HomeMy WebLinkAbout1988-05-02 - Orange Coast PilotMan who disrupted forum disappears,
but campaign foes call for cl~ftcatton
BJ JONATllAN VOLZU; ..............
Tbo mystery fi&ure who accused
COQll'CUional Candidate David Baker
of liavina an extra-marital affair
teems to have made aood bis escape. as m.;or players in the carnPAlan
today denied any knowledle of the
Coast
Nftport Hatbor Yacht
Club begins Its 72nd
season.
Nation
Anatysls of a jetliner that
had part of Its fu181age
blown off white flying at .
24,000 feet found cracks
apparently caused by
metal fatigue./ A4
l,
Sports
Estancia High baseball ,
standout Conrad Colby ts
boptng to attract the at-
tention of major college
and pr'O~ts./81
lndez
~Games A9
1_84"'81:11"1 Board A3
8ullness A6-7
Clulifted 86-8
Comk:a A10
Death notices 85
Entertainment A8
Opinion A5
Paparaz:zj AS
Pubic QPtices 85
Polloe Log A3
Pubtic notices 85
Sports 81-i
man who made the ueenions at a
public forum .
The man upset a Balboa Bay Oub
forum featunna nearly every can-
didate for the 40\ti Congressional
District Qt last Thursday when he
stood up durina a question--and-
answer tcsSion and a«used Irvine
Councilman Baker of having an
Thumbs up
affair.
The man bolted from the room u
Baker paused and then answered the
previously asked question without
makina any reference to the outburst.
Baker and a campaian official,
Frank Caterinicchio, · have sinced
refused to comment on the accusa-
tion, but one Baker aide. who asked
not to be identified. said he tailed the
man after the disruption.
The aide said he followed the man
for about a mile as the man walked
from the 8aY, Club out to Coast
Highway. The man walked to
McDonald's. then to Bobby Mt'Gec·s
restaurant. where the aide said he IOst
the man.
undidat.e1 Nathan Rosenberg.
Chris Cox. John Kelly and Peer Swan
today denied any knowledge of the
man. and had maxed feelings about
the outburst.
Coi< and Roscnbera termed tht
incident unfortunate because it de-
tracted from the real issues of the race.
such as water u~ and traffic. But
others said It brought to light an
.unknow-n
undcrlyina tssue that needs to be nght."
addrcued. and likened aater•a al-Swan also said the lSSUC needs to be
leged aft"atr to the cvenu that brought addressed. but added the comment
down former ~idential candidate about whether Baker had an affair
Gary Hart and former ministen Jim isn't much of a mystery
Bakker and Jimmy Swaggart. .. Everyone who laved 1n Irvine has
.. It was a nast} aJleption; It was known about at." Swan said. "Almost
ur.Jy," said Kelly. a Tustin coun-everybody I've spoken to in the
cllman ... But now he must address it. campai&n knew and spoke about at ...
To quote Sir Thol)'l.ls More. ·silc!l<=C everybody knew he had a problem
is the affirmation of the accusation.'' with his marriage and he was very
'Tm not say1na tte·s suilty, but 1f . public about his rclauonsh1p."
somebody made that accusatJon Swan said the alleged affair. which
about me. I would address it forth-(Pleue eee BAK.BR/ A2)
........................... ...,
Winds hit
65mph;
2drown~
40saved
Onshore damage
minor; few power
outages reported
By GREG u.EUX
Of ... a.llr ........
Boats bobbed and branches broke,
but for all the huffing and puffing of
the strong winds that riPJ>Cd throuch
Southern Cal1fom1a this week.end.
the Orange Coast emerged relatively
unharmed ·
However. the fierce wtndstorm
wreaked ha"oc elsewhere this week-
end. kilhn& at least two sailors. W1P11l&
out an already weakened pier tn Los
AnJtlcs County and strandina 1.400
vis1ton on Cawina Island.
The winds that had &usted up to 65
mph on Saturday and 40 mph Sunday
d1min1sttcd today. gi vma way to
hngedng breezes and cool
temperatures.
Weather A2 CoDwa1D Dua Allen of Ora.Dee Cout Colle«ie aJc,nata Ylctory line at tbe Newport Re«iatta. It wu a tbambe ap day for OCC
SaDday u tb~ Janlor Vanity VDJ 8C1l1l crci11ea the flnlab teae•· which won noery eYent they entered. Stoi;y on Bl.
The wmds caused mmor headaches
1n Orangr Counl)-where bom~
owners and city ~ ~ busy
cleanan1 up . dOwned trtt branches
and utiht) v.orkers repaired scattered
po"-er OUlaJCS.
Rosenberg not unknown now
,
In cast lrv10e. traffic was mired for
more than four houn when the winds
knocked out four t_ra/fic signals
between the San ~way and
Jcronamp on Saturda). said Sgt. Jim
Potts.
Boaters in Newport Harbor bat-
tened down the ttatchcs. but asJde
from a few frayed moonng hnes there
were no reported damages. said Bin
Moore. a di~tcbcr With the Orangic
Count) Shcnffs Harbor Patrol.
Precinct walking elicits recognition in ,,,,
his second try for congressional seat
BJ PAUL ARCBIPLEY °' ............ ...,. ,;
At the very first door where Nathan
Rosenberg knocked. the occupant
knew him from a prominent Re-
publican group in which both were
members.
Y cs. he wd. not o nly would he vote
for RoscnbelJ. he would like to help
in the campaagn.
At another home in the upscale
Newport Beach nei&hborhood. a
tecn..qcr remembered the 40th Con-
HB woman's first
novel hitSjackpot;
success detected
gressional D1stnct candidate from a
civics class lecture Ro~nberg had
given. He. too, was interested in
voluntccrinJ. in this case to meet
course requirements.
Others in the neighborhood re-
membered when Rosenberg knocked
on their doors two years ago during
his upstan chaJlenge to Rep. Roben
Bad ham. '
Rosenberg often remembered
them as well, even to the ~ that
he could ask them about thcu jobs or
their children. in both cases bv name.
When residents d1sagrtt with hrm
on an issue. Rosenberg works 1t to his
advantage. asking them to remember
that he·s .. been straight .. with them
and would take that honesty to
Congress. When he hears what issues
concern them. he incorporates them
into his speeches.
1 agging along with Rosenberg dur-
ing one of his frequent precinct walks
provided a glimpse of the candidate
and his campa1gn strategy.
Rosenberg. 35. expects to know the
outcome of the race before election
day. His campaign is based on
gu1dehncs he learned at a candidate's
school run b) the Republican Na-
tional Cong~s1onal Committee in
Washington D.C.
CAMPAIGN '88
It involves thoroU&h. person-to-
pcrson canvassing o( the distnct's
Republicans by a legion of volunteers
thit will tell Rosenberg who's for him
and qamst him and who·s un-
decided.
Those who haven't made up their
minds wtll be given ample opportuni-
t) to hear about Rosenberg from
volunteers v.allung door to door.
calling by phone and sending them
literature.
Prectnct captams. v1ctol) teams,
advocacy calls -all arc part of the
elaborate stratqy R~bcrg 1s em-
(Pleue ._ R08&NDR.G/A2)
The LI .S. Coast Guard made more
than 40 ~cs in the turbulent
Pacific Ocean dunna a 24-hour
period ending Sunday momin&, said
Pett) OffiCCT Charles Embleton.
Most inodent.s were minor, but 4
year-old Charles Osgood of CaoQp
Part apparently drowned after fallinc_
overboard about fi ve miles north of
Avalon. Embleton sa.id.
Osgood was struck by sail naina
and mocked off the 51-foot boat Sea
Lust. Hts two companjons made
~eral a~mpts to pick him up 1n 8-
(Pleae eee WINDS•/ A2)
Newport planning
community center
By GREG &LERll °' ............
Newpon Beach offic1als ~ putu ng
totcthcr a fundina and development
packqc f<),f a tons-awaited west siCk
community center that alto would
finance afTordabk hOUSln& 1n the city.
Both projects would be placed on
thc sitt of Newport Chnstian H~
School at 813 W. I Sth St .. whd Wiii
move to a new location at the end of
-lhc school )Ut-
The site would be pure~ and
the projce1 financed lbrouah a com-
binalioo of federal, Clty and de-
\'elooer funds.
City offic1aJs have been ICO\lri~
West Newport for some time ID
search of an appropnate Ille for
addittonaJ park.land. sa1d City Coun-
cilwoman Ruthdyn Plummer. wbo
has ~adcd the drive for the COftt .
mun1ty center.
TbC only parcel city p&uneri could
locate was the scbooJ Stle, .aiic:b tbej
dcctdcd would be better uted • a
community center.
"This will be tbe first ~ity
for people on tlie MSt iide Of eowa to
So to Pf04"'oms k>C:ally ... Mid...-...
mer. ootJ• that tbt etty•s -.,
(Pla11 .. aW,.t/Aal I .
South cotinty utility
r~tes may be redUced
..
5DOAE ieduced nua b)' S 141
• , ... NDer taid.
"":nils petCe9t red\ICUoe ii sipifi-
c:ant and I lb.ink tbis mam us much
mOft (()ft\pttltive, .. fUllct aid.
The Publtc Utilitie-t Commission.
wbidt received the proposal lh I
morniaa in San DietO, could 1Ct on
the teq..el\ &l ILi fttt~t meetin&.
ICMdWed for May 11 m San f ran-
dtc0.
SOOAE spokeswomao .Uren
Duncan IUd the monthly residential
bill for customm would drop from
the currmt SS2. 78 to SS0.12 for 468
kilowatt boun of electricity.
TM San Qieao--baed utilil)' rovers
• 1 portion of south Oranac County.
terVina about 70,000 customers in a
ponion of Mission V acjo. and all the
communities south of it, indudina
S.n Juan Capistrano, Dana Point and
I San Clemente,
Ahbouah h would affect all
SOOclE residential customer5. the
rate cut could be cspcc1ally important lor die utility's 2.000 customers in
South L.aauna.
Since the community was annexed
to the city oflaaum &.ch this year •
there has bctn cfcbate whether SOu\h
tiiluna should share the same utilil)'
as the mt of the city.
Southern Califomaa Edison bas'
Iona served Lquna Beach and be-
1i.evci the anneutio1>oupt to ajve it
cl>ntrol of South Lquna u well
SDG&E d1saarcn. arauina that il
should continue to provide service
there.
The Laauna Beach City Counctl is
expected to consider the matter at its
mcctin& Tuesday ni&tn.
City Mana,er l{en Frank said
toc!a_y he will recommend that
SDG&E be a.ranted an interim
francl.ase. ma1nly so work on placina
utilities undcraround on Sout" Coast
Hiahway can be allowed to continue.
Frank also wiU recom~nd. how-
ever, that Edison be asked to make its
own request before the Public Util-
ities Commission for a boundary
chanfe. with the blessana of the city.
"It s better for us to work with one
uulity," he satd ... Also. Edison rates..
Collision victim 's identification unknown
Fountain Valley authorities we~
teeki~ the identity of a Latino who
was hn by an automobile Sunday
ni&ht wbife tryina to cross Harbor
Bciulevard near Verbena Coun. He
hs carryina qo identification. pohce
said.
The man, about 35 yean old, 5 feet
4 inches tall and we1pung about 135
pounds.. was an cntacal condition
today at Fountain Valley Regional
Hospital. but was expected to live.
authontacs said.
The dnver of the car. a Santa Ana
man. was not cited
U fat U residential UKn 10 II least,
arc anywhttt from 26 to 28 petCltOI
loWtt than San Dtqo'a. ..
Frank u id the city would be
rtluctant to make 1 PUC rcquest
itael~ i1 could cost from SI S,000 to S7',uuu in attorney fen. He also
believes a bouodal)' c1'a• is unlike-
ly anyway, &Uowina it only a lO to 2j
percent chance or approval by the
PUC,
However, should a boun~
chanac be approved in Edison s
favor, Frank is askina that SOO&E be
compensated for the work it has
performed alread~ with the buryina
of power lines on Coast Hi&hway.
As pert of the proposed ralC
reduction. SOG&E has asked the
Pubhc Utilttici Commission to
eliminalC a controversial $4.80 cus-
tomercharae. implemented last Janu-
ary.
The charae, a fixed fee, actually
reduced balls for 85 percent of
SDG&E"s customen by groupana
chaf'IC'S rtlat!d to fixed costs.
BAKER ••.
From Al
reportedly ended an Dcttmbcr, is an
issue in the race because it is contrary
to Baker's campaign materials.
"He's painung hamsclfas a mAn of
God and a family man in four colors.
but that doesn't seem to jibe," Swan
said.
U.S. Tem~ .. ~
All>uqu«que 75 ~ Anc:noreoe so 32
Allanla n 49
Atlantic Qty 62 50
8elltmore ea ..
81rW*IQNl'n 79 .. .,... S4 23
loalon 51 ..
8ultalO 83 47
Chenea1on.S C 70 57
Cttarlone,N C 74 48
CNcaoo 88 39
Cincinnati 78 42
Clev.land 1141 34 ~ONo 71 37
Qebs..Fl Worth 76 57
Dea~ 19 52
o.tlOlt 72 .,
Dllluth 70 ..
ElPMO ee 48
&le 57 42 ::=· 45 29
. taft I 39 26 o-.:1~ 73 36
HonolUlu as 74
Hous1on 78 82
lndlenlpoils 73 . ..
Jedl80fl.Miu IO 45
~-71 ••
.......... ~ 1S .. .......... a ~ Extended .,...t...,, n H Calif. Temps Nutw14'e 1' 43 ~wtlj dOllCIY --end leCllllY -= Hew°'1Mn• 11 IO : IOw IOt 24 "°"'119"dlflf ., 5. "' .._Yott!Clty 5t .. w __ ..,. ~ ThurldaY
wslWd II 43 ~~=i..---~ 16 50 Eurell• N 43 Ff1Clrt HIQl\a In llW IO ....,_ 70.
~ u 5S ,,,_ .. 42 ~to IN lo.-70l IO'°"" I09 PlllN>urgh .. ., Loe~ 75 SS ll'r l owe In .. ,.,..... IO
Portland ....... S.2 42 Oektend es 53 -~ P0>11and Ore 53 45 ,._~ .. 3S
Releegh 12 45 filed 8lllff 70 35 R..,.cS City 11 SI ~ 81 ., Surf Report Reno 52 :zt Red-.ood City 85 .. SI LOUii 71 &4 Sec;.r-10 " 48 LOCATlOM 1111 ....
Sell Llkt City .. ,, Sallnu 8" 43 Hunli<19llll' ~" 2-3 ...
s~-SS S2 Sen Dlegc> 65 52 "'-Jetty~· S-4 ,.
3-• .. SyrecuM M ~ a .. frlf\CllGO 84
41. =·-~ SA .. T amoa-S1 Ptr.OO 78 tt hn-'-., .. ,.,.., _, ~ .. TCIC)elll 7t 57 Sen lull ObilC>O 65 weooe t-3 ,. •2 uo--a.«" TUC90ft 11 •t S1oc:1tton 88 .. a... cien-•• 2·~ toOd
Tulsa 11 57 Wet•IW!'C \I Wut\lng1on.D C 10 .. Hlgfl, low lot 2• hOUr• ending et Sp m 5.,.., 0 <t9(11(1if'! w .. ,
Wldllta 75 54 ~ • 45
llU 110111 .. •2
llgl.-•9 23 Tides Smog Report lly1he 16 515
c.tellne M 52 TOOAY
~ 81 ., Sec:onO ..,,.. 3 3So m II
~ent .....,.,d .-. ~ MO t.-e l9ed'I n 00 S«ono ~'II" 9SOom SI
~:: •• e.i-100 .,...,_ i. , .. -L.A Mrpor1 88 S4 r~eou
Fon1io-soee m 07 . 200-M-v wf ......... a.nta ~ 7S 43 •1 )11 m )4 F'ln1 "'O" __ .......,. ,..,. .......
"'-S2 37 cw-~ ......................... 81 S4 s--oio.. 40011"' t 1
~Ory " 57 ioci.y·· ,.. ...... Senta Monlc:e N S4 Second "oO" 1014 p"' ..
LMVega 8" 52 TW-V.tlfr/ " 20 $unM11e1I J6pm ,_,..-.,. .. ROSENBERG A KNOWN CANDIDATE NOW •.•
P'romAl
ploying to win the congressional seat
be has coveted for more than two
years.
Ccn.amJy, he has the funds and the
volunteers. As one of three front
runners. Rosenbera bas ~iscd
$460,000 in cash and ptedaes. He has
been averaging about S5.000 per day.
be said.
In 1986, Badham made political
hay by noting much of Rosenberg's
money was comang from outside of
the district. Rosenberg as suit collect-
ina larac amounts from elsewhere,
but 60 percent ofh1s contnbutions a~
comma from msadc the 40th. be said.
Badham also used RoscnbcrJ's ues
to his brother. Werner Erhard. to
paint a ncgauve pacturt of the brash
challenger.
Erhard founded the now-defunct
est -revived m the 1980s as the
Forum -a controversul self-im-
provement program that was hkened
to a son of Dale Carnegie <:<>ursc for
the "me gencrauon."
But if leadership skills and powers
of penuasion were among the talents
Rosenbe11 honed at est. he has put
them to good use an has campaign.
So far, I.JOO volunteers -that's
one thousand. one hundred -have
signed on, said Rosenberg staffer Ted
Long. Probably about 350 of them arc
hard-core. ded1ca1C'1 workers. Long
said.
Many of them a~ high schoolers
who heard Rosenberg spe.ak at-one of
the many c1v1cs and economics
classes he has v1s11ed on the Orange
Coast. Others are aC11v1sts who have
rtturncd to the campaign 1ra1I after
being alienated an the past by the
poht1cal system, said staff member
Joe Trgo.
Leadcnhap also as one of the main
themes on which Rosenberg has
focused has campaign messaJC.
"1 think government officials have
a JOb 10 be leaders. Being a member of
Congress as -hkc Theodore R~
velt said -to use a f,ully pulpit."
Rosenberjl said.
.. And either you're going to use the
bully pulplt LO make somethin&
hapecn for yourcommunaty or you're
not.
Clung the county's transpon.ataon
issue as an cumplc, Rosenberg said
the congressman's role c.an be limited
to wanntng federal transportation
dollars for the county.
But he wants to expand that role by
bnnging together the local factions
that have unsuccessfully grappled
wtth transportation questions an the
past.
"I can bnna together the various
groups-the county supcrv1son. the
city council members. the citizens'
groups. the developers -bnng them
all together under the auspices of my
aood offices and sar.. 'Look, we've aot
a problem. I don t know what the
solution is. but rm convinced there is
a soluuon.·
-And you ask them to start workln~
together to solve this problem,'
Rosenbcr& said.
The result is that people of diffcrtnt
interests now have a stake in the
solution that as worked out. "So each
aocs back to his group and is suddenly
an advoc:alC for the solution."' Rosc-
nbcrJ said.
h 's a process that has worked
cl~herc and that Rosenberg would
use on oehcr issu~ such as nndang a
site for another rq.ional airpon.
Rosenberg believes failed leader-
ship of the {)'Ul can be blamed for the
transportauon and airpon dilemmas
betng faced today.
He promises leaderstup on another
favonte issue -water -to avoid a
s1m1lar and more danserous dilemma
m the future.
The Metropohtan Water Distnct
estimates that, based on present
supplies. the Southland will be short
S00,000 acre-feet of water by the year
2000 (An acre-foot of water supplies
an avcrase famal) 's needs an a year).
Re<;alhng the gas cnsas of the 1970s.
Rosenberg said. "ff you think people
got upset about g.as lines. we will have
a rcvoluuon on o ur hands if there's no
water when you turn on the faucet or
flush the toilet or step into the
shower"
Rosenberg says he woµld start
akmg action now 10 fend off that
revolution.
Among his proposals arc lining the
All-Amencan Canal from the Colo-
rade Raver that annually loses an
estimated 50.000 acre-feet of water
into the soil. covcnng locaJ reservoirs
that lose substantial amounts of water
through evaporation. and improving
pumping and water treatment tech-
niques that would increase the water
supply.
The solutions demonstrate has
businessman's approach to problcm-
solving, Rosenberg said.
.. Over 60 percent art lawyers an
Congress." he said. "That produces a
lcgahstac approach to everything. and
all this country's problems can't be
answered by lcgislauon."
Dave Baker and Chnstopher Cox.
considered Rosenberg's pnmary op-
ponents in the 12-candidatc Re-
pubhcan field. arc both lawyen.
In has business operations. strategic
planning 1s a vital component. Rose-
nberg says government leaden don't
do enough stratqic plannana and
priority scttin&.
"A balanced budget amendment
would require us to set pnoritics," he
said.
Lotto player wins $4 :8 million
SACRAMENTO (AP)-Someone
picked all si~ winninf numbers tn the
weekend "Lotto 649' pme to wm the
s•.8 m11llon Jatkpot and five players
d1vtded up the SI. 3 m1l11on second-
place pool, ,Jhc C~hfomaa Lottery
•nnounced Sunday.
The ~jackpot ticket. worth
$4,826.082, was purchased at Nugget
Market on Rivenide Boulevard in
Sacramcnto.Namesofwinnersarcn't
blown until they tum an their tickets
a1 a Louery off ICC.
The winnina numbcn drawn Sat-
wday n.iabt were 42, 17, 4'. 34, 11 , 23,
r
=£lilJPlil
llMIOWIC• ..... ..,. .. C......_CA
and the bonus number, 22.
five tickets had five numben plus
the bonus., and each as wonh
$260.510.
Elr1icr in Sacramento. the state
lottery "Bi& Spin .. grand pnze duded
16 spinners Saturday and ~ 10
$6.25 million where it will remain 1n
hmbo with the st.art of a new pme.
Next week. a new "Win It Spin"
whttl wall be introd~ that IOJtery
offJciaJs say wriJI unprovc 1k odds of
bccomina a millionaire bua limi1 the
top pnze to $2 ouUion.
Rosenberg would put his business
cx~rtisc to use in such areas as
military procurement. where un-
manageable paperwork and redun-
dant. unnecessary regulations dnvc
I.Jute AOCll
~ .~
11
76
79
S... 8led> IO MecAnlu ltwO •2•90 ., IMnl. ledlll'Urct V.., ~ 4e LllgWnl ._.. .. ~ 151 Loe Mgellll Alrpoo1 .. • ..
I
Torrence ea eo I 01 r m ...., Mii eQM'I El 7 JT pm W...-0 " S2 Moon·-•• e si 11 m Ml• r..-.,.
Y-'!•¥11 M 27 llllotem end•-OQllnattSlpm
up costs.
An understanding of the military
-and nauonal defense -is another
area 1¥here Roscnbe~ sets himself
apan from his two lcadangopponcnts.
WINDS' DAMAGE MOSTLY OFFSHORE ...
A graduate of the U.S. Air Force
Academy. he was a naval aviator who
was credited wath saving 24 lives.
He was assigned to serve as
cxccut1 ve support officer to Secretary
of Defense Harold Brown during the
Caner edmin1strat1on and was a
national defense advisor to Senate
Majority Leader Roben Byrd.
From Al
foot seas befo~ returning to Avalon
Harbor and reponmg the accident.
Embleton said.
The body of another'stonn victim
washed ashore about 2:45 p.m. Sun-
day near El Squndo. Terry Michael
Hammond. 24. of Hawthorne, was a
boater who leaped from • disabled
craf\ and tned to swam to safety an
wind-tossed seas. coroner's official
David Campbell said today.
Another sa.tlor beached his craft at
Treasure Island Cove in Laauna
Beach af\er a stem line became
tanaJed an its motor.
Tbe Huntington Beach Pier. which
lost 250 feet and Thr f:nd re~taurant
to Januar) 's killer ~1orm. sun 1ved
the weekend wand\torm 1ntacl. ac-
cording to Huntington Beach police.
However. wcd,('nd damdge to the
Redondo Beach Mun1c1pal Pier was
estimated al S I m11l1on said city
spokesman Jim (m1h.tm
Rosenberg says his experience in
Washington and the military make
him the most "solidly sroundcd and
probably the most conservative" of
the front runnen on national defense.
NEWPORT PLANS COMMUNITY CENTER .•.
Rosenberg as among many who
favor putting the mtht.ary to work in
the banle against drugs. too.
He differs with some of the other
,candidates. however. on true con-
servative philosophy in other areas.
'Tm of the behefthat government
thal governs least governs best ... hr
said "I don't want the government
messanJ around walh people's per-
sonal lives. while (other candadalcs)
wanl to get anto morality."
Ahhough personally opposed to
abonaon, Ro~nberg doesn't believe
government should regulate i1. "any
more than we want the govcmmrnl
looking tnlO proplc's bedrooms."
"I thank it's intellectually dishonest
to sa) we don't want the government
messing around an our business. then
say lefs go into people's bedrooms.''
From Al
ex1sungcommuruty center. the Oasis
Senior Center. as located in Corona
del Mar. ·
A youth center currently in de-
velopment is also being built an
Corona dcl Mar.
Construction on the new com -
m unit) center could bc&in as early as
1h1s summer. said Ron Whitley.
director of the cu y's Parks. Beaches
and Recreation Depanment. How-
ever. development of the preject as
still an lhe early stages. Whitley said.
The project sttll requires fonnal
appro' al b) the Planning Com-
m1ss1on. Cit) Council and the federal
aov~mment
But Whatley and other city officials
arc confident the project will go
.
throuah.
"We've been look1n1 around an
that area for qunc some time. We're
all pretty excited .about it." said
Whitley.
Last week. the City Council voted
unanimously to use about S 1.5
million 1n federal funds to buy the
high school site
At a price of $2 malhon. plus
purchase costs for the entire site. city
planners estimate lhat S 1.3 to S 1.5
malhor\ in federal funds would be
needed. The funds will come in the
form of a loan and wall be paid back
through the city's federal grant fund.
Mesa Development Co. also will
kick an up to $450,000. but the
developer as requesting a I ~unit
apanment development on 1he s11c
some of which would m~t low-<OSl
housing standards as specified by lhe
federal govcmmrnl, according to a
staff rcpon.
Whitley said lhe coMtrucuon of
some affordable housing on lhe sate 1s
necessary an order for the proJ«t to be
awarded the federal loan Between
S2SO.OOO and $3 50.000 in city money
also would be used 10 fund lhr
project.
The tcach4na contracts. equ1pmen1
and curriculum for Newpon \hns-
tian High School have bttn bough!
out by Covenant Commun1t)
Church. which as current!) nego11a1-
ana for a new. larger IOC<lllon w11h1n
about five males of the currrnt \11e.
said a church official
Taking independent stands has
labeled Roscnbera as a sort of
outsider who has made a few enemies
an the Rcpubhcan estabhshmcnt. NOVELIST'S FIRST BOOK PRAISED •..
The bulk oflhc local leadership has From Al
thrown its endorsement to Baker. coming book. "Paym ent in Blood.'' details of her first book, ''A Great
But Rosenberg has won his sba~ of she and her husband discovered an Deliverance.'' and as ~luctant to give
heavyweight suppon as well. indud-isolated grave an a graveyard. She away the plot.
ing developer Wilham Lyon of the worked the grave 1n10 the book. she She says the book as "very. very
Lincoln Club who as campaign chair-said. antcnse and disturbana." Set in the
man. U.S. Seo. John McCain. R-Whtie researchan& for her un-Yorkshire country side. it's about a
Anzona. and Arizona Congressman finished novel. "Well Schooled an 19.year-old 11r1 wh<>s accused of
Jam Kolbe. Murder." Toa bin spent a month last dccapitatin~hcr father. In the open· Over the weekend he was endorsed f: 11 · 8 mg n<l-, s c as round s1'tt1'na on an C ·r. a v1satang nlash boys' schools. ..--~ 11
by the ah1om1a Young Republicans where she also was a guest lecturtr. ovenurncd bucket next to the corpse (He was foundana president of the in the barn ofa family farm. Orange County Young Re· The British teachers got anto the .. 1 did it. I'm not sorry," she says.
publicans.), and on May 27 fonner spirit of mystery-writing, she said, But Toibin said that an n next to
Sen. Barry Goldwater Sr. will come Lo and showed her where a murder could the body has no finacrprints. It
Orange County for a Rosenberg fund-take place in 8 classroom at the provokes questions of why she'd Wipe
raiser. school. She took the advice and used out finacrPnnts yet confefl to the
Nevertheless, Rosenberg knows he the room 1n her story. she said. murder, Toibin said.
wall have to make some phone calls Toibin is pretty guarded about A native of the Bay Arca, To1btn
when the clcctaon as over. 'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii "lfl'mluckycno ughtowinonJunc II
7, I'm goina to have some fence-
mcnding to do," he said.
But Just like the people he meets in
the district when be walks door to
door. he'll tell them, .. Whe\herpeople
aptt or disqree, J hope they'll see
hert's a guy who will be straight wtth
us."
Clarification
In an April 28 article on 1eCU.ritiet
fraud arrests in Newport Bach,
Transamerica Enel"IY Corp. "'
named as the company deali"f in
illept telephone sales prKtiCa.
Transamerica Enc'I)' Corp. bas no
affiliation •ith the Transa.mttic:a
Corp., a Fonunc SOOcompenywhich
alto has dealinp in teCUritret and
msuranc::e.
°I:.::'
Iii Q11r•t11d
said she's been wntang s1n\.e \he ~as
7, but seriously and profes\1onally
only for about fi ve years
"I was teaching a course on the
British mystery stor) (at El Toro High
School). and said. "Get" I can do
this." She took a lca'e and has bttn
writin• ever smcc.
"Wntina 1s a lot mor~ challengm&
(than teachina.> I have 10 rely o n ml
creative faculty all the umc. I can t
loss the ball to the students and say
'You auys do this.'" '
She uses Grut Bntaan as a
backdrop for her books becau~ she's
carried "a love affair" for the country
since British rock 'n' roll bands
p ined fa~ in the 1960s, she said.
~---
........ b \MO C:-.t .... CA t292t
.~td!I d 71 --A ..,..OI .. '41 •lJ• Ja.tcall 642-8086
"'°'*" ~ I r9e • -,_.,. """ --., )'9!'11l ........ 7pi.t
4'\G .,. c., .. ..
..
---........,~....,"
... - -f'Cll' ~., ''"' c.ml .... I0•11111110.,..._, .. ........
QI ulaam ''pt·-.... :::-~ .... --
Cool Cuuals
for
Spring and Summer
•
Orange Coal DAILY PtLOJ/Manday, May 2, 19N '* AS
College will host
DlsaDtlity Day
Thursday in HB
~emporaey housing chief to 4uit
Dtsab1hty Awareness Dey will ~ observed
Thursday at Golden West Coll~ 1n Hun11n1ton
Beach wtth an all-day prqaram spon~rcd by 1evcraJ
campus sroups.
Speakcn and service o rpn&Uuons offenna
copina stratca.ici 10 the disabled will ~ featured. Mo~ than SO campus and community suppon
strv1cc vc>ups will SCI up tnfonnallo n tables from I 0
a.m 10 2 p.m 1n the centraJ quad.
87GllEO~ ...............
~ eucut1ve d11tttor of Irvine Tern·
porary HouStna. the agenc)' behind the
city's failed attempt to ho UJie homcleu
fim1lics 1n an unu~ dog kennel, has
announced that he will step down fro m
1h11 pos1t1on
Jamn Palmer no ufitd the ITH Board of
Dtrecton last wttk lhat he will rn11n from
t}1s pos111on of e,1u~cu11vc director H <JOOn
as the board concludn a study of
alternau~n 10 admtnlStl'f t~ temporal')
housina proanim. accordma to a ncv." Rita~ from the lfOUP
Palmer is ~s1an1nc to purs~ a carttr in
rnou~ ck"clop~nt 1n beahh l"aK or a rt"tat~ field 1C"Cord1na to ITH offic1ab
Palmer w1ll ronun~ 1n the posmo n unul
the board d«1dn upon a rourK of action
Lau )cat. ITH ,.,u au&bt an ~ mtddle
of a fiert't' du.putt O\'tt a dcc1s1o n to
~oova1e a ~acan1 dos kennel for us.t as a
homelts5 shelter The proposal was one of
lrv11w's hottnl lSSUts In 1987. Wtlh the
C rt) Counetl and l't'\teknt1 dt' 1d~ 0'"
lM prnpnct) and n«tu11~ of the Pf"OJC( 1
ltho u,ah the ctl) rtten~ a S4% ~·
fcdt'nil arant to fund IM project the
pro~I WU evt'ntuall~ \nufftd •M"n II
v.a) d1"'0'~ that the doa ~enncl ... ,
•llh1n an El T uro Manne Basr CT-uh zont"
~blcolm tr.as ITH c lu1rman said the
croup a nd I n inc officials arc 1111 wa1t1ng
for an ansv.cr 10 tht'1r apphun1on for a
$430.(,(ICJ ft'dmal r.rant for a proprn.c"d
tran!l1t1onal hous1n1 proyam
The l 11' ·~ no~ cun'tdt"nng us1n' ti \t"
larmhnusn.. \la ltd lor bulktwinJ. to hou
the UI\ '> homl'k'\ ..\ \O\(' On the-l~)Ut' 1$
c\pc1. tcd 1n t~o v.tt~s
Le .. ,~ wud thlll dunna the' pa I two
months the ITH board hti bct'n siud
:.tht'rnall'c adm1n1\trltl\e met a•
mcan' to IO'-'Cr m an<aetmf'ftt and Optrat•1
101 w~t' ol m pru1rams 1DC'ludina tt.
1n' ohemcnl ot count' ""1de non-profil1
ltl\l n1.1C'S
I TH urlil 1al' hcpn their scarrh for
n\v. t'\l·1.utl\l' J11'('dvr o n l uesda\ saact
l ('V. I\ ;
~
Music and theatrical performances and a
reception hononna dtsabled actress and model Ellen
Stohl also arc scheduled. Call Caroline So~I at
89S-878 I for add1t1onaJ information
Northweat •how ln NB
NYHC's 72nd season s~arts briskly
The Manne~ branch of the Newpon Beac h
Public l1braf) Wlll present a shde show on the
Pacific "lonhwest Wednesday at 7 p.m. at the hbar)
2005 Dover Dnve, Newport Beach
James D Solhday. a Costa Mesa fin=man. will
co nduct the program. which 1s frtt and open to lhC'
public Call 644-3 I 4S for more information.
~ombat veterans meet
Combat Veterans Anonymous. a suppon group
for combat veterans of the Vietnam War. meet
Thursda)lt at 7 30 pm. for mutual suppon at
Path"'a}s to Discovery. I 83SO Ml. Lan&)ey. Suite
250. in Fountain Valley. Call 430-1815 for fun.her
infonnauon
Alumnl dlsplay artwork
A m1xcd-mtd1a collcc11on cnt1tl~ "Common
Connec11on/D1ve~ Dtrcc11on." fcatunng the v.ork
of alumni Dan Calhs. Stcwvc Comba and Jim
U yelt.awa. 1s on exh1b1t throu&h Fnday m lhc Fane
Ans Gallery a1 Golden West College. Gallery hours
arc Mondays 1hrou&h Fridays from I 0 a.m. 10 2 p m
and Tuesdays and Wednesdays from 6 to 8 p.m ( aU
895-8783 for details /
Candidate to speak
Ncwpon Beach Councilwoman Evcl}n Han. a
candidate for the 70th Assc:mbly D1stnct. will spca l..
Wednesday at noon at the Newport Beach Tennis
C lub. 2601 E.astbluff Dnvc. Newpon Beac h The
cost 1s S5 and ~na11ons may be made with '\dcle
Tingey at 644-5467.
Irvlne newcomers meet
A membership meeting for all In ine ne"'-
comers will be held Wedncsda) from 10 a.m to
noon a1 the Fine Ans Center at the corner of Yale
Loop and Walnul >\venue People 1o1.ho have mo1.ed
to In me v.11h1n the last three years n-c eligible 10
~ome members. and more 1nformat1on 1s a'a1I·
able at 731 -0 IQ4 o r 730-1554
AAUW meets ln Laguna
By ALMON LOCK.ABEY
Sc'cnl)·l\l.O ~cars of yacht1ng acu' II)
and ser" ice to 1hc communll\ w-crc
celebrated b) ncarl) 1.000 mem~rs and
1ues1s ol "'e"' pon Harbor Yacht ('lub on
Sunda)
Dressed ship flags and burgt"CS \napped
in the brisk -wcstcrh breeze -the w1nd1t"St
O pening Da) 1n· man) )e.irs -.a~
Commodore .\ndrcw Z1mbald1 prcs1d~
o'er the lerem0n1es. \l.h1ch incl uded 1hc
1ntrodull1on 0f present flag office rs and
the trad1t1onal fla~ raising marking the
stan of the club's 7 _nd season
Other flag officers arc Peter C Palle1e.
'Ile lommodurc. Wilham l Palmer Jr .
rear wmmodorc. Jack Jakosk) flttt
captain Da' 1d l .\mold. pon captain
and darec1ors Thomas T. Schock. T1mo1h"
P Hogan. H (11lben Jones. Burleigh J
Bre\l.er T ho mas J tlogan Dr John R
1'1rller 1s fleet surgeon. and Thomas P
Vii llder fleet measurer
Non-( aim office~ (Juniors) arc Marla
( oon rnmmodo rc, Jor) Tv.1st. 'rec
com modore Darren Sutherland. rc~r
commodore ( nss\ Z1mbald1. treasurer
Christina .\llen scerctar) Travis G rant.
pon l.lpla in Can Olson. fleet captain
.\n annual highlight of the ccrcmo"' 1s
the upC'nr ng da\ inspec tio n o f )achts and
the a1Aard103 of trophies for the best-
ma1ntained 'essels in vanous catcgoncs
V. inner of 1he Sharln Mcser' e
s"'eepstakcs 1roph) for the. best-main-
tained }ach1 1n the flttt was the 56-foot
•OO<k n )alA<I Od\SS('~ O'An~ by .\I and
..\udrc' Burnand It "'as the 50th b1nhda\
for O<i)SS<'\. built b) Stevens Sh1p)ard an
Stockton in I 'H 8 for the HarT) G Steck
fam1l) ol Ne"'pon Beach and ha~ heen in
the famll) t''cr s1nce .\udrc) Burnand -.-.a.,
formerl) .\udrt) lttle
O ther tnSpc<"tlon "'inners \I.ere
Sail over 40 feel Prom•~~ Phil .rnd
M 1ckc' Ro1111c
Sail .under 40 feet L1vel) ~ta tT <om·
modore Jame'> P V..annington
Po•er 0 ' er ~ feC'I Salud. Bill Ort"•n
Pov.er under 40 IC'ct Pullin. Riii and
Della Palmer
Nearly 1,000 memben and peam admlred the
fleet at Newpon Barbor Yacht Club on Sunday at
..., .......... ~~..,
the •tart of lta 72nd ull~ eeuon. Prlu9 were
awarded to the be8t-main ed yacbta.
Da' ">allors Ha"'!. Grngcrlt't" Field
Ba\ Boal'> and Laun<ht'S '>cc.otcr t... r~
Ell1011
"'on-C alrn tJ un1or1 Sabot. L1111e ( ol·
hns
C ommo<lore's .\ward Bear Fljg Tum
and \'alem· ( arc;on
The 'e"'pon Harbor '1 acht ( luh s ~2nd
'car,., a tar 1.1"\ lrom Ult' da'' o l ~I ~ -.-.a, n1.1:•1ll4-•rntc-d m •"• 3n.:l f)T '-'••and ~hl·n .\lben 11.lnd and a iroup of ~uth """) lhl· til"\t .omm,)Jorr
( u.l't '1 alhl Club \achtsmen sail~ their
ho.it!> through the dangrrou' m udl1a1 .. and
rncli.' tu form SC YC Statton .\
On c )(. t I~ I" 16 a group l'>f talion .\
memhu~ mct and organutd v.ruat •as 10
bcl:omt 'e-.-.pon Harbor '1 a ht <lub It
The d ub ha~ gro-.-. n along with the <'II' ot
~e1Apon 8c'a1.h '>inCt the t\arhor rt"alf\
hcome na\lµblc 1n f(H6 ~llh thr
•urnplchon ot lhl' 1c111~ and d red in ot
thC" harbor
The Laguna Beach branch o f the Amencan
Assoc1at1on of Un1"ers1ty Women will mcct
Wedntsda)' a1 7· 15 p.m. an the communtty room of
Great Amcncan Bank on Fo~t Avcn~ IO uguna
Beach for a panel discussion on vc>wth. l\dm1ss1on
1s frtt and add1t1onal information 1s a vailable from
Mal') Fegraus at 4Q'7 ·I~
C ALEND~R
Balloon race launched at last
minute after winds die down
TVnetWork
pulls the plug
on Swaggart
Monday, May 2
• 6:30 p.m. Costa Mesa City Coancll, council
chambers. 77 fair Dnve
• 6 30 p.m. Cotta Mesa PlauJn.1 Comml11loa.
stud) 5('$Ston. first-floor conference room. 77 Fair
Drive.
• 7 p.m Lapaa Bea~ DoWll&cnn SpttUk
Plu, council chambe~. S05 Forest .\ ve
• 7 p m HutlapMI Bue• City. Co1tncll.
council chambers. 2000 Main St
P.\l~ SPRIN(,. ! .\Pl -.\Iler a da' ·,
dcla) duc to g.ale-fom .· "'ands th<' las1 ot
sc' en heh um balloons an the ann ua l
Gordon Benncll distance race launc hed
earl) toda) JU'>I mtnu tes before the liftoff
deadli ne
The colo rful race "as ~hcdulcd 10 bci1n
a1urda) e' cnin& but was po~lponcd b)
the "'mds 1ha1 s1o1.ep1 across most of the
slate 1hro u&}lout the "'~kend
The Bcn1hana thC' last balloon to lca'c
from Ruth Hard} Park m downto"n Palm
pnng'> jUOlhC'd JI I ~8 a m twll l.lilll1\t.1n 1~1' · \h Baumer ..ah.1 .. RC'"Jcnl\
minute-. hc.·lorl' the th~-hour stanang m1gh1 tic 1all.C'n .lOal l 11 a h.Jll1x•n lan1h in
penod l'lj p't'd said ra~ lOOrdinator their '""n ··
Rand\ "~c,tr11.I.. "hall depends on the "1ndc. hut the('("'
The b.l ll11dn" manm·d h\ t-.-.0·pC'r\()n 1ht Pl-"'1h1la1' 1hc' tould lat1.h ;in updraft
cre\l.S "'ere Jnfung wuthl'J'>I and -.-.oulJ .tnd rt"lru'>' th< t...>rdN 1nw 1h1· l n111·d
111..ch lW'>'> O\l"T into \.1e\ 1.0 '\OUlh of El \wte\ Baumn \.ltd
Paso. Te\3\ b' earh Tue-.da' <J1d '"' \m,ong those IJ'or('J IC\ ~in are R'' '
spoll.c'>"'oman iuhe Baumer · \••l 1\\ncr and founder ul lhe lknth.tna
Entr.101\ 1uoll. a kiter from h•rmer fl'\ldurJnt 1.ha1n 'Ah•l -.-.on lh<' I~:-I r.lll'I:
~fa~or Franl Bogert. 3o;.l 1ng the ~\,._o~J_foc 1:>.n1tnttcr -.-. •w v.011 th<' race in
Chihuahua 111 c\lend luuncs,/1~-<l1;".!, 1\lS.t anJ l~fl'
L0'i ~ '-G ElE 1.\PI -Th<' R<''
J1mrr ..,.,.,_..n., rrlus.al 10 stop apl"'('ar·
an~ 1.H' 1v.o tclc' 1!>lon sho~ produ1.t-d b'
thl' "w . .igpn m1n1\tn~ ha' fur'-c-d the
<. hn,t•.in Hn1<ad~ao;.11np "-c-tv.orll. 111 drop
1hc: lJhol .,h,,..,.., a \pl•~e .. ~n !>.:11d
"" <' h.aJ ~1,('n '"'~~ b~ mail a il("n,..Jol' me IOdC'l dc v.hcthertOl'Ompl)
""'th our r~u~I tha ht' not a~r an the
~h ...... : Lui V. ('lfll h 'flOkesman for the
\ 1 "'t.lnt.a &al h \a ·N~ net"' or!.. ..aid
,u;d:t'
Tuesday, May 3
• • 9:30 am. Oraqe Couty a.ant of S.per·
vilon, board hcanng room. Hall of Admm1strallon.
10 Ct\IC Center Plaza. Santa Ana.
Communist group celebrates May Day
It hr ""a~n t t1111n@ 10 apl"'('at l "'"' •ou ld
lOnt1nue 10 l"Jm 1h1· ">ho-.-. .. But •e •e~
nouril."d 1ha1 ht' thuught that 11>.a\ not 1n tht'
hC'\I 1nte~I •f '}"' .1uan·, e\ an~1cal
i'~x·1a11on ·· .... d V.1"1r ~ t>
The d«1i1or dC"Pf't' C'S '-\1.aggan of the
lafi~t net~on. ~am 1ng hnn C B~ ~ml"'
rcl1~1ous 'ho~... 1. h1ldrt"n·i. 4'hO\I.\.
dtx umrnt.an el>. da,\1~ ~·omt'd1c<. and lam·
'" l·n1cruinmcnt t• neart' '~ m1lhon
l11•m1·o;, 1hespQL.e,man ...-i1d
• 1:30 p.m. Orup Coury P1au.bi& Com-
ml11toa, board meeting room, Hall of Admin1s-
tra1ion. I 0 Civic Center Plaza. Sant.a Ana
• 6 pm. Lapu Beadl Qty Coacll, council
chambers. 505 Forest Ave.
• 7 p.m .. New-pen Bead Pub, Beack9 u4
llttreadee CemmJniea, council chambers. 3300
Ncwpon Blvd .
LOS .\,(,Elf\ -C ommun1\t labor ·
groups dragging ct1ig1e' of Prc-;1 dcnt
Reagan met "'1th rnuntcr-demo n'itralo f'\
dunng a Ma) Da' march do"' nto"' n but a
pohCt" cscon kept the rall~ pca~ful
~o artt1t'> ~ere made dunng the \I.all.. b)
about 150 chanting demon'\lratOf' totin@
red banner> d enouncing cap11ahsm
ra" 1!>m and lOrJX•rate gret'd said pohce
~ICCtl\ c (1rt'{l Rodnguez
••••••••••••••••••••.......... The march o rgan1ze-d b~ 1hc Prog~Sl\C
Vietnam veteran
honored for his
cri-.e-fighting
BJ aoBPT BA.RUA ~uspccu 1n the .Plrki"I lot at Hunt-0t............. . · 1nsion &ad\ H•ah School C'amposa-Jnldo Yid Tllunday. Rccjno-~ .. Campcmanido.• 11··~ · ""-I~ uve of \be ftaili ~nd a -When. t'IJQJ tn Vl"••· ~mt' na . ~ ..__ mends 'Wtlh ttvcral politt officen. I vcteranoftheV~ ar. UIUQOn knowtheyhaveareafbardjob. I want
11nak:d ®I as lbe cn~fisbier of the to do what I can'° hdp. .. month by the Hunl1npMI Beach
Nc'lb.borflood Wald\ cnme-~li!'I Cam~ Id he tna1 have. nizabon. been cspeciilly -au:bftal beca"9t ~~ ll. heard noixs thievahadbrokauntoaroommaie's
outsidr his uDUftllOft 9c:acb •sie-:t-car aboua th~~~ •
rMnt at about l : 15· o. momina 1n He wu born !" Muall but ~Died
Labor PJm h11nM-ed \la' l>;n the
1nterna1111nJI "'orler', huhda' lelchrated
1n commun"t l°Ountnc'
,\ t1r<>up oi ,,1untt'r-marl hc!'. Nu Pl '
"'llh tiullh1•m., and -.-.eann@ a, 'l'''
t'mblvone<l .... 11h thl· name · l ti ,1 1
Patnot'i.. \elled 'll:Un' l'\;t, .1· 'l The pH'M.. t·,.,1l'" ,,, mah her<. -.-.all..1n@
thrC'C ahrct1<.t '1rek h<'d IM aht,ut 1~0 Cll'
bloc!.,s alon@ thC' m1k-l11n@ Bm.:id "'a'
route 1.h:rnlln[it 'u'h .,h~n\ l' \\,,rl..ef'
struu.J~ ha'<' no ht r.kr. .ind· The onh
solution " •11mmun1.,t rt' 1'lut1un" in
Enghsh and \p.in"h
"hen 1hc v-r•up Je .... -nt1C'"..1 "'' fC';h' •
Ruben l\Tat'I a' ·n,.hl·"''"ll l •1'1.i·lca o~
\mcncan, .. tneJ 1,1 11lllQ\I. the mar. n<'r'
mounted P')hC't' l h<i<i.t"d lhl•:n h;i, l Ill tht'
s1~all.. -.-.11h th<'ir ho~\
\ .. ~'s min"t" ~d to air the
,.,_, .. -. hn:h had an 3, erait·' 1c ... ('r-.h1r 111
.l Ml til 0 ()t(l homt'' '31d '-' L lnl h ""ho
.,. -'' 1n lllS -'nJ< I(', hH the-annual
• n'l'nt1••n ol th< '311.•nJI l <1blc Tele
o-.-. nt:r a\-..11..1.11111n \ pc_.)()I was ~lolcn
v. h 1 lc l)ff1, er' -.-. l'rr called to ass1s1
animal ll•ntrol an cap1unn1 tt,aht
dogs ·runnin~ amuck .. at anothn"
pool • • •
C)c, cral re.,.dent'i on Gnma1ndef
\\a' rt'T'QrlC°d hcanng gunshots cart~
toda' Olli"c" ... rrc unabk to find an~ thin@ .1m1'\s • • • Tht' d m e\haft "'as taken f'Tom a
IQ I ToHHa tour·• httl-dn't' pteluap
truck"' h1k 11 •as park~ on lkarpe.-• . . ~ , ,_~ear·~Jld ,.as arrested for
allqcdl) brc~l1na into a PC>t11bk
bu11dtni al l nt\Cf"il~ Hil)I School
He 'A'a.S taken to tht' pol~ station &Ad
releasrd to tu~ parent\
IACana Bee.ell
.._ whtte-198S GMC J•mm\ -.
stokn Sunda~ f'Tom 1u partuni ~
on 3rd ~'t"nuc. thc,tcnm toldpohtt. • • •
'"'" ''")(1ata.1n
him a1 unfll1•er \\ ~<' he a~
flro.3ch<'J the man thl' •thl"r dr tr
got out of his cu and r"'inlcd a 4~
calt~r hand.aun at him :hen ~cxll.t'd
1t The man hid t'tchind .another ~ a r
sto PJl('d in tnaffic and the gunman
sptd off .\ ~t1f\"'\J L "' .\~m11t1' polt~man v.1tn<'""1 the' t'\han~ and
tool. do•n th< r.unman·, hctn'o('
plate The 't'h1de •.i' ""'1,tt"d 10 a
Fo unta1n \a.lie' man .....
" fur 'alucd \I SI ~ 11.1 v.as &aken
from a vault at BUiiock~ m the ulh
Coat Pta:z:a. Tht' vauh ~ tocttd,
and Ollh CTt'lplO~"ttS h,a\(' I\ TM
far •b pu~hawd b\ a •onu.n and ll'Ul~ from a mw't' l r'ld
fl'alU.nl for hn lo ,.C-u up bul
IPP&tt9LI> she ·~1ted too Iona
Newport ltea'C•
St.rcakiaa. \M f'l'lltCtttt of
nm aa cd f no a""9rtnt
ftMOI\. IO_& a bntf f't\'l'\ al Sa rda}
alkraooa' fn>f't o~-pon Harbor
H1Vi '-..hnt•I '"" tttn...qc 11rls to~
r<"hn t hl ' -.-. (' r r .,. aJ ing o ff t ht' len nu
u'IUrt\ "'h<'n a man ran b W('Ulfll
llnh a ~1 n,lhrt>aker and \al'k top ran.
The' \a1d h<' .... ,C'd as '* ran pnt
thl"m Thr man ran acros~ the st~l
and tnto ;a ncarb~ ~\lhborhood
• • • M<>tt than S1~.000 wonh of co
~\("'f t'Q\llpmen\ -~~ '*"' eeft~
'unda) from tht-Compu\C1'\an;
\1orc 4:!~ ll Dn"e The ti
apparentl) ent~ the bu11nca ~
Jm1naoptn • doubk~door. : . . . ,
C\na t'lbn hooU ..nd a video
K I ttOldet ~ JlOlcn frocn bu~lnt'U in \ht'~ ol,~~"' CCl\~t>ri 1me~
a m and noon u ••• 11 mmt amt uc:t .. -........
'1dco Ile ~ from I
In the' 20() Nll"Wt'l_..
bt1'Itta : 15 L m
frida).
fdwuu'y the U.S. Na~y •• 197~ a. aid. tW
Tmai a..t bit ftalhliPt. he al--was au.ched u • ~ t0 ik ftec1
lcFdly llW· 1WO men lfY1-. t9 bftak MariftiCI. he aid.
into a car in Ibo alle'J behind has Potiitt Ch~( 8111 Payne. who pra-
rnicknc:e in downtown Hunaintton cn~cdaplaqurtoCam~•id Beach he IS .. , CT)' mth~ b)' Ctlamtl ~
Payne said. -They put themxl'U oa
lbt liAc. In somt ca~ they llC'tuall)
bold people do•n until pal>ec ar·
.\. aok1 nna 'all.ltd at UOO
ITpMed uokn Sundal &om a ~on lhC aJt H wa . • • • \n c~umatcd S6lS lD aub and
ctothina "'Cft ~toam from a car
r\td twda)' 1!\abl aloft& thr Jilted lover wrecks Mesa home
c.ati.~ called police W'lth a Rerivc honon CllC1' mootb from ~ ol lhe c.lprill ind their NcWhbOdtood Waicb. cat •. Officeft caijpt YI> with lbe .. be P'Ollk art ftal heron. ..
"'c." 000 of ,_,ri< Coast li · •a). • • • ~ fllopW midc'at tokl
Saturday thl1 tOmC.'OM had .
tn the a s SI.)
" of•tnm
' •
..
. 1 ; -
·IRA terroris.t bomb kills 3 Strike called Death toll 1nountin' from
at birthplace hospital tragedy in ndla British soldiers in Holland ofSolidarity .,,,..AsMdate4P'"• . .
NEW DELH 1-A new win& on a three-story children s ho p1tal coll a~
ROERMOND. Netherlands (AP)
-lnsh Republican Army auemllas
who killed thrtt Bnt1sh soldu~rs and
uvurcd thrtt an a car bombina and an
ambush may have c=st'apcd from the
Netherlands. police said today.
"It is cas) to escape." pohce
spokesman Louis Steens told re-
porters ;n Roermond, six males from
the West German border He said 1t
takes ··a shon lime to get away"
~ugh relat1v~ly open borde~ with
Germany and Belgium.
One Briush airman was killed and
two injured an this southeastern Ctt)
9o'ben their car was spra)ed with
automatic weapons fire earl) Sunda~
morning. An hour later. a car bomb in
Nicuwberacn. 30 miles nonh of
(tocrmond. exploded. k1ll1ng t"o
8ritish airmen and se'erely injured a
third ..
Police said the t"o attacks on the
six ~rviccmen. who were v1s1ting !rom their bases 1n West German).
were closely coordinated.
There are no border controls for pas~nger cars crossina the Dutch-
Belgian border 30 males from
Rocrmond. The West German
border 1s more tightly controlled but
also has some unmanned crossings at
n1gh1.
ThC' IRA anacks were the group's
first an the Netherlands since the 1979
sla) ing of Bmaan 's ambassador. Bnt-
1~h forces 1n West Germany were told
toda) 10 take extra precautions when
tra,ehng in or near the Netherlands.
Signs at bordC"r crossina.s near
Roermond said "BFG (Bnush ForttS
m German>) Persons Advised Not
To Enter Holland."
The lnsh. British and Dutch gov-
ernments 1mmed1atel) condemned
the attacls on the Bnush soldiers
The Bnllsh go,emmenl said the SI\
airmen v.ere off dut) and unarmed
"hen attacked
In Belfast, Nonhem Ireland. the
IRA cla1mtd responsibtlity Sund:ty.
Stecns told reporters today that
"therc were a few witnesses who
spoke about a person they saw" in
Roermond when three Royal Air
Force enlisted men were fired on after
actting into their car parked outside a
local cafo. "It was a man." Stecns said.
Senior ~.arcraftsman Ian Shmner.
20. died instantly. while a fellow
airman was listed 1n senous con-
dition at a local hospitaJ and a third
was treated for minor shoulder m-
JUn~. The in1ured men were not
1den11fied
In the N1euwbergen attack the car
carT) mg the thrtt service was tom
a pan b) the blast as 11 pulled out of the
parking 101 of a discotheque. Two
ai rmen -John Miller Read, 22. and
John Baxter. 21 -were killed and a
third. who was not 1den1ified was
SC\ erel) injured.
WARSAW (AP)-Workm went todayinthenonhemstateofKasnmir 1ndalocalreponersa1d 11 pcopledied.
on strike today It the Lenin shipyard Another repon said 30 people were killed ... It is a terrible s1aht up here. Ne> one
ah Gdansk. l>irthplac:e or the Soli-knows how many children have died or are dy1oi." Kashmir Tames reponer
darity independent trade movement, Arun Joshi said after visitin& the site. "Pohce and army rescue teams ~~~e w
government and opposition spokes· far ma~ed to acoount for JS peo9le, includina 11 dead." "I heard ch!ldren
men said. moanina in the rubble. he said ... They may be dyina." "At least ?S ~ • ren
Government SPoktsman Zbianiew and their parents or attendants are involved in the trqedy," Josh.• ''"d when
Augustynowicz said be did not know contacted by telephone in Jammu. Kashmir's wmtercapital 340 miles north of
how many h1pyard worken were New Delhi.
taking pan in thestnke. It followed an
appeal by Solidaritr, leader l..cch
Walesa Sunday for a 'day of action"
to support strik1n1 steelworken in
southern Poland.
A banner at the shipyard gate said
··s11-ln Strike," said Andrzej
Gw1azda. a local Solidarity leader in
Gdansk. speaking by telephone. He
said the smke began between I :30
p.m. and 2:30 p.m.
Ex-pollce official beld ln •laylng
MEXICO CITY -A former poh~ official has been detained.in the kilhna
of a journalist in Tijuana 11 days qo. the aovemment news agency No:iamcx
said Sunday. Gustavo Romero Mesa, director of the Non hem BaJ• Cah om••
state jud1c1al police, said V1ctoriano Medina. a former group head an the forct.
was a~ted followina invesllptions of the death of the JOumahst. Not1mex
said. Hector Felix Miranda, 47, a sat(ncal columnist who was c~d1tor of the
weekl) Zeta, was killed April 20 whale dnvmi to work At the 11me. a
spokesman for the state prosecutor's office 1n T1Juana said shots ~re fired
from an a1Homat1c 12-gauge shotgun from a brown pickup true~ "tth a camper
shell.
Australlan yacht deslgner dead
Plane loses
3engines,
land& safely
Israelis shutdown
Palestinian paper
The strike was proclaimed m all
depanmenls of the shipyard ans! at
least 3.000 people were panic1pating,
accordtnJ to Walesa. the 1983 Nobel
Peace Pnze laureate who is employed
as an tlectnc1an at the plant. Walesa's
remarks were reported by Jacek
Kuron. a scmor Sohdanty adviser '" Warsaw
SYDNEY. Austraha -Ben Lcxcen. des11ner of the yacht that ended the
United States' 132-)car dominance of the Amenca's Cup compeu11on. died
Sunday after a heart attack. He was 52 Lcxctn's unique winged-keel design
enabled Austraha II to defeat the New York Yacht Club defender Liberty.
skippered by Dennis Connor, and win the cup offNC"wpon. R.1 . in 1983. The
United States won back the America's Cup in 1987 wh en Connor skippered
Stars & Stripes past defender Kookaburra. which was not dt's1gned by Le'cen.
Also today workers at an elec-
tronics factory m southwest Poland
ended a one-da) work stoppage after
the> obtained a pron;ii~ for a SI 5 a
month pa) ancrea~ and possible l J further increases later in the year. Contras demand talks outs de N. caragua
TOKYO(AP)-A Un11edA1rhncs
Boeing 747 with 258 people aboard
landed safely toda) at New Tokyo
International Airport after three ofats
four engines failed. an a1r!Jne official
said.
None of the 239 pascngcrs and 19
crew members aboard UAL Flight 97
from Los Anaeles to Tokyo were
injured. said the official. Katsuro Isa.
Isa said the Boeing 747-100 landed
at 3: 17 p.m C 11 I 7 p.m POT) with
emergenc} vehicles !>landing b) at the
airpon 1n Nanta .ao tr11les northeast
of Tokyo.
He said the aircraft lost the use of
one enJJne O'-er the Pacific Ocean
approx1matel) one hour and 15
m inutes before landing. a second
engine about 30 minutes la ter and a
third e~e JUU pnor lo landmg.
Isa said the captain requested and
was granted an .. expedited approach
and emergenq 'chicles standing b) ...
JERUSALEM (AP)-Israel closed
a Pales11n1an weekl> today. charging
it v.as funded b) terrorist groups. and
a Palesun1an teen-ager was elec-
trocuted while chmban& on a ullht) ~k "ith an outlawed Palestinian
"the lntenor Ministry shut down
the Jerusalem-based Al Awdah. a
weekly published 1n English and
Arabic, determining 1t was .. a tool for
terror organazat1ons:· accordmg to
manis1ry spokeswoman Tova
Elm son.
The closure order was dehvercd
today to magazine ednor Ibraham
Kareen. who also heads the Palestine
Press Service.
The press scrv1~ ""as a key source
of information on the occupied
tern tones before it was banned for Sill
months begmning March 30. It has
mamtaineo contacts with fore ign
JOumalists.
lsraeh officials ha ve padlocked
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SC\ eral .\rab ntws organizauons
since unrest erupted in the occupied
termones five monlhs ago. They
cont<:nd the organ1za11ons have help-
ed fuel .\rab nots.
Ka reen denied Al Awdah received
funding from terror groups. He said
mone~ to run the magazine came
from sub~nbers
"This was ~ pohucal decision."
Kareen said
Kareen said .\I Awdah. which was
founded St\ )Cars ago and has a
combmed nrculauon of about
10.000. wa!. the first Palest1n1an
pubhcauon 10 in ten 1ew Israelis face
to face" in an effon to promote
dialogue.
"Now. the onl ) relauonsh1p left 1s
of occupied and occupier." Kareen
said. "The occupier wall hilrass. the
occupied will resist. and dreams of
ha-. rng a dialogue ... seem the product
ofna1\ete"
opposition spokesmen said.
The work stoppa~e at the Dolmel
electronics plant 1n Wroclaw in-
volved about about half of the plant's
3.500 workers. said oppos111on and
go .. emmen1 spokesmen
MIAMI -Contra leaders outraged over actions of the Sand10istas said
the) want the next round of peace talks outside Nicaragua. while President
Daniel Onega has insisted that any new d1scuss1ons take place in the country.
Two of the fi ve-member Nicaraguan Resistance. Adolfo Calero and Joaquin
Chamorro. returned here Sunday following the second round of stalled talks
Fighting in Beiiut claims 12 lives
BEIRUT (AP) -Shell blasts and
staccato bursts of gu nfire shook the
capital 1oda} as pohce reported 12
people died and JS were ""ounded an
factional fighting m Palestm1an refu-
gee camps and nc1ghbonng Shute
Moslem slums
Meanwh1 le.1hc S)nod ofMaronite
Catholic bishops met m an emerg-
enq session at the residence of the
communtl) 's patriarch to mvestigate
the k1dnapp1n&. tonure and kilhng of
Monsignor .\lbert Khreish. 53. head
of the Marontte Spmtual Affairs
Court.
The meet10$ was chaired b) the
Nasrallah Sfe1r. patriarch of the
850.000 Maronues who make up
Lebanon's largest Chnst1an com-
munit)'.
Police said KhrC'1sh's bullet-nddled
bod) was found Sunday b) a bird
hunter m a pine tree forest.
Guomen kidnapped the pnesl
from his home 1n Joun1eh. a Chnst1an
port north ofBearut . .\pnl :!6. He was
m his pa1amas ~hen his bod) "as
found.
Khte1sh was the nephew. of
Cardinal Mar .\nton1os Bu tros
Khre1sh. the Maronites' former pain-
arch
Pohces.a1d there were scars 1nd1cat-
1ng ph)sical torture on Khmsh's face
and that he had been shot at lt'ast JO
umcs.
Metal fatigue found in Hawaiianjet
KAH ULUI. Hawau (AP)-Detailed analym
of a Jetliner that had pan of its fuselage blown off
"h1le fl) 1ng at 24.000 f«t found cracks apparentl)
caused b) metal fatigue. a federal official said
In an 1nten 1e" on NBC-TV's .. Toda)·· show.
Nall said that althou$lJ the general quesuon of
metal fa ngue m older Jetliners has been discussed
and debated 1n the 10dustf) for ~ears. the safet~
board '-IC"ed the Aloha acc ident as calling
"s1gn1ficant attention .. to the problem
10 stable cond111on with bums and lacera11ons.
nursing supervisor Beverly Perreira said.
"What appears preliminaril) to be fatigue
crac~1ng" <1.1.as found at sill nvet holes on a metal
stnp runntng the length of the aircraft. Joseph Nall
of the National Transportation Safet) Board said
a1 a news conference Sunday night.
The cracks. measunng 0.2 to 0.6 inch. were
d1sco .. ered on the metal strip. called the No. I 0
stringer. that ran above the passenger wtndows on
the left side of the Aloha Airlines' Boeing 737. Nall
said
The plane made an emergenc) landtng
Th ursday at the airport in 1h1s Maui Island town
The 01eh1 from Hilo to Honolulu earned Q5
people. including 89 passengers.
T"ent) feet of the plane's upper fusel~e covering first class passengers tore awa). A 01 t
auendant who had worked 37 years with Alo a.
Clarabelle Lansing. 57. of Honolulu. apparcntl)
was sucked from the plane" to her death, while 61
other people were injured.
The seven. who "'ere s1t11ng '°the area of the
rupture. mainly m window seats. received their
cuts from Ja&&ed sections of what remained of the
fuselage. Nall said. They also suffered w10d burn.
he said.
Onl y 30 percent of the fuselage remained
intact at the point of the rupture
Nall said tesh found that repairs ma de last
Noverr.ber 10 1wo cracks in the plane's No 4
stringer. located fanher up the fuselage. appeared
to have held.
Nall said all of the plane's nvets. as well a~
those on Aloha's other 737s. were betng tested
electronically 1n an effort to find any other cracks. Seven rema10eq at Maui Memorial Hospital ..... ,
A service bulletin issued by ~ing in Apnl
told a1rl1nes to look for corroding fasteners that
hold pieces of the fuselage together
Dukakis turns
blas~to Bush
By The A11oclated Press
Dcmocrauc front-runner Michael
Dukak1s called George Bush a "blank
slate" and urged ham to speak out on
breaches of law and ethics 1n the
Reagan adm1n1strat1on. Jesse Jack-
son talked today of "a histoncal
d1mens1on .. of has campaian after
spending the night at a union or-
gamzer's home. "(
Jackson, in comments today in the
Cleveland suburb of Berea. Ohio. said
he'd stayed at the modest home of
steC"lworker union organizer Valen-
tino Fulimeni to bring attention to
laborers who he said have been h.\Jn
by administration economic policies.
The tWb Democratic rivals and
Bush. the guag&ntecd Republican
nominee. were campaigning today an
Ohio on the eve of the state's pnmary.
The D1stnct of Columbia and In-
diana have primaries the same day,
but Ohio offers the bigest delegate
pnze.
f ,;1\\ Ot lice ..... (){
High court backs manufacturer
against retailer in antitrust suit
WASHINGTON (AP) -The Su-
preme Court said today a manufac-
turer does not always violate federal
antitrust law when agrecrnJ with one
rcta1ler to stop domg business with
another who sells at discount prices.
The Justices. by a 6-2 vote. said
such a "ven1cal restraint'' impo5'..'d by
a manufacturer on a retailer becomes
illegal only when "it includes some
agreement on pnct or price levels ...
The dcc1s1on. a significant one for
antitrust law. 1s a victory for Sharp
Electronics Corp. and a setback for a
fo~er Houston retailer of Sharp
calculators.
Business Electronics Corp .. owned
and operated by Kelt on
Ehrensberger. was the exclusive re-
tailer ofSharp cakulaton in Houston
from 1968 to 1972.
DurirtJ that period. Sharp became
dissatisfied with DEC's pcrformancr.
Sharp contended that it was unhappy
with BEC's failure to meet sales
quotas but a federal JUry found that
Sharp was dissatisfied with DEC's
policy of selhna calculators at prices
lower than those suggested by Sharp.
Sharp appointed Hartwell s Office
World as a second retailer of its
calculators in Houston in 1972. and
in 1973 terminated DEC's dealership.
Hartwell had told Sharp that it would
quit distributing its products unless
Sharp ended its relationship with
BEC.
BEC then sued Sharp. and a federal
JUry awarded DEC $600.000 in dam-
ages. Under federal antitrust law. that
amount was tripled to S 1.8 million.
The Sth U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeals.. however. threw out the jury
verdict and sent the case back for a
new trial.
Today·s Supreme Coun decision
upheld the appeals court rulina.
Writing for the hiJ}l court. Justice
Antonin Scaha said the tnal Judge
erred 1n telling the JUf) 11 could rule
against Sharp 1ftt found lhat BEC was
terminated 10 reduce pnct competa-
taon m the Houston retail market.
"There has been no showing here
that an agreement between a manu-
facturer and a deakr to terminate a
'pnce cutter,' without a funher agree-
ment on the pnce or pncc levels to be
charged by the remaining dealer. al~~s1 always tends to restrict com-
pcuuon and reduce output "
He added that Juries must apply a
"rule of reason" approach -rather
than any au1omat1c rule -in deci-
ding whether such agreements be-
tween a manufacturer and retailer
amount to illepl pric~fixing.
.. In the vast m~orityof cases. it will
be extremely difficult for the manu·
fact1:1rer to convince a jury that its
mot1vat1on was to ensure adequate
services.
RUSSELL S. KERR Congre88man 's aide leaves
poem prior to his suicide PERSONAL INJURY LAW
ATTORNEY FEES r.: fRH CONSULTATION
(_, f [[ SASfO ON ' or
R£COV(~Y
0 NO f([ CHARGES
UNllt CAS£
COMPL( TEO
ALL l~Jl"RIE
=AUTO MR C't'CU = MALPRACTIC( = illP & f All = WORI< RELATED
:.-WRONGFUL O(AlH = UNINSURCO MOTORIST Cl AIM
1.1•. Ol\N>unt to ~nlur tltlit'n'
HOl ~~ < \LL' If' \EEO•:n
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shoppln m all doesn't makepeopletwtces rich.··
-----~------------..... ~----~------------~----------------~------~----~·
Condors should
be left to fate
As the belt and the briahtcst race to combat the ravages of Acqu1~ Immune Deficic"cy Syndrome. as they search for
an antidote for cancer and a cure for the common cold.
another group of Clpcns is dcvouna its resources to
preserving an endanscrcd species.
Usini tweezers and finscrtips. man tned to help the first
condor chick conceived in captivity break out of its shell at the
San Diego Wild Animal Park last week. The chick couldn't
seem to make tt on its own, which seems. typical of North
Amenca's largest btrd.
1:his chick was conceived by the only known active
breeding pair of the nearly extinct California condors. The
others are either disinterested or too younf
A successful hatchini would bring the nown population
of condors to 28, all of whn::h live in ca{>tivity. The condor can
only survive in a zoo and then only wtth much assistance.
Of the 27 survivors. 13 were hatched from eggs taken in
the wild over the. past five years.
Man is attempting to guarantee what nature would not, to
ensure what the clements could not.
The question is why?
Whether it be G od's will. evolution or cruel fate. doesn't
it seem as though the condor was not meant to survive into
modem times?
Fair trcide bill a
victim of politics
.)
President Reagan vowed to Congress he would veto
proposed foreign trade legislation unless a key amendment
were deleted. It wasn't, and he will.
The trade bill is doomed by the provision that requires
American workers to be given at least 60 days advance notice
of U.S. plant closings.
It seems Congress d oesn't have the votes to override
Reagan, who chose to support Big Business on this one. That
in iLSClf is no real surprise.
What is puzzling is what in the name of capitalism does
one issue have to d o with another unless protectionism 1s the
title o f the doomed bill?
T here 1s much merit in the trade legislation. enough so 1t
seems a waste to let the whole package collapse for want of
some wrapping.
On the other hand, Security Pacific employees who will
be out of work May 20 when the Harbor & W ilson branch an
Costa Mesa closes m ight have another opinion on the issue of
advance notice.
Insurance reform
O nly rn Cahfom ia would the 1nsuranc'e industry finance
a costly television ad campaign criticizing high insurance
rates. That's nght. those annoying commercials m which
husbands and wives console one another over how the) can
afford to pay their auto-insurance bills are sponsored by the
folks who mail those sky-high bills.
There's a method to tho industry's madness. however. It
is sponsoring one o f eight proposed insurance initiatives now
attempting to qualify for the November ballot. The insurance
industry wants Cahfom1a to adopt a "no-fault" insurance
system. in which each motorist's insurance company pays to
rcpairhisorhercar. regardless of who is at fault in an accident.
The state's trial lawyers oppose no-fault. because it hmllS
lawsuits to cases involving senous injury.
Instead of requiring voters to choose among conf11ctrng
in1t1at1 ves. the Lqislaturc should get its act together and
adopt meaningful insurance reform. Issues as complex as
insurance reform arc better ironed out 1n committee hearings
and legislati ve compromise then through the initiative
process .... Unfortunately. the insurance industry and the tnal
lawyers are major contributors to legislative campaign~.
That's why most lawmakers would rather duck their
resoonsibihty than risk the wrath of one side or the other.
rte Tribue of Su D~
Desert protection
Four years ago. Sen. Pete Wilson played his cards close to
his vest before helping Sen. Alan Cranston enact a bill that
added 1.8 million acres to California's majestic national
forests.
The circumstances preceding the enlightened California
Wilderness Act of 1984 arc not unlike those surroundin3 Sen.
Cranston's proposed California Desert Protection Act.
The act is scheduled for a committee vote in the near
future.
Surely a compromise similar to the Wilderness Act can be
achieved to safeauard one of the statt''s most precious and
f ragjle natural wonders.
The Cranston measure, S7. would place 1.S million acres
of California's dcsen land under protection of the National
Parle Service.
It would set aside thrte national parks and 82 wilderness
areas in the 2S million..,-e California Dcsett Consenation
Area now administered. by the U.S. Bureau of Land
Mangement.
The bill wouJd enlarlic Death Valley and Joshua Tne
-national monuments and uPIJ'Ade them 10 national ~
status.
It would crate a new l .S millfon..acre Mojave National
Patk from federal land east ofBantow, and it would desipate
4.S million tcrcs of wiklemeu now manqed by the BLM under the 1980 C.lifomia Daen Plan • .__ __ ...,_,.._. ____ _
... {Wilib"ifs) mission oow. as before with the Wildttnesa
Act, is to be a cawya1 in mc.'idiatina a compromile bill that
would be acuptable to Sen. Cranston and the cnnviroftrneft-tali~ to fdloW Republicans and thus the presidelal
•cetll ...,.
. ~·::' 1!-J. I ......
, .... c• .. ,.., r.., ,..., , ...
(Mir .. , .... ,.. ......
Only developers benefit
from unlimited growth
Thcrt 1s lots of mom~" to ~ made
from bad planninJ Th~ dcHlo~rs
""ho make 11 finan~ elec11ons for the
officials \\ho do the planning. <That 1s
wh) some of us fa, or publicly
financed clecuons ) But aside from
the de' elope rs and their hand-picked
offirn1ls. wh) ~ould anvone else "'ant
more gro\\ th"
I can sec some reasons lf)ou arc in
the dog-cat-dog world of corporate
takeovers. growth means ~ou can
,obblc up some other com pan}' I.Ack
of gro"' th ml'3ns someone else ma~
gobble )OU up 5o an C\t'C'Ull VC IA-hO
"Ill lose h1~ Job 1f his compan~ 1s
acquired. ma) 'Cf1 "ell develop a
"gro"'-or-d1c·· habit of thinking For-
tunatcl>. a ell~ or count} can remain
ha pp). prosperous and the same size
for man) 'cars 1A-11hout danger of
beina gobbled up
1r )Ou pro' 1dc legal sen ices. piano
lt"ssons or ne"' cars, making mOl"C'
income-depends on attracting more
customc~ so gro"'th looks lake an
cas) -.a) 10 .. ucc~s I ~hcve 1h1s 1s
"'h\ the l hamba of com mer~
alwa> s fa' o rs more gro"' th But of
cou~ growth also bnngs more
law)ers. piano teachrrs and car
dealers. who take a"'a) ~our cus-
tomer\. The net effect 1s no 1mpro,c·
ment at all The safe way to suC'Ct'ss 1s
the hard "a) G1\C beuer ~nice and
lower prices.
If you read financial pro1ccuons.
you get the idea that office bu1ld1ngs.
hotels and shopping malls pour
mone) into the cit ) trcasul) and pa)
for all the ~rv1ccs the ~idcnts
require. This 1s the sc1cnt1fic c~cu~
for mor<' growth. C11y officials who
believe this nc"cr understand wh\
taxes ,ct higher instead or lower as
their c it) becomes b1grr. 81g<1t}
cnme and detcnorauon overwhelms
them while the figures sho"' the\ arc
scn1n' ncher and richer Eventual!>
the) ,ct so nch they're flat broke
W hat the officials don't realize 1s
that "'eahh consists of income ~r
capita TIA l\l' a \ mam people t"ICl'
as man' Offill'\ J nd '"ICC as mam
shopping mJll'> dr11 . .,n·1 make ~Oflll"
t"' u:c a., nl h Bui d ccted offiu;il.,
e' 1dcn1h rl·J l11t 'a' clearl) that 11
puts '"' llC a'> mul h monc\ 1n thc-
dc, cloper., pt.1'-kt'I'> and thus in thl·1r
campaign IA.Jr l hC\I\
Onl· ol1ht·1 r ta' oni.: rcmark'11S that
'"L1k I!> grOIAlh lf\OU don't gro"' \.OU
die-·· What an un"1\e analog>'
B1olog1lalh unl1m11cd gro"'th mt'ans
1us1 om: thing cancer .\nd the rolled
inner lorn o l big 1..1t1M ccnainh
rc~mbk thl" dcla\ 1ne, 11\Sut' ol
canccroui. gro1Ath
Adole~cm:e 1s the lime for gro" th
One oftht' most efTClll\e 10S«11c1dcs
1s a hormone that kccps ca1crp1llan
gro"'ing and gro"'1ng The-.. become
huge catcrp1lla~ but the) ne,er form
a pupa or become .tn adult There 1s
no nc't generation l ncontrolled
grov.th 1s a dead t'nd
To ui. II means runnin' out ol
"'atcr "e ha'e alread\ had one
drought and sporad1l episodes of
"'ater rat1llning in Southern ( al1 -
fom1a. Our popula11o n has gro"'n
s1m:e 1hen What .,.,11 hap~n "'h<'n
Arizona stans taking 1t~ share of the
Colorado R1"er" In 1he past. agncul·
tural >Aater has formed an emcrscnq
rcscne that could be d1vened to the
c111es in time ofdrouaht But"'<' ha'<'
bet·n pushing agnculturc out and
turning Southl·m Califom1a into one
big c11\ I don"t ltno"' when the cns1s
"i'R arr1' e. but I do kno"' that when 11
comes. "'e "'on·1 ~ ablt' to goaflcr the
people "'ho caused 1t and tak<' their
millions back
.. But population growth 1s in-
t'' 11able ·· 1s the en This ra1St"' a
larger ISSUC. "'h1ch II IS unpopular 10
face .\human population v.llh pubhc
health and unhm11ed resourttS "'111
double about<''<'" ~~\Cars .\1 that
rate there IS SOOO One ~rs.on per
square root all o-.cr the ,lobe In other
words. there 1s no such thin& as
.. unlimited resources ·· Watt'r
At.w
BEEK
energ) metals land some1hina 1s
go ing to pinch Populauon growth
must \top That 1s "'hat 1s 1n<'' 1table
The quesuon 1s "'111 v.e stop 'Olun-
tanh and humanch "'h1le thert are
'>1111 "enough r~urm per capita to
make life enJO)able" Or "'Ill "'e
charge bhndl) at that bamer -.here
congestion P"' auon. ho~lnsnC"SS.
cnme. ~ dt'p~s1on and war stop
gro"' th for us 1n "'3) .. too painful to
contemplate"'
>\nd k.-s look at the record 'W hat
has gru"' th brought us" Conantion
air polluuon and gndlock 4-sk som<'·
one "'ho mo'cd here 1n the 19~
"A-bt"lher Or.in.ge Count} 1s a n1cn
plac<' 10 II\ c no" that 11 was 1hnl
'uv..;11.ia's \OU cen dn'c 10 minutes
alrou to"'n 10 re~'h Bullock's or
Buffums In those dau. \OU had to
dn'<' ~(I m1nut<"s to ·Santa Ana 10
rc~ch Bullod."\ o r ButTums 4'rr wr
~lier off'
The human ra~ hu passed
through ltS adolescence .\t\er
adolesc-cnce comes matunt) "
health~ person. and a health.) S0C1et)
do not gro"' ph) s1call> after the) att
mature <\ person turns to grov.th 1n
o ther "'a)s. gro"'th in skill. 1n S)m-
path) in taSt<'. 1n "'1~om. 1n loH "
health~ soc1et) turns to vawth 1n
health care m culture 1n JUSll~. 1n
educauon "-e can ach~'e this. We
still ha,ecnough re~u~ West.and
on the th~hold of l 'top1a We ha~
the lno"' ledge and the mtt'lhgcncc to
crtatc a aolden age L~t us use that
mtelhgcn~'
Ce/IUD.Alsl Allu IJ,e8 lh'fl ,.
,..-~..,_rt Bea~.
Federal government should
not be involved in child care
Second only to the .. war .. on drugs.
the Cf) amon, Democnus is for
federal ch1ld<arc programs.. In this
(as in the I()(). Year War on drup) the
Democrats arc not alone. Althouah
the pnnc1pal mcasu~ bcfo~ Con-
the .\ct for Bctttt Cluld Catt
BC). has the suppon of man)
<'publicans. thert arc other
measures float1na about. most promi-
nent!) one sponsort'd by Sen. Omn
Hatch. ABC c.lls for a pant ofSl.5
b1lhon m fcdttal aid to da)-arc
crntcn.
The problem 1scenainty K"Utc. The
hia,hnt ~rttntqr of Amman
wo~n ever now work. and ~
who ba'c htlk chiklttn at home
endutt problems tha1 art a matter o(
conttm. Whott ronttm!
Well. ABC would <fisln'butt money
to tht mtes. and the stattt would
mdow ch11d«rt C'eftlttl.. Parents
whottincomeis l Upetetntorleaof
ahctr itatt•s median ~kt be en tilled
10 .-of the e.c;r -t 1 is onTy PIUina interest lhal. for imantt rn
the Slltc of New Jmiey: I bily
eami"'I 146.920 WMld riliift for
-NI is in drca fedcfil dilld ewe.
Now. the AIC bill llC"cr miad that
its spomon ~ Qf its dtsipa IO = i~ of opa'Mioft.
with lhe '"°" nduii'W't draia.I ol .... P'lfte&s rtttivhle 9'd aid
.ad no&. fot DMaOCC. ftrit IO ltnd lhcir ~,ar-dd toacf\~il'ed
~ cam -'° do ID would vw. tM provdiOe OrctllitUI * ...... •• ol ctwrtt. Md llatt, the .,..,,.. «J8C'ide.
SolMl• 1 be1ftl~tSn'\ a lbfln Of' OUC ...,.... IO a
publid) Nft ilckart mlttf'. or 10
tc*' ct.urdl -or IO I~ •
'" n.chanF ror ba ifrvlta ••pan o(&Mdl .h tuWIM1 ~ikt
arrangcm~nt that could onl) at-· -------------
tenuat('. the authont) of th<' parent
o'er the lh1ld lndC('d. most of the
cnt1c1sm le' dcd ap1nst .\BC ~ such
as conscr,at1,c soc1olog1s1 ucorge
Gilder focuses on th<' dans<'r of
rcmo' 1ng 1hc child from the influence
or such persons as the mother. or wch
person as. g1' en her choice sh<' -.ould
ela-1 to place that child un<kT dunn1
the cn11cal formati\e H"ars
Bui \ul"('I\ the ma1or cnt1cism
should be h.3S<"d on the prrpostcrous
nouon that th<' fe-tkral 10,cmmmt
ha\ an) role "hateH'T in sponsonna
and financina a social provam 1.0
orpn1call~ the rnpons1b1ht) of a
lo>Aer echelon of 10,("'fllmcnt. It 1s
d1sma~ 1n1 that af\cf 1ir' en ,~ars ot
lht' m°'t consttVa111oe ldm1n1s-
trahon M~ Herbert Hoo,tt, thit
1cka should~ instantl) attcpttd th.al
1f chald care " nttdcd. lht' fedenl
&0'm1mcnt nttds 10 provide 1t ~most no thouaht is ai\:C-11 10 I.be
mm.t Ob\ IOU~ objtt1ion ... hic'b ii 1ha1
tbt mont) C'OUtt1C'd 1n. ~· Nf'w J~. flo-..s OUI Of C..-Jent') 1n thit
fin• IMllntt. So that. far tM
c--. kney com"'uni•r;.rnttmcd. i1 mjaht as w.d1 bt a 1.u. •"th
otthaPI thi di . that
)tt11q •ill. an kt. bt ttnd "I mort
money to W 1 on undtT t
proposed fedtra1 ~' thu lt ..-ould be ltnd1~to1t1 own au.irnt 1f
lt ~ ... da)-<art «nltn uodcr local Cllllft<l.'t&illoft
'
WILLIAM F.
8ucKLEY
: L £TllP ~
---~-~~ ---
Age n ot a
limit to
achievement ,
j
To lhc Editor 1 A 9-)ear-old bo) has com~
throuah mastcnna the~~
1nstrumentaf sluUs of atn:-ra.ft piloe·
1ni. a f11.du across the Uruted 5'ata..
But all t"M "'~> T"On) Alteneena ._
nc' er allov.ed to forset he was only
•• A little bo) ••
Ton) "1ienccna. whole ~ •
above "'as bl.lanced t) -rm a 9--yat•
old man" nadt a saatcmmt oa bd:Wf
of children e"C'f')..,.herc .. , knew l
could do 11 I had no doubts. ..
The Ft Worth a1rpon oontrolkr
thouaht he was talluna to a prt ~
h<' heard Ton) 's ch1ld1sh voi~. But
th<' common m1scalcula11on made by.,
mo't all .. adults'" ts that anyone wMkt
the arb1tranl> mandated qic of 11 iJ
100 )Ouni. 1~ns1blc and there--
fore inC'llpablc of mature conduct.
People are amazC'd that Tony
-\licnicna actuall) accomplished
"hat most ~oplc o'er the• of II
"'"ould ne,er in their hfrtamc. ew:n
thinl about attemplln8-Why dC'pnvc
an,one becau~oftheir yout.bful._
of an)1h1n1 the) can. by apptopria.le
e' atuauon. &l ve reasonable assurance
that their commument IS lf!OWDe.
rcspons1 blc probable penonnaacc.
~t a 11me 1n their hves when mak
adok'sttn ts can l"CC)de lhcir tcXual
cncounlttS in 20 minutes or ku
compa~ to an hour for the •vallF
4 5-~e.r-ofd man '"C'ducation-in tht
l 'n1tt!Mtates continues lo ~Ir
b1bk-thump1n1 sermons about the
~1nfulcharaoerofman's most natural health~ e~prnston of human love.
"'ed1sh ~outh att mandatory <K-12)
\C'~-cd cumculum. the best 10 the
world for a nallon with tht lowest
tet'n....,e prqnHo~ Amman bds..
ac1ualmn1 love w11h minds twtS\Cd
to bclie\e their reproductive orpns
and acts are din). can claam the
"orld's h1a,hesL Top that off with
runa"""a> ~Jt cnmcs, rampant v~
nercal d1stascs and all of 11 under the
1mpnmatur oftotahtanan gush
The~ 1s a high school he1'C where
studtnts att rout1ncl) sub.)CC'ted to
d1saust1ngl) unprofcssaol\'1 conduct.•
pr-orane la"-ua,c. sell.1st amponunuy
and degrading. physical abuse that:
makes the Patcnon. NJ Easu1ck
h1&h school's baitball--bat. bullhorn-'
toun1 pnnc1pal. Joe Clark a para-I
d11m of 1ntcrscholastte adminis. •
trau'e enha,htccnmcnl · ~ccord1ns to cndcntt el1C1tcd !
from ~tudcnts thcrt by one of the
nauon '> former chief 1nvntlpb~ t
attomc) i. pa~nts ~ mt1midaacd
from tesll~ 1n1 for fear of retahatJoa 1 b~ facult) backed ~ a fCl-louah. f
school board ard adnunistrauon ~dd the '~-real potential of com-1
prom1sul& a studcn1·s academic rc--1
cord aradua11on. collqie adm1u1on r
and carttr I
"'01 Iona qo. most of that h~ I
school's facult} SJJlled a pct1t1on to,
the school boa.rd comp1a.inana about•
the nepttH press lhC) ~~ ari · 1
from the school ncwspa . attribu
in11he1r pl1~t (no1 to t~ qua.lit}
their tcadun&). but to ·•tac1t of
supen-1saon and rcspons1btbty (read.;
ccnsorm1p) on the pan o( stuckntl wntcrs and their advuer .. (not a
C.C-Uh> mem~rbutcditoroftbe local
communit) n~pcf'). I ~CCPU'I I.ht blinders Oft the iA-
tcllcctual. sooal. phyPCal and man.I
ma1unt)' of youna people, iD the
name of say1ns .. no" to dfl9I and teen.,. se1ual acuv1ty tS JUSl u
benlOUs u \ht ecooonuc.. spjn1uaJ
and emotional u p&oatatton added lO
the suppression (inldlcctualty and
ph}"licall)') of duk1rn •·ho dart to
cb.allaw: and resist lhc Joe Oms
rnuquer9d;aQ1 as 1eachen an school
and a parenu at home
Wub an 1mponant mochficauon to
Harvard Unhersu' P'restdcol Ocrd
Bok: ··tr you think (quality) cducattoo
1s nptnsivc -tr') tll\orance ...
"I knew I routd do it. I bad oo
doubts.."
Thank )Ou. Ton) Abe~. Mr.
and MR. ~hc"'Fnaand fh11nitlst.tuc.:
tor Ed ttm<1l. for posiuvt reenfortt-
mcnt of youth pe>ecntial 10 acbirvc
1oals be)"Ond the cq:ICC\atioes aor-
mall)' 11\nbutcd :.~=NG
'• a 8rac:b
•
•
·May means economic recovery is another month older
By JOHN CUNNIFF ,,,.....,_....,..
NEW YORK - ( ompa~ to
other periods over the past two
decades. these are dull days '" the
marketplace.
"Thert arc no ne"' issues on thr
CC'Onom1c front." sa)s a report from
Data R~urccs Inc. supphrr of
economic numbtrs and prOJCCt1ons
to aovemment and andustry
About the only lhing ntw, 11sau.1s
that the allqedy overextended re-
covery 1s simply one month older
NeAt month. 11 ~m~ to ~uuest. tht'
news 1s hkel) to bt that the recovery 1s
older b) sttll another month. EH~l)one 1s watchintfor a nse o r
fall of 1ntt.'rcst rates, ut the rates
don't respond. lnOat1on seems to bt
safcl> tud.cd awa). for the moment at
least. Thl' dollar has stopped movmg
The stock market seems t1rtd of 1t all
Congr~~ and the White House
aren·t doang much to stir things. since
11 is ~ell known that any bnef ~od
of calm can be destro)ed by one 111-
timl·d proposal or l·areless comment
Besides. ifs an election )CM.
Even the tntde bill. onCt' lhought of
as landmark lqislauon. isn't likely to
make a very big d1fTercncc an the
econom). The consumer seems
neither vel) bullish nor beansh
In' e\tors hang around the sidelines
Quiet penadcs
Evel) nov. and then thert' 1s an
a11empt to producc a httk action 4.
report hints at 1nOa11on. but the nut
one buries the thought. Interest rates
Jiggk higher. but then fall back almost
all 1he wa\
, NYSE UPs & DowNs
NEW YORK (A~ -Tne foliwing lilt snows lhe New Mk St~ 11ch•nff •tocks and werr•nts that ve oone uP
lhe mosl •nd down the most r$ed Oil J:!'cent of chell1>e r99ardleu o volume Fndav
No ~urlllH traCSlng below S2 are incl· -~I •nd Pef'cent•ge chanoes are the di rrtwMtt the previous closing orlce and ridov's '2 P.m 0<lce
Ufl'S
N•me LA st ~ l MGMUA Com 11~ + 1 ' J Am SLFle If f I'.-. TPlorlnd 1 • ~ ',\
4 MCoro r•• t '• S MHI Group ''I j Harmanlnt 14\o + '• •oc•E•• o '!" I ''' e111ey tnc ~ ~-
' IC•r1IHd of 21 ' • pa 10 Fruh ofA 7 • ~ 11 Showboot s ~ '"> 1~ CentrnCo 2 , t '• I AGS CPI s 17~ ''I
,, l=°t\l"""'ira('o n '" ..£._ ....
NEW YOltK tA~I
NASDAO ..... tt.u ....... ,,..._, .... _ ...... ,~"
met11 .. ,_en H el 4 -.m. .~ ...... "'°"* reftl meAIHI ~~" ~· ''Si.Cr' ... Frld9Li. A~ rot 11.
At..,I" ''-I IS-16
AASKLI> 1 • 1" As: I 1, A ._ '>
Altv o' 1~ I~ , AMl\11 1l I) • A"18r ' II • 11 .. A.Meo :ro· , n 1 Amcut 11 > 11 AGrMt 11 17 • Amlc~ 6 7 > AMldl \ l'-p ,
.0.NllM JP. 32 • Ar19SA 16 > 11
.0. 4()1, Cl A=.A ......
.0. I S'• 7' Ar 3' At~t 6'• 17 ... ,,.... ) 1 . llanoH 11" 13 , 9•MJ.ftl IS 16 I I· 16 Il.!,.
''• l .. s .. s •
11 J7 " 17 ... II • ,,,, 13 ' . ,..,.
l '· , '• l6 • 31 , s ., & • 1t>. ,. l
I • I '• ,, . ,,
IS"' IS ' 1s1 .. 26 • 17 11 • ;~ .. fl!'• ' ' ' . ~: J': 7 • , ..
61 "
f'C1. Uo 11 2 Uo 7.6
Uo 1 s Up 7 4
UP 67 UP 63
UP 60 Uo 56 UP u Uo Up 56 Up u UP 1)1'
15 ArkonsosBs• ·~·· + "4
1, Oonotier s 16 t 14
1 Feno s l4'• t 1:.. IJ ~OlumbP1c 1 I • t ~ I t1ousewor II• + ~ 10 renscn Inc 21• t • y Dolln 11 ~ + l lntrsi8kr 10~ + '• 23 NortonCo ~l t 2 a 24 SunEtec 2i. + ,
2S WosPINofl n + I'.
DOWNS Name Lui _cii. l NlSemi WI 3 2 Vallev Ind 3 AmSPlipB
4 AmGenlCP "'t 5 McOrmlnt w t
6 vgrilv 7 N I Inc II Coo~rco 9 PolrckPtr
10 semisCo ~ 11 LC 12 CoastSvLn 13 SvcResour
''• 10 10 • 10 ...
•• 17 7 7. l()loo 10 1
1a II o
)•.. )""•
t . I ... .0'• 60'• IS'• 1' 12'· 2l u' I)'• ll • JP• , .. 1'• II,_ II ,
f0 f 10 I
IJ·J7 7· 16
I •I r16 .. . . .
14 .. H' 10 • 10 ' '"' ... 16' 11 11. n C2 •• , ..
)9 ' .a JO ' J7 ~-: n.:
21 • 11 .. ,... 1'. 10 ... 10 • 7 • ) ..
1S 1S • 2S 1S • lt~ l$!:
~.: ~~. r. > 11·. ~ l• , •• 21 • 11 ..
S'• S '• 141 .. '° . , ,_. •'·
II ' 'i'' ~~ ~: 11 • 21'• lO'· ll • • • • IS ~t_I It)!
~ ... ll'
' 76 > SI• • .. n, IS 16 I
2 1 -'. s ~ -,
6 ,
J. -.
3. -• 41. -~ 12 • -'• )l, -. 701, -I~ 1~, -,,
17'• -1 • • .
UP
UP UP
~o 49 49 UP •II UP UP
.. .. Up
UP UP UP
45 4S 43 42 UP '2
Pct. Ott 111
~ B 17 Off 7• g:: 74 73 Off 67 Ott 63 g: 6.2 62 59 ()fl S9
14 Boll8ern1o. \ 1&. -l SI IS EmryAF 6 8 -~ 'f Nortei. II~ -,
1 KaMt>Svc 2. -• 6 ~ v1Menv1lle 2. -• 6 W1nnenC1> 2. -'• 6
10 ~enltnLab 2. --... ~ 21 Plvron . , -• 22 lobirCo 2. -...
i! 23 US Home 2. -,,,
24 Mallet Inc 6'• -~ 2S C•IFedtP 7 'lti 26 NllHertge n ·~ -'•
OTC UPs & DowNs
NEW YORK !APJ -Tl'le following hst snows 1ne Over • tl'le • Coun1er stocks end worr ont\ tnat have DOM uo
ttie most •nd down Ille most be.ed °" oercent of change tor Friday. No secunlie\ tr.csing below S2 or 1000 snores ore included Net ond e>ercentoge cnange-s •re ll'le difference l)elwttn ltle Previous Closing
Pr•ce end Fndov's to\t or bid Of'lce
N•me I W\lnPubl 2 lnmedCP 3 HPSC wl
• Polvde.a S s1uar1Holl
6 Sones•• 7 Telecr•ll I AeroSyst Eng ~ Onc09ene 10 HomeUml'rSL 11 Texcel 12 RobOitSoft 1l TonsTov w t 14 8avouln1
IS CPlrCft 16 'fexcel wl 17 Keane s 11 8rae<:oro
19 Oot•lran
20 PersntOl1111 21 Reco1rn 27 Vie deFrance 23 BuckeveFn
24 ~etoCorp 25 reotvTch
26 Oldlfll 27 Holidav RV
N•nw 1 SoecllvComP 2 ><scribe l Nonometric 4 Enlr0t11cs S V kon1c.s 6 AmA1rcrf1 \ _ } Nov11PPI wtH I GollleoEI s 9 ProveneFds
10 Tronstnd s 11 llS 111111
12 CrouTreck
1l RePublhc ' 14 OistribLog
IS EIKtSensr s 16 SclentSoft 17 TuckerHld 18 8irdfindr un 19 ()r1home1 20 lntellE lee 21 LibtyHomA 22 PETCO 2J SummilTCh
24 SoulnlfeHld 25 Sc1comOa1a
UPS Lut CM Pct.
22 • + 11 • UP 41 3
3 • + I UP 4• 4 2"11 + ~ UP 35 7 2~ +11·16 UP JS~ II • + I~ Uo 24
15 1 + 3 Up 24
4 + >, UP 23 3 1 + ~ UP 11 7 • • + >,. Uo 2t 4 4'• + 1, ·uo 111. 31'! + 1 Up 17 4 3 +7·16 Up 17 1
.. 2 • + S· 16 Up 16 1
7 • + 1 UP 110 71. + ~ uo 1
1
I 2)• + ~ UP
IS + 2 Up 15 4 2 + ,._ Uo 10
14 • + 1>... UP U 0 2 • + . • uo 1133 • • + 1 UP 3 3 3'• t7·16 Up 12 J 6'• + >. Uo 125
4 1 t 1 UP 12 S 51·16 9·16 UP 125 3~ t )t UP 12 S 3~ + )t Uo IB
DOWNS ust a.a PC1.
4 • --1r. O'f 79 2 7 ., -~ Off 200
7 • -, ~ 112 4 • -,, 17 1
) l 14 3 2 5·16 -~ 14 0 3 • -,, 131
/ .• -1.'; h ~ 4~ -~ 11 ~ 31 .. -• ., 1111
1s>. -2 113 7 ~ 11 1 3. -~ 10 7 J. -~ 101
4. -,.., if 10~ • • -, 10 • , -., 10 51, -~ 91 7 >. 9 7 91 -I 95 7~ -95
2"9 -• ~ 9 s 5 ., 9 1
7>• -l.. I I -------
...
paytngupto
$186 too much
for r,ar Insurance.
C811GEICO.
GEICO has be~n s;1vmj{ ){ut1d dnH·1~
mom~}· on quality car m~u1tmce :--inn·
1Y:36. ln fact. a recent national ~ur\'e)' of
new GEICO aut11J)(•hcyh11lde1 .... ~h11wed
an a\·erage annual ~1\'111~ .... 11f $186 '
GEICO a lso ~ive you:
• Pe~malized t11\·t>ragt: t11 fit
your needs
• Con\'emenl pa} lllt'lll pl. m .... t1' fit
your budget
• Round-the-cl< ick "e'"' tL t'
• Fast. fair claim handlmR
•Free, no-obliR<lti11n mil' quC1te
Find out hm' much vou ma\ "'we -
JU ·t stop br 11r call ·
u:u B E•t .... t bt St.
Sant:l Ana
5~7-5:J35
..
Concern dcvdops I.hat the ex-
pansion is tumioa into boom or bust.
but the latetl &JOSS natiooaJ product
figurn ncutrafitt tM re.a~ showma
that growt~ is in the non-mftationary.
non-m:csstonary ranse on.s peroent
and steady.
Such 1ntervaJs hoe been rare in tM
p<1st. and usual!) bncf. and always
ha'<' preceded movements one way
or tM other. This knowfedat is a
fac-tor in the current quiet: u makes
m~cstors observers. waitina for cuc-s
to dr' clop.
Cons1der the contrast wtth the
1970s. when pnce1, interest rates and
most other economic eleml'nls we~
out of whack. PN>ple knew then that
prices and interest rates would con·
ttnue to soar. so a wild enlhus1um
was &cncrated. Get-nch~u1ck seminars roamed
tM country. v..1th financial evangel-
ISlS mcsmenz1n& folks wtth tales of
how the) were down. o ut and broke a
few )Cars qo. but hov. they. JUSt
ordinal) folk!I hkc )OU. learned to
make a fortunl"'
It's very mu.ch difTe~nt nov.
Nobody knows which way the econ-
om)' 1s 101na to head. T1'e big dream
have bccn tucked away for an~t~er
da). and 1f there 1s iny p~va1hn&
mood it 1s p1obabl} one of bcansh-
ncss
hcl)one waits for the C\.-onomy to
make a mo~e one wa) or another.
know1n& lhat whenever It does thett
v.111 be action aptn and plenty of
thos..· 1ngen1ous. c~11ve. old-
fa!lh1oncd and Ofitn explOlttVl' Of)-
portUOllll"'S
A e g g
M ~ i ~
i
3 Ak i ~ ......
Alll Alfi .....
Ala vilo At. AL AL Ak Arr "" Arr Arr Alo ,.,,
A A A
A ... ... A A A ~ :~ ""' .. ~~ ~t! .O.H ""' "'" AA/ .. ,..
AP' ...
""' ~ ..,,.
""' ~ ""' Aft" n AT
""' ""' A"' ""' ..... """ ""' AN Arr """ Arr Al'I' -AN AN ""' Attl ~ Mt Ant ..... ...... ...... ~
A.col
""' .o.rc Arc ... .. An A~
A~ Arr
""' ""' Arr .......
"" Arc Na Ano Ant ..... ""' A ill ""' Alli "" Allf> ... ~ Aue
Aui; Aid A~ .O.v1 AVI ..... Aw
AYC Aye
I
I
I
I
...... I
Otange coui DAILY PILOT/Monday, May 2. 1Na**At
NYS E CoM POSITl T RANsA crroN s
MONDAY'S CLOSING PRICES
Trend in prices fuzzy
'E:.'-' ) C>R )...1.\P1 -~t~l pnccs'Showcd no
clear lrc.-nd \1 unda' 1n a sns1on marked b" some
late bu n.g ol blue ~hlP\ ·
E' 1denle that the econom' cont mun to grow
dt • moderate pale h.is latch b«n met walh huk
enthusiasm b' in' es tors
The g<H cmment reponcd thts morrung that
facto~ order.. in-. rcased I 6 pcrc"ent in March.
Thl· 11}arlet al\1 hasn't sho"' n mucb rcsponst
to general!' '>trong wrporate earnings repon.s for
the fir..1 qu.tner
.\nahsh \.J\ 1nd" 1dual anveston and pr<>-
kss1onal mone~ manage~ continue to sh) aW3~
from stcxh. "'tth memones still fresh of the crash
last fall and lontro' er<-' conunuinf.o' er the eff~ts
ot 1.omputcr program trading
Th~ Do"' Jone'> a' erage of ,:\(1 1ndustnals rose
I IJ '1..S to : o.n : .,
But de-din in~ •'>'>UC\ uutnum~rcd ad' anccs
b' murr than ..s h . 3 on tht• '-<t''-' ) orl Stock
(,'"hangc '-'•th ~111 up !\ "' dll'-'O and 48~
un1.hanJcd
I WHAT AMEX Dio
NEWV0~1(. (AP ,,,..., 2
ft'r'ft , ~ Aovenceo O«trneil
¥~09e'C oiet l\$UH m N~w l'!1gl'i 11
N-IOwi •
AMEX LEADERS
CoLo QuorEs
s..;..a~ .. -~i.yr..-_..._
~ morow.., b*"O. --L ..... .,..,_ au.g ·--,_.. --~ung. '446 ~ "" s. &; ..._.... h"'O • $o&Af .,. ,,.. It .e
ZWtdl We ---°"' ~ 00,,.. '2 I() ~50-ea
......, • ...,_ • """6 '° °" '2 ·o ~-~00 °""'' I -, .,..,_ ..... JO o'!a.'3
llf'I' C-F10 11P01 -l'n I-AS' 00 we> IO 00
METALS QuorEs
-.ew Ya-I fAPI -SC>OI --~--Wonde¥
......._ $1 '000 _. .. ""' "°""" ''" c.-..
tCIOI '"°""' -~ .. c...., . ., .._., 01 .... i. • "'°""° us _ ..
net-c...., · llS IO c.tta Pf' oo.ino ., ' _, IOOI _..,,.,,
~.,.._._..
n... 56-$1 -• """"' -Tllo ." ........... -0"091» t -· .qs...,.. _..._,.,,... .,_....,..,
......... -....,. -""' C:O.-• llO<'I _,,., ~""' ...._.,. 8330 004»0 oo-711b "---·-......... ,.~Cl>~Cll ... _.....,,,
,...._. l5ZS IO N Y llllWc llPOI Pf' .._,. • ......
6 •
WHA T NYSE Om
NEW VORll. AP 111.ev 2 ........ '"*'*• 'J Actve"t~ l C>Kh,,~ ~ ¥ !'( "-"9t<l o•• u~ 19~ ........ "'OO"' 20 ~IO"'S n "
NYSE LEADER S
Dov. J o ~us A\ER AGE s
NAS DA Q SUMMARY
Arms sales overseas
may go up $3 bUlion
EW YORK (APl -l. arms
saln abroad cou1d Jump b\ SJ.3
bllhon. to mo~ 1hln S 15 bllboo this
year. with much of~ 10CTCUt p;una
to th~ fiddle Elsi. 1M "le,.. York
Times reported tod:a).
A conftdcnual rcpon from the
Sutc Oepanmmt to Conve h' ~rial ta~ lO )3 <"Oun111C$. lsnel
,..-ouJd fC1 U .6 btUaon wonh of anns
and fc)pe would tet S2.1 billion. the
Times said.
• l"herequestp~~antetion10
the Pmian Gulf rrP>a than req
of ~ious > •"Ith tM Raieu admi · ratioa · for ad~
anns and tq•upmctll for udi
Arab6a. Ku-"'l.lt, Bahrain and t
U n1led Mab Emira~ to counta
\l'uuts ftod lru. tbc~taicl.
El~ooe ~*~pcm-iblt pwdmcn is Kofta. with a
pc>ecntial Sll billion ua
~Slid. ~~'Li ~ulrcd to
BUY
throu h cb f1ed 642-5678
Da'rid Raye. with Jady Steele and GlmJ Garman. Martha Drewbolt, Kay Wlttmack and Marjorie McDonald.
.. Durty ~elly·s" Fashion show better late than never
OPEN FOR LL NCH & DIN~ER
Monda' thru f rida' By KAREN M. REED ballroom of the hotel, greeting all who parade of waiters. o..r ~ e.1 o • •• • had paid $40 for the luncheon and According to benefit cha1~oman 11 A~t 10 9 P~f
I
r=-"=*=*=*=*=o•=E======o====r,=x =E=-1
YEAR'S BBS! FILMS?' I
The program said ··A. Cordial fashion show featunng the designs of Glmi Forman (attending with her
~ekomctoourSpnngJub1lee"anda David Hayes. daughter. Judy Steele, costume de-
rnrd1al wt"lcome was indeed offered And Ha}es wa'i . disarmingl} signer for the .. Golden Girls" tt"le-
to the 450-plus women a ttending the charming. There wasn't one woman vision series. among others).
25th anniversary celebration of the in the room who d idn't feel the proceeds from the fourth annual
l .iguna Philharmonic Committee re-graciousness of tht' handsome de-fashion show will benefit the OCPS
cc nth at the Ritz-Carlton. signer. back for the third year with the >Ou th educatio{l programs. which
pit-shined and polished students committee. ~erc ··given without cost to parent or
from the Laguna Jun iors. a A well-choreographed sampling of child to more than 300.000 Orangc
PhllhJrmon1c support organization Ha~es' summer and fall rollections Count} school children in 1987."
"*'~Dm.m>
''A W..DycapivatirJCandcxnpW,ely UDeipectal
of high school youth under the followed a luncheon of shnmp and Son~stress Jaa Knowlton was
.... atr hful dirccuon of LPC' member papa~a. lemon and herb chicken and Ha>es opcnin$ act. She performed a
Laura Little, were stattoned at the the '':!5th conccno in chocolate medic} of Irving Bcrh n tunes and
cn1n and dov.n the stairs to the mousse"cakeprescntt"d tomusicbya enlisted the ass1stanc~ of OCPS i-----------------------------=~ execu11'e director Ericll Vollmer and
board chairman Jack Caldwell
celebration af Jif e." ta'(li 3mmll'KNIC-1V NEWS
.. ,. •••• •••• ••• A PWMOONT ~RE
: I •.•• ~ -. .. .. .. : ~ .. ,..,, • •~JU' ~
~-=-· ...... 11"''1J~
NOWPLAY1NG
ElTORO lflVINE LAMllWIA •ITAlfTOM
Eawaros ~1eoac• Eawaros Un1ve'Slty PK!fic s La Mirada Edwaros v.i1aoe Center
581 5880 8~ 8811 994-2.aQO 891 0567
•COSTA lllEIA Eowaros To..n Ceo1er 751 4184 •ORANG£ CenturyCtnedOme 634 25~
•PttES£NTED IN C\A"'~ • '"° ___ ,,__l
FARMERS .. SURANCE GROUP
.&
831-1743
441 Old Newport Blvd.
N.P. Accroee from Le Blarrltz
Home
Auto
BuelneH
When Ha}cs finall> took to the
podium. he did so hes1tantl>. reveal-
ing that the shov. wasn't quite ready
Thus. Ha}cs the desinger became
Ha} es the stand-ur :-omcd1an
The Laguna Juniors were to be
dressers for the models. but apparent-
1} had not gottt~n "in .. to their roles ac;
}Ct. When Hayes called for "olun-
teers. Caldwell's hand was 1nstantl}
raised -in front ofw1fe Nancy
.\nd 11 still wasn't read\ (It seem!I
one of the models oad bCen dela}ed
b} a traflic acc1dcnl.) In near desper-
ation. Hayes laughed ... If the} don't
start this show. t thtnk I'm going to
run for office ...
But stan 11 linall)' did. and 11 was
well worth the wait as the guests were ~~~~~~~~~~-'-~~~~~~~~~~-.~~~~~~~~~~_L_
EDWARDS CINEMAS
COMING SOON
EDWARDS NEW
"lmll CEITRE I" .. SI._....,
.......... ,.,.(N I ..........
"AllOVE TitE LAW"
<"> HS 7JUJe
''CASUAL SEX"
'"> , .... I ..
"THE LAST EWEftOR"
(POtJ) E T f'Cllm
7W I"'
.. WAU STMET' fJ')t1S lteS
"MOONSntUCK"
(PO) .. S
"ABOVE THE LAW'
(ft) STUll Sl~
190900
"SUNSET" (R) .ucs tlllllS
'~••t•• "MTIMM TO SNOWY
RIVER" (9"013) 1 It
"3-N& A BABY' '°° ......
-CMitWr
~llf•• "9A 119IOT wcu•r~._ ...
... PERMANENT RECORD"
(PG13)
11 .. 1 ~· .. , lO I l0-1010
"A TIME OF DESTINY"
(PG1J) "'-LIMI IUIT
IZ Jt.l-ot-~JO-H0-10 lO
"THE LAST EMPEROR"
(PG 1l) lll'Sl PICn.
100 I011•
"91LOXI BLUES" (PGtl)
1tA Tit'" llOIJClllU
6 I~ I JO 10 JO
"SUNSET" (A)
MIOC£ 1'1.llS
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.. A80Vl THI LAW"'<">
SIDDISl.Aa
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"CASUAL SEX" C"l
LU TMOWSOll
1•t •t••s
"A TIME OF DESTINY"
(PG13) •tWll IUll
s1s 1es1000
"COLORS" (R)
IQOT MAU
600 1 )0100
"STAND A DELIVER" (PO)
l OU DWIOID l'ltll PS
iOO l lSIOIS
"PERMANENT RECORD"
(P013)
Sl0 7lO t JO
"BtLOXI BLUES" (PQ1J)
llMTll'W 110101C1
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D0.11·~ IDTOll
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OfMUl au11 so1••JO
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UO IOI ltlS
"ABOVE THE LAW" ("I s TtlCll S(a.;Al
700900
"MOONSTRUCK"'
( .. O)iJt.1040
"WA.U ITREET" (") I JO
FAMILY BARGAIN NIGKTI
12.00 TUES/W£D/THUtltl
AT ITAM€D •cMENa
DAil Y MATINEES
AT EDWARDS
TOWN CENTER
VILLAGE CENTER
MISSION VIEJO MAU.
El TORO
LAGUNA HILLS MAU
"ABOVE THE LAW " <"I
smosu~
1OO·HO10 IS
"SUNSET' (R)
lllllJC( •llS
SIS 7 JO HS
"CASUAL SEX" (R)
l[A TIOIP'SOll
6 •~I es 10 JO
"BILOXI BLUES" (PG1l)
llMM'W 90C8ICI
6 l~I JO 10 l5
--CMtta•r (POU) -nt-cmsl-
S6-76-HS
"THI UMttOl. r '"> ' •s.1t JS MITAllD. DlUVO"
(PQ) us
"PEMIANUfT RECORD"
(PQQ)
C li-ll~ll IS
•
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CENTURY Cinedomt {;] 6J4 h•11Rl111 •n 2~~J S.ot• 4n• f...,
)9 I 110 lt••••Lo l'j \11• ·~·
CRITTERS II
~U)
~LL.IUte« fPG) 12 40 2 40 4 so
1 .oo t . to
.. tJ•~Ta, t.:'fio1""obT:oo 7·55 10:00
A . .OV. THIE LAW (RJ
1 00 3 '0 5 20
7 JO &. 9 50
8tLOJU 9l..UtES (PG-1a) 12 >S Z :50 5 DO 1 20 &. 9 40
P hu The Hidden t A )
A80V£ THE LAW
(1') ~us The
Seventh S•tn (Al
D . 0 . A . (ft)
Good Morn1n9 Vietnam (Al
~TO.._.,
C1tyC~nte1 CEN TURY e ftNE:a • .._
Stand & Oellvltf (PG
llOOtlSTRUCK (R) 12 l5 z 50 5 00
7 .15 t : lO
aROADCAST ·~ (II) t2:10 2 :40 5 :0$" 7 :25 &. 10 00
trlJIUt W""'!ft I c-.i....
OOUT ITlmO ITIVIH llMAl
MOVI THI LAW 1111 I~ t:>S tM .... ldt 11•
DltU llWWW
CRmtU 2:
THI MAIN COUUI IN-I*!
l>.J! !:P !tl! ti! ... IW
90UY STDIO .,....WIWAMI
GOOD MCe•tea Vll'INAM 1111 1W1 ltP "8 M JM lUKAIMMI
LADY IN WMm CN-111 l:US MS ... 7i&I 1•11
LAKEW
C""'"' S0u1h
lllJltM tltlfhcelly •Del•-
llTUIN 10 SNOWY 1M1 lh
'"' LllN CONl'INUIS .... IMI ......
rrATAL ATTllAC'TIOM (R) U tll J110 1 125
7 40 . 9 ,55
a 1111C111 a " aAa.., l"Q) Plua Swltchlnt Channell (P G)
• * DAllll llCS Cl'(!j • • M DAYS 1eiw1111wos11~
1UllOEA tHAH UltllSS lllOTl
LA MIRADA GATEWAY
OOUT STlmO MM , .... oeaT IUNA4l
COlOtlS 1111 tt:• Jolt ,.. ... , ...
DOUY ITUIO
UUCI WIUlll.IAMU U.CI
SUNSIT 1111
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DOLIY ITIUOllTIVQf llAOAl
AIOVI THI LAW Ill
"1t JIP S:• hU NS
IOUY Si~ lllAftltl
UmlJUICI !NI 1Wt2:• ........ , ....
TWO MOON JUNCTION Clll lilJ JsJ.J t iU l :IJ ttt•
Ul'IU P'8IO
CllmlS 21
"IMANINT llCOtlD i-1a1 THI MAIN COUISI ~tai ni• 2111 4:41 .,.1 t:Je IO.U !tit lcl! lolt 1111 tilt 11•
A TIMI fO. DISTIHT""' OOUT~~
a.as llU CASUAL SIJl ? • THI UNMOl Y Ill t• wt Ml,,. Ml I._ h1S .... l ..
• 1 asucw-ca•w. tu'" ITMe Me 8ILIWR
_....._
-Hmll-• MOlalf. .....
---MOWl'M LAW• ......... .,.
treated 10 a fabulous arra)' of colors
and graceful line) -classic but trend-
setting. and appropnate for all ages.
Reds and hol pinks. yellows and Jade
greenc; -and lots of black -were
featured \\llh dramattc hats and
glo,e'> (and onl ) one flower) in
sumnwr )Ult) and dresses. with
camel\. blad.~. gra\s. coffee and pale
p1nkc; ofTen·d 1n light"eighl wools for
fall Lengths remained at.the knee. and
'>ligh1h abo'e a-; Ha)eS said .. , don·1
I. no" hov. ) ou feel about length. but 1f
\OU \C got great legs. Oaunt them."
Mildred Farmer, Amy Fletcffr,
Shirley McCalla. Alice Garlud
Masbbir. Gral.I Outmans and Au
Striker. \I\ of the ong1nal 15 "olun-
ll'er' v. ho founded the Laguna Com-
m 1 I ll'l' 1 n I% l "ere on hcrnd to enJO)
thl' fr<ill\ Illes
( omm11tel' ml·mbcrs responsible
for the e' en1 "11h proceeds esti-
mated at S 10 000 1nduded co-cha1r-
v.om.in Kay Wittmack with Estller
Aber. Mary Broou, Jean Barnett,
Ann Crowl, ~oan Hanson, Charlotte
LockYtood , Jeanette Norton, Eloise
Seymour, Ernestine Allerband, Jack-
ie Buckley, VirgiJaja Crosley, Billie
Han.sen, Ruth Hill, Majorie
Mc Donald, Sbfrley Schnit1er and
Gloria Tbrallklll
Bob Hope slated
for Arts Center
Patrons of 1he Orange County
Prrlorm1ng .\rt\ (enter v.111 be get-
ting some mcmone~ to be thankful
for this month
Bob Hope v.111 pla} the C enter Ma)
21 in a one-night stand under the
I sponsorship of lhe In inc S) mphon)
Orchestra .
Hope'sdebu1 at the Center also will
feature Su\3n .\1ken. \11ss .\menca of
IQ n a1 thl· Ronnie Brov. n big band
undn 1hr dirC'cllon of Geoff
(larl.~un
Tic ket~ arc available at the Center.
600To"n (enter Dnve. Costa Mesa.
or h' phone through the Irvine
S'mphun' ollice at 261-0:!~1 Ticket
prlLL'\ rang\ from S24 to $45.
THINGS
TO~
" 1 fii car ---
2. read the -. . Pill
T. ~a:ler p\ants-
4. read.= 1111 -5. shOC>C>l'l -
RU Ff ELL'S
UPHOLSTERY INC. ..... , • ....,c...s ....
lUJ 111111 IUI .. CISTI IU&-SU.115'
BRUCE
WllUS GARNER
sunsr1
t
........ , .... ,.
AIUBS(March 21-April 19)-Whatappeattd farawa)' as oow available.--------------
Scenario hishhlhts pressurt of deadline.
responsibility. 1n-
ten s i fi ed rela-SYDNEY tio nship . Op-
ponunny exists for Ollll puter financial rt·
ward. Capricorn in-1111111111111111111111111111111 volvcd.
TAURUS(Apnl 2().May 20): Discuu1onsconttmin1
fund1na, finanttS will be featured. Tendency exists to max
bus1nns with pleasure. Stnve for balance. fulfill
obligations to one temporanly incapacitated . GEMINI (May 21-J une 20)· New approach necessary
an connection with lqal arrangements Clash of ideas
featured. bttal from trad1t1on indicated. you'll have
opponunity for fres h start. lk duttt, take 1n1t1ativc
CANCER (June 21 -July 22): Focus on cooperative
efforts. public relations. sales ability, restoration of
purpose and directio n. Success indat'lltcd 1n dealings with
women. You'll learn more about propeny values.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Populant) increases.
emphasis o n commun1cat1on. acceleration of social
act1 v1ty. Lunar emphasis on creauvi t). discovery. style.
KX appeal. You'll recel\e '"' 1ta1 1on to tra,el.
VIRGO CAuJ.. 23-Scpt 22)" Current C\Cle highlights
prol)Cn)'~ family. ab1hty to obulan matcnal ~v1o~y
wiavatlable. You'U n:ceJvc offer foe ~I proJ«t OT
in,enuon Taurus. wbra. Sco rpto people prominent
LIBRA (Sept 2J...Oct 22). Discern mou ves. set
promises an wnuna. communicate W1th 1nd1v1du.I
ronnttted w1th personnel. sales Relattve expresses cksa re
to v1stt. lk charmma. but play wa1tin1pmc
SCORPIO (Oct 23-Nov 21 ): Mo~. home. prop-
tn). romance make up "busy" scenano MaJOr domestic
adJ&lltmcnt could involve residence. mant.al S\atus
SAGITTARIUS (Nov 22-Dec. 21): Cycle ht&h. take
init1at1 vc. trust >Our own Judgment. Insist on clanlicauo n
of terms. request o pportunity for tou r of prcm1~.
Message will become l'Cntcr of attentio n
CAPRJCORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)· What had bttn
nebulous has become obvious -means promise as
fulfilled, mone) and 101,c art featured Com"'unacate
with one a!.S<>Caatcd with spec1al-mtcrest groop
AQUARll'S CJan 20-Feb 18)· Finish what )OU '>tan
realize C)'Cle 1s high enough to wm fncnds a nd 1n0ut"mc
important pcopk Spotlight o n confidence.
PISCESCFeb 19-March 20)· What had been mercl) a
prom 1S4.' 1s transformed into realat}. You'll get chante to
tcc,t pohl 1cs. theories You'll als&-rcce1"c public suppon
IF MAY 3 IS YOUR BJRTlfDAY current C)Cle affordi.
oppon unit) to pcrfrot techniques. to rcv ac-w gains and
losses to makl· dl'CISlon's rega rding purpose. d arcctaon
Gem1n1 ~gattanus people pla) 1mponant role-; an \Our
hfe 't ou'll tra,cl 1n !\fay and tould wan conte<it
Trauma beat w.as distasteful
DEAR ANN LA NDERS: I share
the feehnas of"C lJ an Baraboo .. who
was di51ustcd with the way the media
exploit pcop" who ha"e had
tragedies.
For c11ht years I was a member of
that media. As a Connecticut reponer
1 was sent to a wceklong vagal an
Bndgeport where hundreds of re-
porters and photographers stood
aro und waatmg for crews to pull 28
bodies from the rubble of a collapsed
construction s1tc-
My statio n sent me. not once. bu1
three times to the home of one of the
widows. The first intrusion was less
than four hours after the wife learned
of the traged). I don"t know wh) she
let m e a nd m) cameraman in She
should have slammt'd the door an our
faces.
A11
l.uDEIS
another field. But I still fttl guilt~
about the peo ple 1 offended ""h1k
doing m) JOb I'd lake to a pologize 10
eal h and e\er) person I citplo11ed to
get a1u1q 1nterv1e"". Pka~ kno"" that
most rcponers do not enJO} those
"human interc.-st" assignments. I
hated them -O LJT OF 'THE
Bl Sll\iESS" IN H.\ftlFORD
: BRIDGE
DEA1\ HARTFORD: UnJortaaale-
ly. tracedles are news, b1t llley cu be
covered wlU1 dipity ucl saasilivity.
ADy~g less slloeld aot be tolerated.
A crau or u ploitalive reporter (TV
or press) cu be told. "Sorry, I doa't
wut to talk aboat h."
• • • DE.\R .\'l,"l l~'DERS: 1 am 16
~c.-ars old a1un1or 1n high school. and
alrcad) I am "ntmg to ~nn Landers,
M) g1rlfr1end and I "ant to ask a
coupk t>I <.en1or gu~ s to our 1un1or
prom \\ho <,ho uld pa~ for the tad..ei.s
us or tht gu~s'"' -l TICA.. N )'
DEAR l'TICA: Wboever does tbe
i11viting assumes llle role of aiost. Tlae
!lost pats on llle party. watkat mHAS
yoa pa) for Ule tkkets
Orange Coat DAILY PILOT/Monday, M11y 2. 1938 Al
TV L1S TING S
I &:oo j &:30 J 1 :00 I 7:30 f a~oo j a:ao j s:oo : 9:30 I 1 o:oo ! 1 o :30 : 11 :oo j 11 :30 l
........
i.o.
CetlNd"• ,.,..,
Coun
.. tee•
Grt. "4•s
""'' SJ •
IWll $UCQ9 Spol4 ROC11 Munter'
·~11 ...
Yllltne 1 'The TaU19 of Fl4gi.t 147: UW ,_, 0.ncbon 9lo •
an ... n uu " as •
1C ...
lat• 0 Sc.Do• or:;. :
Thi Rcr.1 Miii 111 1111 WOl\d
Thi S.'OIY 2 Arsla O...U.
.....
Thi Re""' ..., '" IN Wono
Tl-. SIOtY J N151ocll Otwssa
Con•'V•"9 ,t,"'.,IU -.... ~~
Th11 ~rao11 Coun
T"9 T11ong ot F ,._111 1'7 Ul
Otr>enon Sto.., ••
In TO\<Cll
D•teOft•H """-•rM '.: ", _ ·~ · ~
!Ir. •••
J eca ' M·u
.....
TBN
Toa
T-u
ll>'Ol'tl
1"""
...... Nlgll!Mlll
The~·
SMw
The Sar Tro
SlrNI ... ,. 1:, RuwMil ...... Toniv,..
Show
CMllUlfl Doug
Lie Cler•
C0111110t1 • ~. 1.4~< ;e•
04 5'"11'"' •'IC
HNtt ol ~y
N1hoft Well
.. . .
Comp .. te televlak>n Uattnga In Sund8y'a TV PUot.
That same year I had to co' er thret'
teen-agers whose parents were killed
1n the Dupont Plaz.a hotel fire an
Pucno Rico. I tried not to feel
anyth1nj v.hen the firemen earned
the bodies o ut of that burn mg hotel. I
kept tclhnf m ~self. "This 1s )Our JOb
You aren t supposed 10 get cmo-
t1onall} invoh t'd.'' but the faces of th~ tcen..agc rs will haunt me for-
ever
ANSWERS TO WEEKLY BRIDGE Ql IZ
Q.1-East-Wcst vulnerable. as
South you hold: + Q76 ~ 93 • KQJO +A 10813
The bidding ba~_proettded:
Nor1ll East \s.o.@.th West
I ? 2 0 ? Finally I decided I had to gt't into What act1op do you take?
----------------, A.-One possibility 1s to btd two no Make a trump, in the hope that partner has
rontribution• to enough for game. However, since
there is DO JUMIOtCC Of game. we
life after death. suucst you do uble. You should
ta.kc at least three, perhaps four .
rnEAMEIUCAN HEART
ASl5CnA110N
MD«mAI. PW!iau.t. ' .,, , -... ' '.. ' ; , , .. ; , ~·""
tricks OD defense. So if panner has a
sound opemng bid you could colJcct
a bundle.
Q .l-As South, vulnerable,
hold:
• AIU076l v AJ93 72
The bidding has proceeded:
Soedl Wat Nor01 East
I • Pus I NT Pass
1
you
+6
What act1on do you take?
A.-Don't feel 11 incumbent upon
you to rebid your spades just to tell
partner you have six of them. Bear
in mind that partntr's one no trump
respon.~ could eastl} be concealing
a four-a.rd or longer hean suu Bid
two hearts
Q .3-Ne11hcr vulnerable, as South
you hold
•13 QJ762 Q106 •J7J
The bidding has proceeded:
Nortll East Soul b West
I + Pm I " Pass
l • Pass !
What action do you take?
A.-Partner's jump shi ft 1s uncon·
d itionally forcing, so don't even
think of passing. With your weak
hand and oo particular fi t, we
wouldn't even take a preference to
three clubs. Instead, the more dis·
EXTRA! EXTRA! EXTRA!
1988 MARK VII LSC
$1 DELIVERS~·:
LEISE lllY LlllCOLll IERCURY Ill STOCK
DRIVE IWIY FOR OllLY $1 down
Leasing Managers -V Manzo or Don Flecky
,.
CHARLES
COREi
couraaina bid of two no trump,
which sho ws a diamo nd stopper.
should dampen partner's ardor
Q .4-As South. vulnerable, )OU
hold: + AKl :-91 J76 + QJ632
The bidding ha.s proceeded
ltiiortai East Soutai \\est
I • Pass 2 + Pass
2 Pass ~
What do you bid nov. 1
..\.-You hPc alrcadv <.hov.n a de·
cent hand with -.our 1v.o-o.,er-onc-
respomc, so no~ there 1s no need to
-It ...... "' .. , .. """ ....... llHds 0.., ~ts Ull "'•t you Pf'1Ktl•
~DE:'\''°'
16'.J ,__.. '" c.u -.sa ca (11•1 ........
~
AUTO FACTS ..,,.. ... vw
If Hi Ifill:
Piii Frech
QUIT STALLING
do anything more than tale a pref·
crence to 1-.0 spadel> The fact ·hat
you ha-.e thl' two top honon 10 pan-
ner 's swt was alrcad> ti.ken into
account when you responded at the
tv.·o-level
Q .S-East-West 'ulnerablt' as
South you hold:
•9 AQ106 AQJ6 +J91S
Your right-hand o pponent o pcm
the bidding w11h three ht'ans \\hat
action do \.OU takt'"
A.-You -.ould lo'e 10 puni~h
RHO for his rash amo n, but there 1s
nothrng you can do-a double
would be for takeout Pass. and
hope that panDcr can reopen tht'
bidding w11h a double, which vou
ACROSS
1 Fngtiten
6 Wes1ern
Indians
10 S!att
14 Jurtlor
15 OeMrve
16 New Mu!Car'I
natNe
17 s.ni. -
18 Aelatlve
20 Al\ot
2 1 Swamp
22 Af1• Fr
23 Declared
25 L.ar<Ser
27 Kine
30 Lurctl
31 Conform
32 Mongol
33 Foremost
36 ~
37 Mushroom
38 FabgUe
39 CoffatlOn
40 Acted
41 Lift•
42 HwYwned
44 Kind of dive
4S·il' the
dW"ect1on of
47 ~
48 ArrMdllo
49 Cont--
50 State
SC Second
1
narration
57 Accustom
58 Native
mtnerals
59 Optnton
60 Aat
61 BUed Item
62 Time of day
63 M1xt\K'8
DOWN
1 Con g8t"8
2 &.,-
3 Mme~
• Tned again
5 GrMk letter
6 ForQed ak>f'O
7 Pool
8 s.ct.1 tummer
9 Gr991 U..e
10 FU1.,.
11 °' • c.n.dian
rtver
12 Ental
13 Hot~ -,.
19 Spud
21 'Sheme'"
2• Bitter
25 Deaeued
26 -Mountatns
USSR range
27 Prot-:t
28 5'c*neu
29 Keep ano.t
30 To<* peiM
32 Pubk8tJOM
~ Cean. s rNer
7
would com en to penalties b) pass-
ing. or b' baddmg three spades. 10
""htch .. ~ \OU o uld \enturC' 1hr5
no trump
Q.f>-.Both 1,ulncrable, as South yo u
hold
•9153 761 AU52 +3
The bidding has proceeded
w~ "ortll Eut Soulil •
•• l 1 • ~ •
What acuon do you takt'"
A.-\\-c like your hand Panncr
surely has a t most a SJngleton spade,
so t here ts the pro bability of a dou-
bk fit We opt for four heart), al-
thouJ}I we pcrsonaJJ) fanc.) the idea
of a lcad-d.Jrccttrti thr~-dJamood
bid on tht wa} to four hcans
.· 1. ). •• ..
35 Si..
37 Memoty 49 Ulidelstood 38 Court 51 ~IOn 40 ~ 4 1 Enoine pert 52 lfWI~
~ ThlnneSt 53Pc111 IS 44 M9QCJQ'a ruler SS ao..n 45 Old C8f'd pme
'6 F•tllff e .g se Si-. at>bf
•7 lnlt .. ted 57 Oeclly
8 9 ,, 12 13
by Bii Keane
·can you play' with us, Mommy?
We need a vampire."
llARllADUKE by Brad Anderson
"It's an ounce of prevention ... you should
have seen the mischMM>US gleam in his eye!"
PEANUTS
MEV RED BARON ~ SURPRISE ~
~APP'f' BIRTHDAY!!
\
D
GARFJELD
TUllBLEWEEDS '
Professor Siicox and his mechanlcal specta-
tor are kicked out of the stadium after he
Inadvertently pushes the "heckle" button
during the natlonal anthem.
DENNIS THE MENACE
b Hank Ketcham u u
'l t<rON ! Lfr'S EAT ™E ~ANA, STUFF THE
SKIN WIT'H MASHED POTATOES ANP TAPE If
6~ TOGE™ER. II
by0 Charles M. Schulz
\
)
DON1T YOU EVEN WAt-JT TO
8LOW OUT THE CANDLES?
I 0! l I .. .. • . •)
by Jim Davis
KNON ANV l\J~ CAMP-
by Tom K. Ryan
weu.,COMEOPwm.I SOM6'1WIN6-! ~I~ 1'7 ~f{IO~nkS11\J"t>
MY fV10!;f MO~ SKlJLK!
. .
:J>RABBLE
f I Re 9fORI~?
NO.
,. .,
by Kevin Fagan
~ef.~~ ~Cf.RlT\
Q ~
SHOE
~ If (,()(/(/f)flQI.
\
JUDGE PARKER
~VING A~ONISHED
DAVID FOR
WIELDING A
CHAIN SIWV,
SUSAN WALKS
6ACKTO
THE HOUSE
WITH HIMI
FUNKY WINKERBEAN
l.W'RE KIDD!~!<? Pl..A51K POCJ(EI PE.~
HOt..DERS ARE IN ! ~
DOONESBURY
-
AND 11'.5 CAU.EO 71-4£
f NERDQ '-DOK I ! ~ GREAT I
1BANK5 A LOr !
SARKS OOtJ'T
REFLECT,
PATCHES
by Addison
1
by 'tynn Johnston
by Jeff MacNelly
by Harold le Ooux
by Tom Batluk
by Garry Trudeau ':!~~· S<C~cillA-~t.~s· :::
----IAo4 ... QAY l. ~ ----
•
T
Ne
Co
hi1
OOl
un
fro
-
(
• I
871
CM•
H
28 ' thrc
base
8
.524
dou
this
dr1l\ to u
\\
6-fo
11
S-IL
that
Ct
tinaJ
first
Colt
iswi
0
also
intCI
at tt
unn:
duac .. ,
a nae
Sant
attn'
lnJ i1 or·~
I
)
' • ,
l • I
I
I
• I
MONDAY, MAY 2. 1988
. Jorden ftrat to 8CON IO In INtck·lo-beclc "8Joff ~II&
•t• auppiJ •II the flreworka In 11~ rout of ClnclnMIL R
J
..., .... ,.....,, .... ._..,
The Orange Coast College junior varsity eight rows to victorr Sunday at the Newport Regatta in North Lido Channel, Newport Beach.
OCC rowers dominate a~ N: ~wpo" Regatta
.. --.
Pirates JV wins Moore Cup:
other teams also victorious
Condon Johnson Cup. won last }'Car b~ Stanford (which
did not panic1pate this year) OCCs freshman eight had
won the Cup 1n 1986
Orange Coast. "'h1ch had four ""inning shells in four
races. won the no" ice eight by a) most I 0 full seconds and
the varsity four b) nearly 13 S«onds
By RICHARD DUNN
0..., .... C.01 ' , I
The morning weathercond1t1ons were typical for the
Newport Rqatta, as was the performance of Orange
Coast Collqe·sJunior varsity eight as the shell rowed to a
higher plateau Sunday in the North Lido Channel.
The best race "as for the Condon Johnson Cup a'>
OCC"s freshman eight. with a 11me of 6 35.82. e-dged the
University of San D1e.o. which clocked 6:36 13
But getting past l Cl.A 1n the JV eight -and qu11e
hand ii) at that -was clearl~ a h1ghhght for OCC Coach
Dave Grant.
"Ifs like a new plateau." s.a1d l\llc-n. whose ere" 1s
gearing for the Pacific Coast Ro" mg (hamp10Mh1p'> in
Sacramento May 21-22.
Wi.th a crystal clear Newport Beach sky above and
COUwatD Dan Allen leading the way. OC'C"s JV eight.
unbcaicn against West Coast compet1t1on. pulled away
from UCLA to win the Robert B. Moore Cup m 6:20.8.
And the freshman e1&ht of OC'C won a cl~ ract
against the Univenity o( San Diego to recapture the
"We hit a nice song and had a good s-w1ng:· said
Allen. descnbing the "a~ ()((' increased its half-shell
lead at the halfway point to an almost three-shell margin
of victory .
Colby is big man
in Eagles' attack
But his lack of size
has meant scouts
have stayed away
By ROGER CARLWN
Of .. Dllllf ........
He's on a record-setting pace w11h
28 career do ubles in the role of a
three-year saner for Estancia H1gh's
baseball team.
But despite a batting average of
.524 and 33 RBI. as well as 13
doubles. a triple and two home runs
this season. senior Conrad Colby isn •t
drawing major college and pro scouts
to take a look,
Why? Apparently because he's not
6-foot-3.
their No. I recruit." •
Troxell secs the dtkmma much m
the manner of the Joey James
syndrome.
James ripped the cover off the ball
while at Newport Harbor High and
went on to Orange Coast College and
continued dominating every pitcher
he faced.
He is presently doing the same at
UCLA. but at each step his numbers
have not translated into rave reviews
from scouts.
Why not? Despite w1eldina a
loaded bat. James 1s not tall and he's
not fast.
Like Colby. however, It doesn't
take blinding speed to roll into second
when the ball is bounced off the
outfield wall. nor 1s it a foot rilcc when
circling the bases with a home run.
Defensively the rap is "too short to
play first base. too slow to play in the
outfield."
.. We knew "'ha1 "e ~ to do and "C did 1t. It was
good ro'ol.1ng lor us. but we still ha"e a long "'a} to go \\e
1..no" "hat•e "ant You think what \OU "'ant to be and
)OU usual!~ become II. E'J)C'Cl the besl and )OU usuall) gel 1 l •• •
.\lien seem1ngl) has the JV eight st~rcd in the nght
d1rcct1on. CApttllRg and gelling J>()S1t1'e results
.. We bas1calh racC'd ouro"'n ract toda-. 14' said .\lien
... ., ou Just Judge from the othe~ and do v.tiat's n~sa,...
10 'Jl3) ahead of them ·· ·
The JV eight defeated the top fo ur boats on the \\ est
Coast 1n earl) .\pnl to "m the San Diego Cre" Classic
and tool.. third behind Haf' ard and Brov.n m the St.anford
Cre" Classic "here l'1ght of the ~t boats in the nation
competed t'ol.O \.\~k' ago
ex ( ·s frl·shman CtsJll finishC'd S«Ond 10 Cal In the
StJnlord ( la<..'>•c after v. inning the San Diego Classic
..Thi'> "as a v.hole lot of fun for us toda} ... said
Gran I.
'"Dan 4.llcn docs an excellent Job: he·s aJways on hh
toes. he's an1culate and he loves the compcuttoo. Geoff
Scheumann rov.ed in high school (Overtake H&gh in ~attic). so he 8-l"es us some expenentt and n 's rare to
ha'e an}one v.1th expenenct And Fred Honcbeln pw:s
w. a spcclal eltttncm ...
The Pirates art hoping to win the utle at the Pac1fte
( oast Champ1onsh1ps. but \\ ashin1ton. among othcn.
stand in the wa)
-0ur goal all along has bttn to win the Pacific Coast
C'hamp1onsh1ps. ··said Scht"umann .. 4.nd H's gmnl to be
tough. v.e JUSt ha'e to put our heads down and&<>
Honebe1-., who tumC'd down offcn from Orqoo
State and Washington S~te out of Redwood Ht&h '°
compete at Orange Coast. said the JV eight ~ -wanted
to control the race·· m "-hteh the\ did.
Honebein rode the founh scat of the freshman etght
boat last )ear
Meeting
payso£f
for Jays
" TOROl\10 (4.P) -The Torotilli
Blue Jays held ~ team rnecllnl to
discuss the little thinp, and they
ended a big lostn& streak Sunday.
The Ja~s.. who pla) cd lettwJ)caDy
th~ SIX strat&ht losses, rdJou.Ddcd
with six runs m the first four mn1ngs
to beat t~ California ._ngrls. 6-4
Following a 6-1 loss Saturday.
Manaaier Jim) W1lhams said hr
wasn't going to pante by pulhna a
hneup out ofh1s hat in an attempt to
create some runs
Oear1). he was leavina w solution
The 18-year-old is approaching
5-I 1 and weighs 185 pounds. and
that's not cno~. say the experts.
Colby doesn t qrce. ..Don Mat-
tinaJy isn't 6-foot all and he's the best
first baseman in the m~ors." reasons
Colby. "I think it (the premise ofsizc)
is wrona.··
"I told Conrad that the other day
after practice." said Troxell with a
chuckle. "So the next pme comes up
and he belts in the tying and winning
runs with a double and comes up to
me and says. 'Yeah. too small a nd too
sJow:
Eatancla HlCb ee:nior Conrad Colby. with a
. 524 battlDC •YeraCe and S3 RBI. l8 OD •
record-.e~ pace wttla 28 career doablee
with the JtaCles buebti1 team .
One of his coaches. Paul Tro~ell, is
also mystified at the lack of major
interest in Colby, whose consistency
at the plate is such that if he iocs
unrewarded in two straiabt at-bats the
duaout is in a state of bewilderment.
.. They're hounding him from Or-
ange Coast. Golden West and Rancho
Santiaao, I'm just surprised thett
aren't mOR Diviaion I schools show-
inJ intcmt." said TroJ1el1 ... All three
of the community collqes say he's
"Conrad can play and I'm sure he·11
play Division I baseball. He played on
the Houston Astros under Doua
Deutsch durina the winter and he's
played year-round for the last two
years." .
But the real value of lhe Ea&lcs'
standout is simply an attit\ldc ol win
fii:$t. sats second.
"I'd give up every hit I've had to be
in first place." insists Colby. ''I
(Pleue ... COLBY /112)
Lakerssurgepas~Spurs
INGLEWOOD (AP)-Mychal Thom peon came off the bench to
ICOrC 29 points and Miiiie Johnson had 26 Sunday njpt as the Los
Aftlda taken o~me a sl•sb IW't to beat S.n Antonio, I» 1 I 2.
at tr.e fonAm and takea 2.0 Iced over the Spurs in their first-toUnd NBA Pla~tcria. _ .. fi . C'-• ,__ • • -•-· ave ICflCS moves to ~n Anioauo """' the lh1rd game TUelday lliaht and a founh pme. if~. Thunday niaf\t,
TbC Lalcm. who trailed. by l 4 Points in the first quaner. ouUC'C)rcd the~ 29-9, tlte ftnal lil miautcs Oltbe tlaird ~and the first
minute Of* foUM period to tun a 74-71 clctkirinto a lOO·U
lldvuflle. Su Aaeonio p no &ler dllian niw poiata after that.
noinploe W 14 pciillcain --.....-.~ LaUn puUed ••.Y· KMecm Abaf.Jabblr *9dtd lO poiDb and Jama Wonby blid
lllbrLOIA .....
The Spurs Id an l-0 ICed i11 tM fin. I :48 Ol~y. c1tcrided tbrir
edv_.. to 19-6 after Wt ""'"'ta ariid ~ o.-top, l0-16. after 10 mi a--.
At dlitt poe•t. I.he Lakeri 11erned to wake • They tCoftd nint of
*fiMI I IDOiauofdteftntpai9dtomanitl2-2S and llofwfirst
11 Poi•• of the lecOlid qtlM1Cf to lake a ll-37 "'9d wnh l 'h m eutts left '8tMW£
Tudor silences Dodgers, 9-0
.,
Cards left-hander -
removed following
stXIlo-htt innings
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Wh1k
o thers were talking no-hmer. John
Tudor and Manaaer Whtte) Hcrzoa
~re thinking season.
Tudor. matins o-nly his second
stan of the season anercomin1o(Tthe
d1s.abkd Ii t, pitched s1Jt hitless an-
ninas before he was removed for a
pinch-h:iuer in L Louis' 9..() viC'tOf)'
O\rC'f Los Aneda on Sunda)' at Dodacr tacfoam.
Hcrzot •nd Tudor ..,ttet he wou.kt
ka'c the ptM for a peochahittcr.
"I asked him ifhe wanted tossat an.
but he said his lhoukkf was uiften-iaa.,. HCnQa said of bis att left·
haadcr •. "l told him he bii&t a ncHt1ttn
Ud he •id •• didft' matter ...
T&¥tor. who sinK out fbur and walk.Cd two.. was lifted tbt pi~
bitter Tom~ ift the.wvcath.
lldit"Cf Scott Terry .alowtd a
sinllc '°the first be•tcT be ked. Kuk Oifiloft lft the IO'Ct\lb.. uld did not
al1owanotherhh &bt~oftbtwayas
he earned h• first sa~.
T'be CaidJnali bad placed a SS.
,
I / I
The schedule
HOMa
Toni9f'it.....fl'llt$bur'Ott. 7:QS o .m
Mav >-Pit sburtll. 7:0S om
Mav 4'-Plll~. 7:0S om
May s--"'°'9' AWAY
Mav 6-St LOlh S:l$ om • ,..
Mn 7-SI \.ouh. S'O.S o I\'\ •
Mav t-St Louls 1l lS • m •
• OnTV.~11 • Al...,.. Oft KABC, 1'0
pttct\ limit on Tudor 1n tus first tan
of the n apinst S.n Dqo Qn
pnJ 26.
He pi tcMd sax ICOr'tatss '"'""-' apin tthc PldrH1napmctheCards
~. l-0. ln 121nn1 . he has allowed
no runs and f, ur tut
On Surkla~. the C'ards had a 7S.
pttcb hmu on Tud r ~ho had atread
thro "'
"I didn't want to press.It or p\Jsh 1t
If 11 wasa 2-0 same I mtght ba~e gone
K\CO annanas. but 1n an'~ I wasn't
101ng on.-Tudor said
.. If l had four or five stam unckr
m1_bclt u woulcfba~ bcn dlffereat."
Tudor fdt bas chances ofbcrorruna
ttie first Cardinal to pitch a no-htttcf'
WW Bob Fonclt beat MontrcaJ on
Sept. :?6.. 1913 ~ shm at best.
-1 •u luc~. t~ wu still a IOQ&
way to ao," Tudor 531d. -ncrc v."&S
'\Cf)' bttlcC'hanccof lf!tllQll DO-.billef
ap1nst a team lake the Dodaen Ytiih
my St}le.-Los~lnst.artcrTam Lcaiy. 2~2.
lasted just two-thirds of u 1nn1ac as
the Cardinals K'OC"Cd si• NM.
Bob Homer 19'd Tom lnanansky
and Luis llC'CI ach had NrMCOtl,. sinaks •-bile Tony Pena's bU out ~t home •~her Nil. Vince
Coleman putc4 telieVtt ._in
Holton W1th a two-no si...ae.
TK C'ard11\a iddc!cl a naa ie
fbwih 1nn1 .. ~ T~Jcton's sroundcr scoted Waltit
LoUis IOOf'Cd ts fiMI IWO 1VM i•
the ciahtb Oft hndkton"s ... ~
dout and 8Nnan y•s NO-tC'On
$i ••
'
......
......... Vei'froDt became Strange Wine In aadden death
~ ... ar zon· ~or amps . ~Scnmp.sintinaabirdicputton II :w . .-&' __ t lbt I.bard extra p&ayoff' hole,~ Gr:-J
Nim• ror the title Sunday in lhas New York players ~~(J(;~~~=u:anc1.ubave ;.._ n. .._.. ... ..._ bcca in pla~ 5lran1e, who earned SI 26.000 rot his • 6na PGA 'f°"'r vic1oly dlis year. hit l\is •OOl"Olldl shot
: (;1NC'fNNA TI -Never bu t.tebeU 111 · uo ) over the ta' ODto No ... theft "'8 ~
• ·-· D. ~-s•-...1·: • '"81WnmtaftcrNonnanbadtwo-cMled .•. lnAl.lSUn. to ..,y 11 ru' nu~l • .-.uum. T oas. °"9'IJle lleM1 madt 1 12·"'°' birdie pun on t.ht
-~ New Yort ~~ 6-S. W"day axt.h playoff hole IS he and ..... era..-
1 YICtOC) o~er lhc Canctnnau Reeb was . . succad'ully defended l.har lttk in the ~of Golf. :puna•~ by a '!'ld-pmc pla)'er faab&. ~ 01nth-1nruna Moodi. usu\I a 50-tnch putter. also put hi1 tc::am in the ~ ej«'laoo and a closln& friaht that left playoff with T•-J A,a,.. and Lee GnlwD with a ~ dllc waeu of barballs. corns and cups of rour-foot birdie putt on the 12nd bole. Tba.t completed :fri..U .-ed ODIO the field by~ fans. 1 beuer...t:lall fmakound 62 and teed Aaron and Graham • !'ida M1,,.,-,~ Rose. cjcacd for sbovini • 11 2S4, 26 shou onder par on lhe Onion Creek C1ub Da'~ Pallooe over a d.t,.,uu::d call lD the 010t.b. c:oune ... Patel am. sank a seven.foot birdie puU on
'rmll91dl fu venom at RivafronL tbe fifth pla)ofThole to win lhe l.PGA tournament an ·rve KVcr 1Cm anyth.i:aa Ii~ that. -R~ said. Nashville. Tenn. Razzo and Slierrt TW-.r played all
._rd say lbt Cam id they got mlroadcd. rve got 10 five holes of~ playoff that bepn with four players.
tllRe wiLh them 100 per'C'ltftl... ~ WUBaml and TalamJe Grete bo&eyed the first
Tbe sbo-.:f Of debris JPI SlO bad that Pallone, who playoff hoJc to drop out of the ~ for the first pnze.
made the dtspuud caU at fim base in the ninth. ran off
the field toa shower offam' drinks and IO\llht safety in
die umpires• drcai~ A ~ of thRlC umpa.res fia.isbed the pme. · a I ._minute dday IO dear
the field. ·we~' that was for bis protectton. .. umpi~
John Kibkr'said~'sdepart~. "fanswoukin 't
siop throwiaa stuft: We didn't want a forfeit. I told him
to IO on in so we couJd ICl on with it.
""Ccnainly. it was as unruJy a crowd as rve ever
teen."' said K.aDler, ia bis 24th season ... CeTtalnJy I was afraid. ..
: So~ the Mets.
• ~radio&. ice. drinks. beer-}'OU oa~ 1t. •Jt came OUl. .. said Mees tlCCOOd bueman Tlm Tcukl.
•! Pauiom fin& .u-c infta.mcd in the teVCDth inruog,
wt.co Reds left.bander Tom Browning balked to 9end
home the Meu· fift.b run. then hit Teufd in the mtddle
oftbe back with his next pitch. He'd also hn GaryCarirr
in the hip carlttt IO t~ p.mc.
Oa.nyl Stra~bcrry led a chargr of M('ts pla~ers
onto the field for a bncf scuffic. Stra• ~ and
Brownina were e,J«ICd with Ne-w Yort leading. 5-1
-The onJy thing that stopped me was that
Browrung ran (from the faght). •• Strawberry sa 1d. ·· ..\s far
as rm conccmcd. be has no guts.
.. I just bad to do 1L He put tumsclf an the modcnt
lfbe ever hits me.~ will be a fight.••
Quote of the day
~S.tta. basketball coach at Kentuck}. on~ high ei1;pcct.at1ons ofWildcats• fans: .. The)
'WlJJ)t you to win 34 games -in a 32-game season.··
First NASCAR win for Parsons
Plail p.,...... won the first race of his •
NASCAR stock car arttr on Sunday.
holding off Bebby AlllMll and Ge.ff
BMiBe to wm the Winston 500 at .\labama
lntemauonaJ Motor SJ)t!Cdwa) in TaJ~ Parsons.
30. t~ iroungier brother of fOf'llln' Winston Cup
champion Baay Panees. s.hppcd past Bodme to take
the lead I 5 laps from the end of the race. then
outmusded his pursuers to win bir JUSt .21 seconds.
Parsons. from Den' er. N C . finalh won m the 111 th
Winston Cup race of a carttr dating to 1983. He 1s the
SC\enth different ~inner m nine races this season .. In
lmola. ltalir. Brazilian Ayr1o11 SeaDa and his French
teammate Alaul Pr .. t lapped the oppos1t1on to g1,e
McLaren-Honda a 1-l tnumph m the Se· Manno
Grand Pru. the second e"ent of the 1988 "'or1d
f ormula I champ.ionsh1p. The .:!8-year-<>ki from Sao
Paulo edged Prost b} l .33scrondsat the finish hne a~ he
scored his first '1ctol) at the lmola c1rcu1t and the
~venth Grand P1" "'In ofh1s carttr
Groos takes Marathon Trials
PITTSBURGH -Margaret G roos. m
running sn he r first muathon in four \.e&rS.
pulled awa) in the closing miles (or an
1mpress1\C "1ctof') 1n the U .S. Olympie
\\omen·s Marathon TnalsSunda' and became the first
Amencan "'oman in thrtt years to bttak two hours. 30
minutes.
Groos. the fifth-place fin isher in the I Q84 TnaJs 1n
her last marathon appearance. "'as timed in 2.29 50.
and JOtned Joan ~non Samuelson. Julie Brown and
Pam Cat.alano as the onh -\mencans to smash the 2.30
bamer ·
Samuelson. the -\mencan rt"Cord-holdcr with a
clocksng of 2:::! 1.21 at Chicago in 1985. was the only
.\mencan 10 the past fi"e )Can to crack 2:30.
Knight apology demanded
BLOOMINGTON. Ind. -About 300 m
prople marched on the Indiana University
campus Sunday ni&ht and demanded that
basketball coach &ob Knight apologize
publicly for has nationally televUed statement on rape
and stress.
1bc protesters -canyjng StgllS that satd .. Rape IS E,·ery Women·s Km&hunarc-and .. Rape is No Game ..
-aJso called on untvcrsit> administrators to repn-
mand Knight for the comments he made on an NBC
program about stress and to make rape awareness
workshops mandatory for athJetic teams. ·
The controversy began last Monday night. after the
NBC telecast.
When correspondent Connie Chu~ asked the
roach how he bandies strcSS, Kni&ht replied. .. I think
that if~ is 1ncv1t.able. relax and enjoy It.
··That's JUSt an old tenn that you're foing to use.
The plane's down. so you have no contro over it,'• he
conunueci .. I'm not talkmgabout the act of rape. Don't
misinterpret me. But what I'm talkina about is
something happens to you. so you have to handle it -
no".. ~
Steinlen takes Premiere 'Cap
Stc1nlcn, w1nmng for the third con-•
!>t·cut1'e time. held off longshot Si)ah
t\.ak m 10 capture the Premiere Handicap
on the turf\ at Hollywood Park Sunday.
Stemlen. ndden b> Gary S&evetas and carrying 119
pounds m the race for .}-year-olds and up. finished a
head m front of St) ah K.alem . Olris Evert. who has
"on 18 Grand Slam ~mgles lilies in her 17-ycar ra~r.
said ha .. clock is licking away .. and she may retire 1h1s
year or next ... I kno~ the end 1s near: ll could be this
year." the 33-)ear-old Even said on the eve of the
Italian Open. a tournament she has won five times .
Gae Snow ofFon Wonh won the Sl 0,000 top fuel pnze
in the 18th annual lntema11onal Hot Rod ASSOC1at1on
Pro--\m Na11onals drag races at Rockingham lnter-
nallonal Dragv.'a> an Nonh Carolina. Snow was timed
in 5.60 S«onds. or 139.36 miles per hour. Other
~ snners included Ed McC.Uoc• of Hemet. who won his
second straight race 1n the funn)' car d1,is1on: Rickie
Smitla of King. "1 C . "ho won for the third lime in pro
stock. and Dal Denton of Del Valle. Te:1.. who captured
the top alcohol funn) car d1v1s1on
Television, radio
TELEVISION
4·30 p.m -PRO ROCKEY NHL Wales
Conference finals Game I -New Je,rsey at
Boston. ESPN
4:30 p.m. -PRO BASEBALL i\tlant.a at
Ne~ York Mets. TBS.
7 p.m. -PRO BASEBALL: Chicago Cubs at
San Diego. WGN
7:30 p.m -MEN'S TENNIS: UCLA at
USC. Pnme Ticket.
RADIO
4:30 pm -PRO BASEBALL. Angels at
Cle' eland. KM PC ( 710).
7 p.m -PRO BASEBALL. Pittsburgh at
Dodgers. KABC (790).
7 p.m. -PRO BASEBALL: Chicago Cubs at
San Diego. KFMB (760).
UCI drops pair of games in Las Vegas
LAS VEG.\S -Stung b\ a loss to
UCI on Fnda} mght "le"ada-Las
Vegas responded v.nh a venge.antt
Sund.a). sv.('Cping a Pacific Coast
.\thlet1c .._ssociat1o n baseball
doubleheader from the .._ntcaters.
The Rebels v.on b) scores of 1-'
and 16-10. amassm& 33 hits m the
1w1n bill.
In the opcrier. UCI Jumped to a 3-0
lead m the first 1nnmg as Jeff
Oberdank led off v.1th a walk.. Al
Rodnguez singled and Doug KhM
was hn by a pitch
Mike Goodcase and Osmar
DcC'havez each sangJed 1n runs and
the third came across on StaC)
Parker's fielder's choice
The lead held up unul the fifth
when the Rebels ued the game and
UNLV chased losmg pitcher Rob
Johnson. 3-4, while scoring the go-
ahcad run in the seventh The Rebels
ad<kd three more insura~ runs in
the elghth against UCI relievers Ken
Whitworth and Jeff Heath.
In the second game. UNLV(l.l-5 in
the PC AA, 36-15 overall) surged to a
10-1 lead after sconn& eight runs m
the bottom of the fourth.
The Rebels. ranked 19th natJonally
b} Colleg1ate Baseball and 20th by
Baseball America, had 19 hits in the
nightcap. including eight for extra
bases.
The biggest upnsing of the day for
the o\nteaters(6-1 2. 27-28-l)came in
the top of the s1.llh when they
managed five runs.
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..
consider myscl( the ultimate 1tam
player. h's one of the reasons I'm
pitctuna. rm wiDina to do it. I want us
lo do as wdl as we can ...
Colby, a lcf\-blndet in his fit1t
staru on the mound for ~tancia. bas
put ~ther a recof\1 of S·l. with an
ERAotl.47. But 1t'a not Colb)'·s pttchina that ~ 5hock wavn thfoulh lht Sea
View Leaaue. It's his hi lti na. as wet.I as
a very impressive situation at first
base.
Apinst Corona def Mar last Wttk
his deft maneuver to complete a
double play_ on a squceu in the sixth
anoinasnuflW out one potet'llial_~Jy.
then he aot the final out on a ddTicuJt
stop and scoop to the pitcher coverina
m bang-ban& Slyle to end it.
"He ~ys first bate wdl,.. said
Troxel. He's Sood around the bl4-"
He drove in the tyma and wannina
runs with a double in that pme,
prompting one Corona dcl Mar fan to
say, .. We should have walked him:·
There were runners at first and
third at the time. but the fan
countered. "Who cares? Walk. ham
anyway."
"That's what Tustin did." said
Troxell.
.. He's a clutch hitter. When the
game as on the line. not only do ~
want him up. he·s the guy who wants
to be up. He wants the ball. He wants
the bat. He wants to patch."
In tenns of a a complete effon from
one player. Estancia received the
following from Colb> in a Newpon
Elks Tournament game against Santa
Ana:
He strudc out 10 and walked one.
and at t.be plate he was 3 for 3 with 3
RBI and, naturall)'. a double.
Colby bas been switched to the No.
3 slot in the lineup to help get him
better pitches.
.. They've been pitching around him:· said Troxell. ··so we moved
him to third and hc·11 probably stay
there the rest of the season. We've got
Frank Henmn at .41 0 and Scan
Nk'hols at .390 foUowina htm, '°.,...
think they havt to pilCh 10 him."
Th.it's what Coroea del Mar did.
and the Sea KaQ&.1 paid the l)rice.
Colby has alWll_I been able 'o
swina the bat. h s someth•na he
radHy admits. &t he'• lllO •ware It
has tlien a h tiPt '° keep Ole bet
hot. and he Cfediu SecVe Knila, 1n
ISSllllftl C09Ch rot what hu tlamed
bis let'lior year an\O 1 bounia.
"He com~y chanaicd my IWl"I
and staoct, ' said Colby,.; "'I bad a
closed stanc:e and the bat wraoocd
around the beck of my head and 1 Was
havint trouble hitting inside pitchet.
He SWttched me around and at worked
ou•arnt."
The chanae lives Colby the chance
to wait lon,eron the pitch-which is
the key to his success.
What hasn't come n11u.rally is the
self control he has developed.
"He would rt down on himself.''
recalls Troxel . ··in his sopbomott .
year. he struck out a couple of times
and had a couple of nubbcn mck to
the pitc~r. then the next pme
another 0 for 3.
··1 told him then he'd have has
chance in a key situation and sure
enouJh. he comes up with a pme-
winnmg double to get u1 into the
playoffs.
··Even as a sophomore be felt he
had to carry more than his load.
"The key is his personality. He
doesn't let anythina affect him. He's
competitive, but as a matter of fact.
for the first time in four yean J have
been associated with him, he actually
voiced an expletive during a frustrat-
ing moment. He's JUSt always under
control."
Estancia remains sn the hunt for the
league champ1onsh1p. but it's an
uphill road with a three-tame deficit
to Saddleback and just four games let\
(two this week with Saddlebadc) .
But Colby says anything short of
the title is unacceptable.
"As far as I'm concerned ~·~
going to win it:· he said. ··we·11 take
Conrad ColbJ
care of them (Saddleback). In my
mind we're better··
Estancia 1s 14-7 overall, 7-4 in
lcague play, but as Troxell maintains:
"We're not thinkina playoffs. The
kids arc thinkina lcague championsip
and I don't think \hey'll be happy with
a nything less."
When you're lifiinJ weights on a
daily basis at 6 a.m. m the su.mmer,
anythilll less than championship the
followinl:.rina 11 unacceptable.
The es opera1e under b?d
coach Ken Millard, wh09C reputation
as a hard-nosed baseball sort. donned
in shorts. rather than uniform, and
usually very noisy, 1s well known.
Millard stews and spews. fidg~ts
and complain•. paces and barks. His
team can win. but he'll grumble,
"Yeah. but we stunk the place up for
Lhrcc innings ...
.. After four ye.ars you get used to
him." said Colby. ··1 wouldn't trade
him for any other coach ...
Nor would the Eagles trade Colbr.
who clearly had equalled his coach s
dedication to the game.
Jordan back in record book
He's first to score
50 in consecutive
NBA playoff games
From Tiie Associated Press
Michael Jordan put another mark
an the NB-\ record book Sunda\-
Jordan became the first player 1n
league h1stol) to score 50 or more
points tn two straight playoff games
as he ~ored 55 to lead the Bulls to a
106-1 01., \ ICtOI) 0\Cr the \!Siting
CleH•land Ca"ahers
.. ut's 1us1 sa} I got things going. ..
said Jordan. who srnred 50 m the
senes opener
That gave Chicago a 2-0 lead in the
best-of-five sene~. with the third
game in Cleveland Tuesday night.
.. we·re 2-0 this year instead of0-2
facausc "'e·re pla)mf as a team ...
Jordan said. ··1 know I m sconng. but
rm contnbullng to the offense ...
Not onl) did Jordan score more
than halfh1s team's points, but he was
the central figure in the cnucal final
minute of the game. in which the
Bulls had trailed b) as much as 13
posnts
Has JUmper from the comer put
Chicago ahead to stay. 102-101 . wnh
exactly a minute left. Then he hit two
free throws with 14 seconds left to
make it I 04-10 I before Horace Grant
hit two more foul shots wnh three
seconds left to clinch it.
In other games:
Celtlct lU, llllicb lH: urry Bird
had 36 points and Kevin McHale 24
points a nd 12 rebounds as Boston
went on a 12-1 spun at the stan of the
second quaner to break open the
game.
The Celtics. who have won 18
straight games against the Knicks at
the Boston Garden. took a 2-0 lead in
the series and can wrap it up when the
teams move to Madison Square
Garden Wednesday nighL
It was a far different game than the
first one. in which New York led.
74-71. late m the third period before
losing by 20 points.
Soeics Ill, Naget1 tJ: Dale Ellis
scored 22 of his 24 points in the first
half as l~ Seattle handed Denver its
worst home loss of the season.
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FOr mor. Information
I# ks ..... CbJcaco'• llichael JordaA 80A.n put a Cle-.eland defender
to 8COre dartna flnt half of Bull•' NBA plaroff Ttctory.
Denver shot only 32 percent from
the field and midway through the
second period had as many field 1oals
overall -eight -as Ellis.
Seattle. which will host the third
and founh games of the series
Tuesday and Thursday. had a 66-41
lead at halftime and led 76-45
m1dwa> through the third quarter. It
was the Sonics' first victory in ~ven
games at ~nvcr dating back to Nov.
30. 1985.
Hawks 194, Backs t7: Dominique
W1lk1ns scored 43 points. powcn"'
Atlanta over Milwaukee at the Omni
for a 2-0 lead
Starlltes wrap up
regular-season title
BJ UU. WOLCO'IT
........ Cue: 'I
In women's Major League Vol-
leyblU action Sunday nilht. the Los
At\ldcS St.1rlit~ b!~ the Cbac:qo
BlUie back to d~ Windy City •
Los An,eles ( 17-3) unasbecf ill way
to three stra &ht wins to clinch first
place in Jttufar season play f<w the
tceond • con~cutive year. The
Starlitn woo the cham.Pionsbip last
year over San Jose in the i.nateural
tcUon of women ·a pro voOeyball.
The win, bd'~ a a"OWd of f'OUahly
200 It Golden Wcat c~. leCU~
the top teed for LA in fbe playoffs.
The tarUtcs will fKe I.he f'oufth-Pleec
ieam in the l~ut. ti1htf San J0tt
(9-10) or NeW Vert (1-9) • .a
championmip plly tqins May 19 in
M.tnneapoli
LA came ou1 t.l'iiill\ Sunday
nilht, IOlina lhc firstlrve J~DU to
dijcqo(S..l•). Bchtnd dlic teni~ol
Diane Pestolesi, Pauy Dodd and Dlk
Hall. ~vtr, the Scamtes fedcid oft
ri;ht llraiattt JIOiDll IO laU •ft I l·S
~and couim to a I S.10 fita11me
VldOf)'.
"We stan otr slow all tbc time," fi~t-ycar coach Albert Gnparian
said. ••1t takes us awhile t~ rotJj~
but once we wake up we lake charae. .. ~ wasted no tune in pme 2. The
Starl1'es scored in clumps, tatina. the
fim ~x. Points. Chicqo betded baek
Lo within two at 6-1t. Bu1 five terVict
points. tty Ptsto161 lccl to 1 I S"6 LOI
Anacles dcd$1on
"&pcriencc as the di~ ..
Hall. 1 res1cknt or Newport Beech -ho~ 1t C0n:>hl dd Mar Hieb. said. ''We"'~ JO' the most experieftce ~f any team an tbt Ja.ipe, and wttti
t ~i&tl1 playm playtna, it mates •. 1fft~~~ I~ the sbonest of the SWtitcs at
S..foot·1. mldt a bia da&tuae th~t tht cvma._ In P1M l,
one of htt Pmt-ladiftt IS . kill
t'O!ltnbulCd to. a lS..11 ""'IDd l.A°I tbii'd nup llus year.
. ~ hva, one ornw SWti• ••iu. competed for UCLA .prior IO
t.anu._ pro, abo had 15 tial.' It.ha
Ct'odttt. 1 lllVtt mcdll wi•Mf Witll
\N l"4 Untied "' wo•e•-. ~II team 1ao.. -111' ~ Mil f4:1
' I
Viola silences Red Sox
He earns first Fen way shutout by
left-hander In nearly four years
,...m fte Al-mcH Pre9a
Frank Viola pitched a fivc--hittef for his rant shutout
of the season and the fint by a left-hander at Fen way Park
tn nearly four yean. and Oary Oaetti hit his fifth homer.
lcadin&the Minnesota Tw;nuo12.-0victorySundayover
the Boston Red Sox.
Viola. 3-1. struck out ltll, walked only one ind
allowed JUSt one runner beyond first base in outduehn&
Jeff Sellen, 0-2.
1.n his first complete pme in six staru, Viola pitched
the ea&hth shutout of bis ca~. but only his thjrd since
I 984. liis only shutout last year was a 2--0 victory over the
New York Yankees on July 6.
··1 enjoy it here, I really do," Viola said ... rve loved
th as park ever since I first stepped into at."
The Twins. salvagina the w;ndup of a thrcc-pme
scnes and handina Boston only its second loss an 10
games. went ahead 1-0 in the second as Gene Larkin hned
a san&Je to nght-ccntcr. took third on Randy Bush's
ground single lo nght and scortd as Tim Laudner
grounded into a double play. ·
Gaetti led off the founh by hitting a 1-2 pitch high ofT
the hghl tower 1n lcf\ for his home run.
"That's the best r vc seen him." Boston Manager
John McNamara said of Viola.
Sellers. pitching for the first time since Apnl 15
because of raanouts. allowed JUSt sax hats an eight 1nn1ngs
but struu.Jed most of the way. walking six.
J1m-k1ce had two si ngles for Boston. Kirby Puckeu
had a first-annang \tngle. extending his hitting st~k 10 14
games.
Elsewhere an the Amencan league:
Wlllte Soi '7, Orioles S: Ivan Calderon's thrtt-run
homer and a two-run single by Kenny Walhams at
Comiskey Park helped Ch1ca10 send Baltimore plunging
to au 23rd defeat an 24 si.rts.
The Orioles. who brotce a record 21 "'$ime wan less
streak Fnda> ni&ht. fell out of this one quickl y as loser
Mike Morga!". 0-5. was unable to survive the first inning.
l.:ance Johnson opened the White Sox first wnh a
double an~ went to third on Ozzie Guillcn·s bunt single
Harold Baines singled to score Johnson. and C'aldcron
followed with has seventh home run and SC'Cond into the
upper deck an left field in two days.
The White Sox wrapped 11 up with thrtt more an the
third. C'alderon walked and went to third on a single by
Greg Walker. Mark Salas doubled to scgrc Calderon. and
W1ll1ams singled an two more runs.
Rookie Mehdo Perez. 2-0. was the winner. working
onl) fiv~ innings. He gave up one run on five hits and
thrC't' walks but escaped a ba& 1nnang because of a basc-
runnang J&fTe by the Orioles in the fourth. John Davis
earned has fint save. coming on with two men on and two
out an the eighth.
A victory would have gJ vcn the Onolcs their first
scnes wan since they took two-of-three from Oakland last
Sept 4-6. They arc now 1-17 under Manager Frank
Robinson who inhcntcd an 0-6 record from Cal Rapken
Sr
R.ucen ~. Yuba 1: Paul K1lgus and Dale
Mohorcic com baned on an e1gh1-h1ttcr. and Mik"c Stanley
hit has first home run of the season as Texas averted a
sweep of \he thrtt-pmc series at Yankee Stadium
Th as was onl> the second time all season the Rangers
had scored more than four runs an a ~me. and the other
ume they lost. 7-6. to Detroit on Apnl 23.
Kilgus, 3-2. allowed six singles an sax innings while
walkina three and striking out four. He gave up has only
run after two were out an the first inning. After
consccume walks to Don Matttn&I> and Jack Clark.
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Dave Wmfield hat an RBI si*. Winfidd had rour ha
utendint has h1tt1 .. 1trealc to 1 l pmes..
The Ranatn took • 3-1 '::,!{; t.hc sixth annins
without ,ettinaan RBI. Stanley rrom third b&SiC on
I double·J)lay lfOUnder in the third and, tn the SU th, after
SW1Cf Al letter balked home Scott Fletcher. Cecil Espy aco~ on another double-play arounder.
Amletkt I, lMJaa •: In Cleveland. Stan Javter
drove an two runs with a bases-loaded san&Je, and Mart
McGwirc doubled in two more runs durina a six-run
ninth innina as Oakland rallied for its seventh straaaht
VIClOry.
The toss was lhe Indians' third an a row.
Don Baylor started the Oakland ninth wtth a sinaJe
off Doua Jones. 0-I . Oeveland's founh pitcher. Glenn
Hubbard followed with 1 singled. and one out later.
Camey Lansford beat out a slow roller for has I ,SOOlh
major lcque hit, loadin& the bases.
Javier then grounded a two-run sin&Je to nght, and
Jose Canseco looped an RBI single to right, breaking the
4-4 lie. McGwarc followed with a double, scorin& Javier
and Canseco.
Ron Hbsey capped the rail}' with an RBI single for
the seventh hll of the 1rn1ng.
Tl~tt• S, MariDen Z: Matt Nokes drove an all of
Detroit s runs wnh two homers 10 beat Seattle at Tiger
Stadium.
Jeff Robinson. }-2. allowed s1.11 hats and no walks
while stnkang out a career-high I I an eight 1nnangs for
Detroit, and Guillermo Hernandez earned has first save.
Nokes got the first hit off Mike Moore. a solo homer
an the fifth. then erased a 2· I defic111n the seventh w11h a
two-run homer JUSt over the bamer 1n nght-centcr
Nokes' SC'Cond homer. hts S<vcnth. follov.ed a lcadoff
single b> Alan Trammell
Brewen It, Roy•ls I: Rob Deer hit a grand slam, and
Milwaukee survived a three-run Kans.as C1tv ninth for the
wan at Count) Stadium. ·
The Brt'wers led 5-2 when the) sc .>red five run!> an the
m.th, four on Deer's third career grand slam.
C'hras Bosio. 4-2. h~d Jtven up JUSt two Kansas (It)
runs on five hns until gJv1ng up four more in the ninth
wath the help ofa throwing error by third baseman Ste'e
Kiefer. two more singles and two walks
* * Rln99n S, Yankeet 1 WMe Sox 7, on.., 3
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Tully vaults 19-2 at UCI Invitational
Make Tully of the PaC1fic Coast
Club recorded the top American
mark outdoors this year with a vault
ofl9 fect,2 inches at the UCI Track&
field Invi tational Sunday.
Tully's mark was \he e1&hth-best
ever b)' an Amencan outdoors and
broke his UCI Stadium record of
19· I 1'i set last year. Doua Wicks of the
Stars & Stnpcs Track Club also
qualified for the U.S Olympic Tnals
wath a second-place fini sh of 18-311 •.
Finland's Scppo Raty won the
Javelin with a toss of257-6. A.mcncan
Judd Bintcy. a former UCI com-
Anteaters collect PCAA
tennis chanipionship
LAS CRUCES. N.M. -The UCI
men's tennis team captured its
seventh Pacific Coast Athletic As-
sociation championship since 1978
Sunday. winnina four of six sin&let
tttlcs and swecpina tbroqb doubfes.
overall sWttp 1n Sunday's final
The only othe-r s>laycr to drop his
sinaJeS title match for UCI was Shiac
K.anroji in the No.. S position. He fell
to Santa Barbara'sCraia Ellison. 6-7,
7-S. 6-4, but only after 1quandcnn1
four match point opponunatics in the
ICCOnd sel.
Tttvor Kroncmann and Richard
Lubocr tamed titles for the sceond
pctator. won the discus Wlth a mark ot
203-6. and Kyle Mc Duffy of Canada
won the long Jump at 25-3111.
Walter Barney of Cal State
Bakersfield took the highjumpat 7-2.
breaking the previous UCl Stadium
mark of 7-1 v •. Onan McClury. rom-
pct1ng unattached. also went 7-2 and
pla~ second.
Steve Shipman of the Maccab1
Club finished first an the steeplechase
in 8:45 64 and was runner-up m ~
5.000 meters in 14:45.35.
UCI se nior Richard Graves won
\he 5,000 1n 14:36. 79 and junior Pete
Vicencio was second in the steeple-
chase an 9:04.57
Also from UCI. senior Ricky
Martinez picked up second place in
the 1.500 (3:5 I .57): sophomore Scott
Laforce was third in the 5.()00
(1•:50.12). and sophomcm Mike
Morales was fifth in the hammer
throw at 188-3. a hfet1me ~t by six
feet
~ Coeet OAILY PILOT/Monday, Mey 2, 1IN •
Detroit'• Matt Noka ripe a two-run homer
ln the ae•en~ Inola& of Sunday'• game
I NATIONAL LEAGUE
~ -
a&alnst Seattle. Noka &Yo hit a eolo
homer ln the fifth aa Ttcen won. 3 -2.
Mets overpow:erReds
New York ·s four home rs support
Gooden in 1 r=-o rout of Cincinn ati
From The A11ociat~ Press
Instead of the baseballs being throv. n from the stands
at R"erfront tadaum the Nev. Yor~ "1ets v.ere h111ang
them 1n10 the scats an Sunda\ 's 11-0 rout of1he C1nc1nna11 Reds ·
The Mets h11 four homers and D~1ght Gooden
patched a four-h111er for his sax th straight '1cton a!> "e~
) ork completed a lhrtt-gamc sw~p and ntendcd its
v.1nnang streak 10 fi,e gamt>s
New York v.on Saturda} night un a disputed
umpire's call that brought a cascade of dcbns from the
fans and forced umpire Dave Pallone to head for the
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T-1~ •-la.A•
S<"Cunt) of the umparn· room
The onh firev.orks unda) v.crc supplied b' Lhe-
Mets, who got consccut1\C homers 1n the fifth from' Tim
Teufel. Kc11h Hernandez and Darryl Strawbcrr)
. Howard Johnson ah.o hit a thrtt-run homer as part of
the Mets' biggest power display since a s.1x-bomcreffort 1n
their season opener against Montreal.
'"It's onl~ one da) at a umc. bot cntaml)' wc·rc
bu1ld1ng momentum.-said Hernandez.. who drove 10
three runs an the \icts" fifth consccutl\C victor. '"\\e'rc
stanang to gcll ofTens1vel) ... ·
Gooden. the National Lcague·s first s1>.-gamc
v.1nner. has pitched four consccutl'·C complete games en
rouac 10 the first b-0 stan ofh1s fi,c-vear c:arttr
In other Nauonal league gamci
Bnves t. P1d1Ua $: Ozzie V1rg,1I h11 a thrtt-run
homer and drove an another run with a double as 1'tlanta
beat Ph1ladclph1a at Veterans Stadium to snap a four-
game losing streak..
Tom Glavtne 1-3 allov.cd four hits and thr~ runs 1n
'K'.' en innings and Bruce Sutter fin ashed
Shane Rawle). 0-5 suffered his 10\h con!>tcut1\.C
loss Hts last 'lcton v.as A.ug. 31 198.., aga1ns1 the
Dod~~ .
Gi.ull 7, Cabs I: ~evin Mnchell and (and)
Maldonado each drove m two runs to lead San Francisco
past C'hacago at Candlesuck Park
Rick Reuschel 4-1 pnchcd sevc-n innings allow1na
SI\ hats and two nms He shut out theC'ubsovcr h1~ last six
innings after falling behind 2-0 in tht' first
Pinta '· Padtt1 Z: Al ~nQUC had thrtt hits and dro'c 1n two runs. lead1n1 Pit3btfrgh past San Die-go ac
Jad Murph~ St.ad1um for the Pinitcs" 15th HctOf' an their
lasa 19 games
John Smale~. 2-2. allowed four h1t5 an sa>. annangs..
&rT) Jones p11ched two 1nn1nJS and Jim Gott pllched the
ninth for ha~ founh ~ve Enc Shov., 1-4. who had shut out
St Louis in his last st.art. also went six 1nmngsand allowed'
fi\e hits.
Ei:p917, Astros S: Tom Fole~ htt a run-sconng tnplc
an the top of the 14th inning to break the tie and rookie
Johnm Paredes added a three-run homer as \iontreal
beat H·ouston an the 4'strodome
\\Ith tht' score 3-3. Folc~ ·s tnplc sco~ Matcb
\\ cbster v. ho reached on a tbro" m@ error b~ p11chtt Jeff
Heathcock. 0-1 Hc:athcock's throv. had pulled fiBt
baseman Glenn Davis ofT the bag. A.fter an mtcnt1ona.t-
v.alk to Tam Rames. Paredes hit hi' first maJor tcaiue
homer
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Small group
welcomes o·s
Ll"'ITHICL1\i \id <.\Pl
-Thr Baltimore Onolcs.
after \Cl another los!> were
&fCC'led b~ a sparse but
en\hus1asttccrowd of about
50 fans Sunda) as the)'
amved home al 8ah1mo~
Wash1n1ton lnlemat1onal
..l.1rpon
Onoles Manqer Frank
Robinson had no commtnt
as he walked off the char-
tered JCI a fc~ hours after
~ Onoles lost thar 23rd
pmc m 24 starts.. 1.3 to the
C'tncaao White So~ M•
of the players manaccd ii
smile. but ~w ~ auto"
arapbs for their supponrn.: ~lrst baseman Eddie
Murra)' was one of lbc Jetr
to dt~w his stanaturc. The Antcaten compiled S9 points
to fin"h well in front of runner-up
UC Santa Barbara. which scored .0.
San Jose Si.tc was a distant third with
30.
It was also the sixth tam cham-
pionship since cwrent bad a.ch
Orq Pltton took over the tquad in
1980.
wa.i&ht:a-Kronemann defeated K.ip Bra of Santa Barbera. 7-6. 6-1 ,
While Lu WU a 6-1 , 6-l victor o~er the Gauchos' Scon M.one.
lndoneaian wine Long Beach Marathon
Malcolm Allen of San JOK State
earned Pla~r of the Year bononwtdr
• 1-$, 6-3 victbry over ucrs Martt
Kap11lrtn No. T sinjki: ·
.. You've IC)t to hand it to him. he
really pla~ wdl, .. sllid Nuon.
wbote team fdJ shot1 of its pf of an
Tbt doubles teams of Kronemann-
Mike er-. Lu~K.aplan and
Karojt.Mih ~ all ~ vic-
torious. mean~ lhal elCh ua competitor can st DltonnJdt.
UCI travds to meet UCLA •t 1:30 ·
WcdftiCtday in a ley ma~ for NC AA
laJd\111 patpOllCS. •
LONG BEACH {AP) -Nack
Sapla of Indonesia won lbc men's
diviS1on or.the l.onaaeacb Marathon
Sunday. nann1naa tune of two hours.
21 min\,ltCl and J7 tCICOftCh ~ me city struts. Jc.ff ~tmtr of Anaheim finished
second id l:ll:O&. and Wu Ztuhan of.
IM ~·s Republk ol Ouaa .._
\hard with a lime of 2:22 13.
01annc Rodsc'r or N""' Zaland
tool the women's 11tlc m a couf'K
record ta mt Qf 2: .... :S2.
Aracel)' Salam of Mexico "''11
stt0nd in the women's comprtitaon
wath a 2:46:S6 clociu~ Trud) ~n
ton of Au.straha was thtrd '" 2: ll.
COILlll& SYSTEI FLISI
s14!!TAJ
•INSPECT COOLMQ 8YlnM
• f\.USH COOUMQ IYITDI ..
• CMECtC MOiai AND ~TS
• MSTORI Wint .. TO 1 GAL ANllFMEZE
I
1-1 0 N D ,A OllLE/GIC TRUCKS
2880H.-lhd. • CaN Mesa
(714) 54CM>713
\. :J
2850 Hlltaor Blvd. • COltl Mm
(714) &40.9840
l I
WBS'rDIVlllON
Oakland Cbicaeo
Kansas City
~ta
Texas
Scaltk
w
l7
12
12
10
9
9
10
L ht. oa Ltt
1 .108 9~1
10 .s.4S 4 S.S
II .S22 •Y> • 6-4
14 .417 7 4-6
13 . .o9 1 s.s
13 .409 7 4-6
IS .400 7'1> 4-6
...._.1
Woa 1
Woo 2
Lost 2
Losa I Won I
Won I
LoS1 3
8-AWQ
S-4 12· 3
1-7 S-l
(>.) 6-8
4-S 6-9
6-6 l-7
.... 7 S-6
).. 6 7-9
Ckvtland
~:Vorlt
lolaoft Detroit Milwau.tce
ORIGIO
laldmott
16
16
14
14
10
10
I
7
8
7
8
II
13
23
Toronao 6. ~ 4
Minnesota 2, Boston 0 ~eus s. New York I
OUJand a. Ck~ 4 Deuoit l, Seattle 2
EAST DIVISION
.696 S-S
.667 'h S-S
.667 I 8-2
.636 l 'h 7-3
.476 S M
.435 6 4-6
.042 I SY! 1-9 s...a.,·. Scoeres
Chicaao 7. Baltimore 3
Milwaukec 10, KansuC11y 6
Lost )
Losa I
Losa l
Won 4
Won 2
Won l
Lost 2
9· s
C). s
8-s
C). 4 ,_ 4
S-9 a-a
T_.pt'sGama ~ (Fl"UCt' 3-0) at Oevcland (Swindell S-0). 4:35 p.m.
Te.us (Guzman l-1) at Baltimore (McGrqor 0-3). 4:35 p.m. IC.an5's Cit}' (Bannister 3-l) at Boston (Ellsworth 1-2). 4:35 p.m. Oaklaod (C.Y~ 1-0) al Detroit (Alexander 2-2). 4:35 p.m.
NcwYOti(John l-O)atChicago(Reuss 1-1). S:30p.m.
Minnesota (Blylcvcn 1-2) at Milw,aukce (Nieves 2-2). S:3S p.m.
Toronto (Flanapn 2-1) at Seattle (Trout 2-2). 7:05 p.m. ,...._, •• Gama
MokaaOcveland. 4:3S p.m.
OH.land al Detroit.. 10:3S a.m. Tcu.s at Baltimore. 4:35 p.m. Kansas City at Boston, 4:35 p.m.
New York at ChiQao, S:30 p.m.
Minnnota at Milwaukee. S:35 p.m.
Toronto at SeattJc. 7:05 p.m.
Natloaal League
Houston
Dl~aa SM rancisco
Cincinnati
San Dieso
Atlanta
Pittsbw"&h New York
Montreal
Chicago
SL Louis
Pbiladclpbia
w
14
13
12
11
9
4
17
16
10
10
9
7
L
8
8
12
12
13
16
6
6
II
13
14
13
SL Louis 9. Deqen 0
Atlanta 9. Philadelphia 5
WEST DIVISION
Pct. GB Llt
.636 6-4
.619 'h S-5 . soo 3 4-6
.478 J'h 4-6
.409 5 S-5
.200 9 4-6
EAST DIVISION
.739 7-3
. 727 'h 8-2
.476 6 4-5
.435 7 4-6
391 8 6-4
.350 8'12 4-5
s..day't Scores
New York 11 . Cincmnati 0
Pittsburgh 4. San Otego 2
San FranC1sco 7. Chicago 6
Montreal 7, Houston 3 (14 innings)
Streak
Lost I
Lost 2
Won I
Lost 4
Lost 2
Won 1
Won 2
Won S
Won I
Lost I
Won 2
Lost I
Home
10-4
(>.. 6
7-8
5-7
8-7
1-11
8-I
6-2
6-5
2-4
4-5
S-4
T-.tpt'1Gama
Pmsburgh (Drabek 3-1) at IW&ffl (Suuon 1-2). 7:05 p.m.
Montreal (Perez 3-2) at CincmnatJ (Robinson 1-21: 4:35 p.m.
·Atlanta (Z. Smith 1-3) at N~w York (Darhng 2-1).4:35 pm.
Houston (Ryan 2-l) al Ph1ladclph1a (K. Gross 1-1). 4.35 p.m.
Chicago (Moyer 1-2) at San Diego (Jones 2-1 ). 7:05 p.m.
St. Louis (Deleon 1-2) at San Francisco (Dravccky 2-1 ). 7;35 p.m
THtday's Games
Pittsburgh al DM1en. 7:0~ p.m.
Montreal at C10C1nnau. 4:3S p.m.
Atlanta at New York. 4:35 p.m.
Houston al Ph1ladelph1a. 4.35 p.m.
Chicago al San D1qo. 7:05 p.m.
St Louis al San FranC1sco. 7:35 p.m.
7-2
7-3
6-2
S-4
3-7
S-4
I-IS
Away
4-4
7-2
S-4
6-5
I-6
3-s
9-5
10-4
4-6
8-9
S-9
2-9
~ 'onto, 9. Jecotrt. Clewl9nd, t , TW'l.oul, IC.111\MJ
CifY. '· G9ddln, ~I ••• Melllnulv. New Yorti;, I, Pua.en, ~ •. I
TltlPL.Es-wllon, IC.-t CllY. 4, ltft"ftOIG1,
Sftlfle, 3, ' -lied wlltl 2 . '
"
AMeRICAN L•AGUE
lllUe Min 6, A....-s 4
CA~NIA ~
McLmr 2'b
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JoYNr lb
CO.v" 11
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~lb """91 If
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SJ40 Gilllol\W 4 lt
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STOL.EN &ASE~ ~. New York.
10 Pettb, a.troff, 12. CW'MCO, Oeli.19nd, I.
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i..neston. s.me. 53. CaN11o111. ~. '°· Mj)rrb, Detroit. Jf, lAiter. New Yen, l7,
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Deft-•I Sffllle, 7:30 P.l'I\. •••11'bY'1 co-lk>slon •I New Yott.. S p_m
Detroit ., w.~. s IUl'I
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s.tw9n '"'-llf MC8Mlr\f)
Houlton •• o.tn. t?-.JO p.m.
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ThomMon 161 Auls~ AnlDlllo J4 (ltotl-
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--4 lines 7 days ;,flvtl• pat1y only "° AUi • I 0 80 Eatate Comrnetdll. Auto-motive. Boating Of Help CALL 642-5678 FROM NORTH ORANGE
FROM SOUTH ORANGE
540-1220
496-6800 • Wanted
I ClXSSIFIEb INDEX 6U.Ujl 1 ltwptrt IHc• tMt C.1ta lleta llM lt!J!!! ltac• lllt IHt• Ct11t ••tr• C..ta lltsa Mlt C..ta 1111 MH lt•,.r! .... IHt lne1sEAc:'!A:
BEAUTIFUL 1Br conQo 1n 3BR "2BA Twnhme frplC, S850-BACK BAf·OUPLEX llll ••TwnhH·1ype 28A EXTRA LAG 18R. New Clean 38R 28A. bide to BR 1 11 BA upatalrt PROlll WTM OltAMGI CO. ...1m \Ima BalbOa Assumable gar tastal\JI d8COf flighty 2 Bedrooms. patio. no lmmac condo 2br 2ba MC 1''l8A, w/d hkup. Gat· crpt/palnt. pool, no pate bctl. Gar, patio. Lndry. 2 • u etlO down·
PROlllOUTHOllAMGICO. • 1111 loan tor$112000at8''"1• deSlrab,.pvtcomm Ten· pa11 645-5778 , pool carport,patlo.nrS. age 3033 Coolidge •B. 1550· $350 uc d/w, lrplc. 131 39th St ''8A krtctl, P $6'5/
,,. OMLY '9LOT Int $132.000 9415-7893 nls. pool & tpa 11350 548-6434. 642-2267 Cst Plz $725/mo (213) $750 No peta 432·7787 **&48-36HI•• $1200/mo yrly 955-1219 11111r; :Jt:682* *mo
Q.AUlf'lCOOf'"f'ICU+OYAS CH£CK YOUR AD ... tr yrl't lae CALL Marilyn BAY FRONT 624· t598/0660·1984/£ Garden Apt. apacl0!.11 CUFf HAVEN New decOt
t..,._.S..-M-F' !HEFIRITOAY llMt-.s Coombt531-1266 Elag1nt 2BR Security *BRHll\N(W 2BR.d/w.w/wcpt1/dfps. 28R 1Ba. Ml in kite STEPSTOBEACH
• oo AM-s 30"" .... °" • -,w..... .. ... ...... LtcaHHI LHatlH! bldg S 1275tmo A!fi;itatatl ftt111 cable ready Encl gat patio. and gar no pets Yur1Y 2BR 1BA 1 car ~og:.!\!~,."u :: • .':'';':,',;-.:.:. ",-.:-:::; lecaHH! WA'TERFRONT HOMES -S890 No pets &45·5517 $800/mo Agt &42·2t34 ger lrplc no pats 451"
1'00 AU.600 PM ....... • ·-.... -·-·...., One ollha VERY BEST 40 INC la 1100 OFF St S990 "'° 5•7•8981
OUOUNs• :.:;·~,.·-:::0::;,:_-;;:,.7,;. street to street locat10<11 REAL TORS 63 l· l400 11111• 26ff 1ST MON'TH'S RENT Wll .... tier IJt VE.RSAILES PENTHOUSE
...,.._<•TtON DE•Ot.rN' ·-··,.. _ .,,., ., ... _,.. oo Udof Just a 1--4oor1 3BA w den 2eA. 2 car gar, UYSIOREI 18.R lB". unlurn Bit-Int 801 PAULARINO w/lrg patio In good locate. IDT!' II• talmJI 2BRl2BA Ctt>tise. pool.
-""tt>UM _.., • ..., •• _, • .__.._ to tha bay and beactll 1800 sq 11. lrpl, new " •lBA lBA s750 $410/mo 859W 19ttl C*111tWCc.1$l sac: 1 97Slmo 720-9213
·-· -Ut -•><-... -,.., ..... -· Th I SBR I d hlld/ I OK 3BR. 2BA Cape Cod 11+ !1ata S750/mo for -f , .. r ~ 386 I ..,, -· '-s• ................. -.. ;... .. ,.,c..... llllgtllandary or rapes c pe S2500/mo Avatt 611 lhls~ummer th9real1er •2BA2BA S850 LG28<1'"t8a.lrple,pallo. llf'Qf ..-..ldtaM CU• or5-47·6 vm..,,
""'-· .... ··-.......... -... .... ..... 4 and a den) contem· s12001mo 893· 1315 Agent Debt Bibb M>90 714 774-3055 •Pool/Spa new carpet, paint D/W, plld allllll -~ 1911 WALK TO SCH NA HOAG ~·~. '"':;:_::: _,_ P<>'_92b"oma,dw~ de· 4BR/2BA detached gar 644-9060or642·8868 lal"'ta p -.-I •Garages Avlnow S795/mo ·dap 21Awul"'*ll c~ 1 •lBA $695
~ ·-·-,. ...• -"'11 • ..,,., .... ..-.... ---•-" ~ttaciy·=tra ~~ Lndlord will do ydwk • taaa11
0
a 966-9168 933-8917 2273Mtner•A 6-45-8161 tiff &lll!Cf AC WFO!lt"' •2BR2BA S895
... -~ ...... -,.. ........ S1200/mo 775 Joann H 7 --llly~\ilclttn •esiQct Poot.spa e11tr1park1ng
-,. -· ....... ·-er9 are ready for a ta st btwn Harbor & Placenlta ILIFFS JU LEASE •IST IEEI 11tt b11 8tHl1llll no-111 l 40 1 Superior 648-6838 ;+. . '.
••
;i~ . ·• "-' ..
Ital Estate Ftr Sal~
Beun/C .. •11
Gauil 1602
.. 1 '' ., ..,. -...._. -sale! A 'must' to see• (213) 630-5284 Or 2BR • "'--, 2•-B• 2BA l BA duplex.· Com-•Mesa V81'de quiet 2BR 28A 2B". ''"'"'·encl gar-dens •11 -11•1•n1ncr -.. ,__ ._..,, .... ..., --.~-ntM """'' • " let-• I b Step to 1BA, gar •• lndry hk-up, " ,,... " m " • , .. _ --.. -~ .:•.-• S 1400/mo 640-5664 Bkr P ..,y re ur s ~·· all bullt·in• near oro.,.. SZISO ..io
~tr&~•\.,
' ~~ --
Cnta •tA 1024
IEW LISTill
USTSllE C.I.
..uia IOO h Siii IOO Niee 3BR 2 rBA 2 story bch $885/mo yrly George lg C\.lpb0ard1. new decor shops s695/mo ~ Ross 673-78~7 condo Frplc: 3 car park· 7141526-3204 Iv message 1725 NO PETS 8'0-2495 8 10 CENTER ..... Mft
1ng w 10 hkup small eoct ILIFfS UY Y1EW .,_Ul IAY YIEW *IEW lPUTllEm* TSL MGMT 642· 1603 11an1111.-..11 yarel Comm pool Nr C0<1do. S 17 50 3br 2 ba, 9V Lg 2BR 28A Reserve -EASTBLUFF 2BR 1' iBA
••-Harbori405 Fwy SlOOO Pool 673-33591747·7344 2Br. 18a ICH 1 or 2 adult• yours now! sa251mo No llWLY IECIUTtl Fireplace. pauo pool -lty 675-4912 Agt Ute & airy View sundeck Pets 817 w Victoria. 2Br 1'.;Ba w/gar, crpta. $975/mo 848 Amigos EASTBLUFF Twnhse 3Br s t k I It d bl f d I w 6 l\Ol\A -DOLL HOUSE 28R/ 18A tree P g w perm Days 9 79.9991 Eves rps. tins. nc pa 10 ay 44·v~
NEWPORT BEACH delu•e E II s 1 s Ide c I ea n I 1 dwn). 1' )Ba w/lresh N/S. No Pets $96Smo Yly 979-3848 Pam 836-<t t20 Call 1-5PM c ·STBLUFF spac1ovs 2br DUPLEX 2-2BA on Pen· 5900 mo Pei 5 OK paint & carpel in conven meld ultls _ 2439 Orange ·e $750 ""'
lnsula Steps 10 sand S4l~1700 or 751 4330 park ltke ne1gt1borhood lll-tllJ* 2619 Santa Ana .0 $735 2ba apt Frplc d/w encl
S34'0K Agl 499-5360 w comm pools & spa 2 ....,...._..... 667 V1etoria 'L $720 2-car garage pool
-EAST SIDE 2BR tBA car gar w d lg sunny -WflllT ~-U 119 ~ $t050tmo * 759-1534 •WPHT IEllllTS t1ouse Gar n pets. pal•O St350 mo I Yf lse -Newly elurbosheel tBR
R C II Newer 1Br ~reat toe: by apt --·-~-... nAtlO cil llUT L-·r••• -••-FIHR ntSmk $10001mo eter pet poss a owners ,.. z s SO/ I 1p••T111-1 '"""'""' ,,_ -" ---5 8 287 agenl Donna Wall run one mo yr Y -"' to 1hopp1ng. $590/mo Delu11e 28r 2Ba wittl 38R, Iott 2•;,eA. 2 car gar Call alter 5pm 4 • 1
644•6200,W 854 1802,H 250-8002 673-6880 Sparkling clean. large • dep 382 Victoria or Ocean View Gar cable
age large IOI S299,000 EASTSIDE 3BR 2BA tam SUPER sharp lBR ';btk Garden apts Beaulllully call 850-7244 W/O hk-up Many extras
Hurry• Call Liz CH Chuck rm gar lg yd quiet tree HARBOR 111ew HOME 10 bet\ Parking new landscaped grounds Prime Nwpt Bet\ toc:atron ~;.~;4363t-1266 or ltned street $1300/mo Two story 48R 3 .BA carpet 1tle paint Yearly Pool&spa paltostdecks lltfwr~l11te4111l CloselobeachS895 mo
WM~i\ Ma111yn Coombs Gardener $2550 mo 5700 sec 673_6"78 garage or carport Sorry. Eiolese• ~lflt, cleH 4101 Hrlara
631-1266 or Cynthia 644-6610or673-3174 nopets TSL MGMT 642·1603
756-7725 Coroaa ••• fllar 2'22 •SEVERAL LOCATIONS ...... ,, ., .... 11
·~t .. ·~~····~· I ·~·~;·0 HARBOR VIEW HOME 2 Bedroom. i •.oreA, ssoo Bachelor $590 •••• H0· 1244 1 Bedroom $655 •12 Ylct ri t~ Palermo 4BA 2 ,BA yd Move-In Bonus! 1 year 2Bdrm 1 •• ea sn5 • I I _!!!....:..._...:.., S2500 Juha 759-5506 lease $950 • S500 sec 2250 Vanguard 540·9626 SPACIOUS 1BR Pool ·~---/ .. C..--..... ----i ~ .l.JJ.A..V 900 Sea Lane 6"4"-261 l lndry carport stove &
E'SIOE 3Br 2Ba Hovse 2• KU',F~ 3BR 2BA 11Br has pv1 Bactlelor $560 relng No pets t939
tr ZIOZ car ~rage dishwasher \t\\ I \11'1" I ~ \ 11 entry! Lg loving rm & den 1 Bedroom $655 Wallace $565 $350
ICWIFlllT IEITALS ~~~n. ~~4-6~~~oo mo q(ALfOAS: ~~:.So~~P:~4-&5sf,8'n t ~~~~~ ;~·~~wnhs =~;g dep 642 1401. 642.5723
16 Available tor Yearly & e1s1oe Cottage IBR 1BA 825 Center St 6"2· 1424 Baat. leacll 2640
Summer• Cont&C'I Jeff t 1 p I LARGE EXEC 2 stor" 4BR 3BA 2BA lower unit Jacobs '"75-4630 To person on Y art urn , $ " Nt k N n.o1 Reis 2BA 1 •m room 2 tr pies 516 fros 1300/mo Bachelor
JUST brrng clothes' Ou1e1
lu• 1op·flr 1er totally turn
incl ltnens MICl'O llCR
phone A/C pool tennis
etc Cov d pk~ -A't'atl
611-9117 Mature prsn or
cple n-smkr $1 200 mo
•security 646-5214
LG lu.1< 28r 2Ba 1 lOOsl 2
prtv mstr stes 2 paltos
gar nr Wcltll no ~Is
$875 IS avt 6 1 640-9408 see drt-by 4007 Sea am r 0 ........ l> a I GE RE s •v $"''" dep 6•" 235 ~ lenceel paddle 1ennis lllLLA NT AL Shore "---Daily 12~ JJV " ' 497 "•88 ...,.,....., crt S lll50 mo 645· 1528 • • .,.. * llff ftite lltrl SHARP & CLEAN 2BR <.
t Bedroom
2Bdrm 1 •Ba
16t E •8th St
S590 Ou1e1 1M apt 4 blcks
S680 from beh all utrls pd
5790 S650tmo · depos 207 llSl SH!
642-0856 Ctl•cago 985·4954 appt tBR 1BA. enclosed gar
AllKMllEA OF™E ' Remodeled 3BR 1'·BA SEARS RNAHCIAL. NETWOftf< Ill _.130 1 •,eA Duplex Un11 LIDO ISLE twnhu Costa flltH 2624
.,. w/paho & encl garage 3BR 2 2BA 2 patios trpl $100 OFF Prime Eastsrde -age. close to beactl Nice
1 Bedroom $695 La1aaa hacll 264l qu1e1 1ocat1on M>9Slmo
COLDWC!U.
BANl(C!RO
Expet1 &..>Ix.~
SPYIWS
11,I00.000
Uncornpereble v1-from
Newports t1igt1est Res
PCL at end ol excl cu•·
de-sac SM entrre bay
tast11on 1st coast to
Palos Verdes
14~tOIO
Im HWI P&YllEIT1
hlMI lslaa• 2106 $750 No pets 6§0.4751 nr 1enn1s c1s $1600 long l Br pool includes gas
term 646-7155 $625 mo 1.C5 E 18th SI 2Bdrm 1' •Ba S805 IB nr beach S700tmo 1480 Monrovia
HUGE 4BR 2BA Fam Rm 2BR 18X Yrty Lrg brlCk
crtyrd steps 10 bch &
convenient snopptng
S 11001mo 673-3773
2 car gar beaut )r<l Lovely turn 2Br den 1860
S 1295 Cell Te rry ~ 2''>ba 2 trptc pool
751-6190 or 549-9823 tennis nr Fash Island
CHARMING 3BR 2BA l~UDECOUTH
2BR w/gar new crpts
tncd yd 636-4 t20 1-5PM
673-2820 2526 S8flla Ana D $710
• 2176 P1acent1a C Sti 70
2l07 2BA 2 tBA TwnHse Huge
yrd w auto c1ccess Dbl -L-ove-ly-re•m_od_e .. I -oc:-n"'lf,.rt•h•s-e gar 111ras• $975 Pet ok 2
tor 1nd1v or couple Somt> ppl 646 12641642-9666
S2:?75 mo Avail now
720 9680 or 722-7007
NEllER LIVED-IN Newport
Norlh 2BR • loft 2BA. 2
car a1tach gar Site or
tse Lse S 1700 760-0714
7'l4 Remodeled 3BR 1•.BA restric11ons req Cl Winter TOWNHOME
new gourmet kitchen only S900 mo 856-3120 L•~e new 2BR patio HI \I I \
master l:Xlrm !iu•le tor-
642-7997 15 t E 2 Isl SI 548-2408 Firec:>lace View balcony TSL MGMT 642· 1603
BAY TIMBERS carporl No pelS
We!itfield
1BR lrplc cable. pool 32• Tnelte 494--0802
pa110, gar No pets 399 UNFUAN STUDIO $525
W Bay ~t $655 650-6357 1s1/las1 deposit Olde<
* LllE IEW * tenant prel d No Pets IPIRTMHTS cau atter 3 30 497-4304 Large allract•ve ap1s m a Come see ltle difference.
t>eaulltul garden setttng completely remodeled
Pool/spa garage or Beaulllul 1 & 2BR apts
carport SoHy no pets Pool rec room. laundry
•SEVERAL LOCATIONS room Ready for lf1stan1
28Clrm 2Ba $800 move-on! ONLY SSSO 10
398 w Wiison 631-5583 $650/mo Plus $200 oH move-in ttlrough 5115
IUMOW&PTS.
lnrrt hacla 2'69
SPIClllS APT. 1 •ii•
t• l11oltl 142-235l
tBR lBA-Steps l o bch
S575/mo
Bkr 675-2232
••• ,_Im .... , ...
U<Mitt ... ,. c;.......-,
,.., bfa.:.t ... lltl ~ ... "
etetc lli$hn"" ""''° pr • ~ ,.,. ouc' f'90
N'>ll 1811 \11111 ~1 SI~~ • •t IUPI 1111.1 •
Sorr1 No l'fls
l .... 1.
WEfKLY NOW' Beaut1lully
furnished NB oc6'n lrorit
3br 2ba patK> lrplC 2
garages 640·478,.
WESTCLll'F
2BR 2BA. relrtg d/w lrplc
1100 sq 11. pool crp0r1
n pet $850 'mo 64 5 0302
Misc. leatals
.... , 2761
ROOMMATES WANTED
10 renl IBR on l)oose
i;oreal cond No smk09 Of
pets Close to bctl
$650 mo Te" Days
S38 3588 Eves & .. knd
722 1030
Hettla/Mettls 2711
suu11•m Wkly renlals now •vaJI
$14700 wk & up 227•
Nwp1 Blvd CM 6-'6 7445
iutifl -,. lhrt
2724
• LAGUNA SCH HOME.
A11a11 for prol M ocean
vot>w 1mmoc $430 mG
•nCI Ul•I ,.97 1304 f
• N B step'> 10 beach
Prof non-<,mllr shdre lu•
untt S550 mo Call •
650 3633 or 639 8722
BA v RIDGE CONDO Prof
M F cln n smi.. 10 Shr
2BR 2BA $750 mo
Mstty turn 72'2 ·6968
CdM 2 story house nice
cood quiet walk to t>Ctl
M1F Avail 5 8 S500 mo
Cati Mark 673 4243 E
Cln file rm on cute CM hse
lor 30•Sh le,., Sm pet &
cigs Oil-no drugs $363 •
'>VIII Kalhe 646-6803
Males for large JBR
Bayview condo Gareoe
poo l S5?5 S625
•6'~-2607 •
N B Steps to beach
We II give yov the down on
exd\g for e stlare ot own·
&f'stup Yov make ttle
mttlly pymts & we share
llj)pre<. You receive
100•. lax benefits Must
have clean credit Agl
497-8757 Dys Ev Wknds
1 Bedroom
---------2Bdrm 1Ba mal Clrning w oak paz. ConH •el Mar 2122 1 dou01\1~~<.~d gar P&•AlllOICUI
quet Brea~tas1 noo~ 2 Cute but cozy Ouple>t WATERFRONT HOMES YJ(W·lllRl llftD
lrplc Owners .t.ave Untts 2BR tBA 1 car
1
INC REALTORS 2BR 2BA. Den. 2' •BA
301 Avocado
1 Bedroom
24t W Wilson
S630
$750
642-9850
$655
631-0960
530 W Wilson
TSL MGMT
722 9012 or 642-1603
COTIAHnPE
28A tBA ct1arm1ng COi·
1age trpl<. S1eps to the
beacfl No pets $1050
mo Lv msg 631-2167
Nice 2BR 2BA rn country prof M n-smkr ·~ 24-34
setting Poot. patto, W/0 lo Stir sharp 2br 2o.i
hkups. DtW, gar $995 condo avt 51 I S4501mo
960-6610 Of 751-2787 ~I 01650-0402 purcnaseo anollH!r gar Frplc. Drive by ~14 63l·l•OO comm tennis & pool $249.000. Curt Herberts Jasmine S900 mo EtSIDE 2Br 1Ba g81age IQ yard Wtltl patio washN"
hk-up $7501mo
II 631-1266 YILU REITILS WESTSIDE 3br 1ba den S3500tmo Alk for Maureen or Ed 760-5000
I ~~~\. ll& _.112 lndry rm lrg baci..yard or 759_ 15~9
2BR 1BA •Int cond New
kotctl cabrnets new crpt
prv1 patio carport laun
dry rm $650/mo 360
lloctona St 548-8523
•1HRM SIOO•
Frig dishwasher stove
incl No pets 545-4855 • , _ v-.. Avail mmed S950 ·mo ~ nfu BEAUTIFUL 2Br 2Ba ·S700secdep 979-5755 RE/A-11( I
2546 Orange
T SL MGMT 642-1603 IEWNIT IEllm wm
Decorated Ilka a Clream IEW LISTllli dup•e• w marbled ttr:. WESTSllE COTIHE \t'' 'I \.....,11' 1u \ '11 lrple garage, laundry pvt 18R 1BA trplc, $600/mo \.\ . t--. ~
beach access No pets sec dep Call Rusty REALTOff' •
•2HRM SlOO*
2Br 2Ba , 100 Sii, dlw. con CIT£ 111 Fng dishwasher, stove
E d C b,_ I s I tnCI No pets 545-4855 lndry lrplc gar Sml pet IS• e a re. poo ng
S1350 mo 673-5337 63l t266 ---------
Light arry ltving rrn with
a 11oor 10ce111ng1rrep1ac:e EASTSIDE C.I. oi. l8501mo s5oo dep 5550 646~3 7 11 •8Pm * USTIUFf SPECIAl
Ava111mmed 24 t-7383 USTlll ACltELOR • tBR 1BA lrpl $725 Lw ltiiMll Overl()()l(ing communoty Remodeled 3BR 1, ·BA CltlU COYE
pool 1 bdrm walk lo new gourmet kllctlen. WATtRFROIT
everything Perfect master bdrm suite for· Unique ,. or SBA 2BA 2 starler or 1n~tor unit Only 5114.900 mal d1n1ng w/oak par-story prvl nome on quiet
2144 71•·llOO Quel Breakfast nook. exclu<,1ve commun11y IJviae
l rpl<. Owners have Spacious & versahle floor ---------
'
KJ purc.hased anottler plan wonderlul vie~ Beauttlul detactled house
( rFl ~ rl I ""~ $249 000 ~urt Herberts Greal front patio plenty 3br 2ba lrplc AC 2-car
IF-I '\II'\'\.\ II 631·1266 otparkong All new decor garage yard $1250/mo 1!2.1 ,. Available 5 1 675-6096
lalNa HHllllR'• lnalJt. Lse;,~.~5;:~i5 W /D IE~2:~r 2'f1200
Pt•i•••la 1007 SMINE CR s MMER Sotheby's IA 979-3565
208 E Bl y •ve A---'··---' Baat. hacll 1040 JA K u "' ., ,.. ""'"""" RENTAL 2Br Oen furn S,.ot1C1l1r ••If
$40K-now $455.000 Nu DESIRABLE La Ouesta Tennis pools gated ltcltiH 21r +4H
4br 3ba 31005/t 3-s1y Villa t\Ome 3Br lam $2500 mo 720-3776 Frple garage wetbar a1c
AIR Realty 673-5870 room P.Ba 1 350 st NEW 1 I I $1400 760 5064 OPEN SUN 2·5 Bldr/A 1 A II access t>eacfl close 2or 2ba • v condo • --~ g S 169 500 Bkr 964-8003 Lovely garden indoor TURTLE ROCK POINTE Ctrtaa bl •ar 10%2 . lndry gar clubhs, Oasis 3Br 2•,ea • family 1n pres-lmat 1044 Sr area S 1950 731-6232 t"'ious gated community •HARBOR WOODS• ·• 2BR 2BA 3 level Twnhse FIR UU If OWIH Spacious 2BR '2BA Frpl Available any11me Can
\ Xlnt tee 1oc ec:ross trom 2BR 2BA woodbrtdge oc vu gar W D New be leased trom 1-2 yrs
Gel'°"s "' 3 decl\s 2 car Laurels on park best relrrg p11n1 & bhnds One S22501mo 786 7500 agt
gar """"' spa m any up view AC lrplc •Ira blk Ir bet\ Sl300tmo L I t.. "l.al· """' 3 o 5 L L •t••a eac. • , grades incl 2nd l/p on storage By Appl ' a r ~ s Pu r _
mstr br prlnc ooly $21SK s l49 500 733-2206 645-4636 or 721·8883 1BR qu1e1 area walk to
*By owner 760-3083 town & beaches Avail TURTLE ROCK lllEW June I No pelS $700/mo * S.ECLIFF * s'81t..3BR tamrm den SPYIWS LUSE 497-t957 btwn 1oam-9pm
_. -Ne"" wn11e carpel Decor-Newbadlord • 4BR
"u' --~ a1or hOme Fran Lugo. bonus 3 lull B'-beaul1· LafaH lifatl 2152
Spectacular 48Rt 3BA Centruy 21 prof lul S35001mo Mali 3eR 2'>ba condo Like lltf!W Prtva
9
te0 Bctl By '557-4373 Gulledge 720-9800 or Owne< 720 4 t or T60-5000 • new' Frplc. 2-car gar,
SEA ISLAND 2br 2' 1ba
den Almost new Over·
looks goll course with
oc:ean & city hghl 111ew
Gated comm Avail 611
$35001mo 786·7500 agt
SPYGLASS ocean bay &
city nigh1 ltght views
4 Bdrm No Pels Avl 5 t6
S3600 mo 619/340-t284
SUPER CLEAN DUPLEX•
Nr Bch 3BR 2BA lrplc.
w /d nkups gar
S1250tmo Yrly673 8754
•S200 BONUS• Greal E· Ullls incl 5/mo 1665 Pool no pets d w carport
side loc• LG 1BR $600 g Irvine Ave -A 720-9422 •722 8140'722·8011 *
up Cable BBQ gar. etc' EASTSIDE lovely 2BR •EASTBLUFF Townhse
Sorry No Pt'IS 631 -8427 Near schoOls & shops Apt 38r 28a. 2 car gar
• • t BR 1 BA pa110 encl Cable ready Child ok no pels $1025tmo yr IN
gar w/d hkups new $650 No pets 631·6 t55 644-1010, 8-5 Mon ·Frt
carpet relrrg $550.mo EXTRA Lg 1BR IBA Pool. 3BR/ 1 *·BA BONUS
Kevin 851-0424 carport $520/mo • S250 ROOM Lg backyd * • 2BR tBA encl gar secunly Call Kevin * * $2250/mo Forst/last &
age nf!W paint clean 85 t-0424 * • • Sec 891-2002
lhru-out• S725tmo 2025
Pomona Ave 646-4559
••••• Superior Nwpt Cres1 Plan· 2BR tBA. stove relrig
1a11on stlutters 3br 3ba crpt. drapes patro. gar
gar pool tennis sauna S675tmo 557-6932
S16001mo 1se 675-2332 **MESI PllES* *
UNIQUE lg faec lam A smelt, qu1e1 complex
home. nr Baycresl (not '" neslled among tall tree•
lhgtll pattern) beaut vtew & 1av1st1 landscape 1Br ~ntn 'trees 4Br I 1 w/ ltke new w/balc:ooy ca
bonus area 1 w11rp1) 3Ba. thedral ce11tng lrplc gar·
lam rm w/wel bar drn rm, age, pool spa, lndry tac
tndry rm 3 car $2600/mo NO PETS S700 • aac
645-8897 or 650-4928 Call llelma 549-2447
VILLA BALBOA 28r, 2Ba.
den 1600 sf plantauon • BRAND NEW *
shutters oversized lub, SmaH. quiet adult com-
lrplc w d retng incl plex Lg lu11ury 2BR
elegant unit• 6 mo lease townhouses Conv to
Avail 5-25-88 S 1300/mo beacti & st1op1 S850·
1w1aa1 dep 722-2581 $925 No Pets 722-1700
720·9044 lftwrrt hacll .1069 Rf/NA( comm poot/lenms S 1500 _ lse Ctlns, 495-3700
*'°'H 1•11* .. , D11·1y P1·1at Cntl •tu 1024 Fixer Back on 1t1e market \[\X.l 1""ff j'f \'I I 2169
cwmSlllTIWI~ 3 BA 3' .. BA pool REALTORS ........ _
JD PROPEATY MGMT Need resp 25 35yrs non-
r-,-..,,.....,,............,.,..,,,,,,...,..,,,.....,,...,,.~ 1 smkr 3Br t>•Ba w spa nr ABOVE nfE BAY So Coast P~ Easy lrwy
v , •' ... 't1 .. J
~·~:-·" ~· ·-
PARK NEWPORT
17141644-1900 .....,,_,....,,_. .......... ...,
~11r .. ~c_,,,.
~~"" f> ....
access $350 557-9022
N/smkr prof stir 2BR 18A
COM Apt nr bet\ Great
loc1 S•25 • ut1ls Dys
955-2510 E..es 721 0929
TEMPORARY
Roommate want ed
Mature aelult to Share
28R apt on Costa Mesa
A vail 1mmed
S350tmonttl Ulll pd
Pool tlot tub Please call
Judy at 642·•32 t ext
316 days from 9 • 5
Your soring r9decofatiog Jlarls ..,,,, a~ lril)
ltlr ti clas: ... oed
EASTStOE COST A MESA 5524 OOO Brashier & Co
JBR 21 .. BA 2 car garage Rttr 759•1'19 • • · · ·~;...:..· • • • • • • · • •• · • •• • g~~Et~r:.:~~ ·~~~~l'~· 5~¥&.~ : . : . : . : : :~~Jr(~::::::: The Daily Pilot has a new way to turn
your Hidden Treasures into CASH
WMr.lC R
• • 1 ; • • •
WSllPtlll
3BR 2't8A Twntlme
Frple, attec:hed 2 car gar
age """*' occpy Ask· ing I 139.900 Marilyq
Coombs 831-1266
WM~fi. .,, ,\ . . . .
-..iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii .... ..iiii OET4CHE04BA2BA new •..•.•.•.• , ••• ·,· i • ......... • ••Yfl-pa1n1 crpt & Window cov· lliiiimiiliiiiimliiiiiii•ll . . • . . . .. •, • • • •. • ,• . · . · . · • · . · . · •
- -I er1ng1 NiOa paUO dbl ,•
N-er SBA SBA. t1mlly garage S 1800tmo 2BA 2BA 6th fir Bayfront •
rm, 4 frreplecas Private Agt 673-5354 ocean view! 1200 Sii, sec
dock l0t 50' boat • 2 --sit Pt Pool & •Pa Cetta •na 2124 2 car prkng S 1595tmo Call 8·30-5 30 955-1961
SI 500 000 Appl Call Jo 2eR 2•.BX TwnHse Huge w•TERFRONT Twn .. ~-Ann Kenton 760-5000 yrd wtauto access Obi "' ,..,.,, ..
RfAW .. 1
~rwrwr 1~· '< ~,,
~TORS
S 2 Mstr bdrms 211ba. gar' xtru• 995 Pat Ok 2 modern kltctien. lrplc, 2
ppl. 846-128416-42•9666 car gar woltl w/d hk-up, 3
•BRIGHTON SPRINGS• patio•. aec: gates. Avail
&Mutttut spacious con-511 I 167!»/mo, yr IM
dos. 28r 2h-w l d•n PtlOM wwkctsytr 10-5
S1095 I 18< 18a 1760 835-2126 Mrt Mebane
liiiiiiir::;a;;;=======C.=;:;;;;i====iiiiiiiiiiiiift Lex In a QIHI water· ......-
• IC9ped comp44Jll Frpie. * lllU ""* w/d hlcup pool Jee: AH 38r 2' •S. pool vu l3350
w/gar I ~· No pall Sotheby'1 IA 979-35eS
CALL Val~ 5"9·2•47 *Tll l&.IJJI.•
•MeM Vllfde quiet a 38A -Den, 38A pMIO,
cleen 38R 2BA. new c:tpt. great 1oca11on Furn
pa1tO. dbl gw lndry rm s21001un1 11900 Agt
$1176 No P"ata 840-2495 7H.e93• L V Prop1.
-~· Mat1e F 873-tm -let •• ...., y .. ...... v.o.· "'°' fem hH 38Rf28A HARBOR VllW
sat 28• 2 car w/Of*IM. Home Community poOI tip. CMMI, 914* CIMn, lg S 1850/mo lie. 145~ 12 tnc: blcil 'yd •ldta9e or 143'-25'1, Stl v-,,.,.,.,t
w~.
Mt-1671
for Information
& surprisingly
low cost.
frtl btl S 1300/11'1(), • MO JBR TOWNHOM~
del> No ,,_tl 5'5-«>35 M pa110. frple, comm.
aft 5iPm S.VSun all daY pool/ape. No p•tt.
3M 2 A ~ Nr 11150/mo, 240·2180
bMCf\, Obi oar. rncd
yn, ICl9. trp1e • ..,,. • oa S1245 14&-15A1
S!()!t~
prepayment
4 Llnes-7 Days s 10.80
NAME
STATE_...__ZJl' __ ....._ ___ ......_~-
AO COPY: 4 llM mfnlmum, ~oprAMefy 4 wotdl ~ h .
I
...
......., ....
$2.56 per day
F•ADS
ARE FREE
Cal:
C....t/Cwnte ....,_. Plutn/l.,.u
BRtCl<tCO..CRE'fE ~ DUSTY'S L..andtca0eltawn IOt 1C1 patc:tl plasterlOQ,
Prof rellable. res. <T.f._ ~. Serv Wltly/f\'\Ofltti/ CUS1om textunng. quMlty
FREE est 641-3283 IAN 1 time Fnie est 241-1640 worit Problems-No Pro«>-
bet--. 9am & 5pm M-F I Of call Betn at 642-4321
U1... 205
H•v••prageule
wltttout tit• praga
S.11 Jour Items In classlfled.
Motor Routes
available in
Costa Mesa
Huntington Beach
Fountain Valley
DRIYD
WORK PART· TIME DELIVERING
NEWSPAPERS EARN UP TO
$600/MONTH. MUST HAVE RE-
LIABLE VEHICLE. INSURANCE,
AND OMV PRINTOUT MON·
DAY-FRIDAY 2-5 PM . WEEK-
ENDS & HOLIDAYS 4-7 A.M
N&'~PORT /CORONA DEL MAR
& LAGUNA BEACH AREAS
CALL 642~ EXT. 205
ASK FOR BETH
Sales
IAlf CREW
MANAGER
Put you Direct Sales Ex-
perience to good use working
with teenagers.
Tha1 1 ALL you pay IOf
3 nne... 30 day mln4mum
In the
Ctruaic Tile -Lll.J lerNn iema• •32&864 ss.4-7831
cust6M CERAMIC fttE 7"6AUNK 6A1v1Nd _P_I ...... __ • ... ----·•
ClaHifted'a
compre-
beaalYe ll•t
of job
opportma-
lttea can
belp yoa
at.art the
DeW year
wtthaa
ezcttm,
career
chaACe.
NO COLLECTING
NO SOLICITING
You can make $500 Plus per
week. If you can hir~. train. &
motivate a Special Sales
Crew getting new customers
for THE DAILY PILOT SERVICE
DIRECTORY
~---• AUTO/BIKE ACClONT 24 .. D • 111-1111
tape.. 5.-c tub enc 5425 • DRUGS HEATING • PLUMBING 1~ A9' Pat S43-804A F~ DA. Free conUt nIW Cart 472-5527
llni.a1 f-.YMYIUL -l~~~:oec;~ N..:r&.1~553 •&-?~~··
"-I IOI ---CLEAN& EXPERT
EXPERT Serva & ~
34 yn e.xp 18 yrs ., ---Llc. 409035 964-8911
==ALUMINUM
"-ingutters LOW Prica.
Fr9eeat Call 831-AAIN .......... ..., Ttu-7-5 l'mamomt~ 25yrae:xp.UC:T-11&428
m&.ft PAUi l20 day 9'8'1 In M~ In my ••ABC MOVING•• !~~·~-----I For more Information Woodbndge hm 7•5889 Oulc* & Careful T 13804e
CALl. TODA Yll TINY TOT HOMECARE.. 2 LO AA T'ES 552-0410 IDUll I IOI .-S Ill ,. I.Ill yra In bua hlghty qualln.d ST ARVlNG SCHOLARS All types lJc 4~
YONI fUlty lie. 751--6858 Sandi New trucks . T 155n9 ROOf LEAK? Low cost,
Deliver One Day a Week -
Must have dependable car
and proof of insurance
Call 842-1444
Ask for Joanne Craney
ftp •• ,. 1111• •111••
Call Keith Hardie
213-890-8818
111a111 a. a 121111 S.W:. onctory ca.aillt 1eniee Ful Service -State Wide highest ~ty roof ,...
... ...matM m Daw* 714-i57-10a8 pan Locall'9fs 780-7176P"'--------1 .. IG..at1 .... 111 ·~ aper., ,. •D• BERNARDO'S• ' '-'---;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;m~tiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;~.i--------" hbte,,..... ~ Moving System Oepeo-·---------------------------. .. _______ After3Pm.C.ol&48-8502 deble & Efftcleht. PUC "'*hC)iSilQO;;a;,dump
... ll1m Hoow:,..ling/~ 10 Uc.•T159236. 968-3307 truck ... ~ 't:he Clllf P\ltllC Utllltile yrs •J<P Aellable. t>oncMd rerno¥81.,,.. -6'2..:J 12
ConwTll .. Dr.1l. REOUIAE.S k ., tna'd. J9nny 548--0621 .... Alt FREE TUTOR SESSION
\NI ... ~. houMhOll •LORI'S CLEANING• s&JcmTE ln;;;;;a;n;a 1<-14 ~RM6-Science ~~~ Ham9-Ren~ SOULMATE ISSUES. 110 Mr Morgwt646-2227
..... ·6 ~·· pnni 131-eMa * 84M957 ~~TU.
tM11r T C.P number In.. ·-.,.. Direction. 540-"671 • 104 """1-l'P!"l!'!P ___ .. _I ~ta. " ~ OEAAMIC SPEQAUSTI
Nw9 a ~ mout CARPETS & WlNOOWS ·= Top quallly worll by
u. ~ ol • "'°"'· IG..-a l6QerlMd pro~ ~ fif ~·c e»-11 IE I••' I ~=::_ ~N ~ 01*9ftMed' llM329
Pvbtlc It,.. ~ ~ 'o. • (Uc. IN.~ "'5-Teol 11Wi!!;';•~;;~ ... ·I .-.ion. 7w-6M-41$1 Good .... a Good ~ _,,,_.....,.....,..-....,.....-....._,,,_.. r ~ 541--tTQ lft .a.-GLASGOW PAINTING '* • I~==~~~~~: ....... Int /Ert 30 ,_,....,., 8111boe'• OrtglrW .... R:lfu• ..... 6'2-6214 w.-.. s.Mcel50-"202
~--m...,rz::~~J T&J PAIHTINO lnt./&L HOME REPAIR. ~ a.t Wf'/ ,...,._.price try. plumbing. ,.,....,
UC.•45G> .. .... Pf~. Allla ta-1'2'5
..
Lml ...... _.lllm
II Yim'.., Tl ID .... 1 l.1111-'
I flw Fu? ', 11.11111 Ml 11 P ff II DI TftlM
A Good P-. To St-1 Looking II With A Job That's
Fun. ~ Ha Oppoftuntt..... And Stll
~ You T1me To Go To &:hod ~ The ~
Without ComplMely ~Mng Up Your NJghtlt9.
EARN $6. 10-$9.50 PER HOURt!!!
• Easy E\'riig Hours • Sllary + Comm + 8cn'98S
We Wll Train Someone With A Winning PerloMlty.
Call Pat Collin 642~6 Ext 430
It May Not Be OZ. But It Isn't Kansas Either1
· .JOIN OUR TEAM
MANAGING CARRIERS. THE DAILY PILOT IS
LOOKING FOR TOP QUALITY MGRS WILL-
ING TO WORK HARO. WE Off'ERXLNT BASE
SALARY PliUS OVER S300 IN . BONUSES
EVERY MONTH, GENEROUS GAS ALLOW·
NICE & OPPTY FOR ADVANCBENT. JOIN
P',JA TEAM & BE B !QB.£ FOR FULL~
CAL COVERAGE. CREDIT UNION, 401K
PLAN. F YOU'VE GOT WHAT IT TAKES,
CALL BETH. 142-4321 EXT. 205 OR SEND
AE8UME JO: OM.Y PILOT. S30. W. BAY ST. b08TA~CA12811
-------~---
If you re 10 or ofder a 1ob as a newspaper
earner might be Just your sae Just send en
this coupon Of call 6'2~ Routes •re
av~••able now'
It H•lllMJ. le I
...,,..~
'~ft; I d hke to find out mor::-~=;,I
1ng • Daily Pilot earner
Name . I
I Address I I I I Ptlone at; t.ci I
1
1
s... r~ n. ..._ ,... -I "'...... _j L---~~11!!---
• . -
I
.J
IPlllTllll
lYllLllLE
EARN
$4G0-$1000/WK
*S71Hr Treinlng -comm
11tSAM-12 Noon Mon-Frt
81111 Now -5 Pc>s1tions Lel'I A#. for LVICOSTA MESA
548-8919
MJ/LAGUNA NIGUEL
582·12CO
•n.sCHEVROLET r;:ri Home of the
. Serengeti Blazer mj§f •Jt.,I Call our friendly salesmen for details
5 79·5100 1-800·228-7240
17071 E Imperial Hwy · Yorba Linda. California
Dom,•rt Our 8
Senit:1 I s,11clion
THEODORE ROBINS
THEelf)STORE
2060 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa
642-0010
o SADDLEBACll
Sales
Leasing
Service
Parts
IRVINE AUTO CENTER
1~800-831-3377 714-380-1200
~ABERS o SALES
BODY SHOP
LEAS ING I I P.\RTS and
SERVICE
Open Sat.
STERLING 540-9100
2600 Harbor Bl vd .. Costa Mesa
0 NEW LOCATION'
SANTA ANA AUTO MALL
1500 Auto Mall Dr., San .. Ana 135-3171
Newport/SS Frwy. at Edinger
Sates Oept open 7 days Sen11ce Hours Mon -Fn 7am-10pm
0 Sterling§.!!!!
SALES • SERVICE • LUSI•& -PARTS
-OVERSEAS DELIVERY SPECIAUITS -
1540 JlllORH RIAi, 8'QfHRT IUCll
•MiM•ttt •• h111-•11H• &•0-1'44
btH4t4 StrYtct llt11n: la.&-10,•. IH4ar..Jri411
e~ I GMC:;.~uCK
"THE SMART STOP"
12 (714) 540-9640
2850 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA
G) JIM SLEMONS IMP_OATS
AC URA
1001 Ou8I It.
Ne•port8Mch
s .... • L...ing ------~~~·P«t.
SAtES SER VICE
LEASING PARTS •
OS<~1tl1z-O\unty~ ltl-ROYAL-....
Thenk You For Meklng Ua #1 In
America. Come In and SH Why
Parts Open M-Sat 8 • 5:30 Sat 9 • • p.m.
. :
Servloe M-Frt 7:30 -6 p m
,..,,, ~ auo. MUWTIMOT<* •Act.
BUENA
PARK
714 / "2-2000
PACIFIC
OCEAN
' • t • .. . ..
l• ,. .' : " .
mc:E1mm-1~·t.·~
"ORANGE COUNTY'S OUIET LEADER OF THE IMPORTS"
12 (714) 540-0713
ONLY 15 MINUTES FROM NEWPORT.
SAVE HUNDREDS!
405 Frwy, East 1 Block to
6633 Westminster Ave, Westminster
714/849-8333 1-800/26-CHEVY
..
7
•nnmaOlllt.L&
UITUOI
New paint, rebuilt engine.
good condition Aaxlng
$1200. CALL Moniea Of
Mo e.45·9420
~· fil
Serving Orange County o .. ·cr 20 years!
Pans & ~rv1~ LEASING SALES
Open Sat. ALL MAKES BODY SHOP
2600 Harbor Blvd .. Costa Mesa
0 540-9100
0 HOUSE of IMPORTS, Inc.
Mercedes· Benz
6862 Manchester Boulevard
Buena Park
'6 SERYJCI 213 or 714/MERCEDES
M·F 7a-6p M·F 8a-6p
Where 1-5and 1·91meet. Sat. 8a·2p
CONNELL CHEVROLET G 2828 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa
Over 23 Years Serving Orange County
Sales • Servloe tii ~ . -~easing <=3• ~ ·~.. ~ -:::u= :;,-
546-1200 Special Parts line 546-9400
CUSTOMER SATISFACTION
0 OUR # 1 PRIORITY
7~. o~~:;~ 54~~;~~ ~ Eagle • Leasing
2524 Harbor Blvd. • Costa Mesa
0 -CAMPBEU I c NISSAN/fUJTNilOO 11,oo,
• low Price' • No G1mm1cln • Greot Selection
• Frtendly People • Eacellent Service
'"" leoch .,._d ~ leoch
(714) M2-7711 (213) St2·14'1
Auto Sales and L.Ung
15'451 8Mch &Nd., Westmtnster '
(714) llM121 (714) ........
# 1 BORDA DEALSll 11' ORAlfGB CO. .
-----~------Sala. SenMe a, Parta ....... ----""-:::-Leulng AU Make.
'h L·~ . . (71•) 98~1959
•auca LllOOLN P MUIY
P LUU.
SA~~ LEASING
SERVICE -PAR1S
F
(
a
°'
tc
pc
cc
Ii
-
]
c
v
fo
in
MONDAY, MAY 2, 1988 25 CE TS
W. ~ewportcenter advancing:
Funds earmarked to buy school site for the Pf'OJCCt financed throuah a com· _ b1nat1on of federal. city and de-
COmm unity f actltty, low-cost housing ve~i~r ~w.'~!·1s have been scounl)a
By GREG KLEJlll
Of .. .., ........
Newport Beach offic&als are puttina
t<>scther a fundina and deve~nt
pecka&c for a lona .. waited west side
community center that also would
finance much-needed affordable
Kirk Gibson of the '-
Dodgers tries to break up
double play during 9-0
loss to St. Louls./81
Estancia High baseball
standout Conrad Colby Is
hoping to attract the at-
tention of major college
and pro scouts./81
Index
Advloe and Games
Bulletln Board
Business
Classified
Comtcs
Death notices
Entertainment
Opinion
Paparazzi
Public notices
PoUoe Log
Public nottoes
Sports
A9
A3
A6
BM
A10
B5
A8
A5
A8
B5
A3
B5
81 ..
--west Newport for some time 1n search
housina 1n the city.
Both proJCCU would be placed on
the site of Newport Chnst1an H1~
School at 883 W. I Sth St .. which will
move to a new locatJon at the end of
the school year.
The site would be purchased and
Thl,Ullbaup
of an appropriate site for additiol'\al
parkland. said City Councilwoman
Ruthelyn Plummer. who has
spearheaded the dnve for the com-
m unity center.
The only parcel Cit) planners could
locate was the school site. which they
decided would be better used as a
c mmuntty center.
"This will be the first opponun1ty
for people on the v.cst Stdc of town to
10 to pravams locally," said Plum-
mer. noting that the city's onl)
e1ust1na community center. the Oasis
Senior Center. 1s located 1n Corona
del Mar
A )OUth center cumntl) in de-
velopment 1s also be1rt1 built in
Corona dd Mar
Construcuoo on the MV. com-
munit) center could bqln as earl) as
this summer. said Ron Whnle)
director of the Cll)'s Parks. Beaches
and RCCT'Cat1on Department.
Hov.c,er de'elopmcnt of the~
J«t 1s sull in the cart) stqn. \\'lutk)
said
The Pf'OJCC1 still requun formal
apprp' al b~ the Planning Com-
mm1on. Cu) Cooncll and the fc<kral
10,emment
But Whit~) and other Ctl) offioals
arc confident that the prOJcct v. LlJ 10
through
··we·, e been lookana around 1n
that area for quite some time We ~
all prett) eJ1.c1tcd about 1t. -said
Wh1tk).
last week. lbc C It)' C OUncil yCJllCd'o
unanimous!) to use about Sl.S
m1lhon tn fe<kral funds to buy t.bc
h1Jh S(hool sne
At a PflCt of S:! m1llion. piUs
purcbast costs for the cnu.re site. city
planners esurnate that S 1.3 to SI.~
million in kdenl funds •'OUld bt
needed. The funds ""'" come in the form of a loan and ... ,11 be paid met
throuah the Cit) ·s kdtta.I ,rant fund.
(Pleue eee COIOIUJOTY I A2)
Winds
wreak
havoc
at sea
2 boaters killed. 40
rescues madi:° pier
toppled dunnggail
y,.., s&aft ... win rq;cu la
0
" fierce ~•ndstorm ra~qied
Southern Cahfom&a tale Saturday
and car1> Sund.a) kilh,. It k:ast two
sailor\ v.1pmg out an already weak·
encd ptcund straftd1na l.4001ourisu
on Catahna ls.land
The• 1nds caused minor beadac:tta
in Onngr Count' •-heft bome-
ov. IX'f'S and C"I t\ CttWS ~ bus)
deaning up do ... ncd Utt bta.Ddla
and uttl1t~ v.orlers rcpatrcd tca11Cftd
pov.-er OU \agtS •
Tbe L.S Coast uua.rd mAMk ~
than ~ rescun 1n the twtJWcnt
Pacific Ocean dunna a 24-bou.r ~od endaoe Sund.a) morrun&. satd
Pem OtTiccr Ch.arks Embleton
.\.fthou&h most •-ett mmor. 41-
'ear-old Charin 05COod of Ca.nap Part ·~ apparmtJ) dro-ncd after
falhn& o,C'fboard about the m&Acs
north of .\'&Ion. Embktoo said. Weather A2 C.Uwaln DILD Allen of <>ran&e Cout Collete •tcnala Tlctory line at the Newport Reptta. It wu a thlllllbe wp day for OCC
8anda1 u the Janlor VanltJ vm ecall croeeea the ftnlah team.a, which won f!!YerY neat they entered. See ~Bl .
05good was struck by sail '1lllQI
and knocked off the SI -foot boet Sea
lust Has "'() compemons ID.de
SC' era! annnpt.S to peck him up ia .a-
foot seas before rc1um1na to A valoa
Harbor and rcpon1na the acadmt.
Em~onsa1d Rosenberg runs 'people' campaigD " hdJCoptn and bmt search 1n
... ,nds that ~unn au.steel abo\ e
60 mph pro"ed fru1tlcu
GOP congression·a1 hopeful mobilizing
volunteers, knocking on doors in quest
By PAUL ARCRIPLEY °' .. ...., ........
At the very first door where Nathan
Roscnbera knocked, the occupent
knew him from a prominent Re-
publican sroup 1n which both were
members..
Yes. he said, not only would he vote
for RoscnberJ. he would like to help
in the campallf\.
At another home in the upscale
Newport Beach neiahborhood, a
tcen-qer remembered the 40th Con-
grnsiontl District candidate from 1
c1v1cs class lecture Roscnbera had
aiven. He. too. was interested in
voluntcerinJ. in this case to meet
course requirements.
Others 1n the neiJhborhood re-
membered when Roscnbera knocked
on their doors two years aao durina
his upstart challenae to Rep. Robert
Bad ham.
Rosenbera often remembered
diem as well. even to the ~ that
he could ask them about their jobs or
\1'eirchildrcn. in both ca1e1 by name.
When residents disagree W'lth him
HB woman gives
novel writing a
try, hits jack.po~
CAMPAIGN '88
on an issue. Rosenberg works 1t to his
advantaic. askina them to remember
that he's "been straisht .. with them
and would take that honesty to
Congress. When he hears what issues
concern them. he incorporates them
into his spccch~.
Tawna alona with Rosenberg dur-
ma one of his frequent precinct walks
provided a glimpse of the candidate
and his campaian stratcay.
Rosenberg. JS. e1pects to know the
outcome of the rac-e before elcctton
day. His campai&n 1s based on
pudehnes he learned at a candidate's
.chool run by the Republican Na-
t1onal Congressional Comm11ttt 1n
Washington D C
It in'ohes thorou&h. pcnon-to-
person can' assing o( the d1stnct's
Republicans b) a leiion of vol.ntttrs
that" 111 tel! Rosen~rg who's for him
and against him and who's un-
decided
Those who ha' en 't made up their
m mds "111 be gJ' en ample opponuni·
t} to hear about Rosenberg from
"olunteers "alkm& door-t(Hjoor.
callin& b) phone and sending them
literature
Precinct captains. '1ctor) teams..
ad' ocac:,: calls -all are pan of the
elaborate strateg) Rosenberg 1s em-
plo} mg to win the con~1onal scat
··0tx to the fact the man Weft no
hfe 'est and had no means of
protecung b1mselffrom lbcdmM:ats.
he IS presumed lost at Ka and
drov.ned. -Embkton su1.
" bod' also •ashed ~ oear EJ Sq.undo.at about :? 45 p.m . Saturday.
It •cas bdte\cd to be that of a bc»ter
.,bo leaped from a duabkd craft to
~1m for help said Los ~
Count) ufquard Set Tom Hartm.
Anothtt satlof ~ bis cnft al
Treasure Island Co'e 1n • ...-
Bcacta afttr a Stn'n h~ became
tanckd ID Its mOU>f v. ind-whipped su.rf rcactnaa 12
fttt toppled a I SS-fooc secuon of the
Redondo Beach Muruape.I ~.fore.
1nadosureat Sp m. An bourlalert.ht
(Pleue 11ee R08EPIBERG/A2) Nadaan RoeenbaJ (P'lm8e w WilUl8/ A2)
Viet vet honored
as crime fighter
By tlOBEllT ~
Ot ..............
Reaino .. Rqpr .. Cam~. a
mtt\C of tbt PtuhpptDC"S and a
~eteranofthc Vte"tnam War. hasbttn sift&kd out as t.ht cnrM fiJhtcr oft.ht
month b) the Huntl"f'Oll Beach
'ciahbofhood Watch cnmt"-f\Pt1nc
orpn1nt1on.
CamP<>SQndo~ 33. he-ant ~
outst<k-has R~nun1ton Bc-ach apan·
n1tnt at about )· t S a m one mornnq
1n Febniaf)
Tabna out his f\ashhghL he aJ..
lqrdty sa• t•o ~n lr)lll& to bttal
into a car in the al~ behind 1
Housing offiCI iii
Irvine glves notice
t
OPEC talks break down;
" oil prices expected to drop
VCENNA. Austria (AP) -OPEC
oal meniiters early _ Monday
mspended for a mootb lbeir eft"orts ao
ICf"tt oa a prQPC*ld tokeis cut in oil
groductioo., ~ piospc:ru of a
£rcsb drop in oil pnccs. ·
Muuilcn of the Orlaaiz:ation of
Prtrolcum EJ.ponisaa Countries said
• ..,90 ea.poe,,..do
VET •••
Pro.Al
car about lhrcc weeks before
He was born in Man&Ja but JO•ned
the U.S. Navy m 1973, he said. He
< was attached as a medic to the flttt
Marion. he said.
Pobce Ctuef Bill Payne. who pres-
ented a plaque to Camposqracio. said
he is .. very enthused bycitu.ens" who
rc«1ve hono rs each monlh from
Ne&&hborhood Watch.
··l"he people an real heroes.··
Payne said ... The) put themselves on
the lane. In some cases they actu.all)
bold •• pcop~ down unul pol tee ar-
n ve
Payne added that vehicle thefts~
-predominant'' in the downtown
they would ruon"ene JuM 8 to
d11cuss the propoKd m:tucuons an
outpuL
Several man11tcn u~ chsap-
po1ntment at the brakdown of
~l&all<>M. which th~ vlCWCd as a
chantt to sh<ft up 011 pricn and open
a oew avenue to cooperation walh
non-OPEC prod~rs who had prooosed the production cuts, ~1 would be much happier if we
could have lfJftld on ruu now." said
Libyan oil manancr Fawri Shak.shuki.
Analysu nwnt.ained over lhc
Wf'tteod that an OPEC faalun to
qrec on production cuts almost
oertamly would send 011 pnces tumbl-
lQ& when world markets opmcd later
Monday.
The production cutuna proposal
was aimed at raismi pnoes to OPEC:S
target ofS 18 a barrel. from the cu~t ra~ of S 14 to S 16. by tiahtening
supplies.
OPEC president Ralwanu Lukman,
of Nigcna. cold rcponen that lbc
cartel needed more 11me 10 consider
1he proposed cuts of 300.000 barrels a
day. or about 2 perttnl of tot.al OPEC
output.
The proposal. pul forward b)
Algeria on Thursda). was an tended to
satisfy the requirements of the offer
by 1he six non-OPEC 011 producers.
The non-OPEC group had told the
canel in a meeting last wctk that it
wouk:S cut alS 011 expons by about
200.000 barrels a day -or S percent
of Ill 10\IJ nports -for two months
af OPEC dad likewate.
·More UDY 11 rcquim:t to clarify
some of the poants of the ofkr." wd
Lukman. who favored accepuna the
offer.
Saudi Arabi.a led the opposition 10
the proposal, arpina that the no,,..
OPEC croup shouJd make larger
reductions and that OPEC should do
no more than match any non-OPEC
cuts barrcl-for·barrel. The Saudis
were 'upported by three ocher mcm·
bcn..
Echl OPEC membcn stro~y
favomt accepunJ the offer. They araurd that while tt was not ideal 11 at
least was a st.an1"1 point f9r possibly
mo~ meaningfuJ cooperative agrtt-
meo&.s with nval producers.
After the mecting, which began
Sunday n.Pt. Lukman tried to put
the besl face on the failure of lhe
OPEC nqouauons.
.. We appreciated 1hc proposal pu1
forward b)' the non-OPEC group.· he
said. "This opponumty given to us as
one thal we cannot Lake lightly ...
He said lhe c.artcl wanted to take ns
time m cons1dcnng a response 10 the
non-OPEC offer bcausc an agree-
ment on mutual cues had long-range
importance.
HOUSING OFFICIAL ••• homAl The proposal was one of Irvine's
hottest iUUC'S in 1987. wath the Cit)
Cou0etl and residents divided over
the propriety and necessity of lhe
project.
Allbouah the ctty received a
$496,000 federal arant to fond the
project. the proposal was eventually
snuffed when it was discovered that
the dog k.enoo was within an El Toro
Manne Base crash zone.
Malcolm Uwls. ITH chairman.
said the p-oup and lrv1M officuls arc
sull waiting for an answer to lbeu
application for a $430.000 federal
srant for a proposed transitional
housing program.
The ctty 1s now considering USln&
five farmhouses. slued for bull-
dozing. 10 hou~ the Clty's homeless.
A vole o n the issue is expected in two
wa-ks.
Lewis said that dunng the past two
months lhe ITH board has been
studying ahernat1ve admini$trative
methods as a means to lower manage--
ment and operating c:osu of ns
programs. including the involvement
of countyY..adc non-profit agcnoes.
ITH officials began 1heir search for
a neY.. e>.t"Cut1ve director on Tuesday.
said u-.-.1s
ROSENBERG RUNS PEOPLE CAMPAIGN ••.
From Al
be has coveted for more than two
years.
Ccnaanl). he has the funds and 1hc
volunlttn "5 one of three fronc-
runners. Ro~nbcrg has raised
$460.000 m cash and pledges He has
been averag.ang aboul S5.000 per da)
he s~ud
In 1986. Badham made pohtacal
hay by noung much of Roscnbere's
money was coming from o utside of
the d1stnct. Rosenberg 1s suit collcct-
ma large amounts from el~whcre.
bu1 60 perccnl ofh1s contnbuuons arc
comma from ms1de the 40th. he said
&dham also u~ Rosenberg's ucs
to his brother. Werner Erhard. to
patnl a negauve picture of the brash
challenarr.
Erhard founded the now-defunct
est, a controversial sclf-1mprovemcn1
prop-am tha1 was likened to a son of
Dale Carnegie cou~ for 1he "Mc
generation.··
Bui 1f leadership skills and powers
of persuaSJon wctt among the talenls
Roscnberg honed at est. he has pul
them 10 good use an has campaign
So far. 1.100 voluntccr5 -chat's
one 1housand. one hundred -have
Slincd on. said Roscnbcri suffer Ted
Long. Probabl)' abou1 350 of them arc
hard<0rc. ded1c:a1ed workers Long
saad
Many of them att high schoolers
who heard R~nbcrg speak at one of
the many c1v1cs and economics
classes he has v1s1ted an the Orange
Coast. Others arC' act1v1sts who have
returned to the campaign trail after
~ ahena1ed in the past by the
politacaJ system. said staff member Joe Tf1i0.
Leadership 1s also one of the maan
lhemes on which Rosenberg has
focused has campaign m~
-1 think government officials have
.a job to be leaders. Betna a member of
Conpess 1s -lake Theodore Roose-
velt s.a1d -to use a bully pulp1l. •
Rosen~ said.
.. And either you're aoing to use the
bully pulpit to make somcth1na
happen for your community or you·~
noL''
Citina the county's lr&nsport111on
juuc as an namplc. Rosenbcra said
lhc W&C1essman ·s role can be limi&ed '° winnina federal transportation
dollan for lhe county.
But he wants to expand that role by
brinaina toeethcr the local factions
that have unsuccessfully pa~
wath transponation questions 10 the
past.
-1 can bnna togrtbcr the vanous
. poups -the county supco ilon. the
· tity council members. the atizens'
a;roupa. tbc devclopcn -brifta them
';WI ~under the auspices of my • IODCI omca and •Y.· •J..ook. we've Ft :=m. I don t know what the i · is. but rm convmccd theft is .
a solution.'
~And you ask them to st.an working
1ogethcr to SQlve this problem.··
Roscnbcr& said.
The rcwlt is that people of daffcttn1
interests now have a s~ in the
sohmon that 1s worked out. -SO each
goes back to bis croup and 115uddenJy
an advocate for the solution." ROSt'-
nberg said.
Ifs a process tha1 has worked
else-.-. hc.-re and chat Rosenberg would
u~ on other issues such as firµiang a
site: for another regional aarpon.
Rosenberg behc"es failed leader-
ship of the pasl can be blamed for the
1ransporuuon and a1rpon dilemmas
being faced toda)' ,
He prom1sn leadership on another
favonte is.sue -water -to avoid a
similar and more dangerous dilemma
m the future.
The Metropolitan Water D1stnct
estimates tha1. based on present
supplies. the Southland will be shon
S00.000 acrt-f«'I of water by the year
2000 (An acre-fool of water supphes
an av~ famal)'s needs in a year).
Recalling the gas cnsas of the 1970s.
Rosenberg said. ··1f )OU !hank people
go1 upsc1 about gas lanes. we Wiii have
a rcvoluuon on our hands afthe~·s no
water when you 1urn on tht faucc1 or
flush the toLlet or step into the
shower."
Rosenberg says he would star1
taking action now to fend off tha1
revolution.
Amon& his proposals arc hn1na the
A.IJ-Amcric.an Canal from the Colo-
rado River that annuaJly loses an
estimated S0.000 acre-feet of water
1n10 IM soil. covcnng local rncrvoin
that lose substantial amounts of water
through evaporauon. and improving
pumping and water 1rcatment 1cch-
niqucs that would increase the water
supply .
The solutions demonstrate has
busincssman·s approach to problem-
solving. Roscnbcr& said.
.. Over 60 percent arc lawycn in
Concrcss." he said. 'That produc:cs a
lcgahsttc approach 10 everything. and
aJI this country's problems c.an·1 be
answered by lqislauon:·
Dave Baker and Chnstopher Cox.
consjdcred Rosenberg's pnmary op-
ponents in the 12-candKlate R~
publican fidd. arc bo1h lawycn..
In his businessopcratioM. stratqic
planning is a vital component. Rose-
nberg says aovernment leaders don't
do enough straiqic planning and
pnoritba~= • .. A budaiet amcndmcnl
would reqwrc us lO set pnonl.ICS. .. he
said.
RosenberJ would put his busmess
ex~ to ute an sucb areas as
military. procurement. wbeft un-
ma~ papei wort and redun-
dant. uo.nea:sary replatioos dri~-e
up costs.
An understandtng of the m1lnal)
-and na11onal defense -as another
are.a whctt RosenbclJ sets himself
apart from his two leading opponents.
A graduate of the U.S. AJr Force
Aca<kmy. he was a Naval aviator
who was credited with saving 24 hvcs.
He was assigned to serve as
exccu11ve suppon officer to Secretary
of Offense Harold Brown dunng the
Caner adm1n1strat1on and was a
nauonal defense ad .. 1sor to ~natc:
MaJOnl)' Leader Rohen Byrd.
Rosenbcr& sa)'s his expcnencc 1n
Washington and the mihUI) make
him the most .. solidi) grounded and
probabl) the most con~rvata' e·· of
the fronl runners on national defense
Rosenberg as among man) who
favor pulling 1hc military 10 work an
the battle against drugs. too.
He differs with some of the other
cand1da1cs, however. on true con-
scrva11ve ph1losoph)' in other areas.
·-rm of the belief that government
that governs lcasL governs best.·· he:
said. "I don't want the government
messani around Y..ath people's per-
sonal lives. ~hale (other cand1da1cs)
wane 10 get tnto morality."
Although personal!)' opposed to
abonaon. Roscnbcrg doesn't believe
government should regulate it. "any-
more than we want lhe government
lookini an to peoplc·s bedrooms."
··1 thank i.-s intellectually dishonest
to say we don't wa~the government
messing around in o business. then
say let's go into peop ·s bedrooms:·
Taking andepe ent stands has
labeled Roscnbe as a son of
outsider who has a few enemies
m the Republican estab£ishmcnt.
The bulk of the local leadership has
thrown ats cndo~menl lo Baker.
Bui Rosenberg has won his share of
heavyweight suppon as well. includ-
ing developer Wilham Lyon of the
Lincoln Club who is campaisn. chair-
man. U.S. Sen. John McCam, R-
Arizona. and Arizona Congcssman
Jim Kolbe.
Over the weekend he was endorsed
by the California Youna Republicans
(He was foundini president of the
Oranae County Youns Re-
publicans.). and on May 27 former
Sen. Barry Goldwater Sr. will come &o
Orange County for a Rotenbcra fund-
raiscr.
Neverthelas, R01enberg knows he
will have to make some phoM calls
when lhe election is over. -1rrm luckyeno&.l&h to win on June
7. I'm IOl"I to have some fenoe-
mcndiQI to do." he said.
But ju1t hke the people he meets in
the d.istnct when he walb door·to-
door. be'll tdl them ... Whether people
ta:rtt or ditaFC. t hope they11 see
bert•s a pay Who wdJ be strai&ht with us. ...
__J '=f 'Illy Piii ~ • I
'
..... Offllce ._..., ... C-...._CA
_....._ ... lllO C..~ CA a3I
QIMlliM-6"11 71 ~ • -ar• .. 1 431'
NL;ft--
.(
JastcaU 642-6088
I
'== .. Ga 11• l ud
u .,......; •row• ....... ,_...,.."'
SllO•"' 1111.-r.10'" ......... .. .. ........ ... ..,...,.,.. . .... . ,.,. ........ ""-*'~'·"' ....... , IOalft .,_,row~ ..
De ......
ar.,..eo.t ......... =~a."9--todllr-'
Tu.-dey, .._ no11"1Ml ... to """'~ ~ .. canyoi•~· ~·,.....,,..to 74 ............. to,_. 90 ln!Md. tonight wll rengt from -4e to 55 Tu.day
.. be COOier. wtth NgN In the mid IOI to mid 70e.
Wlnelt =the Inner ooutal....,. _. blow WMI Ind ncwttw1est 1010 knot• tod•yovw 4-foot -. turning Aght end
VWtable tonight
Mountaina will be clHr but bteeZy with norther1y winds
blowlng OV91' the~ and through the cal'lyoN todey. RMor1
highs wlH range In the mid 50a to mid 80a, Iowa In the mid 20e •nd
309.
DeMrt .i<tes will be moetty cie.r with northetty wind• 20 to 30
mpti .. the MStem deSerta. UPP« deMrt hlgN WIN =re In the
70., lows in the 40. Lower deMrt high.I will range from 8 to 86,
i,ows from '8 to 58
Hlll9llA •• ;; .._.,., " 72 .......... ,. M U.S . Tem ps Surf Forecast ~-0•1 71 " Calif . Temps ,___, .. _ .. L.e '**-Mlle IO 41 AIMn\'.N Y M Q ~ 71 .. ~-75 SS ""'-50 M ~·...-.. u~..,...., '-' ~ 75 51 ~Olly .,. S$ .. .,.,.., .. ,, .... ,_. IO "'"'*• IO IO LMV..,.. .. IO ..,..,_ .. 45 loot~ Coly )-4 IO ~ 72 31 Utlle ... 71 IM --.man• et 42~~ ,.. 11 ..... n IO ~ 71 44 ...... •• 23 San Coufoty
A-.C:Clty u 47 UAltMldc as 53 Eut•• M 41 & 8¥1NW8·V-..,a ,_. IO
"""""' .,. 66 ....... .,. 50 ,,_ et '1 s-dffc11Cw1 W•'°"Y OuOoolt tot .. _.. .. 40 Mlaml8Mcl> 73 .. l-..lef 111 41 T....Oa~ Uftlaeflen08 ..... .. 32 ~ as 55 long e..cll 73 00 ............ .,. ,. .......... as " Loe.A~ 75 53 ...... ell 12 51 Mp94tPaut 11 53 l A AifJ>Otl 91 :; Tides ... $4 31 ......... 71 31 M~ .. 9ae1on 51 .. .... ~ 71 M MofltoYI• 71 .. .,_.,.. 11 .. New YOtll City H 45 ~ n 52 TOOAY
ILft8lo as 40 Noriolll. Va as 47 MO<t•er st 43 ,,,., low 4 2•."' .0 I
8urllnglon Vt 47 " Nonll ..... te 71 SS ._,... 70 51~ 10 48•"' ,.
c.... 37 3$ Ol<W-C.ty 71 $4 "9wporl .,._,, 115 S3 '°"' 3 35 p"' 11
OW-SC 70 to OmlN " 56 0.lend IM • 7 SecOftd ....,, t 50pm S t
0..-onWVa 71 ,. ClnMdo 71 " om-.. 3t CtwtoMHC 74 51 Pt••--.. • Pllm~ l5 $6 TW90AY
~ ~ 3t ,.._... 71 ,. P..-.a }It 75 ., '"'low S1)5 ._,,, ·5.
CNcaoct .. 37 ~.!.'o.. .. ,.. ~-=-... 21~ l1'8a.M ,.
~' 71 42 » .. 65 ;.>$ s IOw 4 OOp"' 2 1
~ .. 34 Pr~ 56 CJ ~Cny 10 42 S--0 IMgfl 10 24 P"' 5t
~SC 77 •• ="Olly 72 .. ........,. 70 40 ~()No 71 37 .. .. '--to Sfl 47 TM e.un ,_at 802 a "' --·al Conc«d,H H se 41 "9flo u 31 ,..,_ ... •1 7 38 p "' !Oday Dlllme-Ft Worttl 78 52 AlcMlonO 71 !i ... ..,_dlno 1.-50 T1>emoo<111-at9S2pm lod81\'and ~ 7:1 41 Silo.A ,. ... QaOrtal 71 50 1411 .. f II 49 Im T.-dey
Deft¥« 78 » .... I.alt• Clly • :N 8anOlefti " " o....--,. 51 IMAnl-11 ... ..,.,,_ ... 47 0.lfOll 72 40 ... ,.,.,.,. " It n ....... 17 ~Extended Dulutl1 70 41 SllleMwle ,, 31 t..Ma.Ana 12 EIPMO .. 17 ---51 • ........ o.po 115 •2 £---IO • ... '4', 1' ... .......... •• 54 W..,,_, T"'°"'9fl Fno.y -Pwtty ::Mtbet*1 45 33 aiou. ... Tl !II ..,,.. llilonlc:a .. 5' ~-'~::oJ.:,--F•90 IO IO ~-S5 II .... _ .. •2 o.y ~--.. :::~ ,. 2t ·~ ,. CJ T.,_V...., .,
10 -~ ---Ft-, t""9 73 ,. r-..S1P1nb9 71 85 T-.. to In 1"8 r'NO IO mod-70a wwrNng 1"to Gr.-F• $2 a. r..-. 7t 50 ~ •• 51 ,,,. -70a 10 -'°" by Ft-, Ol-illlbO<o.N C 1l 41 T-72 " Y«*lmlte VI)' 51 17 Lowt In 1N1 m'6-409 to mld-!IOa tWttaf'll SI 41 T ... 71 IO
WINDS WREAK HA voe AT SEA ...
l"romAl fishing promenade collapsed. s.aid
city spokesman Jim Graham.
.. h's totally gone. like 1t was never
there." he told Associated Pras.
The floor of a fish and chips eatery
also fell into 1he ocean.
Redondo Beach had been ba11cred
in January, too, when huat stonn-
a,encrated surf damaged restaurants
and a hotel there.
Graham estimated the latest dam-
ase costs at SI million..
Abou1 1,400 tourists spent an extra
ntsht on Catalina when the winds
shut down all ferries in and l:>Ut of
Avalon Harbor.
Hotels were Jammed and tourists
WC"rc sent 10 a local church where lhe
pas1or farmed people out to par-
ishoners, a high school gym and a
movie theater. said chamber ol
commerce spokeswoman Donna
Hunsucker.
Boats resumed running when the
winds died down Sunday.
About 78,000 customen suffered
power 04ll&CS throuahout Southern
California. with hardest hit com-
munities between Malibu and Long
Beach. said Southern C'aliforn1a
Edison spokeswoman Pat Messiginn.
"It was prclly widespread. from
Ventura down 1n10 Orange County,"
Meniginn said .. We've had repair
crews working around the clock."
In cast Irvine. traffic was mired for
more than four houB when the w1nds
knocked out four traffic· signals
bel"n·n 1hc San Diego Freeway and
kron1mo on Sa1urda). saad Sgt Jam
Po us
Gusts 1oppmg 65 mph were rc-
pont·d in 1he desen and mountain
regions. and winds fanned a five-actt
brush fire an Palos Verdes Sa1urday
aftemoon
Bob Grebe. a Nat1onaJ Wea1her
Sen ice meteorologist. blamed the
wands on a strong spnng storm over
the Rockies and a high pressure fron1
O\ er thC' Pau fil
· v. hene'-t:r "ands blow. ifs ~e to
a pressure difference, from h1 to
low. JUSI hl..e "acer running own-
htll." Grctx-~1d
Mocher Nature wu slowly shutting
the tap Sunda) as wands tapered off.
COMMUNITY CENTER PLAN ADVANCES ...
From Al
Mesa Dcvclopmen1 Co. will also
kick 1n up to $450.000, but lhc
de' doper 1s reques11ng a 16-unil
apanment dc"elopmenl on the s11e.
some of which would m~t lo-.-.<osl
housing standards as specified b> 1he
federal go' ernment. accordmg to a
uaff repon
Whatle) said 1hc (Onstructaoi-of
some affordable housing on 1he lite is
neccssal) m order for the prOJcct to be
awarded the federal loan Bc1w~n
S:?S0.000 and $350.000 an cny money
also would be u~d to fund 1he
prOJCCI.
The tcachmg contracts. equipmC'nt
and cumculum for Newpon ChnS>-
taan High School ha,·e been bou"'l
oul b) Covenan1 Community
C'hurrh. which 1s currcntl) ncgo11at-
1ng for a ne". larger location w11h1n
aboul fiH m1ks of 1he curren1 s11c.
said a church official.
NOVELIST'S FIRST BOOK A HIT ...
From Al
fonhcomang book. "Payment an
Blooc:t:· shC' and her husband dis-
co' ercd an isolated grave 10 a
graveyard. She worked the grave in10
the book. she said.
While researching for her un-
finished novel. "Well Schooled In
Murder," Toabin spent a month last
fall v1si1ang British boys schools
where she also~as a guest lecturer.
The Bnttsh teachers got in10 the
sp1ra1 of mystery wnt1ng. she said, and
showed here where a murder could
take place an a classroom at 1he
school. She took lhe advice and used
the room in her stol). she said.
To1b10 as prc11y guarded about
details of her first book.. "A Great
for
Dchverancc:· and is reluctanl to give
awa) the plot
She says lhc: book as ··vel). very
intense and disturbing." Set an lhc
Yorkshire counlry side, it's abou1 a
19-ycar-old girl who·s accused of
decapitating her father. In the open-
ing pages, theJirl is found sining on
an ovenume bucke1 next to the
corpse in the barn ofa family farm.
··1 did 1t. rm not sorry." she says.
But Toibin said that an Ill next to
the body has no fina,erprints. It
provokesqucst1onsofwhyshe'd wipe
oul fingerprints yet confess 10 the
murder. Toiban said.
A native of the Bay Arca. Toibin
said she's been writina since she wu 7
Spring and Summer ~
. t
years old bu1 senousl) and pro-
fess1onall~ onl~ for about five years
"I "as teaching a course on the
British mystel) stol) (al El Toro High
School). and said. ··0tt. I can do
th as." She tool a leave and has been
wntang ever since.
"Writing 1s a 101 more challenging
(than teaching.) I have to rely on my
creative facuh) all the time. I can't
toss the ball to 1he students and say,
'you gu)'1 do 1h1s • ··
She uses Great Britain as a
backdrop for her books because she's
earned "a love affair" for the country
since British rock and roll bands
.. incd fame in the 1960s. she said.
1