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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1988-05-31 - Orange Coast Pilot. . _\ - • ·-• •• .. . • • TUESDAY, MAY 31, 19 25 CE . Veteran~·clash at Irvine-rally 1Number ioftiaifflc deaths down Fourdte tn county; 41ho1 aydeaths reported in state BJ ROBERT HYNDMAN °' .. ..., ........ Roadways in Oranae County and throupout California were safer this ........... .,&.-..... Contra backers.peace convoy actlvtsts start melee on Memorial Day at City H BJ JONATHAN VOLZKE ftetts u.5he1'cd thrccoutDdeforMdJ. ... JENNIFER WEBER ina spc:a.k:ers. No arrests WC'R ..... oe .. .._....... but e1ctn pohcc otflcien SlOOd by .-1 On ,,_ the croY.-d broke up. a way mtendcd as a memoriaJ to "We arc rean~1-n.....e ..., tllO. .. those who d~ in war. a battle ~ "T -erupt~ in l~ane that turned men Aid Diet De PP. one of dli who had ontt fought for the same protesters and• Navy veteran. ·we h 5hould be bononDJ those.._ wae cause IPJnst cac other killed That's ~hat Memorial Olly is Sharp v.'Ords were exchanacd and all abo t th ..... _ vc • .........:~ b-~veraJ small scuffles broke out when for th:c.;nt~ wuvp ~ ._ a sroup of "ctcraos and an aucmbly But even as Delapp -the i.ncolD- of pcacc act1v1sts on a nauonWldc trek ana commander of the lrviDe Vet· to gather food for the children of erans of Forel&f\ Wan post -spc;te • Nicaragua held a Memonal Day rally othtt veterans voiced suppon for the at Irvine Cat' Hall. project. Whale rough I) 250 supponers of -1 spent foUr years an Vietnam ad the Veterans Peace Convoy to I want to makes~ there is nq.more Nicaragua crowded into the Caty fiJhtang." one man yelled as the Council cham~rs to hear Ma)or protesters chanted "socialist pia" Ud Larry Agan and Laauna 8c:acb • -commie" at the project supponcn Councilwoman uda Len~ speak, IS they left the 10 a.m. rally. - more than two dozen d1ssentcn It was Ap'an, however. who toot ~outside the brunt of the prot.es1Cn' abule, Memorial Day weekend, with traffic = 11toee1 candldate DaYld Baller fatalities anc;htrunk.en drivina arrests to a crowd proteedn• a rally for tile down from a year ISO· Veteraaa .... C..YOY tMt made a llem· orlal Day 8tap ID lnlne on llond.ay. The group oppos1n1 the incl~ 90me ibarp rcmatbfloaa Nic:ara&uan atd was inside the fellow oouno1inan Dave Bater, who chambers.. but left when pollCle of-,..__ _ VBTSa.A.Re/ AS) ,,,,----Four people were killed in OnrNe County, pan of a statewide total of 4 l fatalities, the California Hi&hway Patrol reported. Last year, 46 oeoole were killed durina the Iona hOliday weekend. Locally, Ten Lee Delmonico, 26, of Huntington Beach was killed at '4:10 a.m. Sunday when her 1979 Toyota Corolla slammed into a utility pole after she missed a tum on Irvine Center Drive near Lion Country Safari. The cause of the accident is under investiption, but police said there was no indication drup or alcohol played a role. The three other Orange County fatalities occurred in Anaheim, Santa Ana and Westminster. The California Hiahway Patrol reported also that the number of drunk.en drivinaarrcsts. 2,026 motor- ists, represented a 2S percent drop from last year when 2,692 were arrested statewide. The reportiDJ period bepn at 6 p.m. Friday and ended at midni&ht Monday. ·•What it shows is that hopefully they are aettina the messaae not to drink. and drive," Clf P Offiou'K.evin Douahcrty said. ' .. Unfortunately, they &rU't Fttina the messaee about 1eat belts." ~ Of the 29 people killed tn CHP jurisdictions. 27 were not weari9' seat belts, DouaJtterty said. ~ Traffic ·was liahter than "normal throua.hout the state beCause of unsnsonable cold or windy *Ca'tber, · inclUdinaple-foroe winds. snow ind rain in some pans. While windy ~lher caused havoc ofT the Oranae Coast, strandina dozens of boaters, it kept thinp qui~ on local beaches as tbe cold air virtually emptied ~ sands until · . • Monday, when sun wont).ipen re-Aflaf18e .... to.•.,...A...aaeoftlae.,... .. atllarbOrLawa ~ ... TllAn'IC/A2) 111..adal Park la C.-M.a. where tbe Soatb toUt . ............... &.-..... Veterau Orp.D!atioa W lta S4tll maal 11-0ltal Day SerTlea. Sada O.C 1epreeeata a fa11ea een-ke•a•. Services honor fallen veterans BJ .JONATllAN VOl.UE °' ............. Too many people i&nort'ttbt me.an- ina of MemonaJ Daz and -just me it as another day of( retired Marine Corps Bn$-Gen. -william .. Art .. Bloomer Slld Monday at a Corona del Mar ceianony. "'You caa Jods a natioa ·1 adc:als !'x bow it rtmeml>en its war dead., Bloomer said.. -10 peral.. tllte Uailed States docs a &OOd job. but l doe't think \00 many ccscmnnies are wdl anmdc:d.. ..,. oo muy people jvst me it as anolher day oft:"' Across tbe Oraaie C'.cat. bowe.-er. hundreds ftoodcd memorial pats iD nearly every community to pay tribute 10 those who los1_ their lives t• defeodtn& the COUDtr)'. Bloomer. former coaunaDder of the EJ Toro Manne Corps Air SwioD and now a City COQncil ~its Irvine. said individuals are fiee 10 chose how they spend tbe day, but they sbou1d remember 1"bere tbat ~camefrom. .. It's imponant for the ~ 10 rememberwby we have the day aa the (Ph111 _lft __ JAL/A2) Nuclear treaty from summit doubtful eo.ta Meea High footbal at• Terry Bryent prOved he9rt CM rnllk•• for a leek of llm In hie drtw for 1.000 yar:da. /81 Cout MOSCOW -Soviet leader Mikhail S. Gorbachev told President ll~ today it may be '"time 10 ban& our mts on the table" to prod nemDlil1on workina on a treaty bafvi .. stiatecic nuclear anns stock· piles. But at was dear that an qRCmcnt would not come at this week's summit. .. I'll do anything that worb. .. Reapn said. · Offiaals m both delegations said the pl was to reach an agreement' before Reagan leaves office next AddltlonlJl..,,,.mlf co...,_on• January. Gennad> Geras1mov. the Soviet F«cip Mmisuy spokesman. said that .. unfortunately, t.bcre will be no more siJninp" beyond minor qrecments fiuhzcd today. On their third day of talks. Reapn and GorWbev met in the SoVlet leader's K.rendiD of&ce. sittie& be- neath I portrait of Kuf Man. Afttt t.bcir di9cussions.. they took ~ un- Grad nights: Parents ' 'love gifts ' Coast()uard kept buy over weekend .. •1,,.. A.Ill di• Prw Seven climbers Ud biten chataensina California mountaim dw\na the Memori&J Day weekend needed 1uimnce al\c:r stormy weather and inexperience bampcftd their hikes, officials said. Two Seattle climben comoleted 1heir a.scenl Suqday of the nonbwest face of Half Dome: in Yosemite National 1>atlt with help from rescuers aner their ropes froic over- night, leavana them stranded at 4,200 feet. park spokeswoman Mallory Smith said Monday. The National Park Service de- Ii vered fresh ropes. sleepina bigs, thermal clothin.a and food to Charley Hampson, 33, and Bill Enier. 32, a~t 5 p.m . Sunday, Smith said. A helicopter lowcttd two ~ue damben who bdped tbe pair flnish lhc: final 600 feet three hows law. A pair of ftO~ice b.ibn. dretll:d i tn shorts and T-shirts. spent the • t in Antela National Fomt re wanderina earty Mooday into u Altadcna beck~ Where a resi· =ve them• ndc to their car. Los County abc:riff'a Deputy Ga Ramirez said. Tbe Peters brothcn. Chris, 27, and Cr:aia, l I. of Bwbank suffered no ill effects from btavina the l\iabfs ~ de&n::e temperatures. "Ot~r than the feet that they were cold and had a few scratches, ther, were fine and alad to be t.ck. • Ramirez said. They did not start a campfire for fear of stanina a brushfire, he added. The rmn were sch«suled 10 hike in lbe SWiua Falls area north of Al~ ud weft expected beet by Suodly aftmlooa. They weft ,. Poned missina at 9: l S p.m. Sunday, Deputy Roxanna Schuchman said. Tbrceovc:tduch1ltmwerefound1t I l:30un. Mondey in the San Gabriel Mountains above Uule Rock Dam after they became lost durina a downhill trek from the Buckhorn CamPlfOund on Ansc:les Crest Hi&h- way, said Los Af\Fles County sheriffs Deputy Darrell Brown. Lou Gelbor, 32, Mark Welton, JO and Dave Puvo, 30, all of Los Anaelcs, were in cood conditiool Brown said. There were expectea • back Monday morning •t Llttle Sycamore Campground above the Antelope Valley. NUCLEAR TREATY CHANCES DOUBTFUL •.• homAl Marian t-itzwater wd Reapn,.tfad slept poorly and that everyone in the delegation was 1ired, despite a four- day rcs1 stop in Helsinki. Nancy Rcapn, asked about her husband. said, .. He sleeps fine." Fnzwater said Reagan was in good health and "his swnina is just fine." At a meetina with Soviet students. Reagan was asked about bis im- pression about Soviet dissidents and refuseniks with whom he met. Soviet newspapers described one of the dissidents as a collaborator with the Fascists during World War II. The president said he knew nothing about this allqation. R~n said Gorbachev .. bas been most bclpf ul and agreeable aboul correcting" the problems incurred by thoscpoups ... We have the same type o( thana happen in our country," Reagan said. blaming it on bureau- cra~. . The Soviel leader expressed new hopes for completing a major arms treaty, but it was nol clear whether be was talking about getting it done by summit's end -or merely before Reagan's term concludes next Janu- ary. Soviet and American officials have said repeatedly they do not expect a stratqic arms pact (ST ART) to be concluded here. During an encounter with re- porters, Reapn was asked if he still believed the Soviet Union wa.s an "evilempire,"ashehascalled it in the past. Standina next to bis host. Reagan satd be no longer thought that way. -1 was t.alk.i~ about another ume. another era, • the president said. The leaden also watched and joined in the applause as Secretary of State George P. Shultz and Soviet Foreign Minister Eduard A. Shevardnadze signed several second- ary agreements, inctudina a pair of arms accords. U ndcr one such pact aar'eed to in Motcow, the super- Powers will notify each other of the time. p~ and in\Cndcd ta.raet of intm:ontincntal-ra.nae missiles tests. R~ cootinwna bis public rela- tions offensive to promote freedom and human riabts in the Soviet U nion1 met over lunch at the House of Wnters with artists, filmmakers and wri ten.. Talk.ina to some of the Soviet Union's leading intellectuals., he dis- cussed how an actor could become president -explaining that both anists and political leaders bad to be able to IJ'l.SP a vision and 10 put it into life. .. By the way. I've found that Mr. Gorbachev has the ability to arasp and hold a vision and I respect him for that. .. Reagan said. Later, in an address prepared for delivery to students at Moscow State University, Reagan said the young people were Ii ving "in one of the most excatint: hopeful times in Soviet history ' when "the first breath of freedom stirs the air." He said "we arc hopeful that the promise of reform will be fulfilled." The president cautioned that .. ~ grcss is not foreordained. The key is freedom -freedom of tbouaht. freedom of information, freedom of communication." He cited steps in Sinpporc, South Korea and Taiwan, addil\&!!lat the most excitingcbanaes were: iri "China "where one quarter of the world's poDUlation is now •tting its first taste or economic freedom ... GRAD NIG~TS ALONG THE COAST ••. From Al ~ $20.000. Ticket sales rcimbune only part of thal sum. Local businesses help underwrite the balance. In some cases, big developers like The Irvine Co. and C.J. SCgerstrom &: Sons. have donated up to S 1.000 for the parties. "We support It for the very simpk reason that we think it's 1mportan1 they be given a good opportunity 10 have a good time together, one lasl time together. without mixing al- cohol or drugs an." Segcrstrom spokesman Thomas San1ley said. It's good public relations. SantJey said. but has Ii Ille other benefit for the company. "I don't thank that there's a real payoff thal even every graduate knows which businesses supported (the party). The payoff 1s rc:ally. 11's just something important thal needs to happen in the community:· Althouah most Orange Coast hiJh schools still send gradua1es 10 Dis- neyland·s grad night.. most say that is secondary to the party. The am~­ ment park 1s n_ot that special for Orange County youngsters, many of whom have been to the park rc:pcatcd- ly. And the party is a chance for the whole class to be together one last time, rather than splitting off into groups as 1yp1cally happens at the theme park. for everyone to see each other one last time ... .It's le.ind of a group feelina. It rulty lelS you know that you're the paduauna class of'88 instead of just a bunch of kids 1oin1 to Disneyland." Anditaivesparcnts,somcofwhom have: worked «>gelbef for ycan and have watched one another's chi~n grow up, a last chanoe to sec the youngsters before they embark on adulthood. • "It's neat to see on this ni&ht how much like kids these kids really arc. You know bow~ can be. It's neat to see them havana aood clean fun," Robinson said. These are the local bi&h schools having&rad niaht panics: • Corona deJ Mar, June 23 -Sea Kings seniors will live through a .. Night of 1,00 I Dreams. .. Parents are not disclosing details of the party, which costs $35 per graduate. • Cost.a Mesa, June 23 -Or- ganizers are keepina the theme secret. Tickets are S40 now, $50 at the door. Disneyland is slated for a June 17 trip. • Edison. June 16 -The theme for Chargers grads is "Fantasy Island" and tickets arc $35. Seniors turned down the chanoe to go to Disneyland this year. • Estancia. June 23 -Students have a choice of aoing to Disneyland for $23 or takina a cruise on Newport Harbor and then going to a party, which costs $40. scheduled for June IS. •Irvine, June 22 -The theme of the party is "Sail Away." Students will go J() the Seauoia Athletic Club in Buena Park. Tbe cost is S3S. The following night arac:tuates can 10 to Disneyland's &rad niahL Ticlcets for that arc $24. • Laguna Beach, June 23 - Parents are not announciJla the party's theme until &raduation niahL Tickets arc S3S. •Marina.June 16-.. Southoftbc Border" is this )'ear's theme and ticket$ run $2S or S30. dcpendin&_ on when the graduate buys them. Tbc Disneyland trip is scheduled for June 10. • Newport-Harbor, June 23 - The Sailors take to lhe hi&h seas with "The Buccaneer Bash." lickets arc $40. Graduates can go to Disneyland another night. •Ocean View, June 15 -Gradu- ates arc taking a cruise of Lona Beach Harbor with tickets costing S.O. Students can go to Disneyland June 10. • Univenity, June 22 -Seniors start with a party in the gym with a Iheme of "Uni at the Movies," then get the choice of aoing to Disneyland (S2S) or cruisina Newport Harbor ($4 5). The class reconvenes for break-f asl 1he next mominJ. • Woodbridsc:, June 22 -.. Safari '88" is the theme and tickets cost $40. •• •• .. •• • . . •• . ' :· . ~: . . U.S. Tempe. ... tide ti ., ...... ,.. • • Le :::r .... .. • ., IO ~ .. ....,. .. • f4 • . • al ,,.,,...0.. r. ._ ~ ........ • • :.:..•( ., Calif. Tempa. ..... .. .. • .. ~C*y " ., •u.. • • . .. .. : 11 .. ...... ., • ...... °"' • • :~ ................. 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" .., .... 10 .. e~ .. 11 .., ... ~ 11 ~ l&te .. . , ltocblll n IO ,...,... .. 47 """'Md~ dolldll -.. --~ ....... :.:':.." • .. .......... ,,...,. ... ~ ..,..,...,24....,..,.. .. ~""" .. .. :L'-'-...... :::;:,.--.. ...... . ~ • 11 ""* -.. .._,_ .. -HowltOfi 12 14 lfld ...... 111 .. ~-l-.lll ...... 1. • .. .. ......... ,,...... ~ " .. ,,_.I,.... .. .. ...._ .. ~ ~City .. • Surf Report L.9V..-74 u Lii*"°'* • " ~ " a Loe.noel -...,.,,. ......... ,, 17 ...... ..... lwll 1-S .. ........... 11 11 .._.....,,~ w .. ...... • a ....... ...., 2-S .. ............ " 11 dnd .......... 1-S ,.. .......... IO " == t-S .... .... on.or. .. .. 1-2 po« .... YOfllClty 11 11 aenoi.-. ~ .. ~City .. 10 ........... GINN .. .. ............... ....... ..... ~. ~ ~ ......... ........... ...... .......,, ..... OnUrto ~"""" ........ ,._...... hn...,_dlno e.G*tll .._AM 12 • • • ., .. 11 .. .. 41 74 11 11 .. n .. Tt IO IO .. IO " .. u 14 41 .. .. 74 .. 14 to " .. 14 IO 11 " Tides M-M7:11pm,,._~ M 5:42 Lm Incl .. ....,,_• 1::.::.. ...... n.. .. tltp-"\.. .. ., .. uo UI'. _, ......... S3 RESCUES KEEP OFFICIALS BUSY ••. Prom Al old airt. from the beach at the island's Goat Harbor cove, said Sheriffs Deputy Hal GranL The names of the ~ Coast residents -four from l-lcwpon Beach and two from Costa Mesa - were unavailable this momina as sheriffs deputies.continued to patrol the island bf helicopter, lookina for wreckqe or utjured. At ·least .0 other stranded bolten were mcued around the island dur· ing the Iona weekend. ICCOfY1ina to county lifeauatd.s. Some: swam with lifCJU&lds 1C10S$ rolliDJ. waves to wa1tina rescue craft. saad Ufquaro Lt. John McKay, whose own oper- ations reteucd lS peop&e in three days. "We bad more than 30 cases Mondat, when we usually have lhtte or four, said Coast Guard Lt. Debra HarbauJh. -we were hopping from one bolt to another.·· The bowlina winds and rocky teU. whipped up by• sudden and Wlusua.1- ly fierce late-sprina storm, were blamed for two apparent deaths Sunday. Conditions improved Monday~ many bolt.en continued IO storm warninas and take lhel1Cr in Avalon Hamor and in coves oo Santa Cruz Island, off the Santa Batbera ~t. said Coast Guard Quar- ter .nastcr Elizabeth Flemina. ''lt WU a ni&btmari~d. ... a very memorable Memorial week- end,·· McKay said. None: of those rescued at Ooat Harbor were seriously burt when their three boats smashed .,ainst tbc rocky shore Sunday afteroOon., Llfe- pwd LL John Stonier said. They swam to safety and pcoole aboard an undamqed bolt pve them food and clothing to set lhrouab a cold lliabt on the beach, Stonier said. The harbor 11 nnacd by l .000-foot cliffs and inaceessible by road. so the boaten were lifted by helicopter to an inland area where they could be driven to Avalon, the island's only town. · Lifeauatds and the Coast Guard were 6usy Monday respondina to various trouble calls on Catalina. destination of 11 many a.s 400 boats over the Iona weekend, aocotdina to Harbormaster John Phelps. Meanwhile, a teareb for Thomas Fortuna, lost when his sailina • catamaran capsized off Santa Catalina Sunday, was suspended Monday after rescue crews failed to flnd a traoe of the missing man, said Flc:mina. Anolbef man, David Wri&ht. also was missing and presumed drowned after a bolt in which be was riding crashed into a pier near Lona Beach Harbor Sunday, said Coast Guard Petty Officer Dennis Hall. RECALL COULD COST .$60,000 ••• PralllAl another election to name repl.aco- mcnts. then the city would be liable for about another S2S,000, Rollinser 11.id. .. If the rcc:alJ qualifies for some other time than tbe Nov. I election I'm aoin4 to slit my wrists," Romneer said, ootina that t.bc city would have to hire polling places and people to staff them. as well as havina to pay the cost of printing. Meanwhile, recall leaders arc tryin1 to make sure that their aianatures. once: collected, ao strai&ht to the Oranac County Rqistrar of Voten office for vttifJC1tion, rather than to the City Ocrk's office finl Barbara Westbrook said she and other recall proponrnh· don't lTUst Rollinger to keep .seem the &ipatures on the recall peUUons. .. we don't tNat a.nyt.bina aoina in there (City ~all) and we don't -ant an)thina beina &ampmd with," she said. ~. who had not beard of the !)Ian tbas momina. said toina around ko~ltnsc:r was, "bcina a little para- noid:· Moreover. the Rqis:trar of Voten by law can accept the sianatures only from Rollinaer before it verifies them for the city, said Rosalyn lever. assist.ant rqjstrar. ··1r they are maltina accusations (apinst Rotlil\IC!f) ... I don't want to set close to it, .. lever said. High court won't hear death row appeal W ASHINOTON (AP) -The Su- preme C.ourt mused to bear the apoeal ofCalifomiadeath row inmate Adam Miranda, convicted of killing a convenience store employee in Lot Anaeles County in 1980. Miranda and CCMtcfendant Arnold Gonzales were convicted of kHlina Oary Bladt and WOUD<lina K.elly Cband.lcr, another store employee. "If you didn't have (the party) everyone would go their own separate ways right afier gnaduation and no one would sec everyone •in," Mike Wardner. Universily Haah's ICl\ior cla~s p~s1denl. said .. It's a aood idea • Fountain Valley. June 16 -The party has a crua~ theme and tickets cost $35. Disneyland's grad nilbt is The Disneyland trip is slated for June ~iiiiiiiii!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 17. MEMORIAL DAY SERVICES HELD ••. From Al first place and those who pve Lhcir 14vcs for our country:· said Bloomer. the honored speaker at Pacific View Memorial Park. whett more than I 00 people g.atherco to remember the TRAFFIC ••• FnmAl turned by the thousands. In Huntinaton Beach, 1bou1 70,000 people pecked the city's roast.line on what is aeneratly considemS the start of the summer season. Newpon Beach hfquard Craia Fanner said S4-deptt water kept most of the 90,000 people in Newport on tbe sand and out of the watc-r, atthc:Nib a rcw rescues ~ made. Jr• e.· V.&ft M4 n. M-liedaNtl r,.. ra,,.,1114 ,. M ,...,,_ nation's fallen h~roes. Newport Beach City Coun- cilwoman Evelyn Hart, Costa Mc:sa- Mayor Donn Hall and Walt.er Ehlers. a Congressional Medal of Honor recipient, also auendcd the cicr- emony. The event marked the 30th Memorial Day observance hosted by 1he Newport Harbor American Lesion Post 291 . In Costa Mesa. the city's veterans orpniz.alions ~led their 34th annual Memonal Day services at 11 a .m. Monday at Harbor Lawn Mem- orial Park. Bria. Gen. Steobcn Wyman of the C.lifomia Anny National GUiid was the auesc'fPCakcr at that ceremony. ~ hundnds American flaas are planled on ""The Avenue of the flap" in honor of fallen soldicn. Roben Hanson, commuder of Leaion POA 44~. read the •ma of l 3 w ~ ;_ .. L· · ~ ~· soldiers whose flags were added to the memorial Monday. In La&una Beach. the American l.eajon Post 222 and the VFW Post S868 held an observance 11 Monu- ment Point at Heisler Park. The 11 a.m. ceremony, complete with a Marine Corps firina detail, was prccedcd by a performance by the Laguna Beath Hi&b ScftoOI band. Memonal Day observances have bcc:n held 11 Heisler Part in l.quna Beach since 1946. Veterans groups In west Oranse County. includina HWltinaton Bc.aCh and Fountain Valley. com· memoraled the holiday with 11 a.m. cercmonia at Westminster Me10- oria1Cemettty. Memorial 0.y, form¢r May JO every year. is a JCderal boliday now cddntcd on the las1 Monday in ~y. ,,.,, ......_.,..,., lfretee ~ .... , ..... ,..,... JaatcaU 642-6088 Cira , • T I pt 1111 • THE P.O.S.H. OFFICE VISIT Because your time is valuable. and getting away from the office isn •t always possible. we offer a highly experienced staff that can come to your office. At your convenience, we will present a comprehensive collection of our in-stock suits, sport coats and furnishings, or if your prefer. samples ofmade- to-measure clothing and dress shirts. You will be fitted by one of our master tailors. in your office. and your. selections will be delivered back to you. PLEASE CALL FOR AN APPOINTMENT ... ;4NDSEE JUSTHOWEASYSHOPPING ·CANBE. • 640-010 .. .. t2 • ' • .. ... • • I • • • ... •• • .~ • • I :· .. . ' •• :. I' . •• :· ·~ •. :· !: . <>r.,ge COM1 DAILY PfLOTIT~ • ...., 11, 1• * M DtsasteFsetwtce tra ining session set for volunteers Vet, 69, looks bac~--and forward AD intftliductoiry CO\lne for Red Cl"C* dilwtr 1ervices vOlunllltn f1 bdJW Offered at 7 p.m. oa June 7 at the Ora• County C'hapcer tadquanen. 701 N. Oolden Cuae Drive. Santa Ana. The ICSlion will focut OD theher ~t. ~ wana1t. communications. public rtla-uon' mul fecdiQI. hc:alth care and what trainina is available to voluateen in all attas. To Rli11tt for the trainina. caU t~ ~ quanera at 13~S381, ext. 140 . SmaJJ IJamae. coane A coune on small businet1 ownen.b.lp tblt wiO focus on establishina, 1:n4 opentina a bullneu will bt ottered in two etpt·week aession• at ~ Coast Collete. beliuant MOnda~. The claas will cover such toptet as tet·UP plans. financial analysis. &oen packqes, marketina. credit, site planniq. purcbasina. human resourQCS, man· qemellt control and operatina techniques. It will also look at ways to make an exi1tina business profitable. . for reaistration information. caJI 432.5n2. Cuper Par~ volunteen .. Docent Trainini for Volunteer Naturalisu .. will be ttiscussed by ill Tidwell, Oranae County vcaetation supervisor, when be address memben of Casper Wilderness Park Volunteen. The IJ'OUP will meet at 9:30 a.m. Saturday in the theater at the visitor center, Casper Park.. 33401 Ortcp niahway. San Juan Capistrano. Tidwell, who had served with the oounty park 1ervice. is a lflduate biololist, holds a rnastc1's ~in environmental studies. conducts toun for Coastline CommunityCollqieand isan instructor at Saddleback Collqe. Coane loo~• at the world Two three-unit councs that will loot ~t major . countries of the world -their population, resources, ~neraJ development and physical settina -will be offered at Oranae Coast Collese bqinnina June 6. For rqistration infonnation, call 432-5772. Irvine newcomen to meet Newcomers in the Irvine area are invited to a act-acquainted coffee at IOa.m. Mondatin the Fine Arts Center, Yale and Walnut avenues. Representa· tives of many interest aroups will attend. BraUJe voJanteen 1JtJ11g1Jt The Braille Institute of Lquna Hills is seekin1 volunteers to read newspaper articles to a blind poup and discuss current events. The aroup will meet Fridays from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. in the l&lesia Park Community Center. Call the Volunteer <:enter ofOrantc County at 582-3176 for further infonnation. CdM Blgh see,klng gnu The class of t 968 of Corona· del Mar Hiah School is plannina iu 20th reunion in Newport Beach July 9 and is lookin& for lflduates. Alumni from that year should oootact the reunion committee at 474-3644 or the hi&h school at 76().3320, ArtlultU ezercJR program "Joint Efforts." a mild exen::ise procram for arthritis sufferers. is offered weekly in the Com- munity Development Center of San Clemente Hospital. The prosram is open to the public ellCh Wednesday from I to 2 p.m. and there is no charJC for membenhip. Call 661-4415 for rqislrltion information. An Invitation Att9nlion cqanimtion pi..W.lfa and ~ We want to hetp _..,our 11pcoiM19 9\'9rlfl, ,,......, ....-.,. and Midi ...... ~. Send w .. ~ incWlne ...... place, colt fif Cll'IY) .... phcN'9 ..,..._ for adcltlawldl WorRllllllllfl lot .,..... loerd. Daily Hot, ,.0 .... 1560, Cotta Meta, 92626. Repona of 10Uf dub°' or ......... :' a odNMel - ad GIC~ .... ~or .a.c'6oftofoffbn -~ be dir9dld to the CD••'*""' MWI editor at the IOIM oddr... ~ Wock CMd wWlit phoeo•Giflha en.-.•. 'VETERANS ••• hem Al appeared with the protesten durina the rally. Baker as seeki_na the Republican nomi- nation for the 40th Conp'Cllional District and Apaa is hopina to become lrvjne's fint v01er-elcctcd mayor. Tbe election is neitt Tuesday. . . .. This isn't the city of lrvine•s policy;• Baker yd.led to lbe protesters. many of whom ~ .. Baker for Conaras .. buttons or hats. .. This isn•t the people of Irvine's policy. This i1 Larry Aaran·s: po::.~; said after the rally that he did not orpniz.e the opposition, but had heard about the event at another forum and journeyed to City Kall to voice his disapproval. He said he supports President Reapn·s attempts to supply the Contra rebels. _ .. Nobody wants W&r, .. Baker said ... But it's best for the lona-ranae interests of the ohildren of Nicarapa that they be free." Baker said he would ask lbe City Council on Tuesday to look into Aatan•s use ofCitY. Hall for the rally without prior oounctl approval. ; Aatan. however. said he was not shaken by the vocal attacks on him and the ~··t ima,ine anybody so sick that they would be apinst food and clotbina to children who are the victims of war," A&;ran said as he left the hall. As many as SO trucks -includina two ~tly painted school bu9CI that were in Irvine on Monday -and 120 ~ are expected to make up the Veterans-Peace Convoy when it rqroups in San Antonio. Texas. on June 7, said Dan VauJbn of the National Pledac of Resistance to Ora.nae County. After the oonvoy, which started at six points tbrouah<>ut the United States. meets in Texas. it will move to Nicarqua COlft~IKCJDNt ~ b fit full.: cnoa colkit• .. I ~ •voa can &ook bkkward in the mom- ina. and iA the afteraoon you can look forward, .. Tracou Mid. Ml mtmbtrOldw~~·a S7th $tpil BattaliOD and Jata the l6t.b Infantry BattaJaon iD Wotkt Wu II, Trete0tt saw llC'boo in Nonlt Afi'ica. Italy, France. Gmnaay aDd AUSU'ia. £idl yew Oft Memorial Day. he spends a while by himtelfinacemetery, rcmcmbtr-ina tallal comrades frOm thote campa11J'J. · He mu~~ out ! ~r and built a catter ta Caletonta. &rs. in t~ farm CbtmiCat bUiiae.. thta srllina hydraulic equipment and finally as an ad"1sn to buiineues. . Now be bopes IO save lep.I advaee to buainetllM'n who fed unfairl)' uatcd by illieaovernnient .• 1"be1l ru ~ and So for the • buc:b.•• Tmcott said. • ~ It oGJy after bis tetftment an 1'911 that Trete0tl btpn to think about the law. He would araue about aovernment-busi- ncu relations with h.is dau&hter. Pamela T sncott Ashman. ·~hf-wn Jct t>xpJam 1~111 I """'"v ~1'1n 't Jama Bieber of Ban~ Beach. a member of Toan& Am~ for t'ieedom, la ejected from to drop off the supplies plhercd on the cross-country trip. Vauahn said. The first-time effort ''has no real nucleus. It was Just a arass--roou rno~ ment that spread hkc wikifitt when somebody mentioned it." Vaughn said Oliver North to campaign in OC for House hopefuls l"nm staff ... wtre re,wu Oliver North. a prominent fisure in the Iran.Contra scandal. will stump on the a Coast this week for two oon- 1onal candidates who are old White ouse buddies and chili-eatina chums. The former Marine lieutenant colonel who earned enormous public su~ durina last summer's televised bearinp will campaip for 40tb Conpessional District front-runner Christopher Cox and 42nd Conaressional District candidate Dana Robrabacber. Robrabecber. is challenaing front-run- ner Harriett Wieder, an Oranae County supervisor and former Huntinaton Beach mayor, for the seat vacated when incum· btnt Dan Lunsren resi&ned to accept the aovernor•s nomination to state treasurer. Cox hopes to replace retirina Rep. Rohen Badham, R-Newport Beach. North met both men while they worked in Wasbinaton. O.C. North formerly served as a foreiJ.ll affain soecialist in the White House whale Cox. JS. of Newport Beach was senior associate c:oun1el for Praident _Reqan from 1916 to this year. when be raiped to seek election. Service in Los A~les. "Way before aJI the Iran-Contra JllZ.. Olhe and Dana "-tte mends. ~ have a strona personal relanonsbip and a ~ fcssional relationship," Rohrabachercam· pai(tn spokesman Roben Rule said. .. They're also ch1li-eatina pals. Dana makes the best chili," Rule said. In fact. 1t was a fondnes, for ch1h that brouaht the three chums toaetber. "Dina every year has a big chih pany. Chris met Ollie there," said Bob Schumann. Co~·s spokesm•n. "It's pori- tics.. philosophy and ch1h." North witfbtputcd with a ralty at Lona Beach Airport on Wednoday momi~ He will then spend the afternoon walk.ins around Lona Beach. knocluna on rcsidenu' doors and askina them to vote for Rohrabacher, one of 11 candidates runnina for Lunarftl's seat. which extends from Lona Beac6 into Huntington Beach. North wiU attend private fund-ra1scr5 for Rohrablcber in Los Al\ICles and Pasadena in the afternoon, then address a S250-a-pcnon dinner for Rohrabecher an the hanpr of the world·s larJiest airplane. the Spruce Goose. For a S 1,000 donauon. participants can attend a reception next door on the ocean liner Queen Mary pnor to dinner and have their pteture taken with North. North retired from the Marine Corps io May after bein& ch~ 1.n a federal indictment with CODS{>_tn~ to defraud the govn-nment by illepUy d1vertina mow.:y from Iranian anns sales to Centra rebel'-. In h1s first public appearan« since the lran-C ontra hearings.. a oommenoement address on May 2 at the Rev. Jerry Falwell's Liberty School in V1f'linaa. North lashed out at his aocusers and said the charsesapinst him were .. no, a brand" but .. a badac of countte.'' "We must nol just choose the naht prcs:idenr· in 1988. NOfth said. -w e need a better Cona;ress.. .. But in the oppos1na camp. Wtedcr's 01mpaian ma~ said they•rc oot wom- ed about Rohrabacher's hi&h..profilc su~ porter. ..We thtnk Rohrabechcr needs all the belP.~can1rt Wedon•t think at will make a diffettntt ... said Jeff Wallach. The other Rcpubhcan candidates an the •2nd District are Jeffrey Bums, Don Davis. Steve Horn, Andrew LittJefa1r and Robert Welboum.. Rob.rat.cher, 40. of Palos Vmies was a special assistant and senior speecbwri ter to Reqao from 1911 to 1918 and was also an editorial writer at the Oranaie County •••ill•iili•lllil••••••·---Rt&ister and a reporter for City News North will spend Thunday campaian- ing and attendi.na func:ka.iters for Cox. The other Rcpubhcan candldates in the 40th District arc Irvine City Councilman David Baker. Ow1cs Dt Vore. John Hylton. John Kelly, Adam K.>enuk. Pa-mc.i-~unter Kishel, Kathleen Lat~m. Nat~ RosenberL Larry Stembera. fUf' Swa~ Dave W'illiams and Wilham Y acobozn Jr. Judge upholds seuches in Ranily Kraft murder case structure at South Coast Pl8D bad ber pune stokn at 2:25 p.m Moaday by a man who had been waltins behind her. After &atina the bancn.e. the man jumped into a waitin& car and sped off. Police dilcoverecl later the car was reponedly S1oleD from OraQF. and the thief and dnvu were arrested later in Tustin. • • • A buralar sa.)le a $600 typewriter from a aay mre mater in tbe 600 block of Hamilton Sueet. Tbe tbeft ~tlyoccurred Sanclay OI ~ day. • • • SomeonejllCbd up• RX-7 ~ day. took lbe tires Md wMtteMd left tbe car in tile 1400 llkldt Of Wm Baker Strec.t. ~wMtlwtaWMebcMat.wll~ ~t \0 '° to law ICfiOol and ae.rn it. Tracon recalled. · He took five )ftn IO comPAcle thr ~. and now is clcttina for thftie sepatlate law nrms. includina the one Chat tmploys bis dauabte:r. Tracott ~ collelc IO other 1tnior citizens as a way to stay,..._ .. I should be~ arou.Dd witb a walkt .. stict. but forwet it.•• TtelCOlt aid. .. And tbey (the students) fOfFt it af you ICt properly. You•re into a whole nrw wortd &nd it's pat. .. He added that many of the convoy pan1C1pants went lO Nec:::aracua on various peace movements an the past. INS preparing to enforce new immigration law NEW YORK(AP)-Hyatt Hotel Corl>. executives arc balking m SoVCf'llmC'Gt pn.isc for compliaacc witb tbe new unmip'atiba law, wbida mates it ilqal IO bowuaaly hire adocammled a1ims. But wnb Wednewtay"s enfon:emau deadline loominl. a Maican fast.fOod chain in Teus fears raids by the 1 mmiata- tion and Naturalization Servtce.. And 1n Sout.bern CalifO(llia. a waterbed- frame r.ctory is challeQlina what u calls abusive aDd ait.uvy INS inspcc:tJOa tactics, 10 the first saaruficant ooun tat of ~ law's sweepina employer-ancttoa provisions.. Some •Y the IFDCY bas shown ex- traordlnary tolerance and the new documcntallon req,wrements for em- ployees arc only a minor noisance. Othcn contend imm.iftation officers have WJcd to educate buu~. and the~ is horTCndOU$le=:'fusins. Stuart H. pey, an unm..,.auon lawyer ~ said lute employers arc complyina because they ba~ the resources to effic1entJ) keep records. "The little IUY Who n&nS the small prment shop or 90methina like that. probably. tsn't 1n oomt>laancc and won't bt an oompb&DOC. .. be said. Some like Ronald Klasko. pmadent- dect of tbe Americ:aD I mmip'auoa Law- yers Anociatioll, pmbct the INS will S\llC zealous enb-c:cracnt ra.tds aAer W~ day's expiration or~ 11-montll phne-10. durina whldl 1t only 1saed warnings to first offmders . mat.in, a nabt turn from .\ltoa Partway. No one was injured. but the mishap dumped 1 bUlt transformer into lht roadway tbat dOKd tbe 1aDt ovnni&ht • • • A. woman told police ber P'lf1C was stolen ""hen she left it in ber sbopp{111 cart in a CWva-Drive marUt. lost less tbaa sso cash, her credit cards aod cbec:lli>icii: OCwoman killed bytraJ.n • • l • I ' ' . W ASHINOTON ~~n -S\ltes IOmCUmes may a Pollible dealla tenleftee ii coevictied hM lhc 'rpf to execute convicted mu even if their constitutioaal CODtUh with a law)'er beb'l submittina.10 a ~ riabt to a lawyer"1 help wu ViOlated, the Supmne Coun tnm.inatioft ~ to ddemiine hit ftluare daften'- Nlcd today. OUIDCIL By a S-3 vote. tbejusticeuaid for the (ll'Sttime that Writina for the 'court today1 Justice Sandra Oliy such erron may be deemed "hannleu... · . O'Connor said violation• of that rilbt do not neceaarily But the justicea voted 8-0 in siatina that such an enor mean that an ensuina death aenttnce, in pen bued on a in ~ 'pl'.09CCUlioa or c:onv~eus murderei' John · findi:Moffunu~da.,ousoeu.must.be thrown out. Satteiwhite'wu not harinleu.-lt>e decision overturned l'be coun reftatid to adopC an aaatomatic riiJe that bis death tenlenCC. • would call for revenina the deeth 1entenc:e in aay cue in The hiab coun in 1911 ruled that a defendant facina wbicb well a violation occun. Court lets stand cable ~must-carry'niling WASHINGTON (AP)-The Supreme Coun today refused to resurrect federal ·rules that would force cable television operatoo to carry all local TV lianaJ• on lbeir systems. The coun. without comment. let stand a rulina that struck down as ilnconstitutional interim "must-carry .. rules Id~ by tbt Federal Communications Com-mission's 1a 1986. Tbe U.S. Cimiit Court of Appeals here ruled last December tbat tlae "'*' wbich were to be impmed b five years. violaled free tpCCCb rilbtL The Nat.ion.al ~on of Broadcaam, lbe Association oft~ndtnt Television Stations and other .1- broldcast orpnizabOM uf1l!ed tbe justicea to relnAate the rules. sayint alley hi calile operaton may drop their over-tbe-eir ........ The appeals court aid the need for such rules ••is more speculative thui rea1:· La~ for me RX..,-. and uraed thejustic:a to reject the broadcasten' apPeals. The .,,..as court in 191S said the comtlriaion's ori&inal let of rules ualawf\.ally .. coerce speech" because t.beY ~uired cilble ~IOn 10 cmy local ~aen· sipals anapective Of wlletber the operator considered them a~te propammina. such leeway, Kennedy said. Customs SCrvice rules. The Customs Service and two leadina diacount distributors, K Mart Corp. and 47tb Street Photo Inc. of New Yodt City, said P'IY market loo:4t should be allowed. Justice William J. Brennan, in a separate opinion, said, .. The dispute in this litaption centen aJmost ex- clusively arou~ that aspect of By a seperate 5-4 vote, the justic.'lel struck doWn a Customs Service ~ulation that ~xs-nds the avail- ability of pay market aoods. Bush gets pr,omise from Meese; DukakiS working with Jack&on · • . This something happens o.nce in a blue moon . · BJ ne A.111 dll ... Prell Kennebunkport; Maine, where he has .. talked frankly about the campaip," WASHING TON (AP) -If you've • n-r~-• r ...... ~-M-II' been holdina meetinp with advisers and said he believed it would harm been waitina for somblethina that o~.Y _ .... ":::-i::.!..I~ ... -:._ ~~ pro~~ and mullina over stratecY for the fall Bush if he were to step down at this ~ppens once in a ue moon: It s .... ~ ... .., u~ ... ,,.. "~ cam1>9ign. time. ume. the Democrats with ready ammuni-Bush bas been Jakin• a beatina in .. If I were to quit now, foreumple. The second full moon in the same tion apinst GeotF Bush, says be bl' · .. · Id be -• 1· bill' ""---h '---· r. l'-1--.. Bl believes his Ju.sti<:e Otpartment re-recent pu 1c op1n1on surveys 1t wou a 1~ ta ty ~use mont , 11,nuwn 1n 10 iuvn; u a ue cord will be an astet to the Re-malebina him ..-inst Duk.ak.is. He people would say there was some-Moon," occurred at 3:Sl a.m. PDT bJW-. .. s this fall B...... meanwbjle bas sai~ R~n admiriistration con-thina wrona.... said the attorney today, acconf~ to the experts at pu ·-~ ~ • troversacs were probably partly to scneral. the U.S. Naval Oblervatory in Wash-says ~ .has JM'(!m•~ not to, do blam~ for bis showina. However, in the interview on the inaton. A full moon alto occurred an~na to Jee>~ his campatp. · Bush hasn't sinaJed out Meese as .. Larry Kin& Live" show, Meese left May I. ~~ M•chael. Dukakis and one of those ~re points. but both open the possibility that be miaht The term is applied because of the Jeue Jacbo...-ior their pan,. qreed Jacbon and Duk.akis have harshly leave olf ice by the end of the summer. · f•"'-· ... · The .a~ ~t Jae~ would play 1 m-.;or Jl!lr1 criticized the attorney scneral. who is Pressed by 1uest host Pat Buchanan, a rant yo un; SltY11tlOn. · moon uu..a •n ~s expected fa.II campaasn under criminal anvestiptjon. and former White Houx aide, as tO' not necessarily appear blue. ~nst Bush. But both, Wdtheoature ~a.:-to q .. :L ... _ As seen from Eanb. the ttme wm .... wheuK"1 he m:• .. t step down by Labor -1 fi 11 nd the t · that role hadn t yet been worttcd ~ .-,·den• who "--· ___ "'-,... ~ ween one u moon a nex 1s t • ..._ I"""' ., • ._ ... -vcy, Mee!eresponded: .. ldon'tthink 291h days, a span called the moon's ou The three ndidates were bracina fused to call for Meese's resignation. I'd rule anythina in or anythina out... synodic period. ,; .ca ofthelo · confirmed Monday that the two Bush says be doesn't want to This means that, technically, two .:!: last= •::and of co':~~ recently met privately. ' comment on the Meese matter until full moons could occur in any month week from today in California. New Bush decl ined to detail what was after an independent counsel's report except February. 1be occasion hap- Jeney. Montana and New Mexico. discussed, but when asked if Meese is issued. pensra~.however,onlyaboutonce The two Democrats both cam-had promised to keep from hurting In any event. Meese said, the every two to three years. ~overMemoriaJ °">'weekend biscameeian. betold,reponers: .. Yes, Justice Department .,_s a "re· Some fol ks, in cl u di n·a an New Jerxy, and both prepeftld to yes,. I thJ~ ii•a fair to say that)' markable record that will be an anet metcoroloaists. cpntend that the icrm bead ror California later in tbe week. Meett, 1n an interview on CNN on to any Republican run.nine for office ··Blue Moon" should apPly to oc- Busb -as at bis summer home in Monday niaht. said be and Bush Md 1'1is fall." casions when the moon takes on a liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~iiiiiiiiiii!iiiii~-iiiiiiiiiim=iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii•-~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~il blue coloration. This can happen • when small particles in the at- . LOEHM~NN'S POINT· mosphere infertere with lipt. causina the bluish tint The particles can come fiom auch tources u forat fim and volcaJtic eruptions. This. too, ii a rare happen· ina -.about once in a blue moon. NaUon P.BYS homage to fallen sel(V/,C.emen 8'1111 .. 11 I,,,,,_ n.Dldoa-.... ...... . UMM .... ot_.. ........ . lmll Ga MnMrial DliY illcl 1' 'I I aVMI ol I S,000 at iiii Vietaim Mtmolill ia WlllU...._...' wtlile milliona Of A.inericUI •Ila: a• d lbe belinnina oil.be ewnmet -.on. _1 .A holida~ outina in Til1atobl. MiM., WU btt by ll'leedf when. 16- foot bolt carryina ept people ~-killi• Ii• you~ women aboard tbe ovcrloeckd craft u well a a man whO tried to reteue them, authorities laid. The open&or of the bOlt laid the oc:cupnt1 were eajoyins a slow .. joy ride. splaSh~ water on eech other, wbeo the · nt OcCi&n'cd Monday afternoon. A to\IJ of at least ~ peoPle died on the nation'• hiahways u of midniaht Monday, accordina te a state-by-state count by The A.- IOciated Press. The National Safety Council bad estimated that the Iona weekend would claim 3IO to 480 lives in trafrlC ~dentL Last year, 416 ~died. the Chicaao-bued counal said. Afthouah most of the country er\joyed sunny holiday weather. a snowstorm hit the West on Sunday, .dum]>ina up to 10 inches of snow on southern U\lh. Up to 6 inches of snow fell in Wyom1na. where ranaen closed larae seetions of Yellowstone National Park. Where the weather was aooct. people beaded for the outdoora. In Michipn, tourists pecked mocels and a ~ part aloq Grand Travene Ba.r, on the state's Lake Michipn side. Last year we never did fill up. ... Traverse City State Part Manqcr Iv• Mck•t...W. ~;1'1!1'• .. ........ tSi la~ I tillUM IOCt com.wt -yt• ~ • :::.~~ IWO dolen peop_le .... .--,.; -~-.OW IO .. IO dll coecert. .. ,, 1 Ub t1ie "•otme Wortdl' al over 1Pin." IUd -.. • x..Dltb Priclc. referri to ..... ~ 1931 radio ~It by Ork'CI Welles. The ~ ... ·a: a way_ ti bjvina f\an over MDOria1 Dly ~"taidWGRX_.....ma. ._, Bill H09*iat0n ... £".-y tMnoUI l"OUP in tale world ns tbett. It waa a nice acape for our lilteDcn. .. Other memorial events around Ul!t nation included: -A lWatMayinacemnoay at me Tomb of the Unknowns in Arliftttoe Cemetery in Vil'Jinia. llCl"Oll the Potomac River from the nation'• capi\11, that drtW 4,000 ~ -Jn Bol&on. a cannon oa the 190- year..old USS COftltitut.ion wu tired 21 times ~nnina at noon.. -Jn Gett)'Sbwa. Pa., retiftd Oen. William C. Westme>Rtand, wboCOID"'. manded U.S. troop1 in Vietnam and whose ancestors fouabt for the Con- federacy, said the wounds of the Civil War have not yet healed. The thre. day Battle of Gettysbura and other Civil War confron\ltions pla~ a crucial role in the evolution or the United States, he said. -The Kennedy family tpent a quiet Memorial Day at their Hyannis Pon. Mus., compound followina a smaU memorial service Sunday Tor the 71 st birthday of President John F. Kcn~1 said family spokesman Mart'U't:onnor. Panic lead., to death of slz women afterbciat overturns· By Tiie Aaeda_, Prea _ TIUATOBA. Miss. -A boat carryina iiaht people capsized durina a Memorial Day outina. killina six~ women abOerd the overloaded craft and a man who tried to racue them, authorities said. The operator of the l6- foot, aluminum bolt was able to swim ashore and one person on the craft wu rescued, authorities said. The operator, Robert Arnutrona. 32, said the bOlt's occupants were on a slow .. ~Y ride:' spluhina water on each other when the accident occumd on Lake Tillatoba on Monday afternoon. ··0ne ,;rt leaned over when the boat was tumina and some water stancd comina in the bolt and everybody pan.icked, .. said Armstrona. Who acknovded&ed that the bOlt was overloaded. Supect liJ armored-car IJe&t •arrenden SALT LAK.EOTY -A·WeDs Faraoauard walked into FBI officei with ~.~= and SS0,000 of $2.S million stolen from an armOR:d carf su and then told qents where to find t.he rest of the booty, the FB said. Ja~ Layne Gray, 26, appeared just before I a.m. Monday to confess to the May S robbery. He W1J bOoked and held without bail in the Salt Lake County Jail, pcndint arraiann\ent today before a f*"'I mqistrate ... We were somewhat surprised," said FBI ~I qont Bob Lund. ••We'd been wort.int on this. and on somethin' like tbts you ,eneraUy e•pect to IO out and make an arrcsL'' Gray told autbonties where the rest of the stolen cub wu hidden and qents recovered au of the money late Monday, Lu.nd said. Coapl~ ac.pe Caba lJJ rickety b_ya.t MIAMI -A couple who sailed a canvu-c:overed kayak ft'om Cuba survived storm)'. seas and a water spout that t>roke their l S-foot vessel's frame before beina raCued by a flShina bOlt, officials said. "I don't know bow in tbe world they made it across the ocean. .. said Don Ouraiolo, captain ofa charter fisbjna boat that mcued the couple-off Upper Matecumbe Key. (PLAZA) Independen1 What wollld savvy Newport entrepre!leurs with a sure. Newport pro~ition Money. • a and an eager Newport market want with a bank in Costa Mesa? -------~ • \I 'I OrangeCout OAILY PILOT/Tuad1y.¥ay31, 1Ne •Al . eemeter-y workers -# delaying Syria suspected ili~init b.ombing; Christians strike. funeFals l COLMA (Al') -The IWO lead.111& i ues in lhe s1nkt by worken at 17 San Francisco Bay area ~metenct are the use of non·un1on subcontrac· ton and the risin1 cost of health insurance. union officials said. "The cmployen want to have the nah1 to subcontract out work current- ly bc1n1 done b.Y (union) employees.·· said Carolyn Del Ga~.~ i~o •• ~i incu asent for the Cemet~ and Greens Attendants Union local 2.§S. "That 1nvolvts ,_real threat .~o the future of their JObs, to the union itself," said Del Gaudio. whose union represents the approiumatcly I SO union workers who went on strike on Memorial Day. But John Cantwell. who represcnts- two associations of cemetery owners. called subcontracting a "sham iuue." Cemeteries have always used subcon- tractors. and the owners associations' proposal says that no worken will be laid ofTbccausc of subcontracting. he said. lllcbael Coyne uad other •trlklDC memben of the Cemetery Worken and Green• AttendaDta Union picket oataide Hayward cemetery. Cemetery workers currently re- ceive S 14.35 an hour after 18 months, Cantwell said. Under the employers' proposal, employees would receive ra1scsof30centsan hour for each year of the three year clontract, he 111d. The employers also arc offcnna to pay the same amount for employee ' health insurance as under the previous contract. Cantwell said. The union's three-year contract with Associated Cemeteries and the East Ba> Interment Propenics As- soc1at1on expired March I It covered employees. mostly ~undskeepers and custodians. at eight cemctenes east of San Francisco nine on the Peninsula Negot1at1ons broke off Saturda) and no ncv. talks arc scheduled Cantwell said The stnke will probabl) dcla> burials. management officials said Al least o ne cemetery. 1n Ha) ward. already has canceled bunals sched'! uled for to<lay "The bunals will s1mpl) have 10 be postponed." Cantwell said Hitchhiker shoots, kills passenger SAN DIMAS (AP) -A h1t~hh!ker picked up~y a motonst allegedly shot and kilted a passenger 1n the same cu early today. then sllUJ&)ed with the driver, who lost control and veered over a Trecway embankment. officials said. · The victim, a man in his early to m1d-20s whose 1dent11y was not 1mmed1ately known. was pronounced dead al 1he scene on the eastbound lntcntate 210 at San Dimas A venue, said Cahfom1a Highway Patrol spokes- man Lee Anhur. "The driver and passenger picked up_two tutchh1kers and at some point. one of the h1tchh1kers pulled out a gun and shot the passenger," said Los. Angeles Count~ Shenff s Deputy Gabe Ramirez · .. A struggle ensued (with the dnver) and the vehicle v.ent off the freeway and crashed:' Ramirez said The car's dnvcr. who was not 1den11fied. went over 1he side of the freeway at the San Dimas overpass. 30 miles nonhcast. of Los Angeles. following 1hc 12. )0 a m shootJng. said Los Angeles County shenffs Dcput)' Della Robcns. The driver was not m1urcd. she said. Law enforcement officials were 'ICarchin& for lhc gunman and the other h1tchh1ker. descnbcd only as male. Anhur sa1d. Flre-damaged pl er draws moderate cr_gwd REDONDO BEACH (AP) -Surv1vin1 businesses on the 6Q...year-old Redondo Beach Pier drew a moderate crowd of several thousand on Mcmonal Day as workers continued to remove debris from a devastating blaze. The fire last week left at least I 00 people without'jobs and guued about 15 buSJncsscs. N1Jht patrols to discourage looting conunued ovt'r \he holiday week.end and there were no rcpons of vandahsm. pohcc said. "The crowd was double compared to Sunday," Officer Dawna Huu said Monday She estimated several thousand patrons strolled alo ng the boardwalk while on the beach below worken clcafe4 dcbns. • ··With the wind and all it's not as lar&c as last year but we still have a prctty decent crowd," said Officer Silvia Villarreal. Lene' s100101sAtoN European Hair Colof • Miiano Hair Descn • Mah-up Artrst 100\ Human Hair hleniions • Hlltl fashion Photoeriphy New Chent' SAl.ON/SPCCIAl HAIRCUT For Men/Women BEIRUT. Lebanon (AP)-Banks. schools, rtitaunants. ps stations and other buS1n~sts closrd today in Chr1,11an t'ast Beirut's Rmac1I dJ'1nct to protest a car bomb1nl that k.allcd 20 peopll' ind wounded 7 Christian m1ht1a leaden blamed Monda>'s bombm& on S)nl Polttt cst1ma1ed 1he car that bltw up in a crowded street 1n Rmae1l was packed with more than WO pounds of TNT. Charred co~s wrapped in nylon bags v.erc turned O\l'r to the v1cums' relat1\e!t at the St Georg"' Greek Onhodo' ho~p11al for bunal poh~ s.a1d "The '1c11m\ will be buned scpar- alcl) ocl·au'>I.· 1he~ rnme from dif· krcn1 '11lage'> and areas:· said a pohCt' spokC\man who t"annot bl- 1den11fied under $tand1n1 te1ula11ons He said the Leban~ Forces the main Christian m1h11a had banned a mass funeral adding .. The} don t want a la~ nowd gathered at one place It "'111 be 100 tC'mp11n~ a target for ano1 hcr ll'rronst attack • Thl' bomb t».ploded about 500 yards from an office or C'hnsuan ~1den1 ~mm (,ema ... el's Phalanv Pan) It sh.rnt:rl·d tacade> of e1lflt apartment hu1ldinis. badh damaged 20 o thel"!I and ""'et l.;ed al least 301:ars The bombing laml· tour da}!t ahC'r S}nan trOOP\ mmed into lhl' slunu o f south lk1ru1 l'ndin(! 1hrC't' week\ of blood) dashe\ l'IC't'-'t't'n lih11ll' MosJcm mil1t1J' in "'hllh n('lrl\ 300 Duarte leaves El Salvador forulcertreatmentin U.S. By Tbe Associated Preti 'i..\ "-S ..\ L. \ ..\DOR. El Salvador -Prcs1den1 Jo\<: 'apolC'on Duant' 1\ fl)'1ng 10 the L n1ted States today for medical trl'atmcnt of a blttding ulcer go.,.ernmcnt officials said. Eduardo Colindres. deput) inlormauon m1n1 s1e-r. said Duarte left San ~lvador al a 2 p.m. (9 am PST > 1n a pn~att' plant' tor v.. a!>h1ng1on DC "'here he w~I underso treatment a1 ~alter Rttd Arm~ Medical Centl'r Earlier. a secretary reported Duarte was going to Houston Go' ernment sources. who spoke on cond111on of anon> mit> said that before his departure Duarte planned 10 meet with members of his C abine1 Arms shipment bound for Fljl intercepted SYDNEY A.us1ral1a-CustomsofftCC1'Ssa1d 1oda) 1ha1 the\ ~·zed a huse cache of 'A-capons bound for fiJI that could ha'l' started a small "'ar 1n thl' South Pacific na11on. scene of two coups last )t"ar The cache including submachine guns. automatic nOes. hand grenades. monars and anti-tank mines amved on a ship from Port Hodc1dah in Nonh \ emcn '11 Sn Lanka and Singapore. said Customs spok('Sman Alastair ~ 1lson He said the sh1pml'nt. discovered Mo nday 1n Sydne) ·s downtown Darling Harbor "'as bound for Lautoka in eastern F1J1. stronghold of deposed Pnme Minmcr T1moc1 Ba.,.adra Three American hostages may be released LONDON -The Times of London said toda) that four hosta~ in Lebanon. thrl'e ~mencans and an Indian. ma) soon be frt'Cd followina the S) nan arm) ·s takeover of1he Beirut d1s1nct where the) arc bchcved held The paper 1dent1ficd the four as Amenans Roben Polhill. Jesse Turner and .\lann Steen. and Indian M1th1lnhwar Sinah. all educaio~ a1 Bc1ru1 L'.ni.,.cn1t~ Collee. Thl') v.erc abducted Jan. 24. 1~87. pt"ople v.crt kill~ and 1.000 'A-OUndcd Thl' Lebant'~ f'orccs blamed Syna for the bombinl Kunm Pak.radoun1 . thl' m1h11a's !>t.'tond 1n command told a ne""s rnnfrrt'nn· · Th< da} befort' yestcr- da) {Saturda' I "'C' rettl\cd the propaganda mt"\'Ml~. Today (Mon- da~ I v.t rt"ll"l\t'd the blood) ml'S\agl· He rcft'rrC"d to J '>tatement Saturday b\ Information ~1n1\\crMohammcd Salman o! \, ric1 .,,, hu ~1d prcs1dcn- •1.al t"lcc111rn' 1n l chilnon v.ould onl) be poi.s1hll· th1\ \ummcr 1f the Ll·baneS< r 01 t l.\ "'1thdrcv. from nst &·1ru t Dutch police recover art ~MSTFRO.\M ""'clherl~~ t ~P> -Pol1Cl' 1t>da' re u\ ercd t I 9th- centuf) ma•;terp1cces 1nclud1n1 pa1n11ng!t b\ \ 1nu·nt 'an Gogh ind Paul ll"t.lnnc 1c.,, th;;an l "'-O wttks af\l'r the. '-'l'rt· 'tokn from the cuy's M un1t 1pJ ~1 u~:um The 1mpre\\1on1suc paint1n1s. 'alucd a1 up 10 S52 m1lhon -were found undamag<'d 1n a parked car outs1dl' c1 h111cl 1n thl' city'\ west side during a prc-<ia"'n raid said city police spokesman ..._laas Wilting. Pohcl' ~1d one <,eller and two prospect1,e bu~e~ ""Crt annted 1ns1dl' the hotel The Ma) Wart 1hl'ft was the b~t in Dutc h h1s1on The pain11ngsart' 'an GQ&h's 1888 ··c ama11om. ·the 1894 st1ll-T1fc ··eot- 1le Y.llh .\ppk·s· b> Cennnc. and an 1874 work b) Dutch 1mprcss1on1st Johan Jongk1nd .. The Houv of Ma11rt' 81llaud 1n ,e.,..crs .. .\!though the 30-year-old suspected seller hu a pohce burglar) record. 1t wai not 1mmed1a1el) clear whether v.as 1n,olved in the theft. sa.1d Leo Dctenng. anoth("f' police spokesman . ING E! .JOI~ TllE l,ELEBRATI<>~! PRESCRIPTION GLASSES . Measure A El ROLL #OW Sensible Growth and Traffic Control Initiative "for the right 1t•rt in fife" HAWTHORNE CHRISTIAN ~ SCHOOL ALL DAY KINDERGARTEN Kindergarten thru 8th FAU SEMESTEI c , STABS SEPT. 12th • Door to Door Transportation Whet• Possible • Reasonable Tuition • ArlthrMtlC, Ae•dlng, Spelling, wlth Phon!ct Emphaatzed • Before & At1er School c11e tor Stu<Mnta of Working Parents (1:30 am.-8:30 pm) • • Who Wins? Who Loses? featuring Ruaell Burkett Bxccutive Director Orange County Tomorrow Antbmy R. Molso President·& CEO Sonia Mmgarita Company Dr. Alfred Gobar Economist Moderator Dr. ~te tlddlna DirectOr b&stirJM 1'un.spof*1lion Stwdies. ua Sponsored By Newport Center ~lation ~ JiiDe 1. 1988 7:30 a.m. to 9:00 a.m. --1-N~ 1-=b ManiOtt Hoecl r 900 ~ Cc:Mer Ori~ CortdNwl llnojfUI -' ,,.,_, MlOO ~ -64().:1161 (Bif ocals-028 & Round. Just $39) A Pair Complete! Single \' 1swn • Choose from Over 500 Frames at This Very Special Price. Yes' For a limitt'd lt~ }OU ( .rn ha\ 1• 1 pair 11f s1} h">h. pro- f~,1onally craft Pd inglf' V1'1on ··~ "lo!h''' ' fur Jll't $:?1f a~. 'Rtfocal 028 and Round onl} $HI m1 •n llon1•,t Of cOW'S4', thts <ltrer doe~ not appl~ tt• df•,tJO)t"r framt•-. or 1"1''tra..'\ lll<e uJtta,101 t prote.. twn <.,('rah h 'h1<>lc1. tmL-. or ru .,..~'lee. Rut thttt>'-. no c-hn.rgt> fnr )' ur { hol<.'t' of ~...s or p&L~. o'"·el"SJZ("d or lugh po~ r ~ Why Are We Doing This? • mJ*.Tu COSTA MESA/SANTA ANA 3725 S. Bristol . (On Briitol/Between Sunflower• ~ur (714) ~-1341 ( . : : i -...111•' i \ ....... --~ ' .. . . . •, It'·s time to face ..... . -transportation crisis in state Vote 'yes'onProposition 72 ~ion machinery rcqui~ an occasional fine-tuning to ensure peak rfonnance. and that's what Proposition 72 .-ould do to th Gann Spending Limit. The Gann imit was approved by California voters m 1979. Wbilcthet · · · e putgovemmentspendingonasbon le.ash, it permitted the state's budget to vow at the same rate as population and inflation. The limit as often criticized by politician~ but c.aJifomia bas prospered and there has not been a gtncral tax iocrcasc since it was approved. The adjustment by Proposition 72 wo uld increase the Gann Limit and provide more money for transportation projc<;ts without increasing taxes or sacrificing the spending limat. This would be accomplished by reclassifyanJaS user fees money collected from vehicle registration and weight fees and the 9-ttnts-a-gallon gasoline excise tax. The money would continue to be used for transpon.auon projects but would not be controlled by the Gann Limit. Proposition 72 also would require that revenue from the state's 4l/4perccnt gasoline sales tax be used for transpon.ation projects and be classified 4l user fee. Currently, the tax goes to the 1eneral fund where its use is not restricted. Reclassification of these transpon.ation-relatcd taxes to user fees Oll~Ds oth~r taxes, which could not be spent because o( the spending limit's cap, may be used by the state. The Gann Limit requires that when tax collccuons exceed the spendinJ limit, the money bas to be returned to the taxpayers or used an voter..approved projects. California's lqislative analyst estimates Proposition 72 would increase state appropriations by about $1 .5 billion in 1988-89. Proposition 72 docs not restrict how locaJ governments spend their psoline sa.Jes tax, but it does specify that the vehicle registration and weight fees and the gasoline excise fee can be increased onJy by a two-thirds vote of the Legislature or a majority of the voters in a statewide election. The transpon.ation-related user fees would be phased into use during the next thn:ie years and would amount to about $200 miJlion in 1988-89, $430 million in 1989-90 and $725 million in 1990-91. - Proposition 72 also mandates an emergency reserve fund in the state general fund. Each year, the state budget must include a payment to that fund until it equals 3 percent of the total general fund budget. Money put into the reserve as exempt from the Gann Limit. bpt money taken from the fund is subject to the spending limit unless it meets an emergenC} appropriation Lest. _ Money from this fund must meet tough . confFins to prevent wasteful spending. cannot e'xcecd 2 percent of the total general fund expenditures and must be approved by two- thirds of the LegisJature and the 'overnor. Proposition 72 is an admission that ~lifomia has neglected transpon.ation spending fbr too long. Approval will not provide all of the money needed to reverse years of neglect, but it is a step toward better roads and less traffic congestion. Proposition 72 fine-tunes a spending limit that has served the taxpayers of California for a decade and deserves a .. yes" vote. Vote 'yes'onProposition 74 There is a time in the history of every state when the people must throw off their blinders and face reality. Now is that time for California. Transpon.ation is the fabric of California's being. It gives us independence and freedoms that would have shocked our grandparents. Mobility delivers California's promises. but the lack of mobility wilts those promises. Californians spend about 300,000 hours a day stuck in traffic jams. Ex pens predict that by the year 2000 we will have an additional 15 million cars and trucks on the road and a l 50 percent increase in personal and business tra~el. California was once a leader in transportation planning and building, but during the last 20 years our highway programs have declined 96 percent. This neglect has to be reversed. Proposition 74, the Dcddcn Transpon.ation Bond Act, has been called a Band-Aid approach to a problem that requires major surgery. Its opponents charge at violates the principle of "pay-as-you-go .. funding for transponation and that every SI of new road construction wilJ cost the taxpayers s 1.80. The criticisms arc valid Proposition 74 would authorize the sale of SI billion m Jeneral obligation bonds. Jfthe bonds are sold at a 7.5 percent antcrest rate and paid off in 20 years. the totaJ cost will be $1 .8 billion. ~ . The money would supplement other state and federal transponation funds to meet spending taract levels. Those levels include: SI billion annually to expand the state's hiahway system, $75 million annually for rail transjt bfojccu and S 15 million a year for highway soundwall proJCCts. · ln Orange County. the bond J)Togram would PIY for the · widening of Interstate S and rebuildiria intm:hanaes from •. Route SS to Route 22 in S&nta Ana, a S6S.4 million project It also would permit rebuildina the interc~ OfRouta Sand 73 near san Juan Capistrano, a S3S milliOft projecl. and widcnioaand reaJianina Route 13) near Jrvinc from Canyon Acres to El Toro, a $9.J million~ Proposation 74 is a bitter ptll of debt fmancina that we must IWallow with a )'es~ vote on June 7. It Will not solve alJ of our transponation problems, but if it is approved as a mcssqe of resolve to improve our transp0r1ati0ft crisis it can ... put us on the road to recovery. ... ,.. (Mlf ..... f. Auec1111tl• ,_ Clllll ,..., ..... ....... UlrlMw ..... .......... .=.-:.:. ....... '* ........ I •r-o:.. .. ''The Calif om la electorate. thoee who actually vole. .laabeftdY dlspropo,rtJonatelyaged,llfVlth morethanhalt:offheWJtenlJtlymnoroUer. ·· ... . UKE ~T Of '«>U, l JU~i CAN'T ~'Ii tMNEY u~ 1 u~ in .. ... WHlCH fORC£~ THE OOVERNtr\EN'l' 'TO 6"\L lT OU'f ... ... WHICH WlLL ~PAID &Y HIGHER ,.AXE~ .•• ... WttlC\t HAS l>EPLEttO TK£ f. ~ 1..1.C •.•• , ... WH1CR ~ Lll'.£ . W>ST Of '1>U. 1 t«)N' 1' M All.£ 'IO ~VE MONEY Lll<.E 1USEO1'0 ll Campaign '88 has poli~cal animals pacing the precincts rm a political animal. I'm sure this ~es as no surpnse to anyone who knows me. My biorhythms must be keyed to certain Tuesdays In Novem- ber. Thank God, however I'm not running for office. The most onerous job of one who would be elected IJ begging for money. Political dialing for dollars is the pits. Back in 1978. when I first ran for office, I raised only S 1,000. A mailer cost SS.000. If I wanted to act elected that mean1 I had to walk the district with my brochure. You really had to want 10 be a councilman to go to all that trouble. The late J~ Unruh said it best. .. Money is the mother's milk of politics... To get elected. to stay elected and espcc1ally. to buck the system. you need mega-buck.s. A noble cause jusl won't hack it. That is why voters should pay attention to the Propositions 68 and 73. deahn& with campaign reform. Most everyone agrees that campaaan reform 1s long overdue. Transfer of funds 1s the most despicable of the abuses. Both prop- osialons prohibit iL l could give you chapter and verse of bow elected office holders (it's hard for me to call them legislators) use their pot of aotd and campai&n resources to control elections. Now they have sunk to the level of conuollina ciay council and school board seats. Who elected them to take over local conuols~ Proposition 68 limits campaign spending to a degree. In order to do that and comply with a Supreme Court ruling somethina had to be provided in return. That somcabing is limited public financing. You have the option of providing funds 1f you check off a $3 contribution on your income tax return. Proposition 68 limns political ac- tion rontributions and pn,hibits fund-raising in off-election years. In the 1987 non~lcction year for exam- ple. state legislative incumbents gen- erated more than Sl.S m11Jion. Polen· ti at challensers raised $400.000. Does it surpnse you to find out that in 1986 few state legislative incumbents who sought re-clectaon lost? Campaign reform, however, comes too late to help Evelyn Hart. How does one go about discourag- ing someone from the impossible dream? l can imagine what the locals said to Joan of Al"l' when she set off for Orleans. ··You're goina to do what?" (And we think male chauvinist pigs are a modem invention.) When David searched for just the riJht stone for his battle with Goliath did his friends laugh themselves silly? What about Don Quixote? T1hio1 with w1ndm1lls never did catch on as a popular sport. Can a candidate with limited resources hope to defeat an incum- bent with a pol of gold? Histoncally. the answer is no. However. sometimes miracles do happen. This election will draw out a different electorate in the 10th. My hunch is that the voten will not be apathetic. The) will be confused about the rhetoric surrounding Measure A. They will be angry about traffic. If you remember Marian Bcrgeson's write-in campaign and Congressman Ron Pack.ard'ssucceu- ful write-in several years back you know that this electorate will respond to genuine appeals for redress, When I sec the anauish of my friends Tom Riley, with bis reaaJI. JACKIE HEATHER • and Harriett Wieder. with her recall and conarcss1onaJ fight, I have to ask if it's worth all the heartbreak they are suffering? In retrospect. Sen. Marian Bcrgeson's decision not to pursue Badham·s congrcssional scat was the correct one, even though I argued for her to go for it. One very persuasive element in the decision was the need for re-election every two years. The four-year term in the Senate and as county supervisor look very appeal- ing next to the agony of Hamett's campaiJn and the ecstasy of Marian's re-electton effort. Meanwhile. back at the Supreme Coun sits Congressman Dan Lungren waitin& fof a ruling on the stale treasurer's job. Doesn't anyone care that the state faces a SI billion deficit? On the presidential scene, Cali- fom'ia Republicans need to worry because Gov. George Deukmejian's name keeps comina up on every SJ?C':ulative list as Georse Bush·s likely running mate on the GOP ticket. Deukmejian keeps protestina that he isn•t interested because it would be unthinkable for him to go otT to Washington and tum the state over to a Democrat. Besides,just think ofhow much fun Johnny Carson would have with the ··Chansma Ticket." Jackh Healkr I• • /orma New- /#111 Bad mayor. Hemet exempllfies growing ecoliomlc clout of r~tlrees HEMET -The most striuna fact aboul Hemet. a pleasant community in the hills betwe-en Rivcnide and San Dieao. is that it has 41 bank branches. Tha,J'u lot for a city ofonly 32.000 souls. and it is a clue to what makes Hemet tick: retirees. As California's population ages - and th.a .. is especially true for the AnaJo populataon. which is aaina more rapidly than other ethic sroups -retirees constitute an evu-l~ portion of its population. The ovcr-6Sers ttpraent Cali- fornia's famst-jl'Owlft4 • sroup. State demOlflphen estimate that an I.bis decade. that • block has e"paodcd by nearly JO percent white o\'etall population was srowina by about IS~L And they~. popular myths to the contrary. a rtlativdy prospe.ous lfO\lp with biih iDCOlftQ Ind levels of personal -1da. viH-vis other • cohoru. T'Ul'I DOC IO ti)' that thefe arcn 't poor old folb. too. but tbcft are feWa' of'tban, rdatiVety. than in Other • .,..,.. Thus, die, ~ have bic!COmc iacra:.=~nt from an econ-omic ·aL Tbcy rtp1c.nt. in purdy ecoeomic aenm. lle8d)'. non- pollwti• i~. ,. ~ .... of Amerimli ~,..a-.illalUfWY oldw .... ic~ollllliofl...,. c.ailifw is...,_ IO I -l T'lr olwwkll••H..._._ DD11111.i9cludiila .......... ,,, ... llitl"' wid9 '9clll -..... ~--ca nar ..... .,.,. ......... Ii• --.. -ol6t ~ ... c;mo1 • .._w_.w.11 ... ,;&:• ~ •·• 'ill CllJ , .. A• 1111•, fit 6t --... MaW~MClllllllill•..._ dlllfRof PN1Jll1l7, .............. ,,, ..... - trianaJe in Southern California that has become a haven for the affluent elderly. It stretches from northern San Dicso County (includina one retittment development sponsored by and named 1fter bend leader Lawrence Welk). throuah the southern reaches of Oranae County and into the mountainsand detens of ,Uverside County to Palm Sprinas and vicinity. where the super.rich retirttS conareaate. at least durina winter. There is no equally dramatic con- t'entration of retirees in Nonhem California. but there art si&nificant colonies in the hills of the East San Francisco Bay area. in the Siena foothills. and 1n Lake County. whole population has a median • of 43- plus. a whoppina l l )c.ars hiahcr thin the statewide median. . i1l\C t>vraiconina numbers of re-tin:a repretent. in ctfect. a powm industry for those C.lifomii com- munities with the weather nd other 1ttribu1a that md.c them attnctivt mi~ment spots. Rfliren ha\le Aeedy incomes. whit-ti make than \llhled.aasaomm. Md mUe rdilJ~ h d I I .. oa E"" ................. ....................... ....,..., .......... -1111i1U eapect. it°" medial .-vioa .... ........... vills .... llodyol .-...ha1nm•aai1Jz• II 7 a ..eeoM ............. .... 0/41 ........ ~, ,.,. Deft II -•zr .._. • 9dL Alld 1M1 II pollskal • ln•11dl11 'ii~ ..... ............. ... fll -= ..... -~ =-•'"*""'-• .... , ...... . -.a•l'Ylllw-or• ... -. DAN WALms 1elf-protcctive -as one qa.. and what•s true for indi vidual1 llt0 is true for communities as l".ef ._ It's also true that political paniclpetion .:_the propensity to reps.er and vote -1~with-.e. The Ciliforaia d«'IOl'aw. t\ote Who KtuaJly \iOle, is alrWy dit- ~oulely 19ed.11ritb more than half of the votim JO~ or older. Al the numbers OI ~ pw, it's c.pected tha• die ~ · 111oc will coatin• to • AM datll. * DOli1ital l)'ltem iii ~ will become incr111i1111Y .,_iutld by oldct \/Olft'S Mid licit eoDCll Al. n... illC'IWi111itla.11C11 iulready "'*-' ia .. ~hft .... i•. ....--. O¥W .a& ~ meta ll_l IU.11 llft for~ 1• i Cllir& 0.d'eelol.._ma olllu 11 .. pllic .,..... ii • dediains dirlcl Dolital ~ ror no.: .,.. ·11. ........... ~ lilnedtillli& illldtool. n. ......... fl .. .., • =.t~:.,i: 4 .. I a cmd1 Int ..... ...., ----•-== ...... -~---:-ori•••·-:~ .. .. . .... •a ,••••••·-... • Li:·: r· ----- Gay couple's memory book .. . To the Editor: r I am Yniting in rnponte to the May I I anide ~ina Mr. Dan Worth- ington, the pbotcsrai>hCr who rd\atcd to print a photo or tbe py couple in the memory book bi1 company was hired to do for a hiab school reunion. Mr. Worthinaton was quoted as saying his main competiton in the business also have a policy of not prinlin& same«x couples in the memory books they produce. I was very upset that the reporter did not check with other companies to verify that statement. Our company has bttn doina photoeraphy and reunion memory books for 19 years ind we have no such policy. The high school committees always have final say in what goes into their books. They have hired us to provide a scrvicc.1 our moral objection is not rcqutred. I certainly would not want pros~tivc clients to think we have the sariii policy as Mr. Worthington and decide not to use our services. l pass no judament on Mr. Worth- angton·s feclinp. I just want to make our policy clear. CAROLE BERINGER On Site Photo/Graphics Costa Mesa • • • To the Editor. We compliment Dan Worthington on has stand qainst publishina a year book without the .. two boys" picture in it. He doesn•t want his family and friends exposed to their way oflivina and neither do we. • I fit's meant to be that they lave than way. th~~ feel sorry for them. but don't force their lifestyle on atherJ. · RICHARD ALLEN . Costa Mesa Chancellor's compensation To the Editor: It is with not a smaJI dcaree of concern that r have lately been followingthe arucles pertaining to the selection of a chancellor for the Coast Community College District. As a member of the adjuct faculty (librarian) I find it distrcuina that retuminJ summer and fall students will be m for some rude surprises because of severe budget constraints while the board of trustees has seen fit to allocate a ra1her lavish compensa- tion pack.age for the new district administrator. One item included m the .. perks" is particularly puzzlini- $25.000 was alloted as a fee for the incoming chanccllor·s attorney in return for his participation in ncgo- tiating the contract with the Coas1 Community Collesc District. It has been noted that the new administrator was selected, among other reasons, for his acumen in the area of finance i.e. to directly work with the district budget and Jive ofhis experti6e in educational budaetary problems. It is straQIC indeed that this responsibility has and will be a major duty in his position and yet he has to retain the costl~..scrvioes of an attorney in order to negotiate" his yearly salary. moving expenses., psoline aUowantt, etc. Coast Community College District has gone to great lenaths in recent years to increase the student enrol- lment and maintain necessary academic prosrams and services. In Auaust library petrons will most likely be told that &hey cannot have a cassette duplicated (class lectures). on-line searches are no lonaer avail- able, faculty will no lonaer be able to SC'hcdulc as many library orientations (fewer librarians), ad infinitum. The )Visdom of the board of tnmees escapes me, and I believe their latest action can be viewed at best as not beneficial and at worst roductive to the maintenance of academic standards of the D. VIRGINIA BROHARD Irvine Aquino funeral To tbe Editor: • I can•t stt Why Coruon Aquino will not aJlow Ferdinand Marcos to come homo for his motbe(s funeral. Afttr all, didn't he aQow her husband to come home for his own fUneral? R.B. MARTINEZ CoAIMea 1 ...... . H\lnttngton ratifies police, fire pacts Hunti~ Beech city otlkiak have rauftcd '9na·tenn coaancu with police and fire uftions that puih the aven19t buic pay &his year (Or polite ofticm to $37,000 and to lefltants. S4S,OOO a year. The fird'ithten ttpOrUdly haven't ratified the contract. BUt terms ap- proved by the City Council would aive ex~nced fimllhten $3),000 a year; fire enai_neen $37,..ao and fire capwns $44,300. The increases. plus an l!'J"CCtneOt to pay a portion of medtcal insurance for retired pcnooncl, will cost about S2.8million. Pay incrcues for both departmenu averqe about 4 percent. officials said. oh)'•ia at UCl, bas bttn named the 1911·89 recipient of the Di .. liftlUiskd Faculty Lcctu"th~ Award for Research by the UCI A~icSmate. Ourina his 16 yean at UCI, Rostoker bas focutcd his rneatth efforts on plas1na physics. work that bu potential aoolication for COl\· tr0lled nuclear IUsion, the reaction that powen the sun. A major obstack for researchen attcmpuna to bamns fusion is the conwrunent of superhot ionized pses. plasma. durina the reac~i~n. RostMer has worked on devaS!nl ~ys of con~nin1 fusina pits.ma us1n1 meanetac fields and particle beams. His most recent research prOJect, the development of a new kind of particle accelerator called a plasma ------------. betatron. has demonstrated tech- Prol..a~ honored Dr. Norman Rostokcr. professor of II 1111111 1111 .. 11. Cit ...... Slit nology that could make fusion reac- tions smaller and cheaper. Rostoker received his doctorate of science in solid state ohysics from the Camqie Institute ot Technoloay in Pittsbuflh, where he also held the position of research physicist. He supervised theoretical physics at the Armour Research Foundation of the Illinois Institute of.Technology. then joined the research staff at General Atomic:. where he later become man- aacr of fusion and plasma physics projects. Carmel Retirement Village is a private community for active seniors in a secure environment. We're/cross from Mile Squar .Park and the golf course. He then served u IBM profalorof enainttrina and chairman of aoo&ied physics at Comdl Uruvenhy bef~ comina to.UCI in 1972. He chaired the ucr depanment o( pbytia ft-om 1975 to 1918. .. The Irvine resident is 1 fellow of tbe American Physical Society and has served u vice chairman and chair· man of its Pluma Physicsdiviuon. .. VCI ell•'' eado•ed UCI has rectived a S600.000 pled1e from the Gold Tele- communication Co. of Seoul, Korea. to endow a chair in radiolojical sciences in the Collqc of Medicine. The chair, which has not yet been named and is pendina approval by the UC Board of Resents. will be the l 0th endowed chair at UCI and the fifth in the Collesc of Medicine. Endowed chain provide funding for research and tcachina activities. excluding the professor's base salary. supported by income from a fund established by private sifts tot.aUna a minimum ofSlS0.000. A chair may be filled by one individual indefinite- ly or by a series of indiv~&als appointed for prescribed pcrioCls of time. Gold Star Telecommunication Co .. a division of the Lucky-Gold Star Group. wilt make ap initial gift of $200.000 to UCI in June. The rcmainina S@ .000 will be Jiven within two years or less. ~ncaaq ApPlieatiOftl for poutioos on t>ie Huntifll\C)n leach Environmtntal Boerd are beins accepecd from ttai· dents ohhc city. Board m«tinp are held on the second and' foun.h Thursday eveninp of the month. lnllf'CSt penons &bould contact Catherine O'Hara at the city•s Pbn- oina Department. S36-S27 I. P'alr 9romot1oa A woman who started with the Orance County Fair as a pert-time worker for her father, the fair's livestock supervisor. has been promoted to assistant manqer. Becky Bailey-Findley started with the fair in 1972. was promoted to Youth Expo coordinator in 1982 and took over as exhibit supervisor two ycarsaco. As assistant manqer, Ba1ley- Findley will IX' responsible for the daily operation of the fair and fairpounds. personnel and rcntina the grounds. She replaces John Burke, who left Orange County to become manager of th~ Santa Barbara County Fair. Bailey-Findley has a dqru in liberal ans from Occidental Collete. She taught h1.Jh school for six years and worked in substance abuse re- habilitation. She lives in Anaheim wnh her husband and two children. Orenge CoMt DAJLY PtLOTITUeec:My, Mey 31, ,... A? Top carrier . ~ Pilot canter Robby Clark aceepta a certificate IS a $ colleae ecbolanlalp from pabUelrer •a 11 Pl Cluuch•••. Clark, a ~t-A Radeat at Jlfewpalt Ckt. dan School, lau beea a .DUiy Pilot carrier for --. ..._ three yean. Be wu eelected·for tbe Callfonda New »iAI• Yoath Poa.ndatlon ecbolanlalp from a field of la_.,... f/11 carrier statewide. Be P1aaa to pa.nae a career ID encl= 11 ..... or a related edence tfe1cL I I ' ; • Convenient to shopping and Fountain Valley Community Hospital. SJe i I 17077 San Mateo, Fountain Valley. CA 714/962-8887 7391 WARNER #F HUNTINGTON BEACH PUBLIC E Proposition 65 requires the Governor of California to publish a list of chemicals Uknown to the State to cause cancer or reprcxbctive toxicity." This list is compiled in accordance with a procedure established by the Proposition, and can be obtained from the California Health and Welfare Agenq~ Proposition 65 requires that a clear and reasonable warni ng be given to persons exposed to the listed chemicals in certain situations. Accordingly, the following warning is provided: ~< WARNING Detectable amounts of some chemicals known to the State of California to cause cancer, birth defects, or other reproductive harm may be found in and around facilities that produce, refine, handle, transport, store, or sell crude oil and petroleum and chemical products. These facilities include, for example, oil and gas wells, oil and gas treating plants, petroleum and chemical storage tanks, pipeline systems, chemical plants, refineries, marine vessels and barges, tank trucks and tank cars, loading and unloading facilities, gasoline stations, and other refueling facilities. Detectable amourtts of some chemicals known to the State to cause cancer, birth defects, or other reproduc, tive harm may be found in crude oil, petroleum products and their vapors, or result from their use. ExamFles are motor fuels and used motor oils. Read and follow label directions and use care when handling or u.sing al petroleum products. Ashland Oil, lncorp6rated l-800-223-1000, Ext. 906 ARCO l-8001 223•1 I Ext. 906 lhe ies ' . ' .. Texaco USA J,S00..223-1000. Ext. 906 TmeOilCo. 1--800-223-lCXX>, Ext. 906 TOSCO Corporation l-8CX). 22J.1CXX). Ext. 906 Tri-Cdor OI Co. l..S00.223-1000, Ext. 906 T>D Produdion Corp. t"8CX)..22J-KXX>. Ext. 906 lkion P.atic l~kn>~~ • UNOCAL Corponilloi1 1-«X>-992-1976 US. OI I Ast•-a Co. ·~~.Ext. 906 W1•1mAJllOl~P1 l«0-223·KXXl. Ext . v . j .. I ... • COMPLETE NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS, A 10 •; .... ~ .................................................... ~ .................................................................... ~ ...... 11!111 .......... . (\ .. .;. . :Econo· Lube doubles as .o comjJetitiori multiplies ~Newport Beach-based quick-lube firm rojecting 42 million In sales this year . JJJ ILENE SCHNEIDER '>liliii9; .... C.o 4 * I ,, Newpon Beach-based Econo Lube ·N Tune, one of the pionttrs in the -rapidly ex.panding ••quick lube" in- dustry, is tctll~ ready to face increased competition from some very bi& names.. In li&ht of Econo Lube's success. a v number of other major firms also htve en~rcd tM industry. 1ndudm1 _, Mani-Lube, owned by Quaker State. and PennL01l, which launched its J1fTy Lube shops. To combat the arow1n1 competition. ~no Lube plans to expand 1\5 busmcss ba~ dramatically and double its size by opening more than 400 outlets b}' 1991. With more than 100 franchised and compan}'-owned outlets throua}lout the West and S42 million in sales prOJCCtcd for this y~r. Econo Lube ·N Tune is one of the larsest operators and franchisers of quick: lube stores m California. Now companies such as A vis, Mobil and even McDonald's arc aemng into the field -seeking to capttaltzc on the trend away from sen ice stations in favor of more con"rnient. lower-<0s\ outlets that pro' 1de mo\onsts with qutck and 1ne\pensivc oil changes. tuneups and 01hcr auto maintenance services. .\lthough the entrance of these national giants waif mean more competition for the smaller. pnvatel} hrld Econo Lube. Roben Over- de' es\, its president and founder. 1s looking forward to the challcn.e. "The fact that these companies arc now entcrina the field lqitimizes what wt"'vc been doing," he said. "It proves \\-e're 10 the riaht business and that Out business IS &oing to grow " When O'erdcvcs\ decided \o leave his 9-to-5 office Job to open a one-stop auto service company. he had no hands-on expenen~ in auto main· \enancc. He did pcsscss the business savvy to p~ict that car owners would patronize a shop where they could receive low-cost. drive-throuah oil changes and tuneups. Econo Lube opened Its first stort 1n Anaheim in 1974. Sin« 1hcn. the demand for stores like it has boomed. M,orc than 2,000 quick lube outlets l have opened in the United States. Further. industry sources predict that another 12.000 to I S,000 stores will open by 1990 -a rat( of more than 4,500 new stores per year. Econo Lube ·N Tune. meanwhile, expects to start more than 90 stores of its own by the end of next year. Thereafter, it plans to open new stores at a rate of 8 to 10 per month. The company also plans to expand to the East Coast. initially targetina Maryland, GeorJia and North Caro- lina. as well as Texas, Colorado and W1sh1nston. "'Econo Lube has always been a touah competitor," said Ovetdcvest, who was born in Holland and emigrated to the United States in 1956 . . Aft.er arad~tinJ from the U~ivcr­ s1ty of Cahfomia and cam1na a master's dearee from the Univenity of Ol'CJon. he spent five yean in markeuna. accountma and businns systems development at Shell Oil Co. In 1970 Overdevest joined Paine Webber, working with the invest- ment firm uhtil M founded Econo Lube ·N Tune in 1973. (Pleae ... EC01'0/ A9) ;~, ................................................................................................................... _111!!11 ................................................. ... ~aker cashing in on South Coast Plaza ~:reCycliµg machine honors retailers' '87 achievements I ----nMesa-based firm expediting ~~everage container refunds -<f ----- ~lny JOYCE SAKKAL ~ .... e... 4ft t t4 Lynne Mercdnh doesn't mind the unusual -....ays some people go about making their li ving. Even the sight of people $8vcngmg in trash · ns for ~mpty beveraec cans doesn't bother her. And wh> should it? After all. they and other s fonuna\t' people help keep her in business. No. Meredith does not share their way of iving. Instead. she 1s the presid(illt of Ecotech olog)' Management Corp .. the exclusive dis- 'butor of the can "Recycler" machines which utomaucall y pay out cash and COUPof\S in ~xchange for empty aluminum cans. • Co~umers will soon be seeing more of the Rft}cler machines near supermarkets and conve- nience store entrances as Costa Mesa-based cotcch gears up its efforts to place more than S,000 Recycler machines nationally. ''&tween now and the end of tht year. we should have t,300 additional machines 1n thr .sdllthland." Mer~th said. bringing the total cents per can or 50 cents per aluminum pcund. and. at some stores. the machines will also pay a S- ce nts redeemable coupon Ever since the compan} was formed a little O\ er four years ago. Mered 1th knew that was the nght field to go into ··1 sa" a lot offuture in the reqchng industry," Mere.duh said. ''And the public's response to the Rec)cler machine has been real!}' good. They loved 1t." One of the main reasons behind the growth of the company was the passage ofa recycling law last }Car. the &"erage C'onta1ner Refund Law. Under that la"'. JUOCC!) stores with annual sales of more than S1 m1lhon "'ere required to place a state-cenified reqchngcenterw1th10 a half· mile radius or be fined SIOO a day. Meredith saKl the com pany carnrd $4.5 million w1thii;uhe firs{ quarter of fiscal year' 1988 and she expeets to do $14 million 1n equal'ment sales this ytar".'lialfthe amount she is predicting for 1989 "We arc prcd1cung at least the double of tha1 in 1989 because all the machines ~ill be in the field.·· she said. ..... _, .... ...,.. Gross annual sales registered 20 percent inc rease over 1986 Achievements of the 1987 retail year were celebrated by 350 people - including the merchants of South Coast Plaza and Crystal Court as well as the management and staff of both malls and CJ. Scgerstrom & Sons - during a banquet at the Red Lion Inn in Costa Mesa. In a bnef"state of the retail center" address. James Henwood. general manager of South C'oast Plaza. noted that gross annual sales of S613,3 I 8.000 for 198 7 exceeded the 1986 figure of SS 11.832.000 by 20 percent. ,.number of Recyclers placed Joe.ally to 1.3 58. • The computcnzed can recyclers. which arc lGtbout the size ofa water vending machine and have 1~ 5.040 pcund capac1!)' per week. pay consumers 2 Ecotech sells the machines -which cost S 1 :!.500 each -to investors who arrange with grocer' stores for sites Ecotech JUS\ recentl}' signed a $9 m'1lhon contract "1th Alum1 Teller Vending Corp of (Pleaee .ee RECYCLER/ A9) Lynne Meredith, preatdent of Ecotecb Ecoloay M•n?o:ent ~!:.11!;• abows what Recycler oa to al am cane. Jack Matthess. general manager of Crystal Coun. gave a s1m1lar analysis. sayinJ. that business had increased stradil> due to the addition of exceptional rfta1lcrs unique to the venue &\Sy Sanders. vice president and _.,..., . ...__ l') t' .- ~'West's leading beer importer ~;expands network nationally Tecatc Iker. the nation's No. I mpcned beer in cans and one of the astest-growmg imported beers in the oiled States 10 the '80s. 1s headed for strong new growth" as the brand's mpcner in the "'estcm United Statrs xpands nauonall) this month. ac- ordmg to a com pan}' spokesman. "Teca te Beer. our No. I product, 111 get the biggest benefit of our new auonal operation:· said Manuel ub1ralta. president of Tecate Beer mponer Wisdom Import Sales Co. c. of Ir .. me ... Tecate -and all our rands -are headed for strong new owth as a result of our new national d'en1S1ng. ne"' promotions and our xpanded national wholesaler etv.ork." Wisdom lmpcrt Sales. the Wes\'s ldest and largest ~r and beverage 'mporter. 1s expected to complete 1\s at1onal e'\pans1on by Wednesday. ccording to Rub1ralta. \\ 1sdom's national brands will include Bohemia. Carta Blanca. Chihuahua and Tt'catr beers from the C'er .. cceria Cuauhtemoc S. i\. brewer) (1n Montcrre,. Mexico). and the full hne of Penafiel mineral waters and fru1t -Oavored beverages produced by Manantialcs Penafiel S.A. de (' V. (Tehuacan. Mexico). Wisdom also continues to serve as the 1mponmg and sales and market· mg compan)' m the western United States for the beers from England's Watne}' Mann and Truman Brewers (Watneys Red Barrel Iker. Watnrys London Light and Watneys Cream Stout) and San Franc1$CO~s Anchor Brewing Co. (Anchor Steam Beer. Anchor Porter. Uberty Ale. Old Foghorn and i\nchor Wheat Been • • • John C. Warner. chief e.xecut1\ie officer ofQalksllver Inc., announced improved fiscal 1988 second quaner "Developing the , Next Generation " Grannies For Nannies, Inc. • Live-in/Live-out • Full-time/Part -rime • Highly qualified. loving and mature nannies (714) 361-1480 THE HOUSE DEBATE CONTINUES ... " ,, What Sets HOUSE of IMPQR1S Apart from the Rest? &6Ale O.ld ,. Wcirtil ,..._ ..-..., lrOClU .,.....,.. ~ £.idroi:JtdllVJry Dollar Valuer ...... Df.9-)'C.. ~O.W0-.'4•/ 5 Settle tbe Debate... s..:=.. "'7'.;::. u Vlatt Ua Today and Dedde for Tounelf. .. and first-halfopcraung results for the Nev.pan Beach company. Net income for the second quarter ended Apnl 30 increased 58 percent to S 1.806.000. or 30 cents per share. as compared to net income of SI . I 4:!.000. or IQ ce nts per share (adjusted). 1n the hke quarter last year. • Net sales for the quancr rose 79 percent to S 16.504.000 compared \O S9.225.000. in the hke quarter a )car ago Net income for the first half of fiscal 1988 increased 50 percent to S ~.185.000. or 36 cents per share. as compared to net income of S 1,456.000. or 26 cents per share (ad1ustt"d). in tht' like period a year ago "let sale!> for the six-month period rose 71 percent to S24.505.000 com pared to S 13.816.000 in the first m months offiscal 1987. (Pleue Me PATE1ff /A9) ,FREEWAY STORES ; Since 1919 ' . .. . i40"' OU!'MGCWS rtlaS Oii lUIM f10PUl fGLW:l ' ' ••. ,' ,.,.~ ••• ,, C.1·1 ··s·· flCl1 . . . ,i CREDIT LINE ~ - FORSCH VARIE K.INER Ex-pitcher Forsch joins Grubb & Ellis Kea Forscla has joined Gnabb 6 Ellis' Anaheim commercial brokerage office as an office properties specialist. announced David R. Hibbard. vice president and district maniger. Forsch. a former professional baseball pitcher with the Cahfomia Angels and Houston Astros. previously served with Real Estate Advisors in Santa Ana. Dunng his ma1or league care-er. he participated in two All-Star and champ1onsh1p playoff games. • • • Laguna Niguel resident C.rbtlH Varte 1s now manager of business development at Elliott Corp., a privatcl)I owned $eneral ' contractor in Ncwpcrt Beach. President K.irk Elliott said her rcs~ns1bilit1es include coordination of the company's marketin& ac11vi11es and administration of bidding schedules. • • • Maril KIDer of Mission VieJO has been a~~::.ed an associate at Rlcbarcl1oa Nap Martla Arckl&ectve/ 11. The award· wanning RNM has offices in Newpcn Beach and Dttrlield Beach. Fla. I ts pro~ccts include morc than 200.000 residential unit$ and more than 4. 5 mil hon square feet of commercial. multi-use and hospitality projects in the Un1trd States. Mexico. Canada. Austr1lia. Japan and Europe. • • • Western DltJtal Corp. in Irvine hasappci nted A. KelG Plot as 'ice president. corporate development. to ovel"SC'C strategic planning as the comp:inycontinucs record ,rowth asa leadina manufacturer of a broad range of storage management. antelligcnt disk drive. commun1cat1ons. video controller and core logic products for OEM and end-user markets. Previously Plant was president and chief executive officer of Speech Plus Inc .. which he founded in 1983. • • • NcWl>Ort Beach resident Walter W. K.eudtt Jr. of Keener Eatupr1se1 in Costa Mesa has received the Pacific Coast BuildeF1 Conference's coveted Rodney Ra~ Award for his lifetime of sen ace to PCBC and \he state buildf ni industry at lafl'. The 1award. presented in San Francisco. as aiven each year to the indtvldual who has most demonstrated thoSt" attributes of dedication. unselfishness and contnbution to fellow man and the buik11n• industry: A CBIA lifetime director. Keusder served as state association preslaent 1n 1984. • • • Directors of the Callferala Avic:He Cemmt.a-in Irvine have promoted Maril Alf!ed to prn.1dcnt to had t~ 6.()00:.mem~ comm1ss1on·s advert1s1n" promotion. merchand11ina. food service. • Clpcrt. ~bite relattons. industry relauom and aovcmmmt affain. SuccetdinaJohn Ban.elmc who 1en in Marth, Af!lttk said. ··My top pri0t11y is to rtstructu~ lhe commission to mort effectively and efficiently meet the needs or our powers.•• • • • a .. Gemn, whose operien« in international air ataO transportation dates to 1967. bu bttn namtd 1n1em11tional m&ftllCf o( Mee AJr ,,..._. in lrvtnt. Eden is a rapidly powina air frci&ht forNa'*r •ith ra(iliucs 1n 1.5 ~U.S. meuvpohtan areas. The (Ompeny entntd the overwu mAftri in early May with tcf'\lic:e 10 and from Australia and plans to launch ttTVic:e to Europe very soon. .. general mana,er of Nordstrom. Southrrn California. was keynote speaker. She referred to the 10th anniversary of Nordstrom in Cah· forn1a. which opened its first s'°re in the state in May 1978 at South Coast Plaza. At last Wednesday's annual merchant dlnner. Nordstrom was honored for hiJhest sales per square foot . greatest increase in sales per square foot. highest total gross sales. major store: arcatcst increase in dollar sales and best customer ser- vice. .. Other awards were presented m a number of categories ranging from highest sales per square foot to highest total gross salrs for major and spccaalty stores. South Coast Plau stores that were first in their respective compan1ts. c11hcr by gross volume or salerper square foot for 1987 were Alex Sebastian. Bally of Switzerland. Bergstrom's Children's Store. Capczjo. Charlotte Russe. The Coffee (Pleue eee PLAZA/ A9) State is No. lin shopping centers~ By ROBERT MACY Aa111tautP9.-W...., LAS VEGAS. Nev. -Consumers spent S584 billion at more than 30.600shoppingcenters the past year, according to new fifures from the International Council of Shopping Centers. The association repcns 241 new centers were built last year. an increase of 7 percent over 1986 figures. The upbeat fiaures were released as more than 25,000 shoppin& center developers, executives and retailers met here for the annual ICSC spring convention. which ended May 20. Included in the week's activities were the opcninJ of a lcasina mall covering I milhon square feet of space at the Las VcgaS convention center. Show officials say billions of dollars in business were conducted in the three days the mall was in operation. wtlh developen from across America showcasina the latest in shop_pinJ center trends. TheSS84 billion in shoppinac:enter sales represents 54 percent of the total non-automotive sales in the U.S. in 1987. accordina to IC'SC Executive Vice President John Riordan. California leads the hst of shoppina centers. with 3.561 centers ranaina frorn major malls to small strip centers. Texas is second with 2,610 centers. followed by Aorida with 2,369. Nevada has 202 shoppina centers. accordin~ to the ISCS fiaurs Ca11Tomia shopping Cfnten rans up $67.6 billion 1n consumer s~nd­ ina in t987. followed b~-46.4 billion in Florida and S43.2 bihion in Tuas. The shoppina ttntcn accounted for S?l.6 billion in state ulc:s tax revenue, with Califomia accountina for S2.S billion of that amount. the ICSC study rcpons. Nationwide, S.9 million people work in 1hoppin1 centns, about 9 perc:tnl of the non:41ricultun.I cm- plo)mtnt in the U.S.. Tbt iriduttry 1tUdy sbows that COOIU\lc:tion bep.n Oft 1,146 lhol>- PU'I c:enten in tht U.S. in 19&'1, emPfo)'ina t 36.000 constn.ttion worktt1. Cahfomia led the WI) with 2S7 MW c.'ent~ ConstnlC'tioa contncu for new ttntm t.oWcd S 7.6billitll111917 :..!~ ir.c1C1K o( S700 mUJion over IYR fipm. ShODDi.. t"ftlltr proftsti<NWa rrom NOnlt ~ Souah America. £.UtoDe. ,IWI aftl Alllbill "1nded • lK'SC COl'l\'StlCM9 ........ ..... ,..._ta.o~ud ..... mMtf ..... to '" , ... rt-"'°'"'· 1' ' '· .. • RECYCLER EXPANDS ••• FromA8 Phoenix, AriL, to tell 1,000 of the Recycler machines. Ecotech allO has exclusive national contracts with the Stop N Go and Circle K market chains which recently purchased over 1,000 7-11 markets. Ecotech will pay rental space to th<>SC'markeu to place the RCC')'cler machii>es. Faced with such an increase in business, Meredith said a problem the company ~s e.iperiencina is being unable to provide the equipment to markcu fast enough. "We can only make 200 machines a ¥' month." she said. "Riibt now we are prina. up our !"'apufacturu ~!'<' 1ncreasmi our maintenance team. Ecotec6 is also the distributor of a second type of machine capable of crushina &lass and shreddin& plastic. Ho.wcver. Meredith· said she has refrained from marketina those m• chines because they are not cost- effcctive. "There is very Jittle scrap value in plastic and &lass." she said. .. Aluminum is really where the money is." mmt ~ymenl.I. The IRS wiU review your financial condition to determine bow you are~ to i-y. £n1orad collection is pormally used oo1y after the IRS tries to con1aC1 you arid live )OU the opponuruty to pey ~ohuaLanJy. . Afty type of property,~ or ttal. may be stiltd aod .old, tbt Mtit(y )'OW l.b bill, Bebe the da~ •At. you may rcpin your property by maklna an ICttl*ble IP'ttmcat for · Cymm' of the IU.. You may alto ~c • the f'iaht 10 ~ YoUr propMy at an) time prior 10 the sale b)' peyina the tax due. 1ndudi,. in~ and penalties. totrther with any expenses of the seizure. 1 . Real nu1.e sold thfOUih this coUec~ t.aon procftS may be redeemed by you al ur time within 180 days tfttt the salt. To redeem )'our property. you I PATENT INFRINGEMENT DENIED ••. hoaA8 . Warner said QUiksilver's im· proved opcratina pcrformanre tbrouah the first half of fiscal 1911 WU on ~t with the com119ny's pis. Quiksilver Inc. ctesians. arranaes for the manufacture of. and dis- tributes_ beachwear and casual clotbiQI primarily for r.ouna m(n and boys under the Quiksilver label ~ company's productS are mack in the United States and sold to 1,300 surf shops, specialty stores and sdttted <tcpanment stort"S. • • • Cederan Ille. announced iu earn· inp repon for the third quaner of fiscal year 1988 mded March 31. Net income was $21.196, com- pared to SJ.Ml for the like quaner. fiscal )'Qr 1987 ended March 31. 1987. A net Ion was reponed for tl)e quarter of (Sl~S.998). an lncJftlC over the reponed lossof(S7S,S2S) for the third quartet of fiscal year 1917-1 The 1naused loss from the rom- patable quarter wu4Wibuted by the Irvine-based company to a 1ubstan- tial incn~ase in marketina and sales expenSH as the company moves out of iu ~rch and development phase and into a markctina orien- ~t1on. The ~rtcd lo$s per share of common stock was ($.002) as com- pared to a loss of ($.00 I ) for the third quarter offiscal year 1987. "We continue to shift our emphasis from produC1 development to mar- k.ctinJ and selling out cumnt product ofrenna." said Willis Marsiq. presi~ dent MWe are optamlStic that the efforts we have spent in the put several PLAZA MERCHANTS ••• PromA8 Bean &: Tea Lea( Fanfares Shoes, Foot Locker. G . Hq. for Men. Golden Shear. Harris & Frank. J. Jessop & Sons and Johnston&: Murphy. Also, Mrs. field's Cookies. The Maglc Pan. The Music Box. Natural- izcr West, Th( Nature Company. Optica. Paae Boy Maternity, Roottn's Luapgc. Scandia Down. ~an Clay. The TannC'T')' West. The Tinder Box. Toys International, Upstairs GaJlery, Viie de France. Weisficld's Jewelers. Westminster Lace. Bullock's. May Co. and Nor- dstrom. I months will provide tbt income later this calendar )car to turn lbe com- pany into a profitabk pos1uon ... On Feb. 25. the company s1aned a memorandum of understand1ns with Sccuricom PTY. LTD. of Bnsbane. Queensland. Australia. to form a joint venture to manufactutt and sell computer se-cunt) products an Aus- tralia and 10 other Pacific Ram ~nes. ln1t1al product orden of .)400.000 "ere placed by the JOint venture for the 1988 calendar year. • • • Westen Dtlital c.r,. said last Frida,. that its F'llcCanl product does not infnnic the patent aSfttled by Plus DcYelopmcnt Corp. in the lawsuit rcttn tly filed api nst the Irvine-based company. Another patent in t.lusswthu been asserted by Ouantum Corp. and ECONO LUBE TO DOUBLE OUTLETS ••• Silver lapel pins W"ttC presented to the. maoascrs of tbcsc stores •bile m.anq.ns of stores that opened in 1987 received burlap blp of lima . beans. in honor of the pnor qricul- turaJ use of the land on which the adjacent malls now stand. From.AS .. I'd always wanted to bt in busi· ness for myself,'' said Overdevest. .. After careful research into new business opponupities.. I became interested in the quick lube industry, which was jusa bqjnnina at that lime." AJthouJb he had little knowledsc of auto maintenance. Overdevcst want- ed to capiYlize on what he saw as the arowinaconsumcr ~ttrcst in car care services that took less time and were less expensive thin dcalenhips or traditional service stations. ""Savina time was becomina as impona111 u savins money, ... over· devost said. ''People. were belinnina to look for alternatives to the often time-consumina process of lcavina their aJl-important automobiles for upkeep and repairs. "We've been here since the st.an. We know our customers. we know our posit1onin1 and we know w~ wc want to 10. Many of our new competiton lack the experience and undcrstandina of the market to do well in the Iona term." One key advantasc Econo lube pas over theK companies is divmity of services. acc:ordan& to Overdevest. "Many are comina in just as lube stores." be said ... That posiuonina is too timned in today's. martr.etplace and may not be economically viable as the competition beau up. Econo Fluor Daniel honored for safety excelle~ce Fluor Daniel, a unit of Fluor Corp. in Irvine, bas reccivcd the first Construction Ind~ Safety Excel· lence Award by the Business Round~ table. Fluor Oanid was choltn from amo"' the Jartelt fuJHervice con· struct1on and enaineerinJ companies in the United States for 1u ouutand· int safety record dwins the last three years. Holder of the record for 17 million safe houn worked at a siDJle Rte, Fluor C)ujd bis ClleftSlYC ~s for accident prevention and -safety trainina. Business Roundtable, bued in New Y ort.. is an lllOCiation in which chief excciativc officers of200 major companies focus and act on pOblic i~ atrect productivity. Mainlenaftc:e and construc11on. ranked u tbe nation's most haDfd. ous industry. had a 1986 incident rate of 6.8 disablina injurina per 200,000 houn worked, compared to Fluor Daniel's incident rate of O.•. The Roundtablc's select.ton was based on a proposal submitted by Fluor Daniel. ~ the com· pany•s excellent safety statistics. iu safety trainina propams. iu Iott manhourav~ and the recommen. dalion of eevcral ~clients. For the Graduate's Outstanding Achievement Give Her a Gold Star! Also available - A Tie Tac for Him . .. Lube. on the otheT hand. offers tuneups. bra.kc jobs and oil chanaes. ~offcrina more than one or two services is a bia benefit to consumen.. They can come to us and Jtt everythina they need. and by offmna a divcnity of suvices. wc can keep our prices down. That's a big com- petitive plus." Econo Lube, howevtt, t\Js no plans to expand beyond iu basic servtccs. '"Once you start providina too many other scrvJCCS, you become too much like a rqular service station." Overdcvcst daimed. MWc want to maintain our imaat as a quick. Jow- cost. on~stop center for basic auto care." -Two special awards were sjven to a retailer and member of man.qement at South Coast Plaz.a. Gayle H~er. current president of the South Coast Plaza Merchanu Association and owner of Toys Inter- national and Tutti Animali. pres- ented an enaraved silver &owl to Sue Graham. past association president and scncral manaatt of Bullock's. Henwood presented a standin& globe to Werner Escher. d1ttetor of community relations. marltiqa his 20th anniversary at South Coast Plaza w~ he was formerly director of marteting. .--~~~-...,,..-....;::...~~~~~~~~~~,..._~~~~~~--:::.__~~~~~~~~.___.;...~~-:-_;...-..;..;..,..--~-r~---~~-=- CLEANING & PRESERVING SHAKE ROOFS SINCE 1969 State LI~ No. 4711MO MAKEYOURROOFLASTLONGER AT A FRACTION OF REPLACEMENT COST! CALL NOW FOR M.ORE INFORMATION AND A FREE ESTIMATE Simp~ ilurat on balances of $10,000 to $90,000. • • I ·. ~ y s F c I •,4 • . ~ •• ~1 '' - Market posts stronggatn .. I NEW YOllK {AP) -The stock martet posted one of its stro"aest advances of the year Tuctday u traden went oo a post-Memorial holiday buyina ~ · Analysts said there wu no siftl)c piece-of economic news to account for the au,.e. but said tradenapPCll'ed to be bcttinf that interest raicsare approachm1 a peak for the ume bei.na. . The Dow Jones ·~ of» industriall. which fell 10.31 point.son Fnday, climbed 7•.68 to 2,031 .12. ll WIS the second biaest rile in t.bc Dow Jones industrial·~ this year, aurpused only by a 76.42 point pin on Jan. •· ,. Gainers swamped losen by a ma.rain of ocarly • to l on the New York Stock Exchaqe, wit.b 1,2001 up, 322down and ..03 uncbantied. Bia Boant volume totaled 2•1."61 million shares, apinst 133.59 million million. in the previous teSSion. The NYSF1 composite index rose •.31 to 148.04. ~Cllllpl .. -~·,.tell, .ta . -411 """' el.ul/IJ o.u 842-&lll WH AT AMEX DID W HAT NYSE Dio NEW VOtllK !AP) May 31 AMtX LEADERS Galo Quon s .... "°"' ~ -.... flt·-...... ,,.... T~ • 11.ltoO _.."' ,...._ tt't OOMeil ............ "' 0.,. • l t ..... 1_.,. _. I ....... UI . . ...... ~--t.IO--.-~rc.-_.. ...................... .. .... ., ................. ...... ftt• ............ ._Olli¢ I lf11 ...... ID.I = ............ &...,_=..., ..... ... ,.. ...... ttt ....... .._.M ....,._ ......... ,_,. ........... Y0111 • ........ ==···"'&.N.Y.~ ........ N.Y ............ ..,-.M NYSE L l~DfR ~ ·- w ....... ,.Jw l AJUBS (March • - nebulous could be· ------------- is made 10 embroil you 1n family dispute. Read bttween lines, bt positive conccmina rules. reaulat1on1. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov 21): Be analyt1C'&l. take nothin& for annt.ed. disttm motJvts. Gutrd polteSSions: a \lS1tor could be careless and brnk valuable \lte. Prevent at. Qcmina, Virro. Sa&itllrius people fi1urc come "very reaJ." Terms will be outlined and de. fined, you'll learn SYDIEY wMf'c you stand and promine~V~· -. SAO ARIVS (Nov. 22·t::>tt. 21): S«nan.o h1ah· whether or not 0 joume)' . is to ~ke 1111 , place, Pisces. V1rao •••••illlil•••••I li&Jlts patience. determination. charm. ~nua11venns. Domestic adjustment takes place. could include ~ous concern about residence. hfcstylc. marital s\ltus. Taurus featured. fiaurc prominently. TAURUS (Apnl 20-May 20): Emphasis on deadlines. power. authority, intensh)' of relationship. Someone failed to "correct fi~nc1al ftJurH .. -you'll be apprised ofthat enor. Canttr, Capricorn people play roles. GEMINI (May 21-Junc 20): You'll finish what you sta~ed appr~ximately two weeks If<>· Completion of project co1nc1des with added recosmuon. p'Catcr cmo. tional s\lbihty. resumption of "romance." CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Perceive po1enttal. streamline techniques. set nd of superfluous material. Guard pnvaC). refuse to be 1num1dated b> one who claims to "know 11 all ... Communicate with one in home or hospital. CANCER (June 2 1-July 22): New outlook concerns employment, basic issues, optimism rcprdin& health. You'll also learn more about mcmbcrofoppositc sex who rtecntl)' confided '"true feel ings." Leo 1s in picture. LEO (July 23-Aua.. 22): Dichotomy exists between amb1t1on and duty. For now. stick to what is familiar. fulfill obligation to family member. Emotion~ tend to AQUARIUS (Jan. 2~feb. 18): You recen&ly pushed aside oblipttons -time 1s up. bill must be paid. You'll get what you want 1n connection with speculation, romance. crcat1 v1ty. But don't miss deadline. PISCES (Feb. 19-March iO): M1ss1on is completed Transactipn is finished. know 11 and get "ofktagc. ··Focus on presuge. career. relations with media. Financial windfall possible 1f you "handlt with care " Libra 1s involved. dominate -stnvc for balance. ~ VIRGO (Au~ 23-Sept. 22): You'll have more "working JQOm.' Scenanp hi&hli~ts social activ11y. popularity. invitation to travel. ~ou II be concerned w1th IF JUNE 1 IS YOUR BIRTHDAY you arc romanttl·. daring. odginal. challenging. ~nsual. stubborn. You also arc versatile. possess sense of1howmanship. seldom do anythana halfway and often read more than one book simultaneously. Leo. Aquanus people play important roles in your life. Current cycle hiahli&hts domestic adjustment that could include chanae of n-s1den~ or marnal status. body image. general appearance. wardrobe. · LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Be willinJ to revise. review and to renegotiate agreement. Relative 1s involved. cffon Sorry, it's a wrong number DEAR ANN LANDERS: The new phone books will ~ out soon. Will you please tell your readers. Ann. to throw out all the old books? The telephone company goes to ~reat expense to pubhsh new direc· tones every )Car because people move and compa_n1es change numbers. I ha vc a small business whose num~r bclon&ed to a radio station m 1983. laet phone calls from people at all hours for sona rcqu,:sts. They can't ~licve they d1al~he wrong num~r. When I told one caller to use the 1988 directory. he phoned back and used the filthiest language I've ever heard. Before the radio station had my number. a church had it (six yean a_go). I still act calls for Father Gonzales and Mons1anor McCanhy There should ~ a therapisl who specializes m helpina ~le sever their emotional lits wit&'1tld phone books. How about 1f. Ann? Stan a trend. -WRONG NUMBER IN ST. LOUIS. DEAR ST. LOUIS: If dllt problem •• Ad . I •.tsuce, SM ldepMH compuy la St. Lffl• ••oaW lan~ a ............... ..call&Mel• ..... boob. If Gey ottered U for every olcl book tarnecl ID, they'd strip t"e toW11. Since A11 lMDEIS yoa Uve lll SL LHl1, wily llOI villa tff ltead of tile &elepliloae company and HQCSt llkJI pnlttl! I • • DEAR ANN LANDERS. I knc'>' I had to wntc to you when I read your answer to "Out West." the g.irl whose mother slept with her father's shin under her pillow after he died. Many years a&o we lost a precious little &irl. She hved for five days and died of pneumonia. It took me several years before I could talk about her without break1na down. What hun me most as that when I returned home after her burial. my mother and sister had rcmovCi1,.all trae>ts of our prep- aration 'tor tlW new baby The little bassinet that I had decorated with such loving ca~ was aone. So was the beautiful drc¢ and the baby clothct I had crocheted and 51:wn by hand. I know they did 1t to keep me from funher hun. but 1t was the wron& thing to do. I wish with all my hean that the} hadn't taken 11 upon themselves to decide ~hat was ~st for me. Everything about my baby 1s gone now. There 1s not a thread ofan)thmg left to hold. I feel so empt) and cheated. - A READER FROM TEXAS. DEAR TEXAS: I'm Hre muy ttaden wUI bn luned sometlliag I.Uy becaase yoa Weft willlDI lo bare yoar soal. Ttlank yo• for wri1LD1. DEAR ANN L.\NDERS. A TV commercial for Jeans is so offensive to me and many of my fnends that I feel the need to write to )'OU about 1t The )Oung girl in the commercial 1s expressing strong disapproval of her mother 1n a defiant and ~respectful manner because her ?fOt:Oer turned oIT a commercial for jeans that the mother d1dn·1 like In tb1s da) and age. wtth so malT) parent -children relat1onsh1p~ strained to the breaking point, wh) would a company give crcd1b1ht> 10 such unacceptable behavior> In fact. all the commercials for this brand of Jeans arc d1sgust1ng. What has happened to valuct and respect" -P'\ULA D . SMITHTOWN. "I Y DEAR PAULA: Yoa loot SM words rt1"• oat of my moatll. Complain to lite maHfaclarer. SPRING CLEANING SALE! SPORTSWEAR-20% OFF Plus Additional Markdown on Supersavers (Already below cost) Something Special feminine fashions \I. c spc~ 1Jl11c in lash1ons for the miss) figure size~ J 111 .il<.-0tx•l1h.'<t 250 E. 17th Costa Mesa,• Hilgren Square • 045-571 1 • All. TV L1SllNLS 1 e:oo 1 s:so 11 :00 j 1:30 j a:oo I s:3o I 9:oo I 9:~o 1 10:00 j 10~30 J 11 :oo I 11 :30 I ...... ...... T,. Higb p,_ ·ot "-" 191 • ·Rcnar11 c,.,.,,,. KAIWI ,,. .. lhl l.,.. LL.~~~...:..E!...l!!~~~~~~~~l!.=::~~:::.x::===~=-=::...=::::=::1...-~==---'~t Neither vulnerable. SouLh deals. NORTH • I(. l Q J s 0 • s J 2 • 9 'J 2 WEST EAST + A Q 10 9 S 4 J + J 7 6 Q 2 ~ Q 10 9' J O Q v 74 • I( I 7 6 • A 10 S SOUTH • Vold ? AKl76 0 A I( J 10 9 6 • Q J The biddina: Soutti w~ .. I ~ l • 4 0 Pus Pus Pass NortJa Pus s v East , .. Pass Opcnina lead: Six of • Life imitates art, wrote Oscar Wilde. A few weeks ago we re· marked that pessimists do weU at the brid&c table. This philosophy was hiahli&hted by the followina hand from the recent Sprina North American Championships in Buffalo. Complete t•vt.ton hllng• In Sunday'• TV PUot. T ::? .... -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~· ~ CHARLES GOREii care exercised by declarer. At the table we watched. Arlene ThomJ>'(>n. of Ft. Wonh, Tcus, became decwer on the auction shown. West aot her side C\ff to its best start with a club lead. Declarer ruffed the third round. and drew one round of trumps, noting the fall of West's queen. Those who fore- saw no problenrdrcw another trump ACROSS 1 ntummatJon unlt 5 BlbUcal petnarcti 10 Ecfjcts 14 The b9st 15 w I. Island 1ev..- 11 Edifice 19 Flt CK 'f9'll .... ,,., 65 Reedy Ml Singer' Francea - 61 S.tYe 61 Sew • Uriepoied DOWN 1 E.xc:.d 2 NOllW ... 3 Cameo atone .,.,...., and then <1ta.rtcd on heans. Now ;: they could ruff only two ~sand, : becauw of the S-1 split still had to • concede a hean for down one. • Thompson took the trump queen ;:'{ at face value. To protect apinst the possibtltty that West WU short in ~ both red suits, she abandoned trumps and ca.shed t.M ace-kin& of hearts. Wbcn West discarded a spade on the seoond heart. declarer ,.,. was able to ruff aJJ thJ'oc of her ban , losers, winJ spade ruffs as entries "!.'t back co hand, to make her contract. ~ lnadentaJly, if you think Wesa's hand IS rar too StrOnl for I weal ~ jump overcall, so do we! Note that ,. East-West can tile 10 tricks at a spack contract as the cards lie. Because or the vaprics of dupli· cate scoring, most Nonh-South pain played in some num~r of beans. Almost all were too high be- cause of the terrible trump break. At some tables, however. Nonb-liiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiaij~ South reached five diamonds, and I J.he result depended on t he dcarcc of 20 MU9ilc group 2 1 Eon leQllM"t 22 WM borne 23 Succ:wtct 25 Biped ~ Awora 5 A WMf*1gton 6 .. • ,,,,.,, - -'"°"9a'" 1 BIO UClllII an. Kamer'• •ucc 111 a. An Important IM~ from Ann JllNan .•• · · 1 feet good about myself . . . "'FOllowlng my doutStc mastectomy, I de- cided against reconstructive surgery In- stead. I decided to wear Camp/ A~na breastforms They're unusually like your own breast tissue ~Y ~come warm with you and they're very pU~ They feel hkc a natural extension of FREE CONSULTATION NO OBLIGATION yourself. My chOlcc IS A~na APPUIO OITMOTIC SYSTEMS. Lid. bfeastforms #I recommend • t .. 11 Mt. "-'lier SL. SU!lh I them to any WOIT\¥l Who's had a P~ Vallef, CA tJJOe mastecr?my... f7Hf •I· 1712 -·--- YoU!re Invited to a Class in Criminal Law Western State University has-sChedWed a free introductory class in criminal law in south Orange County on Tuesday, June 14, 1~, beginning at 7:00 pm. This popular dass is designed for those Considering a law career. Seating is limited and reservations are Nq\tired. • For r~lon. and lafOrwuiff~ tall an admWlw c:oanMlor ticlaJ •t. How dollar was named B1L.M.BOYD To that hst of coins named at\er people. please note "dollar"· came from the German "thalcr ·· first coined by a Bohemian s1h er\m1th named "Thakr - A third of thequanerho™'s are cit' dwt llcrs. 30 Hummingbird 31 0.-lltM>e 3<4 SlmpMton 31 s..tNno 31 Orang land 31 "Good 9flowl" 42 Sooner than 43 o.feal .. Cent 45 Ellpy 41 Attldr. Ger 49 Cftult 50 St.ate ebbr 51 w.ttwood<• 53 Ms ManieM SS Gukt se Stwvtie 81 ~--62 Cac90 &4 ()ppoeft• of 3 14 20 In Ftbruary of 19'f8. th~ (II~ ot Woodbury. Conn .. offered to one Daniel Gnslus a Job as head of the town·s prbaat disposal dcpan.!T'cnt He took it 6ut onl) aner the Clt} 17 aarttd to 1ivc him the title of Superinlt'ndmt of Used Food Coll«- tions Dcp&nmcnt. You don't thank of a robtn as carnhorou buut\er a rain 1t can cat umuchas t•fcc1ofe-M\h~s.and lhat'sarnivorou:s. i1 it not? Q What's the easiest way to con'm kilomttm to mile$~ A. Muhiply the kilometers b• " and drop the lasl dit,it. R°'Chl)·. If the spttdomtlCT showl I 00 k that's 60 mph.a~" Q, How m'8Cb is a -.utin .. •ha~\~ A. About nu.a 11llon ':.. . ' ' , t A Roa.Wiit 10 Ottne9tera 11 Arrw1igement by dat!9 12 Fat9ned 13 o.m.i ..... 18 n.. Ff 24~ 25 Wher9 v ....... 2t CUbed 21 WonNp 21a...1Qe ...., 2t Eoo cMr* 31 Ma ScM9 32~don 33 Hurry 35 Vat1 37 Of long ego 40 Prone 41 01apll•"'9 4o E.JterminaNd 48 fOctcbedl 5 1 IMtrument 52 Dine 53 Spirll 54 ··o.mn y ...... glr1 S5 Aoner 57 Qi'°9r 51 Ntmbua 58 Mf*\. pref 80 T o.n. IJutd\ 13 8cnp 11 12 13 by Bii Keane l1'f TBlt BLBACRBU by Steve Moore "Gee, Grandma, you sure look a lot different when you wear a wedding gown!" by Brad Anderson "You have the wrong side of the bed, Marmaduke. It's Phil who takes you ./ for your 4 a.m. walk." PEANUTS WELL I LEARNED A LOT IN SC~OOL TODA'1' .. I LEARNED ABOUT TRANSPORTATION GARFIELD BACK. FLE.A5 ! l..OOK! A HE.A COLLAR! ·---......... LQI. ----'t"fl- FlUMP ACRES ~-MllJalcl4 FAT FARM DENNIS THE MENACE by Hank Ketcham IGUESS WHAi.Ma\\~ ALL THE'MIR~ IN l2HE HOUSE LOO< LI KE ME ! " by Charles M. Schulz IF '(OU MISS T~E ~ BUS. '(OU WALK ! ~ ... • ~I, SON. ~DISCCNT'EtJT lS WA~ 0:-SELF-REL~E, IT 15 INFlRMITY OF' WILL. 9 FOR BETTER OR POR WORSE .SHOE JUDGE PARKER !F WE.~'I CLIMB 1AA'f ~ uP m IHE CE1L1N& , WE'k.k FUJNK PHQ5 . ED! HOWEVER I A FALJ... FF.OM -rnAr HEJ&fff -O)U"-0 8€ FAfAL. ! by Addison -by Lynn Johnston by Jeff MacNeUy by Harold Le Doux by Tom Batluk I If KINDOFGfVES A~ ~ MfANING 10 FINAL I EXAM . ~ __ ...,, by Garry Trudeau I I I , ' .S·JI G '--'-~--'------ 'p . . -,. -' I Nickels, quarters, keys·, it's notjust small cli~nge Iiaddedu tohelp Terry Bryant keep hlsfootball dreams The occasion w.11s the National Football Hall ofFameaward9>en· quet for Orange Count) athletes. an arena which puts the cream of coaches. adman1strators. former stars and d1an1tanes in the audience and thc~tofthecun"tnt crop on thcdats fora bow. It was here rccentl) when Terry Bryant. thcd1minut1veCosta Mesa Haith standout v.asdast1ngu1shed be(orc an audience which included his No. I fan. has father. who was Oanked b> TeN)'scoach.Tom Baldwin. and has pnnc1pal. Frank lnfusino. along with his mother. At 5-fooi-7 and 155 pounds your first 1mpms1on 1s that asan athlete. he isa lightweight wrestler. . But knov. mg that he had barged for o'er I .OOO~ardsasa senior. your first quesllon 1s "'hat makes T ercy run'> Well. he's been runrungsmce he was a 9-year-old and afyou think S-7. 155 is small. )'OU should have seen him asa 9-)'car-old RocE1 CA1LS01 SPORTS COLUMN IST and"' hett n reall\ s1aned forTclT) Bryant "'h1ch has no" culminated 1ntoan appointment to the United States M1htan ~cadem)' Preparatory School the fin.ti '>tep before 'Nest Point ")can't remem~re:ilactl\ "said Br) ant oftha1 da~ at St. John the Baptist "but I Y-eaghed about 85 pounds and I "as about five pounds shon ma~~ more I "'as stanins to gro" but Iv.as still about4-loot• 1 I. "I ha4 pla~cd Junior .\11-Amencan football since the founh grade and each >cat 11 seemed e' ~one~"' and I d1dn'tgro"' a1 all m y pockets and they were reall)'. bulfan,..1 was surprised they didn't see 1t, and I was rcal1y nervous. .. Still. Terrycouldn't liptbetciles. So they sent h 1 m down the hall \O ftl up with more water and when be returned the decision must uv~ alrcad) bttn made. The) sent him on with thien:qliinlii 1n111alson the form,althouah bed didn't reall) tip the scales. That's how It's been for Terry Bryant. a )Ounistcr who simply v.oold not t.akenoforananswcrorn lack of size as reality. TerT) told thatstory to the au- dience at the Football Hall of Fame banquet and v. hen he finished. he looked at his father. Curtrs.and proceeded to melt the audience: .. , love )OU. dad ... Terry Bf)-ant was easily the s~llest individual of some lOatb- letts to be honored that n!Jht. but Cunis Bryant was without Question the most en\ aed man of the evenU.. Bryant and his Costa Mesa~­matts~JUStonttm 1987-all-I conquestofcross-tov.'ll nval &lancia an the opener ............. .., .. ._ Costa lleu '• TerrJ Bryant wu a 1,000-yard naaher for ht. coach, Tom Baldwin. It was h1se1$hth grade ~n at St . John the Baptist 1n Costa Mesa. ,.. hov.ever. whtch v.u the turning point "It v. as gett 1 ng to uiticr e \cry )Cir and I came out aboJt a month late because 1ttook av. hale to persuade -:a m) dad 10 let me go ouL When I did get in and went to the v.e1gh-ins.11 was prett) ob\'ious v.hat l was doing. -"I had kc) s. nickels and quaners in In that game h1s8l-yard touch- dov.n rungavcthe MuS\l~a 14-0 lead and put them in tbednvenseat the rest of the ni&hL .. It was an aud1b1c and everyone (Pleue ..,. IDaA 'S/8SJ Dailing L8.kers' dilemma: Another dogfight Rec! So~ Still!fe· s Clear sailing seems to be a seventh. tf fteccssaI). at the Forum either champ1on.acknowlcdgcdthathehadhrwantedto put 54-o~n ,I, .I Saturday or Sunday. "''none of the t"'o most recent games in DaJlas and I,~ '.,r' Do. d~er,s someth ing from the past rorw~~~~~n~~~~a~~n~f"t~~cl!~e~:~~~~ ~~~ ~~ ~~~ ~~~~?;s~ t".'!11~\~:.~~~ ~~; to Bala· S Mets capture 3-2 victory over La in rain-delayed game NEW YORK (AP) -Ron Darhng allowed six hits in 8o/J innings and the New Yorlc Mets beat the Los Angeles Dodgers 3-2 Monday night in a rain- delayed game between division leaders. -~ The Mets. who swept a three-game series in Los An~es last wcclccnd. ended Tim Leary s shutout streak at l l innings.. Dave Magadan, the first batter after a '34-minute rain delay in the third. hit an RBI sinaJe and scored The schedule AWAY Toni9ht-New Yortl, •:JS o.m • June 1-+lew Yortl, •:JS om • June ~die. HOME June l-Clnclnnati, 7:35 p.m. June .....Cincinnati, 1?:20 o.m. / June s-<lnclnnatl, 1:05'o.m. June 6-~ton, 7:35 o.m. June 7-Houston, 7:35 o.rn. June t-Houston, 7:35 o.m. • On TV, Channel 11 I On TV. Channel ' • All games on KAIC, 790 on Darryl Strawberry's double. Oarlina, 6-3, struck out nine and walked two. He has has made 11 statts and aone at least seven inninp in each. · After John Shelby hit his second homer of the year with two outs in the ninth, Randy Myers relieved and sot pinch-hitter Mickey Hatcher to fly out.. camina Myers his eiahth save. Strawberry left the pme in the fa fth after irritatina a tendon in his right poin. Gumm>, mU.in& his first appear- ance at Shea St.Id.tum since a suspenSJon for thrown\& hu bat at Mets pitcher David Cone, constantly was booed by the crowd of 42,096. John Shelby's founh-innina double extended his hittinastrcak to IS. Titans capture SOutb ~onal • • -came t() play ""ell and LA came to play well. The home<oun advant.age wt th a second-game loss at • INGLEWOOD (AP) -The Los Angeles color of the uniform does not have an)' thing to do home .L', Lakers. seeking to become the first team m two w11h it. It is whoever plays well." ··wuh L:tah v.e were down 2-1 and 2-2 1s ---""--------- decades to win two straight NBA titles. aren't Whatever happens. Dallas returns to the West better:· he said. "We're m ·a better position now Clemens picks up surprised th.at what appeared to be a breeze to the Coast with renewed confidence. than ""c were in the last scncs I expect us to play finals was rudely interrupted in DaJlas. "The attitude on the team nght nOW·IS great... better 1n L..\." -5 2 victory with "We knew this series would be a dodight just Mavcncks center James Donaldson said. "\\e Dallas CQach John Macleod said the founh-- like Utah." said B9fon Scott of the Lakers. who came home and accomphshed what v.e had to game \ICto~ \I.as cnt1cal, 7fucomnlete game nttded seven games to get by the Utah Jazz 1n the accomplish. But we still have to wm a game m L<\ "'We kne~ they wanted to go into the nut • ~ conference semi-finals. "You usually don't have much of a chance of game 3-1. It was the biggest prne for us all _rear Los Angeles was dominant in the opening two coming back from an 0..2 deficit... because It ~as the swing game for the Lakers BJ iudiAao OONN games at the Forum against the Mavencks. rolling ., "I think ""e can take this intenSlt} into LA." Los .\ngclcs forward A.C" Grttn said ~ Dllllr,..Cow, 4 , to 113-98 and 123-101 decisions. But the Dallas forward SaJn Perkins said. "It looked Lakers Just have to get rolling again. aJthous.h he Mavericks came back with a 106-94 victory in dismal after Game 2 I think the attitude 1s added that the homccoun advant31C may not It's diftkuh to SI) that a Pitcher ts Game 3 at Reunion Arena and evened th.e series different now. We'll have to try 10 do the same mean a lot. • headcdfortheHallofFameafteron.ty Sunday I l8-l04. · things even though we won't be at home." "We've got to show some cons1stcnq and four big leagues·scasons. Game 5 is at the Forum at 8:30 tonight. The Lakers Coach Pat Riley. who a year ago persistence." he said "It's not hke an expcnenced Roger Clemens may own sixth game will be back~ Texas on Thursday and guaranteed that Los Angeles would repeat as team to break down hke that .. Cooperstown if be conllnues at the same pace. OopS! Detroit's try ()f alley-oop mtiffed Celtics· Johnson htts winning free throw with 0:08 left, 79-78 PONTIAC. Mich.. (AP) -Dennis Johnson broke a tic by hitting one of two free throws wt th eight seconds left and the Boston Celtics evened the NBA Eastern Conference finals at 2-2 with a 79-78 victory over the Detroit Pistons Monday. Tbe winning free throw was set up when Adrian Dantley. attempting an alley-oop pass. threw the inbounds pass into the basket.. ajvins Boston possession with SO seconds left. Johnson then missed a shot that Kevin McHale rebounded with 26 seconds rcmain.ing. After a timeouL Isiah Thomas fouled Johnson in the open court, and he made his second shot after missing the first , Joe Dumars, the hero of Game 3 with 29 points. was shOTt on a 12-foot jumper just before the buzzer, and Robert Parish rebounded the miss.. givina the Celtics back the coveted homecourt advantqe they lost in Gamel. Games 5 and 6 arc scheduled for Wednesday night at 8oston Garden and Friday night at the Silverdome. The seventh pmc, if necessary, would be in Boston Sunday. Boston, winnen of 16 NBA titles. is scekin• its ftfth straiaht trip to the championship series. The Pistons have never been to the final series in 31 yean in Detroit althou&h the franchise made 11 twtcc when it was located in Fort Wayne, Ind .• Bill Laimbttr led all scorers with 29 points f6r Detroit. while Larry Bird had 20. Johnson 18 and McHale l S for the Celtics. Boston held Detroit to I~ points~ the first 19: 15 of the game. but led onll 18-14 with 8:23 left 1n the first haJ . Danny Ainge then hit three 3- pointers and Johnson one in the next S:20, lcadinaa 19-9 spurt that gave the Celtics a 37-23 lead with 3: 13 left. The Pistons finally picked up the scoring pace af\er that.. cutting the deficit to 46-36 at halftime.,.0Ctro1t was 12-for-4 l from the field in the first half. or 28.8 percent. · l.aimbttr had 18 points. half of Detroit's first-half total, and was 7- for-9 from the field. The rest of the PiSIC)ns were 5-for-32. With Laimbttr scorin& seven more points.-Detroit opened the secood half with a 17-6 run, Thomas. with six points durina the' spurt, finished it with a steal and layup, givin1 the Pistons a 53-52 eda.e with 6: 13 left in the period. Detroit SCQ,red the last et&ht points of the third quarter. the first six of them on frtt throws. to lead 68-60 aoina into the final 12 minutes. Bird, who massed most of the third quarter because of foul trouble, scored lbe first sc~n 1>0ints of the fourth penod. narrowina the deficit to 68-67. But OennisRodmanscoredbn a fast-break layup. drew Bird's fifth foul and converted the frtt throw for a four-point Pistons lead Frenc h Open h as just one Frenchma n left for semis The Boston fireballer displayed his usual brilli~nce Monday before the S«Ond larJcst Anahelm--Stadium crov.-d of the season. ~.S91. as the The schedule HOME Tonton~ton, 7:l5 o.m • June~. AWAY June 2-MHweukee, S:JS o.m. •, June 3--Mflw...._. 5:35 pm.• June ~euaee, 6:05 Pm • June 5-M auk•. 1 US a.m. • June 6'-THas, S.JS P.m June 1-Texas, S:.35 o.m • June t-Texn. 5:35 o.m. • • On TV,a.nMIS • All .. mes on KMPC, 710 ...... fte A111elatM Prt.I SEA TTL£ -New YC>ft Yankca a muater Bilty Mania •l! his d1vtlion- lc8dina •~ won't be distracted'' by former manaacr Lou Piruella's surprise announcement that he's steppifta down as ceneraJ ma~r. ·~wc·ve been disirac:ted before many times," Martin said. "This is not aoina to distnct us." • Tbe playera learned of Piniella's announcement from members of the media Sunday nilbt and then went out aod beat the Seattle Marinen 7-3. They won two of three pmes in Seattle before movina to Oak- land to meet the American 1.eque West-leadina Athletics in a tJiree-pme series besinnina toniJbt. The Yankees lead the Al F.asl. John Candelaria, who im- proved his record to, 7-2 Sunday -.....,;.-.:0..........1 niJht with a five-innina ~r- PlaleU9 formance, said he wished Ptniclla well Candelaria si&ned with the Yankees as a free agent not Iona after Piniella became GM. "I hope thinas work out well for Lou," Candclana said af\er the pmc. "I hope he made the right decision. I hope he acts to do what he wants to do." Pimella's resignation, which still has not been acknowledged by owner George Steinbrenner. came just 46 pmes into the season. After Sunda> night's victory. the Yankees were 32-1 S. their best st.an since t9S8. Piniclla had said earlier Sunday that he had resign~. but the team refused to confirm that. anno.uncina onl) that a front office restructunng was imminent. Piniella said Bob Quinn. the Yankee~· vice president for baseball operations. was named the new general manager. Before the game, Martin labeled as .. nd1culous" speculation that Piniella's rcs1gnat1on was due to a personality conflicL .. We haven't had any araumcnts," he ,aid. Piniella and Martin reportedly had had their differences this season and, on Sunday, Piniella told The Associated Press from his home that "Billy's not the easiest person an the world to work with ... Later an the day, Piniella .said that .. as far as the manager as concerned, you know he's not the easiest person in the world to wort with at times," but added that Man an was "not the reason rm stepping down ... Quote of the day MarUaa NavradJeYa, the Cu:choslovakaan defector who became an American citizen. over her upset loss to Natalia Zvercva of the Soviet Union at lhc French Open: "The toss was prarucularl.r_ disiusti1,11 for me.·· ~ · Coliseum remains available LOSANGELES-lfsrowmgintcrest [iJ rates interfere wtth the Los Angeles •II• Raiders' move to Irwindale, the Lof Angeles Cohseum Comm1ss1on will &ladly reopen necotaauons to k.ccp the NFL team playing in the Coliseum. ~n official said. However, speculation on future talks is "premature" because "the Coliseum Commission res~s contractual ageements entered into by the Raiders or anybody else," oomm1ssion anomcy- MarshaJI Grossman said Friday. "If for any reason the Raider-Irwindale deal comes un&Jued, then the Coliseum Commission would be defighted to have dilcuss1ons with the Raiden." be added "The Coliseum Commission bas valued the Raiders as aolenant and certainly the public interest would bt well served by discussions of a continued relationship ... Last Aupst, Raiden owner Al Davis announced that the National Football leaJuc team would move to a new stadium in Irwindale. 18 miles east of downtown Los AD&Clcs. That followed the collapse of plans to renovate the Coliseum. But increasing interest rates oould pose an unforeseen obstacle an financing the project.. acxordiq to some reports. Syracuse wine NCAA crown SYRACUSE. N.Y. -Attackmen ri1 Brook Chuc and Grq Bums each IClOfed , twice dunna an eiaht-toal run as Syracutc won its second 'NCAA lacrosse cham- pionship in six years with an I J-8 victory over Cornell Monday afternoon. It wu the second ume in as many years that Cornell lost tn the title game. Bums.. a sophomore. finished with three pls wbile Syracuse also JOI 1wo pis apiece from twins Oary and Paul Gait and Jim qan. The top-seeded Orangemen finished their I S..Oseason befott the 1araest crowd ever to watch an NCAA lacrosse pme. Gary Gait's two JoaJS pve him 70 for the seasoa and the U.S. lnte.rcolJeciatc Lacrosse Association Division I record sanck season scorina record. The old record was 69. set by Ari1pna's Evan Davis in I 98S. Syracuse. which bec&mc the first host team ever to wan the national championship, grabbed a quick 2-0 four minutes into the pmc on scorn by sophomore Gary Gait Tim Goldstem pve Cornell it's first soal seconds later. The fim quarter ended 2-1 . Owie started the Syncuse spree with a aoat 20 tee0nds into the second quarter. Within a minute Syracuse had e•tended iu lead to S-1 on tallies by Rodney Dumpson ancl8ums.. •• Bonon for BWJ VakoTlcb m INDIANAPO~ -lilly Vukovidl . m\, the fif'll third«llaatioft drivCf in lnaJan1poli1 500 lilltofy, was named Rookie of the Year at the annual Vie10ry Dinner Monday ni@\L Vukovtcb, 24, finished 14th in Sunday's nice, the only ooe amona five first-year 1tanm stilf nannina at the end. ... can't believe I won iL Four others dctervc 11 as much 11 I do," Vukovich said. ''Our aoal was to win h (the award) when we ca.me here. You're only a rookie one time. h's hJrd to put into words what it means. I always wondered iTl could make it here without a bi& sponsor. It was always a dream, and I just hope I can come back and do tome more." Vukovich, the hiJhest finisher of the rookies, completed 179 laps, but he wu far from satisfied. .. We ran OK. NothiD,J areat. Had some trouble in the pill a couple of times. he said. "We went as far as we could 10. We had about 10-12 taps where we sat in the piu because the motor WC>uldn t fire. Other than that we really never aot the car 1oina as aood as we like. Maybe next year. •·our pl, was to finish in the top tO," he said.and then he blam~ himself for fallina short. "I killed 1he enainc an one of the pil stops. That cost us two spots." And even thouah Vukovich was the only rookie running at the cod. he said thal was more other people's bad luck and has own good work. ''Everybody kind offcll out there." Vukovich said. Indeed: -Dominic 9obson, the fastest rookie qualifier in 500 history, dropped out when has coolant failed after I 4S laps and finish~ 18th. -John Andrem. the third And.rem to qualify an 1988, ran as high as seventh before blowing an engine on lap 114 and fin1sh1ng 21st. -Tero Palmroth. the first Finnish dnver to qualify. dropped oul when his engine failed after 144 laps and fin ashed 19th. -Rocky Moran was knocked out by engine failure after I S9 laps and finished 16th. Vukovich is the third generation of his family to race at lndianapolts. His fathCf". Bill Vukovich Jr., was Rookie of the Year in 1968: bis grandfather. Bill Vukovich. won Indy an 19S3 and 1954 and was killed while leading the race an f9SS. English soccer team arrested MANNHEIM0 West Germany -m West German pohcc arrested the entire junior team of the Bristol Rovers' English soccer club after the youths rampaged in a local discotheque. a police spokesman said Monday. The 17 youths. most aged between I 7 and 18, were arrested early Monday after smashing windows. flower pots. advertisements and other property at the discotheque and nearby streets. the spokesman s.aad. The spokesman. who requested anonymity. said the youths got .. sliJhtly drunk" at the "Music Circus ... a large discotheque in the Mannheim suburb of llvesheim, about 40 miles south of Frankfurt. They caused damage worth about S l.7SO The soccer players spent the night at a Mannheim police station. were released at noon Monday and flew home later in the day after paying bail. The police spokesman said a Mannheim pros- ecutor was anvesupung the case and was expected to charge the youths wnh damaging prcpcrty, an offense that usually draws a fine. Gulch repeats; 3-horse spill NEW YORK -Gulch became only E the second horse to win the Metropolitan Handicap two years an a row when he came back in the stretch 10 beat A fleet Monday an the SS86.000 first leg of New York's handicap triple crown. Ridden by Jose Santos and carry10g I 2S pounds. the 4-ycar-old colt matched the fea1 of Forego an 1976 and ·77 in winning the event two stratght years. The purse of S3St,600 raised his career earnings to $2,384,881. Additionally, tha:e ~ys were injured in a ~ular three-horse sptll in the tint race at Belmont Tbe acx:icim't occurTed when lmanair, with Chris Antley aboard, fdl shortly af\er enterina the st.retch in the I 1-16 mile race for maiden fillies on the outer turf course. Televialon, raclio TELEVISION 4:30 p .m. -PRO BASEBAU.: Dodgen at New York Mets. Channel 11. 4:3S p.m. -PRO BASEBALL: Pittsburgh at Atlanta, TBS. 7 p.m. -BOXING: Michael Nunn vs. Ron Jack Danids an a JO-round middJcweiJht bout. from RCleda, Z Channel. 7:30_ p.m. -PRO BASEBALL: Boston al An&els. Channel S. 8:30 J>.m. -PRO BASIETBALL: NBA Western Conference finals Game S -Dallas at j.ake,rs. 01annel 2. RADIO 4:30 p.m. -PRO BASEBALL: Dodgers at New Yort Mets. KABC (790). 4:30 p.m. -PllO BASEBALL: Padres at Philadelphia, KFMB (760). 7:30 p.m. -PRO BASEBALL: Boston at An&els. KM PC (710). 8:30 p.m. -PRO BASKETBALL: NBA Western Conferenoe finals Game S -Dallas at Laken. Kl.AC (S70). WEDNESDAY'S TELEVISION 6 a.m. -TENNIS: French Open men's and women's quarterfinal matches. from Paris (fivt hours. delay~). ESPN. 11 a.m. -HORSE RACING: EnaJish Derby (deta)'ed. after tennis).. ESPN. 11 :1 $ a.m. -PllO BAIDALL: Cincinnati at Chicaao Cubs. WON. MISSION PIPE & SUPPiLY CO. ~ 1968 BATH COLLEOION Fitt Con.ultalton Featuring rntemat,onal Designs by Etier El~ comrnls.siOned ffUf'natk>Nlly fMIOUS ~to create blth-rooms for today. n.. bath«»- ..._ NW the OM shown move, •e now prlf'fiertng In our ShOW- f'OOfn. I windell hal up his 10th ctofY p ......... Mleda ......... Ont s-iiMSell ~ no hiu Ova'~ iuiftll Md became ihc m¥N' ~· ftnt l~ winMf 11 tbC 9evdand lndijal debled the KaMaa City R~ ..._,, 10ClevdUd. Swinddl 10.1, -.lted die ....... ._ r.cec1. Kurt SuUweU ud then retired me Mil JO ........ bifciire Dinny 1 artabuJI liQlled deUly IO ce11• witb two out in the leventh. Tar1&bUll lhta came lftN8d IO ICOft on oonteCUtive sinak:s b)' Kevin seitaer udg~ Tile 23-year-old Swindell, who wu IMl ...on. pvc up~ bits, &1J'uCk out t.htet Ud one bu& bad to leave the pme after the 1eveoth innina wkh a stiff left shoulder. DouaJona allowed one bit in the ftnal two inninas to earn hi• 11th •ve. Julio Franco extended bis h.iaina s&n:ak IO 11 P.mes. the lontCA this teatOn in the ~ lcapct. wuh bit fourth homer and a 8ouble. Ehcwbere in the American 1.aaUe: : . MWidct I, v....-. t: In OaklaDd, O.ve Henderson led off't~ bottom oftbe 14th inaina with his 11a.th home run of lbe aeason over the CC1*r·fidd fence and the Oakland Athletics won their lixtb llnilbt p.me, be.atioa the New Yott Yankees 3-2. Heode:rsoo connected off"S1eve Shieldl, 0-2. who had pitched three perfect inainp. Oakland relief' ace Dtni,is Eckersley, 1-t. the A's fifth piicbcf .. went •~for the victory. - Tbe Athletics tied the pme 2-2 in the ~th with a run off reliever Dave Ri&hetti. Jose Canseco sanaJed with one out and scored when Dave Parket's siJ'lk to lcf\- ccntcT f>ounccd off left fielder Rickey Hendenon•s aJ<>ve for an error. Canseco, who was running on the pitch, score~ easily.. ,. O.kland starter Bob Welch pitched nine innings. He gave up 11 hits but only 19i<> runs . Rugttt I, hill• 1: In Minneapolis, Jeff Russell allowed six hits over ei&Jlt innings and Larry Parrish had a two-run double as the Teus Ra"'ers defeated Minnesota 10 end the Twins' ei&ht-tame wmnina streak. Russell, 4-0, making his third start of the season, walked three and struck out five. Dale Mohorcic pitched the ninth. Ben Blylevcn. 3-S. lasJed only 4 1-3 innings but struck our five to move past Phil Niekro into seventh place on the all-time strikequt list with 3.343. Brewen 4, Blff Jays f~ In Toronto, Teddy Higuera, who missed his last start because of back spasms, scatter~ six hau in seven innings and B.J. Surhoff'sin&led home the go-ahead run in the fifth inning with one ohis four hitsas the Milwaukee Brewers beat the Toronto Blue Jays. Marlllert 4, Orioles I: In Seattle. rookie Rich Renteria snapped an O-for-24 skid with a tie-break.in& single in the fifth annana for the first pmc-winin& RBI of has career as the Seattle Mariners beat the Baltimore Orioles. ..,l.C" In the National League: c.bt ll, Reds S: In ChicaJO. cmeraency starter Les Lancaster pitched has firs1 maJor teaaue complete pme and Rync Sandberg"s three-run homer highlighted a six- run second inning as the Chicago Cubs defeated the Cincinnati Reds. Pirates 14, Brave. %: In Atlanta. pitcher Doug Drabek tnpled home l-pa1rofruns in a six-run fifth innina and scattered eight hits over eight innings as the * * Indians 4, Reven 1 .. ....,.. •· Twins t llAMUSCJTY «.•WIUMO TmJlAS -IOTA ...... .... _. ...... . ..... ~ .. _..,.('f J ' •• J ••• FrMCO,_ • t 1 1 Mc0..C1 11 I I O-• • t II u..io.wi. Jiit ,_ .. S1JI -.a 4l l t ........ . 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E.,..S,Gluttl:ln Montreal, Tim Raineshitatwo- run, two-out sin&te off Atltt Hammaker in the ninth 11ini114 to aive "'tlte Montreal Ellpos a win over San Francisco. the Giants• fourth strai-1\t loss. .Utros 5, Card.laa11 C: In tfouston, Glenn Davis broke a tie with an eiahth-innina homer and Jim Deshaies allowed five hits .. in eifht inninp. leadin.g the Houston Astros pa.st the St. Louis Cardinals. * AtNetla l, Y8'*~ 2 -· Ya.t OM.a.Am ···-...... 1 I 1 I L.MalrfJlll I I 1 I 11 II .le\IWI 6111 1 I It C-rf • J 1 I StlO ~ .. Sitt •••• McGd .. 1111 •I I I -c 1111 •IJI ......... lltt •t i t ~< 1••• I tll ~cf I 111 • • • • Gel99aft J • f. ........ ... lift --..a Jttt Wa!MM Slit T-•tlt1 T.-•1111 ----y.. -"I --.... , ~ -.., Ill -11-J ---......... ""'--0....w--.•11 -~m * Mal'lnln 4, Ot1llleS 1 •AL TWillOaAI •An'l.m ., ... ~· , It• Ll'M<f 4 I 1 I Clt1!111A M 4 I I I ~1"....4111 Sdoll ...... 0 I • -• I •• ......... , ... c •••• ,.. 1ttl Ill JI II . ..... I I 1 I •••• • 1 1. J I I I f 1 I I J. 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"O ____ , ...... ..-... o...-...uc-..._m ...... - -..... I~ •A111Nt. L~ ~ .......... lt91 -00...... 1)1. 0... t, ""'''' lilts It. ........ ·--L~ L.-. l, --..__ ~ ...,_, 111-I. S 19 ,,_.. ..._ 1• 0....... (11. 1• ....... If),"-lfl. ~ G.o..11 1111 M-GY-IJtJ. McGe9 ,.,, ._,. Cllt ......._., t II' ... .- IMI, """'9olltv CJI ~ • " • • • • ............. aW11111 .....,._U-t S1'J f I t S I C.-tl·J 1 f • • I a ..... I 2-J t I I I I TWf'tL,1-J Jt-J I I 1 t I ...... l l I I I I .._ -·-7 .,...._.,,..., I S • 4 I I ....... W,t-1 t 1 J J I I ~S." I I I I I I ._ O••• Ut ............... , "'"·---.; \Wt-· '"''*· w. ... ~ ""'· ............. """'" ·--...... --· ,..,_ ,.,.... ~ T-'Mt. _,.... T-te ...-11.tl& MARTIN GETS BOOT FROM DIRTY UMPIRE Edison, Woodbridge at CIF Sd1aoa ~·· 8te•e Arnott (left) and De•e Moore were Gabe Pate of Woodbrlctce. Moore and Arnott loet ln the compeUnc ln CIP lndhidaal telllll.a S.tuday. u well a• eemlflnala u dld Pate and teammate Randy hey. Mo10R S PORTS Three in the bank, but .. . Mears knows it could be .. . • He has captured Indy three times, but three othe rs we re so close INDIANAPOLIS (A P)-Though he says he doesn't dwell on it. R'ck Mears 1s very aware his third In- dianapolis 500 victory could have been f11s fif\h, maybe has sixth. "I do think about that from ume to . lime," he said Monday after 1he traditional picture-taking at the finish hne. ··in m y makeup. you think about something hke rhat for a while. then you go on to o ther things." In 1981. Mears had one of the best cars in the race. but ended up in a hospital instead of Victory Lane when he was burned an a pit fire. In I 982. the Bakersfield driver pul on an incredible fimshina spun to catch Gordon Johncock. but wasn't able to pass h 1 m and lost by JU St 0.16 of a second -,the closest mariin 1n Indy history. Rickllean possible to v.in JUSt about e\Cf) race y,,e run:· Penske Racing. owned and directed b) Roger Penske. now has an un- precedented SC\.en \ ICtones at the Indianapolis Motor Speedwa). The) got their latest tnumph Sunda) by ne~r giving up on Mears. despite an 111-handhng car that cost the driver a lap early in the-race "We try to be patient," Mears said "Instead of leaning on the thing and possibly making a mistake. ana I did make some. we decided to stay back and work on the car. Ort the third (pit) stop. we took some wing out of the front and after that the car was tine. "It seems like the majonty of our ~·ictories a~ that way. It seems to be our philosophy You spend the first half of the race getting to the second 11alf. and the second half ge111 ng to the finish "In the fir>t half. )'OU use that time to test. You lf) to put together your b<-o;t combinauon for the last segment in case )OU ha .. e a shootout. Yester- da~ . .,,..c d1dn 't need 1t ... Irr 1986. Bobby Rahal and Kevin Cogan crossed the finish line ahead of Mears., with the Penske Rac1ngdnver third, less than 2 seconds behind the winner. the opponunuy to win so man) um cs. Mears. 36. wound up beaung Emerson Fitt1pald1 by onlv 7.076 seconds after the Brazilian ;as first penal 11ed two laps for passing under a caution flag. then had the penalt\ rescindcd A.J. Foyt and Al Unser both have won here four times. Nobody has won more. Mears. who won Indy 1n 1979 and 1984. said he is amazed that he had "To b<-able toc:ome to this race and actually be competitive enough to win 1s few and far between.'' Mears said. "We've been competitive enoufh to win more than five tames "It s this team. They make It "The team was g1 ving me spl11s and I knew where eveiYbod)' was:· Mears ~Id . ~ Women'• •porta camps UC Berkeley y,.11f host 1wo spons summer camps for )ouna ""omen 1ntrcsttd 1n ~th('r Volle}'ball or Basketball The Basletball camp 1s tauih\ b) Bcrkcle) womens Basketball eoach Gooch Foster and 1s d1v1ded up so that 11r1s. bcaJnina or advanttd, ean attend the PfOV1m nJht for her. The Vollc)'ball camp will take pla~ th(' week of July l l-Au1us1 4 l:>rs1J11cd to helpall lt"vt"lsof pla)ers. there 1s a spcclal .. elite" camp schtd- ualtd this ytar For more informauon on e1thtt camp. call (415) 642-2098. The San Dteao Ottans Foundation wlll hold 1u annual (un<f,..sina naa.ht on June 24 at ~ San O.qo Maniot Hotel and ballroom. ~ nl&ht's ittnttary will 1ncluck an on the btxh rocltt.111 pany. silent auction. dinner and a hH~ aue11n dunna clinner. TMtt •ill abo be an awards prntnt.atioa 11 well as dan<ina 'till midni&ht. The COit of'•hc 81ack·Tte a~1r 'wt at Sl2S ecr ~ and to up. All pc'C)Cftds ao 10 the Occlns Found.ltton 10 u"°" iL's Pl"Oll'*"" in mannt awal't'ncss. cducauon and RC'ttJl"dl. For more inf'ofmatioa ca.II (619) 237-1221. - , Flab.Ing Tournament On Saturda' ahr "1arhn ( lub v.111 host it's annual Jusl for th(' llahbu1 fishing toumam('nl s1anin1 at 6 a m fhc cntl) fee 1s SI S for adults and S 7 SO for )Ouths 16 and undrr Enll) 1s oixn to the 1cncral public anJ the comix-uuon 1s for Halibut CIUJht bc~v.ttn 6 a m and 5 p m bclv.('Cn <kcans1de and Pl lXsca)nO TherT 1s also an av.-ards dinner and raffie pnzcs ict 10 be included that da)' To obtain cnll) mformauon call Clms Ne,,..man .. Unlted Way golf tourney The United Way ofOranac Count) will hos1 it's k'"cnth annual aolftournament Fnda). June 10. at the Milt' Squart' Golt C ounc 10 Fountain Valley Subaru of Amena will spon~ the c'cnl and the cha1rm.n will bc Subaru rcprMCnllll\C Ron Murphy. The entry ftt "SSS ""h1ch w1ll mdude can. baaof""Joodi~" and dinner ThC'rr will also be rompet1t1ons for cloxst 10 the pin and lhC' cllain 10 ~1n an automobtk for a hole 1n one For more infomuit10n call (714) 348-SJOO ... Adoption GaHd Tennie The ~doption Guild of Onaner C°'uny " holdina n's 27th annual doubles tennis tour- nament at ~•nous locauons th~t Orantr • C~nty Ma)Wl-JOandJunc4-S. l'hc tournament Is the ta~ doubles tour· nament "'•ht Unittd tales and It •ill bcnrutit •he Holy Family Scf\'1<n of Oranac Coun1y Thtl't' ll't' 2S dlv1s1ons of play~ T.istcittally "-" .. n<llldcd some o(thc bnt taliena in trnnis.. Penske still corning up a big winner INDIANAPOLIS (AP) -Despite all his 'ucccss at lnd1anapolts in the past 20 )Cars. ~unda> 's race st11l had Roger Penske spooked until the moment Rick Mears took the checkered flag Penske av.oke from a troubled sleep at 3 a.m Sunda) -e1lht hours before the stan of the 'f 2nd ln- dianapolts 500. worT)ing that the da) could become. as he put n Monda). "the biggest disappointment of m) life .. Instead. the owner of the m~t successful team in Indy-car hlStol) was relishing an unp~ented seventh Indy 500 victory a nd a third place as well. But as his yellow-shined crev. scurned around him closing down the team garages at the Indianapolis Mo tor Spccdv.a> Monday. the man his team calls ··The Captain" was alread) thinlung about winning next v.eck·s race 1n M 1lwaukke Penske did. however manage a little lime to reflect on Sunda' 's race "Something could have hap- pened ·· he said v.1th a shake of his head ··Things went so well here all month that .,,.,e v.ere th1nk1ngabou1 all the things that could go wrong. \\e c"en too~ some p1Ctt"s our of the cars and sent them to C'ahfom1a for hardening. JUSI to be sure ... He needn't have womed. "fter sweeping the front row in qualtficat1ons. the three Penske Rac- ing dnve~ -Mears. A.I Unser and Dann~ Sulin an -led 192 of the 200 laps anaMc-ars and Unser finished tirsl and third. ··ob, 1o usly. that's the biggest i:ac- ing success our team's ever ha<¥. It started al the beginning of the month and .,,.,c sustained 1he momentum all the wa) through ··Leading 19~ laps has to tc11 you ~ou've got 11 under control. But. in racing. ~ man) things can happen You ne,er rompletel) relax unt1l 1t's O\er .. SullP.an. y.ho dominated the first half of the race crashed after an aluminum fastener that stab1ltzrs the front wing snapped off That eliminated mulh of the down force on the front as Sull1,an started into a tum. and St'nt the car sliding into the concrete bamer "Thafs the t} pe of thing ~ou · alwa)s v.orT) about." Pens~e said "And Al had the same problem The front wma stab1h1er bent and v.e had a long pit stop late in the race that cost h im second place .. Still, it W&SJUSt another Penske da~ at the Spttdwa\. where Mark Donohue first ga' c h 1 m a "1cto11 in 1972. Since then. he's won v.1th \1ears in 1979 and 1984. Bobb~ l ' nSt'r tn I Q8 I. Sullivan in I 985 and \I l n~r in 1987. . -Monll victory went to Baker . . . INOIANAPOLIS (AP)-If moral victories count;;for anything. score OWMr R. Kent Baker as the winner of the tndtanapolis $00. He did 11 his way. I Wath no nicina e xpcncn« more mox1e thao money and a 2·)car~ld car, Bebr Jocked boms wtth the &0hath1 o( Indy -T cam Ptnskc. N~-Haasand Patrict Racina- and still WU s&andint It the finifl\. Wilb a atw lJ\at 't paid With T<> obtain more an(ormation call Eilttn Graham 11 (714) l6'Ml 70. bono •ed pe:ru.. W itb a Lola Cos-- -wqrtlt ND • h cndes as possible to 1\b&d WC8I' aod ar. itb a dnver Nlmcd Plait K.msf 1Who did C~t)._ thiaa ..,, ..-.oa. bcMtlcs. .. " .. Wida ~ '-tlo reed about 11ftr•1tblybifoii5-dlY'.s ~and Wll't "'°* CllGlllt to 'ibld doHlf bils .., httlc '*"'* aad I ... dlctn ~ -ropes llabd .... bit lllllt °"a.di•~ . . •"'Tl -lib·~· Of-= ... "~.~·'"°''° .. ft retJlllk't .,oat·~ ........ ~ wort 111....W •• ,. ..... ,. ....... ... and ...... q ......... ~. ~m•llllle1'"1ol4'•www 10•yboih1t41L .. · .. .._ir.W.lmunpiNdan>'WY" an)' ,'"hclddcid.-.-1'41btral I . OranQe Coat DAILY PILQT/Tueeday. May 31, 1981 -----~-------·-------~~ ............. ~ ...... .,,..., MESA'S TERRY.BRYANT. Prom Bl Pidtcd 1t up. w.1uch was rart ... recalled Bryant. "I Just -.ent off'nght tackle and made a cut to the n~t a httJe. but 1t was prt'tt)' much a spnnt .. He finished 11o1th IS I yards on 17 cam~ ''.At the beiannin&oftht )Car m)· main goal was to JU St att throuJh the seasonalt"e "sa1d8r)ant "lhad 50 man) inJurics before (fractured pch 1s. tom ~nee li"'1ments). I wun 't e'en sure I could play 1n our first pme " It wasn't until <.iame 5 or 6 that he realized I <JOO' ardi. was obtainable and he d1dn 't ~111 until hi$ last earl) oftheseason nt'tt1ng I 001 yardson 20Scarnes "I wasdrcamin[! jbou1 all-league ·· admits Bf) ant ·11u1 I didn't think that wa~ rt'..ih~11, · Indeed Bnan1 "'j\ an all-lea,ue choice in the: Paulil < oast Leaauc: the rnd uf a tarwa\~ v. h1ch bepn asa freshman"' hl·n at 415 pounds with knee troubk hl' didn't pla) at all He "'a'> a I I "·pound ~phomorr on thr JUOll'r '.ir,11~ '>ljrtrd at cor- nerb..td, a .. J 140-round JUn1oron the 'ar..1t' thl·n "t'lll lht• J1\tance as d senior The: lS 1., arJ hur\I to l rad. open the Estanua~rrh ... a,unc:ofthc.-b1g h1ghhgh1\ -B1 'ant ,an still recall telling h1m-.c.·lt I m nut going to let them c·a1, h nit Butlurlt•rr' HnJnt whohasa room full of mt•dal·~ awards and mt'morJbdia "'hll h has accumulated 0' er thc H·ar;, hl· had a da11\> h1ghhghi tifJUSI \U1t1ng up and It'll cont1 nut' th1\ fall"' hrn he sum up at USM.\ Prrp You set'. Br\ dnl d1dn'tJUSt work at becoming a I 1100-\ard runncrto become onl' ul 3 ~to gain an athle11c scholar'>h1p hl· "orked tn the classroom too "hr re he de" eloped a grade point a' crage of3 84 A. lot of good things NIH come Bf)an1·s v.a, s1mpl) bccau~hc v.anted 11 badl) enough and rdu~d to accept an> thing less H endm t~ ho""' t'r the h1gg~t pn1r "'J'> h" alceptance at the prep '><.hool "I "aH \uted about ho.,,., I did in football bi.it I rl·alizcd I had to go to college anJ I had all m > egs ID o~ basket. hl' ~1d "So I wasn'tenurely happ> until I "'as accepted at prep '><. hool ·· ""' .\rm' !>prepschool1saone-)'eAr shot for 151 t tr om around the nation each )l'ar -.u11'sanexclus1vec1rcle. onr""hllh indudcs Woodbnd&e H1gh',J1mm~ Burke >\bout IOwHI not ma~I." thr grade. The balanccaon on tu~ C'>I Point the followina year. But that"., hardl) the end ofthts '>tllf\ H~ II bt rnmpet1ng this fall and he prom1~d h1sdad. 'Tmgo1Dgtoplay 1n thr .\rm)-"la') Game someday and I jm going to be the start1na tailback. 'ou'll Stt ·· I'm noi suggest1ngan)onegoout and bet on that -but I wouldn't bet ag;unst It cnhcr ANGELS LOSE, 5-2 .•. From Bl ~ot 1he t~o-t1me ( >) oung .\ward v..inner who's on course 10 cam his third straight. something no other pnchcr has e'er done. Clemens 1s 8-~ with a I 82 ERA On the road this sea.son he's b-0. Daung back to last Sept 20. Clemen.s 1s 9-0 in his last nine road stans He pitched a four-hit shutout 1n his last stan against Seattle. but his string of 30! scoreless road innings came to an end in the third 1nn1n1 Monda) ''\\-hat can )OU say.,.. Boston Man- ager John McNamara said .. You don't sec a benef' p1tchin1 pcr- fonnance than ton1&ht or this )ear. besides Stting a perfect pme It was one of his great p1tchin1 per- formances of the ~ear .. Clemens wasn't so high on himself "M~ an~1et) was runnmg h1g.h and I made ~me bad pitches earl) .. Clemens said "I'm happ~ the pme was close at the end because 11 made me bear down and reall> concentrate on fin1sh1ng up the game·· He usuall) finishes what he starts Clemcns leads thr 4-mencan Lcaaue w11h 116 stnkcouts. He has mort' shutouts ( 5) than 12 4.L tams. leads the league 1n ERA. and innings pitched ( 104) Clemen~ will turn 26 in "ugust. v..h1ch 1s almost scaf) "We had a chance to beat him. but v.c didn't capitalize:· said Angels Manager C ook1e RoJas. "I don't think this "as one ofh1s b<-st da)'S throwing. either .. Ro1as might b<-in limited mm pan~ Y.1th that thouaht The A.ng.cls. how- -... C\er did ha'e an opportunity ID tM ~\Cnth Georae Hendnck was thrown ouJ at the plate trying to score from im base on Jack Hov.ell's double. ri would have tied the game, but Bolton walked awa) clean before scocina. twice tn the e1&hth to pull away. 'That was the kc)' situalld)l ... Clemens said ··1 realized I had to !!tai: do• n and concentrate after that. Hendrick h«1tated between uri< and second after the hn and took an e~tremcl) v.1de tum around thnd before being gunned down at tt\O plate 9-6-~ * ANGaL MOTaS -IMl1I ......,_, lftl Club \ No 4 Mllecl-., lfte ~. l"7 ..... -· ~ef1 '**' -the ....... l ...... -S-0.... .,., ~· ..._ ..... .... ....... The 11---0ld Hola-. II -.. iO twOl«leO °'IC'.t>er'I ~ IO ---. .. IOr "'-U S OlvmP< lleMIMI i.m ..,,... ... ~ ~ "' 5-A .. .iio.. ~ ~-H .... 5cMOI Ill 0..-~-11en..,. "'' ~.,. catW ""' -tll ~ J-Contoe WI Ok..,.,,.. ~ ~ llN.....,. Cel9ie ..... .......,,,,.: ..... °" ....,., ... lfne ..,-,.,n, -MO&'" -' ~-Molld9y M "" .. I lllt• "' 1111 .. .._ ~. ~ ...... Mrlect trll(k rec:~o II<' the -nib -. leklnl 5-of-ll SIO!e<I lleH elremof$. He fleS $l111911 1' fll "" NSI It e tt-'-• 0.flnt llec:ll to lnl s..I n Left lietclltr 0-.., ........_ WllO llet stertt<I the lest \la ..,,_ llealuM of ltw duOI& '"'""'-' r>l•ved 111 hi• 1.oooltl ..-""'11ttt1Mv • MeenwrtU. r-.,_, hes Slenecl "-..., ....... Demft ... ~·-fi.lcl ~ .. ,.., \I~ tour Nrnn If! • row e t ~ Dew reolee1"9 Men ~-"'!'ftll'• Oft tlllt IS oev d•.-..0 ~" ... ~-l•·l) • len Mmle '"""'-10-1) ~ 17.l.S D.111) lft ,,.,. M"lft .no "Omfttend tin.i. TIW .,_. ... ...... on Wednndev for a _..,,., rwr: c•tv tr o to MllweUIP.ee end Telle\ ~ •onOM\ eeme Don't ml•• the boat. If you'fe thinking about a trip to Hawall- •oon, our Sunday, June 12 Travel section le . for you. Or -If you're aelllng goods or servtc• that Hawaii-bound folk•· can use -thl• HCtloa'• for you, too. \ . Eapeclally •Ince l f.3 of all Oran .. howhOlcl• take thru or more tr:lpe CM1t1li1 the 1o .. r &8 etatff uch year. (714) Ml~lll DT.IH -.. (:all Today •• ,. ~e standings AJiMdeaa~e war DIVISION e ... AW..~ w L Pd. 01 Lit t....u U.kland JS 14 .714 .. _ 7.3 Woo 6 16-7 19- Teua 2S tl .Sll 9Y1 s.s Won l JS-12 10-1 l Miuaota 24 23 .Sll 10 8-2 Lost 1 14-11 10-12 kaDIUCity 22 27 .449 13 l-7 Lost 1 l().lS 12-12 .... 2l 21 .440 13"'2 S-S Won 1 11-12 11-16 ~T 20 27 .426 14 2-1 Lost I 11-15 9-12 19 31 .380 16'h l-7 lost 2 S.-16 ll-lS EAST DIVISION NewYotk 32 16 .667 7-3 Lost I 16-8 16-8 CleVeland 31 18 .633 1 Y> M Won I IS-8 16-10 DeUoit 28 19 .S96 3YJ M Lost 3 12-9 16-10 Milwaukee 26 23 .S31 6Y> M Won 3 I S-11 11-12 .._ 24 22 .S22 7 4-6 Won I 14-12 I 0-1(() Toronto 21 29 .420 12 4-6 Lost I 9-14 12-l s Baltimore 10 39 . 204 22"'2 4-6 Lost I 7-16 3-23 ... Moada7'1 Sooret Bostons,~i Cleveland 4, nsas City I Tuu6, Minnesota I Milwaukee 4, Toronto I Oakland 3, New York 2 ( 14 innings) Seattle 4, Baltimore I Only pmcs scheduled Today'• Gamet Bouon-(Smitbson 0-1) at Aqeb (Fraser 4-3). 7:3S fi.m, Kansas City (Gubicz.a S-S) at Oeveland (Farrell S-), 4:35 p.m. Cbicaao (Reuss 2-2i at Detroit (Tanana 8-2). 4:35 f"m. Milwaukee (Bosio S) at Toronto (Stieb 6-3), 4:3 p.m. Teiw (Kilfus 6-3) at Minnesota (UI 1-3), 5:05 f .m. Baltimore Morpn 0-S) at Seattle (Nunez 1-1 ), :OS p.m. New York (Leiter4-2) at ~land (Ontiveros 3-1). 7:35 p.m. Wed8a4ay'1 Gamet New York at Oakland, 12:15 p.m. .... Baltimore at Seattle, I :35 p.m. K.a!'sas Cit~t ~veland, 4:35 p.m Cbicqo at tro1t. 4:35 f"m. Milwaukee at Toronto, :35 p .m. ~at Min~ta. 5:05 p .m. nly sames scheduled . National League WEST DIVISION " L Pct. GB LIO Streak Home Awa~ DM1en 27 19 .587 5-5 Lost I 12-12 IS- Houston 27 20 .574 lh San Francisco 24 26 .480 5 Cincinnati 23 26 .469 511i San Diego 17 32 .347 I l'h Atlanta 15 31 .326 12 EAST DIVISION New York 33 15 .688 Pinsburah 30 19 .612 311i St Louis 25 24 .51 0 81h Chicqo 24 24 .500 9 Mont.real 23 24 .489 91h Philadelphia 19 27 .413 13 Moaday'1 Scores New York 3, Dedsen Z Pittsburah 14, Atlanta 2 Chicq.o 12. Cincinnati 3 Mont.real 3, San Francisco 2 Philadelphia 7, San Diego 3 Houston 5, St. Louis 4 Toda7'1 Games S-5 Lost I 17-1 10-13 4-6 Lost 4 14-13 10-13 3-7 Lost 3 12-13 11-13 4-6 Lost I 13-1 s 4-17 4-6 Lost 2 S-17 10-14 6-4 Won I 14-7 19-8 7-3 Won 3 18-1 12-12 S-5 Lost I 13-12 12-12 6-4 Won I 10-1 2 14-12 6-4 Won j 14-9 9-IS S-5 Won 4 11-10 8-17 ~en (Sutton 3-3) at New York (Gooden ~I ). 4:35 p.m. Cinannati (Soto 3-3) at Chicago (Nipper 1-2). 11 :20 a.m. San Francisco (Reuschel 6-3) at Mont.real \8 .Sm1th 3-3). 4:35 p.m. San Diego (Hawkins 4-4) at Philadelphia (Palmer 0-4). 4:35 p.m. Pittsbur)h (Dunne 3-2) at Atlanta (Olivine J-6). 4:40 p.m. St. Louis (McWilliams 3-0) at Houston (Knepper 6-0), 5:35 p.m. Weaesay'1 Games ~en at New York. 4:35 p.m. Cincmnati at Chicaio. 11 :20 a.m. San Francisco at Montreal, 4:05 p.m San Diego 11 Philadelphia, 4:35 p.m. PittsburJh al Atlanta, 4:-40 p.m. St Louis at Houston, S:3S p.m. lndv 500 WIMtr$ ~11-ttay .._,,_ •• •• •• •• AUTO JtACIHO llASCM -, .. a..11 ........ ....,..,, --.. • .-e111 ..... CONCo.tD, H.C. (AP) -Ttll or• of llnlsll wltll drlwr •nd llwtlfle POlltlon, l'lometown, make of all'. ...,. end orlu -. I. (51 Derr.. °"WeltrlP. Ft'Mkllll, Tlll\ft., OlrlrclW. -· SlOUSO nu .. lftPfl. t. ( 11) It U$tV Welece. $1. L°"*'• Ponti.c, -·WAS. J. (f} Al9ll KulWldll, GrMnfie6d, WIK.. Ford, •· m ,lOO. 4. 0 4) 9rett Iodine, Olemune. N.Y , Ford, -· M9.JQS. S. (1) Devey Allsotl. Hwvtown. Ale., Ford, •. "2 .... .. ( 1') "*' Sdveder. F911ton, ,,_,_ Olev· ,....,, •. m.t00. 1. <Ml •k*v •uoe1. Olela..-e, Ve.. 8uidl, "'. • t7 i05ll .. (12) ....... _. Detroft, Mlctl . "Olds-,.,..., ,,., t ISMQ. f . ()) Terry ~. C.--CIW1atf, Tun, o.w.e. ,,,, m.- .._ 0.) Gt'9I Sedu, Menltudt, N.V., Pon· tlelc ........ .... 11. Cf4) Ken 9oulherd, FlldlOurt, Mau., Ferd, *· n,m. 11. (J7) Jlrnmv "'-"'· For.st Clfv, NC., Ponn.c. 1'5. 02.7..S. 11 (1) 0... EernNntt, Moorftvllle, H.C.. ~. JN, S12.7U. 14. 1211 8obOY Hmlll Jr., Mldlend, Texu, aulck, Jn, Sll,CMS. lS. (JO) ttlcNrd ... llY, It~, N,C,, fllonllle, "2. 'I0,911 16.. ( 1)) l(yte P9fty H19'1 Poll\1, H C.. Ford, J1S. ,,,,. 17. (4) INCltlv AMlton Huevtown. Alll , luldl, 365. '17,7• 11. (IO) ttldl Wilson, IMlow, FIL, Oldl· mo«11e. m. nuso -1'. (6) P Elllott. 0.wsonvlla. CO... ll'ord, M . S17,200. 21. (2'1 Joe ttunmen. UNllCI. ClldlnlllMe, ... u.-. 21. (15) ~· SCIMd. JKllMlll, Miis.. Otm· ,,...., m. M..600 21 (23) Ernie lf'ven. Modesto, Cl'lrmllei, •. .,,,. D (22) Mic!IMI """1P, o..ntoare, Ky , """'"-· JM, S1 A H . f') Geoff 9odilfte. C'*"""8, NY., ~ ....... llf, 112,IOI. 2S. Oel 8ennv ParSOM, E'*119, NC , Ford, ... 16.M. ». ( .. , Moteen Slwflerd. C_,,.,, N C , .-.. m . a.- "· (1'J ,_... M#tn, ~. Tt1111 , O'flFl .. I. "7, M.• a. <JU l!Mt ~-. Sen Alli.No, T--. O'•m•11. ~. S2AI. It. Cf'I hddf lell«. Meentvlll, N,C., O'fl TJUI, M , IUA a. (11) Hsrt Gem, T'*1\lllt, N.c.. Olla•. Dt, IS.• Jl (II) Jltr""'f Hw10tl. Heim ... i. N.J., ,..... -a.a. 1'1~.Joe O.wson lttr.l\An Gou• "'.......__ Tilomet '''~ OePMne "1.......0.-lo ltnla 1917-lt--No r.a, WOt'ICI Wttr I lfl~owerd WllcoJt l~IOll ,..,, .. 1'21-Tommv ~ lf22-Ammv Ml.IBhv lfD-Tommv Miiion 1'2~Corum end Joe 1'2s-fiete Def»eolo l~rank Lodll\ert 1'21~ Souden 1"21-t.oub Mev« 1929-«av Keect! 1,._.llY ArllOld ,,, l-Loult SCMelOer Im-Freet Frame Im-Louis ,,..,_ ,,,..._... c~ lns-KtlY P'Wlllo 1'36--tAub Mrwtr 1'37-Wllbur Sl\aw 19>-Flovd ltoberts lf)f-WMOur 51\ew 1'4C>-Wllbur Sflaw 190-f'IOYd Dem enc1 Meurl ltow lNt-~ rec:e, World Wttr II l~ltotllen 1"7-Meurl ·-·~url Row ltd-81• HollMd lfSO-Jotlllnle p.,_ 1'51-1.M WelWd lfS~Trov •unmen lfs.J--9111 V\AlOYldl Sr. lfs.t-11 lft V\Alovletl Sr 1'Ss-8ob Swelller! l'~al Flellertv 1'S7-5ern HMas 1'51-Jlmmv 8rv•n 1'5'-«009er W91fd l::t:i~ :~ l~Werd l~ernell J-. l,.._A.J ll'ovt 1'6r-Jltnmv Clllrtl INt-Grellem H 1"'7-A.J. Ftwt IM IOlltl'I Ul\Mr 1,.,_Merlo Alldrettl 1970-AI UM« lt71-AI Uni« ·~ DoNf-. ~CMn JoMcOdl 1'7 ..... Jotwrr •Ultlerlwd 1ns--e..e., Unter ., 1'74-.JoMftv •""*11bfd tm-A.J ,tvt l~U... ,,,._._IQ llM9n IM-Jof!NIY ltutnerfofd '"~ UllMr 1~-JoMcodl 1,.,_Tetll Sfttv• ~IQ Mmn ~ WltYllll "" ·-· lteNI 1"7-AI UflMr ...... lc:k MMr'I .. Y' . • • AMmttcAM LaAeUS R..iS.S,A...-1 .. , ... 5 1 •• st 3 1 4 1 , • '1 ', 1 ••• 4!0I Sv10 '" 0 '. 1. CA'-"'OIUM ~ ., .. _. DwMe• •••• 1 -. .. a 4tlt JovW ,. • ••• C0.¥11 r1 4 l f 1 HMldrCtl " • • 1 • HoWtlJll •• 1 0 Ar!Mlcf 1 0 0 . cw.-rct ,.,. kf*ldM 11 I I ........ . ... E"9t'flfl I S'I I ~ ...... ...... c , ••• Mkc 1 0 11 • S I) S T.-a ft 1 • I tcw9..., ..... ..... ----· c.--••• __ , o.me WlMlt\e R81 -OWEYlllll t*I. E~. Ci>evll. ~ J. LO&--eoltoft lJ, Callforllle 4. ta '°""· lunu. How•. H•-OWEvent (>), OowNlw Ill, COevla <ti Se-e.Mderlon (4), CW.aer (1) ,__.un". SF-DwEv-. ~ ....... OemensW,1·2 c........ ~trv L.2-4 Cliburn Minton Hen.ev P&-Mlllef T-3'i16 A-4t,,,.. • " ..... to ' 6 ! ' 1 ' .. ' 3 , 1 0 2 t 0 0 l I I 1-l 2 2 2 2 I lt-3 0 0 0 0 2 NATIONAL LRAGUE Mets J, .,....... 2 LOS ANG•us .... YoaK Su 1t1 l 0 2 0 Dvlll"• cf • Titan plokecl off MlO•vll r1 4 0 0 0 lk:tlmn 2t> Gltnon H l 0 0 0 JNltletJn Ill GueffVf' '° l 11 0 Strwt>rv rf Merihl 111 4 0 0 0 Wiison rf Shetllv cf 4 1 2 2 Mcltvlcb " kloKl8c lOOO C.0-c MHldw" Pfl 1 0 0 0 HJohsll 3t> Andnn n 3 0 0 0 MYWI P l 0 0 0 l I 2 0 4 I 1 I 2 0 1 I , 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 .. 0 0 0 2 1 1 0 0000 l 0 I I 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Cal State Fullerton'• Ralph RamJrea wu caqbt off the~ at ftnt u Tena A It 11'• Jlai lfenm•nn appllea the taM darlnC cham· plonab.lp aame of lbe NCAA Soatla R• ,,~, ... t:r.:•• bueball toanwaabt ID &tu e , • It wu tile onlJ W., the/ tam mt11ed on wa1 to 8-S ftctol'J'. c1a1m South Reclona.1 title llcmda1. Lury o 2 0 1 0 Elller IS Hollon o o o o o Owilll9 o H-Pll I 0 0 0 KHrncb Ill Crews o 0 0 0 0 T"""11 n I 6 2 T... • J 6 J LesMellft SC.. lilY ...... _ I• •'-I ,.._ Yri Ol2 1• .. -J G•me Wlnnltle ltll -MeMden (2). DP-New "fork 1. L~ A,,...._ 5, New VO<"k 1 2&-Sex, ledtmen, S•rawl>efry, Shelbv Hlt-Shelt>Y 12) s~ m. c ..... NCAA TOU9'NAMllNT (DIUMI llltllllw .. 11 NOaTH•AIT ••GtONAL At .......... CeM. TlwrNQ, MW 1' Clemson 3, Fordham 2 (If lnlll111J1I y, MllY 'D SI Jolwl'I 5, llford 3 Kentuc:kY 6..-Ml'l 2 HJollll_, 171 s1antoro 7, FordMm S IFordhM'n lllmlneted) • " ..... so letW*Y, May. Les......... Ruteen 6. Clermoft 1 LH rv L,4·4 S 2·3 6 3 3 5 6 K41111UCkY 12, St . .loM'1 6 Holton 1·3 0 0 0 0 0 Clemson 11, SI John's I (SI Jenn's Crew1 2 O O O I O eliminated) New Yri ._.y, Mey ff O.r11ne W,6·3 1 2-3 ' 2 2 2 f Slanford I , 1tut11W1 1 Cltutcws ellmlnated) Mvef'S S.I 0 0 0 0 0 0 l(entudly 1. Clemson o. (1 1111111111. SUIO . ~~"iio"1~~ r•lnl MAMmv,Mll'I• A"91b Kenludl.Y •• Clemson 1 (ClemMlll etlmlneled) Stanford 6, Kentuc!IY 5 Tun .. Mev 31-eoaton, 7:3 • Slanford, 40-t2, va. l(antudlv. •-24 Fri., June l~enws Cltv, 7:35 •AST ••GtONAL Sal., ~ 11-K-I Cltv, 7:15 P.tn. .............. AtTlllMSMe, '1A. ~.June 12-«-s Cltv. l:OS P.m '----w ..... v.May25 ~. June l~s Cltv. 7:35 P.m Florkla 7. ~ Ma10ll 0 'Tun.. June l.,_Teltfl. 7:35 p.m. Ftorlde Stale 10, Stetson 3 Wed .• June Ir Taxes, 7:31 p.m. TIIUtMllY, MllY » Tilurl.. June 16-Texas, l:OS p.m. Tul8ne I, North C.rOllne Slate O Fri, June 2..-.Mll'#eullM, 7:31 p.m Stetson 2, C.-ee Meson I IGeorue Mason Set., .1\#W 2s-MlweukM, 7:05 P.m ellmineled) Sun.. June 2'-Mllweull•, l:OS o.m. ~ .• June ,,_,..,,,,._,., 7:l5 o.m Tun., June 2t--MlnMMI•. 7~5 p.m Wtd.,,.JUM ~ta, 7:35 p.m. Thun ., Julv 14-0etroll, 7:3S p.m. Fri. July lS-0.trolt, 7:35 p.m Set. JvkY 16-0etrolt, 7:05 p.m. Sun , Jutv 11-()etrolt, 1:05 Pft\. Mort.., Julv I._ Toronto. 7:3S p m Tun , .Jufv 1,_Toronlo, 7:lS p.m. Wad .. Ju!v ~Toronto, 7:lS P.m. Fri., July 22-<lt'Hlend, 7:3' o.m. Set . July 2>-0evelend. 7:05 p.m. Sun , J\lrv 2.-<levelend, 1:05 P.m. ~ , JIJIY 2S-Oeldend, 7:>5 P m. Tun , Jvlv 2'-<>eklend, 7'.35 o.m Wad , JulY t7-0U.lend, l:OS •.m. Fri., AUii. s-<lllceeo, 7::U P.m. Set • AUii. 6'-<llk:Ho, 7:0S p.m. Sun.. AUl'l 7'""-<lllc-.o, l:OS p.m Mon , Aue . ._SMttte, 7:» o.m. Tun , AUii ~ttte, 7-.lS P.m. Wed., AUi l~llle, 7:35 P.11'1. .. Fri., Aue. ~ Yortl, 7:3S p.m. Set., Aut. 27-New Vortl, 7:0S p.m. Sun. AUii. 2t-New Yortl, 1:05 p.m. Mon., Aue. ,._..,,lmore, 7:31 P.m. Tun., Aue. »-eeltlf'llore, 7:lS P.11'1 . w«1.. Aue.. n-ee111nwe. 7:lS •.m Thura., seot. 1-eollOll, 7:3S P.m. Fri., s.t. 2-loalOll, 7:lS p.m. Set., Sel>t. ~on. 7:0S P.m. Sun., Sept . ...-eoalof), 12:05 o.m. Tun., Sept '3-tCMMS Cltv, 7:05 P.m. Wed., 5-1. 1..-t(enMI Cltv, 7:0S p.m. Tllurs., s.t. ls-tlMMs Cit'!', 1~ p m Fr1., seot. 16-THH, 7:05 P.m. Set .• SePI. 17-Texea, 7:0S p.m. Sun., SePI. 1._Tuas. l:OS o.m. Mon., SeCJI. lt-Mllwl ullM, 7:0S P.m TUH., Seof. 20-MhllUllM, 7:0S om Wect., S.I. 2l-MllwltUUe, 7:05 o.m. lllun', SePt. ~I. 7:05 p.m. Fn .. Seol ~ •• 7:05 P.11'1. Sal • SePI 2..-Ml,_le, 7:0S o.m Sun., SePI. 25 Mif!Mtoll, l:OS p.m. .,....... Mme MMdUM Fri.. June >-<:lllclnnell, 7:JS o.m. Set., J~ ~II. 12jO o.m. Sun., June ~II. lM IJ.tn. ~ • June 6-+foullon, 7:U IJJl'I. Tue .• June 7-+toYaton, 7:35 p.m. Wed., June t-+4oYllOll, 7:35 o.m. Tllur., June .....+4ouaton .. l:OS o.m. Fri., June 11-'911 Olelo, 7:3S e.m. Set , June lt-Sell Dleto, l:OS P.m. Sun .• June l9-$M '*'°· l:OS It.I'll ~, NM 20-Altenla, 7:15 IJJ'll, Tue.. June ll-Altellte, 7:U IJ.m. Wed., June ft-Atleftte, 7:U p.m. Frl, Jiiiy l-Ollc:NO, 7:25 IJ.m. Set., Jutv 2-<'*"9. ,. ltJft. Sun, JlllY ~. 1:05 o.m. Mon., Jib ...-sf. UUll, kit P.11'1 Tue., JtllY s-st. ~. 1~ o.m. wed., JlllY t-$1, Ltull , 7:35 P.m. Frl, JV/It t-41'1ltt0ur9'!, 7:35 o.m. S.t., JIJIY ~-. 7:05 o.m. Sun .• Jl/ty 10-PlttMlurlfl. l:OS IJ.tn Fr1,. N1Y ,._...toll, 7:35 IJ.ltl. Set., N1Y ~-· 1.S p.m. Sull~ JV/It 3~. l:OS p.m. Moll.. A... 1-<lklnnell, 5:10 IJ.m. Tue., Aue. 2--Clnclnnell, 7:3S PJl'I. Wed., Aw. >-Cll\dllNll, 7:)5 Mn. FrL, AU9. lt-$ell Frltlldtco, ns •.m. sat .• A4ll ~ ll'l"Wldlc9, 1• •m. Sun. Aue lit-SM Frendlco, UIS •.m. /IMtn., Aus. l~ Frencltco, 7:31 P.tn • Tue., Aue. " ftlllad1llhle, 7:35 1'."'-w.a., Aue. 17=-AR1dallllle, 7:3! o.m. Tllur., Aue. • l'tlllld•llllle. l:OS om. Frt, A.,._ 1t Mofttl .... 1.:11 IJ.fl'I.. S.I .. ~ 11 Mo11tr• 7M IJ.111. u . "419. 21 Mm•••• •• IJJft Mori.. Aue. 22-N9w Yertl, 7:)5 IJ.l\'I. Tue., Aue. ,,.,......, YOttl, 7:U IJ.m • wed, Aut. ,........_ YOttl, 7:JS 0.11'1. Wed ..... ~. 7:3S IJJ'\ . .,...., ., '-' t ........... 1!2$ IJA r:rl, s.t ~. 7!25 """ s.. ,.. ~. 1.S IJJ'I\. ""'·· s.. 11-clfldMefl. •• •.m. #Ml. ,.. 1~. 7:1S •.m. ~1· .... .,.... ....... , 7:JI ....,,.. ........ , ........... ~ .. I'!\ W.., .... ·~ ....... , .. •"'-nv ............. ~ 1:11 ant. -..,. ... ,........ ,-~, 1• IJA SM .. OCt t-t.I ,,..._., 1•• Oft\ 1611\., Ort ,...... ,'9lldlelt. •• NI\ 111',,.v, Mrt t1 N CerOllna $1 13, Florlde l Florid41 SI I, Tulene 6 Flor~ '· Tul•ne S (Tulane eliminated) 5etUN1y, MllY • Stetson 4, N C•rOlina SI I (NC Stata etlmlnalad) Florida f , Florlda St l ~··-·" SlelMlll 7. Florlda St. 2 (Florlda SI eliminated) Florida •• S1etson o. Florlda edvancn ATLANTIC ••CWONAL At cerlll o.Mn. ,.._ ........ , •• 25 C.-lria Tten f, Vlrtllllle Common-Ith 6 Miami. Fie. 4, TOWIOll $late 0 Tiwndly, MllY t6 Soulh OrOlllle l , Jemn Madison 2 TOWIOl'I State 4, Va Commonweetlh 2 (VCU ..lmlnattd) 111',,.y, Mey t1 c..orei. T edl 7. Soutll C¥ollne 6 Miami, Fie., vs Jemn Madison, PPd .. rein s.1UN1v, *• a Mleml 11, Jernn Madison I (James Med!Mlll ellmlnettd) Soutll Cerollne S, TOWton St 1 (TOW10n St allmlnelad) Miami, FIL 4, G.orllle T ecfl 2 ,....,,Mrtlf South Cerotlna s. Georei. Tac:h o 1"-1118 Tedi ellmlneledl Miami, Fie. 10. South CMollna l IMletnl edve!Q$) toUTH ••GtONAL At MIUlttlllel Slltl, Mbl, ,,..,,....., Mey. Mlddle Tenna'" St•i• 3, Tena A4M I Mlulnlool Stele 7, Western CMOlllle 4 "' ..... Mey 21 Texas JU.M I, w ~ ' CW Cel'Ollne ellmlnetedl Futler1on Slete '· MIUourl 3 setwlMy, Mey. Mll~I 10, Mldda T-. ' Fullerton SI. S, Milllll'81 SI. 1 MlulsilPPI St. 12, Middle T-4 (Midcne T em. ellmlneted) ......,,MllY2' ' Taxes A&M 6, Mlasour1 2 (Mluourl ellmlne led I C.I $1e1e FullertOll S, Miu~ SI. 3 ( 12 lnnlne1, Miu. SI ellmllleled) ~•.Mrt• Cal Stale Ful«letl '· Teua AA.M 3 !Cal Stele Fuller1on ectvencn I MIDwillT ••GtONAL At......,,O... ~··-·" Wlcl'tlle Sl•le '· SOVltlwatem Loull'-2 Okleflome Slete 14, Mc.... Slete ' ..,...,,Mlvt1 Lo~. Cellf. I, ArUMes l McNatM SI. 11, SW l..oull'9ne • (SW Loulalene ellmlllatedl ~ .. _.,. Oklellomll St. 13. Arlulnsas 7 (AIQl\sa1 ellmlneted) Wldllfe SI. IO, LllWl9 6 L.ovOle 12, McHeeM St. 4 IMcNeew St. ellmlnetedl ... HIGH SCHoot OrMlit e.ntv Al·Stlr GMW (et ~ c.... c.1191, """' ., SOUTH AU·STMS (MtktM ... ~ c:..-. SMrtl••-•> • OMi •Mdta lret Johnson, El Toro, 6-1, 175 Den U,., La9U1141 IMctl, 6-1, 175 ........ a.di• ltlcltv Leoute, lolM Gr9ndl, H , 215 K•IM&lh Caner. Edl1011, •-O. 20S John lurns Ill, Mlulon Vlelo, S-10, 175 Robert E LM, Senta Ana, 6-0. 200 OftlMM UM JeaM Hardwick, lolae Grenda, 6·6, US Todd Katovaldl, CO<'ona del ~r. 6·2, 115 Kevin Lewla, Hun"llnefOll llMCfi, 1--2. 2SO Johnny Kane, lrvlne, .. o. 2SO Fel!Ji Leuta, La Quinta, 6-J, 250 D•ve Tuller. fWWP«t Harbor, 6-1, 215 Tlm WaredV, Ulllvenltv, H , 21S w...•~ O•vv 1taw10n, Caolitreno Vallev, 5'-10, Tony lolenoa, Irvine, H , lfS 8rl8n Fllml11111 La9una HID\, 6-J, 115 Kellh lAl>ul, Meler Del, H , 190 ltovel Miiion, Sente Alie, H , llO T1llllt ... Stew Sleffonf, FountUI VelleY, 6-5, ns °""*• .,.... u...dlwa Crale Pvett, E!I Toro, 5'-11, 200 O.ve Webb, lrvtrle, ""''· 220 Pete Sc:Mll11, Laeuna llMc:tl, 6-3. 20 Jeff ....... MIWon Vleto. ...,. 245 Joe Hesler, Sedi111hca, 1-tt~. ~ Georee Tulolf, Sente Alie, .. 3~. 210 Jim ltunell, Tustin, 6-3, 20S Jlrmw lurke, Woodllrldee, .. ,..,,, ;oo DI•••• .. Adam DeMelle;lon, El Toro, 6-J, 211 •.u ~ledllll, Foun..in V,,,,,,.,, 6·2, fU Jose Avalos, SMte AM, H , 210 fM•flr"o! Demon Flaner, lolM Grende, s-10, 175 Adet'll araaa. El Toro, s-n, llO SMrl TWlen, !Mllllhdl, H . 170 •01Nwn Lacv, Sellta Ana V.tllw, .. 1, 175 Dwrldt Odum, Woodtltl09e. H , 170 Ceodl a. JoMMn, El Toro ,, NaA ........ COM'•ll•MC• , .. AU , ........ a.-, ~Y'I S-,. 8o11on 7'. Detroit 71 (Wies tied, 2-2> , T ....... ,...,. Delles al L.Hen, l:JO -.m. CS.In lled, 2·2) W ........ aOWM OetrCHI al lolton, s P.11'1. 'T111fn4111Y'I 0- LHen •I Oellu, 6 PJl'I. ,,,..,., o- 8ostoo at O.lroll, 6 o.m. CK l\llClftMl'YI Sttw•v ., S..V DdH •t L.Men., 1t:30 IJ.n'I. (If nec:naarvl ,_....,., OWM DetrOll ... 1 lolton, T8A <K IMICftMrY) ,.. ... f t.a °"" (et ~ MIN 0.W'8t9 Ill ... S-11 ... , .... ... 6·J .. , .. 1 ..., H 6-2 6-5 ,.7 H 6-S .., Henri Leconte CFrenoel dlf. 8otlt ~­<w .. 1 Germanv> •.. 1. •·> ... ,. s-7 ... ._ Jonee I . Sven.son (Sweden) WI. Item Cnson (Sweden), s-1, 1-•• 1-6, ..... 6-2. . WOMllN ~· Sl""1 Graf (Weal Gerr'nMYl d9f. 8ettllle FUico (Areentlna), 6-1, .. 1; GIW!ela s.Mtllll 11181V) IMdl ........ l(elftl (c.Mde), 4 ..... ,, 7-1 . . ' •• ()qnge Coat OAILY PtLOTIT~. May 31, 1M8 * - 'The Wall Withtn': Vietnam veteran$ still qt war Post Traumatic Stress Disorder won't let some soldiers r esume their lives NEW YORK (AP) -It would • seem, in view or the much-visited Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Wuhinaton and the l)Ol)Ularity of Vietnam movies in \~ thcatrn and on TV, that America bu finally welcomed the Vietnam veieran home. But as reported in the powerful CBS documentary "The Wall Within .. at 8:30 p.m. this Thursday. as many u I mtlhon Vietnam veterans have )'C1 to leave behind a war that still ierrorius them every day. and lit~ has been done to http them. Some have committed suicide and abuted tMir families. Others sufftr tlashbecks.. n.iabtmam and withdrawal. CBS went to Washinston state. where many velerans who suffer ft'Om Post Traumatic StreSS Disordcf have Otd. The dente bab. pcT'haps ftminiscen• of the jt.aftllel or Viet-nam. shelter thtm from a world -httt the) cannot ~ of the atrocitie1 the)' witntUCd. "They literalJy took to~ ~ilh..'' CBS anchor Dan Rather laid 1n an intttView. Rat.htt 1ntttViewed tOme of the nteraM and narratea the documentary. which wu oroduced and dirttttd b)· Paul and Holly Fine and wrinm by PftTy' Wolff. :1 don't want to have to be nobody atlmy life:· says Terry Bradk). one of the veterans 1mcrvicwcd for the ctowrom&aey. -I'd •-.nt to be abk to vic-.'t'd dncribcs how he almoo -As \'tty youna people they wtft come home. •ilh some dip1ty." killed his ~other -.hen she "''Oke him plunscd into a srttn junale helf." aid 8rldlcy's rrward for his sen-lCC 1n onl' momma and M thouaht s~ wm,. Rathfr. 'They saw tnn"bae &Dd aMM'· Vtetnam · s O\'amcdication as a t.hctncm). . rific lhinp. Tbey w thctr t.U. ~ranoid 1duzoph~it that kf\ him Some of the ,eterans arc bcalnnma done to others. done to !hemselva. •ilb orpnk brain dam•· Othei: to d~I with PTSO in thf onl) way Then suddenly they ~tt jcrted beet \ictcrans icU or farina ttjec:t1on end the) an. b) talluna to other \ietcrans and du!"'pcd back into a couatry iod1fTCttDCe .. hen tbqi tttumcd from an rap croups spon~ b) Vietnam ._~ in man)' cases. ~ were combaL veterans centen. many of which wtll ~spascd. humihaleet cnttCJttd. ... .. Tb.is hour that~ do. this is not the mo"~ 'Platoon: This is ~al stuff." wd Rather. "These att real ~pie Str\.lllhna to rtt0ver from ttal •-ounds.- Anothtt of the \.l'terans inter- soon be dosed due to lack offunding. stall vet} youn1-Is 1t any woockr that the). suffered a psycholomcal wound Onl' ttason some of the \.eterans that is deep and ab1d1na~~ - talked to CBS was bttauSt Rather had Another veteran suffers frOirn a been in Vietnam as a rcponer. S) mp&om of PTSO called .. hY'Pft:' ··TIK> v..on 't e' l'n conStdcr talktn& 'isslancc. •· He recalls with peat to somebod) v. ho d1dn 't 10 to difficult) watchtnJ a buddy die on the Vietnam." he said. "It was slow go1n1 deck of an aircraft camer bccaute Ille • to t\tn ICl them to talk to us. Som) was not alen l'no~. So he pauo1s- ttportin1 from V1l'tnam v.as a Mlp •• 1ocnsantl) a1 n1 L dnv1na c:if)' Rather satd he also had to hsten to a streets or back roa s in h11 truck. lot of complaint~ about hov. the war CBS seems to have helped the , wts reported hcahn& somev.hat by bnl\l)Q& thtee Soprano Caball~ in magnificent voice On~ 'eteran took Rather on a of the 'eterans. Bradley. Ric:e and John Michaelson. to the VictMm flashlight 'l'>ll to thl' small unhl Veterans Memonal wbett they .ept room he k~ps at the back of his as the) found the namC1 of bUddin ~ment v. here the v. alls are CO\itred the> lost in v 1etnam. It is thne with rough drav.mgs likl' a cavt<-movina~nes.shotJust bef~dawn. d\\ellcr'\.. d~p1c11ng his V1~tnam that conclu<k the documentary. '° n1'htmares the strains of .. -'ppalachtan Sprina, .. ·. Whereas the formula for master violin-makina died with the 17th and 18th century c~moncse, it appears that humantty ~tains the capacity to produce another sort of master in- strument the ultimate musician who. by virtue ofbeina a sinser. happens to be her own instrument. in this case soprano Monserrat Caballe. In a concert Thursday cvenin1 at the Orange County Pcrformin.a Arts Center, sponsored by the Orange County Philharmonic Society, we heard outstanding renderings of Ital- ian opera excerpts from the Pacific Symphony, .lhe Pacific Chorale, con- ductor Bruce Fcrdcn (who ou&ht to be on the short list of Pacific Symphony conductor candidates) and Caballe. It is fittfng that this concert wa.s a highliJht of the past thru seatons, as it was your critic's last in the capacity of Daily Pilot correspondent O\arina this time, we have heard some ~markable {)Crformances; amons them the Ch1cqo, Paris and Rot- RUFFELL,$ UPHOLSTERY INC. -. ,_ .... c...s""' 1122 -llfl~ CISTI IUl-541-1151 . ''A~ ... , .. -Su.an Granger, WMCA (N.V.t CHllS PAI.le terdam orchestras; the Hqcn. 'l:mer- son and Colorado quartets; violinist Belkin. cellist Ma, and pianist Pogottl1ch. Taken toacther, their performances define the experience of music at its best. Caballc's mu- sicianship and voice put her high on this list of indisputable masten. At their roots, voiccsareair. Warm air. We whisper softly. and shout loudly. How is it then thata P911icular voice can trickle softly, aush loudly. or oo~e sensuously, without losina its cott and substance? These att at- tributes of water, not ofair. Yet they A. arc the definina features of the votoc of Monserrat Cabal le. If this had been an orchestra concert consistina of··favontc move. ments.. from favorite symphonies and other works., it would have been billed as a pops concert. Indeed. at its heart, a program of Italian opera excerpts very tenuously walks that line between what we miaht bear 1n the park and what we mi&ht hear in the concert hall. Yet by virture of its quality. the performance itself tranccnded any sugestions of•a -J>OPS" aproach. Conductor Fcrdcn followed 'Caballc meticulously and at times deftly. The orchestra played with a unaty of sound which exceeded their Schoenbeflian best o(last week. And the Plc:ific Chorale pvc us grater clarity and li&h tness than we have come to expect. Caballe, however. stoic the show. In works of Bellina, ROSSJni. Verdi. and Boito -interspersed with or- •111 1a MaTne.-, Oa 2 ScrMM: 11: 10 U : JO J : 1S S: 11 '''' S:U 1: U I : U t :•S 10:2S _ ......... -~ .... -...._ ....... ...cm (!.,.,.., .. ,.,_._. ~--._ .... ... -lt1tal ...... ...,. u. .... ..... s-·---.... _ ·---a ..... ··--....... a... ,..,......,, .......... ='-'::2-• ecata-·--., ... ID"11 C-111.., ~o... ---~C..~llolllll ._ .. .... • ,,_ . M-J* (Tl<CI .. ,~ ~ ....... ...... c-... Ull'-°"'""' •• . -----c.-..-. Ctnt ..... aau ._,,,...,.__.. - L o o~ !o r RAMBO T Shirts Posters Headbands and othPr Rambob1l1a on sale at part1c1pat1ng theatres! -··-----·-wwuow ... ............... ....,_ ...._ 10 •lllQIW-lllllrfPW ...,.. .... ftmUll• C:ONltH•'• ......... ..----;A Url ... ........ chestral and choral interludes of the same compose~ -her ''Ottt wound its way down from the mountain top. ebbma and Oov.ing through stream and rapid. Never did its water-likl' substance cease to flow effonless.ly. as with sravit). and at each moment we wett offered something spontaneous. onginaJ and soul st1mng. Cabalk also bnnp a Sol'nsc of humor to the stage After tv.'O encores. it was announced that she had run out. but v.ould repeat the Rossini Then it was discovered that the orchestra pans had already been collected. How now to make a retreat? She announced a v.ork for so~o and pit.at. sans guitar. After a tc..- bars o(mqruficient stngmg. she held up her hands as 1fhold1nga guitar and plucked 1n space as she sp>lcc "china. china. china. ctung." Amidst the roan of lau&hter. she waved &oodbye. leavins behind the most enthustiastic Sqcrstrom Hall aud1enoc your critic bas ever witnessed. "I LOVE 'Wtl.Lb\N: .. Enthralling and beautifully produced." -c.r,, ,,_ .... k"8C " ··A TAU Of MACK that leaves a tnendly glow." -it.w ..._ "°' MailS ~ ~ • -. -· 1'011' PIA'Yll'IG ---------.. ., .._.._ ,..,,,,._ ·-·------•WUWWWW ---lfl-., • ( l "\ CALL ·642-5678 FROM NORTH ORANGE FROM SOUTH ORANGE ( axssmmtNDd m.an I ..... ....,.. Ga:Ut• co. ... ,. ,.._eouTMOllUl•CO. -1111 1·•11·r.~~"':""i•;1; .. To1~•;:.1ic.iiiiiiii1aiii .. iiiiiiii11iiiiiiiiiii1;;114~c... w.., •n C..ta.... •at C.• 111u MM .... -•w-.... •• ... ,... •• I ftlbt: 'lie. Condo. 2 B:&oom. 1W: U86 •UOO IOMJSI ~ t-EtW UnlqU9 Deetan. '* * 'D'JZDIP WORM !.MtbeUft. Sbr 3be. ~ ~ Bonual 1 rMI' llde loci LG 18A llOO & V9"1t9d ~Uno•. fbr Frig ....... nR. Ml BA .....,... ,.,,. t * ' '9dec. 1311.000. OwtW. WESTSIDE ...... $t50 + l!IOO MC. up. C.bte, 880. ger. MCI 2'M>e. 2c:arQW.W/~ tna. No ..... 541 4111 \t8A, kftich • .,. ........ ~ ~ 121-0241, 84$.-t509 900 S. Une 844-<H11 Sorry, No""9.1314427 ere, W/d nit up1 ale, ..... N/~. Ml6/MO. ..... . ,.,. DAIL 'Y PILOT CtaC« VOUll AD Ct.ASWll"OOll'RQUtOUM THE PMIT DAY r...,_ a.rw. .,., . YILUS •Newty dee 28A 1W LG 28' 2a. EltJde nw micro, end unft, bltlt to •W IHI* **...,_2t12•• t:'s'o1::''C: lat.lb tWfthl poet fl) carport new wlfrpk: et'IG4. end belleh. no J*t. tt050 FftO, dllf1a..,_, •we WAU<to.,._., •11rlder! 14t-100tll'I I 00 AM 5 30 "' '"" --..,,_ '°' __,, Set .. OtrlOOA»-1130-AM ..... ...,..,. -.,._ ..--c-... f ............ ---- /&;iii 111.0 ••••• w/d hk'4J. sat5 La HO gar.+ "*'9' INO+ utll. Imo. llOO ""°" tst.12u W:il. No .... 541 .... t uo. •ltudto lt21. pete.1224t40/722..011 DIM1·1324 E/857-otMe Garden "Pt. 1paolou1 ..... llllLI Pool, lndry, gar. Ewe IEWH llOAM-500,.. _ .. _, ___ .._~- , _____ .. 1 .. 1l'll'n.1 •WLRl•llll/ • ..__,.,..,2•Mtu·-40 2929,. OlJPLEX, Q\IM1, 2BA.dlw,wtw:'ctrpe. Llmf 1• ... * 734--4312or521-1411 OCNFRT. Pref WAOtJNEa .. --· ... .,. -•tO----··-... ......... ..,~.,..,,--.......... UJ!Pl, • .!!LDY RIA AX -iu.-•• 11!~2~11a2~0-an.wu~ ~~&.__""' =t/o~64s-651f· N9'#fV con1tNCl1ed. ~ h••' CM1t lttrt Condo. '*"in -· -· OC!A~ ... f ht U• AM -,,. ..... '"""'" ~-,,,,,. _, __ hwn ,_.Nit. ,.,., , ........ ... u ...... ""' ......... mo yrty. * ... ""'* .,. "' ........ ....,. pei1n...,, o•~· aood · tom Oflk ~ new ..... 1111610+ 842 ;:"' .. "" ::: ::.·: == STEPS TO OCEAN 2BR c L £AN 1 Br u 95 .,.. 1735/mo. 'ld0-4711 l..wge tBA 18A, 000¥9-etov. rwfrla1 cfflhwWier .... ______ .... _.,, ..-•• .-........... C•-28A yrly 112501mo l.Mge 3 er. 2~. 2 earl •120-taee•• •29rtwnt.1._._ tlo nlent looatlon. Ho All Vtlt• lnct Private AIM \BX umrw. '::.cs"'::.. .... -.. -'"' -""' OCEANFAOHT 4BA 3BA. ettached gareo-, wld •BAY & OCEAN VtEW* bltlne lndry l8Cllty ~na pete/wetwMdl, S550 entry. astt Bey.,.._ tito Pool, 1pa, ttn~ll, In NilwpOtt .. :-_ .... ___ • ..... OCEA~~ 2BA l'ltlyps, frJMc. pvt yerda.' ebove beeutlfut Chin• Plue· depoelt '1soo mo. Lv Ml9 &4'""82 peta. M Delly. . 5'MIN ~ ~22_:,~; +-.c.131-406' .. -· ..... _, ..... -• 1IOO/ yrly. pool & 9'*-11250/mo eo ..... 2Br 2Ba ta <Mn. ~ •541-5S48• MUST SEE-LAAGE. 38r •EAST9LUFF TownhM --.. -. .....,_ ·-Burr Whit•: f7S:.630 RESERVE ONE HOWi $1750. 673-'1892• 2~ ow. vn. 1825. Apt. 38r 2a.. 2 car gw, -... --.-.. --.. ----· _,!!~PORI .. • ,,. ., ---· -726 W. WlleOn St. ***** 1021 Vlllende <MeM de! no pet• 11025/mo yr lee ...... .-...-..-.-._at ~FOR -.. --•-.... ... =~ ~r For lnfOf call 541-7001 M ..... 211. 111111 ... M8'). No Pete. i5o-7105 •.u 1010 •a Mon ..frt • Meture edult. <• __ ... ,_,._ _ -=-Ger. no pets. Avl 611. CW .,_.. ...... · · 'frl old). 2 be "' S9251mo. 840-1648 ........ s•10 OFF .... , •num 3 MINUTES TO HAMO.. fmt houM. 5 ~ bc:h bllth ept .,. Co ...-#7<--·· ,; ~~:'!· ~-- Cod 3BR 1'119. FR. fp. fncd mlLLf aOllRR n-i-2BR. 'it b1k to • aer 1'Mta w/QW, c:rpts. SpKloul l Brl18a a.,t. 721 1453 I 1 ~I t . lmotl• olc. KR4 yd Stpa sandy bell. --v-Oc..n 1ST MONTH'S RENT drpa. bttlnl. fnlcd petlo LOY9fy w.tcltf c:omplaJt. " · mme • • legea. Avell lnW $1400/mo.MM333 •111&11alPT* I ='bor ~Ceta~~,: eo1PAULARINO ~120Cllll 1-SPM Unftupgradad.OIW,cetl--mo¥elnl permonth.1st1 2~.1~~~.:: vautt9d ce111,;g.~ lrptc:, •1111U 1111 ~'31!~t~!':c···;···'1~111!;15~~~ ~tt~~ eo.ta.~1 ..... ~=:fS: Ptaiual 1\07 Welkt ahoppl &dciel lndry 1 ger lg deCj( •211JU 1111 &v .......... ~.,. •••• ,._ • ··-. ",_,.,,...,room..,.. .... , ----·'----to b:ach. $115/mo. 11400/rno. 'Drlve by 867 Vlctone 'L .... $720 •PDIXlll• ~on-tmkr. 1-n. pref'd. ~ = f=~ 2~R untUmQ;d flOU4. ($250 Of! 111 Mo's Rent). 214'~ FemlMI. 645-3427 Nll./lfl Nice 28R 18A up.,.rl3br 2'M>e on the bey. emt>· &45-2357· AcroH from Perk CALL 541-7367 Of 631·12M Sheryl Ul!!!ff W/dedc nr Herbor & 11hh. Letge dedc. auper vtaw. ... Hlftl ti S1200/mo.Agt675-1170 ---Pr~pereonl7251 prime location. No pets · °' 9&4-3375 T~ Like new 2BA mo + dep & ref. 494-7008 Veer IN '2495/mo. 3338 PM IU 9llD. 4BR 5>At>a ~ont hofne 2 1t9~·~~;:~.=· gar-CALL 111-1181 I Via Udo. Mgr. 175-9219 w1oy rem• now evell. 11U• iii Approx 32008/f, grMt )Y•terfr~t Homee inc ~ OR 833-1111 a.!!. emf 111111 EAST9 t.UFF apecloul 2br 1 147.00 wk & up. 2274 24-h< ecoeaa. 11 vtewsl See ayatem. 50' Reeltora 631-1400 . ......., 1675/mo~1~5g:t•· 2ba lpt. Frplc, d/w, enct Nwpt Blvd, CM 846-7445 Newport Bch. I ~~ ~~3 ...... Dua Ptiat 21B 2BR, 1BA. frptc:. pvt street.I **_.. _** NORTH~ 1 PLEX 1 2-cer gerege, pool. Y1t1tlt1 itat&ll CO.ta M..a "' 1 car garege. Loot<• out -~ • 11025/mo •759-153-4• 21 Bak•. ·~lg clCI cenaa ••I llu ilfl ON BLUH Xt HlRBOR on Blg"Coron•. Yrty rentel A email. quiet comptex 3br 2ba, dbte gar, Ip, dlw,I ganioe '°'car 0 Spec 3210' 38R 3BA S1950/mo No Pet• refl nestled emong tell tr.. petlo. $1000 2bf' 2ba. m&T 1.1111111 . $15/mo. Agt 75 28R 18A.Pvt Bctl, fpk:, Twnhm Meoolf Vu-toe. req'd F'teue Uk for-& levtlh I~ 18r gar, d/W, dedc. $800. I Quiet detux top-fir 18' gfdnr. yrd. Nu pnt. lndry $2750/~. 49e-T009 Carey Werd, SunboW ,.._I like ftf/# w/balclony, ca-Lndry rma. 642-6487 I Del~: ~;™~~15'!11111 totally furn tncl llnene. -. Ill M. hkuf<,'· N/emklg•ta. l-1-llu eny, Inc. 631·2242 thedrel celling, trptc. get, 17501mo 2br 2ba; frple I OOMn View Ger cable MICro. VCR. phoM, A/CJ llU 112-1 111 /mo 780·901 m11t .., SHARP 2BR 1BA Duplex pool, epa, lncfry. No peta. petlo ~btt lndry tee' W/O Ilk-up .M.,,Y'extru' pool, tennla, etc. C9'ol'a I •UNUSUAL 3BR 3'hBA;-2 DETACHED cottege, s& OCMn tide of PCH. Ger~ s7oo + MC. Avl now & 1 gar. No peta.' Ntoa loc. . Prime Nwpt 8dl tocatlon: pkng. Av•ll eJ l<9/1f. .., • frplea. dbl gerege. top ol 2ba. frplc, Ae. r9frtg. 2-ege. leundry. $950/mo. •vi 61211 Vetme 549-2"1 2085 Thurin. 5'40-&338 I C1oM to bMCh 1875/mo ~u:!o ~=: ~-;:,~ ~ line~. $2150/mo car gerege, ~ yerd. Avail now.163-1390/dys * E/SIDE Sunny 48' 2Ba. SPACIOUS lBR Pool 4101 Hllerle I x 17' I ltSO OF HWY 2BR 2BA. $1200/mo. 675-9096 upatelra, 11150/mo. lndry e.rport ifove &ITSL MGMT 642-1803 ltatl 1 It Ill •84MM frptc:. carport, S 1225/mo. I t leac~ ••it Cntl JIHa 2'24 * 2Br 1Ba P"' yd S750. Nr r9fng. No pete: Avl 6/ 1 & llUT L-•-1114 ~1-1 Agt 873-5354 ~ 4'J ~ ahopallci\ooll. M6-463l 7/1 1939 Wall~ $5&5 -•-• .,..._.... .. 1111 lttale ftr lalt Cetta.... 1114 Cute but cozy Duplex 2BR 2BA28X itfi ftr. L;fr&lt, SPARKLING clMn. extre •SPACIOUS 1BR crptt +1350 dep. ~-14o1 2Br, 2Ba. frplc. h 95. LI. l&Jt'"a. 18A 1 car ger Frptc: oceanvlewl 12001/f,aec. large 28' 1Ba, encl ger. d di encl • • 640-6941 Specloua 2BR 2BA ept to1 --...... /ct9Li .,_•••PUA Drive by 51, JUmtne 2 car Pf'kng S15001mo. dtw. cable tv. P•tlo. q"'-1 ~ r~ N:":=i DUI Ptiat BB ._._ __.. anr Pvt bdl. boat dodl lulwl/ Ht 1800 •'f 3BR ._, ..... ,.7 ,, ~,,12• Cell 1:30-5:30 955-1961 wooded grounds 1150. u · S# ... , ~ evell, pcio4 1615/mo in.. GMflJ (AJ Almost -• _.,.,,mo.'""'' v .,._., Avt 6/3 324 Vle1orte -25/mo 845-5577 ... AB UITI tBA 1BA. •ldoeed iaat:· duding u1Hs 780-19M 2·~ end unit. FrPe, 2 LOWER COM houM 2br ••HARBOR, RIDGE•• (btwn Hert>or & Nwpt Bl) •SPLENDID 1BR No 2br lb• llvlng ~-n •• cloM to bMCh Nici . . -wu ..... """t"""•-u·.,-.. - 6 nlBX~SSHOR~ ~2 f:o''::~.,Js,C·~ 2ba. lrg llv rm, ger, Y.,d. l=. :::.:'1:ooo°::. 631-4215 or 673-0275 petal End gar. refrlg & bdrma ~P End patio & q"'-1tocauon,1§51mo 3~1°~d:· Fclo!: to Cornet W•tc*ft tun ng &Ate ••7-· · · 419 BeoonlL $2200/MO 7&0-1 33 · 547-3919 range petlo laundry i'r lot• of grH• 1480 Monrdvle · • em • n-Nwpt Bch-Co{net bdrm remodel Tiie Best buy in Coat• Mesa! 6'0-<C92<C or 640-824' . 4 or ltfwn 111 a.a IHI S550/;,,o+der). 642-59&4 71S/mo. '* 493-1351 . TSL MGMT &42-1803 amoklng. All atnenltleall Fufl .-vie floors. Fr doore & Hurry, call Liz °' Chudl **VERSAILLES BACH • .. ,., • 1350. ~2-47<C4 by 2pm beemed ceilings Ught & JonH 831-1266 or Lrg 2BR 2'MSA +big loft. Futlkhctl. Pool,get,aecur· ,...., ....... ~ DElUX BACHELOR. 0t Ntce = ~ 2BA. '~ Belboa Pen. Prof M/25-35 ........ 11 bright Large centrer &46-5743 Dramatic. l*a nu. Lndry, lty Welk to bdll S6e5 ....... 112 Yieteria ...... ~ • .nu reeldent. Comp turn. U1ll ege. f>C_._;.poot Non-llM ah 2bf. l~ba -· •-1 paUo ·7· gw. fplc, ITIOf•. 11315 15· 2300E 5484425 ..... ~-u ,. peld. No tmOk• °' pee1. Awat•pd••;;iiv.Nop«a. r __ 831·1~ .. .(LH)$455.000 1•!21~;: Toml31..fJ107 84010a 1• ~ Weal 12.. 40 + 1675493-3392. 850-8213M780-1411 :::X~i°/3~3~'1e'"· 1817 WESTCUF "-ATI R•J<O""l '" -3BA. Fam · d~ Ntoa 38 R 2BA patio hm. a.a~ Sperkllng clHn lerga • 28' 28a. dbl ger dlw BAYRIDG£ CONDO. M/F FOR LEASE. 314 - 1f~ ,..... ~ 2a R 1800 •unwur•* IPUNllll But INC~ B4i nn ..US IPU j Nwi>t Bc:tt, AGt ~ uo111t ~ 1-. t ... tabl • am;:; ger. Frptc, comm pool, 2 car WWW::.LI -=-..-Gar<Mn eptt. ae.,tlfully 1BR 1BA. peOo, frig, d/W. trptc Two blka to b..ctii prof. 3CMO. 'Mnl to elt· to.8Slq f1. Badt REAL ESTATE f~ 1•<1• New vtew S2 Condo 38R • S1450. Or1ve by 424 . lendaceped grounda. pciol. storege In geted 202 ;A, Cotton St $130 port. 2Br 2Ba. ~-1750 440 E. 17th St, C _ ..,, Fam rm oc.Mnn.~ vi..; Viste Suerte. then cell 1N1W11 POOi & ~ petloaldedta, cmplJt. Nr Gotdel1weet/ 204 'A' Lugon41 sa75 ea. Geted. pool 22..-.a (619) 3'6...e3641 REALTORS 1•p"'A""l_ .... '6_R_o""0~1c~k"1 • 13SOO~-, 67~912 Agt Lerge.. attrKtl\le a.,t• In. gerege Of c:atpOft. Sorry, Wet'MT 1625. 541-3391 Avallable 8/1 650-3759 COM Pref fem to al'ler• Of &45-154 A~OfntE ' SALEJ Fentaatlc buy! WllterfrontHomea lnc. •NEYiPORTCREST.38 R beeuttlul ger<Mn Mttlng. nopeta 21r 1~ 28 R. 1 btk Ir bdl. Sun-FOR LEASE 514 SU11S ANllCW. NETWOM 2400 sit. 2 ltaty SBA Realton 631•1400 2.,.,BA condo 2 car gw. Pool/1pe. garage or •SEVERAL LOCATIONS S I -deck. No kldl, petl, IO 8S9Q f1 8..::k 2'hBA. dining rm. Jae, tennis welt!. to beech. ~-Sony, no peta. 8aehelof S805 675 + 850 deposit. druga. $550/mo + utlll + 4'° E. 11i11 St ( COLDWeu BAN~eRO euto eprlnkters. Nr tents Ctttl .... BH $1550'.(213)421·1136 2Bdrm 1'.48a $765 18edroom $880 •193-4"4• s,~ .. w.IU\lutr"\111."\1.rtl S550aec.6e0-9500deyt. (619)346-136e. , 'Frwys. 963-7389_. 2Bctnn 2ea saoo 28drm w.ea sn5 1 •T• -n lJ''''irrM~ \luO<> 1.nJ 1 123.gsoo.,.,, 845-15 . l **2BR 1BA hM on lOt SISO-BACl<BAY-DUPLEX 398W W119on 631-5583 2250Vengu,l_d ~-l•H t• ,.,,.,,""itmt'fll\•~1 . ~ 2 t:~ .a..,... best . *"" Piii* tncd yd. frplc. pet oil Pet 1 6' 5 • 5 7 7 8 . 1 Bedroom S630 Bechek>f $550 111111111 2 I Ill ,..,~,, r~~ ~s f!Oni llMr, furnished! W/Ofy 1000 elf bldS lniat w/otner. Big dbl get, 2 Bedrooms, patio. no ------------IPU~fl •nOJV'-"!.A'"'t~.h.nY· COM * 28r, pref, ""I °"~ Co-op, i ~ u IC' Sl95 2 people. 642·9666 5'&-6434, M2·22e7 28drm 1Ba $750 1 Bedroom 1655 Swtmmtng poJ.. Llatlted S7',<,/rnJ llYllJck\ COfTl..""1~ $490. Us-8599 Aedhllt/405 F'fll AWl•T 1111111 ~t=. ~:~ :: *Olean 38R 2BA, emell • Baytront Elegent 2BR. 301 Avocado M2·9650 ~:!': ~~:;wnl\S $7: tennll. volleybell & ~~ll'>l•tnMS~i.nwom LIDO ISLE. Cozy, qui.t, M50 mo-mo U SIM.IM So~ 405. Grubb & Ellis y11d. Garege. W/D hkup, Sec bldg. $1250/mo 1 BE~OOM. privet• de-125 c.nt St 842 ~24 baeketbell. CtoH to m.nq 1KT11~ lt'fTIIH OUlt\ 48' Ma, lrg patio. nr bc:h Ytc.. avel. Ml Remode6ed Home -Great JlJDY BUCHEA Agt 275 M ... Dr. •E • Welk to Bell. 3BR 2\t&A tec:Md alcytlght dllh-., • bMCh. ICllOOtl. perk• & :~~~"!;r .;:,;;w 2 Mor F'a 23-39. $450M Tll lllllllft l<lnga Roed oceen view 733-9666 11200 NO PETS 722·8011 Twnhm. dbl gar $1550. waah9r • no • pet a~-----MOO ~· rv "'°""""" -846-2331. 541-0100 meg Newport C1r F• --.,_ Weterlronl Homee Inc. $800/mo 631-8155 ESTWA .... EA '• tocation ... _.t ~ *WMllllNE* •Neer beac:t1 3BR 2..+BA Rultora631-1400 · 1 Bedroom S8IO IO-tlJI Thel'.EW LG NEW2BRl2tMSA DPL.X TMEfflclantAlte IUtchen. oomlortat>tetem-twnhM Dbl ger fncd lll 1111 + .... .. 28drm w.ea S790 0 4 ov 11. IC\ v IDr'IDT" hM. CM/Badt-t>ey. FUm. Full ~ Of • 11y room. large lot with Charming alngle femlly yard, IPI. frptc, .lmi pee • IUl•NW e .,e/•.....,.lH ...... 1151 E lltl)St 642-oaM ·-&TTllllm rrv\"'"i::wn ... m 1 Nice yd. Prof M/F. u rvtce /ma ll room to expand Greet cottege home. 38'. 3'8e, olc S1245 6'U541 Palermo 4BR 2 ... BA 2 .-• ADULT ORIENTED H a"'!!..t --'t T--' (714) 644-1900 S.SOO/mo 650-1449. 64()..5.47( vetve seper llv/dln/lem rm . • . . .._, en.,.._ • ...... ........ N.-carpet 'plcil your3Bedroom.2 Bath.Cot-at~. S~n .. r 111.,utlMllPH GAROENAPTS.Lrg1BR. treller aorou from -·i.n~.._llDIO lfvou-relooldngforacar cotor'. Tiie kit. flp. cntrt lege Perk. Big yard, fire-~ ... eon5001 7.i. ~1/l Securt1y building. eunlcen pool, n/peta S550 plul b .. chlS525. CALL ~-r:' ... ~ , UDO ISLE elr. dbl~· nex1 to pciol. placia. $117!/mo. Mutt · -mo, ...,..... thowws. pool, 91'1clad 1350 e.cutfty. ~11 536-8318 ~ cfaulfled Ml news for '101 Remodel.cl 2 atory 3 $229k. Open Set-Sun, 62 aak tor Pete 751-5000 BAYRfOGE2BR 28A. Beat geregea Remodeled *Ull BW* --------r--------------=-- bdrm. beelned oelflngl & Recing Wind 645-5540 Executive home 3BR view, securtty gate. ger, units 641.&403 Fr.~ to patio & ca-· j It leac~ Jilt 2'h8A, 2100 slf, $1500. w/d , pool, spa 11395. 2BORM 1,k&A Townhouae Come -the dlffw•IC». den. Fraah •II-white ·~ (Inga) 751·5000 854-eOoo Of 780-9642 Apt 2 people no pets COl'\Pletely remod.i.d. decor end patio ca-den. IHa.. 3BR 2BA. 2 car gar .. lrplc, BEAUT. ~. ctty view. 1 S6 t 5 . Av 'e 11 • b I e BMutlful 2BR epta. Poot. 6$1-l400 .... ·· S49i.500 OCEAN VIEW.:.1 BU< TO new carpet/dish WUl'MW. 3br 2ba. pool. tennil. 6/2()-8125. 846-9507 ~°':: ::::?' = - ".\llHIHl"l BEACH .... 1.Q 3BR 28A No pete. pvt petlo. aec.$27501mo.Ce11Lou 2 BE.~OOMS1nthe lnl ONLY 194s _to 1111..,1 .., ._ condcnit/brii:tl ~. IOlll'· 11200/mo. 837-85&5 956-5229 0/213-626-7l63 a...itltul C... Granade $650/mo. ,._... 1100 off REAL E.STATE ~~-~~~ 38R 2BA Colage Pant. 2 BIG CANYON Dowr 2BA FromS715gapald ~through5/31. ,_.. suite wl batcon Most frl>tca, nu crptl· drapea, 2BA. upgreded. Frenc:tl 400 Merrtmec Way IL.I llAIA IPTL REAL TORS unu9Ualt y... oven, r~. w/d hllups doort/wlndowa, crown jult .. 11 of Herbor 530 w. Wiiton · 1111 ... PIYmT' .,, ... IULn 11195. A 6/1 ~9-2534 mokt Ute & t>rltel ~¥4 for 979-1911 TSL MGMT We'll glY9 the down In Attract ctNn Wat1lde lhow 813. $3000 mo. 2BR 2ba. new ~· 722-9012 Of 842-1603~::1;M!t;:::::Al:::;;!!;!;!;;f;;;;~!~!;iTA:;diti;;:I excng IOJ~thereofown-lll-ATl 11 Ul-IMI 28R 1'h8A hie. Nlca yd. Ownr/Agt, 61~1657 corwenlent to . EASTSIOE 18R. Al utl. ~ _....,_. _____ t'Wiiiii!~~.,...,.~ entilp You meke the *WATERFRONT ._ ~$900 Incl grdnr & wtr S7751mo +aec. John Of paid Stove. rafrtg., -othly pymta & we lhar• 3BR. 2~ Bath. Boet llip 1369 °' 646-2389 ILIFFS Ill LUii SMiiey. 87s-8391 upstlh unit, QU!et, epprec You receive S3'9.000. (71') &S0-8413 Beeutllul 2BR 2'~BA Or 28A + Oen, 2~. 28R nr 8 . Coest Plaza. 811 1625/mo $50-• 100% tu benefits. Must FARROW REAL ESTAT.E twntime Obi ear gerege, $1395/mo. 640-5&&4 8*tr Quiet cut d'aac. Sun EASTSIDE BEAUTY 28R twve dean credit. Agt pool, epa. Xlnt locl Avt clel*, gar, W/D NI~. 1BA frptc di'# bltlne 957-6002 Oya, Ev. Wknda ....,,.. '111. $1300/mo. Call Rite EASTBLUFF 3Br home. SIOO/mo. &4M2e9. gwi.ge Patio. coin ' •Spacious 38A 2~ on Wiide 631·1286 $1150 Nr bat IChoota $135/mo IA-3o21 lovetygmblt.1299.000. Avd .6/1 Pvt ~ mW/ ... aiiM ---·-----e hiJlllaYIEW •tmmac. SBA 2'hBA"' E onty. 760..fJ776 Onr/Brtcr Strol to bell\. GrN1 vtew. 1481 ... llf PQpUlef 'La Tour' model Blun Cntr.1259.000 CMd ..ecom.. No pet.a. 1M "'*'pd<). Cal_..dl with two muter bedroom Ship69y/Oabolt Exceptlonel 28A 2BA 1925/mo. 131...e 107 ptkng No~ 1585 a.tit• MCtt with It• own &44-0'496 & &46-2319 condo In luxurloul 09""'" Adltl '4~ 11S 1 Aft 4 bath Beeutttul view of George Elklns Reelty Beautlful Spenl•h·tll• 1,Y •111ng. j)lthWMMr, ILm Tl N.1 pm ~. baY & ctty UgMa. twnhM.2BR2'nBA.court lndry till~ petlo, •t· 28t 18a,lndryrm,doeeto 11WLY•HU1B Very 00fl¥aolent IOcatlon ~lffS a..cm:.,-:: ywd + JM patio. gerege teched garege, poof, ~. bulaa. 1875/mo. 2BR w/gw, new c:rpta W8119t 10 the OCM1i Of ~ ' & pettclng apace S 1000 S995/mo teO-ee 10 2264 & 2272 M.pa I tncd yd. ~ 120 1. en I o y t tie Io v •I y :;':1.!.nbelt~2~. ~ mo. A~ June. 988-343-4 .JD PROPERTY MGMT TSL MGMT 842· UI03 252e SMta Ana '0'. 17 c:tubhou99. Po04 & IP&. Bttr Prtncipe11 only 8'end new 3BR + <Mn EXECUTIVE E'BLUFF 58r, · Geted comn-wty & ... houM Lg yd. 2 car gar, 38a 2 ltory, tumNnfum, cur1ty bulldlnQ.Ownerwtll ~.....-T 2BA. 2222 Cenyon. ~. avt 711. '-- carry 2nd tru9t deed Im-e .. utrful modern 3BR S1350 Siu 963-8377 req'd. 6"-0l3t* mediete 1~~•11lon 2'~BA Lerge m11ter Cute 2aR 1BA Duplex. 2 HVK-PORTOFWO $ · · tulte w/llttlng rm. ~ cw garage. small yerd. 4br 3~ newty decor lff..11M piece, lor9\ler vtew new cwpetlpalnt 1650 S2TSO tnc:1 wa1er GWdftr "~Fl~,, I I ,KJ;\;~ 122 E. ~F1'0NT 676-4912 Agt 644--M10, 873-3t74 ~ \ ~"' ll'\\;\ Call 615-15e2 to.... CUTE c ... n 3Br 11Ba H• *Lm llLI •. ~ . GIJ Ht \l HIR... • lllf• Ml IU ~:?i· ~~ t~r~ 3Br 28a trpflc WI~ ....---...,,.....,,.....,=--.,,..,...,....., View. Lg lot. POOi. epa. Fr 541·5242h D78-1508w • S1S50~119-1$S-0719 ctctu ... .., lift dOOra. S c:. ~ ~ Eutakte 28R 1BA trptc l.m mJ • LIT1 • NC. S9SOK. 7 '° l9fd, erlgl gar, w/d hltup' 41 """°"' hOfM. Of.at · WIRIWITB ftEW MiiaJ ~I Cul~~ xint condl 1oc. 48r 4~ .. l*O~ .... ~ •• ·-2..-NorMAve AVIM 7/1 ....... a1.,----• • r-SIH/mo. Call Sheryl 1 Miiion A Ml'llt 38R, loft,~. 2 fM 91'· 131-126e cw 875-1427 ~ ~'-" -.,. cftlf 23't HAZEL 9 .1. 759-9070 ege. '-ve lot. ta9.000. praoi9, tlR. -19v, Hufty! Cell Ul Of ChuCk ......., C9llnQ9. PoQI. R6/Mt-}(R ....... Jon•• 131-12H or 11275/mo.17~. 38Rf2'iteA wldlltedl ren-14e-11'3 t.i ~. v... 1525.000 17~9115. JWM~-. . . Sel Y w p,.,.,.,t a. ........ ~ 641-5671 for information J. surprisingly J low cost. ~ . . . ' • DlilJPilat Take It Easy ... '4111111 -. 11ii>7mo, tn Bch.~HSe aa nr 8'1stql l lg double end r car or ator11ge, 'Gt 7ff.831L ···•1• 122 .... HU '1911 '. S75 mo 15-e5"• lal p· ' lict Lat 2711 n ..... -~&lnllne ~uSulte ~111 ae•n TCUF(ORIVE ~ 541-5032 E. 314 lq ft @ . Ba bulkllng h St, CM. ™ •5-8523 E. 574.aq ft @ Ba Building. h St CM. 388 ~5-1523. >--op, 7 ..,,_. bldg. Neer 5 Fwy. $526- rno LSE. Ser· lit Hl-1401 mftllm r.,F~lal. nt AlterneU\oe or~ mell only. ~5470 • HeppyN.8. Rlctwd Sinor rt) M&-7808 ~PAINTING I ,_,. eicper. •.M2"'5214 «) lnt./Ext. lllOneble Ptlce •M-~ Nellptiper Aeo-n exp. Clean, •. 842-5937 .eNTPeill'lt-.. rat•, hlghe9t k, 12 YI'• exp. l)UQ 720-9148. OX PAINTING MATERIALS 876-4009 . PAINTING• = lSONPAINT! ly wor1( Mice IPI Ext. ~ 'le'dl31-4870 ffiNG AND ~ING. QuMlty at.Nl-e34i . ,. .. .. F•ADS ARE FREE Cal: JOIN OUR TEAM MA".f GING CARRIERS. THE DAILY PILOT IS L06K1NG FOR TOP QUALITY MGRS WILL- ING TO WORK HARO. WE OFFER XLNT BASE SALARY PLUS OVER $300 IN BONUSES EVERY MONTH, GENEROUS GAS ALLOW .. ANCE & OPPTY FOR ADVANCEMENT. JOIN OUR TEAM & BE ELIGIBLE FOR FULL MEDI- CAL COVERAGE. CREDIT UNION. •OtK PLAN .. IF . YOU 'VE GOT WHAT •T TAKES. CALL B~fH. 642-4321 EXT. 205 OR SEND RESUME TO: OAIC.Y PILOT, 330 W. BAY ST, COSTA MESA. CA 92626 Motor Routis available in Co1t-l111 Hullfi1(1!1 .llaoh Fo11tahl Y1ll1r •t NO COLLECTING NO SOLIGITING 4 Ask for Joanne Craney ~ . .. . If you· re 10 or Older. a job as a newspaper carrier might be Just your size. Just send in thts coupon or call: 642-4333. Routes are available now! r ltt1•1W,.lta hily Plllt c....tet1 .. An lnlur9d van. ...,.,. ~­ up/lhelm .. a MUST. r · FOr morw lnfomMttton CiHMr.Jim• (213) C71·2170 iji Market posts strong gain ' NEW YORK (AP) -Tbe stock mutet posted one of its stronsest advances of the year Tueaday u traders went on a post-Memorial holiday buyina ~ Analysts wd there wu no sinaJe piece of economic news to account for the surae. but said traders appeared to be bettiDf that interest rates are approac61na a peak for the time beiQI. • 'The DOw Jones a~ of JO industrials. which fell 10.31 poinuon Fnday,climbed 74.68 to 2,031.12. It was the second bigest rite in the Dow Jones indUJtriaJ avenae tbis year, surpeued onty by a 76.42 point pin on Jan. 4. Ga.inen swamped loeen by a ~n of nearly 4 to l on the New York Stock Exoha.ftle, with l ,200 I up, 322 down and 403 uncbanaed. Bia Board volume totaled 24'f.6 I million shares, apinst l 33.59 miUion millfon. in the previous session. The NYSF1 composite index rose 4.38 to 148.04. ~C411pl ~·,.teM,~ dM ""ill e/lu,l/IJ Call 842-6878 WH AT AM EX DID WH AT NYSE Orn NEW YOttK (AP) Mav ll Tlf , AMEX LEADERS GoLD Quo TE s NEW YORK (AP) ,,,.V Jl 1 ... ~ NYSE L l~Df RS NASDAQ su~~.1 RT . t·; New home sales show .. j 4percentApril boost · .1 .. .. , .,. ,g ·, _, . ' j . I s ' t I f c a • f ' p y ti g l< " n n I al bo n tt 81 c• n ~ ~t be tr s· •• C4 4• be ta ......... ,,, .. 1 AIUD (Marth 11-April 19): nebulous could t>t. ------------come .. vcr)' rq1.·· Terms will be outlined and de-- fined, you'll !tarn SYDIEY where you 111nd and whether or not o journey_ . is to ~akc 1111 , olatt. P1sc:es. Virso •••••II••••••• fiaure p;rominently. TAUftUS (Apnl 20-May 20): Emphasis on deadhncs.. power, a uthority, intensit)' of relationship. Someone failed 10 "(Orttet financial fi&urcs" -you'll be apprised of &hat error. Cancer, Capricorn people play roles. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): You'll finish what you started approximacely two weeks ... Compleuon of project comc1dcs with added recoanuion. putcr emo- uonal· stability, resumption of "romance.'' CANCER (June 2 1-July 22,: New outlook concerns employment. baste issues. opum1sm -rqardina health. You 'II also learn more about member of opp<>sttc sex who rttcntly confided "true feelings." Leo is in picture. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Dichotomy exists betWttn ambition and duty. For now, slick to what 1s familiar. fulfill obliption to family member. Emotion> tend to dominate -stnvc for balance. \t VlRGO (Au,. 2~Scpt. 22): You'll have more "workina FQ<>m.' Scenano hi&hh~ts social acuv1ty, popularity. '""itallon to traVel. You II be concerned wJth body imaae. &eneral appearan~. wardrobe. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Be willinJ to revise. review and to renegotiate agreement. Relauvc 1s involved. effort .. - 1s mack 10 embroil you 1n family duputc. Read be\Wttn lines. be positive concernina rules. rtaulallons. SCOllPIO (Oct 23-Nov 21): Be analytical. take nolhin& for araoLCd. discern motives. Guard pouns1on • a vmtor could be cattltst and break valuable vase. Prevent 11. Gemini. Virao. Sqittarius people fiaure prom inc~~· SAO ARIUS (Nov. 22·0ec. 2 1 ): Scenari_o h1ah· li&hts patience. dcterm1na11on. chann, pcBuas1veness. Domestic adjustment takes place. could include serious concern about rntdcn«. hfcstylc. mantal status. Taurus featured. CAPRICORN (Dtc. 22-Jan. 19): Perceive potential. streamline techniqwes. &Ct rid of superfluous matenal. Guard pm acy. refuse to be 1n11m1dated b} one who claim!> to "know 11 all." Communicate with one 1n home or hospital. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20..feb. 18): You recently pushed aside obltaa11ons -time 1s up. bill must be paid. You'll aet what you want in connection w11h s~ulat1on. romance. creauvuy But don't miss deadline. PISCES (Feb. 19.March iO>: M1ss1on 1s completed Transacupn 1s finished. know 1t and JCI "ofktagc " Focus on prestige. career. relations with media. Financial windfall possible 1f you "handle' with care." Libra is I0\.01\·ed. IF J UNE 1 18 YOUR BIRTHDAY you are romantic. danng. original. challcngina. ~nsual. stubborn. You also arc versa. tile. possess sense ornowmansh1p. seldom do anyth1na halfway and onen read more than one book simultaneously. Leo, Aquanus people play 1mp<>rtant roles 1n your life. Current cycle highlilhts domcsuc adjustment that could include changr of residence or marital status. Sorry, it's a wrong number DEAR ANN LANDERS: The new phone books will be out soon. Will you please tell your readers, Ann. to throw out all the old books., The telephone company goes to great expense 10 publish new direc· tones every }Car because people move and compa_n1cs change numbers. / I have a small business whose number belongrd 10 a radio station in 1983. l.&et phone calls from people ~t all hours for son& rcq~s .• They can t bel~vc they d1aleo "\he wrong number. When I told one caller to use the 1988 directory, he phoned back and used the filthiest language I've ever heard. Before the radio station had my number. a church had it (six years ago). I still get calls for Father Gonzales and Mons1anor McCarthy There should be a thcrap1s1 who specializes in helping 00'Plc sever their emotional ties .)llit~ld phone books. How about 1(. Ann? Start a trend. -WRONG NUMBER IN ST. LOUIS. DEAR ST. LOUIS: U tkls problem 11 ncla a Dabuce, Ute telepltolle compuy lllSt. L011lt tlt011lcl laucla a drln • lllMilre "' all .._ e14 plt•e boob. U &My effered U for every olcl book tamed la, tbey'd strip tlte towa. Slace A11 lMDEIS yoa live la St. Loelt, wily Ht vlslt die ltead of lite teleplaoae compaay ucl 11111est tlll1 prolect '! ' . . DEAR ANN LANDERS. I knew I had to 'Wntc to you when I read your answer to "Out West." the girl \\'hose mother slept with her father's shirt under her pillow aner he died. Many years ago we lost a precious little girl. She lived for five days and died of pneumonia. It took me several years before I could talk about her without breaking down. What hurt me most 1s that when I returned home after her bun~I. my mother and sister had rcmov~ll tracts of our prep. aratton'tor the new baby. The little bassinet that I had decorated w11h such loving ca~ was gone. So was the beautiful dress.el' and the baby cloth~ I had crocheted and s.:wn by hand. I know the) did 1t to keep me from further hurt. but 1t was the wrong thing to do. I wish with all m) heart that the) hadn't taken 11 upon thcmsehes to decide "'hat was best for me Everythin& about my bab) 1i. gone now. There is not a thread of an~ thing lcn 10 hold. I feel so empt) and cheated. -A READER FROM TEXAS. DEAR TEXAS: I'm 111re muy readen will laave leaned som ecalng today bttauae yoe were wllUag to bare yoar soal. Tbaak yoa for writlag. DEA.R &.NN LANDERS. A TV commercial for Jeans 1s so offensive to me and mam of m' fnends that I feel the need to 'wme to you about n The )Oungg1rl in the commercial 1s expressing s1rong disapproval of her mother in a defiant and d1srcspcc1ful manner because her mother turned off a commercial for Jeans that the mother didn't hke. In this da) and age. w11h so mall) parent·chlldren relat1onsh 1 ps strained to the breaking point. wh> would a compan} give crcd1b1ht) to such una('('('ptabk bchaviorll In fact. all the commercials for this brand of Jeans are disgusting. What has happened to values and respect., -P.\ULA D . SMITHTOWN. P<,J Y DEAR P AULA: Yoa took IM words rtglat oat of my moatla. Complain to U.e maaafaet•rer. SPRING CLEANING SALE! SPORTSWEAR-20% OFF Plus Additional Markdown on Supersavers (Already b elow cost) Something Special feminine fashions \\"' <,peuJl11t• 1n fashions lor tht> miss) hgure sues I 1 /\ ,11 .. 0 ~t•lt'<o 250 E. 17th Costa Mesa.• Hilgren Square • 045·5711 \ OrW1g9 Coat OAILY PILOT/T~y. May 31, 1MI .. TV L1s11NG S I &:oo I &:30 j 1:00 j 1:30 J a :oo I s :3o I 9:oo I 9:30 I 1 o:oo I 1 o :ao j 11 :oo I 11 :30 I ..._ OM C,,.... <"'-ti Kill ~ 0...,. lflG. 'ti) .. • ,_ Ncilhcr vulnerable. Soui.h deals. NORTH + 1' I l -; J 5 ( I 5 3 l • 9' 3 l ~T EAST + A Q 10 9 5 ' 3 + J 7 6 9 l ? Q 10 9' 3 '.> Q ;:, 7 ' • 1' I 7 6 • A 10 S SOUTH + Void 7 AKl 76 0 A K J 10 9 6 • Q J The bidding: SouUI Wat 1 ~ 2 • ' 0 Pass Pau Pass North Pass 5 ) Opening lead: Six of • Eas1 Pass Pass Ure imitates art, wrote Oscar Wilde. A few weeks ago wt re· marked that pessimists do well at the brid&e table. This philosophy was bi&f\lighted by the following hand from the recent Spring North American Championships in Buffalo. ,,..., ._ew .,..,, , .~ . .. Complete t ... vlak>n U...nga In SundaJ'• TV Piiot. ~ -· ... i ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~---: CHARLES GOREN care exercised by declarer. At the table we watched, Arlent Thompson, of Ft. Wonh. Texas, became declMer on the auction shown. West got her side C\ff to its best start with a club lead. Declarer ruffed the third round, and drew ont round of trumps, notin1 the fall of West's queen. Those who fore· saw no problenl'dr~ anochcr trump ACROSS 1 lllumlnatloo unit 5 Biblical petNrc:n 10 Edicts 14 The beSt 15 W.I il'and 16V__. 17 Edifice 19 Fir or yew .... .,.. 65 Reedy M SinQer . F~- 67 Satve 68 Sew 69 Unspoiled DOWN 1 Elloeed 2No. ..... ' • and then \tarted on hearts. Now :: they could ruff only two bcirts and, : because of I he S-1 split still had to • concede a hcan for down one. Thompson took the trump queen - at face value To protect apinst t.bc p<>ss1bility that West was short in both red suiu, she abandoned .. trumps and cashed tht ace-kins of t beans. When West discarded a :"t spade on the seoond heart, declarer ;"" was able to ruff all Lhrec of her bean losers. win& spade ruffs as entries _t back to hand, 10 mate ha contraC'l. ~ lnadcnl&lly, if you think Wesr's hand IS fat too strona foe a weak ! jump O\ercall, so do we! Note that ~ . East-West can tat c I 0 tricks at a .. t spade contraC1 as the cards lie. ": .. .... Becau" of the vaaarics of dupli· catc scoring, most North-South pairs played in some number of beans. Almost all were too high be· cause of the terrible trump break. Al some tables, however. North--.iiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ South reached five diamonds, and I .the result depended on the degree of 20 Mu.lc group 21 Eon .egrnent 22 W•bome 23 Sucdnct 25 Biped 26 Aurora 3 Cameo atone 4 Aally 5AW~on a · ammn - -~·· 1 B6g eJIC II • 8 The Kaiieer'I •<<1111>1 An Jmponant IM~ from Ann Jllllan ..• ''I feel good about myself ... "Following my double mastt>ctomy. I de· etded against reconstructlve surgery In· stead. I decided to ~ar Camp/ Amoena breastforms. They're unusually llke your own breast tissue They ~co~ warm with you and tMy're very pli~ They f~el hke a natural extension of FREE CONSULTATION NO OBLIGATION yours~lt. My choice IS Amoena APPUID OllTHOTIC SYSTDIS. ltd. br~astforrru . , I reco~nd . 1 .. 11 Ml. UfttleJ St.. Suite I th~m to any woman who's had a ,.,.......,. v ... .,. CA tn• mastect.omy." f114f,.1·77aJ YoU{re Invited to a . Class in Criminal Law . Western State University has«heduled a free introductory class in criminal law in south Orange County on TueSday, June 14, 1~, beginning at 7:00 pm. This popular dass is designed for those ronsadering a law career. Seating is limited and reservations are required. · For raervatlonl and illfOnMtion, all an admWlosw coaniftor tOclay at • • How dollar was named BJL.M.BOYD To that list of coins named after people. please note "dollar'· t ame (rom the German "thaler ·· lirst coined by a Bohemian ~1hersm1th named .. Th:ller •· A third ofthct1uarterho~~ art·~ 11~ d~~llcrs 30 tunmlflgbird 31 OYer1lhoe 3"' Simpleton 36 s..thllig 31 Gtazlng ~ ~·'Good~' 42 Sooner then 43 o.fMt « C..t 45 &py 47 Attide 0. 49 Ctrcutt 50 St ... abbr 51 W..._coctll 53 Mat.taxw.ll 55 Quit 56 Stwube e 1 Hou. lilt• 62 Cec.o 64 ()ppoilllte of 2 3 14 In Ffl>naary of 19<48. the < 1t~ of Woodbury. Conn.. offertd 10 one Daniel Gristus a Job as head of 1he town's rrbqr disposal dcpart}TleOl. He too it &ut onl} after the cit) 17 qrttd to Ii""' him the title of Su~nn1tndcn1 of Used Food Coll«· l10M Orpanmtnt . You don't think o( a robin a$ caml\OfOU but a1kr a rain 1t can cat u much as I •Httt of earthworms and that's ami\orous. is it not? Q Wbat•s tbr .. ,.~ 10 20 34 con\tf1 t.1k>mctt:rs to mile$! ,( Multiply ik k.ikMM"'1"S b· ~it 3t anddropthdastcbait. Rousblv. fftbc 1---+--+- spccdomtltt I 00 kpb. tf.afs 60 <4l m~.abola Q. How m.aitb •haSt\ff! A. bout nint pllon .. • 9 A Aocu·Mi 10 Of the.,.,. 11 A1raugeme11t bydeN 12 Fatened 13 a.rm.,, adn*'* 18 n-F'f 2•~ 25 Whwe V.a.tta Ill 26 Cub9d 27 Wonihlp 2a a.v•aoe expert 29 Egg dt1r'lk 31 ... SQl9 32 SpenWI don 33 Hurry 35 Van 3 7 Of tong ago 40 Prone 41 C>laelllll ,,.. '° Exlermina'9d 48 Kk*Ndl 5 1 Instrument S2 Ow'9 S3 Spirit ~ "Oemn Yank ..... glr1 SS Aon« 57 CMdlW 5e *"bue se~·pre1 IO Town. Outctt 83 Sc:f• Tm WAMD,T ClllCUS by Bii Keane· •Gee, Grandma, you sure took a lot different when you weal a wedding gown!" llARllADUKE by Brad Anderson "You have the wrong side of the bed, Marmaduke. It's Phil who takes you for your 4 a.m. walk." PEANUTS WELL. I LEARNED A LOT IN SC~OOL TODA'f .. I LEARNED ABOUT TRANSPORTATION GARFIELD BACK. rL£A5! LOOK! A HE. A COLLAR! S·JI T·• A.UMP - ACRE.S \o£1Qfr-~ FAT fAAM DENNIS THE MENACE by Hank Ketcham l6uessWAAT.~I ALLTHEMIR~IN ~HE HOUSE LOO< LI Kf ME ! II by Charles M. Schulz IF YOU MISS Tl-IE ~ 8US, '(OU WALK! ~ by Jim Davis • FOR BETTER OR l'OR WORSE JUDGE PARKER FUNKY wlNKERBEAK IF W£.~'1CLIMB1AA'f ~ uP m 1'HE. CE1ut-iG, WE'U... FL.VtJK PHC.>5 . ED! ' . by Addison -by Lynn Johnston by Jeff MacNelly I I IJ ft • by Tom Batluk I tr KIND OF Gf VES A Cl.WU: t.lE.w M~ NG -rD ANAL I EXAM . ' ,___.....,. by Garry Trudeau .5·31 l I I ' # 0 ................. ~~-.:;.': . .,.,, .............. ~ ...,.-----~-.,,.. IN MIWS • , I ' Nickels, quarte r&, keys, it's notjust small cliange Itaddedu to elp Terry Bryant keep his football dreams Theoc:as1on was the NauonaJ Football Hall ofFame awa~n­ quet for Orange Count)' athletes.an arena which puts the cream of coaches. administrators. formeut.ars and d1cn1tanes rn the audience and the be-st ofthecurfcnt crop on the dais fora bow It was here recentl} when Terry Bryant. thc d1minut1\CCosta Mesa H 1&h standout "'as d1st1ngu1 shed bc(of( an aud1en~ v.h1ch included his No I fan. his father. who was flanked b) Tell) 'scoach. Tom Baldwin. a nd his principal. Frank Jnfusino along wtth his mother .\t 5-fool-7 and 155 pounds \'OUr first 1mprcss1on 1s that as an athlete. he is a hghtv.e1ght wrestler. . But knoy,ingthat he had barged for 0' er l.()(X) ~ ards as a ~nior. your first quesuon 1sY..hat mal es Terry run., Well he·s been ru nrungsm~ he was a 9-ycar-old and 1fyou thmk ~ 7. 155 is small. )OU should have seen him asa 9-)ear-old RocE1 C11LS01 SPORTS COLUMNIST and v. here 11 reall~ staned forTelT) 8f) ana which has no w clll.!J>inated 1ntoan appo1ntml·n1 to the United StatesM1lttan \cadem) Pf(paratory School 1he fi n.sl ~tcp before West Po int "I can't remembere,actl) ... said Bl)ant oftha1 da) at St. John the BapMt "bul I "-e1ghed about 85 poundsandl"'a~aboutfi .. epounds shon. ma~ be more I v. as staning to grov. but I 1.1.aHttll about4-loot~ 11. "I hac,1 pla ~ cd J un1or -"ll--"men can football since the founh grade and each ~carat seemed e'Cf)O~ ~"' and I didn't gro"' a1 all m) pock.cu and they were ra.lly bu 1fa ng. I wassu rpriscd they didn't 5tt 1t. and I was really nervous." Sttll. Terry couldn't tip the Kales. So they sent him down the hall to fin up with more water and when be returned the decision must ba~ already been made. ~>sent him on with thereqau.I tnlllab on the form, althouah he d didn't reall) tip the scales. That's how 1t'sbttn forT~ Br)·ant.a )Oungstt'f"whosimply "'ould not takcno forananswerorbit lack of size u reaht}. T erT) told that story to the au-- d 1en~ at thC' Football Hall ofFame banquet and when he finished. he look.cd at his fa ther. Curus.and proceeded to melt the audience: .. I IO\.C )OU. dad .. Terr) Bf)'ant wascasllythe smallest ind1 .. 1dual of some 20atb-- lctes to be hono red lhat niJht. but (" ur11s Bryant was wrthout que5lioa the most en' 1cd man oftheevcnifll. - Bf)'ant and his Costa Mesa ieam- mates "-on1ust~ m 1987 -all-I• conquest of cross-t~n n val Es1aDcia 1n the opener ( ................. ._ ea.ta Ilea'• Terry Bryant wu a 1,000-yard raaher for h19 coach. Tom Baldwin. It was h1se1shth grade season at St John 1he Baptist 1n Co'ita \.tesa ... hov.e,er. which was the turning point "It Y.al>ge-t11ng toughcre-.. ef)' )Car and I came out abo.Jt a month late bccau~ 11 tooli. a "' h1lc to persuade ~ m ) dad to let me go out When I d id get in and "'ent to the Y.e1gh-1ns.1t v.as prell) ob .. ioulov.hat I wasdoing. ··1 had kc)!>. nickels and quaners in In that game his 81-yard touch· down run ga ve the MuSl.1~114-0 lead and put them in thednver'ueat the rest of the ni&hl .. It was an audiblcandeveryooe (Pleue -ID8A .. ,... Dailing Lakers' dilemma: Another dogfight Red So.ri St'J• ~es Clear sailing seems to be a seventh. tf ftCCCSSlf)' at the Forum Cllhcr champ1on.acknowledgedthat he hadhcwanted to put s~o~n ,j,,I. Saturda)'or Sunda) "'inoneofthetwo most rcccntgamcsinDallas and C,~ ~ Do. d:gieri'S something rrom the past forw~~~~1~t~~~~ a~l~n~;nt~~nc~~~~·s~~: ~~~~a~~~~ ~&!;a~:~ rt~~\:~~~~~~ to Halos Mets cap ture 3-2 victory over LA in rain-delayed game NEW YORK (AP) -Ron Darting allowed six hits in 81f1 innings and the New Yorlc Mets beat the Los An&cles Dodgers 3-2 Monday night in a rain- delayed game between division leaders. ~ 4- The Mets. who swept a thrcc-pme series in Los A~elcs last weekend. ended Tim Leary s shutout streak at 2 j innincs. 0.ve Magadan. the first batter affer a "34-minute rain delay in the third. hit an RBI single and scored T h e schedule AWAY Tonioht-New York, 4:35 o.m. • June 1--New Yont, 4:35 om • June l-ldle. HOME June 3-Clnclnnatl, 7:35 o.m. June ....-ClnclnMtl, 12:20 o m. / June r-<:lnclnnatl, l:OS'o.m June 6-Houston, 7:35 o m June 7-Houlton, 7:35 rt.m. June 1-HC>Utton, 7:35 o.m. • On TV. Channel 11 / On TV. Channel 4 • AH oama on KA&C, 790 on Darryl Strawberry·s double. Darlin&. 6-3, struck out nine and walked two. He has has made 11 starts and gone at least seven innings in each. . After John Shelby hat his second homeroftheyearwith two outs in the ninth, Randy Myen relieved and &ot pinch-hitter Mickey Hatcher to Oy out., eamina Myers his eiahth save. Strawberry left thepme in the fifth after irritating a tendon in his ri&ht sroin. G~ making his fU"St appear- ance at :shca Stadium smce a suspension for throwing his bat at Mets pitcher David Cone. constantly was booed by the crowd of 42.096. John Shelby's fourth-annina double extended his hitting streak to l 5 . . Titans capture South @J.onal • ---came tO play well and LA came to pla} well The home<oun advantage with a second-game loss at INGLEWOOD (AP) -The Los Angeles color of the uniform dOC"S not ha .. e an}th1ng to do home Lakers. seeking to bccdme the first team in two with n. It 1s whoever pla)s well ·· . I "With Utah we were down 2-1 and 2-~ 1s _If_. -----=----- decades to win two straight NBA titles. aren't Whatever happens. Dallas f(tums to 11* ~est belier:· he said .. We're m a better position now Clemens picks u p surpnscd that what appeared to be a breeze to the Coast with renewed confidence. than we were in the last senes I expect us to play finals was rudely interrupted in Dallas. 'The attitude on the team nght now 1s grea t... belier 1n L \:' 5 2 victory with .. We knew this scri~ would be a dogfightJUSt Ma,cncks center James Donaldson said "\\.c Dallas Coach John \.iacleod said the founh-- like Utah." sa1d 89ron Scott of the Lakers. who came ho me and acromphshed v.hat "-e h•d to game '1ctorf (i.as cnucal. 7th COffi n}ete game needed seven pmcs to get by the Utah Jazz in the accomplish But we suit ha'e to wm a game in LA ··\\e kneYt they wa.nted to go mto the next ~ • conference semi-finals. "You usually don't have much of a chance of game 3-1. It was the biggest prne for us all vcar Los Angeles was dominant in the opening two coming back from an 0-2 dcficll... because 11 1o1.alo the swing game for the Lakers. ~ By IUdlAaD DUNN games at the Forum against the Mavencks. rolling ,,. "I think we can take this intensity into LA." Lo!i .\ngeles forward .\ C Green said the ~,...eow, 4 6 to 113-98 and 123-101 decisions. But the Dallas forward Sam Perlcins said. "It looked I.Akers JUSt have to get rolhng again. although he Mavcncks came back. with a 106-94 victory in dismal after G ame 2 I think the attitude 1s added that the homccoun ad\'antaec may not It's difficult lO sa}' that a pitcher" is Game 3 at Reunion Arena and evened the series different now. We'll have to lf')' to do the same mean a lot. . hcadedfortheHallofFameafteron.1y Sunday J IS-104. things even though we won't be at ho me.·· "We·vc got to show some cons1stel1C) and four big leagues· seasons. Game 5 1s at the Forum at 8:30 tonight. The Lakers Coach Pat Riley. who a )car ago persistence·· he said .. It's not hle an expenenced Roger C lemens may own sixth game will be back iJ) Texas on Thursda} and guaranteed that Los A.ngcles would repeat as team to brc~k dov.n hke that ·· Cooperstown tf he conttnues al the same pace. Oop~! Detroit's try ~f alley-oop muffed Celtics· Johnson hits .... winning free throw· with 0:08 left. 79-78 PONTIAC. Mich. (AP) -Dennis Johnson broke a uc by hitting one of two free throws with eight seconds left and the Boston Celtics evened the NBA Eastern Conference finals at 2·2 with a 79-78 victory over the Detroit Pistons Monday. The wrnning free throw was set up when Adrian Dantlcy, anempt1nc an alley-oop pass. threw the inbounds pass into the basket, giving Boston possession with SO seconds left. Johnson then missed a shot that Kevin McHale rebounded W1th 26 seconds remaining. After a timeout. Isiah Thomas fouled Johnson in the open court. and he made his second shot after missing the fU"SL , Joe Dumars. the hero of Game 3 with 29 points, was shon on a 12-foot jum~r just before the buzzer, and Robert Parish rebounded the miss. givina the Celtics back the coveted homccoun advantage they lost in Game I. Games 5 and 6 arc scheduled for Wednesday night at Boston Garden and Fnday niaht at the Silverdome. The seventh pme, if n~. would be in Boston Sunday. Boston, winnen of I 6 NBA titles. is ~kin• its fifth strai&ht trip to the championship series. The Pistons have never been to the final series in 31 ytars an Detro•~ althouah the franchise made 1t twtcc when It was located in Fon Wayne. Ind . Bill Laimbttr led all scorers with 29 points fOr Detroit. while Larry Bird had 20. Johnson 18 and Mc Hale I 5 for the Celtics. Boston held Detroit to I~ points-ill the first 19: 15 of the pme. but led o nll 18· I 4 with 8:23 left in the first hal . . Danny Ainge then hit thrtt 3- pointers and Johnson one in the next 5:20, leadj na a 19-9 spun that gavcthe Celtics a 37-23 lead with 3: 13 left. The Pistons finaJI ) picked up the scoring pace after that. cuttios the deficit to 46-36 at halftime . ...Dctroit was I 2-for-4 l from the field in the first half. or 28.8 percent. Laimbttr had 18 points. ha.If of Detroit's first-half total. and was 7- for·9 from the field. The rest of the PiSl(>ns were 5-for-32. With Laimbttrsconniseven more points. Detroit opened the second half with a 17-6 run. Thomas. with Sill points durin& the spurt, finished it with a steal and layup, givina the Pistons a SJ.-52 edge with 6: 13 left in the period. Detroit ~red the last et&ht pofots of the third quarter. the first six of them on free throws. to lead 63-60 1oin& into the final 12 minutes.. Bird, who missed most of the third quarter because of foul trouble, scored the first seven points of'tbc fourth ~riod. narrowin1 thedefiat to 68--67. But DcnnisRodmanscorcdon a fast-break layup. drew Bird's fifth fouJ and converted the frtt throw for a four-point Plstons lead. • The Boston fireba.llef displayed his usual brilhantt Monday bdott the second IAl'JC'St Anabeim---&adium crowd of the season. 46.598. as the • Th e schedule HOME Toniotit--Boiton 7.35 om • June 1---tdle AWAY June 2-MllwaukM, 5:.35 o.m. •. June >-Mllw•uk•, S:35 o.m. • June ~auk•. 6-0S o.m. • J une 5-Milwaukee, 11.35 a.m. • June 6-Tens, 5:35 Oft\. June 1-Texas, S:lS p..m • June 1-Tex.i. 5:35 om. • • On TV. ChllmeC 5 • A• oemn on KMPC. 710 ... . .. -\ Tanlree problems minimal; Piniella Ian 'ta distraction Pnm n. AIMdaW Prill SEAlTLE -New Yott Yankees • maN11er Bilty Martin ~ his diviuon- leadina team woo't be 'd11tncted" by former rnan•r Lou Piniella·s surprise annou.nct"mcnt that he's steppina down as l"neral man.qier. .. We've been distracted before many umcs," Martin said. "This is not aoina to distrad us.·· • The players learned of Piniclla·s announcement from members of the fM'dia Sunday ni&ht and then went out and beat the Seattle Mariners 7-3. ~ They won two oftbree pmcs in Seattle before movina to Oak- land to meet t.he American Leaauc West-lcadJn.a Ath1e.tics in a tllree-pme series tqinnina toniaht. The Yankees lead the AL East. John Candelaria, who im- proved his record tQ. 7-2 Sunday ic.....;..:;._.-.. ____ .J night with a fivc--innin& ~r- PlaWla fonnance, said he wished Pin1ella well. Candelaria s1aned with the Yankees as a frC<" agent not Iona after Piniella became GM. "I hope thinas work out well for Lou, .. Candelana said after the pme. ··1 hope he made the right decision. I hope he gets to do what he wants to do.·· Piniena•s resignation, which still has not been acknowledscd by owner George Stein~nner. came just 46 pmcs into the season. After Sunda> night's victory, the Yankees were 32-15. their best stan since 1958. PinielJa had said earlier Sunda) that he had resigned. but the team refused to confirm that. ~nno_uncina onl> that a front office rcstructunng was unminent. Piniella said Bob Quinn. the Y'anket"s' vice president for baseball operations. was named the new general manager. Before th~ game, Manin labeled as .. ridiculous" speculation that Piniella's rcs1gnat1on was due to a personality conflict. .. We haven't had any arauments ... he ~id. Piniella and Martin reponedly had had their differences this season and. on Sunday, Piniella told The Associated Press from his borne that "Billy's not the easiest person in the world to work with." Later in the day, Piniella said that "as far as the manager 1s concerned, you know he's not the easiest person in the world to work with at times," but added that Martin was "not the reason I'm stepping down .. Quote of the day Martial Navratlleva, the Czechoslovakian defector who became an American citizen, over her upset loss to Natalia Zvercva of the Soviet Union at the French Open: "The loss was particular!l_ di51ustil)I for me.·· ~ · Col iseum rema ins available LOSANGELES-lfvowinginterest ti] rates interfere wtth the Los Angeles •II• Raiders' move to Irwindale, the Lof" Angeles Coliseum Commission will &ladly reopen nciotiations to keep the NFL team playing in the Coliseum, an official said. However, speculation on future talks is "prcrruuure" because "the Coliseum Commission res~s contractuaJ agreements entered into by the Raiders or anybody else," commission attorney Marshall Grossman said Friday. "If for any reason the Raider-lrwindaJedeaJ comes un&Jucd. then the Coliseum Commission would be dcfighted to have discumons with the Raiden." he added. "The Coliseum Commission has valued the: Raiders as a tenant and certainly the public interest would be wcU served by discussions of a continued relationship." Last Aupst. Raiden owner AJ Davis announced that the National Football League team wouJd move to a new stadium in Irwindale, 18 miles east of downtown Los Aoselcs. That followed the collapse of plans to renovate the Coliseum. But increasina interest rates could pose an unforeseen obstacle 1n financing the project, according to some repons. Syrac use wins NCAA crown SYRACUSE, N.Y. -Attackmen Brook Chase and Greg Bums each scored twice dunn1 an eiaht-soal run as Syracuse won its second NCAA lacrosse cham- pionship in six years with an 13-8 victory over Cornell Monday afternoon. It was the second time m as many years that Comell lost m the tatle game. Bums. a sophomore, finished with three pis while Syracuse also 1ot t~ pls aptccie from twins Gary and Paul Gait and Jim Epn. The top-seeded Orangcmen finished their I S-0 season befott the larsest crowd ever to watch an NCAA lacrosse pme. Gary Gait's two aoats pve him 70 for the season and the U.S. lntercollqiate Lacrosse Association D1v1sion I record san&&c season scorina record. The old r«ord was 69. set by Arizona's Evan Davis in 198S. Syracuse. whteh became the first host team ever to win the national championship. grabbed a quick 2-0 four minutes into the pme on scores by sophomore Gary Gait. Tim Goldstem pve Cornell it's first pl seconds later. The fim quancr ended 2-1. Olue started Lhe Syracu1t spree with a aoaJ 20 seconds rnto the second quarter. Within a minute Syracuse had extended its lead to S-1 on i.llin by Rodney Dumpson and.Bums. Bonon·for Billy Vakon ch m INOIANAPO~ -lilly Vukovich 1111, the first third,._,.tioa driver in lncuan.a~Jis 500 history, was oamtd Rookie of the Year at the annual Victory Dinner Monday n~t. Vukovich, 24, finished r•lh in Sundar·• race. tbe only one amona five flnt·ye&r 1tarten 1til ~ni"I at lbc end. "l can't believe I won it Four otbcrl deserve It IS much u I do-" Vukovich said. "Our pl was to win it (the award) when we came here. You're only a rookie one time. It'• bJrd to put into words what it means. I always 11t'Onderc:d iTI could make it here withouta bis sponsor. It wasahwaysa dream. and I just hope I can come blc~ and do 10mc more." Vukovich, the hiJhcst finisher of the rookies. comr.lcted 179 laps. but.he WIS far from satisfied. ·we ran OK. Nothinf areat. Had some trouble in the pits a couple of times. he said. "We went as far as we could 10. We had about 1~12 t.aes where we sat in the pits because the motor W<>uldn t fire. Other than lhat we really never sot the car aoina as &ood as we like. Maybe nut year. "Our aoaJ. was to ti nish in the top IO." he said. and then he blamed himself for falli"I short. "I killed the ena,ine 1n one of the pit stops. That cost us two spots." And even thou&h Vukovich was the only rookie runnina at the end, he said that was more other people's bad luck and his own aood work. "Ever) body kind offell out there." Vukovich said. Indeed: -Dominic 9obson, the fastest rookie qualifier 1n 500 history, dropped out when his coolant failed after 145 laps and finished 18th. -John Andrettl, the third Andrett1 to qualify in 1988, ran as high as seventh before blowing an engine on lap 114 and finishing 2 lst. -Tero Palmroth. the first Finnish dnver to qualify, dropped ou1 when his engrne failed afler 144 laps and finished 19th. -Rocky Moran was knocked out by engine failure after 159 laps and finished 16th. Vuko•1ch 1s 1he 1h1rd generation of his family to race at Indianapolis. His father. Bill Vukovich Jr .. was Rookie of the Year in 1968; his grandfather. Bill Vukovich. won Indy 1n 1953 and 1954 and was killed while leading the race in f95~ English s occer team arrested MANNHEl~Mest Germany -21 West German poh arrested the entire 1unior team of th ristol Rovers' English soccer club after he youths rampaged in a local di~otheque. a police spokesman said Monday. The 17 youths. most aged between 17 and 18, were arrested early Monday after smashing windows. flower pots. adveniscmcnts and other propeny at the discotheque and nearby streets, the spokesman said. The spokesman, who requested anonymity, said the youths got "slightly drunk" at the .. Music Circus." a large discotheque an the Mannheim suburb of llvesheim. about 40 miles south ofFrankfun. They caused damage wonh about $1 .750. The soccer players spent the mght at a Mannheim police station. were released at noon Monday and flew home later in the day after payina bail. The pohcc spokesman said a Mannheim pros- ecutor was invcst1gat1ng the case and was expected to charge the youths wrth damaging property, an offense that usually draws a fine. Gulch repeats; 3-ho rse spill NEW YORK -Gulch became only !'i'J the second horse to win the Metropolitan Handicap two years 1n a row when he came back in the stretch to beat Aflect Monday in the $586,000 first le& of New York's handicap triple crown. . Ridden by Jose Santos and carrying 125 pounds. the 4-year-old colt matched the feat of Forego 1n 1976 and ·77 in winnina the event two straight years. The purse of $351 ,600 raised his career caminas 10 $2,384,881 . Additionally, three jockeys were injured in a spcctaeular three-horse spill in the fim race at Belmont Park.. The accident occu.Ted when lrnanair, with Olril Antley aboard. fell shortly after cntcrina the stretch in the I 1-16 mile race for maiden fillies on the outer turf course. Television, radio TELEVISION 4:30 p.m. -PRO BASEBALL: Dodgers at New Y ortc: Mets. Channel 11. 4:3S p.m. -PRO BASEBALL: Pittsbuf'lh at Atlanta. TBS. 7 p.m. -BOXING: Michael Nunn vs. Ron Jack Daniels in a I ~round middleweight bout. from Rcseda, Z Olannel. 7:30 p.m. -PRO BASEBALL: Boston at Anccls, Chatinel 5. 8:30 p.m. -PRO BASIETBALL: NBA Western Conference finals Game 5 -Dallas at j.a~ers, Channel 2. RADIO 4:30 p.m . -PRO BASEBALL: Dodgers at New York Mets. KABC (790). 4:30 p.m. -PRO BASEBALL: Padres at Philadelphia, KFMB (760). 7:30 p.m. -PRO BASEBALL: Boston at Ansels. KMPC (710). 8:30 _p.m. -PRO BAS~ETBALL: NBA Western Conference finals Game 5 -Dallas at Lakers. KLAC (S70). WEDNESDAY'S TELEVISION 6 a.m. -TENNIS: French Open men's and women's quanerfinal matches, from Paris (fivt hours. delayed), ESPN. 11 a.m. -HORSE RACING: EQalisb Derby (d~laycd, after tennis). ESPN. 11 :15 a.m. -PRO LUEBML: Cincinnati at Cbicqo Cubs. WGN. MISSION PIPE & SUPPLY. CO. Since,,.. BATH COLLECTION Free COilMaJtatJon Featuring 1nt~rnat1onal Designs by E!jer Eget comrniss~ trurnatlonaly famous dnigneri to create bath- rooms fort~-TheSe bah dt-- 11,gns, Nice me one shown above, are now Pf'eri'M«~ In cu ShoW-room. .,.. J _ ,'Swllldell chalks up his lOthvlctoi)rof ea n Orf& SwiAddl aDoWed no hits over ~ Uaai1t11 Uld became the m.jor ae.aues· first 1 ~ winJI!« a tbe ~veland Indiana ddetled the Kanm City ltoyab 4-1, an Clevda.Dd. Swindell. JO.I. walked tbe lne betWbe fMled. Kat Stillwell and then rcUrid the .at lO bat9n ·t.elore Danny TartabuJI liniled deealy to oe11w whh two OU1 in tbe sevcoth. TartabUll lheft camt U'OUDd to ~ oo oonleC\ltive liqb by Kevin Seimr ud!!!ICbon. The 23-year-old Swindell. who was IMl leUOO. save up three bits, tlNck out three and one but bad to leave the pmc after the aevmtb initlna witlt a stiff' left shouJde.r. DouaJona allowed one hit in &he ftnal two inniqs 10 earn his 11 lb ave. Julio Franco extended his bittinaauut to II ~es. the loaeest this sea,on in the ~ot ae.,ua. with bi1 fourth homer and a ltouble. .. Ebewhcre in the Amcric:an 1.Qaue: A.aw.tin a. Yutees I: In Oak.land, Dave Henderson led oft'tbe bottom of the 14th innlna wttb his sixth bome run of the tt.UOn over the centet·fidd fence and the Oakland Athletics won their sixtb straiaht pme, beatina the New YM Yankees l-l. Hendcnon connec1ed off'Steve Shidds, 0.2. who bad pitched three perfect inllinp. Oakland relief1et Den9is Eckersley. 1-1. the A's Jiftb Pi &cher, went two imri up (or the victory. '--- The Athletics tied the pme 2-2 in the ei4hth with a run off reliever Dave Riahetti. Jose Canseco u~ with one out and scored when Dave Parfter•s POiie to lef\- ccnter bounced off left fielder Rickey Hendcnon's &Jove for an error. Canseco. who was running on the pitch, scored easily.. -· Oakland staner Bob Welch pitched nine innings. He gave up 11 hits but only tfi<> runs.. Raacen I, Twllt1 I: In Minneapolis, Jeff Russell allowed six hits over eiJht inninas and Larry Parrish had a two-run double as the Texas Ra~ers defeated Minnesota to end the Twins' ei&ht-pmc wmning streak. Pinsburah Pirates defeated the Atlani. Btaves. PlllWa '1, Pdret t: In Pbjladdphia. Juan Samuel had three hits and drove in three runs as the Philadelohia Phillies rallied for four rum in the sixth innina and beat ~ San Dieeo Pldn:s l\iabl for their founh consecutive victory. Ex,.. s. Glut1 l : In Montreal, Tim Raines hit a two- run, two-out sinaJe off Atlee Hammaker in the n'ioth in·nin.c to cive tne Montreal Expos a win over San Francisco. the Giants• fourth strai.aht loss. .htros 5, C.rdlaalt 4: In J.fouston. Glenn Davis broke a tie with an eiahth-innina homer and Jim Deshaies allowed five hits in eifht inninas. leading the Houston Astros past the St. Lows Cardinals. Russell, 4-0, making his third stan of the season. . walked three and struck out five. Dale Mohorcic pitched * * the ninth. Ben Blyleven, 3-5. lasted only 4 1-3 innin15 but Atllllkl >-Y-*~ 2 MllrtMn 4, Ortlln 1 struck out five to move past PhiJ Niekro into seventh HWYOIMC •••• OMUt1D •••• .... ""'°'"'•••• ••TTU •••• place on the aJl-hme strikequt hst with 3,343. •-• '• 1 1 '--"'•• • • > • Gerftw1• > 11 • c.ttod • • 1 1 Brewen 4, BIH Jay1 f~ In Toronto, Teddy Higuera, . =: : : : : :!rl :; ; : ~,.:!" ! : : ~ .!'.,:'~ ! ~ n who missed his last stan because of back spasms. ~~ : : : : =:,~ : : ~: ::.': '{: ~: :=:. ! I I: scatteredsix hitsinseveninninpandBJ.Surhoffsjn&Jcd WWl9Nrl "" .......,, u1 1 .......,... •••• ~-"" home the 10-ahcad run in the fifth inning with one of his =i: : n: =:'c ; : : : ~c : : : : =·~ ~ ~:: four hits as the M1lwaukee1Brcwersbcat the Toronto Blue :.:':' ! : : : =: ; ~ ~~ • ... : : : ~: •-,. "• • Jays. ....,.._ 1 ... • I. I T-•• , 4 Mariffn t, Orioles I: In Seattle, rookie Rich =::." : : ~: .-. ._... 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"'& ...... _, a.... -ett .,_. 0-0.. .._ Ital -""""' <II ...... - -tt•-1 ·---· I...,_ L09-f,wl 0-.,....,. ... -oo....ta 01. ~ •• ... ... ti.. It ......... . ._ .... Loe-ii . .._ t. ........ ~ ~ s..w. ..... . S J9 Pa*@ ii• t• ~ (II, ~I ... II-. (f) ~"­Go..4t (111 se-GV-lltt, ~ IC),..._ (QI ,_..__.,I W ,_ ...... IM> • .,_. 01 ~ • M ..... ............. _ ...... wi.--U·' SM t • S J t ~U·• I 1•1 1 • 4 I a ·--I l-J t t I t 1 •~.. ., tt-J t 1 I I I ~· I I t t t I ....... "D a 0.... w,.t t S • 4 I 1 ...... W,t-1 t 1 I J I t °""'91 s, • 1 • • • • 1 w oa 11• .. UINitiw ••••• w... ,_...., ...,._ Un•• tllfM. "*JP , .. L. ~. ~~ ....... ~.~,::--TllH. - MARTIN GETS BOOT FROM DIRTY UMPIRE Edison, Woodlfrldge at CIF Orange Cout DAILY PtLQT/Tuaday, May 31, 1988 MESA'S TERRY.BRYANT. hCMaBl Oidcd ilup. ~1uch wasrarT."nalltd Bryant. '"lJUst went off riaht tackle ~nd maducu110 the nfhta Ii ult. but It v.as Pft't1)' much a spnnt " Ht fin1)hcd v.uh 151 yardi.on 17 ca mes. ··At the ~sinn1naoflht )CU m) m11n 1oal was tu JUSI &el through the Stas.on alive ·· i.a1d Bl) an I .. t had so man) inJurte'> before <fractured pch 1s 1om !..net" ligaments). I wasn '1 cHn surl" I wuld pla> 1n our first pme·· It wasn't un11luamc 5or61hat he rtah1cd I IX)(hardi>"'asobtaanable and he d1dn ·, gl'."111 unttl ht' last carT) of the ~ason net 11 ng I OCll vard'> on 205carncs - .. I wasdrearninKdbout all-lc.-aguc.'' adm11s Br) ant hut I d1dn'11hink that "'a~ n:.tli~11, lndcc.-d Bn;rnt "'d' .in all-league choice 1n thl' Pal rfrl C oas1 League the l·nd ufa liHHa\\ "'hie h began as a frcshm.rn "'hl·n at 'l'i pounds with knee truubk hnl1dn'1 pla) at all Ht "-J'>a I I .,·pound !K>phomort' on 1heJun1unar"1' '>tarteda1cor-Terry Bryant nerbad .. a'J l41J-poundJunioron1hc 'a~11' th~n ''l·1 11hn.l1~tamc a'>a ~n1or pnt l' "J\ ,,.., J l ll.'ptanle al the prep Slhuol Edleoi:a Blib•• 8te-.e Arnott (left) and 0.Ye Moore were Gabe Pate of Woodbrlqe. Moore and Amott lMt in the compettna lD CIJI' lDdlrida.al tennla Sata.rday, u well •• aemlfinal• u dld Pate and teammate Randy hey. The IS I-~ ard hur-.110 l rad open the Estam 1a ~Jnll· "'" vnc ul thc: bag h1ghl1ghh Hn,snt ,·an )1111 rec-all telling h1nhdt I m not going 10 let thl·mlJllhml ··t "'al>l'\utcd dbou1 ho"' l did 1n fOl1tbJ ll by1 I realized I had 10 go to college: Jnd I had "" m\ cus an one ba$kt°I hnJrd So l"'asn'tcn11rcl) ha pp) until I "a~ accepted at prep school ~ , MoroR S PORT S Butlorlnrdinant "'hohua room lu ll l•I mn.IJIS av.ardsand m~ morJll1lra "h1d1 has accumui<lled ~rm' ., prep '>l hool 1s a one-) ear shot fur )• horn around 1hc nation each )c:ar .,.,,t sanc~clus1vec1rcle. one "'hllh indudes Woodbnd.&c Three in the bank, but .. . Penske still coming up a big winner 0\(~rlhc H"CH' hl' had a da1h, h1ghlighi OI JU\I \Ulttng up and 1t'll conunue th1\ IJll "'hen he su11s up at L'S\1 \Prep 't ou!>« Br,antd1dn tJUSl"-Orkat bccomingJ I ooo-,ard runncrto bctomt'Onl·11! l'itoga1nanathlc11c scholarship hl' "'url cd in the clusroom 1110 v. here he de' eloped a High r.J1mm' Burke A.bout 10w11l not make lhl.' grade The balanccaocs on to \.\ c~t Po1n1 the following year. ~ But that'<, hardl) the end ofth15 !>h>n Mears knows it could be .. . grade point CJ\ erase ofJ 84 ..\ lu1 of good things h.a'c come Br) ant's v.a.., '>1mpl~ because he H'c II be lOmpc11ng 1h1s fall and he promised h1sdad. ·-rm go1n1 to play 1ntht' .\rm~-"'a'} Gamesomeday and I Jm going to be the st.a.n1ng ti:lllOOl k. \OU II Stt .. He h as captured Indy three times. but three others were so c lose INDIANAPOLIS (AP)-Though he says he d~sn't dwell on 11, Rick Mears 1s very aware has third ln- d1anapohs 500 victory could have been his fifth. may~ his sutth. "I do think about that from time to ume... he said Monday after the trad111onal picture-taking at the finish hne "In my makeup, you think about something like that for a while. then you go on to other things." In 1981 . Mears had one of the best cars in the race. but ended up in a hospital instead of Victory Lane when he was burned in a pat fire. In 1982. the Bakersfield driver pu1 on an incredible finash1na spun to catch Gordon Johncock, but wasn·t able to pass him and lost by Just 0.16 of a second -,the closest margin 1n Indy history. Rick Ileen possible 10 "1n JUSI about ever) race "-<' run ... Penske Ractni. 0" ned and d1rcc1cd b> Roger Penske. now has an un- precedented sc-.cn '1c1o nes at the lnd1anapohs Motor S~d"a>. The) got their latest tnumph Sunda> by ne,cr giving up on Mears. desp11c an 111-hanehng car that cost the dn \er a lap early in th<' race "We 1ry to be patient."' Mears ~1d "Instead of leaning on the thing and pos-;1bl) mak1na a mistake. and I did make some. we decided to stay back and work on the car On 1hc third (pill stop. "'e took some wing out of the front and after that the car was tine "It Kcms hkc the maJOOI) of our \.lctoncs art' that "a). It Sttms to be our philosoph) You spend the first half of the race gelling to the second half. and the second halfgeu1ng to the finish "In the tir~t half. )Ou use that umc to test You Ir) 10 put together your ~st combina11on for the last ~cnt in case )OU ha\C a shootout Ytstcr- da~. we didn't need It .. INDIANAPOLIS 1-'\Pl -Despite all his succC\i. at lnd1anapohs in the past 20 )Cars Sunda) 's race still had Roger Penske spooked until the mo mt'nt Rick Mears took the checkered flag "'an led 11 bJdh l.'nough and rcfu~d 10 accept an) thing k~s Hcndm1t'i ho"'e'l'r theh1ggc-;1 rm noi $uggcstangan)onegooul and ~I un 1ha1 -but I wouldn't ~t aga1ns111. e11her Penske awoke from a troubled sleep a1 3 a m. Sunda) -c1lht hours before the stan of the 1.:!nd ln- d1anapohs 500 "'OrT)ing that the da> ANGELS LOSE, 5-2 ... From Bl could be-come as he put tt Monda) ~01 the t"<>-t1mc () Young -'\ward "the biggest disappointment of m) v.1nncr 'lloho's on course 10 cam his life .. third s1ra1ghl. something no olhcr Instead. the owner of the most p11chtr has e'er done successful 1eam 1n Jnd)<ar histor) Clemens 1s 8-:! with a I 82 ER-'\ On was relishing an unprecedented thc road this season he's 6-0. Da11ng sc' enlh Ind) 500, te\Or) and a third back to last $(pt 20. Clemens 1s 9-0 in place as well has last nine road stans · But as his )Cll ow-shincd ere" He p11chcd a four-htt shutout 1n hts scumcd around him closing down the last stan against Scattlt'. but his string team garages al the Indianapolis of 30 1 scoreless road innings came 10 Motur Spcedwa) Monda>. the man an end in the third annina Monda~ his team calls "The Captain" was "\\hat can )Ou sa> .,.. Boston Man- alrcad) thinking abol!l. winning next ager John Mc"'lamara said "You wcd..'s race-in Milwllfi'l(kc don·1 sc-e a ~tter pitching per-· Pcnslc did. however. manage a formnncc than tont&ht or this )car. C\c.:r did ha'c an opponunity 1n the SC\ l'nth (,eorge Hcndmk wu thrown ouJ at the plate trying 10 score from h baS( o n Jacl Ho"'cll's double. It would ha'<c tied the game, but Boston walked av.a) clean ~fore M"ocll\&. twtce IO the c11hth to pull IWI) 'That "-&S the kc) s11uat1<ln .... Clemens said "I reahzed I had to F dov.n and concentrate after that Hendnd. h~ttattd ~tween Cin< and second after the hit and took an c'\trcmcl) wide tum around third ~fort" ~ing gunned down at the plate Q-6-~ li11lc 11mc to reflect on Sunda) ·s race ~sades Stttng a periect p me It was "Somcth1na could have hap-one of his great p1tchin1 per-• pencd .. he said with 8 shake of his formances of the }car·· 4MGaL MOTH -Mmn ....._, ._ head "Things went 50 well here all Clemens wasn't so high on himself duO, 1oto • wi.ci-'" 1ne June 1"7 "'• Irr 1986. Bobby Rahal and Kevin Cogan crossed the finish hnc ahead of Mears., wi th the Penske Racing d river third, less than 2 seconds behind the winner. the opponunity to win so man> umes Mears. 36. wound up bea11ng Emerson F1111pald1 by onlv 1 076 seconds after the Braz1han "as first pcnali1ed two laps for passing under a caution nag. then had the penalt\ resc1ndcd. month1hal"'c"'ercthtnk1ngaboutall .. M~ an\ICI) was runnina high and I =.,,.~: :=: ~i.....::-1_:*',.i: the 1h1ng.s that could go wrong \\ c madt° some bad p11che-s t°tirl~ .. ......._ 9lle 1a-Yoeer-o1c1 Melli-11 -" e'<cn tool some p1ecc-s out of1hc can ( kmcns said ·-rm happ) the pme io °"'01.c1ec1 "'~ K"9dUIM '° MntdNtt A.J. Foyt and Al U nser both have won here four tames. Nobody has won more. Mears, who won Indy 1n 1979 and 1984. said he 1s amazed that he had "To be abte to come to this race and actually be compet1t1vc enough to win is few and far betw«n:· Mears said "We've ~<'n compet111vc enoufh to win more than five times "It s this team. They make I\ ''The 1cam was living me spills and I knc" "'here e\ Cr) b<xi} "'as." \.tea"' said '.~ I I th d ..._... d IOt ,,. u s ()lvmc>< ..... teem Nini -and Knt them to Cahfom1a for was c osc a c en ~use it ma c ~ Olv~ '" s-a ~ ~ .., hardcnmg. JUSI 10 be sure ·· me bear do"'n and rcall) concentrate """"-p,, .. H'lll' kNlll 111 o.-,.. .. He n~n·1 ha'c womed. on finishing up the game ·· ~ ~~~ ~ --c.: o\fter sv.ecpmg the front row in He usualh finishes what he st.ans sw. ~ c..1it ....... .,..,1•• q ualtticataons. ihc three Penske Rae-Clemens lca.ds the o\mcncan League IMO of!""*..,'"" .. ""'"· -Mc:lt"" '*• th I 16 t k H h vwel •C>W Molldev U the No I Mier II "'9 Women'• sport. camps UC Bcrkcle)' will host two spora summer camps for youna women 1n1res.1ed 1n either Volle) ball or Basketball The Basketball camp is iaulffi b> Bcrkele) v.omcns Basketball coach Gooch Foster and is divided up so that &iris. bcpinina or 1Jv1nced. can attend t~ procram nJl'.'t for her The Volle)'ball camp .-111 take place the Wttk of July l I ·Au1us1 4 Cks1aned 10 help all levels of pla)'crs. there 1s a special "chtc" <"amp sched- ualcJ this year For more anformallon on either camp. call (415) 642-2098. The San Dicao ~ns Foundauon will hold its annual fundra1S1 nl niaht on June 24 at the San Di~ Marriot Hotel and ballroom The mt.ht's lllnenry will 1ndude an on t~ beach coc\tail (>9rty, Siient al.ICllOft, d1nntt and I h<ve aucun dunna dinner. The~ will ali<> be an awardt ~nta11on as ~II as danrina '1111 mwlnishL · The ~ of the Blld· Tic 111\tr stan at S 125 per person and JO up. All proc.-ttds ao to the OcCllftt Founda11on to su~ ift proarams in manM awateness. tduc;auon and ReteJ~h. Fot more inf'onna11on call (619) 237-122 1. .. -.. • .. \I . Flsblng Tournament On Saturda' thr \1arhn t lub "''" host 11's annual Just for the llalrbu1 fhh1ng tournament s1an1n1 at 6 a m The cntf) ftt 1s S I~ for a<luh\ and S 1 ~ for· )'OUlhs I 6and under En11') 1s open 101he scncral public and the compel lion IS for Ha libut causht bet.wt'cn 6 a m and ~ m lx-lwet'n Ocrans1dc and Pl Ocsca) no There 1s also an pnzes St'I 10 be mcl To obtain en Newman anb d1nnrr and raffie cd that da> informauon call C hns United 1V•1' golf tourney The United Way ofOranac Count' will host it's W ... t'nth annuaJ solftoumament Fr1Ja~. June 10. al the' Mile Square <toll (nurse in Fountain Valley Subaru of Amenca will sponscr the c'cnt and the chairman will be Subaru rcpn"scnllll'<' Ron Murphy The entry ftt 1s $55 which w1ll 1nclude can. baa of"Joodttt" and dinner There will also be compeuuons for closest to the pm and the chanct" to win an au1omobtle for a hole 1n one For more 1nformauon call (714) 841-5300 Adoption Gulld Tennl• ing dnvc~ -Mears. -'\I Unser and w1 s n eouts c a.s mort' ..-~. ~.,... • -1KI ~ Dann} Sulh,an -led 191 of the 200 shu1ou1s 15) than I:!. A.L tams. leac:h •ecoro or-,....._ tNs -. •• s-.i.,, laps anaMt"a~ and L'nscr finished the league in ER.\ and innings ~7,,r.~..=··~,,.:..,: :-:.i ~ ': first and third pitched I 1041 Lef•-fleld9r ...... ""'*"*· ...no ,_ "Ob' ioush. that's lhc bioocst r.ac-( lcmcn~ "11o1ll turn :!.6 1n .\ugust. ,1.r1eo rrw r.n1 1h....-11eC1t1M et nw c:tuO'• • .... 1 "'h1ch 1s almost S(..'lln """Oft P4neo "' "'' 1.000!tl _,_ Mondll• • mg Sulccss our team's ever had It ··\\,.had a chan,..'to beat him. but ~~ T-a.mwt l\as ~.,,..,.. • staned al the t>ci1nning of the month '" "" ... .., ~"' ~, .. flelcl .,_,., tlblti and "'e sustained the momentum all "c d1dn'1 cap1tahze." said An~ls :::' .. ":::!:.:'~":'ct.:.:..;:.-~!, -:C::J the wa> through Manager C ool1c RoJ&s.. "I don ·1 think is O.Y O•YbleO h" .,... ,,.... <H I ,.. "Lcadino 1<)2 laps has 10 ldl ~ou th1s"'asoncofh1sbes1da)sthrow1ng. '•ct Miil• ......._ 10-11 laf>lgt\I !7.lS11m> 111 • -either.. ,.,. -'" •ncl '-'-'encl n..eie n. AnMll )ou'vc got 11 under control. Bui. 1n .... oro ~..,.. •or • --..,... ,_... racing. so man) things can happen Ro1as might be in ltm1tcd l'Ompan\ c••Y ,, o •• Mll-w•IAM Mid Teaas ......,,.._ y ou nc' er m m plctcl y relax u nt ii It. s p;;"';,;;;' t;,;;;h;,;;;t;,;;;h;,;;;a;,;;;t ;;;'h;;;o;;;u;;;&h;;;;t;;;;T;h;c;A;n;g;e;ls;. ;h;o;.."';-;;;,on;;""';;' iii-iiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-il O\ er .. I Sulh,an. ~ho dominated the first half of the race. crashed after an aluminum fastener that stab1lt1c-s the front v.ing snap~ off That chmina1ed mul h of the downfol'C't' on the front as Sulh,an st.ancd 1n10 a tum. and sent the rar 'iltdang into the concrete bamcr "That's the l)pe of 1h1ng \OU · alwa)s worT) abou1:· Penske said ..And Al had the samt' problem The front wing stab1h1er bent and "'c had a Iona pit stop late 1n the racc that cost ham second place .. Sutt.. 11 was JUSt another Penske da~ at the Spccd"'a'. where Mark Donohue first P ' c him a '1<'10r) in 1972. Smee then. hc·s won" 1th \kars in 1979 and 1984. Bobb\ l n'ie'r in I Q8 I. I Sullivan in 1985 a~d ·\I l 1n5t'r 1n 1987. -Moral victory went to Baker . -- tNDIA.NAPOLIS (~Pl -II moral v1C1ontS tount,..for an)'th1~ score I owner R. Kent Bak.er as the wtnner of the Indianapolis SOO. Ht dtd 11 has i ~ Don't ml•s the boat. If you're thlnkhig about a trip to HawaU~ soon. our Sunday. June 12 Travel section la . for you. •• The doSKion Guild of Oranar County 1s way. I bo&d1na n's 27th annual doobln •~nntt tour· With ftO raci"I cxpcnmtt. more Or -if you're fflJlng good• or Hrvk•• that Hawall-boun~ folks can use -thle aectloa'• Mmenl It vuious local1ons thl'O\lfOUt Orlntt nlOlllC than money Ind a l-ycar~ld • C'Ojtftt)' Ma)WS..JO Ind Jt.1ne 4-S. car Balter locked boms wtdl the il'he 1ouma.~n1 11 tht tartnl doubles tour-aoltatbs ol Indy -Team Penske. na1Mn1 in tht Unutd Sca.tt'l and 11 •all btnn11it Newman-Husand Pltrid fbcina - lilt Holy f1mt1y ScfvK"n of Onus County and still wu s&andinsat the fink)\ TMrc •~ 2S div1s1on1 of play l'ft4 fiistoncamy· W ... ..... "" ... W ... ~\ .. nc)lldcd some oft~ bHt talent in trnni1. ha 1 ettW uut .am 'pllCL lw To obi&ain more information caJI Eilttn borrolfed J*1S. Wit.b • l..ola C0t-Cil'abam at ( 714) 76CM 170. --~ ND as h miles as pos11ble to ..... ._ _____________ ~ l\O&d 1laf' ud 1taf. Will' a driver named Pbil IC.tt'*1 ~did C~f')'· thins Mt-* lode boua. Wi.. ..,...n ~ reed about Wcr·sWybifoi'eSacllQ..~ud ~~ .. '° .. . bilb ""°little~ ud ... Wen ~~·roeallUedoatlick lil'S °" GaotiM Airy • .tt'ft"t -lib 'ltOctY' Of ~ bit it~ ii nict to a.~ ·peOllll relplCt .,..:r tai4. ... c:aa WOft 11 --. a dly "'1 odMf Mlnct1 And MMe ......... -.. lliaa dollarl. )'tit ......... "' fl dd .. CIQ to•Ybodl'tbt. .. IUt il\Wa ._ 1~an '"'wax ... be ldde4. rd be Ml ha • II fori you. too. . Especially since 1 f-3 of all Otaa.. CoMt houMhOlcla take three ot more ~ o.t1ll1 th• 10 .. r '8 stat .. MCh year. CaH Today : Or ... C.. DAILY PILOT/ T'*day, May 31, 1"8 w 3S 2S 24 22 22 20 19 WD'I' DIVISION L ht. GB Llt StnO 14 .714 7-3 Won 6 23 .S21 9111 S-S Won l 23 .SI I 10 S.2 Lost I 27 .449 13 3-7 Lost I 28 .440 l 3'h S-S Won l 27 .426 14 2-8 Lost l Re .. Any 16-7 19· 7 U-12 10-11 14-11 10-12 10-IS ll-12 l 1-12 11-16 11-IS 9--12 31 .380 l6'h 3-7 Lost 2 8-16 l l-IS New York CleVeland DeUoit Mllwauket lolioil l'oronlo Baltim ore EAST DIVISION 32 16 .667 7-3 31 18 .633 IY> 6-4 28 19 .S96 3'h 6-4 26 23 .S3 I 61/2 6-4 24 22 .522 7 4-6 21 29 .420 12 4-6 I 0 39 .204 22'h 4-6 • Mo.day'1 Soeret Boston s. Qleb I C1evdand 4. l<ansas City I Teua 6, Minnesota l M ilwaukee 4, Toronto I Oakland 3, New York 2 (14 innings) Seattle 4, Baltimore I Only pmcs scheduled Lost l Won l Lost 3 Won 3 Won I Lost I Lost I 16-8 IS-8 12-9 l S-11 14-12 9-14 7-16 T ... y'1Games Boston (Smithson 0-1) at Aqeb (Fraser 4-3), 7:35 p.m. Kansas City (Gubicza S-S) at C1eveland (Farrell S-3). 4:3S p.m. Cbicaao (Reuss 2-2) at Detroit (Tanana 8-2). 4: 35 p.m. Milwaukee (Bosio 6-S) at Toronto (Stieb 6-3), 4:3S p.m. Texas (Kilgus 6-3) at Minnesota (Lea 1-3). 5:05 p.m. Baltimore (Morpn 0-S) at Seattle (Nunez 1-1 ). 7:05 p.m. New York (Leit~ 4-2) at Oa~land (Ontiveros 3-l ). 7:35 p.m. Wed.aesday'1 Gamet New York at Oakland, 12: 15 p. m. Baltimore at Seattle, I: 35 p.m. Kansas City at C1eveland, 4:35 p.m. Chic:qo at Detroit, 4:3S p.m. Milwaukee at Toronto. 4:35 p.m. ~ nMinfte90ta. 5:05 p.m. Only P!"CS scheduled . National League WEST DIVISION 16-8 16-10 16-10 11-12 10-t'O 12-1 s 3-23 . ,,. " L Pct. GB LIO Stftak Home Away Doqen 27 19 .587 5-5 Lost I 12-12 15-7 Houston 27 20 . 574 'h 5-5 Lost I 17.-7 10-13 San Francisco 24 26 .480 5 4-6 Lost 4 14-13 10-13 Cincinnati 23 26 .469 5'h 3-7 Lost 3 12-13 11 -13 San Diego 17 32 .347 I l'h 4-6 Lost I 13-15 4-17 Atlanta IS 31 .326 12 4-6 Lost 2 5-17 10-14 EAST DIVISION New York 33 IS . 688 6-4 Wo n I 14-7 19-8 Pittsbuflh 30 19 .612 3'h 7-3 Wo n 3 18-7 12-12 St. Louis 2S 24 .510 81/1 5-5 Lost I 13-12 12-12 Cbicqo 24 24 .soo 9 6-4 Won I 10-12 14-1 2 Montrca! 23 24 .48-9 9'h 6-4 Won ~ 14-9 9-15 Philadelphia 19 27 .413 13 MHday'1 Scores 5-5 Won 4 11-10 8-17 New York 3, Dod1en Z PittJbur&)t 14, AllanLI 2 Chicqo 12, Cincinnati 3 Montreal 3, San Francisco 2 Philadelphia 7, San Diego 3 Houston S, St. Loi.us 4 Today's Gamet Dod..t.en (Sutton 3-3) at New Yortc (Gooden 8-1 ). 4: 35 p.m Cincinnati (Soto 3-3) at Chicago (Nipper 1-2), 11 :20 a.m. San Francisco (Reuschel 6-3) at Montreal \._B.Smith 3-3), 4:35 p.m. San Diego (Hawkins 4-4) at Philadelphia (Palmer 0-4). 4:35 p.m Pjttsburah (Dunne 3-2) at Atlanta (Glavine 1-6), 4:40 p.m. SL Louis (McWilhams 3-0) at Houston (Knepper 6--0). 5:35 p.m W~y'1Games Doclcen at New York. 4:35 p.m. Cincinnati at Chicago, 11 :20 a.m. San Francisco at Montrul, 4:05 p.m. San Otqo at Philadelphia, 4:3S p.m. PittsburJh at Atlanta.. 4:40 p.m. St Louis at Houston. 5:35 p.m. ·-.. •• •• AUTO JtAClNG "AKAll -18' a..... --l lllftft) ........ ~ .... CONCORD, N.C. (AP) -Tiie wdar of flnlalt with drlwr and atwtiN -'lion, llOmalown, melt• of mr, NIPs and Pl'lre monev: 1. 15) 09"r911 "W•ltriP, Franl!Nn, Tann .. Olewolat, 400, S10USO, 12U.0 mp11 1. (Ill RUllY Wallace, St Loull, Potttlac:, •• 156.CZS. J. (" AJM Kvtwlc:ki, Grwnflald, WIK., Ford, •. m .100. 4.. (1') er.ti Iodine, Cllamunt, N.Y .• FOl'd, •• WJ,)IS. S. (1) 0.WY Alhon, Huevtown, Ala., Ford. -.~.-. 6. (lt ) Ken $dlradtr, Fenton. Mo., Cllav· , .... , ... SD.tOO. 1. (,.) Rldly RVOCI, Chft•••ll•. Ve., ll;ick, "'· 111..-.. t '2} ""' ,..,._, Detroit, Mlcfl .. "Oldl· ,,...., ,,., 115.5'0. 9. CJI Twrv L.Mlente, CorPU\ Cllrlltl, Taus. c........., "'· m.-lo. (ll6) Gtw s.dts, Mattltvctl, N.Y .. Pon· ttec, ....... ... II, C1•1 Ken ~d. Fltd!Ol6t, Miis.a.. f'erd. JN. .. .325. l2. CJ7) Jimmy Meenl, Forftl Cltv, H.C , ~. '"· 112,7il 11. (7) OM E~t. ~,,Ille, N.C.. ~.JN, 112.7'5.. I'-(211 8000v H91n Jr , Midland, Tex•s. 8u!O. Jf'J. t ll,00. IS. 1301 ftlcrlerd l"atly, ftlllldlaman. N.C .. '°"'lee· Jn. a lUIS 1 .. I Ill ltvte Petty Hlvfl Point, N.C .. Ford, J75. ,,,,., 11. (4) 8000y A•lton, Hur/town Ale., lklldi, xs. su.1• 11. (}01 Rick Wlllon, a.rtow, Fie .. Olds· moollt, JSJ, S13,JSO. • It. (6) lllt Etlloll, Dawson ... rlla. Ga .. FOl'd. *40. 117.200 2t. (U) Joa ftullman. UPiand, Oldll'n&Dlla, •• '5,!00 n < 151 LAil• s-ci. JKalOt\ Mnl .. Olds· moolle. D . MAGO 22. (ZJ} Ernie Irvan. Modelto. Ct.wOMt, nl, U,'51. 21 (22} Mk:tleal ""1riP, ow-Goro. ltv . "'°"'*· lH. S1 ,400. I&. <21 Geoff 9odlna, c'*"""'· H Y • Chev· ,..., Jlt. 112.100. a <•> INnllv ,._, E_., N c., Ford, ........ M. '161 Morean sn.tierd, cono..,, H c . ~m.a.-11. (20) Sl9r1lne Merlft. ~. T-.• OldM" ••••• 247. .. ••• • (J2) E.Ollt l lertd!W•, S.n Alltonlo, , .... °'" 71111. 24, u.-. If C27l ""NV ..._, ~.,._, M.C .. Oldl I 1' , M . IS,J9D a Ull ...,.,.. Oettt. Tevtan\1119, NC., ~.D1,ll,M J1. CMI """1fty Harton. ....,_.,.... H.J .. ,.,.., -12.-. lndY soo Winnen -Wl~av Harroun ltlt-JM Dawwn 191rJIAn Goult ltl._._ Tl'lelma1 1'1s-R•lllfl o.P•lmll lt16-C>Mlo ••••• lt17· 1~ reca, World W•r I 1919-+4owerd Wiicox 1920-GatlOfl Olevroeat 1'21-Tommv Minon tm-Jlmmv /lliurWI"' 1'2>-Tommv Mitton 1'2...-LLCorum and JM eo.,... 1'2~• OaPllOlo lm-f'renll Lodlhert 1'27--<0eofM SOvOar1 lm-t..ouls ~ 1,,...._.•v l(aecti 1'30-ellY ArllOld lfll-t.oub ~ l~rad Frame lJD-Loub ,,,..,... 1'34-ell Cvmmlnos 1'3s-Kalv Petllo l~ovfs ,,..,... 1'37-Wllbvr SMw 1'3t---Flovd ftotltrts l~Wllbvr SMw It~ Shew lt4~tovd D•.ifl end Mevrl Rose 1942·~ r~. Wortcl Wer II ·~·--,,.,~"'' ·- 1'41-Maurl ·-194'-elll Holland ~Jot!Mla Pvaons 1'51-l.• Wallwd 1951-Trov ttvumen ltS)-9111 v vkovlc:tl Sr ltSt-elft Vvllovlch Sr. lttS-Bob SWelkert 19~•1 Flehitf'IV ltS7-S.m Henks l~Jlmmv Irvan 1,,,_.0d!IW Ward IHO-Jm Ile~ 1961-A.J. FOV1 l~OdNI' Ward 1"3-f'erntlll -'-t 1...._A •• t Fov1 1"5-Jlmmv Cler1I 1~reflem Hiii IH7-A..J. F0¥1 IHI lloMty U1t1« "'~ AnOretll ·~ UMar 1'11-AJ Unur 1tn-Marll Danof1ua lf7>-<iordaft JoMcodl ,,,._Jofwwly •""*1or~ 1'7~~ ,,, .... .iollMY le""*1iaird 1'17-A..J FO'tl • 1'7t-AI "'-...,,....... __ Main 1--JolWIY RUlfMlrford 1tll-9oOOY Unw nm-Gor09ll Jaflncedl '91>-T.m SM¥e ~.. Mew'I 1"5-0INW ...,.,. ,,.. ..... llaNi 1"1-.\1 UMlr t•-tUck MIW'I .. ~ ' . .. y AM11atcAN L8AeUll •N S.S,._..I CA.&.1Ha9M •rUll J ... 11 JI • ' J. t 1 I J ., ... t. 1 ' ., .. Sv ll 50 1. .. 1. • 1 ' 1 • ••• •••• .,., •• 11 4 0 I t 1110 I01t I I 0 t •••• •rt• •••• 1111 1 ••• n t • 1 ...... °""*'' W,1·2 ~ ~trvL.2·4 Clitlurn Minton H•r,,.v • ' 3 3 1 0 2 t 0 0 J I 1 1-3 2 2 2 2 I '2·3 0 0 0 0 2 P&-Mlllef' T-306 A-..,Stt. NATIONAL LEAGUE Mets J, °"""' 1 LOS ANG•LH NaW YOIUt s .. 211 ~ 0 2 0 Ovll&fr• cl MlO•vls rt 4 0 O 0 kllmn 211 Gii>'°"" l 0 0 0 "'"9dn lb GU8f'rtr 91> 7 I 1 0 Slrwbrv rf M8rsl\I II> 4 0 0 0 Wlllon rf Shelbv d 4 l 2 2 Mcltvtds " Sclolcl• c l o o o c.ner c MHlchr 111'1 I 0 0 0 HJQtlln ~ l.ndftn n 3 O O o Myers P L .. rv P 2 0 l 0 Ellter u HoltonP 0 I 0 0 ~P HMC> Pll I 0 0 0 I( Hrnd2 II> Cr•ws P 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 ) I 2 0 4 I 1 I 2 0 I I 2 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 • 0 0 0 2 1 I 0 0 0 0 0 l 0 I l 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Tltllh n 2 ' 2 T9'11b a J 4 J Ln Allel'ft Safe bV .......... 111 Oll-2 ,._ Yen on •• •-> G•me WIMl119 Rll -MllNdan (2) OP--Htw Yon I L<>&-Lol ~ S, Hew York 7 ?&-SH. l!l.8ckmen. Str•wbtrrv. Shelby Hlt-$helbv m SI~ m. HJOlltlJOll (7). Let All9llM L .. rv L,4·• Hollon Cr-s NawYn O•ninv w.•·3 Mv«s s,a IK-L .. rv 2. T-2'50. A-42,096 ~ " ••••• so 52·) ' l 3 s • 1·3 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 I 0 • 2·) • 0 0 2 7 2 ' 0 0 0 0 Antlb .....,. KMdule Tues , f!Mv 31-eoston, 7:35 p.m. F rl , June ll>-K8'1MI Cltv. 7:35 P m S.I, June l~MMI Cltv, 7':05 P.m. ~. June 12-K-• Cltv, 1:05 P.m Mon , June 1)-t(anMs Cllv, 7:35 p.m Tue&., June l._Te1tas, 7:lS P.m. Wed., June IS-THas. 7:35 P.m. ThurL, June , .... TexH, l:OS p.m. Fri., June 2t-Mflweutt•. 7:35 P.m. S.t .• June li-Mllwauk•. 7:0S p.m. ~ • June 2'-Mllwauk•. l:OS P.m. Mon.. June 77-N.lnnatot•. 7:35 P.m Tun , June 2' M!Melota, ,..lS p.m Wtd , .. June "':-M~t•. 7:35 p.m Thurs .• Julv 14-0atrolt, 7:35 P.m. Fri. Jutv IS-0.trolt, 7:35 P.m S.t .. Julv 16'-0etrolt, 7:05 P.m. Sun . Jvtv 17-o.troll, l:OS p,m. Mon .• Jvtv lt-TOl'onto, 7:35 p,m Tvei, Jlh ,._Toronto, 1:35 p,m Wed .. Julv 20-Toronto, 7:lS P.m Fri Joh 2'-<~. 7:1S P.m Sat , Jvl\I 23-<le\INnd, 7:05 P.m Sun . Jvtv 2t-<lrt9!8nd, l:OS P.m. Mon., Jvtv 2s-oall18nd, 7:35 p,m. Tues, July ..0.kl8nd, 7:35 p.m. Wtd , Ju>; 27-0.!Uelld, 1:05 P.ITI. Fri., Aug. s-<hlc;ffo, 7:35 p.m. Sal . AUii 6-<Nc.HO. 7:tS p..m Sun , AUii ~. l:OS P.ln Mon.. Aue t-SNllla, 7:35 P.m. Tues. Aue . ._,..,He, 7:35 p.m. Wtd., Aue. 10-S..llle, 7:35 P.ITI. .. Fri., Auo. 26--He* York, 7:35 11.m. Sal , Aue. 21-+lew Yorll, 7:0S p.m. Sun , Aue. ......._ YOl'll , 1:05 p.m. Mon , Aue. ~lmcwe, 7:35 P.m. Tun.. Auo. »-lalllmora, 7:3S Pftl Wed , Aue. 3 ........ llmora, 7:35 p.m. Thun.. s.t. 1-eo.1on, 7:35 P.m. Fri., Sept, ~toll. 7:3S P.m .. s.1.. see>t. ~on. 7:05 p.m. Sun., seot. ~IOI), 12:0S P.m. Tue&.. s.t t>-«enws Cltv, 7:05 p.m Wed., Sept, 1.-..C.,..t Cltv. 7:05 P.m. Thvn., S.t. ls-KanMs Cltv. 7-0S Pm Fri , s.t. 1..,_Teus. 7115 P.m. s.r . S.I. 17-Taus. 7:05 p.m, Sun.. $aot. lt-Teus, l:OS P.m. Mon.. Sept, l~Aw•vll•. 7:0S p,m Tues .. Sept, 20-Mllweullaa, 7:05 P.m Wact., See>I. 21-Mffwevll•, 7:05 P.m. Tilurt' Sept. n-MI~•·· 7:05 p.m Fri., Saot. 2>-Mlnnelot•. 7:05 11.m. S.t • S.Ot. 2~nnnol•. 7:05 p.m. ~n. s.t. 25 MIMetole, 1:05 P.m. Ded99r'I .....,. ldledUle Fri, June >-ClnclnneH, 7:JS p.m. S.t.. June t-<lnclnnetl, 12:20 P.IT\. Sun .. JUM S-Cfnc:llW\811, 1:05 p.m. Mon • June ._.._!Oii. 7:35 PAI\. Tue , June ~totr. 7:35 p.m. Wed , June ~. ~ P.n\. Thur., June ,......_ton,_1:15 p.m. Fri , JUM 17-SM Dlt90, 7:35 Jt..IT\. S.I • JUM lt-S8n DlatO. 1:05 p.m. Sun , JUM 1,_Sell OlatO, 1:05 •.m. Mon., June »-Allenle , 7:JS P.m. Tue.. JUM 21-Allallle, 7:35 P.ft\. Wad., JVM 22-An.nte, 7lH P.m. Fri., Jlh 1-0llc:MO. 7:)5 9.m. Set . Jlh ~. 7:15 PJft. sun .. JVN ~. 1:05 •.m. /Nin., Jib ~St. L.ovb, Sc10 •.m. TUI.. ~ r4t. Louil, 7:35 P.m. Wed., UY 6-St. Lauh, 7:>5 PJl'I Fri., Jvtv ~1Mlur8'1, 7:35 p.m S.t.. JUI'/ f-ftltt*-'"'· 7!05 p.m Sun.. J""' ~"""""'· l:Oi p.m Fri., N/1¥ 2' I lauttoll, 7:35 •.lft. Set.. Jliv ........,..Ion, 7115 p . .m. 5'#1., '411'1 )~loft. 1:05 p..m. Moll., Au9· l-CtllldMell, l:IO •.m. Tye~ Aue. t-<lnclnnefl, 7:JS P.m. Wed., AW • .>-Clnclnnetl, 7:35 P.m. ,rl., Aue. 12-San Frttndtco, 7:3$ P.m. S.I., Aue. l>-Sen ,rencltCO, 7:05 •.m. SIM , Aue t~ Frencltco, 1:05 P.m. ""'°1fl,, Aul. 1~ F'9fldlc0, 7:)S •.m. Twe., Auf. '6 ~•U1Yl'lle, 7:.U Pm. wee.. Aul. t1 f'tlla ''" l'lle, 7:35 o m. :niur •• Auf. " ,., ... lsl1'fl, 1:05 pm. Fr1., AV& 1' Mentr.i, 7:JI •·"'- kl , "-»-Mclfttr•. 7:0S • m. lull • Aue. 11~. u•s o.m. #ttlt., Aue. ,,......._ Y~. 7:15 •.m. T•, Aue. 2>--New York, 7:JS DJft. W&d., Au9 2........., Yen, 7:15 P.11"1 Wed s.f, 1 lloultoft, 7:JS D.11'1. '"""" ............. 7;35 •.m. ,.,, • ,.., ~·· 7:15 •-"'· let., s.t. ~1. 1M •.lft. Suft., s.t. U-<lnclnNtl, 1:05 pm. ,,.,.., ... ,,............. 7:)5 • m. Tua~ S.. 11-A .... 7:)t o.1'11. '#eid # s-. , ......... ?:» p..m. W.-, S. ,,_... ...... JIM Ml. TM .. S. ......... Dlille, 7":JI DA ..... s.c. ~ ,~, 1:11 D.lft. let., ()(I ...._ ffrelldtce, t•• •A 1u11. oa . .--,,..._, t• M'\. HollyWoOd·Park.resµJ.ts for Monday ... • , Titan ploked off cat State Fallerton'• Ralph Ramires wu caV.Cbt off tbe ~ at ftnt u Tau A a: 11'• Jim Neumann appll• tbe taa darm, claam- plonahlp aame of tbe NCAA Soatb Re- 111ona1 MMbalJ mamaaeabt ta·= 111.u. It wu tbe ODIJ tJdDC tbe .Jfttam mteeed on way to 8-3 Ylctory clalm Soatb R.onal dtle Monday. c;....,. NCAA TOUltNAIMNT (~ nmlllltllll) NOllTHEAIT •IGIONAL ............. c-. .,..,.....,, Mav 116 Clemson l , FOl'dhern 2 Clt lnnlnvs> e MHfl St .JoM's S, d l Kentuekv ,.,. "" 2 StanfOf'd 7, FOl'dhem S (Forcni.m tllmlnaltd) ...... .,. M9y. Rutoen '· Clemtoft l Ktntuckv 12, St. John's 6 Clemson 11. SI JoM's I (SI JOfln's etlmlnattc:tl s.Mlv,May1' St•nford a. Rull*"' I (Rutoen ellml118ted) Kentuekv I, CtemSOfl 0, II lnnlnv, susp • r•in> ,....,,Mn• Ktntudtv a, Clemson 7 (Clemson etlmtnettc:t) St•nfOf'd '· Ktntudl v S Sl•nford, .0-22, VL Kentucav ••• ,. llAST RllGIOMAL At TlllMa.UM, '1a. ...... y,M9y2S Florld8 7. George Mason 0 Florld8 St•te 10, Stetson 3 .,,..,,...., Mav 116 Tulane I, North CarollN St•le 0 StetSOfl 2, Georoe MllSOfl I (Gtoroe Miison t1imlneted) Pttey,Mnfl N Ce1ol1M SI 13, Florld8 3 Florld8 St a. Tulane • Florid• t, Tvtane 5 (Tvl8ne ellmlnaltdl s.rw.y,MayJI Stetson 4, Ill C•rOllM SI I CN.C Sl•le etiml1111ltd) Ftorld8 t, Ftorld8 SI 3 ~v.M9v1' Stetson 7, FkM'ld8 SI 2 (Ftorlde SI etimlnetadl FlcM'id8 a, St.,son O. Florida adnnces ATLANTIC R•Gte*AL At c.ret GMllH, ..... w....-v.M&yJS Geortl• Tedi 9, Vir91nl8 CommonwNllh 6 Miami, F18. 4, T-Stale I T11wM&Y, -·" Soutll Carollll8 3, ..i-Madison 1 Towaon Siii& '· V• Convnon-tth 2 CVCU etlml118tedl Prtdey,Mayfl Georvl• Tech 7. South C•rotlne 6 Miami, F18 , "''-Jemn MHllOIW. POd .. ••in Slltunl&v. Mav • Miami II, ~mn ~ t (Jllll'ln MllcliSOfl etlmlnettc:t) South C¥Oll118 5, Towwn SI I (Towson SI etlmlnetedl Miami, F18. •. Georela Tactl 1 Soulldey, Ma• 2' South C•rOllllll 5, Geortl• Tech o CGtorel8 Tedi etlmln8ttdl .Miami, Fl8 10, Soutll C.roll118 3 (Ml8ml advancnl IOUTM R•GtOMAL At Mlub ... Slit ... MbL Ttwn:dlv, ,._., 116 Middle T-.SN Stal• 3, Tens UM I Mississippi St••• 7, Western Caroline • ,fWav,MIYfl Texes Aa.M a. W Caro4ll'l8 ' CW. C.oltne etimlneladl • Fvllef'ton Stele •· Mluourl 3 s.t1r9y,,,,.., • Mluovrt 10, Ml6dla T-. • Fullerton SI. S, MIUIUINI St I Mississippi St. 12. Mlddla Tann • CMlddle Tenn. ellmlnetad) SUM9'1, MIV 2' ,, Tax•• A&.M '· Ml&s«lrl 2 (Mlssovrl etlmlneted) Cal Slete F ulerton 5, MluJuiPPI St. l 112 lnnln91, Miu SI. llltnfnelecl) ~ ..•.• Cal State FullWIOn '· Tues A&M l (Cal St•te F ulltrton advanc91) MllOW9ST •tOtOMAL At ,.....,,OMa. T'llWMltY, Mllv 116 Wlcl'lll• St•te 4, SOUltl-tarn L~ Oklenom. State It, McNMM Slete 4 ,.....,,Mty21 L.ovol8, c•. a, ArbMas > McNaala SI. 11, SW Lou1Man8 4 (SW Lovltlene atlmlntttdl Sltunlay, • ., • Ofllellome St. IJ, Arunset 7 (Al'llensas etlmlnalecl > Wkflft• St 10. LOYt11a ' LAVOie 12, McNaeM SI 4 (Mc:Hefte St ellmlftated) • s.twwv,MavJI Nev.·Las V•Hs 2, EVllMVltle 1 ~dine 11, Cent. Mld\'°811 a Cent. Mlch'9en 1, E"'8Mvllll ' (EveMvlll etlmlneltd) S..v.Mn1' Arlrone St 27. Nev.·Las v ... 1 a INev ·Las Vegas ellmlneted) P9Htrdlnl 5. Cent. )Aidll9all 4 ( 1• lnnlnal. cent Mlchl08n e11m1"'1ac11 · Mlll*v,Mlv• Arlr-St•t• II, ~Ina •· Paoclaccllna vs Mione St. (Cl\emOlont.tlfp), ,...,_ __ ~celeee STAT9 PINAU Cat UCO s.a.manto I, llanc:ho S«llleoo • flOOTBALL ' RAMS' 1JtHl9fTIOM SCM•°"LI Sal, JlllY 30-<:lnclnNll lall0811. ll:JO •.m. (Centon, Ofllol Wad., t-ue »-Oanvar 8ronco1, 7 p.m. (hOme) . s.1.. Aue. lrSM Ola9o cn.roen. 1 P.m (hOme) S.t .. Aue. 20-Hovston Olten. 7 P.m. lhOmel Fri . Aue 2.-s.n Oltoo Cf\aroen. 7 P.m IJKk ~v St8dluml HIGH SCHOQ Or-.. Ceun1Y Al·Stw Geme C8t Or-.. c.lt C....., Mf I I SOUTH ALL·ITMS ( M11ac1M bY on.. C.... s..rtlwrttan I .~. Bret JoMson. El Toro, 6-1, 175 Oan LMw. L81Une leac.h, •·I, 17S ....... la9c*1 Rldlv L_., lolle Gnnde. H , 215 K•IHPtl Carter, EdlSOft. H . JOS John Burns 111, Mission Vlalo. s-10, 175 Rotltr1 E. Laa, Sent• Ane, •-o. 200 CM&MMU. Jessa Hardwldl, lolM Grel'dl, •·•. 255 ToOd Kato\lllctl, Corone def "Mr, '"'· 215 Kl'rin Lewl1, Hun-ilnvlon 8eedl, .. 2. 250 Jofwlv K811t. Irvine, H . UO Felix Lau••. L8 Quinta, .. ,. HO 08..,. Tulel', NewPMt Harbor, 4·1, 215 Tim Wendy, Unl"9f"llly, H , 215 WWI Racial¥WI Oevv ftawtofl, Cac>lstrano va11av, s-10, MO Tony &olanot, trvlna,....,,._,IJS Brian Flamlnt, LaiuM H•, .. 3. 115 Kalltl Labus, "Ml« Dal, H , 190 ftov81 Miiion, Santa AM. H . Ito TllM ... SI-Sl•flord, F-'aln v ..... 6-S, ns °""*• llllWlt ......aian Crelt Pntt, It TOl'O, S-11, 200 O•vt Webb, lrvlna. .... 210 Pel• Schmitt. LA9Ull8 IMdl, .. 3. 20 Jeff ...... • Mllllon Vi.to. ..,. 2'5 Joa Hester, SM~. Ml_.,, JOI Gaorta Tuloll, Senta AM, .. J'h, 210 Jim Rus.... T111tln. 6-3, 205 J""""' lurll•. Woodbrldta. 6-l'h, 200 DeatA 4'*' Adam o.MalltMtt. Et Toro, •~>. ru ttne Metldlaedlll, Founlaln V....,, 6-2, ttS .JoM Avalot, S8nt• AM, H , 210 S.rn t-v Damon Fltrltr, IOlle Grande, S-10, 175 Adem Br•n. l!t Toro, s-11, Ito Seen Tharlan, ladll1hdl, H , 170 Rowwn L.ecv, Sent• AM Vetlev, .... 17S OaN1dt Odum, Woodbr!Oea, 6-0, 110 . c..o 8°' JollMon, El TOl'O ,/ ........... GONn••NCI ,tNAU , ........ ,...., -.-. SC.. Boston 7t, Datroft 11 IS.lat tied, 2-2) • T.......,,._ o ...... L.Ran, l:ll Ill.In. (Serles tied, 2·21 ......... o.... Detroit •I Boston, 5 p.m. l'tlundlY'I 0- Ulran at Dalles, ' P.m. ,.,....,.. 0- B«Kton •• Detroit, 4 p,m CH nec:euarv) S9"'"9IY ., S...y o ... , •• a..aun. l?:JO p.m. (If nac:eaaerv> ~ .... ca.... Detroit •t l«KIOll, TIA (If nacnaarv~ .,... ... ...... PoL HI . ~ ...... 5 f H ... , f •·7 ( ,., •-2 • • •-t f H • S-11 f .. 2 t-f .. 2 f .. s f 6·5 1 •-s ... S.-tl .. , ... 6-4 ,_,. 6-2 6-l ... H .. , 6-5 ,.7 H .. s ... NI Wl"OaT LA .... -2 11Mt1, W alllJlars 12 sand .,._., ' rnecMAI, S roell fltll. 12 ICVltMn, 2 ~ M wtll19 cr-.r. 1 ~bnon. DAV•Y'S Loat•a (......,. a.al -4 1M>e11, m 91\91an. u berfecuc11, 20 ca1co 11n&. 11 Mild Mst, 2M madltrel, 15 ICU94n, 4 ,,_ fllll, I "11•1MM, I ~ ..... / . 'The Wall Within': Vietnam veterans Still at war ,. Post Traumatic Stress Disorder won •t let some soldiers resume their lives NEW YORK {AP) -It would • 1C1Cm, in view of the much-visited Vietnam Ve&erans Memonal in Wuhinaton and the popularity of Vi,toam movies in ttM= lheatlfl and on TV. that America has finally welcomed the Vietnam ve&cran home. But as reported in the pcwerful CBS documentary "The Wall Within .. at 8:30 p.m. lh1s Thursday. as many ., I million Vietnam veterans have yet to leave behind a war that still tcrronm them every day. and link hu been done to htlp them. Some have committed suicide and abwcd their families. Others sufftr flasbbKks.. niabtmarn and withdrawal. CBS went to WashiJ1110n stale. where many veterans who suffer from Post Trau.,,,.t1c Streu Disorder have ftcd. The ~MC fomll. pcrltaps mn1ni~• of the JwWn of Viet· nam. shelter them from a wortd wht're l.ht')' canaot speak of t atrocitin t~ w1tneued. "They htetally took to the hilh.. .. CBS anchor Din Ratbtr laid io an anterview. R.athct' interYicwed tome of the yctcrans and rwnaet the documentary. wh cb was orodUttd and directed b}' Paul and Holly F ... ne and writtm by Pnry Wolff. ··1 don't want to have to be nobody altmy life." sa)'s Tcny Bradley. one of the veterans interviewed for the doclmcnt.11)'. "rd Y.-ant '° be ablit to come horM. with some di&nitJ." 8radk} ·s ttward for his K~:itt in Vietnam was ovcrmcdic:a1i04't u a paranoid tdtiiopbttnic that ~ h1m with orpnic brain dal'JUllC. Other vctetans lc-tJ of Carina rejection •nd indr.·n; .. ~ ~Y mumccHrom co l. . . "'This bo\lr that ~ do. this 1s not the mo~ ·Platoon • This 1s real stuff." said Ratbtr ... These are real people stn.1al1na to recovtr from rt"al wounds. .. Another of the \eterans inter· vi~'Cd cksmbes how he almost "AS \C'f')' )OUJl& people thn. weft killed bis mo ther .,..hen she woke bim plunacd into a creen junftle helf.'" •id ont' momma and he thouabt shew.,.,. Rather. 'They saw tcmble and hor· the cncm). nrac thu'IS They aw thetc lhi• Some of the "etcransare be&Jnnmg done 10 othcn. done to ~hem Iva. to ck-al with PTSD 1n the onl) way Then suddenly they are ,crktd beet the) can b) talkina to other vncrans and dumped back into a couai.ry 1n rap aroups sponsored b) Vietnam whc~ in many c:asc:s. they were veterans ~nters. many of which will ~scd. hum1ha~ cnucued, ,... soon be closed due to lack offundmg. sull \Ct) youni. ts It any wonder tbat the) sufTC'rcd a psychoao.k.al wouDd One reason some of the veterans that 1s deep and ab1dinar ___ • talked to CBS was because Rather had Another ,eteran suffers from a bttn in Vietnam as a reporter S)mptom of PTSD called .. hyper· .. The) 1o1.on't t''l.en conSJder talkm1 vig11an~ .. He rccaJls w1tb area• to somebod~ "1>hO didn't 10 to difficult) watchmJlbudd~~ontbe Vietnam." ht said. "It w-as slow going deck of an aircraft camer &ate he .. tO e'l.Cn &Ct them to talk to US. So my WIS not alen enO~. So he pauolt- rcport1n1 from Vietnam "1>8S a help·· ant't'SS&ntl) a1 ni t. dnvina' city Rather said he also had to hstcn to a streets or back roa tn has truck. lot of complatnts about hov. the war CBS seems to have helped tbe , was rt' ported hcahnJ somcv. hat by bnnaina dlfft Soprano Caball~ in magnificent voice . . On~ \eteran too~ Rather on a of the \Cterans. Bradley. R~ and John Michaelson. to lhe Vie'tMm flashlight '1s1t to tht' small. unht Veterans Memonal where they e.iept room he k~ at 1hr back of hls as the) found the namq of buddies bascmen11o1.he~tht'v.allsareco\Cred the) lost in \ictnam. 1t 1s thnc v.1th rough drav. tngs. like a tavr-movin1sccncs. shotJUSt befottdlaWL dv.ellcr's. dep1ct1ng his Vietnam that conclude the documcnlafY. to n1~tman-s. the stratns of"' ~ppalachian SpriQI. ... Whereas the formufa for master violin-makina died with lhc 17th and 18th century Cremonese, it appean that humanity retains the capacity lo produce another son of master in- strument the ultimate musician who. by virtue of~ina a singer, happens to be her own instrument, in this case soprano Monserrat Caballe. In a concert Thursday evening at the Orange County PcrforminJ Ans Center, sponsored by the Orange County Philharmonic Society, we heard outstanding renderings of Ital- ian opera excerpts from the Pacific Symphony, the Pacific Chorale, con- ductor Bruce Ferden (who ought to be on the shon list of Pacific Symphony conductor candidates) and Cat»lle. It is fittrna that this concert was a highlight of the past three seasons. as it was your critic's last in the capacity of Daily Pilot correspcndenl During this time, we have heard some remark.able ~rformances; among them the Ch1cqo, Paris and Rot- RUFFELL•s UPHOLSTERY INC • .... , ..... c..... ..... 1122 -•ft~ can •sa-su.m1 . ''Al~ ... I'' -Su.an~. WMCA(H.'t'.) PAI.A. HOGAN ~ KOZJ.OMilQ ~-111...EJI ..... -- C111s PlllEI tcrdam orchestras; the Hasen. "Emer- son and Colorado quartets; violinist Belkin. cellist Ma, and)_ pianist Pogorehch. Taken l<>ccthef. their performances define the experience of music at its best. Caballe's mu- sicianship and voice put her hish on this list of indisputable masten. At their roots. voices are air. Warm air. We whisper softly, and shout loudly. How is 1t then that a particular voice can trickle softly, aush loudly, or ooze sensuously, without losina its core and substance? These are at· tributes of water. not of air. Y ct they ....... ~ ... .., arc the definina featum of the volce of Monserrat CabaJlc. If this had been an orchestra concert consistina of .. favonte move- ments" from favorite symphonies and other worts, it would have been billed as a pops concert. Indeed. at its hean. a program of Italian opera excerpts very tenuously nib that line bctWttn what we miaht bear in the part and what we might bear in the concert hall. Yet by virture of its quality, the performance itself uancended any sugestions of· a "'J)OPS" aproKh. Conductor Ferdcn followed 'Caballc meticulousl~and at times deftly. The orchestra yed with a unny of sound w ich uceeded their Schoenbersjan best o(last week. And the Pacifac Chorale pve us greater clarity and lightness than we have come to cxpcc:t. Caballe, however, stoic the show. Jn worts of Bellini, Rossini. Verda. and Boito -intcnpencd with or- On 2 ScreeM; 11::10 U :JO 2: 1S J : 11 4 :41S:417:11 1:111:4S 10:21 ~·II no) 1 ::10 7:JS/MMi tJ.e L.aw( .. )12:20 ... 1•• -II'--... _r-..., "'""'-__ ,_ ... -1111 ..... ~ ....... ·-...... ... .,.-........ c--mra-·-·-Wl4CIJ ~~ -0...C-~llllCll ..., .. (114•0.,. ~ .. c:.. ~·-!;lo-..... •1111 •O-Pi&rrtif ,.,_ ............ = ~._-.. Olaal "TRl-SWI llREASt .!.. ·-~---· ......... ~-~ ...... _._ __ =.,a-. ., __ ...... ....,. •IA-aa ·--............. , mcn :93 ----·---.,..__. ..... c--... llllT•O.-••• '0 ..... .au - L o o~ for RAMBO T Shirts Posters Ht>adbands and other Rambob1lla on sale at part1c1pat1ng theatres• _, ___ _ --·--Wll&OWfllt , ......... ... ~­..,.... .. ...,._...,,,, mw.Nllf• -&JJF• ClGNftllR ... ........ ~--­,,. ... y .... ........ ~­··-··" ...... ,,. .. chestral and choral interludes of the same composers -her VOfC'C wound its WI) down from the mountain top. ebb1na and flo1o1.mg 1hrough urcam and rapid. Ne\'er did its water-like substance~ to flow cfTortlcss.ly. as with sravit). and at each moment~ 9-Cre offered somethtng spontaneous. original and soul stimng. Caballc also bnnp a sense of humor to the s .. After rwo encotts. it was announced that she had run out. but 1o1.ould repeat the Rossini. Then 1t was discovered that the orchestra parts had alre.ady bttn collected. How now to make a retreat? She announttd a work for soprano and 1ujtar. sans guitar 4.fter a (cw bars o( magn1fic1ent singing. she held up her hands as ifholdtng a JUttar and plucked in spatt as she~ .. china. chm&. chins. chmg. •• "midst the roan of laughter. she waved goodbye. leavina bCbind the most enthusuastic Sqcntrom Hall aud1en~ your cntic bas ever witnessed. "I LOVE 'WILLOVV: .. Enthralling and beautifully produc.ed:· -c-,, f ·-.... "-"" T\o ··A TAU Of MAGJC that leaves a friendly glow_·· -si-... -.-~ ~ ,,__s ~. -· !YOW PIAl'lJYO ·---...-..... -....... ""_ .. _ • ~"" f ""• E" • • • .. .:... 4 ..: , :. .l .. . . . ~ . ... • * • • ·---·---·--·-----.. _ ., .. ... • ( CALL ·642-5678 .. ,,. - .. .· . ., ..... ~ ' -' ... ~~ ,._.; • a ~:: ·; COLDWeLL BANl(eRO . . • '49· I . • Stl Yw Pr~,! Cll C111llfl1•, ~ Mt-5671 for information A surprisingly low cost. FROM NORTH ORANGE FROM SOUTH ORANGE , ' , • I I. .. ' .. , I s ; t ,• 0r-. Coat DAILY PILOTITueed~. May 3t, tN8 ' ' I 111 !! 1ae 111 e >lllt mt .. 1131 , .... ._ llH lllfl~/le ~ ..... 15 ... 11• ... *llfll* II 111111 lllDIWlllllJllf $-Ooot~11311.AM6M " ---~ 1'11*11 per. '....-. ""-0"1113 rn . ..-. e.n.ntl, nn~ t50LOWI ..... -...... .-...._. ..... .,..,......,.fer 111111* ,...._, . .., ... 11:; ~•.;::a Cell 171 CoftMlenct tbt1Nohrtua...._,c......a,u.M0\4I r:.~~ ='9 ,,..., ............. lll ... ft r:.-::..eo.r -.,y, Vlc*l9 • =11f= .:.i.Wl'Y· '-"· f?Wl1e I ..... ....... ----.... ell.IOI• ........ --. Cll 0... .... ,, OI A ,. .-y '*"' BAY SLP ..... ,,,~-tot l~t 1* ..,,,1124.0• : ~...... "..d. •tlll .,.~..,, ~1_.~· .. °' --~.,,~I 1 1!~~~:g_m ... llllllJ _ TRAllI ~:"del'~~~SO u• Sall or Pow•r. ' .. _.,.. 1.._,. • i-flllT. · • Oii> '°".,.,, ~ •· M50tmo • 752-ff11 lupertot AW.. CM ~ 1 ._.. • I !no Oft,,. pflosw?l N1W A TEASED. "II* ~ . 1.SOpm, 11pm-7 30am ,_...... 'd? 8mllt IMWfTINil w/12 dr--l**tlf & llfn .. tlf ... ... /.aTIBY UgM~.f'.WW,_. fl4J/lllt'IPortr:f ~ f'U'111M1 hMdbowd 1100 080 -H~ISEACH o.tllllld Ol'lenl.ltlld. ~ ~ = ~...: dlo .... ~*OB PIANO BENCH (Aru.t't). CALL 6504380 '~~~~~~~~' =.-:.~~·~:.-:; Cotta' M•U Fair !:'.:' hl l tonll ~S::."-,~ ~-.:~.: ....... ,... UIW '790r,__,Mal .lmlOT ~ '"· .._ -+ Gtounde.6494Clt1 MWllDllWTD evaMUIM N..o fOOd '200080 780-tl42 Avallabl• at AtehH 1 ~•011rW99..-::t. ~ h LU al:J lalery. O.V. ~7111 * OPEMTO.. * a pflonepei-...-, tY'Pina "·-~ I •16'2~ O.A.C • ...,., " MllllEMEIT Eva/Wkndt MS4004 mid °'*'""· bper PllTIJ • .,. • plue. Tr..,q ;:~ ~• • rt -• ••n -111Elol• -----MIU0t.....,a. pr.t Wknd ••~d ~~133-711• W1 would NQ to,_., eta ~ I dl.iMEACIOEI w ·:::..:.·=~-Houeell..... "1-Sat "'""· ~ wwwrnmH rromyou.S500P9rHouf row,torJune4Concertat For ~~J:::'31b09t (2131714)111-tm un..cutM;'DOOd credit a Gr"t ttatter poeltioft TM~ Plot It loc*lnO PIT ~~Ladlee a.ct\ M4-70GO ,.,__ phonM, teat• c:uet + a.n.ttte. Pacific AmphlthHtre 5Frwynw8eadtlMI mutt~.000. ~---com-'°'......., ~ Loc:ikerAoomA~t. ..... Otderl. T--'5 -t~ 650-14'9 sun1111n. I 1neu.n.P9B ES ... -.. ,._,_ 10,,,.,,..~mmen.. Must beftUMtln Englleh T~ -..... HOURS · ----Outlc 8Md'I I REAL TATE ff pany . ..loM,MCMtOO• ~ .... a. 7~.-' Earn '300+. M )QI CM Oita entry, ........ EJ(p P<ef 11 ·--Mon-#1' Al"LIHE TICKET~ Hewpot1 f'f Ill ,....._.: 11JUt we1 trlM. ._,....... .. Nndell. ..... loc0f""°°'1 Wlltrt6n ltl Ul3 9 am-I ~" Setl8un OCI Sall LMeCfty/ BoiM local!O(I Cell 131~ AWllM6e .._,_.Of,._ •lfl __ .... 8w -.,y,$S711wk -+ 8iiaJW Co. It underttaffff. 8111.•Jlll O.lO#n ID 912 AIMl*'lrNYba WANTED .-0'•12'.4' Slip ftnandnO.Poor~OK W. heVl9 bl~ on a QA8 + 90NlJI Pf.AH ll&iif... Needl~help! c.11 M• Garcia at u99d S60 "6-tMS 1or1><andnew '81Jer-v,•11.DI01•1111 CaU4hra.('114)164-o425 r.;i=~-::: HM: 11AM .. PM ~ 18001..00AITHWY ·w~•Offtol ~c:;r~~= "42~21at.207 MUST SELUI 21 In Spomfllher Pref L..ldovou7~!Jhor l ud * WiOOW HAI us m.nuat & ~ BK Ft1. N.8 . 144-9550 • Pei aonnel • ~ Wll train w.-.-.d. only Btonu Grwyhound OOg Ille Of Balboa ~In I Mercecse.&enz ~ for TD•t s10K-up No ""'Y ,_.·c1. NeV9r a dull c.11.-.. w.n.y, 142-4S21 y.r-.-~~:~ · tromM.'EnergeUc& de-1 1200. Qlrltng ... 5300 1 863-9373 or 97S.272e 1111 .._. .. I.I. cr.O.v /no pen. Oen-moment In 04ll CM otc. a205 .... 11AM dlllty '°' Ful & PM um.. ~ ~ S.-S-"'855 *~* I "_..., nl9oft~e1s-1s11 * Lot•of,...,.131......, appointment. ... c.1r54-5eo51v,..... PAATTIU£UDll-l2. Is~-~~ J ... lry/Pan/Art llbc. Traaa,ertatiea .(l14)an.u. ====!!..-.1•••1111111•11 111.YPl.IT llllH•IT ~·!·~..!ve~. ,,. ~ .,,t ~, e~. Newpot18ctl A/E MU lhtercyc ... / I 10-UlllDIUl. llliilfiUii fidHettM110tetPattti11-.. 'a···.., ... F~Tirn9.Pwtlllfollentw. lunc;:tl routa M..f .... 1. ~~toilllNoble 25 otfloe . .s7Muo &XD0NbR1NG-AKarat+I lnttm Hll,~::i~::o.~~:=· iiiiiiiiiiiii-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiml~Sen~ conulned, waterproof .. • H9wpof1 e..c:tl s.lon '50-*90 CMtl dallV. ,.....,a nm.mum a11p -~ Appr111Md at $6500 5.n l;iiii[;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim be wom under blklnl ..... ..... • 142-1005 or 6'2-2915 1.111'1 In.. I = ';:t,W'I M:. ':!ln OU~ Enefgedc eoftww• !ng l3000 Only 1 mo .. , OIUU .... F-ADS Dlstrlb. av9ll $50C>-M500 ~---llll llMJ•• go1rtg and sonat>1e pany 11 iookl or CALL MS-2753 5 IC>d. pwr lode/ wind. aun-lmo &Mnm. poult>te~ ...,._, ...... • I Ccata Meaa .J:tion Cell entttu1la1t1C. outooino -man 4'EWIUY 1110 HGlll root m9. (1CXV1T5) IDrfREE lngtromhome.54M821 lll&ldl~-•n111 ........ , I btwn 3·7pm M·TH peop6atodolrwldet .... ANTIQUES. largjt-·-SIPEllPllT s1.-ftM IUml Hewpot118dl7 .. iA/110E omc.. y dman, bc)et Hper. 18-28 yra ligtlt ~-755-1155 Linda marke1tyllng..,..,~t Op-tlontrom11e11etalMtat• Cal F Pattllng Fedlty _,, d but not r« r nery keeplnQ, ~ portunl •w '' + com-all ICed t wtlOleule : ~ BMc:tl. Fuft· Or Drya.n.rt · '2'39W. Coast . Meaa~':~'::: Reat.::!~ 'FUT• mlalon. F•malH en-Fin:'quaut; W1nston'1. lllM,. •••-1111 PIT, 14.75 hr. 175-2790 II --Hwy. t 8ch ~1 1M I! 11tt\ Str , Costa ,_ ,..._ r couraoed to ~ Aall 1761 Newport Blvo. c M Low ~ Mint con-.,.. --•• ~ ....._ 142 2211 _.,. tor a.le Tatum. * 645-5595 * dlllont• THEODORE ROBIN S FOR D llml/ F.xps noc nee.'"· PIT. m ,_..,. -N u ' Peraonne SyNma ine I st Sell!* 20t.0 HAW at1• b' • l. cosr.e ,..1 ,. ..,., • ,, 1aaiimJatM ..... G Y N , N. 8 •. 8 rl g M , NIT 11111'1& 119. .:o,:c,c;,,~.~~=;-(11') ISS--3923 90 DtAMONO Solitaire. • LllTllTIU/WIT Ful time. Muet be good Qualty/~p~11-ucld. anergetle, enjoy WOtttlnf Leaf,_ Control Com--W•tars/Waltlws 9t1WE Beauhlul Clear & wt\lte 11211-7"' AE:D TOYOTA~ Long heir, mate, Corona with people a.n.tlta CdM. I~ w/publtc. Ml.tit l'Mlve exp. pm'IJ needl route t«:h., Bartenders, Host-Host-. IK;~~ I MUST SELL• S500 " vvn- Def Mar 721-0455 CostaMeu9'S-7441 .. OAS STATION ATTEND-wlthAIP,A/R&bllMlng& wet'111n,l'NISthelll9good Cocktall Waltr .. 1, IPEllJll _ ™·2188 112·111JINH ,. ~~ets:;:t L~~,~~4 LOST GRAY N.utur.0 ANT ,._. CK PIT. o.ys c:o119Cttone. 881"1100 ~d.CalAattln Co<*•. Busboyl. Olsti-l pex Ill houri. In Hewpot1 IY~ttriUI MH MUlp ••rr,. nu ores Lo ml Aunt MM ,,,... T=. No colter. CLISSlf IEI eYM, Wkendt.Redhlll/ MedlC.i am. t 1 =•· Jll'lltora Bwf'I 833-1471 REPOSSESSED MUSt Mil * * * nu Orig OWMr l2350 =Mau. 5= :tr· AIYERTISllli Wot SMI 557.-.c> 1-ll.IY TECH "'"•If.. P9'IOfl TllDllDI •• 3 quonaet slyte ..... build· 080 S.-0-5'91 aft 7pm. l&l ITl1m ...... Full Orne 2;30-11pm ~ 4DtV dltalred. 5 TORTILLA FLA TS-IRVINE Emry llwl. no P$I S 10-lflgl brand new .._ 7S SUPERBEA TL£ CONY RADK> TRANS for model . Wll .,., Ftr Ptr. Inquire Mon thrU Frt beMftta. Dy•IWk. "o night•. 27792 Vlst• dfll Lago S 15 ttr We trllln Call Mr er9C1.0 40a.O. 50x too I•-.:-.--AH new Inter Pnt 2 yn. top 1lrcraf1. On 5122 et The o.lly PilOt Cl .... n.ct et T..co IM2 Edinger PIT W.-.nda a.n-epm week_,. or hOlldays. Mlaalon Viejo, CA JenMn (714) 520-4051 Wtl Mil tor balance owed -~ .. -, new. radi.I tirea & .more. model ftytng ., .. on Departmenthaunentty-at Goldenwelt, Hunt: Call Kim n1-1'20 Nwpt Bch area 6'0-6588 l.-a-11 •-•~ T..._..__ .. _._ 1c.u Biil 1~20 Clauka 9045 Lw mla.2nd on( Xlnt Santa Ana river In CM. i.v.f poeltlon lvallable at 8c:t1 Jerry 843-4097 .. _ _. __.....,.. .. ~ · WOOD windows & wood j. cono MK obo 6'6-NM S20t9WWd our Rec•pllon/Front . MED TRANSCRIBER PLl•DlmPlll Pvt time llaxlblil ttours.1 TmD•-fllT 65 COfWET c:onv riw (111) ........ 127. Counter .. Thl9 poetllon GENEAAL HELP ful time Wor11 at home. FIT or Nonpertenca. Ently 1ev91 Newbe>c* store. $4.50/tw l.m _. • ...;. 1 f'ench ..:-'~ '1oorS5'~ metcnlno •'1, w/mint VW RABBIT will be accepting ~ ,.,tal agent wining to PIT. Acute holPtal -s> only. We t,...,, C... Mr to 1tart Penny 8'3-2808 ems as 0 twdtp' ~7ou 11\0W cw CONVERTIBLE 12 REWARDI Calleo Cat, n.ct Ads. A,qulrw 45 WOttc weekends for buay req'd. AllO operq for JenMn (71•) 520-.-o51 -PlY'f I St600 lnstlla.tion ..,..._ $23,500 6'4-111•2 .wry White, ne. tir.. custom ~· apeyed fem. lo91 ws>f" ~ " YoU ._ C.M. equipment ttore. pathol~ tranecrlp -UP IUT llllT at>t. (71'1 582-9303 ellOya and air oond ~ Aci!:.':a.~ a =adot~ ~ ': AWt 1930 Nftport CM tklnt9t. 7N-8500 ~~ Prfr Chart•~~~*"°" FIT I $400 SE.AlROOON /WK •· r..uw. H..41 "1 A•m ....... tall ~cw AM~™.u,: REWARD! LOST LIGHT thejob~',.loc*lngfor. hHtll ltfloe *111111* attemoonsM-F5'9-9544 . . • • l!U .... t ..,.1 ACURA I u n I 5 t t 5 CALICOCATon5/1htc. Salary plu9 commlalOn, Pll(1 time, 9'JP'Oxlmetefy FaNon Show producer P/T~llftn IUllTUY 51.f~ut dHk · 24 1-31711720-*6. ofAdaml/OelewareHB exceltent baMftte. Call 201'nperwtclnourlegal ...Umodebforfunlon l -•1s11•iu.r ENTRYLEVEL •tAM-12 Noon l w/lallllde return & h•l•lliil No frOnt ctaws. ~tMS for lnt•rvlew: Peggy Dept. Mlae offtce ctut-., ~In LA., O.C., P.,, Wll trllln. Int.-In wortc-Young. growing contuftlng •No NiQhtalMnda matcl\log ~· cr9denz.a 'Wt'N ....... ti M 11 er.vtna, 6'24321 •X1 typing 40-45 wpm. SP<lnQ91 557-7102 or lngw/watcl\~.~ ftrmneaapoettlonopen •S71HR+comm/trmnlng 1100 c.11720-1131 I hrl' .., ...... ~~~~•= 301. phone.Appleantmustba 790-26'9 at Iha WATCH WORKS. ICK a par90n wtth eec:.-llSTlllUMl-ltll COPIER Sh 00.. NO REASOHABl.E 1111111<1' N • w p or t Cr•• t . 11• 11D 1111 ~: ~n=a:S" DID . 369 E. 17th St.CM. ~~=:::--b;::~-:-: 11111U.112·1HI ·1 SF760 • Ent!~:.; r•-OFF£A AEF'JSEO I 1,000 ml. 123.500 •M0-1998'* Repe1r pereon needed. W• P*M Caa Judy et en•) DIU _,, PIT GENERAL OfflCE Opportunity ror actvanc:. ducee LAttw. leQ1il. com--a FIBI Im& AU ter Lee ....ua lc...a. train, no exp. S10...S12 Iv. 6'2~21, Ext 319. How cloet 11..312 • S7hf. A9x tn. P-1ec:1 fCK ment, good 1Mneflt1, lJllAl(E put8f-lin trays. Lit!• t001 OUAtl.S'i •• N.8 •------- Call Mr JlnMn 520-4061 tlmuywaound?=• hou~Mffy retlr ... pteuant atmosph•r•. OFFICE~ new $450 ~5200 lll·Hll lUllU NABERS labwtila Jiii llDIUllU~ what the Army ~ Funny PR Co. 5'1-338-t ~.,.:.7~~ ICK TEMPORMY AHO Pih ....... I IHIL•WHIF We've opened. new ot-....... ... P9YYoUtOltart. T,...,, P/llDIUL... TEMPT@-.S~ cOTE' ™ mr ;q & CADl.1.AC Now for"*'o 8t FMhlon ftce. and .,. now hlrtng -J one weekend a month Some bb:eep6ng Bkgmct IEClnlll POSITIONS AVJaaBLE wtlt Al<C r99llt.,ad ,, .~ 191and. (714) 721-1210 fCK vw1oul poaltlon9 In and two week• • 'fMI. Fath,., &«-42•2 for Youth Sarvtcea In •Receptjonlst• beeUtlful. Heedl oood BEAUTIFUl.SElEcnoti .. SJ~ , • .,ehouae, Office. No 1 ..... ..,... ~oday .... " you •1111.mat1• eo.t• u.u.. Must haY8 •Clerka home•tywd.-6"-~ °'~in=·"!:: ~ P$I nee. e.m '300/wk to · good human relatlon• •Typl!IU Cowcy1 s. • ~ l1<lil Ali ltar1. Appty today • ...,, ..... -....1112121 •ILL"' Ill IL llllTJ + IWTlll'I communk:tlon lk ... 11'gh ·~ ..,.. _........ UI • M1R tommorrow. A9k for i~•• ~ 1111f ID8ft, Young aggi..-.lcanaed energy. comput• aw. •Dail• Entry Oper1ton Some vocabulery ~5 ( R [VI ER 540-1100 DAY NANNY In CdM Jina t7f>.1215. K;ll5RM. •rrNE Anahelm772-1480 Agents w/exp needed to 8"-lnguel $perli9tl help-•Word Procwon 71()...9'18 ~ 2e00Harborlllwd. home for 2 yr otd aon. Corona~25 tlloW & Ml proe>ertlel tul Good b•n•llll. eAcc:ounMQ Clerttt ·--Jut w----Tnm ' &...... COST MESA Mon--Frt Dy ~ .. Re1teurant Hperlenc• CoataMeaa540-102e with • Top Producer. •979-7900• REGISfEA NOW ~ ~.. .. .. ...... .. ...... ____ A ___ --..· X2401, Evet. 720-032e bp•rlence nec:Htary. nee uaery. Two (2) fu1 eyprw 527 _5191 I High comml111on1 a ANO EARN 1155 l ftW IU9\D • Exp'd Hekper llve·ln Country Club eonv..... time poeltlona open. Dena Point 493-1901 bonuMa. Send r.ume Slm'TllY I *Bonul S$1 COOk car• fCK 2 ~ cent Ho.pit al. 20382 •Call·~· Fuller1on <M7-Me1 clo PATRICK TENORE. HI g h I y m 0 t I II. t. d • 1 •Paid Hoideys -.......... , & P<Or famlty Speek ~ Santa Alie Ave.. Santa Garden Gtove 138-8750 Agt. • 18 Corporate Pim.a anergetlc & organfffd *Paid Vecatbla WAIT Ill 13 Wai .to ..-. LHT llltl l\ave r9t. l drive Ana Helghta. 5'9-3081 "HIRING! Govarnm•nt Hunt. BeechM2-tl21 Hewpot1Bch,CA12tl0 lndlv lor tut peceo 16'00 Von~ ~ 311 ai.lo lol*d 2Cllllll3 1si..a121 854-4527 DETAILER )ot>e. '/04.tl w ... 115,000-L..aHabra871-9140 Shopping Cent« o.- 1 Ste130, INlna 474-297• Ill.II!!* ~ 3~ !I~ IClldel 1 ' SH.000. Call (802) Orangel74-2940 ~ Shorthand l 100% FREE to Applic8nt ~ 7~ S '°' IClldel fllOtll la=t 1131 J08 OPPOMVNITY 838-1815 EXT. 308" s.ddlebadt Vly 798-525 I W/P exp ,.q'd. Com--E O.E. 116 Sl!I •to loldtd !POHi Ill With growing detail com-Santa Ana 138-9924 ' putar apt'MdlhMt k~ TIRE SERVICE * lH-1111• 87 m !ISQCI io.tect 20Yt76S liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii '* M IC* Xper. pm'IJ. Wll tr.In. 790-7224 Wiil M 11111 Tustin 731-0481 edge' + Nllmlta otc Wt-' baMndnQ S•'-Se<11tee amoa lo, own 1ooee. >Ont -WMtri....,. 111.~7e Wt1yc:t1wa1 townt HUGHES INVESTMENTS • _ IP•'"T paylbeneflt1. Shell, mTILB'TP/1 t•eaovanuoeOV: .... 1° •2~atePteza2SO ••••ttm_.,.,. Piaw Orpa Parts Leasing 11 AedNl/Brt9tol 557.-.0 Exp. In fetit pee. 09f*al The Orwtge CoMt Deity eom.-Comelign Coma Thab9stbuyllnlftlf'CNI.. Hewpot1Beech,CA92MO l44-«t22 llSt 135 3171 •a mtRll UIZ&•llllLllT denOUTltlltES~ ~ '*'i='d. :':V:C =':;:.buy-Ind ' IW. d619occ..dallytndaamlled. 759-9531 A9k fOf Uurta •PIANO BEACH; l500 Au~o Mall Or IW Ulll Have a epecial on ,. · ._... •• alat our Dlstrtct MaMgen 11r(ARTISrS>* aumea. Call for '/04.tl "-collectlon, lllng etc. 3 ~ dur1nO.,,. .-. Upholltered & AdfuStable Santa Ana 1111mf con.ultatlon. Cell Chrtl 9-2, M-Thw, 8c:t't welllerlda end hoMday9. CUSTOMER SERVICE REP t Retab tor a... S400 55 Frwy at Edinger Loededl!AullalMltdl at C.A.S.S. 141-37&4 ~· .:: ~· muet ha¥9,. '\. Cl\alra. rwflnlltled. MOO $200 oeo 790-3&t2 IPfl 1 urs llUT w• MHUJlllWJllT :::.. C8r....:. v;:.c; ~~~t~ WURLITZER Muttl-MMlc ~e Mrs Mon r: *°"'Yl7 .. * FIT Oi**'O tot Accountl llPf 11111 ln1uranc• and OMV 2 pos1't1'ons ava1'lable tn OUr CUS-Pef'cua6on Organ S700 I OO •m lo lO pm j: Aaa19tant at 111tp Apt ~-Mllabee tor•· prtnt-olt. Starting pey lit Ml-•N .... * oomple .•• Aaepol..,.... peneiad...,.... oftlce 11.00 per"°"' ptua Qa9 tomer serv1'ce dept w111 be: Preparation Of a w:recar1e1 w1tt1 .. ca11e1., aaow.noe. . • $I~~~~~~~~ dally barlk depoelt. flAnO, computer, typing and Come In to~ at: Sterlin\¥ '73 Grand Tortne Fotd eome ~ front office pflone .... in dynamic I h 11 ii Automdr:, ~fmo~~! =:.-::=.i== Must have peasant p one per-n BM ~~·.:!_,..._CM Xlnt beNftta. ~ "' helpful. ecca1en1 ban-.... Piil sonal1'ty· typ1'ng a plus Learn mt oond troa1,,... 1 •1 •11•.t1• tr•111•e>0rt &4'-errr pereon et Pin Hewpot1 em. end WOttctng en--J , · S1CIO a 1 wllcemaker a.TMJllLF•• fY. ~ ~ ... ml.IT Aptl, 1 Pin Newport, wonmentlnlrvlneS~ Valuable Office Skills and earn Sl75·6'6-3Hl9 Nm9CI SAT JUNE 11· ~· 5..,..S ~Waft-Nftport Beech, CA. trum --. Send reeume •-Wiii.., It. __ 1.__ 14 Carnival gamea, food, rat-.... • •,..... '* 1 roof ci'..tom -- EOE to Mr. FUent• It: -$5 00 h t t rt. vu.... fta S ...... rne9C -tee -a." ' -------RobertBeln,WlllamFrost ......... 1112121 • an OUr 0 S 8 * H aora av*! Ss_.Cal ~ -(2GRV02t) IPT _., lllP\I l AHoclatff, 14725 beltWWI tam & 5pm M..f ~. coftea & end Cindi or 790-3458 WNt-••• •••• ..... 1e Unlta. Pool 11.-0/mo AJton-PatkW9y,IMM.CA °'cell e.ttl at 6'2..4321 tbta, lamps. Whit• Well\ tlerScl\ool 1800N Whit-1540.JAM80REEROAO rent. 800-912-2387 92711 ext. 20S H ... 11 30 A M 8 30 p M rattan aota. lovffeat tier 81 eo.ta Meaa. Open 7 dllY9 •week , MANAGEMENT JOIN OUR TEAM MA·· /GING CARRIERS THE DAILY PILOT IS LOdKl~G FOR TOP QUALITY MGRS WILL· ING TO WORK HARO WE OFFER XLNT BASE SALARY PLUS OVER $300 IN BONUSES EVERY MONTH, GENEROUS GAS ALLOW• ANCE & OPPTY FOR ADVAHCEMENT. JOIN OUR TEAM & BE ELIGIBLE FOR FULL MEDI· CAL COVERAGE. CREDIT UNION. 4'01K PLAN IF YOU'VE GOT WHAT IT TAKES. CALL B~f H. 642-4321 EXT. 205 OR SEND RESUME TO: DAILY PILOT, 330 W. BAY ST , COST A MESA. CA 92626 ,. Motor . Routis . available in C~st' 1111 H11tilllft1 IHOh Fo11taiil-Y~ll11 NO COLLECTING NO SOLICITING Ask for Joanne CNney , ours are : . . - : . . $550; cot, end tablila ext9nded$r;lc9Houn d S t & S 6 A M 10 30 $375: floor temp $150. fraa 7 a.m -10p m Mon-Mi an a . un . . . - : =.,~.=;~ 11 ... _an A M 5 IPO. air. IUR-<ool. cua.. • • a.usmlMllllll 111'11Wt .... alf aattwNs (2HHN8021 tlMdboard. footboard. Law mft9gia MUST SeLU Sll ... llder.ite.1195 M0-1733 '4200otlO.173..aoo Call 642-4321 ext. 207 to sched- ule an appointment. , Ask for Llolanda. DAY BED Whit• & en.I • 101••• Mc:::~~ •WNIJ flm .. •M0-1733• F• 111.1 UIS _ _,_ $1~ A$2000Value W'_, -. 67S..-t9 -"-cotof, good cond ·-L ~~~~~~~~~~~~!!!~~~~~~~~~~ S7599t'h.1440355 t -.-t QUEEN SIZE MATTRESS .. If you're 10 or ofder, a job as a newspaper carrier might be just your size. Just send in this coupon or call: 642-•333. Routes are available nowl .. ...... ., .... ..., Pitt Clnterl & BOX, QUILTED. END cn.t• St....of. BRAND NEW1$155. Alt 3'' CrelllOC*. '9tlg Cal ~293 o..lwflk~ 875-7100 SOFABED, Challr9. dellll. 3T TRAW\.EA-Oon't au, rec:ten. • ...,_a~. lM8e 5 dyll"'°' STtlct,.} al,.._...._ 8erttlad In ~ Few 6'1-8309 ara. 3:30. details. call 675--7100 I •••••••••••••••••••• . ... . ..,.... . i • :SPREAD I i THE • : Newsi IWori< Ille-~-. • oaper ·PromotiOn fieidt tf you.,. t ntf ·motivattid and • ~1dng with • ~ this may be the ()()- : portuntty you·-~ nt~ for Thlt a GUARANTEED INCOME of $400 per WMk to ata11 ~ po tlel eemlnp of up to $1000 per -.. .. M ln8'nd v.n. wegon. ~­ up/ ...... a MUST. THlODORI ROBINS FORD .. .-~'-""'A• k. II •, • • (\.._~'\'& .._.t,A •I imPOlilible 10 meet wi1b Iii• ia ._......,.._..,.___.._,.,_ ____ ..,......_ ......... ~_,,---=--=--_..;..-. WubiJljllon; ~said .e did not ~~~had .oupt u ·~ and that rel be very )lapPy 1Q' tee MOSCOW (AP) -Praadent Ile-.. ll is not completed. there are atill ~ ha u exu.ordinary question-l>Oints that are beina debated. .. said ~ ICSSioo with Soviet mr ka!P!l, who has OaJy one more cleeu.. aid today .. that ~ Uaited tehcdulcd mcetina wit& Oortiecbcv Sta1e1 "would like nothina better" before departjna Tb"'1day. than 10 help 1n the sean:b fbr Soviet .. We are both bopef\al that it can be ddien missina in A~istan. finished bedOre I leave office" in The session, covcrina topics as January, he aid. "If it isn't, J assure diverse u the pliaht of American you thit I will haveim.,..caed on mY. lndiails to the two-term restriction on( successoc that we-mus.t carry on until American presidents and arms con· it is siped." uol, fOllowed the president's speech ' One stUdent told Reqan that ~ 'at M0tcow Univcnity. He took are 310 Soviet soldien mil,1ina in QUesii'Ons from a stqe beneath a Afahanistan aJW-eiabt ~ of 10werina bust of Lenin and a banner fiahtiQ&. The student asked 1f Reapn emb&Uoned with a hammer and would assist in the search and return aietle. of the forces. Re1pn noted that there once had "Very much so," Rcapn replied. been hop_es that be and Soviet leader .. We would like nothina better than Mikhail S. Gorbltbev could mark the that." The United States bas vowed to Moscqw sutn{Uit by sianiriJ a sw~ continuina supportiaa the Af&ban ina treaty to ,cut stratq.1c nuclear rebels as Iona as the K.remtin su~ iftaoons by half. , portsthe Kremlin-backed rqime an .'"'-Thm: are many things st'ill to be Kabul. · .ettlcd," Rcapn sa1d, all but confinn-Another student told Reapn that a in& the treaty will not be signed this dclcption of American Indians bad week. traveled here because they found it wm... I · Huaid the United S..tea ~ tiveta the lndiani mWioftl ol aae1 Of &and and established men'IUou wbere they could ljve iftbey cboee ... We've done everythin& ~can IO meet their demands as IO boW they want to live. MaYbe. we made a mistake. Maybe we shoUJcf not have humored them" ind insisted that they become iolqrated in American life. Al for the deleaation here, be said, .. I don't know what their complaint miaht be. • The queatioo-anckoswer leSSion follQwed a speech in which Rcqan preached ~ mark~ freedom of speech and the American way oflife. The appearance. at the university whete Mlkbail S. Gorblchev camcd a dep'CC in 1954, was one in a strina of events undertaken by Rcapn to promote the concept or hedom and hUJ11an riahts. White Houte planners said the appearance pvc Reqan an opponunity to pass &Iona some thou&htl to a aencration that one day will JOVcm the Soviet Union. "Prolress 1s not fore-ordained," he 1 said. "The key is freedom -freedom of thou&bt. freedom or information, freedom of communication." He praisecW.bc econ6mic prosress of such free-market citadels as Sinpporc, South Korea and Taiwan. And he added: "PerhaJ>S most excitina are the winds of chanae blowi~ over the People's Republic of Oun.a. where o~uartcrofthe world's population is now settina its first taste of economic freedom," Asifthatwasnotchallefl4Cenough to the world's other ~or com- munist state, Reapn said he hoped that SoVtet families will soon be ~ to visit their relatives overseas. ,.. 9 9 So'riet l•der Mllrlwll GoltaacbeY bold9 a 'bal»y toda7. wbue Ile. YlattiDC Presldeat ••r.n, tJaelr 8taften and tater- pft'ten •et a toarlat'a Ylew o Re4Squre ln lloecow. World's top chiefs take stroll as tourists MOSCOW (AP) • Soviet" lawlc1' Mikhail S. Gorbechcv played tour auide to President Reapn today, showina him the sipu on cob- blestoned ked Square nar historic St Basil's church. ~ superp6wer leaden strolled on the 1quare, wbere hundreds of people were lined up to see Lenin's tomb, after they extended their meetina at the Kremlin by more than an hour. They chatted with poups of cla~ pi "J tourists pthe=:I in the squilc amid heavy security. When Reapn mentioned peace and friendship. peop!c said "thank you. sood" m Russian. .. It was wonderful, I bad never 11ctuaJJy seen Red Square;· the 77- year-old presideqt said later. Like an American politician, the Soviet Communist Party aeneral secretary picked up a toddler in a multicolored suit, and said to the little boy. "Do you recosnize the president?" The child did not re- spond. Gorbachev pointed out vario'us features of Red Square which dates from the l Stb century, joking there should be "no perestroika .. no rcbuikiina here." When one woman mentioned peace, Gorbachev said "women arc more active, but men want peace too'." Reapn also commented on the female sex. .. , was just sayina to the cencral secretarr how much I have great admiratJon for the women of Russia. They are courageous," be said. First lady visit& the Hermitage's treasures LENINGRAD, U.S.S.R. (AP) -Nancy Reagan, welcomed to the "Venice of the North" by tens of thousands of wavina. and smilina people. marveled today at the city's an and architectural aems after payina homaae to the 6SO.OOO Russians who starved to death in Lenillp'l(l collections in the world. Paintinp by Leonardo da Reapn was asked about the reception the people of Vinci, Picasso, Matisse and other areat artists can Leningrad bad aiven her. be found in the collection, bqun in 1764 by I "Wasn't that wonderful," she said. "I was >""' Catherine the GreaL wavina. hopina they would know which car I ~ "S~nJ. stagering. ~·s just too much in." .. - Mrs. Reagan placed a bouquet flowers at the Monument to the Heroic Defenders. located near the front line of Wortd War II where the fiercest battles were foupt. to digest. ·the first lad¥ exclaimed at the end of her The outpouEnJ of affection •~n:d to be fi ve-hour tour of the city. spontaneous. Officials bad npt 1'tfeascd the first Queried whether she had any more sympathy lady's motorca~e ~~iifch traveled the length for communism aftu vicwin& the cxtravagent of several of t~·.s n:_nowneCF&oulevards. At finery used by the imperial familr, before the . some points, people lined up several deep on the revolution, she replied quickll, "No. • · broad sidewalks to catch a alimpse of the petite first From there she traveled to the Hcrmitqe, which houses one of the most fabulous an As she began her tour o the museum Mn:-lady. Sermonizing sou.rs summ,ft talk's spir\t U.S., Soviets sign testirrg accordforarrnsreducLJon MoScoW (AP) -A Soviet of-MOSCOW (AP) -The United this summer in Nevada and at apinst ballistic missiles. Even if ficial criticized President Reagan on States and the Soviet Union today Semiptiatinsk of U.S. and Soviet other issues are resolved. the Soviets Tuesday for empbasiz1~ human signed an accord providiq that each devices to measure the force o(blasts. ha~ refused to complete the ST ART rights violations durina his visit to superpower wiU notify the other of Shultz and ShevardnadU ·lianed treaty until the Star Wars dispute is Moscow, saying it hindered the the time, place and intended tarset of the second pact. as well. resolved. dialope.bctwccn the supcrpowen. inten::ontmental·ranae missile tests. .. It's too small for them," GennMiy .. The two sides could not convince "tf each side djscussed its own But that ~t. siped in the Gcrasimov, the Soviet forcip minis-each other," Gerasimov said. errors and mistakes and did not din:ct Kremlin by Secretary-of State Georsie try spokesman quipped. .. It's impon-The Soviets and many American its~atcorrect.inatbeotberside, P. Shultz and Fenian Minister ant.butootthatimportant." analysts contend the U.S. prosram I think 1t wouJd be much easier for us EduardA.ShcvardnaduasPrcsident Other ageements to be siJJ'lcd by threatens the 1972 A1ni-Ba1Jistic to solve our problems and continue Reagan and Soviet Geaeral Secretary the minist«s covered experiments to Missile Treaty. It limits defcntes on thedial<>&ue,"saidGcof'liArtatov,a Mikhail s. Gort.cbcv looked on, is verify the 1974 Thres&old Test Ban 1hethcory1.J?9.1Cntialq&res90rwould mem~r of.the policymaking Centnl only.a slice of the unfinished Stratccic Treaty, extension •fa 198S cultural be inhibited tfbc faced tile prospect of Committee and head of the USA-Arms Reduction Treaty (STARn. ~ent, and pacts on fisheries. devastatina retaliation. Canada Institute. That accord remains elusive, maritime rescue, transponation, civ-The Rcapn administration llJUeS "I think that the Soviet Union bas althoue both Reaaan and ilianuscofnuclearreactors.and radio the propam is not in conflict with the set an example here;• said Arbetov. Go naviption. -treaty . .. When Gorbachev arrived in Wastl· rbac v, answerina rc~rten' Nqotiators workina on arms con-On START, Gcrasimov said, the • in&ton. be dld not mention (any Q\Jestions at the outset of their day of trol, human ri&hts. bilateral and United States clea~ the way to problems.~ even lranpte. On the summit talks. voiced fresh optimwn rqional issues met this momina and removinc one of fi"e major obstacles other hand, he explained ·~w· that it can be achieved. were to repon their PIOllCU later in to a treaty, droppiDJ. a demand for a and openness_ and bow we are JOina Tbetestinaaccordiswbatbascomc the day to Shultz and Shevemadze. ban on mobile missales. to correct the mistakes that we made to be called • confidence-building officials said. · But the tenior White House official in the past... measure. Last weekend. senior Re-Two senior U.S. officials. briefing disaareed, sayina the U.S. position At dinner Monday niaht. after q;an adminisuation-ofrtcials aaid it reporters sepera~y under rules .. at this point -· a bari on mobiles Rcapn bad demonstrated his sym-was snaaed in ·a dispute with the which barred disct~ of their missile. We are still dilCUssi~ it." ea thy . with Soviet dissidenu, Soviets. who wanted a broader qree. names, scaled· down an optimistic Soviet officials aaid before the Ciortl9chev cautioned apinst .. ser. mcnL account by Geruimov of PfOIJUS summjt that tbeY thoupt the United monizina ... that could sour super-The differences were wort.ed out by toward resolvina other arms control States was ready to llf'Ce to aUow ~ Rlanons. · senior American and Soviet .,._ disputes. • mobile-milliles if ~ could be The pmcral secretary's comments tiators. under the dinlction of lteaon Nor was there •J\Y "1ID from either restricted to a specific area and .J . came boun after the president's and Gomachev, Ilona with anotlier side of a bn:ak.throujft on the U.S. mon_itorcd by spy .~cUisea . 11\d mcetinawithdissid:e~n~ts~.:-~~~~qre~~ce~m~~~nt.~pro~v~i~d~in~1~f4~o~r~jo~i~n~t~tcsts~~=P'l:Oll~ra~m~to~dcv~~e~lo~p~a~dcfe~~n~se=1=·n~~:;:~~~~~~on-sa~~tc~f~nspec:uo:::~~n.:..._~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Ml.IC MmC£ MUC llJTICl Ml.IC llJl'lCI L1 • N , · I r • .. .. TUF.SDAY, MAY 31, 1988 25 CE TS Vets clash at· e~orial Day r'111 -Trapped island boaters . . . rescued Sall ors airlifted from cove at end of windy Memorial weekend ~ By JONATHAN VOLZIE Of .. ...., ..... Helicopten were used to rescue . boaters Monday trappecj in a difJ'- rinsed cove on Catalina Island as high winds and choppy seas kept Mem- orial Day weekend sailon from rctumina to tbe«Southem Califom&a coast. ' . No deaths were ~rted Monday. however, and the National Weather Service said the 20-knot winds were expected to drop by half, brinsina some hopes of relief to tattered rescue services up and down the coast .. It was a niabtmarish weekend ... a very memorable ~morial week- end. .. said Los Anacles County Life- guard Lt John McKay. whose ~ rescued 3S boaters in three days. But while the winds created havoc / off the shore, they kept thinp quiet on ~ the Oranae Coast beaches. authorities said. The cold air virtually emptied , the pnds until Monday, when sun- worsh ipers returned by the thousands, Huntinaton Beach and Newport Beach lifcauards said. Huntinaton lifeauard Kyle Lindo said "thlnp went pretty smoothly," allhouah an estimated 70.000 people packccf the city's coastline on what is aenerally considered the start of the summer season. .. It was a pretty bia day, the most we've had in quite sometime." Undo said. .. But there were no rescues, and we only had to a.tve out a couple Band-Aids. so thinp went ~ smoothly." Newport Beach lifecuard Crail Farmer said S4-dqree Water kept most of the 90,000 people in Newport on the sand and out of the water, althoush ... few" rescues were made. While few swimmers needed help, some S6 boaters, indudina a 3-year- old girl, were re9CUcd from Catalina and its surroundln& waters after howlina winds and hish seas smashed many's hopes for a peaceful weekend jaunt. Los Anaelcs County sheriffs helicopters were used in many in- stances because scv~I of Catalina's harbors are inaccessible by roads. ("---TaAPPSD/A2) • co.ta .... High toottMlll ltar T.-ry Bryent proved he9ir1 ... "'*•up for. lllc:kof llzaln hladrtYefor 1.000 yerda. /81 ea.et :r'r· Awboml)ldlllOln .............. .....,., .......... ~ =~....,:-~ .... - .................... Veterani"' Peace CoDYOJ, wblcla made a ~emorlal Day 8top la Jnlae OD llonday. a, IONATllAN VOLZ&E _,JENNIFER WEBEll ........... _ On a day intended u a memonal to • thosC who died m war. a battk en.apt~ in Irvine. tuq1na men who bad ooet fought bmdt dM another apinst each other Sharp words were exchanaed and 1evttaJ small scuffles bro« out when a ~p of veterans .and peace acuv1su on a nauoowtde trek to ptber food for the children of Nicaragua held a Memorial Day rally at Irvine City Hall. While roughly 2SO supporters of the Veterans Peace Convoy to Nicaragua crowded into the City Council chambers to hear Mayor Larry A&nn and Lquna Beach Councilwoman Lida Lenoey speak. more than two dozen d1uenters pthcrcd ouuide. The aroup o pposins the Nica.rquan aid was uwde the chambers, but Id\ when po~ of- -~ ................ ..... Aflliilaadd.ato •"TM AYeDaeoftbe Pia&•" at Barbor Lawa Vetcrana ~tlona lleld lta Mtll Aaaaal 11-adial Dl.T llelaidal Park la CoMa 11... wb.ere the SoG.tb Cout Senice9. EaCla O..C 1epr 11 eata a fallen ....-k-·•. . MOSCOW -Praident Reapn and Mikhail S. Gorbechev cdJCd f~ on anns issues Moaday 1n a _...;c sesao.-lbat was eclipsed by R!llR· tina wi&h diuiden11 and hi thiFtbe Sovift lrdr' usher 1 new .,e of reJiaiOos fieedom ... .. ~t·s time my friend. it's time.~· the president implored the aencral seo- retltl'. quotina the pre-revolutionary Rusau poc1 Alexander Pushkin IS be sounded tbe human fishts theme on die tecond day ofhis five-day visit. In an extraordinary mcctina with aevnaJ doz.en dissidents and re- fuseniks and members of their famil- ies arrayed before him at the U.S. ambassador's residence. Reapn said: .. 1 came here hoping to do what I could to sive you strength ... "But I already know it is you who have strcnathened me. You have sivcn me a mcssa,ge to carry back: While we press for human rights throuah diplomatic channels, you press with your very lives, ~y in1 day out, year after year. riskir4 your JObs. your hOmcs. your all. .. He said the United States .. views human rights as fundamental. absolutely fundamental. to our rela- tions with the Soviet Union and all nations. .. The symbolism of Rcapn's meet- inp spoke volumes. That be was stepPina into domestic matt.en on Sovm IOi1 bad rankled ~ aides before and aft.er the ev~nts, the aeneraJ secretary ref~ to ft IS be toasted Reapn at a state dinner. Oorbachev caJled for closer coa- tactS with Americans but said .. this should be done without intcrferins in domestic affairs. without termon- izina or imposina onc·s views and ways. without tW"llina family or personal problems into a pretext for confrontation between states. .. Reap.n told Gort.cbev that be will tell the man who the Amcrica.n people ~ this fall to sucaed him that the tt.arch for common pound must continue. .. Bucd on the iidlievements of the last few years, f will abo ICU llim it is a search that can succeed, .. tbt pmi- dcnt said. Gort.cbcv said the two laden' main task is findiQS a way to reduce strateaic nuclear weapom by SO pen:eat and noted the "'"ucmcndous Coast mourns its fallen: soldiers · BJ JONATBAN VOLD.E ........... _ Too many people iporc the mca.n- ina of Memorial Dal and .. jmt U1C it as anothc1 day oft retired Marine Corps Brir.. Gen. William .. An .. Bloomer said Monday at a Ncwpc>l't Beach ceremony. .. y du an jud&t a nation's ideals !'l bow it remembers its war de8d, Bloomer said. .. In~ thc Uni11ed Slates does a tood job. but l doG't think too many c:aanoaies ~ Wltl1 ~ •ncnded. . ""Too muy people just me it as Uolhcr day Of(.. - . Aaoa theOraQeeCcmt, ~. hundmis l\ooded mcmoriaJ pmb in nearl) every commwtity to pay tribute to those who lost their lives def'endina the oounuy.· Bloomer, former oommander of the El Toro Marine Corps Air Station. saJd individuah aJT free to~ bow they spend the day. but they should remember where that freedom came from. .. Ifs important for the people to remember wby we have the day in thc first place and those who pve tbeir lives for our country ... Blooma' laid. (Pleue -lllSllOIUAL/d) . ____. ...... aduation night parties alternative to tragedy .............. .,_'-..... claamben llonday after dlaraDtl.DM a llem- Odal 0., nlly of Veterana Peace ~D•OJ to "icanCU· VETS CLA SH AT IRVINE PEACE RALLY ••. From Al I fellow councilman Dave Baker, a candjdate for the 40th District Con- gressional seat., who appeared with the protcstors durins the rally. '"This isn't the city of Irvine's policy," Baker yelled to the erotcstors., mal'\)' of whom sported 'Baker for Conaress" butn>ns or hats. "This isn't the people of Irvine's policy. This is Larry ~n's pohcy." Baker said after the rally that he did not orpnizc the opposition, but had heard about the ·event ·at another forum and journeyed to City Hall to voice his disapproval. He supports President Reapn'sattemplS t_p supp- ly the Contra rebels to ba'rtle the &ovemment's troops. "Nobody wants war," Baker said. "But it's best for the long-range interests of the children of Nicaragua that they be frtt." Baker sajd he would ask the City Council on Tu&day to look into Asi:an's use of City HaJI for the rally w1tho4t priQr council approval. Agran, however. said he was not shaken by the vocal attacks on him and the program. ~ "I can't imagine anybody so sick that they would be against food and clothing to children who are the victims of war,·· Agran said as he left the hall. As many as SO trucks -including two brightly painted school buses that were in Irvine on Monday -and 120 people are expected to make' up the Veterans Peace Convoy when it rqroups in San Antonio. Texas. Of) June 7, said Dan Vauihn of the National Pledge of Resistance in Orange County. When the convoy. which started at six points throughout the United States, meets in Texas, it will travel to Nic:arqua to drop off the supplies gathered on the cross-country trip. Vaughn said. The first-time effort "has no real nucleus, it was just a pass roots movement that spread hke wildfire when somebody mentioned it," Vaughn said. He added that many of the eonvoy panicipants went to Nicarqua on various peace mdvements in the past. GRAD PARTIES AN ALTERNATIVE ••• PromAI sumption," Kathy Roberts of Corona anduatingdassor88 instead of just a del Mar said. "I think we're all trying bunch of kids aoina to Disneyland." to say throuaft this, 'You can stiU have And it Jives parents, some of whom a good time without it.' " have worked toae!bcr for years and For this, the parents -schools have watched one another's children have virtually no involvement with arow up, a last chance to see the the parties -are willjn1 to shell out youngsten before they e,mbart on anywhere from S 15,000 to $20,000. adulthood. T1cket sales reimburse only part of ''It's neat to see on this niaht how that sum. Local businesses help much like kids thelc kids really arc. underwrite the balance. In some You know how.teen~ can be. It's cases, bi& developers like The lrvtne neat to see them havma good clean Co. and CJ. Seaerstrom cl Sons, have fun, .. Robinson said. donated up to S 1,000 for the part.ies. These are the local high schools "We support it for the very simple having grad night parties: reason that we think it's important • Corona del Mar. June 23 -Sea they be &iven a good opportunjty to K.inp seniors will live throuih a have a good time together, one last "Nig,htofl,001 Dreams. .. Parents are time toacther, without m ixing al-not disclosina details of the party, cohol or drugs in," Sqerstrom which costs $35 for the paduate. spokesman Thomas SantJey said. • Costa Mesa, June 23 -Or- It's good public relations. Santlcy pnizcnare kcepina the theme sec;ret. said, but has little other benefit for the Tickets arc S«> now. $50 at the door. company. Disneyland isslated foraJune 17 trip. "I don't think that there's a rcaJ • Edison. June 16 -The theme payoff that even every graduate for Owsen grads is .. Fanstasy knows which busjncsses supported Island .. and tickets arc $35. Seniors (the party). They payoff is really, it's turned down the chance to go to just somethang important that needs Disneyland this year. • to happen in the community." • Estancia, June 23 -Students tickets run $25 or S30, depending on when the graduate buys them. The Disneyland trip is scheduled for June 10. • Newport-Harbor, June 23 - The Sailon take to the hi&h"'Seas with .. The Buccaneer Bash." lickets are $40. Graduates can go to Disneyland another nighL • Ocean View. June IS -Gradu· ates are taking a cruise of Long Beach Harbor with tickeu costing $40. Student:S can go to Disneyland on June 10. • University. June 22 -Seniors st.an with a party-in the &Ylll wifil a theme of "Uni at the Movies," then ~t the choice of goina to Disneyland (~25) or cruising Newport .Harbor ($45). The class reconvenes for break- fast tbe next morning. · • Woodbridge. June 22 -"Safari '88" is th~me and tickets cost $40. The Dis~land tnp is slated for June 17. Oldest law school grad given degree in Mesa Although most Orangt Coast tuJh have a choice of aoing to Disneyland sch0<>ls still send graduates to Dis-for $23 or takina a cruise of Newport neyland's grad night, most say that is Harbor and then going tQ a party, By 1"ff Aisoclated Pren secondary to the party. The amuse-which costs $40. ment park is not that speciaJ for •Fountain Valley, June 16-The Orange County youngsters. many of party has a cruise theme and tickets whom have been there repeatedly. cost $35. Disneyland's and na&)lt is And the pany 1s a chance for the scheduled for June 15. · .._ whole class to be together one last • 1rvint1 June 22 -The theme of time, rather"1han splitting off into the party 1s "Sail Away." Students groups ~ey are wont to do at the will go to the Sequoia Athletic Club in theme park. , Buena Park. The cost is $35. The "If you didn't have (the party) followmg ni&ht araduatcs can go to everyone would go their own separate Disneyland's pad ni&ht. T ickets for ways ri&ht after graduation and no that are $24. Memorial Day means a lot to Robert Trescott, who lost many fnends m World War II. but this year it took on more than the usual signifrcancc when the 69-year-old veteran graduated from law school. The dcarce he received Monday from the Western School of Law in a ceremony in Costa Mesa is believed to make him the oldest evCT to grad~te from law school in Cah- fomaa. "I take a kmd of private and personal. view of Memorial Day." ' Ol•--•.NO • • Tempa Surf Poreeaat .....__ • ....... 41 -~ ...... • , . .. La ....... ....... " .. ...... ... .... n II : •:=in II ..... ~;.:..~ .... .. ~. :•1 ..... ......... 11 • .... • .. '111 • ~--... • o-!lr M t1 .... ,..._, '!. rs-:. • • ............... ... 11 • .. "-Cllr •• ., .. ........................... n • Lm"-' , . .. QMrCJlr ,. • .............. 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LIM <*y ,, ., ...... _, ... ,. • l11e--. ....... t::l1 ....... ..., .... ~~ .. 10 IMNltONo ...... • • .. n = to ., Sen,.,.,,. .. a It ... ...,. . ., N ... .._ ... n .. ... ... LM. ....... IO .. • leno.tlt ,. IO Del ...... .. ....... ti .. ... _. 11 11 Eztende4 . °""°" ., ., ··=· • • ... ~ .. • °'*"" ... ,. ....... .. • ... ,,.. .,. ... Bl'90 ......... • ... .... AN 71 ., ,_....~ .... ---~ .. 11 .......... , . • " .. .,._ ............ __ ..... a eor....-....,.. • • llllU9~ ., a ~ ............ ..., ,, • r.-. .......... • • =a: ... :t ...... • • 41 21 T-71 .. ....... .. • ....., -----...... .. It TMllle .. • ---71 IO u IO W.........,..O.C. . , .. T.,_Vllllr .. n .................. ..,_L.-1111 .................... MEMORIAL DAY OBSERVED ON COAST ••• From Al Bloomer was the honored speaker at Pacific View Memorial Park, where more than 100 pthered to remember the nation's fallen heroes. Newport Beach City Council.ws.cnan Evelyn Harl. Cosu Mesa ~yor Donn Hall and Walter Ehlen, a Conarcssional Medal of Honor ~ cipienl also attended the ceranony, the 30th Memorial Day observuce hosted by the Newport Harbor American Leaion Post 291. In Costa Mesa, the city's veterans organizations ~led their l4th annual Memorial Day SCt'Vica at 11 a.m. Monday at Hllt>or Lawn Me:rn· orial Park. Bris. Gen. Stephen Wyman of the California Anny National Guafd was the auest speaker at that ceremony. where hundreds American flus are planled on ••The A venue of the Aqs•• in honor of f alien 19ldiers. Robert" Hanson. commander of l..egjon Post 445, read the names of 13 soldien whose flags were added to the memorial Monday. Jn Laauoa Beach. the American Leaion P'ost 222 and the VFW Post 5868 toecther held an ob!ervance at Monument Point at Heisler Park. and Westminster. ,,.,.t-1 •'°'7 on A&, Teri lee Delmonico, 26, of Hunt- inston Beach was killed at '4: 10 Lm. Sunday wbenber 1979 Toyota Cor- olla slammed into a utility pole on The 11 Lm. ceremony, complele with Irvine Center Drive near Uon Coun· a Marine Corpe ftriQa detail, wa uy Safari after she misted a tum. The preceded by a oerfonnance by die-caute of the accident is under in- Lquna Beach lii&h School &ud. vestiptidn, but police •id there was Memorial Day obtervance'S ha~ no indication drup or alcohol played been held at J{eisler Part in Lapna any role. Beach since 1946. Authorities said they were sur- Ve1aan1 poups in west Oranee prisedatthelownumbcrofaa:idents., County.!. indudina Huntinaton 8e8oh which they were unable to explain. and l"Ountain Valley, com-.. That's damn aood. we eJ,PeCt.ed a memoraled the holiday. witb 11 a.m. lot more." said Steve Scholef. deputy ceremonies at Westmins1cr Mem· county coroner. • orialCemetery. · Statewide, 30 people lost th~!!!es Memorial Day, (ormerly May 30 in traffk accidents., and the ys every year, is a federal leDI boliday were cloged late Monday with bol- now celebrated on the last Monday in j day vacationers workina their way May. home. Traditionally, the holiday ii alto a The number of anata for drivina sad one for motorists, dozen1 of under the influence wu alto down which uc killed on the .._ee•s bielt-this year. While 2,'43S •IJeFd drunk- ways. en driven were armted 11atewide in But authorities aid the number of 1987 durina the Memorial Day fatal acxidenu was down this year weekend, I, 771 were ta.ken into cpmpemi to previous holidays. In custody this year, authorities aid. Oran~ County, four people were Slaff wrt1er ReMrt~ a.- killed, in-Anaheim, Santa Ana, Irvine CrllMI~ a. &Ml re,ert. T RAPPE}) ISLAND BOAT RS RESCUED •••. Prom Al "A lot of people seemed to have gone out fisttina and boatina without consultina anybody about the weather," said U.S. Coast Guard Petty Officer Robert Beals. "We probably won't clear all of our calls until Wednesday." Beals said the Coast Guard had roughly SO calls from help over the three-day weekend and as of late Monday niaht as man1 as a half- dozen boats were still dnftina free on the oceans, having broke free of their moorings. Lifquatds and the Guafd were busy Monday iftl to various ttouble calls on talina, destination of as ~Yu '400 bmu over the Iona weekend, accordina to Harbormaster John Phelps. As the wind dropped to 20 knots and seas to S feet, boaten were liven clearance to leave Avalon Hamor. and many chose to brave the stilJ.. rouah 20:mile channel to ,et bKk in time for work Tuesday, Stonier said. The stormy seas apparently claimed two victjms Sunday • The search for Thomas Fonuna. lost when bis catamaran capsized off Santa Catalina on Sunday, was suspended Monday afterraaae cmin fajled to find a trace of the miains man, authorities uid. Also Sunday, David Wri&ht was lost and presumed drowDecf after a bolt ill wbidl be wu.ridias crubed into a pier near Lona Beacti Harbor, Cout Guard Petty Officer Dennis Hall said. n. Aa11elai.I Pren .. .,....... ............... one would sec everyone apin," Mike .• Laguna Beach, June 23 - Wardner. University H1gh's senior Parents are not announcmg the class pr~ident, said. "It's a aood idea party's theme until graduatjon night. fer everyone to sec each other one last Tick~t~rc $35. time ... h's kmd of a aroup feelini. It • ~na. June 16-''South of the really lets you know that you're the Border~ is this year's theme apd T~tl~~betw~navi~t~a~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~i veterans' cemetery and commence-11 rnent ceremonies for the Fullerton college. NORTH T O CAMPAIGN O N COAST ••• From Al · Long Beach Airport on Wednesday for Cox. morninJ.. "It's his fint campaign ap~rance He wall then spend the afternoon an} where," Ruic said ... We re treat· walking around Long Beach. knock-ang 1t lik~ a Dtt$1ck-ntial appcaran~." mg on residents' doors and ask.ins 1hem to vote for Rohrabechcr, one of' North retired from the Mann'e 11 candidates running for Lunpen's Corps in May after being cha~ in a seat. which extends from Lona Beach federal indictment with CQnsp1rin1 to into Humington Beach. defraud the 1ovemment by illcplly diverting money from Iranian anras North will attend pnvate fund-sales to Cootra rebels seekina to oust raisers for Rohrabacher 1n Los An-Nicarqua's Marxist aovemment. &eles and Pasadena in the afternoon. then address a S25<H-penon dinner In t\is first public·~ since ·for Rohrabacher in the hanpr of the the Il'an-Contra hearinp. a com- world's laracst airplane. the Spruce menccmcnt addrcu on Ma~ 2 at the Goose. For a $ 1,000 donation, par· Rev. Jpry Falwell's Liberty School in t1cipants can attend a reception qot Vi,.;naa. North lubed out at bis door on the ocean liner Queen Mary accusai and said the chartel = prior to dinner and have their picture him were "not a brand .. but .. , taken with North. of COUl"MC ... North will spend Thurtday cam· "We must nqtjust cbooee tbc riallt .wi.nina and ancndina ft.an6-ra.I-president" in 1'918. North Mid ... ..,e --..... need I betttt Consrm... - ~~ Illy Piii • ...... OFPJCa ........ eo.e .... CA ......... ,MOC.. ..... CAtraal But m theopposmgcamp, Wieder's ~mpaign manaacr said they're not worried about Rohrabacher's high- profile supporter. ··we think Rohrabacher needs all ~c help he can JCL We don't think it wall make a difference," said Jeff Wallach. . The other .Re{>14bllcan candidates 1 n the 42nd Distnct arc Jeffrey Burns. Don Davis. Steve 'Hom Andrew Litllefair and Robert WelbOum. . The other Repu~lican candjdain an the «>th Dist.net of fountaia Vallty, Irvine and Laauna Beacll are David Baker. Char1cs Dev~. Jola• Hylton, John ~Uy, Adam K.iei'nik. Patricia Gunter Kishel K.thleen LltMm, Nathan Roten~ llri'Y Stttn~ Pea-Swan, o.;;:~illia• and Wilham Yacoboui Jr. ~-.. 1M11 -I ...... W-'311 J aMcall 842-6086 .. II THE P.O.S.H . .. OFEICE VISIT ...... Because your time is valuable, and getting aw-.r from the offlce isn't -always possible, we offer a 'highly eJCperienced staff thar can come to your offlce. At your convenience. we will p~nt a comprehensive collection of our . in-stock suits. sport coats and furnishings, or if your prefer, samples of made- to-mea$Ure clothing and dress shirts. You will be fitted by one of our master tailors.. in your !'flice, and your selections will be delivered back to you.' PLEASE CALL FOR AN APPOINTMENT~ .. AND SEE JUST H OWEASY'SHOPP.ING eAN BE .