HomeMy WebLinkAbout1988-06-07 - Orange Coast PilottuESDAY; JUNE -7, 1988 25 CENTS
RefereDdUm ::tfue on Home
tJf ., '· ,.. • • , .. ' • • • .. , ... • Ranch
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-M · t ill fd f N be · open space. 't js bounded by the San • &afl'a Said larcr, ho~ever, thll he · esa VO eFS W eC e .n OV~m r . . ·'·. Dict.9 f'rttway,.. Har;t>or BC),ulcyard ~doubt~ a special election will be ·... -if --~t f } ffl-~f t · · 6d •' and Sunnowcr Avenue~ • . . nttessary ~ ti~ constraints 2 • . • COD rovers a 0 Ce proJeC proce~ ~··· Another. ·referendum WU ~~ 'will likely pllCC> lhc issue on the
•• • ·: ... 1-:-' _, -• • • • • • • • .:. • •• . , , ,...»· f • Jcvcttd al a stpini~ project. l,he ~met · NoHmbcr ballot.
. ., · . , ,. . ' . • ' . : . .. ',. • -~ . · ·· Dcvelopm_ent . Co. s Metro Pointe •• " Home Ranch wu fim brou&ht
.I . By JON+TllAN~(>LZDl'. ~. ,d~~ ~ol\day ao pli~th~ ISSUC!'d,on. but ·the Cit)' ~s .fi&huna th.at refer-bcf'on::the CH) tn 1986 Si~ lhen . °' .. ..., .... -.,.: · · . · hn;.~,otmrcsponsct~~re1creft um cndum in coun Opponcn&s reared la'W)CfS~have done more work on
.,J._. Costa Mesa ·v terS.will ,decidc' the ~tlttoo filed by . opppner\t,s last, .lhc ,Ctt)' m1lht .make ·~a s1~1l1r', prOJCCt J1'ao construction work~.
• ·· .,fate of the c~'troiett,ial Home Ranch ... ~(Ch $tekl~a }blo~ert~ the cou11~ chaHcwge to the Home R~nch prOjeC't. Once planned as the tallest ~u11din1
-office ro' .in 1 rcferrndum vote al s approva o t~ p'r~J«l. • h C • .On Mon~~· Co1,1oc1lman Peter 1n prtaao. Count). the prOJ«t has h , ·f1 l t I ' -h N The 94-acn: proJ,«t tn non .osta Q.IJfl'a asked lfl.4t the lfome Ranch changed rons1derabl)' an response to .· ~~~wli 1 e Y •P~?A t e ovem.: M~s:a. i~cludts'.l 2-and ~toryoffice . in1tiat1vc appear ·~fort Costa ~esa pubhc oppos111on and lcpl banlcs..
,. a .. ot. • .;,.,. . . · .. . bu1l<J1ngt. a chtld car.c cent,r. fi ncans .. >Yotcn '"as soon as po$siblc." and his· . 1,'he tos&,a Mesa Rnidents for
T'fte· Costa Mesa City Council · .IJlUKum.. restaurant and 11 acres of request wanupponcd unanimously. Rcsp0nsiblc Gro"'ih. rtPttStntina
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· Two blue-collar workers
are feel(;\g,gooc;t after
splitting the record $51.4
· · . million Lotto jackpot.~ ~7:' ·. ~
Nation .. ·~
Robert F. Kennedy's fam-
Uy gathers on the-20th
annJversary o f his a~
sasstnatlon./ M
' ' .
Entertal~m~nt :. J
The epic musical • :Les
Miserables'' exudes· ..
power and passion at the
Shubert./87
·1ndez
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AS
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By ROBERT BAR-'ER °' ............
The T()wn Square condol'f\iniurn·
townhome project was catted .. a 'bad
deal" for the city today by Hunt-
in,aton Beach City Councilman Wes
. Bannist~r. who's led an unsuccessful
fight against the controversial ven-
ture.
Bannister, on the losing end ofa 4-3
vote Monday night that approv~ However. Councilman Tom Ma>~
fjnal financial tenns: for the ·~· who was on the winn1n1 side of lhe
. d~vclSJPr:t\f;n\ -project. said th4t di~ vote. said that the Cll) will-csscnually
Cll) is '·givtn& away too m"m:: ._be a 50-50 partner wnt) develo~r
Furthermore. the most lucrative pio--f.rar\k \ioJa and ~ . .-ands to make a
jcct at the city-owned foQner Civic vc~~ large profit if horttc pncn
Center site 'itt 6th' and Main Streets · cc;>nrmue to chmb.
would be s1nglc-.'fam1 ly hom~ -not· ··E\en 1f the pnces don't JO up. the townhom~ and' condomintun'ls -dt) v.111 grt a fair market pntt for the
he said. land." Ma)>s.sa1d.
"' -:..
Depositors, reimbursements. ..
orderly at closed Mesa S&L
By BOB VAN EYKEN
ud JONATHAN VOLZKE
Of ... 0-. .........
There was no sip of panic in the
13th noor offices of American Di·
versified Co. today as depositors
lined up to rcccive their f~eral
insurance checks coverina accounts
lost when the company failed.and was
taken over by the Federal Home Loan
Bank Board.
Record S&L payout underscores warnings. B4 .
under because of risky real estate
investments intended to return hiJh
profits to investors. mostly b11·
money investors.
versified ,;, 1986 and of North
America in 1987.
The bank board 1s payina $1. l 4
btlhon from the Federal Savings and
l oan Insurance Corp. to American
Diversified depositors in the largest
<'ash payout the aacncy has made.
aecncy Chairman M. Da.nny Wall
said. It is covering $209 million in
deposits a.t North America.
opponent\. araut the projec1 will
flood the srrttts with trafftC' and ~tan
irrnpons1blt pece for development.
Thcgroupalsocontendsthcprojecl is
poor!) planned .
Whtie the referendum \Ole looms.
Home Ranch ~main in coun.
In a Ma) 24 ruhna. SupcriorCoun
Judet Tull> Se)mour found the
counctl's coun-ordercd rt' isions to dcnsit~ rtstncttons m the ar~ral
plan acceptable. Btu Ctty Attorney
Tom Wood told the council that
Sc) mour also v.ould likely review 1he
en' 1ronmcntal impact repon on the
project. • The council Monda) Khedu~ a
public hearin& on that 4-inch-thick
en' ironrnental report fdr June 20. or •s soon as possible thcrcaf\er. A 5tudy
session is 'ICheduled 1 week pnor to
that hcarina.
Councilman Da"e Wheeler araucd
again\t a June date for the hearina.
"Ifs unreasonable to exP«t the
public lo read this much in two wttk~
espcc1all} if they can't act all of the
report~ cited in here." he said.
Counc1l1Aoman Mat') Hombu<"klc
(Pleue ee:e llAJllCB/A2)
Coast precincts
-report sporadic
.early turnout
•
HB reports brisk~.
early-hour voting,
but Mesa slower
ByJONATHANVOLZ&E
ud ROBERT BARKER °' .. ...,,... ...
A long day for Orangt Coast polJ
wa•chcrs staned out slowly in some
areas ahd qu1ckl) in 01hen as voters
bcpn punch1n1 ballots for scores of
would-be elected officials and prop-
ositions
But tbt turnout val'led from cm to
ett}. and O\eTI from prectn~ to
pn.'Cincr w1thtn cmes. the volun1ccr
poll watchers said .
The earl) voter turnout at a
prC'C'tnct at 512 Hanford Ave. 1n the
old tOIAJl pan of Hunttngton ~ach
was the most bnsk in )tars. ekcuon
offic1als said.
:·Usuall) weha,eonc -.oLcrwattmg
for u~at 7 a.m. and nobody else shows
up unul J o't'lock or after.'' satd
-clcctton inspector Kay MacClcod.
who's ~orked at the garage polling
Under tenns struck Mon<ta) ni&ht.
tbc ctt~ "''II get S:?.5 mtlhon for its
land from proceeds from sales.of the
condominiums and townhomcs.. And
when the 89 t~o.stor) and thrtt-stof)
umts arc completed 1n abbu1 18
months at a value of about S 18
million. the cit) will rtte1ve about
$160.000 a )t"ar in tu increment
fund~. ·
plact for 11 )tars.
· A heated coniress1onaJ race. t~
slow-irowth 1n1ttauve and b11 bond
1ssu~ could have been rnponstb~
for the brisk turnout of l 1 voters in
the first 40 minutes at the Huntington
Beach polhng place. she said.
But 1n Cost.a Mesa. fev.-cr than 2S
voters turned out 1n the first three
hours the polls were open at \he
Presldentlal lront-run-
ners In California to
watch return•. AT
?'l.c1&hborbood Community Centtt
on Park .\' enue.
"th1,. 1s prett} slow." said inspec-
tor Gene Adams .. We're usually
busiest betv.cen 7 and 9 a.m .. but
v.c·rc ~ci) slo"' today."
-'dams said he thouaht turnout
m1iflt be lo"' at the center becau~ of
nc"' prcclnct sphts that reduced the
number of W>ters on his rolls from
more thart' SOO to 336. Laura Hruu..
Helen Wilk and Joy Wolfe manned the polls -.1th Ad.ams. .
(Pl--eee ~Y/A2)
The ctt} ov.ns 97 .000 square feet o
the J 7-acrc proJCC'l site and Mol
~n\ abou1 25.000 square feet.
Bannister said that Mola·s ponion
1s \alucd 11 SI mallion. yet the city's
land 1s valued at onl) Sz.2 malhon.
"I have a hard t1me".bclicv1ng.th1t•
our land wouJdn 't be worth S•
m1lhon becau~ it's about four umn
(Pleue ._ COKDO/ A2)
Mercedes
.makes a ' .
blg&plash
'in Newport
Thfboard on MoAday closed and
liquidated American Diversified Sav·
ings Bank aod North America Sav-
inas and Loan Auociauon. both of
Costa Mesa, without arranaina for a
takeover of the thrifts by another
institution.
Officials said the institutions went
"These two repre~nted abuses."
said bank board member Lawrence
White. "The whole esstncc ofbeina a
depository mstitulton with aovem-
mcnt·provided insurance is that there
is a strona ... obliption to OJ>CTllC in a
sarc and sound manner. TitcK two
places did not." •
Both institutions have bttn insol-
vent for IOmt time. Rqulators took
over manucment of Amtrican Di·
Ron Edmondson. a board spokes-
man. pointed to a stack of Federal
Exprcss envelopes and said mort
than SOO chums for insurance pay-
(Pleue eee PROCW/ A2)
Jettrey Ho•aeplin; -.n-accoant eaecattn wlttl Ariietlcan
Dlftnifled Sa-rinl• Bank, talb on the pbone Monday at tbe
company•• office In Co.ta Mara.
Mesa seeks
development
pact review -
• I
fe.n••=•• ....... __.
..... by Semwy Ol5'ale
• ~EuloillaWide....,.• nc Polla wiU bt opeta _.ii I It-•· liA ..,.._ fire •ions and cbuidMa
*"*OlaftitCouaty. Alioaa with &M
pm.idmtia.I rttt. tlte <>nnee COMt ts
n tM mids& or hca~ r1ta Cot the ~h IQd 42nd Conaressional Dis.-
riC'ts. Vo&cn throu&h<>ut the counay
alao '"' decidina the fate of Measure .A. the SO<alltd $low1h arowth in· itaati~-c that hnks development to
mandatory traffic improvementl.
~of the Huntina1on Beach early
bird~kanie Reill). said this morning
that she was at the polls bn$h1 and
eartr to \'Ole for the prn1dentill
nom1M-e
A Democrat, she said only that she
voted for "the best.man." A youna
dauahtcr who went with her into the
votina booth hinted "the best man"
-.-asn't Michae!I Dukak1 .
1 cny Townsdin. who descnbcd
her~clf a~ a "staunch. die·hard Re-
publican." said her most compelhng
reason to vote was to cast a ballot for
conservative candidate Dana
Rohrabachcr in the 42nd Distnct
congressional race.
She's rccci~cd lcuers from the
White House urging her to vote for
l(ohrabachcr. a former aide to Presi-
dent Reagan.
ln Costa MC'S<l. Miles Wood said he
came out for the 40th District race.
He added with a lauah that he 1s a
candidate for the Republican C~tral
Committee. which also encouraged
him to vole
When the Costa Mesa poll closes,
Adams will be responsible for return-
ing the completed ballots 10 the
....... ~._... ......
R~ Rep. Robert Badham •otm for eomeone otber thui •
hlmsetrfor the Ont time in 28 yeara thi9 morntnc.
Count) Registrar of Voters' office.
"'here the) will be counted lontght by
computer.
"h makes for a real long day."
.\dams said. Those who have for-
aoucn whcrt' the> should vo~ or have
other election qu~t1ons should call
the Registrar of Voters office at
S67-7600 where 20 phone lines were
added Lo handle the load.
U.S. Tempe.
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~ • .. Loi .... ~ _.,.,IMI Y--1/ty a .. ""' · l PROCESS ORDERLY AT CLQSED s&L •••
From Al
mcnts have already been received,
man) from the East C'oast.
.. This is the first shipment of claim
forms.·o\er SOO pieces and they're
still coming m We have a lot ofout of
stale people. a lot of East Coast
accounts we're havmg to deal with."
Sa' iogs and loan accounts arc
usuall) insured up to SI 00.000.
Amounts bc)ond that a~ not c<>v·
crcd. and mH'Stors lost about S2
m1lhon in unmsurcd funds when the
C'osta Mesa 1ns11tutions collapsed.
Edmondson said
Man) local '""estors chose 10 go to
' Lhc bank to gel their money rather
than use the mall'
··People who arc coming in m
' person we're trying to g1\.'e them their
chccls toda). For most people. 11's
onl) Laking about 20 minutes,"
Edmondson said
Dcpo~11or Irma Westphal of Hunt·
• ington Beach said she was sat1s1ficd
1 with the refund process although the
failure "'as a surpn!>e.
·, "It was' er} simple and quick." she
said '"The) seemed 10 ha"e e'ef)·
thing 1n order. It was JU!il a shock.
tha1's all. learning that the compan~
"as going under··
Westphal s~11d. howc~er. that she
"as not worncd bccau~ she knew
that her account would be co~erC'd by
· American D1 vcrs1ficd·s federal in-
·Surancc
Other depositors wrth acc9un1P
· under SI 00.000. also were hap~ with
the quack returns.
'"for me. ii was prc11y quick: I
made an appointment ycsterda} "
said Helen G Smith of Fullenon
But Smith said her troubles weft'
not o'er
''The aniuet)" IS JUSt bcginntng.
Finding a d<X'cnt home for the monc)
1s going 10 be a problem."
She added she did not expect 10 gel
am v.hcre near the 9.35 perccn1 1ntcrL~t that she earned at Amencan
0 1 \ l'rSI fied.
Nauonall). onl ) I 0 of 235 failed
sa\lngs and loans since 198 I ha' c
tx·cn resohed v.11h a straight payout
to depositors Usually. the bank
board pa) s a bonus to a healthy thrift
10 bu) a Silk s&L because 1t 1s
cheaper . .\t the 'Cf) least. the board
arranges 10 transfer deposits to
another 1nsutut1on.
But the unique characteristics of
the l'-"O California thnfls made that
1mprac11cal, Wall said
Thl' thnfts had few retail deposits.
lacked branch olliccs. and rched on
high.cost. short-term deposits ar-
ranged through brokers. The brokers
in tum lent out lhc deposits for
six-cul:nivc real csta.tc ventures and
other risk) investments. Wall said. 7'k .U..CUtH Ptta ., .. CM•
trllHlld to W1 npon
CONDO DEAL APPROVED ••.
From Al
as large." he said.
Bannister also s.a1d the Cll}
wouldn't r<X'e1"c HS mone) for the
land sales until the un11s arc sold and
until 'anous expenses and commit·
men ts arc paid out to Mola.
.\lso. the Cit} 1s pulling up the land
as collateral for Mola·s cons1ruc11on
loans. Bann1~1er said. If the company
should .go "bell) up.·· the c1t} would
forfeit o""nersh1p of the land. he said.
In add1uon. Bannister sa.td he
found fault with the city's agreement
to pa) Mola for S.5 pcrccnr of gros$
1nc;ome for mana~-ment of the pr<>-
Ject as well as brokeraae fees. lltle
insurance. opcraung costs, taxes and
cosls ofa framing contractor
When the deductions arc figured m
and rnnsultant fees paid out. the city
ma} l"CC'c1vcno mQre than SI million
to SI 1 ! m1lhon fol lhc rand. Banntslcr
said
The Town Sq..are project. which
hao; been nc-go11a1cd and discussed for
nearl) four }Cars. has bttn scaled
do" n tn dcnsil> and ~1ght from
earlier proposals. Turned town by the
Planning C'om m1ss1on earher this
~car. 11 was appro,ed last month b}
the Cit) Council. Work IS scheduled
10 start "1h1s summer on homes that
arc C\pccted 10 be priced from s ~15.000 10 $300.000
ToV.n Square 1s slated to be a buffer
bctv.een the C\pccted redevelopment
of the do" ntown and the sin&Je
famil) residences funhcr inland.
RANCH •••
From Al
also voiced concerns that a June date
was rushing the issue. "We are
proceeding in great haste. My
preference is 10 &ivc a little more time
for review:· she said.
Truck-bus collision clogs
freeway traffic for hours
By PAUL AJ\CIUPLEY °' ..............
An accident involving an l 8·wheel
truck and an abandoned bus on the
San Dtcao Freeway caused muStve
gridlock Monday. with m6ionsts
arrivina home three to fbur hours
later than Ul\lal.
A tractor·tra1lcr rig traveling north
m the right-hand lane drifted onto the
shoulder by the Santa Ana River
about 12:30 p.m. and struck the
disabled church bus. said M ike Lund-
quist of the C'ahfornta H1ghwa)
Patrol.
Both vch1ctcs tumbled off the
frecwa\ and down a 40-foot embank-
ment b} the mer. Lundquist said.
Nobody was on the bus and the
truck driver suffertd minor inJuncs.
But the accident forced motorists to a
crawl for the next nine hours as
h1ghwa) patrol and Cahrans officials
arapplcd with the cleanup.
Traffic reportedly backed up all the
WI) to El Toro. and for about a half
hour 11 came to "a dead stop .. whtle
workc!J moved a crane into position
to hotSt the truck and bus, a highway
patrol dtSpatcher said.
Two nght-hand nonhbound lanes
v.ere closed for much of the day.
"We've been getting a lot of calls
from people who arc three to four
hours overdue." she said .
Al 9:30 p.m .. more than nine hours
after the accident, traffic was still
snarled.
Accordina 10 Lundquist. truck
driver Robcn B. Cause~. 34, of
Memphis w-as talkm& on his Ciuzens
Band radio and looking at a map
when his r1& dnflcd over onto the
freeway shoulder.
Causey wt5 dm mg betwttn SS and
60 mph whc-n his truck hit the
disabled church "fun bus.'' The
impact knocked the bus onto 11s side
and both vehicles tumbled down the
embankment
Caust) suffered a broken le& and
minor cuts and bruises. He was taken
to Fount.a1n Valle) Regional Hospital
Within 4S minutes of the a<X'1dent.
traffic was backed up past the Costa
Mesa Frecwa). Lundqu1Sl said
MESA WEIGHS DEVELOPMENT PACT ••.
From Al
interested 1n a development ·agree-
ment. Roeder said.
"The de\cloper has comm111ed
substantial resources toward (the)
proJ~t and land acquisition." Roeder
told the council. "The concerns
expressed center on varying m1cr-
prelat1ons of (the slow-growth) 'in-
1t1at1' c as well as delays associated
with 11s provisions ...
south Orange County.
Slow-growth supporters blasted the
supervisors. contendina the aptt-
mcnts -which carried promises of
traffic improvements -were at-
tempts 10 skin the coun1yw1de slow-
growth initiative. which is before
voters today. A similar 1n1t1attve has
quahficd for the November ballot in
Costa Mesa.
not at the mee11ng, of trying 10
sidestep the mit1at1ve and said ~
would not support any form of
Kline's prOJCCI .
But Roc<kr assured the council his
intent was not to avoid the millal1ve.
but to protect the c11y's interests in
redevelopment prOJCCts.
. . . Roeder said a formal agreement
between the city and Kline would
suarantcc the pro~cct and could
Althou&}I the Costa Mesa council
only ordered 11s staff to explore the
possib1hty of agreements in the city
without regard to any specific pro.
JCCts. two council members voiced
concern.
Kime has cooperated with the city
and so far has worked on his own to
clean up an area deStgnated as a
redevelopment area. Roeder said. UCI ATTRACTING ACADEMIC STARS ••• r.rotcct it from the initiative. which
J"romA2
Not surprisingly. each has attracted
one or more intcrna11onally known
figures lo lhc UC'I campus.
-In 1984. Dr Ricardo M1lcd1. an
e11:pen in neurob1ol<>&y. was ap-
pointed D1s1mgu1shed Professor to
UC rs Department of Psychob1ol<>&Y
M1lcdi spec1ahzcs m I~ stud} of
communication between nerves and
muscles. He was formerly the chair of
the Department of B1ophys1cs at
Unl\ersit) College. London
Thomas Professor of Psychology at
Harvard and spent 1hc past year as a
fellow al the Center (or Advanced
Stud) in the Behavioral Sciences at
Stanford Untvers1ty
Why have these and other d1~
t1nauishcd scholars left h1ghl) re·
spcctcd instuuuons for one who~
reputation 1s s11ll grow1ng?
All. of course, have reasons of their
own But Ohn ventured a general
explanation.
nks development with traffic 1m·
provemcnts.
1987. The council voled 4·1. with Dave
Noted genct1c1s1 Francisco Ayala Wheeler d1sscntmg. to have staff
left UC' Da~ 1s m 1987 to become a draw up possiblcordinancesallowing
D1s11nguuhcd Professor of B1olog1cal development agreements. The panel
Sciences at UC'I did not order a return date for the
Dr. Lewis Dennis Smith brought a potential agreement ordinances.
d1sungu1shoo record of ~rch in Similar agreements have been used'
dc,elopmcntal b1oloay from Purdue by the county. In a six-month period.
Un1vcrs11y 1h1s )Car when he became county supervisors entcrtd 21 dc-
thc new dean of the School of vclopment airccments that guaran-
B1olog.1cal Sciences. teed 62.000 homes and 4S million
Dr. Alfredo H-S Ang. an inter-square feel of commercial space tn
··1 would have a lot of trouble
\Oting for development agreements if
I lhOufht the intent was to Jet around
any m1tia1ivc the voters might pass.''
C'ounc1lwoman Mary Hornbuckle
said.
"I think development agreements
arc bad things," Wheeler added "I
cannot help but feel we arc on the
same road the county 1s on .... and I am
\.'Cf) frightened by that."
Wheeler .,,...11.:f'(f Kline. who was
"This gu y 1s respondin& 10 a (cur,
redevelopment) aJency request, •
Roeder said. "h 's distinctly different
than what the county is domg."
Roeder said Kime plans to include
traffic impro~ements in his prOJCCt
Ma)"or Donn Hall added the slow.
growth 1nit11t1vc. 1f passed, could
prevent "'good" projects as well as
bad.
"I don't know what impact the
growth sn1l1a11vc would have on
rcdc"clopmen1 prOJCCts. but 1( an
attac11vc plan 1s presented. I'd hate to
sec those plans shot down.·· Hall said. -Dr Peter Rcn1zcp1s. a pioneer m
the use of lasers 10 in\est1gatc
chemical rcacuons while al Beu
Laboraton~ 1n New Jersct. was
appointed Prc<i1dcn11al Chair and
professor of che m 1s11) 1 n I 98S
"It's a sense of poss1b1ht) that
misht not e>.ISI rn established 1ns11 1u-
tioM ... Olin said "It's an opponun1t y
to mo' c into more dttc<'llon-. ··
na t1onally renowned professor of l~~~~:;:;s::;s;~~~;;:;:::::;:::::;:::::;:::::;::=:::;::~==:;:::;::::=7:::;=:;;;::==~:::::=~::::;:::;::;:::==~=.:::;;::;,
c1\ll cn&inccnng. w1lljoin the School
ofEnginccnn& in July afler 29 years at
He '"' cntcd a technique called
p1cosccond SJ>l'Clroscop) that 1s used
b) chemists. b1olog1sts and ph}s1cists
to stud} 1hc in1crac11o ns of atom sand
molecules
-ln1crna11o nall} known htcraf)
cn11c Dr J Hillis Miller became a
D1stmgu1shcd Prokssor of En1hsh
and Comparal1H' Literature at 1JC'I
in 1986.
Recruited from Yale. Miller as-
sumed a pivotal position 1n UCTs
Program 1n Critical Theory.
-Dr. R. Duncan Lu~ accepted an
appointment in UCl's School of
Social Sciences last month as a
Distinguished Prof(U()r ofCoa.n1uve
Sc1cn.ccs and director of the newly
created Irvine Research Unit 1n
Matflem•tical Behavioral Sciences.
l • He currently is the Victor S
ORANGE .... .....
COAST ._,, .... .
MAIN OFFICE SJO w.t Bar SI COP. .._ C4 ._._,.. 8oo IMO, CoN Mela CA ~
In Miller's case. 11 was an op.
portunll) to Join a department that
alrc::td) had de' eloped a hrgh repu-
tation and '-"as 'illll moving up. Ohn
SU&il~tcd .
the University ofllhno1s.
Chancellor Jack Peltason an·
nounccd last month that Dr. C'han&·
Lin Tien will be recommended as
UC'l's new executive vice chancellor.
Tien. who has been at UC Berkeley
since I 9S9. 1s an internationally
rccogn1z.cd au1hon1y in mechanical
cnsmccnng.
Also in May. Dr. Dennis J. Aianer
fhcsc scholars haq: been joined by was named dt:an of the Graduate
other d1stingu1shed faculty members School ofManaacmcnt. He movei to
in n:ccnt )C::trs UC'I in the fall from USC where he
Jerrold Petrofsk~ who pioneered has been a professor of economics
And for Luce. 11 wa!> a chance to
return 10 thl' campu~ where he was a
professor of W{'1al sciences 1n the
earl) I 97C>i.
the use of compulN"S to help the smee I 976.
p:aratzcd '-"al ... mo,cd to UCf from Other '"stars" could be listed he~
Wri t State Un1"ers1ty in Ohio 1n and more can be expected to JOm
198 • them as the univcn1ty continues to
Jacques Dcmda. formerly director · arow. in size as well as stalu~.
ofstudies at Ecole des Hautes Etudes .\s Ohn noted. '"Th(f'C'S a sort of
en Sciences Soc1ales in Paris and a academic network that operates. and
v.orld renowned philosopher. joined people pay attention 10 who is aoina
the UCI School of Humanit;es in where.'
o:&.::C ........ ,
~ '41667• ~ ' eOl!OtW .. , 011 Ju.tcall 642-8088
....,. ft.O.,. II yo.. ., -.... ,... .,..... "' •a..,m c.itMIDr97P"" -)'(V~--~ ..,_,.,......,II '°" .. ,.. ...... ,.. C!Oillf~., •111 ----IO•"' 9'11 J'VI" _, _. 1M-...
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I
Commencement
service Fnday at
Coastline College
Coeitline Community Cot1ette•1 Newoon
Beach Center will be the t1te of the collele'• 12th annual commenccmnt ce;emoay fridly. -
Dr. John Randall, interim chucebor of the
California Community Colletet, will live lhe comme~ment addteta. Fred Roth, pretidcat of the
Coastline Foundation, will receive the c:Olleee'•
honorary associate in ans~·
Ninety-eiaht ~uates wdl recci~ M dePees.
168 will aet occupational certificates and 41 Othen
will tarn both. The ceremony will ~D at 7 p.m. at
the center, 3101 Pacific View Drive, Corona ckl
Mar. "' ·
Public •J'akln6 talk
Lecturer Cheryl Jaffe will present a seminar on
public ~peakint Wednesday at the Meridian Hotel, 4SOO MacArthur Blvd., Newport Beach, in a
prosram co-spon50ttd by the Newport Harbor Area
Chambtr of Commerce.
Jaffee will discuss elmininatina fear and
developinaconfidence in her S:4S p.m. address. Call
644.8211 for further information and reservations.
4
Streu lecture at OCC
"feel Better Now: The Art of Lettina Ge,'' 1s the
topic of a workshop to be presented Friday from 7:30
to 10 p.m. in Room lOS of the Counselina and
Admissions Buildint at Oran,e Coast Colleae in
Costa Mesa.
Psychotherapist Chris Schriner will present the
prosram, which 1s pnced at S l S. Call 432·5880 for
reservations and additional information.
Scholarshlp awards set
The deadline is Friday for application for the
Women's Division of the Fountain VallcyChambtr
of Commerce's ei&hth annual scholanhip awards.
The scholarships will be presented to female
residents of Fountain Valley, 2S ycan or older.
preparina to enter or re-enter the business or
professional world. Call Diddy Lammen at
862-3453 for funher information. ·
Dana Polnt rlvlera
The Dana Point Cham~r of Commerce will
conduct its third annual "Ni.abt on the California
Riviera" Saturday at the Pavilion Shoppins Cneter
at Harbor and Golden Lantern in Dana Pomt
Hiahli&htina the 6 p.m. fundraiser will be an
auction or hundreds of donated items.. further
information may be obtajned by callina Bob Moo~
. at 496-8854.
..
E•~t«: plann1ng wor kshop
~ workshop ofTerina taps on estate planning,
trusts and the avoidance of j>robate will be offered
Saturday in Room I 09 or Oranae Coast Coll•'s
Counselina and Admissions Build1na.
Lawyer Richard Saavedra, a certified public
accountant who spent 13 yean with the Internal
Revenue Service, wall conduct the 10 a.m. propam.
The cost is S 16 per person or $2S for a couple. Call
432-5880 for details
The Queen CitychapJer No. S7 of the Women's
Army Corpt Veterans' ~uon Wlll hold its•
rqular monthly mcetinc Saturday in the communi-
t:°m of Fidelity Savinas and Loan, 13820 Seal
h Blvd., an the Leisure World shoppina center,
Seal Beach.
Any woman who served or as cµrrently serving
in the Anny 1s welcome to atfend. Call Jean
Earnshaw at (213) S97-2S60 for additional tnfor-
·mation.
Tuesday. June 7
• 6 p.m. Lapaa Bud City Condi, council
chambers. 50S Fornt Ave.
• 7 p.m. Newport Bead Parka, BHCHI and
Recrutloa Commhsloa, council chambtrs. 3300
Newpon Blvd .. Newport &Qch.
Wedneulay, J unes
• 9:30 a.m. Oru1e C.Uty Board of S.rr·
vtson, board heanna room, Hall of Admmistrat1on.
10 Civic Center Plaza, Santa Ana. ,
• 7 p.m. La~ 8e8dl Plaaalaa Commluloa,
council chambtrs. SOS Forest Ave.
Irvine to put a 'bang' back Into 4Ul·
I IJ JONATllAN VOLZ&E -1~pmdtnct' Day" ttlebntioa in Walnut A\C,. will ~ t~ Slit of w "f1mllttta~nK"OUrlled10comteut; •
... ....,....... '" aM." R~ruawt .. In addiuon, willl ct'ldwatjon. which ,.,,11 fa11u~ the Raia · brina 1 picnic din~ and Makt ouu r.Olll
What'• &he founh of July without dt~cffittttl ") r.~, ban. ii become more bow Sinacrs.. a dukb~n·1 lintins lfOUP! tow Jtat on the.,... ... R.Odeln llid. T1iiC fircv.-ork_1., • 1 lCU t 1or 1nd1\ iduals and JfOUJ>t to,et .. lttvuir 1988." preritnied bj die Lori pki Will ope• at 3 pm. and the ibOW,
' into the okJ fuh1oned spem of patnol· Hanson Dantt Studio: and a "Pltnotic whi h 1s sPQntoftd by the 1HOC11ti°'9 and ~in~ the popi, blnp and fla~. the lim... Popi Conttn b)' the South Coast ym· Fred S JamC"S and Co. oflr\'iM. beains 11
holiday JUlt ~ms to finlc. uys ~tnck ~· So tht Pohcc A~1at1on 1s briawina oboft> Orthcsba, dirtfted b)' John Lany 4:30 p.m .. ht id. •
Rociacrs. Irvine Pohcc Auoc1auoo s>rn•· ~ck tht ··conccn on tht Grttn and Oranerr. Rodi'"" said bt expect u many • ck~t. . f1rc~orks .. of )can pa t. to bt held the Hiahh&httna 'the e"enina will bt. of 8.000 to bt on hand for the s.how. Ticket . <>!1July4, 1987, there was for the fint e"cn1nf of July 4th. course. 0 The Cint American Firt~oru inform tion is available throuah ~ time in many )Cll'1, no communitywidc 'The rvine Hip School Stadium, 4321 Show." Oisbrov. at 78~?741 .
Work on Newport Pier
The Fiahenoan •a aeaf ood reataurant la expected
to open next m onth on the end of the Newport Pier. It will be almllar to an eartery of the aame name at
the bue of the San Clemente Pier.
Lou Yan torn, headed Coast
Boys&Girlsc~ubuntil '86
By JONATHAN VOLZJtE °' .............
Lou Yantom. who devoted 37 )ears to
the Boys cl Girls Club and countless other
hours to the Lions Club and other c1v1c
groups. died Monday af\er sufTenng a
hean attack at Costa Mesa City Han.
He was 70 years old.
Yantom aP.parently was auend1na the City CounC11 meeuna and used the
restroom dunna a break. He collapsed
there about 9 p.m
Pohcc Offictr Dean Smith. who was
. stationed at the council meeung. sum-
moned paramedics and administered
emerienC) aid to Yantorn. but the man
was pronounced dead at Collcce Hospital
m Costa Mesa.
He 1s surv1\led by has wife. The couple
hved 1n Oranac.
Yantom reu~ from the Boys cl Girts
Club an I 986. and the Upper Bay Brartch of
the Harbor Area Boys cl Girts C1ub was
renamed an his honor.
He Joined the orpniz.at1on in Lona
Beach in 1949 and transferred to the
Harbor Arca Club 1n I 96S btfore serv1na
21 )ears as exeirutl\C director and rcsoura:
development director.
Under has leadership. the Orangr Coast
branch grew from a one<lub operation in
Costa Mesa to a four<lub network SCTVlf\t
thrtt communities and m~ than 3.000
bo)s and prts The Harbor Arca network
provides sports. ans and crafts and
community service activtt1es for children
aies 7 to 18 )cars old.
"I can't think of anytb1na else I'd have
doM wub my Ide Wt would ha\le 11ven
me more happiness," Yantom told t~
Da ily Pilot in 1981 after reccivinathe Boys
Club first Bronze Keystone award for
outstanda na servacc. "He was a cood man. .. wd Costa Mesa
Cuy Councilman Orv Ambull!)'. ..He
s~nt all weekend worklna at the F1s.h Fry.
He 's bten helpms out for man} many
years"
R~nd consultant Edward guade of Niguel
By Tiie AsMdate4 Press
Edward Schaumbtra Quade. a founder
of t~e methodical problem-solving
method known as "systems analysis." has
died after sutTerina a stroke. the Rand
Corp. saict The Laguna Niguel resident
was 79.
Quade, who had cancer of the spine.
died at Saddleback Hospital on Saturday
af\er sufTenna the stroke a week earlier.
Paul Weeks. spokesman for the Santa
Mon1ca~bascd thank tank. said Monday.
A consultant to Rand until his death.
Quade had joined the research orpniza-
tion when It was founded an 1948 and
retired m 1973. With a handful of
systems an.ilys1s as a recognized saenhfic
discipline." Weeks said m a prepared
statement.
Quade's I~ book, ··s)'stems Analysis
and Pohcy Plannini: Apphcauons in
Defense." defined systems analysis as ··a
S) stemauc approach to helpinJ a dcc1s1on-
maker choose a course of action by
mvcst1puna has full problem. scarthina
out obJCCllVCS and altcmatt\CS. and com-
panna them in ahe haht of their conse-
quences."
Quade, a native of Jacksonville. Fla ..
trained in phlsics and mathematics at the University o florida in Gaines\ 1llc.
His books applied systems anaJ)'s1s to
military problems and later to broader
pubhc pohC')' ISSUCS.
Quade as survived by his wife. Sylvia. of
La&una Hills; a brother: three c-h11drc-n: ana thrtt pandduldrcn.
County's·
new jail
proposal
rejected ·
By BOB VAN EYIEN °' ...........
A SupcnorCourtJudat bas nruck down
a county environmental report meant to
pave the '*•Y for a 10-story, t ,Sll-bcdja.al
10 be built near Anaheim Stadium.
ln a decision made public Mondey.
Judat Claude Ov.-cns ruled th.at an ea-
vironmenal impact ~port prepan:d by the
county for the proposed jail was flawed.
County oflkials want to locate the new
short-term Jail on a 7 S acre sate at KateUa
Avenue and Do~ Road, dote 10 the
home field oflhc Angels and Rams.
The county has been under considerable
pressure m rcctt1t )'can to rcbeve the
scnous ovcrcro~dma at its correcuonal
faciliues.
City officllls 1n Anaheim have fouaht
qainst the ,ail on the arounds that at does
not fit m with the hap·valuc commercial ~
and offi~ buddinp that charac1enze the
area near the s1 te.
ln an anempt lo block tbeJlil. Anaheim
offlCWS filed suit aplnst the COUJU)
char&lna that county officials bad not complied with the Califom.ia En· "Vtronmcnta.I Quality Act when they ap-
proved the jatl Site.
Owens. 3 retired judF aJSianed to the
c:asc. ruled the county bad u.nd.erntimated the mu1mum capecity of the jail, which
could ~ col\Slderably more than l,SIJ
inmates 1f bunk beds are used.
He said double bunkina is "a lepl. often
used practice in~ County J&lls." and
that "IJ"en the county's b1siory for ever
1ncrcas1n1 ;;111 needs, to not look bcyouMS
1992 and consider double bunk1na would be unreasonable ...
Owens said the increased 1nma1t popu--
lauon would increase the proposed Jail's
en"1ronmental impact. .
Among his other find1np, Owens~led
the county's detetaiinations on traffic and
C1rculation were in.adequate.
The county report concluded the oty of
Anaheim .. can and should .. adopt 1m-
pro"etnent measures clesisned to relieve
traffic CODJCStion from the jail. Owens said the county djtclosed oo
eHdeoce to show that the cuy could handle
the s1tuauon
R.tchard Simon. an attorney for the
county, saad the Judie's ruliq on the
envuonmeota.I repon would not nee.a.
anl)' derail the ,Jlil ~jcct. "The county basically has two options,
they can accept the rultnt and revtte the
EIR accord1naJ), or they can appeal, .. s11d
Simon. "The county can corT'Cct the
document and srt on hoe wt th this projec1
\lef') qu1Ckl). an my esnmauon."
~ttomeys for the ctty could not ~
reached for comment
School gun plea entered
B1 'l'lllie ~~ Presa
A 23-ycar-old man accused of running
from the roof of a school with a semi·
automatic nfle pk:aded innocent to felon)
and m1M!emcanor characs.
•••••••••••••••••--" collequcs. he "devised and de\leloped
Rand Corp. President Donald B R1~
said Qwide's ~ks "ha"Ve ~f'\ ed to tram
generations of analysts They arc a lcpq
thnt will be with us for many generations to
come."
c~mat1on arrangements were handled
by O'Connor Monuary m lquna Halls. A
memoNl SCf'\11ce is scheduled for 2 pm.
June 26 at Lutheran Cbwch of the
Pahsadcs in P.ctnc Pahsade-5. v.hett
Quade and bis wife lived before movina to
Leisure World. a L.aauna Hills retirement
community. in 1983.
Nonh Crance County Municipal Court
Judie Marprel Anderson incrcucd bail
from SI0.000 to SI00.000 for Roben
Lawrence Houston Houston was cba1'8ed
with a fek>ny couna of possession ol a
~capon on school arounds and four
misdemeanor charics
.Teen-age murder suspect
f:ecaptured in Anaheim
t •f •
BJ BOB VAN EYKEN 1ty was not rtkascd. turned h1mselJ an
... ....,,....... a&out siit houn after the escape,
Three dlys of freedom ended which occurred at 10 p.m.
Monday ntsht for a teen-aaer Richardson remained at la"F. and
suspected or murdt-r in the shootina police said they believed be mtaht be
death oh Corona ~I Mar man. • ~~liJ::. Oak.Lind.. WhCtt his
John M. Rich'ttdson, 17, and Monday evcn1"'9 however, Polic:c
another youth pulled • dariq escape investipton r«etvcd infonriation
Fnda1 niaht from .the maitimum that Rtchardson Wiii in Anaheim.
secunty w1oi 'of Ocanet County .. At 7 p.m. inves&iplOtl received
· Juvenile Hau. •• informatJOnthat tbe~Mdbeela
· ·, The two you tbs ftR • rcPonedly seen in the 3300 block ol E Monte
· liruna 'Weiahts in the day room •n Strttt... said Anaheim Police s.a.
they }hrew two '#tiat\ts tti~ a M~OraY· .. Oflk:en~to
'window •nd jumped out the .nnctow the ana and the luspect ,.,.. found
into an athktic fitld sunout*d bY a • hidina in a ,.,.... .. IUd Oray ......
14-foot ~. • wu armtcd wathout 1.cideftt Ud TheY theft dashed ICfOU the 2 turned over to the Sheriff's 0epen.
yard ldcl and.teaJCd the bee meat."
freedom. · Richardton is one of two ·oneoflhe~wl*l•t· bei• held for robber,. and•
followina a May 2 s.taootout at a Santa
Ana check cashina shop.
The shop's owner. Phahp Brower of
Corona dtl Mar. was killed in the
robbery. One oflhe suspects. Gemld
K. kobens. of Costa Mesa. also was
killed Y..hen Brower shot at the
robbers. Sant.a Ana pohce say they
beltc"e al was Robtru who shot and
killed Brower
Ricbaftbon and another suspect.
2().ycar~ld Harley C. Curtis of
lrvtne, were arttsted s.honly after the
incident and pros«uton say both ba~ confused to panicipatina in the
robbcty.
.Ridludlon II ftOW btint ~Id in itolatioft •t \he Oranae County Jail in
Sula ..ua. Aaa acape dwlt will be
lddld '° die cba,..es of robbery and
m•M. ICC'Or'dint to the Sheriff's ~
•
cloth1na. • • • A resident of Luu Om e w1d he's
bten recc1' ma drua·ttlatcd death threats but he docsn •t know whal the
callers are talking about "because he's
not an that kind ofbus1ncss ·· 4. ~port
of attempted extortion was filed
1"lDe
A rnadent who li"cs on Stanford
ttponcd a man came to the door
lookins for a sell educauon class. The
man wasn't a weirdo. JUSt lost. The
Pol~ ~ on the lookout for 1 ponly Latino in bis mid-SOs .. ho
allcsedly stole 1 S600 diamond rins
from a store at JSJ N. Coast Hiahv.'ly
on Monday af\crnoon. The man qs
dcscnbcd as S feet 4 inches tall. I IO
pounds and weariQI a •h1te straw
hat. -.bate jade&. whuc pants and
sponina a moustache
!fewpolil"t 8 1 acla
Two toilets \ a1ucd at $600 each
were reponcd stolen unday from a
residence in tbe 2100 blOc of E.
Balboa Boulevard. Four faUttU
valu.ed at S 11 S eaclt were abO takea.
Pol1ct ba"e )'Ct to 11\db °"' any
$1.lSl)«tS.
d~ ... "IS bciaa held a few doors Transient arrested after • • •
onA t~fc:tro~~~=~~ Laguna tavern stabb1 ...... Oc'wbtrry Way The snake .-as taken ~
to tht Oranae County Fare Otpert-'
ment. where littfl&htcrs later rtkucd IJ LANCB IGNOH it. ............ ...
• • • A Liluna ._.. resident WU A man all~fy paSled a bolus $50 ttpOned in IOOd CC'indition •aday
on _C\al\'cr Orive. When e1up1 by • af\crbriasaabbed Moedayn•u•a
pot.cc 'Dd ~Sena aemu.. the kxal 11\'ef'ft. Md Iris= a ,, .. , mansaidhetttta\ltdtbebilfatabank ~ 08 •~• <A •·
0\1 Cl"lt ltft\peed Murder, paliClr .W. c-..._ Wiliatn Duffy knlp, 29. iad
RObcn Ridwd Wanamatt:r. WhO
politt dacribed U I tocal lranllCftl.
wett ........ at Micley'a Spasu
TIVCl"ft. nos. Ccmt H--• ,..
Wana•brlNlld a knife,~
toa politt ~ tmttaa bJ DIC9ett1~
Uftee ltliaiMI I ~~\ht tnift.widdiaa WanalMkcr off 9* W -. ..C w ...... ~-..-.-,aw
1t,,..r twice •n o.e .woma. • ~ .......... w:eu"::. 1 7 w.,111~•,lfl,:-'ftll• ... 111 =
_ bucJget cuts
d ftclt, but more.
trimming needed
W ASHINOTON (AP)-C-0nareu
WU ~ a deftcit reductfon ~t wnh President Reapn at DWed a Sl.l trillion federal ~ g filcaJ 19891 but a hefty
deflCit .emain1 and aoendina pn-orities already have ahifted.
• The budeet. approved by the
House Lut month and the Senate
Monday by a vote of 11-29, ahows a
deficitofneartySl42billion when not
countina ales of aovernment assets,
which aren't counted under 11,he
Gramm-RUdman budeet balanCfni law.
The president's Office of Manqe-
ment and Budaiet 11~ hither interest
rates combined with 1ovemment
beilouts of banks could drive the
deficit hither.
the deficit) durina times of economic
prosperity," complained Sen. Wil-
liam Armstrons. It-Colo ... We're just
puttina the whole problem off until •
after tfle election."
Senate B~t Committee chair-
man Lawton Chiles, 0-Aa., con-
ceded; .. We've taken some steps in
the riaht direction, but I'm afraid
there's miles to JO before we sleep."
The :![>!ndins plan also was nearly
two months af\er the April J .S
dcadlineJ. creatina confusion over the de~jJs 01 next year's federal spmdin&
pohcy.
•
Antt-gay
violence
increase
reported
W ASHINOTON (AP) -Jle.
DOrteCI inddenu of violence ud ·
haruunen1 aimed at hom~uall
roee 42 percent tut year,~'!~
• study related toda)' wbic;h ~ an AIDS blckJasb 11 contnbut1111 to
the increase. . . A record 1 .ooa inciden~ ranea111
from verbal abute JO murder, were
reported in 1987 to the National Oay
and Lesbian Talk Force. acc:ordlns to
Kevin Benill, director of the Wk
force's Anti-violence Pro~ .
The statiltics were complied in the
report .. Anti-Gay Viole~. Vic-
timization le. Defamation in 1987,"
the third such study by the advocac:y
aroup. .
lfit eets past Sl46 bilhon, OMB is ~uired to order automatic. across-
the-board spendin& cuts under the
Gramm-Rudman law.
And the 1pendina plan doesn't
come cl<>te to mcctina Gramm·
Rudman's pls for the years after
fiscal 1989, which are designed to
force a belanced budaet by fiscal 1993.
Within total spencUna levels for
military, foreian aid and domestic
proa;rams that were set by last fall's
qrcement with R~n.-~the ~t
envisions inaea.sccf federal spend1n1
on the space p~m. education.
AIDS research. fil)ltina drup. and
othu etecuon-year priorities.
But the resolution itself is non·
binding. actinJ only as a auide for
production of the annual spendina
lqjslation for runnina the aovern·
menL And because of the delays, the
House and Senate have been moving
ahead with the rcaular spendina bills
that stray from the budaet's priorities.
&tlael Kennedy, Roltert'• Widow, flaaked by 1-• 8ea. &dward ltemaedy cl~ memortal
80ll Rep. Joeep• P. ••D!MIJ Ud brotber·ln· Maie at ArUJll*Oa Nadoa&J Cemetery.
"While our report does not claim to
measure the full extent of anti ... y
and lesbian hara11ment and violence
in t987, available data c~rty dem·
onstrtte that the problem continua
to be severe," Bcrrill said. Kennedys gather at gravesite on The study sueae:sts several realODI
for the increase in incidenu reootUd.
includin& that the task force n!cetved
data from more local JJ'OU,PI than in
the prior studies. In 1987, 11.received
reports of 7,008 lncidenu from 64
aroups in 32 states and the District of
Columbia. compared to 4,946 inci-
dents from 41 aroups in 27 States a
year earlier.
"This is a paltry, pathetic and
completely mcanin&Jess reduction (of 20th anniversary of RFK' s death
.
Na ti on' s high schoolers
find rnatp. hard to figure
WASHINGTON (AP) -In the
dusk of a sprina evenina. with his
family pthcred before the simple
cross that marks his anive, Robert f .
Kennedy was rememben::d as a father
who auided his children with love and
understandfo& and as a public fiaure
who was .. always ready to stop and
reach out to others." W ASHJNGTON (AP) -The na-
tion's I 7-ycar-old students are dismal
at math, with ontr half able to cope
with problems usually taught in
junior hi&h tchool.
The federally sponson::d Natioul
Assessment of Educational Progress
also said that nearly 27 percent of 13-
year-okts are lackin& in bask com-
putational skills.
More than a quarter of the 17-ycar·
olds~ that they did not usually
understand what was talked about in
mathematics class.
The agency reported the results of
tests it gave nearly I S,000 students
aaes 9. 13 and I 7 in 1985-86, as well as
comparative data from math
assessments in 1973, 1978 and 1982.
Tourists min&led with friends and
aides of the New York senator
Mondayeveninaata Massofrcmem·
brance for Kennedy, who was shot by
an assassin 20 years 110 as be left a
Los Anaclcs celebration of his victory
in the 1968 California presidential
primary.
The report, .. The Mathematics
Report Card: Arc We Measuring
Up," said all three age aroups im-
proved recently. but mostly on low-
lcvel skills, and the 17-year-olds still
have not repined all the around they
lost in the 1970s.
"I invite you to join us in renewina
the commitment that was his life. his
spirit and his hope," said Matthew
Kennedy, who was not yet l'h years
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old when his father died.
It was the first time the Kennedy
family had invited outsiders to take
part in a memorial service. All I 0
survivinJ children had a brief part in
the service. The 11th child, David
Anthony Kennedy, was found dead of
a druJ overdose in West Palm Beach,
Aa., tn April 1984.
His widow, Ethel Kennedy, arrived
on the arms of her brother-in-law.
Sen. Edward M. Kennedy. She did
not speak at the service, but she told
NBC News tn a taped interview that
her husband "brouaht us all alona
with his enthusiasm .... his love of
life .... h1s curiosity."
Robert Kennedy's anive -only a
few steps from the more ornate site
where his brother, President John f .
Kennedy, is buried -was unadorned
Just Right
for
Dads & Grads
from
Halliday'
WESTCLIFF PLAZA
for the service but an altar was set up
nearby for the Mass.
Six choirs sans and the United
States Navy band played. Andy
Williams sana "Battle Hymn of the
Republic.'' as he did on the ni&ht
Robert Kennedy was buried.
The sun was scttina over the
cemetery as the service bcpn and as it
ended. the crowd li&hted candles that
had been handed to them as they
entered. The Oickerina liahts cast a
soft aJow as John F. Kennedy Jr. read
a Shakes~rcan quotation his uncle
often recited:
"When he shall die. take him and
cut him out in little stars. and he will
make the face of heaven so fine -
that all the world will be in love with
night, and pay no worship to the
prisb sun."
Also, "neptive attitudes toward
py people as a result of the AJDS
epidemic contributed to the problem
of anti-py violence in 1987," the
report found.
Fifteen percent of all incidencs
reported last year and S percent of the
physical assaults involved verbal reference to ac:quin::d immune defi.
ciency syndrome by the perpetraton
or were directed ljainst people with
AIDS, the study found. As in 1986,
near1y tw~thirds of the local aroups
reportin& anti-pJ incidenu in 1987
believed that 'fear and hatred u-
sociatcd with AIDS hu fostered anti·
py violence in their communities,"
aocordina to e repon.
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I I-
W. Bank town's
mayor stabbed
llAMALLAH, Occuoied Wat
Bank (AP) -The lvae&•ppoinled
mayor ofthe WM Bank IOWft of EJ-Bireh was stabbed in the cbelt today
in an apparent aulalination attempt
by Palestinian militanU.
The atabbina of H-..an Tawil, in bis 70s, follows repeated demands by underuound laden of tbc 1ix-month~ld Pale$tinian uptilins that
he and other Iaraeli .. ppointed of ..
ftQala tHip their jobt io the oc-
c:upied West Bank.
Tawil was taken to nearby
Ramallab Hospital, w~ officia&
said be was in stable condition after
IUJ'ICfY. He was stabbed om:e with a .. very
Iona knife" that pierced his heart. diaPb~. liver and stomach, said
the offietals, who JpOke on condition
ofanonrmity. Bria. Gen. Shaike Ere, bead of the
military aov~ment in the West
Bank1 said Tawil was attacked near
the c1ty hall in £1..Bireb, a town of
mostly Moslcms about nine miles
nonh of Jeruaalem.
Shonly after the stabbina. As-
sociated Press pholOlflpher Martin
Cleaver saw Tawil lyina slumped
apinsta sh~ttered store front. He was
surrounded by lsraeh t~PI·
Tawil appeared ashen-faced and
had 1 lafte, bloody stab wound on the left side of his chest, which was
partially covemi with a bandqe.
Cleaver said four soldien com-
mandeered an Arab vehicle, climbed
inside with Tawil and rushed him to
r~.,,,,_,
tor Anbn1'114'rt
ALOIUS. ~(AP)-UDder-uound a.den or tbc aix-month-olct hlatinian ;uprisjna in the lll'ICli-occupied lel'T'iaoriet c:aUed on Arab
leaden ioday IO open \heir borden to
aumilla autckl on Ind. The appeal, carried by the Palesti.
nian news qr~ Waf'a. was made to
the Arab chltft of stace who belin a
three-day. eme~ summit meet·
ina in AJaim toniJht.
The summit was to be devoted to
solidifyi ns support for the Palestinian
uprisina amona the 21 Arab Leaaue
members.
The underF.'OUnd leaden of the
uprisina -which involves mainly
Palestinians in the lsraeh-occuried
West Bank and Gaza -said al t.he
Arab nations surroundina Israel
should "open their borders to Palesti-nian combatanu. ..
The appeal was directed mainly at
Lebanon, Jordan and Syria, the three
nations rcpresen~ at the summit that have 1 common border with
Israel.
the hospital.
"The mayof left his office without
his bodygua.rd. Almost at the
thresh hold be was stabbed," Police
Minister Chaim Bar-Lev told re-
porters at the stabbina scene.
Hussein Tawil, a son ofthe mayor.
_,, et t
llayor of Weet Be.Dk town takea to ba.pltal after e1abb1Jia.
said a driver who also acted as a paard
was with his father at the time of the
attack. He said the man was being questioned by police. Howe'(er, Bar-
Lev said the mayor wu alone.
The police minister said a knife was
found near the scene. Asked whether
any suspects were an custody, be said
only that the in vcsugauon had JUSl begun.
"I assume it's a nattonahsttc
motive," Bar-Lev added, meaning
the attack was made by Palestinian
nationalists.
Warming of Earth
threatens to flood
cities, ezperts say
STOCKHOLM, Swedtn (AP) -
lli .. na ocean &evels *ill nood cities
aJ\d the climate will become hotter
aod more storm~ unless eovemmenu
cutb ps cmi1S1ons that make the
Earth I D CVef'•wtrmin& areenboUJC1 I
IJ'OUP Of ICicnti.stS said.
'"The problem here is I 0 tames or
maybe I 00 times more impon.ant and
more difficult" than the thinnina
ozone la}er, said Bert Bolin or the
World Meteorological Orpniz.atlon.
The lfOUP issued a report Monday
calli na for coordinated P1'Mi~ to
prepare coastal defenses apmst
floods. stop dcforestauon. re-turn-
inc ent f1) pohc1cs, cooperate to
monitor and study cm1ss1ons, and to
carry out the accord to halt the
depletion of the ozone layer recently
sianed in Montreal
fhe repon said weather changes
will make dcscns honer and tropical
storms more sevm in tbe neat few
decades. It a id ritint teat will
threaten to flood couu.J cities like
New Y orlc a.rid cndanter entire coun·
Lrit1 like the Netbcrlands and
Banaladesh.
Bolio said the 1eicntists could not
establish how the wca.t.htt cbaOICI
would hit specific areas. but it was
clear that "climauc problems will be
pan of p,eoPl!!'s lives over the ~xt
century.' .
The study was a follow·uptol l98S
conference of the International Coun· cil of Scientific Unions at Villach.
Austna. which endorsed the theory
that pscs trap energy from the sun
near t,he Eanh's sur<aoe, 'Nlf'ITlirll the atmosphere an a ··areenhouse rlrcct:'
.. We arc entcnna a new phatc. We
told the world what scientists belie"c
will be the case. Now nations and
pohuc1ans must stan to think about the problems," said Bolin
U.S. urging extradition of
bomb suspect from Greece ·
BJ Tk AaaodatH Prat
Shultz says U.S. won't relax
efforts for Middle East peace
Explosion triggers
gunfight in Beirut
BEIRUT (AP) -A car bomb
exploded near a Synan army check.-
point in south Beirut today, touch1n&
off a cun battle between Synan troops
and pro-Inman fundamentalist mil1-
t1amen. police said.
W ASHJNGTON -The United States is prcsstnJ rcluetaot Greek
offictals to permit cxtrad1uoo ofa PaJesunian suspected of anvoJvement tn the
bombtnss of a Pan Am _lumbo ,ct an 1982 and ofa TWA althncr in 1986. U.S.
officials say. Greek officials told the United St.ates they did not think the
evidence aprnst Mohammed Rashid was sufficient and asked for additional
infonnauon to JUSllfy cxtndauon proceedtnp. a U.S. official S&Jd Monday.
spcaktng only on cond1t1on of anonymity. He said Rashid was arrested 1n
Grcccc at the rcq~t of the Urutcd St.ates.
Bulgarian j oi n s Sovie ts In orbit
MOSCOW-' A Bulpnan cosmonaut rocketed anto a clear blue sky today
aJoni with two Soviets in the first manned space mission of 1988, a launch
tclcv1sed hvc and featunna broadcasts from 1ns1dt the capsule. Alexander
AJeundrov, 36. of the Bulpn.an town ofOmunq.and the two Soviets blasted
off at 6:03 p.m. (7:03 a.m. PDT) aboard a Soyuz TM-5 capsule from the
Ba1konur Cosmodrome an Soviet Central ASla SoVlct television pve
unusually extcnSJve coveraac of the hftoff, sho-...1na live pictures of
Alcundrov's family in Omunqand blac.k..and-wh1te shots of the cosmonauts
an the moments before and after launch. "I feel excellent," Aleundrov wd on
the hve broadcast seconds aft.er the launch.
CAIRO (AP) -Secretary of State
Georse P. Shultz, windi~ up a futile
Middle East peace mission, said
today that extremism and an arms
buildup could enaulf the region
unless Arabs and Israelis shed their
illljliOnS.
He said~ United States would
not 1Jow its efforts to prod the two
sides into neaotiations, addina that he
would like to have another try at
Mideast diplomacy before the Re.
apn administration ends in January.
"The underlyina problem won't 10
away 1>y itself and can't be wished
away," Shultz told a news conference.
.. Nor can it be ianomi. Tbe lives and
weU-beana of too many people arc
endanaered by the continuation of
this conflict."
Dunna five days 1n the rqion, he
met with leaders of lsrael, Jordan.
Egypt and Syria and found support
for his plan for tw<>-stap: neaotiataons onl~rom President Hosoi Mubarak of t. whose rtation 1s at peace
with srael. tl'
Mubarak repeated bis limited en-
dorsement in a statement to E&Yl>t's
Middle East News Agency -i1\er
holdin& a final meetina with Shultz
early today.
"The American initiative has some
positive poinuand some other points
that need more alterauons. We have
to accept these posiuve points and to
work on developing the other
points." Mubarak said.
"We ask him (Shultz) to come back
time and time ap1n. There is some-
thina new in each trip. more under-
standing. ... of viewpoints."
Shultz had said he found "untvcr-
sal iTnernt in fi nding a way to move forward" with bis peace irutiative.
He planned to stop 10 Madnd for a
mectin& of the North Atlantic Treaty
Organization on the way home.
The trip was his fourth to the rqion
this year in an effort to coD.vene a
peace conference .
They said at least three people were
killed and 22 wounded an the mid-
aftcmoon blast an south Beirut's
seaside Ouz.a1 distnct. It was the third
car bombina in Lebanon this year.
Among l he wounded were two
Syrian soldiers and two Lebanese
policemen who were manmn' a Joint checkpoint on the Ouzat ha&)tway,
police said.
The site of the blast was about 300
f cet from an office of the lraman-
backed Habollah, or Party of God.
the most radical Shiite Moslem croup
an Lebanon
S trike contl.oae.1.n Sou th Africa
JOHANNESBURG -Hundreds of lhousahds of blade wor'ken and
students remained on stnke toda).' to demand the nsbt to oppose apartheid.
Police 5.a1d se"en people were kallcd and more than 20 anJurcd. Stnke
supportcTs and tran'Spon companies satd the protest, an its second day. cased 1n
many areas and worlcer attendance 1ncreucd.. But paruopauon near I 00
percent was rcponed ID others. Pol1ce rcponed more than two doz.en tnctdcnts
of violence between Monday cvenina and dawn loday. 1ncludina many
firebombanp and stoninp of homes. buses and trams
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Governing by
initiative is
risky business
California's initiative process has again grabbed national
attention. But the focus is different than it was in 1978 when
Proposi1ion 13 was the envy of taxpayers throughout the
nauon.
Ten years ago, Pro~ition I 3's victory over escalating
propeny taxes made Cahfomia's taxpayers folk heroes. lt was
a grass-roots political movcmi:nt that turned the 1ables on
govcrnnlent Some thought it was the wave of the future. a
shining example of the principle that all political power is
·inherent in the people. Residents of the 23 stales that have the
·power of initiative sat up and took notice while residents of
the 27 states without initiative powers wished for them.
Government by initiative has lost much of its Juster since
then, bul none of its popularity.
Critics point to the decline of public services in California
since the approval of Proposition 13. Public parks have grown
scruffy1 roads, streets and public buildings arc neglected and
public schools have suffered. The worst effect. they corree1ly
point out. is that Proposition 13 hun city and county
governments the most. It wasn't intended that way. but that's
what happened.
Voices from theother°kideofthe aisle. however. can point
to no general tax increases in 10 years. and a state that has
grown and prospered.
Both are right.
Californians have prospered and suffered because they
seized the reins of~overnment with the initiative process and
disrupted the traditional operations of government. But who
gets the blame or the crrdit?
Before Proposition 13 was approved it was difficult 10
find a politician who supported the initiative. After thl.'
13ndslide victory most of them. especially the Democrats.
embraced it because it is not politically expedient to be on the
wrong side of an angry electorate.
Some politicians even applied the .. if you can'1 beal
them.join them" philosophy. Iftheycan'tget a bill to fly in the
Legislature. they go the initiative route.
Each success at the polls has bred new initiative efforts.
and now we're experiencing a crush of initiatives. Opi)osing
initiatives are becoming the rule rather than the exception.
This year's genira election·could be the icing on the cake of
this political fi . shness if all four. of the groups pushing
initiatives to refi m the state's auto insurance industry get
their measures onto the ballot. .
Government by initiative is f\ourishintt in California. So
is th~· danger that this important constitutional right will be
intentionally or ~istakcnly T_Tl,is~scd. Unlike the. laws that are
passcd b)' 1he Lcg1slaturc, 1n1t1at1ves arc not sub1ect to checks
and balances. lnitiativr-s also tend to provide simplistic
solutions to complex problems and they weaken the quality of
political representation by elected officials.
Use of the initiative process, as we're now seeing in
'California. may be the ultimate governmental and Political
paradox. The populari1y of the process has arOwn because
many voters feel their elected representatives are doing a poor
job. but the quali1y of representation -the political courage
to resolve problems rather than pretend they don't exist -is
being thwarted because our elected leaders bo"( to the political
expediency of following the pack.
Paul Gann, president c,f People's Advocate and the
author of several initiatives. defended the process in a column
written for U.S.A. Today by uying.. "We must restore to our
national conscioUsness something too often forgotten by
those we elect and which is the very essence of our Declaration
~fl~dependence. 'that to sec::u~ these. ri~ts, governments are
1ns11tuted among men. denv1ng their JUSt powers from the
consent of the governed.'"
We agree with Gann that these words are the cornerstone
or the ~reatest form of government ever conceived. But
wouldn t government improve if the quality of elected
officials increased? Wouldn't the promises of democracy be
closer if people were informed and involved in-the process
rather than just complaining about it?
Look at the voter turnout percentages after today's
prin1ary election.
Imagine what would happen if the majority rather than
the minority ~istercd to vote and showed up at the polls.
Could any politician who wanted to keep his job neglect or
ignore such power?
Political power should belong to informed people who
take the time to get involved by voting out or recalling poor
representatives, then electing candidates who will keep their
pro mises and represent theirconstituents. lt'sa form of power
that results in good government and a much better process
than making our laws by popular vote.
State lottery
It's about time California lottery officials started
listening to their critics.
More than a year ago, the Commission on California
State Government Organization and Economy -the Little
Hoover Commission -complained that lottery officials
were unable to fully ensure that the lottery was opcratin@
efficiently and the funding for education was being
maximized.
The California Lottery is much less efficient than the
lotteries of comparable size in other states. It has not been
fbllowing standard policy in awardinaaovcmmcnt contracts.
It hasn't become the boon to education tha\ some supporters
claimed duriDJ lhc 1984 election campaian.
Some critlct say the infiltration or orianizcd crime is the
only major prediction by lottcf)' opponenu that bas not come
true since the lottery initiative was _approved by voters. This
sugeslS that lottery officials bcltertipten lheiropcntion, C1JI
down on the size of the bureaucracy and improve t~ process
for a~ina conlnCIS.
To ianore the critics would be to invite this dlnter. ·
ORANGE COAST
llilyl'llt
•
c.111..-.. El c.JM
....., .. , -l••• '""" .. , .... ....... , ... -----
w ... ............. a::.-=. .,,_ "'------... Ullw -----l'liWDlrlCtll'
"Robert Cbulce. thecomptro/Jerofthe curren=whol"fflUlates the ·
natlan'•b1111testcommen:Jalbllnka,laprt bl'luldflWWall'aactlon
u'thell>Olitoutntgt:au1act'hehaswttneaaed tll••nment."
. l'f'!) 0" I
il\~'t'RE ONL't
t>RU\'\K ...
JACa Aldll:•IClll • Oii 71•
L ' . '' '
Animal
research
To Ibo £dilor:
I am writiftf in respontc to the
recent inundabon o( letterl ill IUP.
pon of the destructive action• of the
animal f'iabU actlvitt.L 1 find it
DeCCtlalY to respoDd not only to thote
mildirtcUld terrori1t1, but more ir1?'-
Poftlr1lly, t.o the un1nformcd public
that tw remained indifl'ereot toward
111imal research. OoerriU. llC)lcs and
sensational headlines mtY inflame
emotion1 but Lhey do not lead to
rationaljud&ementJ. r lmal The Popular auPP?l't O the an ,
np11 activists is lunhed. Delptle
their att.empted domination of ~
media. a 1 percent of tbe n.1~
supports -animal rnearch ac::cordjna
to an Auociated Press Poll. Jn fact.
many orpniutions, 1ucH u In-
curoblcy Ill for Animal ~
(iiFAR) have expanded their me.m-
bcnhip acrou 111< U.S. by educauna
the public. iiFAR was formed by
individuals and families who owt
their lives to research performed on
animals.
Ruling on Irvine-based S&L
demoralizes bank r egulators
Animal ~ has provided for
the pf'OIJ'HS of medicine with the
treatment and eradication of many
diseuea. The activistt claim that results from animals cannot be ex-
trapolated to humans. This is utter
nonsense. The vaccines have worked
on humans. Antibiotics developed
qainst strep lhro1t, car infections,
bronchitis.. pneumonia, etc. were first
used on animals. Insiders say decision compromises
powers of the San Francisco region
WASHINGTON :...... Americans
have nearly I trillion dollan st.ashed
in the 1111tion's savings and loan
institutions. and most peopk assume
their money is 11fe because the
nederal Home Loan Bank Board
regulates the thrifts.
But the Bank Board has ripped the
rug out from under itself in a cue that
has some federal bank rqullton
wonderina who is callina the shots -
the government or the t.nken.
_ M. Danny Wall, chairman of the
Bank Board since last July, is the man
under the microscope.
When Wall took over the job last
ytar, rqulators in the Bank Board's
San Francisco rqional office were
knee deep in an audit of Lincoln
Savinp and Loan. which is bued in
Irvine.
The acrimonious audit created a
rift between Lincoln's owner Charles
H. Keatina Jr., and the S.n.FrancilCO
rqulaton. The examiners., looked into Lincoln's nontraditional, IJ)d·
some believe hiah·flyina, investment
and lending poficies and didn't like
what they 11w. Since K.catini~t
Lincoln 1n the early 1980a, the thrift.
with SS.4 billion in aueu, bis
chan&ed its focus. Lincoln ha.s vir·
tually abandoned home Joans. 1he
bread and butter of savinp and ki&n
institutions, and has turned incrtu-
ingly toward Iarae ICl.le real estale and
junk bond investmenu.
Th< San Froncis<:o rqulalOn who
believed that Lincoln wu o=
in an unsafe manner rcoom
that the institution be put in re-
ceivership. Now. thanks to WaU and
the Bank Board, Keatina won't have
to deal wi~ San Francitco any more.
On May 20, the Bank Board voted 2-1
to take Lincoln Savinas and Loan out of the jurisdiction of the San Fran·
cisco regional office. Lincoln's next
examination will be done in Wash·
in&ton, O.C., ind eventually Keating
will be allowed to switch rqulatots
permanently. ·
In a move believed to be un-
prcccdcnted in the annals of bank
supervision. the Bank Board voted to
let Kea.tin.a' like over an insurtd savings and loan in one of the 11 other
Bank Board districts. He would then
transfer his headquaners to the new
thrift and f'all under the jurisdiction of
• different, and presumably more
friendly, rqulatory office.
K.eatin& also has qrced to• raise
S 160 million i.n new capital, accord·
ing to the announced terms of the
aareement.
Our bl.nkina sources aay the n:au·
1-Sory indu.slf)' is demoralized ind
devutaled by What·-to be the Bank Board's decision to kt a 11vings
and loin shop around for a rqulatory
district.
Robert O&rb, the comptroller of
the currency who reaulltes the na·
tioa•a ~t ~mmCrcial banks. is
fri_v•iely ~ Wall's action as
the most OU\nlCOUS act" he bu.
witneued in aovemment
.. Danny Wall, in effect, has under·
cut every reaulltor in the country," another · rerilltory official told us.
"He's made a eunuch out of the reculltor. How can San Francisco supervise anyone else when they
buically have been called incompe-
tent?"
One official ft contacted said that
the top echelon at the San Francisco
Jacll
AllDEISOI
and JOSEPH SPEAR
Some physioloaical systems in
animals parallel those in humans.
1bc COW has a nine-month stStalion
period -consequently it wu •
perfect model in embryo transfer and
artificial insemination methods that
have been apPlied women. Robcn
Jarvik tint 1mplfnted the artificial
bridae-to-tra.nsplQt heart tn a calf.
office included "the crum or the Skin arafts for burif victims, arthritis
rqulatory crop." and cancer treatmenu are bcina
The deal Llncolncut'With the Bank invcstipted in animals. Pia.s also
Board last month was foretold in a have a cardiovucular system similar
confidential aaenci memo dated Jan. to humans. In fact, the bean valve
13, more than four months before the transplant for thOIC inflicted with
forinal vote. Our associate Michael rheumatic problems was ob\ained
Binstein obtained a copy of the from pip. ThesimiLarslr\ICtureofpia
memo. It shows that the Bank Board insulin to the human hormone has
wu annoyed because word had helped tremendous numben of dia·
leaked to Bins~n that the · San bet1cs.
Francisco rqulaton wanted Lincoln The probletJ!s facin& orpp ll"lns.-to be P.U:t in conservatonhip. Keatina plant rccipienu due to rejection• by
wasn t suppow:d to know about that the immune system or side effects of
recommendation. . • immunosuppressant& such as cor·
The memo also reveals that when · tiCOlteroids has been lessened b,Y
Lincoln officials learned of· t~ tee-lnimal-tested cyclosporioe-A. It u
ommendation&... thel' demandOd to due to animal tcstina. that the side
have the San t"ranc1sco office.taken effects were.determined before many
off the case. people would have died. -..
The memo says: "Above and It is imponant for the public to
beyond the issue of trying to identify know that although anatomicals~
the source of the leak, the most tures may vary bet.ween species, the
troubling question it what '!would basic physiolo&ical m~ba:nisms for
motivaie someone to leak such a dealing with daily aCtivities and
document'> To put pressure on the disorders are present in all higher
board ... Whatever it was, the costs are animals. This includes circul1tory.
heavy. Theassociation(Lincoln)now. nervous, digestive, immune, en-
knows that the (San Francisco ofr1et) docrine, skeletal, muscular systems,
has recommended 1 conservator, and eic. .
the attorney for the association bas The s1..1aaestion th1t compulen
alrady called (1 Bank Board official) can be 'bled instead of ~n
and told bim ,\}lat no qrecment can research it-a clear indication that
be reachC(l unleSs they are transferred animal righa llctivisu lack a funda-
out of SPs jurisdiction, probably ~ental underst1ndin,1; o~ ~sic
through a takeover of a small usocia-btolOI)'. Due to the 1nfin1Ln1mal
tioo in another District. In short, the degree of aenetic variability, it is
leak has likely hardened positions.•• impossible to predict orpn1stic re.
Jack AMk,.... u4 J.upt Spur sponsiveness 10 dnip. surgcry1 etc.
•r~ 1YJHllc•ted c.l•mal•U. The complex interactions be~ cells in livina orpnisms can not be
mbdeled in computen.
Old fears return to haunt
attending sorority reunion
The claim that. 'animals suff'tr
needlessly in mearch lab& i1 an
attempt to jerk at human emotion.
Th< USDA has r<port<d tha1 1M
percent of federally protected labon-
tory animals were not subiect to
painful ~wa or were admioiJ.
tercd pain killen or anesthesiL
Ulumately, animal riahu activisu
are anti·hum1n since they are at·
temptng to deny us the ri&ht to the
best medical care availlble. Reliving the trauma of going through
rush, being retroactively blackballed
What is there about reunions that
terrifies us? You would think the joy
of seeing old friends would be the only
thouaht. But no. some of us a~ so
competitive that it .sometimes turns
into a contest on who &Jed best.
The beluty business is somethina 1
could never handle.
Do you remember. in the olden
days. when the Daily Pilot's socie'l
editor nominated me u the Pilot s
"Bcau1iful Activist," and put me in
compc:tition with the nominees from
all the other newspspc:n in Southern
California.
ror changing my life.
Now the gift is coming back full
circle.
My 10rorit)' is Alpha Chi Omcp.
and I c;an't believe my alumnae
chapter nominated me "hen I think
of all I've put them through ove:r the
y .. rs. .
Tbiny-one ycan 110 we moved to Oranee Cou.nty when my husband
became chief' of cardiolosY at the
county hospital. The Hean AllOC'il·
tion uked me to run Heart Sunday.
and I runaited my IOfOrit)' sislen 10
do lhe walkir'lf-After 1everal yean of
this they wished I'd mairied a oroctolo&ist. 1'bey don't have fund
drivea. dO lhcj?
·.
JACKIE
HEATHER
chanaes youna wo"'en have about thcmsclves·a.nd what theirt01ls are as
univenity s1udents.
' LAWRENCE S. K.ROWN
Irvine
T OOAY IN His TORY
Today is TlatSday. June 7, the
I 59th day or 1988. There are 207 days
left in the year.
Today's Highliaht in History:
Twenty yean qo, on June 7, 1968,
the body of Sen. Robert f . Kennedy
lay in State Al St. Patrick's C.thedral
in New York. That SMneday, a arand • i•'l' in Loi Anaci<I indicted' Sirhan
BiW.ra Sirblrfi.. 1 Jordanian citlun,
on a charee ofnrst-dearce murder in
the 1ssauination ot;Kennedy two da.Yf earlier. ,,
On this date:
..
Tbe 1ctivist part I knew I could
handle. but 1 know I drovt'the IOCiety
editor crazy tl")'il!J 10 find out what I had to do 10 qualify for the bcaullful
part.
My husblnd was no belp. He
ins.isced that I had to be ou1 or
orthodontia before I could thiok
·-plntic SUflCIY. What a opoillpon.
In the oklen days. PIPI sent you lo
collctt to &et your MRS ~· Sororities provided the tocial m1Ueu
to help that happen, Now, I'd like to
think women want an educ:ation and
a caretr alont whh true love. 11 trill be
lnterestina to 1te how they plan to
llCC'OmP.iish that pecu,e. ~ That I wtnt into Politics and lUCSS
wbaltlitltn"::f"'Medintowalkina At last, women are bcsinnitt1 to pnciac.u? 1 · io convince them realize whit ibe men blve "bowi Ill
lhll lltey .... tllcir toad hellth to all Ilona -the ltn-or Ille "old the:J9vetnentpopdina1'veputthem 1C:hool tie." Caretr networtina is
In 1769, P<of>ob~on Jun.( 7 attc;>n!inc to ,Kent 's Historlca1 • · Socit'ty, ftonltmmln iel Boone
Memories of the .. Beautiful Ac-
tivist'" Otdeal art 6ab because my _.,will 111 .. -11oc .,.._or --"-..... -· ... ~comna•Mulcoe•...,.,
All mJ ._ tlillAwlority a1< In ftdl_ ... n,.,... ... ,.
Some42_._atmyb;p
-·-··· .. ll-· lllipo. I - -I 1Wl •ai.oo ••• ,., ........ h .. 1l!0111W1 -i--10 Jiii" I -ly and buJ docllel
I 'SC· Ill ·-r .. ~ntlltt in mr 10
-.... o(tloc ......... _""" ............... h_.,.. .. ............... _. . 1-·--.. =iw '*•k• -.. c."CMlll ...
throusb-bc&inning to fall in place. •
I ~ my oorori1y't tifl by worlt , Socio.foli1ta will 111-. to ldl us ttu:• • lllal: -wbm I WIS whateff'cctthcnewwomubaonlhe '" i*lltoltboa.llll•Coundlof old focus of fiimily cnatloo and Al s-Pss' 'r 'ct priorities. Have we u tM metJna
ne ·eoi ......... e.-111 '"" ~ .. -orr_..,
-111OHnil.w.wto1cem . As -... .., r~ _,-,,.
-.. ~ .... --Id .............. 11 ........ -. =-=-~ ltJ=!i\:"'! ha .. "t.':,to fla al --·after st' 11t'rel • .t w 1M • ,_... -•11111,... .. ,~.... I am ~ tllo aid -al
........ _ ..... -.My .............. -...... -.,_ 11la.rt''1 ~ J will bow·,...,.,sesr111•1snl-.
--to1.a4 :huh*Ya I -...,. _, _..., ..... -•• -........ jult.y' _._._ ...44.......... s
.... wlll_ ........ ........-........... -..,....,...,_ ... ,.. ... _
(
fim hep• 10 nplore the pment-doy
Bl-State. .
In 1776. Rkbanl Henry 'Lte o(
Vcirainia propoted to the COntintntll ~onpe11 • resolution caWnc for a Do<tlralioo oflflfkpct'*-
ln 1164. Abroham U-n -nomina1ed b another ~ as pral-
dcnl. II ~It pony's -tJoo Ill Bllt1mott.
11 1929, Ille ....... -"' V1'!c-City c:aac inlO eaieseace •
-o( Ille '-• TMly -•&;:'."&'.l:.o::.~ru..~YJ -
.... ~ !liMc1ll ....... N=· falll.N.Y .• A:raYllittD
U Slltes "°"'""' I -~ .. ,. __
:::; ~.: ...... •11£1 ........
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Democnt Michael Oukakis. poited to lock up ~·· p;aidenlial nomination with toda}'.'1 final quartet of primaries. bis naMOIMtY
caution to exult that · victory is in the air." Rcmai~ ftl Jeme Jac:boa
looked beclc with pride, callina his bittoric candidacy 1 C'Mlil)'ll lw lfOWlll." Rc~blican G_eor1C Bull\, who has
the GOP nominallon in the ~ arei Q•a..--'M'.-.
eitptaied ~to~ Dukakas ~•~ W .. --~~· i~ the fall. He said the two have m~ny e· I ectJQ•ft gr..A•..__ dafTtrences and "I am ... on the npt :i' ~ ~.._.
side."
The four-month presidential pri-
mary season closes today with races
in California. New Jeney. New
Mexico and Montana. All three
pttSidential contenders were in Cali-
fornia today and will stay here tontaht
to wait out the rtSUlts of the day's
contests.
The bigest prize as California, and
an ABC News trackinJ poll indicated
Ouka.k.is led Jackson in the state by a
2.1 m&J'lin, 61 percent to 30 percent
The survey. based on •ts intcrvie-s
Saturday and Sunday, had a nwsin
of error of 6 pm:ent.aae paints. the
network reporte4 Mon~iahL
NEW YORK (AP) -ABC. NBC
and CBS plan n~ ~o(
today's prnidential pri...arieli~ i-
f om ta, New Jersey. New Mnico and
Montana.
CBS will have one.minute updatn
at 8 p.m. arid 11 p. m. and a )().minute
special at ntidniah~ Donna Dea.
manaacr of communications for CBS
News, said Monday.
llaDdy ~. rfCld. • e.crameato
•penurket clir• • .....,. a qwtlon at a
preM cODfenmce at State Lottery head-
qUrtmW .. fellow Lotto wblaen Cai'roll
Alaelby. left. aa a.lrcraft meclaaillc from
VacaTtlle and la.le wife Da look on.
Grocery clerk glad to split Lotto
jackpot with aircraft mechaQic
' . .
Opponen
wary about
PQStpone
oil drilling
SAN FRANCISCO (AP)-~
nents oftbe Reap.n adminiltl'lbOll'•
pn>pOlal (or exteftsave oil leali11 otr.
the Northern California COlt1 daimcd Cftldit for the decitioD IO
suspend the plan, but said dwy
remain wary it won't be ICUnled.
Environmental laKkn and poAiti-
cal critics of Leate Sale 91 re.cted
cautiously to the announcemtAt lale
Monday by Interior Secrewy O..W
Hodel that he was baJtiQI wotk • * proposal to leax l . l million oftiMft
acttS. Tbc decisio1 effectivdy.,.....
the sale bKlc at least s~ add.ltioaal
months. to Au1u11 l 989.
His action came on the eve of the
Cahfomia pnmary and a day after
Vice President Georae Bush sOftened
his pro-<lriJbni st.ancc and called i>r
the contro\·ersial offshore plan 10 be
dell) ed.
California officials were precjictina
a low turnout, however. Secretary of
State March Fong Eu said she
expected a turnout of 48 percent,
which would bC the·lowat 1n more
than -40 years.
Before today's votina bepn.
Dukakis had nearly 1,900 delcptes,
leavina him fewer than 200 shy of the
2,081 needed to nominate. On Mon-
ABC plans two-minute special
reponsat 8 p.m., after 9 p.m. and after
10 p.m., with· additional coverase
around 11 p.m., said Elite Adde.
director of news information. The
network's n:JUlarl)' ICheduled pro-
sram ''Niahthne," which airsat 11:30
p.m .• will run an hour instead of the
nonnal 30 minutes. she said. • SACRA!-fENTO (AP) .-One of
. Primary coverqe at NBC will the two ~nners wh~ splat a tecord
include two three-minute inter-SS 1.4 malbon lotto Jackpot says he
ruP.tions at 8:S6 p.m. and 10: IS p.m.. ~ relieved he has to ah.are the
with a »minute special at 11 :30 wand~ll so he doesn't have to face
p.m., said Mark Anaotti, an NBC "all this by myself ...
researcher. ''Honest to God, I was hopina that
Ata news conference, thel...otto649
winners said they both used a feature
of the lottery Ltckct terminals thal
randomly selects numbers for the
player and that they wert rqular locto
players.
The winnen in the Saturday draw-
ina said they plan to quit thev jobs
and have few immediate plans for the
money except to help family mem-
ben in various ways.
tlekets.. ··1 found a headJ..up penny."
··Every time I've ever found a
be:ads-up penny. somethaap always
happened good to me. r m su~
stitious, I guess:· he said.
CarroU. a mechanic at TravtS Air
Force Base, said he was unsucc:nsful
in finding someone to match SSO with
bas SSO. then splat any winninp from
the S 100 in bets.
Tbe two major Democratic presi·
dential candidates., MutKhUIC"lts
Gov. Michael Dukakis and Je11e
Jackso(' have advocated Slopping all
offshore drilhna activity.
Richlll'd. Charter. a WashlftllOn
lobbyist wbo represcnu California
coastal government faahtinc ofJsbore
drillini. said. "lbtS is an anempt to
try to tet Bush off the hoot. ..
He Said the ann®ncemeat also
could be an effort to prevent Convess
from imposinc a one-year mora-
torium on the sale. The Hou.te
Appropriations Commitu:ie is tcbed·
uled on Wednesday to consider such a
plan to delay Jeasina until 1990.
day alone, more than 70 deleaates Monday in Los Anteles. ·
flockedtotheDukakiscamp.Jacbon Jackson, however. suffered a pri-
ttaals with less than 1,000 delcptes.. mary~ve embarrassment when he
Therewere466deleptnatstakein missed the ftrst 16 minutes ofa live
today's primaries. half-hour statewide broadcast that
In addition, Dukakas' fonner rivals was supposed to showcase his caih-
for the nomination were lininJ llP ·palan and provide a platform for a
behind him. Campa'an sources said dramatic final appeal.
Dukakis would travel to Missouri on DukaJtis went to Jackson's Los
Wednesday. lhe day after the last Anacles hotel room for a late·niaht
primaries, to pick up Rep. Richard meetina Monday niahL Neither man
Gephardt's endorsemenL The same would commmt to reporten after the
day, the sourees said, Sen. Paul hour-and-a-half meetina. and
Simon of Illinois was to endorse the Dukalus walked tisht-hpped through
Massachusetts governor in Wuhina-a crush of reponers tn the lobby.
ton. . Dukakis has maintained a con-
Duk.alus, not noted for his effusive-caliatory stance toward Jackson, who
ncss. nonetheless sounded like a on Monday threatened a~ fiaht at bapp~ man as he headed into th~ final the convention over his demand that
contests. South Africa be declared a terrorist
"I'm really overwhelmed by the state.
&ood feclina. the spuit. the con-"lfhe will not bend on that matter.
fidencc. A scne of victory is in the we11 simply meet on the floor at
air," he said as he cafTlpaigned Atlanta," Jackson said Monday.
FBI joins pOlice search for
Pinole, Sacram.ento girls
BJ TM A.noda&ed Prest .
somebody else hit it, too,.. said
Sacramento supermarket clerk
Randy Pcnninaton, 26, who will
divide Nonh Amenca's larlest lot-
tery JackPot with aircraft mechanic
Shelby Carroll, SJ, of Vacaville.
The winners, who found them-
selves instant celebrities Monday,
each will receive S2S.7 million an-
nuities that pay S 1,028,000 annually,
after tues, for 20 years, lottery
officiafs said.
Both al90 told a crowd of reporters
and cbeerina lottery worken that they
would be ready for an onslaught of
stranaen interested 1n thelr bonanza.
but declined to discuss details of their
plans.
Pennington told the crowd of about
100 people that after bu)'ing his
.. , asked my boss. .. 1fhc would like
to share with me. I said. 'Ga~ me SSO
and we'll split the wioninp.' At the ti~. it {the jackpot) was around $40
million. I said, 'ReaJJy, no one needs
more than S40 mil hon: He Slld.. 'No.'
I asked a couple mo~ of the suys. and
they said. 'No.' "
Humboldt County Supervisor
Wesley Chesbro. an outspOkcn critic
of the Interior Department•s plans;
said, "We've succeeded beyond our
wildest dreams an making this an
issue of importanCC to the national
campaisn."
Death sentence affirmed in· oc mµrde·r case
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Prosecutors who
uraed jurors and potential defense witnesses to
con~adcr the murder victims' famihes dad not
violate lcpl stJndard.s; the state Suprmte Court
ruled 1n upholfma the death sentence of a fomlCT'
Buddhist monk. -
The court made the unanimous rulina
Monday in the case ofJaturun Siriponas. It was the
20th death sentence the court has upheld out of 28
~s at has considered since conservauve Justices
became the majority last year.
The opmion by Chaef J usticc Malcolm Lucas
said the prosecutor's comments did not break
standards set by the U.S Supreme Court last )ear
when 1t struck down a Maryland law rcquarina
juron in a death penalty tnal to be told about the
1mpect on t.bc victim's family
Siriponp. 36,ofHawthome, wasconvteted of
stranaJina Packovan .. Pat" Wattana.,:Om. 36.
manaacr of a Garden Grove marlcct where
Sinponas had once worked, and fatally stabbina
clerk QUach Nauyen. SJ. in December 1981.
S1riponp.1¥ho came to the U ruted Statd from
Thailand in 1980, was arrested after be tried to use
RUFFELL!S
UPIOlSTEIY llC.
... ,.. .... C....lwe!
1122 -, ..... CllT& 9»-SQ.1151
one of Wau.anaporn's credit cards 10 buy a
television set. Police said be had tried to feoce
some of her ;c-.etry throuab a friend, and most of
the rest of the jewelry was round in bis home or car.
In the appm. Siriponss' lawyer aid pros.-
ecutor Ed Freeman was improperly 1nJlamma10ry
when he said. ""The amped. that is left qn those 'Who
sun·ive. the near and dear ... as a factor that
certalnly at least )'OU might 'l,;==me lbouaht to." But in his opi:ruon. said Freeman
offered only -brid' and mild"' comments and did
no t prctent u y cvidenoc oo tbe fam ilies..
SAN FRANCISCO-Federal investi~torsare loolcingfora possible link
between the disappearan~ of two youna prls in Northern California. and cite
the appattnl kidnapping of a Pinole child u particulatly baftUna. The FBI
jotned police on Monday in investipting the cues of Amber Swartz-Garcia, 7,
of Pinole and Candi Ehzabeth Talarico,•. of'Saa2mento. A,ents fear the oldef' .------&irl was abducted and may have been taken Qut of the state ... We are now in it
for the 10111 haul. .. SI.Id qcncy .spokesman Chuck lattina. "°There is almOSl no
evidence, period. She just vanished, and it appears this is aoina to-tac a very
difficult case." Amber, nearly deaf and with a sliabt speech impediment. was
last le.en by her parents while skipping rope in t6e front rard 0, their family
home. about IS miles northeast of San Francisco Fn• evenina. The
dtSappearance was followed on Saturday by Candi's abduction from an alley
near her home about 7S miles nonheast ofl>1nole. .-.
PoUce rookie •hot dead In North Hollywood
LOS ANGELES -A rookie Los Anaeles police officer was killed with his
Starting June 27th ttvu August 8th
Cla~s heid Moncqy thru Fli<U'y at tM Laguna ~Kh Htgh School
JO HOUltS ~ INTINSNI TUT0RtNG • NAllVR ·s 2 TEA040S • SMAU. GltOUf'S • NIVATI USSONS
ACH • ONLY ~mr.•
..., own 1un today durina a struale with a bUJ"llary suspect. Police later cornered
and killed a man anned wiili the dead officer's pn. and arrested two other
suspects. otracer James Beyea, 24,on the force for Just nine months, was fatally
shot about I a.m. after he and his ~ner. Ianacio Gonzalez, rupondcd to a
buralarY call at Alpha Electronics an North Jton~. said Cmctr. William
BoOth. 'Beyea later died at Saint Joteph Medical Center in Burbank. About
three hours later, a canine unit discovered an armed suspect biding in the attic
of an abandoned borne in the I I 000 block of Runnymede Street, about three
blocks away from the electronics store on Lankenbam Boulevard, Booth said. ~=~~======~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I
Gunfire wasexchangedbetween paliceand thesuspect-a man in his early 20s
-. who was fatally wounded. Booth said.
-~ . T~best~
ptzn in to.n. Tr.d1t10NI •nd
OligiNJ crNtiorn
17502 Beach Blvd. at Slate r
Huntington Beach 842-5 505
Con-GRAD-ulations
19.88 ·Graduates
·show your favorite graduates just how proud
you are of their achievements. Run their
picture and your personal message in the
Dal ••
Daily Pilot on Wednesday,
June 22.
GRADUATION '88
KEEPSAKE
only $25
pergreeting ·
•
Don'tbla111ecatsfor AIDS
DEAR ANN LANDERS: There it
a CIOlllPincy in this country between
lhedocton and !he media. I hope you
rillla .. lhe_to .. pooe h.
reod in !he livl111 room. I~":' OCCOnd·handbookJIOlftud t
home all the borw,' dos and ad...,.
twutorinlhatl hadlo....Sasamild. Ouess what? My childnn were
fUcinated by them. I made Ii-to
btar abollt -and bow •ocb Ibey were ~ It became a pmc to finish a ud then 1dl tllle story.
11:00 1•:30 l~:oo j1:30 l•:oo 1•:30 l•:oo je:3o 11o:ool10:30l11:ool11:30I ....
ft bas 10 do With AIDS. The
Arnerictn publie has the risht to
-.... tnlth about lhl• bo<rible di-. So flr there lw -a lot of l)'iD&. We detel'\'e to know where
AJDS comt1 &om and why. I taite
thete q_uestions becautc retetrchen
at the University ofC&lifomil Medi-
cal Scbool. al Davis have dite0vered
that cits have AIDS. How can this be
in lif,bl ofwbat we have been led to
believe? .
v .... ., •• ,...,.,.M'C,;t1t. •••
Last week I realbied that the bottle had been won. Grandma told my ton
that he oouk! have an)'thina be
wanted for hit 14th birthdly. Mott
boys would have asked for a TV but
my son asked fO( books.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: A .,...t
many Plt'eDLS complain that their
children watch too much ldevision.
I've heard various methods men-
tioned to help supervise and/or
curtail viewina time. l'd like to share
what worked for me.
Cau are not IV drua uters.
Cats arc not homotexual.
Cats do not act blood transfusions.
Since l 1m sure you will aaree with
all of the above, will you please tell me
why lhe coverup? -READER IN
MAINE.
DBAlt MAINE: Yev lafenmti•
ii mc.rree&. I .,.U wldl Dr. MU'l'lly
~r. claalrau 9f ,.IMMD at 1k Uahenlty el Calllenlo Meill<al
lcMelatDllYis,.u4M..W .. t1aatl8
ltlli lky llllcovere4 a leliDe tm-••••tflc:lwf vim mat •u tlJDl-lar te AIDS. faitlt tltere are ,...._.
lfMt:k: Meraeet. nit same vlnt
When lwasarowinaup. my mother
tau&ht by eumple. Wbcncver she
had a free moment. she would sit
down with a book. My brother and I
had access to boob for as far back as I
can remember. We were encouraaed
to read and to look up words so that we would undentand what we were
readina.
A fewyeanago I beaan thC battle to
wean my children away from TV. I
threatened, unplugc..1 and punished
to no avail. T'hcn I thought of my
mom. I had always read in my
bedroom or in my study. I bepn to
This may not work for everybody.
but dcvelopina the rcadina habit can
do a child a world of aood that will last
a lifetime. I bless my mother every
time 1 pick-up a book. -CALI-
FORNIA BOOKWORM.
DEAR BOOIWORM: Wlaat a ......... _,.. __
6adly aee4M ............ --..
maay YOPI eyn are ..... • TV ud
.. Wac monb .......... -.......
r. ,_ lo -. ........... U4I
meMeys, •t AJl)S It la Mt.
weae•y. Jae I
AJlfg (March 21 -April 19): Take initiative, reali.i:e
people are drawn to --'-----------
you, wiU be sym-
pathetic to your
cause. Jud&ment.. in-s
tuition on ta't<t. YONEY Romance plays sig·
nificant role. Teach, o
write, exchange MAii
ideas._ Virgo figures •••miiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 'fl")m1ncntly.
TAURUS (Apnl 20-May 20): Focus on &lamor.
secrets. clandestine arra.nsemenu., rapprochement with
family member. Diplomacy wins. attcmptina to force
issues results in loss. You'll pin access to inside
infonnation. Libra featured.
GEMINI (May 21.June 20): Circumstances swing in
your favor, you'll win friends, popularity zooms upward.
Financia1 structure is stronger, you'll aet needed backing.
Scenario also hi&hliahts speculation, romance, charm.
CANCER (June 21 -July 22): Em~s on busincu,
career, prestige, ability to hobnob With very important
people. What had been denied will be provided. Credit
n.ting improves; so docs ca.sh now. Capricorn plays role.
LEO (July 23-Aua. 22): Favorable moon aspect
coincides with communication, publishina. advcrtisina.
romance. travel. Enthusiasm shoves aside ennui. You are
JOing places. will be flinina with fame and fortune. Aries
involved.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-ScpL 22): Stress independence,
style:, qgrcssivencss. Rcfwc rejection, move ahead.
realize moocy previou."y withheld is due to be released.
Partner or mate revca.ls secret -startling. Leo is in
picture. · LIBRA (Sept. 2).()ct. 22): Hunch pays off, sense of
y1l1 of die eyeltall1. ·
Todly'1 TV vteWttS are ...,_..
rew'1 eHdi potlitees. Let's Mar h for , ........... .,.. ... -...... Uk. .. Wltere eu we,.'? .. tkJ -.W
be told, "'f• tM Ut.rary.'"
•
purpose and direction restored. Em~hasis on public
relations., contractual obligations, manta! status. You'll
rise above petty differences and could win major contcsL
SCORPIO (Oct. 2J.Nov .. 21): Look beyond th<
immediate, ask questions., aivc full rein to intellectual
curiosity. Lunar emphasis on ~ts., dependents., employ-
ment, diet and nutrition. Gemini, Saaitarius pla)' roles.
SA.GITl'ARIUS (Nov. 22-Dcc. 11); Relative talks
about '"break from tradition." Be sympathetic, but play
waiting pmc. focus on impulse, romance, creativity,
variety, travel plans. Scenario accents physical attraction,
sex appeal.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Lunar position
highliahts home, security. fuJfillment of obhptions.
You'lf learn more about property values, long-ranac
prospcctS. You'll rccci~ answer "in writina.'' Analyu:
contents.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fcb. 18):.SJ>C!tlight ori trips,
ideas, visits, relative who asks special favor. Domestic
adjustment necessary. could rcsul1 in actual cban.F of
residence. Marital status also commands attention~
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Many of your "best
qualities" surae to forefront. People take a second look,
many comment on your appcarancc. Money picture briJ.hlr you·n also locate article lost, missina or stolen.
Anes involved.
IF JUNE I IS YOUI\ BIRTHDAY durinaJune1 you
make fmh start in new direction, spotlight on creativity,
initiative, style, romance. Visor returns, optimism
replaces ennui. Taurus, Cancer, Caprioom people plat
important roles in your life. You are intense, sensua ,
sentimental, you work well -under pressure and art
capable of meeting the most cxactinadeadlincs. Sense of
purpose and dirtttion restored in July along with
rapprochement in connection with family. August.also
memorable.
By CIW\LES GOREN uil OMAR SHARIF
Both vulnerable. South deals.
NORTH
• Q • l <;> J l
O AKQ6
•AI75
MST WEST
•JI091
11 109654
() 5.
• " J <;> Ql7
0 10,173
• Q J • 10. J
SOUTH
• A765
<;> A " J
The old 'poison' salesgimmick "TbebHldin~,::,1
So•tll Wett Nortlt [a(
p,...
Pus
Pou p,..
Mak.en of a certain dinnerware
between 960 and l 370 concocted a
noteworthy sales &immick. Any
poison, they claimed, changed the
a,rccn color of their celadon dishes.
Arab sultans., fearful of e1tina off
anything else, paid dearly for those
plates. Dinnerware salesmen, who
survived the trips through Arabia.
came back with fortunes.
Not every man gctl to do what be
wants. Actor RascrMooresu.rtedout
as a cartoon animator. Didn't work
out.
Q. Can oslrichcs be trained to herd
sha:p? •
J
LM.
Bo YD
A. So it's saWL Believe ifl ran sheep,
though, I'd want a herder out there
1martcr than the stock. Even an
educated ostrich is pretty stupid.
Peop&c who don't play bridge don't
undentand its drawing power. I
suspect. In Chlcqo once. 26.000
people showed up to watch a bridae
tournament.
Puritans thou&ht sex on Sunday
was a sin. They believed every bl.by
was born on the same day of the week
on which it was conceived cuctly
nine months later. So they punished
the mother whose baby was born on
Sunday.
Q. A mountain n.n,aie in India is
called the Hindu Kush. Why?
A. That means .. Hindu killer."
Once wu a Moslem 1tronahokl
Custom then was to kill any Rindu
who turned up in the vicinity.
' ....... , .... , t ····hi<>!'•··~···"' omen
Monthly Lectures on Women5 Health Topics
U N
I+ Put 1 0
l • Put J +
J NT P.. 4 +
4 Q Pau 6•
Pau P ..
Openina lead: Ten of <;>
How important is the opening
lead? On this hand, it meant the
difference between making a slam
or &oin& down. And we can only
extend our sympathy to West, for
we would probably have attacked
with the same .suit.
North's decision to jump shift,
altbouah based on a Ot for opener's
1uit, wu borderline. North's four
dubs wu a mild lllam tty, and South
E
"Eating Disorders: When Food
Controls Your Life"
Anorexia, Bulimia
and Compulsive Overeating•
· Kay Pitsenburger
Piogram Direcror. ED. U.
Wedgesday, June a
Wednesday, June 22
"What You Need To Know
About Liposuction"
Discussion and Presentation
by a bcJard
QIJilied Piasa~ Surgeon
'!,hursday, June 9
"Ob My Aching Back·
Back lnjuries,_C.URs,
Effects and Cures"
Todd Fassoff M .D.
Thursday, June 23
•
"
FOR RESERVATIONS AND INFORMATION,
CALL: (714) 554-1601
All lectures presented at 7:00 pm. in the Conference Room.
• • '
•
...
Complete t•wtolon llatlnga In 8uncleJ'• TV Pilot.
took the opportunity to cue-bid his
ace of hearts. North needed no fur-
ther impetus to leap to slam.
From South's spade bid and
North'• decision to bid slam only
after he heard the heart cue-bid,
West inferred, correctly, that
North's weakness was hearts. Had
he known how much or declarer's
s1rength was in hearts, he would
certainly have selected some other
suit. With a spade lead, South
would have had no play for his
slam.
Declarer captured the qucc:n of
hearts with the kina and cashed the
acc-k.ina of clubs. He took his re-
ACROSS ,......,._
e Bitl• s>Wt 1t Slid~ ,. ..... ......
'""*--17 HunW'• -1tl .H .... ~
20RW 2t......._ .. ...........
24 Latproom .. _
27 --down eek•
30 IMg nerne In Del•••• 32 Leid noon
33 BtllMtwelrl Ma..., 37 "So ......... .. _
38 Conftd9nt ... .._ ··-42 fWrOw: pref. 43--45Aed ...
48 Tape.,..,,.,. .. __ ··-$() Ofe9k cc*! •
52 Trlelde .. -57 o.prf\lie of la
po11111le1t1) .. _
81 BedQtir'• -.. _
CanodlM ......
UKlnof ......
848t~ .. ........
DOWN
t """-...... ·-·-·-• Court group
'""""" ·-. ._
10 DICIOiiery ,,_ ··-13 So. Affbnt 18 LMd body .. -"""""° 25 Tot up
HT-27-··-no ........
30W•~ lend
St Putil ~o -.. Dul_
-;----.--
maining hearts for a spade discard
from dummy, then cashed four
·rounds of diamonds. As tuck would
have it, West was short in both mi-
nor suits, and East had to follow
suit as declarer sluffed two spades.
AU that remained was for dcclar·
er to give East his trump trick.
09wn to not.hina but the pointed
suits (spades and diamonds), East
had a choice of ways to commit
suicide. He ooufd either lead a dia·
mond 10 give a ruff-sluff, allowina
declarer 10 discard a spade loser
from one hand while trumpina in
the other, or cls'e lead away from his
kina or spades.
.. _ ....
31 Slit••·· .._ .. ""'" ..... _
•1 Wonr•.n. .. __
"TaflttlangoCI 46 ........ .. .._.....,
47ThWOIM
.. _
50 E\'O'p<cl • ., eo._, ..._._ .. _ .. ...__ ·-
N Totem pOfe _,...., ....
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" ... So UttSe Rea Riding Hood went
· walking !fl the forest with her
daddy Robin Hood ... "
llAIUIADUD . by Brad Anderson
ALL Rl6MT, LUCI(, LET'S LOOK
ALIVE OUT TI4ERE ! 6E RE ADV ~
fWf ATTOOION ! CONCENTRATE ~
GAR.FIELD
--
JR TD BLSACllSU by St9Ye Moore
DE!OUS THE llERACE •
b~ank Ketcham
lls a<AY, /k:M . tr WAS JlST TAAr CW VASE. TAAT
6E~ TO '()UR GAAtllWDlt£R."
by Charles M. Schulz
C>riftjj COMC DAILY PM.OT /Tu11lllf, JuM 7, ,_ M
POR BETTER OR POR WOR8B
~ 1Ft:. ~ I tl'!;O\\::R 18 '/Ell'Oa.D. BUT ~t~~ ~~~Cl.JPl ea1asFR:~.
SHOE
l Tt1E. u~ NeeOS ~ .-.
I •
by Lynn Johnston
v.Je:U-~R~ · ~!
by Jeff MacNelly
JUDGE PARKER by Harold le Dowe
,. PLEASE DON'T WORRY ABOUT MONEY AT~ ,. IN.AS~ APPARENTLY NOT' HIS LAWYER tJ TIME UKE THIS. DAVID ' I'LL ARRANGE FOR YouR \ .SAID HE L EFT A LETTER FOR ME, ~ YOlJR PLANE TlCKET AND WHATEVER DAD'S O NE HE HAO WRITTEN SEVERAL 'i ELSE YOU'LL NEED WHILE I DEATH Vl'EEKS ""'°°' XT MUST HAVE 1.\1 :IN SAN FRANCISCO' THANK VOU U NEX-A'\INEO HIM TO REALIZE HE ~ ABBEY / I PECTED? DIDN'T HAVE ENOUGH FOR A P DECENT BURIAL I
by Jim Davis
.
FUNKY WINKERBBAl'f
! CAAATE D 'fO I.EAVE l.itX) I 'fl»ll6H"r LO 1-rn 7tOO 1UING5
1fiAf 'I'VE L..EARNEO 008< J ~E c.ooR&E Of fW..) CAREER! ,
~
r
j
f.
}
' _...____.._ e..--
by Tom Batluk
TUllBLBWBltD8 by Tom K. Ryan
MWHIW IMAR~f1iu..E'e e 9ttft4MAvatA6e!&..OOK!-100
10J09T' AtJAV~ <?P'I. ~~ 1WO ~,1\Ab !:~JM'~ -~~~\J f "Mb FINS~ HOL.e7 11\J IVI 1 NOSE ..
" '\
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. by Pat Brady
• 1
by Garry Trudeau '=~;:' $~~~-l/,£~S·:: ----i..cu•a.----
·---. ., .. 0.. --• ---_ .._.... _ ..................... _ .. ._ .. ...._ ..... __ ~ ........... _ I U IICltOO l .' I I r I I .
II S A Y E T I i I I I I
11 I AN"IS I' I\ I I
I
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r.
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f1
,,
II U streets are not designed to live, •
they die. But to live. they must be
planned to do much more than ft.lllllel
the road traffic of the moment So
planning-more than any other
factor-is vital to the life of streets.
For example-until recently-the
planners of towns had no way to
project certain events which can
swiftly obsolete streets and even
highways. Events like the sudden
surge in two-income/two-car families.
Or the flight of employment centers
from downtown urban areas to out-
of-town suburban sites.
The restilt is that there are towns
todaY-all over the nation-whose
streets. though once designed to
carry the lifeblood of their com.mu-
• nities. have now become clogged
arteries no longer up to the task.
But there are new towns today-
like Rancho Santa Margarita-whose
; streets were planned to meet the
• traffic needs of the present and the
, future. With streets that live and grow.
Timely Streets.
Because Rancho Santa Margarita
is a masterplanned community, its
interior streets and main arterial
roads are planned in advance to grow
in phases-just as the town itself is
planned to grow-in phases.
~rexampe.whileRanchoSanta
Margarita has been planned to pro-
vide homes for up to 50,000 people
over the next 15 to 20 years, its
residential neighborhoods are being
~ constructed gradually-in phases. As
is its Business Park-parcel by parcel
So year by yeai; as neighborhoods
sprout and businesses and employees
move in, existinpoads are extended
-and widened-in phases-as part of
the overall plan. Tu accommodate the
9" growth of the town bef!!rt it occurs.
And as it occurs. With timely streets.
~Street&
While expansion of the town's inte-
rior str"ets is timed to its overall
growth plan. Santa Margarita
Company also participates with other
landowners and builders of nearby
communities to upgrade and expand
the capacities of feeder streets in the
general area-roads that serve those
communities and serve Rancho Santa
Margarita residents too.
One such example is the planned
extension of Santa Margarita Parkway
-west of El Turo Road-into a new
section named Portola Parkway. This
expanded arterial will not only serve
Rancho Santa Margarita. but also
Mission Viejo, Coto de Caza, Robinson
Ranch, Trabuco Highlands, 'lrabuco
Canyon and neighborhoods in the
towns of El Turo and Lake Forest
Through this pooling of efforts,
Santa Margarita Parkway has
already been widened from two to
four lanes. And now the widening to
its ultimate width of six lanes has
also begun.
Streets Fbr Work And Play.
The community streets of Rancho
Santa Margarita were not just
designed to carry the vehicle traffic
of the town, but to integrate the
roadways of the town ... with the
lifestyles of the town From the very
beginning, its streets were conceived
with adjacent bike ~es. paths and
walkways. Tu give bikers, joggers,
strollers and skaters free-flowing
pathways that interconnect the town's
residential neighborhoods with its
recreational areas, its shopping cen-
ters-and even its Business Park.
Planned for work and play. So that
the people who live and work in .
Rancho Santa M,.arprita wOuld never
be much more than a bike ride or
stroll away from their jobs. their homes. .
schools and other activity centers. ·
We call such streets "Living Streets."
For that's what they were designed
to be. For today's residents. and for
generations of residents to come.
A 1bwn In The Path Of Propeu.
Bounded by Mission Viejo and Coto
de Caz.a-and nestled in the shadow
of Saddleback Mountain and the
Cleveland National Forest-Rancho
Santa Margaritas-picturesque loca-
tion is a modem day paradox. For
while it sits in a valley of viewlands,
it is also amazingly close to the thriv-·
ing business, cultural and commercial
centers of Orange County. 'lbwns,
cities and communities alive with
economic growth and opportunity. In
an area-scheduled at last-to bene-
fit from two major transportation
plans: the Foothill Circulation Phasing
Plan (a $240 million program to
widen and extend existing roads. and
improve some 40 intersections in
southern Orange County.over the
next one to three years) and the
much-needed $350 million Foothill
Transportation Corridor (a ~mile
long super highway and transpor-
tation system) presently charted
to pass through Rancho Santa
Margarita and past the .. front door"
of its budding new Business Park.
Though now in the freshness of its
youth, Rancho Santa Margarita sits
sqtl4I'ely in the path of this progress.
A town uniquely designed to mature
slowly-in a balanced, methodical
manner-over the years ahead.
A new town. in a progression of
towns and communities. A town in
which this generation-and genera-
tions to come-can live ... and work
... andgrow.
l~
(l~c..rt
KEEP HOUSING
IN ORANGE COUNTY
AVAILABLE AND
WITIHN REACH.
VOTE NOON
MEASURE ''A!'
It could drive the cost of new housing
~high ... stop new road construction
dead in its tracks ... and make traffic
~not better!
llEASUU"A"-11aelaeteitwqtow1ecktlae
~olO...Coaq.· t&900J'rt
a •
laptowcl Acceu Ro&da Aa4 JIMder Arteri..,_including the widenini and extension of
eEstinc roads. the enhancement or some 40 intersections and the construction of new roads-~
acheduled for completion O'f'Cf' the next one to three years. ln a major effort to improve traffic now
and provide added alternatives to freewl.y travel in the South County area, this wort is part or
the $240 million FbothilJ Cirtul&tion Phasing Pl&n
Tbe tow11 .tlnlgnrd fer life
llleill' /J..._.11.,..11•._.=.,, •111¥...!! \r~-·~ .......... ....!..'L~11= -~~..._ ..... .._.. __ ~ I Ee!ltt• e==••t ...... ~ .. ...._Al._. ..... ts ,_ .... .._.. ___ .. -........... '5RS====--..... ._ ... ~ ..... .. P•_._............. ... ........... ......_ ....... .,......,. . ._.=.::=ea •tm• ..._ ............. .,. ., ....... , n t
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TUESDAY. ~ 7. 1111
Piece of green stripped from E
enn y ' s six-year tour as Its principal
comes to a close with decision to ·retire·
past s.• )tan hll kept them on top of
the heap .
.. ~ .ecret is IQOd coechcs. ••
insists ~ncdy. who ditii0tuishcd
himRlf for many years as a top
WrtStli,. CQIC'h whilt at Marina
H iah
. •
I
.
The~ndlbavecomeapinand
caujht up an thmt isJICk Kennedy.
Edison Hiah, Schoot•s lou, the loyal
opposition•spin. ....
After JO yean in the busineu. the 56-yar..old Kennedy and his wife
Barbara are Pl(kina their beo and
setuna iftdy for a June .JO exit lor the
aoldfaclds ofNonhem Cllifom ia.
rrbe principel o f Edison for the pqt
lix years, he opted for early rttirc-
ment, althouah be maintains ""Tetirc-
ment .. won•t come for at least another
decade.
In the D'leantimc, the Kennedys
Dodgers
take one
. i-on chin w
' ,
~ p ,
~ • " • , • • •
• • • , • • ' .. • , • $ , r .. ,. • ,. , •
Astroseruptfor 14
ba8e hits, get 10-4
decision over LA
LOS ANOELES (AP) -The
Houston Astros arc hop101 their hilts
will follow their leas.
The Astros bad t• hits and stoic a
scason-h1fh six bu.cs 1n defeatina the
Los Anaclcs Dodgers I Q..4 Monday
niaht
"Our runnina pmc o pens up our
h1ttin1 game:· said Gerald Youns.
who stole three bases for the third
time this season. "We have people
movina and people 1n sconna P<>'"
iuon. a nd thinas JUSt seem to o pen up
a little bit more. And the majority or
our stolen bases lead to runs ...
Young. who singled twice. walked
I
I / I
• The l'E~ale
HOMI
Tonl9ht--Houlton. 7:35 o.m.
June t--Houston, 7:35 o.m
June t-Houston, 1:05 o.m. •
AWAY
'
, June l~S.n Oleoo, 7:05 o.m. •
June 11-S.n Oleoo, 7!05 o.m. •
I June 12-s.n Dle9o. 1:05 o m • June 1)-ldle.
• On TV, ChMnel 11
• All Gamft on KAISC, 790
four times and scored three runs.
leads thl' National L.caauc with 34
stolen bases. 8111) Hatcher. Terry
Puhl and Kc' an Bass also had steal~
Denn) Walhna had three hits.
"It (speed) 1s aoing to play a key
role." said Hatcher. "Our offense 1s
the main part of our p me. Get on
base. get runnina and get in scoring
position. and we're bound to get a key
hit sooner or later •·
Bob Knepper. 7-1. allowed five hits
o'er six innings. strik1n1 out seven
and \o\alkina three. Larry Andersen
pitched three innings to earn his
second save.
The Astros managed only three hits
ap inst Don Sutto n tn the fi rst six
inninasand trailed 2· I before rallying
in the SC\/Cnth apanst Alejandro
Pena. 2-3.
"Suuon pitched very sood. but
he'd gotten out of a couple of touah
innings •nd I felt it was time to att
him out o f then::· Los Anaelcs
manaaerTom Lasorda said. "He kept
us in the pme for six innings and did
aJOOdjob."
P1nch·hllter Puhl sinalcd with one
tn the seventh and was thrown o ut
tryina to score on Youna·s sinJlc.
Youns then stoic his lca1ue-lcad1na
llrd and 3•th biscs and scored on
Hatcher's sinaJe. Hatcher took sec-
ond on a walk to Wallina and scored
on Glenn Da,·if tinje.
will deal rtal estate ffom thtir
rts1dence th Cool, which thould be
read1, in about a year. U ntil then
they n reside in Auburn.
Prineipals come and ao. but every
once in a while a nuget comes and aocs and thcrt is a distinct void. and
that's what Kennedy is creatina.
Ifs no secret that Edison "Hi&h's
a&hlctic succcu bcpn on Day One
when Ernie PaKOe took over and
brOU&ht with him a heavyweiaht from
Westminster. Lyman Oower
It's also no secret that the direction
Kennedy has liven the Cbarsen the
"Then tht tOod athletes want to
movt into your area. and aood coachts don •t lose athle1n." add$ the
man in the perennial arua COil.
Kennccty wore hit peen almost as
if' be was in uniform and racfy IO aart
lhood . •sk.eu ot kickina field
pis. ~re was no mist&U, Ken-
nedy was a Charser.
He has ma<k sorM easy. decisions,
such as bri!'sin& in Joa Botchtrt to
auide the Charsm· besketbell pre> aram. and ahhouah this decision was
har<kr to make. they'rt similar in-
Thomu Beam• la kept from falllDC thrOUCh the ropes by
referee Richard Steele from b low by Iran Barkley Monday.
as.much as tht fifll WM._..,. Ii~
with fora whi~. alMtdaisOM~llc.
too .
.. , had j ust come inJfi91ji'itlll:rille
and brou&ht Jo n in from West·
minster ... recalled Keancdy. ·~
~ere some hurt r~linp ~ ~utc
there were people here whO feh they
were in line for the job.
Hit M gets hit, Ran ~
and·hOw, in upset put Ha1os
and~\Cr.ll<;honpuncltCStOlhchcad. a way 6-4 Hearns suffers KO
in the third-round
from 4-1 underdog
LAS VEG~S (AP) -Iran Ba rkley
knockl-d do"n Thomae; Hearns and
stop~d him in the third round
Monda) n11h1 to "in the WBC
m1ddlc:"'cight c:hamp1onsh1p an a
shocking u~t .
Barkle). who v.as takina a beating
fro m the l-111 "1an fro m ()(1ro11 .
suddenly landed a right lo the head
that dropped Hearns on his back. He
struqkd up at 8 and Bartle) bulled
him into the ropes. After a couple
more ~hots to the head. the fight was
stopped and B:lrkky. a 4-1 undcrd<>1-
-.as the champion.
The umc w-as 2:34 of the third
round
After rcferttt Richard Steele stop-
ped thl' fight Hearns fell through the
ropes
The 28-ycar-old Barkle) "as bleed ·
ing from a cut O\ er his left e~e and
also "'as bleeding from the mouth
ancr two rounds Dr. Donald Romeo
v.cnt into his corner after the 5CC'Ond
round 10 c'aminl' the challen~r
&rklq came chara1n1 out in the
third round and launched a series of
v.1ld Oinas. Heam'> fuuaht back a nd
"as not hun .
Then. Hl-am~ ~rl"d v.11h about a
dozen '1c1ous punches to the body
Barkle) looked ltkc he was ready to J
go but he lashed out "'ith the naht
hand lhat made him champion.
Hearns Ob\10~1) was bedly hun
ancr '>la&&erina up at I and i't didn•t
take Steele long to decide the onl)'
man 10 "'1n four .. orld titles '<11-'aS a
beaten champion.
Hearns. -.ho has bttn a world
champion C\C!". ~car of thl!> decade .
controlll'<i the fi'r~t round with his kft
Jab as he opened the cut o' n-
Barkk) ·s e)e. Hl-arns drc" blood
from !bride'· .. mouth in the sttond
round a nd continued 10 wort. on the
t')C CU I.
At this point. Barkle) looked hke
he was O'ermatchcd as a cro">d of
8,541 chl-cred Hearns on.
For Hearns. who Cot S l.S m1lhon,
thl· loss .. as his third apin~ 45
'1ctories. 30 b) knockout. He was
stopped in the 14th round by Sugar
Ra) Leonard in a battle for the
undisputed \l.CheN e1gh1utle1n 1981
and "as knod :ed out 1n the third
round b} ._,1an dous Man in Hagler
1n a btd for th<' undisputed middle·
"'-·1gh1 c:hamp1onsh1 p in I QSS
&rklc). who \31d his onl) fight
plan 1o1.-as to do "'hate' er 11 took to \I, 1n
thl championship. "as in his second
bid at a 1o1.orld title
Last <At :!3. he lost a TS-round
dec1s1on to Sumbu Kalamba' fo r the
-.acant \\8.\ utl<' in Ital\. · •
He \\On his nc,t t"'o fiihts to earn a
shot at Hearns.
ARLINGTON. Texas JAP) -
Odd1bc Mc Dowell had a .,_o(hiU.
dro'c in •~o runs and UokdliollraSd
Monda) nil.ht as the Tcus ltaaetrs
bc::it the C'afifomia Antth M .
Jose GuLman. 6-4, al~ etJht
htts ;snd struck out c:1aht in pitduna
his fou nh complete pme. lie over•
came three errors and~ ..ual mitttal.cs b)' tc.immatesu 1'. l
the Anccls to thcir 12th cWlm ''
pmcs. '
W1lhe Fraser. 4-S. allowed K'-fti
hits and si~ runs in S'li inniap.. •
In losina their 12th ia dlt lait ~S
pmcs. Lhe naiclsalso -ert~
the field to make a loser 10(. aanrr
Willi~ Frase<. 4-5.
Center fielder Ton) Armas· ennH.
th1: second helped the Ila~ to
three runs and kft·f~lder Jim;~ p:ard·~ botched n) ball in the (~
lcJ to another run • •• ··\\c P 'C the same away:· ;iti.d
.\n&ds manager Cook1c..R0Jas. ·~
Back.Lfo-baCk Lakers 'goal in slgbt
TIJe .clJedule
AWAY
Ton191ll-Texai. S.l5 P.tn. •
Jurw 1-Tean 5.)S o.m. •
June 9-ldle.
MOMa
Detroit stands tn
way w ith Ga m e 1
at Forum ton tgh_!_ _
INGLEWOOD (AP) -T he last
time an NBA team repeated as
champion. four of the five current Los
Angeles Laker starters were children.
Bu t not the fifth. Kareem Abdul-
Jabbar was 22 a nd about to begin his
long. bnlhant pro career.
In the 19 )Cars since the Boston
Celtics won their second consecutive
title. nobody has accomplished such a
feat, a nd such people as Maaic
Johnson. James Wonhy. Byron Scott
and A.C. G reen have irown into
adults and starters for the Lakers.
Abdul-Jabbar. now 4 1. is still
around a nd has set many NBA
records. Despite his advancina years,
he·s still a key to the Lakers• chances.
'Tm very excited about the fact
that wc·ve done what we had to do to
gct here." Abdul-JabbaT said Monday
after pT&cttcc. referrins to the NBA
finals. whteh begin toniaht at 6. "I'm
just takin& It one step at a time."
The takers, who arc playinJ in the
finals for the seventh time 1n nine
years and have won titles in 1980,
J 982. I 98S and 1987, were extended
to the full sc\len pmcs in each of their
last two 1erics. apinst Utah and
Dallas. But as Abdul-Jabber put it..
thcy•renerc.
The Detroit Pisto ns, on the other
hand. have advan«d to the finaJ,J for:
ahe firsnirnc since. 19'6. whttf they
Detroit 'a Bill L&lmbeer atretdae9 oat OD
the floor of the Fonam Monday ln prep-
I#~
a.radon for too~a Ont &amd with the
L&ken in the cU.aploublp eertea.
were the Fort Wayne Ptstons. The
franchise mo ved to Detroit the fol-
lowma )car
T he second game of the bcst-of-se, en scncs will be played T hursday
niaht. also at 6 at the Forum The
sc.ric then shifts 10 Michtpn for thc
third. fourth and. 1f ~ a fifth
game If necessary. the sixth and
SC\ienth pmes ""'111 be played at lhc
Forum.
Abdul-Jabbar has ~n a member
of fi \ie champ1onsh1p teams. the four
La~er ~u:ids 1n the la.st c1&ht )"Cars
and the M1l"aukcc Bucks or 1971. in
his S«Ond NB \ season
Because of the circumstances. a
sixth lltlc wm('tnnc rn the nut t"'o
"'«ks mi&ht be the swtttcst of all for
him lfso. he -.asn't talk1n1 about iL
.. We have to v.m 1t first before .,,.~
can talk about the s1an1fica~ ... he
JUM ·~~ Cltv 7;JS P.tn.
JuM 11-Kanw' Cilw, 12:20 o m. June 1?-Kam.as Cltv. I-OS o.m.
JUN lJ-KaMai City, 7:35 Om
• On TV Cha.,.,.. S
• AJ oatnft on KMPC, 710
t hn.-c run~ t he~ ""orcd in the second
inning the) n<''<'r\ho uld ha'e ~
" ( drop an} ball and let another rull
in "'" JUSt k t too man) in •
.. It '>huuld ha'" bttn a 4-1. 4-)
p me for us 1nst<'ad ofa 6-<' loss It.,
a slopp) pmc G u1man pitched ~
so. I didn't think he did that w~a
There's no v.a' \OU c-an kt them ha11it
fiH-. SI\ ouh an inn1na Sooner or
later the~ 're goina to ~t )Ou ..
Tc\as tool a 1-0 lead in the first on
Ruhcn \1crra s \t'\Cnth homn-and
made 114-0 in the third on RBI sin~
b~ Stnc Bucc:hek' C urtis Wilkerson
and McDo"cll
Cahfom1a ~orcd 1n the third on
Eppatd 's RBI sin1lc and then cai>i·
tah1cd on Tc 'u error\ for two runs IQ
the fourth.
Johnny Ra~ sin1led and w•s sacn
fittd to wcond One out latn-. Damll
Miller v.alkl"d and both runnm
ad,anccd on a v.1ld pitch.
·UCiseD.ds3
Celtics wrote the book on back-to-back titles ...
defcat(d in the NBA chamPtonship sencs b)
Boston in the Ccltici •. ak>rY years.
.. Yo u had to hOpc to play your best ap1nst
them .. b( said ... and even •hen you dtd.
usually that wun·t IC>Od enouah ...
In the 13 ltlSOns frOm 19'7 to 1969. the
Celtic\ won 11 championships. includtna
eijht in a row from 1939 to 1966. Not the
Yankca or Picken orCanadicns ot an)bod)
else 1n professional spocu have b«n w
dominant..
"How'd we do it?" •id former 8o6ton ~at Tom Heinsohn. now a teleVisaon
commentator ... We Md the lft8tel1 offtntc
and t~..,P.tai ddew." Simple .. u &hit. Wida maier lill RYSRll
Jtt\'iftl 11 lhe conet110M. tllt Cddcl t.-d the NIA pl9~ ••10a 111C1Cc,.._ Of'annual ~iOMat .. Tk 011111 lliL ..
ltWllllO('OHK'idttdtMla ..... ~
... and~ With .... Celda' Dfllil6·. HewlMPlt~= .... -~ Cod IM GcMfll "-I Aws'*lli ._... ... ,.or.w
Nol11111 ..... ,,, .. a.. ..........
of nobod1cs. mind )OU.
.. Then: were two nucleuscs O\er thMC
)Cars. v.ith Ru~ll as the basis for both or
1hem." Heinsohn said. ··1 ha\ien't counted.
but sc~en or c:iaht of us have 'o bt in the Hall
of Fame." .
Make it n1nc 1f OV.1\Ct' Walter Brown (no1t0 · d«ea~) and A~h att snrluded. alona
v.1th Russell. Heinsohn. Bob C ous). BiJJ
harman. John Havlicek. sn Jona aftd
frank Ramsa). Each ofthoK pla)US pl:aym
I kC} part in the buildin& and $'1 ini"I O(
the Cchics· [))nasty.
"It's toosamplc1 th<>Uth.•oJ~ y thallhc
Cdtics "~re the bcsi teem~" COU$Y R id. ~\iOUll .A~rbicb·altftt•in '~WI~ he
•l>rktd a sUC'CaltOn of~ as rouad
pets inlO tqlllft holes had a pat deal IO do
With it.
.. As it is. •IMMtvcr ~ ~ to •Y et •
penic'ulir ti me in tf}iftl ~ tM
Suct"m W04tkl bt .......,. ~ "T1't ., ' •
The Ctltks won all of'..._ dMlm~ Pl
-)ICU' after )e:U"-..S 1'* cu n,..n 11 .. ,, ...•• ..,..-...............................
Now the Lakcn att in ~1tion IO take a ~tcp tov.•rd ~tncs: \\.'h1~ they miaht not
duplicate: tbt Celtics• ttmarbbk SUC'CCSS.
conxcutht tttlc:I would be mnarbbk an
this cra.
•• 1 adm t re the LU.en bc:nute Ou is their
iho& at brtomn\t an an e•tn~al team:· Hem•n said... .,tam that win a
championship .s .,at in its own WI)'. bUt to
do somcth1~ lMt nobodydtt has done 1n 20
rs -thlt • a chlMe IO rally make yow "'rt.
••And tht wiay it i todly. SU~ hive to ~ pniet~ two ..,..., ,.. ot
cmoUonal inticnaa.y eM4 tt.e tWT'lllC' bumatt britlll ....... ,~itllild. nc thma '°
mncmbtt is tUt IMft ~ a hell of a kM of
ltt'll pa~ and llC'alN OU\ &heft wttb the same pa.··
lhhe Lam d...-ae DHiiMt PilloM. '* o.ly Would''"*' *Mir .-d mle i• a
ro.', bul Octr 11urd ln lhe .... ro. ,)'Cllf'I aad
fifti-i• IM pea nint. ORiy nnee • dMJle ••• ... ....,..,
an 'sassault.on NFL hierarchy continues
s ~·,.~··. 8k r4 ~
Nataonal Fan AH1anc:e (NFA) snsi·
cknL While David's nets have
notbi~ t~ do ~it~ flab (u~ it's =ins 1n Maarna). he milhts the
icity his shin and orpnization
. s been receivina lately.
Last football teaton, David aod
vi« ~nt Derrick .. DJ .. Johnson
made a plea to National Football Ltquc <!'ommissiontt ~te Romie
to have the neu behind the p l posts remo~ed to allow fans in •he end zone
---
llCall I chutt at llkill bome I
foolbell .. It beallft b a iob." uid David
from his NFA otRce, which opened
last month in COiia Mesa. '"but tht
punc" ltfte""fOOdnuet IO be ftlnay ... So funny, 1n fact, that IOcaJ ne-.
papen ind lelevision and radio
station' t;Cpn takinc interest in the NFA. But I.hat is whett the interest l&Oooed. Wilson, who providts the
NA: whh 11me baits. would have
nothint to do with the NFA in far of
jeopudazina its PRCious football
conlract. ''fk national television
stations took the same stand and
tefusc to retum David's and DJ's
~calls. And RozctJt com~y
turned hit bad on the NF A, boipi .. 1t
wo"ld ao a*ay and leave him alone • 1"*8d, whb. help or. riverlat
pmbler from Lauftand, Nevada
named Ki"I Cole,----wbo 1nvaecd
Sl.000 in ttie NFA. and KUS.FM
radio. whidl pvc the Alliance oft"ace
apeceand a l.IO()number, Dlvidand
DJ have aone into business ttttuitina
members to the caute.
For a $20 contribution, any fan accrou the country can become an
official member, and wi ll ~ivc
cilheran NFA T-shirt or hat.and a4S
record or cassette ohhe "Take Down
&he Nell" 111p ~.
The NFA bal Sll lina '° take
incoV'lina calls at the olftcc (a two-room. while walled c:omplel, decor·
ated with .. Take Down the Neta"
postttS .and T-;lhin.), and ecuptt
fOur m..,or credit <Wds.
.. Ptoa* wetrcbedri .. utout Mthe aames fast ~r. sayi111 •this is cool.
but are you auyi fOr teal'." DJ said.
''Now they're loo~na for us in~ end
20ne each pine and even alk.ina us
back.''
The NFA aot '" first member rettntly. a twelve year old in Omat.a.
Nebraska. There art l>lan• 1n the
mwna 10 peint over. belt up 1979
El Dorado and tum it into an Official
Net-mobile to take to the pmes. And
now that the .. Take Down the Nets"
drive ia under way. lbc NFA ttopes to
branch out in other diNCtions. •ne four point play in belktlball, ii VU.. a •m an aua ~nt for C"!fJr/ ihot aink .,_ind dte mickoun h.c .............. __ _
•A ten;man Hae up n blle1*Jt --~ every man, inclUd•aa the
pitdwt' bell -in an attempc '° ~lear
up the On-dttllint dnipated h!tlef coauo~ betWcen the Arnencan
and National Laaues. •And, the silent third where at t~ ~nnina or the tbi;d quarter ·, 1n
football and balke1blall, or the. third
innina in baseball, cvtry fan 1n the
stadium keeps quiet for one CUii
mi nu~_.. ... JllATIOJllAL/88)
,Williams fired;
Argyros: We need
to Win, have fun
Gun-toting Hawk a rrested Billy chokes on gar. order'
OAKLAND -Atlanta Hawks re· m
sen e fol"\\:mt Chris Washburn was ar-b d
rl.'Slt'<f on invest1gat_ion of C8fTYIOI a gun vows he' 11 not e t e up nnd a bill) club. pohct said Monday.
Washburn.. 22. the Golden State Warriurs' first ·
round draft pid. 1n 1986. was released on his own
fl'C<>gnwmcc Monda) after spending the night in Jail .
SEA TILE -Dick. Williams. who led
thrtt different Ofl'nizations into the
• Wortd ~ries, was fired Monday as man-aacr of the ~attic Mariners. a franchise
that has never had a winnina season. . . .
"I think in the last coup,le of days Dack W1lha!'ls
lost control of this club,' aencral manager Dick
Balderson said •. "I just don't thin~ the playe~ ~e~ ~nding to ham at all. t don't thank Dick W1lhams
wu ttina 111 he could out of his players.·· Williams. S9. was not m the
Kintd<>me ~hen reponers ar-
ri ~ following the firing an-
nouncement. He could not im-
mediately be reached for com-
ment.
Williams was fired with the
Mariners' record at 23-33.
The 6-foot-I I Wash\>Um. who lived m Oakland
unul thc Warriors traded him to Atlanta last December.
was arrested Sunda) night aner neighbors reported that
shots had ~n fired. police said . .. We asked him 1fhc had a gun. and he said he did
and pointed toward hts coat," Sgt. Mike Foster said. Office~ pat-searched Washburn and found a .38-
callber rcvoh er. Fostcr said. The gun was loaded with
thn.'C ro unds but had not been recently fired. police
s:iid.
Washburn told police he lives in Woodstock. Ga.
He \\:lS apparent!) in the area v1s1ting a girlfriend.
Foster said.
Officers found a fncnd of Wa shburn's and a bill)
club 1ns1dc Washburn's late-model Porsche.
W::ishbum was arrested on susp1c1on of possessing
a dangerous \\'Capon. posscssins a concealed firearm
and possessing a loaded firearm 1n public. ~1s friend .
Derrick umar Turncr. 27. was arrested for 1nvcst1ga·
tion of possclting a dangerous weapon .
NFL defends strike lockout
Jim Snyder, 56. the
Marincn' first-base coach. was
named interim manager and took
over Monday night when the
Wll.lluM Mariners mm the Milwaukee WASHINGTON -Jack Donlan. the [i] Brrwcrs in the opener ofa seven e homcstand. c\eCUll\ c d1rc-c1or of the NFL Managc-
"I think we need a ma~r w gtts th'c most ~u1 men1 Counc1l.1cs11fied on Monda~ that the
of has players." Mariners owner Gcoric Argyros said. lcagul.' \\as not 1n '1ola11on of labor la"s
•we need to win and have fun now," said the Newpon "'hen 11 rcfuS(•d 10 rc10sta1e s1nk1ng pla~ers for game~
Beach businessman. held last )car shonl) after thl' un ion ended 11s 24-d::i~
.. This was something we felt needed lo be done," wall...out. · ' club p~sident Chuck Armstron& said. "We think we Donlan.testified for nearly four hou~ at a hearing
have a pretty good club that was not achieving its before an adm1n1sl!jilt1ve la" Judgl.' of the Na uonal
expcctauons." . ubor Rclauons Btlard. He said the deadhn~ for
Third-base coach Ozzie Virgil. a longt1mc coach stnktng players to ret urn 10 their clubs was mad" for
under Williams who also worked with him at Montreal "safet) and compct11ivc reason~. and we did not want to
!lnd San Diego. also was fired Monday. , chanfh~he~i~ Pla)ers Assoc1a11on is seeking an
Quote of the day
Micuel Jordu, th~ Chicago Bulls' sconng
mach1m.•. "hen asked about the poss1b1hl} tht he
might m::il...I.' an eJ1.crc1sc \ 1deo. -11 \\<Ould consist
of ml.' going to the drive-through window 31
McDonald's on m) way to the golf course.··
Mayweather retains bis title
LAS VEGAS -Roger Mayweather. • tn trouble several times in the last four
rounds. fought back gamely each time and
kept the World Boxing Counc1vuper
h&ht"'c1ght champ1onsh1p on a I 2-round split decision
over Harold Bru1cron Monday night at the Las Vegas
Hilton
Mayweather appeared to have the fi$ht 1n hand
allcrcight rounds as he scored well with left Jabs and left
hooks as Brazier seemed tentative.
In the rest pcnod before the ninth round, manager
Pete Susens told Brazier. "You have to stop him."
In the four-round war that ensued. 1t looked as 1f
lhe 32-)car-old Brazier. who didn't tum pro until he
was 26. "'ould car11 out Suscns' orders.
In another title match. undefeated Virgil Hill
pounded out a lackluster 12-round unanimousdccas1on
over Ramzi Hassan to retain has World Boxing Assoc1at1on hght heavyweight title.
Kings sign three to contracts
INGLEWOOD -The Los Angeles Ei1 Kings have signed three players to con-'
tracts for next season. the NHL team
•nnounccd Monday.
Those s1gnini were goahe Marie Fitzpatrick. the
'Kings· second chottt an the 1987 entry draft. left winser
Sylvain Couturier, a founh-round pick in the 1986
entry draft. and defcnseman Chris Panek. who was
taken in the 1987 supplemental draft.
· Vachon also said the K1nis have bought out the
remainder of the contract of veteran plie Al Jensen.
who spent all oflast season with the team's New Haven
affiliate of the American Hockey Lea&ue.
S t evens paces Cobras, 36·22
· NEW'\ OR"-. -~all Stevens thrc"' Ell
four touchdo" n passes t"'o of them to c • Ga~ Mulkn. 10 kad the Los "ngclc-s II
Cobras 10 a 36-.:?2 '1c1on over the Ne"'
'ork Knights to .\rl.'na Foo1ball on Monda' n1gh1.
Sin ens completed 16 of19 passes for .:?05 )ards for
thl·Cobr::i), '-3. "ho now ha ve "'on tree straight games
Thc lo">s "as the fifth an a row for the Kntghts after a
k'ason-opcning 'ictory.
es111m11ed S:?O rnalhon in back pa ) 11 SCI)~ the pla)ers arc
o"'l.'d for games pla)ed Oct 18· I 9 oflast season. three
daH afll·r 1he conclusion of the pla)ers' stnkc.
· .\fter the pla)ers called an "nd 10 the walkout on
Ckt 15. the owners refused to le\ them return. t'1t10g a
dcadhnl.' that ell.p1rcd one da) earl1cr. Instead. thc
lcugut· 'lttagcd a final week of games with r('placcmenl
pl4l~l·~.
Fitch fired, search begins
HOUSTON -Houston coach Bill m Fitch. under fire from some Rockets fans
and star center Akecm OlaJuwon. was fired
Monday with lhrtt years remaining on has
contract.
Fitch. who led the Rockets to the NBA finals in
I 986. drew cnt1cism from Ola1uwon for his iron-fisted
approach during the 1988 season when the Rockets
·Slumped in the closing month of the season.
Television, radio
TELEVISION
4:30 p.m. -PRO BASEBALL: Chicago
Cubs al Pittsburgh. WGN.
5 p.m. -PRO SOCCER M ISL Cham-
p1onsh1p Series Game 4 -Sockcrs at Cleveland.
Pnme Tid.el.
5 p.m. -COLLEGE BASEBALL: World
Scne~Game 10-Stanford's. M1am1. Fla .. from
Omaha. Neb .. ESPN
5:30 p.m. -PRO BASEBALL· Angels a1
Tc>.as. Channel 5.
6 p.m. -PRO BASKETBALL: NBA
Champ1onsh1p Series Game I -Detroit at
La kcrs. Channel :!
7:30 pm. -MEN'S VOLLEYBALL: U.S
's ( ub::i. from San Diego (taped). Prime Ticket.
7:30 p.m. -PRO BASEBALL: Houston at Dod~n'>. Z Channd.
7 JU pm. -PRO BASEBALL: Atlanta at 5'ln Franu"><.o. TBS
RADIO
5 'O p.m. -PRO BASE BALL. Angels at
TnJ'>. K~1PC (710).
Cl p.m. -PRO BASKETBALL: NBA
( h.imp1un'>h1p Series Game I -Detroit at
l al...l'I' Kl\C(570). '
7 p. m. -PRO BASEBALL. C1ncinna11 at
PJJ1\·1.. f...FMB (760).
7 30 p m -PRO BASEBALL Houston at
DuJg\·r~. t-. .\BC <790).
WEDNESDAY'S TELEVISION
10 a.m. -COLLEGE LACROSSE. N< ..\.\
01\ 1\100 I semifinal -S~racusc '~ Pcnn. from S~ra(.usc. N.\ (tapi:dl. ESPN
I
THE HOUSE DEBATE CONTINUES •••
:!'"What Sets HOUSE of IMPOR1S Apart.from the Rest?
All-Stilr
volleyball
The 12th annual Orinae County
bo)'S and airls hiah school aU-ctar
vollcyball p mcurc slated fOf Friday n~t 116 and 7:30 &;;· ~pcctively at Ookkn West C'ol .
The Nonh boyi are ~hed ~
Edison's John Httmaa and ~rina s
Andy Rad and led by NewDon
H1r1>or'1 DreW Sbcwmd. Mike C'utti
and &ditoa's Brian loont.
The South boys. cmc'hed by Woodo
bfidle'1 See~ SCrat01ud Dim Hills'
Oz Simmons. are ltd by Stanfonl.
boUnd Adam Kcdie.
In alrts mlon, Newport Hii'tiOr's
Dan °tilenn and Corona ckl Mar>1 CliiHie Brlnde wih pijk the .S-A aeam W"hicb is led by Newport Hatbor°s Jen ny E\IU1.
1be .. A tam. coeched bY £1 Toro's
Mitre Jldt Md &penala'1 Jon
lltid, '"" bt led ~ Irvine's Came Ddlon 1nd El Toro 1 Elaine Yov• Mm..._ s s:uo ror ae1u1u nct
SI lbrse"*"••·
Ma rtin returns to New York,·
but Red SoXSj)oilt he api)ie
From fte A11oclated Prest
Billy Manin returned from his three-game su!.pcns1on Monday night and stayed in the dugout but
s•ud after th e game that he would sue baseball's umpi~
for their threats to continually eject him.
"Youcan'tgagany Amcncan and I'm not going to be
gaggl'<i." Manin said after the Yankees lost to the Boston
Red So' 3-2 10 New York.
"Mr. (Richie) Phillips 1s a lawyer and should not
bclll.'r." Manin said. referring to the head of the Major
uaaue Umpires Association. "This is something that
goes on is Russia. Maybe Mr. Philltps is a Red Sox fan."
Manin had said before the game he would no longer
kick dirt on umpires. the act that led to the most recent
suspension.
Phillips. after meeting with American lr.i&uc
President Bobby Brown dunnf the game. restated the pos1t1on that Manin would stil be "treated differently"
thnn other major league manasers.
Manin said hi.' "'as angered bcc-ause h~ could not talk
to his pitchers on the mound through the game. Hesa1d he
"anted to go to the mound when Mike Greenwell was
balltn& tn the fifth innang wuh runners on second and
third. Grccn"'ell hit a two-run double to tied the score 2-2 .
"I wanted to pitch around him. but I didn't get the
chance tonight ." Manin said.
Phillips had never indicated Martin would be ejected
for lea\ ing the dUJOUt to visit the mound. onl y to
question an) umpinng dec1s1on.
The hallwa)-s of Yank(CS Stadium were filled with
ml.'l.'l1ngs Monda> ntght.
Manin said before the game he would not go on the
field because he didn't want to set the fans against the
umpires.
"Not because of what the umpires said but because I
don't "::int 10 set the fans against the umpires. Their JOb
"'111 bl.' tough enough.'' Martin said.
I l11ung coach Chns Chambliss brought the Yankees
1111\'UP 10 home plate for the exchange and pitching coach
An Fo"lcr went 10 the mou nd for conference and to n.·mo' e p1t<:hcrs. Manin never lcfi the duJOUt and there
"as onl' close call during the game that went aga inst the
't anh·cs
Martin was assessed the suspension and fined S 1.000
b) Bro" n last "cck for k1ck1ng. then throwing din 31 um pm· Dale S<:01t on May 30 in Oakland.
On Frida). Phillips held a conference call with the
en.·" ducfs and thc ump1rt"s threatened 10 eJCCt Manin 1f
hi.' !>11.'ppcd out of the dugout to argue a call
"From now on. for Martin to stay 1n games. he's
gotng to h:t\C to be an altar boy. sitting there with his
hands foldl'd and his lips shut." Phill ips said. "From th is
da) forward. Billy just doesn't have the same rights and
pnvill.'gcs that any of the other managers 1n the Amcncan
League h::ive... •
Manin announced before the game that he no longer
"ould l...1ck din.
"J Just want to say to all the fans and 10 evcrybod~
listening. I will never kick din on an umpire again. ·
Manin s::iid on a radio prc-pme show
.\n hour before the game. Brown met with the
umpires tn Yankee Stadium and said later that he had told
them he thought they would do "what was nght."
Brown said he was upset that the umpires expressc.'d
th l.'ir d1S<lpproval publicly rather than privately. But he
s:11d he did not reprimand them .
"The> objc-ctcd to what Billy did and objected to
"hat he's done before.'' Brown said.
Brown and Phillips appeared on the pre-game show
or Monda) 'i. nationally televised game and Ph illips
rl·affirmed that Manin would be treated differently from
other man::igcrs.
Els.:" herl.' in the American Leaguc Monday:
Orioles$, Tigers t : In Balumorc. Cal Ripkcn broke
out of a month-long slump with four hits. including a
1IU\'l'-1Un homl.'r. and scored three runs the Bah1more
* OrloMt S, T1"r$ 2
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amll• lloDday DJcJat in Kew York. before the &ame. Aftenrard? Ya.nb le>11t. S.2 .
Orioles beat the Detroit Tigers.
lacllau I, BIH Jays 3: In Cleveland. C'of) Snyder
broke a tic with the only hit dunn1 a four-run sixth inning
as the Cleveland Indians beat Toronto, snapping the Blue
Ja)'s' sill.-game winning stttak.
Royals t, Atltletlcs t : In Kansas City. Frank White
singled home two runs in the second inning and late-
replaccment Steve Farr pitched six innings as the Kansas
C'1t) Royals beat the Oakland Athlettcs.
Twills t, Wlalte Sox •: In ~h1c1go. Tim Laudncr
homered twice and Kirby Puck~ll drove to three runs
with a two-run homer and tac-breaking double as the
Minnesota Twins defeated the Chicago White Sox.
Mari.Hr• t, Brewers t : In Stattle. Scott Bradley and
Henry Cotto hit run-sconna s1nJ1es and three Seattle
pitchers combined on a four-hiller as the Manners
dcfcatt'd the Milwaukee Brewers.
ln the National League:
Mets 6, Cardloal1 %: In St. Louis. Darryl Strawberry
drove in four runs with a homer and a single and New
York won for the sixth time in seven games against St
Louis 1h1s season as the Mets defeated the Cardanals.
Pldlllea $,Expos 4: In Montreal. Lance Parrish and
Mike Schmidt had two hats and two RBI ap1cct as the
Philadelphia Philltcs defeated the Montreal Expos.
Reds 1%, Padres t : In San Diego. Tom Brownma of
the Cincinnati Reds came w1th10 two out s of p1tch1pg the
first no-hitter in the National League stnce 1986 before
Ton) Gw>nn singled -as the Reds routed th~ San Diego
Padres.
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Tezass~na
top draftee ...,. = '' ~ 1 ARLINGTON. Teus
W"-<1 ';~-: c--• -:'~~': (AP) -Shortstop Monty
ICMW'9 Utt a.r-.a •• , • Farri\ or Oklahoma State. =~.. : ~:: =:,. ! : ~: Texas' IOP pick in last
..._.,. • •' • ...,_.. • • > 1 wed.·~ omat~ur draft. Mdl•I 4 tf t T"'9Mt ft tt c-, • •' • o..-• • 1 1 1 siinccJ Monday with the ~• • ' '• -• • • '• Ran .. ~-. ..... t 11 • ---· tltt .,., . ., =-::. :~~: =: ::::. Tht 20..ytar~ Farin.
..._ .. " 1 1 TW'rr• • • • • the 11~th pick in the nation.
.._ • 1 • • =.• i:::: ~ill ,,.Mk out with lbt
... ,... ..,. "-: • 111., Ranscrs at ·Arlinaton
au. : • --· ad1um thi1 Wttk 'and :=n-...--:t.~ ~!:. ~port neat Tuesday to
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Major Le116De standings
Amedoaa~
n:IT DIVISION • L .... oa Llt a.n.ll S...A••g Oakland 31 17 .691 7.3 Lost 2 17-. 21-
Minnesota 28 25 .S28 9
Tc~ 28 27 .S09 10
Kansas Cit)' 28 21 .soo I01h
Chicaa.o 23 31 • •26 141h
Scan le 24 33 .421 IS
20 36 .3,7 181/J Aqta.
EAST DIVISION
New York JS 19 .648
Clc"cland 34 21 .6111 l'h
Detroit 31 22 .SIS Jlh
Milwaukee 29 27 .518 7
Boston 26 26 .500 8
Toronto 27 30 .474 91h
Baltimore 13 42 .236 22'h
M_..y'a Scores
Te.1tas 6. AD1e11 4
8ah1morc S. Detroit 2
Cle"eland 6. Toronto 3
Boston 3. New York 2
Minnesota 9. C'h1ca10 4
Kansas C'1ty 2. Oakland 0
Seattle 2. M1lwauktt 0
Today'aGamea
7.3 Won 2 17-13
+6 Won I 16-.12
a.-2 Won S IS· IS
4-6 1.Mt I 13·18 4-6 Won I 13-13
3-7 los1 l a.11
S-S Lost 16-9 S-S Won 11-9
4-6 Lost I I S-11 6-<t lost 2 IS.12
3-7 Won I 14-16 7-3 Lost I 11-14
4-6 Won I 9-18
Aagela (Finley 3-7) at Texas (Hough S-6). S:35 p.m.
Boston (8o)'d S-4)11 New York..(~iter 4-2). 4:30 p.m.
Detroit (Tanana 8-3) at Baltimore (Tibbs 2-3). 4:3S p.m.
Toronto (Stonlem)'re 2-7) at Clc~eland (Bailes S-4). 4:35 p. m.
Minnesota (Lea 1·3) at Chicago (Perez S-2). 5:30 pm.
Oakland (C.Young 4-2) at Kansas City (Power 2-1 ). S:3S p m.
Milwaukee (WC'Jman 4-S) at Seattle (Swift S-2). 7:05 p.m .
Wtftffday'a Games
AD1ela at Texas. 5:35 p.m.
Boston at New York. 4:30 p.m
Detroit at Baltimore. 4:3S p.m.
Toronto at Ckvdand. 4:3S p.m
M1nnC$0la at ChlClgo. S:30 p.m.
Oakland at Kansas City. S:3S p m
Milwaukee at Scanlc. 7:05 p.m.
National League
WEST DIVISION
11 -12
ll·IS
13-13
1().13
11-20
12-19
19·10
17-12
16-11
11 -1 s
12·10
16-16
4-24
w L PeL GB Lit Streak Home Away
Docl1en 30 22 .577 S-5 Lost I 14-14
Houston 29 24 .S47 l'h 4-6 Won I 17-9
San Francisco 28 27 .509 31/i 5.5 Won 2 16-14
C'i neinn:at1 :?5 30 .455 61/~ 3.7 Won I I 2-13
San Diego 20 35 .364 11 111 5.5 Lost 2 I 5· 17
Atlanta 18 33 .353 It 1h 5.5 Wo n I 7-17
EAST DIVISION
Nev. Yorl 38 17 691 7-3 Wo n 3 18-9
P111sburgh 31 24 S64 7 4-6 Los1 2 19·10
St LOUIS 30 26 536 8'·: 6-4 Lost 2 I 3-13
Chicago 27 27 .soo IO'i: 6-4 Lost 2 12·12
Montreal 26 28 .481 ll'h 5.5 Lost I 14-12
Philadelphia 22 31 .415 IS 6-4 Won 2 I 3-14
Monday'• Scort1
Houston I 0. DodJen 4
Philadelphia 5. ontreal 4
Nev. York 6. St. Louis 2
Cincinnau 1.2. San Diego 0
Onl) pmcs scheduled
Today's Games
Ho uston (Darwin 2-4) at Doc11en (Belcher J...2). 7 JS p.m
Philadelphia (Carman 3-3) at Montreal (Heaton 2.J;. 4.35 p.m
Chicago (Maddux 9-3) at Piusburgh (Fisher 4-2). 4:35 p.m.
Ne"" York (C'one 7-0) at St. Louis (Tudor I· I). 5 '5 p.m
Cincinna11 (Jackson S-2) at San Diego (Whatson 4-S). 7:05 pm
Atlanta (Mahler 7-4) at San Francisco (Downs 3·S). 7 35 p.m
We4.esday'1 Ga.mes
Houston at l>Mgen, 7.35 p.m.
Ph1ladclph1a at Montreal. 4·05 p.m.
Chacaao at Pittsburgh. 4:35 p.m.
New York at St. Louis. S:3S p.m.
C'inc1nnat1 at San Diego. 7:C>S p.m
Atlanta at San Francisco. 7:3S p.m
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New middleweight champ
Iran Barkley celebra.ta hi.a third-round TKO of Thoma.a
Rearm lloDdaJ nJCht ln Lu Vegu for wee crown.
~ • • ., . ..
AMEAtCAN LEAGUE
Raneen •• A1'9111 4 CAllP°"NIA TEXAS
Ownnqdl\
EPl>ard 11
Jov,,., lb
CO.v•\ rl
Aav 20
How~lb
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AMllUCAN lEAGUE
IA TTIHG ( ISi at Mt\ -LaMlot'O, 0.lliand,
M1'1 W•nl4fd New YOfll ln 8o99\ loston
l4t Puckttl llllinneiota W . McGri" Tor·
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lorn.a 17
TRIPlES llevnold,, S..tt,. S. W•t\On
lla<\M\ Citv t II are 1..0 w1tfl l
HOME RUNS-<ar~. Oekiano 14
Caidef'aft. O"u~ ll lt><av11111a Ttt<M ll
HrDet<. M ~·· 17, W.n#....:1, New Yon 12
NATK>NAL l•AGU•
IATTING ISi al Olll\)-G.elwr .... Mon· ireal "6 lloftllle P•ltltlu'9'1 llJ P•tmttro
(1><"90. )J1 8•Uftanlll.v, SI LOU<t, )21, COi·
em.en, St l.Ou•' 321
RUNS-8°"cl\. Polllbu•Gll. ~. Gelarr .... Montreal. •S Str•w~rv, New Yori!., .0
lotllla. Plthb.-•Uf\ 3', C..,t. s.n Franc1teo
JI ~ °""""' .. lt8~ 1a P·ltMlul'el\. U GOa>i t , Mw\
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IOXlNG
(al LA• V-s>
MIOOLEWEIGtHS -Iran e.o~ oe1
Tr.omu H«ar"'· TKO tn.rCI rounc:i 1' &ar.,>ev
"''"' WBC t•tte !8¥"1h -?S·• '"''"' SJSO 000 Hurn\ •tcOfO now •S·3 '""'" JI S m•ll>Onl
SUPEll llGHTWEIGHTS -A°"' M4iv wtettwr ciet H.,OICI 8'az¥ W)I•' cM< ,_ It
•Ouno\ ,,..,. .. ~.,~.. ••'•"'• WIK '''" (M4iv .,~ • ._ "OW J1·S &rai¥ "OW SS l ·I
LIGHT HEAVYWEIGHTS -V r9 H• de4
Alll'l\11 Ha\Wft 12·rouno oec U)n Hdl ,., • ...,,
W8.A •il1t (Holl now n ·O w<M 'ISO 000 Hen•"
tlO• ?S·. """' us 000
T£NNIS
C ..... r_...
INTE•COLLl!GIATa TEJINK COACHl!S .,....,,
Tw 2S
I Sl8"10fo (1S·ll. 1 L~ Slelt <27·11.
l 11,.) Moen_,, UI SI and USC tU·Sl. S
~.,..,. 1n ·Sl, Luo (12·11J 1 ll~v
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Tua\ Cl>rst•ll" UO·SI, IS Tuu (19-61. 16
SoutllwHt LOUt\•ana ( 16·9), 17 Ca1ttorn:a
(1)·14) II ArUnM\ (11-6). 1' Dull• <12·SI.
2G Trlftitv (10-9), 21 11,.l Alaba,.,.. (IS· IOI allCI war v.or .... 11~11. 2'l Nor•'-M ~-,..
116·91. 1• r.,.,., Aa.M llS·7). x ,,,., Kenwl
!IS-fl -.,.IONW'n Youne (,._.I ua ~• ra ~ IS M.erk ic;..,,, )1 Tr..,ot
Kr-. 60 •teh¥d Luor.t
OouC*1 11 Kr__,... -M •e &r°'"'
U IC.-and LUC!ner.
Mis.&.
CH~SH..-S sa•1u
Game 1-s.n o-6 ~ S wmc 2-s.11 Die90 ' Clnelllft<I 1 c;.,... )-San o-l c ....... nd t tSan o-INC\ W"•fl l 01
T ........ 1~ s.n 0-at C>e•..atld S1K om
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Sa!Wa't't ~
Cll'Veland a t San o-7~ o.m (.I noceu·
IVY)
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MeftdlY's tnMadeM
IASlllALL
.,_...~
IAL TIMOltE Olt~E5-f'\lrd'.eMCI '"°'
contract of Jom Traw, '"'' De""'*'-Oo.11·
lltildel'. "'°"' ltoc:l\ftlef' °' .,,. ... , .. ~1-4
L-.ue O.t.onH ic:.i"'° ~ outf...-, IO
ROdlftl• Act•v•ted '"-tt Slafl<°"· lrlf'.-.W· ouffteldW. from ,,. IS·oev Ott.ell!H •t PlacM
ltlcll SC:flu 111.,.0 M_._, Oft Ille IS.-••
~lhl SEATT\.E MARINEAs-FirW Dick WI·
lam&. ,,,_..,, aN1 Ow• vorva ttltrd·bose
alldl. ""'*I Jltnmv Sl'ovder flnr·MM CMd\,
lftler;m ~
T<:>RC*TO t LUE JAY~ JoM
"'-· _.Ids, Oft l"8 IS-dev 0.\..-cl ht ~ .. ~acl of INt1l ......... Idler.
ttom SY'l'KUM oC 1111 lntomatiOM l._,.
~ It~ VtutJM Utcflllr, ~\11911
......... ~. ,.,.. JGNJ, ~, ... Ind
Curt JoMMI' 0..... WMt""''· Gr" Mee~. Gree Wlmemt, Moc""4 91'.0..., T1m _,_ AM T1rf\ an.JdtWltr, OI~ .............. ClHCINNATI lltEC.-s.-1 '°"""" Al\lftd ~; '*--.... '"' ........... °"'-~. c.ici., .. ,.,,.,,_ ... ..,...,..~. Olir'OllO n--. ,._.,... ~ ~ ,_.,,., .. .,.... ~-~
HOU$TON AS~ IC.tMY ~ ~. elld -~ Nm .. A'*'" of IN New Y0111.•,._ L .....
aAJll8'1'9AU ....... •••• l&..ct• HOUSTON •OCW.~T~ .. ~1td1, ..-~----·--""--' -----· 't••~ #IAMI TaOflila ..... ~ ~
.,.,.,,.. ,...,. Miff ~ "'9f'lll -..... ........
BACK-~BACK-~BACK. ,.._.,
)C.Bdid Los An,rlcs faal toruch tht much irt'lltt loll on 1 seam.
NBA final -111 ~u )'OU. WC' bed I 0 .. ,.....
That mi&ht not be a dyn_u1y. bu1 it in1crthlnpblc players -Whq
is indeed otra~Atta•'Ptdal. Cousy and Sharman wtat out • ..._
'Td ha\c to 51) that it -.ould be and K C. Jom"I ~ould corm ia 8nd
' ) tm~i~ to f't1)elt what t~ -Ii.id; )'OU lO dtalh mm . • YOU ~
C'chiC\ did:· said West. now lhf ICC bench llrt1'Jlh lilce lha1 aft}~·
Lokctl'gcn nal man Jtr. ''Therrat"fa and il's bC'c:ausc ornpension. •
lot of rtasoM (or it ... Cousy. ho~,n-. t.aka tht' aM:
.. For one 1h1n,_ thcrt art so many point and comes up with a "~
~ams now. )OU re n:ally no1 able 10 different opinion .
1ncrcuc )Our talent levfl with the .. Tht talent Yo11S much m0tt ~·
dr:if\ :in) more. If i ou'n: draftina in central~ and the inteMitt of~
the top I~ c' t'!) )Car ma) be you can ri'<:alriei •·u much attattt. COCJSY.
get a pl:l)er 10 1ncrca~ )Our takt, But said "'Now there may be fWi<.'C" ft'
.-ith 13 tC<lms in the· league. the: m:a~) teams. but with the d1hned'
poorer teams iet the better draft l.41cnt it's bttn a t~<Heam leaaut in
pi ~'-and tha1 uhimatel) makti the this d~dc •• i
teams cl<»cr toiethcr. Sin~ the ~auk upnSonit'I W9ft
-That ma)~ good for the fans. but the 1979 title. either IM lall.t'rs' ot
11 males ll a lot tougher to repeat. Cch1l h,a\c won se"tn of the pu1
ob' 10~1~." eight champ1onsh1ps T1hey ba'c hdd
Heinsohn ""ent a.step funher. J 1 or the 16 spcm in t~ cham·
"When ""l' "'er~ .,,,.,nninJ thow p1onship finnls -1n<'ludin1JC\'C'n of"
champ1on)hlP\. I here ~e~ e1,ht and t'lghl in lht' 1>3St four )CAn.
btcr nine teams in the: lcquc,"
Heinsohn )J1J. -That means thttc ~ouS) ch~cklcd. .. •
arc no"" 3, '-wmntartc~ in the IHaur •. . But don t &Ct me stan~. ~MU
more than thl'll' "'ere (it.ahc) pta)crs Its like ""hen I ha"C' a ftw beers ...
(end tta'1l') tx:torl' In other >NOrdS 30 ti) to J\Old that tx:caust once I acl
pla) ct s "'ho -.tar1 1003, ""ould 'not started. 1 itnrt boas11n1 about the ol
C' l'n hJ, l' " -.pot on a roster back dt) s and I become such a botT then .. pointing out the fact that our a
Hts point. ihat the talent hu been complishmc!'t ""as far r:no~ difficu
prtad morl' 1h1nl) throughoul the to ac~mph~ than it ""ould
IC<lguc might ~ diffused b> the toc:b)
argument 1ha1 there arc m0tt highly He paused.
talented pla)cn toda) But hl' is ready .. The th1n1 ts: You can be
for that. concerned as )OU "'ant about pc
··Yeah. bu1 watch -tht'rt' as a son.al n:rordsand otherth1ngs. but
much grcatu dropofT bctw~n know we ha\C somethin1 that ~
siancrs and 1he bench toda' than ne\cr come C'I~ to being dupl
there v.:as then. so inJunC"S 'take a catcd •·
KENNEDY RETIRES. • • From Bl
In h1ss1~·~t'ar reign hl' hired SIA
ind" 1duals-1ntlud1ng football
rnalhCs ();a,c W hue and Ham
Schmidt .. ~II m. of them cam~ with
ab1lt1l'S for 3n C:\trac:umcular acu' 1-
t) ... said Kenned)
Another bonus at Edison has been
the rclat1H•lackofproblems from
booster clubs."' h1ch although t'X·
trcmcl) aet1,c. Kldom enters the
nepu"e arena.
• Kenned) has
an cJ1plana11on
forthat. "This
ua funn) area,"
hcsaad.
-Thctt's no in·
dust() and the:
~hooland the
housngrcv. up
together. It's
tM irschool. Kauaedy. _.....,_ An example
1s thccmcrg1:nct.tof'Jhc school's
daboratc footb311 office. bu1h b>
t>om11:rsandsurcl) 1heen\) of man~.
although 1n som1: l·ascs 11 y,,ouldn't
c' en be :allov.cd on campus.
"I bcnto,1:rb3cl.""arduogtt 1n the
footb311 office .. admtts Kenned~
"Oth1:rs ""ouldn't •ant 1t bttausc
ma)~ 1t m:akcs football too 1mpon-
ant oinJ suagew. othcrspon.sarc less
1mponant ··
Kl'nned) didn't~ It that wa).
But u's not Just football that has
benefillcd. Kenned) hasSttn the
"alucs of athletics and alwa)S
fostered a mcct1naor1he mind~.
'1'.u wrestlin1coach hdound it eas~ to get along with the basket~ll .....
coach :at Manna -Jim Stephens. H(I,
"'ouldn·tcons1derapp~hin1a •
stancror e"cn a member of the sq
on thou1h1sorv.rcsthns, Rat.her.~
v.-a1taround the door around the ti
cutscoamc.and then he'd pluck olTt
basketb311 ttJ«ts to bolster his
mg squad •
··Some ofthOISt' gu) s tut d1dn 't ~
mali.c 1he b3ske1ball 1e~m wercn 't •~ ..
agile as the gu~s v.ho made 1t. but th
v.cre rcalh tough ··he satd.
11 ""as v.'halc Kenned) YolS at
Manna thal lhc F1,cCounttCS In" 1
uonal 1.1.f'C'Sthngtoum.amcnt was
born. v. hich has remained the best
"'rcsthng tournament of1ts lmd on
the \\ est (oast at Fountain Valle\
High <t
A rct1rcmc:ntdmnc:risscheduktS ·
forthc Huntington Beach Inn t • •
and1tallendsonJunc 16.wbcn
schooJ dosn.
Bnan Garland. a longstand1:Kg •
EdlSOn fiaurc and :w.ista.ol pri •
the past fOur )'cars. takesov~r. •
Kenned) \CC•~ .,. cbangtt
"Ht''uC'harsa-sa•d Kennedy.
LAKERS, PISTONS •••
P'romBl
it:· Grttn said of last June's auann-
tec. "So 11 d~~n·1 put .an) e:ura
pressure on us "
Green dad sa' that the 1dl'a of rept"a1tng~' e the lakt'rsc:xtra inccn-
11 \ e
.. The \ICtOf) hasn·t bttngnnted to
us )Ct. but I thinl "'e·rc going to do
at," he said. "\\c:'re go1n1 lo go out
and If) 10 repeat and make history "
Rile\ c•pressed confidence ap1n
"'ionda' concl'rning the Lalters'
chances
'Tm not ~omed about an)thini.··
he said. "We crtalt' problems for
them. w e·,c bttn there ~forc. this
isn't ant""' e11pcnencc for u\
.. we·,e bttn hctt ~fore and
ma) be their first t1mr oould crcatl' a
Sorn Sor of real ursiency. The finals
do that ··
Much has bttn made about 1a,
sencs matching a phys1caJ team
the Pistons against a finesse team -
the lakers .\bdul-Jabbard1dn't
con«rned about such a matchup
"Therl' are lots or teams who p
ph)saca.I and don't get thin'5 done. he sa1d ··That's how y,.e vc
pla)ed all )Car I don't e:itpcct n
change Thinas happen in pmcs the
)Ou can •t prtd1ct ··
Mtght tempc~ flare., -:-
"It'$ alw&)S a poss1b1ht)." ~bd
Jabbar said.
··we expect that from them, tht
ph)s1cal pme." Grttn said "I do•
think the~ cwect that from us."
~J'IONAL FAN ALLIANCE}!
.. It would be a ·s11tn1 MaJOn t) · .. It would cost thl' NFL less to gs
David satd. ... solidanty move awa) footballs then lo pay thl' ~
among the rans to remind the owner$ who hoist up the nets. ~nd they~~
who 11 1s pa)in& ror the salant1 and t'\'Cn lcq> lMm up before the pmC.• ron~ions.and what n would sound said Da"1d. who fttls this mo"c as I
Like in the stadium 1r the fans l'\cr n~y than soanng baseballs a
decide to quit $how1na up hOC'kt') pucks. aucnd1na any Eu·
"Wouldn't )OU JUSl IO\t to hear a pcan soettr pme or filhna up SO.
fool smack1na the ball on the luckofr. fans ~ilh Stadium ~r and 1cm111
Or the cninch of a tackle on the: them loose on tM frttways af\cr:i
return? Or the tqucck1n& of shoes on game.
the basketb&l~.coun as MqJc ~outs "Word of mouth i~ the only th1i1
out the pla)'1. he added. th 1· t ..... u d •• ._ With the football snson aB-a s a<>•n& 0 tet uK ~ own. ~
• i..1 fi r said "But -..c. the fans. art the 1n·o1~duna.1~ ,,fA lJUttS to remain p;a''"' up to s 10 to pafk. Sl.SO fo(a
\Cl') busy •1~ the nets and their hot d anothcT S3.SO for a becrafl
rtmonl. °':vid and DJ ha'c al~> as mu~ a~ $20 to ~tin the wont ananaed tnth a Nev. \ ort. bull· .... .. ·
nosman tohaveh1s I 50staSOn-ucke1 in the ilMllUm.
hokkn hold up .. Take Down the "If thert was a 900 num~r a ana
Nru" p0$krs 11 ehc first· Monday whether the: neu lhould "-IY up. the
Niaht Football 1dccast betWttn the onl) pcDOn m ehe country 11 1na·oo·
Giantt and RC'd iA -.ould be Pete Rozelle:'
...
Titans spank Stanf oi:d.
at College World Serie
.... ecord S&L payout underscores _analysts' warnings
TM ~ hu apena mort on Medi. the COiia Mt11closinp1tt ~ tnn11ctioal. incl~na S2 ·lilldy to mew deba~ over bow Iona
bilUon a moadl •to Mlp SoUtt.wnt tbe ftand can lul widlout con-S.Win-.~ban in DUlatacqaire ~action.
four iftliolveat SAi.a. and S 1.3 billion So tar. &he f\and bai ~-by ~o~ IO bail out Vernon without laapaycr money. C~
S.v1np and loin. allo of O.llas. lut AlllUll provided for an inftiaion
But in those c:atcs mOIC of the help ofS 10.I billlOft over dwe ~to be
came in the form of notes. promisina railed by sale of bonds paid oft'by the
pay_ment if ~. and auaranttt$ il)4ustry. So. f~r. the beak baen:I has
11A•nft (Crtaan future IOueS; . ~ Uled S.2. 9 bilhon of that bom>wint
The two Costa Mesa tran11cuons authonty.
drop the insurantt fund cash balance All told. includin1 insurance from $3.2 billion to Sl.9 billion. pttmium payments by SA1.a. the How~ver, $465 million in revenue is fund should have about SlO billion to
due tbi1 month from insurance wort with over three years and about
premiums peid by healthy S&Ls. $)()billion over 10 yean.
· Althc>uah FSLIC will have cnouah However. the Geriaal Accountina
cash on hand to meet its immediate Qffi(C, Conaress' investaptina arm,
Bassett Wlll oversee
HainJDond Co. region
San Oemente resident Prad G. Bassett has been named
fefional man.~ for The Hammond Co.~s Southern California loan
onginat1on offices. announced Thomas T. Hammond, president of
the Newport Beach-based mortp&e bank in& firm. With the company
since 1980, Bassett most recently was branch manaatt and vice
president of the Newport Beach loan origination offi~. During his
tenure, the office twice was named top contributing branch and~ a
company record for loan closinas in a singJe year.
T • • Lelle7 ~ bas joined POINT 4 Data eo,,. u managcrof
software quality assurance. He will be based in the firm's ~:fa,uv:ten facility in Tustin and will be responsible for software
ceru callon. • •• • •
• ICU Medleal hie., ttfe MissiOnViejo medical device company.
basa newcontroller-O...MortWaWo oflrvine-whow1ll be in
• -charge of all financcanda~ountinaoperations. She brings IOyearsof
•. financial experience to the 4-ycar-old company that has quickly
fJ! emef'JC'd as a leader in desianinsand manufacturinJdaily use medical
devices that help prevent the accidental transmission of high-nsk
infectious dJScaxs such as AIDS and hepetitis-8/
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,
t
Mwlgemeclt
WEBSTER
UNIVERSITY
·success
of slides
outlined
in book
Irvine graphics firm
tells how to convince
a critical audience
By lLENE SCHNEIDER
DlllJ .... CMI II" IR •nt
Do you have a big presentation
coming up? Do you need some
ammunition on how to sell your ideas
to the big boss or dazzle a new
customer?
A new booklet, published by Slide
Link Inc., an Irvine-based graphics
service company that spcciali:r:es in
imaging personal computer files into
mainframe-quant'f -,-s.rnilftmeter
slides. JUSt mi&ht have the answer .
The free Slide link booklet. entitled
"How to Sell Shaky Ideas to Criucal
Audiences with JSmm Slides,"
outlines the steps required for win-
ning presentations.
Step No. I 1s to make certain that
the prcstntat1on speaks the au-
dience's lanauaie. This means to
address the viewers' educational,
social and emotional needs. A sVJ>-
11cal group requires a different ai>-
proach than a downnght hostile one.
Step No. 2 is to know your goals.
"This is the sinaJe bigest flaw we sec
in presentations.•• said Morris
Wenenberger, author of the booklet.
.. Presenters frequently come to us
with no clear idea of what they want
to accomplish.
"Presenters won't know when they
get to their goal if they don't know
where they·re going. So, Step No. 2 is
to write down the goals of the
presentation.··
Good goals are measurable. Re-
sults should be .. sold 30 pe~nt of the
viewers." "made appointments with
two out of three prospects .. or "1ot
budget approved." according to
Wertenberger.
Statements that att no• measurable
frequently include words such as
"know about." "familiar with" or
"inform about.·· These are hopes and
wishes. rather than aoats. he said.
Step No. 3 involves creating your
presentation. This means arranging
your thoughts 1ntoa loeical sequence.
Wenenberaer su,gests writina down
all of the points to be made and
arrang1na them from stan to finish on
3xS-inch cards.
Stan the presentation with a work-
ing t1 tie rather than just a Libel. "How
to Increase Your Sales t~·· will aeta
lot more attention than "New Sales..
Techniques.·•
End the presentation with a call to
action. This is the action you want
from your audience.
Next. write your slides. List only
the most important poinu. said
Wertcnbcraer. Keep Slides short. Use
them for key words with one idea to a
slide. The presenter should explain
the details. "Slides are "'"'· not
novels ... Wcrtenbersrr stttSM!d.
The day• of black beckaround
slidts a~ aone. accOrdina to Wtmn~. PlaiR colored beck·
srounds without IOll)s a~ disappear·
1n1 r.tt. Tbe sman pmenter dreuet
shdn for SUCC'ftl with modern colors
ud a contemporary bectr.ar:o_und.
The "°'°" of tbe llides Should be choltn for their psychoqical im-
PIC't-Blue siJnifin trust while red
sianiran excuemmtt lceotd.ina to
Wn1Cnbef1Cf. •
The ti.cttaround ctn•sn Should
induck modem paphic elements u
well as the company ao,o. Almost all
imponant praen&ations a~ done
with llidn that indudt Lbe company
• or the prnmwt"1 name -or bOth -oe ~ slide. :accordina to Wtnenbeqet .
.. NO. s. Ult ... ~ ia • IDOd ........._ 11_,_.. Mwri time a 111111.0."t....,IOOlcilll•w fl:t ='..::' • Jiii 11'411 cc I I lie CM ne.l'" •;:.11• • '=::• • . _, ... z a uw.-.................. u.:1:110it ..... ... ... ' 111111111 • CJ 1'11 ,, 1d I ' •11•• :zuua1 :---........ f .n-.., aaeu ••II III
wams that ma)'11ot be cnou;t_a. A bout ~ of the nataon•s l .120 federally insured SALi are deernedJ\nlQlvmt
and GAO says it will COit 126 billaon
to S36 billion to clean up the mas. Priva&e analysa, put the price Ill
even hilher-al about UO billion.
Protifems &had for lhe thrift
indUSU')'. include Te.as. wt.ere IU of
281 thrifts 1tt ailina. Suftlleh S.vinss
Association in Dallu aloae recordiid
a S l.2 billion 109 in the ftnt quuicr
or this year. In C1tifom11. the racue of lbe
second laracst s.tl ~ .. companf. in the nation, Financlal Corp. of
America in Irvine. is ltill .,.ndiftl.
The Roben M Bua Group of Feit\
Worth1 T_uas. is neac>tiatina widl the
bank ooard over a takeover. &ti·
mattt of the cost of that beilout Nn
into the billions.
Wall says the bank bOlrd has all it
can responsibly spend throup l 990.
But should more money be required.
there arc basically thrtt sourtts
'"1crc Con~s will &ook.
The first is the industry Georae
Gould. undersecretary of the
Treuury. etlimates the iridustry
could ftnance somethina letl than SI ~
billion. Thafs vipoutly oppoted by
SAL lobby aroups.
The ltCOnd is the Federal ~it
Insurance Corp., which has Sii
billion to insure deposit1 in 13,650
commerc:ial banks. Commercial
banks and their rqulaton are already
movina to try to head that oft
The third source would be tax
funds, not an easy proe.OO~ion to ~t
by Conarcss in an qe ofbu<llet limits.
,
80% of execs show hostile behavior, hurt own.companJ
Pn.O.U,Pllllwln~
CHICAGO -Up 10 IO percent ol corporate caecutives cahibit lloltile
behavior pillCfM in varyint ._...
which, at the extreme, are woiki"I
•inst the best intienlttt Of their OWft
comptnits. taid Pmonnd JCMm\11 in
rePortint the raaurn compiled by Dr.
David C. Glau. a nationally promi·
ncnt social Pl~· ~ behava0t beans uhibited by
these maf'.'11"1 is called Ty)t A. It is
charactttizcd by imP1tience. ini&a·
lion,anterandaurnsion. Jn contrast
to the IO percent •mo• ~ftlFfial
ranks, only ..0 percent to~ pen:cnt of
the ,cneral population exhibits this
typeofbehavior, an anicle in the June
issue said. ~
The anicle said corpora~ b·
ccutivcs who exhibit Type A behavior
in the extreme are hostile to the
employee involvement that is beina
promoted by firms as a means to
improve worker morale and increase
productiv11y in the face of srowina
1ntcraJobal competition.
Personnel Journal said Type A
behavior 1s the reason why more
companies have not made a S4JCCCSS-
ful transition to cffcciivc employee
involvement despite the widespread
emphasis and attention that has been
devoted to work teams. quality circles
and other cooperative workplace
measures.
Manaacrs who exhibit Type A
behavior arc involved in a constant
strua&Je to achieve more and more in
less and less time, said Personnel
Journal. They see their enemies as the
clock and other people, and typically
try to measure their accomplish·
ments in termsofnumberund s~.
In its extreme, Type A behavior is
addicitve an the same mannerofother
addictions such as pmblina, over·
catins. excessive, use of alcohol or
cxces1ve cxercisina, the aniclc con·
tinued.
Just as alcohol often affccu others
in addition to the alcoholic. extreme
Type A behavior often had ncptivc
effects upon others, the article point·
cd out. Manaaers who exhibit this
behavior arc at increased risk ofhcan
OTC UPs & DowNs
---
NEW YORK !AP> -The folowlno llsJ show1 ,,,. New York Stodl ExeMnoe stodls end werfents 11\el l\eve 90"9 uo the most Jnd oown lhe most bese4 on percent Of en.nee reprdleu of volume
for MondeY. No S«Urillft lred1ft9 beloW S2 ere lnd--uo.d. rwt end percenteee eMMtl ere the oltference .,.tw..., the oreo11out do$1no e>rlce end Mondav's l p.m. e>rla.
di...e and other lttt11-relatcd tll·
DeMCland IO&rc w people wbo work
fortheM.
TM "9d b 1he lddiction in this
Cate it dw body's own adrenalin. The
individual •ts a biochemical "hilb"
by neeti• crisis or ttraa situations
and then puttina out the fira.
Wha& is ~.immediately apperent
IO obeervm 11 that many or thttt
m1i1 situations are aniflc11I. In the
midst of what tttms to be Ofllniu-
tional stress. manaetn have a rcady-
made uc:u1e not to 1uppon employee 1
involvement or any other approech
IO human resources manqemcnt that
they may not hke, said Personnel
Journal.
The excuse is u1ual!y staled in iuch
~rms at, "We can•t afford the time to
support employee involvement ""1t
now because of the crisis we are an.
Come back when the crisis is over.
and we'll talk about it then."
B)' the next time there 1s another
crisis. and the support never ma-
terializes even thouJh the manaacr
Jives lip service to the concept of
employee involvement. said Person·
nclJoumal.
Wtth their aurcuive, action-orien·
t~. impatient bcha vior. Type A's arc
often viewed as the ideal manaac·
mcnt types. However. they do not
always possess the edae in manaae-
mcnt success. When the job involves
complex juda,ment. accuracy rather
than speed and workin& as part of a
team, the Type A's more relaxed
counterparts, Type B's. tend to
outpcrfonn them.
This may be one reason wh) more
Type e·s surface at the top levels of
manaacment, while the Type A's
dominate the ranks o( middle man-
aacment, said Personnel Journal.
Other reasons also have been
advanced. First, it is likely that Type
A·1. because of increased risk of heart
attacks and other disabilittes. 1ust do
not last Iona cnou&h lo nse to the
highest levels. . _
Another factor 1s the 1mpa11cn~
and irritation that acrompeny ex·
trcme Type A behavior. These arc
often incompattble with the lona-
tcnn dcc1s1on-making strategics of
NYSE UPs & DowNs
p
tfl: l .
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\ -~
l'~.1 :J
1!
--l1Ulififi·-~------
...... ,...., ....
OPf.N FOi LUNCH a DINNEk
~:1dnF•1
ll,AM to 9 PM
lop maQ1emcn1.
A third factor is that tbe boltilt
beha"tor ofTypr A·1 may lead than
to makt cnmttt'I alona the way wtridl
can coun1 apinst thcm WWII proimo--
1ion time comes. A fourth ahnnativc
is that Type A's arc moft lilLtly IO quit
Ofllnizataonal life and become cn-
trcprcnc\.lrs.
hard-drivina nature that C'hal'Kltnlt throup emDIOYec MaiMUCC pro-bdaaviot a.cl lW efkl OI •
Ty pr A behavior can bt fuAC'tionaJ or aram1 or hiat1& ~· pro-btuvior on tht ~iaaiom
1he ~tt. dy.f'u~aool, fOr the .,am the an1de C'Ofttinues. Cwpor-lddtt'lled, the aniclt Aid. ... .-~n1za11on, ckpcndana on What the ations that maintain active HM~•
jOb is 11 hand. But wbatever &ht job. include Kimberl)-C'latk. Xero~. Con· If 1tnuinc cm~ ioiil
tht qualities ohnerr and ~"'c· trol Da&a. General Dynamics and is ever IO becoa'4 a ~eed
ncudi1n1puhc valucund ~~of Citicorp. in U.S. 1ndus~ wan t,a\ICil!lr
employee involvtmeftt, said Pnlon-an equaUi w Jality
The speed and the competi1ivt,
nel Journal However, no lo~tenn chan,e is fication or extreme Type A bcbaVJOf,
Type A behavior can be trated possible unleu both the 1nd1vidual Penotu~l Journal concluded.
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TUl8DAY'I CLOMIG PRICll
Stock market retreats
NEWYORK(AP)-Thestock market pulled
back Tuesday. running into resistance from sellers
after its sharp rally over the pest wttk.
Interest rates rose in the bond market. PriCC'S
of long-term government bonds. which move an
the opposite d1recuon from interest rates. fell
about $5 for each. S 1,000 in face value.
Analysts said the pressure on bonds stemmed
tarael)' from inflation worries that have increased
with nsma commodity prices oflate.
The Dow Jones averqe of JO mdustnals, up
118. 77 points over the past five stSs1ons, dropped
20.62 to 2,054.59.
WH AT AM EX Dio WH AT NYSE Orn
NEW YORK (AP> Jun. 7 ~rev. NEW YORK (AP) Jun. 7
Th1 ~ I Actvenced
Oedlned ¥~~= ·1
AM£X L£AD£RS
GoLo Quoas
--
METALS Quo1£s
- -----
,. ......... 1or
You Dad
e>wo.-..
Ill IAlmOM llLAJll> •
f
11 NrN hlOnS
4 N•wlOwl '
NYSE LEA DERS
Dow JoNE s AvF R~C[ s
NASDAQ S uMM~RY
(
..
, , 'Lea es with passion and power ...• •
..,[,.it ............... oil.a ~ ud &he,.. ol tbe world.
:=:.:r-'~~:a~ (wbicb.':t"c .. ~ :.c=l &.1kiMI dltlic or Mtloriml twBl.. it 1'11 llrived oa die W• n .al =-;.-=-=:.-• ~ottbc i".c::r=: Ca.•ecw anc1
Al uy rate. its moll lkwioua 1e1 dailner do ........ "~"" ao eapoaeauodateit .. LaMialnblel." Oruee Couelf• NrfclnDJ111 Ana now enlCOOCld fbr wbat thould be • Ceeter last montb -Trevor Nunn .._.y.es1 I ment •t Loi Aneela1 and John Napier. ~vdy -
SbUbeit Ttieelet. "Lea Miterablet"' at UM Sbubm ia a
The DOD-mutl~ tbetltet bu supreme Kb~c"'4?1't . b; all con· stumbled on oc:cuion in its auempes cemed. Tbe (fe•pcoeec• • almott
to tutD novels ineo plays, but lhe cincrutic.; much lite watdliaa "Dr.
pnx:aa tetma 10 be macte 10on1er1w Zb.i.· v•" on the 1eteea.·11we·rouow a
the lyrical. near-operatic f~-central dwact.et tbJ'OUlll the~ of lariiCd by~ Uoyd in ru.,own~tonneft\l .... nstthe
"Evita .. and '"Call." There ii little, if · ti.ckdrop «~itical upheaval.
any sooken dia109ue, and the emo. The core Of "La Miserables.. is
tionaf inqic eman.tes as much &om Jean Va\kan, an embittered man
t.he on:hcsua pit u f'tom the .cton on released after l 9 yeert oca the orison
•'-· chain pna for tbe tbeft of • f09f of The i19dva.nced with "Les bread.·StlD punUed by tbc dOllNtic
Miten the m\llical ..S.ptation police inspector Javert •t every tum,
ofVictor uao'aclassicno\lelofearly he rna,..s10.ctvancein IOCiety and
19th century France which bad iu redeem bimte1fby ~DI a yo~na aen~js in that countl')', tbe.n on to airt whose mother diechn desperation
I, CLASSICAL Music
~---= -- ----- ---
after be had ianored bcr plilbL
William Solo ttnckn a ~rful
and compelhna pttformance as Val·
jean, amplifym1 his chade1tt musi·
cany with the soul-stal'C'hina 00Wbo
Am ,,,.. and the compassionate
··enns Him Home" over the un-
conscious form of his adopted dau&h·
tcr's wounded lover. Solo is • sturdy
presence who. even in old •at.
commands focus on s&qc.
I he role ot the steely, uncom-
promisina Ja\lert it performed with
teetb-srittina intensity by Jeff
McCarthy, who drawt perhaps the
loudest applaux of the niabt for his
solo number '"Stan." His fiDaJ 1cenc
i:s~yang The love. Mory the lbow's
only link with the itional auwcal. ii welt MIMW by Kara finemaa-u
Valian's ward. Coeet1e ud RciCe
Hoband u the wealtby reirolut.aonaJ;Y
Marius. Soiciaa the mixturr lS Micbdle N'1Ca1U0'1 ptsy ttatment
of lbc spumed ~inc. wbOte "'On
My Own" number opens the tec0nd
Kt Oft • bjp etnotiooal pl.a.nc.
Colajc rel~f. wbtcb the compocn
of .. Evica .. bypaaed, is al.ive and well
in tbe "ucous oerf CJC"m&Ac:el ot Garr.
Beach and Kay Cole as the evd
1eava.,a of the Iowa" deplbs. Both
reach for the most repulsive level. and
occasionally ovttdo it, but their
burlesque effectively off'seu the
beaV,Y intensaty of the overall ~
duct1on.
Fonner l..qunan Greg Blanchard
revds 1n his portrayal of Enjolras.
leader of the insurrection. brinaina a
Wlnninastyle and a strona voice to the
procccdinas. Elinore O'Connell
elicits su~ of pathos as the ill-fated
Fant.int who. "l DremDecl a .,.rs of'm..K:alampectlmves i• the ..
Ottem;: becomes a hymn for tbe ft.rat act doeiea aalhan "'*One Daw
undernrivilterd and could ~ M~ .. which 1110 .. La MiterabWt".
what.JMcmory" ii ao "Call." wtW .. A New A.fllD•"" it IO •
Two cbildtta wbo .,..,ear 111«-.. E\lita .. -Ollly IDOfe to. ;
natdy in the prod~oca were~ familiarity With H-.o'• DOvel. ot.:
latly df'ective at ~iar· mauw. tven the movie verw "' .. Lei . Phillip OWier is · ly lll'OGI u Milenbks. .. i• not a prenqwmc tor .
the cocky httJe m>et lid. wbik cqjoymtat, but .. ,...,.. ~ •
Kimberly McCullouah ii ~uiait.e u arrive early e~ IO ~ • :
the )'OUl\I Colette, tttcUed &om I Ute .,... ·~ Ul the , ..... ,(.
of CindCrella·like dt\ldetty by Val-before the tipts dim.
jean. ..La Milerablea" sboWd ~
Technically, .. La Mitmbb" is unchal~ootbeWeaC.outfora1 maeiificeo~ trtith ~ap!er's ~· t-o-tcut a year (or J)09Slbly until we eiet a leC'UOn banicadcelicitn~a uJe as production of the Toay Awa..0.:
at eonoccts mid·stqc for battle winnina '"Phantom of the Opera").
scene. David Hersey's brilliant tiOt-Paformances ate aivm ruahtly e~
ina effects are an 1ntesraJ part or the c:ept Mondays at I p.m. with weekend
action -each time a charlctef dies. m.etinees at 2:30 at the Shubert. 2020
he or she 1s bathed in banb wbite Avenue of the Stan in Century City,
hpu. and ticket raervauoas ate betftl
FinaJly, the Shubert orcbestn.. iaten at (800) 23}..3123.
under the baton of John David Scott. ..----------------'
attacks John Cameron's score with
fervent determination, supetbty
1mphf}1n1 the drama on stqe. Tbe
Ravenscroft' s symphony work mixed blessing
We've aot djaJ-a·ride and diaJ-a-
prayer. Why not dial-an-orchestra?
That's basically what Ronald
Ravenscroft did with the Pacific
Symphony Orchestra. literally
purchuina its services for an entire
week throuah Chamber West, a non-
profit support aroup he founded.
The culmination of th•t move was
heard and seen at the Orange County
Performina Arts Center Saturday
evenina in a aenerally well-played
thouah strangely unsteady prosram
of Peter Tchaikovsky's Symphony
No. 6 in B Minor, the "Symphonic
Pathetiquc," Op. 74; Ludw11 van
Beethoven's "Fidelio" Ovenurc, Op.
73c; and R•venscroft's own Violin
Concerto.
The son of Thurl Ravenscroft (best
known as the voice of Tony the
Ti&er), Ravenscroft the younaer dem-
onstrated fine conducun1 wlls and
an excellent memory, directin1 a 49·
1J1inute performance of the
Tchaikovsky Sixth without a score.
His style was dramatic but never
melodramatic. He consistently show·
cd areat restraint, especially in not
overusina and misusina his left hand.
And his enersy level didn't wane, not
only in the Tchaikovsky but throuah·
out the concert, as he usually pushed
the tempo and his players (remember,
they were "his" for the night).
Yet he lacked total mastery of his
craft, as evidenced by forsettina to
effect a few crucial cues in the
Tchaikovsky, where he also curiously
mM!e wide gestures for such delicate
·-.... -·--------a...----· --.. _ ·-·-----_..,.._ -:.-:... •. :.--.:.=.... =-·==-=-..,,_ .,,,,, --<U... --··-----._.. __ ...... -_._ --.. _ -u..... -· ==-::-,.:....... ==-....... ___ ..,. .. ~. ------~· 11141 .. .--· ._,. .. -
M1cw1
RYDms11
passages as the woodwinds early on m
the first movement. His beat patterns
weren't always on the mark. and his
conducting restraint -while a wel·
come relief from the overconducting
style that's become so ~pular in rcccru times - often d1dn°t "say"
enouah.
The orchestra. for its part, re-
sponded wuh a pohshed rcadina of
the Tchajkovsky that "spoke" more
than Ravenscroft did. However, It
was also a performance that was
mostly devoid of heart.
It seemed as 1f the orchestra played
in spite of the conductor, as detected
not only in its sound but also in the
fac11l expressions of a few of its
pla}crs. There was a richly lush stnna
sound, stronaer than these stnnas
have produced m a Iona time. Many
of the score's tempo and d ynamics
fluctuations. ~rticularly the swells.
were splendidly realized. abetted
areatly by the hall's acoustics.
ingly bombastic conclusion. The
finale's distinauished quality was us
very end. where the low strinp ebbed
and throbbed, p1anississimo, into
nothinaness.
And yet that .. somethina extra"
that separates the veat perfornanccs
from the good ones was miss1na.
Certain climaxes were dulled, par·
ticularly in the scherzo and the death-
like rteapitualt1on of the primary
theme in the first movcmenL It 1s in
the latter instan~. as well as the entire
finale, where the full sweep of human
emotion ending in despair and resia-
nation should be felt and which
qualities the orchestra failed to re-
alize, •despite the mostly clean per-
formance (some sloppy strina
pizzicati notwithstanding).
The concert opened Wltb a
pleasantly fashioned. 1fbasicaJly pect.
estrian, account of Beethoven's
"Fidelio"' Overture, the fourth and
"definitive" overture to the com-
poser's only (and twice-revised)
opera.
especially Horvath.
Dressed man all-black IYP5)' outfit
rcflectina his H untanan background.
Horvath infused his part wtth a fervor
and dedication usually reserved for
the great violin concerti of
Beethoven. Tchaikovsky and a few
others.
The theme-and-venations first
movement manqcd to maintam a
st) hstic samCl'cU. despite such con-
trasts as violent orchestral outbursts
intruding upon the quas1-lyncal.
psuedo-Slavic v1ohn melody The
second movement. "Cant1 ..
("Songs"), proved the most inven-
tive, the expressive violin playina
over a minimalist background of an
incessant marimba ostmato and soft
wmd harmonics changing ever so
shJhll> and slo-.1). The intcf"ienina
middle section featured a carowel·
lake gypsy theme introduced by
Rena1ssance brass
The finale out lake a lhot, soon
settled down into the most tonal
sounding passagrs oflhe entire work.
followed b) some of the most disso-
nant and J&mna and 1ncom·
prche11s1ble.
The aud1cntt O\ation was strona
enou&h to prom pl Horvath.Joined by
Pacatic Symhon) concertmaster
Endre Granat. to encore with three of
~la Bartok's violin duos -the most
dch~tful bema the last of them. the
p1uicato No 44. I
• ·•"" _f .... Tf P
' .••• "i' .\18-l .... . . -.
'"WILLOW"' CK> 11 -.... 11ac11 _,, s~o
ll •l•S ».t.• It 15
"THE MET AL YEARI"
(It)
II »I • l •S • 1 • t •
.. POWAQQATSr
(G)
...... NllmE ·-·-------~---... _ -·--·-... _ ·-------~ .,... . .... .-.,W6, eu...... euwwwwou .............. ~·..a-..... __ ---·-·==-~-== -.. ......,..~ ""'"11 .. ----·--=.--:-t.:"-=.---www•w• --·---~-· -·-------·--I . ._.._. I (W"';iiiiiiiif ............. ___..1 _..._..
'NH6 .... AT ,, ..... ~
~OCMLE DUMl>E.E r
(..0) lllO PASR.I
~-,,
The third-movement scherzo was
taken somewhat on the slow side but
played stately and movina in a clear.
firm direction to Its inevitable. cxett·
Alcunder Horvath, the orchestra's ·'
associate pnnc1pal second viohn1St.
pve a superlative interpretation of
Ravenscrof\'s above-averagr I 98S
violin concerto. Rccc1v1ng its Oranse
County premiere one year after
Ravenscroft, Horvath and the Paetfic
Symphony presented the work's
world premiere at the Pasadena CIVIC
Audnorium in Chamber West's first
sponsorship, the d1~ionless con-
certo was nonetheless played wnh
d1stinct1on by the orchestra and • I .. H~S• 1•t • .. FUMllY FAMI'' (PG)
Qffr OtlSl
6JltU l .. S
·~r tRl
JTUOTO still.Oii
~• 11~t•11 •
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12:41 J 100 l tH '7:4 11 :4I J iJO 4:'ll ''30
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tt-:n.. . -"-~ •au-_._ .. .. w•ua ....
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IOUY itiMOI09V'Y CMAll
PUNNY fMM,_ .......... ,... ....
aw aw llCUNI Of 1'111 '"'WIS,..ITIM"'-1 ..
CMUIA1'0N • 1M1 MITAL TIMS t11 ....................
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"IT ANO I DELfYE"" (PG) u111•
"CO'-ORI .. (RI
IGOJMlll ~l~IJOll•
J.. "PENITENTIARY IU"
~ (It)
1•t• IHS
11G"Cll'O)
Tiii .-S
'15 •• 11•
•CROCODILE DUNOH N"
(..0) NO PAQEI .....,.,,,"
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~TO....,MU" ------·-------* (P0)10 ... TAm a DE1JVEJt" CN>S6-t-es
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CALL 842-5878 FROM NORTH ORANGE 540-1220
FROMSOUTHORANOE 4M-UOO
r .. °"' --., ..--. ------------_ .. _____ _ ·---·-......... '" .. ----____ .. __ _ ... _. __ _ __ .,. ___ _
__ ..... _o.-_______ ------·-.. -..... --......... _ ... ___ _ ...... ., ___ _ -------~-
WM~~
' ' .
•BLUfFS Beeutlfut stngte
leV9I A~tta mocMI. end
untt 28A 28A on I0"9ty
greenbelt 120• 1. 704,
8kr Prlncl{>al1 only
lalMI 00 38R. 2 lrplca, Iota of uMd Pnlual1 I 7 brick Compf•tety r•-~--,.--=~:---:-!
tllW • •llWl modtMd new kllcil & BA. Brend new MA '*-·
28'. 28e dbl gar. frptc. AQI, Hazel 831-<>eec). yd. 2 c.,. Q9f, 29A
150K be10w mkt. °"''* Ill UITll 111 IU CenyonlJ~1 Br<*•
lull bouoht •notherl vi.w L.g 161 POOi ~ fr ------.,..-·~=---,--• 1310.000 111-M4t doors 3 car o•r cul..d. College Pn 2er+ cten.
CITY LITES R~L TY uc, lffoK 1eo.3a 10 28a, frple, dbl OW, w/d . ~ ...... ~.11250
SELL ........ _. ......... 1314131*
31ff+. 288. frplc, pttme IC>-C-... 2M tM Dupm '
,. cation I 1451,000. '-at .,_..., emel 'd,
11throush classififlf ~'Ao1 M0-1212 ,.. cet1Mlt'P9im
I • A ........ • 17~12 Aft IG-1111 . M .Ncomn.lldll*'of ~ 1 "1:*.
Let• .. Yet ·
Set Y!ll p,.,.,,,.
=~~. w a. ...... ~
Ml-S6JI
for Information a surprlSlhgly
low cost.
..
-Y9fd, ..... wld '*• CuM»-MC. JCIM COftdt
2M4Nof'9A.e '""'"°. Catt a"eryl a,.,. 01 171"1427
lillJPlit
NAME
..--n.uu ... ..,_
111111111 (LIMITED TIME OHL YI I
OUR' FAMOUS
MES1\~tJNE
HAS RETURNEDI
Back by popular demand, Dimes-A-line will run Friday. Satur-
day and Sunday in Its own classification In the Classified Ads.
Since this 1s a special otter. we have a Thursday noon deadfl~
and ask prepayment for all ads. This Is open to all private party
advertisers for merchandise not over SSO fprlce must be listed
1n ad) and no abbreviations will be accepted AJI ads wlH run
Friday. Saturday and Sunday. There 1s a 5-line m1n1mum at 20C
per line . So your low cost Olmes-A-Une ad Is onfy ...
$3.00.
DEADLINE: Thursday noon
PRICE: 5-hne minimum • 3 days • 20C per hne = S3.00
• All ads are prepaid by coming into the Datly Pilot to
place your ad or use the coupon below
• Private party merchandise only ads No com-
mercial ads. pets, livestock. produce or plants.
• Each item must be priced in the ad with no items over sso.
MAIL TO~ Olmes-A-Une
Daily Pilot
330 West Bay Street. Costa Mesa, CA 92626
Dally Pilot hours
Monday-Friday 8 00 AM to 5 00 PM
PHONE
c
----------------------~ -----------------------------------
ADDRESS -------------------------------------------------------------------
CITY STATE ZI~ -----.....,.----------
AMOUNT ENCLOSED DATES TO RUN
UNfS
1.
2.
J.
4.
5.
••
7.
••
••
--
<
.
.....
---------------------________________ -:..;;~-
. •..
--
.
-
' . .. .••• -........ -... .......... 13 C)O ... .
--••-. •• .. t•••-•••••••HI•-····
=--I"-
---" . ........... _ ......... -........ M -~ "
-. --
---.... ·--'"""' -u.. eddltlon8f lfn11d9CI
642-
I
SplcJovs ~ M1CI
~Sludlo I M'd}
tieooorn .iipaltmrm M'd 2
Mid lbrdloom~
Wldl~e\~from
S755/me> 1nC1Uc1rs c~
~ lltnn5 ti». swm-
mwig llghed ~ aun.
SERVICE
DIRECTORY
&SI FOi Liii
Your ~ OlrectOf'y
-Aepr.-ntatrw
142-4321td.310
USllD/
/IHIPTlll/SHM
Full hme Must be good
wilh people Benefits
Cosla Mesa 645-7448*
CLASSIFIED
ADVERTISING
Oepan,..,-.1 ~an entry·
18\1'94 PQ94tion available at
our Reception/Front
Counter This poSlhon
will be acoaphng Cla9i-
hed Ads ReQutres •S wpm typing If you lttle
helping Others Ind .,.
Ofgan1zed. this cOUld be
the jOb you·re !Ootllng for
Salary pit.ls commiUIOn,
eitceltent benefits Call
for 1nterv1ew Peggy
lllYU
WORK PART-TIME DELIVERING
NEWSPAPERS. EARN UP TO
$600/MONTH. MUST HAVE RE-
LIABLE VEHICLE, INSURANCE.
AND OMV PRINTOUT. MON-
DA Y-FRIOAV 2-5 P .M., WEEK-
ENDS & HOLIDAYS 4-7 A.M.
NEWPORT /CORONA DEL MAR
& LAGUNA BEACH AREAS.
CALL &a-4531 EXT. 205
ASK FOR 9ETH
c.. ................. . • ,.....p~ . • • : • • • • : • •
SPREAD
THE •
NEWSf
Motor Routes
... .
available in
Westminster
Huntincton Beach
Fountain YalleJ
NO COLLECTING
NO SOL::ICITING
Deliver One Day a Week -
Must have dependable .car
and proot of insurance.
Call 842~1444
Ask for Joanne Craney
CUSTOMER SERVICE REP
2 positions available in our cus-
tomer service dept.
Must have pleasant phone per-
sonality; typing a plus. Learn
valuable office skills and earn
$5.00 an hour to start.
Hours are 11:30 A .M . -8:30 P.M .
and Sat:. & Sun. 6 A .M. -10:30
A.M .
Call 642-4321 ext. 207 to sched-
ule an appointment. Ask for
Llolanda.
• •• .
t Work in the ever expanding News-
:· oaper Promotion field! If you are !f!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!~~~~~~~~~~~~!!!!~
t sett-motivated and like worki~ with t t teenagers, this may be the op-
t portunlty you've been waiting for . • • This Is a GUARANTEED INCOME of
t $400 per week to start With poten-t tlat earnings of up to $ tOOO per
• week. • • : An Insured van. wagon. pie.k -t up/shefls are a MUST • •
MANAGEMENT
For more Information
Call Mr~ James
(213) 477-2870
JOIN OUR TEAM
MANAGING CARRIERS. THE DAILY PILOT IS
LOOKING FOR TOP QUAL ITY MGRS WILL·
ING TO WORK HARO. we OFFER XLNT BASE
SALARY PLUS OVEFf" 1300 IN BONUSES
EVERY MONTH, GENEROUS GAS AtlOW-
ANCE & OPPTY fOA ADVANCEMENT. JOtN
OUR TEAM & BE EUGt8LE fOA FUll MEDI-
CAL: COVERAGE. CREDIT UNtON. 40 U<
PLAN. IF YOU'VE GOT WHAT IT TAKES.
CALL BETH. 142·4321 EXT. 205 OR SEND
MSUME TO. DAILY PtLOT. 330 W. BAY ST,
COSTA MESA. CA 12p,I
If you're 10 or okter. a 1ob u a newsp.aper
camer might be 1ust your sae Just send 1n
this coupon <>< call &42-4333 Routes are
available now! ...... w, ....
...,,.. ell~
O lUI I'd hke to find out-=~=,I ..
ing a Deity Pilot carrier.
Name I
1,;; :~.._ ~I
Dll. Sl L---,,.~'2!!----.
• •
er 21
... u._ al. ......... Ill FIT I "1f. -prwl, ... .. iiiilll~I' ... _............ ht&. lul •• ••• --MD
Ma = 1M.I . w .. •oolMCI, C...tt-J_!i_~ ,..TONRM .
....... -.~ ~~IP-_.. fl0M10N8AY~I a ,_. or _., 1R ;;;;;--,, t ... 230ll.eo.t*¥.OOM ...........
'-' -IOf .,_ IO • ...,. ATIOM fn •a.tie c-.ms...-.ean-. •?R·n ATTINONm. ~ + := ... M .. a..111~ liiiiii! M pee.. llOlll&u Ill' !Mt & I...... •Olla "*Y OjerlllOrl Rm u 111 ,.... --,n. Pn. Mw ..ion. A#t't 25IO •Wotcl flWWI _,.,.., .... .,... Goode Growth'"*"" ~ 9!Hl.,;cu. •Aocoun11111 Cllrkl f.!! U'~ CO le loc*lng tlel ....... Mh MGISTIA NOW
T~n.1:.-:= •IDllll'L CuMOfftet..._ =:. •&• ..... MC. Curt.,.}*! hiring U· *~ Holdarl
CllAP11C'Mt00. ,...-a. na111rr •~v....-.
l iiiiiiiiiiiir •LM ~·--·~ 1-..00 Yon~ .. •HOIT811H08T St• 1~ nine 474-2174 • .... l'N Pft •SElllYEM IMWll'lftll 100% FREI to Appblnt ~-t-411-no_, nee;, •PNDMA r\NI I M't E.O.E.. ...... tanw. ~ In For ·• pennenent po11Uon, -., bcllent .... I Mn-The o.ty PIOC ..._ a Cw--·Tift 9ftts ........ ..,pylnper-tomer ~ Polltlon 111,_.. 81 c 1111 eon So. 3050 So an.to1. av~. NMd OOod ~ $245. ",: .. ~:ao'l!:~nimil •......&• CM *5*0589* ptloM C*tonelH'f: 1YPlno •t.o-8733• MIX (Ney) MU8T GO TO :f.":· TralninO Pf~. llW ~..... Dee« wftop hutch & light A 0000 LOVING~
fr!, would $5-=,:. ::--Exp pref JiU1 !Ne In 0t many di' .... , dark ~ P-.. ell &44·3al + ~ OUf aroundHunt.IMcl'l.Pol· by Hinkle, Ort cond. FRHtogoodtlome)IOUn9 '14 ETCHELLS E22·U8
ltion evllll Juty 1. Cell Steo. &47-t7H btaclt Shepwd ~· m Ontetlo eo.t lllch.
HOUf\S GnlgorK•en.SH-2507. OIHINO"' 4'" ~ GREAT dllpolltion, Cell =~,. i)~=
11:3C>lmot:30pMMon-Frl TRAINEiwl~9'1Mto gleu leble, 4 ctlalra •54&-5915* -CREVIER ~::r'.!!"~« w11 9'.00am·10:30amS.t1Sun wotk on high tech~ w/chrome&suede....._ Torlghtnotn.-Twotie.ut. U,. / .....
---AETAll PIT FIT 1>'11• ~etn. 15/ht to •Int S450 080 '31<0417 lo~ mai. Cat• 'Nip & 7tn ~W'Poneutco. • .UUIT .. 11 Cell M•. Guel• at stert 557-8'21 er..... couetl & loYe Tucit 1 blonde 1 Dl'4'Y fu•111f111 a. .....
+..-11 ... ~ vtefo 111.11 ITllT &42-t32t at. 207 9Nt. orw. Nightstend. AM anot111s..3&53 . •**Up to d' lot ., _ _..Ill ...
Oii Nm1Cy 79-tm Flex nra Ho •• ~ ftT &llllTAIT HOric1a ao dlrtbike All I /1 ,..... 0Ntt•-8oet.11&omo. a NW n~ • • ~ llDI• MC. c.ie 10-5. s.fr..e796 for bnctllront anlmal tow prle:ea.'&42•7808 "'ff an ,..-1 •HMlM'k ,.-. m ....... 71ttn -3:30pm AetalSMI .. /........ ~:,ai,,,w::ri ~~MOVING. Must Sell: Sofa. HU 40· & up llllp .. with asT..~;.;.2C15117
... ,IMw. no -s> MC, m lllAIWll Per'rnenent. FUii company &42-3840 24 Hrs lov•seet. •nd teblea, man awlllf perl!lng, llv.-aboarda as l2Se 5 spl. lo* llSll21
....... App/if In per90n, Newpoft 8C:fl ,._ tmmedi-benefit1. Cell Berbwe for --lamps, 3 leath« cNlfS ANTIQUES i.rge .. O.k. Newport Bly. Btuoe as J2Se IUIO, loadlf 110302
--· ,... at• OP•nlf'IO for FIT appt. 650-2001 WAITllSl/WAITlll All gOOd cond. ~M341 hoo from ........ •tat•. *780-0837* as 73Si 5. '°* '*81
' 111,...,8t • C.M, Cerpet Sates As1oc. SPIC&. SPAN LAUNDRY & ........ USI IM.J! MOVING SALEll Beaut •It priced et ~le. II' .... .., .. /_ 16 528e MllO, .._.. IPOHlll *141-6525* Apply Moo-Fri btwn 10-6. DAY CLEAN! Monday Svc .... ab lunch routes dtntng Mt, end lebtee, Fine quelfty. Winston'•· No ltve eboafd9. Newport 17 J2S 5spd . lo* 21mi76S ..... -ft. EOE ttlru Ffldey lnqu1te; 2613 M·F. 8-1. Mull ~car cot• table9, tWln '*'8. t76t Newpoft Btvd, CM 9MCh l73-W5 Sales • 5«vtee
.. ,. Newport Bl • N.8. L•l .. llTOIEI 191n Zenith TV kl• * 645-5595 • 5 ii+ IWTAl'fl UJl...lllf llAllf • °'call 11~ . • VCR. bed ~. mtr-------11JP1 fl H'•S2JI/• Parts • Lea.ing
At11eutve llceued Ohener ne.t 25'-40'. FIT. IT ... -.m -171-0141 rOfl, heed board9. Meke Ofl1ln fa1raJt9n • ._. Cla8* NewPort 8eectl 135·3111 ,= .. ··'::.r ne:::: -&45-7100· WOf1C•. el(P«ienc:.d. b.. WALLPAPER HANGER offer. 675-3445 14• ~·· ~1 l«•tlon. Cail 13l.a480 1500 Auto Mall Or.
-" a ToP S:,oducer. Ul.111/W...llUI pendebt• ••lf·•tart•r. NMds FIT Asst. Learn --ULll Xttrec: Fe~ Harper •l1e. frw11Mt1tlM Santa Ana
Mltfl commlHlon1 & INSTRUCTORS CALL ~8-9326 trede. Musi be neat, Everything goeal Couch. Secty DHk•. R•tatt 55 Frwy at Edinger ~ ~ r.surM RiQQlng, malntelnlng geer enjoy det•U work wtttl din/rm Mt .. cl 552-6309 S 1100... Sell 2 for $&50
1 USA 11 11 CO< te &-lnliruetlon Call (619) 11111T11Al llAf1ll hends, heve own tran• IBM ~trlc II Type-Ml I IHI l IA fl ~ ~ a.::;• 4~747 Of epply at 5 Y'9 expet AUTO CAO port N/amk. 786-5630 MUST SELL Golden Oatt writ• S265. 476-11176 Servtce Hrs Mon·Frl
·callf. 826IO N9wpor1 Dunes. N.8 exp«. Newport Sch A/E buft•t & china ceb. Per-Prlve1e Typewrtt.f a.. 1 oo ern 10 to pm
s.i.. offioe. 675..ettO Wll.LIAPll UllU feet cond. 11200 new. IBM, Ollvsttl etc. and new
Comput.,..eSottw.re ITlfT PIZZA NEEDS FIT ASSIST. L.Mrn 1650· 642-3095· word procestor1. Guar.
Xlnt pey F/P Time Hinng dey & PM poemona trede. Must be nut. NEW 3-do« oaik china From 1250. 641-15113.
Mr 8Nce 720-9266 evall Good PllY H.8 ,njoy ci.teil work with cebl,,.t with beveli.d SOFT SERVE DESERT •ea. Dolores 846-6888 hands Owl\ trans IMne gt au. S500 Cell MACHINES gOOd con· UL.II Pllm baM. ~kr 7H-5630 893-8538 eYeS Of Iv msg. drtionl Must Miii Call 111 ee, -
IUL man Unique Gitt Shop In Oof· WlllEll-ISEIAI Oak roll top ct.It $150; •W-1301• low miteaoe. Mint
F T .. 1..0.1-ona Del Mer nu opening Bick "hr wing bac:ll chr & p bl 1. •~ii dit10nt• Of ~ llACH , .. r ..... , fe<eiq>'d~on Ship ·a Receive &n.11 otteman$t25 knghMd tt1•a .. _.. .......... 11* W __,_.....,.
Umlted oppor1UNty to join Frldey, S.turdey & Sun-mlCrO component co. b-oerd. mattress & 8Xssif POPI. c hamp ••• ... "!_!' .!:!..."': .....
national tMI ... ete mat• dey Knowledge of lndoof Mlaion VieJO Cell Nancy sprlngs, sheets, 'P'Md line. ftalhy ook>n, ""3t 11211 -- -
• l!eflng aystem. w,tth un· plents h•Jpful. Celt 7M-t233 1100; wtklng mectlln9 .... 1275 up. Shots/ 1.0 1444
lmlted utnfng9 lnfor· OorothyM-f8-t. 120. tcfMn door $25: wrmd(714)735-1989 112-111u.... 1540JAMBOAEEAOAD ~ ~.: ~ne 8 TEXAs Oii QOmPany need9 1.,J.,.tat Wut.. Kenmore Hwlng S ma-SILKY TERRIER PU,;s-....... aflw l,. Opw'l 7 deyt I.-
BEAUTtFUl SELECTION of latemodel. IOw,,.... C.-.C.ln~
CoUntyl See IA t~
140-1100
2tOO HaltlOr 8tYd' COSTA MESA
...,aw
12111•
Ml-1111.._ .......... .,.
***
CHEVAOlET'l3 Citetion,
spaclout, htactlback.
rune grHt. $1250.
•M2-t821
a•••fted•• .. ,...
........ u.t
of job
opport-·
ldeecu
~,..
etart tile ..,,, ..
wttlaaa ••U., car..-...,..
Jedi Ayr• 751-5000 metur• per.on M/F to SSH ~ *&67~~. 125· AKC Regl1ter MIF *** ExtendedS.W:.Houra SELECT BETTER HOMES .... full Une of hlgtl QUtllity -RESPONSIBLE cmr 759'-IM82 759--11452 7 •.m -tO p m. Mon--frl 'II llTllWI
AND GARDENS tubricants to manufec· TtU.-llSPaTOI ledy Xlnt ref«. to tlou• OUEEN SIZE MATIRESS Avellabll 113 r-... --_.---Plft.--.--.. -4dr, euto, st•eo. *· etw,
luring trucking. con-All hrs ope11 Coste Mae 111 Of be • companion & 8 0 X . 0 U 1 l TED •ui al •-· Pwr lode/ wndw oof clMn, lo ml. ( 1E 18910) IEaPIJJmT stNcilon end farm cu• Co benefits 642-3490 673·59431(9t9)436-044l BRANO NEWI S155. C aaatrultah HONDA 'I& 500 tNTE~ '...,,,.., ' la. An..-phonee. tek• CUit tomers Protected teni-, . --Cetl &46-4293 1155 CEPTOR 111< mlles. 1~ CUL ( lNSN3&t)
°''*" Type 45 wpm toty. thorough training PlllE IPEUTlll llttclta .. in SOFA BED queen liz• llk•lmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil yrs on wrnty. S 1850. 'lliS!P.1 ~;.-.
Date entry, PC. Exp pref. r...°vt:" ~h~ lmmed opening. Exper new, earthlones w/wood 7~·142t Iv meu.
Wiii train. &4~. toty to ·J A Huff Sout~ pref'd. Fri-Sat night Aatl!!n 1111 mold1"9 $350. Desk with WAIT Ill ., Tncka
AIOIPttlmT W9Stem P~roteUm, Box g:•rd ootyl Newport **** hutch S100 720-8158 -~~~~~~-
Light tys>lngJfk Good toe. 961005. Fort Worth, Tx. · 833• 1471 Will PllY CASH for Lionel & SOFA. high quellty, never IAl.llU *
Smol!e ff• envfrooment 76191 Telephones.... Ametlcan Flyer model used, stllt wrapped. Dartlke<John~S-5574 -nan••EFEn trains 893·1015• Worth StOOO, NC S250. •ltl-11M• M•t••nn mnnn LMllDSISlllT ArrllHcn IOll candel 2t3-S62..esaa ( ,
Mon-Fri 2-1. TU. -"" SllUTUY Pan • ·-·-··-·t UPRIGH.T PIANO, S250. Pi I or ---•·30-e fe< bu9Y Real E• Fuhlon lslend rt-amo«lng _, ........ __ Ylow hide-•-bed. Reiten aan 101 ~t• office In Costa Mae office Full time Mon-Fri EARN Refrlget'etora, Westler• & sofe/love seat. Old sofe toSt
Mtm be rell8t*t. front ofc (714) ~1555 Dryers Mike &45-9701 Cenebek chr 675-24 t5 ~~:c:; ... 1~ ~f::1 ESOlnSllllTUY $400-$1000/WK riraitue Hl4 •i1ttlll•••• Hts ee.u1~~·1100
lf81n • C.it .JoM TrOU1 3 yrt ••per Betleflts. 4 V GOOdnctl fa R:aieta (213) 5112-5345
631 12M salary to ablhty. Call •6AM-12 Noon m abric: cov. 16 51110 31 new STS/N li___.J <t-.a -Vldcle at 673"'6255 •No Nigtlts/Wknd9 ~beck c:tie1rs, $150 4 16x7 50 ii.res & wheets CJ! n .....
PIT-~ent get! on •$7/HR +comm/training . e --54S.-2594 -$10/ee 645-4299 LAms rm Tounata
skllls Word prctsng CISTA •SA. Ml-1111 •WHITE WASH RATIAN c M MOVINGSAlEI Let's type.~ cond best
bkkping M-F ~2pm NB SHTI J C iJ2· 1HI & SOUTHWEST FURN· Mgollate• Couch color off• ell befe<e 5pm or ---------I ArcMect 645-4170 • • Sofas/LOYMeats. coffee/ TV, sklls. distlH btwn 7.30-9pm 536-63~
amrr111n 11.a. SRRmH111 DAILY PILOT t;::,.~b::::t.'oJ~~ _ *64s-9089* FIND 0:'or:'1'Celxi;'! :;' = '°'C:.:8::; Clesslfled q~~p,~{m1~t,~~ Geunengteonthecemera
Mary Hinkle 476-1134 *494-8571* 842-5878 AU xtnt 973--0653 ~~c~:::r through classified
rtaJC NOTICE
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RECYCLE
tt'lrough the
DAILY PILOT
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C.UM2-5171
M lllllll -.ntl GARAGE SALE
Your Authorized
Mercedn-knz dealel'
1111 ... lt.,I~ It's ttiat time ag<Mnl Make sure your goroge
(l1•)11W* Mlle is a wcceu by ~sing in doulfied.
1-;-;.--iiPiMN;;M":iiiiii&;;-Stof't your ad two ~ before the tole to PAl•lll Tll W1 attract the most buyers. Too muctl Cati doWn?
l .... ·79 or new. MBZ
Compere°"' lerge-.ct
OAC ............ .,,r..
Olal MERCEDES
(2131714)837-2333
5 Frwy nMr 8Mctl Blvd
In Buena Patk
C A L l
642-5678
••••••••••••••••••••••••
STARTING A NEW BUSINESS??
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-.j
TUFSDAY, JUNE 7, 1988
eds close. 0 esaS&Ls
~'FSLIC to shell out 1.3 billion in largest
cash payoff on insured deposits ever
By GREG KLERKX °' ............... ~
The federal 1overnment clostd and
liquidated two ('o)ta Mesa savings
and loan firms Monday and will shell
out$ 1.3 billion to cover the accounts.
the larJCSt cash pa)ofT in the indus.-
tr').) h IStOr).
Two blue·collar workers
are feeling good after
splitting the record $51.4
million Lotto jackpot./ A7
Study linking computes:
terminals to miscarriages
Isn't decisive, experts
caution./ A7
World
World scientists warn ur-
gent measures needed to
prevent greenhouse
catastrophe./ AS
Sports
Edison High Principal
Jack Kennedy is calling It
a career ./81
Entertainment
The epic musical "Les
Miserables" exudes
power and passion at the
Shubert./87
Index
Advtce and Games
Bulletin Board
Buainess
Ctualfled
Comics
EntertaJnment
Opinion
Pollcelog
Public notices
Sports
Weather
A8
A3
8~
8S.10
A9
87
A6
A3
810
81·3
A2
American Diversified Savings
Bank and Nonh America Savings and
Loan r\ssociation ~ere closed Mon-
day b} the Federal Savin~ and Loan
Insurance Corporation (FSLIC') be·
cau~ their assets had drop~d below
their l1ab1luies. said Mary Creedon.
pnnupal deput) cxccuti'vc d1recaor of rsuc.
Over the side
C'rctdon said meraert •nd buyouts
arc the usual methodsof closin1down
troubled sa\ln&sand loancompen1n.
but the l;lrgc deficit of American
01,ers1fied and Nonh Amcrica made
l1qu1dat1on more cost~fTcctjve. '
Creedon emphasized that such
hqu1dat1ons and direct cash pa)outs
ar\' C\trenwl~ rnn:.
.. The5C P3)0uts rcprctent only the
ninth and tenth pa) outs (by FSLIC')
Stn« 1981. and thcfrc the la,.nt
v.c·, 1. e\ er made:· said Creedon.
The liqu1dat1ons arc only the
second and third such actions in
Orange C'ount\ siOC"C 1984. said
C'rc.:don. ·
federal rciutators will pa~ out
caltrane officlala ponder the cleanap after
a tractor-trailer rti bit an abandoned
church bua whlle tra•elbi'C north on the 405
freeway near E1lClld Street. Tbe acctdent
and cleanap effortcaued maMI" erldlock
all tbe way to El Toro. Story OD ,... A.2.
County may cut red tape
to lure movie-makers here
By 808 VAN EYKEN
Of ... OlllJ .......
Makin& a movie in Orange County
ma) not be .. the b1gcas) ... but count)
officu1ls now think they have the right
stuff to attract more silver screen
business.
.. come to 'rcw Orange C'ounty as
..S1bcna:· according to Su~rv1sor
Gadd1 Vasquez. who rcrommended
tv.o months ago that the county come
up with an ordinance aimed at
1mpro' mg the situation.
Staff members studied Orange
Count\ ·s rC'Ccnt involvement with
thc film mdustl) and found that two
count) agencies, the Environment.al
Management ~genC) and the Gcflffll
Sen ices Agenc) have been bttn
issuing permits for motion picture
production over the past two years.
The county Board of Supervisors
toda) will consider an ordinance that
odm1n1strat1"e staff members sa)
v.ould edit out some of the rtd ta~
for filmmakers interested in traveling
south of the Los Angeles County line.
Up until now Orange County has
had no centralized procedures for
dealing wtth movie and video com-
panies and the county has not been
aggressive in marketing 1tstlfas a film
location.
As a result. film producers have
Under the proposed ordinance. the
En\lronmcntal Management Agency
v.ould be the sole ISSUIOI aaency for
film permits.
The ordinance would also make the
count) Public Information Office the
d'ffic1al liaison office with the film
1ndustl).
Pubhc 1nformat1on workers will
assist film companies 1n contactin&
the n1ht people to obtain permits and
'"" also pro' 1de referrals to com-panies v. ishing to work 1n cities. <.
.. Hopeful!) this will streamline~
pron-ss and make It easier for film
companies to do business here." said
Renee Schulte. a county adminis-
trall' e aide
She called the ordinance the first
step in a process that could lead to
c\ en morc concentrated efforts to
v.oo the film business.
.. It "-Ould be real nice tf wt could
h<l\c :i film office hkc San Diqo.s. ..
(Pl ~/A2)
Mesatak
1pproximatel) S209 million to cover
1nsu~ deposits of 2.SOO North
Amcricn depositors and S 1.14 billion
to 13.SOO insured dcposjtors of
Amcrtean 01\ ersified. for a total of
about SI 3 b1lhon.
The pa) Out check!. will~ is ucd to
some dl'positors as soon as toda\.
said (r1.'l'don ·
Amencan Dncrs1fied and Nonh
,\merica <kah 1n hi&h-risk. hi&h->ield
in,cstmcn1s that anracted mainl)
corporate in' cstors. said Creedon.
The 3\ er.ice account balance at both
institutions was S90.000. and
Creedon said morc than 80 pttemt o(
depositors were benks. crtdit ~nions.
and other savif\IS and loan com-
pani<.'s.
Neither company had t~lkn.. 1uto-
ma1ic' teller machines or brlncb
offi~ •id C:rttdort. Most~
tors conducted their transactions by
telephone.
As of Marett 31. onh Amtrica
h:id $98 million in assets and $216
million in liabilities and had an
(Pleue ... RD8/A2)
•
Home Ranch
to be placed_
on MeSa ballot
After months delay.
coun~il moves to put
office project to vote
BJ JONATHAN VOLD.E .............
COSll Mesa voten will deade the
Catcofthccontroversial Home Ranch
offlCC proJec1 1n a refcreadum vote
that will likely appear on the Novem-
ber bellot.
The Costa Mesa City Council
d«idcd Monda) to place the tssuc on
the ballot in response to a referendum
petition filed by opponenu last
Marcb sccluna to overturn the coun-
cil's approval of the proJcct.
The 94--acre proJCCl 1 n north COSla
Mesa 1nclucks 12-and 20-story offlC'C
bu11di np. a child care center. fine ans
museum. restaurant and l 1 acres of o~n space. It 1s bounded by the San
Dtc&o Freeway. Ha.rbor Boukvard
and Sunnower A'llenue.
Another rcfe~um was also
lc"ekd at separate project. the Amel
OC'vclopment Co:s Metro Pointe.
but the cit)' IS fightin& that refer-
GeddJ Vuqaes
ntpact
endum in rourt. Opponents feared
the city mi&ht make a similar
chalkna,c to the Home Ranch project.
On Monday. Councilman Petet
Buffa asked that the Home Ranch
tnitiauvc appear before COIU ~
voten .. as soon as possible ... and his
request was supponed unanimously.
Buffa said late!', ~ver. that be
doubts a pccial election will be
necessary because time consuainll
will hkely place the issue on tbt
November belloL '
Home Randi was fiTst bi'olCbf1
before the city in 1916. stoce then
laW)CR ha\'e done more wort Oil
proJCC1 than coostnactioa worlc.cn. '
Once planned to have the h~
bu1ldin' in OrarilC County. publiC
Ol>PO'ltton alld lcpl b&nles have
chanaed the project comidcrably. •
The Costa Mesa Residents fot
Responsible Growth, -rcpcetentina
opponents. aJ'IUCS the . pn>JCC'l will
flood the strttts with traffic and set an
irrcspoMJbk Pitt for ~elopmeftt.
=oup also contends the project is y planned.
Whllc the mcrcndum vote looms.
Home Ranch remains io coort.
cPl••-llCMB/A2)
Mercedes
parked in
Newport
Harbor
BJ GllEG u.EUX ............
Scan Callawa) didn't plan to ID
boaun1 Sunday momma. But he did.
Kart Ulnk.son dtdn•t plan to &<>
fishina. But he did.
As 11 turned out. neither was
SUCC'C'SSful.
Callaway. a 26-yea.r-Old Ncwpon
Beach rcsident. was dnvin, a 1987
Mcrccdcs-Bcn1 2602 cas1 on lOlb
Stn."'Ct at around 1.30 Lm. when he
apparent I) lost conlJ'OI of the car. iaid
Newport lkach Poli« Otf~ Bob
Oaklc). .
The Mcrctdes ran up a curb. off a
platform and n,ht into twport
Harbor near the C'ann~ry Restaurant.
.. The) JUSt dro'e into the occan ...
s:ud Oakky.
C'allavoa) and his pa scnscr. ~nthOn) Alra-..ti 30. of FuUcrton.
lo\.Cf't' uninjured and anqrd to make
their v.-a) out of the tloatina car
throuah the unroof. said Oakley. •
l.Jln~SOn Y.3S docked nearby Wkn
ht' saw the splash from C'aUwaf t car.
He rcHcd up-his boat and mou>ftd
o' t'r to the bobbing car. said 0.ldey.
lJlnlson pubbed onto the sanroof'
v. ith his hand and attempted 10 puR
the car back to s.horc.
The makcstuf\ tow truck worMd
fora bout fh e feel. •-hen the Mtr«dei
bcpn to f\oundcr. water nasbi .. in
throuah the open u.nroof.
It ~nk only tc'C'Onch lakT'. hC:lld--
hpt$ ull bcam1ns.
Callaway wasarres\Cd OD~
of dnv1na under the iftftUc'ace Cl
alcohol arid was lattt ldellcd.
t1ect1on polls
open unttl 8 p.m.
.-1 ...
r
ts abandoned bus,
acks up freeway for hours
'1 PA~ AllClllPLBY truck driver suffered minor injuries. fl' .. ._....... But the collision forced molonsts
1 TJw COllitiOn of a trvck arid '"It~ a mw1 for the next nine hours as
abandoned bus on the San Dtcao ti•Jhway patrol and C'altrans offi(Jals
f"rttWay cai.ated massive •ndlock lf'lpplcd with the cleanup. .. · Trame reportedly backed up all the Monday[' with motoritts arrMna way to El Toro. and for about a half tto~ thne to four hourt later than hour il came to ··a dtad stop .. while
usual. workers moved a crane into poshion
A U'KllllliMniler ria uavelina nonh to hom the truck and bus, 1 hi&hway
in the riaht·hlnd lane drif\cd on lo the pa1rol dispatcher 511id.
Jhouldcf by the Santa Ana River and Two right-hand northbound lanes
'truck the disabled churth bus. 511id were closed for much of the day.
Mike Lundquist of the California "We've been &ellina a lot of calls
Hiahway Patrol. from people who art three to four
Both vchides tumbled off the hours overdue." she said.
frttway and down 1 40-foot embank· At 9;30 p.m .• more than nine hours
ment by U.C river. Lundquist said. after the accident. traffic was still
\ Nobody was on the bus and the snarled.
Accord1n1 to Lundquist, truck
dm er Robert 8 Causey. 34. of
Memphis. Tenn .. was talk1n1 on his
C'iti1cns &nd radio and looking at a
map when his ria drifted over onto the
freeway shoulder •
Causey WHdrivina between SS and
60 mph when his 1ruck hit the
disabled church "fun bus ...
The impact knocked the bus onto
its side and both vehicles tumbled
down the embankment.
Causey 'uffered a broken lea and
minor cuts and brutscs. He was taken
to Fountain Valley Regional Hospital
for treatment.
W1th1n 4S nl1nute of the accident.
traffic was backed up past the C'osta
Mesa Freeway. Lundquist said.
BOMS Club leader Yantorn dead
BJ JONATHAN VOLZKE °' ..............
After devotina 37 years to lhe Boys
IL Girls Club and counUess other
hours to Lions Club and other civic
troups. Lou Yantom suffered a heart
ittack in Costa Mesa City Hall on
Monday and died.
He was 70 years old.
Yantom apparently was attendin&
the City Council meetina and used
the restroom during a break. He
tollapscd there about 9 P·rn· Costa Mesa Police Officer Dean
Smith1 who was stationed at the
council mcetina. summoned para-
medics and administered emeraency
'id to Yantom, but the man was
pronounced dead at College View
Hosptial in Costa Mesa.
1 He is survived by his wife. The
coupled lived in Oranse.
Yantorn retired from the Boys &
tiirls Club in 1981 , and the Upper
Bay Branch of the Harbor Area Boys
& Girts Oub was renamed in has
honor.
HeJOined the organization an Lona
Beach in 1949 and transferred to the
Harbor Arca Club in I 96S before
servin121 years as executive director
and resource development director
Under has lcademup, the Orange
Coast branch grew from a one-club
operation in Costa Mesa to a four-
tlub networt serving three com·
tnunities and more than 3.000 boys
and Jirls. The Harbor Area network
provides spons. arts and crafts and
community service activities for ch1l-
dren aaes 7 to 18 years old.
··1 can't thank of an)'}hin& else I'd
have done with my hfe that would
have &iven me more happiness."
Yantorn told the Daily Pilot in 1981
after receiving the Boys Clu& first
Bronze Keystone award for outstand-
ing service.
"He was a good man." said Costa
Mesa City Councilman Orv Am-
burgey. "He spent all weekend work-
ing at th~ Fash Fry He's been helping
out for many. many years."
MESA CONSIDERS PACT •••
Prom Al
very ffiahtencd by that."
Wheeler accused Kline. who was
not at Che meeting.. of tryina 10
.sidestep the initiative and said he
would not suppon any form of
KliM's project.
But Roeder assured the panel has
·i ntent was not to avoid the an11iat1ve.
/;>ut to protect the ertfs interests 1n
~evelopment projects.
KliM has cooperated w1th the city
and so far has worked on his own to f lean up an area dcsi&nated as a
,redevelopment area. Roeder said.
'This guy as ""ponding to a (city
redevelopment) aJCncy request."
Roeder said. "It's d1s11nctly different
than what the county is doing."
Roeder said Kime plans to include
traffic improvements 1n hss proJ«t.
Mayor Donn Hall added devclop-
ment agreements could prevent
"'good" projects as well as bad.
"I don't know what impact the
growth initiative would have on
redevelopment projects, but if an
attactive plan as presented, I'd hate 10
sec those plans shot down," Hall said.
HOME •••
rromAl
In a May 24 ruhng. Superior Court
Judge T.ully Seymour found the
cou ncil's court-ordered rcVJsions to
density rcstnctions in the seneral
plan acC'Cptable. But City Attorney
Tom Wood told the council that
Seymour also would likely review the
environmental impact report on the
project.
The council Monday scheduled a
pubhc hearing on that 4-inch-th1ck
environmental report for )unc 20. or
as soon as possible thereafter. A study
session 1s scheduled a wttk pnor 10
that hearing.
Councilman Dave Wheeler argu~
against a June date for the hcanng.
"It's unreasonable to expect the
pubhctoread thasmuch an two weeks.
especially 1f they can't get all of the
reports cited in here," he said.
Councilwoman Mary Hornbuckle
also voiced concerns that a June date
was rushing the issue. "We are
proceeding m areat haste ...
:uc1 ATTRACTING ACADEMIC STARS •••
'FromAl
and mathcmat1cal social sciences
,_ "On their own in1t1at1vc the facuh)
rturned those into first-rate dcpan·
•mcn1s:· he said.
Nol surprisingly. each has attracted
tone or more internationally known
,figures to the UC'I campus
t • In 1984. Dr. Ricardo M1lcd1 an
c>.pert an ncurobaolog). was ap-
LJ)Otnted Distinguished Proft'ssor to
1 UC'l's Department of Psychobaolog}'
! M1led1 spcc1altzcs an the stud) of
ieommun1cat1on between nerves and
created Irvine Research Unit an
Mathemattcal Behavioral Sciences.
He currently as the Va ctor S.
Thomas Professor of Psychology at
Hanard and spent the past year as a
fellow at the Center for Advanced
Study an the Bcha" •oral Sciences at
Stanford Un1ve1"11t}'
Why have these and other d1s-
t1ngu1shcd scholars left h1ahl) re-
spected ins111ut1ons for one whose
reputation 1s still gro"'1ng?
the l 1\1 School of Human111es in
1987
Noted gcnetic1St Francisco Ayala
lef\ UC Davis in 1987 to become a
Distinguished Professor of Biological
Sc1cncc-s at UCI.
Dr Lewis Dennis Smith brought a
d1s1ingu1shcd record of research 1n
dc"clopmcntal biology from Purdue
Un1\.crs1ty this year when he bC'came
the new dean of the School of
81oloa1cal Sciences
• u • • 11 ....
TOOAY
3.29•"'
IO t:r """' ~P,M.
H.Jt, "'-
.... 80AY
..... Ill.
1t 00•"' l; ... plll
4' oa •• 11
u Ot ..
FEDS CLOSE 2 SAVINGS AND LOANS •••
From Al
a'etage monthly operating loss of
S l 6 million. For the same period.
AmcriC'ln Di\'ersified reported ••ts
of SS09 million and Sl.7 billion in
liabahties. opcrattnJ at an averaae
monthly loss of$8.J million.
North America. in businns sin~
1983. was offtcially placed in con·
scrvatorship on Jan. 16. 1986. only
9'1? hours after its owner. Newport
Beach dentist Duayne Christensen.
died in a mysterious one-car accident.
FSLIC later filed a lawsuit apinst
Chrmcnscn's estate and Janet
McKinzac. Christensen's executive
assistant and close companion.
McK1nzie was left more than SIO
milhon tn Christensen's will. She
could not be reached for comment
Monda}'
The suit charges fraud. brtach of
fiduciar) duty and gross negligence
and seeks more than $40 million in
damages. The suit 1s pending before
thl' U .S \C'ntral D1stnct Court
uunched in 1980. American D1-
'crs1ficd lost a whoppma SS26
m1lhon ID 1986 In February 1987. a
la"su1t was filed against owner
Ranh1r Sahni. charging fraud. breach
of fiducaar) duty. ncihaence and
racketeering. That case 1s pendina an
U.S Central Distract C'oun.
Creedon said the two firms employ a total of I 30 people. all of whom
··-.111 be Vrotkin' for FSLIC for the
nc"'t few weeks. • After that. some
employees wall be retained or rc-
IOC'ltcd by FSLIC'. while others will be
.. kt ao." said Creedon.
Creedon acknowled&ed that the
S 1.3 billion cash payoff will drain the
FSLIC budget, cuttin~ its reserve
down to SI . 9 ball ion. Creedon said
FSLIC officials C'xpcct to take in
about $20 balhon an federal funding.
uscssments and fees over the next
three > C'ars.
Ho~ver. the ~neral Acrounting
Office. Congress· aud1tin1 wing. puts
the cost of cleanana up all SOO
msohent sav1na,s and loans at be·
twC'cn $26 billion and $36 b1lhon and
·sa)s Congress may have to come up
with more money for the fund.
Private analysts put the pricetag at
more than SSO billion
Closing the two ( ahfom1a thnfts
wall help all savings and loans by
reducing pressure to pay hiJh interest
rates. said C'~don. Fa1hn1 thrifis
had to pay high rates to &Cl the cash
needed to meet cxpenSC1 and some
healthy thrifts havC' had to raise their
rates to compete. •
North America was paying 8.SJ
perccn1 interest on deposits. l .4S
pcrcentaac points above the averaar
for all tfiraft 1nst11u11ons. American
D1"crs1fied was paying 8.64 percent
Creedon said depositors wall be
compensated for federally-insured
depos11sup to SI 00,000. Those with
accounts of more than S 100.000 m.fY
be able to recoup some of their
monc}'-' she added.
About one-half ~rcent of all de-
positors to both inst11ut1ons have
uninsured accounts. but Creedon said
uninsured depositors may he able to
recoup some or all of their money and
should fill ou1 claim forms
FSLIC plans to mail most of the
checks w11h1n 24 hours of rett1vm1
the necessary claim forms and
documenta11on. said Creedon.
Depositors who wash to process
their claims an person may do so
begmnana today at the Great Western
jJank Bu1ldma. 3200 Park Center.
I Jth Floor. Costa Mesa. Claims W111
bC'acccpted between 9a.m. and4 p.m.
throuah June 11. l'lC'n weckd~sJunt
13-24 AfiC'r June -4. all claims will be
processed by ma II
For more mforma11on. call (800)
347-6660
MOVIE MAKERS SOUGHT IN OC ...
From Al
she said. "It wall depend on what else
the supervisors want to do "
Officials at the Califom1a Film
( omm1ss1on office an Los Angeles
had no exact figures on the amount of
film business enjoyed by California
locations outside Hollywood.
But Michael Walb~ht. the com-
nuss1on's public affairs manaaer. said
he believed San Francisco and San
Diego both outshined Orange County
1n the number of film productions
th<.') hosted
X-huhe said that inequity could ~
remedied. wath some effort.
.. We have more thtna,s to offer than
San Dac~go. but they Sttm to have
their act toacther a little better than
.,.,c do." she $aid.
Dcsp11e a poor shoWlng compared
to some of its sister urban areas an
Cahfom1a. Orange County as not
without ma1or credits 1n the film
industry.
Over the past 20 years. features
such as "Planet of the Apes," "Sa lent
Movie:· "Creator." and "Doctors
Wives" have been shot partly in
Orange County.
Part of the the tclev1s1on movie
.. Laguna Heat." which as set in
Uigun,a Beach. was shot an the Art
Colony.
A number of c111es. 1nclud1ng
Newport Beach. Laguna Beach and
Anaheim. rcaularly cash 1n on the
mo' 1c trade.
Newport Beach led the p!lck. issu·
mg nearly SO film J>iermits last year
Laguna Beach officials say they
issued about 30 perm a ts.
But Newport Beach officials say
they pcrfer the smaller. quieter pro-
ductions. such as commercials. to
ma1or productions.
City officials s11ll shudder at the
thou&ht of the huJe. flam ing ship that
escaped its moonnr in Newport Bay
durina filming o Cannon films'
"Assass1nat1on" two years ago.
thrcatenma ba)sade homes and fore-
'"' the evacuation of residents.
Reports show that a 10111 of 10
motion picture perrmts were issued
for unincorporated Ora nae County an
1987 . muscles He was formerly the chair of,.
the Department of 81ophys1cs at
Un" ersll)' College. London
• Dr, Pc1cr Rcntzcpis. a pioneer 1n
.\II. of course. ha\.C' reasons of their
o"n But Dr Olm \Cntured a general
C\plJ 11Jl1on
· It s a S<.'n!>C of poss1b1lll}' 1hat
m1gh1 nol e\l\I Ill l'\tabhshed IOStllU·
11011~ ... Olm ~uJ .. I t'~ an opportunity
11111111\t" 11110 n H>r'l' d1rcct1ons"
Dr. Alfredo H-S Ang, an inter·
nationally renowned professor of
Cl\ 11 enJinccrtng. will JOln the School ofEn~nccnng1nJulyafier29)ca~at ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ the Univcrsll) of Illinois.
"'the use of lasers to 1 n vC's11gatc
chemical reactions while at Bell
uboratories 1n New Jersc) was
appointed pres1dent1al chair and
professor of chcm1stf) an I Q8S
He invented a technique callt'd
pacosccond spcctroscop}' that '" used
b) chemists. b1olog1sts and phys1c1s1s
to stud> the mtC'ract1ons of atoms and
molecules.
l • lnternauonall}' known lateral)
cr111c Dr. J. Hillis Maller became a
,.D1st1nau1shcd Professor of English
and C'omparauvc Literature at UC!
an 1986.
Recruited from Yale. Maller as~
'
sumcd a pivotal pos111on 1n ucrs
Prosntm an C'ntteal Theo')
• • Dr R. Duncan Luce accepted an
'appointment in UC'l's School of
·Social Scacnccs last month as a
lDis11n1u1shcd Professor ofC<>&nitive
'Sciences and dire'Ctor of the nc-wly
In D1 \11lkr\ l :lSC 1t was an
uppm1u1111~ 1010111 J department that
al1 l·ad~ h;i<l tk H·lop..·d 1 h11h rcpu-
1.1111111 .ind ''a' 'hH-.Q.1.0'~na u . Olin
'>Ugj,:•\lnJ
\nd lor Dr Lun:.1t v.asachan
rl'lu1111n 1hl rampu\ where he was a
prok"~m ol ~11<.1•11 ~1enccs 1n the
l'•trh I 97(h
T hesc ~holan~ hn' c been joined by
other d1st1ngu1~hcd focult) members
Ill rl'CC n I ~ l'!l I'):
Jerrold Pctrohk~. v.ho pioneered
lhl' use of compute" 10 help the
P3f;th ll'<i "alk~ mo' cd to U(I from
Wright State Uhiversity in Ohio an
1986.
Jacques ~rrida. rormaly dirtttor
of ShKfa.-s at Ecole des Hautcs Etu<ks
en ScienttS S«ia1cl an Paris and a
v.orld renowned philosopMr. joined
Chancellor Jack Pehason an-
nounced last month that Dr Chang-
Lin Tien will be recommended as
UC-l's new Cllecutl\e vice chancellor
Tien. v.ho has been at UC Bcrkelc)
since I 9S9. as an anternat1onall>
rC'Cogn1zcd authorn) ID mechanical
engam.-crin&.
Also an Ma). Dr Dennis J Aigner
"as named dean of the Graduate
School of ManagcmC'nt. He moves to
UCI 1n the fall from USC where he
h::is been a professor of economics
since 1976.
Other .. stars" could be lasted here
and morC' can bC' eitpttted 10 jOin
them as 1hc un1vcrs1ty contmut'S to
grow. 1n size as well as stature.
As Dr Ohn noted. "There's a son
of academic network lhat operates.
and people pay 'ucntion to •ho is
goina where."
, ~--------------~~------~----~----------------------~~--~------~-----...' OAAHGE ... IMlaf
COAST IJl!!!'f//!llllJ ~
MAIN~ D>.._~11 .C....._ CA ..., ...,_ loll 1• c.11....., CA IN2t
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