HomeMy WebLinkAbout1988-06-08 - Orange Coast Pilot• *
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 8, 1988
E
**Fl
25 :E T
Voters reject slow-growth limit
IJ lftvt: MAllBLlt
aM IOI VAN EBEN ................
r In a dramatic shift of public
opi11ion, Oriri,e County residents
went to the polls Tuesday and
rejected the propoled countywide
slow..,owth initiative -an outcome
that would have seemed imJ)OS1ible
only weeks qo.
Measure A, which would have tied
development in all unincorporated
areas to road improvements. had
enjoyed commandina support ac-
cordina to polls taken as recently as
April.
But a wtll·fuftdecl advertisinc bhtz
in the wanina days of tbe tiea&ed
e&mPli&n apperently turned the tide
and doomed the controverSial in-
itiative
Despite a substantial lead in early
returns, the meuure went down to
defeat, pmerina ~.3 ptrCeGt of tbe
vote as oppoted to SS. 7 percent
apinst it.
Conareuional candidate Dlvid Baker, who opposed the initiative,
said "the people educated \Mm-
selves."
"Measure A iJ a complicated
measure and I think tbe mon: pec;>p&e
looked at it. tliC mcm they found it to
be a coml)lex i.ut," BUcr uid eatty t~. ''Tacklina the powtb isaue.
traffic issue and the ..... Si*)e issue
needs some aood heads to Ft toaether."
Tom Roaers, co-author 6f the
initiative and ats leadin1 advocate, w~s bitter about what he termed the developen' well financed campaisn
of de«ption.
"So much for fraudulent cam-
paips. and 10 mudl for S2 million ...
said Rotm. ""TM floodpaaarc open
now ... r suarant~. now that ck--
-¥elopen haveaotttn out of peyina for
roacfs. you're toin& to tee a tu
anctQSit.''
. Roten said be behe\led IOnte Ull'I
money could have helped initiative
SUPJ>!>rters counteract tbe ftood of
anh·initJauve advertisins.
"We couldn't combat $2 million
with just $41.000," ~ wd ... , think
maybe if we'd had SI S0,000, that
would have made a difference. We
could baiwc ll)tlal out a couple ol extra mailtts,"
John Slmoa, a cteve1opm• aUOl"IWy
who led tbr fllht ... Ueat&ft A.
said the money c:oUec:1ed bY hit anti-
initiative sroup wu wdl speat. .. , think tbe peop&e ol or..
County owe a debt ofaratit-* IO tie
bu1ldjn1 industry foe IJ)eedifts tbe
money to tct the facts ovt... aid
Simon.
Irvine Mayor l.any Aataa. ID ardent suppomr of the ioit.iative, , .......... ....,..,.u,
GOP House races go to Cox, Rohrabach.er Duk&kls,
Baker blames foes
for dtrty tricks;
RosenbCr third
BJ &OBERT HYNDMAN
... JONATllAN VOLRE , °' .............
Former presidential aide
Cbristooher Cox edaed Irvine City
Councif man Dave lkker by only
1,200 votes to pin the Republican
nomination to re~ce Robert
Badbam, R-Newport cb. in Con-
IJUS.
Cox iumed back the cballenae of
Baker and attorney Nathan Rose-
nbna to win nomination for the <40th
Coqressional District, where Re-
publicans outnumber Democrats
nearly 2 to I.
Cox pmered 29, 760 votes. or 30.6
percent of the ballot's cast; whil
Baker received 28,S88, or 29.4 per-
cent; and Rosenbera received 17,16S
votes. or 17.6 percent of the votes.
At the local GOP cetebrauon
Tuesday ni&ht in Oranac. Cox said he
·thou&ht the important issues were
brou&ht out durina the campaiJn and
said that pve him tbe edle.
"We are fortunate 10 the 40tb
District that the dectorate is hi&hly
educated. .. be said. "They are CIPlble
of uA<Seniand.ina the issues."
Baker, ho-Never, said he thQ~t
the' camP1isn wu marred by dirty
tricks arWS personal attacks.
"What happens in the camP1lan
(Pl.aM ... uwco1ma/A2)
Lakera loee opener
.
Detroit and But Lalmbeer
took care of the Lakers
and Kareem AbduhJab-
bar in Game 1./81
CWopbr Cos it:!. reeelnea laaJMlat Ida
n.lte ID tbe Doa IDD ID Oraae• u IM
................. ._
beada for .se::z ID tM 40da c.oncr e 11loaal
DlMrlct Repa can pdmary.
Ferguson tu:rns back Hart
challenge by 2-to-l margin
BJGREGUZAU °' .. .., .......
It was a touah fllbt. but the
outcome of the Republican primary
race for the 70th Assembly District
turned out much u expected with
incumbent Gil Ferpson postina a
clear victory over Newport Beach
City Councilwoman Evelyn Hart.
With all returns in, Fersuson. 6S.
clinched bis third tenn in the statt
Asxmbly by a nearly 2 to I marsin
over Hart. S7. Fcrauson earned 60.2
~nt of the vote to Hart's 33.3
percent.
Tuesday's primary vote ends weeks
of brutal campaiJnina that turned
two fnends into bitter rivals.
Hart's unexpected candidacy an-
nouncement 1n February tent shock
wava throu&h the county Re-
publican Party and drew sharp cnta·
cism from pany leaders, who said her
chaJlensc was detrimental to party
aoals.
In Apnl, Han received a reprimand
from the party's Ethics Committee
for what 1t alled "unethical and
unfair .. campa1Jn tact1cs, refem"' to
her mention of an FBI iovestipt100
into Fersuson's campaip funds.
Hart. 1n tum. called said the ruJina
came rrom a "'k.anproo court'" that
was tryina to pressure her out of the race.
The battle of words rarely let up
throu&hout the ratt. with both stdes
exchanaana st1n1.m1 maalcn and
speeches. But 1n the end. ot>Krven
u id Ferauson's strona conservative
stance. Jaraer war chest and in-
cumbency won him the race
Fersuson said he was ready to bury
the hatchet.
"I'm f(>IQI to offer her a hand of
friendship, .. Ferguson saad Tuesday
niahL .. I hope ~ would convey to
(Pleue Me J'ER01.180N/ A2)
Su~rvtsor Wieder
blames media for
bur.tin campaign
8J llOBDT llYNDMAN _,ROBOT BAUER .. ..............
Haniett Wieder, embittered by
media ICXlOUnts of her lies coooemina
a colks education, failed Tuesday in
her bia to suc:aed Dan Lunsren in
Conases.
Instead, Dua RohrabKbcr, a for.
mer speechwrittr for Ronald Rapa,
was the top vo._,ttr in the crowded
42Ad ~ft.al District Re-
publican pnmary, thereby virtually
assurina himtelf victofy tn the No-
vember ie'fteral election in a district
with heavy Rrpubl~voter rqis-
tration.
Wieder, chairman of the OranJC
County Board of Supervisors. bad
.-on the eodortemcnt of Luo,aren.
wbo is Slq)plnadown after I 0 yean in
Conaress to sect the state treasurer
post. But Wicckr's campaip was
rocked by revdahODS that she bad
lied about receivina a c:olle8e depu
from Wayne State University in
DeuoiL ln fact. she bad never
attended Wayne State and bas no
collqe ~· . . t..-.a Later ID the campa..,n, Wieder .....
to fire a press IC!(ret.lr)' who im-
personated a reporter to interview an
orpniuT' of ao etron to rU:all her
from the Boud of Superviton.
~ ... WJSOal/A2)
GUP'erp80D
Bush set
for race
to finish
Jackson defeated,
but vows to fight
for spot on ticket
By DONALD M.. BO'l"BBDG ,,,, ...........
LOS ANGELES -Republican
Georse Bush and Democrat Micbael
Dubkis celebrated victoriOUJ eon·
clusion.s to the lonJ primary teaton
today, with Dukak..is dcdariQL -rbe
marathon is over and now the race IO
the fioisb lint be&ins.'"
Jesse Jackson renewed his claim oc
the Democna' No. 2 spot. but
Dublis said no OM .. is due ao offer ...
Both Bush and OUkakis, assured of
their parties' prcsidenual nomi-
D1Uoos. Pled&ed a touab but dean
election rt&ht-Of'feriDJ Voterl a clear
choice.
"I feel terrific. Herc I am IS the
Democratic nominee," Dutakis exulted in an intenic-w btoedc:aat
today on CBS-TV .
Jackson, lus !alt remain.in& oppo-
~t. promited in intcrvie'Ws brmd-
cast today that he would OODtiaUC lbc
nominauoo fcbt all the way to the
convention in Atlanta. But Jac:bon.
implicitly ooncedina the fiabt was
really over, said rqatcdly be bad
earned a Dubkis offer of the vice
prcudential spot.
"I've earned an option to aooept it
or tum at down;· he said on CIS in an
1nterv1ew taoed earlier. On ABC-TV
AddltlonM-.Ctloit cor-.,.,,. on A4-5
he said. "C'onsJdcration docs mean an
offer; at does not mean just in passina,.
We ha"e earned constdcration. .. He
did not say •hether he would accept
such an offer.
Dukakas, makana no promises., said
on ABC ... I don't think anyone is due
an offer: He added, "Tbcre are a
ircat_ man~ people that areaoina to be
considered and he'll be oae of them
and r m not ao1n1 to rule anybody in
or out at lhts point.·
lndez
Advice and Games
Bulletin Board
Buslneaa
Clustfled •
Comics
C7
A3
C9-10
04-6 ca
08
A10
SA fire losses total $6 million
In Wastunaton today, former can-
didate Paul S.mon said be would
support Dukalis f« ~t. and he
uraed has I SO or so remaintna
dcleptcs to do the same.
Senator Simon. D-fll .. who bad pul
his fadin& campaiJn on bold t...a
months aao. said at a news con-
feren<'C. "The pnmann and caucUJeS
u-e now history. The verdict is in. I
'4'111 "ote for Michael Oukak:is at the
convention and will do evcrythin& I
can to advantt his candidacy after the
coovenuon.• Death notices
EntertaJnment
Food
Mlnd & Body
()pffilon
P1paraz:zl
Pottce log
Pubtlc notices
=~
c1-e
A9
A8
C7
A3 oe
01-3
A2
B)' BOB VAN EYU!N °' .............. Santa Ana fire investipton were
anemptin& to determine the cause
today ofa $6 million blaze that bepn
at a constnac:tion site on East Third
Street and damqed seven buildinp
in a six-block area Tuesday niaht.
Witneues said flameS reached
heiabts of 100 feet at tima and
billows ofsmoke could be seen IS far
away as Malibu. The fire marled
ll'lffic in downtown Santa Ana and
tfiaered lridlock conditions on tbe
Santa Ana Freeway.
Motorists~ warned to avoid the
area as a havy drape of smoke
billowed over much of the downtown
area, the C'altfomaa Highway Patrol
said.
The blaze t>qan shortly after S:JO
p.m at 1 204-unu apartment complex
uoderconstrucuon an thc400block of
East Third Street, sa1d witnesses.
··1 was in the dnveway of my house
on Second Street," said Santa Ana
ttsadent Rudy Zamudio. "We we~
about to pull out of the driveway. It
was about S:3S when I saw the flames
on the first floor of the apertment
complex. I ran inside to call the Fire
Department. but I suess somebody
had already called becaU9t the hne
was busy.
Agran elected Irvine mayor;
.slow-growth allies also win
..
'You could reel the heat. It was
really hot."'
The blaze traveled quick.I) throu&h
the wood-frame apartment compleit,
pan of the city's ttek\lelopmcnt plan.
and destroyed a nearby home. h
spread to a two-stof) bualdina owned
by the Salvation Anny and threaten-
ed several other nearby buiktinp. The fire left one family homeless.
The family, whose last name 1s Ruell,
could not be located Tuesdayevcnana
but was not believed to be lOJUred.
Fire officials said there were no
c1 v1laan in.Junes in the fire. • ..
One Santa Ana. firef\lbter, Ron
Lcf\tJt, wu taken to Wes1Un Medi-
"
ca.I Center .an Santa Ana. sufTcnna
from beat dfiaustton. He was treated
and released.
A number of nearb} residents saKi
they feared for their homndurina.the
bei&ht of the blaze. which was
contained around 9 p.m.
.. , was afraid for my famaly. -satd
resident Javier Garcia. "I aot up on
top of the houst to Stt what wuao1na
on. Evcrycinc on the street was
waterina down their hou1CS. t aucss
we'll hive a lot of flowers this year ...
Eric Guillen li~-es with bis famil) at
518 Third St.. dtruily 8C10$S tM
Urcet from the ..,.nmcnt complex (Pl•• ... n:a&/AS)
Dultak.is alto was picti n.a up tormal
support ~y from former riva
Rtchant Ge'phardt of Missouri aod
Bruce Babbitt of Arizona.
"The rare to the finish line bcsin ..
proclaimed a jubilant DUb.k.is aftlr
returns from a four-aate pri_,
sWttp aua,.ntced bim a ~· m~ority. He ll'On races ita D1UI.
New Jcney, Mootaaa aAd New
Mexico
C"'-... POLl'l'IC8/M)
Berc,son withdraws
her Isa Chica bill
r
. .
•.
AKl>ALLIBS ELECTED •••
~ uid C.••leno. 1hno declined to ICek another
council tam beca\ate of business
in~retl1. ud laker oPtod out to pursue 1 bid for the .eo.h C.on· peuional District. which he narrow·
Jy Iott 10 Chrittopber Coll.
However, there ia a chance &hat ft:lc~• e!«tion coWcl be: Irvine "olm alto a~ proved a meuure that woWd allow 1
apecial electioa of the third council
wat if ci~ .... eDOU&h 'lip.
twa on a petition driYC •. "f'here wu
no indication today lhac such a drive
would be launched.
Alto Tucldly, lrvine vottn over·
1'_11tDER LOSES ••• ........
.
ritbt direc:tjon, not JUlt promasi!'I
this and that to local intereat lfOUJ>I.
Rohnbacher aamered 38,620
votes -34.1 pen:.enr in Oranae County and 3S pnccnt in losAl\ICles
County.
Wieder, 67, ~t 26,16S votes an all
-28.8 percent an~ County and
22 percent in Los Anaelea County.
Steve Hom, S6, tbe former ~rest·
dent of C.I State Lona Beach, finashed
third with 21,442 votes -17 percent
in Oranae County and 20 percent in
Los Anaelea County.
Other candidates in the crowded
Republican primary were Tom
Bauer, 34, an aerospr.cc eqineer
from Tomnce; Jeffrey Bums. 33, a
Huntington Beach carpenter; Don
Davis, 441 of Palos Vmles Estates;
Andrew Uttlefair, 27, of Lona Beach;
and Robert Welboum. .SO. of Tor-
rance.
In the Democratic primary, Guy
Kimbrouab defeated twocballcnsm.,
Dan Farrell anp Ada UnJUh. the
da"lbtcr-in-law of the late state
Treasurer Jeue Unruh. K.imbrouah,
42, is a political science and history
teacbei' at Mt. San Jacinto Collele.
lbe 42Dd District extends from
Beach Boulevard in Huntinaton Beach and includes Westminster,
SeaJ Beach, Los Alamitos, Cypress,
whelminaJy •PefO"ed a propotal to
leave an additional 5,000 acres as
optn IPl'OC in their city. Earlier this
yar. city and Irvine Co. officials aarttd to amend the city'• llnd-utt
plaD to 5Ct aside the idditional
8Cfel&e. Jn return, The Irvine Co.
would be allowed men intenaive devcloP nt ia other areas of the
city.
The total amount of open space in
Irvine will be about J 6;000 acres,
more than any other city in °"'* County.
Voten approved the proposal
known as Measure C, by 1 marain o~
more than 6 to I.
Dua ROlan.bacber
La Palma._paruof Lona Beach, Sianat Hill, San Pedro, Tomnce, and Palos
Verdes.
About 40 pcn:ent of the distnct lies
in Otanae County.
-Pllll AIS.Jplq ftMlrlbtlte4,. till ,..,.,.
hWCOMER COX WINS40TB DISTRICT •••
----Al
9ill be very tdlina about the future of ~ COuniy politics. We ran a
~dean aunpaap and some of my )!itp)tau nn the dirtiest campeisns
~ the history of tbe United States. ..
!taid Bake'r, alto attendina the pany at :lk Doubktree Inn in a.ass.
.. To lhe ~ ~tive cainpaisns
are suausful, 7ou re aoina to sec
more-of them. hope the responsi·
biliiy for these vile, filthy mailers will
fall on tbotc who teat them out."
Baker bad early momentum,
C,~r!!' the endonements of and 1\lte Sen. Marian acr,eson.. But bis campai&n was bard
hit when an unidentified man attend· 1= campaian forum yelled out al lions that Baker bad an
ad lerOUI aff.&Jr with an lrvane
'W'OnWl. The JS.year-old auomey
and ronner ua buketbell star
acknowled&ed he experienced
uoubles with bu nwriaat. but did
not directly respond to the claim.
Badbam, who stepped down after
I 0 years in C.Onaraa. also decried the cam · tactics uted this aprina.
.. (~n tecina two years ~ a
srowina trend to demean the job, he
. aid. .. , rearet to see il happenll\a. No
matter w6o wins. for the next two
yeaneveryone will just think of those ual mailers.." ~milhina third in the crowded
Republican contest was 36-ycar-old
Nathan Rosenberg of Newport
Beach. Roscnbera bad tried to untcat
Bldlwn two years aao. thereby
• up1ettina party leaden who did not : care for fellow Republicans who
: Cballcqed established incumbenu.
Even u a party outsider however,
; R0tenbe'J raised some Sd0,000 and
' drew praax for an ~peee book on
b politics that was sent to as,ooo
voters in the district.
.
I
Jie wu also, however. linked to
some of lbc smear tactics used in the
race when il was discovered the
author of literature namina Cox a Soviet .. propapndist .. and Baker an
adulterer donated S 1,000 to Rose-
ober&·s campaian. After the discovery, bowever,
Rosenbera denied knowlcd&c of the
mailen and sent back the contribu·
lion, he said. He said today he wasn't
quite sure what pve Cox and Baker
their cc.tae. ··1 don•t know It was a Iona. tough
race and the people made their
choice,'' Rosenbe'l said ... But I will
defin.itely be partacipatmg in local
politics. rm not aoina anywhere."
Cox. )S, is a former counsel to
President Reapo and used campaisn
posters that simply read: .. Thank you,
CbriJ Coll. Ronald Rcapn. •• Cox has
extensive contacts in Washil\llOn.
D.C. Amons those who cndoned hts
candidacy were fonner judge Robert
Bork and former Marine Lt. Col.
Oliver Nonh.
In earher intcn-iews, Cox pointed
to his extensive credentials when he
said his t.clw'ound will help him
deal etrectivefy With forcian policy
and the economy .
lbe Newport Beach resadent
araduated mqna cum laude from use. where he took an ac:celerated
three-year course and a double major
in EnaJisb and political science. He
simultaneously attended Harvard
Law School and Harvard Business
School, was an editor of the "Harvard
Law Review" and in 1977 received
both a law dep'ee and a master's
dearee 1n business administration.
Cox was a partner in the law finn
Latham & Watkins an Newport
Beach. where he speaal1zed an cor-
porate finance. from 1986 to last
February, he worked in the White
House asa senior associate counsel to
: ..................................................... ..
• tFERGUSON TOPS HART ..•
l'rolllAl
her aupporters that wc'tt all part of
•tbe ume party ...
Ferpson said that. for the most
part. the mudslinaina was oonfined to N~ Beach, addina that be took Hans attacks .. personally."
mailers and throu&h the press." said
Hart ... I have a lot of respect for their
JUd&rnent. and I'll give that senous
consideration."
President Reagan.
Jn an April interview with the DaHr
Pilot, Cox said: •'As a COnJrt$$m&ft J
would be able to offer to people nol
just the minimum they would eXJ)CCI
-their phone calls act ~urned and
that I'm withna to hsten -but I can also offer an intelligent mind qainst
which their concerns will resonate. So
af they've aot a complell business
problem, I will understand it ..
Othtr Republicans 1n the race were
William Yacobozz1, 46. a Newpon
Beach attorney; John Hylton, 43,
Newport Beach airline pilot; John
Kelly, 26, a Tustin City Councilman,
Patncia Kishel, 39. a Laauna Hills
author. LatT)' Sternberg. 60, a Tustin
certified pubhc accountant, Dave
Williams, S2, of Livermore who
P.romiscd to move to Oranae County
if elected.
Lida Lenney. a Lquna Beach Caty
Councilwoman, won the Democratic
primary against challcnaer George
M111ofis, a .S6-ycar-old volunteer
hospital administrator from Newport
Beach.
She pmered 26, I 72 vokS to
Mugohs' 18',678.
Lenney, S4. is a former junior ha&h
school teacher who formed tfie
l..aJuna Canyon Conservancy in an
effort to preserve the area from
development In the last few days of her pnmary campaign, ~nney w(ln
the endorvment from ~n. Alan
Cranston
Cat kills owner
CHELMSFORD. EnaJand (AP)-
A pet cat killed an 80.ycar-old woman
when it jumped to areet her after
bean& m1ssm1 for a month, police said today.
Ann Edmunds, a widow, was in the
prden of her home on Tuesday when
the cat returned home and leaped on
her, severina a vein an her les, said
Actina Inspector John Woodpte.
Ne,&hbors rushed to help as blood
po~ from the wound. but Ed-
munds lapsed into unconsciousness
and died.
Neiahbon were carina for the cat
on Wednesday
Coast outlook fair and warmer
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Cyclotron passes a crucial
test in nuclear experiment
W ASHINQTON (AP) -The
world·s most powerful cyclotron has
just passed a crucial teat, tbowina it
can fire atomic "cannon bells instead
of BBs." and stands ready for some of
the most promisinaexperimentsever
pro~ by nucfear physicists, the
National Science Foundation said
today.
The NSF said scientisu at lhe
aovemment·funded National Super·
conduct1na Cyclotron Laboratory at
Michigan State University succieeded
Monday in bendina a narrow, hi&h-
eneray beam of neon nuclei so that it flew out of the cyclotron cleanly and
hit a staiDless steel tarset.
That auc:cas, the NSF -.id, means
the K800 cyclotron is ready for a
series of 1tom-smashi~ experiments
that could suide pby1iast1 to funda-
memaJ nales aovemina subetomic matter. It is hoped lbe studies
eventually wtll lead to a better
undentandina of the forces directina
cosmic events. such as the explosions
of stars, or supernovas.
The ene'I)' of the test beam fired
this week was 360 million elCcU'on
volts, but the machine is capable of
acccleratanf nuclei to ene:rsies ·~ proachlna billion electron volts. By
compenson, the world's aeoond most
powerful heavy·ion cyclotron,
GANIL in Cacn, France, has ~
celerated beams to eneflles of 4
billion electron volts.
The U.S. test means that precision
beams of heavy nuclei can now be
du'Ccted into laboratories at the East
Lansing. Mich., facility for u1e in
furthtr experiments, the NSF said.
Scientists generated the K800
cyclotron·s first hilh.eneray beam in
February, usina its superconductin1
maanet to accelerate electrically
charged helium and carbon nuclei iaa
ti&ht spiral.
MEASURE A REJECTED BY VOTERS •••
l"romAl
agreed that the vote only indicated
that count)' developen had swayed
the vote with vast sums of money.
·•it appears to me that the de·
velopers aot the election results they
paid for. and now they're aoinf. to
have to clean up the traffic mess. •
.. It's up to the developen now,"
Agran said when asked about the
fututt of the countf s traffic problem.
"They said there s a better way than
Measure A. Let them put up or shut
up."
Developers. who poured more than
SI million mto the campaisn apinst
Measure A, were satisfied with Tues.-
day's election results. althou&h some
said there was stall a need for manqed
growth in OranJC County.
"The vote reflected the fact that the
IDltllllVe was nawcd., and had the
potential for increased oosts that
fri&htened the taxpayers,·· said Larry
Thomas, corporate communications
director for The Irvine Co .• which
pve n:iorc than $ l 00,000 to the anti·
an1taat1ve campa1an.
''But f think 1t would be a mistake
to assume that there is not a mandate
for powth manaaement. The in· 1t11t1ve arew out of strona public
sentiment, and many of us ID the
development community were not
apinst ats stated aoals. Where we
parted company was on whether the la~auagc of the initiative reflected
thbsc &oats."
Wendy Wetz.cl, spokeswoman for
the M 1ss1on V 1eJO Co., said she
believed voters had read the initiative
and concluded that it would not do
the JOb of controllina arowth and
traffic.
"I think people also read the
cditonals in every m.;or newsi-per
an Oranae County recommendana
apinst the initiative," she said. "And
I think the advcrtisina helped too."
The slow-srowth measure attracted
support from both Republicans and
Democrats who said they were forced
to 10 to the people with the iniliatave
because of years of irresponsible
arowth manaaement on the part of
elected offacials, panicularly county
supervisors.
Prownents said the measure
would finally force developen to pay
for the roads to handle traffic from
their buildina proje(ts.
To some, the initiative wu an act of
protest. The sJow..,-owth movement
ID Oranae County had attracted
statewide interest. especially from
other ciuzen aroups interested in
draftina their own arowth·limitina
initiatives.
But those opposed to the initiative
saw it as a flawed effort that 111ould
ultimately cri~plc the county's econ·
omy while doana little if anythina to
improve traffic.
Early polls sh~wed that more than
80 percent of the county's populace
supported the initiative.
The tide bepn to tum, however.
when opponenu -who called them-
sci ves Citizens for Traffic Solut1on1
-collected well over S l .S million in
campaian ~ontributions and
launched an clltensive advcrtis1na
and educational campeip.
A continu.ina theme an that cam·
~·in was the claim that the in·
uiative, ihucussful, would have cost
taxpayers Sl.4 billion to implement
"Measure A:. 1t will make traffic
worse" was adopted 11 the sroup•s
battle cry.
Simon sugested the county•s traf·
fie problem was too complicated an
issue to be drafted into initiative
form
"The problem is that if th~
(initiatives) don't work, you can't fill
them except thro~ another in·
itiative," Simon said in an earlier
interview.
Opponents of the mcasun had
attempted to derail the aniliative
from appearinJ on the ballot but lost
when a Supenor Court judp: naled
voters had the riaht to cast their
opinion on the measure .
Even still, initiative detractors had
indicated they stood ready to take the issue to coun qain if it won voter
approval.
Similar 1ro111th·hmit1t1on
measures are set to appear on the
November ballot in several Oran~
Coast cities. includina Huntinaton
Bc:ach, Costa Mesa and Newpon
Beach. .. rve been a Marine officer and
p:nJ)eman my whole life,.. said
FCIJUIOD. .. When someone attacks. 1t
ii the same tbina as aiettina wounded
on the beuJefield. I haven't developed
&Ouab cnouah skin yet.··
Hart wd this momma she believes
whale her mcssaae reached some
people, the bottom line in the race
was money.
"You really need the bta bucks, and
I didn't have them," said Hart. "I was
advased that this (losint the race) would bapPCn. and at did.
~lmsfo~n~ilcsnorth~~of 1 r~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ London.
flan allo said she would tty to
,palCb lhe relationship, but still bad -:..~inaed criticism of Fersuson.
l .. I will abate bands with Mr.
fcrpdOn and work for the aooc:t of Rqjublic::an poli . " Ilk saia Tues-
,day DilbL .. M!:Jy people don't
..... 6ut I hope to. That's what this
c;amp.ip WU all about."
Han iaid her campaip misJlt ha Ye Jiufld bencr if she'd had m~ time.
, .. .,,.e have to mnember people
:. Mve been informed throuab out
(
Althou&h Hart wd she dadn•t
rqrct the experience of nannina
qainst fefJUSOn, she said the race
was drainin1 and discourqjna.
"1t•s hard to say whether I'd Nn
qam, it'• too early, .. she uid ... rd
have to uy today thal I'm not that
tou.ah." ne district inclUdet Newport
Beach, Costa Mcu, IMuna Bach.. ~na Hills. ~na Niluel. Dena
P0tot, S.n J&&ao C..pblruo 8od
Mission Vi(jo.
WETLANDS ••
From Al
restore 91 ~ acres of wetlands a-nd
possibly buUd a nav1pble channel to
the: oc:ea n.
• The Hununaton Beach City Coun·
cil hc:ld a s])tcial KUion Tuetday c~enina fotrowin1 the press con·
fercnce to call off a public hclrina
achcdul.ed Thursday on Bcrteson·s
bill.
D= .. o ..........
JuatcaU 842-8088 ""°"°"~ I! tOot CIO l!QI ,_ '°"' ~ .,. & JO p l'I Oii lltfl)l• 1 pm .,,, f0'-11 .. ..
-...0
UCll1llll111L.
t •61llpfl1M1
er~ ....
I
'
Through the C*'lturiel, flne wood thutt.,. have
become aynon ymou• with luxury and good taate.
Today. Hefrwood Shutters give an euy elegance
to any Interior from Colonlat to Uttra Modern.
No other window covering performs ltt function
with such beauty and gr.ce. Shutt.,. fitter Nght
with an. Infinite vartety of atytee, reduce glare.
block out hMt and eokt, maxima. the view and
expand lnterk>rt wtth ctean, "ms* Nnte. UnMk•
other window tr .. tment1, lhUttera Iner .... your
home'• vatue.
With • HeltwOod Shutter'• you mey ChooM
Louver wldthl of 1~. 2~. 3~. and 4~ .
We -.ct the flnelt WOOd• avtltatMe and oftW a
large -.ction of COior• or ltalnt and we_. help
you -.ct the bel1 deitgn for 'IOVf ~ and
.. lding --dOort.
Serving California since 1953
,
' ...
•
I
Coa•t meetlzV •t
A s-nel of th,_ speakers will be htured at
Thunct.y•s luincheon ~intoftht Oranee County Coua Auocaatton. to be held at 11:30 Lm. 11 die
Newport Beach Counuy Club. 1600 E. Ccmt
Hiahway. ~ Btactt. Assemblywoman Doris Alkn. COMtrVatioaist Johnn~ Crean and Harborm8*r Harry 0. will
speak on the future of our coastal waaen. The COM is
SIS and details are available at ~a..6250.
Wine ta•dn6 .cJJedaled
The Grove ThelterCompeny will llllC its third
annual wine fest Sunday from 4 to 7 p.m. in tht Mills
House An Gallery, 12732 M1in St .. Oardtn Grove.
Celebrity itema to be auctioned inclUde Paul
Anka 's autoaraphed trousen and Cybill Shepbmrs
script from a ttttnt ••Moonliahtina" episode.
Admission is by donation Of'Sl Sor S2S per coupk.
and tickets may be reserved by callin1636-7213 . .
. Summer l•t la Irvine
The Swedilh orpnization SWEA Orante
County will hold its annual midsummer cekbntion
Sunday from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. in the William Muon
Park at University and Culver drives in Irvine.
Admission is fiu and the public is invited. A S 1,000 scholarship will be presented by the
orpnization to UCJ political science rujor Carol
, Renee. who will attend Lund Univenity in S~
for a )Cir. Call Christina Walcber at 8S4.1184 for
addiuonal information.
BPW meetbJ6 •lated
The South Coast Business and Profmional
Women will hold their monthly mcctina T~y at
the El Tonto Grill, 633 Anton Blvd., Costa Meta. to
hear Linda Miller, a professional sales trainer. speak on "keys to effective communication."
Both women and men are invited to the 11:30
a. m. event. The cost is S 13 for membcn and SIS for
non·membel'\. Call Robin Riddell at 7.S 1-0991 for
more information and retet\'ltions.
Stop-•moi:l~ cJ ... set
Fr'Clh Stan, an American Cancer Society
proaram for smokers who want to kick the habit, will
o&r four classes in Wmminsier bc&innina next
wetk.
The sessiorb will stan Monday and contin~
June IS, 20 and 22 at Humana Hospital. 200
Hospital Cin:le. The cost is a dOnation ofS 10, and
reaistration is beina taken by the cancer IOciety at
751-0«l.
Gardea club to la•tall
The Newport Hills Garden C1ub will hold its
annual installation luncheon T~y at l l a.m. at
Sherman Gardens in Corona dd Mar.
· Mo~a Lane will be teated as president, and
other oflittrs are Nonnaeene Shamrell, Dolores
Joannin&. Eleanor Norton, LOrraine Brody and
Audrey Wiles. Call Joyce Anderson at 64()..8396 for
more information.
WedaelHl87, Junes
· • 7 p.m. ta,... .... Pie• ... C.mml1 ...
council chambers, SO.S Forest A vc.
• 7;30 p.m. r .. w. Valley ,,...... C..·
liDlllMa, City Council chamben. 10200 Slater Ave.
TJJunda7, June 9
• 4 p.m ......... Be9d AIDS Meeatt. TAM
f'eree, council chambers. SOS Forest Ave.
• 6:30 p.m. WpM 8-d Beanl ef MJUI·
.. , ... Detlp Re¥lew IMN. council chambers.
SOS Forest Ave.
.........
SmeraeDCJ perNIUMI na to tbree-alana ftre tllat'-trOJedaa a.....--tcoe .. •1'1111 .. y m,M w tM e.ata Am& ctTlc c.a..
FIRE DAMAGES 7 BUILDINGS, LOSSES REACH $6 MILLION •••
J'rOIDAl
whcft the fire stancd.
.. We ~ standina riabt outside the
house when it staned." said Guillen ... At
first we were just uated. then I tot teared
because I thouaht it was aoiq to bum my
house. It was so hot it shanered all the
windows in the front. ..
Witnesses said the Oames shot up 100
feet in the air at the heiaht of the blaze,
which tied up freeway traffte as motorists
aawked at the mushroom cloud of smoke.
··1 could see the smoke all the wet.from
Anaheim when I was drivina home. said
R.afxl Barbo$O. botllood.Ofticiabsaidtbeexplolioosma cordiaa IO Bud Caru:r. Senta AM m
Rudie Oomez, 3l, watched the fire with have been the sounds of cira burlUat .J Cbief • his 1<>0 and said the flames were .. ., tall as crack.ins. The fire aillo biidb' CUI otl ..,_
telephone poles." A.cross the Slreel. hat bealled sboPfrorit power, illChldi4 ...,c.li6e ... ,._ ad
.. It didn't stan o. ut slow or anythina like windows out or~ n auto parts store at tdcpboaa. to teme residmU in u ._
that.itjusttookriahtoff'becauseofallthe Fo .. urtbandMortimer~-. ~Tllin:tadSidlmd~
dry wood. The heat wauo intense than we It went up real ..._ said leonanl and 1U'etU, aid ftleollkialL •
couldn'tttt any closer than that buildinJ. ... Gomez.,. ~9. u employee at Lynn's _ lbe. ca~ of the blue 11 llill ~
Gomezsaid,pointinatoancarbysboppina Transnumon.. . anv~tJOa. The blaze was 1*i"lr center The fire was mostly confined to an area contaaned arouod I p.m.
· between Third and Fourth strecU ud Santa Au firditfll&cn w= •••by
The fire. at one poant. seemed to produce French and Porter streets, al~ winds fire departments "&om NewPort 9eac$.
a series of uplOSJOns. sendina bum.ins cstimaled ataboul U mph staned several Costa Mesa, Hunti~ Beach and Fowt-embcn rainjn& down on the neiah-spot fires in nearby nei&hborlloods; ac-ta.in Valley.
Petition deadline eztended
for LB Council recall effort
Irrsured workers find health
care often difficult to obtain
BJ LANCE IGNON ..............
Leaders of a mo\'ement to oust three
members of tli'e Lacuna Beach City
Councll reviled a deadline for combiruna
their special election with a regularly
tcheduled ballot on Nov. I.
The Committee to Recall City Counctl
announced two months aao that it would
trytocombinetheelections to save the city
the estimated S2S,000 cost ofan indepen-
dently held rec.all election.
The committee has Iona stated that 1t
had until last Tuesday to tum in 3.000
valid sipatures 111inst Mayor Dan l(m..
ncy and council memben Uda Lcnney
and Robert Gentry if t.he two elections
WCR to be held concurrently.
But Tuesday niaht Ru 8f'9dy, consult·
ant to the committee, announced that tbe
date bad been revised to next Monday.
Brady said the committee had aamed for
last Tuesday in order to pvt the city ample
time to pt'OQCSS the recall petitions.
The new deadline will aive the recall
movement more time to collect its
sianatures..
LOS ANGELES (AP) -U.S. ~ with bealth insurance. espttiaHy
minorities. ha~ a ba.rdcr bme eetnna med.K:aJ care thu the ekSerty and arc more
prone to suffer moaey problems caUled by illoess, a saudy fOUDd.
The Ua.A study beina published Thursday in the New EQlland Journal o(,
Mcdici.De ram:d questions about heahh insuranoc protectioa amoqa the cmployed
at a time when much aneation bas bttn focused on improvina car for the retiM
ud the uninsured.
.. Wbat it s•wsts is theft arc fundamental problems with the W.t in wbQ
bea.lth <:aft is fuianced aDCl insuranoc distnbuted within tbc country,~ said Dr.
Martin F. Shapiro. an aaociate professor at the UCLA School ofMcdiciae. and a
co-autbOroftbe study.
Thtst&ady was obtained in advance by lbc l.osA.nlelesTamcs. which published
the raults today.
. Tbe raearcben traced the costly covcrqe PP' in pan to co--payme11q.
deductibles and other restrictions that were meant to control risina medical ~
Driver knocks
worker off ladder
A 19-year-oldsalesclerk 1n1 Bristol
SCteet shop reported rcccivana a
phone call from a man who asked her
to describe herself and what she was .arins. Some time later, another airl
in another shop recieved a similar
call, but the man told her be would
tboOt her if she d)dn 't comply.
::~:a~~:~~~i~ TV1dl!nman_ getsprobatlon · the SOO block of Irvine Avmue. • ..
a.a...,.._aeacla
A man called from a S-Y pboDe at
nearly midftiaht Tuetday, daimi111
that be didn't like they war be ..
ejected from Faces. 1 ISl2 Bellida
Blvd., and wanted to file dlarlts
apinst tbc bou~.
•
• • • Fifteen car batteries valued at S l SO were taken from a shop rack at 213
Canyon Drive. ••• A pocket watch valued at more
IMft 1900 wu taken from a botd at
3(00 8rittol St. • • • • 11ac )I-year-old rnaftllef Ofl 17th
Slnec Jboe s&ore received I death ...,_after firinaaa empio)« ... You
.,, IDilll '° die alMI die IOOft." The = r alJeiedly reoopiJed the • Yoice ... frind of'his bmer ...-a,ee. and told Ofticen be = dae man wu capable Of
oucehctbreaL
• • • Someone entered a rtlide'Dce in tbe
l IOOO blodt of NetdNood Cirdt
throuah an unklcted..,.. door and
StOk about s~.000 ia~. • • • A woman •id that kNd music aDd noite from the ntst-4oor ..,..,._,
disturbed her at ne.ty l LIL ....., .
Sk said abe kftGCbi Oii tk door to uk the OCICypMll to IOllt it dowa tMlt
OO¥ld1\•t raiteaayoec. • • •
SotneoGe ~--... SIOO wonh ol a 11 *l "°°"' i• lht 1 toOO ~ Simi .sa..
ip thro-wi a grand old party Jn county
.SPAUL AaClllPtBY -!' ..............
f.itlepublic:afts tbt"e'# tbemld va a
p1ny Tuetday, complete wi\h rousins
~-youna cbeerleaden (off· lftjna of the ~ Nixon aitk?)
aDd QPbeat mu..c.
~Tbousandl of enthusiastic con-
.. 1ervatives were in the mood to dance in. theaia&es, but nobody did. In fact. it ~.all anyone could do just to move. ~.Tbe party faitbfuLJIJftmed the tiaUroom at the D<>ublettee Inn in • Oiance. If that fire in Santa Ana had
$prcad north to the hotel, the Re-
publ1can Party of Ora.nae C9unty
weuld'vc been decimated.
They were attracted in part by the
nee of Vice President Geotat
, Gov. Georae Oeukmejian and
. Pete Wilson.
me said the decision by party
rs to celebrate the primary in
Clilllmae County underscored the im-
that is bCina placed on
blican voters here to tum out in
ftumbers in November.
t messqc was repeated of\cn as
leaders took turns at the
...,.ftW\hione.
Naylor, chairman of the Cali-
. Republican Party, said, "We're
to tell Michael Dubk.is this is
county where your presidential
c will meet its doom."
dedded-. biln eau--. .. ~
mary, muy arrived • .. ._,.to
knd lhrirsuppon toodaerCNdl .. 111
aeekint nomiutioa ht .... OS.
andC~ u~ wbat ..u, couatld on this year's primary .,..,.._ Ill
teltvision ICU were tUaed i..o lie
openina pme of tbe L.un-
Pistonschampionship .ncs.
Republicans obviously hope to
faeld a betltt team than Lot ~
manaat<t in whal one Oblll ver
labeled "a real •tinteroO."
Also :ina on Republbll mindsT ywas"Project90."tbe
party's plan to pin control ol'tbe stale
Assembly in lime b tedittricti"' of
stale Assembly and Senate dittriCU and~ districu.
For a mere S 1 SO, pert1 faithful
could purchue a copy . o Richard
Nixon's latesl book. "1999 .. -auto-araphed by various peny lwninuia
-with proceec1s aoena ~ Pro;eCt 90.
Republican bOpe tM -prQject will
JO better lhaa the entrance ol Pat
Nolan.. the Mlelllblymao who WM
introduced• the next tpCaker of the
A•mbly. Millin& a step on IUs way
to the dais; NOian fell flat on his ftliCe •
With the departure of BUsh and dae
other GOP brass, the ~Y moved
upll.lin 10 various suites where
candidaaa held court • election
returns came in.
Rep. Bob Doman, R-Oarden
Grove, told the aowd, .. I've been
tirillina to Oeorse Bush for two~
t.,.fhis victory will come from the
state of California and the bia
ben will come from aolden
a11SCounty."
A fiR manbal would·= a fidd
day. Rooms where balfa m•t
have been comfortable were pec&d
with damls ol supponen.
Views di•ppcared behind win-
dows steemed OYef'. OridJock loomed
in the hUJways..
Wieder on the media•• covenee of handftal of diebardJ chatted in the middleoftbehallwayinfrontofaTV,
her •lnd ConpcllionaJ bid. main bellroOm and memben of the Pf'OODCd up his ~ and turned on
The eveni1:t1 ~ dowa. Su~ preu watched i>r the tut recums. Johnny CanOn. It s a Iona way to
porters diuipeted into the niaht. A One maa put a chair down in the November.
.o,;-.
-.i11111Juah the national convention ·u two months away, polJtick.ina
a Bush runnin& mate was heavy.
poup was pushing openly for
ne IG~~t~ck. while a few
M>n yelled out for a Busb-
Al rd\lrnS tridrJed in, apparent
winnen and losen asseaed their
races.
.. I th.ink .we needed more sip~"
aaid Larry Stembrii. an aJsO:ran 1n
the 40th ConaretaiofW District race.
.. It would "Oe· put it you talked
abOut the issues," said Hamett
Bush tells Irvine businessmen
WllADllC'J. ian ticktt.
itb Bush nominatio!' already
11'.e'll trim tax on capital gains
BJ LANCE IGNON ... ...., ......
Voterturnoutlowestsmce '44 Some 900 businessmen &om Or-
anac County's hiah·tcch industries
applal.lded vieorousty Tuesday u
'' LOS ANGELES (AP} -Fewer than half of California's reaistered voicn Yice President Geol')t ~ prom-
botbered to ao to the polls to vote in the 1988 primary, a spokeswoman for tsed to C:Ut the capttal pins tax to IS
5-cretary of State March Fona Eu said today. ,percent if elected presl~L .
The state bas 12.s million voten.. so fewer than 6.2S million took the time "Q;?'~s~~':ihu l~W:b~~:V:~?~
to vote: . .. new technol~ and research and stay W1th99percentoftheprect~rcPortmg. wcare~t4~pcftC!'t.SOwcfccl competitive an the~ world ma~~t
pn:tty comfort.able Wlth our.proJectlon of 48. l pc~nt, aud Melissa Warren. place, Bush said. echoiOl a fam1har ~ults from two counues were yet to be turned 10 to the Secretary of State, theme of the Reapn admmistration.
she w.d. ..We have to encourqe risk-taklna
With or without the outstand1na ballots. the voter turnout was the worst 10 and ~wtb .... wc need to compete,
44 years. since43 peroentoftbe1tate'1 vo~rs went totbe polls in 19<44, the year he said. •
the cwrmt system of combinjn& presidential and state-office primaries was Bush wastbekcynotespe.akcratthe
introduced. I 9S8 HiJh TechnoloSY luncheon at
· lD Su Bernardino County, ''there was a problem with the delcptc the Irvine Hilton to honor the
prosram, .. Warren said ... In Tnn1ty County, they are counting punchcards by county's top l 00 hiah-tech busi-
bud. Jt wiJJ be a while before they can 10 100 pcrcenL They'll be done when nesses.
they're done. Jt should be some lime later today," she said. The vice president said he was .,
asked lo make a non-polit~h,
but the request WU obv' 11~ too
much &o ask on the day of' the
California primary.
The vice president and former head
"bf the CIA chided bis .Democratic
rivals for not promisina durina a
Tuesday momina preuoonference to
reject all tax increases.
Like the prcsjdent. Bush blamed
the Oemocratic~ntroUed Congress
for the nation's budeet deficit and
praised Oranse County representa-
tives Roben Badham, R-Ncwpon
Beach, and Robert Doman, R-Oar-
den Grove, few tl)'ina to hold.the line
apinst 1ovemment spendini.
At the same time, Bush called for
continuned aovemmern s:uppon of
hip-ticket defense items: the
Stratq.ic Defense Initiative, the MX
and Midaetman missle:s and nuclear
weapons tcstina.
.. In my j&ldsmentv.ie•ve Sot to have
a ~ident Who undentand.s that
we ve aot to keep the technoloskaJ edte. We can't have one who OppoteS
all modernization (of advanced mili-
tary systems)."
Lu.ncbeon ~Crail Crawford.
vice president of saJes for CR"Tech-
nolO&Y Inc. of Laauna Hills, liked the
idea of lowerina capital pjns tues
and Bush •s call for better education. a
messae sounded by Massadu1setts
Gov. 'Michael Oukakia and Jeae
Jackson u well.
Crawford said small and medfom-
sized companies like bis, which
desian and manufacture artificial
vision and electronic test 1y1tem1i.
would have a better chance of
attractina investors if the capital pjns
tax was reduced.
But for the most part, Crawford
said. "the speech sounded fairly
boiler plate ...
Meyers
narrow
school
Nominees seeking party uility
..
winner
Bush. Dukalds weighing running mate
choices after clinching nominations
BJ EV ANS WITI' ., .........
W ASHJNOTON -Tbe 1988
oresidcntial primaries are overL. but
Michael Oukakis and 0eofle Dush
are still campaianina. now teekina
perty unity at the summertime con-
ventions in Atlanta and New Orleans
and into the fall
.8otb nominees-to-be are reachina
out in the next few days to the men
they defeated in the 39 primaries,
scckina to heal ~nds and to avoid any new 1q1 And part of
that procaa will be their choice of
vice presidential runnina mates for
the ttnet&I election.
Bush joins four of his five former
Republican rivals for a .. Unity '88"
meetina in Denver Friday. the first of
several such mect1np to lay the
aroundwort for the GOP National
Convention in New Orleans Aus.
I $.;IS.
Oukakis. his ftnal pnmary vi~
toriel in hand, pt.hers the formal
beckina of some fonner Democratic
rivlls &oday. He will stop in St. Louis
on the -ay home from California to
receive the endorsement of Rep.
Riclwd Gephardt. while Sen. Paul
Simon of Illinois will add his support
in a statement.
.. 1 don't see any peat divisions
within our party," Oukakis said
before the votes were counted Tues-
day ... We're aoiAa to have ounelves a area• conve~~on."
For the MasUchusetts aovemor,
the first chalJenee is Jeue Jackson.
The pracher-tumcd-poUtician has
been Oukakis' most persistent oppo-
nent. banaina on to the end of the
primaries and promisina to continue
all the way to the Democratic Na-
tional Convention in Atlanta July
18-21.
"SufrJCe it to say, we're aoina to
keep·our campaian alive to July, al
the convention," Jackson said in Los
Anteles.
JIC.kson bas stepped up his preuure
on the Mauachusetu aovernor in the
clolina hours of the scaton -on tbe
vice presidency and on the issues. In
his stronaest statement yet. Jackson 1~1ed be bad eatfted at least an
ofter of the No. 2 spot oa the ticket.
.. If he were so win, cxtactins the
invitation to me ia his option,••
.
Jackson said of Ou1cakil. .. It is an
option my constit~ has ~ed."
Dukakis brushed aside such com-
ments, notina that JICbon has said
that it is up to the nominee to select a
runnina mate. And be also claimed to
be unconcerned about the pouibility
of fllhts at the convention on issues
Jackson thinks are importanL
.. Wemayhaveafloorfiahtortwo,"
Oukakis said. '1'bere may be some
issues that ao to u.e floor:·
But Jacbon wu conciliatory u
well after a meetina Monday niabt
with Dukakis.
..He's sensitive on thcae matters
and we're aoina to have some follow.
up mcctinp. necesaarily to discuss
matters of platform, credentials,
rules. the convention itself, and
beyond that. our stratcay for winnina
in November," Jackson said.
Jacbon aides said he would remain
in California for a week of rest,
resumina appearances next week.
And campeian mlDIFf' Gerald Aus-
tin bas talked of stralCI)' eesaions in
the middle of the month, with
Jacbon contin11I~ to campaian
tb.rouah the convention.
For his part. Oukak:is will cam-
=~matkably haid for the next aix
He eayi be Will apeOd dlree days on
the roed in aiCh t4 the comi .. six
weets; &ouchiftl bue In by 1t11e1 for
the fall The rest of the time he win·
spend in his Statehouse office in
Boston or in campai&n briefinp..
The Maaacbuetu aovemor will
travel this weekend to Utah to speak
to the U.S. Conference of Mayon.
His fint extended trip ia planned
for next week, with a~ tour of the
South. Stops in North Carolina.
T cxas, Geof'lia and Florida arc ten· = ICbedukd in the rqion j a •troolhokl for Bush in the
fall. •
Dukakis may run into Jacbon on
one of his stopS. when be visits the
Teua state convention June I a .
Later Dukakis wiU touch on econ-
omic themes on a tour of industrial
1tatc1 at the end of the montb.
The Denver unity meetiq is the
first of at least three s:ucti lelliofts
planned by tbe Republican National
Committee, which is pickina up the
bill. One is lcheduled later in June in
Cinannati and another early in July
in Atlanta.
Of Buah'• onetime rivals, only Pat
Robertson is not confirmed for the
Denver unity letlion Friday and
Saturday~
Republican otricWs said Sen. Bob
Dole of Kansas. Rep. Jack Kemp of
New York. b'mer Ddaware Gov.
Pete du Poat and former Secretary of
State Aleunder Hait have all qreed
to attend.
VotersbackRanclJo~co11akeplant
...
"::IW:' ... ~ ;a~ .. == oc;;;;,,, .......... r: .... er-.. '° .... .... ,.. Will lta ....... vot.ial
,.... l?HI •MN tweep
~" .. .._....... ~""'°' ~ 1a ao ..... ,..........,. :::I coa• ....... wida """ ""' ..... °"" dac ... twO moatbl C11M dowll to a• 11d IO •ead
blt&le ••-Duhlrit Md JaciboL 11le IDRllc ,....., for a eonveo-tioa ...,ty _ 2.0ll and Dutakil
wily =III d aMt with WI liad-llide ft . Hit delepte total after
Tueiday•a ·~ stOod 11 l,25I1 accordina to the latc11 AUOctlu:a
Praacount. . Confronted by Poll• say1n1 Dukaki1 was the current choice of a ~ty o( voten, Buih said. "I'm
ftaltlina beck. l'm the undetdot " -now.
· While DUkaki• could enter the nee
with an edfC in poll1 lhowinc Ameri· cus wanuna a ciw. after nearty eiah• yean of Ronald Jleapn•s ~
ciency. Bush could find~ ID the
Republican bOld on the eleetotal
v'*t ofSout.bem and Western 1tates.
The vke Draident WU meeUftS th it m~i'!i:: \Vaabinaton witb Reapn. · aid votcn were not
interested in .. slashina. attacb" and
be warned the Republicans not to Z .?n .. mudslinaina and name-
.. 1 "tn·t think you have to run a
neptive nasty campeip,0 said
Bush. ''What I think you liave to do tboUlh is be sure the American people
perceive what you re.all)' want (or this
country."
Party unity and the .earcb for
runnina matct were top priorities for
both Bush and Dukakis as tbeY
looked ahead to their petty conven-
tions -the Democrats in July, the
Republicans in Ausust -and
beyond. •
Bush wu ftyina to Denver Friday
to open a unity conference at which
three of his former nvals for the
nomination would appear -Sen.
Bob Dole of Kansas. Rep. Jack Kemp
of New York and televtsion evanael-
ist Pat Robertson.
Campqnina in Calif omia for t'M>
days before the primary, Bush
previewed his fall stratel)', repeatedly
porttayina the MassaChusctts aov-
emor u a liberal likely to advocate
tax lncrcatel.
"Michael Dukakis said be would
not rule 011t a tax increase," Bush
said. ··rn rule it out.··
For DukakiSt Jackson remained an
unpredictable raaure in an otberwite
smooth roed to petty unity. Com-
mandiftl the loyalty of b&act voters
who are a critical ,-ri of the Demoo
cntic Party's coehtioo, Jickson will
have more than l ,000 delqates at tho
Democratic National Convention ia
Atlanta. Dubtis predicted t.bae
would be "a floor fi&bt or two" over
platform issues. but none that would
split the J)arty.
Both Bush and Dubkis hit rOU1b
tpc?ts on their drives for the praideo-
Ual nominations of their parties.
On the ropes when the campaip
reached New · HamDlbire1 . Bush 1&.lled a comebeck ibat anatteml
Dole's hopes for a quick knockout.
Then on March a. Super Tuesday,
Bush swept 16 primanes and~
tivcty ended the Republican conte1t.
for Ouk.akia, .\he race ataned
accordina to plan with • credible
third.place finish ia Iowa and a atroftl
~ in New Hamjlbire. Victoria
in Texas and Florida on Super
Tuesday establisbcd bis cndetltiala u
more than a reaional candidate from
the Northeast, but he ,..ambled in
Ulinois and apjn in Micbilan.
However, DUkaki1 ihcn put
t~ the Itri .. of victoriel that
qWetcd lueb ~-Md put him u. commncs Of the race. In IM flftll eoaws. '>ebklt
debted JDIOn by IM!J!,8:.~* dml2tolh1New .New
MnkoadMOldUL ..... he c.Hlwnil ............... ia
Mlllde=•11s1llu..._., •• ..... • .......... tom ~°'=m"··· ... Dimtii--... • 6J ,._ ........... .u, .. c-.
Wlas IOQ~GIMCO tJ .... Md ~ ..... ,.,.,.
111"'91' -. ... un • .._ ~,t~ :i: =··u =r. .. ..,, W21JMII I .ua-n:t. ~Jt:' :':;?'JJ
Ml ..
I
pen ed, Gann limi
LOl~~-v-. ............... " ... ,... ................... , ... .
............ ~-::~-... -cam~· mce.Md-*k dMr .. , ..... "' quarut.i AIDS victims. o..aill love aflUr wi• ._
auto, Calibniant split almolle¥enly
Oft I SI billioe bOnd m llllft Jof ~ witb _.ty 100 II"-• caat Of the pr'!tincu ,.,,._ 8nd
more ltiaa S million VOlel ..wed.
State ek!Ction Olftcials tUd it WU IO
de. tbat on!Y the offtcial voee count,
IO be certified De1t moadl, IDIY
decide the matter.
Propotition 74, a SI billion bond
measure sponsored by Gov. Occqie
Deukmejian to f\and hipway COO·
-----~--....... = .. i•vetl.W......., ••••c• wnciilCll~dil .... llOod .. ~ ~· ~;13,IU. ao, a dt~ l,45i voeea.
VOlln in T~t lllctioa did
emllna bonds re,;~ ~pub, C':.ic IChool ~ lklme to veteraat and makina build-. afer in ear1hq&alkn. ~ alto approved pn)p()litioa
that require county a-..on ao be
elected Ind toUaheD MCOlld-deiree murder ~ties loruyone whOiills
a police officer Perf'onniftl official
duties; •
Proposition 73, which will limit
contributions in all state and local
races and prohibit public camp&ian
· Election returns
Preeldent .
'"" ,..ldlld9 ,.,.._.) Vote
DtiHeraUe
Michael Dukakis I, 778, 752
AJben Gore 53,289
Jesse Jackson l,0'°,U7
Lyndon L&Rouche 23,891
Paul Simon 63,314
a.,.lilleu
Geoqe BuSh 1,794.374
Robert Dole 280,S86
Pat Roberuoo 91,424 A-.rteM .... , •••••
James Griffin 8, 719
James Gritz 4, 723
Pwe ... Pru••• Lenora Fulani 1,968
AJHambura ~3
1.arry Holmes 1,012
Sbidey: llUCIOn l, 173
Willa Kenoyer 381
Herb Lewin 693
U.S. Senate
'""~' .......... DelMCnlk Leo McCarthy 2,306,S92
John Abbott 214,778
Robert Banuelos I S9, 768
Charle1 Greene 142,800
Pete Wilso~71:~QA 2.()4.4,701
Amerteu IMet••••I Merton Short 14,560
Pt9te ... PreM1m
Oloria Garcia 2.437
M. Munoi 3,48S
1Aer1arlu
Jack Dean 9,623
Propoeltlona
•"" pnellletl ,..,.,...._) PNf.M -C..tJUHI ... Yes 3,719,782
No 1.~l.S3l
Prep. 17 -Offlc!er ....
Yes 4,3S4,771
No 9S3,088 ......... -c..,.1p'z ·~ Yes t720
No -l,421,276
Pro,_ It -LaR.dle AJD8
Yes 1,694~709
No 3,610,3S7
Prep. 7t -ParU MM
Yes 3,431,lOS
No l ,131,335 Pnp.71-G .. ,..,.._
Yes 2.47S,206
No ~Sll,928 Prop. n-o.. ..,..
Yes ,984,288
No 3, 172,030
Pnp. 'JS -Cam,alp ~·at Yes 3, 9,~
No 2.209,602
p ..... ,. -JU&na7 ....
Yes 2.S63,t22
No 2.%4,SIO
....... 71-ScMel ...
Yes · 3,420,.ao
No 1,840,944
Prep. 71 -Vetera.11 ....
Yes 3,S02.S16
No 1,680,411
Prep. 11 -Qult ....
Yes 2,933,773
No 2,287,686
County Meuare-A
I
ftefltlleu Dana Rohratiechicr 11,947
Harriett Wieder IO, I 06
Steve Hom S,9S6
Andrew Li nlefair 2, 194
Tom Bluer 1,246
Jefl'rCyBums 1.2~
Oon.O.vis 1,208
Robert Welboum 1,111
Peaee ... Free~•m
Richard Rose 42
State Senate
UM~ ,.-edacU re,erttq>
S&tb Dlatrlct
Demecralk
Mike Balmqes 37,062
Sey ~ John mour (UK) 72,032
Peace w Pr11•om
Maxine Quirk I 00
S7th Dlat:rlct
Demecnde
, Pat Mt'Cabe 28,SSS ae,.blleu
Marian 8iJ:°~> 62,S6 7
J. Mark Suprs . 290
Auembly
(lM~ pndadartf*dac)
&8th Dlatrict
DelHCftlk
Andrew Kmcaid 9,439
"-. ~lieu 0 UQJfttS Bro..-n (inc) 16,S I
lAertartu
Scott Stier 117
Peaft aM Pree•om
Richard Green 27
89tb Dlatrtct
Demeerat&c
Marie Fennell
lte~Ueu Nolan Frizze le (inc)
19,649
38,067
70tla Dlatrlct
Dem1eralk Mi~ha.el Gallups a., .. ,k ..
Gil Ferauson (inc)
Evelyn Han
Mike Mana
Inine
22.601
39,694
22.002 4,167
( ... ~ ,...a.ea ,.,.,.abtc)
City COIUlcil
(elect two)
Pau.la Werner 11 . 732
Sally Ann Miller (inc) 10,849
c.amcron Coscr<>ve 10,634
Art Bloomer 8,218
Michael Shea 7,284 ...,.
Larry A&ran
Barry Kammond
Hal Maloney
IS,135
8,494
3,011
Jucllclal
""" ........ "' • r11111)
181Dbbliot ·~-"' Raer:r S.toa (inc:) ~I
Ron May ~uo
... DI hlut
Olddl V~ <•> 16.W Sun ,.,... ls. 710
lrnti1&,.. plmd. st Plftllllt eo
U-1,ll • .... ....... PrOIOlhiOll 61.""1•· •IO~ coitrtiitiOillimli oa 'etil'lliw 19CCt,. by '3 l*Ce• IO 47
''C Plopoeltion u -~ _, .• wider~ tbM ~
61. Prc)polition 1.r1 ~ will
l\lpci .. thole offl11111Mi• 61 iD
arat wlwre tbe ......,. conftict.
PrincipaUy, Pr~ 73't ban oa .
public financlnc of cam~• will
prevail ~v~r Pl'Opositioa 61'1 ftnanc-tftt prova~s.
Proposition 71, which would hive
ealCd the 11.ale sptnd.iftt limit IO inOft w money could be spent by IDV«n-
ment, was defeated by 49 petCet'.tt ao
SI oercent. •
~ ICbooh dUef' • "-'Md o&Wr su~rt u•uc1:11Nfulty uauect me niltinc Wait a. .--4•
roedbkd '° imPrcwim&. °' nn mahnainina, pUWic eduCMioll led
odtri' key IOVtnUllmt ~
Propolitioll 72, whidi wOulll Mvt
moditicd. tbe tPeftdinl limil to ,.
quirt eaJcs tu OD paolfne IO. epat
oa uansponetioe ~w. w
ttjccicd. 38 pmcot IO 6 wcaL
Anti-CU crUtader PaMI 0.• ud
other tuppon.n-s had i_.... 11.i it
wou&d provide needed ,...... b
transporutlon w1\Jlout Jt•rallr
diluttna the e•isti~ iocndias limit.
tst.ablished by Gann s r 979 initiative. ~ spendina ceilin& tin annual
expenditures to population powth
and cost oflivina.
/Dana Point cityhpod
overwhelmingly OK' d
BJ GREG UZUX
_.BOB VAN EYU!N
..... Dllllf .......
CouW residents said yes Tuesday
to the formation of Orinaie County's
28th aty, Jivina that distinction to·
Dana Point by mlflin of nearty 4 to I.
Final fi1ures showed 79.3 percent
of volers ch0011na citybOod for a
combined city of Dana Point.
CaplStrano Beach and coastal Lacuna
Niauel. Only 20. 7 percent voted
qafost cityhood.
Dana Point's successful Nn at
city"hood beon in the lale fall of 1916
when residents bepn c:irculauna
petjtions for incorporation.
Ear1ier in the year, there had been
rumblinp from nearby• t.aauna
Niguel that the two communities
ou&ht to combme and form a sinpe
city. But leaders of the buracon•na
citybood movement in Dana Point
did not take kindly to the idea of joint
incorpo,.tion, which lbcy Uld would
amount to a loa of identity for their
community.
A aroup of coast.al residents in-
troduced a plan to form a city of
bpina Nip.el weichina frOm the
s.ftt.a Ana &eeway to the COUL
~er. several months afttr
accepcance of the unjted l..apau
Ni&uel cityhood appljcation. a poup
calltna itself Coastal Tupayen for
Local Control bepn lobbyi~ to be
left out of the proposed city of Lquna
Niiuel.
Leaden of Coastal Tupeyers at
fint lraued tbt:y would prefer to form
their owq, exc:IUSIVe COlflal city
stre1Chin1 from Niauel shorn into
South lqu.na.
Then in the sprina of t 98 7, the city
of Lasuna Beach lfTeed to annes
South Laguna. leaVlnf the coastal
U,una Nicuel faction without enouab territory to ancorporale.
Ironically, Dana Potnt ended up
swallowina a piece of Lacuna Niauet
when residents of 13 coast.at com·
munities voted 6 t to 39 pen::cnt last
June to join with Dana PotnL
Dana Point also~ on the other
11de, when county offiaals persuaded
the Dana Point C1tybood commmee
in June, 1987 to ac:cept the unin-
' corporated community of Capistrano
Beach. -. ....
~doe 69, the AIDS illitiative
that WU defea&ed. 32 ~t IO 61
pet'CHlo Wit 'VirttaalJy idcntiall ID a 1916 lftti·AIDS .beUoc meuure ....
V«*n dd'cated by a marPD ol fDOfe
&ban two to oat.
Bllcbd bJ ~ of oc>Udca.I
c•trtmiat L)'QdoD l..aJtc>ucbe, the
measure would have i'eQu1red health
officials '° ,~ to the· lllle tbc
umes of~ ~th AIDS and thole
tatjna ~iu~e for e•posure to the
virus.
It would also have added 111Cquir'4 immune def.c:imcy syndrome ao the
state's liJt of communic:lble di~
Althouab Proposition 74 was
placed on the ballot by the Lqis.
latutt, its opponents i ncf uded K"ml
lawniakers -.ho said it dtparts &om
Stanton, Va~que~w i n __ ._Wf}sOn, McCarthy
~!!r~untylh~:~~1~!1~ Som prepai1ngf0r $24M
... Dllllf...... Poner, a retired cement contractor. ! .. down 4.·L "s :IJllej 'i'J ,,
Incumbents ROF Stanton and Vuq\.G passed the victory naa with Su 0 Wi LUi1 i iLI, •t Gaddi Vuquczeaslly won re-election 66.82S ballots f~r 64.9 penznt of the . 1 •
to the Oranac County Board of vole to Poncr s 3S.770, or 34.7 LOS ANGELES (AP)-Sen. Pele pen:cnt and Grttne Mtb S percent.
Supervisors. percent. Wilson and bis Democratic: McCarthy. fonnet ~r kn of IM.: StaMO" who ~pescnts Dlstnct I Vuquez. 33. was appointed to Uk .. -"-L Go Leo M-"--.. ... .. t .. • ·-ul>.·.:; ''-fonw ... board last ""'•r by Gov Georae C1~nacr. L v. '-''-AUmy, .,._ .. ~"'"' ..--. in Sant.a Ana and ~ntraJ Oranae .. J-• • vowed to wqe combetive c:ampaJ&DS mayor of San , coested ...,,,...
Countr. defeated a challente by Sant.a DeukrneJ~ ~fill the seat left vacant after the primary opened tbe way for uneventful races. sp?dina tbe bcalk t>f
Ana City Councilman Roo May by a by the res&p.ati~n C?f ~ Nes~. an cxpcns.iYe fall ibowdown. ~t their time ~ .,.
S8.7 to ~.8 pen:ent ~·Stanton Vasquez, a MiSSlOn V~JO rn.1dcnt, couldcostthec:andidatcs$24mdhon. The candidatcs ~ m some
bad 36,201 votn to Mays 2S I SO. was • Nestande. aide and .~IO bad With 84 percent of Califorrua's 'in·pnmary sk.irmit6es, but ti.,
St.anlon,SO,isaformerprofessorof once wo_rked fo~ Deukm~aa!1· ~ 23,S96 precincts reporuna early cam~swcreo~ersbadowedbydlit
business ma~ment at Cal St.ale bc?Undaries of hlS supervasoriaJ dis-today. McCan.by handily deb.led presidential race and suffered ftOtia
Lona Beach and was a fountain ~ stretch from the north county three politJcal unknowns for tbe tbc cudidatcs own bland publiC
Valley city councilman before his CllJCS of Fullenon and Yorbe uoda Democratte nomination for U.S. imqes.
electfon to the Board of Supcrvi90n alona the eastern county hne to the Senale b)'. cinchina 82 percent of the Wilton bas estimated he m111
in 1980. 10uthcountycommurut1esofEJToro vote. Walson. the frnhman 1ncum· spend betwttn $12 million and SIS
May, 48, teaches politicahcienc:c at and Mission V1e10. bent, was unopposed for the Re-miU1on to k.cep the teal. while
Sant.a Ana High School and by mid-St.uton and Vasquez win ad-publica.n nomination. McCanhy bas vowed to .. match him
May had raised only S3S,OOO for the dttional four-year tmru and re.JOtn The candidaies celebrated their dollar for dollar" in .spend1na i.a
campaian, compe~ to Sta.n&on's Tom Ri)ey, Harricn Wieder and Don victoties with jabs at each other, September and October. McCarthy
treasury of more than SJ00.000. Roth on the fi ve-member Board of t.akina ad van• off rec publtClty in a said his campeip hopes \0 raise· a
tn District 3. Vasquez turned beck Supervisors. race they predict wiU eo5t them a total tot.al ofS9 million.
ofS24 million. Despitt a lack of ierio'6
Judge Knox re-elected;
London will join b ench
BJ ROBERT HYNDMAN Muo.icipal Coun seat Bren London
... ..,....... netted S4.9 percent of the ... 'Ote to
~ L Klein's ..... 4 percent Superior Court Judie Robert A. London, 36. w111 fill tM teat
Knox breezed to rc<lection victory vacated by ~tmna Judae Kenneth
with 77.8 pen::cnt of tM vote over Smith. London has been 1 proscaa&or
cballenacr James E. W1lkosb, a in the Oraaae County District At· Newpon Beach attorney. • ffi -A fro Knox pmered 320.304 ballots. tomey so lCle since .,_.uauna m
Wilkoski _ who was unsuccessful Briabam Youna Univen1ty an 1979. . · London currently is assjped to the two ya~ • 1n has bid to unse1t oftk:e's writs and appeal SCC1ton J~ Willi.am 8 . McDonald -had wbeft he bandies appeals and pretna1 88~l. a former prosecutor, joined ~ on cnm1r_W cues. The
the Supmor Coun bench in 1982 and . Foun~n Valley resident also 11 an
served before that in the Municipal ~professor at ~ulhem Cab·
Court in Watmins1er. fomaa_C~ of~w 1n Brea.
The 60-year-okl Huntinaton Beach KJeiD bu filkd m as a part-tune
raideat his said his priority is to judet in West Oranee County M\1-
reduce the COW1 beck~ He .is nicipal Coun ~ 1981 and tcN&bt
atliaMd with three other Judies 1n election for a ~l-time "°'" ~ 4S. beam .. a thfte..ycar pilot propam to yar-olcl HWllllll\Oft 8eacb ~ot
eaDeditc trials in Superior Coun. a.bo his woft_ed u • referee •n the ID• l1ICI lot a West Oru,e Couaty county's juYCGlle COllt\. ..
.. rm not about to ~~ lhc challenaen that pve McCanhy .. 1
prnsure," W1hon tok1 about 3.000 bead st.an on the November race,
wpporttrs pthered at the GOP opinion polls showed tum losiqa
headquarters m Ora111C ... rm Pn& suppon 10 hts own party and sJipPi~
&o maintain a full coun press n&ht 19 perccnt.aac pomts behind W1laoft.
throucb &o November... A California Pon reported lut week
Wilson ICCU1Cd his liberal oppo-that Wl1soo hek1 1 50-31 ad even
nent of bcina soft on mmc. whale th~ the first-term tenator ha
McCartby continued his attacks on relatJYdy low name rec:ocnition.
an iocumbent be calls "the unknown sena&or Crom California... The widenina popularity pp may
•you must speak from your con-bt more disperale than the two
vic:tioa.1 to people." McCarthy said. candidates. who share reputations for
"You don't jump on winnina sides. honesty and moderate· to liberal
That's toina to be one of the main st.ands on sooal and envuonmenw
diflCrt'Dcu,.iadbctween myxlfand is.sues. •
Senatot W i lion... · fferences ) TUClday'a Democrattc pnmar) Despile sharp di on de-on~ ~nuscd to be 1 frec-for411. but fcnse and foreitn pohcy-Willon isa
bccameju.stafonna.lityforMcCarthy hawkish supporter of most Reapn
after 1 once Iona list of promiMnt administration pohc:1ea and
Democrau dropped out. McC&nhy a banh cnuc -tbc1r carfl
McCanhy was oppoted by John s.k1nn1shcs foeuted on their rccocdS
Hancock Abbon.. 1 Santf Clara on tM elderly and the envtronmcnt
political tcieecz tcac:bC'r and per· Wibon. S4. st)'let billlldf a .. com.
enDial caodidatc"; Robert J. Banudol. pa.s.sionale coftla'Vati~.. and llil
a communicatiom .........:.i:st &om carnpaip slolaft • .. IMki• • clif.! ....--. fcrence forCalifor'n' .. n Oranee; and CbartcS Greene. •ho
detcribet hitntelf 11 1 Lo& Anaekl Mc:Canhy. S7, of San F,.ncite:o.
County conunilliootr. an old·st)"le bbC:raJ who ru a wbiltk.>(
W1tb 19,741 prcdacu t.abula&ed. stop ~paapt.o· ~ ~-~ AbboUc:.nwilaa~tltCODdwith I.Dad tried t.o _..__HA ..--·w
I ~l. wi" WWeloe .-ith 6 commoa ~
Brown, 'Gangof5'.splltraces
...
Car-po01 lane's
cheaters merit
tougher penalty
The N11011 one milbt support car·pool lanes is a lo& like deciai~ Whether filhina b fun. It aon of de~nds on which
tide oflhe line you're on. •
Thole tftlide die double yelJoW are hoObd OD the Janes
abalallow CUI witb two or: more puacnsn to ,et from here to
IMre with a minimum of' delay.
8'at the outsidcn. thole solo motoritta on the outside ~ can't eet there from here, snerally believe the car-pool .llDC co~ smells like so mUcll week-old carp.
Their frustration at beina left out lftd left behind is
Udcntandablc. And that frustration 1e>rnetimes lelds them
to crou the line, which while undenaandable is also
~b~e. _ · .· .. If Jeaillation introduced by state Sen. Marian ~n.
R-Newpon Beach, is a~ved, the price ohuch impatience will increaee substantially.
Bcl'ICIOn 's bill, SB 2361, would raise the fine for first·
Mae violaton to between SIOO and SlSO. SeCond·time
.&nden would still face a $200 fine but a third-time ~would be liable for as much uaSSOO fine, d6uble
die cwrent penalty. Cri~ arsue the fines would be unjust and iwould stifle
lrtitimate protelt over the coacrovenial lanes. They contend 9:l solo motorists aren't committina a traflk violation as
• u thCY are protadna iDldeQuate uansponation policies that have resulted in daily traffic · s.
If civil dilobedience is the real mo~or. arid tt\at is
doubtful, increaina the fines may actually provide the proof.
After all, it is~ to~ when there are no consequences.
~ j>Urity of the protest win be proven by thote wiltina to risk s'°° to tenc1 • me 'Z to aovemment. la truth, the ICO ws who ftaWlt the law are actina out of
d-:intaat that can crease a terious buard. Hiaher traffic
fines misbt belp deter' them. Traffic IUety is die real issue.
TbOle who iporc the mandate of two persons per vehicle
allo are prone k> ianO{e the double yellow Jine that restricts
lane chanees. The impatient driver who risks a fine to go solo in the car-
pool lane is Also likel¥ to be too impatient to wait for the
brokri-lioed areas desi&nated for merging.
It doell'\'t take a traffic enaineer or a physicist to
undentand fhe co111Cquenccs of a car starting from a standing
stop tumina in front o!another traveling at 55 mph.
Furttier. ~ don'tacceptttienotion that breaking the law
is the correct mctbod &o cbaDIC an unacceptable law.
BeraaOn'sbill, whi1eadd~thenCed for compliance
ia traff.c law.*» addrCSles &be ban oC the problem. Her
ameftdecl •lation divide$ money. from fines collected in a
way that mi&bt actually help provide traffic flow -for all
mOtorillL 'Bl <>mile County Trmaspona&ion Commission re-
ceives h&lf of inc money colleCtcd in unincorporated areas
and one-third in cities. The county and the respective cities
receive the balance.
TUt could bC 1 healthy fund. Since the car-pool lanes
were opened on the Costa Mesa Freeway in 1986. the
California Hi&hway Patrol has issued about 14 citations per
day for a yeany 1vef11C of about 5,000.
And that's a Iona line, too.
J~m Wright
The concern voiced over Speaker Jim Wrighfs aJleced
breaches of House ethics rules is no mere tea Pot tempest, as he
would have us believe.
Thou&h some of bis conservative opponents have been
mutterina about this for some time, and would love to catch
him out, the dispute cannot be shruged off as a political
vendetta.
Any such characterization went out the window when
Commoo Cause, which has a solid reputation for probity and
often takes a liberal stance on public questions, called for an
ethics committee inquiry.
Wriaht's sour cla1m that Common Cause was a
''handmaiden .. for conservatives out to set him is not
credible.
Tbe speakerJhip is a powerful position. The person who
occupies it can do a lot for and apinst memben of the House.
But the ethics committee, if formally asked to investigate.
will have an overridinf responsibility to do so. And ifWri&ht
is blameless, an invest1ption rcachina this conclusion would
aerve rus interests as well as those of the House and the
electorate. ·
B,_.trld (Ga.) Ne"'
Drug abuse
Cocaine has lost is charm for affluent yuppies. That
means drua use is down, ri&ht? Wrona.
What used to be the recreational drua of the rich has
become a bi&)lly danacrous street dtua a1ted by u.e ~nemDloym poor. That's not paniculltty swdins news. but
at could have an effect few have contidered
More and more of the wealthy are realizint ~~ danttt of
cocaine and have stopped ui114 it as a .. pany«I~ ..
The tnetlllC that cocaine as danam>us and lddic:tive is
,ettina th~ k> the middle class. But. that •me~ ii
not makina ic to the inner city.
Althouah it miiht not be n visible as it once was. cocaine
... remains a bia swobtem. ~ritina it Oii' u 1 pique or the inner city pc>or will not make n ID 1way.
,.. (t»la.) ,,.,,,,
•
Govemo,-'snlp-llopoa state
tarplan was a major b111nder
For someone who bu speat bia
ldult lifetime in California politics,
Gov. Georte Deutmejian hai a remarkably poor sente of history, a
fact demonstrated by bit fti~llQP on
bis own tu plan.
He arrived OD the Sacramento
scene u a frahman Republican
assemblyman in January 1963,juat
when Democnt Edmund 0 ... Pat"
Brown Sr. was beainnina his teCOnd
term u aovemor. The au~uent
four yean turned into a pobtical
dill.lier that.set lhe a&qe for Brown's
overwhelmina defea1 at the hands of
Ronald Reqan in 1966.
Inner.Qty riots and the campus
rebellions apjnst the Vietnam War
would have made Brown's re-election
bid diff'JCUlt enoUP, bUt the De1n<>-
cratic tovensor compoueded his
problems by developiq a repulation
IS a weak decision m.Utt who too
ea&ily switched bUic positions OD crucial illues. -
DeUtmejian, wbO durinc bis four
years in the Aalembly became one of
Brown'• chief letislati ve hecklers,
should have reflected more on
Brown's political undoina before reveni!J himself Jut week on taxes.
There s nothina wrona in a poli-
tician cbanaina his mind if · he
becomes convinced that his oriainaJ
proposal was wrona; i~ it'•
commendable. ahowina boda '»'1'11t
and an open mind. But t.bit was
hardly what the aovemor did by
withdrawina a proposal that would
have boosted state tax collections by
$800 million u s-n of a plan to close
a ~ deficit of S2.3 billion. tns Deukmejian was auilty of poli . cowardice.
He did not admit error -far from
it. He was ancry that what be preferred to be c:alJed • "temporary
minimal adjustment" in tu rates was
beina delcribed by tbe news media as
• tu increue (which it cenainly WU.
altbou&h not a ~ ~ Rather
than -liave bimtdf tJ il of u
someone who raitcd tu.es, be a~
dicaled his role u the leader of state
aovemment and aid be is lea~ the
problem to tbe Lqis)ature to decide.
Some questions arile: Did Deu-
kmejian think his proposal Wll in the
best intcmts of the at.ate when he
made it? If be chanaed hia mind on
·that score, why didn't be •Y IO? ltbe
did not c~ his mind, wily doeln 't
bC persist in off'erina vmat be thiD6 it
the best solution despite tbe opposi-
tion the propol&l quic:kJy developed
&om the anti-90vemment elements
that dominate the Republican min-
ority caucus in the AmmbM Isn't
what 1eems in tbe intere111 otdle scate
more imponaat tban Deukmeiian'a
reputation IS aomeone Who always
aaya no to new tuel?
The answer to this last question is.
IS far U Deukmejian is concerned, I
flat no. That's a terrible indictment of
a 1ovcmor of California. It brands
Deukmejian 11 10meone wbo puts
what he thinks is politi<:al expediency
and a possible desire for national
office above the (>Ublic welfare.
It does sometJuna elte, tbouah. that
undercuts Deukm~ian both u toV· emor and u a pohtician. It expoees
him to contem('t -public ~tcntpt
on the part ofh11 Democntic oppo&i·
tioa, and private CO!\IC"'J't.'OD the s-n of bis fellow llepublicu of·
6ceholders-u a Political weaklina.
On considerabfy Jell dam.Una
evidence, Pat Brown band bimaelf
regrded u, in the words of Time
t.f.apzine. a "tower of Je11o·• in hit
political leadenhip. The term applies
even more today lo Oeorae -Deu-
knl_ejian.
The 90vernor .caved in on his
modest tax increaac ~l, not
bcc:aute the news media accurately
portrayed it for what it.~ but
became.of the opp()lition ofhil fellow
Republicans. Unable to brina himadf
to lead them to perform the un-
pleasant but neceuary wt of boolt·
tnl taxes U paJ1 of what it rieeckd to
keep at.ate and local aovemment
solvent, be accuted reporCen of
foolina OOP leaden into believina
bis propam wu aomethina other
than it WU. S~hmvmeRepu~icansus1ate
GOP Chairman Robert Naylor, As-1Cmbly Minority Leeder Pat Nolan,
and New RiPt leader H.1-Rieb· ardaon have caute to be insulted by
the tovernor"a allclltion -if they
weren't privately~ Tauabina at him
over the way in whiCh be tried to
escape the mponaibiJitics of leader-
ship.
One more question. the most
imponant of alf: ~did the tov-
ernor make auch a atuDid mistake?
Part of the answer is biCI advice. Hia
staff is Maker than it was durina his
fint term IS aovemor. Another is
Deukmejian 's teJf-im~ isolation.
As aovemor be renwns the political
loner he's ifways been1 reluctant to
brolden his circle of aaviten and to
l~n to other views, even from
within the OOP.
Still more of the answer 11eemed to
surface Sunday durinc an interview
with the aovemor on ABC TV'•
-rbis Week :.witb David Britt~ ... Durinl the J>l!)ll'Ul, Deukntejaan
seemed for tbc fiist time to be tryinc
to leave the door open to bit telection u ~ Bush's' vice-presidential runnana mate.
• The real answer is pr'Obe~y a little
complicated. Deutmejian ia realistic e~ to know thit·1U1 chances of
select.ion were never very aood. J f he were elected vice president, he wouJd
have to mip u aovemor and ~
the administratiOn o( tbe natJon'a laraest state in the hands of the
Democrats under the prnent lieuten-ant tovemor, Leo McCarthy.
· What Deukmejian more likely
hopes for is to achieve a pter
measure of national promanence simply by encowtairw specv.lation
about himtdf u a vice piesideatial
runruna mate. Should Bulb loee in
November (and be ttailt now in the polls~ Deukmejiu tben wou.ld be in a
eotitson to try to win the 1992
Republican White HOUie nomi-
natioe with couervative 1UPPOft.
Never mind that this ICC1Wio has
been made all the more unlikely by
bis demonstntion of Makneta The
via.ion of onaell u president can
bliDd most ooliticiam to 11emer
realities and die need for= ..,. ... . . ,_
uh nbt. .
Nelg~bors' trash prOvldes
a m~rror oa how they live
Laauna Laurel
vofe e~latned
To&Mldbor. AIOl•wboUw ia C>Ja811Couty and lnlwl ........ .., ~
1a1..a, ...,. "'* mioui tnmc eanemm aim,....... .lllDY ol our._.. ad heWa)'L
nt INiy -"ble """"*" to IOlviftt &ht eount1• current lrlflk
problena ii '° ldcb.-boch the danand aidi Ud Mtpply tide of the ~lion equation. W• must
aarwl ~ demand on transpor·
tation facilities by emplo~
mcuurft .... • alllt'nate IChedWel ud ride ~ Wit.It ~IOIU""1,WlftUll~tbe
c:apedty Of nilti11 roedl -ft'Cieo ways u Well as build new ona.
Durina my tenure oa the Board Of Supe~ I ha" cMmpioned both
transportation demand maueement stra~ and critically Deeded
circulation improvement1.
Funhennore, I remain iteedfaat in
m1-commitment to tolvinc the coun· ty a tranaponation problem• without
pueina the bill alona to the already o~ tupeyer. Therefore.
allow me thia opportunity to tet the
record atrapt, once and for aU, on
my vole in support of the ~na
Laurel ..,.eement with The Irvine Co.
This 1pttment provides the lut
major acament of ript Of way needed
to construct the SAn Joequin Hills
Corridor, which it iordy needed to
alleviate conaestion on the S.nta Ana
and san ~freeways. Under the
Laauna Laurel land Ute plan, more
than 70 percent of the total acreaee involved will be devoted to Opeft
spece and recreational Ulel. In ad-
dition, critical safety improvements
will be madC ORj treacherous L.aauna Canyon Roed to abete the camqc
now takina place on that hiahway.
Besides the lquna Laurel qree..
ment. J have supponed other apee-.
men ts which t<>tether ensure compie..
tion of more than 2'° lane miles of
critically needed new roads in IOUth
county and commit devclooen to fund more than $300 million in
transportation and public safety im-
provcmentL Thete aareements in•
corporate ·previously adopud land
use plans and an indude a deve~
ment phasina desisn which tinb
buildina to road completion mile-
stones. No new entitlements to build
home or office space wett panted.
These qreements provide a com-
prehensive pori mana,ement p&an
for 10utb county and the foundation
for a arowth manattment plan for the
entire county.
Oa April 27, when I joined two
other supervison in vottna for the
Lguna Laurel aarttmcnt.1 did so out
of conviction that the pu.blic facilities
obUlined from the private teetor
would best serve the needs of the
entire County. Today, desr·te con-
siderable pohtical fallout, remain
convinced that the qreement ,,.....
resents sound public policy. I 11and
by my vote.
HARRIETT M. WIEDER
Chairman of the Board
Supervit0r, Second District
Todli ia Wednetday, June 8, tbc
t 60th day or 19U. There are 206 days
left in the year.
Today's Hilbliabt in History,
Twenty yan aeo. on June 8, 1961,
a requiem Masi wu held at St.
Patridt'aCathedral forSea. Roben F.
Kennedy, slain by an llMllin June..S.
SCn. Edward M. KCIU'edy eulotized
his tirOther u ••a eood and decelit
man who saw wrona and tried to rilbt
it, saw auff'erina and tried to heafit.
saw war and tried to l10p it."
Roben Kennedy waa buried that
evenina at Artinaton National Ce.
etery, near the arave or another
brother, Pteiident John F. Kenftedy. on this date:
In A.O. 632, the prophet
Mohammed died.
In 184S, Andmrt Jack'°!', the
1evcnth president of the united
States. died in Nashville. Tenn.
In 186 I, Tenncaee leC*ted from the Union.
In 1869, Ch~ inventor lvea W.
McOlffey received a petent for a
vacuum cleaner.
. In 1176, author Oecqe Send died
Ill Nolaant., frllDCL
In 190' Praiclrnt Tbeodoft Rooeevelt ~ IOact 111 lnedia•
in lhe •~• 111 War.
la ltlS~-JelS..Wiltilm
,...... fl 't:_. .. z---owru.& :.~ ... illUlaotdltllis dr ., ..... ¢ 7 ,,,_
Co 0 Mfls1Jo•r
OSBAlowen Wright critic's aide
tmfcllmlts alsoworkedonbook
WASHINGTON (AP) -Millions
of workers would be expc>led '° smaller conc:etltraliou of IOllic
chemicals on the ~ under the fint wltola1lr rc\'ilioa o( federal OCJCupt-
tional health rcplation• aovem•na
thehazardi.
TM OccUpetional SafetY and
Health Admiftiltration 0n l'ueiday Pl'OOOliid cuui111 job expc>Mll'C limits
for 23ofl0Jlic cbelaic:all and brinsina
J61 OCberi under eovemment reiu-
latioa b' the fint Lame.
""This ii a 20.,ear tedlno&ap:al
leap IMt brinp lk counuy's tiuic
occumtional heallh replations up to datc,~-said OSHA Administrator and
Alliltant Labor Scc:retary John A.
Pendci .. UI.
WASHINGTON (AP) -One of that role. it would aot be ~
the most vocal cntics of Houte pl'OP!ia1C," ~ Mid ill a lele-Speaker Jim W~t·s ethics hu phorie interview TUelday.
acknowledeed tbal. like Wrialu., be Manbew CoetOlot~ a former aide
once had a coqreuional aide· work to Wriabt. said in intcrvicwl ·tllia
on a book publilbed under his name. Mdt that ~t ''° to 200 bow'I But Rep. Newt Oiftlrida, R-Oa., while on W · t's conpeuional scaff'
said Tuesday that the work bis aide ~.on speakds boOt. •
did on his book., ''Window of Oo-HCHlle reconh tbow that Coeeolot-
portunity, .. before 'ts publication In to mo WU paid Sl.071 from official
1984 was much diflerent from the ~naJ accounts to cover bis
work Wri&ht's aide did on the expeftlCI durina a 1914 trip'° Teus
SJ>Caker's book. .. Reflections of a wkn be ovmaw the final edit.i• of Public Man... the book;
Ginpicb, who asked the House Wriabt bas refused to conunent on
ethics commiuee last month to the mancr since Sunday, when he
investi1atc· Wri1ht'1 p_ersonal deteftded O>uolotto•s aaipment
financial dealinp. aid he t .. fairly duri~a tclephoae intttview with the Duarte has ,urgery, but cancer ~ern•lnal
Ofticiall esti maled mat the new ex~ ceilinp wiU reduce jot>-
rda1Cd fatalities due to cancer, respir-
atory ud cardio¥atcular admenta
and liver and kidney dileUel by'°° a year. Dlneues wiO fall by 55,000
annually, they ettima1ed.
confident.. he 11kod Frank Wu'lu"'1on POst.
~y. his administrative uai.,. Gilllrich's request for a HOU9e WASHINGTON (AP)-Salvadoran PresldentJoee Tuesday at Wahn Reed Anny Medical Center in which
tant an l 984, to review the manulCript ethics committee invntiption of Napoleon Duane will probably UftderlO chemolhenpy to doc10n ranoved a ~ of bit lloimda bVt left his
of bis book becaute ""be'11 fint class Wriebt came teveral weeks before tn::at the cancer that has sprald from his stom8Ch to his ditc1ted liver alone. •
writer." CoUo1ouo•uo1e in the production of liver, but 0uarte•1 personal physician saya the malia· .. Thal is pna to end the life o( Praidmt ~ ..
.. That is totally appropriate and to Wriabt't book became known pu~ naney is terminal. aid Or. BetUam1D blleriano, o...te•s ptnoul pbJt"
the a tent that (a aWr member) filled licty. -Duane, 62, underwent three boun of canc:ier su,.ery ician.
rr=~~~============;tJiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiL
Iran-Contra defense asks
f~~ IDOV~ and delay of trial
., ,... ....... Pnll
WASHING TON -Iran-Contra defeuse la~n araued today that the
trial of Oliver L North and three co-4efendants ahould be moved from
Wuhi..,._ became of massive pre-trial publicity and postponed until after
&be praideatial deotion. Richard W. Bc:ckler, lawyer for former National
Security Adviter John M. Poindexter, told a court bearinL "This is a very
political cue," in which .. the a-.renea in Wuhinaton, D.C., is pater than
any kale in thCcountr)'." U.S. District Judee Gert\ard A. Gesell did not rulo
on the mo~ but told Beckler be -as failina to dnw a diJtinction .. between awarenesa a med opinion,. on the part of people in WubiQ&ton. GaeH po~nted oua that cues With rnutive publicity bave been tried in Wllbiqtoe
befOre. includina I~ Watapte trial It M\icb he~ He usuml the
defeme that if the cue proceeds. ••There will be no political trial."
JMkken Ht ap omce to ftWaln PTL
FORT MIU.. S.C. -Jim and Tammy Bakker have let up otrrce a miJe
from PfL•s Heritqe USA headquarters and said they are 4iaina in to repin
control oftbe failiai TV ministry they built before his downfall in a 1ex scandal.
Tbe BakterJ returned to Fort Mill on Tuelday from Gatlinbu.r'J, Tenn. Bakker
towed bis new oflice in a thoppiftl center, 1ben went «Xt door-to visit the
Oflica of the Brina Bakker Back orpnization. BU.keraaid that he intends to set
the mini1uy tMICk and fiaht for Heritqc USA, PTL's Christian theme perk.
Bakker told about 60 lllj)pOC"tcrl ... Anyone wbo tries to take, AeaJ or take over Heritaec U~ can be sure that there will be lqal bettJes... ·
I U.S. , ... to Comply wlt.IJ n.1ier1e11 pact
A
Beautiful
OldtnatM Trot~rs•is famous T~--. forthcuuniqutwa)Of ..I~ blcndanalosttmcomfon.
beaut) and ~aluc. He~. suppk ~thcrs arc
hand~ n 10 pcrfcct1on whik dctp custuon
·• liners and OldtnaiM Trollt'~•cxctusavc.
Comfort Bouom pro" 1dc supcrt> day-Iona
comfon.
DlscoH'f Oldnuunc Trott~today
thc bcauuful wa) 10 be comfonabk_
WASHING TON -President Reapn siped leaillation Tuaday to make
U.S. lawt comJ?ly with a recent fbheries treaty aovernina tuna-rich waters of
the South PacifiC. aayina the PKt "will Id a tone of cooperation rather. thari
confroncat.ion." The treaty provides for U.S. filbermen to JMUClwe rcaiona1 ONLY $57.00 5457 NEWPORT CENTER OR.
licemes '° fitb for tuna in eome 10 million square miles of tbe South Pacific: Complete size and FASHION ISLAND Ocean ... It will aet to rest the filheries-rela1ed problems we have experienced 644-4223
atcmmina from our dift'erina judicial pc_ .oji•ii'tic>Qsiiiiiiconcerruiii&ii. Ill.bi~· ahl~yiim~icra~tory~£i~iiiiiiiiiwiiiiidtiihiiseiiliieciitiiioiiniiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiii5iiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ species or wna.," Ra11U Mid. n
. Mother goes
to churc'b to
avoid arrest
Lady Quby ~ Linsc;rie
20%
OFF
'FRENCH BRAS
by
2 weeks only
552 • $EXY (7399)
WOODBRIDGE VILLAGE CENTER
4614 Barranca Parkway. Irvine, CA 92714
A Statement of
Family Pride
A monogram
in karat gold
The Perteet Gift fOf Old OI GrMtu.te
A Sianet Rini
With Hand-cut Orest or Monolfam "
l
r
II offering
ection after
mayo~stabblng
JEJlUSALl!M (AP) -lneli Ahmed Y..U. of OUa City's Shifa
audaoritielotrend ~to Arab Hoepital said. The army confirmed olldlll ia tM ~ Well llak Huateia Jam•a Abu..Jllla!U died but
10dly after aa lnelM('POi•ted Arab aid said the circumatancc1 ud cauae mayor was llllllbed an dae '-". of death were not clear.
apparentJy by Palestinian nailitantt.. Tbe death would raiec the number
Tbe army lll8iJltaiMd a~ on of Arabi killed in tbe IP-month o&d
E liM and ..,.. .,.. le tbe Palestinian upriai"I '° 202. T'WO neilbbOri• town ol ltamdlb • it Israelis have abo dieCS in the unrest in continued to .arcb baaapectlia tbt lands lsrld ICiud in the 1967 Middle Tuetda~ saabbi• of HaMID Ta-.il. East war. 74T~l .!'f: = Co.ctiuon. said Israel radio reponed today that the army would prolCCUte an officer and a doctor at RamaJlah bolpital who two IOldiers for excessive ute offoru epoke on condition of anonymity. · ·1•·--Ramallah
'Tl..-J--lis ·-'""i-to .uw. _..._ ID Arura. • VI ..... near
• 111; ---... -r --... __., where two residents said they. were
Arab officials from qllittias under bwied under 1 pile of rocb last pressure from mili tant1.; b
The Israeli newspaper Muriv said mont ·
the military aovemment would siep Hanna Atruh. the elected Arab
up proSection for the Arab officials. mayor of the West Bank town ofBeit
but it did not specify what steps Sahour, said eiaht soldiers in two
would be taken. An army spokesman jeeps offered to protea him but he
refused comment. muted when they said he couldn't ao
A 19-~.okl man from the Gaza anywhere witbOut them.
8EllULEY <.AP> -== link between plllliddt~ ~
the Mate's McldiWnlllla ~ Wlf
and teVeral ·~ ol llirtla .... it DOl ltroftl ~ to,.,....,,.,,...,
lludy, acCorctilll to RlllfCWL
SdefttiltltlUClyiaa womea~
to malathion foUacJ ........ tion between IM peldcide ad tine.
typel 0( birth dektl -deft lip ad
palate, intestinal atJnaninalhlll and deformed limb$, said 0unc:an C. Thomu. a USC siatistician and chief
investiptor on the study.
·•certain reportable abnOrmaJitia
appear to be 1tlUkJy ueociated with
exposure, altiM>ulla the numbers af:.
fec1ed were ~nenJly to0 llDlll to
attain utistical s~" said Thomas. whO pritented bis findinaat
a meeU"I at the. state health depart·
ment offices.
The investiption, made public
Tuesday, looked ~ at the ~
histories of 1,933 women 1n the
IOlltblrnS..frwirolmy ...
aocmd to die p n•lcidl iD 1911 wl 1912. .... ..,._ofS..Clln
aadSUU...OCCMIDlillwere=
wida mlldaioa to ooatroa aa
tioa by tlae fNit fty, comlllOllly called -~y ........ -•-llaM11Uvell-7ll-ll we ue concerned," 1114 ~= $Mo• Swa, who llliiNd ill r: .ioiwt lhlCIY WdaOtate n.-;e--t Ol Health SerYx.; the i*"r ... f~ndatioe Reteucb In-
stitute, in ~i and use. Althoulb lnalaaaioe it approvid ,
by the U:S. Environmental · Protec-
tion AfFDCY for sprayina in populated area. its me tDuted muda debete
about health dl«u. kesearcben tncina bi.nil records
looked at whether womea Who had
mitc.aniaees or abnormal births had
received more exposure dwina the first three months of ~.ncy thin
women who pve butb to normal
babies. Swan said.
Strip rcrutee camp of Jebalya died ··1 also told them they are hurt.inf
ovemi&ht from wounds he suffered me more than they are.belpina me, Libyan leader Moe••1r Gadlaafl (left) areet. PLO eldef
when 6eaten by Israel solaien, Dr. he said. Ya.er Arafat at tbe A.tab Rmmlt meetbal ID Alllen:.
.c 0 · · Homeless study shows Arab leaders map support ior PL upr1s1ng one-third are children
ALGIERS. Alleria (AP) -·Anb 1be summit's open.in& session nothina more fractious for the Arab the leaders with an impuaioned ·
leaden bepn aecrct talks today 00 Tuesday ~ marked by the walk<>';Jt ~pie than their show of unity, .. he cndorse"!ent of the intefadeh •. w_hic~ Meaatda New~ of plenty we Californians have '~DI up their material, financial of the lranaan ~busador to.Al,eria said. ~e de~bcd ~s the ~~tans 'J ~,,.~~ crea1ed for ourselves. ..
and political sunnnrt for the six-and by emotional expresstons of "Are 1lv-v really united around the path to llberatton and d11J11ty. SACRAMENTO -More than . . .
th Id Palest.fr:~--· · · the suppon for the Palestinian uprisint intcfadehT' Peres asked in parlia-But despite a lenllhy meetina one-third. of the estimated 150,000 Tbe.Califom~~e~ Comm~nt-1:.· .o · n~ u.pnSJna•n from President O\adli Bendjedid of ment, using the Arabic word for Hussein had earlier with PLO Chair-homeleu people in California are II t)' Action.Association as an orpru~-
i-oc:cupied tcmtones. AJaieria and Kina Hussein o(Jordan. uprisina. .. Do ~ mean to say Iran man Vasser Arafat, his speech did not or younter. accordina toa new report tJon °f Pf!vate, '.'On-profit •!Kl P'tbhc
On the second day of their emera-The Iranian ambassador and other and Iraq are fi&hting a war over the contain a sin&Je reference to the warn.ins that the state is .. at risk of communi~y-action qeftClC$ that
ency summit mcetina on the .. in--diplomats based here Wtre invited to intefadeh and that in Lebanon all the Palntine Uberation Orpnization. losiqthousandsofcbildreotopover-serve low-a~ people ..
tefadeh." or uprisina, the 21 members the openina ocremony. factions are also flJhtioa over the Bendjedjd. on the other hand, said ty and despair... Moat alarm1na. ~ccordina to the
of the Arab Leque met in different In Jerusalem today, Israeli Foreisn intcfadeh? What lund of show is universal recosnition and acceptance C.Ontrary to popular imaaea of the repor1. ~ find1np that many
aroups behind closed doors. Nearly Minister Shimon Peres mocked the this?" of the PLO was .. ,he key to any bomelesl u Skid kow alcoboliaw the homclea du~n are also b~.
all were represented by tbeircltie& of Arab leaden for supponina the Hussein. who has been lukewarm settlement of thC Middle East prob-report. bued on a survey of abelten Fewerthaoone1ntbrceoft.hote1nthe
slate. Palestinian uprisina. .. There is in hissuppon for the PLO. astonished lem." thro~t the slate, fo~nd that 35 abelten had ~ to food Slaf!lps;ed·
percent of the shelter reatdenta were fewer than one in seven recelV
18 and under, with 13 percent under federal food suJ>t>lemt!'ts or free aae 6. school lunches -1mplyana. says !)le
Student revolt
cooled in China
BEUING (AP) -A itudent dem-
onstration for more dem~. praa
freedom and better treatment of
intellectuals failed to materialize
today after anned police oordooed off
Bciiina's central T'aanan.men Square.
Police rout angry crowds iri last
day of black strfke in S. Africa
•1be stereotype of the homeless as report. that many are not attenchns,
rootless men who chose this life or 11 school. •
mentally ill individuals. .. .is just not Diane Bonar, association's man-
supported by the facts,.. says the qer for nutrition prosrama. said the
report by the Califom.ia-:Nev141 survey, funded b)' the State pep.rt·
Community Action Assoaatton. ment of Economic Opportunity, was
"Not sincie the depresaion of the one of the first attempu to learn just
1930s have we seen children in such who California's homeless~
Doz.ens of students ptbeRd at the
1quare at mid4fterno0o, appuentJy
traveliDf fro~ Beijina UniVU'lity and
other ~ but were thwaned by
the heavy pobce p1aence nd did not
demonstrate as planned.
Police uickJ intervened after a
doz.en st~aes Tn: Beijina Univer-
sity pt.hmd lata at the neirby
Nat.iOnal MuteUm of Chinese Revof-
ution and comola.iocd their n,ht of
expression had been violated.
One penoo was seen beina taken
away by police, but the students said
be was not one of them. At dusk,
police were continuina to cordon off
the square.
JOHANNESBURG (AP) -More
than a million. black workers and
students stayed home today as a
nationwide .,eneral strike moved into
its third and final day. Police reported
~violence.
Ten people were kiUed durina the
strike, South Africa's lon,est and
biaest tcneral stnke.
'P"olice said they dispersed unruly
crowds with shotpns and tear ps.
Black labor unions and anti-
·~ poups staled the boycott to protat a twe>-year.old state of
cmeraency, more reoent restrictions
on their activities and proposed
lqjslation to restrict the riahts of
unions to strike.
The death toll from violence re-
ported by police since .the strike bepn
Monday rose to 10 with the shotaun
(EST. 1982)
B AD So Old .•. n.a Yet So New
Join Us For Our 1st Analversary
(Slace H• OwaerlMJ) nan., Jue ... ...., Jae 11 .... laa
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Daily Drawinp at 7p.m.
For DiDDen Cot Two 0rew.,.
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19" COLOR T.V.
145 E. 19th St. Cotta M .. (Behind M ... Theater)
(F011Derly •-n.. FWic")
PREGNANT?
Or Thinking About Having A Baby?
You aft invited to attend a
FREE MATERNITY TEA
sponsored by the Family Maternity Center
at Santa Ana ~ital Medical Center.
When: Wednliday, June 15, 10:00 a.m.
When: Faiilly ~ Cen11tr
S.... &\a f'loepitil M.dkal Ea.r
• _ -1901 N. Fairview Street -f< in the Empl(J)W Calmria
-You11 see what 5anta Ana Hospital
Medical Cente-can offer ~expectant .
parents in O.R services, LOR Rooms,
ditcx>unt programs, free physician refei 1als
and eduatioNl cla55e5.
V'asit us and you will see why
the Fm\ily Mallemity Center at
Santa AN Hospital is the beSt
(hob for you md the birth
~-=..-..-~-Of ftM beby.
death of a toddler and the machete
k:illina of a youna man.
Ovemiaht. a train engine and
frei&ht car were derailed near Joban-
nes&ura; buses, private trucks. police
vehicles, and homes were firebombed
and stoned in several townships in
Natal and Transvaal province, police
said.
The aovernment has said the
~test is illepl, and employers said
Tuesday that worken were retumina
to their jobs 1n many areas.
The CongJ'CU of South African
Trade Unions, the nation's taraest
black union sroup, said at least 2.S
million people bad honored the
boycotL
Independent analysts said those
fiaurcs were probably hiJh. But based
on the low numbers of l)USCngen
ridina buses and tlains from the black
townships to cities such as Johan-
nesbura. Durban and Port Elizabeth,
the absentee rate amona black
workers nationwide easily could ex-
ceed l.S million, they said.
lncludina the near-total boycott by
urban black students, the fl&Ure for
each day would have surpasted two
million, the estimated number of
people who stayed borne on June 16,
1986, dunna a protest apinst the
bcainnina of the national state of
emeraency.
That strike was the lonpt staged
over many different economic sec-
tori. Theco~ said it would consider
mcetina with the aovernment's man-
power chief to discuss the labor bill
that sparked the strike.
Riot police block march to N. Korea
SEOUL(AP)-Tbeaovemmentbepndeployina60,000riotpolicetoday
to stop radical students marchina to communist North Korea. In Seoul,
troopers firina tear ps broke up a rally.
National Police Headquarten said tens of thousands of riot police wouJd
block roads to the North Korean border to l)Rvcnt the march Friday. Riot
police bepn surroundina collep today in Seoul as security forces went on top
alert.
Riot police in sreen comt>.t fatisues and black. visored helmets fired
volleys of tear ps when several hundred students at Yonsei Univenity tried to
march into the street after a rally for the march.
bleak circumstll'lcai .. the report oon-The state's shelten are almost
tends. .. The potential loss of these completely full, inclicatina that more
children and their contributions is all than 90 percent of the bomdesa are
the more ttqic becau1e it is a denial hvina in camppounds, cars. homes
of the promise implicit in the society of friends or on the streets.
Countian smashes cars,
planes with grader, shot
CHINO (AP) - A berserk man
commandeered an earth IJ'Mier, ran
cars off roads. nearly rut . 1everal
people, then smashed into three
planes and a Cbino Airport hanpr
before authorities shot him to halt his
six-mile rampage.
Randy _ LaC.Omb, a 37-year.okl
Anaheim man who wu uptet by
marriaae problems. was in 1enous but
stable condition today at San
Bernardino County McdjcaJ Center,
where be was airlifted after beina shot
Tuesday, said hospital spokeswoman
Laura Greene.
At least five bullets struck
LaComb, who was booked for in-
vestiption of assault with a deadly
weapon, said Jim Bryant, spokesman
for the San Bemanlino County
Sheriffs DepartmenL
He said LaComb drove the pllder
six miles to tho airport. where he
badly damase<S three parked air.
planes, partially destroyed a ha~r
office buildina operated by Aiabt Craft -a business that l'dUcla planes
and aives flyina lessons -and
threatened to knock down the air-
port's to~.
.. At some points be actually
seemed to be havina fun." said
airport worker Darin Ford. .. People
in the banpn be puled said be WU
smilina and wavi.na. ••
The escapede bqan about 9:30
a.m. when laComb commandeered
an earth Jradcr &om a Chino Hills
COnstructJon site and roered down
Old Enalisb Ra.cl toward the airport
six miles away, Bryant said.
Snow, b•ll cover
northern atate
BJ TIM AIMda ... Pntil
VEN ETI A~ c;o'tDOLA. WEI>DINGS Atr SEA Another late«uon storm that ono
forecaster called "bewilderil:"-" bit
drouabt·&>laaued Nortbern California
Tl.ielday; cfumpina snow on t.be
Siem. bail on Fresno and eencratioa
a funnel cloud _. Cbico.
,.
,ROFESSIONAL PLANNfNG OLD WORt.D ROMANCE Ml.OAT
Gourmet baskeu w/c~ & roses.
ll'VINE COAST CHARTERS 675-4704 Aboard luxury Yacht. Al ~lets arr~.
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At least 10 bikers were reponed
miasina temporarily Ud tOCnC hl&b-
ways over the mountains were doled
or reatricicd.
The indcl'Alftt weather Qleftdcd a
P1ttem Of U~ a.id COD·
ditiont in Juae fol~ 1 wiDter of
below-DonMJ rmnu.
Attacking brain tumors with 'killer T-cells'
BJU:SRONIO
........ Oeeu 5 • I
·A new tra1ment for malianant
6tain tumors. now bcil'\I pionttttd
by phy~cians at Tustin's Healthcare
Medical Center and UCI, may at last
provide ho~ ror av.cstina • disnsc
chM now claims nearly I 00 percent of
it$ victims.
"Our 'new techntQtJC w alrcad)'
extended the life of our patients three
or four times over the current average
longevity (22 w~ks) for comparable
tumor suncrcrs. says Dr Yancey
Beamer, director of Healthcare
Centers recently established Brain
Tumor Institute._
(Beamer 1s part of an invest1gat1ve
team that includes Dr. Dean "Skip ..
Jacques of Pasadena's Huntington
Medical Research Institute and Ors.
Gale Granger. a professor of 1m-
munolog). and Sudhir Gupta.
professor o( med1c1ne. patho10$Y·
microbiology and molecular genetics
at UCI.)
The "adopttve 1mmuno1hcrapy"
treatment· he refers to involves the in~rt1on of billions of''k1llcr T ~lls ..
into the patient's tumor sue for the
purpose of fightina recurring mahg-
nancies.
The new approach onainally WtAS
discovered by Jac9ucs in 1983 and is
now beina administered expcnmcn-
tally and clinically as Pflrt of an FDA-
approvcd limited•'-LSe pr<>vam.
5.l)'S BHmcr ... Last ~r we bcun
appltcation or the technique on five
patients. establishm' that there was no to.-.icity tt'Sult1n1 from 1h1J
protocol. We've now entered the
5tt0nd phase. dur1na which we have
been gi\en the go-ahead to examine
the -0verall dTcctivcness of the
procedure.
"To do this. we will be able to
operate on several hundred patients
who have prev1ousl) undergone sur-
ge!') and who have cxpencnced some
recurrence of tumor growth ancr the
trad1t1onal X-ray or chemotherapy ...
Adopuvc 1mmunothcrap} uses the
patient's O"-n health)' white blood
cells to help kill the malignant
tumors. Because the 1mpa1red im-
mune S)Stem of a cancer paucnt
cannot manufacture cnou&h of these
T -cells to kill tumors. they arc now
grown 1n a culture in which normal
cell~ arc taken from the body and
mixed with a protein substance called
-·-----..J
Initial suracry 111 then prrform~.
durina \lrh1ch as much of the tumor 1s
~mov~ I\ possible. rtP.lac1na 11 with
1 m&$$1\ie d~ of the k1lkr cells.
A funhcr dose of lntcncuktn-2 is
also placed at the site to ward off 1
r«urrcnce of the ma11pancy. Fout
months later. a second sur)n)' is
J)'rformcd to remove any dead cdls
&issue and to dcpcnit mort IL·2 and
ncv.I)' de\ eloped T-cells. This sccond
ttll deposit should prove even mort
potent. according to Beamer. because
the onginal cancerous tlSSUC has been
used to seM1uzc the T ~Its so that
the)' no" .. go n&ht forthc tumor.")
Wuh the green hght ahen to
Hcalthcarc Medical Center to begin
the second phas.c of the 1m-
munotherap~ rc~arch this )Car
Bc:amer hJ' no" performed tv.o ne"
_ surgcCICS, "1th others scheduled in -----.J the near futurl· One recent rec1p1ent
o.r,... ...... .,w.~
Ray Van Au.edal la reco-.er-
lng from •uraery.
lntcrlcukcn-2 (I L-2 cau~s the cells to
grow and d1 ~1de and become ac-
tivated against tumor cells.)
of the tn:atml'nt 1\ Ra) Van l\usdal.
5). of El Toro. "ho "as operated on
\ololth the m'" tl·c hn1que about s1>.
\olot.'Cls ago
Van ~u-.dal v.as orig1nall)
diagnosed as !>uOcnng from a brain
tumor after ~'ere 1mpa1rment ofh1s
'1s1on alerted him to a problem last
September He undcrv.ent the tra-
d111onal oJ)l:rauon and X-rav ·treat-
mcn1 and v.as prtpanna for a new
Opt"ration early this year to remove
dead cancer tissue when his wife
Marci about HcaJthcare Center's
breaxthrouah.
rtcuperatt\C pl"()CCU ind that the
chaf\ltS that occur att subtle ones.~
he says.
Still, he xes some physical im-
provement sintt his las1 sursery. and
" ••• the optlmJ.m l• therefore macl.a l.a'61.aer,
aJJd tl.aat optlm.uai h• dellnltel7 •pread to ·
myownattltude. Inowl.aavea •holelotof
hope.''
"\\ uh surger) scheduled in JUSt
tv.o lo\C"Cks -he recalls nov. .. I
doubtld that Dr Beamer could fit me
into hi-. schedule so soon ... To hi-.
surpnSc hOl.\C\ er. and large!) as a
rl'sult of his meeting the Pha~ II
quahfilauon requirements. he v.;as
acttpted 1mmed1atel} and operated
upon a shon time later
Nol.\ rccoHnni at home. Van
.\usdal sllll expt"nenccs the "spao-
nl~s·· that has chara,tcnzed his
thinl.mf s1nlc the onginal appear-
ance o the tumor "Dr Beamer
explains that this 1s a \Cry slow
Ray Van Ausdal
a more pronounced p$)Chologkal
1mpro,cment as "<'II "After my
ori11nal operation." he concludes.
"the doctors "ere not vel') optimisuc.
smtt current t«hnuloay could not
rcall~ auaranttt that all of the tumor
IS ('VCr remO\cd. The use or lrnct•
kukcn is nev. hov.c\tt, and the
op11m1sm 1s therefore SJlUC'h htah~r.
and that op11m1sm has definitely
spread to my o-..n altitude. I nov.-
ha\ e a v.holc lot of hope.··
for more 1nforma11on on the Brain
Tumor Institute at Healthcare Medi-
cal Center ofTusttn. call 832-8020.
Recipe for good sex: Preheat slowly, season with fantasy
RECIPE FOR GOOD SEX
lmH
1 woqiu
1 piece of 1eD1DH1 llagtrit (to be
worn by llilt womu)
'i\ Clip of lpoDl.utlty
'it C1IP of my1ltry
% Clips lillmor
3 caps affttllon
1 t.ablespooa of 1ofl w~1ptn
1 teaspoon of t.alklng dirty
% caps knowlecl&t ud exptritnct
1 C11p of saltly
1 t.ablespooa clan1tr
Cltaa.1oft1lilttt1
1 boUlt wbae
1 Marvla Gayt or Dtf Leppard
record (deptadln1 OD taste)
.PlllCt' ingredients in any loat1on.
prehe•t slowly. Stir. blend. mix.
knead. and stroke as needed.
Season with fantasy
IJIDA
la.CAD
Top with whippttl cream. honey.
or chocolate sauCt' as desired
Store leflovers. as they keep '4e/I.
W11hout toppmg. less than 0
roloncs. No cholesterol, fat or
an1ficial fl•vors.
This r~1pc for good sex was
submmed for e'\lra credit in the
Human Scxualll) cou~ taught b)
famil) counSC'lor Kim CrawfOrd at
Orange Coast Collcie A more scnous
Sludenl wrote. ·for me. ·good ~x •
has to include passion. fun. mp«t.
and genuine love with clements of
sensuousness and fa11hfulncss muled
up wuh spontanl·1ty. humor and open
commun1ca11on •·
Another added that her defin1t1on
included .. watch1ni a panncr's ex-
pr~s1on and den\ ing pleasure from
his/her pleasure
You may guess that this class.
Soc1olog) 165 (also known as Human
Sl'xuaht)) 1s one of the most popular
thrtt-crcd11 clas~s on the Orange
Coast campus
.. ln111all). nef')one 1s embar-
rassed ... \a) s the )oung. prett) in-
structor. "because 'il'\ 1s 'illll <.on-
s1dered somewhat ot a taboo sub-
JCCt especial!) bl~ausc "e also talk
about its pleasures and not JUSl about
re prod ucuon."
Her students range from high
~·hool age to grcat-grandpartnts
··\\hat lhC\ ha'l' 1n common ..
Cra\,l,ford sa)S. "ts 1ha1 the) ha\e
come to learn about their bodies. their
sc~ual functions and abou1 their
d) sfunct1oni.
.. It comes as a great relief to
C\Cl')one to find out that their
concerns arc normal ··
For example. she s:l)S 111s comfon-
1ng to men to find out lhat almost all
males ha\e e\penenccd 1mpotcnc)
from time to ume.
-'nd most \\Omen art relieved to
disco' er that lad. of the SO<alled
.. ,a~1nal orgasm .. d~ not mean
d)sfunct1on -that ever) "-Oman
n~'ds clitoral st1mulat1on from one
means or another
If students complain about be10g
bored b) their sex hft. Crawford
encourages thcm to take personal
rcspons1b1ht} for more cre&ll\ 1ty
··Telling the other person to be
more 1maa1nat1\e emphasu~ that
11'\ your partner's respons1b1hty .and
11's noi .. she sa~ -OCC1dc v.hat 1t 1s
that \\Ould make the expenencc
tx·tter for YOU and do u Then 1t can
bl"l.ome ~our partner's tum to add a
kl.\ Tutuall~ pleasing ideas of his
ov. n
''This class should ha\C been called ·c ommun1catton and Human Scllu-
aht}: ··wrote another student
That·s probably bccautie each man
and \\Oman 1n the class has the
opponun1ty to comforubly com-
municate on a ~w level about a VCr)
Old 'iUbJC'Ct.
··1t's nice to be abk -finall~, -to
open up and talk about a SUDJ,ect I
admn 1 think about all the time. ·said
one woman.
Some of the old fears continue to
More disapproval of high-tech 'mirc:icles'
1
Thrtt weeks ago I discus~ the
ncg•n1vc aspects of high technology
used to ~vc markedly premature
infants. When infants "c1gh1ng be-
t"cen I and 2 pounds arc saved with
expensive inlcrvenuon. they usuall)
bt'rome a permanent financial and
emouonal drain on the family The)
arc almost alwa)S brain damaged.
and can almost ne,cr be expected to
func11on normall) 1n society. I ques-
tioned both the ethics and morahty of
this t> pc of technological 1ntcr-
~cntton into nature's mistakes..
I expected strong rebuttal from
physicians who use this technology.
Instead. the only letter I tttt1ved
from a doctor -..as supportive of m)
point of view I would like to share 1t
with you.
Dear Dr "'h11akcr·
Congrotulat1ons on an e:ctrcmcly
"di wnrtcn column in the Mind •nd
Bod> section of the Daily Pilot toda).
Ma) 18. 1988. It takes courage to
stand up for somcthmg that is as
contro"ers1al u keep1n1 the
premature babies alive at any cost.
I am an M. D. on staff at Childrens
Hosp1tDI Orange County and can
attest to the massive e,os of the
JULIAN
WHITAKER
ph)s1c1ans ~ho uS<' ev~I) tec-hnolog>
inctudm1 the IDt<'SI monster. the
ECMO (E~trocorporcal Membrane
0JC)~naterl to produC'C brain-dam-
aged. ph)s1call} disabled m/Bnts who
will fl'QUlrc mass1w fin•nc1a/ out/a}
for the rNt of their f1, es. In m.\
opinion. and mltn) other physicians·.
this he:lfl/lung machine (ECMOJ has
no place m mcd1cme.
I agf'f.Y that the Newswr-ek an1clt:
did a major disscrv1~ in not inter-
' 1cw1ng more p:m·nts of the hopeless-
/) retarded "'<'8Ctablcs that haH' bttn
produced by this .. amazin1 tt."C'h-
no/OI) ...
The hugr cost ~ould be much
b<"tter spent in prcvent1t1c m<>asurN
such as prenatal care. dru1 abu~
<"duc1111on. etc .• that would lead to less
prcmaturc infants who nct'd a "mir-
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NEWPORT BEACH ... 848-0944
Certified Oennatok)gllt In conjUnctk>n with
The Amertcan Aeadeloy of Dermatotoqy
~
acft"' to Inc
I hop<· )Our anidt•tan be-published
In ;JI/ ITIDJOr p;1pcrs in the (I s
Due to m.\ pos111on at CHOC I
mu:,t "11hhold nt\ name /Or fear of
pcrwnal n·pns.:JI. but man." of us :m:
S0/1d/} /x•hind .\OU
(Pleue eee DOCTOR/AlO)
You're Invited to a
Class in Criminal Law
Western State University has scheduled a free introductory class in criminal
law in south Orange County on Tuesday, June 14, 1988, beginning at 7:00 pm
This popular class is designed for those considering a law career. Seating is
limited and reservations are required.
For reservations and information, call an admissions counselor today at
WESTERN STATE
UNIVERSITY
College of Law .
(714) 738-1000
111 1 North State College Boulevard
Fullerton, CA 92631
FU.Uy ICO'fd!Md by 1.M ComauttN ol IW E.ununln ol IN 51.1~ Bat ot CaWomLll and It)' IN Wac.,, AINaatMJn ol ~and <:ouq.
One of the rarest and most
coveted of gemstones. Alex·
andrlte Is prized for Its
change from shades of green
in daylight to shades of red In
Incandescent light. After Its
discovery In the Ural Moun-
t a Ins of Russia. this
gemstone became a f avorlte
of Cur Alexander II for whom
lt was named. Russian fotk
tore reports that A-.Xandnte
was discovered on the day
the Cur came of age. Adding
to the popularity of this strik-
ing gem was the feet that red and green wete the colors of
the czartst army.
change of color from
brownish-green to oflye..red
and were pretty faint.
In the mid 1970 s.
Malacacheta. Brazil .
• • Alexandrite Is truty the
bk.19-blood of gemstones. the
rar .. t form of ctuysot>eryt.
Russian Alexandrltes are
Of'tY. found In old estate
~ today as the Pf'C>6 •
ductton from the origlnel
IOUtCe la Muelty ~ ._.For m.ny~ the finds
CHARLES H,, llAM
produced a very small find of
fine ~rites.. In 1987 In
the littJe ~of Hematlta In
the Br&tiHen state of Minas
Geraia, a fantutic new find of
IUperb AlexendriM WU dlS-
covered. TNI mw. hel belfl
doeed down f'90entty ~
mlltary IUJ)eMak>n end the
ownenhjp of the mm. ptcp-
erty 19 In dllpuM. Future pro--
ductton end the , .. lrvel at•
In the ground .. unknown.
We are f~ to haw a
ntoe -.ctton of tM early
production of tNee IMt Bra-
dl9n mlMa now In atodt.
With pemi, Mexandrtte II a
bitthatone tot June. a.ca. ...
of Its durebllty ... twdneat of
8.5 ... lt •a~ gm"Mtone for men wtM> ...,.. to be S*·
tk:ullriy intriqu9d .. the
~~~~tan. ... "°"' Sri Lanka. Brull Md Zlmb9tiwe and .,.
Clwec1•md by. poor
1lJ " •
persist Young men. foreumplc. sa)
the) f~r rtJect1on from ""omen. They
ha\e an idea of "'hat 1t would be ltle
to have a rtlat1onsh1p. but arc'fcarful
about the step$ the} ha~ to take to
ach1e' c that pl.
The students agrtt that it remain
more difficult to find 1 mcamnsf'ul
rtlat1onsh1p th.an to ronnttt scllu.ally
~•th some panncr
Older people (and e\ cryone else
v. ho plans to get older someday) learn
about max1mmng the JOYS of mature
sc~ualtt), Through lcam1na. other
m)1hs and fears are permanent!)
discarded.
You ma) be happ) to learn that
pronUSCUlt'.> IS ddin1tclyout. A dus ~I confirmed that ·monopm): ·as
1n· not so much for reasons of
moraht}. but because today it is
smart and safe." says Crawford.
"E\ef)one needs to be C'Onccrncd
(Pleue .. aBCIP'S/ AlO)
Deli do us
Dad's
Day
Gifts
Father's Day
June 19
"
r
nafore' lively
musical history
lesson at NTAe
,..... **Id be a few collele
Cl9dill ilavolved io attcndina_ .. HMS ........... at the Newport-Theater
Ant C.W. lelida tbt musicaJ -.. ,..,._en a c:ap1Uic bmoey leaton
• die compoeen; Oilbcn and Wivu.
la dae aomewhat-too-lent",; ,....._. various cbon&s mem
l• Trm
~le a wi~. mother or lover
OIOM Of the Other Of tbe .,.;r -and watchfW eye of her father (delicately
ev•Qileei Victoria. explainina why intef'Pre1Cd by Eric Hindley). There's • wftlaMld knishthood &Om Gil· an aae problem here, but ifs soned
b1rt. Followint the ~ormance. cast out. o/ at least rearranaecS. by the final -..ben detail tbe final days of the cunaJn.
c:ompoeen. · Ken Owens u the boetswa'in is the lltweco all this curriculum is a stronaest perl'ormer in the caat, whi'e Ii~ production ofthC ~ta from Dana McClary's Little Bunercvp is a
director Kent Johnson. who ts some-sweet-voiced aem in support. Robert
dtiftC of a GAS authority, haVlr\I James and Gordon Marhoefer alter·
pttVIOUsJy st;aacd ~ Mi~o" and nate an the role of the stuffy Sir Joseph
1everal venaons of "The Pirates of Porter the .. monarch of the sea" who
Ptmance." At ~t. it becomes mo~ thwarts the you"' lovm with his as the evenina wean o~.. pursuit of Josephine.
. _ b.u a.kuck b 9!P1C~ up The dastardly Dick Deadeye. a part
liis. m1;1~s with co~1c shh~k. added to roil the waters. is played »hach JSn t altoaether evident dunna with splendid comic menace by •ost of the lint act: By the ~nd. Robert Halverson. Mal'Jle Taylor
.Oweyer, the farce is 1n full flight. contributes a sterlina soprano as the ~"'',the porousness_ of the plot admiral's chnaina cousin.
1'bicbevidenllywasconsideredscan-The 10.member chorus is in rous-1~•1ous1y aatiricaJ a century 110. in& 'ood voice under the tutelaac of
Cass warfa~. a favonte taraet of musical director Tim Nelson, while
'tish ~~ywrights, is ~bout th~ only chorcovapher Kyaa Cobb has
embatJoined by the Pinafore 1n th11 fashioned some li&htly intricate ~ but liaht~iaht muaical. 'f1!e dance numbers for Johnson's ship-'llewpon production twall the ba11c board settinJ. ~tsofGilbertandSullivandom, .. HMS Pinafore .. wdl continue
mcluclin• a ~i&h soprano (peanna Thursdays through Saturdays at 8
f; larraza) who If rattJe,the fillinas out p.m. and Sundays at 2:30 until June
Of'J<>ur teeth on her !tiab notes. _ , 26 at the Ne~n Theater Arts ~ Barrua,uJosepb1ne, ~captain.a Center, 2SOI 01ff Drive, Newport
1 ~u&flter, and Dexter Ecb1vem as the Beach. Call 631-0288 for ticket 1nfor·
I D!wart awab Ralph Rack.straw (inex· mation.
Plicably referred to u "flafe" • • • •rOUlbout) conduct a high-toned If you love a mystery. you can sat
romance on the rocky shoals of class do.wn to. "a dinner you'll die for"
llarll• Taylor, OorcloD llarlloefer lD '"8118 Plaafore."
noatina restaurant tn Newpon Beach.
Dial "M" for Murder Mysteries of
Burbank as brinaina its aounnet
mayhem to Newport for four sched·
uled perfonnances, with professional
actors posina as dinner ~ests and
several "murders" occumna durina
the course oflhe even1na. Additional
mystery niahts are planned for June
24. July 9 and Aua. I 2, all stattinaat 7
p.m.
The audience is encourqed to help
track down the perpetrators, and
those who solve the crime correctly
are rewarded. Tickets are SSO and
S60. which includes dinner, tax,
aratuity and homicide. Call (8 18)
9S3-42S6 for 1nfonnat1on or reser-
vations. • • • CALLBOARD -PlaywriJht-<lirec·
tor Kent Johnson is bnnaina back his
hit musical "The White Arrow" for
another run at the Newport Theater
Arts Center, and hat announced
auditions for Monda)' at 7 p.m,at the
theater, 2SOI Oiff Drive,· Newport
Beach .... all roles are open in the
Robin Hood musical. which will
open July 29 .... call 631-0288 for
additional infonnation.
The Irvine Community Theater
will hold tryouts for Wilham tnae•a
Pulitzer Prize·winnina play .. Picnic"
June 20at 7:30p.m. in the auditorium
of Turtle Rock Community Park, on
Sunnyhill Ro.cl at Turtle Rock Drive,
lrvine ... .a cast of four men and seven
women is required for the drama,
which opens A~ S, and further
information is available at 8S7-S496.
Readinas for Joseph Heller's
"Catch 22" will be held June 20 at 7
p.m. in the Newport Beach Center of
Couthne Community Colleae. 3101
Pacific View Drive, Corona del
Mar .... a lar&t male cast. alons with
seven females, is needed by director
Robert Conrad. and more infor·
mation may be obeainect l>y caJJina
7S9-S-404. • Cistim:tions. attemptin1 to avoid the Fnday night at the Reuben E. L«
···~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~---:-~.
~ tylactiag
In ~KS concert
OD dae tremeDdous commerdaJ. ---~-~-~-~~
' ol dleir ..... "· "'Kick. .. A:., INXS is DOW •llint out
la,.,:! venues like the Forum and PKiftc Ampbidtcatre, w~ they
'-dined Satufdly nisht.
And even dw>ulb their 90-minute
set Of'hip ~. bottom·heavy hits ~ lhi adori crowd oa its feet &Om start to ftnfS.. the li1·man poup
rarely 11t1yed ft-om a nanow and
uaimlliutive path. hi dtawi~~vily from the multi·
Dlatinum ''Kick.'' INXS locked into a
limited. ~na pece that
worked better for 10me IOftP than
othef'i. The ca&chy vibrations found
in .. New Sensation" and .. Need You
Toniaht" fit snuaJy into the danct•
Ooor JfOOVCS. But more meaninaful
1elec11on1 like .. Tiny DeDen" and
"Gun• In The Sky" werel>uried by auffoc:atinaly over-mixed bus lines
that nepted all melody and feelina.
Much of the disinterest that sur·
faced in concen 1temmed from the
similar soundina e_anem• and
rhythms of each sona. By not varyina
the Poundina temPo, the music came danaerously close to the vapid tunes
played ad nauaeum at Newport
Beach's familiar dance •Pots.
At one Point early on, the bind
wisely attempted to slow the pace for
an acoustic duel of l 98S's lovely
.. Shine Like It Does." But the
execution failed the effort as lead
sinaer Michael Hutchence mumbled
through the lyrics while muJu-in·
strumentalist Kirk Penailly
strummed a tinny-soundina suitar.
It was siJJ'ificant to note that the
band's earlier material -particularly
the inter-racial themes of .. OnJinal
Sin" and the 1hif\in• dynamics of "Don't Chante" and .TSoul Mistake ..
-was far more cnpaina than the
simply structured mono-rhythms
that permeate "Kick."
For INXS. movina up tQ arena·
sized venues also means incorporat-
ina some of the cliches as well. Smoke
Jou
1111
machines and strobe liahts were •n
unncceuary distraction, and why,
M,._ Hutcbence. does every new '
heartthrob have to occasionally .,.ab
bis crotch?
But for the mOll part, the slinky .u
symbol kept the macho excesses to a
minimum. Shif\ina from a 1wager-
in1 bravado to a more whi~
sensuality -lake durina .. Devil
Inside.. -Hutchence created an
appealina mllnure of hot and cool
moods and emotions.
Wbic;h is exactly what this concert
needed more of.
One of regae's most durable and ~ bands opened the show
with 4S minutes of pulaatm& poly~
rttythms and smooth vocal har·
monizina. Showcasina bot new ma-
terial from their MCA debut release,
"State of Emeracncr:· Steel Pulse blended a lopina back-beat, swirlina
keyboard washes, and Politically
characd lyrics to form an oriainal
style that would make the late Bob
Marley proud.
DOCTOR .••
FromA9
Sincerely yours.
A Concoemcd M.D.
This letter demonstrates how an· timidatcd ptrysicians can be when it
comes to expressinJ a nepuvc
opinion about the rapidly expanding
use oftcchnoloay. Perhaps some solutions to this
would be: :. .. ................................................. .. I. More panic1pat1on of the parents
in the dec1S1ons rcg.ardana the care of
these very premature infants. These
dcc1s1on1 are ethical and moral de-
cisions. NOT medical decisions. and
should not be left solely to physic11ns.
:· •• • :: .. • .... fl •• :· :·. ••• ••• •!• •••
TUUl .. AT ., ..... KM'lllll
1AUA .. (N)I•
~TANI> I DEJVU"" (N)
IWIHO
"COLOtta" (ltl ~ .aTlllMU s1s.1•1ttt
-tf 'ftMrTDl'TIMY•" ~ ,.... lt'tS
"WO" (N) , .. ...s
sn••·i•ts
... T .. LAST IMNAOlt" 1t (!'011) IUl "''* ,. tJI
-ti ... ITLINtCI" (f'O)
... llWTCll 111 tOl IUS
.. WUOW"(N)
1t •• IUCI llGllT S1Ul0 12 ll >•s Jl.1-.11 IS
"TMI _,-AL ftMS" , .. , .
11ll1 •lll SJI 7 )l.t.Jt
:~cnWAOOATSI"
'c:l. ••>•·, , .....
"fUllMY f AMI" (N )
CllYYaml 11.Jt.IM~IMltlta
"'WO"(f'O)
tlll-S llM.llltll
•CROCODLI DUNDEE r (N) NO f'AllU
ti:ae --.11:11
"CROCOOLE DUNDll •" (N)NO,AIMI
SM-t:Ot-•1s
TUlll WIO Af
IT ... D
'CAOCOOIU DUNOEE 11··
(f'O) NO f'Allll
1U•t·4M OCM t .... tO:U
"THE MET AL YtARI"
'"' u n 1IS4 IS. IS I IS It n
"Will.OW" Cf'OI
Wat lUll ll111J1~•1•1••
"•tO" Cf'OI
10. ... s II IS I ISJll HU• lta~
"Cot.Otts" l"I -ti .,..,."•u llJUllSIS7~1tl~
"RAM90 ••• (RI sn•sm st•lOll llOl llt.• ••-s .......
TUHI ' 1t .._ITLINICE" (N)
llDWl IUTCll , ... ,.._1tu
1t "HIGH SE.AIOW' , .. , •im•mmi s s 11st•
"FUNNY fAMI" CN)
CllYY CIMSl 1)1.1., IUS
1'G"(N)
t .. IMU
H~IOlltU
~UM TO INOWY RfYP" * (N)7 tS "ITAMD I DIUVP" (NIS •st U
"AAMeO Hf" ("I
STUOftl SUllOll •IH»IHS
TUHIWIOAT
ITAMIDICMIMS
'"WILLOW" CNI
•MH ...
11001•s11 1•1••
1ALL ITillUr C"ll lt ~ .. '"'
* "MOONITRUCK ..
(l'G) 111t J ....
"CROCOOILE DUNDEE Ir' (f'O) NO f'AIMI
11 ·tl-UO·UW._..1s..-.
.. CROCOOtLI DUNOSI •" (N) NO f'Ulll
11 tJ.t!J0-1:-..:0IM:tl-• ..
"RAMao JM'' ("I S'tUCSfOSlll~
II n 1.ft·4 IH Jt US IUS
'AMtl Y •AAGAIN MGKT8
S2.00 TUEl/WIDITHURI
AT IT....0 ICMI ...
"CAOCOOl.I DUNDll 1"
(NI MO f'Allll
•:tH:Ji.'lt'At
"Wl.&.OW"(N) ........ , .. ,.
K" (N)
'tl ••"WALL
ITMn" ("15 .. It ..
"ntl LAIT l .. ROR" -ti (NU) mt Pit-••••
DA
TWSIW•AT ., ... o ICtlffQ
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•'CAOCOOtU DUNOll r
(f'Q) NO f'AHH
~:00-10!11
"RAMeO Mt" C"I
SlUO ftl SI Al.l Oii SOI 7 l~tlt 11.JI
"FUNNY 'ARM" (f'O) aur CHASl
USHlll ...
"CROCOOIU DUMDEI It"
(f'Q) NO ,AINI
l:tM:JO.-...
,_. ..... .,
IT.-Dacaa ...
'fr "THE METAL YEAAI" , .. ,
11a1J1.JltS)l.7 JetJI
!'GOOD llOfMIQ YllTIWr '"' ~US-Ill IUS ..... OXJ UH" (NU)llW·HS US
"ftAMeO ..... , .. ,
mwim SIM.LOii
111Ha .. 4HOltlS 11 IS
•<CROCODtLE DUNOll If"
(N) NO f'Allll
1t:11-1•>.u-tACM1:11-tO:JO
'"CROCOOfU DUNDIE ft"
(N) NO f'Allll
tt:tl-t:#-l~tl-10'..JO
-rusaawteat
IT"""'D ICM.IM
* "WALL STREET"
(") Ut It IS
'MOONSTMICK" (f'O)l 21
"'UNNY PARM" (f'OI a.n tltASl
1•us
"THE LAIT EMPEROR" * (Nt3) •SJ PICIW 711 1001
"COLORI" C"I ... ,MAlt
SJt7UIOOO
.. RAMllO tll" '"' SllWSfU SfMlOlll
61Sl.Jt 110
... ETLl.IUICR'" (f'OI * llC*lllUH* .........
RECIPE FOR SEX •••
l'romA9
with the spread of AIDS and other
sexually transmitted diseases."
The AIDS scare has resulted in
mo~ people bccomina bom·ap1n
celibates-at least untif they connect
with a s1anificant partner with whom
they choose to be monoaamous.
Many potential new lovers qrce to
submit to an AIDS test before
prepared to have &Jlll\..lnc}-qfe sex
within a comnmtcd idatloflsb~nd
arc bettC'I' able to ~ice aood
commun1cat1on 'kills. '
Crawford's students apparently
learn a lot from their teacher, the rest
of uscan learn a lot from them.
'4
comm1tt1n1 to until·f~nher-notice Dr. AJ1ulll Ht1UtM6•-' family
monopmy. .... lffnp&I 'Lt'l'C.,.,. l'ltd Mu. Sh
By the ume they leave her eta~ 'llelcomayowra,,_...11,.."'u
Crawford boas&.s, $tudents ~ • ~ ..... tee,._,. more ready to tllce aibility fotr di/·~-~ •
thcarscxuality(whjcht yhlvecome z.w. Alpll, Pa.D.i ~l• J..,..9 -"r,11119''• to rccoanize as a life-Iona project). are P.O.,,_ JUI, c..ca--. _ __,,,
LAKEWOOD carTU ~
m1111.-WTJ1tMHMA--
CIGCC.1-1"' ............ , ...
LA•ADA ~us.&; ,,.,. ... ............... aac-. .... 1 ... ..............
WI ____ ~ I --..-.. ---··----IMI~.:"... 1.._w:t='..:'ii.-
~MlMYfoe ---· IAUA,.. .......
...., ... , ....
~ .... ,.. ... ............. ------·-·••a•• a.. ...... __ ,... .. ........ .....
,.. ...... .... ~ .......
--w ... , ......
MLMN ..,...
IUEIAPAll@
VIL. -ft-1Mlll'Mm •Ill ---. ... ............
~ ... ---· l
•
2. Some sort of IC&Jslauve protec·
tion of physicians who harbor dif-ferent views about the rapidly ex-
pand1 ng use of technoloay. The
"Concerned M. o:· who wrote this
letter has lCJttimate concerns about
reprisals against him for his "nq,auvc
views.'' It 11 tame for the lay public to start
playi na an active role 1n the process of
tcchnoloay 1nnovat1on and its use.
The time when we can be "safely" in
awe of dOC'\Ors I\ over.
Jrd'-' IGJUtA'er, M.D., .. ..,. of
"Rev.,.. Hurt Dl•HM" aJl!I "~
vHlllJi Dlakta" (Wann lJHU), u
'1reci.r of T.H wtJUtker Wel1"1•
lalUI•~ la Newpol'I Bud.
RUFFELt•s
UPHOLSTERY INC.
... , ..... c... .....
Jill -lllt .. CISTA •SA-S4J.ll51
PAI.A. HOGAN ~ l(OZl.ONSKI
~ .. _
Dutmalll ...... ~ ·-.,____._ ---------.. ,.,. ..... ·--·---·----------·--===-·~~~-·:::.c:::.-... -·---·==i.. :-..::: ---"" ., "" --=== ---·-...... :r.: -=----==--·· ·--=::.-:: ---..._ 1.::rmrl
•
" J
A SPECIAL ADVERTISING SUPPLEMENT TO THE ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT
NEWPOKf CENTER
FASHION ISLAND •
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 8, 1988
I
Discover the Island is a special publication.of the
Orange Coast Dail> Pilot and ~ewPort Center /Fashion
hlancJ. The contents are copynghred br the Orange
Coast Pu blishing Co .. 110 W. Ba} St .. Cosca Mesa
92626. All nglus reserved. ">
(over phoco provided by K1ere. The girls
model mg are from left. Monee Corso, Catherine
Williams. El anbech Wahler and Natalie Clark sming.
Pamcia A. Long. S~nal eu1on Ed itor
Edicurial/layouc
Rex Babin . ( reacive en·1ces
Co\ tr Jesign
SERVICES
Sir Speedy:
efficienc y
with qualit y
Q ffering evef}1hing from
(-4': graphic design co offset print·
mg and binder} , Sir Speedy in
f'.;ewpDrt Beach caters co businesses
and md1v1duals who want a qua lier
produce and efficient service.
"Our serv1Ce and quality make
us ver} compecicive,"Javad • Shahmardi, owner of the Sir
Speedy, said. Our services include
two-color pnntmg, photocop~mg.
typesemng, paste-up, graphic de-
sign and a free delivery and pick-up
servlCe, he said.
Top brands
hit courts at
Ski & Sports
( ( I would say it could bt called
cht Nordstrom of the Sp<>rt·
ing industry," Adele Doran, buyer
for Ski & Sp<>rts Inc., said. She was
referring co che store that offers
quality top name sporting goods to
aaive lifestyles.
Ski & Sports ac Fashion Island is
a spcctalt)' sporting goods store
offering such merchandise as snow
and water skiing equipment and
cl()(hing; athleuc foocwear and
cloches; beachwear; tennis wear;
C)cling equipmenc and cl()(hes; and
ocher products such as snorkels,
masks, boogie boards, sunglasses
and much more.
Doran said the store carries
"brands people want" and they
alwa)S check che quality of a
produce before bringing it co their
Shahmardi was previously in che
impDrt/exporc business buc de-
cided co find a different cype of
business co gee involved in. "Every-
day brings something new,"
Shahmardi said. "lc's not a boring
JOb because each job 1s different. ..
Su Speedy. located at 1303
Avocado Ave .. Suite 18~ in New-
Port Beach, is open from 8:30 a.m.
co 5:30 p.m. Monday through
F nda}. and closed weekends.
"Product boftdgt and CUS·
tomtr arwcM)la and senice is
something rhal w us ipllt also,"
Mike Morley, managtr, llid. He
exJ>taintcl thlc emplOJttS are
educated on the merchandile and
attend workshops on proc1ucts to
make chem more knowledpble.
Another extra bOnus for cus-
tomers looking to purclwt tennis
or racquetball racquets is a program
where p<>cential Duyers may take a
demonstration raquct of the type
they are interested in and practice
with it a few days co get tht 'feel'. If
they want, they may try snieral
before choosing the one that fits
chem the best. The customer then
comes in, chooses a new raquet and
has ic professionally strung on the
premises.
Located at Fashion Island since
1980, Ski & SpDrtS will soon be
moving co a new location within the
mall. The new location will be next
Fashion Island
expands space,
gets new look
C onscruction is under way on
che firnl phase of che reno-
. vat ion of Newport Center Fashion
Islatld regional shopping center,
and cop priority is being given to
shopper convenience during the
~~~~~~~~~~~.~~~¢~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~u~omingmonths~c~ruct~n •
. ~ •a according to Robert Domin,
F11•1t111 ,.,
T 1441tt• t• J11111re
* Fashion Island gentral maMger.
The $30 million final phase of
the Fashion Island expansionpro-
gram will include the addition of
70,<rosquare feet of retail space, or
to Buffums and will offer shoppers
a view of the bay from its windows.
Citing produa quality and
service Doran said, "We are experts
in our field, and give personalized
service for people co have fun with
our produces."
There are five Ska & Sports
appr9ximacely 40 new scores. An
outdoor food court and an informal
performance plaza will also be
conscruaed.
"We're very pleased to be under
way with the final ph~se of
construaion and are looking for·
ward co these exciting additions co
the shopping and entertainment
ope ions available at Newport
Ctncer Fashion Island," Domin
said. "During the renovation, we'll
be relocacin~ severil stores away
from the corl'struaion area for
shopper convenience. In addition,
we' re surrounding the construaion
area with safety barricades, so it'll
i>e Business as usual here."
Scores that are relocating to
accommodate the conscruction in·
• • • A night on the town
stores in the Southern California
area, including che one located at
Fashion Island in Newp<>rt Beach.
Hours for the store are Monday
through Friday lOa.m. to9p.m.;
Saturday 10 a.m. co 6 p.m.; and
Sunday noon co 5 p.m. For more
information, call (714)644-2121.
elude: Ski & Sp<>rcs Inc., Karl's
Toys and Russo's Pees moving to
che Bullocks Wilshire wing;
Apropos and Laise Adzer relocac ·
mg co Atrium Court; and Red
Balloon moving to its new l~tion
next co Sacinder's Hallmark.
The renovation of existing
Fashion Island buildings and the
conscruaion of the parking deck
will be completed in November.
The food court, informal per-
formance plaza and movie cheaters
will open in the spring of l~.
Architea for the renovation is
Jon Jerde Partnersh ip Inc. of Los
Angeles. BayleyConscruaion Co.
of Seattle is serving as general
contractor.
, .......... -'
J t •• ..,.,. C..tw "· (7t4) 760-t400
Shop~rs and visitors tnjoytd tht r«tnr "Disco~'tr ind ~vtrages wtrt Strvtd and Dtrtk & Tht
rht Island" ctltbracion whtrt complimentary food Diamonds playtd music.
GntWfaW•CWMas
Ml N• ...... celller Drl•e. ,......_ ..... Newpert a.ee'll • M~NJO
, ...... )WI
IOOOW.V~IW. .. S.. , .... ("JUI) -.e131
' •
\
Amici look
adds flash, style
to your closet
Wamto~ some flash and
variecytoyourdOM<? Sa:91>ar
Amici in fashioo Island and le!
SCcve Pmy, ~er.gi" you the
"right look" for yow individual
styit. .
"We are always loOking for i'
something new and diffmnc,"
Perry said. And customers looking
for the same will find it at Amici.
Carrying gentleman's fashions, tC·
Ce5SOCies and the Boss cologne line,
the store provides a variety of
quality designs from Mondo;
Radius; Gomca ofltaly; Escob of
Spain and ocher trendy clothes
styles.
"We want a person to feel
comfortable in the cloches chat
gives them a different look," Perry
said. Promocing a relaxed environ·
ment to pur cuscomers ac ease is not
hard with the friendly salespeople
and personalized service. "We
appreciate the cuuomer, they are
the ones that make the difference,"
he said.
Although Amici opened its
Fashion Island score jusc last year,
its score-in Las Vegas recendy
celebrated its five-year anniversary.
.. Many of our local customers
know our store from Las Vegas,"
Perry said. Plans are currently under
Ki ere' sf ashion-f orward clothes
geared to young girl's tastes
M oms, have you bttn looking
for thaupccial pbce to shop
for your daughter? Well look no
farther, Kiere in Fashion Island
' area for young girls. "I was a happy
way to Qptn anOthcr store in
Sconsdale, Arizona, he said.
If you' re in the market to add
quality and divcrsiry to your
wardrobe take a look at Amici, and
be sure to scop in for the 'LaSt
Saturday of enc Monell' sale. Store
hours are from lOa.m. to9p.m.
Monday rhrough Friday; lOa.m. to
6 p.m. Saturday; and noon to 5 p.m
on Sundays, although "I won't
close che store ro anyone_," Perry
said.
sign is geared to make che young
shoppers feel fashion-oriented with
illuminated multi-bnghc ligncs,
chrome and whice walls and neon
rubes throughout ·
offers quality fashion.forward
., cloches for tod~y· s young girls.
housew ife and mother who found it
ridiculous that so few stores sold
special occasion or fashion-forward
clothing for young women. Whar
scaned out as an idea for a small
score has become a major
enterprise," Wahler said.
·· Krere is a service-oriented
store. Sales personnel will offer
courtesies ncx found in ocher
stores," Wahler said. Setting the
store apart are modeling classes for
young girls and a complimtnrary
nail painting class is scheduled ro
sran soon. "In June we will be
having a fashion show for our
second modeling graduating class,"
she said. The show will be held at
"Kiere'sclicntclc iuspecial .
young 11dy;· VJl&F Wahler, co.
owner of tht store, said. "She has
outgrown the little girl's depart·
ment at most stores but hasn't
matured enough to fttl com-
fortable in women's clothing. Up
until now, this little lady has felt a
bit left out, but no longer," she said.
KierC'is owned by the
mother/diughtertcam of Wahler
and Jeannie V ollaire who decided
that the market was missing a major
Scocking merchandise for in·
fancs, four co 6x sizes, seven to 14
and preteen/juniors, Kiere has a
market for all young girls. Brands
such as Surf Fetish, Oxygen, Noize,
Fribbles and Marsha make sure
teenagers nlainrain current fashion
trends and styles. Accessories and
gift items are an important part of
Kiere' s business also.
Even Kiere'scontemporary de-
T oocsie' s Sidewalk Cafe in Fashion
Island from 4co5p.m.June12 .
Kiere is open Monday through
Friday from lOa.m. to9p.m.;
Saturday 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.; and
Sunday noon co 5 p.m. To get the
lastcsr in fashion ideas for young
girls, call (7 14) 7(:J.).1400.
S~·~g ~P9R~S
We've been
temporarily
·relocated
while pur new
store is under
construction •
Come and visit us at
the east parking lot
entrance to Atrium Court.
6-44-2121
1H!ATllUMCAJE: M
fllhioo Island ( Aaium Coan,
Lowr l.eWI~ 7~1lOO.8 a.m.-10
p.m. daily. Souf6, llndwiches,
deslau.
BOB BURNS RES-
T AURANT: 37 Fashion Island,
644-2030.11 a.m.-lOp.m.,Mon .•
Thurs.;till 11 p.m. Fri and Sat.; till
9:30 p.m. Sun. Champagne brunch.
11 a.m.·3 p.m. Sun. American and
Continental cuistnt. ·
BOGIE'S PLACE: 87 Fashion
Island, 640-03W. 11 a.m.-6 p.m.,
daily; till 9 p.fu. Thurs. and Fri.; till 5
p.m., Sun. Soups, salads, Sari"d·
wiches and P2sta.
CAFE m: 11~ Newport
unter Dr.,~ 5752. 7 a.m .. 7p.m.
Monday through Saturday; 11
a.m .. 5p.m. Sunday. Specialty sand·
wiches, soups, salads, cappucino.
COCO'S: 78 Fashion Island,
644·1571.6:30a.m .. ll p.m.daily.
American culSine.
EL ROBERTO: 43 Fashioo
Island,640-H37.10a.m.-Op.m.,
daily. Mexican cuisme, ice cream.
AFTH A VEN UE FRANKS: 24
Fasnion Island (Atrium Court,
Lower Level). 760-1100. 8a.m..10
p.m. daily. New York style frank·
funers.
FRANCISCAN
ROOM/BUFFUMS: 1 Fashion
ls!Jnd,644-2200.11 a.m.·3 p.m ..
Mon., Wed., and Sar.~ rill 6 p.m.,
Thurs; till 7 p.m. Fri.; closed Sun.
American cuisine.
GOOD EARTH RES-
TA URANT: 210 Newport unccr
Drive,640-2411. 7a.m.-10p.m.,Sun.
through Thurs.; cill 11 p.m., Fri. and
S.. Nariilal fOod; American
cuisile.
IL FOlllNAIOBAKERY: M
fuliion Island (Atrium Cou.rt.
Lowtr: Lnel). 640-4279. 8 a.m.-10
~y. ltalian pasca dishtu11d
LA SALSA: 24 Fashion Island
(Atrium Court, Lowtr ~l).
~289. Sa.m.-10 p.m. daily.
Mexican cuisine.
LIOOBUF-
FET/ROBINSON'S: 2 Fashion
lsbnd, 644-21m. 11 t.m.4 p.m.,
Mon. through Sat.; closed Sun.
Soups. saads, hoc and cold sand:
wichcs, toswias.
MANDARITTECHINESE
CAFE: 24 Fashion Island (Atrium
Court, Lower Lcvel).640-5394.8 ·
a.m.-lOp.m. daily. Chinestcuistnt.
MAX G0URMANDISE: 24
Fashion Island (Atrium Coun.
Lower Lcvel).640-8124. 9a.m.-9
p.m. daily. Fresh fruit carts, pastries,
candies.
MULDOON'S IRJSH PUB:
202 Newport Center Drive.
640-41lO. ll.30 a.m.·10p.m. Mon.
through Fri.; ~:30-10 p.m., Sar.; 9:30
a.m.-3 p.m .. Sun. Brunch. Pub hours
till 2 a.m., Mon. chrough Fri.; 4:30
p.m.·2 a.m. Sar.; 9:30a.m. to 2 a.~
Sun. 3· 10 p.m.
NEWPORT STUFFD ROLL:
107 Fashion Island. 640-)752. 9
a.m.-0 p.m. Mon.. Wed. and Sat.; 9
a.m.-9 p.m., Thurs. and Fri.; 11
un. ·) p.m., Sun. New York style
submarines and other sandwiches;
sabds.
NICOLE'S/MAR.
RI OTT HOTEL:~ Ntwpott
Ctnter Drivt.644-0~.6-lOp.m .
daily; 9:30-2 p.m., Sun. brunch.
Continental cuisine.
SAVANAH NfW.
~on..l9e••.Lunch,
~M~diantr
,:30-lO:JOHLts.day brunch
10:~3:30;clilnefA:30-10:30. Rf.
p;.i Calif oroia cuisipe (San Fran-
cisco style~
P A.RADISE CAFE: 600-0 Ntw·
port Ctnter Drive. 6#-1237. Lunch
11 a.m.·3 pm., Mon. through Fri.;
dinner ~:~10 p.m. Mon. through
Sat.; closed Sun. American cuisine.
PETITE CAFE: 550-B Newport
Center Drive (basement, Bink of
Americt bldg.). 700-9192. Brtalcfast
7a.m.·ll a.m.;lunch 1La.m.·3pE.,
Mon. through Fri. Cosed Sat. and ! ·
Sun. Soups, salads, sandwiches, I
plus two hex enuecs daily.
THE PIE BAKERY: 24 fashion
Island (Amum Court, Lower Ltvel).
760-1100. 8 a.m.-lOp.m. daily. frtSh i
baked pies daily. I
THE RITZ:~ Newport I
Center Dnve. 720-1800. Lunch 11:30
a.m.· 3 p.m., Mon. through Sat; I
dinner 5:30-midnight, Mon. i
through Sat.; closed Sun. Conrinen-f
cal cu is inc.
THE SALAD BAR: 24 Fashion
Wand (Atrium Court, Lowtr Ltvel). f
760-1100.Sa.m.-lOp.m. daily. Forty
linear f ttt of salad makings,
including fres h vtgetables. fruit.
shellfish and condiments.
THE SWEET LIFE BAKERY:
61 Fashion Island. 640-8211. 9:30
a.m.-8 p.m., Mon. through Wed.~ '
till 9 p.m., Thun. and Fri.; till 6 p.m.J
Sar.; 11a.m.·5 p.m. Sun. Sand-,
wichcs, quiche, cookies, croissan •
cheesecake, French bread.
ZODIAC ROOM/NEIMAN·
MARCUS: 49 Fashion Island.
7~1~.11 a.ra.4 p.m .. Mon.
(Pleue ... DIRDO{N)
We invite you
to visit our very special
clothing and shoe
departments.
119 Fashion Island• Newport Beach• Bullocks Wilshire Wing• 759-1622
PROMISE •AD ANYTlllNG
BIJT GIVE BIM 'l'HE WORLD
The Donavan & Seaman's
Globe Paperweight is 100%
lead crystal, hard etebed,
siped and certified. Perfect
as a decorative piece or u a
paperweiaht for home or
office.
THIS YEAR DOUN'T DAD
DIBRVE nlB WOltLD?
...
..
Iflcole eoiido.n, left and LI.a Ifea.l bate •tm-1 raJaia cootie. at TIJe Sweet Llle.
making sure people get the best spend·a lot for lunch or snacks," she
product for the money. "Wt have said. And if you show up for lunch
affordable prices so that people you will find a crowd, but don't
who are working can come and not worry, there art 11 employees on
and Kirksey prides herself on
serving h~r baked goods fresh.
====================:;mi handtom~surtyoudon'thavea
Kirksey opened the Fashion
Island store in 1~2 and a year later
opened another in Palm Destrt. All
the recipes are her own and, as she
said, "I baked and baked and baked
OREA! GIFT IDF..A.5
fOR FATHERS U\Y,
JUNE 19rn
Polo for"Man.
Loundrmrd cot.ton
twi \\ wmdbrv.cku,
•79.~.
Cott.oo CJllWACZCk
ewiust4r, •e1. '!)O.
9bortt eluw button·
down mad1'8e &h1rt, te5.00.
81uc. chombTey pent&,
•~.oo .
Polofbr~ ...
Chambray &!lift,
1!7.00 .
St-n?,Zd cot-t.on oxfonl
clotheh1rt.,•!i6 '50. Pletir.d. ahor't 1 t ~4t.OO.
long wait. The lunch special, a
sandwich, potatOt salad and three
small cookies for less than $4 is a
meal that can't be beat.
Other services include special
packaging for holidays or special
occasions, and batches for parties
or meetings. "But we don't mail our
products," Kirksey said. The
recipes do noc use any preservatives
• and until I found what I liked, and it
1 passed my taste test." After finding
the right recipe, she had to adapt it
to large quantities. "Wt can make
20 dozen large cooki~s or 50 dozen
small cookies," she said.
For special orders or more
information, call (714)640-821 l.
-~--Sir
Speedy®
PrW1tlng Center
WE MAKE YOU LOOK GOOD.
.,
'
• Quality • Courtesy • Service
• Graphic Design
• Offset Printing
• P.M.S. Color Ink
• Typesetting
• High Speed Copying
• Bindery Service
640-4210
1303 AYOCado Ave .. Suite IBS, Newpon Beach, CA 92660
Free Pick-Up and Delivery
Gifts for Dads and Grads
Cookies, freshly baked
and packaged in gift boxes
for any special occasion.
PABHJON JIJ.A)fD
666 ........ 0lr. Dr.
( ................... ) ... u
ollilt.. .. ... ..... , ....... o tes an , .... ...,.°' .. .,.
.. ease f eelil18-' ::.=:r-=.en::~;:.
Bringing in name inromr
llOle, at.ate promotes I
~~comakcthe
liM>pper feel.at home. Aacf COCD•
fonible you will be .. you IUOll
chrough the sectM>n known as Al's
Gange with casual spomwar or
through the main area of the store
with a wide variety of fashion
merchandise.
"We pridt ourself on the
completeness of the shopping
experience you can have at at.case,"
}0t Vasco,managcr,said. The store
carries everything from suits, shirts,
shoes, slacks and just abOOt any and
all accessorics,induding unique
gift ideas such as Battcrsea Boxes,
handpainted enamel boxes from
England.
With designs appealing to
everyone from students to pro-
fessionals to retired persons, at-ease
offers quality merchandise with
varied pricing. "We spend a lot of
time researching the market to
bring the best value to the
customer," Vasco said. And that is
apparent a~you walk through the
store and discover the quality and
variety of cloches available.
ay to maba decision on which ptir
will provide it-• ~look.
Speeiila.omer .mce is
evident UJOll-.lk in the door and
are greeted bf uiyol me tnenl
sal~ "Thtrltioof cus-
tomers to~ is great in our
store, we usually ~ve a one-on.one
situation," V asco said. A tailoring
room is on the JftD1ises and Offtri
alterations on purchases, or some·
one who rips their pants may want
to Stop by and tilt at-nse tailor will
sew ir up and send you back to work
in good shape.
Those are noc the only special
services offered to at-nse cus·
comers. ''We will iron a customers
shirt when they purchase it so that
he is able to wear it now or that
evening,"Vascosaid. They also
take orders over the phone and havt
been known to deliver an item so
the customer can have it to wear
that evening. "We do just about
anything to make the customer
happy," he said.
Hours for the Fashion Island
score arc Monday through Friday 10
a.m.to9p.m.;Saturdayt0a.m.to6
p.m.; and Sunday noon to~ p.m. To
contact at-ease, call (714)644. ~70.
P.O.S.f:'I is in style . ,
Port Qir, Sl11b<»td Homt, 0t P.O.SH iJ • pmnitr mtn'.s clcthitr
curring ro riJirw 0t Uf'F ~ ,,.,,.,,,, mcutitttS. Tht ltOtt is
loartd •t '61 Ntwpotr ~Dr. in /Wion illlnJ .
r
l
1
..........
through Sat.; closed Sun. California
nouvelle cuisine.
EL TORrTOGRILL:~lNcw.
p<>rt Center Drive. 640-28n. Lunch
Mon.-Sun. 11 a.m.4 p.m.; dinner
4.10 p.m. Sun.Thurs., Fri. and Sat.
till 11 p.m.; happy hour Mon-Fri.
4-7 p.m.; cantina 11 a.m.·1 a.m.
daily. Original Southwest mesquite
grilled cuisine. •
PAVILION, FOUR SEASONS
HOTEL: (:l1J Newport Center
Drive. n9-~, 760-4920. Break-
fast Mon-Fri. 6:30-10 a.m., Sat. and
Sun. 7-10:30a.m.; lunch Mon-Fri.
l 1:30a.m.-2 p.m.; dinner nightly
6-10:30, reservations suggested.
American cuisine with a California
flair.
CABANA CAFE, FOUR
SEASONS HOTEL: (JX) Newpon
Center Drive. 759-~. Breakfast
Contacts help
patients wit.h
nearsightedness
Almost 50 percent of Ameri-
cans are suffering from some
degree of nearsightedness, Dr.
Donald Harris, Newport Beach
opcometrist said. Harris is also the
public relations chairman for the
lmernational Onhokeratology As-
sociauon.
Orthokeratology, a medital
procedure of correcting
nearsightedness by a non-surgical
remolding of the shape of the
cornea through the use of thera-
peutic concaa lenses, has proven
successful with several of Harris'
patients." Because of this, there
have been significant advances in
hard lenSts to make dl(m easier to
wear; Harris said.
Hard lenses are now crafted in
various materials including silicon.
acrylate for gas permeability.
Previous hard lenses would noc
allow oxygen to the eye and had a
limited wearing time. New versions
are comfortable enough to wear up
to one month, without taking them
out, like the extended-wear version
of soft lenses, Harris said.
"If you have tried unsuccessful.
ly to wear hard lenses in the past,
you '11 be able to wear them now,"
Harris said. "If they feel uncom-
fortable, it's probably because of an
lnaCCUltte fitting ...
With computenzed map-outs of
corneal shape, optometrists can
control the parameters of curvacure
and edge contour. Srace-of-che-art
equipment allows them to modify
the lenses while the patienc is
waiting.
Because of the rigid lenses'
tendency to at lease stabilize vision,
Harris recommends its use if
p<>ssible. Bue for individuals with
extreme allergies or those who are
prone to a dry eye condition, soft
lenses may be the only alternative,
he said.
For more information, or co
make an app<>intment, call (714)
6404040. The office is located in
Pacific Pim at 1303 Avocado, Suite
100, Newp<>rt Beach.
' ( J
Sat-Sun.6:30-10:30a.m.;
lunch/dinner Fri. and Sit.
10:30-9:30p.m., Sun.-Thun. to 7:30
p.m. Lighter cuisine with a Cali-
fornia flair.
CONSERVATORY
LOUNGE, FOUR SEASONS
HOTEL: 690 Newport Center
Drive. 7~~. Lunch buffet
Mon.-Fri.11:30-2 p.m.; afternoon
rea Mon-Sat. 3-4:30 p.m.; com-
plimentary hors d'oeurves Mon.·
Fri. 5· 7 p,m.; piano entertainment
Mon.-Sat. 4-8 p.m.; champagne
Sunday brunch buffet lOa.m.·2
p.m. American cuisine. Full service
bar~full wine list. Acrium/garden
setttng.
TOOTSIE'S SIDEWALK
CAFE: 327 Newport Center Drive.
759-9(00. Breakfast, lunch and
dinner, Monday -Saturday 9:30
a.m.·9:30 p.m.; Sunday 11 a.m.-8
p.m. Featuring American cuisine
with Concinemal couches. Full
service bar/full wine list.
22-.
16-19-July 9
"Like Father, Like Son" (or
Daughter)at che Island: A fashion
special event with the teen
board families and local celebrities.
21
Fashion Island Merchancs As-
sociation Annual
Meeting.
"Summer Arrivals" at the Island:
An exciting 18-dar sales promotion
featuring a chree -uered gift-wirh-
purchase program.
July
10
'Jazz It r p. ac the Island· A SIX·
.
Orenge CoUt DAILY PfLOT/W.or.dey, June 8, .._
wetk series of )au Conetrts, for six American Cane tr SOCiely will once I\
consecutive Sund1ys at 4 p.m. The again incarcerate NcWport Ctmer ,...,,
series will begfo wich traditional ~uriws in a ''Ni" niser to ...
'old' jm1nd mo-.e imucht more support the service, education and ,.,
progressive 'modern· jmaschc research programs offered byrhe ·I'
series continues. All jazz per. Orange Councy Unit of the Amen-
formances will be held in che Ctnter can Cancer Socitty.
COurt our-siefe die Acri\Jm.
'Jail & Bail" at the Island: The
Island: An entertainment-driven
s1dt" alk sale on Saturday.
811111111Ille1r11n. Cui down •·an.
Adding salt to your food
could subtract years from
your life. Because m some
people salt contnbutes to
high blood pressure. a con-
dition that increases your
nsk of"tieart disease
A American Heart v Association
..... ·.)
. " ..
•• .. '
.. .,
"'\ ... • .. .
Show Dad where you get
your great taste with
Father's Day gifts from The
Island. Need inspiration ?
Corne to the Father's Day
Fashion Show featuring
Fashion Island's own Teen
Board and their fathers on
Saturday, June 18 at 2:00pm.
Discover all the Father's Day
treasures at The Island ...
Newport Center Fashion Island.
F
NEWP8~'F EE-NfER-
FAs H 1 oN ISLAND
'
•
'ng life
howroom
:bas advantages
C atalog shoppers who prefer
looking at merchandise
btf ort ordering or want the opcion
Of trying on and purchasing spe>rts-
wtar directly from a retail store.
have that advantage at Spe>rting Life
in Fashion Island.
Owned by father-daughter part·
ners Richard Finley and Terri
Guichet, this is the only West Coast
franchise stort of the East Coast·
based catalog. "We carry about 40
pncem of whar the catalog does,
with our merchandise.geared to the
Southern UJifornia area," Guichet
said. Customers also have the
advantage of ordering styles noc
stocked from the catalog.
Shoppers wilJ discover such
name brand clothing designs as
Albert Nipe>n, Ruff Hewn. Cam-
bridge, Berek Sweaterund more in
the comfortable showroom feacur-
•
I
ing bleached oak w ~cc
with oriental rug m f~, wing
cha1r ~nd pe>tted flo1fa. •
Open since last Stpember,
Spe>rting Life is geare4 toward~
mocher /daughter shoppers and hiS
a medium price range on merchan-
dise. "fashion Island is generally
associated with high-end pricing, I
think it is moving towards a more
broad-based spectrum," Guichet
said. She also tires good customer
service as another reason people
find Sp<>rting Life a good place to
shop. __
Gifts such as hand-painted
Island priz~ winners
jewelry, watercolor pictures,
needlep<>int pillows and a variety of
accessories give the store a different
flair, Guichec said. "Gifts don 't
have co go through the test of what
people will like and srzt, so they are
easier co buy for someone."
Sporting Life's hours are Mon-
day through Thursday 10 a.m. to 6
p.m.; Friday lOa.m. to8 p.m;
Saturday lOa.m. to6 p.m.; and
Sunday noon to 5 p.m.
The store is located at l<XS9
Newp<>rt Center Dr. in Newpe>rt
-Bcach'.s-fashion Island. For more
informario~ call (714) 721-8829.
On the left. Gar le Dvorak. president of Fashion
Island's Merchant Association and vice presi-
dent/8enera/ manager of Neiman Marcus; and Mitzi
We/Is, disrncr manager for Great American First
Savings Bank, announce pnze winners at the recent
"Discover the Island" celebration.
J
~ m
0 ~ '" '"
Irvine Ranch Farmers Market
Atrium Court
Fashion Island
Newport Beach
640-4289
CAUFOMIA DINING AT fTS ANESTI
g3o6E&!!t!!
(J-···· Nigtwty. a.,.......~
,,,...,..-.-0,~ IUQt,_._
-----....-M
rffi:JIE~
FLAG
o restouant.
i
soups
salads
sOndwtches
espesso
wine
1129 Newpor1 Cent• Or.
(i14) 640-6390
>
SAN J
----
PCH
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NEWPOKf ·
CENTER
FASHION ISLAND
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FEASTING
UIN
--
,
600 Newport Center Or.
f eshion Island
Newport Beach
Reservation:
(714) 644-1237
•••
SIT DOWN SUSHI BAR
24 FASHION ISLAND-ATRIUM COURT
In 1tvN Ra.nch FMMn Market
NEWPORT IEACH
1714) 760-1100
L
r
p
11111 ~ WEDNESDAY. JUNE I. t•
"\
GettingaJJ. flred up for a cookout
Add sizzle to alfresco menus ·
with versatlle, tasty poultry
Next timeyou'reall fired up fora cookout. add
siule to the menu with versatile poultry, lt'salways a
favorite and its ease of pre~tion makes it ideal
alfresco fare.
Please those who like topueand nosh with
Marinated Teriyaki Chicken Winpand Thai Chicken
Kebabs. Both feature Oriental flavon made easy with
an unexpected insredient-pancake syrup. The li&ht
maple flavor"imP.&nsjust the ri&ht touch of sweetness
fortheJingeMp1ked, teriyaki-slazed wings and the
spicy peanut kebab-dippina sauce.
Foran innovative, easy en tree, serve Garden
Turkey Buraers, a light alternative to traditional
hamburaers. Bqin with cooked turkey that can be·
conveniently purchased from the deli or poultry
section of the supermarket. Oats are added for hcany.
wholegrain flavor and texture, while dill adds a
summer-fresh flavor boost. Instead ofho-hurn burger
toppings, serve with a cool and tangy sourcream-
vcgetable sauce.
If the weather threatens to spoil the party, simply
move indoors to the broiler for the same delicious
results.
Whether the_party is indoors or out. salad
aficionados will find a new favorite in zesty Chicken
Taco Salad. Made with liahtmeat chicken and high
protein kidney beans, it will star on any weekend
menu. Serve it with homemade salsa when there's time
to prepare it, or top the warm chicken mixture with
youcJa vorite purchased salsa when time is short
When the weekend cook needs a main dish in a
hul'!)', Chicken Scaloppine with Lemon and Herbs fills
the btll. Light and savory, the chicken is coated with
herb-seasoned com meal and sautced in less than l 0
minutes. Team it with a melangeofsteamedorstir-
fricd summer-fresh veaetables and a favorite, tall cool
beverage.
TERIY Altl CBJCKEN WINGS
i Ya poads c~ckea wlap (abut l! to 15 willg1)
Ya cap maple-Oavored pucake 1yr11p
Y..~p-1oy saace
•;. c•p dry 1llerry or water
t tableapoo11 lem011 juce
i tableapoou cllopped 1rea oalon
1 clove 1arUc, ml.aced
i ta•l11•••• vqetable.U . .............
Pound each chicken breast halfbctwcen 2 sheell
of wai paper to 1/•-i nch thickness. Dip into mHk; coat
with combined com meal, cheese and herbs. Heat oil
in lar&e skillet over medium heat. Add chicken; coOk 3
to 4 minutes on each side until aolden brown. Remove
from skillet. SQU«u lemon over chicken; scrvt
immediately. Scrves4.
THAI CHICKEN KEBABS
S wM&e dakkea bream, '-cicl, *luM. e11t la• J-
llldl piece9
l ft1f dUekea bnell
% &Mlet• • •u cla111p ed parsley
1 teal ... cvry .... r
~ C9pmaple-flavend pucake aynp
h np peuat IMltter
i tabla,.... My uace
t tabletpeoa lemoa jalce •
1 cJ9ve prUe, 1Pimee4 "':
·~ to Ya tea.,... en•• re4 pefpel' Dalles
Ya tea.,...~ fretll ,..tr er '4 teupoOll
crMM&laler '· Place chicken in 11 x 7-inch glass balcinadish.
Pour combined chicken broth. parsley and curry over
chicken. Cover, marinate several hours or overnight.
For peanut sauce, combine remaining incre-
dicnu; mix well with wire whisk. Let stand I hour or
ovemighL
Place manna led kebabs on peascd rack of
outdoor gnJI. Cook over medium coals (coals will
have a red afow) 8 to I 0 minutes on each side or until
tender, brushing w1th marinade occasionally. Serve
immediately with peanut sauce.
Con ventionaJ method: Heat oven to broil.
Skewer chicken on 12 6-1nch wooden skewers &eaving
'},-inch space between pieces; reserve marinade. Place
kebabs on areased rack ofbroiler pan. Broil 4 inches
from heat 10 to 12 minutes or until tender. turningud
brusbina witli marinade aft.er 5 minutes. Serve
immediately with peanut sauce. Serves 12.
1 teupooa 1uedded fretll sta1er or Ya teaspoon
sroud pa&er
outdoor grill; reserve marinade. Cook over fN?(lium
coals (coals will have a red glow) 30 minutes of until
tender, turning and brusbin& with marinade every 10
minutes.
cmCKEN SCALOPPINE WITH
Cut chicken wingsateachjoint;discard tips.
Place in 11 x 7-inch glass.bakinadish. Pour combined
remaining ingredients over wings. Cover. marinate
several hours or overnight.
Place marinated chicken wings on greased rack of
or bake on greased rack ofbroiler pan in 400-
degree oven 45 minutes or until tender. Tum and
brush with marinade every IS minutes. Serves 8.
LEMON & HERBS
t wbole cllickess breasts, bnff, lktae4, spUt
14 cap milk . •
Ya cap ariclted cora meal fi'>
14 etip p-ated Parmesu ctaeese
i teaspoou ltallaa snsoalag, craltd (Pl--eee COOKOOT/C4) ..... ... ............................................................................................... ...
Master chefs reveal their secrets
Classic salad now
a hearty main dish
F.atina li&ht and healthfully when fruits and vqetables are at their
peak makes warm weather all the moreeajoyable. But don't tum to the
same old standbys when hunserstrikes.
Treat family and friends toEmeraJd Chick.en WaldorfSalad.
l{jwifruit, in the hei&ht ofits season, adds zesty appeal and brilliant color
to this classic combination. Toned with crisp, red apples.celery, toasted
walnuts and chicken, it is a meal-in-one salad that stands in elcpntly for a
weekend picnicorasaquick, li&htsu~r.
NEW YORK (AP) -The
.. Secrets of the Master Chefs. .. a 13-
par:\ series on public television,
includes these ups from famous
chefs from all parts of the United States: .
-When making individual Bccf
Wellingtons, place tenderloin in
freezer until "stiff," but not frozen.
The meat will be easier to handle
and cut. -Louis Suthmary, The
Bakery, Chicago.
-To add body, without adding
calorics. to the base for a sauce,
••mash" as many as possible of the
cooked vegetables you've used to
make the stock throuab the sieve as
you strain it. The resulting .. veg-
etable puree" will thicken the
liquid. -GcofJCS Perrier, Le Bee
Fin, Philadelphia.
-To easily and quickly peel
tomatoes or peppers, place them in
Dessert
b erry
tasty,
p retty
When it's time to celebrate, make
Strawberry Angels' Cake. Ruby-red
California strawberries appear to
float on an angel cake that's as liaht
as air.
Inside. a sweet surprise: the cake
holds clouds of cocoa-laced
whipped cream and even more
fresh strawberries in a flavor com-
bination that's pure heaven.
Summcnime is fun time, with
araduations, weddings. showers
and anniversaries popping up prac-
tically every weekend. Since every
festivity needs a special dessert, this
cake is the perfect answer for busy
bosb arid hostessCS. And while it
looks complicated, it is actually
aimPlc to make.
a very bot oven and scar until
blackened. Then put them in a
paper bag to steam so that the skin
loosens and can be removed by a
gentle rubbing. -Patrick Pinon.
Maxim's, New York City.
-To add a bit of color to
homemade pasta. use a puree of
fresh vegetables (such as spinach or
beets) to give the dough an inviting
and original hue. -Nunzio
Patruno, The Monte Carlo Living
Room, Philadelphia.
-Your pancakes will be delicate
and airy 1f the egs.s are at room
temperature when you add them to
the milk and flour mixture. Be sure
to let the batter rest for 1 S minutes
after it as mixed. -Norbert
Goldner. Cafe t •Europe, Ft
Lauderdale, Fla.
-To quickly nd your hands of
the smell of garhc, press them onto a
Bake the anecl cake from scratch
or take a short cut by usina a powdettd supr. marshmallow
~klllld mia. Hollow out a tunnel creme, yoaun and brOwn supr. WJC
to fill '"tb the miittUR of whipPcd as dips for tM bcrria. It's a cokwful
cram and stra•benies. Frost witb ccnCCrpteee and help-yqundf cb
more whijpcd cream and dcconte Kr\ all in one.
~---~~~---~----with lmciomredbmici fOreyeand taste appml.
I
In 9ClditiOn to .... jlorious Cake.
frail California auafterrics in-
.re mafty • .,._.. pmty buffet
-. u wcu. r:or lallla. no.t the
......_ IDOll bmdM Wries ia
c:clCbaa&or)' 1utn ~dmn:rerz .
OJ mound a ... wiCbr bMtet '° brimmina wim .... , red berries;
MH'ftMliMI the tilllbt wit. di*S ;of
'
stainless steel surface, such as a sink
or a mixing bowl. The metal will
counteract the strong odor. -
Louis Szathmary, The Balccry, Cha·
cago.
-When serving foie pu. ask the
clerk in the store for the domestic
variety: it is equally delicious and
about half the price of the kind
made in France. -Georges Perrier.
Le Bee Fin, Philadelphia.
-If you·rc cooking on an
outdoor grill and need to bake pan
of your meal. put the food an an
alumrnum pan covered with foil
and place it on the side of the $f111
where the fewest coals arc burning..
Cindy Pawlcyn. Mustards Gnll,
Napa. C.aJif.
The 13-pan sen cs., .. 'Secrets of the
Master Chefs." sponsored by Mas-
ltTCard Intcmat1onal. 1s produced
by The Master Chefs Institute of
Amenca, an orpnization limited to
1.000 of the finest restaurants in
Amcnca. The programs were shot oa
location and hiJhJigbt each res-
taurant's style and ambianoe. Each
ent airs as pl.1'14£.the "Spot-
On ... " series over 260 public
1sion stati<»'lS across the coun-
try on the PBS-TV network.. The programs are aired as '461Jen.. in
varying time periods.
Restaurants featured in the
series: La Grenouillc, 11 Nido and
Maxim's. New York City; Monte
Carlo and Le Bee Fin. Philadelphia;
The Bakery. Chicago; Cafe
L'Europc, Palm Beach, Fla.; Cafe
Chauvcron. Bay Harbor, Fla; Le
Dome and Spqo, Los Angeles;
Mustards. M tu Valley, C.a..; Cafe
Bcau1ola1s, Mendocino. Calif., and
Jars Trianon. San Francisco.
-I
. -
n's best given salt-freeze t
ddicioUlly Kt off by a zesty, liaht
toma&o uuce bcip1ened by sah-
he seuonina blends by Mn. O.sh.
Similarly, the recipe for Souvlaki
Salad Rolls Americanizes a clulic'
Greet favorite by uaina extn lean
around lamb and lel'Vina it in
sandwich or bot dot roll&. Broilins
the lamb further renden away fat
and cholesterol, with a Mn. Dish
blend adding a flavorful zip without
salt.
LINGUINE WITH AIPAR.AGUS , ..........................
trl•·et ..............
S tablelf I W olive ell
1 sman re4 ltell pet1per, ~• ....
•.t.-bldl•~
~npftllelJdllHI • ..._ ···••dPel*flle,• ...... 1 et1p etenely ell•11••• rt,e ......
4 ........................ ....
Mn ....... ..
f4 &9U11ll• ult·free Htra sp&cy
HUOIWls l .......... an•edlf>armesu
dMeM
Cut aaparqus into I-inch
diqonal pieces (about 3 cups). Fill
a ~uart Dutch oven or saucepan
to 1/1 with water. Bring to a boil over
high heat; add aspai:aaus. Cover
and return to a· bOil. Cook 2 to 3
minutes, until tender. Remove
asparaaus with a slotted spoon;
transfer to small colander or sieve.
Cool under cold runnina water; set
aside.
Add linauine to Dutch oven.
Return to a boil and ~uce beat to
medium. Cook linauine 10 to 12
YOU'LL NEVER USE
BO'ITLED WATER AGAIN
With Water Sentry Systems, you'll never
run out of saf~ clean, refreshed 'IRXlter.
A specCacu1ar advance in water technology.
WATER SFNrRY SYSTEMS totally purifies
&. refrahes ordinary tap water:
• Eliminates bannful contmninates (lead. aluminum.
nibata. etc.) bmd in our water supply.
• Geu rid ol the fool bLU and smell ol chlorine
through our specially designed &Jt.ers.
• For the 6nt time. a S)'tltem that destroys and
retn<Wel l~ ol all h.cteria and viruses in
water throu4b our spedally enginee1ed ultra-
violet light IJY*1'n.
• And makes water sale. clean and good ta.'iting
8'Jlin without Wll.~ preclom Celifomia water.
minutes, stirrin1 occasionally.
Drain throl.llb a colander and rinte
with cold water; set aside •.
Add olive oil, bell pepper, onion
and prlic to Dutch oven. Cook
over medium heat. stirrina con-
tinually, for S minu1e1, until bell
pepper is tender. Stir in tomato and
scasonina. Cover; cook 2 to 3
minutes, or until tomato is heated
through and be&ins to release
juices. Add linguine,asparaausand
Parmesan cheese. Toa weJI. Makes
4 servinas.
SOUVLAU SALAD aoUs
le., .......... ,....
~ "' ,...., a1"e• ....... ...... MHM .......
• YI cap flllelJ a1H1 ........
ripe .... a.
S.....,._.fblelJdlH••rM
ODIH
114 ......... ealt.-lne ......
.p&cy ..... ...
'A ._., ... wt-free te... aMI
laert.sea....., .
1 poud ,.....d lamb, H perema
leu ·
' lel&IDt lee4 ~ ........ rolls or ltet doe nlll
l ~ capt~ leu.ee
In small bowl, mix yoaun.
cucumber. tomato, onion, 14 lei·
spoon of each seasoning. Cover.
chill until ready to serve.
In medium bowl combine lamb
and remaining seasoning. Mix wen
with hands and shape into 16 flat 2-
inch patties. Heat broiler. Open
rolls and toast on broiler rack l to 2
mrnutes. Wrap loosely in foil to
keep warm.
Put lamb patties on broiler rack
and broil• inches from heat Bfoil S
to 6 minutes, without tumina, or
until browned and cooked throup.
Fill each toasted roll with '4 lamb
patllcs and some of the lettuce. Top
with yoaurt sauce. Makes • ser-
vings.
Understand what the basic
'Water6 ~~£~!1 er: ~~I~:. ~~i~~ :~~: l~~nut and ~ ~ N••• . Needs to be replenished daily. palm oils, marbling in meat, butter, ••• there's always more 88fe, <!lean water on p. A rundown ~n basic components -Polyunsaturated and mono-hard vegetable shortening. and the
of what we.cat. . unsaturated fats. . cocoa butter in chocolate, are the CALL No~'ITf (714) 855 66JJ · -Protetns. These a~ the build--Complex carbohydrates. A worst offenders. They cause the SYSTf~t/S 'l'l' • -'"i blocks of all ~Y ussu.es. They slow-release eneray sou.rec because body to manufacture twice the
regu)ate. normal cu"Culation and th se carbohydrates take a Iona amount of cholesterol than would ! Suite 144 -13766 Alton Parkway. Irvine CA 92718 resp•c!l~~~m.Akcytomaintaining ti~et<~breakdown.. . theintakeofcho1esterol.
~·=~========~~==~~=======~==========~~i~nv:o~l~un~t.a~ry~m~u~~~u~~~r~m~o~v~e~m~e~m~s .-~~~~m~ntaenoo~l ~P~~nusc~ra~ ...., d1acst1vespccd. Makes you feel full. fats because they arc inexpensive,
-Food substances like whole-stable and harden easily.
f
.. l..owlr In
~lot Im""'*" mar game
• No aMlll • rof
• Rich In SunftcMw Oii
• 72"' ---Oii SIWIOd
1•--·· ---·---------···
•
wheat flour and vcaetables. Sources _ Supr. While sugar provides a
of numerous vitamins, fiber and short eneray rush, it also leads to a
complex carbohydrates. deep decline and supprcsscs a
normal appetite. Supr and fat are
Some ingredients that manufac-more likely to be converted to body
turen add to food: fat than are complex carbohydrates
-Vitamins and minerals: Im-and protein.
prove a food's nutritional qualities. _ Salt: 1t can contribute to
-Chemicals or food substances cardiovascular disease and hi&h
(like citric acid, an anti-microbial blood pressure and throw off tfie
accnl): Promote freshness and 1 electrolyte balance in the
long shelf life. ~ circulatory system.
-Emulsifaen (like lethicin) and Because supr, salt, cholesterol
stabilizen (pectin ot flour): Affect and fats are popular in the Amcri-
how a product look.I and tastes. can diet, despite the raervation1
-Colorina •nts, sweetenen, and waminp of Physicians and
Oavor enhancen (like mono-dietitian1, bow much of the four
sodium alutamate.) ''bad 1uy1" of foods can the ncrqe
·-Food nu~nts. healthy person consume?
Nutrition profcuionab com-~~ inlRdients thlt should be monly aarcc on the follotrina
m1rum1zec:f:, diewy recom~tions for ttiele
-Ch61csterol: This is 1 waxy substanea:
substance found only in animal -Fat lhoUld be lcla than JO
ptO(tucts. Your body manur.ctura pertCAt of one's UM.al calories.
chointm>t for body snce-s.;~~-s.--... mate up 1eu
Even if lou do not consume than · 10 percent of o.'1 &otal
cholestm> • your body would make caloria.
it. -3,000 miHip'ama of todium
Saturated rau: Tbele en· (table uh ad Odlet ,forms of ..... )
c.l'llt Ille bOdY to ..... .oft per day ii a ••wble amount b
dlcJl1•enL Oil!'= ..... dte &he·~ penon . ..... GI' --.I .. lnl -300 •iffivtms Of'ChOliileiol imPonaat ... d9t ...,.., of per dly ii• maximum amount tw
'Mturated fit lhe aveniee pet'IOn.
\
j
)
Dos,don'ts
for storing
dairy foocfs
Meat Dept. Savings
Rump Roast =...~Olf
Steaks :-::~~~_...;..
Chuck Steak:u. _
BEEF LARGE-ENO ..,
Frozen Food Favorites
Budget Dinners._.
Fish Fillets~.z~~
Elfin Loaves:=.,
Meat Wieners.... . . .az99¢ Waffles:::~°"
Sirloin Tip Steak:::o
Smoked Sausage~AMll
Breakf8m SandwiCh==·--"-·
Compare these Low Prices
Orange Juicecmu..u
Apple Juice.cA
Oreo .Snackwich _
Grocery Specials
Scot Tissue =-()Ill_..,,. .. llOU.t~1 •
Coronet Towels:= MQL~
luvs Dia~rs ~ ..cTsr
Orange Juice=~ ... '22"
Kerns Nectar=~Oll · ~
Pizza Mate=:--..:. .o1•1• ·
~ ~ '679 Bread Rolls '°" -~~-~-.A9-
~-.oz53' Coca-COia=: ~..;....,..-; ~•1 1•
,»Cll~21 Tortilla Chips ~_, ..... ...._ n• 11 •
Garden Fresh Produce
----.---.... •1• Perrier=-.. -"""~=---~ ~~•1n ~~~~~r:~~~:J11~:-:-~~~~ij~~ ~--~---79' I
~ .... _____.____,~ --~ IKT.,.
--~
..
Do-ahead I
for an entertaining evenin
-is ...,.. Ibo 11oort II. f,_ Kallllil -r• ......, a~,.._. Tbal'a wby bOIM eatenaiaina a.,en or~~• 1111, I ....,
lhowa you~ ice -' ad • ---.... ... ... But. if ~ IM c:bef' eounda crust may be prepmwd 1b1t ... 1..,...., wt 111111.-
bodaenomc to JOU; cab I CC. ins. tboD froaeft. Clllllill-.. .......
mQPOli&aD approidL Meet II a .......... ...
restaurant for a heart-wannina PBOIBN &ABUJA~ Prepan; Cookie Ctiuiab CrulL
meal, lben invite oompuiona CMlil8 Ci11m Cn1t (,_,. Q~ • i a nm a.-
home to u•-over lbe belt_ .. of ~> ~~ a cream n , •. ... ...,.. ,.... • ·-· over chilled cruat a.ct laura to the cvenina-cotree. coavmatiofl l ,.. ...... w ..,.. lee haer. ID &opOf dOublc tiOiletover
and a fabuk>us desiert. cnua. ..... _, ..n••• boili' ·-_ _., c-nd u·me .,,;th~ n·"'-._.. bot. but not na wa._, 1151 ~ .... uw---. UllR •••e•........,._~.. -~: and .:. _ __..__..._.._ ... __ slave a·n .... ki_.._ ..., __.,.. ~ .. wett u~~ WIUV u•u ""' __,,.,,,,y_....... loweww ... •••ct.celate ._.._ ---...~"--------"--~~.;..;:_~~~~~~~~~-.----,..~~~'"""--~~~~~-;-"".""-r-~~~-::---,.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-,Olale..,...._.. In bowl, with clectrie mixer, beat ca whites to aoft peab. then beat
in ....,. until 1tift' and slOllY tiut r----.,-...:· not dry. In larae bowl, with whisk,
beat eu yolks until thick. then
whisk in warm chocolate and
Kahlua. Slowly fold in ca white
mixture .
fAMIL Y SnAK
GrCLOD .. OT
BE~g.~K La. 1.79
PCl'I body, 12-0z. ltolion
VlAl PATTIES ................................. 1.19 •
SHOULDER PICNIC'. .................... LI .• M -FAMIL.Y 69 MOC
CHICKEN I& e
Former John a..t. Potil Or Jolopeno
SMOKED SAUSAGE ................... LI. 1.69
Lii.
FARMER STYLE SPARE Rl8S .... ll. 1.89
l·lB. PKG.
MG. Ott THICK u. 1.59
Louis Rich Fr.sh
TURKEY DRUMS OR WINGS .......... LI ....
CALIFORNIA, SWEIT ·
c
LB.
SMAU
Sat
Shell-On
LARGE RAW SHRIMP ................. ll. 6.98
:iAdeaEriRf~~.~~ .................. EA .... 8:0o1e~ENBACHIA ........................................................ EA. 2.99 . ::;w.zFR'Ul1 ...................................... ~a :•1
, ...... .
SWISSGlllll
&& 3.99
... [A
WONT .. SKI .. ·.,. .59 12.oz.
PKG.
JttlltfAACK NO NOl••lll ~·~~A':°At0 9 1
•AWi fllOll
i'Oz. • CONTROL TOP I 89 llilii .. liil~~ ~~~s. •
~ToOrder
JUICY LEAN PASTRAMI ............................... LS. e.19 ~i ~ SHOOTS ............................................. 61 Twin ,adt, Aaaoned
MA.SSENG-lll DOUCHE ...................................... IA9
fteur 0. Loit Aaaoned ~·SOt=T CHEESE ...................................... LI. a.M 8.S-Ounce Orlginol Or Spicy
EBARA TERIY AKI SAUCE ........................................... 1.19 4-0z. AerVIOI °' 2-0I. Wide O< Round Solld SURE DEOOORANT .......................................... 2;29
1.99 .75 ASST.
6-0Z.
16..ounc. ,odlop
MNAA. GINA ,ASTA .......................... 7.1
c
........ YeeB•I
I-OZ.~ •• Olt AMT AT
THE IOnOM • IJ
«>-Oz. Whl .. Or ,._,,,..
WELCH'S GRAN JUICE ................... I ...
. In another bowl,· with electric
mixer, beat cream until stiff. Fold
half of whipPed cream into choc-
olate mixture. Pile thia mouae
mixture onto ice cream layer and
spread evenly. Sprinkle lia)\tly with
chopped nuts.
Press remainina whipped cream
in pastry baa fitted with decorative
tip and pipe eiaht evenly-spaced
rosettes to mark servinp (or swirl
small mounds with a SJ)OOn). Top
each dollop with a whole nut.
Freeze firm. Makes 8 servinas.
CeMle Cnmb Crllst.
1 e.p erta, eoceat maea,...
ceekleenmh
• 1 taiw.1,11• brewa npr
I tab~ meltetl utter ~ e.p I; eMPfed peeus or
BruOa•tt
.~ ....... KOi ..
In bowl, mix totetber cookie
crumbs, brown aupr, butter and
nuts. Press over bottom of an oiled
8-inch sprin&f onn pan in an even
layer. Bake 1 or 8 minutes in 3SO-
dearee oven. Remove from oven,
cOOrsliahUv and brush surface with
Kahlui "'tb111 briefly in freezer
before fillina.
COOKOUT.~.
Proia Cl
Combine sour cream, tomato,
cucumber and pepper; mix well. Set
aside. Combine turkey, oats, ca.
milk and dill; mix well. Shape
mixture into 4 patties.
Place on arcascd rack of outdoor
pill. Cook over medium ~ls
(coals will have a .red alow) 8
minutes; tum. Continue cooking 6
to 8 minutes or until browned.
Place each patty on lettuce leaf; top
with aour cream sauce.
Or beat oven to broil Pace patties
on arcascd rack ofbroiler pen. Broil
4 inches frOm heat S minutes; tum.
Continue broilina 4 to S minute'I or
until browned. Place each petty on
lettuce leaf; top with sour cream
sauce. Serve 4.
CHICKEN TACO SALAD
1 ~ HP• flaely e~•pped s.matees
'1'..ap ~ ..........
'1'. e., ~1,.ed ll'fttl bell pep-
per
I • ...,,_, *"ed eUaatro
er.-nieJ
1 taWet,..1em .. Jalee
~to 14 ....,_. srou4 red
~ cMelt• bnutt, MMd,
......... etat .... '4·11d pteea
1 U ••ce aa dart or.._, l'M ld4IMJ Mai, or rM Miu, ......
'4 C91twater
1 1.11 .. ce ,.en1e taco
......... llalx
'Cllfl U...... leu.ee 1 .. ap (t oaen) .uedded
cMMarHiiH
~ C., Mlrj NV cream
TordllacMpe
Combine tomatoes, onion, arccn
pepper, cilantro, lemon juice and
red pepper, mil well Set aside. In
akillct, combine chicken, bcus.
water .and seaaonina mix; brina to a
boil Simmer 1 s minutes. atirrina
occasionally.
Arranee'lettuceon ll-inch round
platter. Top with hot chicken
mixture, c~ tomato mixture
and IOUf cr9m. 5ei'Ve with toriJlla
chipt. Sctvea 6. •
..
y
onlncllet
.. Lowk .. ~ W" Grall IYa a -• ~•el lo.r
and .. laO<balutarolf" n.."""' pan. la 1111111---mlaa• •• rlel uted 10 • pndomilllldly b die and v. cup.....,. tel Uicle. I• ..U
middle •d...._ Men and more, bowl pour bOHi.. .... OYCr
boWever,Md auuitioa buzzwords bulpr. Let scud 5 ~ dnin.
arcbeinalClopledbyaUthoeeaware la IUli ~ llir an ...a.
that • reduced •a; low ~· nour ..... remaini ..... Clllt ......,,
diet can lead to a healthier life. bakina powder and ... t. In lmall
Atcordina to the dietary auide· bowl combine e& 1.CJIUft. con oil
lines introduced by the National and skim milk UDUI well blended.
CholeslefOI Education Protnm. Stir in ~· Stir into flour
appropriate levels of' cholesterol mixture until moii&ened. Stir in
T-· . in 37~ Oftll JO
minutes M un1it cake lellCI" in.o
lened in center comes out clean.
Cool in pan 10 minutes. Remove
and cool on wiruact. Muea 16 (YJ.
inch) slices.
and fat intake can be maintained by cranberries and pecans. Spoon into
reducina11turatcd~uinthedi~r~~------~-------:-~~--~----~----~--_,...-;;;::::::::;;;::::=========:::;::::::::;::;;:;::::::::::::::;::;:::::;:::::::=::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::t::::~~~~~~ and increaina polyunsaturated
Each llice provides: 180 caJoria.
3 arams protein, 26 aram•
carbohydrate, 3 srams poly·
unsaturated fat, J aram ••uratcd
fat, 20 milliarmas cholesterol, 170
milJiarams sodium. .
fats. ~
The JUidclinct also ~ommeftd
increa11n1 com~x carbohydrates
-whole ~in~ fruit and v~.
etablcs -so that carbohydrates
provide at least SO percent of' one's
daily calories.
Baked aood• can be a sood source
of complex carbohydraies, ~
pccially when these arc homemade
atems )>reparcd with unsaturated
oils. Commcreial bakery producu
often contain saturated fats, such as
coconut and pelm oils and arc
senerally hi&her in 1upr and so..
di um.
To help lower or maintain ap.
propriatc blood cholesterol levels.
Dr. Mark Bieber: of the
Mazola/Nutrition Health Jnfor·
mation Service, also suaaesu these
acneral dietary auidclines:
• Limit cholesterol intake to no
more than 300 ma per day.
• Use cholcsterol·free," poly·
unsaturated vqetable oil and mar-
garine.
• Limit foods biah in saturated
fats (meats, lard, butter and dairy
products).
• Control total caloric intake.
• Increase consumption of com·
plex carbohydrates.
• Reduce sodium.
The followina recipes feature
satisfyina choices for incorporatin1
lowfat, complex carbohydrate
foods into the daily diet, especially
at breakfast or snack time. They are
a1So easy.to.prepare and can be
frozen for several months.
DATE NUI' BRAN MUFFINS
1 etap wlilele bru cereal, .. Yldel
1 etap =.•rt. dlopped pltte.l datet 1 etap water
'-" cep cen oil
~ teupooa vaailla
1 e11p U1lfted nou
~ cep1qar
~ etap cea.nely e'9pped walnt1
~ teupeoa bakJai ....
Grease 12 (21'2 x 1 '14-inch) muffin
cups. In larae bowl combine 'h cup
bran cereal, dates. boilina water,
com oil and vanilla. In small bowl
stir flour, rcmainina 'h cup bran
cereal, supr, walnuts and bakina
soda. Stir into date mixture just
until moistened.
Spoon into prepared muffin
cups. Bake in 37S--dqree oven 2S
minutes or until cake tester in·
serted in center comes out clean.
Remove from pan. Serve warm or
cool on wire rack. Makes 12.
Each muffin provides: 180
calories, 3 arams protein, 30 srams
carbohydrate, 2 arams poly·
unsaturated fat, I aram saturated
fat , 0 milliarams cholesterol, 80
milliarams sodium.
Pasta replaces
hot dog buns ............... ~
This cay-co.eaemble main dish
tutel like a Chili dcil. tMat the pasta
takn the place ol the hot dos bun.
Tberc·a no need to ~ the
puta shells.
DOUll.l YOVI
llOlllTW2
USDA lmp.4oldeil Premium
Chuck Steak
or 7-Bone
.Roast
...i~cut per D>.
Save .48 per lb.
Fryer Dn1ms, Wings
orThighs 79 8olMo .....,_.vaaa. fads
petlb . ..-11>.Uf)
Saft .20 per lb. I
Fres
Sweet
' Nectarines
Johnston's
= 39 • °"' C'll> I Sent .20
I
4 Pact-.... ¥6o ....
~e 89
Scrn .48 I
12Pact·L~~
!!~ 2.3
Prlc• effective June 1 thru June 15, 1988
~--------------~ r:-------_....----~· a--------------~ r--bi OFF I l~~c-11~b&couliF i I WITH THIS COUPON I I WITH ms COUPON WITH THIS COUPON I ..... :KIUIBLS
I AllY I I AIY I AllY I ,.,.. ... ~ ~.. I OIE ITEM I I 8REE1116 I SUI .... I """-.. .... ...-49 • (Excepl s... ~. "-cf•ptlon 1 , • CA• , ........ .,... , ... ::=.,. .... -='=.ti! "' 1 I Or Other cvs Coupon,..,,_, I I I .-nuuuu I I -.... -. -W£il:........,.. -I Witt! A~ ....... Of •1 00 Or Men I I With A ReguW ....... Of 75' Or Mof9 I Wttn A Aeguter ....... Of •1 00 Or Mof9 I ~~...... ... -.... .-
1 s-. tu~"'-IPPk"'* I I 5"" tax dllr9'd ... '"*.. I 5"" tu c:twOld --..... I a... ... •-CYS ,.,._, _ -1 I I I I~ .. .;.:.:,:,.--.,, ... -"~ c...oicE s I huT ONE ~ • I LIMIT OHt I ~ DNlll 1111.-I
2 ounce.ca -.. "-~i. DPWS-1111•1 l""'CUIT<>Wlt W'lflES..,,,,.J I NJtCUITOME.1' VINll:I .,,.,.. I u-a....,,....c.pi·,..,c-I
6 pac:ll.' =-=;;~~--·----.... -.---.-;-;-;;-;"'~~=-·---;-.-.---·-·---;-;-;-;;if.~··-·-·-iiii-•-;-.---.-.-;;-;-;-.-= .. .:~;-;-;;-;-;-;-;;-;-;-;-;-;;-;-;-;: ..
~-------------· .,..-------------, CVS COUPON I~ CVS COUPON I 1~ CVS COUPON 35~ DEF 1 35~ Off ID OFF
W1TH THIS COUPON I WfTH T..a COUPON WITH THtl COUPON •
. I AllY AllJ
AIY I CAlmY OR I .........,
DEODORANT I --••• ClEllEI W9lt'I A~,..._. Of., 00 Or Morw Wllh A ........ ._.. Of •1 OD Or Mof9 WW\ A~ "9elill Of 11 00 Or Mote ----··-----Ml-i_::=:~·-1 . -----
a uwr CINI ON1 ., ""~ e.... .,,, ~s •111111 ----------------·
r---------------, ~--------------·~ CVS COUPON I H CVS COUPON SW;_ll.ff 1131!..P.ff
& 1~ .•• •tmr••-Wlttl,.....,..,""" 01 •1 00 Or..,,.. I WWt A~ ...... Of .,.OD Or ....
Sliletuctwglld.-. I s.. ............. IP.I t'
!l .. TONI L PP OUITOlml
Followtlps
forthebest
fresh salads
...._B_ ... G.,._
Summer salad days m OD their
way. This coUection of tiPI will help
you make them better than ever.
HOW MUCH TO BUY
-Aspuaaus: I pound -2 cups
cut
-Beans. p-een: I pound -4 cups
cut
-Broccoli: I pound -6 cu .. cut
-Cabbqe: I pound -1 small
bead • S cups shredded
-Carrots: I pound - 6 to 8
medium carrots -3 cupa shredded.
l'h cups diced, or 2V.. cups cboPOCd
-Cauliflower: I small bead ~ 4
cups sliced or 3 cups flowereu
-Celery: I medium bunch -4'h
cups chopped
-com: 1 ear -Yi cup cooked
kernels
-Mushrooms: I pound• 6cu ..
whole or sliced
-Onions: I large • I cup
chopped; I medium • Yi cup
chopped
-Pepper. 1 medium -I cup
strips or-lh cup choppCd
-Potatoes: I pound -3
medium -2 cups cubed, cooked
-Spinach: 1 pound -12 cu ..
tom
-Tomatoes: I pound-4"mall;
12 whole cherry • 1 cup halved
CLEAN GllENS
-Wash areens before storina them. -lcebera lettuce: Hit the stem
end stwJ>iy on the counter top.
Then twist and lift out the core.
Wash core side up under cold
runnina water; to drain, just invert
and let water run ouL
-1..aJJe-leafarcens: Wash under
nannina water; drain on psper
towels. Pat dry with additional
towels.
-Small-leaf SReOS: Dunk in a larse bowl of cool water. Uft out
arid ~t if necessary until no
sand collects in the-bowl Drain on s-eer ioweis: Pat dry with ec1-
d.it10na1 towels.
-Store SReM in clear plastic
hip in reliifmtor.
-Exceptions: Store~ dry·
it yellows and rots qiiickly if sto~
damp. To llOre watercre1t, stand it
up with stems in a container of
water. Cover leaves loosely with a
plastic baa. Refiitmte.
CHJLCOFF
-For a refresbinaJy cool salad,
chill the iniredients tbofouahly
before you make the salad.
-Or, prepare sa1ecl. cover. and chill at leat"l hour.
-For a quick COOi dOwri.o ~
the salad; covered. in yoUf ~
for 20 minutes.
H ,,,
•1 '
Neither vulnerable. SOuth deals
NORTH
tAQ
Q A 101 3
0 A QI 3
•A 13
WEST EAST
• I 10 9 5 • K I 7 4 2
Q 962 Q Ql54
0 1 . O K6
• Q 10'... • 7 5
SOU111
• '3
Q Kl
0 J 10 9 5 .. 2
• "' 2 The biddina:
~Wat ... Pua
1 ¢ 1.
l Q ·-3 t P ..
s • r-,_ r-
N~ 1.
2 0
3• .. \)
6 ¢
F.at
Dbl , ..
Pua
Pau
Pau
• Opcnina lead: Jack of •
When we were youna, we enjoyed
apcrimentina with different bid-
dina styles. This hand. from the ran-
alt of the North American
Collqiate Bridle Championship
held in conjunction with the Ameri-
can Conlract Bridie Leaaue's
Sprina North American Champion-
ships in Bu.ff alo, show that that is
still lhe cue.
The event was won by the Univer-
sity of llJinois. On this deaJ, Dennis
Carney and Justin Graver of UI sat
North,..South. Tbey used the Preci-
R•on 5,._ co .. to an ambitious
CHARLES
G11E1
L.M. BoHJ
Standing
rooin ainple
at Coliseum
'
Q. How did the teating c:aJ*ity of
diamond slam. North's one club thcColi~umatitsprime1noldRome
openina bid was artificial, indicat-compue to that of modern stadiums?
ina 17 points or more, and East's A. Not bad. About the same as
double showed the major suits. Houston's Astrodomc, 47,69S. But
South's one diamond response the Coliseum also had standiog room
promised at least a five-card suit for another 20,000.
and 5-8 poinu. North asked for suit Q. Weren't Melbe loast. Melba
quality, and South showed a suit sauce and peach Melba all named
headed by the jack. Both three dubs after the opera star. Nellie Melba?
and four hearts were askina bf~ A. They wcrc. There is no Melba
those suits, and South's_µplles~-herrina.. SM didn't like herring.
vealed second-round control in each cue Q. That pdact to tdl you when to
· · add antifreeze. who invented it?
West led;the jack o~ spades, and A. The hydrometer'? A woman
Easl's d.oubJe ~ to haunt named Hypatia of Alexandria. Goes
him. With nothiq to pjde him, way back. To about A. D. ~.She
declarer would probably have taken ~nted t!' ~re t¥ specific srav-
CVer/ rmesse in siaht, with dire con-a~y .of hqu1ds.. Don t know what
sequences. Since the location of liquids. Not anufreeze.
mOll of the cardJ was marked,
South instead elected 10 rise with the
ace of spades. Next came a finesse
of the jack of hearts, and when that
held, declarer cashed the kin&,
spumed the trump finesse in !av.or
of cr0$Sina to the ace and discarded
a spade on the ace of hearts. After
conccdina a trick to the kin& of dia-
monds, he later toot a winni.nt club
fmase to land his slam.
Ask the fellow on the next stool
how many eyes are on a S l bill.
Gcorae Washington's two arc ob-
vious. But he'd better say t.btec.
There's a third atop the-,,yramtd on
the back.
The serial killer kills one person at a
time at intervals. The mass killer kills
h~ver muy in a Single mad ram~ The mass killer is usually
suiadaJ. The serial killer isn't.
T' I : I IJ L . ~.
il --
There's help for obsessions
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Since I
was 13, I've bad a problem that has
been f!tttins worse. I'm 19 now and it
is takms over my life. It's called OCD
-obscssive-compuls1ve diSOfder.
I managed lo keep it a secret from
everyone until six months.so when I
told m~ fiancc. He has been very
suppon1,·e and wants me to sec a
doctor. but I refuse because I don't
believe this is a medical problem.
I f~uentJy feel djrty even though I
wash my hands several times a day
(maybe thrtt dozen). If hand-wash-
ing doesn't make me. feel clean. I \Vlll tau a sho-.cr and put aJI my clothes
in the wash. Washing my dothcs is
very time-consuming because I must
go through at least 12 steps. Some-
times I have no clothes to wear
because they are all in the wash
I bate the "3Y I am. but I don't
know how lo stop. This compulsion
bas taken over my hfe and made me
miserable. Some days I ft:d Ii.kc
committina suicide.
There must be others out there like
me and we alJ need hdp. Wha1 can we
do~ -UNCLEAN I~ CANADA.
DbltCANADA: Tian ilift Wiiii-
SISllt~
• Donll tlor'9e 11 ...,
Warming up for the big race in Newport
....
13 Dtwlged
14 AlftoiMt
150ll ......
• Old ...
f1c.wdllllb
BJ liAEN M. REED ...,,...Cea: 1 a e
Everyb()dy was there -athletes.
sponsors, members -anyone wbo
had anythin& to do with the Oranae
County Pcnonnina Arts Center
Triathlon planned for Sunday. Friday
ni.&ht was an evenins to relax and
celebrate in advance the sure sucicess
of this.. the third annual-and hiply
successful -fundraisin& event spon-
soml by Center SOO.
The event held at the Le Mcridien
Hotel, Newport Beach, kicked off a
weekend of activity, accordina to a..
Meftst president of Center SOO. and was destined primarily ••to thank our
sponsors for their J?Uticipation."
And indeed the hst of sponsors was
impressive. with First Interstate Bank
at the top as "presenting sponsor" for
tbe ICCOnd year, and FHP, Inc.,
Sequoia Athletic Oub cl RadetbaU
World; Direct Color, Mazda. K-
EARTH 101 FM, Le Mcridicn Hotel,
Archive Corporation, Bowne of Los
Aft8da. Heminpay's. Dimension
Cable and Pandtck California also
actively participatins.
··The Meridien is primarily rnpon-
1ibte for tonighf s party," said Meers.
notina that it was the Mcridien who
underwrote the cost by don11ti111 the
bUlroom and food. which included a
variety of hOrs d'ocuvres. pasta and
Mexican finger foods -plenty of
munchies for the estimated SOO
It~
Meers explained that lhl"O\llh
doftations and in-kind sifts. more
... $250,000 bad been teMf'lted b me event. ··l'he triathlon each year is
tile liftllc liqest furldraisina event ~ uy of the suppOn poups. This I!!~ will net tomeWhere around
.,HOJ_.000""" tbr the Cca1et.'
CeMtr 500 hM been resiK>nsibk for
DOWN
1 Smlldrap
2 Vein
3 Modrtgecigk ,,..
4 or.-ldld s DelyQftnd
• Pwt t:A Mid.
7 $'911glrdlr
'""'* .........
10 °""°"'* 11Rre~ 12 Ftomn rllln ,,_...,..
21 L..-ge bird
23 Olr-.a 25..., ....
2tT~
21Md9atlnd
21 ............
30 91'111"~
S4 Olecilll ...
~ ............ .,.!wt)
37 T1tb t Uj •
31Mvlli1QU
40Hoeil...,
42 ~per1
43Nl~
44 Wonl
41 Hobo
47 Kind CJlhll
4111'1 --:
"I said, it's what we @lways hoped
for ... the pttter-patter of
little feet r
llARllADUD by Brad Ancterson DSIU08 TBB lllt1'ACE
PBARUTS
VOOR SWTHf.R SPIKE SAVS
TMAT TME ~R OLVMPICS
IS 601N6 T08E IN NEEDLES ..
TUllBLE1RED8
™ATS RIDICULOUS ! WMERE
WOULD ME HEAR A~IN6
LIKE TMAT?
by tiank Ketdiam
by Charles M. Schutz
by Tom K. Ryan
JUDGE PARIDtR
WE'U. 6€ CAU.l~G CJOO OP 10
RECE.IVE ~DIPLOMA~ ALPHA8€11CA&.w..,
'r----• •
by Jeff MacNelty
' f
H ff •
by Harold Le Doux
..
. ..
~--------- - ---- - ----~--· -- ----------- ----
.~
COMPLETE NYSE COMPOSID TllANIAC11DNS, C10
White House skirts question oftaxpayer-paid bailouts
WASHINGTON (AP) -Tho R~n ldmin1.,.
tration's aavinat and loan rac:uc policy 11 aimtd at
protec:tina the cu1tomer•1 money and ptttttVin& the
public·s confidence 1n the Jystcm, a White Hou11e
spokesman said Tuesday. •
At the same time. Matlin Fit.zwalC'r insisted t~ wn
no rlan to reson lO the ~ of Fntral tupaycrs' funds to
bai out troubled institutions. He pronounced the White
House sat11fied with the way the federal rqulaton arc
handJina the problem.
But Fred Wotr, director of accountin1 and aeneral
manqcment of the con~on.al General Ac:countina
Offiu, said that, consickrina lhe state of thc industry, the
federal aovemmcol maaht have to use aencral taiti-yer
revenue$ to shore up the system.
Wolf said some -'00 tavinas and roans across the
cobntry are insolvent, and 20 art ··what we would classify as hooCleitly insolvent:•
fillwtter IC'knowlcdJtd that "clearly, we've aot
some difficult problems in that induslJ)' ... He commenlcid
a day a~r the Federal Savinas and Loan lnsurantt Corp.
ordered a m:onS SI.JS billion cash bail-out payment to
customcrloftwo faded Cotta Mtu Yvinp and loam.
ThcS l.lS billion fi1urereprescnurollfhly~percen1
of the FLSIC fund for financi.aJ inst1tut1on rttCOC
attempts. Anal~sts have said it likely will cost billions more than iJ in 1hc budaet to bail out other institutions.
fitiwalcr, when asked about how the bank rcaulatory
aaency could withstand such financial pres um. said
FSLJC has S 10.8 billion in borrowina authority o"er tbe
next three )cars.
He took ISSUC With tstimatcs It hkc:ly woukl cost IS
much as SSO billion to put the industry beck on a steady
COUtlC.
.. A lot ~f the Situ thatare in trouble art bema bouaht
out b)' other companies, A lot of th~ art in bankruptcy
and they're try1n1 to work out arransemcnu for them to
stay in busmcu. So. J don't thank it's f11r &o suggest that we re suddtnly have a SSO billion bill.
m•aJ'ltcvnitoallybcWICd. Fitzwater said, "Well, ri&ht now
VtC thfok the ~ulatory 9Chtme is -the rqu.IA&ory
complex is the riaftt wty to aPJwoedl this money. Thtrt ''
a 1n.sst fund. money aoes into it from the banks and from
the member S&Ls. and. 11 this po1a1 that's adequate, and we think the n&ht way to handle it ...
In an interview on ABC-TY• .. Good Momina
Amenca," Wolf said the ~vcmmc11t would continue 10
stand behind the nation ' troubkd savinp and Joan
1nstitu11ons, but that evenaually could mean h:aviQI to
tum to the WPl)'Cn for mOf"e money.
"ThiJ is not a new problem and il's one that 1s besna
planned for and the rqulatory qcncies ha"c been
handhna at cffccfrvely," Fitn.11tCT said.
.. But be a ured that protectana the customers·
mooc) and the public's conft<kncc in the S)Stem 1s the
first J>riority oft he rqula10f) q.tncies. And that's the Yra)
they re approachans it. And I think they h.avc•a very
rational scheme for doing that."
"I don't know ofany ot~ JOutce you could tap."
Wolf said "The fcckraJ ID~tmment has deafly id that
reprdlcss of the problems ... we: stand behind the
insurance
He would not sa) where the money would come
from. hoYrevrr. Pressed to SI)' wbtthcr taxpa)ers' money
But, consjdcrina the Hate of the tndustry, if savrnp
1nst1tutJons aR not able to supply the money needed by
the insurance fund, ··~·s only one other sourcic. and
that's ulumately the t.ui-ycr:· Wolf said
l Bus1NES~ No_r_E s
BoMed announces
pacts, promotion
Hartley quits
chief exec 's
job at Unocal
&.Me4 Melllca.I Mu~
Ltd. has signed two new dmribuuon
aocounts for its oomnvas1ve continu-
ous cardiac output monitor
Hcmolttb Systems Inc will re~
rcscnt BoMcd an Iowa, Kansas.
Nebraska. Minnesota. Mis:soun. the
Dakotas and Wisconsin.
Eastern Anesthesia Inc ~111 cover
for BoMed the areas of MM)'land.
N~ Jersey. New York Cl\)', ~nn
~hania. VirJinaa and West Vir)inia.
Th~ two contracU will brin&
lrvm~bucd BoMcd clo5t to SI
malhon an revenues for the
NCCOMJ..R7unatand1tsarocssones
In the first )'Cat o( thcx pacts alone.
Hevk.a Sramek. currently pTCSl(Scot
of BoMed, was elected by the ducc-
tors as chief e•ecuuve officer She
replaces 8. Bo Sramek who wdl LOS ANGELES (AP) -Fred r es u m e m or c a cad e m i c
Hartley, the blunt otlman who has responsibilities in reprcscnt1n1
1u1dcd Unocal since I 96S and sue-BoMcd's technology wor1dwade. 8.
ccssfully foupt off a lake-over at-Bo Sramek will remain ch.airman of
tempt by T. Boone Pickens Jr an the board ~
J 985, has resaancd as chief exc:cuttve. ··&Med as cnJOYln& a profitable
efTCctJve Aua. I. ~s1t1on for the first s1Jt months of Hanley. 71, will continue m-988 Th ktc definitely as Unocal's chairman, the seal 1 · is comp turn-around can be aunbuted mainl) to compen)' announced Monday, btlt the ancrcasinsaccepllncc ofBoMcd's
will tum over the chief executJve'sjob technology which alloYtS nonanvas1"c
to Richard StCatme1er, the current and cost~fTCC'tavc hcmodymanK'
president and chtef operauna officer. diagnosis and ma~t of the
There has been speculation about patient in the hospital or offttt Hartley's departure foe months. and nd ... _ · some tndUSlry analysts SUllC$tcd CO\ ironment a lrR; lfO'A1DJ rerot-board be had .. _. u ... a-. to nation of the importanoc of nooan-mem n ... .,.._ .... .._, ,as1vc cardiodynamic &SIC'S.S.lnent of
rchnquash. the post. the pauent. •· said Hevk.a Sramd. Hartley s anaff. outspoken com-.. • • •
mcnts and his manqemen1 $tylc lla.aa Ttalriltl Katt Celll IPetie-
eamed tum both praise and cnucism meats, a leading num1smabc 1nvcst-
from the investment community and mcnt fmn s.nce 1976, is among the
the 011 industry. first 25 com dealcn in Amcnca to
"If Fred bad has druthers.. he's ha\.C recca"'cd accrcd1t111on from the
rather be pres1dco& for life," one close Industry Counc1J for Taf\&Jblc Assets
follower of Unocal told the Los as part of 1u new Coan and 8ulhon
Angeles Times. ··1 don't believe Fred Dealer Accred1t.at1on Program.
had control over his own destiny." This ccrtificatJon means th.at Ncw-
Unocal said Hartley had rec-port Beach-based HTRCI has been
ommended the elevation of found to meet the highest standards
Stcgcmc1er. 60. Hartley wdl retire as of profes.sionahsm. honesty and 1ntc--
an employtt no later than Nov. 30. gnt) as cst.abhshed by the Wa~hina
but bis tenure as chaannan as open-ton, D.C.-based tradt orpniz.ataon .
coded. Greg R.oberu. HTRCl's chaC'f
While some anaJysts we~ skepucal bu)cr siDC'C 1981. has rctt111(d 1nd1-
lhat the change would make an "1dual accrcd1t.at1on.
immediate d1fTe~nce at Unocal. The C80AP was launched m
others quesuoncd Y-hether be will March to pro' 1dc the pubhc with a hst
relinquish control. of dealers Yrh~ skills and ethical
NEW YORK CAPI -The lolk>w1119 llSI "1ows 1tw ~ -rhe • Counlef' stocks and w.,.ranls that have 9CW'9 UC> It. mott w oown lhl moil ~ on perc.nf of ctlanoe !Cl' Tuesday. No 1«1.1rilies trading belOw 12 f1' 1000
standards arc above rcproecb. a<>
cordina 10 Patncaa L Butler. the
J>rosnm'S dt~tor.
HTRCl. which has alwaY$ sup.
ported the con«pt of industry regu.
lation, was amona the fint dea1cn to
appl) and become a charter member
upon accepllna. she satd.. ButlO-
addcd that Roberts was the 61'11
compan)' employer io Amenca to
rcttl\ie 1nd1v1duaJ acnmil.ltJOD.. • • • ToC'C'lcbrate its fimannual run raie
of more than SI 00 million du.rins tht
past 12 months.. sme-s,..._.
~ntly hosted a parking lot party fOf
ats 700 employees and invited JLICSl!.. ~s Carm Santoro. ctwnnan, pRSJ-
dtnt and chief executive otraoct.
presided over a cakc-cuttina caL
cmony. the plant facility's penonnd
unfurled a 60-foot banner proclaim~ ma.. '"S1hcon Systems -Oransr
County's Ne-west S IOOM Comi-ny.fl
The banner will bani durina Junt
from the: roof ledge of Bu11din1 C c:A
tht compan) 's complex along Ne.
Myfont Road 1n Tusun.
l'=or the first half of tbc current fi!all
)·ear. the company bas ~
rcconS sales totalll\ISSl.8 nulhoo. u'
46 percent from the S36.9 million i•
\he comparablt pmod of 1987. The
compeny as CJ.pee\Cd t.o well exceed
the SIOO million mark for the year.
and will ha'e •lS best year SU1CC lb
foundina an t 9n
1bcon Systems 1s a leader in lhC
desiin. manuCacturc aod rnarlcetina
of speaahztd ·semiconduc&or an\el'
crated arcu1ts • • • Russell T Gilbert. prcsKlc:nt of
CIMO> IK. an Costa Mesa has
announad the SI 3 m1lhon ~rchatic
of a 31.00C'-squan'-foot butkiing in
Corona 10 SCl"'\lt as headquarter.. and
"'-CStcm rcgionaJ manufactunna lo-
cation for CIMCO subsidiary. Com-
pounding Technology Inc. (CTI).
CTI currcntJ) shares a buddtDJ in
Corona with CIMCO producttoo
The mo"c of CTI into the new
fac1lit). 1n con1unct1on wtth add1na a
fourth curus1on Ian~ will provide: an
ammc:<hatc 30 penxnt cxi-nsion of
CTl's Wes1 Coast production ca-
J)a(1t~ and s1mullaDC"Ousl)' allow
C IMCO producuon to add ursrntl)
n~~ •nJ«Uon mold1n1 capacity.
'H
2 • 1 ..
-
Nv:.:_ ( .,,,,,, TH1~., ,,. l'., -
. Market revives rally
NEW YORK (AP)-Tbe node marke1 stqcd
a stronJ ldvance Wednesday, reviving its recent
rally with a boost from declin1na interest rates..
Tradint wu beavyt inflated in pan by
maneuven mvolvina the 1mpcndina dividends of
hiah-yicldina stocks.
The Dow Jones avcraae of 30 industrials
·jumped 48.36 to 2.102.9S, com1na up just short of
its April 12 clo!e of2, I I 0.08, which marled 1 hiah
since the market CTaSb last October.
Advancina issues outnumbered declines by
more than 4 to J on the New York Stock Exchanae.
with 11289 up, 29S down and 393 uncbanaed.
Baa Board volume came to 310.03 million
shares, apinst 168.71 mmion Tuesday and the
heaviest total since 392.16 million were traded last
Oct. 22.
The NYSE'soompositc index climbed 3.19 to
IS2.87. .
, WH~T AM£ x Orn WH AT NYSE Dio .:;""· , .. ,, ... ;.
~ '5 ==' t 1 ' A ME~ LEADER S NYSE LEADER S
Goto Quon s
Dow JoNE S A vE R ~GES
M ET~Ls QuorE s
NASDAQ SUMMARY
---
SEC prepares charges ' a. in insider trading case
WASHINGTON (AP) -lmxel
Burnham Lambert Inc. and junk
bonddeakf Midu.el Milken face civil cha,.es from the Securitin and Ex~ Commission once the U.S. au~ ia New Yort bu time to
comJ*.t;e hit •rate criminal in. ~~Uooo I published ~ 18y&.
Tbe SEC dCcided at a recat doled·
doot mtetial lO file the hud cMJ'lel •iMt Dmd. Mi.._ and otficr
Drcae1 eMntiva, but wants to IM*t
off K1ioa lO avoid U.terferi111 wnb wmninal~~·*w-. illllODPOIC .-y.
ln f*'mry •• mvatlMftt bent·
i111 flmi ldnowh •it tllAt it Hd
--ol its ....,,... Md been ~ for civil ..... by &M SEC
11il:a..teliM.5fC.a 11baa:D& di~OlryL~wlomrintM • omoe ol7au ·: o.llML ... U.S. ...._, .. = • 'rpca. ~
decti11lca•••t••,..illlly. 111118: ......... ..... :::g ............... ..,. ~---=~:t:n:== Iii._, wrlar .;;-w;, Y"'-
Drexel has been the subject of
mvcstijation1 by the SEC. the U.S.
a_µomcy and I .federal IJ'and jUI)'
11ncc:"'the bttalt1na or tbC insider
tradina teandal aurrouadin& former
1tcd speculltor Ivan F. Boc:Sky.
Duri-co-"'-•l .._.,. __ · ..... .___..-.,..in Apnl, Mtlktri ttf\asod to lal.ifY coafirmina that he was under in:
vestiption by 1 .,and jury in New York.
At the •me hcariaip, ochtr Druci
1otlidal1 defended the ftnn'1 pnctic:e
of altoWi111m.ployees lO bn\ private
panaetlbrpa 10 compne '"'" other mveMR, andudl .. the firm's ctitnts,
for boftCll "'*nrrnaee by tbc com.· .... ,.. .
Evidwlt .,.... ••• tbt ~ .... Plftel....,_,. '111d iliiiil .~...., OW11 eaa..11 from
.. ;l,o,A, ........... ~.! -w:... -..... tbt IUtA•~·~ ... .... .... ..,..
o.wldaie( ..... P,181 b.H. =r: ............. ~ ~.a..: attslictil•a ti 1 mn, .. ... -:;ca 111 ., .... ..,M lfl
-
......
Detroit'• J amea ltdwanta la RnOaD4ed bJ
Laken u M com• ander tlae delew Of
Kareem AW Jabbu (left) and Ma,V
Jolaa acm (S2) ID Guae 1 u to. Alltel•.
LOS ANGELis (AP) -With fint place
within reach for the Houston Altros.t.bis ~
the last tbioa Danny Ouwin wanted to do was
reflect oo his four CODICCUtive IOlleS.
Darwin, 3-4, 1e1ttercd seven hits and
stopped the streak Tuetday ni&bt as the
Houston Altros moved within one lialf-pme of
the lint-~ Los ~ ~ in the National ue West with 1 S-2 vtctory.
"Once J anisb 1 pmet it's over and ~ set
ready for my next start." md the Astros' ri&bt-
hander1 who struck out eiaht. walked none and
workca out of a bues.loaded jam in the fifth
inn.ins en route to bis second complete pme.
"Evarybody in this room knows bow fve been
pitchina this !JCUC>n. I can't control bow many
runs we score, and I can't wony about iL"
··0ne thina about Danny, if he's stiD in
lhete in the seventh, he's tot that tenacious
attitude out there, and he's featleu," said
teammate Kevin ~who drove in two of the Ast.rol nans. .. He's from the old ICbool. He aoes
out there and aiva you everythiaa he's Sot on every pitch. and lhat•a what you want."
Danny H~. a utility outfielder matina
his fint stan oft.be 1Ca10n at tint bue, failed to
field a cou'* of playable pounders in the
leCOnd innull. resultig in t-o runs. He
experienced even more fNstration in the third
innina when the Astros added three unearned
runs to take 1 S-I le8d ap.inst starter Tim Belcher, 3-3.
The schedule
HOM.a Tonight-Houston. 7:35 P.m.
June 9-Hou11on, 1:05 P.m.
AWAY June 10-S.n OleQo, 7:05 P.m •
June 11-S.n OleQo, 7:05 Pm •
June 12'-S.n OleQo, l:OS pm •
June 13-ld,.
June 1~Allanl•. '«> o.m
• On TV, CMnnef 11
• Al Dames on KA8C, no
.. rm not makiaa any excuses, but I'm no
Keith Hernandez out lhete " Heep said in
reference to the perennial bold Glove fint
baseman of the New York Mets. .. , hadn't
worked out 1t first bue all year and I hid two
boun to pre~ It wasn't W.r to me and it
wasn't fAir to-Belcher. Most fint buemen make
those plays." . . Heep played first because reauJar Mike
ManbalJ ha4 a sore beck and played riaht field
inste.d.
Commissioner
makes peace
Ueberroth steps In to stop
Martin's feud with umpires
Legend-stopper
put breaks on LA
Detroit's defense
keys 105-93 win,
takes home edge
CluuaJ)loadfp Nrl• , ............... ,
~.San o.trolt 105, LllMr'I fJ (OefnMI
........ 1-o) . ,.......W"'• GMllt
Pistons' Dantley
dares Lakers to nOt
double-team him
Detroit at I.Ml..._ 6 p.m. ....,..ca-~ lkaatdy N ... Bel~ Laan af Detroit, 12:30 •.m. Prem McQaldJ New lel•lee ,,..,. 0.... •
INGLEWOOD -Tbe Los An-LlfMn et Detroit, 'J.m. INGLEWOOD -Tbere was.,_
feles l...D.en did u outlta.Ddina LlfMn !;-J:.,:r-, P.m. Of fianc:e 1n Adrian Dantley's voice elid ampe:rsonation of the Bolu>n Qltics nec:eu.vv> eyes. in Game I of the NBA finals Tuetday .--1t c... How dare anyone DOt double-Wift
ni&ht at the Forum. o.troff •• ......, 12:30 P.m. <If him each tune he touches the ~
Accordin&ly, the Deuoit Pistons nec.uary) --2' ~ ball.
llole the snow/ playina their lie-Oetroll .......... ' o.m. (If .. , wanted the bell in my bandl," customed role o ~nd-ctoppm and neceuerv> said Oantley. the Detroit Plstor.I cbillina the Laken confidence with forward ... They have to~
an easy IOS-93 victory. me or rm confident ru tc0tt. 8c*°8 .
Sbowina no oeptive effects. from future. , double-teamed me most oftbe U. 1 the cross-country jOUl'ftey they took .. Our defen!JC is IOU\J lO have to fel IO they'll have C.0 do it lOO."
after erasina the Celtics from playoff 10qb," Riley said. "Ot.berwitc. our Or else ...
competition last week, the Pistons runnin& pme is aoina to come to a Or else Ga.me 2 of the NatiODaf pve notice that they would like to walk... Basketball As~iation Cbam
wrap up this party in four pines. The l...akers were beaten at both piomhip Series Thur:::, will be 1 te-;
Jud&iD& from t.be mismatched out-ends of the court. Their ddeme run of the Tuesday · t n=
come of Act I, a four-pme lericl may wasn't e1fect.tve apinst the Pistons• for t.be Loi Anldes La.ken. ·
beJ. ust around the comer. petient pusina offense. and their made l 4 ofl 6 s6ou &om tbe fidd .-d
We didn't bave to tet physical." oft'erue wasn't able to ttt n>ckina and scored 34pointstoLeadtbePi*>lll10&
said Pistons IUl1'd Vinnie Jobmon, rolli a IOS-93 victory over tbe l..akat i1t
wbo ICOred l 6 points to Lead a 32-.. ~just dldn 't mentally do what Game I at the Forum. It WIS CM
point effort by Detroit's bench. When we were supposed to do, .. said Maaic lhJJ'd.bcst ~ performance ill
the Pistons can win without ~tin& Johnson. who led the 1..aken with 11 NBA ChampiOnsb.ip Series hisu>ry. obYsical~ the matcb is tndeed points.. .. Dcuoitwasatthetopoftbeir · Outley, wbo was tnlded_by tbe1 l<>Psided. By contrast, the Laken' pme. We were just not mentally Lakcn to the Utah Jazz R>r ~
aubltituteucorcd only four points, al( ready to play... Haywood pnor to lA's
by MydW TbomptOD. The Pistons received l4 poi.n.ts piooship 1euo1u:all 91~ c.unt .~---'=
.. We were not able to mount any fi:omAdrianDantley,wbowupant-thePistonstwo~aeoinexcb •12
consistent offense," said La.ken ed d.iromatic immunity by the for Kdly Tripucb.
canerlC&rumAbdul-Jabbar, wbobit Laken defeme. He rarely faced .. He cbaDIC$ tbal ieam and be
only 4of13 shots from the field. .. We double-team pressure. Loi Anldes much better post...up player tbalt be
Sol tbe shots, but we couldn't tel the simply -and mistakenly -cfarcd WU with Utah," Lakers a.ch ht
shots to fall. which makes for a b9d him to shoot. Riley md. .. He bas a tendatj 10
evenina." The Pistons opened with a buac tc0re 1 S pornts an the tint qulJ1ler ind
Laken coech Pat Riley, who watch-man-to-man defCnx, a risky prop-not score much more, to we d.idn 't
ed his team I<* its fint post-«UOD osition apinst an attack consideftd want hi,m to er:t of[ We double-:
series home opener since l 981, shook by many to be the tape's best fast-teamed him eartj and went away his head while contemplatina the (Pleue .. LADU(M) from 1L .. •
UeberrotlJ to quit
after labor talks
He's flattered with
second term off er,
but prefers to leave
Angels hurler has
'best stuff,' shuts
out Rangers, 1-0
AJWNGTQN..Taas.W)-:..:~
' An,els • Chuck Finley is still leanrinj -
bow to be a start.ins.pitcher. But bis education took a bi& step foniatd
Tue.day ni&hL
.. I'd •Y tliat's the best stu.ffrve bad
in any ~ ~ pme. .. aid
FmJey, after oombinina on a five-
bitter with Bryan Harvey as the Anads defeated tbe Texas Ra.,.a
The .cJJedale
AWAY
Ton'9tlt-Tuaa. S:JS P.tl\. • June,._..,
MOMS
June l~•maa City, ~ PJ'f\.
June n-KanMS City, 12:20 P.m.
June 12'--t<.anaa Cltv. 1~ •.m.
June t)-4(.,.. Cltv, 7;15 PJ'I\.
June 1.,_Toas, 7:35 PJ'ft.
• On TV, o.w.I S
• Al MIMI°" KMPC, 710
I
~"' ........ ..,...
NEW YORK-Mott parents believe •
Jll)OlU arc as imPOf1aDI fOr their dauabtm
u thear aona. accordina to a na1ional study
1th1ted Tuetday. _
EiaJ\ty..cven penxnt oftbe pa~nu surv~ said
tMy 11'-eed that "sports att equally amponant ror boys
ancf rl •• · ·• eh &hows the word "tombc>y' no lonser existJ in the
athletic dictionary, .. saad Dorothy Harris •. educ:ati.on •
director of the Women's Sports Found.ah.On .. wbach ..
comm1Sfloned lhe study alona with Wilson 'Ponina
Goods Cb. . • •
.. Girts who ,Ptnicipate in s~ns are 90 looser
lauahed at and ridiculed. In flet. it s f?OPUlar for P,Js to
play spe>rt~ It's the sexy thina to do. •
However, the study indicatcs.thatsirts tend to drop
•out of sports as they aetol~r. While 8~ P:Crc:en.t of those •m the 7-to-10 • .,.OUP s&td they part1C1pate ID $portS,
1 the fiaure dropped to 7S percent in the I S..~o-18,arq~p.
• Acxordin' to the study, the drop-ofT 1s pnmanly
due to interest 1n other activities: lack of ume. or
intemt in boys.
Detroit'• Joe Daman and Walker D.
Raeeell cheer on tbe Piatou to .tetory.
NBA teams' mayors make bet-The survey was based on telephone mtendewsJast
November and De&mber with 1,004 parents and S 13
of their 7-to-18 year-old dauahten. PONTIAC. Mich. -Mayor Walter m
Amons the findmp:• Moore has put the use of one of Ponuac's
•Girts whose parents are involved in sports arc namesake cars Qn the line in a bet with
more likel).' to partk1pate themselves. Mayor Ed Vincent of lnile~ood .• on ~he
•While most parents believe better heaJth is the outcome of the NBA champ1on1h1~ senes:
best reason for their dauf.ttten to play sports, a.iris say The Detroit Pistons, wjio play in ?on~1ac, defeated
the big.est motivator is• ftUt." e' the Los Angeles Lak~rs on !tuesday nt~t in Game I of
•Gi'rls participatiDJ in sports receive more the best-of-sc~en ~ries at The Forum .in lngl~wood.
cncourqement from their mothers than fathers.\. J Moore sa1d.Ger"teral Motors C~rp. s Ponttac Motor
•Seventy-lhre.e percent of the fathers said they a 01vis1on would pr'ovide Vincent ~th the use oh 1988
involved in sports or fitness act1v1t1es, compared with Pontiac Grand Pnx for two weeks 1fthe Lakers defeated ~percent of the mothers. the Pistons. . .
.. •Most mothers feel sports activity is more The city of Pontiac also would Rf0\'.1de hght bulbs,
important to them today than .when they were young. produced locally at 01ohght Technologies and suaran-
fathen say the opposite. teed for 20~ear'$, for all municipal offices 1n Inglewood
1f the Lakers defeated the Pistons.
Quote of the day
J.._y .Badt, a member of the Ci nc10nat1
Reds' telecasuna crew, talkina about the wide-leacd beuins stance of the Philadell)hia Philhes•
Von Ha )es: "He looks like a pair o( plien. ..
Jfew Spurs owner fires Weiss .
The San Antonio Spurs' new owner m fired Bob WelH as head coach Tuesday,
saying the ~lcaguered NBA team nccd.s a chance m duut1on after two consecuuve
losin& seasons ... My decision is a subjective one, but it -..as mine to make and I just felt it wu best for this
'operahon at this time," 8.J ... RM .. MeCembt told a
'news conferenoc. McCombs pve no reason for lhe
dec1s1on he said he relayed to Weiss by telephone, but
thances were expected after McCombs pmrd control
of the team last month Weiss, a former assistant with tb£ Dallas Mavencks. was liven a three-year contraCl
extension Jn December, and compiled a S9-IOS record
in his two seasons with the Spurs .. Although relieved
he wasn't ordered to pay more. Boston Celtics rook.Jc
Brad Lollau said he'll appeal the S 1 SOO fine he was
USC'SJCd forfi&}ltma an an NBA playoffpme. The NBA
fined Lohaus, a former University t>f Iowa (>layer. for
ftis pan 1n a light last Fnday with the Detroit Pistons'
Deu1t R.4mu in Game 6 of the Eastern Conference
playoff finals. "They (l~ue officials) said J started it by
throwina the first punch. It started a lot earlier before
that. The referees should have taken c:a.re of it before that ..
In return, Vincent offered to personally deltvcr a
vtdcotape about his city's drua-awarencss program 1f
the Pistons won the NBA title. Several Lak.ers players
appear on the rap-music tape, Vincent sa1d.
Phillies fire pair of officials
The Ph1ladelph1a Phillies fired per-a
sonnet director Wood WMClward and
farm boss Jim Bnmer tuesday as the last-
placc club moved to tum its fortunes
around. Phillies president Bill GUes said chief scout
Ray Sllore will replace Woodward, who had been on the
job little more than seven months. Fonner club general
mana1er and manager Paul Oweas takes over Baumer's
role. Both assignmentsare on an intenm basis ... It is my
antent1on to fill these two pos1t1ons on a permanent
bam as soon as 1 can find the right man." Giles said.
"We have some work to do to &et the Ph1lhcs back into
scnous permanent contention and my partnen and I
JUSt do not feel that Woody and Jim arc the right people
to lead the way." The Florida Legislaturc approved
a controvcmal S30 million fundina measurc Tuesday
an Tallahassee to help the city of St. Petersburi finish
construcuon of a domed baseball stadium intended lo
lure the Chicago White Sox lo Aonda. Rep. Peie
DatNt.r R-Crystal Beach and St. Pet.ersbura assistant
city manaaer Rick D..tp were both confident that a
dec1S1on on the White SOx' move would be made soon
. . . San Francisco Giants• third baseman &eYla
Ml&ckU, forced to miss alJ three pmcs of the Houston
series. won•t need suraiery on his swollen riiht knee. The
team said M11chell was examined on Monday at the
Palo Alto Clinic and team physician GonlOD Campbell
found that possible cartilage damaac turned out to be
simple inflammation.
Te••• Ka end to probation
ThcUnivenityofTeuaisexpec1Cdto • announce soon tba1 the NCAA is takina the
LonJhom footbell ptOtram off probation
after one year of aaoc:tions, the Austin
Amcric:an-Stat.esman rePoftCid Tuetday. UT com·
pliance offker Butch Worley said the l.onihoms bave
implemented all 13 cbanees ordered by univC!lhY
Pmident William Cunninaham as a result of NCAA
penalties apinst the tchool on June 17, 1987. The
National Colleai1te Athletic AMociation bad aid the
Lonahoms' two-year ~tion would be reduced to
one year if those 13 reforms were completed . . . Univen~ lllino1~ athletic direictor N .... Stwr'
acknowl that 1etiool employees did maintenance
work for is family on "a handful., of OCQsions..
Associate Director Vuee aMfen bas isaucd a self·
described confession aayina he now realiz.cs some "perks" of the job "amount to improprieties ......
WayH o.ke announced he will retire u BiJ Ten
commissioner It the end of Dal .1Q1' afteT runmna the
athletic conference since 1971. Duke who will be 61
when he retires, was the younJCSt chief cxccuuve officer
of a major athletic conference when appointed
commissioner of the Bia Eiaht in 1963 at ase 34.
Televl•lon, racllo
TELEVISION 4:30 p.m. -Pa0 8.AIDALL: Chic:a&o
Cubs at Pittsburah. WON.
S p.m. -OOLLEQE BASEBALL: World
Series Game 11 -Wachita State vs. Arizona
State, from Omaha, Neb .• ESPN.
S:30 p.m. -PRO BASE8AU..: Anaels at
Texas.. Channel S.
S:30 p.m. -PRO BASEBALL: New York
Mets at St. Louis, WOR.
7:30 p.m. -BOXING: Demck Kelly vs..
Youna Dick Tiser in a 12-round welterwei&ht
bout, from lnilewood (taped). Prime Tick.eL
7:30 p.m. -PRO BAS~BALL: Houston at
Dod&ers, Z Channel.
?:30 p.m. -PRO l)ASEBALL: Atlanta at
San Francisco, TBS.
RADIO
S:30 p.m. -PRO BASEBALL: Ansels at
Texas. K.MPC (710).
7 p.m. -PRO BASEBAU..: C10cinnati at
Padres KFMB (760).
7:JO p.m. -PRO BASEBAU..: Houston at
Dod,en. KABC ( 790).
THURSDAY'S TELEVISION
10 a.m. -OOLLEGE LACROSSE: NCAA
Division I semifinal -ComeU vs. Virsinia. from
Syracuse. N.Y. (taped), ESPN.
I p.m. -PRO BASEBALL: Atlanta at San
Francisco, TBS.
THURSDAY'S RADIO
l p.m. -PRO BASEBALL: Houston at Dodters. KIABC (790) ..
I p.m. -P1\0 ISASEBALL: Cincinnati at
Padm, KFMB (760).
I
Sockers take
~ .
MISLcrown
=OldolAP).-TllelM~,...,.
... Wi*,tll!IM~lllela ibeblnla ~~'!·c:.:-.... · ~;:ti~:: ~Soarl1.a1
,,. ..... toe* die bllt<Olll'VID =--'' --~dlllllltwowmcomh11oe~ ·~ leld. Tbe loc:Usl woa the Ml& ctOWll for tbe ~ lime. dUa dme In the ftnt chein~p tericl neep an ~~. ff• ...... wbo ... named abe "*' val~ pla ·n tho cbamsMonlbip ICrin in wlticb be ecored au
ICOred 11:$3 into tho lbun.b quaner to put-I~ lhcld s-4. After CleVdlnd wen1 10 a MAUI
11uaer. Wiid Hinnez 'ICOl"eCf twice in the doiins
moments. ~--""-Hinnel, wbo bid driO j)al1 in the~ ..,.....
triumoh. opeMd &he ecorinajust 1:35 in the ftnt quarter •
JWi Vetit IClOf'fld 9:U inlO the eecond quarter to put tbe
Sockm ahead 2.0. '
Perez ICOred on a~ pla.I.{:: 12 eecondl an to tbe
third quaner to put San DiCIO l-0. .
' Then Cleveland, on the ecfee of elimiution, rallied
with three pit to tie the pme. c,.q Allea ICOred 1:29
after the Perez pl. Ali Kmmaini icored 11:37 into the
period and AlJcft ICOl'ed apin 25 leCOndt later to tied the
pmc, ).3, to tbedelilJ'lt or?,110 in the stand&.
After killina off a Force power pla_y to 1&111 the final
period, Paul Doqberty icored to _p_ul Sin Dao blck on
top. 4-3. Craia Allen .coted bis third pl 6:44 into the quaner to mike it 4-4, seuina up the final San Diqo
~f)e. • . Zoltan Toth aot the victory in aoel. booltln.J has
playotrrccord to 9-2. Cleveland bad If' lhouon pl. For
the Force. P.J. Johns took the loa in pl, as San Dies<>
took 29 ahott. Johns' record was 7-6 in the playofti.
LAKERS LOSE ••• From DI " . break ofTen~.
Still, from the early minutes. the Detroit dcfenK was
four-fifths succeuful. Johnaon alone prevented the
Pistons from claimina 100 percent success.
Alone amona the arounded Lakers. Johnson was able
to operate in the open court. ninaina ~ insi~ to
James Worthy and Abdul-Jabber ind penet.ralln& 1p1nst
Joe Dumars. But the Lakers shot only 40 pcroent from the
floor, and Johnson's 10 assists were wasted.
Worthy scored 19 points despite sufTcrinaa sliaht hip
pointer.
Not unexpectedly, Johnson at once established
himself as the key to the Laken' fortunes. He scored ei~t
point1 in the fint quarter and finished the fint half wnh
16 points. Unfortunately for Johnson, he didn't aet much
help from his friends.
Los Al results
Major League'sfirst 10-gamewinner
Dawson:Law homer to back
effort as Cu s down Pirates
In the Amencan League
Yaakeee 4, Reel Sox J: Rickey Henderson bll a run-sconn& single and started a sensational double play m the
eighth inning as host New York beat the Boston Red Sox.
qa.inst an E&st 01V1s1on opponent since April I 0-12, 1987. Wklte SH II, Twtu I: Harold Baines' homer and
Mike Woodard's t~run .triple bi&hliiht~ a seven-run
seventh innina as host Ch1caao defeated Minnesota.
: From ne AaMdatecl Prest
f Greg Maddux became the National Leque's first I 0-1 pme winner and Andre Dawson hit a two--run homer as
1 the Chicago Cubs defeated Ptttsbuflh 8-S Tuesday ntght.
Tra1hna 4-3, speedy Elhs Burks led off the Boston
eighth with a triple. One out later, Mike Greenwell hit a
soft liner to left field Henderson dashed toward left
center. backhanded the ball at his shoeto~ and recovered
for a perfect throw to c:atcher Joel Slonner that nailed Burks.
With one out in the eaahth, Billy Ripken doubled
._ainst Frank Tanana, 8-4, and C..I Rlpken walked.
Murray then doubled down the left-field line. Doua Sisk,
).~ pitched two ICOrtleu inmnp.
lMlau 5,BhleJ•pl:Scott Bailes allowed nohiu for
6'1> inninas and Cory Snyder hit a two-rulThomer in the
bottom of the ninth innana to lead host Cleveland past
Toronto.
Reyall t, AcMeUCI t: Ted Power 1cauercd nine h1u
and Georae Brett and Danny TartabulJ homered on
consecutive pitches as host IUnsas City shut out Oakland
for the second consecutive pme.
I' Vance Law added a wlo homer as lhc vis1tina Cubs
bett the Pirates for JUSt the sixth time in their last 2S moctinp.
t Maddux, 10-3, allowed eight h1u in 711> 1nninp to
• beat the Pirates for the first time in seven careerdecisaons. t Maddux and New York·s Dwiaht Gooden had been tied I for the NL lead an victones with nine. I "They hit me has hard as they always have, but some
of the balls they hit toni&ht were cauaht." said the 22-ycar-
old Maddux. "I was lucxy After last year, l1ust wanted to
be a .SOO patcher this year."
Maddux. who was 6-1' with a S.61 earned run
averaae last season. t1rd Gres Swindell of Cleveland for
the ma1or Jeaaue lead in v1ctoncs
In other N1t1onal Lcque pmes:
nUUn It, E~ i: Juan Samuel drove in four runs witla a homer and sinaJe as v1s1t1n1 Philadelphia beat Mqritrcal.
0"1 Hams, 2-2. pitched three 1nninp in relief of
1tana Don Carman for the v>ttory and Kent Tekulve iot his a.hard save.
Samud bit a two-run homer in the tee0nd and added
a t-.run linak in the thard. Tim Raines homered m the tint for Montreal.
c.ntu.lt •,Mm l: Wallie McGee had three hits and
dro¥e in three runs u St. Louas defeated New York and ~ously 1.1nbeateo Dnid Cone.
St. Louis made the most ohi.1t hits in five inninpofT c~ 7.1, whole eamcd--run averaaie in 1iJr previous
IWt.I was 0. 76. The Cardinals •tole Ii.a belCI in the pme.
includnw two by Mc<let.
Mc<iec had a two-run linsle in lbe third ind an RBJ Ii* in the fifth.
John Tudor 2· I. aUowed cijhl hits in 6t,\ inninp and
Km f:l.-1:: p1tCLect 2~ hilbe anni"l'I for his third uve.
• ..... I: Ed Whitsoa allowed lix hits in
WVCG inninp U:d hit I fWO.i.n&a double, lradin& San ~pat vllilin& Cananntti.
Orioles 4, Tl&ert 3: Eddie Murray drove 1n lhre.e runs,
including a ue-breakma double an the eighth inning as
host Baltimore defeated Detroit and won its first series
Bailes. 6-4, had allowed only thre.e runncn to reach
base before Kelly Gruber lined a sinaJc to riaht field.
Ma.riMn i , Brewen •: Mickey Brantley drew a walk
with the bases loaded and two out1 in lb~ bottom oft~
ninth innina as host Seanle defeated Milwaukee for 111
second consccuuve win under Manaaer Jim Snyder.
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•
New Yott
Oiveland
Detroit Milwaukee
Bolton
Toronto
a.ltimore
•
._A-.... ,.,.. .........
WLN..08 Lii 38 11 .619 M 21 26 .Sit. 9 M 29 .21 .509 9Va tt;.2
21 21 .500 10 4-6 2A 31 .436 JWl s.s
25 33 .431 14 4-6
21 36 .361 17'/J ).7
&uT DIVlllON
36 19 .6SS ~S
35 21 .625 I 'h ~' 31 23 .'74 •VJ ).7 29 21 .S09 • S-5 26 27 ... 91 9 ).7
27 31 .466 l<W.t 7-3
14 42 .250 221h 4-6 ,...., .....
~l.TexuO NeW y otk 4, BolCon 3
8lltimOre ... Detroit 3
CleVdUd S, Toronto 3 Cllialeo I 0, Mhlnelola I
KamU City 6. Oakland 0
Seattle .5, Milwaukee 4
, .... t'•O.....
.....
Loll J ...... .. ,
Loll I
Woa I
Woa 2
Woe I
Won I
Won l
Loll 2
Loll l Lo.a I
Lola 2
Won 2
...... ..,
11· I lMO 11·U 11·13 1~1' 13-13
1~13 l~IS
14-11 10.U
14-ll 11-20
• l-17 l);.19
17. 9
II-9
IS.:11
11-12
14-16
11-14 1().11
19-10
17·12
16-12
11-16
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16-17
4-24
'21-ICM UMUS ..... ., ._...
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OIW, F«d, TIVd, Ir~ Lalren .. 0:::,", =-(W M I rr) ~·~.~ --~.... .
Detroit et LaMrt. lJ:ll •.m.. (W --.WV)
.. fl .... NATIONAL UIAGUll • Dttrelt .. Lehn. 6 •""· <• NClllWlf) ~(Win 2-7) at Texas (Hiyward 4-2), S:3S p.m.
Boi1on (Clement 1-3) at New Y otk (John 4-_J )1 4:30f.m.
Deuoit (TelTell 2.3) at a.ltim:eJBautista ~). 4:3 p.m. Toronto (Cenitti 3-2) 11 Cleve (Yett ~3), -t:J5 p.m.
A .... s.~1 MOWTOM I.OS MHLU CHAWtOMSHW llllUU .,. • •, • • .., • "'9eM 111. LllllWt n
OYountd IHa~lf
WelllntJel GDeYlt 11>
Dorllft 21>
.Atllby c .... ,., . .,,... ..
Dwwlno
• t 1 0 Sua • l 2 t MTaCNTCWI -DMlll¥ 1•1' .. 7 ,., 5100 ..._._ 1110 ~HHl.~ ... M11.
• 1 0 0 A,._ p t O O O °""*" )-S H 9, Thomel ....... lf, 1e11¥ Minnetota (Straker 2-3) aa Olicaao (LaPoint 4-S), 5:30 p.m. Oakland (Stewart 9-3) at Kan111 City (Saberfaalen 7·S). 5:35 p.m.
Milwaukee (Jona 3-0) at Seattle ~C..mpbell J.. 7), 7:05 p.m.
T1m•11Guaa
• O O o ~-t t O o 1-2 H 2. felwwdl •·t H !i V • .....,.... Ml • 2 a l er.wt 0 • • • • 1-5 "· llodnwl J•S CH " rotw CHJ t1·1J 4 It I Gllllcwllf 4 0 t l 1tS. J I 1 1 Mal'tflel rl • t 1 O LOI .._.LIS Cftl -Of-.. H H t, 101 l ~cf • 1 It Wontw Mt S-S lf, .Al>Ckllo-_...., .. 11 Ht,
Detroit at Cleveland. 4:35 p.m. _ -
OUland Ill T~ S:M p.m. Minaesoca at Seattle, 7:05 p.m.
Only pmq IChedvled
~ lfatlolMI ,,_.,,,,
DMea• Houston
Saa Francisco
Cincinnati San Dieao
Atlartta
WESTl>IVISION
W L Pet. GB Lit
30 23 .566 4-6
30 24 .5'6 'h S-5
29 27 .518 2'h s.s
2S 31 .446 6'h 2-8 21 35 .375 J()lh ,_,
18 3-4 .3'46 ll'h 4-6
BAIT DIVlllOH New York 38 18 .679 6-4
PittaburJh 31 25 .SS4 7 4-6 St. Louis 31 26 .S44 7\la 7-3
Chicaio 28 27 .509 9Vt 6-4
Monual 26 29 .473 11 'h 4-6
Philadelphia 23 31 .426 14 6-4 ........ ,..leeret
Houaton S, ~ 2
Philadelphia l_O~ Montral S
'Chicqo 8, Pituourah S
St. Louis 4, New York I
San Dieao 6, Cincinnati 2
San f raoci~ S, Atlanta 0
....
Lolt 2
Won 2
Won 3
Lost I
Won I
1.olt I
Lost I Lost 3
Won J
Won I
Lost 2
Won 3
a....AwaJ
14-IS 16-8
17· 9 13-IS
17-14 12-13
12·13 IJ..18
16-17 S-18
7-17 11-17
18-9
19-11
14-13
12-12
14-13
13-14
2(). 9
12-14
17-13
16-1 s
12·16
10-17
A 0-4 0 .sdoedac-A. O l t £. JoMtoft I · II 10-10 a , k*t _.,. H IS. ~: ::~: ~l~M•.C-1-JHt.T .....
MIOewlJfl 1 o o t Sc-. 11¥ ~
leldllf • 1 O O O o.tl"Olt II al D Zf-ltS HOlllO 0 0 0 0 lA AllelM t1 It • If-ft ~lit t t I I ThrM ...int ..,.._.,...,_ t. E ......... 2,
• I I I T..... M t 7 I t..ellMeer. V. ~ FO!M .,........_ lte-
SC.. "1...... ~·•c~n.u...,.... ....._ ·.m • --• a ceon. 121 . .AMbl....o.er.it " m.m.a m. &Al.._.. W •1 --1 JM ..,_.., 21 c.--It). Tet• ~ Wllwllne llll -'ttanwa (S). ~ M, Lea ......... .. TedW-
E-...., ...,,.._ W ..... or llo"''°" l. ~ ..... ..._. 2. lM ..,..... Loe-+4oul1oft 7, lM ..,...._ 6. ............ ..... ...,.._ .A-T7,._
AtMw. OorM. sa .... ldW cm • ._ cit>. • "•••so ......
DwwlftW,1-4 t 7 t 2 t I Lela...
..,_ L.1-J 2 M ' 5 2 ~ J ....... tl·1 l •• l t MlilM 2 •••• ,
Cl9ln 2 11111 HV ,.._ (DY OwwtllJ. k-Holloft. UmlJll• llome, Htr~ l"lnl, Tete. SecoM. 0.1111; TNrf, FtM1111..._ T-1•1. A-25 ...
T..apt'1Guaa
Houston (Scott 6-1) at D ... w a (VUenzuda J..S), 7:3S p.m.
Philadelphia (Ruffin 4-4) at Montreal (Dopson 1-3). 4':0S p.m. Chicaao (Schiraldi 3-2) at Pitubursb (Walk $-4), 4:lS p.m.
New York (Ojeda 4-S) at St. Louis (DeLeoa 4-4), S:3S p.m. Cincinnati (RalmUteeD 2-6) 11 San Diqo (Show 4-S). 7:0S p.m.
Atlartia (C.Oft'man 2-6) at San FnincilOO (Klukow 4-l). 7:3S p.m. ,,._. ... .,,, GUMI
Houston at DM,u~ l:OS p.m.
Cincinnati at SU Dieeo. I :OS p.m.
Atlanta at San franci1CO, t:OS p.m.
Otic:qo at Pitt.lbutlh. 4:3S p.m.
Only pmet tcbeduled
B uttfr·~ Bn4RD
£A llltematlolul alqde ~
The Los A"lcln lnternatkinaJ Bicycle Expo will open 1hree days or bicycle rides and races
Ju!J 1-3 at the Analleirn Convention Center.
. The ~po, the llrJCSt In Southern Catifomia
b11tory, II oeen noon '° 9 p.m. Friday and 9 Lm.
10 6. p.m. S.~y and Sunday, te8turina a charity compct.iuon each day.
featured will bt a S.fety Festival for kids
Friday 11 l p.m., a Criteriu.m bicyde race at Anaheim Stadiwn S.1urda1 at 1 Lm. and
Sunday inct'*9 a »-mile friendtllip Ride at 6:~ a.m. and family ride of2l miles at I Liil.
T1cketsard6 for aduJtund kids undtt 12 are ad~iued fret. Diacount tickets are availlble 11
vanoua bicycle sbOOL For mOft information,
call Randy lee a& (2 fl) 94S-036.
OCC A.111J11er nHqball camp
Oranee Coast Col~ women's vofiyball
coech Jane Hilaendorl"wlll conduct the seventh
annual OC'C Volleyt>.IJ Camp July 29-Jl at
Petmon 1)'11\. TbccampisOj)en to11rts.and for the first time
boys, IFS 12-19. lnstn.ICUC>n lasts from 9 a.m. unul 4:30 p.m.
each day. There as an enrollment fee ofS60 unul
JuJy IS, when the fee becomn $65, and
enrollment t1 on a limited t>.si1.
For mOft informauon call OCC"i office of
cemmunity lef'Viccs 11 (714) 432-5180.
lflke Oenlk• bueball CMJJp
UCI ~bell coach Mike Gerakos will
COndl.ICt bis summer insttuctional camp for
youths, qes 8-16, in June and July on the UCI campus.
SalH>nsrunJunel7·30,JuJy I 1-14and 18-21
11 a CO!' of S I~-I nduded is wort on butni~ntftt. fiekbnt. favonte position wOft ·~ h1&llftl. Aidina Genkos 1te rus uc1 llM~ftlJ, coUcte players and former =~~~th a ~tio of one coece':
T9 "liAcr by pbone or pin f'urthcr 1nf0t'· ma1~ Call Uae \JCJ buebalr oftltt at SS6-674S ~m ._.fal.9 Monday thfOUlh Fnday between a
·-P.ftt.
,
....
CMS 111 •I -=:=::="=:t o.t... ,..,.... ..._ t a..... r
T .... ...
left 0-.. J, Qfg a t ..... .,.... --..,., ...,,
Buuoftnishasoneofthefive ·
to ldvancic to the next world cha
pionship q_ualifyina r;ound, Sch
"'ill face sutr compc11tion.
Sam Ermoleftko of Cyprc11 retu
aft.tt winnana at lo_n& ~ last
on his way to a third..place fini
the Wor1d Final. Shawn Moran "' the race two yean qo with a hrt111c111•
ria,ht ankle. and he retumuJoaa W1
European racina scmation ·
Fuia.
Billy Hamill, 11, -and _Guy~-~
18, will challensc the veteran dri
includina Kelly Moran. who fin·
ICCOnd behind Enne>aenko last
and Kina. who once rac.ed with
crushed vertebrae.
The Amcncan FinaJ isU'lic1JlJt08al
the touahcsl round for Amirir'lrllll•
riden.
Only five competitors advance
the Ovcneas Final in Co"ent
Great Britain.. where the top ni
riders advan« to the -Int
Contmcnt.al Final 1n Yctla
Sweden. The top 11 riden\hcre mo
on to the World Final. Sq>temba
in V OJCOS.. Denmark.
Before the Amencan and Ca
riden bqin m.lltna travel pla
O\lcneas. they must master
treacherous qlW'\er--n:aile oval
in Lona Beac:b.. where speeds t.ait to
mi\cs pc:r hour are reached °" t
beck strai&htaway. Gates open a& 6 p.m .. with tidcds
S 10 for adults, SS fot children.
Yle tickets may be obwned at
T1cke~ oullet.s.
ButlIJe Dar a dlartt7 nm
Bob 5cqrcn Wlll bt '" anendan« of tht
Basulle Dey lk nin July 10 Thc run is the~
llt 1n the lf n1ted St.ates and will berulifit Unned
Cerebrcl Palsy ofOf'anlr County
Last )UT more than S.000 NMen J*11Cl-
paled 1n tbe ln11~ to Newport nan wbd this
year will 1ncluck a fit.Dell fiir.
There Wlll be I bmlMSICltllD'Y forcorporaie
teams 10 compcV and a ~cnt dmner at Le
Mcndtn1 HO\d Saturday. July 9.
For mort tnJOnnauon on tbe llt. can Suao
Whcuell or l.esl)"t: McRae at (71 4) SS1-SIOO.
AIA "°T9 M&tedMJJ ca1111J at CCI 8o)'1 &~4-1 can JOin tbe Athletes in Acllon
scrond annual boys buketbalJ camp 11 E.'11.rist's
Collqc 1n Irvine.
The camp NM Junt 27-29, and c0sts SSS.
For mon 1nfonnauoo wntc AlA Bllsltett.D at
11 590 West 8ttnardc1C\..., Su1~ 21 S, Saa lMao. CA. 9 21 27 For mformalJOn over the: phoDe, Call
(619)4~1-0107
l
• I•
COLDWeLL
BANt\eRO
WllT•E
llWI •••••••
associa ted
. . . . ~'
easy
fashion
J
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.
I . . •
I . ..
7.
• ••
I• -_,
...
I\.
-__ , --
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-- -
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HAS RETU.RNEDI
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> Back by popular demand. Dimes-A-line Wilt run Friday. Satur-
day and Sunday in Its own classification In the Classlfled Ads .
Since this is a special offer. we have a Tt)ursday noon deadline
and ask prepayment for afl ads. This rs open to all private party
advertisers for merchandise .not over SSO fprice must be listed
in adl and no abbreviations will be acc~pted. AU ads wifl run
Friday, Saturday and Sunday. There is a S-lrne minimum at 20C
per line ... So your tow cost Dfmes·A·Une ad Is only •••
--
• '
$3.00.
DEADUNe: Thurs~day noon
PRICE: S-line mrnrmum • 3 days • 20( per hne = S3.00
• All ads are prepaid by coming into t~ D•lly Pi/ct to
place your ad or use the coupon below.
• Private parr!y merchandise only ads. No com-
merelal ads. pets. livestock. produce or plants.
• Each item must be priced in the ad with no Items over sso.
-
"" ......
~ 11 -
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Dlmes·A·UM
Daily Pilot
330 West Bay Street. Costa Mesa, CA 92616
DaHy Plloc hours·
Monday-Frrday 8:00 AM to S.00 PM
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I --•
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l I, ~Ji•••• ............................... :-. . j .,., .
-· .......... .-..-.-.......... .-.
] ......... ·--· --
tl ' ..,__,
,_
fo<-• u...-.. ....... 1111•
I
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For more lnfonnetlon
CALL TOOAYll
lllFNLllS
Y0411
Service Dtrectory
A.pl Mer!tatlW
•
M2·G21 elt.110
(
------~ ~
I
Motor Routes
available in
W11tn1i11t1r
Huntincto1 l11ch
Founflin Y1ll11
NO COLLECTING
NO SOLICITING
Oehver One Day a w.--
• Must have dependable car
and PfOOf of tnaurance.
.. 842-14••
• Ask tor Joanne Craney
•
....
WORK PART-TIME DELIVERING
NfWSPAPERS. EARN UP TO
$600/MONTH. MUST HA VE RE-
LIABLE VEHICLE. INSURANCE.
ANO OMV PRINTOUT MON-
DAY-FRIDAY 2-5 PM •• WEEK-
ENDS & HOLIDAYS 4-7 A.M.
NEWPORT /CORONA DEL MAR
& LAGUNA BEACH AREAS.
CAU I0-4UI EXT. 205
AllC FORml'H
BOYS & GIRLS
Mo~
-START #OW-
11lo15 Years Old
WORK IVIENINQS
AND SATURDAY
WORK IN YOUR OWN NEIGHBORHOOD
YOU CAN AVERAGE PER WEEK •7500
OR MORE
CONTACT Mr. PhlHlps
PHONE (714) 4984321
... .
,..._nm1
1&1.•UIAY ,.,. ........ ~ ,, ........ c.-.... ........
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•11w11ae .........
.nau ....
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 8, 1988 25 CENTS
V~ters paveoverMeasU:re .A _
Direct-man bll6 turns public opinion
against county slow-growth initiative
BJ STEV& llAULE ............ -.
In a dramatic shift of ~blic
opinion, <>ranee County residents
went to the polls Tuesday and
rejected the proposed countywide
slow-arowth initiative -lD outcome
that would have teemed impossible
only weeb qo.
The initiative. which would have
tied development in all unin-
corporated areas to "*1 improve-
ments, had enjoyed commandina
support accordina to polls taken u
recently.u April
But a well•fUnded adven.Wna blitz
in the wanina days of the heated
campaian apparently turned the tide
Additional county, .,.,.el«:Uon CONr.,,.onA4; M
and doomed the controvenial in-
itiative.
Conpa.sional candidate David
Baker, who oppoted the inititiave.
said "the people educated them-
selves."
"Measure A is a complicated
measure and I think the more people
looked at it., the more they found it ID
be a complex issue," Baker said.
--Yacklina the arowth issue, traffic issue and the open...-ce i11Ue needs
tome aood heads to Ft IOletber·"
But Irvine Mayor Larry Apan, an
ardent support of the initiative, •id
the vote only indicated that county
developers had swayed the vote with
vast sums of money.
.. ll appears to me that the de-
velopers aot the election results Ibey
...
paid for, and now they:re toi!'l to
have to clean up the traffic mesa.
.. It's UP. to the devdopen now,"
Aaran S&Jd when asked about the
future of the county's traffic problem.
·•They said there 1 a beuer way than
Measure A. Let them put up or shut
up."
The initiative was the brainchild of
former south county rancher Tom
Roten. a onetime <kveloper who said
be believes builden have l'_)Qe too far
and thit poWt.b limits should be vt.
'The slow-powtb meuure a.tvacted
support from both Republicans and
..
GOP House races go to Cox, Rohr.abacher Primary ~
SupervisorWieder NewcomerCoxsays -. clinches ...
finishes distant third 40th District voters IOr
in42ndDlstrtctrace understoodissues race I;~
By ROBUT HYNDMAN
Of .. DllJNll ...
Haniett Wieder, embittered by
media accounts of her lies concemina
a colles edu= failed Tuesday in
her bia to s Dan Lun&ren in
Conaress.
Instead, Dana Rohrablcher, a for-
. m~r speechwriter for Ronald Re8P.n1 was the top vote-setter in the crowoeo
Republican ' prima.ryi thereby vir-
tually usurina him.se f victory in the
November aeneral election in a
district with heavy Republican voter
reaistration.
Wieder, chairwoman of the Oranae
County Board of Supervisors, had
won the endonement of Lun.,en,
whoissteppinadownaftet lOyeanin Conaress to seek the sta1C treasurer
poll. But Wieder's campaip. was
rocked by revelations that she bad
lied about rec:eivina a coUeee dep-ee
from Wayne State Univerity in
DetroiL In fact. she bad never
attended Wayne State and has nq
collqe«iree at all.
Later in the campaip, Wieder had
to fire a press secretary who im-
personated a repon.er to interview an
organizer of an eff or1 to rec:a1l her
frOm the Board ofSuperviscn.
In an interview Tuetday at the
GOP celebration in Orante. Wieder
blamed the pr&s for many of her
(Pleue .. OOP/A2)
Sporta
Detroit Md BIH LalmbMr
took C*eOf the Lak ..
and Kareem Abdul-Jab-
bar In Game 1./81
BJ ROBERT HYNDMAN
... PAUL ARCBIPLEY
Of .......... -
Christo])ber Cox. a newcomer to
Oranac County politics, emeraied
Tuesday as the appcent winner
amona~ 12 Republican candidates ,o
virtuallr assure him.elf of suoceedina
Robert Bldham in Conaress.
Cox was tumina. bllck the eballeDJe
of Irvine City Councilman Dave
Baker and Nathan RosenberJ in vote
couotina early Wednesday and a~
pearcd set to win the Republican nomination for the 40th Con-
aressional district, where Re-
publicans outnumber Demoaats
nearly 2 to 1.
At the local GOP celebration
Tuesday niaht in Oranae. Cox said be
believed the important issues bad
been brouabt out durina the cam-
P'!~e are fottunate in the 40lb
district that the electorate is hiahly educated,., he said. .. They are capable
of undeni.ndlna the iss~ ts
Baker, however, said he believed
the campeisn was marted by dirty
tricks and peGonal anack.s.
"What happens in the campeip
will be very tellina about the future of
Oran,e-COunty politics. We ran a
very clean campaip and some of my
qpponents ran the dirties\ campaians
~ ... COZ/A.2)
..
Clad.a Coa ~) recel.-a laaDd at It.la Rlte
ba die DoOletr. IDD la On.a&• u lae tae.da
Ferguson trounces Hart
in GOP Assembly contest
BJ GREG ILEllX ... ..., ... -
It was a touah fi&ht. but the
outcome of the Republican primary
race for the 70th Assembly District
turned out much as expected with
incumbent Gil Femlson pollina a
clear victory over "}lewpon Beach
City Councilwoman Evelyn Hart.
With early returns in, Fersuson, 6S,
1eemed assured of clincbina bis third
term in the Slate Allembl)' by I nearly
2 to l marlin over Han. 57.
The district includes Newport
Beach, COsta Mesa, Launa Beach.
Lquna Hills. Laauna N'ipe), Dana
Point, San Juan Capistrano and
Mission Viejo .
Tuesday's primary vote ends weeks
of brutal cam~ing that turned
two friends into. bttter rivals.
Han's unexpected candidacy an-
noUD<lement in February sent shock
waves throuah the county Re-
publican Party and drew sharp aiti-
cism from party leaders, who said ber
challenge was detrimental to party
aoaJs.
· In Aoril. Hart received a reprimand
from the e&J1Y's Ethics Committee
for what at called .. unethical and
unfair" campaian tactics. ~ferrina to
her mention of an FBI investiptioo
into Ferguson's campaip funds.
Hart. in tum, called said the rulin&
came from a "kanproo coµrf' that
was tryina to pressure her out of the
race.
The battle of words rarely let up
throu&b<>ut the race, with both sides excban&ina stinaina mailers and
spcechCs. But in the '-nd. Ferguson's
strona conservative stlnce. ~war
chest and incumbency won b1m the
race.
Ferpson said be was ready to bury
the hatcbet.
(Pleue .. nJlGU90fl/A2)
Dulfakis
Highway bonds In
close contest; other
bonds wtn approval
BJ DOtJG WILLIS ....... _
LOS ANGELES Michael
Dukakis rode to an easy vic:Ulry Ova'
Jesse Jacbon in California's Dem~ cratic presidential . Tuaday, ~adayon ~dindled a
fint-beJlot victory at the pmty°I
D8tioDa1 convention.
Vice Prcstdieat Gecqe 8'1* swept
Califoruia's virnaaUy ~ a.
publican pri~. ID tbe .S. ~ · -
l"llCIC, freshman incumbent Ptte
Willoa won the u~ a.I a. ouhlican . • and Go¥. Leo
MdMtll ~dnepoliri-caJ ~wm to win the Oawaatic
nomination.
TbC oa!l ·c::1o1e statewide races oa Catifomia I ballot ~ amoac tbe J 2
propositions.
A S l billion biabwa bood issue
sponsored by Gov. 3e:; Deu·
kmejian was leadifta by a l<:allt S,03'-.
vo1C marJin, l,143,840 to 1,138,802,
with nearly baJf the statewide vote
c::ountrld.
The other four swewide bond =:~dJ~.2cal-~ ~
earthquake rehabiHi.tion procrama
were all approved by c::omfonabk
~ conflictina pro~s to
amend state ~ limits -ae
both trailiQ&. ~tlOD 71, to ailt
tbe limit, was behind by 2 ~~ points with over half the ·
vote in. wbilt Proposition 72, wbidi
would pve b.iahways a bisr'lhare of
the ~ state funds. was defeated
byal-2 ·
AD aai= b9ckcd by political extremist Lyndon LaRouche to ct.
cla.rc AIDS a communicable =· subjectiaa vlctims so potea ·
qua.ran~ WU debtrd 2-1 .
Qne propou1 co limit ca.mpaip
s~ndiaa. Proposition 73, "WOil baad-i while a cocnpeti~ imtiatW con-fttc:tiQa measure. Propalition-68, led
by a smaller~ . · ~-DUK~;
lndez
C7
C9-10
04-e
C8
A10
euge fire hits 7 buildings, costs$~ milli9a .~
C1-8
A9
A8
C7 08
01'"3
A2
IJ IOB VAN ft&BN ............
A ~ fire tbat bePn at a
con.stnletion lite on Eat Thiid Street in Su1a Ana did an estimated S6
millioD in dmnlle 10 leWD bWdi
in am block area TUaclay nilbt. 1111
W"rtz 11 ra said 8ama l'eldled beilllu of l 00 feet at tiJnea Md
billOws or.moa Could be ... • a.r ..... _} • Malibu. Tiie ftR .......
Uaftic in down&own Suta ADI and
trislered aridJock conditions on the
S.Ota Ana Freeway .
Motorists were warned to avoid the
area as a heavy drape of smote
billowed over much of the downtown
area, the California HiabfflY Patrol
said.
The blue tqan shortly after S:lO
p.m. ata 204-urut a~tcomolelt
uackrc:oostruct.ion tn the 400 blocK of
EMt nird Street. said witnellel. ' ...... in the driveway of my boule
Agr:an elected Irvin.e mayor;
·slow-growth all~es win, too
-
OD Second Street," said Sana Ana
resideft.t Rudy 1.amudio. "We were
about to pull out of the driveway. It
was about ~:JS •hen 1 •w the flames
on the fint Boor of the aplltment
complex. I ran inside to can the fire
department, but I = somebody bad already calledute the line
was busy.
·vou could feel \be beaL It was reallyboL ..
l1lc blue tnvdod quickty thlOUlh
. .
Dana Po
votetofo ........
................
Chica bill withdrawn
' Aa.,.,._tblllM•nc-derom1b..._lD _.Aaa.,_ap11a O..••
FIRE DAMAGES 7 BUILDINGS •••
..... _,l'raaAl
IOP of the house to see what wu toina
OD. Everyone OD the street WIS
.. . .
waterina down their b()ltte1 I sum
we1J have a lot ofOowen this year." f.ric Guillen lives with his family at
SJ 8 Third S1reec., directly acroa the
stRet from lbe aputmCDt complex
where tbe fire started.
"We were standina rilbt outs.ide
the house when it started," II.id
Guillen ... At first we were just excited,
then I s<>t teared became I tbouaht it wu pnna to butn my home. It was eo
bot 11 shattef'ed all the windows in the
front."
Witnesaes said the flames shot up
100 feet in the air at tbe beiaht of the
blaze, which tied up freeway uaffic u
01otorisu pwked at the mushroom
eloud of smoke.
"I could see the smoke all the way
from Anaheim when r was drivina
home, ... said Rafael Barbolo .
Rudie Gomez, 31, watched fire
with bis IOD and said tbe ftameS were
.. as WI as ldepboDe poles."
.. It didn't start out sloW or anytbina
like that, it just took riabt off became
of all the dry wood. Tfle beat WIS to
intente than we couldfl•t ,et any
doter than that buildina." Gomez
said; pointina to a nearby lhoppina center.
The fire, at one point, teemed to ~uce a teries of ex~ aen(l. ma burni. ·na emben =:T, down on tbe neilhbortM>od. . -.id the
exploliom may.have been tbe IOUDds
of tires bu.rnial and cnctiQI.
Acmu the atn:et. beat blasted
shopfroot windows out pf a an auto ~re at Fourth aDd Mortimer
.. It went up real fast." said Leonard
'
Gomez. 29, an employee at Lynn's
Transmission.
Tbc fire was mostly confined to an
area between Third and Fourth
streets and French and Porter streets,
althouah winds estimated at about 1 S
mph started several spot fires in
nearby neiahborboods, '9CCOfdina to
Bud Carter, Santa Ana Fare Olief.
The fire also briefly cut off elec--
trical power, includ.ina cable tetc>
vison and telephones. to tome resi-
dents in an area bounded by Third
and Sill th and Mortimer and Oarficld streets. said fare officials.
Tbc came of the blue is still under
investiption. TbebW.ewasofficiaJly
contained around 8 p.m.
Santa Ana ftrefiabten wete assisted
by (are departments from Newport
Beach, Costa Mesa, Huntinaton
Beach and Fountain Valley .
c0x GOP WINNER IN40TB DISTRICT •••
l'romAl Mi the hist«9 of the United States, ..
said Baker. also •ttendina the puty at
the Doubletree Inn in Oranae.
.. .. To the dearee ~vc campaians
alt successfW. /ou re aoina to tee more of them. boge_.Jhc .responsi·
bility for these vile. filthy mailen will WI on those who sent them out.••
' Baker had early momentum,
eering the endorsements of
ham and state Sen. Marian
BerJiCSOn. But his campa.ip was hard
Ilk when an unidentified man ancnd-= campa.ip fonun yelled out
lions that Baker had bad an
erous affair with an Irvine
• woman. The 3S..year~ld attorney
and fonner UCI basketball stir tinowl~ he bad experienced
troubles wt th his maniqe. but would .ot responddin:clly to the claim.
Badham, who S1tepped down after
10 yean in Conaress, also decried the
campaian tactics used this spring.
0 1 bepn seeina two yean ~ 1
p>winJ trend to demean the Job, ' be
s.id. 0 1 rcpct to see it bappenang. No
... tter who wins, for the next two
years everyone will just think of those ual.Y mailers. ..
Cox. 3S, is a former counsel to
President Reagan and used campaign
posten that read simply: •7bank you,
Chris Cox. Ronald Reagan ... Cox has
uiensive contacts in Wubinaton,
D.C. Among those who endorsed his
candidacy was fonncr jud&e Robert
8ortc and former Marine Lt. C.ol.
Oliver North.
ID earlier interviews. Cox pointed
to his extensive mdentials when he
uid his bacbround will help him
deal effcctivefy with foreian policy
and on the economy.
The Newpon Beach raident
&nduated mqna cum laude from use, where be took an accelerated
three.-year coune and a double major
in £nalisb and political lcience. He
simultaneously attended Harvard
Law School and Harvard Buainea
School. was an editor of the .. Harvard
Law Review" and in 1977 received
both a law dearee and a ma.stets in
business administration.
Cox was a partner in the law firm
Latham & Watkins in Newport
Beach, where be specialized in oor·
porate finanoc. From 1986 to last
February, be worked in the White
House as a senior associate cou.mcl to
President Reapn.
ID an April interview with the Daily
Pilot, Cox said; "As a oonpasman l
would be able to offer to people not
just the minimum they would expect
-their phone calls Ft returned and
that I'm willina to listen -but l can
also offer an intdlipt mind qainst
which their coocerns will resonate. So
if they've JOt a complex business
problem, I will understand it. ..
Finishing third in the crowded
Republican contest was 36-year-old
Nathan R01Cnbera of Newport
Beach. Rosenbcr& h8d tried to unteat
Badham two years aso. thereby
upsetting party kadcl'1 who did not
care for fellow Republicans who
challenged esl&blished incumbents.
Even as a party outsider. however.
RosenbefJ raised some ~30.000 and
drew praise for an 80-pqe book on
his politics that WU ICDt to &S,000
voters in the district.
Other Repubticans in the race were
William Yacoboz:ri, 46, a Newport
Beach attorney; John Hr.tton. 43,
Newport Beach airline pilot; John
Kelly, 26, a Tustin City Councilman;
Patncia Kishel, 39, a Laauna Hills
author. Larry StcmberJ. 60, a Tustin
certified public accountant; Dave
Williams, S2, of Uvennore who
~mised to move to 0ranae County
If elected.
Lida Lenney, a Laauoa Beach City
Councilwoman. won the Democratic
f!imary qainst challenter Georae ~lis. a S6-year~ld volunteer
hospital administrator from Newport
Beach.
Lenney, S4, is a formCT junior hiah
acbool teacher who formed die
La&una Canyon Conservancy in an
eftOrt to preserve the area from
development. ln the last few days of
her pnmary campaian, Lenney won
the endoncment from state Sen. Alan
Cranston.
~GRAN ELECTED MA YORINIRVINE •••
homAl
~ council tcnn, finished a clOIC
!tlrd. But Agran's mayoral triumph
iJto left his council seat vacant, and
under recently-adopted pidelines,
the third olace council candidate t.u~maticahy wins the seat.
-chalJenaen Michael Shea and Art
Bloomer. both Miller allies, were
fourth and fifth and out of the
running.
The new council will likdy be even
more liberal than the previous coun-
cil, which often pitted Apan and
Councilman Ray Catalano 111inst
.._ more powtb.«iented Miller Ind
llMIOll'a , .......... c:-..... CA ._..,._._, .. ~,,._CA_.
Councilman David Baker. Coun-
cilman Ed Doma~ whole seat is
teeure until 1990, onen provided the
swina vote and usually aided with Aaran and Catalano.
Catalano declined to teek another
council term became of tMifteu
intaats. and Bater ~ out to
pul'.SUC a bid for the «>lb Con-~ftal Distrid
Aho Tuaday, Irvine votcn over-
whelmirialy 91.J10ved ~ to
leave an edditioul '· 11a11 a open spece in &heir city. e.tilr dril
year, city and Irvine Co. officials aareed to amend the city's land-me
plan to tet aside the ldditional acreaac. In ~ Tbc Irvine Co.
would be all more intensive
deve.lopment in other areas o( the
city.
The iotal amount of~ s.,.ce in
Irvine will be about 16.000 llCftl,
more than any other city in <>ranee
County.
VOWI , 8Wl"Oved tM PfOPOMli,
known II MeUure C. by I maqiD OI.
~--6101.
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Laguna recall deadline pushed back
BJ LANCE IGNON °' ................
Leaden of a movement to oust
three membcn of the Lapna Beach
City Council revised 1 deadline for
combining their special elec:tion with
a reautarly scheduled ballot on Nov.
8.
Committee to RecaD City Council
announced two months aao that it
would try to combine the elections to
save the city the estimated SlS,000
cost of an independently held recaJI
election.
lie committee has Iona st1ted that
it had until last Tuesday to tum in
3,000 valid sisnatures apinst Mayor
Dan Kenney and council memben
Lida Lenney and Robert Gentry if the
two elections were to be held concur·
rently.
But Tuesday niaht Rex Brady,
consultant to the committee, an·
no'\lnced that the date had been
revised to next Monday. Brady said
the movement had shot Jor last
Tuesday in order to a;ve the tjty
amp~c time to process the recall
pet1t1ons.
The new deadline will reduce that
time. More important, it will &ive the
recall movement more time to collect
its sisnatures. •
The latest fiaurcs show the move-'
mcnt with 2,600 names qainst each
council memben.
GOP NOD GOES TO ROHRABACHER •••
From Al
campaian woes.
"You 1uys were bcatina me over the head all the time," she said. .. The
riiedia has some tou.l«ardliq to do
about what they explOh."
Washington as Reaaan's
speechwriter. He abo won attention
by eamina the endorsement offonner
Marine Lt. Col. OliVCT' North.
Finisbjna 1tron1 in the race was
Steve Hom, S6, the former president
of California State University ~
Beach, who raited about S2 I 0,000 for
the race and was hiahly critical of
Wieder .
Wieder finished a disunt third in
the Los AOFles County area of the
42.od Conaresaional district 1nd was
nosed out by Robrat.cher in the Ora• County precincu even
thoulft he is from Palos Verdes. Other candidates in the crowded
Rohrabacher, 41 , touted his Republican prinl;l!Y were Tom
staunch conservative viewpoinu and Bauer a 34-year-o&d aerospece enai·
often refe~ to his ei&bt yean in necr from Torrance; Jeffiey Burns,
33, a Huntinaion Beach carpenter;
Don Davis. 44, of Palos Verdes
Estates; Andrew Llttlefair, 27, ol
Lona Beach, and Robert Welboum, 50, of Tomnce.
ln the Democratic primary, Guy
K.imbrouah defeated twocba1Jen1m.
Dan Farrell and Ada Unruh, the
dauahter·an-law of the late state
Treasurer Jcue Unru.h. K.imbrou&b,
42, is a politic.a.I science and history
teacher at Mt. San Jacinto Collqe.
Pa81 Ardlpkr COlltrlbtlfal 141 W• ,...,.,..
FERGUSON TURNS BACK HART •••.
holllAl
.. I'm $(>in& to offer her a hand of
friendship," Ferauson said Tuesday
niaht. '"I hope she would convey to
her supporten that we're all part of
the same pany ...
Ferauson uid that, for the most
part, the mudslinaina. was confined to
Newnon Beach, addina that he took
Har{s-ittaeks .. penonaUy."
.. I've been a Marine officer and
aentleman my whole lift," said
Feraeson ... When someone attacks, it
is die same thins as Ftt.inl wounded
on the battlefield. I haven•t develoepd
touah enouah skin yet.••
Kart also said she would try to
patch the relationship, but still bad
pointed criticism offCJJUIO.n..
"I will shake hands with Mr.
Fcrauson and work for the aood of Republican politics,·• she said Tues-
day niabt. .. Mostly people don't
chanae but I hope so. That's what this •
campaian wu all abOut. ..
Hart uid her campaip miJht have
fare better if Jbe'd bad more time. •
.. We have to reme~ber people
have been informed tllf'OUlb out
mailers Ud thtouch the presa," said
Hart. ••t have a lot Of respect for their
judaement, and ru live that serious
consideratJon.
"Yes, I would do it apin."
DANA POINT VOTERS BACK·CJ1;YHOOb •••
Prom Al
Niauel citybood application, a aroup
callina itself CoutaJ Taxpayers for
Local Control bepn lobbyinJ to be left out of the proposed city of Laauna
Nipel.
Laden of Local Tupayen at fint UJUed they would ~ to form
their own, exclusive coutal city
stretchina from Nipsel lhora into
South La,una.
Then in the spri na of 198 7' the city
of Lquna &e.ch qrced to annex
South Laauna. leav1ns the coutal
Lquna Niguel factJon without
enouah territory to incorporate..
Ironically. Dana Point ~ up
swallowins a piece of Llpna Niauel
when iaidents ol J 3 cOu&al CIOlll•
~the centurlle. ftne wood ....... Mve
bec:otne ~ yn'Q'8 wtth luxury Md OOOd ..... .
T oct.y, HeWwood 8huttera ti'!" en wy 111g11a
to eoy am.tot from Colon6ll to Uttra Modem.
No Gt'* window oower'1eag performe ltl function
wtth .a. b9UY end .... 8hutter9 ........
wtth 8ft ......... .,.., of ~ tedUOI ......
beodc out ._.. eno cold, m.xna u. -. .,..
..,.... .................... llnill. ~ °"* wllldow netmente. lhutttra lnor••• your hOMe·a--.
.......... ~·· ~ ,.., dllOW low. ... of 1\6, 2,,., 3'A, Md·~
w. ........... WOOdl-.11 ...........
...., 1111*'-ofoalorlorllllftllnd•illl• rou 1111111 .. ._. dlllgr\ '°' ~ ..,.._.,,.. ..... ........
-servtng Calffornta lince 1853
.
munities voted 61 to 39 pen:ent laa
June to join with Dana Point.
Dana POint IJsO ar:ew on the other • Side. when county ofticiab pcnuaded
the Dana Point citybood committee
in June, 1987 to ICICept the ~
corpora led community ofCapilll'UO
Be8ch.
I I