HomeMy WebLinkAbout1988-06-14 - Orange Coast PilotNew,pori eeich COuncH reverscsitaelf
on denlil ofanniiiil pfrolechntcs shows
•10a.G&LDKX ............... -
. The lkiel o¥er NcWPoit ae.ct. wiH
liabt up aft« all this Founh of July.
After l J minutes of dilCUalion aad
public testimony, the Ne.,_ ae.cll
City Council voted unuimousty
. ·,~ . . .: . ·eout -· .... · ""' .. ,• . . ~
ea.ta Mesa plans to flll
position$ tradltlonalty
heldb~ gun-.:to_tlng of·
fleer• ~th unarmed civ-
. Ulans.J Al · ~-..
' " • -• ~ ,.. • • j ~ · : Callfdmla . ... ·.. -·. ~ . •Io• l •
Sen. Alan Cranstoo ~tit to end a probi
of a uvtnga and loan
company h4tadedby one
of tlit-campaign-~'
trtbutora./ ~· . ·
Monday IO ~ve apecial events
1ppliCAtions for Fourth of July fire.
Works ahowt at Newpon ~Dunes
Aquatic Park and Bia CallYoa Coun-
try Oub, ttvmina its May 23
decision to deay lhe permits.
The Newport Dunes apptication
WU ~ved Oft tM COlldi1icMI IMa owners bitt two Caliloraia ff._
Paaiol oftic:en 10 .... iwida .a...
contrOl
Ti'IMC WU ci*l II tM ...
motivator behind the Ma..>: 2J ..._.
o( N~ Dunes aad .. CU~ ~itJ. which loll on;:-Nia. Of'~I and s;.2, respeeti~
Councilwoman Rutbelyn Plmn-
mer led the movetodeaytbe ...-...
Plummer read from 1 police npan
filed aft.er last year's Newpon Duel
25CENTS
sgetar
letlcn from raidmu .,.... • ,.
c:omiduation.
A 1Wdtat1t Harbor y_. IJ1 mm-
*Y SchOol WM IO .......... Ille
QDeellalion or the ...... -rdied her fif\h..,.cSe m. to wri1e
leuen to the cOundl --few a ..ofhean.
.. If the maner at band it 9tafllc ~on. then wby doe'I ~ jUll de* down the chili cook4l«i. the
lloat shows and all other
exhibits/attractions that ca.-traffic
Scaled-down
-Home anc .
Plan submitted
Developer offers
to downsize tower
project by a third
the botd to 300 rooms. cuts tbe
amount of retail apece by ,aearty
10,000 tquate feet and ctiminata 1be
health "'dub, said MalColm Ila.,
SclC* sa om '1 dircctol'of plaani•aDd
desi .. "t've loobd very bud at ibe
economics in•olVed aad we ha~ all SJ JONATBA.N VOLZKE ~project as much as we am." Rom ... ...,,..... said
The body debet.ed Home R.ncb He said the decisioD 10 a.her the
developrpeiit project could be -=a.led cwrent plans for Home Rueb -a.ct IS much IS one--third if the city already approved by the City CoWt.
approves a reviled plan for the Calta cil. but cblJ...._, bf bodt lbe
Me!a businet1 devdooment offered refcrendwu aDd a lawsuit -tprinp
by CJ. Sqentrom and Som. from a desire to ensure tbc company
The developer submitted DeW is c;>n solid leial pouDd witb iu
plina to the city Monday, possibl)'. to -~JCCt and out of coocaD for
shield the project from . a ~· eta.em. . . • refaeDdum leveled at die tnitial plans Members of the titlZenl lfOUPi tbe tor the 93-ecre Home Ranch project. Costa Mesa Residents for Rapon..
lftbie 1Cfaeudum pm1e1. the ·p1.an lible Growth. were unavailabae b
-Which included 20-. and 12-story immediate comment on the new office 1owen,. a 40().n)oni botcl. I proposal.
llalth dub. m:ail ll*lC and 1 child· · Gty Anomey Tom Wood said
care center -wouJd be tc:rapped and durina a council meetina emtier this
muld not be tesUbmined tor a )Ur. month tbat courts have often bad to
fficials said. decide wbe\her a project Aabmitt.ed 0
Tbe ~ iower Would be ~ a rcferndum 11 •f!ca.Dtly amona tk tlDest in ~ Couoty. dafrerent to ID forward ~-the
h .,.. "'= IDOft t1aaa two yean ptDdiaa ·~&:ft:nda:na VCMe. f10 11 a 3 akyteraJJeF. but wa If Home ~ is blocUd by the
Kaleel t.ci iD the face of Comm.unity refcreadwn. a Judie may bave to
Ol'PQSition. decide if IDJ ICCODd project for the
Tbe latest Plan reduces tilt size ol (Pl an wdVW>/.A2) -· .
..
Inda ..
Advtce and Gamee
Bulletin Board· ·
A8
A3
85-7
88-10
A9
Complaint filed over LB recall conflicts . ....,...
Ct111tfled
COmk:e
Death notloel
~ment ,.,
:'~····
Pubic Notices • SocM'l• . . •.
W•ttw.
810
M Ae
A3
810
81-3
A2
BJ LANCB IGNON ....... ,... ...
laden of a movement to recall a
~ty of the U.Una Beach City
CoUncil allele that two council mem-
ben violated the state Election Code
by interferina with their attanpt to pthel' aipaturea..
la 1 -letter cfeli vered to Deouty
District Anomey Wallace J. Wade &
Monday, iecall proooneou a1Jeted
that Councilman RObcrt F. Gently
snatched 1 recall petition from a
sianature collector in front of a lOcal
market OD Sunday.
The letter also accuses Gentry and
Councilwoman Lida Lenney of in-
timldatina voten by standfo& near
petitioners and enpaina some voten
in debate. In t.enney•a cue, the
complaint also al1css that dwina an
incident last month, she stood lJe.
tween vocen and the petitioners.
blockina easy 8CXlCSS to the docu-
menm;
GeD denied arabbioa petitions
and ~ bis riabt to .aoeak apinst the recall Unney could Dot
be reached for comment Tuesday mornina.
The comp&aint also contends tbat
recall oppooeot Robert Heitel in-
timidated and harassed voten Sun-
day by video~ people IS they aianed the recaltpetJtions.
Members of the Committee to
Recall City Council are hopeful they
can oust GeO~. Unney and Mayor
Dan. Kenney tn a special election.
They also hope to replace Coun-
cilman Neil Fitzpatrick when be runs
fOr re-dection in November.
To fOrce 1 special dechon. the
committee must ptber 3,000 valid
sipatu.res apinst QCb WJIC'tCd mun-
cil member. It bad boped to .racb t.bat
pl b1 Monday IDd cmnbi.De the recall with the Nov, I ,encra.l elcC-
tion. thereby savi~ -the city tbe
appro,ximat.cly SlS,000 -the esti·
mated cost of hold.in& a special
election.
Altboucb the committee failed 10
reach its pl. it intends tOprea ahead
~-..cAU/A.2)
.Qhanges in arena planS argued Pregnant
teen.. er ~ Ex-city manager tells judge Costa Mesa
was ~ot told about l~eramphitheater
BoildW91 planni~ to put an outdoOf
CODCen theater with seatins for lS,000 on the Oranee County FW.
poundt.
.. My in~tion it tha~
W11 DCM iafonned... uid
whO lli'Wld IS city mini ..... ftoli
19'10 •• ,.,, "Tbe orilinal -••••amudtllMllerWlilJ." He • •id ~ omc:illl ... xi 1 I a ~ or die -. 1*wca die F* tird and Niii W• .U.
sociates. the operators of the
amphitheater.
Groundbreakina for the arena took
place in f ebn&ary 1983, and ttie first
rock concen was held that summer.
Kmeft Millar, a Cotaa Mesa resi-
dent, aid the concert sparbd im-
midiate' protest from thole who live
aar the amphitbelta.
A poup of residents, who~
die uame Coneeined CiU.. or COiia Mell. filed auit apinll Ned w-. ctiatai• that concM aoitc
¥iolllid county ordinances.
..... I member oftbe poup, aid
.. -. ~praented by abe Fair = admits that the -ol the .. _ ..... li191hC.•ler differi f'rOm what WU
ori~lly planned. ·But \hey'tt tdlina us thlt if we
didn't know, we should have known
and if we ~ we should hive
filed suit aix months before
~"she uicL ~ t1: .. is that they published IOme
newspaper articles. Our con1e11tion ia
that we did not know whit was ~i• watil it opeMd. And nu
then &MY lold us we were over-rmctins to the noise problCma. that
tbcy wae tatias 11e111 to solve iL .. .. But Debonil Nestel, ID attoc"Dq'
for Ned West. uid Soilabel k.De"4W 11 atty• 1971 u.a dMftll" were bei111 made ia plus b 1bt amphjU..1er.
(1'11111w~AI)
·.
~a$7,300hurdle
killed , ...
FVcraah
, ..................... ,,.,..... .......................... ...... ~ ......... ,.... .._ ...................... .. .................... '--"' .. .......... lk
UCJ profeeeor Dune ...__ {left) aad
facUltlee plaluaer ....... BolMDD a.ope tD
t BUILDING MOVE RUNS INTO ROADBLOCK •••
J'ra.Al
Durina the past several years, often
With help from Holston and otben
who volunteer their time, Meu,er
bu taken discarded slide projectors
and a li.itauaae laboratory to various ~Mexiean universities. -11 The endeavors arc all part of M~s ambitious plan tO foster
educational equaJity between Cali-
fornia and Baja California.
.. The IJ!Ajor factor that prevents
; perity in bi&ber education on both
sides of the border .... is not the
... ,
· Dolphlnsmay
J guardnuclear
submarine base
SEA TILE (AP) -The Navy may
be plannina to station trained
dolphins as underwater suards at the
Trident nuclear submarine base at Banaor. on Hood Cana.I. a newspaper
~ oftidals at the Pacific Sub-
marine Base 2S miles west of Seattle
have filed a permit •PJ>lication with
I the U.S. Army Corps Of Enainee'f'I in • Seattle. statiq pJam tO build a .. li~
• facility for Navy marine mammal~
the Seattle Post-lnteUisencer said 10
today's editions.
The t.se for eight Trident sub-
marines, each carryina 24 Trident
missiles and as many as 192 nuclear warheads. has underaone increased
security measures in the Jast few
years. Tests have been conducted in
which trained Navy commandos try
to break into the base, which is suarded by 11everal hundred Marines.
But two former Navy officers aid
dolphins are preferred for .. ~eter
dense" at minile submarine t..ses.
"They would be used to defend an
.. area lib Banaor from swimmer
int.Nlioa with an effort to plant
mines on Trident submarines.•• said retited Navy Capt.• Jim Bush, an
analyst with the non-profit Center for
Defense Information in Washinston.
D.C.
~xtraordinary economic crisis con-.. If you think· of :it in a very
klitions that exist in Mexico, .. Metzaer instrumental way, it'• manipulation.
and hiscounterpert in Mexico, Hugo This is also what comprr,.on i1
Gutierrez de Alba, wrote in their foraed out of. ..
proposal. "PoSt Secondary Educ:a-And coml)lllioa.it. ~-lional1'atity in llie TwoQlifotrlilF ~ffilleed PICilY Of' ~tO raiee ihe
by the Year 2000. ~funds for the Lumber Mill.
"What prevents parity is the failure The Sid =is. if die moDey isn't
pf the two educationa) 9CCtors to found, a ~ IOOd builclini
recognize the fundamental com-worth some $200,000 Will be 10m
monallty of purpose." down. Holston said. The deck alone. Prejudice, language barrien and which was added three years aso.
Fultural differences prevent using . only the best lumber, cost ~ucaton in both countries from ~IS 000. ·
JhJring knowl~e. ••This is a &ood buildina." Holston
Donatina buildings and used said.
equipment is one way of breaking But with no ute and no place on
down the barriers between educators campus to put the buildina. it's either
here and those south of the border, the bulldozer or ~ ' ·
where Mettaer has done the majority ''This is the way they do it today,"
of his research since 19S7. Holston said ... They just bulldoze 1L ..
REVISED PLAN •••
From Al
~~petty -bounded by the San L.M.ao Freewar, Harbor Boulevard
and Fairview Road -can be con-
sidered. Wood said at the meeting.
In a prepared statement. Ross said
the new plan is a .. drastic change."
The approved plan calls for a
density of 3.1 million square feet.
while the new p)l.n calls for just 2
million. Ross said.
"We made these cuts despite City
Council and city planninaapproval of
the project." Ross aaid.·.-rAnd despite
the fact tbat Measure A (the COUJtty
alow-crowth initiative) was defeated
in c.osta t,iesa. We did it out of
respect fonbe communitrs concern
about density ...
CRASH KILLS GIRL •••
From Al
also was a student at Oranae Coast
Collqe, she said. He was a police
Explom-Scout. which lives prospec-
tive police officers an opportunity to
experience law enforcement work. It
was not immediately clear whether
Potts aspires to be a policeman.
Martinez was airlifted to UO
Medical Center in OrafllC. where he was. later arrested on suspicion of
driving under the influence of al-
cohol, said Fountain Valley Police
spokesman Rusty Speers.
Speers said the cbarJe did not
include any consideration of Squires'
death because authorities had yet to
determine the details of the crash.
.. Tbc s~fic caux is not de-
termined, Speers aid.
A hospital spokeswoman said
Martinez was in the facility's em~
ency room early today, but his
condition was unavailable.
Martinez•s pauen,er, Ipacio
Ahumada, 221 of Hunttngton Beach, was also hospitalized at tfie Fountain
VaJJey trauma center. He is listed in aood condition.
RECALL GROUP FILES COMPLAINT ••• ...._Al ..
witb the campmp. Recall propo-C8IFS'iDI sipa that reed: .. Pleae Do
MDII refuted to meuo the number of Not Sip the Recall."
aianatures collected u of today. At another point. Heitiel. wbo
.. In the loQI run it will be less worked on l.enney"s council cam·
expensive tO tlle tax pa yen thaD this · arrived and bfpJI vicleaU · ~ble, litiaiO&ll council, .. re-~tiO.aen and peOple who ::;:
Call Jack . Hansen said in a sianiaa the doaunenta. •
prepared statement. '"TbJa tcene WU extranel)' in-
A ~.for PROtectl.qUna timidaliqtoany~111tolian Conuruttee, which bu come to the the recaU papen... '111 to the
ddeue or the council. said the • comPLUnt.
committee'• failure to prner suffi-Rec:.11 proponent ta Meuller was
cleat llipatureuo fAr is an indication col~ iiaMtures wben··Ociltry
that it lac:b bro.d-bued supp0n. told him be bad improperty ~
"Haven't they aot the menqe the bottom of the document bef«e
yetr Frank ·Newman said in a tbe pqe wu filled with names.
prepared statement Jut 'IWlek ... The Meuller aid · Oentry 1oiok the
peOpleofLl&U:DaBeachdoi'twantto petition &om hit band without ,Per-
rec:all counal members Gentry, Len-million topointoutthemillake.held ney and Kenney... .. it ror about 30 eeconds, and then
PROtect Laguna has sent a returned it.
citywide mailer that ~raes people who Sect.ion 297S l of the state Elect.ion
have sianed the reCall petitwns to Code prohibits anyone from un-
delete their names. lawfully takina a recaJJ petition and
Monday's complaint tothe District .. it sounds like that may have been
Attomey's office, aiped by Michele attempted," said Reaisttar of Votm
Meuller and Barbara and Paul West-Donald Tanney. brook. was prompted by an incident But Tanney added that the law's
at the Alpha Beta sboppina center intent is to keep people from un-
Sunday. lawfully destroyina pention1.
Recall advocates bad been collect-RecaU proponent Robert Oray,
in& signatures in front of the store who was present durina the incident
when Gentry and his friend, Oary between Gentry and Meuller1 ~d be
Burdick. arrived at about 2:30 p.m. wimnaJy let Gentry handle rus pet.i-
tioo when Gentry tried to point out
Meuller'• alleted mistake. ·
.. He took it out of my hands. He
wun't tryina to take iL He wanted fO
look at a name on iL ..I'm not sure I released it entirely."
Oray added later.
Meuller said the incident between
Gentry and Oray may have bem
xparate from tbe one be bad with the
councilman.
But Gentry said be never snatcbed
a petition from anyone.
.. It must have been another Bob
Oentry," he said. ··1 pointed out that
Mr. Meuller bad liped a petition
form bef~ all the sipatures were on it. ..
While Gentry's presence may not
have broken any Election Code
stawtes. Meuller said Gentry should
have been more .. sensitiYe to the fact
that some of bis constituents arc
intimidated by his pretence."
Recall P."<>p00eDtl said mtny Lacuna residents arc afraid to lip the
peUtions for fear of reprisal from the
council and city staff.
But Oent~ said he was merely
exercisina his First Amendment
rights.
''This is the United Slates of
America. Freedom of e"preuion i1
eltrcmely important," he said.
NEWPORT FIREWORKS SHOWS TO GOON •••
From Al ·
.-ARENA Pb\;N-'S CHANGES AT ISSUE ••• publicbcarina. "If almost every city in the United However, City Manqer Bob Wynn
Councilman Philip Maurer set the States. from New .York to Pismo said the police deparlment would Prom Al
.. ..He testified that from 1978 on-
1 ward be knew of cha~ that were
• takina place," Nesset said.
She said newspaper articles in late
1982 revealed the Fair Board in-tended to have an arena that could
1eat 1 S,000 people. If the city or the
citizens bad been opposed to the size
of the arena, they had plenty of time
to protest or file suit. she said.
Nesset said the difference between the final plans and the original plans
bas been ~ted.
.. They're sensationalmns it" she
said ... The ori&inal master plan called
for S,000 seats, but there were
provisions fOC' additional seatina on
the Jr&SS. I think it provided for up to
I 0,000 people on the pus."
And there was no secret made of
later cha~ that increased the
number of seats to just under 8,000,
she aid.
-rbere was enou&h media, and
there were enoup meetinp between
the Fair Board and the city to assure
that anyone who wanted to take
act.ion could do so," Nesset said.
But Sorsabal told Judie Richard
Beacom in Santa Ana that even if the
tone for the briefpubUc hearina. Beach. can have fireworb on the withdraw is recommendation (Of
city had known exactly what was "Mr. Mayor, can we possibly vote Fourth of July, tbere•s no rational disapproval if Newpon Dunes hired
happenin1t it was not the responsi· a d t ta~ th 1-,,.. · -A reason wby Newport Beach cannot do at least two CHP officers to help with . bihty of city officials to inform the Mau:e~. e e -..ure. quap.-... the same," wrote Royal Radtke, crowd control. The council qreec1 tO
public as to what the Fair Board was pruident of the Corona del Mar the condition. doing. In fact. only three people spoke on Chamber ofCommen:e, in a letter to
concerned Citizens of Costa Mesa the subject. Mike Bradley. vice prai· the council. The police depenment will also
contends Ned West has violated a dent of the Make-A-Wish Foun· "Your reuonina is about as lotical hire an additional four CHP oftkcn
court order barrina concert noise in dation of Oranae County. which as cancclina Christmas lboppiftl for seneral holiday crowd coaltOI
excess of county standards. arants wishes to terminally ill chiJ-becaute the parkina loll tel ,00-fWL" throuab<>ut the city, Wynn said.
The -oup also ...... es that a dren, made an emotional plea to keep The pol a·-A-.. -nt · bu __ A rd" .... .. -·-the shows. '""' ..... ,.......... ,.,.. . cco 1na to UK; permit appU-supplemental environmental impact peatedly recommended that the city cation, f'Ouahly s ooo people were
rej)Ort was n.eeded when the number .. Our kids look forward to it all deny the fireworks permits, citina expected to attend this ~·· New·
of teats was tncreased at the arena. year," said Bradley. traffic and manpower prob&ema, but port Dunes show, which 11 inill2Stb
Attorneys on both sides say they Other criticisms were more point-the council has voted each year to year. The Bia Can)'9n show bu been
expect the hearing on the lawsuit to ed. allow the displays. tta&ed for J s yea,...
continue at least three more days. rr==========~======;===!:======;::;;===;:::=====::=i::::;
----------------------------~---------PARTY HOSTSFACEADDED EXPENSE •••
l'romAl
' turbances arc "a serious drain on
mant><>wer .. and leaves other arcaa of
the aty without police protectio~
Police spokesman Bob Oakley said
the department requested the ordi-
nance after notinf the success of
similar ordinances 1n other cities.
"h puts a little more meat behind the battle," said Oakley ... We're ~ bopina this will help cut down the
:» number of calls to specific parties."
Newport Beach is only the fourth
city in ~County to enact such
an ordinance. aa:oniin1 to Assistant
City Attorney Carol Korade. The
otbeil arc Santa Ana, Fullerton and ~.
Tbe Fuller1on ordinance, which
=E lllyllll
MAIN OPl'ICS mo-..eayS1.CaM1.._ CA ...,.,....._,_,C........_CAININ
has been in effect for a year, also has a
SSOOcapand poUce bill fouervicesat
their discretion, said Fullerton Police Sst. Gary MiUer. On the first visit,
party hosts arc asked to sip a copy of
the ordinance indicatina ~ under-
stand that theY may be billed for a
second visit in addition to any
criminal cbatp and fees.
The result Out of approximately
500 party cans since last May. police
have made a second call only about IO
times. sipifican!)y lctl than bef~
the ordinance, said Miller.
"It's gone wa)' beyond what we'd
anticipated," said Miller. ..UsuaUy
after we drop ibis linll bOiitbiibeO on
them. they say 1llel'1 it; the pany'1
over.' They don't have to close it
down, just quiet it down, but 11!2
usually stop the whole thins. It s really worked."
Sinc:e the Santa Ana Police oq,.,,.
ment implemented its ordinance lut
mollth, police have not made any
tee0nd responses to rowdy piartiel,
said Set. Collie Provence.
··we•re really lookina at it• a tool
to stop tyina up our ofllcen." mid
Provence. "We don't loOk .a ii• a ~venue senerator. We' loiai Ill it• a
wa}' ofshuttina down~ ..
Tbc ordinance wiU ~.....,. lbe
council for a tee0od "' t':;t Jw 27 Ind, if~ wiU be im 1mmeed
immeda.ately.
c:i....olldl ... ,.,. IMll'IMI' l!lllONI, ... , ... ,,, Ja.tcall 842-8088 b
• LSI
J
_,, ... ~~ ......... s re to pay ·for violations
ls month
ne, El Toro
To .... •nl*tlddldiaeiaclcmldom dlll'lll the .... .,. die °'91111 County~ of .. AinericM led 0. will 'Wet .,.... drive. ia ltvime _.II Toro mil IDCllllll. nt lrvliiidrive ii diduled fors.utday at St. Eiabedl s.a CIUarda. 6 HiU O.te, ~ 7:30a.m.
IO 12:15 p.•Cal11'4-1000ban ipPOintmenL El Toro raidcatl 11111 doule blood June JO in
die conference room Of lell Western, 23702 llockftdd Blvd., from 11 a.m. until !J:45 p.m.
a,n.A111at111•Prw
The oPlflW oflhe S.D Onofre ftiadat
powtr .,._. tlrml Mondar to s.y a
Sl:50.000 fine lor aUqed violatiOM of'
federal safety standards for el«trical equi~nt at tlw plant. ·
Tht fine was proP09Cd bythcstaffofiM U~. Nuc:ltar Rqula&ory-Commihion, -:hi(~ found 62 eltc1ncal componerus
d1dn t mttt standards for ptrf'.ormancc
under the dr11uc conditions liktly in an
tme11tncy. tht NRC announced from its
ofrtc'C" in Walnut \rt~k.
Southern California fAoon Co. won'1 contnt lht anion and ttls'lft!Cl4 ao ~Y 1ht
fiM. dtt-company announced.
•·The bottom hnc is that 1ki1c>A all CM
eqtaipmftU •ould have performed its 11~y function in an em~ncy. -aad none
oflhftt 1hincs affect the p_1ant." said Ken
Baskin. Edison vict prea1dc.n1 for nuclear
efllinttrina. safct> and licensina.
The NRC labeled the violations a Class B. or mOderate. problem
Inspections by the NRC and 1he com-
pany found \'ariousdectncaJ part,, iuch as
swi"hes and controls for valves and
puml)'. d1dn 't mttt &he l&aDdatdl for bdna
opttable undtr euremes Of belt, prnsure
and moisture.
E<hsoo aOd lht on-site NRC monuorina
1t1ff d1srove~d the problems earlier th15
>tar. accordina to the company af\d the
IJtnC).
All tht violations wert in Unit I of the
plant. which is on tht coast midv..>J)
• be'tv.ttn LOI Angeleund San Dieac;>. That
unit wts built in J967. before the appli·
cablt NRC rqut.tions took~ in I 98S.
whtk the ,P-lant'• other 1v.v umts were bUih
"'the 19WJ,
NRC ruin re.quire Ptent operators IO
look for electrical r:ompoMnts that c1oft•1
mtc1 tht-I 98S •taftdardi Tor opentiom 1n
emcraenc)' condition5.
The aacn )'said a lS pcrt"ent aat in the ~nah1 was in order because Editoft
adentifitd some of he violations and Ud •
proeram 10 spot such problM\1. H01fllCVtt,
that cn-dit was canctllcd by 1 tmdnta Rat
the comp.Jn) didn't C1 promptly to C'OlftC1
the \ 1olations '4hen they we~ disco~.
AppoiD&mcn11are beh~ talccn at 4SS.t900.
Romuice cl .. at OCC
A thRe-hour workshop offeri~ tips on puttina
romance back into yo~r life will tit offered Friday
from 7 to 10 p.m. 1n Room 116 of the Fine Ans
Buildina at Orln,e C'oast Collqe in Costa Mesa. Brenda.: 81Kkm1n will conduct the session,
whih i5 priced at $25. Rqistration may be m1C!e by
phone u ·4l2·S880.
County jail inmates
want some spice in
their life at dinner
Wor.t•hop for addlcta
The causes and cuttt or codepcndcr.'-"Y will be
the subject of a workshop conducted by Newport
Beach ~ycbOlherapist Or. John H. Land S..turday
from 9:JOa.m. to4:30p.m.at the Balboa Ba y Club in
Newport Beach.
Land's seminar will help workaholics. over-
caters. alcoholics and other addictive.type per-
sonalities learn mott..tbout the or.igins of their self-
defcatina behavior. Call Land's office at 722-1336
for further information.
gaa.te progqm ln Irvine
A special proanm in connection with Earth·
guake Awarcncu Month will be presented Friday at
~ p.m: at the Irvine Senior Center. 3 Sandbura Way
in Irvine.
A ~stered nurse from the Irvine Unified
School District will &ive a review of aeoeral fint aid
skills for emergency situations. Call Mya Sanders at
733-1055 for additional information.
Benefit barbecue •et
,.,... staff ud wire reports
• Thinpcan sometamesict healed behind
bars. but one thin& inmates at Oranae
Count) Jaji sa) isn 't ho1 enoup is the
food. and the) want peppier meals.. main I)
of1he Mexican-style 'anety
J~l officials. fcanng the hot sp1CC5 that
-mto preparing such food-rould be
turned into painful weapons. arc balking at
1he idea. ho~evcr.
"What you've got to Jhmk of anytime
you put something on lhost ta~ is· that
it's,. potenual weapon," Oranic Count)
Shenfrs Lt. Dack Olson wd. "We run
sccuril) in the Jails: how would rou like to
ha\e ~ne of those thanp (chah peppers)
stuck in )Our eye?"
Robert Gore. spokesman for the State
Department of Corrections. said salwi and
peppers are common at state prison tables
and that he had ne\er heard of an) chih
pepper-related assaults.
More than 300 inmates at Orange
Count) ·s main Jail have saincd peliuons
demanding more Me1ican food be stf'ed
at the 1ail.
T hirty-the pcrttnt of the faciht) ·s 1.400
pnsoners a~ Launos. and some a11ue that
thc} ha'e a lundamernaJ ri&ht to such a
diet. The) ~~ beana se'"'c:d MCJLkap food
as no different than allowina Jewish
pnsonel"\ to eat ko her meals <'r v·CJ-
etana ns to have non-meat dishci.
Many countr jails do serve salsa and
ch1l1 peppers.. and state iutdehnes even
rteommend U')inuu,dLit.ems to improve
the taste of jailnousc food. s~ud Jack
Pederson. a field reprnrnauve for tht-
State Board ofCorttct1ons
But the Orange Count) Shcritrs Oepan-
ment. v.hach run$ the ja.11. rcjectt.d th<"
prisoners· plea last week. claiming the
ingredients are potenttal weapons. Ad-
d1ttonall). the count) counst'I decided the
department was not legally required to
provide such food.
The Sheriffs Dcpanment cufT't'ntl)'
provides special meals onl} for medical
rea~ns. not religious or ethnic ones.
Pnsonen at the count) ·s mail Jail do ee1
one Meiucan-st~le dinner a month. a plate
of tamales w1th Spanish nee But the ritt is
made wuh bell peppc" and tomato sautt.
not chili peppers and salsa.
Pet1t1oncrs said lhe)' plan to appeal the
decmon. and 1f necessary enlist the help of
the American Civil L1bert1es Union. A Western barbecue and hoedown to benefit the
South Coast Symphony will be held Saturday from 7
to 11 p.m. in the Mercantile Building of South Coast
Plaza Vtlla&e.
The evenana will include dinner dancing. a no-
host bar and door prizes.. Call the symphony office at
662-7220 for reservations at $35 per person.
'Hoppy Swartz,' surfing
pioneer, dies at airport
Boat auction bJ Newport
Unclaimed boats will be auctioned by the
Newpon Beach Police Department Saturday at the
City Yard. 592 Superior Ave .• Newport Beach.
Purchases a~ made on an as-1s basis wilh no
auarantcc of physical condttion of the boats sold.
The auction will bc&tn at 9 a.m. and payment must
be made an cash or local check immediately after a
bid is accepted.
Wilten to convene
Letting it wave
Robe.rt Bock of Newport Beach lnapecta the American flag placed ha
hla yard and thoee of hla Eutblaff nel&bbon th1.e morn.m,.
complimenta of Coldwell Banker. to commemonte Flag Day.
Althoaah not a le&al holldal, Jane 14 maru the aiud•enary of tlie
day ha 1777 when the U.S. DaC wu offictally adopted.
LOS ANGELES CAP) -uwis Earl
.. Hopp)·· Swartz. the father of orp.n1zed
surfing who developed the JUd&Jn& system
used on the professional c1rcu1t, died of
stroke ~hale on his wa) to a contest an
Northern Cahfoma.. He was 71.
Swartz v.as standing an hne at a Los
Angeles lntemauonal Aarpon ticket
counter "hen he collapsed and died of a
masSJ~e stroke Thu""1a).
.\s Swartz wished. his bod) will tx
cremated and 1hc ashes scatte~ at 8 a.m
Sunda) at Redondo Beach In addttion to
Mel nt) re ~urfer magazine pubhsher
Stc:'e Pczman wall eulogize lhe surfina
communat) hero
Swartz. a I q 30s surfing champ who v.-as
a tamahar fiaure on California beaches
"1th has trademarl. stra.,.. hat and unbri-
dled cnthw.1asm for the sport. ~as headed
for a \\ estem Surfina :4.ssooauon rontest
1n Santa Cruz '4-hcn he died.
The Southern California chapter of the Na·
tional Writers Club will meet for brunch Saturday
from I 0 a.m. to I p.m. at the Irvine Mamon Hotel.
18000 Von Karman Ave.
PUC studying merger between Judge places.
A . · d C 1 . .J:: • t .1.t . conditions on Newport Beach author Hank Searls will be the
JUest speaker. Aspinng and pubhshed wnttrs arc
invited and the cost is SIO. Call 968-5726 for more
information.
r1zona an a 11orn1a u 11 1es BigAcomplex
Tuesday, Jane 14
• 7:30 p.m. FoataJ.a Valley PJuaJn1 Com-
ml11ion, council chambers. 10200 Slater Ave.
From 1taff ud wire reports
Compan) officials toda' hailed the
merier of San Diego Gas & Electnc Co.
and Tucson Etcctnc Power of Anzona as
&ood for all customers, but rcgulato~ wall
make thatdetermanauon before appro' mg
the consolidation.
The ut1ltt1es agreed Monda) to con-
solidate as a $5. 7 ballton 1oint compan}
intended to control encrg) costs and Wednesday, June 16 ensure reliable power sources.
The mcracr must be approved by the
• 9:30 a.m. Oruce C.uty Board of Safer· California Pubhc Uttltt1cs Comm1ss1on.
vlson. board hearin1room. Hall of Administration. the Anzona Corporation Commission and f 0 Civic Center Plaza. Santa Ana. th~ Federal Energy Rcgulatol) Com-
• 7 p.m. Lapa Bead ()pea Spatt C.m-mm1on. The approval process 1s expccted
ml11ioa, council chamben. 505 Forest Ave. to take at least sax months.
• 7:30 p.m. Lapaa Bead1 Park.lq ud 'Tm shocked." said Ken Chew. pnnc1-
Circalatloa C.mml&tee, council chambers.. 505 pal financial eummer for the PUC ··we
Forest Ave. will want to make sure the Cnhfornaa
• 7:30 p.m. Lacaa Bud EavlNDJDeataJ consumer will not be (negau,el}) 1m-
Salety Ctmmlttee. Police Depanment conference pacted b)' It.·· room • .SOS Forest Ave. SDG&E services ponaons of Sou1h .············•••••II"'-Laauna and is locked an dispute w11h Southern (ahfornaa Edison. which also
scr. ices areas of South Laguna and desires
to ~rve the entire commumt\
Ut1ht1cs mergers have bttn rare an
recent }ears. v.ith onl) a fcv. taking place an
this decade:.
Officials w11h both companies said the
consohdataon should limit rate increases
b) both ut1ltt1cs b> g.iv1na SDG&E access
to coal resources while making nuclear po~er from San Diego available to the
.\rizona uuht).
The new utilit) would rank 165th m
market value among U.S. companies. and
would serve eight Southwest and West
Coast •Hates
In Phoena,. the Arizona comm1ss1on
said Monda) at has begun anal} zmg the propo~'d mer-Jcr to make sure .\nzona
customers don t v.1nd up subs1dmng those
outside the stale.
··we ha'e senous concerns that regu-
latol) dec1s1ons in California not work to
the dctnment of '\rizona customers."
acting u11ht1es di\ ision dutttor Gar)
Yaquanto said.
Shareholders of both companies also
must aartt to the pro~~ meraer into an
as.-)eHmnamed C~1fom1a corporation.
"h1ch was agreed to b} the boards of
directors of each utaltt).
··The consoltdauon sampl} mal..es good
business sense.-said Tom Page. SDG&E
chairman.
Paic said the merger should help
continue a downv.a.rd ucnd an San Diego
utaht) rates. which a~among the highest
in the nallon The Anzona utthl) ~ould
be~fit from being hooked to the Jrow 1n1
Southern Cahfomaa market. he said.
.. This mcrser"•" e~tend the outreach of
(SDG.&E) 10 the coal fields of .\nzona.
Colorado. Utah and New Me~aco. and ue
in v. ith a high-,oltage tr2nsm1ss1on S\ stem
(owned by TEP) v.hsch as almost thrtt .
times the sue of ours," said Page
The proposal d~ 1mmed1ate commc:ni
from Southern Cahfomaa Eda son ( o .
which supplies power to 1hose a~as of
Southern Califomaa outside tht' SD<.1d..E
market
By TM Aslda~ PrHs
A.naheim cat~ oflk1als must guarantee
adequate parling and aCC'C'ss to Anaheim
Stadium before 1.on,truct1on can began on
a SWO m.,hon h1gh-nse office complex on
pan of the stadium partuna lot a Judge
ruled
Orange.-Count' ~urxnor Coun Ju.dse
Franl Domcnictiana granted the Angels'
rcqu~t for an an1unct1on bamng the
rnnstru1..11on. bufsaad 1t could proceed if
tht' <:at~ mtt"t!> se'eral condttaons. the
Orange C:oun\) Rcga"lcr rcponed Tues-
da). eating a 1.·1t~ official familiar with the
ca~
The 10Junct1on as the latest de' elopment
ma fi,e-year lepl hanle bctWttn the city
of .\nahe1m and the Cahfom1a Anacls
baseball learn. ~hach claims the com-
memal pro1ect ~•II greatb inconvenience
spons fans.
Domenachin1's 5fl page rul ing was maal-
c:d last ""ed .. to attorneys on the case and
\.\3S to be tormall) tiled in coun Wedncs.-
da'
Mesa m&y use civilians for
POiice D.ep~rtment dtities
• • • An unkno"'n caller let\ scvttal
SC\Wlll) e~phrn telephone calls on a
46-)car-old ~oman's answcnn, ma~
chine. Pohc-c booked the tape into
t\idcncc.
attcr the man spra~t>d has Jc."'l·p
Cherokcc v.ith a caustic chemical.
• • • .\ resident ~·d that a man ridina a
skateboard crabbed htT' and put tii1
hand up her d~s when sht arrive(!
home and wu unlockina her front
door 1n the 15000 block of Gold.en
\\est Street. The man. about 19. ran
a"a) '\lohcn she turned around. d\C
said.
Br JONATRA.N VOLIU .............
In a move officials say will create a more effic~t and less costly polkt
ckplnment. the ci•y of Costa Mesa
Plans to fill posjtions 1radition1Hy
held bf ·aun-toti• omcm wi1b
unlimed ch1iH1nL
POiite CipUiin T0tt1 Laur Cl·
ollined the six-year ~ 10 City
Council membrn at a plannina
ICllSioa Monday.
Aenntint IO the plan, jobs now
htld by sworn ofrsttn will be '\'en to OOIHWOfn ,~Mf. allowina cte-
l*llMM dlkilk co pu1 matt of· rtetn OD die lttWb without hiri1t1
8ddi ........
Tllt,...._Of'jailsupervisor. the ~·=· mtlfmuetf andreCm* .. ....._.
ly wil bi 10 ~ em-~ Ii* iii& ...
ill .... ·::.ro--.... ...... .. .......
wu111.1 ~ &h.a.n~. h\: i..1u.
"We arc ol'lc of the few •ncies
that have $worn ~nonMI an thit
~ition:· Lazar 11id.
The plan will be Dhaled in throqb
the mid·l990s as the positions open
throtllb rctittmcnt or promotions.
etimiuaina the need for la)ota w firi~ Lazar said. CtV11ians alttady are UICld 'by the
dtpenment in a vane1)' of dd'ical
positions and arc JOmtluncs &&led 10
lake politt rcpocu. .
City ~ .Allan ROtdcr iMd
the city will tieftcfit from IM MOW
beea*itt tbt c'iviliMI an Jolid ._ ia
ulary aad benefits thn ollom. .. Yle doft'a Mve a iPIGftc: CIOllir
amount 011 h )'ft because we .. Yn."1
Writtn job dcltriplions for meny Cl
the dvilien politiona. .. Rotdrt .aid.
"ll&tlMtcWilbCa~
•vinp." · Mldlr ...._.,.... • dvilian potiee dtid' _, ...,_.Y bt ratuy.
.. ,.. 91 4lolli ... •'-"•tt and
".
tiahtcr. ( think thal''I very possible."
ROC'<kr said. ...This proposal 1s an
interntina concept and there arc ~et). vcf) few departments that
utihlt ch ilians to the extent this
proposal docs." /
Tbe Plan comes with a chanat in llw depanmcnl's orpniution.
'The Co ta Mesa Poli~ Otpa.rt-
llK"nt's optralions are davidtd antb
dm:c cateaories. but an 1nal)'s1s by
=vase consultina firm of Rall>f'
1tn rttommendcd a fourth
divkioft. traftk and hcliCOJ?ltrs.. be ~ IO mott c-vcnl) distnbute the
WDftloed.
DNni~ Jld Arthn. 'kt pmi·
._ ol~ )4.mcmbcf" Coata Mesa Pala Allbnation. said hi .,... h8sn .._ a aand on tlle .,.. ..
"1t"I • litdt too fllHY, tlw pan tw
not beC1' ~ *...,.. Arl:ber Mid ... Wlln h~-. w"I tau a ~ •• ll ... -:e;r-• -)'5 need tow 1pr~ • -
,
• • • Somcbod) shot a marble·thro~h
1hc rear windshield of an automobi~
parked on Mi$$10n Strtt't. Altho~
officcrsttm"Stcd SC\eral peoplccarhcr
after Jim.tar pranks.. tht sh0()(11lS5-
alv.a)S aimed at ""indo'WS -co~
ti nut'.
i..,...B11cll
Finis ADdrtw tank). 4.S. of River-
side ~arrested on SUIPirion ~
salnMondarat 1:101.m.11
Bay and N. Coast H .. way. He wa.s
also boOkcd on wspedon of bcin&
unt.kr the inftueMe ofdf\llS.. Clnvma
unckr the inOutntt or clNp aftd
alcohol and ~on of 1 syri*
Ht was hckt "' hcu of SI 0.000 biail. ••• " punc containiaa SUO wa reo
poncd Jtokn at 9.S6 f.m. Monday
from tht 30800 bloc'k o Pktf~ Coasa
HiJhwa). .,....
A rnidmt Oft Yak Ooott ~
hcari• Kttami• &ad tlh"P
Crasia1na •• • nc ..... 1 .... A
mG"tkt .-as~--.. bi'ttrti11 sibt-1np. • •• Tiri'ee IMll ~)'. j .... -lrvinc....._t...._aa,a 'llllllOI'
CWWJ on~ ..... Yf'"-,,._ .... 122. ••• Ala.., ••• _. .... ...................
,
• • • A house key left under a no~er pot
-·as stolen on Sarena • • • A man •ho works on Sk' Par._
allcacdl> uK'd his compan) · C'l'Cdll
card lo char&e (our tac\rts on a C'1"U1sc
hnc. T~ unauthormed uckt'ts CO\t . $3.600. • • • stun pn wa1 booked b c' 1dentt
from Un1\.ersit~ Hiah 5(hool The
aun •-as akm from• .siudcnt. •ho
w cit:d and rdcwd fOr posst"'sina
Jhcwcapon.
• • • \ ~idcnt complained that a patt)'
v.:a\ '01na on at 11 pm .. and that
.. kids • were unnatini outside her
bedroom v.indo~ in the 16000 block
ofKdl<>& Cude.
• • • v.oman \aid a man was 'beatin& a
girl "1th a base II bit on htr fronl
lav.n Jn the 2000 block of Rorida
Stf('(l.
• • • A teen r "·ith Ion,, blond hair
rcpontdl.) «Ok a radio \'thled at
SI from asaraec ii\ the I 8000 bk>C\
of Hunti on Street.
.
Mer Md pfOIDilliCI Re-
• -..al IM m ol IM Mat~. lat
lilelident IO be eiculed
co.llUuocat. ddn& tlae iU _...._.,__.. .... Jo,. and..,.
.....,, lreee. wl9o are both holpital· tilld. FkzWller aid. ....,~ 4**°" 10 miln is also 1Wetoliff 1111Nlalion about him as a
......._ caadidl&e for vice pcaident.
Ilia ---been on many lists of
................
te? ........... "'
... lftl .a..111.
la. •temen• ':"~Pla.ter. := -~ ...... J::;._ with deep"""'"
...._ lllrer IW blei a clale friend
aad edvmr wbo has picled ID)' l&aft' deity ad cftiec:1ivety fOr &be lalt 16
montha.'' a.pn laid ... He held a
~ Mad in 1lle lion of the
White HOUie wbilt r.ran.Contra invn.tions were beina conducted and his • COUid folla'ed the
spirit of ~ntion in which those
iuun were ~ntod to the Ameri-can~ ...
• ~ asked durinJ a picture-
takin&JCUion Italian Prime Minister
CirilC'O De Mita whether Baker's ckpanu~ could be seen u further
Deported activist
BrrivesinNewYork
NEW YORK (AP) -Mubarak Charles Kimball. director of the A~nAra~Americanadvocateof Middle East office of the National
non-violent resistance to Israel, ar-Council of Churches. He named
'lived here after Israel defied the Secretary of State Georse Shultz.
United Swn and deported bim from -AssislallLS«cetary of State Rid
liis birthplace of Jerusalem. Murphy. U.S. Ambassador to Israel
The deportation ended a seven-Thomas Pickcrina and counsuls aen-
month )cpl battle and made Awad eraJ in Israel Morris Draper and Bill
the 2ht Arab to be expelled by Israel Wilcox.
si.nce the. I?ec·. 8 siart of~ Palcsti-"They have worked consistently.
naan u~sina an t~e occupied West atduously ahd enormously helpfully
Bank and Gaza .Stnp. . . on his behalf from the beginruna of
Awad. 44. did not meet ~ting this whole~ and he's deeply ~poners at Ke~nedy .lntemat1onal grateful, .. Kimball sajd, his wotds at
A.1rpon after his am val Monday times drowned out by the chanting of
night from Israel. But a s~kesman anti-Awad protesters inadc a bnef statement on his behaJf ·
.ro.~ L:t-'!...--~ ........ .,. -· . WllileHouM.
•1 tlatall be did mudl '° belp to
calm Md quiet and make diiMs lllOft
.... tberc. •• 8ynl llid °" tie floor
of &he chamber.
··He has perf°;::c'~t .nice ftOI only for the . but also Aw
biscounary." Byrd said otlder.
Sen. O.niel Patrick Moynihan. I>-~· Y •• said Baker "res&onld IUbility ...
in a moment of aenulne crisis. It is
suffldenaly tettlcd. restored. thal he
feels able io leave.
"It should be taken u a~ sip ...
Moynihan said. "His sense of duty ...
iuuch that he would 11ever leave were
it nor possible to continue without
him"
Fitzwater said Baker will ttturn to
his law practice.
Sna& .... ..... A~ .... !Z:llJ' .... at tliia KDonUJe, Teaa ....
after llriM tint -• u.ata AlrUDee )it from tlae -me.o._.-,,..~~laoalau fora 80lltla aa& _,_ ... to*-• 100,000 ... Tlalton to ti.e aoo.
'Impact of Supreme Court ruling
on defective vaccines debated ·
WASHINGTON (AP) -The Supreme Court has Laboratories which manufactu~ polio vaccine. said the
redUccd the ~vemment•s protection apinst lawsuits by impact is unclear.
victims of defective federally licensed vaccines. but some The ~isfon appears to cover all governme~t-
.IY!bQrities II)' lbc rutina'.s impKt may be limited. _licensed V4'Ccinnand-polaibly-0ther ~rupas-we!IT he.said. -
The ,. ustKa ruled unanimously Monday that the . But he added that the standards enunciated by the C0'1r1
parents o Kevin Berltovitz, a Pennsylvania boy crippled may affect few cases.
by polio. may sue the government. ~ . Health experts, meanwhile. said the natjon's com-
But Ronald J.·.Greene, a lawyer for Lederle mon vaccines pose little risk.
Judge denies FBI report recommends
mistrial bid some discipline of agents
and said Awad planned to a hold a The United States condemned
news conference this afternoon. Israeli Prime Minister Yiuhak llabarak Awad by Mecham By ne AsMdalM Press
WASHINGTON -An internal FBI report recommends disciplinary
action apinst some bureau personnel in the probe of domestic aroups opposed
to Reagan administration policies in Central America. government sourtc$
familiar with the report said today. The internal review uried that some FBI
employees ai.headquarters in W~binaton and office,s elsewfierc in.the co.untry
be punished for the way they cam~ out their surveillance campaign, said the
sources. speakina on condition of anonymity. It could not be determined bow
high up in the FBl's hierarchy were those recommended for discipline or what
the recommended punishments were as a result oft be probe of the Committ~
.. He wanted me to express his deep Shamir's order that Awad, a U.S.
appreciation .. to U.S. officials who citizen, be deported. Shamir alleged Arab uprising in the occupied terri-
protested his deportation, said that Awad played a key role in the torics. PHOENIX. Ariz. (AP) -Former
Gov. Evan Mecham has Jost a
mistrial bid on the eve ot closina
arauments in his trial on charges of
conttalina a $3SO,OOO campai1n
loan. Tobacco firm ordered to pay
damages in landmark verdict
After attorneys aivc closina arau-
ments this mornins, the jury was
expected to bciin deliberations.
Mecham and his brother, Willard.
arc chafled m the Maricopa County
Superior Coun trial with conceahna
the $350,000 loan in financial reports
required by the state. NEWARK. N.J. (AP) -A jury
awarded a smoker's widower
$400,000, the first damages ordered
for disease caused by cigarettes. but
cleared tobacco companies of con-
spirillJ to mislead the public about
smOking's dangers.
The widower's lawyer said today
the verdict boded well for future cases
apinst cigarette makers. However.
the attorney for the company otdered
to pay damages said he rqa.rded the
award as "sympathy" for the
bereaved husband of Rose Cipollone,
whod1cdorlungcanccraftcrsmoking
I 'h packs a day for .0 years.
The U.S. District Court jury Mon-
day exonerated the cigarette makers
Liaett Group Inc .. Lorillard Inc. and
Philip Moms Inc. of conspiring to
mislead the public about smoking's
dangers. and rejected punitive dam-ages. .
Instead. it decided Liggett failed to
warn about the dangen of cigarettes
and violated its promise, or .. express
warranty," to produce a safe product.
It aWarded Antonio Cipollone. 64.
a retired cable splicer, damages on the
warranty claim but not for failure to
warn the public because his wife was
80 ~rccnt responsible for contracting
the disease that killed her in 1984 at
age SS.
Ligett faced additional claims
because it manufactured the Ches-
terfieldt and L&Ms that Mrs.
Cipollone smoked before 1966, when
Congress ordered health warnings on
cigarette packs. She later used brands
by Lorillard and Philip Morris.
Don't Forget Father'• Dayl
Treat Dad To The Best Ribs
In Townl
~iWPOlll" c0RIB...i~ MP/rt.\~
Open 7 Nights-Dining & Take-Out .
... 2000 Newport Blvd. (Corner of 20th St.)
Coeta..... 131·2110
GREAT GJFT IDF.h5
FOR FATHERS O\Y,
JUNE 19rn
A bendeomc btr'muda
prynt. kimoao· 9\.)'l&
rot& by Ntruttca, · 100%~. ~ cloth l\nird.. ·, 0-C.. ei'24 f\t4 ell. tv9.oo.
smok.ina even aft.er havina part of her
lung removed in 1981.
Ligett attorneys promised an ap-
peal. Cipollone's lawyers s.aid they
would ask the judge to overturn the
decision not to award posthumous
damages to Cipollone.
The S3S billion tobacco industry
mounted an elaborate defense -one
analyst put the cost at SSO million -
to avoid a judament that might
unleash a flood of multimillion-
dollar lawsuits. Reaction to the
verdict. which followed five days of
deliberations. focused on its potential
impact on hundreds of such cases
pendina around the nation.
Cipollone's attorneys said the de-
cision showed the tobacco industry is
not in~incible.
In a motion for mistrial, defense
at1omey Michael Scott contended
that Judgt Michael Ryan may have
prejudiced the case by expressing
surprise when the prosecution and
defense said Friday they had no more
witnesses.
The defense rested its case without
calling either Evan or Willard
Mecham to the stand. Aft.er the
prosecution said it h~ no rebuttal
witnesses.. Ryan told the jurors the
sudden dose of testimony had taken
him by surprise.
Scou araued Monday that the
judge's statement could be inteT-
prcted by the jury as implying that the
defense should have presented more
testimony or put the defendants on
the stand.
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in Solidarity with the People of El Salvador. ..
Poet wlio tilutlgeoned 'glrlfrlend-~ecuted
ANGOLA; La. -A man who romanced a aas station cashier. robbed her
and fatally bludaeoned her died early today in Louisiana's electric chair. It was
the IOOth U.S. execution siooc capital punishment was reinstituted. Lawyers
for Edward R. Byrne Jr., 28, used up all their options Monday when
Louisiana's Pardon Board refused to recommend a commutation ofthe death
sentence and then the U.S. Supreme Coun refused 10 delay the execution.
Byrne was executed at the Louisiana State Penitentiary for his admitted Auaust
1984 hammer slaying of Roberta Johnson. A coroner pronounced him dead at
12:12 a.m. At Monday's Pardon Board hearina. Byrne was described by
defense attorneys as a sensitive. aniculate jailhousc poet who helped other
inmates write letters to loved ones.
' April trade denclt lowe11t 1n 3~ years
WASHINGTON-The U.S. tradedeficitshrank to$9.89biUion in April.
the lowest level since December 19M, the 1ovemment rcponed today. The
Commerce Ocpanmcnt said that a st~p drop in imports helped push the
deficit down by l S.S percent from the revised March figure ofSl l.7 billion.
Many analysts had feared that the deficit would widen in April. so the report
sbowina it actually shrank to its lowest level since late 1984 sent invcston
scramblin& to buydollars and U.S. stocks and bonds. The buying wave_J>ushed
the dollar up sharply apinst key foreign currencies, wrenched down interest
rates in the bond market and gave an early boost to Wall Street.
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VIENNA.~;;; OPIC
oH manilaen a =re meat IOdly ton..S dlrir oil
output PIC1 b -........ .. czuelan od mindW Anuro Haudn
Onsanti said.
.. We have ftllChed 1 AMI~
mcnt ... tht mi1iltcr Mid • he -lavlinatht~ottbc I~
nat on caners -~meet•
ina. ··we thank die m..Mt Will have a f:!:~ ol wMI we have
He said the Uaited Nab Emirala'
oil minis&er, Mani SMed ~
would retllm to the conrefence th11
at\crnoon. when the mectins was IO
rtton,:en~ and said 11 was likdy:tUt
Ote1ba would sip the rollover.
MOSCOW (AP) -Armenians
vinUllly shut down their repiiblic
wi&la • 1Fnnal s1nkc to prrss for land d19~m in nciah~"l_Al.fttlaijan. a dillidcnt sou~ said. The~
._. said an Anmaian killed a ~man in Azerbaijan. Tns of thousands of 1~
... Wn:d in Yerc"an. the Annmian ~tal, Sunday and aarmt on a
.-ral strike ~•o ~ut don all incliaifo~ except food proceuina.
kalth care and transponation, faid
dissident journalist Serie•
Cirilo"> ants.
He Did that Monday die _..,
l:l)ttad to public 'tran.,,on tftd ..,
undtt way thr'oulhOul aeatty all ~
the southern republic.
AicrtMaijaais alWI Anllalians are
•rauin& over control or .... omo-
Xara bak h . a re1ion wnb 1
predonunantly Anncnian population
that was assiantd to ~ in
1923. Most AtCTbaijanis 11e Mo*ms
-and-"'°" AnMnian1 are Clwiltiam.
Arrnenaa·s new Communist Patty
leader. Suren Arutyunyan. 9ddlc~
pro1esten and told them lht AnM-
nian Supreme So"ict. cw lesiilaturt.
~ meet Wed*-Md .. DOI
Gab' rnn. but decick ~vdY"
on lheir daim. Gritorl'a• said .
Nauonal aovemmnt and pany
officials ha" e refuted :tbe l\nnelliM J demaftd for control or the ditPUsed d rraion. ~
Foman Ministry spoknman ae..
nady f. ~ruimov said u ~
jani offiett was killed by .,.._n ftft
durinn,,.otes1, in Baku.-~
jani capital. ft wu the fin& ofticial
confirmation of a police deadl siece a
the ethnic unrest bqan in F~ ill
the neighborina republics. :i
.. 'Pfu6ed wna l•den aoaerated
MOSCOW -four lollhnik a.den wbo were pullleCI. convidd and . -_,,
-died duri~Staltn•s tatofOf'ltiE19lOl liave Ilia noneratcd in she Krem~in·s
lataa revisaon of Soviet hilaory. 11lc Soviet 9upreme coun•s rulina is a sianal
that open drbaae will be al1oMd on ref'orna .,....,..11 at a special Communist
Pany conference this month. The coun revened the convictions of Lev
Kamenev, GRIDfY Zinoviev.and Kart~ and the lnler'~nown GrtlOry
Pyatikov, &he panmeat newm lzvalla ~ Monday. The move
reaotts .. to thae t,..K ftaura t r honor ud thei11:nama. •• the paper said.
The rulina does nos meu complde rehabilila&ion unless their Communist
Pany membership is.retaored.
'Super!. spreader' of AIDS active in Southland
his partners.'" Dr. Nancy Padian of UC said. . ·STOCKHOLM (AP) -A Southern Cali-
fornia man doctors call tht ··super ll>'Udtt•• has
infected at leasl. four women with AIOS and is still
having sexual encounters. a new ttpOn says.
"He has infected four out of five of his
partners that we have ~n. but wedon•t know all of
She said the -super spreader'' -a
hemophiliac anf«ted throuahcontaminated blood
products -is in his 20s. Jiv~ in Southffn
C'ahfomia and is still healthy with no signs of
acquired immune deficiency syndrome
Padian outlined the case as pan ol a llUllb ol
infection rates 1mon1 women who Ctllll' ia rilky
sex.
..He is now usin1 condoms." she ..W. "We
asked him to tell" women about llil AIDS
infection. ··but ~e can't 1uarantec ll11d1CIOitlalhaL -
-I Unbalanced state budget" s~nt
to Assembly floor after delay
.j
~y~le helrpef
bill rejected
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Gov.
Gcorae DeukmeJ1an has vetoed a bill
SACRAMENTO (AP) -After a week•s delay. an the measure the bare majority needed forapprovaJ bY the that would have required Cahfomaa•s
unbalanced $4S. I billion state bUdeet proposal is ready 23-member committee. The proposal could be sent this 82S.33 J motorcycle drivers and their
fora vote by the Assembly. but lawmakerure sure to miss week to a two-house conferenc.c, which w1ll draft a paucnaers to -.~ar helmet.5 when they
Wednesday's frequently 1pottd deadline for appoval ofa compromise budget proposal. take to the road. but he says he'd wear
budsct bill. "It has to do with how wt get the process statted... a helmet if he evCT got on a
After two houn of closed~ rneetinp by Re-Assemblywoman Maxine .Waters. 0-los AnJtles; told motorcycle.
publican leaden. the Ways and Means Comnuttee voted reporters. "The governor has seen fit not to gave us any The Republican goycmor. in a one-
13-0 Monday to send the budaet bill, AB27S4 by 7 lcac:Jcnhip .... We just couldn•t sit here forever with the page veto message. said safety
Assemblyman John Vasconcellos. D-San Jose, to the constitutional deadline starina us in the face and sayin1 to helmets provide "an additional -
noor. . . -.' . the public we won't budge because he won't move." margin of safety to the rider."
At ft~t. only Republicans voted for~ bill, whach 1s WccSncsday is the ronstituuonal deadline for the ··1 am concerned, however. about OPEN 9-6 DAILY FRI 9-8
Ju~is
Country Garden
Month
logtt''s ~has mr lal~
Stftcllon of P~rrM.Uals In
~c~.
640-5800
San Joaquin Hins Road at MacArthur Blvd. $728 ma.Ilion out of balance. Democrat~.did ~want ~o Legislature lo send a bu~get to the governor. H~vcr. the need to mandate all motorcycle
vole for at ~use Gov. ~rae DeukmeJaa'! wit~~ his that daKlline has been missed many umcs and there is 00 riders and passenaers to wear helmets
support for his $800 malhon tu plan •h1ch onpnally .... nalty There is no way the deadline can be metthis year. in all conditions on all highways."
balanced the Assembly, the Senate and the aoveror's -· Deukmejaan said Monday. hiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~iiiiiiiiii budltt proposals. Repubhcans. wbo had refused .~o ,vote for the The bill's author, Assembl~an 'i
l:>einocrats said last week that they would not move Assembly bu~gct June 2 when DeukmeJ1an .s tax plan was Dick Ao)'d. D-Hawthome. sa1d his the~tuntihheRepublicanaovcmonentthcmanew-part of at. will vote to .PU\ the bu~ ~n ~onfcren~ proposal would hl\iC saved lives and Carmel Retu' ement v1·11age I
plan of revenue increases or spendina cuts. Dcukmejian committee without trymg to amend •t first. said cut health-arc costs. and he accused •
has refused to do that, sayina he wants the 1..9islature to Assemblyman Bill Baker. R-Walnut Creek. the go,ernor of caving in to a .. very is 8 private community for ~~
send him a budget so he can make spending cuts to The conference committee will be seeking a unsavoryelcmenl.. active seniors in a secure • •
balance it. compromise among Dcukmejian's $44.S bilhon bud,get, "I &UC$ the go\·emor fs afraid that ""•o
"We have still not heard from the aovemor any theAssembly's$4.S.I billionvcrsionandthcScnate'sS4.S when he~ back to Lona Beach environment. ~
proposals for a balanced budget." committee Chairman billion plan. All th~ arc out of balance. ranginJ from · (~ukmC)aan:s hometoWf!).he'll find
Vasconcellos said. s 199 million red ink for Dcukmejian's to $728 m1lhon for has local Hell$ Angels wa1t1n1 on his we 're across from Mile
But five Democrats finally voted for the bill. giving the Assembly's. doorstep." Floyd said.
Cr~&ton sought end to probe
of ML tied to campaign funds
LOS ANGELES (AP)-Sen. Alan Cranston asked for an end to a federal
investiption into a savinp and loan company headed by an Arizona
businessman who raised s~.000 for the senator·s 1986 campaign. the Los
An,elcs Times l'ePOrtcd.
Charles H:·KeatinJ Jr., a Mesa. Ariz., Republican and chairman or
American Continental Corp., also made donationsofS8S.OOO to the California
Democratic Party in the name ofhii Phoenix-based company. the newspaper
said today.
The contribuuons were made before Cranston. a member of the Senate
Bankina Committee, met with federal regulators in April 1987 to ask for an end
to an investiption of an American subsidiary. Li~oln Savinas • Loan of
Irvine.
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Both sides losing
in campaign for
LB Council reeall
If Henry Thoreau had been exposed to politics in Laauna
Beach. he probably never would have said. "The mass o( men
lead lives of quiet desperation."
Poliucal life in the Art Colony may sometimes seem
desperate. but it's rarely quiet.
A case in point occurred last weekend in the parking lot of
the Alpha Beta grocery store on Pacific Coast Hi~way.
Members of the Committee to Recall City Council were
camped outside the store to buttonhole shoppers. The group
needs about 3.000 signatures to validate its petition to recall
Ma) or Dan Kenney and Council Members Lida Lenncy and
Robert Gen.try. There's nothing unusual apout peop.le gathering S!&n~
tures outside a grocery store. h s sort of h~e the old ~dnor s
advice-to a cub reporter -"When a dog bites a man, 1t's not
news but when a man bites a dog. that's news."
The recall became news Sunday when City Council
supponers and at leasronetargct ofthereca.ll~owed upatthe-
grocery store parking lot to make sure their side of the story
was told.
It's hard to determine who did what to whom. but before
the afternoon was over Laguna Beach's finest were on the
scene to son out complaints and moderate flaring tern~.
The pctitio~ers say co~ncil supporte.rs int~rfer~d with the
signature-gathenng -wh1ch they say 1s a v1ola~1on o~ the
Election Code. They accused a recall opponent with a video
camera of intimidating potential petition-signers by filming
them and asking for iden~ification to P.rove they we~e Lag~na
residents. They also claimed council supporters. mcludmg
Gentry, interrupted them while they were expla\ning their
cause to shoppers.
Gentry and the council supporters denied interfering
with the signature-pthering or attempting to intimidate
would-be petition-signers. They told police they were JUSt
expressing their point of view.
After a br1ef mediation by poltce, the brouhaha subsided.
Police officers were dispatched to other problems, reporters
rushed to write their stories. recall backers continued
gathering signatures. council supporters cold their side of the
story and shoppers had to fend for themselves.
Recall is the right of the citizens and by their nature recall
campaigns are cmo1ional. Objects of a recall arc also obligated
to defend themselves and their actions as elected officials. But
neither" side can claim victory when the political process
degenerates into a squabble that has to be quelled by police.
--~_: =------
Lining federal canals
California has an opportunity this year to plug some
major leaks in its water system. Every year, 100,000 acre-feet
of the wate~ that CMifornia draws from the Colorado River
just bleeds away into the desert as it travels throu"1 the two
big dirt ditches that run to the agricultural distncts of the
Imperial and Cdachella valleys.
Under a biH pending in Congress (HR3988 by California
Reps. Mel Levine and George Miller), these two federal canals
wouJd finaJly be lined with concrete to make them
watertight ..
The Metropolitan Water District of Southern California,
which serves the Los Anaclcs area, has offered to foot the bill
itself, estimated at S l SO million to $200 million 10 exchange
for receivina the water that's saved as a result ...
The proposal has drawn the enthusiastic backing of
aancultural interests in the Coachella VaOcy. But the farmers
in the Imperial Irrigation Distnct have balked. They hope to
sell MWO some water themselves and arc afraid that MWD
won't feet the need to pay the price they're demanding if it can
get a new supply by relining the federal ditches ...
Relining the canals, as MWD proposes ... is exactly the
kind of creative conservation that ought to be encouraged ...
Congress should move the bill promptly, and California's
two senators, who have so far been withhotdina their support,
should get behind it.
FreaoBee
Surrogate motherhood
Anyone who has followed thecelebratedca.scofBaby M ..
and who has any but the most ~ssing fapliliarit)' with
surrogate parenting. knows bow difficult an issue it is. 1t is
quite simple to see how the desire of a childless couple,
despera~ely wanting to have a family, can be exploited: so too
the bodies of the poor and unfortunate who have little else
worth selling.
That seen, the state Assembly vote (May 23) to outlaw
surrogates-for-hire no doubt came from the kindest of
motives. "Babies should not be exchanged for money," said
Assemblywoman Sunny Mojonnier, R-san Diego.
As politics goes. tho~. the vote just happened to come
on the second day a television miniseries told the Baby M.
story. ensuring publicity for its authors ... But if the time
seemed politically opponune, the bill was not.
By outlawing contracts between surroptes and would-be
parents, the state adopts •hat one uscmblyman called an
"ostrich approach." Such arrangements will be made anyway,
regardless of the law. All this bill does is make sure that
nothina will be put in \tfritina. that no one involved is
protected by any forcc·of<ontract.
It creates a new class of motherless children and
nonworkin• mothers for which the state will have to care
while creating the same ' sort of underground baby·selhng
network proponents say they want to avoid.
Such delicate issues. like abonion. have time and time
again proved unwieldy for politically minded lawmakers to
handle. Bener to let courts. contl"ICts anil individuals work
out the details.
.AMHlm Blllleda
ORANGE COAST .....
JICllE
HUTIU
~ Servlnp;the
e oast sbould
b e a priority
Politicians do ao favors for
state by ducking traf(lc woes
SACRAMENTO -AJmost any
survey of Californians' attitudes re-
veals that hi&h amona their concerns is traffic.
As well it should.
The arithmetic of congestion is
alarming When Jerry Brown became gov-
• ernor 13 years ago. California had
fewer than 16 million vehicles
traversing its roads and highways (not
counting out-of-state vehicles, of
course).
Since then, there's been a 50
percent increase in those veh1clc-s, a
gr~wth rate faster than mere popu-
lation The capacity of the road system has
not expanded as rapidJy and the
re!oult. unsurprisinJly. has been a
buildup of congestion. especially in
urban areas and the fast-growina
inland suburbs:
We Californians and the politicians
we elect to make decisions can't make
up our minds on what to do about the
problem.
There's no evidence that CaJi-
fomians want direct restrictions on
their personal mobility. Mild experi-
ments in restricting automotive traf-
fic. such as setting aside freeway lanes
for buses and car pools, have been
unpopular and public support for
non-automotive mass transit re-mains relatively scant.
The results of last Tuesday's el«-
tion underscored that ambivalence.
Gov. George Dcukmejian's ap-
proach -a S I billion bond issue to
finance new transportation facilities
-apparently was defeated by a
handful of votes, although a final tally
of absentee votes might rescue 11.
Whatever occurs. it certainly rep-
resents no mandate for the bond
approach.
And voters in several counties
rejected another step that Dcu-
kmejian also has endorsed: raising
local sales taxes to finance roads and
transit facilities.
If the bonds ultimately do fail , the issue will be dropped back into the
laps of the aovcmor and state leais-
lators.
They shouJd take another look at increasing the gasoline tax.
The gallonage tax has been in·
creased only 2 cents in the last 21
years. It relative terms, it's a small
fraction of what it once was. -
Ifs a relatively painless tax and it's
one that's just. imposing the heavier
burdens on those who use the road· way network the most.
Most ICJislators and most outside transportation groups would have
preferred to raise it rather than use
general obJiption bonds. as the
governor proposed. But they were
bulldozed into silence by Dcu·
kmejian's implacable stance.
Jack Maltester, president of Cali-
fornians for Better Transportation.
the business-backed group that
pluagcd-reluctantly-for the bond
t~. saiQ after the vote that the
aasoline tu must re..ent.cr the debate.
'"This was not a vote for gridlock."
Maltcster said. "What the voten arc
sa_yina is that they arc not comfortable
with the solutions proposed .... Our
streets and roads have for decades
been paid for throught he 'pay-at-the-pump' gas tax, where the people who
use the roads pay for lhem, and
sugstions that we change are simply
not being accepted."
Deukmejian shows no sians of
bendina. insisting that an incrcaJC in
the gasoline tax would violate both
his no-new-wes posture and the
Gann spendins limn.
. "You can'I do it with a ps tu increase," he told a news confercnoe
last week ... You'll wind up beinaover
the spendina limit."
DAN
WALTERS
That's not necessarily true.
One of the proposals that Deu-
kmej ian rejected would have financed new transportation projects
out of revenue bonds which then
would have been serviced from
gasoUne taxes. Using bonds as the
financing vehicle would have ex-
emeted the taxes from the Gann limn.
The revenue bond proposal re-
tained both the vinucs of bonds -
the ability to generate a lot of money
quickly -and those of 1he user tax.
This is a crisis. The Iona lead times
iovolved in constructin& hiahways
and other transportation facilities
demand that action be taken now to
avoid even worse pidlock in the
1990s and the 215t ccntu'1.
As Maltester says. "We re running
out of options and this is one of the
most serious difficulties California
will face for the rest of this century."
Backdoor approaches to the prob-
lem, such as bonds and local sales tax
overrides, are inadequate, stoppp
methods that deal with the pohucal
problems without solving the trans-
portation problems.
If George Dcukmejian and the
state's other political leaders fail to
deal forthri&htly with transportation
now, they may avoid the immediate
political fallout as problems vow
more acute in years to come. But ther.
will be doing this state no favor at aJ .
Da Walr.n I• • 1yadlc•tH
col•IDl•I Ill S.uamato.
Whistle-blow.er IJOW' nghtlng
t h e A r my to gethisj ob back
WASHINGTON -Oeorse
Schoenberg s~nt more than two decades in a civilian job for the U.S.
Army. Along the way. he picked up
several awanb for catch1~ costly
mistakes and wasteful 1pend1na. And he was fired, twice.
In spite ofSchoenbcra'• pluses, his
bosses thouaht he wu uncooperative.
even combative, and said his work
was unsatisfactory •. The fint time
they fired him. he wu reinstated
through union arbltradon. Once
again, he is fiahlin• for his job.
Schocnbcra daams 'he was the
taract of-harassment and reprisals
because hewn 1 cost analyst who did
his jot> too we_ll ~ pinpointina waste
-and th.at ·~ ~uperiors. Schoen~ s employee union bans his claim, sayina he was fired because he made tfiinp uncom·
fonable for maft1Fmen1. • His is tbe whistk-blowef 1 lament.
He llW lbUtei; ttp0'1cd 1hem Ind
thftl eencd ,_a~ ttpatalion H I cvrm~. ~of how he
aired m ~nu. tiotnbefl'•
COft<'GM .. nlid ht aa lie when
pul'CUillalSllS lwnmen 1"<S16«> IOiWt..., have pu1 tile U.S. Defen• ~ment's~prxtie'..'CS undn
htav triUdlnt. ~-I tlaan work in the mid-1.MOI M daC Atmy'1 Tank Auto-
motive Command (TACOM), ia
Wann. Midi.
He was nttet '" C>nobtr 1986. mna1cdinJ11I}' 19171ridftrtd.-i•
B Januaf)'. OUr 1reponcr. Scolt
Sim. haotic8ined aft .. "°'" I
TACOM aa~ wriacll blbe * ram Ii~ ..a hldlc:Mn dlll TACOM oa_._, looti911 llr cr==r.ri:~-.t =-= .......
despite what she described as
Schoenbers·s disruptive actions, his
record didn't appear to justify firina.
She rccom mended a 30·day
suspension. "A review of Mr.
Schoenbcrg'sofficial perwnnel foldtt
indicates no previous disciplinary
action," Hoener wrote. "ln fact the
(record) reflects an exemplary em-
ployee who Ms rettivcd scvetaJ
awards for his work effon ·-"
Schoenbcrs's work 10 save Ill·
payers' money won him numerous
commendations from Army officials.
In 1983. he wu honored for ident·
ifyina $6.J.million that ~ould have
been saved on a contnact. That same
year. he invented a simulated t.llistic
missile to be used for trainins
purposes. or as 1 military decoy. He
was officially commended for the
invtntion, wbich w11 subsequently
~tented.
:n1rou1hout hi• hi11or~ at
TAOOM. Schoen~ra said he tried &o
comet wesac and fraUd, bUtcould 80t
Fl a •tlsf'IC10r)' z-from
supervtson. He ""~c:auec1 • inspeaot ~ .... at TACOM
Ind &he Difcnst ~L Schotnbera w1111'1 afwaya
diplomatic .•• Sc&Minbcr 1986, be ~'I IC'alhi!'t feacr OD I tree• a •fl' pnic, trkicizi"I •8'11fmml for w...ftal lptnd"'9 pt'8Cttm. He
dalm1 IMt i• ~ lie ._ fhed a
motltJI llScf. Man s n• claims daat
ht ... flml '°' SOii imubonliftl· tion. lndficicac)'. repeated malido91. obaM .. d liit T _,,, .... , HEii
Md lllliftcatioe ol a :wm -.Oldter • .............. M net flltiW 'dletlatr· I• WP .. ._ ftlMllUll ...... -~·-· llid .... -
J1cl .....
Did the world end after last
Tuesday's election as we all said it
' would? Now that the campaian is over.
what is everyone doing for fun? What a novelty it will be to go 10 a party and
not write a check. Did r.ou think you
would ever Iona for bills instead ~f
campaian ~tbaac? How many mail-
men have filed for workman's com-
pensation to cover their hernias from
luuin& all that gutter mail? Now that it's all over, whom did
you believe? And why? The bumina quesuon, however. is,
did someone buy your vote?
I am really tryina hard 10 find the
liahtu-.side-of -all the civic t-F&ume
we've been throua.h. Some people went to extraordinary
lcnaths to make a point. As I read tt,
the message is clear. Pay attention to
the home folks. Legislators follow
their own agendas at their peril. There
is no such thin& as a totally safe
district, not from the Democrats or
from some very mad constituents.
The 40th Congressional and 10th
Assembly districts have some reall y
basic worries. In the past, both
districts were the epjtomc of excel-
lence in almost all facets of our ti ves.
However, in the last decade we have
Ken some very real erosions in the
Jood life. . Most of us. when we moved here
with young families, chose this area
because of the excellence of educa-
tion. For a number of reasons our schools and our educational op-
portunities have not kept pace. We
get furious when our rep~ntatives
treat education cavalierly.
Transportation needs more tt\an
lip service. Creative solutions to this
very real dilemma will take team-
work, a trait tacking in some of our representatives. up until now. I hope
the elccuon made it abundantJ) clear
that }>artisan aame playing 1s not
particularly admired.
The JJ".atest opportunity for lead-
ership in both the 10th and the 40th lies m preserving our spectacular
coastline. The state has a very real
vested interest in the oil pool that lies
off our coast. California must fi&ht
the federal government for manage-
ment control. If we do not, the Feds
could lease lhc tracts to the highest
bidders (foreiin interests are not
excluded).
Once lhe federal lessee puts his
straw into the pool. the oil lhat lies in
the state waters will be slurped up.
This is not a very elegant descrip-
tion. but l wam to make the point that
the state should not stand idly by while someone makes off with our birthright.
In addition, the state has a good
track record riaht here in Newport
Beach of discreet 011 extraction and
rttovery. If we must exploit these
reserves (an absolute last choice) the
state has the expertise to do the least
environmentaJ and visual damage.
J•ctle Hutller I• • former New-
port Bad m•yor.
TODAY IN HISTORY ' -~ . -_.-_.,,. ___
INTERMEDIATE MAAKOOWNS HAVE BEEN TAKEN.
~~My made ajfbrdabk ,, S111(}ml <:S1r1Jr1lf
<7m1n11t111. 111f~.,. <i111111111i1,
' WICKES FURNI'TURE· (
....
••2 .-.11 ant" bm>mes aware of your lllent. charm. ability to
(Matth 21-Apil 19): Family member who ~~t tttnds and eyelet. You ~t ""°"'°"°"· YoU alto appeart 1uabborn receive a credit too Iona denied. Aries ~m ~i-
will relenL You11tet ncntly.
your way -could ICOllPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Stre11 i~
include IOC'ial event. creativity, tensuallty, sensitivity. FOC\11 on 1bi.'li it~v 10 10 pu nutt
traYel. • aware of SYDIEY fonh faets and fiaures, to articulate feelinp. Scenario "teeUrity requife. hiahliahtacommunicaoon. leamiq. trawt teo•tuNCS.
ments." G~mini, O•llJI llGmAIUUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): ltmahioll ri1t11 ~uarius will fit· ._ ttuc. learn by teachina. be open to~ hm one u.re promlnentJy. who baa financial acumen. Dia ~ l't idwmatioft
TAlJaUI (April concemina trust funds. tax Rquamncnta, l)Ollible
»May 20): Em~ on domestic adjustment. short inheri11nce.
trip, communicatte>n witb ~lative who recentJy uprnscd CAPRJCO&N (Dec. 22..J~l 9): Emphasis on
fcclina of rqret. Tum On cbJr!n, be considerate. show reputation. credit rabnt, lepl ta and peunillions.
appreciation for &if\. Libra invOlvcd. Satisfy inttllectual curiosaty, read lines, mltlitain
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): You'll discern motives, 1elf<51ttm. Spotlight' aJso on partnership. publicity,
communication win verify views. Fonunate set of marital status. • ··';\ ~
circumstances could mutt in profitable transaction. Ride AQUAIUUS(Jan. »Feb. 18): It is~ 10 break
with tide, be djploma1ic but don't abandon your away, to say, "Thank you, it's been fun, but now l must
principles. ao ... Spotliaht on employment. basic iuues. catt of pets,
CANCER (June 21-July 22): Mljor domestic adjust· dependents. Keep resolutions repntU. diet. nutrition,
mcnt featured. cou1d involve purchase or sale of art IC~=~Feb. I 9-March 20): Lunar aspect coincides
object, luxury item, ~or household ai>pliance. Auto-with personal mqnetism, ~ulation, discovery, 1 mobile and safety tqUlations also fit into scenario. ..different" kind of relationshiop with vnuna nH'9ftn. Taurus featured. < -..... -LEO (July 23-Aua. 22): Meditation, privac(i, hospi-Submit format, stress onainality, innovation, creativity.
J · · · r · · f Virao involved. ta , 1nst1tut1on, va ad psychte·1m~ions arc a I part o IP JUNE 1118 YOUR BIRTHDAY you have unusual unusual scenario. Someone, an subtle manner, is attemptina to impan vital information. Be receptive voice, . p<>ssns sen.sc of drama. have ~ tooth. without bcina obvious. appreciate. an, music •. luxury and ca~ be self-indulP.t· Taurus. Labra, Scorpio people play important roles in
Vl1'00 (A~ 23-~. ~2): Emphasis on power; your tife. CuTRnt cycle hiJhfi&hts publicity, business
autJ:ionty, deadlines, 1n~ens1fied relationship. Lunar . relationships. emotional responsei, posaible partnership,
pos1t1on acc_ents popularity, ability to persuade. valid marital status and maybe an addition to family. Durina c~n~ to wtn contest. Money comes as rcsuJt of career remainder of June, stress equilibrium whettemotionsll't'
actmty. concerned. Money picture is brighter than oriainaJly UBJU (SepL 23-0ct. 22); Individual .. very import-anticipated.
Get those bananas olled
j
DEAR ANN LANDERS. I am a
16-year-old h1&h school sophomore.
Jn our U.S. history class we've been
studyint the 1920s.
' As many people know, the 1920s
were a fun and carefree qe. Many
new expressions came about durina
that period. Some of them survived,
such as "booze' .. and "hot dog."
•• IMIDS
DEAR VNINOWN, INSIGNIFI-
CANT TEENAGEB; v .. certaiaJy
dWll't dn me mltdl ctme. v .... aetter
ant•ei la la&e May. It cakes aftl.le a.
.e~ •1 elf1 Mite.I ·-.ere at tile cucaa• TnMM, .._ 11 .... ,. ..
CaWerala w!Mre It ii~ ever' by
Mtll tile Let Allplet Times SJMI·
cate u4 Crea&en SyMleate llitfere It
i1 sat te my ,..en.,... .-werN. The point of my letter is this: Our
history teacher, who 1s an all-around
funauy,jokinaJy promised topveour
class some extra credit points if be
beard the old 1920s expressions
.. banana oil" on the national news at
night. The expression is one of
disbelief. Instead of sayina. "No
way!"' or"Gc1 out of here!" you would
say, "Banana 011 "
help.) Who better than Ann Landers
to come to the rescue. If everyone
who reads your column used the
t'xprcssion once or twice a day. I'm
sure that by the end of the school year
(June 15) something mi&ht happen.
Today 11 Jae U . It weilN be a
miracle If OM ef tM udmal aewa
commeatac.n ..W ......... .U," IHlt
maybe OH of , .... 1eca1 ~ joeteya
wlll read Wt, aa1 &Mee tmmertaJ •--L.•-wordt oa u.e alr, ... ,... cu Both VUJDQllUllll'. North deall.
I fiaurcd that. althoush I don't need
the extra pomts. 1t would be fun to try
and see if I could do iL (With your
I realize that most of your letters arc
from people who need help but
maybe this lcncr will prove that one
unknown, insianificant tccnaacr can
make something happen. -N N. tN
WESTMINSTER. MD.
penude yov tadter a. e.at It. " :Olr'l'Bll 6 5 2 Pleaae let u new wllat Mppe.1.
DEAR ANN\ANDERS: I am a <:;> A Q 14
lady about ~our qe. I have been O 4
3 drivana a car for many years and have • 1 7 '
always made an effon to be a safe and war EAST
councous dnver. • A I • K 7
PREVENTM HEADH CARE FOR
THE UFI OF W>UR DOG
Recently. I blinked my lights to let cv> K I 5 l <:;> ' 6 3
the passina trucks know \hat they O 11 ' 7 5 O Q I 6 3
were clear of me. I have always done • A Q 1t • I 5 4 l
this and understood that it was SOUTH
common road courtesy. My husband. • Q t I 4 3
• c.w 9IOWYM"
For P'ClC)lel fJicrn ~ lo motufl'V
• CM•• WINAHCt For~ dogl florn motur'lfy lo Old ooe
• CM•• I U :c.-NCF
fQt octllle CldVlt dogs l90lMfll'lg •nc:l90sed 8f*9\". fot P'lY1ICQI pet'bt I 0 ~9 ond
JC)9CiQt c:onot1on1ng •CM99...,.
For oldel' doQ$"' wtltch !tie OQ••>g PIOCe5S is 9\llOer'll
• ~"' t>Oth 0tv ona connea lomis
Come bt O'ld ID' "'~You ~ Sc..-.oe °'91
" 11"9 t.t IOOt1 You can wo '/OJI 000
who was in the front seat beside me.
had a fit. He yelled, "Are you crazy? <:;> 11 7
You are JUSt askina for trouble!" I 0 A KI l
j asked what in the world he was • K '
40 LB. .
•i·. • talkina abouL He said, .. Everyone The biddina: knows that blinkina lights are a signal
tothetruckdrivertbatyouwanttogo N_.. £..a Sotldt Wac
to a motel." ._ ha 1 • Dbl science diet ' ' • • -*' ... • . .~ I was ve~ surprised because I'm a .. '-._ Pul maintenance · ~ · + fairly sophisticated woman and I Opcnina lead: 10 of 0 $2199 ! , \ have never heard of this before. Ann, Do -· reMOD '-'-"" at th• t)ave timeschan....,.sodrasticaJlythat ,__ ova--u,. " Rei2199.--1• ~ h .-.u "-Li-•-L.le?lflOVfta'•'--···•..a . w at was. once kindness and good ....... .au , , __ NIUUN come · •·,,,.... • : fl l manners 1s now considered a vulpr up with the wiD.nina line on this ~. ', '•\ invitation? -BEWILDERED IN band. • ...,..~ ~ FLORIDA. Tbe diamond lad doeln't really SCIENCE ;• b ·~ j DEAR FLOR.IDA: We dlecW help JOU d thM madl. You have ~ ~ 1'f wtdl MVeral tndlq eempales... two cei..m -... fll tnuDPI and lllS~ 81 CM Mm 7;22 '210 DIE I. •A • .-.., w nu lteaN •f Wt. MaJbe llWlt concede a trict to tbe 11ce of
181 Westelnmsttr Mii. WeUllSttf 192-1367 =::.'=9.=-"9r ........ w Ilea reMlq ... chabl. To mab ,oar ...-. the
Pets Unlimited
ii ..., •teamJ llOYdt. Mui 6-will uw to wart and ------------------------'----------~JOU lllalt ... ,_,dub ... to
dUNESALE
20% OFF DAYTIME DRESSES,
TEE-SHIRTS & SWEATERS
254'9 OFF SELECTED SPORTSWEAR
Plus Addittonal Markdown on Supenavers
(Already below co.t)
Somediinr Special
feminine fashions
"-e spec~l1ze 1n lutuons fOf t~ mrssy flCIJre stzH •·Ill. also petites
250 E. 17th Costa Mesa, • Hilgren Square • 64 5-5 71 I
cme. n..•1 srtulr a reti•r IWM:J,
fot lf theltwt .......... ~
can repem ii and clllcant a club om
tbe third ro.ad of ....... Wiiie de). ma ... tlm, JOU .... keep .. off
play to preveat a 1.:1 tbtoGP J'OW'
club tiq. since west.. double
maka it likely Uat be bolda the ace
of that suit.
Therefore, you cannot afford to
draw tnllDpl before tKkliai bearU.
It ii qUite Htely elm Eut bokla a
biab tnmp, and bll dub naum will
defm JOU before JOU ewa llt IWt-
ed. So ..... Wlmllaa tbe ""' trlclt iD bud lad tie am of a.ru. SlncC it
ii bnmll8ial wtMcber or DOt Wat
~. a.•1 .,,__ M does DOI.
Wbla the tlD .... repeat dM fi.
~==1 •· ... ~ !:!': lfFll Jr ADD CIMEMAUllD FLY DU IW j
.
HBO & CINE.MAX
1~88¢
.... MONTW .. ,., ....... c... . .
,.
.... ...... 1num•1
IN MAYA JUNI
• Dirty DenCJng • No way OUt
• Wtm,.ton • s.cr.t ol My
Succ.a • Le 8MtN , ............ -..
@coMc#W • • •
Compl9t• t•vtaaon Hating• In Sunder'• TV Piiot.
CHU LES
GOREN
neae and cub the ace of hearts for a
dub dbcard.
b it time to lead a trump? Not
yet! U you do, and the c:arda lieu in
the diqram, West will win the jack,
cub the ace of dubs and lead bis
luC heart. But will ruff with the tina and you will lose three tnampt
'
ACR088
1 Grumpy one
5 Bound
9 Gone by air
14 laland dance
15 Ci.ch river 1e Stamp«Se
17 Minor prophet
11 v ... ,-:Sp.
18 Tower
20 Kind of bal
22 chreads
24 ~type
2t Monidtwa
27 Bet\teen
29 Youngster
30 Coln of P.-u
33 Busta. e.g.
37 Tennis ecore
38 Pauagewey
39 According to
40 Record• 41 Hang around
42 SchOOI hymn•
44 Pronoun
45 Weekday: abbr.
48 M•:pref.
47 R•potld 49Coc--ed
53 WllddrMm
67 Qlent9le
51 Stupldone
5t L_,,,.
11 FJoWer
82 SwlMclty
83 Heroic
64 Notcl'I
SS Jftiah feut
&e Transmitted
87 Gangland
WMPOf\S
DOWN
1 Song
2 GOUip
3 ll&and hel1o
4 Euentlalty
5 Apart: pref. e That
7 Mastic. e.g.
8 Thr ... lkSed
9 Bordered
10 Tradltlona
11 Wisdom deity
12 Oc:c:ldent
13 Negatiw.
21 At!XOl')a city
23 a.ai1a.
25~down:
"'4.lllc abbr.
28 CopfM
30 Flah
31 AbOYe
321ntenor
33 CumtMrbufld
34...._to
35 E. lnd&W\ r::•a11 3e "°" unit
OMAR
SHARIF
and the ace of clubs.
How do you avoid thiJ catastro-
pbd Simple. First lead the table'•
Jut bean and discard your kina of
chabst No matter who wim the trick,
wbcn you repin the tad you wiD be
able to lad trumpc, and limit your
Joters to two trumps and a heart.
37 Scattering
about
40 Aapect
42 Syrla of old
43 Ftenzled
46 Shackle
47 F~rfver
... NOneenae
50 "Aw -"
51 Command
52 Furniture
53 Pen pert9
54 Stain wew:
Fr.
55 EncloM
51 Ireland eo Month! abbr.
;
Pl
0,
Dll
by 811 Keane 11'1 TD BLEACDRS by Steve Moore
"Did Betsy Ross design barber
poles, too?"
'I~~~;
• ,..J_l.J....... '1
PEAKUTS
50 TMIS 15 WHERE '(OU
UVE. l-IUH, SPIKE?
GARFlf.LP. I KNOW YOO'RE li'£PRE.'=>~E..17 A&OOT YOOR oPC.OMI~ f>tATHPAY.-
~,. "'"-'~. \''' ,,,,,•·If -~ ..
DBJlll08 TBS llBRACB
• by Hank Ketcham
, , .. 1i;
I
I '
6'1 THE WAY .• I DON'T
SUPPOSE YOU MA'JE ANl<TMIN6
AROUND FOR SUPPEl(,DO VOU?
001, P.EMf.M&ER YOO'RE
ONLY A'=>Ol~ A5 YOO FEEL
by Jim Davis
LET'S ~EE. ••. HOW OLP AR£
YOU OOINu TO Bf?
roa BETTER oa POR WORSlt by Lynn Johnston
SHOE
FUNKY WJllfKERBEAN
by Jeff MacNelly
by Harold Le Ooux
HIS LAWYER SAIO HE LEFT A LETTER FOR ME I DAO WOULD f..EAVE .MESSAGESOCCASeON-ALLY . BUT I'VE ~R RECEtVEO A LETTI:;R FRO~ HIM BEFORE I
by Tom Battuk
ARE. ~ 5E.RIOOS ? IS/~/$ f{) WHAi
~ 6'.DWl~~~z.1 OOES ~E
HE'5~
F-OR. rr ·'·' 15 1Hl6 Ra:ORDA ctRfiFlf.D 1l41NK ~
MONSfE.R OR WAA"f? Jr-.-.. ...... --
1
COldWell Banker Country
THE FLAG BEARERS
DENISE ADAMS
JOANN AKERMAN
GINNY ANDERSON
MARCJA MATTHEWS-BAYS
MARCIA BENTS
DEBI BIBB
ELEANOR BOWIE
ESTHER BROWN
N/\NCY HUTTON-BROWNE
JOHN CAMPBELL
EVAN CORKETT .
M~RIE DEREMIAH
lYLEEN EWING
DAVID GOLDSBERRY
DIANA GOLDSBERRY
CAROLINE HAINES
SHIRLEY HARRIS
PAIGE HARTLEY
BILL HILL
LYDIA HILL
PAT HURLEY
BARBARA HUTCHINGS
RITA KURTZ
GUY LIVINGSTON
JANIS MACMILLAN
NIKKI MARKS
LINDA MARSTON
-SARA MARVIN
CAROLE MCMAHAN
JUDY MERTZ
BARBARA MILES
EDIE OLSON
KAY PARKER
BRENDA PETERSON
BERT REEDY
MARIAN REEDY
JUDY. ROBBINS
. are
CYNTHIA RUMSFELD
JENNIFER SHAW
JULIE STEPHENSON
HILLARY THAMER
DENNIS TROUT
. DOTTIE VALENTI NE
SUE "'~RNON
LISA WHITE
IOBYORlE
JIM MULL,Ell.
Branch Saa. Vici ..... ,. M._.,
I
•
0
" A
11
~
I , • II -
Red-hot veteran
pMJ>els streaki~
RoY:iJs past Anje s
81 IUCllAaD DVNN
.._,..., a ''
~Brett has bftn lookina like
his old trlf r«ently. Unfortunaiely
for die Aftld1. thty rncmbled the
inmainaly pttdictable team that's
taken the Anahrim Stadium field too
many tirMS in what's becomina a
loq.ruo".
A red-bot Breu and the kan1ASCi~
Royals handed the Anaels another
loss. this time S-3 in front of 23.111
Anaheim Stadium fans, as the A
fell 16 pmcs below .SOO arid
pmn behind division-lcadina
land. Bret~ manwhlle. went 3 for4
two RBI. scored the tying run ;
fourth. He's been the fottt be
Kansas City's recent surae: •
"Brett was outstandina." said ~ us City Manaaer John Wat~
"He's bauina over .330 now (act
.329). I'm not surprised at the
this team is playina. It couldn't
happened at a better time."
~tthasaone 13for27(.481)i
last ei&ht pmes. includina
homers and seven RBI. The R--·'7
have won 10 of their last 11 p
Want to know \llho makes
Royals JO'!
Com1n1 ofTback-te>-back med
seasons in which Brett batted u"*',
.300. rumors bepn to fly about amt
rctirina.
··1 had thou&hts myself this year:·
said Brett. who has been the Royals'
DH in 18 pmes this year.
"Wh.en you realize that you've
played IS years on astroturf. it takes
its toll." Bren said. "But so faT, I have
not missed a pme and only two at·
bats this season. I've realized that the
okkr you act. the more difficult it is to
play e\leryday. While I welcome the
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A jUctl'.~iiiFtto proctied With fjJS
pve NFL auomeys permission Mon;.; 1 • which ostensibly will be ru ed
day to J?ursue a lcpl stratCSY lhat. if upon by the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of
succnsful, could result in the ~·s ~als.
collcctin' money from the Raiders 'tn. The session befott Hat.er was an
coajuncuon with the team's move outarowth of a decision haAded down
from Oakland to los Aneeles.. two years aao by a feCkril appaJt
NFL auomey Frank Rothman toad court. which tbttW out a 1982 jury
U.S. District Judpc Terry J. Hatter Jr. award ofSI I million to 1hc Raiders in
that the Raiders value increased by th · · t ·t · t'--I some S2S million with their move to car anturus sui apinst •K eaauc.
Los Anaeles in 1982. Thcjudaes ordered the lowcrcoun
.. The value of the league expansion to recalc:ulatc the antitrust damaan
opportunity belonp to the teaaue as a due the Raiders. then substract what·
whole.·· Rothman said. "When the ever benefit the team accrued as a
Raiders moved to Los Angeles. they result of an earlier 1nJunct1on that
appropriated for themselves the ex· allowed the team to move to Los
p1nsion value that had attumlated in Anaeles.
Los Anaelcs. The appeals court did. however.
.. Why are we (the NFL) limited to reaffirm the jury's rulina qainst the S 11 million and have to give away le~ue -which had tried to block the .• S 14 million?" Ra1ders' move -in the antitrust
Hatter said he would allow case.
Reluctant A.C. takes
direct charge to hoop ..
PONTIAC. Midi. (AP) - A.C. Green led
the Los Anacles lak~ this season in reluctance
to shoot. .
He heard Coecti iPlil .RfJCy implore him to
put the ball up more but he wouldn't listen. ~t
offensive weapons like Byron Scott and James
Worth> score. Grttn would pick his.spots forh1s
shots.
On Sunday. Green p1cked the Detroit
Pistons apan. He took 11 shots. made nine and
scored a career playoff' hiih 21 points as the
Lakers took a 2-1 lead m the best-Of-seven NBA
Finals with a 99-86 victory.
"Ourpla>ersarealwayskiddinaA.C. Every
time A.C. scores a basket they say. ·accidental
offense,"' Riley said Monday. "Without him .
we probably wouldn't be close to winnint" the
third pmc
.
Thom
raises
#I $$ 1
Tbe Laken' A:.C. Oreea baa.._ a
reluctaat Mooter lD die title drt.e.
Oilers' Mena makes noisewithbat
South all-star closes prep
career in tonight's classic
llJ URlt WOLCO'IT
...... Cc:: • dW''
Huntington Stach H1ah center fielder Brian
Mena doesn't say much. but he acts the job done.
You won't hear him hollerin1 at his team-
mates or carT)'m& on with the umpi~: Mena's
kwlersh1p comes by example -steady bet.
blistcrina speed, impeccable ficlaina.
"He's really a quiet }Oung man." said
Hunti~ton Beach Coach Mike Dodd ... On our
team, it s not nectSsary for Brian to make a lot of
DOilc. He just aocs about doina bis job." Part of his job this year was bclpina the Oiltts
win tht Sunset lcque for the first time since 1913.
Toniaht. Mena will work overtime u he tries
to betp the South team over the Nonh in the 21st
annual ~ County All-Star Baseball Game.
1k coaacst, sponsored by the Kiwanas 0\lb of
Greater Anaheim. bc&ins at 7:30 p.m. at Ott Ftt
ficJd in Anaheim's La Palma Pa.rt.
"I was surprised to be picked. Ifs a ~I
privilcie." said Mena. who was also picked to this
)car'sall·leaguc ste0nd team for the seci>nd tame 1 n
two )C3rs as a varsity player for the OiJen.
"It's a real honor to be playina in the all-star
pme. wc·,e had a couplt pnl('tic:n alraidy. and
v.c're just foina to go out there and ha"·e run ... he
said. "But ·m suTC once pme time romcs around.
we'll tr)· to win."
Mena helped the Oilen win tbis year. leading
the t~am in batting with a .333 avef119r. He hit t"'o
homerunsanddro,ein IS RBI, but fell tarshon of
his pre-sc~son aoals. .
"I wanted to bit .4SO this 'ff#," Me:nl said.
Wouldn't e\Ct)body?
While Mena missed his penoMI pls this
)'car. he more than compe..attd 1iilh ~ .. play.
Mena went I fOr 2 in t.M fiNl :91'M 0/ die lt-.uc
ICUOrC dri~ina in a run to help lhe Oiteri diftdl tbc
title with a S-0 win over Edisolt.
"He's probebly aot owe of'tk '-Ii ball we've
had ... said l>odd. the Oim· c.& the .,... etaht
)ca~ "He's a line drive hitter. a sin&)Cs and
doubles t) pc of IU). but he an fool )OU with tUs
po-.'tr -
Foohna Mena. howe~cr. is ha.rd to do. He pla~ed the entire 19 8 sea.son Wlthout ma~ •ft error.
Dodd c.alls Mena "Mr. OulCh ... and •id 9'e-
probabl)-would ha\e made 1hC all·l.asue fin&.
team af not for an injury earl) in lhe season. •
In the loara Tournament. Mena Slid 1nao fil'Sl
tryin& to beat out an infield sinllc. Whca then.
cleared. it was Mcna's nsht arm that look dM:
bcatini.
"When I tncd to raise my arm over-my held, tt
lulled ... s~ud Mena. woo pulled mmclts in tlllt t.ct
of his shoulder durina thc;spill.
Mena sta)cd in ccatcr ftdd ddPitc the ia;my,
but "''as forced to thro. -...rmed for idle ant
thn.-t wcel~ Daily trips to the lraiMr tat
ultrasound thcrar>) and ~ h'*5tlliUtt
hcl;c:d him rcsa•n hi, ~h.
That Stl'Cl'lcth will be. calltd Oft api1I ....... i9
MC'nl's final hap tc'hoOI 111mc. Theft n•a • •
Golden Wess C'ollqc in w tan.
Brown makesineritab1e mo
'
...........
NEW V<>alt-For Ille first tbM ia 1 II •v~ career. Tommy JoMa acted ~ ....
I wuj• ..... '° ICuflle ~lot ftwc iAniap and '* trt bloWft out ofthr wa1tt, .. • uid :s...lmY ... 1•w ~ ftltma wey btfore." ~ JOha. ahe OW. player in tbt mltjors II 4S, wasn't
bonible. He .. ve up CW<> runs in 3'h inninp to
Bal&imorc and wound up with a no-dccisaon 11 tht Ncw
.. yQrk Yankees beat the Orioles 6-S.
Thrn 1119in. John blid aood reason not to e-apect
mucfi. YanUri ma~ BHlf Manin. known fOr his
pcc:utiar handtina Of Pikhtn. had started John on
Wedncsda> nipt and then ulCd him for 4Yl inoinas of
relief Friday niaht..
"I'll pnd\ cvtty time they ieU me to pitch. I C'Ould
have adtCd out of1he saan. but I chose not to.
"I didn't have a~ to aoda~. You could see a
tired arm out t~ ... Jolln said ... It s touah ~ to
pitch apjnsl ~ ~ hitatts when you're rndy.
It's doubly touah when you're not. J just wasa't
prtpartd.-
Martin saKI he stanecl John bcciuse of Baltimore's
2-19 record qainst left-handers. includin& 0-11 on the
road. Johtt had shut out the Orioles for 12 previous
inninp this season.
"I went with T,J. today because of the type that
Baltimore is and also so I could set up my ro&ation for
the road tnp ... Martin said. ''Ht did JU St what we
wanted him to do. He kept us in the pme."
John. ho~evcr. hoped for a little more. even if he
didn't count on the 282nd victoryofa career that bepn
in 1963 with Cleveland. '
.. , demand a lot of myxlf. but today I couldn't
demand a lot. That's the fh.asu11in1 pan:· John said.
The mild-mannered John threw hisaJovedown the
dua,outrunwaywhen hewasrelicvedwithoneout in the
fourth. the bases loaded and trailina 2:.0.
"I fell b:ad because I couldn't pitch well," he said.
.. even though I was a Iona way from my best.-
"( could throw strikes. but not &ood strikes." John
said ··v ou lose that little bit on the ball. Now the
sroundballs ao through and the popups become hne
drives."
Quote of the day
Mae LaValllen. the Pittsburgh Pirates'
catcher. on switch-hinina teammate Bobby
Bonilla, who leads the National League 1n home
r~ns: "The man .has only one weakness. He can
hn a ball 450 feet left-handed but can hit it only
4:?0 f~t right-handed."
Buoniconti says Citadel liable
CHARLESTON. S.C~ -Marc EiJ
Buoniconti was paralyzed in a 1985 411•
football accident because the team doctor
and trainer at TheC1&adcl were negligent in uca~in his neck condition. Buoniconti's lawyer
ch Monday.
ut. as Buonicont1's suit against the military
coHcac went to court two years after 1t was filed. school
laW}crs said the accident was Buoniconti's fault.
"When you play football. you assume the risk of
some danger. But you do not assume the risk the doctor
trcatm& you 1s going 10 ~ negh~enl" Buon1ronti's
laW)cr. Robert Wallace. told the s1~·man. six-woman
JUry.
School lawyers countered that Buon1conu was
paralyzed because he tackled an East Tennessee State
~)er with his head down. in v1olat1on of the rules
··ft wasn't because Marc Buoniconu had a sore
neck .... It was because he made a mistake," Daw~
Cooke. laW)cr for the school said. ··He violated the
rules offootbatl but he also violated the rules of nature"
by makin' suC'h a tackle. he said. ·
Buoniconti. the son of former Notre Dame and
Miami Dolphins star Nick Buoniconti. was the staning
inside linebacker for the BuJldop whtn he suffered a
crushed spinal cord durin& a pme on Oct. 25. 1985.
•
n..u.•an111e1
n. NHL lcllftl ol<kMnors Molt-~-A4"".J:'~'=.= .. ~=-=1o:.='.:r::.rrailllioa. nae = .... 1..as10.ooomc-.a.1•111M111 w ,.,=_, for OllC ~ -.d lhwd SI.GOO afttt SdlOm ·1 CCM1hn11diia .. llferw DOn Kohanti
duri111 a pla)'Oft'~me • -6.. 'ftle.Devill obllined 1 ~ rau.iAt• ..... ...,,. .. Sdtoenfdd lO
C'OKI\ Game 4 of the W• C'lllferencc ftMI aeainst
Boston on May 8. Rdfte ....,. Newell and his~.
C'1ti• ul'cl) fanors,.IMa •lbd off and~~
by amateurs. A1 a hceriftl bdbre Game S. Schurilfetd's
1uspcnsion v.as ul)Mld aftd IM ~r oftkiaJs
retumc<! that ni&ht. The mtraina. Otdct wn vacated
b) a New Jersey court ..• TM Nauonal Hockey Lelpc
on Monda) voted to award its United Slatn national
tdc-; ision ri~ts to Cablevision ~~sCorp. for more
than SSO million over three yean,
NHL bonora Park, three othen
MONTREAL-Brad Patt.oncoflhc Iii
1op KC>ring defenscmcn in NHL hiaory. '
and Tony Esposito. one of the top lhrtt
aoaltcndcrsincarecrvictones. ~•ll\Oftl
four ceaycrs selected to the Hockey · Hall of Fame
Mon y. h' · '•h • · h h Guy Lafleur. • 1gh-sconna "~..::t wana Wit t e
Montreal Canadiens. and Buddy 0 Connor. a center
who played for Montreal and the New York Rangers in
the 19-tOi. were the other players named by the Hockey
Halt off ame Sclccuon Committee.
O'Connor was a posthumous scl«tion in the
newl)·inst1tuled Veterans Catesory. The four will be
inducted into the Hall on Sept. 7 'in Toronto.
Part ;played with three teams durina his I 7-)Car
NHL carttr from 1968 to l 985. most notably the New
York Raneers a!\d Boston Bruins. Durina that time. he
compiled a rcrord of 213 Joals ana 683 assists to place
strond in auisls. third 1n points and fifth in 1oals
amon& lhc NH l's all-time leading defcnscmen.
.. Espositobccomnthesecond mcm~rofh1s famriy
to make the Hall.joinina other illustrious brother acts
as the Richards and Conachers. Phil Esposito. one of
the pme·s attat scorers. was inducted in 1984.
Earnhardt receives no ~nalty
DAYTONA BEACH. F1a. -Despite •
reports to the contrary. two-time defending
NASCAR 'stock car champion Dale
Earnhardt was not penali1td dunn1 Sun-
da> 's Budweiser 400 at Riverside. the sanctioning body
said Monday. ,.
Rusty Wallace. won the race and moved past
Earnhardt into the series point lead. I. 790-1. 786. when
the latter finished fourth in the raC'e.
Chip Williams. a spokesman for NASC AR. said
Monday that the rcsuhs will stand and that Earnhardt
was not guilt) of illegally passing other race C11rs or the
pace car under a caution flaa as had been reported.
Television, radio
TELEVISION
4:35 p.m. -PRO BASEBALL: Dodgers at
Atlanta. TBS.
6 p.m. -PRO BASKETBALL: NBA
Champ1onsh1p Scncs Game 4 -Lakers at
Detroit. Channel :!.
6:30 p.m. ~BEACH VOLLEYBALL: Foot·
locker Coed Classic. from Palm Spnngs (taped).
ESPN.
7:30 p.m. -HJGH SCHOOL BASKETBALL
: C'IF state finals. from Oakland (taped). Prime
TKkct
RADIO
4:40 p. m. -PRO BASEBALL Dodgers at
Atlanta. KABC (790).
6 p.m. -PRO BASKETBALL: NBA
Champ1onsh1p Scnes Game 4 -Lakcrs at
Detroit. KLAC' (570).
7 p.m. -PRO BASEBALL: San Francisco at
Padres. KFMB (760).
7:30 p.m. -PRO BASEBALL: Texas at
Angels. KMPC(710).
WEDNESDAY'S TELEVISION
11: I 5 a.m. -PRO BASEBALL: Pittsburgh
at Chicago Cubs. WGN.
Area paddlers
earn U.S. berths
BRETT LEADS ROYALS •••
From Bl
up for seven hits and five runs (one
unearned) io fhe-plus innings. suffcr-
S1x Orangt> Coast area paddlers ing his eighth loss in 12 dcc1s1ons this
have been selected to the U.S. season.
•Olympic Canoe and Kayak team on "For Finley. this wasn't his best
the bas.s ofthtir performance at tnals da)'. as far as his stuff wasconccmcd,''
in Indianapolis last weekend. said ROJaS. "He didn't have a &ood
Newport Beach's Gres Sanon and fastball or breaking b3ll."
Norman Bclhngham "'ere selected for The Angels.. "'ho collected si~ hits
the men's team. It was Banon's third off three KC pitcher>. arc averaging
consecutive selection and Bell-2.8 runs m their past :!O games.
intham's second ~E\Cl)'bod) as a whole has not
lncluded on the "'omen's team arc been hatting consistently. except for
·Huntington Beach's Cathy Marino-Johnn) Ra)-he ha\ been the most
Geers. Costa 'v'fesa's Shirley Dery-consistent.' said RoJas. "Injuries are
B~ulik and Newport Beach's Traci something that )OU can't control."
.. H1111ng the home run got the
monkc) off my back." said Boone. -1
had been aware of it for a long time. h
was nice to act it out of the way. I'm
not rcal high on it. but maybe I'll~ an
answer to a tn\ 1a question ..
Nobody in the park. including
Boone. knew for sure the ball was out.
"When you hn home runs as fre-
quentl> as I do, you're never sure if
the) ·re gone:· Boone said.
But this one was Kansas City's
because of Brett. who was at it apin
in the fourth inning. He started a
three-run rally with a double to leR-
center and scored on Danny
Tanabull's RBI double. Phillips and Shea la Cono\er Kansas City took a quick 1-0 lead in
Manno-Geers. who was the top the first against Finley when Brett. *
·, U S. hopeful and ranked sixth in the one of the hottest hitters in the • -G ANGii. NOTIS -Pit~ coech Merail "'orld in 1983. suffered a shoulder Amcncan u:ague. singled home ary "Stene ,.er.-ua-c~•led ,,.. cttt
tnJury that )Car and could not make Thurman from second base. 1>1r1110av Mona.-t ••• Catehlf .. ._ ...., 1984 Sh Ao-' Ph II' · Th th I d " h' t wffff'td IO-beek IH~ Sundav nl9tll wlllll :..n•C team. e e-r-: 1 •r in urman. c ca -011 11 er, ., "'' llofN. Do:it ••• 1,, .,. ,,.,,ii>e i.neuco
ilhc first 500-mcter md1\ 1dua on sjngled to right and took SC'Corid on anvtie>w on MonOeV, 1n IKt, eoona l'ltt hi& 100t11
turday and then teamed with Wilhc Wilson's ground out to short-career hOme run In ,,,. .-<Olld lnnino, rn.lllno
heres.a Hauni.t to capture the 500-stop. M and Ill•,.,...., ••• ._ Ille MConct 1•t11er· .,, '°" ~f'°" Ill INI~ ""'orv to ""' lot-eter doubles Sunda) Bob Boone. however. pve the Ot·moft llOnWI ... It wn ._.. first
Phillips earned her spot Sunday _~y Anicl~ a 2-1 lead with a hnc-drive 110mer "°'' i.st *'· l•. 4J ""'" eoo · · · ~&in& Conover in the second SOO-hon~ run. his first of the scaton. to = ~ we~c:c! ~"' ~ ~!~::
ctcr race tefl-ccntcr in the second inninJ.; a!louldar •. ~ ~. '" "'-1s·•v lil''"i!~~-----------:------------------'---· O•HbltO 141 ll«euM of 1rrna11011 In his rlttlt eioow 11!>0 l\enO, llW'--. tt1t Ilda IOf IO
TllB ROUSE DBBATE CONTINUES •••
"'What Sets HOUSE ofDIP.OR1S ~~ the Resrl
mlnutts Mol>da• •!Id .. ~ .. 411tc.,,,..,, Ill lht ~ !Wt ol f\11 rl!IM arm , • , ... ,...,
1h0*.ct no ifne>fovament Mefldey ti. 1111 WI rib
C-.. efler reollv1ftt • ~ .., *' SeturCSev • • .... ....,. ,... "'* lnle
M ortflotl( ~ ,,.,.., -.. ...., ..-i.I ............... ~ ........ .-.. 0.-. ............. NI Mii ~-loll .....,9'a "' ~ ....... ....., .. ~*M. ""' lilll ~ lrr1tetlOll Ill "" JtlM am..
Plttabtaqla'o BObb,-lloallla accepta con·
•ratalatfona from ~417 Van Slyke aftet:
I# w11 1• n
llltttac a tbll'd-Jnnlnal two-nm boiDer tJaat
led the Phatee put die Cblcaco Cat.. s..o.
Pirates Walk on Cubs
Pittsburgh ace's eight-hitter
blanks Chicago for 8-0 win -
From ne .MMeiated Pm•
When the Chicago Cubs Stt Bob Walk on the mound.
the) want to run away.
Walk.continucdhismasteryoverCh1cagoand Bobby
Bonilla and Barry Bonds each hit their 14th home run as
the Pittsbarah Pirates defeated the Cubs 8-0 Monda).
Walk. ~-4. pitchc<! his first complete pme and
shutout oft he season despite a I 5-mph wind blowina out.
He allowed e1&ht hits.. stnK'k out five and walked four to
impro'e his lifetime record ap1nst the Cubs to 9-l.
including three victories this season.
··1 can't eitplaio it." said Walk of his success over the
Cubs. "I have no idea. Today the) couldn't get the clutch
hits. With the wind blowing out. I didn't want to walk
an) bod)' but that didn't work either. I guess I was Just a
little lucky."
Bonilla. who had three hits. doubled in a run in the
first mn1na and hit a two-run homer in the third to raise
his Nauonal Lcague-leadin •. RBI toul to SO.
·-rm ha\ang fun." Bonilla said. "This is Just apme
and m) dadd> alwa)S told me to have fun and don t put
an)' prcssun.· on yourself."
The defeat broke the Cubs' three-game winning
st real.
Plilllies &, Expos %: Chris James. Luis Aguayo and
Make Young each hit solo home runs as host Philadelphia
snapped Montreal's four-'3me winning streak.
Shane Rav.le). 5-6. pitched his third complete pmc
after lasung one out Friday night apin)t Pittsburgh ma
game c' cntuall) won by Phi ladelph1a. 12-10. Rawley also
v.as credited "1th the gamt-w1nning RBI on a fielder's
choice grounder in a thrtt-run second.
Hubie Brooks had three hits for the Expos. including
the I .OOOth of his carttr
Padres 7, Giants S: Enc Show allowed four h11s 1n 7'!/1
innings and Robcno Alomar hit a home run as host San
Diego "'on 11s fifth straight. The Padres have wun six of
SC\Cn gamci. and e11ht of I I on their current I 311me
home~tand under new Manaaer Jack McKcon. The
Giant<, "'ho fcll 10 500 at l 1-31 . have lost three strai~t.
* Brew.n 3, Martnen 1
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Mark Dnis pitchc<! the final I 1111nnings for has 10th
save in I 0 opportunities. Davis also hit a two-run homer
in the ei&hth. his first career home run
At&rot I, Braves $: Denny Walhng's run-scorl.ng
single broke an c1Jhth-inning tic for host Houston. Wtth
the score tied 5-S. Kevin Bass led off the eighth with a
sinalc off Jose Al,arcz. 2-2. Bas~hen stole second and
scor1.'d on Wallina's first game-winnina hit of the 5eason.
The' 1CtOI)'' mo\·ed Houston into a virtual first-place
tic in the National League West with Los Angeles. The
Aslros trail the Dodgers by two percentage points
Meta t, ear.1aa11 1: Lee Maz.z11li Si"J.I~ home !he
winning run in the r 2th innina. ending a bnlhant pitching
duel as host New York ended a five-pme losing streak.
Starters lalT) McWilliams of t~e. Cardinals. and
03\id Cone of the Mets we~ both bnlhant. yet re1ther
aot a dcc1s1on. Cone and Myers combined to hold the Cardinal~ to JUSt one hit afier the fourth inning.
In the Amencan Lcaaue:
Yukee1 1%, Red Sox I : Jack Clark and Rafael
Santana hit three-run homers to lead an 18-hit attack as \1~1ting Ne\\ York gave Boston's Roger Clc~cns the
wor~t battcrir.g of his career.
The Yankees pounded Clemens. 9-4. for nine rlAl'IS
and I 5 hits. the most ever allowed by lhe two-time Cy
Youna Award winner. in just 6¥1 innings. He allowed 13
hits tv.1ceasa rookie in 1984. Richard Dotson. 7-1 gotthe
win and Cecilio Guantc worked three mnmas to cam his '
seventh save.
Orieln I, Tl1en 4: Mickey Tenlcton hit a thrtt-run
homer in the ninthandaddedasoloshot in the seventh as
visiting Baltimore snapped Detroit's fhc-pme winnina
streak. Tbe Tigers had taken a 4-3 lead in the eighth when
Alan Tr3mmcll singled home Gary Pctus.
ladlus I, Bhae Jays I: Cory Snyder's two-run homer
and Mel Hall's tv.o-run double h11hlighted a four-run
founh inning as v~iting Cleveland snapped its four-game
losing streak.
Wllite Sox 4, Twlas 1: Melido Perez. 6-2. combined
with 1wo relievers on a seven-hitter and Ivan Calderon
v.ent 3-for-3 with a home run to lead v1s1tma Chicago.
Brewen 3, MariDen l: Bill W~man combined with
Dan Pksac on an eight-hitter for his first career victory
apmst Seattle and Robin Yount drove in three runs to
lead host Milwaukee.
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SAN l'aAtten<O tAtl 0900 ·-· 4 t J ~ s.m...i 1-J t t 1 .,..,.,, r1 • t J J ¥cOrWI t• • t t ... ._. .., .... c ........ t 1 I. Ha-,, , ••• llW>t•nw • I J. °""""' • 't ~·~',. : ~~: .:.c;. : :; ~ t:':~" ::n =.=;.. : ::: -c ... , =.,,, ; ::
c-.n '" , 1 J 2 G•-" J 1 •• ~·· •••• c_,, JI I' ........ I •• ,.._,, 4 t t I Mor-I •I I I w.t•cl •I I I ., ... ,. J 1 It L"'-19 J 1 I
OllOO.•nP 0 t t 0 Nl«ICI ft If I ..... < • t 2 f MY-rl 2 2 II T... #tit I ,.... • I & ,.,... .. , M • I t t C-la 4 1 1 J II'-• M • t t f A-fO" t I J I -w ......
#1(11'1 .. 4flf ,_ ... Jiil·-· Jftt .llil!IU lttt ~ -··--· I<-c J t t t flllfo u t t t I .w;~ o t t t t 11..W. • J t t I T--nt __.. MW<lm\U 10t t "9rOlllC •t It WJM~nllft It 0 t 0-....,,. ae1 -Fr-Ill .... u 1 t t t ~ • J t ta T-» t t J ,.._ tr I & i IL..... t~~. #l(Ofllt
"'""-• Jiil ~ .... 1117 k_..,.._ 1_T.,....l~'-T..-_,.., ,... ....... ... -__ , ............ u.-.11:n. ..........
YOf'tlllllllrl t t ti l'f'•M*P ----· ltl, ~ CMI, Gr ..... Ill, llllllP (SI, T-JI J i J ,.... D 1 t 7 0..... WiMll!9 119' -·-Ill ,._ HI ~_,.,...... ,&t> ~ IW ..... 1-Y-LOlt_...., ... t, ,.._. SI'...,,..., ~ s.. 11..-..c. "' • ,.._, ...,. r ,._ • .i-,...., ...,.. t • • • • •to
S..0..0 m .. --1 tta-C-Cltt A-UI MY-a.... G-W'"'*'e 11111 -•"-W Ill M-11-1111 $1'-~ 'l't11 I-MW~ 0-S.n Fr-1tff I , • N ...... -...wJ I
Se'\ 0-I L08-teft l'tellCIM9 I, S... ........ D ...... $ Ii
1 1 I I f I
U •l S l 4 J • tlJJ It I I ~ • 1•-w-ow-.. ... ..., s • • s s , 2 .,....... Hit"'<-flat.·----CY. II:~ Ill, ~ 1 t t t t I <-•l:.l t 'i J J t J ~O.··• 111 se-"'°" m. o.-m P"t1 t#' ow.... > 1 1 1 • S-0-T'-._ ........... f t t t 1 1 7 ...... I e t t I I • M ••• ,. ......,_....,._to I Mfltt • .. 111\ (.~& I 1 t I t t
• s ' • • 1 t t I I
p......... ~ .. ,.., Cllfltorl. ·-.. ~_....,.., ,,..._., P:ont, licNletftl ~ °""· ._,.... ~ ..... "'*·· .... ~ .. ..._. flttllfll, ""'·,.,., T!-'2-0 A-aes.M *-V-l»t, e-"f-Ut -)1,m
e•tandfn6•
At .... ,_....
New York
lktroi l
Cleveland
Milwaukee
Bot&On
1'oron10
8-ltimorc '.
..., ......
W L NL GI Lit
40 21 ·'" 4-6 32 21 .'33 7'h M 33 29 .'32 7Vi 9.1
30 31 .492 10 4-6
27 3J .450 12V: 6-4
26 )I .406 '''h 3. 7 23 39 .371 1711: ).7
EAIT DIVISION
39 21 .650 M
36 24 .600 J 7.3
37 2S .597 3 U
32 30 .Sl6 8 S·S
21 30 .4&3 10 J.7
29 J.4 A60 1 l'h 6-4
J6 4S ,262 231/J S-S
MOlilky't Seoru
Kansa. Cit)' s . ...._., 3
New York 12. Boston 6
Baltimore 6. Detroit 4
C'le\cland 8. Toronto 6
Chicago 4. Minn~ta I
Milwaukee 3. ScanLt l
Onl) games scheduled
· T•l&111'1 Games
.....
Li>st I
It.mt I
Won)
Won I
Won I
Lost 2
Lost 3
Won 3
Lost I
Won I
Won 2
Lost I
Lost "2
Won I
BemeAwraf
17· 8 U·ll
17-14 IS·l4
11·1 s 16-14
11-16 12·1.S
16-20 l 1·13
lS-1!7 11 ·2 I
9-20 14·19
19·1 l
IS-12
19-13
19-12 , .. ,7
1>16
10.19
20.10
21-12
18-12
IJ.18
14-13
16-18
6-26
Tckas (Hayward 4-3) at Aqtft (Witt J. 7). 7:35 p.m.
New York (Allen 2·1) at Boston (Smithc;on 1-2). 4:35 p.m.
<1morc (Noles 0-0) at Detroit (Alexander S-4). 4:35 p.m.
C'le,eland (('and1ott1 6-5) at Toronto (Stottlemyrt 2· 7), 4:35 p.m.
C1ucago (l..aP01nt 4-6) at M1nnC$0ta (Blylcven 4-6). 5:05 p.m .
Seattle (Moore 3-6) at Milwaukee (filer J.0). 5:~5 p.m.
Kansas City (Saberhagcn 8-S) at Oakland (f)av1s 5-3). 7:35 p.m.
Wed...uy's Games
Texas at Aqtll, 7:35 p.m.
Cleveland at Toronto. 9:3S a m.
Seattle at Milwaukee. 11 :35 a.m.
New Yon al Boston. 4:35 p.m.
Bahtmorc at Detroit. -4:35 f ·m
Ch1ca1oa1 M innesota, S:O p.m .
Kansas City at Oakland. 7:35 p.m.
Dodscn
Houston
San Francisco
Cincinnati
San 01c10
Atlanta
New York
P1ttsbuf)h
St. Louis
Chicaao
Montreal
Ph1ladclph1a
National League
WEST DIVJSION
W L Pct. GB Lii
32 26 .S52 4-6
33 27 .5SO 5-5
31 31 500 3 5.5
28 33 .459 S1h 5-5
26 36 419 8 7-3
20 38 .345 12 4-7
EAST DIVISION
39 22 .639 4-6
35 27 .S65 41.t'! 5-S
32 30 .516 7"'1 4-6
31 30 508 8 5-5
30 30 .500 811! 6-4
26 33 .441 12 6-4
.Moaday'a Scottt
Ptttsburah 8. ( h1cago 0
Philadelphia S. Montreal 2
New York 2. St Louis I ( 12 1nn1na.s)
San D1eao 7. San Francisco 3
Houston 6. Atlanta 5
Only pmcs scheduled
Today's Games
Streak
Lost 3
Won 3
Lost 3
Won 2
Won S
L.ost 3
Won
Won
Lost 4
Lost I
Lost I
Won 2
Home Away
16-15 16-11
20-1 0 I 3-1 7
19-17 12-14
1~-13 16-20
21-18 S-18
7-17 13-21
19· 9
22-13
IS-16
12-13
18-13
14-14
20-1 J
13-14
17-14
19-17
12-17.
12-19
Dodttra (Valenzuela 4-5) at Atlanta (P.Sm1th I ·6), 4:40 p.m
Pittsbuf"lh (Smiley 5-4) at Chicago (Mo)er 3-6). 11 20 am.
Montreal (Dopson I-land Martinez 6-6)at Ph1ladelph1a (Ruffin 4-4and
Carman 3-3) (2). 2:35 p.m
Houston (Da~tn 3-4) at Ctnc1nnau (RIJO 7-1) 4 35 pm
St Louis (Deleon 4-4) at New York (Ojeda 4-5). 4:35 p.m.
San Francisco (l.aCoss S-4) at San Otego (Jon~ 5·5). 7 05 p. m.
Vf~ay'a Gamtt
Dodctn at Atlanta. 4·40 p.m .
P1ttsburah at Ch1ca10. 11 :20 a.m
San Francisco at San Dacao I 05 p m .
Houston at Cinc1nnat1. 4:35 p.m.
St Louts at New York. 4:35 p.m
Montreal at Philadelphia. 4·35 p.m
............
CH~Ha•as
C..me 1 -Detro.I IOS, LM'" fl
e>.me 1 -Lllltwt IOI OetrOlt "'
Geme ) -Lat!'" '9. Detro.I 8' <L••en
lead w in 7·11
T........-1 GaMe
L.1111'" at o.lroot, 6 em
TtlwM9Y'• GlfM
Lall'" et Detroit, ' 11 m.
s.Ml'I. JuM " ~ Detroo el LM.,,_ l2:l0 11 m (if necnHrv)
T""411'1, JllN 21 0-
0.tro.t el L..Man, 6 o.m. (II nac:n1erv1
NBA draft Wdlr
(JllN a at New Y..-)
I.~ , lndl-
) ~
4 ~ WMv
S. GOIOtfl Slelt 6. ca.en (lrOm S.Cramento) 1 ,,_,.a
t Cllerlotte
f. Miami IO S.11 Allrorno
ll ....... Y«ll
12 WeiNftelon
lJ M•l.,eukM
14 "'-'la (lrom Cle"91andl
lS Seethe
'" Hol.ltlOtl 17. UIM\ 1t Alllftta
lf. Cl'llc.eeo 20 o.aa. 21. Pwtlend 22. C~ (Iron\ OetrO<I 111• ~al n~
24. 8ollon
Ji. Lthn
....... tat ........
JUNIOCll FL YWEIGHTS-Jaev Oho (Lot ~> dK F«""°* V~ewtt IMenM
YUQllll\, ""'-MlcO) In UMllif'nOul 12·rcu>d ~at' 111111 lllOul. COllvt Is •·J wlttt .._ kMCllOlltl: y.,_, •+I .,1ltl D ~ovtl)
aAH8AU.
~&..aM99
90STON RED SOX-Achvelecl W«i G•r·
~ oucner. from the IS·dav •~ llit Se<ll
Zach CrOOJCll p.tc...,. to P.wtudlat ot lhe
ln•e<net-' Lt._
......... LaetiM
CINCINNA Tl ttEOS-Sent L-~.
ll'IC>fl\100 oulr•Ol'll IO Na"°'ville ot !he ArneftCMI
Anocleloon s.n1 Tracv Jonft. outfleldef, to
C"l\ellenoe>Oe ot IM Souttlem LM9Ue ~ the 20-cSev niurv reflaOtlolal-Of'091'9m
NEW YORK NIETS-Pleced Ktltll
.._~1 llrsl bestmM, on ltit lS-dav <Ill·
e!Md 111 rtlroacl1v. 10 June 1. ltacalecl Keitt\
Miller, inf-elder. from TIOewel« of IM Inter·
Mhonel Lffoua
PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES Pl9c9CI K.«'1
Tetiutve O<ldl«, on lhe 15-dav diM*d hi rt1roec1tve to June 11 lta<alled Ir.ct Moor•.
O•lehef' from lteedine ol IN Eutern Laeeut.
IAM<ITIALL ................. ~
HOOSTON ltOCKET~meo Don C'-Y
~ coacll
f'OOTaAU.
........ F.-.. ......
CtNCINNA Tl BENGALS-~ EIMrt
Wood1., runn•"t t>a<k
MINNESOTA VIKINGS-filamed Jenv
~OWfl H"•lelll ~'"' Coed\ TAMPA BAY IUCCANEEtts--A<.-84
Euoene Merw, ~net>ecller, from the lklflalO
lll•s for e !tit Ul'dosctoMd oralt <'*"' We~
Cart Stftttal. °*""•Ive IKllle.
WASHINGTON ltEOSKINS-~ Joe
Cafevtllo, t111ht tl'd, to • one·-contrect,
MO Jam,. ""°'"' runn... bacll, encl c.,.i Mitn•. ~VI Dectl, lo e S.in al_ . .,..,
cont•acts
C°'-t..•G•
KANSA$-Alll'OullCell thl '9Sl9tletiioll II Larrv 9fOWft. 11e•e10e1 cMCtl,. wtlO d ....
Offtl "-d coadl of tlle SM ~ ~
,.._.AllUI_.. ._.,.... s. ..._.a
KAMAtaTY cu FIPW
TilurlMll
W~cf .,..,,.
Tl'tallllrl S.Oztt,.
TllC*r lb
FWhlr.1b
Wdmllft
Macfartnc llllKot•"
•••" •r•tl t I I 0 '°"""" Jt \ t .. 10 DWtlltt cf I t I I • 1 J 2 o-n..dll ••••
•Ill CO..tut •\it )110 .ICMI«• •Ill
1t0l Mllerll ••11 J 0 0 0 8-c JI 2 J 0000 cw .... ,,. ••••
2191 ......... , ••• . 0.. He0fe1'J , •••
l!...,411 It t t
>1 S 1 S T.-n I ' t
SC..."' ...... K-10!'¥ * 111'--S ~ .. ___ ,
Game Wl"""'9 1181 -T..,._ ti>
E-HobM L09-«amu cu, $ Calfllrnla J 18-lreo, TarteOUll, MJ/11« ~~.
ScllOfotld Hit-Boone Ill S6-Joy~ (•),
CWalller 121. s-FWhll• SF-T-.r. liM<•
fefa.nt
ltaMe•CltY lann. star w. 7 s
Montonvv
Ferr S • (.........,..
s , ,
"••• M JO
~ J ) • J
1 0 • 0 • 0 0 • 1 3
F1"'evl4 1 S 7 S • 2 I C~ovn 3 0 0 0 I l
H•rvtv I 0 O 0 0 0
Finlev O•lcl!t<I 10 1 Detten In ...,. 6ltl
Umo.rtt-Homt, ,.,_.<rrl, F1r\I, ''"*INl'I< S.Cond We •e. nwo Coonev T-137 A-13 Ill
MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS
American L.eatllM
Cllveutfl ~Y's 0-) la.Md Ill 174 ....... ,
G A9 • H .-ct.
L•n,ford 0.k 60 2S4 .. " 311 Wtnf >eld NY St 2l3 '2 7f .311 aooo, lhn S7 2" Cl 74 lSI
Puektll M•n 60 252 J9 t6 )41
Tremmft De! '° tt7 40 1S 130 &rell K( 62 237 l6 11 J2t
ltHendM>n NY Sl 10t 4' 61 :m
Malltn91Y NY 44 17S 41 S6 JlO
NlcGnH Tor S6 191 4S 61 )If •~ne>IO' St• ,, m 2• 11 311
llUNS-CenMCo, 0.k•enct s.4 ~IO<'d
Oe•lenct .. Mo111or, M•!weull" 47
llHendeoon. Nt .. York, 4', Mc.Griff Tor111110.
CS. Youn1. M·l•eukee 4S
1181 W•nt.o N-Yorlr., SI lretl Kenws
C11v SO. Cenwco Oekleno .,, Pucllell M-·
sote. •t PegherulO . Ntw Vork '3, Certer.
Cltvtca"CI •1 Gr"'be< Toronto. C2 l reoin
Milweut.ee. 41
HITS-Lenstor<t. 0.l<lanct, "· P\ICllett, Mi~te, 16 W•nfoelcl, N-Yorlr. 1'· 8fett.
1(111\&es C11v, 11 Tremmtt, Oetrool, 7S
OOU&LEs-<ii.ooen. M1nnno1a. Jl, 8fe11,
l(llf\Ms Cilv. It aav, ANlb. 11; TanMull l(anws Cllv. II S .,., I Id wolf! 17
TttlPLEs-Revnc>'<I' Sterne, 6, W1'-!,
Ken5ai Cllv, S Yount M1lweull"· S. Frenc.o.
C ........ nd • G-NI·~· •, ~. Torll"IO •
HOME llUNs-<en\Ko, Oelr.lan<I 11>
Calderon Cll4ceoo. 14. Stiv~ Cltvelan<I I• l"C•••O' • Ton 13 . .,_,.,,...., New Yor11.. 13
6 ere 14e1 w•tfl 12
ST-OLEN 8ASES-tt~tot1. New Vorll,
•I ~"'' Oetroo•. 2'. C..-wco. 0.11.l•"CI 11 Mcl"!or M-lwe.-ee, 17, MoM1tv TorOt'llO. 1'
PITCHING (7 O.CISion5)-001son, New
Yor-•. 7 1 US. \I~, M..-soie, 9·2, 111 CenOeter • New V«~ 1-2 toO lie».,_,,
Oetro•t 1·1. nt Sw•-. c....-10·3 7"
Perez Chi<e90. 6 2. 7SO St40 T«onto, 1·3 n1 we1c11. 0.11.~ 1 l n1
STlllKEOUTS-C....,..,, lostOI', 1.0
L•ngstOI' Stett1t, 107, Gutman Te .. , IS
Vt0la M•-'Ole , 11, Hurst, flo\ton, tO
SAVES-E cl\e<Slev, OHlend, 20 R-clon.
Monnnole. 16, OJcll'fl, C...,_,.., IS, Plewc. Mltweul!N, 1' H-.nen, Oetroot I)
....... Lutue
(Tiwwtfl ,.....,,, Geflws)
, .. '" ... 174 ., bets)
G Aa • H Pct. Ga1arr"•~ .. 1Jf 41 7' Dl
Paime•ro en. 61 2'1 :S.. 7' :nl
GPetrv Alt S7 115 27 70 316
lofW!ta P•I '2 a. Cl 74 31'
ttTllCIOIOn SF SI 20t 1' .. )11
Slrewtwv NV S7 104 CJ '3 lOt
Lar1<1nCln se 27t JS 10 l07
LawClll St 2'26 H .. lOS
McGff S•L 61 MO 33 7' >CM
8Hatcflt< Hin St n2 .0 70 l02
llUNS-Boncls P·ll'°"'Oh, SS ~r ...
Montrtel, 41 Ion le P•llSD<.r9ll Cl. Cieri<, s.n
Frenc vo &l Stre,..lletrv, Ne"' Yor1' '3
lt91-·Bon·•le P thDufon. so GDev.s. Hou•·
Ion, d Ct•rti !.an Fr•nc KO 47, VenStvl<t
Pottui...rOfl 11 &,_, MofttrMI, .0, Gal·
erre11a Montriret 3' Per•·lll. Pfl•ieOttofl•• 3'
ltun81''11Y St LOU<\, l8
HITS-C~ St LOU<S 7', G,Mrr-
N'Of'ltH 7' McGee S• Louos 7' Pe~ro
Ch'Caoo 7', Boni•• P11tsDufoll 7•
OOU&LES-Pe~·ro, Cn.,eoo 11 Hevn, ~.. 10 8rir.,,., P·11'°""9/'I It, Sebo
Cinc....,..i.. 1t G•••"•De Montreal, 17
TltlPLES-<~n. SI LOU•\ I VenSlvat
Ptll'ltlul'Ofl, • M·•~. Seti Frenc•KO s
s-..t, ~~DIW S. t art 1..0 ••lfl 4
HOME llUNS--Ctarll, San Frenci\CO, 1'
Gatarr .... Monlrffl. 1' 9onch, Pt!Wur'en I•. loN'8 Plt~gtl 14 GDH'I, HO;AIOll 13. Strawtierrv. ~ Yor-1\, 13 DawMlft, Ch<eoo.
12~~···
STOl.EN 9ASEs-GYoune Hous•on. ls COiiman, SI LOU<• 2' IH••cner HOU\ton 11
lt1""1 MonlrHI 21 OSm1ll• 51 LOUOl 10
PITCHING 7 dtc·••ornt-Cont New Von,
7·1, t7S 1(-.,.ouston 7 t 175. "''° ClnciMali, 7·1. 17S Goootn New Vorll. f ·2 tit, GMM!clua, Ct1ice90 11-3. 7". KGrou ~ 1 2 m Sco11. Houston. 1-1, 111
·~ ~ F•et>e•\CO •·l 7SO STRIKEOUTS-ltven HoustO'I '7. Scott,
HeuslOf' .. KGrou Pll•••oetofl .. to OeL_,, 11 LOU>• 76. GOC>Oen. Hew V«k 7•
SAVES-W«r", St Lou•• I• OSm•!t\
HolAlon 11. llMO•v•' S.n O•.oo. 10 Mve<s. New Y«ll t , Sutter, Atlante, t
O...s..lsNfte
OAvtlY'S LOC>.cll ( ......... aa.dll -S
tloati, 2.. ene•tr' 4 ~r acude, S3 rO(ll f1s.ll,
H c.ia beu lSl Wnc:I bll1. 161 rnectierel,
1' te\Alljll. I caoe1on > soi.. 1 ,...._o "*'·
t tlllil9 '"*'-I) s.amon N•WP<MtT LANOtftG -7 bo9ts, 41
~ .. cel•co. beu, l7 YM !Nin •1 ,,_.«ti.• "OC' 1., ... f K..,.,., • ~.
I lllllaC1l Sft beU (r .... MO)
S 1npson k nows h is
f alth . but searches
for winnin stroke
f'nm McClatd 11 Newt Suvlice
SACRAMENTO-Scott Simpson
no lontcr needs to keep a small 'hp of
~per in hi' pcxket as a ~mindtr of
his faith, as he did one ycaragodurin& t~e final round of his U Optn
\ KlOf')'.
He has mcmonzed the 81blc "enc
-Colo sians 3: 17 -but lhe pum~ mot.;;c he ukd to sla> Tom Watson
"anished liu a wisp of ovcmiaht fas.
, Simpson defends his Open cham·
p1onsh1p this "'eek at The Count?.
Club in Brooklint·. Mass. He hasn t
pla)cd pan1cularl) y,eJI since shoot-
ingdo"' n Wat\On and the world's best
aolfcrs "'ilh a string of birdies on the
back nine at the Oh mpic Club 1n San
Francii4:o. bu1 S1m~n. 32. is riche1'
for the expen~ncc
.. Th~ pm' comes and socs. but
Y>inningtheOf)l.·n "a great memory.~
S1mpwn s.a~~ ··\\ hcther I pla) well
api" or nncr v.in another tour-
nament. it''> a &real memory.
Hopeful!). rn do 11 more than once.
but I could handle never winneng
another golf tournament.
''The secret 1s to be thankful for
v.hat I ha'e as v.ell as to press on"
Som"·ttmc after Arnold Palmer
Y>On the 1960 champ1onsb1p with a
sumng final-da) charge. aolf scnp-
ture proclaimed that a U.S. O!X'n
'1ctof) is ¥>Orth SI millJon 1n ofT-
coursc income.
.. It's not the m1lhon-dollan thing.
but ifs bttn worth a lot to me."
S1mpwn sa)s.
His agent. Rocky Hambnck. 1s
more expans1'e ronccmin4 the
fin:incsal \lllue of Simpson's win.
··ob,iousl). 11 doesn't do as much
0r-.-CoMt DAILY ~~orn~. AN 14, ,... -
..
s'(
Def en~ U .S. Open champion Scott SlmJMIOQ llancl8 •
club to hia caddie Dul Stojal durtnc Monday'• pnctlce.
for a \coll ~1mpson as it d«s for a
Fuu' Zoeller · Hambnd ~"'·
"Pcopk sa) a L '> Open ''ctor) · 1s
¥>Orth St mllhon for a gu) hk~ Scou.
it's not v.onh that much oHr one
)Car. but o'er the'°" run. it's ..wonh
a lot more than that.
Hambrick estimates that
S1mpson·s ofT<e>urs.c income will be
about $500.000 this year comp:irt'd
v.1th S 100.000 a )car brfure 1hat
magical Sunda~ 1n San Francisco.
S1mP4'0n's fot fora onc-da> corporate
••
outang has inettased from $4.000
SI0.000. ••
On the &olf course. Simpson
strughns. Hehaslin1shcdamon&l
top 10 in a PGA Tourc,cnlJUSt Ori&
since 1he Open. He missed the 3'-
hok cut in four st~1ght toumamc9
this spn_ng. ThoUih he did poclie
S 150.000 for"' inning the Cro•-nU1
1n Japan. his PGA Tour winninp ~
$70.488. Last )Car. b) companson. lilc
"'on tv.o tournaments and $621 .0n
~ ...
THOMAS' BACK. • • RELUCTANT.;
From Bl
·contain thrte of four ofthrm.
.\drian Dantley. who scored 34
points and made 14 of 16 shots m
Detroit's opcnang-pme v1C'lof) has
~rcd 19 and 14 points 1n the
Pistons' t"'o losses "'h11e,ettmgofT21
shots against the LakCTS" doublr-
tcam
"The) do v.hat e'ef) tram docs,"
Dantlc~ said "The) lry to k~p the
ball out llf m) hands and make
som~one else beat them The' ·re not
pla) ing better defenSl' than Some of
the oth~r t~ams The~ ·re big in the
backcourt and the~ "rc quicker than
moM team\. but v.c·re still missing
open shots." "A.O."''" get more shots v.hen the
other gu}s start mal1ng theirs. it's as
simple as thaL" Dal)' said. "Our
dcfcn~ has been a constant 1n the
scnes. The difference has bttn our
olTel\sc We ha,en·t bttn consistent.
Their o'craJI size and quickness is
hunmg us ··
.. Teams that v.m championships
ha\e 10 be dc,otcd to grrat defense.
and that's v.hat "'e·,e done:· said 6-
foot-4 B)ron Scott. who is the
smallest L:ilcrs' guard but 1s talirr
than ;in} one in Dctro1t's backcoun.
To counter than height d1sad,an-
1agr Dal) might use 6-7 forv.ard
Dennis Rodman 1n the baclccoun to
defi:nd against 6-9 Magic Johnson
··w e can use Dennis 1n seHral
spots. but 1f he guards Ma1-1c. then we
arc d1stoncd olTcnsl\el~.' Dal) said.
"Our problem 1sn 1 ddrnsc nov. \\ r
need to tx."Come more cfft"CtlH' on
ofTcn~._ ..
Sunda)' · s '1c1011 assured that the
Lakers. S«ktng to become thc first
team to repeat as "lB~ <hamp1ons
since 1969. could onh lose the tllle on
their homccoun. ·
The best the Pistons can hope for 1s
a 3-1 lead b' "'Inning at lhe ~1her
dome on Tue!ida\ and Thur..da\
n1ghh. Tht. n ~n~ wo uld ~tum to
the Forum for Games 6 and 7
"l hope that the lno"' ledge we can t
lose 11 here doesn't soften us up.
Rile~ said. "We lno"' v.e'll be gomg
home. but v.e ha'e to ¥>1n at least one
more here to e'en thank of ha' mg an
edge.
..If they "''" the ne't tY>o, l~~ ·rr
onl) one game from wanntn& tt all
That"\ scar). e'en tf you art' go1ni
home ··
.. No"' v.c'rc wh~rt' v.e ¥>ant to be."
Johnson ~1d. ··There v.rrc ttmcs
"'hen a lot of people 1hough1 v.e
v.ouldn't gcot this far:·
Mcanwh1k. the P1sto11s· v.indov. of
opportunit~ for v.1nning thrtt
".>tra1ght home pmn and the cham·
p10 Mh1p at Pontiac has d1sappca!Td
.. Wl "t'rl·do"n alter the pme. but
the ne\t morning \OU get up and go 10
"'orl again:· centl'r Bill La1mbttr
said .. We ha' l' a lot of 'C'ter:an
profe\s1onal\ on th" 1cam "ho haH'
the v.ork eth1l to lOmc bad;:·
Jf'romBl
a' crage ot 7 8 IX'r game. !
H~ made up his mind he Y>OUld ~
10 shoot more Sunda). The rcstiljs
\\CTC baslcts on tY>O long jumJ>CI!'.
'"o '>hort Jumper .. and five la)'upl,
un 1n "Magic" Johnson ass1stcd 4n
four of the la}u~ !
.. , ~i:pt &ctting in \he right pcs-
1t10n." Gret"n said "Earvin and lttc
gu<irds J..t:pt hitting me n&ht und<'Tlk
bul:kct and ~ou don't pass froin
thc:rc.. :
The 1h1rd·}car pro from Or~gOn
~tall' ha<.> come a long WI) sin~ t c
'>Crt""' opener. In that game. he v.-as t~
pnmar~ dcfcndc:r against -"dnan
Dantle). The I:Xtro1t forv.ard maic I~ of 16 !>hots and scOttd l4 points::
··He beat me to &el to \he basket."
Gri:cn said after \hat pmc
In tbc Si..'-"'Ond game. Dant~ out~orcd Grtt0 l 9 to 12 and In 1'C
third game. Green had Lhccd&e.21-\.4
and said. ·-r,e been pa)111Ja 1ot mOiir
attention to him pc-rsonall) braute I
don'1 "'ant an~ b11 numbcn on met'
"It's not A,C at all. It's the ~
runnincat me as soon as I set the ball
v.ho 1s troubling him. O;ant~)' said~
Gn'Cn. "'ho led 1he l..akers W1th &;7
rroounds dunng the rqular Sta~.
al~ tops the du~ Y>llh 11 !X'r gamdn
thl' Dctroll -.cnes
That's 10 tx· C:\JX"C ted. His uncs·
JX'l:ll-d )('Onng 1s a bonus. He scoriiJ
I I .a point<, per game 1n the reau:Jar
sc:i!>On but h:i., a' cragt'd 14.8 in &
\Cfll~ 3g.3tn'>I fX1ro1t
BROWN MAKES INEVITABLE MOVE . . . ..
From Bl
thC) knc"' that an' thing v.as poss1blc
after Bro"'fn acccpll'd and then in a
b1~rrc sequence o f e' ents. rcJ«tcd
the UCL.\ JOb.
"When he changl·d his mind about
UCLA. I thought v.c "ere safe.'' said a
long-faced k:insa'> nx'd "'I aucss we
should h~'e kno-....n ll v.-as in-
e' 1tabk -
lncv11able as the ~n v.ord when
d1scussma l.UT) Bro .... ii 's prncnt or
future cmplo~mcn1 lne,1tabl).
Brov.n's teams '"" -....1n In ~ven )cars as a college lOach v.ith UCL<\
and Kansas he's made<,('\ en tnps to
post-season comp.·1111on and thrtt
ttmcs ad,anccd to the Final Four. In
nine )Cars as a prof~s1onal coach.
he's taken SC\ en teams to the pla)ofTs.
"lo Larry Brov.-n<oacht'<f team e,·«
lost more pmcs than 11 v.on.
It h.ippcncd tv.o \CJ rs later "'hl•n
the ''" Jcrse, 'cts l'03\l'd lhl' dapper ,l ...... Yorl.. natl\e had. 10 the
NBA
And no -.... 11's hapf>l.'Ol'<l again
Dunng Bro"n·., li't: C\1."ntlul \uc-
cess-fillcd \Cars at t-..a n\;.l\. h1\ nanw
v.as linked. to a1 ka!>I e-1ght J11lerl'nt
JObs -the Huu\ton Rodetc. I""
Angdl'S C11ppcT\. Charlotte H11rnc:1 ...
Washington Hu!l~ll~. \an .\n't'n10
pur ... l '(L.\ Bruins and 011 1-..0
scparace occas1om. the !\e" ' M~
Kmd.~.
Rumors that he "a' ht•ad"'\I for thl'
Knacks .. crt CSJX'l 1alh \tron~ ngh1
after the I Ql\7 \C3c.on and Bro-.. n
as$urcd ti<.ansas follo"'l'TS at 1he1r
annual ba ett>.11 banquet 1ha1 ht"
v.as absohncl~. po<11t l\cl~ not
1ntcl't1tL-d.
"I don't knm~ v.h' the med11 has to
l l'l'P these 1hings iomg all the time ...
h' ~1d a1 lhl' 11mc.
'ct 1hc nc'I v.ccl he was an Nev.
"t ork tJIJ.ing to Kn1cks C'ittcull\ts.
Rro-.... n·, ps'chc has bttn probed
and c'plorcd b) colummstc; and
ama1~ur PS)Choan:il}st" all o'er tbc
countn What accounts for hi}
nomadic ""~)S~ Some ha'e s~
it's bccaust his rathn' dted when
Bro"'n "'-as till a ch1ld. Ytt. millions
of Pl'<>Plc lo~ their fathers wbtn ttW)'
arc 'e~ )ounaand do not gothroulh
life chan&tn&J~ e'c~ fev. yea~
If an) bod\ kno..,s lam Brown. it's
hi'> old fnend. Fttdcricl .\nd FrcdcT"-
1, k pcrha~ haJ t~ best ex.planation
"hen ad .. cd Monday 10 upt.aia
Rro"' n's bl-N!,1or.
"Lar;r> 1sa '~ compac~ ,,,.n.:· he
....-i1d 1Jo1th a ~mtk. "TllJU l at~ve 1t at
th;il.-lne\ltabl). he v.1ll "'1n lnt'\lt&bl)'.
h(' v.111 get restl~s and go "''" .---------------------------~somev. here dsc.
It happened in 11174 "'hen he 1cn
thcCarolinaCouprsofthe .\mencan Baskct~ll .\\SOC1ation to 10 to Ocn-'~r of the 8.\. h happened 1n I<> 0
v.hcn Brov.n bohL'<i Ocn'CT for
l Cl.\, v.hcrc his fif'\t Bruin t~am lost
to Louis, ilk an the ~( .\.\ cham-
pionship a.amc.
McEnroe prepared for Wimbledon i;-eturn
~. ••ism, CQlllmerci1Uun Stone as Muriel, the mamfd runMt
-~n ,.ICTmlism "':".~ ume it lootina ahead toward motherhood: Louise .-.·s ~ Oftis" Ken Noonan as Pauline. tht MrVOUs
a shot 11 it. sprin~r t'fftl&ina to her hdy ~
m ........ , whilt thew SIM>ll often~ a bear. and Michelt Lamar Ric:hantus
too Kattettd for maximum .&ct. Janel, the tc:n-. ncwt0mtt whOK
11 tima somrwha' pitadty, the prcscn«" •hrcatens ont of the ··res--
II impect of South c-. Reper-utars."
's 1987..s8 season finale isstnwta John de Lantlc maden a lll'Oftl up to compensa1e for its ~w pctforma~ as the touj11 but com·
ural deficinlcin-. passionate coach. Bart.rw'TllbUCll is ~Iden Girls" is a British irnpon hinder its progress. first rate as the t~m phrsician who
iu Amencan premiere whim The primaf) sourc-e of contention offers plattbQ$ in the pusc of spted l
IStusn on a women's track tam is the commercial intrusion into the drugs as a J>S)'Chol<>sical ploy. John·
ring for the Olym~ ~ trainer's domain. and Judy Geeson is David Keller provides some gtnllc
nt is there. but the ~ to cx"llcnt as the huckster bent on comic relief as Marx's enlhusia~~ic
urc top-notch trainina is llOI -reshapi"I the mostl) black team into father. forced to relinquish "his
the emergence ofa spon1onncl a wholesome. blonde image. A scene coachm& po~ers.
start of a domino-like series ol in which she interrupts a training A persistent spons ~porter covers ~promises. KSMOn to slttSS her promouonal mg the team's cvCf)' move is solidly
•;;..UJ"'---.:: we adjust to the EnaJishnaa mcuagc is riveting in her character's portra)ed b)' Hal Landon Jr .. whale
languagc("battin" for''be~" excess of unmitipted pll. Wortham Krimmer is effective as a
instance. as \\ell as some peculiar The runners arc untformJy ~ell sprinter possibl) past his prime.
tenses). the play waves a interpreted by Gail Grate as Dorcas. Kristina Starman cuts a fine figure as
ivating spell as it lr9C'C'S the the determined black anchor (though the ad agency-created •·golden girl''
ncrs' rough road to Athens. The • some inconsistencies exist in her whose Ouffy presence upstages the
let of fi ve wom~n sctk~na four characterizat1on):.¥argaret Marx as rcai athletes.
on the rela) team spices the Sue, the blonde p1x1e trying to break. Director David Ctiambcn has or-
lun:, but the play's lukewarm her father's apron strings as chestrated some exttllent visual 1ms
nacial ~omant1c subplots merely d iplomaticall ) as possible: Suzanne ages. abetted by David Budries'
I~========:;:===~·-......... ---'----.,..-------, throbbing sound effects, apinst the background of Ralph Funicctlo's
running track settina. The race itself.
run in strobcslip1 slow motion. is
Sasaane 1ttaae, Jollll de
Lucie, Barbara Tarlnaell In
"Golden Girl•" at 8CR.
fa~annting in 11s impact.
"Golden Girls" doesn't quite
ach1e"c a thcatncal gold medal. but
the ethical and moral questions it
raises arc genuine and command
attention. Performances continue
through Jul) 14 o n the SC R mains
stage. 655 To\\n Center Drive. Costa
Mei.a. \\Ith curtain Tuesdays through
Frida) s at 8 p.m .. Saturdays at 2:~0
and 8. Sunda)s at :?:30 and 7:30. Call
95 7--4033 for ticket information.
SJ llJCllABI.. RYDIYNl&I
....... 0 J s 1
The National Ballet of Canada
concluded n1 triumphant five-day
prrmicrc visit to Oraqr County the
11me way 1t bepn. with 1noth~
thotOuahly eftlllina. uh1laratina.
knockout pcrfonnan~ Sunday after-
noon.
This time. the ballet ,at 1he Oranae
Count)' Ptrf~ina Ans Cenaer was
John Cranko's I 96S dauicaJly styled
"Onqin." as faithfully ~productd by
Reid Andc™>n. Ba!ed on the same
Aleksandr Pushkin epic verse-novel
("Eugene Onegin") that inspired
Tc)laikov\ky's 1877-78 opera.
Cranko's "Onc&in'' is likewise about
honor.
The 1969 J uergen Rose sets smartly
alternated between realism (Tatiana's
garden ) a nd surrealism (her
bedrooms of Acts I and Ill) as action
wo uld switch from Tatiana's actual
world and her fantasy world when
alone with Onegin (a dream in Act I.
dreamlike in Act Ill).
An) company \\Ould be hards
pressed to match. let alone surpass.
Suoda) 's cast. which combined scin·
tillating dance with bnlliant drama.
As the d1ffiden1. withdrawn book-
"'orm Tatiana. Sabina Allemann
hrs. S1mullant0usly fascinated Pd
frjpacntd her. as evicknmt by~
rrpceted H poi nit approec~ lO •-
ttlrats from the aloof()netJft.
'y tt in lhe follow ins .. Letter Scene"
-Jiamcd httt into a drea!ft ICJClueMC
-Alkm.ann reveals qut&e .aiOCbilt
side of Tatiana. full of ~n ~ ...
ecstuy as she danttS with OMiin I
powerful almost violcfttly athltti( .-s de ctei.x full of airborne ~aAdnd
catchn. slides across tht nOOr a
abrupt position chan,es.
This pas de deux . would retu~.
varied. m Act Ill. ~1th Alle'!'ann s
Tatiana struplin& with Onttin arid
herself. vasc1latin1 between her fttl-
ings for Onegin and honor and tow
for her husband.
==============~ offered the classic young· girl who comes to grips with her awakening
Frank Auaustyn's hatd·h~arted
Onegin was nearly flawless. his un-,
bc:hevably sudden show. of rcmC?nc
over killin& Lcnstc.y notw1th~tand1~
Besides his ideal pannenna with
Allcmann. his Act Ill solo revealed a
very lonely. disillusioned man yearn-
ing for the past. which by now he
realized he handled very badly. As
Lcnsky. Jeremy Ransom proved
superb equally as dancer and actor.
His pas de deux with Olga was a
smoothly exuberant tour de force of
pure and thorough love between
-ihem. while his growing frustration
over Onegin's flirtations with a
sccmin&IY willing Olp was very
credibly nurtured to the exploding
point. Cynthia Lucas effected a
wonderful antithesis to Allemann as
Tatiana's happy, carefercc sister. ~c
other character roles and the enure
corps all contributed to effect an
overall sple~did production.
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Denniston heading
Signal Landmark
Pel« B. Denis• formerly senior vice president of Homart
Dc\.clopment Co .. has bttn awo1nted president ofSlpal Lullmarll
Prepertlu i.e., a wholly"Owned subsidiary of The Henley Group.
Inc. For the past sh. )Cars. ~nniston. an Irvine resident. has dirttted ~ffice ~nd multi-use development for Homart in the western states. m~lud.1ng such maJor prOJttts as Xerox Centre in El Segundo.
W1lsh1re La!ldmark 1n Brcntw~: Gateway in San Franciso and
Metro Port m Dcn"er. Before Joining Homart m 1982. ~nniston
was director of community development for The Irvine Co:s I 0.()()() ...
acre coastal development and an asset manager for First Newport Corp. •••• .. Pacifica luaraltff Se~es i.c., a subsidiary of Costa Mesa-
bascd Pacific Savinss Bank. h.as appointed a se\.en-mem~r team to
staff Its newly established Investment Centers. Named to the new
positions were Le1He A. Sall" Sally A. Bliler, BUI Wluwa, Barbara
G. Rayes, , ... M. Graeff, DeMll Ba1aea..11t and Steven ~la..
Pacifica Insurance Services and Integrated Resources Investment
Centers, an independent broker/dealer. have joined forces to provide
customers with selected investment and insurance products at each
of Pacific's 11 retail bank branches in Orange. Los Angeles San Diego
and San Bernardino counttcs. ' • • • • C.W. Craig Famw bas been named manaaer of client services
for the Towa CHler business and cultural district at South Coast
Plaza. accord mg to Stan Icy 0 . TaCJ.er. T ov. n Center director ofofficc
propcny manaccment. Farrow will ~ mponsible for maintaining
sccunt> act1Ht1es and safety systems for the 77-acre office and
entertainment complex.
GRAEFF FARROW GONZALEZ
• • •• Newport Beach midcnt E••an Gouales has joined Com~
moaweal" LaH Title lu1ruee C.. as a sales represcntati ve. Ronald
Courtney. vice president and county manaier of Commonwealth's
Orange Count) office. said Gonzalez will Stf\e as a consultant to real
estate IJ(nts and financial institutions to fac1htate mil c tate
transactions an Costa Mesa. Newport Reach and Santa Ana . . . . ,
Tlmot•y V. Wolf of lrv1M v.as .clttttd 10 the lrvlJle MedieaJ
Ceeter board of directors. announced president John C GafTnc-..
Wolf. VICC president and controller for Taro Bell Corp. became one
of three business community repre-sentativcs on the 17-mcmbcr
board. Gaffney said the r«t>ntly mtructurcd board needed a finance
spcc1ahst to help direct arowth of the I 77-~ hospital that is under
construction on Sand Canyon Road near the San Oic~ao Frttway.
IMC'. ownN by American Medical International. will bec'ome the
cit) 's first hospital when it opens in 1989.
Fluor Corp. reports
improved earnings
Auor Corp. announced Monday
net eamanas of $19.3 million. or 2 ..
cents per share. for the six months
ended Apnl 30. 1988. This compares
with a net toss of SIS.9 million. of
St.08 pcrshare. forthesamepcnod in
1987.. Revenues for• the first six
months were $2.2 billion. compared
with S 1.8 billion last year.
For the second quaner of fiscal
1988. net earnings were SI 0.3
million. or 13 cents per share.
compared with a net loss of SS2.6
million. or 66 cents per share.
Revenues for the second quarter were
SI. I billion. compared with $900
million for the sccond quarter of
1987. . .
David S. Tappan Jr .. chairman and
chief c'ccutivc officer said ... Results
for the second qu.rteT reflect continu-
ing improvement in operations and
the positive business conditions af.
l-ctina our markets. Many industries
we xrve have sold out their pro-
duction for the y~r and are now
exs-ndini. That positive trrnds ~anal continiicd upward morMntum
for the tftlincmna and coastruttion
industl) ..
All three of Auor's ~mcnts re-
corded improved profitability in the
Sttond quarter compared to a year
aao. conunued Tappan. with the
com pan) 's enginccnna and c:onstruc:-
uon units reportina the most si1nifi-
cant pins.. . .
En11ncenngand construction units
rrcordcd increased eaminp over the
first quarter of 1988 and a substantial
improvement over the results re-
ported a )Cir ago. Profits from both
coal and lead operations were also
ahead of )Car·a10 mulls, Coal was
profitable in the second quarter last )car. v.hilc lead experienced a loss.
New awards for Auor Daniel wtrc
strong for the qu.artCT. up 2 I ~nt
to S 1.3 bilhon. Backloa 1ncrraScd 2S
pcrccnt to SS.S billion.
At the end of the second quarter.
lon1-tc:rm deb\ was SI SS million.
with cash and short-term invest·
mcnts of $392 million. Net interest
income ofSl.9 million was rttonkd
durina the quancr. compared with
net inten."St expenx of S 10.2 million
Int )'tat.
Orenoe~ DAILY PILOTITUMCMy,JUfW 1•. i•
Costs of pollution-control cu
BJ MARP.IA .UCBD .... ,...c., $ f lnl
Complyina with stale emiuion
rcaulauons conJul't'S up all sons of
headaches for businds ~ end
consumers alike. •
But James W. Sman is-an c~
tion to that rule.
Smart is president and founckr o( CM&E International in lmnr. His
business designs and manufanura
\.Cntilauon S)stcms for the chemical
prQCc~ina of metals and Plastics. The
all'lomothc and across-tt indu1tries
arc tus primal) clients.
The Smart Ventilation Systl"m 1s a
patrntcd design for capturina pol-
lutants inside processina Plants and
deh,erin1 the contaminants to con·
trol equipment.
Accordmg 10 Smart. the S)Stem can
redu<:c poHu11on control costs b)
dramatic-all) rcducina _the size of
controf equipment required to meet
the standards recently $Cl b)' 1he
California Air Resources Board to
reduce toxins in the v.orkplace.
The board. along with the South
Coast Air Quality Management Dis-
trict. is cspcciall) concerned with
hcca,alc:nt chromium pollutjon. a
chcmi<.·al commonl) found at pro-,
ccssing plants and a known
carcinogen.
Recent rcJulat1ons by those boards
v.cnt into effect rcquirina installation
of htghl)-cffcctt"e emissions control
equipment at all C'ahfornia factories
performing chrome-plating and
anodizing.
When Smart staned working in the
industl) 30 )c:ars ago. his main
concc:m was to 1mpro~e worker .... ,.....,....,...,._..,
(Pleue eee 8.llART /86) Jamee W. Smart ahowe Smart Ventilation ~J•tem compooeata at Cllalt l.Dteraadoaal
Powerec expandilig production capability .! . .
By ILENE SCHNEIDER
....,,_.C.lllJ I I
I he stor) 1s t)p1cal ot most of Orange
County's htgh technolog) companies The foun·
dcr an electronics expert. launches a compan~
ba!>c:d on an 1nno-.at1vc product. The product
cat<: hes on. E vcntually. the com pan) needs cap11al
to meet the cost of manufacturing the product in
sufficient quant1t) to meet the demand
Such 1s the case of Powcrtt International Inc
a 3-}ear-old Hunungton Beach electronic firm 1ha1
concentrates on dc-.clopm1 high-temperature.
high-power silkon-on-sapph1rc pressure trans-
ducers. The~ measure the efficienC) of the
rl<.'C'tronac mcchan1smsofaircraft. automob1ll"S. 011 factunng capital becomes a"a1lable.
v.ells and other complicated machmt'r) In "pnl. Pov.ercc init1attd a pubhc stodt
Other Pov.crcc products include arc sup-ofTcrinaof1.Smilhonsha~atS2pershart Ofthc
pressor\ to protect data in electronic equipment more than S4 million the com pan~ e\pectS to ra1Sf.
from being damaie<t b) pov.er SUf'JC' and power SI. 35 mil hon v.111 ~ used for production costs Qf
!>4. hottk) diodes to comert altemauni current to products currcntl) demanded. Pov.crcc had nca.rl)
direct current 1n computers. Transdu~r sall"S SI m11'1on 1n backloa ordcn. from major elec·
c urrcntl~ account for :?Oto 20 percent of Pov.erec's troni~compan1cs v. hen it make the stock ofTcnn&
annual re' cnu' Most ofthecompan) 's '>llC'S come ·"dd1t1onal cap1ul raised b) the saJc of stock
from thl· arc 'upprcssors wall help to rcpa~ debts and to modttn11e the
"\uppn.'So;ors arc the mam product nov.. but compan~ s manufactunng plant. acrordm& to
that" 111 change.·· according to 4'rmcn Sahagcn. the Sahagcn ~s .1 result. he anuc1pates a ma1or
founder 3nd president of Pov.erec. who e:\pccts to increase m sales and a 40 percent increase in the
1ncr~~ transducer saln drasticall) once manu-Pov.er« v.ort..fott'e.v.1thin the ne:\t ~car.
CLEANING & PRESERVING SHAKE ROOFS SINCE 1969
State Licerue No 478940
MAKE YOUR ROOF LAST ·LONGER
AT A FRACTION OF REPLACEMENT COST!
CALL NOW
FOR MORE INFORMATION AND A FREE ESTIMATE
TWO TERRIFIC ACCOUNTS
ONE GREAT RATE!
During Our Summer Spectacular
PREMIUM
CHECKING*·
Offers you tooll liquidity,
• weU m 7% simple ~
on balances from $10,000 to
$'90,000 ..
And, there's no tong term
commitment u with specific
am accowu.
Only $500 minimum deposit
allow you to take adv.-·--
of this high intcl'C5t
•
The bnef 60-day term will di~
up your funds for a tong perj4.
:..:
Tlke advantage of...this rite Tit/llN.
iiiii~u~iiti0iirtwiiii1~ii_..t111i1ii1I Accasing your funds is ..,
•NO lflll my a writing a check! .,. ... It is offered for a tinfed
.&%
.........
• llielli.. SlllC
... vidi.. • beltcf'
111,IDJllCI and it is .........
-CWtputn that •••a.•amumon ••~1• in as tittle 11 11
IVS ~ 11nswcn cvrn· lliled ~ tht suite bmrd and
-('Oil or compliance • ...ac~.·~ Ind water ckmandl. And 11 'J \ttbnOkJC)' lO do L ••
ine<t.
TM ~ystcm traps 1o"k emissions c.wmna ~n tanks 11 procasi..,
with lids ind movable coa-
t ron&amcrs that dO DOI
the pttK"nSina Ii•. sman
allo tlid the system ctn lie inltaffcd =., ha\i"I to shut dowa a
-C W81k I fint lint. l'vt .,C I
as a tou&h IUY beeaulC'
arc sa)ing 1 pushed b' the
ticn&&K I could wll more
But I'm ronttmed llbout 9Dlllluon and worker safety. And I do :ia¥f a ~~tm 1ha1 C'ln comply with * louah'.standards and save como ...a moncy ... Smart said.
He aid it is not the cMmical
ledustry's fault that woi"km have had
to toil under to~icclouds. Raahcr. n is
the S&apport industry's fault for not
~in& up .,.,ith solutions •
.. We need this industry. lfit wasn't
for chemical-processing metal plants.
we wouldn't have planes takt off or
cars to drive. But we have to face the
polt\Jtion prOblcm. and workers de·
scnc a safe tn\ironment," Smart
said.
CM4E stands for Conservation.
aintcnance and En_gjnttrini. he
said.
~%
~mrmu
rOl lO Ol. Sim MIS
Sunshint Mining Company 's
prkc:s 00 siM! and ~ bullion
art alrtady tht lowest in the
Industry. And now we havt
~the price on our flawlessly
~ B99 pure 5Wtr 10 oun«
birs from . 75 Mr sp6t price• per
ounce to otily .55 01e1 spot price
RC' ounce.
Umited time otfa through June
JO, 1988.
•spot price as quottd on the
COMtX.
(al JOU,fKfZ
I ·SOO. 2·Slll'fR
SUNSHINE MINING CCM9\NY
SO~onlhe
New 'lbrk Siock fxc:hangc.
Cid II 3tnight {mm IM !IOUltt.
SAS orders up to6ljeta
from McDonnell Douglas
LONG BEACH. (AP) -~cOon
ncll Doualas has rtttivcd 1 S 1.5
billion order for 61 of its MD-80
series pla~ from Sclndinavian Air·
lines S) stem. Douglas 1nnounctd.
The order includes nrm commit·
mcnts to bu)' 24 planes and an OP.lion
to bu)' j7 more. The S l.S billion
fiaurc ii Cor all ~I planes. The
company dccli~ to put a value on
firm orders. spok~man Don Hansen
said Monday.
BaSC'd on the pritt ofS22 million'°
S2S million industry IOUfCft put on
the MD-80. tht firm °'*'1 woukl bt
worth 1~xima1~1y S900 mallion.
SAS ordered four i'nOdtts Oft~
MD-80.a twin-cnaint. medium ranee
jetliner that se11s up to I :SO puKn·
sen. TM order 11 divided among
MD-11. 12. 83 and 87 mockls. The
planes arc scheduled for dclivCf')
from 1991 throuah 1992.
• lri the doi.en years Hannes Tlilvlns ... Coln Im: ... , l 1111 ... MIBml!ha Ille coin
~olios, we've accum•letfd a perfect met JeCOl'd. e_,_.,, our dleml .... mlde money
~their HrRCI investment. In flCI llDce 1980, our clieail._. e.joyed l¥ll'fllO nee pn>firl of
;24 percent annually. BerWeen 1976 .a 1980, m era of ..... """'1D. pm&l Mft evm peaeer.
-nor one KTRCI client hat ever mde lell lban 12 percem als a OGe-1'1f bo1d.
·We've achieved this success dinJUab oa.,oi.na marbt re•_. Selecdna only tbOle coiDI
meet our strict invettment It_.... And by a¥ely ........ llllpcrtfoUOl wen 1rmble.
Today. HTRCI serves more dllD 2,500 clientl nllioawide md -•• ponfollol wldl a
birieCl vllue of more thaii S80 million. And our ln•CllOll cw•hlt • emn lldlJ C'Allllll~
I prOfilS 11 minimal risk.
For more infomwian oa our proi•ionllly ..,.,..ed.~ llvalnaeai ,... ....
toll-me for a free biOclium. Or m.D die CCMpOG beloW. Tbell'lnofMIM•bu lllCI no...._
ipe!'IOll Will call you.
In dlll uDcertlia ftDlncial WGdd. pod i1'°81•kla ii your "'J ... llin I fPU El
For free iilfotmadoo
cill IOU-Me: 79
............ _
,...
.._~ . ~: Stock market rallies
NEW YOU(AP)-Tbe9'oc:t maiMt nllied •
bard Tuesday oa a belta~ tnde .-~ !'C~ but 1 late wave of proftt-takiJai aled met -... usp.uas; -
-, ..., Tbe martd aqed tiro.dly at the OU1lf:t ol a
+ S !:'.!swaiC:S ~ ~u:" it'!: I dcfiei1~toS9.~~r.;bdow .: ttie Sl2-plus billion market W81Cbcn bad been • • ii anticipatlftl. •
NYSE L··. : ..
M . : ' Q L 1_1 • t ~
- - -
·-·
.. . . . . • ,. • I'
I
I I
" . . .
I ., ~ . . . . . -·
tt' jl'
~' -·-:.-
• 0-•!.
COLDWC!U
BANl(eRO
. -
"
\, ; ' .· .
~.:lt -.. ·-~ .. .,...
~·-·. .-i -'
i ........ '·. ~tr... ·. • • • •
FROM NORTH OAANeE '61llO
FROM SOUTH ORANGE 4N llOO
DRESSING
IN PARTS
associated
... ,. "''4'
', '•\I '.I'
2
I
4
s ..
. .
J. ..
'·
OUR FAMOUS
DIMES-A·LJ.NE
I .. .
-
-I
:
HAS RETURNEDI
l
'
·• "
I
Back by PQPUllr dttNnd. D1mts·A-l.1M will run Frtl:hly, ~tur
<Uy Mld Sund.ly 1n its own ci.ss1f1<~ in lht Class1f1ed Ads.
Since this 1s • s~ci.i otter. \IW ~e • Tnurld.y noon deldlne
a.nd ask prepayment for Ill Ids This is ~n to Ill private IH'IY
advertisers for mtrchand15f not over $50 fprKt must be hsltd
1n ~I and no abbrev1.11uons will be acc,pttd. M ~$ w1I run
Friday. Saturday and ~nday There 1s a S-t1ne m1n11num a1 20C
~' fine • So your tow cost DfmH·A·Une ltd rs only ...
Sl.00 . .
DIADUNf: Thorlday noon
l'tttCI: S·lrnt m1n1mum • J d.lys • 20C ~r Unit • SJ 00
• Al ads are preJHtd by coming into lht 0•1Jy Pilot to
pf.ct your .., or use the coupon below
• Ptrvate party mtrchMld1se only ads. No com-
merc1'11 ads. ~ts. ltvtSlock. prOduct or pl.lnu
• bch Item must k Pflctd In tht ~ with no items over
ISO
._ __________________________ ......, ________ __,c
MAIL TO:
' .
' , I
--
...
l»Mt·A-Une
Oa ly Pilot
UO West hy Street, Cou• Mes.. CA 92626
Oalfy """' houi s MC)t)day·Fr1day 8 00 AM to s 00 PM
-
..
I
-~
' , . .,,
l -..
·~
-' "
-f.;...
$2.56 per day
That's All yeu pay for
3 lines. 30 day minimum
II) the
SERVICE
DIRECTORY
f(lll)l)S
AllEF1£E
Cal:
...,...
Is the apswer to your buying
and selling needs. .
WORK WITH SKID MC KENZIE
(SPUD McKENZIE'S SISRR)
Wanna party aJt n~t and hang out at the be.ch 811 day?
FINElll
JUat gl!le us plrt Of your: ..... 9nd yOUI" wlnriing ~-
CLASSIFIEI
dVEITISlll
RECYCLE
through the
OAtLYPILOT
Ctassifled Pages
Turn unwanr.d
Items Into
monf1Y todayl
CellG·t171
•llYIE* iXTRAS
NMded for non-umon pro-
duct10ns No ••peoence.
213-469--1351 *
PAYAOU
PERSONNEL Cl.ERK
PllllES&LES
5-Yefat immediate po1-
111ons r.1aitlble at ou1
Costa Meu location Pan tame l'Venlngs ana
SaWrday am Shifts
Call after 3 30pm
631-3339
14.80 ..... ,,,, .. ......... , ..... ........
Motor Routes
available in
W11hninst1r
Huntington 811011
Fount1in Yall•J ·,.
NO COLLECTING
NO SOLICITING
Deliver One Day a Week -
Must have dependable car
and proof of insurance.
Call 842-1444
Ask for Joanne Craney ·
BOYS & GIRLS
M~
-STARTNOW-
11to15 Ye•r• Old
WORK EVENINGS
AND SATURDAY
Fot M.M you can .0Yllf'1•M
your Garage Sale ln the Dally
f>;k>t. There ts a 4 line mn•nmum
and the pr.ce IS the S8m4t
whether you advertlM 1 day or 3
days. tt's a gr .. t wey lo turn
thOM h dden tf'9UUtes nto
cah.
-•
I
D E~TH NOTICE S
,
.... ,.. ....... ,;=
1&40JAM80REE ROAD
Open 7 daya. WMk
Extended Setviee HOYtl
7 a m .-10 pm Mon· Fri
'll lltllll1c .........
mRIBU ---m-1ua ..... ..............
***
Ht:VY '15 Celebrity • 1111111 Wft Wagon, (lold, 35K mi, V6
Y. o u r A u t h o r t z e d eng, .ir-. am/fm c .... Mefoeda·Benz dMt9f Clean, $799$ 854·9372
1111 .... It., U. '11 llTAMI (11•) Ila~ 4dr, .no, -.o. w. CNS,
'iiip;&;uii .. iiiiir9'11i"';111Ni'A'iii·Mii·•1t• lo mt. ( 1E UMUO) 13415
T ~i E ODOll f Too mucf't CMh do#n? lease '79 or newer M8Z
Comp.we our woe Mllct..
0 .AC ....... n "'81 MERCEDES
(2131714)837-2333
.. 5 Frwy Mar Beach Blvd
m Buena Park
ROBINS
FOQD
• • ' •• M ' ,, •
l ,I;. ~I,/\ 1, 'I
411~UID TurbO Auto
Sporty. A/ . 4 yt MUil
Sell F~ t.09deen •Ml-n••
TUESDAY, JUNE 14, 1988
Gounctl reverses-stand, to allow shows
If sponsors pay for CHP traffic officers
the owners hire two California Hi~·
wa> Patrol oflkc:rs to assist with
crowd control.
Traffic was cited as the main
motivator behind the May 23 cknial
or Ncwpon Dunes and Bia Canyon
permits. which lost on separate votes
of 6-1 and S·2 respectively.
spcctal-Or vehidC$ parked 1n front of
fire h)drants. drh~ays and cmera-
ency access routt'S.
Fiflccn parkina citations were is-
sued al last >ear .. s Newport Dunes
display. accord1n1 to police reports.
although Councilman Phil Sansone
said M""onda) night that "ifthettwert
sufficient officers. t~y could'\'e
ticketed 250" 'chicles.
B1 GREG KLER&.X • I °' .............
The skiC$ over Newport Beach will
liaht up aner all this Fourth of July.
Aficr 1 S minutes of djscussion and
public 1cs1imony. the Newport Beach
City Council voled unanimously to
George Bush talks tough
on South Africa./ M
Jury finds tobacco com-
pany liable In death of
smoker."/A4
World
People with AIDS becom-
ing increasingly infec-
tious./ AS
California
Lotto jackpot taking off
agaln./A4
Sports
Detroit llsts offensive
leader as questJonable
vs. Lakers in Game 4./81
Huntington Beach Hlgh's
Brian Mena to perform In
Orange County All-Star
Baseball Game./81
Index
Advice and Games
Bulletin Board
Business
Classified
Comics
Entertainment
Opinion
Police log 1
Public Notices r
Sports
Weather
A8
A3
85-7
88-10
A9
84
A6
A3
910
81-3
A2
approve spcc11I events applications
for Fourth of July fireworks shows at
Nt"wport Dunes Aquatic Park and Big
Canyon Country ('tub. rever$in& its
May 23 decision 10 deny the pe"!'its.
The Newport DuMs application
was approved on the condition that
World-cl-ballet
Councilwoman Ruthelyn P1um-
mcr led the move to deny the pninits.
Plummer read from a polkc repon
!ilcd after last year's Newpon Dunes
show which discnbcd problems with
Since the denial of the applications.
the council hns been flood~ with
letters from residents uraina a n:-
Tom Keadrtck, president of the <>ranee
Coanty Performm, Arta Center, welcomea
Radoll Nurey~ (~t) and the Parla Opera
Ballet, wblcll bfChi• a els-clay eniacement
In Ca.ta Ma& tontaJat lD tile compuay•e flnt
Wat Cout. appearaaee. Tlae eompuay Will
Derfonn a Yeftlon of .. Clnclerella .. Mt In tbe
Hollywood of the 1930I.
Mesa in dark on expansion
ofarena,Sorsabaltestifies
By BOB VAN EYIEN
0. ... .,... .......
Costa Mesa citizens battling the
operators of Pacific Amphtheatre
over concen noise contended in coun
Monday that they were not infonned
when plans we~ changed in 1982 10
increase the seating capacity of the
arena.
Former city manager Fred SorsabaJ
testified that he did not know until
late 1982 that the Oranse County Fair
Board was plannina to put an outdoor
concert theater with seatin& for
l S.000 on 'the Oranac County Fair-
grounds.
.. My mterptttauon 1s that t~ cny
was not informed.'' said Sorsabal.
who served as city manangcr from
1970 to 1985. The original master
plan showed a much smaller facility."
He also said city officials were
refused a copy of the lea~ between
the Fair Board and Ned West As-
sociates. the operators of the
amphitheater.
Groundbrcakm& for the attna took
place in Februaf') 1983. and the first
rock conccn was held there in July of
the same year.
Karen Millar. a Costa Mesa res•·
dent. said the conttn sparked 1m·
mediate protest from membcn of
nc11hborhoods near the
amphitheater.
A group of residents. usm1 the
name Concerned Cittzens of Costa
Mesa. filed suit apmst Ned West.
charging that concert not~ violated
county onhnanccs.
Millar. a member of Conccmcd
Citizens. said the slate of Cahfom11.
represented by lhc Fair Board. admits
that the size of the am,e.ilh91cr (Pl----AJDJU/A2)
25 CENTS
cons1dcrat1on.
A student at Haroor View Elemen·
l3r) School Yras ~ ups.ct about the
cancclhuion of tt\c shows that she
ralhcd her fiOh.gradc class to write
tcuers to the council ask.ins for a
chan1e of ht'art.
··1f the matter at hand is traffic
congestion. then \loh) don't )OU just
close dov.n the chili cook-offs. the
bo:lt shows and all other
c'h1bits/attractions that caust traffic
problems:· v.Totc Heather lmmoor.
-.ho spcuhcadcd the lener drive. "Please don't 1.ake away 1M,...
works display." pleaded Katie
Thurman. another one of26 studtalS
Yoho "rote 1n support of the shows.
More th<in tv.o dozen ~tu,..
ed out Monday night in suppon ofdle
shows but most stopped shon ol
pubhc 1csumony bcca&JK ~)'Or
John Co). offered a motion to ap-
pro' c the shows before ,opeains 1M
public ht'2ring..
<fteue ... naswomm1a11
LB recall group
files complaint
in market feud
Claims foes disrupted
Signature gathering.
intimidated voters --
By LANCE IGNON °' .. .,...,... ....
···-
l.aders of a mo"ement to recall a
maJOnl) of the ~una Beach Cit\
Council allege th• tv.ocounc1I ~m
bcrs violated the state Election Code
by intc:rfenng with their attempt to
gather signatures.
In a lettt'r deli\cmi to Dcput)
District Attomc} Wallace J. Wade on
Monda). f'C('all proponents charged
Ma>or Robert F Gentry w11h
snatching a recall pet1t1on from a
signature collector on Sunda>
The letter also accuses ~ntl') and
Councilwoman Lida Lcnnt) of in-
um1dating vrucrs by standsng near
pct1ttoncrs and t'nga&rn& some 'oters
in debate:. In Lcnnc) ·s case. the
complaint also alleges that she stood
between voters and the peuuoncrs.
bloclong e:ls) acctSS to the docu-
ments.
Gentry dented grabbing pcuuon~
and defended his naht to speak
against the rc'Call. Lcnney could not
be reached for commenL
The complaint also contcr.ds that
,
Fred Sonabal
recall opponent Robert Heitd iD·
timida'tcd and harassed voten Sun· da~ b) vidcotapina people while they
signed petitions.
Members of Commmee to Recall
Cit) Council aim to oust Gentry.
L.cnnc) and Ma)or Dan Kenney in a
spcc-ial ckcuon. The) also hope to
rq>latt CounciJman Neal Fitzpatrick
when he runs for rc~lcct1on in
No" ember.
To force a speciaJ c&tt11on. the
committee· must gather 3.000 valid
signatures against each targeted coun·
c1I member. It had hoped to reach that
pl by Monday and combine the
recall With the Nov. a election.
tht'rcb) sa' 1n1 the Cit)' the approA-
1matel) $25.000 cost of holdma a
spcctal election
Althoua,h the committee failed to
reach 1tssoal.11 intends toJ)fnSahcad
"'•th the campai&Jl. Recall propo.
ncnh refused to release the number of
signatures collected so far.
.. In the lon1·run 1t will be &css
cxpcns1ie to the tallpayttS than this
1rrespons1blc. htiiious council," re-
call kadcr Jack Hansen said in a
prepared statcmcnL
A i.pokcsman for PROttttl.quna
Committee. wb1ch has come to the
defense of the rouncal. satd the
commmc-e·s failure to pmer suffi-
(Pleue eee IUtCALL/ £2)
Newport
p8:J1iers
to pay for
pOlicecall
By GREG u.ERU °' ..............
Pan)llll in Newport Beach just got
more e\pcOSI\ c.
The C II) Council gave preliminary
approval Monda) night to an Ofdi..
nancc that would allov. the Police
Dcpanment to bill the hosts ofrowd)'.
panics for their serv1ccs. The councd
\Otc .... as unanimous.
Mesa may fill some police jobs with civilians
The nc ..... ord1nantt 11\iCS the de·
panmcnt the ab1ht) to chargr party
hosts up to $500 for rcspondina to a
M.-cond complaint of d1sturbin1 lhe
peace. "'rillen wam1n11s 1ssucid fOr
a first rcspQnsc ·
The ordnance comes at the request
of Police Cluef ._rb Campbell, who
\.lid his department responds.to~
than 1.600 pany drstur'bat\CCS ritCb
'car C':impbell said such di,..
1urb3nccs arc -a serious d,.1n on
manpov.cr" and leaves other~ or
thl' l'ft) '-'llhout polict protC'Ction.
BJ JONATHAN VOLZKE °' ............
In a move officials say will create a
more efficient and less cmtly Police
Department. the city of Costa Mesa
plans to fill positions traditionally
held by Jun-totin1 offic:en with
unanncd avilians.
Police Capt. Tom Luar explained
the six·year plan to City Council
members at a plannina session Mon-
day.
Accord.in& to the plan. JObs now
held by sworn offiC"Crs will befiven to
non-sworn personnel. allowing ~
partmcnt officials to put more of-
fittrs on the streets without hirin&
additional people.
The positions of Jail supervisor. the
dcpanmcnt's shootina ranac master
and m:ords personnel clerk will
ultimately be 1iven to non·swom
employees. Lazar said. Crime tttnc
invntiaaton. who take photasrapbs
San Diego, Tuscon
utilites may merge
SAN DIEGO (AP) -Saft Dieao
Gas cl Elec1ric Co. and Tucson
Ettttric Power of Arizona said Mon·
day t~ Mve lfrttd lO COMOlidlte as
a SS. 7 billion jotnt company intended
to rontrol eneflY costs and ensure
ttliable pGWff IOUrta.
The ~ md bt lJ»P'O'led b)' 1.M California Publ~ Utilities Com·
mission, the AriloM Corpontion
Commitaion and the Federal £Mfly Jl~"tory Comm\llioQ. ~nc C'OMOlidauon simply makes
IOOd butinns Knte. .. said Tom"-·
SDGA£.,..innan. ~· and dtid'ucntivc ollrtr.
"1'M ~_~!I extnd the _,..... ol (SDOU) '° lht COii
ltlchol.Atiw.COIOIMO.. UIM Pel
New Man ... "' hi ......... ~ tr1t 1 rol11I• .,._. C-ned ~TEP)_... ............ '•attOlft.·•,._
···1t's also a bcndit to tlle TUCIOll
opcnition bttau~ it ties tbalt re-
sourtts to the srowi• llllrllct of Southern CllifOrnia. .. IW ....,.._
Paac Slid it lhoUld -:e&;;. downward trmd 1n S. ~
rates. which arc•~ iM ii8
the nation. TM utililJ abo • •irft paru of south Ora• Co.anty. i.cw.
ana South Lllwaa.
The propoleid mtrtrr into an as-
)'d·unnamed CalifOniia corpontioa
was ~-to by the boardi of
dittnO('I Of eaC'h Ut~OWtVtt:' ii
still kts a mont I appronl
prouss bd'olt it be(g•11 reMily~
In Phoenb. u.t AdJOM co•
miaioa Slid MOftdly it m tqlln ·~-~~~1m im,.n on ratn .-W by Ariiona
CllllOmtn. .......... =c,-
....... -AS)
and finacrpnnts.. will also be replaced
with civilians. he said.
"'We arc one of the few 8JCncics
that have sworn ~rsonncl 1n that
position:· Lazar said.
The plan will be phased m slowly
through the mid. I 990s as the pos-
itions open through n:tirement or
promotions. clim1natina the need for
layoffs or firinas. Lazar said.
Civilians arc already used by the
depinrMnt in a variety of clerical
pos1t1ons. and the dcpanment also
relics on non·swom personnel lo take
reports in the field in nan-dangerous
situations.
City Managtt Allan Roeder said
the cit) will benefit from the move
because the civilians are naid ~ '"
salary and benefits than officers.
"We don't h~c a specific dollar
amount 9n it yc(bccau~ we ha\-cn't
wnttcn jOb dcsc-npt1ons for many of
the Cl\ ilian positions." ROC'der said.
"'But there will be a cons1dt>rable
sa\lngs:·
Roed~radded that 3ll'1han police
chief may someda) be rcaht~
·· .\s the dollar gets tighter and
lighter. I tltinl that's \C'f) possible:·
Roeder said ... This proposal 1' an
1ntcn-st1ng conttpt and lhttr att
\Cl). \Cf) fo~ departments that
uuhze civilians to the e'tent this
proposal docs ...
(Pleue eee CIVILIAJllS/ A2)
Poh~ spolcsman Bob OaJdey said
1hc dcpanmcnt rcquesttd the otdt-
nancc after notin.t the 5uctaS of
'1m1lar on:linanCC'S in othet:cidei
"'II puts a httk m<>n' meat bthind
(Pl~ .. PAil i IW/AI)
UClbuilding a bridge to Baja school
,.
S PROPOSE MERGER •••
~val Pf'OC'C$$ as e:lpecled 10 take ·1111Ma 1i1t months.
Tbc proposal dmv immediate
COllHMnt from SOuthcm California
Edilon Co .• which supplicsj)Owtr to
thole areas or Southern California
outside the SOO&cE market. ··we ha11e asked our auomeys to
re' iew carefully the . im~ct of the
proposed ... merger" in haht of such
issues u anti-<'Qmpet1ti\leneu and
the O\erall inlpact on California
clttuk cu~tomcr-1. said Edison
spokesman Lewis Phelps.
Edison and the other two utilities
have shared interests, Lewis said.
includina common ownership in
coal-bumma plants that generate
wwcr. Edison has assets of S 14
billion and scr'es ),5 million cu\·
to mer$.
Standard A Poor's Corp., l"t'actina
to news of the proposal. placed
SDG&cE's k-Cunties on its Cm:li·
twatch survcillaMc list with nt.,ati\le
implications. As of Marth 31. the San
Dicao utility had about SI. s billion of
debt and preferred stock out tandina.
"If implemented. the deal is likcl>-
to l'csult in the consolidated
cnte-rprisc bcina run as a sin1lc entity
with common management and
financial problems,'' the credit rating
agency said in a statement.
UCI profeuor Duane lletqer (left) and
facllJdes planner James Bonton hope to
................ '-....
.end tbU campaa ball~ to ltuenda for
u.e u a medlc&l 8Claool Ultra.ry.
UCI BUILDING A BRIDGE TO BAJA •••
From Al
The endeavors arc all part of
Metzger's amb111ous plan to foster
educational equaltt) between Cali-
fornia and BaJa C'ahfom1a.
""The ma)Or factor that prevents
pant) in higher education on both
sides of the border is not the
utraordina11 economic cns1s con-
d1t1ons that ex 1st in Mexico." Metzger
and his counterpan in Mexico. Hugo
Gutierrez de Alba. "'rote in their
proposal. "Post Secondary Educa-
tional Pant} in the l"-O ('ahforn1as b~
the Year :?OOO ""What pre1.ents pant)
1s the failure of the two educational
sectors to recognize the fundamental
commonaht) of purpose."
Prejudice. language bamers and
l ultural ditfrrences prevent
educators in both countnes from
'lharing knowledgt·.
Donaung buildings and used
equipment 1s one way of breaking
do"' n the barners ~twttn educators
here and those south of the border.
where Met1ger has done the maJonty
ofh1s research since 1957.
.. If )OU thiok of 1t in a very
inMrumental wa) 1t'!> manipulation.
This 1s also what compassion 1s
forged out of ..
.\nd compassion 1s what Metzger
will need plcn~ of to raise the
ncccsary funds for the Lumbermill.
The sad thing is. if the money isn't
torthcomina. a ~ne(tly good build-
ina worth some S200.000 wiU be tom
down. Holston said. The deck alone.
which was added thrtt years •&<>.
using . ~nl)I the best lumber. cost
SIS.000.
'1"his is a &OOd building..·· Holston
said. noting that il has been well taken
care of .
But wilh no use and no. place on
campus to put the building.. ifs either
the bulldozer or Baja
"This 1s the way the) do 1t today.-
Holston said. "The} JUSl bulldote it "
P ARTIERS TO PAY FOR POLICE CALLS .•.
From A l
the battle.'' said Oaklt). ..We're
hoping this will bclp cut down tht'
number of calls to specific pan1~ ··
Newpon Beach 1s only the founh
city 1n Orange County to enact such
an ordinance. according to Assistant
Cii) Attorne) ( arol Korade. The
other cities are ~an ta Ana. Fullenon
and Orange.
The Fulkrton ordinance. whKh
has been in efTect since Ma) 1987
also has a S500 cap and pohce bill for
sen ices at their discretion. said
fulknon Police ~gt Gal) Miller. At
the first v1s11. part) hosts are asked to
sign a cop) of the ordinance ind1cat-
1ng the) understand that the) ma) be
bilkd for a second 1.1s11 in addition to
an} n1minal charges and fees.
The result: Out of approximately
500 pany calls since last May. police
ha' e made a second call only about I 0
limes. significantly less often than
before the ordinance. said Miller.
.. h's gone way beyond what we'd
anticipated.'' said Miller. "Usually
after we drop this lillle bombshell on
them. they say 'That's it. t~e pany·,
01.er.' Th~> don't have to close it
down. just quiet it down~ but they
usuall) stop the whole thing. It's
rcall} worked ..
~ince the Santa Ana Police Depart-
ml'nt implemented Its ordinance last
month. pohce have not made any
serond responses to rowdy panics.
said Sgt. Collie Provence.
"We· re really looking at it as a tool
to stop tying up our officers." said
Provence. "We don't look at 11 as a
re,enuc generator We look at 11 as a
wa)" of shutting down disturbances ..
The ordinance w1ll go before the
council for a i.ccond reading on June
27 and. if passed. will be im-
plemented 1mmcdiatel)
ARENA PLAN CHANGE AT ISSUE .••
From Al
difTcrs from ""hat was ong1nall)
planned. early as 1978 that changes were: bcina
made in plans for the amphtheater.
""He testified that from 1978 on-
ward he knew of changes that were
taking place:· Ncs~t said.
gerated.
""They're scnsahonal111ng it ... she
said. ·'The original master plan called
for 5.000 scats. but there were
pro' isions for add1t1onal ~ling on
the grass. I think 1t provided for up to
I 0.000 people on the grass ...
x~cted tocle~
l -1• niiM Md ................... Md., ....... ,
Wlllturnto•.n.1 .... llllil.Mttlhllhl.._,....,..,_ ...
1ow 10t '*' .. b•..._ .. ._ .. .,. lnlMit. w~•
.,. coolet wt1h hlQha In tr. upp« eo. to upper 70t. LOM tOft!Oht
wM1 renge in the IOw 50t to low IOI
W"ttotouthweltwtnde 10to t5kti0tlwillblowttvouah1M
IMef COMtal waws tNt lllttnoon Ind~ over 2·foof ....
end • 5-toot .outh '° 90Uthwett ...... With oc:caek>net 7-foot
bf"Nkert on touth teeing bMche9 Southern Celllorma mountain ., .. , wMt be flit through
Wadneld•Y With reeo11 hight todty rlt'gtng trorn 74 to aa and
W9dneldtiy from et to 79. Low. tonight wtM be ln the 409.
Goaty wett to touthw.et Wind• 15 to 25 mph • btow
thtough the detett• duti"O tr. afternoon and evening hour..
UpP« deMrt hlaht tod.,-Md WMneedly wlll range from 92 to
100. lows from !I to 88. Lower ci.eert hloh• both daye will r•noe
trorn 10010 107, Iowa from 88 to 75.
U.S. Temps Hout eon .. PO I~ ta 6t Jeclu1on.M1M 12 IO
TlwlMlflll~ ... Le Jacil-vtlMI 13 .. Tilnllllll ....
All)4<ly,H V 92 eo Ju-" 50 ....... held
A~ciu-11 ff 1<-Cny .. .. le<llo.1
~·tllo .. 13 Lu\legu t7 • ----I McMt• ff 41 LllM Rodi t3 11 l4'l10P ~ ...... .. 47 LOUleV!lle t3 IO lllylt-.
AUen1a t7 13 Lubbodl .. .. Ctlllil\a
Atl9ottC; Ctty .. IS ~ ., 11 C"'-Crly
Awlan • .. ... _9Mcll 11 n !w••
llalllft>Ofl 11 92 Modlllnd-00.... .. • ,,_
Mllnga 17 12 MheUllM .. H L-tt
kmtngnarn .. 67 Mpla-81P_,. 90 • longtlMcti .._Q .. 41 NMhYlll9 t3 &a L09 A"9*1
lloiM 79 42 ..... °' ...... 12 .. L.A AifP«l
loll on ... 73 ,,,_ 'l'Ofll City " .. M"YSY!llt
8rownsvlt .. 92 75 Nof10411. Ve. It " MonfOYle
lluffeto 82 12 Oldllloole City ... 13 Mont.ii.tlo
lutilnglon V1 t2 u ~ .. 73 Mon1•11
Ca9'* 7t 11 Orlendo II • ""°* ~on SC .,.. • """""""" ., '° *-Pot\a-tl
CMttlialon.W Va • 13 ,.._.. IOI 72 O.a.M
~.NC • 17 Z'::ro.. .. 11 °"""° =.:sc 17 .. u • P•Stirlnga .. .. Pt'O''IMlc• n .. ,....,....
CoMl>bul Olllo t2 13 ~"' .. 51 .._~
Conc:orO .N H ., SI 11 ., "-Cl""" ~IWortll .. .. """° 11 41 ~City
o.yion 91 .. AieMloNI 12 " ""'° o.n-.,.... 10 SI 8tl-12 .. ........
°"~ 93 .. ltlt L ... 1 Qly 11 la ._.._.o
OelrOfl .. IO 8ertAntonlO .. • .....
Oulutll n u San "'"'·" ,. 11 71 ""a.m¥Olne !lhlio .. 12 ........ .. 11 hl\OMf111
E.._.... '3 51 ....... . n .41 Sln(Jlego
, .... i.-. ., '1 ::.,.~ 12 11 ... ,"""*'°
'"'° a IO • 11 $8'\ Joee
~Rtplclt 11 J6 ---~:= SMtaAne •
11 A •r--ler!t•9erw. OrUI, ... 81 •1 r...,..,, Plretio .. 17 a.tl•Ct\IZ
~bo<"o.NC 17 55 T01191<1 ., 13 941111• Merla
""'1w0 .. 16 T-100 92 Senla ~
Hllarll .., ... lullll .. 17 IMoctnon w kln.D C 12 a T lflOe VIie\'
TOI<-74 54
W.-i#OOd 11 51 .. &.• Tides .. 11
" 14 .. 51 TOOAY
t1 50 flrtl tow •291m ·1.1
105 17 '"':,:f.: 111•hm u
83 $3 S.c; '°"' 3 19 p,., 25
75 55 8.cOt'd "191' t31pm ta
II 55 11 t2 ftCIMSOA1'
" N '1111 low s 11 am ·10
13 M ~low 1154 am a1
11 St 1 SIPlll 22 .. SI s.condhlQll 355pm u
ti 56 .. " Tt-.eun •-Ill & 41 em. end M1t11
IO SI I 03p m !Odey
72 50 ,.,.moont1t1 .. 1sepm IOdeytNI
105 74 ,_ Wldnelclay ,, e aa • 111
113 M
71 55 Surf Forecast 17 la 100 .. 83 51 .. &.• " .. .,...._., .....
102 .. a.ec:n llwt ltN.
" 54 L09 Aft9llM Clly 6 IO
17 45 Ot~ountf ' 10 .. 62 San c-rty 5 ;o
17 M 8 a.1>W1·Vlfllw1 4 10
13 11 6... dWICllon" Soult\ 10 _,.,_. ., 65 OUtlOoll tor W.onteOey Sllgllt ~
13 54 ln-1 .. IO IO '* Extended 12 55 . 74 51 II 41 Thur.oty ow~ S.tl#dey -~
IS 50 ..e momong IOW clouOt mllnly ,_ 74 ... COHI 0t'*""'" IM HiQhl rfln9lll8 73 541 from t~ IOI -the bllCtlle to es 59 IM mid-lo upper'°'"""'° LOW9 In ... 71 21 low IOI to IOW e0e
FIREWORKS SHOWS TOGO ON .•.
Prom Al
Councilman Philip Maurer stt the
tone for the brief public hearing.
"Mr. Ma)or. can we possibly vote
and not take the lecture?" quipped
Maurer.
ln fact. onl) three people spoke on
the subject. Mike Bradley. vitt prtsi·
dent of the Make-A-Wish Foun·
dation of Orange County. which
grants wishes to terminally ill chil·
drcn. made an emotional pica 10 keep
the shows.
.. Our kids look forward to It all
)car." said Bradley.
Other cnticisms were more potnl·
ed.
.. If almost every city in &he United
Statts. from New York 10 Pismo
Beach. can have fireworks on the
Fourth of J uly. there's no rational
reason why Ncwpon Beach cannot do
the same," wrote Royal Radtke.
president of the Corona del Mar
Chamber of Commerce. in a letter to
the council.
··vour rcasonina is about as logical
as CaJ\cclina Christmas shoppinA
because the par'1cina lots get too full.
The police department has R:·
peatedl) recommended that the city
deny the firc~orks pe~its. citina
traffic and manpower problems. but
the council has voted each year to
allow the djsplays. ,
Howe\ er. City Manager Bob Wynn
said the police department would
withdraw 1s recommendation for
disapproval 1f Newport Dunes hired
at least t\\O <HP offi('('rs to help with
crowd control. The council agreed to
this condition.
The pohce department will also
hire an additional four CHP officers
for general holiday crowd control
throughout the city. Wynn said.
Accordmg to the permit appli·
cation. roughl) 5.000 people were
expected to attend this xear's New-
pon Dunes show. which 1s in its 25th
)Car. The Big Can) on show has been
staged for 15 )cars.
RECALL GROUP FILES COMPLAINT •••
From Al
c11·nt s1gnaturl'S M> far 1s an 10d1ca11on
that 11 lacks broad-based support.
""Ha' cn't thC) got lhe message
)Ct?" Frank Newman ~aid m a
prepared statement last week. ''The
people ofJ-a~una Beach don't want to
recall council members Gentl"). Len-""> and Kenne) " PROtct·t Laguna has sent a
cit) wide mailer that urges people who
have signed the recall petitions to
tklctl' their names.
Monda) ·s complaint to the Oistrkt
Attorney's office. signed by Michele
Meuller and Barbara and Paul West·
brook. "'as prompted b) an 10c1dent
at the Alpha Beta shoppmg center
Sunda).
• Recall advocates had been collect-
ing signaturci, in front of the store
when Gentry and his friend. Gary
Burdick. amved at abvut 2:30 p.m
carr) ing signs that read: "Please Do
Not Sign the Recall.''
At another point. Hc1tel. who
worled on Lcnney's council cam-
pa1~n. arrived and began videotaping pct1t1one~ an& people who were
s1gnine the documents.
"This scene was extremely in-
11midating to any voterl trying to sign
the tccall papers:· according to the
complamt
Recall proponent Lee Meuller was
collecting signatures when Gen111
told him he had improperly signed
tht' bottom of the document before
the page was filled with names.
Meuller said Gentry took the
petition from his hand without per-
mission to point out the mistake. held
11 for about 30 ~conds. and then
f"t'turned 11.
Se<:uon 297 51 of the state Election
Codt' proh1bm an)one from un-
lawful!) taking a recall petition and
"It sounds like that may have been
a11cmptcd." said Registrar of Voters
Donald Tanne).
But Tanney added that the law's
intent is to keep people from un·
lawfull) destroying petitions.
Recall proponent Robert Gray.
"ho was present during the incident
between Gcntr) and Meuller. said he ~illingly let Gentry handle his pet1-
t1on when Gentry tried to point out
Meullcr's alleged mistake.
··He took 11 out of my hands. He
wasn't II"} 1ng to take 11. He wanted to
look at a name on 1t
''I'm notsurc I released it enurely."
Gra} added later
Meuller said the incident between
Gcntr) and Gray may have been
separate from the one he had with the
councilman
But Gentry said he never snatched
a pct1t1on from an)one.
"It must have been another Bob
Gentry:· he said "I pointed out that
Mr. Meuller had signed a pe11t1on
form before all the signatures were on
II. ..
While Gentry's presence ma) not
ha' c broken an) Election Code
statutes. Meuller said Gent11 should
ha1.e been more "sens1ti1.e to the fact
that soml· of his constituents are
int1mida1cd b) his presence."
Recall proponents said many
Laguna r1."s1dents arc afraid to sign the
pe11tions for fear of reprisal from the
council and d t) stafT.
Bu~ Genii) said he was merely
e>.erc1s1ng h1!> First .\mendment
rights
"This is the United States of
America. r rcedom of expression is
extremcl) important." he said.
The alleged muden1 between Len-
nc) and recall proponent Ja}eson
Brandle) took plaCt' m Ma) outside
the Laguna Beach Post Office. The
complaint contends that Lcnney
asked for Brandley's identification.
something ht' ref used to do. saying
only that he was a Laguna rcsidtnt.
Although she ma} have done so:
~sking a ~t11ioner for identification
1s not a '1olat1on. Tanney said.
The complaint accuses He1tel of
asking for Mculler's identification.
.. But they ·re telling us that 1f we
didn't know we should have kno"'n
and 1f we obJected we should haH•
tiled su11 SI\ months before
groundbrcakmg."· she said. ''Their
Jcfc·nsc 1s that thl'' published some
nt'"-spa per art1dc\ Our content1pn 1s
that we did not know what ·was
happening until 11 OJX'ned . And c"ven
then the} told u<. we were over·
reacting to thl' n<11~ problems. that
the\ were taking \IC'P'> to solve 1t ··
She said newspaper anicles in late
198:2 revealed that the Fair Board
intended to have an arena that could
set IS.()()() people. If the city or the
citi1cns had been opposed to the size
of the arena the) would have had
plent) of time to protest or to file suit.
she said.
And there was no secret made of
later changes that increased the rr=======::::;:=============================:::===::::. nµmber of scats h1 JUSt under 8.000.
But Deborah Ne\~t. an auomey
for Ned West '>aid 4\or\abal knew as
She also contended that the dif-
ference between th(' final plans and
the original plans has been exeg-
CIVILIANS TO FILL JOBS .••
From Al
The plan comes with a change in
the department's orga111zat 1on.
All of the Costa Mesa Police
CXpartment's operations arc divided
into three catcgoncs. but an analysis
by the private consulting firm o(
Ralph Andersen recommended a
fourth d1v1s1on. traffic and hclicop-
1.ers. be added to more evenly d1s--
tribu1t the ~orkload.
Ottrctive Jack Archer. vice pres1·
ORANGE , .......
COAST .. ,rml
MAJN OFl'IC•
2:tD w !Sa~ 14 CoSla Mf!W CA ~ _._ lo> ~ ColMt lotfta CA tlm
dent of the 134-membcr Costa Mesa
Police Officers Assoc111ion. said his
aroup has )Ct to take a stand on the
move tocivihans. because it has yet to
sec the formal plan.
··rt's a httlc 100 early. the plan ha•
not been before the troops." Archer
said. "When 1t comes out. wt'll take a
look at 1t and Stt whether our auys
need to be protected." ·
I
she said.
"There was enough media. and
there were enough meetings between
the Fair Board and 1he city to assure
that anyone who wanted to take
action could do so:· Nesset said.
Sorsabal said. however. t~at even if
the cil1 had known exactly what was
happenin.a. it was not the rcspons1-
biht)' of day officials to inform the
public as to what the Fair Boa.rd was
do1nt
Concerned Citizens of Costa Mt'&a
also contends that Ned West has
violated a court order barring concert
noise, m cxccu of t'ounty standa,.rds.
The group also· araues· 1hat ~
supplemental environmental impact
rcJ)<?n was nttdcd when the numbft
of ~ats was increased at the arena.
Attomeys on both sides .say they
eapctt the he1nn1 on the lawsuit to
continue f'ol' at least three more f:lays. . .
o=' leOw ... aed
d • f>•' 7 tJll!!f!ftS • .a.10<... ...., 0.11 JUst call 642-60.86
Mon\ti r f f!C!oir II y(lw'\IQ "°' ...... YNt ,.,., by
II JO""' '*' befora111"' .,., '°"' CCIPt' .. • ~
• •
S.r"'*f ~ ~, II
~ • llCll •K-;CM ~OJ't•m.al~ IO•M....,.,._. ..
bl~
ClnUll•IA , ........ .
"'* Qr-.~r Mm .... ................
• J
l