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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1988-06-16 - Orange Coast PilotTHURSDAY, JUNE 16, I I ' ' I I Judged:rop p~rt of arena l~wsuit RU11ng says CM residents should hr;;e protested size of amphitheater oy 1,3 •1 IOa VAN n&Df . amohitheater project. In the late ... ..., "".. I 910s the state of California. rep. A Superior Coun judte on resented by the OraftlC County fair Wednesdey threw out 1 portion ofa Board, cha~ itsplansb'tbearena lawsuit filed by a c.o.ta Mae citizens' from a low-key outdoor tbea1er witb a PoUP •inst opentor'I of the PKific small mus.icalsu,e toa ....;orcoacen AmPhithoatre over concert noite. vepue_ capable of bom.· na rock con-At issue was theatly history of the cdts. _ What former Orange Coast Co1tege plteher amt major league star is not happy with Royals? /81 Cout Pollce departments Cleared in the shooting death of a Chino man who led officers on a three-city chase In March./ A3 Nation Memos to Edwin Meese tied to probe that alleged- ly forced a Wedtech Corp. rlval out of business./ M Indez The poup, Concerned Citizeal ol Judie Rkbard J. 8tacom Nied dMI COlia Mae. said a new enviroemeD-C01ia Mesa residents lbould u~ ial impect report should have beat ~ kaOwn what was bappeni'll ud filed When tht c1'aqe n1 llUlde. lbOUld have fiJed a protest coaciwaiae There is. however, a atule ol the project no later than die mmmer limitations •hicb bolds that dtiam of 1913. · muatfileacomplaintwitbia llO•ys '1be fact is, there .ere a lol of of findi.nJ out about a pollible need people in the community wbo were in for additional documentatioa. a position to obtain that kind of, And state law places the burden OI information. .. said Beacom. '"Theft findins out on the citizens. whca tbe were numerous newspaper artidel relevant information is available and documents were available i• thfOUlh .. reasonable diliemce," dica~ exactly what wu beiftl After heariq tatimony this week. plan . " licbint Spix, anorney for eo.. cerned Citizen~ WIUOd tbla -.., iaidentt bad not known)'* a.ow bil the amphitheater was IOl1'I to be ...a wbal kind of music wu Pnl to be pla~ there until July. 1913, when tbe first conccru were bdd. .. , think it is very clear tbat there were substantial numbcn of people wbodid not know, .. Spix laid.~ -ere people entenna tnto contracts to pwchase their homes riabt up to the moment of the fint boom from the amphitheater. People just don't do thai if they think they're pill • '9 blown out of lbeir bomes. Spix laid that die .-.rwq opinion &mOQI man~ 0.. Mlii residents in tbe late l910l liM -'I 1980s was that U.C ~· -would host mainly ou * r r festivals and clalliCal mulic. Heallld one newspaper anide diiat ..-. official u sayins &be ::J.Vtr 2 would be too small for c::oacaa. .. lt wun't apathy that ,.. ...... people from com~l,= ._. : (Pl•••... , .. B.ecall w~ighed after demotion \ . • of HB principal Parents mobtlize to organize protest of board· s actions factions in the tcbool diarict dmt Ibo said have become uplet by a nmber of district actiou. Carey said tbere would either .... attempt to~ a meetina wi.tb c6:iah to iron thinp out or to take recall ection tpinst the trustees. lf there is lO be I recall dfort. it wouldn't BJ ROBOT BAUER involve trustoe Robert Mam. do- ... ._,..... scribed by Carey u. district oftk:ial •bo has a ...... _, of,.__,_ to tbe Stuna by the reassicnment of a coooemsof~ts. ..._.....,. popular school principal, a poup of Carey also rapped ectioD b)' di.,un~umeuodayupark trustees to extend-die contract u ' next to Hawes School in Huatiqton Superintendent Diana Peters and to . :::t.!tlOU-:pouiblerecallactioo pve bcr pay raite CaUfins the apparent uprou was Carey called the actioo "•slap ia the ~ment Tuesday niabt of the face" after anotber parent bad Hawes Principal Rita Jortimten and = .. ~Y niabt,.. tba~i~ another school administrator idcnt-educatio~clnect":,the~lO ified u Joap Skinner. Both will be invesuptePe1en'maurmeautyle. sent back to the classroom as School district ldmin.tttrative aide teachers, oftic:ials said. Catherine Wbedcr said lOda that the T(UlleeS i.n the Huntiqton 8eacb decisiootorevealtheidalti2::bolloE City School District refUJed to dis. J.-n-__ ... ri..:~ _ made close the names of administraton --MIU ~ --followina the meetina. identifyina strictly~ protect their swivacy. them only by their Social Security She_ said tl\at the .two women bad numbers. been informed euticf Tuelday that Shiney ~.a parent wt.o's led . their~ Seem~ numbcn, ~ the u.nsuccalful fiaht to main Jor-not their~ 'WOUid be ~ if aensen at Hawes.. said the parents the tnastees apProved tbe ,......._ were tryiQI to briaa ~ varioul (!'• • ... PAWDil8/d) Advice and Games Bulletin Board Buainesa Qaalffted Coma A11 AS A7-8 85-7 A12 88 Baker'tired,butdoingOK,'aidesays Death notice Entertainment Oplnton Poetcetog Pubftc Notices $port• Weather A10 A9 A3 88 81-4 A2 Irvine City Councilman David Baker, who dropped out of si&ht after revelations be allqcdJy tried to embezzle $48,000 from a non-profit foundation. is '"tired. but doina OK.·· a campaisn worker saia today. Doy Henley, who served u finance chairman on Baker's failed bid for the .oth Conaressional District seat beina vacated by retirin_s Roben Badham, R-Newpon Beach. said be talked with Baker's wife earlier this week. He said she assured him her husband is fine. "She said he's rest.in&. He's tired. but doina OK ... Henley said. "Under the circumstances, that's surprisina. I 1ucss.'' 'Henley said Baker's wife said the councilman bad seen a doctor. Hen- ley was unsure, however, what son of doctor and whether the care was continuina. lnvestiptions arc under way into alleptions that Baker stole two checks from the Irv.me Health Foun- dation, a S 16-million trust that donates to health-oriented causes for which be senccl as executive director. A foundation secrewy reportedly found two checks missina the week- end befo~ the election pnmary. and Irvine councilman-elect challenged Councilwoman petitions to block No. 3 vote-getter from ta ktng Agran · s place BJ GREG KLERll .............. Irvine City Councilwoman Sally AnneMiUerisleadiq~tiondrive to unaeat Councilman Cameron 9>t1rove. 'Nho ca1Jed the cballen,e a ftuCo and lambuled Miller for .. tryina to bold the council hostaae. •• However. the city's assistant at· tomey laid lbe cbalJenee could be a moot point if a new law al~ the petition drive is not certified before the new council members lft l'NOC'ft in on July I. The petition etron mUb the fint ute of a new election law in Irvine that alloM a chaJlenee of uy council 1eat appointed thfOQlh de&uJt. The law, Adams buy the known u Mea.suR 0 'NU approved on June 7 by a vote oho percent. ,,J::t" for the petition .dri~ Mte out Wed~y. acco~ to off"tcials in the City Clerk's off"tee. There ~ two teall open on tbe "fm shocked, actually, because I think the voten sent a very clear messaae." said Cosarove .... consider mytelf elected. and rm ready to be sworn in. She's playina politics at the tue·apenx." ve claimed that Measure 0 bas not even been ratified by the council or ICCl'eW)' of state. "lt only applia to Y9Cat .. ts. ud it won't be vacant once rm~ ia. .. aid CospoYC, who said a,·~ election would cost tho City ~Otdollars." A•ititDt City AltOrDI)' Joba ~ lows IPeed that. bcaNle the cXMiii:il bu not yet c:eniW the de<.1ion results, Irvine baS ao MeMure DIM'. Tbe ' · ~ ii Ill IO cenifY the results on Jue 21. a.it 6c IDCllW'C would llill not be cfledi~ '1iDtil tllle iecrewy of •te catificatioe. whidl milbt DOI be aMil lifter 1-ly l wbeD ~ve isswon in. If the c:enificatioD OCCW1 afta" July I. Millcr .. sc:bala,ewouldbe invalid, said Fellows. . ' (Pinn .. coeoaovs'9/AI) ~eTlp turns turn-ins into ~Uonal nti-cri111e hotline told Superior Coun Juds David Sills of the disappearanc:e. Sills is chair· man of the non-profit foundation. One of the cbccks turned up unused. but the olber wu aDeFcfty written out to Bater for $41.000. lbe check was sent to the bu~t Si.Os ~-·· /A2) Expansion of"co11nty's forensic lab pushed GOB81'ATIO AL ••• L~-r! ............... ..., ... ---we.·.:. ·.::=a:•.!! ::;--.. 1 ltA••llalt&dTV ! ................ ... -....w ...... ___ ,...._... it =:.,.., -tM kl c..,. rcmaiD teem. Lib die ~ WtTip rieb ._. flom tbc M lfl Ctl It turm ia. --dllte baildilllt ..__. .,.. lit at deiltl mannine tM ..-thlit briaa ia anywhere from 60.o 100 calla ••• ~ .. 00. be eell 10 llUDOnr OM ~et Mb a caller ... , .. llduht .. i• the uawet. Tbe queatioftt CODUDOC: '"SO you tbiak 11e•aa........, Do you know where he pt?"& tbete more ltWl one entrl.DOC to tlUI bcMue'r Jf tbe caUet bad liven hiS name. I.be operator~ have infonaed bim to Qll beck lO uot.be'I' operalOr. Some of the calls have led to arresu ia Oranae County. ~ on WeTip like a aood idea (to ltl marrltd)." iabmation.<>ruaeCouatySbe:ritra Between them thay have eiaht deP.iltiet anested a man in Mission children from previous marriqes, Vjejo on May 30~,: tutpicioo two who now work for WeTip. Of coc:aine sales, . to WeTip Miriam Brownell's sister. Carole recards, which are corrobonted with Klein. is an administrative assistant. eteb arresting agency and the ooum. Her da\llhter. Bonnie Lubecki. is the Oil September 25 and 2~ 1986, offic:eJDanalCf andanotherda\.llbter, lrviDe police arrested-a 1-um Hills Susan Apilar, is di~ of public man and another from Ef Toro on relations. suspicion of sellina $2,0SO worth of .. If we weren't relattJd we couldn't cocaiat work for what we eet paid," Klein But the ~tion now deals said. with fit m«e tban drua tipa. In 1979, Brownell lldmJts the orpnization •s WeTip bro9dened its ICl"Vice area oeroetualJ th. hnA-:t Ja· es little &om Calib'Dia to the entire nation leff over fJ:.. ~!iPeti'tiv~ sabrles and and bepn takina tips oo every najor benefits. WeTip loses many of its m:ieoday· .... _ . . has ·a1 workers to police departments and • a , , UKOrpruntion . spea private i~. Still.~ are tllose Imes to ~ calll concern.ma anon who stick with 11. and JaD& Vloleoce. . "Even those who are not related. .. ~y. many ~f1e think PJll it'n family operation." Bill Brownell people Just aboot otber, so why -aid. •'Thia is the only prosram ~ not le! ~ i~ tx:ald that c:c>m-day to day you can see the resulu of ment, wd Brownell, a mounwn of your labor ... some idiot locked up for a man at llC S4. ~Una dnw or killing someone. .. .. But~ ~pie <Pnl members) While WeTip's reputation bas in-ue no~ously t.d !1'ots and they creased enormously duri.DJ the past seem ~bit everyone. . several years throuah national tele- WeT1p also ~ cal~s ~DI vision coverage and resul~ Brownell murders. ~ ~ IPlD~ saidlawenforc:ementintbebqinnina the dderty,. children, illeDl toXJC was Jeary of the whole thina. waste dum~ welfare ana .corpor-.. They learned that we were a ate fraud. I~ ts currentlr working o~ a valuable resource. However, it took prosram :with ~U.S. Forest Servioe some agencies ycan of throwing away to tum m matlJUIDa powers who plant tbeirprdens in national forests, our tips. .. Brownell said. The prima!}' daqer tip taken must be on auard for are phony ti~ either made as a joke or to put an tnnoceot person in bot water. ••This is an inherent problem, be it WeTip or a police department, .. Brownell said. Etch form filled out by a tip taker and sent to law eoforcenrat includes a disclaimer that •YI au the infor- mation is beanay and that it oeeda tborouah corroboration. From tbe outtet. WeTip buoff'cred rewards for information Jadina to a conviction. Rewards top out at a modeat SSOO 10 dilCOuf'lle modern--day bounty hunten. BrOwnell uid that half the callers c1on•t even Ilk about the. reward. Some are even insulttJd when it's offered • Payi.na oft' the money in~olves an labontc aystcna-to main&ain tbe c:aDen anonymity. After the reWud is approved by WeTip's board ofdin:c- tors. the caller is 11ven a code name and number and told 10 ao 10 a specific postmaster in bis area. 'Ibe postmaster then bands over cub tent to bim by WeTip after the Qller presents the proper codes. .. We offer total safety tbrouab total anonymity, .. said BrowDell. Re said be knows of no cue of retaliation apinst a WeTip informant· · . r tometimes auardinl them with lethal booby traps. And there have been more subtle cban&n at WeTip. Miriam Eckert. now assistant national d..iRctor ~t aae SI, bas called henelf Miriam Brownell for the put three years. BAKER 'TIRED, BUT OK' ••• .. We've worked in thia to many years ... and spent to much time loletber," she _said, .. it just seemed OC attorney disbarred LOS ANGELES (AP) -An Or- anae County lawyer who misap. propriated S20,000 in client funds, then cried to penuade them to sip statcments e&eulina the miJconduct, was ordered diJbarred by the Cali- fornia Supreme Court. A State Bar referee and the State Bar Court bad earlier recommended that John Patrick Kelly, SS, of Santa Ana be disbarred for taking tl)e client funds. homAl said Baker stopped payment on the check before any funds were trans.- ferred . The foundation checks require two sianaturcs. Sills said his signature also aPoeared on the check. althoush he dJd not sip it himself. Sills wd he oonfronted Balcer about the situation and demanded bis resi,pation from the foundation, which be reod'ved. Sills said be alto contacted the District Attorney's office. OfficiaJs there said their m- vestiption should take &dot.her two weeks. Baker hired attorney Paul Meyers the day of his confrontation with Sills and then dropped from si&hi after losinJ the primary raoe by fess than 1,300 votes to Christopher Cox. Assistant Irvine City Manqer Paul Brady said be tried unsuccessfully to reach Bater several times after the eJcction. The fint be beard from the Batcr_family, be said. WU Tuelday when Baker's wife. Patty, called him to say Baker would not be at that evemna'• council meetina. .. He needs time to himself,0 Brady said today. Brady said he will not call Baker apin, but instead will wait for the councilman to get in touch with him. "I know David as a friend as well as a professional collcape, '' lhdy said. .. J expect be will be 1n toucb With me when he is ready to talk." Brady said it is unknown whether Baker, who reportedly is stayinaat bis sister's EJ Toro home will attend bis final council meeting late this month. Baker pve up bis council seat to run for conaress. FORENSIC LAB EXPANSION PUSHED ••• - f'romAl Last April. county officials bcp.n solicitina proposals for a new, 131,()()()..square-f oot laboratory. The Grand Jury bas recommended that the Board of Supervil011 assure that construction on the laboratory bcainno later than June. 1989. That may be possible, provided the county can find a way 10 finance the $28. 7 million facility, said Bob Love, of the County General Services Administration. "Financing is the key question, .. be said. .. What we're proi*>ly lookina at is a builder financina and construct- in& the facility either on his own land or on county land1 and then lea.sins the buildina to us.· In the meantime. county officials are movina some IClctiona of the laboratory to temporary SJMlce at 601 N. Roa "SL in Santa ADI and at the former Buffums depanment store on Main Street. Some ICCt.ions have already been transfered and the move ia lchedulcd to be completed by the end of the summer, said Sheriffs Department spokesman Lt. Richard Olson. -rhey were awfully crowded in there," said Obon. "This should alleviate it until we get them into the new facility ... Olson added that, despite the aowdina. the Sheriffs Depanment bas been satisfied with the per- formance of its forensic lcience section. .. We're pretty proud of the job they've done," he said. ADAMS ••• From Al U.S. Tempa. .... a... .. .. Calif. Tempt1 • Eztendecl .... T.-Clly .. n ~Cil!Y 11 • .. Le ~ • ., :; •tot N ._,.. ....... t ._.... ...,. ......................... ~ ... .. • 0.... • • ....................... .Mdl« ... • .. ......... '1 .. ::t:='"" ""t::.': ...... ~ . , • "-*i -It ........ 102 .. '°'°' ~In--~City .. • ::::g ., • lurwQ • 14 ... ........ 8"lllrnON .. • • 17 • ,,eMO 10I .. ~ .. ., • .Miine es .. ~ 74 • • ,. ...... ~ .. • ~ 17 ., ....... • • :::rCl!r IO • .......... II a Surf Report ~Oii.SC 71 ., .... .. '* ,_....,,. 10I • ~H.C. ., .. NdlMOM N .. ='dC!ly 101 71 CNc-.o • 11 9'1..eW • n n 11 .... .,.. _..,. ~ • '' ... u...Clly • .. ~ :;:~ .... w .. a..oelMd • :c: 8mlMclND It n ...... t4 .. OolurntM.Otllo • 77 54 IMDllgo .. ., .... . ""'"" ,., .. 70 :=. ·SM f<l9nCllOO • f1 ......... ""'"" DelM--l'I Wenfl ., .. 13 "",,_ 71 .. ... ::=""'"" H -Deyton • .. ~---'1 to ... ....... Olllllapo 70 .. ..... 14 .. 0.-• It T ...... ""'9t • 70 ....... ., .. ~ J .. O..Moll'9 It • T~ ., • ...... 14 ........... •.:t.fl\. --~ ... Delrdl .. .. 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Mdlr ..... ~ ?t • Loi Af'llill ...,._, ___ *Ml ., ....... ~ .. .., ltl:M Liii ........... 11:01 p.& ..JUDGE LIMITS ARENA LAW:SUIT ••• hoaAl It ... llf'CCmeDt witb the diltrict'• orWnaJ plans,.. taid Spix. .. Even dunna the toun that wete conducted of the faeiljty when it wuc:ompleted. tbe l::,Y line WU 'noite ii DO ~ don't WOfTY about it.• " Several Costa Mesa~ in.-cludiftt fonncr City MUllliCl' ftd SonabaJ. testified tbat they Md D01 known what the watina c:apecity of the amphitheater woulCJ be or that rock concerts would be bdd tbete. SonabaJ aho said the city ... unable to obcain a copy of the 198 l ltate llf'CCmeDt for the ampb.itbeateT and that be, ucity mananaer. bad Dot been .ckquately 1nfonncd u to what was beina planned and conatnac1od. Attomeya foe Ned West Asrocia1e1, 0pcrat011 of the amphitheater, dis.- missed Sorsabal'sc~ sayina that there were rquJar, monthly meet.inp between membcn of the Fair Board and city .officialSi and that the lease was easHy obtamcct by attorneys. newspaper report.en and othen who requested it. ··There bas been no evidence on the pan of the ~ntiffs u to any concealments, said Neil Papiano, attorney for Ned West. .. In fact. there is strona evidence that ample, and in this case I think more than the necessary public notice that an amphitheater was bein& con- structtJd." In matiJl& bis nilina. Baicom said be bcl~ membcn of tlae public should have oblained documents and attended = of the Oraaea Countyf~ tofollowwbat ... bappenina with plans for the arena. .. It is ~ that IPltbY ..ccms to control ma an imPQrtant pert of public afllin." be saicl Norm Snow, a raideftt of' the Maa del Mat neisbbol'bood near the amphitheater, took exception 10 the judee's rematks. . ··1 really don't think it was fair of the judac," be said. ••But in one respect he's riahL The ordinary citizen doesn't undera1and what is happenina around him. In my cue, J just felt that our elected and ap- pointtJd officials ~uld dcrnotbina to hurt us. I know now that I wu wrons." Spix said the main part of the citizens' suit still remained. the issue of whether conceru at the arena have violated county noise standards. PARENTS PROTEST ••• PnmA1 men ts. Wheeler, who said that the district has employed the use of Social Sccurit~ numbers of employees in the put, said that the two women didn't object to the use of the identification numbers. Parent leader Carey, however claimed that the boud membcrl did it "to protect tbeir bide" rather than to be accountable for their act.ions io a hostile environment Lep.l sources said there is no requirement to rdeuina names -or Social Security numbers -of people beina reaqiancd to new duties. Other officials in Oranae County and in the state said the pnctk:e wu unusual, at least. Pat Howlett, director of com- munications for the Altociation of School Administtaton, said in Seen. rnenlo WedDelday that ... didn't know anywhere cite" the practice baa been in Ute. Depoled principe) Jcqemen said Wednesday only that abe wu lookina towards firiilhina t.bc tchool year anc1 fulfillina her responsibilitia .. well .. Today wu the last day or tchool Neu.her Jcqenten nor IChool of. ficials would dilClose the re&10ns for the oust.er. I COSGROVE'S SEATING CHALLENGED ••• From Al .. We're still piecina this all Baker, a Iona-time council ally of contest it," A&ran aaid. toSCther," said Fellows. Miller, declined a bid to retain bis McNally said there were no an- Supportc11 of the cballenge allesed-council seat in favor of the con-nounced candidates for a special ly conducted a phone survey of aressiooal race, and his tern) expires election. residents. askina them opinions July 1. The two IOliq candidata in the about several potential candidates. McNally said there are currently no 7 _,__.: ... -Bl Cosgrove aaid. \"-Plana to uk Baker to ruo if there's a June ~on were l'Vl oomer • One name that reportedly surflced apecial election. Baker could not be who drew 16.9 pm:ent of the vote. was Irvine City c.ou.ncilman David reac:bed for comment; and Michael Sbea. who earned 14.9 Baker, who lost bis bid for the ~ Aaran said be was also surpritcd at percent Conaressional Dittrict in a bitter, Millet's challentc. Petition oqanizen must ooUect mud...tinaina race. He is now under .. Jt teemed to me that the three about 3.SOO liptures-7 percent ot scrutiny for alkacdly misbandlina winnina candidates were IO clearly lrvine•a 501528 rqiatercd VOtal - funds from a founa&tion to cover last-eeparattJd from the other candidates by July IS tn order to fon:e a apeciaJ in Clearwater, Fla. acquired the minute campaip oosu. tbat it wouldn't teem lolica1 to election. ~~Daily~l~.Ch~ttsaid lj~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~i that purchase was the foundation for I I Five to share Lotto iackpot future acquisitions in the newspaper 'J' field. . The Maoomb newspaper bas a SACRAMENTO (AP) -An un- precedented number oflotto players, five to be exact. will split a S22. 7 million jackpot after they all picked the correct six numbers in the mid- week drawing, lottery officials said Thurs4*~. ~Qen. who will each receive about $4.S tnillion in equal annual payments over 20 years, purchased their tickets in Fremont. Hawthorne. Palmdale, CbuJa Vista and El~ Louery spokesman Bob Taylor said it was the fi11t time five winners bit the same jackpot. Four wi.nnen split the top pnze on May 11, 1987, be added. lhc onJy winner to come forward Tbonday and UYC a prize verified IO r.r is Tberesa Adams of El Cajon. an administrator at a San Diqo con- ORANGE ........ COAST .,...,r-1 llA9eOf'FICa 039 WWI hr II. ec.e ..... CA .... ..,.,_ 00. •MO c.r. ..._ CA 02'H ~ioncompa~y. "Ci:rculation of Sl,000 and OiQJO Eiabt playen b1t five numbers. pl~ Mapzjne distributes more than the l>c:>nus numt;>er, to each win 200,000 copies monthly. Stephen S328,094. The pnze pool was more Adams is the company's cbainnan or than $2.6 million. . the board. There were SO I playm who picked Rotemary Churchman. publisher five of six numbers and wiO eacb of the Daily Pilot and the lndeoen· receive Sl.699. ~ prize pool was dent, said she loob forward to more than $2.3 million. , working with Adams. ... hope to . The 2,SS2 ~yen who bit four of ensure a smooth transition for the ~ numbers Will each act "47. The benefitofOW'readert,adverti1a1and ~ pool was men than S 1.2 our employees." she said. The ~ . million. Pilo~ With-a distribution of 30, There were 3017S3 players who pubhshn daU)'. aloft& the OraQle 9Clected three of ax numbcn. for ao Coast. tefVi°' CoAa Me1at Newport au10~tic ~of SS cacb. . Beach, Hunu,.ion Beech. l.apna The· W1Dn1~ numbers ~ Beach. Fountain Valley and Irvine. Wednetday bilftt for tbe C.ahfomia The IAdepeodeat, wit.6 both Hunt-Louay•a twice-weekly .. Louo 6-49" inston Beech and Foown Valley aame ~= 32. 20, to, 11. 40, 1. The cdltions-diatribuu:a ~2.000 copies bonus number wu 31 . each week. 011wtH ~ 14t M78 llu'l!N9 & Milor111 ... 2 431• Ju•tC11ll 842-8086 ~,.,ow. c...,....,... ~ He .............. llUlll<a"°"" ..... ~ ., ~ --~ ,,., ... ·~ ..... tpllClll I*• ~-~-· Cll ...... T1t11t1111 ..... =-...... ••• ,.. ml'TOFCLAll• [~) "'.-....i...-..Of Baker scenarto lucky for GOP r...._ .. ._..,.., .. , ,Dlvt..._ .... .,. ................ ,~.-ifbe..,..... bl, lie is innocen• •tit....,.._..,, nM ...._...._. •"I __. lhe kt he i1 in trouble. 0.0, ......... --•• th• :::&..·~ ~Di .. ,_ Wer=y a .......... -. wrwbimtdCa lllllmn&I S41.000 check •••••••••• fromtbelrvine He.Ida Foun- dadori wbaw lilt WM euculi~ director. He alJeeedly forJDd the foUndatioa chairman'• name on the two- lipature check. And be alleptly tried 10 transfer another S7',000 frOm the foundllion•1 uvinp account '° ill c:becki._. ICCOUnt. Tbae are all allelltion1 because Baker basn 't tieen found 1uilty of anythiftl. But they all come &om the foundatiOD dlairman;. David G. Sills, who alto happen• to be a Superior \..OUft j~. Sills him.elf isn't •= Balter did anythi~ ~ ''lhavemadenoal tionsofimpropriety. Sills said. But it sure doesn't IOok r!cht.. Sills apparently didn't think so. either. He \oOlt the information to the District Attorney's office. • And if it's u wrona aa it appean. one hu to wonder what was aoina on between Sills' call to the 'district attorney and the primary lhrec days later. We know that two top-level Baker campeian advisen, campa.ian chairman Timothy Strader and finance committee member Gary Hunt; bailed out when they learned abou1 the alleptions. But apparently DobodY told peny leaden. What wOuJd they have done if flaker hid· won? The l\l.Y already bad been pummeltd with stories about his ...niu problema.-Add-the-la~ ftCWl-Ud the- peny has a candidate who could actually lose the most RepubHcan district in the Wlivene. County Republican Party OWnnan Tom Fuentes learned about the story from the news. ~~~ . .. h'scenainJyascenariothatcould have proved to be a difficult political situation for the county party to face. .. Fuentes understated. .. On the other band, within the madness of all these complexities some pidina band, somehow. either throuah the wisdom of the voters or perhaps with help from above, we p>t throuab the process." Quotina President Reapn, Fuentes said, .. 'We thank our lucky staii9"this scenano dido' occur ... • • • Well, we saw the sips plastered all over the Oran,.: Coast, n:mindina ua that President Reapn was pateful for the wori ~ormed !>Y ams Cox when be was a senior UIOClate counsel an the White House. The president was pven the ~unity to thank his former c:Oun.etor qain tb11 week when Cox returned to Washinaton for meetiJJp with R~ and Vice President Georae Bush. Cox called bis meetin& witti the president .. a command performance ... The Republican nominee from the 40th Conpasioul l>iatrict told the president be would work to c::ontinue the Reapn revolution in Conaresa. While Cox should defeat Democratic challenF Lida 1.enney in the overwbelmin&ly Repubbcan 40tb. be said bc·u be campaipina bard to make sure~e blicans ao to the POiiS to eloct Bush to the · and return Sen. Pete Wilton to the U.S. nate. .. Now it's my job to ,et out as many Republican votes aa PoMible to ensure Georac Bush wins Ora.nae County. California and the presidency," Cox said. "'So I'm aoina to campaip u af I'm in last place.·· • • • Since all eyes were focused on the Republicans this s~ the Democrats hid 1 free ride. But county chairman John Hanna says they're ready lo take on the GOP in several races. Since Aslemblyman Richard Lonpbore unex- pectedly passed away the day after the primary, Democrats are even more confident they can win blclt the 72nd District with their candidate, Olristian F ... Rick" Thicrbach, a deputy district attorney. They also 1hink Rep. Bob Dornan is ri~ for defeat in the 38tb Conp'CSSional District. Busi- -nessman Jerry Yudebon is the-Democratic nomi- nee!'Doman thinks he's aoina to a coronation. .. Hanna said. ..He's more worried about ,ettina appointed to a Bush administration post." Alona the conservative Oraqe Coat, they're bopina to lteep down the nwsin of defeat. Hanna .sa~ the party's presidential nominee. Michael Duklkis. will help them in November. "for the fint time in l-4 yean we have a cancUdate at the top of the ticket we ca.n embrace and not run away &om," Hanna said. ~(The Re- publicans) will know they've beeil in a filht." .... E to marcJa lato die ·--·D--8eJaool ....._ tD receln dfplcw••. , llulu.. Pomataba Valley and 1Jm- wtneter ~ lldaoola' .... dona are 9daed11led ti1a eYell.baC· Coast man in fair condition af~er BOiig heart transplant -~, llOBERT HYNDMAN ............... The Huntington Beach man who re> ceived 1 bean transplant early Tuesday was listed in fair condition today at Hoag Memorial Hospital, where he is recover- iq. ! · Hospital spokeswoman Pam Bolen said the petient's condition was ulJll'lded to fair followin1 an eumination by phys- icians. The doctors have yet to determine when the petient is hkety to be releaad from th' Newport Beach bospii.J. The .S4-year-oJd man, who asked that his name be kept secret from the public, is the second person at Hoq and the fourth io Oran,.: County to receive a heart trans- planL The previous three all are doina well, accordjna to officials at Hoq Hospital and at the UCI Medical Center in <>ranae. The latest recipient ~uired the trans- plant because he suffered from ~ ,enerative hcan disease. The heart came from a Los Anscles man who died from a brain aneurysm. His identity was not released, but bis family consented to the operation, Bolen sa1d The transplant was performed by Ors. Aidan Raney and Doua,las Zusman. Bolen said there is one more patient oo the waitina list fora new heart at Hoq. The hospital cooperates wtth the RCSJOnal Organ Procurement ~ to coordinate orpn donations and patient nttds, she said. ~ongtime Newport Beach resident dies Amy Fowler Oinkenbeard. a resident of was also a IOcaJ fashion revolutaonary: she Newport Beach for more than half a was reportedly the tint woman in Newport century. died Wednesday at Hoag Mem-Beach lo wear pants and set her hair orial Hospital She was 94. bobbed. Born Jan. 1-4, 1894, in fnde~ndence, Kan., ~Qkenbeard moved to Newport Beach an l 92S, where she would live the rest of her life. She and her family owned a fruit and vqetable stand at 21st Stnct and Balboa Boulevard in the early 1930s. Accordina to her family, Oinkenbeard Traaedy struck the family in the 1930s when Clinkenbcard's son, Dewey, died in a freak accident at Newport Harbor High School. Dewey was retrieving a shotput when he was struck in the bead by aoother shotput thrown by student. 01nkenbeard is survived by her Iona- time companion, Jam Elliot; a brotba'. James Arnold; two dau&hters. Dorothy HorrcJI of Costa Mesa and Mary Snowden Pearce of Oroville; and a son and dau,tt&er- in-law, James and Jenny Fowler of Oroville. Abo survi~ are nine pndch11dren. 25 gn:at-arandchaldrm and 19 .,at-veat- grandcbildren. Thincen memben of the family a.re Newpon Harbor IT&gh School araduates. Services an: ~ndina. Rams offlclals huddllagover courtsetback I BJfteA.IMda ... Prw ' Disappointed by a costly coun setback. the Los AQlda Rams are pondering their fUtvre followina the decision that could wipe out the 1978 land deal that lured the team to Orante County, a club executive said. California Angels buebl.ll club no less than 12,"422around-levelparkiJlaspaces in the Anaheim Stadium pmtina lot. The Rams moved lO the stadium from the Los Angeles MemoriaJ Coliseum followina the 1979 footbl.IJ season. enticed by a promise that Anaheim would give them 68 acres of the stadium parki .. ~t to develop into hiah-rise oftiCe buiJd.inss., club officiaJs sai~ that was n:praent.ed to us when we moved down here, .. Rams Vice President John Sh.aw said Friday. "We have taken this under the advice of oounsd and we're explorina all Po$Sibilibes.. .. Shaw said it was premature to say whether the team should try to back out of its 3S-year lease witla Anaheim Stadium. Welts OU1. &M driver nl&l:rled * lrilct 1 lhreW ii ia&o rewtll. 1be Olkit.f ... piillied. ----~ and d~ aboUt '30 tie. bdtire Jll M • Wciu lliea tried to drive ~ wlilcft tt eewral ofticcra OpeMd k Wlill -lttudt It lellt ()O« in ... ~ and .... I declared deed at tbe sceee. • Police later learned Wria WM wanted on a S..,000 traffic w.rn:nt fot a tiftlilar ' chase in Costa Mesa lal1 year w4lee lae ' duded police. Weissalt0served time fora peirof'C.O. Mesa buralarics. police iaid. • Artists cash in on. Newport contest BJ GREG •J gau °' ............. A Corona dd Mar resident was the bis winner in Newport Beacb·s fint p.llery JUned art competition, held Friday at a ty Hall. Gerry Miller's watercolor p1ecc · '"Sunken HuJr took the S l ,SOO Pu.rc:bae Award prize in the Newport 8tadt Aftisas• Exhibit and Juried Art Show. Her wart was porchascd by the city. said Judith Goffin. spokeswoman for the show. The show was sponsored by the Newpon Beadl Cit)' Arts Commission. • The show. which was o~n to all Newport Beach residents, dttw 250 en-• tn"-59 of which ~ selected for exhibition, said Goffin. taauna 8e8Cb artist Ruth Hynds was thejudte. Etgbt cash awards were pven. Second p~ went to Ann Amon. whose maxed media work. .. Taos Spirit, .. won S.,50. Ferd Johnson's oil wort. ""Bayside Dnvc -won a separate p11rchasc award for $750. Terry Manchester's acrylic wort., -Sum- mer Place. -won third place bonon and $350 Honorable mention awards of S 1 SO wcrt g1vcn to: Pat Shinno "'Holly Hocks., .. watercolor; Gloria Parry Walter, ''l"Homme Mart1nque.-mixed media; '-tarp Chapman ... Sad Patterns, .. waier- color. and Mauncc Coot. .. Otina House," photop'lpby. ~ winnina worts and other .elected entries will be on display at~ Beacb Cit) Hall. 3300 Newport B • throuab June 28. The Rams came out on the losin& side this week when Oruwc County Superior Court Judie Frank OOmenicbini panted a .......... ii ....................... -permanent iJtjunction paranteeina the "We're disa~int.ed that the devel• mcnl today isn t the same development "It's way too early to make thole kinds of statements. .. Shaw said. -suffic:e to say that we're just reviewina everythina now with counsel ... The Arts Commission wilt .ibo sponsor a fiv~y arts festivaJ in October. said Goffin. Two UCI exchange students killed.hi highway accident . LO*ty said two ~AcC of students. Wfft 1nvetina aJona · eaCb other in. Toyota CcHca and NiSMD 200SX The Toyota, travelina in the lef\ entbcM1nd lane of the four-lane ~y. drifted to the ri&bt lane. tidlll tbe Nim..n to veer ofrtbe roed. IUnlbll clown an embankment and ..,.. °""·~said. ne .., mate ~ in &be TOJ'O'I were aoc iruured and st~ M IM Mddtltt tcene 130 males llOf'lll 1• oll.ot ~ • • • A chubby man with mirrored sun&lasses and a Hawaiian shirt follo"Wed a you°I f rf. home. but fled. A purse with S4S in cash and several pe~n was reported stolen from a bome on Griffith Way. 1tew;ldB11cla Tbere is one very unhappy man in N~ Beach today: He lost his Los AQldel. Laken tcUOn ticktts over the weeteGc1 • • • T~ airls made oft' with Sl.900 in dothet from a Fashion lslqd dodai.. SlOte •bile a thitd &irt dilhC'led the •lcs deft. 1 .. iBnc• A.-, 'r valued atS4'°was tepCWted Wednaday from its cw. CCMiit locat.icm. • • • A visitor to Main lkach on Wednesday tokl police that a camera valued at SlOO was lost or stolen there .. • • • Mi1cdlancous. property valued at an estimated S642 was reported SU>len WC:icloadly &om a car earted aJonattac 100 bloct olOilT'Orive. • • • A Silver 1973 P'Ofeche 911 was stoka from the 120 block of v&a OrvietO be!WOUI t p.m. Sab.lrd.ay and 6: IS ua. M~. ••• A 1987 Y ...... 220 snolorc)de was stolen mi. a tar11r1t in die 3500 blod: otSC:aPcft DriYe arouad 2:30 UL Tuetday. ....._._an=~ A mu aid tbat tomc00e stoic a IYtD bis eoataiaina bis car keys from Dd~ lleJdla JJlt-nui crash • his 1984 black Corvette •bile he was It t~ Holidn Spa It 8cacb Boulevard and Wamc:r Avmue. He tned to ,ct the it towed. but cou.ldai't. because the keys were miuina. bie said. He was afraid lbe bul"llar would return and steal the car. ht said. • • •• ReQIOlt'SI in the 8000 block ol Kcbo Drive said that t0mconc • PeftnUy has med I key to Aeal about Sl0.000 in jcwdry over several lllCMI Bank robbed In Newport Beach BaltedNicar&guaconvoy now bOund fot-Washln~on 8' fte MR I els:tl f Prell IELFAIT,....,.. It ' t (AP) -Abollb•ll111C1ill1.._.._ ............. ,.. • llllJ. d~ldlllddlim llid ...... 10 .-u ..... ID Ille Wane Ma·ae. ~ice• Ana1 a&llek ht Noi'dlen relancl ia eevm monlk Tiie bomM" Wedn 11111) ~ ift ti~ .-viii' ...... .,....... of ............... 1hit y9lft deMh IOU ftom--Wole.a IO Jl-eiillt tbltweell .... .... ··-ioklien cko¥e...., predaetl • .., PrOlaeaa• Ulllutn'1 ..,... ...... bt an unmarbd milis wy van to"8 ila dae loillll' of'dtne l'8CeS and,. runs" that attncced 4.2SO competiton. Wbile ~ WISC .away, ~llat wired eaplosiYa IO the van s cbuais. The bomb a~ when the soldien. retunU1ll from the nee around 9 p.m:., :w driven Off just a few yards, DOlice uid. The IRA claimed rnp0n1ibility. The oUdlwed ~ ~p Iii f.Ptina &o end lfttilll rule m Nonh- em Ireland ad unite the PrOtatant- dominaled PIO~ with the Roman Catbo1ic lrillt ... blic. None of the civilian1t includina an .. , .......... ~ =· ...... tericNI iii .... ..... ,,.~ ............. DCll an IRA 111ws......W c.96i40il'Y .. bli .......... "4m'lt 11ie111Allid that bombwu meut so ldl 4111Wien but accldeatallJ 81211 c rid 11 Pratelllnt dri'h s Wednm1y'1 bllltMnlCk dae "'9 blow "8Jnlt the ltlll'f Uce I 1912 bolnbi• in the DroolliJl' Wil pub ia Bill)ktll), w ·u.iielf I IJ, ~ aa·IQWMMdud~IM Ofl'llM>ot. tlae Irish N'"i11daal'lJWn. tion Anny, daimed .. ,ttp011-.. t11.-.·biU1y for thlnuaet. UibUi1I is the main blM Of. lhi .-;tish army In Northiern lmanct The 1e>ldien were drivi• b9ct IO the iown's T1tievaJ army~ Police •id. =The 8riti1h and Irish 90venunent1 both deplored the killinp. which 1harpened fean that Northern Ire- land is sl.idiq inlO a new c)'de of violence after several yean of' relative calm. Irish Prime Minister Olarlea Hau~ said he condemned the killinp in the strontett terms:• ' Herpes, syphilis sufferers have increased AIDS rlslt ' LAJlEDO. Texas -Members of a conv~ vowed to take their fipt to :'.:Z:.~":Wofticiah~::.~:.=a~r:r~!:i:--Farmers cuttintlbsses as .,.,,..~Pnll ~da)IO WuhiAl'CHI~~ ..,t tbein 8Cl'Oll the street from the White STOCKHOLM. Sweden -People wilh aexually ttansmined diseases . Md bope 10 me them u a na.tional !all)'inl poin! for the majority of cr,appling ;lroug t worsens· such as heq>n, syphilis and chlamydia have an increased risk of contractina Americam wbo oppoee the war 181Jnlt Nicangua,'' said Gerry Condon, a 1 U . AIDS throuah heterosexual contact, an American doctor said today. Prostama national coordinator for the convoy. "We'll probably be there for months." to control AIDS should, therefore, include efforts to combat other aexually DES MOINES, Iowa (AP)-Cattle ed to sometimes desJ)Crite measures transmitted diseasn. said Or. Kina Holmes of the Hatborview Med.ical Center U.S ... ~ll!lllJli cb.ar/dell • daJnst Marcos fanners a~ send int co~ to sla\.l&hter to help rclieye the drought that•s in Seattle. Holmes spoke at the Fourth mtcrnational Conference on AJDS, OI ....... . e· -a• and mowina roidsidc dllchcs to feed prompted widespread water con-acquired immune deficie"9 syndrome ... AIDS JJ"Vention without sexually W ~HINOTON -JustJCC Department officials are reviewing proposed remaining. animals trying to survive scrvacion and threatened farm yields. transmitted-diseaae control 1p a meaninsfuJ way is a blueprint for disaster," he ~nna and fraud c~ against former Philippines President one of the rqjon's worst droughts stndingpriccsz_oominaoncommodi-said. Holmes said that the hiahest increate in risk is associated with diseases Ferdinand Marcos and bis WJfe, law enforcement officials have confirmed. since the Dust Bowl. Crop farmers, ty exchanges. that produce aeniw u1cera. or lesions: The moo important of these in the Prc.cutors are seeki"I approval from their su~on to bring indictments meanwhile. can only wait "We ICt a daily repon (on the United States is ~ · (ollowed by syphilis and chancroid, a becteriaJ llleai111• rackcteef!naconspiracyto loot the Philippincs40venunent over two .. Everybodr. is cullina every cow drouaht) each day and 1 must say infecUon. The lesions produced bY tbaediteateS may allow the AJDS virus to ~ decades and fraud an the way money was concealed behindfalscowDeBhips. that they don t Med. You're-Steins 1 most days since early May anywar, enter tbe bloocbtTCam more easily. Holmes said. lot of older cows going to market," those reports have not been &Ood. ' • SIUYea treaaure sold for ~2.89 mUllon said Malcolm McGrqor, a Nashua Aviculture Secretary Richard Lyng HaltlluJ nrelddeat clillllenda mlU*'-.., 9 farmer and regional vice pres.ident of said today on CBS-TV's 0 This Morn-r· ~· ~.T NEW YORK-Sunken treasure frOm two 17th century Spanish pJleons fetc.bed $2.89 million at a two-day auction, with silver bars selling for about twicetbeirvaJueaspreciousmetaJ. TbeNuestntSenoradeAtocbaanditssister ship, the Santa Marsarita. went down off the Aorida Keys in a 1622 hurricane., ~to th.e bottom booty colJccted from Spain•s New World colonies. Treasure bunter Mel Fisher and his team of divers located and salvqcd the wrecks oftbe two ships. Besides silver coins and bullion ban weighing up to 90 povnds, Wcdnesday•s auction at Ouistie's also featured a silver-tilt rosewater dish that failed to sell during the main session Tueiday night The Spanish Miniltry of Culture claimed the dish. which portra)'$ a Spaniard carrying a spear and blowing a bunting born, for $49,SOO. the National ~ttJemen•s Associa-ing.'' PORT-AU-PRINCE; Haiti-Prelident Leslie Manipt bu rdec:led the tion. Asked iflhe situation was develop-transfersofleVeralhiab-rankinaarmyoftia:n,publiclycba1Jeaaina(orthefint In northeast Iowa Wednesday, ing into a _potential disaster, Lyng time the powerful miliW'y c:ommad that emum1 bis dection. 1be appment yemon Kuh!' wo.rked in his wither-replied: "Emphasizina the word power~~~~ ~· H~ Nunpby, bead of the tbJ'ee.mu ang fields, which yielded 50 bushels of potential, yes, that's correct. The J~ta that ran Hait;a unul MaaJlltldection in Jan=. ordered the tranafmor soxbeans per acre last year. major com belt area, this is the most retiremt:n~ M~t overruled the orders Wecf__y, ~· tboy ~ 'lfwe1et3Sanacrc, we'll be tickled reliable farming area in the world .... is unconstJtuuooal11.DCebe hlldDOC beenc:onsulted. Wednaday · t the Army to.dC!th. 'he said. "We need a week of threatened. It's a serious matter." General Staff~~· utemeat.pleclai• loyaJty.to~t def:ayiaa the ram. But weather forecasters continued transfer orden. It has beell decided lftCr a~ with ... the preadent anCI Elsewhere in the nation's mid-to bear bleak news after a dry winter tbeministerofdefeiise10temoorari1Yputotrtheabovementionedsteps."aaid section and Southeast. fanncrs tum-followed by a parched spring. . the sta1ement. bn:*kut on the private Radio Haiti Inter. Black• call •trike bJ SOatlJ 'Africa Protie targets 'rampant bribefy' in Pentagon JOHANNESBURG -HundRds of thousands of blacks sta~ away ftom wort tOday IO c:ommetncJnik 1be 1976 Soweto riots. An explosion killed one m•. firdM>mbs wounded three othen and a commuter railway was bombed. Many factories shut down1 and the laraest daily ncwtp1pcr for blacks. The Sowetan, did not publish. Woncen at three diamond mines went on strike to demand that June I 6 be desianateid a paid holiday ... The 11 unrest came on the 12th anniversary ofa police attack on nwtbina 1Cho01cbildren in the black township of Soweto. Ten marchers, ineludina two children, died. Their deaths prompted a nationwide rampqe in which hundreds were killed. Com- memorative church services were held in many black townships. Security forces reportedly fired tear ps and bird shot because of stone--tlm>wina th.at ocicumd as blacks left a church service in Lamontville, outside Durban. W ASHJNOTON (AP) -Federal invClfiptOf'S armed with evidence &om two~ worth of wircups and this Mek 1 C09St·to-cout ra.ids are preparing to apProacb witnesses who now may be forced to cooperate with tbe aovemment's massive Penta&on purcbasina fraud probe. The probe has turned up "rampant bribery in tbe aovemment" and includes alkptions of cash pay- ments, purcbuc of can and payments of bills for &0vemment employees.. Seo. John Warner said Wednesday. Government sources familiar with the probe said searches of offices of I S KARATE • Self-c.onfidence • Disdpline • Fun • Knowledge $99.00 - 3 MONTHS BOB WHITE'S KARATE STUDIO U25 Vldada, Salte 8 COiia Mma, CA 92627 645-0337 defense contractors Tuesday stemmed from wiretaps on the offices of two top Pentqon officials. The bup have been in place for much of the two-year investtption. The aovernment 1s now preparing to approach people whose voices are ruordcd on the taps and who arc implicated in possibly illegal acts. said the sources, speakina on con- dition of anonymity. .. They're going to confront them with the tapes and set who they can flip .. into becoming iovcrnment wit- nesses. one source said Wednesday. State court weighs church suit over suicide :Victim killed himself after getting religious counseling LOS ANGELES (AP) -The California Supreme Court. mectin& before an overflow crowd1 hea.rd arguments over whether a church shou)o be sued for the death of a young man who killed himself after receivina religious counselina. received by paston at Grace Community Oiwch of the Valleyemphmzed1uilt1n6tbeneed totum to God, and contn'butcd to their son's death. They also contend that leaders of the Wie fundamen- talist congrcption in Sun Valley shOuld have alerted them to their son•s mental state. The case; with its implications for pastoral counselors everywhere, drew an overflow court.room audience. A separate am was set up with closed-circuit television monitors to accom- modate those who were locked out. Durina the argumen~ Lee sugested the court would be impin&inf on reltf!ous freedoms .auaran· teed by the Constitution af it ruled in favor of allowina the suit. the law. .. This is no new tort;" Barter laid .. We're talkin1about classic ~nee .... Whether you call it maJpractjce or nqli~. they bad a responsi- bility to behave reasonably." Asked by Oiid Justice Malcolm Lucas what the paton should have done, Barker said they sb9u~ have referred Nall)'. to J)!'Ofessional PIY· chiatnc treatment and notified bis parents of his detcrioratioa mental condition. "7be duty wu to behave reaonabty to try to uvc hil life" said Barker, wbo hu ~tcd llae youna man1s parents, Walter and · Nally bf IU~~rban T-uuop. since their IOD committed su1c1de. Edward Barker, a lawyer for the family of Kenneth Nally, said churcb counselon should be held accountable for their role in the death of the 24-ycar-old (onner honor student and hi&h-school baseball star, who killed himself with a shotgun in ------------------------i April 1979. .. Rehpous counselinJ lies ~t at the core of what rcli11on is au about. Lee Slid. Jou Mlc:Aftb• Jr., the puior of Gnce Cl'lurch, Mid oullide the courtroom that ... cue like this shouldn•t even reach the courts." ~ Flo~heim· Imperial Attorney Rex E. Lee, who represents the church. argued that the COW1 would be extcndina ton law 0 to its outer limits" if lawsuits such as the Nallys• SI millio" claim were permitted apinsl pastors. NaJly's percnu conteDd that counselina he He sugested that a ruljnJ for the Nallys would discourqt counselors from 1J vi-.~ritual advice. and deter the des~irina from Meki"'belp tbr fear their confidences WOuld be violaled. But Barker •taued that ~ CCMIAHlan shouJd be held laP!Of'lible fbi tbiir IClioat _., Abo outside the court, Walter N~ voMd to penevere. • "It'• ahnOlt I 0 yant be~ .. but the iaue is so nn_ponua.. ~dme it 1aka ii •amy." fJ • Onnoi CoeM DAILY PtlOT~. June 11, t• CE M . Recovering victim tµrns Sama.ritan . . . Capltal calling; student •1 liTY aouamll ............... Roee_n Sc~enon bu always botn a IPof1S faftltic. Al Tuaain Hip School he was considered 10 be a 1w athlete. He played ttnnis. football, racquetbell, and he snow and water skied. There really wasn't anythint he didn't do._ until 18 months qo. Sevcnon, 48, of Newport Beach, was a participant an the traditional "Ponola Honcback Ride. .. an invita- tion-only event for Oran1e County answers Publicist Who wants to work-for free -=~r:=~="lt fares well Beach does. In f'act. she'sgonc all ~:~~toWa~inaton,D.C.,for at fairs ~n. Pete Wilson announced that Gates, a USC student will work as an intern in hisoffice. She is now working in the pi:ess department for Bill Lavinastone, the senator's press sccreta.ry. She is also keepina busy monitorina Senate floor pm:ieed- inas, draftina press releases, and responding to requests from radio and television stations and news- pa(>Crs. Gates, a communications major, hopes to pursue a career in public relations or broadcast JOUmaHsm after she araduates. She is the dauahter ofMr. ud Mn. Job Gates of'Ncwpon Beach. • • • You've heard the expression By JOYCE BODLOVICB °' .. ..., ........ Jill Uoyd was 9 when her pet rabbit woo first place at the Oranaie County Fair. For Lloyd, the fair'• medta rela- tions and marlcetina supervisor, that poipant memory still ti~ "I lost my mother when I was really youn'-" she said. '-To be a fair exhibitor pve me somethina to hana on to." In an attempt to help her find her indentity, Lloyd, 31, said her father bou&ht a rabbit for her to enter in the fair. 'It wu my first blue ribbon and the b1gest moment in my life, .. she said. businessmen. He mounted his horse and bqan the ride, but before he lnew it, his lqs were cauaht in the honc•s rejps and he was nipped to the around. Severson was comptetely immobile -he had broken his neck. "fortunately there was a doctor on the ride," Severson said.. "He kept me still, and had someone call for a helicopter to lift me to the closest hospital." He was moved to a hQSpital in Mission VieJo. He rememben that he couldn't move anythina below his .. armpits. .. , was told I would be peralyud (or the rest of my life," he saad. :-Dr. Jacque Palmer, neurosurpn at Mission Viejo Community Hospital, operated and fused my neck. I tbtn dcvclopcid pneumonia, ud was led in1ravenously for three ~ks." But Scvcrson's will to ·live wu peat, and he bepn to recover from the internal injuries and pneumonia. When he was finall) strona enouah. bis wife Barbara searched for the best possible facility she could find for physical therap) -1n hopes she'd P'°"' the doctors wro~ .. E"~ th()Ulh it wasn tcon\lenient, eart..ra insisted l ao to Casa Colina Hospital's ln-~tient si>inaJ Cord Injury Rehabilitation Pf'Oll"am in Pomorta, .. be said. --She had done a lot of rcxarch and fdt if I bad a cha~. that was the place to find out. .. After six months in the Casa Colina's proanm, Sc~erson still could not move anythina below bis chest area. Theo he was examined by yet another doctor -Julie Madc>Bki. ~~o _was in J:ha'I' of Spinal cord IRJUOCS ..Up until that time, I bcpn IO wonder 1f they (the docton) wa"C rilbl -that I would never walk .Un,~ Sc\lenon said. "Bui Ot. Mador*• saw a sli&ht mo"ement iD my lOCI. '"SM told me I was what WU termed an ·mcomplete i1Vvry.' .. be said. "She said meuaecs f'rOm lbt brain ~ere manaai111 to It! thrOUilb some pans of the body. -sa.e laid 'I bcht\le ifs possible for you 10 walk apin · (Pleue ... VICTIM/A8) Fitness progra•n ge•red to women BJ KATY BOUCHER °' .............. Trad1t1onally the all-Amencan housewife 1s tbou&ht of as a little plump, "'eanna an apron. and bikini some delectable treat while the chil- dren a~ at school. But since the fitnesscrazt has taken over, more and m~ women in Oranae CooM) an: tu.nuna &o lheir personal wca&ht trainer &o keep their bodies as trim as the tcen-qed 11rls their sons are brinain& home to dinner. Jennifer Miller. 25, of Ncwpon Beach 1s one trainer who is de"otina her hfe to helpina women exercise and diet to a<:comphsh this feat. .. I love the one-on-one relationship with my clients." Miller said '"I can oversee the exercises and make su~ \hey arc do1na them conutly." Chris Sullivan and Lynne Vodra of Newport Beach, both in their 30s, arc two cltent~ who swear by Mmer·s ~~m. Both women say they have rch&Jously work.101 out on the propam for more than five months. my upper body as well as tone." Sulh\lan, who had been in ao auto accident, decided to CIOGlbine work- outs with Miller and Vodra.. "If I find an excercise is too '1rcssful. Jennifer 51_.as an alt.erna-ti\le and it worts just as well." Both women aar'eed that if they bad to ao to a l)'D\. tbey'd probably find ncuxs and eveotuall)' stgp e1Cf'Cil... '"f;Besades bnina the lu.xury of Jennifer eomina to us, it's alto fun wonrna out with a fnend." Sullivan said. "That way we both Jive each other 5upport and .,'On 't be apl to make ex.cu~." Miller says tbr wei&bt trainina aht teaches is mostly pRd to women who just want to tone. .. Most of the women I sec a.re not overwci&ht' -JUSt a little out of shape," Millcrwd ... I mc:asurcthem, cakulate how much 111ux1e and body fat they have, and&<> from thtte. The results llSually S1art &o show in two months How do I know'? The husbands usually tell me! Miller •YI she comes from a Iona hne offitncss fanatatics. Everyone in the family was -and is -involved in some son of cxctcitc. "golden touch." Well recently, 13 local high schools honored a very special student in their communi- ty whose outstandina service to the student body provided a "aolden touch" and made si&nifi- cant contribution to the develop- ment of young people. These annual awards arc the students' opponunity to say 'thank you' for caring. Lloyd says she has never foraotten that eJtperience. Today she is owner of a public relations firm that special- izes in promotina fairs and special even&&. Her client list has included fairs and carnivals throu&hout the state. Besides the Oranae County Fair, her firm represents t6e Sawdust Fcmval, National Oranae Show, San Bernardino County Fair, Farm~ Fair and Los Alamitos Oranae Coun- ty Racina Fair. "I ~ up 1n Fullerton and I was very involved in the Oranae County (Pleue ... PAJR/A8) ........... ~--~ We!Ot trainer Jennlfer'lllller (center) wtth clleDt. Cbrla 8alllftD (left) and Lynne Vodra. • -0nc reason I decided to employ Jennifer's help is because I fell nearly 9 feet off a slu ht\ and wrmcbed my neck.~ Vodrc said ... I bad been aoina to an orthopedic surscon and he recommended Jennifer. who pve me a personalized procram to stf'Cnlthcn Althou&h she claims she does DOt work out wttb her clients. who have arown to mo~ than 30 peopk in the The founh annual Golden Touch Awards were sponsored by officialsat the Assessment and Treatment Services Center (A TSC). It is a private, non-profit Juvenile counselina_propam that has served Orange County for morethan 12years. Dedicated to•• Arrest the Prob- lem, Not the Child,•• A TSC serves as a resource for local police departments and schools by providinaqualified, professional counselina to youths and families. So let's conaratulate local re- cieients; ElalMG ... mu, Wood- bndae Hiah School, Irvine; Brece Sana, Irvine Hiah School, Irvine; Mary AuMabold, New- pon Harbor Hiah School, New- pon Beach; ando.tley Pfaff, of Corona del Mar High School, Coronadel Mar. • • • Tennis anyone? Carol McDould of'Newpon Beach and Louise Smltll of Costa Mesa love to play. As a matter of fact, they · recently won the Jane Hansen Doubles Spring Tennis Tourney. McDonald and Smith played seven doubles opponents and went undefeated. Great wort ladies! The Jane Hansen Tournament is open to all women in Orange County. If interested contact Jane Hansen at 836-0709. • • • And TM.4 ftomp1011ofCorona (Pl-... .. CAPITAL/A8) Bright Beginnings her happy ending BJ JOYCE BODLOVICB °' ............... Betsy Collins story bas a happy endjna. Born in Roanoke, Va., Collins led a fairy tale life. She married a successful corporate uccutive, pve birth to four children and tettled into a comfortable lifestyle. Thou&h Collins was a homemaker by profession she spent many houn in volunteer JObs. Her ability to make people feel comfortable in a new environment was a valuable com- modity. In 1981 lhe family moved to Texas and Collins became acquainted with Welcome Waaon International, an orpnization wbote memben visit new residents and introduce them to local businesses and community ter· vices. The volunteer job evolved into a staff position that culminated in Collins bein& named one of the top sales people for the comeeny. The family moved ap1n in 1914 tt> a specious two-story house in Hunt- initon Beach. And that is when the life Collins had enjoyed for ll yean collaPlcd. "My husband left me," she said. "I had no ,idea the~ was anythjna wrona. wt had what would be considered a close-knit family. I was devastated." Devastated, yes_ but not without an inner st~nath combined with the suppon of her children and fnends who would help her weather the en sis. And as the shock of her divorce eased, Collins evaluated two areas of her life 1n which she had a first-hand understanding. "I was raised an V1ram1a so Southern hospitality runs m my blood," said the attractive 49-ycar- old Collins ... As far as the movma - wcll -my former husband was a corporate IY~Y~ I have moved 20 tJmes in my hfe." In 1986 Collins formed Bn&ht Bcainnmgs, a welcome service tftat benefits new residents and local businesses. With dau&hter Melanie Hodpon, 28. as her panner. and assisted by another dau&htcr Kelly Moses, 27. the home-based busmess now offers its services in Fountain Valley, HuntinJton Beach, Tustin. Fresno and Irvine Collins said five more temtoncs throughout Oranac County will ol>(n this summer. .. When wt first started the com- pany, I worked with one dC1k in the Beby Co.lllna. foa.nder of an,Jat ~ with ber daqbten Kelly lloeee (center) Ud lllelaale JlodC9on. comer ofour fam 1l)' room. A )ear aao we moved to the front room -and now we arc in the dinm1 room. the ..,. •. all over the house." she laughed. ACClOrd1na to Hodgson, whose bacqround is computers and techni- cal writini. and Moses. who created the temtory for the compan) 1n Fresno bcf~ movina back to Hunt- inglon Beach. the trio work well as a family team. "We aet ak>na srat... Hodgson said. .. It doesn•t seem hke .. ork because we have such a good ume.- "h really is my pa test JO) to havt the 11rts wort witb me.... Collins (Pleue ... BJUORT/A6) ~ ... PROOLUl/A8) Camping for teens a 'Y's program BJ U TY IOUCllEJl .............. With the achool year windina up. t~n-qtn a« lookina forward to summer fun. That usually lasts about two weeks until tM first whine 1s heard: "Th~'s noth1na to do ... But pa~nts need not push the panic button The Newport-Mesa YMCA h.as somcthma to offer leen-..ers - all summer Iona. · Staruna July 9. officials at the Y ~111 ktek off lMir main canvan to Lake Pov.ell. Utah. .. The tnp 1s open to all teens qies 14-16. -said PeaY Carlsen. propam d1rtttor ... E,eryonc will «peneftCIC -ma)'be for tht first tame -a chance to rcall) rouah it.·· . Keo McCartney, a volunt.ttr direc- tor who has been 1n cbarae of the caravan for the last four years. wiD lead It aplO "We hope to act at least 1 S adventurous vouth.s to lake on responsibahtan of pitchil'll teats. cook1na meals. startina flTCS, and all it takes to be out in the wikkmeu on your own. -McCanncy laid. And be says Lake PowcU is the (Pleue ... CAllPIJIO/ Aa) Sailing courses b ·eing offered by OCC irr Newport Beach Reaiatralion is under way f'or a variety of Ora.nae Coast Col~ public sailina councs that beain Monday at OCC-s Saihna and Rowina Facility in Newport Balch. The clues will offer blftdl.on instruction 1ritb 80 pcft'lent of class time spent sailint on N~ Harbor or in the <Xe.an. Couf'ICI ranee f'rOm Beai•Di"I ~lit11 in Udo 14 dinahia to Ocean Sailina abOeld OCC".1 aa,.e ocean rac:cn. Mostclaaet meet-.wiekdays from 9 a.m. to I p.m. or ft'om I to~ p.m. Weekend and cvenins duta Abo are available. call 432-SllO b-ftanber infon'nation. • Barbecae l•tlnl bJ Bl Toro .. Craft falr Jn Ca.ta Mesa The monthly Piecemalters Country Craft Fair will be he.Id this wecMnd at the Piecemakers warehouse at 1281 Lopn A~. SuilC A.. in Costa Mesa. Theevat istcheduled to run from 9 a.m. to 5. 30p.m. Sau.udayand lO•oS:lOSuRday.Call 641-3112 for details.. Networkf'W coane •lated Coestli• Community CollclC will present a class citti•led .. Networtias tbr "Fame and Fortune" Monday &om 7 to IO_p.9-L in Room 10 of the Newport Beach Center. JIOI r.anc View Drive in Corona del Mar. SutaA lJaAt a ,_.*6uioas writer, Mil conduct the counc, and die lie ii SIL Call Coastline Community Senica It 241-6116 b ........ $46--7708 for rcscna11ons and d1rect1ons. Sammer program at GWC 'The Golden West Colle&e EAtcndcd ~rtunity Prolnm and Scrvica will off'"er an cilbt·wcdt . '111mmc:r rc:adinm'· prosram. dest&fted for ditad"u......., stv- dcnts. tqinnif\I Monday. To be el~blc for the prosram. a studcftt musi be a biah school junior or tenaor with a year's rcsideocy in Calif'omi.a and must mttt the family income tcvcl established by the statt. Call 89S..S761 for ldd1tiooa.l information.. SHde aho• on •WT1nl ~ Charlotte Clarke. an inslNC10f in tm ~ at Fullerton Coll.qc, Wiii present a slide 1how entitled ""Survi,al .. Monday at the Spon C'hUet. 16242 am& Bl"d., HuntiA&ton Bcllcb. • Tht pnllratn on wildcrnca su.rv1va1ii1ebcdWed b 7:JO p,m. aDd lldmission is lrtt. C.all the Spon,C'hakt at l4i-0981 for ad.dilloaal information We 're looking for good spprts TM Daily Pilot ii iD ...... ia IMriN IMll*lialn ..... ol)'OU M yout,Mflblon. Send U1 a plaow and brief ICCOUal of &he ICICOCllDliab ... t. We wdJI pabMM them m our Oood Sports column, wbfda will ...., la T'ltUI~ Ne~ Focus wtloli. . your conaponde8Ce '° NeilhbofbooJ Focus an eate of lhenuty Pi~ P.O. lox 1560, C.. Mea. 92627. ~AL •• a!f·•.-aa•or.-om.oJT.~.:"" diltinc:tiOa otbci111 named to tbe bonof1 lilt for bia ieoond term ac:ademlclthis'YQr. Besides maintainlna a ~ua av~. nompeoniaanactive mem""ofthe ormeatudont body, pei'fonn1 m. rOck bind. as well as starrina in bOth the fall play and the upcomi~Molier work,•• A Doctor in Spite of Himself.0 And that's not all. In addition, Thompson plays for the Warrior tennis team and studies concert piano. He is the son ofo.nN ~ KaWeea 'hom~ofCorona del Mar, and one of: 160 students attendina the school that promotes stronaacademic cur- riculum with courses that utilize its southwestern location as an .. outdooor laboratory'' for work in archaeology and ae<>IOJY as well as recreational opportunities such as horseback rid.ng and desert and mountain survival. The school enrolls students in grades 9-12. • • • let's welcome Lyue Jolmsoa of Fullerton who has recently joined th~ staff as the new executive director of the New- port-Mesa Girls and Boys Cub. Formerly an executive director for the YWCA in Readina. Pa., Johnson carries a vast amount of management experience into her new position. · Johnson'sinitial plans call for improving the club's facility and incorporating cross--cultural pro- grams within existing member- ship. The purpose for the club is to assist famiUes in the community by providing programs.focusing on the special needs of girls, latch key services for working families, and summer programs. VICTIM HELPS OTHERS ••• 369'5 ~is 17995 5~ Personal cassette records "live" anywhere-in stereo! Built·in speaker. #14·1037 Fast".'Playback Cassette = TX 25% Off 59!! .• Plays back faster, but not higher pitched. #14-1060 a.n.t...9111ra Card-Size FM Stereo -38'4t Off .. ~~ 2795 ....... Aeg.44.15 ~--Heedphol• Ul1a 1A1• thin! With batteries, charger. #12-130 Savel Buy a TMdv1000~ Get • CM-s Color Monitor et No Char9'1 S.V.'299•• 11ggoo 2995 ~~ Pelf "Home-quality" sound for your earl 60 watts ca- pacity per pair. #12-1708 Scientific· Calculator 21!~.95 Cut 37% Perfect for students or eng!-neers. 73 functions. With case. battery. #65-986 Ultrasonic Range-Doubler Motion Alarm Multltester Cut 331Mi fteO. Just plug into AC 51.ts power. 149-303 Contemporary Telephone* 29IMi Off 2495 Reg. 34.15 Battery Bargains I HALF PRICE Cut~..---- A.g. 41.15 Answer-only #43·386 e.ctcup ben«y extra From AS ••That was probably the happiest, but toug,hest. point in my life," he continued. "I started therapy. Very slowly J began to move my legs in a pool. Five hours a day, six days a week. for six months. I l,tadually got better and stron~r. until I was ready for the 'bia time. I could actually walk with a walker. Then two canes, and rm aJad to say I am now down to only one. My goal is to be able to walk without anything but my own two feet." Severson, who co-owns Saddle- back Associates in Santa Ana. an industrial development and property management firm, was so impressed with his treatment that he felt an obliption to help others. "While I was undergoing therapy, thcte we.re many who were improv· in&. but not fully -because they had BRIGHT ••• FromA& · added: The format of the company, ac- cording to Hodgson, is for a represen- tative to visit a new mident and provide, free-of-cost, a packet of community information. like local maps, neighborhood watch pro- grams, chamber of commerce ma- terial. library, police and fire lo- cations. Also included in the briaht yellow tote bag offered to the new- comer are complimentary gjfts, coupons and passes from those busi- nesses which Bright Beginnings rep- resents. "Currently we have 30 businesses," explained HodP>n. "There is only one business in anyaiven subject. It is an effective low-cost marketing tool for local businesses. Rates vary with the size of the company." Martin Blitz. owner of Martinique Hair Boutique in Fountain Valley, is a Bright Beginnings adveniscr. New- comers receive a complimentary haircut from his salon. ··1 think I was one of Betsy's first subscribers," he said. "Because of her I decided to quit advenisina in the throwaways ... my returns from Bright Beainninp far exceed other types ofadvenismg I have done." From pizza coupons to maps of the city, newcomers seem to appreciate the friendliness and professionalism of the welcoming company represen- tative. Cynthia Jarrett and her family recently moved from Irvine to Hunt- inf.ton Beach. 'The information about the city, like a current map and what was here and there was helpful," she said. "It's not that we moved that far, but ifs nice to get inforamtion about a new community." Aocordjna to Collins, the name of her company is a true reflection of what is now a happy endina to her story. · "It was my new stan in life, that is why the name Bright Bea.innings." she said. "Now I want to help other women have the same opponunity to run a successful business." And by the looks of a sleek new Mercedes with its own ear phone perked inside her aarase. j( seems Collins does have the riaht formula. ' run out of time," be said. "You see, most insurance companies will o.nJY pay up to 60 days for treatment. and sdme needed as much as a year to be completely rehabilitated. "They ·WCR leavins -somewhat better, but not their besL I wanted to do something to raise money for people like myself -who were lucky enough to be able to spend the time needed in therapy and come out a 'new person.· " And Severson did just that. He held a luncheon attended by friends and business associates and raised well over $200,000-all donated to set up a s~ial fund for the proaram at Colma. "I'm happy to say I have alreadr, done some fishing and hunting. ' Severson said. "Not bad for someone who thought he'd never walk again." The Raiden are coming Paal -itenre and tbe Raiden wl11 kick off 11 m,bta of entertainment at the <>ranae County fair, performtn.c Jal:y 7 at 7 and 9 p.m. ln the ArllDCton 'theater. . CAMPING PROGRAM ••. From AS . perfect place to go. wasn't any real danger -but the "There really isn•t any place like experience is one no one will forget. thisone,"hesatd. "lknowofaspccial The camarade~ is touchin1 when cove where the water is 85 dqrees -you spend just that shon period of and secluded from all walks oflife." time together, and really feel as if McCanney plans to take a jet ski, yotfre part of a family by workin1and inner tubes, and any other water toy playing toaether." you can think of. Carlsen said the trip costs $200 for All the food is provided by the YMCA members and $225 for non- YMCA, and he says they eat like members -but financial assisance "kings and queens" the whole time. is available. He plans to brin1 his nature books And if that doesn't sound appeal- and teach the teens how to hunt and ins, the YMCA is offerina different track animals and birds that hide in events this summer ,eared to teen- the rocky terrain. agers. "It's the best ex~rience," he said. "We encouraae anyone to join in "You're in the middle of nowhere, the fun," Carlsen said. "The trips are and it really draws everyone on the not only wonhwh1le leamin1 ex- trip close toaether:' periences-but a lot of fun. I'm sure McCanney says one of the best once your teen:-aaer or a friend thincs about the trip as you never ~rticipate, it will take the phrase know what to expect. there's nothing to do,' out of their "Last year we were flushed out by vocabulary for summer entenain- by a flash floOd," he said. ••There ment. • • • • . Retail sales growth slow in May ~ ·---YSts say report should ease fears of Inflationary pressures In the economy tbc sWoUea U.S. lnde ddicit. How.. J)fOdUctioo at tM D1lioe'1 llaariel. 1 e~ Illa iumJ'I al 1.6 pa'Ol8t miAeS ud utililiet roee • modllnlc ia ud 1.r peraetla ~ O.• percen1 in May, '&be ,.w.D tuded conc:c1 a tba& prices ~ me c:omccutiYC month WilbCMn a dediM. .. -... r.auren ~nd it difllcult to r..-.--:·u· .• r ...... _ =--.. med 41anaDd (tom both forip and ~--UK --l A.mcntao couumcn. evi.den« &bat maaufacbnn co.. ti .. f~ll &be Fdlnaary and tia~ IO pod~ more. IDOdl ~ 11 March ~ Mail Illes hive leltled export. Producuoa ofhi•aDaf CICIUIP-u iAlO I CO.foNtile ~po. -This ~t wat putieularty robust. tbe fed 6 thoWd allay fe8n lha& Americana are w~. At put of tbe ~ ~ lad~ in an oro of over-busi~ are pe~ more '° wbicb will make it m~au and ex t.beit fao. " to drive down I.be uade tona. t, icbard W. Rahn, chief · . r. ccooom.ist of the U.S. Chamber of Meanwhile, the Co.auncr"CO &Je. it Commau. ta.id in a sta~meoL panmen~ aid 1 9.1 perceat climb ia ~ Two other ttpOrU illUed Wect.nc. expons 1n the first three moatbt ol day fit tbe patlttD of a shift Crom 1988 from the previous q...w "'• coosumer·led powt ... IO an export· hcl~ sbnnk the men:Uodi• tnde ~ driven economy. deficit by 12. 7 percent to SJS.9 ' Tbe federal ~c Board said biJlion. •• ). ..... --.&.Mita. ~~· ... u + = '- '"" '-... 9 • N y s l r, I 1 '. ' . • 1 :, . ., . . . . '4 ---.-~~ ntllllDAY!8 CLDllll llUCm8 Stock prices decline NEW YORK (AP) -Stock prices took a sl\alp tumble Thursday, mirrorina a pluap in bond prices and cruina pin• in the previous awo sessions that had put the Dow Jones averqe of 30 industrials at a post-crash hiah. The Dow had climbed 32 poinu in the previous two sessions, and anal)"Sts uid there was a natural tendency for some profit-takibl to ICt in. But the day's decline was eucctbated ll;w'ply by disarray in t.he credit markets, which WCR rcactina to an unsubstantiated report in a West Germany newspaper that indicated the central Bundcsbenk m1Jht be tiahtcnina monewy policy. ~ The Treasury'• bellwether 30-year iuue was ofT I¥. Potnts, or more than S 16perS1,000 in face value in late afternoon. WH AT AM EX DID WH ~T NYSE Dio --- 1·~ -1: 1 NEW Y~I( (AP) Jun 16 . l , ==' 1~· AM EX LEADERS NYSE LEADER S -- ' .. : GoLo QuoTE s Dow JoNlS AvER~GES M u~Ls Quons NASDAQ SUMMARY Cool &Dd Ca1aal for· 8aaaer #118 lllhiOa llltnd • Newpon Beacla • 711-1822 • earn under stees me time unee cap HunU.... .. :..':~ Dislricl uu11 ... demon- tuasecl die uldmll ~--ledneM and political eowarclice y n .. t after demotint two IChool IClminisuaton - a prinapal and an aaastant principal. A croWd of ra~ll who attended the meeti~ to defend the prind lhOuld have been enouaJl of a poliucal problem for any e ofllcial, but trulteel stumbled deeper anto contro~ny when tMy tried to tiptoe around their responsibility to •Y wbal they did durina their closed-door Jellion. y,.._ Nftaecl to identify the two employees ncept tiy their SOcW security .....-n to~ the eQlpk>yees' privacy. That convoluted lolic and bizarre decision thoUld earn ttie U'UlteCI a boDiebeid award. Palaas wllo aucaded die ~ ~ knew the identity of the priad.,.a. aDd witlt 1 littleeft'ort frOm the press both names have been published..,..._ of the tr"Ulleel' attempted feint, the)' can't hide tl9e ,Mlentitia of employees who are demoted fiom superv~ positions to cllwoom teaehen. .. Even if we could accept the trustees' excuse that they were tryin& to protect the employees• privacy, its hard to believe they are so naive that they don'tbow.ijlit a Social Security- numbCr is one oftbe keys that Unlocks information banks. Profeuor Alfred Louch, who heads the Humanities Commission at Oaremont Collqe and is an npert on privacy and information ptberinJ. describes it belt. He .. ,,. that making a person's Social Security number public is the most fundamental type of invasion Of privacy. It i1 itrle universal code and access number to ,et all types of penonaJ • information including mediCal records. bankina and financial records. Simply put, it is one of the most revealina tbinp about a ~non that can be releaacd. Social Security Administration officials say the Privacy Act ban them from releasins numbers or matcbinaa penon's name to a Social Security number unfess they bave written permission. But that•s not the case with everyone who deals with information. · If protectina tbe two school emplolyees• ri&ht to privacy wu the reaiireuon for the boanf s bizarre action. they should don-dunce caps and sit in the back of the classroomt The trustees' demonstration of political cowardice however won't wash away as easily. Their leadership role was diminished because they tried to tiptoe around the action they had taken. The real test trustees had to arapple with was whether they bad the political backbone to set policy for the district and explain their action in the liaht of public scrutiny -+ or play pmes and try to tiptoe around the issue. N~-Mesa School District tlUS1eel recently had to face a aimalar test. Th~ transferred two hiab school principals and faced the music. Tbcy explained what they had done and why to ln&fY peRntl and students. M&:~Y people were not happy witb tbe decision. There wu even talk of a R'JCalt, but it died wbeD tbe COOU'O~ died. · Unfortunately, Hunungton Beach City School District trustees were not payina attention because when it was time for them to take their tat Tuesday niaht they failed. Auburn Dam The State Water Relourcca Control Board's proposed cndonementofthe East Bay Municipal Utility District's bid to tap into tbe Ameiican Raver is a bitter blow to the entire community o( Slcramento and ib pros~ for the future. That makes it doubly puzzJina that Assemblyman Tim Leslie and some of the other \;aC:ken of a hi&h dam at Auburn are hailina this decision as a booit for thefr cause. l..Cslie and Ilia cohorts have it beckWara Why would Secramentus want to tu themselves for hundmls of millions of dollan to build a multipurpoee project at Auburn that they don't need just to make it easier for EBMUD to drain the American? If anytbina, the state bo&td's decision just provides another remindct of why the Auburn project was a bid idea from the outset. Killins it is the oruy sure way to remove the tbreat that EBMUD JK*1 for OW' water supply ... There is a simDler tolution. Tbccomprehemive plan that ~ Vic :'Fazio, Robert Ma1IUi *a bolt of ocher loCaf eleictecl 08lciUa propoeed eUlier diia ~ fbt meetina Siaamento'I needl for ftoOd control and waler aupPty called ~.Wly for Conpes1 to revoke the autboriauon for the hiab dam at AubUm and the Foho~th Canal on<:e and for all. The water board's most recent folly undencora the im~ of takina that step now. ~-- School takeover . ™. undertina cause o( .Jeney City's education ampovmlhmenc. In a word: polaucs. ... The victims of the pOliticizatioD of~ City'a IChools are; of course, the Childim. 8' pertent Of ti.em black or H" ic. Only one in four of them is able eo ~ •. basic cumi•tion. com~ with IO ~t of studinll ~ut the state. · · It ii no ..o.cler that Ihde leamina occun in a system 10 a..v_t1.1 inkted·by boll politics. - UIMler the ref'onn law dlamoioned by ReputJticaa OOv. Thomll H. ~ ahe stacf Wid biVe fie.>'ln to tet the l)'l1em ~ -mi111 tJaa& ua · .alteovcr IWVivet IClll challeftlt in lh8 ftna ~. · HOw mudl dle1&atecaa ~ ildebialblr. but ifh at lall CM free IDCal educlUon Diii q meat hilt the pliil~ftl sriP of local CIOll=· it wll hllve helped • •••(Ya.)ftc•Dl .. 1M To the Editor: Pm*nt Rcapn hat tried • Amll'lk since earty in hislnl...,.._.i. spiacofCon~s ~­policy. He has Jried IO 111!1 .._. appropriations for ~mva ii ., budact every ycu from "'S.• includina the proooted •• This is in spite of Amtrak'• improvina financial pcrlwm I I Amtrak"s rivenue-to-alll nMo ... improvtd rrom ~ pcftleGt ie .... year 1981 , to 6S perc:cat in Id Jl!I!' 1987, and federal fundi• for A.,.. dccrcaJed from $89' milliOe ila IMI •• to SS8l million in ltllt ..u.....-a president uys the Rapa,.....• eliminate federal fundi• fdr Allltnk would put it out ofbuti..... .. hi spite of frequeaa •• •••• tlif the Rcapn Admiaill...,, IO tbc effect that "nobody u.e • llni-. .. the passenaer-milet fttuN b' Amtrak' in fiscal )'eat 1987 iw a d for IM fifth conteeutive year IO S.121 biUioa. Over 20 million .... ._. per )'W' a~ carried by Amtrak. These~~ would be even bettcf if A.mink Md .. the capital f undi• needOd for aew"' equipment. bccaUIC their trai• me' frequently sold-out and t.hp_utendl ol pauenacrs must be turnt'it away .a~ peak tra vcl periods. -c1rcus in_ flie :II_ ssembl·y""----~i\~~i:.~if~:. profitable any more than aim..: • tt:l i ~ 1 · wouldbcprofi&ableiftheybadz=: se es n .1or a ongrun ~l~~;~~!~~:-eoi SACRAMENTO -Late Tuesday afternoon, a handful of stale senators wandered into the Assembly chambers. Theyume towatcb the cim1s: The Assembly, beset by partisan and factional infiahtin,a. de&encraled even further into polittc:al anarchy. The death of Oranac County Re- publican Assemblyman Richard Lona.shore last week may have saved Speaker Willie Brown from beina ousted, but it also created a &ituation in which none of the contendin& factfons could mustcr a ~rity to do anythina of substance. At most the 3S remairuna Re- ~ublicans and the so-called .. Oana of Five" Democratic rebels constitute a sometime bk>c of 40. but that was one short of the 41 l'eQufred to move bills or prevail on pioccdural motions. Speaker Brown could muaer only 39 v*s from Democratic loyalists, some of whom deserted ship when circumstances dic1aled. ~ This chaotic situation manifested itself on several issues.. includin& a nasty little squabble over an AIDS bill, but was most evident when the statt budact came up. The Assembly was supposed to deal with the slate budFt on Tues- day. Earlier in the day,· Speaker Brown bad sa1d he wanted to move on the spendin& plan so that it could reach Gov. Georac Deukmejian's desk by June 30. the last day of the current fiscal year. But Brown was faced with a scnous split within his own caucus. even discountina the Gana of Five. True- blue liberals. who have been dubbed the "Grizzly Bean, .. want to hold up action on the budset. which is out of balance by more than a billion dollars, in hopes of (orcina Deu- kmejian to qree to some tax in- creases. Deukmejian, who proposed tax increases to balance the budact and then withdrew them 1n a huff after rettivina flak from fcnow Re- publicans md 10mc un.-anted media attention, insists that he won't back down from bis current no-new-taxes stance. Brown says he believes the aov- emor is adamant and wants to move a budset that's balanced w1tbout taxes by makina spendina cuts. ehminatina the bud~ . ~rve, and adol?linl mOre->OP.llmlStlC ~venue pTOJectlODS. The hbcrals, led by Assembly Wayi and Means Committee Chairman John Vuconctllos. want to sit on the b~t in hopes of forcing Deu- kme,,ian to ,witch positions apm on new taxes. The speaker"s plans. how\'er, were dashed when Republicans and the P"I pushed throuah a floOr amend- ment that imposes tiaht restrictions on abOrtions ~ with Slate Mech-Ca.I funds. That alienaacd some additional liberals. and afterco&lntina D09CS. Brown concluded that the budset was blocked. Republicans made a pro forma attempt to unblock ad1fTercnt version of the budiet, but that effort, too. failed. The sk1rm1shm1 revealed that there arc at least four distinct factions now jousting for dominance: Re- publicans, the Gan' of Five. Demo- crats loyal to Brown s kadersb1p. and the liberal Grinly Bears who support Brown as spca~r but pan company with him on specific issues. mcludma the budaet. And there's at least one m1nonty faction of Republican1. dubbed the .. Maanificent Seven," which was quiet Tuesday but occasionally dem- onstrates its tndq)cncknce. In effect. the Assembly is opcratint on the parliamentary model. an which DAN WALTERS many minority factionsctea&e instant coalitions on specific issoes but none dominates the house. Ifs a chaotic situation at best, and one unlikely to chantie soon. The aovemor is tryina to recover his dominant role vis-a-vis the Lcsi., lature on the b&lidFt aftcrsu&riQa the embarrassment.ofhis ftip-flopoa new taxes. His current pollute, enundaaed durina a ~ contc:reftcc lut week. ii that lhe Leaislaturc is boldil!I , up action and · !Ut he lli9dl taidy: 10 make •ha&e~ ipeadi111 ans arc nttded to produce a .... .ced l*dFt without new toes. It's a tactic that•s worked well for Dcukmcjian in the_past -bl.lmift& the lqi.slaturc for blint intransipL V asconellos and other liberals arc attemptina to tum the tables. llCCUl- in& Deuimejian of being .. pre-. eminently irrnpons1ble-by refusina to entertain new revenues. But they sjmply cannot command the media attention that the aovcmor does. nor can they arpc cff'tttively with the law, which rcquu:ea ~ lqislature to produce a budget by Wtdnesday -a deadline It almost oertaii\ly will miss. Brown, meanwhile, has been weak- ened by the Gana of Five revolt.. and ttitheT can he move his house &Jona anb.':th wtth certainty. Wahen b a t)'IMIJalet ~...-.•Secnmeate. ., Council couldJJ 't get flrewor~s b1111. pBstHarl:JOr View students It took a class offifth .,..cie students from Harbor View Elementary to talk common sense to the Newport Beach Ci~ Council. Tbe council nccdcd it The council had decided 10 ban the city's last rernainina Founh of July fireWorks shows. Both oftbem. The aamic behind the decisioG. if it can be calkd loik; was rooced in the fear that tM _..OWi would a.use traftic problems. People puaina throuth the city would 1ce the ftrtWoi'ts. euJ! over roads. In l 91S the rOld nnwcwt> received Sl•.7 billion in tu m~ -in addition to what bilbway-uten paid.. From 198) to J981 the airny ... S)'stem received S 11 billion in fcdcnl tax money -in eddition-to llirftr' user-payments. So we cannot expect a rail passenacr network to cover its costs rrom commcrcia.I ttvcnaes alone. when other forms of transpoc- latioo do not. No poup would buy A.Qittak for the purpose or providint train ter· vice, but rather for the pwpo1e of - junkini the railroads (an eaential national asset) and devtlopift& the real estate for other utn. Tbis muit not be allowed to happen. ' lnteremd persons should ask their lcaislators to make sure that Amuak tteeivn adecau11e f&mdina few fitCll )al I 919afti ~ 1ncf to P"C•at lbt .. pri~atization-of Amtrak. whida wouJd--ithout aa1 dou~ iD Amtrak •• cbttuc1IOll. could alto help by joiai• dlr · AaociaUOft of Railrwt Pa Ill l\Ul!ft. 236 Mu11duisctlS Ave .. N.£.. s.iec 603, WUhirwton, D.C. 20002; ~ ii -otkiaa to retain and e'pend nil passcaier ltf'Vice. JOHN J. BOWMAN JR. Lancaster. PL Roos review was off.base To the Ed1tor: So John Roos thouabt that the PCffonnanc.c of Sled Poe at ·the l>acific Amphitheatre would "llaab the late Bob Marley P'Oud.. .. I doa't think so: Steel Pul.c performed chat niJbt ..-ithout David kinds. tbe IMd sin&CT. His absmcc MS iflCl'dY COV• cm! up by overly kNd and out ol place instrumentation. It WM dae worst profcssiC?nal ocriorma.oe I have ever cxpcnencecl rve heard of ··dry-labi•a .. chemistry rcpona, but coaccrt ,.. View\~ THOMAS A BUTTERWORTH ... ...... Airport termtila.I To the Editor. lt seems absurd t.tiat 1bt new terminal It John Wayne Airpan will ~over 390.000squarc feec(•ftJ a rtlld in1our~). That amounts to l.9S32 lllClll und~r roof. Ot. a buUdi• 614.'° 111111 • :~· Tbeft att oal,y il:h ai'l*tl DAN MELAJlUY c~w.. ---..... :.w-· .. za•. ·-· _. YOURSELF TWIN CAL W•IGHT LOSS " 66 GRAND CIMltDDIUE .......... J Oft 2 Scl'MM> 1 j :IO 11:90 2 tf0f:10 ,,,. 1 1307:001100 t :SO 10:10 ·No.,._ •IMIDMRTlllllll Oft 2 k,.. ... , 11:so u :3cr2:11 s 111 ,,,. ,,,, 7:'5 1 111 t 141 10:25 E.C'llfAROS ORIGl~A, CI NEMA '1ar t>or ·Ad•"'• ~-)1(}2 CINEMA CENTER li•rbor-Ad1m1 Q79-4141 1 •· . .. ' .... ~' ' ... • • ~ . -4 l \ t ~,,., Ul1-I A Mn(N)t·lt·IOlO ..... ....,,.<"> ,__ I-TUCI DGlJY S1111.0 5:1S.7:15-tJS.ll:l5 ) ll>Pas l:IM:IS..ll:lS.ll:H SLAM!" -0..... ....... IOUllG Sl"OllllllM '°" ...an.a.MCI" (N) . ••f:.W'llOOM-•TRUCK"( PQ) 7:45 ....U. DURHAM" (R) m.COSTID 1:6t.tl-ll:.tl ...0" (PG) 11>,ASSlS 5:4S.L•lt:15 "twmOr(R) m.uro SHI.LOii 7:15-,..ll HUNTINGT ON TW IN S.ec.h ... ,,., ~ ().;M lllllmt.a "9f0 .., ....... (PO) ..,,mo Ut·tJl.ltlS ... ·-. (11'4fll.IA '1'¥f ,• 'WA 11 r-I #'I , '.. .. 1• ~' ~ 4' ..... G•N• .. AL .... ADM18810N a.so "CROCODIL.a DUM:»RI r (N)ll>HSE l :IS.1:4S.11:51 "WU.~.JN> , ... 4:45-7:Jl. ll:.tl 1IG ......... (l'Q) II> PASE 11:15-l:tl l:tf.S:tl-7 .. ttf.11:45 ~~) 12:09-f:JD.S:tf. Ut-10:11 "91G" (PG) ..,,.., ll:IS.l:IS.l:lt·5:4s-a:t0-l0:15 .. POl.TaRGlllTr (P011)TU.~ lf:4$.U~:4M:4S.l.;tS.1t.J5 '1IAmO r (R) STl.ll11D STll.LOlf l*'llS.S:lt-761 .. blonde fellow employee idoliled IO mucb by Seymour &Ml be DllDll tM plantafterller • .-ve11-1itheeded j~ tbm Oroee. SomewMrt in.._, llhri ,. ique is a Judy Oartand tryias to tet out, 11 evideDced by tbe power aDd raqe of her vocalizina. . J~ Cardinale splendidly enacts the puff florist wbo ~ .... -Oft Audrey ll'adrawint pc>wer, while Jd'f' Etjen tam on not only the lhowy role of the sadistic: dentist. but a plethora of other walk-on usipmcnu in a slam-bana performance that throws subtlety to the winds. The street sinaers -Donna Kay, Lita Oaithers and Sandy Terry -are deli&htfully funky. · But the real star of the show is Audrey II, the plant that arows in four stages as its lust for human sustenance increases. Dino Palazzi operates the monster from the inside, while Richard K.lebCr provides the growhna. window-shatteri"I voice that demands .. Feed me!" at all-too- frcqucnt intervals. The Howard Ashman/Alan Menken score won't sell many IJ r Atf •, f, l ~ ,, F ~A ( .,, • , t •• r .... .., ~, 0 li ---~1·P' rf•,-., ... ·.· .~ ~ -.~~ ------- SADDl EflVI<: r1Nf a.AA (' :. ; ... , f " :i . • ~ r • I f ' ><' .d~l ....,. ............ ~,. ... '#-.. ",. .. ,..,...., fAMr (l'Q) allfCla S:IS. l:Jl.t.45 PitESIDIO ...,. __ ,_ ... ... '°"° _. ...... .- DANAYKROYD JOHN CANDY A wm • 111 WOODS wnH•JtMmOIT: 1115 IS fl) HOtlDIY". 1HISISYlll . Giirr .......... -... --····· .. . ....... ,__ ... ..., ----NlWD di.,..._ .............. ~­-----·---....... ................. ----,.,.r..-=.- ~ -.. ll'.l'U\w 8ATOaY '"' ... ..., ... 1Mllft-11n a.ft-_,, I·-fttl .... 1110• ................ Ber marriage in the freezer DEAR ANN LANDERS: Two ~ teD I married 1 maa I really loved. We wmt tcJ9ethri for four ye911 ud bed trcaC •f\an. His percnts adored •c:J patenCI ~tcd bim. Mom and both told me that they doubled bis ability to tustain 1 lovina relationship, I~ have listened. What was once a warm ud intimate love affair has become 1 cold war. There is no to•r any hwna. cuddlina or kissana. u We never talk about the intercstina thi"J.lthlthlppendurinstheday. We don t 111ue. playfully, about politics anymore. He never calls me at work to Sly, .. Hi. I'm thinkina about you." I still try to do these thinp, but he hu star1ed to ipore me. Ann, it brew my heart to admit this. but be tums his beck whcil I'm talk1n1 to BJ CllARLES GOREN u4 OMAR SHARJF North-SOUth vulnerable. South deala. NORTH • AQ762 'V 7 5 ¢ A 1' Q It' •• war EAST • , •• '. • I( 5 'V ' 'V J(J42 ¢JS <> 17641 ••A I It ' 4 2 • Q 7 SOUTH •• 3 'V A Q It I 6 3 ¢ 3 • & '5 3 1be btddina: S..6 W• Norda EM1 J 'V .... 4 'V ... ... .... him. Two day' qo. I wrote him a 1o;. paae letter about m)' feetinp of frustration I beaed him to consider marriage counseling, In the &ast paraira_pb, I said. "My heart is so heavy with sadness at what we have bcrome. Don't you miss the love we shared when we fitst married? The closeness we felt when we dated? Let's go to see a priest together, or perhaps a marriage counselor. We must tum tlus around before ifs too late." He Openina lead: Jack or 0 We came across this rather amus- ina band wblle indu1sinl in our fa- vorite putime-a pme of rubber bridac It the club. It provides DO major 1eaoD except that, when you know where you want to play the band. set there u cxpeditioualy u pouible. North-South wen ulins weak tw<>-blck. North wu full value for bis jump to pme. An dabt-ard flt is the required minimum for play at a suit contrKt, and North knew that one Cltisted. At this vulnerability. South hlld to bave a reuoaable &b- eard IUit for bil wat two-bid, ao a low doubleton WU adcqualc sup- port. And North certainly hlld tbc hiab-<ard values on the aide to com. pen.sate for any trump spulity. Wat's opeDiq ctiammd s.d WU won in dummy. and a dub wu led to the queen. tina and ace. Wat did ooc mpond. Ann, I love this man and want desperately to have his chiJdma. I don't want our maniaee to end, but J just can't stand his coldness. He aecms to enjoy me when we are with friends and family, but he rebuffs me when we are alone. Have ~ ever heard of anvthing like this? What should I do1 -TEARDROPS IN SHREVEPORT. DEAR SllllEVEPOllT: OMi••IJ .................. rwtn ... ,.. aee4 .. ..-,.WMI .. , ..... poulbWtlet w.,." eiplerills (I) B• .. afraY ., •tlJUCJ ..... .,,... fit •cuce klmtdt ., <!> ...,.. It ... tkrw•mu. J•t CMUeUa1 w..W be Weal. U Ile refues, 1• aleee. Y .. are ..re a. p1a some laslpL shifted to the jack of •J*la. takm by the ace. Declarer dixarded a aJ*ie on the ace of d iamonds, ruffed a apllde. fdlina the ldq in the proceu. and then ruffed a dub on the table. · The queen of al*iea wu ruffed by P.ut and overruffed by declarer. and MOCha club WU rutted. But ovemaffed with the jack Md lbftt.d bed: to • diamond, ruffed by • darer with the ten. Now decJarer cubed the ace of bearU and exited with the queen. P.ut woo the ldna. but be WU down to only two dia- monds. His forced diamoGd return pvc declarer accaa to the baud's bish diamoDda wbida be c:oWd not ac:bie¥c oa bis own, and which pro- vided a pa.rkina spot for South's Lut club. In all, declarer sc:ored five trump tricU in band and a club ruff in dummy. three diamonds and the ace of spades. SCBWARZl!NEGGER . _.,_1nc•c•n1nmmr•.ra1•Y•tm1111Sf . -r ...... --= ... ,, ------..... .. -= ..... :..U c. ••• I 1 &, .... ==--. ... , 0 =· ... , ;;= ... &---·-----· • Colftlll1 .. ,........_ letlng9 In...,_,.. TV Plil How to map your future plans Our Love and War man's advice to the )oung and the restless: Dtv1dc whatever you want to do into two catesorics: I. Things eas1cr lo get into than out of -boot camp. mamagc. debt, parenthood. J&il. 2. Things easier to F.' out of than into - collqe, brick laying. Congress. tele- vision. West PoinL Then consider your next move. Q. What was the first company to advcrtix 011 book ma1Cbcs? A Pabst. Only two years after Joshua Pusey invented the matchbook. A salesman of same named Henry C. Traute cut that ong1nal deal For I 0 million matchbooks. Some da} ·s work. Q. What son of hen lays elastic cgs? A.. No hen. Turtles la) elastic~ A snappina tunic's eggs bounce . London is sinluna. But slowl). LM. Ban man, known in his tin pot hat and coffee sack sbin • Jobnny Ap- pleseed. paucd out free Bibles. Tea rosesdon•t smell like tea. They smell like oms root. But the firsts~ shipped from Cb1na smelled like ta by the time they got to Europe. "I'M}· made the trip in tea-trade ships -Q. Ask )ouraotfpro ho.., fast 1s the head of a dnvcr movina when ll hits the golf ball'> ~.Maybe 100 mph. Would you pay to read news sheets posted on bulletin boards? Early V enctWlS dtd. The sheets were called Notiztc Scnttc. The Jl9)meot coin •-as cailcd a Gauna. That wou.od up in our language as Gazette. The MSwiss" an Swiss chccsc 1s in the public domain Like cellophane and aspinn. c~ so called can be made an:r,,•herc ChCCK labeled -swnzcrland Ch~ .. has to be made m Switzerland. ho~t"vcr. Very slowly ACROSS a 1 Nleg8ta. etc S3 Towwd &illt~ Long before Gideons. John Chap- NOW PLAYING .... __ ,,_ ---._... --· .._, .,. ....,.. ---·-·--·-.... -----_.,_ ··-,,.., __ ·--•u.-•n-111-_,IA_ --'-..... --..... -·---___ , ____ _ ·---.. ------.. ----- WWJWIM ---·-!~I 2 65 FNlt decay 16 - -recx><d 87 Old ewd M Bronte woman 98 AlowllllCe DOWN 1 OV'9' wetgtlt 2~ 3 BeMd 'Not as Nltd 5 Urchin e Corp. symbols 7 Ta.st IPfMd • Per19ct pne ... tCNI 10 ScooCs 11 AmGon QM8CMl1 12 Brigflt 13~ 19 w.-orct.ed 24 s-...ns 2t Ktnd ot btrd 21 Vigor 30 Sn\911 dog 31 Ctu'c:tl .,.. S2 H6gl'IW9y .,~ 33Mle~ 34 Sd:• S5 - -. Soerle I 37 Lucitef 38 Innate '° Be~ted ,, Doct!1ne 46 Serft •e He9ht1y 49 Safi hat 50 Impertinent look• s 1 a 52 Oul ftniah 53 F~ 80UrClll 5' ...... 55 -IMI 5e P9ffurne: 118' 57 CountermenO se eon.: sw'9f. 82 HoM9t - 10 11 12 13 . . bY Bii Keane ... I'm NOT crying I My eyes are just sweating 1· by Brad Anderson 11' TD BLSACD88' by Steve Moore .,-=. <( )\ -f _ . . ':It.. •n..-r....-:--"* ~ ~" f_ .,~,~ 1·, \~ - i f_ ·~ ~ f':_ 1..14 DEIUOS TBB llBNACE by Hank Ketcham m ~ FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSB ti '-•,, f r "I had this great dream where I told him to do·somethlng and he Jiu It!" PEAl'fUTS I CAME ALL T~E WAY OUT ~ERE TO MELP '<OU SELL SOUVENIRS AT T~E OLYMPIC 6AME5 .. I CAME 6ECAUSE YOU'RE MV &ROTHER ..• ~~.«~f "-~~-w GARFIELD TUllBLEWEEDS Mo, l'vE HfVER /lfNlO OF A DIET WHERE YOU CAN EAT EVERYr,..tNG 8UT CARRJTS ! NOW '<OU SAV T~AT A CACTUS TOLD '<OU TME 6AMES MAVE 8EEN MDVEP , FROM K~EA TO NEEDLES?! WHY AM l AF'RAIP TO APMIT TWA'T ('M A(11NC:J? by Charles M. Schulz I CAN UNDERSTANV TALKIN6TOA CACTUS. 8tJT Ll5TE~IN6 ?~ ANP WHY ARE TORKf t,.t &oZZAAP!> CIRC.LINC$ Mt.I BEP? by Tom K. Ryan SHOE . JUDGE PARKER WHAl'5 WRO~~ 11 i.OOf(5 ANElO ME! DOONESBURY by Garry Trudeau by Lynn Johnston by Jeff MacNelly ' I I) ~ by Harold Le Ooux PL.EASE, MAKE YOUR· SELVES COMFORTABLE by Tom Batluk . .................. _ .. ,,. ................ ............. _..... . -'-te ..... '-....... _. ....... 'YOUe91fll•......,.. -~ .... ,.,.... ........... I T I c l I A I ,..._..,...... -." .ll'ltl_ 1 EJKRY I .__._I ~I' ...... I ...... I....., i Au y t E 'I. I .. r I I r I•~:--~~ _.._ ......... ii ... ! 'b!t#.;au"'" .. I' r r t r r I ! ~'4tm' 'www I I I I I I I r-'~!?f:-9r:~!·J .... ·-·- • .. --. .... ,,. Quisenberry 16oksfortham Lt e In eep-freeze o Royals' bullpen t roubles former Costa Mesa, OCC star •1 IUCllABD DUNN ........ Oc:uu s t rt Even the peerless Dan Quisenber- ry, like the (all ofan empire, can find humiliation in major I~ bucbllt. .. I'm a nothina." Quasenbcriy re- cently admitted when the Kansas City Royals visited Anaheim Stadium. To hear the Quiz. perhaps the most unique relief pitcher in the past decade with his quotable personality and submarine-style delivery, say he's "nothina... well, that puts a sizable damper on the multi-milhon dollar contract he has which runs throuih 199 l. "I hke my life," said Quisenberry. who pitched forOranaeCoastCollqe in 1972-73 after paduatina from Costa Mesa HiJ.h. "But pro- fessionally, I don't hke my life at all. I wish (the Royals) would release me if they're going to it this way. the nasty sinker. the one who in 1914 became the first major &easuer in history to record back-te>-beck 4(). save seasons, 1s down. Way down. lnterestin1ly. Quisenberry. the most ~ominanng relief pitcber in the Ammcan l..qgue from 1980 to J 91S, appears to be getuna pushed out the door by the Kansas Cit)' front office. It's not that he can·1 pitch anymore. It's not that he hasn't been effective. Frankly. he doesn't know what it is. "If you talk about this year, you ha\'.e to talk about last year," said Quisenberry ... Last yearl was4-l and pit~hed well 99 percent of the time by the all-star break. Then after the atf- star break. I didn't pitch. I've l\ad many discussions with my manqcr and coaches, and all I knew was that I wasn't ao1ng to be the cuy." Dan Qa.IMnbeny (19715) the scenario when we won pennants. ~ . before that ume. ~ "I find ltJUSl a lh&me tblt rm• pitchina." he said. '1bis ~ r. been in two save situations and tbNI close pmes. I haven't pitdled rwllJ at all .. Quisenberry, •bo bad 237 c:m'tllF saves enterina this ICUOft, fiye Ii-. has either tied or led the Americm Leuuc in saves. "[ want to be traded or re'e111ill because I'm oot doiris wltat I Wll told," said Quaz. ... \Old 1beln tWf weren't acnana anythint for tbdW money. c "I'm anxious to pileh. I'll tr)' and hook on next year with t0me~ else. But I was to&d the club will ~· rekax me. They don't wul me to wO' to a_notber team and ~ paid by tbi- Royals, because I have that lon&-tmft contract. "J don't think. I'm toina to be ablt to fi1ure it out. I've pitched a lot Oii every club I've been on. The ontY time I've ever stf'Ullled is whcn _1il haven't pitched very much. rm uM. to throwina over 100 inmnp evetf year." "I'm obviously happy with my contract, I just wish part of it included plaJina." Quiscnbeny is stuck.Jn what the e_la~rs call the deep-freeze. Yes. the Quit used to be the bullpen force behind Kansas City's consistent division-winnina ball clubs. In other words, somebody else was going to be the short man in relief. Somebody else was aoing to be called upon in save s11ua11ons. Not Quisenberry. .. ljust didn't pi_tch in the second halrlast year," he continued. .. In the second half. I was non-existent The manaaer (the latc Dick Howser at the time) said in spring training that I would have plenty of chances.. I did cverythinf I thought I had to do. I was told that 'd get the job back, that I was going to be the short guy day-in and day-out. .. Every manqcr said I was IO'f\I to stick and it did~t happen. So I can't believe that I'm going to pitch a lot here.~ Current KC manager John Wathan took over last Au&. l7. The Quiz remained buried in the bullpen. "I told them I wanted to be trldcd or released. but they don't want to have to pay me (over $2 million a year) and have me play for somebody else," said Quisenberry Quilellberry went 9--9 and 6-6 in his two lears at Oraf\IC Coast. compiliail' ~ a t . 8 earned run aveflllle and 161 ~ strikeouts in 2S4Y, ~ "" .......... ,..--_ He captured the attention of tbt Royals followina an outstandiQI ~ ICSJatc career at La Verne Collete ia: t 974 and l 97S. ... 0.-, ..................... . Dua QalMDbeny lan't too ba~ wltll lala role In tile Ropla' ballpen tJala ..-on. wbere Ile •fallen to tbe deep-f~. "Used to be. -1 don't believe I'm aoina to be m this situation throu&h 1990, •• said Quisenberry. "My motivation is to be ready for my next change in uniform because I don't believe it's 1oina to change here." So the man from down under. with "When Dick Howser was sick.. Mike Ferraro took over and he said that I'd att the ball because that was ... Quisenberry, who was the first pitcher to ever win five Fireman-of- the-Yev awards 1ncludln1 four con- secutive honors. posted only one save last )Ur after June 6. He bad seven Qwsenberry led all oolle9e pilCMj~ (NCAA and NAIA) with I~ wi!l~ (Jt deasions) in 197S, lcadina La V~ to a third-place finish in the NAt World Series. He said he chanaed hia pitchiftf motion from oveNhe-top tO. submarine after throwina 194 inn .. <"'--... 8UJS&J'Mlt•T fll'J BuiCe's free pass~s in 10th pave way for Ranger& Three-run rally supports Russell's stellar outing, 6-3 BJ BICllARD DUNN ~ .... c.. ' fl 1 Tbey have tried almost every conceivable approKh to loee sames this season, but the AftFls may have tori, another low Wednesday n· l is time h was aood old-fashion-ed bases-on-balls, specifically two by DeWayne Buice in the 10th innina. It Tile sclJedale NOMa Todav-Teites, 1:05 p.m. AWAY June 17--KenMls Cllv. 5:35 p.m. • June 11---f(ensas Cftv, S.-OS P.m. • June 1~Kensas City, 11:35 p.m. June 20-Mlnnesote, 5:05 p.m. June 21-Mlnnnote, 5:05 p.m. • June 22-MlnnesOt•, 10:15 1.m. • On TV, Chenntl 5. • All oemes on KMPC (7'0) killed the Anaels and led to a 6-3 victory by the Texas Ranam u 23.2• I fans looked on at Anaheim Stadium. Pitcher Jeff Russell (6-0), who bepn the season in the teus buU- pen, continued to add to the lonaest winnina streak of rua career with a complete pme (all 10 inninp) effort in which he reti~ 2S of the last 27 bitters he faced. RuueU. who atrUCk out ei&ht and walked one. has WOil leVtn •trai&ht decisions since lolial to OUc:aao on ,,, Les •• 0 Dick ScJaofle14 of tbe Aneela KOre9 from 11eCOnd bue. allcllnC put Tau catcher Geno PetraW ID flnt tnn•nc. Aus. 23 oflastseason. He joined the 10th. Larry Parrish, steppina to the · triuer to the aun thatshot the Anaels. :f. because I know he's beef\ startina rotation on May 1•. flnt as a plate with a . l86 battina averqc and J>ete O'Brien followed Parrish with s ·na all year." satd Russell. spot staner and then as a rquJar an the midst of a season-long slump. a sinaJc to riabt to score Sierra and who ~er won t.clt-to-blck starts mem~r of the rotation. eoked a si~e to center to ICOrc C~iltspy brou&ht home the fin~ run in the ~or lQaua before lhas Bwoe (2_..) walked Scott Fletcher Aetcber and llJlite a three-run rally. with a S!qle down the left-field hne. sc:uon. and Ruben Sierra with one out in the The walks, however, were the "It's p'Clt that (Parrish) came .. (Buice) threw me a fastball and I Be~slilser gets by, Dodgers Wl~, 7-5 He develops b lister on middle fi~er. Will pitch Sunday •• "' . • just tiappened to IC' a hit." aid Parrilh, who's now batlina .191~ -roniabt we didn't ICOft a wtiok I01.: but our patcbi .. WU riabt there and -tblt pve us a chanct to win il To eet a bia bit. not just a base bit. but oae which drives in the winnina run ii nioe. I felt mo~ confident toni&hl .. - Teu.s Id\ fiekkf Pe1e lnc:avialia picked an opport1.1ne time to break out of the Joneest home run and RBI drouabt of his career. Aft.er O'Briea sinPed to open mattcn in the fourth, Jncavialia launched ooe over center for a two-run homer, tyina the pm§ ~. . It wu hacavialJa's l«b home .._ of the teUOD.. his first in eiabt Pmti It was also his first RBI in the ~ span. - But who would've fi&ured that the ICOtc would ~main that way until Parrish sinaJed home the wiruuna nan in the IOtb with one out'? _ In the moatb of June. the ~ ·an aVUllina 2.77 nms a pme (ll plllCj). Tbat says enouah- The A~ bad taken a t-0 lead in the first annina when Jack Howdl lined a sinalc to ri&bt to ICOft Dd Schofaeld, who'd bfooped a sin.ck to ri&b t lo 5Wl the innina. Jim Eppard, the DH in place oftbt slumpinalkian Downina,aroundcc.fa broken-bat sin&)e to ri&ht to m°"' Schofield to second. But after Wallj Joyner and Ouh Divis ltl"UCt o.t lookint. it appeared u if the ~ would be lJl far I typical 1988 Uanln&. Runners le(t:on-base, op- portwtities squandered. • Howell. however, Ibo ftabtiaa u offensive tailspin. p~ tbie Anidi the lcad with a ab()( dciwn 1k line. .. Taas came filbt bllct with I ND i:a the IC'CODd off' starter Du ~ to tie it O'Brien walked to open the 1nni111 and later ICOl'ed oa ~ve Buechde's RBI doubae.. Schofield aod Eppmd b8d ltll sinaJcs int.be bottom of the tctond '° put the AQlda aheld. ).I. TOllJ Armas siJ'lled to filllt and toot second on a around out, 10 with awo outs the AQlds rallied 11 AnM& ICOred Oil S°clK>ftdd'I sinlle ... (Pl1111_......,... 1 / .. I ' I .. • ONCINNATI -Six nuUor ~ ii .._.. M *108 U'!e l8bD thit '°GI .a to '9w IDOuad for the ninth inninl ~ d9e weiabt 'of a ao-hiner on their lhouklen. Jobnay Vander Meer knows how that feels. Tbe fonnci Cincinnati Reds' left-bander made the ame Walt twice in flve days in 193&. Both times he aded DP jumpina for joy three ouu later. Unlike Vander' McerJ who WU honofed Wednclday ror his conteCUtive no-bitten. tbe lil ~ leiiUcn this tea0n have all come ue at least • hit lily of fiune. They vehadVanderM~• empathy. .. I sure know what they went tM>uab." Vander Meer said in an interview Wednesday at Riverfront Stadium ... You let theR (and aive up a hit) and you T9•tn ..._ wish aomebody miaht have been p&ayiq in a diffeftnt spot. or you wish you would have thrown a curve ball .. Two playen who watched him Wednesday a,ppreciated his 1CCOT11plishmenL Reds lcft-bandeT Tom Brownina lost a no-biner when Tony Gwynn ain&)cd with one out in the ninth in Sao Dieao on June 6. Cincinnati's Ron Robinson came within one out ofa ocrfect pme May 2 apinst Montral at Riverfront Stadium. .. A onoe-in..a-lifetime thins." Brownina called Vander Mcer's accomplishment. "I don't think we'll ever see that." .. It would be a real accomplishment nowadays," Robinson said. "I don't know how much bueball has ~Obviously it's toucher to tct I n<>--hitter. ''That (two no-batters) is sometbina you've aot to be proud of. That's touch." ,. Houston's Nolan Ryan has five no-hitters, plus <>AO of this year's near-rome.. and un appreciate the difficulty oflhrowina two 10 a row. "That's a real big accomplishment," Ryan said. "The chance of somebody ever doing that apin is pretty slim." Vander Meer, 73 hu no such rcgrets from hjs pmes on June I I, 1938, at Crosley Field, when he didn•t allow a hit in a J.-0 victory over Boston, or from his neAt start.. four daY' la.ter, when he no-bit Brooklyn at Ebbets Field in a 6-0 win. No other pitcher has thrown consecutive no-bitten. Quote of the day Jee ......... third base coach for the Boston lled So~, after sendfo,-Marty Barrett home and then secana him thrown out easily at the plate: .. Did you ever sec a coach get anyone thrown out that far from home? It had to be 30 feet, give or take an inch either way.·· ASU track faces Nnctiona TEMPE, Anz. -The Arizona State m Unrvenity track and field procnm may escape the "death penalty" when the , Pac-10 Council imposes sanctions qainst the pr011'1m next week., or so Sun Devil officials hope., .. The university has bqun efforts to replace fired bead coach O yde Duncan, a sianal that the school expects to have a program ap1n next season. .. , sure as hell wouldn't spend mo~ on 1 coach to do not.h1na for an undetermined period.' ASU Athle1K: Director Charles Harris s&Jd Tuesday. f Actina head coach Ed Gonnan wd there wu .. a ton of applicants" for the head coaching job, includina himself. Gorman said be bas already been offered and will ac:ocpt a contnct as an assistant for next season rqardJess of who is named head coach. ·•1 was brought here as an assistant and I could be very content doina that," Gorman said Wednesday. Also applying for the positfon was assistant Ken Lehman, who 1s also the cross country COICh. The team faced the NCAA 's hanhes& penalty after bein& the second school sport to be found in violation of NCAA rules within a five-year pcnod. The track team's most serious violatiouoccurred less th.an four ycan after the ASU baeball team was penalized in I 984 for violations. After a JO-month probe by Pac-JO invcstiptors, the NCAA Compliance Commit&ee chataed the track team with 12 violations. llcBnroe tantnalli lw volatile Jllla ........ loll IOIDC or bis new m eood-. ..... Wedarrt.)r•be•-.cl to victory over Ah! 1 v .... ~tbe Soviet Union in the Wltrll Of8llCIOW1 tounwnent. a Wimbledoe warm.up im W• IC.ilby. ~. AJthcMAlb lbe tbreMime Wlmtlledoft cbam- pion, leeded No. I this year, acrved welt and beat Volkov 7·S, 6-4, be appeared un.-dy in his fint maach on a British .,..coun since I 91S. one incident d~ tbe 69-.-iaule match with Volkovt~ 66th in the wortd. lbowed that McEnroe bad '°" none ot bit old fire. With the ICOre tied S-5 dUriQf the ftrit Kt. McEnroo refuted to play on until "ml)itt ... J...-cban8cd hit mind over a decision to ovemalc a line call in VOlkov•sravor. However, thearaumeatwitbJenkins was eeod·natured, with none of the prof.tnity that have ~nklcd McEnroe•• outbursts in the put. and JeiWns eventually called a let and RPWY the j)Oi.DL McEnroe went on todinch the vict~. terVina IOaces. .. 'llUJaort oftOUl'Dalnellt ii a pat tbina for fna)i&b tconil. and J doa't 1ee why the LTA hasn't tent umpira," McEnroe uid. ..This tournament can only promote tennis in Enclarid. 1 doD•t know why they want to dclrade iL It's aomethina different instead of LondOo all tie time." .. • MarUM Nanatilova, reachi~ near J)Crfection on her favorito lUrface to defeat Italy s Raffaella Regi. 6-0, 6-2, pve another awesome pus-court performance as rivals Pua Driver and Cla .... K.W.K.Uteta were sidtlintd with iajuries headina into nHt week's Wimbledon championshi{>S ... The Soviet Union's women tennis pla yen offlCl&l ly were fi ven professional status in another sip of chanss within the nation's sports system. Soviet women players now can compete for prize money in au professional tennis events. but must tum the money over to authorities in M09COw to furt~ de~lop the expendina Soviet tennis J)l'Oltlm. I>Odgera recall pitcher Howell The Los Anacles ~recalled Kea Iii Howell from Albuquerque of the Oass AAA Pacific Coast Lequc Wednesday and said he will pitch against the Atlanta Braves Thursday njght. To make room for Howell on the roster, the Dod&crs sent outfielder JeM Gouales to Albuq~ue. Howell bcpn the tcaJOn on the 21-day disabled hst after the ri&ht-hander bad underJone surscry on hisngJ:tt shoulder last October to remove the tip of his clavicfe. Gonzalez saw actiori".in only two sames. but did not bat. His ninth-ihnina erroe Wednesday led to a run in the Dodacn' 7-S victory over the Braves ... AveU.O Valeanela, father of Dodgers pitcher Fenaudo VaJeanela, died at his home in Echohuaquila, Mexico Wednesday. The Dodgas said their star pitcher had let\ the team to return home to his family. The cider Valenzuela had been suffering from cancer. Funeral arrangements were pending. European soccer fans riot DUESSELOORF, West Germany -21 Enahsh, Dutch and West German soccer fans skirmished Wednesda)' after a Euro- pean Soccer Championship match and hundreds of riot police roamed the city hopina to prevent any large-scale eruption of violence. More than 200 people had been detained as oflate Wednesday, but police said most were expected to be freed later ao the niaht Most of the bars in Duesaeldorf's Old City ~ boarded up or closed to avoid the kind of damaae Oat resulted from clashes bet'Ween West German and English fans the ni&ht before. Television, racllo TELEVISION S p.m. -DRAG RACING: NHRA Cajun Nauonals. from Baton Rouse, La. (taped), ESPN. 6 p.m. -PRO BASD:fBAU.: NBA Championship Series Game S -l...aken at Detroit, Channel 2. 9 p.m. -BOXING: Jorie Maysonet vs.. James Sudberry in I G-round bout, from Philadel>- pbia (delayed), USA I 0 p.m. -MEN'S BOWLING: ABC Masten, from JackJonville, Ra. (taped), ESPN. RADIO 6 p.m. -PRO BASKETBAU; NBA Championship Series Game S -Lakcrs at Dctro1t, Kl.AC (S70). FRIDA Y'S TELEVISION 10 a.m. -MEN'S GOLF: U.S. Open. from Brookline, Mass. (continued coverqie at 2 p.m.), ESPN. • I p.m. -PRO BASEBAU.: Montreal at Cbicaao Cubs, WGN. 2:3S p.m. -PRO BASEBAU.: Houston at Atlanta, TBS. Oldtimers to play Many Dodaen oldtimers will Play an exhibition pmc u pen o( the Equi&able OldtJmen Day series at Dodscr Stadium prior to the Padres pme Saturday. The Oldtimen bcain introductions at 11 :30 a.m ., with the major lea&ue pme startina at I :OS p.m . GR!AT GJPT I~ FOR FA~ !Ar-.Y, JUNE 19™ Amerlou~ WaTDlvmoN w L Pet. oa Lit ...... -·rn OUland 40 23 .615 2-1 Loea J 17-10 23-l Minnesota 34 21 ,,... $'h 7·) W•l 19-14 15-14 Kamat City 35 29 .J47 SVt 9-1 w. s .,_., 1a.14 TeXN 31 32 .492 9 ~ W• I 11-16 13-16 Cbicqo 27 35 .~us 12~ s-s LOii 2 16-lO 11-IS Seattle 26 40 .394 1$\11 3-1 Loll 4 IS-17 ll·ll Aaatl• 24 40 .l7S 16\11 5-S Loll I 16-ll 14-19 BAIT DIVlllON New York 39 23 .629 s-s Detroit lt 24 .613 1 7-3 Oeveland 37 27 .578 3 4-6 Milwaukee 34 )() .S3J 6 5-S Boston 30 30 .soo • 5-S Toronto 31 ~ .477 9'h s.s Baltimore 16 47 .254 23'h ~ • ......, •• Seerel Texas 6, ~ 3 (10 lnninp) Toronto IS, Cleveland 3 Milwaukee S, Seattle I Boston 81 New York 3 Detroit I, Baltimore 0 Minnesota s. C1licaao 1 Kansas City 2. C>akllnd 0 T•1'1Games Loll 2 19-1 l Woa l 17-l2 Loll 2 19-13 Woa 4 21-12 Won l 16-17 Won 2 15-16 Loa 2 10.19 Texas (K.ilaus 6-C)atA.Mell (MeCukiJJ 2-S). l:OS p.m. Kansas City (Gubic:za 8-3) at Oakland (You~ 4-3i 12: U p.m. Boston (Sellers 0-6) at Baltimore (Ballard 2·3 • 4:3> p.m. Toronto (Aaoapn 5-4) at Detroit (Morris 6-)14 :3.S p.m. Chicaco (Reuss S-2) at Milwaukee (8o&io 6-6). 5:35 p.m. Only pmcs scheduled PrNay•1GUM1 Aapl1 at Kansas City, 5:35 p.m. New York at Oeveland; 4:3S p.m . Toronto at Detroit. 4:l:>f.m. Boston at Baltimore, S:O p.m. Seattle at Minnesota, S:OS p.m . Chicqo at Milwaukeel S:3S p.m. Texas at Oak.land, 7:3> p.m. Natlonal £ealae WESr DIVISION 20-12 21·12 11-14 13-11 14-13 16-18 6-21 Doc11en Houston San Francisco Cincinnati San Dicao Atlanta W L Pct. GB Lit Struk 34 26 .S61 S-S Won 2 33 29 .S32 2 S-S Lost 2 32 32 .SOO 4 S-S Won I 30 33 .476 S'IJ 6-4 Won 4 27 37 .422 9 7-3 Lott I Heme A•Q 16-IS 18-1 l 20-10 13-19 19-17 13-IS 14-13 16-20 22-19 S-18 2(\ 40 .333 14 3-7 Lott s 7-19 13-21 EAST DIVISION New York 41 22 .6SJ S-S Pittsburah 36 28 .S63 S'h S-S Ch1cqo 32 31 .SOS 9 S-S St. Louis 32 32 .SOO 9YJ 2..S Montreal 31 32 .492 JO S-S . Pluladelph11 28 34 .4S2 12"41 7-3 Wedlinda7'1 Seora Dod1en 7, Atlanta S Chicago 7, Pittsbuf)h 4 San Francisco 4, San Dicao 2 Cincinnati S, Houston 3 New York 6. St Louis 4 Philadelphia 6, Montreal 2 Won 3 Lost I Won J Lost 6 Lost 2 Won 2 21-9 22-13 13-14 JS-16 18-13 16-IS T•1•1Gama °"Jen (K.Howell 0-0) at Atlanta (Z.Smith 2-3), 2:40 p.m. Houston (Scott 7-2) at Cincinnati (Soto 3-6), 4:3S p.m. Only pmcs scheduled FrNay•aGama San Dicao at Doqen (2), 4:05 p.m. Montreal at Chicago, I :05 p.m. Houston at Atlanta (2). 2:40 p.m. Sao Francisco at Ci0C1nnati, 4:3S p.m. Philadelphia at New York, 4:3S p.m. St. Louis at PittsbwJb, 4:3S p.m. NATIONAL L•AGU• .,..,.. 7, ... ,,.. s 'Y' LOI .,.._Lal An.MTA TUC.Al . ' . ' ., . AMaltlCAN LaAGUE ·~6, ..... J CAUPC»•A .. , .. S 2 2 I s. 2 l • 0 l • •tot 4 t I I • 0 0 0 SH ft MHldw' 11> SIUOO. 11> G"-n If Mer1tlel rf JGoiull rf ~cf HernllftJll Deft'IMyc ...... A'*"'v ttenHw• ~. Sdolcle c .. ,... s 1 2 0 3000 2. 1 1 s 2 2 1 s 1 1 1 •••• , 2,. • 1 2 l • t I 1 0110 JllO , • 1 2 •••• It t 0 AHelcf a..111130 ANwea• Or"'9vlfl ""'*"' Gfl'w'rv .. ~rf D~lf /Mrnll .. ~· Tiletna" a..lc1c Vlr9lc Genta G9Wle• . ..,. ... • 71J 1 T ..... lar'9" ...... lG-13 14-1 s 19-1 7 17-16 13-19 12-tC) ..,._, 400t 20t0 Ottt tOOO 2. 1 0 4 2 1. l I I 2 llOO 1. 0 0 0000 J 1 2 1 J 0 I I I I I 0 4 I I I 2 •• 0 2 •• 1 MS 6 I .., .. 4100 1 0 •• 2 I t 0 l I t 0 5 1 I 1 • 2 2 I 5 1 2 2 2 0 1 0 2 0 I 1 • 0 0 0 l 1 1 I • 0 l I u. A..-. ,. ta lll-7 • 0 1 I • 0 1 0 J6' t 6 T .... ,_.." ....... Ttut tlt -->-6 c..... ,. --._, Game wim1ne "" -~ m. ~ 1. L09-Tt11a1 7, CellorlQ S ~ Hlt-4nca,,..._, 041. sa-Jo¥ner (5). Ttua lltut.MIW .... • " ..... so c...... IO I J J l • ~rv 1 S3JJJ H¥WY 2 l00 1 2 9ulct 1.,2·• l , J , 2 0 HIP-FletcW (by '-'rvl. Ull'IPll'ft .._, Jotlnloll, Flrlt, KalMf, Second, McKMn; Third, "emleell T-J~I A-23,241. A..... -!lt t11-S Glln'lt Wlnnlne • •• -Mer1'llll (6) • ~. JGonullL D"-Atllnta 2. LO.--U. ~ 6, AltlfM 6. 29o-T'Mmas, MatWll, SMev. Hit~ (lJl, ~ (t ). ~-(14), "'*" (4). LM._ HenNMrW, .. l Or9lct ..... s .. ...... GlllYllll '-> 7 Al¥wa Sutter 81( ...... ..,. .... • " ..... so 7 4 Ml l 2-J I SM t 22-l 2 1 2 ~-llolM, Hlr~; Flral, Dwlne; Second, Tata; TNrd, Ft MtM'lllle. T-2:!0, A-l0, 154 'tol'TUU. :rD-----C.O-MM• V.,.... -Kert ~. LIM FINIMdlL ~ -~ IC,.._ (SI. Pliul)1 k .; UM Femenclft (St. JoMllll, L.Mllw~)1 .k.i Ill• ltlce (Fountain VIII¥), ,,,; ~ A'- (.,,,.,.._), Sr.; l(ym w.I (Hert), So.; HealNr ~ (ltllMttf), Jr.; AM VM- Dertrec:N cs.ma Mw1e>. Sr.; o.oe ~ (Gahr), "· lllftlldlrl -Kii¥ 1neWe CGMr>, It.; Tw. IC~ (SI, PW), k .; MkNle Mor-. ISi. '-ul), Sr.; ltuatle S'-<"->• Sr.; Alldra Ollw C""'->. Sr.; S--0-.. CF......,. VIiie¥), Fr.; Dlall9 ,,_ (CWf'9u), Sr.; Karti KtW C8wr0Ulfll), Sr~--(Hirt), Sr~ Jullt ,.....,..., ( 0.U), Sr.; Jamie Hee91n CTllouaalld a.Ila), Jt.; UM Gulte (ltllNttl). Jr.; .......... (ltlltwffl), Sr OuttllNlra -TMYa ""'"' cc_. .. ,, 1r.1 Alnv c~ (ThouMnd o.11•>. So,;'Mldllle Sllanka (Mllllulfl), Jt.1 AllCla ...... (Geflr), Jt. Ultllty -Kim fMls <""'->• S.. ML.ctl' >·A Moat ValuaCllll .... ver -Mlc:Nle Or.,,... ~lic:Nn -ClwYt LoftteWay (K......ty ), Fr.; MMY t.efcM.lrllMU (Cow.), k .; .....,_ Uftdllrem (cnac.nta V...,), Sr.; CNrtllw ...,_.,.._ la.lflow• ), Sr.; 0.. Ma-. CL.8 Mir .. ). JI .• KelY C.. (~).IT .. Mldllllt "'-CV*Dl, Sr.; SlecV Veft.- Eutft tlMYfalrl, Se. ..........,.. -0..-Men CK__,.), St.; Tami °"'1ll (QwW OM), Sr.; 01w111t ~ llr-CTuallll), JI.; Nicole S...., (U ~). Sr , Sutle hnlttt (Vile Pwt!), St.; Trtda'kr 18ree-otlndll), Jr.; y...,_ ~ CCutwow City), Sr.; Temml AM (MrMtr), Sr, Oulftlldlra -Sui.It 81tdh lK....-.dY), k .; Tiiie Stactl ICNrter <>ell), it.; Lell9nl Anti CCretclftta Vlll9Y), Sr., Stacy .,..._ CL.a Mirada), Sr Utlltv -catv11 ......., COW11W OM}, Ir.; ~ NaaMr (leulfl Hiia), it AU.tW 1·A Molt V..,.... "9wr -11ftMy IGW .. PltcNt1 -Tlllanv lloYd CW11 •rt•>. Ir.; Mw'9t ~· (~ ... ,. it.; Jule Todd (Arr0¥0), k ., 0.Wa U... (.,...._. Vlll9Y), JT.; DelllM ltlftla (~ J4Wtrwt), Sr.; Trecey ~ (L.8 Senle), Jr, lllfteldln -Aka Marrow (~). So.; E,_a Sdllta Cl.Nuna "91), Sr.; OWttltN Artn*M <s.u.ua>. Sr.: SMme McCe1 ccor--_,, Sr.; Ftw1ellle WtllOll (Cof'oN), Sr.; IMlfaM Acolfa (Monfdllir), Sr.; K* CorcarM (Olamllladlt), Jr.; Tela T....._ <El Monie), Sr.; Kim Jol'wtW (w.odlM .... ), .k.; Mldllll SNllt (Sin a.-ft), Sr. OulfWdln -M9'Clla c.t.. (Ar'reW), Sr.; TrKY ._, .1.':9 Demt, ~ OM.a), Sr~ T.,_,. (SI. Allltltfl't), Jr.; ,,,,_., ~~-).Se .... _ ...... NWY"I ~ C...... .... , -I -.w...,...ns~ ....... J .,........ 1 ...-ui .... Clllm ........ .... ................ 1 ........... ... ...... , ....... ~ wae.,. ur•111 -1 ....._ • .............. , ......... , ..... l ....... f1 ,.....,.. fll NO ... l tC1111t11. t•I Hf ......... t ----~~----------..... -----..C~9.-1MM~Alil~_...P.8.G __ E ........... _0nnoe ..... eoe.t--~-~.ptt.()T--fflu9d1w ....... _ ...... ~·---.... -· Taking aim Appmslm•tely 175 Beet abooten pltdled In Wedn-- daJ for ttie Mftlltll amaaal JaYltatlosaal ~Skeet ~ Shoot at Coto de Cua cOa.n-trJ Clab In Rancho Santa M~arlta. Tbe eYeDt, one In a a 11pOuored bJ tile 552 Clab of B~ Bo.pttal In lf~rt Beacla. ral8ed tner $ 0,000 for tile Patty a11d Oeoqe &-. Cancer Center. Al left. Co-cbalr· men Dr. Da'rid llartyn (left) f and AadJ C&rey look tner. tbe licorlU u 8ob llcDanlel of 1'~rf Beacb marb ap reealta. Abaft, 0..., Dit- tmar ofl'oantala Valley. wbo won tile Top Gan Award tile put two yean. eJ• bl.a ebot. Be ftnl•bed MCODd tb1a year to Walt Tabort, who a1ao teamed wttll Don Crlnrell, lllke Smltll, Ray Sterck ua4 Jack ApGD to win the team com- petition wttb 341 polnta. A•nerlcil. 's Cup sets tr4!D Choy, Gentry fiol>e to sail multthull for Pacific record 8J ALMON .LOCUBEY ~ ............ .._ Hu the controversial decision of San ~ Yacht Club to dd'tnd the Amtrica s Cup in a hiah--tech 6()..fooc catamaran brou&ht a new mpttt to muhihulls such u catamarant and trimarans? One would think so. judaina from the rash of races pinina multibulls and monohuJls in the next rt.. months. First off' this Wttkend will be the Spttdsailina Grand Prix at Lona Beach, produced by Oeor1e Kolesnikovs of Grttt American Media, Newpon Beach, featurina Formula-40. Formula SOO and other muhihulls and monohulls capeble of sustained speeds in excess of 10 knots. Thr SpeeduHiJ11 0.-Prix ii a spoMOred event wh.b 1 minimum cUh ,,nu orss.ooo '° the wtaner. TMn on July 4, Ruch Chcw't 62· fOCK catamaran Aikane '" will leave Lot Arwdn Harbor in a IOlo 111empt to~ the recons m>tlina °'' days and 7 houn to Honolulu held by Bob Hand's 64-foot catamaran Double Bullet. For this racc apinst •he clock, Aik.anc X5 bas been renamed Oentry Aik.ane because Tom Gentry, a noted ofTshort poWttboat racer bas joined Ch~y in the venture. · Choy is known as the father of the modem catamaran. A native Hawaiian. he lattt came &o Newport Beach and formed CSK Catamenns, alona with ·Warren Seaman and AJfAld KullWae, to desian and build tome or the fastest catamarans in Southern Cahfom1a. He later moved back to Hawaii and formed Aibne Catamaran Cruises which is still a dominant factor in the Honolulu tourist industryl'iherc he is known as .. the kin& of the cats ... Oentf') 1s the ch~f executive off acer of a poup of companies whK:h plans. builds and finances residential com- munities, marinas.. shoppin1 centers and otbtt real estate' ventures in Hawaji and California.. He is the same man who travels the offshore powerboat racin1 circuit for about I 0 races and 40 days a year. spttd records in the Adnlk Miami to Nusau, Miami &o York. and New York to ·t&-:1 Upon completina the third d he wil fly from E~ 10 Anatlcs to lCam wilb <:boy lk1pptf tire Gentry Aikane. Choy and Gentry predia tbef sail A1kanc across tht Pacific in seven days. Last ~r Choy i A1kane from LOs Antelet Honolulu -.ainst three other m hulls but was beaten by Wind nor. Neither of them beat Do\a Bullet's record. ,. Hanel, oncideniaUy, is buil new and larier Double Bullet which he plans to try for a new across the Atlantk from 0 Canada. to France. His old OB destroyed in that na: several y All racmg will be 1n Lona Beach Harbor inside the breakwater on Saturday. The first of two heat races will begin at noon over a 4.}-mik course off prime spectator viewint areas at Bluff Park and the city beaches. The starts and finishes will be located directly in front of Belmont Pier ofTOccan Ave. He is prnently assaulting ago when 1t hn an u nderwater rt several hundred miles off the c Hanel and his crew wererescued three frei&hter. Hollywood Park, OUJSENBERRY ••• t7omBl in l97S. Los Al race resultsl He was not drafted, however, but scout Roscy Gilhousen signed him as a free aaent following his career at La Verne. After being the key man in the bullpen for tht Royals drive to the 19U World Scnes title, Qu1smberry began to tail off in 1986. He fi nished \he year 3-7 with only 12 saves. his lowest output since hisanival in the big leques in 1979. For the former Amencan Lcaiue hero and local legend, tame on his contract appears to be all that's on his side. KNEPPER ••• homBl . you what kind of people they arc. I guess I'm gomg to have t<Ystan wcarin& a bullet-proof vest to the stadjum." Molly Yard. the president of NOW. called Kneppcr's remarks stupid. "He obviously doesn't know many mcmbcn of NOW." Yard said. "He calls us lesbians. That's JUSt stupid. we·rc made up of all types. To use an ex.ample. this year I've been mamed for fifty years. ANGELS FIND.WAY TO LOSE IN lOTH TO TEXAS • • • Prom Bl Schofield, who'd moved to second on the throw to the plate, came home on Epr,ard's sin&le. • I don't know about gettina pushed around. but I got nubbed around a little,·· Russell said of those earfy inninp. Russell settled down after that, facina the minimum number of batters for the next five inninp. "l made some real JOOd pitches tonight, I felt real good," said Russell. "I probably had five sticks (broken bats) tonight." Petry worked a solid seven innings. but didn•t come out for the eighth. He struck out three and walked three. allowina five hits. Petry pve up JUS1 one hit in his final three mnings before Bryan Harvey took over. Harvey pitched two scoreless in- nings. wa.lki na one, strikina out two. O'Brien had some good words for his pitcher. · "That's the way (Russell) has been throwma. just tremendous. .. he said. ''(firstbasc umpire Ken) K.aiscr said in the ninth inning that Russell was throwina harder than in the first." * AllG•L MOTaS -The A11991S NY their flMI Htne ol ,,... wven-..me homftl..:I today •• 1'05 pm k.,_ McCnlt• <3~5) f-..._. 1(1-1 lf·tl In the thr~ Mf'ln fltlM wlttt NERSMILE . Vw...tF.Anieo YACHT A ..... allC>U&ACI &N't'DNATIONAl 1•,, c-.......... s.-101 ~ ai-i., C.W..-tlMJ 17H) Tll-11«1 • ~loa "°9t! of the hlput U.S. st_.,.· ta• ..,., .. ln production. Qastca "one of!" p Ut7 ~ to "9 .,,.na1»1e. Plallt vt1itt off_.. "~ pertles. Te .. , Medlc.i ~tr Second be_,, Min Mc"'-'e, on the 21-daY dlMC*d ltsl wlll't nerve lrrll•llon In the rlohl lllbow lllld .,.m, wlD r-.iln MKeerY fO< remove! of • Clot on • ..-ficlel _,, In l'lis rltf\t _. wm. McL-•. wr.o -u.mlnecl on w .. ..o.* Irv v•K\Mr ~ .Nllll ._on IN rec· ommencatlOll oA IWTI or It a 1 dlll Dr. ....,... Y~ ... 119ve ~ Oft Fr1dev .t t:lS e.m Wnl ""' "'1ornl IN ~ .. St. JoMofl's Hos.It.I In 0r..,.._ ~· Is ._,.., .. miss ..... , ,_ .,, ...,.. ....... folowlng ... -""' He tnl .....,.. Oft Mn 13 ..insi New von. CENTER ...,...,. .... lhlpyn ..... '*' ......... ... HNO...to•TOM .... wo.r.1. Nell1 '•" OPEN FOR LUNCH & DINNER Monday thru Friday 11 AM to 9 PM Serving All Your Boating Needs . to cralss, 1 S-3, as Stieb WID.s efglitlJ s t MCariff.Ftcldcrcachclubpatr =:u!':!.'!:r=.~::Sv~uo-,.i * * * . * ofhomcrstotrounceClevcland h'' ....... ~.~t:J.n.obi~l-2.pitcbedatlvo-.....,.. ... I.~ fm n.~ &. ~ • 1Mn4. '=fl.A _,.,... lt:'TI ~h:~.a:::~~::::ru~ ... -Dive ·'-: 1n1 I' Tt1: ---.: :ni =: !n, 1· . ~ -~ Tf1"·ll T'l" §.:-'11 -..__-....t .. 11t11H----.,.... .......... J:AllaftAndalOilallowedonJy ~ .. II .,, I= "'1' ......... .,, •• I 'I' •111· ,. If t ·--·-. i;.------~~ . 62L -• __ .. ri-.. • J •• : .. • II. ... '° : ......,,,,. 'I'' " . '. ' . ..-. i 1 l I . . anu-.-..rua1n n1nnuae1-........ ~wtJuw " ,.. •• 'If•=· ••• ~· • • 'j\' .,. 'I''' • • " " • 'f • ~,__ -.:-... ~----.... OeciJ rlClder hit hi•• incJudi-bJ11eventh h....__ .... i-;,..-,· .. .._.. ... ---....• •• I' c • • ff •• It ...... J ·1· • J e . I' ........ I • 'I' -...._.. -_.... W-.1-A.U __ .. ....__ 5..:_...1.. -bis In Nlll ... __ , I __ ... r-· ...... ".. . . t ' • • • • • '--C i. c f • • I l' .... .. • c -·'--""""'''"' .-.-;~·-... .--·-··""-... ___ -·, •• I ,. •• ==· ........ ~ . , . . . ......... ,.,. . I' "--·--'111111...._..7-l.'9• .. ~ .. ..,.. oa...--~..,~ "D:i. R CJIMll• "" "'-• •••• • "" ._ .. '' • J ........ '!I ... , •••• • 'i -..W. ..,..., ..-• die Toranto Blue Jays beat the -,., .---• ._... euecbel became the ,,..., •" • ....... 1 l u ~' · 11 " o.r.e. '" ~. • • • .__.... t , ........ , "J • ! • Cleveland Indiana IS-3. ~ue·~ICCOM IG-umc"!innerbyatterina~t~tsin =::-.-:::: =· t::: =· ~::: ........ ... ~ a.: I!!!_•. 1.u .... f '! : I Tonyferundczdroveinfournanswitbthreehitsfor 61h1nninpandSant'ranc11COwen\on1oendSaft Dieao•s ~· ••• • .,,,..,. "" c.-1 ••" ;;;;. "" ='J 1 f ..._. tbe Blue Jays. wbo bid 17 hits lpinat three Cleveland aix-pme winnina atreak. ,.... •,., ~· .: : : : ,.... ~ ~.,... 11 •• • =• T • U =::• i: •, J*.chcn. M ... t.~4:0arry1Strawbmycontinuedbis __ ..,. • ~ • ... ·~w;:. , :r:::: ~..._:u• ,... .U: =:-• th ,_ .,.,. · ' Stieb. ~l.bunotlostin IOstarUainccApriJ26. He attackoeSt.Lou1swtthtwohomerundthreerunsbetted C.:::...,. .J 'l'O:. -m-e ._--. •-• • ~ liii._ !J 8:; \:.:.,,-. llloWed three hits in 1even inninp and struck out five. in~tbeNewYork Mets tent theCardinalstotheirsixth 1 -........~-· •1~1., ~a."= ~~T~.... =n: &:·~·-•• ~ r-•I ::J MarkEichhornallowedtbreehit11nthefinaltwoinninp. strai&btloa. -t.OodMellt. .... ,...., ............................... .._._a."' ,,....-.:-;::; .... --. ... -..... -Orea Swindell, I <M. loll his third stra;,ht Ind was ........ t, Eqee I: David Palmer pitched three-hit :.,..a :;: 111i1::-' .~1~ 0::, ~ ~':.! ~t:::.."'· ...._... ~ ct:-~ ~ w •;:.:::" u.--.• .. t:;' knocked out after 2YJ inninp. his abonett outina this 1 bell for eiaht inninp a~d Philade.lph~a took ldvantqe of , ,,.-<_ • • • • .. •' .. u. • " • • • • • .... ..,. " .._...., 11 • • • • :_ '·1~ ::: .. ~ : yur. He allowechi• hilt and five nans. three Mon~l errorun the ~nt.1nn1na. Orea ~anisa~d ~~ • , • 1 1 s:::' L.M ;~~ ~ : : : : ..=...."': ... , , • , , 1 .,... ..,, --.. ••· .. "aft • .. Elsewhere in the American t.e.ue: Steve Bedrosian, who sot has ninth uve, finished wtlh --J t • • J•OMW I J I I • • ...... H I ••• I ..... ..., .. I, Mart.en l: Teddy liipera held Seattle hitless relief. ~,,., , , , a 1 •• O:,~-?... , , • • , , 0:--..:t 1 • • • • ' :9L.H •,., : f : f l hitless for seven inninp befote steve Balboni homcn=d C. 7, Pince. 4: Shlwon Dunston, who drove in •wm.-1 • • : • • ..,....,_. 1 , • • • • ....,...'-"' • • t • • • t ....-. • t I I T : fOr the Mariners' only hit u Milwaukee won. Hipiera. five runs. and Vance Law each hjt two-run sin&)es in the ~ : : : • : : =-z...-:e-~..,., • •""' :.:.... f , : : t : ~ ,., 1 ~wn~ei tinnj"Pandjc>inedthema'Upitcberswho eiahlhinni~oboostChicaao ..,...... '"....,.., "''•• 11a4, ~ """· ~ 1 • • • • • ,._,,,,.. • a • • ' • ... _.,. ft1' w1·th .. ..._ht'"-tb1"s -son. e ··-•L·ed o-._.._, a Eri Da : h" h d U!Nltw ,......, ...... """''*'' .... ._.., ~1 ,,,.,_, •• •• .,..... nw ~ ,._...,... '"*' ' ' ' ' -·.. ,...,.. •M>•• -,.,....., ..... -, u.. : c v11 1ta two-nan omeran ~; ~ ...,.,, "'"-MM-....,.. ...,..... -_ _ ...,....,, '"* • • • • • aildatruckout three. Oms Sabo had three hits to lead Cincinnati. Tom '"':-t-.-A-DM1. T-ar...,.. ~:'....:~~""· ~ ....=-e..::" .. "11=:.• .... ,_-. .. ,... I, A..ietta t: Kansu City's Charlie BrownillJ. S-3, pve up seven hits and three nans over five * T-ta •-••• ......,.., ._., ...,.,., Uibrandt pitched a two-hitter and snipped a personal inninp. anclud1na solo homers by Jim Pankovits and Bill * . .,....... s, Ml,...,. 1 * et.=:" =. 0.:.., =: \h~mc losina streak to beat Oakland for the Royals' Doran. ...,. an 15, .._... J ••nu .,,11 ~·MM•!,,11 c• 1, ,....._ • ~-ti ...._. tilh vtetoryin 13pmes. * CUV9LMO .,..,,. .. _ ...... ..., ... It 1 ""'9UMtl CMCMO ·~ ... S.1 I, Yukeet I; Ellis Burks hid four bits, Twtlla s, !,.. s.x 1 lltM Sn a, Y8'* ... J "•-• '~~': "-*• '~~~ =:1,.. : : : : ~d• Un ...,..., ';~': .,_., 'a': ---------· . .. * * CMICMO ., ... -toT• .......... , ... MITOet ., ... ~,. :n: =: ~::t =:-: ~::: =· uu =-~11~~ =:: a~: T1lln 1, Ortleft I llt9¥ ... 1, AtN111c:a 0 Gtilllllrd • t It '*-' •rllll It_., f I I I e.rtad I I • 4 IUlllt.. I I I I ,_...... I I It ....... J I I I .,_._ : ; ~: =-."· u ~ ~ =: J II t ~rllll M1llOIT ., .... IWfW~, ... OMLAMO ., .... ~==-:::: =: ::: =:: ;::: ='~ :~:: er: .a:: £5 .. :!!! =~ HH =( gn :::... :::: =-il!i ~· •••• "91tild Jttt SllWlu SlllUMlt'fA Sitt ~nrt fllt ...._ .. 41J JOwt.I& ••11 ~ ... -. Siii .u.-c Jiit Mc:Otlll .. •tl49t.....,c ltll "-111 •ttl JOe<fltc fttt .......... J.,. -· •• I. WWIMcf • I I. o....a • 1 ...... • , I. o.tt1• • I I ~" • I, I ~· • , I. .._.. J ........... ( It J • .., ... , I ... LWIF9c •••• °""' ..... I,'. °""'9rlllfl .. • • $llWW;lrt I... er.ti.. I. I I'-" • • ow.ar .. • • J. ....,. rl .. • OWerdW J II. Ila• J I .. oc........ I... ..,.....,. • 2 2. ~.. J... ....,... ' '.. fl'c:e• •••• = ...... o.a-1• ) ••• ,.._.. ,. •• ~,. J • ~-J ... *""" .. I W.t!Wlftf I. It CW-c JI I, c-ct • J 2. Tillllll • II I ,.... 11111. MOIM!lfl I ••• 0-W• •••• • •It I s.INWM l It t Tn.Mrt l t I I........ J t ......... It tt De¥Mlnrt t It MecMl2-JI It ..,,.,. I II I LM• f J t I S-. 111¥..... • ~· JI I I ,..,,,.,llfl It It ~ .... '. ,...., , • It Seit-• •••• OttefMd J I °"911fou .... LARli>.. , • I .......... I ••• OMMn 111 I... Tillllll n I. I T... • 1111 M .... --.... , ---· •••• "'-"'• •••• .,,_.. 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UI -~Ill ~~ ~~ ='c1?~.;.,..~.,,:,...°::t • M llD .. IO m ~. M ua .. to :=., ~ : : : ~ r.r'.-...u.~....r~';'m ... ._, =~~~~ ll-Cll'r M, 0.-1 ~ L U-4.M11111 • M llDMIO ..::i:':? JM I I I J I I~ .... 1 1•J. S I I I SC:.... • t__..!~I I ...... • M DMIO ,.,.._ W .._ ~-!Judl_. S-W-Cl*-. ~-Sl·J t > J J J 0..->J-> I • 4 > I ._..,,W,6·4 I I I I I • Or... ...J I > > I t " • M ll U .. IO • M ll Ill M IO JMd>we L.2.. t J 1 J I J .-l·J t • • I I ~ 2 t • 4 I I C-. • t t t J I ....,_ l·J t • I 1 t ....... "-Off ..,_ I M • J J I t ._ T.... crtm I·) t I I t I 09ll L.>J l ·J f • • • t ......,..,.. 1 J I I S ) ~W.>-t 1 • I I 4 M-J•J J t t I I HontW .. J SJ·> I J ) > StlltW, .. J 1 J I I t t ,..._,IS J-l I t I I t •..rt• M t t t t I ,_,,... I I I t I I 0..,. -'--11·) I t t J 1-.. J > 2 J J I ~ *-11 2 ....,. It ... Oil-. o..a -1...I 4 M J 1 I 4 ~W.4-J U -J t I I I • l-J I I • I H9l"-GNter '" 0..-l, ..,_.. Jrf. Oler_.... le J.....,. M 1M t111. fllc:s SM • 9-:?~-' ~ ,:.i. !-.,~ _.,_, • I I I J A--U JI·> • • t I 1 :....~ ... 4. C:.., ~. C.. kM~I N-St• llcHwa. ~-·U-4l-. SanY = IJ-J 1 .,.._, ~ °"'-Tlllr• • .._ ~..::: ""' -I ~= Ila•• Crell .. ''"'· R•. ~ .._, ~; Tl*'f, ~T~•w, Y-. l'ir.t, ·-· ~ .:"..:• ow:'iMr .. = 0.-:..t' l : T-t:IL ,.._M.171 T-2:21 A-11174 T_,,., A-2UIJ ~HI A T-HJ A--.ut T-HJ.' 4-11-T-t".11. A_..,lk • . . OS< >t1tl1 O~>lUlt)'~-L Thank You For Making Ua #1 In · America. Come In and 8M Why P8rta Open ~Sat a -5:30 Sat 9 -4 p.m. s.rvtce ~Fri 7:30 • 8 p.m. ""' aaACM aw.~°" a&ACN 7141142-2000 ROYAL ...... NEW CORVETTES G LOWEST PRICES IN O.C.I 405 Frwy, East 1 Block to 6633 Westminster Ave, Weatmlnster 714/849-8333 1-800/26-CHEVY • J I • I t I I I I I t • • • • l>Jbtra'•bat pro4Vem clean NEW YORK (AP)'-X· rays of Len Dybtt&•a bet proved neptive. the NI· tional Lape said Wedne. di~· New York Meu outRe r's bit wu "X- ra:yed this momina and no evidence of tamperina wu found, .. the letaue aid in 1 statement. "Mr. Dykltra•s bet will be returned to him prior to toni&ht's pme ... T6e bet WU COllfilClted by the umpires. JHEO~ ROBINS THE-~STORE Pans It Service LEASJNO SALES c: ... 2060 Harbor Blvd., CQ_sta Mesa 842-0010 olADDLEB CK ~ Sales & Service : Leasing Parts . ' ~ . ~ IRVINE AUTO CENTER ~-800-831-3377 71~380-1200 . ~ 0 SALES BODY SHOP LEASING STE LING 540-9.100 261X) Harbor Blvd .. Costa Me5a NEW LOCATIONf SANTA ANA AUTO M•Ll 1• Auto,._.. Dr., lenta AM 835-3171 Newport/5~ f rwy. at Edinger s-. Dept open 7 days, s.w:. HcMa: Mon.-Fr1. 1em-10pm' 0 Ster/ing°''ll!J!! -" SALES • IEIYICE • Lllllll • Nils -OYEllUI llLIYllY IPllllLll11 _. .. 1Me .Mll•H IUI, aat•T IUll ,......, .. , ......... ,. ..•.•... .. .............. ti l ..... ._... ..... , ,,.., j -. . -~ - BUENA PARK STANTON GARO N GROVE PACIFIC OCEAN You too, can get your Deafershlp nOtlced Your ad wlH come out three times per. week for seo.oo -Color Pr••I c.11 (7141642-432' Md• s.les Rep wt1 ,cal you. Open Sat AU MAKES BODY SHOP 2600 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa 0 540 .. 9100 0 HOUSE of IMPORTS, Inc. M~cedes-Benz 6862 Mancheatcr Boulevard Buena Patil ·OQYlCE M·F 7a-6p 213 OS 7aCBDB8,M-F ..... ~ Where 1·5 and l-9lmed. s.t. 8a-2p ...... • C CAMPBELL ~ NISSAN/~ l£A(H ,• .... • Low Prt<a• • No G1mmich ' • Groot Selection • Friendly ~tople .• E.11'coltonf So(v1ce ' ' tll35.._. ..... ,.., . •&EACH .. ·' ....... " .... • (111) lft.14'* LmcOUf mllCURY --"" ~. SALES .:_ ~lSING' • 'SERVICE .. -PARTS .. . ~ .· CALL 842-5878 ~ NOR1iH ORANGE 640oo1220 F-AOM SOUTH ORANGE 4te.el00 IMES*llNE HAS RETURNEDI C:~ck out TOday's Classifi~d S~cuon for O~tarts ._. 1• c.ta... llM R1 h lllT ~_..... II• .._. tllt c.ta... •at C...... 1111 AVlt JULY t • . ..., s;;:r;;,c11yQilf a: ... , ~ •• -..... 9L11 ...... 28A28A,emo.-.lfrplo. ..._..,,pwtpdow/hot Poot. MMlll. tee. "7toJ 311fUtta~. fg ,,_ 2 cw Mt::wlfleld A em.1 • .-. ~. ••.eoo. AtohHeotw• •11111 m.&. ~· wtd. ~. dedl1•11' ~CO:-=~ ,i;c:;,~, ~~..,. °"""'e .: ot•o t blocatJotl•' e o" . MltJed ~ .., .,.... Dtolel CNmlllrla. 11MU1M I ~ PIM 2 .,,... 91'· M5l>. MA· "' vr .__, W e r ti • & 11wW1 "'1 di C8"· 11' J •21~&2M2M+ 28A&Dln.2.18A..Hurry. BHUtlfOI 28A ...... A .._,,..,.,.end iiiiilu-...A.frpla...,.. SUOO/mo . Marl( .,.,_.. NU.,.., •/1Mlll:lonr .... Del\ +'4 c. P!&f. AJmoel •On1t IHt tono ai twntwne. DtM cs,..,...._ I eee.. _... IOclMOfll Well M0-14i00 L.afte, •'"~ IPll In a ....,., ~ fl'plc. ... ,,,. ---• -.:_, new. Cell DILIA 149.000. Alie tor l.ynne pOOf, IP9· X..t !Oct .A1' to be11G1t & Udo V... bMutiful 9l'den NCtlng. ~. 1P9. lndry .... ""- --·· -· -OELGAOO 1eo.tiOOO ~IO.aoo 7' 11. t1•1mo. c.a,.. + ~ •n ll• a t4'00/mo "...-..a . Pooll•P•. gar99• or '700 + w. A~ now a ' ::' .. °::'..:?:.':.: • Wede13t-12M ealtMTownt10!i'9 ovtr• ?3 C#'POft,8otty,noP9'S aYlll211V.,.M-24'7 ::-.,,:';':'~~.! ~ .. /J ~I ::O~J::.we11"10~~-=-Cntt.t ,, ·==~a. U65 •1 •121.: ._, ... _.,,.., ... _ Nt'WIYY"'l.:Yj'fU' JIN . NJX ll Pcr1111'on negottable. 2Mt8A;.....,.Wd~'~.':h:;'·=3NW.WllOn 831-55&3S1000ffmowlnOOll.1& :::_.• :::=:=: .. W•'\...,.. " ~TORS Ag9nt. 7•7500 •• iyn .... 1121Crlft0 vNted -a:_ • -------28AwlpvtOW. DIW ••• .. __ ...... ...., "-"' 11;RE~AL~?OAS-~•;_. ___ ,2,.!!l~~!!!J!~~~I **YEMAIUUIACH ..... I• -.._. poo1., ledioom l&30 poeet, Cllllll TV. PGe( ... -• -"' .,. -II : Cute fiiii 11A: ~ 2 • •-a12751mo, 17s;.t4M 2Bdrnl 18e '750 IP9. 880 I lndty lie. Gd ---·~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil NtHSULA DUPLEX • cw ~. lmlli vW-d, Fulkltdl. Pool.oar.MCUt· AllO ... a•Ho.t. lo1h ..... .... 301 Avocado 142·M50. loci A~,.... .. to .. II U.... I tent 28A. 2atry, ,,._ cerpeVpelnt; 1125 tty. Welle to bc:hl 1118 t~ t1SSOl mo. ••w M9S tn E.22nd It. .,.. :;,=::: ::.....~ !."'.:; ftftllll .. al.I ~dO~, ire.. Aeelty 17Mt12 A!J4 111-2300 EV 54442.5 ' • M-*4 IU .. files... SPAN<UNO dWI, extre ~ 131 7376 ~"•-==-.:::::; a11111L •PIH 111 n1cie. .:.= 0wner umm ..-ra mu • ......,. ...,._, aar. za. 2 ltOty. &Client ;:=. ::.::~~~= · .. -,. -~ - -~ & Ollll)'Ofl ~ • ..-=--Nice 38flt 28A peUo IVft ••-.t condltlOn S2500mo 1 """"llo ~ woOded • -~ -48A 38A. FR, DR. OOOf, 3 ... a.ntt iifi ~a:.:!, '::-C.:.e;: Frple, comm pool, 2 eet L~ Oft e wldt gr.-. ;o:;;;,. 'a175 A~ 711. •e•tiJIJftl; cw 91'· CALL ,,.,.. & ~2BRn4DCot c.O.topertc ~a ow t1400. DtM by 424 bett.Hl29A28A~ 324 Victoria (btwn Eu99nla Stark•nburo tel)ll. 8eamed oeltl~ t.wtcoum.'s 15001mo. vi... au.ta. then c:all luv9ilebletorlmmed'•• Harbor & Hwpt 81) IPWI II 1eo.oee& Md bt1dc frplo, watk to Aveil July! Aak "°'*' 17M912 A9t OCCilUl*'CY· Kida I pets 131~2 15or 11U27& Spartrttno ctMn. ,~ .. IJl!...a.A.V ""' I dwntwn lhope. M•tn83M2M *''M•-· otc,SMtlor.Jonotiarmlle 19' dedt ~ ~ G•defl apea llMuftN,111 ' ~ .. / t195K. 492-f748 Model perfect HR ~~2r~c.I "9 rr1g' Ol'aoe neer tendecapff oroundef· NtWfa..11' r.tX 11 " . towMome,cttyllQhtaand RfN& ....... beaChi ,,:.P.... a5eomo Poot&..-.'*'°'1dec*t... REM.TQAS• r...;.,•.•-1111 .,.t., vtew 11800/mo ../ - -+depomtt. 7~157 gar11g901c.port. ~. 1:·::::::::1l~~-!;--~~_l~~BJ ..... Cell Oanny °' . no pea. (168 p;;e;, dbif Wkf:. f EA8TSIOE lg 28t' 2~. 4 S~. ~200 ~tWfx:l."Yf f'j 1 l W... .. 1M............ •SEYEAAL LOCATJOHS = lo ""'-Seourtty bulldlng, ...,...., ~ MOO ..... + 1C>e trom water, Ytt MW, CJaf., pat • •HARBOR VIEW HOME REAL.TORS , ~. poof, encted 1 Bedroom ---• decot, 2bt 2bL S32. . llde 11\dry area 11000 UR 38A fem room 2 le rage and utlla 2'".._ •y..•-an .. ~ 981-1391 or 175-8854 Imo. Avt lmmed. ~ ltory. trml din im. 2 tip, 3 ~~Home 750fmo Aeterenc.9 =o:.•;~odeled 22°";'v~ ~912i .. In*"'* locetlon k'I mott X'lnt CM s.nlot9 PIB E'S10£ tuxurycondo <*oar .. pool, a/e, l3000 2BR 18A, gar. yerd ,..q'd 173-8121 --------deeitabte .... CtoM to 28' 2e..· +dert pool & 3er 31ABa. 1 .,, atd pvt mo. Gardener/pool w -wldeck, Conwnlent IOc. I l• p l l 29' 1~8a, petlo, a.le, 8ec:MIOr ~ 1 == ~:,OP~~ clubhou.. S39,500. yard, dbl gar, !deli tor ¥1c9 lnel. 147.7529 Agt. rv bc:tl :.:= 11275. • .. .. ... • trpe, dlwefl, sn5/mo 1 Bedloorn *' 1eo-5ooo' or f40.152t 55&-e35e roomm.te, 2335 eden. * HARBOA VIEW HOME MIT I• IHI ~Bdtm 1 ~Be t7to Int b S1~75mo. 842-3112 48A 28Al,laz. comm. pool, COHOO W. Bell>oe. fKol , owage. to 28R 1BA. l10Ye. ..... 2 2Bdml 29a Twnh9 l'l90 nr ~A..V I • E'SIOE perfect for 2 c:ar e-. ant lol. Xtraat dec:ofeted. furn, 2Br, .... c:8rpet, 2rtloe, ~ gar, l atd. Lndry 125 c:.nter St 142-142A ~ " · .....yrm rmmeta 3br 3~ 2• '2200. Avf 711 3I0-0271. 28a, U J\, Fftlt. DIA, den. at:91: to bw:tl ~ feclle 112 . W• CM. 8ecNIOr ----'570 • \11.'\Vlf'V'fJ)' r.tK.11 liMiil 1111 cergar. fp, ~-113!0/mo *Liii iSLE• ~oot. 'r' ~1=:: S1 00/moyrty. 17 Hll*a-7~732 • 1 Bedloom .., ~I.wt-"'-..~ .... 151 Albert. &45-0988 ... ... 4t 38R 28a 1 bll to belt\. -•1--•• •• 28drm 1v..a. 'J t7t0·" FEALTOR$• • ea SAM m 11106 MESA VERDE HOME LMoa faqly home. o.m.-..92. ,..n1 21 St300/mo. 1 r-... . ... _ ~·~,.St .. 2-GIMrl ll~~~~~~~=~t,NB ~ 2br, MOt1250 38~ 2BA M9fy reb'b. for ~II Duplex. 4901 ""'-. H8 Open S.. l0-t2 51oe Strol to bdl GrMt *'--,.,,,..~==--:-:::-=..:-:-::-:- ,t__,,_ ii::: 1114 CdM 2BR 11800 Grt Str. 0AYI 111. S1195 4 Bedroom. j ._. Bath ... ~ 38R 28A. 1 99'· Neptune Aw 17~ CHd Wlcome Ho C**. GARDEN SETT INO,· .,.... ..... Hwpt Shn 3BA hi a1650 Grdnr lnc:l 64&-a90i $350oimo Neer a.ch. S1200/mo. •25/mo 131 .. 107 spaclou1, 28r 28•. "':•iif'iMiWLiiitii•iitiilliiEifilnii'lec:tM38R,FR,e-*2500. lannffeiffr (111)336-7517 UYftlW.,,_ 2 E-SlcM Townhov ... 1775/mo +dep, 100 .._ ______________ _. Newport Hgt1 Country Waterlront Hen191 Inc:. ...., ...n EASTB.LUFF 38R new Smalt llHc., lrg deck •:;ao-· 28R 28.A. H8mllton St. f75-0t31 · Home. 28drm 2BA Aeeltor1 831-1400 Spedoue 28A townhome, 111-41H lnc.t.q) & pelnl S1650 "50/mo 'f't'I. t'1$-M50 '*"'· •• new. mt• ......... ,. laJt .. .,.. IMZ BY OWNER $211.500 ...... ..... 1111 1W w/pvt '*'°· pool, • ...._ ......... CREST 38R 70l a.ot\ 1eo-en1 Opft OCEANFRONT i5001Mo • 28A. .,.., paint, •• I .... OPENSund9y 12-5pm. carport & lndry fee. H9w ""'.,......vn' S.VSun 1~ Ownr/Blu y_,,.,,, 1er-... et ~ loc aa20: -· •I ~~ ............... 4ME 11th St 548-7$87. •STEPS TO BEACH• pelnt. NopeU. m51mo. 2~8A condo, 2 ear get. . 100r'FE. ~-Aptow: 190640-2421E 1M Loft, .,.uo. country GMiiT IM N1lsll .... Oen .. llY W 2:.;·~~R ~~:-00'?:; Curt 11 831-1211 :=i,:;1;~2~ 2:C: .:'1 vw5:'o.,3:! ::! Mor Apt. 1. 5'8 4048 · •uoe> BONUS1 OtMt ~ :*,J.a.s. 1~~1~ ---~~"!"!'!!"""!'!"!'"' Only HIK. D.lperate i7" .--· , ._.:.. 1_2 ,· ..... 'd 28A •a llde lod LO 18R MOO li--------~·'"1 ....... unm owtW tnult ... 38' 18a, LCMlfy 3BR + Oen, 2'MSA. yr1y. ..... .. "' -" 11l'NPT CREST CON00111'~ -.--2 'I' I req·o Yearly + den. 1_ C... 890, oar 9tcl EAITSfDE 2M 18A ~.(! AffWI dbl oat home. +2 sOo i'.lf Only l151UOO. Cel Aon CNlnnlng 38R 1BA houae 2BR 2'ABA. gr1 IOc. $1450. AYI 711 $2500.144-70ll w/d l*u,.~idedl. ~ Ho·.,._ e,,1...e,.27 tege, ,...., crP4 & ~·i,: ·~ 3 bedroom rental eablna. Property" Young &3M21e on otamond Ave. Lo WESTSIDE Avl now. Agt Kath HVH·PORTOFINO 48R ~:>= Str f7 ~ LO~ 28A Elllde . wfd hkup & cerport S72t: ... 2'Ai beth with ne ' deflnet• ftxer, drtw by. petlo & dee*. WID hkup YILUS &45-2235 J.Coombe Alty. 3'k8A, new decor"'-FR. · ttrpc. _,..,/a,..., No'*' 7tt-t214 • ceramic tlle, ptUlh 25325 Merton RldQe Dr. In gar~. Allt now $1300 . •lmlU* DA+Qlt qtra. pool. N550 C9M1 titf L •U ':".:ace StSO+ u'r.r. •38r 28e New ~··. & mini bClnda. Spacious PtMM do not cflsturtl ~ U111a. Agt 873-4082 e.u.ee10 or 473-3174 D/111_1324 Elt57-oe4e frplc dlW end P**ar•' petlo with larsit brtell :::~:;;4~-=2~8 ':; -•• 111ta-• Sf*, 3BA New Enat 1tyta IELU •Ill 2•5 ::'~~=~mo. llmlW L• llLI ~ Bonuet i ,_,.. 2s2BA ......... ~ -"'-' .. _. dt>•e e-. 01ndty, a1000.: ': 8.B.Q. Con~t lo-· 5 ........ ...,..., --hmw/FR&tplo.11tDlckto • ...,. ..... .• 50 +1500MC: _,..-,,___ .. _. •28r 28a. dec*.~99f,.. c:atlon.WalttOcommunf· 3e-........ •n.... beh.2pvtpetloew/beeut llWLUll• 3BR 28A, 3 trpa, f 2:1~,~~1 ... '7~",~l IOOS..Lw ...... 211 1 t::~ ..... dtyeff pllng ICIC. ~ .. ty ~. Eaatbluft lhop--I .... -· 48R 2BA. ftplc, new lnd.cp. S1 175 &48-e333 rm, RV. Recently , 28A 1BA. a.er Cdm a13S1:!?:o...S::: 8ot.fi ~-l50-otOI I ping centet, pettl1, C.O:M w-.--tdtcnen quiet eu1.-...o Ma .... llWI* rnodeted get, ' .,... . BACHELOR. Utll9 ift& ~ ~ ... ~·:.:::-..! UllllTPUI loeetlon. Call Liz or f •--•-•tl7 ... •~-2 ~~~~T(~UNcJ~> Ull'M•fllW• ~51!:, :;~~"~ ***** I05tmo. Newpor; ! t .... _. Beeutttul~ decorated ChudlJonea831·1211or n ... u. • Largt 3 -. 2~ °*' · r Por1ollno48r3\o\BaS2900 75t-9570 1•••1 IEW , ecroea the .u..t. 1115 • lend. GNat lnve1tment1 2Bckm Beth condo &46-5743 2BR 3£ hOUM /. ege attached ger~. w/d $1800/mo P...,,,..,4"'2~$2500 . IUUI lrtvneA..,. •A. f20..N22 1251,000 wlthtamuyrm '°"'*din-'h t>IOctc to ~~ tlk •• frplo..: pvt 'fW' M7·M32or722 .. 14' Avalebe9~ tlC •BAYl~V1EW•' s•IG lff , OPEN8AT&SUNl·5 ............ ·-..... -ti3ooi:! _& .... •1200/mo 98Rl>BAHARllORVllWRiAW ,..,. _,,.. c..1.. • . BAYTIMllEAI , H34 Viet dal Ofo. NB to 3rd bedroom. Fite. ywty &42-7404 RESERVE OHE NOW1 Home Comm ~. • . Cow 28r 2Ba ~ow 18T MONTH'S a.ENT 1BR. ~ 4*lla, poo4, : 711-1111 P6ece Mt bet end Pf1oo ! . 721 W. WIAlon St. '*1t . opt & tile. $1800 ../ S1150.113-* ICU ttAUL.AAIHO patio,~-Mo,_ 3M l GF.a(;E Fl KJ NS va~~· Reduced CUTEST LITTLE HOUSE 4:::-3~~ = F-or lnfor c:all 54-7001 .... .:.W..12. '43-H41 \.lnwrv•rtl' P.n 111 DPlX 1•. ~. "' ""· • 1• 1M llll w 8--.s. t5CMaS7 • 1 • to • . IHCOSTAMESA vtewsJ s.e IY91 . 50• Ill 4112 .~1.w ~""ll I V '-perldng.nopeita.A"4 711. ••• .. NIOe lerQll ~ 28R • Ii L(lMl 1 '\s'-"l (714)-673 4400 Tot.1•.,watedlnleut 38R ~ 111p $4000/:...... • REALTORS• MSO/mo. 12llMlt5 1V.. <=*-to~ No llE 'LTOfl.qit 28A. fam rm, lg yrd. Fr. · en-5373 .._ __ P-'-t~ II• NEWPOfllT HEJGtfTI l"O ..._condo IEAUTIF\Jl ,_. -· -,_ peta. l8501Mo , C.11 1 MAllOI doon. 1243 000 ~ OM* -... J ft,_...._ BR 18.A • ~ • .._.. ~ _.,. 131-5$94 llfter 4Pm •• • Set 1-5 272i s.,; Car1ot BALBOA OCEANFRONT Ull....,. ._._ 1 upper vlliw. 2M 2.8A.. trp&. den. 1~ ti. P.-. c:dcn. 2 'M-S . ' 1.ane.1io-1Me 48R 38A, Xlnt cond I ..... t)upexw/gor~vtew. ~ted . a11001month dedls.1c:wga-.,S152S -..1111.L. ' COLDWeu BANfteR O .. ......_ -S2500/mo Yrty leue. Llllll llftllUH = '=•~1 ~ 2 09', xiou.t I 1t-723-IOl9 /mo 807 IAIS. 12tMIM CALL Ill 1111 28f 1'"· I~ OFP ctoM '° 1 ~· .. --"~~ *873~89•• fll IDT ' ' Moble Hm, Udo PwMn, 1 -llr 1a. • ._ ..... ,rm, 1 liiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiil"blOIUtely datllnf r•-DUPLEX 38R 28A frp4e Large 2 I 3 bdrm• NEWPORT SHORES IC>C from water. 281 28a, 1125/nio. "'All9 ~of OR ~17 ~ ~ =""°~ . -1 a ... _, ~ on lo~ ~t=-patio, lndry. tum 'or un.'. w/oceen vu, gar.gee, *Nice 3BR 28A "°'* 2 ~H ~-131S~050/mo PCH. ~ ITS-1802 TSL MGMT 141-1-• ..... ....... aq. · tum 4814 Neptune. Yr1y wUher dryer f\kup, patio ear getege, frpk, W/D """' "".,.. • I t'~ the best: U..u&.U..uaa&JIT decor, hardwood noon& S13So/mo. 850-3&43 w/prlvat• ,...,. ~. '*-""· a1300 NB k>catlon 2br, 2be Nee 28A 1" e-. dlw. *lG ..... VrdadllerttM .. 11au I ~ central air. JU9t llatedl lkyffgttt balcony condo ~ wtth pmto wld =·no peca. 1 yr 1P up11r9. NllW'daoof, 28A 19A &ltl6de lo-' .... MARYANN McGUIRE ~185,000.1.fALL Rot>tn hnia Ila) llu llU upgradM. Neer be.ch I PENINSULA YEARLY $1 150. Pll <*I .. ~ ~.~2419'.t la ~..c:s: c:.tton. Ptrllo. pooj, lndry I ti ... Ill HARBOR REIAL TY encti &3 2M 28R \Ill, lrg kltChfciin; 1 shopping. 33862 Orlinda. *HuGe SBA + Oen, 28A Ray 754-4381 "72S NO rm. S125fmo. Low de-• Half a milfofi-Pttoe reduc-<>mc. .. 73-<MOO t>tctt from bet\. Frpk:, get, Cati ~330/853-f800. "A* Duplex In 881bola. OPEN HOUSE SAT/SUN •mJ •• poelt tlonl FabUIOUa home 100 ReMdenoe '&4t-8nO yfd. S 1300. Avail Nowl SEARJOGE 38R 2111aA Spectacular bey .,,...,, 1 VERSAILLES 28' 2Be -2 12-5. 50I L.arQpuf 38R Spac6oua 29r 28a. vUted 149 E. 8ay • ft front.agt. 8-t view Of a:n:::: Iii... I™ •17~8075* w/ocn vu Poot ~a ten· get. w/d, trig. frple S1575 ~ IUlt9eF _..~with "*"d bey 28A. ,..,, 2 parttlng, ~IW tndry rm TSL MGMT a.a.1eoa./ t ...... .,.. · · · •Waterfront/Canal 38A .,_, r-, . ....,_ $1200/mo • ' -• harbor entrence rom BEAUTIFUL new duptex nl&. AYI 7/1 115 . ·Ag!. 28A 2 story houM 1 gar-1 eerpet. . MCUrlty. _ · patlO . c1oee to ............... every room. 11.L llllllTYU. Ill.I... t•tur .. 28r 2a. all new Bob Kann 537·2270 age frplo w/d 1111~ lg quiet loc:etlon. Ho P9tS ll,out""'*-movlngto a all S745/mo. IAl1W . .,_ I , ........ Bel. 11. llnoe '87 Gr•t 1'1ew, llngle le\l9', 4 appllancH. ea~pet & lnla 1144 pat.O 11575 ' 11200 L .... ...._7211 new!oC916on?AMounoetne 2035 Pomone 2BA 18.A~ ,..,.....,;--,.......,....-:--,...,,i2r:-:=-:ooo=•503 Part! Av.. 175-28M bedroom. 3 ear gerllge, blind•. Gr .. t locetlon • Yll.U 1mw *Agent No .... mow"' ct 11 n I ~ TSl MGMT 142· llOS _MM __ ,_mo_. ----Linde Is. byfm1 5:o5°ooo only '349.500. SELECT w/batc:ofMI 1-c:ar gw + DETACHED eon•, 36r ~ ··~~1 ~50 Ooo Ptaluala 1117 BH&G 751•5000 Cf)ft & lndty.hkuc> 11500 2ba. frpte. AC, refrig, 2· llf..a11 ~ Shr byfmt at25 000 .. urrm Must Mel c.a 85()..5283 ear gatege, ~d. • •••• YD. Hrbr Rdg w/poc>lt814:eoo ON THE SAND SOMMERSEf TH 1 N c A E o I BL E Vu • 51200/mo. 87 Paterrno 48R 2\\BA 2 COM 4 bcU,.49,000 38R n'49A Condo. Bult Largest model, 48R 2'~BA Beyfrontl.M 12500. Mal W0008RIOGE HOME 1 tor y Sp a ne ar Ba)'ld CW byfm M30.000 1N7. Vecant. 20% down. 2-story. Ceramic tlle, 1(.1 UPP9f' unit. Ute! Bt1tel Very nice 38A 28A home Ander.0,, ~ 1 yr Udo Is 3 bd '429,500 ~ will ~711nenc:e91.,. · huge cioeiets, ltt)'llght, Pertee• tor cplet 1ngl. w/trplc:, vttd <*!, atrium. IM. 12500/mo, 790-3124 CM 3br&Ide1225.000 ~. A9t.....,.. • ceihderal <*ling. Lg ~ 780.()714 2 car gar. U 350 131·1400 Coat hwY Office M==: .. I llu 1112 vet• bacilyard 1193,SOO. Merrill Lyncti Alty Ull UY .. 173-elOO a.lboe Ill office _... Won't IMt longl 759-eeOO BI u ff s 3 b r 2 11' b a . • Waterfront Homea Inc. JASMINE CREEK Plan IV Cell for an Appt. ....... IMc• 2141 s 1950/mo 642...en M-F ..... Pltmn Brtght. IUMy 38r,== TDUll llALn C!A'bUEK wooa;y' pa: BAYRIOGE 28A 28A. Belt We'I oM you the down In =~rnodel"f'i43t.ooo. • JJt.1111 • vat• 28r. frplc, new 1'1ew, aeeurtty eaie. ,.-;. exd\g for a lhar'9 of own-()pen SUNDAY 1·5. 33 IHt IMc• f Mi LOVELY 38r 28e Hbr VU ~·· pattilng. no peta.. ~iK 1:,.J,!2 5 anhlp. You MMe the Mlllnult Dr &40-8857 ' Hiiia home. Lrt IUeh pvt S900 utlls lnc:ld '70-t335 mthly pymt1 I we "*9 . Jar, 2L, 17811 Rot· yard w/poot )ecuzzl. -=-BA""'Y-::Rl""OGl!==-c=-OH="""oo"""'""- appree. You receive LO. VELY 38' 28e Hbr Vu terdam (Werner/Beech) S2900/mo. 1eo.e818 WeR liJUI 2152 28' 28a. dbl get, pool. 1~ tu benell ... MU9t Hiiia home on ~ S195,000.146-3143 !'mf'S H~E 11300 •pa w / d fr I g heve deal\ oredll. Agt lot. Beaut. pvt yd w/pool 1111 htltt.,. N9W Duptu. 28R S1800 38R 2'h8a CONDO. tumiuntvm i5t-t4t1 . 957..eoo2 Dyl, Ev. Wl(ncf9 & Jae. OnrlAgt 'rl0-M11 ·3BR. ~¥1 rm, dbl get a1~""' Both., __ . ..i-... 2' =-----=-=----,=--- i --iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii lntM · IM4 "2500 """'· ·-.... ·-· • BeautlfUI ser 2aa. wet Weterfront Homea Inc ear gar. Chrts. 495-3700 bat, 2 1tory 'houae x'lnt °'ar,Oad, 11..,_ Aeattor1831-1400 lfyou'relOOklngtonhome. loc. H.8 No peu · · WllUMllY 1-1 Sml houM. charm 2Br. S1850mo. 759-0485 I saw the perfect house for • _..Li . 1a.. peoo. new earpetl, .-------------..., You to buy for mom· The Wlndwood Townhom• paint 11100 mo Yeerly. ' welt of CWwr IOUth of Evet 2131451-8907 kitchen Is big enough for us o .. rraetd. Ab1~1v1e1{ CMt• illA 1114 t~ sit lrouncf the farm table = =., "::;~~: ... 1) co:;;:; &;a; SBA: and W8tCh her make OUr r!9~ LOYaly to f>ectlo. ta~~ rm, ba~ard favorite blueberry pancakes · "".'~· ~ "'Z.. Cell 2r ~ec ~~lt~5 ~. 2100 -It's greatl The garden Is e311iit"'* '46-s143 "' s 1500 1noe 151.5000 lovefy and, the 3 bedrooms ••. . 2:~501l~~ 'c: =~ =: and 2 baths make It all •2111-A 0renoe Ave.• perfect. Dad. Mom woutd eao-&741 °' 151-3933 love It. And, the value Is ~ i.m IMI 2• 1a. frp6c, ~ there' r -viN. lrt"• ~ h~: UH/mo · ~121,111 • ~-29r 1'Mla. dbl 2311 Santa Ana •2 ow, 2 trptca; $249,IOO. 2131431--31M r.L <Mell a.. 4M-t2SS ••CONDO 28A 2'-'BA Z"'6JI:' ~M~~'::.t!:' ... bch. No ,,.... 11100 --'° ........ 2""9&. t..M. Dy (114)651-1802 OWi' 1100 tlf. Courtyiwd, Orllv l1S-612-5t&a femlty· -'°°"'· M::O•:J· -_ t431.l00. Unde •AVAjlAILI! HOW• .,... hit-4no0477 2IR 11A. ..,.. Gel' gel'· ·~ ... lift• :OJ::a~fmo. 'nmllll ••• a:a.... ~ .... ..., .:::.r-m:-a nmm~~ ''"""'!· 710· t104, ~ ... ,\tM. at, M N.. •. P9llo • ..... ,m9'9 1::.0::.::.:... ... =:: =--= .. uNl. '2"'.aA • ...., ..... ~ -tW ...... 1»11'04 •• ....... Diii ... ..... UD()IAfd ..... to ~ ............. ... Oc1•lfrM• Ht, I.. Oil. •1a.. lil·••11 ..... _, INJH - =Jiriw D1ilyPllit • easygozng styles OUR FAMOUS ESJ\·LINE HAS RETURNEDI BM:ll Dy popul.lf <k~. 011~~-A-l1~ Wiii nM'1 Frl<Uy. ~tut· oay ~ Sunoay '" '" o wn c1.1urf~1on in~ C..u~ Ad.s Siner this is " s~ '" otfrr ~ h.rvr a Thur~ noon Madh~ and uk pr~ymrnJ tor 10 ads fhfS •s ~ to .e prwacr pany aovrrtrsrr' t0< mt'rchaod1~ not ~ SSO fpfier mun l>e llstPd rn .lldl ano no ab0rt'V1auon1 WIH ~ .cc,pWd Al adS wi• rvn Fn<Uy. S1turday and Sunc:i.y f~r" a S·ltM m.NmUm ~ 10< ~ ltnr So your 10w COit DWMl-A-UM ad II only ..• Sl.00. DEADLINE. Thvrsoay noon ~f S·lt~ minimum • 3 <S.lys • 20C ~ hnt • Sl 00 • All .ads arr prrp.ii>CI by coming into t~ D.lt;ly Pr)O( ro p4acr your MJ 0< usr rnr CO\IPC>fl bPlow • Pr1vatr parry rrw-rc h,.ndrsr °"'Y ads No com- ~rc iat .ads Pf'U llvf'\IO<k PfOOV<• Of pl.lrlc• • Each ttrm must Of' pro(f'(j 1n ttw ad Wl(h no It~ OVPf ISO MAIL TO: Oilmft·A ·lMw Oa•ty PtlC>r )JO Wf'U S.ly ~tr~t Cost~ Mrw '" 91616 Da ly ,.""' l'IOurs Mondly·fnd.ty 8 00 AM to S 00 JtM NAME _________ _ ~S'S ___________ ~ cm~--~~---------STATI AMOUNf INCl.OSID ________ DATU TO ""'"-------- Ulill '· 2. •• 4 . s 1 . .. • . . . '. ·- ' ·-,_ . MdiODllll II~ I ::: LM • 11'1• "°~ I I p ·-----... . ..... .. .. .. • I I I I • J /', .... -...,-·.. . ·--. -... ... ~ -' ..---. . . GUIDE TO·APARTMENIS CONDOS AND TO .. ***** CD MESI PllES . A small, quiet complex nestled among tall trees & lavish land- " 8C8pe. A towty, 1 bedroom "like new" wtth a baJcony, cathedral ceilings, fireplace, pool, spa and laundry. NO PETS. $700/mo + MCUrlty. AVAILABLE NOW & 1 AVAILABLE &-21 111.l YEUll IT Ml-2"7 . . ***** **** BUllD llEW 0 $311 IFF 1ST 11m•s REIT 111 PllWlll • 1 Bedroom, 1 Bath ·$750 • 2 Bedroom, 2 Bath $850 Pool, Spa, Garages 111·1111 111-1111 **** 1 Bedroom, 1 Bath w/fabutoue VIEW of the bely In an ~ beech community. Dflhwlllher, micro. garage, prim• be9ct't 12395. ALSO 2 Bedroom. atllrt at s 1n5. .. Sorry. No Peta ?60-()919 0 'BUCHWOOD YILU&E ... .m •••• liwlm cu•no n•E MLTI> Sp~ous 1 BR and 2BR/2BA. Walk-out patio, celling fat\s, mir- rored closets, pool & Jacuzzi PLUS more amenities. 3 1111/N "'tM kid & 2 1IUla "'tM 405 111rzm111ua 114-llll ............... ._ / -N<1Nadays. the hassfes of Irvine's ne.wst efBtaiflnin cera amenities as vaulted ceilings. privdte y " I bumper to bumper trcdfte with a unique blend d shops. restau· paios and bakonieS. ald reCre8>n ' and skyrocketing rents · ranls. theaters and nigt'Elubs. Plus, areas. Dual master sUtes aid ~ · ; make living near the priVcie recreaion areas dler SNimmilg, home models ~ alsO awilable in beach no fun. tennis and ~ling-all COfM!-select ftoot'plans. '\.'\J But. ~u can hM all the advan· niently locaed in a park·like settilg. Experience the ~" tages ~ the lifestyle ~ deserW Choose from ~ ctjnamic apcrt· litestyte ~ rVt next door in lhe lkWefsiy ment communities to ~ waiting tor ~ a oo Center area d Irvine. yDll adiW ~ ~ tv.o and lrVine's l.kWersity For starters. theRts The Manaplaee-three bedroom mOdels feaue SOCh 1Mri ca& 2•1ll•5 57-- ....... M .............. ... f(Ul)ADS ARE FREE Cal: ,_ ~--·-· ----........ w ... pMy .. night Md ~out at the b11ch .. day? FINEln • """9IWi .. '*'of )Q" ••*'a Ind~ wlniW'I ~. W.'l IMf)ou ..... ~~ moMY ,. ••• nang .. ..., IO .... -lalcMft. lfl'Oduct • ......... Mmy +co.nm.+ ........ In YOUR poa1cet C111 CIR• M (114 Ml t• llL -IDr ,._. laM. Clll ITtlllC .. lftfllMandl'lqlllfOll : HHODOIH 1 · ROBINS I JORC' I •4 A I:' • I ._ •A -..1 • I THlODORl I ROBINS 1 f rq;;i n I ~ ~-... " .. ,. ':, ... I • 'll Catlillao ......... - 1m1.· 11•!11,!1'' ~· 1•1.· 131l·•a;,. ~'RI .• , .1 . . _·r~ ~ispl ~FM $1 i: irJtl; F.irv1ew ROMf i ; ~ 11; < " c: aJ r-- ! m -~ e· ll I ... .... ~ i--I ~.ii~~; 1r~ I g8§a= l 0 . I~ ~. iii€ rli § ~ii~~ fli Hoops,.bangles,beads make comeback In tashl.on accessprles New York IAPI · A woman can have a jewelry box f iUed with hula-girl earrings, glow-in-the-dork bracelets and other assorted junk. There comes a time, however, when only the classics -the gold hoop earrings, bangle bracelets and white- beads -will do. Boring? Well, not necessarily. According to Lindo Borella of Monet jewelry, using the right combinations of basics can update and expand a working wardrobe, without costing a fortune. Borella passed her tips along while conducting seminars at Weinstock's during a recent visit to Sacramento. In her copocity as director of promotions and public relations. she travels the United States, . Europe and Japan, teaching women how to select the accessories to enhance face shQpe, expand wardrobe options and update garments. "The Monet designers closely follow the trends in ready-to-wear fashions," said Borello. "T1m1ng rs critical. V'/hen styles in garments change, women need the accessories to go with them. for spring, the trend in fashion is toward f emminity with softened and shapely silhouettes. Colors are delicate or bold, prints are geometrrc or floral, and fabrics ore lightly textured. "following those trends, 1ewelry designers hove created sophisticated and doss1cal styles m gold, and more casual and fun pieces in soft, sun .drenched colors like sea· green, blue horizon and coral. Textures for both colled1ons are motte and polished. "Another strong direction 1s jewelry with movement," said Borella. "There ore free-form hoops, drops and chain-link earrings that swing, shimmy, jingle and jangle. They ore perfect with the stretch, body-hugging fashions being shown for spring. "To go with career clothes, jewelry 1s dramatic and dean-lined. Most pieces have a high polish or a combination of matte with polish. Shopes are simple and usually not against the body. There ore chom-link necklaces, woven metal eorings and nedloces that sit right on the collarbone rather thon dangling. The key is to enhance, not to distract. "for romantic clothes such as pretty floral or lace dresses, there ore ontiques·inspired pieces: locey scrollwork and openwork vine designs in necklaces, pms and earrings. The charm bracelet is another important item that falls in the romantic coteQOf)', and mony ore variations of our original designs." 52 p ars in La TM,..,, •id:, IP" Pf'OMl*ll'-''-Und ~ In LIO'N lleMftJ oonanu. to tkU1lh ... °' ... ecu.ty aandmatk. Known • • fawde Map IDr ·Jlllore llWI oome to Uigune 811 m. the Pon.y 8'** ........ to becOme•Pl•Nd ...... , ~ fOt CUTllolWa eerwe In nelQhbottng.,... Recently, th• Pottery Shlek has tu_, on 801M chaltenglng changee that have Improved 818or"'"'MN'lta, but kept lta tradltloMI lower price8 and original ftiendly charm. I With Its recent ~. the Pottery SMck oflers a greater eetectlon t'*1 fNet b9fore with well known name brands In all areas. onwtng more than 200 dinnerware patterns, the store provtdee the customer with the chok:e of purchasing dinnerware In eeta or open stock, tndMdual " p6ecet. With the convenience of oper:i stock, the customer Is ... to '*' a pw"Ct Ill ilODOI ........ n..-.111De.on..., .., ol ........ £ -= ~ ... w111Mle .. ... ....... ordlr tt .... 1not.her---.For ... complete tabl9. .,... II a v.rtety of ~ atenuJJ .. and ........ t.o l8llor • putchw according to need. The etore Illa"-on hilnd many of the c:ompllfwttlnQ dtnnerwse 90C 111 Di1le tttal are ueualy ~ order' l~tn other atcna. For the complete table, there ta a variety of cryagl atemware and Mth many ook>t"9 and m. trom wh~ to chooee. The dinnerware and glasswm'e ~menu In- clude. eelectton of ewrldaY. low prtced merchandlee. And to start the day. the newty opened Coffee Room Otrera a gourmet Mlectlon Of coftl II, tw. niline-brand coffee makers. muga and addttk>nal accessories. FNeh coffee ts potteiy from tbe Potterr Bluet ID ~Bacb. tog Salonlla,~ontop of latfft techftlCul• and quality prcMlucta Put eome pllllz In,_.,.._ with Lene'• ''Uldmo'' ...... ln Corona del w. ... , dis ,an1n11 the utttmMe -the ...... Md neweat tect.1'quee In Mir clit- 8'gn," Lene, owner. lllld. In bualnw f0r _,_ ,_r::; Lene ~ hie orlglMI makeup d1llg.,. on u. ewo. PMll Influence. Lene'a ,_ "saJon culture" he lllld. "It 11 lmpoctant for • lllton to .... phl~y and attitude, __ .... the lalort doel not Mv9 a direction,'' Lene Uild. He ll*lt several yura trfllnlna In Mlllno. Italy; London;· Md 8t ¥ldlit Sasaoon In Loe Ar.glf 11 P..onallzed WW. 15 a trademark of Lene'a. ••1 give cHents an ortglnal h8lr _. to · suit lndtvtdual ~"iM. said. He Mid It la lmportanJ not to become bored or stagnant wttti the same hair design. "I like to keep hair In tranattlon -• new look -so clM9nta don•t get bored,•• he said. Lene doee thla by changing deetgn, color or "* texture with the latest In perm styles and aolutlona. The salon also Offers make-up makeovers and ~fa.Non pho- tography . .t'Lene'a Offers cffentl a special evening out makeover. for &peaal occaalone," he Said. Photographs of profesatonal • models, Just-starting models who ~ant a portfolio or women the "Ultlmo" look, contact Lene who would llkesomethlng spectat at (714) 675-0823. The salon Is tor loved ones are encouraged to located at 2333 E. Coast Highway contact Lene and echedule an In Corona del Mar. l'he hours are appointment. Monday through Saturday from 9 For the latesttn hair design and a.m. to 6 p.m., closed Sunday. Profealonal sunset photo shots are· scheduled In the evening. "Lat-..untlght ... called the m11gJc llght -because 'the colors are the most · fntenM, are beet for photos," Lene said. Sp~rt.ing. Life offers advantage tO buYers used to catalog ordering ~.-------------------------------"" catalog shoppers w'ho prefer 'h 1 • d • • • t looking at merchandise before name brand clothing design• aa Albert Nlpon, Ruff Hewn, Cam- bridge. Berek Sweaters and more In the comfortable show- room featuring bleached oak wood, a fireplace with oriental rug In front, wing chair and potted flowers. shop. r .ersona 1ze service, 1ntegr1 y ord8'ing or want the option of trying on and purchumg eporte- Gifts such u hand-painted jewelry, watercolor pictures, needlepoint pillows and a variety of accesaorlea gtw the atore a different fair, Gulchet said. "Gtfta don't have to go through the test of what peopte wtll Uke and size, so they are euler to buy for someone,'' stle aatd. Set Traditional Jewelers apart ~.;=.~~si'i!t~ Owned by father-daughter partners Richard Anley and Terri Guk:het, thla ta the, only West Coast franchlee atoreJ>f the Eat Coast-based catalog. "We carry about 40 percent of what the catalog does, with our merchan- dise geared to the Southern Callfornla area." Gulchet aaJd. customers also have the advan- tage of ordering styles not stock- ed from the catalog. Elegance comes to mind when you visit Traditional Jewelers In Newport Beach. "We are a low- key store that offers personalized service and Integrity ·1n quallty and prices," Marlon Half acre, owner, said. TradltJonaJ Jewelers carries fine jewelry, 8'tver, crystal, china and porcelain. "We carry Patek Phillippe watches; Cartier watch- es, silver and crystal; and Boehm porcelain," Halfacre said. The store carries merchandise not usually found In a family-owned independent store, he said. Trained professionaJs give personaJized service, from put- ting a battery In your watch to jewelry repair. appraisals, cus- tom design and estate <'Jewelry putchasing. Another specialized area that sets Traditional Jewelry apart, Is Its unique work In gold, he said. Halfacre has been In the Jew· elry business for 13 years and he and his wife work In the Newport store. "We llke the area, It'• a great locatlon, and It Is nice Write Co. gives you the right service Too busy to find the 'write' stationary? Jonelle Rosenthal, owner of The Write Co., a new business, has a unique service for the busy executive or anyone who is on the go. The Write Co. speclaJizes in personalized stationary, invita- tions and announcements for business, social or personal oc- casions. The company will bring Its products to you, Rosenthal said. Individual or joint appoint- ments are made In advance for a complete one-on-one showing for clients. Appointments are necessary for the personal touch, she said. And, until July 31st, there Is a 20 percent savings on all purchases. A new program called 'keep In touch,' ts designed for the active Individual who needs reminders On Father's Day give Dad what he's. always given you- The Very Be8t I for occasions such as btrthdaya, anniversaries or apectaJ times for family or friends. Keeping In touch means that the Write Co. will send monthly reminders In advance. As part of an Introduction to her service, Rosenthal Is offering a free llmlted-tlme, one-year membership for those who wish to keep in touch. For more lnfomatlon, call (714) 760-1234. lf••• ... ra. ......... ,, Shoppers wtH di8cover such Lene Open since last September, Sporting Ute Is geared towards mother/daughter shoppers and has a medium price range on merchandise. "Fashion Island la generlAl.Y associated with high- end priClng, I think It Is moving towards a more broad-baaed Sporting Life's hours are Mon- day through Thursday 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.; Friday 10 a.m. to 8 p.m.; Saturday 10 a.m. to 8 p.m.; and Sunday noon to 5 p.m. spectrum," Gulchet aald. She The store ls located at 1069 also cites good customer service Newport Center Dr. In Newport as another reason people find Beach's Fashion Island. For more Sporting Life a good place to ·Information, call (714) 721-8829. lcilNon/glanMM ~ ltUclo/IS*ial free 8xl2 with r;>tdO •••on Sl5 l IMAGE/en Adwt1111ng Supplement to the o.My PHot/Thuflldlly, .... 18, 1111 - 3 ,.--...--------------~~ ........................ ________________________________ __ ,. Atmosphere sets Harold's apart . Elegant engllsh antlq&HM and fine orlentM ruo• on hardwood floors by Ralph Lauren, Calv/n Klein and Joan & David. Harold's Is located promote a comfortable Mopping envlror.mt1nt at Harold'• In the at 3333 Bristol In the Crystal Court at South Coat Plaza. For more Crystal Court. The excluslve store~ quality fashion dnlgns Information, contact the store st (714) 549-9933. Rightweighi: Medical Group program helps adapt lifestyles for weight lo~s Doctor prescribes the beat approach to fit individual causes and problems key," Blum said. He was describ- ing Rlghtwelght's slogan of find- ing the weight loss program that suits each Individual, as opposed to ll program that an Individual has to adapt his life to using. "The only way to help these people Is putting Into balance all the multi-causal problems,'· he said. The Blo-Nutritlonal Ap- proach does this. Programs are desJgned to suit Individual needs and eating fiablts. We can struc- ture a program to flt the personal tlkes of each person who ls serious about losing weight and wants to keep It off, he said. most up-to-date equipment, Blum said. The staff Includes physicians, nutritionists and psy- cologlsts on hand at all locations. Blum, a physk:ian and surgeon with a master's In nutrition, he has seen the results, and believes completety In his weight ~toss program. "We are the true guys," he saJd, "all tbe others are gimmicks." ~ Hobie Sports proVides l;>each w~ar, equipment On your ~ to the bMch? Stop at Hobie Spom Ltd. In Corona del M• and pick up "anything you need. kK the beech," Mike M~len. ~ Aid. Mullen and R.8. Alexander own the store tha1 has been In business for 13 YMf9. • ~rta apeielalty store, Hobie Sports carrtee clothes and equjp- ment to satisfy bellich-going lndl· viduats. "We offer a a.ge M6ec-- tton of the latest and neweet of any beach wear Items,•• Mullen sakt _ The store earn. "* chandtse such as bathing 8Ulta, eurf boards, sunglasses, wet aalta, body boards and more for the entire fami~ br.-. · IUCh .. Reyra ,., • QulcUllver and Gotcha ddne the qullltty of products carried at Hob6e , Sports. Currently, the atote la hlMng a Father's Day~ promotion on Aeyn SP<>Of"91'. merchMdlle. Reyn Spooner featuree qualtty clothing In H~ prints for men and women. Hobie Sports Ltd. 19 loc8led at 2831 E. G;oaat Hwy. in Corona del Mar. The store Is °'*" Monday through Friday 10 Lm. to 7 p.m.; . Saturday 10 a.m . to 8 p.m. ; ~ Sunday 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. For more Information. caM (714) 675-9700. "Statistics show that 97 per- cent of people who lose weight gain It back In one year. 99 percent gain It back In five years," Dr. Jerome Blum~ de.. vetoper of the Blo-Nutrltlonal Approach at Rightwetght Medi- cal Group, said. Rlghtweight treats overweight lndlvlduals by reforming a persons llfestyle to assure proper eating and think- ing habits to maintain a healthy life. "We change the lock to flt the The Blo-Nutrltlonal Approach ts a program designed to find and treat all the causes of obesity. "Obesity ts multi-causal, a per- son can no more treat obesity with diet alone, as any other disease such as dlabetees," Blum said. Rlghtwelght has four offices in Orange County and has been In business for more than 10 years. The group Is always keeping up with the latest medical Improve- ments and studies, and uses the For more Information about the program, contact RJghV . weight l~nahelm at (7114-) 776-7861 or (800) 22thRTWT. The faclll les are open by ap-• poln\ment, day or ever:ilngs. ~dl CHILD'S PLAY IS NOT ENOUGH. RI a~-~J eOfandwrougl.t S<tu•r L,.. ___ ..,. ~'t'"..I"",.. .. ,. ~,...~,.,_,?-,~~ Sterling Silver Golf Tee "' . and Ball Marker available with raised letter or engraving 3838E.Co .. 1Hwy.,Sul1eA g Corona del Mar ~ 673-7495 ~ u Distinctive . clothil'6 and 6ifts ' . for tbe dilctimiuU., ..... .. . \ ... , .. . .• .. •' .. . .). • .. r ·. ' ' I . i • , '41o osier~ c1ves bare legs a leaner I .,,.aw.uu.n-ec_.. (0) Moal4Clly ..... a.Moe .... YOik (AP) -Before tM llllDfl la '1¥91 WI ~ be ptt1dlng: PleMe. pt1111, no more knMll ~gMl'I heve Mid the apring with m8nllktrta. dty lhorta and culott-. hoping ithlre Wiii be more knees bloom-1119 In the wwm W99ttw than c.m.eu.. and tuUpe. OK. eo ._...,the big que9tlon: What do you do wtth tega that haven•t...,, the tight of day 8'nce the earty '70.? Thta ...eon, hole comet either In naturat betge tones or color-toned to match the shoes. It la never.. contraated, u In the past when we wore white hOM with black shoes. That ts ablolutety taboo tor tprlng ·~. What we're aiming for now 19 to make legs look long and lean, and that can onty be done when lhoes. hose and hemlines all blend with the same color treat- ment. When designers first started the upward cllmb of hemlines, tM Miiiry ~=r= tight holl1ry that tooka felnll.. ev.t wfttl the ........ of L~ ue~hole._ .. Md8Gftto ........... tfterww ............ . exerdM tlgtlta. MCI tt..a • fuhlon lrenda. Otf* _...,. .... ..__ Women didn't tell IO expo11d The ...... _,.taplMftt °" ;b Clot and dlM ........... tlarll ~ hlevy .. oowr' .... " ho.Wy ... • ""~ trMll dlllgnl -..... ... wee a gentle wey lo .. ue Into atytee. Ptcool ...,_ u., .. DIOr'a dlMiOnd .,...... • .. ehorter9lclrt9. But MtilnetMr rnMnt to be--. .._ under blCk of IM8ftkle. For .. ..., nrma up. the tlghta hevie to go. mlnttklrta or longer ikll18 With who hat probleml 1111,lr-. ._ SO what'a up now? Ate W9 high 911ta.. • IMIM ltrlllght. PwtdlM --expect9d to bare tt IM wtth~ .. ...,_ .,_ aeverll new holewtth~1--lnel11d hollery? atytee of t~ hoM.'' -.ye of atralght, WeM, yet Md no. 9CCOfdlng to Plccolt. .. ,,_. .. ~ hOM Texturee. too, hllve ~. Cindy Plccol~ •.• n111on·a1 wtth a ruffled ~·at the top eoftened tor tprtng. Y~'d heve apokeewoman tor Henea Ho-and ft9hnet ..,._ · . wtth meeh to look clo19ly to tel thllt ...._. s&ery. lt'• true that hoetety I• ruffle at the top. With rNnlaklrt• ftlhnet1 are llCtu.lly teJctured becoming more Meer' u · the · they're worn Juat to the bottom of hoee. And aaeay dot. MCI brulh- weather wanna up, but there are the lklrt IO that when you walk, 1troke dUh patt.ne .. tone on option$ thla aprtng that wfft make the garter top )Uat ~· out at • tone, IO the t.mn lhow9 bUt • hoalery more fun. Thi• l9880n tt,le hem." . . doean't atop the eye or Interrupt we'll find new texturee.-~ u ..,.er-top t~ Hem the lengthening of the lllhouette. and 1tyles to expand our oollec-a bit too suggeetfve. an atterna-~ Aa with .aprtrig lhoe ~ l ttona. tlve la hlgh•~rfM pmity hole a-: .--.. ,,... A major difference between slgned so that' no matter how hoslerYlh-.. ~ .. ho••Y for the f~twtnter season short the ••rt. the·S*tty won't shell putel8. H.,_8tt0Wtpemt, and the aprfngsummer eeason Is show. : • . tea-foam gr9'n, blultt '**· lheemeu. Fashions fOf spring The.major ch.,. Jn textUre a. brushed attver, pale ~ Md ate '9mlnlne and eoft, ln.cok>ra, the addition of Lycra. Not only· orangesherbert. · pattwna and iHttouett•. The doe$ this add more·atretctl anct • So It's time to etop hldt~ opaque.hOee that looked great In durablnty to ·the fabric, It .. IO under wraps of heavy hoelefy arid cooler eeasona I• simply not right adds a bit of sheen; which I•~ let aome lemlnlnlty ahow tor for spring. In lti pt.ce 11:.na~ural, especlalty nloe In the eYenlng. · 1988. --r ·. • ,. •. .. ... . . . . ' . " • -4 ~ I . .,,. .. • Experts: .1~88 sWim.wear StYies.r.eJ)rese·l)t ~:K·~·.:.:i -·: .1· ~· ·c.;,~i .. ' : ·. ·:." .. • • _ · ... . · • . . .· . · ... · ·: · .. . ·1u.s:1n asn1on. ·. active l1festy· Ies, physical zest of women L;;,,~;;;c.,..ri§u.i·em~1an.·1°'"""_,'988'". · ·. · -. · • · one ot-lhe new Nr#es of coordlnitlng,topa and bottoms for LOS ANGELES (AP) -Sun-... In coming weeks, cash regls-suits." Prlnw can camot.Jflage seen In ~lmal and floral prints, Infants and todd/er<I. Deslpna 'r• made oft/Hf~ frosted~· worshiping women from Can-tera wlll be ringing from figure faul~~ more than solids. A. wt:ilch remain popular. blue •net Indigo de!>1"! ... "!~tflrla/. · ·· · ; ; • , f ornla to Cape Co<t this summttr purchases of yardage wtth tex-sheath or skirted suit can hide Meta~llc fabrics are out at . .. . • . • . ,;· ... =~"":~0::~· t;~::f:=:~~~~~CE:~ =:.~££~':::!':.~:::.: ~~~8E~~~"'~ 881 .. com6iftes Fr·~:,;,, ft-. - llfeatyte and physical zest, at the beach a vlsual as well as a WomenwhobUyt~~~eese. "They-t-av-beenreplacedwtth •· .... ~. · · · ~:~ ' sw1w;,:'nd~:~7e=s~~t ph~;al~~='~:e eo•~tlon of-ti~~ :::~u~~=:t~~~~~uv;;'~ ~os~::~~~~~:~0~=~~h CalifOrDia,=irifluences "portray an Image, of physlcfal fers a neoprene wet suJt that Is a $25 and topp,lng about $60., Stripes are also baolc. Qn the , fitness, whimsical sensuality, prov~ttve bikini with.• hint of Gottex of Israel, an International fashion menu, ahaald. ·.. BB1 at tfie Crystal Court In he said.. .. faahlon awareness .and sue-' scuba dlvJng adventure to It. The manufacturer A QJ1cea a bit higher ''Stripes, stripes~ stripes," she Costa Mesa has blended French There Is also· a 881 store In cea,'' sald'Jlll ~ea WfJUams, who ce>St: $75. with ·m&ny offenngs lr1 tt'Mt $80 said. "Vertical, d~agonal, and Callfornla tastefully In Its Beverly Hiiis for shopping conve- deelgns for Los Angeles-based Jantzen al~ features a zip-range. hortzontal or Interjected wtth presentation of Ton Sur T90, a nlfrice; with the same quality J~ swimwear. pered vist suit dubbed the "Sea Swimwear, however, lsh't nm-more stripes are the active lngre-llne of warm-ups, shlrfs, skirts, merchandise at the Costa M818 'Our bt>dy styling, 'color and Hunt," which' diver Mlke'Nefson lted to the beaG.. an dlents of some of the newest sports tops, •weaters and pants store. ProfessiQnal fashion con- prrnt attitude$ are yery fashion would doubtless appreciate. Gottex also make$·~~!; patterns,•· said Wyne. tor men and. ;omen. · • aultants wm i>rovl~ aniatance forwar4', on top and unafraid," · "In deslgnlng Jag swimwear that render swimwear accep:. Calallna Is offering suits In "The ' saga of Ton Sur Ton to sboppera. ·· . · M~. Williams addtii:t. · . . the creative Ideas come fr.om my table for evening .wear and social colors that feature rich earthen began In France more th'an seven Professjpnal aal.es~le wlU . " fn other words, the· 1tJlts are owJl active llfetyle, sporting events, said spokeswoman Vicki tones of sienna, taupe or years JIQO and men and ~men h~p coordinate fasfllona fo( befngdesigf)edforyoungwomen ·events: international· attitudes, Abrams. charcoaJ, gentle pastels Qf mint, havefC>UlldthatTonSurTonputs summer wear and find styles to wtto value. success and Who trends and travel," Ms. Wiiliams The Gottex offerings feature coral, pink lilac and Ice blue. them In shape no only when thy suit lndhrldual personalities. cuttlvate the Body Beautiful. . aald. maillots, bikinis and thongs. "Nothing Is more permanent In are trying to stay In shape but In Jackel<>W said. Window displays. Other lines being off«~ this Stlll, even those who achieve along with swimming minis that fashion than good taste," said shape· for everything," Johnny preview upcoming sW1ei and yearareslmllarlybold11ndreveal-·less than the Image of perfection can be worn to town and designer Lorraine Roese Jn a Jackelow, owner, salQ. fashion t~ends, · spotlighting Ing. Including those made by portrayed-by ttte swimsuit flounced skirts and stretch statement of her philosophy. 'The literal translation Qf Ton what's~n the latest fashions. Catalina. Deweese and Gottex of models wiU likely be able to.find a dresses "fo da 1 'tll d .. At Deweese, the company Sur Ton is tone on tone. Put BB tls 1 ted at 3333 Bear St. r nc ng awn. describes Its as "young In spirit, th · It "'-'o on t C tal rt I S th C t Israel, all of whlcn have West suit that works for them. Such Some of the Influence of last yet well-... red In It• silhouettes ano er way means ""' r a rys ou n ou oas Coast manufacturing facilities. outfits are catred "solution year's popular choices can be "' o color; ~nd Qo~ a step further, It Plaza. For ore Information, call . ·• · and leve of sophllt!Catlon." also means tn-Shape or In-tone, (714) 662-2~. # . r , . ne Nellolt loebfeller Coli«:don Fine Art Gallery . F aS.hiOn t~~rid .S ._api>ar~f:it in ~h.jrt detailil)g DAD'S GIFTS Art and Jewelry for the Discriminating Taste • Original Paintings ' • Bronu Sculptures •Works on Paper • Erte for Men SOUTH COAST PLAZA SSS Briltol, s.lte !800 Com Meea, CA tzeze (714) 540-5077 New York (AP)-ShlFts have lots of detalling, espeelalty In pocket and collar treatments. There are oversized pockets with contrast stitching. and emb1olcjered crests or ln- ltJals; and some pockets are pleated. The traditional collar. stytes -the tab, pin, point, ~ spread and button-down ._ are all found jn spring. collec- t Ions ai\d are often $hown ln contra5ting white. 'French cuffs with understated cuff links continue to be Important tor the executive. · Dress Shirt colors are the traditional white, pink and blue, but this season there Is the addition of peach, aqua and maize, used as solids or In a variety of striped combina- tions. RJck Vogler, vice president of Wemco Inc., a major neck- tie manufacturer, says that tie .. widths follow the economy. ''When Ote e.conomy tighten~ up; ties . g~t nar- rower," said Vogler. "For spring they wlll be slightly narrower, 3-1• to 3-12 Inches wide. Last season yellow was considered the 'power' tie, but after the problems in the stock market, everybody switched to red -all shad~ of red, lnCtudtng true red, wine and pink.'\ While dress and business clothes are softening In at- titude and flt, aportiWear takes a more dressed-up direction. There are · two major color stories, nautical and sun.:drenched. The regi- mented nautical shades are the expected red, whtte and blue, but also Include kelly green, purple and jade. THE TOTAL TABLETOP, BOUSEWARE AND DECORATllfG STORE •Ince 1938 . BRAKD RAIDS ARD BARGAIN PRICltS • DINNERWARE • GLASS & CRYSTAL •FLATWARE . • TABLE LINENS •BAKEWARE j • GARDENW ARE •CERAMICS :. •VASES • • HAND THROWN PCYM'ERY •GIFTS S1ionctscon MIKAjf\ ' T The Sun-drenched tt)errte Is shown In solld shades wtth trends Is In evejln~ar. The a softer palette of prl,,,ary· cQntrastlng. blazers and polo unmatched jacket In 8 colors thllt appear washed or stUrt~. The real problems are shadow stripe or bird's eye f9ded.' In . ·womenaw,,ar shoesand~ocks~Doyouwear weave Is shown with tra,- they're called the Southwest. sandals or oxford.Si sock.a or dltlonal 1uxedo trousers. It Is shades. For men, thJs group. no soc~s? And If yC>u_ wear more of an lnterpn~tlve formal Includes peach, rrtlr\t,: aqua socks; • do ·you wear sport look that gives men some and lavender. · • · socks or dred socks? No options for black-tie dreu- Wlthln the sportswear matter, the models all.looked Ing. AnottMtr comblnatlon Is a dtvlston t~e Is a strong wrong. . cream dinner jaCket with trend toward. walking shorts t~.best-qf IQOrtfwear Is ' black and. whJte. checked shown with &PQrt c.oata. It Is ~ sweat6rs. Most are done In trousers, black cummerbund lbok that wUr take some all-cotton knlts,-and now that and ~lack bow tie. getting·· qNrd to, especially mosf designers are dealgnlng As the JP.rtngaummer press when designers sh0w them knit ,patterns wtth computers, preview · contlnlJea 'through wfth dress shirts and ties. the patterns are Hmltteas. Sunday·, ln~lvldual designers These shorts are cfone Jn Crossings shows a beach· wlfl "lhow tf\elr coltecttons and tradltlpnal trouset fabrics, scene sweater In sun--there'll, be a Closer look af but the. legs ai;e full wtth deep 'bteacfied pastels and aoothor aprlng · 'men1wear by f)~Pe pleats .at tJ'l8 wafatlfne. Sorn, sweattr covered wtth salllng , Clothing, Ct)oae Ctuslque, . . boraer on th• rldlcu(oui when· . flags In pllmary ah~ea. Both Marlthe & Francola Glrbaud, they',re sttown In tradltfOnal' are wondertut examplee of lebn M~. BUI Robinson, . · sutt P.rlnts *'6ch u glen plelds · new comp~er-knlt · ~ech-• ' Ron .. du. . Shamuk, • ZY!09. or chalk stripes. They're a . nology. · " · .. • Tony Lambert, Jantzen ,andli uttle more beflevable wheri · :. • One of the m08t 8UOC•lful • Jockey. · ·~ • ' ,· -: • • lit • • . . -. . IMAGE11n ~19 lupplement to the Diiiy PIOtlThur8dlly, June 11, 1818 -5 The CIU:B off era horse lovers an &ltern•tive to boarding . • ..... ycMI ---~ '° . Do.-., ........... dlll equ11trten..,.nencet0r•long · · own)IOW'ownhohe,b\lthevenof rklerltrM..r, protlclel 111110 •thWwanttoueethef..._. found louthern Caltfomll the , forlndMduMl~edlnem.· AddtttoMI· ........ ~ for ldelll P'W to affotd bcMlrdlna or Ina horl11 In lhow OOlwpelllOM. llrvlcee IUCh u 11110iW, bo91'd- ftnd 1n ._to ride In? Well, lhe "WeWlleupptylMhonln ... .,. =ldlng. Th«• la not Club In sen "Juen CilpriatrlnO~· ilder Medi .. dedadlon Md • ed *'9th of time for " ofterl~1~.atpt1attve aow of hol'l11," lhe llld. Ball who wilt\ to 1M• • . to high ooeta and lnconvenfent. · haa ll*"t ..W.al Yf8t1 training horM out, but "uauatty the •wr- ,,_ .,..., 'In Europe Ind 13 ~ In the '999 ride la · two hours, but If · · The· Club provldel horw to Unft9d State9.,..,.,. and giving tome0ne want• to ride longer or member• for pl••• we rldlftg, · twona. · h•ve a picnic, we juat uk them to com~tltlon training, riding · TM Club le cur'9ntty on.rtng a let os know In advance," Balley 1.-..onS Md equeetrltn aHowa. Summer camp fOr chMdren or Nld. •Jft"•. grMt WW/ to~ .. , adult• with • dellre to ...,,, ... Located at 27252 Calle Arroyo 'the jOya of the eq'*1rtan IPOf1 ~·of the horee wortd. The at the Ortega Equestrian Center wtthout the heedechel," P... fNe.c,tay cia1111 Wiii offer lnfDI• "In San Juan Caplstr•no, The Club a.ly, owner, 181d. The Ctub wtll to atudenta lo riding, grooming, la open Tuesday through Sunday provide boerdltig, or Jutt auppty vetertnar"Y cite and atabte man-8 a.m. to 7 p.m. For m.ore the .hone fully .SVoomed and ~-Information, or to register for the Uddledtorldetnr,.localhllaor Aon.tlmelntlatton,..ofS500 Summer Camp, call (71•) aJoog the river bed, n Mid. gtveaClubm.n-.awo.-ry-fr• 881-3090. . . ~ tlle Jett, Dorotll7 Balla demOIUtnltm JC.atll7 Greea Ila• to bazJdJe tlle lion. to Tiie CJab member. S,.JPT Samler and wrJille Patrlcla s.Jl7 loob oa. Urii~Vite brings Micro Diet program · into America's weight-loss market . p( · Uni-Vite, a brltlsh-based month worldwide. weight loss company pf ans to The diet products come In make Its Micro Diet a household three forms: shakes (chocolate, name In America thls year. vanilla and strawberry), soups The diet plan Is already avail-(chicken and vegetable) and bars able In 25 countries worldwide, (peanut and cinnamon). Mixed or with more than two mllllon people matched, three Micro Diet on the program. "meals" add up to between 630 "The Amazing Micro Diet" by Malcolm Nicholl describes the history and development of the diet, including Its reSe&rch, credi- bility and effectiveness. Uni-Vite and Its successful program have progressed from country to country -vlrtualty by IDl'I® #501 · SHRINK TO FIT Walat 28 to •2 • Length1 30-40 ADO $3.00 Lengths 3a-.40 LEVI'S® DOCKERS ••• All with that great Levi's• qualtty. : Com~ eleeWtiere to $3• -3 gr'8t styles ... great for O&d'Qr Grad. Waist 30-o42 . . . · SHI.PL.EV'S : ' . ' .. , , . . l HUNTINGTON BEACH , Sellclft Vlll-oe ~at yotkfown 531-4700 • : .. COSTA MESA . • Hllf'bor Center ·' Harbor at Wll8on ··131-12n The Micro Diet consists of and 700 calories per day. Three shakes, soups, bars and a swiss servtngs of Micro drinks and cereal, all In the 210 to 250 · soups contain all the protein, calorie range. Sole source usage vitamins, minerals, trace ele- of the program supplies more ments and electrolytes required than 100 percent of all required for a day's balanced nutrition. nutrients and allows for weight popular demand._ according to t-;:::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=:::::::::::::::::::::;;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~======. the company. losses averaging 16 pounds a A best selling book In England, •' .. ·, For more Information on the Uni-Vite program, contact Bob Schroy, 2815 Cassia, Newport Beach 92660 or call (800) 54' 1- 0IET. CL01HING FOR A LIFEsTYLE. r ' \. I -. . . . ---... • SPECIALTY SHOPPING'S A BREEZE AT MESA VERDE! For anything and everything from the worlds of bicycling, golf and music, you ' II find it all at Mesa Verde Center. Music Market-from Hayden to hard rock, Lena Home to Bruce Hornsby-even the hard to find- in records, tapes and CDs. 546-0038 Nevada Bob's Golf-all· the gear the golfer (expert or amateur) requires- plus, indoor lessons for the links! 545-3827 Wheel Land Bic~le Shop-the most complete pedal pushers around, featuring the high-performance, maxi- mum-oomfort new mountain bikes. 741-4882 • \ .. ) :]~ .) ummer in style with ShipleY sf ashions able. Shlpley'a ator. .,. located In aeveral areaa throu::out Southern CaMfomla. l•I the Huntington a.ct. atore. there la one located In AIW*m, Coeta Meea. Orange, Loe Alamftoe and long Buch. • "We hav. our uaual and every- day low prloea on name-brand quaJfty rnerchandlM," ROia aafd, "but through June 10 we are having a Dad and Grad Nie wtth ewMl better prlcee." To tae advatage of the pro- feak>nal l8l'Vlce and exceftent prtc:ea, contact the Shlpley'1 nearest you. For more Infor- mation, cau the seec• vmage atore at (714) 538-4700. - ean11ton~e fora...,.on--plliOetara ordeaei••._.,..._ pn111d ...... _,.,of.,11ey merctwtdlll .. ~ ~ In LllgUM a.ch. . CWrylng the .... In Imported European cry1tal, Laguna Cryatal ofter• ·Waterford, SwarOYlky, .._,.t, u.dro. Capo di Monte and 13 p11tterna of ~ ....,..,, for cuatomer looklng for~ lf)eCl•I. Born lind l"lllled In Germany, GIMla Buf'millt•, owner, traveta to Europe to do the buytng for the 1tore. With her prev{oui beck- grou nd In quallty crystal merchandlM, Bunn9'ater open- ed her more JnJ..eQUna B••ch In November of 1987. "We have more of a vartetY than moat stores," ahe Mid. The llhop carries everyttwig from flgUrfnee, lamps, chandeffera, v.... and much more. Service la another lmpreulve experience of shopping at Laguna Crystal. Laguna Crystal la currently having a Father'• Dey aale and off era 1 O percent off Baccarat crystal, .Burmeister aald. The store Is located at 235 Ocean Ave. In Laguna Beach. For more OJ.e.la Brum.,._, o....,. ol ~ Information, call (714) 497-9191. 1C,,..,.i.1a. to Jefll'OIJe aa ""7fiW tn,M tor ______________________ ..... ___________________ . Drive-through popular Siebert series displayed l at the Mr. Best Cleaners at Nelson Rocketf ell er ' Drlve-througl't Mf'VICe la d• signed for customer convenience and to save time for busy people. That's why Mr. Best Cleaners offers drtv&-through letVlce for Its customers. "ApproxJmatefy 99 percent of all our customers use the drive-up aervtce," Rod Chalmers, owner, said. Mr. Best, located In Corona def Mar for more than 20 years, betlevea In fast and efficient service for Its cuatomere. "Cus- tomers don't have to get out of their car at all," Chalmers aald. Employees will go out to the car, pick up clothes to be cleaned and write a ticket; when the customer retuma to pTcl< lfema up, DiiY wm be dellvered to the car and either hung up or put away In the back of the car, he aakt Offering same day cleaning service Monday through Friday, other services Include alterations and cleaning service for bedspreads, blankets, draperies, formal wear, leather, suede and ski wear. All work la done on the premlaea by ex- perienced employees, and stat• of-the-art equipment la uled. Mr. Best Cleaners ls located at 2939 E. Coast Highway In Corona del Mar, behind the Holiday House Liquor store. The Language Connection is offering summer courses Neleon Rocketf...., Cottec- tlon, located In South Cout Plaza, preients the Limited Edition aeries of ocean sculptures by Jamee Siebert. The gallery carr ... paintings, bronze sculptures and works on paper. Nelson Rocketfeller tries to limit Its merchandise to the unusual and unique -limlted , edition series of fine art, uaa Brown, manager, aald. Siebert'• collectlon of ocean sculptures have been Influenced by his many years of living and creating near the sea. One sculpture, Pelican, which Is photographed, Is a 1984 Bronze, and Is currentlyavallable at the gallery. Nefson Rocketfeller Collection Is located In South Coast Plaza, next to Saks Flfth AvMue. For more Information, contact Brown nae PeUc:aa m__,_ 25- at (714) 540-5077. b7-lO-b7-l3 lacbe& Allan Adler designs metal masterpieces Why Is It that everywhere we go, we expect everyone to speak or at least understand English? True, English la the moat widely spoken language In the wortd, but aren't we mis.sing something more than just the advantage of being understood In most places? Leaming a foreign language In r---------------------- the United States can also help you get ahead whether pro- f esslonally or as a better educated person. A new language Is like a key that wtll open many doors. The Language Connection Is offering summer courses In Spanish, French, Ital- ian, German and English at the Laguna Beach High School. If you are Marching for that one-of-a-kind design In Jewelry, ftatwear or hodoweet, vtsJt AJlan Adler Sltveramfthlng In Coronal del Mar and talk to the expert craftamen you can make just about anything from metal. More than 40 yeara ago, Allan Adler atatted hla bustneas of metal emlthlng and today la wetl- known for hla high quality craftsmanship for handwrought designs In gold, sterling sliver and quality pewter. "We are a traditional allver- amlth, wtth the ablllty to create things that are one of a kind, In everything," Cynthia Larson, Adler•• daughter, and manager of the Coroha det Mar atore, said. "Our designs are very stmple and classic, we llke the cleaner lines In pieces," she said. How many opportunities slip through our hands by not speak- ing a foreign language. Whether a fove relatlonahfp or a business one. we wonder If we had only spoken the language we could have got the Job, known that person, made that contact. All Concords in Stock 40% Off © MU~ 5 "'IRI$ .. CAAAT G<XO "<)MAN NUM["AlSON A cM-.l c:a.ou-t£D,ACC WAT("TtG .. T TO 1-ll AT~R[S M 9!Ki ut.Ott:S GOl.0 ""'0 QIAMOl"tO t.l(Tll90f'OUT""' lot CAltATG()l0 ...,.0 ~ ~.,_LING OIAMONOli H J90 ICN eGOt.OMIT~ITAH HAHO l'OlllfCOM CA"ATOO&.O ULT•• t-1~•90 3 Traditional J~lers l.AOIES GOLD ...,..0 01AMONO "4"11 HANO llOUSt<COM CAl'ATGOl.OWl'n4 OIA""ONOS IN B(Ul '6•90 CONCORD. WATCH MAKERS To THE GENTRY ' .. c •• ,.,. These are the Concord models whose personalities rome to life m the even mg, the thinnest, most elegant, most scnkmg for, mal watches crafted m Switzer/and today. Om.side the Concord Paris .. (Figures I and m. So sleek that it forms a amtmu, ou.s u..ot,ttn band around your wnsc, it's a timepiece for a lifetime. Be.a whm it romes to slim elegance it would be difficult to compe~ with the Concord Metropolitan .. (Figu.rcs ill and IV). These are watches for the grandest ocmsions. Both are dattling objets d'art in their own right. You can see the entire range of Concord u.mdi.es ht.mdcrafud in Swatter, land at a sptcially appointed jeweler. He will help )Oil dUcowr tht Concord . design chat best suits :yw. 2630 Sin Miguel Di. N~ BeaCh CA 92660 Located in Nev.wrt Hills Center · (714) 760-8035 Classes will begin June 27, and are structured for adult•. chll- dren or buslneaaea Interested In learning a foreign language. For more Information, call (714) 497-9393. SPECIAL OFFER 2096 OFF: Social .t Business • ~ StitioMfy t lnvi&alioM t Anaouncemeeta IY~ • (714) 1-.1243 ...... ,/) .. Nearty one million Americans will die of hMrt au.ctca. ltrok8a and ott. cardlovatcular dl ... M1 thl1 year. Thar. mote than were ldlled In Wor1d V., I and I combined. Bui )<>U can l'9duce your rtak of c::ardkM8culer dlaeue by eating • low-fat. low-<:holeat•rol diet, controlling your blood preuure, and not lmOklng. Do It now BecauM In the batue 8Qalnat cardlowlscular di ...... It may be do or die. t. V American Heart AlsoclaHon W£RE FIGHTlf\G Fm 'tOJR LIFE I]{ ll S JI ~I ( ~ ]((. ~y S1l:·\ ll., ( 0 M P A N l It II a tradition In Ireland to preeent couplel' wtth a '11eke-Up .... " Thie belt le rung when one partner 11 ready to "make-up" end• end eny ltttle qUarrel that may take piece during their marriage. tt la expected that MCh partner will take their tum rlng!ng the belt, and not the ..,,,. partner fNetY time. With toYe •... ha . "" . ft'L 11-5 1111'1.' lM:JI Sit lf.1 .......... • LIONAN> W.C. MoOONALD 1M3 Mlllghte.....- 549-1944 ..... c.e ............. . .................... . , •• __ , •.. '·"·'· AT•I CIYSTAl COUIT Al SOUTH COA$T PlAZA • »)l llM $TltlT I ISS •COSTA Ml'°'· CA ,,,2' 17 .. 1662 .C:I r----,. ....... -..~----~------~-.----------.;..,;:--..,..-~--IM---AG-f.1-ain_Mt. _ _:~ Supplement to the 011Y Plot/TburMlr, June 1t, 1111 -7 • entw1 s ring at sale raditional donate• prize C ~,.:.: .=:::: f H f H II oocl ..... ntld .. with ...... grMd or ooray or 0 yw :Prm .......... ~ neYet won I • .,_.. 1bll0re In my fife,'' ~lkleli..d. "I can hardly be-At N9Wp0t't Hllll c..ter'a port Bwh, holtl en ...... • •• tNi." 'Hooray for Holl)wood" lk»-.-dl'Welk .... flWlfY IP'lnl· TM lldclUof\ to donating the ..,.. ..,. held recently, Roan-.... anr.cta -~ TredltlonalJ.weler1jolned ~.\ V.aJ..~. vC:.awa :.,::-::= =--·"w°"' ~~.2';!'• ~IMnNnta at the center In "" ._. ty. ' • ••-~ ~ a percentage of their ~time ree6dent of Newport ~ .a>out the .... 11rn01t • ~ .... day'1 ..,_to the ~ wu Mlected • the montfi In advanoe," M#Y •wtm for the Gokt program. The ~ner of • cultom~. Mlchaetlon, owner of Newport P,.ogram la a joint effort of the N and diamond ring donated ttllll Drug Store, Mid. "ft t. ~ty of Newport Beach and radltlonal Jew111ra. realty become • maiOr wt." Corona det Mar High School to he center, located In New· For Velde9, the mep "9ftt ,._money tor the construe- ·----------------------------~ I MR. BEST CLEANERS M • _.....,. I I • ~ I I ''TIN 5-rcA lol Eu.ii.ace St.-Hen" I ~ ~ I I IOSAYSRODltAN~ -E I I I •1m ......, B I I ICWIPI= I I $5 OFF ....... ,, S,.ci1I t I I 25% OFF '--~ I I ANY ORDER OF S10 OR MORE 2939 E. c t Hw •• I IF PRESENTEDw/PICK-UP $1 OFF CLEANED& FAN FOLDED OU y. EXPIRES 8131188 • INCLUDES eeosPREAOS 1 BLANKET Corona del Mar I 1 EXP1Rese1311ee ,7~_11n, . _______________________ ,..,.....,. .. __ , ~Ion of en otymp6c-llze com- munity awtmmlng pool. M4tmber1 of Swtm for tM GOid were allowed to host e tab'9 at the 1&'9 and colleok contribution•. "We really ap- preciate the Involvement New- port Hilts Center ha• had with our program," Susan Weir, di- rector of community relation•. eald. "It's really refreshing to see their commitment to serving the community." Newport Hiiis Center Is located at the corner of San Miguel Drive and Ford Road In Newport Beach. Shop. Westcliff Plaza for· Father's Day gifts If you're looking for a unique gift for that h•d·to-buy·for Father, you're eure to flnd It at WestcHff Plaza. W•tcttff Plaza, located In Newport Beech, boMtt M9M- free thopplng, convenience end personal service In It's more than 20 gift shops, clothing ator .. , foods and services. Specialty gift thoppfng la euy at Westcliff Plaza. Look for watches or fine jewefry at Chartea H. Barr Jewelers where a watch- maker la available on the premetses. Jewelry can be cleaned for free, whlte you wait. Vlslt Halllday'a Traditional Clothing and choose from a broad selectk>n of quality eulta, ties, shoes and accessor'88-they have Just what the welt-dresMd Father Is looking for. For those whOM time Is at a premium, The Storekeeper will aet your mind at ease with a great · selection of Reyn Spooner and all cotton shirts. sweaters, argy'9 IOCkl, c:uual J8Cketl and pw- aonatWld aervice. The ..... staff t. wilt even Mlect and deMwr Father's Day gifts to your home or office. Crown Hardware carr• ~ tool, acrew, gadget and glzmo lmaglnable, and the k~ able aales staff wilt even upt8'n • how to use them, If neceeaary. Stop by Heidi'• Froget'l Yozurt, and treat Dad to hla favorite flavor. Homemade mofflna and . tight lunches from Katie McGuire's Pies are also a fP8d8' ..1 treat. As an added lncent"'9, Katie McGuire's witl deUver to Dad within a 10-mlte radius. Hickory Farms sell• sandwlchel "to go" as well as cnee1ea, specialty meats and other dell Items. With gift food Mtectlon• ready for shipping, it's easy to find the perfect gift for a Dad who's not close by. Westchff Plaza 11 located at Irvine Avenue and 17th Street In Newpart Be~h. LUck of the Irish Rhonda Redman, CMJW of The lrWI Crystal Co. displays fine crystal merchMJdlse. All Irish aystlll Is 33 percent lead, mouth blown and hand-cut In lrel.nd. Irish Crystal Is located at 3786 S. Bristol In Orange. For more Information, call (714} 549-1944. clUNE SALE . 20% OFF DAYTIME DRESSES, TEE-SHIRTS & SWEATERS 25% OFF SELECTED SPORTSWEAR Plus Additional Markdown on Supersaven (Already below cost) Something Special feminine fashions 250 E. 17th Costa Mesa.• Hilgren Square • 645-571 I • .. You've Tried All The Wrong Ways To Lose Weight ... at Ortega Eq•estriu Center EQUESTRIAN SUMMER CAMP! • Weekly sessions, Tues thru Sat 9am-5pm, lunch included • Only 5 riders per session • Video taping • Individual instruction vG Schooling in all aspects ·or horse management Call for information about the joys of the equestrian world without the responsibilities of owning (714) 861-3090 Now Find The Rightweight. The Rightweight Plan employs the most current state-of-the-art technology. The program is designed .to ensure both rapid weight loss and · to provide the support you need to \ keep the weight off safely and effec- tively. Our plan offers these unique features: • Thorough medical and nutritional evaluation • Complete physician supervision © tE ~ •Comprehensive Bio-Nutritonal Approach developed by Dr. Jerome Blum • High protein, vitamin & mineral diet supplement to assist in rapid weight loss • lndividually tailored, computer-formulated diet plans • Computerized body composition analysis • Medication for metabolic control & appetite supression • Electro-~cuscope to reduce periodic food cravings • Profe.ionaJ!y directed individual counseling and group support session Call .now tor a FREB COMPUTER DIETARY 0 LAGUNABBACB ANABBIM COSTAMBSA PLACBNnA 14111 ..... v.... 21SN.&at.eCollepBhd.tA 1&'71W•WO.O. IOOB. von.u.a.Bl"- RilhtweilhtMedical Groupe• (800) 228-RTWT • (800) 228-7898 • (714> 776·7•1 f ' ... l { t { t ' f l ) " r e s p e c i SumnlertirN excitement means coo'ing down hot IUl'IWnef doyi with Frozen Yogurt. Come 1n ond try our brand new Kono Kolfee along with our 36' other non· fat yogurts.' 722-99IO i n m I_ n For brides, dods, or other gilt-g1v1ng needs, choose now from selected pictyre frames reduced 30% through June. Mon-Fri 10-8 6~13 .. d Oreng. C... DAILY PILOT/l'hndey. June 11, 1 ... N M Bright. Beginnings her happy ending Seminar ----.... offers· helptO singles Are you looking for .. Mr. or Ms. Right?" A half-day workshop, "How and Where to Meet Relationship. Minded People" is offered Satur- day from 9 to 11 a.m. in Room 101 ofOranaeCoastCollqc's Social Science Buildina. Reais- tration fee is$ 15. The workshop, presented by OCCs Community Service Of- fice, features lecturer Job Ferra, who specializes in e"plor- ina the behaviors that make people ~ucccssf ul in meeting and connecting. Fersus bas appeared on local and national television and radio talk-shows. He will discuss topics such as: where to meet new people; how to make the first move when you see someone interestina; how to identify stable people; discover a practical way to determine com- patibility on the'first 11" dates; exploring five roadblocks to con- necting; and two ways to double your chances of conncctinaintoa loving rlationship in the ne"t six months. Registration is under way in the Community Service office, ldeated in the coll•'sStudent Center. Theoffice1sopen Mon- day through Friday from 9 a. m. to 7 p.m., and Saturday from 8 a.m. to noon. For information, call 432-5880. • • • Do you have any used clothina, shoes, household goods, toys or books? A Goodwill donation station is now open every week- end during the Golden West College Swap Meet. Located on Edinger and Golden west streets. the trailer is open Saturdays and Sundays between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. Goodwill provides programs to train mentally, physically and developmentally disabled people for employment in Orange Coun- ty business and industry. For additional information, call 547-6301. • • • EUaabe~Scllaler,daugbterof ................ '-....... ~z.:reen bellne9 tile beet way for her to help the D profeealon la by ehadJhaa law. ~stablishtng a hospitality service for newcomers a natural for ex-Southerner BJ JOYCE BODLOVICB ................. Betsy C.ollins story has a happy endina. Bom in Roanoke, VL, Collins &ed a fairy talc life. She married a s\KXICISful corporate executive, pvc binh to four children and settled into a eomf0t11ble hfestyk. Th<>U&h Collins was a homemaker by profession she spent many hours in volunteer jobs. Her ability to make people feel comfonablc in a new environment was a valuable com- modity. In 1981 the famiJy moved to Texas and Collins became acquainted with Welcome Wagon International, an orpnizataon whose members v1s1t new residents and introduce them to local businesses and community ~r­ vic:es. The volunteer job evolved into a staff position that culminated in Collins being named one of the top sales people for the company. The family moved apin ir: 1984 to a spacious two-story house in Hunt- in&ton Beach. And that 1s when the life Collins had enjoyed for 28 years collapsed. .. My hust.nd left me." she wd. "I had no idea there WIS anyth1na wrong. we had what would be considered a close-knit family. I was devastated." Devutated. yes. but not without an inner stren&th e&mb1ned with the suppon of her children and friends who would help her weath4sr the crisis. And as the shock of her divorce eased, C"olhns evaluated two areas of ber life in which she had a first-baod understandins. . ~ .. I was raised in Virainia so Southern hospitality runs in my blood ... said the attractive •9-yur- old C"ollHls ... As far as the moving - well -my former husbe.nd was a corporate n~: I have moved 20 times in m> hfe ... In 1986 Collins formed Bright Bcainnings, a welcome servi~ that benefits new residenu and local businesses Wnh dau&htcr Melanie Hodison. 28, as her panncr. and assisted by another dauptcr Kelly Moses, 27. the home-hued business now offers its services in Fountajn Valley, Hunttnpon Beach, Tustin. Fresno and Irvine. Collins said five more territories throuahout Oranse County wJIJ open this summer .. When we first staned the com- pany. I worked with one desk in the comer of our family room. A year qo we moved to the front room -and now we are an the dinins room. the praJC. _ aU over the house." she laUShe<L f Accordw to Hodpon. whose bacqroun<f 1s computers and techni- cal writins. and Moses. who created (Pleuew lllSOIMNIHG8/ A6J Nurse puts cai'eer on hold, -studies law to aid profession ,, BJ JOYCE BODLOVICH °' .. ..., ....... Kathy Green has taken a sliabt detour in her nunin& ~r. And t6at path bas curved into Long Beach and stopped at Pacific Coast Law School. Green, 39, is a 1985 graduate of Golden West Col1C1C's nuning pro- gram. The decision to pursue a law dqree came after a harrowing shift in the critical care unit at UCI MedicaJ Center. .. It had been a God-a'}'ful n1&ht. .. she recalled. ..We (nurses) TCTC sinina in the hospital cafeteria talking about some of the chanses we wanted for nursina -an increased sen~ of professionalism, an increased say 10 nursing -which we did have at UCI -more staffing on shifts. more education requirements and an in- creased salary. "We decided that all nurses gn~ but nobody docs anything about 1t. We agreed we would. so I staned law school and nobody cl~ did," she said. Green took a pan-t1mejob with the Huntington Beach Community Otntc in order to study law. Her goal is to use a law bacqround to benefit two areas of n~ dcfin.ina patient riahts and cstablistuna nuncs• ri&bts.. •• 1 sec these as two separate and distinct areas. tbouafl most people combine them," she said. "There tS not a lot of pay beck in the nursin& pt"!)fcssion. When you look at other JObs open to women and the money they can make -nurses' salaries haven't kept up. "We have a tremendous rcsponsi- b1ht)' and nunes have become ~ iJlus1oned. They say, 'bey I don°1 need this, I am ,ettfogoutofnunina. ·That is why there is such a numng shortage. Rather than lcavina nursing we need to find ways to keep men and women in the profession; to make it wonh their while to aivc them the dignity and salary they deserve.." w added. According to Green. the decisions affcctin~ nurses arc tan&Jed tn the proverbial burcaucrauc maze. ··All of our decisions arc made by either legislatures or hospital admin- istrators." she sajd. ··Most of the responsibility for numng 1s on us. At Golden West Collcse we were pven a real feclina of beans abk to chanse th1np . a real sense of pro- fcss1onalum. That ts .-hy most us went into nursing at very busy hosr•tals. •• would bite nunes to have a say in some of the cha~ that are comin& along. to make them pan of a ieam. 1 want rounds to be mandatory w~ the nurses have a say about what is going on ..-1th the "-tienl. a team approach. The input shouldn't be from nurse to nurse, ii should from nurse to doctor to all other suppon staff. .. And you have sot to pay them. Make dam sutt they are afforded contmwn& educauon throuah the hospital or have the hospital financtally suppon that cffon." Uic said. Accorcfina to Green. then arc hospitals that consider nursina siafl' pen ofhousckc:epini. ·• 1 mean. we are linen. sheets and supplies, .. she said. ··vet nurses arc (Pleue ... lro1t81MO/ AS) .. Jacq•elble ScUJer of Santa Ana, was sworn in as an officer in the United States Forei~ Service. She is serving in Abidjan, Ivory Coast. Elisabeth a graduate of Costa Mesa High SChool, attended the Sorborncin 1979whereshe received a diploma in French studies. In 1980, she earned a bachelor's degree in French stud- iesaraduating magna cum laude from the American College in Paris. She also was awarded a master's in international rela· lions, with distinction, from Georgetown University in 1984. Publicist fares well with county fairs Elisabeth was employed with I the U.S. Depanmentof Agricul- . tureasan international econom- ist in trade policy. Jill Lloyd was 9 when her pct rabbit won first place at the Orange County Fair. For Lloyd, the fairs media rela- tions and markctina supervisor, that poignant memory still lingers. .. J lost my mother when I was really you~" she said. ..To be a fair exhibitor gave me something to hang on to." 'It WIS my first blue ribbon and the bigcst moment in my life." she said. Lloyd says she has never foraotten that cxpcrien«. Today she is owner of a public relations firm that special- izes in promotina fain and special events. Her client hst has included fairs and carnivals throughout the state. Besides the Orange County Fair, her firm represents the Sawdust festival. National Orange Show. San Bernardino County Fair. farmers fair and Los Alamitos Orange Coun- ty Racing Fair. "I pcw up 10 Fullenon 111d I was very involved in the Orange County Fair. I stancd with a 4-H club and stayed involved in the agriculture procram throuah high school. The proaram tau.&ht me to be a practical and responsible person ... Lloyd, a graduate of Cal Poly Pomona, did a college internship at the fair. She was a clerk 1n the livestock depanmcnt, then moved into the public relations depanment under the tutelage of the late Joan Boris. ... also interned at other 'fairs in California.·· she said. ·• 1 s1 mplt found my niche within the fair en-cull " Jn 1984 Lloyd become the media rc,lations and marlcet101 supervisor for the Oranp: County Fair. She rents office space inside the admin1strat1on building on the fairgrounds to accom- modate an I I-member staff who wort year round. Most of the fairs arc in full swin& in July Lloyd puts 10 I~ to 12-hour wort days to make 11 all run smoothly. "You have to be vef) organized." she said. "There arc a lot of deadline crossoven -but we have well- wnucn time tines on the projects Sllll -naht now -it is really CTll) .. Lloyd, a single parent of a 6-ycar- old son. admitted to personal sacn· fices in order to actucvc her career goals. ... think it has been wonh 11." she said. "I .,:ta lot ofsat1sf1ct1on from what I do. The fair is in my blood .. -lly hytt a.ll•vkt JWLloyd I Sailing courses being offered by OCC in Newport Beac Resist.ration is under way for 1 variety of Oranse Cout Collqe public sailiqcowses that bcain Monday at OCCs Sailina and Rowina Facility in Newport BeKb. The clases will offer bands-on instruction with 80 ~nt of class time spent saitina on Newport Harbor or 1n the Ocean. Couraes raftF frOm Beainnina ~ilina in Lido 1• dinahiet to Ocean Sailina ab09td OCC'• larse ocean racen. · Most claael meet weekdays from 9 a:m. to 1 p.m. or &-om I to~ p.m. Weekend and ~in& classes also arc available. Call 432-SUO tor funha infofmation. BulJecae lmtlnl JJJ ~I Tom ' The 27th annual deei>-Pit betbecie dinner and festival at St. Micbaef•1 Abbe)' wm be held Sunday in honor ofFather's Day at the abbey. 19292 £1 Toro Roed in EToro. Tbe lescivitiea wiU ·bemin at 11 Lm. with a SJl!etjal .._In tbe Abbey Cburda. Dinner lickeU 1~ $1 for Muhl and S4 ror·children and may be purcha.ted on the ~ ,..... .W ladudt c:laikba'a ~ booW, ~.:.~;=-~~r~ enfonunoa. ... • Craft lalr bJ CtMta Mesa The monthly Piccemakers Country Craft Fair wtll be held this weekend at the Piecemaken warehouse at 1281 Lopn Ave., Suite A. in Costa Mesa. The e\'ent is scheduled to run from 9 a.m. ro S:lO p. m. Saturdayaftd IOtoS:30Sunday.CaJIMl-3112fordcta1ls. NetworkllW coane 8lated Coutlinc Community Collqe will present a class entitled .. Ner.ortina for Fa.me and Fortune" Monday from 7 to IOp.m. in Room 10 of the Newport Beach Center, 3 l 0 I Pacific VieW Drive 1n Corona del Mar. Susan Lian. a public lilations writer, will conduct the coune. and the fee is Sll. Call Coastline Community Services a1 24 l-6186 for details. • S46-7708 for reservations and d1rccuons.. Sammer program •t GWC The Golden West Colleaie Elttended Opponuaity Prolnsn and Services will oft& an ci&bt·Wftt ~fDCI' midiness" propam, dcsiped for disadvantqed •~ dents, bcainnina Monday. To be cli&ible for the pracram.. a student must be a hi&h. sd\oot junior or tenior with a )'CllJ'·s rcsidcncy in C~afomaa and must meet the family income lcvd established by the state. call 89~761 for additional infonnation. SJldeshowonsarvfval Cbarlotle Clarke, an instructor 1n life SCtenccs a FuJlcnon Collqc, will present a slide show cnti ""Survival" Monday al the Sport OWet. 16242 9c:M:ti: Blvd •• Hunnnaton Beach. • The proaram on wildemcs$ survival 1s tcbcdWed fOI) 7:30 p..m. aod edinauion is free. Call the Spon ChUct at 141-09&8 roe add1tional information. Retbed federal wor~en meet s.dd)ebeck Valley cbap&cf 16&9 of the NI ~ , Aalociatioa of Rctu'Qf Federal Ernpk>~ will hOld ~ ttaMlar IDC!t'll"I Monday in tt. community room ·~ G~ fc:detal Saviqs, 23211 Calle de la Lowa .a Laauna Hills. Retired fodaal civiliaa ~ &heir .,.-. survivon. active federal em 1nd pcstl are iavhed. Call Joe Ore~ at 964-1 22 orGeorte OoocbcMI at 71();61l3 for I.oft i nfonnatioa. I · , ) ' I J I r , • l r '1 GS BRIGHT ••• ,. .. com.-;,.• mc>vi .. beck IO UDI• ..... IM lriO wort well u a ...... iiliim~--ra1ct-1M-ofher I decided 10 quit adveniaina in the throwaways ... my mums from Briaht Beainainp far e"ceed other types ofadvertism1 I have done." Donor card legallybindlng, orls t2 llllt. •f' .=:t = .. aitteoct::~ .._we have iucb • tood time ... •b ~is my .,asa&joJ to have ::.er" wort With me, Collins 'l1lc lnMaa ol tbe company, k· cqdl111 ao Hodpon, is for a repcnen- t.aw &o ~a new resident and PIOVide. f-cost, a packet of communitf information, like local ....,., Qeiabborbood watch pro- .,...._ cbamber of commerce ma-terial. library, pc)lice and fire lo-ca&ions. Also included in the briaht ~w I.Ole bq offered 10 the new- comer are complimentary sifts. couooos aDd paua from-those-busi- neaes which Brijbt ~ninp rcp- rttents; "'C\arreotly we have 30 businesses.•• explained Hodpon. ''There is .only one business in any aiven subject. It is H effective low-cost mark:etina tool for local businesses. Rates vary with t~ size of the company." Martin Blitz.. owner of Martinique Hair Boutique in fountain Valley, is a Briaht Bqinninas advertiser. New- comers receive a complimentary haircut ftom his salon. .. I think I was one of Betsy's first . From pizza cou1>9ns to ma~ o~the city, newcomers seem to ap~1ate the friendlineu and professionalism of the welcomina company rcpresen· tativc. Cynthia Jarrell and btt family recently moved from Irvine to Hunt- i"f,ton Beach. 'The infonnation about the city, like a current map and what was here and there was helpful," she said. "It's not that we moved that far, but it's nice to act inforamtion about a new community." But it was not only the information Jarrett •PtmCiated. ~ "Melanie. -war..cfeliptful. At the time she came I was feediag my baby at the kitchen table. She didn•t mind talkinJ to me while I was shovelina food mto the baby's mouth .... that was nice.'' Accordina to Collins. the name of her company is a true reflection of what is now a happy ending to her story. "It was my new stan in life. that is why the name Bright Bc&innings. •• she said. "Now I want to help other women have the same opportunity to run a successful busjncss." The small pink donor card tMI comes with a ~anent drivet"1 license is a familiar ~t in Cali· fomia. But how ~Uy bindina is &he card? . Accordina to Jetu1 Hernandez. director of oraan and tiaaue procure- ment at UCI Med~I C~~'~be Qrd is a lcpl document fOC' ~ 18 and older. .. If I have a donor card Jeaally sianed and witnessed and I die in a car accident that card is a bindina lcpl document," he said. "But the law ha$ never been tested in California. Technically, ifit was taken tocoun it could hold up. Technically, my wife wouldn't be able to sue.•• Hernandez said, however, a donor card is"'1ot the final say in who has- or does not have -an orpn transplant. .. It is our policy, and most trans- plant Of'flnizauons, to obtain authorizauon from the lepl next of kin ... this is very, v~ important." he said. "If the family of the donor does not want the transplant to be done we will back out," he said. ··~11y we could do the suraery but it would be bad for the transplant ~m. We arc interested in the family s feelings towards donations." The search for the legal next of kin Pl io 1be tbllowilll oftllr: dUNble powerofat~.~aduhlOll or daupset, either ..mt. adult brother or lis&er. ..We would appro--o.cb--the family and ask if they "9d any objecti()n, rot eumplc, to Mr. Hmwidez u an Qllln or ti~ donor" he aid. .. A family is aaaually very 'receptive IO a loved one's wishes. At .... we know what the donor wanted. The donor card establishes a line of communica-tion between everyone involved." Hernandez said 1f a potential donor has no identification, the decision fall$ into the hands of local county otlkiah. "If the penon is 1 Jane Doe. a 24- hour dilitent wateb wiU be con-ducted,.. he said. ''That indudel Coc>rclinatina with the DOHCe c1eput • ment. tf the penon is decJated brain dad, meaai• that if we aop the ~rator she 1111>i"I to die, M don~ remove an orpn or U.ue without prior authorization from the boej)ital ethics com mince. the coronet's offlcc and the public administrator. Accordina to Hemanda, the donor card serves a dual purpoee. "Maybe the name donor card ia 111Weedi ........ .ucs. .. .,JOUCllnl the c8rd •• •&. cllte1t aadwrite In bold print 'I don°t want to be a donor,' it maket &hinp a tot euier • "But lf,.eu don't want to be a dOnor and 1Cat up the card, we don't know where you Rand. .. he aid ... It is not fair '° pua IM burden of ctecidina for you OD~ family." Hernandez uid sometimes the unknown 11 a problem fOC' the donor ~have taboc>s toWatdlorpn donatfons," he said. ..PeOpe fear what they don't understand. -11~ J•rre a.iotricll NURSING CAREER PUT ON BOLD ••• -- Fl'll• Aa r---- the ones who are there 24 boun a day with the ~tientl. They are the ones who monitor the patients. .. Thal is a tremendoUs responsi- bility. You are not just ajvina bed beths. you are doina proCedures that, at one time, docton didn't even do," she added. Green's second interest is bioethical nuninf orpn transplants, lifc-suppon dcci11ons. adhcrina to the paticnu' wishes.. the law. "And do you know what? They arc not worth the paper thtj are wnlten on. That offends me. I want a say in what happens to me." Green said because of the unclear laws, the family of a critically ill person is forced to endure more emotional hardships. quest. .. I have si~ a donor card," she said. "lfl die 1n an auto accident there should be no question my orpns would ao to someone else. 'That, however, i$n't the cue. It is rally up to the family, and remember, they have lost a lot. "My famHy knows what I want so I don't think that would be a problem. ..On that penicularly bed ni&ht ... there was a family who wanted their -;;;;;;; _______ iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiili;;;iiili.ii'-i!iii.iliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilimiil child's orpns donated,.. she •id. • "The child lived with his mother and "We had to call a family at 3 a.m. to come in and make a decision whether their terminally ill son was aoin' on the lifc-suppon machine or not.' she said. "The family decided to put him on the ventilator even thouah he had expressed a week earlier that he did not want tha1. Green admits ahe it not sure how her aoals will be achieved. She uys with only two semesten of law school under her belt she is still muddli"I throu&h the convoluted lepJ system. So far I have found out the law is not simplistic -there are many lf'IY areas; nothillJ is airtiaht," she said. "I hope by the time I finish law achool I wilJ have more answen. Riaht now I have more questions than answen. •• 17995 Enjc;IY music with astonishing hcl1ss8rif! and no surface noise or . #42-5007 ~ ben.tlee •Xlrl - 5~ Personal cassette records "live" anywhere-in stereo! Sulit-in speaker. 114·1037 Fast-Playback cassette ~LJn.nlng TlrneUpto~ 7-Band 40W Booster/EQ = TX 25~ Off 59!!.95 Ptays back faster, but not higher pitched. 114-1060 C.rd-Slze FM Stereo -~Off 12795 .,_____..., -Reg. 44.15 lleedptle>!• Uh 1Aa• th1nl With batteries, chatger. 112-130 Remote Mobile Robot Arm .s.v.1 Buy. T.nd.Y_.1000 TX, Get• ,CM-5 Color Monitor at NO Charge! ... '299•• A9g. 259·95 low Ae 115 p., Montlh 2995 :~5 P• "Home-quali1y" sound for your earl 60 watts ca- pacity per pair. 112-1708 Scientific Calculator 21!!!.95 Cut 370/o Perfect for students or eng!- neers. 73 functions. With case. battery. #65-986 Ultrasonic Range-Doubler Motion Alarm Multite,ster Cut 334Mt Reg. Jusl plug 1010 AC St.ts power. _-49.303 Contemporary Telephone• 294Mt Off Cut 404Mt Reg. 3t.t5 Answerer/ Telephone• Cut~ [Cl 2495 2995 Reg. 3-4.15 Reg. 4t.95 Light.CS dial. An.wet·onty. Three colors #43-388 143-527/528/529 8eclwp i.n.ry extta Battery . Bargainal HALF PRICE ........ LMrllta• ,., ..... I stepfather and they wanted the child to be a donor. But the real father, who had not seen the child for a while, came in and said no -and that was that ... aJwa71 tho~t if you wrote a Jivina wit and d1dn'1 want a 'code blue' or you wanted to donate your organs that these wishes stood up in • "But because he was not ca1_>1ble of making a dccison at that p<>mt, the family had to make it, .. she said. ThouJh Green said she would "filht heaven and eanh" to make sure everythin1 was done for a patient, she would like to know the law stands behind the patjent's or donor's re- Green. however, is sure about one thing. "I just want the Jaw to help with the profession I love," she said. SPECIALTY SHOPPING'S A BREEZE AT MESA VERDEi For anything and everything from the wor1ds of bicycling, g~~ and music, you' II find it all at Mesa Verde Center. Music Market-from Hayden to hard roe~, Lena Home to Bruce Hornsby-even the hard to find- in re901'ds, tapes and CDs. 546-0038 Nev.cl• BOb'• Golf-all the gear the golfer (expert or amateur) requires- plus, indoor lessons for the links I 545-3827 Wheel U.nd Bicycle Shop-the most complete pedal pushers around, featuring th8 high~ance. maxi- mUm-comfort new mountain bikes . 741-4882 I I I USU£ EA11£ST ~esignerof action we~r a good skate E~clting_ summer a matter of course Ifyou•rewishinaforsomething a little different to look forward to ' this summer. take heart. Saddle- back Colleae is offering a season full of choices. Whether your idea of summer fun is sittina in an air conditioned room withacomputerorpad- dlinJ down a river in a canoe, you mightjust like one of the options the Mission Viejo college is makinaavailable viaSpcctrum- Summer'88 p~. The non<red1t, shon term courses include a new lmaac clinic or a creative health workshop for enhancina your outer or inner bcauty,andcomputerclassesthat will help you become even better pals ~ith your I BM-PC or your Macintosh. Outdoor adventures include a CataJina cruise, a .. backroadina .. class that ofTen tips on how to navigate out of the way areas in a 4-whecl vehicle and a cam pout canoe trip. Fees vary. Call S82-4646 for more information. • • • And a note for weary travelers. A 2.3-mile section of Street of the Golden Lantern and a two-mile stretch of Moulton Parkway are now open, link.in& those streets with Irvine Center Drive and Edinger A venue. Dnvcn can now travel from Dana Point to central Ora nae County on surface streeu. The new connection is expected to take some prcssu~ off the San Diego and Santa Ana freeways and Pacific Coast Hi&hway. • • • And a groundbreakinaccr- emony was recently held to of- ficially kick off construction of Mercadodel Lqo, Rancho Santa Marprita•s fint neiahborhood shoppi°'ccnter. The 10.S-acre center will include a Ralphs arocery store, a Mobil gas station. a Security Pacific National Bank and a Payless Dru& Store. There will be space available for lease to restaurants, shops and pro- fessional offices. • • • Several Saddleback Communi- ty College District worken were honored recently as outstanding employees. The winnen were Carmo Cable, an accountant in the payroll department at the district office; EWe Beqe, a library clerk at Saddleback Col- lege; and Robert Dlckenoa. seniorarounds keeper at Irvine Valley College. The honorees were nominated by fellow em· ployecs. • • • A south county student was amona 24 who were presented with $3, 700 in scholarships from Fullerton Colleae's Social Science Division recently. T ... Beary from Mission Viejowuamona (Pl ...... aOllllSa/A8) -...., ........... '-..... Knln Barton will celebrate the ftntanni•enary of bla clotlll.DC bualneea. ...., ............. ._ John 8ecretan la ready to welcome hungry cuatomera at hi.a Cafe Zinc. He has recipe for suc~ess John Secretan was reared on good home cooking but at was eaaht'j'cars an &rkelcy tha1 made ham appreciate fine restaurant food. In fact, 11 was while the landscape arch11ect was laving an the university town. samphng gourme1 pizzas .• fresh salads and dehcately prepared pasta dishes that he came to a surpnsana realization He had more of an affinity for food than for nora So. inspired by &rkeley's Chez Panis~ and Cafe Fanny. the third scneration \egetanan mO\ed to Laguna &ach and opened a sunn) little cafc of has ·Own. Cafe Zane. which boasts a bnef but antngumg menu, has quickly become a pthcnng spot for locals. Each day about 500 people drop b) for granola and strawbemes. a vcietable sandwich or a cappuccino. Casually clad customers arc w1lhng 10 stand an lane to place their orders and to clear offthe1r own tables -if they're lucky enouah to get one Laauna wasJu~t npc for a Cafe Zanc-t.,.pe eatef!. according to Its owner "So man) restaurants, espccaally an Southern Cahfornia. are very processed looking." said Scc- rctan, who spends his dayJ behind the zanc counter top drintina creme anJ)aisc with raspbem pur~ over bread pudding and sandwichina vegetables between loaves of c1abatta "The idea here as to make )OU foci lake )ou'rc wallung into someone's kuchen and the) 're cooking food for )OU •• Secretan's approach to bus1n~s d~s have a famil) feel Aficr all. tht granola recipe did come straight from his mother's kuchen In fact. Ro~­ mane Secrctan. a Tusun resident. ha\ helped her son create Just the nghl taste for sc .. eral of the recipes on the chalk board that hangs b) the front door "She finds rec1~s and pla)s "1th them until the) arc to her likina or my hking .. ~tan said Other favontes on the menu include the fntatta. the eggplant piz.zclla and the Euro~n-\t~ le cafc au lait. sened steaming 1n a bowl. "Bas1call) e' ef)thang sells real well." he said. In fact. nudged b) the bnsk brcakfa-;1 and lunch business. Sccretan began ~nang light dinners three "eeks ago. The "high encrg)" respon~ ofh 1s cu\tomcrs has been gra11f} ing and necessary. according to Sccretan "The comm unit) has JUSI been incredible." he said. "In cosuna things out. the number of ~oplc I ha"e are mandator; to pay for the place I didn't know that I would have it, but I lncw 11 had to be there." . Lagunan raws ideas from those · who set the trends By LF.SUE IW\NDT °' .............. Maybe the thins that separates Kevan Bunon from other en- trcpttneurs is his skateboard. If so. it 1s also the thins that connects the )OU"I clothes dcsiSJlCf" to his future customers. Bunon, who will celebrate his 22nd binhday and the fir1t annivcnary of has clothina business this month, said his desians don't bq.in unttl he collaborates with the younpten For fashion trend feedback. Bunon irabs his pad and pen and hops on his skateboard. Then he tracks down the boys whom he 11ys represent the "cu tung cdae" of action wear fuh1on trends. "We JUSt kind of skate around &ogethcr and talk." Bunon said "I makedrawi0'5ofwhat they're talk1n1 about and, nJht there on the side· walk. th9' tell me, 'Yea. that's it' or. 'No, that s not iL • •· ,,,,. Then Burton makes drawinas to ~nt to retail ste>tt bu)en Work- ing from his Laauna Beach home with hJS partner. l>onn Dtctz and a produ"'tlon a.s.sastant. Bunon creates patterns and samples that arc de-1 livered to a clothes man11facturer. E\lentually, the fini5hcd product is; delivered to the buyer\. Even if it mi&ht take a while for hit} company, called Bloo Ktoo (Pf'Q-: nounccd Blue Crew) to find its way into the t>tEr 1tna.nd1Uy, Bunon ob' iously feels aood about what bt's1 accomplished in the last 12 months.) In addauon to pkkioa up a partner~ Bunon h.as pined i-o financiar backers. Ahhol.tlb the company went' an the hole its fim year. by I~ Bunon figures BJoo Kroo wilt be pulhna 1n SI .S million annually. 1 Prctt) bia dream for a hi&b schoo~ dropout. 1 Bn&ht and talkative, Burton left school in his junior year after a> conflict with one of has teachC'l"S.' AlthouJh he later passed the Gcnnat: Eduauon Dcaree cum, which ii equivalent to a hiJh IChool de&i'cC.! Bu non said there's Jtill a tendency fo~ l people to sec him as someone whC7 didn't finish hiah school But somehow his rocky academic? past seems to have made the am. bitious dna&ner even ~more sdflt confident. He prides himself on what heh.as KCOmplished without a fonn education. • .. , could tee a lona time aao that life's lessons are tbe bes1 educator fat a aRCr," Burton said ... Every p-cat teacher I've ever had bu tauabt met~ trust "!l_~lt's a lesson Bu.non sai(f ~-LAGUWAJl/A.5 Publicist fares well with county fairs By JOYCE BODLOVlCB Ol .. !Wlr ........ Jail Lloyd was 9 when her pct rabbit won fir~t place at the Oranse County Fair. For Lloyd. the fa1r's media rcla· lions and markeuna supervisor. that poignant memory still hnaen. "I lost my mother when l was really )Oung." she saad. "To be a fair c.xlubuor P'e me somethana to hana on to." In an attempt to help her find her indentity. llo)d. 31 saad her father bought a rabbit for her to enter an the fair. 'It was m) first blue ribbon and the biggest moment an my life," she said, Llo)d sats she has never forsotten that expcnencc. Tod.Jy ~ 1s owner of a public relations firm that special· 1zcs in promotina.fairs and special events. Her client list h.as included fairs and carnivals fhrouJhout the state &sides the Oranac County Fair. her finn represents the Sawdust Fcsuval. National Oranac Show, San &rnardmo Count) Fair, Farmers Fair and Los Alamitos Oranae Coun· t) Racina Fair. ··1 srcw up an Fullcnon and I was very involved 1n the Oranp: Count) Fair," she said I started with a 4--H JWLloyd club and stayed involved in the1 qnculturc procram throuah hiaht school. The program tau&ht me to M1 a practical and rcsporwblc penon ... Lloyd. a graduate of Cal PolY! Pomona. did a collqie rntrmship ·~ the fair She was a dcdt 1n th~ (Pleue eee ~AD./ A&l· ,• Six teens achieve Eagle Scout status Six south count' b<>' ~outs arc bc1ni C'CCO&l'\IZed 0 lh1s · month for ach1ev1n1 the orpnizauon's highest honor. the rank of Eagle Scout The boys are all members of thc-\itonnon Church Matthew A)crs from La&una NiJ~I and John G1ddm&-\ trom San Juan Capistrano were honortdJune l while Jason Brown and Darren Ead)'. both Laauna Niauct residents. were recognized June 12 Lasuna Beach rn1dents Pt1 Yen and Gan (C'C'1I will be honored Sunda)'. Organizers of the ceremonies at ran&ed separate events so the lcnsthl accomplishments of each youthcou be appreciated. according to Pa Wccnia. ExplOt'Cf" Scout commit chairman. .. To have them aJI toscthcrdct from the 1nd1v1dual boy's achic men ts," Wccna.& said. ··1t·s just t much to ha .. c in one evenina. .. Onl) 3 percent of Boy Scouts rcac (Pleue eee SAGLltS/ A8 St. Michael's Abbey plans barbecue Sunday in El Toro The 27th annual deep.pit bart>ec\ae dinner and fativaJ at St. Michael's Abbey will be held Sunday in bonoroffather's Day at the abbey, 19292 El Toro Road in El Toro. The festivities will be&in at 11 a.m. with a spetjal Mass in the Abbey Churcb. Dinner tkkets arc SS for lduhs and S4 for children and may be purchased on the pounds. The prosram will include-childttn'• pme booths. live entenainmtnt, a silent auction, a Manne hclicoptcT dlN>lay and 1 &mity ponnit bOOth. Cati 8S8-0222 for ildditional information. PabHc Nllln6 COIU'8e9 offered Reaistnlion is under way for 1 variety of Orantt Coeia C""ol• public •ilina wunea that beain Monday at OCC'1 Sait1na and Rowi~acility in Newport Beach. Tbe clues wiU ofrer ..._ instnac:doa with 80 ~of dlll WM ..-1 ~on Newpor1 Hart>of Oft .. the Oolila. c~ ...... 9111iaai• ;~lina in Udo 14 ......... IO Omllii WU. .-.cl Qa:s lallt ........ , Mollldlmlw a11t lllrt-tL-.to I p.·m.Olt ...... ~~ w-. ... ,,, tnadweimoare ~Ql.UJ..Slll>b ..... ........ Craft fair ln c .ostaMesa . . ~ The monthly Picccmake~ Countf) Craft Fair will bt held this weekend at the Ptcccmakers warehouse at 1281 Lopn Ave .. Suite A, in Costa Mesa. Thceventiucheduled to run from 9a m. toS:30p.m. Saturday and JO to S:30Sunday Call 641-3111 for details. Fi ee 11eJf-et1teem class set A propam called .. 8uildina Self.Esteem" will bc presented Monday at noon at the Newport Center bra~h of the N~ Beach Public Library. 856 San Clemente Drive. Dorothy Milich, a mtdical tcchnol~st and rcstarch chemist, wall conduct the boW'·lo~ seminar. Call Jackie Headly at 644-3186 for l\trthet information. ... S46-7708 for ~rvations and du"«tlons. Summer program at GWC The Golden West Collf:lr Extended Opponunit}' Prosram and Sen 1C'C'S ~ill offer an ci&bt-~k Kwmmcr ~adincs.s" program. desianed fOT disadvan~ ill.a· dents. bciJnnina Monday. ·To be diJiblc for the procram. a tudcnt must be a hi&b school junior or scniof wttb a )-ear's residency in Cllifomia and must meet the family income le~I est1blishcd b) the state. Call 89>1768 for additional infonnation. .. Sllde sbo• on survln.l Charlotte Clarke, an instNCtor in lilt sciences Fullcnon ("l)llcac. wdt pretent a slide show enti ·-survival" Monday at the Spon OWct. 16242 Bhd .. Hununiton Bach. The procnim on wildcmca survival is scheduled fi 7:30 p.m. and admission is free. Call tbc Sport 848--0988 for additional information. Ous .. 0.. DM.Y PILOT/..,.........,, June 18, 1111 omen's Pa\dlion opens in S. Laguna More tban 150 patS anended a dedication cemnony lut week tor tbe SouUi Coast Medical CenlCr't Women'• Pavilion and Reioun:e Center. Tbe center, which opened six months aao, hat 1tt u its main Pl tbe establishment of an ondoWmcnt fund for community women unable to pay for their own medical care. Tbe facility, which consists of two offices within the South Llauna hospital, provides health CclUQ&.ion, RfemJs and aeneral information to women. Theft is a library from which women can check out boob and videos at no charge, and a relocation ~ s1stancc 1>roaram to help women new to the community find friends and set acquainted with their surroundinas. .. The communitios in our area grow by 400 families every month," said T. Michael Murray, eresidcnt of the medical center. ·women arc the ' health care cteeiuon maken of their fimilies. and the Women's Pavilion and Resource Center is tt\eir health information and referral source." Jn January, San Diea<rOasand Electric donated $2S,000 to the Women's Pavilion to help reno- vate the center. Dick Mannini. vice president of public relations for tfie utility company, spoke at the dedication ceremony pledging continued suppon. .. We exist in a county where several million people receive our service,.. Manni Of said. .. Our genuine interest is m human care services and education -and we have pledged our support. We were here 6cfore, we're here now and we'll be here in the future." A hospiJa) women's advisory council, created early this year, took on the active and financial support of the center as their first project. The cbuncil's "lJ)Cmbcr· ship drive in January raised more than $25,000 for the center. Founding council members in· •~Head tjQ_yHS VCR ··-- Jn&rld llcGtdre, newly elect.d to die Dana Pelat CltJ' eoancu, and Dlckll•nn•ncot&u DletoGuandSlectrlc at openiDC of the Women~a Pa~on and Reeoa.rce center. clude<l chairwoman Pam O'Neill Goldstein, Linda Irvine-Gaede, O.N. Evans, Carole Bowman, Muriel Reynolds, Connie Monhland, Grace Boyd and Louise Turner. For more information on ser- vices provided by the Women's Pavifion and Resource Center, call 499· 7202 from 8:30 a.m. to S p.m. Monday through Friday. -By l.alle Eannt Wanted: Good sports The Daily Pilot is interested in sharing the sporting exploits of you and your nciJhbors. Send us a photograph and brief account of the sportina accomplish· ment. We will publish them in our Good Spons column, which will appear in Thursday's Neighborhood Focus secuon. Address your correspondence to Neighborhood Focus in care of the ·Daily Pilot. P.O. Box I 560. Costa Mesa. 92627. • ... 14AJJ ol*-bavepuJiaa llWDdDlllDICMlll&afleMce bOun tOthecmamually ia order toldUevc lkOold Award," said Llllla Crawfw .. 111i111na ex-ecutive dlrec10roftheGirl Scout Council ofOranae County ... It is a very special aroup of airls and ve~ outstandina airls who ach1eve this." We .... te Y• to Hiid u ..,.,... ............. .., .... peaiq1.WewaatteMarfrom , ...... ....,... ...... leeal ,..,aeodae~noMHWlia • ... rat. Snd te DUiy Piiot. p .o. Boa II .. , Cetta Meta tllH. ~ Mante Ge atteaU• of LetJle Eaneet. · ~--- FAIR PUBLICIST ••• ProaaAS livestock depanmcni, then moved into the public relations depanment under the tutelage of the late Joan Boris. ... also interned at other fairs in Califomia," she said. ''I aim ply found my niche within the fair circuit.•• In 1984 Lloyd become the media ,-elations and marketina supervisor for the Oranp County Fair. She rents office space inside the administration building on the fairarounds to accom· modate an l l·member staff who 1work year round. Most of the fairs arc in full swina in July. Lloyd puts in 10 to 12-hour work days to make it all tun smoothly. · .. You have to be very orpnized, .. ~he said. ·~There arc a lot of deadline crossovers -but we have Well· written time lines on the projects. Stm -right now -it is really crazy.·· According to Lloyd. the fair man· qement business has historically been male dominated. "The auidelines arc different for the guys in this busincss. ... that is unfortunate," she said. "But I haven't Jet it stop me. What is intercstina is tome of my best supponers arc men. ··1 had to prove myself to the aood ol' boys," she said with a laugh. "I started youn' in this business as a fair exhibitor. It 1s weird for some of the dpcanmcnt heads to overcome the {act that I am not a child anymore." Lloyd says the Orange County Fair's diversity offers something for everyone. "The fair has a family atmosphere. It is a place to have fun, to be entertained and' to be agriculturally educated," she added. Uoyd, a single parent of a 6·ycar· old son, admitted to personal sacri· fices in order to achieve her career aoaJs. "I thank it has been worth it," she said. "I get 1 lot of satisfaction from what I do. The fair is in my blood It is deeply rooted in me." Save *100 tAGUNAN DRAWS IDEAS •• ~ On-screen prompts make programmf"9 .sy and vtnuany · mistake-proof! 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HALF PRICE Reg. 3t.t5 Answerer/ Telephone• Cut40~ Q 2915 - Reg. 4t.t5 Answer ·only. 143·388 ...,. ...... 11991' From AS he tries to pass on to the local youth, some of whom come to him for help with their personal problems. He tells them to trust their mstincts and they won't go wrona . "I suJ>pon what they'rcdoinaevery step of the way," Burton said. h's a support system that runs both ways. . He recalled 1ast summer. before the company had any financial backers, when Bloo Kroo had SSOO to $600 to invest. Burton spent it all on stickers and T·shirts and then pve them alJ away to the boys. The youn15tcn formed an identity with the company and Burton quickly picked up a lot of eager advertisers. .. They arc out there -a waJking radio. a walking billboard. for my company," Burton said. In return, the youth get to watch their ideas become a reality. , For example, Bunon said. some of the boys complained about the way the metal snaps rusted: Burton created plastic snaps. Others ·grumbled about having to wear long pants to scnool on an overcast morning des,ined to become a scorching afternoon; Burton designed pants with removable legs. Now the sound of separating Velcro can signal instant shorts. Fulfilling wishes for his young cltents is what Bunon said could enable him to eventually plar ball with large active wear companies - .. the big boys," as he calls them. EAGLES .•. From A& the level of Eagle, accordma to Wccnig. To cam the rank, the boys must be proficient in waterfront activities. including sailina. swimina and hfe saving. and must have a practical knowledge of first aid. In addition, ~h must ha ve completed a significant community service pro- ject. Bro~n. 18, who recently ~i.vcd an assignment to serve as a m1ss1on· ary in Paris, repainted and rcstripcd the parking 101 of his church for his community service project. Eady, 18, collected and prepared for delivery boxesofclo1hina for needy families in Poland. Pei Ven. 18. prepared care packafeS for overseas missionaries. Cecil. 16. collected several hundred pounds of clothing to be delivered to immigrant families from Cambodia who arc now living in Santa Ana. Ayers. 17. developed earthquake information for the kivcria Housing Project in San Clemente. And Gid· din15, 17. installed a new sprinkler system m the Boy Scout Hut, the scouts' San Clemente meetana spot -B¥1MUe&nnt . . Someday, Burton said, he would also like to work with his older brother, David, who took the more tradhiooal route into the clothina business. After arac:tuatina from the Univenity of Denver and the Fashion Institute of Dctian and Merchandizi~ in San Francisco, Burton said bis brother is stru&&)ina to find a job in the industry. "He has been comeletely educated to do exactly what Im doina now," Burton said ... My company's not bia enouVI tha' I can afford to hire him. but f hope someday that it will be because it's a tough workplace out there." Burton's mother, Karen Mouchard said she had a difficult timeadjustina to hcrson'~dccis~on to leave school, but now she 1s starting to understand his creative instincts. All things considered, Burton said he has learned a lot and is comfortable with the decisions be has made. But, he cautions. his "trust yourselr' message to youth should not b_e construed as encouragement to quit school. "If you listen to what your heart's telling you and you want lO be a doctor, you want to be a lawyer, an accountant, a physicist, those things require an education no matter how you cut it, .. Burton said. But, other people get where they're going by takina a different path . Skateboarder KeYla Burton Rew 90Dtb comaty ~&ecoa1a are (from left) Quy-Cec.U. DelYea,Dunm-..JUdJuoaBrowa,uwellullattbew Ayre. (not plctared). { I . v • " • '·- .THURSDAY, JUNE 16, 1988 25 CENT'S . BB p:rincipal 's oustetprotested Trustees demote Joregensen, another admtnlstr-ator. back to classroomjobs Social Security numbers. But Stanley Jortenten, husband of the Hawes School princioal. COD· firmed bis wife was one·ol' tk two reauiped. He responded .. Oh, God no ... when asked if he wanted to tee his wife•s Social Security number published in a newsi-per. reassianed to the classroom, tOUn;u said, was Joan Skinner. who Ud previously. served as principal •• Hawes School and more recently was an assistant principal at Sowen School. BJ ROIBRT BAllUR ............... Huntinaton Beach City School District trustees Tuesday m&ht over· rode protests from members of a ttandin,.room-<>nly audience and ap- parently reassiancd veteran · and popular Hawes School Princii-1 Rita What former Orange Coast College pitcher and major league star ts not happywtth Royala?/81 Ranger topple Angels, 6-3, while Dodgers win behind Hersh Iser ./81 California Clergy malprac1ice law- auJt argued before state Supreme Court.I A4 Nation No relief seen for loom Ing drought crisis In nation's midsection./ A4 Coast High school graduation ceremonies scheduled thlsweek./A3 Index Advice and Games A 11 Bulletln Board A5 Bu~nesa A7-8 Classlfted 85-7 Comtca A12 Entertainment A 10 Opinion A9 Police log A3 Public Notices 88 Spor1a 81-4 Weather A2 Joraensen to classroom teachina chott"S. · Officials refused to identify Jo~ aensen, and a second employee, who were assigned new jobs followin, a closed~r executive 1CS1ion. n· stead. board President Karen O'Bric identifaed the two people only by their Jl'r~ at last .. It was one of the most un- scrupulous lhinp (the reasaianment) rve ever seen," he said Wednesday. '"The children, the parents and the teachers were all happy." The second employee who was School Superintendent Diana Peters. who previously said she couldn't comment because the matter is a personnel i5Suc, could not be reached for comment Wednesday on the practice of idcntifyina personnel by Soci21 Security numben in order to protect employees• privacy. ,...,..,,. .. aboat till' fatve are pat OD bold W'eidD•d'aJ wlllle Baa~ 8-cla a.,. Sc~I ..nton recelYe cllplomu darliaf ceremom.. at 8beae J"leld. Oradaatm will be celebratlq ap a.ad down Ge 0...... Coutat 18 b11Jl9Cboolanertlle natweH. Seating of Irvine council . race ru~ner-up challenged BJ GREG &LERU °' .. ..., ....... lrvine City Councilwoman Sally Anne Miller is lcadinaa petition drive to unseat Councilman-elect Cameron Cosarove, who called the challenae a fiasco and lambasted Miller for "tryina to hold the council hostqe." The petition effort marks the first use of a new election law in Irvine that allows a cballenae of any council IClt appointed throuah default The law, known as ~ure D was approved on June 7 by a vote oho percent There were two seats open on the June 1 ballot. but the election of Larry Agran a5 the city's first elected mayor also vacated his council seat. Under the city's election laws, the third hi&hcst vote-setter on the ballot automatically w1ns the vacant coun- cil scat. COlp'Ove, an ally of Agan. finished third behind incumbent Miller and another ~n ally, Paula Werner. Werner finished with 24.1 percent of the vote to Miller's 22.2 percent and Coscrove's 21 .8 percent the lone conservative candidate on the council. , Kay McNally, Mailer's aide. said several people approached Miller to utilize the Measure 0 law in an attempt to f'ePin a conservative foothold on the council ··She believes 1t 1s in the best internts of the oommunny," McNal- ly said. Miller could not be reached for comment W~y. tfthe petition effon 1s successful, a special election would be called and would be open to all eli,;ble can· Others in the education faekt, in . As ma~y u 400 oeoolci\5 Sacramento and Orante County, •id district offiocs TW*la.f. -.. m • they had~ seen--a-11ehool district effort to save o,...... s' .... • use Social Security numbers as a been the prjnciP91 11 Ha-Milli means of ~ntifacati.on. . for two yea.rs. She's beell • ... A lonatuneedueatac;>n ~er said education field Cot more..._ JO,... the ~~ mentially ~.es !he and •a principal in the lie s ? ' pul!fic -the i:i&h.t to learn what lS aomg , school district Cot 13 ~ on m the dastnct. Sl)C.lkcrs said tbe 1emovll 4tl-. • Social Security officials in the senten from her po6t It ........... San~ Ana office have refuted to be an ••injustice" and ~ w ,. prov1~ names to ~atcb the ~ misuse of poM!'." ~ .W * Security numbers pven by district reauJV:~t wo~•iceto officials. ( ._ AL/Aa) .Amphitheater lawsuit dealt partial setback ,"- Judge rules Mesans should have known of expansion plan BJ BOB VAN EBEN .,, .. ..., ....... A Superior Court judae on Wednesday threw out a portion of a Costa Mesa cittz.ens' group's lawsuit against the operators oflhc Pacific Amphitheatre over concert noise. At issue was the early history oftJtc amphitheater project. In the late 1970s the state of California. rep- resented by the Oranae County Fair Board, cb.a.nfed its plans for the arena from a low,.keyoutdoorthcatcrwith a smaJI mu.sicaJ stasc to a major'conccrt venue capable of bostina rock con- certs. The group, CoDCICS"Qeld Cinzens of Costa Mesa. contended that a MW environmental tmpact report should have been filed when the ~ was made. Tbere is. however, a statute of limitations which bolds that citiz.ens must file a complaint willlin 180 days of ftndi"J our about a poaaDle need for adcfiuonaJ doc:wneniatiOIL And SUie law places tbe bwdea ol findina out on the citizms, wbm me relevant information is available throuah .. reuonable dir . " After bcariq testim~ week. J~ Richard J. Beacom nalrd that Costa Mesa m.ideats sboald haw known what was happenina and should have filed a pro1eSt <X>DOenliQI the project no later than the summer of 1983. ~ fact is, there were a lot of people in the community Tt'bo were in a 'tion 10 .. that kind of tnC.tion. .. said We.com. 1"bere were numerous newspeper anides and documents were available in· dicatinc cuctly wbat was beiQI planned. rm sausfied tbll tbe l so;. day period was oommcnc:ed with tbe e1ccutionoftheleuein Mardl. 1911. and 1f not the~ with the start of constnaclion in r-Cbrua.ry, 1983.- Ricbard L Spix. auomey foe Concerned Ci~ bad arpaed tbat many residents bad not known just bow bi& the ampbitbealer was Fina to be and what kind of mmic wu IOll\l lO be played there until July, l 983, when the 6nt coocena wert held. ... think it is very dear tbat daicte weft substantial nwn-:i/~ {Pl•HW ) :Jury says crlnlelab 0 condition serious BJ BOB VAN EftEN .,, ............. In vestiptors arc at risk of losins or confusina valuable criminal evidence u a result of crowded wortina and storqe conditions at the county's forcnstt: science labontoey. acaird-1na to a report by the Oranie C<Multy Grand Jury. Papers for the petition drive were taken out Wednesday, accordina to the City Clerk•s office. The election of Cosarove and Werner. alona with A&nn and Coun- cilman Ed Doman, leaves Miller as didates. city officials said. (Pl_.. eee UATING/A2) . 8allJ ~ llUler To hasten a solution to the prob- lem. the jury has renewed ita ICVal• year-old quest for an capanded b-eft. SIC setenc:c facility. ancf jury ofticials sa) they are tettina some rauJts this Instead of stoppina. Weiss led oolice on a hi&h-speed chase on two Freeways and Barbor Boulevard into Santa Ana. . Costa Mesa officers. a fountain ViJley officer and the Costa Mes11 pdice hdic:optcr pursued Weiss at Fiaueroa Street. His truck· was sur- rounded by seven Santa Ana police can. two from Costa Mesa and one from Fountain Valley, with the helicopter hovtrirw abovt. When an untdmtifted Costa Mesa off~r opened the door and tried to pull Wcw out, the dnver restarted the truck and threw it into ~verse. The offk.er was pinned in the~ jam band dflllCd about 30 kt bcfOtt I time. he fell. Wein then tned to dnv~ forward when several officers opened fire. Weiss was $truck' at least once-in the neck, and was declared dead at th~ · scene. Police latct learned Weiss was v.-anted on a S.1000 traffic warrant for a samilarchalc 1n Cosaa Mes11 last )U! ~hen he eluded police. ' "It's toina slowly, but we th.ink the Board of SupervilOC"S is doiQI every- thina al can to ect them mott temporary splC.'C." aid David Bwdl.. chauman of the jury's crimlaal J usucc and public taJety coaunittee.. · The prctent forensic tcicw:c W. was built in 1969 and thcGrud '"" first reported in 1980 tlw the flcility had outarown its spece. · • "l aucss the boent at tbat time;. · put 1t on the beck burner and btDC about it,·· be said. • The effects of cramped Q'*'8n • the laborate>r)I could be serioul. Weiss also stt'Ved time for a pair of accord ins to the ftPOl1. if 11\lHrillll (Plss•-alftP/A91 Costa Mesa buralaries. police said. Crime hotline still family affair n 'sPaV-illon ns In S. Laguna aeasion muen ortbeir families. and the Women's Pavilion and Raource Center is their health information and referral 10Urce ... In January. San Dieao Gu and Electric donaled S25,{)()() to the Women's Pavilion to help reno- vate the center. Dick Mannil,ll. vice ~dent of public relations for the utility company, soOke at the dedication ceremony pledain1 continued support. .. We exist in a county wh~re several million people receive our service .. " ManninJ said ... Our ,enuine interest is m human care services and education -and we have pled&cd our support. We were here 6efore, we're here now and we'll be here in the future ... A hospital women's advisory council, created early this year, took on the active and financial support of the center as their first proJcct. The rouncil's member- ship drive in January raised more than $25,000 for the center. Founding council members in- lDfrlcl llc01aln, .... , el1111• ..... Dua ..... at.r Coa.ncil, and Dick ll••••acot-DleloOuud Sllataluat opentna of tlae Woaea'e Paftlloa aad lleeoaroe C..W. eluded chairwoman Pam O'Neill Goldstein, Linda Irvine-Gaede, D.N. Evans. Carole Bowman, Muriel Reynolds, Connie Morthland, Grace Boyd and Louise Turner. For more information on ser- vices provided by the Women's Pavilion and Resource Center · call 499-7202 from 8:30 a.m. to S p.m. Monday through Friday. -By u.Jle &nnt Wanted: Good sports The Daily Pilot is interested in sharina the sportina exploits of you and your neiahbors. Send us a phot~ph and brief account of the spon1n1 accomplish- ment. We will publish them in our Good Spons column, which will appear in Thursday's Neiahborhood Focus section. Address your correspondence to Neighborhood Focus in care of the Daffy Pilot, P 0 Box I S60. Costa Mesa, 92627. ••• ADcl C081J*IUlationiare ia Older' b. DUlllbet ollOUdl county airlt wbo•ve won the laipaa honor that can bee to lliiaiorOirt Scoutl-dle Awrcl.~wiDl*IWN ........... ~N ... ; ...... ..,..., ..... ~;a. ... •11tt1rof s.DJuanCapistrano;aad..._ Met 1•1randla~11..._or El Toro. ........ , ........ ................... ., ..... •=z...····••lleu ..... , ................. ..... ............................. C ............. .,_, ...... P.O. 1111.C..ta ..... tMH. ...,. ............... LnUe EarMlt. FAIR PUBLICIST ••• Pl'OlaAS UvcstOck department, then moved into the public relations department under the tutclqe of the late Joan Boris. .. , also interned at other fain in California," she said. "I simply found my niche within the fair ci~Ult. •• In 1984 Lloyd become the media relations and marketi"I SUJ>Crvisor for the OranJe County Fair. She rents office spece inside the administration buildinaon the fairarouncta to accom- modate an 11-membtr stiff who work year round. Most of the ftiin are in full swin1 in July. Lloyd puts in 10 to 12-hour work days to make it all run smoothly. "You have to bP'Very orpnizeci:: 'she said ... There are a lot of deadline crossovers -but we have well- wrinen time lines on the projects. Still -riaht now -it is really crazy." "Ac<:ordina to Lloyd. the fair man- qement business his historically been male dominated. '"The auidelines are different for the auys in this business .... that is unfonunate," she sajd. "But I haven't •et it stop me. What is interestina is some of my best supporters are men. "I had to prove myself to the Jood ol' boys." she said with a lauJh. "I stancil younc in this busineuasa fail' exhibitor. It 1s weird for some of the <tpeartmenl heads to overcome the fact that I am not a child anymore." Lloyd says the Oranae County Fair's divenity offers somethina for everyone. ''The fair has a family atmosphere. Jt is a place to have fun, to be entertained and to be agriculturally educated," she added. Lloyd, a single parent of 1 6--yea~­ old son. admitted to personal sacn- fices in order to achieve her career aoals. "I think it has been worth it." she said. "I act a lot of satisfaction from what I do. The fair is in my blood. It is deeply rooted in me." ·LAGUNAN DRA WSIDEAS ••• Cut 25-V. Persona.I cassette records ''live" anywher'e-in stereo! 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He tells them to trust their instincts and they won't 10 wrona. "I JM,PPOrt what they'rcdoinaevery step oflhe way;• Burton said. It's a support system that runs both ways. He recalled last summer, before the company had any financial t.cken. when Bloo Kroo had SSOO to S600 to invest. Burton spent it all on stickers and T-1h1rts and then pve them all away Lo the boys. The younasten formed an identity with the company and Burton 9uickly picked up a lot of caaer advertisers. ''They arc out there - a walkina radio, a walkina billboard. for my company," Burton said. Jn return. the youth act to watch their ideas become a reality. , For example, Burton said. tome of the boys complamed about the way the metal snaps rusted. Bunon crutcd plastic snaps. Others arumbled about having to wear Iona pants to school on an overcast morning destined to become a scorch1ngaftemoon; Burton desianed pants with removable lep. Now the sound of scparatina Velcro can sianal instant shorts. Fulfilhna wishes for his youna clients as what Burton said could enable him to eventually play ball with large active wear companies - "the b11 boys," as he calls them. EAGLES ••• l'romA& the level of Ea&Je, accordinf to Wccnag. To cam the rank, the l>Oys must be proficient in waterfront activities. mcludina sailing. swimina and life sav1na. and must ha\'e a practtcal knowledae of first aid. In addition. each must have completed a sianificant community service pro- ject. Brown, 18, who rc'Centlytece1ved an assiJnment LO serve IS I Mission· ary in Paris. repainted and restriped the parkina lot of his church for his community service project. Eadr. 18, collected and prepared for delivery boxes of clot~ma for needy families in Poland. Pei Yen, 18. prepared care packaF.s for overseas missionaries. Cecal. 16. collected several hundred pounds of cloth1n1 to be dchvered to 1mm1arant families from Camboc:Ua who are now hvina in Santa Ana. Ayers. 17, developed earthquake information for the kiveria Housina Project in San Clemente. And Gid- din15, 17, installed a new aprinkkr system in the Boy Scout Hut. the scouts' San C1emente mtttina J.pe>t. -•1 IMIJe &lflftt Someday, Burton said, he would also like to 1ft'Ork with his older brother, David. who took the more traditional route into the clothina business. After paduati~ from the University of Deriver and the Fashion Institute of Desip and Mercband~nJ in San Francisco, Bunon said b11 brother is 1trualin1 to find a job in the industry. .. He has been com~ly educated to do exactly what I m doina now," Burton said. "My company•• not bia enouah that I can afford to hire him, but r hope someday that it will be beaux it's a touah workplace out there." Burton's mother, Karen Moucbard, said she had a difficult timeadjustina to herson'!dccisi.on to leave school. but now she 11 start1n1 to understand his creative instinc:u. All thinp considered, B&irton wd he has learned a lot and is comfonable with the decisions he has made. But, he cautions, his "trust younetr• mcssqe to youth should not ~ construed as encourqcment to quat school. "If you listen to what your hean's tcllina you and you want to be 1 doctor. you want to be a lawyer, an accountant, a physicist, those tbinp require an education no matter how you cut it," Burton wd. Buti other people get where they're goma by 8 .............. ----_.___. __ ____ t.akana a different path. -~uc. -.:i.-ua -.. ..,, .. { I iAMAGfD PAGE ,, THURSDAY, JUNE 16, 1988 25CENTS BB principal 's ousterprotested . SyROBDTBAllm .............. Huntinpon Beach Citf School Districi trustees Tuelday n1aht over- rode protests from members of a st1nd1na-room-only audience lnd a~ l)lrentJy reauianed veteran and popular Hawes ~hool Principal Rita What former Orange Coiat COiiege pitcher and major league star la not happy With RoyaJa? /81 Ranger topple Angela, 6-3, while Dodger• wtn behind Hersh Iser ./81 California Clergy malpractice law- ault argued before state Supreme Court.I A4 Natl on JoflCnscn to classroom teachina chores. Oflici.ali refulOd to identify Jor· ~ntm, and a 1«ond employee, who were assipcd new jot:>i foUOwin, 1 cloted~r executive lellion. n- a&eadt board President Karen O'Bric ident1ried the two people only by their Social Security numbers. But S&anley JofJtftten, buabend of the Hawes 'School princiDtl. con- firmed h&. wile. wu Oftt of tlac two reauiped. He responded .. Ob. God no:• when asked if he wanted to MC his wife's Social Security number published in 1 newspaper. .. It was one of the most un- 1erupulous thinas (the reauipment) I've ever seen:• he said Wednetday. '1"he ·children, the partnU and the teachers were all happy." The second employee who was raaipcd to the clauroom, IOUtCel said. was Joan Skinner, who Md J>Rviously served u princi.,.J at Hawes ~bool 1~ fl!OR recntly was an usastant pnncapal at So1ifJICR School. School Superintendent Diana Peters, who previoutly said lhe couldn't comment bealu1e the matter is a personnel issue. could not be reached for comment Wednesday on the practice of identifyina personnel b)' Social Security numbers in order lo protect employees• privacy. Othm in tht education field, ill Al ma~ u .ac> peoolew:: Sacramento &nd OraRF County. said dittrict otricn Tiueldaf -,_. la • they had never seen a school district etron to 11 ve JorplCll 1 • ..... use Soci~ ~urit)'. numbm u a been the principial at Hawil MMI means of .identtticau.oo. for two years. She'a bela la .. A lonstame educatt0n observer said education field for mote diiM JO,_. the ~~re cuentiaUy def!ies ~ and ·a princil)ll in &be eh r i publit the r:iah.t to learn what is ao1na , 1ehool district for 13 yan. on ln the d1stnct. SpeaUrl said the relDO¥lill ~ JGr; Social Security officials in the aenscn from her ~t M ....._ .... Sin~ Ana office have refuted to be an .. injustice ' aad ... ecs 1 a prov1~ names to ~tch the ~al misuJC of poYter." 11lieJ _.. .. ' Security numbers 11ven by d1stnct reass_jJ!lmcnt would ~--10 officials. (PleUe ... n '#.£/AS) Amphitheater lawsuit dealt partial setback-- Judge rules Mesans should have known of expansion plan BJ 808 VAN EY&EN °' ............. A Superior Court judae on Wednesday lh~ out a ponion o( a Costa Mesa c1taens' croup's lawsuit apinst the opct'lton of the Pacific Amphitheatre over conc:ut noa1t. At issue was the early history of the amphitheater project. In the late 1910s the state of California, rep- resented by the Orante County Fair Board. chanted its plans for the arena from a low-key outdoor theater with a small musical stase to 1 ~or concert venue capable of bostina rock con- certs. Tbe IJ"OUP, Concerned Cinzcns of Costa Mesa, contended that a new environmental impact ttpOn should -have been filed when the cha.nee was And state law plllCCI tbe bwdea ol findina out on the citizem. when IM relevant information it availabll throuah .. reasonable dililence ... After hearina testimony this wect. J udF Richard J . Beacom ruled that Costa Mesa resideatl sbould bave known what wu bappeai .. and !.bouJd have med. prolelt c:oncemifta the project no later than the summer of 1983. -rhc fact is, there were I lot of people tn the community who wa'C in 1 position to obtain &hat kind of mfommion.."" said 9eaum. ~ were numerous newspeper artida and documents were available in-~tint euctly wbat .... beiaa planned. rm s&tisfied tbll tbe 180- day period was commenced Mtb the execution of the k:ue in Mardl, t 91 t. and if not then, with the st.an of construction in February, 1913 ... Richard L Splx. few Conccmed Citizent, bad-= tbat many residmu bad not kDOWD jQll ........... _ ... ._·· made. There is. however. 1 ltltut.e of ceremoa1e9 a t 811 l'leld. n -... ..._ -au limitations which holds that citizens 8M '"-w au must ftleacompla1nl Within flOdays bow ~ the amphitheater..,.. aoias to be and what kind of mUlic ..,.. 1<>ina to be played there until July. 1983, w1'en the first conoms were held. .. , thiDl il ii very car tbit dlleft . be ceJebi'a~ 1Rp aad dowJl tile Orimae Of findiRJ OUl about I pomble need Coutat 18 lltiJl M'laoola on:rtlle aat ~ for additJonaJ documeatation. ~ IUbllaatial numt:a~ (Pl••-) No relief seen for loom Ing drought crlals In nation's mldaectlon./ M Coast Seat ing of Irvine council race runner-up challenged Jury says crime lab condition serious High school graduation ceremonies scheduled thlaweek./U Indez Advice and Games Butletln Board Bullneaa Clualfled Cornlea Entertainment Opinion Pollce log Pubtlo Notices Sport a W•thet BJ PAUL ARClllPLEY ............ A11 AS A7-8 85-7 A12 A10 A9 A3 88 81-4 A2 Officiall in the <>ranee County District Attomey's office have cleared three police depanments in the sbooti"I death or a Chino man Who led officers on 1 three-city dwe in March. BJ GllEO u.EBU Of ............. Irvine City Councilwoman Sally Anne Miller is leadinaa petition drive to unseat Councilman-elect Cameron Coscrove, who called the challenac a fiasco and lambasted Miller for "tryina to hold the council bosiqe. .. The petition efl'on marts the flfll use or 1 new election law in Irvine tbat allows a chlJlenae of any council teat appointed throuah defaulL Tbe law, known as Measure 0 was IJ>Pf'Ovcd on June 7 by a vote of80 percent. Papers for the petition drive were taken out Wednesday, accordina to the City Oerk's office. lnvettiptors determined the lbootina of TC?b)'. ""I Wei• WU justifiable homicide, said Santa Ana :r.M"""'llO 'Police Lt. Bob Chavez. I.~ ~il4111~ j fa ? UCistude~. in desert There were two seau open on the June 7 belJot. but ahe election of Larry Aaran as the city's first elected mayor also vacated his council seat. Under the city•s election laws. the third hiahest voie-sener on the ballot automatically wins the vacant coun- cil seat. Cotp"Ove, an ally of Aaran. finished third behind incumbent Miller and another ~n allyt Paula Werner. Werner tirushed wnn 24.1 pcTCent of the vote to Miller's 22.2 pet"Cent and Cosarove•s 21 .8 percent. the lone conservauve candidate on the council. Kay McNall). Miller's aide. said several people approached Miller to utilize the Measure D law m an attempt to rep.in a conservative foothold on the council. ..She behevn 1t 1s an the bc5t interests of the commun11y. ·· McNal- ly said. Miller could not be reached for comment Wednesday. If the petition effort as successful. 1 special election would be called and would be open to aU eliJjble can- BJ BOB VAN EYU!N ... ..., ........ lnvestiptonare 11 risk oflosinaor confusina valuable criminal evidenoe as a rctUlt of crowded workinc and storqe conditiom at the couaty•s forensic science labon.toey. eccord-•na to a report by the Orult C.OW.ty Grand Jury. The election of Cosarovc and Werner, alona with Aaran and Coun- cilman Ed Doman. leaves Mjllcr as didates, city officials said. (Pl-... ... S&ATDIG/ A2) 8aUJ AaM llllJer To hasln 1 IOlutioa to tbe prob. km. the JW)' bas rcnewcd its ICW:D .. year-01dquat rora.n caoanded tOftn.. sic science facibty, a.nd jury ol6ciall say &hey arc aietW. aome raultl this lime. F-aucroa Street. His truck was ar- rounded by seven Santi Ana polic:e cars. two from C01t1 Mesa and one from Fountain Valley, with the helkopter hoveri• above. When an unidentified Costa Mesa ofr!Ca' opened the door and tlied to pull Wcass out. the driver resllr1C:d t,he tNCk and threw it into reverse. The oft"K-er wu pinned in the dOlr jamb and drlliiid aboUt lO feel bem Cr ime hotli~e s -LANClt ICINON ... ..., ....... he fell. Wdss then tried to drive forward when several officers opened fitt. Weiss was struck at least ontt 1n the neck. and was~ dead at the scene. PolX:e later learned Weiss was wanted on a $4.000 traf1k warrant for 1 similarchue iA Coata Mesa last year when he eluded police. Weiss aJso served time fOt a pair of Costa Mesa ~uJlarics. p0lice said. "It's aoina slowly, but we think the Board of Supervisors i1 doincevery· th1na n can to tct them more temporary space,·· uid O.vid 8'aDCb. chauman or the juey'• . crimi..J 1usuce and public •ttty comminee. The t fom\lic 9Cie1Klt .. was buir.:C.'969 &Dd the Grud J"'Y first ~ncd i~ 1980 that the t.cititJ had outarown its spec:e. "I aucss the board at that ti-;. put at on the beck burner and ..._ about it. .. be •.id. The cffa:u of aampod qUllWliM the laboratory c:ould be, sen-. accord1na to the le1*l. if maeerilill family affair U.S. Tempe = :. •;: Calif. Tenina • ...... r-==~~ : ~~=-: : =:&:I-~ ~ .......... . ...... . . ...... -,, NMltle .,. • --Clfr • • ..._... .. • .... ~ •• 1' ~~ -,. !Ill... " .. ---• ._...... • •....... M It ....... .. •L.....-. .... _... -,, ...... • • &..-.. .. • c.llw • • ~ .. '' ...._. .. • a..ca, n • _.. ,. .. ..._...._ •n..... • .. ... .. •SU ilO? • • ~ ,_ • ~ .,.......... ........... .. . •-•• IO 74 ....., ,_.. ft • Lone tt&ISI· • .. •.. ... y-~ ............... . .. . ., Surf Forecut 8111 aa4 lllrlaa ..._.., foa.Dden of W~. pw lil tniiat el a eMllrboent tlaat ............... .._ ..... claarta tbe oronbatlon'• aucc e 11 • lllnce It bepn operation lD 1972. ...... .. ....... .. • La~ , .... =:oii.Y\. : :; =:=. : r. ~ : : aw1 ..... c. n • cw...c-. 11 •.....,... 11 • ~.WYL M II 0...... al tt .... Illa I • • Tides ....... ... u t.J ... CRIME HOTLINE FAMILY AFFAIR ••• :::r ... ...... ...... ==N.C J: = r,r l:IS : : rif* J: f: = = a =t~ : e =.... 5 : ~c : • "'' •• .," •,, =:-:-:• to1 n ham Al man ia Miuion Viejo OD May 30, t 986, on suspicion of cocaine ules, accordina to WeTip reeords., which are corroborated with each arratina qe_ocy and the couns. On Sepce:mber 25 and 26, 1986, Irvine police arrested a Laauna Hills man and another from Ef Toro on suspicion of sellina Sl.OSO worth of cocaine. But the orpnization now deals with far more than c:trua tips. In 1979, WcTip broedencd its ter'Vice area Crom CaJifomi.a to the entire nation and bcpn takina tips on every major crime. Today the orpnization has 1pecia.I lines to take calls concemina arson and _pna violence. · .. Sadly, many people think aana people ju.st lboot each other, IO why not let them. rve beard that com- ment." said Brownell. a mountain of a man at qe S4. "But lhesc: people ' Cons members) arc notoriously bad lhots and they seem to bit everyone (but their intended victims)." WeTip allO takes calls concerning murders. robberies. crimes apinst the eldetly, children, illepJ toxic waste dumpina. welfare and corpor- aie fraud. It is currently workina on a propam with the U.S. Forest Service to tum in marijuana growers who plant their prdcns in nauonal fores~ sometimes auardina them with lethal booby traps. And there have been more subtle changes at WcTip. Miriam Eckert, now assistant national director at aae 51, has called herself Miriam Brownell for the past three years. "We've worked in this so many years ... and spent so much time toactber," she said, "ir Just teemed like a JOOd idea" to act married. Between them tbay have ei&ht children from previous marriages, two of whom work for WcTip. Miriam Brownell's sister, Carole Klein, is an admm1strative auistaot. Her dau&htcr, Bonnie Lubecki, is the office man.,er and her second dau&h· ter, Susan Aguilar. 1s director of public relations. , "lfwc weren't related we couldn't work for what we act paid." Klein said. Brownell admits that the orpniza- tion 's perpetually thin budaet leaves little left over for competitive salaries and benefits. WeTip loses many ofits work~ to police departments and private indu•!'l· Still,~ are those who 1tick with at year after year. .. Even those who are not related, it's a family operation," Bill BrowncU said ... Thia is the only prosram where day to day you can tee the resulu of your labor ·~ 10me idioa loCked up for tkalina drup or killina tomeone ... While WcTip's reputatioa bu in- crcucd enonnoualy duri,. the pest several years throuah nauonaJ tele- vision COVCfllC and results.. Brownell said law cnfon:ement in the bejnnina wu teary of the whole thins. ClllnllM,0. M tt .._ IS .. o.-.1.NH. • • ..,..~ • • ._,_... a 10 ~---11 .. --• = ....... -11 = : : ==-: 11 =~ : : a...._ '' ., ... UlleCl!r • •n =•• " .. 0.... .. --~ et 11 .. = :: ::r ... ~"' = r,::=-· : : == .. . ~ " .. llM{lllltlt .. ., ,.,.. ~ft~ :: =-== :::.·:.1. .. ., ~ • • ,... 14 .. : : ;:::::;. ........ ., . ..... .. .. ~o.NC. !! t .. t T... ..: 1:, =JI : :: i--.. --..... ........ 1-ii·ii ...... iiilliiii.11 .. 11i"li.i .... • = wrbey learned that we were a valuable resource. However, ii took ~~~~:.=.~~naaway CRIME LAB CONDITION SERIOUS ••• .... ... ... IA :in;;nmarydaJlltrtiptakcnmuat PromAl · be on auard for are phony ti~ either htld in evidence were to become The Grand Jury has recommended made as a joke or to put an 1nnoccn1 contaminated or destroyed. If that that the BOard ofSupervilon aMUre person in hot water. • were to happen. the report says. ii that conlU'Uetion on the a.boniory former Buff um1 depenment store on Main Street. 11lis is an inherent problem. be it could undermine the credibility of beain no later than June. 1919. WcTip or a police dcpertmcnt," criminal prosecutions. Tbatmaybepolliblc,~icledthe Browndl SI.id. No one has loiat an)'lbi• m county can find a. way to hance the Each fonn filled out by a tip tater ahhOU&h there have occasiODaUy S28. 7 million fldlity. Mid IOb Love, and sent to law enforcement includes been problems with findi.. ma-of the county OenCral Setvica Ad- a di1claimer that says all the inf or· ten.ls. taid Burt &tel, deputy district minittradon. rnat.ion is hearsay and that it needs auomey. "Finuc:i11iltbekeyqueldori, .. he com>boration. .. I wouldn't •Y it's betn a m.u« said. .. WM&w·1e~lookift1at ouuet. WcTiptwoffmd Pf'Qblem, but somcUma you IO over it a builder ftmna"' and' COMWCt- rewards information lcadina to a there and it t.Ues a wtiile to find ina the kilily either on Jdt own land conviction. Rewards top out at a 10mcthina becaute thin.p, are IUIClrtd or on county land,; and thea leaina modest SSOO to disc:ouraee modem up all over the place, he uid ... It the buildirt110 us. .. Some eections have already been transfered and the move i11Cbeduled to be completed by the end of the summer, said Sheriffs ()eputment spokesman Lt. Richard Olton. ·~y were aWrully crowded 1n there," said Olson. ""Thia abould alleviate it until we set them into the new facility." Heart transplant patient improves day bounty hunten. Brownell uid looks Ukc my prqe... In dae mcuumc, couaty cflicialt that only half the caJlen even· Uk Last April, county officaall bcpn are movine tome sectiom of &M about the reward. Others are dO'Ml>-solkitiftl proposals for a new, laboratory to lmlpioruy 11*'8 at 601 ~l insuhed when it's offered. 131,000.:tquarc-fool laboratory. N. Ross St in Santa Ana. ud at the OllOn added tha~ despite the crowdina. lbe Sheriff's Depenment has been satis(aed with the per- formance of its forensic ICience ICCtion. .. We're pretty proud of the job they've done, .. he said. , By ROBERT HYNDMAN °' .. ..., ....... The ~year-old man, who asked that his name be kept secret from the public, 1s the second person at Hoag and the fourth in Oranat Count)'_ to receive a heart transplant. The previous three all are do1na well, accordina to officials at Hoaa Hospi- tal and at the UCI Medical Center in Orange. Payina off' the money involves an • elaborate system to maintain the ---------------------------------------• Tbc Huntinaton ec.ch man who received a heart transplant early Tuesday was listed an fair condition Wednesday at Hoaa Memorial Hos- pital, where he is recovcrina.. • Hospital spokeswoman Pam Bolen laid the patient's condition was uppaded to fair follOW1Jll an examin- ation by physicians. The doctors have )'Ct to determine when the patient is likely to be released from the New- port Beach hospital. "All his vital lians are stable." Bolen said. The latest rcc1p1ent required the transplant because he suffered from deicncrative heart disease. The heart came from a Los Anaeles man who died from a brain aneurysm. His identity was not released. callers anonymity. After the reward is approved by We Tip'• board of direc- ton. the caller is 11ven a code name and number and toJd to ao to a specific postmaster in his area. The postmaster then hands over cash sent to him by WcTip after the caller presents the proper codes. .. We offer total safety throuah total anonymity," said Brownclf, who knows of no case of retaliation apinst a WcTip informant WeT1pcan be reached at 1~78· C RIME. ARENA SUIT DEALT PARTIAL SETBACK ••• From Al who did not know," Spax said ... There .were people cnterina into contracts to purchase their homes ri&ht up to the moment of the first boom from the amphitheater. People JUSt don't do that if they think they're loins to be blown out of their homes. . Spix said that the prcv1Jhn1 opinion among many Costa Mesa residents in the late 1970s and early 1980s was that the proposed arena would host matnl) outdoor theater festivals and classical music. He cited one newspaper article that quoted an official as saytn& the amphitheater would be too small for rock concerts. the amphitheater would be or that he believed members of the public rock concerts would be held there. should have obtained documents and Sonabal also sajd that the city had attended meetinas of the Omaae not been able to obtain a copy of the County Fair Board 10 follow what was 1981 lease qrecmcnt for the happcnina with plans for the arena. amphitheater and that he, as city "It is unfortunate that apathy ~anaftler, bad not been adequately-seems to control such an important informed as to what was beina part of public affairs." be said. planned and constructed. Norm Snow, a resident of the Mesa Attorneys for Ned West Associates, dcl Mar neiJhborhood near the ~tors of l~ amphitheat~. di~ amphitheater, took exception to the m1ucd Sonabal scharaes, say1n1 that 1udae's remarks. SEATING OF CANDIDATE CHALLENGED ••• From Al Coserovc called ifte challcnse .. absolutely ridiculous" and claims Miller 1s sore about losina a con· servativc seat on the council. "I'm shocked, actually, because I think the voters sent a very clear messaac," said Cosarovc. "I consider myself elected, and I'm ready to be ~worn in. She's playina politics at the tupaycn' expense." eosarovc claimed that Measure 0 has not even been ratified by the council or secretary of state. If be 1s sworn into office before Measure 0 1s sianed into law, the challenge will be invalid, he said. .. It only applies to vacant sea~ and 1t won't be vacant once l'mswomin, .. said Cosarove, who said a special election would coat the city ..thousands of dollan ... City Attorney Roacr Grable could not be reached for comment on the lcpl specifics of Measure D. Supporters of the challcnae alleecd· ly conducted a phone survey of residents. askina them opinions about several potential candidates, Cosarovc said. One name that reportedly surfaced was Irvine City Councilman David Baker, who lost bis bid for the 4">t.b Conpessional Di1tnct in a bitter, rnud-slin&Jna race. He is now under Wednesday's Lotto picks By De Aneda&M Prat Here are the winnina numben picked Wednesday ni&ht for the California Lottery's twice-weekly "Lotto 6-C9 .. pme: 32. 20, 10, 17, 40, I and the bonus number, 31 . Players who correctly auesscd all six numben will share a prize pool of $22. 7 million. said lottery spokesman John Schade. All those who picked five numbcn plus the bonus number will divide amona themselves a prize pool of $2.624 million; those who picked five ofsi:i will share Sl.352 million; thOlt who picked four of Six will share S 1.229 million. Three ofsix is worth an automatic SS per winner. The sales from Saturday ni~t to Wednetday's drawina were Sl•t5 million. ICl\ltiny for allelcdly mishandlina funds from a founa&tion to cover fast. minute campaisn costs. Baker, a Iona-time council a1Jy of Miller, declined a bid to retain his council scat in favor of'. the con.- pasional race, and his term expires July I. McNally said tbetearecurrmtly no plans to ask Baker to run if there's a special cfect.ion candidate. Baker could not be reached for comment. A&ran said he was allO surpriled at Milfer's challe •. -h seemed to me that the three winnina candidatet were 10 clearly separated from the other candidates that it wouldn't teem loeical to contest it," Aaran said. McNally said there were no an- nounCed candidates for a special election. Tbc two losina candidatct in the June 7 clcction were An Bloomer, who drew 16.9 percent of the vote, and Michael Shea. who earned 14.~ pcn:cnL Petition cqanjzen must collect about 3,SOO sipatures-7 pm:ient of Irvine's so,s21 rtaistered Voten - by J ~ly 1 s ID order to force a special efeeuon. ~ "ft wasn't apathy that prevented people from complain1n1 at the time; 1t was ll&t't'Cmcnt with the distnct's on&Jnal plans," said S1>1x. "Even durin& the tours that were conducted of the fac1'11y when 11 w.u completed, the part)" hne was ·noise is no problem, don't worry about it.' .. there were rqular, monthly ~cetmas ··1 .really don't th.ink it was fair of bet~ membcn of the Fair Board the JU<f&e," he a.aid. ''Bui in one and caty.offiaal'i and that the lease respect he's ri&ht. The ordinary was easily obtained by attorneys. ciuzen doesn't undentand what is newspaper reporters and othcn who happen.ins around him. In my case, I requested at. just felt that our elected and ap-"~ has~ooe~dc~on~ ~ntedo~~w~lddo~hl~tol~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;~~~~~~~~' part of the plaintiffs as to any hurt us. t know now that I was concealments.' said Neil Papiano, wronJ." Several Costa Mesa residenu. in- cluding former c11y mananaer Fred Sorsabal, testified that they had not known what the seatina capaci1y of auorney for Ned West "In fact there Spix said the main part of the cs strona evidence that ample. and 1n citizens' suit still remained the issue this case I think· more than the ofwhetherconcertsat the arena have n~ry public notice that an violated county noise standards. amphitheater was be1n1 con-He estimated thatthe remainder of structcd... the heariqa could ao on for up to a Jn makina his rulina. Beacom said month. PRINCIPAL OUSTED OVER PROTEST ••• From Al .,chool officials and to Jo']tnsen. detcribcd as "a d1gnifitd. dedicated•• educator. Julie Burnett. who identified herselfas11cacbcr in Fountain Vallq with a child who attends Hawes, said Ptten .. appean to be 1mpedin1 the education process." ··1 find the distractions inc:i· =' Illy NII llMIOl'PICa --.., It Coilt .,._ CA _. .......... U..C:....._ CA~ cusabfc. I request the school board to investipte the manaaemcnl style of tho superintendent." F0Uowin1 the clOscd-dooT talion O'Bric announc::cd that PctC'rl' con.: tract had been "•mended ... Ad"'irtit- tnti\'C A11istant Catherine Wheeler uplajned later that the action Cl· tended Peten• contract to t 992 and pro\'ided her a 3.S percent pay increate -the same incrcatc that other ~UPI in the district reportedly ecttled for. In britf COMIMntt., O'Bric 1lt0 said the R 11lpmenu "were very carefu&-ly reviewOd"° and~ taken .. in the ultimate best inttratt of the 1ehool district. .. ::., ~ ..... , 11 ...... -'42-'»• Ja.tcaU 642-8088 Whit do you ....... ~...,w... ... , you liU1 c.11 ........... ·~ = will bt NOOldld. 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