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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1988-06-17 - Orange Coast Pilot25 E TS Baker la hospital before election Furor rising over ousted principals BJ JONATHAN VOLRE Of .. ~ ........ A .. depreued" David Baker check- ed into Hoaa Memorial Ho1pti1I in Newport Beach for three days after aUeac<fly admitting he wrote an unauthorized check forS48,000 to his conlf'Hlional campaisn from the accounts of a non·profit foundation. sources said today. "He had just bonomed out," the sour« said. Baker wu the uccutive director of the Irvine Health Foundation, a $16 million group that donates money to health causes. In that position, he oversaw the foundation's finances white workina as an attorney for Paul, Hasdnp. Janofsky It. Walker in Costa Mesa. But in the final days of his bid to pin the Republican nomination for the 40th District Conares.sional seat, which he ultimately lost by less than one perceQJ..i.. of the votes, Baker alleaedly wr~ a check from the foundation's accounu to his cam- pai1n. The checks require two signatures. While Baker was authorized to sisn, Superior Court Judae David Sills, chainnan of the foundation's board, and developer Tim Strader were also authorized to silfl. .,.., ........ ., ........... A atadent at•ea Prlnclpal Rita Joraemen a •. oodbye hq at Bawa School lo BanUQ&ton Beacfi. The popu1u prlncfpat wu reaulfned to cluaroom datiea. Handling of demotions by HB trustees prompts a lawsuit, suggestion of recall ------ IJ ROBERT BARKER ..... ..., ........ Pressure continued to mount today on embattled Huntington Beach sthool officials who demoted a prin- (jpal and an assistant principal this week but refused to identify either administrator. Instead, the officials banded out Social Security numbers of the two women. d aimina that they we"' followina lcpl advice to protect the women's rights of privacy. The action has sparked protest and controversy. • Patrieta McGinnis, a lcpl assis- tant with the state Department of Education. today said school officials are compelled to reveal the names of the two women. It was subsequently teamed, however. that the employees •~ Rita Jorsensen, a principal at Hawes School, and Joan Skinner, a former principal who is on leave followina a previous demotion. • JamesG. Harker, an attorney for Skmner, disclosed today that he has filed a lawsttit against the Huntanaton BcKh Cit> School District. ctaimma Skinner was d1scnmanated apmst when she was first demoted about two )'ears ago. • School trustee Robert Mann. the lone trustee who apparently bas escaped the wrath of parents fiahtang Jorsensen's ouster, announced today that he believes the names of the two administrators should have been made public after the action was taken Tuesday. Mann. also said that the votes of each school trustee should have been publicly disclosed. • A group of parents from Hawes School met Thursday and wtU file a .. strong.. letter of protest and will ex~orc possible recall action. they Slid. McGtnn1s, the Department of Education's lcpl authonty, said today that she could find no prohibi- tion in the state code to aivina out names of individuals in such actions. She said a check with state education officaals an Sacramento and a city school distnct as well revealed that I.hey never heard of such a thing" as Jivinc out Social Security numbers instead of names. A school district mav have that as a policy, she said, but is stiJI required lO provide names 1fasked orifthe action becomes official. When asked Wednesday momina about the board's action. school trustee Gary Nelson said anyone who ~ished to fCI the f'amcs would have to call Social Security ?ftlccs. Social Sccunty officials ~fused to provide the names. Nelson also refused to elaborate on an .. amendment'' to Superintendent Diana Peters contract that same evenana. He ad vised a rcponer to~ it an the next issue of the board minutes. Mann, 1 teacher at Warner School in Westminster. said today that he didn't know about Petea' proposed contract amendment until he went into a closed-door executive seuion. Mann ~id the iuuc not only should have been put on a public agenda, but should have been dis- cussed and debated publicly. The amendment extends bcr contract to four years and g.tves her a 3.S percent pa) increase. Harker. a Costa Mesa attorney, said that Skinner. S4, allegedly was a (Pl---PIUlfCIPAL8' /A2) Sills said his sipature_ appeared with Baker's on the $48,000 check, even thou&h the judse said he did not T lilJ) jt, Sources close to the campaisn said Baker needed money for some last- minute mailings of cam~i&n litera-. lure. A loan on bis $308,000 Wood- bridae home was delayed by red tape, they said. Happy day forever linked with tragedy thing to her. Balter stopped payment on the check before any funds were trans- ferred, and resigned from the foun- (Pl...., eee BAD•/ A2) By JONATHAN VOLUE Of .. ..., ........ Dave and Annette Squires' wed- dina anniversary will now 9CT'Ve as a grim reminder of the death of their youngest dauahter. After a family anniversary cel- ebration at the couple's Fountain Valley home Monday, 17-ycar-old Jamie ~uirn and her finance. Dana Potts, climbed into his Volkswagen Beetle. They planned to spend some time with Potu' sister. Jamie Squires was seven months preinant. Her fiancee, their unborn chifd and her family meant every- But at 10:22 p.m., 1t was all gone. Potts' Volkswagen collided with a cardnven by Ramon Martinez. 20, of Hununcton Beach as 1t entered the 1ntcrscc11on of Ellis A venue and Masnolaa Street in Fountain Valle). police said. Sqwres was thrown from the car and died later al the hospttaL Potts was taken to Fountam Valley Re- gsonaJ Trarnua Center and released Thursda). Martmez 1s an &ood con- dlllon at UCl Medical Center in Orange. His passcnscr. lgnaoo Ahumada. 22. of Huntington Beach. COu'l't:housecookiesgunzy-ascharged BJ BOB VAN EBEN Of .. ~ ....... This is no ordinary courthouse cafetena. scrvin&Jury duty at the courthouse. Some people will go to an awful lot of trouble to set a good chocolate chip cookie. And it seems some chocolate chip cookies wiU go to an awful lot of trouble just to set to the people who love them. Take the world-clau cookies sold at the Orange County Courthouse in Santa Ana. for eumpte. "We think we have pretty Sood food." said cafeteria mananaer Craig Kinder. "and we're always on the lookout for somethina new that our customers will like." That includes cookies. And these are no ordinan-cookjes. Some call them a beacon of li&ht in the darkness of institutional cooking. Others say they are as &ood as.. -or, (shudder) better - than Mrs. Fields'. Green bnstlcd at the suucsuon that she might be a cookie addict. She is not. .. But I know a aood cookie when I sec one. These arc naht up thcrc with Mrs. Fields'." Courthouse cookies arc not petite cookies wrapped in cellophane with t>rim little chocolate chips. These arc great, IOOC'Y baked· on-the-premises confections as big as the Pacific Ocean with mehy chocolate chips the size of Hawaii. And enouah calorics to fuel a serious en.crgy shortqe, a fact which Green acknowledled. Now, most certified cookie addicts aren't goinJ to beain their sean:b for the sublime product at tfie county courthOUIC cafeteria. But that would be a mistake in this case. "I had one yesterday, and it was so food I decided to act another one today,' said Patricia Green, 1 Newpon Beach resident Former Arizona Gov. ~-Mech..n cleared of ~ ... ~. ~lo9r1JAI .. You see, I'm havina a salad for lunch so I Mesa's soup kitchen marks 2·nd birthday BJ JONATHAN VOLUE Of .. ..., ........ Merle Hatleberg celebrated two binbdays this week -Wednesday she turned 6S, and Thursday her baby turned 2. Born in 1923. Hatlebera founded a toup kitchen for Costa Mesa's home- less two years aao. h m survived without any aovern-ment fundina. mostJy on Hatleberc's bantwort. .. When I ~. I used my own money to buy the stove and a bil pot," she recallfd Tbunday, sur· rounded by "street oec>Dle" eatina mt in an annivena,Y celebration. ..... lhoucht that pol WU bit then, now l have a Jiant one.:· HatJebeta feeds as many u 200 homtlal people daily. ICtti• up• ta~~ liM ia the ftC9 Community Centet oa Hamilton St«iet between 2 p.m. and 4 p.m. -=t. weekday. Mesa Ma)or 1-.orma Heru.og and current C'ounc1lwoman Mary Hornbuckle. who cut the ribbon for the soup line two years aJO. "I ICl a lot of donations around Christmas and Thanksgiving," Hat- lebcra said. "But the rest of the teat I have to knock on a lot of doors. Hatlcbera is the director of the senior citizens' center when she's not assistina the homeless.. She also feeds low-income elderly people. but that proaram receives federal funding tbrou&h the Transportation, Lunch and Counseling proprn -better kno"'n as TLC. She admits some of the homeless could help themselves if they would &ive up drinkina or drua,s.. but that doesn't dampen her drive to help. ·•1 feel •no one in Orange County lboWd ao to bed hunary," Hallebcra said. "Tlfi1 is the only happy part ol the day for mosi of them. They act to lit 1i1p, eat 1 real meat -to fttl human. an have the cook.le," she said Another juror, from Irvine. also acknowl- edged tradingcaloncs at one end of the planer for cookies at the other end. "Did you notice I put back the roll so I could have the cookies?" said the juror. who did not want to give her name. The Irvine juror confessed a keen tntercst in cookies.. although her trim fiaurc seemed to indicate that she bad this particular passion under control. "I lake all cookies. 1f they·~ fresh baked. - she said. "The weirder the better." (Pleue eee OOOKDS/ A2) C-llfonalil ComDUter'*k .. break lfttoO....~t ~network.JM She .. ,. fi>r tbt food dwoulb doftationt from privall = .... individuals. Aneo. 51111 itw of'thesupponmandaneftdldnuno day's ceremony, as did former Cotta "1)1)' arc all human beinp and we .llMMald do whit M can •o htlp. We . .._ " ._ milllt have all o( the brains an the Parmer eo.til --. llaJW llOl'iila ~ ... kltcMD woi1d. bUt none or us knows what dlnctor ........ ·~ ... .. • •• llarJ tomorro• will brina... Bom1"ackle llelp .......... khcll:.•"• -••d ~· was also hospitalized. Officers are seeking witn~ to tbe -.TCCk. AlthoU&h some people !lave told pohce what they saw. Officer Rick Martinez said more wnncsses Y>Ottld help ptcce the puzzle together · {Pl--.ee TltAGIC/ A2) :Pentagon data fed Douglas, FBI finds But company officials say Huntington work- not affected by probe From staff u4 witt reperts A search warrant in a military purchasing fraud and bnbery probe md1c:ates McDonnell Dou&lu Corp. rcccaved confidenual inlormat1on from the Pentagon in a $35 billion fighter aircraft manufacturing com- petition won b)' the St. Lou.i .. bued company But company offaoals today said the probe has nothi°' to do with contracts at its HunlJngton Beach faoht> The search warrant indicates for- mer Pentqon officaal Melvyn Pa1s~y. now a McDonndl Douglas consultant. passed a.Iona to the com- pan} information rclatina to the Advanced Tactical Atrcraft program, including data about final offers. The warrant souaht documents in the office of McOonncU DouaJa$' marketing vi~ president, Thomas Gunn, co~ina ··the Advanttd Tactical A1l"C'Tlft provam and Patsle) ·s effons to steer n towards" the company. The warT&nt said Paisley {>rovided the company with .. informauon relat· ing to the Adv"lnccd TJCtical Aira'lft ~ram. includi"I BAFO infor· mat1on." BAFO stands for best and final offers. Accordina to the McDonnell ~ warruu. Paisky 9f0vided .. classified and.or confickotial" ~ocu~ents to company exeanives. mcludu'I Gunn. It said tM docu- ments included infonnltioca oa the F-16 f .Ptcr p&ane manuflactureid ti)' McDonnell µoU&W competitorGeft. eral Oynamics'C"orp. McDonnell Oouilaa. Which ~ (PlilMe ... llCDGtMU.L/d) Inda: 'Star Wars' testing r~s11fnes on Coast ' ---~-- tning sparks brush fires orthem Calif omia wilds a,ftiitA.1111' ........ Mm& 1.000 Ml':O r I llHa. Wt me IKIJ¢ VS ll9il' otdlll w n.n. 411liitllludltt ...... 33 bnasb ... iD. tecQftd day ofbluH1aninl eleca ica1 "°""" authorities •ia today. . Tbt llrikes followed more than 2.6«> U.t aarted about 100 bnasb flra late Wedneiday and early Thun- day. But firefi&baers aid lbe)' were able to keep tbc bilaics small and away fiom strueturn. Meao-tlile, a wind-driven brush ftre that Md bumfd dOIC to oil wells in northern Senla Barbara County WM contained after 1COtebiQ1 33S ac:ra of remote, rvacd tenain. In Nonhcm Cilifomia. officials said most of the blazes MR an l('te or lc:s1 io remote brush~vett.d territory at lowe-r elevations. Uaht.lliDI raked a wide lUtion of Calilonaia aencrally ftOfth of Interstate 80 to the Orea<>n bOtder, and east of State Route 99. Natiooal forests from Mode>( to Tahoe were hit. One of the laracst oft~ liahtnina-spawned fires erupted near the Ptaccr County community of Lin<:oln, 25 mites northeast of Sacramento, said Califomia Department of Forestry spokeswoman Karen Terrill. The fire wucon1rolled1t nearly200acra.sbcl fomia fireftah1et1 from the stale Mid. F~ DeDiu1meat. the U.S. Porat In one of the hardest bit rcPc-.t GI\ Senicle ucl ,. :IM 'ltnau Of I.Md the fint day of Ji1tumi1W IUika. Mant9etnent benled the b1aet. Pllctt. Nevada and Yuba counties. Crews of 20 people each ~alto 490 known liabtnina ltrika ~ broupt in from Oreton and Neveda. 11 ftrcs that were in various IUlltl of A siudY of tbc liOtnina . llrim containment and control, aaid Don showul that wUdlancf ftrC: daneet: i1 Schnoor, a COF 1pokesman in the hiahcr than normal this )-e&r in area. ·· dtoutbt·Pfaaued California, Mid Another of the larler fires .,.ew to Mathes. tome 160 ecres ~ it was con-' .. There wu one hrc for c"ery 26 trolled about 11 miles DOrtb of strikes, whereas n0tma11y there Susanville. which is more tban l~ would be one for every 100," said miles northeast of Sacramento. taid Mathes. Durina last year's liahmina- U.S. Forest Service spokesman Matt spawned fimtonn that blichncd Mathe$. nearly a minion acres in late 1ummer, "We•rc not cxpectina serious con· one •n every 10 1trilces sparked a trol problems on any of the firca," blue, be added. Mat6es said. Tbe Santa Barbara County fire .. we•ve been very fonunate, so started Wednesday. There wtre no far," added Terrill, notina that fires reports of il\iuries nor damqe to oil ipited by li&htnina can smolder for wells, uid Capt. Charlie Johnson of days before erue!:~ into flames. the Santa Barbara County Fart Oe- Temll said o ation planes will pan.mcnt. continue to search for smoldcrina lnvHtigators believed the blaze blazes that mi&ht have escaped. no-may have been started by arcina ticc. "We assume lhere'aa few that we electrical wires, Johnson said. Several don't know about... power poles were burned. About half the fU"H were on federal The blaze was located near the forest land and the rcsi on state and border of the Los Padres National private land protected by CDF. Forest and the small community of Mathes said more than 700 Cali-Cuyama. BAKER AT HOAG BEFORE ELECTION ••• l"ramAl elation after Sills confronted him the weekend before the election, the judle said. Sills said he found out about the checks when a secretary discovered two missing. One was found unused, and the other wntten to Baker·s camPtJgn, Sills said. Baker reportedly broke into tears durina the confrontation. and subse- qi.aently checked into Hoag Memonal Hospital shonly afterward. under the name "John Doc." StayanJat hts;jster's El Toro home, he rem.ams under a doctor's care, a SOW"CC said. The Oistnct Attorney's office 1s investiJating "possible im- proprieties" m the incident. as is Baker's law firm. Both investiptions are expected to conclude within the month. Baker has employed bis own at- torney, Paul S. Meyer, who as not discussing the aJlegations. John Nakaoka. Baker's campellD coordinator, said he has heard about Baker's hospitalization. Baker was under tremendous pressure in the waning days of the race, be said. ••Like most successful people, David had a tremendous desire not to let people down when they supported him," Nakaoka said Nakaoka said he talked to Baker m the last week and that Baker is "doing well, under the circumstances." PRINCIPALS' DEMOTIONS PROTESTED .•. Jl'rmaAl victim of discriminat.1on when de- moted by former Superintendent Lawrence Ktmper. ·Kemper is no lonacr is employed by the district. Harker claimed that comments were made at the time about the brcttup of Skinner's m.arriqc. At the time, Skinner was promised the next principal's JOb that became available "and that Diana Peters and the board ~ncged," Harker said. Harker, who said that Skinner is on medical leave after being .. devas... tated" by the loss of her job and the mantal breakup. filed a discnmana- tion charsc with the Department of F11r Employment and Housing. Harker clauns that the latest demo- tion is .. retaliatory" for the dis- crimination charge. Catherine Wheeler, school district administrative aide, said Jorgensen and Skinner had been informed early Tuesday that if they were reass1gned, the board would provide only Social TESTING ••• Prom Al itiative, or "Star Wars," prosram. suffered minor damaae when a fire raocd through a three-story vacuum chamber housing the laser. The chamber, designed to simulate the airlessness of outer space.. was badly contaminated with smoke. Although the laser was undamqed. a tedious cleanup process took six months and cost $6 million. Gama said. Security numbers, and not their names. She said neither objected. Wheeler said today there was never a decision to report the identifi- cations of tbe women. as incorrectly reported in Thursday's editions. Meanwhile, parents protesting Jor- gcosen'sdismassal said they wall write a .. strons" letter to school officials. protesting the action and the ap- parent effort to keep the demotioo secret. They also said they arc cxplonng possible recall action against trustees, except for Mann. TRAGIC ACCIDENT ••. From Al Ramon Martmez was arrested at the hospital on suspicion of drunken driving, but investigators said the)'. have not determined what role -1f any -alcohol played in the wm:k. •• Ille more witnesses we act, the clearer the picture becomes.," Officer Martinez said. "Even the slightest ltttlc bit might help ·· Anyone who saw the accident as urged to call the Fountain Valley Police Department at 96S-448 I. Because of the death of Squires' unborn baby, which was due Sept. 2. the wreck might result in the filjng of two counts o1 manslaughter or even second-degree murder. Officer Martinez.. however, wd it was too early to discuss possible charaes. The morning after the wreck, Annette Squares blamed Ramon Martinez for the t~edy. "Basically, he killed two people, • she said. A memorial service will be held 11 a.m. Saturday at the Church of Jesus Christ Latter-day Saints on Bushard Avenue adjacent to Fountain Valley High School, said Joel Brodowski. Jamie Squires' brother-in-law. Jamie SQuircs and Dana Potts. a Fountain Valley Police Explorer Scout who planned a career in law enforcement both graduated from Fountain Vahey Hiah earlier this year after taking cqu1valcncy examin- ations., Brodowski said. "She took the exam so she could go to college sooner and study computer science,'' he said. "She was really excited about her baby and her marriaJe." Jamie Squires was a gymnast until a wrist inJury forced her to the sidelines., Brodowski said. She also was a member of the hiah school track team, he said. Twelve years ago, she was featured on the front page of the Daily Pilot while riding a. unic)'cle. She was only S at the time. Jamie Squires. her sisters and mother had once ridden six-foot unicycles in the Rose Parade, be said. "These aren't your avcrqe &iris," be said. "This is real hard on everybody. There's one aonc." COOKIES GUILTY AS CHARGED ••• From Al She hastened 10 add that the counbousc cookies "'C~ not weird. In fact, she said. she hadn't tasted them ycL .. They JUSt looked re~lly good, so I got them." Kinder says his cafeteria has bttn m the qualtt)' cookie buStncss for about two years "We had these prcmadc cookies that we sold. and people kept askana. why can't we bake cookies nght here," he said "I thou&flt. no. we don't have the tame for that." Kindcr's thinkma changed shortly thereafter when a grocery distributor sugested a way that he could have has cookies and bake them too. But he prefaced has explanation Wlth an admission. ··1 don•t want to burst your bub- ble," he said, "but we don't make the batter here. We buy it premixed from a distributor up in the Los Anaeles area ... Ob really? "Yes. but we do bake them ~. fresh every morning." ORANGE ........ COAST .-,r_I MA910fflCI DC10 1W11 8'y I Cost.t Mna CA .... ~ 9oir Coll• u.. CA tle2e As at turns out, Continental Food Service, in Century City, doesn't make the batter either. .. we·~ cxcluStvely a distributor," said Continental vice president Stuart Glaser. "We just schlep the groceries.·· Glaser said the batter is made by a company called Rich's Products., in Buffalo. N.Y. • A spokeswoman for Rich's said she would call back with infonnation on how the batter is made, and how it acts to the West Coast. but she didn't. Kinder added, however, that the quality ~snot only 1n the batter. but in the bakana as wtll. "We've found that most people like their cookies toft, with maybe a little crispness around the ectecs ... be said. ''So that's the way we make them. We bake them at 350 dearees for IS minutes, and that seems to do iL .. For the m:ord, Kinder ldls several otbeit~ of cooki~ all of whkb ate baked 1n bis kitchen. There's a peanut butter cookie, a dark chocolate chip, and a coconut cookie. But it's the all· American chocolate chip cookie that outshines them all, be said. "We·re up to about 22S chocolate cookies a day, sometimes more," he said ... The other ones sell aJI ri,.aht. but nothina Uke the chocol1tech1p." One variety has, in fact, gone ofTthe courthouse c1r('Uit, Kinder said. "We had oatmeal raisin, but they moved too slowly,'' he said. · That is easy to explain. There is somethina duplicitous about an oatmeal raisin cookie. A raisin is merely a dried fruit masqueradina as a chocolate chip. Any chocolate chip cookie-lover who has ever bouaht an Oltmeal raisfo cookie thinking· it was choc- olate chip knows it is .a disappoint- ment not easily foraiven. But as for the chocolate chip (and other) cookies at Kinder'• courthouse cafeteria, no one need ever fear that they will ~tend to be somcUun1 Jh1t they aren t. .. ..Every once in a while. somo other distributor will let us samPtc 1 product. but they're not the same, .. said Kinder. "We're very picky.'' ~~M1 71~6 ~"'"1'31• Ju•tcaU 842-8086 ec.,r..,.. 10IJ 0.ll'Of C.. ~ ~ Mo -lfQfllt. BJSttatt(!t!I, .cf4ootll ~-GI ~ .. -....., m•, ai. lllR~ *allt!UI ~ fllrl• ..,_.,of~ ... What do you like about the Daily Pi.k>i? What don't you like? Call dat number abOve a6id your "': Will be ftlCOftW. h'antcribed and • Ii 10 the aDiirooriale editor. Tiie •me .24-bOur llilWm• lttVice may ~ med lO recotd letlen 10 die editor on an~ IOPc. 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"2 Wwt#OOCI 15 S$ Cllly.,. ,.. • "' 8llCI -·..,. .. 1 uo ............ t4 t7 la.~ Nrport .... -...... -..... 42-42 V-teVt, 12 51 Pf'll Five saved after 5 months at sea HONOLULU (AP) -Five Costa Rican fishermen drit\cd 3,600 miles m five months after their boat ran out of fuel, surv1vina on rainwater and fish until their rescue 700 miles southeast of Hawaii, the Coast Guard said ThurJday. "We ate anything that came near our boat, such as fish. tunics and sharks." Joel Omar Gonzalez, one of the fishermen, told the Coast Guard. .. We 1ot water because it rained a few days and we managed to fill a lot of empty cans we had on board." The Kinei Maru 128, a Japanese tuna boat, spotted the 30-f oot Cadiro 3 adrift 700 mile. southoast of Honolulu Wednesday. The Cadiro 3 set out Jan. 19 from Punta~nas, Costa Rica, for an ei&ht- da)' fishin& trip, he said. .. A storm came upon us so we started head1n1 for lhore, but the winds were too strona and they pulled us out to sea,'' Gonzalez said. "We ran out of deiscl and have been adr;ift ever since then." MCDONNELL DOUGLAS FACES PROBE ••• Jl'romAl ed up with General Dynamics Corp., won the competition last December for the dcsi1n and construction of the AT A. a new attack jct for the 21st century. The companies beat out another finalist team includmg the Grumman Corp., Northrop Corp. and LTV Corp. to build the plane. The contracts under qu~tlon arc not ~rt of McDonnell DouaJas' Huntington Beach operation, said company spokesman Jim Reed. "This has nothin& to do wtth Huntioaton Beach," Reed said today. The only defense projects currently being handled by the Huntinaton Beach facility arc the recentJy- awarded space station contract and contracts for the Delta rocket and a mast-mounted si.aht for Army heli- copten, said Reed. The search warrant said Paisley gave McDonnell Douglas infor- mation on a number of projects that was classified or confidential or not otherwise available to other contrac- tors. The other information concerned: -The proPOscd sale of McDon- nelJ Douglas' F-18 fi&hter airplane to the Swiss aovemment and inside information pertaining to the e_roposal of a competitor, General Dynamics Corp.'s, to sell its fi&htcr, the F-16, to the Swiss government. - A plan to develop an updated F-18, the FA-18, with the f='ntncb government, includin& an internal Nvy study. -The sale of F-18's to the European fighter aircraft nations, which arc Britain. Germany. Italy andS~in. -The APG-65 made by Hughes Aircraf\l the search and track ma radar system 1orthe FA-18. - A 1987 Center for Naval Analysts study rqardinJ the SOO MG Helicopter, known as t})e Kilter Ea. and the future helicopter needs of the Marine Corps. McDonnell-Douglas manufactures the helicopter. • Reed said the company as cumntly rcvicwina its project.sand working on a respdhsc to the government probe. However, he said much of the information allegedly pas5cd on il- leplly appears to have been.obtained throufh legitimate means. "It 11 apparent at this time that the information sou&ht by the. Depan- ment of Justice was information properly supplied to the company by ~ Department of Defense to assist the company in arryina out its responsibility as a 1ovC11mment con- tractor," uid Recd. • The search warraot also sou&ht documents about Paisley's business relatiQnshipswith McDonnell DouaJas eiecutives Bob Hood, Bob Little. Jim Catdwtlt .. and otben" ·~ the compeny from November 1981 throuah l 988 .. Hood is vice president of aerospace business development. Little is vice chairman of the board fot government business.. Caldwell is vice president for international mar- ketina at McDonnell AifCTlft Co. A former employee of McDonndJ Douglas' Washinaton office aUeaed in a lawsuit filed earlier this year tfiat be had been demoted and forced to retire because he tried to blow the whistle on "illca:al activities" by .other em- ployees involved with the Defen1e Depanment1 aa:ordin& to a repon in toda)C's Wasninaton Post. The lawsuit was filed by John R. Betzler, a 22-year McDonne\I Doualas employee, who was the company'1 ditector of military ai,.. craft marketina. Company officials denied durina the trial that any illqal activities bad occurred. In March, the Post said., an Arlina- ton Circuit ,..Court jury awarded Betzler SlS0,000. He had souabt S7 million. • @ ef2"ve ~, .!E5cr» ! • Unique Men's Jewelry creiated exclUstvety. by us. aoo wonderful desk tOR glft.s. tor your Special Dad ,. Availat* from SI 00 "'The ~Hdtr In ArW Jeway DftW'I, OWlty Ind Vllut" 401 NNportCffllB'Drhif.WltJIS • ~CCIUft.,.....flUnd• NI 'G"IMch.C-'fJMO•f714fMM)tOI .. • • • I .. Swimming lessons for all ages start Monday at GW~ Summer IWimmina leubns fbr &U .,e poupt wtll ~n Monday at Golden West CoHeec 1n Huntincton BQch. Classes ra.,.;na from in(ants to adulu and advan«d Jjfesav1n1 instruction will meet Monday throuah Friday in 30 or •S.min&ttt' in&ervak. Tht' Pf'Oll'lm is undtr the supervision of Ktn Hamdorf, owe swimming and water polo coach. The sessions will run for two weeks each and the proaram fee is $20 per session. For additional tnformaiion or the time Khedule for a particular level. call 89S-8228 or 89S-823S. London •}Ide •how •l•ted "London for the Traveler," a slide·1eclurc show for people plannina a trip as well u armchair adventurers. will be presented Saturday at Golden West Collcae in Huntinaton Beach. l:he three-hour program by GWC •rt insttuctor Brian Conley will be held in Fine Arts 222 startif\l at 9 a.m. The fee is $6. and additional information is available at 891-3991. Book sale In Laguna A nine-Oay book salt will beain Monday at the Friends Book Shop. sponsored by the Friends of the Laguna Beach Library. Summer basketball In HB A summer basketball program will be con- ducted on Tuesday and Thursday afternoons for fifth, sixth and seventh aradcrs. startin& Tuesday at the Edison Community Center in Huntinaton Beach. The propam wtll consist of both instruction and league pmcs. The cost is S l S, which includes a T-shirt. Call 960-8870 for addtttonal information. Interest rate talk set A senimar entitled "Which Way are Interest Rates Going?" will assen the economic climate for the second half of 1988 and will touch on safe strate_aies to protect assets from unnecessary taxes. The program, conducted by the Newport Beach office of Merril Lynch, Pierce Fenner and Smith, will be offered Tuesday at 7 p.m. and Thursday at 2;30 p.m. on the third floor of Robinson's Department Store in South Coast Plaza's Crystal Court, Costa Mesa. Call Markccta Smith at 9S5-6060 for details. Peace March on Coaat Housina is bcina sou&ht for the California State Peace March, which wilT arrive in Laguna Beach Saturday at approximately 11 a.m. Laguna area residents W1Shina to put up a marcher for the night should contact Eleanor Henry at 494-6349. Irvlne Optlmls~ meet Kay Pittsenberscr will speak on "RecharJe Your Cope .. at Tuesday's mcctin& of the Opt1m1st Club of Irvine. The session is scheduled for 7 a. m. at Hofs Hut, 18850 Doualas SL, Irvine. Call 830-5639 or S38-5882 for a~diuonal information. College Night at UCI A Collqe Night '88 program featuring "The Fox" will be presented Tuesday at 5:30 p.m. in UC l's Crawford Hall as ~n of Newport Beach's .. Irrele- vant Weck" festivities. Jeff Beatherd of Southern Oreaon State Collqc, the last pick in the NFL draft, will be honored. Admission is SS with proceeds benefiting UCI athletes. Call 8S6-SSSO for more information. • Saleswomen plan meetlng The Oranae County chapter of the N!ltional Association for Professional Saleswomen W111 hear cuest speaker Joe Tanenbaum talk<?!' "C~mmuni~­ tions Between Men and Woll)en at ns mccung Tuesday. The session will be held at 5'.30 p.m. 1n the Red Lion Inn, 30SO Bnstol St., Costa Mesa. Registration is S 17.SO in advance and S2S at the door. Call 837-1226 for further information. Friday, June 17 No meetings scheduled Mond•y, June 20 • 6:30 p.m. C..ta Mesa a17 c..dl, City Council chambers. 77 Fair Drive. • 7 p.m. LI,_. ~ Dewaa.wa s,edflc ~council chambers. 50S Forest Ave. -_ I ............. .,,...,1( .. .., On to the future Tbree weet coantJ 'hlell ecboola held their &ndaatloa ceremODl• Tllunday. Abo•e, lllclaael 8eDto leta oat a cheer after recel•- tq Illa diploma from P'oaatal.D. Valley BIO 8claool. At riCllt. llartaa Prtaclpal Ira Toibln ~balate9 Sabrtaa Mar, wfi.o'll compete ID omna9tlc. ID tile Sammer Olympia. at top n,Jat, Edl8on ~ eenlon ba•e a ball at tbelr commencement. ACLU seeks accord on jail lawsuit By BOB VAN EYUN °' ............... The plaintiffs in a 12-year-old Amencan Civil Uben1es Union lawsuit over alleged brutality at the Orange County Jail have offered to drop their claims if jail officials agree to implement a series of improve- ments. Tbe improvements were recommended in a county-funded consultant's rcpon on jail conditions issued May 2. But Richard Herman, an attorney wnh the ACLU, said county Shenffs Dcpan- mcnt officials arc claim in& the recommen- dations had been met. when in fact they had n9l. "I'm m reaular contact W1th pnsoncrs. and they haven't changed their procedures." Herman said. "They've im- plemenled none of the sugesuons or recommcndauons. .. Shenff s Department spokesman Lt Dick Olson said, however, the dcpanment isn't makin& any claims it bas met the recommendations of the Grossman re- port. Assistant Shenff Jerry Krans. the de· panment's chief of corrections, is out of town this week. but Olson said he bad spoken to him. ''Basically, they're still studying all of the areas that were co,.cred 1n thcr report.·· Olson said today. "It was a lengthy repon and they had 60 days to ~t back to the ~rd of Supervisors on 1t. That lea"cs them a few more weeks }Ct. And I don·t thinbk they're coing to have an} comment until they have reported back to the board." The report. b} consultants Lawrence Grossman. Robert Baynes and Edgar Smith, contained i number of cntJCtsms of d15e1phna')' procedures used at Orance County 1a1ls. but concluded th~ was little, 1f any. record of actual brutahty toward inmates. · At the same time. the report made severaJ strong rccopJmcndations desianed to ehminate the possibility of brutality. AmoQJ the recommendations was that all areas where 1111 guards might d:al ind1\1duall) with inmates be kept under video sune1llancc !'\nolher recommen- dation is that a sergeant be ~nt m all instances v.hen fon:c is ncccssaf) m dealing with an inmate. Herman said he was pleased with the ~ repon because it dealt with the problems of e~c:css1"e fo~. but added that the word1na oflhe report was Mv~ eupbemlSllc." The ACLU filed its suit. known ti Stewart vs.. Gates. in l 916. Among the aUqations in the suit were that inmates ~re rqularty depnved of f'Qdtn& matcnal and other amenities. The suit also contained alleollons that uunatcs h.S been rcaularty beaten and abused in elevators and alcoves at tbejails. La.st year, tht' ACLU filed another class action lawsuit. Taylor \S. Gates. whi~h contains additional allepuons ofbrutaht} and excns1"'e force. Stewart \'S. Gates was heard by U .S O.stnct Court Judsc ~illwn GTI) in 1978. althou&h najor ponions of it rem11n u~J,.ed. Irvine City Counc-il OKs seeking.bids . ·Mesan held after assault for scaled-down Yale A venue bridge .~.:~~~.~:d1)-:~~~11~~: BJ ROBERT HYNDMAN °' .............. The Irvine City Council has asked that bids be solicited on a bridge to extend Yale Avenue over a set of railroad tracks, a proposal that in the past has brought protests from residents. The project. however, is far less am- bitious than one proposed last fall to allow vehicles acxns alof\I Yale from Walnut Avenue to Irvine Center Dnve. Nearby residents opposed those plans, arauina that the bridae would brina unwanted traffic into their neighborhoods. A citizens group filed a lawsuit Dec 7 to block the proJCCt. contending that en· vironmentaJ documents for the bndgc construction were inadequate. A Supenor Court JUd&c. ho\l,e"er. rejected their lepJ .cba~lense. . The City Council this Week determined that an initial bid on the bridge proJCCt was too bi&b. So a scaled-down project 1s now considered which -ould allow only ped- estrians. q-clists and cmcracn9 vehicles. Some city officials, includ1ng Mayor Larry Agran. have vowed that should a bndie be built. 1t would permanentl) be ofT-hm1ts to vehicle traffic. Citizens had opposed a bnd&c for cars. c11mg large increases 1n noise. traffic and dan~er to school children. ~hen the Cit} Council considered the proposal in November. more than 1,000 residents attended the marathon mecung that lasted nearly six bounand culminated in a 3-1 vote in fa,·or of the proJCct. At the u me. the council d«idcd to dcla> action on a second bri .. which would extend Yale Aven~ over the San Dtcio Frc-ewa). girlfnend dunng a fi&ht. pohce rcponcd. Pohcc said Roben Wilham Trout threw his girlfnend onto his bed and choked her "'1th his hands about 9 p.m Wednesday. .\f\cr a fev. moments., Trout allqcdly tool his hands off Jan Pcanns's neck and mo\ed his knee onto her throat. said Police Lt. Rid. Johnson. Peanni. 32. -.~able to strugk free and ran to a nei&hbor's home. where she called paramedics and police. Trout allcaedly t.ritd to flC'C his federal Street home .,hilt peramedics treated Pcar1QJ·s cut lip and bruited netk., but was arrested b) off iccrs. Johnson said. Onofre worker suspended in the IOOO bloclt of Stanford. but It was quickly doused b) Orangt Coun- ty firefi&hten.. • • • A possible coyote was seen roam1ns 1ngu1shers from an office building in the 900 block ofDo\ie Strcct betv.een 6 p.m. Wednnda) and 7 45 a.m Thursda). • • • obscene!) with the woman until the hus~nd romt1 on tbe line. • • • A homronv.n reporttd that IC>me- one entered a bome in the 16000 block of Rqma Cude throuab a bedroom window and stok a pet m valued at SS. A buflla:ry report WU filed. after a ~sitive drug test . . •Nlllla• C'tlhsDfhe .... :-.:. c.A:::s.:1 :,,1:. : ......... • •• "·····----· ... nearStonccrcckand South West Yale Loop. • • • Residents on Park Vista rcponfd a man and woman scrum1n1 and ycllina. The disturbance turned out to be Lakcrs' fans. '· A blact and ,..hitc 1%6 Ford Mustang was stolen from the co~r of 3.:!nd Street and West Balboa Boulcnrd betWttn 9 p.m. Wedoes- da} and 7:20 a.m. Thursday B11Dti.aCtoD B•cla A ruideot in the 19000 block of Pro~·idence Lane rcpons that a man claimil'\I to be an cmplo~ of a local pizza company calls on the telephone. •>•na be wants to confinn a p.ua Order. If the rc:sidcnt's wife ansWttS.. the man Fts ijown to the apparent real rcuon for the call. and talks • • • Someone reportedly stoic guns and camera equipment worth about S I 0.000 from a residence in the 9000 block of West Oiff Drive. • • • CO$ntruction crews work.ina af\a' hours at a pntjcct on Lake Strert 1llilCft told to put lbcir power equ!Pment a-.-ay.af\cr nei&hboR complained at 10.lSpm. JUted lover kllls himself t r entagon computer for.prisons • PAMmNA CAP) -A !Mc_.. IU ~ .. Pllln .... a noo-dtui .. ft' •• C'OmP*f networkmd ~-NASA and Navy dala bub liows teeurity meuures are ~ IO -l*'e with ~ l'OWllll~ter s~ms. adeausts l·h's a ..... &hat makes (com0 P'tler) people taarn pelc and 1wa1.•• aid Hal Masurlky. a member of a National Acedem of Sdeftces SP1CC r..:..-.... wi..;._...1 y • -A~•-~ subcomm111ee on ~tcrtealrity. .· ·NASA'dct Propuliion Laboratory aid Thursday &hat one or mote hackers, or computer buffs. ~ fYIJy penetrated a Drfeftle Orpart- mmt comP-Uter network May 16-17, thCa spent~veral hours cuminina fUeut the lab. the Pltuxent Naval Air Statioil in Maryland and at least one other facility. No damaac wu done. no data was ltolrn. and the incidnt ii taftder invntipaion by tbe Fii ud 1CCUrity oMceri from :National Am>nautin and SpM:e Adminillraaion hcad- quancn in Washinaton, uid Haskell Q. O'Brien, JPL'1 manater of com-munications and compuhnt network tervic:es. The bfak-in shows that "fewer ~le are monitonna (computer acttSS) than Should be. More people nC'C!d to keep their eyea open;· said Cliff Stoll. a compultr scientist at Califomia'1 Lawrence Berkeley Lal>- oratory. "lt'1 unfonunately easy for people to randomly bttak jn." O'Brien said the network that was bttachcd i1 a non-clasaified network for sharina scientific information. It is namcdARPANETand is operated by the Pmt.aaon's ~fense Advanced Research Projects Aaency. Thousands of computers arc con- nected to the network at hundreds of U.S. aad (Oftip uniYel'lltiea Ind rcteardl mtla'I. ~ tome military retcattb kt1iliel and Other NASA offaces. he ldded. "Networkina tw spnlld like wild· fl re, but the NCUrity preQutions ire a new art," uid Maiunlcy. a ~ff. Ariz.-buied U.S. QeoloP::al Survey aeolQsist whO worted oa teVeral unmanned NASA ~ mi•ions. ··with a hacker wbo ii very ~er. tryina to parantee he can't 1CCt1S thinas (computen) i1 v~ difficult." O'Brien said authorities don't know if the hacker operated from the Unite(! Statn or another nation, although NASA suspectl involve-- mcnt by the ChaOI Computer Oub in Hambura. West Germany. "Chaos Com_puter Oub is an o_.nization in Europe that makes a hllt>it of hacking computers world- wide.'" he said. SAN FRANCISCO (A" -ne Rcapn 9dmiailtratioe-. plan 10coa- dun randomdnaa lali•Oflll I J,000 federal prilOft Wortr.I ran ia&o 1 roldblock frolW I fedenJ Judte who says it "trcat1 Innocent employees 11 suspecta." U.S. District Judie Staley W.L whote cartitr order Md blOcbd the prosram from sia.U. • ICbeduled May 23, ittued a .,miminary injuno- tion ThUnday rc;JeClina tbe ,ovem- mcnt's claims &hat dnl lll&lftl was justif~ by co~a na abOut afety and corrupuon. 1 The administration will appeal the rulina immediately and ask the 9th U.S. Circuit Coun o( Appeals to let tcstina tqin While the appeal is pcndina. saad Asaist.ant U.S. Attorney Georae Stoll. The Bureau of Prisons was to have been one of the fint qencies to beain drug testina under Praident Re- apn 's September 1986 executive order for tcsti~ offedefal employees NABLUS. Occupied Weet 8uk (AP) -Israeli U'OOPI killed a Palnli- nian and wounded 11 others today when 1 mob ot l'CK'k-hurtina Arabi tried to stop aoldien from blowina up 1 houte in Ille Oc:dpied Wnt Bank. a hOIPital ofRci9I aaid. Anny otAdall confirmed one Pa&cstinian wn killed and four wounded in Beit furik. five mi&cs southeast o( Nablu1. ThC army uid two Israeli oftken were injurcil by stones. The oftidals said lhey were chcck- ina reporu ohddhional Arabs beina wounded in the violence that bepn when tl'OQP' entered the villqe of Bcit Furik .ao demolish a house. Throuahout the West Bank, Israeli troops destroyed more Arab homes ovemi&ht, bringina 10 18 the number clemOlisbed OI Maled in the put 24 houn In the army'• campaip to stop youths from tbrowint firebombl. the armyuid. At leall 10 of the houtel beloneed 10 allefed fittbombe~ the army uid. The aty of Nablu1 remained under curfew today. a day after an J.,.li soldier was shot and sljahtly wounded by an unidentified assailant. ~fen1t Mini11er Yiuhak Rabin said the army considen:d firebombs lethal weapons and that IOldien and civilians could respond with aunfirc wMn firebombs were thrown. "We dcfiM it as a weapon and the action apinst the throwers is as if th~ used weapons." he said on Israel radio. ''ThOie self~efense orders also include Israeli citizens travelina on the roads.~· $10mllllonault meet overtypO SONOMA (AP) -Gloria Quinan claims a typoaraphi<:al error 1n the Sonoma County telephone directory scared off most of her elderly chcntclc •when the word erotic appeared in- stQd of exotic to describe her travel qency, and she's suing for SIO million as a result. Death ruling upheld in beating, heart attack in "sensitive" JObs. The burau has declared that all of its workers hold sensitive jobs. ··The propam would force law- abidin& employees of the Bureau (of Prisons). on two hours' telephone notice, to submit to urinalysis tatina even thou&h not suspected of any dru& use nor of any wronedoi114: ne&11sence or dereliction of duty,· Weisel said in response to a suit by the American Federation of Government Employees. the Iara.est federal workers' union. Haitian chief appl~uds army for its allegiance BJ ne AIMdas.4 Presa "We offer exotic tra.vel, like tours up the Amazon, but nothinJ erotic," she laid. "Since the listina huappearcd. ttris reserved. not exceptionally ou\goina person has aotaen oblcene calls and requests like someone wnh four naked ladies wantina to know where to ao" on vacation. said attorney Georac Ahcftbcra. who filed the SI O million suit apinst the utility. GREAT GIFT lDEh5 foR FATHERS ~Y. JUNE 19rH Polo-for Man Loun.c:i4lvd cotton wm Wlndbrui i<u, t 79 '30. Cotton~ s""'1.atcu·, •e1. ~. Short-~)C4Y¢ but.Lon· down medns• ah1rt.1 ~5.00. 61 Utt chombrey pant,,s, ·~5 00 ' Polo fbr Bovs .. Cb.ombray Wifrt, 13700 St. n pzd cot.t.cm ox ford clothehirt.., •38 '!JC) Pl~tizd ~rt.'. 3't 00. SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The state Supreme Court has upheld the death sentence of a Sacramento man for the murder of a 78-ycar-old ~oman who suffered a fatal heart attack while bein& beaten durina a break-in at her apartment Thursday's unanimous rulina re- jected arguments by lawyers for Manuel Babbitt, 39, that he should have been found insane or not criminally responsible because of brain damaic suffered in a childhood injury and agravated when he was wounded as a soldier in Vietnam. It was the first death penalty ~asc the court has considered in which the • I NEWFURT BEACH ·WESTWOOD VILLAGE ·~NA victim died from a heart attack rather than from the wounds inflicted by the murderer. The death sentence probably would have been reversed under previous rulings of the court, datin& to 1983, that required a jury find in& of intent to kill in order to uphold a death sentence. PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti-~idcnt Leslie Manipt con111tulated the army for plcdaina allegiance to his aovemment after he apparcnlly defused his first major power struaJe with military leaden. "We are in a period of democratic apprcnticcsliip" and "adjustment "10 a framework of civilian supremacy and constitutional principle," Manipt said Thursday in 1 rqularly scheduled press conference. The president said he met for four hours Wednesday with memben of the army general staff before they issued a statement recotnizina his authority and pledaina loyalty to the aovemment. U.N. Intercede. for condemned blacb But the court. with a new con- scrvati ve majority, reversed those rulings last fall and said intent to kill as not required for an actual killer. under the law, Babbitt was considered the actual killer, since his assault triggered the heart attack. "There arc cases in which com- pulsory drug tcstma may be justified in the interest of public safety or security or the like. This i£ not one. Rights guaranteed by the Constitu-UNITED NATIONS -Secretary-General Javier Perez de Cuellar has uon of the United States must not appealed to South Africa to arant clemency to six blacks await1na the death beH~ ~~ut~;ca~~Tn~~t::.tion's stated ~ally for a 1984 slayin~ Perez de Cuellar made the appeal Thursday. and the ,. ustifkations of safety, prevention of urity Council schedu ed an uraent meeting today on the "Sharpcville Six." The meeting was requested Thursday by the Zambian government. In March corruption and preservation of public the IS-member Security Council had appealed to the South African confidence were unsupponed. government to arant clemency to the six blacks aW.iuna execution. The -------------------------council frequcntJy condemns South Africa for its system of apanheid but IB!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!l!!!!!l!l!!!!!!!!m!!!!!••••••••• South Afnca says the U.N. aroup has no ri&ht to interfere in domestic affairs. The members of the council arc the UnitcdStatcs, Britain, China, France and ~ THE MAGIC 01' the Soviet Union -the permanent five nuclear powers -and Alaeria. I NEWPORT Argentina, Brazil, Italy, Japan, Nepal, Senegal, West Germany, Yuaoslavia • and Zambia. B I: A C H CAPTUll•D ON VI DE 0 Lifeetyle Productiona hu ueembled 1n Emmy award ·winnini tttm of video production expert.a to capture the excitement and vibrance of the •orld·famoua resort area of ... your tow• -Newport Beacta This cluaic video captures the Newport Bach lifestyle picture-perfectly while featurini 1uch treasured emotional moment.au: • the waterfront ... from the tplendor or the ha> w t~ opulent ocean.front homn • the annual Christmas Boet Parade • the AuJUJl Character Boet Par1de • the fun and frolic at the Sand Cutle Contest • the C'onrour d'Eleitance d111ic 1ntique auto thow • t~ rollin1t hills to the tr1dition of the Back Bay fO ,UU.Ul!l TH\ 10€0 l.OCALLY Thtt Ha11dma1dt-n on thl' 1~nm ... ula lmal(f'lo H1llmark \\ tt ... 1d1ll Pin• Zwttht'r' l'harma1' { "oruna-dt'I Mar G1muntt·• Harbor View l'tnter Vii Lido DrlJ¥s Drunken Briton• trash German pub FRANKFURT, West Germany -Drunken En&hsh soccer fans sana "God Save the Queen" as they smashed taverns and fouiJlt German pub patrons early today. Polic:e-found the body ofan lnsh fan floatina in the Main River. In Brit.am, the aovemment proposed a crackdown on soccer hooliganism. Police said there was no immediate indication of foul play m the death of the soccer fan. who was .identified .only as a 29-ycar-old resident of Dublin. The victim apparently drowned while intoxicated. they said. . 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Dlldaa Came. The Lowe Ceawtlen and 5 .......... you could beawne • t'Olltlatant 'ff w-Glftl-tiaRIHll ROMANCI ADVINTUllE *FUN S&.9lt111M Alle8wtdalhllad Fm... • ... - Colossus going ape over mail-order bride ·GULF •nze. AL <AP> - C<la111 ....... M dae ..... captiw lowlancl"pilla. tot hit ftna slims-of ano&ber member of bit speciea lince infancy, a female on loU lot breed- ina. He apparen&Jy liked what be saw. But the ma1Ch between tbe 6- foot-2, .570-pound Colouus and 4-8, 274-pound Mute, on loan from the St. Louis Zoo, hat a lo• way to ao be~ it becomes an affair of the soap kind. ope~. . 111 cncounltt with Muke on Wednetday was only a aliml* throuah ·a small openina between their bedrooms at the Zoo in this Pensacola suburb. .. Colouus has been peekina in throuah that little porthole over there and been knockina the dust out of the concrete walls,.. said Pat Quinn, director of the Zoo. ..He's very excited about this whole affair." Both ~~las are about 22 yean old, prime ina age, and each was captured in the wilds of West Africa asan infanl But Calc11•• hid .... ~ &om ... piU.. • • ...... Aoimal Park in H~;l'in'::" rno¥i1t1 10 the Florida ia Muell: Mute (oronouacld Moo'· key) MIJiwd wiila otber memlllr1 of their ~ at St. Louis, tM Col- umbus Zoo and the Bronx Zoo. Univenity ol Weta Florida ldea- tists had beeD prepll'iac ~0101101 b Muke's arriQI by l1M>wi111 him National Geopaplaic: videocapee ol aorillu. Mute ii worldly Md.iophillicaaod compared to Coloelul. Quinn aaid. She also bu an ornery~ pick.ins flatus even with some male aorillas, and is aaid to have bitten off a keeper's fineer . AlthouO consickrtd lafF for a female, -Muke may have met ~ match in Col01Sus. She watched him cautiously throu,ii the peephole in the door dividinJ thetr quarters, especially when Colossus ran over and banged on it. 110....-. ......... banatnew...._Cil111• Muke was driven to Penwola in a well-vented tniler, stoppina at Bul'JCr Kina restaurants en route for fruit and vcsctable snacks, but no hamburaers since &<>rillas are vea- etarians. Private pilots pressure FAA into easing tra~sponder regulation W ASHJNGTON (AP) -After a 1tonn of protests from private pilots and some members of Conaress, the aovernment bas scaled back its propo!ed requirement for small planes to be equipped with altitude- trackina equipment. The federal Aviation Adminis- tration said Thursday it would re- quire small private planes to have altitude~ina transponden if they fly near 138 airports and in some cases as far as 30 miles from the runway. The devices provide air traffic controllers with altitude infor- mation about a specific plane on their radar screen. Only four months ago, the FAA said it was conslderina rqulations that would bin small planes from all airspace within 40 milei of 2S4 airports and above 6,000 feet when not flyina near an' airport. The rqulation announced Thurs- day requires the devices on small planes within 30 miles of 27 of the nation's busiest airpons after July 1989 and within currentJY. restricted ainpace-less than I 0 mdes in some many cases -surroundin& I 09 other airports after 1990. Under the rule, small planes would be allowed to fly up to 10,000 feet without the cqwpment, instead of the 6,000 feet sugested earlier. Currently the altitude-encodinJ transpondcn are required above 12,SOO feet. Jury clears Mecham of wrongdoing PHOENIX (AP) -former Gov. W lfare revi Ion bill backers say they'll beat veto Evu Mecham aaya llil acquinal on ~ of roncealtftl a J35(),000 campai_p loan ~ "justice can occur an Arizona" Yfben the poli-WASHINGTON (AP) -The toreconcilewiththeHou1ebillthati1 lician1 who removed him from office White House hinted today that Preli-so far out ofli~ with our judament:• are not involved. , de:nt Reapn miaht at.ill veto a bill Fitzwater said. A Sta~ jury cleared Mecham and dcsianed to tum the nation's De-When asked whether the pttlident bit brotber, Willard, on all counts ~ion-en •lfare Sys1em into a wou1d sia,n the bill, the spokcamaa Tiiunday. Jobs prosram but blckcn Mid sup. aaid, "Thett is no deQsioa at this The fir1Mmn Republican became po11forthemcasurcis10stronatbata point We'll just have to wait and the first U.S. aovcrnor to be im-\letO threat docs not ttrorry them. sec." ~hed and removed &om office in Presidential spokesman Martin -.. --t by ... _ r--ie Y--on Apn"I .. w""-the ... ..;-ona The measure .--.v tu~ ..xnA. ..... "' .. i..:;n "'u. Fitzwater said an amendment added b f "1 3 fl -..... __ .... senate convK:1ed him on two un-Ya vote o Yr • ar mo .... UMJI• ~ -1a·...a :-......... ment counts. by the Senate mandatina a wortf t\to<O-thirds majority ~ to ov~- ,,_ KU uu~u :\Uirement for a Jmlll -ntt•-0 "d t r. n..-,...l --·-k Tt....; H........... a·m_... ... _.. him in -·--.-n e a \IC o. .;Kn. ..-.1... ..-....... • iK --. .....-~ fare recipients was .. v~ pro. M · .. _ d R•p "r1..-""· "--conncctioa ~;SlS0,000 loon 10 • ., O}Ohwnnn • • • -~~· hi·• 1986 ca ' a...t the Senate srcssive and helpful." C). both New York Detnocntl. .aid . uvha .,, __ ,. But he said the adminisuation House and Smate ~ton are d«aded not t t c .... .,.. ior ''still has some problems with the expcctedtoworkoutthcirdifrcrcnca fear of ptejudi ina his criminal trial. bill," ""hich now goes to a con-on the bill and have it on Reapn's .. Justice can occur an Anzona when srnsional. conference committee to d~k by labor Day. you !fCl to the people and outside: the iron out d1ffcf'!nces with the vcnion politicians," Mecham, 64, told re-passed by the House. The Reagan administntion had porters outside the Maricopa County ··we ... would like to go further voiced concerns about the measure, courthouse Thursday. ''We're happy. e,·en tn some of these areas" than tht but Scnaic Repciblkanl said that if we're happy. You're always ap. Senate did. the spokesman said. He confertts qrecd on a ~I that l~ked prchCnsive but not really surprised." said the workfare amendment was like the Senate ,·enaon. President Assistant Attorney General Barnett ··"'cry imporunt" and the White Reapn might sip it Lotsteia, one of two prosecuton in House would bt studyina other The two bill sponsors, interviewed the case, said he had "no quarrel with amendments added by the Senate. on NBC-TV's "Today" show, termed the decision:· The House version. without the the differences in the House and .. We believe we presented a respon-work requirement. is more objec-Senate bills primarily "technical." sible case that had to be presented. tionable to the administration. Mo) nib.an noted that the Scnate•s WeobvioUsly felt ~c had a aood case. "We·u try to set ch.mies in con-93-3 vote indicated stronc support in A lot of the people in this community fcrcn~. but il's&<>inatobe VC1) tough the event of a veto. feel that he has suffered enousb. and ,-;:::::=======================; perhaps that was a factOf'," Lot.stein said outside the courtroom. As the ve.(dict was read, Mecham smiled broadly and embraced his attorney, Michael Scott, huged his wife, Aorence, then walked over to the jurors and shook their hands. As Superior Court Jud1C Michael Ryan declared the trial over. Mecbam's support.en cheered. Scott asked Ryan whether Mecham could make a statement. but the JudF refused. \\e're Putting The Monoga1Dy, altrUisni believed linked among anhnals On Our Home LoanRates. WASHINGTON (AP) -Two California scientists believe that amona animals, the aene that causes siblinp to help and protect each other may be related to the aene that causes their mother to pnctice monopmy. A mathematical model creat~ by Marc W. Feldman and Joel R. Peck of Stanford Uni.t'mity and published today in Science mapzine shoW1 a correlation between the altruism that animal RUFFELL'S UPHOLSTERY lllC • ... ... .... """""' 1112 -U ... CISTI •M-SU.115• ROLL~ rm ROYCC ,-~-; ""·~ - Newport Auto Center 445 Easl Coast Hwy Newpott Beach .._~_,~ .. 714/173-0900 Come to Alclens for al yu vilyt noomc needs. Only spedalsts c• ""' you perfectly. , ~EN'S ,...,,._...._c..-.c..cm>...-.. brothen and sisters show for each other and the tendency of their mothers to mate with only one male. The math model suuests that altruism and monopmy "arc aaood combination that produces a situation where the individuals who carry thts combination b&ve more oftSprin&, .. said Feldman. He said the theory docs not apply to humans because altruism amona humans 1s a learned 1L. peJbe.Ct "" tp 1la .... pk litJt. 61&07m 17' ~lat .A>& ......... tendency, but it does apply to anunals where the behavior is instinctive or acnetically directed. Ahrutsm among animals is an instinct that causes an and1v1dual to support others an the family oraroup, or even sacrifice life for the benefit oftbc otbcn.. Examples. said Feldman, &re bees and wasps that will work to feed larvae or will attack when the nest as threatened. Qeat American .. ,,, ;- Veto of helmet law a mistake Motorcycle riden can continue to zoom up and down California •a r'Oldl and freeways widaout be1metl for at Jeut an,other year. ~ woo a stay from a mudatory ~lmet bill this week. complimentl of a veto by Gov. Deabnejaan. While the veto plealeCt motorC')'dists wbo lite the feel of wind in their hair. it brouabt IOIDe banb criticism &Om the bill•s sponsor, Assembl~ Dick Floyd, ~Hawthorne. Aoyd accused the aovernor of cavi .. in to a .. very unsavory element (motorcycle pnp)."·and added insult to iqjury by sipi~ bill that requires people who ride all-terrain vehicles on pu · c lands to wear helmets. Hawthorne and proponents of the manda~ helmet law have tried for yean to aet the bill approved. Ibey claim it would save Ii ves and reduce health care costs. Aoyd •YI most of the motorcyclists seriously injured in wm:b ~ not wearina helmets -nor are they insured. Each aerioµaly µ.tjured motorcyclist runs up a hospital bill of about S 18,000, and the taxpayen pay about 70 peroent of it. Jn a one-pa&e veto messaae. Deukmejian admitted that helmets provide an additional margin of safety to motorcycle riden, but "I am concerned about the need to mandate all motorcycle riden and passengen to wear helmets.•• The sovernor cited studies that show most motorcycle wrecks mvolve young. inexperienced riden who .. 'have frequently cnpgcd in the consumption of alcoholic beverages.•• He added be would be willing to sign a bill that ~uired riden under the age of 21 to wear helmets, required all nden to take training programs and enhanced vehicle licensing and testing standards. Tberc•s some truth to the governor's reasons for vetoing the helmet law, but there's also problems with a bill that rqulates only people 21 and younger. The age limits would make such a law difficult to enforce, and it would create a second~lass standard for younger riders. More than half of the states require that motorcyclists wear helmets. and California should join them. It makes little sense to require motorists to wear seat belts in the name of safety and at the same time refuse to require motorcyclists to wear helmets. The governor's veto was a mistake. that shouldn't be repeated next year when proponents of a mandatory helmet law make another run at putting the law on the books in California. Reagan-Gorbachev Experts, observers, officials and othcn in the instant- w1sdom business ~ generally clustering under a consensus that the recently concluded summit meetings in Moscow d1dn 't produce much of wei&ht or import .... Wu the summit therefore not worth the considerable cost. intemc public attention and persistent anxiety that somethina miaht So awry? ... Althouab the speeches (Reagan) had read earlier in Helsinki an3 other stops on the trip toward the Kremlin were out of the old mold. the president (saw) a new and different world in the faces of Soviet citizens .... Fortunately for the survival ofbumankind, the president got nearer the truth when he predicted that the United States and the Soviet Union would not go to war ifthe youth of both nations could meet and mingle and get to know one another. The conversations between Rcapn and Gorbachev upset the tough auys in both camps, but the rest of us arc justified in sleeping a little easier. C.lmablo, V.uco•ver, Wad. • • • It was something many Americans never expected to see: President Reagan. standing in the Kremlin, sapng he no longer considered the Soviet Union to be the .. evil empire." That description of the Soviet Union, made by Reagan fi ve years ago. has characterized U .S.-Soviet negotiations since that time. Reagan and Gorbachev did not emerge from their four days of meetmp with major breakthroughs on major issues. such as arms control. But some events were impressive nonetheless, such as the Soviets' wilhngness to consider discussion of human ri&hts. Every summit need not conclude with pnd rcsufts; in fact. there is as much danger is bcinJ rushed mto agreements on arms control as there is in delaying them. It's not unreasonable for leaden to first talk. then reach agreements later. DallT Jflfll'Ul, P~ F.U. (Mhul.) • • • Recent developments in Soviet-American relations have broken down a lot of stereotypes .... But the biggest change ofalJ, no doubt. is the one brought about through the combined cffons of Nancy Reqan and Raisa Gorbachev. While their husbands have been hnainaand sianincand h uggj ng and s1gm na and aeneraDy rm Irina nice the fint ladies have sustained a pure. a pristine, a pedect, unhidden animosity for each other that will not -under any circumstances -give way to passjna political tides_. Once and for all Nancy and Raisa have put to rest the notion that somehow the world would be a more peaceful place if only women were runnina it Way to ao~ '" lMJIT News, IM1• (Othl) Perot to the rescue Does the U.S. Postal Service realize what it has done? The post office has hi~ H. Ross Perot to review its operations. The post office may never be the same qain. Perot became interested in the T cxu educational system and drastic chanaes resulted. Perot attacks tasks like a buZzlaw. He cull problems down to size. changes their shape and trims tbtm to fit The federal ,ovcrnment isn't used to that sort of ~volutionary thinkina. ..... (Mir ." ~.:.-=--.... ....... ...... UllJfalr ...... ~ Social codes won 't wipe out racial, ethnic jokes An alumnus of Princeton Univer- sity sendsalong evidence of a campus flination with thought-control that poor Orwell died witfiout thin Icing o( My correspondent quotes from a paraaraph 1n the Princeton Alumni Weekly. It reads: "In addition to ap~intinJ new counselors. the administration is considerina the implementation of a social honor code to complement the existin1academic honor code. focus- ina on respect for individual ri&hts, the proposed code would concentrate on specific violations of these ri4bts, including incidents of sexism, racism, class discrimination and homophobia. As with the academic honor code. students would be obli- ptcd to report any violations of the social honor code. and incoming freshmen would be required to sign the code before matricuJatina. If approved, the new social honor code could be in place by the fall of next year." ' For those not experienced with it. the honor code works as follows. If you (a student) observe a student, seated. say, next to you durin1 an exam, cheating, the honor code' oblip you ( .. obliptcs you," as the 1 Princeton bureaucracy puts it) to repon that infraction to the authorities. The honor code has been in effect a good many years and appears to work. Under the proposed new social code, one im111ncs that ifa freshman hears a sophomore make a joke at the expense ofsirts, or of an ethnic group, or of pys or lesbians, of the poor - or. for that matter, about the rich - he has the duty to 10 to the committee and say: "I was seated next to Jeremy Pushkin yesterday when we were havin& a beer after the tennis tour- ' nament and Jeremy Pushkin, '91, ·told this story about this sirl who had the hots for ... who fell in love with ... who ... desired ... the tennis teacher, and. and -but sir, I can't bring myself to tell you the last line: It was not the most sexist joke I heard since lunch, but that one wasn't told by a Princeton $tudent, so I don't have to tell you about it." Some jokes. we should all admit, ought never to be told. J>mjdcnt ford's able secretary of 14Jiculturc. Earl Butz. 1ot fired for bc1n. dumb enou&h to tell a bad ethnic JOiee to Nixon Waterpter John Dean, who not havina squealed for three whole years. was d)'l"J of th1nt and rushed ofl'to print the Joke m Rolling Stone. Butz should have been fired fortellin1 that particular joke (it was that blld); but the idea of firing someone because he tells any joke at the expense of an ethnic minority sroup is certainly one way to brina on massive unemployment. Violations of the proposed social honor code. moreover. exclude from consideration the contextual auspices under which a story is told. and these arc usuaJly the most informative about the teller's motives. An exam- ple: A few weeks aao. someone told me a mordantly funny story he had heard. I relayed it to a small, chic assembly: Jesse Jackson arrim at the Pearly Gates and demands entry ... Who arc you?" St. Peter asks. "I am President Jesse Jackson." WILLIAM F. 8ucKLEY St. Peter fusses with bis archives for a bit and then says, "We have no record of a 'President Jesse Jackson.• When did that happen?" "About three minutes a10." There are jokes, of course, about everyone and everythm& in siaht as the victim. The National Lampoon specializes in exhalinf the list. In doina so, it en&llCS 1n monstrous tastelessness. But better that. I'd uy, than the prigjsh censoriousness of the thou&ht-controllers at Princeton. The followina appeared as a filler on a page of a Yale humor mapzine a generation aao: "Quid erat illa domina vidi tecum uhima nocte?" "Illa non era domina. Illa crat mca Ullor!" The Prin«ton Social Code Committee would presumably recommend expulsion for the editor responsible for the sexist exchange: .. Who was that lady 1 saw you with last ni&ht? .. "That was no lady, that was my wife! .. The editor. if expelled. would lose ther opportunity to teach fellow studcnt1 that jokes of that kind have been around for a lonJ. Iona time; and no social code is. realistically. 1oin1 to do away with them. wau... F. Bedler Jr. I• • •rMI· calH cMuullt. Campalgn fund-ralslng ls beyondpolntOf obscenl~ WUMll•·~=#'; Trim trees, not teachers To the f.ditor: I am one aqry and coafuled N~ Mesa student reantia& pc)I~ · tbat c:onin>a ectueatioul fuDclina. Tbe ia la)'ias off ,. 1acben in ~ ,,,..,,,... 1M S7 miUioP to $9 million district deftcit at the same time that it ii ~Ill thousudl of doUan p1anqa, pialm U'eCI to beautify tbc campmes. Loll c:ouna at Corolla dd Mar Hieb = for example. ledude Ad-Plecemeat Pb~ AP Spenish, AP EuropcaD bilt«y, hu- manities, and watem li1a'lture. Eal· lish and the ~ormina artJ will be the tWdat b1L The aspect that aqm me mOlt ii the fact that I'll be millina out on educational ~unities at the~ time when a C.alifomia biO ICbOol education is already bekl in low esteem by some ·Eutern icbOoll. There should be a way to move money &om one fund to another. Money spent to "beautify .. tbc cam- pu1a would be better spent~~: ans the educational machine · Let's trim the trees. not the teachen. ROBERT f'ORSTER c.dm Hiah School • Schools should enter drug fight To the E.ditor. · I am 17 and a teniorat Woodbridee Hi&h School. I have been raearchina the topic of cocaine abute. From tbe facts that I have found, mcaine teems to be the mOlt daDFfOUI and addict· ina substance known to man. I think it's time our .schools take pen in.our fi&ht ap.inst drup. To create• drua-frce society. we .must 111:1 to the roou of where the drua trend starta. Each elementary school and junior hi&h should require a two-week course on the effects of cocaine and other substance abuse. Makina Deb aware of the pro~m will be a st:rona detcrrcnt in keepina them off drup. Let's au pull tOf.Cther and make our world a better place to live. PETE ARANT Irvine We need more blue moons To the F.ditor: . With the rare O<lCUn"e1lce OD May 31st of two full moons in one month, one may conclude -or at least hope -that the UMCISOnably cool and windy weather of this Memorial 0.y weekend is to occur only once in a btuemoon. DREW RENNER Newpon Beach TooAv IN H1sr0Rv ' I . Earnings for Mazda Motor Corp. show strong upturn ......... c.,. hllallftOUllClld in ltYiM ill nveaues Ud iMniaill lot tbe b u montbs ol ftical f 911. ......... ApriJ 30. fill::' .. revenue t.w 184 716 ml ~ or S7.071:J-mfi (U.S.k,a IO~incrn•ovs the_llWe or&Mwr.-~ 1a1t ~. ~ U.CO.-lncome biefon r taxes10•7791Dd.~JA.']•.;..:· •.61 )en, or 3.7 cents (U.S.)4. &om 9ini ~ -1.66 yen for the like period lul ~. (U.S.).a, up 111.J 1...-°"' lhe DCtpite the hiahJy competidve PRVMNt~t....,_..., Net environment in the 1uiomotivc in- •fter·IP illCOalt ........ 4 440 du~. the rlSCat reluhs show a SVOOS mWi~~orSJS.SmiliOli(U.!l.k up&um comPlred with the pat two up 179.S pennl tom die 1911 filQI years. which were affected by mid~ ftsiue. ftuctuationt in the yen-dollar re• Net income per thare iaert:Ued to _!!onship. '•~ domatic ules Ind ~~mulled i1 asipiO· cant increa1e in unit Illes for Mazda durinc tbe period. However, ~90" Alel.lbowcd a sl~t dectcue. EftOns to reduce COl1I. improve operational eft\ciency and 1treamliae operations conlribuud to t.bc improved results, IS did increaecd ovcnr.as pwdwel inade to take ldvmitaeie of tbe cumncy exchaRIC ntts. Also contributins to the iml)fOved results were a numbn of oveneas projects, indudina Mazda Motor Manufacturina (USA) Corp. and projecrs involvin& Font MOlor C~ and Kia Jndustrie$, whidt resulled an inaused shipments of paru and components.. Muda·s factocy unit sales durina the firit half of fiscal 1988 were 606.494 units. an increase of 1.4 percent over the like period last year. Passcnatr:<ar sales were 433.494 units, up S.I percent, while sales of commercial vehicles WttC down 7 percent to 173.000. men:ial vehicle sales were u:;I percent. at 82,691 &&nias. Bo.D Brawny (E·series) vans .na and Titan (T-scries) trucb '*'- tributed to this jncreue. ~ ••• Directors of EIP llUcnwll" have declared the N~ company's 41st con1eeutive· ·~ tcrlycashdividend. :rbediv~°" cents per common share will "-Factory sales to Japanese domestic payable July Is. to shatdw>ldin di deaJm WC!'C up 10. 7 percent to• record July t. 196,169 units. Overall passenger-car EIP Microwave manufact.,. sales .sho-.cd a dee~ of 0.2 microwave test and meuu~ percent, al 113,4 7 t units. although instruments which are predomi~ models such.as th~ C~pcll.a (626) and ly used in the dd'entt and .-,. RX-7 were 10 brisk demand. Com· communications industna. Ronald W. Hofer, chairman of Codercard Inc.. developer and marketer of computtt secunty and file protection systems, said ... A more than S2 billion marlcet forcomputersecunty systems will emerge in less than five years. .. S)stem protection crows more vita! every dar. DOI only for sa(eguardin1 data but for EFT (electronic fUndl transfer) transactions where major criminal diversions Of funds have occurred," be said. "Jn a t.cchnol~ wbcrc a small computer with a Single '386' mtcrochtp has the power of a J97S-4nodet inamframc. computer security is becomina critical ... "MoT'C than half of the pro~ market will involve banking and financial terVic:es., Hofer said. .. and most of the ttmaindcr will be absorbed in encryption and data protection applications. · "Codcrcard believes the European financial and • banking markets for com~tcr security are developing faster than those in the United States." Sales of Codercard technoJosy to banki.. w financial instjtutiom are expected to follow fuuil certtficat1on by the U.S. Treasury Department <:I 'Codercard security technoJoey for protection of EFT. The technology bas been approved for ute by the treaSUT)I for ANSI Standard x 9.9 and manual key enuy, and certification wiU follow upon approval of enclOAft and alarm techniques. Equipment for final evaluation wil be delivered to treasury within 30 days.. Hofer rq>Ol1.ed. He said the Newport Beach com~ny u directins a special marketing effort in Europe for Joint ventures 'Wlth ~financial institutions.. --1:ri111mm~----------------~ OTC UPs & OowNs . . r . ·: ~-' ·1 I I ) -.... 'f.:.: • .•· ., ' ··--f ~the~ ftM WOOCI "**'MW become ayrM>ft ~ ~ tuxwy Ind toc;.d .... Today. t....-wooct ShUtt.-1 QM 11n wy ~a to eny intenor from Coton6el to Uttra Modem. No OU. W6nitow ccwef•llQ ~hi fwiction With "°' beUY Ind ~ Shuner9 ..... , With .,. lriflnlle -Wirteily °' .... teduce .... blodl 'out hl9I end Gold • ....,,.. .... end ... Id ................................... . --Window bWlbi ...... ......,. tna'I•• YfJAJlf ....... Wilue. ... ......... ...... .. 10" ,._ d'°°99 .La a• ..... ol 1"9 ~ S"'-lftd 4!4 . ....... .................. alllr• '*"1111a1Gnoloalll9•....,._..• .. • ,.. ................. 1Df'7WI ... ,,, ••• -................. fNr.ilftG C11rona.-a 1953 P8R l'ltBi BS'nMATB --~'!_ .. ,,, ·-- t I• ,. C ,1'; O uor~ ·, Market inches higher NEW YORK (AP) -Stock prices inched hiahcr Friday amid record volume attributed to moves lO capture dividends and the quancrty .. triple-witcbint hour." lbe aimultaneOUs apira- ' tion of fut um and optionl conneta. There was a crush of act~ as the openina bell sounded, with volume ex ina the previous first-hour record in juit •5 minuta. Tradina in OccidientaJ Petroleum 1CCOunted for almost a third of the day' a volume_, with most of the activity related to the company's 1mpeodin1 quarterly dividend. In addition, uaderi said volume wu typically heavy as the quarterly triplewwitchina hour aot under way. Some stoek-index contracts expired at the operuna. while others expired at the close of ttMI" ~ysta found notblna unusual in the heavy volume, cooliderina the dou~ effect of the triple-witchina hour and the dividend plays. They noted;1\owever. lhat sUcb activity distorted the real motivation in the mirltet. Alf'rtd Ooldman, dim;tor of technical marltet aAllysis at AO. E.dwards cl Sons Inc. in St. Louis, said tht tripie.wttchina hour rCridcred the market's movements "meaniftl)ea" and nearly impossible to analyze ... It is totant c:ontroled by non.-m1rke1, non-economic factors. ht said. W H~T NYSE 0 10 --- I NYSE l f .'\[)( R\ ....... ..,.. .... ,....,._~ftle't I l t Do,., J o~~\ A~f R~GES ,.... - --- ....... ~ .. Ill· .... ·· =-OO~ .... IO.offlt.IO. ~·--·--·-··· ~~ ..... ,., ... ... .. ...., .................... ,u ..... .. ~ ...................... t.to Housing construction dropped l 2. 2% in May Victim further degraded I DEAR ANN LANDERS: Recently Wilt probably die before their wives. I Md IO IC> 10 the h~W tl!Wflency wbio arc )'OUftlCI'. Tbc wocncft .;n no room. (Nothina 1triou1.) While l Wit doubl have many sunors for a leCOnd there a woman was brouaht in by the .. marriaeie since both are annctive and police. She had been raped in a motel. will intierit 1 considerable amount of They put her in a curtained booth mooey. and everyone in the place could hear I ... __ I have a aQOd relationship wilh lnY them questionin1 bet. They treaaed -.-tD aonsandtheirwivesandldonotwiah the woman as i( lhe bad done to alienate them. I confess, however, sometbina _.rona. There was no hint ahat I bristle at the thousht of my of cocnpusion or respect. h was could I hive do~, ~n? Pie.lie tell da~ters-in-law enjoyilll the fruits di91Ustina; me, and all the omcrs in ~ur vast of my labor with teeond tiutbancn. Everyone in the place heard the readin1 audience. -MR. R. IN I have rour crandchildren _.ith doctors talkina while they examined NEW JERSEY. whom I am very cl<*. How can I be her. I realize they must set samples of DEAR MIL Jl.: Y• e..w Mn sure that they will inherit the built of semen but their lanauaae was so 18" te 1ee IM ·tm•lttn• tf &M my e111te without makina their vulpr it made mo furious .. I am a 36. ..._.. .... ,.,_....-a,_ w .. parents upset by passina them over? year-old man and I wuembamssed. ......_. ... .......,...,..,... PleascadviK. -REALISTIC IN LA Can you imqine what it was like for M•-••teeemf.nlllew... JOLLA. her? She kept sayina, .. Why me? 1ta7 wltll die ddN. There are so many attractive 11rt1 out Af&er .._ fact, '" ...., MYe DEAR LA JOLLA: 'l'llere are way•· there. I am S4 years old. Why would reponei &M ladlml te ._ A...rteaa to pro.We fer year ... ... die anyone want me?'' HoaptW Altocladell • ~-Cfl'• irllMkMlclrea wttlliMl e9tu.c die The woman's I ().year-old arand-aol teo late .... ,. ...... _ ) It'• ........ = wlvet Mt ~m-"tely. (nit wtiW file child bad been locked in the bath-to be rapM. 'i..t ~ .... .:.; ay la••IU.C.> ~.., lawyer 01 ,..,. room duri"' tbe rape. The child was aisall!W '' tM ,elke ... ~1.,. baU tnst .,.,..._L lef\inthewattinaroomofthehospital Ictus after slid u •nle.al 11 laez· MeuwMle, I~'" an kla& by herself. No one was auiancd to euUle. , ..... yMIMlf. A.a awhl a.a ti give her reassurance or consolation ,..._'"for tM .,,.,._.,a. ..,ae wlae wwt~ Uni all tMtr while her grandmother was being ~tlal &Wt t.ehlat te die attnU. of llnl ckaJ tkmtel•et pleum'n ad examined. FinaUy 1 went out and die ,.Mic. YH .w a ttM u41 ac4'•1•ltl•H t•at t•ey WHI• chcckedonhermyKlf. The poor little t•p&f•l w.1 teday. tboroepty eaJ•Y becaae tHJ wut thins was terrified. • • • to leave a 1ai1e naate to lklr Now that it is all over I am upset DEAR ANN LANDERS: In the relatl•n. la my oplalH, 1tis II a bl& because I didn't do more. But what nat11ral course of cvents, my two sons mistake. ; SahlrMJ, Jae 11 ARJES (March 21-April 19): Scenario hiJhlights discovery, excite-------~~~-­men t , major entirely frank. Do some personal detec1ive work. locate moneyL make positive move. UBRA (Sept 23-0ct. 22): Eml>hasis on humor, versatility, curiosity, popularity. You'fl receive invitation which accelerates social activity. Check passport. realize travel is distinct possibility. Salittarian plays role. SYDNEY 01111 SCORPIO(Ocl 23--Nov. 2f): You're on solid ground despite objections from family member. Push ahead, aoal is in sight and you'll be aware of it It is time to revamp, to revise, to rebuild. Another Scorpio plays role. domestic adjust- ment. Emphasis on children, variely, change, travel, an unusual ajf\. Money that had been withheld will be re- leased. Libra in-••••••iilllllliiiiii• volvcd. SAGm'ARJUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Read and write, communicate, make your feelings known in ~itive manner. F.ocus on distance, language, travd, poss1bility of reuniopwith one who has been estranged. TAURUS (April ~May 20): Emphasis on reaJ estate, property value~ ability to define tenns and ctarifx prospects. You II have access to "inside infonnatfon.' GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Request from relative might lead to wild aoose chase. Know tt, refuse to become involved in venture that is speculative. uncertain and lacks anytbin1 solid. Emphasis on rcsponsibiJity. CAPJUCORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): f'"unding is available, you'll almost suddenly be in position to purchase items which beautify home surroundinp. Domestic adjust· mcnt plays key role. Focus also on pets, employment. CANCER(June 21-July 22): Recosnitioncomes from . unusual source, could lead to publishing venture or' Journey. Emphasis on payments. collections, royalties, rewards. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20.Feb. 18): It might be time to relocate -check facts, fiaurcs, tax and lease require- ments. Be aware oflegalities., special documents. status of love or marital relationship. Scorpio plays top role. PISCU (Feb. l ().March 20): Low-key approach brings desired results. Individual who makes promises may actually be in position to keep them. Focus on money, romance, responsibility, pressure of deadline. LEO (July 23-Aua. 22): Key is confidence in matters of money 'and love. Stress initiative, pioneering spirit, willingness to make fresh st.art in new direction. Utilize innate talent for display, showmanship. VIRGO (Aua. 23-Sept. 22): What bad been a puzzle will now be resolved. Family member is involved, was not IF JUNE 11 IS YOUR BIRTHDAY you are dynamic, creative, impulsive and must take care when handlina sharp objects. You arc attractive, sensual, romantic. could have unusual mark on forehead or face. The joys of older motherhood More people will act married this ,month than any other month during the year. Many of these ceremonies will be performed to silence the tickin1 of what has become known as the bride's bioloaical clock. This new timepiece of the '80s supposedly features an alarm that -0ne day goes off unex- pectedly like the buzzer on °Jeo~ ardy," si'1'ifyina that a woman's chifd·beanna years are over. As Y Of.i Berra said, ·•it isn't over till it'sover. • JosimarCamauba ofBrazil had 38 children, the last one when she was S4 yean old. An American, Ruth Kistler, pve birth to a dauahter in 1946, when she was S7 yean and l 29 days old. If you're really ooncemed with havina a bi& family in a limited amount of time. you can fast-forward like Mrs. Ormsby of Chicago, who pve birth to 14 children in seven years. including a set of quadruplets born in 1901. I was in a su~rmarket recently when a woman with two children -.s patiently ex_plainina to her toddler in the can why he must stop teethina on a package of raw halJlburser. As she was doina this, an older child wrapped her body around a bubble gum machine and screamed ... Gim· mec, gimrnee... When the mother took the hamburger out of the hands of the child in the can, he anpily kicked his feet, making connection with a pyramid of oranaes 1Utd scatterin1 them all over the floor. She looked at me and said, 0 rm glad I had them when I was older. I couldn't have handled this in my 20s." There is no doubt in my mind she believed this. She fifures she has triumphed over the baoloaicat clock and is home free. She doesn't know yet about the biological calendar. Let us suppose a woman bas her first child at the age of 4S. When her son outarows naps. she . will start takina hen. When the kid is cast as a bad tooth in a dental hygiene musical at school, she will be sittina in the audience fiahti~ hot flashes. When he is ready 1or his temporary drivin1 permit at qe l S, she will be a 60-year- old woman poppinp es~ and trying to fi1ure out i her deafness is caused by the car radio or just natural evolution. When she should tell him about sex, she will have to SPQk from SATURDAY. AUGUST 20 IO A.M. TO o P.M. LION'S PARK• COSTA MESA • Arts & Crafts SHOW & SALE Food & Entertainment notes. When she goes to bed, he will be going out, and when she is aettina up, he will be coming in. His acceptance to college and her Social Security check will arrive on the same day. If he mamcs at the same age she did, she'll be 88 and probably won't be able to stay up for the reception. And baby sining at 92? Think about it. As one of my friends said, "l loved everythin& about motherhood -the exhilaration, the warmth, the won- drous miracle that fl"CW iMide me - but I'm &lad l did It early and aot It over witfi." • .. You dldn 't call Hitler a Nazi Q. Didn't the Germans stop using the word "Nazi .. after Adolf Hitler's death? A. Much earlier. After he came to power they stopped using it. He hated tt. During his f'Climc. it was spoken everywhere in the western world except in Germany. You've he&rd the sc;rateb .of a fingernail on a blackboard. Scientists say the hair-raisins SCT't'leCh is much like the wami~ cry of jungle primates.. They think we were con· ditioned eons ago to react to tt. Insurance statistics sugcst mar· ried couples a(ed 6S have a lire expectancy similar to that of ssng)e people aged 55. With the early immigrants from Europe came cockroaches. Q. What do ··cryptozooloSJsts" study? A. Unvenfied animals such as Bigfoot, the Loch Ness monster and the Abominable Snowman. Small men love big women. So proclaimed the German philosopher Schopenhauer. He convinced gencr· ations. Modem surveys prove him wrong. But the nouon persists. When a small man teams up with a big woman, ifs the exception. but you do take notice. Schopenhauer also averred a man with a short nose prefers a woman with a long nose. He didn't get any closer to the truth with that one. If you've watcM<i boxing lately on TV, maybe you've seen the punch CllULES Go1£1 Wlliil 1f dAI ... DOl .... fttlilJ? .1'1 -'mhl ..... l'WOlll ...... ""'.,, .... ....... tltlll '?Diii ... LI. Bo YD count stats. Sylvester Stalone wouldn·t do too wen by them 10 .. Rocky IV" -he connects with 11.5 but gets hit with 218. Q. Why were the first um brcflas so ndiculed in Enpand? A. Class d1sunct1on. If you earned an umbrella. you couldn't afford a carnage. ACROSS 1 Boom 9UPPOf1 5 -motpna: 9= 14.Entr'-: fnWrml ... 0'1 15 Verity 18 Ctllcllk• 17 Penitent one 18 Dftnd 20~ 22 PUta up 23~pert 24 FW1 25 .... 29 Miid 09ttl 27Ape>fehel~ 28~ 31 A9duoed 34~ 35 Slngae: pr9'. 3' Nmygn>up 37 FoodfWe 38 Erst 38 Rot rpm 40~ 41.......,bMe 42F-*9 .... 4S ..... s.lrit ..sa.... 44 8llderdaltl 45 c.ro... 47'--9 41 Hot IP'tnoe 51 KHc:hwt tool 1 2 53 Pertodic8I 55 LOatNngs 57 Noun or Yefb 58 Battery terminal 59 Prefl.x for eo g:.wre 81 Flleted 82 Shortty 63 Aumlnanl DOWN 1 Stough 2 SMtl> 3 Energy 4 Gui's Ion 5 Front 6 Love II 7S.W • Tennlt• I kin 9 Trappen 10 Green spots 11 Kind of lnw.tlg&tlon 12~ 13 NL tum 19 Trlldt ewnt1 21 P-.d on 25 Stunta 29 Acquire 27 ,_,,,. oft 29 Lengtl\ unit 30o..rta 31 Unlulled S2 Once more 33 UK atreem 6 7 A barber shop quartet in Van. couvcr, B.C.. drops by the Jazz Bar every Friday noon, and the four ao straightaway to the men's room. Acoustics arc better therein. Outsidtts say the &OUnd is mqnifi· CCOL h was John F. Kennedy who poinled OUl that the word .. crisis .. wnttm sn Ounesc bas two charactcn -one meanina ~dan,ger" and tbe other m~nina .. opportunity."' Q. How much money docs t.be top exec at Ford Motor Company make a week? A. About S71, 153. CEO Donald Petersen reportedly ..:u cash or c:asb equivalent of$3. 7 million a )'Cal'. 34 L.est 37 &,ndry Mntence 38Cereel 50 Wood .eo Made eYerl 51 Ttbhold of 4 1 P*tty 52 a.yon ..aG . 44 Sanity 41 Comp<*tton 53Pt~ 4 7 SIOr. ""'* 54 W• In debt 418-...9°'..:I 5'~ 49 Sein. .,,.., e 10 11 12 lbyBIKeene _, -- -eoyr We sure wore this day to a stub." by Brad Anderson • I I f J J "I get lt. .. you like their funny TV commercial but you don't like the food!" PBA!fUTS MV ~OTMER MAS 60NE 5ACK MOME BECAUSE HE SAID I SHOULDN'T MAVE SEEN USTENlN6 TO A CACTUS GARftE.LP, YOO'l l S OON ef TEN Yf.ARfJ OLP WMO ELSE CAN I LISTEN TO ?Wf.K> ELSE C""' I TAU( TO ? , . TUllBLBWBBD8 DI TD BLSAC*'•• by ltlA Moore 4_b.· .... =-.--"~ ..... -•·'L DBNKIS TBlt ~!fAClt by Hank Ketcham ~­~-lb l I ! . t>Y Jim Da~ts by Tom K. Ryan 'tt>fJ MAv.nff Uf.MP ~1>41! J(;m1 lnJ --~ mras? h-...---. GAllDI A1'o PATCllBS DtD )OU Kt-JOW AQUA~RHAS llqG~E6 A~ND 1J..lE EtxiE? • POR BBTTBR OR POR WORSE SHOE JtJDOB PAJllDtR ARE l.,O(J O(Jf OF~ Ml~ ~~ BEJNG OFFERED A RE.c.ORDfNG ~lb A ONCE. IN A UFE11ME OPPOR"TUNIW ! ! ~c · . .., M MT MIO ' \ by Lynn Johnston by Jeff MacNelly by Harold Le Doux ~TO eE EXACT' WHEN HE eeueveo IN SOMETHING, HE Wl!Nr FOR BROKE/ l:T WAS ALL OR NOTHING! He MADE A LOT OF MONEY FOR MANY OF HIS FRIEND~ INCLUDING ME! WE WERc MORE CONSER- VATIVE THAN HE' ~~~ by Tom Battuk by Garry Trudeau · ':::' S(C\\4}lw\-4f-~s· = · ---...... --~ ..... --- ......... ....:... ..... ._. ................. .. ... ......... _. ......... "' .. ,,,.., ... ... ........... ....... ,,.,....,.,_ ..... ,__ I Au c: AL I -, . I I' r I I _ ...... --.--.-.....-ti i ,_...__.. ......... 1J ,. . Broker hits the beach Mesa• s FatloWfleld h~ suttand tie, plCSup volleyball llJDllNTa. ..., ......... . COinpafed to 1 c:ommOdidn ~ ker, which be could be, Sean Fallowfteld dOein't make much money. ••1 have 1 broker friend who m1kn $100,000 a year," he 11)'1. .. I could make make that much ifl tried. Al it is, 1 miaht make $30.000 this year." But Fallowfield doela't want toj• make m~. for now, the 24-,ar· old from Cosu Mete would rather Dia)' volleyball on the beach for a livina. Considered 1 fut·ritina star on the professional beach volleyball tour, Fallowfteld earns his PIY only on summer weekends like this upcomin1 one. Fallowfield and ~r Al Jane will compete apinst the finest beach players for $40,000 in total prize money at the J.4th annual Club Sponswear Open at Lquna Beach's Miin Beach. formerly called the Lquna Beach Ooen. it 11 the loqest runnina ~beach volleyball e~n1. FalloWfield and Jane. a former star at Lona Beach State, are ICeded eiahth in the tournament, makina them a lonphot to uptet the No. I ICeded team of Sinjm Smith and Randy Stoklos. Last summer at this time. Fallowfield. a standout 1t San Clemente Hiab in 1980-81 before eaminc._ A!l·America honors at UC Santa Barbara. was wortinJ for a commodities brokerqe firm 1n New· port Beach. He bad all but &iven up his fantasy of pl1yin1 professional tw~man beach voUeyball full time. but at the end of last summer the Miller Brewina Company sianed a lucrative contract with the Auociation of Volleyball Pl~ym (AVP). usurina -. r.uowneld bi& peydays thiJ summer on the beach tour. ... , raaured that I wasn't ready to devote my life to beina a broker," Fallowfield said. "You work SO to 60 hours a week and even thou&b I aot certified to trade, I thouaht the time wasn•t riJht for me. .. , realned how lucky I was to be a aood enouah athlete to play beach volleyball for a while. I knew I could always JO beck to the suit and tie world, and I will. Riaht now, time is on my side." Most of FaJlowfield•s time is spent playina volleyball -three or four Iona practice sessions each week in preparation for the weekly beach tournaments that run from March until late September, across the nation and in countries such as Brazil and Japan. ..lhketbetravetina weaet to do and the free time that aoes alona with it, .. Fallowfield said. Well, yes. it does beat the schedule of a commodities broker. Just last week, Fallowfield said be was offered a job by one of his former manqers at the brokeraae. He turned it doWft. Myina be WU Coeceatlaillll -11111W0¥1.lll llil ·~ llM111 -......... moMf lillud IDlti111a IOOd lhoWi .. 81 . ..-8-:ll ln &ont of friends and h11 eponeor, Club Spottswear. So far. fallowfteld ..... he·• brouaht home about S 12.000 ~ last weekend'• tounaament 10 Hawaii wbm he and Jue_~ ninth. ~t aivn the team a fifth, two acvenths and two ninths rince Fallowfield broke from Scott fredcrichsen in April over wha1 he called a .. difJlrence in philolopby about a lot ofthinas:· FalloWfield has come far quickly since last year. his first full season on the belch tour. Before that. wltile 1ttendin1 UCSB, he bad played in a few tournaments e.ch IUlllmet with various pertne"' includina R~y Dvorak. the l..quna Beach Hip product who was the standOut setler on the 198'4 Fld medal·winnina U .s. Ol}'mpic volleyball team. Fallowfield started playina vol- leyball at a late •· as an after· thou&ht. really, in his junior year at San Clemente. "I just surfed all the time," be said. Jn his senior year, San Oemente advanced totheCIFfinal~extendina an unbeaten Laauna Beach team to five pmes before losina. Fallowfield missed the first half of the season with tom li .. ments and so tbouah he was recoanized by his teamm1tes u a peat ouuide hitter, he was complete- ly overlooked by recruiters. He pla~ volleyball at Santa Barbara City CollCfC and led his team to the state title in his sophomore year. At UCSB, Fallowfield wu startina outside hitter for two yean and earned AJl-Amenca honorable men· tion, twice leadina the Gauchos to the finaJ four of the Western Resionals. He also wu All·America at the United States Volleyball Nationals in 1983. He paduated in the fall of 1986 and last year was assistant coach for the Golden West Collqe men's team. Then, alona came the pinned- (PI ...... PALLOWJULD/84) . ea.ta lie.a'• Seu Pallcnrfleld (rlCJat) &•" ap workln& for a brokeraie ftrm to panae Pistons' Silverdollie finale outweighs Laker golcf Dantley powers comeback as foul trouble proves key PONTIAC, Mich. (AP) -Adrian Dantley lifted the Detroit Pistons out of an early hole then pushed Los Anaeles into one and there was no climbina out for the Lakers. · Trailing l S·2, the Pistons went on a I J.2 run 1.1 which Dantley had five points on Thursday niaht. With the l...akm lead.ins 36-lS. l>antley then sperked a 21·7 SWJC and the Pistons went on to a I 04-94 victory and a J.2 lead in the best-of-seven NBA finals. .. You would have to credit Adrian Dantley," Detroit coech Chuck Daly said ... Ae was on a roll that l have not seen in the two years I've had him. He's a driven man ri&ht now." .. They tried to bury us," Dantley said. .. It looked like that in their eyes. Luckily we came t.c~." ., l , .... Detroit's 52-26 rally in first half leads 104-94 win PONTIAC, Mich. (AP) -A huac crowd and a huac first·haJf comcbeck Thursday niaht brouaht the Detroit Pistons to the ve~ of bursuna the Los AnJeles takers hopes ofa repeat championship. .. We•ve Sot I chance because we're up J.2," Pistons coach Chuck Daly said after their I 04-94 victory 1n front of a record playoff crowd in the last NBA pme at the Ponuac Silver· · dome. "The Lakcrs arc put in their · buildina. We did 1t once and we'll have to te:e what happens. - Standina in the way of the Pistons' first champtonship arc two pmn at the Forum, the home of the takers. who can become the first repeat winner in 19 years wtth two victories there. Game 6 will be Sunday and Game 7, if necessary. on Tuesday niaht. ...... CIJamplomlalp Nri• (Mlt·ef·S.W.) G~ 1 -Detroit 105, LAan fl c;.,,,. 2 -LAhn ,.. o.trolt " GMW 3 -LAlren ,,, o.trolt N GMM 4 -Detroit m. Laws 16 TWMIY"I SC.. Delrott 1CM, LAhn H (Detroit IMds .... 3·2) s.Mlly't ~ Detroit •t ........ lUO p.rn. T___.,., ~ Detroit al LAllWI. 6 PJ'I\. (" "9Ce1Mf'V) Celtics· to repeat as champions. Los Anatles coach Pat Riley, who said after winnana the title a year aao. "rm ioina to auaranttt every9nc we're aoina to repeat." did not beck away from that statement after Tbunday's defeat ··1 tike our chances." Riley said ... , still beltcve this team 1s 101n1 to win the championsh1f.. I'm sun: our fans will be vay voe.a . The buck s~ 1n Los AnJClcs. We'll ha"e to ~ h1Jhly motivated to act the JOb done ... With \he score IS..., forward James Worthy _picked up his third foul, .endina Dantley to the line with 7:09 ~ ... l'OUL8{M) Detroit'• Adrlan Duatlq (ceatu) Yi• for a rebomad.witla tbe Laken' 111.Cbael Cooper (left) and llyclaal Tllompeon. The Lak.crs, who arc in the NBA finals for the Sieventh time in the last nine ycan. arc trying to become the first team since the I 968-69 Boston Detroit's Adrian Dantley scored 19 ofh1s 2S points in the fiBt half. 18 of them dunna a S2-26 spun that wiped out an early IJ.point deficit. '"They just came out and Jumped ......... Pint ........... Mlb ......... of 8afta1o °'°"' m.. ..... .a. purtac 11 ,_a....._..., d• at t1ae u.a. Opea. .. Lyle fights back, shares .. ·lead with Gilder,·Nieolette v.&Opelll•.,.,. • UIAIMllll' CAMI (,.,......, ............ ......... ..... .. :!ii! ............ ---·. ShutOUt riO longer provides pain McCaskill urls best ame since arm surgery in 1987 P'nm TM AINdatH Preti IUrk Mc:Caskill's last shutout was a s-in. Thu one was a pleas~. The Cahfomia riaht·handcr pitched a th~hitter Thursday as the An~ls beat the Texas Ranem 3-0. His last shutout was ap1nst the Seattle Mariners on April IS. 1987.Six days later, Mt'CaskiU was on tbedi11blcd list. A week after that. be had elbow SUf'ICl'Y \0 remove bone chips. ... don't want to say rm back. I wu •ri .. that in spriDI trainina and it took a "hile. .. M~n said. .. But thii WU m1. best pme sinte the SUrtefY. 'ne feeti"I is 180 delrees difkrent from what it wu after that last shutout." McCaskill knew. t0mcthi111& WU Wf'OGI with bis elbow when he shut out Seattle. 'His ~ o~ Tcus wa~ entirely encourqina. "Now I JUSt want to take this and build on 1t. .. McCaskill said. ''I'll try to do the same thma next lime out" McCaskill, 3-S. struck out 10 and walked three as be "'on for the fiBt time siace Mq •.·. n H~c had lost t"'o with four no decisions since then. ~ his recent record ma) n<>t show it, he said be is improvi~ .. , lncw rd been ptQllca.i ... Fl'"" a htt~ better e"el) time out," McCaskill said. .. Maybe not m the obvious th1np. but tbt small th1np that make a d1fTen:nce." S1naJes b) Ruben Sierra iD the first innina. Stc\e Buechele in the finh and Pete lncavialia in the ninth were the only hits for Texas. The R1n1Crs had been ahut out just twtcc before this thtte-111me 9Ct'ies bul wae blaUed by McCaskill and lost }..()Tuesday on Mike Win's fow..bitter. ··vou can'tsaf lbeir pilebttl' 11ull'wasaood enouah to shut ui ~but lbcy did it." Tew &JWd bUcman Steve Butthde • . • BravespoiirldHowell~ topLA, 9-2· on u~ •• Danlley said ... It looked llkt.d lhey 'tY01'e aoina to bury us. "l'hey bad fire in their cyet, but we Sot beck illlO at and did what we had to do. At &be end. they looked a linJe tired... - Dcfensi"e specialist Joe DumUI added 19 points. makina nine of'IM first 12 shots. rnerve pa.rd Viaiie Johnson llddcd 16 and fsiab 1lloaSI had" S points and cisbt usists b • Pistons. who won the opeai,. --of the ICf'ies at lhe forum JO~).==~. Forty~)eat~ld Kareem AbdW- Jabbar was bnJliant in defeat,~ 26 lJC>ints. one short ofhis hisb for• cnure season. Maaic John.ton addpt IS points and 17 usists for - takers. The pme set an NBA playOlf attendance record with a crowd or 41 .732. Los Anaeles trailed only S9-SO Iii halftime despite betna outJcOftii S:?-26 an a span of 16:31 in the 6fil and second quarters. The takers opened a l S-2 kad. "*' 18 points b)' Dantley fuekd Dctroit"t. b11 rally. which turned the I J.poiot deficit into a S4-4l lead. James Worthy, who played otdY. cl&ht minuies because o(fou.I troUl* and scored j~t two points in the ftra ~ ... 1111-~ TJJe Klledale AWAY Tonitl\~.,._ City, UI ~l'f\. • Jun.a '~•"Mt City, 5.S '·"'· June lf'-«9"1M CITY, H:JS '·"'' June 20 flNflt 111e:ot•, HS '""" June U-Mlfw..oea. 5:IS •·"'-• • Jurie It Ml!Wlu .. a, •1S ~ • June o-:tCla. • °" TV. 0..... I. • Al eeme. "' 1tM11C me>. . O> : • ., ., •• .. .. .. -. .. w : . .. .. • • .. , . t • .. ) # l E I • t . i .. ... 0...9M.Y:l'ILOJ/ Mllf. .. 17, 1m rs awaiting appearance e is PfOducina IOlne nice browal for fly fisbina ramwe. •Jina aa cabiaa_ while lftllen ftsbi111 .... very popular June Lau LA:>opare limidM Out on catchable rainbow trout fot 1-it and lurecastm. Brown trout ffi>m Rul'h Creek and -4MNll!IYl:tilttl---------------- 111nor 1eague team Ntzonamonaunprotectecl? R I I g A' 4o1:5llr 1>eat to ~:~~::~~~~ m oya s c ose ap on s hit OD n1ar'-pecks are on a last from which tbe NBA s the first two bitten in the ninth a two expansion~ will ChOOlt their players. the Kansas City completes series Ro1uaveupRayKniaht'1~~0-rundoublea'.'ldMike Cbatlotte Oblerverllid Tbunday. _ Heath's nan-ICOrina double.' Luis Salazar drove an a run ..._. fte Aanda ... Prw The NBA bas clf:c!ined to releue the f!AD'es ofthe SWeep CUtS lead tO 41/2 games with a blles-lolded forccout and pinch-hitter Dave unprotecied pjayen in the Ju~ 2~ expensaon drift f'or ' Betpnan hit 1 sacrifice fly. . . BUFFALO, N.Y. -Cow-milkina ii COll1aU and a chorus line of 490 biab· kic:ten, plus chicken winp and kielbasa are doial t.beit job. So is a eeDeraJ manaaer whole nickname is P.T., as in Barnum. The promotions. the food and a budlome new ballpark bave aiveo the Buft'alo Bisons a team auendance record this year as they move toward becomina only tbe teCOnd mi.nor Jape club to draw more than a million fana. The Bitona' ultimate pl is to ~ the minor bpe record of l,OS2 431, established by the Louisville Reclbircb in 1913. Acb.ievina tbat can only belp tbe ~-raQF plan ofBitons owner Bob Rieb Jr. to let a~~ hncbue. .. We've laid all a1o.,_ that we're toina to let the OCOPle waltiQI up to the ticket windows vote for how fAr ibey want us to 90," said Oenera1 Manqer Mike Billoni. U this ~· ctOWds at Pilot raeld are any indication, the votina is raembtina a landslide. With the 13,6S7 ticketuold foi WedDelday's pme ip.imt the Tidewater Tides, the Bllons, membmOfthe Triole A Alliance's Amcric:an Association, have told S01,134 ticteta in 34 bome dates. cdipeina the previous ,,.hite reeord of' 497, 760 set with 64 home pmes last year Tbe Bi.ton•' avera,e crowd of 141936 is easily the laqest of any minor &eaaue tea.m and 11 better than the avenees of at least two~ teaaue teams, the Cbicaao White Sox ud tbe Seattle Marinen. Season ticket sales at the 19,m.teat 1tadtum were stopped at 9,000, sivina the Bisonsa iarJer1eUOn bue tbaD the White Sox or Marioen. they sell an averqe 13,302 1ickets their re na 37 home mes, t.6e Bisons will 1 the nu mark. ~DI Billoni 1&)" is a ben~. '1 a special ri.na to a million tickeu," be said . ..,,..t's a minimum at the ~ leape level. For a minor lcape team. that's toina to open a few eyes." ~ote of the day ~ lllaJtMe. a Professional Golfm As- IOciation Tour rqutar, on what be would need to shoot in the last. round to win a recent aounwnent: •-n.e rest of the field." :aotel fllea aatt agalnat Sp~b LAS VEGAS -Hilton Hotels Corp. m bu asked a judae to set aside S8 million of tbe S 13.S nulhon Miclulel Spi.nks is Fttina to fllht beavyweiabt cbampaon Mike Tyson forallepdl1breakinaacontnct tobave the fiaht at the hotel cha.Jn 1 Las Veps resort. A It.ate judaie set a hearina for TUClday on the motion by the hotel for an injunction ap.inst Spin.ks and bu manqer Butch Lewis to put the money aside ee~_ina a July 2S trial on the Hilton's suit qainst Spin.ks and Lewis. SplnkJ and Tyson are ICbeduled to fiabt June 27 m Atlantic City in what may be boltina's richest flaht ever. lo the motion, hotel attorney Steve Moms contends the raort lost S8 mallior when Spinks withdrew from a beavywei&ht unifteat on leries tbJt ended with Tyson uni(yjnc tlte title last /-uaust apinst little known Tony Tucker instead ofSpi.nU . Morris asked for the money to be placed in a Lu Vep1 trust account because he knows of no aueu of Butch Lewis Promotions. arsuina that it is "bjahly improbable" the hotel chain can sausfy any judammt at Fts. Drive'• Ingold hurl• four TO. . ... LOS ANGELES -Detroit's Richard - lnaold threw for four touchdowns and ran e -t for another, outduelu)I Mau Stevens in a battle of the Arena Football lcque's &op two quarterbacks and lcadinj t6e Drive to a 31-14 victory over the Los A"l!Cles CObru Tbunday niabt. lnaold completcd 14 of27pusesfor162 yardaand was intercepted twice. He leads the six-team leape in completions v.ith I SO and it teeond to Stevens in yardaee. I, 726 to 1,664. . Stevens completed 15 or 32 peaa f'or 137 yards and a 9-yard touchdown pesa to Wede Lockett in the fowth quarter but was inaCtupted three timtt. the Charlotte.H~mets and Mtam1 Heat. However, the Whit\ had a two-nan trlp&e in the third .and hat his heWSPls>eT aaid at confinned the names throuah lequt P' TM AIHdated Prell third homer 1 two-run shot in the ninth. Tony sources on Wednetday and a copy oftbe list wu made rom Fernandez hid three hits. Toronio hat ICX>ttd 28 runs in avadable. . . Even without Georae Brett. the Kansas Caty Royals the pest two pmes. Oar, ~tman, NBA vace pre11dent and aenerat keep toppina themselves. WM .. S.• I, lnwen I: Jerry Reuss allowed si~ hits counxl, dccli!'CCf ~oconfirm the names when contacted Mark Gubicza earned his fourth straiaht victory and in seven inninp for his fourth stral&ht victory u Ch1cqo by te_!e~ne tn bas New York office. . Pat Tabler drove in four runs as the streakina Royals ended Milwaukee's four-pme winnina streak wath the I m the. only o~ who ~ows who !~ on t!'e pulled within 4'h pmes offint-place Oakland by beatana victory at County Stadium. ~nprotcct~ bat and I m not telhna anyone, ~e said. the host Ath&etics, 9-S, Thunday to sweep the series. The White sox took advanta,e of four Milwaukee No one wdl ever know all !he names on the last, only The Royals have won siJt in a row and 13 of their laS1 erron, includina three by aecond baseman Juan Castillo. the playen who arc~· . 14 to whittle the Athletics' Al West lead from 13 pmes In the National Leaaue: Bettman, however, did say the Heat will draft 12 on June t to 4'h pmes. Oakland has lost nine of its last 11 Altnt 7 WI •: Glenn Divis hit a pair of two-run ~ym and \;he Hornets ! 1 '"7 Cbartotte bas one less pmes -includina all six meetinp this month with homen and Mike Scott allowed five hits before aeavina ptclt bec;a~ 1t won the co1n flip and.elected to take the Kansas City. with a tea injury in the eiahth inoina to lead Houston at No. I pack an the June 28 ~lar drift. . "h's been awesome the way we're ,oina. un• Riverfront Stadium. . ~ly 21 of the teaaue • 23 teams have submitted believable. h 's a area• fcetiria." said Brad Wenman, who Scon 1-2,strained hislefthamltrinawhen he slipped their hsts. had four hits. "I don't think they can believe that we've comina off the mound after Chris Sabo hit a run-tc0rin1 beat them six times. They•re P,fObably sayina there's no &rounder to third. Scott wu to be examined today to Sock en Deed more money way the Royals are that aood. ' determine the severity of the inJury. SAN DIEGO -The San Dieao m Sockers, dominant on the field of play but weak financially, will bait operations June 29 unless new 1nveston are found to pump money into tbc Major Indoor Soccer Leque franchise, club officials said. Winners of six indoor IOCC!er championihips in seven yean and the reicnina MISL champion, the Socken filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy ~tection on April 2S, sayina it oW'Cd etediton S l .S nu Ilion. The club alto said it oecded to come up with 1 S.00.000 letter of credit for the lequt by July I and $300,000 10 workina capital to continue franchise operations thro~ next 1eUOn. Sockm president Ron Cady said he informed staff memben on Wednesday that it was 1 reali11ic possibility the team would fold June 29. The date coincides with the Socken' next hearin& in bankruptcy court. McEnroe reachea .emlflnal• J• McEane continued hi•warmup Ill for a Wimbledon return Thursday, comina back from a set down to beat Peter Ladp• of Sweden, 4-6, ~. 6-2, for a spot an the semifinals of the WinaJ International pass- coun tennis tournament in West Kirby, Enaland. McEnroe, seeded eiabth for next ~k's Grand Slam tournament, was one of three Americans to advance to the semifinals. DaYN Pa .. beat K..ta Cuna, 7-6, 7-6, while Leif Alral defeated,,._ PtaP, ~. 6-l in a pair of matches involvina two U.S. playm. Pate and Shiras will play each other today. c.n. .. vu Bemkrl. who hves in Great Neck. N.Y., but is a native oCSouth Afri~ arabbed the temifinal spot apinst·McEnroeby upsetuna .u.ret CIMmll1•• of the Soviet Union, 6-1. 6-1 ... Jue Fr•rta. wk.ins her I 0th national title in the heptathlon, withdrew from the Mobil Outdoor Track and Field Championships in Tampe, Aa. because of injuries. Frederick, who led by 3SS poinu after Wednqday's first four even~ took only one attempt in the lonajump Thunday. After jumpina only I S feet, I.he withdrew becau.e of awn med left knee and a strained left hamst.rina, Earlier,....., ~am, the 1984 Olympic championi outleaned f..se Cem,MD a two-time Olympian, in winninaa qualimna heat of the men's 110.meter blah hurdles. Meanwhile, S..,._. mpaower, four-time national champion fn the women'a 100.meter hurdJes, met disaster in her trial heat, cruhina into the fi.nt hurdle and faitina to finish . Televlalon, radio TELEVlllON 2;40 p.m. -PllO IAIUALL: Houston at Atlanta (doub&ehcader), TBS. S:30 p.m, -PllO LUEBALL: Anael• It KansuC1ty, Channel S. .7:30 p.m. -AIU!!NA POOl'BAU.: Detroit at Cobmt Prime Ticket. 7:30 _p.m. -PllO IAIDAU.: Padres at Dodem O<>ined in ~· Z Channel. 4 p.m. -PllO BASEBALL: Padres at ~ (doub&ebeader), KABC (790). KfMB S:30 p.m. -PllO IAIEBA.LL: ADICll at KansuC1ty, KMPC(710). Gubic:za, 9-S, allowed sht hits and one earned run in eiaht inninp. The Royals backed him with 17 hits. * * iocludina four by reserve infielder Brad Wellman. Danny .. ..,.., 9, AtNetlcl 1 .,,.... 1, ltMI 4 Tartabull drove in three runs. IWllAlcrrt OMu. MCMT011 ~n C Y "" "" .. _I •r•• •r•• •r•• •r11• un OU"I! ~.was lrKO oter. ....... • I I. ....... St I' GY-cf St I . ~.. 'I 11 Tabler had RBisinaJes in the fourth and fifth and a r=: : : f: =~ ~::: =:"'' ~~ ~ ~ =• n n two-run ~loaded smaJe in the eaahth. For his career. --· t I. t C-rf J' I t ow.• • t t t Eo..41Cf • ft, Tablerisnowl3for63,a .S24averqe,with77RB1when =~ •1t11,~ =:c :n: =::: :n: =::"' f :: hittinf with the bases I01ded. ,._..., • 1 1 1 McGwlr • u t t .... ,. • 1 t 1 °""""" > 1 t .. 'm not worried about the A's. I'm just worryina :::;"',: :;:: =:. :::~ ~=, .. :::: =~-! t .bout the RC?lals now. The Minnesot.a Twins are ri•"'t in T1vnw1• > • • • -.. > t 1' k>911• • t 1 1 ,,...,,,. > 1 .. , Elllw'dl I I f f t ,,_.. e t t t f C-efl I I there, too,.. abler said. T... •1t 1,. ,... ,. ., , °"""". t • • • .... • • • Elsewhere in the Ainerican Laaue: c-cw. ._. • -: a1 --· =:!. : : Or1eles I, Red Sex•: In Baltimore, Cal R1pken's two---.... • •• •i-s ...,,.,,.. t t run double and Jim Traber's run·scorina hilhliJ,hted a ~~ ~~. ,__.~ =-: i : three-run flt\h innina u the Orioles defeated Boston. ~-C11Y '· Ollllllf 1 Mc0<1tet1 • • Traber had three hits and three RBI . Baltimore ~ ci:.~ 11f T.-• 111 • t':,"' .: : : walked 10 times. ..,_,....,,._ 411 :-"'' u .. t0 ......_ ._. • "'-: • ,._ Joe Onulak led off the fifth with 1 sinaJe apinst ~w~s , °": ~ ... _ ~ ~~~-· reliever John Trautwein, 0.1. Billy Ripken was hit by a ~ t L~O.: ,~.:::. ~ eitcb and Cal Ripken hit a l-2 pitch for a double to left. cv_L_...• ... , , • • 1 , ~. o..a. .-...... Oneoutlater.TrabersinaJedtoriahttosivetheOriolesa :.,. 1 11., 11 ! t,' , 1 1 : ~~.C::,-~..:"1' S-2 lead. """'* • t • " •a • t0 Jeff Ba.llard, )..), allowed seven hits in seven inninp. ~ , t.~ ~ 1 : : ~ .=::, Mark Williamson relieved after spa·ke Owen's leadoff ,..... -.-• 1 .. ._. .,. .,. ""' ....- fj ~y-.. ~ ~'·" double in the eiahth and earned his mt ave. ,. ......... ~ c...-. 7M I J I I I MI t J 1 I f . ' , ... Ja11 fl,~ 5: Mike flanapn allowed five r111 ~ ~ •• "~ ,,... ~, : .., : ; ; t hits in eiaht inninp and Ernie Whitt went 4 for S with four ,_,., A-D.9" ,........ ,., t t • • RBI to lead a IS-hit attack f'or Toronto at Tiser Stadium. * '":-,,....... ~ .... :,..,t .,:......:.: Aanapn, ~.walked six and struck out a teaSOn· · .._ JeYt 11, T"9n 5 "~ 11,0 .. MdllerrY. ,.....,, hiah seven, but was relieved by Marlt R9'1 afta walkina Tm011TO NftMfT -: --. --..... nwe. .,... ., ....... ... ........ M • t t t "9tlltcf 4 I I t T-t:JL ....., .. .._ * * IMM ltft ..,..,. 4t It -....d •• ,, ......,., •• ,, ·---------..... SU >. .,.._.. 1 °'1l9lt I, .... In 4 MMla411 • I It ,,.,,.,.,.,.. It I t CMICAeO ........... 80ITOM IU&.TWOll8 Gelll 4 If I ._.. .. It t t •r•M •r•llll •r•M •r•M C-1 It t f er-et1 t t t 1 ltlt Melllwa 4tlfW\ld •tll OFUMI •tit l*:OfWf1' tftf .._,. 4ttt It It S-M 4tft ........ • 1 If ...... I I ft .,_,. • J 11 ........ JI It 4 II t Y-cf JI It ._. • t It C..._.M It It •1111e t J • • '"""92t 1 11 t 4 If t ~· 4 ti I DwtM• 4 tit _,,....,._ t II t '--dltf t I tt ~-• 11 1 ~tll O..rf •tlf._.I •tit Tr...,• Siii ..,...,. •ltl Hlelllc 4 111 • t t I .,_. 4 t t t ..... 4 t 1 I L-d •I I t ~-t f It • t t t ..__. • t If C.-c • t t 1 ~rf It t t T-. 41 lat•• ,.._ • u • 4111 ..,..., ·····-rf •t•• o..-11 ••• , ......... J t I t """""Ill lttt so-.. JI t f T ....... e t f It ~ .. -ttt-11 I t I 1 J<Mllla t t t t Gtoatitlt It 1 t ...... - ---I O...-a tttt T.-••t> T.-Ht•t ._~HI -....... ,.... •1taT.-MIJI...... ..,.._. • ......._,.._I......., ...... S-. ... ...... ...,_ .. m •-t ._ ~T.,_ I LOl-T.,..... I, 0.- CI*-. -.. --· 0.... Mlwlllot • .., -c.•....-i 01. '"" t a.-u-w., ,, ................. ---- ---1 ~"-"t I L0e 11.-I. .... !(..... ""41\ »-Wlllll...t.... can.er 0.... WlllMle ... -........ (4) ..,_.. tr ........ '· ,...... ~ t>I ............ "'""· °"*' I-~ J. ,,,,,,.,.., L-. 0.-. (QUI>, ._.., ~ .... ,.. ff) ., ___ u.-<--'· ......... , (I) ~. • " ....... 19-GWea.r U ....... Cit), ~ • M an • IO -r.,.. 1111 • .=-JM 4 t t • J ....._..... t I J J • 1 • M an N 'jb Tr..,._.L .. I I S S J t t "-:.,.. I J J J J I C1111119e e-U ·> I t t J J lllWf'lt L>-t U-J 6 1 • J J It-.... f ' I I I J ~ I I I J J I ...... J M • t I t J """-'-'> I t t t 2 ...._.. T,_. I t 4 4 I • ...... ..._,tW,J-1 1 1 4 • t 1 ""'-t11t01ef It t 11e11er1 lft 111t ..... L ... 1 t M t J J I t --.-&,I t 1 t t t I fill. _.,... t·J t t t t f ....,. .,._ 19 I Mfter Ill "'9 ""' ~It. ...... ""-' Trv-~ .................. cw ,,...,......). ... ~ UI"'*• , ... , •• _.......,, l'nt, ~ IW ._.,., -...... WI:-""911• I• ... ~. l'lnl, Din, S-. JWa, TNN, ~ -.........C-o.rci.; ~ ..... ~ 1a1t. T-ul A-17M4. T-Jtl Ao-t4M T ..... 11 A-11."7. Fake Items being sold? CJNCINNA Tl (AP) - There is evidence that counterfeit baaeball merchandix is beina 10ld in the Cincinnati area. and that practice will not be tolerated, law enforcement and ~or teaaue bueball officials say . The officials teamed Wednesday to serve notice of an intended crackdown on sales of the counterfeit items. Sports on TV for weekead. TELEVISION 9 Lm. -HORSE .JUMPING: Upperville (Va.) Jumper Classic (taped), ESPN . JO:IS a.m. -PllO BASEBALL: San Francisco at Cincinnati, Channel 4 . 10:30 a.m .. -MEN'S GOLP: POA U.S.~. ftom Brookline, Mw., Channel 7. 10:30 a.m. -MBN'I BOWUNO: The Showboat Seniot Jnvitationa~ from ~J:f• (taped), ESPN. 1 p.m. -no a · PadreS a• Dodlm. Channel 4. 2 e.m. -ROUS u.aNO: The Ohio Detby. ftom Nonh Randall, Ohio, ESPN. TBLl:VlllON 10 a..m. -AUTO AACING: Detroit Orand Prill, Channell. I 0:30&.m. -PRO BAISBALL: Philadelphia al New York Mets. WOR. 11 a.m. -MBN .. GOLF: POA U.S. ()ptn, from BrOok.line, M119t Channel 7. 11 Lm. -BOWUNO: Hall of Fame Tournament finals. froin St. Louil Ctaoedl. ESPN. l l ;O~a.m. -PaOllAIDAIA ·· HOUiton at Atlanta, TBS. ll:IS a.m. -PaO aAISBALL: Monu.I at Ch.tcMo Cut.. WON. • I NFL players s_eek free8gency 4 p.m. -TRACK AND PIBLI>. NCAA Tmct and field Championships, from Eu,ene, Ore. (taped), Cbunell. 4 p.m. -no IAIBBA.LL: Pbilldelpbia aa New York~WOR. 4:35 p.m. -no IAID•U . HOUllOD at Atlanta, TBS. ll:30 a.m. -no IAIDAU.·Antela at Kansas City, aw.net S. NooD-•TSNN-..~111:-WUribledom'.Drevift. Cbuoel 4. 12:30 p.m. -no IAMllMLL: NBA Cham- pionship series Oum 6-Deuoit at I.Min. a.r_"'. l . I p.m. -.,._llWOllLD: UA ...... U• men'• v~ 60ln Villlilim, -PL (111*1); ..... imton Hone TriU lriaa. tam ......_ krnd (&Uedt. U.S. \'I.~ .... diYilll. ft.-I.Mio, .,., (~ OwaDll 4. • • ~ • { Ju~e·srulingon Impasse may come as early as tOday ' p.na. -no BlRM" · Aft111t at Kanta City, Channel 5. S:J01un. -ilSNA ~ New £lllland at NeW VOil. ESPN. 1:JO. aa ----DNG-: ~ Mirada vt. Nikki ,.. Iii NAU'~ _.,wslait tide ..._ hlll Fon woraa. Ta ,..,..~r:::r,r 10 ..... -A fOOl'ULL:'hiahH1tna_ ~. IO:JOp.m.-..._ ....... ll:JO £ .. --·-waMl"Wt ':NCAA =-l1•pla ¢'r• ,._ .,__, N.Y. (tlflld), ~loe.a -lmfl CIGI': POA U.:& 0.-, ._ ............. ff1,,.a);mtl , ) p.m. -Al1r0 MCING: HFC AIMricM Seric1. hm W• Alil. Wile.; t....o. ~. I p.m.J-.., • ._.,, ..... MDafa1 a. Z CbaaDel. l_•P!_& -AUIO IM:Sta CART l•w 1111 'fOI Joe's:-,,,_ PW1' d, Ore. (llll*t), DPN. l !•· -IODM>. J• LcNil dan 111111. Q 1711'.1 .,...._.,.....,.... . 7:JO ,,. .. _ ...... ~a. =.-•0.-.hili'. ...ff1'.,.0.,.. ," .... -••• • ..... w.w ....... Lille 1111¥-. a.,,~'!'!!'!: . IJ,:~a.-.fM~ Mll!li• K.-. 0'1~!1r.(71! ,_I'' HI' MM Ollill-.IJll'llf ~ Oiillt t -_;:11 • ~ KIAC ~ ... ~ .... •'Dlflllt • If Oakland kanlUCny Minaaota Teus Ch' Seai:° .bltll .., ....... WLMGa Lit «> 24 .625 2-1 l6 29 .ss.c 4'h ,... J.4 ll .'41 ' 7.3 ll 33 ..... 9 ~ 21 3S ....... 1111> S-S 26 40 .394 IS J..7 25 40 .38' 1 S'h S.S &UT DIVlllON New York 39 23 .629 S-S Detroit· 31 25 .603 I 'h 7-3 Cleveland 37 27 .571 3 4-6 Milwaukee 34 ll .523 6'h S-5 Boston 30 31 .492 I'll 5-S Toronto 32 34 .415 9 S..S Baltimore 17 47 .266 23 S.S n.MaJ'•'"'" ~113. Teu10 Kan1as City 9, Oakland S Baltimore I, Bolton 4 Toronto 1 ll petroit S Cbicqo 3, Milwaukee I ·~ .... -•-1 lAll •• 17-ll 2J.ll Woa 6 17-IS 19-14 w. 2 19-14 IS-14 Loll I 11-16 IJ.17 Woa I 16-20 ll·IS Lota 4 IS-17 ll·2l Won I 11·21 14-19 LOlt 2 19-11 20-ll l.olt I 17-1' 21-12 Lolt 2 19-13 11-14 1.-I 21-13 13-18 J.-I 16-11 14-14 Won l 1 S-16 l 7·11 Woa I 11·19 6-28 T•1'10...- A_ac• (Frater 4-6) at KantU City (Power 4-1 ). S:lS p.m. New York (Candelaria S.2) at Cleveland (Farrell 6-4). 4:35 p.m. Toronto (Cmatti J..3) at Detroit (Tanana M>. 4:35 p.m. Boston {Boyd 6-S) at Baltimoft (Tibbl 2-3), $:OS p.m. Seattle (Bankhead 1·2) It Minnnota (Viola 9·2). S:OS p.m. Cbicqo(J. O.vi1().I or Lodi 2-l)at Milwaukee(Auaust2·l), S:3S p.m. Tcus (Guzman 6-S) at Olk.land ~Stewart 9-S), 7:35 p.m . ...... ,.a .... Aaa•lt at Kansas City, S:OS p.m. Boiton at Baltimore, 10:201.m. New York at Cleveland, 10:35 a.m. Toronto at Detroia. I :OS p.m. Texas at Oa~land, 1:OS8.m. Seattle at Minnesota, S: S p.m. Chicqo at Milwaukee, S:JS p.m. l>Mpn Houston San Francisco Cincinnati San Dieao Atlanta New York Pittsburah Chica&C? St. Louis Montreal Philadelphia lfatloaa.l £a6ae war DJVlllON W L Pet. GB Lit 34 27 .557 4-6 34 29 .S.CO 1 S-S 32 32 .SOO 3'1> S-S 30 34 .469 Sl/i 6-4 27 37 .422 81/i 7.3 21 40 .J.44 13 J..7 EAST DIVISION 41 22 .6,. S-S 36 28 .S63 S'h S-S 32 31 .SOS 9 S-S 32 32 .soo 91/i 2-8 31 32 .492 10 S-S 28 34 .4S2 l2'h 7-3 1'hndaJ'•Seel-et Atlanta 9, DM1en 2 Houston 7, Cincinnati 4 8u.i Lost l Won I Won 1 Lost 1 Lost I Won I Won 3 Lost 1 Won I Lost 6 Lost 2 Won 2 a...Awa1 16-IS 18-12 20-10 14-19 19-17 lJ..IS 14-14 16-20 22-19 S-18 8-19 lJ..21 21-9 22-13 13-14 lS-16 18-13 16-lS 20.13 14-IS 19-17 17-16 IJ..19 12-19 T•r1Gamet San Dieao (Rasmussen )..6 andWbiuon 6-S) at Dod1en (Leary S-4 and Sutton 3-4), 2, 4:0S p.m. Montreal (8. Smith 4-4) at Chicqo (Sutcliffe 4-4), 1 :OS p.m. Houston (Knepper 7-1 and Andujar 0-2) at Atlanta (Mahler 7-6 and Puleo 0-3), 2, 2:40 p.m. San Francisco (Hammaker 3-0) 11 Cincinnati (Jackson 6-3). 4:3S p.m. Philadelphia (ll Gross 7-2)at New York (Gooden 9-2), 4:3S p.m. St. Louis (Mqrane 0-1) at Pittsbwsh (Dunne 4-4), 4:3S p.m. Sa1UU1'10ames San Diqo at 0..pn, I :OS p.m. San Francisco at Cincinnati, 10: 1 S Lm. Mon~l at Chicqo, 11 :20 a.m. Philadelphia at New York, 4:0S p.m. St. Louis at PittsbUflh, 4:0S p.m. Houston at Atlanta, 4:40 p.m. 'V' . . ., . AMlllHCAfe UAOU• ANlllJ# ...... ftXAS CAUHllNIA .., .... Dwftntcll 2 110 Scheflld.. 4 t 1 1 CO.Vie rf S 0 I 0 Jovnw ·-, 0 1 1 AnnHI JOtt OW!llfe d I 2 0 I Howlllll •I I I a-.c J t 1 1 CWlllkr Ill • O 1 t ., .... ENl'Y cf J 0 0 0 .... , .. 11111 1000 Mco..ld t 0 0 0 Fllfd'lru J 0 0 I s.r.rf 4111 lncY9lle II 4 I I 0 Kunll•w 0 0 t 0 09f*t 1-4 0 0 t P'wrWI• J t 0 t ~c Jtll IU9CHl3'1 JI 1 t wat'Mlll JI t I Ttllilll J 1 I J I Ttllilll • J 6 J T-.. .... c..... ..... 11•-'t 0-.. WW*lf HI -,..,_ (I). • MSr.••• ""-1. LO.-Ttlllla 7, Cell-'°"* 12. • ScNlllld. ~ m. DWNte 2 (6). . " ...... T-KlllMU-5 Cecene Mofterdc c..... 61-J 6 2 I 4 2 11·3 t 1 1 4 I 1·3 t t I I t Mc.Celll• W,J•S f I t I 3 1t H8 .... ~ Uw MIMtac:). IK-McC.-a T-ut. A-tl.714' NATIONAL L•AGU• lraWI t, DUllll I LM AMM&.ft AT\.AMTA .. , ... -· 2 l \. ttnnna 1 • 1 • MHldlr 1-• t t 0 Crtwu t t t t GlllMnlf It t I ...... ,, 1101 ~rf JJIJ ~rf 1t1• lfltlbvcf , 0 •• ...,,_. • t 1 t ldeldlc JI t I ~-.... ANIM• Sitt I(....... 11 tt DefNeyc I It t ..,.. .. S 1 I I 5 tt I .... tltt '111 4 1 't t tu s 1 ti . "' • 1 2 I 2 22 t tit I T.-.,., T.-•tttl u..... ···--· ,,_ .. -__ , 0... .......... -.... ,,,. •-o..:t. ~. ........ a. ~....-1.A111Met.•or• ... 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DeftwW OAKLAND ATMLETICS-T'.......,.,.. Matt Yeu119, Plk:.Nr, from Ille 21..., to 1119 ...._.., dlMflllid hi Pieced s..... °""*91, llltdS. °" IN 1~ ...._ lht retroectlw .. ,._ 12 ........ L.- PH I LA OE l."4 I A PHILUl!S--0."9 a• Almeft, .........,, Illa uncondJtton• ,....... Ac-~ 84* Dwnler. OU~, from 1119 ... ........... ~,,.. ..... ~. from ....... '"'°'. Orlotft u .......... -MtNd...., f'OOTaAU. ........ "-L.-KANSAS CITY CHtlFS ...,,_ ac. t.ll'Nfl ICClllf .., ... ~· ,...._ ttOQ(IY CANADIAN NATIOHA&.. n~ A4lr1en ,..'Ric, ~. ro • ..,..,..., COfttf'ect. Hollywood Park, Los Al race results · , ' Pro golf scores 1#1 ;Ill: Defelld!M clwnplon Scott Slmpeoa watcha Illa d.rtYe otf tint ... <artnc f&at roan4 of u.a. Open ha Brook.line, ...... HB pair advanc • in surfing eveni1 Josh Bradbury and =c t Farnsworth of HUAti1*QD b were amona the 16 wriers to adv ThW"Sday to today's competit.KNOt the Body Glove Swf Bout at Silt Crttk in l4una Ni&uel • The event featured aood c6-d.itions . wilh 3 to 4 foot surf. 1lle competition continues th~t the weekend with ICledecS tWen lqinnina Satmday uct quutcrfi1!fJs throuab finals oa SUftday. : Amona the leedcd swfen c:omet· i~Satu.rday are ~Hts cbamNft Mite Lambrni or Cm1lbed. Huat- inaton Beach's John Panncnt.er ~ Cra11 Comen. : Adva.no.na in Thursday•• elimilla- tions of unS«ded surfen: : Mlt'k ~ton (SM °""9), Ktl'r tillr IC-9Mdl FIL); Ovta!IM AltCMr (8lfl ~);Dell l(fflftWf U4llt °"'*"9);...,. ~ IHulltiMllll a..dl); Met'tt T9tlllr tlenlw Crval. Me McNullV I~ ... ); Antt1911Y Ruftl cs.rite Cluz); Clw'ft Sdlufllt~ ~ c .... w-1, J.,. O'Connw < NltUIO; 0-. lt.-no fTrtnlln. NJ.I; ..,_... COii ,,_,, 5-1 S... IC-8eCt\. ffle '· RlekY so...... (Caftota ~>. Cw1 llry CS-LIM Olilfwo), _. kGn F~ (~9-:ttl • . • THREE TIE FOR U.S. OPEN LEAD .•• rroaa,1 . • --• . about tbas week." He was tied with Scott Sampson. the dcfendina Open champaon. for- mer Masters champion Larry Mm: . Dick Mast and Paul Azinacr. the 1987 Player of the Year Cunis Sltlnft, hailed by some of his fellow American tounsts as the outsta.adina player 1n the pme today, holed out a fairway shot for an ~e-~ on the 14th hole and was wi1h1n a stfoke of the lud until he t>oacyed the final hole from a bunker. He was tied at 70 with veteran Lanny Wadkins. a two.time winner this season, and former Masten champion Craia Stadler That put 11 men un<kr par for the da~. By comparison. the last t11M the ' U.S. Open was held on this courv. in 1963. only seven subpar rounds v.-crc rte0rded for four rounds of rompcu- tion. The reason? ... They eve Jou some fairway to play with,· sat Gilder. 37. who has pla)cd m 13 of the last 15 .. mcncan national champ1onsh1ps. .. h 's the be-st setup I've ever sttn for a U.S. Open courst ·· Gilder s1ud. ''h's still toUJh. But n's not as touJh as Open ('()Unes usually arc." . Both Gilder and Nicolette ~Jics in the more forlivina conditioaapf the momina while Lyle's laie tee~ put him out in the worst o( ~ weather-Slt01'1. swirliftl winds tlllt tonnentcd some of aotrs ..._ names. Jack Nacklaus. for ~ma*. ~ aJcd to a 74 as did Australian OSI Norman. POA champion l..e'Y Nelson toot a 78 thatindLldeda •• on the beck nine at The Cou..,. Club, the course in suburban ~ known as ••TM Old Lady of ~ Street" Our Business Is Leasing We Won't L•••• You •nd Le•v• Youl Factory*· crulM cantroe, tit wheel, pow windows. power mMTorl, pow door ~ A.MINI ... ., wltlt c 11 utt .. 17110 . . -,... ........ ..., .. .._ ... ,.,.1 .... n.,-.. ...... sm.11 ....... a.-.,.. Cost Le$$ Auto Lea I -Wia1M .. CIUllWMllWGldt1to '\be ... ........ .-..~,. ....... ,. eoo.r. fto ...... ~ .. wida IO:~llliadli..._.Jl!lriOd. Ubn ..... A.c.o.....-....w. • wild wi•b 7: 1 a '° "° i• the period. , .. rve .,_ an man ~ • _. whens dime ball were DOI .....--· ...... WonhJ .m. °"Ow'll!iril WU t ~~~~== He l&id refel• 1tat Outley \o the e line DUftlel'OUI ... aftet-he ve '° the bMkel but did "°' -.te milarcalls oe limllar plays Whell tbe taken bed tbe ball •• .. When you have three key pla)'el'I • • en tht bencb with three fouls in tbe ., ftnc ba1(, it plays haYOC with your .. ~continuity, .. Riley •id. .. ie Tbc taken' fOu1 pr0bkm1 resu.Jted "from their determination 10 make the Pistons pay for their pbysica) ways. nfonunatdy for tbe Lat.en. they :~PftOCCUpied with matchina ~ roit eJbow for elbow. They to concentrate oo the pme. Meantime, the Pistons bcllaved • ;.them.elves and Sot the job dOne. • "We. were just patient aod aot into the~ .. Da.ntley said. .. And they aot into foul trouble." Said M&&Jc Johnson, ••we weR ready to play. When Worthyaocsout., 'then Coop goes out, that kind of hurt .. ·;...,. ~ The Lakers can not afford to hurt ~ymorc, facina must-win situations in Games 6 and 7. "We feel like they're not a<>in& to Come out and just do tbe1r'showtirne' •'stuff, like they normally do if they're a pme up," be said. "We fagure they ··~i&ht be a little methodical now." • • : "We'vestillaotalotofworktodo," .• r:-~ 6M7.41!fe"~~.!Jt 1:.: ............ .: ..... byV ... M..,.pw t-....... ,.,.,. ......... 7:44 left ... lbe ..... bua a ....... by Wortby udatinlxpol9w~ByroiiScolt11>t tbel.aan~U. DelrokCllM ._. wnb u ;l' . ta. iDcWcUM t ..... ~·for a ~":van111D 4:21 to ID. and lbe Laken IOI no doter tbU teVen tbe mt olthe way. The Liken, wbo tcOted : 3.S DOin~ in the leCOlld Ulf ofT y•1 2Si>oint deb&. toot I I S.2 lead jUtl 4: 19 into tbe prne, aivina it tbe IOok of a blowout u DetrOtt turned tM ball OVC! on si1 of its first ciaht po1- 1e111ons. "'One of tbe thinat we wanted to do -a1 reduce our tumoven in the set offense and we dld just the =ite," Daly said. "But we fo~t and aot beck in it bcfote the end of the quarter." But after nrto timeouts. tbe Pistons mpondcd with a 23-1 Onan, tlina the score 2S-2S with I :<t<> left. Dantley acored nine in a five.minute span durina the spun and fon:cd Wonhy to the bench with his third foul less than five minutes aone into the pme. . Los Anaeles led 30-27 aoing into the second quancr, but Vinnie John- son scored eiJht points in the fint 4:09 of the penod, Jivina the Pistons a 37-36edJC. A free threw by AbduJ-Jabber tied the score before Dantlcy started a 17-4 run with a three-point play. The spurt pve the Pistons a S4-4 I lead with 3:03 left in the half . ••• VCI aJamal top SoatlJ AU-Stan A &eam of UChlumni deleellld the South AU-Stars of Lhe upcomina Oranae County Summer Cuiic; 138-120 in a buketbe111Crimlftllll at Woodbridee Hilb Thursday evcnina. Adam Keefe led the South iam and prompted former Antelter Bob Thornton, a rcterve forward for the Philadelphia 76en. to comment, "Kee~·1 aoina to be one beck or a besketblll player." The UCl team also ioclUded John- ny R 09trs of the Cleveland Cavalicn. Tod Mun>hy of the C8A Alblny Patroons, l 987 ~uate Joe Buchan- an and Frank Woods and Wayne Enaclstad of the Anteaten• 1988 PCAA Tournament runner-up 1quad. · ••t wu rc&lly pleated with every- one's efforts tonipt... met South Coach Bill Shannon of Woodbridac HiJh. "The kids played real bard. Asa team I'm pleased with way the kids bandied the lituation the way we uked them to do. Tbey never rest on defense and make the extra pua on offense." the Lakers' Mychal Thompson said. ·~we can't tbinlt past Sunday, or they ~ blow right past us.•• r" llaalc Jolmeon of tile Laken wrestl• De- troit'• BW Lalmbeer for the ball dlllina • The lakcn have won four titles in flnt qaarter of ThU'lldaJ'• DA Cham-this decade and 10 overall, the fint ploD91ilp 8erlee 1ame ID U.. ~ftl'Clome. five when the franchise was located in The all-stars will take three days off before rcsumina practice Monday. ~bbott ready to accept challenge. .:.One-handed pitcher 1ntends to prove he's .>major league material ,. :,.., ". NEWYORK(AP)-Oftbe 13,000 men who have played m~r Jasue ,. baseball in the past 119 years, not one ~ been a one-handed pitcher. Jim Abbott intends to chaf\&C that. • On a hot June day, the most wnc:onventional pitcher ever came to .the 21 Club, and said without doubt ·he would set aside the apprehensions of others and set the besebeJJ estab- lishment aflutter. Many doubters came to listen. Ever since the California Af\&CIS drafted him two weeks 110 as the eiabtb pick in the country, baseball people have discussed whether Jim Abbott -who was born without a riaht hand -can make 1t to the big ~ues. It's a time when people arc questionin1 a lot of thinas all over apin.," Abbott said ... It's frustrating when you don't have to prove yourself on your ability but on other thinp. But it's JUSt another chaJJenac ... He's succeeded 1n every baseball challena.c so far. Abbott is no mere ot»banded wonder. He's a lqlt- imate m.;or-leaauc prospect. Abbott was 9-3 this season for Michigan and was Big Ten player oft he year. He was 9-1 for last year's United States Pan Am team. But because of the handi- cap with which he WIS born he never will be just another pitcher. "It's something that 1oes beyond basebaU," Abbott said. "I'm not eoina out there to beat the world or to be inspirational I don't ao out there in the first innina and say I'm ~ing to show the world today. I m like anyone else, I'm just tryJ~ to win ... Although he's proven his ability in college and international competi- tion, baseball people arc skeptical. They ask every son of question. C.n he field? What happens when someone bu nu? What docs be do if a line drive comes flyina at him? 0 Thcy say it's a different blJlpme," Abbott said. "We'll see. I say I can field the ball but ifl don't do 1t., it doesn't mean anything. If they're so adept at laying bunu down that I can't act to them, then the J>f'Oblem is my pitchina. not my fielding. 'If people think that's my weakness. they should 10 for it. If I think someone can't hit the outside curveball, ru JO after that." He throws the baJI faster than 90 mph. Like most prospccu, bis break- ina balls arc unreliable. When some- one asked 1f he could throw his curveball consistently for strikes, he said "some days ... Then he laughed. Jim Abbott "I guess I can say no." Abbott can make it to the biJ Jcqucs quickly because of C.h· fornia's shonaac ofleft-handed pitch- ers. To win ID the ~ors, Abbott says he will have to develop another pitch. perhaps a slider. For most prospects, such worries would be their foremost concern. But Abbott must face new doubters in each city. When he arrived at the Olympic training camp in Millington. Tenn., he was surrounded by re- porters. When he came to New York this week, he was mobbed for auto- graphs. He no doubt will be looked at like a fish m bowl when he report. Playoff may create problem If U.S. Open ends in tie, ABC could have partial coverage BROOKLINE. Mass. (AP) -History's way of rcpeatina itself could create some headaches for ABC's coverqt of the U.S. ()pen golf championship. The network will have live ll-bole coverage of the Open both Saturday and Sunday, a total of nine hours on the air. WbaUt probably won't have is live 18-hole covcnic ~ of a playoffMonday, if the tournament should end in a lie. ,., Nothina is carved in stone yet, but network people , say the likelihood 11 that ABC will keep its daytime : 'schedule and pick up a playoff in propess. ~ Why worry about a playoff so early 1n the tournament? History. - The first time the Open was held at The Country Club, Francis Ouimet won in a three-way pJayofT. That was in 1913. Fifty years later. the Open returned to The Country_Oub and ap1n it t>nded in a three-way tic with Julius BOros winnina the plal:e~ In all, four ()pens ha-ve decided by a DlayofT ID the 23 years ABC hu tcleviled the event. indudJn& ats • very fint Open in 1966. i The Uniled States Golf Allociation is put oft.his • historical procaa. The Open. Which is nan by the USOA, ? is the onl~ tournament aeft thal UICI a fulk'ound playoff ~ to break uea. M0tt events now uec st.addeo death. t Viewers may not ICC Ill Of I playofrbut they will &Ct ~ the kind of upclOtC and penon.J co~ the oetwOrk prides itself in. More than ever before, the network will pea its coverqc around rov1na reporters on the course. Jerry Pate, Judy Rankin, Bob RosbUJ"I and Ed Sneed will be followin& the field durina Saturday and Sunday's nme hours of hve coveraJC. "It will Jive us more information, more dimension," said Jack Whitaker, who will be co-hostinaalong with Jim McKay. They will be backed up with commentary from Peter Alliss and Dave Marr. Alleged infractions by Soonerslisted by NCAA·· ' Oklahoma football program targeted in letter of inquiry NORMAN, Okla. (AP) -Details of 16 allqed infractions. most 1nvolvm1 recruiting. apinst the University of Oklahoma footblll prosram have been included in an NCAA Official Letter of Inqwry, a summary of which was released Thursday by the school. Most of the allqed mfractions occurred between 1983 and 1986, allhouJh some dated to 1981, the summary said. The NCAA said school staff members did not act o n all occasions 10 accordance with NCAA standards. The summary did not include any names. The NCAA'sletterofinquirysa1d that in the summer of 1984, a~ alumnus of the university alleaedJy provided a prospective student-athlete with a used automobile and provided him with a Job for which he was paid but did not work. However, the staff member apparently was unaware that the car was provided at no cost or that the recruit WIS not required to work for the weekly payments he received. the NCAA 's letter said. Durina 198S,astaffmem~rall~yoffercd$1,000 ~sh in an envelope to a recruit on h · school &JOunds to induce the recruit to sian a letter o intent. the NCAA 's letter said. The letter of inquiry also alleges that the same staff member telephoned a relative of the recruit and advued that he was planning to aive the recruit S 1,000. On several weekends 1n January and February of I 98S. a staff member allqedly arran&ed for rented vehicles to be provided to student.atlllete hosts for Mt.IC NOTICE entenafoment of rccnuts durina their official i-id visits to the Oklahoma campus. The renta.I costs of the vehicles were pa.id from the staff member's pcnonal c:hcckina account after another staff member provided funds for the cxpc_nse, the NCAA 's leucr said. Pnor to and durina_ the 1984 footbaU season. the NCAA 's letter said. a staff member allqcdly sold a season football ticket for each of two recruits and pve them the c•sh receipt. wtuch was more than the tickets oriaanally had been sold for. The staff member allqedly did the same thin& for one of the same recruits prior to the l 98S footblll season. and offered to do so for another recruit, the NCAA•s tetter said. In JuJy 1984. the letter said, a staff member alleaedly arranged a frtt one-way airline ticket for a recruit to travel from his home to Oklahoma City in order to accept summcremploymenL Then, dunna the recruit's summer job. the staff member allqcdly amnacd for the prospectlve student- athlete to be provided free lod&ina at a university dorm. FinalJy, in November I gs•. after the recruit had enrolled at Oklahoma, the staff member allcaedly arranged for the athlete to receive a free round-tnp airplane ticket to travel from Oklahoma City to his home. the letter said. The home sate of the athlete WIS not included in the summary. The letter allqed various other infractions, inc:lud- ina Jivin& prospective student.at~ cl0.thina. ~~ Jn two 1nsta.nccs. the letter said, staff mem allqcdly made statements to recruits or relatives of thole rccruiu leadina them to believe the prospecuve student· athletes would receive "extra benefits .. if they enrolled at the university. ,,. I .. __ ,..,_.,_ ---.~ ....... _. __ _ _ .. _____ _ ...... ._ . ::-.";':.;..":: PllkKAlio-1 D41A«. ........ ., ___ .. _ ....,,_ ... ···-_..,.._.._ .. __..._ t----UI-----.,--....._..._,... ..... _ _..... .... _ c- ,_.,_ __ t __ - -.. ---"9_.... ...... _, ........... ....... --....... ... ....... ... ..• ,,,,,, -----·-.. -..... -....... __ .._ __ .,.._ .,._,, ___ _ -------~- PEllllSUU •1,211,111 Elegant oontemporwy bayfront home. s-• e.ctroom, new dock. Europwl kitchen. fabUk>ue mee- ter IUJt• overtooktng towey garden to the bay. Anett tute end con- 1tructton throughOut. DMrDad. I MW the perf9ct hou .. for you to buy for mom. 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(f~itll Sit'n:~~~'.1~~~.11 U,~.l~~faajff sl != :~ • 1~ -l1ril'! ~silttJ1:r1i~1 ~rft!ft 11•1. l ~t1isi ~s.~~sa,lrl,J. ;f 1. 111 1, ;i· ~,,_,fli'' I l•l:lil •• • ' • . •. • . . . . . '· i . ~ . . . ' ,.. J It" • .. -.. . ...... . . . ... . ... . . . ' FJUJ)AY, JUNE 17, 1988 2S CENTS A \ in crash hadlife togeth ~man cb,8l'jed wtth ~ken ;v1ng, -~ po1ice-Wlcertalnw \:Wasa;auR tlai11110 her. BU& at 10:22 p.m., it wu all~· Pons' Volbwi/l'b» collided Widt a car driven t>Y llalrion Martiacz. 20. of Huntilllldn 8e8ch a it eatered the intencc1ion of Ellis A venue mid ~ia Street in Fountain Valley, pobce said. where be is in toad condition. His ~~lanacio:A.hwnada. 22. of Huntanaion "Beach, wualto ii.-...:1a1-ized. __,.. Ofticen are seek.ins witocua to the accident. AlthOup some people have told police what~ uw, otracer Rick Martina · more sta&ements would help piece the puzzle tosether. BJ .IONATllAN VOLIKS ... .._ ....... DeYe and Annelle SQuira' wed- di ... anaivenary wiU be a &rim reminder of tbe death of their YOUswett dauahter .• After the Fountain Val19 fAmily had the annivermy celebraUOli Mon- o..ron wins big 9galn to take 3-2 advantage In NBA~lp Mriel.181\J. Ration . Former ArtzOna Evan .. · Mecham cleared otcam· paJgn loan charge.IM · · Senate puaee meJor wel- fare reform bllt./ M catlfom1a· ' Computer hackers break Into.Defense Department computer network./~ / a.ietlc Hnk eeen .,._ ; tween altrulem and ~ rnorlOGM'Y In animal kingdom./ M · . .Inda ..... Al A3 A7_. 85-7 A10 bmeboc*. At Datebook Al M,,a · • 81~ A2 . day, 17-~-0kt Jamie Sauires climbed into her boyftiend'a Volka- waatn Beede and l.e.ded of( IO the home oltbc boy's lister 10 spend time tbcrc, playina pmes. Jamie Sauirri wu 7 montba ~­nant Her fiancee, Dana Pons. their baby and her family meant every- Squires was thrown from the car and died later at the hototial. Potts wu taken to Fountain Valley R~ &ional Tramua Center and relaled Thuriday. Martina WU taken IO UCJ Medical Center in <>ranee. Ramon Martinez was arraced at the hc>spital on suspicion Of drunken drivinc foUowina the accideat. but OffKer Martinez said he has yet to Bali: er tired, bu·tOK· Children hu . HBprincipa , ' aide after demotion BJ JONATllAN VOlaB .... .._ ....... Irvine City Councilman David Baker, who dropped out of silbt after rcvelatjons be alletedly tried to embezzle $48,000 &Om a non-profit foundation. is .. tired, but doina OK." a c:ampaip worker said TbunClay. Doy Henley, who served u finance cbainnan on Dater's failed bid fortbe «>th Conamsional District teat beina vacated by mirina Robert Wham, R-Newport ~h. said he talked with Baker's wife earlier this week. He said she assured him her husband ia fine. --she said he's restiq. He's tired, but doina OK." Henley said. .. Under the circumstances. that'11urprisina. I auess." -Henley said Baker's wife said the councilman had seen a doctor. Hen- ley was unsure, however, what son of doctor and whetha' the care was 'continuina. lnveatiptions are under way into alltptiQns that BUer atolC two cbeCb from the Irvine Healdl ~ dation, a SI ~million tnilt that donates to health-oriented causa for ' which be served as executive direc:10r. A foundation secretary reportedly found two checks miaina the week-...,. .. end be(ore tt\e primary election, and A ..._t ~ Prtacl=ta :1:1•MD • fOOdbJe -.a at told SUpefior'Coun Judie David Sills Ba wee 8cli0ol la s-a.__. Tile popalar prbacepal (PleUe ... BADa/A2) wu~toel•••ooadadee. · . 'ACLU offers to end · j~il.brutality suit . iftef orms made BJ BOB VAN~ Of .......... The plaintiffs in a 12-yeu:-old American Civil ~iberties Union law- suit over -.•letN brutality at lhe Oranae County Jail have offered to drop their claims if jail officials lll"ee to, unple~nt a 1eries of improve- ments. . . • The improvements were rec- ommended in,. a county-funded con. sullaht's report on jail conditions iuUtdMa 'L . · BUt Ric~ Herman, an attomg w\th •he AG.U, said county Sheriffs • ~nt oflkials were claimina 1J1U the recommendatioftl bad been nM;t; ·when in fact they had DCM. . Mrm in reautar contKt with pris-oaen. and tbq haven't c~ tbeit ~um," said Herman. -ney•ve unp(emented none of the sugestlona or recommendations.'' Sberifrs Oeputnient apoteamaa Lt. Richard ObOn siaicl he could offet' no COGiment beciute. the county's cbid' ~ C.'OmlC't. A..-..t Sberiff Jelly ·~ wu'°:t oltoWD. .1\c ""°"' by conwhaata Law. rence Grossman, Robert Baynes and ~Smith, contained a number<>f critacisms of disciplinary procedures used at Oranae County jails, but concluded that there was little, if any, record of actual brutality toward inmates. At the same time, the repol1 made several strona recommendations de-sianed to elimina&e the possibility of brutality. Amons the recommendations was that all areas where jail suards misht deal individually with inmates be kept under video surveillance. Another recommendation is that a ~t be present in all instances when force 1s necessary in dealina wi&h an inmate . Herman said he was pleased with the report because it dealt with the problems of excessive focte, but he added that the wonlina of the report wu .. very euphemistic." The ACLU filed its suit, known as Stewart vs. Gates. in J 976. Amona the aai.tions in the auit were that irunaies were replarty (Pl••• ... ,. •• , .. ) Jorgensen declines comment while angry parents talk recall ByROBDTBAR&D .............. Y ouna cbiklren marched into the office of Hawes School late Thunday to say ~e to Rita Joqienten, the deposed pnocipal wbo ... ~ asianed to classroom teacbioa by Huntinaton Beach City School Dis- trict trustees. TbC younpters -several holdina the hands of their motbers-lilentiy walked up to JC>f'ltOSCD to ltt her Iona, emotional squeezes. Several mo«bas 1ltCl'C in.J.earl .i the tare.ell on the last day of school Joraam, who was principal at the school and bad the beckiq of pucnu and teachen and children but 00( of SUpcrintendent Diana Peters or school trustca, had no comment about her cbanae in anipments. She woWd say only that sbe wanted the school year to eDd with ber fulfillina ber responsibilities wetL Apoupofher~ met at II p.m. at a plfk ~t IO Hawes School and voted to lend a .. ~ letter to schoOI trustees. claimina tic way they went about r!aaipiQ& the principal and a second tchooJ official constituted a misuse of power be- caute they did not disclose their vote. Further. Shirley C,arey, a parent Icade!", said the ICtioa taken with Joracnsen constitutes a dismissal and not a ~ssipment. Sbe said the parmts also are requestina a bcarina witb 9Chool officials to solve .. many problems" that she claims have developed thfOU&hout the district. The parcntS also wiU study i'ecal1 procedures and review pOSSible tchool bOard C:andidaies shouJd there ' be a recall of trustees. Carey said. School tJ"US1eCS Tuesday refused to discloseJ~1m·sname,ortha.tofa ICCOnd admtniwator who was ident- ified lhroUab other sources as Joan Skinner. lnSlad. lbey identified the two women only by their Social Security n11mhefs . Parent leader Carey also criticised an action by tntstees to extend the contnlC't of Superintendent Diana Peten and to aivc her a pay raite. Carey called the Ktion "a slap in the face .. after another ~t claimed Tuesday • that Peten al\caledly was .. imJ>Cdin&"' education anCI called b 1he district '° invcstip1e ~· maueemcnt style. Scbool district administrative aide Calhmne Wbeeler said TbW1day that the decision not lo ~veal the identification.of Joracnsen and Skin- ner was made strictly to pro&cct tbeir prlVac). (Pleue-CBILDU1'/A2) CM soup kitchen sees 2nd birthday BJ .IONA111AN VOLZKE ............... Merle Hatleberi celebrated tM> birthdays this ..-eek -on Wcclnelday she turned 65, and on Thursday her baby turned 2. . Bom in 1923, H.atlcbera fowided a soup kitchen for Costa Mesa's home- lm two }un qo. · · · It twsurvived witlioutany ~VC:: mcnt fundi"'° mostly on Ha .. , hard work. . -:when I starttd, I used my own money to buy tbe stove ud a bi& pot, .. she recaned Thursday, sur~. rounded by "street people" · eacu11 cake in an anniversary cdcbraboo. ... tb~t that Pot~ bis then. DOW I have a cone. .. . Hatlcbc1:1 as many u 200 homeless people daily. ,tt'ltina up :• cafe1rria-style toup line in the Rea Comma.Ail)' Ccn&cr on HamihOll Street between 2 p.m. and • p.rn. Monday throuib Friday. She PIY' for the food \hlOUltl (Pl•• ... 910fJP'./d) Courthouse cookies guilty as c_harged • ScMM call \hem a beiiicoll ol ._.., ·ia the dlrtw of institutioul co::.mJte.. ~ •Y they arc u IOOd as, -or. ( ) .._. - tMtt Mn. ttelds. .. IMdooe~.udhWIO~I decided eo J:! ana.Mrw tolll1, .. lllill ,__ Oftft. apon ae.llrt Ii t1a1 ~-.;., dlltY•*~ a..-blildld .. -se ·--... -....-.acec*ic..s.lkt.• ML -..1.._.a_..c11lh 01 1--.. ..,.. .. ,....., ........ lllll.1'11Mt..'" ~ -j~111'lr __ ......... a,.11il6• lqt -....-11111-. --= ..... ·g····· •1 e l1ti••• ••fide. «-... .......... I tllellltil lll:•lilAM•a~lt Ill•_. .. .... =..,., . .-..a.-.. ..... -v.-.r.i ............ ..__ •• ......... DI ....... ..... tng down Yale ..... n, bike overpass Uilted lover shoots self ndrtveway A H.....,_ 8eacb maa who MS upeea over a broken 6ot bumdf' to death in Wa tbnner faancee's house in U.. oa Tbunday. ';RDllci1 Everett Hill. ~ was re- ... on arrival at Hoq Holpital followina lhe 6:47 lhooli~ Costa Mesa Police Mc .. Hil wee&'° the home of bis former 's mOlher, Nilab Norman, Taftlltr Dr. where tbe •ui»ata also lived. McBride •id. ne IDolbcr was standiaa in the driveway of her home when Hill ~~ ufiuntiDllC>n Beach. rcsi~t Dilled a .22-caliber riJJe out of tbe bunk Of bis car and put it to his bead. Norman told police she thouaht ~Will wu kiddina because she heard ·"' the weapon click. Sbe turned around to walk into the house and heard the rine discharse. ,McBride said. ·When officers arrived they found Hill lyina in the street with the rifle droPPed by his body. • l ~ad)' be otr'·limits '° vehide iratftc. CitiaeDI Md ~ • ~far cars.. citina l!araie asacreaes ill noite, traffic and~ to ICbool children. WbeD the City .Council co..lidtrecl the Pf'Ol)Olal in Novemblr, mcwe \ban 1,000 iesidenll •needed the ..... thon meetint that latled nearly six houn and culminated in a 3-2 vote ia favor of the project. At the time. the council decided 10 delay ac:tion OD a teCOnd bricfee, which wOuJd u~ Yale Avenue over the San Dicao Freeway. Thieves prefer imported can, particularlyVWs W ASHJNGTON _ (AP) -Im· ported can. especially the v oJb. ~. are &be molt oommoa talFtl ofthiev~ but often tbe lure is not the car but V olbwaiem '1 radio, an in· suranc:e industry study said Thur.. da}'. The least likely can to be stolen or broken into are small and mid-sized domestic models, led by. the Mercury Lynx. The staustics alto demon· strased that thieves most often eye s~ models and isnore station wqons and vans. Acconlina to the insurance indus- try's Hiahway Loss Data Institute, two Volb~ models -the GTl and the Cabriolet -have insurance theft claim rates nearly 70 times peater than the four-door Mercury Lynx. which has the lowest rate. The 11 car models wi'\h the hiahest frequency of thefts were all European models inch.ldina seven vcnions of the Volkswasen. The othen are two Sub models, the Pe~t SOS and the Porsche 9.W Coupe. ·•The theft of car radios is a najor cause of lhe high frequency of lhcft claims of these cars." the anstitute's ,report said. Insurance experts s~ the thieves' interest in the rilldiol is because of their easy acceaibility in many of the foreian models. "All have a common bo1," Rick EJdet, viclc ~t oft.be insurance ~up, said an an inlel"View Thunday. 'They're easily accestible. You cu snap them out of' one cm and Cllily put them into another. It's a ~ery attracti VC theft taf'let." But when thieves are out toite&lan entire car they arc likely to pick spony models, includina a number of U.S. models, the study concluded. It said sports and ~ity can continued to account for an over- whelmina share of total theft loues. •• While these cars account for abOut 1 S ~nt of the total number of can insured, they represent 40 percent of the dollan paid on insurance claims because of theft. Amona the least likely taraets of thieves were three Mercury models -the Lynx. Grand MaTQuas station wqon and Topaz -and the Plymouth Colt Vista wqon and Pontiac: Sunbird. The cars had the least number of insurance claims because of theft. -COOKIES GUILTY AS CHARGED ••• l'l'OmAl sold, and people kept ask.ins. why can't we bake cookies ri&ht here," be said. '"I thouaht, no, we don't have the time for that." K.inder's thin.kin& chan&ed shortly \hereafter wh(n a poc.:ery distributor =Cd a way that he could have bis ies and bake them too. But he prefaced his explanation trith an ad.mission. ' .. , don't want to burst your bub- ble," be said, .. but we don't make the batter here. We buy it premixed from a distributor up in the Los Angeles area. tt • • Ob rQJ.ly? .. ¥es, but we do bake them here, fa:sh every momina. .. As it turns out, Continental Food Service, in Century City, doesn't Make tl)e bitter either. •l'"We're exclusively a distributor," s.Mi Continental v;oe president Stuart Glaser ... We JUSt schlep the l)'Oeeries. .. ,,. \ Gluer said the bitter is made by a company called Rich's Products. in Buffalo, N .Y. A spokeswoman for Rich's said she would call back with information on bow the batter is made. and how 1t ,ets to the West Coast, but she didn 'L Kinder added, however, that the quaUty ~snot only in the batter, but in the bakana as well. "We've found that most people like their cookies soft, with maybe a little crispness around the cdacs," he said. "So that's the way we make them. We bake them at JSO deafees for 1 S minutes. and that seems to do it" For the record, Kinder sells several other types of cookies. all of which arc baked m his kitchen. There's a peanut butter cookie. a dark chocolate chip, and a coconut.cookie. But it's the all- American chocolate chip cookie that outshines them all, he said. .. We're up to about 22S chocolate cookies a day, sometimes more," he said. "The other ones sen all riabt. but nothina like the chocolate chip." One variety bas, in fact, aone off the courthouse arcuit, Kinder said. "We bad oatmeal raisin, but they moved too slowly," be said. That is easy to explain. There is somethina duplicitous about an oatmeal raisin cookie. A raisin is merely a dried fruit masqueradina as a Chocolate chip. Any chocolate chip cookie lover who has ever boupt an oatmeal raisin cookie think.in& it was choc- olate chip knows it is a disappoint- ment not easily foraiven. But as for the chocolate chip (and other) cookies at Kinder's courthouse cafeteria, no one need ever fear that they will pretend to be somethint that they arcn'L "'Every once in a while, some other distributor will let us sample a product, but they're not the same," said Kinder. "We're very picky." "EEN IN CRASH RAD LIFE TOGETHER •.•• 'from Al • Jamie SQuires and Dan.a Potts, a tcience," be said. "She was really the front ~ of the ~ Coast Fountain Valley Polloe Explorer excited about her baby and her Daily Pilot while ridmt a unacycle. Scout who planned to punue a career m•rriaft." J · Sq · h · 1 and in law enforccmeDt, both &raduated Jam~ Squires was a l)"D'llWl until mo~~\ad ~~rid~ s~~t uni-ft'om Fountain Valley Hi&h carliet' 1 wrist injury forced her to the I · the R Pa d h 'd ~year after takina an cquivilency lidelines, Brodowski said. She was eye es •n osc ra e, e 111 · examination, Brodowski said. also a rmmber of the hi&h school "These aren't your average &iris." "She took the ex.am so she could ao track team. he said. And 12 yean qo, he said. "This is real hard on to collqic sooner and study computer a S-ycar-old Jamie was featured on everybody. There's one aone." OFFER MADE TO DROP JAIL SUIT ••• ham Al deprived of reactina material and other amenities due to them. f The suit also contained alleptions that inmates had been rqularly beaten and otherwise abused in elevators and akoves at the jails. Last year, the ACLU ftled another class action lawsuit, Taylor vs. Gates. which contains additional allqations of brutality and excessive force. lf: Stewart vs. Gates WU heard by u .s. District Court Jud&e William Gray in 1978, altbou&h m~or portions of it remain unresolved. Gray issued a ruhna which co~ tained 10 orden to the Oranac County Corrections Division for improvement of conditions at the four county jails. In 198S, Gray found Oranae Coun- ty officials in contempt of coun for failina to comply with the conditions and issued an order rcquirina com- pliance. Under the t 98S ruhna. Grossman was apPointed special muter to monitor the improvement of jail conditions.. In 1987 Grossman's status as special master ended and his fitm, Correctional Consultants of Cali- fornia. was commissioned to conduct the study released last month. ;!2PiP KITCHEN CELEBRATE~/BIRTllDAY ••• j'lonations from private aroups and Hatlebera i.s the director of the ··1 feel no one in <>ranee County 1M.ividuals.. Anton Sqtntrom is one senior citiun ·s center when she's not should IO to bed hunpy,!" Hatlebera ~thesupportenandattendedTh11n-helpina the homeless. She alto feeds said. 1'bis it the only hlePY pan ol ~y's ceremony •. as dad Costa Mesa low-.incomeelderly, b,ut that prosra.m the dly for matt ofthem. lbey Id IO ~it y Co u n c ti woman Mary receives federal fund1na thro&.llh the ait up eata real meal... to fttl human. HombuckJe, who cut the ribbon for Transportation, Lunch and Countd-' the toup line two years a,,o. in1 prosram. "They are all human beinas and we ··1 tel a lot of donauons around SIR admits some of the bomelea lhcMald do wtiat we can to-heir.. We Cbrist~ and Thanbtivint." Hit· ~Id help .~selves if they would m!jbt M" all o( the brain1 n !be lebcrJ said ... But the mi of the~ I IJVC up drinkina or dn.tp. but that woitd, but none o( us knows what veto knock on a lot of doon. doesn't dlmpen her drive to bdp. aomon-ow will briftl." - ... OMC9 ---•.COllau.a. CA. _..._ ... lllOC-W.-CAQ2' ~ ... 904111 .....,,_ & tldllQOW .. 1 G I JrmtcaU 842-608B Calif. Tem119 ........ .,. ~ . ,, • y i:iClf&le--~ ........ --:~ : ., • :n1... • .. . .. ...... .. . • • ic-111r 11 • .. '-~ -. t1. ~-. ,. ~=t=-::r, 11 ,. ....._. .... 11. ........... " • 11 n· "0' I r • • • M 'P ..... 11 • . .. ........... .,. . -f1 ....... .. ,, ea n .... o..n. 11 • • 11 ....... Cler • 11 11. ......... • 11 ., 11 ~°'1 • 11 ... 0..... ... n ., a.. • n :::;::'· ~= •• 0... ,.. 11 • llr1Ul1• • S1 : r. =--:: :: .. . ... . . N • ......_. • • ... ll1-• 10 ............ ~ .. n • ._..... •., • a IMMM#A .. n • f1 ......... • • 10 tt ...... M It : : =.:. .,.:: : : ... --... 11 • .,._ " • • 11 ,............. • • ::;::-== t1 IP , ...... ;OC. t1 n BAKER TIRED, BUT DOING OK, AID SAYS ••• Proa Al of the disappearance. Sills is chair- man of the non-profit foundation. One of the checks turned up unused, but the other was altcaedly written out to Baker for $48,000. The check was sent to the bank, but SiUs said Baker stopped payment on the check before any funds were trans- ferred. • The foundation checks require two signatures. Sills said his sisnature also appeared on the check, ahhouah he did not sian it himself. Sills satd he confronted Baker about the situation and demanded his resianation from the foundation. which he received. Sills said he also contacted the District Attoi;ney's office. Officials there said their in- vcstiption should take another two weeks. Baker hired attorney Plul Meyers the day of his confrontation with Sills and then dropped from li&ht after losina the primary race by fess than 1,300 votes to Christopher Cox. Assistant Irvine City Manaaer Paul Brady said he tried unsuccessfully to reach Baker several times after the election. The first he bean! from the Baker family, lk-said, was Tuesday when Baker"s wife, Pltty, called him to say Baker would not be 1t tb1t evenina's council meetina. .. He needs time io himself," Brady said Thursday. Brady said he will not caU Baker qain, but instead will wait for the councilman to tel in touch ' with him. r ··1 know Davidua friend as well as a professional colle&Jue," Brady said. "I expect he will be 1n touch with me when he is ready to talk." Brady said it is unknown whether Baker, who reportedly is stayinaat his sister's El Toro home. will attend his final council meetina llte t.bis month. Baker pve up bis council teat to run forconarca ADAMS AGREES TO BUY PILOT ••• Prom Al in Oearwater, Fla., acquired the Maoomb Daily in 1.987. Cheyfitz •id that purehase was the foundation for future acquisitions in the newspaper field. The Macomb newspaper bas a circulation of S 1,000 and Chicago Magazine distributes more than 200.000 copies monthly. Stephen Adams is the company's chainnan of the board. Rosemary Oiurcbman, publisher of the Daily Pilot and the lndepen· dent, said she looks forward to workina with Adams. .. I hope to ensure a smooth transition for the benefit of our readen, advertisers and our employees," she said. The Daily I Pilot, with a distribution of 30,000, eubbshcs daily alona the o..n,e Coast, serviDf Costa Mesa, Newport Beach, Huntanston Beach, ~ Beach, Fountain Valley and lrvine. The lndcpcndcnt, with both Hunt· inason Beach and Fountain Valley editions. distributes S2.000 copies each week . CHILDREN HUG PRINCIPAL GOODBYE ••• Prom Al She said the two women had been informed early Tuesday that their Social Security numben, and not their names, would be released ifthe trustees approved the reusipments. Wheeler, who said that the district has employed the use of Social Security numbers of employees in the past, said the women didn't object to the use of the identification numbers. Carey, however, claimed trvstees did it "to protect their hide" rather than be accountable for their let.ions in a hostile environment. Carey said only school trustee Roben Mann seemed to be listenina to parent concerns and is not a taraet of their criticism. LepJ sources aaid there is no requirement to releasina names -or Social Security numben -of em· ployees beina reauiped to duties. Other officials in Oran,e County and in the state said the practice was unusual at least. Pat Howlett, director of com· municatioM for the Association of School Administratora in Sacramen- to, said Wednesday "she didn't know an~re elte" where the practice of u11n1 Social Security numben rather than names is employed. Neither JOfFntcn nor school of· fici.als would ditclose reasons for the reassipments. ' .. ... . -::; ·e . , , \ JUNE 17 ,1988 D\IIX PILOT ENTElrrAINMENT GUIDE \<L4/1'U25 ~ I ' ........ -I ' "! .. . , . -. -----~ ,J Im .. 111Bml Stop-Gap explores death of a child Pllllllflllr.Alilll_,fJCI ' lldiaw:Tl9 .. ~11taatmilr.._. ta., STYLISBL Y 1llODERl'fS' ••••••••••••••••••••••• 12 81. MARY SLOAT Like a defiant child who goes to extremes to get attention, ••The Modems," opening today at the Balboa Cinem~ spurns Holl~ood movie gen~ and see~ to discov~r the limits of what 1t can get away with, succeed1na and satisfied to receive a covcreil smile or a ch\lekle &Om the often startled viewer. ; . -,,......., . ;;. . •· - -, --___ ,..,.;·. rl--. .. . --- Tom Hanks and "Big" dreW raves &om our pest critics in their final outing to the movies. Hanks was unanimously prailed fOr his portrayal ofa 13-year-old in a 30-year-otd•s body. They rated it much biaber than the currently popular '~rocodile Dandee II." Next week, a new pup of critics Will see "Bull Durbam," fint up in die lineup of baseball movies due dais summer. APPLAUtlB .OR TB& TORI WDCRSRS .. 11 :By~DBAN --No~ iJhlte," joked David Emmes as he and Mmtin ae ... i1oOd Oft the ... of the South Coast ..,.,._, Tbcaue li9t weekend prior to the American _=:oroo1c1ea Oiils." Madonna wun•t there, but the ~ NiP1erl sroPJ) .~ die two artistic directors a •Mina ovation IGd ·Wild appiame. llSW a114 OR TD BLOCK ••••••••••••....•..• 14 ~ ........................................... ~ ............................................ . . Harmonious-sounSs-------- for shopping or lunching cm tbt cmrr. Qndj C1atit performs f0t shoppm 1t N0tdstidin in South Coat Pb. Ph«opphy bf Nick Souza. people and DO( be borhmd thar yoa'rt prowiding bedgroaod-masc for ..., . people," Clarke says ... But ND while tbey'rt shopping, I know mry'tt lmning too." Besides the daily musiaJ ofttrings II Nordsaom, snml free musial nan -AR offmd-leally this summer. At Newport Usnr Fashion Island, a mies of conccns ailed 'Jazz It Up at the Island .. kicks off Jwj 10 and cootinoes 00 IUCCessM Sundays at 4 p.m. "We wamd ro do this just for the public's enjoyment," says EiJecn Boben, Fashion Island's marketing director. "We pded jm because ft felt it appeals to all agt groups." The six «>OCett series WIS designed to offtr a history of sorts in the dndopmem of jm music. Dixieland jlzz will 6e fatutcd 00 July 10 with I bind comprising Dick Carlwt oo trumpet. Bob Havens oo tromboot, Peanuts Hucho on clarinet. Paul Smih 00 piano, Bob Haggut oo bass and Frank Upp oo drums. Mainsaum jm follows oo July 17 with I show featuring Soooky Y OUJ18 OD trumpet. Marshall ROJII Oil aJro suaphooe and John Claytoo oo blSS. On July 24, the blues will be featmtd with the husband-wife tCllD of .Jannit . and Junmy Oadwn. The lineup for the July 31 show has yet to be tnnoonced. On Aug. 7,John Oaytoo's jm orchestm will . ~ tht big bind sound. And 00 Aug. 14, CQI~ will be kMuml fth a . by Alpbcmr Moua: 1\e cmcau wi be belcl.• 4 p.m. in tbr lkoldwa1-Neiama Mlrcm ..... ID tbe eipb ...... s.-a f.oocat -Saies • Town U.S • So.th U.. Piia. upcoming lwdlic•« slaows-~ --11:45 a.m. to 1:1' p.a.-include a..i a.o a mc ~ p.,mg mar .,.. . '\aenad --Oil JllJ 14 • dlf . c... Sceomio JCalpbft P*n; ~·t.d~.-.-­Cllllic ;m..a .,... "8es, .. Aug. 11 • Toa Calla M; _.. i.aiyn -~ ........... ol w.s ~ ... oihK Mia OD sep .•• Ta.CmrrM.. · · Olly Plot D tllboc*/ ~.June 17, 1• a 1 I -..... . . JUNE •M TW T F • 1 2 3 ' 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 1415 16 17 18 19 20 212223 24 25 . 26 27 2829 30 COUa'l'90l8 aaTAuaANT praa111 Ne«leeeiel J-ad die Wayae Wayee Bud Dunday tbr'CMllll !aturdly. l:lO p.m. to I Lm. Tbe Courtboule is IOCllled one block otr tbe SS freeway. West on MacAnbur lllvd. ia ~ Hunoa Ceaue. 721-112&. ~ TBS a.vB 221' Newpo11 Blvd. in Colla ..... ~ ....... mirrors ud a b• daDcle tloci-. Rot- sbirts or eboru. Tidretl are SS ball sbowl.. Doon open at I p.m. Call IJ);l 160. TB 80P pram• the cOolat .. "°"1.. Hour io ..,. S-7 p.m. . ....t. and Sa~. Dance Wkb Jlici JolaMOG <SJ ·!lceiover caar.k •Suiiday.IMHop...._ .. ,_.. '--~..;.._------~=--=-=-lnvllion"' with Rock i\rouDd 8:fc:: Pdday ($3 cover chlqe) Md is DUKB'I • NOITALGIA NIGllT· Mo~ .. Rock Aromd 1M Clock. .. a.vii in the Newporw Raort. 1107 a bisu>ry. of rock .............. JambOtte Ro.t. ~ 8-:h JuonOwe. T-.•1....-mwr pramtstbe~~ roctSu·a~I charle).;Wed.U.~n 1~ .,~ii~~;~~~ ~m·~~';:" ~dy= ~ ~.:.l'm; ~ -= •Aane• I I •ns Rol>- Clusic bends will oerfoim die era's cover ~m4 ......... • Plul ...... • 1-.JO p.e. Re-peatest hits from .. Oood Golly, Miss Fountain V. • '6)-UM. __.-. Molly," to ... Wa11t To Hold Your TllE WM8,UI02 llUMawll..U.114. Ticlretsare Hand. .. 644-1700. South Plicik COiii 'Nit~._ ~a llaC PicilcAllDbidaue FOUll SEASONS ~ 690 LlpU Frm ai1ii 1'1io ._ ... _. M al ,....._ Newport Center Ori~, Newport perfonnTt1C9d11Jdll1 .. S11 1,,, lal:.llHI ,._......._and Beach pmcets Marlene Arden's p.m. to l:lO .... a.. Adllll a ao ....._ ... -....._ Clll sonas and music in the Contervatory btw'ed ...,_.Nos.., st~ T.....-.J14-~ Lo'"'lt MOnday lbroUlb Fridays 10 p.m. 4~5m•499-263'. ."r ·~~::!°~__. 8 p.m. and Saturday, 6 to 8 p.m. •••'Ni -.... THE WRITE llOVllC Resiauraat ___ ...__ a 1 I ..... M.. 21 and .... and Tavern, 340 South Coal H~ ---, 645-54& way, Llpina Beacb. ~ts live P.Aane AMPll'BABS 'be ,.. ...... ,,..,.,... ad1 •• enten&inment aDd daDciQI ftiPtly. ~ • 7:JO ~ a .... .. ~ 340 Soutll c.o.. .... 494-8088. sea~-.: 1117.50 oalJ, Tidlm -W9 .... ~ 8wb. prHC.., h SVNl8T PUB 166S5 PKific Coat available st die PmlicA ;•¢ :: Ml 11' RIDt and dnO• ......,. Hiiftway. Sumet &acll. oft"ets live box Ofticll 8lld • • ncta 494 ... entenainment 1even niabU at week. locMiolt.t. Fer_... Illa... Tll• C»U&T80UI& W. Toniabt and Saturday, Tbe Tones, to dlarit .._ ~ ..... Cll TAVUlft Nslhs•iel llal ... 9:30p.m.to 1:30Lm. S9l-l926. Tddioa•~·-~ dwa .... Was I ky ... 110 IFF ANY CONE OR CUP 6:JO p.a One block off the SS IVNIBTPU8166SSPadficCout WU'"attheCypressCivicTheaiet, Playboute, 606 l..lpna Canyon and8:1SthrOQlbJuly31. Freeway~oaMacArtburBlvd.in Hilbway, Sumet 8eac:b. often live Sl72 Oran,e Ave., Cypress Roed. l..apna Be1c:11 (494-0743). -rBE DIPOllTAMCZ OF aaNG ff~ PtJ9 1665< n...-=~-Cout ~~nmeftSatt··~~vea..:, n~a ~ (229-6796), Fridays and Saturdays at dosiDf perfQnnwa f.ODiabt and ZAJlNBl'I'"" by the La JWn ~ -· " ... ~ ! au...... WWI ram ·-w 8 p.m .• !brouah June 2S with • Saturday at. p.m .• Su.nday at 2;l0. muftity Theattt at the ~ ..._y- ffielaway. Sumet Bach. often live fcaturinaTom M 'ff of Acsors. matinee Sunday at 2 p.m. "'I DO, I DO'" at the SoUtbampeoo house. 311 S. Euclid SL. Habra aacnaiamcal teven nilbts at~ 9:30p.m. IO 1:30a.m. S92·1926. 'T.A.ICINATIN' UIYTIDI'" at the Dinner Tbeattt, l40 Ave. Pico, San (992-0C91). Fridayued Saturdays at Juke to.a and BiU Lynch. 9p.m. to OOACBBOUSE331S7Camino Muckenthaler Community Center, Clemente (49'-7S76). Weclnetdays I p.m. lbf'OUlbJune 25. I a.m. 592.-1926. CbapmanAvenueatMaJvernStrect. and lbundave. at l :IS, Frida-__ ,. ....vllDDBYTBZllOO& .. attbe Capistrano, San Juan Capistrano Fullerton (992-7432). final per-J-J-auu San,,__ ,...___ . ....._..__ TtimdaJ presents The Cruuden toniabt formancestoniabtthfOUlbSundayat ,_Sa_t_urdays--.... It 8:4S, Sundays at l:lO '-""'n:sute '-"'"""u1111y •~. PACD NnT.CLVB l8S8l Beach For ticket sales and dinner racr-'8 p.m. Bml. ia Hunlinll.oo Beacb. Blues vations, call 496-8930. c.onoert "GOLDEN GW.S" on the main NiPt. Sbow time is 10 p.m. 21 and bot line: 496-8927. ~of South Coat ReDertorY. 6SS over. Admilaion at tbe door is $4. Town Center Driyc, Cocta -Mesa Call 964-2211 for information. (9.57-4013), 'rucsday,s tbrou&b CANNDY BDTAVRANT to-Fridays at 8 p.m., Satuidays at 2:l0 .. · " niOt, Wednada_y and Tbunday, the and 8, Swldays at 2:30 and 7:30 until Mait: Geem:m Duo. 3010 l.afayeue . Jul>; 14. ~ . A~ leech. 615-Sn7. ':ilABVBY" at the Cosia Mesa H"-a.wav, s!:/~~rs~ "'A CllOllUI LINE" at the Grand Civic Playhouse, 611 Hamilton SL. .... 1 Dinner Theater, 7 Freedman Way, Costa Mesa (6SG-S269). Thursdays eatcrtainment 1even owns at week. Anaheim (772_7710\ n"-.. tlv ex-th~Sat_urdaysat8p.m .. Sundays Queea Ebncin A. \'ibeJ Smash h .... .,, ..... .,. 2 1J 26 tonilbt ~ii° 1 a.m. S92-192d. Mondays at vuyina cwtatn times at : unb une . · TU BOUSE Restaurant until further notice. "BOW TO SAY GOODBYE'" by the --a.~Tnem,-340-south OJist ff'.___ --'"ALONB-TOGE¥ilf3l-tl by the -sto~ap-mattt" com .. ny onllie way, t.apu Beach, ~ts Luke Brea Theater Lea&ue at the Curtis Second SCqe of Soutb c.o.st Repcr- aod lbc Locomotives 9:)() p.m. to Thc!ater. I Civic Center Drive, 8tU tory. 6.S.S Town Centa Drive. Cosia 30 $2 .... _ 4n .. ones (S24-U.S3), Wcclnadaystb:rouabSat-Mesa (641-0llS), tonipt thrcqb I: a.m. coverc .... .,... ~ · urdaysat8p.m.untilJuoe2S. SundayandJunc21-2Sat8p.m. ... ....-.... , .. BLACK COMEDY'" and •wm IE "'I DO, I DO"' at the Lquna aDOC&"S UPS'l'AIU LOUNGE ~~===;;;;;;;=~·-~=;;;:;;:;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijjc-­ preteftlS Shenna Hope and Martin Mead I p.m . to 1:30 a.m. Wednetday tbroup Saturday. Country, Cljun, Blues, Ju:z and showtunes. 18120 Von Kam\an Ave. Irvine. SSJ. I 30S 11IS WlllTB BOUSE Restaurant and Tavem, 340 South Coast Hip. way, Laauoa Beach, praeots hve entenainment and dancina niahtly. 494-8088. Sv.BTPUB 166S~ PacificCout Hiibway, Sunset Beach. offers live entenainment seven niahts at week. forward Motion 9 p.m. to I a.m . .592..1926. --Tlla.nd&J · - - Pack-n-Travel CLOSE OUT SALE . BIG SAVINGS ON · ALL TRAVEL ITEMS TRAVEL BOOKS, MAPS ANO ACCESSORIES LI)() MARRA VI.LAGE .. .............. HELP SAVE THE PIER •• ~li'=-''BLOCK PARIY''··~:a~ . On the Huntington Beach Pl$r .. SUNDAY Jl)NE 19th, 1988 10 AM TO 5 PM • FOOD • MUSIC • ARTS and CRAFTS • CLOWNS • CHLO FINGERPRINTING • MAGICIANS a MORE . . .. 8poii1orecl .., P .l.E.R &RllP ,...,,.. ,,,,.,~In bpedltlnQ ~ AND THE CITY OF . HUNTINGTON BEACH . . 202 Ave.: Cabrilo, Su Ocmente (492-046.S). WM ayatJuouPSat- utdays at 8 p.m. Wllil July 2. ""l'llB NQRMU. llBA&T' in the Drama lab nae at Orms Coat Colqe, Costa Me.a (43'2-SllO), Thursdays tbroulb S.';::C, at 8 p.m. (9 p.m:Jwy l)and YI at4 .... ·-949f p.m. UAtiJ July 3. ,.. ..., ...... by the Amcric:an Olilclren·s Tbealer at &be Anaheim Cultutal Arts Cater, 931 N. Harbor Blvd., Anaheim (7St-5032),SaturdayaandSunclayaat l p.m. tbloultl Jue 26.. at &be Gem Tlica~ 112'2 Maia SL, Garden Grove (6,.7213). Wednel-daya~Saturdaya=·= June 2S with a Sunday at 3~.m.. .. _ '"IBAICAPr at the Ahemati~ Repenory Theater, 1636 S. Grand Ave., Santa Ana (836-7629), final perfonnaoce toniabt tb.roulh SUn-daya at a p.m. '"TllB IOVND OP M1JllC'" at EiubCtb Howant's Cwt.iin Call Dinner Tbee&cr, 690 EJ Camino Rm, Tustin (838-1 S40~ niahtlY except Mondays 11 varyina CW1ain times ~~OP or by the Greater Los Aqeles Children's Tlleat~ at Cypress College (62241 u), toni&ht at 8 p.rn., Satur- day at 2 and 8 p.m., ctosina Sunday at lp.m. r-~-f-.-.·-T.~~ "I.,,* -• ._. .......... ~,. ~o;. . :=-::r.m 7:41 t•:ll TMS ............ U :tl l :a •itO ,, ... , .... _, ..... 'l'llB ...,_,.1naent1 tbrcie lide- sillitti ICtl Clldl niPt Tuada th~ Suada ......... .J admillioG ~are Ip.a ~onday (SJ); Su~. Tlielday tllfOU&b fiunday, (J6~ 1:30 and ·~~·""1-" Friday aDd SatUrday, ($8), doors open at 6 p.m. Dinner is served nilbtly. - --.... . ' • • and~bulli.. Formoreinformation, Call Dr. C1w1es Rutherford at 432-5119 «Bill Scott.at 642-7648. CAPE UDO SOI 30th St., Newport Beach. 8riaa Brombera Band. S3 cover c:barJe. 8:30 p.m. to I a.m. Dinner lef'Ved 6 p.m. to midniaht 67S-2961. . J'rld&J Y.E.S. NBTWOR~ AN· NIVJl:lll.UlY Y ouna Si"* Ex- ecutives cdebrate the first an- niversary of the Oran-Coast Chapter 8 p._m. to 2 Lm. in the Irvine Hil100, 7900 Jamboree Blvd. in Irvine. Hiahliahts wiU include a spCcial dinntt buffet, cake, music, dancina and networking pmes and prizes. Admission at the door is SI 5. -i'lrlffii ~-:-For more infor-mation. COOUIC\ the Y.E.S. hotline 744-1000. PABENTS WITHOUT PART· NEU ~ Coast Chapter 26, (cus&Ody not required) Free Orien- tation at 7:30 p.m. at the Costa Mesa Golf and Country Oub, 1701 Golf Course Drive, Costa Mesa, followed by open tchbe public dance with a liw band. 847-1600or S46-S788. PARENTS WITHOUT PART· NEU Huntincton Bc:ach Chapter 595 hosts a free orientation for sin&le pucnts. Call chapter phone 898-79)5 for meeti~ location and additional membcnlup information. · Membenhip in Parents Without Pannen is open to divorced, separ- ated. widowed or never married parents oflivina children. Custody of ---. ··--_(l . tbe cbildttn is not a factor. A non- profit, non-sectarian, educational or- pnization. PWP -provides a pro- pam of social activities, discussioas and study poups for linale parents and their families. WBDL OP PIUENDllllP aiaps over 4S, meet forT.G.1.F. at S:lO p.m. at Embassy Suites in Anaheim. For reservations and inf<>nnation, call S2J-S875. PIUME OF LIFE SINGLEI Meet for T .G.t.F. at Beef Riger, IOS N. State Collelc Blvd. Oi'a1* S to 7 p.m. Information., call 836-11"44. F.L.l .B.T. Dancin& at the Meadowtark. 8 p.m. DJ. John S_ymes. RefresldDeets. $3, 16782 Graham St, HwatiflllOll 8eacb. In- formation line: 647-1628. Satanta . Campus inside the Marketplace Center in Irvine. Meet at 7:30 p.m.. in front oflbe lmprov for the show at 8 p.m. No RSVP needed, only U . n.orr Suoday pn4JUUS beain at 6:4S p.m. in the SC:actifr V'tllllt Shoppina Center, 220S Main Street. Sui&e 20, Hun ti nston Beach. Call 647-1628 for more information and 10 leave rnessatCS- POCUS M, a llOUP of siiWcs 111CS J0..39, meet at 1 l.301.m.. at tfleSouth Coast Community Cb\U"Ch.. S 120 Bonita Canyon Dr .• Irvine. 8S4-7600 . WllDL OP PIUENDllllP siftlles 4S-olus meetfor: bruDcb at 11 :JO a.m. at 'the Bara. Tusm. For informatio& and raervations. call S21-Sl7S. PIUllEOFLIRSINGLD Duce at the Phoenix Oub, I S66 DoucJus Drive, Anaheim S to 9 p.rn.. For retervations. caJI 836-1744. > ,. -- WHEEL OF PRIEND8BIP SiQIJes da 45 and over, meet for dinner at 6:30 ~-~-~~~JL _______ _ pm atthcOajmJumpcr,Sant&AnL-A.S.A.P...-A-liftlla mociatioD For information and raervatiom, pro~onals, meets aich Mooday at call S21-S87S. 7:30~ fora business and olannina PR.DIE OF LIFE SINGLES meet meeuna. Call 665-6633 or 160-0CSI for dinner at the Paradise Cafe. 600 for inlOrmatioo.. Write 10 A.SAP., Newport Center Drive. Newport P.O. Box 8143, Newport Beach, Beach at 7 p.m. For reservations and 926604143 fot li1Cnture. information, call 836-8744. ~1 -NON.sMO&ING SINGLES of America. (N.S.$.A.) meets every Sat· unlay at Bentley's. 7979 Center Dr., next to the 405 FrttWay and Beach Blvd. HuntiQIU>n Bc:ach-Meeting 6 to 9 p.m. S6 for non-memben. $2 for members. Door prizes, hors d'ocuvres. 846-8440or24 hour event SWING AND BAIJ.llOOM DANCE a.ua Learn west coast swine. fox-tro~ waltz, samba. "1\IO and all ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-""~~~· ballroom dances at the Irvine Hilton Zot Room at 8 p.m. $6 or S 19 per month. Dance at 9 p.m. For more hotline. 894-8932 .. Smaclay information, call 494-0S93. MAll11N AND TONI'S SWING DANCE a.VB mttlS It the K.ina's MEETING CONNBCl'ION Com- edy Ni&bt at tbe lmprov. 42SS Table in the W~ Lanes. 6471 West- minster Av~ in Westmins1rt bqin- ---....... ... ... ......... ........... --MCDiii--• ... ......... ,... .... __ ._ ---WIUOW ... ............. ----....... ................. ----.... .._ ... ................ -==.,--....... .. ....... ...... ... ,.@ . --------------~·~ .:r-.::: -··--IULlWP•• 1'MI COUCll ,.. " ,__ .... ..,, .......... ------·-... , ...... ......... ----11..-o ... . .......... ,. ... ... =-:..--...... ,,. ___ _ ----~ ....... 11ol9•M1t•hU ..... YESI: "TWO llG TllUllM UP! o.utlM • lfJlf/lllm' awmtlS eldlc yar .. ..ll"SA Gil ..... • -C...MdAIGltfa.t.sama~ ··a...11 ......... UDliilrJD. MJllA/llli, .. ~ ...... _ ... ,....._., ... ,.... ... _,_,_.._, ..... ~ ..**** . ...... Nft3 0 ..... Jn: .. " -mR a.t, UIA '"*1 •M!•"!TCI_,. __ .. ~!I-~ •u1111-19.__......, .... ._ ....... ..._, .. ___ ...... .._... -(111.Jo-----C.. __ ... _____ _ _ .,,.'-' __ ..., ... -..--.. -. ... ~--__ .. ,__ ___ ... ... c::::r;;;:;;;;;;;;;;.;~.,-.~~-~--~-::~ ... ...... --'.al----Utll'IJ-t\..-.-___ ,__ .......... &a-•• ..... --M..<at!n. ----·--·-- -----~-----_...._ - NOW PLAYING .. -=:- == ., .. 0, r --.,_. -.--·------J' -. . . . ' ·. . ·,. . . '.· . .. ._ r ,: . • . . . .. . ~ ~ ~ .~, "' ' -"""' • • • . ).,\ ...... ; • • ... ~--:: ·: .... '!!.. a. •. "'--:.. • • -.. £ -•• • •• • ~--=•A, • --~-~ ... • --.._ -._ ~ ~--_..,.~-.lll.-.. t• ~ _ .... I _ nine ~t 8:30. $4.SO for leaons. no El Toro SINGLES Opportunities and ac-nina 6 p.m. to l l p.m. at difT~t NATIONAL DANCE CO. pmcnts a chataie forclancina. M0-3SJ8. 7 p.m. For reservations and infor-tivities sponsored by the Knowled&e local.ions. Small aroup network.ins. swina class at 8 p.m. dllch Friday ---matioo, can 836-8744. Bank, 7 to 10 p.m. in COS1a Mesa. Call personal introductions, hot and cold followed by a dance sOcia1 from WedaH .. J -P'.IU..&N.D.S.asinaleuuociation 898-7878 for location aod infor-honCl'oeuvta, Social, dancina, mix-9-10:30 p.m..; a jittabua class each WBEELOFPIUENDSIDP,sin&)es for fun and growth, ~ts each mation. Materials and refreshments ers and pri.ies. Call e.ch week for Monday at 8 p.m..; and a ballroom over 4S, meet for dinner at 6:30 p.m. Wednesday S p.m. to midniaht in the provided. location and information 66S-6633 or and Latin class each Wednesday at 8 at the Le Grand in Santa ADJ. Call Zot Room. Irvine Hilton, 17900 OASIS SENIOR .CENTER 76CM>4Sl. p.m. $20 for seven lessons. 6S0-3048. S21-S87S for reservations and infor-Jamboree Road, Irvine. Free valet SINGLES meet Wedri'es4ays 3 to 4 "NO NAME" SINGt.a DANCES mation. padina, admission is SS per penon. p.m. in Room 3. · to 8 p.m. at Twains. 2101 E. f.din&er Saad•J MEETING CONNEC'l10N Exotic Get in for half-price if you briq a Coffee and tea from 3 to 3:30 p.m. a( the SS Freeway, Santa Ana. Di.nee -'rllACY ~ BIG -aAND Dinner Niabt at ""The aay Oven _ friend, get in free if you brina two by followed by a special program. and happy hour, door prizes and hors Father's Day Dlricle at Ambrosia Cuisine oflndia" RSVP by 6 p.m. calling 863-3111, extension 2111 d'ocuvrcs.. $4 admission. No dues, Restaurant. 69s Town Cen1Cr Drive. Dinncrat8p.m. lS43SJeffreyRoad, after S p.m. Free 3-montb pusive Tlaanday no membenbip fees. Call S214691 CostaMesafrom'4toS~.foUowing Irvine bctMien the .S and 40S free-mer;;= by anendina,. -Pl\DIE OF LIPB iiNGLES meet for more information. the Father's Day Ba uc Brunch ways. SI extra for non-members. ~ .. _ a Tetu:~ non=! for a discussion lfOUP in Huntinaton from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. SiQllcs and Directions: 894-8932. _._ ... Beach at 7 p.m. Non memben $2. couples arc welcome. Admission to LIFE ON YOUR OWN Si.naJes SS sin;lc sailors with or without• bOat. Refrcshmentt. For reservations and the dance is SIO. C.all 432-7559 foe and over, meet new friends in a warm • J 1W~~ ~o cacbthc !,!!f tbandat lotaT ~00, call• DISC0836-8]~ B.,. ,. •nnu information and n:terVations. supportive atmosphere every tbik. Ql•-.i of ca ._ _... _.,.., ~-BIG BAND MUSIC kcept dancers Wcdnetdaylto4:30p.m.foravaried the Huntinaton Beach Inn, Pacific DANCE a.UB Meets every Thurs-Friday ontheirfceteverySundayniabtintbe ~m Coat Hjahway in Huntinston Beach day at 8 p.m. at 731 W. 17th St., three Swallow's Cove Jounee at the historic tocludin& dinner at local rcsiaurants 6:30 to tn p.m.. Mecti• beains with blocks south of Newport Blvd in PAR.IS OPERA BAU.ET Presents San Clcmen&e Inn. 2600 Avenid& de and a monthly pot luck. Oasis Senior drinks and hors d'ocuvres ib the bu, Costa Mesa S 19 month fees. Learn .. Cinderella" set to Prokofiev's score Presidente. San Ckmen&e 7 to t l p.m. Center, 800 Maraueritc (Stb and followed by a meetiq and .ctivitict the latcSI dances followed by a dance and choreographed by Rudolf with the 0can•s 0cacon.s swing band Marguerite) Corona del Mar, at 7 p.m. SOcia1 hour follows lbc or other activities each wedc. For Nuttyev through Sunday at the and featured vocalist Lisa Powell 644-3245. meetina. ~ost is $6. Call 673:~~ 8 for more information call 494-0S93. • Ora nae County Perform in& Arts 498-9202. PRIME OF LIFE SINGLES meet recorded tnfo about club, actJV1Ues.. A.s.A.P Sinalcs Association of~ Center. Matinees Saturday and Sunx--==-==-'=----::===:==== -fordinnent J>tm:no--s;-2273rMPlll. -seeh\L UNSBOP---Jr.OR-,-esswnatnneet every1'1roncmy eve-daY. -S-,,:m,.Prtdly;-5aturoay an lloada• --------------------------------------, Sunday. For ticket information. call 1 the Cenicr box off!..<z.tJS6-ARTS or -MARTIN iTONi's Swina Dance Ticket master, 740-l\M.I. Oub meets at scvCral Oran,e County .... N.~ftaM ·--·--·-~-- • OUTDOOR RJN FOR EVEIM>NE DANAYKROYD JOHN CANDY & ....... , -•••••cm: ····--111SI• .. ..... , ~ ........... -=-·· _ ......... --. ______ ...,.. ·--~~'!!!!! ~ := == J ~--:--~ :=z .----=· ............ i ... - THE AMERICAN INTER-locations. Dances, dance contests. "TIE • IFFICE -IFTHE _., .. _ ........... .CHEWS ~ trips. play outinp, beach parties aTC some of the activities. Dance lessons are offered bqjnnina to advanced., blllroom to swina. For times and locatfons. call ~3Sl8. "'!'edneedaJ FREE DANCE ~NS by Cay Cannon tonigbt 7-8 p.m. at San Clemente Inn, 2600 Avenida dd Presidente in San Clemente. Dance to the music ofle$ DouaJa,s and bis quintet. 49S..9202. Gallery • openings ClOITA MESA ART LEAGUE GAU.DY 38SO S. Plaza Dr .• Santa Ana. in South Coast VilJaee bolds a reception for new and faturut artim Thunday from 1 to 9 p.m. in the pllery: The public is invited. DL(!l(E NELSON GALLERY 278 Forest Ave., U&una Bc:ach Seri- papbk ])riots ol' Maroo Sassone opens Saturday and continues tbrou&h July 3. Reception for the anist Saturday 1 to 10 p.m. (RSVP 494-2'40)Gallcry hounatt IOa.m.to S p.m. Monday lhrouah Saturday and J J a.m. to S p.m. on Sunday. 494-2440. GRAPHICS GALLERY, 502 S. Coast Highway. Laauna Beach pres- ents the work of Ruth Hynds and a cbaocc to meet the artist at a rurption toni&ht at 8:30 p.m. Wine and hon d'oeuvres wiU be served. 494-6115. ~ IBVINE FINE ARTS CENTER 14321 Yale Ave.Irvine, New Juice in OnQ11C County Ill, a curated exlu"bit of seven Ora.nae County cmersiq and lesser known artists. Opens toni&ht with a rettption for the artists 7 to 9 p.m. The Irvine Fine Arts Center as a mulu-use arts filcility, oWncd and operated by the City of Irvine. ()pcratina houn are Monday throuah Thursday. 9 a.m. to 9 p.m .• Friday, 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. and Saturday 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. OOtCd Sundays. 1'S2-t0tl.-- LABAINA GAU.BAY Meridien Hotel. Newport Beach offers water- Colon by world peace anist Andrea Smith in a weekend t.ia throuah Suadly. Special biablipt is a leriea of i&Dlln etched in wbite water crystal. 110DDN MUSBUlll OF ABT Griffin Towers. S Huuoa Centre Dr .• S.ta Ana. .. ~ An/Minor Art- ias• works from the MuteUm of Childmt ·s Art. Santa Om and WO«ts &om the Santa Ana Unified School Dil&rict's special studio ~ Alniolt ~worts are included in mis caliibiL HoUn are 11 un. to 6 p.m. Tuetday throuab Friday and Satur- day uil Sunday from noon to S p.m. 7~G.w.DIBl3545 Eist i...-......... C.O.. Hilbway. Corona del ~i Broan sculptures by OaYao Deumoft throuab Auaust 31. Mlritimt prints 6y John StOllart. ·~c:tsbyRobenTa~-S Iii · · on view u.ctdlallly. Oe1erY open Moedly ..._. S.W- dlly, 10a..& IO',.. .. 67~~71 Tlaveday COSTA MD.\ QUICUTEPPEBS a tenior citizen square dance aroup seek ex~nced square dance cou-ples to Join them. The Quicksiq,pen meet rqularly every tbursday, 10 a.m. to noon at the downtown community center. Anaheim and Center Sts. in Costa Mesa. For more infonnation, caJl S4S-5669. ADVANCE VOUJNl'EDS NICEDf!D POil PIP.STA The sixth annual Onnee County Fiesta. June 30tbrouah July 4 at Mile Square Park in Fountain Valley is seeking volunteers and · perticipants in Sand IOK runs, sand volleyball competition 111inst top ----- pros, family fun bike rides. pme booths for fund raisins. baby con- tests, arm wrestlin& competition and other events. lA1CrCSlcd ~s-nts. volunieen and potential sponsors m&j' COfttac1 Joel vat at I.be F' aesta office. 962-4441 . LONG BEACH MUSIC n'3l'IV AL presents ~J~ Swint and Evcry- thin& .. Sunday. July 10 from nooa to I 0 p.m. at the Hyatt ReteacY. Lons Beach. . OGER- • I ---- -------- AGitic ..... 'Big' fun with a 13-year-old Tom Hanks ,. b...,... ,.,.....,. ....... c..-.... A •ondedully fuaay,~lgnantportrayaJ "°'·~ 'I • ·~ Our ratlfigs •. Ai .... if ....... _,_ _, I I I . : f I t2t. I·' ,. ' ·. l•· .. I··~ f I !11( r Jr , 0 i' ,_ ~ . ~. 111 1i1. ·t . • !r1i .. :> · ·::r .. : :~· . · 1:a.l . .-~ . r3.• i· -C ~::::~tr•.it1· .~ ;:~~~·f:. ·~~, . I r~i~ ·I · 1 i' i'lt~l . ~ r ;~.} i •· liJ t f~". ~i ·~ i [, .. , •. 1 II(( l li ·1( Q. . il' "•H~I jffr· i 'O f ;J!R.~Jt , ·tU !r' :~. 1z l ,f ,,l~ .... tli ll I ~ 1·1nr, 11f_f. fl', ·.::-.-J I :. ~ ·. rl! ii ,,. (' . If I · Q3 , ·i- . £3 f. _Mer? ·~rul . c-t-' • f-"t l 'C s -.,( It" ~ 1 f~~u:r ·i·!~'f ;~ . l II ~ I -~··1' ~~11 (") ! J ·l,t;J~~ J ·lsiiir f. ·~<'I>· i Yid· :f '1.1r~r11n.11 ·~. d l~fir 1~!1~li'f Jn n . ' ~1ii·1f1rr 1l ,11 I I( '&• J Ir j '' c:· ·~· llUtt'. ~n !:.1' .t:::: "u ' ir1lif: aJ ii'J. J Q. ,. ... I·."--. ~.~.~111·n·1·-· 11!!:1 . ~· ' . Ii. ~. ~ • J · :Ut• e.J d ill~~ ·1-f c · J -. r-_ -~'"·~',_ i . ...... I I ··•. ~· •·1 ...i . I • · 1a2;1n111~: =~;ri ·c · . If I · 1~Julr · U ' ---l -. I ' . u ' --·--.--=--. 1":" .. ,... a. ""' -• . ----·· ~ --~ ·-----~ .. I l.!r.;:u~u .. nllS'i>.i.l§Ptrs.. lhlif(li .li ... § ~ c:r txl u11 t!~ uri·,ff.jl, .lb !.,·J1n~i 1di? "I! ·~ 8 •f!1. ~~; 'hlt11 k~r!ff. !~~L1 1 ~ ; ! '~. · ·. 9.· .. I. 1r~Jf f e:.r 1 ~-.ipi0 ,2 . hJ =s . -.~ ~ _,,. ~f Ii f~ !8~ ~if E2 =-....... (D I 'I I jl 2.iff fl 1r,.. 1. 8 f " »iii ' ... ,... ~ ,.,, iii 11 s f . ~·-t ijlr:-< ~ 8' s~oh· a; <'D t-1 \I~ ,;;;:,. r~.· l 11 s.Of i~IU hf h·iu: · iil . ..-3 ... , ~!.! i ~ JfJl1 •rrn &~1 ~ f > f rj~lf~ 1if i>fg!>=J~8 o 00 !l~f ~ !r 1(ilJlih li~ :liJ.if K!u rhi;~~! ::S rD 20 s1f I ~ 11f luz :J ~fh t:f~fJfirlJI•! "<: t;:j Jlfir 1Ji!'!!~Jl1it i~ fr1:1 .~:16·-~t(;rf P:I ao. en 15 ~ -t § r:r 0 0 . n.g :2. " .... ~,,JzJ f ._... ~ gt! .. ,! "li~ 'Ji jiill: -~ 'i 8 B f f!J-i.~U ~!1 s! -· · ilU hri'Jnl1!n ~~ fl:\ iii lnfla;~ f :~ i . ,···-.. '1" ,, I I ~ ~· -. '.-1 . r '_<. ' .~ -. 1· ·~ . , ·'' . . I I I . I I. I l i ti .· ~ f . f . ·1 1r If I I I ' '·J ft '' ~ I ·- \' t t t ' \ I ' \,. ' . "" • • • • • • •. • • I -- OotOnThelbWn 'The Moderns' breaks the rules with style BJ MAllY II.OAT ...... Oc: ' 0 2 GRAND OPENING * * Hemiqway intones .. Paris ii a ponable banquet .. to wbicb Oiteau replies .. y OU need to woi'k Oil tbaL" Carradine•• Hart is sym99&hetic as the love-~ (usually)·uncom-~ilina artist. Hii diive to (re}pwsi RKheJ is convincina tbouP curious u it's neftr evident wby sbe'1 sutb a pat catdL Some of Hart's paintina tceDel are I bit lalilbY, but rmc1e more iDIClellial by tbe kDowtedp tbat IOIDC of CW- radine'I OWD U1WCJrt appean:4 iD tbe film. Tbe nil OD Jlart'I lieU1; Y~ tiao, _dllcribes a playfUDy c;:aie Radael wbO flits fsoal, 2 10 feeliQa witb tbe ddermiJlaaiOa of L_ .. ibtub, wbidl is where sbe spends IOIDC iDtcresUns ICeDel with, amoaa ~bet basblmd. StOne. LoDe. six months out ol-ne Lat Emperor" .... ~ Mocler'M" ... =~~=~.ct lliflty J' aDd tiOCll poHtftd IDd piliftll. Hil dtilncter is perbapa tbe NOW OPEN! *eurmN CENTRE ·s CI General Admission 'r Children and Seniors ':r. most diftk:ult to portray became of the cbaqe be u~ The black and white definitions of bit Charlcter become muddied and pey in tbe final anaylsis. The film employs monocbioaUtic uansitions in ICeDCI that allow color to bleed in as tbe action pr<111e.1. Costwnaare a .. modern" t.tic bl8ck IDd wbi1e witb IOIDe )'Cllowial around tbe edl£s to remind UI tbat this is Id more t.baa 60 "9f'I IF• Paris bas been recr.ted for ... in Caneda, ia put beta.-of. I low ~ but alto ..... Paris DO :rr loob like ill joutbAal 1920s ""The Modems .. it a.hillturout became of ill J'layfuDy .__. •PP"*h IDd ~··beC:a ... it saaec:eedl. mixina j..i die rijbt amount offian and ftiry. Tbe film could hive Ille~ IOIDe encounten IO ,et ID eab'a PY dollar'• worth but it ... lbort. relyina on P>d t1111e ud craitivity. UldeDoD . Bitter . lessons · Think your mother-in.law is old? Check out On:os. Your kid$ mate you fed ancient? Look at Cnicker Jacks. Orcos are more tban 100 years old. Cracker Jacks, too. Uncle Don wooderl if interview subjects can sue. Suppote ¥ou're a publicity pcnon whose job as to plua a product or personality. Your client is comina to the West Coast to put on a presen- tation you fed is of interest to the pubJic. You make up a press kit. send it to all the media outlets and then &el OD · the f!om trying tp line up intcrviews. It ain't eey cui ev~ wants publicity. J)ll'licularty if 1t's me. With muds effort you con the local newlplpet iDIO intetvicwina )'OW' client. who has nothin& to say about very-little 10 do with minimally anythina. But the local newspaper decides to~even. You think you're aettna a ia.I reporter. Sucker. You 're aetlina Uncle Don. Cao you sue for misrepresentation? Hey, it was Uncle Don's first interview for the Pilot and he wanted to be retdy. We'd be meetina in a hotel restaurant for lunch. Whoa. Retrained himself i'1 the buics of etiquette: shirt lkeVes arcn 't naptins. don't pid yer no1e with yer mouth full, and the utenSils arc theft for a purpose, not decoratiod. Your Uncle strolled into the Red Lion havina no idea what thele pcoPle foobd lite. They spotted him easily i=. It wasn't the shiny aU- poly stri lllin, the boundstoo1b pants or De Day-Ok> jlcket. Some- tbifts mudt lllCft obvious: It was the .. re~1 IOOk." a look of desper- ation and hope. That maybe, if you don't blC>w Ibis usipment and finally wthe tha1~· willnina article, you'll never n have to do stories abcMlt the department ttscuiq Aunt Clarabdle's cats from the _power lioes. Tbi subject at hand wun•t a bed idea. .. Proa..cts tbat ... ve lallcd over · 100 ,an-a8d "1ly." BroUebt alona some of ~y:_weat~...-• pncf- modlcf•s fnlifcalre•uaamp1c. ll•1 been • fUnilj heirloom and 9elf- det:lie ~for a1 ae.. a Clefttwy . • .,.. .. ~ ~fll fcnMiaa mummy and twice• "Ulft .. ~. t111n•1 aU IOrtse C'rud thai"I been ........ ll'OUDd for l()()o plias jean. Tvory. -Wbitmaa's SUiqlltR. Arm a Hun.mer -of ~die ........ ~uct: ~ .. lillllii ... =:=-=ai:= llillJi••... .. ............. cOhunn ..................... ..... , ... ... ...... ol ... bitten. Had .. 11D .... Wlded -:1r-~--..,.,tblit -... -....... lbatk ....... _ilbet . ........... let U Daiif ..... tlew • ..,..,witll ..,..., .• atwlllt tllat lie cu retell. FWINY FAMI (N) ~::slt:e llG(N)• -~ l:Jt.l:CS.11:45 '<L"IT'loj',Y-.. "' .... 8-a "'-" ....... ~ .;;-4.~ V"\..~ ......... ..., •NmJ IStlf.aJt I -• ;. -• t .. • ~ .. T ~ - ...~ ~41· ,. 5.,, . !:>-<' : • -- RID HEAT (llt) ..USG IMllll ~5-1:6- , •:,f -~~-E~ ~ ..... -e ... -•' r • • -" 11111 ' •· ·;rr1 l~-ll-. -MEAT tlll. • .... ICLli ll~~IS-l:JN6.IM WS:.r.L .... ~16 ... .... ... . : . . ..... ... ; , : - ;1:--::_EOJ. • -~~ ... 1 . -.. .. ' ~ . .. ;. . <. -,. : -·. r.· : • - MDHEATlln ..... 11--~-ll l:l~lM ~ . • ~ ~ -"'IE "' L: . . -.... ' t -.. , •• . .. -------- OotOnThelbwn . - - Young eateries quickly becoming landmarks Ftftceil years or so .,_ Joni C1louah to stud oa their own all year, Mitchell aoa. '"they paVed paradi1e with or without d9e IUIDlner tbroap. and put u~rk"i-lot." . Manned by a new, ...ner breed of quite eftoulb Oltbat ~liver. I wondeftld aloud if he d ldl me a lidc order, wida ID Olliaa ...... 11e·d do beaer tbaD ti.at, .. it turned OUL •ffow abo9t if I cbaflC you m. aame as I would a a bleel with CTeam cbeac, SJ .40?" It wu a "Main ~U~ iutiU alive and ensea pweaew, tbelC bxl dilPI "•M ftourishina ia lowa, but whea Oran8e may Well be at d9e bdtont of a new Countians want to rnet in die trend, the .. bondinl" of our neilb- .atmospbere ofa little vilillD. with an botboods and the ~ who live in of OK outward appearances of com-them. munity, they head for Balboa Island ......,, o.i_ •1;, ._.. c..t • deal or l.cuna Beach. ........,. Wjill ..._.. .,;.e1a O?mc summer, so do all the ......... ._.., ...... .._..,.. .. tounsts. d .. , ~out a er:naous 1a1e witbout This ~1 crop o( ~-in. ~ .. H~'s the c:bopped liver'?" I misa• a beaL It Wiil IDOCL GIMci, front mt~~ts indudes a tno asked. The man behind tbe counter at 1J9e meau bcmd WaiJld lliln, of ofl"erinp creaove and exoellent . reached for a plastic spoon and noted tbe ~ of a cbopcied ma- -------------------------. sandwidl, S4.9S. With ilr too muc:b •• •• Qllr Plat DU Ill DOk! ffrldlj ...... 17 ... .. tasti .. " ahead of tne.1 didn°I want a wbole ludwicb, but I badn"I yet Md Al be made my lftlCk. be told me llis ume, Joe sYader.-He WM from Cbiateo. be said. and be wuted this piece to be like the delis be ~ membeml &om the old ...... borhood. '"I even had a red brick. See it out tbe1c, by the door?" I did. indeed. '"'I'beold man who ran tbeddi bKk home uled to have oae. Soinetimea he'd feed us. tiut wbeil be ... busy he'd throw bis brick~ .... door at us. By the end of the IUhuner, the brick would be sbaucred into tiny pieces; bit by biL We'd •ve the pieces and brina ·mem beck to him, leave them in a pile outside bis door and then he'd laup and invite us in. There'd be a tilt, with rollt beef' and puuami, h mediil PdJet and bottles of Dr. ~eel-ray tonic. We'd be one happy poup ofkid&. .. His own red briCk dciOt-stop re- minds him of '"the old man." Sajder says. .. I do busiftell the way be did. mwna friends with ......... ta1tes and half cups of coft'ec. r haw one ""--~17) , -- -- OutOnlbeTOMI ----- --- ----······ 11111111 ....... c ...... --------------~------ ::&staurant J LIFTHEWEEK .. requests .,. UIUeltv not a problem. Oilhea can be ordered with no MSG, .._ oM and ltttM or no salt. ~ Items can alllo be ordered hot and lpk:y. Jack, who is head chef .. well .. OM*lmeMget, trllinl hil llllliltant chefs to ~ It.,,. In a mMMr thet la plMling to Amerlc8n t..-and dl.t. He hea more thin 20 YMJS experielice In the ......,_...t lnduetry. In New Ycwtc, he WU chef at a ~Mt that he and his brother a.necf. He .ate> WOf'ked In~~. ~ Longest Running Show on Bro.ctw-v * New York Or.-na Critic AWl!fd •wn.ot 7 Tony Aw.di • OrMge County~ ANAHEIM ,-..._._ ....... The IUltM ber .la a new telllure at the CNna ~· The ~ ber la mllde out of beeuttfully grained wood lmpotted from Africa. White enjoying susht, dlnert can watch the p 1111 IQ perade of tramc and tourists on PCH. The open enWc>Nnent of the MllN ber • lends lt9elf to friendly cotNe1 ldon. fiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiir:==:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::jjijjjjiiiiiiiiiiiiii SUlhl ti a popular llPP'llZ• at the CNna Plllaoe. Mtl .. 11C CHICON ••H, ..... t . ·I----.... &.1::S"'·::: ..... 1~ .,..._, oomtiN With Someofthemore~llJIN ..,..,.maguro, mede . from h.w\a from ....... and.....,., mede from nMUrllllf sweet atwtmp c-..ght off s.nta Barbera and lt9lpped to the restaurant. More tradltionll ......... .,. Mio avtllflll* and lncMSe egg rol, fried won ton, b8rbecued pc:wk. Med dumpMng, Piii*'~ c:l**en, m.ndlftn c:hk:ken salad and the popular a11 ~ appetiar celled the po- po platter. • The CNna Plllllce II ioc.ted at 2800 West C0Mt Htghw8y at the c:onw of Rlhlflkle ~The.....,.,,. ii open~ to Thundlly trom 11:30 a.m. to 10 p.m .• and from 11:30 a.~ to 11 p.m. on Fl1dey and Saturday. The tuthl bw II open dllly from 5 p.m. to 10:00 p.m. for reeervatk>ne or further lnformaUon. phofle the China Patao, at (714) 131-8031 . .. the lngfedlelt .. and fry In 320 ..,.. ol. CUt .. broccol Into now.a and boll In _. tor 1 minute. rw'IWNe fromwat« and .-r•igethe broccoltiround. big round pe.te. . • IMM:a llAITAI 1tli-.lljil9 ..... , ............. , .. ,. """ .... ,, ... , ......... . 111,...e.-PoUr owr loe .mo en a or 12 oz.. ge.. end top with 151'rum. fi11 Hali1n lining • Custom catering Available • Off the Menu Specials • Lunch and Dinner -aa---.Y• ,...... OPfN UMI 11 PM ....,.,...10,.. --...... . ------.W--270 ~17th St. .._.. .....,. COSTA MESA 112-llM • Deity Plot Duebodtl Fridlly, June 17, 1988 II .. I l l ' " ... / -----.-. OUtOnlbeTown ---------- Graham Parlferret11rns wltlJ subtlerbarlJs Is it ~Die to immenc onelelf in a world filled with inaer tunnOil. disappointment, and frustration and still come out smellina lite • rote? After repeated listeninp of Graham Parker's new "The Mona Lia's Sister" LP, the •nswer is • rcsoundin& yes. bl bis mOlt consisaeat and ~ inc recordina since 191 l's '"The Up Eva•••«, .. the former upt-ridden New W•ver bu forsaken the frenzied style and tounds UIOCiaaed with bis cuty pub-rock days in Britain. Usina primarily silnple and spue acoustical arranaements. '"The Mona U.'s •• .,..,,...a "'a'*' ~.June11 ... Sister" instad often subtler, more melodic musical lexture. Always a razor-tbup JYficist. the socially<OmCioul rocker \un ... lolt bis flair for feedi111 his snarlina vocals with ripe materi81. Known b bit battles apinst beina molded and manipulated by i'eClord company executives. Parker lashes out at At.laatic Reconls in --S.acc:aa .. : 1bey say tbcy want you/For your c:olourfuJ evoc:ati<mflbe wy you tW'D a dichc/lnto a sensation/But all they ever wanted/Was that ume VJ· bration{lbe one that shimmers around success. .. Abo in that bitina spirit, ''Don't Let It Brak You Down" finds bis ambivalent relationship with the press tumillf sour as he sinp: '"Some people arc 10 chafJe of pens/That shouldn't be in cllarae of brooms{Tbey have the nervetoripup a lfta!l 'S ljJe/ln a puapapb or two." But the album offers more than jusi wiuy ~tina. MUsica.Uy, lone· time collaborator Brimley SC:bwan ~ pcnisaall punda to the in- strumelatal attack with his economi- cal auitar licb. Whether reelifta off ~DI leads ( .. Get Started, Start A Fire ) or diaina into some wailina blues P''..,..., the former Rumour makes bis praenoc felt. What keeps Partcer.s dark tbemCs aflmt -and thus enpoesing-is the way he weaves them into a divene potpourri of musical Pia. He sua:eufilllJ...!!_tiJlCS various elenienll of ftlPt (lbC Girl Isn't Re8dv"). rocbbill~ ( .. I Don't K.noW").-bfues rm Juit \'our Man"). folk \Blue ways"), and rock into an album •round u:ncenainity and ~ fWKle. But despite the them.a of self- doubt ancf frustration ra:u:rrina in this 11-sona collection, Parter still believes that the {J'OS'ibility of event- ual love, comm,tment and fulfill- ment make the strup worth endur· Down home BBQ·. Slibildrt ....... rum.~ auic. Tldck .. ,_.,.. _ .. ---.............. ~ ..... ,. ......... ..., ................ . ~ ..................... ~ ... in.a. Brrww,.. ..am c:n11L All M ...... k' I ... --poaWcle ................... , ...... ,... .. -00 to t:OOpa o.1rs11.•,.,.... ar ... llOlar..... • adll l2....-.1aw11•11&1lar0111J•.---. ,...., r•-.~•· , ••. .-....., ") SehudlJ ....... 8 •• .-. i'\ec.u.e it lacb lhe immediate emotional impect of some ofhis more ~uressive earlier works (like "SQucczi~ Out Sciarb"), -rbe Mona Liu s Sister .. does not deliver any knockout punches. But the album's ability to touch some ol lhe raw nerves found fo all of us cannot be ianoRd. Parker bu returned after a tliree-year hiatus with • comebect that's definitely worth applaudif'I. ' • • I f • • . ' . . -. . . -·ta ....... 80 I umucba..--ialDWB•aqmpol coftce and a pitOMti at dae old Renaisancc ~ (DOW llldly de- funct) or a Joeeplt•na (jack cMe9e; ICallions, im}o. etc., Ga I bled) 81 The Coffee Pub. ) .. Wlo v.tiJldn't 'M:lnt to have an endless affair with our soft, fresh-baked, piping hot garlic brecidsticks? That's Why, When you Sit down to eat at The ot1Ve Gorden, we ~a Whole basket~ ful dONn on )QJr table. And ~ ~'re finished with those, another. And another ofter that. So if you love buttery garlic breodsticks-ond all the best of Italy-come to The Olive Gorden for a meal thot'H be on affair to remember. (}if:ta'1 .. fWMHU~ . - AlL=IME~eF-tw¥1s~-~ • 16811 Bead\ 81wl., ~· 8eodt ~. ' -f ~-. II I ' u ! . ...: -.. ~ ' -~ ~ < -~-~ 1·1f. f ,.t ' • !!'· . -: . ~---... --~' ·' I:"' . ~I . ti ~ ... f.~ . i · '.~ ~ ...... ~a. ~· R-f {:, I .~-- P · i r~ J ~I Iii · .. rf I • ! . f !if lllf i !~ c ~ l t•lht.f [(" :_·~ t. t .. f.. ~. -·t ~f)i.· j1·!!. I;. -~; 'ti ..... ~ rr1~·~1.· . I•; ·~.~ IJ[li tfs: '.•!., ~ • ·. 0 ~.~[,t, _IL-IP -~ ~ r~P1 !tt ~ . .-s -~ • • :c Q - §·i ··a ~ ...... ... If -· i .,, c i ., .... -.~ ; I .s. i ·r Eil ,_I -r : i! :1 ii .... · -~~ II ··=N f 1-c_ 1 ·1~i-i "'' -= m· . • .. !I Pi If di ..;1, r . --._ ~ _.,-. . ~,... ~ ~. ~ ,_, -.. -. . ~ -O> .. --11,1·1 ll J!l,;i'! 11 r,auu111~n i~ ~ti.!.tJlf ;11 ni!'se u s~f§~-a. .; . ~ "i~ ii • f _i,.:;, . ..,.s. . I 2.11 < ~ ·.' t r : i"'. . n , . 1 -.. -'i~'( . t· . ~-, .... s1 r . 1;~· I .--·on . -s Ii i' <& ·ts . · I a· .a: -~ . . • ,. r• 1-_.ilgl' __ a 1 a.!· .. ·, ·11 1,iJ'l[rtl 1J .r.-', l ,i!a'i1 .·!l 1.~~ :l,t :~1 11 1 ~ r s. -Ii ·[ Is-1 0~1 u 1 ~=-.., -1 ;·f.l · : •f !J;-111 t &~~:.,i~lu,.lt:,,J~l~l~f ~!1.1,l d~ .. ! ~ ·Htl> ·f: Lil ]-j~ ,~~ . ~·l . -~ lJ -: ~ .'-, ~ .O' .... II • .Jiii. • l -•· a, 1-·~ i _ ... ; 11·1· I 't s 13 ~ ,e~·~ ! . I ti1'''~H1rr1i1!f nr.!i~~'~rr~1~ . , · ·. -:_-~ 1r!.!,I. ·l .. -~~(J_1.f l.1_~!r1 li l'f~~~f.~ll''l.1~C.i ·-. ·S'> _.1:r1J. " ••• u·.,al!f 2.i rc. .. J-1.-~i .. Sr .r. -__ n1·1:n1;i~_ .Q)1_uf ;n~u!1· ,,., n_ . : j• !11r1 .. •filJl~f 1rca 1r1h1~1 w 11 iilUJl · ~l .~,~ :f .,.fi!•tiL~I ~ I-·~1.11.·.r•.l i_'r1'P1ni, u .... J! I·' 8 1'd!:'rl!1.=.-~ . ·. -_ [h:.Jl( a;ft !i If' c:'.f 11'. · .. ~ ' ~ff J1r :lilt~, !ttn,;".-lafrllif · Jl ,,f,11tf1 rl . . I ta .Wal._,~ A ~ :; I j I I . . , I I Plant's youthful band lacks polish and punch BJ BOBDT 11\'NDMAN (eCCOt wO(k. most notably the updated sounds found I ... ...,....... in his lhird solo offerint,. .. Now and z.aa... L.ii-~ It's bard towatcb Robert Plant perform without Such new w.nes IS the bUlad "Ship of Fools. .. • c..1:-~-•-: .. l'.or ... _ ..... _ ... __ .• .._... .. Y of, _... the ai!')' .. Heaven Knows" IDd the rav~ '°Tall ~~....-1' ~ WUDUIQuua ._,._ &AIU Cool Oae .. allow Plant more flexibility IS a vocalist.. • bl bom"--•:--·--.. ... __ : He delivers them in varyina lOOCS and volumes, no S uesy, ~ WU&a,;1.1 -...-lo 1-~ -.d ..... _ ..__ .. __ ... _... Ditcd heavy end of the rock musac.· ~m QllCf ·~ to compete ••w ~ .... vy-........u durina the 1970.. provid.ina a leCUte bridee between blaSts of his former bud. an idealistic hippie and a nihilistic punk era. Tbc Plant's current _lineue. -led by pi1arist Doua LP .. Physical ~ti;" relcwd in J97S, was Boylc_and~.!'hilJobnstoGc-1CrVCSbim Zeppclin'stourdcforoeandoneofthedecadc'smoa· weft in the studio. Now and Z.CO" e&cti:i·vd importan~ records, sbowtasina the ~ and updatcsthe~soundby~naolf~ murcularity of a band at its peat. • ~CDand . lddina a &louY polish &ppropnale As ZtoDeful 's frontman. Ptant virtually defined tunes. . the role of the bard-rOct siiwer and spawned ~ons Unfortunately, the four-piece band appears ofimiutors who continue to swaaer and waihn his uncomfortable in the 1a.rJe venues Plant is per-~ moce than a decade later. fonnin& io and bas yet to loosen up enoush to So when Plant revives a l.cppelin tune, as be did provide Plant with the occasional push and shove a a few times at Monday niabt's concert at the Pacific siQICf needs from a bud. Amphitheatre, the rctponse is invariably To be ~ Boyle's position is not enviable, enthusiastic. Plant, on the VUJC of tumina 40, bavina to rccreale Jimmy Pqie's massive &Waar appeaml fit and cocky u always, musterina with sound whik tryi.Qa simultaneously to csublisb his cue the requisite susto for .. Misty Mountain Hop,.. own idrntity as a capable auitarist. "In the Evenina" and '°Trampled Under Foot." Co~uently, the new tunes lost their polish io It's a treat, ofcounc, for Plant to acknowtedle the translat>oo to live perfonnanoc and the Zeppelin his ZeoDdin 1*tp'ound. But it Ibo it uncfer.. sonas etneflCC1 as the eveniQa's ltrOftlCSt -a standa&fe that be would like some credit cast oo his development Plant oupt not be proud o( --------------=-----------------------------------~ HARBOR CRUISES • S.,..r cru-.. NEWPORT HARBOR EVERY WEEKEND GULLIVER'S CAll FOil USEllVATIONS NOW! .. • .... .. - Out On The Town THE CANNDY Thil hiltoric W91M(roat lud..,.11 in Newport'• Canat'f7 Villlp f•· tw. (reeh local ...rood an4 P.aet- .... bell. cc I t•\JJ pod W • vice, opn for IADda. OiDJW, Sun. Bruncb end l. ....... pape Hubor Cnaila En~t ni(htfy and Sun. aftMnoona. Enjoy the 1owip rood pllery-«apub da• chowder! 3010 L1FayeUe. 175-5777. 8AlLLOn Sail Lo<t Bar at Grill f•turee octeft view di.U. wiOi the empbMia on rNah ...roOd. Oysttt bet. live tnt.enainment nl;htJy in the ber atu. Open for dinner nishlly Crom 5 p.a . Weekend tiour. from 10:30 a.m. Fabu.loul Sunday BNnch. LocatAd at 400 P.C.H. in lAsuna 8-cb. .......... ~ ......... "'-'-..... l.:r::s 011Ulc .... ........ ..... ,,_,.a ...... A .. ,_ • ~ ....... ~ ., ..... Dlllr Piii Dau• Hk' ,,_, .-.. 11. ,.. •• TALE or TB1C WHAL& Ea~ a...., a.It u.to ...... to a plea where you cu diM at yuur uwn leilure. Enjoy the ro- manc:. o( old Newport wiU. a pan· orantic bey view. E.c:i.. your Hlllill with their MnMtional .... food and treditiOnal fimiriU... Breakrut 7 1 m. Mon.· Fri., IAmch ll ·4 Mon. ·+'ri., Dinner 4· 11 Mun,.·S.t. Sat. •nd Sun. Brund\ • ;.4, ()yat.er Bar Fri., Set. 6 Sun. Banquet recaliliel up t.o 500 400 Main St., Bilbo.. 173""4133. p ...... ,,...p • •n• ........, .. ... ......... .ll.7);.IIUS 11••• ......... ... ....... --••u• '-PAI ''== ..... Hit • • ••• tltst4U .......... ....... GRAND DINNU TB&ATEa I•~'" cliainc aod pro· felliuNJ produetioal ate MIN to p1e ... .-ch time you Yill1t. The ~ bulfet oll'en n!IMt ba,_ al bMI, siMed ham with I fruit IMK'e, Georsia ehicbn with ,...ct. and ..... and &ha Mahi * •• .. , • ......,.. • * Mahi ii terv9d in a .--nt ..ce. Trl-culur fdwcrinl ..t ~ii a rMl favorita. l'.oJc1' cliulr ...S a play toni,ht! Crud OU.Mr Tbeetar loallld within UM GtMd Hoe.el in Anaheint at l How:! Wey. CalJ 772-7710. GIN6's ON TH& BILL Almull a COIC.I Meee ~ whtte friends And .. ..-~ Ginu'1 isn't an Italian ~rant. but • restaurant btiftl n1n bY a (lucal) Italian. Even t~h l)wy 1erve many Italian it.efOI. thtf U.O orrer a l&rp variety o( other lllall on their m.nu. Knowt1 for "Huneat foOd and frieodly ..,. vice," G\M'1 fHl""9 • varied menu with emphelil on qUllity and 19MOG1bl. prica. CotktAIJ hour with int«,..li .. not'°"9 .t 4:30 p.m .. and hva eatet1&inmMftt Mun. thru. S.l. fnim 1:30 P.•• Saturday A Su""-1 aw.df•t rrom 9 ..... L«a'4d aU38 I. l'1th Street. Coate M .. Call 860-1760 for rtMtvationt. dinctionl Of what.ever. *