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1988-06-23 - Orange Coast Pilot
t S~te Supreme court declares Senate's negative vote dashed nomlnee:s hopes BJIN>aBOBL&O ............ _ SAN FRANCISCO - A state Supreme Coun dominaled by ~ poenteesofGov. OeorlO ~ian Nied &&nanimoutly tOdar that [)ea; kmejian'• nominatioa or Rep. Du LUnaren 1111ate uasurcr wa killed lrr...,,nWeek honoree Jett a.thard .. pres- ented wtth Lowaman · Trophyforbelngplcked last In the NFL draft./C1 Cout County OK's toll road connecting the Rtverstde Freeway to the Santa Ana Freeway at two locations In Irvine./ Al California Dennis Day,SJ:::; VOlcedlrlah who for deCadee was the foH for CC>mfktlan Jack Benny, has died./ Al Inds when it wu rejected by the state Senate. The rulina came only nine days after oraJ a~umenll in the most intensely poliucalcuetocome before the coun since the current con- lefVative ~ty took office 1111 year. Five of the seven justices att Largest hotelplez for BB advaJJces BJ aoBDT BAllm .............. The S34S million Waterfront hotd And oondominiuQl project -the larJest residentiaf and commercial project ever to hit Huntinst<>U Beach -WU apP!Ovcd. witb re9CT'Vations, by the city's Plannina Commillioo on Wednesday. Commissioncn approved a I 3- sto~3 million Hilton Hotel aJona the h&oot at Huntinaton Street and PacifJC Cout ffiabway. In the fint pbae of the 44 9Cre devdol>ment, final approvil ap- parently hinp on an qreemeot to pay relocation costs for 400 tenanu livmaat the Driftwood Mobile Home ~ located on the site. City Hall insiden say officials may be CIOllC to qreeina to pey up to $13 million to move the people and put in a new short aolf course at the Ocean View Mobile Home Estates, where most of the tenants will be relocated. The aolf course will make up for the one at the Driftwood park. In addition to the Hilton, the Robert L Mayer Corp. of Newport Beach plans to construct tluee othtt hotels. 890 coDdominiwnt, a public sports center arid a 99 ,000.square- foot commercial center on the city- owned PfOPCfty. • The commission also approved, in (Pl••e ... 1' ATSlll'ltONT /A2) 2~ CENTS pOintment rejec Deukmejian appointees.. The unsiped opinion said ~ menu by Lunaren and DeukmejlU that a nominee to a vacant llalCWi* Poll can take office unless rejec= bOtb houses wu based on a .. di interpretation" of the law and ""would ltriously degrade the power and dipity of one house of the 14i• lat.-re." . The court said state law allows eithtt house of the l.q;islature to veto a tovemor's nomination to a lllte- Mde otrace. Lunaren'1 nomioatioll Wll approved by the stale A.IKmbly but dehsed by the Senate. . Oblervi~ that under Lu..,a'• aa~tJo~. a voce by one hou. ao re,,ect a nomu~ "-oufd be rendend a nullity," the eourt said. 1lle leais&ativc power rests in both bouln; .. When. as here, one hou.tC voees '° disapprove a nominee, the nomi· nation is. ~jected, just u in other mattets requirina lqjslative action ... the decision said. 1k ruliae means Deukmejiu mUll submit another nominee for uasarer to the Democratic-()OD .. trOlled Lesillature. ~. WbO is tttvina his final 1mD ia CC>ftll'eSI. laid in a statement from his Wathinaton oft"tee: .. , believe I bad a fair opportunity IO ptetmt my case lo the Supreme CCNlt and I fully respect thrir decitioft. I intend to serve out the mnai~ of my tmn ~-th vip aDd c:ommrtment and lhenJOID my family in &he SKnweato area. A•1 • I bave no firm .,._, for *9 intend to remain involwd ill life and hope 10 coeliam .. people of my ba.e _..- James Puri "a, a ...,.. tlr Lunaren. uid lie w f 11 ·s • with the NIU. bua addad, 4-• rest any 1"8 ..._. ._ 6il m.t ii not independeat. .. J<*J>b R~ • ...,_. b .... Senate Drmocratic ......, .-. die (Piro• ... LU.am/_, Council OKs scaled-doWn . . Home Ranch Mesa foes consider a new referendum to stop office tower BJ PAUL AaClllPLEY _. JONATllAN VOLD.£ ........... Sc:aled-bKk plans .for the ooit- troversial Home Ranch ~ pined City •. CouDcil approval Ill • special meet.tna Wednesday, a move that could fon:c cfuipuntled Costa Mesa rcsidcnu to launch a 1CCOnd referendum drive. • By a 4-1 vote, with Councilman Dave Wbcelcr d:is.1Cntint. the council approved 1 aeneraJ plan amendment reducina the project by about 30 percent. By the same vot.e. the council also rejected bolchna a special election on the citizens' mcmwium on Home Ranch. I nslead, the council schedule the vote durina the November P · era1 elections. But tbc couns may have to decide whether the referendum is still Valid iD li<t o(thC scaled~ . About 2S speakers who ~ the council durina the l'h hour· meet.inc were evenly divided on the ~~Dot &plnst free cnterprix.,. -.id Ruth RmliQllOn. wbo liva near the envisioned development. .. How- ever, at times ~·s a need for ratraints. "I fed the rcsidcnu of north a.a Mesa are beina uated in 1 IOIDt'What cavalier manner ... Resideat Jobn Humphrey ques- tioned the leplity of cba.Qsina the project in an apparent bid to avoid a reftreodum vote. "Let the people talk about what they want in the c:i~ ~" be Jaicl t , ... ~ Resident Stephen GoldbcrJer ~the tatuoed project, but aid the developer didn't ID &r enoup .. It still repnxnts an intnlltion of urba.naation on raidential nap. bomoods. .. Goldbersr ... He also criucm:cI the project as unbalanced, with too mucb office spece md not enouab commercial. Initially submitted to the city more than two years 1&<>. the project included a 32~ skyxraper. ~ velopet' CJ. Seeerstrom A Som then reduced. the plan to include 12" and 20-$l.Of)' towers., a 400-room bOCld. a health club, child care center and retail sc-:e. But tboee initial cuts ~ not enoqab to pUa1e lbe Com Mela ReMeou fcW llCIPOft$ible ~ a ...cit.Uns sroup llaat Aaed IO Mp lbc project oa the srounds the city let improper density limits for the de- (M 11 rr _ __.., A2). Advice and Games Bulletin Board Bualneu Claasifled Comics 83 81 A7-8 OMS 84 Silddleback Valleycityhood plan OK'd Death notic:ea Entertainment Oplnlqn ~= Pubtlc Noticee C8 85 A8 88 A3 C7-8 BJ BOB VAN EBEN ............. Oranae County's propoted 29th city won approval Wednesday follow· in& four hours of verbal wranalin& before more than 300 partisan sup- .120 vintage cars ~survive the first =day of Great Race porters. Memben of the Local A&cocy Fonnation Commission approved the proposed city of Saddlcback Valley, while dealing a blow to the hopes ofl..a&una Hills residents. But members of the lquoa Hills citybood committee said they wou.ld work hard to sink the proposed valleywide incorporation and renew their quest for a separate city. -rhey're pittina a couple of com- munities apinst each other unnecess.- arily. -said Marilyn Funari, a propo- 'owaer can't buck eviction ,. ncnt of separate citybood for Laauna Hills. ... think they'~ beaded For 1 very heated November dec:tion ... R. Craia Soon. chairman of Citizens to Save Lapna Hills, said the battJe will bqin much sooner than November. If oppooeulS can ptber sipatures from more than SO pm:cnt of rep. tered voters io the propoled city. they can quash lbe proposal at the man- datory protest ~ befote the County BoardofSupcsvilC>n. (Pleae-Cit IMICIO/A2) Animal control much more than cha~ing strays .. .... *'9kws .... .. " ...., IPOlted it -~~~·"= ~-:..~~--................ " Wiit • WD ol aix police officen and ............ ~ otRcen. ~di pd die ;iawl of. .. Wiiiy a.lof" .. Wi&bdllca 119eQd ,.w I.be an_., in&o •van. Wally-who actmlly turned out &o be caimu. a clisiut cousin of the allilatcr -now lives at the Loi AnFles 2oo, Pteano . laid. Bua tbat od~ would be just a co1ueader fof the rank of mOll uDusual in the memories of Irvine's animal controt Oftic:ers. • In July 1983, an elephant killed a trainer at Uon Country Saflri Ud fled -oe&o the San ~ Freeway. Animal CoDttol oflica 1, aided by Police ud I bd~ herded the hu,e. beast down an Oihmp into a vacant field arid kept it there until its trainer could retrieve it. • Several yean .ao. 1 TurtJe Rock preschool Sol a IC)at to use as its mascot. The.,., arew. however. and tqin knockioa cbildren to the pound, to munch on their shirts. The pt now lives in a spetjaJ pen at the shelter. •In Auaust 1984. more than 118 cats, 17 dogs, seven rabbits and sevetal birds were found in a small motorhome and trailer driven by an Indiana woman. She was ultimately convicted of cruelty to animals, fined and placed on one year probetion. But even aoina to court isn't all that unusual for the animal control of- ficers. They are sdteduled to testify later I.his month when three juveniles face c.haraes ofbeatinga duck to death atHeritqe Patk. A bi&h sc1¥>ol diploma is all that is offic:iafly required for the job, but hpno said each of his officen graduated from a Humane Society Academy in San Dieao. Although they do not carry we&{>C?DI, each is qualified to do so, he said. .. We've all taken several assoned law enforcement clasxs." Pa&ano said. .. Animal control offi()Cf'S have similar powers to police offic:en.. .. Anim.AJ control officen respond with police officers when an animal is involved in an auto accident, or when narcotics officen must search a home where there is a doa. He said on-duty Irvine Antmal Services offiCCTS can make &rTeSU and ...................... Carl pe·::;~t8DdeDt of A••••I lanluW la~ .,. a Im le tbe Ko. 1 qullflcWtloa f• aa a•l•al coatrol oftloer to4ay. conduct searches. They commonly issue citations to neaJieent pet own- has not been infected with rabies m ers. Violations of the city's leash· control laws arc the most common, but Papno said a law enforcement bacqrouod is a ctufial element to the .ob. J .. You're TtOrkina with people and often settlina disputes between them, so law enforcement is imponant,., Pagano said ... But at the top of the list is a strona love for animals. "It's ertjoyabk to capture an animal and return it to its proper owner. At the same time, it's en- joyable to take an animal away fTom an owner who isn't carina for at." Unfonunately. w too many pet owners are irresponsible, be said. For example, only about half of lrvine'sd<>sowners -about 7,000- have reaistered their pet, despite state llw rcquirina fClisuation. Others let their peU run free. .. I've been around aiuen a Jong time, .. Papno said ... But I set tired of people and their excuses of whr th~y'rc not t.akin& ca.re of their pets.• Keepina stray pets off the street is important because I.he top mission of Animal Services is to prevent an outbreak of rabies. All.hough a human Ora• Count)' since I 9S6, a t.t canyana the ditCUe wu found in Irvine u receatJy 11 thii year. • ''A man saw a t.t fla= around on his driveway. He cov it with a laundry t.sket and called us,·· Papno said. ..Bec:ause it was ol>- viousJy sick, we tested it and found it bad rabies. It could have easily infected a doa or a cat, and that could have been passed on to a human ... Animal Services officen do not necessarily want tp issuecitations for buki_na doas or leash-law violations. be u.id, but to educate ownen about bow to tile care of their petS. ' lbat becomes more and more imP<?rtant IS Irvine's rapid Jrowth contmues. "'This city was rural not too Iona ago ... when I started here I 0 years ago, there were only 29,000 people.·· Pagano said. '"It used to be all farmland, that's why there is so much wildlife around here. ··ne fruit used to fall from the trees, and that would attract all sons of .aquirrels, rabbits aml ·opossum, aod that would attract larger Jridi- tors -coyotes and bobcaU. "Now there's more people, so there's more contact with the an~als. That's when they call us. .. • U.S. Tempa. ..... .. . .. a ... ,. 11 -" t1 • ... . , . •• ., ,. • n t1 .. " n ... t1 • .. 7t .. 11 .. . , .. . .. . n a •• .... 10 • ., . .. . • n . ,. • 11 •• tf ,11 •• -" -.,, ., " . ., • n •• .. . •• • n " " Calif. Tem1>9 •. .. 11 :: ,, " . ,. 100 J't 111 .. • 11 . .. n 11 • 11 •• =~ '°' n • 10 .. .. ,. .. •• .... '' n •• ,,. n t1 11 '°' n :; • w .. '*"' ...._ • • a.M .. ..... .. " .... .. ,.... . .,. lMMlllle ,. .. o..i ,. • P99--... ........ .. 11 ::·,,~ c.r :: l: ... _... .. 11 ...._ , ... :::~1.. H : ....... . . &en~ Ollllpe • 11 ..... . ,, ...,_, .................... ..... ........ tof .. ........ ., .. ..... . ., .... .. ., --,,. J't c--. .... LlnDlll9r •• L-.Sllldl 1t ., L..A~ .... ........ '" .. ............ .. ... AM 1' • ........ 11 M ... en.a .... .......... n• ......... • 11 TIMeValllJ M It T ""8llCl9 11 It ....... "" .,_..~ •a Extended ,. .... _ ............ ...... .., .... _ .............. . ..................... ...... 10 • .,. ............ . ..'--.... .. Tl dee . ... u ... u u ... _ ............ Mlllr .. . .--..--........... ... ._,.._M1;1Sp.llll.-Ml!ir• ,.., ............. ,:1'p.lll . . WATERFRONT HOTEL PROJECT OK'D ••• Prom Al concept, Mayer's plans to construct the other hotels and facilities. Commissioner Tom Uvenaood, who voted in favor of Waterfront but complained about the density of the condominiums, said the total de- velopment would be equal to puttirw the Westin South Coast Plaza hotel, the Irvine Hilton, the Emt.ssy Suites at John Wayne Airpon and Newport Center's Four Seasons hotel onto the Waterfront site. Livei\JQod voted with the stipu- .. lation he would write a minority repon to the City Council concemina the condominiums. which would be built behind the hotels. He said he W"ou.ld like to see the condominium project scaled down from JS to 2S uniu per ac;re. Mayer SI.id Wednetday that be hopes to beain conJtruction this fall and plans to finish the Hilton Hotel byMay 1990. About 20 speakers endorsed the project, usina terms like "fantastic," "unique" and "Jona-overdue." ; Phyllis Caruthers, a Jonttime reD; den ti said she "is tired" ·of oeod8 comina to Huntinaton Beech .net leavina only their litter. · • . . "I want them to brina their filthy lucre and spend it in H untioatQO Beach, .. she said. · Mayer officials estimated the pro! jccts would briDJ $200 million in net revenue to I.he city durina the next 2j years. CITYHOOD OK'D FOR SADDLEBACK .•• VINTAGE RACERS SURVIVE FIRST DAY ••• Prom Al "We're convinced there is so much opposition out there that we wall be able to set enough signatures eas11y within the 60-day period, .. said Scott. Oyde Childress, chairman of the Citizens Cityhood Committee for the Saddleback Valley disapeed. "That will never happen," he said. He called on Laguna Hills separ· atists to set aside their opposition now that the commission has deaded an favor of the larJer city. .. I believe that the opposition 1s smcerc," be said. "But I believe their opposition is not to citybood but to the form thatcityhood takes. I sugest that they join with us in plannina the future of the valley." Members of the commiss1on called Wednesday's decision one of the their most difficult, because advocates on both sides of the issue were so adamant 1n promottng their causes. Commission staff memben n:c- ommended a single city. citinJ the advantqes of a single mun1c1pal 1overnment in addressing problems of regional concern. Scott challenaed the staff's reason· ing. saying that the rqjooal problems cited, such as air quality, arc not within the purview of city govern- ment but are handled by larger regional authorit.ies. Comm1ssaoners SJded with staff members. however, sayina I.hat the people of the Saddlebeck Valley should decade. .. Dunnathisdebate, we would hear one speaker who said he represented the majority, followed by another speaker who said. 'I represent I.he other majority that feels the other way,"' said Commissioner Gaddi Vasquez. a county supervisor. "In the end, I believe it serves the interests of the people to let the majority decide. If. in fact. the voters HOME RANCH ••• From Al velopmcnt. Supcnor Court Judse Tully S. Seymour ultimately pve the go- ahead to the project, tiut not before residents pthcred enou&h sianaturcs to force a referendum vote on Home Ranch. If the referendum went against the project. 1t could not 10 forward for 12 months. But an an apparent move to avoid the referendum. Seaerstrom sub- mitted a third set of plans to the city that reduce the prOJect by rouahly one-third. Gone are the health club. I 00 rooms of the hotel and more than 10.000 fttt of retail space, said Malcom Ross. Sqerstrom•s dtrCC'tor of plann1na and desian. ..We've looked very hard at the economics of the project involved and we have cut the project as much as we can," Ross said when unveilina the new plans two weeks ago. The new plans were approved by the Plannina Commission in a special meetin1 Monday. They leave Home Ranch. a 93-acrc parcel bounded by Harbor Boulevard, Fairview Road and the San Die'o Freeway, with a density of 2 million square feet per acre. a reduction of I. I million square feet. Ross said. The child care center was not reduced. he added reject the proposal in November, we wall be back 'here in December with, perhaps, a different protx>sat." The proposed city includes the communities of lake Forest. lquna Hills, El Toro, Ponola Hills and A~n Hills. It does not include Leasure World, whose residents op- posed inclusion. The next step in the cityhood process 1s the protest hearing, for which a date has not yet been set. Once official nottc:e of the heanna is published, opponents of the cityhood proposal will have 60 days in which to gather protest sianatures. Wld•ky protected LONDON (AP) -Parliament has passed a law that will ensure the antcarity of spirits labeled "Scotch" by mak1n1 the appellation a protected trademark. Under the law, no whtsky can be called Scotch unless it conforms to standards set by the Scotch Whisky Association. From Al Ecelbarser of Tucson. Their l 936 Fountain Valley caught fire when h Packard Coupe finished just 12 apparently overheated. seconds off the perfect coune time. Withers and her naviptor, Bruce For other Ora nae Coast racers. the Gezon of Pittsbw)b. were not i!\iured day held mixed blessings. but lost si&nificant time. They did not .. Overall, everytbina we"t fine." arrive in San Luis Obispo until late said. Bill Halliday of Newport Beach, Wednesday niaht. wh6 drove a 1919 c:bevrolet •90 Wilhen' husband, Newt, who is Racer. ··we had some problems drivina a 193'4 Packard Roadster, keepina up s~ on some of the bi& said his wife's car will problbly hills. so we JUSt went IS fast u we continue the race. RClldent Jake Rennipl aareed. .. You throw a party in t6is town, and everybody comes," be said. The racers left on the ICCOnd 1eJ ol the journey at 6 this mom.1.._ Today's 407-milc trek was to ta• racers throu&h Santa Cruz and SU Francisco before arrivina for an overniaht stop in Sacramento. could and made up the time coming "Thetc kinds of problems happen down." in this race. We bad a lot of them LUNGREN "She ran pretty well, es~ially in today1 thouah" said Withers, who -Al • • • that heat. I think we're all nght," said expcnenceda flat tirealonathe route. .. •vau Cal Woolsey of Costa Mesa, who "ltwasunusuallyhot,andlthinkthat ruUna showed two lhinp: "that we drove a 1929 Ford Speedster. obviously had IOme effect." were riaht on the law, and that you tel The first lea too~ an averqc of lnfonnation on Mn. Witben' car a fair hCarina in t.tas coun... • ,, nearly seven houn to complete. The was not available this momina. .. It certainly ihves the lie to lhoae unusually lona travelina time was due If the racers were tired and worn at .. to both speed and timina constraints, ~ ~nd ofWed~y'sj~f'1:'CY· their :n~• w~u~ct safn ~~the c:::. ': and the choice of route, which took spants were certaJnly lifted by the -... theraccnoverbackroadsthrouahthe lively crowd of nearly lOOOO that aovemor," Remcho to rcponen; Moiave Dcsen, put the famous J·ammed the streets of $;n Luis He said the messqe to the aovemoc " ks Sa was "to use some more care and Mormon Roe and across the n Obispo to areet them. consultation with both houses before Andreas Fault. ..They ~ just greaL This really However, the windina. scenic route makes it worth it," said Halliday. be selects a nominee." thro~ some of Southern Cali-Tbe arrival of the racers was the Lunpens. 41, a conservative RC: fornia s most picturesque desert took event of the week in I.his sleepy publican trom Lona Beach, wai its toll on many vehicles. Several can seaside bura. One radio announcer named by the Republican 90vemor to experienced overbeatina, while even quipped, "There are so many fill the vacancy created by the dcatb othen had flat tires in temperatures people on handt rm ~lied a last Auaust of Democratic Treasurer that soared to 11• dqrees outside presidential candidate hun t shbwn Jesse Unruh. HORSE Bakersfield. up.. The VllCl!'CY pve Republicans a • • • One of the most serious problems San Luis resident Ronnie French chance to flll their only statewide Prom A 1 occurred before the race's tint stop in put the turnout into perspective, oft"rce below the aovcmor>1 leveJ ud city-owned J>erk land at Golden West Lancaster. however. launch a new fiaure on the state Street and Ellis A venue. A 19 l 2 Oldsmobile Autocrat ""You should see I.he crowd for our political teene, with the Mt van• of ••Somethina tragic will happen." Speedster driven by Ginni Withen of Thursday niabt barbecue,'' she~ incumbency in the l 990 election. M~ersa~"Theman™ill~aj~~i~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ a violent temper." 11 Shue and other 00.rders com- plained to city officials earlier this year that Millipn allqedly raised fees illeplly and without city per; mission. But city offiaa said an aooit of the business WU satisfactory and prices weren't rolled hick. .9b:t-/Wb Ju-sb tk best:-~~ to-p/U- it;~ tk best:-~ t&. • •• Correction Wednesday's Lotto picks In the June 19 issue of the Daily Pilot, at was incorrectly reported that the Newpon Beach City Counal had voted at ns June I 3 meetina to rename Marinen Patk in honor of A. Vincent "Vin" Jorsen.en.a Iona-time community leader who died last month.. The council voted to defer the issue to its June 27 rnee11J\I. The Daily Pilot rqrets the error. ORANGE ~ .... COAST __ , rm91 MAIN Off1C• 1lO WM IMf SI. Costa..._ CA ... ._. .. lea tMO C.. .._. CA taz6 ., 'he Altodate4 Preis ff~ att the winnina numbers picked Wednesday nipt .for Lbe California Lottery's ~ly .. Lotto 6-49" game: •7, 33, 6, 37, 43, 19 and the bonus number, 22. Players who comctJy Jll?llCd Ill.I six numbers will share a_~ pocil of S 13.8 million, lottery ofticialt llid. All those who picked five numben plus the bonus number will divide amona themselves a prize pool ofSl.8 riilllion; five of six will ~ $962,000; four of six will share $175,000. Three ohix is wOrth SS per winner. Total sales for Wedlaeldly nipt'1 drawint were S 17 .S millioL ~ w S678 ~ ' tOltinlli .. 1 ,,,, Ju.tcaU 642-6086 J • Les wns add spice to presidential race , How maay al YI ....... '° "'°"' up IO be ~t?ltll'lide lllf .. _ _..._ ...... tbe ~ periOd -.... pro batblball pla)er/u&ronaut .... Jobn ~ ftl praidlaL He had tbi1 beautiful wifl Who took Amlrica Oii a tour throuab the White Houte. It loOtlld Wie a.,.,~ to sUY hide and 1eek. He wa ~ ucf dynalilic, and he Played IOftW Oii lbe 'MUii Home ...... ~ president looked like a eUU job. MOit of uspve upllW~ IOlneWberealona the way. We IOI& inlenlt. fouod new diam• to pursue, ralized we dida't have a chancle. ( N.:!ki bow often do we look at tbe occupen be it Ro ReipD or any of bis pndeceaors, and think to ourselves, ... could nan tbe country it least as aood as lie is, probe~ betteT ... There's always a 1'-nctful of people who decide to do somethina about it and idd their names to the list of candidates. I'm not Wkins about the Oeorte Bushes and Michael Dukaki1e1 here. I mean the Iona ---------------------shots.The Pat Paubens of the world. We need PAUL these can- didates to put •--·-... the thina into lllAl'Ltl perspective. I Paulsen, the perennial Dl'Clidtnlial contender, first became a candidate in l 968:He has proposed such lcintillatina solutions as wiJtn.iQI the war on poverty by ••sbootina .00 bellln a week" and takiDJ ICX ed~tion out of the tcbools and puttina it t.ck in the au'tter. • But there are plenty ofleuer-knowns who aJso can enliven the traditionally duU presidential race. Back in 19761 was workina at a small weekly io North Oranp County when a local, midd)e..qed lady anDOuDced her candidacy for president. She 'was lively and earnest and I did a story on her. One oftbote human interest-type features. Problem w1s, she was dead 1erious. She started callina and comma by rqularly, somehoV( con- vinced this homey commuruty newspaper was aoina to launch her into the national spotli&ht and the White House. It turned out she was on a mission. It turned out God was on her side. It turned out she was missing a screw. This year, a smtidential contender hails from 1Newport Beach. John Greene Denison is runnina a lS cents.-a- day campai&n as the Republican national wrile-in candidate. Obviously a k.id at bean, Oenison•s campaian literature is a baseball card with his face super- imposed on that of some ~or leaaue (>layer. In a press release he reveals bis ninth inn1na victory stratqy." ----.... Cla of' .,. ' ... 21 J:· .. ·· :::..1•.,..; 119111 ll ... ... ., ............ . ., ... •"-7.••n::•*• ,., .. ms.. at fou FM? r•t ....... TtflJ.,_MTTllMd -...111 .... a.. ·•••••• ·:s·--11c•oo1 .... •' r'd"\ftth• ... ~ ..... 1:~..... la......... ,.: .... Tiie MWlll ·al set of Ull Altel'Datlft ~ ......... D1NCI tllelr'ladtfthej .......... .. tlMy ................... of tlHrlr cllplcm••· Happy . ll... aad alldlq lilortulloUda at llna Ceater al UCI ~Jed tile ead of fou ~ ...,.._atUDlftnltf ~klloolUdllle~Of ~ dial will bi ,... mea at clMil ieanloaa hi ftn, 10or2&~. . Oradutloail today la Coeta llna, l'f:rt Beacb and Lanna B• an 1eWaled u follcnn: C.W de1 llar ~ 8claool, S p.a., aampu ~ Rewport 11ArtM1r ·mo aca.oo1. s ~----· DaftdeoDl'leY;CoMa .... IBP Sclaool, I p.a., PllcUlc Aliapbltlleater; a.nda -- 8cll0ol, 7:30 ·~· Da.tdlila ftel4 u4 ~ Beacla BIO 8cllool, 7sSO p.a., lnbae llowC Deniton, 40, has forecast he will win by attracting the 90 million rqistered voters who stayed away from the polls m 1984. He figures Reapn/Busb mana&ed only S7 million votes and MoDdale/Fenaro prnered just lS million, "both outdistanced by the 90 million non-voters. .. He would rename the Soviet Union "New West !Alaska Territory." apparently as part of his plan to win the cold war. He would help _p~ll Mexico out of its economic malaise by buying u.ja California and renamina it New Arizona. Supervisors OK -toll road over Irvine ~s objections T1kina aim at has party's nominee .. Denison said, ... want to ensure that our Republican Party wins the White House •in in 1988, and that our Republican Party repins a healthy ~ority in the U.S. Senate, neither of which is a &ikelibood With Bush." Denison suaested Bush wean very abort coattails. too. He recalled an Orange Coast campaip stop by the vice president two yean ago (or U.S. Senate candidate E.d Zschau. After Bush spoke to several hundred supporters at a banquet in an Irvine hotel, he sneaked out and raced defwn to Mi Casa. a Newport Beach Mexican restaurant. "Good cbow,•• Denison said of the restaurant, ••but I myself would shell out the $4.9S to feed Oeorae (at the banquet) instead of losina to Cranston." • • • You need not be a candidate to stand out from the crowd, either. A arandmother in Cedar Rapids. Iowa, liked what Dukakis was sayina about ·education and, being concerned for her pand- childrcn, formed "Grandmas for Duklkis." Not to be outdone, some Iowa third~ers launched their own aroup, '•Kids for Duklkis. •• No doubt the Massach"9Ctts aovemor is stayina awake niabts wonderina bow to convert 8-yar~lds· enthusiasm into votes. Maybe he should teU them about John Denison. They could form a Little Lequeteam. BJ BOB VAN EYUN °' ........... A toll road beginni.DJ at the Riverside Freeway near Gypsum Canyon and joanina the Santa Ana Freeway at two locations in Irvine won approval from the county supervisors Wednesday. The IS-mile Eastern Transportation Corridor is one of three tollways proposed for Orange County and construction is expected to start in the mid-l 990s, accordina to transportation officials. Under the proposed alianment, the corridor will divide at Santia,o Canyon Road. The two southern scsment.s will jom with the Santa Ana Freeway near Jambon:e Road and apin iat the Lquna Freeway. The decision puts the board's stamp of approval on a preliminary environmental= and designates the two- pronged route ~ the ••prcfi .. alignment for the toll road. Next spring. the county Transportation Comdor A&encies wiU present a final environmental impact report containin1 details such as exactly where and how the tollway Will link up with the Santa Ana Freeway. Also still to be determined is the tollway's exact route through Ptters Canyon. northeast of Cowan Hei&bts near Tustin. Another lingerina detail is whether the western lea of the toll road will be six or eiabt lanes. The proposed plait drew criticism from an Irvine resident who said she represented 14 homeowncn' associations in the nortb let'lion of the city. ••••••••••••••••r-' Chris Elliott. of the North Irvine Villages Associ.a- !PoliCe raid marijuana farm ~in Mesa; CO}lple &rrested . ~Elaborate operation yields 800 P-lants ~protected by tutgatlon and ventilation tion. said residents want the number of lanes in tbc eastern lea of the toll road left QPCn to disaission, but board members refused to add her request to their resolution. ··we're very irritated," she said. .. AU we wae asking was that the design of both sqments be left open to discussion. North lrvinealreadyhutwofreewa~we feel that an expressway, rather than another y, is what we need.' But Susan Manec, a spokeswoman for the Transpor- tation Corridor Aaencies. said there would still room for discussion until the final environmental study was com~tcd. Nothioa is set in concrete yet. .. she said. .. But if people object to the alignment or design, they're goina to have to come up with documentation. Just sayina 'we dop't like it' is not aoin& to be enouah." A biologist foe tbC State Department of Fish and Game also criticized the propoled aliplmeot. .. The environmental im~ -repon is inadequate from the standpoint of biolOIJcal resources. .. said Esther Burkett, the department's biologist for Orange County. Burkett said the department was concerned about the possibility that the proposed toll road miaht disrupt wildlife mipations and destroy wetlands and oak woodlands. But Kari Riaoni, of tbe county Environmental Management A.aency. said the proposed route met with county and state standards. The other two toU roads arc the Foothill Transpor- tatiod Conidor and the San Jo.quin Hills Transponation .---e e e ·~ Conidor. - -1 -.. _ . ._ ................. ............. Qradj bu a1n:ady beplD on . of t.be SID Joaquin H~ Corrid~ which ~ from tbe Corona del Mar Freeway to the San Dieac> Fftcway IOUlh of San Juan Ca~o. The foothill Corridor, linkina the Eastern Corridor with the San Diego Freeway near San Clemente, is still iD the pl.aonina phase. The three comdors are expected to cost about SJ billion to construct. lllltiGD IOMcO..rd n= II •C.... .......................... ant~ lftlrM left hil "-: Oae IOUftle told tM Ti- received ·"lllilerina fees" company. The two-)'C91'-old inveatiption focuses on aJlepliona t.bat private consultants. ,.....y of them former Pentaeon employees, pejd bribes to obtain ~ Deputmetlt teeretl about upcomina conuaas; Gaines made an appointment to hire a Washinston.area ~ law- 1yer, but then abruptly c::anceled the meetiJ!4 aft.er ,ettiDI a call from I federal tnves~whoto&d bim that "you have untal 9 a.m. tomorrow to 1decide whOle side you're on." K:cord· 1ina to one source. Gaines decided sevei"al dlya aao to cooperate, said the sources. While Gaines is wkina with ecuton, another Penlq\On o&'cl!i whose office was searched. Victor Cohen, is nqotiatina with the gov- ernment on whether to do the ume, said the sources, apeakina on con- dition ofanonymity. After a mcetina with the chief Bodi a... ud C.obeD bad key ~=a:.:=:-?~-=~·= ~~~':.,.::: ' tam Air fofte ,.,...,, ia c:harF of bUyiac a.aical w=nr~ coauoJ, communicaliw ad computer sya.- tems. Boda Inell MW been ftlliliped since the inva1iptiba became pub- lic. . ' While Hudlc>a wa cbCribiaa the case to ~ laden OD WeC:tnesda~Defew ~ retary Casper w~ .., de- feodina his PenlllOn -nr,t style and warn.ins apinst pu . md conarcssional ovenactiOD to the disclosures. North trlEil pushed for start Jn fall WA.VllNOTON (AP) -The jucfee in tbe Iran.co.in coupin_cy cate ii llttina ~~urea fiol' deali111 witb clm;;men11 in an 1ppam1t effort to brina find White Hou.It aide Oliver L Nonh to trial by fall. U.S. District Jud8e Gerhard >+.. Gesell ordered Nonli &o identify by July 11 which teeret eovernment documents the retired Marine lieutenant colonel wuu toditclole in coun to rebut chlrles tbat be illr&ally diverted Iranian umHale profits to the Nicarapan rebels. In a rulina Wcdnaday, Geiell said that both the public and proeecuton would be barred from 1 July 14 hearina to determine if any of the documents arc relevant to the case qainst North. The j udF also re~ed a defense motion to declare the Oallified lnfonnation Procedures Act un- constitutional as it applied to the case of North, former national ICCUrity adviser John M. Poindexter and arms dealers Alben Hakim and Richard V. Seoord. a,ftltM1 I SA,,_ ,. l()lftJN-n.na-.atodar it is lo~••'°C''n• lud. in ... ~~•rdlwtt110nolNewlniau.foi1~ .WGov. Miclllll ldlil DOC a ..... olthe llf'Obe, Dubkl11iid bil ~ • llld.... ... •It coulcr ,....,., be" abo'8t tbe prilOD COD110Y1f11. ~ "' nra .... llldolloeJaCIOladucdlilan inqmry to -.Wa ....... lderal ........... .._ violatld "91fdlns tbe ~tofa atate ~-New ......., ...._, ud Ott tbi proicuremeal of land b' lbat Drilolt." FBI , ~ Ka"'1 ~ laid iD I StlletneDt illued Ul 'Wlllijnaton, : .OOOV. Mic:ttlll Dulr.ikil it not dMi subject ohn inva~" tbe met The , f'BI la ..._ llld eutier indicated a preliminary inquirY into the coaarover8al ...-litinl was under way. Od"-..-mn ~011 'overw1Je1mlD1' WASHJNOTON -ne pernment predicted today t.bat the ecooomy : will pow at a-..~ 3.5 pen:ent rate in 1911 and tbat inflation " will bold .-cty at 4.3 percent, with tbe odds ovenrmelmiQ&lllim& a recetlioo. • A llilbt inc:reue lo inlerell rate1.t abouta balf perceat, was focecast fortbe~. • Jn re~ cmtier atimMa,_ lllryl ~nkel. Cbainnan of the Council of Economic Advilen., aid. ""Our rosy forecast wasn't rosy eQOUlb. '°The ' economy is dc;Hna betier than even we exp«ted." The ldminisuation oriliullY Md .,redicted the economy would arow by 2. 9 ~l this ta"· Sprinkil said the dtouabt could have .. a lipificaDt efreCt on fbod pric:a unleu there is rain soon. However, be laid the farm oommunity ,enaaca only about two percent of the Grwa National Product. the bro9dat 11uee of economic health. TOzlc Cloud roai. Kentucky re11lde11t8 CROFTON, Ky. -Bumina phospborua from a derailed tanker spread a , toxic doud ICr'Oll five Kentucky oounties. drivina thousands of residents from their homes before it bep.n dillipetina today. The phosphorus bunt into flames in 99-deaaee heat late Wednetday when 3-t can of a CSX Tranaponation ' Corp. train derailed and the chemical leaked from one car. The file burned itself out shortly after dawn today ... It's very, very much dissipeti~" state • police Trooper Bryan Pitney Slid todaf. "It'• not u dense as it wu. It 1 not u uritable. .. The Federal Aviation Adm1ni1tration lifted a restriction iml)Oled overniaht on 111 air travel at or below 2,000 feet in the area. State of1icial1 temporarily closed some rolda. The only remainina fire thia momina was a minor brush fire nearby, officials uid. · TIJJrd fbm nJan• A1DB vaccine te11ta BJ ne A.111 date.I Pren bu become very, very lerioua u our crops beain to Dos to the northwestern Ohio town, said be wun't r· Drought tightens grip on parched Midwest deteriorate," said Iowa's teeretary of ~lure, swt if I.be chief cberved tbe credit for the sboft'm. EMERYVILLE. Calif. -A third U.S. oompany uya it will tqin human Sl.r.N ~verdiedjeidaroundtbe·~~Yea"Missito ~ Dale Cochran ... Jn the next lOdlya, if we don't.Ft "All .. lr~~t ~to knn· ow th<!IC !~~~" ~ ~ testtnath. c ~type fl~ vCorp~~~~ people bnot in~ .. ....... Al un; ~ ~ rain we oould lose SO peroent of our com crop. llJJUW lS you 1p a eotn &DU sometunes tt with tbe-7 vtrus. '-nuun . Lid 'Nedn 't wat tests OD wnana ... w hundreds or t.cked-up ~ While triple-diait A series off.erce tbundenaonns ripped ICFOSS coma ~beads." ltan in Switzerland in the initial Step in clinical studies that QOUld last 10 years. tempc::ratures prompted auto worten to walk off southern New Hamp.biie cluriDI ~ 1he niabt. ID Fenton, Mo., a Chrysler Corp. auto worker The tesU are beinc oonducted by Biocine Co., 1 joint ventute of Oiiron and the job after a co-worker coUapted and died. tnoctina dOwn tn:a and causina power outaFS died after collapsina Wednetday niatlt in what co-Ciba-Oei&Y Coro.. a New York subsidiary of a Swiss pharmaceuticals aiant. Sprinkliap of rain Wednelday suooeoded and at least twofireaWbileasmuctiutwoincbesof worken said was unbearable beat in 1 paint shop; Thefintclidic:aftrial willinvolve20to2SbealtbySwissmenwbodonotcarry only ia &usintiac fann:«tt growen; While ra.in fell on pens of Vermont. as temperatures in the St Lou.is area topped I 00 1be virus that cautes acquired immune deficiency syndrome and AIDS«lated thUAda Ronni acrou the Northeast earned a Rain also· tell in a,de. Ohio, where Sioux degrees. complex. Biocine said it is now selectina the partiapents. It is the first bu man round of 1pplame from bueball fans at Tiler JndianOiief'LeonatdOowDoabad perfonneda .. It's so hot, you can hardly breathe in there. testinaofa~veAlOSvaccihein"EuropeandmayexpandtotheUnited Stadium in Detroit durina• rain delay. 'raisa ceremony be promised would brina rain by It's like you're smotberiq-like you're inside an Stat.ea within a year. Slid Ginter RosenberJ. a Chiron spokeswoman. Two .. Withtbesearinabeat we'vebadtbesitua!ioo today. Florist Cliff Doebels, who brouaht Crow oven."saidoneworker,BertbaSuton. othercompaniesintheUnitedStates-OncoseninSeattleandMicroGeneS}'1 --~---------"--:------"'"-"----__,..-------------------------------:-, of Connecticut -already have beaun human trials on AIDS vaccines in the United States. Canadians uncover Soviet espionage ring seeking U.S. secrets OTT A WA (AP) -A Soviet spy rina exposed by Canadian authorities tried to infiltrate a U.S.-owned.mili- ~ contractor that bas access to bJahly classified American naval tecbno)OI)', news repons uid. The can.dian Broadcastina Corp. reported late Wednesday that the rina was after sophisticated wanbip elec- tronics slated for a new seneration of Canadian naval friptes. It said the sonar, radar and communications equipment is made by Paramu Electronics of Montreal, a subsidiary ofUnisysCorp. of Detroit The New York Times quoted unidentified Canadian officials today as sa)'ina Paramu had access to classified ·tecbnoloty includina equipment that controls weapons ~1em1aboard U.S. Navy lhips. The Canadian Security lntellisence Service, which monitored the ac- tivities of the eiabt Soviet diplomats and officials expelled last week and nine others bamd from re-enterina Canadi. wouJd not confinn the link witbParanw. But apolcesman Jeny Cumminp told The Auociated Presa today. "lt wasn't one sin&)e operation -some of these operations have been over four or five years. .. At Paramu offices in Montreal, the company said no one was avaiJ.; able to comment on the incident Foreian Minister Joe Oarlc told Parliament Wednesctay that Can- adian authorities had prevented any severe security breach. The Soviet SQvernment expelled two Canadian diplomats in retalia- tion Wednesday and said three otben currently out of the country would not be allowed back. Spokesman Viatcbeslav Bomdanov of the Soviet Embassy in Ottawa termed the expulsiODS-from Caoada ••a provocation." aatk and other aovemment of- ficials declined to {'f'Ovide details of the Soviets' activitaes. thouah Oart II.id they included attempts to in- filtrate national security intelliaence asen~ CBC said one of the Soviets expelled was a naval attacbe at tbe Soviet embassy in Ottawa and was "cauaht red-handed in a stina" C>Ja· 1tion. Disastrous landslides bury I 00 in Turkey ANKARA, Turkey (AP) -Huae lan~1lides roared throuah eastern Turkey today, crashina into houses, a scbool. a line of can and a cof- feehouse jammed with people stranded by an earlier slide, authorities said. Yt> to 100 people were believed buried. llClcue 1ea1111 recovered three bOd- ies under the wrectue. the Anatolia News 1FDCY repo_necl The clilpalda said at least 11 people were injtlred ia the diauter in a mouta1now ua of M.cb town· ship; 8bout 350 miJa Dor1beut of Aabn Md not fir hin the Bleck Sea. . •1 .. die mouq'8i_n comi .. over me ..S _.. ruiliilll away," lbe newt~ quoted a wi-., Zeki ~--- . Landslides struck at least three houses, four stores, a restaurant and a hiah school. accordina to news aeency reports. The IChool was in summer rec.:ea. But the coffeehouse was pecked with at least 30 bus passcqen who bad been waitint there after tbe-=way ~ cloeed by an eartiei land · just after midniaht, the repons added. Deputy Gov. Erkan Jsilpn of Trabzon province told The ~ sociated Preti by telephone that rescue teams feared the death toll would climb since so many people were miuina, Jailpn said rescuen were tryi., to find out Whether the 11911eaeen included any~ tourists. Rain bampmd rescue ~liona. U.S. citizens among those · detained by Haitian regime O...,..COMI DAILY '9U>Ttnw1f ... ~ ... a. .. -.. - D nnts y, 71, lmefotlfor 400 milllo h f . dget by state legislators Ion ·Jae J Benny,dies SACRAMENTO (AP) -14illa1- ive budlrt wri~rs, disheartened bY •8IC'ali1y of cutt1na more than St biltioll from the unbalanced sta~ budst. trim!Md more than $400 milflOD durina their tint real wort .,, i'!'Cludint trial coun fundina that counties say they need. million fortbe ~mhl) ·,.. Over ud OYer, the four Democrats on the committee lamented Cbe necasity o( trimmina increues for =" they said were essential pons. IUCll • tht $356 milhoa fot trial court fundi., tbe entire SI millioe IOllftlln ~ ~· SIO million for naral ec:ononuc de- LOS ANOELES (AP.) -Dennis Dly, • tokkn-voic:ed lnlb Mls.delr m New York whoee career 11 a roil ar comedian Jack Benny ~ned decades or radio, televiiion and ftlm. died Wednesday at his Bel Air home. Hcwu7t. 1 .. He wu surrounded by bis 10 children and 13 arandcbildren," laid K.ittr. Divis, 0.y's _publicist and fanuly spokeswoman an a ldepbone inlerView from Palm Sprinp. O.y's wife was in the hospital Wednaday. ti His wife, Pqay Marpret McNul•¥· was in stable condition at St. John s Hospital and Health Cenier in Santa t.jonica, acconlina to nursina super- visor Nancy Oauthier. She wu ad· mined Wednesday for cardiac tests. Oocton have not confirmed Whether a.he suffered a heart attack. O.y played a dim-witted stoote for Benny on the comedian's radio and Ez .. CBP atrOlman convicted ;tnslaying SAN DIEOO (AP) - A former state patrolman faces P.<>Uible life imprisonment forstranaJinsa motor- ist whose k.illina exposed bis un- onhodox habit of stoppina youna women drivers for linaerina talks in the dart. - Craaa Peyer, 38, of Poway, a California Hiahway Patrol officer for 13 years, was convicted Wednesday '}in his second trial for the on-duty · munkr of Cara Knott, 20, of El Cajon. A prosecution case strcnathened thro~ hindsiaht and the inability of the defense to establish an alibi were the chief reasons cited by lawyen for the jury's first-<Searee murder findina. Peyer's tint trial ended with a huna jury Feb. 2S. "Holes closed in the ·second trial," said District Attorney Ed Miller. "The jury came to the conclusion that there was an overwhelmina abundance of evidence. I think what we've deR\onstratcd is the system works,justice has been served, and no one is above the law," Miller said. Peyer was the second officer in the SI-year history of the qency to be. cbafFd with killina a motorist while on duty. "He 1s crushed. He wants to appeal, .. said Peyer's attorney, Rob- ert Orimes. Orimes e.lplained his decision not to ~t Peyer on the stand. Most of his defense was already in evidence. His daily activity lot was in evidence, and it could be believed or disbelieved. He really didn't have too muda elte to offer to that. He had no alibi. He bad no other place where be was." Peyer was convicted of stranaJina Knott, a San Dieao State University student, after pullina her car over on Dec. 27, 1986, u she drove alona Interstate l Son her way home. SuJ'Cfior Court Judie Richard Huffman 1ebeduJcd sentenciaa for July 20, and Peyer faces a prison term lof 25 yean to life. Orimes said he would appeal the verdict at the sentencina. I Peyer, who was free on S2SO,OOO bail, was taken into custody immedi· ately after the verdict. Two held in TV .fl&ure eztortion LOS ANOELES (AP) - A talent lllCDC)' owner and his attorney have been arrested for investiption into aJleeedly tryina to extort $30,000 from television anchorwoman Jann cart tfy claimiaa to haw ~~ explicit video lapel ofher, polace said. Police Lt Fral Nixon said. bow- 'ever, an investiption had indicated there a~tly never were any sucb 1 tapes or Carl, a news reporter for 'ltll.A. • Oilbcrl Caboe, •lt owner of COllD-' muaication ArU Inc., a West Holly· '4Wodd lllent maitcti111 llCDCJ, and bis attonxy, Maurice At~· .... were atnltld MOriday by police. "OiJben CabOt contacted Cati Ud sold .. dial be bid ICClll to IOlne video tape material 1blt contaimd eome eeawW)' exptk:it lhlfl' ud tbat Aw tM aum ol SJ0,000 be could ICQ1lhe tlMm ud ,et tbeal beck IO •""Nboalmid. ct.i coatKted ~a~ Ii• :.::'~ 5:.-=.-ortc ... ..,, ..... ielevisioa varifty shows. but shrewd contnct mueuverina with studioa and networks made him one of the best-rewarded talenU in the busiftetl. Lut summer he was di&Jnosed 11 suff'crina from amyotropac lateral Jclerolis; known u Lou Gehri.'s disease. The proernsive nerve dis- order debilitates muscle control. ··rm very, very saddened by Den- nis' death... satd comedian Jmy Lewis, national chairman of the Muscular Dystrophy Association. .. He was a ~t friend-to me and to so many durina his life. When he found out that.he bad ALS -the disease that led inexorably to his death -be put all the rcma1nina encray he had into helpina MDA f.,t\t this traaic disorder. .. That concern for others whO shared his pliaht is what inspired Dennis to want to we a leadina pert in d~openinaofMDA's ALSCnller at USC in ~b. But Al.S lloDDed him. His weakened leas failecf ~m when he tried to walk down tbC lleps Of his home. He fell and never recovered from the injuries be sus- tained. .. Dennis Day was a brave, kind, talented man who showed bis love~ siviJ!il. All you had lo do was ask. • Lewis said. .. That's about a third of the way, if we art to do our jobs," said As. 1C111blyman John Vasconcellos, chairman of the six-lqislator budtct conference committee. .. We arc already 1tttin1 lctten sayina. 'Put my money beck in, ... he added durina the all-day session be dubbed the "Wednesday wipeout .. and the .. Wednesday momina massacre.'" . The committee must devise a compromise budatt for the 1911-89 fisCal year that bc&ins July l from the Assembly's S.S. f billion proposal. the Senatc"s$4S billion plan and Gov. Georac Deuk~jian's $44.S billion version. All three arc unbalanced, with the deficits ranaina from Sl99 million for Deukmcjian's to $728 Blatorlc Cannery Vlllqe la an antlqae loven pua- di.e. The charming ltttlC shops over flow with every type of Old World antique tmagtnable. Many are tastefully shown tn vignette settings. Some storee include reproduction jilecee. Many shop owners are also interior designers. And each store ts dlff erent. Inventories come from England, France. Germany and Italy. Althoa&h th1a tiny atreet once butled with flaherman, sail makers and a cannery. it now peace- fully displays the Imaginative and unexpected gift items for which you've been searching. 1hc>le propam1 are sure \al'lttS of &be Republican aovemor'1 .. bfuc pencil," his constitutional authority to veto individual spendina items in the budcet sent him by the L.eaWature. The Democrats cxprnsed frus- tration and aneer that Deukmejian rcfutn to support any increased revenue to rep~ tM SI billion income tax monfall that suddenly occumd this sprinJ. Last month. Deukmcj1an proposed a S800 million pack.aac of 1ncreued iACOmc and business taxes. but drop- ped that plan. leavina all three budee't versions In the red. He now says he will not sian anythina that an be pcrttived as a tax increuc. The committee members had a smooth time Wedncsda)' momina. •heft ~ sailed throu&)l and ruth· leu.ly cut proarams Deukmejian sup- • velopment and S 10 million '° attracl tedlnc>loS>' meafch. But their aatitUde cbaisd to retuc- ta"" when they reached the health proarams they support and Deu· kmcjian don not. .. This 11 an area the aovemor will sure as sbootina .,cut," said Vascoocellos. ()..San J&e. 11 the committee conaidered S92S.OOO the Senate added to the budeet for an inflation increase fM senior nutrition propams. "I'm of a mind we take tht'm (inflation increases) out. It's terrible. cruel ... .. Cenain cuts are aoit11 to be made b> the administration." apUld Sen. John Garamcodi. l)..Walaut Oro\lc. .. lf v.-c make the cuts now. it will make it easier in other parts of the budlet." But the . committee decided to postpone a decision on \.be nutntioo cost-of-livina increate u.ntil members aot a list of all such increa1eS. " • Diplomas from the school of hard knocks If John and Tony Gomez's father could have seen his sons this month be would have done all the thinp that proud fathendo. He would have~uaredhisshoulden, tried to suck some of his waistline up to his chest and probably fouaht bltk a tear of pride back in case anyone was watcbina. John and Tony may not have posted the highest academic records at their San Bernardino hiah schools. but their aocomplishments arc light years beyond those of most hiab school p-aduates. The twins were abandoned by their divorced father five ~ aao. Some would wonder if abandoned is too harsh use he offered to take his sons back to his home in G~ But they didn't want to go. The twins, who hadn't seen their: mother in four years, wanted to stay in the United States where they were born. . Their father ~ paid two months advance rent on their trailer in downtown San Bernardino and left. Duri~ the day, the boys attended public school like other teen-agers. But dunng afternoons. even!nas and at nigh~ they were adults intenungat the school of bard knocks. From the bqinnina. the boys knew they bad to beat the system. They knew they could not afford bad grades or poor conduct at school because teacben would want to talk to a parent. They also understood the S 168-a-monlh rent on their traiJer had to be j)aid each month. and that they could not depend u~n public aaencies or other people who mi&ht have helocd with food, clothina or other neoessities of life. They bad to guard their secret because the system won't let two 13- year-old boys try to make it on their own. They made mistakes, learned from those mistakes, depended upon each other and played the $1me. As they got better at money management and as therr earning power increased, they moved to a small $335-a-montb apartment. It was furnished with odds and ends picked up at second-hand shops. from friends and durm& shopping sprees at yards saJe,. ·It wasn't the Ritz, but it was better than the trail~r and pfetty good fbtthe salary teen-.agers earn at fast-food restaurants. John and Tony felt the same peer pressures as other teen- agers, but t.tie pressure to remain anonymous to the system was stronger. They chose their friends and auarded their secret carefully -a few confidants knew the secret but none told. While their friends worried about caa, dates and the thousands of crises that befall teen-agers., Tony and John silently struagled to bold their grades above .. C .. and to keep the bills paid. It must have been a hard grind. but it wasn't all work and no play. John was able to rcpt a car and a tuxedo for his senior prom. He worked SO hours a week for a month to keep up with his share of the household expenses and have enpugh left over for prom expenses. The grind finally '°t to Tony last November. He dropped out of school It took b1m two months to see his future without a high school diploma was hopeless. In January he enrolled in accelerated classes in a continuation hip school, made up his Jost cmiits and eart.!ed a high school diploma. . Grad~ioo day should have been the pinnacle of his ·young life., but instead of bursting with pride Tony broke CIOwn and cried at his baocalaurcate ceremony. He cried because no one was there to share his proudest moment. If it was a demonstration of self pity, Tony had earned it. Like so many other thin&.\. be learned from it. He also vowed it was one of the few things he would not share with bis brother, who was scheduled to graduate a few days later.· .. John took off work on his brothers graduation day to snap photographs and sit with the parents and families of the araduates. No one knows for sure. but John probably squared rus shoulders and let a little pride swell through his body when Tony stepped forward to claim that diploma. Bqth of them are 18 years old now and by virtue of their age and diplomas arc ready for the next phase of their lives. The~ can also be called men now, not because they reached the ~cage, but because they've eamcd it and they don •t have to hve in the shadows anymore. Few parents would wish the lives that John and Ton.>'. Ii v~ for their teen.qers. But all parents would be pro~d 1f th~tr sons and dauahters could have accomplished the same thmg. OTHER V 01cEs Cat?strophic illness Obviously it wilJ mean an increase in tues, but one of the most important bills passed in m:ent days is the one which provides catasi.ropbic illness insurance. The bill pasted the Senate 86-11. and earlier passed the House, 328-72. President R~n. at the ursina of Health and Human Services Secretary Otis R. Bowen, sent the insurance proposal to Conaress more than a year ago. It passed with some features the president doesn't like but it apparently is acceptable. It will give 29 million elderly Americans vastly improved protection apins& fimncial ruin if they arc stricken with~ called catastr()phic diseases such u cancer. t:or the fim ti~e. aeneral prncription drug benefits will be paid Under Medicare, a real boost tor elderly people tryina JD make ends meet on small. fixed incomes. The plan pro~ run bOIPital coverqe after • once+ . ,at deductible estimated It SS64 in 1989. Little bu been done for Iona-term home health care fOt dWbW and Cbt'onically iU people or an aees. btit the .Plan JMHll will provide tome pace of mind to millions of dderty WllO llOW liw in rear-that an extmded hospital stay wiU wipe ... out ftnaacWly. Dally,...,,,.,.,... ...... .... -...... .......... ~~-·~~ ..... -..... ~~&~··>--• --·-~-~--~-• • • • --• • I .... ! I f lpi• • .... • • t., ... ... -... .:..a.-----· .. , ~ -J.~ • • \~-1-THET GOf 1llE MESSAGE, At«WIJ ... Barded Speak.er Wr1gb.t slips qulclilyln, out of Sacramento SACRAMENTO -That was a bizarre visit that Jim Wright, speaker of the House ofRepraentatives, peid to Sacramento this week. Apparently, Wri&ht was invited to address the California Legislature several months aao by Willie Brown, speaker of the state Assembly. Leaders of the state Senate were informed only belaled~at Wri&ht was coming. Senate ident Pro Tern DaviCi Robeni guickly ot., pnized an early·momin• m:eption for Wriaht but was othel'Wlse omitted from the event. WriJht•s speech, in fact, was dcliv~ only to the Assembly, rather than ajoant session of the two houses. which is a more standard operational procedure. The s~h itself was remarkable only for its banality. Wriaht. a Texas ~litician of the old school, 1ef\ no chchc unturned u be prajsed California's agricultural abundance, lauded the state's con· IJ"CSSional delcaation and recited ~from the Bible. His mcssqe, af there was one, was somethina to the effect that all Americans should wodt toaether to solve their common problems. Now that was certainly wonh hauling Wriaht and his en· tourage 3,000 miles across the coun· try. Wriaht never mentioned, of course, anythina about the political cloud hanaina over bis head. A conarcssional ethics committee has voted to investipte all~tions of improper conduct on Wnpt's part, includ1n1 questions about lavish royalties he earned on a book that was nothina more than a collection of his speeches assembled by an aide on the public peyroll. And if Monday's speech was any eumP,le, anyt.hina more than l S cents tn royalties was overpayment. The Republicans who walked out of the s~h becauasc of the allcptions certainly didn't miss anythiftl. Throuahout his brief' visit to the Capitol, Wript consciously ducked the press. His traveling~ aide went out of her way to run interference. As she was supposedly "*tiatina with . journalists for a brief ~on with Wri&ht. for instance, tne speaker was slippinf out of a beck door of the Capito to avoid any contact with the media that would include embana~ !na Q!olct~ions about the pendina 1nvest1ptaon. And when the press aide was asked whether Wri&ht was plannina any purely political appearances in Sacra- mento. such as a fund-raisins event, she insisted that she knew of no such occurrences on his schedule. As it turned out, however, there was such an event, and it raises questions about one of its co-.spon- sors, U.S. Rep. Vic Fazio. O.Wcst Sacr;amento. Fazio was very much in evidence on the Assembly floor durina Wript's a~rance. H~ is. in fact. a former assemblyman him!Bf. But Fazio is not just the local conaressman. He also happens to be a member of the ethics committee that voted lo investipte Wri&ht's con- duct, and which will be makina a series of decisions about the speaker that could be critical in an election year. Wri&ht and Fazio went straiaht from t6e Assembly speech to a nC:aJby hotel for a luncheon at which local Democratic contributors~. inch.ldina some members of the ~mento DAN WALTERS lobbyina ~. were tapped for money to support Democratic can. didatcs for the house this year. The luncheon, with a SSOO.per- plate price taa. was co-sponsored by Fazio and Rep. Beryl Anthony, ~ Ark., chairman of the Democratic CoDJfCSSional Campajan Commit- tee. Is it a problem for Fazio to sit in judgment on WrW>l's conduct while simultaneously usina the speaker as a fund-raisina tool? Fazio, who says the event was orpnized Iona before the allegations of impropriety were raised by Re. publicans and Common Cause, sees no conflict. "He is the speaker and will con- tinue to be," Fazio said in an interview Tuesday ... He is respon- sible for raisjna money." Fazio said he personally will not benefit from the luncheon's proceeds. Nevertheless, it does seem a little odd that Fazio should have continued with the fund-raiser after the ethics alleptions arose. And clearly, Wriaht wanted the event to be kept a secret; that's why his press aide wu dcnyins that any such event wu scheduled. H nothina unseemly was occurrina, why should it have been a secret? Du ,,.,,.,.. & • •"'41alc!ff eelaua&L ·Politics can be hazardous to ozie 's financial health Karl had too much money. Baker had too little-and both got into big trouble Seldom does politics brina oui the aivina too much money toOary Hart. best in a person. And then theR's the David Baker There are plenty of uamples. but story. Jthasasreatbesinningbut then two come to mind just now. One is a aoes sour. Nowport ~h man whose crime. it Until a few ehott months aao. appean. is that he has too much Biker stood u a toweri111 -and I do money. The other is an Irvine mean \OWerina -euml)le of some- rcsident who simply didn't have one who bad made all the riaht enough. moves. SMalbed all the rieht buttons, Stuan Karl pew up in Newport knew aU the riabt oeoole. He was on Beach. He araduated from Corona del the inside net. Life Wu pretty aood. Mar Hip Sthool, started a waterbed A former bMlr.etbelt Star at 1JCJ. trade mapzine with S200 in bor· Baker went on to ltrYe bis comm uni· rowed money, branched into other ty ljke few otben before him. He was publications and eventually tot inlO el«\ed to the 1rvint City Council, .... _ · "'--t de H od··_... .. _fl-' became the d1f~ ~. was active un; VJ\KV ra . e pr __, l..,.; ... in his church. bdp fOund the Irvine · Jane Fonda workout tapes and, bY. ~-Otrts~•namedman arid by, became a very wealthy man. ._, -r'-ft-a---una·· Kail alto became intaated in "' 1-v., ·~ __. .. politic&. .I.don) know why cuepe tbat t)' ~Pl Hd WM director of a non· the hart of politics can be over· »ront . ._... fa•dldion. poweriJ1I once you ,et a taste. llU.et...,Wll....aiDted by OOflC>o He liked Democrat.a. Wbicb ia illelf ins Rep. ltebien ......,.. IO succeed is~iDN"1pon8each.OnieOftlle. =il:=--~-~~ it ;r~-:.. °:2 ~ SberifF Ind= Me111ithed by the Donna Raafllir andbfS2=.,,_.mlIO,llad aod ... coMidcnd a feedi•.... COUid-iD <>met~. Clntill mdidlte. In flct. i111e boc* ere· IDcal ~Md ... -Han would lilr.tlJ.. ... •••h • ~ Dl•ocalldt ...._, lllJr die 9Jrimn 'I blall IO .. Haft llllltiil llP lllil drfHll 0.. ... CO. -a Wlmi _. .. • nMllY • uy 11ali1lcm ii ..... ..._lleea111•a.crowdtd .. ....,Oldie~. .... Kml.amil'.tlOa ............. -. ... .., ••• , •• -.... All ... ........ ...., ......... .. , ... , .... --.. --:r.'l: die...,~, ._•a :'t a" " .. STEVE IAllU Congressmen, media play by same rules To the Editor: Cru~ify Con1re11man Bob Bldham? Hold the:S vou"" wayoutoflint. Wb • He)t,beby ... thc Pilot is playina by same rules. Albeit, acceptJn& ID bODonriwn on vote day has the a~ of impros>riety. But Bob Bldbam didn•t tchedule the meetina. Bob Badham didn't 1cheduJe the vote for an increase in the truck orders. Bob Badham did appear at a breakf'ast and he did listen. He listened lO a promotion. That'• his job. H• is a paid ex.pert. If you want to Dlay .... you have to pey for the time o(an ell~. Don't blame the ached\lles. Now you differentiate Bob Badharn's acx:eptance of an honor- arium (of which you ac:cutcd him of breach•na the public trust) from the way in which you and rest of the media do busineu. Take a look at sports. Who aeta the most coveraae? h usually is the event that caters to the fat cat sports writen with free booze and bulmen. Tbe lunches, the dinnen. ibe free:. bics .... the writers love 'em. Isn't this a breach of the public trust? Don't we dcterve COveflF of all of the events?. The media is on the take. World rccotdlare broken in track and field, yet we tee front Pl,e covef1Fof some overweipt tobilcc»-cbewina baseball player and/or a beUy·luaina aolfer prominently displayed front page. Wby1 The freebies, lunches, dinners and atmosphere provided to the media. A politician wants a fair shake with respect to coverqe of an important issue? Forset it! Unless, of course, there is some sort of fat.cat lunch provided to the media. Cmon, boys and airls .... we are all playina by the same rules. Bob Badham earns his and you eat and drink yours. BRIAN K. THERIOT Costa Mesa Put those cars in the garages To the Editor: I would like to protest the use (aod misuse) of prages on Balboa Island. Too many residents and renters are usina their aaraaes as extra rooms or storage area. This is maki~ a bis daily parkina problem on this little island. If people would just get rid of the junk and furniture that they are not usinf. we would have enouah normal park1na spaces for all of us wbcHive here. I know that u soon as we have parkina meters on this island, every- one will (overniaht) make a decision on their one, two and three-car garage, but by then it will be too late, as usual. ALAN Al.BERT SNOW Balboa Island TooA v IN H1s10R~ .,..,_ ~ --. . Sen~te panel ups financing for NASA space station ,.,.. ....... ..,..,..... . .A 5eMae P.U,d bu cleared the way for an SIOO million z:=tioa for the planned U.S. spece station a move ~ ~ ~!et'Y heartenina .. by ofticialt at tbC Spece Stauon Div111on of McDOnneU ~ in HunUaalon 8acb. ~·· veryil OC"WS; the fundina is movina alona ~uvely thro ContJaS, blck on tbe u.k the pmideat Md ASA "Wa.nt. .. said Tom Williams, ..,otamu for lhe division where work on the station's c:roabcamt aad connoctina modules is on hold, awaitina t l said ... We've crOMCd tbe bi& hwd&e ... Aaother xnatt appropriations subcommitttt, Which has jurisdiction over NASA's buc19tt, voted lui week lo apP!'Opriltt $200 million fat &be rpece sution. lkftucn said at the time that amoont .. provides only enOul.h for the sJow stranplation" o(tbc project. year if it stays on sdaedtile, and it is plUned to be in ~it around Eanh and occupied by astronauts by t.be md of l 996, officials ,a':f' Benlleft · he is opcimistic t.be SIOO miUion wiJl cleat the •.PPtopriaboftl comminee and the full Stutt'. · Praident Reapn had asked tw a S967 million appropriation for tbe_spece Ntioa in the next fncal )U(s budeet. and NASA otr.cials wd S900 milltoa is needed to keep at on scheduk. •. Construction of the space .ution ClOuJd bc&in n«l Tiit Houte Appropriations Commiuet, bowevcr, says the future of the _project mould depc1ld on the ntlt prnidenL The comm1tt~ volt!(i last week IO ~te S902 million for the speee sution. bW the nexa presldeot would have to~ toao ahead with the project before the projttt could receive about half of that amounL DOaOELL WAJU> French promoted at Spectramed Inc. ~ r.c. has named a.tea A. Fl'elldl to the new post of executive vice president and chief operatina officer, with responsibilities for day-to-day operational activities. The Newport Beach firm is an international manufactvru and awteter of hiah-technolO&Y aitical c::are proclllCll used in hospital ICU1e c::are lettiap. Presidenill J. Aplin aid the emotion of French. who bad been senior vice president and ctUd nci.al officer since 1986, will allow Aplin 10 devote more time 10 stratqic pla.nnina foT Spectramed's international operalioa.s. • • • llelllu °"*II has been named bead~ at on a.n el Callfwlila hr ed in Irvine. She most recently was a desiper for the intematicmaUy known Lizwar Division of Liz Claiborne in New Ycwt City. Dorddl is ~~y workina on Oft' Shore's sprina 19&9 line of su.tfwear uad VoUeyblJJ ~ -., ... • • •• Architect A.we a.._ is now an asaociate partner at lldMall, V-.ea a Partllen. I.e. in Costa Mesa. Tbc archit.ectwal and plannifta firm has~ S3 billion wonh ofSoutbero California's most notable residential developments and 6 million ~ feet of hip-visibility urban office spec:e in the last 10 years. Cbana's most current residential projects include the oceanfront Pier House apartments in Huntinston Beach for Mola OevelopmenL , ••• &any Wm has been promoted to product ~for Pwl c.ee,ta, LP.. a Santa Ana-bucd manufactURt open office systems and ersonomic seatina. • • • Laguna Hills resident Daiei P. ll.al•e bas been appointed propam coordinator of Nau..J UlliftrlitJ'• School of M~ mentand Business in Ora.nit County. He will be tmcdat I &ccuuve Cude. Irvine. ••• In Costa Mesa Ardlft C.,.. a leadiDa manufacturer of I ~iO';fi ~&ape drives. has appotnted ...... P. c.n., praicknt of CalComp and a vice president of Loctbecd Corp.., and ·Gtecwlil Reyes. president of American Semiconductor Equipment T echnoloa;ies, to 1CtVe u members of the bcmd of directors. Orange pact should help trade talks WASHINGTON {AP) -A new qrecment with Japan on beef and oranaes will be a positive clemalt in peraJ u.de nepiatioos. penicu- latly with the European E.conomic Community, U.S. Trade ~tcnla· live ClaytOn Yeuner says. .. It should provide tOIDC additional psycbo&osical suppon for us in deal- lDI with the Ewnpons, .. Yeutter said. "'Ill other wotdl. now that we've been able to strike a deal with the Japanese on beef aod citrus. it puts some additional pn:aure on the Europeans to be somewhat more acx:ommodalina than t.bey have in the past." With the Japanese swtina 10 come into I·-it could put EEC leaden in the .._,lion of lookina .. like the vmar.:'of the apicultural wortd" if they continue boldina out, be Slld Tuesday. Yeutte:r.z who earlier this week returned rrom Tokyo where tbe new qn:cment was reached after mara- thon DCIObatioDS, told a tetepbone conference with broedcast and ~ paper rcpo11elS that Japan ~ 10 open lhe door 10 more American bed and citrus in the face of further U.S. cbaDmtes under the Geoenl Aar'eO-meot on T ari1fs andTtWe, orGATT. Tbe llRCmeDt couJd lead IO a doublina of U.S. exporU o( beef and oranp by 1991 to .piore than SI billion a year. lo retu:r'll, the United States llJfecd to withdraw its GA TT complaint apinst Japan restrictive import quotas. Ycutter said lhe complaint -and previoua suooess under GA TT rules last year -helped prod Japan into acceptina an npansion of beef nd citrus. "'In other words. the jia was up," be said. -rhcy'd JO(ten away with a contioualion oftbe:lt propann fat a lot of ya;n.; Wbat we. die United Siates. sboWd have doae was ~these lhiQP about IS )Un ISO inSlead of now. but be11er late than never ... -1:0.111mm~--------------- OTC UP S & DOWNS • •I •• Stock prices decline NEW YORK (AP) -Tbe stock martct ~ relreated sliahlly Tbunday in moderate tndi ... weakened by investon cuhina profits from tbe stronapins of the previous two lellions. Some traders were disbeanened by wba1 they called the market's failure to 1u111in the momn- tum of a rally that ~ late Tuetday ud carried over inlO Wednesday.· They said it rcOeded a reluctance by a broad ranee of invesion to commit sipifac:ant money to tbe market . But otben were more optimistic and aid lM lli&ht retrc1t should be reprdcd as a positive ajp of undertyina st~nath. -· HEW Y()ttl( ('AP) Jun. ZJ l •..... , 1. ~.l .................. ,.____,TM • 1 ,,,.. ................ ..., ...... . w......_-. .. ..,.1.111.fllf eo 111 . ............... liea.11fllfl' ... ........... 1441.44, ... , ... ............................. , .. ..... 11 ....... ....... .__ .... , ........ ,. . ............. .a,, ... .,.. . ......... s a , • ...,, .... 74 • .......... _.. .............. JO NIW VOM !Apt-... :••:www ...... ,,._ ~ 9 ., .... --,,., ........ .,., c-.............. o_., • 11 u .... u. ..,.. • l*M. v. ,, ...... ..::r:; •• ,u ..... ..,,.,..... !ft' 0.-.... ......... .,.......... . -.................. ...... fta ....... ._ ............. .., ... , -·'1.ttO.__ ................ ..... -• "· "'..,"' ... .,., c.imt .... """"' ....... ...... :m---.-:"· ....... ., ... ,...... .... ...... ., ........ ........ ..., ....... ..,...., ..... , NASDAQ S u~¥.~,,, • Ltr 1 ••• ~ .. egllge ___ a, Mn 11CM:8D .......... _ OI THURSDAY, JUN!A 1• th er of boat in ve11tion •••••••••••• Marllaall Duflield ol Ncwpun ........ tired o( ..ai,:::•·• Annual race cbalteq~ •pecial'60at9 Patrons a.farts to serve mase11m Newport Beach is probably one of the most beautiful pl8Cel to live, and if you appreciate an. you·u be happy to know nine membenofthc Fine Ans Patrons -one ofNew1>9nHarbor An Museum's oldest and larwest sup- pon sroups-have been elected to serve tw~rear tcnrrs on the· orpnization s board of directors,· And on Tuesday they'll be introduCed formerly at the patron ·s annual meetina. So 1et•s welcome Kia l!wrce. ~::-~-=~Ul· Slllelalr ............ ler. PllllllP Qmrre_. Paala Veple. Rema.iniaaon the board are AJn. ...... Priuel,Brada CVrle,BnerlJaHa.dl Dll•••.,Nera 18W8•,C8rol ... ._. Mvrell. 0.-0Ha,8.J. Rlater, Patd-Jeus.m,..., Ju • Setta.LellStovaUud Jesie .. ,.... • • • ' ADd speaki~ of selections. OceidcntaJCoUeacjuniorNell RW1irJ, son of Corona del Mar residents Peter aH A.a Ridley, wu recently chOsen for member· ship into the national senior honor society, Mortar Board. Neil, who IS a history major, is one of22 students selected for the 1988-89 academic year. Monar Board is a society that em~zcs theaoatsofacademic achaevement, lcadcrship, and ser- vice. In the past, the board memberi have raised funds to proVide scholarships for minority students, panicipeted in ttadina clinics, and promoted campus awareness of AIDS and rape iuues. The coll• is a private liberal arts institution with a student b0dyofl,600and is located in Los Anaeles. • • • AbiJcon~tulationsaocsout to SeniorOirl Scout Pam Crue of Irvine. Pamisoneoftherecipientsof the Gold A ward, the biahest given to Senior Girl SCouis; llenlri L lllri, council presi- dent of Girl Scouts of Ora nae COunty said; ... Girls who earn the anmw GOid Award are outstand- ina in every way, not only in Girl ScOutina but in their everyday lives. The award requires the patestachievement in service, career~tion and ~uisi tioa of stills." • • • Wbo•sJ•y M•tpmery! Judy,oflrvine, isamona6,000 C&libnians of achievement who arc lilCed in the new volwne of the "Wbo's Who in California," Produced by the .. Who's Who Hisaorical Socie~~ ... · Tile current 600 pqe reference 1K>Okcontains~ lkdChes of notable CalifOrnians "' ......... ,., ud ltftl '° tail roo111 lor .. pernt's boat. ~':st*'U: C" .:&91» Would 1-1 to a NW inwetioa. Duffield. 36; it the owner or Duffteld 'Eearic Boats. • busineta tbat lella boell nan b)' the power Of batteries and u elettnc motor. "'h ba~ one eventful nillal- another even•• .I WU pouacfed lO my room," Dutldd said: .. My &incl Kwt Olton and I Weft disappoiaMd we couldn't wic the boat becaute dm was our main encenainment especially for datina $iris. Both of m pondered an alternative to usina the boet. without havin1 to maintain the enajne Ill the time. .. The morr we talked. the more I thoupt of my dad. who was-and still as -an avid eolfer... Dulfidd said ... Sometimes he would play men than 36 holes at a time. and drove that aolf cart up. down. and around hills. It ocxui'ftd to us that maybe a small craft could nan the same way." When Duffield mentioned this to his father, he was tOld 1t would be a peat idea -as welt as a -onhwbiSe •. project; . "My dad pve me .$300 a~ 'r · bouaht an old beat up .,1f cai:t," he said ... I took th.It electric motor out and put it into the little 8-foot craft I used as a child. I bad built my 'lint electric boet. n But Duffield said there was one sliabt problem. · .. We needed some son of a propeller, but feared it would Miah too much and the boet wouldn't work," be said. "After vacillatina back and fonh, we decided lust to u1e the existina one on the craft. and 'so ·'District give~lts lstaward Tbc firs& $2, 500 scholarship offered by the Newpon-Mcsa Unified School District bas been awarcled to a N~ Harbor Hap School padu- atina m1ior. Pranted durina a recent board meetina. the aMid was 'WOD bj futu~ teacher Martha Sick. Accordin1 to David Dow, prai· dent of 1dministn1ton• assoc:iatJon, the award was created to &ive • sistance and supp0n to students who plan to pursue a tcachina career. Sick. who will attend UC Santa Birbara in the fall. was selected for her academics.. community and tehool involvement and commitment to teachil\&; .. We are aware of the need for teachers, .. Dow •id ... Martha is rated 23 out o( 410 paduatcs ... is a CSF (CaHfOmia Scholarship FCderition) seal barrier ... a membcrofHcart Felt. a poup that vis.its hospitals and belp feeds the homeless." Sick said she is truly interes1ed in (Pleue ... 8TUD&Jn'9(111) llanllall Daflleld re••._ oa oae olJda 20-footelectrtc boata. for it.' That sucker went seven miles an bo~ We even put •ndbe&s inside -just to see what would happen. and it ran like a charm.·· Duffield said it wu about this time a nc1Jbbor saw him and his "friends cruiStna around the harbor and waved them to sbo~. .. He qs so impressed and wanted to know twbat kind ofbattenes I used to power tbc boat." Duffield said. "Forsomc rason I replied. ·the finest marine batteries money can buy, ·Trojan Batterici.' " ..It was then, the man 90t so excited he called out to his wife and said. ',et the checkbook!' I told him I wasn't in the business of sem.., boats, and be replied. ')OU are now.' " Little dJd Duffield ~ his nei&h- bor was Ray Godbcr, a member of the family •ho manufaauttd Trojan batteries. Godbcr was prepared to launch hts project as welf as help him perfect tccbnjques and steer the 18-ycar~ld in the riabt direction. ~-BOAT/82) ........ _... ............. 111c1aae18llea patau maeJa ... _.,Into canoe~ u Ile dom 1a1a prol1111oaa. What kind of a race en you hive with boats that have muimum ~ of S.S knots? A pretty cballcnaina o.DC. accordi1111 IO Manhall Oufrackt. 0o SatUrda) the teCOnd aDDWli .. Gttat EJcctric Boat Racz" will take place in the Newport Harbor. start.ins at the Cannery dock.. .. We don•t want this to be a •foUow the leader ratt. • .. Duffield said. "You acc. this is not your averaee racina event. .. Ouffteld . upwned the r1ICle will consist of 3S electric boats. divided into five divisions of ICVat boeu each. ... Each boat starts at an llllipcd checkpoint and is pven a tealed envelope containina ·dues' oe •bei'e to JO," be said. "Minuiet befOre the race besins. the aauun .re in- structed to opm their eav: Then. once the boeecn read ti;;, clue, they .hald for the fim desti- nation. Whea reacbed. they pick up a 'token,' each one a difliftnt color. There arc seven clues and fh·e IOkens to be obt.ai ned -each a historical clue that only local Newport Hartior boat.en wouJd know. ••For in.5t&DCe, last yQI' we bad I cluie that rad, 'Go to tbc pan of tbe bay Where you'd find JOOd will.' " be said ... MOit of the boa1erS know that the 'Good Wilt' is a schooner tied up in the bay." To confuse panidpants .. we throw in •qus' clues., too ... be Wet. .. like ~ ...... llAC&/82) J" ·NB lawyer paddllng own canoe BJ UTY IOtJC8Ell .............. Micbacl Sbea likes to live OD t.be edlC -in more Mys than oac. ft's cVidcntty not nousb that tbis JS-year-old law9cr from Ncwpon 8cacb alto is I Wes iepiCKU•tive foi Tandem Compuvn 1n Sanwa AM -M's I canoe racer u wen. · And. Shea •ys he's one of the· "'lops .. in canoe racinc competitioa -CODleSIS ~ take lli.JD ~ ttaebc:roua wa1en in Taa. Ha..U,, Sinppnre aad c:a1mcr waters rilbt here in an. County. ..Jt•s tort of I be.lance ( ~ .. Sbea said. "If I was workiaa aU IM time, and rnakina lots ol moeey. td fed u.mculcd and ~ rm alwa~ urivina for the peri:IC't bahnce -aDa canoe ~ bas become my second·~·~· He pndcs bimtdf iD rnMkrinc the skill of .. ski surfi.QI," whicb be describes as racina in a sleet boet tJw ~···· -CAllOS/82) Fountain Valley plays host to annual fiesta By JOYCE BODLOVICll ....... ,.. ... What ~ have here is classic l 9SOi music, spectacular fireworks, carnival rides, crafts. pmcs, a vin1a1t car show and rib and chiU cookoff.: It all masquerades as the 1ixtb lnnual ~County F.esta. a five- day countywide pelt)' from June 30 to July 4f at Mile Squ&R Park in Fountaia Valtey prclC'1tc4 by the citfs Chamber of Commerce. The fiesta opens at S p.m. and aoes wuil midn&pt on June 30 with Diny Du of'Shl Na Na and 19SOI _., idol, Donnie Brooks, who roick:ed the music dwt with "Mission Bell ... A LaVepsstyle .. TributetoElvis .. will Uo be shOwcascd. AloDJ with 1Jm0st continuous ~ntcr1a1nment. the fiesta•s special openina ni&ht one-price-paywll ad- mission o(Sl3 includes a bolt of carnival rides and other attractions. And that's forstaners. From July I throuaf\ July 4, the festival will run from 11 a.m. to michli&bt. IDd will continue rockina with classic sroups like Bill ~·s Comets. The Coasters. Tbe Ori~ The Pmptns and The Del Viki• On July 4, not only will fiesu-socrs enjoy a 9 p.m. fit'eworts spectacular but an all~)' ~ 1970s car show. All county ~ts are cocourqed to enter their classic or antique cars in a com~tion that could cam them trophies and plaques. AnothcT pert -a SI 0 entry fee allows admission for a fous-pcrson pany and car to the fiesta. .. The C1usic Auto Show adds a spcctal touch to the days and niahts of musical entertainment for the entire family;• said chairman Dick Greg. The fiesta allo will pro~ t~rc can ne~·cr be eQOUlh cooks to spoil the broth. Orange County restuarants and private panics arc encow-.ed '° crate ruipes for the barbecue n'b aOd chili cookoffs. Thir e~nt be&ins July 2 witb tlle Cahf'ornta State Cham~p Rib Cootoft wo.nh $2.000 tn cub ~ and trophies to the wianina daets.. The SI .000 C'h1h Cookoff wiU be held July 3. Ent!') fees are S2SO aftd SlS Tlttb add1t1onal prOCUlds beftefiliOI ~-•1881.AJm) 'AFabian Fantasy' festivities in Mesa set as MS benefit .. '1 ee JaaJtJa aemfaar •lated A hellth temi.., ~ 6"Ce to the public wilt be held S.turday at l:lO Lm. ill Suite E of Women at Llrsc. I SOl7 Ooldeft Wtll SI., Huatinaton Beach. 1~111 ~. '°"• 'ftiaht and Jowenna blood pteUUre wdl be dir Cl• iM .f!'Gl"aln• which includes an~ cWi: Ill al ... ., ,IO.~ is limited. and ~my bla•lli• 1'J caltins 194-3SS7. Wntmi CTf'or the Homdesl.. Tallm at 49S-0107 for more ial>rmatioa. Collqe ;::a: l)epartmcnt to raitc fuDds far 1k tbl"OUlh 12 and their pare:Dts are 'Wdcomt. Oil Frw:a T1'e cutialbon be held from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. b-a don;ation ol S20 wb. Appointmeats may be made by Atllletlc 9e'Jlfaar bl Im.e call1na Jeanne 8eader 11194.-6267. • · Eahancina ~111<e &. Spotu wil "*-'tel a prosram by Irvine's FamilY Scrvica D 4 1n •• Monday from 7 to 9'.lO ~-.at Ge lrvi• Y .... 3'I u RI Cen1e1. 14301 Ylle AYC. ' 1bt tcnuw is~ 10c:uualaw1 1·111' ...,... .. ._ .. terioos amatcUn ..cl ,prmllionab; he .. ii S>t-... rcP&ra1iof\ may be l'ftlde bya>at.9Cti11'Dne.A'-... l1 .. __ _ ~)920. ... =· :...Jnli =*A== .......... ...... lllllfl111111Wwll8•0.laaW.,._ .... l:i,_ ......... .. ..... • ... nm.. dllldaey4 ~ ..... ........ ._. ...... .., .... ..,an11 In 1'111bllWll1u11••-11111-• 1961.NOwlllll_ ..... ~....... CllWlt- that ildlim .. -. wla laa ;... ~ 11nhn .. wn'-.. ~ iv, ...... [. •>• ... tilMlidiltih.a....... ..... " .. ---·-.. gilel Of ...._, ..+M'zl .. tilually 1Ua abOUli> -.. .. a a r'tte.. Any kind of crift ii ......... aewsCM be IS lafllor•_.•~llwisb. Shea prdm to 10 wilh one other pmon, a Soulfl_ Aftir:an named Patrict Hcmmm1; .. He.a in juet about every race I compc_te in -and llcalwaysRves me a. nm for ~ylBODeJ," be liiCl. .. This ume we WIU compete • OM. some- thi!'I rm really kdri• forward 10. It' one of the lllOll unusual ex· perienc:a I've been tOld. You can only take provisions needed b lbe entire race that fit inside diil 1inl' canoe. Once you've launched ~ JOUl"De'Y, you can't 1alr.e anYlhiaa on board from anyone of&hore. ~unless it's water. People have told me they have been so tired and stla.i out they've actually hallucinated." Raitcd in SL Louis. Mo., Shea said as• youth be ... ate, drank and slept football." Because bis dad WIS the ~for die St. Louis Cardina1s ...... team. be lnveled on the roed lrom die time be was 12 until he was 20. ... ncelled in foodleJI and was aivcn_ a fd ~to East Carolina UDi""81)'. ~ I en· joyed playi'!Se I ao ettjo_yec! academic 1tud1e1. I ~ I aurpnled everyone wben I ~in business and went on to~ mY. law dearee ftnt in Geoqia, then Cahfomia. "I alWays bad the UfF to So 10 California -San Diqo, to be specific," be said. "That's when I dilcovered canoe ..a .. -ud after my first excursion •ven: ..,, rve manlF,d ~ uaVel ~.IS wen u nwnwn a ~YIDI job. unrelated to sports. Altbouah Shea has never been married, and says he c1oesn•t have any immediate plans for it, he calls bimselfa "daddy." · The oft'sprina. a aoldeft mriever named .. Buck.John," ii bis loyal companion and watts pe1iently-b Shea's return from each 00.tina excunion. ~~crf --~· =a:=--.zs•st body lnvolvtmlld.,. Im· BOAT INVENTION ••• Pnlil•I Now it ii 500 boaa. later-and tbc Duftidd •YI be never .Ot iato the' boa11 bave ex .. ncled 10 20 feet. Tbey electric 00.t buaineu ror the money. have all the cOmforu ot borne, with an ail tbat can ~Ult ao provide a sunroof. tabla, lt9flle 1P11Ce, ad a saereo. .. We Call it die Duffy 20." he saML -rhe next project will be tbc Daft')' 11." .. But the excitins tbina tbat has evolved ii an naual boat NCe • aaarted Jut year ~ tbell .-.nc boats," he aid. "TM nlCe ... aldl • IUCCIM, we've decided ao do it every year." ' RACE CHALLENGES ••• W...81 ~Bay llland. • Well, .,.m, most IOCala know that pm1icular pert of the bey ii doeecl from June IS throuah other side," he said ... This is what makes ii fun and not so competetive." Stature no handicapfordaily battles ! Sip&. u CYCO' year ... And Duffield said it's difficult to (cure out which boats are ahead bec8Dte of tbe crazy way the race is run. , "One boat may start at tbc besin· nin& of the batbor, While another's fint stop may be all tbe way on the The entry fee for the race is s•s. and a portion of that aoes to the Newp0rt Beach Nautical Museum. ''Fint Place winnen will ltl a set of Trojan batteries IS Vt'Cl1 u a troPhy of a aenuine replica mOdel o( their boat," be said. -•rI.atr...., W-e'relookingforgoodsports The Daily Pilot as interested in sharina yoursportjna aploiu. SCndusapho10andbridaccountoftbcaccomplishmenL Wewillpublish them in our Good Spons column. which will appear in Thursday's ., l.F.IJJB ltAllNBST .............. What Gracie Oliver lacb in me lhe make up, for in determination. And, at 2 feet, 10inches1411, sbe has needed plenty of detenninatJon. There have been leuer bettleS: 1e1ectina the best fruit at the poduc:e counter. And painful battles: liitenina IO people talk about her u if Ille were invisible. There have been idiotic battles -ans~na questions such IS, "Wow, bow small were you when you were born?" And~ have been battles of social sipifk:ance -refus.ina to be bused to a school for the bandi-~ capped. And, in the s>u.t I 0 years, since the 32·year-old woman has bad to be&in usina crulcba and a wheelchair to get ~~--..,,..,,.,,,,__--...,..,...~~-=~--::::--.:~~~="""'"....:.._.;.._.;~,......, around; there bas been the battle of N~borhood Focus section. · Address your correspondence to Nei&bborhood Focus in care of the Oiily Pilot. P.O. Box. I S60, Costa Mesa. 9262/. the perkina lot. Maybe that one is ll\Cft of a war. · If Oliver drives into a lot and aeesa vehicle without a handicipPed stick~ er or a desipatiQll on the license plate, she pulls her bia burauody &uick behind tMrn and parks it while she aocs 10 can the police. If the vehicle's pwncr mums ~il.'J that he or she was only aoina to be m the store fora tee0Dd, well that's just too bid. Oliver and her Buick IUy put. .. hay, •No, rm not movi• mycar- tiD )'CMI Ft rour tick~. " Oli Vet 11id. .. They probably hate littJe people from theCl on, but they don't do it apin." Oliver, who is in the process of movinc frOm lqUna Nipl to fountain VaUCy, crediu her mother with inllillina in her a stro• ttnse of self. . "I have • very assertive per· tonalit)'," said Oliver, WbOle ~nts and siblinp are all of aveflle htiabL .. My mother raised me to be self· ..ured arid to have common tense." She works to pass the lesson on to others. As chairman of the board of: the Shon Stature Foundation, Oliver writes a .. Deai Gracie" column, illuminatina dwarfism for readers and, pvi, practical advice to small people: n addition, lhe viaia. classrooms aDd la.lb 10· chiJdi'ea about what it means 10 be di&reat. When someone stares at her, sbe walks up to them arid besins ~ When eomeone tells a .. sbon joke, she sets them suaifhL "If I wut any ,t<>kes made about myself; ru make tbem," Oliver llid she tells them ... But don't you make them and direct them at me." It would help, Oliver said, if people just understood more about amalJ people. for eunaDle: there are more than 200 kinda of dwarfism, and some have bodies of common porport.ions, while others do not. Most have -to allow bet to ID to a ~ borboOd ICbool with ber brotMn and • lillers. Finally, ber mother relented. l ... knew •·d have a bclluva. • ftaln and we did,':' Oliver llid. 'The tcll()ola put Oliver ~ a a.ttery. of 1leltl IO det«miDe if lbe WM , in~t eDCMIO beln dleY. pve in. No o&ber ....ant wbO wu luiDdi- capped or of smaU mture luld anended that ICbOOI befoft. • Oliver puticipaled in everythina. -volley~=n-~ ~ Iida bOckey and She anlilced • on beina included in the driver-1 • tralnifta c1ai1 even tbouib one• teacher quit u a rauJt. ... didev.-.1thin• iDa limited way." she llid. "'' T • ... : Al it turDI out; drivioa ii ~. tbil• Oliver~ enioYI. The rnldwif ID4 cNICtiel •ve been L nuisance, but ihC k>ves bet Buick. With a step to ~ into it, a teat .cal d·m l . . a .. u: . cushion, band controls and tensitmd l>hys• a acu lies aD lllUUlllon to steeriQI. Oliver can easily ttt to bcina small. · · · tbc ~·-_.__ a-:-. ·--• meeunp; ••n&J• enpeemena. or : vw.11U111 __, can ... ....,. anui;i.... 1Ym ~ .nal ~mpression, .and Allbouab Ille works out ~y, diffic:ulty with bearina and C')'CliibL people stiD look at her IS if she 1 out of PbyUcaJ pcoblems tbat IO uncor· place . rccted ~be fa~ and dwarfs have 1 • "I ·never fit in Wherever I to." lhoner lifesfJu m ,eneral. OI' '.4 • ... ..:_ f--'"~ AJthnumhOliverllicla11youdpler .. IV~l&J"" WltnoutaauutO -:-.,,.1)' .• she ,;a;"J""""artaa .. ridi ber special I wish I. did, but I .~ ~ .. bike ID the tlreetl Of'~t, she · BumplDI UJ> !lfllntl lift. I realibel quickly leirDed * luld adult t.ttla c::-n be" .. dam~ ·~· ~ to fiaht. After movi°' to the aubutbl, ume1i accordina to Oliver, but she IChool officials iMI..,,., Oliver be just plows on. buted to Detroit IO auead a bandi· "I don't realize I'm tiny, ¥OU tee." capped ICbool. She pleaded with her Ille said. "I know in my miftd's eye mother -her perena. were div~ that rm not." , Dl!Aa ANN LANDDS: _, I IO&he._wlto.,...M .. wife bid been •rir11d 40 hid two ..... ~ tatenli_~y aad.,.. IM ........ ia lite?'.J11s ~ ftaw ia *!.~ .. Chai btCoulila't ... iuibu111around. • C.nca are Chai bis wife knew ~ bis affain. bu& she ~ ~ ~Wl)'.Wdl,lwaa ... aoallo ~,tkOtherMy,and _,,,_ payi .. dearly ror my mu.. '° ftlce ibt trutb. I beau io lole ~t. my hair fell put. 'I ~ to sweat prof\ilely, and became Mak from peni11nt diar- fhea. It was like a ca1e of intellinal ftu that I couldn 'I tel rid of: A f"eW weeb qo I noticed that my aakle was lWO&lea and had purple spo11 on iL My doctor confirmed my wont feari I hive AIDS. My husband doei not know who inf'ected him and it rauy doesn't mancr. I Tfie metaiee it: Don't put up with infidelity. Oric:e it meant em~ lllCllL Tadlll_~ ~ mean dtath. -SAN JOSE TRAGEDY. DUA UN Mm: T• W dial I& ..... .................... . ............................ p ••nled1 ''t• ....... .._ .......... ... ................... ~ .... ..,ttr ........ .,.,... .... .._ .. , .. ...., ...... . ............ linft .......... ..... ,... . . . DEAR ANN LANDERS: I have been married to .. Jim" (or 28 )Un. We have four pown kids and l llave always wOrked IO help out with the tilla. r,_..,... .... _.1..,.. .,.. -.;holDllMlll .. '-~ .... .," ......... _.....,°' llil M'metk eyay Miek on ....,,. dlllilL . la ., I'--' five ~ t.e baa woa SIT. 11. mate. me sick to tee*' ..... aM) money lib lhiL Hit ...... rnpQftle is. ·~ .... 1!111 to win and I have Ju-11 llMMI a a...11..,~elle. If' ii wwen t for the lottery I ftUld haw deoe•t f'umiture, carpe11 and clr'lpelies>HetdltmelamhdYM cloela't drink or atnOkc Oil ct... ......._ MaYbe to, but I feel~ Any comment?-CHICAGO. D&Aa ClllCAQO; y .. '11118 .. .. •• '*'"t·-·•'-.. ..... ................... 1'111•• .... II = .... Ma lie ._ I l'let 01 " ...... , -. .. Fl w .. p .O. la 1717 , IAil ~ :~ •• c.11. •n. fte w.,•••• a 11 Clll) ..., ................. :t nit -~call nllW ~ ...... ,..... ..... PrtllaJ, Jw 14 . ·A.IUD (Man:h 21-April 19): You receive messqes reach for the sky. Added recotnition due and IO ts romance. rdatina to travel,------social affairs, par- ticipation in Chari• table or political ac- tivi ties. Demands mide on your time, relatives seem to 0 think they have .. ex-.., 1111 elusive ri&bts... ' TAVllUS (Apr_il 20.May 20): Some reQuest1 are panted, bUt money picture not m focus. Play waitinapme, better offer is .. on the way." Check ddails. rQd betWeen lines., know that Scorpio individual will prove llletl. G2MINJ (May 21-June 20): Your ability to write, to verbell~ communicate SUl'JCS to' forefront Personal mtpetlsm fllllfCS prom!nently, member of ~IC leX is completely captivated. You wiU,et excittna a_ssian· IOOllPIO (Ort 2~Nov. 21): LiJbc shed on area pttviously dart. You pin informallOD which dispels feirs; doubCs; suspicions. You IC't to heart of mattm in connection with special relationship. Leo plays outstand- ina role. SAGrrrAJUUS (Nov. 22-~. 21. You'll u~ lesions learned in pest two weeks. Em asis on women. poaibly indudina mother. Fi · st.ruct~ is ~ viewed, procect credit ratina. Cancer native 61ures in scenario. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Diversify, make inquiries, pve full play to intellectual curiosity. Individ- ual you helped in recent past is now ready to "release ~ strinp.,. M~. travel, increaled social activity involved. -ment. . CANC'Ell (June 21-July 22): Domestic 14,jus~ent featured, helPI restore harmony at home. Empbalis also on payments, collections. awareness of invoices, budaet. Take time to smell ~ Oowm. Taurus plays key role. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Revision necesaary, rebuildina prosram can ,et under way. Focus on distribution. communication, plans for jobtney. K.nowl-edae of foreip lansuate, customs would be beneficial. Proceed accordinaly. . eom.-..talawtllon ........... _.,..TV""'- LEO (July 2~AUf. 22): Scenario features plenty of activity, movement. tnps, visits. Key it to be selective, to manaac time, money. Relative says. "Include me in." Dilcem motives; avoid beinaJuOible. Pisces invol\led. VIRGO (Aus. 2J..Sept. 22): You set the money and with it more responsibility. Question of law is settled, y~u win. This can be power play, you'll be directina traffic. Relationship intensifies. Capricorn plays role. UBRA (Sept. 2J..Oct. 22): You suite chord of wlivenal appeal. You present subject, product in manner to atlrlCt men. women, children. Don't limit yourself, P~e6. 19-Martb 20): Excha.nae of ideas featured, involve Gemini, Virto, Sqjttarius ~pie. Y ou1l am more about money and love, tome illusions will beditpellcd. Short tri~y prove necessary. IF .JUNE 14 L1 YOUR BIR AY current cycle b~liJhts pannersbip business, public appearancies. abmty to deal successfully with women. Maria.al status also commands attention Ud so does lifestyle. Taurus. Libra, Scorpio~ play impor11nt roles 1n your life. You have unusual voice, possess sense of drama. appreciate an, music, literature and can be self·indul,ent where diet is concerned. Ouri11f July, burden is lifted. you'll travel, pin more recop1tion and could appear before media. Super Bowl no laughing matter Q. Who d~ up the name .. Super Bowl" for lhe Super Bowl? A. Lamar HunL But wben,he sugested it II a 1eque meetina. ihe other owners lauabed at him. It wun 't called the Super Bowl until the third year. · ~ press.ion is most widespread. They're those who purposely don't. Under still auessina about why. which catesory does the veteran in your family belona? Women's Lib is no issue amooa aolden silk spiders. Tbe female is 100 Maybe you already heard that a times biger than the maJe. • chameleon's tonaue is hollow. It's said military veterans can be You don't think of sprina u the divided almost equally into two time to be deJ)fCS1Cd. but some · cateaories: those who keep pens of docton say that's when severe do-their old uniforms u mementoes and Q. What do psychOl~B mean by .. Cinderella complex"'! A. A conviction suPPoSedlY held by cenain women tbat-''tbcre1l always -----------------------...., be someone totakecareorme." ,,. •=====================================• A .. belfry .. was called that before an~body ever bun& a bell in one. OriainaJly, it was a Greek war tower. 1YCHM1•8C- ANOOllMIMAmf NeidMr vUMrable. South ... NOnB • Qllt Q Kit 0 Atl . ,.,. war UST •Al72 •K4 Q 1t74 <;>tlSJl 0 &65 O Q1114 •Qll .,, 80Ul1I • 165 3 Q AQ 0 111 •AKIM Tiiie tiid«ha: .......... N..a. bit Paatw .... Ck two of .... rr yoa bbclJ fallow tk ., •• lMI ,_ ..w p1ay LMrd haDd MP ad ntm1l putacr'• tail.,_ ..... ., ap willl ta killll o1,....-.... wbm um IMid. ,.... die llit. Tbird bad ..... ii ..... .... here. But ,.._ does .,.u.•a lead ol tbe clCIDce tel ,.,., n.t ..... oalya fov~-. Ewa ifcMI tuit ii ....... bJ tile w-jlck, ,.. will di need cricb e.lt 1 wlme if,.,. are to 1-l tbe ..-.. llMnfore.. a ll*le RCm1l wUl DOI Wp J10S aWc. It ia time to c:.-•a d for 11 1 v 1 NT ,_ 3 NT ,_ ACROSS ... ... adftx Opeaina lead: 'r.o of • 1 .....,.. .- Tiiie trouble willl tnowiq all 6 CMN tooth daole rvbricl ._ n.t JOU should ~~ ~his do • the. bridel tMlt .. that JOU money ..... .,.. to follow tMa ~. Tbcy 15 Anb ru1er rep.at uct.lpildicws, but me 1&s~ DO mblcit9le for ...... ud topc. 17 l..ngth unit 61 Kitchen toot 62..._.. 83 Aog Mid. asv._..,... M TheBPOE 17C......U. DOWN Immerse Yourself If JOU woUI lb to tat JOUr 1a ::; ot 1492 dcfemhe 1kD1. coww dae Wat and 19 ~poet SOutb buds ltlld plW JOU UC 20 No«* Q. Where's the best place to stick a 22 AoPc*1' • thermometer in a chicken to aiet an .,....._ dane 80 anmp. The auc-one's tigerit 1~ 2 Southwest wtnc:I 3 "Someoi• in Pleasure. accvrase readiDJ? tio.a ... J08 ** cOer Cha tb8l 24 Md °"*" A. When cookina same? In the die clldlarial lklil ii oot llnllCbina 26 Joined blast. (Oil ..... 27 Echoed ~.....;..---------------------------------..,,..-------~---, 31M•dow 32 T,_ 33 Muhlpfytng ...... 4 On the tpe>t 5 Vot• 6 Swernc> 7 c.ntrei to • EJtP09-"' .._, Orange Cout Collete ....... word 35 Young8W 38T .. 3t P01'11111ded 40 SNlwe I Wreded 10 Nova - 11~ 12 SurpriM 13 DM"'9d 21 <Mp Ut yoUndf be O\'e'- vmehned Wi1h pleasure during a maxing weekend atCOSU l"CSWU'ants. And livdy ~inrwo~ Relax at the fitness center, pool, .spa, sauna arid steam room. And discover world-class ~ anCl enter· taimneat nearby. It all -.wa lip to a spe- cilll ,..._L ~ COMMON SENSE MONEY MANAGEMENT CAUJOOAY tllOC111MCcllh MGl ........ 11 ~ (714) 851-0131 41 Kids'~ 42 Foodleta 43SptnilhlWM 44 FNlgtll _..... 45 ..... ~ 47Z-... 51 lM-t•• 52 Ermine. .... 54Golf~ 51~--~ , 2 3 23 OlmlnutiW IUffta: pl. 25~ 27Wlr'9 28 On 1he briny -~ 30F---' Maun.a •ea 31 lndMd: If. .. .-WU.ad f cmdapa 11 2 1:1 ~ .at to tm1lilla IWS!lfdc' def ifC tricb. ~*-.80t91 11zNwil do. Yoa ~ *ft to dllll Im ol . « an_ to C8f8' to &M fC I •1 tMt .......... die )Id ... --.... • l!illl ..... ,,_ ,_ wil -...Cd J'I .... WID ad ed. ... if ... ..,... •• .-.e. dedacr ~,. llcmc. TM._ WCU cloil 90 ... OM "1 hrf&I . ap IM 9'lC of * rovlt twb. _. ewd 1rwo...-tri&:b.two ... ._ ..... 1111111 • c:llllb. • .. 48Qowl)oyge9' 50 Of• noble 53 Pi I ISi 55 &.Ir: •. MAt_, ... 57 .... thl ., .. _ ....... _ ........ 11 12 llQo .. .-Id -.., ••• baCk to the chickenS to get them Med up?". DlllU08 TllB llSllACB ~ 2.<t> ___ ..,_"" ~~ "Have you been jumping on my chair, again?" by Hank Ketcham CT.1;· ol •JUST CttECKl,.. TO SEE \'MAT~ GOING TO 8E ~KFUL FOR 10NtGITT. • Gone With the Wind JIJ The story of Rhett and Scarlett. ] t was a dark and stormy marriage. WHICH WAY PO «t'OCJ 'THINK l"f W'tLL eRE.AK? by Charlel M. Schulz 1 . ~ ..... __.. l~1il0 .:·· ~ I \ -·-... --.... .... ~ -..... =-- ____ ._,._ ..... .,. ___ ... ......... :-.:aw•• --, ___ _...... ............. DAN AYKROYD JOHN CANDY GiMI' ~-~.. l*=tiifSv:*I "Wiit ---- ,..._ eCOSTA-. et!IUlf••&&.aY •LA.._ ~ ..-r-.Mlllllll.41 ......... C.. ..... ,_._, MIC,__.... --. .,.._ ....... 711 ... ,. ....--.ma ·-&'°"° •-IRlllW •LA.-W WIWIM ...... .... ........ ..,.... .......... ••a.. .-1 .,... ..... •1111 ..... .......... ,,......-..it ~!!!!:!!!!!!!!!!:!!!!!i!!!!l , .......... _iii t) ------.. ,.., ... ............... ----...... ............... ------·· . ...... ",... .... --------.. ·------== ~--... ........ ~- ··•a..,..~ .... ·~ ..... ,. .,_, •IWIM109llUOI ........... WWIW'81 ..... o-.c.. .......... ....a-._ ltl4'1t us.'"' .. -...... ----.......... w..o...__ ... II .._.. ....... -~ .......... ._,IUClt m-. --UI .... .. ._ --._ ... ..... 9411 .... . .... ...... ........... , .... =:::---::;:.i.-r--,......,.,,..-~ l•l'NllNTID1t-WMMfl lnf.r-:1 -----~ ><un·,.., Cflll'Pf ... ~ " ·~-, ..... ~ ' I ' "t I ~ ~ t~ ~ cl .-., , I ("' f 1 l f. ~ ~.; ... ~ ' .. ~--~ 5: lS. J:JS.t:IS.11:15 -ll:lS.l:l~Js....11:15 ..... DUllHAll ~~-6-fft.li. ·--..... ·=. ..... ·==Nit·~,,·--· ... a..,. M-Blt ..... , .... c..-... -.......... -..... ~---•_. C-o.i = -I ..... •m1 ·-!,._ .... 1==--: ..----·.--..... _... . --..a..r-'-11 ...... ~ = 111;4"' ••1 111!-._.. ........ . "<AP'~;. a,· . ... lit .... ~ .. 4 .... ,_: . ••.• ,. I l . 't I. I ...~~ ... .,•.~ ...... I 1w.1•AtJUM MD NUT 11:»-L~IHI , , ....... but ... limiled to met-~~----· ADodaer Weal • . ' It w .. 1elldet .-~ oa Lem Your Hearl'" 1k ~-. Jlowever, ii OD ... _., OWiy ad bis lleefta1 twcilkial ~GPDIJ-crull BOlel. 'When ._., mvilvelf.m:a ailmbir, it wons well; WbeD ~. Dal -ludl .. in the mpailuous .ea.d ect .-r. ''Tbe Sun Hu Got 191 Hat'·OD .. -the paint oa this vi.-.e carousel of a aboW --'° clUp. Some notable_ IU~ pef• formancea arc ~ .·'!>' ,Erick De-vine as the fainily IOlicitor over- anxious 10 break Udo a IOftl and dance about bis ~; Louis S. Cnune u the ~ octo--~ ancl Keith Pal)' u the ~-faced. Veddy proper butler. variety of 04sporti .. " politiona. One thine was clear from the propam and its J)hotot datina from Johnson's childhood -neither JOhHOn or wife KadtJ have qed much in their adult lives. Only the sideburns date the ~otos. B~HEVROlET Home of the Serengeti Blazer •sout11c..oority~ ROYAL .... ~~=-==-#~ NEW CORVErrES ~ Cd our friendly salesmen fOf details 579-5100 1-800-228-7240 17071 E. Imperial Hwy. -Yorba Linda. C8Jifomia ~' . THEO.E ROBINS THE STORE 2090 H.t;Or &Ml., Costa Mesa 142-0010. o SADDLIBACll Sales ~ · SerVlce Leasing ~ Parts IRVINE AUTO CENTER 1-800-831-3377 714-... 1200 N • SALES BODY SHOP LEASING STERLING 540-9100 2600 Harbor ·Blvd .• Costa Mesa ·e SA~~Y.11~ G e NEW LOCATION! SANTA ANA AUTO MALL ... 1•Auto .... Dr.,8llllltaAM 111-3171 Newport/55 Frwy. at Edings ..... e>ept. °""', ...... HGiwE ..... -M. 7~10pm i I ...,. ()piir\ M.s.. a. 5:30 Sat e -• p.m. • • LOWEST PRICES IN O.C.I SeMoe M·Fn 7:30-e p.m. .05 Frwy, East 1 Bk>Ck to 911.uat a• NUWTw.TOM •ACM 6633 Westminster Ave, Westminster ~ 8UENA PAAt< 714 / Ma-2000 714/849-8333 1-800/26-CHEVY STANTON PACIFIC OCEAN 445 £. C.t ....... , ...... ludl (bttw .... ,.... & .... H) (714) f7J.lllO HOUSE of IMPORTS, Inc. 'llY'C& M·F 7a-ep Mercedes· Ben% 886i Manchester BouleYa.rd Buena Paik @ . 213 CW 714/llEllCEDa,M-F a.-ep Where 1-5and1·9lmeet. Sat. 8a·2p -• l~ Prteet • Ne °'"'""tek• • GfMt 1eiect~ • Frieftd!ty ,...,.. • hcetlent SefM Tables turn for Hall · S~rtswrtter finds - he· s inductee with Redskins' Kilmer •1 PAUL ARCBIPLEY ............... A former sponswriter who tho~t be wu toina to introd~ the in- ductee and a fonner quarterblck who uted to diam about trasbina the ' Balboe Bay Oub were inducied into that same club's Spons Hall of Fame Wednesday. • 8iDY Kilmer, who quartert.cted a.e~Washinston Redskins in SupeT Bowl VU, was inducted alo"f with five-time catifomia Sportswriter of the Year John Hall. They joined a slate of other present and put aports ~nalities durina the banquet that 11 part of the annual Irrelevant Week celebration. Jeff Beatbard, this year's honoree, ' alto was ~ted with the Lowsman Trophy by the University Athletic Oub. -Beatbard endured an cvenina of routs and toasts as the 333rd and last pick in the annual NFL draft. Joinina in the festivities were bmcr Rams defensive end Jack Youftlblood. University of Nevada- 1.u Veps buketba1l COKb Jerry Tarbnian, Rams quanerbect Jim E:;t:atbard's uncle, former pro q• le Pete Beatbard and his &tber BObby.&..,eneral manqer of the Wullinaton KedskiM. Irrelevant Week founder Paul Salata, wbolC own name bu been. included amona the ranks of former pro foOcbell players nobody ~ memben. kept tbeeveninar>ina with a smoOth bfend of biaoricaJ trivia about pest Irrelevant Week honorees and wbat Jobn Hall claimed were the tune jokes he's been tdlina at t.he annual beriquets for 13 years. Hall; now a human interest columnist for tbc Oranec County ~. tbouabt he wu f>!na ·to introduce Kilmer as this~ 1 Hall oi • Fame iaductec and .-Utied surprire i that he &oo WU beinl honored. : Kilmer altO WU awpriled when he ! .... DoUfted of the honor. .. Wben I wu a kid, I uled to come by ........ raili ladl. .. Kilmer laid. .. I .... ~ =IO tbrow a bomb on tllilllboalnOu~" • M Hall of 'fame iDClucteel. both become lilMUne manba1 of tbe dub. ..:~~-==: W'l11'11nrCL bUt lat baDd out ., .................... .. ........... ..-.... · ... lae coulda't dlKbe moll oliL YW#aod did..._ tM& _....~---0.. ~ ................ ..... r .... State U•lftitltJ .la 9Dulllllll an.a~-,.. ... I aOsrt ...., 61 Oub111 _____ _ ::1==·•-aae1'11ldll • • ravels rarelyendinlife of punter From Ruitlers to Bills. Partrldjenoexceptlon ., ION PSIOUION ............. NFL playen who u1e their feet come and 11» lbd ao. and IO· Just ask former Golden West Colics standout P'lnter Rick Panrids. ft's a fact of life that place kicbn and punten are well traveled in profetlionaJ footbell, whct'e 10metimes timina 11 as impon· ant as perfonnancc. Panricfee has been no exception 1ince comina out of lbe University of Utah as tbc foui'lb best punier in the natioa bis 1enior teas0n with aa aven,e of 44 yards per kick. "E.ue;I for a P.Y like Ray Guy •ho spent his whOle mftlel' wUh the Raiden..._. punten and kickers ~ wen tnveled, .. Putiidle said. .. Very few stick wilb a team~ With most of them t11ere•1 a foal hi~ ol 9'0PI-Like Nick LOwerY. He bad six tryouts before be stuck with the· c&ie&. Vince Abbott bad been around before mak.illl the Owteri lall ,ear. And he beat out a f'Y who was the hnchise, Rolf Bmincllke. ~basbeentonintstoplin IOycan with NR. aiad USFL ~ Thole ~ include puntina for the New Orleans Saints first .m squad in l 979, for the AFC Western Divitioft ctwn_pion San Dicao ~in 1980-81 , tM l 91l USFLchampion Michiaan .Pantbert. 1he 191S playoff-bound New Jeney Gentrall Mtb Hmchd Walker. and even a stint wilb the luft'alo Bills durina the 1987 strike . . At 30, his career milbt be c~ to an t:nd . but another chuce stiUli.,s. The BiUs still want hjm to come to camp this summer. but Panridie is weiahilll *hethcr he wants to make another try or settle into his position with Canada Ory Bottlin1 as a sales manaaer handlin1 the ManlWten district. .. lt.s up in the air for next fall." Pannd~ said ... The vice president of my company said he understands. which meant they're up for me to try it TMf d welCome me back laler if it didn t work." Partric:ite had spent a frustratina penod in limbo between the dose of the USFL season in July of I 98S and tht Stan of the 1986 NFL season. try in& out with the Broncos before beina cut. .. I kicked in about two pre-season pmes. •• Partridac said.·· Af\erthat.1 was lookin& toward retirement.·· ''Maybe I should have quit years qo. ~ Panrid~ said. ~rve been knocked down enou&h times. but I keep pickina myself beck up. The averqc professionaJ football player spends 3.2 yean in the NFL. I beat that. I wouldn't chanae it (the past), considerin& that al 30, Buffa1~ still wants to sip me." Buffalo Qlaed in 1917 and Panridec said he felt IOod aboUt hi1 performance in camp. .. The ,Bills coatxtcd me and I was lookioa at a &ood sianint bonus ... Partfidee said ... In camp, the GM said in any othtryearwhcn there wasn't a strike possible. I would have had the job." But the incumbent punter, John KJdd. was the Bills' NFLPA ''?::tenlative and lhe political ramifacationsm cutting the union rep were somethina tht entire te.aue's own- ership was wary of. Alain Panridac was cut. but the strike came and tie took a a ve of ablcntt from work. In the tbn:c pmes, Partrid~ struglect, twice battlina the elements -rain and even ba1l 1n New Enaland. In the third prne apinst the G iants, he had eiaht puou for a 40-yard averaac and thrtt inllde the 10-yard line. The strike was just another in the list of tnals for Partndae. ··we took &uses from the hotel to the practice site and had to IO ICTOU the picket lines." PanridlJC said. ... was ooc of only two N Fl veterans on the team. No one else wanted to sat in the front seat oftbe bus. because of the ttuncs that ~ happenina at all the camps. I sat 1n the front seat of the bus. I know a few of the auys on the (re&Ular) team. and it bun. "But if they WeR in my position, they would have done the same thi._ I felt I still had something to prove lO the Bills, or maybe tbc ~ ... PONl&a'8{C2) No guarantees Steady Probst guides S~uth Rlley watches hls tongue 4 0 .000 tum out for parade as LA celebrates its title 1 LOS ANGELES (AP)_,,. C:O.Cb Pat Riley wasn•t about to isaue another parantec, but his Loi Anaeles Lakeri made it clear they'd like I third atraiabt NBA cham~·onlhip. · · · nal pulled a headbend clown around his moth :::Jay before addralins approximate- ly 10,000 fans who crammed onto the IOUth lawn of City Hall. About 40,000 turned out few a perade to celebraie the Laken' I ()I.. I OS victory over tbe Detroit Pistons in the 1evcnth pme of the NBA Finals Tuada)' nitbt. · .. ( JUlt Wlllt \0 llY a couple of thinp. and tbey area 't Piii to be very profound," R~ .UCS. "Thia is the ftftla pir'lde we•ve been illVOlwd an. 8lad it'• &r and ••YIM bllc we've ewr--. .. Anolber lbiae. and I .really IDllD Ilda. without your IUpport and your laith -and 11111 mia ha llJntS 6 and 7 -1 d08'1 think we'd tie a..,_. aow. You did a helluva job for us.·· One Costa Mesa man said be arrived at City Hall at 6 a.m. to 11£l a front-row spot for the ceremony, which didn't start until about 12;30 p.m. "To make eye contact with the players is wonh it~' Briaq Bleecker. 24, of Cosca Mesa. said. "Plus. baCk-to-back., you just can't misa iL .. "Skill and experience beats °L!lioutb and enerJY every time," Blecckeuai4 of the era• defeat of the rc?unacr Pistons. .. Macie carried them and James (Worthy) delivered. .. Moments after winnina tbc 1917 NBA title over the Boston Celtics. Riley auannteed the Laken would repeat as champions, a ht no team had accomplished since Boston in 1969-. "Aho. fd like to say, and I'm pretty biased about it. but there•s no doubt 10 my mind t.t;:~'re never aoina to find, see or watch anodact tMll team play like tbe one that lits behind me. Eve-r." "It basn 't been doDe for 19 ~ and Buck (Mqic Johnson) said today, 'Rilei, !bey said it can't be done.' CdM pomtguard learned lessons from UCl's Hess BJ &IR& WouxnT I ........ CC:: 0 9 When Coroaa del Mar point IU&rd Jeff Probst sn uck into the lchocI IYlll thn:it sammcn qo. be had only expected to work out a little -take a couple free throws. practice his outside sboounc. wcR OD bis dribb&- iDJ. lnstead. 1 his pine WU cbaftled forever. · Another point suaid who plldu- ated from CdM and went on to play at Texas before finishina his career at ua was already in the l)'ID. Miu Hess asked Probst if be wa1ned IO 5boot around. .. I hadn't planned to play very Iona that day, but M'tke and I ended up shootina and dribblina for more than two houn,.. wtao Probst. who bad followed Corona basketball most of bis life and considered Has some- what of an idol .. We swted playiQa lOldhc:r every day durinf the summer. workina out. liftina wei&bts and runnina for con· ditionina. Towe Mike a lot for where I am today ... Probst said. Where Probll will be Saturday IS in the UCI Bren Events Cen1et for the 0ranaie County Hilb School Al~tar pme wbicb beaiDS at 7:30 p.m. (Pl11w-n:o•IT/C2) Angels' w inning s t reak end s a t six Minnesota's Viola hurls three-hitter, gains 3-1 victory MINNEAPOLIS (AP) -~ can Leaaue bitten would never Juesl that Fruk Viola bu been tlkins n C&Sl Oft them lately. .. , was ~int • little lazy," the Minnesota left bnda said Wednes- day ... But I YfOfbd out• few kinb on the sidelines between awu. and I was throwina much better today." It WU ca1aialy DOCic:able to tbe An,cls as Viola threw a three-hitter and became the fint American lelpe pilebitr to wia 11 pmes thu teUOn • the T-.ins beat the Anp 3-1. It clMkd Calib'ilil"I sil"t&me winnilll streak and a 7-.me "*' .. sUaL ~= 11·2 o~ and 8-0 at home. Im IOlll oGJy oaee sance ~ills day bUt WM t-1 iD .... lalt ...-.ns. :.& a.e ldt better Wednaday. Ila •jlla -'Y M ----NA. cauled by his own throwilla--•• pictoft' aoempt. ........ , DOW dM: 9" :I -...... thintuYbodYi191··· Viola salcL .. l cllllll'l ~ (Pl••·- .._ftl'm1 'UI,._ WllOIT -WllM 01Mr -. bu& 111· •NlwYadtY...._couldt.e I\\ .... • e1 .. r::1a,_ ... ..._ ...... ~ F 2111 .,....._. sarrwouldbi~-...._ --llMlli-ar..,V,Mllitlbownbl ••,~&::"Y..._ a 1 • ..... decide .. N.wYanY...._.._,.-1 met ............ r...-,--. ..... .. .... ... ..... llUllllltlriil .... ndlbt be .... -10 &e .nc tbat't IMir preraeatiw_ .. ol OWMr Geolte ~ and lob :==~--~ --..-. Wbo...ect his the I ire ~ •MitajM tbal catcbier Don Slauaht be hla die ~-hied lill nea tboulb be _, ftll1 NCO•...S hm a llmnslriaj Pull Mard8 allO llid .............. ~Md been ..,..;Ill bim far ..._fteld IC'livita. DOcably what II Mid ... ~•wllb three mea 1Mt moo1' at ~ .. a Texas topleel bar lbat left IWa bnaited and bdeed. .. rm lick ad tired oll>einl called a drunkard. .. be Mid. .. rm fed up witbl'IY'CalliM Us>~ and tclJiJll .. rm driakiM. I lliawia"t bad I drink ID two days. You l'IYI dw.k am"t a bis cleaL A lot of tbinp have .... OD witb peofle IUbauirinht& me. I don't like tbaL n.a mMllinJ's beaa ftm. All :the otber Sluff is bull. 'l"beR's ~ pre 11ue oe a "'IDll"" and a team. Tllere•a DO R!MOll far it.00 la fact. lbat prtllUre bu been buildina for the past 10 days a the Yubel have Jolt six of eiabt and dro~ out of first place in the AL East. Four of the lolses-in five pma-have been to their two clOlest rivals. Cleveland and Detroit. Tuesday oisht's defeat was the most devastatina, resulti.na from c:imnnstanca for wbicb Martin has been most heavily aiticized in the New Y ort media - his bandlina of the ~1Chifll. FtrSt Dave Rilbetti the former bullpen ace, walked in two runs, ~ to 11'1F5lions that be wasn't sharp because be balD"t been used enoUfb. He w~pl.at~QcilioG~~wbomcri1ic:sclaimhas been overworked. Guaa1e prompdy yielded Trammell'• homer, just u be bad SWTendered a pme-winnina .bomer to Tom Brookens in the tenth innina of M= n.isbt's pme. But even before lbat, Manin like be would =-~ ~ Steinbrenner has been Quote of the day a.81Dafta.wbobascommitted12errorsin riaht ftdd this season for ~ Antell, two shy of the team record set by Ken Hunt 1n 1961, on makina two erron Monday: "The fint error bit my aJove. I must have been wearing it inside oul On my ICCOod one, I saw some kids in the stands awt tcarina up my bueball card. It was a big one, too." Mlnneeota won't keep Brooks BLOOMINGTON, Minn. -Herb Iii Brooks will not be rehired IS ooacti of the ' NHL's Minnesota North Stan., new Minnesota tcneral manaacr Jack Ferreira said Wednesday. . .. After one week of con1ideration, I have decided to P!_af\er a new coacb," Ferrein said in lbe statement. -nic tension and milunderstandiQg evident in my meetinp with Herb made me feel uncomfortable bavina him IS coach of the North Stars next season. We want to put pest problems behind us." T'••ODW' 22 lrlHa leul U.8. INOUWOOD -Sieve TimlDGM .. ..... 41tr'wlUIC:kllfUaitiadS.... ..... " .. ,.. ...... wida 22 killl Wtdt till>' I#• ii dliD tOpftaked U.S. .._ dd~aaed·J-IU l S,, 10, I S-1, I S-3 in USA Clip comrualted Slalll ii .. ti .. itt fifth defenee of the USA~ lint P~..:. 5-0 ..i...,..., bdd8d IM epiti a lonnir Soutbem Cal Al-Amlrieaa =r Jota lloot. •bo flnjtMd witla II kiUI. lut YYIUN 1~ no fiaWaed with 12 kills, and NIOki Taub. with 10. beljld live sixth-ranked Japan a I J. I 0 lellll in the ftnt ~ H~. Timmom• llootaided the American team ia overtlkina the Japeneee. lloot led tbe U.S. with Wee blocb. . U.S. center Jeff~ Uc. of Pepperdine, led all players with eiaht dip, wbile Ctvnlik added eeven. .. Judie bacb Spinka n. Biiton . LAS VEGAS, Nev. -A awe judF • bu ~Nied to lflllt an i!Uuaction •biCb ~Id have 1ttacbed SI million of the $13.S million Michael Spinks will earn for t meetina Mike Tyson Monday .u.hL Dillrict Juctae Micbeel wenaeu naled OD Wednes- day that an injunction was not warranted. He said Hilton Hotel Corp. which IOQ&bt the iltjllDCtion1 bad not .. demonstrated a realONb&e orobebility.. of a.tCCletJClina in a suit apilllt Spinks and boxina promoter Butch Lewis. Hilton went to court Tuesday in an effon to attach SI million of the money Spinks will earn in Monday Jli&ht's beavywei&ht championship fiabL Tbe hotel claims that is the amount it loll when Lewis and Spinks bllckcd out of a bea~i&ht unification series spomored by the Las Veps Hilton in 1986 and 1987. lllSL reduced to nine teams SAN DIEGO -The M~or Indoor m Soccer l..Qlue WIS reduced from 11 to nine teams Wednesday after the Minnesota Strikers folded and the St Louis Steamers we~ automatically terminated for lack of onaoina operations, Commissioner Bill Kentling announced after the first day ofMISL mt.etinp. Kentlina said there have been inquiries for expension teams from prospective groups in both Minnesota and St. Louis. Members of the 1987-88 Strikers and Steamers have bcc:ome C.. .,ents because the teams are now defunct, Keotlina said. Televlalon, radlo TELBVmON S p.m. -TENNIS: Wimbledon early-round matches, from Wimbledon. EnaJand (delayed). HBO. . 6 p.m. -AUTO &ACING: Off-ROid Champtonsbips Grand Prix. from Pasadena (taped), ESPN. 7 p.m. -AUTO llAaNG: USAC midaet com~tition, from 1;ra~! (taped), ESPN. 7.30 p.m. -S . Meet of Own- pions, from Mission V eijo (taped~~ Ticket. 9 p.m. -AUTO a.ACING: un-Road Mint 400. from Las Veps (taped}, ESPN. 9 p.m. -BOXING: Vinnie Buraese vs. John Rafuse in • l().rQundJ'unior-welterwei&ht bout, from Atlantic City, N.J. (taped). USA I 0 p.m. -AUTO It.ACING: SCAA competi· tion, from Detroit ('=io ESPN. No events scheduled. FRIDA Y'I TELBVISION 11 a.m. -MEN'S GOLP: PGA Seniors Southwestern Bell Classic Open, ESPN. I p.m. -BASEBALL: New York Mets at Chkqo Cubs. WON, WOR. Mahler puts an end ~!fELS ••• to Dodgers' streak Braves pitcher tosses four-hitter for 4-1 complete game win LOS ANGELES (AP) -Manaaer Russ Nixon of the Atlanta Braves doesn •t even want to think about where his team would be this year without Rick Mahler. The ri&ht~ pitched I four- bitter Wednesday nipt for his second complete pme, drove in two runs with a peir of san&les ud retired lbe last 10 batters as die lul"'l'iace Braves defeated the Los AJlldes Dodsm 4-1. .. Mahler.s been outtianding for us, .. Nixon said after Mahler helped end the Braves' four~ skid and Jft I , , , Tile schedule AWAY June 2>-fdle. June M-<lnclnnetl, 4:3S p.m. • JUM 25-Clnclnnetl, 4:05 P.m. • June 2'---<lncinnetl, 11:1S a.m. • June 27-Hou5ton. S:lS o.m. June a-Houston, S:JS o.m. • June 2'-HOU51on, 1 l:JS P.m. •On TV, CMnnel 11 . • All Ottmes on KABC (790). the Dodacn' fiv~e winnina . streak. "He'swonathirdofourpmes team pla~ defensively ... and he relieves when be doesn't stan Don Sulton, 3-S, has not won since and be drives in runs. What else can ~Y 14 and committed a biDrre you ask ofhim'r' em>r in the third to ltcy a three-run Mahler, 8-6, struck out six and Atlanta rally. walked two as he held the ftnt·place "rm comfonablc with the way I'm DodFrS hitless Over' the lat four t.tifOWi., tlie bell, but not witb the inninp. results, Sutton said. .. There weren•t cocky statement. When you feel aood about vourself, aood thinp will happen.(• · Viola's took only two houn and ten minutes to complete the pme. .. It kind of speaks for itself," catcher Tim Laudner said ... Let's face it, hc·s one very consistent starter for us. Battler, excellent control, &ood fastball, chanaeup and he mixed in a few curves." Viola walked one and struck out six. Of his I 06 pitches. 68 were strikes. '~ive I IUY like Viola credit. .. said Chili Davis of the Anaels. uHe comes out and throws strikes, challenaies bitters." The Anaels finished their road trip at 6-l. their first winning trip since June 1987. They were 0-9-1 an road tri~ prior to this week. •We're not elated to win two of three, but it's better than losin1 two of three, espcciaJly in their park," said A•ls M1naaer Cookie Rojas. Starter Willie Fraser, 4-7, allowed all three Minnesota runs in three inninas of work. The Twins Sot their first run in the second when Gary Gacni doubled, went to third on an infield out. 1nd ~ on a passed bell ~catcher O.rrtll Miller. a JNllCl :=-.=.-:. . Al;: = .. ~ ....... bowe .. Ml-... ---. ...... ....,. riebt ....... -----....., ~ "'Hew t1C'(lr"'mt ~ awo ~~~CGl•vr::: Mid. "'He ... our to. llader. 1'1wft was uM1811y nobody .._. 10 Mlp bim." Problt. • ~ -tbe cx.'l.Y mumi•-...,. 1ar Qnu th& :.a:-S:\;t:;~t View Lape tide la 1917, be ibouldered mucta OI tbt ftlllPOllli- bi.lity this year, orria llid. but never complained. Problt's aUitude, coupled with hi• hustle and ltCMy olaY impraeed South alH&arOOllCb 8i)fb.iinnoo. Orisinally. the .... sporttwritm ch09e 12 ~yen to eac:b aJklar team, a.Iona with tbree ~ The alternates~ to lit oe tbe end of the bench in street clotba duriftl the pme while the media players~ the floor. Shannon ~eed with this. .. I fiaured if all 15 pla~ are aood enou&fi to make the team.\ then all 15 plaxers are aoina to play. he aid. ' We're aoina to play ~ in the first half. Then we'll play lbe second half to win. Whoevet doel well will be in there.·· Shannon, who coaches at Wood- bridF, has known Probst since ninth aradc when he particii-ted at s~ Valley Basketball. While Probst is not a veat drive-and-dilb player who will draw defenders, Shannon taid he WU probably the South·s best ball hand- ler. And with the North tryina to pick up the tempo and beat the South with its fast ~ ball handlina and the strona defensive stills emphasized by Orris at CdM could prove a factor in slowina down the pme. In prepantion for SatW"day's con· test, the South team scrimmqed last week qainst past UO players. "ll was a areat expcneoce," Probst said. "I s<>t to ~)' apinst Johnny Rosers and Bob Thornton, wtio are .............. Geoff Probet of c--... llar, ...... tit.tia ··-Las Alamltoe' Dre IA•oareaa. p1a,. for die loatla AD.-.n. both in the NBA. J even ended up auardina Wayne EnaJestad a couple of times." Eqlestad, the Anteatcn' powerful center last seasonl. staDdl 6-fOot-8 and tips the scales It ~SO pounds. Probst. on the other band, ·is an even 6-foot who carries f.ar less bulk. Tbe Anteatcn won the exhibition, 138-120. but Probst believes the All- Star pme will tum out differefttly. "We're ready to play. PndUces have been toina well and we want to win, .. he said. "I'm just aoina to play IS hard u I can. Hopefully ru ,et to play a lot and contribute to the team." As for Hess beina at the_ pme to watch his proteee, Probst said. .. I told him I'd try to ,et some tickets. J owe him a whole lot more lhan that." r .... • ·cash.rcillies frOID brink of def eat He avoids Becker's fate of 1987, defeats 21-year-old Argentine third round, where he will face countryman John Fitzaerald. .. He played fantastically well for two sets, .. Cash said. "There WIS only one way for him to ao. and that wu down ... --- WIMBLEDON. En&land (AP) -Defendina cham- pion Pat Cash, playina on the same coun where Boris Becker was dethroned in the second round last year, avoided a similar fate Wednesday with 1 stirrina comeback at Wimbledon. Frana. who was beaten 6-1 , 6-1 by Cash two weeks aao at Queen's Oub, was playin1 in his fint Wimbledon tournament But be obviously wasn't intimidated by his opponent or the historic sum>undinp. "Once I aot onto the ~urt. I foraot where I was and who I was playing." said F~pa, ranked 80th in the world. The brash Australian was pushed to the brink by 21- ycar-old Javier Frana of Aqentina before rallying for a 6-2, 4-6. 3-6, 6-1, 6-4 victory before a standina-room-only crowd at Coun I of the All Enaland Oub. About SO yards away on Court 2, Becker was wipina out the memory of last year's defeat with an impressive 6-3, 6-4, 6-4 victory over Karel Novacek of Czechosl<>- vak.ia. The 20-year-old West Gennan. who won the title in 1985 and 1986, boomed t 7 aces to .-ve him a total of37 in his fltlt two matches. Beratina officials and himself after losin( two sets in a row, Cash appeared to be followi~ in the footsteps of Becker, who wu shocked by Auatrahan Peter Doohan in last year's tournament But he repined his composu~ and his strokes to win the final two 1ets and move into the Steffi Graf, the women's top seed, lost her Grand Slam shutout streak but still blitzed I 8-year..old Karine Quentrec of .France-6-2. 6-0. PUNTER'STRAVELS NEVER END ••• Prollll 111 . . . . , other teams. or maybe even myself." It WIS in' the pme apinst New Entland when:~ was speared in the back near the sidelines while runnina with a poor snap on fourth down. The back problems didn't surface until a later, and the Bills' doctors pve him a medical release. "I don't know what my chances arc now," Partridse said. ..rm not necessarily lookina at football as a job. rm looking at 1 business career and puttina the emphasis on thaL Althouah its aood PR for the com- pany J<>in& to camp. l don't know rcahstacally ifthe Bills want me. The invitation may have something to do with them covering themselves for my back." If his career is over, Partridge said, ··r wouldn't have had it any other way. I had fun. made money. I aot to do somethina a lot of people only dream about, and I sot to live that dream of mine ... The dream bcpn as a youth olayins football and baseball for 'tustin Hi&h. Also a quarterback in hiah school when the Tillers "weren't much ofln offensive football team," Partridac was the fourth of five brothers who Pf1yed-football. Bob went to Occidental on a . academic scholarship, while the other three -Brent, Bruce and Jeff, the After beina drafted by the Packen younacst of whom later kicked for the in 1979 and out-kicki"4 veteran Los An,eles Express -all played for punter David Beverly m camp, Golden West before moving on. Partrid&c found himself cut. He Records -~ set to be broken and kicked ?or the Saints for a year, was the Partrid&es took care of their own. traded to the Charaers where he Rick broke ~rent's Tustin record - a played two seasons and was later quick kick from his tailback position siped by the Baltimore Colts. -but Jeff later topped him. At ·~r sianed with them before the Golden West, Jeff apin broke some draft. and the (Colts') upper manqe- ofRkk's records beforc a lcpcyoftop ment said no way would tb_9' draft a Oi&ht Rustler punters also moved punter," Partridge said. 'Ibey did. past the Partridaes. And Ron Starks (the Colts' ettrrent "The thing that m"'e (Rick) 1 aoOd punter) was a great punter. It's biahtly kicker was he also was a 1ood unlikely for a kid comina out of athlete;· said Golden West COKti college to kick like he did." Ray .Shackleford, who coeched four His most memorable moment Partridacs. .. A lot ofkic~en just kick. came with the New Jersey Generals in but he was a team member, not just a l 98S, while h~dina for a field pl on kicker.•• second down. In a pme a,.anst Fullerton Colles "We went in to win the pme with a at Anaheim Stadium in 1976, 30-yard chip shot. Thett was a Md Partridac punted 11 times for •S2 snap and I ran for a touchdown in yards. the two Golden West records overtime. The coach told me if be still holds. . anythina went wrona. either ao for it "I ~member1oin1outthcrcquite1 orlillon the ball and roll to the center few times.?' Partridae said. "It WIS a oflhe field for pe>sitionin1 on the next defensive battle." . . down. rwent' He once booted a Westttn Athle1iC While be watched the USFL fall. Conference record 91-yard ~nt. a a~na football is a new pro forum be ~ mark Which 1till 1tands, anet his ·44o won't enter. It's somethins he hai yard career averqe nnktd 10th on 'little rqard for. somethina be calls a the 111-time NCAA Division I list · farce. It makes sense. After all. there throup 1986. arc no punters.in attna ball. .. Mostly J went with fastballs and I many balls bit hard. but 1t•1 a bottOm- had aood location with it." said liAC business. and rm not 9tilfied Mahler, wbo bad · beC:D winless iD wi1b the bottom tine." three stmU tiace ....... I caner best with a 1even....,ne winnina After sinaJes by Ozzie Vi,.I· aDd stiak ... Everythint wu pretty much Ron Gant with none out, Suuon the way I wanted iL I j\< tried to could no{ cleanly handle a bard-bit P~RFyachts mak.e event s~cceSsf~ IDOYC the ball in aiad out. But the key c:omeblcker by Mahler, wbo WIS T "'ng Beach event 10 the ~ pme was \be way our credited with a hit. .&JU _ -----------------....:.-........... hase!f!ed many sponaors for race .. ... -~· _,..._ .. Cl._.. Giants, 8 -7 His thrce-run.tlouble ln ninth, seven RBI lead wtn over Padres P.rw"' .......... ..... Will a.st dio\19 in Wleft nans. enjoyina the bimell .-e IO (w i• hit C8lml: aid llloWed the .Slln franCflco Oiln&a IO ...... l'h ~ iui111 Wedneeday. ~~'llli two IUiltel &Iii• llim Ill four times be hit rd muda ......... OOl have tWO ltriket on~ but one ihina •.~dO~ic with.awo ~--··be saad. H11 bUeHoeded double an tbe mntb came off rOnner teammate" Mart Da~ wbo bad aruck OUl Clark OD Tuetday nilbt wllile •Vina a P9dres victory. Thi: Ofan11 trailed·7~ IOina ia&o the bottom of the nintb but IMdled out aa 8-i viciory over the Sin J>ieeo Padre1 u ~tt Butler ti,.aed hbtM a Nn with two out ud Oatt drove in three n&111 .-i&b a double. .. HOpefully, th.is Will tet the troops rollina apin," said C1ait. -tto had a (Our-hit day and lined out to lhortatop the only time he was mired. The Oiants. defendin& National Lcaaue West clwnpions, had lost eisht of their last 10 pmes. They mede two da~na erron on defeote to allow t~o unearDed runs to acore. Clark drove jn a nan with a ainale in the fim and had a thrcie-run homer in the fifth. Eltewheft ln the N.UonaJ Laaue: ................ Dwilbt Oooaen, Roter McDowell and Rand)' Myers combined to pve New York pitchers their third shutout in fourpmes and tecond s~t over PitUbUqh. The Meta now have 13 on the teason. sax more than any other ~-lelaue 1am. PMlllee I, Cillll I: Mike Schmidt drove in two runs to tie Willie Swaell for 23rd on tbe alJ.time RBI list at 1,S40 and five ·pitchen combined cm an Ciaht-bitter for host Philadelphia. Allnl I, .... I: Bob Knepper and Jua.n A&osto combined on a six-hitter and· -Buddy Bell's two-run double hichliahted a four-run eiahtb inn int as the former Cincinnati tltiid bueman helped beat bis former teammaies for the tee0nd straiaht nisbt ICq. I, CaHiMls I: Nefson Santovenia drove in three runs with a double and a Ii~ and Bryn Smith and Joe Hesketh combined on a six-hatter as Montreal s~ its three-pme series against St Louis for its seventh strai&ht win at home to pass the Cards and move into fourib place in ~ East * * Mets J, ""'8tM t ....... S, CUlla I ~ ... \'OM CMIC..o ...... U'tM ...... . ..... t t t t °'*"'9d • t t t .,... ., ... ......... ,,,. 0....-• •• , ........... . ftt.f •""*a•lt l t ,__., 1'11 Mn..d •t1t •••t ......,ff tttt Gnda '"' *-"' •t>t ltll ~· '"' ....... 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M IKGtMc •t ltTrewtoec OJedl111 • )tit~• ltMr$lllV • t ••• ""*"' ... eomi."" ........... . ,... .,.,, ... --·- ., ... •t •t 40 t t It It 4111 > 1 I t • I I t • I t I • t t I 1tlt 1 0 t t I I I t SI S 1t S ••t• o-a •••t I t tt Y .... d • t tt S ttt ~o •t tt J 1 1 t .,_. •I t t • 1 t t so.Mlle • 1 1 I 4 11 J s-u ttt I c...... -··--· 4 11 t ......... " l t 1 1 '"' ....... >t•• •ttel T... D l f t ........ -. ~ "',,, ...... ...... ----· OWN ~ ... -Jrfllr C•I I!~ 0"' Ml w .... l L09-0MlaM 1, Mllw ...... ~ t. Sl!llMM:fl. Sur'Nlf H~ CUI s.-c-l211. 0....... If) . • "1t•M10 0..... ,.,..,, ..... , ' • 1 1 ' • ....... "-'L.J-l • • S S t t 0.-. l t·I J 1 1 t I Mir...... JI-> I t t t ) • "-' lllldlW .. t ....... Ill ... 1111 ~---"'-• ........ ilMC, l'lrd • ..,_, s-... c--. "*f ..... • T-t• A-lt,17l. ._ ----· co..~•11 -.. co e~' ~ ~1111.-7 ~ut!IY. 5-. W . T-~ (DJ. s-ic- Velazquez etopsGuena .,.,.. •r• .. ......... J ltt ....... d Jttt K.._,..,d ~Ott SMlll lttt c.lled I ttt l'latc:ftrM 41 II ........ Stlt llWTW~ lt l t IWllAS~rut -~ •n111 * ..... .... It 1 t ..... • I I 1 • Titlln ,, Yneea 2 AOeolttlll ............ ltlt ..,.... '''' ...... ttt• ......,_ l ltt ...... ltt• ""-1' I t I I °"""' .. • t t I v.. c , •• t ,,.,.,... • • • t t GWllMll" > t t t MllwllY c S t 1 t ....,,.. • • 1 t ttlll'!Mla > • 1 t • ...,d ,,,, ---, ... T.-MUI ,.._ •Ill ............. ..... "' .. -1-1 ~ ........ . ,~=.::=-....... 1. L '11, ,,._ IS. .-a... '*""· ,......,, • .., 1• ..... , 1111 .._........,, \ m. ..... (IJ, I-(\1) .... 'f ........ .,. p d ...... ......... MJlcalM lonV • a.-W,1•1 ftml • ....... J • . ' • • • • 0.-L.NI ' •• , • 7 , ....... 1 t t t 1 I .._ ...... , ........... . -....,_.,. ........ llt-0-. ........ .. ..... ,...... ""'· ,.. .., .._.. ~ ,.._, --,,..... ,,......... WW... ct 4 l 1 t 1.-a I t t t ... Y01ttC M'ftOIT ....ii. lttt ...._ .. 4l11 •r111111 •r111111 ~ri I t t t ._.... t t t t , ...... 4 2 t 1 ......... I 1 1 t •IMnftn l t It GWlllkt 1-4 1 "t t .._d It t t -..a 4 I 1 t ..._. 4tlt ,....,. 4t11 .....,_ $t t t s.i..rrt •••t l<.Ollr• 4 t 1 ...... d • '' t .......... '.' t ,..,..... .. 4 t t t f'Wlllea I I I I ~tt It 1 t JC.Wa• I 0 1 I It ....... 1-It l t T .... I 4 1 I 1 .. a t. t t GW-d > t I I ...,,..., I I 1 1 M9dlrtttc • t I I ~c •tit ,,,..,,..,.. It t I WN!llrtfl I tt t ......... t•t• ---''" ....... c •• , • ...,.., •••• ~c tt t t ' • ..._. J ttt OC•• lttt ....... D4M1 ,._ DJ1tl ...... t t I t ...-c ttl 1 ....... ... s.... .. at•• ..... , •••• "-C8lr 11'1 "' ...... Owllll I t tt """"d 4 t t t c.... -• tit-• ~-t. t • ..... MllWllll\ ........ ""'KWtlf. ........ , ..... , •• o-~•11 -.... (11. s...w ...... .~-~ • 4. ..... \'.. "' --... , L~ Ol't 1, Olcaee '1. °"""' t1t •t -1-1 W hseT-.~t ........ OlltW_ ....... ,.._..., .............. Cl., .......................... _,..._, .. r..-, • • 1-wllllllll. ~ I. LO.-- p tt •••llf Yerfl 1. 0... I. •Sr• .C-Cll\r -...... ......_ 4SJ. ..,_,,_.. ( ."'*'°" 71-1 1 ·' t ~ .,,_~ ,~ WI t t ... \'... P ....... ~ ,_,,,,,~ 1 '11111 ~ I I t t 1 t ......... "'> t H I I I I • TNITTllW.A-t I I t t t ' t ..,,.~ • ~--.................. ,_ , •ttlt lllP WINI • • I"' ....... .._W.1-1 I I • t t t 'WP'-«--111-C .......... t u..•• , ... ,., Mt'C.W~ rW. t.... ' un•a ••••· ._.. ~. -...; ~wt' .,,'TNN. ~ ...... ..,_, i .......... c;.ra •';"'• . . . , ..... 11 _,.,.14 .. (' Hollyp&,k, Los'Al race results . Amedoul£...-..... .. " L Pel. . oa Lii ........ M'Hd •s lS .6") s.:s Miawota 3& 30 .,Sf 6 7.3 K I City 37 ).4 .S21 1¥1 $.S T .. 3" J6 .416 u ;S-' ,....., 31 38 ....., UYI s.s UJe 30 41 .423 u~ 7-3 27 4S . 37:S 19 1.9 UIT DIVlllON Detroit 43 26 .623 7.3 NeWYodc 4() 21 .SU 2Y, 3-7 Cleveland 40 30 .S7l }'h "" Milwaukee 36 3S .507 I s-s loAOl'l 34 3) .507 • M Toronto 35 37 .416 9YJ M Baltimore 19 St .171 24~ 4-6 . ....... ,-..... Minnesota 3, ~ t Oak.land 6, Milwaukee 2 Cleveland 3, Boston I Dclri>it 3, New York 2 (10 inninp) ToJ"Qnto 4, Baltimore 2 Chicqo 5, Kansas City 4 Seattle 3, Te:w 2 (10 10.ninp) Woo 3 Won I LOil I Lost l Wont IMt I Won I Won 3 Lott 4 Won l lolt 4 Lott I Won I Lost I ... ... J 19-12 26-1 23-16 IS-1' 17-18 10-16 20-17 14-19 1a.21 13-17 U-21 19-20 IS-17 12-28 22.14 21·12 19-11 21-17 22-16 ...... 23-17 13-'ll 16-17 lS..16 17-17 1a.20 12.21 7.30 T ....... 1G9.mM O evdand (Bailes 6-6) at New Y oft (Rhoden }.S) 4:30 p.m. Baltimore (Tibbs 2-3) at Toronto (Olney }.9), 4:l S p.m. Only pmcs scheduled P'dUJ'tG.,.. Milwaukee at Aqeb, 7:35 p~m. Oeveland at New York., 4:30 p.m. Baltimore at Boston. 4:35 p.m. Detroit at Toronto, 4:3S p.m. Olicqo at Texas, S:3S p.m. Kansas City at Seattle. 7:0S p.m. Minnesota at Oakland, 7:3S p.m. WD'I' DIVISION w L Pct. GB Llt 30 .S6S 6--4 32 .S<43 2 S-S l>Mpn 39 Houston 38 San Francisco 34 36 .486 6 }.7 Cincinnati 33 37 .471 1 6--4 41 .431 10 S-S 4" .3S3 14"'2 4-6 San Diqo 31 Atlanta 24 EAST DIVISION New York 45 24 .6S2 7-3 32 .S<43 7'h. 4-6 33 .S22 9 6--4 3S .493 11 4-6 Pittsbu.r&h 38 Chicas<> 36 Montreal 34 St Lo11U 34 36 .486 11 'h. 2...S Philadelphia 31 37 .•S6 13"1 6--4 Wd11 ... y'1 Seen. Atlanta 4, D•ts I I 1 Philadelphia s, Chicqo 3 New Y ort 3, PitubwJb 0 San Francitco 8, San Diep> 1 Montreal 6, SL i..Ouis 2 Houston S, Cincinnati 1 Stl'eU Some Aw•~ Lost I 21·18 18-1 Won 2 22-11 16-21 Won I ~19 14-17 Lost 2 16-lS 17-22 Lost I 22-19 9-22 Won I 1 ~2 1 14-23 Woo 2 25-11 20-13 Lost 2 2}.lS IS-17 Lost 2 16-14 20-19 Won 3 21-13 13-22 Lost 4 IS-16 19-20 Wort 2 18-16 l}.21 Tt=•Gama New Yort (Fernandez }.S) at · (Maddux 12-3), l:OS p.m . Pittsbursh (Fisher 4-S) at Montreal ~n 1-S). 4:3S p.m . Philadelphia (Rawley S-6) at St Lo11U (Tudor 3-2). S:lS p.m. Only pmcs scheduled - PrillaJ'• Games Deqen at Cincinnau, 4:3S p.m. New York at Chicaao, lO:OS a.m. Pittsbuqb It Montreal, •:35 pm. San Oiqo at Atlanta, 4:40 p.m . San Francitco at Houston. S:3S p.m. Philadelphia at SL Louis. S:35 p.m. ~-... =:: ,.,,,. .. .,,... . OWlllllld MllWC ...... ....... .,...... ~ , • 1 •111 ...... J I t t I 'J • • • i 'J • • 1 • MA11CMIAL L8MIU9 .,__.,Dru 1' ATUJITA a.. AMeLet .,... .,. .. s • 2 • s..a • 1t1 •111 ...... , ••• 4 0' 1 0.-1 •• 1. • 0 I I MmnNlf'f J t O t a 1 I I *"-"d 2 t O t • t t t ldllcltcr Jo 1 t • ',. ....... J 1 1. ,,, ......... 1>11 1 • It ' ,,.,...,,_ • 1 ••• ........ . ... ..... 1 tOt er.-. • • 0 0 MtDaw• 1 ••• ;us...-•••• ••tel T.... •1•1 ...... _ ..... --~ ............ ____ , ~ ..... 1t•• -,.,,.., (It. ~. SMlel, er.... CW' ...... t. LM A..-. t. L.09-A._. 6. LM ~ l. ~~(SJ, AMiii (IQ,°""" ..., m. ....... ....... ,_._w,.... ' • , 1 t ' L.-.._. SUttsft t.>S U•J 6 • l J • Hlll9ft 11-J 1 t t I I 0-l 1 I I t t AJle;w I I t t t t UI•-• llOiote, ~ FlrWf. E .... Sec· •..1. It.....,; TNrd. West. T--Hf. A-27 ..ft IM IN Dll IDtF. -Cit. JJI ........ ... •• .....,........ Vlllal-.. , ....... ~ ""°"' ............. D119tt .... ._ II a lt&t I tr 0 '9 ........ CV•-la •I ..... M I , -.; ~ ........ AaY..ftJl-VEW CM'I TV F.JDlllVI. 10 ./. ..... is the. answer to your buying and selllng needs. let U1 .... Y11 Sell Y• ,,...,.,1 Cll ..... 642-5671 for information & surprisingly low cost. MPrrill Lyne h ~ .... 11' GUIDE TO APARTMENTS CONDOS AND TO *"***'* 0 IESI PllES A tmall, qutet oomplex nestled among tall trees & lavtlh land- tcaPe· A lovely, 1 bedroom "like new" with a balcony, cathedral ceRings, flrepface, pool, ape and laundry. NO PETS. $700/mo + MCUflty. AVAILABLE NOW & 1 AVAILABLE 8-21 · OW. m.111 IT Ml-2M1 ***** BRAID IEW © 1 llLE Fiii IEICH, 11m1m11uc1 2 Bedroom, 2 Bath with lofts and garages. lndudes marble entry, marble fireplace, wash· er /dryer hookup, ·t11e kitchen, floor and baths, vaocum sys- tem. ,.,, .,,,, -""'' ,.,, ,, . "'"""" ,, ••. ... ,, . 141-1111 @ @ THE FAIRWAY 1111 11111 JIUll PllEm © 11 ''OUR TOWll'' • 2 & 3 bdrm apts. • Newly redecorated • From $700-950 • Chlldrens planned activities no charge • Immediate accoupancy •No Pets 121111111 CllTI IESI HUNTINGTON HARBOUR AREA @ 11A1UNERS WALK -Ligbt, bright, airy & just a {ew block.a from the beach. 3 Bdrm Townhomea. Yardl/patioe. garages, fireplaces & vaulted ceilings, washer & dryer bookupa. 1995/MO + 1500 1eeur· ity deposit. CALL 474-1819 Ext. 505, 9AM-5PM ~ ?lltzd.11 t:14,u. 1"11.f Botzl ~ @ 1 Bedroom, 1 Bath wlfabulou• VIEW of the bay In an exctUlfve beach community. Dlahwaaher, micro, garage, prlvate'beech $2130. ALSO 2 Bedrooms atart at $1775. Sorry, No Peta 760-()919 ~s,?•• ••• 1 .......... . ,.. • •llTll SPllllS • . '"+-'-di~'~ ' Spacloue 2Bdrm + Den, 2 1ABA condo over streams & fallsl ~lreplaoe, washer/dryer hook-up, pool, Jacuzzi, double garage w/opener. $1095/mo +$500 min sec. Avail July 3rd. 1"'~ CllL YELll 1•1-2441 a*LIKENEW* Cdme ... the ......... cornolMtti ' ' r'!lt"MHl•l•d . ......., ~=~·Pool. · rk. room, ~ room. • for · lnltMt mcy .. Int ONLY to '850/mo. PM •100 off mcrte tn through 8/30. . ALA MOANA APTS. 530 W. Wllaon ... TILMGMT · 1224012 or IG-1tDI • . • • • • ,. • .. ... WEITSllE VILUS MJPllt SUMMER . 1201 .9, DRESSING I WORK WITH SKID MC KENZIE (SPUD McKENZIE'S SISTER) Wanna party all night and hang out at the beach all day? FlNElll Just give us part of your evening and your winning personality. We'll give you a chance to make good money representing an easy to sell. well known, reptltable product. Guaranteed SaJlry +Comm.+ Bonusez =-= $$$ In YOUR pocket Call Collin at (714) 642.,...536 Ext. 4'30 for more Info. Can between 3-9 pm or leave a meaaage anytime and.I'll call you1 ~Ca.Mid caJ~w1u a11 at/ IM ~l/letl .. 842-5111 HAS RETURNEDI \ 8«k by poptJI¥ derNnd. 01mes-A-L1ne w .. run Friday. ~tur d~ and ~ '" its own c1assif1cauon 1n tM Clau1f~<f Ads Since thlJ 1s a ~c1al offer. we ~t a Thursd~ noon df'adhne an<f ask pr~ for aa ads Thts IS e>pf'n tO ~ pt1vatt pany ~rt1~rs for 1M1chan<f1~ not ovtr SSO jpnce must br listed 1n adj an<f no .cbrrv1at1ons will be a<Ctf)tt<f Al ads will run Friday. Sati.day and Sund.ly Ttirre is a S-ltne minimum at 20c. prr line So your tow cost Ofmes-A-UrM lld Is only ..• ';) S3.00. DEADUNE: Thursday noon PRICE: S-llnt! minimum • 3 days • 20C prr 11ne • S3 00 • Al ads ate prepo1•<f by co1n1ng Into tM Daily Pilot to p!Ke your ad or use tM coopo!" ~ • Privflte po1rty merchcln(J1st onty a<fs. No com-• merc!M a<fs, pctts. livestock. product or plants. • Each Item muse be priced 1n the ltd with no 1te-ms C/Vf!r sso J MAJL TO: ~-A-une Daily Pilot ))() Wtst Bay Strttt, Costa Me.$.1, CA 92626 04'/yPtlothouu , · ~y-Frrday 8 00 AM to 5 00 ftM PHONE ...... , ...... ____ --------·-----"Y·----I •. ·-------"""-11--....-;.---+------------it-----""1 .. ::r.::t:. "°~ > . .....,. ____ --1~=-........ -=....-... ...... t-------~t--------1~------:-"""'!------ 1 ...... _______ --t_ ....... ___ ~tf--...,_ _____ -t __ ~----~ •. .._ ......... ...._ ___ .,,_ ....... ___ ~----------i '·~--~~ ...... ·-~~~----t--~------t------..... ·~---=' ~~--....... _......,.._ ________ ~ __ ..__ _ _....t-'"_~--. Motor Routes available In .... , .• , 1119'111111 hloli F•llllll Y1111J NO COLLECTING NO SOLICITING 11111••t 'Pttc.s ,_Al'M!NT OU~ .. .... .......,..., tentng PfOO'Mn makes It e•y tor you to ~ue a brand new. C~tCMortNCJcorala•~ tMd vehide (any l'naftf. CALL 146· 1200 AskfOr JOIN OUR TEAM City ol Huntlnstor1 Beach 2000 Main Street ff~ ... ch. CA 9l6AS (714) S3'-S54l '10 ALL INTEllESTED ACENOES. GROUPS. AND PEllSONS: The ~ or this notice la to ldentity an action to be taken by the City or HunMltO!' Beach. t. On or about July 31, 1911, the City or Hunt1n11on Beach wtn request the u .s . DepertlDeftt of Houfln& lllld Urben Development (HUD) to releue Federal fundl ln the lnaoart of $139,000. 1uthorhed under Section 17 of the United Stat• Housln& let of 1937 (41 u.s.c. 14370) for the ronowlf\I project: Provide tow Int.at rate loanl or snnta to piopeny ownen lo the Oakview net&N>orbood for the purpo1e1 of ClOfTeetlna tubltandard candldonl to mate ..nttal ~reentl, and to repetr m1jor houllnl .,aterns ln daft&er' of failure. Thll lt an ar• W•t of Beach Boulevard. Eut or Nichol• Street, bclomded by Warner Avenue lllld Slater Avenue. Theta homa are of the 1940 vlntap and are muhl-famlly unlu. Thll It an area or medium density housing. l . It hu been determined thlt such requeat for release or fundl wlU not coortitute an action 1lptlf1cant1y affectlna the quality of the human envlronment1, lllld acccrcftn&Jy, the above named (Grant Recipient) bu decided not to prepue an Environmental Impact Statement under the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969 (PL 91-190) The reuons for such decttionl not to prepare such StattrDent are u followa: Due to the 1lte location. It hu been determined that atptncant natural ~ would not be lmpected by thil project. The project la not loeated In an area of blsf.orical 1tsn1flcance or where hlator1cal raourcea would be found. The abject lite la not in a wetland. flood plain, or acenlc rtver. There wlll be no effect an endanaet'ed apeclea or IC>le .:u-ce aquifers. The project site ta below the 65 DNL noise leYel and la not wttbtn 2,000 feet of an upNt "hlzard area". Aft Envtronmental Review Record retpeCtq the abject project bu been made by the abo¥e named City or Huntlnstm leadl which doc11.,.ta t.be envtroftmental review or the project lllld more fully •ta for the reucn wt\)' such statement ts not required. Thia Envtronmental ReYtew Record la on me at the lbove ~ and la available for public uanllmtlon lllld copytog upon request at the fifth lloor between the bows or 1:00 a.m. lllld S:OO p.m. No further environmental review of such project la prapoled to be conducted prior to ~ the reqmst for release or Fedenl Fundl. All lnt..-.ted ••encl•. ~. or lndlvlduall dJsqreetna with the piopoNd action are Llwtted to abmh written commenu for consideratkn Such commenta wtll be rece"'9d at lOOO Main Street on or before July 31. 1911. All written comments received wtll be con&ldend. lllld the Clty or Huntlft&ton Beach will not request the relale or 'edlral fundl or take any actloa on the delc::ribed project prior to HUD'• written autborb.atlon to UM thole funds. The City of Huntln&ton Beach wlll undertake the project described above with Block Grant fundl from HUD under Tltle I of the HCDA -1974 and Rental Rehabllltatlon Grant fuodl Wldel' Sectloa 17 of the United Statea Houslne Act of 1937 (U.S.C. 14370). The City ot Hlmtmaton Beach Is certtrylna to HUD that t.he City or Huntlnaton Beach and Paul E. Coot, In hfs offlclat capacity u City Admlnistntor, conaent to accept the jurtldtctlon or the federal courta If an actkln ls brouaht to enforce reaponsibllJttes In relation to envtron.mefttal review, decUioo matln&. lllld action; and tbat these repamlbllittes have been 11tldled. The lepl effect of the oertlncatlon la that upon tu approval Block Grant fundl may be used, lllld HUD wlll have atlaOed tu raponstbllJtiea under the National Envt.rorlmental Polley Act of 1969. HUD will accept an objectJon or ~ ot the releue or funds and acceptance or the certtncatlon ooJy tr It ls on one ot the followtna bull: (a) That the cenlflcatlon wu not In fact executed by the CerttfYlna Officer or other offloer or applicant approved by HUD; or (b) that the applicant'• environmental review record for the project Indicates omission or a required dedalon flod1na or step applicable to the projects In the environmental review procaa. ObjectJona muat be prepmwS lllld submitted ln accontanc. with the required procedurm under 14 CFR Part SJ 1 of the Interim Resulatlona found In the Federal Rqlater dated April 20. 19 ... TheM replatlonl are available 1-tbe office of the (Grant Recipient). They may be addrmed to Envtnioraental Clearance OfOc:er, U.S. Depenment of Houslna lllld Urben Development, t6tS-W. Otymptc Boulevard. Loi Anpla, Califomla 9001S-3IOI Objections to HUD on the release of funds on butt other than those stated In the preYlow parqraph wlll not be conlldt~ by HUD. No objectk>ol received after July 31. 1911 wlll be constdered by HUD. ,_. L c-11. CtlJ A •"4::1 ...... = ......... ..... .......... II SC11 .... CA- :r, .. J.-==:·= a.ti ~1111111 If you're 10 or older. a ;ob as a newspaper carrier might be JUSt your lize. Just .end In this coupon ·°' call: S.2--4333. Routes are avAilable now• ........ ., .... ..., ... arrt.1 r~u7d-.-;;; rtnd 001 -:;;;;;;;::l Ing a Daily Plk>t earner. I Nam. ______ ,,......______ I Addr.s I I=:........ ~ ,. ..... .. ~---.... ~-.!--- NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEAMIG ZONE CHANGE NO. D-10 NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEH that the Huntington 8w:ft Qty Coundl ... ho6d a pubic r..tng 6n the Coundl Chllmber M the Huntington ~ CMc Cent•. 2000 Main Street. Huntington ~. Cellfoml9. on IM d8le Md at the time lodlc:9'1ed '*Ow to NCINe Md ooullldel IM ...,,.tta °' .. penona wM ..... to be '-d Nlidhe to the ~doe· deecrtbed belOW. DATl/T9m: T~. -Mt 5. 1•. 7:00 PM LOCAno. Souttwt comer Oeeaw•el'Ft-.*1ort ZOle: C1-CZ (Nelghboftlood Commerdel Dlllrtc:t, eo.I* Zone> Mca&mT~ aw. of zone from C 1-CZ to CMdtown Sc>edftc Plan Ca.tlll ~ One INYMIS~ AL ITATUa: Covered __..., NegattV9 o.a.r.tton -.a OM PLI: A cariyof the propoeed requelt 19 on .. .., IM o.p.1r11ent of~ o.i t': ~ •••t. 2000 .....,. S1Net. tMIUl'lll'°'' ~. c.Momlll 92648, for ll!lpeCdott by IM pubic. A copr of 1M ltd~_. be ew n'nttt to~ per1iee et City Hal or the......, Ctty Ubrwy (7111 T.._, AV9nUe) .,._ June 14, 1111. ALL..,._.,...,~ .,.lrwft9dto..__,-'d r..tng Md ~Ol*IAOl•orlUtlmM ~tor or....,.. the llPClAc...,., • out9Md ~ "0... .. _, .,,._ ~ sii-cal Jf/lf Ableniowb:. A I 1 It"""*· .. 538-5271 ~-llACM cm cm..-.: Ma. a....,...,., Cllr °"'-..._ CFM> m •• 0.1ed: June 15, 1• Publlhed ~ COlllt Deity PICC June 23, 1 ... tt1711 ............................ _ ... I~----·-· zcss-10 VENTllEacA SANDRA LEE (Tot.- ten) VENTRESCA, age 45, FJ Toro. CA., wife of Jo.eph Ven- tres:a died •t Saddle- b •ck H oapit• l. Mision Viejo on June 19, 1988. Mrs. Ven- t.raca WU born No- vember 15, 1942 in Waterbury He.pita! in Waterbury, Conn. She is the daughter of Leon and Dorothy (Axelby) Totten. Besides her husbend she is survived by two children, Lee-Anne (Olce!le) Walker and Peter Olcese; one brother Leon E. Tot- ten of North Brookfield, Maas.; and three grand- children, aever•l nieca and nephews. Funeral aervices wW be held today, June 23 at St. Johna Tile Devine Episciopal Church m Costa Me.a at 6:30 P .M. Burial will be in Northfield Cemetery in North- field. Conn. Memorial oontribulJona may be made to the Childttm Hospital Foundation, P.O. Box 5700, Or- ange. CA 92613-5700. PAC•IC Y11W •MONA&.PAM c.m.twy •Mortuary Chapel • CrematOf'f 3500 Pacific View Drive Newport Beach ~··2700 HAMCMt LAWN- lllT. OUVE M<>f"tuary • Ceme1e,., Cremllory 1625 G1alef Ave Costa ~ .. ~0-55~ ~ tJI U. ...e. II to ldilatlfy an action to be tat. by the Chy tJI ~Jlftlt08 l On• .taout ....., IS. I-die City tJI Hulltl!wtGD leecls wlll NquMt tbe U.S. ~t tJI ....... 81 U1111a Development (HUD) tO re•• Federal ,_.. under' Tltle I tJI die ......... _. C:O. .... t)' Development Aet of 1974(PL)93-Jll) '°' the 'ollowtnl projecta: 1. M-lplar•m ti. activity pays m. ....-1 and opsatms eo1u tnc\lrr1d .by the city In tbe edmlalatndon or the Block Grant Pracfam. Additional COits ~ whb the cit)''• l.eiDtal Rehabllltatkia Prov•tD wm aleo be charpd to this activity. $133,101 l. Na....,. 1 PIM ewns rmtccta; s. 6 7. a .) M•IQ=PW lnd JQock lmpmycmcnta: Tbele fWldl wlll be Uled to Improve the public right or way on the block bounded by Main, Sth, Walnut, and Olive. The Improvements will Uiclude under lfOWldlnl al udliOee, •w textured alley pevement. new walkways and landlaplnc, an cooformlng to the downtown desl&n culdelinea. $296.999 b.) Oakytcw Clrcjj)atlgo lmproycmcnt1: These runda wilJ be used to lmplemeot Identified needed public Improvements in the Oakview Redewlopment Project Area. Improvement• tnchadc: 1. Alley Conetructton to South Oakview 2. Jacquelyn Lane Enhancement Project 3. EJm and Keet.... cul-de-Ac 4. Additkiaal Street Lighting ln North Oakview. $150,000 c.) ()pcatlM LOGQS. These fuodt wlll be used for the personal and operatln& c:asu associated With th11 youth employment program In the Oakview nelJhborhood. $38,000 Citywide Agfltug; a.) b.) c.) Rcbabtlltatloa. Funds ccwtltute the contribution to the city's oaaoln& rehabilitation loan pool. Said fwids are med to provide the below market rate Interest home Improvement loans and deferred loans to low-lncOme, o~ sln&le-family homes and. to fnvestor-ownlCI multi-family structwea. $2SO,OOO. Protect SelC-Suffidcncy. Funds wfll be used to support the penonal and cperational costs for this HUD Demonstration Procnm. Al well u the •Adapt-A-Family" campal&n which pledpa • to $SOO per family if matched by private funding. Thia procram wlll uallt lS single unemployed parents in makin& the transition rrom welfare dependence to economic aelf-cufficlency. $50,000. · PYbl!c Scrytcc. These ruods wUJ be dllbtned u aubgranta to human service agenctea providing services to low-and moderate-tncome bowehokls within Htmtln&too Beach. Specific asenciea to receive a share of these funds wm be the subject or review and recommendatton by the dtY'• Human Resowcea Boarct Tbele recommendations will be subsequently forwarded to the. City Council for Its ocmlderati.on. $190,lOO Oranse County Fair Houstnc CouocU. One of the major objectives of the Community Development Block Grant program and one of the requirements for the City's participation is to take steps to affirmatively further fair housing. The city accompltlhea this objective by annually contnctlng with the Orance County Fair Housh>a ~1 to provide landlord/tenant relations to low-and moderate-tncome tenants within the city. $32,900. Cmt!QICDCY. Eich year u part of the CDBG Prosram, a share of funds Is reserved In a contingency account which will provide additional financial resources ror any currently or previously budleted activities which may incur cost overruns during the source of the prosram year or to meet needs not identified at the time or the adoption of the budget. $126,100 0. It hu been determined that such a request for release or funds will not constitute an action significantly affectin& the quality of the human environment; and, accordingly, the above named, Grant Recipient hu decided not to prepare an Environmental Impact Statement under the National Environmental Polley Act of 1969 (PL91-190). The reasons for such decisions not to prepare such statement are u follows: Due to the various site locations. It has bee.a determined that slgnlftcant natural resources would not be Impacted by this project. The project ls not located In an aru of historical significance or where historical retOUrces would be round. The subject aite Is not in a wetland, nood plaln or scenic river. There will be no impac t on endancered species or sole source 84i'Jifer. The ptoject site rallt within the 65 CNEL and ts not within 2,000 feet or an upset "hazal'd area." Environmental Review Record respectln& the S\lbject project, hu been made by the City or Huntlnston Beach which documenu the envtronmental review of the project, and more fully eeu forth the rutan1 why such at.atement la not required. Thia Environmental Jlevlew Reccrd la on file at the above address and la available for public examination and oopylns ~ request on the fifth floor, between the hours of 1:00 a.m. and S:OO p.m. No rurther environmental review of such projects ts to be c:ooducted. All Interested a&enctes, groups, or lndMduala dilqreeln& wtth the proposed action are Invited to submit written comments for OOl'llideratlon. Such comments wllJ be received on or before July IS, 1918. All written commenu received wlll be considered. and the City or Huntington Beach wm not request the release of federal rundt or take any actloo on the described project prior to HUD'• written autboriurton to use these funds. OBJECTIONS TO HUD The City of Huntineton Beach will undertake the projecU described above with Bloct Grant funds from HUD under Title 1 or the HCDA-1974. The City or Hunttniton Beach ii certifylna to HUD that the City of Hunttn&ton Beach and Paul E. Cook, ln hia ornctat capacity aa City Admfnlttntor, consent to accept the jurtldlctlon of the Fedenl CCluru tr an action ii brou&bt to enfgrce rcspoostbllltl• have beerl satlsfted. The lepl effect of the certification ii that, upon lu approval, Block Crant funds may be used and HUD wm have satisfied tta respoosibilJtles under the Natiooal Environment.al Policy Act of the certification only tf it la on one or the following baN: (a) The certification wu not, in ract, executed by the Certifying Officer or other officer of applicant approved by HUD, or (b) That the applicant•• environmental review record f04" the project indicates omlalon of a required decttlon flndlna or step applicable to the project in the environmental review process. Objections must be prepared and submitted in accordance wttb the required procedwel under 24 CFR, Part Sl.7S of tbe lnteriJD Reauiations round In the Federal Rqjster. dated April 12, 1912. Tb91e recuJatlons are available in the office or the City or Huntlnaton Beach. They must be addressed to Environmental Clearance Officer, U.S. Oepertment or Housln& and Urt.n Development, 1615 Wat Ol)'Dlptc Boulevard, Loe Anplea, California 9001S-310l. Objections to HUD ror the release of funds on ba1l1 other than thole stated In the previous parasraph, will not be considered by' HUD. No objections received after July IS, 1911 will be conndered by HUD. ,_.LCMll.Ollf '& IJ .... QtfflfHB D &01 ..... _ .......... 11u•411n._...,CA_ ::.~:==-= Cllfll .................. ...... ..._ .. ,. ... =~":.UC,.O: ...... c•1••,..-• -~-----. ., .... , .. , .. . , ......... ... •• 0 ... ,.. .... ..... ,., . ., ..... . . ,.. ........ .., __... • I .. ._ ....... .. .... _. ...... .... c. ....... r. ----- Pe·ople NEED Classified RESOLUTION NO. 5114 (Revlalon• to the Downtown Specific Plltn) NOTICE .S HEREBY GIVEN thet the Huntington 8wlh City Counc:ll wll h<*t a pubk hwtng In the Counc:ll ClwTlber at the Huntington &wt\ CMc Centw, 2000 Main Street, Huntlogton Beech, Celttomla. on the date and at 1he tam. llldlcaled below to NC8Mt end coneider the .....,.,ts of al l*'IOfll who~ to be he9rd ,..ttvie to 1he ~ deecrtbed below. DATI: Tueedey, Juty 5, 1818 ~7:00P.M. IU&llCT: AaaoMlon No. 5884 AJlllUCAllT: Ctty of Huntington a..:t"t LOCA~ Oown1own ... gane1aly loc8ted akJng Padftc Coest Hlghwey betww'I Goldenweet Street and Beecf'I Boulevllrd. ZOlll: Oowmown 8pecltlc fltM PROfOUL: FM1alon to eocpend reeklalflllll ..-. tn 01i1tttct9 3 and 4 In the Downtown 8peclftc Plwl anct minor revtalolll In al dlslrtctt wtlk:tl wll c:ne .. a more condae ~. IWIMIFFifTAL aTATUa: Cowr9d by &wlroc.,•1'9 lmc*:t A9pot1 No. 12-2 ~adopted by Counc:ll. COMTAL STATUa: Pur9Uant to Section ... 5.0 • ~ .,.. •lapmmrt '-"'" .. not MC 11 I II 'f wtltl INI epplCdora. The Calfoi'nla eo.tal ~°'' .. ,....the Pfopoeed cheligea. ON PU: A copy of the propoeed NqUe9t II on flee In the 0apertment of Community o..-..1ent. 2000 Main ltreet. Huntington leech, Celfomla 82&41, fot II~ by the pubic. A copy of the _,, t9POtt wll be 9lrlll1blt to In• l9llld partte1 at City Hell or the Main City Ubr9fy (7111 T~ Avinae). ALL lf'IWSTID .....aM are trwtted to enend aa6d hwtno n ..,,_ oo11-. « aubmtt ewtderloe fot °' eoelr* the is**kln .. outllned 8bo\19. H .._.. .,. Mr M1Mr ~ pleele c.M Robert F,....,,, Alaodilte ~ at 538-271 °' .. Oftloe of the Ctty Clat1c. 636-5405. tMITIM81'0M IUCM crTY cm,. 9J: Allla M. ........... catJ ca.ti.,.._ (1M) •I• th7t7 .. RESOLUTION 58H l ' • • I - a1t ... = ...... -· • .. led Or- t1, -... ao. lHURSOAY, JUNE 23. 1 .. taopensinFountain Valley 8J.IOYCSIODLOV1Cll U.VflMst)'k"TritiUtetoElvi1""will count) rnadcnts art ~C'Ou~ to The event bcJins foly 2 with the tht' sedate Allipaor rick. Whilr dw ... ...,....... a1lo be ~Std. 'cnwr IM1rclan1c or anaiq~ can 1n a Califomi1 State Championship Rib cami,·at ridtS att frtt ~ _. Whal we havr heft is clusiC' 19so. A1CNtJ with almost continuous com~hion thal could earn thaR Cookon: worth S2.000 an cash prizes • there is a chatle for rides ilr 1111 · 1 1 fi '" rn1tna1n~t. the finia"s spmal aroptt~n and plaguts APC>thtf ~ arid tro~·n to the winnin~ cht'fs. rtmaindtr of lit Fielu. DilllD•M mu11c. -'~c acu ar arewor .. 1. -i .. ~t on--~-...... 11-. -a SIO enln. ,._all....,.. actm•••.._ S . . . S d\ E carnivalrkks.mfts.pmes,avintaer .,....... S ) .. -,..·---1~ mu ,., ,., ·1 '"'" .,_,. ._.. 1'be I. Ch1hCookofTwil beheld ride ticket1.1tv~ rides b S. • ~ -·r;r: car lbOw and rib anet chili <'ookofli. ~ I includet a tiOM of 1or • .our-person pan}· and car to the Jul)' J. Entf) fttS arc S250 and SlS percent dite0unt. wiU become avail-1' ,._, 1 11 au mnqucradft as the sl•th csnival rldn and ot~ alU'KticlM.. fiesta. • with additional procttds benefit int able from the Fountain Valley anmalt On .. County rtetca. 1 fivt-And thlfs for stanen. Ftom Ju1y I .. The Classic Auto Show adds 1 non.profit and charitable aroups. Chamber or Commerce after June.2&. g. d ~ day countywidt-pert_y from June JO to lhRMllh Jul) 4. the festival .;11 nm spc'C'ial touch to the days and niPll of' Rib Cook off participants will have Other events ind&Mk coateM>. ··a aa ~ July .. al Mile .squatt Park in hmll a.m. to midnilht.a.d trill musical cn1cnainmdt for &hirentiR IMprhilqcofsellin&lheitaoOdfood porar) toChristianlnd~)\r • g -.,. . r=:ountain Valley prnented by the conain~ rockina with d8llic '"*". famil):· said chairman Dk'k o._. 10 spectators at the fiesta. A panel of music. Famil) fun bike~_...,._·· c•t}'~S Chamber of Commem~. lite Bill Ha!c) ·s COIMIL TitC The fiesta al\O will prove theft CM Judeci ~ill decide tM top winnel'1 and crafts and pknty of' samp6- tJ The ftflll opens at S p.m. and ps COISlttS. The Drift~ The Pneuins ne'er be cnouah coo~s to''*' &ht alona with a Pcopk's Choice Award. inp will be there foe thr tai-. e~••.-wr•.:I until midniaht on June :JO with Diny and Tbt Del Vikinas. broth. OranlC Count) rnt•rats For the children. small and ••biJ,." B General admission S3~ JUnion. ~· r ~ Dan.of Sha Na Na and 1950s t«n 9i'Jul) 4. not only-ill~ and pri'a.te part1csarcenro~ to cl B .\muscmentscamival will setup 6-IO. $I. childrc.n S years and u~. idol. Donni~ Brooks. who rocked lite CftJO) 1 9 p.m. firev.orb ~ crcatercc1pcs forthebarb«Ut'nbaid a \"arlct)' of ride-sand pme booths. free. Opening night oaf). Sll 1icUt applause •m•"'•skllll!c•hallilrt-wlii•th!llll .. M~iss!llllioil!lnl!llBclllllill•."•' A-•bu-.iC•p•al-l-<lalllli)•ptt ... ·.111!97•0slli!ar_ ...... · Aill•l •c•hilili•cl!lool.k•omffi•'•· ------•-E•n•~•O•) •th•e•st•o•m•ac•h•·•lu•rc•h•1na-Z•1•ppe_.r•o•r ----(Pl-------•PllJSe.i..TllA/991•iiill . Le~son for class: 'You c-.i fight city hall' First thinp first. Co~tulalions to every pre- school, arammarschoOI. middle school, hiah school and colleie araduate who snaae<l a diploma. \' ou done iood-whoops. you've done well!! Also a miahty consratulations to all you ~rents who nagcd lencourqed), threatened · motivated) and sacrificed Ch•pter 11) to make it happen . What does it take to become a Phi Beta Kappa nationaJ liberal arts honor society member? I am soibid_you asked: Phi Bcia Kappa was founded in 1776 at the College ofWilliam and Mary in Viraania. Member- ship is limited to students who hvccomplctcd a minimum of 168 term houn of credit with at least 84 boun in liberal arts courses. · Each studcn t must have 24 hours of upper-division courses with a minimum of six hours in each of two or more subjects not closely related. Students may not ohoosc the pass/noaradeoption in more than six of\hose 24 hours. Members-elect must also have compilcdacumulativegrade- pointavcrageofat least 3.7 or 3.S when the GPA for upper-division work done in the last five terms is 3.8ormore. OK-with that information behind us. may I introduce one student from the University of Otta<>n who has achieved the honorofbeinacalleda Phi Beta Kappe: &a .... MldteUe Cine .... of Costa Mesa. a politi- cal science maior. lo •• Ttie tcholar'Ship committee of PIC:ific Christian Colleac in Full- erton has named U.. RI•, daqluer of J.ay Bertvtt of Huntinaton Beach.as an honors scholarship winner forfaJI t 988. R;igs was chOlen becaute ofhcr h~ school teholulic recOrd, declared motivation arid purpose. career ambitions and leadership. Only a small percenl81e ofstu· dentsrettivethescholatihip. ••• J ...... M .... ofCosta Mesa is perform in& this summer as a member of the Universityoftbe Pacific Fallon House Repertory Company in the mother lode town of Columbia. The Fallon House Theatre has recently been restored to iu oriainal 1880s appearance. Mundi, an Estancia Hi&h School paduate, is work.ins toward a degree at UC Santa Barl>ara. He has held a variety of technical j)OSitions in the theater. While at Estancia, he worked behind the scenes in such per· formancesas ••Camelot .. and -rhe Wizard of Oz.·• Mundi, one of the 19-student cast underthcdim:tion of the repertory com "'ny's professor P'leMe ... PaOOLUl/82) Fourth-graders turn into poltt1Cal - activists for a year Not much slipped by the political activim in Came Slaybad's fourth-sradc class. Throuahout much of the school yNr. the~ ind 10-year-olds at James H. Cox Elementary School in Foun- tain Valley were dttpl) immcrvd in the proposed South Park pro,JCCt ~ould the propcny be developed into a busy commerc&al complc• - or should the lush strawberry (ields be left intact? The strawbcmes won out. The youns pcopl~ also debated whC'thcr an overpass or a sianal should be constructed at the busy intersection ofSlatcr Avenue and Los Jardines East Street after a classmate) )·oun~ s1Ster was struck by a car. The class WIS spliL lllchael l'fordatrom leamaaboat crime prnentlon from oftlcer Kim IDeu. Slayback's pupils became profi- cient letter wrilCrS. In January they wrote concerns about the strawberry fields to former Mayor Barbara Brown. She ~1tcd the children to Cit) Hall for a question and ans~r forum. ~era! of the activists be- came ram1ltar stahts It City Halt • Video.preserves grads' memories BJ .ioYCE BODLOVICB .. ... ..., ........ Eda son Hiah School classes of 1976. 1977 and 19'?8 -where arc you? ACC'ordins to alumnus Ron Fcnky. you may be an the movies. so to speak. A mad scramble is in process to locate graduates who may have slipped through 10-year reunion cracks. The reason: .. Memories of '77." a collection of old and new memories artfully combined on a 30-minutc ,-idco. The film is directed. produced and edited by Fenley. 1 professional film director. He was assisted by classmates Rick Kelley. an actor. and Don Ocrrea&, a stockbroker. Thouah the film is mainly a tnbutc to Fenley's graduatina class of 1977. he says there arc classmates from 1976 and 1978 seen throua)lout the nostal&ic video. The film wiU be screened and available for purchase at a post· reunion bash planned for July I at 8 p.m. at the Huntinaton Beach Inn. The dress is casuaJ: SI 0 gets you throu&h the door. · Fenley. a 29-ycar-old frcela~ director whose association with Dick Clark Productions has led to an established directing. shootina and editina carttr. has credits for numer- ous TV projects and rock videos.. Currently he is darccttng a home vidc:o how-to parody on aolf for Paramount Studios to be released this summer. Fenley said the l 977 portions of the video came from photos he took al the end of. his junior year and throughout has senior yttr. .. I set out to make a movie on my 'Senior Year at Edison liigh School.' a kind of motion picture yearbook ... he~id. ··1 took some of the pictures the tail end of m) junior year. but 99 percent of the film began the first day of my senior year and concluded a Wttk bcf Ott 1f3duation.'' Fenlc) said the experience of filming high school classmates was the foundation for his adult career. .., lUCSS I was labeled very quiet.'' he said. "Most of the people didn't know who I was until I started shovina a camera 1n front of their faces. "It was a good growing~ for me. At first I was intimidated and arra1d to approach people. but t~.en I became vef)· comfortable behind the lens." he added. Fenley said there is only 30 percent of the original film left on the newly edited \1deo. ··M05t of the stuff has been edited out:· he said. ··w e had to scrttn the old one at the reunion and eve7one loved it ... but 1 couldn'tSlaM it, was 1oinarnuy:· Last summer tbc 1977 aractuatina class held it$ 10-year reunion. Fenley hired a camera crew to film the cvenina actJvities and the next day's famil) picnic. "The project has taken me about a ytar." he said. ··1 spent about 200 {Pleue eee VIDSO/B2) Ron Fen~ (left) la tbe pnd'eCU o6 •-....ortee of •77, •• ualstecl bJ Doll Denetc and IUek K~. Accordma to Sla)'beck. the South Park project as tocalC'd almost at the dOOl'$tep of the school MOS1 of the C'htldcn the tn the t.043-homeGrttn Valle> Acrn housina tract acroa from the site. "We decided to &lle a positioa .... she said. wwe discussed the pros ad cons and each kid WJ.Ole-bis position. The kids said they wanted the stra•bcrry fictdsand thcldidft•t want anolht'T New .York City. Toward the end of this school year. the )Ouna acth·ists '*1"0lr ap.ia ao Cll) Hall. This time the su~ was an -o\·crpass. Copies of tbrir lC'ntts were distributed to local newspapers. Kendra Ma)o. 10. said tbc class debate that resulted 10 their last lcttct'· wntifll campaign centered oa * pros and cons of the ovc.rpus u"d wMthcr it was the safest idea for the well-traveled intersection. She sud the class eventually lcained the city has planned to constrUCt a traftk s1inal. -we ditcussed if an overpas woutd be too steep for the ddcrly ~ople -or maybe it would rollaPR tf there was an earthquake." she said. -w e also debated if~ sbo\lld have the crossing suard fOf' a IOl'\ltt time. -An o,·erpass would put a crouina guard out ofbusinns. but they are in (Pl••wPOLITICALfm) Dlstrict awardSlst scholarslJJ.p 87 IOYC& BODLOVICll .............. The fiBt S2.SOO sdlolanhip offered by the Newport-Mesa UnifM:d School Pistnct has been awudrd 10 a Newport Hartlor Hiah ScboOI srad• atina senior. Prc!ented durina a recent board mectn .. the award was won by future teacher Martha Sid.. AttordJna 10 David Dow. prcst- dent of admiais&raton• UIOCiation. the award tWaS auttd 10 live as- sistance and suppon to students who plan to pursuit a teaebint c:arur. Sick. 11rho wiU attend UC Santa BartJara in the fall was selected for her academics.. community and scbool invol'Yctnrnt and commitment IO tcachina. .. We are aware of the need b- tcacbcn. .. Dow said. .. Martha is rated 23 out of 41 O sraduates ... is a CSf' (California ScboJanhip FedmatlCWI) seal barrier ... 1 member ofHcart Fett. a sroup that visits bospil.lls ad helps feed the homeless. .. Sick said w is t.tuly interested in children. and wants to tee youftltf people appreciated. "t o be selected means a lot to me. .. she said. ..This means lbe cliltria chose me as a aood ~prcstnlativc Aw a futu~ teacher. ··1 have always wanted to be • (Pleue w Sl'U'OSln'9/911 'Arabian Fantasy' festivities in Mesa set as MS benefit ,, , . hee IJealtll Rmlnar slated A health .ttaiMr olfered free to the public -111 be held Saturday aa ~Lm. in Suite E of Women at Larte. IS087 Goklen Wa19t. Huntin11on·Beach. 1ricreui111 ~. lolins wri&ht and lowcnna blood ~~will be cliSU11 !d at the propam, whicb includes an optional choh•uol tat for $6. SJ*': is limited. and retcrVations IM)''-..Wnied by calltnt 894-lSS7. Collcar COltmetOIOIY [)q>artmcnt IO raite Nads for tbt Wntminsttt-besed Sbcltcr for the HOl'l'idc& The cutathon will be Mid from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. fof a donation of S.20 c.9Ch .• 4ppointmenu mey be mede by callifll Jeanne Bcnckr at ~26 7. . othen. Al ~ Of' u.. ..... flllbil Shon Stalurt ~, ......... Olhw wrila a "IJllr =.-......., illwnina&illl ~ tar,.,,,. and .siviltl ~.a to .-II l)(Opk, .In --Ille Wila clawooms ud tiltl • eMMrlft abOut What it ..... • be t1•1a1t. When someoac ~-· • walks up 10 &Mm IDll ~ When someone ldls a ~ she sets them~ .. If I want any·.ioUI IUdr ebout myself. I'll make lllaa. .. ~ leid she tells them ....... , ,_ meb them and dirttt tlMID •-·" It would help. OIMr laid. if Peol* just understood more ... .-all people. For e.lample, 1beie are mort than200kiltdsofd•ata t,aMw have bodies of common fQ!PCW1ions. \\hile olhers d6 not. Milt hevc ph)-sical difficultia in idllhioe 10 being small. Dwarfism can also brina internal problems. spinal comprnsion. and difficulty with hearina and eyniaht. Physical problems that IO uncor· rected can be fatal and dwarfs have a shorter lifespan in genttal. ................ .......................... ., .............. a.-. ..,........... ~ ~---llae 10.Ji*U.:t• reki..., .. fiieedlbip ··-. ........ "ltae.DonilldlW..-,W ltJ)tl'lte WI)'$ after hjp ICbool." ¥ uid. ··0vcr the ~ we drWloplid ~ .... in lbe l.ol ~ ... ~ ftiHclllai ••Bu1 all OPjs . ._,ee _, ~\ compare to tM liimcfllt~we f'onned at an inn()CC1\l qe whea die nlalerial world and all &he PR•wet did~t bother us. Weallcholeie>be._.._. This friendship and the unity ()(our class is very real to us. aad ~ what drove all of us. especially Ron, throuah the project. .. he said. Although Oliver said asa you"15ttr she was .. fearless" ridin1 her•spccial bike in the streets of De\roit. she quickly !rimed She had adult bettles to fight. After movinJ to the 111burt>s. school officials insisted Oliver be bused to Detroit to attend a handi- capped school. She pleaded with her mother -bcr parents were divorced -to allow her to ao to a neiah- bOrhood school with her brothers and sisters. Finally. her mother relented. ouwr ... ..._•a 1:ne ,.a • ..,.. STUDBNTiS HONORED ••• "She knew we'd have a helluva fit.ht and \\C did. .. Oliver said. The schools put Oliver throu~ a battery of tests to determine 1f she was intelligent enough before they gave in. No other student who was handi- capped oT of small stature had attended that school before. .. OliVtt Pllr\iciPtted in everything -~. 1Ymnastics. field hock~ and buketbell. She insisted on bdna inducted in the driver's trainina dus even thougtl one teacher quit as a result. "I did evrrythina in a limited way." shCsaid. As it tums out, driving is some-- thin& Oliver particularly enjoys. The wheelchair and C'l'Utchcs have been a nuisance, bu.t she loves her Buick. With a step lO -1 into it, a scat cushion. hand controls and sensitized slccrin&, Oliver can easjly act to mcctinp. siftllna enlll'mcnts or the aym. Althouah she works out ~rly. people stiTI loc>k at her as if she s out of place. ··1 never fit in wherever I ao." OlivtTsaid. without a hint of self:.pity. ··1 wish I did. but I never do." Bumpint up •inst life's realities can be ··damned inconvenient some- times." accordina to Oliver. but she just plows on. ··1 don't realize I'm tiny. ~ou see," she said. "I know in my mind's eye that I'm nol." Pnm8l 1aeher. lh~ mnfOtta my dream. ... Sick said die ldlolanhip will be divided in\o S500 ins&aUments fc:w five years or~. "What as eacitins to me is &he tcbolanhip was fomied to entice you to come melt and laCh in the district. .. she said. "This is just ftnc with me because this is where I want to live." We're looking fo~goocl sports· POLITICAL ACTIVISTS ••• From Bl A reprcseni.tivc from each of the district's four intermediate tchOOls received the Norman Stillwell Award. Outstandina ciaht~ winnina the award are Karen Thomas. Corona dcl Mar Hi&h School; Thai Due Pham, Costa Mesa Hiah School; Stacy dcBOom, Ensian lntcnnediate School: Ty Schisler, TcWinkle Intermediate School. We're not lookina for news on ~ Johnson's latest triple-double or bow many RBis Wally Joyner bad FIESTA ••• From Bl last montb. But if you know a Litlle Leaa:ucrwbo had a bi& day. a weekend aoUer who won the club tournament or a next-door nei&hbor who rolled a 300 game, let us know. Send us a photOlf1lph and brief account or the sportina accomplish- ment. We will publish them in our Good Sp6rts column. which will appear in ':fhursday's Nci&hborhood Focus section. danacr too," she added. h seems only fit1in1 that some of classmates should end their school )Cir in roles representative of their communit) concern. So for an hour Slaybadi's pupils. along with representatives from the school's three other fourth gra<te classes. became the city fire chief. personnel manaaer. asssitant city manaacr and chief of police. to name a few official posts. Address your correspondence to Neighborhood Focus in care of the DaiJy Pilot. P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa. 92621. includes rides and entertainment. Procm:ls benefit non-profit and charitable causes including youth scholarships. For additionaJ infor- mation contact the Founuin Valley Chamber of Commerce. 962-4441. The 25 students were selected through letters they uote explaining why they wanted to participate in -=---=-~~---,.,--,---------"------'-------.:-..-. Student an Government Day at Cit> Hall. According to Slayback. there is value in personalizing City Hall. -"The children know they can fi&ht City Hall." she said. "They know where 1t as and they can say l &alked wnh the mayor. fire chief and police chief and they communicated back with me." And what were some impressions lcfl b> the city officials? .. Hc·s preuy nice.'' said John Patel about PohCC" Chief Elvin Miali. "He asked us "hat we thought a politt chief docs. We said 'he as the boss.' Then he had to leave because he had somcthina important to do." Brian Wajncr as imprcsscdwith Fire Chief Dick Jorgensen -or - rather the chiers toys. -•r J•yce &Ml#vkt Accordina to Ensian Princip.I Paul Twedt, the award is named after the late Norman Stillwell, a lonatimc district employee and adminstrator who died in 1979. .. Norm ~rved as both assistant principal anCS ptjncipal at En sip ... he said. "He died suddenly of a heart auack while employed as principel. "Newport-Mesa decided this was a method of honorina Nonn," he added. T,,..'Cdt said the fint presentation was made in 1979. He said students are selected by each school thlt houses ciahth-araderl: "Each school has its own method- olO&Y of selection. but for the most PROGRAM MAPS NEW PLACES TO SEE ••• ham Bl WUUam Welak, will perform in .. Kiss Mc Kate,·· '"Blithe Spirit:~ .. AnnicGct¥ourGun," · .. Charler,'s Aunt .. and "DOn't Tell Mother. 'l'fhccompanypresents · SS performances during the nine- wcek season. which opened this month. • • • Is there anything worse than Climbing behind the wheel ofyour four-wheel vehicle with no place ao~?Ofcourscnot! Barry LeweUya,author of "The Glovebox Guideto Un- paved Southern California, .. will teach how to plan. map and by a local Jack in the Box. navigate unpaved terrain in a Tumcr'sentrywasoneofseven proiram on Tues'day at Golden winners chosen from amo"-the West College. morcihln JSOentriessubm1ttCd A colorful slide show of'' places iri the fourth annual essay and • to go and thin~ to see·• will be photo scholarship competition. included in the proaram to be held The theme this year, o~n to all in Business 110, 7 to IOp.m. Southern California hiah school Program fee is $16. For additional seniors. was .. lfl Coukf Chanae informationandldvanccrcgis-One Thins." Jud&inswasbased tration call GWC Community on the students• abihty to inter- Scrvices. 891-3991. prctandcapturc thccsscnceofthc • • • Fountain Valley resident Amy theme in an essay phOtopapb. Diane Taner hasbeen selccttd to Alrlduatinasenior at foun· rcccivcaS t.OOOcollqcscholar-tain \'aUey HiahSthool, Turner ship in a coml>tlition sponsored can use her tcholanhip for tuition ---------------------------.·and booksatanycommunityor four-year coltcae. • And ... to Tney-my own h1ah school gniduase-well done!!! • • • California Elcmenlary School ~tothetuneof$20,7~ · dunna its recent•• La~ for Liten- nare. "lhe jos+thon irioncy was raised forthcschool's library. Two bi~ WCRdonated by Dr. _...,.....,..._and a..ja G".81 for a rame held in bonorolthestudents who partici- .. ket in \be event. • II • a-to-~ CJl'Oeein View .ierecipient1o( 1blftC'bamberOf'Commette ~~S2.00l>. San8oclaORdaSl'"GOOeedl. • • • AllCllP'~~~ View •lid~IOdmi 8 1111 Abil•F•--t •dtlfhllldle ~ ..... -::=="" pan the .students arc sekC1ed bl the staff of each school, .. be said. The qualities common lO all IChoola would be the students' aademics.; strona leadership, excellent citizenship and service to schoOl and community ... Tbouah academics are imponant, Twedt said the studeats' support of school throuah services and student b<KI) involvement 11' equally im· portant. Ensian school honoree is the daufiter of Jim deBoom. the dis- trict s school board president. who presented a certificate and new dic- tionary to his dau&hter . Twedt admitted that it was rather unusual that the winner's father is president of the school bOard ... But anyone who knows the youna lady . and her strcnaths would know bet· ·~ '• ter." . "· · J Other awards went to fourth and • ·· fifth arade pupils who pankipttod in the county Penmanship ~ontdt.1'.l)e · . founh &rade team. Lon Hoffman; ; Harbor View: Graham Hoover. Mariners: Nhi Nauyen; SeltOra; · Cathy RobCns. Harbor View: Kin. .... Steel (alternate). Newport Heialns. · ·• took first place. • ... ·.· The fifth .,adc' ream n:oeived. a · .. founh place award. Team ,nembefs • .. · were Mertedes B~ •. Sonora: Jenny McC~t. N~; Heather Parker, Callfomaa! ~-Siemon, Mariners: Amy Arthur (•Item.ate). NcwpQrt. · 'W· ~ .......... t.eolill91t • I • school year. Alona with teSchina · · " En&JiSh and ESL skills. he · / • coached the boy's · · · f rcshman/ /sophomore Si<>Cter:: ~ team. To Ab, fromoncappn:ciative parent, thanltsforajobwclldOne. J You were patient-quite a feat . with l~and 15-year~not to mention the rowdy .. rents- and Skilled in your coachina abilities. We will mi• yoU!f! • • • BrMfeHJaJ':"'ton o( 0r .... 11rs.vmfti¥t11tor Huau..-Bach.dMitivea doctor Of' dental SU._, depee in Sunday's COWftCement cer- emony at wUlll~of'Pacif1eSCboolol~in SU Franatc0. lndlord.a 1977.,...leof H"ntiNIOft 8*b Hillll~ ftttlvecUaisutwkti..-mte -1 ~hm ..... Y~Univenii1ia 1915. Mltried10dle .......... .., ... Dr. IJ>di.., will be •Deia1edWitlt t.'t."· Vm. in Hlhnif111911 .. . han 1cap fOrher daily battles "' Lag.1aa posts va•nc;y notices Laauna Bach raidents who've been. IOY,ina with the idea oftatina part an City IOVSDmeDt should toy no loaeer. It'• prime time to tel involved since there now are vacancies on five city commit· ~ " Tbeopeninpare on the Rec-reati~n, Human Affairs. Houtina and cableTV commiueetand on tbc Personnel BoUd. Personnel brcl IDCIDbenlCl'VC ~year tams. Committee memben are · · tboeen to fill one-yeer terms, and · the City Council may reappoint . . · .memben or fill vacancies. · •. Memben of the Penonnel . Board bearappeals ,..rcliri; · · · · · .... ~....,~'-~ ~thinpud_ismiaals,dem~· · WllUe cntallm ... • ••rl±'Nnlr are •· uonsand .. yreductions;Tbe . ..._..,.lo Oncle Ollftl', . .,..._ la a CableTVC00111l.itiee reviews the r•RN. At riP,t. .... ~ lier cat A.miter QPeration and compliance of "I..,_ • rtcle. · · · ' . . &ancbiles. TbeHousinaCom-· ·. mittee is invGlved with concerns · such u comm unify block srants . and providina low-incc>me hous. in& forseniora::Tbe Human AffairaCommittee bu subcom- , mi.t1ee1 on au~ includina . child Qrt, py and lesbian iuues and the bomeleil. And the' Rec- reation Committee focuses Qn • P6fks and. well, recreation. ·Students· brighten ·· .. clients' ,day = Applications must be filed with tbecityclerkbyJuneJO.Appli-Oients of Lq1ina Shanti, the cants will be iilterviewcd by the orpnization that opened a year aao to couricil at itsJu"6 5 meet.in• serve the nttds of peop1e.hvin1 with" ~ 1 .. life-t.hreateni-illnesses, were treated · .. . .. , ... . Several south ~u~ty residents to an unexpected pft recently rn the , were amOftl tbol!'anicluatin• form of I bundle O~ le_tters fri>m $an fro UCf Col._. fMAA~ • Clemente school ch1~n. . m I ---r.o ~ane . · The' fint t.hfPu&h seventh-trade th11montti.•Recelv1.._theirinedj. pupils from OUr 1.ady· of Fatima calUqrees~Amt .... from · School in San Qemcnte offered aet· ••. Ll&una Beach, .I.le.ta••••,.._ well wiSbcs for people who have • anaJllll"smllV~from · 'AIDS. Some letters were decidedly . Million Vic;jo and,,_ ... , · upbeat • ...... .,~.-,f'rOmEIToro. ..Dude. surf~ UP." one student . Accordinatotheunivenity•s . wrote. "I ~ly Just want to tell.Y~· communicauonsofrace, 28 ~r-·you should, hve the mt of yout hfe in cent ofdlc II physicians who . style. Qoli t I~ ~ybody tease you. -..A ...... .0 M.i,; • Your fnend, Tim. were .. --~~. ""' .. nres~ : " .. .l hope you are doin1 some fun ·d;mcYS'nJpa11111n1n~~·~ , thinp," another wiote: .. You've Sot • ane-lbe most populartPeci*'· to have fun, enjoy and liven up your . · ty. ~nd most pOpular. (~ily . 1 · life. You are ~~bly 11yin1 •easy, for CbllA-. a -'--. _,_,1 time .... medica~at20percent. · _ hettosay'.andatasibutwhenl'mnot ,..."" -...~ ...-- : • .*. • ' . • •. . vt bavina a nice life make it nice. So " .,, •• IWlNEST ............ W.... Oncie Oljver lacks in six * ...-up for in deterraiutioa. Alld. .a l feet, I 0 inches taH1 lhe his _..,plenty of de1cnninauon. Tlleni hive been lester blttles: .-Clhll the best fruit at the produce _.eer. And ,.inful blttks: l1S1nina !O =· Wk about her u if lbe were • IDYm • ' TIMft hive been idiotic battles -UIWaifta questions such as. .. Wow, bow small were you when you were bani?" And there have been mttles o( -.cial lianificance -refuli111 to be lllulCld to a school for lbe bandi- apped.. And. in the put I 0 yean, Ii nee the 32-,car-old woman bu bad to bqin minscrutches and a wbeeldWr to tet ll'OUad. there bu been the mule of die .-tins lot. Maybe that one is mcwe o( a war. lf Oli~ drives into a IOt a.d 1ee1 a vehicle without a handicapped stick-er or· a deslanation on the licente olate. she pulls her bia burpandy 8uict behind them and parts it while Ille 10CS to call the police. If tbe vcbide'a owner mums pleadi'IJ tblt l9e or sbc was only aoina to be 1n the stoce for a tecond, welJ that's just too blld. Oliver and her Buick Slay puL .. I ay, "No. rm not movins my car Ii> ti1J you tel your ticket.· .. Oliver aid. .. . ' • ADdaM1•onV1.,raideftt ~ take91ylldvice.Itjustmiahtworkout Child · wasamon&tholehorioftdattop •· fbryou.Befriendly,lively,andthink •. c· a•e· ··center· 0 . e.. s ·1e~oninCalPoly'1SchoOlof ~ thou&Jits .... Your Friend, Bran· . . . . . · . _ &... .· • ' · p n Science and Mathematics recent-. ai~ ... -. -l)'. . , !'"KT let~en off~ comfort. • ~ . • , : . .. · ··J-..'B.G .. l'lltllreceived DcarFnend, Hi,howareyou?I m AsfausGinaJ..am~li~isconcemed, the rmntly .. The I I . volw:d · · tbe nnnwd .-· th~e~~icExcelknce~ward · ::~!~~~°[~~:'~!~b::f~'fJ opene_d Saddleblck qti~!'.'s-·Di~very Center in EJ becametha~~W,:.~ildrea:C1~un~~t..! r~-;it·~ave ... 1~ ~-to be near YQ\l. .. wrote one younpter. Toro u Iona overdue, · -. ~ · ., said. ··tt•s sometbi1't I really saw a need for. · · ~.: 988clua. .~ whoCllTlela .. .., care about you and tbere are other · The.rq.ist,ered n11~ -who bas spent yean workin1 · .: Before she swted wortina• tt.e cntcr, lamourelle. · Clouble ~ ia math~ Ph~ · ·. ~ whO care -bout you. too! My to rriak• the center a raltty -said the problem of child ~a consu!tant for SaddJebKl ~tal oa cbild-rclated ics,tbaredtbe0U11tandift&M~or' 1\ame isSbd1C1. ud 1..,na seventh-careint.het>U.Pning$addle~V~hasbeenlafJCly iaues.. She ts a m~m~olthe NalioDal ~tion for awudliabOtluubjeetl. . · · ~ ... !' · · r · · :t • . • ovcr!_OO~· r • • • • ~~t10.nofYOUQ1Cllildtaa;::c:a111~.tofalocal Georp. wlao plans to aneild ,;Steve Pakind. founder of \.aauna . • • lba1 tt the first new cliild ~center in the area that JUR~ hi&b tchool Parelit T . A.aociauon_ As a jnchdiool at 8ciifon Univenity~ Shanti. •id clients Were touched by his .Jrown }>Y leaps add bounds in ,bou~i!'J and in bolpl&al !'u~ ~oordle worbd u1 lntmsiveeart Unit nder. u . ., KM-bl.. tiaJ the sentiments of the children ... buiineues. said lamo~lle, an employee ofsmdlcbllck and Pediatncs. <!r • ~eUov!Ju ruk~hY. .-~n .. • · ,; "n.y were very direct and (o \he HOSpital,!p ¥ission ViejQ who has web a ~r·s leave of · ~ccordina=to ~ 6DIDCial supPOn from tbe ·· . P, ... ~ 1~•~·~P ·, point, derbonstrafin1 that kids~ ablencetod1rccttb(center. ·· · ~talhasmean ore..-:ebthe~-S.200 ~hileputldP!t,i••ntwona-. ~ ttallyclearlboutwhattbeihuesare, . ·"01·~~venoadvoc:a~MaU1haveadvocaies. square reet i ... and ~000 ~tdoon. -lnd has tJonil.~pct1t1~aad womna . whicb is IOvina -nd not judains... ~ l\ave -Sv~tes. even .., haye advocates.· but Ill<?~ the orpn1zauon lo ••wst tn. 'Vandy of specw .. _p.timeuapbyucsre.der,an . Peskind siaid ... The~ were very , ctuldrea~be1 · left out-"' ; ' · acttv1ues. obiervatory attendant and a~ .. ~Ul]>riied and mQved to receive them • . For~ past ve y~rs, lamourdle, a Mission Viejo -~ ~t a time W'~ elected. 0~1, • ctutd care · Janc:ecomputeronmammer. ouroftheblue,sototpeak." · · . ~t..,.idsheWJSedged..outby,otherbusinesses.sucb .¢ialis.ts and fam1hes~k~11 out about the • • • •••. ,~ • The letten will bcon display at the u a PtDa .. r1orand two funfiture stores, as she souP.tto ~lt ~k of aood. a chilllf care, Saddlebaclt Anchevenhoutll coanty jun· t..a,una : Shanti anniversary :persy · ftnd. a .,a.ce ft> locate the .~nter. The ter:\ice, initially 'ffospn.a1 · ~ . worked lO help fill dltll void locally." • ~---oiaADuATM,..) ,--~ ·-••i· ... l.\in~ for thitd~l) ~r·tite .h~rs .e.mj>loyees. has ~,nocndlewd. "Ourstaffprovideumri1111tmospherc . ,_ r-... -· ·-~ _,. ·eVol~ed into. oommutufy child catt facil.ify. . (lllHH w CD.O/m) • ' ,(.. :" ... '... • • ~ ~ ' ,J "'· • If ., ... • ,. 'ltJ • ... •• : • .. . · -. ~ . ~ . , .. · .. !OMN•dlM•llQe--•1111 ~--K-~-===sr•~~=-:.-==.rr~ ~ probably bate tittle people from then on. but they don't do it .,.Un." Oli~. wbo ii ... • )lftXlell o( movinc ft-om lApna Niellll to Fountaan Valley, credill her IMthet with instillina in her a llrOlll tente of ldf . .. , laave 1 very --UYC ptr• sonality1" uid Oliver.""'* ~u and liblinp arc au of avenee aeipt. "My mother raised me eo be lrtf. ucured and to hatt commoe ~-" She wotks to pus the lellOft °" to others. Al chairman of the bolld ol lhe Shon Stature Foundation, Oti~ writn a .. Dear Grxie"" column. iUuminatina dwarfism tOr ft.Iden and sivi, practical advice to small people. o addition, She visits dusrooms and talks 10 C:lliadren about what it means to be different. When ·someone stares at her, she walks up to them and belins talki~ When someone tells a .. short joke, • she tets them straipt. "If I want any jota ID8de 9bout mytelf, rll make than," OliYW 9id she ldls lhem ... Bu,.,.,,_ .... them and direct theai at lie ... . It would help. Olivenaid, if people Just UDdentoocl more ....... ....at people. For nung:. tbere ue more thaft200kiadsof~wll0me bave bodies of common pol~ wlaile od9en do DOt.. M• ~ ob)'lical dilf'ICU!ties in additioa 10 bei .. small Dwarfism alto cu brills i....a 111obkms, spinal comprellioa, wt diftic.ulty witll bearia& wl ere•L Pbysieal problems M ID UllCOf· ("I All W .,. ... ,.) Wheelchair champion honored 8J I ma &.AaNJl'n" .............. A Su Oemen1e man Who is tbe wodcf'I top.ranked wt.:clcW-leellis pla,er and .tlO era.led the Na. tioU1 f ovncllltio9 of Wbeelcllair Tenais Reeived ~!iODal recot• DJUOD recndy b' his wort IO aid the handicapped. Bradley Alae Parts.. pmWyzed 6om the waist down IS tJ.e relull ot.askii•ea.idelltat• ll,reciei~ the leC:Oftd au.i , T*8d Foiia- dation National Award &0..1111 d-- ina AchievemcnL The a...-cl is~ to an individul wbo Im Mtped improve the ifN9e Of. the di.Weit t.hrouab ath.letie aa:omJlllitliineats and wbo halcra.tedopportwaitiel for disabled peol* within their com- munilies.. . Plirb, l 1, is credited witb develop. · in& tbe sport of wb c 'cheir tennis; He won the &Old medal ia 11M:D '1 li1'lla and doubles at tbe 1917 U.S. Olynlpic Feslival and ... cbanapioa of the EvaatA hnaiQll U.S. Open Wllecl- chair Ten.Dis Ownpiombip in 19t0, 191S ud 1917. Pub. wbo was arew up ia Upm 8e8c:b.. alto wrote t.be boot "":Teois ia a WIM:dcbair,.. and bas piroct.ced video&apes on the subject. Tbe National f"oundatioll of Wbcdcbair Tennis. mated m 1980. is a ~fit orpnizatioft .._. ia Tustin.· More than l,000 atWelel around tbe world are in.Wwd ia the orpnization'1 ~I. Tbe Tolland Foundation it a eon-· profit otpnization founded in 1979 to promote community rcrpuncc of ....._ .. ca•w,.., .. ........ ....... ' -. collqe of lender and hUIDOl'OUS moments Pia~ out as teen •n in 1977 •nil adults in 1987. ne teen- lltfl are captured as football ud buketball players. cbeerlellden and prom queens. students involved in surftna; tq-of-wars and just beina teen-.n. In contrast. the 1987 foollee ·re- veals men and women dreued in suits and stylish dtcsSes. Gone are tbe ..._. and Iona straiaht ha:ir styles. Added to the picture are Small children callina the araduates "Mommy and Dlddy." Kelley said he only recently saw the completed video. "We were in the editina room at Dick Clark Productions, it was just Ron and myself. .. he said. . "Ron was excited. nervous and anxious: this is a project he cares a k>t about The pan of the filin that stuck me the stro.,.est were the shots of the reunion. It was then and now themes. ··ne th<Milbts numm•~ my mind were bow inCiecliile that Ron should have this idea f'ora clau video at such a youna qe and then want to come ti.ck 10 ~later to complete it,~ he added. ~ aaid the 10:.yar reunion rekindled tbe friendahip betweeo tbe three men. "Ron, Don and I had aone our 1e~rate ways after hi&h school," he saad. "Over the years we developect friendships in the Loi Anaeles &JU, aood friendtbi .. But all ~ aaree they don•t compare to the friendships we formed at an innocent aae when the material world and an the prasurea didn't bother us. We all chote to be &oeether. This friendship and the unity of our clasS is very real to us. and Pf(>b9bly What drove all of us. especially Ron, · thl'QUlh the project," he said. Fountain Valley plays host to fiesta 87 JOYCE BODLOVJCB ............. · What we have here is classic 19S0s music, spectacular fireworks, carnival ridcS, crafts, pmes, a vintqe car show and rib and chili cookoffs. It all masquerades as the sbth annual Oranae County Fiesta. a five- . . ~ . . , daycountywidepanyfromJune30io music chart with .. Mission Bell ... A Cookoff, ~onh Sl,000 ~D ~b prizes July 4' at Mile,, Square Parle in Las V~styte "Tribtite lO Elvis" and trophICS ~ the winn1.nt chefs. Fountain Valley ,pretentcd by the also will be showcased. · Tbe$J,0000iah CookoffwdlbC held city•s Chamber of Commerce. Ak>na with almost continuous J~ly 3. E!'~ry fees are S2SO and ~35 entertainment, the fiesta's special wath add1t1onal proceeds benefitana T_he fi~~ opens at S p.m.,and t.<>C' opening ni&ht one-price-pays-all ad-non~profit and charitable 1roups. unul midniiht June 30 Wllb ~rty. million oi S 13 includes a host 'of Rib CookofT participants will have Dan of Sha Na Na and l 9S0s teen idol carnival rides and other attractions. the privilege of sellinJ thciraood food DOnnae Brooks; who rocked the · And that's for starters. From July to spectators at the fiesta. A panel of 1-4', the festival will run from 11 a.m. jud~ will deeidc the top winnm to rriidniaht, and will continue rock-along with a People's Choi~ Award. ins with classic aroups like Bill Forthe children, smalland "bis." B Haley's Comets, the Co.sten, the &. B Amusements carnival will set up Drifters. the Penguins and the Del a variety of rides and pme booths. Vikirip. Enjoy Ute stomach-Jurchina Zipper or On July 4, not only will fiesta-gocn the ~~ Alliptor ride. ~ite. the enjoy a 9 p.m. fireworks spectaeular carnival ndes arc fret openana n1aht, bUtanall~y,pre-1970scarshow. All there is a cha~ for rides for the county residents are encourqed to remainder of the fiesta. Discount ride enter their classic or antique can in a tickets, seven rides for SS. a .SO ·competition that could earn them percent discount, will become avail- tropbies and plaques. Another perk able • from the Fountain Valley - a $10 entry fee allows admission CbamberofCommerccafterJune28. iOt a fout-pcrson party and car to the Other events include cootem- (iesta. · porary to Christian and wstern-styte '"The Oassic Auto Show adds a music. family fun bike rides ph11 ans apecial touch to the days and niahts of and crafts and plenty of foOd. sampl- DlUSicaf entertainment for the entire iop will be CMre for the takina. family." said chairmao Dick Grqs. General admisaioa is $3;· juniors. The fiesta also will prove there can· 6-10, Sli children S yean and under, never be enouih cooks 10 spoil the free. Opcnina ni&ht only, $13 ticket btolh. Oranae County restuaranu includes rides and entettainment. and private panics are eftcouiued to Proceeds benefit non-profit and creaierecipesforthebarbecuen'band charitable causes includiDa youth chili cookoffs.. scholanbi~ for adctilioaal anfor- ThC event bqina July 2 with the mation con'8Cl the Fountain Valley California State Championship Rib ChamberolCommen:e, 962_....1. Ex-councilman Hal Dike dead ,1 ~ ' Harold £. .. Hal" DilDt. 13, a SU Juan c.-rano Nlicllet. died Jue 12. A . biDer owner Of Dike ud Townleftd Insurance lrobn, he had recentJ}'_ fttiRd from the tusk Co. sales omc:e in San Clemente. Born in Redlands, Dike Md eerved twace as city councilmen in that city and oncie as praident of the Chamber of Commerce. He also terVed on the board of juvarile court for lhe ~ of San lematdino. dT~-::: Dike. a \JO.A pllduate, WJ It member of Delta Ul*Jon fralem1ty and Blue Key. The Wortd War 0 veteran also wu a membei ol lhe Santa Ana Elb · l.odle. El Mid Shrine and pat president of Gold Coast Shrine Club. • .. He is survived by bia .~ Maraam; a dauahter. Batbara Neal:-. .son, lama Dike ol Aberdeen, Wlllll: ... ----------and four ~ndchiktren. · ?! Memoriala may be lt'ftl tcli* or.nae County Central Oflic:e;-:21t~ South Grand Avenue. Santa A~ 92705. ir;(,o • CHAMP ••• FroaBl the disabaed and to intqrate the bandical>oed into everyday activities. Baled in Connecticut. the foundation has prosrams and serviClCS na- tionwide. Nominations for the award were received from national orpnization1 for the disabled, media representa- tives and memben af the communi- ty. rfs' f c:id ~ LETTERS •• .:h'! '... PnlaAl .4·'• , Sunday. The celebration, whicbiWiP be beJd at Anneliese School at l086I' Laauna Can)'On Ra.d at E 1Tmo Road, will be open &o tbe publie. • .....;ayi..-.~ Cl""' DW ARJI' ST ANDS TALL ••• P,..Al rec1C:d can be faial and dwarfs have 1 shorter lifespan in~. Althouah Oliver said u a ~apter she was ''J'earleat" ridi bet ipecial bike in the streetl ori=:Jt. ahc quiekly learned she had alt ._nles to frahL After movi• to the IUburbl. schOOI officials insisted Oliver be bu.ed to Detroit to anend a handi· ~ ICboOI. She ple8ded with her lllO«her' -her pmeall were divoft:ed -to allow her '° ~ '° • aeiab-borbOOd IChool with her brothenand ~ Fiaally, her modler related. '"She knew we·d Mve a helluva ftDt and WC did," Oliver taicl The IClaoola put Oliver~ a bandy of Intl to determine If lbe W&I intdliernt eftOlilh hebe Ibey pve jn. NO other 1tliClcat no wathindi- c..,ed or of lmllll llal.n hid aileadldtlaal tcbool ..._ <*ver panidplted i11 Mrydli.11 ~~~~ .. .. .......... trainina clau even thoulh one teacher quit as a result , ··1 did everythina in a limited~ ... she said. I Al it turns out, drivina ii t0me. thina Oliver pjnicularly aUoys; Int wbedcbair ud cna&cba uvc been a nuitance, but she loves her aaicL With a atep 10 ,et iato it,:= cuahion. band coalrOltand •nlill lleerins. Oliver can .uy .. ~ mcetinp. linai111=•• ....... "* ~~IM WOfts OUI ~ peopllstilJ look at her as ar.be'"\'iili ...... ~ ... ae"9' ft• in --···J:~ Oliwrllid. WlllaclUlalliiltfli • .. , Willa I did, but I aewra" a· lumpina up llli• H•'I reali • can be ...... _. iDCm~•ieill ttmea. .. ICCOntilll IO Offftr, ... ju.t plOwl on . ... doa't ralbe I'm liny, lhe ..W. .. lbowia my• .._r•eot." Mesa roes not an aatlilfted. may need second referendum to topple bft'ice pliiri .,~~ .. .,. .. ...... ~ ... B3 81 A7-8 C4-e 84 85 M ee A3 C7-8 C1-3 A2 Racers tested by hills, hot sun First leg takes vlny.&e cars on scenic route to San Luis Obispo BJ GUO KJJCUX .............. 'SAN LUIS OBISPO -They were tired and bot. Some bid taken Wl'Olll turns tbat cost tbem valUlble time and raourc:es. Otben cha .. tires or repaired faulty !Ndrinery in temperatures that pushed the mercury put 100 ~ Bat when all WU slid and done, all of tbe 120 rKen tbat left DilneylaDd Wednaday momina survived tbe first lea of tbe sixth annual Great American race. . Tbe 1'rlt lea of the race tOOt tbe vint-.e autOmObilel and their driven and navipton on a 331-mile route to Su Luis ~ tbe abortat lta of tbe 4,500-mile journey that will end iD IOMcm oa July l. Ii. $2'0,000 pune ii at ab iD die race. wbicb drew panicipants this year trom 29 atata aDd levCral Rolldl1er. whole Mviptor is Wayne countries; Stan&e&cs m~ MelL A1thouab official fi.nMtay results .. Overall. ~-went fine. .. were not yet available race official• said Halliday a bC made 101DC minor indicated that two o;;n;.; Cout . ~Ul1ments to bis vebide. .. We bid raidcats were amons the top ftn-101De pr:oblema keepins up speed on ilhcn. some OI tbe bis bills, IO we just went Tbe 1919 Chevrolet 490 RacCr a fat aa we could and IUde ap tbe driven by Bill Halliday of N?.POrt time comial down." Beach rolled into San Luis Obispo RacenreceivepoiDtabuedonbow just in front of the l91S Mitchell dole.~ come to a -~i.Ded 2~Q:NTS Renewal of slum rentals weighed HB may redevelop Commodore Circle apartment buildings Route for county tollway adopted· Dog catching not what lt used to be ' f-Q•talJJ• ane'Vfct Jionetram city land Wednesday's decision puts the bomd's stamp of approval on a preliminary envilomnental study and dctiplta the two:-PrO~ route :u u:.:rferred" qrunent for tbe Nat IPrinl. tbe county Trampor· talion COrridOr AleDCiea Will ' a final environmental im..J': cootai · details aucb u exKdY ~=bow the toUwa will liak ~ wilb the Suta Ana FrJw.y. AllD .nu to be determined ii tbe tollway'• euct route tbroulh ,._. Can~. nonbcat oreowan Jfeilbll near Tustin. AIMJCher detail ltill to be WOlbd out ii wbetber 1M • eltern lee ol tbC toll toed will be ah or eilbt lue&. Animal CODtnM oftic:as rapond with oolice ofticen when an animal is involved in an autollCCident, or when narcocics ofticet1 must .ean:b a home where there ii a dos. He aid oHuty Irvine Animal Services ofticm have PDWCl'.I to a.natand~~ '1"h9 commonly issue ciuuons to ~~ pet-ownen. Violatiom of 1be aty•s 1eub-<0ntrol laws are 1be most common liclketl, but hpDo said a lawenfo1c:ement tacqround ii a cnacia1 element to the job. - • • Calif. Tempi ~ • ., " ,,__ : : :::rJt-: \1-----------------m : :·.... . i~ :: 8arf Porw8t •• F. •. , = : --1~ f: =--~.... ... .. • " &iii. • .. ..... . ... ti ........ I.. M • . ,.,,_ . ... " • .. ....... • E ... • tr • L-.111¢ 7' ........ II .._.., • ,, '--...... " .'91 ....... ,: II ~ : :------'"!""--., ,, ,..,_. ., • Tl ... _ •n..,......, ... u ., 74 ........, " • . " ...... ·-i ,...., .: ;: =..... = ==r :::: • 71 o.te • ........ .. .... n• ,....,,... •• .. ......... .. • ft ,......... .. • ,.. • • 7t ....... .,. 71 ,.....,. • 17 .......,OIW M .......... • n ......... • •""'• •1 n ....... • • • • ..._ • 74 It __ ..._ .... .__,_ .. • n ........... • ... ,_ . "......... .. . ....._ _ _.. ............ n • r.1111111t '' 11 _.._.w ... "• ... ,.,..... n •--·--------------., " .... • • btended .. 14 ....... ". .. ........ . .. .. • ..... Clw .. .. • ., " r.u.C*IPO • • .... .... ...,_ ..... • n ..... ...,. " •-..--. ........ .._. 114 71 .......... • ,,_~ ............ ... t7 7• ....... • tt ......_" ,._._,..._. ... "1 " r...v-. .. ., •a...• .... menL lfthoeeof you out theft want to do~ to help Mary Vincent. offer 1:an'Y Sinaleton a job. Mab bim a productive member of IOCiety and tben ICDd UI bis paycbect." Tbe auomey Uid Vincent iJ li . off Social SecuritY payments ':J small private donations. F.dwardl said be will con.sider lli Bauer's dec:ilion and will 111:r",...t&n~-IUl~·dl'ons to locate Sina)cton. lf After beina relealed oa Pll'Ol8. BOT SUN, HIL~TESTGQATRACERS ••• ham Al need ~ f.dwards II.id be will ID to Florida to find s~ who •r>-.,,.,.a~ bu no lela1 repraeatation. -FAiwuds said "he will bciin his teatcb iD Contra Colle County,,,. wbcre Siaptoo siped • leUer earlier tbiJ month 1<>ti.._ that an <>ranee County court bad no Jurildiction over him. SinaJeton 1ried to eetde iD irvenl Northern Cali(ornia commuoitiel but wu t\lt'Ded away by Ull'J. residents. He ended up .ll)CndiJll hil a.od the choiee of route. which took the nan over hick roeds throuah Bakenfield. near the famous Mormon Rodts and across the San Andrea Fault. However, the windina. ICellic route thrnu.h 10me of SoUtbent Cali-iCftia"""i" molt picturesqQe daa1 took its toll on many vehicles. Several can exoerienced overbeatina. while otMn bad fiat lira in temperat\lta tbat IOUed to t l 4 dqreel outside BUenfidd. One of the most ICrious problems ~before the race's fir1t Slop in laa<'8Rr. A 1912 Oldsmobile Auto- crat Speedster driven by Ginni W"rthen of Fountain Valley calllht me wbeD it ·~tly overfleatccf. Withers and her naviptor, Bna Oczon of Pittsbu~ Pa.. were not injUJ'ed but lost sipmcant time. They did .not anive in San Luis Obispo until late w~ Di&ht. Withers' b Newt, who ii drivin& a 1934 Packard R09dster, said his wife•s car will probably continue the nee. "These kind of problems happen in this nee. We had a lot of them today, thouah." said Withen, who ex- ~enoed a Oat tire aloaa tbe route. It WU wiusually bot, and l think that obviously bad some effect." If the racers were tired and worn· at theendoftbeW~J'sj~. their spirits were · y lifted by the lively crowd of oerrly 4,000 that jammed the streets of San Luis Obispo to sreet tbem. ROUTE FOR CORRIDOR ••• FrolllAl The proposed plan drew criticism from an Irvine resident who said she rqxaented 14 bomeownen' usocia- tions in the north section of the city. Chris Elliott. of the North Irvine Villa,es Association. said residents in bet' area also wanted the number of lanes in 1be easteru Jet of the toll ro.d left open to dilCUlllOD. but boerd memben refused to add her request to their rete>lution. "We·~ very irritated." she said. "All we were ukinl was that the desian of bo1h ICIJDC!lts be left open to ditcuuion. North Irvine already bas two freeways, and we feel that an expressway, rather than another free- way ii what we need. What they'~ imJ,iyina by teavina us out of the ditc:Ullion 1s that the eastern lea is aojna to be built to f'reeW8y standards. wbereu the wat.ern lea may be built with fewa' llDes. al aD GpiellHy ... But Sasao Marzec. a spc)keswoman for the Transportation Corridor Alencies, said there would stiJI room for dilC'Ullion until the final en- vironmental study was completed. .. Nothinais set 1n concrete yet," she said. .. But if people oblect to the alipment or daian. they tt aoina to have to come up with documenta-tion.. Just ayina •we don't like it' is not Pnt ~be enoup." A bi<>l&ist for the California Dc- putment of Fish and Ga.me also criticized the proposed alipment. -rbe environmetnal impact report is ~uate from the standpoint of ~ mouroes." said Esther SwWett. the department•• bioloaist for OnnF County. Bult.eit iaid the department WU concerned about the possibilit1 that ~~to~ road mi&ht disrupt ~ • nUpatlODI aM destroy wetlands and oU woodlands. ··~ we~ just peat. This really makes at worth it." said Halliday. The arrival of the racm was the event or the week in this sleepy ltUide burs. One radio announcer even quipped. "There are so many people OD ~ I'm SU~ a praidential c:anclidate bun t shown up." San Luis Obilbo resident Ronnie Frenc:h put the tum.out into per- spective, however. .. You shou.ld eee the crowd for our Thursday niabt bubecue. .. she said The racers were ICbeduled to leave on the second lea of the j~umey at 6 this momina. Today's 4'07·mile trek will take them throuab Santa Quz and San Francisco belo~ anivina for an ovemiaht stop in Slcramento. one-year prob9tion period in a niler inlide the priJon aroundL HORSE IN BBC.AN BE EVICTED ••• l'roiaAl Cannon that Millipn evicted Shue a maliation for her cornioa to the City Council with otben to file complaints apinst MiUipn. However, Millipn's attomer,. Mark Roeen, laid Shue .U.CUY broke stable rules replarty. dilrupled trainioa claues and threatened utety ofothen. ~ araued tbat MillipD al-leaedlY enpeed in a stream of oblcmities directed at Shue OD 00-• c:uion bad a near-accident with her ""Somethi trqic will happen.• on his eolf cart. Mayu said.~ man (MillipD) hlll Mayer aPOC&Rd before the Hunt-a violent temper." mason Baidl City Counc:il Monday Sbue 'and other boerden com-=~warned officiala that they plained to ci~ .tier~ y . have a liability: oa what }Ur that Mi · 111 qdly nailed m • t blppen at the Equestrian feet illepµr_ ~ without city per-' • Center, located on city-owned Dart million. omciala said that an aUdit land at Golden West Street a.od Ellis a~ to be ati.r.ctory and the A venue. prices waea't rolled beet. APARTllENTSMAYBEREDEVELOPED ••• HOME... ~1into aeaior citizen apart· PolicehavedelcribedCommodore when be~ to a nea1'Jy ~ l"romAl menu. Otben ••rited tbat the Circle a a "drive-throvcb dime centa:1 said be'• oPPoted to fW'tber, current 1tructuracoukl be bu1Jdcncd stote•• for ~ uted by youtbt work mat will make a .. aiclcrenviroa.: submitted a third set of plans to the and new structures built. throuP.out OraftlC Couty. meat for the drul dealin." .: city that reduce the project by rouahly Ray HiJkcn. a r.ident of Hunt-It alao is a 11thcrina place where The CommodOre Circle complel· one-third. inaton Creek. told officiUt that mostlylatinolaborer11undo1u1reet lw come under heavy fire in receat Gone is the health club, 100 rooma residents "'live in uncertainty and comen to be picbd up for daily jobs. yean from city officfalt who claim' ·ofthehotelandmorethan 10,000feet fear... Citr_~ have poured about abtentee landJordl let the buikliftll of retail space, said Malcom Roll, Commodore Citde iJ localed near ,._50,000 in federal money into the de1eriorate and become r haven iOr. Seaentrom'sdirectorofplanninaand the Faw Poiatl lboDDilll cellter at neijbborbood in u attempt to make coctrOICheland rats. They allO u9't ' Main Snee. lc9cb "Boulevard and pulilic not.of.way improvements at complaided of other' .. VOi)' con-.. e·ve looked very Jwd at the ElliJ A venue. Hu'lli'IPM Creek is a CommoCJore . .Just two weeb a,o, the ditioas iuc:h aa Wup toilets and economics of the project involVed condominium compkil in the aft&. City Council approved spendioa phambill& problems. and we have cut the project u much HilMD. llid O.modore Circle s2ro.ooo to put in new tidewalb. ID ·~ resideats ol Hua.....- u we can." Ross said wtien wiveilina residelltl baw ~ Del barwed laDdlcaplns. a.od to resurface 1treets erect and neilbbotjns Villw ~ 1be new plans two MJeb •· women wt ~ 1Mm to rude ~~ • ........_ _, ... be's~"N> dacended oca City Counc:ilcfteTttn The new plans were •pPrOvcd by •ura wt ...... -. ~ wuu __, v 1 to requea tbat the buiJdials be" the Plannina Com million 1n u1>eeiaJ "No one fedudt," be l&id. what be eees tn the DeiP bulldomd. meetina Monday. They leave Rome __ _.;..--------------~----~----.,-----------Randi, a 93-acre pucd bounded by Harbor Boulevard, Fairview RC*l and the San Dieao Freeway, with a density of 2 milfion 1Quate feet per acR. a reduction of 1.1 million 1quare feet. Rost said. Tbc daild ~ ceoler' .. -reduced. be added. JYi~ ilobJa4b tk; ~ wt7 ~ «r ~ ... a&, tk ~ ~ i&. Correction Wednes~ay's Lotto picks ... OFflC9 ...... c......._CA .......... ,.._C........_.CA ... ~· .... 1': ...... ' .... .,q ... , WTOflCLUI• (n21 -)