HomeMy WebLinkAbout1988-06-28 - Orange Coast Pilot.. TUESDAY, .JUNE 28, 19 25 CENTS • • •
sen park proposal rejecte
Newport Ctty council tempers tribute,
names memorial library room, fl~pole
., G&BG &LBllU ............
Tbe public lcpey for loqtime
Newport ee.cb activist Vin Jor-
lll*D .... ecaled t.ct considenbly
MODday u the Oty CoUncil voted to
name a room-ratbcrtban a put-after the late resident
Mike Tylon(rlght)em-
bracee Michael Spinks at
a news conference after TYIOi'\ knocked out
Spinka In the first round of
their world heavyweight
title flght./81
C.llfomla
Governor' a education
panel urges sweeping
changes./ A7
World
U.8. mllltary attache to
Gr9eee killed by a car
bomb./M
Seekina to avoid an ualy oon-
troveny, the council votecl unani-
mously to name a multi-purpose
room at Marioen Library after Jor·
aen1en, who died May 16 at the qe of
7-4.
A ~le at the library will also be
named in Jof1efteen'1 honor.
A minor controversy aroee around
a recient proposal to rename Mariaen
Part after Jortenten. A petition with
more than 200 lipaturea aupponjns
the name chante was submitted to the ~ Council at its June 13 ineetini, teVeral letters of support ~
received.
But the council aul*.quently· re-
ceived letten and petibon1 fiom
residents who were concerned that
the name cblftae would alter the
character of the neiahbothood.
Tbe neiahborbood, located adja-
cent to Dover Shores. bas a library,
tcbool and street with the name
Mariaen attached to it.
flesidents Aid they were not op-
poeed '° honorina lo~ but w'ICd the COWM:i.J to seek 10 altefna.
tive to mwn~ the perk.
"Altbouab Van JOf'llC1lJeD wu defi-
nitely an utet to our community,
many othen in the put were equally
ao ..• It would 1Ce1D best not to let sucb
a precedent," read a ~ from Mr.
and Mrs. David 8eepn.
Council members apparently
~with the residents' concerns. .. I don'l think we want to start
nami~ broed areas of the city after
oeODle llid Councilman Donald Suausi. .. I think there could be a lot of
problems with that. becaute there are
IO many .worthy people."
Councilman Oateft.Oe Turner, who
bad kid the council effort to rename
the pe.tt for Jorsm1en. made the
alternate PIOPOlll, but added a S\.11· -o~ that ~ eitr look for ways to
honor ltl active resident.a.
.. Wehavealmostatllditionherein
~'=~: GROUND
tl1 5 FLOWER
SPECIAL s:1Rif L'ER
t~
Beacb of not rocopm ..
wbo oontribute to Ibis cttr• umer ... We're not just a aty
made up of beautiful can, beets.
boma and a harbor. We're made up
of people."
Mayor John Cox said the alternale p~ ttuly honored Jcqeneen'•
sptnl .
.. Vin wu really a {>ttSC>n wbo came
to the battle lookina for a com· promi1e, .. said Cox..
JOflCOICn was a well-known fiau.re
(PleUe ... Tamon/d)
Expense
forHB
complex
backed
City OKs spending
of $9 million to get
$25 million center
•1 aoaarr BARD!ll ..............
A payout of ocarty $9 million in
fin1ncial i.Dcentives to land I $2.S
million five-story entenainment
oentcr aod condomini\llll complex in
the downtown area was approved
=-)~~the Huntinctoo
The~ of the expenditures - a
S.S.1 million partins wueture and S 1.) million for a new water line and
underlround utilities -also will be
used ror other l_X'Oposed redevelop-
ment projecU tD addillOn to the
auenamment center.
But the city qr'eled to sell 27,000
equare feet of land valued at Sl.5
million '° the California Reloru Co. for Sl to pave the way for tbe fint
OC fireworks promotion fizzles AcMcl and Games A 10
Bulletin Board A3
. tedevdopmeDt . ill the =U)WD Ila io1aD4 CC'the pier.
The city alto~ to pay up to SI
million to re1oc:ale c:ommerciaJ and
residential tenants to make room for
the five-acre l>roject anchored at the
silt of the old Golden Bear !Jilbtclub
at Main Sueet and Pacific Coast
Hilbway.
8Ullnela 84-5
ca....tled 86-8
Comk:a A11
Entertainment AS-9
()pfnlon A6
POUc::e log A3
Publtc Notices 88
Sporta 81-3
Weather A2
Wyland claims
Sawdust officials
locking him out
a, PAUL AIClllPLEY ............
He flnt ~ notoriety bade
wbeD be bid a 6nt and last name lib tbe nit of ua. Since thole
days. Llluna 8e8cb artist Roben
Wyland \u aspired to the raab of tbe one-name at.an: a.er,
Liberace, Stina, Madonna,
Wylud.
..
wholesalers who do business -
altf?ouah not as much as they once did -an tfle county.
Fireworks are permitted in only
ei&ht ~ County cities, and
fireworks distributors said they had
hoped Costa Mesa and representa-
tives from the other seven cities
would join in the conference.
Earlier this year, industry represen-
tatives worked wtth fire officials in
Costa Mesa, Buena Park, Fullerton.
................... ..,
Aa • .._..., O~ory Jow .......... , ........ u-
Haa ..... 'l'Q .. (lower left)
Jal•• ... face dart•• ........ ,,~.
I
Stanton, Garden Grove, West·
minster, Oranae and Santa Ana,
which still allow certain approved
fireworks, on a series of brochures
and fliers th.at warn the public apinst
illepl, explosive fireworks and
provide pomters on the safe use of
lepl fireworks.
Jerald Farley, of the Fullerton-
bued Maaic Draaon Fireworks Co.,
said he Wed reprctentatives of the
ei&ht fire departments to panicioate
in the press conference. He Said
~tatives from all the cities
irutially expressed interest.
"Every ~ of this material was
developcdJointly with the fire depart-
ments, and every sinale word was
approved by them. so we thouabt it
would be useful to bold a joint press
conference,.. said Farley, "but a~
parently the fire chiefs' association
voted not to participate and d.is-
(Plea.ee .. rtllSWOllU/A.2)
fn mum for IOina into debt for the
project, the city's redevelopment
qenc:y expects to reap revenue ICQCr·
ated by iacreued l!openy values and sales tues from project. California RetOrtS, formerly Hunt-
in&ton Pacifica, bu won approval to
build a six-plex movie theater with
(Pleue ... COllPLU/A2)
Former CBP officer pleads
·guiltyto pimping teen girls; ··
BJ JONATHAN VOLUB ..............
A former California ffiahway Pa-
trol aerpnt plc:adcd pailty Monday
to dwaes he pve teen41C airls
cocaine while they worked as prosti-
tutes for him.
William Scott Taylor, 49, siped a
written oonfession on what was to be
the thild day of his pr:etiminary beariaa before West Mu.mcipal C.ourt Judie Floyd Schenk.
Taylor, who retired &om the <AJi.
fomia more than five ~ qo followina a motoreyde accident. kept
his be8d boMd behind a leCU.ri
tcreeD dwinl the ~inp. faint)~
~ ~ .. to Schenk's ques-
hons.
Prolecutora delaibed the Pf'O$ll·
tution rina as "informal."
Taylor, accord.i°' to the accusa-
tions, found )'OUQI prts roanuna near
the pier, then induced them to wort
as pr<!titutes out of the ooovencd
Main Street bot.el where be lived. He
ooUectcd a fee, but paid the sirls in
cocaine and bousina. authorities said.
Tbe ICbeme was nearly identical to
one in Las Vepa that Taylor pleaded
JUilty to Deady 10 ~ llO· That cue. however, was reduad to a
miJdemeanor and Taylor received
only probation aod a fine. Hwat·
inston Beech Police detcctJve Randy
Pa said. f.;aor·s pill. t~ plea Monday came
after a Superior Court Judie inc.tictted
be 'WOUid" likely sentence tbe former
San Bcnwdino CHP officer to eilllt
years in ptjson. H.t the cme ec-to
tnaJ and Taylor oonvicud, be could
have m:eived more than double that.
said his attorney, Grqory JOlllel.
Jones admitted it wu unUIUM for a
defendant to ~ his plea in the
midst of a preliminary ~ He
aid the offer was made c:harilll a
mcetina with Depu.ty Dillrict At-
torney Connie Johmon IDd S..,..iot
Cowt Judie Luis Cardenu Ille ...
week. (PleMe .. ,.,. .. , .. )
NB'sBlueBeetbistro facing Flghtfans storm.local closure for Code violations cable firm
y'squake on San Andreas Fault
FIGBTF ANS FLOOD CABLE COMPANY ••• ..... ,
oullide ltQF'I' ~ they may
baw been oacc they aw tbe much-
publiciied title bouL T)tOD bocked
out me pre!ioully udcfeltod Spinb
iD tbe vay ftnt round,jutt 91 9'ICODdl
iD10 tbe teboduled 12·round fiabt.
~the mare competitive co~
tat WU l.D~cable TV letVice
fortbeftebL
Local bo~aa &.m wbo waited until
Monday to order the cable service foWKI the telephone lines jammed by
otben a1lo requestiJla the brot.dcast.
That forced crowds of people to visit
Roeen· offices to pay for the 11C1CeS1 in
penon.
However, 1CVeral peop~ ltandina
outside the office at SeaclifrShoppina
Center in Huntincton Beach on
Monday n.iabt said they bad ordered
the lcr'Vice in advanocL paid for it, aotteo a special cable oox and still were not nooked up just minutes
befcn tbe fiaht. .. MOit peOple were taken care of,
but you can only put IO many people
~ ow computen at a time IO,
ya. there wu a wai(" Panenon said.
Bec:auae of the Jona wait and the
&usuatioo by those anxious to order the 1C1"Viot.. R,_.... .t..-t 1eCUrity
parda iD the ~But there were DO reporu offiabts or violence,
despite tbe bot iempm.
Patterson 11id Roaers
Cablelystems bepn takina orden for
the bollina mat.ch three Meks qo.
The price WU $39.95 throuah last
Friday, and $49.95 if ordc:rcd after
thaL
More than 3,000 ofRos:ers· 75,000
cable customers in Huntinaton
Beach, fountain Valley and west ~unty oRlered the special
If customers did not already have a
device called a Zenith convener,
which aUows them to receive other
pey channels in addition to tbe bl,sic
cable ~nuua. they bad to pay
an additional $4.95 to rent one.
PatterSOn aid repon.s that Roten
was diJtributina faulty or incorrect equi_pment were f'alle. "Some people didn•t even know if
they needCd the Zenith COGvetlef, but
we would cbeck by callina their
names upon thecomputel"I, wliieh we
did.•• Patterson aid.
Still, because of the crowds of
frustrated customers, Roacn ofticiaJs
are considerina chanaina their sales
policy for future events.
"This i1 probably the hiabest
demand for any (special pay event)
that we've had." Patterson said. "'l
think next time wc ~t decide to
cut off sales the day before the event." .. But you just can•t prevent people
from waitina until the last minute ...
FIREWORKS FORUM FIZZLES IN OC •••
h'OIDAl
co\ll'llcd individual dcp&rtmenu
&om panicipatina.'•
But a Costa Mesa fire official said
his department had not been dis-
COU,...S &om attendin&.
"'We didn't ever decide not to
attend, .. said Tom McDuff, the city's
fire manbal ... It's just that they held it
on Monday and we did not have
anyone wbo could So·"
FOWltain Valley FltC Cbief Rich·
ard £. JOfltlllC!t president of the Oranae County l'll'C Chiefs• ~
tion, said Farley also had asked the
association to send a representative
to the press conference.
.. We voted at our meetina on June
16 not to participete," said Jorsenscn.
1'he official word is that the majority
of fire chiefs in Oranae County believe that aJ1 fireworks are danger-
ous."
The association is conduct.in& tts
own press conference today in Orange
to demonstrate its prenuae that all
6reworb, even the 1epl ones. can
cause i.J!ju.ry and ~peny damaae.
But fireworks industry representa·
tives say the vast ma~ty of fires and
iltjuries are cauxd by fireworks that
are banned either by the state or the
federal aovcrnmenL
.. It seems there is a lumJ>Ull
tQFtber of all fireworks. .. said Pam
l.andli, of ~tronia Coro., maker
of Red Devil fireworks. .. !Jut it's a
bum rap. The fact is. 92 percent of
problems are attributable to ilJepl firewotb. ..
Still, Jo~ said lbere are
cnouab injunes resu.ltina from the use
of leo.I firewotb to came concern.
.. We're . particularly concerned
about aperklcn, which burn at l ,000 deliecs. .. he said. .. People &ive those
to "l·yea,-okts to hold.••
He said be was also worried about
the milled messaae children are receivi.na from the sale of lepJ
fireworks. .. We continually teach children not
to play with matches and with fire,"
be said. .. Now all of a sudden on the
4th of July we put all ofthete flamina
devices in at their disposal. It's just
not consistent education.••
Allowina safe-and-sane fireworks
also makes it more difficult to detect
illeo.I fireworks, McDuff wd.
"l've been up in helicopters and it's
hard to tell them apan when you look
down," be said. .. I think that'• one of
the most important arsumenu that
can be made apinst them ...
Industry representatives respond
that a ban on aJ1 fireworks only
encourqes people to obtain the more
COMPLEX EXPENDITURE •••
hoaaAl
1, 7SO 1eau· a 3,000 square foot
n.iJbtclub; I lo condominium uni~
10,000 ,uare foot restaurant; 23,uuu
square eet of commercial retail
facilities; and a 20,000 square foot
public plaza.
The project is a far cry &om plans
by the previous admirustration to
build a 12 to 14-story hotel and other hiah rise buildinp in the area.
There was no discussion Monday
niabt of rebuil<!inJ the Golden Bear1 the popular old niabupot that stooa
in the area for 60 yean before it was
tom down to make way for re-
developmenL
Officials have backed away from
previous demands that the ni&htclub
be included in the complex. The complex is bounded by
Walnut Avenue and Pacific Coast
Hi&hway and Second Street and Main
Street on the west.
danaerous ones from out of state and
Mexico.
.. You only have to look at the cities
that have closed out all fireworks and
have 1eeD increases io iltjuries and
damaae," said Farley. wrbe point is.
there are some people who are aoina
to Ft fireworks, and they're not aoina
to ~l the ~ lepl ones. They're
&OLDJ to set the ill~ ones that they
think are more fun.
McDuff said be believed there WIS
10me truth iD the arsument that
bannina all fireworks encourqed the
use of more cSanaerous ones such as
Roman candles and bottle rockeu.
The number of cities pennittina the
private use of firework.s has dwindled
tn recent years. Fountain Valley,
Huntinaton Beach and the county
enacted ordinances this year bannina
all fueworb.
Farley said he and other industry
representatives hoped, through
education, to penuade the rema.inina
cities not to enact bans, and to
convince some cities to lift their
prohibitions.. .. We think the facts are clear and
that they are on our side, .. he said.
Also appearina at the conference
was Tom Peten of the Freedom
Fireworks Co. in Norwalk .
TRIBUTE •••
From Al
in Newport Beach and a 33--year
boa.rd member of Hoaa Memorial
Hospital He WU a1lo a foundina
member of the hospital'• SS2 Oub, a
board member of Oranae County
Perfonnin& Ana Center and past
president of the Rotary Oub of
Newport·Balboa.
He was named Man of the Year in
1969 by tbe Newport Harbor
Chamber of Commerce and rece1ved
a Spirit of Life award from the Oty of
Hope.
WYLAND BATTLES SAWDUST OFFICIALS ••• Prom Al .
A pest member of the board of
diRcton said mi1COmmumcation on
both sides resulted in the demon-
stration never comina off. Wyland
expected them to come to bj1 atudio.
They expected him to come to their
offices.
.. It wu a comedy of miscues," the
member said.
Wyland went ahead and removed
the )CWClry, then was accused of
putuna it back on display before the
end of the festival. He wd that ctwae
was untrue IS well.
Tom Klintmmeier, 1CCUrity man-
.,er for the festival, said be was asked
to check Wyland's display cue for
,ewdry. "On the montina that I
cbeclced, it wasn't there," be said.
IQi.neenmeier declined to dtlCUS'S
wbctber a second chect was made
aft.er Wyland was accused of puttina
jewelry t.ck on display.
He aid KCUnty penonnd are
uk.ed to check displays u a matter of
routine. Wyland thlDb otberwi1e.
•11•11 lot of politics by people wbo
think rm too bia to be in that show, .. wx1and Micl. I don't want to bed-mouth the
ORANGE ..... lllLi.f
COAST ~·r•I
IMINOfflea •
PO Willl e., tit Coit•.._ CA _. ..... 1oio I Colt9 .._. CA ~
Sawdust Festival, but they'tt. really
puttina a lot of beat on me.••
Wyland said he invited Sawdust
officials to come to his studio so he
could show them bis jewelry work.
"I have ori&inaJ desians., every· thins.·· he aid ... We're tryina to act it
worked ouL"
But be also is considerina lepl
recoutse.
"I tokl my attorney rd like to avoid
the lepl thjDj. but it's clear there's
been a conspuacy to keep me out of
the show," be said.
HealY,, president of the Sawdust
board or directors, said Wyland called
Monday and threatened to 1ue them
if they d.id.o't permit him in the
festival.
In &ct, the board ia havina trouble fiiurina out what Wyland wants. "He c:alled me and laid. 'I will not
put my jewelry in, I will apoqize io
the baud and I will not 1eek an inj~ • " Healy llic1 -rile
next dal his attorney aid they'll s":lr
WC doll t let bim iD tbe lbow.
'"We bep beari°' be'a ayina tome
board manben are JQlous. We'd like fot bim to •Y wbicb 'board memben
are jeaJold so -we can sue him." .
A anevance committee met Mon·
day ni&ht to discua whether Wyland
shoulcfbe permitted to participate in
this year•s festival, which is &lated
from July 2 throu&b Aus. 28. How·
ever, a decision i1 not expected for a
couple of days .
But Wyland 1ugested board mem·
ben have already made up their
minds. When festival officials held
their annual booth •ianups, Wyland
said he wun•t invited.
He said friends who called Sawdust
Festival offices were told Wyland
would not be in the show this year •
Healy said the board simply was
foUowina the rules. "If be thinks
somebody has an ue to pind, I'm
sorry," Healy said. "Tbat'1 simply not tnae. ..
Wyland aid many of tbe artiJtJ iD
the feltival depend on it co ,et them throUlb the year. He does well
th~~· the year, but still enjoys
putJapauaa.
'1'he S.wdust is real impot1a1U to mt," be Mid. "lt'1 like I &miJy down
tbae.
.. But a bandAa1 of people are out to keepmeout"
°:L":' "a .. ,.,., ...
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FORMER OFFICER PLEADS GUILTY •••
From Al '
"It was an easy decision," Jones
said. '"The likelihood he would have
been convicted wu quite atrona.
Ei&ht yean is the hiah tmn on Just
onecharseofpimpinaandpanderina.
The sentence could have aotten real hiah real quick.••
Johnson said she wu atisfied with
the sentence. The reduced term was a
aood exchanae for the plea because it
spares the &iris the hardship of
testifyina. she said .
Taylor will be eliajble for parole in
four years. .. A lot of people don •t realize the
trauma thete prls face when they
Ex-CIA official enters plea
WASHING TON (AP) -Former
CIA official Joseph F. Fernandez
pleaded innocent today to chartes he
co1tspircd illqally to ann the Contra
rebels and then asserted throu&h bis
lawyer that be was only followina
President Reqan's policies.
After Fernandez, St, the qency's
former station chief in Costa Rica,
entered his plea in U.S. District
Court, bis attorney said be had
committed no crime and that his
indictment sends a "chilling m~" to the nation'• intelliaence
aatnts.
have to testify in court," Johnson &irl•; one U-year-old, one lS-ye&r·
said. • old, two 17 year olds and a sirl in her
The &iris. mostly runaways from 20.. Payne said. ~
areas outside Hununaton Beach1 are The deteaive said Taylor received ·:,
t.ck with their fainilies ana in reaular disability payments &om the l
treatment prosrams. Payne said. CRP, but probabfy made the bulk of •
Taylor wu arrested in early March his income from the prostitution rina.
when police went to hia Main Street He did not advertise the service but
ap&!'l!Dent about two blocks from the instead relied on word-of·mouth and 1
city's pier to 1C1Ve an arTest wamnt the &iris to brina in business.
on a teen• &irl, the detective said. "There were periods when the sirls •. Pa~sa.adofficenfounda 14-year· went out for him daily," Payne aid. .~
old &irl at the as-rtment. and she told addina officen complied more than ·~
them T~ylor pve her ud at leut four ~ pases of reporU on the rina. :~
other sirts cocaine and boulina while "They would meet their c:ustomcr !
they wortcd u prostitutel for him. and 10 to a place of his choosina... •
Taylor pleaded auilty to 28 cbaJ'llCI Authorities said Taylor will likely ranaina Crom unlawful sex with a serve bis time in protective custody
minortopimpinaandpenderina. The because of the nature of the crimes ::::;:~:::fi::d:~::ead I
A '40-yea,-old Costa Mesa tannin&
salon owner wu described as brain-
dead today aft.er be sustained a
massive electrical shock at his busi-
ness. police said.
Michael Qualls, 40, ofl..quna Hills
was wortina with an electric fan in
one of the tannin& room1 at bit 2630
Newport Blvd. business when he was
shocked. said Lt. Dennis Coat.
Paramedics were c:aUed, and Qualls =~
wu taken to Collqie Hospital in
Costa Mesa aft.er Monday's 4:30 p.m.
accident. He wu in &uarded con·
dition in the intensive care unit.
officials said.
Cost said there were no sian• of
brain activity after the electrical
shock and that Quall'• heart bad stopped durina the accident. ______________________________ ................................ ._~3
l;a BLUE BEET'S CLOSURE SOUGHT ••• i;
iJ From Al
to "ao ahead." But Soffer stormed out
of the council chambers before any
action was necessary.
The injunction -if pnted -
would mark only the latest .etblck for
the Blue Beet, a popular beachfront
ban&out that reopened in Mareh after
a devutatina fire two yean aao.
Soffer, Who purchucd tile Blue
Beet in 1960, has often been at odds
with officiall. wbo have cited him
previously for violatina numerous
city ordinances.
Once, when accused of viola tin& an
entertainment code, Soffer even
broUfht his piano player to a council meeuna. tellina the council that .. It
wun•t really entertainment -be"s
not aood enouah. ••
The seaside tavern ii believed to
have been built around 1914 and
stakes a claim to havina the l~t· runnina liquor license in Newport
Beach.
Aho at Monday niaht•a meetina.
the council pve final approval to an
ordinance requirina the installation
of marine pumpout S1ation1 for aai1inJ clubt and certain other com-
merciAI marine facilities.
A number of people. moltly charter :ji ~f:J~ that tbe ordinance ! was y tarJetina certain com· !
mercial operaton, but the council :•
approved the ordinance un.ani-~: mously. •
Tbe council alto pve final ap-!!
proved to an ordinance allowina .1
Newport Beach police to bill party ~ hosu for their aervices if they are :
called to the same party location twice •
in the ame day. The ordinance is •
deafped to enoourqe pany bolts to •
tone down their parties, and free up •
police to u1e their time more eftlclent.-
ly. •
He pauses for
a moment
to reflect
on all he has achieved.
'
He feels great and looks
great. Making you look
great for any occasion is
our primary objective.
Gentlemen's Oo1hina
t'•hlon 1aland
S61 Newpon Center Dr.
(714) 640-8310
() Oqftge eo.1 DAILY PtLOTITUMdiJ, June 28, 1111 *AS
.
GWC film festival
starts Friday with
·vankee Doodle'
Alternative to gridlock on track
.. Yankee Doodle Ollldy, .. the movie that woo
June1 ~the Academy AWlld few bit pof'lrlyal olO.O.. "ld:Cobail. Will kick off tbe annual Family
Film J:ntival at Golden West ·Collese'•
ampbitheiater Friday. The eilllt·weck fUm teriet will offer inexpen-
livt bily entertainment bl an ouldoot lettiftt. and
audiencee aie encounpcS to brina oknic bUketa. ~beach cbalil, pilJmrl and blaJ1kcts. The
lbowi wW 1&an 11 da
AdmisPon to tbe G-raied movies is S 1.$0 per
penotl. with a U.,per .. fiLiuily maximum cbarle. Call
191-3991 for l'DOfe information and• complete Ust
of the summer' 1 61.mJ.
htlent •apport poap
A au~n sroup for £padn Barr P1tieou will
be otfmd 1bW1day at 7 p.m. at the Rushm~
Medical C.cnter, ~2 Bolaa Ave., Huntinaton
Beach.
Admi.uion i1 he but raervations are re-
quested. Call &91-77S6 to reserve a spece or ror
fwtber information.
Tbe Hoeloa Dancen will entenain. For more
informaiton about the TLC procram or to make
raervations for the tuocb, please call 842,...288 any
weekday mornioa.
Ocean Nf ety .emlnar .et
The San Clemente Marine Safety Division, in
oblervan.ce of National Bach Safety Week. will
conduct a he seminar oo ocean safety Satu.niay
from 9 to 11 Lm. in the Ole Hanton Room of the
Comnn.tnity Cenier, 100 Avenida North Seville.
Topics will indude beach da.oaen. rip cunents,
IWf neeotiation. marine animah and lifeauard
operationa and warnina syatems. Call 361-82f9 for
additional information.
BotUne tnlnlf16 cl•un
The West~ County Hotline will offer free
"aeative liltenint trainina clules, bqinnina in
A~t. Volunteen and donations are needed.
The botlioe is staffed by volunteen who have
been tralnined in listenina skills. referTa1 lef'Vlc:es
and suicide intervention techniques. For ~
information about the classes, call (213) S94-®60.
Pa6eant tJcket. •vall•ble
Tickets are available for the Lquna Beach
Plpnt of the Masten throuab the city of Irvine.
Ticket data include Friday, July 22. and Friday,
Aua. 19. . The exhibition is held at 8:30 p.m. at the Irvine
Bowt OD Lquna's Festival of Arts srounds. Cont.act
the Irvine Community Services [)q>artment at
660-3881 for additional informauon.
Ba.t f•mlUa needed
The Youth Exchaqc Service ofNewport Beach
it loolrina for families to lel'Vt u hosts to ucbanic
ltudenu plan~ to live and attend school on the
Oraue Cout dunna the nnt 1ebool year. 1'be studenu are between IS and 18 and
communicate well in EnaJUh. Host families may
claim a tu deduction of SSO per month. Those
inietested should call YES at (800) S33-06S6.
Jau daJJce c1 ... at Y
The South Cout YMCA i1 offerina a class
featuriqjuz music and dance 1tep1 for teen-qen
and adult.a. Tbe dall will be offered Wednetdall from 7:30
tol:JOp.m. at tbel)"ID in Crown Valley Community Part. 29831 Crowo Valley Parkway in ~
Nipd.. Call 49S-04S3 for rteistration mformauon.
Tuaday, Jane 28
• 7:30 p.m. Peacaia ValleJ PlaaJq Com·
milt._ council chambm. 10200 Slater Ave.
W'edae9day,Jane29
e 9:30 Lm. 0rup C..lf a-n el &ifer· ........, board beariQI room, Hall of Admm11t1auon.
I 0 Qvjc Cater Plaza, Santa Ana.
8J I09 VAN SY&EN ..............
C.ocnmuwn will IOtbeda)' ride tn.tal to
avoid lbe sridlock on the S..ta Ana
f RllMY 1fa ptan approved Moftday by the
couat1. Transporatlon Commission
doesn t pt derailed.
"The plan calll for two extra commuter
N4t from Su C1emenac to Los An.,:lct
durina momina and evcnina commute
bOun. pllll u~ to tncb and llltion' = tbo cnure San Dicto to Loa An.,:Jes
dor. It ls tcheduled to be in operation
by mid· 1990.
lllbe propam wlM the rtliOMJ cooper·
ation needed to IDAK it wort. it will come
just in time to bdp commuim atalled by
planned c:onstr'UCbOll wocit OD \be l!Judy c:oOlttUd Saata AM freeway.
"£vef)'body ........ how IC'Vcrdy
iml*tcd the 1-S ii toiat to be dwina the u~" said ~tioa com-mmioner llidwd B. ... Here is a
chance to let people out t.Mir cars and
into tra.i.Ds. And ma.or people arr never
aoina to'° bKt to their can ...
Ol.rice Blamer, chairman of the com-
mission. said lbe pc"OPOted commuter rail
improvement PfOJeCl 11 IDOlhcr important
Great racers reach
halfway point amid
appreciative crowds
BJ PAUL .ARCllIPLEY ...............
R.aoen croued the half-way point Mon-
day in the Great American Race when they
rolled mto Salina. Kan., where thousands
of citizens turned out to cheer them on.
Partic1p&nts have been astounded by the
reception• they've received as they travel
the 4,500-milc route from Disneylllnd to
Boston. said raoc spokesman Phil Cole.
In Rockspnnp, Wyo .. 20,000 people
lined the streets to greet the v1ntaic car
racers. In Cheyenne were another 15,000
and m Loveland, Colo.. nearly 20,000
more.
On Monday, when racen traveled a 440-
mile route from Denver to Salina, they
found huae crowds at every s1op.
"There was a big crowd in Burlington for
a p11 atop and a biger crowd in Oakley
where they stopped for lunch." Cole said
··And now in Salina it looks ltke the b1gest
yet. ..
C.ole said the m01t consistent finishers
10 far are Dick Burdick ofRosanky, Tex.as.,
and Wayne Bell ofl...a.ke Oswego, Ore., who
are racina in a 1924 Bentley Three Litre
Speedster.
Jn teCOnd place overall arc Alan Trav11
of Phoenix and Wayne Stanfield of Costa
Mesa, who are rac1n110 the 1915 Mitchell
Road.st.er that earned them to vtctory last
year.
Surprisinaly, netther team has taken a
first place in the daily qments of the race.
Neverthetess. their consistently hi&h
sbowi.np are an mdicauon of the nav1-
ptional skills oftbe teams, Cole said.
"A lot of people say the naviptor tw the
touaber job," Stanfield said. "The nav1·
ptor truly plays a very important role in
the Great American Race.
"But the driver and naviptor are really
J&ep ID ~ Soutbera CaJiforaia
taidcnu away &Om ou\dlted commutlq
b&biu. .. , think thd ii pa. ... lbt aid. "We
need to~ peopie'1 lifest~ a.ad berr
is a practical aJwnatiYe f« doina that ...
The PfOIJ'l.m bas alrady won wppon in
Irvine, San Suao Caplstnno, Fullerton
and Santa AOL
Irvine officials are plannina to bwld a
mulu-use t.rampOnatioo cent.er alon, the
rail line and tome cities. such u San uan
Capisua.no, have tlrWy purchased and
uppaded railway Ntioot Ilona the com-
muter oorridoc'.
50-50. You both have to t.aU the blame
when tbett's a mistake. and ~ou both take
the credn when you do well. •
Stanfield said TraVlS lS alto a skilled
naviptor, so be understands the navt-
puonal upect oft.be ratt. "It pvcs us a b11
advant.qe, .. be sa.id.
ConuniJliooeri vcMd Mcmday 10 twm
a technical rail .tvbory coaunittec bf
AUIUIC that would 1-dude ltUOpQN1ioG
omciall from Oruee and Loi ~
counties u -ell u ·~ntativa or the
Nte Tr&nJpOrtation mmillion and the Southml California Allocia0oo or ao ... cnamenu.
The comm1110n alto voted to brcia
oeaotiations on the establishment ofa tri-
couaty -Or&nle. San oqo aod Los ~es -board that could seek It.ale and
f.edera1 money to build autiona. and
acquire rail hoes and other neocsury
propeny.
The race has been marked by 6ettt
competition. with lS can fimsh•QI in the toe five in the fint five rKeS., Cole aid.
Today, racers facie the loOFSt lea of the
12..c:tay race. Tbcy1J travel 490 miles from
Sahna to SL Charles.. Mo., where they will
be aiven a rest day on Wednesday.
Grand Jury says OC deputies Angels hit
need ethnic culture training with suit
by former By BOB VAN En.EN
Ot .. Ol!llf ........
Shcnft's depuues need more training in
the la.n&uaacs and cultures of Orange
County's ethnic aroups, accord1ng to a
Grand Jury rcpon released Monda)
A second repprt. also deahna wtth
traJnul&. ~mmended that deputies as-
sianed to Oranae County Jatls receive
trainina in how to avoid situauons that
may lead to charges of brutality or
eJtcessive force.
In the 1&me report. however, the Jury
concluded depulles did not UJC excus1ve
force 1n 17 1nadenu that bad been c1ted in
an earher Jill study.
The earlier Sludy, conducted for the
county by Corrcct.Jonal Consultants of
Cahfom1a. ltsted the inadents as c&K"S 1n
wb1cb depuues m1&ht not have followed
correct procedures reprdina 1he use of
force.
The Sheriff's Department has come
under fut from the Amencan Civil
Llbcnies Union over the past 12 yean for alleaed use of excessive force ap.tnst
inmates at county Jails..
The reports . released Monday were
prepared for the Jury by the consultma firm
Lonerpn and Associates.
One of the conclus1ons oontaJned 10 the
reports ts that law enforcement officers
must have a koowledae of the l.a.n&uas and
cuhwa of Oranae County's rapidly cx-
pandina Aslan commun1ues m order to
wotk effecuvely 1n the future.
"Some of our deputies are ~una
lanpaat and cultural training now, but
most of them are aemna 1t in Spanish,"
said David Bunch, chairman of the jury's
public safety committee ... Yet an increas-
Ull mwnbcr of them are aoina out to areas
where there are IJ'OWlftl immip'&Ot com-
muniues wbolc cultues are different from
anythq the deputies are uxd to. ..
knowled,e of the mores and customs of
cultural sroups makes law enforccment
officcn better able to avoid problems.
Bunch said
"There are 10me poups. for example,
where women are still held to be subset·
vient to men, .. said Buncb. "So a woman
officer who aces up and wants to arrest a
man runs the risk of encouoterina some
real hostility, and she's tot to be prepared
10 handle IL"
.. And beyond that. WC JUSt th.ink II lS
aood pohcy for law enforcement people to &c anuned to the cultwu of the peuple
whom they serve We thlnk 1t makes them
bettcr officen."
The Jury's report also rccommmded
that instructors at the Sbenft's Depart·
ment academy rca:1ve more traJn.ma in
teach1na methods.
The report pve acnerally bl&h marks to
the depanmenl's trairuna S\lfr_ and con-
cluded that the 18-weck Sheriffs Depart-
ment 8&Slc Academy .. mceu and exceeds
the rectuire~u of the Commission on
Peace Offictn Standa.nis and TraJnjna."
But the repon a1Jo found that most
inst.ructors have l.mJc or no becqround in
teaduna methods and rccommf!Dded that
they be required to obtain a minunum of'
su colJqe credits 1n teacher t.rainina
before beina assi&ned to the trainina
academy.
Assillant Sbentr Walter .w Fath Jr ..
who is in charse of trairuo&, wd he oould
not comment until be bad received and
read the Jury's reports. ...
Laguna Museum names director
BJ ROBERT HYNDMAN ...............
Charles Desmarais, director of the
California MUJCUm of Photopaphy at UC
R.ivcmde, bas been named the new
director oltbe Laauna Art Muxum.
Oesmarats' sefCct.ion was announced
Monday and culminates a teYen-month
tearcb for a successor to Bill Onon, who
resipcd Lut November after beldioa the
mmeum for nearly 1Cven yean.
The mUIC\lm's board of directon
selected Desmarais last week after con-
sidenna more than 60 c:andidates for the
post. said museum spokeswoman Ann
Naleid.
"He bas obviously excellent crcdent.Ws
in the fieki, and on top of that be
understands the art community of
Southern Califonua, wb1cb is really im-
portant. .. Naleid said
Desmarais LI 1eheduled to assume bis
new position by September.
His appointment i1 expected to end a
period of instabllity and cbanat at the
mUJCum, which bas been a Lquna Beach
landnwt StnOC 1929.
The art museum, located JUSt north of
M&Jn Beach tn downtown Lquna Beach,
was closed for rcmodclln& from 1984 to
1986. Then 1n October f987, prosrams
coordinator Micbad ~ _.ho was
IC:r'Vin& u the museum's cbid curator.
resi&ned to become c:urator of the new
Modem Museum of Art in Santa Ana.
Mkhael McManus was named OCL 19
to replace McGee. But less than two weeks
aft.er that. Otton resaaned after lf!TVt na as
mUJCUm dlrcctor since 1981.
S1noe then. administrator Lyn,Scaqu1st
bas been the muscum·s actina d1rec1or.
• • •
city chief
By ne A.111 da._. Preee
The California ~ls an bc:in& sued by
C1-C1ty Ma.nqer Willwn Talley for al-
klicdly aedrina 1.o have him fired bcc:au1e
o( his rok lD a development dispute
between the Ctty and the AmencaD Leape
bneb9lJ team.
Tallc,. wbo resiped last summer Mth
ICVC1'1.DCC pay, a1Jcses ID a lawsuit that
Golden West llaebe1J Co .. wbJcb owns the
~Is, "eQllll!ed ID a senes of acts
~to diliu.P1 and mtcrfcrc" tn order
to diJcredlt bun.
Tboee a1Jqicd ICts wcren 't outlined 10
Friday's suit. which KCb unspcafied
monf!W)' damqcs. Anomeys for both
ades were unavailable for oommenL
Talley, oow the IC'tlQI city manar-r of
Miss.ion Vie10. ll suina Golden West
Bucball Co for "intlictma tcven mental
and emouonal stress." aa:ordma &o the
SWL
Abo named tn tbf suit an Micltacl M.
Scbretcr, team executive vice presJdent·
treasurer, and JacqudiJ>c Autry. executive
vice president and wife of club owner Gene
Autry.
As city manqer, Talley bad been
ai tiaz.ed for bis bandh.na of a dispute with
the· An&ds over whether the Los A.Qlldes
Ra.Im of the NalJOnal Football LCllpe
could bwld a hi&b-rite drvclopmcnt oo lO
acres of the partina lot at Auhcim
Stacbum.
This month. the~ declared vic:lory
in the kn&tbY dupu&c when C>rm9t
County Superior Coun Sudie Frank D .
Domcruduni issued a pmnaDall UV-0-
bOn bamna development oa 1M lot
without the Anacb' advance &Plll'Oval.
Bandit uses bicycle
to flee FV bank heist
between 12:1S Lm. and 9·30 p.m.
Sunday.
without breWDf ~'t fire ordJnanoes Residents reported that a df1ll
related party wu . aoina on in an
a~ent tn thc 200 block of Nash-
v1lk A venue.
the same pt tch. • • • An emplo)-et oi a ptoliDe •tioe
OClcml ••Mi dcy ltdWlecn in ati'S: aa dearic:al Ire Moo-daJ oe Soo_. Coal Hilb--.,. . ..
Miil Sl lO 19 cmla ... .:c-9 ....... , .... cm . OD
CBDIM. . • ,.........:..u. '" ...... to cn.e.at ·~llMla -Men
' ............ " .. ,.,'n.y --··c·,, ...... ftki -"-' t•J'. ...........
t~I In t I Jt!!! ... abo.i ,,..,._ ..... _._
die lGD ~fl,_-=::
••• Someone 1tolc a computer system
wonh about $2,000 from a business
in the 600 block of Newpon Center
Drive between noon Satwdly and 6
a.m. Monday. • • • A red 1966 Chevrolet J>ickup truck was ltOleu ftocn the 3000 block of
Wat Ocaa&oat Avenue around
3:30 p.m. Ma.daJ.
lntM
A mu ...._ up to a woman
waitiq at a bus llOI> Monday aftcr-
DOOD &nd,, llif DO ~t teUOn.
ltiJed bet. T'bl womaa docidcd not to
pursue~ ••• Someone ... lnaa1 bannm
from daie Herillll Part Aquatics
Caeerbetweee 1cr p.m. Sunday and 6
Liil. Maaday.
A wbi1C I MO \Mw .,.. stolen
from lbe UJO'*>ClolCeelM' Drive bctweea ........ ......,. ••• Two -.......... W4aa• udcmb ................ iD ~~ti::=: ~
raideocc "" 2 J • ., = t~ed _. .... _..., aa•• ............ ~
omc..· c ...... j .. ,_.,..., ..,. _......
AW..• pn11111I" =• • =:-=~=:: I, crs::
Jam P!1!WJ .W 611 .. a 1 = .... tl aio. l:JO-.a aMllllll"l ldmn _. e r 1 m ..
B~ smashed 11ass in the front
door ut the 16000 bloct of DlaM
Lane and stole an unknown amount
of jewelry. • • • Thieves entered a residence in the
17000 block o( Bolla Olica Strttt
throuah an \lftlocbd front window
and stoic SlOOc:ashand a V1dcoc::aut1·
te ttlCOrdcr and jewelry. " . . C\dpriu stole sti _ -~u.ipmcnt
valued at S7SO ud a SIOO c:unera
after' ea~•~ in tM 2000 ~ o{Dell...-e Street~ an
unlocUd m.a door. ••• BW'llln ..... II a window in tbe
SOO b&Oct of Utica SUect ud **' a kt cbain udodler je-*Y ..aued at ft ,6'° and a v'adoootw t• recorder. ... ' A man rued a taen npart llbout a
PftVlOUS theft ol I S l,IOO lob
watch !tom bis eolf bll at MC8dow1ut Golf CoUne. • • • lbicva ttpOnedly ... docba, •
wcuwt ud a ble trith penauJ
bdoaliJIP ll daie bc9cb.
• • • People rq>ortedly yelled and shot
off fiRcncten at about 11 p.m . ID a
part at McF.&kn Avenue and
Oolden West Street.
Skull in HB yard from teen gtrl
t
!)
on 17th Sttcei ii ampet1ed ot
embettbna S 1,500 hm tbe lla1ic& • • • Two necklaces valued at lll<ft tMll
$3,000 WCrf taktft ft'om all £ac:iaD
man 1ellina the wares at the Oraee
County ratrp"Ounds. Tbey ~
taken from h•s cue as be bdl*I ot.ber
customers..
Bandit robs
Irvine store
of$32,000
U. attache to
Greece killed by
car bomb blast
ATHENS (AP)-The U.S. mili-=Mtllittie to OieeOe WM killcd
Oil the lmalJ ttnet wbete be
by a car bomb that bleW bis
ermor~led car off the tOMS u be
WM driviaa IO work. police uid.
Na CaDt. William E. Nordeen
-j~ 100. yatdl away &om his .._. .t.en tbt blut buried his car aaa. tbt street. Jodsiq it in a steel ~ a poJiee tpOkeiman said on
COGdition of anonymity.
Tbe omcer·. decapitated body _.,
found ah yards away in the front
yud of an abandoned home.
la Wubin&ton. Pmtaaon apotes-
mu Maj. Alan Frietaa would not
relelle the name of the victim pendi"\e DOCification of next of kin.
But taid the lellior military ofticer Uliped 10 the U.S. embt.ssy
in A~ a Navy capeain, was killed
tlm monwaa in a bomb blast near his
bome.
many American aod foreian
diplomats live.
Accordi.111 to tho leftii-oftlcial
Atbeu Newt Al/tftl::'i, Noirdeea. Sl,
was married anc1 baa one daulhter.
He bid eerved u a pilot aboaftt the
Uren.ft carrier USS. SanlOll bldbf'e
his Atbeu PQl&iQI. the~ Mid.
No ~P claimed reapo1Wl>ility
for the blU1, bu.t lellior Ofeek police
omcials believed it 10 be &bo wort of
November 17. a Jeft-wina urban tm'OriJl poup.
November 17 bas ~med credit
for 11 UIUination1 aince 197S, incl~ the 1913 abootina of U.S.
Navy ~ Oeorwe Tsantes and the
l 97S 1m1ination of Rkbard Welch,
CIA station chief in Athens.
A penon livial narl>y. aocakina
on condition . of anonymit)', said
Nordeen .. lived up the street with his
wife and childten.. He drove to wort
around this time every day.••
U.S. embassy officials on the scene Tbe aplosion oc:cumd at 8:06 .. m. (10:06 p.m. PDTI in the north-
ern Athena suburb of Kifissia. where refused to comment. llamb a:perta alft tJa.roaib wreckaee of car aplmlon.
Twoarrested Bodies taken from wreckage of =~~t~!: Paris train crash; 55 people die
VIE'llNA. Austria (AP) -The
interior minister said today that two
Twb bad been arrested for claimina
they wanted to kill Pope John Paul II a.ncl llCCUled the two of perpetnti na a
bou to pin publicity.
.. Du.riaa the papal visit, there was
no auempt.ed uuuination, .. Interior
Minil1Cr Karl Blecha told reporters followint a Cabinet meetin& today.
Monday, the pontiff ended a five-day
Austrian pi]pimaae.
PARIS (AP) -Reteue teams pulled more bodies
today &om the crumpled steel of a runaway commuter
train that alammed into a crowded train about to leave a
Paris station. At least SS people were killed.
A fire department spokesman said the death toll
probably wu (mal fioro the scene of the Monday everuna
crub, the worst rail accident in Paris history. But the
spokesman, speakina on condition of anonymity, wd some oft.bole hospiWiz.ed were in arave condition.
Officials aid IS plS1CnlCf1 were seriously hurt,
another 17 were injured leu 1CVerety and 14 more were
treated at the scene.
Philippe Rouvillois, dim:tor general of the state-
owned train company known as SNCF, said the company.
the Transport Ministry and judicial officials had beaun
into the cause of the crash at the Gare Lyon, the city's
J.aracst train station.
Another company official. Raser Gerin, said the
"ori&in of the accident was in difficuJties with the braking
system but we do not know the exact cause."
Authorities said the eiaht-car commuter train,
comina into an undersround track at the busy station an
eastern Paris, split open the first of the stationary train's
four cars.
The movina tmn was sliced open lenathwise and the
stationary train buckled upward. A U.S. television network reported
Monday that a plot to assassinate
John Paul durina the recent visit was
uncovered and foiled in Vienna.
But Blecha, whose ministry ovcr-
ICCS many police and security func-
tions, said the plot was notluq more
than a bou to "to grab the anenuon
of the world news media ...
Gorbachev urges election reform
ABC News quoted unidentified
aoW'CeS as sayina two Turks were the
prime suspects in the allqed as.
sassination attempt that was to have
taken place last Thursday, the first
day of the visit.
MOSCOW (AP) -MikJwl S. Gorbachev called
today for sweepi~ chanae m the Soviet Union, includang
creation of a fufi-ume lqislature with real power and
election of a president with duties akin to those of some
Western beads ofstate.
He also proposed that farmen be made masten of the
land in a prosram that would allow them to lease the soil
they till to quickly increase production.
lt was not immediately clear how the legislative
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Gift Certificate
GOOO $ 500 IN ALTERATIONS
TOWAltOS Off~ good chru 6-JG.811
With This Ad OAy
M•st~r T.ilor on Premises at M Tunes
Mon-Frr IO•m -7 p m ~t IO •m -Sp m
proposals would affect the post of Communist Party
aeneral secretary, the Job that makes Gorbachev the most
powerful man in the country.
Gorbachev spoke of an elected president of the
Supreme Soviet who would appoint the head of
government and oversee foreign and defense policy.
In a 3'h-hour televised speech opening the con-ference, Gorbachev told the S,000 deleptes that farm
policy bad to be cbanacd.
"Developing
the
Next
Generation"
COST A MESA COURTYARDS 631-5787 bfw-WW..IU!fi . ..-..--s.... OPEN 9-6 DAILY FRI 9-8 640-5800
Carmel Retirement Village
is a private community for
active seniors in a secure
environment.
Good)' -....c. tlU ...__.,,. llvd
We 're across from Mile
Square Park and the golf
course.
Convenient to shopping and
Fountain Valley Community .
H08pital.
17077M1t•1a-,Founeeln~.CA
San Joaquin Hills Road at MacArthur Blvd.
(714) 956-1215 ..... -u. ... ,., .. ~·-,
Wall Streetjolted by
reJ><>.rts of $19 mtllton
insider trading scandal
NEW YORK (AP) -Tbe ~ iDllder UldlQa cue aiMC lbl Tvan ~ tcaDdal bu jolted Wlll Slreet
ud implicated I trainee at a bi,t ~ and I Hoaa Kona buli-
DUZDN'D wbo ~y reaped Sl9 million in illicit proflu.
A Securities and Exchanle Com-
million civil como&aint flied Monday
accuaed Stephen Wana Jr .• a junior
analyst in a uainina J)l'OltalD at
Morpn S&&nley • Co., of sivina
~ about imPendina corporate
takeovers to Fred C. Lee, a client with
homes in Hona Kona and Mclean,
VL, a iwUk Wubinaton suburb.
"From at least Jul_y 1987 tbrouab at
least April 1918, Lee pllced fona-
dittance telephone calla from
McLean, VL, Hona Kona and
elteWhere to Wana at his home and
office in New York." read the SEC
complaint ftJed in federal coun here.
.. Durina tbete telephone calls, Wana
im~y ditclosed to Lee the
material. non-public information."
Lee paid Wanaat least $200,000 for
the inrormation.1. ~uthorities said.
Tbomu C. Newkirk, the SECs
chief litiption counsel, said an in-
vestiption wucontinuinaand he did
not rule out the possibility that others were involved.
SEC sources speak.int on condition
of anonymity, also said they ex~
fedenl protCCUton to scd cnminal
indictmenu apinst Wana and Lee.
the same pattern that emeried in the
Boesky case more than two yean 9>·
The SEC said Lee made$ 19 million
by tndi~=-lllatld. It .... s 000 ol Ille lnODIJ wtda
Wans. It tM plir....,.
.... pl irioll tMt UDOUD~':re..~a iofal ofl76 DUllion. Tbe amount it lecond only 10 tbe
record S 100 millioD ia ~ and ft.-paid ln November 1916 by BoettY. wbO wu at tbc caner ot a
mulive ICIDdal in wbida Will
Stteden me.DY U.S CODftdeadal
corporate Wonnation to ~ iD
l10ck tramectiom.
Boeay •• apeculator wbo Un·
Dlbted other Will Scniet pn>-1-iODllJ. was benilbed fi'om tbc
leCuritiea bulinnt f'or H• ad " eervina a tbreo-year fedenJ pritoft
tenn. Morpo Stanley, wb.icb WM ID
adviser in the ~ takeoven
listed in Monday t~Dt, met it ·~~ lait Friday aftertM S IU him. Tbe also said it bad been cooperatifta with the SEC for tome
time in its &)robe and Ml comiderifta seperate but unsoecified lepl action
qainst Wana and Lee.
Tbe New York Times todaf quoted
unidentified aoun:ea u ll)'IDJ that
Morpn Stanley•• complianc:e depen·
ment bad picked up auspic:ioul tndina in la's account u eu1y u
last year.
Newkirk said the SEC &epn &be
investiption in Aoril but the probe
did not break untiffridly, when Lee
admitted detailt of bis IJTUlmllCftl·
Michigan sets criminal
penalties for surrogates •1 ne A...m~ Praa
LANSING, Mich. -Middlemen who profit &om surropte births risk up
to five ycan in prison and SS0,000 in fines under a law that makes Michipn the
first state to attach criminal sanctions to prqnancy-for-pay deals. Monday
Gov. James BlancbanS lianed into law a biU that makes arranainl such deals a
felony beainnina Sept. I. Advertisina or otherwise "induciq" a woman 10
become a sunopte also will be a felony ... It's a ~or victory," Jeremy Rifkin.
co-chair of the National Coalition Apinst ~· said in Wuhinaton.
"Micb.ipn will be leadina the way with this leaialation, 'said state~. Connie
Binsfeld, leader of a five-year drive' to outlaw surropcy.
Mystery deaf yoang•ter ldentllled
EL PASO - A Mexican woman bu identified as her son a partly deaf
youq boy who was found last fall wanderi~ near downtown Juarez. Mexico,
a newpeper reported today. Micaela A&uilera de Garcia, 32, of Tampico,
Mexico, said Monday she is mwna plans for a reunion with the bOY she
believes is her 9-year-old son, nicknamed Chuy. Tampico is on the Gulf of
Mexico l, 120 miles southeast ofJuarez ... rm at peace now -now that I know
be's all riaht." the woman told the El Puo Times.
Court backs parole denial
for 'Onion Field' murderer
{
'
~Dtracto
'open door' setup
for Pentagon data
WASHJNOT())tl (AP) -~=· COW1roOm te1timony ,. dat private.~ ... CODIUhants
IQd CX>Duactora didn't need an under·
=:ration W) obtain dulifted
on from PentaFD cm-=· They could pt it 11mply by
Tbe open-door~system apparently
opeta&ed. aloQ&lide the clandestine uraDltlftents .between con.Wtanu
and Pentaaon employees that are the
subject or an intelllive federal in-
veatiption.
ln~ton believe consultants uaina the ICCl"et syitem may have
bribed Defeme Depen.ment official•
to obtain top-secret information,
i.nclUdina plans of one contraetor that
could be sold to anotheT.
Tucked away in a coun reporter's
records in Baltimore ii a 1984
dacription -and a defense -of the
more open cooperation between
aome con1ultants, contracton 1.Q.d
Pentqon officials.
Tbe information obtained in the
open wu im_ponant to contracton teekina to bid on Peni-..on projects.
But private lawyers familiar with the
aystem said the information usually wu secret rather than top secret, and
only consisted of Pentqon docu-
ments, not those of contractors.
Tbc up-front system came to liaht
in January 1984, when lawyers for a
private defense conaultant 1um-
moned Caroline A. Chewnina to the
witllell stand in U.S. District Coun.
Tllea ud now involved with writint JrClrUD.A for the Defense
AdvaDced Raeaicb Prqjecu A8mcY, Cbewnina testified that consUJtanit and contractors with security
clearaDc:et routinely asked for key
documents at offices su.cb u hers -which wriies "wish li1t1 .. for futuri1ti c
military 1eebnolOI)'.
Bribes were not n~. she
testified, because the information was
••mac1e available to them for free.••
Wby? Because, she tatificd. con-
tractors could not pouibly submit a thoroulh bid for a major Pentaaon
project within tbe required 4S dayi
after' an official notice was published.
So officials simply banded out the
information to leCUrity<leared con-
suhants and contractors to pve them
abtadswt. .. lt'1 in the aovernmcnt•s best
interest that cootracton have this
information. If they had to so to
•official channels,• it may take them
1ix montbs. ... You're on a tiaht con-
tractaward ~and you don't have
time for that, .. she said in defense of
the system.
"The government and private in-
dustry must cooperate in order to get
contracts awarded· and material de-
veloped."
The Defense Depanment would
not say Monday whether the system
has been chan&ed But in a speech,
Defense Secretary Frank C. Carlucci
cautioned apinst any hasty reforms
of the defense contractina system.
Parties tap
speakers for
conventions
Midwest drought may
Fourth of July fireworks
•1fteA.111ctaWPnee a,fteA111d9 ... Pl'ftl &WacountyinandforttohelpOhio Wednelday to pic:t up tbe ...,, .,_.bticu Oee>r;e Buh was A VirJWa man who orpnized a flrmm who lack bay to feed their Walters Mid.
uavclina to California today to visit a baylift from Ohio to bis droutht-animals due to the drouaht. ID Wicwtin, GOv. Tommy G.
NASA raearcb center and a neiab-IUickC'ft II.ate two yean IF plan1 to .. We've tot aome hay lined up and Tboal{'IO'l llid ~ be would
borbood saf'ety prosr&m u Democrat reciprocate, while Fourth of July we plan on doina what we can to help bu pnvate firewOrb dilolaJi. open Micblel Dubkis · wu toulifta bis fiteWorb displays in Wisconsin were the situation (in Ohio!,'• said Morris, fi.rel and even ~ i.c::.u.e of
Ma•duuetts record on bousina jeopardized by the worst U.S. dry wbo works for the aoil contervation tioder-dry coftditioaa tbml bawled to iMuel before focusina apin on the spell in so yean. lef'Vice of the u .s. Department of fitn over tbouMDdl o( acNt.
leafCb f'or a runnin& mate. Parts of the --hed South and AaricuJture. wh'dl '""--
Wbl·1e ... _ ~i·dential candida•-m-: _.-: . Morris said the current dro~t Under the ben. 1 ,1.UUUIJ'IOD u ... r•v~ .... southern .-...,ns received mn durina th · -i .......... to ai-today, loc:al .nvem--re out ... umpi'n• ... e o-..bl;,.... • .. _ r. da bu . T wu not u severe in sou em If· an-&UIOIU .._.. -__ .._ ..... .,, .... W' .-.,.. ....... we; put 1ew ya, t except 10 exas., · • and bad I men ts and the state may ......,. National Committee was ready to it wu llOt enouab to aid thirsty cropa. Pnll. many arowen aurp us exceptions where conditiom allow.
name its .. ml,jor speaker" for the TOdafs forecast called for more bay. A1ic:e Walten, a spokeswoman Alto exempted will be community
GOP's convention in AUSUS1 in New abowers and thunderstonn1 from the for \he Ohio Department of A&ricul-fireworb displays. but Only where
Orleans. sou·'--H; .... m-=ns t'nto Te•••. ture, said about 6,000 bales bad been """"-11_ • ..,._ r. W\Olu ._.. ..-1&1 ...... lined up. __.,.uate '"" preventioJl measura
''"' announcement 1ollows the Euaene Moms of Charlotte Coun-Four tractor-trailers and their driv-are taken. ~=~T=~~~~ ~·~Ma:n:ysohue·~ covir·n: ers,R ~natedeo bywill9~I..car T~_& Someoffic:ialsinlowaalsoplanned a fiery populist orator, to deliver the ,----------UIOl;J-u ____ u_~_· __ ·• ___ K'&_v_e_~_u_n __ to_restn<:t __ ._fireworb. _______ _
keynote speech and .. set the tone" for
the Democratic National Convention
in Atlanta next.month.
Richards. S4, will be the second woman in party history to deliver the
convention-opening address.
Today, in an interview on CSS. TV, she mentioned fellow Texan Bartlua
Jordan's keynote speech in 1976 and
ldded, .. That year the Democrats
went to the White House so maybe
they 11w my selection, having
another femaJe, as a good omen."
Richards said she would consult
with advisen to Jesse Jack.son as well
as Dukakis before preparina her
1peech. "I welcome any help and any
advice that I get. .. she said.
Jackson. meanwhile, 11ys be is
weiahina which of a dozen issues left
out of the pany platform to brina up
at convention.
JUNE SALE
20% OFF DAYTIME DRESSES,
TEE-SHIRTS & SWEATERS
25% OFF SELECTED SPORTSWEAR
Plus Addldonal Markdown on Supersaven
(AlrHdJI below cost)
Something Special
feminine fashions
~e spe<.1dhlt' in l<1sh10M tor tM missy ficure s11n 4·111. <1tso pelll~
250 E. 17th Costa Mesa,• Hilgren Square• 645-5711
WEDNESDAY 9 A.M. TO 10 P.M.*
HERE,. A FEW OF OUR GREAT BUYS!
Schoolchildren
need their own
funding lobby
On.use County's Grand Jury bas joined skepucs who aren·t~witbthe~ft'ectlotteryfundsarehavinaonl~l
tcbool districts. In theirfinal report for 1987·88, the jurors said:. "California citizens who voted for the lottery are not =:.':f... !'bat they voted for -an increase in funding for
~ report's conclusion is based on an assumption that
the milliom of dollan the lottery aenerates for school districts
would aupplement rather that supplant or diminish state
ftmdina for IChools. That assumption was used u leverage durina the campeip for voter approval of the 1984 State
~ Act but. is now grouped wtth so many other empty
cam()l.1ID pronuses.
What happened and why are questions that have state
lottery officialSr leaislaton and local school officials pointing
the fin.er of auilt at each other.
Lottery officials defend themselves by saying they
P!'O~Ote the lottery and collect the money, give school
diltrictl l4 cents out of every dollar, but have no control over
bow it is spent -
State o~als are partial to the same tact. They ~arp on
the responability oflocal school boards to follow guidelines
that the lo~ funds not be used for recurring costs, like
teacben' salaries.
Local ICbool board members are more sensitive about
the ilaue. They have felt the heat more than state officials
bccaua they are closer to the fire. The Newpon-Mesa Unified
School District ii. aood eumple.
Board m~bers looked a1 their first payments from the
lottery and dcaded to spend the money to reduce class size
under the theory that smaller classes equal better education.
Red~ c1us size means hiring people, so the district's
lottery fiinds went toward salaries for 10 new teachen, with
some left over for new textbooks and other school equipment.
It was a aood plan that went bad when the district's
rqular appropriation from the state came in at a 2.5 percent
incmue over the previous year -not as much as they had
expected. There was also a slump in the district's share of
lottery funds the same year. To make a long story shon the
district didn't have enough money to keep the new teachers.
The net result was wasted money and efforts, frustrated
teacben and a.narY parents.
School officials arc the first to point out the lottery has
n~t lived ul: ex~tions th~t it ~ouJd help schools. Many
think the stature 1s more anclined to cut the education buc:laet and let local districts make up the difference the best
~'J they can. The complaint is justified. but local district
officials should shoulder pan of the blame.
Too many school boards have bent to pressure to use ~on.cry money for new employees or to plug into salary
mcreues. They have not been strong enough to use the lottery
money for thinp that won't require an cquaJ or higher
ex~diture the followina year. Sooner or later they must
realize the lottery peyments will always be there, but the
amount will fluctuate from year to year.
California's lottery could hurt education more than it
helps unless legislators and school board members quit using
the lo~ ua acapqoat for their own bad judgment and poor
ptanmna The dISpute over whether the lottery can help
education won't be solved until the schools' lottery funds and
the state•s reaular appropriation to education arc di vortcd. So
far, most or the focus has been on how local school boards
have. used -~ misused -lottery funds, and the cuts in the =~~ucallon budaet have reoe1ved less attention. That's a
lncreasina the quality of education in California will
require ~uate reau1ar fundi.na from the state and stronger
leadenbip fiom local school boa.rd members to use lottery
funds in wayi that supplement their district's proerams rather
than supplant them.
Miss Califo rnia
Michelle Andenon, Miss Santa Cruz County 1988, is a
UCSC student majoring in literature who has received more
press than she deserves... The first on-stage protest by a
contestant is news. and it was as gutsy and innovative as It was
stupid.
But in her aeainst-everything, for-very-little diatribe,
Anderson complained about the Miss California pageant
making contestants something they aren't. Which, of course,
is what she's reaUy been doing ... for several months.
In the process, she took a $3.000 academic scholarship ...
from someone who secs the positive side of the pageant, and
because of her educational affiliauon stands to strain town-aown relations in some quarters.
.. Paieants hurt all women" was printed on the sign being
waved by Anderson. She's misread the purpose of the Miss
c.aJif orn1a pageant.
Deukmejian for VP
poet Georie Deukmejian want to be Georic Bush's
runmna mate?
Yes, the California aovemor removed any doubt (at a
June 10 news conference) that he'd like the opportunity to run
for the hiabcr office.
But wouJd he aaiept a Bush 01ferto1·oin the RepubUcan ticket thit year?
Tbat's a di&rent question. Deukmej~n. in a muddled
r-aponae--. teemed to betoinain a couple different dirutions at
the amc time, perbape rddctina a tmuine ambivalence on
bis part about what to do.
hi tbc met. be eeemcd to be lcavi~ at least sliptly ajar t.bc door be Ud previously slammed lilJltly Uiut. ........
ORANGE COAST t•Tll
(ftr ...:-:=. ...... ........ ....
Uy(Mlt
'
• •
··~ottbewlahlt.Ulnlbeworld~notconce<h~hardfactth•tln •bOUt two,..,... l,lt!en tbeprwnt ralltWol•pendlng. the.Ute h161J.,-., accounr "'11 be nat bmted. ·· ,
' to RW.\.'t Q 1\it 4 ~ lfJl i<an 9Jn'? "'. '
Voters won't buy gimmicks
forfinancingnewhlghways
Straight gasoline-tax increase, boost
in truck weight fees could raise money
SACRAMENTO -The frustrat-ina traffic conaestion that California
motorisu experience every day is
nothin& compared to the aridlock that
the state's political leaden have
achieved.
California voters rejected two
transportation-related ballot
measures this month -Gov. George
Deukmejian's SI billion bond issue,
and another measure that would have
redirected sales taxes on psoline into
transportation projects.
In rejcctina those two measures.
voters were not teUing their leaders to
do nothlna. Polls have consistently
indicated that traffic coqestion 1s a
m~or concern for the state's rn1·
dents.
lmpltatJy, the results of June's
election indicate that Californians
would be willina to suppon 1 straJght-
forward increase in the p.soline tu to
suppon the bi&bway construction
that's sorely needed.
Al state Sen. Quentin Kopp, S-San
Francisco, told the state Transpor·
talion Commission last week, any-
thina elac is a "Jimrnkk" and .. Gim-
micks aren't 1oin1 to work."
Kopp and Sen. John Garamendi,
D-Walnut Grove, are Pu.shin& a
straiaht psolinc-tax raise, ooupled
with a boost in truck weiabt fees, to
raise 1everal billion dollan for high-
ways.
Jt•s certain that a ~ority of state
lqislators would support a ps tax
boost, which is five yean overdue. It's
also certain that the state's business
oommunity, which is mon: than a
little concerned about transportation.
would put up the money to persuade
voten to 10 Ilona with the plan,
which would ruiuire voter per-
mi~on to raise the Gann spendina
hmit
Deukmej~ should be willina to
take that approach, especially since it
would include voter approval.
But the aovemor is sulkina these
days because of several ~litical
reverses, including an ill-fated
proposal to raise tax revenues to
bridae a state budaet deficit.
He's rehardencd his no-new-taxes
st:a~cc. theref~re. and is apparently
dismterestcd m any land of ps.-tax
boost, no matter how widely sup-
ported or how loaical.
But if bonds are rejected -there's
still some faint hope that a final
accountina of votes will result in
approval of the issue -and the
1overnor won't accept a ps.-tax
increase. what's left to do the job?
Precious httle.
The adnunistration's head-in-thc-
sand attitude Wis araphically dis-
played last week when the TranspoT-
tation Commission took up the fivc-ycar statewide transportation spend-
lDI plan that it updates and adopts
each year.
The ad.nunistration's transpof-
tation director, Bob Best, told the
commission should "assume new
state revenues in the net amount of
SI. 7 billion are available in the state
bi&hWly account.·· lo other words, he wanted the
commission to ma.lte promises that it
can't keep. bued on the wishful
thi11kina that somehow the adminis-
tration and the lqislature will come
up with the money.
ActuaJly, there's a $4 billion pp in
the five-year plan -about Sl billion
that the administration wanted to
raise in two bond issues, and another
S2 billion or so that the LeaisJatwe
has ordered the administration to
prosram, without specifyina revenue
aouroes. After acceptina that decree.
DAN
WALTERS
incidentally, the administration has
been tryina to weasel out of the
commitment, which is still another
point of friction.
It's a crazy way to run a railroad, or
a highway system, throwina up· s~ flans that are billions upon
billions o dollan out of whack with
firm revenues. These $UYS are too
creative to be operatin1 m Sacramen-
to; they should take their talenu to
Washington. where the locals really
appreciate red-ink spendina.
All of the wish luts m the world
c.annot conceal the hard fact that in
about two ycaB, IJVCO the ~Dt
ratin& of s~ina. the state hiahway
aocount will be fiat busted. unable to
put up the matchioa money necessary
to capture federal funds.
The ad.ministration's approach is
to spend the money as fast u possible,
cross its finaers and hope that some
more tevenues appear before the
crunch comes. But beyond bonds,
which the voters don't like, the
ad.ministration hu shown no wdlina-
ness to develop those revenue
sources.
The Transportation Commission,
which was appointed by Deukmejian,
adopted a halfWay approach. It
adopted a spendina plan that is 1till
short of revenues, but set uide some
projects that depend on which inter-
pretation of the spendina commit-
ment prevails.
It ii. in other words, still a wish list rather than a firm plan.
Du JfalR.n ,, • ·~i.tl ,..,. .. ,,,.
Trauma· aslde, support for
teensleavesb.erinKnott's
Why me Loni? Why me? I am in
such a state I don't know whether to
spit nails or eat wonns. When I
attended the benefit at Knott's Berry
Fann for the Trauma Society last
week. I didn't ex~ them to pus out
free trauma samples.
Let me set the staae for you. It Wis
almost a comina out party for me .
After • year in I wbcclcbau, I WIS
newly upright usina one of those four-
pronted canes. How joyous it was for
me to tee old mends and coOcaaun
apin! t kept dro~ my cane as I
spottcd yet another friend to bua.
My bauerie1 certainly aot
recba.raed as 1 cauabt up on .all the
la tat neW1 in many areu of intaat. I aot Iris• for this mill for montht to
oome.
For example, Anahdm Covn·
cilwoman Miriam KaywoOct updl1ed
me oa the new ~ii war, tbe Aaabeim
Stadium war, direCtly e*1eet mayor
WV UICI tome bot elcctioD • l~in~'1.~U? s..t Dtat to me at diaMr was
eo.1i Mela reticletn. R. A. Hl!lha, widi IM .Fedentioa or CalifOm.la Raclnt Aalodatiou. "What iJ ~ur
poliuoa oe •lelli&e --~ I Mbd. Boy did I fiod OUL WM&ibitw r wu .-1 became a ........ o1 m. c.lifoniia .-.... o1
FoodlM~leleW-.h•a
.._ • '61 man-~ a..,... 111111tllr 'n
NIW11$ •• ...,..... _, Lou
ff~ -HellD Q6y ........
• .. IO 111814 • die IOCill IClllC, IW a dlllilp J 4161.t11"1 .. ve a _,, dhwmlO~ .....
DliriM .... ~aid-... ... .,.__ Pfeelln.1 ==-· eo.·1 ..Oladl .............. prUlfal la ..... Crillmol't*f¥1to ... I ........ IO._. ... .....
..... • .. dlil 1191111111 sn-
'
JACKIE
HEATHEI
LI' I : ,
DARW~ Crl •W
---
No basis to
t
Riley recall :
To tbe Editor:
I had the pica.sun and honor of wortti~ with Sth District Supervisor
Tom Riley for five of the nine yean I
•orbd for the Board of S'1perviton
from t 970 to 1979. He wu always in
the office very e.arly and wu one of
the Jut to leave. He speat numerou1
bours retearchina all of tbe -. to
come before the board ill an effort '° not only serve the people in bi•
district but to be fair to everyone
involved. I worked for one of the other
supervisors and I can usute you that
Superviaor Riley took the time to
lam the issuet befcm malciq bis
decision. Even If there was an issue in
another supervisor's diltrict, be pve
boun of bis time to the problem
before votina his own comcience. This recall effon apiOJt Tom Riley
i1 totally without foundation. He bas
strived for the past 14 years to do
what be feels i1 best for bis co111ti-
tuents and for the entire county. He i1
one of the most honest people I have
met and to sugest be would com-
promise his intepity after honorably
aervina so many years in the Marine
Corps and on the board is despicable.
LINDA L DIONNE
Irvine
Signs belie end
of ca mpa igns
To the Editor.
To the winners, conaratulations; to
the losers, keep trying -it is the
American way. However for both
aroups. the job's not done. from
Baker to YJcoboz:zi in the 40tb
Distri£_t, from Bauer to Wieder in the
42nd District, not to mention Aaran
to Werner in Irvine, the time has
oome for a cleanup pany, to remove
the sips.
Ob SUJ'e, eventually the weather
will set them, they will blow otr the
utility poles and overpass fences. But
would it not be a pat idea to ajve
some p.inful employment to some
younasten now that school is closed
for the summer'?
For either St persianora flat rate of
SS an bour let's return this wonderful
area to the cleanest part of Oranae
CountY,. Or 1f you feel charitable, call the
local Kiwanis Oub, they'll do the ;ob
and they will accept your aenerous
donation to the many youth activities
they set involved in. "It ain •t over 'till
it's over" said Y<>si Berraj this
election won't be over until the
cleanup job is done!
GENE SELIG
Irvine
Teacher praised
To the Editor.
Thank you for publishina the Gres
Roberts story Sunday, June 19. Such
heroes deserve public acclaim.
Parenu always hope their children
will enoounter a teacher wbo inspires
and makes a difference in their lives. Orea is just sucb a teacher. be
accomplished bis aoaJ by simply
beina him.elf -a youna man of bnvetr, empathy for Othen and a
fantasUc sense of humor.
.. Mr. Roberts" is a favorite of all
the kids who have been lucky eoouah ~ have him as their junior lifepwd
instructor.
JAN DUNCAN
Corona del Mar
TODAY IN H1sTORY
---- --
Orange CoMt DAILY PILOTIT~. Jun. 28, 1988 * A7
Zooofftolel•
4IYorc•a1apea Crltlcs assail state school panel's recommendations
PHILADILPHIA (AP) -Or·
....... ~ OD T~y left ....... orat ~at .... Siii 'Prl.-oZoo for 1 coanv~ trip
IO N"'dlla ltia, MalN I new home and • .,.. tioyfriend 1.tt ....
Joeephine, •bo ffll born about 23 ~ • in the .rilda or Botneo, is one ol70 ortlllUlaftl bel• ~ted under a new national ~ daiped
IO ave eDdafteered apecia and their tublpecia
Tbeir eeperation bu sparked a
Mnt.imental outcry qainst the ~icy.
Su f'ranciteo zoo off'lciala llid
f oeepbine does not set Ilona with Denny and lhe two haven't mated aiocc 1979.
calld~a.J.~= educlU. ,._. ...... laun welfaft rwipi1•11
wl ..... whllloot ......... ICbool ~ --c::r~ticl.ay. memMn defended tbc 69-
~t repon Monday It I CapitOI DeWI
CODfelricie •. •Jiat it would imerove ~
ICboolt by UICftMUll local authority. recauU'lnc pater ec:ademic and ftlCa1 accoun1.1bility, and
lnatin& lludenll Iller tom violence and drual. · Tfie commillion was CTe&ted lai July llby Dcukmejiu after • bitter battle that rllCd
between the Republican chief and state super-
intendent ol public in&trUCtion BiU Honia, who
was scekift4 more education funds. Tho• not openly critical of Honia, the
repon cate& defecu in kinderaanen-
tJuouab-12th ande schools and Points out the
illarn• ia ICboiol ~ durina the Oeu· ,,..... WmiDitlraaioa.
Honit Slid thai IOIM of the recommen· da1iom maldl f"B 11ions of hit that have been
iaaplcmaued or are pl'OCM.Wd, but continue to bt
lh.realeDc:d by lbe ....e's budtet cninch.
~Wl vowed durina the news con-~ to at the report carefully. "In time, I
think you will tee tbal we will bqin to
implement some of t.hetie recommendations,"
be taid.
There will no lhonaat of lawmaken ready
to carry the bills that would be needed to put eome of the suuestions into effect, Oeukmejian
administration ldvieer Peter Mebas ldded.
One of the panel's most controvenial
proposals would require perenu who receive
welfare benefits to ensure that their children
an
auend 1ebool in order to receive fuU bcnefiu
..That would bt a banb step 1n cblina with
ecooomically d.illdvantqed students." said
California Teecbm AMOciatioa Prcsidmt £d
Foalja.
Commisa.ioo member Celia Jimenez said in
a prepattd statement. .. Tbe withholdina of
funds for the acquisition of basic human needs
such H food. lhtlter and clothtna is a punish-
ment that far outweiabs the crime."
However, commilston member Wilson
Riles, who is a former stale superintendent of
public instruction. called the propQsal one of the
most important in the report.
"We have found that may of the dropouts
come from that catqory, and what we arc tryin&
to do is not punish welfare recipients but make
them more responsible," Riles said.
'
• ur · ·am1
FOlfia &lid Jimenez criticbed wlw bollt
deicribed as pl'QpC)Uls that would bun tmdlen.
One propou.I SUllelU creation o( I t1"0-ticf
fundina procea to diffemltiate betweea Ni111
costs in basic IChool district propame and in aalaries.
Another would require a public tw:.nna
prior to adoption o( uy school coUect:ive
barpiniq qrecmcnt. so that the public is aware
of the impacu of salary ineteUCS on future
school bu41et1.
"He (Oeukmejian) iuryiq to turn the clock
back on collective barpiniQ&." said. FotJia.
"He's tryina to dnve a wedaie there (between
tuchcrs and the public). He doesn't like taehet'
orpniz.atioo.s anyway and this is another
example of scndiq that mcssqe out."
If you're one of the millions of Californians
without group healthcare coverage. then you
should discover the family of Blue Shield Plans.
Because we probably have a place for you in
our family.
Every Blue Shield plan has catastrophic
protection, and with the wide choice of
deductibles Blue Shield offers. you have a
choice of how much your plan will cost . But no
matter which plan you choose you know
you're be~ng helped by the over 200 hospitals
and more than 36,000 physicians who have
accepted Blue Shield's cost controls and
payment limitations.
When You're Over 65.
For You and Your family.
'Nhether you 're responsible for taking care
of just your own healthcare coverage. or for
taking care of your family's plan, then you
should talk to a Blue Shield agent or broker.
Because Blue Shield has different pla~ with
If you're eligible for Medicare. you have
special needs. Thats why Blue Shield gives you
a choice of Medicare Supplements to help you
take care of your individual requirements. 'Ne.II
help you handle Medicare's deductibles and
copayments-in fact . some Blue Shield plans
even go beyond what Medicare covers. And
every Blue Shield Medicare Supplement
includes Senior Healthtrac. the proven health
management program.
different benefits and deductibles. that help you
provide the kind of protection needed today.
Call Yom Blue Shield Agent or ~er or Call
1-800-624-5150
Blue Shield
of California •• -------------. 11r:-.---;~;Sh:. -leld-----------"~u-_c:A·,.:11
write: Blue Shietd of Cahtomia call· 1-800-624--5150
Box 7168
San Francisco. CA 94120
I Please send ~ inbm1tian on Blue Shtek1 p1ans I
I D For lndMdulll Md f9111u I
I O For Group Cc:MtrlQI b my Employees.. I EmployeeS I
I Hime I
I Addre• I
I ~ I I ay s. ...., I
I Phor'9 ~-~ I
I O rm CMt 65: ,,.._ WKt "" ..... ~·· inlormmo" on etue Shiead's Medicarl I I &~ Plana. Birl't1S ,,. I
~-~-~-------~~~--~~----------~~-~
1
'Richard D' opens
Grove Shakespeare Festival
Uatil itl .... .. miDu• '° Monemen't Hemy IV two MllODI Skb ,,..,.., .. Ridmd Ir' ilDOlable -. ja bllct a tbe Duke of York. ~ ie1 811116 ta o( bloodllled ia tbe ~ tbil peripberal rOle with bis
.... olpoww.&omoaoambitious J vOeal •t=b. Daniel Bryan ""'*" ol medieval Euelilll IOCiety II c.arunen, · nt actor at the Grove toanocber. and tbe ~t Gem Tbelter, is lt'•~intbi•openinaproduction y aoladid in bis all-too-brief ltin• .. or t•e 10th aDllual ·orove ITIS fobllofOawu .• Henry'1fatber,raiJiq ••~ Feleival. amona the fwioully (in preparation, perhaps, for moet ........ tively bloodlell of the bis upcomina role as Kiq lat).
Buer• bistorical dramu, with only MOit of the othen are little more
tbe lyriail perfonnan()C of OresorY .. Henry IV Pait J.. (performed in than well-(l()ltwned let pieeeS in a
ltzin in 1be title role fannina the 1986). WbAt it does have is ltz.en'1 "R.idwd II.. \bat leans more on ~ ftames of concern. stirriq Rkhafd and a darkly 'moody mood than manner. Aaron utilizes I~ whoeerivetiqMemniowas atmosphere by set desilner o. tbe revolvina down<enter stqe for
a liDIU)ar hilhlilbt of South Coast Martyn Bookwalter and tfie eerie, virtually every ICelle, thouah it's
Repertory's .. "Aomeo and Juliet" two •hisperina sound effects of John rarely crucial to the action. The
year11110,ila5baketpeareanactorfor Fisher. UIW'Pina1equenoe, in which Richard
all •ID"• ~ plunp &om tbe Oreaory Morteuen, in an earlier and Henry are the mnainina fiaures
throae to the duqiDOn may be non-version of his title cbancter from in a pme ol medieval muaical c6ain,
violent, but ltl.ell lkewm bis rivals .. Henry JV," is older, witet and more mates best me of the rotary platform.
witb a stinaina tonaue luhina en restrained this time around. The fire Some ltirrina contributions in
route. and determination be exhibits in an backaround assianments are
.. 'D:_ .. _ _. U." ..,1.:-1. i• .. •t am~ rendered by Judith Hawkins u Su~" , ~IUl.Utl .uprod early-play challeqe to rival Thomas =•bel, Mamie Croslen 11 the cspeare 1 ... ~uen y Mobray (John Walker in a fine ofYortand K.urt w..:cb-plays. lacks the power and J>l&CaDtiy vianette) seems diluted upon his ... ..., of a .. Julius CaeSar" t~ at the return Crom exile to dethrone the u the queen's prdener.
Grove lut year by Richard 11" Jci.na. In a Protmn note, the city of
director Jules Aaron) or even a Harry Fnzier, who played Falstaff Garden Grove conaratulates the festi-
-"'"-----------..:...------------.;.._------Val OD its 10th lelSOD and~ its
LIDC CINEMA
Newport-Lido 673-8350
I TOOAY ti.II UNTIL MO PM
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increuina excellence -ironically,
aince the city recently voted to withhold its annual subsidy, forcing
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festival officials to issue an onstaae
appeal for funds to keep the show on t6eboarda.
"Richard U" will continue Fridays
throup SUndaya at 8:30 p.m. until
July 16 in the Festival Amphitheater,
182S2 Main S!:t qudeo Grove, to be followed by a ;)flUetpearean comedy
( .. The Co~ed of Erion") and one of
tbc pla · t'1 moat notewonhy ttaacdies ("l · Lear .. ). Addition-
ally. actor Bettjamin Stewart will offer
a on'e-man dramatization of
Shakespeare's "Venus and Adonis,"
runnina July 7-23 in tbe Gem
Theater. Information on all festival
productions is available at 636-7213.
,.,,_, Ht (WI
Ptua ~01te,...11t ru . ,,.,
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C'O"'' Valley P11r~ way
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Rockers havlng:lt
'All' in new-group
·--.. _ __ ... _ f--,,M\ ... W\ -·---tow-~,..,
•I\ ... , ...... s...Mc. ....
•U--· -.. , tl>'I" ·--1-c-.-. .. .. ,.
·---------------· :.~°""'·
dilblnded
FnJID the ~i· ol puak rod: ,1a ... .... .. DllOIJ .. 11 •
ctita•i•ld ...... WI hill tlae ~ IDO\'elDIDt by pclll lli'!ll • ~ ~ .... Ud' dildDCt
apolitiCal altitude. .(
Sabardly njebt All continued ia 1be fbO'*PI of 1be o.c.deata by turnina ln • ....,.,. focUlld 60
minutea of .. diliUIW .·PoP"· tom
"AJ1roy Sez. •• Witb the additloll Oftbe
sweet voiced Smalley, there ii little
doubt All is ~ to ft.nd com-
mcrical appeal without matiaa any
mindful concea.iODI to maiDlttcain audiencea. a
Tbeir let at Niabt Moves may ha~
UIU1Ded • cbarlctcriltCally ~y
feel witb little variation by ill coil-
cJUlion, but, with bumOl'O\ll ud
catchy tuna about love (""Just per-. feet" and .. s and Spice") Ud
food ( .. Alfted~f!!). All ma:!&?:! to
appeue the unusually tranq PuOk
rock crowd.
Tbe same could not be said for
openina bandl "Cbemical People.-·
UDI" or .. Bia Drill Car." Not
1urprisinaly, these three anotl)'lllO\LI
punk buds revel in an immaturity
and filldulence standard in the maay
ineffectual oun.k·rock po1uen who
cater mercifessly to the bearina im·
l)9ired every time they step on llllC·
"I.,._
Gm11111"
-&-.n Gi1inglr, wtlCM¥i!N YORK
PAUL HOGAN LINDA KOZl.ONSl<J
~ IJUNDai][
LAICEWOm cenu nm ---.... " ...-rwmo ----..r 1ywwre ,...., .. _....,_ --------WIUOW,.. ............... --.... _. .. ,_ ---..................... ....,_ ... -CIDClmi-llNt ......... 1111""
No matter
what you're
doing, your
hometown
newspaper
The Daily Pilat
fits in.
LA•ADA l!!!!!!fll.. .
G'Siri&. ... •'IF Ill JWIM... ....,_ ----...,rt IWIW ... 1• ....,_ ------IUU~• .. .......... ...
'....,_, ,__
, .... ~':&. ....
""'_ .. ,_ .. ..,._.,.. ...................
,_ __ ---.... ~.n.
WAP•@
""---.,... ·-==a. w••t•• ----· --....
HIWC.-•
-----,··· .............
Ronsmtft
concert
nawless,
'Soulless
I
87 IMJa NAVAJUU>
...... 0Mi1¢ p I ~
Tbe ftnt time I rem~mber hearina
mariachi muaic. I waa a little boy
livioa in El Paso, Teus, ptOblbly
hidint in ou.r kitchen after bavina
dlrown a rock at a car.
Surrounded by the smells of rout· ins peppefli beans beina slowly ex>Oked and the excitement of siayina
Q ~~~;:!ct!o;rme~=
Lola Beltran made their way into my
aut Iona before they found my heart.
1 For, in ~ measure, mariachi
inusic is aut music -screams of
unrequited love. black curses at a life 1hat abuses those who till the land.
And Sid laments about the sufferina of all the .. madrecitas" who've had to
watch as their children stumble or lill.
wJ)ere Unda Ronstadt ormed her
That ls not what we heard Sunday
ftiabt at the Pacific A=hitheatre,
•eanciones de mi .. show
before a aood-sized and appreciative
crowd. What we bean and saw was a
faithful and nearly Oawless per-
formance of many of those songs.
............. ., ....... ..,
LIDda Rondatat YWallaee at Pacific Amphitheatre.
The Ronstadt voice is a wonder to
behold -the power is compelliDJ.
(be ability to phrase and bend a note is
Jesndary, and 10 is her COUJ"qe.
'What other U.S. superstar would dare
to release an all..S~nisb album and
then ao on tour with a slick million·
dollar production that so eloquently
ponrayuome of the Mexican charac-
ter -all in Spanish?
The problem is that the show is so
smooth that at times it has all the
feeling of a music video. Add that to
the fact that Ronstadt refuses to make
any contact with the audience (not
even a hello or a goodbye) and you
can undentand why some of us arc a
bit disappointed. Why some of us
yearned for the throaty and amo-
tional bellows of a Lola Beltran. who
was in the audience, arrivina and
depanina to hearty applause.
Still, there is reason to be pateful
for this offcrina. Those of us who
bu• for the sounds of .. cl
manachi" have to sup wbcrc we can.
So what ifLindadocsn•tsing from the
gut? I don't throw rocks at cars
anymore, either.
Judy'srubyslipperssellfor $165,000
NEW YORK (AP) -A _pair of
ruby slippers worn by Judr, Garland
in '"The Wjzard ol' Oz ' fetched
S l 6S,OOO at auction last week.
l'be anonymous eurcbaser partici-
pated in a feverish bidding war for the me 6B pumps. adorned by 2,300
crimson~yed sequins.
They were &mODf seven or eight pain, five still eiusting. worn by
Garland while filming the 1939
MGM classic. Roberta Jeffries
Bauman of Memphis bad won this
I'
pair in a contest in February, 1940,
when she was 16 years old.
The price, which includes a 10
percent buyer's premium, was a
record for any type of shoes sold at
auction and for a single movie
property, said Lee Anne Fahey.
spokeswoman for Christie's East; the
auctioneer. The lot carried. a presalc
estimate of S 15,000 to $20,000.
The auction room, which holds
about 400 people, was packed to
PC?ts Unlimited
COSTA •SA-1835 Newport 81\td. 722-6210
WEITMINSTER-181 Westminster Mall.897-8367
FULL LINE PET STORES
-----~----------tam If Reg. Puppies & Kittens I I fUU--(Regui.r Price Onlyl I 1--------...----1---, I AIW8Y$ dreamed of that I Buy RI
exotic Bird-11111 Tiii Diii I I I to Make it come True. I fllb Get I
I r~!.~h~Md I 2nd For I
I nitc1111t11 . I le I I Tame. Tattcs. Great Color I ( Equal Value or LessU I ==~· •Eiiiiciiitiie 1
1 c1::11 I Sel1ct11n And I
L--~~-~!t!.~!.Pl~~-J
standing room only.
Other items to be offered later in
the sale included 96 unpublished
color slides of M~Jyn Monroe .~en
in Los Angeles m l 94S by Wilbam
Carroll; several photographs and
memorabilia of the late actor Harris
Glenn Milstead, better known as
"Divine"; a pair of western boots
made for Liberace; and an Etvi.s
Presley Anny uniform from the 1960
movie, ··GI Blues."
t '
.·.
Otll\Qe eo.. OAIL.Y PtLQT/Tueeday, June 28, 1Ne
r
Saddleback College rocks
with a jazzy season fin~le
Tbe ~ IOUDdl of pure, un-
ldalterated New Orleans jazz per·
meatecS tbc Saddlebeck Cotaqe arm·
ulium ~>' evenina as the Praervation Hall Jazz Band pandly
doted out tbe 1987-88 Million Viejo
PerforiD:iM Ana seuon .
• Tbe .wbOle place took on a carnival air= were areeted by a clown, a j and a walkina puppet show
oo outside; refreshments. includ~ in&-ooocom.. sold by vendors iD c:oloifuI straw hats and matcbina
outfill in the lobby; and the Mu~ liciau Choice Batbenbop Quartet
doina prwbow barmoruzina and tellina corny jokes on siaae.
MICHAEL
IYDms11
in& melodies were easily detected in
tutti patlllCs, while bis solos pos-
sessed strenath and animation.
Kimball was nothina short of
· wilb bis non-stop. h1gh-
strumm ing, provina the
IJ virtuoso mstrument in such
unpolilhed but 1ttaialn.-fi'olHM.
soul sinaina voice.
Trombonist Demond, the ~
est and only white member ~ tbe aroup. played wilb Vieof' 1114
enthusiasm, jauntina about me -.
to encourqe audience Ii.-• and band-dappiq.
Even if Demond badn 't doae uy
encouraaina. the audience llill
would've aotten into the ll*it ol thinp. A blonde woman twined Mr
rainbow umbrella while mardlias .
about the SYJn to a couple oftunet.
Tens of people jumped out ottbeir
seats to marcll behind DanoDd.
Kimball and the umbrellHwiltias
blonde as the band ~ with
"When the Saints Go Mardlinil In. ..
Then on came the Preservation band. direct from New Orleans'
French Quarter, where the late Allan
Jaffe established Preservati9n Hall -------------,.-------------
for the revival, preservation and RUFFELL'S
attentionrna pieces as "Sona of
the Nile and "Georgia on My
Mind." In both be also displayed an
perpetuation of traditional, authentic
JU:Z as developed in the Big Easy. UPHOLSTERY INC. Apinst a painted backdrop of a
New Orleans square filled with ... '• ... c.-a lere!
saloons and burlesque houses, the lit! --~ CISTI IW-541-115'
Oub Rep) and the Blue Angel, the r.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;:;;;:;;;;;.-iiiiiiiiiiiiial teYeo·piece band rqaled the approx·
im.ately SS percent-filled hall with
such familiar and excit~·ng1 played fare as .. Hold That T' and a·
··won't You Come ome, Bill
Bailey?"' derivation.
The entire group began most of the
14 numben. Solos by clarinetist
Willie Humphrey, trombonist Frank r.:•~a:au~f!iii~~c:::::---1 Demond, trumpeter Percy
Humphrey, banjoistNarvin Kimball,
pianist James Miller and bassist
James Prevost followed, with dNm-
mer Frank Parker only iettina two
solid chances to display bis prowess
all nifbt. Then the entire JJ"OUP came
back m. standing for the final refrain.
This oldest edition of the Presef'.
vation band -there arc actually th~ such bands -is led by the
Humphrey brothcn, who started
their careen together in 1911. WilJic
Humph!C')',. bis outstretched arms
acknowlcd&ina the applause., demon-
strated be still bas many sweet notes
left in him and his clarinet.
He tootled trippinaJy over such
numben as .. Joe A very." with his
Iona. closina hiah note, and the
openi.na "Hindu Style;' with bis
exuberant walk.iDJ entrance. He also
got in some ~ifllUl& and ~en. SOCl!' quick and rumble dancing. 10 his
emotionally rendered .. Oh, Ula."
AJthouah trumpeter Willie didn't
tax himself as much as his brother, be
didn°t exactly relu., either. His soar-
''LOADS OF
LAUGHS!''
D\N AYKROm JOHN CANDr
GL0umooas
H ~.. ·--._ .. _.... .. ,,.., -... .. _ -·--· ---·---.,.._ 511--~ ....
~ __ ,,......., ------------· 1»•511 --_ .. ...,. ---""-·--~ --•u. -.-·---ITllll -.-... ... a.. ..... , .....
Youth trends disturbing
DEAJt ANN LANDE~ This i' h the woman wbo was di5UUSCd
became bet son shaved his bead. I'd
like to uk some questions about the
boy.
la he disrnpectful? Hu be been
arrested for drunk drivin,? Hu he
been kicked out of collep for cheat-ina? Hu be made bis &irlfnend
prepant? Does be aet failina arades?
Does be steal money from your
pune?
If you can answer .. no" to all these
4uestions. stop complaining. You
have a peat kid. -RALPH N .•
ATTORNEY IN OAX.LAND.
-------------............. 5 , ......... .. w...-..... -.....,...,,..
•• lMHIS
u.-... .........................
,.u......-.~e•'7 ........ CMllJ ...... ......, .... ...... ................... ,, .. ... ...... ,..,,.. ........ -=-... .. .,..... ' u,.. ................ . ...... .., ......... ..,..., ...
!-4toUft.llUeft~dlat~ =t :::s:::::;. .= = ..... mce .........
• • • DltAll IULPB: Yn.r lener polat·
M..tllew m8d times uve cM.D1e~I.
,.., .... kW ..... -.,.... doea't ... ft.Wac.,..... lwa't beell ar-,.. ... r... .,.._ Uivtq·or kicked"'
Gum .Company. These cards 'a~
obtained ~hen the kids buy gum. They are traded beck and forth and
the idea is to act a b~ collection.
I shall try to dcscnbe some of the
cards rm look.ina at. One is a colored d~ of a child wbo bas been
sta in the bac1' and bis bead has
been split open with an ax. The blood
is ~shina oyt. Another card shows a
child who bas been run over and
crushed by a car. Still another pictu~
a little boy with 14 spikes aoing
throuab bis body.
DEAR ANN LAN.PERS: Does a • ~3~~ra~;~ .. liii~~~e~~~!Ll!!!!!!!!!..Q:!!!!lLJ.. ... ~Z .... k~r-~ mother who does not tmoke have the r.
ri&ht to ask her dauahter not to smoke
when she (the moihcr) u v1sitina in
lier home'!
el =• fer ~dq, made ll1 ..,..... ~t or 1tolea from ,.... pne\lie'l .. P...t." .
Ne ... u. ta alMle ef aclleve-..._ Net a wn .._, latep'tty, a
.-el...., 11atNllty,MceKJ,mor-
alitJ er MrYke a. edlen. lt'1 --0
Dal lie j91t t&aJt Mt of tr'edk, eiT
WMta ... eemmeatary•owdaes.
OrtM J:AM. wt.ere are we Madba1 ad
W'M II ..... to take a dlenT
Several months aao I asked my
daughter not to smoke when I am
present. She infonned me that I am • t-:::ii::""I=:---ic~=+::::::---b:=:-rT.:".:~-h=i~~~--+-=--~:"""!':::--1=-~-+~~-I
no longer welcome .
fte iest lener may stve u a cl11e
utewt.tlla.Wquud•'Y· DEAR ANN LANDERS: In Fcbru-
uy you printed a letter about a
toddler in Boston who was stabbed l 7
times by a S.yar-old. You said the
child probably aot the idea from watcbina TV. Well. let me sugcst
another possibility. I shall do my best
to 10ne my letter down because the
words to describe this filth cannot be
printed in a family news1>9per.
This trash is caned Garbuc Pail
Kids, Published by Toppa Chewing
Tbe most disturbina, card pictuf'e! a
child pinning after he stioots a little airl. The dead child is lyina on the
sround with three bullet boles in Her
body. The boy is la .. ins.
Our 8-year-old oe1ahbor boy has a
Garbqe Pail poster that shows an
infant stabbed witb knives,
hypodermic needles and swords. The
itiCantiswearinaa wiet. The caption
onthepostersays, ''Havcaniceday."
At a time when so many children
are bcina abused we do not need this
kind of trub that pictures children as
piblac. Please use the poWCT' of your
column . to tlert parents to this
monstrous thins. -ELLEN H. IN
HOUSTON.
DE.All ELLEN: I wrote aboat
Ga.rtlqe Pall K..141 a fe1' yean a10 ..
It has been very painful for me to
lose contact with my dau&hter's
family. I have asked for fo~veness,
but she refuses to have anything to do
with me. Maybe in time things will
improve, but riaht now I am heartsick
and miserable
Thanks for any ideas you might
have. -A MOTHER IN HAR-
RISBURG. PA.
DEAR MOTHER: No 1•eat
(mo&Mn blcl .. e-4) ua die rtpt to
aet •P nln la l4tlDeeH elte'a lilome.
St.ce yM adm.ltte4 tUt JM over-
1tep~ yow beaclt ... uve begtd
for fordveaen, yoer ••pier ..-..W
flnd It fa ur lteart to lavite JH back.
(P .S. A eote from yoa aaylia1 &bis
column meeded ~e rtft •Hid make
my day.)
w I 111 ,.,, ,_ .tt LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Read and write, knowina
ABD8 (March 21-April 19): Lunar pos1uon that you will pin ~ written word. You11 be em=ia ~ crovided with additional information concemi~ tax. cto: with people ease requirements with reprd to home. Gemini figures
io authority, prominently.
a c bi eve men t , . SYDllEY SCORPIO (Oct. 23--Nov. 21): Domestic adjustment PfC?D>oti~n.. Love re.. n takes place, relative could pey s~ visit. Dig deep for ~'P 11 strong, information, act written report, ~~)' sense of fitness
career potential in-· 0MARR and humor. Money, previouslywilhbeld, will be5uddenly creasea, financial ~leased.
·~ are very SAOITrARIUS (Nov. 22-0cc. 21): There will be
TAURUS (April 20.May 20): Lunar, numerical delay and indication ofloss., but you'll n:cover and money ~ coincide with philosophy, education, travel, picture will be briabt.er than oriamally anticipetcd. You'll
ability to suooessfully communicate ideas, concep~ also locate article that bad been misnna or stolen.
Scenario also features .. spice of speculation·· and CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan. 19): Scenario features
romance. Libra involved. dead.line, strona love relationship, ~lurn of via.or and
GElllNI (May 21-June 20}: You11 make fresh start. optimism. Wear bright colors. UICtl views i~ dynamic
you pt provertrial second chance. Y ou11 learn more manner. You will have chance to hit 6nancial jadrpot.
abou. t fiMnQaJ status of one clote to you. And AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. II): You've recently .. emburusi.na situation" comes to li&bl U:o plays complained about bcina .. limited. .. tfow wraps are off, aJJ
sia;rdficant role. stops out. Horiz.ons are wide, popularity increues and ~pu.nc 21-July 22): Foeut on partnership, you could embart upon journey. Aries, Libra play roles. ~blicity qrceJhent, marital status. You'll be ~, P1SC'a (Feb. 19-March 20): Stress independence,
• called t.Ck to home bue. Spotli&ht on securitr.. creativity,style,willi~to~echance"onromance. eroPCl1Y· loaa·ranae prospects. Another Cancer Mil Wish come1 true, you U win friends and pin admiren. name promi.Dently. You11 lead rather than follow. Aquarian fiauJ"es promi-
LEO (JaJy 2~Aua. 22): Forces tend to be acattend. nently.
otba'I will find you entertalnin&, bu1 you may feel you've IP JUNE H IS YOUR BIBTBDA Y cunent cycle faUcn abon of the mark. Young person t.alb about empbuius ~trospect.ion, meditation, ability to aetrid of
'poaeuions and finance&. Gemini. Sqittarius natives in superfluous material. You'll learn more about younelf,
picture. you'll also have chance to perfect techniques. You could
VIRGO (Aus. 23-Sept. 22): Tendenq' is to act on a1ao be iD midst of propcny or real estate tramaction.
impulae-n~ to protecudfin em<>llooal clinches. Cancer, Capricorn, Aquarius people play important roaes Focus on spcculabon, variety, intenWicd love ~la-in your life. You are intuitive, loyal, tenaitive to moods of
tiomhie. Scenario b1&hli&hts 1e111uality, personal othen. You are also are an excellent ju41e of cbarlcter. mapetum. , · October will be productive, memorable for you this year.
.
'" •
ALL DAY 'KINDER ARTEN
KlllD•llGAllT•ll THllU 8Tll GRAD•
IAWTllllE c•1snu SClllJ
16135 Brooldust St., Fomtafn Valey
(714) 963-7831 Sl.A1U
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.. Tips for Tops" (Devyn Press,
22' pp. paperbect. Available from Bridac World, 39 W. 94tb St., New
York, N.Y 10024 at S9.95 poll free)
is the latest book by Oeorae llosen-
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lished in the ACBL Bulletin, many
of them expanded. It ii loeded with
sqe advice, and eecb chapter ends
with a tip summarizina the author's
thinkiQS OD mat iectlon. Tb1a band
ls from tbe cbapW entitled MUirv
Sure Partl#I' Do# tM ~I 'Tb/JW.
North..soutla nech • normal
four-spMe CODtnd after I limk
raile by North. You lead yow liD-
&letoa ace of bearU, ud pa.rtDer
CHARLES
Go1£11
Complete teleYlelon .. tinge In Sunder'• TV Plot.
Taste fades; SID.ell grows
A pcnon's sense oftasle is sharpesl
when said p&rty is about I 0 yean old.
Not so, the sense of smelt You don't ~place your taste~ u you qe. But
as prcVJously menuoncd. you con-
stantly replace your olfactory nerves.
It's a middle-qed person who tends
to have the most acute sense of smell.
Once you Ft an idea in your bead,
it's pretty bard to shake IOOIC, what?
Most of us think what we eat. if
anYlhina, just before we JO to bed,
aft"ects how we sleep. Scientific re-
search purports to prove it docsn•t.
Most of us still think so.
An American hidian historian says
the Chip~ brewed an herb tea to
induce a ·on, but he doesn't say
wbicbberb .
Men dress to look like other men .
Women dress to look unique.
Q. Who said, "Discovery contists
of scei~ what everybody bas 1een
and think.ins what nobody bas
thouaht"'? A. Albert Szent-Oyot'IYi,
pronounced. .. Shrug.
Yoo know childbirth wu cause No .
l of death amon1 women in colonial
times. Oient asks what wu cause No.
2. Burns from cooking over open
fireplaocs.
-ldM--~-----·--
AC ROH
1 Loud cry
5 CNateoesne
1Q Lurch
14 Opera number
15 at.ettng
11 Pronoun
17 Typed
lncotr*ltly
19 Heckle
20 Psrtor piece
21 a.ct.I
22 Roel ol: vat.
23 lmplOled
25 NatM: IUff.
=~ 31 Modttlea 34 .. _ -La
Menctle''
3f "--,1 ...... ··
31 Exdemetlon
39 One kind of
mtat.k•
42 -Fell; crown-
ing eione
430r~ 44 Up-t I
45 8t
47 O.T. book
48 Sitwr grade!
lbbf.
50 Men'lnemt
51 Domlclt
53 ndtet pelt
55 Supporter
5e Time period
11 Inhibit
12 ConfUled
&4 Son of Ew es~rwn ee Maricet
87 Pr..,-.d ee NcMcet
89 Whereet
DOWN
1 Tuberl
2 AIMl1nd
tongue
3 Aeoord
4 UltlmMe
6 Me, •·O· I Bec:trtc Wiit
1 ••'• po9t I Mbdure
tTurf P**
10......,.
11 House CO*'
12 V•d6 WOf1c 13 French rtwr
11 Soup type
24Ta!ll....,..
25 Th•fll: Lat. 2t Fllh
27 -There9a 28~ 21 COW1
31 Ptftl Pt'
32 Tlliem"*9
33 WIMt
• 1
35 Ubwsted
31 Whh force 54 lnltNment 40~ 41 pt, of 55 Sporty .. __ ..
17 Cwtoonltt 48Aock 518tete ... Skybodlea
51 CNdy 5t Fer: Pft/f,
52U.-to.Utopia
53 ~..,.,.. 13Zodlecllgft
•
' .
~
•
Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT /Tunday, June 28, 1988 A 11
by 811 Keane
1
DI TBS BLSACllSU by Steve Moore BLOOll COUNTY
"Thanks, Mommy. Now blow me a hug."
llARllADUKE by Brad Anderson
"Up 1ust in time .. this has to be
my lucky day!"
PEAKUTS
TMAT COMPOSER HAD A
TRA61C LIFE, DtM ~E?
GARFIELD
~ ·21..-~ ...... -
....
DENNIS THE llE1'ACE
by Hank Ketcham
~
Co l.6 l
j
·'--~ ~.-~ ! -
by Charles M. Schulz
A TRAGIC LIFE IS ROMANTIC
Wl-lEN IT MAPPE~S
·--"'"TO 50ME60DV ELSE ..
-by Jim Davis
AMA! GIRL SC.OO'f5
ANV "fH(IR C.OOt<l~S APPROACH !
HALT! l &E. ~N eRANl.M(5
ANP CAI lP.AC.K'l>. fME.R£.'f> A
CAT AM 60~1-1 OP AHEAP !
I
TUllBLBWEBDS by Tom K. Ryan
DRABBL& by Kevin Fagan
GAMIN AND PATCHES
YES. ~E. lJtJ~OS ~IP.S,
CL.t:ANS A. PAW~ $.OP,
AND 15 A. NIGl·ff
WAIQ..JJAAl.J
FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE
SHOE
JUDGE PAR.KER
FUNKY WINXERBEA.N
~v (X)E"S HE
KEEP THI~
STQAIGHT?
I KNOW lat)Sf ~
IHEMlOBE-\'A L111lE..
)
"TIDIER, 1RF11'S
./ ALL!
by Addison
~E HAS A 9.aiAt-J ...
t:XX:K IT l-40:K IT
AND~IT
by Lynn Johnston
'/CY. H£ffiD ~~. ~ WIPE~rt.'ll:a~ll
by Jeff MacNeJly
by Harold Le Doux
ON SECOND THOUoHT fl M NOT HUN0RY LAURA '
"'RINO ME UP SOME TEA AND iOAST I
by Tom Batiuk
OKAU .. WE'Ll $TARI iHE:
'ca:,N'O DAiE ·A Br L.114' ' "ffiSI
(>Jl1H ~R A"T"flWDES
iOWARD GIRlS
roR ~TD BE Al'fl?Atn:D m A G;Rl. , 1-r·s mosr
IMR:'.:>PTANI IH.m" SHE
$HOUL..D BE ...
f (l.)BEAU"flFUL.. (ZJ FOPUL.AR
I (3 JINIEU.16E.N"f (4.)NOT
~ (l;W.Et-rru.> IN PRl$0N .
y-
DOONESBURY
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H QTHER 5TAJM¥W'!S RlO/lf ~ aA9150F ~.
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O\lE iHERE ..
1
I
i
' •
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by Garry Trudeau ':!~:':' $~\l'1~-'1t.~s· ::
~ Hit) /JUN FC1l6£D ™'5E
~ aJAJ,JTS 1H4f HA/)
Pflf"f !iO Hlk HIS AIJl()fYG
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--. '
'; .. • 1i lilts: 8 .. ••ttr;• 0.8 ........ ev. ,_..,_~FTC Mlhod.
..
,
p
. .
. ,
r •
••
. ..
(
1
• )
TUESDAY, JUNE 28, 1988
... Frencfeco outlMta Atlente In NL slugtnt for 1CM win. 112.
Knlcka, Hawke ntllke k~ acqulaMlona In ,,,_.aft trlldea. R
'IJ
Maid
qualifies
Estancia student
makes US junior
amateur tourney
NORTH HOLLYWOOD-Costa
Mesa•s Austin Maki. an Estancia Hiah student, qualified for the r~ld of
156 'at the U.S. Golf ASsociation·s
Junior Amateur aolf championship
1eheduled for July 26-30 at Yale
University Golf Course in New
Haven, Conn.
MW. who shot 7J..68-J4l an has
two rounds at Sinain& Hills CCs Oak
Glen Course an El Cajon, was topped
only by Mike Bestor of El N11uel
Country Club in Laauna Niauel, who
shot 67-71-138.
Beator was the best of 3) com-
petiton on the course. He and Maki
were the only two aolfers to break par.
At Simi Valley, Charlie Wi's three-
over 147 was the top score, two
strokes better than the field over his
home course.
,., Laupl ...
The tournament, for boys who
haven't reached their 18th birthdays
by this date, is the 41 st conducted by
the USGA. The qualifying events
were conducted by the Southern
California Golf Association.
111.ke TJ8on la atpaled to the neutral cor-
ner by referee ha.Dk C.pacctno followtnc bJa Ont rouDd knockout of llJcbael
Sptnka In th~ he&YJWel&ht title bout.
Spinks dares to trade punches
Strategy Is short-lived;
he quickly lands on back
"He had two opuons, he could stand and fight
or he could run," the champion said. "He took the
option to fi&ht."
From the first overhand n&ht Spinks threw
about 30 seconds into the bout. at was clear the
stratqy conceived by the Spinks camp to take the
fi&ht to Tyson would not work.
him." sa1d Spinks. "Instead. he hit me with an
uppercut." Spanks's manaaer and lonat1me confi-
dant Butch Lewis laid out his fighter's stratcg}
before the fi&ht. sayma Tyson had to be pr~sured
by Spinks for Spinks to score a wm.'
ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (AP) -Michael
Spinks tried to do somethana few of Mike Tyson's
OJ)l)Onents have dared -trade puncties with the
fearsome hea' ywci&ht champion.
But Spinks soon found out that strateg> was useless.
The plan lasted only 91 seconds. the time 1t
took Tyson to knock Spmks down twice, leaving
him the final tame spread on his back under tl)e
ropes while referee Fruk Capuccmo counted lrl'm
out .
Tyson answered the n&ht with a nght of his
own, bacluna the challenger up. Then. after
followina him to the ropes. Tyson landed a left
hook to the head and a ri&ht to the body that put
Spinks down for the first time in his I I-year
profess1onal career.
··1 wasgoang to fi&ht back but 1t was tough with
Mike's style to see what kmd of fight plan }OU
have," said Spanks. "My plan was to get thc rc1pect
I needed 1n the early roun~."
.. I came to fa&ht JUSt hke I said I would;·
Spinks wd ... Everybody thought I'd run and make
it I boriq fi&ht. ..
Splllks was up at the count of three and ured to
fi&ht back, but Tyson was on him quickly. landing
a lef\ followed by a nght uppercut that landed on
Spinks forehead and put him down for the count.
Tyson. thou&h. only saw fear 1n his opponents
e}es. And he knew the fi&ht would end earl)
"When I came mto the nng and looked at him
I saw the fear and I knew it would be a first round
knockout," Tyson said.
. Everybody but Tyson. that is. "I thou&ht I would cxchanic nght hands with
So. for the 3Sth time m 35 fights. an
opponent's best laid plans went ha}w1re
Angel~ ·unload
on Twins, 16-7
~
Boone leadstear,
team shows flash
of potential at plate
BJ RICllARD DUNN
..., .... C.:; '; f I
As the summer temperatures rose
Monday, so did the bats of the Anicls.
Tbe more the runs came. the
wackier thin~ 10L Minnesota s most effective pucher
was left fielder Dan Gladden, just to
show what kind of pme it was. as the
Ansell put tQJCther their most pro-
ductive offenuve show sinoe the 1986
championship season by defeating
the T...tn~ 16-7, ID front of 22.167
Anaheim Stadium fans.
. "
TIJe 11ebedale
HOtM
Tonfslh.-Mlnnesof•, 7:35 o.m June 2' Mllw1e10t•, 7:35 o.m. •
June 30-4dte. AWAY
Jutv l-Oetrolt, •:35 o.m. 1• J\b 2-0etrolt, 1:20 o.m.
JIJtt( )-Oetrolt, lC>.35 •.m .•
Julv ~Toronto, 4:35 o.m
• On TV, C1'Mnll 5.
/ On TV, CNnnel 4. • Al Mmet on KMPC (710}
In the midst of what appean to be
new life, the suddenly rcsuraent
Anads made it three wins 10 a row plan on makin& a senous run at the and nine in their last 11 as two players teams in front of them in the AL
(Jack Howell tnd Bob Boone) had West, there's no better timethan now.
four RBI and two others (Devon The parade of runs were the most
White and Wally Joyner) had three. by the Angels since they beat Kansas
.. I've been in real lood grooves City, 18-3, on Sept. 18, 1986.
before, .. said Boone, I -for-32 (.S63) The Angels sent I 0 men to the plate
in bis last nine pmcs. "Ri&ht now, in the thirit inninp. scorina five runs.
every time J hit, a liaht aocs on and the batted around in the fourth to score
pitch loob like a beaeh ball. Every aix and added four in the sixth and
time I swina. it seems like I hit it on one in lhe seventh.
the aweet spot (of the bat)." .. Boone had a helluva ni&ht and
,., L. .....
In the last rune pmes. Boone has everybody has started to contribute
recorded five muluple-hit pmes and on offense, .. said An&iel Manager
l I RBI. He went 4-for·S. includina • Cookie Rojas. .. We're settina a lot of
his KCOod home nan of the year in the help. And to win a few bett at home
fourth-the inn in& the Antels scored means a lol It's been a Iona time since
aix runs to make it a rouL we've had l\OOd pmes at home hke
Tbe winnina stttak? If the Anaels · (Pleue ... AJISOSL8/BS)
M1•·11aea •tarter Fred Toll.u coftn bla race wlllle ~
to Mttle down durtnc tbe Anaela aploelon In tile tblnL-
Manning likes Clippers' future
Team's No. 1 ptckseesmuch
potential in youth movement
always been on aeams tbat have won. rm not sayina the
Oippcn will have a attat team. but rm sure we'll have a better team ...
Marty Blake. tbe NBA'• chief scout. said he expects
Mann&,.. to be a.,., prOftllional player. but he doesn't
believe 1'e can t"na around the Oippen in one ICISOn . .. l'bete are ao mGft isapect p&aym.•• Blake said •
.. Larry 8itd. MiliCJolli11e01tl8dAkcan ~uwon are the
oaly ones ia tM llila 10 ,_.. wbO have made an immodiMe im.,.ct; IJ.....,, ..... they turntd a ieam
UOUlld ia oae ,_...'" ......._Me no.~ &he draft lot~ May 21
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Dsssr'· '•
Little joke
devastates
challenger
Tyson makes good
onheadplay~KO's
Spinks in just I :31
ATLANTIC Cln NJ {AP> -
Trainer Kevan Roone) had a httle
joke for Make T)son before his fi&hter
went into the nng Monda) ni&ht for
the undisputed hea,')'we1aht title
bout apinst Michael Spinks
''He came up to me and told me
that he bet both our purses on a first-round knockout ... Tyson said. ..,
thou&ht he was ~rious. So I said ·fine·
and r went out to take him out 1n the
Cmt round."
Whether it was a Joke or not. T~son
used b.is dcvcst.aung punching power
to send Spanks to the canvas for the
first time 1n his professional career
and scored a ~tunnina knockout at
1 :31 ofthc1r S34 mllhon fiaht.
Tyson. who improved hts record to
35-0 with 31 knockouts. said he knew
early that Spinks was in trouble
"When I came antothe ring and saw
his face. I knev. It was go1na to be a
first-round knockouL •• T>son said.
Tyson said he expected Spanks to
do one of two things -either to comc
out punchmg or to lead ham around
the ring for 12 roun~
.. I thank he was scared to do
anything else, so he came out fighung.
U)ing for the TKO or the cut·· Tyson
sa1d.
Spanksaot neither In fact. he never
got a glove on Tyson. And before too
long. many m the crowd of 21.000
started rcahzang what Tyson already
kncW.
Tyson sent Spinks to the can"as
with a nght hand that finished off a
comb1nauon.
Shortly after rcfertt Frank Capuc-
crno finished his count. Spinks surged
toward Tyson. onl) to be met b~ a
short nght uppercut to the forehead
that sent him Oat on his back.
Sbort utd ••eet
M&AVYWWIGNT TITU f"9tfTI SMrted • ........,
11:1$ -Joni ~ -Jedi Fllt-119N'\, Aorl ,, 110l 1., -~ Dokft -,,.. w..-. DtcemMr 10, 1"2
t:it -T~ tur'fll -Jer9' ,_ecM, ~ell 17, , ..
l:ll -Mike TY'tOll -~ ._.,..,, ~?7. lM
l:l6 -Joe Frat.er Ollfr De ... ZY919Wia, AAwM n , IM
He would not get up an time.
The k.nodtout would have won ~
Rooney's bet But there was disap-
pointment Rooney walked into rina
and told Tyson thay the bet was just a
joke.
What wasn't a jok.e was T)'IOn·s 'heer skills. He jabbed. He moved.
His fist struck and hurt.
"There is no fighter like me ...
Tyson boasted. ··1 was reading today
whctt some fi&htcrs "'~ ~u.oted. in the paper sa)ing. 'I don t hke Mike
Tyson because be'' cocky. arropnL •
So to au those fi&htcrs who said that.
here·s a message:
..Therc·s no fi&?ner like me. I can
beat any man in the world." Tyson
said. T)'10n was not the only one who
thou&ht he could demolish Spinks.
Roberto Duran. a former champion
an three · divisions and Tyson's
boyhood idol. visited Tyson before
the fiaht.
..He told me , 'He (Sputks) as made
for you."' Tyson recounted.
... Relax. don•t .chase lum. Be calm
and relued and punch to the body
and throw combanallons to the
bead," Duran told ham.
"Tnat was my plan ... Tyson said.
.. Bas1call) he nouccd that was the
wa)' to fi&ht Spinks."" ~
The st.art of the fight was delayed
almost 15 minutes because of a
contro"ef) O\CT the taping ofTyson .
Hillegas blanks
slumping Astros
He allows two hits
over six innings,
aids Dodgers, 4-0
HOUSTON (AP) -Los Angeles
n&ht-hander Shawn H11leps was
&ong the n&ht team at thc n&ht ume
Monday m&ht.
H.1Ucps blanked the Houston
Astros on two hits 1n six 1nnangs and
the Dodacrs went on to win :!-0 Tor •
their ninth v1ctof) in 10 games.
"Houston's m a team slump right
now," said. Hallcps. 2-0 .. You can't
put )Our finacron 1t but n's happened
to us before. You look at their
offensive potcnual and ~ou knov.o It
won't stay Iona.
• "I JUSt hope the} Sta) in 1t until ~
get out of town."
Los An&cles' Mike Sc10SC1.1 ex-
tended his hauana streak to five games
with a solo homer as the Dodscn
increased their lead over Houston to
4112 pmcs 10 the NL West.
"The last three wc-cks I haven"t
been able to hit anyo ne:· Setoscia
said ... rve been lc1nd of scratchiQ&.
But I started workingJust tf) in& to tet
morecoOSJstcnt with m' mechanics. -
Hillcps allowed a fint-innina
sU\gle to Bill Doran and a fif\h-innina
hit to Rafael Ramirez before beina
rehevcd by Tam Crews to stan the
seventh. HJlleps walked one and
wuck out three.
··A pme hke this is a real pcnonal
chalk~ to me because rm a you.na
pitcher.. said the 23-ycar old HiU-
cps. ··When I was up hcrt wt year we
f LOI~~~ II-~
I
I / I
TIJe sclJedale
AWAY
Toni91't~ton, S;JS o.m. •
June 2"-+iouston, 1U5 •.m.
June~ HOME
Jutv ~~. 7:35 o.tn.
Jutv 2--0llago, 7:05 p..m.
Jutv 3--0'licNo, UIS o.m.
J\h f-St Louis. 5:10 o.m.
./ On TV, 01eMel 7.
• On TV. °*""91 11. • Al I*'* 0«1 KAK (7'0) •
were l 0 to 12 games out. ..
The Astrps were held to five hits
and have ICOred only seven runs in
their last four pmes.
"There's nothing else to tell them,··
Astros manq.er Hal Lamer said.
"The manqer and COICbes can't do
any of the h1tttng. ~players have to
swina ~he bf:~ and riaht now thcy•re
not doina 1L
CreVolS P'e up scvcn\b-.i.Rnins si~cs to Glenn OaVJs and Ramirez.
but Jesse Orosco came on with IWO
out and sttuck out pinch-bitter Jim
Pankoviu to end the thrcaL
AJc,andro P.ena allowed Obie hit ia
the n1oth and earned his sixth save.
Scioscia tut b.is SttOnd homer witla
two outs m the fourt.b iD.Dtl'S •
Joaquin Andujar. ()..3.
• lo
No peace for Gian~s' Craig,
but result proves positive
San Francisco loses cushion.
but tops Braves in end. 10-9
mm n. AINdasei Pren
San Francisco manqer Racer Craia thought he was
in for a nice peaceful pme Monday night af\CT the Gia nu
ICon:d five ttt0nd-innin1 runs.
He was wrona.
Tbe Gianu woulld up bcatina lhe Atlanta Braves 1~9 in a coat.est tha\ hluttd 37 hits-a seuon-hiah 19
by San Francisco-includina nine doubles, a tnplc and a
home run by both clubs. Crail wound up usina six pitchers.
"Af\er we scored tbe five runs. I fiaurcd rd just relax
and sit back and e~y the pmc." said Craia-"It didn't
work out that way.• .
San Francisco's Mike Aldrete led the offen~ with
four hiu and three RBI. Breu ButlCT had ~~ b1ts 1;nd
three RBI and Kevin Matchell added three h1u. ancludana
a solo home run -his eiahlh.
Ehewhere in the National Leaaue:
C.. Z, nmtes l: Shawon Dunston hit a two-run
homer and left fielder Rafael Palmeiro lhrcw pitcher
Shaae Rawley out at the plate in the sevenlh inning to give
host Cbicqo its ninth vtdory in 12 .-mes.
Rick Sutcliffe. 6-S, pve up nine hits and an 6¥1
inninp for lhc victory. He struck out five.
Pa4.ret t , Reda Z: Tony Gwynn bit a three-run homer
to spark a seven-run second inning lhat powettd San
Diqo over host Cincinnati. Left-hander Dennis
Rasmussen, 6-6, traded by the Reds to the Padres June 8,
beat his former teammates by scattering six hits in seven
innings.
Pirates Z, Meta l: l.Jcht-hitting Rafael Belliard's
sinale in the fifth inning drove in the go.ahead run and
MiXe Dunne and two relievers combined on a five-hitter
for host Pittsbu.rah. Dunne, S-6. overcame eight walks
and one hit batsman in 6Y> innin15 to win for only the
second time an six decisions.
Expos I, Cardlaals S: Hubie Brooks hit a three-run
homer wi~h two outs in the 14th anning as visiting
Mont.real snapped a four-pme losang streak. Brooks'
home run, bas ninth, came ofT Steve Peters.. 3-3. who
allowed Tim Wallach's homer in the 13th inning_
In the American Leque:
Ttpn I, Yoke.es S: Gary Pettis had three hits and
KOred four times and Luis Salazar drove m three runs,
leadin& host Detroit past New York.
Jack Moms and Mike Henneman combined on a
seven-futter as the Tigers beat New York for the fourth
time in as many meetings this season and took a two-
pme lead over the Y ankecs in the American League East.
Wynne, Brown tangle
CINCINNA Tl (AP) -San Diego's Marvell Wynne
and Chris Brown were involved in an altercation befo~
the Padres' pme Monday night agaanst the Cincinnati
Reds! prompung Manager Jack McKeon to drop both
from lhe st.an.ma hneup.
The incident occurred around the batting cage bcfo~
the Padres' 9-2 v1ctol) over the Reds.
Both players we~ scratched from the starting lineup
after the anc1dent, althou&h Wynne struck out as a panch-
h1tter in the ninth inning.
"It was JUSt two 1uys with a misunderstanding. ..
McK.con said of the metdent. "No problem. The case 1s
cl0$Cd. They JUSt vented their frustrations.
"When I heard about n. I took them out of the ltneup
. . . It happens. It's history."
Red Sox Greenwell
doesn't have· fans'
recognition ... yet
BOSTON -Growing up in Florida.
Mike Greenwell played hi&h school foot-
ball, wrestled allipton ID the EvCIJ)ades
and was an ainateur boxCT.
After finishin& founb in tbe American Leque
Rookie oflhe Year ballotina last year, be acted as lus
ownacent ID nqotJatiQ&acontractwitb the Boston Red
Sox wonh S20S,OOO and bonuses for 1988.
Now, one month before bis 24th birthday,
Greenwell is lrYln& to slua bis way onto the AL roster for
the All-Star Game.
Overlooked so far by f&nJ in lhc ballotinJ. tbe lcft-
banded hatting outfielder as hoping that Minnesota's
Tom Kelly, who will manqe the AL team in lhe All-
Star Game, is looking at bis performances.
"It's hard to make the AJl-Starteam when you have
only two years in the bta tcaaues," Greenwell said. '"The
fans probably don't even know who Mike Greenwell is.
"'But I know lhe playen around the lcque know
who I am and, hopefully, a lot of the pitchers do."
W1lh httlc fanfare, Greeo'W'Cll has blossomed into
oae of baseball's top youna slu'8t" since comma back
from a shoulder iQJury early thas month.
He ranks amona the leque leaders in seven of the
top ei&ht offensive cateaorics. His numbers., Soina into
Monday ni&ht's pmc apinst Oeveland., included a
.343 battin& avcrqc, 14 home runs and 59 runs baned
in.
Greenwell b1t a ~run homCT m the first innina
apinst Baltimore Sunday, extcnd1n& rus hlltlnJ streak
to a career-h.iah 17 pmcs and earning tus ciahtb pme--
winnina RBI of the year.
Durina the streak. be was 32-for-70. a .4S7 averqe.
which improved his avcrqc 57 points from .286. Tbc
home run was h11 lix.lh in KVcn pmcs and pvc him 20
RBJ in one week.
He bit .SOO last wtck and was named the lequc's
Player oft.he Week.
··1 know that everybody has a bia year ooe time in
· ltiJ careet whether he"• a .2'° hitter or a .300 bitter ..
OreenwcU said. "I feel like rm a .300 hitter and riSbt
DOW rm bavitll a bia year. • ,
"rm p>ina to keep tryins to put bCJnumben on the
board. tq.ust lives me tometb1na biller to shoot for next pr.·
Gree:n'ldl it fi11ed with confidence. but is ftiend.ly
ad olltp;>ins. daimir\I buebeU is nppoeed to .be fun,
not wort. .. Ht'• a area• bitttr beclute he's aarcsaivc. ..
1e1mmaae Todd ~ tald.
e.ote of tbe day
Morris, I.he winninaest pitcher in the~ in the I 910s. ii onl_y 7·8 with a 4.87 ERA despite bis strona out.ina.
aM S.1 t, IMlw 5: Rookie Jody Reed's first mtjor-
~ bomer, a two-run ahot. touched off a five-t\ln sixth
inmna that rallied host Boston.
· Mike Greenwell, who extended his hittina s\rtak to
ll'pmca with a triple in the fifth innina. also Jrove in a nan with a srounder in the lhird as he took the AL lead
wilh 61 RBI. one more than New York's Dave Winfield. · ~ t, BlM Ja11 t: Jim Traber and Rick Scbu hit
IOlo home runs and Cal Ripken had a t~run sina!t. Jeff Ballard, who dida't come up fnom the manors untd May
19 allowed ooc run and 1even hiu in seven ioninp and
bcCame the fint pitcher to win four pmes this tcaSOn for
thC 21-S.. Orioles. a.1a1:1 I, ftlteS.x l: Frank White led offt!'e ei&hlh ion~na with his sixth horpe .ru~ and Ma~ <;Jubicza ~cl~
visitin1Cbicqotofouth1u1ne1&ht-plus 1nm~. Whites
bomc run was onJAa~~th rut off loser Jerry Reuss.
Martaen I, S: Seattle came from behind
with five nans in the mth inning on fiv~ straiJht two-out
bits, includi~ homers by Steve Balboru and Jim PrcsJcy.
loler Paul Kilaus allowed only one hit and~ 2..0 until
the sixth. · .
A&Uedct 5, Brewen C: Dave Hendcnon smaJed
Camey Lansford home from th.Jrd base wilh one out in
the bottom of the 14lh inning to propel host Oak.land.
Relief ace Dennis Eckersley was the wanner aftCT pitch in&
out ofa jam m the top of the 14th.
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Brambl~ arrested for drugs
lJviaptolle Bramble. former Wotld Ill
Boxinc Association 1.i&Jttweacht champion.
was arrested at a St. -Croix airport in the
U.S. Virgin Islands U\C1' t~o ounces of
nwiiuana were diJOOvcricl in b1s possession during a
routJne inspcclion. Bramble. 27, who won the title in
June 1984 by uoppina Ra7 "Boom Boom" Mucllll in
l 4 rounda, was anestcd when he attempted to board a
commercial fla&ht at the Ale.under Hamilton Airport
late Sunday. Bramble was released Monday on a S 1,000
unlCC\lnld bond. He must report to tM perole office at
Pbsak; NJ., where be now lives ... The Kobe
Prosecutor's office in Tokyo said Monday it had
suspended prosecution of Dtck Davis. a Kintetsu
Buffaloes infielder and former maJOr lcaguCT. for
allqed violauon of Japanese drug laws, and had
released him. A BufTalocs official said the club had
caoocled Davts' contract because of lhe mcident, and
that Davis had left Japan for lhe United StatCS>Officials
of the prosecutor•• office declined to discuss further
details on the suspension of the indictment. Davis, 34.
was arrested on June 8 after Health and Welfare
Ministry dru1 agents found 14 arams of marijuana at
bis home in Osaka. Davis pla)'Cd wilh the Mikwauket'
Brewen, PhiladelP.h.ia Phillies, Toronto Blue Jays and
PittsburJh Pirates before coming to Japan in 1984. This
aeason he Sllflcd a contract 'With the Buffaloes for an
estimated $720.000. He lives in Riverside durina the
ofT.Qicason,
Ktnga algn pair of free agents
INGLEWOOD -Left WU\JCr John Iii
Tonelh and defenscman Tim Watters. 1 '
pair of free qenu, have s:ilncd contracts
wilh the Los Anrdcs K.inp. the NHL team ,
announced Monday.
Tonelli, 31, was offered. a temunallon contract by
his former te.am, the Calpry Aames. He had u1uil July
I to ~t lhe contract or neaouate a new deal for
himscltwit.ttanot.her team. •
Watters, 28, was in the same ~tuatioa wit.b .bis·
fonnet 1.eam, \he Winaipea Jeu.. ·
Tbc K.inp won'• be requited to compensate
CaJpry or Winrupea becaute of the •• ••• .
Toaelli bid 1·7 Pbud 4J .misu an 74 pmcnrith
the flames lut ~ Hit NHL career totals.are 246 pt1and 414u1i1&11n 755 ~ ..
W1ncn bu appeared in 01 NHL pmes with 2t
plund ~01 .-.... He hild QO poirns in hit 36 prnes -rut ICUC)n. •
Packen Ink former Raider QB
..
ClllcaMo'• Andre Da1N0n alld• Kfely hlto MCOJla wttb a Rolen bue .. Pbiladel-
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YoungYaz
calla ft quits
VANCOUVER, British
Columbia (AP) -Out-
fielder Mike Yastrzcmski,
the 2~ycar-old son of Carl Yas~emski, the former
Boston Red Sox star, has
decided to retire after five
years in the minor leagues.
E-l.-. Ol"-<lfte-•, I
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1 I I • • • t I I
Yutnemski, wbo was
strualina wilh the Van-
couver Canadians of the
Pacific Coast l..ca&ue lhis
season. made tlie an-
nouncement Sunday. L-1• ll J 1 1 I . --lhellua l·J 1 I 1 • ""11• • M 1111111 MIO O¥rwiltl S I l·J I t 0
1 --• , I 0 I
I 1 J He'll return to bis
produce brokerage busi-
ness an Pompano Beach.
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Uft•a I---Flr\I MdNrTY Sec-at_ .. _ T""O w.-T-J If ,11---s tn
China to enter Little League
TOK YO-China, which has recently •
emerged as a major international threat in
voUeyball and armnastics, now has iu eye
on America•s fa\'orite sport -baseball.
The world's most populous nation will join Little
Leque Baseball this fall, a senior Cbin~ sporu official
announced Monday in Tol(yo.
"The Chana Baseball Association will formally
apply for membership an lhe Little league Foun-
dation," said Wei Mins, vice chairman of lhe
association.
Experts wd bescball bas been rapidJy groWUlg as
an international sport sin~ lhe International Olympic
Commince decided to uppade buebell's status from a
demonstration sport to an official event bcginng wilh
lhe O~ympie Games in Baroclona in 1992.
"ln basebell, the sun never ICU," said Creighton
Hale, prisident of Ltttle Lca&ue Baseball lnc. '"Some-
where in tbe worid. boys are playina lh1s sport."
Soto algna pact with Dodgers
HOUSTON -Pitcher Mario Soto. •
released last week by Cincinnati, signed a
contract for the remainder of the season
wilh the Los Angeles Dodgers, club Vice
.President Fred Claire announced Monday.
Soto, }I, willjoin the Dod&ersin Hou~ton Tuesday
for the second pmc of a scnes with"\he Houston Astros.
Soto had a 3-7 record and 4.66 earned run average
with the Reds this season
Soto, a three-time · Nauonal Lcaauc All-Star
sclCC11on, ~yed 12 seasons wnh the Reds and
compiled a H~92 m:OTd.
TeleVtalon, raclJo
TBLEVJllON'
4:3~ 9.m. -BASEBALL': San Francisco at
Atlanta, TBS. ·
· ' p.m . -TENNIS: Wimbledon quar-
terfinals. from Wimbledon. Enjlud (delayed),
HBO. -
S p.m. -BODNG: Wat.em OIYm}lic
qualification bouts. frcm Houston (taped).·J>rim~ • Ticket.. -,
S:JO p.m. -. IHEa•u .. DoclFn ••
HOUSU>n, Cbannd 11. •• :
. 7:30 p.m. -RJOB ICllOOL IAl&STBAU.
: Lot ~let bOys' fi~::tC Prime Tu:bt..' -7:30 (>.m. -I · Minncaoea at
Allltlt; Z O\anncl. • "
aADIO
4:30 p.m. -BA.ISaAU,. Padm at Cincin-uti. IC.f'MB (760). • . •
S:lO p.m. -BAISa.u.L: Dodlrri at Houswn. KABC (790). .
7:l0=•· -IAISBAU • Minnaota at A._._ JIC(710).
~Y'ITSLSVlllON
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u..--.-.-K-. "'"'' °'-S--H~• l""• ,,_
T-411 •-1112'
"It was a do-or~ie busi-
ness satuation, but I had
lost that com~etttive
edac," Yastrzcmslu said.
Bulls' Oakley
solidifies Knicks
CHICAGO (AP) -The Chicago Bulls traded
forward Charles Oakley. who led the NBA with 1,066
rebounds last seasQn. to the New York Ktlick.s on
Monday for veteran center 8111 Cartwnght.
The two teams also will switch pos111ons in
Tuaday's NBA draft, w1lh the Bulls J,Ctti~g the K~1cks'
11th choi~ and New York taking Chicago s 19th pick.
The switch means the Bulls.. in the third round. will
get the 62nd selection overall. rather than the 69th
Chicago has no second-round choice.
In another trade, the Atlanta Hawks dealt reserve
shoouna auard Randy Wittman and their No. 18 pick in
today's draft to lhe Sacramento KJn$S f6r guard Rcgie
Theus.
New York Coach Rick P1tino was "ccstauc" with lhe
trade, callina Oatley "one of lhe top power forwards m
the pme of basketball and has strcoath and youth."
Knicks aeneral manager Al Bianchi said, ··we have
obtained one of the premiere forwards and rebounders in
the NBA. We have solidified the Power position."
The Bulls are hoping Cartwriifit is the answer to thc;r
dream of landina a pure center who can help Michael
Jordan with lhc sconng burden.
Jordan was the fcaguc•s 1987-88 Most Valuable
Player and scoring champion.
"We're happy toacquiretheSttViccsofa proven low-
Post scoring center in 8111 Cartwricht." said Bulls general
man.acer Jerry Krause. ··At 31 , we feel he hes a lot of
excellent basketball ahead of ham
Oakley·s departure means a b1ager role for Horace
Giant. a rookie last season. · '
"'The development of forward Horace Grant enabled
us to make sUth 1 trade. We feel Horace can be a quality
player ~!'d do an ~utstandin1 job in ~adna Charles
Oak.Icy, Krause .said. ·
Coach Doua Collms said "in order to set quality you
have to IJVC up quality." ••
· "Ye>U hate fo lose a player the caliber of a Charles Oektey ... he said. • ·
··0oeofour bia needs wis to &cl a low posucorcr. e;n
C.anwnaht &i~n us• player y,,c-(ttl can 1tt us aicywhcrc
from If to 20 points and provide u1 with a wea~n we
• must utilaze \0 make 1.11 a more vnatile team ... COiiins
said.
Tho 7 .. foot-J C.rtwriaht s>taycd all 81 pmes in his
eiibth pro roar WI 1nt0n. The former lJniVersity of'Slln
· Franci..00 star avtft&ed 20 minutes, 11.1 ~nts and 4. 7
rcbounda. In .S37 pro prncs.. he has scored 9.006 POinta. . . . ·.
·-LOCal ••llon dominate
' LONO BEACH -Loeal •Ion domina\Cd '1'c
Seaior fliabt ha the Naples Sabot aataonal championthjp l'fll'la a1 Alamhoa 8'y Yada1 Oub. Foun~ boil• named out for tftt event.
Jl'Ooby ~-'um were: SENIOll FLIGHT (11)-Nidt ~ 11R.o.
YC: l. Jou Normu. Mil Corinthiaa ¥C: J. Dail Tdalic. IYC. 4. ltcvia Dumain, AlemalOI Bey YC: S. Erie
Praut.IYC.
MASTEllS tUGHT (26)-I. Nier GUa. 1¥
2. Daw~. Lido I* YC; 3. Dile lenillilcr. UYC: 4. lM ....-.., ABYC: 5. ~ lllT, SU Dim» 'ye; 6. Jw~~YC:7.MwSi....._SDYC:lOeolae .... lly YC: t. Onlllm Oitlbowl. IYQ It .
... ..... , (Mile, ArlC,.
•
I
e9tll•dJrw•
AaNrJeu~·
war D1V1110N w L ..._ oa Lit aa...
47 21 .627 M Won I
41 32 .562 • s 6-4 Lose I
39 36 .S20 • 3-1 Won I
3S 39 .473 1 l'IJ 4-6 Lost J
33 40 .4'2 12 S:.S LoJt I
33 42 ,440 13 S.2 Won 3
JO 46 .39S 17"2 4-6 Won 2
Detroit
New York
Oeveland
Bolton
il'oronto
Milwaukee
Baltimore
SAIT DIVISION
4S 28 .616 -7.3
43 lO .$89 2 4-6
41 J.4 .S47 S 3-7
37 J.4 .S2 I 7 7.3
38 39 .494 9 M
37 31 .493 9 )..7
21 .S4 .280 2S J.. 7
M09day'1Scora
A.l&•ll 16, Minnts0t.1 7
Bafumore 6 Toronto 2
Deuoit 6. New York 3
Boston 9, aeveland s Kansas City 2, Chicqo 1
Seattle 6, Texas 3 •
Oakland s. Milwaukee 4 (14 inninp)
Won I
Lost I
LoJt 3
Won 3
Lost I
Lost 3
Won I
.... A•a1 21-15 26-1)
23-16 11-16
11·11 21·11
21-19 14-20
18-21 IS;;l9
14-22 1~20
18.-11 12·28
22-14 22-13
22-16
19-18
2().J8
23-17
13-21
23-14 21-17
19-18
18-16
18-21
14-21
8-33
TMiPt'1Gamn
Minnesota (Blyleven ~)at Aqel1 (Petry J.-5), 7:3S p.m.
Detroit (Tanana 9-4) at New York (Rhoden J..S). 4:30 p.m.
Toronto (Olney 4-9) at Baltimore (Tibbs 2-4). 4;35 p.m.
Oevetand (Bailes~) at Boston (Gardner l·I ). 4:35 p.m.
Chicqo (Lona 2-3) at Kansas City CR.Anderson 0.0). S:35 p.m.
Texas (Guzman 6-6) at Seattle (Trout J.-3), 7:05 p.m.
Milwaukee (Auaust J..2) at Oakland CG.Davis 5-3). 7:35 p.m ·
Wtdaetday'1 Games
Minnesota at Aa1el1, 7:3S p.m. Milwaukee at Oakland, 12:15 p.m.
Detroit at New York., 4:30 p.m.
Toronto at Baltimore, 4:3S p.m.
Oeveland at eo.ton, 4:3S p.m.
Chicago at Kansas City, 5:35 p.m.
Texas at Seattle, 7:05 p.m.
National Leape
WEST DIVISION
W L Pel GB Lll Streak Home Away
Doqen 43 lO 589 9-1 Won ~1 -18 22-12
39 35 .S27 41h 5-5 Lost I 23-14 16-21 Houston ,
San Francisco
Cincinnati
San Dleso Atlanta
37 37 .500 6'h S-5 Won I 20-19 17-18
33 41 .446 I01h 3-7 Lost 6 16-19 17-22
33 43 .434 111/l 4-6 Won 2 22-19 11 -24
26 46 .361 I 61h 4-6 Lost 2 12-23 14-23
EAST J)IVISION
New York 46 28 .622 5-5
,Pittsburah 43 32 573 31h 7-3 Chicqo 40 34 .541 6 7-3
St Loujs 36 39 .480 101h 3-7
Montreal 35 39 .473 11 4-6
Philadelph1a 33 40 .452 l 2Y1 4-6
Moaclay'1 Scores
Do41era 4, Houston 0
ChiC;YO 2, Philadefphia 1.
San 01eao 9, Cincinnati 2
San Francisco 10. Atlanta 9
Pittsburah 2, New York 1 Montreal 6, St. Louis 3 (14 annangS)
Lost 3
Won 5
Won 3
Lost 2
Won I
Lost I
25-11 2 1-17
24-15 19-17
20-15 20-19
17-19. 19-20
21 -17 14-22
18-16 I 5-24
ToaJpt'1 Games
Dectcen (Sutton J.-S) at Houston (Knepper 7-1 ). 5:35 p.m
Phil~lphia (Carman 4-4) at Chicago (G.Maddux 13-3). 11.20 a m.
San Otqo (Whitson 7-5) at Cincinnati (Jackson 7.4) 4:35 pm
New York (Fernandez 3-6) at P1ttsbuf1b (fJsher 4-5). 4;35 p.m.
San Francisco (Downs 5· 7) at Atlanta' (Jimenez 0-0). 4 40 p.m
Montreal (Dopson 1-5) at St. Louis (Tudor 4-2). 5:35 pm
Wedllffday'1 Games
Do4ce,. at Houston. 11 :JS a.m.
Philadelphia at Chicago. 11 :20 a. m.
San Francisco at Atlanta. 2:40 p.m.
San Oicao at Cincinnati, •:35 p.m.
New York at P1ttsbuflh, 4:35 p.m. Montreal at St. Louis, S:35 p.m.
.
. LENDL ••• ··rr-•1
11 .... ~ICI, IU.l
JUNIOR WEL TEllWEIGHTS-Vlnn¥
P11111lu \1-.0 Fiii• DullrlY 11 1~ In i-111
round •
edvuced in strai&ht tets. American volley that Woodfordc sprayed wade
Zina. Gani,on, eceded 12th. upset with bis forehand.
No. S Gabriela Sabatini of Araentina
and unseeded Rosalyn ·Fairbank
ousted NQ. 8 Nat.alia.Zvere~ of the
Soviet Union. •
FouitlHecded ams Evat needed •
three set.a to down Katrina Adams. a
1 ~year.old f'fom CbiQIO who used
to idolize the thiee-time chatnpion.
.. When l aot to match point, the
crowd was really deafeniq and
overwbelmlDI. •• said Woodforde,
wbo reached the final 16 at last year's U.S. Open: .. He hit a aood vOUey and
that's why he's No. f. He comes up
~th · thoee &bots at extmne mo-ments. .. · Woodforde, "bo lost his only
PftViout match w Lendt in &t.miabt Asked ifbd ever lhouabt he would
KU at I.bis yeer'1 Australian Open, lose. Leod1 said. ··Wben you're at
Md 1 match point leedina 7""6 in the match poin&. you have to consider it. bal Id. But LcndJ. •ho never bas 8\lt if you SW1 thinkinl you're toina
WOG a WimbledOn tit.le. bit a ~ • IO tole. vou do IOIC."
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('Tllrwtll 5uMIY'• 0.-)
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G A.I • H ~ W1nfoetd NY 70 156 SO 91 lSS eons 1.,, ., 252 .. • .3't
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0.klalld. JO, 11 H«ICWJOll ,.._ Y or1I , SO,
Wlnfltld New Y«ll. SO
1111-Wlnfltlcl. New Y«ll 60. Gr-.. , 1ot1on, st, Puc1o.e11. M1nnesot1, 57. Canseco
0.llllnd, 56. Bretl, KanM' City, W HIT$-f'uclltll, Mlnl'lftOfl, 102, L.aMlotd,
o.111anc1. tt, 8ret1, K•nt.a1 Cltv, t l. Wlnflald
New Vorll, "· '°"'· 8oJIOfl, •• Molitor, Mllweulllt, M, Trtmtnell, 0.lrolt, a
OOUILEs-lrtll, KanMl Cltv. 25. Gladden, Ml-.011. n. 8ooGi. eo.ton, 11. lln • ......,
111 McGrlfl, Toronto, 20
TlllPLES-WllJOll, l(anM' Cltv, 7, llnnolch
Sa1lllt, 6. V'ount. Mllweu«11, 6, GIOM. Mlnne-
$011, s
HOME llUNS-C.llMCO, Oekland, lt; GNtii
Mlnnltoll, 16, SllYCI«, OtYeland. 16, CMltr, Cltvelaftd, IS, McGrlft, Toronto. IS, Wlnfltld
N-Yorll.. lS, $l0l.EN IASE5-4l Mencltnofl, NeW Yortt.
41. Pett11, Oelroll, 31. Molitor Mllw1Uk11, 1S
CIM«O, Oell'-"d. n MoMOY. Toromo. 11
lltdul, ClllcAlvo. It, lttvnoldS. S.tlll, ~ PITCHING (7 CIKillOnll-lluutl, Ttu,,
7· 1. l tt Vlofl, MinMloll , 12-2. LJ4, Hur,1,
loston. t-), A.ot, CllldlWla New Yorll. t·J
111. "...,_· 0.lt'Olt 1-l, 7f7 ) J3
........ &....-
( T'llllrWl9I S4!MIY'• Glmel) umNG
(~ .. 217 ...... ",
G Al • H ~
G "'9rrY All 63 1'1 31 to l32
P'llmelto c111 n m '1 tS .n• Sabe Clll 63 25' l7 M .324
McGee SIL 1' 311 40 " 311 L1w Chi 71 26' 31 15 .ll6
GeWr ... Mon n lit Sl ti 315
1on11e "'' 1• m so 11 .J1' D1wl0fl Clll 71 115 ll 17 lOS
L.lnlln Cl" 70 276 .. M llW II. TMmoton $F 62 2'l1 1' 61 .ll3
llUNs--lol>cb, PilllOuroft, 61, 0..... ~ SJ.I Gllarr-. Montl"HI, 51. eoNll.
PlltlMtll, SO, lkllltr. Sin Francbco. 50,
Str1W111NY, New Yon.. SO
1111-clet'll, Uft Frenc:lsco. 51; G. Devil. ~ton, S1; lenlll, Ptlllb4.or911. W; Ve115tvtle.
Pl11*"'9fl. 51; Slttwtlen'V New Yor11, '6.
HITS .V.CO.. $1 Loull, tt, P.imtlfo. CN·
Q99, tS; G8'1WT .... Mont ..... tl, COllmln. St
Loull, It, lenlla. Pllllburtfl, '1 De.non.
~1..."· DOUIK.I~. Clnclnnlll, 2t, P..,.,_ro
C't11C.1191, ~ ......... Pl'llld1•M1. 2J; lrwl'I.
Pl"*"'tll 22; GatlN.... MonlrMI. 20
Titl"-b·-V1tt SIYM. Plltlllurtll. It. COi· "'*'• SI, '-*"'. t. lllillft, MorltrMI. 6. ~. Pl'l'llflll'llll. " HOM« •UN$-Oltll. San Fralldtco, It.
G O.vll.. ....._, 11, Gallrr .... Monlf'lel. 11,
SlrawM ry, New Ytt', 17; loftlla. Plttlbur'efl.
15.
STOLEN IASEs-<i. Y.-.. HaullOll, 43.
Coler!'IM, SI. ~. a; Slllt, ClfldlWlell. 2' McGee, SI ~. n; 0 Stnolfl, SI L.oult. n
PITCHINO 17 _.....)--<-New v.-
,..1, 1.19. It._.. HcMtofl, M , HS.
G MMc!U•. CllklMo. tJ..>. 217; Scott • ...-. •·t, JM; ........... DMilll"a. 11-1. ,., 156.
ST•tt<£0CJn-ttRft, ~ton. 1'I; kDlt.
HewlOll. •: ~. SI. l..IUt\. ... Cont. New Yon, te, OeMlltl,. New Yortl, a
CLEANING & PRESERVING SHAKE ROOf,S SINCE 1969
-...111 • ..,. ...
MAKE YOUR ROOF LAST LONGER
• AT A FRACTION OF REP.LAGEMENT cosn
CAL.LNo\v
FOR MOIE INRmf lf'11QN AND A FREE ES11MA1'E
<
USGA JuNw AtM'9W C'Ml1 ...... &11•
SOUTI40M CAlWOIU•A QUALW•a , .. ._. .... cc>
llt-Mlll• ... tor •El "'-"" CC ~ N~). 67·71
1• 1-AU&llll Malll (Cosla Mela Of.CC C~
Metal. n• lo-Milt Jvn ,_,,ldlld. Sen 0-l
73·70. O...td ThorlllVn 1..,.,.na•>. 11·n
I~ Mllllltn (L.AlmU ,_.,,, Fe CC.
~ leldl). 7'"1'1.
146--ilevln 1111¥ CTICM.. c.....on. Sen Olelill. n-1 .. Trvy ..,..,_ IOU. Vhta GC, lonn•I. , .. ,,
NOTE JUI\ -•¥'Oft wlltl lltrellt °" 11r&1
.. ,,. !loll J) 9lllMn ~ .. lllrlt '°°''·
(If .... lt..o CC. IM!I V..,)
1'7-<lllrllt WHWoocl llarodl. Slrftf V111YI.
71·76 1.-v1SCN Feld (~A wast. L.a Quintal.
71-71; JOOll l .. (lot c--. --P¥ttl JS-74
1$>-;llMf"M ... ,.,..,.., o.i. (Nonft 11-11 •
Wwllllle V'MMtl, 7S.-11. OW1t hlNrl (Noni!
ll1Mfl. Wftlllk• V99e9l. 1'-14.. 1~~ Me CW.twll ._, O*'lol, no nines'"'...... . . NOTE. a.ii_.,. '"t....,,._., wotw1"1
... "' '"' oflnt IJltf'• ....... ....,.. CllMM!ad
lvr '-'6 ........ ~ •
9.75°/o '.'0'' ·Points .,
FI XED RATE/ ADJUST A BLE
( .
• 7-Day Loan Approval~
• No Cost Convertible AAMS
• Pre-Approved Home Loans .
• No PMI Loans
• Below Market Fixed Rates • 6May Rate Guarantee
. Celt John Beli1, Dlrect/PortfoHo Lender
(714) 250-~1 ~0 ·. ..
PACIFIC . FllST IORT&llif/ : , . . '\ ~~~~~~-~·
~ APR-=-t 17~ Meld MDOf\ 1009( Loen Amt. ~
T HE BOUSB DEBATE CONTINdEs •••
''whai Sets HOUSE Qf IM!'ORTS.Apartjrom the 0ReSt?
HOUAilDll'a.11
.,,,,.. Aki I -· Dlld8U/Tlt_ .. _
............... ... ... 4
. ... . .
,.. ...
Fed ready to raise inteEest rates
W ASKlNOTON (AP)-Tbe F•
eral Ractvc will bOoll a keY iatc:rea
rate widaia the neat moelll ud then
bopc that c:redit-tilbteDi.111 mo~ will
be eaoueb to keep iaftatioa ia cbect
until the Novemller election. many
analysts believe. .
Tbete economim laid they expect
tbe Fed to incrcue its ditc0unt rate..
th interest \be central bank dwJes oo
lous '° member bu~ frOm 6 percent to 6.5 pen:enL
Tbe Fed bu alreldy executed a
tcriet or thRC ti&htcniq movct badnnina in let.e March. but it has l btTd beck &om increuina its dilCOuot . rate, which ls tbe moct dramatic • · move tbe ceotial bank can make to
demomuate i1! intention to push
·.
During Our ~ummer Spectacular
PREMIUM
'
CHECKING*
Off~ you total liquidity,
· as wen as 7% simple interest
on balances from $10,000 to m.ooo.
And, there's no loog term
1 _' . commitment as with specific
~ term accounts.
Accessing your funh is as
~sy as writing a check!
.
:#· INSURED FOR SAFETY
-. Dcposics arc irisured up to $100,000
by the FSLIC, an agency of the
Federal G<Wemmcnt .
~n resuicrions apply.
•
. .
60-DAY . .
MATRIX*
I
l8S BRANCHES STATEWIDE
Call in.f ormaion for the
branch nearest you.
ENJOY EXTENDED HOURS AND FREE REFRESHME.NTS FROM 5 TO I P.M. WEDNESDAYS .DURING JUN
AMERICA
ANO LDAN ASso---·
r
ltl .
r
fl
Of~ co.I DAILY P.tlOTIT~ ......... 1•tt•
NEW YOlt~ (AP) Jun. 21 ,
•
,: AM EX LE ADERS .__ -
, Go Lo QuoTE S
L
Stock market prices rally
NEW YORK (AP) -Srock prioes rallied 10 liabt trading today, reboundin. from Moodav's broad decline. ._ T
As the day bepn, tradcn ~faced with news
of an increase in Bntish interest rates and an
ovenuabt decline in the dollar.
11ie dollar, however, showed "IJlS of stead-
yina ~ foreip excbanJIC as the day passed. Interest rates an the U.S. crcd.tt markets headed lower after
an initial rise.
Analysts said investors rema.totd oo~ed
over the drouaht in the Midwest after futures
oonuacu for several basic farm commodities
jumped by theu allowable daily limits on Monday.
Advanci.n1 issues outnumbered dechncs by
about 9 to Son the New Y ort Stock Excb.anJe. with
966 up, SIS down and '82 qncbanp
,I W H~T NYSE DID
I.
NEW YOttK (AP) Jun. a ,g
NYSE LEA DER S
Dow JoNE S AvERAG£S
I= --=-·
,' METQL S QuorEs
NASDAQ S uMM~R~ --
I ..
' ' 0
"
CALL 642-5878
COLDWeu.
BANl(eRO
,...~ ............... ~. --.... -·-.. -........ ..,_ __ _ ..... ____ ._ --11-·-·-...... , .. o... __ _ --.... -..... --~-~.,.. ... ,.....-_._ ... _.,,.._ ..__..... ...... .._er.
c ... -•-1et111tWt1 --. __ ... ____ ....., .. -....... -........ --.----.... "' ..... __ _ _ .. ____ _
, _ __,_
I
(
Motor Routes
,,,\
available in ..
W1lllli1d1r ~·
Huntlllfl• 1-••h
F1uid1in ¥11111
NO €OLLECTING
NO SOLICITING ..
Oeljver One pay a Week ..
Must have d8peridabl8 car
and proof of· lhiurence.
YtNI a.w=e Dlfeetory
Alpf-•t•t!Ye
141-4111 .... 110
WORK WITH ·~Kio MC KENZIE
(SPUD McKENZIE'S SISTER)
Wanna party all night and hang out at the beach all day?
FINElll
Just give us part of your evening aod your winning personattty ,
We'll give you a chahOe to make good money repreeentlng an
easy to MN, welt knoWn, reputable prodoet.
Guarenteed 88*y +Comm.+ BOOUMZ • $$$
In YOUR poCkM .
Celt COIMn at (714) 142~ Ext. 430 for more Into. Call
._.11n 3-9 pm or.._. a m1111ge ~and l'I Cllll youl
•
•
COME TO THE FAIR
WITH US
II• let Piii fw ltlll
The Dally Pilot ls looking .. for a few good
PeoPle to help atan our booth at the o.c.
F•~ FexJble hour9. poeeible Mure ~ploy"*"· (Fllr Detea: July 7-17}.
"you are relable. hive a pleasant, outgoing Del'8oMlttY 9nd enjoy talktng to people,
l:»CFASE CALL TODA YI
PIT.a.II
Ml-Ull:xUI
IOlia, I '*9 old, .... ~--· ,.. ........ 131901171
•111·1110'*
............ , .. ................... ......... ,....., -
., ...
ACURA ..,..* ........ MO::t:i~. CJPlllM.....,
•• IEl-•1ow.L1T .. N..a. 111-1171 Tiil H I
'1' AUDI eooo.
A/C, """°°' .... Good •9"'11a bill 1cs. ln-tlM
IU-1111 ..... ...........
***
-11111••t
~ • co.-C.1-lnQ. IOK mlea. Good tr .. 'l90'1altoll awt
..
STARTING A NEW BUSINESS??
The Legal Depaftment at the
OaJly Pilot Is pleued to an-
nounce • new Mf'VtCe now av111-
able to new bullneNa.
We wfll now SEARCH the
name for you at no eX1ra charge,
and save you the time and the
trip to the Court Hou• In Santa
Ana. Theri, of COWM, aft• the
...,ch " ~ .. wtll file your f~tttou• bulineel name
1t.-nent wtth the County Ci.tk,
~ once a ..-fot tout ..-1 • ~red by law and ''*' .. ~ J>foof of pubU-cettOil Witt! the eounty Clerk. ............ ....... ... ..,., • °"" JI , Cr•al•1 ....... c...-..
1HOlll1
BOYS a · GIRLS
MoMflj
·STARTllOW-.
II to IS Ye•n Oltl
WOllK KVllNINQI
AND SATURDAY
WORK IN YOUR OWN NEIGHBORHOOD
YOU CAN AVERAGE PER WEEK
•7
OR
00
ORE
CONTACT Mr. PhllHpa
PHONE (714) 418 •1
•
25CENTS
E .. -0 .leer admits pimping teen
~...,..~~~~-----~~~~~--.-~~~~~...-~~ Ptillty plea In Huntington sex·f or·drugs
case spares gtrls trauma of testifytng
., JONATll.AN VOLIU
·~--........
A fDrmer California Hilbway .Pa· trol .,..., pleadid pilty Monday
to cbaflN be pve teen._ prts cocaine while they ~ 11 prosti·
1U1abbiai.
Strong earthquake sways
Bay Aree akyltne./ M
acw.nor·e education
~ur~eweeplng
cMngee./M
Jada
William Scott Taylor, 49, siped a
written confesiion on wbat was to be
the third day of his pr:eliminary bearina before West Mun1cipel Court Judie Fl~ Schenk.
Taylor, who retired from the CHP
more than five years aao folJowina a
' .
Infant
chokes
on bag .
in Mesa
BJ .JONATHAN VOLUE °' .. ..., .......
An S.-mont!H>ld prt was killed
when the Costa Mesa infant apparent-
ly suffocated in a plastic baa kept near
her erib, police reported Monday.
Erica "Isabel Cabrera's father put
her down to sleep Sunday afternoon
and checked on the child several
times, but found her tanaled in the plastic bq ~bout 8:30 p.m., said Sat.
Sam Confetro .
.. He checked on her an hour before
and she was fine," the se,..eant said.
.. They had some dinner and checked
her ~n and found she wasn't
breatblllJ."
Cordeiro said Erica's perent's -
Crcscencio Cabrera, 21, and Latica
Gomez, 18 -do not have a phone in
their Carnation Street home, so they
rushed to a neiahbors houx to call
police and paramedjcs.
The child was pronounced dead at
Coastal Community Hospital in
Santa Ana.
.. Ev~y tried, but it was just
too late, Cordeiro said. A10
A3
84-5
Be-8
Ai1
An autopsy was to be conducted,
. but the ~t said the death
appeared iccidcntal. ..
AS.9
A8
A3
88
81-3
A2
. .
The li&htwei&ht plastic baa a~
parcntly was kept next to the crib to
bold the infant's dirty diapers, he
said.
Cordeiro said be has beard dozens
of waminas about kcepip1 infants away from plastic bqs, but this is the
first Costa Mesa case in which a child
suffocated with a bq.
moto~yde accident. kepi his had
bowed behind a tecurity ICnn
durin1 Mondn•s proceedia11. antweri~ I barely audible '"ya" IO
Scbenk's questions.
Prolccuton detciibed the j. tution rins u "informaJ.'" ptOI(
Taylor, accordinc to the accusa-tions. found youna auis roamina near dae pier, chien induced them IO ~
11 ~titutcs out of the converiea
M11n Street hotel wb~ he Jived. He
collected a fee, but peid the prls in cocaine and housina. authorities said.
The tcbeme was Dearly identical to
one in Lu Veps lb.at Taylor pleaded
pailty to l\Carly 10 )Un •· That cue, however, was reduced to a
misdemeanor and Taylor received
only probetion and a fine. Hunt-inaton kth Police deleCtive Randy .
Payne sa1d. •
Taylor's 1uilt~ plea Monday ca.me
after a SuperiorCourtj.,. indicated
be would likely sentena: the formett
San Bcmardino CHP off'teer to eiaflt
YC':'" in prison. Had t~ case JOM to
trial and Taylor convicted. be couJd
. . . . •'
bave received IDOft lb.an double that,,
eaid bit attorney, Grepy Jona.
Jona admitted it wu unusual for a
defeadant to c~ his pica in the
midst of a pttlimuwy bcariftf. He
aaid the offer wu made dunna a mectin& with Deputy District At·
1omey Connie Johnson and Superior
Court J udac Luis Cardenas late last
Mick. ..ll was an easy decision, .. Jones
said. "The likelihood he would have
been convicted was quite strona..
Ei&bt ycan is the hiah term on just
· First~round knockOut
Uad.lapated la•YJ1Nllbt champion lllke
'l)9oD raJMe b.18 anu Ill Ylc:tory u flilat
"promoter Don IUD& loob on followfnf
TJ'Ma·• tint nMUMI bockoat Ol IUdMael .
8plDb bl AtlaatlC City llonday m,t&t.
See dctalla ID 8polta. Bl. ·
Laguna
museum
selects
director
Appointment hoped
to bring long pertOd
of Instability to end
BDT llYNDIUN .......
Cbartes Desmarais. direct« Of tile
Cahfomia Museum of PbotolraPitY
at UC Riverside, bas been named die
new director of the i..uu. Art Museum.
Desmarais' selection wa an-
nounced Monday and culmiu1a a
seven-month search for a ditectcw '°
succeed Bill Otton, who resiped last
November lfte:r beldina the mutewn
for ocarly seven years.
Tbe museum·s board of directors
ldected Desmarais last week after ~more tban 60 candidates for the post. sajd museum
spokeswoman Ann Ntieid.
"He has obviously excellnt
credentials in the field, and oo top of
that be understands the art communi-
of Southern Califoraia, 1'bic:b is ~y important." Naleid said. tiis~~=-~~ His appoint.meat is expedild toelld
a period of instability aDd c:Unte at the ll'IUICWD.. wlt.icb bas beat a Lasuoa Beach~ siDce 1929. Tiie art mmewn, loc:atedjust north
of Main Beach in downtown Uipna
Beach, was doted for remodelins
from 1984 to 1916. Then in ~
~-LAOUWA/A2J
pc transportation chief's Safe-sane fireworks
promotion fizzles
as firefighters pass ~alary now tops governor's
t<immission hikes Oftelie's annual pay
~o $102.883 tn continued upward trend
., 908 VAN n&&N ...............
Tiie executive director of the
OrultCountyTransportation Com-?millioo won a pay increue Monday
:&Ut J*tl bit annual salary above that :of . U.S. Transportation Secretary
!Jamea Burn~ and Oov. Oeoflt •Deukmcjian." .
:: Siu Oftelie, 40. bean u director
:of'tbe c:ommiaion in f 913 at a salary ·Of'S50,004.
Moedly•a UDaDimoua action by the .commitUoe ateadl Oftetie•s con-
=tnct until I 992wlelnllelbis~ ! from itl praeot $92.604 to SI 02,183 ~for fllcal ~ I 91U9. .
:. EYCD bdJre tbe mcr..e, Oftelie•s
:111uy Wll ............ ttw. of the
~coaty'• tJuee OCIMlr top tran~:iatioa oftkiall: l.eitb MdCean. direc-
tor of Oranae County's ~ltrans
district office (S6S. 724), James Re-
ichert, teneral mananaer of the Or-an1e County Transit District
($86,613)andJohn Meyer1 director of
the Transportation Comdor A&en-ae. (SSS,000). ·
Commission members acknowl-
edsd that the salary was hi&h but
defended it as a wonbwhile expen-
diture.
.. TtaDlpOrlation is the most im-
portant issue in ~ County; I
wOold be emb9rrassed 1f it were not
for somethina 11 important 11 trans--
~" ~ commilaioner 0.na
Reed mid be believed the com·
mission Wll~lll its money's worth &om Oftelie.:
..... bowl how to IC( thinp
:· ........................................................ .
done," he said. "If be were in the
private sector, he could probably
double his salary.''
Oftelie's contracts over the years
have included automatic cost-of-
livina incTQSCS, plus the possibility of
merit increases of up to 7 percent.
Monday's vote on the salary in-
crease included the full 7 ~t increase, plus a cost-of-livina adjust-
ment of 4.1 percent based on a salary
review ratin1 of "exceptional"
Oftelie's salary has increased by
more than 10 percent each year, with
the .,.eatcst increase occu~· n from 1986 to 1987.t.. when it jum from
S77,320toS9"'604,about l percent
"That is where the bia increase
occurred,.. a.id Tom Fortune, a
~ f'ot the district. Oftelie llf'Ced with Reed and other
commillioll members that he is
worth the alMy bci~ paid to him.
"If you enluate it acCordina to
public betlicfta,, I think it worts out, ..
be said. .. It's a toe more than a teacher.
maybe tbai•1110t a itlhould be. But I
think I do more JOOd for society than
a bus player in a rock band, and I
certainly don't make nearly as
much."
He said he bad attained the bi&hcst possible mmt increue in each of his
salary reviews.
ltepraeatativcs of other tranSl>Of-
(1'1 ...... PAY/A2)
BJ 908 VAN BY&.EN .............
R~tives of the Costa Mesa Fire t were con.spicuousl)'
absent onday when a poup of
fireworks wholesalen pthered to
promote the vinucs of .. safe and
sane" fireworks.
The confcRnce was (lOnduc:ted
Mondat iJJ Sarita Ana by "'Niesent> tives o the \bree ~or rewortts
wbolesalen who do business -al~ouab dot 11 much as they once did
-1n the county.
Fa.reworks are permitted in only ci&bt ~ County cities. and
firewort.s distnl>utors said they bad
hoped Costa Mesa and rcpracnta-
tivcs from the other seven cities
wouldjoin in tbeconfercna:.
Earlier th.is year, industry repraeo-
tativcs work.Cd wath fire officials in Costa Mesa, Buena Part. Fullcrtoll.
Sta.atoll, Ganim Grove, West·
minster. OraQIC and Santa ADll.
which still aUoW ~ app;cwt fireworb. OD a tehCS of~
and fliers that warn the P'abliC ....
illcpl, exp&omvc fireworki Dd
pro~ pomtcn OD the d mt of
IC'.pl flreworb.
Jerald Farley, of tbe F~
baled Muic °"FD F~ C.0..
said be aW:d rcpcesentaaha oftM
ci&hl fire departments to ...-L I
in the press confereDce.. He mid ~ntativn &om all tk cidet
irutialty expressed intcrell.
.. Every (>icce of this malerill .._
devclopcdJOintlywitbtbe&re 111 •
men~ and every sinlle __. ..
approved by them. IO ~ tll 1 • ii
would be useful to bold a~ ....
conference." said F~. -W • pamiUy the fire ctaiefi• 1111 ' : voted not to putic:ipMe _. COW1ICd individual .,_, I from participatiftl. ..
But a COila Mesa 6R ~;1 his cScputmetlt Md DOI tima _ "'*-... naawce•._
~Training hi dealing
!With ethnic groups
!urged for deputies
Artist at odds with Sawdust boa~d
U>S ANGEl£S~AP) -A~ _,. ... fouDd pUty Moeclly Of ..... . dlild ____., .. cwtt!L~~~
Ille •1e·1 new anti-oblcenity law.
ofliciall .aid: Olr)' ,Jerome Levinson 38, ..a
coaviaed on five mildemcuor
coall ol. clia&ritMau. oblcenC ....
terialaiid one COUDi of advcrtiaina the ta.t~pbicmaterial ina cataJos.
Levinton said he wa&d't surprised
by the jury's verdict.
"We lost a battle, but we haven't
IOI& tbe """ Leviuon said. Levinson's lawyer, Willtiam Gray.
ten, uid be will appeat the convic-
ographer first
-~nder n~i3.~.od~··
.. Al horrific and 11 tnual u the nare of Pris. Thoee ~were t~n
..ICrial a.. it'1 atill a master of Finl dillftilliild by M..nip~ Court Judee
Ameedmeat •u." OnYICll aid. MarloD Obera. lut Deputy City AltOme'Y Mike Lcvinaon ~c:ea a muimum
Guarino said tbe material ~·filDi liPt· 1enaence of 31h years in priaon and
yean outside the C:Usto.mu'Y liniitt of $7,000 in flnn for distributin& ot>-•Ddanll ~pretled" in pomOlflphy 11CCnc Uteratu~. audio and video ~ undettbe law. tapn.. He is scheduled for sentencina
Juroq acquitted Levinson of one JU!}' 6.
count seemiwrina from hit appearance He alao races federal charses of u a iadiltic c:haractcr who tortures a di1tributina obscene material
boy in a videotape titled, .. Lltde Boy , throuah the mail( with trial in that
Snuft" case slated for Ju y 19. tr convicted,
The paJiel faiJed to reech a ventK1 Levinson could receive up~ to five
on two other counts 1temmi1'.'J from ycan in prison and a S2SO,OOO fine for
one-video dcaJin1 with bestiality and each count.
~
Standard, labels urged for light beer
SAN FRANCJSCO (AP) -Just
how liaht -lite. that is -arc low-
calorie American ~ ud bow do
those diet-conscious producu com-
pue with their competitors? 1bc
American beer drinker is entitled to
know, says the federal Bureau of
Alcohol. TobKcoand Firearms.
The aaency. chief resutator for
alcoholic beveraaes in the United
States. a few days qo inserted into the
Federal Rqister a request for com-
ment on a pair· of alternatives for
aolvins a definition problem on the
beers with fewer calorics that rcaular
brews.
Many replar U.S. beers range
around 13S calories for l 2 ounces.
The .. light" been are mostly 96
calorics, attained by two main
methods: use of the enzyme
amylOl)ucosidase, a fcrmentingqcnt
used efiminate residual sugar. and the
addition of water to dilute the
product.
The fint alternative proposes that
the word$ light and lite can be used on
the label if the product of a C'Crtain
brewer contains 20 percent fewer
calorics than the same producer's.. ·
regular beer.
For the second alternative, the
.,ency proposed that the brewer must
include on the label of the low.caloric
product the number of calorics in
both its light (lite) or regular brews.
EX--OFFICERADMITS PIMPING TEENS •••
ham Al
have to testify in court,.. Johnson
uid.
The prls, mostly runaways from
areas outside Huntington Beach1 are
back with their families ano in
treatment propams, Payne said.
Taylor was arrested in early Maroh
when polite ~nt to his Mam Street
apartment about two blocks from the
city's pier to serve an arrest wa1Tant
on a teen-.. girl, the detective said.
Payne said officers found a 14-year-
old 11rl at the apartment., and she told
them T~ylorpveberandat least four
other girts cocaine and housina while
they worked as prostitutes for him.
Taylor pleaded guilty to 28 chlt'les
ranaina fi'om unlawful sex wifli I
minor to pimping and pandering The
challC' stemmedJrom acts with five
girls~ one 13-ycar-old, one l S-year-
old. two 17 year olds and a girl in her
20s, Payne said.
The deteetive said Taylor received
regular disability payments from the
CHP, but probably made the bulk of
his income from the prostitution ring.
He did not advertise the service but
instead relied oo word-of-mouth and
the airls to bring in business.
"There were periods when the girls
went out for him daily," Payne said.
adding officers complied more than
400 pages ·of reports on the· ring.
"They would meet their customer
and 10 to a place of his choosing."
K.-.K•
WllHam Scott Taylor (bottom left comer) bldee Ida face
darlDC.• prellmtnary b~ while Ida attorney. Gre&ory
Jonee, loob o•er a confaalon ataned by Taylor. admiftinlf
teen-aae proetltatee worked for blm.
·Authorities s~ud Taylor will likely
serve his time in protective custody
because of t~ nature of the crimes
and his fonncr profession.
LAGUNA MUSEUM SELECTS DIRECTOR •••
FJ'OIDAl
1287, programs coordinator Michael
McGee, who was serving a the
museum's chief curator, resigned to
become curator of the new Modem
Museum of Art in Santa Ana.
Michael McManus was named
Oct. 19 to replace McGee as chief
curator. But less than two weeks after
that., Bill Otton resigned after servina
as mueum director since 1981. Otton
left to become president of the Art
Institute of Southern California in
Laguna Beach.
Since then . adm i nistrator
Lyn Seaquist has been the museum's
acting director.
• Desmarais, 39, has been director of
the California Museum of Photogra-
phy at UC Riverside since 1981.
Since last October. he also has been
authoring a column, "On Art," that is
published bi-weekly by a Riverside
newspaper.
From 1977 to 1981 , Desmarais
served as editor of Exposure, a
quarterly journal for the Chicago-
bascd Society for Photographic '
Education. And from 1977 to 1979,
he served concurrently as director of
the Chicago Center .for Contem·
porary Photogr:aphy.
Desmarais has a mdt~r's degree in
Fine Arts from State University of
New Y-0rk at Buffalo.
He and his wife Katherine Morpn
currently reside in O aremont.
FIREWORKS PROMOTION FIZZLES •••
l'romAl
courased from attendillJ.
"We didn't ever decide not to
attend. .. said Tom McOufT. the city's
fire marshal. "It's just that they 11eld it
on Monday and we did not have
anyone who could So···
Fountain Valley fire Olief Rich-
ard E. Jorsensen, president o f the
Orange County Fire Chiefs Associa-
tion, said Farley had also asked the
association to send a representative
to the press conference.
"We voted., our meeting on June
16 not to partic1pate," said Jorseosen.
"The official word is thal the majority
of fire chjefs in Oranae County
believe that all firework.s are danaer-
ous. ~
The auoc::iation is conductins its
own press conference today in Ora nae
to demonstrate its prcmue that all
fireworks, even the Jqal ones, can
cause ifljury and ~peny damaac.
But fireworks industry rcprcsenta·
tivcs say the vast majority offircs and
injuries a.re caused by fireworks that
are banned either by the state or the
fcdcral aovcrnment.. "It seems there is a lumpina toadhCr Of all fireWotb." said Pam bnelli. Of~tronia Corp., maker
of Rt'd Devil fireworks. "But it's a
~111111•
.._OWICE
S30 .... 911¥1t ,C:-...._ CA
bum rap. The fact is, 92 percent of
problems arc attributable to illegal
fireworks. ..
St.ill. Jo~nsen said there arc
enough injuncs resultmg from the use
of leaal fireworks to cause concern. "We·~ . particularly con~mcd
about sparklers, which bum at 1,000
dcarces. .. he said. "People give those
to two-year-olds to hold."
He said be was also worried about
the mixed message children are
reccivins from the sale of legal
fireworks.
"We continually teach children not
to play with' matches and with fire. ..
he said. ·~Now all of a sudden on the
4th of July we put all of these flaming
devices in at their disposal. It's j ust
not consistent education."
Allowina safe.and-sane fireworks
also makes it more difficult to detect
illeaal fireworks, Mc Duff said.
"l'vcbeen up in belicoptcnand ifs
hard to tell them apart when you look
down," he said. •·1 think that's one of
the most imponant arauments that
can be made apinst them."
Industry representatives respond
that a ban on all fireWOtts only
enCOUf'lleS J)eOple to obtain the more
dantcrout ones fro'm out-of-.tate and
----10o IMO COM .... C-' ...,_ c....... ..... ,N,8 ~' dtolllll ..Z..tJ21
Mexico.
.. You only ha vc to look at the cities
that have closed out all fireworks and
have seen increases in in)uries and damaJc," said Farley. "The point is,
there arc some people who arc aoing
to set fireworks, and they're not g.oina
to pt the bori n,, legal ones. They're
eoinJ to get the ill~I ones tha\ they
think are more fun. • ·
Mc Duff sai<\ he believed there was
some truth in the argument that
baruling all fireworks encouraged the
use of more danaerous ones such as
Roman candles and bottle rockets.
The number of cities permitting the
private use offireworks has dwindled
tn recent years. Fountain Valley,
Huntin&ton Beach and the county
enacted ordinances this year bannina
all fireworks.
Farley said be and other industry
representat ives hoped, throush
education, to persuade the rcmainin&
cities not to enact bans. "and to
convince some cities to lift their
prohibitions.
.. We think the facu are clear and
that they are on our aide:· be said. Alao appearipa at the conference
WU Tom Pcten. o( the Freedom
Fireworks Co. in Norwatk.
au 1tit11n
TUl .... 1111
U.S. Tem~ Tl 11 ., . ... • n .. 11 •• ,.. n
• n . ..
" t: • I t 1' • .. 11 n • n " 11 • 17 .. .. 11 . .. . .. ....
11 81
.. 14 n n . .. Tl .. 1t .. ,.1411 .. •a n 11 .. 11 . .. ., 71
.. 11 74 ;1 • 12
14 II n 81 •n • 11
10S 11 81 11
II to
Calif. Tempe
ARTIST, SAWDUST BOARD AT ODDS ••• . . •• ·: -:: Prom Al
"It's a lot of politics by people who
think I'm too big to be in that show,"
wxtand said.
·1 don't want to bad-mouth the
Sawdust Festival, but they're really
putt in& a lot of heat on me."
Wyland said he invited Sawdust
offietals to come to his studio so he
could show them bis jewelry work.
"I have ori~nal ·designs. every-
thing," he said. 'We're tryina to get it
worked out."
8'1t be also is considering legal
reco\fi\e.
"I told my attorney I'd like to avoid
the legal thing, but-it's clear there's
been a conspiracy to keep me out of
the show,·· he said.
Healy, president of the Sawdust
board of directors, said Wyland called
Monday and threatened to sue them
if they didn't permit him in the
festival.
In fact, the board is having trouble
fiaurina out what Wyland wants. ·
"He called me and said, ·1 will not
put my jewelry in, I will apologize to
the board and I will not seek an
injunction; " Healy said. 0 The VCfY.
ncxtdar, hilattomey said they'll sue 1f
we don t let him in the show.
· .. We keep heari~ he's saying some
board memben arc Jealous. We'd like
for him to say which board members
are jealous so we can sue him."
A pievancc committee met Mon-
day ni&ht to discuss whether Wyland .
shoukfbe permittecf to participate in
this year's festival, which is slated .
·from July 2 throuah Aug. 28. lfow~
ever, a decision misht not be r,tadc for
a couple of days.
But Wyland sugested their miqds
were already' madt"up. When festival
officials held their annual boot~.
siJnups, Wyland said he wasn't:
invited.
He said friends who called Sawdust
Festival offices were told WylancE
would not be in the show this year. -~·
Healy said the board simply wal·
following the rules. .. If he thin~
tomebody has an UC to arind, r~:
sorry," Heal¥ 1aid ... TJ'tat•s simpl~
not true." .
Wyland said many oftheanim hl
the festival depend on it to act them:
through th~ year. He d'oes welt
thro~fbo~t the year, but stm cnjo~
pa.r1tC1patana. :
"'{he Sawdust Is real imponant tO:
me," he said ... It's like a family do~
there. ..
.. But a handful of people~ out t~-
~eep l'JlC o~t." : ·.
' .
GRAND JURY.-vaGJts E'I'ilNic TRA:INING •••
Prom A l • ~ :~· ' · .
"And beyond that, we just thin.Jc i.t oft.be Commtss1on on Peace Offiocn
is aood policy for law enforctmenf · Slandards and Training."
people to be attuned to the cutturewf . • .
the people whom they ~~",·W~ But the report also found that most
think it makes them better omt:e'f;" • instructors -taavc little or no back-
. • I ... d lf'OUnd m teachina methods and The JUry s report a so re<Mnmc.n _. recommcn~ed that they be required
O~ County's jalls receive mort train~OJ in ways to prevent incidents;
requmna violent or forceful;
responses. ~?
The Sheriff's Department hascomt:
under fire from the American Civil: ed that instructors at lh~. Shcnff.-s · · to" obtain , minimum of six college Oep~rt~ent a~cmy receive. ~o~ ,,credits in teKher trainins before
traan1n1 in teaching methOd~.. . ~·:being' assianed to the trainiDf
The report p ve .generally high academy.
Liberties Uniori over the past 12 Year\
for allcjed USC of eXCC$$lV~ force:
qlinst inmates at county jails. . :? .
marks to the department's training ..
staff and concluded.th.at the 18-wcelt In a "'Separate report deallna with
Sheriffs Department Basic Academy trainini. the Grand Jury recommend~
"meets and exceeds the ~uu~~11ts ed that deputies assisned to duty at
PAY RAISE:IN.F AST LANE •••
l'rolll Al . ,
tation agencies said their ~ircd'on iet·~idetines for iocreues.
were not pven automatic annual ,
cost-of-livina adjushnents. · · . ···n. board of di.rectors reviews it
Reichert. whose salary bn .mdre · based on a c;omparison with what
than doubled from its o~nat other iiistrict scneral manaoaers are
$40,SOO during bi.s I O'h year1 as · mak.ina, and kecpinJ in mind the pool
transit district general 'rnanqer, is-of what other dismct employees are
reviewed each year and there are nb mak.ina... said Claudia Keith, a .
Assisiant Sbelj.ff Walter W . Fath!
Jr., who is in charse of t.rainins. said!
be could not -comment until be bad:
received and read the jury's reporu. ~ .. .. :·
~.~ -: ~='
spokeswoman for the district. . ~
McKean, as an appointed state!
official. tets only the annual cost-o~"
livina increase approved by ~
aovemor, uid Albert Miranda, •l.,i
lpo\csman for Caltrans. There is no·_ ~ibility for merit increases, . ~
l&Jd. ~ -~
He pauses for
· a moment . . . J
-· 1 •• to refl ect
on all he has ach ie~ea. ~ ,,
,• ... ..
He feels arcat and looks ·.
" . . . .
.
. ..