HomeMy WebLinkAbout1988-06-30 - Orange Coast PilotNon-teacht~personnel ~eted as ·
~ewport-Mesa cuts S4M rom budget
bard by bucfeet cuts II the Slate and federaJ levdl.
f.arlict, die clistric1 il'eed IO ter• miaate 27 le8cben and pmueded
about 90 otben to accept early
miraneat C-C~ said Nicoll
Tbat mow 11vcid t6e district ab<Mlt S3
million.
Newport.Mm chapter of the Cali·
fotnia School Employees Associa--
bon, said IOlnC of the cuts could result iD a lower quality of tcnice for t.be
ditcrict.
.,GW•IAl:X ...........
ntNc.r.M-Uaiiied School Dil&riet · lay off 11 many aa 61
-Dk>Yea bd'oft 1he ~ of'tbe IDt ·Kbool_,.r 11 .,.n otu X: lO
trim about S4 million from its ......
Tbe tcbool board apptoved the
UCl'a Mike Briggs, Trevor
Kronemann will represent
U.S. In International Jun-
ior tennis toorney ./C1
I
World ! ·
Vatican excommunicates
Archbishop Marcel
Lefebvre after he con-
eecrates four bishops of
hit tr8dl11onallat move-
ment./ M
Inda
cu&a tbil week wbile couiderina the
district's $61 million budeet for
19U-89. The laYGI& alone are ex-
peCted lO ave ck distiict about SI
million, iaid Supaituendeot John
Nicoll.
The cutbecb are the latest in the
district ~ like many otbcn
throqbout the state, bas been hit
-nil ii 1he result of aoina into a
very Md deficit year brOUlht OB by
cbaJss at the state level, where there Wiiia°' even enouah money to bf'C8k even." said Nicol[
ManbaU Bryan, president of the
"Tbe)''re not aoina to be tettina the
services they're uled to ~tins. I
JUC11 the district is prepared lO accept
that. .. said Bryan.
The cuts include layiftJ _ off l 0
CUSIOdians, three sroundStecpers.
and several plumbers, m«hanin and
teachers' aides, he said.
The district also will lay off its only
Drug money ,
Coeta .... PoUoe c.w Daft 8aowdea
waru aboat tbe ...... of .....,_ 1D local
ecboola wlille aprlrt~ at •ectODal
Jfarcotlea Sapprnmloa Tiak Poree prw
coafueace Wed.needay, wlaere 8•.2 •tlllon
1D .-pected dJ"aC 1DW7 WU ~ed in a cof!IA. T1ae moaq wu 9el In a
lloatebello raid on Monday. Story on AS.
'1:r
~
25 CENTS
two caipen~. erYan warned the
tchool boeld Tuesday that if the
district tried lO contract out for work
done by the c:arpmtcrs, the associa-
tion would file an unfair labor
practice pievance.
s~ &here ii little the assomtion
can do about the layotrs.
..About the only thi~ we can do is
try and ovcnee cverytluna and make
sure the 19offs are done accordina to
seniority, said Bryan.
The district's allotment from the
state bu been cut jn half since the
l 98S-86 fiscal year, While a.. ....
increased at a sleldy rate. liW "'911.
The resultina deficit has._. cllll
district to borrow from 1--..
reterVe funds, and the fact die • •Wflll owes itsdf about S4 aijljoei '9 ''twWna out there like a time.._~ ..
said ~icoll.
As an added problem. ii9ia
teachers are still without a c••et
and have indicated ~-bit .;..,
actton when school resumes ill e.
fall. Teachers arc ul)Slet !lecm•....,
(Pleue Me LAYOWN/A91
RecOunt stirs
Irvine Council
seat scramble
Cosgrove backers
petition registrar -
to check for errors
By GREG &.LERU ... ~ .......
With the status of a new etccuon
law still in limbo. council members
and would·be council members tn
Irvine are pla)"ln& an increasingly
confusing pme of politicaJ musical
· chairs over a vacant seat.
Things became even more com-
plicated this week when supporters of
councilmaD<Jet1 Cameron C05_F'Oye
applied lO the Oransr County Re&is-
trar o(Voten fora recount.
C~vc finished 106 votn t>e.
bind uxumbent Sally Anne Miller.
who finished behind Paula Wcrnef'.
Two council seats were up for pabs
on the June 7 ballot. but the ckction
qf Larry Apu as the city's mayor
also vacated his council scat. There
will not be an dectioa for that
-ti n on the council until 1990.
cumnt city dection la'W'I.
ve wins th.It scat t>y~'11t as
the third hiabest vote-tetter.
However, a new measure approved
by Jtvine voters on June 7, lcnown as
Measure 0 , 11ves voters the option of
petitioning for a special election lO fill
the third seaL
Such a petition drive ts currently
beina led by Miller, who would be the
lone conservative on the council if Cossrove aeu the seat. Peti&ioaal have until Ju.ly IS lO collect the
approximately 3,SOO sipaturn
necessary for a special dedion, said
City Clerk Nancy I.Mey.
However, the petition drive c:oWd
be moot if Coscrove is sworn in
before Meas.u.R D is validated by the
council and scaetary of swe. The
council was set to . validate the
measure Tuesday, but the vote was
pcmponed until Ju.ly 12.
If Measure D is validated by tbe
council. the City Clerk must m:cive
state validation by July 20, the day
Cosarove and other council members
are sla1ed to be sworn in.
Lacey said it takes a minimum of
two lO three wiecks lO certify dcctioa
results, which ~ mean Masure
D would DOl be validated uatil July
26 at the earliest. Sbe tUd the proc::as
took three months after the election
last November.
Frank Lundina. a traffic com·
missioner and Cotpove su~. 'i,UCS1£d the f'eClOUUt Tuesday. unctina sa.id the ra.,.,i• behind
the IU'OU.D1 request was liln)llc.
-'Thole I 06 vot.es are JllmdiQS in
the way of (C~e) 11!Uin1 a two--
year term or a four-year tcnn. &rots
do bapPm. mist.Ues are made. .. said Lunc!,."'o . . __ ... _ ...... ve lS 00 VIC&tlon auu l.'UU.lU
not be reached for comment.
The election of COllR>vt and
Werner. bDcraJ allies of Aaru. aJoaa
(Pleue-llSCOUltT I .&2)
Advice and Games
Birt ha
BUHetln Board .....
Cluaifled
Comics
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Jury Cle11ttpolice in jailing of epileptic
Deeth notice
Entertainment
Optnlon
PoUcelog
Public Notices
8porta
Weather
By IONATBAN VOLUE ... ~ .......
Hwatinaton Bach police officcn were not nqliierit when the_y jailed an
epileptic wbo the)' m1stakcnina
the>\&lbt was intoxicated. a Superior
Court jury decided Wednesday.
The jury deliberated less than six
boun before decid.ina police officers
DA to get data on
Cox phone tieups
Newport poltce say . cans were traced to
Rosenberg backer
behaved properly when they UTCSted Bruce Usbcr, wbo suffered two seiz-
uru while in the city's jail.
Usbct, 32, wu drivina near Pacific
Coat ffi&bway and Bach Boulevard
in 1912 when be suffered an epileptic
seizure, lost consciousness. and
cnsbed his car into a block wall.
WbeD police anived. they aUeaectJy
noted \hat Uiber's speech was slurred
and bis behavior confused. Officcn
arrested Usher on suspicion of driv-
ina under the inftuenct of akobol or
druas, accordina to court records.
But at one potot -Usher coii.erids
it was immediately after the aocidt1lt.
while police say it was later-offim's
were told Usher was epi~ and
even &iven bis doctor•s aanlC. a
Usher was placed in the ci~s~l.
and while makina a telephone call to
arrange bail, be sUffered a seizure and
was taken by ambulance to a hosoital.
He was released from the bo$pitaJ
hours later and taken back to the jail,
where a supervisor ordered him
released from custody. But the pro-
cess took several hours and Usher
suffered another seizure. court re-
cords show.
HB leads Coast in a crime
with no solution: Murder
E. Day Cannan, Usher's ·~:
ued that officen ~~ ~and federal rqulations ......... ina medical treatment of jail ia= r 11 r
Usher asked for S 150.000 ill ..._
IFS. but jurors in the week-loal aw decided the city acted JXOl)Cl1y. -
Los Anaeies anomey· naa.. J. Feeley. who rcpruenticd the day,._ (PleMe-JV•t.,.,
Banker
accused of
thefts for
gambling
--~-· .... ..........
llnlalilwO....CoUIJ"•llder-" _. ..,.....•a•• .......... Mid ialiwo• IS Jllia ...... aidcaluw. ~ .............. otlbe
~Coaly<lrnd Jwy.
la a •mmery Of CCMICWDI ideftt. iW by &be jury"a HUIMD Services
Committee. memben DOied that
studies over tbe • two ~ have lbowD that OrUS Couaty.could be on tbe veqit" ol a criiil in the
availllbility OI bealtb care fbt the
pqor.
.. la molt counties. indiaent pa-
tients IR ~ ~ the county
bolpillll. ~ COunty bu no county boilpi~ tbe IWllllW'Y says.
The coaunittee sum~ aoet on to •Y i11at ua Meer Center, wbicb wu tonnetly tbe county hospi-
tal, ba been proviclina medical
letvicel to tbe poor fat the put l 0
yean under a county contnct. But that IGVice may be near its end.
-rbat COlltnct bu exJ)i.ftd and
UCI bu indicaled that they may not
be-inla'elted ill renewinl the con-
tract. Tbat cOuJd leave Or&naie Coun-
ty with no facility to provide medical
care for tbe ind.ilent."
The reaon. accordina to a 1987
study by United Way. ii that hospitals
are k>lina money on medical terVices for tbe poor because the compensa-
tion bema pven to them by the
county does not equal costs.
June Galante. a member of the
THEFTS ••.
l'romAl
checks. the dei.ective said.
.. He was goina throu&h the
prescribed procedure,.. lfalloway
said. •1be account numbers be used
for the cbecb were numbers from
ICCOUDts that were closed. but be even
took the files home so they couldn't
tJ1a ~that way."
The asaociation overlooked the
ICbeme in one audit but found the
dilcre~ in a second review. Aslociation offtcials then confronted
Beauchamp, who allepd.ly confessed.
.. We just kept diaina and diging, ••
Halloway said.
Beauchamp's brother is not IUSPCC1ed in the allqed scam because
be .6ad turned his bank accounts over
to Beauchamp, Halloway said. The
detective also described the brother u a .. P!Dblina addict."
"His brother was losina so much.
be pve Beauchamp control of his
account so Beauchamp could deposit
and withdraw money at will,.. Hal-loway said. .. He never knew what was
aoinaon."
Halloway said Beauchamp, who
lives with bis wife and child. was
analed June JO and releatd on
$10,000 bail He is scheduled to be
am.ianed on arand-tbeft charaes July
11. ffe was unavailable for comment. .. It'll be interestina to see what happens." Halloway said. .. He may
have to tell bis house to repay what he
took.."
care
H ..... 511 ficlelCommita. llid die lmY la ·wit did MC bave .... lllDt ._,....todo1 com.-.. •lllPGft
-... Med '°' i ...... t mcidical .-.ica
"1Tbl CIOllDmillle bu ncomlneftdo
ed 0.1 tbe aew OrUd Jury take it up.
bu& Iha&. of c:ounc, will be up to
them." lbe iaid. O.Wc felt it WIS an
ana 1Q'lh lookiaa into."
Galante ii oae of three jurors who elected to ltrVt a aecond aenn with
tbe iiewly appointed Oraad Jury. But
sbc Uid sbc would ooi be lerviQS on
next yar'a Human SCrvica Cominit-
*· Two ueu that were &be au~ of
full studies and reP'.OfU this year were
nutrition terVica for the eklcrly and
boerd and care homes.
A 1Nnantement review of the
county's Area A,ency on Alina by the
Costa Meu finri of Dcloitte. Haskins
and Sells found that the qency lacks
formal. wrineD ~am for .......~WtdllautritioMI ....proWWt.
la ......... ,.,rt allo dali111
wbb ltf'Vicea -.. ~. the jury buMl that '"tbcR ii no System
available ta Or-. Cowlly wberiby
a dtizen can request anct ~ve
ICCUlate information Oft board and carebOmes. ..
Tbe jury ciled fincti"ll by the
COmmiuion on CaliftliD.ia Staie
Orovernment <>rpaization and
Economy-more c:oaunoaJy known
u &be Little Hoover Commission -
indicatina thal tbete were a taree number of unlicmled boeid and care homes in Oran,e County and numer-
ous cues of abu1e and mittttatment.
Tbe jury recommended that tbc
County Board of Supervilon f\Jnd a
comprehenaive information system
to help people chOOIC q~ity board
and care homes.
LAYOFFS LOOMING •••
hoaAl
are not beina offend a salary increase.
Despite the fiscal aJoom and doom. Nicoll said be is optimistic that ~ter days are ahead. The 1988-89
b~t a~v~ by the school board
requues no further borrowina. ••1 th.ink they (budaet problems) are
reversed as of tomorrow when the
new (fiscal) yeas: bqjns," said Nicoll
.. We are aoma into a year where at
least OW' assets exceed OW' liabilities. ..
Nicoli's optimism stems from an
increase in the district's property tax
revenue, which accounts for the
majority of the revenue in the new
bu<1aet. The district bas just be&un to
recover from Proposition 13, which
froze property taxes and put the
C' OD district ~ said icoD. Pnlpocitioa 13, .,..... in 1971,
abo l'Dadc diltricu dependent on
ata1e for dleit budleti. be iaid. Tbi~ct's ovenlJ: ddicit ii
cunntfy Dl'O.iected at Mc>ut SS
million, wi Nicoll iiid be eXl)eCU to
reduce that amount by about SI
millioD iA the comina year.
Tbe battle over the saic•s 1913-89
education budlet is ltil1 beina ~
in Sacrame1lto, and tebools are
currently Ioli.Qt. The state Lep.lature
receatty moved to cut the 4.1 perunt
inc:rate propoted by Gov. Dtu-
kme.iian down to about 2 percent.
aaidNicoll.
Carpenter iinpaled, dies
A Costa Mesa carpenter who fell
and was impaled on a metal Pole at a
work site bas died of his wounds. the
Orange County Coronet's office re-
Ported Wednesday.
Antonio Moreno, l 9, was working
on an apartment project Monday at
the comer of MacArthur Boulevard and Ford Road in Newport Beach
when be fell from a scaffolding, said
Ron Stanzak of the coroner's office.
Moreno fell about 2S feet and struck a metal pole that piermt bis
stomach and uited his side.
The carpenter reportedly managed
to free himself and walk a shon
distance before sittina down follow-
ina the 4:37 p.m. accident.
When paramedics arrived. Moreno
was conscious and talking.
They rushed him to Fountain
Valley RcaionaJ Hospital for treat-
ment. However, Moreno died of his
wounds just before 4 a.m. Tuesday,
Stanzak said.
RECOUNT SOUGHT •••
FroaaAl
with Councilman Ed Doman, leaves
Miller as the lone conservative on the
council. Seeltina to avoid a speciaJ election, Aaran attempted to pass an u,.ency
ordinance on June 14 to bump up the
date for swearina in the new council
However, the ordinance required
four votes, and Miller's opposition
doomeel the proposal. The swcaring-
in date was set for July 20.
The council did certify the results
of the mayoral race Tuesday nilht, as
well as validatina Measure C, the city's open space ordinance.
St.II rrlter Lnlle Evant CM-trllHlle4 ,. ,.,. ttperf.
U.S. Tempe. .... ~ .. n C-Hf. Tempe . btended .. Le NewY.,_Olly • .. OllWlolM Clly • 71 .-........ .... OilMlle • t: =='"'°'~---=· a IZ ONNll • = .................... Lift 14 n "'•fl!J ... .. .. ltvOlllll .. --MIMJ deyt Lllll• oli.... HI MllM!cOlly 11 .. ....... .. IZ
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~Wwttl .. 11 ..... 10 " ==-:ha 11 .. ,..., ....,, *""'°"' ,... = =· •• .,._ .. a 71 .. ....... ~ ,..
17 II ~ ....... • IO ...... 17 .. ........ ~ . ,... .. .. 11 ........ .. tt S4 -0. ....... II 12 ........
~ T1 ., T.,_. ,: • ....... .., 14 "°"'9endlrlt ·,u-~~ . .. ~ Ml9I a• T\MMll 14 ...... 7t t-4 Tulle • ,, .,.. 11 11 ...... .. . .......... .. • 11 w....-.o.c .. • II:' IO 41 .......... Soul .. ........ .. .. WlcHle • 10 .. 13 :-: .. :,,,, .,. a =. 101 •
77 .. II IO Tldea HoMMll IO 7t C...Cllw 11 a ......... • 1' Smoa R9J)4)rt .._ t7 • INILll•••• 11 " ~= 74 a ........... 10. n 11 • TOOAY ... .... .. 11 PoMlnt ......... tie .... ::i::ew .. IO ...... t :IOp.111, a A ....., . .. ~·-~10· -1oe a 8-Ml'llifl 10·11111.m, ..
..... Cll1 ... f1 200-M wry wl -M:-~..::---11 ., .. .-. ,,.,. .. l:S' Liii u L.9~ -., _. ""°"' .__ ••• ,.,. ...... IO ll a.. .... ,. 10 ..,...... .................. ,....,...
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~ " 17 IOIM(•Pll~ ,..... .. ,, U5PJll. u = '!': • -71 ........ . " '9oondNlll\ 10'.67p.A ... ., " ... ...... ~ ........ -... , ... ._.., 11 81 11.w! ..... ''°' It.Ill, ""' ,,...., • ....... . .. .,....., rat·~-•• ,_ n a ..... "' 1"41 ........... ,fll. .._...,...
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Three U.S. ftghterjetsdestroyedjn crashes
BODENHEIM, West Germany
(AP) -Mili~ iovestiptors today
examined debris of two jet crashes
that killed an American pilot and
destroyed three U.S. Air Force f·l6 fiahter planes in one day.
The accidents Wednesday broucht
.
to five the number off-16 ~~.:' that have c:rubed in Wat y
in the past three months.
Two of the jets collided in the air
Wednetday, and a third crashed and exploded in the Black Fomt. Tracy Burnett, a ~man for
the SOth Tactical Fighter Wina at
Hahn Air Base, said one pilot wu
kiUed after the F-16s collided durina a
training maneuver.
Burnett identified the dead pilot as
CapL Michael A. Crandall, 30. His
hometown was not available.
PHONE-JAMMING DATA GOING TO DA •••
Pl'OIDAl
the case on a back burner. Police
officers invcstjpliftlao allqied crime routinely decide whether to ••pitch''
the case to the District Attorney for
prosecution, and that office has the
final say in the matter.
Jn thts case. Newport Beach in-
vestiptors decided there waan 't
eno"4b evidence to even ao to the Distnct Attorney's office, Oakley
said.
"There's no way to teU who made
the phone calls.." Oakley said. ••lJut
because of the political sensi tivhy, we
are tcndina copicsof aJI ofour r:eJ?O"'S
to the District Attorney's office. •
Wade said his office will review the r reporu.
..Before ~ can officially reject a
case we have to look at the paper work. .. aaid Deputy District Attorney
Wallace Wide ... And we haven't seen
anytbina in this cue."
Wide aid Newport Beach .,alice apperently announced the District
Attorney's office rejected the case
after a telephone call bet,ween a
District Attorney investigator and
police investiptor. At that time. the
police officer apparcntl_y thou&ht the
Distnct Attorney's office was not
interested in the case.
0 We always have Jittle informal
tel~bone callsi" Wade said. "But we
don t want to c ose -or file -a Cue
based on an informal telephone
conversation."
Cox, the Republican candidate in
the 40th District, will face Democrat
Lida Lenney in November.
FIGBTF ANS PUMMEL CABLE TV FIRM •••
Prom Al
MURDER STATISTICS REPORTED •••
error that affected some for which we
are truly sorry," she said. Patterson
said those who didn't receive the
broadcast will be '1ven Cftdit. The
problem is being mvestipted. She
said up to S,000 people received the
telecast. she said.
The bollin& match waan't the first
time that Roten Cablesystems view-
en have felt abon cbanacd while tryina to watch a ~or sportina
event Technical problems resulted in
a blackout durin& a critical basketball
playoff pme last year and durina the
1986 Rose Bowl pme in which local
football star Matt Stevens led the
UCLA Bruins to victory. ~oaen Cablesystems scTVes 1bo11t
7S,OOO customen in Huntinston
Beach, Fountain Valley and other
cities 1n western Oranae County.
From Al
injury but not death.
Authorities said that while many
crimes can be prevcnled -or at least
steps can be taken to leuen the
likelihood of them occurrini -
homicides are a different story.
"We cenainly don't know any way
to stop them as Lona as you have
thillfS bappenina in the heat of
passion." Olson said. Newport Beach P~Hce Lt. Tim
Newman said population is one
indicator of the number of killinp a
city will have, but be added there are
others.
"Obviously, the more people you
have, the more crime of any type you
have," Newman said. .. But the socio-
economic factor also seems to have
19mcthina to do with iL
-rbe per capita income in Newport
Beach is pRtty sipificant, and we
tend to have fewer homicides than a
city of similar size but lower income."
Newman said most of the homicides in Newport Beach have
involved people who knew each other
as family, lovers or business partners. ··we do have some of the 'stranaer
in the ni&ht' cases, but that is
definitely die exception," the lieuten-
ant said.
Hunti.ncton Beach Police Sst. Bill
Peterson said some sociolOJists think
the murder rate climbs as the
temperature rises, or on holidays
when tensions are hi&h.
"Those guys just aive past history,"
Peterson said. .. You can't take it to
the bank."
Peterson said solvina the crime is a totaJly different story.
"If you don't set your guy in the
first 24 to 36 hours, your chances of
ma~ an &JTest ao down signifi-cantly. the serpant said. ••Thinas go
cold, witnesses 10 away, evidence is
losL"
No <Jne wins Lotto jackpot
BJ Tlte Aaedate4 Prat
The California Lottery "Lotto
6-49" jackpe>t ofSS.4 million will roll
over and be added to Saturday's prize
pool because no one correctly auessed
all six numbenchosen in Wednesday
ni&ht's draw, lottery officials said
today.
The projected prize pool for Satur-
day will be over S 12 million, lottery
apokawomao Sheri MOSIC1t said.
Wbile no one selected six numbers,
there were four tickets with five of six
numbers plus the ~nus number.
ORANGE ....... COAST __ ,.._
llWOFl'a
..... .,., ... C-..... CA ' Miii ..._ Ioli t5e0 CoUa ....... CA ~
Ticket holders will sha~ a pool of
S 1.4 million.
There were 297 tickets with five of
the six drawn numben and holders
will share a pool of S7S4.000. The
pool for four of six numbers.
S68S,OOO, will be shared by I S.317
ticket holders, Ms. Massett said.
There were 296.311 tickets sold
with th~ of aix winnm1 numbers.
They are wonh an automatic SS.
The winnint numberi sclce1ed
Wcdni:lday ni&ht were 2. 9. 19. 20. 24.
2S and the bonus number. 36. •
Police qencies hit the streets .. with
everythina we've aot" immediately
after a slayina to pther as much
evidence as possible. no matter how
insi&nificant it appears. he said.
JURY'S VERDICT CLEARS BB POLICE •••
Prom Al
.. We've aot to talk to everybody
who even remotely bad any contact
with the victim, no matter how
ali&J'lt," Petenon said ... Every minute
piece of evidence helps, even if you not available for comment, but an accident," Cannan said. ..But I serious mistake. The evidence un-
doo 't realize it right away." Cannan -.id jurors apparenUy were don't' think that was the issue... disputcdly showed that Huntinaton
Peterson said detecttvcs usually awaycd by dru& tests that showed Beach violated its own regulation and spend the first two days of a homicide Usher had not regularly taken bis The attorney aaid be would appeal that the law is they should have not
investiptioo pthcrin& evidence and medication. to Superior Court J ud&e Richard 0 . put a ~n with a history of teizura
don't even take the time to -rhere was ·a pharmacist on the Frazee Sr. to let asKle t6e jury findina tnto jail.•• Carman said. "But they
thorouply review the evidence until jutytbatlthinldnfluencedthejuryby and make an award to Usher in did, and left him there."
after the first crucial 24houn.areput. sayina if there was no druc in Usher's addition to ukina for a new trial. He Usher testified during the trial, but
..If you've done it all pro-system, be was not takina bis medi• aaid be would make both motions was at bis Detroit bome when the
fessionally, you'll have a handle on it cation, and if be bad taken the within the next month. jury'a decision was aonoun<:ed and
by then." he said. medication, there wouldn't have been .. , think the jury made a very wa unavailable for comment
But even then, arrests don't always i;i!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!i!!i!!!!i!!!!!!!!i!!i!!i!!!!!!!!!!!!!i!i!~!!!i!!!!!!!!!!!!i follow. The auys on television wbo set their man every week are a far cry
from the real world.
In Huntinaton Beach, police cleared just two of their six 1987
homicides. Irvine police and the
Sheriff's Department bad the only
other unsolved murders on the Or-anee Coast. one in Irvine and two in
county territory. .
Newport Beach, Costa Mesa and
~una Beach each made an arrest in
their &iri&le murder cases.
County statistics were not avail-ablc1~utatewide. l,92Softhe 2,929 alavmp were solved.
·f1t•1 bit-and-misa," Peterson said. ··The numbers could ao up or down
DCXt year without us doina anytlllina pn>orcon."
In 1916, Hunti~n 8eKh solved
I rapectable 0vc Of its leVCft
murderl. Nat year. the retord may to to
aomcbody cbe.
Knit Shirts
Sweat Panes
Sweat Sb.lru
1Jpper Shirts
SwtmTrunb
Reg. 13S.OO MR 119.00
ltg. S4S.OO "-tJS.00
aq. ••s.oo "°" sis.•
leg. S6S.OO N9w t5J.OO
... 127.SO IWs 119.0I
~-. .. 1!1671 ~' '°'°'* .. l~11 JuatcaU 642-8088
Clll I Ill .., ....... ..
uthe'
t constituents
He only won me Republican nomination. but
tome people appa~ntly ep"t Mit for Chris Cox IO
lake office in the 40tb Colllf'Hl,ional OistricL His
campaian headQuaners in Nrwpon kat'h hi•
recctvod a hindt'ul of requet11 from con1tituen11
ncedina a con~ssman·a help.
Anyway. Cox isn't in1tte1~ in hrlpina
an)'bod)' th as week if he can hrip it. He's vacadonina
ih Hawaii befo~ anrina up for the .-:ncral election
race qainst Democratic nonunce Lida l...mM)'.
Cox's staff' forwarded the coMtituent mail to
the current holder ofthat iob. Rep. Robert Ba4h&m. ,. ~ .
Badham. who terved an the 1tatc Lcaislaturc
before mo .. in& 10 Conartss. no&ed earlier ihi~ ~ear
that Sacramento wor~ much btner in the days
When ttprcsenunives served P1n·time and panisan
politics was less .. -olati&c and not so paralyzin& to
cft'cctivr aovcrnment
A new
• survey by Cali-
fornia Journal
mapzine con·
PAUL firms that state
leaislators a..... adhere almoit 11111i11IPLEY rchaaously to ••••••••••lill•I party Jines when voting
on controversial bills. Surveyors studied legislators'
votes on 45 bills that "clearly distinguished political
philosophy."
Along the Oranle Coast. Assemblyman Dennis
Brown. R-Lona Beach. who represents most of
Huntington Beach. proved to be the mo.st con-
servative of the three local assemblymen. Brown
cast a conservative vote 97 percent of the time.
He was followed by Assemblyman Gil ~rguson. R-Ncwpon Beach. who garnered a 94
cent conservative rating. The most "liberal" of
three was Assemblyman Nolan Frizzellc. R-
untain Valley. who turned in an 88 percent
nscrvatave rating.
Of the three. only Brown·s voting tttord grew
re conservative between the 1987 survey and this
r's. up from 95 percent. In '87, Fcreuson was
re conservative with a 97 percent rating as was
zzellc with a 92 percent ratanJI,.
On the other side of the aisle. nine Democrats
achieved 100 percent liberal ratings. including
Assemblyman Tom Hayden. D-Santa Monica. and
Assembl¥man John "Self-Esteem" Vasconcellos.
Oranae Countaans will be surprised to learn that
Assembly Speak.er Willie Brown is actually more
conservative. having achieved only a 97 percent
liberal ratina. ·
In the upper house. of Orange County's three
most prominent state senators. John Seymour. R-
Anaheam. is the most conservative with an 82
percent ratinf. Sen. William Campbell. fl-Industry.
achieved an 0 percent raung.
Sen. Marian Bergeson. R-Newport Beach. came
out just right of center with a 61 percent raung. In
fact, compared to the I 987 survey when she scored
an 81 percent con!>Crvative rating. Bcrgt'son has
moved cons1dl'rably lefi.
Sacramento watchers won·t be surprised 10
learn that the most conservative senator of all. with
a 100 percent rating. 1s H.L. Richardson of
Glendora.
At the other extreme. fi ve Democrats scored
perfect tOOs on the liberal scale.
Do the more liberal voting records oflocal and
statewide tcJislators this year over last indicate a
move to the left? Probably )'lOt. Many lawmakers sa)
the movement actually is in the other d1rect1on. It's
just that the Democratic maJonty 1s authonng more
conservative bills that moderate Republicans find
palatable.
Heeding back to what Badham said about
partisanship and effectiveness. Bergeson 1s the
perfect example of a legislator who tempers her
political philoso~h). although not her pnnciples. to
achieve success. Extremists on both s1dt'S of the aisle
should take a lesson from her. • • • Democratic nominee Pat McCabe probably
shouldn't invest too much encray into hercampai~
to unseat Beracson in the 37th Senate District. '
In her first re~lection try. ~rgeson announced
she has received nearl y 1.000 endorsements from
constituents in the district and more than 100 from
outside the district
Her effectiveness as a legislator has been duly
noted by numcrousgroups. ln 1987. she was named l.c~slator of the Year by the Leagu't of California
Ciucs. the California School Boards Assoc1at1on and
the Chief Probation Officen.
She also was honored .by the County Super-
visors' Association of California and the Anti-
Defamation Leaauc of B'nai B'rith.
And while she probably won't need to. one of
her honors indicates she can run hard in this
ca~1paign. The California Association for Health.
Physical Education. Recreation. and Dance nam
her Most Fit Ft-male Leaislator.
•
or-. COUI OAILV PllOTnlMndaY. June 30, , ... * ..
for Nixon library approved
., ... -.......
.............. ra Yort. Li.W. have UlllftT.iQW l(lllWOVed \ht ftnal deliift ft)C' me W atlHon Richard M. Nll,Ofl Prtti-ftlr' l.ibrary, 1ebcdu&cd 10 ~n in early
"I bl~ traveled a Iona road from my
,outh in Yorba LuMSI, and this project has
tnvekd a Iona road beck;' Nixon wd ma
leucr read Wcdnetday by Mayor Ro~nd
E. Bi&oqer ronowina the commission
vote.
.. Now that we have seen the kind of
project it will be, we cannot imqine ii any
other: way, or in any other place." NiJtoo
Preparing for change
Mate.
Tbe tW01IOI)' li~;&o be located on a
siJt·acR she. wa11 ut adjattnt 'o cht small.
wood-frame ho'* wheft Naxon was born
75 ~ "°' The tomdin wlll 1ndll<k a museum, offitts. a iflat.rt. an exhabn
room and aar-conditioned f.teih1ics for
document 'tOf'.111.
""This is a very impon.ant lt.11• as far as
Y orbe LindA i1 conctmed and as C'Oncem~
the history of' the United SUtts." uid city
Plannina Commilliontr Ronald Watroba.
Nixon is scheduled to attend the
aroundbteakinaceremony,sctforNov. 18.
a«ordinatoofricialsofthe Richard Nixon Library and Birthplace Foundation. \\hich
funded the projctt and which \\111 run the
&dht) .
The city bo..,tlt tht property from the
Yorba Linda School Distnct la~t month
for St.3 }1'lillion.
Architects from LIQ&don Wilson
Mumper of Newpon Beach. the hbrary•s
dci-.ncn, displayed a tcale model of the
library and descnbcd aome of the planned
exhibits.
A theme garden will fcaturtdttp.red Pat
Nilon rosci. named after the former fi~t
lad). as well u an herb and aris prden.
Included in the museum will be displa> ~
on the Alaer Hiss spy case; a NiKon debal(
with former Soviet leader Niktta
A lone bulldozer work• the land aouth of Corona
del llar where eome 2,600 bomea will be built.
The lrrine co.at. now prtatlne undeveloped land.
will alllO be bome to ae•eral hotel•, at lea.at one
jolt ccnuwe and a battery of office balldlnC•· The
llnt bomee aboald be completed within m yeara.
Khnnhdle .. ·; Naxon·s .,,a&dcntiat cam-
pai11u of 1960, I 96f and 1972: the
tmrranice of detcn~ wttb the Peopk's R~_public of China durina Nixon·, time tft
office in the earl) 1970s; the Vietnam War.
and the intqrallon ofpubli<'school~ in the
South.
· No official documents frum the 37th's
prcsidcrn six ye2rs in office will bt houted
at the library ~use the U.S. Consms
ordered t.ll~ papers retained 1n the
National Archncs in Washington. O.C.
The libraf) waU 'fCAturc his vice prt'Siden-
taal papers. personal papers iintt lea,·in1
office, manuscnJ>ts for his.six boou and
personal Whne House diaries.
Auto racers
get day to
inake repairs
Wednesda) was supPosed to be a rest
da) for contcst..tnh in the Great Amencan
Race
But for 8111 Halliday ofNewpon Beach.
1t v.as I~ hours of engine ovt'rhaul on the
1916 Chev\ Roadster he and naviptor Ma~ Tra\.IS of Phoenix have nursed
across se\ en stall's
Battling tht.• heat v.ave that bas anpped
much of the nauon. Halliday's vinta,e car
bart'I) sputtered into St Charles. Mo .• on
Tuesda> "lt was so hot )t'Sterday 1t burned the
\aht's up." Hall1da) said.
Halhda\ wasn't alone with his mechan-
ical headaches.
Of 120 vintage \chicles that rolled out of
Disneyland for the 4.500.milc rally-type
race to Boston. 31 ha\e dropped out of
COmJ>l'lltlOn
Man) of the other racers spent Wednes-
da) v.orkmg on th<'ir cars as well.
One team welded a broken piston rod
ov·em1ght Another had four new pistons
flown in and replaced them. And still
anothl'r team had to rebuild their car's rear
end
Even Newt Withers of Fountain Valle)
known among th<' ra~rs as "Mr.
Good\t'ar.'' has suffered four flat ures on
has 19·34 Packard Roadster
Although this year's ra~ features fJCrtt
compeutaon. 11 also 1s marked by
camaradene. One of the com~lltors made
ava1labk his mobile mechanic shop for all
the other\
Coast prepares for a bang-up Fourth
By PAUL ARCHIPLEY
Of .. DlllJ,... ....
The rockets' red glare will fill the Orange
Coast air Monday with fi~orks spectacu·
lars from Huntington Beach to Dana
Point.
With the continuing trend awa) from
home fireworks displays, the number of
public shows continut'S to increase.
But those ready to celebratl' the nation's
binhday don't nttd to wait for the Fourth
of July. The ft'Stivitaes k.ick off today in
Fountain Valley when the annual Orange
County Fiesta begins a five-day run at M 1le
Square Regional Park.
Sponsored by the Fountain Valley
Chamber of Commerce. the ~lebrat1on
includes baby beauty contests. arm wrcstl-
ina. SK and lOK runs and bike rides and
sand volleyball pmes.
Also featured are nb and chih cookoffs.
game booths and carnival rides and a food
fair. For more information. call thl'
chamber at 962-4441.
Sunday the Huntington Beach Elks will
sponsor an Antique Car Show at the lodge
hcadquaners at 10480 Talbert .\ve ..
Fountain Vallev.
The show from 8 a.m to 3 p.m. will
include a 'S()s..style sod hop. a raffie
featuring a $500 first ptace pnu. (ood and
be-.crages
Admission 1s $~. children under 8 are
free. For more information. call the lodge
at 964-I 665.
Fourth of Jul) fcst1v1t1es begin earl>
with a "laberty Tree·· planung at 9 a m in
Marinen Park to mark the dedarauon b)
Congress on Jul) :?. 1788. that the nl'"
Constitution was in effect.
The tree planting is sponsored b) the
Newport Beach Committee on 1he
Bicentennial of the Unned States Con-
stitution. 1 he park is located at 17th Strttt
and Irvine A venue.
The ceremony precedes the I 5th annual
Fourth of July celebration sponsored b)'
the Mariners Commumh Assoc1a11on at
IOa.m. ·
Also at I 0 1s Huntington Beach ·s 84th
annual Fourth of July Parade. which this
year 1s expected to be the biggest l''cr.
Leading the parade will be Grand
Marshal Zsa Zsa Gabor nd1ng her T('n-
ncssec wallung horse Silver Fox
The Sports grand marshal 1s B~ron
Scott. the hot-shoounaguard of th<' World
Champion Los Angl'les Lakrr\
Gabor and Scott head a star-studded
cast that includes Ja) ACO\Onl' of Tv·s
"Beaut) and the Beast. .. Todd Cunasofthl'
soap opers "The Young and the Restless. ..
Cind\ Morgan of "Falcon Crest.'' Dustin
Nguyen of .. 21 Jump Strttt" and
Chnstopher R)dt'll of "L'ndl'r the
Boardwalk ... "How I Got Into Collegl' ..
and ··Mismatch:·
Also slated in the two-hour parade are
Olympic track star and former Rams'
player Ron Brown and the LA Raidercttes.
cheerleaders for the Raaders football team.
Themed "A Yankee Doodle Founh.''
the paradl' "ill include 14 7 l'ntrants
heading from Main Street at Oranie
A venue north to Yorktown ... venue. then
west to I 7th and Lake Street<;
Come sundown. all e\es will tum ~)ward when fireworks s~taculars are
scheduled throughout the Orange Coast·
• Hunungton Beach High School's Cap
Sheue Field. Yorlctown A venue and Maan
StrC'l't. Tickets att S~ and can be purchued
on the second floor of City Hall (96()...8899
for information).
• Mile Squa.~ Park. Broolc.hurst Street
and Heil A venue in Fountain Valley
(96::!-4441)
• Nt'WJ)Ort Dun~ i\quatac Park.. 1131
Back 8a> D"' ~ an Newport Beach
(644-0510):
• lf' me High School Stadium. 4321
WaJnul A\e in lf'me(786-77~1);
• 11.forth Main Beach at Pacific Coast
H1gh'u) and Broadwa) in Laguna Beach
(491-3331);
• In me Meadows Amphitheatre, 8800
ln1ne Center Dme 10 ln1ne (855-8095);
•Lake M1ss1on Viejo at Margumteand
Ahcaa park.wa)'I ( 77().1313 ).
• Crown Valk~ Communit) Park..
::!9831 Cro\\n Valle} Parkway in Laauna
Niguel (831-96:?::!).
• Hentage Parle at the end of Old
Golden Lantern in Dana Point (Ml-0779).
Relatives of crash victims want charges reduced
BJ fte Aaaoclaled Prest
Lawyers for two families who lost
relatives to an allegedly drunken dnvl'r
have asked a judge to reduce the charges
against bim from murder to manslaughter
so they arc more likely to collect insurance
money .
Prosecutors arc fi&hting the hi&hl>
unusual request regarding Gonzalo Car-
cia. 28. saying the) are onl) interested in
JUSllCC.
"We're not backangofT." Deputy Orange
County District Attome) Richard M. King
told Judae Luis .\.Cardenas.
Attorneys for the families and defenst
claim that under Cahfom1a law . thl'
ansuranct' compan) for the 0" nC'r of th<'
truck that struck their l"<'lau'e" " mor~ hkcl~ 10 pa~ 1fthe colhs1on wu a nt"ghgl'nt
act.
A neghg<"nt act would const1tul(' \C'h1cu-
Jar manslaughter. "hereas an an 1nten-
t1onal one would JUSllt) ~ond-dt'irtt
murder
Garcia is chu-ged with two counu of
Sttond-degrcc murder in the deaths of
Jav1('r \ aldez. 45. of Orange. and Norma
Grossi. 4::!. of .\nahcam. who ~re passen-
gers 1 n a car that Gama struck on D& 21.
1986. 1n Orange. v.hen he was tryin& to
elude pohcl' an a \tOIC'n truck.
Drug problems rooted in schools Street and Yorktown .\\enut'. • • • A. SC"Curity guard said 1hat four
skatcboardm refused to leave lhe
uxth level of thl' Charter Center
parkina stNCturc at Warner '\venue
and Beach Boulevard
\\~nl'Sda\ rvtorc than S700 in cash
was also ~tolcn • • • A v1dcocassc-tte recorder was stolen
from a room at Newpon Harbor Hiah
School sometime bctWttn 3 p.m.
Tuesday and 7 a.m. Wednesday. BJJONATRANVOLIK.E °' ...............
Costa Mesa has a cocaine problem
rooted deeply in its school~ Police
Cbkf Dave SnoWden said at a
Wtdnesday news COftferriCe where
$-C.1 million in atlelid cm.. money
scittd by authorities wu di1Played.
But SnOWden Mid ht has been
llftlble to con viace puentt how .,-,ve
t the situation is. •• All patents bahenftdy .... to
believe tbc bell l1MMll tbdr tick. ~
i#tlen they ask tM8ailtllej .....
the kids 11y no ...a dleir iltClilbln ' believe tbem .. ~ ili4 .. Ua-
fonunaittr, •• ._llllilvi.
than ii~...., .... lDI ha Coun~ • many • 11 liilloCbm ...... s.o .... • ....
tbe bald ft)'. 1917. sno-dentai1111ii,..•cu ...
the biaat dintrence by buildina
their-dilldm\'s .elf-esteem and a.iv· ins them ttle couraae and confidence
to avoid drvp. He Mid it was nearly a
certa.inty that c~ student ~II be a.Poled to cocaine at one tame or
another.
"1t•1 difficult to flute the e.tena of
the probltm in Costa Meta. but
certainly it doesn't Jtop 11 the city"s
boldeis." Snowden Mid.
"But we defin1te!f!:vc a probkm, Md e~crybody Id rtCQ8J\ite
\bat."
The chief maide tbe comments Whik standine ln front of a cUkct
Med Wlcb the Cula. dich 'f4S fouild mc•ed ha tbc clole1 in a
hciDe Monday.
wi1b lbc Rqional
Nllc9lka ~ aioa ,,._... -a lllll llrci cj'1. CCMIMY. SIMe and
..... law ati• I eat •lllties -
found the moncydunnaa three-Wttk
investiption.
Detectives also found a mone)
counter at the home and ledgen indicati~ the cash may have been
collcatd 1n less than a week. Snow·
den said durina the confertnce at the
Westin South Coe.st Plaza.
Two men~ taken into custody. but~ related for lack of evickn<:c.
Sno~said.
Tbe lllOM)'. 1'owc-ver. was con·
fiteatied and ultimately will · bt re--
turned to local police departments to
be meet in tbc war on d.nlp. Snowden
llid.
SiDce hi incepUon lWO )'Carl •• the I 9-llrDCJ Wk folu -includi~ inv~ftoam the F'BL IRS aid
U.S. Sirvice -has coo-&IC*d Sl0.9 mil6ac and ncatl)'
6_000 .... o/ C!D"";.M ..w, .. ,...,., ........ Sooowdcn
said. refcmna to the influx of'coca1n<'
from South Amcncan countnl's
"The inv111on of drup is as dt-adl> as
sendin' m1ss1les across our borders ..
Shenff' Brad Gates said local law
enforcement aaencies arc do1na all
they can. but nttd help from the
federal 1ovcmment. incf udina mili-
tary action.
.. I( we can btow up an 011demdt1n
the ~nianQuJftomakeapoint ... wt
can thinkofsomethinatodoto~nd a ~ toCoJornbia and that auy in
panama.,•• Gata said. "We ouaht to
quit pla~i"S pmes. '"Our kalslators ouabt to do somc--
thiQt. lflhcydon't. ttiC pcoplcof'this
county • iU run riaht over (lbetta)."
Gata .ta a coalition or stuidtGts. ~ts and businas ltaden arc blnalionsor~·· rcad)' io laoncb
an all-out offcuavc tp1Ml dn&p
vtbcn ldlool rnumea in ~ptember.
. • • • • a residmt 1n the cJPon area in the A 4) 1 r 'DnhMDr vlhtd at 9<Xl0l*d ofComwall Drive... M.OOOWllticllllll._ .• ~ • • •. -... W. lmll.... A man with a bmd ttDonedlY • . • ·a9'da naeamaaat-.ill:lO A.,r•• """l!illllle'1 ~::.il!M w dlo .._ ... ..-.. ...., ._.,¥C .._ · ftMUt'UI at leetb Boulevard
......... -..: ... . . Stl'lft. • • • ........ SMalhed a,_. windo'# in
die lOODO'ltodl of~~ Driw udsdiSl,_,in. • ••• ~ ....... J__._... .. •• ..,.a.1 .. ., .....
I •
• • • Someone broke into a storage shed
in the 16000 block of Malaaa Lane
and stole tools valued at S l.SOO.
Lapu8eacla
Pott« arTested Judie Elt7abeth
ROSStm. 52. of M1SS1on Viejo on
suspicion of drivina under the in-
fluc~ of' alcohol. Ro~m was
amsted at 92:30 a rn Wednnday on
South Coast H\abwt)' follo"Mn& a
non-uvury accident. She was bckt '"
lieu ofSl.SOOb&i\ • • • A wallet contaimna an otimatied S 170 ID Qgh • .-u stolen on Gaviota
Street. the \ictim toad pol~ Wednes-
da}.
• • • Someone pned the lock to a vehicle
parked in the 3500 block of Daffodil
Lane Wcdncsda} mominaandstolca
portable compact disc pll)U. car
stereo and ~v<'ral compact discs.
1"ble
Could 1t be frttWay sbootina time
•in" Well. almost. A man an a
TO)'Ota pickup truck follo~ an
lrvinc JUident into Northwood
Community Park Wednesday eve-
ni~ .lbcn for no a,pparent reason
pulled a pistol from a bolster and
poi,oted it al 1he tUident•s vchide.
The wspea dro~ away •ithout
fuina a shot or •Y'M a WOfd. . . ,
Computer prinien wonh lllout Sl.400~ stoka frOfh, .,... in
Uc 'JOO() block or Daimler "*" betMCD 6 p.JD. T~ aad I a.a.
Wcidnaday. • • • :Someoae puaCheCI lhc ka••ar ~indle 11000bkdofMw"1
Avan.e T~ m _.. tM w-
hidt'19'a'tO. ~.Ii~-~ 11 I Ft.
il'Wolllm ............... auneo•iln:tlll lelOO Micltall.lllM
C.,. lkoed ll!IB Rl•1 .. 1Wlll· m .
J
......... (~-. ..,.; ...._. Llllbvse .clefted
..., -comec:naed el .. lnditionalist
~-M. Cb':
y..... raponded shortly
tty excommunicatina
_. 1M four new bilboP8. 9-W W...S that conecrations
..._. • ~val of Pope John 1-.1 II waild briaa automatic ~ec-
--me~un:h. -W. • eoavinced we are follow· 17. .. a1 olGod." the French-born low told about 10,000 sup-,.._. iD a balf-hour bomiij before
tlle•wy. n. prelate IClCUSed the church of
M _.;.. ..mOdernism, liberalism,
comaUlllll, Zioni.siil" and said the
~are "not Ca1bolic. ••
Joia Paul ~ Lefebvre in a
tel•-Weclnetday to refrain from bil ...... for the Jove of Christ and
biidaurdl. ..
LdebVre said the pope sent him a
cat Wedneiday Dilbt to iake him IO Rome. He met be Wiii IUl'Priled at
tbh dl'ot1 to make bim cancel the
elevation.
Today tbe rebel &il'ela1e ~· bands over cecb oft\e new · to
com= the COllleCl'atiom. hilb~ted a festive ceremony in a
tent on a Vitt meedow in front of tbe u11ditioaalist Jeminary in this Swiu
bamJct surrounded by vineyards and
Alpine peaks;
1n Rome, a statement rad by Vatican spokesman Joaquin Navarro
said the comecratioat were a
IChismatic act carried out apinst the
wishes of tbe pope.
A schism is a formal rupture with tbe Holy See. Excommunication
means Lefebvre and tbe four bishops
are excluded from the rilbts. sacra-
ments and priviJeees of tbe church. "This is not a schism, we are not
tebismatic," Lefebvre said. "There is
no question at all of this. On the
contrary, we are here to manifest our
attachment to the church of all
times."
Peru-New Zealand voyage starts
CALLAO, Peru (AP) -five
Spenisb adventurers boarded an
anciently styled reed boat and pushed off for New Zealand in a voyage
aimed at showing bow pre-Col-
umbian Peruvians could have
croued the Pacific.
Famed Norwqian ex~lom Thor
l, whose theones and ex-
sparked the adventure, bid
o the sailors Wednesday as
they departed Lima's port Callao.
••The U ru is built correctly," the 7 3-
year-old anthroploaist said during an1
inspection of the 7~foot ship made
from reeds. He said it is crafted along
the lines of pre-Columbian boats.
The Spaniards, headed by 29·year-
old Kitm Munoz. plan to follow a
course chaned b)' Heyerdahl, who
sailed the primitive balsa raft Kon
Tiki from Peru to Polynesia in 1947.
Heyerdahl and five others made
the voyage, which he wrote about in
the book .. Kon Tiki," to support bis
thesis that the first settlers of Poly-
nesia were of South American de-
scent
Rome bu followed a coune of
.. .,.ve errors" since the reforms of
die Second Vatican Council in
1962-6, that WU "aboUt to destroy
the church, .. Lefebvre said.
He uid tie bid to JO abmd with the c:ouecrations became "we have tried
ev~ to make Rome return to
the tl"ldibons, but it was in vain."
.. This is an operation of survival of
the tradition," a.nd sianina an accord
with the Vatican would have been
.. operation suicide," Lefebvre said:
MOSCOW (AP) - A Coaun...U.
Pany official 10ld I ftatiouJ COG•
ftrtDce today that tome DeoDle a. lieve pany stalwaru like -ADCltei A.
Grom~ are nu loqer ftt to bold offic:c Ute they can •t work under
Mikhail S. OorbKbev's morma..
Earlier, in a stinaina critique:.. ! llOetworker said that three yean aner
the reform prosram was launched, bis
town still doesn't have meat and
consumer aoods have vanished.
The two menspoke on the third day
of the extraordinary conference
Gorbachev called to assess bis reform
Pf'Oll'&Jn and set a course for the
future. The ptherina of S,000 party
deleaates is closed to the public, and
reports are based on Soviet media and
official briefings.
Delegate Vladimir I. Melnikov's
remarks were the tint reported by
state-run media in which top party
fiaures were attacked by name.
Despite the freer climate created br,
the Kremlin campaip for .. glasnost, '
or openness, criticism of top leaden is
still llflCly off limits to the Soviet
press. and members of the ruling
Politburo generally maintain an
imqc of monolithic unity.
Melnikov, party leader in the
RUlliaa ........ . of Kon.
laid ~ r1bt .,.ny's ~c.tiual Commauec ii
pnletldi111• llowly, tlwT• news
::.\.. la1d in 1 aumnwy of bis
lodl Commwailtl and noa-pany
memben. Melnikov said. have said
that "people who in previous times
activd~ conducted the policy of auipataon cannot now be on. Oil work
in, central ~Y or Soviet orpna.. in
the period or recontruction ...
Tau said Ootblcbev. sittina on the
dais, broke in, sayins; "Maybe you
have some concrete tu11Ktions?
We're sittina here and don't know: Is
be talkina about me, or somebody else?°'
"I was refcrrina tint of all to
Comrade Solomcntsev, and to Com-
rades Gromyko, Afanasyev, Arbltov," Mclmkov replied.
Mikhail S. Solomentsev, 74, and
Gromyko, 78, are both members of
the Politburo and have held scats on
the Central Committee since the days
of Nikita S. Khrushchev in the late
l 9S0s and early 1960s.
As Politburo members, they have
seats on the dais close to Gorbachev . Tass did not say if they were present
Wbea Melftiltov spate.
YcfremSoko&ov, hadoflbeCom·
mliail& Pany in 1be ~ reWWic lalel' \Old ~ -t
MelmtOv's aatack promiMed aDodlcr deielllC &o send I DOie fad ft'oln the ~ium in support of Oroinyko'•
decides o( work. "It wu very warmly apPlauded,"
Sokolov said. . Cential CC>minittee ofJicial OeoraY
Kryuchkov, asked by reponen a~t
reaction to Melni.kov's remarks, said there were no other immediate ex-
pressions of support for the men
attacked by n&ft?C. N~oe o~ them s~kc up immedJ&tely tn thear own
defense. be said. . . . Gromyko served as fore'lft nunas-
ter for 28 years and was shifted to the
moslly ceremonial post of president
in 198~. Solomentsev is chairman of
the party's Control Committee.
Georay A. Arbatov, one of the
Soviet Union's veteran specialists on
American affai~ is frequently seen
on U.S. television, has led the USA-
Cariada Institute since 1967 and has
been a voti°' member of the Central
Committee sance 1981.
It was not clear which Afanasyev
Melnikov was referring to.
Israeli army closes six Palestinian schools
JERUSALEM (AP)-An 18-year-old Palesti-
nian who was shot durina a clash with Israeli
soldiers died today, and the army closed six more i"alestinian schools, Arab reports said.
Arafat Awad Hanani died of injuries suffered
in a clash June 16in Beit Furik. nearthe West Bank
city of Nablus. One other Arab was killed and 18
were wounded in the fiahtina which erupted after
the army blew up an Arab-owned home.
His death brou&)lt to 213 the number of
Palestinians killed in the nearly seven-month-old
uprising apinst Israeli rule of the West Bank and
Gaza Strip. Four Israelis have died.
Also today, troops opened tire at Arab youths
throwina rocks in Nablus' old city, wounding a 17-
ycar-old in the leg. said officials at the city's Al Jttihad Hospital. Army officials said they were
checking the report.
in the West Bank and Gaza Strip Feb. 2. but
schools in Gaza have been operating on and off
since. Israeli officials have hoped that the
reopen in& of schools in the West Bank would help restore normal life in the area.
The military administration closed six West
Bank and east Jerusalem schools, the daily Arabic
newspaper Ashaab reponed.
Fifty-three schools have been ordered closed
apin after the army reopened West Bank schools
June 6, accordina to the Palestinian-run Jerusalem
Media and Communications Center.
Also today, 19 Arabs chaf1ed in connection
with an April 6 clash in the West Bank village of
Beita went on trial. A l S-year-old Israeli girl was
killed durina violence between Arab villagers and
Jewish teen.qers.
The army shut down more than 1,000 schools
The army determined that Tirza Porat was
killed by a bullet accidentally fired by an Israeli
auardiog the teen-agers.
Top execs facing quiz
on Korean payments
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Northrop
Corp.'s chairman and two other top
executives have been ordered to
testify before a federal arand jury
investiptina payments the company
made to South Korean businesses. a
spokesman for the defense firm
disclosed.
The subpoenas were issued by the
Jlllnd jury for the U.S. District Court
in Los Angeles, Tcny Cantafio. a
Northrop spokesman, said Wednes~
day. Northrop also was ordered to
produce documents related to its
Korean deals.
Federal officials were not immedi·
ately available to comment on the
action. A call placed to the U.S.
Attorney's office after business hour,
Wednesday went unanswered.
Cantafio said the executives or-dered to appear before the arand jury
were Thomas V. Jones, Northrop's
chairman and chief executive officer;
Welko £. Gasich, an executive vice
president; and William C. McGagh,
identified by Cantatio as Northrop's
former chief financial officer.
Althouah McGagh's retirement
was announced in April, he bas been
workina with the company during a
transition period.
The Justice Department and a
c:onaressfonal subcommittee have re-
portedly been conductina criminal
anvcstiaations into NorthroJ?'s pay-
ment of more than $6.S million to
Korean businesses in connection
with anempts to sell its F-20
.. TiJtnhark' jet tiahter to the Korean
mihtary.
Northrop bas denied it violated the
Fo~ Corrupt Practices Act and
has said it was 1 victim of fraud by its
Korean partners in a joint venture to
build a hotel and office project in
Seoul.
Police, threats of death ·
can't stop gang slayings
BJ 'fte Aaoela&M Presa
LOS ANGELES-Police sweeps and threats of the gas chamber ca nnot
stop street &anJS from killing to pn)tect their fortune-makinf drug trade, two
pngsters testified. "When.I'm out there doing my thing. I don t think about the
oon~uences. I won't think about the death penalty at the time because I'm
just thmkina about aettina away, .. a pnpter identified by the psuedonym John
told a state task force meetina Wednesday to plot a war on ganp and drua
trafficking. Testimorili from John and another member of the city's
predominantly black.tri_ps pna, identified by the pseudonym of Jack.
hlahli&bted the first day of a ~Y hearin" The meetina followed 1 ni&ht of violence in which 11 people were wounded 1n shootings. many of them png..
related. The testimony was piped by loudspeaker into the heanna room at the
County Hall of Administration, while the two men remained invisible in an
adjacent room. The pair said_tbe1 were a~ted more than 10 times each on
such chalJCS as robbery and illef,IJ firearm possession. John, 28, became a pna
member at age I 0 and has spent three )lean in state prison and four years in the California Youth Authority.
Brothen cdtlcal alter ~Jo11lon
RICHMOND -Brothen t-dly hurt in e-.plosion . condition today after a powerful expl~ive device found by a group of
younasten blew up wtieta one of tbtm drO{>Ped 1 li&htcd match into its center, authorities and JWJtMSles laid. .. They Cl.It 1t open and set it on the floor. I was
just standillJ there. &Mn oaeofthcm fit a match, put it inside, and it ex.,.Oded,"
said ~cser-Saeva111o 16. ~ of ,four otbe:r youths irtjurcd in t~ Wednesday cvenana blast. Some residenll m the unancorponted north Richmond area detcri"::=p&oilon on an ..,.nment buildint!>aJcoay u sound.in& like 1 . &iant fi · • But Colltn Cotta County Sherill's *.Puties and tt1e·fcdrra.I
Bwau of AlcObol, TObeccoand Firearms werel&iU ~to determine exactly
what the device wu &bll blew 11 lead two of the children dear or the bakony
to the around iwo stories betOw 1bo01 S:JO p.m., said sberiW.s 5'1. Mike Schon.
TJuee,...,,.., from d,_lded IHMt
.eannot
PLO'• U.N. ml•lon
~ .......... , .....
Mn YORK -A liederal jucfet naJed W9dDelday tbal the U.S. p~-.14oet llOI have ..-aulboftty 10 dOM tbe Paladne Ubtra1ion
Qrllllillaioft•• obeener million 10 tbe UDiled N1tion1. The Juatitt ~t maintained thll lul ya(1 Anti-Terrorism Act. whlCh branded u.=. 1 lm'Oritt JrOl.IP. em~•red the 11>verament to cl0te the PLO's U. N. m . lut u~ Diltrict ,.._ EdmulMI Palmieri found that the act does not
U.S. obliptioM to the 1947 ~l that broulhc U.N.
uancn to New York. Palmieri did rule in a second opinion on a related
cue, er, tbat -narrowly interpf'e1Cd-the Anti· Terrorism Act don not violate die U.S. Constitution and .. may permissibly put a halt to the o~tions
o(tbe PLO in the United Statnapart from the mission to the United Nations." But in bi1 initial, 37-J>lle opinion, Palmieri wrote mat the Janauqt ofthe U.S-
U.N. ~uancn ~IMntt as well u lonpJ&ndin1 practice, "leave no floubt that it plac:e1 an obli~uon upon the United Statn to ~frain from
1mpeirina the function of the PLO oblerver mission."
Better join• lour 1Jop#J6 to bay PTL
COLUMBIA. S.C. -Jim Bakker: preRnted a S IOO million offer for the
failiaa PTL ministry durin1 1 bankruptcy court snsion in which his wife,
Tammy, aobbed when the judF. orden:d the sale of the BakJcers' former
()Ul9RllC. PTL trustee M.C. Benton, who said he has received four offers. one
for S200 million, lo buy the ministry, promised that the former aelev1sion
eve.list's proposal "wiJI be considered alona with everyone else" if he can beck 1t up. "We are read)' to 10 forward with eamest negotiations. .. Bakker told
reporters Tuesday outside U.S. Bankruptcy Court. But he refused to identify
who provided him with the S 100 million line of credit to buy PTL.
lJrelon ioaen falllag •piked tren
WILLIAMS, Ore. -Logers have ~un cutting down trees on the How
Come Peek timber sale in southern Orqon s Siskiyou Mountains, even though
many of the old..,-owth tren have been booby-trapped with long .metal spikes.
••1t'sju1t another hillside,'' timber faller Roger Prefontaine said Wednesday.
He was one of two fallers for Plumley Loaing of Central Point, which has
contracted with Medford Corp. to cut down-the trees on an 18-acrc unit and an
adjacent 21..acre unit on the U.S. Bureau of Land Manqmecnt timber sale.
The two uniu contain about 800,000 board feet of timber. The SLM and
Medco received anonymous letters in late May warning that many of the trees
io this sale had been spiked in an effort to save the trees from logina,
Documents
destroyed in
defense probe
WASHINGTON (AP) -PeOpk
implicated in the Ptn111<>n ~
probe have dettroycd doCumenu on
at least two occasions in tht s-st t•o ~ks. IClCOrdina to JWC)leCUtof'I who
uy m&kina key informaiion public woUJd tritarr a covnup by ''major
felons.''
.. ID the short time since the
CllCCUtion Of the searth warnnts
became public (June 14), the aovern-
ment has already become aware of
several incidents of destruction of
documents related to th.is case," U.S.
Attorney Henry Hudson, who 1s
coordinatina the probe. said ina court
brief released Wednesday.
In an affidavit. Assistant U.S.
Attorney Joteph Aronica said pros-
ecuton have learned of two incidents
of document destruction.
On Capitol Hill, members of Con-areu called on Defense Secretary
Frank C. Carlucci to make a .. dra-
matic move" such as halting new
Pentaaon contracts to win back
public credibility in the wake of the
bribery probe.
"We're fl&huna 1 credibility prob-
lem here and it 5«ms as though tough
action is required,'' said Rep. John
Kasich, R-Ohio.
Hudson, in his court brief, dis-
cussed the possibility of further
document destruction in arguing
apinst release of sea.led coun docu-
ments.
U.$. debtburden Death penalty for juvenile
tope$368billlon murderers may be banned
WASHINGTON (AP) -Ameri-
ca·s foreian debt soared to $368.2
billion in 1987 u the country lenathened its lead as the world's
laqestdebtormtion, theaovemment
said today.
Tbe Commerce Department said
the new debt burden was 36.8 percent hi&her than a revised $269.2 billion
debt to foreianers that the United
States was carryi na at the end of 1986.
The detenoration means that the
country now has a debt load ~ter
than the total debt beina camcd by
Brazil, Mexico and Arpmtina com-
bined, the Third World countries
with the lariest debt burdens.
Simply put, the U.S. debt means
that forellllen now own more in U.S.
assets than Americans own abroad.
For 1987, the 1ovcmment reported
that foreian holdings in the United
States increased l•'-6 percent to S 1.54
trillion.
WASHING TON (AP) -The Su-
preme Court today ap'Ced to consider
bannina the death ;enahy for all
juvenile murderers, a day after issu-
IOJ a decision that could end capital
punishment for killers not yet 16
when they <X>mmitled their crimes.
The justices said they will decide
sometime next year whether use of
the death peoalty for anyone under 18
when the crime was committed
violates the Constitution's ban on
.. cruel and unusual punishment..,
The court voted to consider over-
tumin& the death sentences of Geor-
aja death row inmate Jose Martinez
Hialt, who was 17 when he partici-
pated in a 1976 murder, and Missouri
death row inmate Heath Wilkins,
whowas 16wbenhecommiteda 1985
murder. The court Wednesday overturned
the death sentence of an Oklahoma
man convicted of a murder com-
m1ttcd when he was l 5.
Fouroftheei&htJusticcs who voted
in that case saio the death penalty for
convicted murderers who commtttcd
their crimes before reaching 16
always amounts to uftiawfully "cruel
and unusual punishment."
Three justices said no such age
limitation on imposing capital pun-
ishment can be derived from the
Constitution.
Justice Anthony M. Kennedy did
not participate in Wednesday's rulina .
In hercontroUing vote Wednesday,
Justice Sandra Day O'Connor voiced
serious doubts whether ~tales may
execute people for crimes committed
when only 15.
But she supplied a fifth vote to
overturn William Wayne Thomp-
son's death sentence, ruling that the
state's death penalty law could not be
applted to him because 11 has no
minimum age.
Orange Coat OAILY PILOT/Thunday, June 30, 1918 * Al
White Honse to institute r
drug tests for employees c
WASHINGTON (AP)-The White House, on the
bcel1 of revelations that five emplo)ttS wtrc ttl~cd of
their dutin a11uthorities investipte drua use. said today
it will soon beain mandatory. random df"41 tests of its
employees.
~an Marlin Fitzwater a.aid the months-old
investtption, which has resulted in the dismissal of two
National Security Council clerks and the suspension of
three White House guards. ··mumates all too well the
terrible fact of d.ru& use in our society."
ba'e uted dN&J he would like to sec them nnc:r dnat k
treatment proarams. •
.. ,, n wu JUSt a case of usina" drup. Reqan said.
"then l would like to sec us do our best to~ them into a
drua-treatment orpnlz.ation with a view to attemptiQI a
cure .... Let the people know that then we will do our bell
to salvqt anyone who has been a victjm."
On Wednesday. White House spokeswoman Liz
Murphy said the two clerks had "admitted drua ute and
were separated from the NSC."
Reapn, asked at 1 pitturc-~kin1 session about the
developments, lint reported in toda)'s Washington Post.
said, "Yes, of course I am upset that it (drua use) is found
anywhere."
Fitzwater toda) told reponen that the clerks··~
to resian" several months ago, "durina the winter." lJi
Asked at what level the NSC clerks worked, Fitzwater ..J
said he could not specify Cll.Cf"pl to say they were at the jl
··sccret.ary level." " , Asked if he thouaht his .security had ever been
endanJ,CTCd, lhe president replied. "No. I don't think so."
Reapn. ~1ng with Republican consressrnen who
had come to the White House to d1scus.s drug policy
options. sajd tlat 1f White House ~orkers arc found to
Pressed to say whether the two were involved in q
bandJina sensitive matters. he responded, .. It's fair to r
assume that evet) one who works at the NSC has access to
scns1uve matenal. .. ...
J ....................................................................... ~
Rain in Plains, but more needed n
the central Plains. and rain was widely scautrcd over b
much of tbe H•alt Plains and the lower and maddlc ,
M1ss1ss1pp1 Valley. :;id
By Tk Alsoclated Preti
Rain soaked the drought-stricken Plains today, but
prayers for precip1tauon by Alabama's governor went
unanswered and forecasters cauuoned that a Jot more rain
would be needed to reverse the long dry spell.
Amencans who prayed or danced for rain in rccmt J.1
weeks got 1t m spades in some places Wednesday.
ln North Platte, Neb .. more than 2 inches of rain fell "It's likely to get worse before 1t gets better." Michael
Hudlow, director ofhydroloay for the National Weather
Service said as long-range forecasts were ~leased
Wednesday.
Showers and thunderstorms fell today over much of
in about 90 minutes. flooding city streets. cavins in the •
roof of a downtown bus mess and causina at least. $25.000
damage to a hotel, authorities said. A tornado touched
down near the cuy, but no iruuncs were reported..
SALE START'S
WEDNESDAY, JULY 6
10:00 A.M.
Bra,s
Robe's, Gowns
Hoisery and Loungewear
20 to 7SCF/o OFF
SERVICE. SELECTION
AND SATlSF ACTION •
SINCE 1963
Westcliff Plaza 17th & Irvine (714) 642-1197
So, fill me in an
whats been happening
whi/,e Stu.an and I were an
our secmul honeymoon world
tuur! I hmr Clarise has a
new husband and Marietta has
a new face and-oh, yes!-
there s a new, fast way fJJ get to
Smah c.oast Plaza.'
TIU! Umma <kl Mar Freeway?
My dmr, you were g<mi! longer
than I thought That must have
been SOTM second honrymlXm!
Id you forget.: the Umma del
Mlr Freeway to the Bear Street
exit ... it makes the stores of
South OJast Plar,a, as close as
they art jibulous.
SOUTH COASTPIAZA
.. Dieso ~ ..... 1 SL.C..• ...... hJI. ..... ...
(714)1114'MW111..a1 ...... ..
..
.. ,. ..
..
l
' I
--
CEDAR
FENCING
42" HEIGHT, 8' LONG
Student's poster shows American way
., un IOUCHER ............
Althouah Honsvan Tran is fromVie1nam.
her American spirit has won her qui1e a tMt of
ttrotnition.
Tran, an ciahth-arade sraduate from TeWinkle Middle School in Cosll Mesa. has won
the Newport-MCA Unified School District's
"Bicen1ennial Art Contest" for Mr poster entry.
The theme of the contest was "Life. Liberty
and Happinm... Conteslants were askod to
capture 1he essence of the" American Way" in their
posters; ..
Anita Ferauson, wife of Assemblyman Oil
Ferguson, saluted Tran for her effort.
"It depicts the whole Uni1ed States. and I
loved the way she brouJht in the fact that George
Washinaton was the first president. and Abraham
Lincoln was the 16th. Her idea of putting them
inside the flag was really very clever," she said.
Born in Vietna~sbecame to Costa MHI 41'2
yean qo. She ha two older brothen and two
youneer sisltn. and says she wants to be a model
when she ftnisbet Khool ... But my mother wanu me to be a lawyer.•• lhe •id.
The contcst, apc>ntOred by the committtt. was open to all 1ehoolt in the district.
Tbc Bacen\tnnial Committee was launched
last ~ber .. It is a f(!ur-year ~~ram aimc:d _;1 t hononna the Ball of Ra&bts. which celebrates its 200th birthday in 1991.
Groap11 can Nek city funds
. . ~onprofit aroups plan.ning community ac-ttv1t1es or ncedina help with promotional and
advertisin& costs can apply to the city of Costa
Mesa for fundina.
said. . . h" He tbllows a police officer trad1t1on !n is
family: his father is a retittd rommander an the Lona Beach Police ~partmcnt. Pn1tch has
Worted at Fountain Valley Police as a cadet and
aidt since 198$, Griswold said. In April. fountain Valley swore in Chad T.
Nichols: a top araduate from 1hc Oranat Count)'
Sheriff's Police Officers Academy.
VCI re11are1Jlnf bnln tumon
UCI rHearchcrs arc investigating the role !'f
two different molecules in rapidly growina brain
tumors.
ACARTOM • • • -~ HCU·7 Chell"UI
The posterwasan outline of the United States.
w11h profiles of Wasbinaton and Lincoln wearing
hats adorned with red stars representing each state.
The City Co uncil reviews the requests in
January and July and grants money on a competitive basis after examining several factors
in each appiication.
The work of Dr. Jacob Katz, professor of
pediatrics, and Dr. Violet Shen. assistant professor
of pediatrics, is supponed by a S2S.OOO grant from
the Con~m 11 Found3tion. an outgrowth of the
Los Angeles-based Concern Foundation. The
arant is the first the foundation has awarded for
research suppon in Orange County. REG. $29.99
a 10 SQ. FT. TO A CARTON Tran was surprised when she when told she
won the contest.
The benefit to the city and residents.
enhancement of the city's image and reputation
and service to a charitable, philanthropic, cultural or educational purpose are some of the criteria.
Since ns formation in 1981. the Concern
Foundation has raised more than $900.000 to support research in childhood cancer in the area of
immunology.
a 6"x 6" SOUO OAK PARQUET
REG. $17.99 • NO·WAX DURA-LUSTER~
URETHANE FINISH
"Has anyone told you why you're so import-
ant today?" Scott Paulsen, the school's principal.
asked. But Tran jusl shook her head no.
Applications must be submitted to the city
manager's office by July 29. Additional infor-
mation is available from Ann Gyben at 754-5327.
According to Shen, brain tumors affect 12.000
people in the United States each year and arc the
most common soltd tumor in children.
• EASY TO INSTALL --As parents, faculty and students ga1hered for
their diplomas and awards. Lynn Turner. chair-
man of the Bicentennial Committee. honored Tran
with a commemorative silver dollar medallion. New otflcer follows tradltlon
1275 BRISTOL
STREET
(Redhill & Bristol) 558-1500
Standina in for her husband. Forguson gave
Tran a certificate of excellence for her winning poster entry.
Tran has had perfect attendance and main-
tained a 8-plus average at the Costa Mesa middle
school. Her teachers agreed she was a pleasure to
have in the classroom.
The city of Fountain Valley has added yet
another police officer to its ranks with the hiring of
Joseph Scott Prutch. a Huntington Beach High
School graduate.
Prutcb gradu3ted from Golden West Police
Academy with an overall ranking of third in a class
of 4 I. Fountain Valley Police Sgt. Larry Griswold
Taraeted for research by Kau an_d Shen is .a
molecule known as an oncoprote1n, that is
associated with other malignant tumors such as
colon and prostate cancers. The researchers also
arc studying a molecule found on tumor cell
surfaces that may be responsible for increased cell
mobility.
Their ultimate goal, once they identify the
biochemical culprit. is to investigate means of
controllin& its production or modifying its effects.
CLEARANCE!
CLEARANCE!
CLEARANCE!
CLEARANCE!
CLEARANCE!
CLEARANCE!
Over 200 artists
and craftspeople exhibH
their works of art!
The 22nd Anal
Celebration of
Fine Arts
and Crafts
In Laguna Beach
July 2-August 28
Admission
Adult~ S:3 . ChildMl I~
and under FREE when
a('('OmpaniPd by adult.
Seniors$~. 'ra.'ilm pass
for l\rn, Sll.
•
Sundtiy-Thufld8Y IOam-Wpm
Friday l Sat...., Olm-llpm
Rooten's
\
J
Luggage, Business Cases,
Desk Accessories, Travel Items,
Gifts, Adult Games and More ...
SOUTH ·COAST PLAZA STORE ONLY
UPPER LEVEL -CAROUSEL COURT
Laguna Bfach otrers a uam Wt'\'K'e to• he
fesm·af e,·ery diy from t .SOIU1 to U:'3gpin.
Call (il4) .a9i.:l3ll.,, detaDs Tht Qrlnle
Coun~ 1tan t District P">"ides bus Jel'\'ke
each day,;, routes /1 Ind 16i. Or you can
M & Rade from the free parktn« IOt II
t.quna HUI• Mall Call IX~RIDE ">I'
itlrortnlllOO.
The participants of the Sa'' dust
Festival annually transform a
quiet eucalyptus grove into a
wonderland of individually
designed and const ructed
booths. The natural integrity or
the site is left undisturbed, and
sawdust covered paths lead you
from one exhibit Lo the next .
Wandering minstrels will pause
t0 play for you ... a gl~blower
will create a masterpiece before
your very eyes.
Come to the festival early for
fun under the sun. Stay late and
watch the stars come out.
Sawdust '88 is an experience
that can't be compared or
duplicated.
Children 's Day, aponaored by
TM NtfD•.~.Monday, July 25.
Children of all ages can enjoy
games, storytelling, arts and
crafts lessons, sing·a·longs, and
other speqiiJ treats from lOam
to 6pm. All incluc1ed in the price
of admission, of course!
roto .. t "heel of tlte ~
tlval"~~ .. J
Con~ ... l'bur rarst Place
winners receive 150 cash and a
•. Fbtomat gift ~k. fbr informa·
• tion and an entry form, write to
fl1't the Sawdust Festivali P.O. BOx
12'34, f4una Belch, CA 92662.
leUe ......... Dar ...
Tuesday, Auguil 2. ~your
old Sawdust ~'al T-lldtt or
swea"1irt and -. a tree IOda.
The oldest .. relic" wn a he
'88 T1'fiirt .
112•--•11 •• 0.... to~ fdtval alter 4IA da~ ttvough Priday. -,...
I 10% dilCbUlll Gn ... frOli
P1rti4liP1li"1 rellU'llQ.
SPRING CLEARANCE
SALE
30o/o TO 7DJ'/o OFF
'
SUMMER MERCHANDISE FROM
RUFF HEWN, REYN SPOONER,
SIL VER FERN, CAMBRIDGE,
DRY GOODS
Monday · Thunday 10-6 • Friday 10.8
S.rurday 10-6 • Sunday 11·'
1069 Newport Center Dr.• Fashion Island• 721-8829
STRINCFEl.LOW SUP£Rn:No HAZARDOl'1' WA~'TF. :-n ~·
DHS AND EPA ISSUE
STRINGFELLOW SITE
FEASIBILITY STUDY REPORT
AND PROPOSED PLAN FOR
GROUNDWATER CLEANUP IN
GLEN AVON, CALIFORNIA
The California Department of Health Servicea (OHS) and lbe U.S. En-
vironmental Protection Agency (EPA) iuued the Strl111fellow Site Feasibility
Study (FS) Draft Report for public review and comment on June 30, 1988.
Ac:companyi111 the report it the OHS/EPA proposed plan for cleanup of site-
related contaminated groundwater t0uth or the aite in the community ot Glt'n
Avon, California. The public review and comment period for the feasibility
atudy report and the propoaed plan runa throuch ~pt.ember 30, 1988. The
complete Ht of documen~ indudea:
• Strlnlf•llow Pea•lbllity Study Dran Report -present.II de·
tailed evaluations of p.>tentW cleanup alternatives devt'loped for the
Stringfellow Site. An E1ecutive Summary dee.cribins lbe full report is
included. A aec:ond volume with technical de1eription1 or cleanup technologies w allO available. Cleanup alternativ• conalst of combinatiom of technolofies
that addtMI varioua pollution problem. posed by the 1ite.
• Prop09ed Plan for Glen Avon Com•unlty Groundwater
Cleanup -a fact sheet th.t provid11 a description oC tht' OHS/EPA
recommended alternative for cleanup of 1ite-relawd groundwater contamina-
tion aouth of Hichw~ 60 in Olen Avon.
Thele documenta are available for public revit'w and comment in Oranct'
County at the followinc loeationa:
Aaellel•Llk•1'7
aoo "· ~i:li A .. ....._CA tU•t .... lllO
r ... talA Vall•1 a.i..,.,,
11Hal.o•Al••ot Poualala VaU.1. CA 91709
('fHIM2•1JM
o-r.a. ......... u..r • .,
· 101 Jif. c .... r """ Or••l•L£At .... l'fH INS.OStl
0r8"ge Coat DAILY PILOT/Thuf9dly, June30, 1911 A"t
... mAG ..... UL ... llU. ..,.
Mr. ud Mn. Dlvid ~. Sin
Oemnte. lirl
·~ =r.: Beach.~-M-•• ;~ M-Mn. ~-.... Mr. IDd Mn. Plul MastrOlia. H11nl· r. aad --O'lkyan. and Mn. tb Bonner. Huot· Mr. ud Mn. Richard Sbmnad. inatoa Bach, bo)
Irv*, boy iftllOll Bacb, sirl Costa Mesa. airl W-r. and Mn. Johe Walton, Ca1ta ,,_., Mr. and Mrs. Philip Feldman, Com J .. 1t M-.:...i Mt. aad Mn. llOben Llpwonh,
HuntinttOn leecb, boy Mr. and Mn. Richard Pnftl. New· ,..--:-~---------------------~ ... _...,, pon lad\, boy MaJU Mr._. Mn. Jay~ C«ona del Mar.lirt Mr. and Mn. Kevin Cumn, Co.1a Mesa, boy
Mr. and Mn. Steven McMastm.
Co.ta Meta, boy
t1a1H Mr. and Mn. Adnan Sanchei, Hunl·
ina1on Beach, boy ... , ..
Mr. and Mra. James Price, Hunt· inaton Beach, boy
Mr. and Mn. Ptter Glaesman, Costa
Mesa, &irl
MayH
Mr. and Mrs. Robtn Wolfe, Costa Mesa. boy
Ma7l1 Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Dunn, Lquna
Niauel, airl
Mr. and Mrs. John Connell, Costa Mesa, airl
Mr. and Mrs. Ramon Galvan, Costa
Mesa, airl
Mr. and Mn. Cra11 Jack, Irvine, sirl ~r. and Mrs. Thomas Hill, Hunt·
inaton Beach, boy
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Sefton, Hunt·
inaton Bcacl\, boy
Mayll
Mr. and Mrs. David Palmer, Costa
Mesa, airl
Mr. and Mn. Daniel McClory,
Laauna Niauel, boy
Mr. and Mn. Daryl Chinn, Newpon
Beach, airl
MayH
Mr. and Mrs. Robtn Farnsworth,
Fountain Valley, airl
Mr. and Mrs. James PllC. Newpon Qeacb, airl
Ms. Janet Bell, Costa Mesa, boy
......
Mr. and Mn. James Crandall, West·
mimau airt
Mr. Md Mn. Scott Tobias. Newpon
ae.ch.lirl
Mr. aJid' Mn. Richard Lewis. Corona dcl Mar, boy
Mr. and Mn. Thomas Willi.ams.
Costa Mesa. boy -n.ea Mr. and Mn. Jeffrey Koon, Costa Mesa. boy
Mr. and Mn. Eric Barto, Newpon
Beach, 'rt
Mt. :J' Mrs. Steven Warren, Foun-
tain Valley, airt
Mr. and Mn. WiUiam Buchanan,
Huntinaton Beach, airl
Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Franks, Foun-
tain Valley, sirl Mr. and Mn. Jacob Best, Irvine, airl , ...
Mr. and Mn. Robtn Lucas. Newport Beach, prl
Mr. and Mrs. David Cole, Hunt·
inaton Beach, boy
Jae5
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Green. Irvine. airl
Juel
Mr. and Mrs. Steven Sladics. Ncw-
pon Beach, boy
Mr. and Mrs. Steven Ptzula. Irvine. boy
Jue7
Mr. and Mn. Bryan Famdale, Hunt· inaton Beach, boy
Mr. and Mrs. Jamshid Alan, Hunt·
ington Beach, airl
Juel Mr. and Mrs. Christopher Mone>.
Irvine, boy
Juet
Mr. and Mrs. Cra1a Oark. Hunt·
4TH OF JULY
..
After a hard
day at
work ...
It's Time To Relax. Here's how:
1. Sit down in your favorite chair.
2. Take off your shOH.
3. Inhale deeply. 4. Let it out
5. Start reading The Daily Pilot
Daily Pilat
s\ ~R-SPANGLfo
SALE
SHOE SALE
UPTO
30%0FF
WOMEN'S
Selby. Trotter, Evi••
aad ot••r•
MEN'S
Flor••eia, Cole Haa• aad otlaer•
AN ADDITIONAL J.8'ft OFF
on any PURCHASE Item if you
mention or bring ln this ad?
GOOD THROUGH JULY 3rd
,J."' . .. . . .
.:.-. .
CLEARANCE
SPECIAL WEEKEND HOURS: FRI. 9 TO 9~ SAT. 9 TO 7~ SUN. 10 TO 7
STARTS FRIDAY:
WE'RE CELEBRATING
WITH HOT SUMMER SAVINGS
FOR THE ENTIRE FAMILY!
DRfSSE.s
•Selected soft and woven dresses, 34%
off. Several styles in solids and prints, for
mistes' sizes 4 to 16 and petite sizes 4 to
14. 0 . TJ!)6/7207/7D/7214/7261 /7262.
Orig. 78.00 to 110.00 ...... ._. to ••
PLAZA SPORTSWEAR/EXPRESSIONS
•An eyelet bloutea, 25% off. Four stytes
in easy-care cotton/polyester. 0 . n..s.
(Not at Beverly Center.)
Orig. 19.99 ........................ 14..11
• Neil Martin poplin related separates.
Find jacket&, pants, skirts and tops in
bright end basic cok>rs. 0 . 7247. (Not at
Beverly Center.)
Reg. 14.99 to 24.99 ......... ~ .. to 14.11
• Sefected Actif casual pants, 24.99.
0 . 7252. Orig. 30.00 to 34.00 ....... 24.11 -IPECIAL SIZFS-
•Petite sportswear by a famou9 maker,
25% off. Career end CMUal k>oka In lizea
4 to 14, P-S·M·L. Selected stores. 0 .
7264. Reg. 34.00 to 98.00 .. M.11 to ..
•Petite Dimeneions' t()P9 end coor-
dlneting lhor1a, 34 % off. A fine 1Ummer
11t1C1ion In brights Of~. 0 . 78.
Orig. 16.99 to 20.00 ............ • 12.9
FOCUS -WEST COAST KIDS-
•Already reduced junior shorts, 34% off. •All SW1mwear for gir1s 4 to 14,
In many styles and colors. 0 . 71!J7. 25% off. D. 73SJ717388.
Reg. 9.99 to 19.99 . . . . . . . l5t to 13.11 Reg 11 99 to 36.00 . . . ... to 27.00
-FASHION ACCESSORIES-
• All regular priced fashion and tailored
necklaces and bracelets, 20% off. (Ex·
duding Napier"', Dior, Givenchy, Anne
Klein and Mone.-.) Selection varies
• Selected girls' swimwear accessories,
25% off 0 . 7392.
Reg. 4.99 to 20 00 ......... 174 to 15.00
YOUNG MEN-by store. 0 . 7326/73Z7.
Reg. 10.00 to 90.00 . .LOO to 72.00 •Selected shorts by PCH and &
• Regular price vinyl and fabric handbags,
20% off. Choose from styles by Valerie
Barad, Capezio and others. 0 . 7332.
Reg. 20.00 to 48.00 ........ 11.00 to 31.40
Company, 25% off. 0 . 7469.
Orig. 10.00 to 32.00 1..11 to 24.•
• Selected fashion tanks and T-shirts,
•All B.H. Smith leather handbags and 25% to 30% off. From Tomato, Permit,
clutches, 20% off. Find smooth and tex-Diner and LeTigre. D. 7461 .
tured styles in summer colors. 0 . 7331 . Reg. 10.00 to 20.00 . . . . ..... to 14..11
Reg. 22.00 to 42.oo ........ 11.• to 33.• -MEN'S RIMISHINGS -
-INTIMATE APPAREL-•Our exclusive Centura polyester/silk
• AU regular priced cotton and neckwear. 40% off 0. 7425.
cotton knit llees>'•war and regular priced Reg. 12.00 . . .......... 7.3
robes, 25% off. 0. m&/7378.
Reg. 18.00 to 75.00 ........ 13.11 to a.JI
•All regular priced cotton panties and
matching tops, 25% off. By St. Eve, Ax·
iom and others. 0 . 7371 .
Reg. 3.33 to 18.00 . . . . ..... I.II to 13.11
• Mllidenform'1 Sweet Nothings bra and
nwtching bikini coftecrton, 25% off. 0 .
7373. Reg. 8.00 to 17.60 .... 1.• to 13.13
•All men's boxer shor1s and Muns--
ingwear underwear, 25% off. 0 . 7421 .
Reg. 4.fiO to 15.50 . . . . . .J..JI to 11.11.
-MEN'S SPORTSWEAR-
• Arrow Criterion fashion T -lhirts, in
striped ltylee. Cotton. 0 . 7441.
Orig. 20.00 to 26.00 ................. I.II
• Selectlld junior bustier df11111. 29.•. •All reQ&ller priced becklw and stnipaw
Chooee printa or IOlda ln meny stytte, O. ta., 25~ off. Summery atytea from
7281. Orig. 38.• to 54.00 ............ Meldeoform and Youno Smoothie. O. •Our exclusive regular prQd men's
7373. Reg. 10.00 to 23.00 ... 7• • 17.21 lhorts by Achf, 34~ off. 0 . 7441.
• K~ Up K11Ye\t'9ar, 9.99. DntW--
81rtng lhort9 end-pents, tenk and lhon·
..... tape. o. 7212. •
Ot'tg. 14 •• ., 19 ................... ...
-IPECIAl SIZFS-...... pedt9 COOl<ll .... from the
SPftng ti colacdof I by • f8moua tpe)ft•
•Al *-dy Nduced junior lkir1i, now MW d11l91•, 25"-off. Sll1cted ., ...... ~ oft. o. Tl111. • • .... onf¥. 0 . 72114.
ortg. •• .., a.• ............... 1U1 ~· 311.00 to aoo ............ ..
THE
IS SOUJMl8N
Reg. 15.96 to 24.00 ........ 11.8 to 11.M
IOYI
HOME
•Tulsa J..piece livmg room group. Sofa,
love9eat. and wing chair 1n navy btue with
quilted cotton floral pnnt 0 7565. Save
700.00. Ong. 2000.00 , ....
• Our entire assortment of 100% cotton
print beach towels D 7501 Save 50%.
Ong. 16.95 to 19 95 7_. to ...
• Our exciuSIV9 12-pteee Revere coobet
in copper cJad or aluminum disc bottOITlS.
Set includes. 1 'h and 3-qt cov
saucepans, 6-qt cov. dutch oven, 9"
open skiUet, steamer insert, double boiler
iMet, and 3-pteOe bowt set 0 . 7546. Save
48%. Open stock value 156.93 11.11
• 180-thread count cotton potyester
percale sheets from Wamsutta Choose
from queen or king sheets and standard or
king cases Three popular patterns,
lmari, Deco. and Lily Vine D. 7509.
Orig. 24.00 to 28.00... . . . .....
•Zenith VCR with 4-heed design, MTS
stereo sound, on-acreen programming,
and 157-channel tuner 0 . 7ST2
Orig. 599.99 .. . . . .. . . 411.11
• Our "Holly" living room group. Includes
sofa and loveseat in Wedgwood Blue tex-
tured cotton fabric and coordinated plaid
wing chair. 0 . 7566.
Orig. 2000.00 ................... , ...
•Our enttre coUection of crystal lamps.
D. 7533. Save~%.
Reg. 39.00 to 349.00 ...... JUI to m.11
• Vtnyt tablecloths by Leacock in ''Key
largo", floral pattern and "ClarabeAe",
novelty cow pattern. D 7515. Save 19"9 to
46~. Orig. 9.95 to 14 95 .... 7a eMh
• DonWtr shakemalt•. 0 . 7541 . s.w 5.00 Orig. 29.96 - . . . . ....... M.11
• Donvilr one-quart ice cream mak•. o. 7541. Orig. 50.00 ............... ...
• Our entire aaonment of C.bena Club
drintwef'e end ec:c 11100... 0 . 7M5. $aw
501'. Orig. 2.96 to 68.99 .... 1.• • K.11
LU88Am
• Al hMWdt ~end Atllntk:'a ··&···~· colection, 25~ to 50"-off. 0. 7594. Wil be S>.00
to 2115,'00 .................. to ...
,
•
Simple lesson on
customer service
is key to success
The folks ai Roaen Cable TV didn't plan on talunJ a
whipping like the one inflicted on cx-heavywciJht boxing
champion Michael Spinks but that's what happened. The
local firm 1s one of thousands of cable TV companies
nauoowide that offered the Monday night Mike Tyson-
Spmks fight on pay-per-view television hookups.
Pay-per-view is touted as the next DlaJOr television
mark.elm& wave, and Monday night's big fight was supposed
to be the premiere demonstration. But for many angy Orange
Coast fight fans the only demonstration was in the parking lot
of Rogers Cable TV office in Huntington Beach. They either
bad paid for and were not receiving or wanted to pay for but
couldn't get the fight. A similar scene was played out at the
firm's Garden Grove office.
Rogers' employees did some fancy footwork that would
have put any boxer to shame and blamed much of the problem
on people who waited until the last minute to order the fight.
There's no doubt that was part of the problem. but some
customen complamed that they ordered the fight early and
still didn't receive it. One person complained in a letter to the
editor that a Rogers employee told angry customers the
problem was created by a technician who .. pushed the wrong
button ... Another woman said she ordered and paid for the
fight early but was offered a refund and told that so many
people signed up the company could not take care of all the
orders.
The real cause of the pay-per-view flap 1s probabl >
somewhere between the company's cxplanauon and the angry
customers' complatnts, but anyway you look at tt. the
brouhaha is a classic example of what business consultants are
calling the biggest challenge facing U.S. businesses -
customer service.
Comparing a customer service problem at an Orange
Coast cable TV firm to fears that United States business is
losing its bold on the service industry may seem farfetched.
but there's a connection.
Business consultants contend Japanese entrepreneurs
are ready for the second round in the fight for control of the
service industry in the United States. The first round was
similar to the Tyson-Spinks fight: If you didn't watch closel)'
you missed the action.
Consider a small example of the trend as 1t has already
developed. The Japanese now own six ofCahforn1a's top 12
banks. half of the land in downtown Los Angeles and two-
th1rds of the maJor hotels m Hawaii. They arc wheel mg and
dcahng and expanding their influence on the Un ited States'
service industry, which creates 75 percent of the Jobs in this
nation. But ownership is only part of their secret to success
The Japanese arc attacking the service industry, which
accounts for 71 percent of the United States' Gross National
Product, JUSt hke they did our manufactunng industr)
They've found a weak spot and are capitalizing on 1t. That
weak spot 1s customer service.
Motorola chairman Robert Galvin explained his alarm
over the trend to USA Today by saying. "The Japanese ha ve
the money, and the mtangjbles to be No. I in service - a
highly skilled population, a culture of consensus. a world-
class communications system and the spirit to serve. Japan
has instilled a personal pride in its workers. In Tokyo and
Osaka. taxi drivers work the streets in coats, ties and white
gloves. At service stations, the attendants run to the street to
greet yo ur car, and offer the windshield-wiping and 011
services we were once accustomed to. All this in a soc1et;
without Upping."
A top business newsletter publisher recently told has
readers that their short-and long-term business strateg> had
better focus on "customer service. more customer service and
better customer service."
The experts arc not predicting that hordes of Japanese
workers will be imported to the United States. but they are
sa;mg there's a good chance the number of top-paying
management Jobs m the service industry may so meda> be
dominated by Japanese.
The advice the experts are offering is sound and, hke all
Jood advice, simple. It apphcs to all segments of the service
industry from banks and insurance compamcs to fast-food
restaurants, cable TV companies and, yes, newspapers. The
lesson and simple secret ofsuccess many business people need
to learn is customers may be attracted by promises. but good
service will keep them loyal.
Mu scular dystrophy
The leather-clad motorcyclists who recently descended
on Milwaukee may have seemed unlikely fund-raisers. but the
truth ts that they contnbuted upward of$500.000 toward the
fight against muscular dystrophy.
So successful was the effort that officials of Harley-
Da v1dson Co., which sponsored the bash as pan of Its 1988
fund-raisins effort, arc talkmg about increasing the1r goal
from S l milhon to $1 .S million.
. The bikers. some 50,000 strong. flocked to Milwaukee
hke ants to a picnic. mtent on cclebratina the 85th birthday of
their favorite cycle, the Harley-Davidson.
Admission to the party ... covered the cost of ente~i~ment and a don1tion to the Muscular Dystrophy Assoc11uon.
That to many motorcyclists would tum out for a
charitable cause bespeaks tender hearts beneath sometimes touah exteriors.
ORANGE COAST ..
Piii
Mll,,•dee J""1'Ul
,.,.
(Mlf .. f...,
Als«iatt Uitlr , ,.a.. ,.,., ™" ........
U\1£.ttof
u ...
AdftltJilllDndot ...
Owtttor .,, ...
QrQllMll ...
~ ... ....... ........ ........ ..............
NOW A.AYING
New rallying cry for schools:
'Trustees, spare that teacher'
Newport-Mesa District plants palmS.
uproots instructors at the same time
There are palm trees and there are
1eachcrs And an Newpon Beach. 1he
palm trees ~m to be winning.
Al first glance. 11 seems like
complete madness
The oncc-nch Newport.Mesa Uni-
fied School D1stnct 1s laying off
1eachers at the same ume it 1s planting
palm trees as part ofa beauufica11on
program al Newpon Harbor and
Estancia high schools.
Palm 1rees arc grea1. but the)' can't
teach calculus. comparative llteralure
or fortha1 ma11er botan)'. The} can't
reduce class i.1Ie and the~ can·1 gel
}our lid anto Hanard. The) don't
e"en prO\ 1de much shade.
Some pan:n1s. no doubt. must be
~ondcnng "hether the school board
has 11s head !l<:rc~ed on straight. What
arc the 1rus1ees thanlang about'> Are
the) plan11nga palm forevel'} 1eacher
the> la) oil'? ls 11 a memonal.,
.. Ya see thal palm over there near
the soccer field. That's for Mr Jones.
the b1olog} teacher And those two
over b) lhe parking lot. Miss Prim
and Mrs. Proper. French and social
studies. Great teachers: great trees."
But as it turns out. the only thmg
wrong with the plant-a-palm program
1s 11s t1m1ng. Nothang more.
The money thal is bemg spent on
thC' trees can't be used for more
mundane 1h1ngs like saving a
1eachcr"s JOb or reducing classroom
s1Ic It can't even be used to bu} a
tuba for the high school marchang
band
But 1hat hasn't stopped the d1s-
1nc1's teachers from takana the mue
b} the fronds. so 10 speak.
Teachers an lhc distnct are sttll
~ 1lhou1 a conlract. ThC'ir last contract
provided them w1lh a pay raise of
zero The current offer 1s the same -
zip. On lop of that. the d1stncl has
andKatcd 11 \lolll ha'e to lay off some
27 teacher~ bi.'fore school starts 1n
Scp1cmbl.•r
In shon. 11 ,., the mean o;cason in
Nc"port Beach and C osla M~
So 11 should come as no big
surpn~·. then . that morale 1n 1he
"Orl fort'C is lo~ or COUf"S(' ti's IO\lo
Ho" v.ould )OU l1le to spend }our
summer' aca11on "ondenng v.hether
)OU ~ould be workinJ an September'>
Ho~ ~ould 'tOU feel 1f,ou wert told
that once aga°an )OU "'on't be getting a
ra1!.C but at the 11me }OU can·t help
but noucc 1ha1 the old school d1s1nc1
1s 1n,es1ang m mone) an palm trees.
Noi T-b1lls. but palm trees.
The teachers. in fact. ha"e fashion-
ed a pro\est around the palm issue.
"Bu) a palm tree. bury a teacher."
Not much ofa battle cry, but lhescarr
teachers we're dealing wtth. no\
political consultants.
The teacher's protest 1s a bit of a
con. of course. They know the dmnct
can't use that money for salaries. Bui
it sounds good anyway. 11 has a nice
nng to 11.
Still. 11 does raise an issue. Whv 1s 11
that a school d1s1nct can lease out an
unused school bul can't use the
STEVE
MAR BU
money It makes for teachers? Why 1s
i1 tha1 a school d1s1ncl would find
Itself in the odd pos1t1on of being able
to afford palm trec-s bu1 not teachers.
School financing. generall) speak-
ing. 1s a mess Not JUSt here but
e'er) where. You can use mone\ for
this bu1 not for 1hat You can put 1n
ne" carpeting. }OU can rcpain1 ahc
g}mnas1um and )Ou can can plan\
palm trees un11l }ou·re blue 1n 1he
face. Bui }OU can't hire a 1eacher
The state lottcl'} promises monc}
for our schools But agam. the lotter)
mone} 1s not meant 10 ~ome pan of
a d1stricl's da}·to-da} opcratang
budget
The nouon 1s that 11 v.ould be
wrong for a school d1stnct to become
hooked on loller) money What 1f
lonery sales ~1ther., What 1f the
citizens ofC'aliforn1a change courses
and decide to do away w11h the
lottery? What 1f the Big Spin takes a
bigdhe.
If the income from the lotter)
dwindles or evaporates. a school
district would be in a real panch 1f 1t
was counung on thal mone) 10 help
balance its budget.
School officials m1ghl even have to
-gulp -lay off teachers
S~ve Mar6/e I• tte Dally Pilot'•
city editor.
Dukakis planning to expose
Bush's inaction in drug war
WASHINGTON -A confidential
memo commissioned by Gov.
Michael Dukakis sugests that Vice
President George Bush's eight years
as drua czar of the Reagan adminis.-
tration were window dressing.
The 16-pagc memo was secretly prcpa~ for Dubkis by one of
Cona.rcss' top oversight ellpens on
ant1.<frug prosrams. Rep. Glenn Ena-
lish, D-Okla. It cites example at\cr
eumple 1n which the rhetoric of Bush
and the edministration was never
backed up by re1ults.
Reapn repeatedly created anu-
drv& pr~ms (oT Bush to ovcnce,
but En&Jish's invcstipuon found
little sub&Lantive action. For cumplt, in a speech on Feb.
16, 1982, Bush uflCd artater cooper·
ation with tht aovcrnment of the
Bahamas to combet dnl&-smualina
activities there. One year la&er.Cnc·
· lish's ovcrsi&ht aubcommiuee aSked"
the State Depanmcnt a simple ques-
tion about the cooperation promised
by Bush: What had has>eened'?
A bit sheepishly, the State Oq>an·
ment -as fon:ed 10 rrpon that the
coopcruion included the followina
equipment provided to the Bahamian
aovemmcnc • Twelve radioa that daUld blck to
lbe Korean War. OnJy OM worked.
• A 40-ycar-old ~ 10 whkb the
Bahamians said. ~ks, bUt no
tbanb."
• Three bolts that wett too llow
for chasins dN& smUa&m and
couldn•t be used on the optn •ter
btiwern illAds: ·
• Two Huey ~tll.atcould
D01 be flOw1' °"" Wlftt. wrft too lloW for a cblit Ud Md u iaide-
q•1'-W ~lhJ. Odacr pnmiln Mtt braMtl or =i...t diappoiatiae rautu. nt
~ promi:ecl in
May 1912 ID p *WI twlMoaMftt aiia ,...., dill hlD I kilky Oft iewioe-Key, FIL. ad IO baild
..., .... lmUty lor cM .,.. .....
But by Auaust. accord1n1 to Eng-
lish's report, the Pentaaon had to
admit it was woefully behind sched-
ule. It took until January for the Air
Force to bcatn passina radar data to
the Customs Service from Cudjoe
Ke)' -seven months late, at a low
rehabilit~ rate. And that was only
after En&Jish's subcommittee called a
bearina 10 find out if the promised
radar coveraae was beina delivered.
the memo says.
EnaJish and his investiptors were
unimpressed with another Bush pro-
ject. the National Narcotics Border
lnterdiction System (NNBIS), which
bcpn in March 1983. NN8JS was
suPOOSCd to ·coordinate antJ-dfua effo-rts with many qencies. but its
actions were ~undanL NNBIS ap-
parently bad to take c:ttdil for the
work of others to prove its own impon.ance.
The memo ref en to a non·panlsan
repon by the General Accoun11n1 Office. which in ... estipted NNB1s·
claims about the role 1t played in 11
caJCS wbetc aitbomc drua 1mualera were caupt. The GAO reportedthat:
• In one case, the only job of
NNBIS was to move the narcotics
tbllt were wiled.
• NNBIS took credit for 1nother
operation thlt had been planned
monlht before NNBJS aisled.
• Customs and Drua Enforcement
Aa£ncy people did the bulk of the
wOrtc for two drua teizwa thlt
NN81S included in ht Portfolio of
wins.
• One tazUrc b wbich NNBIS c1aimec1 m11111 camt about .... or ... tom u infonnant Ii~ ..oaths ....., ............ ..,_..
1io9olNNllS. • Twomrsfor_... NNmtoot
credit raidtedhM roriae c.omt s.v1ce..-...
•Madm .............. ... CM1eol1rM11~.-... Mt1d NNm. ... ¢c•tdHdm~Md
.... c 7111,eh••• -... <'ill) ..
1JACll
AIDEISOll
and OALf VA N.A I TA
praCtrce (appeared) to have some
difficulty livtna up to its mission."
THREAT TO JORDAN -The
real casualty of the Palest1ni1n upris-
1n1 in Israel may not be Israel at all.
Jntelli,cnce rcpo.rts warn that the
fM'ed·UP Palestinians may mount an
all-out ttbtllion not' qainst Israel.
but apinst nciahborini Jordan.
Sixty ~nt of Jordan's peopl~ ITC
PalnUntaDs, and tbt_y have chafed
under the rule of the Hashcmite royal
family. Kina H'1SSC'iG hu taken pains
to cou.n Palatini.ans, and he probably
has the supPOn of the mljonty. But a miliwu minority would prefer to be
ruled by their own Palestine Libera·
tion Orpiaiiation .
MINl-EDITORJAL -The aver-qe American ~uenllf feels powcr-
tea to a.a. intemauonal cveq11;
Tbat isn't true. hOwevcr. as Iona u m~ talks. Tourism is the third
._ lnd111Uy in lsnel. lleccnt prca
reports indicate \hat American tour·
ists have cufJ&iled tnavel ao Ind
sinm the bnl&al skirmitltts in tbe 0«11~ lerri&otia became niebtly
ldevasiocl ~ 5Pedfic81Jy Amen·
can Jewa lft 1Cr1tdliQ1 linid otrthcir
MntW WM:laioa ltiMrliiel. Middle
f.alt ~ Ml """"'9 ia IN t*'t bul .... ly tM IOUrilb ate driYa
... , by :r.. 1hh time. ""' lft bii111 driva awa1 .,, ...,....,.... ......... ....,.....:a. ....
din ..... its~ ........ ridl
........ -..... arial ...... . ......... ~
....&: ; =-... V•Mt -.e 1-r .. l .1 r • •
L1 l ! I K',
' ---
It's time to let
tragedy pass
To the Editor. I am writina about the woman wbo
feel• that the Costa Mesa Hiah School
yearbook should ba~e had ~of a
tribute to htr dluahta who died 1n an
airplane crash in ibe aununerof 1987.
We can all feel for a pam>t who ~
lost a child in such sudden and tJ'lliC
circumstanOC'S. The fact of the matter
is the yearbook editoR wteftllly mentioned the airl in memoriam in
the senior section.
The mother bas had a year to <kat
with the loss of her child and whereas
she may never set over it she &hould,
by now, have come to terms with it.
By demandin& more tnbutes she is
delayina the realiz.ati<?n that he~ child
is aone. AU she's do1n1 now, m her
unthink1na dcsm to keep her dauah-
ter's memory in the forefront, 1s
beapina undeserved auilt on youna
people who have dealt more re..
alistically with their ¢cf, spoilir.for
the tivinJ thepduation herdlu tcr
was denied, and causina turmoi and
upset for school teachers and admin-
istrators who merely allowed student
editors to honor the aitl in lhe
apfropriate manner thay saw fit.
think ifs time we let Costa Mesa
seniors in peace to enjoy their
.,.aduatton, and sto~ aivina a fo1';1m
to a woman who 1s cmbamssina
herself as well as the memory of her
child. FRANCIS GAOOY
Costa Mesa
Beer pictu re out
of place in ann u al
To the Editor
My dauahter 1s a student at New·
pon Harbor Hiah School and recently
brouaht home and shared with me her
yearbook. It is always intcrestina for
parents to take note of local busi-
nesses who show their appreciation
by buyina advertising space and we
try to support them as welt
However. l was shocked to see the
phot<>vaph which Gary's & Co. chose
to use 1n their advertisemenL It
clearly shows two students with a beer
bottle. This struck me as very poor
Judament on their part.
As parents v.e work very hard to
combat the epidemic of teen-age
drinking. It was d1sheartemn1 to sec
the ad showing our kids breakioa the
law. It appears as though Gary's & Co.
condones and or advocates this
dancerous practice.
NANCY LYNN BECK
Newport Beach
l TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Thunday, June 30, the
l 82nd day of 1988. There arc 184
days let\ in the year.
Today's highliaht in history:
Twenty-five years ago, on June 30.
1963, Pope Paul V1 was crowned the
262nd bead of lhe Roman Catholic
Church in an outdoor ceremony at St.
Peter's Square. In a homily delivered m nine lanaua_gcs, the Pope said he
mtended to encourage: "peatcr
mutual comprehension, charity and
peace between peoples."
On this date:
In 18~. the Indian Territory was
created by Conarcss.
Jn 1859, French acrobat Emile
Blondin crossed Niapra Falls on a ti&btro~ in front of S,000 spectators.
Jn 1870, Ada H. Kepley of Ef-
finaham, Ill .• became Amenca's first
female law school araduate.
In 1906, the Pure Food and Orv.a
Act and the Meat Inspection Act
became law.
In 1936, Maruret Mitchell's novel
"Gone with the Wind" was published
in New York.
In t 9S2, "The Guidina Ll&ht," a
popular radio program, made its
debut as a television soap opera on
CBS.
In 1971, a Soviet space mission
ended in trqidy when three cos-
monauts aboard Soyuz 11 were found
dead inside their &paoecraft after rctumina to Eanh.
Jn 1971, the 26th Amendment to
the Constitution, lo~ the mini-
mum votina • to 18, wu ratified u
Ohio became lhe )8th state to
approveiL
In l~ Pmidcni Jimmy Caner annou he had decided qajast
~uction of the 8-1 bomber. 11yuia
II WIS lOO eottly. The 8-1 MS later
revivtd by Praidcot Reqan.
lo 198~:..:tbC time limit for the ~ ~Ull Riahu Ameftdme:Dt ;o li.S. Conatituuoo expired. with
ptoponaus fallint shon of tbe'thtee ·
additlorial stat.es needed to ratify it.
lil 1915. )9 American ~ &om a bijaieked TWA jetliner were
6-eed i.n Beirut after: bci• beld 17 dim 1916~ M decilioa. tbc U.S. Supreme nled that "8telCCMlld
ou.dlw bocnolaual acta betwwa
CC>n*tinaadults. even ia tbe pri'9CY of their own....._
T• )'elf'I 11D= Vice r..-.t W .... F ...... le l'M iato bodt ........ ....., ••••l'Mlft• be~ I~ vilit IO brMI m ---Jewilla ....... ... ....., ..... '° ....... "' ' doaol.WMW1111,..~
fi¥1,_.lllD=n.J..-D I n. -=Sa a.Iii ............ =::.:=.~:at::~ =.!t:;5;S'.nt 'I Ir 1 s's ., •• r•u•.._
--
• Onnge CO. DAILY PILOT~. June ao, 1MI
~~~__:____I a_pproves boost in minimum. wage
Labor committee OKs measure raising millaot'I jobs. especially those that SS00.000 ot ks&. Tht ~>.cmptton
1 _ ncedWin·.blark)~Ut~andSpuisb curttn~1pphatofinmw11hs.alnof Co raJ payto 5perbouroverthreeycars )~~~/~t':'!!:':l~.c:.;; ''t~~~ahebill~uldincrttK art essubminbnam --.-AIHl-~NOT--ON-('""'_.~.,.---The--.e-...... -------.....:=--..;....--pany lines. wtth Rcpublinns Robm tbt IOGlkd up credit for mcaurans ~I ..KJtO week ...... they would oner T.SllffordofVmnoatand Lowdl P. worktnto SOpnttnt bY Jan. t. 1990. • LliNWCommit1e1llPPfOVed11-5 uncnaietua. but DOnt wat in· Weit~ Jr. or Conn«ticut joinu11 Em~ art' currently allo~C'd to
Oil Wldaeldly comptCNnbe leait-troduced: lhc Otmocratic majority. count ~ pcrrent of an employtt'.t
la&iola IO raitt the ftdcral minimum .. Theft was no reeson to take on Tht KconC'dy compromise wn tipt toward paym~t of the minimum
Wllf to M.5, ptr hour ovtr the next tholt is&ucs in committtt." 11id Stn. wor\cd out b(twccn DemO<'T'ltic WlllC·
three )Un. Orrin G. Hatch. ll·Utah. "There will conarnsional leaders and otpnized Ktnnedy and Rt~. Auau1tus f .
F1ocx Kiion on the bill is not be amendments when tM bill trtlto labor afterat bcamc clearthat 1 latfCT Hawkini.. [)..Calif .. chainnan of the
npec1ed i.antil after the Dem0«:ratic the noor. I am sure we can conjure up minimum --boost. approved by Hou.IC Labor Commiutt. Inman~
National Convention. wtuch occurs some:· the House .. Llbor Comnuntt. was sponsored tcsistatton that would ha"e the week of Ju.Jy 18. Hepredicied that floor action .. _ill aoin& nowhctt. railed the minimum~ toS46S1n
Committee Chairman Edward M. be a donnybrook. Thttt is • lot of The Kennedy bill would raise the hour over three )eln. then .. i~"
Kcftnecty, O.Mau.. sponsor of the imtation on this bill. Thty (Demo. current $3.lS hourly minimum watt futu~ in~a~s b~ tYint them to tht
bill,didnotwulttimeinbrin.•n•i"'-mts) haven't had the intestinal 10 U 7S in 1919; $4.15 in 1990 and inOat1on rate. ·-• ·~ fon.itudc to brina up the bill before .... « 1n 1991 O · · h · d · measure 101 vote by the panel, ca.llina now... -.u · ppom1on to t t an uan& for ~ l&IJv as soon •• a q·•orum ....... The e1emplion for small busi· provuion b> a numbtr of Democrats
1 -.. ..,.. Ha&cb laid the inmasc in the Id ..._ ...... th H · r. __.. h formed. Republicans had indicated 1 . ncun wou ~ cxpanun.i to cover on e ou~ commmce 10".~ t t minimum waae .. could cost up to a cmplo)Cl'I with annual ,.1,ts of letdcl'\hip to abandon u. In place of
inde1ina. the HouKcommitttt voted
to incrca~ the minimum v.agt to
SS.05 O\tr four )ears
Re~blicans in both bodies art"
expected lo offer amendments thal
would cap the increase al $4 an hour.
NEW YORK (AP> -TM following list 1h0Ws lht Nb York Sloct.. E11c:ftanoe 1tocks and warrants that have oone uo the most and dOwn ltle moil bas.ed on perant of change rtoardlns of volume tor Wed. No s.ecurltift trading below s2 ere loo· -~· Ntt and l>4tf'Centa0t changes art lhe d enc• between lhe orevlous closing
fW ln<I Wtd~Vj' 2 o m PflCI
Name Last CM l'ct. 1 Pullman 7'1 + 13;. Uo 216
OTC UPS & DOWNS
~----= ,,. •. _
NEW YORK (AP) -Thi tolto•1no list ~ the Ovw -the -c~•w slOdls aNS •errants 11\at Nive gone uo
ltle moslJnd doWn the most based on owe.ant Change le>< Wed No securities lrtding bttow n °' 1000 51\arn are lncludld Net aNS percenteoe cl\a~ are the difference betWMn lhe Ol'IVoOYS ctosing
e>rlee and W~s .. ,1 °' bod l>l'•ce
Last CM I'd. 1 Am8 n 2'> + -·'f,. Up C29
2 H.nlev fo 541• + 11 • Uo 26 i
3 SPhln11Mn9 2 7· 16 + "> Uo ~ 4 E="9Measr 2l• + i, Uo 2
S Int wl j>• + '> Uo 2
6 ~JI SCP \1 + " Up 2 .' 1 Enh l.4 19·16 Uo 176 I leraRE 13 I Up 16 1
9 toma I 1 I , Up IS! 10 AmMedEI s 11' • + Jl,. Uo IS 1l FFdSvMonl t• + 1 Uo 1•
12 AvantGarde + • Uo '' 13 lntwvolct • + , Up 1'. lj ROCkHon• I + Uo 1' 1 Soec:Ptler + Uo 1'.J I NuVi'" · , + Uo 1~.3 SlarTtcll 2't + • Uo 1 .J I ClarionCap l, + '• Uo 1 0
19 Manatron • + " UP I~ 8 i ~~=~· 11
1
• t •. ~ ~g ~~ onllnvum s 11' • + 1'• UP 12 i
o"'"-Fds • , + '> Uo 12 S Sllvarlisco 2 • + '• Uo 12 S S ConsOICaPlnco 1 + 1w uo 12 o DOWNS N.me 1 ClrcteExp 2 lndePFdl
Last ~ I'd.
3 EP<Hlltl vn 4 ~lwlr.Pic vn t MPSI Sv CtrvWTrns
U"ia>Amtf'
'. -1 • 3'• -l. ~J!= 1 ., -~ -... -"
lH ll7 6 16 7 1~' t, ~
13 9 1~= ]~ ~ -1
' M;ct\AnlllnV
10 ~~g,NC 13 t f 12
ll MillooeGP 12 Orttiomtt 13 Halhew•v s 1• lnll IOO un 15 NorttlLIV
16 Parle11CP ~17 L~~;cn ~uto~ vn DM~Furn
7. - 1 2S·16 -S· 1' I::= ~ ·-I s. -~ 16 J -2
J 11 -"
12 12 I 11.9
111 11 s 11.1 109 lot
10'
AT Env wl Grt tnnF I
2'• -• 2. -• l8a
120 •90 ,andsngl~ V rlttonLM ar•dVneEI SunrflOl'I
i:: = : l~ = .
2:1.t -
00%
S"1l'r6 m rmu
fOll 10 OZ. SILVtJ ~
Sunshine Mining Company s
prices on sil\ter and gok1 bllllion
are already the lowest rn the
industry. And no~· ~e have
rtduced the price on our flawless!)
minted .999 purt ~I~ I 0 ounce
bar!t rrom . 75 CM:r spot price• per
ounce to only 55 o.<er 5PQt price
ixr ounce
Limited lime offer through Junt
)() 1988
•spot price a" quoted on the
COMfX
can rou.·rRU
l ·800-2·SllVt:R
SUNSHINE .
MINN3 CTh1R\NY
50~ontht
New lbt1l Stock bchange.
Ott"~"°'" tlw ~-
;-~
-~~'!!1:!~~:.!~:!~~~:~!:.1
Sl.so··s':'bm1n1m':lm"forwotktn~uinaS60a month oqnorf.in tips, v-ill take
effect fnday dop1tf a roun challenae. a state labor offiriaJ said Wcdntsda).
A statuppCalscoun in Sacramento ruled tht> tv.o-tier wage illrpl June 16
and said all ~~rkers must bc paid t~t new minimum ors~ 2S. But that rulina
u not )'Ct bindana becaust an appeal 15 pending bcfor( the suite Supreme Court.
··.w,c arc IO•ns toenfortc the man1mur:n-wage order as 111s wrmen. that is.
pcnnlllul& tht Sl.SO minimum wall' for tJppcd cmplo)'t'CS who rtteive S60 a
month io tips:· said James Curry. ckput) chitf of the D1Hson of Labor
Standards and Enforttment in the state Dcpanment oflnduslnal Relation.s.
..We arc cautionina emplo)cn. ho~cver. 1hat the d«ision of the Coun of Ap~J might b( upheld and that the_> -.111 then be rt'QUrrcd to pa) the full S4.2S. I
We r( c,·cn su~una that the) m1a,ht v.-ant to ~t the mone) aside for beet
paymecu to thelt emplo)ttS."'
lfback pa)mentsart required. Cum said. the' v.ould not ha'e to include" mt~rnt unJcss an emplo~er rrfust'd to make tht 0pa~men1 and enforct'ment acl100 ~-as nttded. But a laW)er for emplo)tt arou~ challenging tht'
subm101mum v.agr said last v.eek that claims for back pa) would include
interest.
J ~~::'1~1101 ·~ + , UP in 2" + • • MclntyrM g 5" + 3•, S viManville 1 + I J Portee J•+"-E nnlslSF 1 ' t '" ·~~m~" 14>... " i . + 10 Roekawav '· 1 11 AM Intl ~~ • 1J i'iorlzonCo I l Marc.di 2:1.. t • 14 W1tn Urnon 2l .. ~. 15 Soumrtt ad1 Pi 11 • + .,.,
lJ Amrelnc 20 + "• 1 NwArnShoe n 2l• + ...
lt~rr " ell.. t p,. r '•
fi ff"' w•
.. A Inc Jt: 1 • Mfg ~ Enov 31-t 11 Inc JI • I • MACON\ 10 J + 1-Soumn.Co J, + DOWNS I
Name Last °"'
Wllcl OTC c...or MaW YOltK I U I c .... r ..
•ASOAO ....... C...cm ................. ~ .. ' ......... lllllr1"' '°'°'' .__ .. fMllarl .... 4 C0t•S• ~ ..... , .... c .... ., ......... ~it' retell mer••• ........... __ ...... ?.\~ • 're' Ac.Mlln I • I s-i: AO.CU ~,.. l~ 1 ... 'i· ~ I· I • 1 lo Oii ~ ... ¥', I • ,
Allco r. lL rv·~ Ame.est th• ·~ ~71 fl Aml.ct. 4 • I
ll.M4 ' I, 1 t I• AN'l"S tr·~ FIW "' ,.,..SA i 1 '• = 1 -16 "'-"•" ..... , FlurOCJI
lA•:W 'l Fat,.,., Ar.., •1._ ~...., :~'\'? .......... ·t., t)lo F,._ ~ I h" F ..... , ll ~ ~ D .....
Cllnc i 1 : ,,, -= om l t-1'
'•"' IS • -ll(;o '14 • lflo =· • • .. 'J 11·1'~· )A 1 l r f! ~ ... , ' lrlllr" ~. 'I. ...... s ~ 1 •• .,,,...,. n·u. -·So WICO IA 14. JClf'ICD' t~i ~ Kerne" ' l(tyS A' I(_,
IC.•tnOf ' I , 11;.-
SAILCLOIB
A nri'\V l'Obnc
<ZXcl~l\.(l. to
f.L·f.tez
Wasnabkz arrl.
~.t0r•3E>
Nrl ll o::¥Tli~ in
four gJ'tZfL cdors
Cott.al '1AZ.b bz.lt~
by Trofa\9Br
tl7 50
Uo Uo
UP 67 Uo 6S Up 64
UP p UP Uo Uo Uo :I Uo Uo UP UP a UP UP '' UP '' Uo 'l Up UP Uo Ii UP UP UP
Pct.
Q ... '3'1 It • 1._ ... ' Jt.,.
17'-171o
411• 41 • 2''-14 • 17 ... 1111. 1i"' ,. -. ,,, ...... ij~ l~ ~1 .
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9• tncl 1 -31• J Vl~NH J 75of0 I • -1\IJ
' B~AIYOW n lfl • -211) t VI NH J~fE l ''J -l ~llSICo 21--21'! Home 2~ -'·"
' T~~ ofA r• = :: ., ~~ ..... r-·~ I 1 I tPb PK -II)
1J ~ NH pl -1-'l 1 oleco ~--\41 1• a~vc ''--'-" ts ~c ~Ln ~ -'.'J It ~11 t:, 1 ~ = '-,1 x•""' TIC ,~ -11. l rnSNo& ~ -.. :·I r .... I\'". ~ -.. ..... """" ,., _,. 1 Alc~StT.r: 23lio -ll't ~w .9lllW lf~ -1-s ~ 2 • .. -1 ,,
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ttr._ ~ ~ ·-~' It~• ll. ll • lt-S•
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~· ....... •. r-~ JI • 1'~ i. '> I ......,., ' ~n ... I u IA 1 ~-,, • 11-.. -\~J!! ~ ~'117 , -NO.C. n.n. Tecvm NM.cm 11·1' ,., ncm.t. ' ft~ u =~~ II "'-T.-Ue ~s~ 111.t T-...... ff.. 1 ; l=.i g, ~ .. ~~ ~ n~~~ USEw ., . ._... " . U<'vHll . ... »~~ ~ ZJ., 11' v ... s .. 7'8 VeoMI tr: ft~ \IMJI
.~ I'~ \lell;r9 ~. ilfaftE~ 11~ 'f ! .... ,~ ifg == "-'""'' im 1'· ~~ ~ ·~ ,.._,. ~ ,........ D~, Wtpllr• I ,~ .. '> ,._.... ,,,,_,
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It•~ IS • IS-. n~-~ ~
Your Favorite Beverage Delivered FREE
To Youi Home or BllSlness
A~Newfdea
In Home De~ry
•Gifts• ~s
·E~use ··-
--JULY S .. CIALS------
OitW Aw 7 t4 hOdUcts ..... .,.._ ..... .....,
.......... NllriMfll s.... °""'= .. thalNI lcH !he ......
..-1.11. -• ,._,. ..
Marketgatnsground I
NEW YORK (AP) -Stock prices uined JIWnd Thunday with a boost from deCliniaa
interest rates as the markets reached the midpoint
of 1988. Aftalysu said investon drew some encou~
mc.nt from a drop in bond-market interest raan. West Omrian authorities railed some of their
key interest rates Thursday, followina a similar move in Britain earlier in the week.
But traden in the U.S markeu took the news
in mide, apparently concludina that 1be federal
Reserve would not nec:essarily feel compelled to
tiahten credit in this country.
Broken were ex pectins the PllQC of activity to
slow Friday as the tons July .c holiday ~
approaches.
WH AT A~HX DID : WH ~T NYSE Din
NEW YORK <AP) Jun. 30
1 ~
A~H~ L E~DERS
- - -- -
GoLo Quons
-- - --
.... --......... ,.,..,,.,. '¥ The AILI ffl!w ................... ..-...... 13.IO ....... ..._ ............. u..oo .... ...._ .... Jaf.a .... .. ............ .. tQY.Jf, ... , ... . ....... ...,_..,,,'°·•14 '°· ..,, .. .... ..._ ................ .,.00 . ........ 11""7 ... up tUO .
................... ,
9 01..-.... a..,. ~ ... .,.._. ....... ?O ... t1eo
I M u:a~ QuoH~
Due to tranamlalon probleme In
New Yottc, today's Nsttng wtll not
appear In the Oalty Ptk>t.
Due to tranam•on probllme In New Yen, today's ttstlng wt&t not
appear In the DaJty Pteot.
Dow JoNES A~tR~u s
lt'sbard to ~ta ~ce tag on
art, but recently, purchase awards
for the 1988 Newpon Beach
Artist's Exhibition and Juried Art
Show were pvenand have been
put on displa~rouab July 29 at
the Newpon ch City HaJJ
pllery.
Presentations were made by
Ma,_ PnTem EveJJ8 Hart, and
internationally known water-
colorist Ratll Bf8dsjUdged the
competition.
More than 2SO pieces were
submitted, and 70 pieces were
chosen for the exhibition.
So let's congratulate the big
winncn: Gerry Miller of Corona
del Mar, fora fint placewater-
colorpaintina, and a purchase
award of$ 1,SOO. Second place
went to AM All ... of Newport
· Beachforwatercolor,andshe
receivcd$7SO. TerryMueMl&er,
alsoofN~Beach, was
awarded third place and $350 in
prize money for an acrylic paiot-
"'ftonorable mentions ofS 1 SO
went toTatAIUo, Newport
Beach; Gloria Pury Walter, Cor-
ona del Mar; Marse ~pmu,
Newpon Beach; and Maartce
~Newpon Beach.
And receiving the Mr. ud Mn.
David SMra purchase award of s1soe:;ren1 J-...ofNew-
pon b for an oil painting.
Newport/Corona dcl Mar an-
ists selicted to display their work
are Perris Bne1, G.W. M•lalman,
EU7..QrlsiaMe~ener, Jeu
P....n89Ue1,DoMW P.Joaes,
JeU~.BeaRlleJ,
BdaGreea;J.P.PaJmer,
Gretdela WUUam1,~ar L. Prua, ... lvyC. Wa.
AIM blel .. ed: Jee Everett,
J•$1tea,Maleom C.Uer,Roya
F ....... A.....,MeNeO, David
Ra7,Stev•Jme, Wlt Juu,Jue
MeCurJ,SlleaTJ 011e9. Mary Am Rall, Wallace Sle1el, &my
Lue, Bewanl Mortrldae,
.-.......Panem,S"&eve
:::e-::r.:.~n;:::.!I'-........
And there's more ... Ra)'IDOIMI
C. 0..ta, Lob Apew,Ju ADI,
S11ana &ue,MarilelB..-Om.
ButaraB.I.ewallkl.Gall
Sellen, Wlalf"41 I. Roda, Ubby
Jeulilp,atrley AuS&ocb,
M,,.alSanea,Keldl
Ju .... , Adlwa, l\aymoad
Mitaell,L Ceot,
PatrJ...,._•,l\aJ Baack,
Beae.Belllqer,ud Tlmotlly
Ertt.
• • • Speakinaofawards, Horizon
Youth Employment and Training
Service, an employment prep.
aration and ptacement prosram
for»biah school studen~ recently
was presented with ~itioo
awards for five local businesses
......... llOlf0 .. /82)
s =====T=ti:::::URSO==A;:Y=, J~UNl:;:;i:::::=1:m. 1a:lll
1
11:8
'hood bikers ready to roll
Bl.ken are (from left) SJlerle W•tJMrbJ,
Ama Storm, GUI Ocba, Sue Bramel, Teri
Gmadlacll, Karen WU.On. Mary Rabon,
Wendy Joltneop and Jeantfer Woo19eY •.
Ancient Torah
in NB temple
IJ l.ATY BOUCBEll
Of .............
Throuah a c:ircuitous route, an ancient Torah bas
found its way from Nazi Germany to a synagoeue in
Newport Beach.
Rabbi MarkMillerofTemple Bat Yahm says the
Torah would often be hidden during Hitler's mgn 10
Germany by Christians doina a favor for their Jewish
friends so the Nazis couldn't desttoy them.
Durina bis rcip, Hitler was having all syn-
aaoaues destroyed. but be preserved Torahs and other
documents. and stored them in museums as anifacts.
He·tbouabt that after the Jewish people were killed
that othm miaht want to see lhe artifacts of the
reli&ion.
Durina that time, a German Jew named Martin
Oettinser attended a synqoaue in Germany that had
a Torah in its ark.. Oettinaer. who bas since died, was one of the
lucky Jews to escape Hit.let and the Nazis. However,
he went back to Germany after the war to claim the
three Torahs that were in bis old synaaoaue.
Miller said Oetti.nscr was a very wea.lt!ty man
who imported foreip aoods-He knew where some of
the Torahs had been taken, and was able to obtain
three Torahs from a museum and take them back to
New York.
.,,.,,... "'-~
Jlabbt llark lllller with ancient Tora.II.
The Anaheim synagosue wasn't succeed1na.
bowever1 and Oettinger's grandson wanted to give
this pruious document to another congregation.
· One went to a temple in Manhattan, and the
remainina two ended up in Queens, where Oettinger's
pandsons went throuata the ber mitzvah ceremony.
Y can later, one of bis pandsons moved to
Anaheim Hills to start bis own congreption. and
obtained one of the Torahs.
"When I heard of th.ts from friends of mine, I
sugested the Torah be given a place of honor and
<lifi:Uty in the holy ark of my congregation." Mjller
said.
(Pleue lee Al'CCIEKT /82)
Show high on skateboarding
The messqe was to aet hiah on
your skateboard rather than drup and the pand prize was a custom-
dm&ned skateboard made by a youna
pro(essionaJ skater.
The event took place last week at
Newpon Heiabts Elementary in
Costa Mesa. where the anti-drug rally
featured a skateboard exhibition by
p:ofessional slcater Gary Sandmen,
12. of West Covin.a.
Every child was involved -from
kinderprtcn to sixth ~ These
youths were not only excited to watch a skater perl'orm and do tricks. but
two sood citizens' names were picked
from each classroom to be put ina bat
and three winnm received 1l Sand-
erson oriainat slcateboard. Each board wu unique, with different
vivid colors and desips -some·
thine that the skateboard sponsor
n:qwres.tbc athletes to do each year to
keep up with ~nt trends.
SandenOn, who is ~sponsored by
Madrid SbtCtioards in Santa Fe
Sprinp. lkated on the blacktop while
the childreil'a eyes were ftoot and
center. He raced to a ramp, made a darin& twistinajump, and performed
cement-parkina-block jumping.
Sanderson has been a professional
skater for almost four years, and
someday hopes to win a competition.
He says the best he's done so far is to
place l.Oth among 80 other pro-
fessionals.
And Sanderson put on quite a show
for the children. He said, however.
that he wants to stress bow druas can
ruin a person's life, and he wants to
show skateboarding as an alternative
The children all qrecd.
"Drugs arc dumb," said l~ycar-
(PI ...... $KATE/B2)
a,unw.an Thewomeabikenti.d~ita
... .._,.._ San ClCmtnte, Juncb in Diel Ms, met
SW. llwl Ud Gall Odu were · fio!lhed ~t the Saa DieeD ~ ... f1' bei111 left bchiftd by ~their tra~n staoon, whei'e tbcy took ~
..... adl wbca abe mea would ride train black home. .
otroa lhcir 10-tpecd blkes. . EverytJuna went perfectly. ~
Thcte wu oothina else to do but even had a .. moral suppon ,..
joiia than. And if lhey were aoing to driven by a oeiPbot wbo ...... •
bepU,Pi dlcwomcnknewthcy'dhave remain anonymous. IO~. ..We'd be bikina uohill -" -
Soon, other women from their friend in the van wouktbc bl.,.;'11 e.
HarbOr View ociahborbood took theme from 'Rocky; and roodlll • no~ and wanted to jorn in. . on. really m.akina the ride fun, .. i9id
In fact. bike ndin, in the neigh-Woolsey. "I couldn't believe it. SM
borbood became so popular, the drove slowly and stayed with us the
Newport women slaned riding whole way:
wit.bout their husbands, and eventu-Woolsey satd weather coDditioM
ally Conned their own ridini club couldn't have been better.
called '1'he Fut.est Mothers on "It was perfect," said Wooh!Cy.
Wheels... "This was not your typical Juet
"We're not out to break any speed morning. The sky was ck:ar a9d
records. only to enjoy the beauty and sunny. We all climbed on our biJca
c""'''--of each day," said Jennifer with our spcaal T-shirts beari1'S our ._..... • ..,.... logo and took off."
Woolsey, one of the ridina mothers. Woolsey said they made it with \be The small bike riding aroup soon · · fla · srew to 10, and women aot toaether only mishap bein& a t ure.
three times a week to practice. "This isn•t our first trip," WOollry
Then they decided to put that said. "wt year we went and almost
practice to the ultimate test. Sot run down by a tank in Camp
At 6:30a.m. on June 8, they started Pendleton."
out ridin& from their Newpon Beach .. I used to be a ru·nner," said
oeiabborliood with a destination of Bramel .. The reuon I swildaed is San Diego. because of the enjoyment I llC'l by
""Tbe purpose of this trip is 10 beina with friends. and it's a fot ~
cdebrale a few birthdays that arc stressful on the body."
comina up for some of the women... AndWoolseysaysplansareaJready
said Woolsey ... We won•t tell you our in the works for next year's jaunt -
qes, but the qe P."OUP ranges from and if they're lucky, the husbands
early 30s to the m1d-40s.. •• may even JC1 to go.
Former actress
turns nurse for
ailing stray cat
BJ U TY BOUCllEll
Of .. 0-. ........
Former actress Mamie Van Doren doesn't usually do hcT own srocerY
shopping -but 1t was such a beautiful June day. she said she "°ouki make a
refreshment run.
Van Doren. who lives across the street from a grocery store in Newport
Beach. was out the door. dodgmg the demolition from construction wort,
when she noticed a helpless starving cat ·
-that could barely move.
.. 1 never go to the store.•· Van Doren
said. .. All of a sudden I saw this pitiful cat
that looked as if it had been trapped
under the rubble for quite some time. I
started to approach him. and he tncd to
move. but his legs were too feeble and he
fell."
Van Doren summoned l'ier h~
band, who was watchina from their
window, and he brouaht a towel and they wrapped up the cat arid took him home. -..:.. ........ ,_
.. , didn't want to take it to a vet.
because I was sure I could give him the
best care," she said ... I was reared on a
farm in South Dakota and took care of I S
cats and SO chickens. starting at age S. l
wanted to nunc this animal back to
health myself ...
She said she knew the cat bad been
trapped because of bis appearaAOC. The
animal was covered with open sores
along one side of its bod¥ -as if 1t bad
been tra\)Pcd on tts side under the -------i-~;;.a..;:-..._..;;:;;;;;::m~ construcuon.
But that was at first glance. After Mamie V• Dora
closer examination. Van Doren foundrmorc complicauons..
"I thought it had been de<lawcd. "she said. "Every dav. was acme-and
his nose! It was rubbed raw from the frantic dauina it must have done to
escape." .
She and her husband made a bed for the cat ma large empty bird cage that
was in the prage.
Van Doren said she gave the cat a bowl of fresh. water and it was aone in
seconds-thearumal had been so dehydrated and famished. the water was the
only th1na be could handle. Then she began to hand·fced h1m ea yolks and
eventually propnscd to canned .. gourmet" cat food.
"When the cat was strong enouah I pve ham a bath and picked every tlea
off by hand ... she wd. ··1 named him Ernie -after Ernest Hemmingway. but
the bath rc'·calcd that he was a she. It's a bcauufut 'Tabby: with emerald peea eyes.··
Van Doren says she's also &ivina physical therapy to Ernie every da)
because of the anunal's inability to stand for vel)· long.
Van Doren. rcfernd to as one of the .. blond bombshells .. and sex.symbOts
{Pl-.. ... PST/8a)
i· Youth musical 'Choose' schedtiledat Newport church
•·a.oo.e. .. a th-oriented muSica.I, wilJ be prcs.-
entcd by the ?fe:' Youth choir of St. A~'s
Prelbyteriu 0.Uldt Saday at 1 p.m. at the (hurch. 600 St. Andrew's Roed, Newport Beach.
TM lboW deaJa with tbecboicel a youna penon ~
While learnilll to me ~sibili_ty fOr bis action and is
diiwd ~!1()1 AUcL Ad•~ is tee, but an offeriaa wilt be taken. Call
631-ll21 ., ... iafonnatioe.
availabat, Sunday. SbOw time is 9 J>.m, and reservations
may be Obcained by pbOM at IS~S46 I. .
. PaaOde bJ"m.tfut la BB
Lapna Beach Chamber of Commcn:c will bt held
Wednesday eveniDJ at tbc Tivoli Terrace OD the Festival
of Ans pounds 1n caauna Beach .
Followina the dinner. chamber mcmbcn., pacst.s and mends wilt attend the openina dl'CS$ rehearsal of tbc f>llWit of the Masien in the Irvine 8oWt. A limited
number of tickets remain. with funbcr information
available from the CNf!lber office 11 494-101&. ·
..
The tcSSioa is IChedulcd for 7 p.m. iA the' Balboa
Room of tbt Hunti~ Beach Central Lib!'&cy, 11U
Talbert Ave. Additional information mAy be ob..ufted bf
calhna 84 l-004 l.
V'-ial ala coa•altat101111 .et
..
.. .-.:-iv.~. . ~ • rd ratbei' be a ~~ .. ~ ..... *'dtld~ the perfarinuce and ~'r-~.,odd~ .. Pettit llid. .. I bODt I win. I love to
Ua1ebolrd. You bave to bC ~
stroll& SO lab all the bnUICI )'OU ,et. '
Loa A-*i County mideot SPd·
enoG llia,.therc WU a ftUOQ be
1nVeled to~ County to diteusa drUia and put OD his lbteboard t~m very cloee io· a mother wbo is a
parent and teechu at tbis IChool," Sudenon said. ..She is Gail
Caldwell. and wt d.i1eaaued our pis ud decided to pool our efforts and
idels toeether. and see wbat kind of
resUlts we'd,et from the chiklrat."
Caldwell, 36, of Balboa Island. who
teecbeS a special procram .. Project
' Self Esteem:· said she's sick of all the dnc and a.k:obol abuse and wanted to
• beJp educate the children while they
• are still youna.
• And wben the exhibition was over,
• tbe lucky winners were announced.
: Tommy Love, Nils Houabton, and
Tim.Baker each 1ot a skateboard.
But not everyone was left out
Otben recieved T-shirts and stickers
and an important anti-drua messaae
they will always remember.
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tumtable with cartridge,
matching 11· -high speak-
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a..11ed at ''eanl.-•e Lwllt••• aN (froilt JOW. fl-. llift) .......................................... oota• 11armo • ._.. a.nro._ ...... ..,,~ ........ ~
Knw. .. _.Mola .... CUf Lara. ealo llen:uad• ...
States, Oranae County Council,
announced 1tllllam P. C.te,a real
estate broker in Ne~n Beach,
has been elected president of the
council for the upcomina rear·
Amelia Stamm, was elected
secretary. She is a Iona time aeros~ employee in Newpon
Beacli.
The league is a civilian suppon
orpnization for the tea 9el"Vica·;
of the United States, inclu4ina tb~ Na'V)', Marine Corps, COalt
Guard and Merchant Marine.
The QranpCountyCouncil of
the NiVf. Leape, a non-profit -
corporation, is one oftbe Jarsest
councils in the United States. .:.
Anyone interested in member-
ship orinformation may call _
760-1303.
-Gentle eXercises for victims_
of arthritis spells r-e-1-i~e-f ·
By JOYCE BODLOVICH
CN .. Ollfr .......
Sisters Thelma Ackerman, 69, and
Marjorie Welchel, 66, of Huntington
Beach have shared experiences all
their lives.
Now they arc sharing the painful
affects of arthritis.
According to the Arthritis Foun-
dation. the disease affects more than
38 million people in this country; it is
the most prevalent chronic health
problem and the No. I crippling
condition in the United States. In
Orange County there are more than
288,000 people suffering from the
disease.
Betty Jones, executive director of
the Southern California Chapter.
Orange County branch of the
Arthntis Foundation, says there arc
more than 100 different forms of the
disease. Arthritis means inflamma-
tion of a joint. The disease can cause
pain, swelling and redness in joints
and connective tissue throughout the
body.
In an effon to fiJbt the disease. the
Arthritis Foundation crca\ed ••Joint
Effort." a group exercise program
designed to introduce pcopk with
arthritis to gentle. non-demanding
range-of-motion exercises.
In Huntington Beach, the 45-
minute class is held each Wednesday
afternoon at the Rodgers Senior
Center for 20 to 25 people. Exercises
range from throwin, a brightly col-
ored sponge ball to earning how to
get in and out of a chair without
puttina additional stress on the joint.s.
The workout is done to music.
It is open to men and women, ages
18 to 90 ... but most participants are in
the older ranae1 Jones said ... They do
relaxation tecnniques because the
disease is aggravated by stress. They
arc also taught to do these things at
home.
..Most of the people have had an
increased ranae of motion that helps
with mobility," she added. "I have
seen people in wheelchairs who
couldn't move their ankles or hands
improve trcmertdously."
According to Jones. the program
serves a dual purpose.
··Most ptc>plc with arthritis are
taking medication and lack of activity
kind ofleads to depression." she said .
"The socializing and caring means an
awful lot."
Though Ackerman said she has
pain from arthritis "once jn a while,"
tt is her sister who is greatly affected
by tht disease. The sisten have beth
attending the class for five months.
.;Marjorie is real bad, but the
improvement has been terrific"
Ackerman said. "She has what we call ·
a hingy knee. Every time she would
bend, her knee would lock. She was
helpless until it unlocked. •
"The exercises seem so simple bOt
they are so effective. Now she Js
walking so much better and she ls
much stronscr. She can even lift tic
windows in the house -somethi~
she couldn't do before. It really u
great," she added. :
Accordina to Ackerman. more thin
her sister's physical health is impfO!·
ina.. :
"MentaUy she is so much bett~.
Bein& with a bunch of people exe~
ins is wonderful," she said. "And ovr
instructor is just a ~oy to be arouqd.
She is so enthusiastic." ;
lnsuuctor Jennifer Cline is Jll
adapted physical education speciaU,t
for the Long Beach Unified Sch<K>l
District. Oine is working on :a
master's degree i':n
adapted/gerontology with I'll
emphasis on anhritis. She bcpn
working with the Arthritis Foun-
dation more than a year qo.
ANCIENT TORAH •••
l'romBl
It was agreed upon. and the holy
service was performed.
, "The word Torah comes from the
Hebrew language meaning 'tcach-
ina.' "said Rabbi Mark S. Miller. "It
is a hand-written scroll. written by
trained scribes who wrote ancient
rules and rcaulations on plirchment
paper." •
Miller said the Torah contains the
five books of Moses: Genesis, Ex-
odus, Leviticus, Book of Numbers.
and Deuteronomy.
"The Torah spans material from
the· creation of the universe through
the formation and call of the Jewish
people," Miller said. "Throuah the
enslavement in Egypt. liberation
from bondage, journey to the Prom·
ised Land. the laws and ethics. and
reli&ious practices of Israel."
PET CARE •••
Because it is such an honor for a From Bl
te'm{lle to receive a Torah, a special
service was performed at the Newpon of the J 9SOs, is best known for her
Beach synagogue. roles in movies such as .. Untamed
· "The Torah was brought in under a Youth;' "The Private Uves of AdaJn
chuppah," Miller said. • • and Eve," and "High School Con-
He described a chuppah as a fidential."
··ma'rriagc canopy," noting that Jew-The former actress bas been a
ish brides and grooms are married pennanent celebrity in Newport
under.a chuppah in the temple. Beach after leavin,a Hollywood in die
"This symbolizes the people of · early 1960s. She ts married to busi-
lsnrel are wedded to the Torah," he ncssman Thomas Dixon. She says
said. she's "done it all," and her auto-
Miller, who lives in Irvine with his bioarapby, ''Playing Jhe Field," just
wife and thrct,children, says he's bien came out in paperback.
at the congregation for more than 14 She's very optimistic about the
ycan,. and has watched it grow to cat's future, notina that it isstartin& to
more than 400 people. purr and warm up to the family.
Miller sa:y6 Ile 1s proud because. ..The only thins now wc'U have to
"Nazis intended that this Torah be consider is probably a name chan,e,"
destroyed -but our resolve is the she said. "from Ernie -to
Torah ever lives." Ernestine."
""" . ·Music, mimes, magic open ~
SuffimerSawdustFestival ~
! The "facet of the Festival" contest
wiU give amateur pbotopapbers an
opportunity to submit their best
festival photos. Winnen will receive
cash awards; Entfy deadline iduly 29
at noon. · The festival will be Ol)en from lO
a.m. to 10 p.m. Sundays thn>Qah
Thursdays and until l 1 p.m. f'~
and Saturdayi. On July 4 the"'°"*
will close at 7 p.m .. Admission is S);
S2 for Kniors. Children 12 and undtr
are admitled free. ....
LB'S annu8JArt-A-FaiT
awaits summer crowds
. • t-.-·· ftlMlnlal Nllll 5 ' I
~~,.-:::t~ bu1bact ftUJdu.k ........ :If ill 26dl IMIOft lat weebDd ll a.he :zau... Pllylloule iD ...... leidl.
=Composer Adolphe Acl9m'1
,"a two-.c:t romanlic bellet.
ltlDrY of a peuant aDt no
Act I torn :.bock after havina ber .,...., boyfrieod it
PDY a ClOUftt already cftlllll'd, but ::...0 •vet him in Act II fioln death at * banda of tbe Wilis -spiriu of e women who died before their na day and spend eiernity na youna men to their death.
... Tbe production was a very mOdcst
~ in terms of sets. "Jed .. by mmly
adequate painted blckdrops and
rickety lookina shacks. Modest, too, ~crowd scenes of less than 30. includina a royal retinue of oruy
seven.
0
L 'Giselle'
be COWi W'llive wilb bil more de-
.....U ~ lail h :I .:it: cabftola r-ii"'° lidieways ~ kick1) ia Ac:1 II. H~ love fOr Gilelle appeared real and
sleefully boyish ia tbe belinni._ but When it came time lot more dninatic
mime, llC. too, '1ndet:piayed. even
durina the crucial "dance of death .. sceae.
In 1ubtidiary roleSi Deborah
Schttiber danced a technically .steady
but oon-menacina Myrtha. Queen or
the Wilis, while Hil&rion, a pme-
lkttper in love with Giselle, seemed
awkward and labored in his death
dance.
Some of the best dancina in Act I
occurred durins the peasant pas de
ckux, which Heidi Edarcn and James
Pollara executed with effortless pacc
and lithe athleticism. The finely
coordinated corps dance. with the
'!Vilis sbuffiina across one-footed
atom GppOllite diftic1ioat and inacr-
filln& UDOl1I wh ocher, lriP•iPled Actn.
Molly Lynch, who toOk over the
main ch~phy. dutin for Balkt
Pacifica fouftder-4irec10r Lila Zali
(who's retirina). may have Mad htr ltalina on tht I U l Jeaa Cor'11h ofilioal. It shows in there havinabem
more ems>twis on mime than one
normally finds. but she should have
infused some life in t~ feene.
Sadly, that wasn•t always tbt cur.
If the ori~ chorcopaphy is
lackina in places, Lynch sbou1d'vc
invented her own. but in keeJ>iM with
the style of the period. Don 'tjust have
26 people stand around shakina t.beit
heads for several minutes.
Despite the drawbacks, this
...,Giselle" was still a joy to watch in
the corps danc!na. some of the solos
and duets and the more li&ht-hcarted
actina.
•
~Hothouse' maywarm up.summer TV
By KATHRYN BAUR
--~ .... reruns.
NEW YORK -In ABCs new
1ummer series .. Hothouse," set in a
private mental hospifal, the inmates
don•t take control of the asylum, or even the show. The doctors are the
ones worth watchina.
Don•t be put off by a lackluster
bcainning of the "-'O-hour movie.
The writers at tint seem to be askina
that viewers act interested in the
patients of the fictiool.l Garrison
Center, a small, private institution
outside Boston. The transparent
anxieties of an qina wife whme
husband no looser seems to need her
and a troubled youth whme worst
offense is slinaina a m~ke .at a social worker aren't exactly nveuq.
.. Hothouse.. premieres toniabt
with a two-hour pilot, the~ will
.~ntinue u an hour-Iona senes on
Thursdays.
_ The show is not on ABC's fall
"bcdule, and that may frustrate
viewers prone to aettina booked on
well-written ni&httime soaps. cs-
.pecially in the mid.st of dull summer
But by the end of the two hours, the
docton, nurses and administrators
emerge as intercstina, well-rounded
characters.
The cast is exceptional and in-
~" ... , ""' ... u., ....... .
'" l
BARBARA HERSHEY
[" Wor-~d Apart
.. ~-. ·-------,_ ~.!!!
STARTS TOMORROW
IDWAIDI TOWll CllllD PLAYS DALY AT 12:45
COITA .U 11t-ttl4 3-.S:15-7:3M:45
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eludes such notables as Josef Som-
mer, Alexis Smith and Michael
Learned.
Sommer is Dr. Sam Garrison, the
patriarch of the center and a family
that includes psychiatrist daughter
Issy, short for Isabel, played by
Katherine Borowitz, her father's big-aest supporter and perhaps closest
friend; a bottom-line accountant son,
Matt (Tony Soper)-"I see." be tells
bis father during one of their many
money vs. humanity ~ments,
"you·rc St. Francis and Im Ivan
Bocsky."
Issy is married to Leonard Schrader
(UCI graduate Bob Gunton who
played Juan Peron in "Evita .. on
Broadway). the center's lovable medi-
cal doctor. Matt is married to bcauti,
ful, young Claudia (Susan Diol), who
feels suffocated by her husbsnd's
family: In the ~m she is expcctanallia¥y. · ·
.. HotboUJC" needs to develop more
compell.tna patient stories to become a well-rounded series. the way "LA.
Law" mvolves viewers both with the
attorneys and with their clients' cases.
In at least the first two hours of
"Hothouse, .. the doctors arc the onJy
ones who seem human enouah to
need a psychiatrist. Fortunately, they
arc enou&h reason to tune in apin.
'Cinderella' video sale set ~
BURBANK (AP)-MCinderella. ..
the 38-year~ld Walt Disney movie
Iona considered one of the stud1p's
crown jewels. will be released OD
videotape for sale tbu fall.
The release will be available at
video storn Oct. 4, or about three
wcck.s earlier than Disney rival
MCA's planned release of .. E.T. The
Extra· Terrestrial" home video. .. Cindtrdla.. will be priced at
$26.99 initially, with a price increase
to $29.9S OD Dec. l, and availability
endlna on April 30. 1989, Disney
announced Tuesday. C.Onsumen cu
order the cassette at S10tt'S bccinnina
Ju!x 12. · E.T." will be released Oct. 27 at a
retail price of$24.9S. . :
"Cinderella,·· an adaptabon of t.bO
ancient story about a beautiful
scullery maid's triumph over ha
wicked Slcp$istcn. was first rdeated
in 19SO. .
EDDIE MURPHY ---NOW PLAYING ---
AT THESE FINE EDWARDS CINEMAS Ai'WWCA
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I M I ' 'I \.. ' ' ~. '"' I ,) \ ' '
New World Music Festival
opens impressively at UCI
A lllMtlel1'aU tnllic lnt.erpretation of a Mabler qu!,.. ud an uplolivo
reoditioa of a PoulcDc trio opeMd the
fil'lt amaul New World Music Festi-
val ia~W.she atyk M~evenina
at UCl"I Fine Arti VilJtle Tbeater. Servinl u tbc concert•• ma1u:r of ceremoniil WU Michael Tilson
Thomas. artiatlc adviter of the New
World Sym~ony, tho country'• fint national trauliqo~ua. the music
festival'• main att.nction and the
eourec !om which the eveni.na's
other ~yen were drawn.
Besides introduci.na each of the
prosram'1 four chamber works in his
unique blend of et0teric academicism
and ICCeSlible colloquialism, be also
panoot in two of the pieces.
That included the laudably per-
formed Gustav Mahler Quartet for
Piano and Suinp, which featured the
n.i&bt's liveliest instrumental inter-
play. Intricate &i.~-take between
pianist Tilson Thomas and his strina
partners -violinist Navroj Mehta.
MICllA£l
RYDZTllSll
who played a first·l'lte IYJ>IY•Oavoted
cadenza, violist Anna · Schaum a:nd
cellist Peter Steft'ens -characterized
and bei&htened the one-movement
eiece's dramatic tension, which was
finally releaScd into a tenderly re-
siped conclusion.
Pianist Bill Edd.ins provided most
of the explosiveness in Francis
Poulenc's Trio for Piano, Oboe and
Bassoon, fully realizina the work's
tonaue-in<bcek quality with de-liahtfu.l aJ)lomb. Eddins' playful ac-
cents and syncopations dunna the
iovial iiasaaes were matched tecbni-;;:;===========:;i cally and neatl)' so in spirit by oboist Ron Sipes and Philip Pandolfi.
"I..._
amllMEI"
-~Qrw1glr. WWCMEW"f'ORK
FWJl. HOGAN UNM KOZL.ONSKI
All three meshed very cohesively in
the expressively rendered lyrical sec-
tions of tbe tint movement and the
whole of the second.
Less sUcc:essful i.n execution were
Mozart's Quartet in G Minor for
Piano and Strings, K. 478. and
llichard 'Sttau•' Sereude in E-flat ~r fiat Wind lnslNJl\enta. Op. 7.
The former was marred by some weak
violin playina. withoc:cationa~ly. er-
rant notet an4 unsteady tempi from
the usually reliable Tilson Thomas at
the piano.
8Ut be also produced the evening's
best sounds in the Moiart. hit e_xpen
control of dynapiica and pedalirta
effectina brilliant shades of tone
colon that intcrminaled witb the
1trinp, which were rounded out by
violist Julius Wirth and cellist David Low. .
As for the Strauss. the 13 wood·
wind and brass players oft'ered an
llCCW'l1e but very dry account boast· in& very little communication be·
tween themselves or withthe au-
clitnce.
Upcomin' concerts in the New
World MuSlc Festival inelude to-
niabt's sympbonyorchestra, which
alOOf with those July Sand 12 ~at
the OtarlJe County Performing Ans
Center, two more chamber concerts
at the VilJ.aae Theater, Jwy 7 and 14;
and a joint concert with the Pacific
Symphony at the Irvine Meadows
Amphitheater July 16. For ticket and
other information1 contact the Or-
anae County Philnannonic Society
-which is co-sponsorina this event
in coJtjunction with UCI and the Ans
Center -at 642-8232.
Sounda of mualc
Dlmltrl CluietJ bolda ltrbl Buley, tb.e yoanceet of bl8
brood ta .. Tbe. Soand of llUlc" at ltllabetb BoWard'•
Curta.ln C&ll Dbmer Theater. l"rolia left are the other
children -Aclrlenne Stiefel, Jennlfer o ... mann, KeYln
Loreqae, Leelle Beaftla, Krlateo Mazon and llattbew
Buley. The abow 111U tbroqh Sept. 4, and reeenation•
are taken at 838-1540.
~~ .. _ DutaiEJ[ 'Star Wars' beams down to county fair
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KIDS 4-11
SAN RAFAEL (AP) -~ lai:gest
display ever of the magical creations
of filmmaker Georse Lucas opens today just a few miles from the movie
studio where his fantasies come alive.
Visitors can see a carbon-frozen
Han Solo from .. The Empire Strikes
Bae.le," Luke Skywalker's Land-
speedcr from "Star Wars," The Ark of
the Covenant from .. Raiders of the
Lost Arlt'' and a half-size Jabba the
Hutt from "Return of the Jedi."
"We're puttinaout for the first time
on this kind of scale the very thinas
which dreams and wishes are made
ot:" said Judy Niles, spokeswoman
for Lucas' Industrial Light and Magic,
the spccial~ffects division of his
movie-makina empire.
The fi~y show at Marin Coun-
ty's annual fair, free except for fair
admission, shows bow much of
Lucas' galaxy of special effects has
become pop culture.
Although explanations arc written
on cards at each exhibit, almost
everyone can instantly identify
Wicket on his Ewok ~g &lider,
Darth Vader and bis Imperial Shuttle
Craft. a stooped Yoda and the Star
Wan storm troopers.
There also arc mockups of Solo's
WIN FREE FAIR TICKETS
Enter the Dally Pilot's
coloring contest featuring
this year's Orange County
Fair mascot. Winners will
get four frtt Uckets to the
Fair.
the entry form.
Enter as often as you
like. Watch for duplicate
entry forms In upcoming
issues of the Dally Pilot or
plek up duplicate entry
forms between 8 a.m. and
5 p.m. Monday through
Friday ln the main lobby of
the Dally Ptlot at 330 W.
Bay Street tn Costa Mesa.
GOOD LUCK! I
& Happy Coloring I Get your entry forms
from the paper or pick
up copies from our Clip the coloring contest
entry form. color the pic-
ture. fill In the entry por-
tion and send tt to the cot..-
onng contest addresss on
I lobby. But, please. no
phone calls asking us to
l matt you entry forms. I
Thanks.
I
Coloring Contest
COLORING CONTEST RULES AND REGULATIONS
• One w1nner In each age group wtll be chosen. Each wtnner wtll receive 4 tickets to
the Orange County Falr. Wtnntng pictures wm bC posted Jn the Ftne Arts Exhtbltton at the FaTrgrounds. ·
• All entries must be completed bv a child Sn one of the age groups Uatcd.
• .. Mau flnlshcd entries: ORANGE COUNTY FAIR • MEDIA .DEPT •• COSTA MESA
92626 .
• Entrtea muet be received by 12:30 p.m .• July 8th.
• Jqlng Day: Friday. July 8 at l ,p.m. In the Fine Arts Dept.
• AJJ entrtes may be plcked'up at the Fine Arte ~. after the Fatr.
(,
clunker spaceship and Vader's super-
star destroyer, the Imperial At-At, or
All Terrain Attack Transpon; the
TaunTaun snow lizard; and the
Imperial Scout anti-grav Speeder
Bike.
In one comer of the I S,000-square-
foot round auditorium, Vader stands
next to the Deathstar Battle Station.
Nearby. where they will pose for
pictures with auests, stand C3PO and
R2D2, Skywaiker's mechanical side-
kicks.
~.o& project supervisor at ILM in San el. IS miles north of San Fran-
cisco.
"I think people will come here to
try and see how their heroes were
created,... added Gawley, who has
worked for Lucas 13 years.
Besides Lucas' creations, Indus-
trial Light and Magic also bas created
special effects for scores of other hit
movies. The KJinfon Bird of Prey
from .. Star Trek II" is displayed,
alona with a model of the De Lorean
Time Machine from "Back to the
Future.''
"This is a collection of giant flashes
of imagination, all inspired by
Lucas," said Steve Gawley, model All the movie props were taken
-9lflcam-Ta1.----, from a &iant warehouse employees ~.-..,., 11111-<AIL•-call The Archive.
''LOADS OF
IAUGHS!''
MN AYKROVD JOHN CANDV
GL-OumooRs
l!!I ~ 4llt A~~~-~"f!
Many were falling apart, and bad to
be repaired, and in several ca!t..-s
replacement pans were scavenged
from duplicates, leavina only one
intact.
.. These models die a httle bit every
time you move them," lamented
Niles. "I doubt that we'll everqain be
able to put on a show this Jarac;
certainly not one that's more tbanjust
a few m1Jes from our studio."
The same crc~ .• Jhat handles li&ht·
ing, makeup an~stuming for ILM
arranged the display, which includes
a star backdrop and videos showing
how the various items appeared on
the bi& screen.
Models of the various spacecraft
are startling in detail, not all ofit done
in the utmost seriousness.
Look in the cockpit of one, for
example, and you'll see a miniature
Playboy ~r, in another a NASA
emblem; m still another a ~ anchor
on the outside of 1 space destroyer.
EDDIE MURPHY
i1111Ca
-tllllm't
ready, for
prime time
a, li'IDYN l••D "'.,........_ --Npt YORK -l~ne Bdwiiiit
R. Murrow ttYinl to tlll CM'
landmark 1960 -documentary, .. Harvest of Sbame." to NBC pco.
pammina executives thele days: Mu.now: .. Thia ia an imPOnUt
story. Americ:aal don't naHzt thC
very food they eat ls Raped tw
opptetted mipant f&rmworbn wbo
live in iiqualor, piqued by poverty,
diteale, iDdifrereDce ..• "
NBC executives: .. Well, it miabtfit
in our-Summer SboWcue• docUma\-
tary .eria. But it'I IO~
There ate DO celebrities. Just poor
people who aren't ~ violent or
anythiq." :.:
Munow: ••A television network is
suoPoled to infOnn the public."
NBC executives: "Yeah, but did
you see the lousy demoa oo that
homeleu documentary?"
Murrow: "ls that all you people
care about, ratinp?''
NBC executives: ••No, no, of coune
not .... What if we aot Rohen Redford
to narrate it?"
The network that has been No. I m
the ratinas for three yean but ju.st
can't seem to find room for a prime-
time news show -the last, tetlinlly
enouah, was '' 1986" -bas cbOlen
the season ofleast viewenhip ton.in.a
series of documentaries J>Kk-.d ua
yatta-yatta-yatta kind of entertai.D·
ment event, .. Summer Sbowcue ...
The tint, airina Tuaday, i1 0401
Macho and Men," another of tbe
lifestyle documentaries that are bo-
comina endemic to NBC. Admittedly
entenainina and biah-rated. ~
offer little new information and t.beif
point of view is about u sharp u a
marshmallow.
"Life in the Fat Lane" wasa mott!y
light-hearted look at the leqtb to
which Americans will m to stay thin.
and ••Scared Sexless·,..-took a walk
down the well-trodden path of 1exlaal
attitudes in the aae of AIDS.
"Women in Prison" was an excep-
tion, a tbouahtful, informative
portrait of a part of society that mOll
Americans ten.d to think ofin terms of
stereotypes.
And NBC bu bad a few wonhwbile
hard-news documentaries., notablX
last year's .. Home Street Home
about the homeless and "Six ~
Plus 20 Years: A Dream Is Dyina, a
hard-ball look at the situation on the
West Bank from the viewpoint of the Palestinians.
.. Summer Showcase .. will offer at
least one serious documentary, 1"be
Pension Cookie Jar," a last otrerina
from lqcndary producer Reuven
Frank before be retires to take a
fellowsbie at Columbia Univcnity's
Gannett Center.
Jn .. Of Macho and Men, .. cor-
respondents Deborah Norville and
Lucky Severson interview men who
complain of a variety of ills, from
bcina wronaJy accused of sexual
harassment to aettina shot point-
blank by an &ft&l'Y wife. But lbe
correspondents offer no point of vine
Maybe NBC viewers will start
noticlna the same thina. Im 't there a
rerun of "thirtysomethins" on the
other channel? •
Suicide threat not painless
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Last
moalb I came home from work and
found a leuer from my husband
Myir11be bad taken ofTand wasaoina
to end hit life.
I notified the police immediately
and they put out a bulletin with the
make of the .car and the license
number.
Days pu9Cd and not a sin&le clue
turned up. Even thouah mr doctor
P'll me on ltlnquilizers was a
nervous wreck.
It's been over a month and I'm sure
my husband is alive and not far away
because I've received bills for
psoline and 1 new tire.
1 have since learned that he
borrowed several thousand dollars
from a friend. Apparently be was
ashamed that he could not pay the
money back so he just took off,
intcndina. perhaps, to kill himself.
Obviously he has chan&cd his mind.
I feel u 1f I am livina a niahtmart.
Ann. The police say they cannot force
my husband to return home even if
they find him because he has done
nothina illqal. J was told," A man has
the riaht to leave his wife if he wants
to."
Please let me hear from you. I feel
so alone. t am sienina my real name
and address but please don't print
them. -DESPERATE AND BLUE.
DEAB FIUEND: I a.ope Uaat '' oe
time J•,.... 11111 ,.., ....._. wut
.................. 1 ........ ,.
• &lie ,..... 1M lffmc4 .-i&t: M,ef .. ta.at ev•tuUJ M wftld
COGM ....
1 .. ~-,..r letter CG let my
reMeri bow liat rillilt.bli away 11 no
•l•tiM. It lllerdy r" famJly and frleMa Or_,. ~ . WUtever Ille
~· t&a)' aM face It. WIUa tlle
Ip el JeW IPH OMS, H matter M• W 11 It, It cu be worted oot. • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS When
Soldier of Fortune mapzine lost the
lawsuit 1b21 forced them to pay for the
death of a woman whose husb:lnd
found a hired luller through their
classified ads. the publisher said.
.. That verdict will have tremendous
ramifications on the publish•nJ in-
dustry. From now on every publisher
will have to look at every ad he
publishes." Well! I would hope so'
I work for a newspaper whose
employees are instructed to check out
evet)I ad taken b')' the classified
dcpanmcnt beforc it is aC(cpted. We
arc CXP.CC'ted to be alert to scamt.
especial!¥ those that orisinatc in
states with permissive advettisint
laws.
Child-care providers and mt
homes must have licensn and we
must verify those licmsn with lhc
county. Vitamins and diet foodt
cannot bt advenised in our paper
unless 1hey have FDA approval .
Businesses that hire models or actors
must be licensed. DtttO aa)one
ad:·ertisina a service such as
massaacs. palm reading. etc.
If an ad sounds suspicious and the
manaaer is unable to prove that the
company is lqitimatc. we refuse 10 ac~pl it
Our newspaper cares enough about
its customers to tr) to protect them
from charlaans and crooks. If more
publishers were hlte ours. perhaps
that woman would be ahve today. -
NO NAME. NO TOWN.
DEAR FRJEND: Sorry YH
woalda't pennlt me to sure Ute name
of yow paper. It deserves to be
applauded publicly.
Too bid more new1papen aact'
mapdHI don't uve you II.Ip
t&uclards. I've read ... tbt bocked
my aocu off. I use sabtcrikn to
complaba •ilea daey see ACl9 sleaze.
It's tile oaly way to gel rid of it.
"'*'· JllJ 1 AlUl!:S (Man:b 21-April 19): There is reason to
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Dtg deep, do some
detective work. reahze that rclauonsrup is more than
mere flinauon. Focus on change, travel. vanety. gain
throu&h readina and wnuni. Brother or sister may be
involved.
celebrate, despite------------
.. doubters" who re-
ally are envious.
Focus on friends.
=ed wi~:-.0~~ SYDNEY
Scenario hiahliahU 0
recopition, money MARR
and love. Caprioom1•••••111iilliiiil• plays role.
TAURUS (April 2~May 20): You've uked for more
mponsibility, individuaJ you contacted did pay attention
and you•re in for surprise of pleasant variety. You might
be asked to embark upon journey. Mjssion will bt
completed.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Puzzle pieces fall into
place. you know where you arc 1o!nJ and you could
actually find "soul mate.•• SpotliJht on romance,
crcativtty, style, ability to ect to heart of matters. Leo 1s
involved.
CANCER (June 21-July 22): Fanuly tradition will
take back seaL Coodiuons have chanted. financial picture
alte.rcd, unorthodox procedure 1s required. Despite mitial
bowls. all will be fol"IJvcn. Another Cancer in picture.
LEO (Julr. 23-Aus. 22): Unique agreement revolves
around trave , communication, publishing, ability to
overcome distance. lan&uaae bamcrs. Popularity m-
c:reues, you'll be more aware of wardrobe. body im•.
Sqittarian involved.
VIRGO (Aua. 23-Scpt. 22): Emphasis on work
methods, employment, relationship Wlth dependent.
Family member will .. cry poor" but take this tn stride.
You receive usianmcnt rcquinng meticulous attention to
details.
SCORPIO(Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): Study Libra message for
valuable hint. Chanacs occur on home front, money
JOvolved, sale or purchase featured. Older individual requ~ encouraaemcnt, praise. You '11 get gift denotina
affecuon.
SAGmAJUUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Don't tell all.
Relative is inquisitive, but actually is misinformed. Focus
on trips. visits, mystery, intriaue. Terms of offer must bt
clearly defined. P1sces, Virao figure promi~ntly.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): What had been
denied will be released -to your advanl:8Je. Financtal
position is strcnfthened, emotional around 1s made firm.
You'll locate article that tiad been lost, missing or stolen.
AQUAJUUS (Jan. 2~Feb. 18): Cycle hiah, confidence
is reslo~ and you will be at nght place. Love plays role.
you reach more people, personal munetism sparkks..
You could be sayina, "Am 't life pnd?" Aries featured.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): You make fresh stan.
you pm insi&bt, mystery is solved and you'll feel mort
secure. Look 6chind scenes. rcJect superficial 1nd1cations.
Member of opposite sex could make declaration oflove.
IF JULY 1 IS YOUR BIRTHDAY you are indepcn-
dent, creative, dynamicand can be sclf-1ndulgcn1. Youare
an orilinal thinker. inventor, and you possess pioneering
SP.1rit. Leo. Aquanus people play important roles m your
bfe. You are sensiuve, moody, capable of detecung mnds. and you can deal suc:cessfuJI) With public. During
JuJ.Y, you receive newsofrclatJve wbo hurmbarked upon
unique m1ss1on. You could be involved in romantic tryst.
October Wlll be productive, memorable for you this year.
Screams thwart bank heists
What has foiled the most bank
robberies 1s the screamina of women.
Nothina else so of\en turns thieves in
frantic retreat. accordina to research
for the Amencan Bankers' Associa·
lion. Now that car aJanns have
become so commonplace as to go
unnoticed, the makers arc toymg Wlth
the notion of redoina car alarms. So
they'll scream that w&). At 2 a.m In
your neiahborhood.
A baby can smell odors before it's
born.
Roman P.dlators rubbed onion
juice on their bodies tonpcl the lions.
Unfortunatel), some lions liked on-
ions.
Q. Quick, name a mammal with
only one nostril.
A. Whale. It closes that blowhole
when it di vcs. Whale, porpoise.
camel. What other animal comes to
mind that can close its nose?
A lawyer is 13 times more likely
LM .
Bo YD
than the averqe American to go to a
psychiatrist.
Not every attorney-general 1s re-
qui!"d to tell it all. Canadians thouaht
thctr Attorney-General. one James
Barry, was a brilhant doctor. How-
ever, an autopsy started an invest1p-
t1on that proved the Attorney-Gcn-
eral actually had been one Miss
Miranda Stuart.
Q. Can you lose your sense of smell
in a car wreck?
A. Happens all the time. To about
one in every 15 victims of severe head
iJ\iury.
RU Ff ELL'S
UPIOLSTEIY llC. ... ,_ .... c...""' tm-aa.mta ~su.11a
*Open t o All
12 & Over
If you won the zillion dollar lotter).
would you quit work" When pollsters
put a s1mtlar query to a sizable
sa!'lphn&. 71.5 percent said yes. 28 5
said no.
As to how' many "eyes" arc on a SI
bill, )Ou've 101 t~o on George
Washmston and one atop the pyra-
mid -thrtt. But I failed to mention
the caaJe's C)C -make that fou r No
doubt }OU can win a small wager w1th
the fellow on the next stool 1o1o1th the
SI bill's e)e count.
Halfof all the people IO 1h1s count!")
dtseend from people who came
throuah Ellis Island.
"Eao .. is just a snooty translation of
Si&mund Freud's actual term -"das
lcb'" meanina "tbe I."
Q. 1s tennis elbow the most com-
mon tennis iltjury? A. Not of those
treated by doctors. Lower back pain
is. From scrvina. And playiq on
ditfc~nt surfaces. ·
Can you name a four-letter flower
that rhymes with "nose""! Elemen-
tary. 1What? But not to• computer. h's
aid no computer -yet -can do
this.
Q. Wbatmakaac:nb'sbloodblue?
A. Copper. y OU mow what makes
)'Our blood red, don't you? troo.
•'"'------•e>ney one redQe entry per cona.tMt.
-
I 1:00 l •:30 11:00 f 1.:30 J 1:00 l •:30 I s:oo J 9:3o 110:00110:30111:00111:30 I
8o<h vulnerable. South dca.ls.
WFS1
NORTH
+At 7 3
Q t 5'
¢ Q'' •A Q 5
EAST
• "Q J
Q JI' 3
• It I 5 4 2
Q 7
0 IC It t J 1
• 7
0 I I 5 • t. 31
SOUTH . ' Q A IC Q 10 2
0 A 7
• IC I 10''
The biddin1:
S-.. West NOt'tll Ult
I Q P ... 1• P ...
2• r ... J Q r-
4NT P .. S Q hm
5NT P-,. r..
'Q r .. r .. Pua
~ lead: Kin& of •
It is easy to take your eye off the
.ball when a contract looks decep-
tively easy. Remember wbat we have tric:d to drum into you over the
ycui: Expect the worst!
Note that South did oot fed com-
pdled to do more than rebid two
clubs at his second tum. He did oot
set excited about the band because
of the spade misfit. However, when
his partner took a jump preference
over two clubs. South lau.nc:bed into
Blick wood before oomiq to rest in
&ix hearts.
The kin.a of spades WU a normal
laid, and dec1ua \houabl that bis
only loser was aoiJ1& to be a dia-
mond. He won the ftnt trick in
d\lllUnY, cashed two bUDlpl and So(
a rude lboct when Eul dilcarded a
spMle on the ICICOOd tnunp. Dedar·
er tried to r«O¥a bJ croaiq to the
queen of dube and ruff"1q a -=ond
'l*k· However, wbm be tried to
pl to dummy witll • .x-.1 dub.
Wcat ruffed and ailed ~ a
tnllllp, and deduer C¥tDCUDJ bad
to cooc:eiSe a ctimnood rc:w down
U.Gmp: ,._...
Complete t.a.vt.lon Uatlnp tn 8undaf'• TV Piiot.
CHARLES
GOREN
It lieded only • simple precau-
tion for dedarcr to aiw bi:mld.f an
extra chance-be should ~
ruffed a spade at lrict two. Now
when Easl shows out OD the seccmd
trump, dcclaft:r can draw a third
round, croa to dummy wilb a club
and ruff another IJ*ie. All thlll re-
0111 ~
SHARIF llm' .. l
maim ii to nm chai. ad nil ..U
West ruffs, tbm hope for dlle bell.
If the cards lie u iD die~
wbm Wcat ruffs be bu OGty ..
moods kft. ADd liDce be bolds cM
kin&. ladina .... , from the ...
arch will allow dummy's quem to
ICiOR the fulfiDina trick. -o w imam~---------
ACROSS
1 Vaunt
6~d
10 On one's own
1 • M<*em deity
15 Make unh-c>PY
16 Double
17 An.at
18 Oeducbon
20 ~tNe
21 Stand up
23 Rhymes
2• Long live Fr
25 Coty Of
L....aque
26 Oeclaration
30 A.ward«
3-' E ffllCer
35 Sprites
3 7 Blackbird
38 Spilt
39 -Flow
nev.I base
• 1 Mideast gulf
•2 Honshu bay
43 P91celw
.. CUttlng (Woodl
46 Engtiltl TV
48 Countersigns
50 -to· eugmonts
52 Decorticate
53 F..-, sa Ado
57 M8'blo
llO Rust
62 Glratt.'1
relat~
64 Premium
SS NorMnamo
66 8-'gian rMw
67 A of A.FL
66 Trust
69 W1tcl'I or -
DOWN
1 Singor
2 M1xtunt
3 Oen1"1
mMSUI'•
4 Wtlt s - -or Ritey
6 Eugene ...
7 Fluff
8 Mr Landon
9An~
10 MUSIC-playtng
syslem
11 Po11H_.
12 IM9Ct1
13 Sll'lgles
19 Bursll
22 ()pPoMd
2 4 Bench toot
25 Frolic
26 DeMNe
27 ReYol'I
28 Orange typo
29 Ol8dem
31 LOW99t point
32 Without a
stop
33 Surrounda
, 2 3 • 5
17
36 Free ta•tt
40 Exe.IS
•1 GI truant
43 Polyp 45 <Nwg ...... powei--..... aig""
• 1 Eratertainer
Slf Harry -
49 Ptudry 51 ....
53 er.e'a lun
5-' ·~l()n
55 Quote
54 Defee!
57 Scotd'I ~
58 -r.cto
59 LIMr
81 Ent..,_11
S3 Cogi liz91CO •
10 11 12 13
18
'' I
"Brace yourself. I
heard the ice-cream
truck.·
llAR.llADUKE by Brad Anderson DENNIS THE llE!fACE
"You're out of luck They don't have frozen
TV dog dinners yet."
PEAl'fOTS
W~ILE WE1RE TMINKIN6 ABOUT
IT WE SMOOLD DECIDE IF
WE'RE 601M6 TO KILL A BEAR
F~ SUPPER Oft A MOOSE .
GARFlltLD
TUllBLEWBEDS
tARltt'IN6'MEi Off101M5
JtJf1l'-a OF1'H• ~e. ~ f'O~ M• 1'0 MAAR'( 'btJ !
I WMV DON T 'fOU DISCUSS
IT, AND TAKE A VOTE ?
WHAT'~ TME. MATTER, GAP.F=IE.LP?
Lm;i YOUR
APPETITE.?
· by Hank Ketcham
l
I ' ~I
by Charles M. Schulz
OKAY.MACARONI
AND C"'EESE
IT 15 .
by Jim Davis
11 TOO!'\ ONE LOOK AT PINNER
AND WfN'f
IN'fO MIPIN<$
GAlll1' Mm PATCllBS
E.VER LIKE 10
HAVE. '>Ot."2 ~M
S2EAD, ~lt)·~ES?
')OJ M>-VE HIDDEN
TALEtJTS ...... PEO'l.E
MtSU~DERSTAtJD
'rO.>--YOU NEED
MID LIKE ~ENDS
0UT ALL THOSE
THINGS APPLY
TOME,100
byAddlaon
0 -00
6 -30 j m..~m..-~;;;;;...--ii...----
FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE
SHOE
JUDGE PARUR
by Lynn Johnston
by Jeff MacNelly
by Harold Le Doux
I. "TJ.f INK ~I OU'f iC
1J4E MALL. 15 FINE ...
.............. 1'11 ........
'netor Kraar ••• atta••ed tM Ro. 37 n•''•\ ln tlae D&tloa tlal8 ,_.. aa a ..,._ore at Ro. 2 8lall• or UCl.
Moses heats up
with new team ·
It almost sounds typical of Moses
with all the ups and downs he's faced
as ~journeyman player.
UCI ovies
in Galea .cu~
....,.,j.oln Lon Beach St .
. . trtovs. Yugoslavia
a, KSY1N BALL the tOUJ"DIJ'DeDI is limited to players
........ I J , , under 20 years old..
It --bY chance that two ua ...... ppoee if you win it all. it will players will be travdina totetbef to Fl you national m:opitioa. It is kind
Europe ant week. of a s~a stone, .. said BrilP, •ho
f ... _.a_ · play. from iusl finished bis . freshman year.
tbe ~'~me~:>~ named 14Playcrs like (Bjorn) Bors and (Ivan)
U.S. Galea Cup tam members. Lendl sot their start in the tour-
UCI tennis playen Trevor namnam~!. and ~\ on to ~me bia
Xtonem.nn and Mike 8riiD will ..... .
tam up with a dlird SOU1bern As a sinales player, Kroncmann Califorma player Gres Faillaoll..onl actUatly faired l>etler th&n be did as a . leKb Slate, July 9 wbea tbe three-tandem with Brigs when comoutn&
...a 1quad takes on the wiuer of ·raw numbe~. Kronemann fwsbecl -
Wedftelday's Hunpry-YuaOslavia the seasn with a 29-U matk but
IMldl. • ranked only 37tb in the nation. •
Howwver there is m<n pride than But UCI Coich G~ Patton, who ~ on' the line when the thn:e also serves on the Jun1or Davis Cup
collelians take to the court in Buda-Committee which selected tbc Cup
pest, lfuapry 8riaD said. · Team, believes that the two have
M .. forteamsfromlheUnit.edStates. blended into a lqitmate force as a
it is not that bile" said ~ who doubles team,
aloq with K.ronemann just m~ ~ey are a ~~menal doubles
out on~~.;: nation's top 20 m team. ' Patton said. When they are doubles, fi · · the year ranked bot, they scorch the ball Eventually
No. 21witha16-record. their names .aot ~uod that they
"But it is preuy imponant for the almost made the national team. From
European tams. It does have a there the CO.Ches IOt totetber and
certa.an amount of Pratile them, but · (Pl ... ._ UCl/C2)
..
Former Mariner
finds himself with
world champions
Fluby woukln 't be proper for •.
Moses, classy would. •
Recently, Moses has been on a tear.
BJ IUCIWU> DUNN ........ c.. 0 , 2
He wu interested in pitcher Dave !Juppen when former Golden West CoDeF " CoKb Freet Hoover dis--
covered John Moses.
Tbe type of player a scouting
director would call a borderline m-.jor
leapaer, bouncina t.ck and fonh
from Triple-A to the bis leques for
the put six years, Moses has once
apin found a P.lace he can call home.
For now, it s with the Minnesota
Twins.
"I wu a free qent after last
season," said Moses, wbo played the
entire year with the Seattle Marinen.
'"Seattle didn't want to 10 to arbi-tration with me because of money reasons.
''Then, just after Christmas,
Cleveland called and I sifned with
them in Janua But 10 '&e"i:'
trainioa. thi1,.scli<lD 't wort out .
(The Indians] .. bad Ron Kittle and Carmen Castillo. So three days into
the season, Cleveland released me.
And that's when I si&Jled with
Minnesota."
Before Wednesday's .-me with the
An&els, Moses was~ .338 (26 for
77) with six stolen bases 1n 4'0 p.mes.
Speed. you say? Yes. Moses has it.
Hu a lot ofiL
His profewonal season hiah in
stolen bases was SO -accomplished
twice. Once in 1981 (bis second
season in the Seattle Wm system) and
apin in 1982 with Double-A Lynn.
That was the same season the
Mariners called Moses up for a look
in September.
He stole five bases and hit .318 th.at
month. He would jump around from
Triple-A to the Mariners from then
on.
But just settina there wu the news.
Hoover, who will move on to Cal
State Fullenon this fall after 22 years
of coachiq the Rustlers, 101 the aood
word about Moses from Huppert. the
former pitcher who became a catcher
in pro ball and eventually made it to
the bi& leques with Baltimore in
1983.
..Actually, (Hoover) was there one
day to see Huppert play," Moses said.
.. Dave was aoina to Golden West and
be told Dave that he'd like me over
(Pleue-llOU8/C2)
Keefe adds another .
~to his list of awards·
Name an award this prep spons hearina about for a loiia. lona-tiine,"
season, and often Adam Keefe's Shannon added. "1 couldn't be more
name baa been attached to it. pround o(the kid." , The. 6-9, 22S-pound recent ,radu-Placentia's Janet Evans of El
ateo!WoodbrideeHiibaddedamost Dorado Hiib·won the airls awaid ~OUI oae to hiJ fona li1t with bis after ~mm, the tint American
teledlon u AJ~thern California . swimmer to bOld tbrie 'WOl1d matb
8aard of Athletics annual hiah school at tbe same time since Debbie Meyer. "°n athlete of the year. · acx:omp&isbed the feat over ~ yean If-ever .at down and were able _,, a_.1 --• .._ -;:---.&.. · · et-~ UM all u.; awardi be hu won, it's • ~ 11 a two-lime ~·
just mind-boilliftlo.. said his hiab Section 2-A bukett.11 Player of the
ICbool ......... cOllcb Bill Shannon. Yeer and ~time Soutbeni SectioD .. tte•s to tow key about mott of it, 4-A volleybaD Player of tbe Yem.
IDOlt of.it will probably end up in a • Witb a 3.6 lfMe point a~ in
bol ~ honors cuniculum 8& Woodbl ...
•• .. He's die type of penon you'll be (PIJHI -.....,ci)
He claims he's abum&I out' after
kriocklrig out Spinks on Monday
. He p~eserv~~·raie
~~--'-0.-.....,,..-.~=-=-,,--~--vi ct o ry ..f o i; .Finley;
· Angels prevail. 2-1
., .. .... , •1 .,aratn DVNN . ,:.._ .... c. a or. ~ ..
SIMit .. ~ have ibis ·
• mentality of.tntapotss, or DO~ the tale dilipp. . . . ~ . . 9
. ~ dW's wby ~.Harvey bas
bc:Conie thc . u,· tQ tbe : Anidi.
bull~ . ·-•. , .
..._:,~ 1{.d\-ha.Dder Oud. Fmley con-
-tin~tobe~tasa~ud .
• ~eydblcd thc·~on Minnesota · to earn his club'-~ cishth save in
· ~l-1.vlC'torybya\e~sWcdnc!S-· . . ·-... . . . ..
.... ,.
...
. .
-·.
,._ftllA11111at ... ,._
MILWAUUE -Some fomier II ...................... ICOUtl ud ........ ol ...... W1eUtl w1tb
dr nolPIQi1111110blll•....-rinaiaa _,.IM•llld llP W•111hyfor=caU. "-ty lOOmea Wi.._ bltllnd c:apa were at w•~ ..nan IMMlt before tbe day-Iona ~" ... to ,.... up. 1ake pouftd bells arid tae their
...,_--=~-dleeyeoftcOUtswllo "''&:red u b' tbe castina of ··M~ a.a.-... wWdl will ftJmed in Milwaukee this ••mer. M-. laoMva". were amaceun looki"-10 fltlfill lbeir ._.. of .....,. a bia baue uruform and IPP*'illl ia lbe motioG pic:tute to be direCted by Oscar
winner Dlvid Wiid.
••1t•1 been a dream of mine to be in the movies and
::-~ball~ oa tbd and it's a dream come true,"
··1 ca bit.. I cu pitda and I can do anythin& th~
want to ... Jtjus& clepeadl oa what they're looki~ for,
said William Pucci.'24, wbo plays 1emi•pro ball an the
Milwaukee area.
DID Burett.a Mar!Juetle Univenitr student from
Cincinnati who is spaadina the summer an Milwaukee,
aid be would be williJll to sacrifice his collete soccer
tcUOn to make tbe movie.
"I'd love to make a summer of it l'd maybe even
bypass the soccerteaton if it helps me," Barmt said.
The movie, beina produced by Major league
Productions, wiU focus on a professional team &Om Oeveland that sheds its tosina ways durin.a a
championship season, said Lisa Beasly, head of the
castina crew.
It is expected to be released next sprins. Some see
the movie u part ofa new trend of baseball films that ~ this month with the reasc of .. Bull Durham,''
which focuses on the life of a Iona-time minor leque
catcher.
With the exception of a few sc:ienes to be shot 1n
Tucson, Ariz., and Mexico, most of Major Lea&ue will
be ftlmcd al County Stadium, where the Brewers play,
Beasly said.
QUote of the day
, 0.. DrJMale, Dodacn' br09dcaster who was known for brushiq beck batters in his Hall of
fame career as a pitcher, dismayed at the number
of ejections in the ~on these days for tbrowina
purpose pitches: "If the same becomes any more
namby·pamby. they may have to put the ball on a battina tee ...
Duarte wine after long layoff
LOS ANGELES -Frankie Duarte. m
who hasn't fou&bl in matt than a year,
stopped Ron Cisneros at 2:5 I of the
seventh round in their scheduled 10-round
bantamwe1ahl bout Wednesday night.
Duarte, a I 18--pounder from Venice. outpointed
Cisneros, 118 of Denver, landing numerous pun<:hcs in
the first six round.
Mike Morton, Cisneros' manaier. threw in the
towel and rina physician Dr. James Jen·Kin qreed
stopp1na the bout.
Duarte raises his record to 4).. 7·1 with 32
knockouts while Cisneros falls to 27·20-1 with 19
knockouts.
NFL owners urge negotiation•
NEW YORK -National Football EE Lea&ue club owners apin urged the union •II•
Wednesday to resume nqotiations for a
new contract and warned that manaiement was considering implementina new rules that could
affect the playen• benefits or workin$ conditions.
The NFL Manqement Counctl issued the call
after a meeting of its executive committee in Miami,
but dad not spell out what rules were under
consideratton.
"We reviewed a wide ranee of opuons open to the
clubs.·· the ownen said an a statement ... We believe a
collective barga1n1ng settlement of all is.sues is
preferable to unilaterally amplement1n1 certain terms
that would change current player benefits or workint
conduons."
... ~ ......... ..,.ti ..
SAN DIEGO -ne ftw1i1Uy '1'l!I :=-.. s:~~-=-~ .... S-.1..-torn tennht• ~.:tfr, u.e -.a·a anorney 1okt a federaJ
ne r,..... ...... action 1f the San
~ $aC*lrl .al ao poa a $400.000 letter of credit by
~ '1 •:.:r-daldline, ICCONint to a court ......._ · bY MlSL Com..U.1oner Bill
~Ind )ll'CltDted°WedDaday '°U.S. Bankruptcy
Court JUdet PWr W, Bowie, .. .,. i.Uunction it approved, it would 11ve a new
buys 1iine to ~t that letter of credit. Socken
•atonleY C1.rteS Cbristoplaer laid. • loW\e. who will bear the club's request for tilt
~ ORScr. a)so must approve any putthalt
o&n. TM dub is projected to lose more than $600,000
t.bia~.
Preclalonlatretuma, la.ea rider
(
INGLEWOOD -Hiahly-acclaimed E Precisionist &DDCAred for t6e fint time in 20 months dilrinl :the feature race at
Hollywood Part Wednesday and while
finishina ftrtt, unseated his rider after stumblint at the
start.
E:*taunas. under Willie Shoemaker, set the pecc
and won the SSS,000 feature by a lenath folloWed by
Red Attack. wilh Laftit Pincay Jr. aboard. Finishina a
oock behind was Midwest Kina. witb Eddie De-
lahoussaye. in a field of si~ Prccisionist. the l 98S
E.clipse A ward-winnina sprinter. was marked .. does not
finish."
The much anticipated return of the 7·year-0ld
Precisionist was marred at the start after the Florida
stud faltertd sendina rider Chris McCarron to the
around.
McCarron, who landed on his feet, was shaken but
unhurt.
Lakera to train in Hawaii
HONOLULU -The Los Anaeles m Laken will be aoina after their third conteCUtive NBA title next season after
bokfina their 1988 t?Jinina camp at the
UoiversityofHawaii, General Man.aeer Jerry West said
Wednesday~
In addition, the Lakers will flay their first two
preseason pmes at the Blaisdel Center Arena in
Honolulu apinst the Golden State Warriors on Oct.
lJ..14, West said durina a news conference on the UH
campus.
West said the idea of holdina trainina camp in
Hooolulu oriainatcd with Dr. Jerry Buss, owner of the
club, •bo .. bas been a peat fa of Hawaii for a number
of years. Hecomcsoverbereand spendsabouta month
every summer ... He said to me last yeardurina traini!"I cam~ 'Wouldn't it be nice if we could ao to Hawaii?'
I have been comin& to Hawaii form.or, years. and
everyoneovcrtbercscems to bea Laker fan,' Buss said.
"Since the people of Hawaii have seemed to adopt the
Lakers, it only seems fitting that the Lakers adopt the
state of Hawaii as their home, at least for trainin1
camp."
Televlaion, radio
TELEVJSJON
4:35 p.m. -BASEBAIJ..: Atlanta at Mon-
treal,~.
S p.m. -MOTOR SPORTS: NHRA
Winston All.Stars. from Atlanta (taped), ESPN.
S p.m. -TENNIS: Wimbledon women's
semifinal, from Wimbledon, ~nd (delayed).
HBO.
7 p.m. -MOTOR SPORTS: USAC Mid~ts.
from fodianapolis, ESPN.
7:30 p.m. -MEN'S VOU.EYBAIJ..: USA
Cup finals -USSR vs. U.S., from Inglewood
(taped). Prime Ticket.
9 e.m. -MOTOll SPORTS: SOOcc Italian Grand~ from lmola, ItaJy (taped), ESPN.
9 p.m. -BOXING: Darrin Van Hom vs.
Mike Landini in a 10-roundjunior·middleweight
bout, from VirJinia Beach, VL {delayed), USA.
12:4S Lm. -TENNIS: Wimbledon
women's semifinal, from Wimbledon. England
(taped), Qannel 4.
RADIO
No events scheduled.
TELEVISION
10 a.m. -TENNIS: Wimbledon men's
1emifinal, from Wimbledon, En&Jand (taped),
OlanneJ 4.
2 p.m. -BASEBAIJ..: Houston at New
Yort Mets. WOR.
~18 Clalll Daftll 18 taaed oat at eeocmd bue .,,. llbuaeeota eecoad buent•n Al
Newm&11 I.II tlae ftnt ta••ac of 2-1 Tl~
Oftr tlae Twine ~t Anaheim Stadlam. l
HARVEY SAVES FINLEY'S 2-1 WIN •••
Prom Cl . around," said ROJAS. ••Miller came up
with I bi& hit, we played &ood defense
and Harvey did on outstandina job
out oftbe bullP.Cn to save iL
.. Bu1 I doo t know wlw we can't
score more runs for ¥ii>Jty. He's
proven that be can do the job. I don't
know bow many times I've said this.,
but I think he should have a revene
record of what he's aot (S-8). I think
be has the ability to be a aood starter.
He's been very consistent all year."
Finley1 meanwhile, lost his bid for a
shutout in the seventh when former
Anaels farmhand Brian Harper
home~ with one out
It was a line drive to left, Ha_i:per's
fint of the season, cuttina the Minne·
sota deficit to 2·1.
"With Harper, be was/'ust sittina
on that hook (curvebal ), .. Finley
said. "He just out·thouabt us on that one.·•
Rojas called upon his new stopper.
Harvey, to tum out the lights for the
final two innings.
Finley pitched a four-hitter for
seven inninpubewon his first pme
since aoina 87>i inninp apinst Tex.as
on June 7, five stll'lS qo.
uMy ma.in objective was to pt the
first SUY out of the iMina. said
FinleyJ.. who retired sill of the seven
lead-0n hi ners he faced.
.. , pitch like it's 0-0 all the time.
When we aot that second run, 1hat
pve me some brcathina room. The
way it was aoina. I knew that once
they scortd some runs. I was out.
(Rojas) was 1oin1 to let me act the
shutout.
.. Harv's been doina such an
outsland.ina job. I can't arauc with
that."
Fillley, whose only career comrlete
pme came in Toronto on Apri 30.
struck out a career-hiah 10 an bis last
start apinst Milwaukee. This time he
fanned four, walkina three.
.. Finley pitched an outstanding
ballpme tonight." said Minnesota
Manaaer Tom Kelly ... We could not
touch his curveball. He ate us up
toni&ht. We only hit the ball hard five
J
times all ni&ht. You've got to Jiv~
Finley creclit." J
F'mley believes be can win 1 ~
pmes this season, thanks to his
consjstency. He says 10winsis1oi114
to be easy. ,
··1 &<>t off to a good start (this
season). but the luck wasn't there~
me," said Finley, whose ERA di
to 3. 77 with the second most inrun&f
pitched (I OS) on the staff.
"I could have eiaht or nine win?
right now."
* AMG•L NOTIS -C.teher ..,_ ...._.,,
UllMlll to AN ~ In Plls foot etter t•· """"*'""' wltl't an ortllOllc Mtc:e, ...., l'ICwN
to Flotlcfe Oft W..11 .... y to '"' hit ..... rllftl fool for _ .. we.Ill, tM ~ lllWIOUllClM.
Thwe'1 no tlmttlllle tor '* rtlurn end II'• ~ w.,,.,... mtY ,..... .... In ,.. 11111
IMIUtl ... In ••• Maneter CeR» ... ull
fllet bo1t1 c:etc:Nr1. OWN M9w ~ ..._..,
.. --. ... ldUllY ""' llmt Wlind !tie Nie • • , JIM 1...-N WH llOI In !flt 118"11'9
"-WednndeY llecauM Mlnnnote ,..,._.
lllft-llendw Alll9 ....... OU! ••tell fO(
E POatd to PllY more Ht -n1 four Ms In hla 1111 ......., et·beta encl he1 1111 aaftit¥ In flw of
1111 i.11 II• -'* <1 for n1. Ht 11et ._
mulllPle-hll °""" Ill hit 1111 .. _ llwtt.
KEEFE ADDS TO LIST OF AW ARDS •••
homCl
Keefe is beaded to Stanford on a
bUketbeJI scholarship, but has also
received permission to play vol-
leyball, something rarely afforded a
big·time collqiate athlete.
"On top of scbooJ, he was playina
on teams year round. Durina vol-
leyball season it was not unusual for
bam to leave volleyball practice and
bead to the boys club to play
basketball with some of the lJCJ
kids," Shannon said. .. Or he'd head to
the Marine base with hlS father for
weiaht tramini.
"I don't know what ptarer from the
past who's done what hes done as a
hi~ school athlete. On top of that,
he s such a fine student and such a
fine ambassador for Woodbridge
Hiah School. What he's done is so arcat that I don't think we'll have
anyone duplicate that."
The annual selection, sponso~ by
First lntentate Bank and the
Amateur Athletic Foundation of Los
Anaeles, is made by Southern Cali-
fornia sports journalists.
1911 -M1c19e1 AIO, Wimtnf19n 8anniN
1912 -EdWerd Allen, Vtrt>um Del ,,., -Mike Slnllh, Los Allol
'"" -Joe Hiiman, Gllndlte Hoover
1915 -·-Gomn. '*"°"' 1'16 -Nethen Cd, C.pl1treno V ... y
1917 -Lt•on Ella, Metw Dtl
1911 -Acllm K .... , WoodllrldM
A YSO teams from Costa Mesa depart for tou.rilamen ts &:Rf!: ·o:.: Hodakin•
A pair of American Youth Soccer Or· Included are the Gold Coast Youth Soccer Benson. Jason Wear. Ryan Yiarada. 11ahu1J The Division Ill urls team consists of ~~ra~•((:105~il~~af\Hi:hf b.~~
pnizauon teams from Costa Mesa de~ed Classic in Brisbane, Australia, for et&ht days. Bamra, Benny Novak., Jon Hartl. Chris Jenny Aston, Micbelfe Decker,· Meredith · Kol.lb Phil Han (Overtake Higll
westward Wednetday to test their skills in the Friendship Games on the Fiji Islands for Sandro, Josh Porter, John Lamer, Enc Denton, Suzanne Hayes, Jill Johnso'!:. l'.,racie Redmo~d Wash .) and Geoff'
youth toumamen1S. four days and the New Zealand Soccer festival Jacobson and Casey Waldron. . Manz, Andrea Odicino, Michelle KaOisay, Scheuman~ (Overlake Hiah)
The Division IV boys all-star team ( 11 ·12· for three days. The squad wqo the Irvine Cup June J..S as Laihawn Ross, Claudia Rugjero, Danielle ·
year-0lds} coached by Chuck Benson is headed Both tnps are the culmination to,a r.ear's Dill sc:o~ IS ~s in five matches,inctudina ·Straub{ Emily Waldron, Amy Watson, Amy .. 1 was ~Illy proud of the Coast
the Hawaii Rainbow Tournament fcaturina 16 worth of fund-raisin.a cft'orts by the children both JOllt int e title-clindlioa;2·1 win over Yocke. crew," Grant said. "They were well·
1CamS. • IDd their parents with total costJ upward to Hununaton Beach, and then captu~ the Sun · .
The Division Ill &iris all-star team (13-14-Sl0,000 for the boys and SJ0,000 for the airls1 and Surf Tournament in Huntinaton Beach The squid reached the ~m1finals of the · rcssto~ncedunatndumedwe.118·preut ~ouleldf\bi~oe
year-olds) coached by Norm Manz and assis.-. lbe Division IV ~ys roster includes Orea :June 18-23 as Dill scottd 11 aoais in five !rvine Cup tourney before bOWtnt out;~~-....
tant finola Hayes will play in a three-stop tour. Dill, Ryu Brown, Shane Robbins. Brian matches. · '. lOI apuw ll teams from SOuthern Cahforma. preferred to have it end differently.'' l . ' . . ,,
" . .
MOSESBAVINGFUN ••• · .rr.mc1 ~ there. I pli)1ed Metto ball for Coach Hoovtr .saidMoses. .. ljus\lovethepme.htuckwithit
·that aummer •Ud U..t'• when thinp really andalwayswantedtobeamajorleque::·
sW1ed to tum around fbr me. • So this teason, after spend int two in
·•1 owe a lot to fnd Hoover. lfit "9n't fOr Triple--A Port&apd. MOtel is riaht whctc he
Fred HdoYei', I woulda't havt "*'t ii. He P"e • 'ttilDU to be -in the show.
me \be OQPOnuity lftd n1 ntvcr for,n thlt. ... did ptei~y well in Triple-A thil·)'Cm,
• He pe me 1 daiDCe " hini• abou1 .350/"• Said MOMS. ··1.,. oft' ao a
M--. • ~·10. J 70 Oound8. ha iOC>d sun becaute I didn't want to tDend '°°
81waysbeitl....a.M11tt'1.aw.11'bemfat.Hc mucb ume theR. Tha('11M tbina about .-is ..oae u · OrQet C.OUO&J eommuaity cot a. ~It can cha.qe.onc day after aaother. Dis
record 5 bwi ia 1976. i ftCOnl Which "9 llJM'I 10 Mild. And rm havi"I·_~··~· I
• btoUG dli$ ~ w·....-. luttlcr, Jama. wun'thav1naaarftan1n5el'tde .. Nc*ody.a hcc:bll1. · .. · ~ in Seattle don't know whM it Wll.
• ""They were 1ew...·mc about"°"' f'ai thb It's polliMy the owne.sbip. tbeY hllw IO
kW w. .. c1ptri...t HOover1 !"'*"':'~: maa, twie-u.-. bU1 no ~ We'• in dlaJI ~Ill was:$! nupP.en . Miaaaou aow •IMI rm......,,, that~ ID m.t atioln mil Moeet · 'cowna. We're Mvi ftaa -. ad hopddly -~= .... ._.tbe'db111D11P ·IMTwinawilMvt'\:._ ......... t .... ..,.....bu&il,ou"iea.vo;~ ~wbn IMj waa die world a--"a llltl. ,_.,.a sn "°"'el. So h doae't · i)."' ' larlitllme1ti11lll•tialMtMih1t 11 You M'l~w11o·1r,:a••lrehooce~-. =~1111 •wtllllMWIO
,....... ... et Ooldea "• lfJJ.77). ,... • ... . "*" ..
...... -lit ~
Orange eo.t DAILY PILOTIThur~~ June 30, ..... * ca
avratt1o a tops Evert, heads for match with history
coueaalive tiiles 1111 year. William Renshaw -.on si1
rnca'1 tidee in I 81 I ·16.
EYen wu su1t the ball wa1 in and pumped htr fiJU.
ready for tbt ntlt point at what she thouaht "' drUtt after saviJJt the third match point of that pine.
Navraulova pleaded, "He calltd the ball out." and
Lumb fin.ally aarec<l.
WIMBLEDON, Enlland (AP) -Martina
avratilova moved to with1n one win of another piece of
• hinory today with a eemifinal vic:tory over
me rival Chris Evert at Wimbledon.
Navratilova'1 opponent in Saturday'\ worMn's final
wu decided in the second semifinal, between top-Sttded
S&effi Graf and No. Pam Shri\ltf, Graf is tryina to stay on
track for a sweep of the Grand Slam tournaments. having
altudy won the Australian and French Ooens.
Navratilova reached the thl"C'lhold of another place in the record books in a strona performance, but with
boos rinaina in her ears at the end of the match.
"The bl.II wu called out," he said. "Game, set and
match, Miss Navratilova."
Evert couldn't believe it, and neither could the
cro"d. They booed as Even slowly walktd ofT court and.
finally, shook hands with Navratilova. the winnu for the
41st time in 78 career meetinp with the 33-ye.r-old
Floridian.
Even. known as a slow taner. tot htr p~ toina in
the ICCOnd set u she ustd pinpoint lobs and puaif'll.sholl
to beat Navratilova. who was at the ntt. She broke an the
fint pme. held a 3-1 lead before Na~tilova broke in~
third, and broke back for a 4-3 lead JUst before the ram
came.
Trailina I S-30 on her serve in the ei.&hth pme when
ttfertt Alan Mills calltd a halt to play. Even won thr«
straight poinu when play resumed to hold serve, then
aerved out the set on her second set point when
Navratilova sent a backhand long. The 6-l, ~. 7-S triumph put the No. 2 seed into her
th contetutive Wimbledon ftnal and ninth overall.
baa never lost a title-match appearance on Centre oun. and -if she maintains that perfect record -
avratilova will have won more 1inalet championships
anyone else in Wimbledon hi11ory.
She held match point -her fourth -up 6-$ in &he
third set. Evert sent a forehand cross-court that ctipPed
the nelcord and appeared to land in the doubles alley.Just
outside the line.
The line jud&e quickly si&nalled "out" and
Navratilova jumped for JO)'. But umpire Richard Lumb
of Britain misunderstood the can and failed to give the
final score.
The match started in haze, was interrupted for more
than one hour by a downpour and ended in sunshine. The
level of play was almost u erratic as the weather.
Navratilova started like a rocket. breaking lwt~ for a 3-0 lead and qain for the fint set on a netted forehand by
Evert.
The level of play picked up m the third set as
Navratilova kept charaina and Evert kept passinJ. They
cxchanpd breaks 1n the fourth and fifth pmes and stayed
on serve as Navratilova took a S-4 lead with a love game.
She and Helen Wills Moody 1hatt the record of eight.
avratilova let the tournament women's record of six
The match was balled as the big show~own. the battle
oftbc arau-c:oun kmp. But the product nc"er matched
th( build-up. Becker was JUSt too good .
ission
alley
op seed
MILLERS 0 U T P 0 ST
olleybal team
o participate in
unior Olympics
Jack Houston has been coachina ~u~ior r· rls volleyball teams for lhc ~l I years with three different
orpnizat1ons, but never h~ he seen a
Junior Olymeics field as close as the
'988 one which meets oext week al
Fort Collins, Colo.
Houston coaches the Mission Val-
ley Volleyball Oub's 16-and-under
team, which is the No. I-seeded from
Southern California. The Orange
County Volleyball Ouh headed by
Charlie Brande will have a couple of
\cams in the tournament.
"This is the closest age di vision I've
ever seen," Houston said. "There are
eight clubs which could win it In the
past, it's always been one team that
,Sominales. This year. there are sev-
tral teams which have beaten each of
the other top teams."
Mission Valley , which took fifth at
the Volleyball Festival last year, will
vie to better its effort of a year ago at
Festival '88 on the UC Davis campus
this weekend.
The team to beat is a "surprise"
team from Las Veps. the Nevada Juniors, Houston said. Mission is 2-3
in five meetings with Nevada this
«ason.
Included in that total was a 2-1 victory by Nevada in the final of the
Lone Star Classic in Aus\10, Teus..
durina mid-April. Mission Valley's
Sarah Nelson and Kealy Clarke
earned all-tournament honors in the
Junior Olympics qualifyina event.
Clarke, a freshman, and
sophomores Nelson, An&ie Rush and
Jody Bu<f&e, all of Laauna Beach
HiJh, suart for the. Laauna Beac!>-
based team along with Dawn Austin
of Canyon Hi&h and Courtney Gillis
of Dana Hills Hi&h. Other team
members include Marni Pn~ of
Corona del Mar, Mepn Combs Lisa
Senltbeil of Capistrano Valley (only
for Festival) and Megan Morse of
Sanua Marpriua.
Clarke was invited to one of four
junior elite tryout camps across the
country, which are usually senior
dominated. She did not ma.kc the
squad, but should be a force in the
future. For Mission, she plays what
Houston calls the utility position
where she carries out the team's main
hituna duties.
Tbe team works out the nine
months or the year that hiah school
pr<>1t1ms are idle. It must carry &iris
from at least four different hiah
schools. and no more than four from
'-Dy one school.
Houston is the founder of the
Newpon Beach Volleyball Oub and
was a head coach for the Oranae
County Volleyball Oub before link-
inaupwith Mission Valley. Hewasan
assistant for the 1984 women's Olym-
pic team.
,U.S. opens
·series with
. Yugoslavia
In a rematch of the I 9M Olympic
p>ld-medal pme the United States.,
the world's No. 3..ranted team, will
play host to No. I Yuaostavia, the
defendina Olympic and world cham-
pion, in a six~ teries be&innina
,Friday in six California cities.
Tbe .-mes will be hdd: Friday,
:Univet11ty of Pacific in S&ockton;
t:SuOdly, S&anf'ord Univmity in Palo
oAho; T= Newpon Harbor t~;W y, Univ:enityofCal~
r forilia. SU ~; Fridl_y, July 81 l lllmont Plaza in Lons BoKb; ano
e.iSM*dly, July 9, Peppa'dine Univer·
lltiill Malibu. o :. iTM ~at Newpon Harbof and
n llbnOftt Piiia wil& eiCb atan at 7
r o•Gllkl. "( ae~·~•waue ·u-...dle l914LtilA.-~ -1•••te-C1•doaolU..~ ... ••Iii •tdMID .. ,..n.., "'*" .... la a S.5 di. YlliilllY11
.... WOil iMP.ci _.....,Wtlliota
e~..:::" .. w s 111 I Id tbe
1 & II • °'6:.ll'I ~ U.S. -15::'.J: ... :r '~ x~u.:il.:t ..... ... ··~ ............ ... --· ·-~··· .... '',1:•2 .J111z1119! ........
n a ~~~.,,.
'
JUNIORS'
CO'ITON
SHORTS
·orig. $12. Fresh summer looks in
pastels and brights. Sizes S-M·l.
YOUNG MEN'S
CO'ITON
SHORTS
Orig. $10. Save on cotton shorts
Waist sizes 28-38.
JUNIORS'
EASY-CARE
TANK TOPS
Reg. $12. Solids. stripes and prints
in polyester/cotton, 100% cotton,
cotton/Lycra~ Sizes S-M·L
FOR JUNIORS
M-ta~ off knit crop tops. Sizes S-M-L. Orig. $14-16, now 4.99
37~ off woven cotton tops. Sizes S-M-L Now 7.99 and 9.99, sale 4.99
58~ off ribbed tank tops. Sizes S-M-L Reg. $6 ea .• sale 2 for 4.99
~off lkifta. CottOn and potyester~. Sizes 1-13 and $-M-l. Orig. $22,
now•.11
2CM off one..pocket cotton T-shirts. Sizn S-M-L. Reg. $10, sale 7.99
_.. Oft Cdton lhortl In pUtett and bnghts. Sizes S-M·L and 3-13.
Orig. $1~ now 7.11
83'4 off lkit1a. Cotton and~~. Sizee 1-13 and $-M-L. Orig. $22.
now7.tt
33'4 off woven cotton topa. Sim S.M·l. NOW 14.99. .... t.11
11" off cotton panta. Sine s.M-L and ~13. Orig. ~ .now I.It 33-44" off all women'• ~ NoW 116 Md $18. _..I.II
SO.. oft Ill lldte' ~ )9w .. ry. Reg. 49'-7 ... 24'-l.H
ICM oft Ill lldlel' ~ llCC 111Oli'taAlg.411-7.99, .... Mt..S.11
SUPER SAVINGS ON HOT
SUMMER FASHIONS!
FOR YOUNG MEN
41...-3~ oft screen--print T-shirts from Maui & ~ Spuds MacKenzie!'M
Gordon & SmithTM and more. Sizes S-M-l-XL. Reg. $12-14, .... 6.99
M-6~ oft short-5'eew rayon shirts an solids and pnnts.. Sizes S-M-l-XL.
Orig. $24-26, now 7.99
33~ oft acreen--print tank tops Sizes 5-M-L-XL. Reg. $11-17, ....
7.3S-11.33
44~ oft short..sll!llM9 cotton madras plaid shans in pastels. By lbmaro-and
Shah Safatt Sizes $-M-.L-XL. Ong. $18. now I.II
11 .. off short4teeve striped cotton shirts. Sizes S-M-L-XL. Orig. $26.
now~•
44 .. off cotton jefaey tank tops in a great eetection of solid color&. Slzes
S-M~L·XL Orig. $8 ea., now 3 tor I.ti '
44-e1 .. oft ahOt1s fn:>m Heir, Maui & Sona! Hobie' and C.tchtr. Sizes
28-38 and s-M4.-XL Orig. $1846. now I.II
~ off swimwear from Morey Boogie• and Hobie~ Sizes 28-38 and
s.M-L-XL. Orig. 116-24, no. t.•
....
-
Oll••Ooelt DALY I'll.OT/~. Junll IO. 1•
LOS ANG£1.£S (AP) -St.cond
bt11 w Dtmuo Garcia. ttbled by
.. A&Ula Btavn carlier1bi1 aeason,
W nedled ·~ qrmnent with the ~ IJOdlers. it wu an·
'1--.1. ~I • y. . ~ wt I Ill" a conll'IC't with the Dodlm' Albuquerque farm club, the
dUblndicaled.. Gucia. 31 , is expected to join Albuaueraue. a member of the Class
AAA 'Pacific Coast I.asue. within the
De&t week io I 0 days. \ht [)odaers
laid.
Garcia. a 6-foot, ll~p0und native
of Moca, Dominican Republic. bit
. 117 in 21 pmes with the Braves.
90ina 7 for 60, before bein1 rel~ in
April. He had one home run and
drove in four runs.
Garcia made the American League
All-Star team in 1984 and l 985 while
playina for the Toronto Blue Jays.
Garcia was traded from the New
York Yankeesorpnization with fint
baseman Olris Chambliss and pitch-
er Paul Mirabella to Toronto for
catcher Rick Cerone, pitcher Tom
Underwood and outfielder Ted
Wilborn on Nov. I, 1979.
1#•111y11
8teTe S.. of tbe ~en Janda on HCMl8ton buenumer
BWy Batcher after forcJnC b1m on doable play Wed.needay. . .
Walk costs Reds pitcher
Alo mar follows base on balls
with homer in Padres' win
From n.e Aaedate4 Presa
Aoc:ordina to Cmcinnati's Tim B1rtsas, his biggest
mistake came on a pitch that wasn't even hit.
Birtsa.s walked Dickie Thon With two outs in the fifth
and Roberto Alomar followed With his sixth homer as the
San Diego Padres defeated the Reds. 3-2. Wednesday
na&ht at Riverfront Stadium.
.. NOthillJ hurt me but walking Thon 1n front of
Alomar," said Birtsas, ().I, who was making his first
National League stan.
"He threw extremely well," Reds Manager Pete Rose
said.
The founb-plac:e Reds lost for the eighth t1mf' in I 0
pmes to fall I 01h pmes behind first-place Los Angeks 1n
the NL West. San Diego is 11 1"1 back. but has an 18-14
record under Manaacr Jack McKeon.
Enc Show, 6-8, walked none and struck out three.
Mark Davis struck out the final two batters to earn his
I 4lh save in 15 opportunities.
Two of the hits off Show were solo homers Chns
Sabo hu bis 10th in the fint inning. and Paul O'Neill hit
his seventh in the seventh.
"l tried to keep the ball 1n the ~rk and not walk
anybody," Show said. "I did half my JOb."
In other NauonaJ Lcque pmes: ,
ntJUes '1 Cabs %: At Wn&)ey Field. Juan Samuel.
Bobby Dernier and Von Hayes hit consecutl\c run-
tc0nna sinr.Jes in the seventh innina IS Ph1ladelph1a
ended the Cubs' four-tame win01na streak.
Calvin Scbtraldt. 4-6, was protectlll& a 2--0 lead, but
wt th one out in the seventh, Danen Daulton beat out a hit
off Sch1raJdi's left ankle, Steve Jelu singled &l\d Mike
Youna walked to loaded the bases.
Les Lancaster replaced Schiraldi and Samuel s1na.led.
Pat Peny relieved Lancaster. and Dernier was credited
with a sm&Je when n&ht fielder Dawson lost hit ball in the
sun
Hayes then sinaled. sconna Young with the go-ahead
run. ·
Mike Maddux, 2--0, was the winner. Steve Bedrosian
earned his 13th save.
Gluts 7, Brave.%: Don Robinson. makina his first
start in almost three years, allowed two bits in six innings
and Will Clark hit his leaaue-leadina 19th home run IS
San Francisco swept a threc-pme series at Atlanta.
Robmson, 3-1, who bad made 31 relief appearances
this year and had not started since Aug. 18, 1985, gave up
tw<>-<>ul sin&les to Dion James and Dale Murphy m the
fourth inn~DJ.
The right-hander walked one and struck out two.
Sco\t Garrclts allowed five hits m three innings and
earned his fifth save.
Clark. who also leads the NL in RBI with 62. hit a
solo shot in the fifth off Pete Smith, ;z-a.
Meta I, Pirates 7: Kevin McRcynolds' single drove
in wmning pitcher Roaer McDowell wtth the go-ahead
run in the I Ith fonina as New York rallied to beat
Pittsburgh at Three Rivers Stadium.
The Mets took two out of three games against
PittsbwJb and increased its lead in the NL East to 51·1
over the second-place Pirates.
The Mets were wt thin one strike onos1na m the top of
the ninth when Howard Johnson hn a 1-2 pitch off Jim
Gott over the nght-field wall for his 14th homer of the
season.
McDow~ll. 4-1 . who allowed one hit in three in rungs.
doubled down the n&ht-ftcld line with one out ofT Bob
Kipper, 1-2. the Pirates' stxlh pitcher.
McReynolds followed with a line smgk that left
fielder John Cangelos1 bobbled. allowmg McDowell to
score standma up.
Exp91 I, CanUu1t t: Otis Nixon tnpled to lead ofT
the 1-0th mruna and Henn Wmnin&ham followed wtth a
sacnfice fly IS Montreal defeated St. Louis at Busch
Stadium.
The CardmaJs have lost 14 out of 19 and have four-
extra inning losses 1n their last six games. The Expos are
10.3 in extra-inning games this season and 22-4 over the
last two years.
Jeff Parrett. 7-2. pitched two hitless innings for the
Expos.
Hershiser finds groove,
two-hitsHouston, 2-0
~ers pitcher
OU:uels strikeout
specialist Ryan
HOUSTON {AP) Orel
Henhiser pa.id Houston's Nolan
Ryan the sincerest form of flattery
Wednesday -imitation.
"Nolan is an outstandina com·
petitor and I ~J fortunate to be on
the ume field with him,.. said
Hn'Sbiser after lhunina out Houston
on two hill for his fifth 11raiaht
victory u the Dodlen beat the
Astros, 2--0, in the Astrodome.
TJae .cJaedale
HOMll Todlw-tdle. J4h l-CNc.8eo, 7;25 p.m. .,.. ~. 7:05 p.m,
J4h >-Olkato, 1:05 P.m.
JAh ...st. &AUii, 5:10 •·'"· • JAh 5-St. LAM.Ill, 7:>5 P.m. Jt.JN t-St. LAM.Ila, 7:3$ P.tn.
• All .. ,.,. on KAIC (7'0).
• C>n TV, Chennet 1
.. Nadoaal Lape with
IU'ill.Mull.
"11w ... couple or~ that'• &bl
mOl1 overpowreiac be'• beaa · , u., .. Mid Mike MUtba11. who acOred
rua ud drOve in uoeblr. I .. We were fortunate co hive Oi'd
tbe mound a.Del to aet a cou* pns. ..
Ryan, U. UI IOI& bis lut Ii
decisions, but he wu=with
pitthina lllinst tbe .. If you compare this co my last Co
orfiveouti• J threwtbe.,_.l m '
better and baCI better command of
pitches." Ryan said.
"We're just toirw throup a slump and today we <Jme up apinst
touab pitcher ...
Hmruser, I 2·3, retired the flnt
1even Astros in order and after
walkina Kevin Bus in the sixth.
finished the pme with 10 ouu in a
row.
11\e Dodsen have won 10 of'tht
tut t 2 sames and tit tended their ·
" to 41h pmes over the second
••••••••••~ Astros 1n the NL West
The riaht-bander walked one.
struck out six and allowed only a
sinaJe to rookie Cra.11 Bigio in the
third and an infield hit by Billy
Hatcher in the fifth for bis fifth career
two-hitter.
Hersbiser said.
.. But we beat a Houston club that is
uuure4 ·~ not playina up to jts potenllll n&ht now." . • · .. ..
Ryan was his usual Qverpowcrin1
self. strikinaout lOand sjving up only
four hiu in 7'h innings. Ryan lea.dS
Los ARICles' fint run came in
third ionina-ben Ryan walked
tbrtw a v..ild pitch arid IUt MJiftl!Ldl
with the hues loaded:
The Dodam added an inswa
run in the ei&hth when Oi
walked, stoic second and scoRd on
sin.ale by Marshall. "It was one of my best outinas this
season and my best stuff this season," •
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Abbott ·sharp, but ~
U .s. beaten, 4-3
SENDAI, Japan (AP) -One-handed pitcher Jill
Abbott of the Un1vers1ty of Michigan held the Japanelt1
all-stars scoreless for five 1nnmp but Japan raJlied to edit
• touring American collellate squad. 4-3. Wcdnesdlj
niaht in the third game ofw bascbaU series.
._ A crowd of20,000at Miyqi Prtfectural Stadt um saw
a t1g,ht pitchina duel m the early inninp by Abbott and
Ryoich1 K.arnioka. ·
Abbott, who won the Sullivan Award this year as the
nation's outstanding amateur athlete, allowed one hit and
struck out seven in his five-inning stint K.amiobpveup
only one run over six inninp. a fourtb•innina homer b)'
Robin Ventura of Oklahoma State.
Toronto pitcher Key's fi~ tstartsinceApril 14asuccess
Coming off elbow surgery, he
yields four hits in 62/3 innings
From n.e Aueclate4 Presa
Jimmy Key allowed four hits in 6>f. innings in his first
start since Apnl 14 and the visitin& Toronto Blue Ja}s
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White Sox owners
sign stadiu01 lease
beat the Baltimore Orioles, 4-2, Wednesday niJht.
Key, l -1, struck out five and walked two m his first
pmeJince he had arthroscopic surgery on his left elbow
May to remove bone chips.
Key, the runner-up 10 the 1987 American Leaaue Cy
Youna voting. was relieved after walk1na Ride Schu w1th
two outs in the seventh. Key threw 91 pitches, 59 of them
stnkes.
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'
Duane Ward followed with two inninp of rcliefand
Tom Henke aot the final out for his 16th save after Joe
Onulak hit an RBI sinale.
Toronto broke a T-1 seventb-innina ue with three
runs. two unearned. off Dave Schp'lidt. 3-3. Manny l.tt
and· Tony Fernandez hit infield sin&les and Rance
Mulliniks pve the Blue Jays' the lead with a a hit-and·run
sin&)e.
One out later, Kelly Gruber bit a b1&f> bouncer to
second bueman Billy R1pken, whose throw could not be
handled by fint baseman Jim Traber, allowina Fernandez
and Mulliniks to ICOte.
Baltimore took a 1--0 lead in the third on Pete
Stanicek's RBI double.
Elsewhere in the American Lequc: ._dcl 7, Bnwen t: In QUland, Dave Henderson
hit a tbJ'co.run homer and Mike GaUeao ldded 11<>lo shot
to back tbc six-hit pitehinaof Bob Wekh IS the Athletics
defeated Milwaukee. · •• • • Welch. ICM, walked one and llNCk out five for his
second s1raiaht victory aoina fi~e swu in 1 row without 1
win. Bill Wcaman, 6-6, was the 1<*f'.
With one out in the seventh, Stan Javier sinalcd and
took second on a AWild pitch. canseco was walked
intentionally and Henctenon connected one out later for
his 10th homer, deep into the left·ffeld stands.
Y ...... 1, 'hew! I: Claudell Wubinat0n drove 1n
&hrce ruu with a sanaAe, dou.blc and triple as New York
I
beat Detroit at Yankee Stadium for ill tint victory 10 Ill
pmes apinst the Tiaen this season. ~
The Yankees stopped Detroit from its fim th!'l'}
aame sweep in New York since April 10.12, 1966. Ttif
Tilers, who won twice in the teries, bad their lead redua:il
to two pmes by second-place New York. The teams -not play apin until Sept. 8.
a.. SH l. IMlai 1: Roter Clemens struck out I
endina a four-..me losana streak at Fenway Park;
Ellis Burks hit a three-run homer IS Boston bedt
Oeveland for its fU\h strai&ht victory.
Oemens, 11·~. allowed three hlu in seven inninas.
He ~s siruc~ out l 0 or mo~ ei&b.t ti~ this season a~
29 times •.n his career. He raised bis m"or·leaaue leadina
strikeout cow to 163.
..,. I, WMte IH 8: Jamie Quirk. 0eorae Brett and
Danny ,.anabuU bit ftftb-U.runa homers u Kansas Cifr
took a~ lead aDd hunt on for the victory at Roya& Stadium. 4 ~ ICOred eiaht runs in the seventh led ~arold Baines• dcftablie and horner and Orea Walker's two
s1naJn.
•ucera 1, .......... t: awtie Houab pitChed 11
ICOftlcA inninp aDd Dinch-hiner aut.ro ~ hit a
lllCrifac:e fly u Teus blaabd Seattle in tbe Kinedome. Houp, 1-7, allowed aeven hits. Jtrilck out~
walked tbrtie. He ha woe three of his IUt four • and bu pitdMld iDIO tbe l l th UU. times 1his .....
... rm.aua,.. a.. Mendia ltc*i "' NtTi Bach la the r."!"~· •stllle Dly run. •he ~t
Tbe race aoi1 a 3k Fun R&ID/Watl belln ti I
un. oa Jul)' 10. -Mth corn~h°". ru. nnana
ihoup * Irvine arid Ncwpoc1 Bead\ final\Cial ~
Latt 11&(1 evnt lltre<ied morT than 5 ODO
Nnntn and apecutots, indadina Sylvia MOlo
g...eda, whoranthtfatiat U,S. t1mefor1..-omtn
1n 1917. Theft 1ulso a wheelchair catetorY.
In l!ddmon ~o_the t¥C thi1 year, a Food fair
and F1tneu Fair•• llated ror 1hc momi~ of July
10 11 the Lt Mmditn Hottl. alona with a sm·
event puta dinner on SatuRUy. July 9,
. Restaurants ftootn the area will ttt up boot ht
with d1tkrcnt specialties The fitntis fair :n~u~ bootht on various hffhh and nutrition ~ &om the tvent bentfit 1he Unittd
Ctrtbral Palsy Ast0eiati0ft of Oranae Count)'.
All tn!ran1s a.re cliaiblt lO win tickets foi:.two to
Pans 1n a random drawina. For more 1nfor·
mation. phone Susan Whetzell or Let.lye McR~
at S57-SIOO. • A~iumatcl)' 3SO voluntttrs will be~
ror ass1anmtnls from l'flistration. Stan and
finath hMS, aid Stallons and rou~ manaat·
mcnt. Ir "intcttlted, phone Kelly Hahn at '57-SIOO.
..
If~ BNcll .,,om PIOD'IUIJ•
' A variely or sporu p~ms arc 9ltercd for
'adults throu&h the City ofNcwpon Beach Park&.
• Beaches ah<f Recreation Ocpanmcnt this sum·
.mer. • . ~
Tcnnia. co-ed volleyball, aolf. aymnastks.
Jaj)Ancse Karate, T11 Cha and ridina lcssons are
offered throu&hou1 the suit.mer.
Bqinmnt July 11. ICl'nis lnsons ror players.
bqinnioa or advancc<t. will be offered in two
sessions - a two-week' ~on that meets
Monday-Thursday or .five-week session tbat
mcel.S once a week. Monday-Saturday.
The omnastics clus for bt&Jnncn costs S20
for I rour·Wttk session Oft TUC$days and
Thursdays rrom 1-l 0 a.m .• bqlnn1na July 12 ..
For more informauon on any of lhi provams.
phone 644-li S I.
SCAT trater po o Pnwram
The SCAT water polo prosram. now in its
third year IS lookanJ ror new playen.
After a sccond·plact finish 1n the last season's
final overall toumamnn. the I 3-and·undcr
team came in second aaam at the Junior
Olympics. The prosram hopn to take boys and airts I ~-and-under and 17-and-undtt teams to
the Junior Olympics 1n Florida this August.
For those interested in playina. SCAT ho!'
workouts at Dana Hills H1&h Monday throu
Thursday from S: I 5 to 7: IS pm. May 1hrou ·
November, and Tuc"1ay and Thursday at t q
u me times from December throuah April.
Ch11d"1\ qe c1Jht or older can play by comm&
to the pool or )' pbon1na661·21S7
Tllree-maa bu~etball
R~istratton is now beint acttpted at the Los
Alamitos Corumurut)' Center for the Los
Alamitos Rcettation Dcpan ment 3-on-3 •
BasUtball uaauc. "'
Tbrtt d1 v1saons are be1na offered -Men's
Over 30, Monda) n1Jhts 7:)(}.10; Men's Open,
and Men's 6-2 And Undtt. Thursday niahts
7-10. Fee ror the lea~. which includes T ·Shins and
awardr., 1s S70 plus a S25 forfeit fee. Lcaauc pla)
bcaJns July 18 1hrouah Sept. 12. All games arc pla~ at Oak Academy Gymnasium.
, f'or funhcr 1nfonn1uon. pbofte the Los
Alamitos Community Center at 827-9010 or
(2 13) 430-l 073, Monday throuah Fnday from t
a.m .·S p.m.
•
,... Comi(Y hJr aollritM8
M4*WC')'dr and GUiid ractS.. todtos and a ~ shov. wtll br ftalul"td at lhe Oranir County.Fai~s Coon A~n1 throuabout the July
'7-17 f'11r.
0. °'""'' ni&ht. Jul)' 7, four-whttl q\ald race win .be hdd rrom 1-10 pm. T~ v.ill be fOut profeuionat l'Kn. lft I .. spm!Wl)•Slyk"
fonnlt. MmlMton to the quad ratts i11ntludtd
wilb a ticltt to the Fair.
Tbe followina cvenma w'lll faturc a motor·
()'(le spetdw1y race for tht Fair J?m>y Cup. Tht
ehampionih1p format race will feature l6 men l"ICiftJ 20 heats. wnh the top point:1tncrs then lllC'Ct•na for the cup, Race ume on Fnday. July 8
i•Sp.m .
A Texas lonahorn 'how 'Mil take ovtt the
attnaon thcfolTowioaday, Saturday, July 9 at 4
p.m. It will be an open show of lbc mammoth
bovi!1CS '!With rqular judlina. and open to the
pubhc. •
Tbc Triaqle T Rodeo, which will be held
Frida)'! Saturday and Sunday. JuJy IS.17. IS
Cllpec\JftJ 2SO CO'lWbo)'i from around the country
to pen1e1petc 1n bull rid1na, saddle bronc ndin.a.
tv.o ropina events. calr ropina and tum rop1Jll.
stCC1' wmtlina and women's barrel racina
events. ~ as an additional charJt for the motor·
C)Clc racconly.ofS4 forqes IJand over.andS2
for 12 udµnder. Tickets to the Fair arc $4 for
adults. S2 for children 6-12 and frtt f'or
yo unastm S a.nd under.
Additional infonnation on the Oranae Coun·
ty Fair may be obtained by phon1na 7Sl·FMR.
· l!Jn'oa Scott claarlty e~eat "rhe siccond annual "C'hallenac for Children"
chanty event. 1Cheduled for Saturday and
Sunday July 23 and 24, has rttc1ved commit·
menls rrom top NBA pla)crs to part1c1patc in
Byron Scott's chant) basketball pmc and tennis
tournament
The charity basketball pmc. which Wlll be
played II the Bren E"cnt.s Center Jul) 24 at 3
p m .. wi ll iocludc such NB.\ stars as Dom11l,1que
Wilkins ohhe Atlanta Hawks. Ro} Tarpley and
Enc Hafl>Cf or the Dallas Mavenclr.s. LaJcers
Kun Ram bis and A.C Grttn. X.Her McDaniel
of1hc Seattl~ Sup«Son1cs. LaSalle Thompson of
1he Sacramento Kinp. Lafa)ette Lc"er of the
Dcnvtr Nugcts and C'hfT Robinson of the
Philadelphia 76en.
The bas.ketba.11 aamc -.111 include a prc-pme
'with the proressionals pla) ma ap1nst cclebn llC1
and u ecuuvcs. who hive paid Sl.SOO for the
opponun1ty.
Tickets are on .ale at 1he Bren Center and
throuJh Ticketron For more 1nfonnauon.
phone Mclnerne)' Communiceuons at
66~·71 1 7.
Oil-Road Gn.a PrU
Stadium BaJa racina will cclebrate 11s 10th
anruvenal)· at the Los Ansclcs ~emonal
Cohscum Saturda). Jul} 16 when the Off-Road
Championship Gran Pn1 rc1ums 10 the site
where Mickey Thompson introduced h1scloscd-
course concept a full decade qo.
The~ have bttn a number of chi~
the inausural t\t'nt. The Off-Road Cham·
p1omh1p Gran Prix is now an annual na1t0nal
sencs. aucndance ronunues 10 incrnsc and the
rcchnolOI) of compet1na 'chicles has ach a~
trrmcndously.
And while there arc some new faces amona the
competitors toda}, man) of the \Cterans who
competed in that fi rst C\t'nt 11 the Coliseum -.111
be beck for the 10th ann1vC'rs&r) cdJllon next
month Amona them an Roeer Mears. who
fin ished second to his brother Rack 1n the bug)
class. Ivan Stcwan. Glenn Hams. Oreg George. St~ve Kelly, Walker Evans. Bob Gordon and
Danny ThomptOn.
Tick.cu for the event arc available now at
T1cket)'naster and T1ckctron outlcls For ucket
and event 1nfonnat1on, phone ( 213) 747. 7111
YAC:HT t. SKIP HOttllAGI ~TIONAL
1'°1 • c:-........,. s-102
............... ~tt'6J
1714'1" "40
42.f OOI SeftH
Proti:tklft boMt of the htahftt U.S. st.,."" • 42' Hrl•• in prbduct Of\, QAstoa ''one efr• .. Uey f9C]\ts to bit 1vellabl•. Plant vulu
off .... to t..Soua ,.run,
OzuftC... ~N.U .. ,.
For :tit first tunt, lflf Orantc COtil C~
"'.ollt)ball Camp v. U be open to both bo)" and
airb aan 12 thn1 19. Julr z9.31 at retmon Gym.
. Patt1cipent1 wiU bt d1vld(d0 into bqinnina.
1nitrmtdiatt and advanced aroups witb cmpha~" placed on ck\ dopina the slulls or aa
K\."Ompl15hfd pla)tt.
Tbt ~amp v.11l 1b( hnckd by v.omen's ca.ch
Jant H1IJendorf and her staff, who arc comina
ofh.1987 campe1an which yitlckd an Ora1111e
Emp1.rt Conftrrn~ m>wn, their 10th con· 1ttut1~e iftJue tillt. · .
Rqutrauon infonnu ion ma)' bt obtained
thru OCC Comm unit) ~K'n at 432-5880
g adaraace cyell.JJI cllalla16e
C')chsis 1nterrsted 1n ttw ultimate d iallcnp:
will ha'c that opponunat) on Saturda). Jul) 9,
1n lhe Tour of the California Alps 1n South Lu.e
Tahoe. Cahr
Fondl) knov.n as -The Deathndc.'' this
14S.J..m1lc nde ta.kn cychsts to the tops orfi,.t
·"lp1~ Count) pcah lota.lina I S.000 rttt or
climbini.
For lhe past SC\.en years. C)'Chsts haH~
aathered at Mark.ltt""1lle. half an hour south of
lake Tahoe, and run a fhe·fintcrcd counc up
and down Ebbetts Pass (eleuuon 8. 730 fttt).
(arson Pass(8.S73 feet). Luther Pass(7.740fttt)
and both sides of Monitor Pass (8.314 rttt). The
lowest elev111onon the nde 1s 5.0SOfcct. Grades
avcraac about s11 percent but aet as stttp as IS
percen1
Re11s1ra11on 1s hm1ted 10 I 500 pan1c1pants
For more 1nfonn111on. phone the A. lpinc
Chamber of(ommercc It 1916> '>94-2475
Loroi.1olf to1UD&1Deat
Lo~ola uw School u. 1n,111na all golfers 10
compete in the third annual aolftoumamC'nt for
studcn1 scholarships scheduled for Thur§da'.
Jul) 7. 11 the C'1hfom11 Count!'\. Club In
Wh1111er. ·
Fred Martino. ch11nnan of 1he tournament,
sa)S the S l25 donation includes ICC pnzcs. aolf.
conuncntal breakfast. lunch. awards dinner and
special pnzc dra-.inas
Theda) bcains -.1th chcck-1n 11 10 a m. 11 the
Cahfom11 C'ounlr) Club with a pulling contest
:scheduled from 103010 11 .301.m. The shotgun
stan 1sat noon with the awards banque1at 6 p.m
Golfers a~ invited to rqister as individual
pla)crs or as pan of foursomes All procttds go
toward the Lo>ol~ uv. School Student Scholar-
ship Fund
For fun her 1nfonna11on, phone (~ i 31
736-1096
Beaellt motorcrcle raa
The Golden West '-totort")cle Club of Hun I·
inston Beach 1s spon\OnllJ a benefit molol"C)cle
run Jul) IOfortheC'asatadtSan J~. a home for
abused ch11d~n.
The n1n w 111 la'c tv.o startina points -1368~
Beach Bhd 111 Westmins1er and 3104 El Ca1on
an San C>iqo The desunauon -.111 be the
""oodchud. C'amptround Reson. JUSI soulh of
Lake Elsinore on Routt "9 South an Temttula
Rq1strat1on will be held pnor to tilt nan from
8 10 am a1 each site.
Commcmorau'e pins ,,,,ill be &l'Cn to all
entrants and trophies will be prestnted 10 the
winnen alona -.1th a 50150 dra>A1n1 beana spill
e\cnl} between the first-pla« winner and the
casata
There: 1s a S 7 dona11on for rqis1ra11on plus one
of the follow in& items· a canned good. 1oothpas1e
or toothbrushes or children's school sup~1cs.
For mo~ 1nforma11on, phone 892-119 •. 013)
973-4403 or (213) 864-7352
NE CENTER
Martnen lllle Shipyard
Newport.._ • .,. Rigging
Heul Oul9 to SS Ton•
845-0901
Now SpeCilltdng tn the Custom
Re-M~ of a.tram 31•
~
c;.nl 1nsMrrbKZ ~
U01,...,., OJMt·""" •. ~"101
1'11'1 fort..,,...... 0 'ok *'* 'E 6 6.J
,.
BOAT ING
New PHRF race
slated Aug. 13
Regatta to f ea tu re amateurs
vs. pros. new scor~ng system
By ALMON LOCK.ABEY
0.., ...............
Vo>•rs Yacht Club and ~a \.iagazine ha' e come
upw1th some1h1n1new 1n Performance Handicap Racing
Flce1 compcuuon.
Thee,cnt 1s labelrd the ~a Magazine PTo-,\m
Challenge Cup and will fea1urr both amateur and mannc
induslr) proft.-s\1onal racers 5uch as sa1lmakel'\. ck·
\11ners. builder\, etc. ,.
The rep I ta v. ill be a single-race e' enl .\ug. 13 o'er a
~~ ~-m1lecour:.c around the buo~s lxtv.ccn Newpon and
H unt1n1ton Beach cons1s11n1ofS<', en legs v. 1th S<'ts.ji~.
uacks. beats and runs.
~1anne 1ndustn racers ha' e been prohibited from
competing in PHRF'racesforsome time. bu1 ha'e~n
1n' 11cd to compete 1n this race
Thc &a Mai'ILIOe Pro-Am is drs1gncd to pit the bes1
amateurs and profess1onalsap 1ns1 each other
In add1uon to class trophies. special awards will be
prcS(nted to lhl· beM amaleur and best professional crew.
The ~·a \1agazinc troph> will be prr~ntrd to the h 1ghcs1
planng ~acht -proks1onal or amateur.
.\unique kature of1he race wall be the uS<' of the
percentage pcnalt) S}Stem which allows an infinging
}ach1 to take a pcnah) and remain in the race w 1thout
d1~uahfica11on. The percentage penah) opuon v.orks
thlSWI):
Upon a hail of protest b) )acht .\.yacht 8.
ad.nowledgincan anfnngement. must do three things-
hu1st a )ellov. flai. lccp 11 d1splayrd unul finished: repon
heral ... nov.lcdgementofanfnngement ~nd the 'acht
infringed to the racecomm1ttcc. ·
If she performs thC'St' three ao'>. her finishing time
v.111 be penalized b) ~Opcrentofthe numberofstaners .\
race v.11h I Ostaners v.ould ha' e her lin1sh1ng ume
pcnahzed b} two plac~.
If )IC hi B fails to perform thcS<' acts 'acht .\"s
protests are heard and' acht B 1s subject 10 d1~uahfica·
uon 1ffoundai fault l(}acht B acknowlcdge-s fault b>
d1spla)1nga }ellov. flag. but fails v.1th the other tv.o steps.
she v.111 bed1!>Quahficd v.-nhout a heanng.
Race'"' nauons v.-111 be a' a1lable at local~ acht du~
New Sweden suffers
first 12-meter loss
Ll:JLEA, Sweden (4.P) -Bengal Ill of Japan. v.1th
Skip Lis~1man of ,\ustralia as helmsman. handed Ne.,
Sv.rden its first semifinal loss in tht World 12-meter
't achung Champ1onsh1ps on Wrdn~}. wmnmg their
match racing duel b) I m1nutt and ~ t ~nds.
?"ev. Sv.rden. the former South 4.ustraha and
mod1fird with a new kttl. mast and sails for the
cnamp1onsh1ps. fin1shrd t~ da) vmh a 5-1 won-lost
record and a tie forthe o'erall lead with Kookaburra Ill of
Australia
"lev. Sv.rden. skippered b' Olle Johansson. c-as1h
bea1 Crusader '88 of Bn tam b\ 4:23 an the second race.·
Kook1burra Ill. sltipperCd b) ~ter Gilm ou r. won
both its head-to-head races. first beating Crusader '88 b'
3 3:! and then defeatina Bengal Ill ~ l 56 •
Kookaburra Ill. wh ich lost the final of the <\menca's
Cup 1n Februat) 1987 to Den nis Conner's Stars a nd
Stnpes in four consccuuve races. had won the tlC'Ct racing
ponion of the reptta despite w1thdraw1ng from the 1as1
race becau~ of a problem wnh iu keel
Conner's NordstJernan. which actually 1s Koolcabur·
ra 11 but was renamed b) the San Diego skipper's Swedish
sponsor for 1h1s champ1onsh1p onl). was alone in th ird
place with four points. one behind Nev. Swrden and
Kookaburra Ill.
Nordstjeman beat Stealt"n K1dne' of 4.ustraha b\
2 53 and skip Gar; Jobson's "i1ppon ot Japan b) 1.38 10
llS IV.O races
Serving All Your
Boating Needs
AUTHORIZED FACTORY
WAAMNTY SEIMCE
SPEC&AUZING IN HtGH PEAfOMIANCE
~NJf_!." '\;.,u.'.~\.H
-
Aa..-.1..,.1 ,... ...... • L . m-• .... cw-.. 41 29 6-4 f!nn~ 42 )) .560 5 s.s
40 37 .519 8 4-6
37 39 .417 IO&h 6-4 Br 34 •1 .'453 I) u
34 '43 ..... 2 ... '7-3
30 .a .385 l&Y.a 4-6
&AS'I' DIVISION
Dini• '46 29 .613 -6-'t
llMrYort .... 31 .587 2 4-6 f::::u..t 39 34 .534 6 ... 2 .. , 36 .S32 6 2-8 =ee 38 39 .494 9 2-8
39 40 .494 9 6-4
•lti""'Jft 22 SS .286 25 4-6 ........ , .• ,.... = 2. Mianetota l nd 7, Milwaukee 2 New y O(k 7, Detroit 3
Toroaao 4, Baltimore 2
lcllaon 5, Cleveland I Kamas City 9, Cbica&o 8
Texas I, SeanJe 0
.....
Wool lMl I
Woa l
Woe 2
Loll I
Woe 1
Loll 2
Loa I
Won 1
Won S
Loa s Lost )
Won 1
Lost I
T•y'1G ... New York (John 5-2) at OJicqo (LaPoint 6-7)1 5:30 p.m.
Only pine sCheduled.
Frida7'1 Games
,-.. at Detroit. •:3S J>.m. OUlud at Toronto, 10:35 a.m.
Seattle at Oeveland, •:3S p.m.
New York at Chicaao, 5:30 p.m.
loeton at Kansas City, S:35 p.m.
Minnesota at Milwaukee, S:3S p.m.
Baltimore at Texas, 5:3S p.m.
Natloaal £ea6ae
WP.Sr DIVISION w L Pct. GB Llt Streak .,. ......... .... 31 .587 8-2 Won l
Houaton 40 36 .S26 4'h S-5 Lost I
Su Francisco 39 37 .Sl3 S'h 7-3 Woo 3
~~"°~· 34 .. 2 .44,7 lOVi u Lost 1
34 .... ... 36 t 1 'h-S-5 Won I
Atlanta 26 '48 .351 17'12 3-7 ··Lost 4
EAST DIVISION
New York •8 28 .632 S-5 Woo 2
Pittsbur&h •3 34 .5S8 5112 6-4 Lost 2 ... 35 .539 7 6-4 Lost I
._.Arn 22-16 16-1
23-16 19-17
19-19 21-11
21-19 16-20 1~21 16-20
U-23 19-20
18-20 12-28
22-14 24-IS
23-14 21-17
21-18 18-16
22·16 l9-20
23-17 15-22
20-18 19-22
14-22 8-33
Dome A•aJ 21-18 23-1
24-15 16-21
20.19 19-18
17-20 17-22
22-19 12-25
12-25 14-23
25-11 23-17
24-17 19-17
21-16 20-19
...... =-· ~f'f .... ,.. =~ flludltlfl cf Oetlflla .....
L.-.iln 1' NftlMll
MD.-• DMlll9d ~-...,, ..,.. ....... . ...,..,, CWtllra °""'" NeWftll\2' T ... nut
, .. ti ...
, ...•
AMdltoll I..•-• ' f 2 2 1 S ..,...,., J 00002 c......
F11119¥ W,S-1 7 • l 1 3 • HllNev 5.1 2 1 0 0 0 0 Urnlllrn Home, Ford,; First, ltMd; 5econd,
Scott; TlWd, Hine~.
T-2;31. A-29,050.
NATIONAL LEAGUE °"""1 2. ...... 0
LOS ANG•LH HOUSTON
SH2b SlubOs lb
Glbsofl If ~rshel rl
Shelbvd
Scloscla c
tQmltnlO Anclanu Herihlar p
•rlllll 3 1 2 0 sooo 2 I 0 O
, 0 1 2
• 0 0 0
• 0 0 0 •OOO
3 0 2 0
2 0 0 0
GYounecf
8111 rl
ClttnldaH OOr1n2b
GO.Via lb
S..3b 8Halctlr If
Maadwtrf
llleoloc Ryeno
Aeottoo Puhl pft
JO 2 S 2 T...,_
Sc-bY ......
Mrll~
I 0 0 0
1000 • 0.0 0
lOOO
3 0 0 0
3 0 0 0 3 0 I 0
3000
3 0 1 0 2 0 0 0
0 0 0 0 I 0 0 0
21. 2.
lOIAftelltl Oil M 010-1
Howilfl --•-t G1mo Wln11l119 ltlt -Mar"'811 {f ). E~ltevnokh. , ... DP-Los AllOllH '· Houston I. LO~los AllllOlft f , Houston 2. 31-Alldtl'son. SI-SH 2 (lfl, 811191o (2),
Gibson 11Sl. s-+iorsh!Mr 2.
LMAllelleS . HorshlMr w, 12· 3 ..........
• H RER N SO
' 2 0 0 I 6
lty1n l .W 7 1·3 4 2 2 • 10
AllOllO 12·l 1 0 0 I 0 HIP-Manhl.lt (bV RYllll WP-Ryen
Ul"l\Plr~omo. OeMutn; Flrll,
Won6Mted1, Second, loftln, Tlllrd, MatSll
T-2:» A-27.671.
0... .. ........
DAV•Y'I LOCKIR ("""'9 9-0) -I
11oa11, m anetor1. 1u bernlcude, .to bonito, 2
'ftllOWllll, ' hallbul, 176 c:ellco ...... 2.2'2 Mnd
boss. •75 medlortt, ., ICUllllft, tO ~ an.rks.
NIWfl'ORT LANDtN9 -• boeta, 13
•nolorl. •St land 11au1 154 cellco bass, IOf ttwrlCUda, 2 bonito, 102 madltrwt, f SCU!Pln,
• shooolMacl.
TNI weelr'1 trwt *"" LOS AM•Lll -lollQU8f ClnVOn Crootl, Plru C~ (FroncMwn'1 Flot), Pvramfd Leko.
SAN llltNAJlDINO -Arrowt>Mr Leko,
GroM v...., Ullto, GrOfON Lallo, Joftks \.aM, Slnta AN ltlvor, Santi AM ltlYer (_,111 fortll, SIMrwood L.eka.
SAN Dtl90 -Cuvarnec.e Ullto, OOeno
Pond, San lull Rtv River.
SAM LUIS 09IWO -Loon l.lka.
KUN -ltlto Vtt/llrt Like, Korn River (OOtnocrat Olm to Kltl Powertlouse, lor .. PoWWflOuM to Oernoall Olm, ...... Dem to Borel Powemouse, KIU ~ to
Leko la.bell)
W1a •Y"s IH AllCllent
USllllALL ..... Low
TOttOHTO ILUE JAYS-,-Acflvatld Juntny
l(ey, ttltdler. from !tie dlMlilcl ... ~ ,,_
~. plldler, '° hrKUM of IN 1ni.ne11ot1e1 L....,_· ........ LAHllll ATLANTA IRAVE~M<llvaled Ed OIW!ne, pltcMt, from the dl'8blld llsl. Stnt
K9¥tn Coft'lnM, 911dlar lo Ourl\tm Of IN
CMOlll\a l9"Ue.
CHICAGO CUl~k!Md Miko ~.
.iteflor. to low• of the Amorlcan A~llon • LOS ANGaLES DOOOERS-Announcod
lflev 118119 ~ eoAOIMlll wlltl Oomeao Garde, MConcl IMIMman. c... u...,. PRINCE WILLIAM YANKEE5-N1rned
GoM TtnaelO "'*'"°'· USKITIALL W... .. Mi .... L..-.
CALGARY ···-Slenod Kent Hiit, forward· center.
POOTIALL ....... ,..... LH9lllO
PHILADELPHIA EAGLES--SftnOd P1ul
Mc:Faddell, Dlacoldckor. HOCK•Y ........ Hecl!OY LM9Ue CAlGAltY FlAMES-Sltntd l1nnv
McDonald, c:enttr, to 1 -v-contract. NEW YORK ISLANOER~ Gr" Gll-
tlor1 and Ollo HeftrY, loft winos, and Shawn
EVllll. ~ COUAG• AltMY-Harned Iden ltllrt aulstent llodlev
eoldl.
IROCKPORT ST ATE-Nemtd JOln
SCllockow womon'1 ~ coach end Sh«rv Sytvostor women's tOMls COICll.
r
I• ... 1910'1. die --Wiid liU Coclr wa a baa11•rjd ..... alonl
wiUl otbcraedWIY·aoublel. IUCb .. Rid Wai& and Du~ --..no"
ledrct. nie.e1tan0f'~bave 1o-. liace huaa .UJ> t ir 11ee1 lhoes ancJnow, in the 'W:s; tbe ume Cody
is OMe ._. • .-n of lbe apeedW1y
ICCne •
Bobby Cody, a t 7-ycar-4>1d Dana
HillJ HWt 1tuden~ milde his debut in
profctliOAal socec:tway ncina IWO
wetks qo. In the .Past two Wka, he
not only won his thiid division heats
to transfer to the main evenas, but in
both casa. won the third division
main event &nd did it handily.
The win was so convinci"l last
w«k that promoter Harry Oxley is
movina him up to the second division
ind he will be saaninaon not the zero •
but the 10.)'ard line.
As 1 junior two years llQ, Cody
suffered •n accident which ~utted in
a major break of his femur. It took
him almost a year to heal, and since
that time, both bis mother and father
have done their best to discourqe
him from racina speedway.
But obviously, ihey have relented.
..He just aoes too fast for the lower
division and I worry thJt his ex·
perience doesn't match his natural
ability," said Oxley .
• If he keeps up bis success. it sho~n't take him long to reach the
divis1on one pro ra11ks where the veterans are currently locked in a
tight points battle.
Brad Oxley lead.s the way with
3,349 points.
* CUlltRINT ..otNT STA...,_.$
1. lrld O.irt J~ t. ao.v Sdlwotl1 U2S > Steve luctro 2.A91 ... ,.., Haml 1,911 s. Garv Hldl• 1.ns 6. Eddlt C.an> ,....,
7. lobOv Ott ..... e. Dubb Ferr.. 1.S If t Scotty ltown l.21f
10 AIM CIVlstr.n I.US
OUcaao St Louis 37 40 .481 I 11h
Montreal 36 40 .474 12
Philadelphia 34 41 .453 I 3'h
3-7 Lost I 18-20
S-5 Won I 21-17
~ Woo l 18-16
J9-20
IS-23
16-2S
MAJOR &.aAGU• LEADERS
Amlt1caft LAetue
°'"9111 •••n•V'• "-> IATTING (217 at belal-llo9ft. 8oston. ,,_; W1nfteld, New Yen, .UI; Puc:Utt, Minn.-
tote, 3'5; Gr9enwotl. 8oston, .Ml; lrttt, KM-
.. , Cll't, J:>O; Trimmell, Detroit, .330.
Hollywood Park; Los Al results
We0esda7'1 Seoret ~en 2, Houston 0 Philldclphia 4, Oticago 2
San Francisco 7, Atlanta 2
San Dieao 3, Cincinnati 2 Ne~ York 8, Pittsb~ 7 (J J innings)
Montreal 3, St. Louis 2 (JO innings)
Today'• Gamee
San Di~ (J. Jones S-7) at Cincinnati (Rijo 8-3), 9:35 a.m.
Atlanta (Glavine 3-8) at Montreal (Holman 0-J), 4:35 p.m.
Houston (Darwin 3-6) at New York--(Ojeda 5-6), 4:35 p.m.
Only pmcs scheduled
Friday's Gamee
Chicaao at 0..1en, 7:35 l>.m.
Houston at New York, 2, 2:35 p.m.
Atlanta at Montreal. 4:35 p.m.
Cincinnati at Philadelphia, 4:3S p.m.
SL Louis al San Diqo, 7:05 p.m.
PittsbwJh at San Francisco, 7:35 p.m.
"8.IC MJTICE NlJC NOTICE
RUNS-Censlco1 0.Ki.nd, M; Molitor, Mir waukae, SS; McGrlff, Toronto. 53; Wlnflolcl,
Now Yor1t, S2. ltlt-Groonwoll, eosron. '1; Puckttt, Ml,,..
10t1, 60; Wlnflolcl1 New Y«tl, 60; Cansaco.
O.klend, 9'; Iron, Kansas City, 56.
HIT!-Pvdltll, Mlnnotote, 107; Lan.stord,
0.kllnd, 100, lrotl, Kanws City, fS; Barrott,
lotlon, '3: Wlnflold. N.w York, fl. OOUILE5-erott, KaMaS City, 2'; Glllddtn, M1Mesot1. 2l: ,..y, .-. t:b '°"5. loston,
21; McGrtfl, TOf'onlo, 21.
TttlPl.£5-Wllson, Kantn Cltv, 7; Yount,
Mltwaukeo, 7, Revnolds, S..ttlt, •; Gagne, .wn.-ta, s.
HOME RU~. Ookland, to;
Snvdor, Oew1911d, 17; GMttl, Mlnnaofll. t•, CMtor, Cllw&Mld, IS, J. CioB, New V«tl, 15,
McGl'lff, ToronlO, IS; Wlnftolcl, Now voni. IS.
STOLEN IASEs-R Hendotion,. Now Yotti,
"· "'91111. Ottrolt, 32; Molllor, Mllwel*•· 25, Cansaco, o.iu.ncs, 21; Mos.lbv, TOf'Oftfo, 20. PfTCHING (7 doclsloN)-ttuuol, Tea.a,
7·1, Ut; Vlo6o. MlftMIOto. l2·L U.; Kuni,
lo6toft. t-J. "°'· It..._, Ootroll, ... ,. J.33. STRIKEOUTs-<iem.ns, lotton, 1'3; ~. S..ttlt, 123; GUimM, Ttxn, ff; Houotl. Togs, M; IMtvwl. Mlnnesoto, N.;
Vloll, Minnesota, '4.
NlJC NOTICE Pt8JC NOTICE P\BUC NOTICE PlBJC NOTICE Pt8JC NOTICE
THE CITY OF COSTA PERIOD OF THIRTY (30t MOTICa CW ll'1111 WATER MAIN REPLACE· ducted by. a limited partlltt· u known to the Intend«! duding Inventory. ltcenM Eut, 5th Floor, LOI Angeiea, .... N.J. Ol84a and the I.et
MESA HAS SET AN AH-DAYS AT CITY HALL P\a.IC .-.cnnoua IMllMU MENT PROGRAM lhlp . transfer .. .,.:'" ••none", to rlgtrt1, tredemartlond tu1de Callfornla tooe7 on or after day fOf lllinQ clalrna by ~ NUAL GOAL FOR FISCAL JOHN LOWER. AS· HIAMIO NAm ITAT'lmNT C-tract No.: 2701 Cf9lg l . Gooden. p ...... llate.)Hone. name. and ls located at;. B Juty 19, 1911. credftor """ be Jvky 11,
VEAA 1Nl-ll OF FtFTEEN SOC«ATE ENGINEER. •TH NOTICE IS HEREBY The lollowlng pettona are 1!nglneer'1 l!etlmate: dent The IMllM(I) and bulinela Vllldett>llt. ll'Yfne, Cl 92711 1flll bl.lltl trenefer la II.lb-1918 wNdl II the~
PERCENT ( 15%) FOR THE FLOOR, n FAIR DRIVE, GIVEN that the City Cooncll 'doing busMeM aa: $240,000 Tflll llaternont W11 filed ldd,... of the Intended The business n.-ne uMd jeet to Cllffomla UnlfOrm day before the conaumma-
UTILIZATION OF OISAO-COSTA MESA. CA 92828 of the City ot Newport BMch W ! STERN I AUTUMN AP9roved by the City with the County C1ttk of Or· 1tensterM(1) er« Claaa Axe, by the Hid tranatw0f{1} 11 ComlMl'clll Code Section tlOn date specified aboYe.
VANTAGED BUSINESS COMMENTS ON THIS wlllhOldapubllchMrlnQ r• HILL ASSOCIATES LIM· Councll 1hls 27th day ol ange County on June 17. tnc .. •752llne0"1Bl'ld.,81dg. Nldlocatlonls:B.C.Cotpof· 1108 CIHa AH, lno. 81:
ENTERPfUSES (DBE) IN GOAL Will BE RECEIVED g91dfng propoMd OAOI-ITEO. 11201 Von Karman June 1911 1911 '· Ar .. A l 8, MlddleMx. atlon. . The name and addr ... of CHARLa8 8TRINQUt,
FEDERAL-AID HIGHWAY IN THE ABOVE· MEN· NANCE. being. OROI· A\l90Ue, Suite 1100, Irvine, WANDA I. RAGGIO, City · Pm N.J. ()11.48 That Uk1 bultl trwf.r la the peroon with whom 1Pte1lll1nt, Intended Tr.,,._
PROJECTS. TIONED OFFICE AND BV NANCE NO. 11-22, Callf. 92115 Clerk Publlttled Orange Cont That the property per11· Intended to be conaum· claims may be flied la t.rM(a).Publlatled Or~ THE GOAL ESTABLISH-THE UNITED STATES DE· AN OROINANCE OF THE WPI General Cotpofatlon, Proapctlw bidders may Dally Piiot June 23. 30. July nent her9to la deac:i1bed In mated at the office of: Cl\atles Stl'lnger. %Cl ... Cout Delly Piiot June 30,
MENT PROCEDURE Will PARlMENT OF TRANS· CITY COUNCtL OF THE a Delaware corporation, obtain one Mt of bid docu· 7, 1•. 1911 generll u : Aa of the non-Spenatey Horn Jubal & Axe, Inc., 752 Llnccln Blvd., 1918
BE AVAILABLE FOR P08-PORTATION. WASHING-CITY OF NEWPORT BEACH 19201 Von Karman Avenue, ment11tnocost1ttheoffloo Th-n1 cut1aaaet1 of transf9f« Jn.. lubltz. 1880 ~ Partl •• Ar .. A & B. ~ Th-7M ~~~~AT~~~AP~AMENOING S~TION8~~1•1~.Cl~of~Pu*W~~-~;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~7 ~;.........;.....;.;.;...... ___ -10F FORTY·AVE (45) DAYS 19.1'.013 AND 19.14.01' 92715 mont 3300 Newport ---------11
FAOM THE DATE OF THIS OF THE NEWPORT BEACH Thl9 bu1lnaaa 11 con· BoureVard, P.O. Bo11 1761, f't8JC NOTIC[ D· ~. M N '. : NOTICE. MUNICIPAL COO£ RELAT· duc:tedbyaUml1ectper1ner· Newport Beach. CA __ _..._.........,....,,__ __ 1
Publlahed ar.....,.. ec-t ING TO VESTING TEN-ah4o 92651-1915. 8 -1
SVPW w Delly PiloC June 29. 1918 TATIVE MAPS. Ctaig L Goeden, PTell· For turther information. MOTICS TO
•"-W-108 . The PIOl>med ~to dent call Stephen Luy, Project CMDITOll9 Odette Henriette--------the City's "98tlng t«rtatlve TIW 1tai.men1 WM flied Menagerate.44-3311. OP8UUC Snell, pasaed away on PmUC llJTICE . maip ordinance reflecta the wtth the County Clettl of Or-Putlllahed Orange Cout ftlANePD
Saturday June 25, ~atlon of the relldenttel 111"19 County on June 17. Dally Piiot June 30. July 1. ts.ca. 1101.
1,...0 • H . MOnCa d~opment reatrlc11on, t9U 1911 e 101 U.C.C.)
-in unttncton 9MTll8..,. .., would require appt. PW4 Th7t2 Nata II '*9bV given to Beach. CA. Born May Noticell~__,tnat c:adona fol' comtMlaal ~ Publllhed Orange CoMt creditor• of the within 26 1916 in Les An-the Boerd of T"'8t .. of the ting "'IC> to comply 'Mttl the Deily Piiot June 23, 30, July named trantferort•) tNt 1 _i-CA. A 25 year HuntlngtOn 8MCh Union Clilcloeur• and lnlonnetlonal 7. 14. 1... .....770 rtalC ll)TJC[ bl.Ill trll\lf« la about to be ·--High ~ Dist~ wit ,.. reQWement• of the City'• • ,,. made on pertona1 PfoC*1Y resident of Newport cM. .-.cs bide tor~-ordlrwice. KA1m hafelnatter dttcr1bed.
Beach. Retired afttt Ing food ....,... and ~ NOTICE IS HEAl!BY Pl8JC ll)T1C£ PIC11TIOUI llU8INlll The IMllM(1) and~ ~ """"""" of dedicated plea meMlng or 9ql.ial to the FURTHER GIVEN that Mid um ITA,....NT addr.. of the Intended
" --apecfflclltloM on fllll In the P"lllc hearing Will be held at 110nc1 The following S*90nS are tt..,...ort1) wo· 8.C. Mat· nunin&fDtrector of offtca of Mid Dlotrlct. the hour of 7;30 p.m .• on JulY 1MT1MQ •• doing bullneau•: ketfno Corporation. • e van-Nu raes. A com· Bin a11a11 be c•••rly 11, 1tef. In the City Hail s..... bide may be ,. w~STERN/PALISAOES dert>ilt. '"""-·CA 92711
paliooat.e da\JCbler mttked '"FOOCS Staplea and Counctl Chamberl. 3300 celved at IN offtca of the ASSOCIATES LIMITED, The loeatlon tn Callfomla
caring mother, dearly==~~!,~~ .. := ~8eech~~~ ~=·,~eo~ ~2:1 ~c:'oo~~T.:: ::.=== loved sister and mlnlatratOf of Food Ser· which time and place "'••port Beach. CA 92715 of the Intended trlMlerOf
motherly and loving vlcea, HuntlnQton Beech lnt...aed peraons may 8P-92854-1915 until '1:00 1.m. WPI o.neral Corpo<auon. la;(lf "aame .. ~ ... 10 aunt Survived by Unlon High School 0111t1c1. pear and be llMrd lhafton. on the 14th day of July, a Delaware corporation, 1tate,) • , 10251 Yortctown AY911u., WMIDA I . llAGCMO, Cl'TY 1tel, _., wtllch time l!JCh 19201 VCXI Karman Avenue, All other bullneu namea brother James C:ot.e Huntington BHch. CA CUM. Cl'TY Otf MIW· bid• lflall be °'** 1.nd Sutt• 1100. lrvlne. Calif. and eddr ..... uMcl by the and dauaht.en Dian· t214t, and r«*ved at Of" PORT .-ACM read for 92715 Intended tranlfer0< within na Lee llerrera and before 3:00 p.m .• MOl\day, Publllhed Or~ County Tiiie ef ,......., 1918-19 T}'ll1 buaineu 11 con-tttree year• tut put to fat
Deru.e Snell and 6 "'t:·ti!ct9:a. remain valid ~ Piiot June ' 19: 714 • •
IF a n d c h it d r e n • tor 1 period ouo day111ter • .Roury will be reoted tt1e dale tpeelllecl for the,.. __ rmuc ___ MJ_TICE __ _
on Friday July l, at ~of =d of Trust ... --------6:00 P.M. at Pierce ot1a11 be tt1e 1o1e Judge of ACTITIOUI ..-11.
Brose Bell Broadway wflO ~ quality and ,.. MAm ITA,,_.,,
Oiapel. ea.ta Meta . ..,._..the ngtit to rejec:1 any n. =::tone ..
Mus of Christian or .. bids and to ....... 8fty ~ v A I T A L I A . . ":Etheraln. Burial will be ~l-U..T ... ad-AISTOAANTE. 3520 Eaat
ebrated 00 Saturday .. .... ... Co.It..., . Corona dll Mar,
Our ... C..1212$ at 12:00 noon at . o..d· June 21 11111 \/Ml ..... Inc .• c.tornla.
Lady of Queen of Pubhhed 0rarioe County WO bat COMt Hwy .. Cot·
..... -1. Ch· .-.a. N .. w. ,_, Piiot June 30. Julv· t. ON dlll Mer, Callt 12125 ~~ '""'1• "' ,,_, • ' ...,., • TIW ...,..,_ .. con-
pori &ach. lnter-1911 Th711 dUded 11y: accwporatlCWt
IMllt Will foUOw at ~ Huaeon. Sec/T,...
Good Shepherd Can-. TIW ata•1•1t waa filed -_...____ n~ rmuc llJT1C( ..... County Cll"1I of Or-
·-~· rwn:s un119, .,.. CouMy on M~ 2t Bell Broadway .._ ,.. • llortuarY. Dtrect.orl. HC iii .. at Ill JIM Pll11ll Oilla Mesa. M2·9HIO Mm 8TA..-T ~ Or .... ec-t ~=:;;:;;;::==;;::;;~ Tiie fOllOWlng ~ .. = "-'~ .. ft. 23, 39, • dol ~ar.
s'l:Mll AOSEVtU.£ AS-Th-7 41 'AC•IC YllW I I '•AL ,.,.
c.Met.,y • MQrtu.,y
~ • Crernatcwy 3500 Pac1ltC v ... Ot11te
~tlnc;ti
~···2100
80CIATU. 11'22 ,_ Av·
enue. 84lle tOO. INIM. ctillf. --------·1 9271 ..
... e,.,.. MuMI Uf9 --------ln11Hen~ Colftpany, a
MHHctluMttt OOf1IOJ ..... . 901 ~. 10tll ...... ,... ........ ~ ..
aoaton. Mataact111MUa dolr'8 ..._."T .. Oltt7 . (d'OX\' '-'·. cwiox-........ Foot,.... Ae-IM.J Cl DIW, M4I
---. a C RI • ...-Yleta fa:::' ... ,. ........ u ...... ....... A--. ......... Wllll ,Mel c.11111N Vista .......... ,.,.
1'1111 ............... --. OllF:-
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The Daily Pilot has a new way to turn
your Hidden Treasures Into CASH
5 10~$>
p~epayment
4 Unes,-7 Days s 10.80
D!f!IW .... JllW... C......_ CA_,.
642-1678
NAMl ...... ....-.----...---~~~~----ADOllSS CllY _________ _.. ....... ,,____ ~----__ .,,,, __________________ _
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If yoU-re loold119 for• h-.e,. .
claultled has.news for ~OIL
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c...t ..... c... ..... ----"e•---llllllRLI• .... _~11 llllc...&iMirW1't -. .... 1 11 .... --·,. iow ._ Lare• taJrway •"•· ....... aA. flm ""· blC. .,.. 1.-.. MHD CW nw 2ba, trpl, ....,--..,t , ....... r::. ';;;"• .... ....._ ._, CiUllol'9 ...... .Ud, ...... 2 ,_ lllk:fl. Hr perll •. ttl Cor· N1••1J1....A VIAN. Y ~ OoMt Pima poot OOlltlelde PCH .. _.
·• l;IGO. Qlllll_,,.lot. lll0,000. ... doee to ldtoola. Avt OMdo l1MO No dOge.. .......... -+ o.n. 29A ~_ale ....,,!)Iii pekf t10l'O Mr. W.• •
..,..,. ... , .......... _ CAL.L ... mo lindotJuiv.ONNIAT. Avl now! Wayne ....-D&aplellin9111boL 171111Y'()241-oa1 Oay1 112~1•1• or ... '°"""--. -· r= . uil OCUNYi1W LOT 1M. 117 HAHOYUt °"· ..._.18 .._..,.., t.ay vee., 1 Evnga/wtcnda 417-INI .... . DA~· 3111Utobcft ...... Wldlng ............ aM 2• LAW 38r 21Mle ......... ,..,f'1g,ttptctt571 .......... LAAG! , • .-..... .. ar W Q. ~ "C: ltte, ~ "": :::c= ...... Dbl ger, fnod W/trplc, neutr• crpt, MW •::rr..:;:' 1 = lilii clolM, ~ ...... ... ..._ _______ ==~~..:i .. ~tt .~ 0enn1.lero1cet =.~,=.~pet =i2<:2:1~ ::o=75•1d~.io ...... .. ~_:~~
or.QMlll.-.131-1118 *4"-2425* ~VIEWl.8rge28r 451-0111I--.&....._.. •---•upol'lldecl38A BOKEX\hC'om=. LAAGE aer 219 .,._
or .... 1741 Ill.. 2Mllldwlnernellcom. • • • .,. 28A~~· \.f:· 3Br-S1400. 28r·HOO. dole to bellelh. ~. ~ =--:' ~~J ~= .:-=· ~~1~.00imo' ~~':~1:U-only. ~7=7f3 t1311/mo
uncter91ound perking. C#pott & lnOty ..C ._; a&.lmllLI I II 1..aa.. SOUTH of~•, .. 11a 11200. m1 Pacific Av Pllint No pe11 17.Simo 1---u 1• .. 11 •....... COOV''evv ---.-.........-________ Aeet Eatate Svc 14~5550 ' · • ..,.. 11 18A, wtttl oar-oe. ..... -7 , .. ..,-_., F..rwrtlhebeif: ......... UdOlll.211RftOIN CUr111131·12M l'RRll.. Yrty teoo/mo us-1.ee 1111• newt 11050 • ~ ._... .,.._ ate.000. 11500 Yrty 38A 1~ IA Condo •ldlbA e •••••• • ' 721-1304 « 721-1226 ,=:... o.v 411-1330 NB PntNe 28R. tam, den, gar, patiO. & PoOI. LndfY. ..... .... 2141 Palenno 4M 2™. 2 II ( 111 Wf11 vue. 11850 . " Hr OCC 1950/mo + etory . Spa, near Rental 28r 18a mlCO 1 c:.ta... Ille lfl inlM jlif Bal lit 38A hi. $4250 d ep o a 5 4 8 -2 3 13 LG 111r condo. fnN dlln ""· AnderlOn Sdlool. 1 'f' gar11ge ~ Avt r14 Pti'!ll...,.llPt!,._,.....~~ W... OM~ ... on tM TtMfliNOCk tu:i( ....._ 8ayfrnt Condo 281 den. dayl/541.a97 aft lpm. 6ek:onlet. etou from lie. l2350/mo, 780-312• wknd. 873-0H or NJE f PlJ' 2ilf. 2il ,_ ~ .. W. price. 2 .,.,,.r dOdl tor 80' boat Yrty bHChl pool, 1pa, 873--3408 ~ c;athdrl ~ BR. DA. Lrg ,,_.., uee lenda. Highly CU9lOmlnd 14750 . E'SIOE 3bt dptx, O'.BA t9501mo. 213/592-523& CHARMING HEIGHTS cot· dl'W cable oet' ~
LR 111"'9Ulleed C911ng, ..t "9 tam ~ 38A Summer/Wkly Aental1 Frpl, erM:f patio, gar. No *=& •....L-21_.• Lige, 2br 1ba. Olf', dee*, 1Un •taianla ~ saoO, e0.oeoe
bW Febuloua locetlOn 28A. ~vu 1521.000 from 1175to12750 pets. S975/mo + eec. • .... .......,.. ,.. dOM to be9ctl 1 lt'°P9 2117 ..,,.,,..~-=-....,.----doie to~. 3 Almrodt 184-2511 0wnr Wlllrfrellt llllli i.... 54-1581 or 892-1739 . W St.\L nom;, 2-c:. S1200/mo 14~ · StARKUHG2Br 1~;.,_~
... 1111 ... , ;; lilt 48r,28aMM¥*dear-. gatti09, front ' badt £'BLUFF 58r 38a 2800llf CUTE 1BR. ""rm, flAI kit, woe -·--•••nU1·1• ..,~ t>ed/.;;d S1300 ya1d1 1-yHr l••H. 2-«y.W/Otrtg,taJ•d, eundlc.81ktobay&betl, noot.enclgar,dtw,cablll --NI ii • 1111 Newport Pacfftc: RMI e..-(818)841-5380 ~.wtrlncid. A 111. Pf'kna, ut11 Ind. S750/mo tv. patlo, Quiet wooded
We'I g111e ~ n. down 1n 21A, ~2 lot w /doclc. 11U1iN • i.te 14~3883 119iM ilM 12200 ...... 54&-8355 yny. Avt 7115. 54-7225 ~~ic~f. ·~:~~
--...1orutweofown-13•0,000. Call Aon PllWilila 2117 AVAIL JULY 1 FOR SALE BY OWNER ........ HMM 1'4arbor I Nwpt llt :::·~ ~n:·.:: voune 131-1* Cikf AN In prld:#Ut 28A2BA,8monew.Frplc, ••TNI &Ill HIQN)'upgr9decl,cnwm-Studio •Pt 1575 IS31-'215or&73-42?5
apprec. You receive Penin. Pt. 2 xtra ltg 8A9 d/w, w/d, g,...t deck, V«Y Clean. 11315/mo. Ing brlclc hom~ In •87S·M2•• 1~ tu beneftta. w.... 'W/patloe, 2BA, 2 car gar. end gar. S950 142-1311 Call Bkr ... 640--5864 BaycrHt. 48r/2 ~Ba. SMALL Vlcl«lan ~ •e~ .....
hew dNrt etedlt. Aot l1225/mo875-9'28 BEAUT. C-.:>e Serlel. 3Br OETACHEDhle38A/28A, lowtybigyardS31-osao .. ~ 1Pt. no kitchen. _.....,_.. ...
157..eoc>a Dyt, Ev, Wknde IY _.. ~ wlt/llp 1t~-.a-• .. llU 2S. condo. newly '*'9c., air c:ond., trpl., ti.utlful H.-t>or View Home'a e.t 1575 Jncludel utmti. .
••
'.'....
28r 2'..tea;Ju." ct. ....--frplc:, 2 car gar, plltlo, yard, dbte ow. pe11 ok V...,.48r3'MS&.Newpnt 557-1818 *** ~ --condo M.:f:L 28 ;2 WWW+ t:miY room poo4 S1200/mo. No pate. $1175/mo 8'15-eOM In/out, ~ qtre S2400 v 2BA den 18.A. n.. atracttve ApD ....
2 ....... ft c:tnc:tft vi. One°' 'An. frplc, lif9e ger9. vtld 832·247'10 758-00IMS/H NOfrrHWOOO Tlmbetllne' 644-ee10 or 873-317• :: l*up.~~· ,.,,. poot, 11)11.. prMlll9
MC. llRI .... 1425,000 U0.11N tlk111>. rwunttofdue>fa .._ JUIUWUM 38R 2'MSa 2 car garage, LIDO ISLE Lowly48r 38e S1200/mo utda.. padol °' dedca, ow-ea -1 llf BY Owner· L.OV9ty up-11095. * 7~7A * 2BR 18.A. Dlf'I09 1g patio Frplc, P<*' ~ ~ wfttl well.-to-well 22~ 35U-Str. 81 1140 °' c:wport In 2 ~ Oneof11'9..,.._.unltlln grtded 38, 2a. Nwpt HR/2BA SandcHlle cul-ds-Hc liS"O/mo: 2yrenewS1350.552-5864 carpet S1HOIMO land1caped Ht"ng,
11'9 VIia 8albos Wtth • Shor• home. Fee !Md, Condo w/MW erpt, tum/ 2314 Not9e,IB 8Mryt 87W170 or a~ C... W .. Mii SorryS.:.:::isso
lpecicH f.mty room ho-c:ommpool&tennla.walk unturn, al~ frpl, poot, e75-6427or 131-12M !ftJert IMd Ult LAG oeuc.condo. omM 2 C&oom. 1.lll'. i8& 1 Bedloom *5
lng/dnlng ., .. P"" two to beech. 1215,000. Prln-Jaz, gar S 1215/mo ~ILLES CONOO. *-· 28A 2BA. trpl, dM. ~ BorMll t yw 121 BTll ll'ml
bffroom1. den, c•· dplesonty, 842...a579 •645-S525* Pool, apa. ascurlty, t::!.t SHOO/month ..._ S850 + l500 eac. COSTA MESA ::rw~.:v.-:: EASTSIOECOSTAMESA ...... 750/mo. Call Norm 81$-723-IOM tOOS..Lw"4-2tU1 IQ.,.
EnlOY the MCUftty of a lmmeoulMe 3 bdrm r• Gated community high nt-3983 « 541.7540 LUXURY Townnom. owr-38R 28A. .,_ .,.._ Awt •--------
ga'9d community end tM model wtttt t1rep19ce. in-bwn oe11ng, 1p, 2sR. 1 1•••••11 *UlllUff* ~ goftcour'l9 2ar. Aug. 1st. 40C'n Acma. , ......... _
catetrsslteatthepool& tei1or ~ ... ',cbl~ car gar. 11800/mo-yny. "Polyr11'rAtmolptlel•" H6cs 38R 2BA petto hnl. ~..;J~mi;' .. °rSC:-Do not dllturb l9Mrtts Sec&.-tty buldlnQ, 8lrilarl ..,_« ... to tM beedl. oareige. "'""" "-' Cell c.tey 81131-2242.. Spec:lo11 28A + Dan. Frplc comm pool 2 car ..,...,.,, ._.t. S1•251mo, 873-7142 ll'lowera.. PoOI. end9d
Cell now for an IPPC*tt-wfth new roof. kitchen. BEAUT "-'-2'h8A condo over gar $1400. om. t,y •2• IDI Ii .W• BACHELOA· oom wtUI garagsa. AemoOsled
ment. S399.500. ~ & ftoot covet· 1br ccindo~emat "'d:.._. atrwna I talll. Frplc, Vilta Suena. thel'I call 28R 21MIA. Comm pool I belt\.'~~ qi.-end urwts. 641'""°3
711-11• "191-1400 ..... $225,000 pvt end pmlo, frplc, :'cJ. •:: ':~· ~A~.7~ 87s-412 AGt .,._ Pef1ecl for 2 ~ dNft, rricrol1rig. utllltisl 2Br H~Ba. patio, ale, \,f'"'°""'EEI "''NS -faZ minute to ~ i1095 :=;·min NO •HARBOAVIEWHOME Veryeecluded&f)Mnw Included.~ al PCH, frplc.dl'dh.Sn5/mo. 1 ~ -1'\1 WAnRfRON'f S12oolmo 759-1193 ~ .;efma $4$-:::1 58R 38.A. tam. room, 2 HoeQ Hoeplt.al. Highlyup-F/n-emkr, no pell. AVllR-•• 118 & U _"lt\m\N'\ UOMt.~ IN. atory, """dln ""· 2 f/p, 3 graded and 1a1lf corn. ~now MIS 87~ --------111::.\LTOR~ RE.AL ESTATE Cuts 2BA 1BA Ouptex, 2 car gar., poot, ale, S2800 plex only 5 yre old VIEW/COZY 2eRltBA IYll YU 111ft1 · Hlmm.• car garage, em.at yard, mo. Gardener/pool w-$1300/mo. Rita Wede a.n ca11ng gar n0 View Apt&. 2 151 P9Clffc
............ .... REAL.TORS 8111.•HUUIT MW carpet/paint. l800 'llel lnc:;l.147-7528Agl. e:t1-12M pm "'75/mO a1:1200 A"9.Must .... 28R28A. ******* JENNIFER ENCARNACAO
87
5"'
912
Agt *HARBOR VIEW HOME 09yl OfiMS.1812 E¥2 * S925. No peta. IS31..e107 WM~A m.L ft'Ollln U. ft'"• -1111111 HARBOR REAL TY .._.all .U 4BA 2BAIJm. comm. pool, ... : . . Bal. II. lince '87 Won't leltl The BEST BUY omc:. e7M400 La 3BR 28A home. Fam 2 car gar, cmr tot. Xlrllf
503 Partc Ave. 87~28ee In Harbor Ridge Modet Ae91dence 87~2N8 rm. new kitchen, fml dins S2200. Awt 711 380-0271. N£WPORT------HaGH-__,.TS..,.....,.38d. ___
laDIM per feet SBA ~BA w/pvt Ltg Ouptex 2BR 2'hBA ~9;~~~= *LllO ISLE* t~Ba. Frpte. <* noore.
faiuala lM'I ~L\;E ~~.~Fe! +Oen, dranwtlc w/loft, tP M~• Sdlool, pn & Large family home. Gl9at ~~~.,,!~::O sppt PATRICK TENORE & beamed eel. Lndty, 1' terwacourts. Cell Rober1 tor em.r1ainlngll BAY FRONTAGE triplelt 72,_,2oo Of 780-8702. car gar. $1375 ~ Mlllllcen tor detall1 4 Bedfoom, 3~ Bath. .. NEWPORT StM>r• 28r
furn, 2 '°!'· pier, l*o. 131-1286 S3500/mo. 2.a. Houes. DouClle gar-
bc:tl. 2·1Br I. 1·2Br SU Celta Jleu 1114 •--Wl..l&-lffr 1ge. tlreplace, new •171-2Me* .... , ...... car-pet & s-lnt. IS0-270I
telil... HM .:.~~MIT 111 ... OCEAN v.. 28r 1Ba +
2BA fail conac;, 2-car Mi 111•-•l.8rgepetloe&yat"da E-COSTA MESA on *~EWPORTCREST.38R =-~81~~::.::.
att.c:Md gar. 1112.000. 2BR .. 28A w/bHutlhJI ==:etor• BROADWAY, new con-= C:::· ~ c::.::· (upper) $1250/MO. =:"t~ ~ "t Oecor. Comm pool I IPL •Pool ~~r50uc,mollo'!-.. ~1'.!111lng l1450imo (213"""27-1136 OodcSlde RE. 722-9730 s.4~2465_ Prl~ on1u S199,500. 780-071' -,.._...., • ,..
....,.._ '7 Ill llllZI IPTI E/lide 28R 18A houle. •NWPT SHAS 28R•Oen. TWO TOWNHOUSES
*EASTS IDE C . M. Then-..._._.~ IOO W. WILSON 271-275 Vlrglnie Ptace. 28.A. dt>I gsr, frplc. dl'w. Frpk:a, frig,~ pool,
CONDO. 28R 2BA. frplc, rTuu--"• Ill.I. 141-fltl StO¥S, Tot refufl>. gar, freeh wtit cpt & ...... =:::--act98 of rec-
garagis, patio, comm. n• ...,(]J•)],._,.,.71• kids ott Smt1 pet c*. lmmacl Pool, tennta. Nr , epeceS pool 1150,000. 64&-8039 • • _..., •1• M1lmlft• $795 (2t3) '37-'118 bWt1S1S50831-1313 2Br. 2~ w/d. HOO.
754-1551* ~---19¥~...,°'*-EASTSroe: PSffsct tor••· NICE 39,. hm w/Farn rm. *•R2191U* 38r !:.:~,Jl 200
BRIGHT 28r 2'MSa Condo, ecutlw tlmity. 38drm, S 1300 -.in
1'h ml. ff4m bHch, MifMT.aT H~BA. tamlty rm w/frplc Twntlm SBR Comm poot 2-58dnnt800-l5000/mo. YllWmE
aeum .. loan 1134,000. 38R ~BA end unit In ~~ 2~ ~ S1100 Marti, SGt "2·770e 0... 14.
Call LMry. Ann CNlm•n quiet court. Larger Pl#I $1800/mo Incl gtridr. AYI .... rfrellt ........ SBA 2BA Opbt.,,.. dflls. ~3£~ 28a21tfWW
Real Ell•t•. '"-1341 4. Won't last $239,000. a11. For Interview call ltllttn U 1· 1• erpt, eee.. 3 doon to bd\. EJCCalnnt cOnditton -,;
GOLF COURSE VIEW Pnndpall only. Martt J . Scotti $48-2301 Femify pret"d. Untvm, P9sl S2IOOrno ' Complet~ new lnterlOr by Re/Mal( Rltre, 850-1400 *2BA tBA twnhe. M•a I'-~ yr1y S 1500/mo. 845-5714 .
1uperlor craft1man. Verde PatJo yd gar11ge SpeciOul 38A 28A. dbl BAYRiOGE CONDO •
Gourmet kitchen, 3BR. 11eMJe..... WIO hkup. 'po(,., 1895 gar, I/rm, d/w, •Int cond. 28r 28' dbl gar, poot,
2BA. Single tamtty home f• Sale llM Con1ktef pet 122..ao11 $1225 +eec. 541-4497 1p1. w I d , tr 1 g .
on I= ~· lot. ESCMttNt co:t. = •2BAOUP\.EX.qutel,ju8t m111111-fum/untUm, 751-9411
associated
. .
~1902' Wall Senlor'I perll, 28r 28a pntd/nu CfJ)t, wld tlOOlc 48R SBA. Qutet cuk9e-Mllll -
+den, pool & du~. upe, genlge, QOOd ... UC. Avtlil 7120. $1495 Wall to Nftport Cntr. ~
S39,$)0. Bkr 551 1351 1735/mo. 7«M>7ea 1ea1 dle.cOunt. e:st..seee 2BR 1BA. attac:Nd os· lu Cl1•111t UH
0pen 113 t2-'. 300 e. **NllWI)' cleCOtated a 38r. 1a. new ctec:or. can-•· 2 'f'"I newt a1250 mo F6RitEh m ,,..
Co.et Hwy, ..... Nwpt super dNrt 38A 28.A. ttW locatlonl '975/mo. ..... "' , • home. • 28a. ... erv
Bch. $4t,5o0. 28A 2BA. S12001mo Ind .,..., & ,221 AVOCADO 28R+Oen U350 mo. tot. dtw. 11450/mo ....
Agta 175-7113/875-<t010 griO. 517-t748 472-0737 or 380-8871 • 64C)..5114 Bkr 2131•7-7'04 tve "11211
Grubb Ellis
ENTS CONDOS AND TOWNHOM
r@--1a1r.111---,
, A --. quiet cone Mete.cf MM>ng 1
I t.n t,.... & tavtehlCtipe. A towty I
18R "Ike MW" wfth a b*ony, ca-l thedrjl cellnga; ftreplece. poo&, tpe & I leundry. NO PETS. 1st mo+eec. Avail I now. c.11 veema. 540-2447
ltt u ...... y ..
Stal y .. ,,.,.,.,,
e• ClantfW,
642-5671
for information
& surprisingly
low cost.
2 Bedroom, 2 Bath with loft•
and garages. Includes
marble entry, marble .._
piece, wuher/d~ hookup,
tile kitchen, ftoor and batha,
vecuum8Y8t.,,.
·I·==~ .. I ..,.... 28A + Oen, 2W condo I aw1 ... ..,. & ..,... Fnpece, _.
I •'*"'-hook-usa, pool. Jecual, I doui»I• a l_~r•t• w/op•n•r.
I l10Nhno+l800 "*'·MC· NO PETS. c.11--. •• 2447
'@ --1 .. ,., ,,., "". ,,,, "'
a\'9flfll••·
lilt
141-1111
I I
I I ..... _. ............... .__ .. J
1
Cap!!z DwtrlW · La.._1"91 Palatiq iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii:ii\ii;;;iiiiiiiiil-:Add::.:,..:o.1gn-~::;Rem:::oc:1:::1e1::-*™ICIAN ta 1108 I Lancan l"'!G.O.RA~o-!isr'.l!liu ... o!"'!E .. N'!"T '!"Pain-t .. -.
New-Ape.Ir-Top qua!. r... Dryer-1pa-f*'·remodel1 GARDENING-CLEAN UP lntl•t low rates, highest
Vour
Service Directory
Repfeeentatlve
M2·U21 ell.110 .......
tr.. est. Uc. 831-23'5 meter c:hangeM!ghtlng Mow-4dQe-trM work-lull qualtty wonc. 12 yra exp.
+ Sml Rmdl & Additions. Mrv call. frw est. Uc malnt. A.as. 966-2718 R9fs ht. Doug 720-9'149
walla, doors, windows •NEW-REPAIR-SERVICE DBL A TEAM 15 SWANSON & SON PAINT
M2· 1TII, 11111, m ~ ':·~·-=· Juli~ & ... ~ ::::. ING. Quaty wen .~
•HOME IMPROVEMENT ., ' lnglhouMc:leen &42-.3921 "1962. Compl Ext. from
Concre1e & cafl)entJy facet GAROENINO SERV Oean SIM ~· lne'd 831""'70
LOU 67~185 Nwpt Ben PATS Redwood fences l ups: L.awna. P..,.,, trM Todd T Kornefy. Pllllnttng
Custom Gat• Quality trim. garege. Al 549-e461 Contr.:tor. Quality S'fC.
-.!'fw ... .,.. ____ I ConatJRepeir. 964-9080 TREE TRIM· TOP-SHAPE-Uc. lna'd. 675-1425 •a.. u Stump-P.am.cleattupe.-TOP QUALITY PAINTING Hauling Mtlle, &41-0512 18yrOC. r~ompt-refa
=--------H repllfi. palnt * 111•1111 * Full SeMoe Gardening
No Job 2 Big or 2 Small VESCO PAINTING AND
Fr• •t 531-2507 WALLPAPERING Qu .. fty
MATSUNAGA MAINT work. FrM Eat. 969~0
HYMPl•ITlllU
YMUMllDTI
CfTY
lllYD
WORK PART-TIME DELIVERING
NEWSPAPERS. EARN UP TO
$800/MONTH. MUST HAVE RE-
LIABLE VEHICLE, INSURANCE,
AND OMV PRINTOUT. MON-
DAY-FRIDAY 2-5 P.M., WEEK-
ENDS & HOLIDAYS 4-7 A.M.
NEWPORT /CORONA DEL MAR
& LAGUNA BEACH AREAS.
CAUea..-.EXT.D
AIK FOR 9E11t
WORK WITH SKID MC KENZIE
(SPUD McKENZIE'S SISTER)
Wanna party all night and hang out at the beach all day?
FINEii!
Just give us part of your evening and your winning personality.
OUR FAMOUS
HAS RETURNEDI
Back by popular demand. Dimes-A-line will run Friday. Satur-
day and Sunday m its own class1f1eat1on in the Classified Ads.
Since this Is a special offer, we have a Thursday noon deadline
and ask prepaymMt tor all ads. This is open to all private party
advertisers for ~chandlse not over s 1 SO {price must be listed
in ad) and no abbreviations will be accepted. All ads wlU run
Friday. saturday and Sunday. There Is a S-flne minimum at 20C
per line ... So yow tow cost Dlma-A-Une ad b only ...
S3.00.
DEADLINE: Thursday noon
PRICE: S·line mlnunum • 3 days • 20C per line = S3 00
• An ads are prepaid by coming into the Dally Piiot to
P'ace your ad or use the coupon below.
• Private party merchandise only ads No com-
mercial ads. pets, livestock, produce or plants.
• Each item must be prices In the ad with no items over
SlSO.
MAIL TO: Dimes-A-UM
Daily Pilot
330 West Bay Street, Costa Mesa. CA 92626
Daily Pilot hours
Monday-Friday 8 00 AM to S:OO PM
STATE ZIP
~------~------------------------~----~~ ·~-----------
AMOUNT ENCLOSED DATES TO RUN ~-----------------~ ------------------~
UNIS
'· 2.
].
4.
5.
6.
7. ..
9.
...
.
-
I·
c ---
=
--.
' ,,
'
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-~
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.
'
" ~ ' ,
-
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!> --••• 4 ....................... -•• '3.eo
-. .......... _._ .. ~
• ._ ........ _...... .. ~
-_,.
" . ................... __ ..
Few O.C. &crow Co. 4-t
In M-F. Must have own '*·Pert tor Mfnl ,_Ired penon. Lynn ~7-5e25
••••••••••••••••••
HAVE
A NEED?
Reod the clos1il1ed pages
and you're sute to lrl 111
c
L 6 A 4 s 2 s -I 5 F 6 I l E 8 D
' MANAGEMENT
JOIN OUR TEA.M
MANAGING CARRIERS THE DAILY PtLOT IS
LOOKING FOR TOP QUALITY MG~S WILL-
ING TO WORK HARD WE OFFER XLNT BASE
SALARY PLUS OVER $300 IN BONUSES
EVERY MONTH, GENEROUS GAS ALLOW-
ANCE & OPPTY FOR ADVANCEMENT. JOIN
OUR TEAM & BE ELIGIBLE FOR FULL MEDI-
CAL COVERAGE. CREDIT UNION, 401io\
PLAN IF YOU'VE GOT WHAT IT TAKES.
CALL BETH. 642-4321 EXT 205 OR SEND
RESUME TO: DAILY PILOT, 330 W. BAY ST,
COST A MESA, CA 92626
BOYS & GIRL~S
Eillk Mo~
-START NOW·
11to15 Ye•r• Old
WORK llVl:NINQS
AND SATURDAY
WORK IN YOUR OWN NEIGHBORHOOD .
YOU CAN AVERAGE PER WEEK
•7500
OR MORE
CONTACT Mr. Phllllpa
PHONE (714) 488-3321
-'MOtor a·outes
r
.......___ --.....
"
available in
Westminster
Huntinifon :Beach
f o~tain ~~a11e,_'· . .
NO COLLECTl°NG
NO SOLICITIN.G .. ....
Deliver One Day a Week -
Must have dependable car
and proof of insurance.
C1ll 842~ 1444·.
Ask for Joanne ,Craney
..
'• . .
I "" (' ' • • : .• If. you re 10 or ~er. a.ljob. es· a ~ •
earner might be JUSt·your Sit&. Jost send in : ..
th1s·C0Upoi:l or callr 64\2~."Routes "are ·1 \"I'
a~1lable,now! • .. . , . •
.. . . .. .
. .. ,-.r..,se;r~:. ·-.•..
~ r~ run·~ lake to~~ oUt :,e .about ~l . : . . · ..
·~ a Oa.tl~ Pilot ~,,... ." . _ I . · . .
Name I ... I . . . '") . Address ..,, . · ... I . I _ . ·. · . · =: . f Phone ~ ,. • •·. iii .. . . 1.
I s...Te:-: . new,* .. · t · I "· lle 1. aa, St." . .. ,, ... I . L...;..,... C.t1~21.?,!_____ f .:
•. ,.
.. ..
' .
.·
= .. ~
I . ,
.
·.
':.: .... .·
. . ~ ... ...
.. ~·. ..·
·~ .
• I
TING A NEW BUSINESS??
Tiie legill Depwtment at the
~ Ptlo4 II PIHHd to an-
nounce a new ..w:. now aY911-
..... to new bu8inelw.
We _. now SEARCH the ·,__tor you at no atra charge,
Md l8ve you the time and the ._to tM Court HouM in Santa
.a. ~ Then, of c:out'M, aft• the
eMfCtl 11 comp19tect .. w1n n1e
,,our llctttioul bueineaa name
•111 ,..,t wtth the County Clerk,
,pubbh once a week for four
WNk1 u required by law and ttMlin ft._· your proof bf publl-
1' cation with the County Clerk.
• •
,...._ stop by to file your
ftctttioul ~ 1tatement at
the Oe6ty Ptlot legal Depert-
ment. 330 WMt .a.v. ea.ta
Meu.. caMfomia. " you can no1 atop by, plMM cell UI
• at (71~) 142-4321. Ex1enek>n
315 cw 3M and we wtll make
arrenoen'*'t• tor you to handle
this procedure by mall.
H you ~ have 111ty further
qUMtionl, plMM call UI and we
wM be more than glad to ..eat
you .
. Good luck In your
new bueineu!I
o &-:.thO>llllty-®-00-
Thank You For Making U. #1 In
America. Come In and SM Why
P.wts Open M-8at a -5:30 sat 9 -4 p.m. ~ M..frl 7:30 -e p.m.
.,,, 9UCM M.¥9. ~-laAat
17071 E. Imperial Hwy.-Yorba Linda. California 714 / 142-2000
• ..
. ,THEODORE ROBINS
. ·.: .. THE .... STORE
· --· . 2060 Harbor Blvd .• Costa Mesa ~ ·',. 642-0010 • ,,. •j
.,•.•,I '
-.SADILEBACll ,... & . ; . :~aies .. ~ ... · . · . Service
·· ~-e~ing : ·.. : Parts .. . -
1.RVJNE'.AUTO CENTER
i-~a31-33n ·. . 11~390-1200 -.. PARTS and
SERVICE .
Open Sat: ':
SALES
BODY SHOP
LEASING
STERLING 540-9100
2600 Harbor BJvd .• Costa Mesa
!
I BUENA PARK
STANTON
GARO N GROVE
PACIFIC
OCEAN .....
Huntlflllon Blach
Chrysler • rlVllllOlllll
NEW CORVETTES
• LOWEST PRICl!S IN O.C.I
40S Frwy, East 1 Bloek to
6633 Westminster Ave, Westminster
714/849-8333 1·800126-CHEVY
You too, can get your
De~notlced
Your ad will come out three tirMs per
week for seo.oo -Color l'reel
C.a(714J64Z·4JZI
and.~ ltepwll all you.
0 HOUSE of IMPORTS, Inc.
"l'"a M·F 7a-6p
Mercedes-Benz
6862 Manchester Boulevard 80 ·.
213 or 71•/llEllCEDES,M·F 8a-8p:
Where 1·5and1·9lmeet.. Sal. 8a-2p
• Lew Pricn • Ne Gimmidlt • Gr"t S.~
• ftien•y PMPle • la<ellent S.Vece ...............
(211) ... ,.
..
•.
;on-teac~peraonnel ~eted as ewport-=:. cuts $4M l'OiD biidget
.,GWJP••x .............
nc Newaort-Mela Unified School Di1trict Wif1 ~ iay off u many u 61
•Dk>Yea before the beainni111_of the nat 1e"bool__year.as pu1 OI an effort to trim about S4 milliOa hm ill budlet.
Tiie ICbool boerd approYed the
UCl'a Mike Briggs, Trevor
Kronemann wtll represent
U.S. In ln1ematl~al Jun-:
k>r tennis tourney ./C1 _
World . \
Vatlcah excommunicates
Archblahop Marcet
Lefebvre after he con-
eecrates four bishops of
hla tr&Cittlonallst move-
rnent./ M
IDdez
Ad¥tce and· Gamee
Blrtha
Bullettn Board
8ullneu
CIMetfted
COrNca
0.thnottce
Entertainment
Opinion
Police log
Public Notlcea
:I:~.
85
A7
81
A9-10
C7-9
86
C6, 10
~
A8 ·
A3
C4,8
C1-6
A2
cuts this week while considerina the
diltric:t's $61 million b\ldiet for
1988-89. Tbe ~yoftl alone are ex-
pected io •ve the district about S l
millian, said Superiniendent John
Nicoll.
Tbe aatt.cb aR tht latest in the
district wbicb, like many others
~t tbe 11&1£, has been hit
BJ JONATllAN VOLBE ...............
Huntinaton Beach police officers
were not nqliF_nt when they jailed an
epileptic who they mistakenina ·
t.houabt was intoxicated, a Superior
Courtjwy decided Wednesday. ,
The jury deliberated less than six
boun before decidina police officers
.
DA to get data on
Cox phone tieup~-
Newport police say cans were traced to
ROSenb§jb&cker
disconnected as soon . as they ~
answered, but wasted hundredS of
maft..boun. Coll's officials said ' · Police iD . ton tnced the calls
to a I ... ~ bome bearifta
R:r::f campaipl sips. The hus.-.,amj wife who rent the home mm doaatld S 1,000 to Rosenbeq's cama•~ Mve declined com-ment. · bave 001 publicized
their--. aa1ea11111 lmdeoied any invOlve-
rnent. He iaid bis cam_... also
---c:aJll iD the waDllll days of &be race. bUt .. j• cballled tbem up•
~" Tbe YP 1s lioasCOUJd baw resulted
ia milde-w ~~a
&wwxolup1D-.,..-ba
tlw ~'° Sl°'OOO. Ne~ Potice<-.Bob~-..... iln 11r•tion Mid 1D m ·-·==------w1 .... a•1•
hard by budeet cuts at the 11au and ~rt-Mesa chapter or the Cali-two carpenten. Bryan warned the federal levdl. fonUa Scbool Employees A~ ichool bolld Tuesday that if the
Earlier, the district ceed io t.er· tion. said someofthecutscould result district tried to contract out for work
minate 27 tacbers ana· perauaded ~n~lowerct. quality of service for the done b)' the ~nten, the associa-
about 90 Olben to accept arty lion would file an unfair labor
retirement peckales, said Nicoll ""They're not~ina to be ~tine the practice pievanoe.
"fl!.a~ movuaved t6e district about Sl teTVicet t~y'.rc used to acttina. I Still. there is little the 1SSOC1ation
million. pas the distnct is prepared to accept can do about the-layoffs. : '""l'hil it the result of aoina into a that," said B~ .. About the only thini we can do is
very Md deficit year broulht qn t?Y The cuts 10cll.14e layins off to try and oversee everyt.hma and make ctwss at the state level, wlierc thei'c · custoclians, three ·11oundskeepen, sure the ta1otrs arc cf one according to wuia.., even enouab money \0 bruk and 1everal plum~n\cchanicund seni0rity1' said Bryan. -
even." said Nicoll. teachers' aides, he said. The district's allotment from the
MaribalJ Bryan, president of the The district also will lay off ns only state has been cut m half since the
198S-86 fitcal year, Qik ODllit ...
incttaled at a steady r8le, llid ~ •
The reSuttina deficit 1m = district '° bom>w from reserve funds, and t.be fact die
owes illdf about I' _.. ii .. ba.naiaa out there like a time...._ ...
said Nicoll
Al an added probleln. ~
teachen are still without a ~wt
and have indicaled pollible ."'1t
action when school rn&uniel ia ilM
fall. Teachers are uPSet beca-.._,
(Pleue ... ~YOl•81.All
Recount stirs
Irvine Council
seat scramble
'
Cosgrove backers
petition registrar
to check for errors
.,Jooe conservative on the council it
COS&tOve seti the ·seat: Petitionen
have until JuJy IS to collect the
approximately 3.SOO 1ipat11Te1
necessary for a special election, said
City Ocrk Nancy Llloey.
ByGBEGUZRU
Of ............
With the status or a new election
law still in limbo, council members
and would« council members in
Irvine are pla)'in& an incrcasinaly
confusing pme of political musical
chairs over a vacant seat Thinas became even more com-
plicated this week when supporters of
councilman-elect Cameron C05&t0ve
applied to the Oranae County Rqis-
trar ofVotcn for a l'!:CC>unt
~ve finished l 06 votes ~
hind mcumbent Sally Anne Miller,
who finished behind Paula Werner.
Two council seats were up for grabs
on the June 7 ballot, but the election
of Larry Apo as the city's mayor
also vacated bis council seat There
will not be an election for that
position on the council until 1990 .
Under cunent CJty election laws.
Cosgrove wins that seat by default as
~the third hi&hest vote-srtttr.
..., .... ,...._,.._.._.. Ho~cr. a new measure approved
Goafereace We4Deeday, wlaere&4.2 mllllae
bl~dnltaODeJWU=-' lD a . coffto. ~ money wu bi a
by Irvine ~·oters on Juoe 7, known as
Measure D.11vcs votcn tbe option of
pct;itionin& for a special eJcct.ion to fill
the third scat.
Such a petltJOD drive u CWTCOtly
being led by Miller. who would be the . llolltebello raid OD llonday. Story OD A3. . . .
behaved properly w.hen they arrested
Bruce Usher, wbo suffered two seiz-
ures, while io the city's jail.
· Usber, 32, was driVing nqr Pacific
COISI Hiat!way and Beach Boulevard
in 1982 when be suffered an epileptic
se~ lost ~nsciousness, and ·
crubcid tu. car lnto •block t.'a.11. Whe1l police arrived, they allqcdly
noted that Usher's speech was slurred
and his behavior confused. Officen
arrested Usher on suspicion of dri v-
ina under the inOuenc:e of alcohol or
drup, according to court records.
Butatone point-Usher contends
it was immediauly after the acadent,
while poti~ was latC(-ofliCers
were told -~ and even pvtn hiS dOctOr .. s name.
Usher was p&ac:ed in the city's jail.
and while makina a tekpbooe call to
arrange bail, he suffered a seizure and
was taken by ambulance to a hosoital
He was released from the bo$pital
hours later and taken back to the jail,
where a supervisor ordered him
released from custody. But the pro-
cess took several boun and Usher
suffered another seizure, court ~
cords show.
HB· ieciCI'S Coast in a crime
.. . '. . ' . ,, .
With no:"Solution: Murder ' '
BJ JONATllAN VOi.BE ...............
..
It's not a record anyone is proud t~ bold.. but
poliee officials apce there's not mbcb that can be
done about it. •
Accordina to the state Attorney Oenetal's
S*lilbcl Burau, 111Qre DeOik . were slain iD
HuaU..-. &e.cb 1aSt year than in any other city on tbe Qtailee Cout. ..
Sil ~we~ killed in the city of 18,.,000, one
• b e¥11J ~000 residents..
. ff•i •• ~·s sn homicides ectually .repn• nllll a dldine for that city.11tven people~
ima dllrt ia 1986. All the otbct cities on the <>ranee · C.. .... MICQIDW&Rd five M>mic:ides ia 1987. . TWo= ..ae slain in JM~ wtlile police iD Ne~ COiia Ma. uid tap• Bac:ll *' -~-7111 W ~ fOuaW. Valky'.s boliiicide •crsd,.•t t :ldaiittime•Olberduties-tbi.-e ..... k.·:··11 a.1Mtc:itylllt )IW. ~ .
Siaiewide, 2.929 people were slain in 1987. said
Charloaeabca. a Department of Justitt stausucian. no 0ranac County Sbaift's Department
wotUd ICl'Cft killinp.. but its jurisdtruon spreads ~me county and the statistics dtd not note
where the~ occurred. .. Tbllli,..ly is no way to pmlict the number of bOmicictilll ~than if someone believes 1n the law
of a~! ,said Lt. Richard Olson of the counfy Sberifl'i -~nt. .. It's one of those crimes
comnuaWdiia the btat of passion often times."
i1be ._. definitions of hoinicide place killinas
in du'til ~ria: first4eptt murder, sea>nd-
~...,... and m&mlaupter.
WW&aaieb bas variom wt>-sroups, Mt-de&:ree
nuanllir i'liti8erally a planned, deliberl&£ killiaa. It
calliJW cil.death penalty. ••• • • * I' ft mirier' aienenlly includes crimes "1 f h 1 or cues of poss ~ While r rt' IP• ~ ea&aib an mtent to came (111••··-~&I)
s'blows
....
However, the petition drive could
be moot if Cotcrc>ve is sworn in
bef~ Measure D is validated by tbe
council and secretary of state. Tbe
council was set to validau t.be
measure Tuesday, but the vote was
postponed until July 12.
If Measwe D is validawd by the
council. the.City Oett must receive mte validatioo by July 20, the day
C~ve and other council members
arc slated to be sworn in.
Lacey. said it takes a m.Uaimwn of
two to three weeks to cer1ify election
results. which would mean Measure
D would not be validated until July
26 at the earliest. Sbe said the procas
took three months after the election
last November. .
Frank Lundin&. a traffic com-
missioner and Cospove supponer,
requested the recount Tuesday.
Lundin& said the rcasoninc bdlind w recount request was simple.
.. Thole J 06 votes are standina in
the way or (Coscrove) ~DI I twe>-
year term or a four-year tam. Errors
do hapPCD, rrustakes are made. .. said
Lundi.QI. . . _ .. ~··"' Cotsrove 11 on vacat100 --.. '-VUIU
not be reacbed for commenL
The election of ~ and
Werner, liberal allies of Apan. a1ont
(Pleue -a&CX>CJM I/ A2)
E. Day Carman. Usbcr'a.anomey.
~ that officers violated jail
policy and federal rqulatiooa requir-ana medical treatmcot of jail ioma1a.
Usher asked for SIS0,000 in dam-
llCS. but Jurors in the week-kq uia1
decided the city 9Cted properly.
Los Anaeles attorney lbOmu J.
Feeley, who rep1eseoted tbecity, was
(Pleue-.JUJl~/d)
Banker
accused of
thefts for
gambling
Market gains ground .
NEW YORK (AP) -Stock prices pined ,
JroUod Thursday with a boost from dcclinina ·
interest rates as the markeu reached the midpoint .
of 1988.
Analysts said investon drew some eocouf'llC-
ment from a drop in bond-market interest rates.
West German authorities raised some of their
key interest rates Thursday, followina a similar
move in Britain earlier in the week.
But traden in the U.S nwteta took the news
in stride, apparently concludina that the Federal
• Rnerve would not neceuarily feel compelled to
tiahten credit in this oounuy. .
Broken were expeqina the pece of activity to
slow Friday as the Iona July 4 holiday weekend
approaches .•
WHAT AMEX 0 10 WH 41 NYSE DID
~ --
l. t
I G fJl D Q u 0 TE s
Mf1:1l) Q uuTl~
-------
HIW TOM C#t -"'°' •••-_... ,.-. Tiu'Mlr . ..._ • t1. 1a °"* per '*""'· NY C... ... _....,WM
C...., • It 11'1Wt.1t °"* • ,ouM. u.-•ua1*0 .. ~tM.IO_.,_ OOllN. NY~ ...
W..• -----· --· ...... 10 ...... ~.---n. ..... 11, .............. ,....,. •. , ............. ..._18111Y ... .......
... . ·-.. "' •. ,,., °""-... MOMfl ....... .....,._ • .,._.,.,,. ......... y ... .............. ..., ...... ., .......... ~
...... --N.Y ........ ._ .. ...
------
Due to trW11mlMion probfeme tn
New York. tod8y'e Meting wilt not
appear ln the Detty Ptk>t.
•
NYSE Lr 4Df R j
Due to ttanemlak>n probleme In
New Yotk, today'• ll8tlng _.. not
appMr In the Oafty PMot.
1 Dow J o~Es A uR~cf s
.,:.~t:~J::l ~~Ye.mo~
A1114MI 0..
~ -\,\
, 51 ~ 11-n ~-a
i'~ t t4
IJoaon
aitlsts, ·
works
It'• bani to put a price iqon an. but recently, purchue awards
for lbc t 988 N~rt Beach
Artist's Exhibition and Juried Art
Show wereJiven and have been
put on display tbrouah July 29 at
the Newport Beach City Hall
pllery.
Presentations were made by
Ma,... Pn Tem EvelJJi Bart, and
internationally known water-
colorist a.111 B,_judaed the
competition.
More than 2SO pieces were
submitted, and 70 pieces were
chosen for the exhibition.
So let'aconpatulate the big
winnen: Gerry Miller of Corona
del Mu, for a first pllcc water-
color ~tin&. and a purchase
award ofS 1,SOO. Second place
went to Aa Aasee ofNewport
Beach for watercolor, and she
receivedS7SO. TerryM..-.ter,
also ofNewport Beach, was
awarded thiri1 place and $350 in
prize money for an acrylic paint-
lllfronorable mentions of$ I SO
went toTatD•no, Newport
Beach; Ga.rta Parry Walter, Cor-
ona dcl Mar, Marse CUpmu,
Newport Beacbiand Maarlce
Coot, Newport neacb.
And receivina the Mr. ud Mn.
DaftlSMree purchase award of
$7SO wuPe,.JMetMofNew-
port bh for an oil painting. ,..
Newpon/Corona dcl Mar art-
ists aekictcd to display their work
are P.-rlallovey, G.W. MaltlmH,
Bllj".a.rtnaMeltener,Jea
Pen.tS..tleJ. 0.1W P. Jws. ..... an..-... ae. Riley, RdaG...-,J;.P. Palmer,
Gntidllml W•W.•1,~ar L
Prub, ... IYJC. Wa.
AIM 19c .. •M: Jee Everett,
ffllalllea, Maie.iD C.tler,Ro1a
P ...... , Alld.reJ McNeil, DavW
RaJ,ltn•Jae, Wit Jou, Jue
Mee.n,, aerry Oltea. Mary
Am Rall, Wallaee Slelel, Emy
LMe,Bew.,. Meqriqe,
...... PaneM.S-&evi
Beeb&Uler,Eve 1'omp10D,An-
._ ....,PatriclaftobM)' ud .........
And there's more ... RaJlllOlld C.DMta,IMs~.JuAal41,
....,_l(Me.MarilMBOlebeom,
Bart.ra B. ~owalW, Gall
· a.Den, WIDlfndLRedl,UbbJ
J.-...,Dlrley AaaS&ocb.
M,na.,...,lteldl
Je ..... Adle•e&.RaJDM,IMI
llhcWl.LCeM.
PatrJ=:-,Ra1Buck. ...._ ___ ,uiTlmoday
Bl".
• • • Speakina of awards, Horizon
Youth Employment and Training
Service. an employment prep-
aration and plac:ement program
for hilb idlool Sfudents. recently waa~tedwnh~ition awards for five local bulmcsaes
Pl••-llOllOU/a2)
THUASOAY, JUNE 30. 1•
bikers ready to roll
m.ken are (from left) Merle W•tllelt>J,
Ann Stonli, Gall OcM, 8ae Bramel, Teri Otmcllacb. Kara wu.on. 11ary lfabon,
Wendy Johnecm aa4 Jemdfer WoolMJ.
Ancient Torah
in NB temple
BJ KATY BOUCHER o. • ...., .......
Tbrouab a circuitous route, an ancient Torah has
found its way from Nazi Germany to a synaaogue in
Newport Beach.
Rabbi Mark MillcrofTemple Bat Yahm says the
Torah would often be bidden durina Hitter•s re•gn in
Germany by Christians doina a favor for their Jewish
friends so tbe Nazis couldn't destroy them.
Durina his rcip. Hitler wu bavin& au syn-
aaoguesdestroyed, but he preserved Torahs and other
documents, and stored them in museums as artifacts.
He thoupt that after the Jewish people were killed
that othen miabt want to see the artifacts of the rcli&ion.
Durina that time, a German Jew named Martin
Oettinaer attended a synaaasue in Germany that bad
a Torah in its ark..
•
Oettiqer, who bas since died, was one of the
lucky Jews to escape Hiller and the Nazis. However,
be went back to Germany after the war to claim the
three Torahs that were in his old synqosue.
Miller said OetliDFf was a very wealLtiy man
wbo imponed foreisn ,oods. He knew wh~ JOme of
the Torahs bad been taken, and was able to obtain
three Torahs from a museum and take them back to
New York.
L' .., ..... u. ......
Rabbi Mark lllller with ancient Torah.
The Anahe1m synagoeue wasn't succted1ng,
however, and Oettinger•s a:randson wanted to give
this.precious document to another congrqatton.
One went to a temple in Manhattan, and the
rema.inin& two ended up m Queens. where Oettinger's
arandsons went throuab the t.r mitzvah ceremony.
Y cars lakr, one of his .,.and.sons moved to
Ariibeim Hills to start his own conaresation, and
obtained one of the Torahs.
"When I heard of this from fnends of mine. I
sugcstcd the Torah be given a place of honor and
diJl:lit)' in the holy artc of my congregation, .. Miller
sa1d.
(Pl--eee AlfCIEJllT /82)
Show high on skateboarding
Tbe mes11F was to act hiab on
your skateboard rather than dnlp
and the &rand prize wu a custom-desianed skateboard made by a youna
professional skater. •
The event took plaee last week at
Newport Heights Elementary in
Costa Mesa, where the anti-dl'\ll rally
featured a sltat.cboud exhibition by
P!Ofessional skater Gary Sandenon.
22. of West Covina. Every child wu involved -from
kindeflllten to sixth pde. These youths~ not only excued to watch
a skater perform and do tricks. but
twotood citizens' names were picked
&om each classroom to be put in a hat
and three winners received a Sand·
enon ori&inaJ skateboard. Each
board was unique, with different
vivid colon and desians -some-~ that the skateboard sponsor
reqwres the athletes to doe.ch year to
keep up with current trends.
Sandenon, who is sponsored by
Madrid Skateboards in Santa Fe
Sprinp, skated on the blacktop while
the children's eyes were front and
center. He raced to a ramp, made a
darina twistinajump. and performed
cement-parkin&-block jumping.
Sanderson has been a professional
skater for almost four years. and
someday hopes to win a competition.
He says the best he's done so far is to
place l 0th amona 80 other pnr
fessionals.
And Sandenon put on quite a show
for the children. He said, however.
that he wants to stress bow drug.scan
ruin a person's life, and be wants to
show skakboardina as an alternative.
The chiidn:n all aareect.
"Drup ,arc dumb," said 10-year·
(Pleue ... JKAT&/82)
., un 80tJalD lhewomm bikers bad bi • .. ..
• ...__... San Clcmenie. luacb in Del .... .. -. ._.and Gail Odn were f'inilbed at lbe Su Dil9D ,Am?nt · 4..,._ left bdrind<by..wir--~ 1111ion, ~tbe¥ IDllk.1111
••• Whea lbt men would ride tratn beck home. a«o.llleir 10-speedbikes. EverytlHQs went~.~ T-. .. DOlhina el1e IO do but even bad a .. moral MIPPOlt ,...
jaia : ..... And if~. weft aoiq to driven by a neiabbor who q 1111 ..... ¥P\ the wonwo knew they'd have remain anonymOUL
to piii£UCC. ..We'd be bikina upbill Md .,_
Sooa. other women from their friendinthevanwouldbeb'~
Harbor View nci&hborhood took theme from ·~ocky; ~ NOalll • eoace and wanted to join in. on, ~lly makin&· the ~ filat" iliil ID fact. bike ridfoa in the neigh-Woolsey .... couldn't ~ at. •
bocbood became so popular, the drove 'slowly and siayed wida • !Ille
Newport women started ridina whole way.' . . •
without their husbands, and eventu-Woolsey said weather CODditlOlll
ally formed t.btir own rid.in& dub co~ldn't have been~· ca8ed "'The Famst Mothm on · I~ was perfect. said _Woomy, Wheels... ..Tb1s was not your typical Jmae
"We're not out IO break any speed morning. The ~~ wu dar ~lid
records, only to enjoy the beauty and s~nny. We al~ chm~ on ~ bikes cha~ of each da)'.;~ said Jennifer ~ :~ :~k1:;slili'U be9rial our
Woolsey, one ~f the. ~ana mothers. Woolsey said they made it with I.be
The small bike ndi na aroup soon nl ha be· Oa · pew to 10, and women aot together 0 Y mis P ma a t tare. three times a week to J?f3ctice. ..This isn't our fint trip ... Woolley
Then they decided to put that said. "Last year we went ud a1ma11
practice to the uJtimak test. ~ot run down bY a link in Omap
At 6:30 Lm. on June 8. they started end.leton."
Out ridina from tbetr Newpon Beach ·•1 used to be a runner," llid
neiahborbood with a destination of Bramel. 'The reason I swi1Ched ii San Dqo. because of the enjoyment I ,et by
061"11e purpose of this trip is to
celebrat.c a few birthda)" that arc comins up for some of the women.··
said WOOitey .... We won't tell you our
qes; bul the llC ~up ranies from
early 30s to the m id-40s ..
bein& with friends. and it's a lot les1
stressful on the body ...
And Woolsey says plus~ already
in the works for next year"s jaunt -
and if they're lucky, the husbmds
may even act to go.
Former actress
turns nurse for
ailing stray cat
BJ li'l'Y BOUCHER °' .. ....,,... ...
~·
-:
Former~ Mamie Van Doren doesn't usualh do her own grocery
shoppina -but 1t was such a beauuful June day. she said she would make a
refreshment run.
Van Doren. who lives across the street from a grocery store in Ncwpon
8c:ach. was out the door. dod&ina the demolition from constructaon work.
when she noticed a helpless st.arvma cat ·
that could barely move.
-1ne~cr1otothestorc." Van Doren
said ... All ofa sudden I saw th.ts pttiful cat
that looked as 1f 11 had been trapped
under the rubble for quite some time. I
started to approach him, and he tried to
move, but his lep were too feeble and be fell ...
Van Doren summoned her hu~
band. who was watchina from their
window, and be brought a towel and they
wrapped up the cat and took him home. ,....,_ .. 7'1
"I didn't want to take it to a vet.
because I was sure I could give him the
best care;· she said. ··1 was reared on a
farm in South Dakota and took care of 1'5·
cats and SO chickens. startina at aae S. l
wanted to nurse thJS anunal back to
health myself."
She said she knew the cat had been
trapped because of bis a~nce. The
animal was covered with open tores
along one side of its body -as if it had
been trapped on its side under the -...-.,;;....-.::ll-..o..;..;:.::.;;::.._-=:::::::11--.. construetion.
But that was at fmt &lance. After Mamie Vu Dora
closerexammation, Van Dorm found more complications.
"l thought it had been dc<laW'Cd. .. w said. -Every claw "-as gone -and
his nose! It was rubbed raw from the frantic diging 1t must have done to
escape."
She and her husband made a bed for the cat ma large empty bird CICC that
was in the Pfl&C.
Van Doren said she pve the cat a bowl of fttsh watcT and it "-as goiae in
seconds-the animal had been so ckhydratcd and fam 1shed. the water "'a the
only thin& he could handk. Then she bepn to hand-feed him ca yolks and
eventually propcsscd to canned .. aourmet'' cat food.
.. When the cat was strona enough 1 pve him a bath and picked every flea
off by band. .. she said. "1 named him Em1e -af\cr Ernest Hemm1naway. but
the bath revealed that he was a she. It's a beauufuJ 'Tabby,' wttb emerald sreen
e~.. ·· h Ith Em. da Van Doren says she's also pvma p ys1ca crapy to 1c every y
because of the animal's inability to stand for very long.
Van Doren. referred to as one oflhc .. blond bombshells .. and sex symbOls
(Pl ....... nT/91)
'Youth musical 'Choose' scheduled at Newport church
~." a youth«ieated musical. will be ~
CDled by I.be New Youth choir of St. Andrew's ,,..,.._a.di S.1dly .. 7 p.m; at lhe chUrda. 600
St. Alidrew°I a.o.d. Newport 8eacb.
'ne lbowcleilll with the cboices a YOUD& pmon fxa ftile ~to llllre tapomibility b bis action and it
...... ""Lillce.A.llea. Adlaflliae ii he. but an O&ri1'1 wilt be taken. C.all
6Jl-Jl21 ..... WormMioil.
available, Sunday. SbOw time is 9. p.m. and reservations
may be obtained by PboDe at 1'9-5461.
.Paacaae biedfut bl BB
Tbe !ilW City Atlocilldoli Mad t.hC Huntiniton
8Cecb K.iwait Oub will hOll dllelr fim Fourth of July pucan bnU6ria Moaday at 1M Seildifl'SbOpi.na Center
on Maia Stnetat Yortrtowa Aw.e. Huatin11<>n Beach. n.t ..... willnua '"* 7• I l Lm. '1 a donation Of Sl. U"9 ................. 8llcl crafts for the
dlildnn Will W aftlllllle. Calr Mlle SMlion at 722-811 o
for ftanller .......
fiaoa'4Jptl-..i.Ncf
•t119111ac WllM 11 C.DDIDrV. .. is tbe tiOe of a .,... .. _ .. ___ .. ,.,., •• ,......, •• ~.•tbeNewpon
c.w-..d' ... ,...l*l'' .... Wc(,,lnry. 11)9111•=11~a.--... --the -? F 1 fl 7&1¥ ... ,....... Tbe ....... ~ -~~ .. =,:: .. ~a;;;;fi--~ .... iw;~.:: ---
Laauna Beach Chamber of Commcrtt will be held
Wednesday everunJ at tM Tivoli Tenace Oil the Fcsth·aJ
of Arts pu_Dds in Lapna Beacb. ·
FODowiQ& tM din OCT, chamber members.; pms and
friends will attend the operuna dress rdaearsa1 of the
Pqcant of the M.-n in the lrviDC 80wl A limited
number of tickets remain. with fu:rtbcr iDfOnnation
available frorn the chimber office at 494-1011.
The IC9ioD is ICbedukd for 1 p.m. in t.bt ..._
Room of lbe Huntiaston Beach Central Li~. '711 I
T aJbcrt Ave. Additional in.fbrmation may be~ 111 ~
c:allint 14 l .:oo4 I .
Vlftull u• eo.a.aJtatlou 9et
~ -nscHEVROLET g Home of the
Serengeti Blazer +1&11 Call our friendly saleSmen for details
579-5100 1-800-228-7240
17071 E. Imperial Hwy.-Yorba Linda. California
•
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1-I00-831-3377 714-380-1200
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..
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STANTON
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OCEAN
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• LOWEST PRICES IN O.C.I
405 Frwy. East 1 Block to
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714/849-8333 1-800/26-CHEVY
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Your ad will come out thrH.tlmes per
week for SI0.00 -COier Preel
caljt14J642-4JJI ana a sas.., w11 a1,.,.
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Pans A ~rvict LEASING SALES
Open Sat. ALL MAKES BODY SHOP
2600 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa
• 540-9100
HOUSE of IMPORTS, Inc.
Merades-Benz
6862 Mancheater Boulevard
Buena Park ~ 213 OI' 7~E8'M-F ........
Where 1-5 and l-9lmeet. s.t. 8a·2p
• low Ptteft • No G1mmteh • G;oot S.le<tiittt
• f,~nclly Pooplo • l•coffont Sonic•
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(111) 11'1·1411
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I
exercises spell relief for arthrit
Belpers
wanted
totraclr
dolphls.s
Are you a bonlenosc dolphin
fan?
Ifso, Oranae Coast College
needs you to volunteer in marine
biol<>Jr research to help monitor
activities of the dolphins for two
hoursonJuJy23. ·
The research project, named
"MassSi&hting Day," isa Coastal
Dolphin Survey Project of Or-
anae Coast College. In order to
have a better idea of dolphin
population and its range, the
project will have volunteers
placed at one-mile intervals from
Point Conception (Santa Barbara
County) to the Mexican border.
Pr~ director Deul1 l.elly
said it is essential citizens help
study the dolphins so that a
catastrophe, similar to the one
that occurred on the East Coast
last summer, is averted.
a, JOYCB llODLOVICB ............ _
SWWITiaelmaAckerman.69, arid ~Wdchd.
66, ofHuntiftl&on Beach hive ahared etperlCftCelaJl thtir
lives.
Now they are sharina the painful alfecls of arthritis. Accordina to the Arthritis FoundaliOn, the diseaw
affecu-mott t&an l8 million people ia dais couuy. it is
the moa prevalent chronic he.\lth problem and &hr No. l
cripplina condition in the United Scates. ~n On•
County there are more than 281.000 peqple su~ from
the disease. •
Betty Jona, uecutive director of the Southern
Califomta Chapter, Oranlt County branch of t~
Arthritis Foundation. sa)'I there are more than l 00
different forms of tbe diteaR. Arthritis means inflamma-
tion of a joint The diteate can cause pain. swellini and
redness in joints and connective tissut throuahout the
body.
In an effort to fiaht the disease. the Arthritis
Foundation created •. Joint Effon... I voup ex.ercise
propam dnianed to introduce people with arthritis to
~tie, non-demandina ranae~f-motion exercises.
In Hunti~ Beach, the 4S..minute class is held
each Wednesday afternoon at the r.00&en Senior Center
for 20 to 2S peol)le. Exercises ran~ from throwina a
briaht1y colored s~nae ball to leam1rfJ how to set in and
out of a chair without puttini additional stress on the
joint'-The workout is done to music.
It is open to men and women. qes 18 to 90 ... but
m05t participents are in the older ranee. Jones said. "They
do relaxation techniques because the disease is a_gravatcd
by stress. They arc also tauaht to do these thinss at home.
.. Most oftbe people have had an incrnscd ranse of
motion that bdps with mobility," she added. ··1 have seen oeoole ia wbeek:hain who couldn't move tbe1r ankles or
haads improve tremendously... -Accordina to Jones, the prosram serves a dual
'*-'POR· .. Most people with arthritis an= takini medication
and lack of activity kind of leads to depression," she said.
"The socializin& and carinf means an awful lot ...
Though Ackerman said she has pain from arthritis
.. once in a while,•• it is her sister who is ~t1y affected b)
the disease. The sisters have been attending the class for
five months.
(Pl .... eeemaCl8B8/B2)
Kelly, an OCC marine biology
professor, said more than •so
dead bottlcnosc dolphins washed
ashore along the East Coast from
New Jersey to North Carolina
from unknown causes between
JuneandAuaust 1987.
Her dedication given special recognition ·
Volunteers must attend an
orientation meeting on July 22
from 6 to 8 p.m. in Science
Lecture Room 10 l ofOCCs
lewis Center for Applied Science.
.. More than 100 people partici-
pated last March in the second
such sightingeffort," Kelly said.
"Approximately l20dolphins
wete,ighted.
·--rhe •Mass Sighting Day' on
July 23 is much more ambitious
than last March's sighting day.
Weexpecthundredsofpeoplcto
pertiapatc in this project, .. he
added.
Participants will receive a
certificate, a photograph of all
dolphin sightings for that day and
a rep<>rt o(the results from the
day s research. For more infor-
mation, call Dennis Kelly,
432-5546. • • • CostaMcsa'sMarcu
Rose Hammerstedt's dedication to her "little
ones•· at Ocean View Hi&h School goes beyond the job
description of an EnaJish as a Second lan&uase
instructor.
That is why Prlncipal John Myers said she was
selected recently by the Huntington Beach Union
Hi&h School District as classified "cmp~&oyec of the
year." She was chosen from a field of700 workers.
..She is a 24.hour advocate for the ESL Latino
kids, .. Myers said ... She has a club for the kids. "Entre
Amigos' (Amon1Fricnds) that involves activn1es and
cultural events. She also knows the system. The kids
always have someone to talk 10. She really is a child
advocate." ' Hammerstedt's success with the school's Latino
population comes from first-hand experiences.
Althou&h she was born in San Francisco. she was
raised in Central America and when she turned l S her
family moved back to the United StatC'S.
.. l went throuah culture shock. .. she said. "l went
from a smaU Catftohc school with nuns 10 a huce
American hlah school with kids holdin& hands and
kissing."
Hammerstcdt, a araduatc of Cal State Fullerton.
has been with Ocean View Hi&h School for nine years.
"When I started I had only eight students," she
recalled. •'Today we have more than SOO Asian and
Latino kids. l came to the school as a bihnfual ajde.
but the longer I was here the more involved became.
I saw a need."
parents come to school. I formed a club for tt\e ktds ...
tbejob1sendlcss. but 1 lo'e it. The) arc my li1l~nes.
"Most of the IUdsjust came to this country ... she
said. "The) ~ e'posed to a whole n"-1 cuhUtt and
• must learn evet")thtna in a short timr. I am'° proud
when the) pass the profiClenC) test.·· she added.
Kammerstedt. the mother of three srown
children. has .. adopted .. all her littk ones. She ll)'S
Enuc Am1eos 1s a launching pad for graduation.
.. If they arc in my club I can follo~ them clotdy ...
she said. .. , ha'"e to build in them to bcheve m
themselves. Once they bche,e. the} come around.
Thalls why we all go to graduation every }ear. the kids
sec what 1s ahead for them.
"This }Car 14 (Latinos) graduated; s1x were from
m) club, .. she said Pf'?Udly. . •
Hammcntcdt said e"ef1 gra_duat100 ts a tn-
umph.ant ccJebrauon.
··Oneofm) kidss.ot upar J a.m. C\.Ct") da) to load
trucks. He had bttn doi"f that i.mce ntnth sractej ust
to put food on bis famil> s table. h 1s remarkable -
buc this kid p-aduated.-she said ... , really hatt
summer bec.aus.c the l ids gel full-ume JObs and drop
out of school. .
"The kids ha,·e no concept of education goals J
try to get them to look be\ond. I set goals for them ...
their final goal 1s graduation ... she added.
Like a proud mother. Hammentedt d1spla)'S a
photo album filled ~nh pictures of her studrnts.
-0ne of our acm mes is a sno~ trip ... she said.
-F or man) of the kids u 1s the first time the) have ~n
Wal1Mar1erand HuntiD1ton
Beach resident Cud• WlDlam1
are two semi· finalists vying for an
Oranae County Centennial Am-
bassador role. Six ambassadors
will be selected during the Orange
County FaironJuly9 and will be
~ntatives for events and
p.tas planned during the county's
yearlong•• 100 year birthday cel-
ebration."
The need Hammentcdt fills is beyond runnina
from class to class assistirlJ Latino students wnh
assignments and translatina instructions.
"I call parents at home, 1 translate when the
0.-, .......... ..,,.,......_
Roee B•mmentedt la praad of atudenta ahe hu helped to iradaate.
snO\\. The\ taste u . roll an 11. the\ art" almost Like li ttle
children \\"e also ha"e a Chnstmas pan} and aift
(Pleue eee BONOR/82)
Curtis will attend USC in the
fallandmajorincinemaarts. His
bobbies include music, snow and
watcrskiingand tennis. Marcus
plans to pursue a career in
television with hopes of educating
andentcrtainingtbepublic. His
bobbies include hiking, music,
pbotOlt'lphyand bOdysurfina.
Computers help to train handicapped at OCC
Winners will receive a SSOO
scholarship, a trip sponsored by
American Airlines, prizes and (Pleue .. c.u,.,
Tom Bracken is lcamin& skills he
hopes to use as a computer operator.
Retired school teacher Arthur
Ril(ion wants to develop expertise in
word /rocessing so he can begin a
secon career in the paralcpl pro-
fession.
Julie Mitcham is e'lplorina op-
portunities in office administration
and computers.
All three are disabled Oranse Coast
Collqc studentJ. Each is enrolled in
the cou~·s keyboarding proaram,
which has attracted a sizable number
o( disabled students m ttcent years.
said Dennis Louie. professor of
administrative services.
.. Many laf'F companies like to hire
disabled employees because they tend
to be ncellent workers. are loyal and
aivc 110 percent all the time:·
Bracken, 18. has panial vision in
one eye. After araduating from Foun-
tain Valley High School's visually
handicapped PfOVll'U· the Hunt-
inaton Beach resident enrolled in
OCC s keyboardina pros:ram this
sprin~
.. It s an outstandtna pr<>JT1m." be
said ... J first heard about 1t through
OCCs Disabled Stu<kn_t Center. You
propess at your own rate and can go
as far as you feel you need to.
"rm llkina_ the p.l"OIJ'8m to in-
troduce myself to computcn. I'd like
to p11rsue a caner as a computer
operator. I would also like to teach
computers to v1suall> handicapped
students. .. he added.
Mitcham. 19. has bttn paralyzed
on bCT left Side since btrth. A Costa
Mesa resident, Mitcham 1s a 1987
&raduate of Fountain Valley High
School's bandacapped program.
"rve taken the beginning kc:.·
boardinacourseandam nowenrolltd
in the inputtini class.. .. she said. ··For
the last rune years. I've worked full
time an m' mother's restaurant iD Ne~pon &ach. but rm exploriQC a
future 1n computers and office work.
rm rcall~ Cll)O} ng the proSfam."
Rigdon. ob. taught sc..-enlh lhroUlll
ninth grades in San Pedro for .34
}'Cars ..\ graduate of New Y•
Una\ers1t\. he c;utTercd a stroke at dlt
age of 38 that left him wilhout the utt
of his left hand The Hunu..-.
Beach rnident retired two years .••
(Pleue .ee COICPUTD,_..
Fourth of July.pancake breakfast served in Huntington
Tbe Sister City Allodation and the Hu;.tinaton
Beech KiwlDia Oub wW boll their fint Fourth of July
~ bnUfall Monday II the Smdift'Sbopina Center
on Main Street at Yort10Wft Avenue, Huntinaton Beach.
Tbc breeklast will nan &om 7 to l l a.m. at a dOnation
of Sl. Live eniertiaimnen_t. .llll_llCI and crafts for the
dlildten Will be available. Call Mike Shehoa at 722-8110
for ftartbcr infonnalioa.
AIDS beaelJt mallloaJ bJ LB
.. ~va-m.-.C~nina"iatbe
titleofa · mueicll~ ~Mthe ~ llech w ... •1a..,2161L Ann's Drive. for the
lleieft• or .... AIDS 111 ..._ FounilatiOn or ~
Coul!_t)'. -__.n.1111Hn•1~D nabdd..,Welll
ad Jeiiica Willlllill -•LI Jed oa IM.=:· ··•111'•,••-...:::v.-=lf ... ....,,:': • [,J '~ 1111 .... .... d I ........ ,.,, .........
propam to be presented Tuaday at l p.m. at the Newpon
Center brucb of the Newport Baich Public Library. H~pist Kay Carvoua will discuss the
treaUDeat ol paan, ~t. smokina and phobias. The ..., ........ ~ii hie and Will last approximately an
boUr •• ~-lilrary• IS6 Su Oemente Drive. For aiclidoMI iafbnnauon. caJ1 JKkie He.dly at 644-3t16.
The meetina is 1eheduled for 6:30 p .m. at the Clatm
Jumper Resiaurant on Broothurst Street at Talbert
Avenue in Fountain Valley. It isopcntotbe_publicand the
fee is SIS. Call Joan Trivett at 896-S7U for mo~
infonnation or racrvations.
JINr.11111 •••·-·-•••I 1'1Jlwllllt A111I1111•-W.._.
day at 7:30 a.m . at the Westin South Coast Plaza Hoeel 19
Costa Mesa.
The propam wdl focus on nctv.1>fkina. QJI Howitlil
Gordon at 139-8929 for rncrntions or fUnhtr 1....._
mation.
ll'l ee career 8emlaar la flll
P.Sy(ihotherapast Dr. Unda \',Berens will Ha
1mportanee of right lh.-ehhOOd fOf me.Utt.
speritu.al wtll beiQI in a &er tcmiflareatitliid .. ,, .. ,...
Paydlcd .. Wtdnc9da).
The lltSSIOn is tc"heduatd for 1 p,m •• ..
Room of the Hunti~ton BeaCh CCnh'iJ
Tdlicn Ave. Addatiobll information rnay •
caJlina 141.aM l.
DISCOUNT
DAYS
Handheld Cellular Phone
Keeps You in Touch
1IJ9900 =
Aeg.14H.00 Low Aa sss p., Month•
• Ftta in Your Briefcase
• Weighe Only 28 Ounces
Make calls anywhere. With rechargeabfe battery
peck, antenna, cue, strap. 117-2001 Whef9 •• ...,,..
Reg. 995.00
Low Aa S30 P• ~ •
Pnnts up to 500 words per minule. #26-2800
• Dtgital·Eeetronlc 1\lnlng
• Ftve FM/Rve AM PreMta
Copy personal cassettes
Of record from turntable Of
oft·the·air Two-speed
tumtabl4t with cat1ridge,
matching 11•-higtt speak·
••. 113·1227
Digital-Effects VHS VCR
Saves.too
39995
Reg. 499.95 HQ System fOf'
Low Aa S20 p., Mon~. Sherper Picture
Watch a tape and a TV show at the same time!
Video memory "freeze1" one scene from a pro.
gram Remote programming of 21·day/8-event
111ner with on-screen prompts 116-651
Personal cassette Player
~ 3915
Reg. $epel'9le ltema 14.90
lncludM Our Nov...--34
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Features auto-reverse, Dolby* B
NA. 114· 1033, 33· 1000 Bal*• e111ra
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291!! =
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• 4'" Woof« • 1• lWMter
Onty 71/1•" high. Black,
#40-2030. Sliver, #~-2034
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17995
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Take music to your pienic! Dual cassettes with 4·
track/ht-speed dubbing. Five-band equalizer. 0.-
tachable 2-way speakers. #14 -765 eau ..... ..,,..
Cordless Telephone
9995,:i.~
"--.. '11,., .....
• 80·Numbet Aulo-Ol.w
• 1Wo-W81 lrMrcom ~
,.. C8lll flam your,:dt
lbnelpulle dilling'.
... try '° CllW iii ctm. -~buac ICtiviU.. (• type ol a• l«ile)alotolmodcmud..._._ ~
lllt-mautiotaand breal)his ... 881
leftior ~Deeds 1 lot of .........
•1 Wp lbem I---....... ~about lbemlllVa l Play ·~ Cal, insttumencal ud bta MnCI music
when we do~ atult: they reelly
ttlate '°that."
Oine said the •verlll • in die
clasl is 60 •
.. We do have a 9().o~ and •
few ladtes in their ~ Nollody t.le
an aae diff~nce. They are Ml 6ielM'll
to everyone,·· she said.
"For arthritis sufreren. lbe •yiaa
ls 'if you don't I.lie it you WiU loee it." 11'
they don't do the~ hett or
somewhere elle lhe1r joints tet rWd
and start to become bone io bone, ihe
fluid on top of the bone can't sJide and
you have pain. People won't tel up;
they won't leave their homes. They
need to keep exercisina -and once a
week isn't eno1.l4h. They shou1d do it
every day in their homes," sbe said.
COMPUTER ~RAINING •.• . -Prom Bl
.. I'm balf·way throuah a paralepJ
~ at another institution," he
said. "I enrolled in OCCs key-
boardina propam because I knew I
needed word processina skills in
order to handle all the P!lperwe>rk. ·•
Within the next two yean be plans
to launch his career in DVl)cpl work.
assistinaattomeysanddoinaruean:h
work for the courts.
.. rm only able to ty~ with one
~ but the keyboardana ~m here as helpina me become proficient
with computers. I'm sure it will make
a bi& difference in my future."
OCC launched its procram four
years aao in conjunction with the
openina of the Keyboardina Center.
Previously, the coUeae offered a
t~ina prop:am. only . 'At that time our students worked
on manual or electric typewrite~"
Louie said. "About 9S percent of
them were females. Our compleUof1
rate was only about SS percent"
Today, nearly half the students in
the pfOIJ'&fll are men. The compl.t·
tion rate is between 8S and 90 percent
because students are allowed to learn
at their own pace. As a result. most
tend to learn faster.
Cluses in the propam are officiatty
nine weeks in lenath. althol.\lh stu-
dents att allowed to ~ as
rapidly or slowly as they wish. For
classes off ercd, look under the Ad·
ministrative Services listina.
Music, mime~, magic open
summer Sawdust Festival
... --... .. -.. . .. -
By LESUE EARNESr °' .............
The Laauna Beach Sawdust Fest•·
val will celebrate its 22nd opening
Saturday with music, mimes and
mqjc. The activities will kick off the
season for the city's only non-juried
art festival, which wall run through
Aus. 28.
Festival organizers have aiven the
fairgrounds a facelift, sprucina up the
landscaping. incrusma seatin& areas
and addina a variety of weoekday
specials.
"The pounds havesuch a new look
to them.•• said Tina Arana. pubhc
relations director for the fesllval ... I
think we're 1oin1 to have a great
year."
Since the flurry of festivals often
snarl traffic each summer, Sawdust
Festival planners are offerina incen-
tives to encouraae people to attend
durin1 the week. New weekday ac-
tivities will include Children's Day
on JuJy 2S, a Relic Recopaitioo Day
on Aua. 2 and an amateur photo
contesL
DurinaChiJdreo's Day, the festival
will feat~ twice as much entertain-
ment pred to you'!JSl.Crs S to 13
ycan of age, accordana to Arana.
Activities will include sina-a-lonp.
pmes, story-tellina and a clown who
will hand out free balloons.
On Relic Recosnition Day, people
who have attended pest festivals will
be ajven a free beverqe if they wear
an old festival T-shirt or sweatshirt.
The person with the oldest .. relic" will
also receive a prize. •
The .. Faces of the Festiva!*' conteSt
will ajve amateur phOtOlflphers an
CAR SHOW •••
FroaBl
wardrobe sponsored by Brea Mall
and West.minster Mall.
• • •
The Huntinaton Beach Elks ~No.19S~willpresentan
AnuqueCarSbowfrom 81.m. to
3 p.m. on Sunda:r on the lodae
aroundlt 10480TaJbcrtAvc.,
Fountain Valley.
Theevcntwillfeaturea l9SOs
atyle .. SoCk Hop,•• raftle(SSOO
fint ~)and delicious food. Admillion is $2; Children under 8 ~free. Relisttation for car
eatries. SI before event, S 1 o the ~Ioftbe event. Proceeds from will beoeftt the Elka local pro~
For more information, call
964-1665.
•
opportunity to submit their best
festival photos. Winners will receive
cash awards. Entry deadline is July 29
at noon.
In addition, four Laguna Beach
restaurants will give a 10 percent
discount to those who attend the
festival after 4 p.m. Monday through
Friday. Partacieat1n1 are The Cottage
Restaurant, Saal Lon, Tavern By The
Sea and Royal Thai Cuisine.
More than 200 exhibitors will show
their work at the arts and crafts shOW
and demonstration booths will le
situated near the fest1val entrance.~
The festival wiU be open from .iv
a.m. to 10 p.m. Sundays lhroujh
Thursda)'s and until 11 p.m. Frid~
and Saturdays. On July 4 the arounOs
will close at 1 p.m .. Admission is":
S2 for seniors. Children 12 and under
arc admitted free. :
-LB' s annual Art-A-Fait . a waits summer crowds
The 1988 Art·A·Fair, which will
open Saturday at 7771.quna Canyon
Road between the Sawdust Festival
and the Festival of Arts, has beefed up
its activities this year, anticipatina 1arJer crowds u a resuJt of its new
location.
.. h's a whole new show/ said Sue
Krause, a spokeswoman tor the faar.
.. We've just bad to anticipate a much laraer crowd."
The new pounds were recently
desianed and constructed with booths
protected by two laraecanvascovered
structures. The show is a full-scale
model of a Iona term d~i"1.
"Our costs are really quite hi&h for
the first year because we bad to build
this from the around up," said
Kral.lie.
Besides showina off a new home,
Art·A-Fair has doubled its entertain-
ment budaet for this summer's sa
.. -and is including a special feature ~t
will enable participants io cast thdir
own plaster or wax molds i&Uo
bronze. A portable Bia Stone Foundty
wiU allow fairaoen to panicipete.ln
sculptina, wu workina and add
moldina. The cost to participate will
be S l 0 per pound of bronze used. •
About l 82 artists are expected to
show their art work at the j~
exhibition this year. In addition, the
fair will feat~ improvisatio
theater, music and mimes as well as
cartoon portrait sketchina and mask
maki '
"W°J're hopin1 that it's a b&n&-up
year," said Krause ... We really tfiiok
this 1s a ao and we should have a great
year." .
The fair wiU run throuab Aua. 28, from 10 a.m. till JO p.m. and until l 1
p.m. on Frida¥S and Saturdays. For
more informauon, call 49+4Sl4. · -•1'. IMJJe &nt.t
j ..
f
l
n
l
3
t
s
r
I
1.£111
EAllEST
FamUy
fun set
for 4th
at YMCA
The South Coast YMCA is
invitinJ south county residents to
attend ats Fourth ofJ uly cel-
ebration dctianed to remind
everyone that there's more to
Independence Day than just hot dop and sparklen.
Theday·lonaevent; bcainning
at6a.m. with IOKandSJ(f\lDS
and endina with a 9 p.m. fire-
works display over the laplna
Niauel Rqional Park Lake, will
include a .. Freedom Chain" to be
created by J>a!.ticipants. Materials
for the chain links will beaiven to
individuals who will be asked to
write their personal definition of
freedom on their link.The com-
pleted chain will be tent to a
YMCA in a country that is in the
middle of a struale for freedom.
The Freedom -chain booth and
other Independence Day ac~
tivities will be centered at Crown
Valley Park in Laauna Nijuel.
The events are sponsored by the
YMCA, Laauna N!i' uel Chamber of Commerce, and na Niguel
Community Services ·strict,
TheSKand 10Krunsanda2K
Family Fun Walk will begin in the
park at 7 a.m. Orpnizenare
encouraginaadvanc:e registration
for the races. Applications are
available at the Y and at the
Chamber of Commerce office.
Also planned for the day is a
pancake breakfast, family games,
a borsesboe tournament for
senion, swimmina, dancing and a
chili cookoff. The breakfast. ser-
ved by volunteers from Monarch
Bukm Laauna Niguel, is$2 for
adultsandSJ forchildren . There
will be no charae to use the pool.
• • • A standina ovation is in order
for the Peter Pan Players of Laauna Hills. The young actors
m:ently put on the production of
"Pinocchio" at Orange County's
Ja)esia Community Park in 4'una Hills. All performances,
which were directed by volunteer
SUI SIMmaa, were sold out.
The followinaacton had im-
g'!=les !:.':~Jay: Au Na Dawkin,
llleMnl Beeael,ArtWelter,
C...M7Weier, Daillelle 11eDenMU. AU.-Valead,
11.-aa~AaaeJeGqe,
.....,. Dawtm.,lAslieC.ttea,
W ... G .......... ErtkU.,
llatllew Valeatl;ReMe Plellllk,
A_les ...... ~0.YN , ... , ..... M*eaStrJ.
• Abo in the cut were,,._..
Gnea,NlekGn111, T=1~•·· IUaLeller,Jtilalfer
llleMle O..W..., KellJ M~Ama•.......-.,_ ............... IMtLMUetta. u..ta-.ua,RlaiU ......... Jami• KJIM, ...
JS-..a.U.. ft.talkW, Leslie
MeDirmeU,DIDawa ........
Otherc:utmemben were Reha
Dullll-.Jeia()qe.SDllJ
(1111111-rAm.T,.)
Bl,,.,.l B,. \' I l ~ ' 'l I . ' •.
Businessman beefs up pet collectia
Move to Fatlbrook
y,teldS new pasture
for b6vtne buddies
87 I m,m E.UlNEST ...............
Many people consider a dot to be
man's best friend. but Randy ZeaJ
liked the idea of havina a bovine for a 1*ddy.
In fad. havina room for the lonahom canJe be and his wife. JocfeU. CoUect u pets was important enoUlb to came the Z.eals to move a
couple Yein .., from their home in l.Muaa Hills to a house with a pasture
in f allbrook.
.. We c:aJJ ourselves the Littk
Bi&hom Ranch because we•ve aot a
little land and the lonahoms." ZcaJ
said. In fact. the Zeals will soon be
movina apin to another home in
Fallbrook, one that bas still more room for their arowina "family:• In
addition to their 7-ycar-old dauahter
Sarah. the Zeals now have I 0 font-
boms.
.. 1t•s like an)'thina else," Zea1 said.
llaadyz.Jf .... lmTaul~.wlllellwWbe~yedattlleOnUl&e CollatJhk.
"You~ one, you have to have two ...
For ~y. who commutes to bis • .asuna Hills radiator st<n each day,
it•, worth all the uouble just to look
out the window and tee a part of the
Old West m his beck yard. lt's son of
like ownin& a part Of American
bislory.
.. It's like freedom 10 me when I sec .
.. California Sammer" by Robert Wllllama won Art-A-Fair potJter conteet.
Art-A-Fair
awaiting
big crowds
Tbe 1988 An-A-Fair, which will
open Saturday at 7771...a&una Canyon
Road between the Sawdust Fesuval
and the Festival of Arts, bas beefed up
its activities this year. anticipauna w,er CTOwds as a rcsuh of its new
location.
.. It's a whole new show..:" said Sue
Krause, a spokeswoman tor the fair .
.. we·ve just bad to anticipate a much la.rter crowd... .
The ocw pounds were recently
desiped and constructed with booths
protected by two L"IC canvas covered
structun:s. The show is a fulJ-sc:aJe
modd of a Iona term~ .. Ou.r costs are really qurte hi&h for
the fint year because we bad to "'build
this from the around up," said
Krause. . •
8csidcs lbowina off a new home.
Art-A-Fair bas doubled its entertain-
ment buds\ for this summers season
and is indudina a spcciaJ feature that
will enable participants to cast their
own pluter or wax molds into
bronze. A ponablc Bia Stone Foundry
will allow fair&ocn to participate io
sculpt.ins. wax 'WOf'kina and sand moklina. The cost to pan..icipate will
be SJ 0 per pound of bronze uted..
About 182 artists are expected to
(Pleue ._ AllT (82)
Music, mimes, magic open art festival
., l,F.Sl.JB EARNm
Of .............
The Lquna Beach Sawdust Festival will
celebrate its 22nd openina Saturdar. with music,
mimes and maaic. The activities will kick off the
season for the city's only non-juried art festival.
which will run throuah Aua. 28 .
Festival orpnizers have aiven the fair-
Jl'OUDds a facelift~ sprucina up the landscapina.
1ncreasina seatina areas and lddina 1 variety of
Mek~y specials. .
.. The ~nds have such a new look to
them," S&Jd Tina Arana. public relations
dmctor for the fcitival. "I think we're toin& to
have a peat year."
Since the flurry of festivals often snarl traffic
each summer, Sawdust Festival planners are
offerinaincentivestoencourqepeopletoattcnd
durina the week. New weekday activities wiJI
include Chi.lclnn's Day on July 2.S, a Relic
Recopition Day on Aus. 2 and an amateur
photo contest. Dwina Olilclren·s Day, the festival will
feature twice as much entertainment aeared to
youqstcrs .S to J 3 years of aac. accordina to
Arana. Activities will include sina-a-lonas.
pmcs. story-iellina and a clown who will hand
out free balloons.
On Relic Rccoanition Day. people who
have a.uended put festivals Will be aiven a free
bevCflF if they wear an old festival T-shin or
sweatshirt. The _penon with the oldest .. relic-
will also receive a _pitt.
Tbe .. Facesoftbc Festival" contest wdl give
amateur photop'lphen an opponunity to
submit their best festival photos. Winners will
receive cash awards. The entry deadline is July
29 at noon.
Tbe festival will be ()pen from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. Sundays throuab Thursda~ a.nd until 11
p.m. Fridays and Satwdaya. On July 4 the
pounds will close at 7 p.m .. Admission ls Sl; $2
for seniors. Olildrcn 12 and under are admitted
frte.
a lonpom out there.., Ill
"They re just aood .a
animats.••
.. 1t•s a bobby," said Jodll.
"My husband kandy ii 1 till
bunter and likes vniqur ...
animals. so the I~ eyes.··
It was on his bear ........
peditions that Randy llid Iii
bcpn to notice the~
io fteJds. lncreui~y. lie ·~-=~ have bis own. But once :dley
collectinJ the cattle, tbc l.-111
th.at their home in the Nelie
community would not acco-z ' :
thear new pets. Even in tMir ~
bor'hood in Fallb£ook. Jodcl.Wllt
husband acts "funny loOb" .......
puts a baiter on a longhorn and .....
1 t for a walk.
This is not the fint bobby tbc Z...
have plunacd into lOllttber . .PW
example. there were the CotWllllL
Randy used to show Corvetlel _..
Jodell was president of the New...,.
Corvette Club.
"lfifs somethinadifferent, I~
J>robably be intcrated in it,"~
said. Both Jodell and Randy w•r
homed bovines different en°"lll •~
be interesting.
•• Lonaborns are historic." JoW
said ... Anybody can have ID CW?' 'J
cow. But lonahorns arc smmw ..._
other cows, and they make nice .-,:
They're curious and very en--.
~Y said the animals are cam.;.
mu.nal and will protect their 109-'ll
but are not oarticulatlv _,clliwe
~ ... cowa,..,
Student
awarded
$15,000
When Lquna Beach Hieb ~
valedictorian Melissa Rush IS'lldu-
atcd this >ur. she bid Sl.5,000 in
scbolarsbip money to take with ber-
t.bc laraest amount CVCf' awarded to a ~· student. Tbrouabout the school, more dliaa
$200,000 was siven out, md JO
students ~vcd S 1,000 or more.
.. I think that probably we ba~ o.e
of the most extensive ~
around," said Dec Brislen. llli••
principal at the biJb tebool '"Some
srudents arc acruna cloae to M rides. ..
Aocotdina to c:arot ~
auidance secretary at t.bc ICMlil.
excite.ment bqins to build in J~
when students start appl~ tar -
scholanhips and peaks .._ • winners arc announced in J1111e. =:
.. It's like an academy Of a • ~
ff.,edom said. "Tbae's a 1M 1111111;
mystery and mystique in it... .:!
(PleuewSIUllDlll!li .. -;:.: ,.
-· -.. ,...:
f\'iusical program will ben~fit AIDS reseafch in Lagun.~
SIOon tbeda1oftbeeveat. AdmiuionisS2, withchddren
under I admiaed he aDd all proceeds toina to local Elks ~ C.aD It.on ~ or Orea Neneman at the Jodilt. 964-1665. b addi1ioMI infbnDation.
Early rqistratioa is recommeodcd silK:IC earollmcnt
is limited. Participants may resister by phc>at by calli._
432-SUO.
V••l ala co.a•altadoa. .et
•
CollelC iD Coil& MC:ila.
Carmine Tuoao will instruct tbe ~ at1CftekieS $bould briQI a pocket dictionary. The .. •
and racrvatioas may be obC&ined by c:alli111
432-SllO.
.... Mao ., ..... die ....
•1me•y wil9 a. a-nca. SMjley lall IWi1 .. llid i1ai1 wa IUfPrillC4 **' lk amouaa * wo..
. .. ... ~ :Mppy --le 'WC cu '*ill* kip we cu eet to P9Y my tuhion:• R• llid. .. We~ all very
eadled. very euilcd ...
lusll. whole ICbOlanhip awardl
wen belOd lartely on M:idemic
elCClleece, Cftd.ited htr P1tttnt1 with
inatillina in her a joy of teamina.
.. As Iona as I can remember.
leami~ in our house has always been
1e>metlu"1 to enjoy and reedant hu
Men a pan oftbat," Rush said. "My
parents have always believed learning
should be eqioyable, so 1·ve alwa)S
e~ aoi~ to schoOl.'.
Ruab. who will work two jobs this
aurnmeT befnre leavina for Stanford
in the fall. is lookina forward to a
career in international law or inter-
national finance. Althouah her
1'9ttnts encouraae<t her to learn and
lo participate ina variety of activities.
Rush said she and her l S-year-old
sisler, Anaic. were not pushed to do
anything unless they wanted 'D·
...
"They never had to force us to do
anythina.•· Rush said. ..What they
want for me is for me to be happy
doina what I want to do."
............... 1111111._
Artlaitda Yktllu' apper tono. limber ap wltb ~ate
tollil, led by .Jeanlfer Cline Crlabt). • -IJy Lnlle &nlnt
DISCOUNT
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Take muaic to your picnic! Dual cassettes with 4-
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tachabte 2-way speakers.114-765 .._...9'1,,.
Gentle exerclses for vlcttmS .. -of arthritis spell r-e-1-1-e-f -~
mocioa llaat ._.Wida mobilico!.ld" sbe ldded. .. I taiave,.; ..,.... ill wlleek:IWn wllo n"t move tbeir anklet or
liaadi im~ tremindoullY ...
., JOYt'S 80DLOYICll .... ..., .... _
Sis1en Thdma Ackerman, 69, and Ma9orie Welchel. 66, ofHuntiatton Beeehhavelharede~.U their-
lives.
~ IO . JGMI, tfte "'°"'m lervtl I dUif
~~ people with arthritis ~ tWftf med~~ and lack of ICtivity killd ofleldt to depmaioa," she .ut.
.. The sodalWnl. ud cariD1 ~ u aWf\aJ lot .. Now they~ lbarina the s*DAll aft'ects of anhritit.
Accordina to the Artbriti1 foundation, the diltlk
affects more than 38 millioa people in th.is country; it ii
tbe most prevalent chronic bealda problem and the No. I
cripplina condition in the United S1ata. In Oranae
CoUnty there are more than 288,000people1uft"erina from
the disease.
Tlaou9b AC1'enua .. ibe bis • tom al1bri I ••once in a While, .. it 11 ber tiaer wbo :;::.uy deC1ed ~
the diteMC. The sillerl hive been anendina the c• fQJ;
five months. ,_
..Marjorie it real tMd. bUt the improvement hat born
terrific" Ackerman said. "She bU what we Call a biMY.
knee. Every time she would berid. her knee would locl~ Sbe was helpless until it unlocted. '
~ Jones, executive director of the Soutbem CaJifonua Chapter, Oranae County branch of tbe
Arthritis Foundation, says thete are more than I 00
diffemit forms of the disease. Arthritis meaminftamma-
tion of a joint The dilCUC can cause pain, swellina and
redness in joints and connective ti11ue tbrouattout the body.
In an. effort to ftsbt the disease, the Arthritis
Foundation created .. Joint Efron." a '1!>UP ex~ise
proaram desiped to introduce people WJth arthritis to
ptle, non-dcmand.ina ranae-<>f-motion eurcia.
•"'fhe exerci1e1 teem so simple but they are 14
eft'cctive. Now she i1 waJkina so mucb better and lbe ·tr
much 1troqier. She can even lift tbe windows in ~house
-somethiqsbecouldn'tdobd'ore. ltreallyispeat, .. sbe' added .i.
In J:1.unti~ Beach. the •>minute class is held
each WeClnesday afternoon at the Rodien Seoior Center
for 20 to 25 people. Exercises ranJC frOm throwina a
briahtly COiored S_P!)ftlC bell to anUDJ how to tet in and out of a chair without puttina additional stress on the joints. The workout i1 dOne to music.
It is open to men and women, .,es 18 to 90 •.. but
most puticipanu are in the olderran,e, Jones said. 0 Tbey
do relaution techniques because the discax is~vated
by 1tress. They are also tauaht to do thae tbinp at home.
1si.uuctor Jennifer <.1ine 11 an adapted oh~
cducation·speciaJist for the Lona Beach Unified Scboot
District. Oine is workina on a master's depu in
adaP.ted/,en>ntoJoiy wida an emohasis on arthritiL Sbt
bep.n work.ina wida the Arthritis foundation more than a
year~t I have noticed is that teniors' need biJb.
motivation to exercite at all." Cline said. ''The statisucs
~ 60 percent of people 60 years old and older have some
fonn of arthritis.
"Most of the people have had an inc:re.aed ranee of
.. I try to create fun clasles-parachute activities, (1
type of exercise) a lot of motion and strenathenina -
relaxation and breathi na ... any senior IJ"OUP Deeds a lot of
breatbiJll. ...
cows ...
homBl
animals. Still. people tend to fear
them because of their bom1, whicb
srow 44 to 60 inches Iona.
.. People think they are dal\Ff'Ous
with those homs. Tbey are not."
Randy said. .. They're like any
animal, you just don't comer them or
push them.
The 7.eals have had some new
chaUenaes to deal with since movina
to Fallbrook -like keepina their cattle safe from the coyotes in the
area. And they say there was a lot of
excitement the first time they put a
rooster in the pasture with the
lon&boms. But now the chickens and
cows have learned to share the same
pain dish, and it sounds as if life in
Fallbrook has become fairly routine
for the Zeals.
Their excitement now revolves
around pre~ to show their
lonah<>rm at the Oranae County Fair
in Costa Mesa. AU longhorns will be
on display July 7-10, with a com-
petitive show scheduled for July 9 at 4
p.m. The 7.eal's lo~oms will con-
tinue to be on exhibition until the end
of the fair on July 17.
"We won't brina our babies to the
fair, it would be too much for them ...
said Jodell, who is on the board of
directors of the California Associa-
tion of Texas LooJhoms. .. We'll
A man'• beat friend 18 lat. borine, aa llaadyZeal wW ·~
brin& four adults, one bull and our
halter-broke lonahom. It'll be pretty
excitina to see 60 or 70 longhoms
tosetber."
Whatever the future holds, Randy,
who arew up in Costa Mesa and lived
in Mi~on Viejo before moving to
--Lasuna Hills, said be will never loi
bis connection to Ora.nae County. -
.. Once you arow up in Oran.i
County, it's bard to set away," ¥
said ... This is where the money's •
thi$ is where the can are at. this D
where it's happenins." : --F
FAMILY FUN FOR THE FOURTH ••• -From Bl
Le.lier, IM1 BarrilOll, Carmea
G•ermaa.Ed Dantaa, Peay
Blad1, Ceale Meore, J•
Brom!Mrs. a.17 PowalaUt. DaYe Meenm. Cella eon..o.
ReltlaPletalk,Cadly Moina,
Ter11 WHrfal, Tem Denltera,
SudJDavll ... Carmn Ga-
Mrmu.
Auditions for the next pro-
duction, .. The Wiz.ard of Oz," will
be held an September. For more
ART •••
l'romBl
show their art work at the juried
exhibition this year. In addjtion, the
fair will feature improvisational
theater, music and mimes as well u
canoon portrait sketcbina and mask
mald!'J'. .. We re hopina that it's a bana-up
year," said Krause. "We really lb.ink
this is a So and we should have a pat
year."
Tbc fair will run throuah Aua. 28,
from lOa.m. till IOp.m. and until II
p.m. on Frida~ and SaturdaY\, For
mcm information, call 4~Sl4. _.,,...,,...,.,.,
inf onnation. call 830-8318. • • • The Laauna Beach American
Legion Post 222, which is active
in civic affain and youth pro-arams, bas installed Gnat
MeC.mbt as the 6 l st post com-
mander. Tbe33-yearMarine
aviation veteran said he will have
two main aoals while he holds the
position: providina more help to
elderly vets and their families and
increasina the enrollment ofViet-nam vets.
---·rbe other officers installed _
were Pall Cudllo,Let Cb&Jau!i
Jim Law, Al BalP, Earl Ca·
• ..,..mAIMIJobSolomoa. -: -
WebmteJM&eleMu =
lafermatloa•eemmal&Jlaap-.=
pealap. Wewut teMar fnm .:
109abeetmpee..._e••&a,1Dea1
peopleUd--in••• MW• Ii
1e11eral.Se.r te Dally Pllet, P .O:
Bo1 UH, Col1a Mesa 11111.
Mark to dleatteaUoD of Leslie
Eanest.
We 're looking for good sports
The Da!1Y Pilot is interested in sf\arina the sportina exploits of you
and )'Our neiJhbor'$.
We're not looking for news on Maak Johnson's latest triple-double or how many RBis Wally Joyner had last month. But if you
know a Little Lequer who had a biJ day. a weekend golfer who won the ..:.
dub tournament or a next-door ne1ahbor who rolled a 300 pm~. let us~
know. •
Send us a phot~ph and brief account of the sportina -: acc~mpl~shment. Y'e Mii publish t~em in our Good Sports column • .::.
which will appear rn Thursday's Ne1&hborhood Focus section. .._.:
Addresa your correspondence to Nei&hborhood Focus in care ol-
lhc Daily Pilot. P.O. Box t S60. Costa Mna. 92626. :-...---
;
I
r
r
•
COsta Mesa police say DOWney, Sivtngs
VP took 825,000 to pay for •addiction'
IJ JONATllAN VO'm °' ........ _
25 CENTS
t tied to. gambli
laid. ~ account n&&mben he used
for the cbeckl were numbers from
ICCOUDll tbat were cloied. but he even
wot lbe files borM '°they couldn't
uace them thal way."
TM '-Dk ovmooted the 1eheme in ooe audit but found the discn:pency
in a leCODd review. Bank officials
then c:oa&onled Beauchamp, who
allesdly oon~feaedd. • . and d " . ~We just tam& 1gang." Hallowa .•
Bea=p·s brother is not
~in the allqcd 1eam because
be bad tunled his mat-•• to Beauchamp.~ deu:ctivc abo dclCriW a.
u a .. Jl!DbliDI addict."
.. Has brother WU IOlils •
be pve Beauchamp CClliNI
account 10 BeaUcbalnp Clllllll and withdraw moaey Ill ..... ,
loway said. .. He new:rbeWWllll
toinaon."
Halloway said 8ead2?91 lives with bis wife and dlM.
~ .... ....,
Epileptic jailed
as drunk loses
suit against HB
Jury finds police not
negligent: 2 seizures
suffered while in jail
• Hun~ Belch police. offioen ~ ~l DCllSnt Wben they jailed an
epileptic Wfio iutkred two 1e1mres m the aty•s·jaiL a Superior Court jury
decided WedDesday after less than six
hours of detiberaiion.
Bruce Usher, 32. was driving to
breakfast in the v= of Pacific Coast ffishway and Boulevard
in 1982 when be suffered an epileptic
seizure, lost comciousness. and
crubed his car into a block wall.
When police arrived, they allepDy
no1t.d tbal Usher's spcecb was slwred
and his behavior confuted. so be WIS
am:stcd for drivina under tbc in-
fluence of alcohol or drup, accordina
to court records.
Butat=t-Usbacoateods it WU irn~~y after the accident.
Wbilc'police ~WIS later-officcn ~ tokt u WU; epikptic and
even liven his doctor's name.
Usher WIS placed in a cell in the
city's jail. and wbiJe mWDJ a telephone call to arranaie for bail. be suft'ered a seizure and was taken by
ambula.nce to a hospital
He was released from the hospital
bows later and taken blck to the jail,
where a supervisor ordered him
released from custody. Tbe pn>ee11
took sevcraJ hours, howeva', _.
Usher suffered yet another ICizwe.
court records ay.
E. Day Cannan, Usher's •tulnle!.
contended d · the trial tlllll ol-
fic:en violaled 'j.'! J>Olicy and fedcrm
replations requirml medic:al tral-
mcnt of i!il inmala. u sber ' suit soujbt s l S0,000 ill
damaps, but juron wbo sat throuab tbe Week-lone trial decided __ c;fty
acted property.
Loi ADFles &W>cuey Thomas J.
Feeley, who 1eprc1CD.tcd the city, w
not available for comment. but Carman said juron a~ were
swayed by drul test$-tbal showed
U&ber: apparently bad not~
taken his medication.
'1'bete WIS I pbanmcist OD the
jury that I think inll~ tbejury by
SI~ if there WIS no dtua in Usher's
system. be WIS not iam. bis medi-
cation, and if be bid tam die
medication. there wouldn't haw beta
ID wridn>&... Canaan liid. .. Bal I
doa't thillk. tba1 WU the i--. ..
. Tbe attorDey said be ~.,..:r' lO SUperior Court Jadllc . 0 .
Frazee Sr. lO tel aside die~ filMliilil ad make an award 10'4 -Umr .
addition 10 askiJ1i1 fOr a new trial He
said be wouJd make both mo6oDs
within the next month. .. I think the jury made a very
terious ,mistake Tbc evic:1em:c ua-
dispuledly showed that HUDri,,,..,.
Beach violated its own repalation and
that the law is they sbouJd ba\le DO(
~-SPIL&PTIC/d)
. .
Advice and Games
Birt ht
Bulletin Board
BultnMt
Clutffled
Comlct
Entertainment
Opinion
Police log
Pubtic Notlcel
Sports
W•ther
85
A7
81 Recount muddies fight for empty Irvine seat
A9-10
C5-7
86
83-4
A8
A3
C.,-8
C1-6
A2
BJ GllBG Kl.QKX ......... -
Widt die ... tus of a new election
Jaw still in limbo, council memben
and Would-be council memben io
lniDe Dlayin& inCreuinll c:omu.: ,une or .,:tical m:l
chain over a vac:ut teat.
Tbinll became even more com-
plica&ed this week wbeD supponers of
Ocean View efilef:
Student transfers
ban 'foolishness'
councilman..eJect Cameron Cospove
applied to tbc Orante County Resis-
trar ofVoten for a recount. r,,_,.ve finished 106 votes bl> hi~bent Sally Anne Miller,
who finished behind Paula Werner.
TwOcouncil "*'wereupfor~
OD die June 7 ballot but the election of
Larry Alia &o die politic>o of mayor
l1lo vllC:Med lbsCOUDCil at, which is
DOt up b re ek c:tion until 1990.
.
Under cunent city election laws,
Cocove wins that seat by default as
the third biahest votc-tetter. However, a new meuwe approved
by Irvine voterl on June 7, known as
Measure D, Jives voters the option of
petitionin& tor a special election to fill
tbctbird~L Such a petition drive is currently beina led by Miller, who would be the
lone conservative on the council if
Coscrove sets tbe scat. Petitioners
have until July IS to collect the
approximately 3,SOO si~atures
necessary for a special clcctioll, said
City Clerk Nancy Lacey.
However the petitioD drive cooJd
be moot it Cospove is sworn in
before Measure D is validated by the
council and teeretary of swe. The
council WU set to validale the
measure Tuesday, but the vote was
BB leads Coastm a .crime
Wltb. no solution: murder
Sheriff's DepartmenL ••1t•s one of
those crimes committed in the
beat of passion often times. ...
Tbe lepl definitions of
homicide place killinp in three ~ 6rit ~ ICICODd--ese.ree and iDaoslauabtcr. . 9lbile aich bas variom sub-
FOUPI; =: mmda' is p-aany a~ ddibeiate killiQ&.
It CID cmy the death penalty.
Secoed•dt11ee murder ,eacrally
indlldei die aimes of pasioa or
CMC:I al ~ while mwla~ ~tails ID
intan &o came iJUury but not c1eaa Autboc:ities Slid that wbile
muy crimes can be prnancd -
postponed until July l 2.
1f Measure D is validated by 1llc
council, the Gty Cert mUll NClliw
state validation by Julj' 20, *.., Colcrove and other couaciJ ,. r '1n are slated to be sworn in.
Lacey said it takes a min~ fl
two to three weeks to c:Crtift... . 2 I
results. wb.idt would w t' a
(Pl•• w ltlDCOUft/All
Shortfall
no bar to
QC board
pay hike
..
I.
ol
I
n
nt that sbouldn 't
es researcher.s . .
NIWYOalt (AP.)-l11111dlerl --~ • ht .............. wortd I • !~ u Fonw Mic1.
1!1r ._-._. IM191neady coa-~FWtlMI'. ~ • 1be extremely ........ •'17 IOI ~a curiout ' ttlOludoallN.__or,,._. •dlMMIJ;-... M llM>U)d. byuy wbidl woUld daaOy aa~· coeulit1lh...,,lteimPQllible. bodieeia...,..-U..rwtion 't
'"lt'I .. , .. ., .. Md it brMkl a.U occw, Fonner laid.
tbe nlli.'".Ww0flbe1t111rdiren, Yet dael'IUID"t ~IO be uy
Patricia Poltw', an iaam~ anti~,....t.10U..queation is: u111Jld;~1Uhe Univenityc;f Wbaa ia '*"'°'....,, ToroMO. NoW ~ bave tried the 1'i f I 111 dwn bave ~ that uperimeat wilh cbemica1 ..... tbal
an1iba&li• tbat twt with omain rcect with tbe blood cellL Tbey. IOO, blood cell will continue to react euct tbdr eftiect •t e•tteme dilutions.
wbeD diluted 8ar' beyond lhe p.>int fu ~an~ that should be
wbele tbey tbould 1beoretic:ally be polliWe,'/ .
able '°· A c:autio&q report or the findinp
Tbie ..c1ioA oa:un eveo at ex· will ~ Thunday in Nature
tnme CIDutioGll WbCft tbero are JU111111Mt I lritilb ICientific joumal.
~ ao antibody molocuJes ·· ne :ldeDtiJt ~pally respon·
left iD tbe lokatioa. aid far1ner. liblc .X tbe iaaptica~ results is Dr.
"We've Ill -·mod 1Mt where Jll!Clqml Balveniaae ofINSERM, the
tblft ere ao molecWel Pf'tlCDt. Frric:h medical raearc:b institute.
oothi• will baDDcn." Fonner aid in n.e fiadinp are an outarowth of
an inlel'View Wednetcily. But tome-hiseft"ortstodevelopanewbloodtest lhinl does. to identify alJeraies.
'"'t'laia bu rallJ, 1bateo up our Fortner, Bruce Pomeranz and ~" ahe laid. Even ~ who others at the Univenity of Toronto
baw teeD tlaia pbeDomeooD &ad it bave independently duplicated
uni to believe. becauee it'• bard to Benveniste'• findinp, u have two
CODCeive what could be happenioa reaearcb p"Oups i.b Inel and one in
here." • Milan. Fonner llid. Benven.iste was
SUblequent "*8rdl bu added not in his laboratory Wednesday
further mystery. The phenomenon afternoon and could not be reached
occursoalywbeQ the extremely dilute for comment
IOlutiom are milled violently in the Nature's ecliton were u perplexed
laboratory. aid Fortaer. Without this by the ~ u were the re-
violent -sbakins. called auc:cmon, ICll'Cbers themselves. Its referees -
ldaitiftc apena c:bolen to afftnn Ulc
aoundn• OI 1~ before it ii c:-••-cticba'l bdinetbe ...... c:o.ldD~ ... ~ ...... witb the CODduc:t of dae aperam.11.
1M=111rinelakl .. b:iln ot.W. anicle IMY *n tlw iDCrildulity fJI tbe 1D1DY ......_ go .. ve co-men-4 on llwnl venioDI of it 4'riDI 1bt pe-. llvtml montlat." Nal\ft laid ID a billalY
unusual comment titled .. &titOrial
reservation."
Of the ftndi.. Nature llid. wntereil no ph~ bail for Machan
activity."
Nature said that it bas~ for independent inveatipton tool>terVe
repetitions of the experiment&.
Benvenilte'a fiodiqp fuel 1 '°Gt-
1\andina dispute over the effective-
ness of a controve:nial IChool of
disease treatment called home-
opathy.
.. Homeopathy buically •YI that
the same subttaoce that can caute a
problem -if you can identify that
element and dilute it into very small doeea. infinitelimal d1>1e1. it can an or amellorate thole 1ymp&om1. .. llid
Robeit MalMlk. I pbMwitt It ~ I bomeppadlic ~tical com•y in Nor-wOocl. Pa.
Beavamte'• findinp. if comet.
lend support to the cWml of home-
opathy.
STUDENT TRANSFERS BAN ASSAILED •••
J'l'GillAl
aries, many went to Ocean View's
Hope View School. less than a mile
from their homes. The nearest school
in the Hun~oa Beach district.
Smith School, is nearly four miles away.
l'wo families appealed denials of
transfers before t&C Oranae County
Department of Education trustees pte last week. A second day of appeals
is scbeduled next Wednesday.
HUD.tinaton Beach Superintendent Diana h1ers said previously the idea
is to have children in her district
attend district schools for Jona-range plannina advantqcS. To do other-
wise would have a chaotic effect on
plannioa. she said.
Pt1en said changes have been
made to accommodalc the children.
iDdudina offerina day care at aU ei&ht
district schools and the purchase of a
new school bus to provide .. express
ter'Vice" to Smith School
Nancy Cuccl, a parent who won an
appeal to continwna sendina her son tO Hope View because she has a job in
the Ocean View District. said Tues-
day that she sympathizes with parents
wbo were denied permits and will
speak for them at appeal bearinp.
Huntinlton Beach School d1strict
officials .. haven't been up front" with
pa.rents, CUcci said.
She said that when she •ma other
pamiu asked for a boundary chance
to the Ocean View School District.
trustees told her in 1982 that no one
had ever been denied a transfer and
that tbe policy would not chance.
Cucci said she had notltln1 -.ainst
Smith School and that the "basic
problem" is distance, not quality.
Coolan. whose district wiU lose
about 56 pu.¢.ls became of the policy
cbaqe. wd Ocean View won't
reciprocate by lhuttina off' transfers to
EPILEPTIC ••.
ham Al
put penon with a history of 1eizurcs
mto jail," Cannan said. .. But they
did. and left him there: ..
Usher tatified durina the trial, but
was at his Detroit home when the
jury's decision was announced and
was unavailable for commenL
BANKER •••
r..-Al
Daleeootan
the Huntinaton Beac'b District.
"If we don't respond to the Deeds of
parent input ~nd p&fCftt ~ice on
matters affecuna their cbildreo. we are invitina them to withdraw their
students frOm the public l)'1lelD. and
tum to private schools.• he said in
remarks before county school
trustees. .. Why do we continue to shoot
ourselves in the feet by lettina 1930 t.hink.i.na '°vem l 9l8 decisions? The inlt:rnlptJon or • student~s educa-
tional process after many yea.rs of
permits is, in my mind. unthinkable,"
Coopnsaid.
He said th.e previous transfer policy
worked well for l S yean. .. My bottom line _guestion to you <Oranae County e>epanment of
Education t.rustea~= the Huot· inaton Beach City I District is
simply •Why are we doin& tltls to
these parenta and students?'"••
Ocean View bas about 8,200 pupils
and Hunti~ Beach bas about
S,llOpu~
RECOUNT REQUESTED •••
From Al D would not be validated until July
26 at the earliest She said the process
took three months after the election
last November.
Frank Lundina. a traffic com-
missioner and Cosgrove supporter,
requested the recount Tuesday.
Lundin& said the reasonina behind the recount request was simple.
.. Those 106 votes are standing in
the way of (Cosarove) aen~· a tw year term or a four-year term. rs
do ~n, mistakes att m . • said
Lundina.
Cotcrove is on vacation and could
not be reached for comment
The election of Cosgrove and
Werner, liberal allies of A.gran. along
with Councilman Ed Doman. leaves
Miller as the lone conservative on the
council.
Seekina to avoid a special election,
Ap'an attempted to pass an uracncy
ordinance on June 14 to bump up the
date for swearing in the new council.
However, the ordinance required
four votes, and Miller's opposition
doomed the proposal. The swearing.
in date was set for July 20.
The council did certify the results
of the mayoral race Tuesday niaht, as
well as validatina Measure C, the city's open space ordinance.
Sfa.11 writer LftlJ~ Eanat CM· trlbalft to liU ,..,,.
SUPERVISORS RAISE •••
S'lomAl
supervison' salaries will be boosted $44 million and county officials say
to $63,960 on Sept. 2 and to $65,873 up to 400 jobs could be lost.
OD Dec. 16. Still. board salaries in Orange
County are a distant second to those
in Los A.naeles County, where board
mcmbenearn $84,764 annually.
The board also approved pay
increases for county agency directors
and other top manqemcnt officials.
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Boys who found explosi~e
device blown off balcony
RICHMOND, Cllif. (AP) -
Seven boys were injured Wednelday
even.ins, at least two criticall_y, when
an explosive device went off u tbey
were playina with it on ID •pertment buildina balcony, authorities llid. 1be 61.ut blew at least twO of tbe-
)'OUDISten .. clear offtbe belcony," of
the two-story buildina in tbe unin-
corporated north Richmond area.
said Contra Costa County Sheriff's
Set, Mike Scbotl
The device may have been an
"M·lOOO" -equal to a quarter-stick
Of dynamite -or I berrel bomb, said
Richmond police Capt. Ed Duncan,
MURDER AC
Prom Al
or at least steps can be 1aken to lessen
the likelihood of them occunina -homicides are a different story.
..We cena.inly don't know anyway
to stop them as long as you have thiDfS happenina in the beat of passion, .. Olson said.
Newport Beach Police Lt Tim
Newman said population is one
indicator of the number of killinp a
city will suft"er, but added that there
are otben.
.. Obviously, the more people you
have, the more crime of any type you
have," Newman said. "But the
socioeconomic factor also seems to
have someth.illf to do with il .. lbepercapataincomein Newport
Beach is pmty sianificant, and we
tend to have fewer-homicides than a
city of similar lizc but lower income."
Newman said most of the
homicides in Newport Beach have
involved people who knew eacb other
u family, Joven or business ~en.
.. We do bave some of the stranaer
in the n.iabt' cues.. but that is
defiaitely t.6e exception," the lieuten·
ant said.
Hunt.inlton Beach Police Sit. BiU Petenon Wd some sociolopsta uy
At lieut one or tbe ,outbl wu
critically iitjured with an opea Chat
1ff0Und, medics at the acme told
Scboa. AD ..,_.-old boy wu i1l daQIC! or
~ I ~ and aeva'll OtMn su&n. facial bums may Joie their -~ Sclao&t llid. ..... deYice -• cylinder 2'h incbel
in diameter -exploded when the
~ !ll!'d 4 to 14, were ptbmd
8rouDd tt. stuffina lisbted matches into iu center, Schott said.
1be boys found the explosive
under a boarded-up house in the aame
block near the intersection of Sixth
Street and Grove Avenue. deputies aid.
Two of the children, .,es S and 7, were in critical condition at OW-
dren's Hospital Medical Center in Oakland. Mid ft • •
Judy Harr. A third"=~ be 10, wu expected shortly.
T-wo others, Kaofinh Saechao, a,
and Nailien Saechao, 13, were in
stable condition in the bum unit of
Brookside Hoapital in San Pablo,
hospital spokesman Fraser Felter said. Meanwhile, Tom Saevana; 7,
and Peter Saevana, 17, were treated
for minor to moderate burns.
WITH NO SOLUTION •••
the murder rate climbs as the
temperature rises, or on holidays
when ten.slons are hip.
"Thole IUYI just 11ve past history,"
Peterson said. .. You can't take it to
the bank."
Petenon llid solvina the crime is a
totalty different story.
.. If yoo don't act your py in the
fint 24 to 36 boun.. your chances of
makiDf. an arrest ao down lianifi· cantly, theterpntsaid. ~go
cold, witoeslel go away, evidence is
lost"
Police .,encies hit the streets .. with
everytbina we've aot" immediately
after a slayina to ptber u much
evidence u possible, no matter how
insipiikant it appears, be said.
"We've tot to talk to everybody
who even mnotely bad any contact
with the victim. no matter bow
lliabt. .. Petenon said. "Every minute
pie<le of evidence helps. even if you
doo't realize it riabtaway:•
Petcnon said detectives usually
apend the first two daya of a homicide
inYCStiptioo pt.berina cvideftc:e and
don't even take the time to
tborouahly review the evidence until
after the first crucial 24 bout1 are put.
"If you've done it aU pro-
fessionally, you'll have a band.le oo it
by then," be said.
But even then, arrests don't always
follow. The IUYI OD television who
set their man every week are a fat cry
from the real world.
In Huntinaton Beac~1 _police
cleared just two of toeir lix
homicides. Irvine and the Sherifr1 Department bad the only otber
unsolved murden on the ~ Coast. one in Irvine and two m
county territory.
Newport Beach, Costa Meaa and I:acuna Beach each made an arrest in
their sinaJe murder cases.
County statistics were not aVail·
able, but statewide, l,925 of tbe 2,929 slavum were solved ·fft'S hit.and.miss," Peterson llid.
.. The numben could ao up or dowil
next year without us doina anythiaa
pro or con.''
ln 1986, Huntin&ton Beach aolved
a rapectable five of its seven
murdcn.
Next year, the record may ID to
somebody cite.
arrested June I 0 and releasd on ~O, bail. He is scheduled to be
· ed on arand-theft ctwses July
11. e was unavailable for comment.
.. It'll be interest.in& to see what
happens." Halloway said. "He may
have to aeU his boute to repay what he
took. ..
Unionized county employees re-
ceived pay increases of approximate-
ly 4 pcreent in December followina a
John Sawyer, spokesman for the
union that represents most county
employees. said county officials seem
to have cha~ their philosophy
reaard.ina defiau and P9.I increates. ~wyer said county officials want-
ed to deny pay raises for work.en last
year in order to balance the bud&et.
.. My main observation is that they ij!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!i!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!ii
seem to have bad a cb.anJe of philosophy that's a bit self-serv1n1 for
manqement. I hope they're aoina to
keep that same philosophy in the
future when it comes to reviewina pay
increases for other county em-
/
three-month wqe dispute.
The contract also provides for a pay
hike of3.2S percent. effective July I,
,and another 3 percent Dec. 16.
Next year's proposed budget con·
tains an expected shortfall of about ployees."
CABLE •••
Proa.Al
error that aft'ected some .. for which
Wednesday's Lotto picks
M are truly IOr:ry," she said. Pat-'' ., ...... Auecla~ Prest
tenon said thOlc who didn't receive
the bn>edcalt wiU receive credit The Here are the wibnina numbers
problem is bei._ investipted, and picked WedDetcS.y nitht for the
abOUt 4.QOO to S,000 people received California l.onery's twice-weekly the~ sbe laid. "Lotto 6-49 .. pme: ~ 9, 19, 20, 24, 2S
~ Cablel)'s1ems serves about and the bonus number, 36.
75,000 .~ i1a Hunti¥on Playen who correctly IUd1Cd all ~ FoWltaiJl Valley IDd otber six numben will wre a prize pool of
dtia ia MIWll ~County. SS.4 minion, lottery officialS said. =,.,,.
_.OflllCI ao..,.. lillr* C4liMa .... CA
All those who picked five numben
plus tht bonus number will divide
amona themselves a prize ;x>ol ofS 1.4
million: five of six Nill share
S7S.,OOO; four of six will shart
SW.000. Tbree or six is worth an automatic SS pcr Winner.
The Illes from Satui'da:y nialu to
Wednetday•a drawina were ~ll.7
million.
........ eo.. \lllO Ca.M Mlill CA mM
Clrillilll90 .. tc1M7t ~a ..,,Of,.lk1-4lJ1 Ja.tcall 842-6086
Cll 1111'21
TS Jflllll
Knit Sb.lris
Sweat Pints
Sftll Shirts
Zipper Shirts
Swtm :rnrnb
*
~· '35.00 NoW 119.00 -.. ••s.oo Now sis.oo
~· MS.00 NW $J5.00
leg. 16S.OO Nft 155.08
... '27.50 Nft 119.00
Selected $lyles of )ddl
~ 16S.OO IO IS.00
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