HomeMy WebLinkAbout1988-07-19 - Orange Coast Pilot,
TUESDAY, JULY 19, 1988 25 CENTS
_ Cigr m·anager told to evict aliens
Costa Mesa Council consenting to INS
sweeps, if neede , against day la rers
efTon to pt>rsuade the council to leave
the \\Orkers in Lion' Park alone.
Cit~ Managa '-\llan Roeder sug-
gested 1n a stall repon that police
assign resen l' officers to the 18th
Street park and the l'itv find a new
spot where men I-oping for a day"s
work cou ld gather But Councilman
Or" .\mhurge5 \at d the recommen-
dation """too 'loft "•thout s citic acuon--almca -at un ocumente<f
worh·rs.
.\mburge~ ~id. ··out 1f ~uu're rllegal .
\OU.,e got no nght to be in Costa Mesa.··
.\mburgc' ·, mo11on that Roeder ··\oh e the illegal alien problem .. and
meet regularly with the I N~ gained
support from Councilman Peter
Buffa and Ma, or Donn Hall.
tall for '>"l'l'P'> ··
Ro1:dn \aid Jhl·r the mt'asure-
pa'>sed 1hat 11 ,., .. no1 our pur' 1ew 1n
c11~ go ... l·rnrnl'OI to direct the federal
gch nnmrn1 IO i:nfortt: 1mm1gra11on
la"' hu1 lhl· ut\ "'II "'ork with )"l;S
lhc hn1 "'l' lJn '·
"orll·r' \o nobod~ ·, grt11ng rros~d
''g.nal' Jrom u~ and the 111\\ .. Roeder
\Jld
I !tu nhm lit-lonll'Odl·d throughout
thl· d1"-U'l\Jon that "orling w11h
1mm1grJt11m <•ffi c1af, "ould destro)
thl· l ll\ \ rdat1on\ "1th 1hr Lat mo
u1mmun11'
.. •
By JONATHAN VOLZltE
Ol .. Dellr,... .....
The Costa Mesa Ci ry Council early
toda) direcred the city manaaer to
"solve the illepl alien problem.''
relyi ng OIJ Immigration and Natural-
i1ation Service sweeps if necessary.
With <:ouncil members David
·-~~a
Advice and Game;;
a trths ..
BuHetiri Board ·
BuSiness
Classffied
Comics
Entertainment
Opinion .
Police tog '
Public notices
Sports
Weather
.... i
'A8
A10
A3
85-7
88-10
A9
A7
A6 • A3
810
81-4
~2
Wheeler and Mary Hombuck~e dis-
senting. 1he council passed rhe order
after ,more than three hours of
disc ussion ·aboul day laborers wh o
gather at Lions Park.
The action brought hisses and mild
boos from several people in 1he
audience. many of whom pickered
Cit\ Hall earlier in the meeting an an
in1989
Extra weekend could
stretch ~~t ~rowds,-=
relieve traffic snarls
B~ BOB VAN EYKEN °' .. ...,,... .......
Pigs. cows~ \h~cp and people could · · !>e spcn(;j_ing an extra . week amid the
.. I full~ \Upport the concept of a
hmng hall for lc~I da~ workers:·
• Wheeler charged that Roeder has
no choice but to ask the INS 10 S\\ecp thrflugh L1-ons Par"K-. -•
.. .\sking the cit} manager to solve
th c proble m 1s asinine:· Wheeler
said ... Wha t "e·rc asking him to do is
I k -.artl hl· did not antK1pat1.• calling
1mm1gra111m 11gcnh into tht' park. hut
adOUllcdu ~a!> W<• carh to tell what
might I'll· nt:tl''>\ilr). ·
"'-'hat "e nl'l'd to do. and I mean
ngh1 01111. 1~ g1·t -.oml·onr out there
and u1rnmun1t.ate with tht.• da~
\mhurj!l'' h<ml'\ n . 'aid Rol·der
lOuld unkr lhl· p;irl \ 'ipnnl k r1; be
turnl·d 11n al ".1 m ""hrn a' m;in' a!I
"'' 111l·n g;.i1hl·1 111 twrx·' 01 ~w1iing
p1l lnru 11 I• •r ;i d.1' ·, "orl
(Pleue eee ILLEGAL/ A:I)
Irvine
~election
easure
certified
In surprise move .
s ta te c lea rs.~ay
for s pecia l e lecti on
B~· GREG K.LERK X
Of -Olillf,_ II ...
Thl' tor\\·lun' rJll' tor th.: In me
( 11' ( ounul ~wt l'\l'n crazier Mon-da~ tollo" 1n~ qa1e rc.·ntficat1on of a
ne" rkct1on l.i" allo" ing a special ~o' l·mhl:r l'ln tton for a d1'>puted
n 1um·rt '4:':11
1 11 \l(luall' l'\l'none\ surpnse
lhl' nl'" drct1on la" -Imo" n as \kJ\U'fl' I) -"J~ rC\ ll'Wt•d \-f nnda\
-h\ thl· \t'l n~tJn nt <1tate·, offi ce and
. oolan.•<i lighls and rorn .dogs nex t
year:'ifQrange•Coulilly Fair officials
go·fbrward wtth a prOJ>9!Mtl to extend
the annual 11-day-evC'fll hy as much
as w ven davs. · · ·
.... we·re looking into it~"'sa1d Larr)'
.\moldL a Newport Beach .attorney
who Sits on the Orange fount~ Farr~
Bo~rd. ~It) JUSt gotten W> <'r~w~ed. ----....--11111.,~~· tk-f·t"ti -ltk-d-Pe~ ttrl.
the crowd s.-· . . .
Rec"ord cro"ds·a.1 ·this ~ar"s fair:
which cloS«t Sunday ri\ifl1. mean1-. hea~) traffic on stt~ts adJa·c'ent to the
Costa Mesa fa•rgroundr, a~ v.:cll. ~s
bumper-to-bumper ~pie du.ring:. ·
peak hours on.th\' fair'f ,pedrstnan ..., ........ .,L-9...,_
thoroughfares. · •• ' · -·, After 11 day• of ••aeeftn! It Up'' ·-tlala · u workera tol'e ap ublbltll eD4 r.ldeL Tlal9 .. ··w-c'.\tqtdmg t,he fair· cuts .. the. Jiur'a Oranae c--... lfatr •tbem~ __.. tb~'-: year'• falr attractH nearly a laalf million ,crowds m half. th~.~a~ not 'be.any t ... _ -~·1. -
need for-tramc 1invrov~morus ... said • '•'~-:-tamed to. hambaJ"ler llo~itay . mltora. .
.\niold. ·. :. ·~ , · · · _ . . . . . ~
.. In fact. .\rnold.sa1d. tnrrr'could·t;,.,,_._.. .. The 1dt.•a of <.'"<tending l h<.· fairs JJsualh \Ian up the fcriiow1nt~eek -·-rm on 'acatmn he' au\t' "'e don't
problems for '<"onn·s41U?.na1res·"'l f'th~·· . ~&'ion ha' hl.·en d1scusSl'd for ~ears. l'nd The problem ne\t ~car 1s that ha' l' the ·s"ap mee t c.J un ng the fair .\ ~>.lcn~·-5(.·ason wen~ 1<r .W.i.o the . ..\mold ~r~I. but l\\O p rcumstances Jul\ ~''on a Tuesda' There rsn·1 lot of people look foN ard 10 that
cro.wds 100 m'uch. ·-: hJ\l' m<idl' thl' J\SUl' more urge.nt l'n1!1.18h t1mr'hcl\\CCO m1dn1ght Tue~ hrl·al F-or a lol of U\. ,,.., the onh
r"You ha"'c to ·1ook at po1en11al · · · .• "Thl' d1 <cu ... ,.111n" h:n c gollcn morc · lla,•anJ IOa.rrl Thursda' fo r them to · 'acatmn "e get. \O "t' "ouldn't mind
. com0,e(C131 pro,btcm ... Y h~..aul'. .. lf11 \Cnou' a' thl· ·crowd~ ha' e go,11efi gc.frno' l'd and \Ct up:·.· c1 lt11k ntr:i t1ml· .. ,
. mea ns-~;ou'rc ortl) gorn~ to _havl' h1ggl·r a11d .h1gga:· hl' ..aid. ··-"'nd Opl' ~ m ta Mc~n~ "ho h' d In lhe Rul Balough ..aid he "a) not ~urc
5.0CIO on a Monda)-. ~rcJou go•ng tO" · 'H"n· facrng a "·hedµ!tng pr.ob1t>m .... \tl·'a dd ~1ar nc1ghhmho~. said ht> thl· ntrndcd "-"a,on· "ould he -.uc-
kill busint·ss~ They'll sri havt• t11 ~5 . nnt ~l·~ir an·~" a~. We folio" De! Ma r. "'ouldn ·1 mind_ a Jo ng<'r fair.. t l.,.,lul '
. their belp. whr1hcr 1t'~a slo~·~).Or a ~n the n rrn11.. and Jhe~ trac.l11ronall ~ "It " ould aflc~t me. because I ~I at ·· 1 think n\ )t01 nfl to itl't \t:tk ii the'
bfJS,y 4ay."' . . . . ":~'.;·t: : ... ; ·:-tin1'ih UJl ()0 thl· Fo~rth .of fol ~. Wi: . lhl· ~\\:tp Jlll.'Ct. ..a1J J1)(' Ra tough (Pleue Me,. AIR/ A2) ·• ... . ,, .. . . . .. ,j , ...
mea,url' "J' 't'nt I<' the o;tate aft('r
cn1lilallon h' thl' < 1t' < nunc1l on Juh I~ . .
.:f \l·~th1ng " 1n order It 1s
dTe< II' l" no" ·· "31d Jern Hill 3\SIS·
tant \Cl retan nt \tall' .
1\k a.,un· D appro,cd b~ Irvine
'ott·r' J unl· -allo"' for a Sp('Ctal
dnlmn. "-ht:n . a tounc:1.I .• _ ~al Ill
'al :itt·J h, a c1,unc1lmarf<, elecuon a
mJ't'r I hat ,n•nano C'CCurred whrn
I.arr~ .\~rnn "J" t'kc1ed ma~or on
lun(." -Jnd hl\'-<'111 "asautomat1calh
J"Jrl.ktl to tht' third h1ghe'>t \Qt('··
llClll'f ( Jnll'r<>n < osgrcne
--\ pt·111 1C1n dn'e rn \Uppon of a
'J'l"l JJI l'ln 1111n. kd ~~ mcum l:w'nt
t 11uflul~'om.1n '\Jlh -\nnc-\.f iller .
'l!lll'nll·d in nht:11n1rig .:nough 'l1gna-
1un· .. IP l11ru· J 'J'l'l"lal l'lec11on rt'
\fra,url [) 11.a' hkd ti' the c,tatr
N.:lnrl < '"Pll'l "J' '"nrn in \\ l'd1w..J.1, n1~h1
ft Uri tiPgtq·µ_.a;c~~\q µic~-IY. tO
-.. • .... .... • • .. • .... • •.6
< "'lH"' t' ... rn.l l.1H' \1onda' that he
"·"' .. ,h1x ~l·d Jntl dt'3ppomted"' and
'u"r'' '""' nt thl' mca.,urr·\ unu.,uall~
'"Ill Jpprn' .ii
··\h mmtl '' rann~ "1th though t!>.
n111 .ill 111 thl'm haprn ·· '31d Cos·
llfl" l' I h" hJ' rralh cnmr from left
t1dJ I hJ \l' n(') 1dl·a· ho" 1h1<, wrnt
1hr0ugh ,1, qull ll~ Jt \mack!. of a
l on,p1 raC\ .. By ROBERT BARKER
Ol .. Oel!J,... .....
The Huntington Beach City Coun-
cil cleared the d«ks Monday for a.
rapid rebuilding of the city ~ier w~ile
qrceing to srudy costs of rc1nfore1n1
and rt'oponing a portion of the old
·fee wins .-~
~ · couli'cil 's . ' . ·· •P.PrOvaJ. •t ROaDT BAUD . ................. -
~r the:ftat 1inR.'in' Mlr1y two
dcct4q. ·Huntinaton.lleach midtnta
wtl r find t11en>1elves payina d.icmty
· for cul'Mide trash collcctiotL fol~-.·
• inJ action bv ,the Hunt,;:· BalCh ~ City C0u.,Pf Monday n' t. ,
·; ·. OflkiAts approved a S monthly .ftt that's Hpcc1Cd to sian ~. 1;
• about the sarnr time that a~ Wiier
rat't increatt also wiU tab e&ct. Tht wattt nte increuc wu a
formality, as City Codncil membm '
• . lfrevioull_y aw<>ved first radina ol
. the hike from Sl9.20to$l6.60"'9'Y
two months for the ~ lunilr.
The new water rate apPlin for all
,sinale family homes. dupltus. trip.
ltites • and fourplcus. Apanment
· d~llcn ahd commerical and i.,..
trial firms .already ·99Y for trath"
· collection. . • · •
Oflkiall approved . ttw inmucl
afttt heart111 City AdmU.ittrator Paul
Cook and CieRlrt'Mftt 4iretton ID . t1'rouah a tftany of ...,,-n.pnsive
. I fidtta IM dty. -
City Council in 1910 dropped
I 50 mondaly ....... fee .... it ,...,,wet I ~ ~t &al on utility
billl. ~ for ~ cepitll ~ ~ iried IO r..
inllitule antlhilft.1"t ._..
stru~~r~ as.a s'topgap fTI Nsvre. . · ·· -.-· · OfficaalsalS<) established3a c1t11r~s· portion l)f th e 'J ll I -1-t'ra p1e r\o she'
Officials, who.rook a verhal brating cqmm1tttt . to lead a fund-raising Toqld ~·wn hl·r Se~um·· .. Loder fast-
from residertts t h'<allt'nging th(' recent drive·and to-spearhead design efTon5. f()(l(f rl''italtran t 'open.
closure. voted to seek bids for · an: ·The-city is shooting for compl~tion · . CITmtcn'('O. 7-li promised to con-
enJinttr to design a rteYt' pier at ii!J. · of a new pier by the summer of 1991. trrhu,I(· hat( her profits -.. ,n th<'
estimated cost of S.S00.009. Actual -Ella Christenttn. who's operated tho~..ahd' of dollar;"' -toward a
construcri on cosrs art' eslimatCd at rntaurants on tk pier for three nr~ rnrr S 10 million. ·' ' decadn. u,.ed officials' to bratt' ·a (hr1.,tc"\t'n. "ho also uix·ratt'~ the-
JriT~ii~·buS~nesS ~omplex
· 6V¢tCo.itl~·Scity'.s snafu,
·' . ~ . . ··~. . . '• . ~ ·'.:. . ...
By GREG U.EllltX. ....... ..,.... .• ·-=--: , . . . ..., ..
The l~inc Busines'S'Compth snafu~of 1987 is
still a sore subject around lrvjne City-Hatt. .
·Touted as the Nut Bia ThinJ. in 'office
Cltve;toPft)tfif." .the 'toHU>l6'' ~o<Slrt-bl!lllna ~ ~hr
. medaa and bus1ans community la,sl fall whtn· It )NU
discovtml city planiwn h¥i 1oof!t1U1t...-·. tquare footaer' alk>tment ..-gooa; If-.,.,_, 5
, million ~uare fttt. . , · • ;
In a citr ~t prietd it kit on careful plarutins: the lBC 4d*lt was arauabl~ tM ftlOll. iDfamous
happcpina of 1987 i'l Irvine. But city offtcials Wf'l't
detmniMd fo tum Ow compllx ardund.
As one official l?'!t it at tht ii,nc, .. you don'1
' throw out the baby with thG blth wiier . ., . •
, Now. more than a year tater. ·a recent' SVC)' indicates that llC ha not only t~ ardund has
also gained ground on other mott established
businns compkxes an the area.
The busi ness complex 1s s11uat('(f in the busthna
Olin Wivnt .\irt)On atta. It as hemmed in by
Barranca Parkway and Bnstol Strttt betWttn the
· Costa Mne FMCway and San Diqo Crttk.
Accofding 10 the Retnrrh Nttwortr of Llpna
Hills.. IBC now ~ads South Coasr Metro. N~n
Centtt. the stadium area 1n Anaheim. and the Irvine
Spcctnara in Fonune SOO com J)9nies. company
corporate hcadquancn. hotel rooms.. banks. edua-
tional facilit~ and-offi« spett.
In the catt of IBC. numbtrs speak aouder than
words. The compln "s daytime population i1
IOS.000. almost 9 pem-nt of Orantt Count)1'1 entitt · , ......... laVIRS/A2)
< ap1a1n·., C1alk~ on the pier la-
mented 1ha1 she rl'C<'J\ed no "aminii
trom Cit\ ..\dm1n1strator Paul < ool
h<:torc the p1l·r "a' do'>t'd l:t'>t
T Ul'WJ\
C 1•ol. prl'' 1ou\I~ !Ml1tf ma l.inii ad -
' anu· n,111ce "ould attract a huge
(Pl~ tee UBUILQl1'G/ A2)
< , "~m' l' '·"d hl' "'pre11arcd to run
1n th l· 'f1n ia l l'll'l l1tln
.. , 11 ,pur<.1· I'd rather 'n1'I But I
ht• I" ' l I ti" , '" l 1 t to t hl' I I (l( I() "ho
\\Jrt' r1l Jn,l nrx-rt me tn represc.'nl
(PleHe 8tt IRVIPfE/ A2)
Settlement near on
amphitheater traffic
Agreemen t could
halt legal skirmish
withCMresi ents
By BOB VAN EV&EN
Of --~l'liif -
.\ drafl of a scttlt'ment that could
end a four·)C'ar-old ~ d1<ipUlt'
brtwttn Costa Mtm f'liidrnts and
the <.tatr of Cahfonia over traffic
from thl' PK1fi<' °"""'im..ttt was
•(',J"('l'tt'd to rnch theC'Oft~IUtCC I.able
1003\
If a 'it'ttlcmrnt is rt'achcd. 1t will put
to mt a portion of a laWMUt fik'd b~
C'o,ta MC5f resi~"' 193' over
no1k' and traff.c a ........ ~hklt is
localed on tk OW 1'0.t) Fair·
IJ'OUndS. G
< ;-.11·111)\•m hea·nng<. on th e la'"Ult
,.~Jn \1J' '" Jfter two "rd ' of
't'llkmrnt t.ll\.' tailed to pmduC't' an
J~rn·mcnt
\ mon~ Pl hn th 1 n~s. 1 h<' n·~1drnt'i "·"it tht• Or:ingt• ( ount~ Fair Board
111 put 1n tm prn,emt'nts that will
, h.mnl'I 1 ''m'<"rt traffic awa' from [l'''d~ ~trcr.l.La.n.d_d.J.n.·c.1.h. onto 'l'" l"'n li1.1ulc' Jrd.
I ~rl'l' "l'd .. Ji!Cl 'K"ttl('m<'nt 1alks
hl·pn agJ1n Jitcr Supenor Court
I ud~l' R ll hard fkacom dt'n1('(f a
mnt111n "' [)('put' .\ttom('\ Gent'ral l~·nn1' J>a"~n on ht-halfofthe Fair
Board 111 h:i' c P3rt of the la~ult
J1 \nll\\l'J
I{ 1l·h.uJ '\p1 \. \(ho rcpttttnts the
fl''ic.knt,· ~roup. (on~ C'\li7('ns
c1f( o-.t11 \k-.a . .,..,d DaW10n and the
f :uJ 8<l.1rd had~ become mort
mtrrMt l'd 1n ~ttlin• sinct tht denial
(P1eue ._ TLU'PIC/AI) .
Mur,der sDspect~d in woman'• deaUi ·.
----. . .
IJ PAUL~ Malinda Gibbons was found by her _. .. a •ax husband. Kent. at their apartmau in
, • ., .... ,..~ · Mcditemnnn Villqt. 2;ec>4 Harbor
· A 22·,w old COMI Mina woman. Blvd .. DOlitt 11td. Rtttnt ua..-ntt tOuad· ae.d by her ......... late from Utahanddtvout Mormons.. the ¥~,..._,at tlwif ., 1?11Mftt. was couple had ~vtd into the apanment ................... * -.Olll)'da)'.icarlicr. ~ .
S neckties. a ftllti"' •id Pol~ .satd lk bwsblnd ret~f"Md
, ,.
''·
at Wntem Otaiu l Corp. in Irvine and
found his •'lft about 6 p.m.
"tff '111ill in lhod and he's bttn on
I Ml roUtr toUltf ...... Mid~
Boi~"· a cousin ofthe slain woman and a ..!:!!!!_ta111ton Btlch rnidtnt. ·
K.-mt Olbbons. l S. has bttn. N)'iftl
wt th lottN" and has wtfe. Shirk). .....
•
•
"Wr ).Ult wanled 10 trt him amdna
famil). • ·
~llhoUJlh polK"t dtttiMd eo ttltatc
details Otftd•swan autopst lldwdultd
latr 1odlr. loiteu• satd Gibbons told
him he fOu1'd tut wiff bound and PF Mth llil"OWft Mttten.
.. ~II he said was that thty hlld her
..
•
-
...... ., ... ........, ........ = ~---Jolll•• '••11rrlf1 Ida
......................... llO
wtazr 11 • • .,._ w aa ·~ ~ leDI onic:en .,uncnt &o
QllltlmDt. but we didll't cdme up wia ID~ .. JobftlOll taid ... No-
body ••or tieard anythi~"
Tbc ~ moved to COit& Mna
.-Oabboa~ wbo rwcnth lf8du· atecl from tbe Univertily olUIM. wu
olrered a job with WCSWD Dilital.
Mn. Gibtiolls attended Weber 5'aee
Collete in Utah. Sbe Md nperienc:e
in bin~ and wu plannina IO to IO
work aftef the couple tot tetUed. laid
Boiteux.
Unlike facts. which Johnson said would by slow in comi'!f'.. rumors
traveled ql&ickty as Mediterrancu
Vil. midentl walked by the poUc:e
depUtmcnt'S yellow lapt and qumed
one another &ate MondaJ. -
. ~ ........ tba~ ~ misht be lnves1111tin&a \omicide, one woman uid. ··r uteef to leave my door Optn IO
IO do my wash and stu~ but never lllin." A man watchina police from 1
nearby lfUSY area Said, .. This is too
clott to ho'1'1e. No wonder I sleep with
I .38." .
1\c c:oupte moved 10 CO. Mna
Uout a month lllD &om Clearf'teld,
Uiala. WIUdl is near a.sea. said
loitrua. J'1tey moved into Mediter·
rancaa Villqe only Saturday.
Tbe ~ married in January
1917 aftera lix-month counlhip. uid
Boiteu. ney met after Kmi Oi~ boos comlllcted a two-)UI' mission
for the Mormon church in Tai·
labaaee. Fla.
ILLEGAL ALIENS •••
"She wu just the sweetest little
tbina you ever uw," said Boiteux.
.. Sbt was very active ·in tbe cbureh.
and the cl~ ~ina she ever took to ~ WU ~n. She WU I person
you d be pleUed to know ...
Proa Al
Amburacy said police officen
could also enforce loiterina laws i1un
efTon to reduce the crowd. which
some nearby residents say in-
timidates them and prevents them
from usina the park.
Other rnidcnts contend the day
laborers -lqal and illegal -
contribute to cnme in their neiah·
borhOQd. although Police Chief
David Snowden said there is no link
to the workers and crime.
The council also voted to form a
sub-committtt to find a location for a
hiring hall and enact recommen-
dations by the city's Human Rela-
tions Committee.
REBUILDING OF BB PIER ADVANCES •••
ham Al
crowd and create ..... invitation to
disaS1ef.. at the deterioratina struc-
ture.
''Ate we to believe that in the last the quarreling behind and move on as
five yan the pilina have de quickly as possible with a new pier.
teriorated that muchf I would ~ "No one hates to see it close more
But Christensen appearerd t.o be
unmollified.
aPP9)1ed to think the decision to than I do. But I think Mr. Cook ac1Cd
rebuild. at a cost of S2 million, was responsibly," he said.
made knowins the rest of the struc-Cook also drew suppon from
ture would be inadequate in the near Mayor John ErskiM who said he
future. These must have been dif-· "could have hidden behind the City
ferent experts. Council" and let the elected officials
"I wu never so hun as to aet the
shaft ... she said. "I didn't even have
time to put the food away ...
Othen in a raucous audience
questioned whether the pier should
be closed, even tbolollh a recent study
by en&ineers with Auor Daniel show-
ed that steel reinforcements hid
deteriorated and that the 1.800-foot
pier was daqer of collapse.
.. Please p ve thott of us who are close the pier.
willina the opponunity to walk on the "There was no room for dct.te."
pier. You can put up billboards Erskine said. "Paul. we appreciate the
similar to the warniDJ on ciprettes tough decision and heat yo~ too~."
advising of the potential danaer. Cook said today that the cny's ··1 will personally sian a waiver enginttring dcpanment would look
holding the city harmless in case of at the request to bolster the pier up to
collapse." Christensen's rntaurant -about SOO Resident Mel Heckman said that
advice to clott the pier apparently
conflicted with other expens who
allqicdly pve the ao-ahead for major
rebuild.int after a storm in 1983
caused heavy damage.
John Gustafson. the operator of the feet from the ocean's ed&e.
End Ca(e whose pier restaurant has He said the work would required
plun.aed into the ocean twice in the reinforcing 30 or 40 suppon beams.
past live years, ufled factions to put
IRVINE BUSINESS COMPLEX BOOMS •••
From Al
employee population. It is home to 47 velopers; fees which were earmarked
Fonune 500 companies. 32 banks. for street improvements.
ei&ht hotels. 83 restaurants a.rid 12 SubseqUfDt study ~ cit)' officials
educational facilities. and a private consulting firm con-
1 BC has nearly 18 million square eluded that the city may simoly have
fttt (>f office space. far more than the bitten off more than it could chew.
next highest development.· the Poor rccord-keepins. inadequate staff
stadium area. which has about 7 training and inconsastent application
million. accord ins to the rcpon. of a complicated ordinance aoveming
A total of lS ma Ilion square feet of the complex were blamed for the
IBC space is currently occupied. problem.
according to city staff. -The City Council immediately
!.'T-he -num~d further credi-slapped in eme~ncy ordinance on bilit~ to IBC"s ranking as the coun-IBC. halting the approval of funher
trv's prime corporate business en-. permits until staffel"5 could son our .
vironmen1:· said Jay Carnahan. IBC what had happened,
spokespenon and senior vice presi-The permit process was eventually
dent of marketing at Tianspacific resumed. but the snafu was not
Development Co. without its cost. In December. Com-
Last May. a scathing repon an-munity lkvelopment Director Larry
dicated that.basic staff mistakes and Hogle tendered his resignation. os-
. an ln~wite rcc~·kttpingsystem tensib~r to pursue a job in ihe private
resulted in massive overallotment of sector.
space at the complex. At the same Cit) hall so urces. ho~ever. said
ume. the rcpon noted that staff had that HogJe's depanure was hastened
failed to collect about SS million in bv the tBC debacle. Most of the
developer fees. employees directly responsible for the
The result: The county's most IBC' errors worked under H<>Jle.
ambitious office development WoolJett admitted at the ume that
ground to a halt while planners the business complex situation did
scrambled to find t>ut exactly what play a role in Hogle's resignation.
had gone wrong. "I think IBC had an effect on the
When they found out. heads rolled. taming of his decision to go. I know he
Several employees. including the feels panially responsible for what
city·s development director for more happened." Woollen said.
than eight ye.rs. lost their jobs for According to Brady, development
their roTl s an the blunder. an the complex is now back on track.
Assistant City Manager Paul Brady "We've met with developers and
recalls the business complex snafu we're up to date as far as what we said
with mixed emotions. we would do." said Brady.
"Looking back. I view this as a A city staff repon indicates that
situation where the city was moving between Sept. I. 1987, and June I.
so fast that no one took the time to put 1988. the cit)' issued building permits
the tools in place to really monitor for S 14.440 gross ,quart fttt of
this properl y." said Brady. who was development an JBC. The city can
largely responsible for cleaning up the issue permits for an additional 9.S
IBC mess. million gross square feet of develop-
Most Ir ane cit' officials still ment before the cap of 34.86 million
regard the IBC mix-up as the biggest gross ,quare feet is reached.
planmng gaffe an th e city's histof). Brady said the system of monitor-
Plannersdiscovi:red an May 1987 that ing IBC development has undergone
the~ may ha\<' o' erallottcd more a major overhaul since last fall . The
than S milhon square feet of office ci tv's method of tracking develop-
spacr at the sprawling complex. mcnt in the complex IS now COm·
ln addition. the repor:t stated t~§utcmed. and is now shared b.Y..Jbe beca~~r··mic cakul,@fion errors.ata processinfand community de-
the city was SS million behi.!')4 in its velopment depanments. It was
collrctaon of_ IBC fees from dr; prev1ousl) done b} hand and was the
FAIR EXTENSION •••
FromA2
extend 11 tor another wrckcnd." he
said.
..\noth er rc.,1dcn1 said she would
look ··cauuously" at the proposal.
"It would depend: af It would cut
down on traffic then maybe 1t
wouldn't be so bad." said Karen
Millar.
-Millff as one of the residents
involved in a lawsuit apinst the
OranacCounty Fair Board over noise
and traffic at Pacific Amphitheatre.
which is located on the fairsrounds.
She said a settlement of the lawsuit
mi~t make it unnecccsary to extend
the fa ir in order to ease traffic.
~= Illy Piii
llMIOl'PIC• • w. e.y St . Coll•.,.... c~ 11111111 ...._ loa IMO. C-. YIM. CA 12t2t
"If the~ accompli shed the traffic
improvements we arc asking for.
ma~ be th<'y wouldn't nttd to extend
the fair." shr said.
Residents are asking for a I 0-lane
"Disneyland-style" entrance to the
fairgrounds. which )!"Ould channel
traffic directly from Newport
Boulevard.
Charlotte Cleary. president of the
Fair Board. said the board's Fair
Committee would probably consider
the possibility of extmding the fair at
nrxt month's meetina.
"We could have a dttision within a
couple of months." she said.
sole responsibahty of the community
development department. said
Brady.
Officials have also been riding herd
on developers who have not paid
their share of the uncollected de-
veloper fees. said Brady. Much of the
uncollected funds have been re-
couped.
Finally. the .city is prcparinl a
proposal to bnng the IBC zoning
ordinance and environmental rcpon
into compliance with the city's gen-
eral plan. The inconsistency between
the thrtc documents is at the root of
the IBC snafu. said Brady. The 1982
EIR states that I-BC could hold 34.S
ma Ilion square feet of development.
while the zoning ordinance for the
area allowed 41 million ,quarc feet.
~.JJ~cent audit of I BC development
·set the development cap at 39 million
square feet. C1tyofficialsarccurrently
U$ang the zoning ordinance figurt'
until they can bring a proposal to the
O iy Council. probably an October.
said Brady.
Brady will go befort' the council
Wednesday to request a 10-month
extension to the existing urgency
ordinance slowi ng development in
the complex. The current urgency
ordinance expires on July 29. and the
council is not scheduled to meet again
until Aug. 23.
TRAFFIC •••
From Al
of thei r motion.
·-rm .supposed to have a draft
·settlement proposal prepared tomor-
row:· Spix said Monday. "The Fair
Board's always been making noises
that they'd like to iet out of the suit by
doing cenain things. 1"'1hink this
indicates we're getting a littleclottr in
terms of what they're willing to do
and what we want them to do."
Dawson said Monday he had not
seen Spax's settlement proposal and
coul9 not com~t on the ljjc.elih°-Od
of sett ement.
The proposed settlement would
not end the lepl battle. however. A
thornier issue 1s noise from concens
at the amphitheater.
Residents say concen noise has
repeatedly violated county npise
standards. an allegation which is
backed up by a coun-appointcd
sound cxpen.
The resident!' want sound
monitors. who have the authority to
turn down the volumc, a,t all concerts.
Attorneys for Ned West Associates,
which owns a 40-year lease to the
arena. say ·rock groups will refuse to
perform if their sound is tampered
with.
Fair Board members are consider-
ing buying out Ned West's lease and
putting a dome ovctthe amphitheater
to contain the noise.
Last week. the board hired Ncw-
pon Beach appraiser Georae Jones to
help them determine the value of the
lease.
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t:.": •UO • ......... NlwoOfl 1-3 ,.,, ..._.. 12 12 .. 11 l2rld ..... HewpOfl 1-3 lllr San lemlrdino .. 17
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'' 11 :34 p.m.
TRASH FEE APPROVED IN HUNTINGTON •••
l'rolqAl
down each time by opponents who 1hrt>e \Cars. he said.
claim there was a promise to never Ci ty Administrator Paul Cook had
chargie for prt>qe. requested an S8.S6 monthly trash fee.
The utility ftt, which officials said a proposal supponed onl y by Mayor
will generate about $9.S million this John Erskine and City Councilman
year. bas been mingled into the Jack Kelly.
general fund and used for other City Kcllv said that the city should tell
Hall purposes. in addition to major residents the)' ha ve a choice -
construction projects. "either can the trash 5.000 miles out
Former City Councilman Oancy to the dump or pay the proposed fee.
Yoder. who's led the attack on the Residents would find that the S8.S6
recycled trash fees, said today the fee fee "is a real bargain." he said.
"was inevitable." -Earlier. Atting Public Works Di-
And while mourning the increase. rector L.es Evans told the City Council
he's heanmcd by a Cily ...Liluru:i1-.Lbc.y nced..ta..spcnd $28.milhon alone
decision to earmark utility fen ex-on pumps and other flood control
elusively for capital projects after eq uapmeflt to escape effects of a
maJor tlood.
Ci ty officials say there arr about
SIOO million wonh of reponedly
urgent projects they are unable to ~Y
for. Those include deterioratina 11de-
walks. curbs. and gutters. poor street
lighting. park development and facili-
ties. deteriorating fire station roofs
and other police, fire and public
works projects.
In another majer financial matter,
the CityS ounciJ approved spendina-
more than $700.000 to buy the former
Southern California Edison Co.
building..on..MainSlr«~
ans cerner. Money had ~n set aside
from previ~us years. officials said.
IRVINE BALLOT MEASURE CERTIFIED, ••.
From Al
them ." he ~id. . . . .
City Clerk Na~cy Lacey said she
was "very surpnscd"• that the sec-
retary of state's office acted so quickly
in approving Measure D. Lacey had
predicted it would take two to thrct
weeks to review and file the ineaS'ure.
"We'll just have to sit down and
figure out what'~ next." said Lacey.
The approval of Measure D will not
affect tfle seating of Agran and
Councilwoman-elect Paula Werner.
who finished first in the June 7
cooncil race. said Lacey. Both arc
scheduled to be seated Wednesday.
Miller. who was rt elected after
finishing second in the election. also
expressed surprise at the measure's
qutc k ·filing. but said the law Is clear
and th;tl a special l'lection is now
inevitable.
· "Ev<"rybody said it couldn'1 be
done. but it has been done," said
Mnler. who would be the. lone
const>n ·ativc on the Irvine council if
Cosgrove were seated. "Everything
that could be done to stop this 'has
been tried. We've won."
.\llornc's for Irvine Pride. the
organi1ation behind the petition
dnvc. were to go to Orange County
Supenor Coun 1oday askin' for a
judgment blocking (. osgrove s seat-
ing.
The measure's approval is the
latest rnmplication in a council race
fraught with legal stumblina blocks,
harsh words and aeneral confulion.
Supporters of Cosgrove had ~un
a recount of the June 7 ballots, hop1n1
to come up with enough votes to
move him into second place ahead of
Miller. Cosgrove finished only 106 vot~s behmd Miller.
C.osgrove ~alled off the recount last
week. saying that it was only addina to
the difficulties of an already-confus-
ing election. -
Irvine Pride filed a lawsuit July 12 ·
asking the coun to block Coscrove's
seatingand force the council toctrtify
Measure D. The suit was denied. but
the counci l did approvr MeasiJl"f D.·· · . . .
SEMI ANNUAL ·SALE .!
E
'·
•.oo -'ln.oo
···~st7.50to sss.oo ......... oo
(CM!r 2.000 t~ from our ftne cu~ selection)
' I
Gentlemen~ Clothing
561 Newpqrt Center .Dnve
FastuorrlstanO: Newport Beach • 640' 8310
., -r -
Romantic, unusual
spots in Southland ·
spotlighted at OCC
"The Romantic aod Unusual ia Southern
California" is the title of a three-hour~ IO be
offered Thursday at 7 p.m. in Room IOI Of the
CounselinJ and Admissions Buildint 'at On1111
Coast Col ... Robert Badal. author of the newslet1cr .. Ro.
mancin1 LA;• will discua unusual restaurant.
sunset spots and weekend adventures.
The proara.m fee is S20. and participants may
resister by telephone at 432-S880.
WUdJJle profnia Ht
Orante County Park Ranter and naturalist
Richard Dyer will present an educational and
humorous pravam on local wildlife Wednetday 11
2:30 p.m. at lalesia Community Park in Lquna
Hills.
The proaram will include a slide show and
stuffed birds and animals. Th_c cost is SI per ~n
and those interested can rtSJSter by calhn1 lalesia
Park at 830-8318.
Offlcen' wive. COIJYeJJe
The Officers Wives' League of Oranae County
will install new officers for the comin_a year at its
regular luncheon Wednesday at the Ofrtttrs Club at
the Marine Corps Air Station in El Toro.
Wilma Sharp of Fountain .valley will be
installed as''J)rcsident at the l2:30 p.m. event. and
Joan Nolan of Huntington Beach will install new
members of the executive board. Call Charlotte
Walker at 549-2028 or Evelyn Gorman at S36. I 33 I
for details.
Family nlm• bJ NB
The Balboa branch of the Newport Beach
Public Library has scheduled a summer family film
series on' the third Thursday evenin1_ of the month at
7 p.m. This week's offering will be "Balloon Safari,"
a colorful adventure of hot air balloon ins in Africa.
"The Dove." a true story about a tttn~r who
sa1lrd alone around the world. is scheduled for Aus.
18. Admission is free and everyone is invited. The
library is located at 100 E. Balboa Blvd .. Newport
Beach. and more information is available at
644-31 71.
Irvine clJamber muer
The Irvi ne Chamber of Commerce will hold its
July mixer Thursday at the Red Onion. IOI E.
Sand_pointe Drive. Santa Ana. •
The event is scheduled from 5 to 7 p.m. and
members are admiued free. Guest admission is SS.
Flnanclal •orblJop •lated
~' ...
Orange COMt OAtLY PILOT IT.,.._ tMt 1t, 1-* A8
Ball won-'t seek re-electloJJ in Mesa
., .IONATllAN VOUU .............
Cotta Meu Mayor Donn Hall an-nounced Monday he will not seek re-
election IO tht City Council in November.
The announcement means two of the
five council seat will be up for pabl.
Councilman David Wheeler, who opposes
Hall on IJ'Owth issues. already has an-
nounced he won't seek re-election. Coun-
cilwoman Mary Hornbuckle has indicated
she will run.
Hall, in announcina his decision. cited
the amount of time required to be a
councilman and expressed frustration
with various citizens aroups.
"I'm convinced there are a few who
press a point of view when they know it's
incorrect. Arsuin1 apins1 nonsensical
positions held by people who know better
has become very tiresome." Hall said.
"We've called these people slow-
growthers, n~owthers. Mesa Action or
residents for th1s orthat. I.call them. people
who know bener." ·
Hall made reference to citizens aroups
baulinJ the Pacific Amphitheatre and a
pair ofbuildin1 developments in court.
Hall was appointed. to the City Council
in 1978 a~ servina two yeen on the
Redevelopmmt Comminion and was re·
dec1ed in 1980 and 1984. He has 1C1Ved 11
mayor durina four of his 10 yean on the
council. ·
He ~said he w11 proud of his accomplish-
ments. but recopized some thinp ~re
left undone.
"Traffic in Jtneral needs a lot of work. One of my b1gnt frustrations has been
seeina the traffic problem needina solu-
tions. seeina the rnourttS readily avail·
able but steins no sipifican1 prosrns."
Hall said. "I'd like to kttp try1n1 to 1tt
throush this maddenina maze of en-
vironmental impaC't reports. bureaucrauc
baloney and petty violations.
"I'd like to continue on the council and see some of thinss throUlh. but I won't."
In recent years. Hall 6as f~ opposi-
tion from slow-srowth advocates who
have attacked ham as a friend to de·
velopers. The Fair Political Practices
Commission also investipttd a poljtical
aC'tion commintt that supponed Hall in
1984 and allegedly failed to repon a $4.600
contribution.
When the in\'.estigation was made public
in January. Hall denied a~Y. knowledgr of
wronactoina. But he concede the inves11p-
1ion miaht affect his decision to Sttk ~
election.
Otht~ said Hall's electronics firm .
Omega Industries Inc. of Newport Beach.
has 1a~rn a btauna durina the d«'ade Hall
has served on 1hr council. He operatts the
business wi th his wife. Jean.
Hall\ last election to the council was a
b11ter -and expensl\ e -fight against the
Mesa Action rnizens group.
Hall and former Councilman Eric
Johnson "ere targeted b} Mesa Actio.n·
supported candidates. Hall narro"'1Y won.
but Johnson lost. The fight wu thr city's .
most expensive. "'tth tfie two spendana
$90.834
Johnson "as ll'ft "'1th a $20.000 debt.
while Hall found himself holding S 11 .645
1n promts\On notes to hi s business.
In IQ 0 Hall's debt after election was
onl~ a fe" hundred dollars.-but he spent
thousand'> in 1984 on mailers 10 counter
the literature put out b~ Mesa Action.
.\fter thl' \hm 'll 1011. Hall again faced a
tough bauk to hold his seat on the Orange
County \\ ater D,ism ct. Hall M1ueaked by
Mesa ..\c11on cand idate Patrina A} nes by
se' en 'oh:'>
Da-ve Baker trust fund establish·ed ·
By PAUL ARCHIPLEY °' ... ..,,.. ....
A trusliund.has beenset up in response
to an outpouring of Dffers for financial
support fo r former Irvine Council man
Dave Baker.
Baker. who narrowly lost the Re·
·publican nomination in the 40th Con-
gressional District in the June primary. has
been in seclusion since allepuons arose of
financial misdealings.
The county District Attorney's office is
in vestigating whether Baker mishandled
funds from a foundation in order·to cover
last-minute campaign cosJs. His campaian
1s reported I) about SI 00.000 1n debt.
After being confronted by· foundation
dire-ctors. Baker checked himself inJo _
Hoag Memorial Hospital.
Baker also we-n1 on a leave of a~nce
from the law firm where he is employed
and did not attend the last few Irvine C'1ty
Council meetings before his term ended:·
Paul Me\'tr. Baker's attome). said his
office has been inundated with offers of
emotional and financial assistance from
supporters of Baker.
Me~ er said he tried to d1scouragr ~ople
from donaung to avoid an~ poss1bihtv of
1mpropne.t) pending the conclusion of the
in ves11ga11on.
Bergeson discounts
chance of becoming
neXtstatetreasurer-
··1 thought 11 -...uuld cause more prob-
lems than 11 "ould alle' 1a1e." Me,cr said.
finaJJ) . .ho"c'cr. he ag~ee--0 to handle
boakkeeping chore'> in a special account
fo r an~ funds that ..-.ere donated.
Ho"e' er. hl' ~tn:ssl·d that neither he nor
Baker "eri: sollc111ng or exJ)«ted an~
donatton~
"He has al"a\S said and still saH the
work he did 1n puhhr ..en ice was re.,..·ard. in
itself." ~,k~er ~1d.
Me)er satd the~ fou nd 11 d1flicull to stop
people from donating ~cause Baker was
liked and R'Specled in the commun•t> he
had sen ed man) ~ t"ar~.
"Thr amoun1 of emotional support
from thl' rnmm un1t ~ I\ 'e~ strong."
Me~·r ~1d "H1., l'arher ~ood works have-
n111 bl·rn aa'>i:d
.. .\l1hough L>a' l' Bak.er might wish 10
dl'al "Ith th1~ in Sl' lµ!>1on and 1solat1on. all
the >ears of public sen IC't' still come 10
ix-opll"s m1~ds.
"J u,t the ~n e that the community
ha~n·1 turnl·d 11~ back on him 1s heart-
l'n1 ng." he ..a td
\k~er said Baker •~ doing as well as can
bC' t:'\pl'Cted undrr the, 1rcums1ancrs.
"lfr's dl'ali ng ..-.11h 1h1) tragJc situati on
a' tx·'t hr ran." Me~er )aid.
Pac.Bell
may end
, _ _,"-workshop~p$00-bow...l(),C()ntr.ol your -....-.tv-r-ftE(i KLEm-------
Anancial future will be presented Thursday from 7 to °' ... .,..,,...._.. eliminate ''1rtuallv even Senate contender
for the position. ·indudinf Bergeson and
Sens. ~1lliam Canipbel of' Hacienda
Heights and Robert Beverly of Manhattan
Beach. Two other top contenders. John
Se' mour of .\nahe1 m and Ken Madd\' of
Fresno. rt>centh rr mo,·cd thcmseives
from cons1dcra11on.
lt>calcall
monopoly
I 0 p.m. an Room I 05 of the Skill Center at Oranac.
Coast College in Costa Mesa. State Sen. Manan Btraeson conceded Ka~ Byrum-Ellerman. a founding principal of Monday that she stands link chance of
Financial Services Unlimited. will conduct the being named state treasurer in light of
seminar. The fee is $20 and registration is beina remarks bv Gov. George Deukmej'ian1hat
taken at 432-5880. he would not appoint any lawmaker facina re~lection in November.
. PR 80Clety to meet_
John Rehfeld. vice pmidcnt and general
manascr ofT cishiba America's lnformauon Systems
Divjs1on in Irvine. will speak ·on ~ituational
management Thursday at a hsncheon ~tt.ting of ~he
Orange Coun1y ·chaptcr of the P1.1bhc "Relauons
· Socieh gf America. .
· · The program is scheduled for 11 :30 a.m. at the
·' l..'6 Mcrid1en Hotel. 4500 MacArthur Blvd .. Newport
Beach.· Call the PRS~ ~ at 832-2037 for
·rrrv;Jtions. ·. · • • . ... . .
•.
rae..7, Jaly is . . .. . ..
··1 think it°s·preny clear that he's not
going to pick -someone who. faces re·
election ... said Bergeson. who had been
considered a front runner 10 replace the
late Jesse Unruh as treasurer.
.. , would havr been honored. 10 ha ve
been selected. · but I think I havr
responsibijities-in the Senate that will
cont inue to be c.hallenging and r.eward·
ing." said Bergeson.
Dcukmejian said Monday that 20
people arc on has list of possible choices for
stale treasurer. but said that "it would be a
great risk in naming an incumbent that's
·running for re~lection" because such a
move would provide political ammuni·
1ion 10 the appointee's opponrnt.
The governor declined to identify those
who are being co nsidered for the position.
Deukmejian's comments presumably
But-other p0tcn11al choices include Tom ·
Stickel. a San ()1t'jo financier who SCTVed·
as a trustee of the California State
Lr nn ers•I> s~ stem. Bergeson suuested
that Peter Schabarum, a Los Angeles
Count) supervisor, also_is on the list ~f
contenders,
Dt·ukmcjian said ht' hopes to nominatr
someone "ho can be rc~lected to the
office 1n I QQO. but denied that he was
attt'mpt 1 ng to groom a GOP star to succeed
him in 1he ~overnor's office.
··1 want an individual that would be able
to be re-elected to offi ce ... Dcukme11an
said ...... But there's no wa' that an\'bcxh
can pick an heir apparent. Tht'~ ·11 have 10
go out and campaign v1gorousl> and win
suppon on their own. r, e never bellrved
that there 1s such a thing as coattails.
Rarcl>. do \OU sec an> kind of coattail
Sen. llarlaD Beqeeon
effect. 1 1·~ q~n rare. I don't th ink It works at all.·· ·
l 'nruh. a fo ur-term Democrat. dtt'd last
summer Deu kme11an·s tir'it cho1ct'. Rep
Daniel Lungren of Long Beach. was
approH~d h) thr .\sscmbl~ but rc.-1rcted b>
tht .. Senatl'
Thi' Ll·g1slaturc.-·s c;plll 'ot.: sparkc.-d a
legal battk O\'er Lungrrn's confirmation
"'h1rh the 'itate Supremt• Coun re t'ntl~
rr,ohed h' ruling unanimous!\ th at
Lungren .... a~ not ellg1hk to he-ronlirmed
Tk Asso<'i•IH Prrn C011trilHltH to
tii.s ttpt1rl.
•t> -p.m. La1ua Beael1 City Coacll, council
-chamber\. ·sos Fo~st Ave.
I
.. ..; .. ~~y, Jaly 20 Phase two of freeway widening begins
• 7 p.m. Lapa Bo~ Opn S,.ee C.m·
, ml11lo1, council chambers. SOS Fomt Ave.
• 7:30 p.m. Lapa Beadt Partiq, Traffic ...
-Clr~la&loa Comt110lff, cou.ncil chambers. 50S Forest.AA~e. ' :
8 BOB VAN EYltEN will add one commuter lane in each Ot~o.llr,......, directton to the frcewa} betw~n ~t' 605
Frttwa) and the San .\na Freewa~ in El T ransporta1ion officials plhered in T .i._ oro. Irvine on Monday to annouMe ~ Thr first phase of the w1dcnanJ proJect
By 808 EGELKO
'111 I ' IPfw .....
S .\~ FR.\SCISCO -In what ts called
"the most significant change stnce the
breakup of thC' Bell s~ stem m 1984.".
Pac1frc Bell made a ~urpnse proposal to
gt' e up 11<. monopol~ Q_n local caUs m
. r \rhange for reduced state regutauon.
l · nder thr offer. the com pan) also
"1.1uld e\pand the local toll-free zone and
11fkr push-btltton phoneS without ex1ra
charge in e\change for thr dttrcased
rt·i ula11on If appro,ed b~ thr Pu~hc
I 11li 11es C-omm 1ss1on. the plan would gtve
t u~tome~ a1· e~\ to h1gh-1echnolog~. low·
l'OSI ~f\ Kl'~ ,
( nn~uml·r rt•presental'l 1 es greeted the
proposa l \lo 1th 1rep1dat1on
··\f ~ b1gge'\l fear 1\ that ..-.e ~ill have the
pretense of compct111on but not the
'Wlfi:guards of compt't1t1 on ... said Robt-rt
(1 na11da. a la .... ,cr "ho rrpresents six
min1mt1 and k)~1.-incomr groups in thr
Pa1.·1f1, fkll ra11• l.'ase tx-forc thr PtJC
Otha' "ould compete.-in handhng local
1111! ,·all'\. hut "there ..-.on'1 be anv real
rnmpr1 1tl()n .. and ··the compan); will
esrape dTectt' e public and PL1C scrutan)."
( 1na11da said. Pacifi c Btlrs profit will
t'\l'l'l·d ~I ti1 II ion this' ear. more than tw1~
11s h1ghi:'1 le'cl berOre drre-gulation. he
':11d rt c ,, h1l h ha~ <.uggcstcd mcreas1n1
iih1)ne ~·11mpan~ lle\lb1lit~ m thr .new
mark1't , rratl'd in the dismemberment of
"
·• 7:30 p.tn .. Lapa Beadt Eavlname111al
Safety Committee, police library. ~OS Forest Ave.
beJ.!nning of the second phate in tht SS7.I bepn last summer at a cost ofS36 million.
ma Ilion widenin1 of the San DielO fl"tt--It will result in "'1dening the freeway
• . way. -ht-i.wttn t~ and-Corona dcl Mar
Monda'·, e"ent. conductc.-d at the Park
Center h'rliport on ~11chelson Dn' e.
marked lhr groundbreaking for the S~ I ~
m1l11on second phase of the prOJt"Ct Phase
t\\O will w1dcn the frttwav bet .... ren the
Santa .\na Frcewa\ and ttie Corona del
Mar Freewa'. ·
Ofl'.ic-ials Sa~iH'Ote<'t ....,141 ~ rom--
pk1ed b~hC' summerot IQ~
thr BcJI ~\ ~tl'm. ..-.111 onstder au the
proposa b during th1· ne't ~ear.
.\l'co rd1ng to Pacific Bell. the new
pwpo.S!l_" morc_~rous th.an.a plan we--~
tim pan~ pr1·\Cn1ed in Janua~ ···············•••r-'!!L.-men romplete. the widtnina project freewa ys. "··· . '
-r .;'.-
-~-:Man $~Ing city over shooti~g
. ·arrested on parole violation ....
By GREG~ ................ .
1' .Cosaa -Mesa· ll)Jft who sued
,, .. ~tiwport BCach. ponce· in January · -'alttf he was shot. by ·an oft"Ka' was
· ·artej\ed Monday on suspicion of
· Pirole viol~tion: pol~ said.
Rkky ' Patrick. Miller. 26, was
arrested at 10:30 1.m. at the 1301
Dove St offitt of his attomeyJ...~
Goldstein •• Newpon Batch vmc:er
Grq AnnltroftJ said.
Miller is btana held in Ncwpon
City Jail without 1-il ptndint HU.
dition to Tens. where he is wanted
for violatina ~ from a prison
term for auto thdt, taid-Armmoua.
Miller made headlines earlier this
)'c&r when he sued the Newport Belch
Police Department over 1 Jan. 23
shootina iftcidmt •
Police l8id Miller was drivina
around the area of 37th Street and Wnt Balbol Boutevard in a darkened
1983 PIYflKMlth Cballmlef. Polk'e.
believias Miller miP& be c:asina
homes for poemtial buqlary. and
pulkd him over.
Aca>rdina to polke repons. Miller
was shot once throuah the beck of the
shoulder after he ran from offi~n
and1.hen ll~ly SWUI\& ind Struck
an officer's drawn K>rvice "volver.
The lawsuit filed b¥ Miller claims
police be&an beatina him on the head.
neck ana shoulders after he sur-"ndt~. After the beatins. Milltr
allqed that the offi~ "leued his
pip on Miller and "without any
notitt or wamin1 of any kind ... shoe
Miller in the beck at point-blank ranee.
A coun date for tht lawsuit is slill
pcndina.
• • • .\ blue I QS lsu1u Trooper was
stolen from the 8600 block of
Red"OO<J Street between midnight
and a.m. Monda,.
• • • Someone stok a portable com·
puter. worth $4.000. from a room at
the Reg1s1~ Hott~between noon and
8 p,m. )tonda~.
Hanttncton Beach
.\ ra ilroad rro .. stng arm rt'portrdl>
malfunctioned and wa!> down for
ahout ti'C' hou~ Monda~ night.
backmg up traffic on ~kFadden
.\\cnuC' tic.-1 ..... een Hunttngton \'1lla~e
and Gothard Stre't't. • • • T"o \'oung girls said that a man
approached them near a park near
Edin~r .\\'rnuc 1n thr HuntmJton
Har~1ur Jn•a and touched thrir toes
and tn1•d 10 k1-.s thrm. He told them
hl··u tx· ha ck at the same time
.. wmornm ·· th l' 1url said.
• • • Th 1n l'' entered a home in thr 6000
hlod of ( an1erhu11 Lane throuah a
tic.-droom "'1 ndo"' and stok a com-
pact d1~ pla>er. ~Ocompactd1scsand
a man·, "atch Total loss ft.as ~
f\\.>n1·d JI J~Ut S 1.000
·1keTurnerf:,'; Jury selection starts 0!~?:."!.~'! _ •k• for Randy Kraft trial ·
T umrr. who'pmed fatM in tht I 9605 •
singmg alonptde then-wift Tina By PAUL AACHJPLE\' proposals afkr le.am1na the SS ..,._
Turner. was sentenced Monday to a °' ... ...,.._.... mt'nt ts tht lcpl hmi1 in the C'CMIA'J.
,rar 1n county Jlil for poansaon and More than fivf years after his The tnal was t~ belin IOdly willa
iransponation of roca1nt. arrnt. suspec1ed terial ~alln' Rand) _JU') Klect1on. wtuch could tMt ••
Tumtt. S6. of Cemtos. 1mmedi· Kraft"' K1 10 80 on tnal today tn m Wttks 10 ro.mpktc ..
S.turday. 11elv was &aktn into custody. Ht also Ora• County Superior Coun. "1.tomeys will int~ lO ~
Coeta .._ ti::.K:fctncet1 to Ai~"= JUdlt Donald Mt'Canin dmied ·~ Juron first. Kraft s ~"'!" -
was taken fto'Ollt me mM ..tirr this
month. A computer valued at lltOft thari lr+IM .\ttorne\•'s spoknmen. final motions Monda) b) boch tlw nltmatC'd thn may •;~.,. • S~.500 was taken from Wntma ... wp1rt•11• Fifty-ltaliu Cypress lmt ~ TumtrwnconvictedApnllSon dtftntt1ndpro9«Ulonto"'YJW'On =ny aslS.~pte>pk.l etaU...
Diaital on Red Hill Police are UDIUft stolen from ·an Irvine laadleaptlll two dn11-rda1ed tHony counts of morr than tk estabhsbed fet of SS °" ~lc.ctioft 11 ~~
how tht crook look the t'OlftpuW A p1Mi1!dlt'•"011•1dd rirw,. wonll c:om-nvtometimr.Monday.. ~ion and ~lion of perda)'forthttrialthatcoulclluta -Krafh1ehartedwttltk•li•!6~,-._-• ftom an tm~;·~· , _ about g. ..'llltlail11u•..a llOft __, • • . . l from an .\usust yemor lontrf 1n Oran,r C-ount)' brl• .. ft7t·•
MoreSS40oNlll'lllllU11-111nt eoontrrin JIDDMaof'ViaUdo StVttal t~nd dollan wonlt of =i"fn t::=t~~Y'tWOOd. •!.' • . Drimw att~ c. Tbomu 1913. ud prGIK'U*'_ -~ ._.
cu11 - ---,... ---·-·rPt .. 11 "'· _,..,.., __ ,___ 011Xm ,.;.i ,...._ w ..... McDould ~~"' .-hun "' z1 -.., .., 1a ....
dlines II ~Coate.a.. nt AW 11 ..... t:. .......... , I buliw i~ -2000 block of ' drivi• matialll~ud whtn thty ''°per day wtnlt ty •ttrtct Slates.
vnctinalllldai•wereprildopen. rrom ........ .,.... ...... MicbdlODDri~onMondlyudlast .,,aUed"imO\W.l fowl•~-~ To'8 •a1• AU of tbe """"" ... -'ti , • • ofWntlllbol~wi• Thunday. ~Matpttttbataats· pipt ad about'· pw ol rock jU1W1ticpMdtlaeeq~tOl'dlltir mok•1d .... ~e:.ctct"..:'::'= luC T..tly or W1i1111llm>. mpk)yft W1th a pw U) may be tht 01JC9iM i• •MW ftoil ooalaiarr~ lllaria · . -_..,.. w •• 1 • • -14.'. . _...... oa 19111 su._11ia *ti• 5omeoM .Je ...... ..._ am C1llprit • •. ---ttwftoorohlteair.Anodttt .J6pum Ootthah nt1maltd 1ht trill w;n 1983. bl Milliaa· VMle .... •
;;..-.... iOlidt die lllllac'•' all» PoftU.C Tram Am ,.._ * ~ A water mew .. "*" ftom a "!' fau!M1 in a picc't ol ~ last nine moatM.. whilt" Mt'Donakt H~ .__... _. •··== ... ="~ .. ::;.: ..... ~~~-~"'~*:,:•~·~--:-l*l.:r1~•::11~a.:•:111:h~•y a~·;•;;•rt;·~;COftlb=~--~ct~· .. 10, renmo.aM,.. fol~ ..a ... tumcr • ntimattdJlnpnh ~ • I. •• clleld Ollt. A 1'8... ..... ndl 91it\1 MWWI t.JO«JO Ja Miftao IDlllitflM ""° tlw wccllC1'. *-· ~ llilL lut ~an Kraft ws.
• . . ,· ,,
L
WASHINGTON (AP)-A unit in
the Justice Depanment has launched
an ethics inqu~ of At_~ General
Edwin Meete Ill, the lobbytna poup
Common Came di1eloled today, and
the 814-PllC repon of i~t
counwl James McKay will provide ttte basis for the review.
Common Caute had preMed for tht
•· examinationonJuly6,ukinatbat the
Justice DeDanmeat's OflicC of Pro-
fessional Responsibility loot into
whether Menr may have viola1ed a
I 96S executive Older spellina out
standards of ethical conduct for
government ernplo)'tla.
··we have initialed ua ~ into
\Our complaint ud we will advite
vou of the results 11pon its con-
Clusion,·· OPR counwl Michael
Shaheen said in. a one-~ph
letter to Common Cauw. which
publicly rele,aied copin.
Common Caute alto asked OPR to
examine whether Meair-violated
provisions of a federal law. the code of
ethics for government service.
Common Cause filed its request
the same day McKay referred his
len_gthy repon detailina Meesc's ac-
ll\ 11ies to the Justice 0epar1Jtlent. a
~tep that was expected to lead· to an
inquiry b~ Shaheen's off tee.
Meanwhile. Mccsc said "there's no
question I'm vindicated" of charges
of wrongdoing despite an indepen-
dent counsers conclusions that he
probably l;lroke two tax laws and twice violated a conflict-of-interest
law.
~kesc mounted a strong counter·
attack to the repon b~ independent
counsel James McKa~. ~ying the
n:port's accusations against him
abse nt criminal actio n were
•~•79_Jlew
did oamm,.dJDIJoll ?
SANTA BARBARA(AP)-Presi·
cknt Reapn still feels Edwin Mcew
Ill has been "an outstandiDJ attoi:ney
,eneraJ" ckspitc an indeptn<lent
counsel's findina that Meese likely
violated tax and conflict-of-interest
statutes.
White House spokesman Marlin Fitzwater told reponers Monday that
Reqan believes Meese "will be able
to loOt back with pat satisfaction on
the contributions he has made to the
Justice Department and-to the ad·
ministration of j ust ice in ieneral." • Re~n. who is vatationing with
his wafe, Nancy, at the couple's
secluded ranch in the Santa Ynez
Mountains, has never wavered in his
support of his ~time California
adviser and poli · confidant.
,
"absolutely wrong and il.'s·absolutely
unfair." ·
The attornev general, interviewed
on ABC-TV's "Good Morning
America," sa id McKay found Meese
had no criminal intention to violate
the law. .
"When there's no intent to violate
the law. there can be no viotauon,"
Meese said. "Intent is an absolutely
cnucal ingredient and when that 1s
ab!><!nl ... th en there can't be any
violation of the law."
Meese said that when the report is ~n together with the response of hi s
attorneys. "when you look at all the
facts. vou sec that in fact I am
vindicated. ... There 's no question
I'm n nd1cated."
Deletatlou • tile floor of die De11Rt1atlc
National Con•entlon tarn to tbe podlam to
Jackson
readies
upbeat
siree~h
ATLANTA (AP) -Michael .
Dukakis. in a spirit of unity'j yields
center staae ton1aht to.Jesse ack.son
for a speech cm.in to ipite .•
thunderous rally at the Democ:rauc .
National Convention. He'll ckliver:
··an upbeat speech," Sen. Uoyd
Bentsen. Dukakis' running maJe,
predicted today. Democratic leaders includin1
Bentsen, the man who got the No. 2
spot Jackson sought. were all
emphasizina harmony today. Before
Jackson goes on. delcptes will ckbete
three platform planks· that Jackson
wants changed. but agreements to
disagree without anger apparently
have been worked out.
•·1 think it's going to be a good
debate. but l don't lhi.n.Ut's .soina to
•• 111 bCdiviiive and I don't think 1t win be u.teD to ~8Jllot8 :ell dmiDt-llOllday rancorous," Rep. Bill Gray, a Jackson ntcht'• opealJIC HI • supporter closely in volved with plat·
form deliberafions. said on NBC-TV.
To allow more time for debate, Ja. cks· on g' ets his re S»ect' today's convention starting time Wll moved up from 1:30 p.m. t.o noon
PDT.
Whi le unit\ was the convention
bvword. there was trouble on the ·an· d role 1• n · ~~· 11 Ca~ pal• gn :f~!W~"~~ lhe third day of demon-
-Just blocks from the convention
site, police arrested 134 anti-abortion
the nesotiations. "Make no mistake protesters at a clinic where abortions
about 11. What Jesse needs. Jesse will are performed. They were charged
-1 " with criminal trespassing. .unlawful
ATLA NTA <AP) -Michael
Dukakis is promising Jesse Jackson a
substantial role in the fall campaign
and the money to carry it out. in what
Jackson supponers say is a step
toward bringing Jackson's rnnst1·
tuency into t'!.e fold. .
votes in the primaries and rqisterina
thousands of voters along the way.
The two men. along with Bentsen, ge ~Members of Jackson's team will assembly or other counts. Until
be integrated into the Dukak.is cam-today. onl y one arrest ha~ been
paign at all levels .. although Dukakis reponed. aide Paul Brountas indicated it was Bentsen. in an intervi ew on CBS-notautomatic everyone would have a TV. showed no concern about plat-. b · form differences being aired on
Vandalism at Vietnam
memorial discovered
Meanwhile. a senior Dukakis aide
said today there was no tiptoeing
around major issues when the two
candidates fi nally met Monday to
work out the agrttmcnt.
"I will sa) 1t wa s one of the most
fra nk and candid • di'iCussions I've
ever been involved in." said the aide.
who commented onl y on condition·
h1 !1 name not be uscd."'lt was a very
open discussion with both sides
agreeing. a' the Rev. Jack.son put it.
that it would o;erve no good to allow
their ships to pass 1n the n1gh1:·
·forged a un ified front forthe Novem-
ber election. publicly ettdins days of
tension between the campa1sns that
followed Dukakis' -selection of
Bentsrn a week ago today -and the
governor's fa ilure to gi ve Jackson
ad\'anl·e word.
Toda). at a civil rights breakfast.
Jackson said. "We can·1 just join the
circle. We JOT to keep pushing the
circle back.·
Later. Jackson worked privately,
wi th ad\'iscrs. on his convention
'peec h for tonight. "We're still trying
to put it together." he said.
JO ~Jackst>n supponers will get cl ose televiS<>n tonight. "If they bring these
to half the 25 at-large members of the issues to the floor. well that's the way
Democratic National Committee to conventions are supposed to go,"
be appointed Friday. and a new DNC Jackson. the runner-up reluctant to
vice chair. quit. wa sg.i ve n 28 minutes-startina
· The dramatic news conference JUSt at 7:21 p.m. PDT -to address the
hours before Monday's kickoff of the 5,3 72 delegates and alternates.
Democratic National Convention Wtth his ri val wielding over-
W .\SHl ~GTO~ I .\Pl -ll.S. ·
park ranger.. !la~ a vertical scratch has
been d1'iCo,·ercd 1n the Vie tnam
Veteran\ Memorial that 1s deeper
than ..cars detected earli<.'r this ~ear
T'fielaicc;I \natch. four inches long
and an r1ghth of inch wide. doe!> not
touch an~ o'f the 58.1 56 engra ved
n"me\. The h1ghl ) poli'>hed granite:
..-.all 1c; c;o hard that National Park
~n 1ec offin alo; said the da mage onl )
c<iuld ha'e been 1n01ctcd deliberate·
I~
Park Ranger )am~·' l,:ance. "l:\o
served in Vu.'tnam in a nonromba·
tant role. discovered the damage Sunda~ morn ing hut ..aid h'e ..-.as .not
sure " hen the damagl' occurred.
Official<; ..aid 'andal1<im 1s a d1f-
ticult secun t~ problem for rangers
and l ' S Park Police bec.ausc people
routine!" touch the wall and make
ruhh1ngs of names.
The memorial is. the most popular
1n Wa<;h1ngton. and ha<; been since 1t
11ix·ned in J 982. a tt racu ng 12. 000 to
! 'r.f1t;f)\lSTlOTS daily. ~
"The problem 1s the nature of the
memorial. ... said Jan Scrug~. prest·
.<lent of thr Vlctnam Veterans Me·m::·
onal Fund that jointlv administers
the rnl·monal wi th the Park Service.
"What make-; it successful is the:
kd1ng people get from touching n.
from touching the na m·es. We would
• nc' er cons1dr r co' enng It wilh gla'>s
tn pmtt"C't it. ..
<\andra .Alie\. of the National Park
Sen 1C't'. and ~auggs Yid they want
'oluntl'l'fS to fo rm a mem ori al watch.
'>1milttr l<l a m·1ghhorhood watch. to
ass1.,1 I l.i Par~ T>olice in patrolh ngat
night
The aide said Sen. Llo\•d Bentsen .
Oulcaiis' running ma\e:-partlclp'iteif
on l~ in onl) lalit few minutes of the
talks. hu t thl\t.the others made sur~.he
agreed with C\'er~th1ng that had been
"orked out.
The hottom hnc from the meetmg.
JarkM>n hackt'~ said. was that the
chalknger "111 get thr respect he
thmk!> he earm·d in wmning 7 mil hon
In the Dukak1s-Jackson news con-
fcrenn• Mondav and in a later briefing h~ their top aide!>. these details of the
t..-.o rarum' agreement we re revealed:
-Jackso n will keep much of l'i is
urgani1at1nn intact. paid for by party
funds. and w1ll rnnt1nue to Cflrl')paign
tor the Dt:mocrat1c ticket.
-Hi\ traHI costs will be paid. ··1f
thl' man's goi to tra \'el. we're 'not
gmng to k t him n~ commerciitW" said
Joseph Warrl·n. a longti me Dukak1s
c;upportcr who ha'i becn-1n,olved in
came after a meeting that started with whelming J)owcr. Jackson struck a
breakfast and moved in phases gl·ntl eman·s agreement on platform
through a review of the campaign. di sputl'S. agreei ng to withdraw I 0 of
discussion of the cift and then an 13 mmonty planks he championed.
agreement on a new relationship. His biggest conce'ision was droppin"
_Ho_uw alc..c.Jack.sonsa id•hatwbile -~..f~r-freeze on
he would be in volved in the cam-Pentagon spending.
paign. Dukak1s must reach out to his · Panv sources said Dukak1s would
fQllowers as well. 1 instruct his delegates to vote .down A
"Gov. Dukakis must cohvey to Jackson's t all for higher tnes on the
tllose persons that ... he cares for wealthy and no first use of nuclear
them. that they are on his agenda. weapon'i. and th at Jackson's call for a
When 11 is all said and done. the Pak stin1an homeland would be de·
nominee must con\'l ncc people." ha ted and thl·n withdrawn wit hout a
Jack\On said. vote .
Keynote Speech featured style, smiles
.\Tl..\:'-. r .\ (.\Pl -Democratic fhe Omni attdience interrupted forgotten in Amcnc.-a:· th e mother of ~'-''noter .\nn Richards drew laurels thi: speech at least SO times with three said m hef letter. ,
-·and laughter -for a styeech that applause and laughs. Afterward. del-Of ber · t>t·
MacArthur grants awarded
to nation's most deserving
u~d an eas'. home\ tone and wicked egatcs said they were taking their "· couN: you ieve you re mi
humor to talk ahou·t what the Demo-fa vorite Richards' lines home with forgotten. Because you have been.
<:rat\ can do for American famili es them. ..., Richards ..aid. blaming th e Reagan administration. and what thl' Republicans have not. "George Bush 1s goTng to live for a
"This Republican administration long. long time with a silver foot in his She excited both major factions at treats u' as 1f we were pieces of a mouth. That one will stick." said the convention by heaping praise on
pullle that can 't fit together." the del~tc A.orence Peterson of Grand presidential nominee-to-be .Michael
<Ill( .\GO l.\PJ -.\writer who
had to burro"' monn for treatment
aftl'r he wa'i d1sahkd. 1n an accident
rec:C l\l'J one of3 I Mar.\nhur awardi.
announc:cd toda\ and \a1d he will use
the monc~ "to pa~ the people who
takl· care of ml· until I du."··
f iction " ntl·r .\ndre l>ubu'i said he
kit ··~ra111ude 'o l'Xl rcme ,that I
ha,en t rec:O\en·ll lrorn II \Cl. ..
l.1ke othn rt·ur1cnt\. Dubu'>.
who'>t' latest hoo~ wa' ''Thr Last
\\ort hk 'i'i E'l'n1ng ... leaq1ed of hi s ·
a..-.ard la~t "'ce k .
"J'\ e ht:en U\IOg horrowcd m OOC\
tnr th e people "'ho take care of me.'·
l,;H~ r>uhU>+. 5.1, IA .a.A-I~~-.
Starting Augla8t I st
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Community Newa
Alona the Cout
~1 onda' from h10, Ha"crhill. Mass.. Tl'.\ac; state treasurer said in her Rapids. M1c.·h. -Dukak1<i and runner-up Jesse Jack-
homc. He ..-.a, inj ured and had a leg Monda) night !>peech that depaned in The "sil ver foot" line. an instant ~n .
amputated two ~ear<; ago after he was !>lyle and tone from the traditional classic among delegates. was inter-The .. k s\('. .Jesse" chant rang out
hit h~ a car ""h1IC' helping another 'itemwmdcr that open s political con-rupted twice in the midst of it and after Richards called him ··a leader
mo1or1s1. vcntion\. ended with a roaring response from and a teacher whocan·open our hearts
Other \1at·.\nhur winners include 'kw York Ciov. Mario Cuomo. deli&hted delegates. and minds and stir our very souls."
a firefighter "ho 'itud1es the cult ural ..-.ho~ l>em~at1c keynote address "Poor George." Richards said. Dukakis backers chanted "Duke.
h1'>tnr: of tire\. noted Jan per-four 'car\ ago propelled him to hero gnnn1ng broadl). "He can't help it. Duke." when-Richardi said the ~t
l'U\\lon1st \'fa.\ Roach and the grand· 'itatu~ in the Dem~tic Pany. called He was born with a sil ver foot 1n his traditions of stra1ght-talk1ng Demo-
daugh tcr of Prc'i1dc nt Theodore R 1chard!I. effon "great." adding: "She mouth." era ts "live today 1n Michael
Roo<;e' l'lt ht thl'lf fu se tonight." Bush was barbecued early and · Dukakis."
Rl·cip u.·nl\ of thl· award!i, which Richards. who i~ Texas' state often by the treasurer from the state And she had warm words for
range.from\ I 50.000 to $375.000. arc trea'>urer and a S4-year-old di vorced where he has a Houston hotel suite another Texan. Sen. Lloyd Bentsen,
frl·r to u'>t' the money a .. they wish. mother of four grown children . saved that he calls home. Dukakis' designated running mate.
lnd1\lduah arc nom inated her most pointed quips for Vitt "lamdelithtedto ~herewith you "He knows how to bring us
Jnnm mou'h tor the fcll nwsh1p" -Prrre;11ddcenn
1
t
1
aGI ~e.'!~.utso .. h-bc. the GpP th is evening because after listening to together b) region. by economics. by
ihl·' -mil\ nul J pph -"·-------~~---~ -..t,G~· c~ou:rtue:-a.Buu:shw.-.aaillLI ut hu:e:3'sc~ycagu.rs~I ~fi,.uuurcd;u....-cC'A>laitlmfffilplefto. ::..W-.td-of Bentten. "And -------~----~~---~-~~------------~~~-----. vounttdedto knowwhata~f exas he~ al~ady ~akn G~~ Bu~
0
t
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All You Can Eat s41s
July'• 8u,,.I FHlur••
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TUCSOAY • S1uS11f C1ec1atore & Shells w/Meat Sauce
W[Df«SOAY • BBQ Me1tbllls & Mostawole w/Meat S1uce
THURSDAY • Stutted C1bb11e & R111ton1 w/Meat Sluce
FRIDAY• Spl(htllt w/Me1t Sauu & Me1tbllls _ , (~~!iuii) ~one wrtli Trl!Sh vecet1bles. cold cuts. $111ds.lrn h fruits. pudding.
brelds ind Pl~ZI
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accent sounds like ... Richards. who oner."
plans a 1990 race for Texas governor. Bentsen defeated Bush in a 1970
said in an opening line that quickly U.S. Senate race.
goi the crowd on its feet. ~legatrs from around the nation. Richards was emotional. too. She and Dukakis himself. called the
talked about a woman from Lorena. Richards speech a winner.
Texas who had written her a letter "He said he thought it was great,"
that complained that life has become Ri chards said aftl"f talking by tele·
difficult ckspite a· family income of phone to Dukakis. "He -wanted to
about SS0,000. know what he could say now because
"I believe people like us have bttn I'd taken all his good lines."
COSTA l•IA-1131 Newport Btvd. 722-8210
WllnlWTD-111 Weetrnlnet• Mall,197-8387
· .FULL LIN! PET STORES -----------------1 • If Reg. _Pupptea & Kittens I <......, Price Only) I
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U.N. chief says
Iran-Iraq conflict
could end soon
UNITED NATIONS (AP) -The have been pro mptrd by "'tactical
Iran-Iraq war could be halted wi thin a reasons·· -Iran's rcc.cnt battlefield week. Stcretary-Oencral Jivier Perez defeats -rather than by a desire for
de. Cuellar predicted after Iran ac-peace. Iran's economy also has suf-
ceptcd a U.N. cease-fire plan. But the fered deeply.
belligerents wctc fightinaapin today. World leaders generally praised
lran·s announcement and expressed Iraqi warplanes attacked a nuckar hope it would lead to an end to the
plant and other Iranian industrial conflict that has endanaercd com-targets today. Iran said a day after 1r b revenung itself in announcina it mercial shipping in the au s usy
would acc<·pt a year-old U.N. resol-waters and heightened the U.S.
ution call1nu for a truce in the eight-military presence'" the rq1on.
C> Perez de Cuellar said he would year-old war. assemble a 10-member team and
The contlict has claimed an esti-another force of at least 250 U.N.
mated one million lives. milital") observers to monitor a
Iran said It shot down three Iraqi Jet pro'lpccll ve tfuce.
fiahters today and Iraq said it downed "If I'm lucky. I may have a cease-
two Iranian warplane. Bu t both sides fire in a week to 10 dan:· he said.
claimed their planes all returned The Peruvian said :he also would
safel> 10 base. . d1o;patch LU..:. teams to both coun-
lran's official Islamic Republic tne!I at thl' end of the week to work on
News Agency also said Iraqi air raids an earl} prisoner exchangc.
near the city of Abvaz in Khwzestan Perez de Cuellar. whose peace
province killed and injured an un-mmion to both countries in Septem-
Sptcified number of people and ber ended in failure. said acceptance
inflicted soml" damage. • of the r\!sp)ution by both combatant!>
Iraq. which already has accepted 1s a breakthrou_Jh.
terms of the resolution. expres~d ··The resoluuon is a ~cc plan." he
skept1mm today about its ri val's said. "and it covers all asptcts. If it is
abrupt about-face. full v implemented. I think it means
Baghdad -said t~ f°e"vetSal m&y-an ~d of the ronOtet;-" ---
Gorbachev criticizes
Armenian separatists
MOSCOW (AP) -Mikhail S.
Gorbachev accused leaders of the
.\rmen1an unificauon movement of
expl01t1nga terntorial dispute to hide
their hosuhty to his dnve for reform.
Radio Moscow reponed toda~.
The So\'1et h:aderspoke Monday to
tM countrv'!i highe~t executive body.
tM Supreme Soviet. which rejected
tM movement to unite the Nagorno-
Karabakh region of the .\zerba1)an
republil' with neighboring Armenia.
He charged that leaders of the
campargn .were conservati ve and
corrupt and had ."stuffed their
wallet.," hefure ·hr came to · powr r.
Radio Mo.,cow said.
An <\rmensan1ournahst ~id today
that the campaign of civil d1sobe-
dicncl.' wascontmumg in the soulh(•rn
republics,
Mo'>l of Nagorno-Karabakh's res•·
dents arc .\rmenian. although the
enclave has no common borders with
Armenta.
S1nC'l' FdlrUal"\. Armcnsans have
been waging a ·sometimes violent
campaign for transfer of :--Jagorno-
Karabakh from .\zcrba1µn. which 1s
main!\ Mo'ilem and ha!> had contro l
of the ·disputed region since 1923.
Man~ voiced hopes that the greator
democrat11at1 on and openness under
(iorbachev would lead 10 the
Kremlin's acn·ptancc of their de-
mands.
Fliers rescued by Vietnam
Oown back to Philippines
BJ ne A11ocl•~ Pm• .
8.\NGKOK -Three U.S. Nav} aviators who were. rescued b~ a
Vietnamese vessel after their plane made an emergenq landing in the South
Oma Sea flew back to their base 1n the Philippines toc.ia). The anators arrived
1ri Bangkok from V1rtnam's Ho Chi Minh City. formerly Saigon. aboard a
transport plane dispairhed by the U.S. Embassy in Bangkok. They flew on to
tM Philippines on a plane sent from Cubi Point. said U.S. Embass) officials
who asked not be quoted by name. U.S. Ambassador Wilham A. Brown was ·
among those grct'llng the aviators at Bankok a1rpon. The three were nqi
1njurt'd 1n the July 12 1nc1dcnt and appeared 1n good condition. One of them.
Lt.j.g. Eli1abeth A. Stemneckl'r of Corpus Christi. Tcxas:was prcgnaat. .. This
1s1oing 10 be one strong bab~ .··she ~1d. gestunng to her belly before getllng on
a van to transfer onto tht' plane to the Ph1hpp1nes.
GaemJJa hardliner win• Contra 'ptMt
S.\NTJ> DOMINGO. Dominican Republic -A controversial hardliner
in the guerrilla war against Nicaragua's left 1st government has become the first
militan man to win a kc\ role in the rebel leadership. Col. Enrique Bermudez.
who sun 1ved an ouster attempt In Apnl. JOins a seven-member Contra
directorat<' that oversees the U.S.-backed insurJency against the Sandinista
governml'nt. The 56-year-old professional soldier. a former colonel in the
Nicaraguan National Guard under ex-dictator Anastasio Somoza. was elected
by a 44-2 'ote Monday b'· an assembly of rebel delqates mtttma here.
Bermude1 ran unopposed as an independent candidate fo r a one-year term on
the directorate. which 'iCts overall policy for the ~icaraguan resistance.
\>o
rn,!( \ Wfl)-)'IJU 11 W<l'lf 11w
'\r1ioe1io N.trvrdll) Oy C~ Tne
uult'• V)('ll '"" "' \111r llkt' wrl~,.
!!Ml 1\ \Oil tO ltif' IOU(:fl yt!I Int'
l1"<'''"J ,~ r11m N'<l \u~lllt' to
Ir! \t'l urt'l'r .ir 11.J lOmlcJn,111ly It\
lhe p('llt'll ,trl\Wt'r 10 vtiur lit'!)
\IN'<.1<11 'lt't'll
• •n•nu na111•-,..r
• NIHllf .. • WHLm-.911111·(911 .... ), •ne1 ·-· .. --·· lllB'n I• 111:11 Pl
·-
. fl#~
Loul• and Crlatlna Locasto, wboee newborn baby wu found
aba ndon ed ln the batllroom of a Unltled Alrllnea jet, lean a
cuatody bearing.·
Woman en airliner
hid her pregnancy
H El..~10' I (\Pl -\ "uman "'ho h1<l~A.·tt~k-•Jffi-~
and dcn1t•d -pcrhaf''l''en tn herself
-that !>he "''1' npn 11ng had onl~ a
o;hort llml· 10 1h1nl. a' \hl· ga'l' h1rth
\l'trctl~ 1n a Jl'lhm·r rc~troom. ht>r
laW\C'r 'Mlld.
"in ~fl m1nul(·.,.. \he had to make
~ome dl'l'l<.101'' -not onl~ ph~ <,1call}
ho"' tu dl'l l' l'r a hah' 1n a IX. J fl. hut
how don \hl' rl•-.cif, e tht' dill'rnrna
\hl'·, ncated fo r ha-.elt h~ not tell ing
an,onl''.". John I \\'1111:.irn' \a1d
\1 i1nda-..
"I Butl <.hl• nn t•r tfll'd 111 harm the
t:h lid . .\II 'ihl' t nl'd lo do "'<i\ htdl· I he
child the wa\·'ihe trn·d tu w nn·;il thl' pregnam·~ _. .. ht> added
W1ll1am<,. the laW)l'r for Chmt1na
LoCac;to of Staten Island. ~ Y . \poke
at a news conference after a JUVt'n1k
rnurt l·omm1'i<,1ont>r ruled that hn .:;.
da~ -old daughter "ould remain 1n the
1empor~trttod~ ol -'Yan \1a1eo-
( OUnl \
The· dO.,l'd-door hearing lollo.,..ed
Lo( n<itc), m110Cl·n1 pka la<.11.\l'ek toa
ti:loO\ l'hargl' 111 l'hild l'ndangermcnt.
The ~~-H·ar-old homt·maker. who 1<,
lrl·e o n ·$50.00<J hall. '" accused of
ahnndoning hl·r nl·whorn daughtt>r
undn th<:~· nl. <11 thl· Jl't re'> I room on a
l rn<,\-rnuntr~ flight
( llmm1<,~1ona l'atnc1a Rre..ce de>·
l ltkd the infant "''II ''a' in a fo<,ter
homl· at ka'>t until Frida\. "'hen
rnunt ' \on al "' 11rh·r' pn.~<.l·ni a repon
11n tht; homes ol I o( .1,10 rclall\ es as
111 thl·1r fitn l''>'i a'> a homl' for the bab~
Hut untll thl•n. lhl· Lo< a'>tos .,..111 be
.illt•"'l'd to '!')II thl'lr nl·"' daughter. "''':l f rancC\ I o< ;i<,111 under the \U~'" t\lon of thl· < ount~ Depart-
rTil'nt of \ociJI ~·n Il l'' Rrl'\C(' ruled
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /T~I! ~uty 19, 1988 * Aa
·search for eight
killed in copter
blast continues
'i.\' f-R ..\'\{ l\C 0 {.\Pl -Tht·
\t',1r\ h Im \·1ght t·n·1.1. mc:mbns bc-
lil'' t•d lo.died "'twn a 11.Ja"~ helicopter
r'n~\ll'rlOU\I\ nploded tontlnUt'd
tod.i . "'1t h a (' oast C1uard l'uner
plo"' ing thrnugh the Pa cilit outside
lht• ( ruldt"n hilll' ( 0 3\1 uuard Of·
fi ua 1, ,,11d
·· 1 hl·r..:\ '11 11 no '>1gn ot \Ur' •'or~
bu1 v.l··re hoping and l11ok1ng:· said
( 11J't (1u:ml I t ( mdr Jack Hardin
• 1 hl· tutll·r Hlall.ha"' "'>l.·arching
thl' .i11.:a ·· \J1J fll'll\ Onlt l'r Robl'n
\), .iltl·r' ffr '.1 1J t hl·rc: "'l'n' no planr\
al1111 durr•1g thl· n1gh1 hut added lhl·
cuthr · "'J' .qu1p!)l·d "'''h ~arl'h
l1j1Ah 1., 'l JO lhl· area 1n thl' dark ·:
I h BIJl ~hJ"' "'a" alrt·Jd\ <ii <;t·a
'-'hln thl· \'\f'lm1on t'lt urrrd on
\111nd.1. Jlld l lluld rl·mc1in ou1 lor
•,nn.il JJ" '.11d Pell\ f)tfal·r Da'l'
.\nda • '" ·
I h\· 1J u'r 11!. th1.: C\plo,ion that
do"'nt'l! 1hl' \fH-5'lE ~a Dragon
hrlil •rta \\h11.h "a'i t unduning a
mut rw l"\l'r 1-.t rl·ma1ncd am~ 5tl"~
l hl· w.1rrh tor '>Ur'•'<ir<t "'J'
ham pt·reJ tn dl'n\<' tog that rl·dutl·d
'10,1b11l1' to 150 'ard~. \aid ( oa~I
Cruard Pt'lt~ nmc~r Thuma'> ( 01.\an
'ame'> ot the ml\'\1ni J")l'r\onnc>I
"'ere ht-ing "'11hht'ld until tht· 'J\ ~
.had nn1 Hil'd rl'la11' t''
···1 hu1.· "l'll' l·1ght f'>l'opk on h11ard
\\ \' l'\Pl'l l nu 'ur\I \Ill' ..aid
C crn :in Ht· '-<!Id '>t'arl h t rl'\\.., found
·a lot 111 "'rl'l l.agl·· 1t1at rnd uded
'-l"\ t'n hd1m·t~ in thl .Hl'J d1reL th
<1lhhcirt· lrc101 !)an f 1ant i<,u 1 .
11 '.\a' th\· fir\t 111:11111 Jll"l,dl·nt
'"' 11' n~ .en \1 H-ql lto.,..l·,er the
hl'l1l • •r 1t·r '' oa""d • •n an l'arl1n
m11dd till' < H-5 ~I .• in :1mph1h1ou'
:i,,;1ul1 .JH\ ratt hullt 111 tJff\ a' man\
·l' "' lull\ ,1'11Wd \IH•lr' iha 1 l\.\IC~·
.hJ' lx·\·n lht · 1t)1t'l I 1 < •• ngrl·"wnal
1nqu1r1t''
f \\t•nt\ \l"l\ll1'0i\'ll h.i\t:d1nl IO
prn 1uu'>, rJ\hl'' 11! < H,5 IE. rnptl'r'
according to .\ ndrr"' I 1gh1J·11xl\ l·d1·
wrial d11l'1 t111 1 .. r Intl rnJt H•nal ()l ..
kn.'-1.' lm.il!l., \l.1g..1111, 1n Ir' •nl'
Tw_a__kidnappedglrlslocated
\ \( R .\ \H' ro ( .\P) -Tl.\O
'm.111 girl' -•JOl' "ho had ht-en
m1,,1nl! tor"' Wl'l'kc; -"ae har~
"'Ith tfwir tam1k ' and a dl·at-mute
l U'lndrn n "':l' 1n l U\l<Kh toda' 1n d
kidnapping l'Cl\l' 1ha1 roi"1ce \did 143\
hrolo.l'n h' a 11h'>l'r' dnl "'1lnl''>'>
<>nl' ,,j' thl' g.1rl\. -l-~l·ar-old ( anJ1
f Jl.in,o wa' found \1 unda' 1n 3
l'hur1.h a al.\I '>PJCl' equipped wnh
hl.inl.l'h llg.hh and a ll'I<" 1'>100 'l'I
I ht· 'pau.· v.a' l11{atl·d dirt'Cll~ undl·r
1hr 1hur1.h JI Wr. one 1n'e"11gatcir
\31tl
\J, rJml'nt11 p11l1t l' orli1.er' and
rount 1 shl.'n tr' 1.kpulle'> arre\ted
Kl·nnl'lh \I\ in \1il'hrl. 32. of Elk
(ir(I\\', J p:l rH1 mC' CU\tod1ar. at thC'
I n1ll'd \k th11d1st ( hurl h 1n
'uhurhan l I < '''" l' arkr thn tral rd
thl' l!Cl'll\l' r lall' '11n thl' blue ...Cdan
1ha1 :.ilkg.l'd h "a' u\1·d 1n lhl' ah<lut·
11nm lk hJd n 1 pre' 1uu' cri minal
rl· .l•rd
\!In hi\ Jrr\·q \1 11.hd alleged h
d1rntl'd 11flilcr\ tn th\· g1r1,· 1oca11on
Jnd pill 1ll' 1n1crrog.~ttl'd him through a
\1gn ·litn g.u.1gl' 1nll'rrrrtn authontu."'
'JJJ r hl 1JnJpp1ng I I Jbnt o I.\ ho
\\J' .il-\th .. , tl·d .lunl' J 14 n1k 'ht' pla~l'd
" 1 h r rtl'n1h 11u f\u.k hn '-.1rr:1 ml'l'l IO
.Jr.1nml·ri : rt'l l'I 1 n .1 PJ t 111na l tde·
'''·"., Jll\·n1111n on f 11 \ Hmadca!>11ng.
t ' \ nwnt'a ' \I "i \\Jn tc:d .. prt\·
~·Jm
I ticrt "J' n•• rndll .1 l11in o f '>l'\Ua l
rn11lt',tdt 111 n ':i1d I l'rr' !\.no" Jes.
'11\'1 ·.ti Jl!l·nt-1 -d1.1r~l 111 the \acra-
r. l'r.tc f Al nt1i l
~!,~~~~' 2~1~;~?.~~~:d ~a::.•m~"~d~<~=:~.~~,:d 3no 'l'rornl tlml· 1n 11 "'l'el.' lirl· '>lrul lo. a .. ( hl'nlll !!l'~ir' madl·rontact "'llh thl· hnl. out ol there. hl' recalled 'Pnn ll:" "'l'rl' in,1.1llcd there h111
drrnntnv.n ,k~\craf)l'r r:t\ag.1ng l"'O .i_n l°ll'tlm :i l out let ·· lau\ing a rlash ·1 \\J'> iumping three steps .~t .a tire ·,1~1t1ah. d1~ nut 1mmed 1atel~ ·
lloor'> Ol'ilr thl' top of tht.: 'X-,w~ l1rl· timl·." ..aid Bradlc~ Frarik<,. an kno~ 11 th n "'l'll' in opc.·ratmn
I nion B:-1nk IOl.\t:r and cau'•l)g I h,· f1rl··, lir't .ilarm. a '111 l'ml·rg-a'>ht.°\IO\ rc:nrn,al \\Ork.er who was on Both thl· hr'>t lntl·r<.,tJtl· Jnd l n1on
SJ -0.UIJ{J damal!l' lx·fnrl' fin·tighter<, l'nn rall camt' in :it X 2' pm.. thl' ~Xth floor "'hen he heard an Bani. bu1ld in£?' "'l'rl· u w .trurted
rut OUI lilt' hb1~· ;in ;1rd1ng Ill h rl' ( lm·I Donald () l'\J\Uat 1t1n l'all u1 me ()\Cf th(' build· tx·iun· a J<.i-J r1rdin.1na · rl·qu1nng
f\\o 111 thl· J 5(1 lirdi~htcr<, "'ho \1J nn 1 n~ Th1.: firt• \\Jo; out h' 4·06 ing 1ntan1m ~ 'pn nkl1.·r, in Jll h1gh·fl <.(.''>
ll'\JlOOUl·d \l\1nJa ~ n1g..h t Wert• pm . 11J11nal'I \aid \ fl'\\ f'\'Clpk \\efl• h1l1 0l.\10g and l hl' f 1r!>t lnll'f,1Jte (m · hurned fiq~
tre:Hcd h' p:iramt'dlC''>JI the scene for \1 1rh~ll·I Tuma. "ho '!'~L' on the '""1l' 'Jr.m1hk,1 Jod fdl I "'a'>.On the tl11M\ 11! thl· ,ta1t··, talk'lr tiu1ld1ng
\.·\hau'>tmn anti heat l"<pm url'. liu't · hu1ld1n{' 't5th flum "urJ..1n[! latl' l'ith tln<ir "hl·n 1 'J" firefightl'r' ~1 rc.'lig.h t 1•r, '-ltd .sltl·f"'a rd the~ "'l'rt'
lhl'rl' \\l'fl' no 111hn lnJUrll'' dlll ng kgal rl'\l":tnh "hl·n tht• hta1c ,om1ng up lhl' 'l.i1r' ·· h,1•t·h Jhk IP \ltW 1 ri•rr. h~.rn1ng tht·
\'apor' frnm l'hl·mirat' t1':1ng u'ied hrolo.l' out 'kllll 11 kit hlo.l' tl.\O I 11.c the h2-,to~ F1r<,t l ntl'~taH' ,·rtnt· hudd ing
in a furniture rdinl'>h1 ng pro1rc1 on n rlf'l"on' rod~tl th\' F1gurn1J \tn·rt Rani. hu1IJ1nj. \\ hrch "'3' hit h~ :i f-n~t' rx·11rk "'l'fl' 1n1urt•J 1n that
lhl· .'.ith llnortau~d thl' hla1e. "l\ICh tcma dl'\.J,ta11n£? flit \la' ~. thl' l 'nlOn hlJtl' .inJ 11nl' rt·r,Pn d1C'd
hurnl.'d 1ha1 floor and thl' 35th. nt~ lh-rl·turnl'd 111 ht'11t1ill· "hl'fl' he Han~ \014 1.'.r \\:l\ no1 l'Qu1 ppcd \'Ith \IJ1nll'0.1nu· ""rl.c·r .\lnaflder
rirt• lkpartmcnt <,pokl•\man J im .rnJ l U)-1.\IJrl.n \P\llll'd the tlaml'S firl' 'pnnl.k r\ .1lthou~h It 1.\3\ In !ht•. ll.1nd1 "'·" 1.rlh·d "'hl'O he rcidc an
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,
.
Wading is safer
-than diving into
political waters
State Controller Gray Davis is appamitJy one of those
politicians who see thiP&s in black and tVhite. He has no use
for the middle pound or shades of pay.
Davis also apparently wants a biger and better political
career. Who can blame him? How many people can name the
state controller or know what he does?
Those who listen to Sacramento's pulse. say Davis is
hungry. The in-the-know crowd pttdicts be will try to move
into the 1ovemor's office in 1990. Ifs not a bad plan. Gov.
DcukmeJian 's star is fadina and the field is wide open -ripe
for an aspiring politician.
But a run for the governor's office requires political
connections. money and that ever-imponant name recog-
nition. ·
Maybe name recosni ti on was one of Davis· goals when he
pounced on an audit his staff had made of 12 school districts.
h seems the audit revealed some schools had more
administrators than they were supposed to have. It was too
good to be true. a real political opportunity.
Davis called a press conference to denounce the school
districts. proclaimed that too much state money was being
spent on administrators and that more money should be used
for teacheTS. He also said the district.s had been fined.
Visions of grateful parents. appreciative teachers and an
addition to his political base may have danced in Davis'
imagination. but those visions were shon-lived.
Last week Davis' political coup went as sour as milk left
on the door step too long when state Superintendent of Public
Instruction Bill Honia came to the defense of the school
districts. Honig's press secretary told the Daily Pilot.''Biil is
mad. He reallv trulv believes that it (the audit) wasn•t just
shoddv. but was a deliberate misrepresentation of the data."
Consider the case of the Ocean View School District. one
of the school districts Davis chastised.
The audit said the district had three too many
administrators. Bu t a closer examination showed that two of
people were teachers teaching other teachers. They had been
pullea out of classroom duties to work in a state-required staff
development program. Topics included updates on new
teaching methods. textbooks. state requirements and pro-
grams -things that are supposed to improve the quality of
teaching and education. The third was a teacher who was
pun i n~ together a cra sh program on bilingual education.
\\ ~ r ( ther teach-en--c>retdmimstrators':'
The audit rules sa) if a person is not assigned to a
classroom. the job is adm inistrative. If the job is adminis-
tratixc. th~ person doing it must be an adntinistrator~ and
'thrre should be no more than one administrator to' every nine
teachers.
Davis apparently never thought to check with Ocean
View Superintendent Dale Coogan. lfhe had. he would have
disco,·ered the district was saving money. Two people could
ha,:e been h1req to take care of the staff develop~ent.program
and a new bilingual education program. but it would have cost
the district about three times what it was paying for tt\~
teachers al read~ on staff. .
Davis also could ha e checked the staff breakdown for
the distric t. He \\OUld have discovered that ll has 33
administrators. not 36. Of that total. 18 are princi pals. That
lca\(~S 15 administrators to manage the district's $30 million
budget. its business. transportation. personnel and other
departments.
But Da' is d1dn"t check. He called a press conference.
Ocean V1r" and some of the other 11 districts have filed
for wai \'Crs from the fi nes. Ocean View officials explained -
" hat the tcachrrc; "erl' doing and wh y m its wa iver request.
'' h1 rh could nempt 11 from Da' is· fine.
If. as soml.' statr school officials say. many of those
rcquec;tc; arl' appro' ed. the episode will soon be fof$Otlen. But
there·s a ksc;on in it fo r Davis and would-be poliucians who
want to tcc;t the political waters of higher Qffice .
Wh.:n entering murk ~ political waters. it's best to wade in
carl.'lull } rather than di ve in head-first A would-be candidate
getc; \\l't hoth wa' s. but candidates who wade have a lot better
chanCl' of walking out under their own steam while ·the
rcckk,c; d1' ers often end up with their heads stuck in the mud.
_J
.. --. -----. ~---
~
u
Pesticide Scare couldiJurt-
state agricultural industry
Do the repeated television stories
of the dire plight of the country•s
farmers cause you anguish? The
dro usflt isn't in far away Africa. It is
here in the world's breadbasket.
It is particularly difficult for
spoiled-Californians to suffer for our
own people. Few. if any. will admit to
the Dust Bowl legacy of the Okics.
Surrounded-by supee;abundancc we
take the miracle of California agricul-
ture for granted.
Agnculture is truly California's
golden egg. I despair because there is
an insidious move afoot to kill the goose that lays our golden egg.
For more than 200. )'e,ars. Cali-
fornia has shared her dream and her
bount\'. However. the state's excel-
lent harvests don't just happen.
Blessed with a fortuitous growing
clrmate m nmri;aricHand. fanight~
"ater managemeot and dev1lopmcnt
have made extensive irrigation poss-
ible. .
. -. One farmer provides food and fiber
for I 16 peo81e -86 in the United
States and 3 overseas. That figure of 11 6 is up from only 46 people per
farmer in J 960.
EvervCalifomia farm dollar,ener-
ates S3)n the state's economy. hat's
an annual impact of $54 billion!
Would \OU agree that agricu lture is ·our golden egg?
There is a move afoot to under-
mine confiden ce in our harvest by
insinuating that go vernment is doing
an inadequate job of protecti ng the
nati on's food supply from potentially
harmful agricu ltural chemicals: The
latest challenge is a recently publist\,ed ~book: ··Pesticide Alert: A Guide 10
Pest1cide6 in Fruits and Vegetables" b~ Lawne Mott and .f'.(aren Snyder
published b) Sierra Club Books.
.\dd 10 1h1s Ralph Nader's reissue of his pubhcauon ··Eating Clean."~
.\nd. of course. the bombshell in 1962. Rachel Carson's "'Silent
Spri ng."
· As a member of the board of the State Department of Food and Agri-
culture these charges concern me, and
I have been working hard to sec if
these (hargcs about the ·qoality and
the safety of our foods are justified.
This is what r ve found out.
Agricultural chemicals. used prop-
erly. play an important role ii:t the
productivity of our acreage and the
increased availability and variety of
fresh produce.
Fruits and vegetables from Cali-
fornia are produced under the most
stringent pesticide laws and rcau-
lations in the world._ To ensure the
quality and wholesomeness of Cali-
fornia produce for the consumer the
CDFA (Cal ifornia Department of
f ood and Agriculture) routinel y sam-
pks and analyzes raw agricultural
mm modmcs-from-whotmle. chain
store distribution and retail markets
a~ well as their point of origin. for
pesticide resi dues .. In addition,
('Df A has added three new specialty
programs to its overall res idue-
monitoring program. The new pro-
grams consist of (I) pre-harvest
sampling. (2) sampl_in~ of produce
destined for processing and (3)
·focused monitoring of targeted
pesti~ides.
The collected produce samples arc
analyzed in four resrdue laboratories
in Fresno. Sacramento. Berkeley and
.\nahe1m. CDFA labs have the speci-
fic anah·tical methods and s1a1e-of-
the-art Instrumentation for virtually
ever) pesticide registered on food
commodities. i.\lso. the labs use three
di'fTerent multi-residue screening
methods-chlorinated hydrocarbon
K HO . organophosphate (O P) and
carbamate -which have the
capabilit~ of analyzing for more than 100 pesticides per sample.
Forgive me for being so technical
but after spendin~ hours in the lab.
t~1s is as si.mplc as I can get about the
JACKIE
HEATHEI
work that goes on the~. I was very
impressed with state-of-art equi~
ment. the expertise and the dedi-
cation of the staff. I really boil when
certain retailers have hired outside
labs as a marketing tool to certify that
their produce is somehow safer than
their competition. .
According to "Pesticide Alert" in
Cal ifornia. which grows SI percent of
the nation·s vegetabl'Cs and a la~
percentage of its fruit. 14 pirccntOf"
the produce analyzed by the state labs
contained pesticide resid ues. The
figure for the entire -cottntrv is 36
percent and imports have residue on
64 percent. ··
The authors fail to state the exact
amount of chemical compounds
found on produce. In fact. according
to. state reports th-:· residues it d~
tcctcd cari be measured only m
allowabte parts per million or parts
per billion.
To get an idea how minute ··one
pa.rt per million .. is visualize one
facial 11ssue in a stack of facial tissues
higher than the Empire State Build-
ing. For "one part per billion"
imagine a sheet of toilet paper in a roll
st retchi ng from · New York to Lon-
don.
Common sense tells us to wash all
produce. peel when appropriate .. buy
domest1callv grown produce. ·buy in
season and avoid waxed produce.
ff vou·re still nervous. you can al"'a~·s gro" your own.
Col•mo/11 J•citt Hr•IMr 11 f
lormrr m•yor of Nrwport &•di.
Ted T~rnerpaints glowing
portiait of the Soviet Union
..
DAN
WALTERS
Identity
crisis in
Atlanta
ATLANTA -Ostensibly. Dtmo-
crats have assembled themselves i' this steamy Southern city to noma.-
natc a candidate for president.
But there's no mystery about that.
Massachusetts Gov. Michael
Dukak.is has won the nomination and
he has already chosen h\s runnint
mate. Teus Sen. Lloyd Bentsen.
The purposes of this vast expen-
diture of money and human enc11Y. ii there are any. must be fo,und
elsewhere.
There arc. of course. the petty,.
personal. purely political or
pecuniary purposes. JoumalislSwlltmtyou they're here-
to cover ttie story. but most a~ hard-
prcssed to define what.the story is. To
many. it's simply a reward fro~ ~
company and/or an opportu~aty ~o
pursue catter changes. a aiaanttc
Journalistic job fair. 1 Local politicians. show up to bC
seen by thcirb~thren and toso,licit-
as energetically as any of the hookcra
who walk Atlanta's streets -atten-
tion from the reporters. And lobbyisu
for hundreds of special interests are
here to make connections with poli·
ticians.
Man). perhaps most. of the del-egates are in Atlanta to enjoy them-
selves in the endless rounds of social
events. their own rewards for faithful
service to their party or good luck in
backing the winning candidate early
enough.
As those currents flow through
.\tlanta. one senses that the Demo-
cratic Party is undergoing one of its
periodic cnses of identity. .
Most of the Democrats in Atlanta
th is week re resent the liberal core ca
!lie.party as 1Chas evo v since tlt7
Vietnam era. A poll of dclcptes
conducted by the Atlanta Journal and
Constitution fo und that by la margins. most of tllem want m
federal spending for almost eve
thing but military defense. In t
hearts. Jesse Jackson. with his fi
rhetoric about the dispossessed a
his tonsue-la,shinJs of the· co
ations. 1s the ript candidate;
sa\•ing the things they want to hear.
But those liberal Democrats
are tired of losing. They have
election after elcrction. liberal
didates such as George McGov
and , Walter Mondale say the ri.
things. push the right idcologJ
buttons and lose. ~':
So. without much emotional i :
vestment. they will vote for Duka • :
an ice cube-cool tec~nocrat who. represents. they hope. a good cha ·
of wresting the White Hout( from t
Republicans. And they will clap a
cheer on cue for Oukakis a
Bentsen. a Texan so conservative t
he stands to the right of ma Republicans. so that the telcv-isi
cameras will convey the image,
false as it may be. of enthusiasm a
unity.
Is 1t better to be right or to be
winner'?
The Republicans confronted m
ihe same questio.n a acncration~ when the Democrats seemingly
lock on the White House. Ba
Goldwater represented the con-
servative soul of the Republican
If \OU "ant to lift \'.Our e)e~ for a •What did Lemn face "hen he Party. was no~ted for preside
tin) ·moment from 'events in the took over Russia? His part) "needed and lost the pr?'sta?n'tv-iq.Jan ·
--------~con\'enlibn ffiller '" Atlanta-. tn to mold--a-ncw--kfnd~ofcitrzen. cmc..------r;,...;...,;__-'--" __ -:-to::T".1·ndonTol nson. ewas. inc .
Congrrss appears io be on the verge of at last enacting law them tra vel to another part of the city who would embody all the vinues'9f WILLIAM f the esse Jackson of the ripht. · to require basic survival geaF on commercial fishing vessels. that is th'e headquarters of the Turner the socialist ethic' -clean-Lhmbed. • The social upheavals o the 19~
Boat safety
Both houses should be strongly urged to push ahead and Broadcasting Co. This is ·the outfit right-thinking and dedicated to the · BucKLEY and 1970s saved the Republicanl
recti fy one of the nation's worst safety shortcomings. that has given us the most innovative state. The kind of model superpcrson from having to answer the qucsti ..
. There' are some 33,000 commercial fish ing boats in the (and valuablclTV programming idea that would be a shining example 10 because they ruptured the Deme: of the decade: round-the-clock news. all.·· cratic Panf s already-delicate balanq Uni t~d States-. But for about 90 percent of them -ve ssels That news is reported even-• What 1s the gbal of communism? of interests. The R"cpublicans ca~
under ~00 tuns -the government requires only that there be -handedh . But the strangest trans-.. .\ high I~ developed people. givii:ig Goebbels on the Jews. His answer'? "I tali zed on the split to win four of ti*
• a life 1ac-krt for each person aboard. Nothing in the rules about formation since the discovery of thr freel) all they ca n to a society and in wanted to go over there and paint a· last fi ve presidFnti_al contests.
thermal bod} S\Jits ... nQt hing about life rafts or even a radio transsexual operation is what has return'\aking back all they need." beautiful ponrait :· •
beacon to call for emergency aid. · . happened to Ted Turner. the founder · • How has the Soviet Unio n dealt Pressed to explain the distortions. Dukakis is promisinf to win bt
Though industf) leaders. and even many of· the of CNN . He has become a Soviet with 11s ·artists? "Just outside of he just said itapin. "Well. that's trot. app_caling to the middlc-of-thc-roeil.
fi shermen. oppose federal regulation as being too costly and apologist. In fact. his st.ufTis so red it Moscow. livi ng in the most amazina that's absoluttly trot. we wtnt over middle-class. white Democrats~
probably 'int."'ffectual. there is need for establishment of • wou ld embarrass the Daily Worker to grace. 1s an enclave of top Russian there to painu ponrait. we painted 1 felt themselves drivel\ Out of the
· · d d Th Id 1· . publish it. -artists. <These) princes of literature ponrait. anA I'm not going to by its incrnsinaly libnal cast. H mmimum stan ar s. atwou save tves. ·-·Tlutnot the Ell.t'.Yclopedia Britan-_ha".£ their homes in this Russian .apoJogizc_fotl •• sclectionofBcntscnwasaclcarsi
---WHterly (l'U.> Su nica. and here hes the storY.Last Dcve r.fVRi s. The wonderful irony is that when ihat~ht puts Winniiijllind ofli
March. Turner Educational ~rvices. • Is iher~ freedom ofttliaion in the this beautiful portrait of the Soviet ~ndplc. He needs ccrnservativt
which is an arm of the broadcasting So"iet Union? Forpwdsakes. "Athe-Union was cxhibittd in the Soviet Texas and th inks that Btntsen wil
com pan\'. aired a seven-hour pro-ist though the state may be. freedom Union. the Soviet '°vcrnfMftt ran a deliver its tlectoral votes. · •
gram called "Portrait of the Soviet to worsh'P as-you please is enshrin~ disclaimer. criticizint the prosram-. It was. fll'lratively. 1 slap in
Edwiri Meese
Cla1 m1hg 'indication is Mee~·scl umsy way to save face
as he. at the same time. gives in to pressure from fellow cor~servatives and from Vice President Georje Bush that he
resign . •
Like-m inded right-wingers lost patience with Meese back
when it became clear that his legal problems were making it
impossible for him to be an effective leader on issues de•r to
the right's hean. such as laking away women·s riaht to
abortion or getting ideologues onto the Supreme Court ....
. 1Jntllftw9(ft.)11.,.,.,.,
Union." The next thing we knew. in the Soviet constitution." for. failinp to dcscribf tht hanh fact to Janson. one txattrblted
Turner te1med up with the Encyclcr-• But h.aven't the Soviet Union's rtalitics o tht Sovitt Union. the fact that the civil-riahts
Ptdia Britannica to take those seven managers in fact failtd to create an This was all too much for L. Brent learned of the decision from
houn and ruh them for the education advanced society'.' Horsefe1thtn. BozeJI m. chairman of tht Media ttpontr. rathtr than Qukakis' lips..
of school children. And this notwith-"h's modernization on a arand scale Research Ctntcr in Washinaton. who And.as of Su-.:.·y. t .. _ •ve of 1 standing the universal pannina rt· -a great success." \vrot~ to the Encylopedia Britannica ,...nvcnta'on. J1e'k-10n .=s~still cci"ed when "Ponrait" was broad-• Didn't a dozen million citizens distnbuton. and 1ot blClt from w ...
cast on WTBS. ptrish in Sib«ia as the mull of the Michael Jirasek. wtto is "min11tt. \till talkina about bavillJ his
The first sentenct ofWashinston policyofGulq'.'Siberia"Utedtobfa communicationa services." tht ·namt pllCCd in.nomination for
Post revitwtr Tom ShaJcs.. who one-way ticket to nile: it's now a dumbest lcttero(the ye1r. via Pftli*ncy. demandina an
auards the liberal tablets in this world chance for yount Soviets to do' Jirasn·s position is that whatever defined ''partnership." still hintina
as Fafner auarded the Nibflunp' somethina for their country, make istold iNldcquately by the movie ljrts battles over pany Dlllform t~asurcs. was. "Don Ted Turntr some extra monev. maybe evtn stan C'Omcted b)• e~hK'ational rad'ina that could bf ~ified by tht -------------------------, ha,•e a few thousand acres in tht a whnlC' new life:' matter that aecompanics it. So? Mae into the ditrord that has bectJ ....., a..-. Urals that ht's •-ina to unload?'' • Could it bt that all this time. all Lo.about..__., ~ ....... rflL·• liA.WM dl~na to.tht Demonats.
ORANGE COAST ..., .....
_,111>1 S"'fd 11'> .. 'f 0.f of lhe )'elf Al
330 W Ba~ St (;()st• ..,.... C.A
AOO<f"SS CO'•~f 10 Bv• t!leO Costa..,. CU26lL
'•'-• (dttOf .. ,...,
Aaoctllt(ttor ,_a.Iii """ """" . .........
~c..
P ....... ·r amov~ "" ~"' "' It's a po' lit~I _._ •-u .... __. Shales was just warm ina up. ·"This is thtse )'tan. our thoulhts about Lenin under _Adolf Hitltt. in Omuny, -...,_, ,,,... .. -u a.t not a 'Letter from tht USSR.' It's and Stalin and Khrushchev and distribute iuo 111 tht Khool daildml. nritbcr man, the ~lie °"==:x:-,.... ~ Dif«tor mott like a postcard from Binky and Brtzhntv and Andropov wttt mit-nd th thnn 80 Hot nor tht charismatic IKbon. k
'-'.. Biff ai Cainp Whitr#h1i.'. taken' "Tht lonatt you'tt twrt. IM ~adin;n ~'k'r,: tlctptio.r: tlsis ·for Cfnain whit cards his ri'°'I C~ Olftctlf Evtn so .• the EB propk undcnook m0tt you diK'OVtr bow man~ wrona position. . ptay.
llr ,... to make it a taninll instnament for ideas you havt abouttht Sov~ts." Tht Kttmlin should live Tumtr Dubkit may-~ daf aomi
Cirt...._Onctor the instnK1ion of Amftia'1 Kbool TtdTumerwas1tt011edabou1this tht Order of Stalin, tacept that thf and whb it die'~ ala o.,1111....., "hiktttn. How b9d is dae Tunwr travntv on his own "Crotlfirc" Kmnlin would be mtaum.d to Cft1ri11. winhll Dtwsllk .
811S111m 91k•-.., ponrait of the USS~.'! . ftatutt'. Pat Buchanan put ii to him .1i~ttSulin-witlllunrr'1idnlof' '-..._ • '-•4lilicy
-,.._.. · • Thf K-mntin meet-to bttona to-mu tflis "" the mMr ~1r1W Stahn. .._ e ll*T. -. ''*''*'°""* tht C?in.. "Now. it btlonp to &he ,, peckoflinaboutthtSovidUnionin .,...,.~~.... M•n II 8 .,1 1 ff ~-_J~~~~~~~~~~~~~!!!!~~~~~~E~ pcoplt... OM f*'klF ttfttt • ~ ~--w••liL:~~====::.::=iiliiiilii~=-~~~~~=:-•__:.:.;
...
Oran~ Coait DAILY PILOT IT~ July 11. 1111
J -------
'GreatNt .-·
Show·' bJ Symphonies
Anaheim From the Sturm und' Dn111 open.
ina of a Christoph Will ibald von
Gluck o~ra ovenure to the
IJ llVTll MOllRIS boisterous clow of Hector Berlioz'
..., ... c.111, •• 1 .. fantastic" symphony. the second
Pacific Symphony Orchestra conttrt The Ringling Bros. and Barnum cl of the summer stason ran the pmut
Bailey clown rollqe has bttn rnpina of emotions under the superlative
a study of senselessness for twenty direction of Eduardo Mata Saturday
yars now, and plans to celebrate its evenina.
universary in s1de-splittin1 style. This event. which was played
I before a one·third-capacity crowd at Bcainnina today at the A"aheim Irvine Meadows Amphitheater. also
Convention Center. the RinJlin1 marked the year's final local appear-
Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus ance of the New World srmphony.
will pay tribute "to its merry . the Miami-based nationa trainina
minhmakers by reviving time-orchestra of postaraduate music stu-
honortd clown gags. The en111tment dents which has bttn in residence at
will run until July 27. when the UC I for the past three weeks.
circuswill Pl{'ck up and 3.897 feet of Both orchestras combined for the
circus train will move on to the Los length of the program. This made for
Angeles Spons Arena. a sprawling stnng section in the
The classic car crunch, first per-ovcnure to Gluck's "lphiaenie en
formed in 1 Q40, will be presented. '\ulide" ( 1774). which requires a
Countless clowns will cram into a classically sized ensemble of 40
jalopy in celebration of the American players or less. Still. Mata harnessed these forces for some surprisingly pastime of''car cramming." chamber-like lyrical sounds that ~o~-
conibine for 'f3.iitastic'· evening • •
cltar. articulite strings. The latter also "''as h1ghl~ dis·
t1 ngu1shed b~ beautifull) e' oca11 ve.
haunting Enghsh horn solos Mata
took the Iona repeat 1n the first
mo' ement. wh ich added not onl~
minutes but strength to the proceed·
ings. Ho"'·e, er. om11t1ng the Ion~
n:peat in the "Mart'h to the Scaffold'
somewhat d1min1shed that founh
mo' l'ment's dramatic scope.
Thl' per<·uH1on section had a rouah
llmt· in mo,ement fo ur. which bqan
\Ao 11h mudd' solos in the timpani. and
in fi ,t' ~ "Dream of Witches'
5>ahbath" -which passed ofTunn).
C'lang~ tubular bells as church bells.
'111 1. thr bass drum rolls latenn that
fi nale were dd1c1ousl ) menacma.
first movement (allqro -quick) a
little too heavily. this more' majestic
qualitv actually worked well here.
The second moveme -the only
or1t' not based on a Weber piano duet
but instead on a Chinese ttleme
Weber used in his incidental score to
Schiller's oriental drama -Turandot''
-featured exemplary contrapuntal
percussion-ensemble hnes.
The centerpiece of the pr<>&ram .
however. was the S41/1-minute "Sym-
phonic . Fantastique.'' actually the
first part of Ber1ioz' "An Episode in
the Life of an Anist.'' Op. 14. (The
rarel) performed second part.
"Lelio.'' was last played "'<ith "fan-
tastique" 1n the Southland bv the·
Lona Beach Symphony in the fall of
1981.) Mata. whose dignified manner r..i!~~~~~ii~!!~~~~~~iiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiijiiiijiiiiiiijjjiii~ of conducting was nonetheless filled
Haunting. wistful flute and oboe
solos marked the third movement
while the finale (march) featured
powerful. COQCentrated brass and
with txpressive gestures rangina from
broad sweeps to minute fin~r s1gns.
painted a wide<anvassed work of
detail with his 150-pi«e ensemble.
Even thou~ he was conducung ·
outdoors. Mata wasn't afraid to take
his time shaping slow. quiet passages
or draw out rests. ooth as in pon1ons
of the long introduction to the first·
movement "Re veries. Passions" as
well as the third-movement "Scene in
the C ountl) ...
Rooney back in 'Boys Town'
......, ... , .. ,
BO HI.AT 1111 •
Clowns will pose as painters. too. in trasted with the more plentiful.
the lon&·time favorite "soap sud · stormy sections. OM .\HA. Neb. (AP) -Mickey ba~d on the fa mous home for oo' s.
splash ... first presented in 1949. In the Paul Hindemith's "Symphonic Rooney. appearing at a ceremony Roonc~. who pla~ ed the tough
kadllional firehouse gag. an ominous Metamorphosn on Themes of Carl maFkiJlg the SOth anniversary of the teen-ager White~ James in the 1938
. .
ECIClie Murplly COM-.TO
. AllE•ICA 1111) ~ ..... -. .... 19'l .. .,.,
P1u 1 Prer.•Cloo (It)
cloud of smoke and .a big blaze will Maria von Weber .. ,( I 9424~ was the mal(ingofthe film "Boys Town ... said film. said he would approach Col-, ::-~.rl u 3,0~~,':f'..:!,'!J."'
rescue. Thisstuntappeared as early a.s as a .whole. Although Mata took the send a cavalcade of c~~ns ro the ~~n~i~~t~·s~m~o~s~t~~~t~is~f~y~in~g~~~o~~~a~oc~e~~h~e~w:a:n:t:s~~~m~a:k:e~a~w~~~k:l~y~T~V~~:n:·es~~u~m:b:i:a=P:i~c~tu~r:e~s~n:c~x~t~~;e:a~r.~~~~~~~~~·~·J~s~~~~~~,~~;G~l~';z~,s~s~s~:o;s~t:~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1932.
Featured in this gala celebration is TIE _, ' " Frosty Little. a Master Clown. one of
only four in the world to achieve this ~tinetion:-ff'f"4ttv--i'c-i'mr' tf'tlf-tirv-M-+t-
fellow Clown College graduates.
Ringling Bros. and Barnum &
Bailey Clown College was established
in 1968.bv Irvin Feld. chai~an and
jjrod.ucer of. the circus. It is a tuition-
free tnSlllUt1on. .
Funsters aspiring to make a cartt,r
in clowning can audition to join the
College Aug. 4 at 4 p.m. at the Los
Angeles Sp(>ns Arena. Of course.
applicants must be available to travel.
and have a serious interest in buf-
foonery.
For additional information call
Jackie Sharpe. public relations. at
(!? 13) 274-694 1. or the Clown College
a'1 1-800-237-9637.
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Drunken drlv~r's regrets
MILLION REG RETS IN WIS. DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am a
21-year-old inmate at the Black River
Comctional Center in · Wisconsin ~rvina a five-year sentence for reck-
less homicide (drunk drivina). I want
to share my-story and offer a little
advice.
I was your average youna man from
aaood home and graduated from hi&h
school with honors includina one (or
aood citizenship. In my senior year I
was awarded the Chick Evans Schol·
arship and went off tO-Indiana
University. where I diS('overcd al-
cohol.
•• lMIEls
DEAR REGRETS~ Yeu letler 11
pint)' 4lffefftt. A ldlelanMp-w ...
1111 eollece 1t94nt, .. aae.a..lk, ...
prilOD for kJUla1 a ""°" wklfe drivlqdrull.
I llope olller 0tt11loul celebraton
will see dtemselvH ud lean frem
yoar experiftce. nuk1 for die
sermon. Aa4 1ood I.ck to yoe.
In thc summer of '87, I was
involved man accident that changed
my hfe . .\fter drm_ki.nJ...lOQ much. l
ran heao-on I nto another car and
killed somebody.
.\!though alcohol was responsible
forth is tragedy. the au1horit1esagreed
that I am not an alcoholic. This 1s m)
messaite. Ann: You .don't have to be
an alcoholic or even a frequent
drinker to be involved. in a tragir;
accident. In fact. I was a strong
ad vocate of not dnnking and d riving.
Man~ times I was the designated
driver. On those nights I n~ver
touC"hed alcohol. The night of the
a~id~,t_l 1hould have let~meonc
else dnve mv car. &ut l was too
l·hild1sh and stubborn. I was sure I
could handle it. (Same old story.)
!'ow I am paying for my foolish-
ness b) !lpcnding fi ve years 1n prison.
Of course. thl· death I caused will be
on m~ consncnl'e forever. -.\
• • •
DE..\R ANN LANDERS: When
\ uu suggcstcd that the wi"es of th<>K
joc:b \II down with their husbands
and watch football on TV, many
"l\CS s.aid they didn·t have ti~ ..
Ma ) be if the couch potatoes aot off
thl·ir dum and helped with the -kids.
thc laundrv. the coo1cing-and clean-
ing. their wives would have time to
wa tch TV. \\ ith them and there
"ouldn·t be ~o many beefs. -D.B.C .
W .\ YNE. MICH.
WeUelft)'~ J1I)' zt
ARIES (March 21-April 19): What appears to be lost
is merely misplaced.
ln11road~sr.ap;--
plies also to rela-
tionship. Road is SYDNEY rock\ but affair of
heari "Ill bc back on
trad .. You·re duefor OIAll much-more recog-
nition. •••••••llliilllliiiiiill TAURUS (April
20-Ma' 20): Fresh employment opp,onunity indicated.
Scenario highlights pets. dependents. new stan. added
independence. chance to imprint St}le. Special note -
avoid heavy lifting. L<'O \\ill pla~ role.
'GEMINI (M a\ 21 -June 20): Good ·lunar aspect
coinc1dc'> with creai1' 11~. d1Sc-o"c~. scnsuaht~. personal
magnetism. SCA appc:al. You·11 emerge from emotional
,·ocoon. mam "-111 '>a'. ··"11n· to have-\Ou back ··
5ag111anan represented.· ·
CANCER (} u ne 21-J ul\ 22 ): Broaden· hon zons.
rCJl11c propen~ ma~ appear-in ma nner that 1s .. dl.'cep-
t1\ l· ... .\sk questions. '>all f~ cunos11y. Initial offer could
be 1nfla11onan. Long-d1stancl' call "'II resolve dilemma.
LEO (Jul~ 23-.\ug. ~2)· lk av.arc of source material.
t.•rnpha!.11e re,.-:arch and sh ov. that ~ou can perform task tn
thorough · mannn. Focus also on co'mplet1on of trans-
action. fresh \-lC-" of negot1at1ons. Scorpio as in picture.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). F1n1sh rather than 1n111ate
prOJl'Cl. cnano highlights e1tc1tement. change. tra,el.
'a net~. gain through "'n tten word. Money previo us!)
\\lthheld "ill tx· relca~·d .\nuthcr Virgo figures prom1-
ncnth
LIBRA 1\l·pt 23-C>ll. · 221. \n·nan'o· emohawd
DEAR' WAYNE: Riot oe. YOtl
scorH a 1011ei.down wit' tllat ooe.
mu.,1 c. flowers. beaut). affection. Moon in your sign
accents timing. J){'rsonaltt~. charisma. sensuality. Loved
one makes concession w11h regard to domestic adjusl-ment.
SCORPIO (Oct. 2J-No\. 21): You·11 learn secret.
dandes11ne maneuver I'> 1n\ oh ed. Be d iscree1:1ca"e no
tell-talc clut."s. Ego 1s 1n,oh ed. but know that you don't
"ant to hurt an\ ix·rson. P1'iCes pla)'.s paramount role. SAGI~ ARIUS (NO\. :!:!-Dec. 21 ): Time for playing
games 1s ti n1shcd. S1 tuat1on 1s .. for rea1:· You'll get your
wish. but thcrc 1s a pnct.'. Emphasis on intensit y.
speculation. romanrc. Cancer. Capricorn in picture.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Project is com-
plcll•d. vou·11 breathe sijh of rclief. Means burden as
removc-d. supertor 1s satisfied and yo u'll get credit long
O\C rdue. Em pha!lis on communacatwn . travel. stvlc. audience. , ·
AQL ARIL'S <Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Scenario spotlights
tra\ cl. l'dura11on. ideals. communication. You might feel a-. if )OU arc alone. but truth could be exactly the opposi(e.
Y11u·11 fa thom meanan_g an surprising manner ..
PISCES (Feb. I 9-Marc h 20): What vou need is
l.urrentl) shrouded 10 nl)'ilO~. Time is on your side. famd~ ml·mbcr propo~.-. unonhodo:< concept. Follow
thro ugh. rea hl(· \\hat appears ec·ccntric could actually be ..on the.· monl•\ :·
IF Jl1L y· ?O IS YOUR BIRTHDAY current cycle
l·mpha\11l·-. prndul·t1on. promoti on. rcsponsibilit~. press-
Ufl' oldt.•adlinl·~. '.'Aantal starus '>pothghtcd. there could be
lln add1 t1~n to family. It l'i hkel~ that you will take greaser
rharge of~ our o" n dest1n~ and rould BO into bus111ess for
\Our'>l'lf. Can l'r. Capnrnrn PffiJ)k> pl~
in 'our hi(·. You deal 'iucn·ssfull ~ wnh public. especially
\\41nwn fkhxl· Jul) I'> lina!i.hcd. ~ou'll make maJor
tl11mnt 1r ad1ust nll'Ot Scpll'fl1bcr "'1 II be memOlAl ble.
wu1d k~llUrl' n1one~ and IO\ l·. -.
Paranoia takes ho vacation
Thl'\ v.crl' a fam1h hl·aded fo r J
\3Calli>n £\t·~thing' pClJnted IO II
The li ttle girl v.ore a .. Bon \'o~ age .. T-
shirt. the mother balanced a large
can\ a<. hag bet "een, her knee<.. and
the hu<.hand "a~ alread~ "1nding
do"'n a!. ht.• read the paix·r ,ind s1ripcd
h1\ rnfTrl' frnm a parx·r rup.
.\'i the' \lood up to lx1ard I lw plam·.n
the "oman ..aid ... Rogl'r. I thin~ I kft
the ho'>l' on tn the ro\l' ga rden ··
Rogl'r hl:inchcd a~ he de\ l'lopcd a
11r 1n one l'~C and rnfTCl' '>Pilkd O\Cr
h1'i hand
E11A ~
BOllECI :.:.. ~-.
I gayl' l'l1rth to a hah~ glooma who
dn>\C u' nut\ You couldn ·1 climb
into rhe car "1thnut her pred1ctron.
.. ( ind\\ dad\ rar '>OUnlk d hke, this
IU\t tX·furl' 11 laught lire-on the
npn;'.<\S\\il~ · tkh1ndl·,rn <loud "a~
a t• irnadn •
d0t1r, ··
\.\ hL·n I gr.ihtx;J hl:r tH t~c.· pon) 1a1I
and a-.kl·d ... \\'h~ d1dn·r yo u sa~
soml·t h1n~ tx·ti>rl' \\l' ll'ft home?" shc
ans"crcd ... , ou al\\:ns said children
'hould ht.· 'il.'<'n and oot heard :·
I "a11 hl·d a' 1111· "oman w11h thl'
Ciln\ a' l:latz g111lll·d lll·r hushand to the
planl· "l<11gt'r "h.1(, the matter'? ..
'hl· a'h·d. " 1111' '' a 'aca11on. for n~ 1ng 11ut loud .''
BRID GE
Bv CHARLES GOREN ·
and OMAR SHARIF
W-lde world of Shakespeare
T l'n n1~ pla~rr., might quote
Shal..l'\J)('arc·s .. Henr) VI ": .. 0
rp11nstrous.fau1t~:· Basketball players ..
.. I k nn V .. : ·· Hcar lhl· shrill whi'itle.''.
Rm' ll'r'i ... The Tempcs1··: ··Mcrcy on
u~. wl· '>Pht:· Golfers ... King John":
.. (i, \ c mc an iron:· Rase ball players.
··<>1hr llo .. : .. You did bid me steal."
Horkc~ pla~ers. ··A Midsummer
:--1·1totht'<. DrL·am .. : .. (it'ntle-Puck. come .
h11hn :·
<) t lo" dad thl' great mag1c1an Rlac h tonl· stop hi s pulse at will?
\ T uckrd a wadded cloth under
h1' armpit and clamped down . .\ny-
hod~ ran do 11.
th·niun or~er in .\ustralia.'s Mel-
hclu(m·. 'l<>mrconvictcd ~" ofTendcrs
han· h1.'l'n tnJCCled · with female
hnrnwnc'I 10 reduce thei( dangerous ·
d nw,.
Q. lsn·t ~:ar!l thc.-comp;n-; With the
most real cstalc holdings?
.\. Used to bl·. McDonald's pasS«I
ll In 1982.
Earh fil'ld of academics has its own
color. Takc dentistry. It's lilac. Engi-
ncc·nng l!I orange. No. sir. joumal-
1sm·s 1c; not_)'.~ll~w. but crimson.
Claim 1~ thc only place m the world'
where you can play one round of golf
in two different countrit-s ·is the'
Gateway Golf Club on the Saskatchc.'
wan-North Dakota border.
The musical ·"Green Grow thJ
Lilacs" failed after 64 performances.:
Wil!fjts nam~ chanjed to "Away Wei
Go.· it failed apin. mi~rably. Per-:
'11u·\l' 5een TV dish antennas on sistericc pai~ 6fT. though. It ~nally
rooftoi}s. but maybe you've not ~succeeded . rn . a n:iost mag~!ficenl
big rotat1rig mirrors up thecc. Ori mann~~ w1th Its third na'!le. Okla·
some Cit\ houses overshadowed by homa.
tall hui ld.ings. such mirrors tracl( the Q. Before no-fault. wasn't snorina
o;un to reOC'Ct i1s Jjght do~ward. Lot grounds ror divorce? oft~em m Japan. A. In 16 states. it was.
1 Alia -
8 Havtng thin
brist1o9
. 11 ·AttM unit
II Telty
• Jedcel type 10~,
7 t Afrtcan land
-.,
since North did not have enough to ~; ~light
Thl.'Tl .. , 11m• in l'' en lam11\ -
pcopk "'hu IU't tan·1 h<l\e a good
11me 'wml' pcopk pad, ha thing \llt t'i.
The~ pad. 'hr~md' "iomc people \11
qu1ctl~ and v.atch 'un.~·I\ ·The~ -.11
and "on<k·r 1f somcom· remcmhem.I.
to unpl ug thl' rnffcc po1 Soml' \ud, in
their hreath ar the exc11enwn1 of lhl'
5i'it1 nl' Chapd. f he\ <;uck 1n thC'ir
h reath rl'ml·mben.ng thn left
.\nd till' \\l'Jrd rar.t I\ the~' ll('\('r
'wrat -thl·~ ·rl· JU'>l rarn1·r-. nfs"ea1.
\lll'r rltl'' ru1.n l'\ a~ onl· l°l'il,.!> tnp.
thl'\ pu\h thl'tr ··r1car .. hutt on and the
1\ofr) '' g11nl· I hl·~ gel on with their
li'e'>. lea' 1ng lhl' othc.·r., tn a state of
<lcprns1on and an \ll'I\ that will not
go a"a} for rhl' rl·,111r'i hc trip
Both vulnerable. South deals.·
NORTH
be interested in 5lam, his jump to t8 B••ball atat. ~ ~~--
. three no t rump was lextbook . t7 Gladal me1e 3 Yukon and;
h h. ti Seecout Alalka
han:.ina' ti' thl· sink. v.h1 rh v.111
attract mur.l' tru11 f11c-. at thl' l'nd 111
thrcl' "l·rk' than a gartiagr hargc
• 9 7
I K 6
/ J 6 J l
• AQJll
Wf.ST
• KJIS4
Al4
7 5 .
• 7. J
EAST
• Q 6 l
/ 10 7 3 2
10 9 I ..
East put up l e queen on 11 part-20 Po11111No 4 Mldwt-ctty
ncr's low spade opening, and declar-22 Traci! 5 c.....
er allowed it to win. He hel.d up the 23 Allan tltle 8 Of tho...,.
ace a .. in when East continued the 25 -tranllt 7 s.,.-low
-28 cat.terla I Ooee suit to his partner's jack. But the Item
king o f spades finally forced the 29 s.un.. t~ =pt.
acc. 30 Tom t 1 L-unit 32 -ooago --.....
A club finesse lost to East's kins, 34 MOit d6ltant ~: =
and he had to decide which red suit 31 AegMrt lllo ti Pt.y pert
\t 'onw 11ml· or anothn "l' h,l\l·
all cndurnl "hat I u\ed tu t.all thl·
I gl~ Oratk l hl· l.1d v.hoannc·unl'ed
.. he \\;t' C\P<>\ed to mca<.k'> and
"ouldn·t h<.' <.urpn!>cd 1fshe hrok<' out m.l.--"-..._~ the d:u \\ l' arm eel at the bcadt. Or
\\ho,,,·\\ a '' rn ngc man 1 n a part... rd l Jr
\\~trhtng \1 11mm1l· '1'> '\hl' pul thl'
h11Ulll' t...n under rhe tlowerr or
<)ur dau~ll'r "uuld wai t until we
''l'fl' all in thl' .1r "ng1ng .. Q9 Bottlei.
of lien on thr \\.Ill · .ind g1dd~ w11h
1hr l·,c11,·nwn1 111 .1 l amp1n~ tnp.
\' hl'n 'lhl· "nuld \;J\ .. You kno"
"haf'"' fhr '111tl''> .. iorrx·d ''"ging .
··'f>ou t...nC>" th;it littk nancl tha t tits 1n
tfu.o_dogg.u: duur~' Someone furp.o l-lo
11u1 11 tn. \ <>U t...n11" our paper t.m .
>" :i' nf'' 1-k <,a id .1 man broke 1n their
hou..,l· onn· rhmugh om· oftho\c.> l111lr
• "6 SOUTH
+ A 10 3
Q J 9 5 A K Q
10 switch to. Do OU have I choice1_ -: :::::" blloWid _;ZJ._DulfllndM11e1:L..,~J!!~l!!J:!::iil!
~· That depends entirely on whether 45 Sevore 23 T ... __ _
your partner is a player or a pusher! :: ~ · 24 P,..,tod
If the Ian er, you have to auess; i( the 50 A;::-~ =
[ -.
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Custoitt CWt~Kg
(Jo1L]v1e.K a~d CW'Oltte.K
· By Deslaner Hlqul (For~r Mana~r of Top l itters 8nd ~sign Workers
at A~n Wardy for 9 years •
• Conv~nfent Servfce • Ho~ or O~ Appo1ntmtnt
FASHION BY HIQUI, INC.
4JIJ Ml,,,, ..... W.y, Unit C. NI_,., lemt
.li:W~it~·:r .. ~="11f:.47c..~ ..... ~ .... i7 I~ 1..., SAT t:•J ...,
•
• 10 9 5
The bidding:. former, partner's kins of spades 54· PreMI vect 30 ledge s
should be a suit-preference sisnal, ;: ~ 3t Otno.. Soulll Wtll Nortll East
I ST Pus J NT P .. askina you to return the hisher of 51 KWf of '*1S
1hc 1wo obvious suits-in this case b••bell o-no ~ =,..., Pa~ Pus Pus
Opening lead: Five of • hearts. (Had partner's entry bttn in IO Expleln 3e L~
clubs, he would have led his lowest 13 TogelhornoM 37 --fire In chess, they have a term for it-
woodpushcr. That's a person who
~imply moves . the pieces around
~ilhout any s1rategic plan in mind.
In bridge. you araduate from card-
pusher to bridsc player when you
realize that every card tells a story.
spade to ask for the lower of the two : ¥:' 31 Ont•lo rtver
suits.) 40 A-8 ~
The auction was simple enouah.
The one no trump openin1 de-
scribed So uth's hand perfectly and,
The whole hand hin1es on what
East returns. If he trusts panner's
Instructions and returns a heart, de-
claret IOH down two trick-$. If he
shoots back a diamond, d~larer has
nine tricks-four in each minor and
the ace of spades. It's a world of
difference!
1988 Towel Sale
at 1988 Prlce1I
Avanti EmbBllishecl
2 tiers of lace ruffles on utln
Velour Towels .
Bath 11'.H.Hend f7.ll,lnglr-Tip U .H
5 Color• -beige."""'· peedt, '** 'whtte
No~ Orders..,.,_, Fnt Come Fhf s.Wd
26 I 2 lat Coast Hwy.~ Ccnn• dll ..., _
11 llc-S. of ~J --610~29
2 3 4 5.
•
1
4t - -fllt pece
44 Oodk:atod
47 Aono¥8tel .
48 Humorttt
Goorgo-50 LOWo11!11Cod
5 t Frendl ctty
52 Antlleo
lllend 53~.
I I
55G~.
57 TablliA••
HSMI
8t ~oelc
12 .one: Scot.
M Affllct
U AfllrfNtlW
]2
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I
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.,
Otenge Cout DAILY PILOT /Tueedey Jvfy 19, 1-A9
by Bii K•ne Uf THE BLBACllSR8 by Steve Moore llLOOll COUJlf'IT
-Wow! How many teams are
playing, Daddy?"
~_!'rad Anderson
tJr9.*'ded .••
PEA!fUTS
ME«E'S TME 800t< vou'~E
S(Jf'POSED TO REAC.TMl5
SUMMER .. IT'S CALL Et'
ciTESS O~ TME D'URBERVILLES "
OAllPIBLD
D~--
••
DBNIUS TBS llBKACB
by Hank Ketcham
x~
by-Charles M. Schulz
T~ERE~S A-GOOD . ?-,,
TITLE .~ l1LL MA'VE TO
REMEMBER TMAT
by Jim Davis
. .
.. A/61t0 1¥Ydllf"
ME 1W 6M AaJJlll r
!I/IP 1 ~ J(J(J
~Oii-~.-..._
wmf-
............
s.
GAION-AllD P AICJIES
DO YOU ~AVE.
TO LEA~10 a.DIJ~LHAQ
10 GET ~E AU2
11-Q:)06M ALL
l..o:;E TU0ES?
FOR BETTER OR POR WORSE
SHOE
TIMEOUT~
JUDOS PARKER
I WANT YOU TO "'EA[)
MY OAO'S L{:TTE", SUS AN ',
a .. if\-·.,_,,
JPUKKY WllUBRBBAl't
400'RE l(IDDING I 8ARR4
BAl...DE.RMAN 1~ AC:fuAu..Q
GOING AS A DH.£6A1'E 1D
'Tl1E DE('(()(RA11C NMIONAl
ca.lVQ.l1JOO C:-
Cle.AH' ru. BEi"'TWtr HAS
ib BE PRE-rfQ SCA~ AND
1N1iMlomiN6 ... E.VEN fOR
AN OVERAC~IEVER 1...IKE
BA~.!
by Lynn Johnston
by Jeff MacNelly
by Harold Le Dowe
by Tom Batluk
D001'UBUllT by Garry Trudeau ,,_ o .I\,. 1 f) c h. _. ~~=, s"-l'4U ~~-'-"<l""s· ... _
IN A IAKJftP,
HMOfXJIS ~AIN,
l'61rlt..
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.
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.....
. .
" .
POUftAIN •ALLD UGIONAL .. ITAL --· Marauerite ud Sicven Kina, Foun-
llill ~-. boy Jan Ponef and Glenn Watson, Hunt-~ a.ch lirl Va& ·and 0Tbomu Hu1Cbinson, ~n Bach, boli ba, and David oaae, Balboa.
... __, 11 H: .. ~ and Paul Ochoa, Costa
[ .lldt;) McCurry and Thomas -.aw, Costa Mesa. boy
QaYDb Jennifer Dieu Nauyen and um~ Fountain VaJ&Cy, boy Empllira Pok and Savry Hel, West-minller -.. ......
, ....
Chri.Une and 8ettjamin Weatherbee. Huntinaton le8di, bo_y
Cynthia and Donald Staft'Ord, West-
minster. boy
Jme 1'J Kim and Luis Tobon. Huntinaton
Beach, airl i
Maria and Cla)ltolt• Slieft' Ill. Costa
Mesa. airl -Kathleen and Ricky Riach. Hunt-
inaton Beach, airl , ....
Christine and Jeffrey Tote, Costa
Mesa. boy Joyce ind Frank ,Major. Huntinaton
Beach, airl ·
JaeH
Cheryl and Grqory Mepi. Fountain~
Valley. boy
Thoeup ind San Sun, Fountain
Valley. airl
Pauline and Jesse Bazan. Huntinaton
Beach. airl Liu F1llon and Chlrles Huebner,
Huntinaton Beach. airl
J .. 11 .,,,..
Sharon and Richard Ashmore, Hul'lt-
inston Beach, Jirl Kimberly and Roy Dulkin, Hunt-
inaton Beach. airl ~oniq_ue and Craia Grqory, Costa
Mesa. boy
V1kric and Jof'IC Calderon. Hunt-
inaton Beach boy Coleen Kelli and Mark Johnson.
Huntinaton Beach. boy -
Jme!Z Kristine and Mark Middleton, West-
minster. Kiri
Cindy and Semar Wilson~ Fountain
Valley. boy · ~I via Roldan and Jeffrey Fitzeerald.
Costa Mesa airl
Heidi and RObCn Stevenson, Hunt-
inaton Beach. &irl Natalia and Jolln .LeeheY. Irvine, boy
Chau-Hui Hsieh and Justin Chen,
Irvine. airl
J .. IS Kimberly and Roben Warner. Irvine,
boy
Laurel and Edward Hakim. Laauna
Beach, airl Lorelei Corral and Manuel Soto,
Fountain Valley. girl
Rosanna Gaudier and Jesus Manuel,
Irvine. airl Jacque and John Loew, Huntinaton
ee.ch,boy
.. Wardeh and Ribhi Abdelmuti, Foun-Maureen and Daniel Hausen, Hunt-
tain Valley, boy inaton ae.ch. boy ....... . , ...
Connie and James Borras. Costa ~~ ~nd Cunis Oudvan,en, Costa
Mesa. boy Lisa and bavid Burke, Irvine. airl
Jme 1'1 . . Jenny and Milo Kartchner. West-~ura and Steven M1yosh1, West-minster, boy
minster, boy Su Yen Chao and K.ai-Chuna Chena.
Jae II Fountain Valley. boy
Karen and Tomie Howard. West-~-------minster. boy
Theresa and Scott Reinu. Hunt-inaton Beac;h, airl •
Kathleen and Guy Gonzales, Hunt-
inaton Beach. airl
&111,U/I''' e!Millet,
C!l6,"'61 Marcedes and Jaime An1uiano,
Costa Mesa, airl
Susan Weldon and Kenneth Wise. Find out who can teach you Laauna Beach. boy J ... H through cl-lfled.
An occasi~nal Walk in the park ~jth ~e kids ~ · 16 ... yo~'ll get the b~st selling book 'lake Care of Your
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' -----·-~---'""""-----~---------------------..
Another
niilestone
forSeve
L YTYHAM. Enaland (AP)-Seve
Ballesteros of Spain birdied the 16th
hole with the help of a mqnifittnt
iron shot that hit the naasuck. and
won his third British 9J>cn title by
two strokes over Nick Pncc today.
It was match-play condition
through the final 18 holes, with Price
and Ballesteros playinf toaether
stroke for stroke untjl 6. ·And it
wasn't over . until Ballesteros
scrambled from be.hind the 18th
grttn wi th another incredible iron
shot to save par with a two-inch putt.
Ballesteros finished at I I ·under par
273. with a .final round of 6-under 65.
the lowest 18 holes of the wcather-
pla1ued tournament.
The Spaniard won his fint open
here in 1979, and it was 16th-hole
heroics that lifted him to victQry_ that
une. too.
Price. the Zimbawcan who led after
the second and third rounds, left a 12·
foot birdie putt short and to the riaht
on No. 16. he then ~yed t.hc final
hole, tying for a last-ditch birdie, and
finished at 69-275.
Nick Faldo of En&land. last year's
winner. shot an even-par 71 and
fin ished third at 5-undcr 279. Faldo.
who turned 31 as the open had its fint
today finish ever. won last year with a
round of 18 pars. but had three birdies
and three bogeys this time.
.. '
.................
. Woodbrlqe Hip'• 8larlDe AU-Star Derrick Odam.
•
TUESDAY. JULY 19, 1988 --::=· v.-... .......... to ..... lllllr lftOV9. .. 11111 ••where.., ... ..,. tumid ..... oorner~ M.
Odum .beats odds
He'I16e in Sot.it · 'ssecondary
fn Shrine All-Stars owcase
By ROGER CARUON
CM ... Dlllr ........
P.\S.\DEN .\ -Every football coach dedicated to
his. pla~er~ goes through 11 to one deartt or another -
showcasing has most promisint for the collqe scouts..
maki ng sure his plaven get their best shot. ..
lt's·not too d1ff'i'cult fo r a coach at Edison High to get
his message across.Just as it 1s at f ountain Valley. Crrsp1,
Bishop Amat. El Toro. Capo ~LI S Valle~. Long Beach Pol). ~ ~ P • O(j
Banning.Carson ... ,.:,,,.0 ~~
There's a common de-~ ~'
nom inator among those
schools-thev all compete in
the major d1\'lsions w11h high G..~
exposurf ... ~"?
But for athlctt·s at Wood-Cl-~
bridge High. as "ell as man~
ochers " ho aren·1 able to boast of 5-A and 4-A status. it's
a different ball game. one which isconstantlyao1ng uphill.
fkrrick. Odum a 6-foot. 170.pound Woodbridge
High product. 1s a good example.
..\n_.\11-CI F Desen-Mountain Conference choice. he
was even <;ingled out for honors on the All-C'I F Southern
Section ek' en . but "hen it came to selections for
Saturda' 'o; J7th Shnne All-Star Game at the Rose Bowl in
Pasadena. there was no brass ring.
Nor 'i'Cre there many choices for ham as a college
pla}fr despite his prowess as an athlete.
His coach. Gene ~oj i. realizing his standout wasn't
getting thf kind of attention he dcsttved. sat down at a
phone and staned calling. And calling. And calling.
"I sat down and called one school 21 times before
thev'd m um m' phone call," said Noji. ·-rve got a. kid hfr~IOdum) wh·o 1s asgood a pcrimetet kid as I ever had
at Long Beach Pol~. but nobody will 11ve ham a look."
l 'tah finalh did and offered Odum a scholarshi p.
which he accepted.
h "as th~sam(' SIOJ) for the Shnne Game. which
annualh sho"ca~ man' of California'\ best h1&h school
products. ·
Noj1 'lat do" n again after Od um was passed up. and
his letter to th<' South coaching staff obviousl y touched a
bas,c be au~ "hen an opening surfaced. Odum WU
cbo~·n. .
.. I "a' ... urpmed:· i.a1d the Woodbridae co~k.
··r l'opk JU\t don't kno" much about us because we JU'1
dun"t get that much recoan1t1un. You know. peoplcsayM
can't compt'tt' against 4·.\ aad 5-A teams ..
Thl' ~outh lOach('S. Dick Bru1ch of Fontana and
R<1tx·n Richards of Thousand Oaks. knov. more about
him than he rl'al11c'>.
.. , ou kno" :· ~1d Richards. "when that kad look
O\l·r at quanl·rhal ._ after the second quan'erba!=k went
do" n ht'> uni~ nix·rn·nl'e at the position was when he was
a trl·shman and '>ophomort' ...
• R1l hards "as alluding to the come-through efforts of
Odum during. 1he CIF Dt.·.,rn·Mounta1n playoffs last
'l':J"'" "hl·n hl' \ll'pped 1n and completed I 0 of 14 paan
for ~(Jn \ard and ran for t"o touchdowns in a clutch
33-15 '1cton O\l'r Pa~o Roble~ .
Enc Brougher the" S o. I quanerback. had bttn
s1ddined <,ince thr earh pan of the Sieason with a broken
kg. and h1\ backup. Fred Schweer. ·was knocked out of
action in thc first round of the pla}Offs .
\ll thl· V. amors "ent to Odum and after the.first day
of practice on a ~ondn~. according to Richards. he
approachl·d h1' coaches at noon the following day and
..aid. "Lt·1·1. pu• some option 1n ·· · · · ·
Odum".. rl·rnllec11on of returning to quanerback: "It
"a'> a hla<;I. ..
II ,,a., al\u .s hla'>l fort he compe11uon. He returned to
tht' 'ie'C-Ondaf" thr ne~t "eek and helped lead the Warriors ·
to a 40-H ruu i nf .\tascadero on the wa) to a 13-10 victory
m er ( ham1nadc in the finals ·
Said Bru1ch ofh1s late replacement .. , ..a" him in the Orange Count) All-Star Game and
I "as 1mprc'>sed "•th his pla} at cornerback. .
"I "a" ong1nall~ th anking of ham as a receiver. My
<,0n J.,.un 1\acornerandrcce1,er.too.sowe'vegotsome
'l'rsa111t1' ..
Odum "a" onl' of the kc' defcnde~ in the South's
: 1-. '1cton 1n the Oran~e Count' game and it's obvious
(Pleue eee ODUll/IM)
-Two Amencans. Fred Couples and
Gary Koch. fi nished at 3-under 281.
Both shot 3-under 68s on the final
day. with Coupl~ S-under before
taking bogeys at the 17th and 18th.
-Sandy Lyle of Scotland. the 1985
champion who started tbe day at 4-
uoder par. also faded in the late going.
taking a bogey-5 on No. 17 and ·a
double-bogey 6 on the final hole to
finish at I-under 283. with a round of
74.
The Great Outdoors is nothing like this .
In 1979. thf last time thf open was
played at the Royal Lyttiam and St.
~lf E' ..
22-year-old who alrea~y ,had led the
PGA European Tour in money win·
ninp b~t still was looking for his first
major victory.
He got it in the open that yea r.
playi ng a shot out of a parking lot on
the 16th hole for a birdie-3 and went
(Pleue eee S&VElJM)
. ·"". · ..
Huntington Beach's Dodd has own way
to exploit summer _va~ation opportunity
If \OU find \ourself io a conversa-
t1Qn S<>mcwheredown the road about
i n'gton lka,·h High baseball coach ~1k(' Dodd 1s involved. wait unul he
tflls h1" 'itOI) ·first.
How do~ ou top a couple of weeks
in Sweden. followed up b} a couple of
~l'('ks in i\ustraha'~
The n·teran 0 1k'rs' l'Oach 1s not
onl ~ doing that -but he ma}
continue doing 11 for some lime.
~l' "<'nlloS~eden "Ith a rou
1g \C oo Juniors rom aroun t e
coun1n as th(• coach under the bannrr
ofSpoits fachange of L .S.A. out of
Santa Monica.
The '.\ustrali an trip. which is sull to
rnme. in,ohcs h'1so"n 01krsand
1ncludfsa' 1s11 to thl· Worlds Fair in
Bm bane. ·. -4'i"('~'Cl-"~llrrat. hu t .\ustraha 1s
Angels' pitching staff takes .
ahikeasJaysgain 12-2-win
Gruber puts TurOrifu
on e~ ~treet with 3
runs batted fn, homer
By RIC-HARD DUNN ...,,...c:.: 111r•u
The victories have been coming in
by 1he barrels. but when the Angels
lose one. they sure know how to lose
one.
Their recent seven-game winning
streak came to an end on Saturday
when they wfre pounded by the
Tiacrs. I 0-1. So after extending their winning
ways on Sunday. the Angels were
blasted again in a loss on Monday,
12-2 this time.
Frustration took its la in
ant 1nnina .or t e Ange1 s as start~r
Chuck Finley was bom~rded for ~1x
earned runs on seven hats. ·
Things were never the same for the
An&els as 24.241 fans at A!lahcim
Staaium watched the Toronto Blue
Jays put on a hitting clinic apinst
Finley and reliever Stewart Oiburn.
Six runs in the tint inning. How
could it get any worse?
It did. To make matten worse.
!iJht fielder Chili Davis. the hotttst
hitter in the· Anaels' lineup, and
Manqer Cookie Rojas were ejected
ia the bottom of the inning.
Davis was thrown out by finl base
lfmpirt Drew Cobk after arauin' a ·
check-swin1 third strike call. R s
Tile .clJedale
HOMa Toni9ht-Toron10, 7:lS P.m .
July »-Toronto. 7:JS p.m.
July 21-ldte.
July 22-<levtland. 7:lS P.m
July 73-Clevetand, 7:0S P.m.
July 2..-CleYtland, t:OS P.m.
July 2S-0.kl•nd. 7:35 P.m.
• A" 0-mft' on. KMPC (710).
throw a gu~ out from all the way out
therl·" If aO\one should haw thrown
him out. 1i o;hould havf been the
h o me plate u mpi re (Tim
~c< 'kllandl
.. , l>:l\ 1!> I " a' alrt'ad~ in tht' dugout.
\\ hrn I came out. he asked 1f I was
coming oul to argue the third-stnke
call. I said no. I "ISJUSt coming out to
find out \\h\ \OU threw (Da\ IS) out." ~l'' crtheifss. 11 was an ugl~ first
inn ing for Fink\. 5-9. who worked 2~
innings and was charged with eight
farnfd runs.
Fin If\ "as shellacked for nine hits.
Cliburn· packed up the pieces for a
'i'h1le. but he had gi ven up four
l'3rnl·d rµns by the time he left aftt'r
t~ee innings.
'i oronto starter JcfT Musselman
"as the beneficial" of all the suppon. ••••••••l=~_mdudtng..lj bitL_ _ _ ._.r> . Toronto third baseman Kelly
jo1ncoufeit"taiier Davis was tossed. Gruber collected ~ two-run double
Davis whose I 0-pme hitting and ('enter fielder Sal Otmpusano had
streak ca me to an end, was headed a two-run triple to highli~t the first
down the dugout steps when Coble inning for Toronto. which sent 10
ga ve him the thumb. which u~t battt'r\ t~ t~e plate. .
Rojas. lfot-h1ttmg Fred McGnff. who
Rojas. who had to be hot an) how heltfd his 19th home run of_ the year
after watchinf Finlev gi ve up six runs in th<' fifth. v.cnt }-for-5 wi th thrtt
in the top o the first, vehemently runs scon·d. "The All-Star break
argued with Coble before getting the hel ped me. then gettins a couple of
boot. hits (against Oakland) increased ~)
"I just ca me out to find out wtt.x he confidence." sai~ McG rifT. "I had tn
thrtw Davis out." Rojas said. ·He the hack of m) mind to _1et 30 homen
said he threw him out because of a this ,·car. lfl could get five a month. I
gesture he made at him from the could do it... ·
d"goet' I didn't tfiink thal was riaht Th<' Blue Ja,s hit three home runs
so I wenJ out there. How....rouJ~ (Pl•• 111 A1'0SU/U)
thl' morf sat1sf~ 1ng because of the fact
hl··.-. with h1sown pla~ers. as he 'i'a'ia
'car ago when the~ "On the Great
Barner RcefTournament.
"II was an unforgettable t."o~·
penencc:· said Dodd ... One of the
nest things 'i'e got O~.t of ll \\aS gelling
Thf cost 1s SI . 700 per J)('rson for
thl' t"O-"l'Ck 'enture (S"fden "as S 1.600). bu tit SC(' ms cheap 4" half the.
pncf cons1denng thr package. 'i'h1ch
1nd udcst"omeal\ada,, the flight.
room and board. and other fri nges.
such as the Worlds Fair
.\nd it's not nt'cessanh unique
Jack Hodges takes ~1s Laguna Hills
.
SPORTS COLUMNIST
team to Ha"<lll annual I\. and El
Dorado. for instance. has 11s baseball
1eam 1n EuroJ)(' this summer
The .\ustrahan tournament 1s
most I~ compc't1t ron. "hem~ t~ trrp
Dnon W1alte eteai. tlalrd aader Ja19 tlalrd MMIUD Kelly
Onaber. bat It• llcnralllll •Ude all ntpl tor Aqeli.
to ""l'den "as not o nl\ a mailer of
cumpe11ng hut of teaching some' e~
an\IOU' '"<.'dish )Oun~ters. .
Baseball" 111be an 01~ mp1c e' ent
in Barcelona 1n I qq~ and becau!le of1t
therl' are a 101 of C'ountnes becoming
mor 1 '
.. .\lot of our pla~ers ht'ld mtn1·
camp<. forhttle ~ids ... said Dodd
"Th<' ltnle '"ed1<,h k1ch realh lo' t'd
11 Thl'onJ\thing the~see of ·
.\mcncan ba'lt'ball 1'i " hen there·'>a
h1g fight on tcle' 1s1on
'"The~ "ere talk mg about Pedro
(1 ucm·rnand h1s hat. The' don't get
an' \Cllfl''> but 1f sortlt'thing bad
(Pl~eee~DD/~)
Tbe .cbedale
AWAY
Ton1gM-St Louis. 'S:JS P m •
Julv 20-St Louis, 10-.JS 1 m
Ju•v 11-Ptt S!>ul'gh •.JS P"' •
Julv 11-P1tts1>urg11, •.JS o"' •
Julv 13-Plllsburgll, HIS Pm •
Julv 1t-Pittsl>urgn, 10-.JS 1 m •
Julv 1~~n Franc.'-CO. 7.JS o.m..
• On TV (l'lannet 11
• All gam~s on I( ~BC (790)
Dodr:· itc . --g
o s .rup
Leary (five-ttter).
Marshall (homer)
for.st~eaktng LA
Flores wlilting in the wings for Chargers 'job
Re· sf ar f rom.flntshed prOCluctn titles
Int e NFL esplte Rat ers · retirement
•
Kansas City Chiefs and came 10 the
Raiden. a. year later Tom Flom
~omes the head coech.
T .. her they produce two Super
Bowls 'rinp for Al Divis and tht
Raiders.
In t917 Slrvl' Onma)'ff lavtt thr
Raidm lnd aocs to the C1wlm. In
I 9U. Tom Rora mim 11 tlic bad
COKh o( thf Raidm Ind bKomft I
sp«W consultant for special projKts
with tht Raiden.
TCMR Flom ~•ptntnttd the thrill
ot1Suprr Bowl vtc1ory tons t>cfo~ Al
DI~• -.a. dwft he~ bM'k 10 ~
'"""Su.-
Flores can wake up each monina
and chOOK from four Super Bowl
rings to wear. Thrtt of them have
COMMENTARY
Raidm writtm on them while tlw
founh hll Kamas City C'bicft m-paved oojL _ '
Tom.asat.dup~b
tbl' Chiefs •Ma tky .rtatecl ...
Vikinp in tht 5-f lowt. I oaty
wanted ont Super 9owt ri~ TOllt •
four of them.
What moR roukl a Mae .._.!
Rnpta and lhe ttecllftiUoa o1 Ml
taknts could bf ~t ibc • °'* ~
..
'i'ho ntt-dcd a bra1lk ~rd to read a
dtfrn\C. Jam Ptunkett wh o uKd too
mu h '1dco tape eHf') hmc hf v.cnt
hack to pass and final!~ Matt W1t9on.
v.·h1ch meant ~ou <'Oukl not u~ a
sho\1un formation becauSt' Mar
v.ould call for a fair catch
So wh ' not ans•Tr his old fncnd's
call for a head roac-h? It'll bt' the Ste ' e
and Tom sho• ap1n •1thout ha \·1nt
to shart the crcdfU •Ith .~I Da\ IS.
~ brinp llw taknt and s:aans
them. Tom CQIK'hes tMm.
If the) ha\·e to firt ~t Saun<krs it's
bttauSC' t~ '°' off to a = sun.. Yoh lC'h means ibe) ·n tit 1n WJ)(
to draft a rood quant't'tMlck or tndt
for one.
M('any.·h1 k 1n Los ~.Jes. Al
Divis can't makt up hn m1lMt
v E'~'~------~--.....,..,=--.,_ n. ltnty H111tt. tM Cot-
1wum or lrwtndak.
-
I I ~r
• -
POONTAIN Y Au.sY hM It
WIOIUL ._ITAL Christine and lelUamin Weatherbee . _, M . Hunti~on leadi, boy ' Mamleri&c and Slcvea Kina, Foun-Cynthia and Donald S&aff'ord, West-m Vllley, boy minster. boy Ju Poner and 91enn Watson, Hunt-. Ji.e 17 • C ='~ Hutchinson Kim a~ Luis Tobon, Huntinaton ~Beach, boy • Beach, prl Hd David Sloate, Balboa, Maria ~nd Clayton Slieft' Ill. Cotta
11aiJ · ·~~and Ricky Riach, Hunt-... _, .. H: .. ~ and Paul Ochoa, Costa
L'J,•it:cos:cCurry and Thomas w, Mesa. boy Qu~ Jennifer Dieu Nguyen and um Nmc. Fountain Valley, boy ~---Pok and Savry Hel, West-m,..., lirl
inaton Beach, airl
J .. 11 Christine and Jeffi'ey Tote. Costa
Mna,boy
Joyce and Frank Major. Huntin1ton
Beach, girl
J .. it Cheryl and Grqory Mepi. Fountain
Valley. boy
Thoeup and San Sun. Fountain
Valley, girl
Pauline and Jent Bazan. Huntinaton
Beach 'rt
Lisa frilon and Charles Huebner,
Huntington Beach. airl , ....
Sharon and Richard Ashmore, Hunt-
inston Beach, ,;rt
Kimberly and Roy Ouikin. Hunt-
inaton Beach, airl
Monique and Crai1 Greaory. Costa
Mesa. boy Valerie and Jof'F Calderon. Hunt-
ington Beach. boy
Coleen Kelly and Mark Johnson,
Huntington Beach, boy
JmeH Kristine and Mark Middleton. West-
minster. girl
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L ..... ---------------------------~---.;_-_· ______ .;;;_.J
-eaueSbilKt
d California
®
. ,..
d
Ail other
milestone
for ·Seve
Ballesteros takes
thtrd·British Open
with great ff ni sh
•
..
TUESDAY. JULY 19. 1988
Odulli beats odds
He'TIOeTOSout 'ssecondary
in Shrine All-Star showcase
annualh shu"'cases man\ of California's best hash school
producis. ·
NoJi sat do"' n again after Odum was passed up, and
his letter to the South coachins staff obvious.I~ touched a
base becau!°IC "'hen an opening surfaced. Odum was
By ROGER CARI.SON cho~~·\'a' ~urpnsed." said the WoodbnA .... comnblc. k. Oltlleo.llf........ ...... .. People JU'>t don't know much about us because we J&llt
PASl\DES.\ -Ever) footb&ll coach dedicated to don't get that mut'h recognition. You know. people say we
his pla~ers goes through 11 ~o one degree or another -can·t compete against 4-1\ aod S-A teams."
showcasing his most promising for the collqr scouts. Tht' South lOaches. Dick Bru1ch of Fontana and
making sure his plavers &et their best shot. Rolx·n Richards of Thousand Oaks. know more about' L YTYHAM. England (AP)-Seve · It's not too difficult for a coach at Edison High to get him than hl' rl·alm·~. ·
BaJlesteros of Spain birdied the 16th his message across.)ust as it isat Fountain Valle)'. Crrsp1. .., ou kno"' ... said Richards. "when that kid took
hole with tht help of a mqnificent Bishop Amat. El Toro. Capo O\ l'r at quanerback after the J cond quarterback went
iron shot that hit tht flagst1ck. and Vallev. Long Beach Pol). ~"1 H -so{j do\\ n h1~ uni~ e\pcnen\:e at the posit ion was when he wts
won his third British Open title by Banning. (arson ... ,,::;,,,,.O ~~ a freshman and '>Ophomore:·
two strokes over Nick Pru:e today. There's a common de·~ ~' Richards " as allud ing to the come-th rou&h dfons of It was match-play condition nominator among those Odum during th<.· CIF Desen-Mountain playoffs last
throuah the final 18 holes, with Price schools -the' all compete in '>t'3'>on "ht·n hl' s11:pped in and complet~ I 0 of 14 passn
and Ballesteros playi"f together the major dn lsions "'ith high ii:..~ tor 206 \ards and ran for t\.\O touchdowm. in a clutch
stroke for stroke until 6. And it exposure. .._~"':1' 33-~5 , 1cton O\ CT Pa so Robles.
,wasn't over until Ballesteros But forat hletes at Wood-CL,.. Enc Brougher. the !'o. I quartl'rback. had been
scrambled from behind the 18th bridge High . as "ell as many sidelined )IOCT thr earh pan of the ~ason with a broken
green with. another incredible iron others who art_Sn"t able to boast ofs:A and 4-A status. 11's kg and h1 backup. Fred Schw~r. was knocked out of
shot to save par with a two-inch putt. a different ball game. one which is constantly going uphill. acuon 1n the lir'it round of the pla yoffs .
.Ballesteros finished at I I-under par Derrick Odum a 6-foot. 170-pound Woodbridge tht• \\ amors "'ent to Odum and after the first day
273. with a final round of6-under 65. High product. is a good example. ot pracuce on a Monda>. accord mg to Richards. he
tht lowest 18 holes of the weather-.\n..._.\11-CI f' Desert-Mountain Conference choice. he approarht•d h1-. coaches at noon the following day and
plgued tournament. was even singled out for honors on the 4'11-CIF Southern said ... Let"<. put ~ome option 1n."
The Spaniard won his first open Section eleven. but when it came to selections for Odum ·s recollecuon of returning to quarterback: ··1t
here in 1979. and it was 16th-hole Saturda' 's 37th ShnneAll-StarGame atthe Rose Bowl in "'as a blast. ..
heroics thatJiftcd..him 10 viMocy 1hat--1"-""'rllr"'= -Pasadena. there was no brass ring. It"' a' al'>o a blast forthe compet1t1on. He ~turned to
time. too.· Nor "'ere there man' choices for him as a colleie the secondan the next "'eek and helpdd lead the Warriors
Price. the Zimbawean who led afkr pla\ er despite his prowess as an athlete. to a 40-0 roui of .\ tascadero on the w~y to a I 3-1 p victory
1htsccondand third rounds, left a 12-· Hi s coach. Gene Noj1. realizi ng his standout wasn't O\ er Chaminade in th!:' finals.
foot birdie putt short and to the right getting the kind of attenuon he deserved. sat down at a Said Bru1ch ofh1s late replacement:
on No. 16. he then bogeyed the final phone and s1aned ca11mg. And calling. And calling. ·· 1 sa"' him in the Orange Count} All-Star Game and
hole. tying for a last-ditch birdie, and "I sat down and called one school 21 limes before . I "'as impressed wnh his plav at cornerback.
finished at 69-275. thev'd return m\ phone call." said Noji. "I've got a kid .. , "'as onginall~ th1nk1ng of him as a receiver. My
Nick Faldo of England. last year's her~ I Odum) wh·o 1s as good a perimetet kid as I ever had on. Kun. 1~ a cornl'r and receiver. too. so we've got some
winner. shot an even-par 71 and at Long Beach Pol~. but nobod y will gi ve him a look... versalllll\ ··
finished third at S-under 279. Faldo. • L'tah tinalh did and offered Odum a scholarship. Odum "'a' ont' of the ke\ defenders in the South's
who turned 31 as the open had its first ..., ........ ,..... "h1ch he accepted. 21--\ 1cton in the Oranite Count' gam e and it's obvious
todavfinishever.wonlast yearwitha Woodbrlclp RIP'~ Sluine All-Star °'1Ttck Odam. It "'as the sa me stof1 for the Shrine Game. which (Pleae eee ODVll/IM)
round of 18pars. but had three birdies -·-----------... -----------------------------------------------------• and three bogeys this time.
Two Amencans. Fred Couples and
Gal) Koch. finished at 3-under 281.
Both shot 3-under 68s on the final
day, with Couples S-under before
taking bogeys at the 17th and 18th.
Sandy Lyle of Scotland. the 1985
champion who started the .day at 4-
under par. also fadc-d in the late going.
taking a bogey-5 on No. 17 and a
double-bogey 6 on the final hole 10
finish at I -under 283. with a round of
74.
The Great Outd~ors is nothing like this
In 1979. the last time the open was
played at the Royal L ham and St.
u . ester s was a
22-year-old who already ~ad led the
PGA European Tour in money_ win-
ninss b~I still was looking for his first
major victory.
He got it in the open that year.
playing a shot out of a parking lot on
tht 16th hole for a birdie-3 and went
(Pleue .. s~~/IM)
Huntington Beach· s Dodd has own way
io exploit summer vacatio~ opportunity
If fou find \'Ourself in a con\'crsa-
t ion Somewhere down the road a ut
yoursummeren eavorsan unt-
ington Beach High baseball coach
Mike Dodd is invol\'ed. wait unttl he
tells his stof) first. .
How.do you top a couple of weeks
1n Sweden. followed up b) a couple of
"'eeks 1n .\ustraha?
The veteran Oi lers· coach 1s not
only doing th_al-bu1 be ma~
con ll n ur do1 ~'-II for some ll me. Ht• \\en110 ~eden i.a.1lha~
high schoolJun1ors from around the
countn as the coach under the-banner
ofSp(>n s Exc hange of U.S.A. out of
Santa· Monica.
The .\ustrahan trip. "'hich 1sst1ll to
come. in\ oh es h1s o"n Oilers and
1ndudes a\ 1s1t to the Worlds Fair in
Rrisbanl'.
S\,l°dt'ffwa~ itre<i t. but .\ustrali-a 1s
Angels' pitching staff takes
ahikeasJaysgain 12-2 win
Gruber puts Toronto
n easy street with 3
runs batted In. homer·
d ~B~HARI> DUNN . ~...:e.111; ~ -
The victories have been coming in
by the barrels. but when the Angels
lose one. they sure know how 10 I~
one. . . Their recent seven-game winning
streak came to an end on Saturday
when they were pounded by the
l'iacrs. t 0-1 .
' Tiie .clJedale
HOMa
Toni91'11-Toronlo, 7:3S o.m.
July 20-Toronlo, 7:3S o.m.
July 21-ldle.
t~·iro" a gu~ out from ~II the way out
then.··•·1fan\one should ha\I~ thro"'n
him out. 1i should ha\e been the
ho me plate umpire (T i m
'.\itc<'klland I.
.. , D:l\ 1s) "3~ al read~ 1n the dugout.
When I ,·aml' out. he asked 1f I was
coming out to argue the th1rd-s1nke
call..I said no. I wasJust coming out to
find c1ut "hv \ ou threw (Da\ isl out."
'\l'\ cnhcicss. u was an ugl) first
inning for Fint'i~. S-9. who w~rk~ ~J.,
inn ings and "'as charged with eight
earned runs.
Fin le' was shellacked for nine hits.
the more sausf~ mg because of the fact
he·s"' 1th his own pla~ers. as he was a
\Car ago "'hen the~ won the Great
Barner ReefTournament.
··11 was an unforgenableex-
pmence." said Dodd. ··one of the
best thin s"'ego1 outof1t "'asgetung
o no" eafhotner.~ · -
The cost 1s SI . 700 per person for
thl' t"'O-"l'ek \ enture (Sv.eden v.as
.S l .600l. but it seems cheap en half the
·prn:e cons1denng the package. wh"ich
includes t\\O meals a da'. the flight .
room and board. and other fnnges.
such as the Worlds Fa ir.
.\nd tt's notnecessan h·un1que _
Jack Hodges tales his Laguna Hills
.loco
CAii.Sii
SPORTS COLUMNIST
team to Hav.'311 annual I\. and El
· Dorado. for instance. has us baseball
team 1n Europe this su mmer.
Th~ .\ustrafian tournament 1s
most I~ co mpe11t1on. whereas the tnp
to S"'eden "as not onh a matter ol
com pet 1 ng. but of teach 1 ng M>me \ er:
an\IOUS S" ed1sh ~ oungsters
Baseball"' 111bean01~ mp1ce\ent
in Barcelona in I QQ~ and because of 1t
there are a lot of countne~ becoming
more interestC'd
··.\lot ofour pla~t'rS°held min i·
camps for httld .. 1d!.. ··said Dodd
··The little "ed1sh l 1dHealh lo\l~d
1t. The onl~ thing the~ se·e of ·
.\mencan baseball is "' hen there's a
big fir.ht on tele\ 1s1on. ··Tne-~ "'eretalkingahout Pedro
G ucrrcro and b.u.baL The\ don 'tget
an\ !l>Con.~. but 1fsomethmgbad
· . (PleueeeeDODf>'l82)
The .clJedale
AWAY
Ton1gl'l•-St Louis. S.JS ,,_,., •
Julv 2~S1 Louis. l0:35 • m
Ju1v 21-P111sourvn. '.JS o m •
Jutv n-P111s1>urgfl ':JS om. •
Jutv 23-Pillst>urgti. ':05 o.m •
July 2..-Piltseurgfl, 10-.35 a m •
Jutv 2~S.n Fr•nciK o 7 JS om
• On TV Cti•n,,.i 11
• All games on K ABC (7901
ers'
So after extending their winning
ways on Sunday. the Angels wett
blasted again in a toss on Monday.
I ::?~2 this time.
July 22-Clevet.nd. 7:3S o.m.
July 23-<levNnd, 7:0S o.m.
July 2..-<levetand, l:OS o.m.
July 25-0ekl•nd, 7:3S o.m.
• All Mmes on KMPC (710).
Cli burn· picked up the pieces for a
\\h1k. but he had gi,·en up fo ur
earned runs b~ the time he left after
three innings.
Toronto starter Jeff Musselman
was the bnreficiary-ohlhhe suppon.
including IS hits. -"t-Oronto--th-ird-baseman-Kfl~
.:....-l ..... ~ ..... ,r~,, .... A4 .... g
Frustration took its place in the Ch~k 'JA~,e~0~i~b:~C:CS:d ~~f!
earned runs on seven hits.
Things wett never the same for the
An&els as 24.241 fans at Anaheim
Sla<tium watched the Toronio Blue
Jays put on .a hitting clinic •inst
Finley and ~liever Stew~rt ~hburn.
Six runs in the first mnans-How
could it act any wonc? It did. To make matters worse. ~t fielder Chili Davis. the hottest
hmer in the Anacls' lineup. and
Manaacr Cookie Rojas wett ejected
in the bottom of the annini.
Davis was thrown out by fint base
umpitt Dttw Coble after arauin& a
chcck-mna ihicd strike all. lloJ&S
joined the act after Dayis was tossed.
Davis. whose 10-pme hitting
streak came to an end. was headed
down the dugout steps when Coble
gav.e . him the thumb. which upset
RoJas.
Rojas. who had to be hot an~ how
after watching Finle\' give up six runs
in the top of the first. vehemently
argued with Coble before getting the
boot.
"I just came out 10 find out wh y he
thrtw Davis out." Rojas said. "He
said he th~w him out because of a
gesture he made at him from the
dugout. I didn't think that was riaht
so l went out there. How could he
Gruber collected a two-run double
and renter fielder: Sil Campusano had•
a two-fun triple to highliJl'.11 the fint
inning for Toronto. which sent 10
batters to the plate.
Hot-hitting Fred McGrifT. who
belted his 19th home run of the year
in the fifth . went 3-for-S with thrtt
runs scored. "The All-Star break
helped me. then getting a couple of
hits (against Oakland) increased ~Y
confidence." said McGriff. "I had 1n
the back of m\· mind to Jel 30 homers
this year. lfl could get five a month. I
could do it:·
Tht• Blue Ja\S hit three home runs
(Pleue Me ANOSLS/llS)
Dnon Whlte ateala Wnl ...... Jap Wnl .._ •• Kelly
Onaber. bat It a downlllll .Ude all DICllt f• AJICela.
Flores waltizigla the wings for Chargers 'job
He's far from flnished~producing ti ties
In the NFL despite Raiders· retirement
Kanus Ctty Chiefs and came to the
Raiden. a year later Tom florn
btcomcs the head coach.
Toarther they produet two Super
Bowls rinp for Al Davis and the
Rai~ rn 1987 tev( Orima~ leavtS t1'e
Raidm.and_aoes to tht Charsn-In
1988. Tom Flom retim u tt"ic lad
COKh of dw Raidm and bttomn a
special consul\ant for special projects
witt\ the llaidm.
Tom i:1oris n~ the thrill
o(a Super 8owt vK'tory tons. bf-fott Al
O.Vit dill-dlcn 1R c:a.nt ~~ to ~bf..
..
FlortS can wake up each momina
and· choose from four Super Bowl
rings to wear. Three of them have
COMMENTARY
utle "Genius· is rntrVed for Al
()a,·1s and not the head coach.
.\I Davis is su~ to n.in the
team. the ~ COllCh jusr roaches .\I
Davis' o~n9t and dtf~w.
RerMmbtt the daY1 when the
Rai<kn v.~nt out ·and tot whatevn
'the\" flttdtd~
Last '~ar the~ Medfd a quar·
tert.ck. ·but Al Davis bri~vC'd in
Raidtn written on them while the Rust)' Hi·~ and pve him the
founh has Kansas City Ch~fs tn-startana po11t10n.
aru:cd o.n.iL ~ Rtcbtimwanmt to http Davis
T ...__._ n-.,.._ ,._or so thnoftttcdhimq_uannw\~ om was a u..aupqua ~·~a•• wi·11aa· 'ms fior a third round' draft the Chiefs when 1My dthttd the ('hoitt,
Viltinp in the Suptt Bowl. I only .\I said "No ...
"ft'lntcdoneSuper&o-lrina. Tomhas The Cardinals ofttttd Al ~
fourofthem. ~ Nf'il LOMU fof-eotM ·
What ~ "roukl a man want'! mtddte rouftld ~. Al "id .. No ..
Respt('t and the rttellftition o( his Williams bttamc tflc. Super Bowl laitftts roukt bt atthe top o(tt.t list. MVP whik Lomo suntd for the
Nobod) '"°' i9WI 11w ..... wwe1•nlll-a9r9N1i••.--1N1i-ff'FF~in1HttheiW>"iPll"tr'l'lort9ow1mrt:l.
with Tom AOfft. Thaf~ beaar tJw So Tom F1orn hlld R'-'tl)' Hilett
v. ho nC'eded a braille board to read a
dc-fensc. Jim Plunkett who uKd too
much ,.,dc-o tape e'·e1')1ime he •ent
back to pass and finall)' Mnt' Wihon.
which meant )"OU rou&d not use a
shotgun formation bccaust Marc
v.ould call fo r a fair c-atch.
So wh' not answtr his old friend's
call for a head roach? It'll bt the Ste,·e
and Tom shov.• apan Wlthout hav1na
to sharr lhe Cft'dits with Al 0.vis.
Steve brifllS the ialeru and s.aa1u
them. Tom l'Okhn thm\.
tf tht) have to fitt Al Saunden ifs
bc'cauSt the) tot off to a k>usy st.an.
v.hkh means the) '11ht1n IOOd shape
to draft a aood quanerback or tradt
foront.
· ~ranv.t11le 1n Lm i\nlFtes.. .\I Da,,, can't make up his mind
bttv.ten Viner Evans. Ste\(
n. ust) 1 • iM CoT-
ittUm or lrwtndale.
Leary (five-hitter),
Mar~hall (homer)
for streal_<tng LA
ST LOL'I !-\P) -The wav Tun
Leaf\ was pitching. the Los Anectn
Dodgers didn't need much offtnst.
Lean th~w a fi ve-hitter for has
founh shutout and got a ninth-innina
home run from Mike Marshall as the
Dodgers defeated the St. Louis
Cardinals 1-0 Monda) ni&ht for their
~"th ronsecuu ve victOI')'.
··our pitching has bttn 1m-
'1t100al." Dodgen ma~ Tom
Lasorda after Los ~ 1&ereated
1ts kad to eight pmn 18 tlw NatioMI
Lt'ague \\est. "Tam is been pitdli•
wt'lf all year. V.'t just havm'1 been
!l<'onng runs for him." ·
t.nn·. Q-6. won his last .., 1.0 in
Chitq o. He patched tr¥a1 iui1111
and dro'e 1n thep,_.,_.,..._ ~inst1heCanlin11&.i.---*
out four and waUrad w. II ' ...
onh one runnttto,_. ..... .._,
and escaped that ~ :I lllia6-Lu1s -\hcta to tnd the ~
"I just tried to kttp tM 11111 ....
and sta\ ahead of tM w...• llill
lta1'. ·.,ho Cftldits bil 15! mtchanin and a ..,ot.ftu
to a tu~~Jlb-•111111~-~~
last se,ason. Leary '°'""'ed ...... nan avefllt 10 2.'°. ·
Todd Wondl. ~ 7. mle• '° lllft
the ninth and MlnbaD hit die_,,..
p-itch for h11 l~ homt ftlll. lob
Fonda and l.anr w.:w-.... tllut
outLos ._tn•...,W.foreiillK
innanp. "11 1¥8$ dQ'MI <a~ bi" a litdt
1ns1ck. ·Manball laid. "Ht dwvws•
hud. hf & la IO la
(111111 -••a••••
..
. ~
.•
Track and field~ it's a sport in deep trouble
INDIANAPOl.ls (AP) -A .... meet
director aid Monday that tnck-IDd 8eld 1a
the United Slatn wu in deep troub&tand said
"the only way to revitalize tbc spon may be
via a ulionlJ spc>fttOf that embnca tract." ·
Al FrJDken of lot Aneeln. dinctor of the
Sun.kill. Pepli and Michtlob meets. all in
California. said. ·-sevtral track meet or-
pni.zen, indoon and outdoon. arc suffmnt
financial revennoftraumatic impect border-
i"f. on eoina out of business. ..
Most of the orpnizen experienced dreary
financial results -soarina coats. dedinina
~ -this year,.. he said. "We fll·
cricnced just wdt at our f'K'eftt ,... and
idlelob mcfls. And we had tbe supm&an.
web u Carl Lewis at~ and ~ Decker
(Slaney) and J1ekic Joyner-lttnee at
Micbelob, plus a tmnendous supportina cut.
pt us IOOd. strona sponsors and national ·TV.· ··ar this combination isn't worki.,. it's
obvious the ~n is in bi&. t,q trouble.
Franken said a nation&r circuit with strona
sponsorship had been pro~ last year by
The Athletics Conaress. tlie national aovem-
ing body. but TAClater dropped the plan .
··Ad van•. a national spons marbtilll firm. advlttt me they threw up their haDdi
and withdrew becaUlt Olla C...U (U•
ecutive direc:tot ol TA(:) JU& IO =
restrictions in ~ir WI)' of-.U.. I ftl '
sp<>nsor becautc of bis rclaliou witb Mobil ·
and Mobil's finandal c:onunitmeat to TAC
that no other sponsor c:ouJd be olJered a viable ~ka,e ... Franken said.
Cauell said that TAC did have DlaM "for
1the development of the ~ in the United
States. which involves a carcvit."
"This is currtntly under ftCIPUations. ..
Cutdl Mid." Al Franken is DOI privy to tbi1 or
to thne =· lions. WbeD evff)'ibi111 is in plact, com details wiU be announced. but
watil then, we prefer to make AO comments. ror obvious...,.. ....
Mobil.,._. tbt U.S. indoor trlCk and
fltld Orlllil Pria IDd tbe outdoor Grand PriJt,
in wbida moea ollM ..u arc conducted io E~. otthe 17 outdoor Grand Prill meets
tbit ~. only one ... tcheduled in the
United States, at SU Joee, Calif.
In addition to man~ Americall athletes
travdiQI to Europe b lllc>ee meets. many ID
there for non-Orand Prill meets. because of
the larte amounts of money provided by ..-
European promoter\. ··we need 10 ao to some profenional outfit
to see if we can market II (track and field in dw
United States)." Franken said at a hastjly
called news conference durina the U.I.
Olympic Trials. "We're not eettina muc:JJ
track on TV.
"I think the money's out there. I think track
isbisfthan beach volleybellandcyclins," be WO.-ref'errin1 to two Ss>()nt that recently ha~e
been marketed for television:
Butkus replaces
Jimmy the Greek,
sans picking 'eni
Le~s (Carl), ~ewls (SteVe)
~:5~~~~£-:~]~ t•J do their thing at the trials
the C~trainina camp. h -
The. . wbo sent veteran wide receiver Wes Carl Lewis COOtiDUe8 iS 8.888.l lit
Chandler to Francisco in the Jurae 2 deal for r~ Id edal rr.m ne Aaedale4 Prw Quillan. now will receive an unspecif\ed draft choice In quest o a our more go m s
NEW YORK _ Hall of Fame Ell from the 49en as compensation for Chandler, said
liraebecker Dick Butkus will replace Jimf11y c • • Steve .Onmayer, the Chargen director of football INDIANAPOLIS (AP) -Olym~ champion Carl
.. The Gruk" Snyder on CBS' "NFL • operall~ns. Lewis outdueled Larry Myricks in a brilliant Iona jump
Toda .. show. soun:es said Monday. Q~1llan. )2., had played 10 yean for the 49en. competition and Steve Lewis ran ODe of the paint 40(). ~e official announ«ment was scheduled for appeanng twice in both the Super Bowl and the 'Pro meter races in history Monday niaht at~ U.S. Olympic
Tuesday Bowl. . Trials. T~ other former NFL playm _Jack Youna-The 6-foot-S. 266-pound Qu.allan had s~ .129 Carl Lewis. continuina his relentless quest to
blood. Gary Fencik and Lyle AlzaCSo -auditioned for pmes for the 49e.rs before suffenna a concussaon in a duplicate his feat of four aold medals at the 1984 the iob -Nov. I pme against the Los Anteles-Rams. He was Olympics, won the Iona jump competition with a leap of
the JO · . , ted . J replaced by Randy Cross. and was unable to •in his 28 feet. 9 mcl~s -equalina the fifth-best ever. Butkus, 4.S. wall fill the vacancy crea an anuary staning~ition after comin1 back· from the in•ury What made theJ· ump even more im-ive wu that when CBS fired Snyder for of-.. 0 i · he ~ .__ 1ct'~ · • ...... _ fensive remarks he made about _ A .. r I tean n t _ UC. ·~ cou see a Lewis did it o.n a wet runway. Lewis' leaP, came shortl=,,._-
black athletes durins a television coml)(Utave envaro~ment wi the you•~ J>llye'! after beavy r11n a iOikCd the lnaiiiia0n1ven(ty Trac
interview. But a. .network sou~ here. and then ($tanan1 center) J?on M~k JOI~ us. and Field Stadium. delayina the meet for about 12
said Butkus won't pick winnen of Qlar:gen C~c~ AJ ~~n<kn 5'id 0~ Quillan._ He felt minutes.
NFL pmn as Snyder did. hk~ 1t was an .has bcfl interest to re~•".'· and 1t was an · He needed such a performance in order to beat the
.. He'll be a personality the amac~ble parung. ~.twas a tough pos1t1on to make, and veteran Myricks. who soared 28-81/•, the best ofhilcareer
way Jimmy was but that's whett we wish ham well.. . . and the eighth-best ever. This wu Lewis' S'th
the similarity e~s .. the source . ~a~~ has massed only eight stans an 12 seasons consecutive lonajump victory since losina to Myricks in
said. · sin~ J~m•na the Charsen as a second-round draft the 1981 national indoor dwnpionships.
BUtkus will be joined in the choice m 1976. Myricks. jumpina two places ahead of .Lewis. took
studio by ··NFL Today" veterans 4 9en pat llcKyer OD the block ~ew~~~~7~112t.he fint round. sailin1 27·8. compared to
• _ Bmit Musburger. Irv Cross and Then. after Myricks had inCreased his lead with a
Will McDonoqh. OCKLIN s · Sa F · EiJ ' -·..: C: ·nd Snyder, who had worked on the show for 12 yean. R -tanana n ranmco -leap of 28.()ll• on his ~ond jump •. LC"w•S lea ~ wa -
was fired after saying blacks were bred to be better 49er comerbadt Tim McKyer is available t -• aided 28·2'/• as the rain betan com1111 down vdy.
athletes and t.hat.they were takina over the coachina for a trade. coach Bill Walsh ~id ~unday. Aflerthe rain subsided, Myricksaotoffbisbestjump
profession. He later aircln.ized for the remarks. which · Both McKyer and stanmg nght cor-in round three. but the iml)(turbable Lewis answered . red ..... ft h .__. nerback Don Griffin. along with veteran stron1 safety . right back with his winnina effon. .
tnge a storm o protest a er t ey a11~ on 1 Carlton Williamson. became holdouts Sunday when Afterthat.MyricksJ·umC28-3'4,26-Sl/2andfouled, Washington television station. s· C I'-· · autkus.. who played nine seasons with the Chicago , they failed to ttpon to the team's aem o .... .,.. tra1n1na while Lewis finished with a oul and jumps of21-S¥• (the
Y fi 1 · 973 .....___ f camp in Rocklin for the ~nning of summer camp. . I 2th-best ever) and 22-2112. when he mis-stepped. , Bears. retired from ootba I m I ~use 0 a severe Both McKyer and Griffin att under contract. but It was tht second victory in the Trials (or Uwis and
· kntt injury. He was inducted into the pro footbaJI Hall they att seeking to have their contracts rcnqotiated. kept him on target to attempt to win four gold medals in
of Famein 1979. · · Williamson is a free agent. the Seoul Games. Earlier in the Trials, he won the 100-After leaving.foot&.11. Butkus became an actor. He "We have indicaled to other clubs that we would meter dash in a wind-aided 9. 78 seconds, tilt fastest ever has apl)(ared in many television shows. movies and converse and consider the trade of Tim McKyer."
commercials. including a long-running series for a beer stated Walsh ... And we're ol)(n Jo any trade talks with run. Earlier Monday. Lewis won his opeoina two heats in
companv. · Mc Kyer in mind. but we have had no response." the 200-meter dash in 20.32 and 20.03. the fastest time in
For· the past four years. Butkus has been a Walsh. Qbviously upset that the two players are each of the first two rounds.
---------
I# L ;t I
Carl Lewla lape In Illa attempt to qullfJ
for 1988 Olympic Gam• In tile lone jamp.
commel)tator on Bears games for a Chicago r>dio seekinJ_ to renqptiate as a tandem. said that he's not ~son. he was-ako • guestanefyst on-optimistic that there wil~jja~o~t ¥o~rc~spo~n~se~.~:..!..~, ~--=fo,....,l""'lo_Jw~iu:ng.-!-. a.UnLl.SCofT~da111y.naJtoda~111y.lllJDl_W11tJ.WDCJX112.i1i.cu.,ua;ua;~~~ri~rrifrimi-iliF""rji~~~~r.~~~~Fn---r
of ESPN's prime-time NFL telec~sts. "I don't think other Clubs would want to take this The third spot'On the longjum_p team went to Mike 1 :43.96·
· Quote of the day
· Ricky Jenlu, the Philadelphia Phillies'
rookie. on playi ng in his first major league pme
hett the tcmpcratur,c on the floor at-Veterans
Stadium was 146 dcgrccs: "Talung infield before
the. pme. I couldn't even catch ·the ball or
anything: Just being on a major-leque field made
me nervous."
Attomey'a fea: $808,887
LOS .\NGELES -A federal jud~ [iJ
awarded interim attorney's fees of C •
S607.687 Monday to lawyers who rep-
re sented the Los Angeles Raiders in a .
lawj u1l against the National Football League .. stemming
from the Raiders' move to Los Angeles in 1982.
Two law firms wh1cb represented the Raiders had
sought up to S9.2 million in attorney's fees from the
NFL over the action.
.\ttomcy Richard Haas of the law firm Lasky.
Haas. \ohler and Munter said the award to his firm 1s
based on the lawsuit. which has been the subject of two
tnal'i as well as apl)(als to the U.S. 9th.Circuit t'oun of
.\ppeal'i .
.\ damage heannf is still J)(nding. In addition.
anotht•r heanng datt o Sept. 26 has been set when.the
issue of attorney's fees agarn will be raised.
Joseph ..\hoto. whose San Francisco firm of Alioto
and .\ho to 1s one of two rcp~nting the Raiders. said
the firms have asked for S8 million in attorney's fen for
trial work . .\nother S 1.2 million is be1n1 sought for the
appeals work .
.\ppeals Judies upheld a jury's a~ard of Sl4.S
mil4ion to the Los AnJeles Memorial Coliseum. The
appellate panel also affirmed the jury's finding that a
rule requmng :"iFL approval to relocate unreasonably
nncttdlradnrr-vrolmmroffedm1 anti-rrosrta .
Raiden get llcColl from 49en
EL SEGl'NDO -The Los An,eles •
Raiders ha"e acquired st"ven-year veteran 4 •'
outS1de linebacker Milt McColl from the
San Francisco 49ers in exchange for an
undisclosed future draft choice. the NFL team
announced Monda¥.
McCbll. a 6-foot-6. 2J().pounder. played m 12
pmes for the 49crs last season. starting I 0. In 1986. he
started all 16 regular-season pmn. ·
McColl. 28.Joined the4~nasa fret-agent in 1981
and played in 97 rqular-season .-mes for them. 32 of
them as a starter. He also played m two Super Bowls.
McC oH was an Academic All-America selection ai
Stanford 1n 1979and 1980.
kind of thing on. because they kl)Ow that the 49ers Powell. who leaped 27-S'I• on his final attempt. beating ··;\lot ohou guvs (members of the media) have been
probably hav( ~n. mor~ than generous... Gordon Laine. wfto had been in third place sirK'C the sayi ng thalJohnny Cray can't wrn the big ones." he said.
According to Walsh. the 49ers last offer to the two second round with a wind-aided 27-3'1•. after taking a victory I~ with his two sons. John 111 and
players. prior to minicamp. was "in the area of Theotherlewis-Steve-wasnearlyasimpressive Jareb. "Today. I showed I can do it."
250.000." The 49er coach said that the two arc asking a as Carl. National cha·mpion Mark Everett finished second in
package that would yield each $1.4S million for thret Steve 'Lewis. a 19-ycar-old freshman at UCLA. 1:46.46. with _Tracy Bas~!Jt third in 1::44.91. Both ran
y.ears. including a S 100.000 signing bonus for each of blaLed through his 400-meter semifinal heal in 44.11. personal bests. ·
the three years. shattenng the world j unior record of 44.~ I he had set in Diane Dixon. a gold medalist in the women's 1.6()().
_ :"T-hat. is totally excessi~e and just n.ot.reahsJic.'.' -Sunday's second round.' . · . . meter rclav at the 1984 Olympics. won the women's.400
added the coach. It also was the second-fastest time run at sea level. in S0.38. the fastest by an American this year.
~.pall• oat of tourney
LOS ANGELES -A nagaing leg El
injun has forced Martina Navratilova to
withdraw from the SJ00.000 VitJinia
Sh ms of Los Angeles women's profes~onal
tennis tournament. to be played· Aug. 8-14 at
Manhattan Country Club in Manhattan Beach.
Na'vratilova. ranked second in the world. is out
with a pulled hamstring and hip flexor in her right lea
suffered two weeks ago during the Wi(Tlblodon
championships. She plans to play only one tournament
prior to the U.S. Open. the Canadian Open from Aug.
15-11.
"'I am disappointed I will not be playing the
Virginia Slims of Los Angeles." Navratilova said. "It is
one of my favorite tournaments. and I 'have always
supported 1t overthe years." · . ·
Jan Diamond. tournament director for the
Virginia Slims of Los ~ngeles. said: "Certainly. we arc
going to miss Martina. She is a great champion. but we
understand her situation and don't want her lo risk
further injury by playi ng if she is not healthy.
Telemloa, radio
TELEVISION
4:30 p,m. -BASEBALL: Atlanta at Phila-
delphia. TBS.
. S:30 p.m. 1nSEBUX: DOdgen aCSt.
Louis. Channel 11 .
7:30 p.m. -BASEBALL: Toronto at
Angels. Z Channel. .
. RADIO
4:30 p.m. -BASEBALL: San Diego at
Pinsburah. KFMB (760).
· S:30 p.m. -BASEBALL: Dodge·rs at St.
Louis. KABC (790).
7:30 p.m. --BASEBALL: Toronto at
Angels. KMPC (710).
WEDNESDAY'S TELEVISION
. 11:15 a.m. -BASEBALL: San franciscoat·
Chicago Cubs. WGN.
WEDNESDAY'S RADIO
10:3S a.m. -BASEBALL: Dodgen at St.
Louis. KABC (790). _ ·
behind only the 44.10 by But~h Reynolds of the United Dencan Howard finished a close second in S0.40. ·
States last vear. with Valerie Brisco..the triplegolJI medal winner at the '84
And it was the fifth-fastest ever. topped only by Games. third in SO.SJ. · ·
Reynolds' clocking. plus three at altitude -43.86 and Bruce Bickford won the men's 10.000 meters in
44.06 by Lee Evans. and 43.97 by Larry James. 29:07.3S. after taking the lead with about 2.000 meters
The 400 final will be Wednesday. rtmaining.
Six other finals were held Monday ·night, and there Joining Bickford on the I 0,()()().meter team were
were several other outstandina performances. Steve Plasencia (29:08.58) and Pat Porter (29:09.92).
Kim Gallagher. the 1984 Olympic silver medalist National champion Ken Flax won the hammer
who had been struggling lhe past thrtt years because of throw with a meet-record throw of 2S3 feet. 6 inches.
phvsical ailments. won the women's 800 meten in Lance Deal edged American tteord-holder Jud
I :58.01. the fifth-fastest time ever by an America. It made Logan for second place. 248·2 to 248-0.
her the No. 3 U.S. performer. behind only Mary Decker And national cham8ion Donna Mayhew won the
Slaney and 1968 Olympic champion Madeline Mannina. women'sjavelin at 208-1 . the best throw by an American ~1 couldn't have a r:ace st~;ea . because e~e'J~Y this year.
was pushing and shoving throu out the race. said Gaining the other berths on the team werr former
Gallagher. who took the lead at metm. o · Ka · s · h (I 8S 3 d L d s fi ··1 stayed out ofit. in fifth place. then made my move lZ<fiians nn mit • ) an yn a ut in
when.I felt it was right." < 1 ).
Gallagher's timing was perfect. as she won easily. One of the day's biggest surprises came in the men's
Delisa-Walton Floyd finished second in 1:59.20. and pole vault. as American record-holder Joe Dial failed to
Joetta Clark. who fell over the finish line. was third in advance to the final. Dial. who has vaulted l9-61/1. failed
I :S9.93. edging Debbie Marshall (I :S9.97). .in three attempts at 17-7'1•.
DODD ENJOYING THE GREAT OUTDOORS ••
From Bl .
happens. they hcar(and see) it.~'
Much in the manner of Americans
1ng .pmpK of Enalish socct1
t~ms by way of the idiots in the
stands. Europeans view baseball by
what they see on the television screen
during variousbeanball incidents
and such.•
"Their impression ofbase6all is
that it isa lot more physical." said
Dodd.
The Stockholm venture included
the Swedish and Finnist'I national
teams. as well as their juniorteams.
and the Soviet Union s national team.~ well as Athletn in Action
and another U.S. team stpcked with
hiah schooljunion.
ihe national teams were composed
ofplayen in,tre1he ?1-30 qe~poup.
Dodd wasjnvited to return. and he
said he miaht. He was also invited to
Leninaradand MoscowbytheSov-
ieJs. but he decided he'd sc:m enouah.
Predictably. the AJA won the
constant. concern. ..We prett) much handled every.
Dodd became involved in the one." admits Fountain Valley Coach
Swedisll v'nturtbetaust-otlrinu • Mike Milner. --
cess in Australia. where that title at That's a mouthful considenng
the Great Barrier RttfTournament M;lner's reputation for downplaying
eventually evolved into a Sunset his Barons' abilities-at least until
l.aguechampionshipthispast afterthescasonisover. .
spring. But when a coach Stts his offense
· II wassummtnime in Sweckn -comi:><:ting with. as well as beating.
the sun went down around midnight some of the fastest coml)(tition in
and came beck up at 2a.m .. but in Southtrn California. I guess he can be
Australia it's winterand Dodd said forgiven forgettinga little optimistic
thistime because the tournament will with still six or seven wttks remain-
be held on the weekend, thinp should in& before it tqins in September.
ao bttter. Henigan. who'll be a three-year
.. This year they've promised it sta'ner for the Barons this fall. was
would be Saturday and Sunday named the El Camino Toumament's
pmes." said Dodd. ••Last year the~ Most Outstanding Player.
wasa school near the field whett we Also tiiini~ all·tournament were P11Y1n1anoalTOT .. su&fennere-fionors rom ounllin VIIley were 6-
comn tbe teacher, alona with all of foot-SwidercttiverMikeCookand
htt students. "1th hats on and lined defensive end Eric Sassenbera.
up perfectly. to watch the Australians ·
pl~_ the Americans.•• D
Tbe Oilers leave for Australia Aua. The tteent Oranac County All-Star
I 6and rttum Sept IL-football pmua Orantr-CC>Mt Col-'
Anderson signs Rams pact
iourney. followed by the two U.S.
continttnts. and it wua tournament
certainly wonhy of 11Cr1pbook.
"When we arrived i1tStotkholm
afttracoupleofexhibitionpmes1 it
wasalmost like the O lympics. .... id
a lege appeared to be a rousina succns
Fountain V alky Hilb 's football. -it's not often thatthe pme has ·
team this fall has a rcputatio6to live aoracted a ~nuirae full house of 7,600
uptoafterrollinatoninestraiiht , atOrangcCoastCoUete. ' ·
vactoriesonthewaytotheCIFBia The'netfiJumintheS20.000taner ,,... ...... ~rn..
The Rams ended a week-Iona sipiina drouaht
Monday whm they reached qreement wath one of their
top draft choices. wide rcttiver Willie Anderton.·
Anderson. a S«Ond-round pick who WIS the 46th
player taken overa1~· sipcd his contract in timt to take
Plrt in the second or two practkn at Cal Slate Fullrnon.
T mns werr not dildosed. .
"I was fnastrated. but never worried about beina a
Iona holdout.·· Andrnon •td. "I ftlt wrd trt it 4llne
ptttty IOOfl .•
"We Ft a lot done It mini-camp. I knew I wouldn't .
fall behind after only one Wlft... •
The Rams hopr tMt Allckl IOft, wbc,. aulll• IO'
pann for a sdtool·record l.021 yatds at UCCA. dn
rcpla.T Ron Brown u their detp tbrat. Brown
announmt 11;. rctirtmtnt ift Merdt to rct"'1ti0-tndt nd
field.
(behind Henry Ellard) rm 1oan1 to IO for It... Dodd.
The Rams. who had siped I 0 of their draft choicn "h nsa beautiful bal~ with a
two days into traininacamp. have now stpcd 11 of their ~~ftballfaeldneatby. Tbcybad
14 draft choices after tiaht days of camp. int O.yCemnonea. railed the
Howtver. first-round picks Gaston Green, a ruanint Amtrican f11a. played our national
back from UCLA. and Aaron Cox, a wide receiver &om anthemandmarthedour.-ysout
Arizona State. rtmalned holdouJs thlft dlys btf'orc there. The same with the Fins.Swedes
veterans wert required to rtpOft. and Soviets.
"Thttr becomes 1 point. and it's still u.t. deft "Wt'vulleotmarveloulpictum rfPQfti~ late worts apanst _you ... COid Jolin lobinon and they bad a tirh international
said:" It s iinponant tM1 Wi& trt hm ad tr! mrted:' tCJQl'ftllnnlfllJl•Olf'lt die 111111 time
Meanwhile. Frid Strickland. a lind!Kkcrdtolln in just 1.000yaid11way.
the t«Oncf round. was able to ~ice with a ..,. cat "So the Whole community was
covttina his brobn left inde• ftnert. H~. ie was Pft(ty much involved. ..
unable IO tad1t anyone. · As it turned out it was ID outldnd-
Tht Ramutte•Dtded to fit him witl9 umallerC81l intnpetimtt.onewt.aevn
• ••hen lht pain rrom the break. whidl CK"C..t ·~· indtldtd1cnai1tontlw9lltlc5ea. lttwM. £acunions widl 1pstol16-ynr·
FiveConfftmttchampionship focthes:hantin. which n,ust receiye
finals. at lea$160pcrttntof~pme. -
Off'tht Barons' display in the That's what aivn the pmc and its
palliaapmethissummeritwould .. plaventheannualcheaplook-
apar such upeaationi art mere chiriain.
fOnnality. · · Tht pme can't be played whh«!Yt
Return in, All-CIF quancrt.c:k charitics. thusalmost always the Bra
Dlvid HtnlllD and.the mt olbis Lions aub must nickel lftd dime tht
tam maws uvenan rouPthod over. pme in onkrto11ti1fy ~M
c:omRCtition ol~Q~ tllii standards.
summer,rOli11toa1FOftCOrCI:-TfitonlydelervhwUoctontlw ~ lbriaddldtht El Camino pmcaoesto the ,.tlieticllfM
Col .. FftdYlltitletolbltrcollec· · Pr'Olrllll. wttich ~'2:"ydone it
tioe, ••~ Hlltm•. Wnt would btaeood · fof Torr.-. Nol Vn*a. Nonla Tor· 'ftltione.l laOnoflof'boaant 10..
rltK'e. Lonslelll'ta Poly Md Leul· . lnwmai""Raoun~·1ot11er: inp all-t1ar1IUKtioll nate:thelmMI· Paio. Vn*twattMdolnleapt blll_..at UCL a.-e
(32 .. JO)andPolyi._~•pd propmwhidlwauldbtallod
..
(
"I can ID ckcJ)." Andcnon •id. "but I want ao bt -...1.UllALtbma.lokpll~ .At .... !be No. l •at it•"
Vetmns Sttve Dlh (quancrblclt). Orea .. , (run· oldsanalt0mantroublt-bllt ni~ back) and "fvin Grttrae(liMbeebr) reDonedearty. Ooddllidnone-11cfd,ilt0t• • Nttet11.._.R~r8hH ... C8Mp,..., s0.6(._ ---P1910"IM i• nslais .... W ............................. ~-•lioeal..,_.._ ... ........ ,..... ---~-~It-
'
M I •\
. \ ~, ~ ' ' I ~ , I I, l . •· J • J ~ • L ~1 ~ l L
---
M&ttlugly on fire
since bi»•' blast
stetnbrenner must
havelttafire. orwas
Yankee star just due?
1 I 4
1 0 I
4 1 I 0 1
1 0 0 0 1 .... ,.......,..,,
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t e·••• •o lie•""' 10 ... ,~,fl lo
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Clllt-11 000 Dtl GO• -I C•1"14t 1"' ~f't ~a 1t8t ,..on.
E-l•"'-.. ~· ,."'~' OP--. ..... .,~··
LOl -N•• "•n t C ~ ""'!"' il-0•" .+, 1 ,, t.:t'• ,., .. ,
5-0JK"\Of" ''••O'••· )f:' Eu1th IP " •I• II \0 _y..,,
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DODGERS .IN, 1-0 ..
.l homBl •
The DoJ ga' '"<'Pl a fi\C:-g.amr sene~ in (h1 cag0
J11nn 2 thl' \\l'C'h·nd .ind ha1 l' a ~0.13 road rrwrd ht-q 1n
the maJl'r!> ·
f hl' ( arJinal' hJH' lu~t ll1 11f thr1r l3'it 11 µmes and
~t> of .'J. t Lou1 ' h,1, O('t .,l·1•rrd mun: than thrr<' ru M 1n
1 t' last I I g.am l''
Thl· t ·ard1nJI'. -.hu t 11ut tor tht.' I 0th ttm<' this sea~on.
li:ll into a tie "tth PhilaJdph1J for last plare 1n the NL ra,1,
.. , uu ·can·t \1 111 \\1th11ut an1 run :· ..au.I ( ard1nals
managl·r \\ hne~ lkrrng "ho\\.' t~·am l'i ne\l to last 1n th~
lragul' 1n runs scorl·d ··\\ t' ha1 en t 'IC1,red in a long time
For"'·h. staning h1' tounh game of the W"ason.
"or~cd the tir.>t ti1t• inn1n~' and µ't" up tv.o hits Ht
"ork<'d out of a t'-'<H1n. on<'-out Jam tn the first and a
ba'<.·s load<'d. on<'-out s1tua11on tn tht• founh
T-lieBue(k} 'snot stopping for anyone
PITTSBURGH (AP) -The Bua haven't -but still can't pull away from the P1rat~s. "ho
·stopped hert. Or in Los Anidn. or San Dieao or have remainC'd ka.atimatt C'onttnders a lot longrr
San Francisro. than many bl5eball nptrts thought the~ "ould -
In fact. &ht rallyinf cry.around t.hc National including somr of the Mets. , ~ue __ thnc ·days isn t just can tht Mets and O nlv last wttk. Mana1er Dave} Johnson !-atd ~ bt cauant. ·but •ho's aoina to stop tht Montrta1. not Pittsbuflh. was the team he ft•arl.'d Bucs. · · • . most down tht sll'ttch.
Tht Pittsburah Piratet -who lost 98 pmn .. Thert's probably 10 teams tn the National
just two }all I.JO -·bavc hem 'as bot as tht Lcaauc who take uueriousJ) :· said catchtr Mile
. weathcrlltcfy.-wsnninaanNlltalOft.hilhnincin LaValltcrt. "It donn•t make any difTcrtnC't' We
. arow. Theontyhotwr1treakbcnabou11fiasbttna take ourKlvn ~riously and that's 111 tht1 rt'CcfRt.Kttiftl sarcek of. I J mnttcu1ivc ~ matters.··
r days. • · · • ··pro~ think wt'll collapw," said tint
.. That .,.... is bot That team is ~t. .. San baseman Sid Bream. ··u1 them kttpthinkina that. i~ M12211r •Gitt CNil Mid afta-tht-~~don't. it'saoina to bt fun10 w t~m tiltht'lr Piratn swept a~ wUnd .mes f'tom the · v.-mds. ·· ·
Giants. wlM> W WOii ftw ift a ro. brfott 1bt All· Right fit1dcr Oamtll Coln satd the Mtts "are
Star brat. aoing to k«i> sayina what the) 'rt 10tn1 to Y). I "E~ittl dwy clO it rilltt. and ifs t<>Ulh to I hope tht) kttp ~'Ofl}lftl about e' crybod) tl1t hut
belt I dub lib ...... llwy0rt lailt'Ula in the cf\lt('h us. E\C'rybod)' thinks we'rt' a nuke. JUSI luck~
and ~-od -" ..... iftl. .. · \\'t'tt content to saav in the shlld~i. but thC' .... "'. • -L . ."-.-..:. a--. f Oc _....... . ~ If •. WUUlllll 1111wa II U1Stf ........ ~t bcsinnan& o tUUL:r • tll $1)C'&L •Or 1tsr si~ Jue I ) •·Im• thcftt w1tbia 21h · Thf Plratn ha'cn't ~t Slnct tht Founh of
Thl· P1 ratl'S ha' e 1'l'l'n "0 hot that thc1 '-'t'rC' thr
hnnnrr headline acmss the top' of· Mond:n ·~
P1ml°'un1h Pt1.,t-(ia1<'ttt' spon s p;igt. The opC"ntng
11f St<~lcr · training l·amp. normall) somc1h1 n~
akin t(I a rl'11g1ous holida~ l<x-all). aot a M<'·
rolumn h<.'adhnc at the bottom oftht pate
Pirate'I \tanagN .l1m uvland has C'Omt' up a
"'nn«r latd~ e'<'" "hen he's pmbk-d \\llh the
O\kl'-. Hl' rc .. at'J four fC'IUlars Sunda~ ap1nst the
(julnts. 1n luding h1'i l\\O hottnt hitters. Ba~
Bond'i and <\nd~ \an l~lt. ytt C'lmt up a S-4'
"1nnl·r "hC'n Bond' hat a tv.o-run. ptft('h-h11 home
run in th<' c1~hth annina.
The P1ratt't. ha' t' C'Ontlnucd 10 IC't C'ons1s1cn1
p1t\hing fmm buddtM° Bob W.lk and John m11C'}.
•ho haH· rombinC'd for IQ v.inuftcr bc&inn1na the
\Ca'<>n a' the 'lo 4 and~ !ttantn. M1kt Dunnt and
Oollg Orahc'~. v.ho btpn' th<' ~~n .1.: 10 the
rot311on ha\ C' 31<,('I \tanl"d to v. in rttularl\
ThC' bullpen h3s bttn ron'i1s1tnt 111 \('If
behind former (i11nts Jim Ciott l I.\ y, ~land JttT
lh"'1n~n 1 "'-: m ·ord. tight \l\nland haulk\v."('d
nnh on<.' run in ~(\ 1nntnp.
&nd!> ha\ 'ihrugrd off a crank~ kfi kntt that
Orange Cout DAILY PIL'OT /Tuetaay July 18, 1988
Clark Kent? No, but
Terry Clark has some
of his characteristics
A~gels-are getting
Superman treatment
from improbable _ace
From Tk A11~iated Prtss
Tanana. /l'rt• for 1ero. inning afl('r
inntng on ">und<11 . Clari., said he
thuul'h t 11 ''as .. unbehe' able. The
thrill ofa llfrt1ml· ··
But < lark "a~n 't a" ed b~ Tanana.
"Hl·'J pllt'h an inning. I'd p11ch an
inni ng It gut·d~"" to "hc:re I JUSt
":'lntl·J to ll'll at him .. Clark said.
.. I'd look' at him in the dugout and I
v.antl·d w ~~-') ou·r<.' going to &•'l"
up LJ run. 'oonc·r or later. ...
lron1l all ' both p1tche~ 14ert taken
••L.t ~·tnrl' lhl·rl' "'a) an ~ sconng.
Ji' h11u~h T .rnana l·nded up as thr
'"'" g p11dwr T an.ina kept tht
l.~11.1 ' 'u•rl.'k" dunng a bases· ll1u~.kd J.1 m in the eighth with a
hrilliant 'top l•t ;i Johnn~ Ray
gniundn IU'>t to thl· right of thr
m11und Rvllin~ 1111 hi) s1dt. he
mJn.1g1.·J ,, thrt111 tu ttw plate JUSt an
11nw 111 lllr\l' 1m '\llding Dick
'°'ll h1 ,. ·hl
Hut 1>111 . q \bnagcr Spark~
\nlll'r"'' lhl·n rdtl'' l·d Tanana
11 ·~ 111lh \1 1k1.· H1.'nn1.·man Bnan
1>1111 n 1n~ grlTtl·d Hrnneman with a
111 11-r.J11 ,rn~k :.ind< hil1 Da.,1~added
1 l"'1i-r .. n J11uhil' tu gt'l' the -\ngel~
1lt1. 1r 1l.1rd 1 ll ll•fl 1n thr lour gamC') •
.1~.11n -.t till' f t!-'t'r' fhat l'Ut ·Dt·trott's
ll·JJ 1n thl· .\I f J<.l 111 ,.m• pme cnl'r
•a· 'l' 1 ) nrJ.. ) anJ..c .. ,
< I.irk Jlln"1.'d •l;'t ,-,,l. h1 1<. in ht)
l'l~ht inning .. Hl t1 Jd jll~"\d fi,'l' •
ntt' Jnd vnl· rur in. a t11e-1nn1 ng •
nlJ I• 1r .l·.1gul· 1.khu: thJ t k d to a 'l _I
\n2d 11-ior• J l ( l1·1l·bnd Ill da's
1.·J·I1lr •
''"'nl v.hJt h1. lhuught about • IJ1. 1ng th1.· I tgl·r\ < lark \3rd .. ,
:huul!ht 11 I hdd th1. m w one or l'-'O
run' I'd hJ\l' J ,h.in1.l' But I ne1er •
J~l'J ml•d 111 J \hUIUIJ l
"I 1.Jn i"ti1.h hl'll' I I l!l't '><.'nt bad:
4_11v. n J' •l·a...i I'll kni111 I did the best I
i°"''"hl. .oulJ ll11 · I ll'" ,\1th Pa' dul' !<> .. 11mc: ofT the
J 1,J!'-leJ 11'>1 1t'-.·J uuht•:;i the .\ngrls
"111 gt\ l' ( larL, a r l:Jne l1Ck<.'t back 10
ldmt•ni<1n althl1ug.h thJI \\Ould be a
tra n'>pc •ndttlrn 1mpn.>' eml'nt o'er the
hunJrl'd' ul bu> ri dC'' hl· :.ufTaed f
· during .i \lov. 1ournl'1 through the
minor lc.i~~l'' ·,. °''"a , .,-'1 < lJrlo. hJ' p1t\hed tor /
J11ttn.,on C 1a,10111a -,t Pl·ter,hurg
-\rkan'>a'I Lou1" ilk' .\rkan.,;i ' again
and \11dland ht'lorl' •111n1n~ thl' :
-\ngd' wr !arm tram at t dmunton :'
la\t\('3r :·
. \..;KC'd . \\ h\ ( ~1" W~"ln-t J f'llf ::
"1nnl·r 1n the min11r le:igul'' R,,,a, ::
..a1tl ··~nmetlml''> 1uu takl.' .i 1tuv and
t'Ul him in 3 h1g h:i llpar v. ,ih ~11od ·:
dl'kO'<.' ·~·hind him anJ hl· 1 d o :· ~·ttl.'r th.in in thl' m1n11r' Thl'rl· 3rl' .i •
ot (•1 ,mall hallnarl...1, in Tn nk·.\.
K11JJ' ~rd Clar~·, tJ,:liall "a') a :~
"'.'f,l\\·Jll''J\!t' '" n1ph "UI 'hl hJn~t'' 'l)\.'~·d, V.t' I Jnt..I "-1.'l'fl' lht •
M Ill''' •1l nalanre . J nd th:it ' v. hJt 1:
!Jh·, I "Jn 1" tht• f11i: \'.tfi..ii•, .. '
ANGELSLOSE, 12-2
From Bl • • • ·.
1n tht• g:iml' lh"ugh ntinl' ol them
.JnW ni'f fink~ \\ h11 \\a' p1 1r htng t.•r
!ht· 1·1r\t ttml· 'lnll lunl· :" ~·cau'l' ,,,
,1 'trJtnL·d lig;iml·n: 1n h1' l~·tt th umh
.. H,-1\31, JU'\ rr1.'lt' ':ri•ng Jlt1·r
thrt'l' 11c:c·k..., .. l<i.1jJ' --.11d 11: I-ink'
"T hn hit thr h:il l hJ rJ. •ll him V. 1th
th.It mJn' run' 1n thl· rirq 1nn1 ni: 11 '
l\lll~h tn catch Uf' .tg.Jl!''I J ,:uh :11-l'
T 1ir11··1111.
"II, 11.1, ·111• ,,, 1!·11: i., ,•Jr• ~l"
1ht l1xat1nr h,· \\Jntl'j II ,,Jr'l'l",11
11;1, h.t T'l!!IOf .tnd hl g11i 1'>1• "l.1rJ tit'
,,1mm.1n,I ,,a,n't tht•r(' f 11'f\th1ng
\\J' u '1 h.1n~rng l'\l'r tht' plJll' I
thin~ h1.· ,,, i.:nhrr11 lhl· hall Bul I
Jpn't 1h1n then· v.a, Jn' thin~" n1n~
11 11h ht' thumh aftl'l°''Jrd ··
\\ h.1: ''lJ I ha'\' ht•t·n ra" :1• :r "'"' 1'1 tht ' ~nw "J' !hl'
:'< .. •f'".11u•, •' \f u\l'.\.·lrnJn \\ht•
,h,11 ... : :h\. \n!!l'I' tnr \t\ in ning.\
1'·t.•r;· !l<'l=l.: r ·lu·vd b~.11m t lano .
.\', thl· .:.i ml' "t"nt on hl· 2111 N'tta
"l.I' tx· IH: "·'"' :.ihlc tl'I rrfa , .. '31d
T 1•r1111t1• \1Jn3~'I Jin~ \\ 1lham!I
··T1}'111i:h: Ill' had go1xl r11chrn F. and
~1··~1 dl·kn't' \\ r had the i'l'Pl'nun1·
t1 '" ,,,,rl· .1nd 11r 'i.1.l1rrd ..
-< 11 1"ll''\' \f u...,selman haJ a 11•/\
'l\·f\11' \ U'hlllO 10 Sii on tx·f1'rl' h<'
l'I l' ,, t •• I ~ I h l' h 1 ll
· \\ :i., ,, '"·run !tad. 11 •:-.1 ~1.·'
th1r .:' J l11tlt easier. '.1'.l \h.,~l·tman \-<•no" 1n h15 (11,: h1i:
k agJl" JrpC'aranl"t of the ~3,,11" ,
It 11a" <.t''t'n months ago tCI thr JJ1
1'ln \h•nda'. "hen ~us!>t'lmJ "" hJJ
anhr11x-.1pic UIJen ([)('{ '' "' rrpair l"ll' tear in his rotat1•1 , u1l
around ht!' left shoulder \tu''\ :nJr
\pC'Ot thl' ti~t half of IQ I\ nn 1n u"'
rch.1h1li1a110n to l"C<'O' <'r
'•1 n'.1~ir1~ h" rir ,1\!Jn 11f:he q•ar
'11:n1fi1 .tn! 1n l t,dl ''l!"l' m'Jn r 1:11.k
:til \r11!1. h l11plo, 'lul'lr" J! ihl· rtatt'
\ 1., ., .• 1 l•ttll' nl••rr rl'IJ \l.'d "'1lh :i 1'1~ ll'.ll~ ttt \,lid .I ll'J! ,!!llOd 14 II~ lhl'
• .1.! '. J, .J~t J~\llJI II T ht-rt' 143'
'll'Til' rr1.·,,vl' l\1 lh111V. 'trrlo.1.·, :iltt•r
!!l ·: "i: :111. t'tr\l 1nntni il-Jd ~o nl\
''l'l.1 r ,11n,l·rn '-'3' ll1Jllun 1u't
:t,r ,,, "~ 'lnlo.n .1n~ ~l'ttrng lhl· h.1rt
\ ·".,. r 1.1tl' jlL.it 1!' 1: n pla~ " tt.
"· • .1: h .: l'JJ
I h ,~.1:1l·r1.:J to1u' 1J-r.ill·" hi t' :inJ
14Jlh •J '"'' 'tnL.1n~ •ll.! ··w 111th ,,.,i
i"lll hl'' -
·E ·" r 1'1nin2 I \\t'n: ,1n I ic lt N-ttcr
.1nd N'ttt·r · -.aid \fu,M"lman "In th~ , \l., I 11.·I· !ht c,1r11nces1 ··
ANGEl NOTES 0 .,.,,. 0... ....,..., w'>o
P>tH \C'f.... ...,1"11\~ o• • " ::>" ""t 0 Wt»f"O \1 •
:>f' "' ,., • a ,o .. a -t"c • 10'f"' a"l*.i.r ·~"'fl'• o~
:_\. .. .. a \ --.~1!'C Ja"'"l"\f \AO"'IO•\ •"'C -·~.a
"-.. ..,..,..,. •)v"IO: .,.~,.-CT •o \Q~
P'f'"" ,. ~~ ... a \ "'•u•..a. t""'1 &f"l'ilf' w'°l1tif
't 0... b ~·".1~ Oa' n M•t'IM~la ' .... ,.~
JC' "' '~-f t>v' Of" !1'-0 ' ~t CJllH~ Pf't.,..\t W '(I
~'°f"' ...-r'-• .,, .. ,.,.. ~~ "., ... •nd •ria• was 1• I, ' thf wtnt
tHI • U t>f'•o•p ' 00~" lcl'IO# wlla l ~\« IO lell
•Cl~ V\ ,all• o 'C~\ #I~ IHI Ille iame tn Ille
:> ... 10it"' C'.,,.\ a ,, fH '~f"' OG o,.. '~ ~ •• mo tor
t 11•...,. ~·~ MO"O" wme i.•• "' ,.,.,.grn e'. • ., •• \ \Ir&'>~ ~Ir. .W iil o' .,,, ~
t\ •:.. • ~~ :t<>""\t> vou '""" ,,.. ar\O oo •oo ~ -'"" · "'-'•~ s ..,., tor I'll\ ·r111•-•o
., ~ • , ~ •~\I~ T... anl<i. I I\ ~II·· tlu'
~~' \" • "'"'"' "\.Q w'W1'! thlPv P\ec:J ,.,,,. O tcf'I ,.,
•-It \ ~:.. a1t0 oemr "''d ... ,,..,, 1 .. u IOIO
•• e;i;· ., A'Pd ,,,. al'lllte\ •PllUf''r ' "'"' IU\!
~() ~Q ('~' ...... 10 001(1\ "' IN NfTW ""° I IU\1
•• l!Qil'h•'PO ,, II '"" "urts I ~· ._ ,, wll· ~· OP"t• 1,_. O ICf11"9 5!e" lflenll\ !(' •00'>.P ,.,l"f c...... •. • ...., lleloeG to '"° ....
L•~ \ 0" a '01 "O ..... P" °That'\ 111-e 9000
.. ,.. • lflt•• '~ 'fl.-m I °'8Vff'lllQ .....i P9'f"1 \.1!6()
'·•• ,.. I •-Dee'-bu' "-v rt otav111Q r u · .. ·-.o...• ~ KW. ~ 7 ~1
.. .,_, llMrt ~ H l tot119"11 -,_.
Wlfl t II OC>l>OW\ _--. Kft " l I °"
...l'C"P\C<h
THE ROUS~ DEBATE-CONTINUES •••
"what Sets HOUSE Qf V..fPORTS Apart from-the-Rest?
...... Da .. ~ "'......,,,... __ ~
ltOC.S& .t...,.,..
('\a~
Settle tbe Debate ...
Visit U• Today aad
Decide Jor Yourself.
HOUSE of IMPORTS
·Ho,,., of Mff'ctJes 8rrt: ·
-..e.-.ps-
rJti,..,,... ,,__...., a-.,p· 48/ s
..... , .......... 11 ............ "
~., ...... ,.
'cw.-.
Dial 213/71• 181tC&DE8
San.ta Ana Cl ~ Md Ri\-c.rMck 11 91) F rn°'~'"'
'I\
.o(Nl i...-.111 Nfw Yort. nt Mcu July.whtnthtylos11nSanDtctotobntOyfallinto LAL ...Uaun·mu·•, J"-M)L11JOMaa1:.i*--.. r.Jol111..1 .. _s-11iaia...A"1t11llu•iut1l--itmhird..1Mct iiq pmn.-bthuwi •hf. Mfl,~---'4tti ma~ wrtt . --1-------------------... -:-.----------..• . ' L . _,..
'
-. . . . . ; ...... ~-~ ~ ~ ------.... ~--_ .....
Ballesteros got what'
hewasseektn , but,
t ts time wit a twist
lllird oom dmnpioarlt• willl a 6 ; ntv 65 Md a 72-holr lotal ol l7J. tbeft laift!.~!1 •n iron to within I fett oltbe n... A ..,.. to ltay even wu l&W 1
$pain. bit bi:l1ee shot far out of the flirway,
·into a Pllti1111ot. He took a drop and 1tn1
bis s«ond lllol. a sand ~. onto the ~n and holed out for birdie-3.
TM Spaniard be9t Price by two.,..,
but the ~ one came u Price Wll despera~ly teekiJll a birdie OD tM ftnaJ
bolt.
'bitit . . ~. ~ 2-putted and fell behind ror the
ftl'll time in three rounds. .. After that. on 17 ud 11, I waaled to be
lllR'liW but not b>lhardy," be laid ... y OU
can ICl 's •t thole two holes real euy."
Tiih year. the open's first retum to Royal
Lnham since then. the patkina lot was out
LYTHAM. Enaland (AP) -This time.
there were no fenders to dent or hubcaps to
hit around. . This time. instead of a recovery from a
i!'I lot. it was a 9-iron that hit the
uck.
The· 16th was the key.
With-his tee shot smack in the middle of
the fairway of the 3~7-yaRI ~-4.
Ballesteros lofted a 9-iron toward tbe ft11. ··He played the wind perfectly," Price
said. a touch of awe in bis voice.
Without a pmble, there would be no
secqnd chanc:i for Price. Ballestm>s WU
aivins nolhina away.
o bollnda. 8allesleros never came ~
.. , dida't find any can on the l 6tftrairway
thit time," laid Billestm>S. one oftbe belt
~*' players in the pme. "'{My should perk their can on the. 16th
f'lnway next time, because I've become a
ut like last time. it camc on the 16th holc
at Royal Lytham and St. Annes. and it
meant a British Open title for Seve
Ballesteros.
The ball came down and struck tbe
flaastick. It dro~ust behind tlae hole, and Ballesteros ta ni'fora birdie-Juda
lead that finally he up in one of the pat
rounds in the open's 117 yean.
··1 don't know how it missed the bole, ..
In aoisw thrOJllb bis card at the end of the round. BIJ~ described the crucial
16th just likt any other hole.
''One-iron to the fairway. 9-iron. 3-iDCh putt, .. he said. . •
It was 3 inches that made all the
difference: just as a second shot at.the same
hole had n1ne yean aao for Ballts\er'OI.
• v~=player." st.ill knows how to play from bid spo11, too. as he showed on the 18th
hole. Off tht back of the peen and some 40 feet
from tbt pin a~r two shots. Ballesteros
lo&d I mid wedee that skimmed lhe hole
and left him with a 4-inch putt for a titlt·
clinc.hina per.
"I think the shot I hit at the 16th was vcry
imponant." Ballesteros said af\er over·
taking Nick Price on the final day to win his
Price said of the iron shot. "It lancfed riabt
~hind the flag."
Price had a pretty 'decent second shot Sttkina his fint ~or tournament title.
the then-22-vear-old from Santander.
Major League sta.ndlngs
Amedcaa~e
WEn' DIV1SION w L Pet. GB
Oakland 56 37 .602
Minncsota 51 40 .560 4 .
Kansas City 46 46 .500 911:
~el• 44 48 .478 I I 1/2
Chicago 42 49 .462 13
Texas 41 50 .451 14
36 56 .39 1 191/1 Seattle EAST DIVISION
Detroit 54 36 .600
New York 53 37 .589 I
Boston 48 42 .533 6
Milwaukee 48 44 .522 7
Cleveland· 47 46 .505 81h
Toronto 46 47 .495 91h
Baltimore 29 63 .315 26
MODday'1 Scorn
Toronto 12. Aa1el1 %
New York 7: Texas 2
Boston 6. Minne5ota S
Mil"aukee 6. Kansas City I
Dc\roit 12. Seattle 3
Oakland 7. Clcveland 2
Onlv games scheduled
Lii
4-6
4-6
3.7
8-2 s.s
3-7
4-6
S-S
6-4 7.3
8-2
3-7
7-3
4-6
Streu Heme Awai
Won I 24-19 32-1
Lost I 25-20 26-20
Lost S 23-22 23-24
Lost I 18-25 26-23
Lost I 25·26 17-23
Lost I 24-26 17-24
Lost 3 20-23 16-33
26-18 Won 28-18
Won 2 28-17 25-20-
Won s 26-18 22-24
Won I 25-20 23-24
Lost I 26-23 21-23
Won 2 23-24 23-23
Lost 4 18-27 11 -36
· Today's Games
Toronto I Flanagan 9-6) at Aa1el1 (McCaskill 7-5). 7:35 p.m.
Chicago (Reuss 6-6 and Long 3-4) at Baltimore (Boddicker S·l I and
Tibbs 4-6) 2. :?:OS p.m. Cleveland (Swindell 10-8 and Rodriguez 1-1) at Oakland (Wclch 10-6
and Bordi 0-1 ). 2. 3:05 p.m. Texas (Hough 8·!0) at New York (Candelaria 10-S). 4:30 p.m.
Mmnesota (Anderson 6-6) at Boston (Smithson 4-3). 4:35 p.m.
Kansas Cit~ (Saberhagen I ()..8) at Milwaukee (Wegman· 9-6). S:3S p.m.
Detroit (Mom s 7·10) at Seattle (Langston 7-8). 7:05 p.m. ..
Wednesday's Gamet
Toronto at Angels, 7:35 p.m.
Kansas Cit\ at Milwaukee. 11 :35 a.m.
C'le\ eland at Oakland. 12: 15 p.'m.
Detroit at Seattle. I :35 p.m.
Tex~s at :'llew York. 4:30 p.m.
Chicago at Baltimorc. 4:35 p.m.
Minnesota at Boston. 4:35 p.m.
Nat1011al ~e
WEST DIVISION w
54
L Pct. GB Lit Streak Home Away
Ooc11ers 36 .600 7:-J Won 6 25-23 29-13
San Francisco-·
Houston
Cinc1nnat1
~ '46
47
45
42
32
44 .. 511 8 5-5 Lost S ·21.21 19.23
45 .51 1 8 6-4 Won I 27-18 20-27
4 .489 10 6-4 · Won :! 22-21 23-26
San Diego
.\1lan1a
50 .457 13 6-4 Won 27-23 15-27
58 .356 22 3-'7 Lost 16-31 16-27
:'l:e" York
Pittsburgh
\font real
Chicago
Ph1ladelph1a
St. Louis
EAST DIVISION
56 36 .609 4-6 Lost I
53 3 .589 , 9-1 Won 9
.p 44 .516 811: 7-3 Lost 2
46 45 .505 911~ 2-8 Won I
]Q 52 .4:!9 16' ! 4-6 Won I
.N 52 .429 16'': 1-9 Lost 2
Monday's Games
Dodgers I. St. Lqu1s 0
Chicago t<. ·an Francisco 3
.\tlanta Q.1 . Philadelphia ~-4 I I st game 11 mningsl
C1nc1nna11 2. Sl'" York I
. Hour,ton 6. Montreal I > ,....
S<H'l Du~go at Pntsburgh. ppd .. ram ?..!:::;>""'o
Today's Games
30-14 26-22
:?8-17 25-20
26·21 21.23
:?2-2 1 24·24_
22.21 17-3 1
r9·24 .. 20-2s
Dodgers f Rrc:nnan O·Ol at St. Louis (Del.eon 5· 7). 5:35 p.m.
San Francisco f Reuschel 11 ·5) at Chicago (Sutcliffe 7. 7). 11 :20 a.m.
~n D1e.f.o Uoncs 5-8 and Hawkins 9-1) at Pittsburgh ISm1ley 9-4 and
Fisher 5-61. _.JS p.m. ~l'" York l Darltnit 10·5)atCmcinnall(RiJO I0-4).4:3Sp.m.
Houston 1Scott S·f) at Montreal (Percz 6·3). 4:35 p.m.
.\tlanta <Z. Smith 4-6) at Philadelphia (K. Gross 3-6). 4:35 p.m.
Wedltesday'1 Games
Dodgers at St. Louis. IO:JS a.m.
i)n Francisco at Ch1caao. 11 :20 a.m.
Houston at Montreal. 4:05 p.m.
Ne" York at Cincinnati. 4:35 p.m
.\tlanta at Phiade~ph 1a. 4:35 p.m. an. 1ego at 11ts urgh. 4':35 p.m-. --
Femncll H
Lirleno 2" Mo..ovrl
GWK lerlllld rl
G'Ullef JI>
F illdef' dll
L•2" 'McGrlff 1D C.moanct
But~•c
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Secono Cllrll, Third. OenlliftM'
T-HO A-2•,241
NATIONAL LEAGUE DedllrS 1, cardlMh 0 LOS ANGELES ST. LOUtS
Su?D HNP ID wooain ID G1DM>n If
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• 0 2 0
2 0 0 0
2 0 I 0
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3 I I 4 • 0 0 0
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• 0 0 0
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C~1n 1f OSm1t11 n Worrtll P McGft cl 8rnnlllYr1 Pl\Oltn lo L191 lD TP-c AlfcN 11> Forscllp . Wiiker P11 McWlm10 OQuenon Jl 1 SI T ....
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Lii...... --•1-1 SI. Liiiis - -•-O G1me Winning R81 -l!Mnilll" (10) E-H1mi11on, 0 Smltll OP-Los A""le' 1,
SI. Louil I L08-Lo1 A"9flfl •. St Louil s HR-M1rs11.t11 1 m se-su 12s1
If" H RIR ea SO Les ...... Lu rv W , ... 9 s 0 0 1 • SI. LIUll For\Cll S 7 0 0 J 0 McW11tml J 2 0 0 0 0 Worrtll L,•·7 1 I 1 I 0 1 Ump.re\-Homt Eneei. F1r11. H1lhon Sec· ono W1lh1m1. Tl'llro, Wnt
~ -73• .4-29.351
Tep 10
• AMaRICAN LE AGUE G Al R H .,.ct. 809gs, 8011011 17 l>O •S 111 lSI Pucktll. M1nnn ote t9 370 SI 130 JS 1 Greenwell, Bo1ton 17 3?9 '1 114 3'7 W nl1e1e1, New York 17 31S 60 IOI l'3 Brett. K1n111 City 91 lt7 ,,. 11S 331 ·Trammell. 9etroit 14 27S •S 90 n7 Moiolor. M1tw1ukH IS )IC) .. 110 314 Mlll•nQIY, New Yprll 13. l03 S7 fl .323 Ow E ••n1, Bo'10I\ '1 3" SS 110 l10 L1t1,1ore1. °'"'•"4 '° 31• S6 110 l1' .._ ..... C1n1t<o. 0.1111!\0, JS. Gaetti. Minnt10t1. 21. McGrrtt. TO!'Ol\lo, 1', Hrllf'. Minnnote. 11. J Cltrk. New Yori<, 11, Snv<Mt. Ctevtllncl, II, Caner. C1ev111ne1, 17. tnct'li9ll1. Tex11, 17, Lvnn. Bllhmo<e, 17
·-laftMlll Grttnwtll. Bolton, 7S. Cen1t<o, 0.kllnd. 73. Puckttt. Minnn ot1, 71, 0 Ev1n1. Boston .... Ct rlt•. Clevel1ne1, 67, Brett. Ken•H Cltv, •S . W1nf1~d. New York, .,, J Cltrk, New Vork,
SEVE •••
From81 on to victory. · The pukin& kM WIS OUt of bcMlds
this .YC!r.· but BallesterOS never came bar 1t. Tied with Price at I ().under II
they teed .off for the 16th bole, bis t.ee
ahol was rilllt in the middle of the
fairway. ·~ his second shot allftOlt
was r:ijht in tht middlt of the holt. It hli ·the stick and stopped deed.
BalltsterOS tapped in, and nevn
looked beck. .
Price. who blew a th~shot lead
with six to play in the 1982 open,
didn't blow it this time.
He played a solid round of ~
birdies and an. ~3 on the uth 7T.".i~N-1mtr.Burtre-dt0pped ~ stroke-on !he-
second hole. and ap1n two-puttina
from five feet on No. 14, and coald
. . . . • -Al! ..... •' 1 .Fllpl)hig·-out. . · ·"' , ·
Ed Hop99D of St. LoaU hlnled. nip· follcnrlal lala ftOt
with Kelcie 'Bann of Cbl~o. bat It wu for aaa.Jat -u
lo.t bla feath~nre .. ht boz·ol'f boat at C.eear'a Palace OD .a
3-2 dectalon .Sanday .
not make them up tbroush the
tonuous holes that brina winners -
and losers -back to the red-roofed
clubhouse that is kissed by the breeze
off the Irish Sta.
Price had a last chance to send the
tournament, afrad)' st~hed to five
days by rain. to a four-hole playoff
when he sent his second shot on the
18th hole about 30 feet behind the
pin,' on the arecn.
Ballesteros drove the 18th into the
frinae on the riaht of the fairway. then
sent an iron shot across the fairway to
the back of the green.
ft looked as if Ballesteros miaht do
what Price did six yean ISO· But t~e
Spaniard is one of the best players 1n
thl' game ~t .makina peat ~ots out of
poor pos1t1on. and th11 was no
excepuon.
He chipped onto the ~n. runnina
the ball toward the ttd flaptick and
yellow banner with the rtd "18"
emblazoned on it. In the sunshine of
Jatt aftcmoon. the twll cast a shadow
on the cup. missina a birdie 6y inches.
and Ballesteros. smiling broadly. •'
-kne" he was home free.
Price. tryina for a 1yin1 birdie, sent
his third shot rollina past the hole.
then missed a par pull comina beck.
Ballesteros holed out for par, raised
his hands in victory. and accepted the
cherished silverclaf'(tj~g forthe third
11me. .
. "I didn't find anr ~an·ori 'the 16th -
fairway this tim~: • he :Slid as he
accepted the trop'hy. ·•They should
park cars on the 16th· fairway nut
time. because rve become a very
straieht ·playc/." · . . ·
Price agreed that ttte I ~th holc Y!as ____ ...... ________ _. ______________________________________ • thc ke\. .~
. , MoMV IHden '·H~ plaved the windjusf right. and
GOL'
Brtttllt °'*' 17l Seve BeUesler\. \ 136.000
Nick Price I 102.000
N1~ F11e10. 179.900
Frtel CouPIH, 06.9SO Garv Koc'1. IS6,9SO
Pt1er Sen10r. MS. 900
vs
v•
211
212
lll Senelv L vte. 13S. 700 Pavne Stew1r1, US.700 1110 400.•, IJS.700 01v1CI Froll. ilS,700
,.GA TOUR'S LIADING MOHEY WlfiiNIU I can't believe the shot missed the
I S..n4v Lvl/Tflreutill SUMIY) J6l7,ll4 hole. I\ W0Un0 Up riaht behind the , c111P Birco. 1614.119 flag.'' the ~nnet'-up said.
l Cur"' s1r1n~ muoo . Price said he had played .. as well as
• L1nnv W•11111n' 1520•621 . I could." and that h'e was SUJ'( he · s Ben Creni111w U03.17S . , M1•11. McCumt>er · MSUU would win the tournament one day.
1 Joev Si11ci.11r · · Ml0.'12 Peter Senior of Australia was in at
I Oav1C1 F rb,lt "22.190 l -t. • f J Pa t Gre9 Norm1n Mlf.S~ 282. with sao Aual O apan. yne 10 P1u1 Ai1nger un.tn Stcwan of the U nitcd · States and
11 JnH' .. , un ... s 0a, .. id Frost of South Africa ,·oinina 12 Steve P11e 1346.7S2 'IJ M1r1t C11u vecc1111 1331.714 L\·le at 283. 1• P11er J1c00Mn w1,0'1 ·Brad Faxon. an Arhcrican who had 11·•9·'M·Z1
. ::· ~~ ~~" :::~; to qualify for the tournament. 1.nd ·
7HNHe · 11 Frte1CouPiei 131Ul• David J. Rus_selt of Eftlland ti~.at 71·n ·70-.. 11 P1vneStew1r1 °'6.45' even-pa· r 284. U.S .. n..-cJwn~on 1' ScOll Hoell W•.• '-"i-" ft 10·1Ho·" •. 20 G11Mor111n ms,010 'Cunis Strangt. 8-over on the nt
1l·•9·'7·7• 7HS· .. ·'1· 7HHl .. 7 7HS· .. ·61
11 KenGretn '26U'6 . round. fini shed with a I-over 21S-for
22 Miu Reid w.i.... . f\ fi I nd 1J Lerrv Netwn '261.S76. · the tournament a er a 1na -rota 14·M1rk O'Meer1 U.0."3 68. , . .
2S Crtitl Stadler '21f,l29 8allestcr.05' pabbed a share of the . '**'"~' o .... e1J •M~11.nt.0:4 11·1•-.,·70 ~; ~~~~~~~ :m;; lead' at ..63 hOles with a scorchi"' v1oi. • ..MiMa01._ ~.112.-lloCl!nloft. o.,__e~h~n.~ ... ,..,o.n 21 MOrri.-H11'11kv 1217.dt string·latc in the front nine.
St
tro11. 11·J, 116, lerenoutf'. Minnnote. 1-l. 115 ?f lob Twey '207.19$' H :1.-.1 n...:-• bird' nd 727. Oot1on, Ntw York, t·J, 727, RUHlll, Lirrv NellOI\, 123.IOO 73.71 .... 73 lO Mlrll Wieot UM.ill C matC11a.1 rr~ii; S IC I Toll. 1·3. m. Ciemeni. 8o1t011. IH. m : ee1u1re1o RPIT'lr. nuoo 72·11·•9·73 31. Jeff sium1n l201,tl7 ea&lc on the e-r·' silllh and h ~~,~~~' Cllv. 12·.s. 7°'· JOlln. PMw • •sir•-•21 eoo ._.. -~ ..... ·•wwt--n c~~ '·• hotes'. l:nin. aUM thud-rou leader
Ane1v Bun. 111.1sot---7Ho-71·7~ ~ ~~':'J.v, :~:I . two-putted from 12 feet, Ballesteros NATIONAL LIAGUI Oon Poolev. 117,tSO 70·7HM• JS Sltve Jones ll".»I holed a birdie putt on No. I to tie at 9-G Al R H ,.ct. Joie Rivero. '17.tSO 7S:•9·70·72 J6 Tom Sltcllm•M 117S,2'0 "d · ·
C. Perrv, Allenll 7S ?90 Jt fl ~S 9.., Cren111aw, '17.ISO 7l·73· .. ·72 l7 Curl'9yr0m . 117•.1'2 Un er par. • . . G111r·191,Monre11 '° l67 .. m lls 211 • 31 EoFlot! 1in.•· PricesaidSundi'ythatthesixth'lnd P11mt.ro, O •ic•oo ,, l69 ... ,,. )Ot Goreln 8rnel. Jr . '1 1.900 72·76· .. ·71 )f Tom Wei.on 11'7A'l SC\'.'". nth wnuld be crucial holts. He. ~:;,~"~,~,:~C:r~~ :: ~ ~ '~ .=t =~~ ~~.~~e:.1;i~900 •. • ~::~!:~:~~ ~ ~,;e1=er0' ·:l:U: · diitwhat he wanted t0 do, pickina up
0....., o.-n .. l17 .. 97 301 Tom Kite.'"·'°° 7s-71 ·1l·.. 42. Oolini. Hemmolld , 'IMOM1 three ShOtS 'On par. but . tMn McGH, St Lov1s · 91 ll2 '1 11S 301 Roctoe' 01v1\ '11.900 7'·11·72·.. 4J lleine McCen111~ lttl,ln Bal'~t-d'ld m...-. . . ' S..bO C111C1llnlli 12 l?f .. " lOI -"-C t 1·•-~ ... .,.. VI .. L1w C111c190 IS lll l6 fS 1" 11n Woo1n1m. $9,lSO 76·71·72·6' ~. :;;~,~~' ' til6'.SG Price. tryinl tOtrjse metnOrittOfa
8onilll, Pillll>ur9\_:: SI '9 296 .J1ck Nl~ll.leuU9.}SO 2t9 7S·70·7S:61 ~:r.:'F~; :::::::-diSIStroUS final fOUnd in the 1982
MendmV'I !_~I HOIHR ltACING Strawberrv, New Yori<. 1•. G111rr199, Mbn· Mtr~ O'Meert. II.MO 7S· .. ·7~70 • O A welOr'-tlM,..a 'open. bolfytd the leco"9 ~today · •. ' .,,::.:.'~ HtlvWMd hrtl trell. 21. C11r11, Sin Fr111elsco. 20, G Onl1. 2'I l/f: A .... ~ tlJS. ISl but saved pet on thf U.1rd W1th I 2~ ..
CL EVELAND INOIANS-ttKllltO 1111 ~::.·=1 ~~=O'l~i1.e=-. =·11:·~.9:: ~~~:~,~~~.':;~ ~:~~~ :t:::::: ma;:. foot putt 'ift" a·ltilddfiria'·bu•ker ' L•ll<tv. O•ICl'le'. trom ColOredo Sclrinol of Ille JIOfY ~lit .. --~M'llo '°"· N•~ Vorll, 17 Tom WllM>n,S7.120 7•·72·7t·n S2.lotLOflf ,·, :::ea shot.HebirdiedNo.6withasix-rGot '' Ptcihc C:O.ll LHOut Pieced Jon Pt<lmi n. G Sttvtnl 371 " S6 51 .24 .s3 Cl'llP Itek, '7.120 n·7t·7•·7J S), Oevlcl IOwetCh · t!Jl:m gutt and hit In. -.a. putt1 froft'f four pllcr1er on 1"f 2l·C11v OIM«>ltd till s.<lt Rici'! L Pinch Jr :Mt 63 SO Sot 11 • ..... llteM Ill Tommy Armr Ill. S1.l20 n·n·n·n Sot. Cllltlt!'PM!I 11• ft1 1.-...i.. "h"9"' Y•ll. 01tc11tr. outrl9P11 to Cotor10o Sc>fines C McCirron ,., SS _ JS 'n SJ Cll,_, ~n FrtnciKO, 61: G '0e¥1s. HoullOI\, Jim It-. t7.l20 7S-n•7'-n u •~ W..-.ln · 11-·-' «(It t°" KV~t . ' ' ., .. . .......... L...... A Grvelef in so .. 1• . IJ ,l1 ... V•nSIYllt. Pilllb!Ktll, •S. ·&onilll. Pit· 2'1 56:;:;;; z• s 11;:zs .. BuTBi11c:s"laOs'~ ~t there, and CINCI NN.ATI ltEOS-Plectd Leon Our111m E OtllllOU\11vr 1" .. SI 46 16 SI llOUr9'1, ti. Strawberry, New YOfl!.:_ff;·lfOOks'1· Wavne ltilev, S7,0SS n·11·n·1' $1 Oen Potlt • 11W 191 t k d I , __ -....~ • ca--'up llr\I OIMmlll, 00 · tM 1h Stv C1i111>1t<1 list '173 )2 n 26 11 .1' Montrtal. 57, G ... rrlN. .....,..!rtal. . 7 OSS 1l·71·71·7' . • n'• . 00 'I y n,,_.. ·•-n HK :• Activeltd lton llOOlnM>n, oltc,,.,, trom tM IS· ~ ~~;~:' llO JO ll 4' lll .J2 MclttYnolds, New York, Sl. LlnfW Wldo.ini. t . 292 :: ~~!:1t~mt4ll ::.:... Shon on tht tiehth.by ,ettiN .birdie
Olv e1111D1ee1 "'1 ~. Soll' Jl9 ?t J\ so °' >t "itdlllli<t DldUIMI JPH·Merie O•ubl. 16,715 1l·7Ml·75 60. L•"Y Mire 1n7Mlt frorr, Iona rantr: · · AIMriUll A111Cldeft M '"-Oroll 119 11 J9 2' .Of ll . G .Medelua. Clllca90, IS·.J, .al. c-. New GordOI\ J ereflCI. 16.715 1l·1'·n·n 61 MM. O'GrltlfY nl6.t• . · • ' ~LAHOM.A CITY lfEltS-AnnoUf\Ctel It Sobollt JS6 1S D D IO 21 YOfll, •·2. 111; $clft, Houtloft, 1-1. llO. J 1'2 ~ 62. JoM COOll t111,G1 Si.ve KtmP, O<ftflt!Otf will lelvt tile IHm. ltobin.on. F-1lllOuftlll. 7·t, .771; l"etrtll. Mon· l rltn AMf'd!Mnll, tS,17• 1l·74•7J·7J 63. Jof1ft Hvtton 1111.* efltetive Jvtv It TitAINIR STA-I trN I, 10·3. 76'; .......,, ~ 1J•4, .7611 ltonen llltfer ly, tU7' • 74·74·71·7' ... lred.FHon 1•,JM· · . • •.
'OOTIALL ~~'' --: ':: a;: ~~ . ., ICllftlPtl'. Hou1tqn, 9·l .. 7•: -~'to. Cl11Ci11Mll, ICtn l rown, U.t74 7S·n·7S-11 65. Dorl~ ••;Ml-OmJll ... ·· ' .......... , ..... '----J Caneni .. 21 10 6 JO ~· 10·•. 714, Welk, """'*""'· ....... 11• Jty HNI. •U7' 71-76:71·• " TOfTI ftul'lrer ··-• •. • . •. • ltAIOEltS-Acoulted Mill McC041, c Wtlillifttllllm 1111 20 IO ,. .lt .•l · Noetltetditle,SS,17' 70-71·7'•70 67 HelSUt!Ofl • ,._ • • • • • llfteM<ller !Tom t!W Sen FrtfteltcO ""' '" It Metldelle 1' It l2 n .26 S7 Grellem Marti!, 15.17• 7S-7J•7M4 .. Tim S1mMOn . ...... .._.. • , •, • \ e•Cl'\en9t fOf en u!\OiKIOMd ctrelt CflOice. It. Stell! 7t 17 11 11 .22 ... Oevkl A. ltuuell, SS.t7• n.,:7J76:nn:~6 .. 10 •. 50~11 _!_!lftett on " •,!!-!!! ht~J,Comfona~ in tbis' penicular BUFFALO l lLLS-Announced lllet Mlllt M Stutt Ill " IS IS It .JS WIYntGredy,IS,17• ' ...., -. "rftm-· . HemDv, dtftn1l'lt end. "" left cemo •fl~ L. larr~• ICM 16 10 10 . IS .JS Corey Pe.,rn, SS,174 74·n·71·7S 71. we~ Lnl •--' >.. _..y. •. ·• ' " ,, felline teem otiY•ic•t M M1tcl'le11 ,. 1• t to n ., 2" 7s-11•72.,. 72.,.., Ool'l 11111• ""~ : Bact-t~bedt :-AU.Saar · Games b.~~.e~~:o~••owNs-Slel!td "1a11 7 := i:. :; ~ ,; ·if tt ~~k.t:~~~s.r:;·u.11s ,..,..7..,, ~ r:'G~ .... :.tr donn't.aft aacb • ror .....-
. OENVElt lltONCOS-We1vtd Jim Heftdley, w~ CMtlC)lft .wfnnlne -c.tlllelt. Sam Tc>rr1no, SS.Its 7NHM1 JS."*' Ttfll!Yton ...... vacaiqn. but Odum ~IM
Cfl\ler, Arnold If own, Ltonefd JOMI _, M~ oenolft "' "" """9¥ "'"*"· .... Peut Alllltltl'. IS, llS 7NS·7J·7' 76. ."'. COCflflll .... ,,, ODDDttunity • • TvrON Devit, defeM!ve Deelll, Jim Kmet, AtlOvHof tll,SS,llS l7 ... ·74·7S n71 .. JMleT-IMl*::r' ~ -·,<1fi ~:'., ~ .. _~.._ dtfeM!ve end; Scoll WliMll. OIMMlve llNrNll. IOA,_ 2'S _.. •• • ...;.tt _... . ....-!wel ..--~ ltvtn ltlelt. Oen~. T'*"M A'*lclle ~ YACMT AW ·HuOlr!Gl"Wft.M.7.. 7'·1l·7HS 1'.ltM' · •· lft,lil . ~.ta • M -:!°ui ~~~::.,r:;:.~1:!.vs..~'. ANO~-~\'= C~W r::::ro,v:::::: ~:~:~~ It~· ... ~.~~~··"··-~10-offtn•ive li"""9fl; CWY C-..r. """"· ltven ,...,, ............ , PlllliDWettOl'I. M.7.. n ·1'·H-1• .D.Oe'llclOlrlll I how ~ larkel' _, OeYld CrotMu. N*1ctlera. c;..., CLASS A -MM ...... ,, .. lll·Newmen. Peter FOWier. M,760 7t·72·71·n a,'*" T""" · At Utall be ~111· ia
Torrell•. ~: C"9fW111 w~. '°" IYC. t. •Y!Nft . ...., ~ . ..,... llY ,,. 75'71~,..,. M. •1et11r• ~ . buliw ...... ati.nma .... .,, K•tev. Mitle Mer_,.I ll'd SMll ,.,_,,, Yeclll Reclfll C-..: 1 MllCNlf, Her•'eurllllr. Mille Smith, M,461· IS.P~ .1.~ -• • • ~ 'l.i...... rUMlne Deeks; Cflrlt W~. Freel 0.¥11, 1111\1 C01'"""'911 YC. Cl'I ~. M ... 1 7~•17·7S It MI....... W ;nvw 1111r mlll::r ·--· M ,_
AM.t *""'.,.. Tre. c.-e, t'9'11 "*· ll'd -- -CL.All I -t, _,... T .. , Jlftl 6 ll8'911 e·P,!IU!lr'01df1uot 7:1·1>·7••76 11 Mlke""91rl MV~IO-W. Cnuc11 $celft, Devlcl Mllel ll'd Victor Mo«e. DAVl~D ( ......... , _ 7 Hutlfttj IYC1 I. C_._, Otr• GrlNm.. 2'7 ·"-"""'""" • .. I'd fiD10P.81J._N .. wl~0:10ILHl-iieMd Trecey letoll, r-~ ~:. ,,_.l,:r::-..:..~.:. IY~(Aullr-."·i.O:.:...:.~-=-':.~~w. re~=·:~ ~:t::t:: 5-.·=~£.· t ' in l'our ~ ........... to Mfetv. 0.¥1cl VlelN,.!!'!!.!..:... _, ....,_ '1 '~ ..... 2 ttia._., I .. .,_., 4 INN IYC; f . .,._.,, Delll T ..... IYC, l ,.. , -. ...,._ . ~ .... Wflil ........... If
""· ......,..,. elld. .._._ .... ....,.... w nn _...,. .. ....... ' Otr•. Tlf'll ~ •• I YC "' • ... -. ' ..... & •• , .............. . ~~'· lineWW. _, .,,_., ..... ... ..... , ~ -....... n "-.... ........ ::,-:::, ~:r.::::~ ::~-::.:.=.:;::,;;:ea. -.~ • KANSAS CITY CHll~l-SllMCI J .•. Am· ~ ,... ......... 7 MrrlClldl. n lllMI, CL.ASS A0 l. ..... Jim~. IYC; AMr9WSl!lrWM.•.• 71·n·1t-lt fl_. a r .ar,,. ,,.....,._. .... ...... ., ·::--·:-~-=~·:.•::o...:,...,~: ...... =:.r~·,.:.c;:: .. "!';·ur:':i.. • ~"":'..:.".~r."'· NMYc; 2· .....eev. '" iJ·1r..:.."". -* mtt hm 11a111a• an.•
MIAMI OOL"41NS-Sltf*I l"e\11 1.M*ford. TNI '""'' trwt..... CL.ASS I -t,waell, ~ ,.._.., Mellull~IN!'o,U,•lt 19':7J·7N• ti IMtAaeil • 1111"" I litaillr .......... COi,,.,~. We!Wf U• •~. offeMtve LOI A .... L.IS -Ill tt.o Cr•,...,_,.. I YC, l.Nu919 T ... J. T~. OeYld ~... •r •· • ..., , .u6:10. t~--. _, o.rrvt RUMlll, ~MIMO. ~~Cen~von'.'.:_~Cr~tlll~.~~~~~-:-~~~~~V:ov:...,.~'~·~Y~C~~~~~~~~~~-r=.ma.;....,..W111L.ftUM<1..-~~~--'t.L..1:-'-l'l~~...,. ..... ,..... !JR-~
'· .. ..
•
'11
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/TueldaV July 19.~!19 •
·American Stores' headquarters anchors the Atrium
8J 808 VAN EYUN ...............
Irvine's Roman-hiah-tech office
tor;er. the Atrium. has · lured · a
Dtmber of bia name corporate ten-
.. to Oranac County over the past
*years.
· ,Amon,1 tht major coups has been
tlit transfer last December of corpor-
• hcadquaners for American Stores Co. from Salt lake City to the Irvine
Business Complex. ·
Owner of the lucky and Alpha Beta
suptrmarket chains. the Osco and
Savon dru& store chains as well as
several ~tail chains in the Midwest.
Amtrican Stores reported $14.3
billion in sales in 1987. .
The move to Irvine makes Ameri-
can stores the largest publicly owned
company based in Oranac County.
American Stores is by far the laraest
national company to ha ve located its
headquaners at the Atrium.
A com pan~ spoke'iman d«hned to
discuss the: reasons for the move from
Salt La kt Cit).
The complex hasalso been success-
fu l in signing on several rea1onal
hcadquancrs. including Merrill ..
L'nch. Pierce Fenner and Smith Inc ..
G·enc-ral Electric Capital Corp. and
Manufacurers Life Insurance Co.
··We're 7.0 percent leased, which is
about average for today's soft mar-
ket. ·· said Bob Davis. a leasing aaent
"'1th Cold well Banker Commercial
Real Estate Services .. which handles
the .\tnum. ··1rvine's overall vaca ncy
rate this quaner is 23 J)(rcent. That's
high er than some places. such as
Newport Beach. but the) don't ha ve
the volume of ne"' construction that
"'e have here ...
Tc:nants are paying an average of
SI .SO per square foo t fbr a piec:eoft!K
335.65 I square feet of rentabk space
William JP. Purcell
ABitells
Of reCo·rct. ~.
reVenUes,
new .offer
.Net income increase .
for Irvine phone firm -
listed at 38 percent_
-r
Frank J. Frttz. president of .\81
!\ma1can· Bus1 nt"ssphones Inc .. an-
nounced· Monda~ the re:ce1pt of a
'-l:eond unsohc1trd proposal · from
ompan' directo r. Jc:a n R.
Sttl-gemelcr. for a cashout merger oi
the compam ·s common stock
Thl' nc~ · pr~sal 1s at S 11 per
share: arid 1s )Ubject to Sw:geme1er's
1n\(''itor group obta1n1ng necessa~
financing. negot1atton of a merger
agrl'l'ml'nt. approval of tht trans·
art1on h' .\8l's~rd·ofd1rectorsand stcx:~holder'I and a numtx>r of other
cond1t1 ons. •
Thl' proptl~I. "'h1ch C'\p1res at
noon on 'Juh ~5. requires Fritz and
t"'o other co·m pan~ e\ecutl\rs hold-
ing· an aggregate of 4 1 5 percent of
.\81"<1 stock 10 grant Stiegemeier
opti ons and 1rre' ocable pro'1es on all
their <1hares.
Fr1t1 stall·d the If' 1ne-based com·
pan' 's board of directors will con-
s1dl;r St1t>gc:mr1ers new . proposal
bcf<m· 1l. t''\Plres. Fe1tz decltntd
further comment.
1n tht' .\tnum. The rate places the
.\tnum on tht· h1ah end of In inc
office rentals. although it 1s com·
parabk to other larar. upscale lo-
cations an the cit'. Davis said.
Complt'ted 1n ·1986 ~ the lrv1nt'·
ba~ French & !v1cKenna Co .. thC'
.\trium was des11nt'd by the Los
AngelC's art h1tectural firm WHJZ
Group Inc.
C'ompoSt"d oft"''° 10.stor) tov.ers.
tht' t'nllrestructure 1scovered b} glass
atrium. creating an effect that publi·
c1st Davf <\. Dickstein said was
tn!>pm·d b~ th<' open counyards of
ancient Rome
Tht' compk, ... unusual des11n .has
"on n t'ral a"'ards from orpntza·
11on!> such as thr Pacific Coast
Bu1ldas Conferrncr and the Na-
tional .\!>sociat1on of Industrial and
Oflin· Parks and thr American ln-\t1tull' of A.rch1tt't·ts. which dubbed
(Pleue eee A TaJUll/•)
Stein-Brief-Ecker na1nea
Purcell as vice president
William f . Purt"e ll has tx>cn named
'ice prl'Sldc:nt. "'l'C.tern rl-g1on for
Stein·Brief·Eck~r. a Laguna ~ 1gud·
bsed commt'rc1al brokt>rage fi rm
spec1alt11ng tn Lenanl n·prl·~n1a11on
For thret· \l'ars ht' ha\ rt•pn·~ntt'd
rnmpanll'S.ln build·IO·'>U lt . thl' l C·
qu1st1on and d1spo.,111on of lht'1r
fat:thlll'S and rnnsolidauon., • • • CMS Ealtaacemeats lac .. a global
producl·r of ma'' c.toragt' de' 1n·' and
acn'''>Orll''> for personal and laptop
romputrrs. ha'> opened a -...:ei. .... orktng
(product'> I di\ l'>IOn Jim Farooquee.
· pre,1dl·n1 of thl' Tust1n-ba~d com·
pan'. said the Ol'"' di' 1s1on ·· .... 111
bnn·g to markt't hard d1\ks. cabling
and othl.'r products needed to connect
pc-~onal omputa~ 10 net"'or~s 'uch
a' thOSt' a' ailablt' from ''\\ l'll
8.2500/o.
JC 0 \1 and I B\1 ·· Hl' appointed
Rokrt Wagoner a~ product mana,er.
hl•aJtng lhl· nl'" 0 1\ ISIOn • • •
'l'" [)!1rt lkal h rl''>ldcnt Stevn L.
Hollstein ha~ ht-t"n ad\'anced to the
f)<)\111on of l'\l'CUtl\ r ' ice president at
'larine !'\a1ioaal Bank. He will retain
h1' rl''p<1ns1b1h1' as chief crt'dit
utfow tor thl' independfnt fi nancial
'"'t11u1 ion that '>l'f' e'> Orange County
frum 11!1in•\ 1r1 thl' John Wa,ne
.\1rpM1 and \ktw ( l'nter areas. · • • • Barbara La.adis. an IP inr resident.
ha~ hel·n promOll'd 10 manaaer, nsk
management for Carl ~arcller
Enterprises Jae. 1n .\nahe1m. " 12-
~ tar insurance profl·ss1onal. sht rc-
l't'nlh l'arnt'd an J\l>Oelate 1n nsk
manaj!l'ml.'nl dt-grl.'l' from the Risk
(,leue eee 1'All&S/B6)
TAX FREE
MUNICIPAL BONDS
State and Federal for
California Residents
Orange County, Co~munlty f ·aclllty
· · District No. 87 •1 ·
Availability and price su~ject to change .
. -For mo~e complete information,
call CARMEN SMITH at
1213; 688-3207· or . (800) 237-8796 . ..
or Hnd In the coupon betQw to: .
EDWARD BULIAYAC
c/o DREXEL BURNHAM . .
444 South Flower Str-.t, ~th Floor.
Los Angeles, Cellfornla 90011 · ·
. '
'
. .
-------------------------------~---··;------· . . .
' -· ~ ,.
Addrn1 . ._.
• City/State/Zip ..
··Drexel a·u.rnhan1·~ ·
. ·. La\t month ttegeme1er made an
un'lohcttrd proposal at SI 0 a share.
"'h 1t·h "'as 1 urnt"d down h~ .\er .. 1-;==============:;;:==::::=~:::::::::::=:~ d1rc:cto~ on June ~.i. I
F«1t1 also announced rl"<'ord fiscal
I ~81' '"t'ar-t'nd and founh qoor:irr
~IOO RIWARD .. ______ c-
Has your bantc C.1,0vcd .
()n .you?-~·;:·:, .. ~ --
. .
Take advantage of our guariu\teed~ood' service
FllEE .... ...
• 200 Penonall&ed Cbecka FJlE'&•
When you open your new ch~kini·ac:coUnt .
• > • • s montlaa replar. aentce ·c~e FREE
Because of our commitment t.0.~rvice1 n'Ow is the time to
add a new account or chaifge l>at1'k1. ' •
NOW T"O LOCA.TION.$.TO CHOOSE FROM.
84~4681
16531.&lia Chica St.
Huntincto n Buch. CA
•os,
' ,.~)' 1
r-"~~\19 -
l <ii -I f 4:
.
l
I
,/
\
I J -._.w I
..--~~::.;,,;;z;,~'.¥9= ~
536-oo96
202 Main Street
Huntington Be.ch. CA
/ . MM9
I
I
NATIONAL ·MNK
I
' • '
.... ,,..J, ..
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...
"
~ ......
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' ,.
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ATlUUll... NAllBS •.. ,__. ..... .
the Atrium "the most provocative Ma~mnt Institute of Ammca.
and interntina office complex in CKE as the owner and franchisor of
, . v..a. G .... of ........ -NIWY~~-~ ~.BUI ...... m. in N_p-= .'rJ~OttllNt-rl'h. ~
Oralllt County." 4S8 cart•s Jr. restaurants.
Otfitr major tenants include Home J • •
port Beach has been elected to the IM =r'or'CNftii"'~ IN J:' or-.: N..... M...., C.WU. it was f:cet1Mondev. ,...,.
Federal Savinp and Loan Auocia· NenDM V. Wapier, former presi-.
tion (rqional headquaners). Prop. dent and chid' executive ofticer of
eny Company of America and fideli-Sianal Landmark Properties Inc .. was ty Investments. named to a four-year term on the
---------------. Univenity AdvilOf')' Board at Cal
announced by John. Nu~een A Co. ..~itcwtttet "= 3.,._~ Inc. the nationwide investment dllrWi..., Ml,..,... ;:.in;
ba;ftkins firm. The cou~ is com-price-= ~. '99 P.:. or . pmed of a select poup of anvesament professionals acro11 the country who
arecited for''continuinauc:eUence in
financial counselina in the faeld of
tax<xempt securities."
State. Fullerton by President Jewel
Plummer Cobb. The 13-member
board meets reJUlar with her to serve
as a communications link with the
publics the univenity serves.
• • •
..... Onmle c..a, ,.,..., 1>11-
trkt namecf Wtulul .,....._ of
Irv.inc as Coach ~rator of the
Month for June.
INNIN
••••
Y<?UJ ATM card has winning ways this summer! Use your AlM card,
.and you could · win two ways • American. Savin~.
1. WIN A EUROPEAN VACATION AND $25,000 CASH!
That's right you'll autanatically receive one sweepstakes entry each time
you use your American Savin~ or CIRRUS• AlM card to make
a deposit. withdrawal or cash advance transaction.
2. PLAY AT A.MERICAN AND
YOU COULD WIN A PRINCESS CRUISE!
Use your American 24-Hour Convenience (ATM ) Card or any
SfAR SYSTEM• or CIRRUS• member card at American Savings from
June 1 through August 31, 1988, and you arc automatically entered in a
drawing for a luxury Princess Cruise fort~. If you don 't hav,e an
AlM card.• now is the time to apply at any Amenean Savin~ office. "Money, Money, Everywhere!" .......
SWEEPSTAKES
•AlM c.'d -neccasy IO p'-y. Ptnalll wilJloul AlM cardl ruy' cinkT Ille~ by nalinl a n:quclt to Olla lhc C10111C11 10 lhc 111:.-.eSI Amer&:ai
S.Wi ... bnn:b. No .....u.i requiR.d.. Free Cllllty inlarnulimi a'lillibk It my Amcrit.wi S.Wmgs bnnch. IZl!lllO)Ui o( Amcnc.1111 SllYings and ~1nrc:n
CN1n imd lhcir faiailics Ire not digiik IO win. CClftlf!llM .ClllNll* Nip ..-tilabk 11 Ill)'~ Savings bnndl. Winnen o( the C1rruslf>S .. -ccf!Uc\ .. ,11
be DOC.ifiod by llbiJ wilhill 30 dllys alla ~ OOl'llal cnlk. P~ ol 1111 lf'Plicak U.S and ~ ~' will br lhe rurau ibil11y o( lhc winners
-111ERE ARE iss eRAN'curs IN CALIFORN.IA -·Pt.J:ASE CALL ·INFORMATION roR THE BRANCH NF..AR~T vou --· -. ' .. . "' . .
AMER[CAN .. SAVINGS .. . ... . .
.-
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AL. PHA~ . Think ~OOur how many bank' ~oont, yo;,._ than 1.~VERSArEJl.ER •
· · have scattered around town . And think how ATMs chr<>Ufit~t Califorr~ia. ·
· . . . much simp1et 1it"c'would be if Vo\1 could put : ON. .E. C'T·A .. IE.· ·MENI
• them an t~ther. Now yo(J can 7 wi{h the new . . . . ..., 11:\
Alpha Account fr.or:n-Bank of t\rrierica. . Instead of ~ing flood~ with separate
. .. " a·· NE.. A··,c' COUN' ·1 . . . ·s~at~ments for eve~y accou~t. you gec'bne · n · sim~_monthly starement With AJpha. Just one.
· With Alpha·you gtt interest or regl.1ar · _ because chats all you~-So it simpliftes
chedUng. S3Vtngs. and a line of credit.for extra your ~~fog-and your life-at the same rime.
£aSh ant! pri.>tecdon against tsodnc~ ct'iecks. '. , . All~ ~e account: What's rftore, you can . ONEDERFUL
write as inany checks as Vol.I want with no Alpha dots it all to make your everydar
per-Chtck charges. And you h~ ace~ to banking easier than ever. And with Alpha.
~tngat nearly 850 branches andl_110f" · Yourchecklng and savings accounts can work
,
. ' \ .. .. •
t0grther to meet the balance
nec;essary to waive your monthly service
chargt. In most cases. you pay no more than
you now pay for cheCking alone. Drop tn at any
B of A branch and ask about Alpha. Because
if your'bank's really on the ball. it should
simpllfy Your life. NO( complicate it
. -
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OrMgeCout DAILY PILOT/T~Jviy 19. 1•**87 •'
NEW YORK (AP) Jul 19
TUEIDAV'I CLOSING PRIC•I
Stock prices plummet
'l \\ '\<HU, 1-\Pl -1oc~ pnce> ..ank
T ul·1,J:H amid lOmpOtl'r-dnq.·n ~II programs and
tn\ \.'\tor nen ou .. nl''-'> follo " 1ng a sharp!) lo"er
m:.srl..t'I\ 0 ' l.'rseas ·
-\nah sts sa1J thl' marl..t>t ... momentum con-
tH'lul" .. 10.abatl' and a 500-plu .. point plunge in
Ta1k\l1'ske' '•U t·i .:!25-shareinde\onh served to hl·1~htl.'n in·, C'\tOr uneas1ne .. s as the sess'1on bc-gan
··; mC' in' l'Sturs are hesitant to hold on amid
t'' t'n tht' 'l11?hk 1 '' l'.ll.. nc'>s rather than nde out th<'
.:ur-l"l llon " nmrd Eugt'ne Peroni a 1echn1cal
anJl\ 't ..11 fonne' \1 ontgumc-r;. ott in Ph1ladel·
pl'l lJ
"!•gh t l~ h1gha ho nd price and pos1t1\t'
\ l•rfl(1r Jll' t·..1rn 1ngs 1or the.> \t'lOnd quant.>r pro,·1ded
on)\ min imal "Uppon for equ1t1t's
Tra<.krs po1ntt·d to the technolog~ se-ctor as
oc1ng pa nit ularl) ,,._.a l.. .. The tart that"<' had ver;.
'agut' k..1dt•r\h1p "l) panl~ a cause fo r the
mar ef, poor ~ha' 1or ·· Peroni said
I
Lo~~ oujpatcd gainers D) abOu! Q 10 5 on the 't''' ) orl.. Stod . E \rhangt' "1th ~I ~ up. Q 18 down
and 4'11 unchan11ed
WHl T NYSE 0 10
NEW YOU I.AP .1.J..Llt ,.,..,., r=-ncti . dlY
m Advanceo Tiff ! Qoc~-~ OKJ1ne<1 ~ngec . ¥n<1t4noeo· 1~ Yotal ••wes 01a1 1s~' 1ir ~hiO'I\ 1• ~w l\tQPIS ~low\ 1 6 41W IOWS '
Golo Ouon s
M ET~lS Ouons ..
HfW'Y()41111 1APt -Soot ~ 'ft9181 ~
Tu:a•t, •.SI 20 -"°""° 'I' .:0.-.• SOOl 'N)<!I~
~'°"" Moll • I c....,. St °' ...S• o • oo.l"O ~ S .,..,.,,.,_.
C...., · 96 O cents -POunG 'I' c.,..... soo•
"'°""' "'°" UM-~k14!h::c;eo_,,tsNe1-i:~ ...... -c----
Jlloc • 66-·o """cs • -.,..._-.., n... '-' OU3 "'1•'1 w-:.,..._.• D'<f' ~ ~ .._ · s· 25~ ,.._, & .,_.....,.,on., oa"' OllClle
.._ • $7 •SO -1•0• o: "'' c;o,..e, ~1 '"'O"l"
c:toMd "'°" -_.. · '3EI:' OO·SJ -~ JO -'"E •t> n--w. • o-•
......... ~ OO.$S4; 00 ''°' OZ Ill ' ;:tvHtcl ,.........~()() ... : ....... Ctc!Ol-l'C'>Ol ... .,..
Dow JoNE S A~ERAGES
NEW YOR~ AP --=1na1 Dow Jon.\
Ufr aQ41\ for T 1>41\dav
'9Clrs """ ~I t"\d 19i'rrs m ,) ~
T ·~ SO lrJ 1t"t1017 . . l; ,J· ~ ~ 119 11 ,~. ~1 ,u_ o.
6' S111. llf .02 92..69 716 ~9 m 6
tnou\ 1 ·a;· Tra~ • Ulol~· 6S s" · 20.n .a
NASDAQ S u MM~RY
ASHii CJ!t..
-~1~1'--------'
+ lJ
+ " + , ?~ -7· ,...
+ loo +" + • -"
SIDEWALK SALE
SATURDAY JULY 23
10:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m~
# 119 Fashion Island
Newpon Beach
759-1612
..
COLDWC?U
BANt\eRu
...
·.~, Merrill Lynch Realty
IUJDILB I Wllll•
You know the type. hllllkte In
. Turtlerock. 2 bdrms, den w/vlfM
from master suite~ near 1ehoot1,
park and shopping. $315.000
11111•
ltt ...... y ..
Sell y .. ,,.,.,.,1
Gel ......
Mt-5671
for Information
& ·surprisingly
iow cost:
-
7007: Stitch up 11'1
edorM*t "gift" b99' for
I 1P9Cial Chttd. Vie
tetry.~or~
for 18" bear. caliCo for
cloehet.Peewn
lnctudel clredtonl &
tileue.
S3.25PLUSS1.00PIH
FOR EACH MT.TERN
OROEAED.
OFFER GOOD THROUGH
DEC 31. 1988 ..... ........... ..... .___ .. °"' ~ ..... ....... .., .....
Mc ....... Mnet. ..... ,..,.__,..
.. , .. .,., .. JI fl. ........... ,
-DILIYIRY-
l I IEllllE llEllllS
''""' Th~ Daily Pilot Is Sttklng part·t~ drMrs tor aft'rnoon
dtlivtry of ~spapers In the folowfng arHs:
-tr NEWPORT BEACH
-tr COSTA MESA
-tr HUNTING.TON BEACH ·. tt FOUNTAIN VALLEY tt IRVINE
Thr~t hours per day betwttn the hours of 12 p.m. and J
p.m .. ~'"days• Wttk. Must haw• reffable c•, Insur.nu
and good drMng rttord. E•n S20.00 to SJ0.00-ptr dlly.
pkJS bonus.
CALL 642·4121. . ~ -... , ______ _
ASK FOR ERIC BLADE . .
llllJllll
·~
I OUR FAMOUS
DIMES1\·LINE
ADOttlSS
AMOUNT INCLOSID
UNI' -
t .
1.
J.
••
I .
••
HAS RETURNEDI
Back by popular dtm.lnd. D1~ho\·l1nt> will run Friday. Satur·
day and Sunday m 1u own c1au1ricat1on 1n !ht c1au 1r1td Ads
Smet 1h1s 1s a SPHial oft•r. we have a Thursday noon ~~,,,.
and ask ptep~tnent for aft ads.JhlS IS open 10 .. private PMfy--m..,..--
.Jdvert1sers for merchandls• not over SI SO f P"'' mull ~list~
in adJ and no Mlbr.vlatrons wll ~ ac:ctpttd. Al ads wlll run
Fnday. Satur~ Mid Sunday TMre is a 5·ltne min.mum at 20C
Une ..... °'"' ... --..... ~--
$3.00.
: DEADLINE: Thur\day noon
~I: S ·lint m1n1mum • 3 days • 20C ppr hnt = ~) 00
• All ads 11rp prpp;ud by coming into lhP Dcf1/y P11or 10
plac• your ad or usP lhP coupon l>Plow
• P1111111t pt1rty mtrchand1st only ads No com·
mtrc1<11I ,iids. pPts. h11P\ll>ek. producf' or pt.:1na
• Each lltm must t>t pr1etd In tM ad with no If Pms over
Sl50
MAIL TO:
I ---
DtfMt·A·Ufw
0.Jrty P110t
HO WPS! ""Y Strt>et. Cost.; Mes.:1 CA 92626
D;i1ty P11or hours
Monday·F11d<1y 8 00 AM to S 00 PM
STATr ""
OATH TO ltUN
13 00 Mir!
l.UO
100 ... .. ..
642-5678
•
•
' (
' 0
J
c
" c
Yi
I • j •
IN •
..,,
...
.......... ..........
1211 .. , ....... .........
.... 1. --...
If you re 10 or older. a 1ob as a newspaper
carrier might be 1ust your size Just send ir1
this coupon or ca11 642-4333 Routes arE>
available now'
It SOtltbMy. It 1
' D1ity Pilot carritr! r------~---------, • ·ffS!-I'd ltke to find out more about becom-I 1ng ~a1ty Pilot carrier :
1 ~~ I
I Address I
I PMne '• : r I
·1
1
*' Tt Tiit • .., ,.. f
llt I lay St f L~---~~~~~-------J
"'~~~-!-.. '\ ~:,o~ , ,t'\
··~<~<Joo~. J/1
.. ~,~ .. II ':' .. /. ·-~~ .<:~:-·~·· /
St~rting August J st
. -,
Community NftVS
Along .the Coast
•1••···· Ill I 11• _ _.
llf.1111 .... "*IMlllll .........
***
BOYS a GIRLS
T~~ ~~ TOYOTA Celce 1174, I ~u'f 11_.'t'taorlH • 9'1Cf, gr• condition. NM .,._ rnln ... _..._ -• .,...... .... w ..... beet..... -•••••, c .. eso-tHS enc1 IMve 1M1 .. ~ Auna ,, .. ,, 5 IOMCI. m1111ge (1'~ 11300 obO. 142·3'&0 . ..,
RECYCLE
In Third \\brld countries. hun-
dreds of thousands of children
are in desperate need of food,
through the clothing_, medical care-the
DAIL v PILOT basics of life. These girls and
CIUlifled Pages boys are even denied che Motor Routes Eilll\ Mo~
·START NOW· available in 546-t 200 Turn unw.,,ted opportunity to attend sch?<'l.
1111....,. c ... _..,. Items Into
II to II Y~•r• Old
WORK EVENINGS W11t111in1tar
Hanlin Baich I money today! -•1 M C.U 142-1171 They are our neighbors in 4
1=. ~~· ======~ a world that grows smaller ............... _ every_Qav. _ AND. SAY.UJlDAY. f ount1in V1ll•J L-aA~B·T0-0~:
' WORK IN YOUR OWN NEIGHBORHOOD or purchase at our low FLEET prices t
(t NO DO\IVN l'AYMENT :
Please pick up your phone
now and aial the toll-free num-
ber below. Be a good neighbor
by helping an innocent child .
YOU CAN AVERAGE PER WEEK . -s7500 NO COLLECTING
NO SOLICITING
(t EASY OUAUFYtNG I Our in·hOu~ ~aslng PfC>gtMI rnatles ft easy
ror you to ~a~ a bland new Ctwvr~rcar
or truck or a i.te model used vehk~ IM1Y
rNtieJ. ASK FOii ! OR MORE Deliver One Day a Week -
Must have dependable car
and proof of insurance.
•. JO• CRAV•RO J•RRYTROST t
CONTACT Mr. Phillips
PHONE (714) 498-3321 Call 842-1444
i fONLYJ t
i CH~E.f i
Ouistian Children's
Fund, Inc.
1-800-228-3393
(Toll Free)
All· TRANSPORTATION PROVIDED
BY AN ~DUL T SUPERVISOR Ask for Joanne Craney
CALL 546· t 200 t
6 2828 HARBOR BLVD.. ·;
l COSTA MESA
LIQAL MOT'IC9
OM*IAMCa
MO.-' AN OAOINANCE OF THE
CITY OF HUNTINGTON
KACM-AMINOIHG-THE
HUNTINGTON BEACH MU·
NICIPAL COOE BY,AMENO-
ING SECTIONS 3.38 010.
3 3f 050 and 3 3f 130 AE·
LA TING TO UTILITIES TAX"
-·~:· ... Ordinance No, 2133
amencts Met.on• or Hunt·
1n91on Beech Munlclpal
Code Chaptet 3 38 "91ating
to Ullhtlel TaJ1 S..O Ordi· nonce wnpo.-• 5'11. utllltr tu on C009!:*ation plants
WNch Pfoctuc. etectrlClly • THI P\IU TIXY fl' THI
•ANCI ti AYAll· •LI IN THI CtTY ... ~.
A PTED by the City
Counc of ,,.,. City 01 Hunt·
'"91 Beec:fl el e regu1ar
ing l'telO Monday. July
5. lNl,t>ylhe lOllOWlng rOll
ca11,,01e .
AYES Counc•lmember•
Kelty. Green. Finley Maya.
Winchell NOES. Counc1imem1>er1
Bannister
A 8.S E N T Co u~· c~bers Ersa1na cm °' HUMT1NOT llACH. ALICtA \.
WINTWOltTH, CITY
CLIM
Pul>lt9ned Orange Coa11
Daily Pilot July 19 19ell
T207
KC,_
PtCTfTK>U9 IU ... 11
MAMI ITATW•MT The fOllOW1ng persons are
doing Dvltnftt 19 l .. I Ae-
pelr. 1673 Irvine AYfl . • F. Cotta M .... CA 928271
Seung Svp Cha 884 1 Jar-
rell Clrcla Mun11n91on
leech. C. 926472 Kyvng-
M Cha. 118' 1 Jerrett Circle.
Huntington Beach CA
......... . ....... .
Mt.IC NOTICE NllC ll)JIC(
LIQAL MOTICI flUikJc MOTICI vice ot .,, attorney en 11111 county of Orenoe. requeat· -M0ncs MOTIC8 TO No Dldder mer withdrew MOTICI OP DIATM offlee 11 locMed el 8'lldlnO
OM91AMCI MOTICI OP maner. you aN>ulO 00 to '"9 that GLENDA ANGULO IMYfT...a W COlft'MCTOll8 eny Did'°' a period of ll•ty MID OP NhhOM c. 780 Welt 18Ctl Stfle'.
MO ... , ,_,,.WT10M PfOll\ptly to that yaur wrl1· be eppotn1ed u peraonel BID ITEM CML .. POil (IO> days after IN dete aet TO ADHDll TD Cotta Mela. CA 92127.
"AN ORD4NANCE Of TME OP •OATM ten rMC>O"M. if eny. INY be '9Pfewltatlw to edll\ll...... NO. 111 W tor IN~ of b60t. llTAft OP: The PfinCIC* ~ of
CITY OF HUNTINGTON DlelMAT10M Med on tllM ......... of the ~t. MOTICi _.._..5M Sc:floot Dlihltl. Cont -.ne-. llUT-C:-PCMIM tN roundlllOn • Jotw'I c.
8E ACH AME-NOH•O N<n1et tS~ffY AMOt~•dcn• 'fll• petrtron-:-;.queill GIVEN that ..... o Cornll\UllltyCollege perfor~ bond.,,... be llTATI MO.. Cr..,,~··•110tney: Alen N.
ARTICLE 980 OF THE GIVENthalthelfvlneUnlflecl !Nfld.00 Eltrebunelpuede authority to adminilter the Pfopoultwillber~by led0eedlne:'2:00o'C*ldl '9QU!fed prior toeaec:u11on A,... O'Keon.Eaq .. 8'\0IPwry.
HUNTINGTON BEACH OR· ScN>ol Otttrict Ml Pfec>ered decider contre UO WI au-•tata under t~ lndeelen· IN City of Colee Mele to p.m • of tN Cttl dey of of the conttec1 Md 111811 be To al heifs. ~. A Profelllonel CotporatiOn.
DINANCE CODE BY At>O· a Negatrva Declaration tor dien<:,. ·~ ~ ~ ~ denl Admlnltlrateon of &~ wit The Cffy Counc:il. P.O. Augus1, 1.. . In the form NI fortll in the creditora and contingent One Newpor1 Piece. Tenth
ING NEW SECTION M05 1 the IOllowlng: IC)Onda _..tro ..,. · fates Act (lhtt euthOrlty al-Boa 1200. Cotta Mele. C... fflaM ef ... ---= Of. contract 00Cument1. cradilort and perlOftl wt1o FIOor. Newpor1 BMc:tl. CA
MilO .AMENDING SECTION PAOJEC1'. Conttructlqn lea. 18 lnlOfmaclon Que lows the perlOMI rept...,_.. nla 92921-1200. on Ot 11ce of OitectOt .... ty Kelln. Put-I to Section •.590 may be Ot~ lfttar~ted ~ . · _ ~..:;
UOl(.bJ RElATtN.G, TO .Of ~11Jy .j'119h ~Ilg~ ~ t~livatota•!meny~lonl tllifor•Jheh0ufof.1t:09•·'"; cha·Mftl-Del»•'1"'•"t· oftheGc»<i¥1w1....,r-coailo(1nttiewliore.late.orllOtft. ~ Orenee PAAKING ~TRUCTURE DE· Addthon f"Phne A"f, ad· St Utted ~ toeitlt• .. without obtaining. COllft ~ on Frifty. Auguat 16. 1111.· Coast Coi'nmunity ColeDI the Stat• or Calff0tnla. the of MARY c. FOATINE. ello !)My Piiot .My 19. 1MI
SIGN 01t1on ol acience wlr19. conMtO de ':_ ~ PfOVal Betore t•eno certain h Shell be the raaponllblity Dlatrlct, Treiler Facility. 1370 contract wlll oonte1n llnown aa MAAY FOATINE T21
SYNOPSIS thNlet. auaill.ry rooma. Md •1• uunto. .. '° acttons. hOwever. lhe per-of the bidder to deliver his' Adams Ave .. Coeta Meae. pr0Vi1lon1 permitting the A petition Ilea beafl Ned
Or01nence No 294 7 gym expansion totaling lnmadlatamente. de "" tonel repr...,,tatlva 1• r• bid to the City Oertl'a Office CA 92121 1uccHttul blOd•r to by Ann Alng 990 llnown •
amends HUflhngton BMc:h '7.140 square leet. and r• manara tu fHPUHta .,ired to give notlea to l:ly the Pfoper .-ounced Ptetect .._ttneet ... aublll1ute leC:Ufltiaa tor at'Y AHN DOWLEN ReNG In tM
Ordinance· Code. Artk:•• model ol Uftl-11t'; Hlgfl aacrlta. 11 hey~· lnter .. ted per-uni-Utne 50s will w publldy ....._ Orenoa Coat Cot-~withheld l:ly the Dis· Superior Court of Celifornla.
MO Parking StruetU<et. 10 School "A" building. twim--.., reglttr.CS. atiernpo. they have wai¥ad not~ °' cpaned and reed-.loud .at leDe Aepeir ~Ir Collt-lld Ho. lftct to.....,,. performence C9uftty of Orenoe. reQUMt·
apec:lllCelly.addr .... pertilng. mtng pool, tracll and fields. 1·T0.THE RESPONDENT. con ... itad to the proPOaed 11 OOa.m .0t•aoonther• 1421 (llbrefY CoollnO S~ under tllecomrect. Ing that Ann "'"°· alto
11ruc1ures end tubterranean tennis and volleyball T~ 1P911!'°'* ~flied • action I The . l~t efter ..-pt8Ctleeble -on Ft\· temt). (~) S O.M. 0...11tl1t1 ... , •. M llnown • ANN oOwlEN
l*k"'O 1n the code St.,,. 1tad1um. •Hlrooma. and pet 1 on ~~f'!ii'T f:'' eomen111re11on authortty will day. Augus119. 1 ... In tN Progr.,,, Ho E·3t e/Dewlf A. ••••1telf, RING tte appointed u per. derdllneludamlftimumttal p&au marriage you o • b• granted unlHt en Council~.CltyH... ,.._,.._ .. •Pie: ca. 11111 IOf\el ,_.,,._..1111ve 10 ad·
and ..... Olmentlonl. tame> LOCATION Unlveralty tel90ftM Within, 30 days of lntarftted perlOft fllel .,,. 77 Fair Drive. Colt• ....... Ofb'of Olr'ec1or. Eugene F. PublllNd Orenoe CQeal INnllter the ntat• of the •
elopes. perimeter 181110· HI g h Schoo I. 4 If 1 IN date that thll IUll\f'llOft9 00,ection lo !hit petition and Calllor111le, IOf the fumilNnl Herrle. Pttr. Fee. Ping .. Dally Piiot .My 12. 1t. 1... cedeftt
tcaplng and ardlitecturat Michelson Road. lrv•ne. CA •-v:: on f":" .,:'~ lhows good cauM why the of CONSULTING SflWICEI CoeM Community College T2CM TN peuuon .request• r~ triter•• 92714 may an er court "'°'*' not grant IN TO EVALUATE THE CITY'S Dlatrect. 1370 AC1amS Ave. euthorlty 10 ~-the
THE FULL TEXT OF THE LEAD. AGENCY lrvlne court may enter a tudgll\enl authOrity FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT Coaata Mele CA 92121 ••If' Mftftl'C •tale under tf'p lndeelen·
ORDINANCE 15 AVAILABLE Unified SchOol Olltr1C1 contalnlr19 lnjunctl.e or A MEARING on the pell-p AOC Es s I NG AN 0 NOTICE '1s HEAEBY ~ -·~ den~l1trehon of Es-
IN THE bTY CLERK'S OF· COP!et ol the lnlhal Study ol~er Ofdefl concerning ''°" wtll be held on AUGUST PROVIDE AN UPGRAOf GIVEN that the above· --tat {Thia euthOfltr ... FICE ate on file and available for Oiv111on of Pfoperfy, apouNI 10. 1HI at 1·45 P.M. In MCOMMENOATION nemed School Olstrtc1 of Or· llOTa OP tows the aonel r...-n·
ADOPTED by ,,.,. Clly lnapactlon ., lhe Admintl· auc>P0'1. ctlllj:t custody. dlllO Dept Ho 3 located .. 100 Additlonel ... of 1N anoeCounty. Callfomle. ec1· "*'C IALI °' i.tlve ft) , ... "*'r lctlonl
Council of lhe City of Hunt· !ration Center. 5050 Barran· IUPOl1. anorney ,..., COits. Civic: Center Drive West, IPKfflcatlont INY be ob-Ing by and thfougfl hi Go¥· NMOMA&. • without OOteln'"9 court ep.
lnglon Beach at I regular ca Pafkway lrvlne. CA and IUCh other r .. ief U mey Senta Ana. CA 92701 teined at the Offa or the ern'"9 loerd. herainefter r,. "'°'"'"' PfOVal. Beforetaii'"9 99rfeln
meeting held Monday. July 92714 be granted by the court The IF YOU OBJECT to the Pufchaslng Agentat 11 Fair lerrecJ to 81 "DISTRICT". Will • ~ ectlonl. llOwever. IN per-
5. 1988 by the lollowlng roll Ouathons and/Of com· ,arnethmenl or wegea. lak· granting of the oetl11on. you Drive. Cotta MeM. Cell-NCelve up to. but not later Nottce ~ ~ IMt tonal rapt...,,..tlve Is r•
call "ote ments should t>e Olrect.o to '"e.. 01 money or Pfopeny or ~ elthef ICIPMF •1 the torn.a. liOt "'°"'° be ,.. "'9n the ~atateo time, pursuant to Section a quired to give notlea to AYES Councllmeml>eft !Nina Unified School Dis· other court authorlHO hearing and 119'• YfNf ob-turned to the attention of the IMled bids for the ewatd of 21701·21115 of the Cell· lnterftled persona uNeal
GrMn Finley. Maya. Incl. Corlnlle Alave. Coor di· Pf~·~~may alto r-.in. fee hons or file written Oblec· City Cle«ll. wltNn Mid time econtrec1·for the above pro-tornia 8ullnet1 and Pro-tt1ey have wetveo notlCe °'
W1nc,,..1. Bann•••• nator. FacHllles Plannlr19. tlons with the court before limit. In a ...., an¥ltope feet -..ens Code Section 2321 conaented to the Pfopoeed
,_
Put>llahed Orengia CoeM
Dally PllOI .My 5, 12:1t, 21.
1HI
NOES Councllmemt>ers (714) f51-0444, eatanllOfl U:::: ~C~ the heer'"9 Your ICIPMF· ldentlfiedonlNoutetdewfttl 8lda at1e1 be~ In oflheCalllornia<:omtWdel action 1 The 1tldepelldent
None 326. on or before August 30. Cleftl · • · ence INY be 1~ person or l:ly IN lid 11am ~and IN ltle piece Identified ebOlle. Code. Section 535 of the eom1n111rat1on euthorlty.will •-.,. Mftftl'C
AB S E NT C o u n • 1988 your anorney. ~Del•. and lflllll be cpeneo Mel California ...,_.. Code and be granted unlHI an· ,._,., ""'-. c11mem1>ers Ersll1M 0..ATED: .ilJtr 1. 1HI Linde A Chaptn. Altorney IF YOU AAE A OREDITOR heh Did than IP9Clfr publicly reed aloud at the the O¥illonl of the C... inl9fftted per. ton !Ilea an _....;...;;;:;;;:;,;:;~;.;.;.;;;;.. __ .:
CITT OF HUWT..OTON IY: CORI ..... ltlAYI, for Petitioner. llOl Dove °' a contingent creditor of MCll and~ Item aa ... ebove·tteled llfM 'en4 tofnf: Auctlof\ L~ ObjectlOnto!NtpactllOtleftd K.-
llACH, ALICIA M. COOlto.ATOft. 'AClll· 91rwt. &itle 235, NewpCwt the dec:1111!1. ~mutt "'9 terlll' on IN apeclftcaliona. piece. Act theunder19iedWill ... lhowl good cauae why the PICTmDUIWM
WINTWOltTH. CITY '9Sfll~ ~~~ Coat your~wltllthe courtaor: ~yaftd .. ••~lottle T ... wlllbetl10.00de-atP.,bllc .... bycornpetl1"'9 ~should not grant... UMllTA~
CLIM Put>lllhed Orange Cout u "'09 pr._,! to per apeclflcMIOM fllUat be dMr· poall required tor aec:tl NI of bleldlnQ on the 27th Oey of authority T!!a klllowlnO peraont .,.
Publllhed Orenoe Coul OallyPllOtJuly 19. 1988 ~ally P;~ ~ tt. 21· rec>raMnlallveappolnt9dby ly'llatedlnlheDIO.andf .... biddocumantatoguerant .. .My ttel at 11·00o'dodl A HIARIHG on the petl-doing~•:l'ty'aHelf.
Daily P1101 July 19, 1988 T209 ugull · · 1 T215 the court within f:" :;:"tM ure lo Mf forttl "'t Item In .,..., return In good con· AM 'on 1t19 Pfernia.t wMre tlon will be held on AUGUST marll Shopcle. Allaon't Helf.
T213 "°"' '"-Oat• 1 Is-IN apeclflcatlonl tNI be dMiOn within tan 1101 oeys MIO propertr Plea .,_,, 3. 1te1 et 1:45 P M 1n Dept. INrtl "'°P. Katie'• He11meirt1 NlJC NOTICE ••ec __ :-s~~:'';'o: ":,r:: grounds for retactlon of IN alter the Did oper*'O date. atored. ano which er• No. 3 totated at 100 CMc lhoc>. 370 E. 11t11 Street.
..--. ""'-. n bid. Eeefl bidder "'911 be a located at Public St0tage Center Drive Wnt. Santa Costa Meae. CA 92127 ...:. ....... c-----------Probate Code of.Californle. EacflDIOIMllleltortllthe 11cenuo contractor 2075 NewpCwt Boule¥erd ln Ana. CA. John Tarrant. 2505
--• • It 4Mm The time'°' fNlng c:lelml will f\jtf nama. and , ...... 1()98 of purwt to the ..... ... City of Cole• ...... If YOU 09J£CT to IN LIUfetwood. a.me Ana. CA ~ ~~ MOT!Ca OP DIATM not expire prlOt 10 tour all "'90fll and per11M Md Prof · c 11 Code end GCluntr of Ofante; St ... of •enttne 9' ·the ~. you ta1-04. "°'9-T8"'8"t. H06
·-.,...... -AND OP Hi i I ICM mon1"9. from fN date of the lntereatiCJ In IN pr~. be llcenled In the fotloWlng Callfomla the gocics1 c:Nt! lfloulO ei1her IC>PMF at the LIUfetwood. Santa Ana: CA -~~!!'_ TO AD•llTIR heart'l{I no11ead ~e -the .bid II by• c:orporetlon. cla11mceuon1: HVAC • u.. or s*sonat Pf°'*1Y de-heerlng and 11ate your ob-t2704 ·
NI.IC lllTICE
-C .. .;::: HTATIOP: YOU MAV EXAMI,_ the acate the n81M8 of the of· C-20. lbed below In the met· jectlonlorrMewrittan Thia ~Lll.JOft' ... -·-_.. nuAM_CQD Ille kept by the court. " ICI' • 11uabenct and ...
Thll 1:1u11nes1 is con-O °"' .., n N_,l..,.O"'U'"'IS!TE tTiflMO. --ate periOilii a.. the tleer""" Y -John #renl, Hope T•· Ho..-ll G B DOWD .......... ,..._ fttate. """' -...._ wMtl Robel1 Mc:Adema, -· H "'V· OUf ......-• r t -~ · ' ... -ted by co-parlnefs ,..." · regory II ec>-,._, / .. -,,. r r~ ,,_, ,_ contract doCuf'ftentl 210 --' ..__, t .... _...., .. _. --be In -Of..., ~ --. """' """ t ,..._"--• ·of Ae~onoenl KENIC Toell ..... '-1 . ..._-....., .... 1 ..... ~-·rtaror-'"'-.-• ._.,,..,_,.,.,...._., .... -........ :,., --· w, ........ Seung Sut:> Cna Kyung Ae ..,,1ng o ... .._.rtment ,_. .,...,.,,.., ,,. ~· ,,_ .__. E.adl bidder IMll aubmlt. drllng atm. "ldG. Ottat. ' . rfl4lf attorney ' tlll ........... t WM -Cha AlcotiOWC 8evarage ContrOI WAR N DOWD . cfedllort and contingent ror Special Notice of ... flt.. ..... If the Did Is by. pert· on the rorm furnllNd with Sonya l• .,,,..,, Sp E IF YOU ARE A CAEOITOA with the County Qertl of Or·
Thia atat-'I wu hied to Mii alcot\oltc oe-agea Cw No. oaetl13 creditor•. and persons wt1o Ing of.,, lnVW1t0tr..,and IP" nar~ or a joint venture. IN contr!Cf doeurM!ita. a 176-cfWttmp. dr..,. recrdl. a contingent c:redlt0t of enoa County on June 21.
withthaCountyCter1t OfO•· et (fnMft loc:a11on1 1500 14•HDM may be ol1'19fw1Ment•nted PfalH!Tlefttof"'nt..,•911ita ICat• the'*"* end ecJ. latoftheprbpoeed.-ort-1'°11· mile 611,, frldo. bed· tlledeceeMd.youll\llStfMe 1tel . •
enoe County on June 21. Newport Blvd. Cotta Meu. NOTICe Y .. ..,. ._ In the wiH Of fttate. Of both. or 01 any petition Of account dr ..... of al oaner• pert· trectort on this project u frme. TV • · your claim With the court or ,_.
1"8 CA 92827 with "47" On·S• ..... n.e .... ...., ..... ot JOHN WILLIAM COVE ... proY1Cled In Mellon 1250 ,.,. ll(ICl'•jOi'et venturera. " ,.quired by the Sutllett'"9 lendr ....... Sp. E 11f-C pr.en! it lo ·the· per90MI Published Orenoe CoeM
FW. General f Pub Eat Pl I ....... ,_ ..... ,._ At<A JOHN W COVE. JOHN or lhe California _,otleee the bidder II -tole end Subc0ntrect1n9 Fe# mile b ... 5 mile bga cttlll . rep1-'tat~ ekcitnted by Delly Piiot June 211 .My S.
Put>lllhed Or•nr Coall i.cenM ..... ....,_ ...... ,.. COVE. ANO JACK COVE Code A Aequaat tor Spectel proptletOftNp or anotNr P{ec11cet Act. Oov.-1WM11t Eowaro p Plka. Sp, E· 1CI the court'"""" lour"'°""" 12. 19. 1911
D .. ly Pilot June 2 July S Pvt)lolhed Orenoe Coaa1 ............ • .... .._. A pet1teon NI bean filed NobU for"' ii·~ ffom entity. tftet does ~ Code Section • 100 Ill 1911 fr the «Set of flrlt ft. T· 111
12 19 1988 Daily P110I July 19 1tll ............. I~. by GLENDA ANGULO '" the the court dart!. • 'under" a lfctltloul neme, the Eeefl tliclder ""'9t""""" ::· wot' Dar. rec~ . .:C.ot~l~Ofovlded ·---------
. . T · 192 T210 II YoU wllfl to ..... "'9 80· Superior Court of Callfomla. W. M ...... A~ el Did th .. be In the reel neme ""!' Md! llld a certified 0t ,,.._ MerlMO. Sp. E In Setllon 700 ot the r-----------------~--------~--------1~~~~~of~~~·~~~~~•113~·~·~Pr~eeoo.ot~. SHOP
AT HOIE!
l9fita ...... CA '"'1 nation' tollowlftg "'""'° IN OtSTillCT 0t a llld bOftd 1NJC bu. T}le time tor flllng datflCI wll
Pvbllltled Orenoe, CoeM "09A (IN fictitious'*"->''; 1n "'9 toms _. '°"" In IN u.....-io·Mertlnel. Sp. not ••pit• prlOr . to tour
Daily Pilot July 11. 20. 21, provided. ~ no fie· oontrect doCI IMllll In M I 04S..-. 'bedMt. frldO, montM frOll\ the Clei. of IN
1988 • . tltloul ,.... ........ _.... encount "°'..,. .... "' ..... dlt. lllde. bed ..... tceerlng noticed ebOlle.
TW20I Uflleaa .._..I• ~ oun9't --.~ ...... otllld ... .._ YOU MAY E.ICAMM Ille
. r99111r.ti0n ~IN 0ranoe •a.,_.,.... ..... tM..... 0..-,...._.. tt1e r1gM lie llept br.tN court. If~
County N1:0tdar. '"ceee of .., wt11 enter ~· 1M •411d .. tt1e...., ~ .,. a per.on in..,.... '" M-a.e· ct··_..._ STARTING A NEW BUSINESS??
The Legal Oepartr'{'ent at the
Daily Pilot 11 pleased to an·
nounce a new service now avail·
able to new businesses
We w1rr now SEARCH the
name for you at no e•tra charge.
and save you the time an4 the
trip to the Couct Houle in Santa
Ana. T-hen. of courM. after the
search is completed we wall file
your fftt1t1ous business name
statement with the County Cler:k.
publistl once a week for four
weeks as required by law and
then file your proof of pubh·
cahon with the County Clerk
Pleaae stop by to file your
f1ctihou1 business statement at
the Daily Pilot' Legal Depart·
ment. 330 West Bay. Costa
Mesa. California. If you can not
stop t>y. please call us
COflMll'atlone. tM propoeed cormect " tM ,,,-.wttft.Cllf!Oftt</ IN ....... ~ mey .. wltfl -_,_, -------MIMI 9' IN • ~II --onc1 pe6d tor 9' the ftffte of "'9-court a torfNI ~ advertlling the beet ••II' --~ery.· 'T,...,,.,, llf'd 96ddJr "',.....,,. °' pu1c"9M. A" ~ tor Spec{ll Hota of,..,.. way to save time _ _... ... ._-..... ..... .-"".......,'-----MaNoeJ . • enter tnto Mid comrect. toodl .,. lllfd • 11. n 1ng of an "'*"«r end ., "41114 • n:. Qty ,Countl of IN IUCft ~ .. ..,... tor-~ ... ~ .. thettme pr.......,,°'........... and gal
PICTITIGU8 • Id •• Qty of Coe! Mele~ lltted. ....._ .__....... • prtor or of anr ...-on or~
at (7 141 6•2·•321. Extension
315 or 316 and we will make
• arrangement• fOf you to handle
this procedure by mall.
If you should teave any f"''~
, questions, pleaM call us end we
w1u· be more than glad to a1S11t
you.
Good tuck 1n your
new business!•
um ITA~ • tM rtofft to,._, .., °' II "-Dll'(NCT' ,...,.. concll•IOI: In ;.. ..-... of • pr~ In Wtion '"°
The--... '*"-.. ftlM.• ,.._ Mr Ot JI ...... ii 1111t11ein 0..-ef IN CeMornle Pr--. ~==:.:: "'"',_er.,. C.... ... Ot t0 weM _,Ir-· encl OUtMld perty. Oeted Code.A....,._tor.,.....
:'(;'\TH QA TI A I. ~"'°'.Mr"·~-,.. 'I ..... °' ........... ,. 11111 Md 1tets d1¥ ol Moelceforwcia......._lrolft
toCIATH t7t22~Av-, • . lft_,lllllilorMWll ...... JI/lit, 1tll. ~ ..... tllecourtden.
Jnl'9 Su"e too ntN Cell-,.....,.. .... ,.oulJtol• Men•11wt, lftc. T..... '-..... -• l 1, • tor"'9t27H ' ' _.,._ eflectlon1113ottlle&AMF,...... {111) UC·IOIO,...., .. ,. 11,_,. ..W~MUTUAL ,........,"",_ Coda of "'9 ....... Cll-torOwclef. ..... ,...._ ....... .....
LIFE INIUMNCI COM· IDmle. "'90llTRCT ._._ Or ... C... ... L...-.... CA-
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~~TM flW '11r1uo11t to l"t1e11 ..... oncl "'9 = !WUC.. •
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' _.. !tr • ....... '*"" Nw •••• ,.,....., ... ,.... .. en -• "-~ ,., l. • .!!..:....••'· eo. . .,_ . I. p .. '*iNP lcle tor IMUtU: ... TNCT ...... ...._, ........ Celf.ft'R7 ~-----lt04 T"9 re111tre11t COM• ....... ...._ .... """ ......... ,... ,....... T•ry ........ Cottle. (4ft ef .......... ...... I INNed _:. lr.l_ll~ HOus ... •:tt,.• .,.., taJt MllM. c.... ...... M11. 111): .. ;4t. C.-c.a ..... ...._. ..... ... --................. _.. ..................... Cllf. ... ...... ....._ .... ~ ...,_ .... ·~ ,... tlO ............... ...-, A,_, ef -TNa ..,.._ la .-. Clllir*r ~ "'1 .. 1'MI
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TUESDAY, JULY 19, 1988 25 CENTS
Mesa may establish hiring hal·l
By JONATHAN VOLZltE
OtllleO.., ........
About 40 Latinos picketed Costa
Mesa City Hall Monday night as the
Chy Council considtred proposals to
ease tensions over day laborers who
gather daily at Lions Park seeking
work. including the establishment or
Dukakis, Jackson mend
fences as Democrats
open convention./ A5
World
Iran endorses U.N. cease-
fire in gulf war .I A4 · ·
Index
~dviurartd Games
Births
Bulletin Board
Business
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a hiring hall.
Tht pickets. however. quickly
abandoned signs that contended
"Police should investiptt' crimes.
not immigration" upon learning the
ci ty does not intend to use police
offic,ers to check citizenship in tht'
park.
Earlier th is month. Councilman
OCFair
maybe
long~r
inl989
Extra weekend could
spread out crowds,
help reduce traffic __
By BOB VAN EYKEN °' ... .,.., ..........
'
Pigs. cows. sheep and people could
be spendin& an extra week amid the
colored lights and corn dogs next ~ear. if Oranse Count~ Fair officials
go forward with a proposal to extend
the annual 11-dav-event bv as much
as a full week. · ·
.. We're looking ir1tO 1t." said Larry
.\rnold. a Newpon Beach attorney
who sits on the Orang<' County, Fair
Board. "Ifs JUSt gotten so crowdt'd.
· we're looking at ways to spread out
the crowds."
Record cro"ds at this 'ear's fair.
which closed Sunday n!ght. meant
hcavv traffiC'on streets adJa~ent to the
fairgrounds as w~ll. as oompcr:to·
bumper people during peak hours on
the fairs pedestnan thoroughfares.
"If extending the fair cuts the
crowds in half. lbtre may not be an)
nttd for traffic improvtments ... said
Orv Ambur1ey urvd that the cuy
"take whatrver action necessary" to
rid Lions Park of illepl aliens.
Although Amburgty had pushed
for stron1er action. the council on
Monda) debated a series of proposals
that excluded using police to chase
undocumented workers out of the
park ..
In a debate that extended into the
early mom mg hours today. the coun-
cil major!t> infor~ally endorsed
finding a site for a hmng hall.
Other rccommendat ions before the
counc1l 1ncluded:
• .\sk1ni Police Chief David
Sno"dcn to place rrserve officers 1n
the park to monitor da) laborers.
• Seeking Spanish-speaking appli-
cant s to fill a ne" I> created pos1t1on
of park ranger.
In his repon to the counci l. Cit\
Manager .\Ian Roeder also suggested
that the staff prepare a 90-da~ re' 1ew
of the da) laborers at 1he park. If
further ac11on 1s deemed necessan.
the cit) could pa'>S an ordinance
outla\\1 ng lo1tn1ng in the park. ac·
cording to the repon .
Roeder ..aid th e da\' labortrs must
be handled !>eparatel) ·from the illegal
1mm1grants. "ho are be}ond the
Cll) 's 1unw1ct1on. ~1an) of the da)
labors are legal l S. res1dt'nts wh1k
other<; are not.
The Cll \'·s Human Relations (om·
m1t1t·e al~ made ~'eral recommen·
da11ons to deal with th e workers.
"h1<:h the coun 11 cons1dt•red \ton·
da' lk cau'll' thl· me n gathl'r as much for
'><>1.1:i l reasons as for "ork .. thl'
comm1t1ee urged that an adult soccer
kagUl' be: established within 30 days.
The co mmittee also recommended
the n l) fi nd a park manager and
om~udsman "11hin Q() da\S and
begin an accuhura11on and education
progra m in SI). months.
.\ h1n ng hall should also be in p•ace
\\ 1th1n '" months. tht' committtt
Uf{!l'd
\IJ~nr l>onn Hall !Wild the hirina
hall \\(iUld <,('r\ l' as a $'1lhning point
fM the rn r n ')ean:h1ng for work.
(Pleue eee HIRING/A2)
·Mesa
woman
found
dead
Police describedeatll
as suspicious. rope
off apartment un!t-
By P Al L ARCHIPL£Y
Of ... OeltJ Net ...,, •
Poht'e and coront r's dt puues
"orkC'd late-into th e n1gh1 Monday
st~ling lurs in the death of a Costa
Mesa "oman.
Costa Mesa Pohee Lt. Rick John-
so n said the~ "ere mvestigaung a
··susp1nou' death .. but .. ·ould not
elaboratly ·
He "a'n·1 read' to charactt>nzt' tht'
"oman'<, dt·ath. as a poss1blt'
hom1 uk . nor could he sa\ whclhct
an' other cn mt"i had bttn com-
mined
Pl1hl \' "'t>re c~lled at about 6 p. m.10
the apanment in-Mediterranean V1l-
lag.e. 2~00 Harbor Bh d.
The' qu1ckh roped off the apan-
m<"nt '1n the ~"'°4 building of the
comple\ that includes several hun·
dred units. and in '<"sttgators began
qu~uoning neighbors .
.· ...
Cl .... fled
.Comics.
Entertainment
88·10
A9
A7
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· .\mold. ·
After 11 day• of "Beefin' It Up" -tbla
year•• ~e CoDDty .P'&Q' tbeme -tbe
falr&rounda turned to hambai1er Monday -
0-. ........ .,Lee ......
u workers tore ap ezlllblta and rldee. Tlala
year'• fair attneted nearly a ba1f mtlllon
Ylelton.
' l'nhke facts. which Johnson said
would h~ slo" m coming. rumers
lr:J\ ded qu1dd~· as res1dt nts w-alked
b~ the poh~ dt>panmt"nt's yellow
tape and quened one anothtr ·Opinion
Police log
Public notices
Sports
Weather
810
81-4
A2
In fact. .\rnold said. tht'rt could be
problems fo r concessionaires if lhe
t•xtended season were 10 thin the
crowds too much.
"You ha \'e, to look at potential
commercial problems:· he said. "lfit
means you're onl~ going to . have
5.000 on a Monda}. are )OU going to
kill business" The~ 'II s11ll ha'e to pa y
thl'lr help." hetht'r 11's a slow da) or a
hUS\ da\ ...
Tht· idl·a of C\tc:nding the fa1r's
'ie'as.on has ix'l'n d1scus~·d for 'ears. ~rnold ..aid. but t"o circumsta nces
ha"e made the issue more urgent.
Mayor Hall declines to seek
re-election to Mesa council
By JONATHAN VOLZltE °' .. .,.., ..........
Cosra Mesa M~or Donn Hall
announced Monday he wiU not seek
re-election to the CilY Council when
his term expires in l'ilovtmbcr.
Hall said at Mondav's council meet-
ing. "There's a lot 11'd s1ill like to do.
but there's not enough ti mt. I'd like to
have some spare time and time to gt't
my business going again ...
cal Practices Comm1ss1on has also
been mvesugaung a political action
comminee that supponed Hall m
1984 and allt'gt'dly fai led to repon a
S4.600 contribution.
··The d1scuss1ons ha,·t gotten mor<"
~nou" a~ the crowds ha ve gollt>n
b1gga and ba"cr:· he said .... .\nd
"e·rl' focmg a scht'dulina problem
nl'\I ~car an~"a~. We-follow Del Mar
on thl' circuit. and the' tradittonalh fin1~h up on the: ~th. of J4ly. we:·
The announcement means two
Seats will open for the election. as
Councilman-Bavid Wheeler, who
opposes Hall on growth il&un. has
already announced he's not runnina
again. Councilwoman Mary
Hornbuckle has said she intends to
Hall was appointed to the City
Council in I 978 after serving two
years on the Redevelopment Com-
miuio.1umd was~«ted in._1980
and 1984.
When the investigation was made
public in January. Hall denitd an~
knowledge of wrong-<ioing. bul said
aubtlirnt. tbaulK.invrstiption ma-+---
. 'seek re~lection.
"It's been a lot of years. and I've
contributed a lot to the community."
·Anything you 're involved in for 14
r.cars you· re going to m iu it when you
cave. · Hall said.
In recent years. t:fall has faced
opposition from slow-arowth ad-
voca1es who have attacked him as a
friend to developers. The Fair Politi-
afTect his decision to run for re-
election.
0tMrs-a45&-Said Nalt:w~ron
firm. Omega Industries Inc. of New-
port Beach. which he runs with his
wife. Jean, has taken a beating dunng
the decade Hall has served on the
(Pleue ._BALL/ A2)
:Amphitheciter settlement on table
By BOB VAN EY&EN ..............
A draft of 1 settle1Mnt that could
end a 4-year-old lepl dispute between
Costa Mesa raidents and w stale of
'California over traffic from Pacific
Amohithatte is dut to reach · w
confttenGeUble today. ·
If 1 senlement1• rathect: it will put
to ttSt a Portion of 1 lawsuit filed by
Costa Mesa residents j n 19M over
noise and traftk at tht arena. which is
localed on the OrarlF County Fair-
arounos. .
Courtroom hearings on the lawsuit
bcpn May 30. afttt two Wttks of
settlm!ent talks failed to pft>d~ an
agtttment. .
Amon.-:other thinp. the ttSidcnts
want the OraflF County Fair Board
to put in improvements that will
channel-cont'Cft .-t~ away from
·residential ltlftts and directly onto
Newport Boultvud.
Thtft Wttks •. tctllctMnt talb
be&an apin. after Superior Court ~udec RKhard Beacom ~nied a
motion by Deputy i\ttorney Gentral
Dtnn1s Dawson. on behalfof the Fair
Board. to have part of lhe lawsuit
dismi~.
Richard Sp1x. who represents tht'
'fSidents' aroup. Concerned Citiztns
of Costa Mesa. said Dawson and lhe
Fair Board had become more
in1trntcd in 1Cttlint "Me-IM4en11t-
of their motion.
"I'm supp<>K'd to have a draft
settlement proposal prepared tomor-
row." Spi1 said Monday. -The Fair
Board's always been makina noises
that thl·~ 'd hke to er• out of the suit by
doing certain things. I think this
md1catl"s "e·~ gttting a httlcdoser in
terms of "hat the~ 'rt "1lhng to do
and" hat "'" want tht'm tQ do."
Dawson said Monda' that ht had
not seen Sp1,·s §<'ttlemcnt proposal
and could not commtnt on th<'
hkehhood of ~nlcmr1n.
The propost'd settlement would
not end the lrpl battle. howevtr . ..\
thornitr 1ssut is noise from cof\C'trts
at th<' amphnheattr.
(Pleue eee AURA/ A2)
·Bergeson unlikely ~o be·treaSurer
BJGll&Gu.&llU "I would hive breft ~to Tt1c .1ovcrnor·s comments supef"\1sor. 1s also on the hst of
....... ,..... have been ldected.. but I think I have pmamlbl)' diininatc vin.ity every rontcnckn.
R ~-rnponsibititles in lhc Stnaw that wilt Senate ~tender for the position. Orukmtjaan said he hopn to Sen. Marian 8et"FIOft. -·--..... • continue 10 be challtnlins and re-indudina·mn and Sens. Wil-nominate somt'Onc •·ho t'ln be "'" Beach. conceded Monday thll lht ~ ~ 1:--c f H-~-H••a. •-__. .. _ ffi j 1990 but . uan4s li&de-cblMe of brins Mined uam am 0 . -~·-,....,.ts ('~(lt'\I to lm-0 tCt n .
state uasum in lilht of ien...U bf · Moaday tUt 20 .and Robtn 'Btvttty of Manhattan dented that M wn lttnnptins to
Gov. r-t>Nk,_.iul that br oeCllle art on llil lilc of pomblt Beach. Two other top conkndtn. sroom a GOP star to sUC'C'ttd him in
would ";";~nt ··uy la~ Cboicn h Ill~ uasum. but 11id John Seymour of AnaMlm and Ken the l<l'tmor'1 offlC't.
facinite-eltction in November. thM .. it would be • pat risk in Middy of Fresno. ttCCntty rcmovtd "I •'Antan individual that would be
.. 1 think it=s dnr &Mt br'• Mm= incumbent thaf1 runnins themtclves from ronsidnation. .abk' to be l'N'tttted to office ... not~·-10 . ICMMOM no ms b u ~pol~.ncl Midi a~ ToBum's°'t~P*ft. I Satialn. ~finaiM~ Dfukmcjian said. -... But lhtrf's no ·• wou.u provlUlt 1uca ammwu-.... ~I. • Si ..,.,...., .... .... •-a' that lft"~ ca · 1. ........: ft'< tion." taid .. ..,.. no WM _ . , .-..i..-. stf''f'Ci n a trusitt of tht . ,ivuu~ n PK• an nonr
had ...___ ---:...a--1 • rroat-nannerto to tl'llt' appoenw. OP.PNKftt: WTIU lpp.l'rtnt. Thf} 'II ha\'C' to 9'\ out and ~" "~-...... _ 81\._. ~,~ to i..a-1iA. California Statt nivCBtt) s-aem. · ~• d 111\-..-1.-the Ille Ja. U.,.. as ' l'llt' -·"" '"'" ~· ~ _-n •1 7 • campaaan ''llOf'OU»)' an •1n suppon ·~~-,..~~~~~~-.,,-~~~~t~hoee;;~waf!o;.~•~tt~bri::.:'•'.:!....:"°":::1te:1le:~red=...:for=-~Bc~~~n~so~n~.:;:t;0;"~td~~th~artu;P;et~trr-~~._~ .. 1 .. ._118~.al: ,...__Al.l,...;SUf'C'!.
• '
usuall~ stan up lh<" following week·
l·nd. Thl' problem nC\I year 1s that the
~th 1s on a T ut'Sda). Thert 1sn ·1
qnough time: hc.-tween m1dn1gh1 Tues·
~r.tnd I 0 a m. Thursda\ fo rlht m to tiri'N o,l·d and-set up." · · . \'> (Pleue eee FAIR/A2)
.\tler heanng J>:<>llCt' ma~ be. m-.
't><il1g.a11ng a homicide. one woman
\aid ... I u\C'd 10 lea'~ m ~ door open to
110 do m' \\ash and stuff. but ntvtr
. (Pl~eeeD&ATB/A2)
Irvine election law . .
certified by state
By GREG l.LERKX
Ot .. Oeltr ........
·.-t
The 10ps~ ·tuf\ ~ race fo r the If\ int'
(II) Counnl got e'en crazier Mon-
da) fo llo" mg 'itate certdicallQn of a
ne" ckrt1lm la" allo" 1ng a SJ>t'("1al
'\o' l·mher dt"(·t1on for a d1sputt'd
counn l ~at
Tt• "1nua ll~ C'"C"~ne's sU1"pnS('.
the ne" d <.·ct1o n la" -known as
Measure D -"as re' 1c"t'd '1onda' b\. th·· s.xr.·1an of statc'.s offia and
ordl•red filc:d as of its rect1pt Fnda~
The pafll'f" or~ for the measure "as
\l'nt to thl· "late after ccn1fica11on h'
the C11~ <. ounnl on Jul~ I~. . ·
"f\('1"\th1ng is 1n ordt'f. It 1s
cffcct1' l' no" ... said Jem H 111. au1s.-
tant ~retan of state ·
\.k ac;u r,· b. approvt'd b~ lr"tn<"
'oter. Junt' ,_ allows for a special
clet""t1on ".hen a cou~cil scat is
'acatl·d b' a councilman selection as
ma H)r That scenano occu~ w~
Lam_ .\gran "as elected mayor on
J unc and his scat was aulomattcal'#-~---11
a"ardl·d w the third high"t votc-
grnn. ( ameron Cosgrovt. •
.\ ix-t111on dn\e 1n support of a
~pc< 1al elC'Ctio n. led-.
( ounnl"oma n Sall) Annt Miller.
"uccctdcd in obtaining enough si1na-
turt'' to forct a special elcctfon if
(Pleue ~ SLSCnoit/A2)
Irvine Buslneu
Compluoutgrows
1987 contro~ersy
By GREG KLERiX
0t .. D111t,......., ·· . 1i.e Alrfunl .. aGl•llc
The ln me Bu~in~ C'omple\ placeolcG ....... -
snafu of I~ "'is s11tl a sort \UbJ~Ct
around In inc (It\ Hall.
Toutt'd as the Nr\l Bia Th1n&Jn
ofllC't' dcvelop~nt. the romplc'
took a heating 1n the 1Md1a and
t>usineu commYnll)' last fall
•·hen It WM ditco\l'fmt Cit\
l>lanntn Md pltd in caku··
l11ina squa~ foc:ilaer allot~nt -aoof'N b> about S million squa~
fttl.
In a Cit) that ~ ibdf on
carrful plannina. tht llC ddlede
WU af'IUlbh tht most tnfamous happtnins Of 1917 In lrvint. But
cit} offinlts ~dttmnincd to
tum tht complo around.
As Ont otfiaal put at It tM tt mt.
..~ c1on•t throw out tM bib>
... th tht beth •'lttt."
, No ... mart tMn a )'al llttt. a
rtttnt Wf'Vt'\' tndKaln that 18('
im not nntY tvmtd around but ha~ 1t10 paned around on o&her
. ~. dy Kraft trial Q.pens tod~y
~••..-...n .........
More dlU ftve r.a!! after hit ..,... .......... llrial killer landy
Kraft .-• trial today in <>ranee CoualJ s. . Coun. J._ ~ Mceania cSenied IMI iaocioas Monday by boda tbe dlfelllt ud proeecu&on to PIY juron
lllOrl .._ .tbe neablilbed rec o1 u
Pll'·•Y fDr tbe trial that could lut a ~orloeeer. Deleme attomcy C. Tbomas
McDonald pro,~·uron ·be paid $50 per 'Clay, ·while' ty district
attorney Tom 1 .._.atd
jwon tir paid the equivalent Of their
sallrin.
Goethals estimated the trial will !aJt nine months. while McDoiiakl
DEATH •••
Prom Al
111in.''.
A man watchina police from a
nearby arassy area-said, ''Thia is too
close to home. No wonder I sleep with a .38." ,
Coroner's deputies did not enter
the apartment until after 9 p.m.,
Johnson said.
He said investipton would prQb-
ably remain on the scene until well
past midni&ht. Cause of death was
unknown pending completion of an
autopsy.
eetimaled 11 moalhl. . But McCartin nded · boah
propollls after leami• ~ PIY· mcnt i1 the lelal limit in die county. The triaJ WU lla&ed to bcein tbj1
momins with jury ldection. which
could tau up to six wetkl to
comp&ele.
Attorneys will interview 20 volun.
teer jur0n flllt. Kraft's defen1e tam
estimated tbn may interview as many u 15.000 l'fOI*, ''°at a time, bef'oft selectiotl 11 comoleted.
Knft is~ with killin& 16 men
in Oran,e County between £971 and
1983.
ARENA SETTLEllBNT ••• PromAl ; . "~
Residents .say concert .noise has Perform if their sound i1 tamperfd repeatedly violated county noise with.
standards. an alleption which is
becked up by a coun-appointed
sound expen.
The residents want.sound moniton
a\ all concens who have the authority
to tum down the volume.
_ Attorneys for Ned West Associates.
which owns a ~year lease to the
arena. say rock aroups will refuse to
Fair Board members are consider·
ina buyina out Ned West's lease and
puttinaadomeovertheamphitheater
to contain the noise.
Last week, the' boarJ hirfd New-
port Beach appraiser GeoflC Jones to
help them determine the value of the
lease.
BERGESON RULED OUT •••
Prom Al
on their own. I've never believed that
there is such a thina. as coattails.
Rattly. do you see any kind of coattail
efJect. It's very rare, I don't think it
works at all."
Unruh. a four-term Democrat.
died1ut summer. Deukmejian's fint
choice. Rep. Daniel Lunaren of Lona
Beach. was approved by the As-
sembly but rejected by the Senate.
The Legislature's split vote sparked
a !cpl battle over Lunaren's con-
firmation which the state Supreme
Coun rtt~ntly resolved by rulina
unanimously that l,.unaren was not
eli&ible to be confirmed.
~ Aa«UIH p,.... ~,,.,'-' ,. ~· ,,..,.,.
FAIR MAYBE EXTENDED NEXT YEAR •••
hem Al
One Costa Mesa mident. who lives
in the Mesa del Mar nei&hborhood.
said he wouldn;.t mind a lonacr fair.
"It would affect me. because I sell at
the swap meet." said Joe Balou&h.
"I'm on vacation because we don't
have the swap mttt durina the fair. A
lot of people look forward to that
break. For a lot of us, it's the only
vacation we act. so we wouldn't mind
a little extra time."
But Baloudt sai~ he was not sure
the exte~cJ season would be suc· cessful. -_
"I think it's going to grt stale if they
extend it for another wrckend.'' he
said.
Another rnident said she would
look "cautiously" at the proposal.
"It would depend; if at would cut
down on traffic then maybe it
wouldn't be so bad," said Karen
Millar Millar is ·one of th.c rnidents
involved in a lawsuit qainst the
Orange County Fair Board over noise
and 1raffic at Pacific Amphitheatre.
wl1ic11 as located on the fa.irsrounds.
She said a settlement of the lawsuit m~t make it unnecttSary to extend
the fur in order to ease traffic.
"If they accomplished the traffic
improvements we are askina for,
maybe they wouldn't need to extend
the fair." she said.
Residents are askina for a 10-lane
"Disneyland-style" entrance to the
fairgrounds. which would channel
traffic directly from Newport
Boulevard.
Charlotte C'leary. president of the
Fair Boarjl. said th<' board's Fair
Committee would probably consider•
the' passibility of ell tending the fa ir at
nellt month's mtttlns.
"We could have a decision within a
couple of months." she said.
HIRING HALL IN MESA CONSIDERED •••
From Al
ehm1nat1ni the need for them to
pther an Lions Park.
Res1den1s who Jive nrar thr 18th
Strre( park ha ve told the council they
frcl threatened by the men. who on
....some -da)'..s gather !lO;suona at 1bc
park to ~1ah1e and waat for work.
Snowden told thr rnuncal earlier
that the. day laboreni do riot pose a ~ft'ty ttirrat and that there is no lank
.betwttn the men and crime.
Thr chief said pohcc officers are
prohibited from enforcing 1mm1gra·
taon laws. although they must help the
fmm1gra11on and Na.turahzataon Srr·
vice should the fedC'ral aaency raid the rontl·nds city support of such actions
park. fmm1grat1on agents already would destroy thr budding rtla·
plant themselves an the park undrr-tionship bctwren the city and its
cover. and Harold Ezell. the INS Latino community. Carlos Ornelas.
western region commissioner. earher 32. agrrcd with Hornbuckl~ ~uuaid be Rqun&cd sWttps.-::Mr. mbur~y·~ pfan 1,-vt'ry
through the park to round up negat1 vr." Ornelas said. "It would
suspected illegal ahens. cause fri"tion between the H1span1c
-Ambu~ey supponsraads.contend· rnmmunity and Costa Me!la.
ing the ehmi·natio n of 111~1 workers "We thought we had something
would optn joM for cni_zens and J)U\lll\t' goi ng ·wath the la ving room
1mm1grant'i 1n thr amnt'sty program. dialogues. Peopk said thrrc was
He has had trouble. however. in nothing wrong. but suddenly 1t's
o;wa)'1ng has fellow council members. summer and ··hango." Mr. Amburgey
Councilwoman Mary Hornhucklc . '1oe~n·11Jkc H1!>pan1c~." .\.
IRVINE B~SINESS COMPLEX BOOMS .••
From Al
speak loudrr than words. The com-
plell 's daytamr popula11on 1s I 0~000.
almost 9 percent 9f Orange County's
entire employee population. It is
home to 47 Fonune 500 companies.
32 banks. right hotels. 83 rntaurants
and 12 educataonal facihucs.
planning gaffr ar_l the caty's hi story. for 514.440 gro\s ~uarr tret of
. Planner-; dascovert'd an May 1987 that · development 1n I BC Thr city can
thcv mav have overallotted more 1s\uc permits for an add1t1onal 9.5 ~han 5 ma Ilion square feet of office m1ll1on gros'I square feet of develop-
r,pace at thr sprawhng complex. ment before the cap of 34.86 milhon
In add1i1on. the report stated that • gro\'> ~ uare feet as reached.~
becau!IC of .. basic cakulataon errors." the cit ) was S5 malhon beh ind an its Krady said the system of monitor·
..
U.S. Tempe -" IO • .. ..
" .. u
" 110 .. .. .. ~ ..
" " " .. 17 .. .. .. t2 ts
102 t7
" t2 ..
I I
103 17
17
" " " II
12 101
99 15
ti
t3
" ..
II '°' 111 104 .,
105
71
IO
17 107
107
IO t2 73
112 t2
tO
" .. 76
" 92 17
118
t 2
t2 111
18 N 71 12 ..
IO
72
62 77 78 .. 1oe ts
77
'2
100
· Smf F.oreca•t
TODAY 1223•"'
7 12.'" 204p.m
7 ... plft
s::w ¥¥
•• 01 ., u
u
14 ...
21
ELECTION LAW CERTIFIED BY STATE •••
Prom Al Measure D was filed by the state to three weeks to review and file the
before Cosgrove-was sworn in
Wednesday nig))t.
Cosgrove said late Monday that he
was "shocked and disappointed" and
suspicious of the measure's unusually
swift approval.
"My mind is raci ng with thoughts.
not all of them happy," said Cos-
grove. "This has really come from left
field. I have no idea how this went
throuiti so quickly. It smacks of a
conspiracy." ·
Cosgrove said tie i!> prepared lo run·
in the special election.
"Of course. I'd rather not. But I
beht'-Vt' I do o~ it to the 11 .000 who
want ml' and expect mr to rt'prtKnt
them:· he ~1d.
C1tv < ·1crk Nan,·y Lacey said she
was '1ver)1 c.urpri~d" that· thr Sec-
retarv of Statr's office actrd so
quKkl) tn approvtng Measure D.
Lacey had predicted 1t would take two
mca'>urc.
"W{''ll jU\t have to sit down and
figure out what's nellt." said Lacry.
The approval of Measure D will not
affect the seating of Agran and
< 'oun('alwoman-elect Paula Werner.
who finished first an the Juns 1
rnunci l racr. said Lacey. Both arc
scheduled to be seated Wednesday
night.
Maller. wh.o was reelected after
finashtng sernnd in the elrcuon. also
e~pre'o\Cd surprise at thr mt'asure~s
quack filing. but said"the law 1s clrar
and that a spenal election as now
1nrv1tablc.
··t.H·~bod) '><lid 'it couldn't be
donl'. but 1t ha<> been done." said
Malkr. who would be the lone
· ron..cna11ve on the Irvine council if
Co!>gro'e wf rc seated. ··Everything
that rnuld be don(' to stop this has
tx•cn tned. Wc'H' won."
Attorneys for Irvine Pride. the ·
organization bel:iind the petition
dnve. wall go to Oranae County
Superior Coun today askin' for a
iudgment blocking Cosarove s seat-
1 ng. C'ity Attorney Roger Grable
rould not he reached for comment on
whether Cosgrove could be seated
lk spite the. approval of Measure D.
Thl' measure·~ approval is the
latl'St rnrnplka11on in a council race
fraught wit h legal stumbling blocks.
har'lh words an·d general confusion.
Supporte~ of Cosgrove had bqun
a re-count of I he June 7 ballots, hopina
to l'OtTte up with enough votes. to
move tnm anto second place ahead of
Maller. Co\grove finished only 106
\ote\ hc htnd Miller.
( 'osgrov(• called off the recount last
wrelt ... sayang that it was only addina to
thl· d1fficuh1es of an already-confus-
tnJl ck·r t ion.
HALL NOT SEEKING RE-ELECTION •••
From Al
rnunnl. He was mayor four of the 10
~ ('3f'i.
Hall \ la.,t dc<'laon to the counhl
wa\ a b11tf r -and expensive -fight
again'lt thl· Mesa Action c1t11ens
group.
Hall and former Councilman Enc
Johnson were targrtcd by Mesa
.\<"lion-supported candidates. Hall
narrowly won. but Johnson lost. The
figh1 was the city's most Cllpcns1vr .
with the two spending $9(>:834. whale
m era II 'Pl'nd 1 ng topped S 18 7 .000.
Juhn'><m was l~ft with a S20.000
dr ht. "'hile Hall found hamscl(hold·
ang S 11 .h-*5 an prom1sory notrs to his
hu\tnC<\
In I 9MO.-H;111's debt after electi on "'a" onl\ a fe"' hundred dollars. hut he 'pent th.ou!><tnds 1n 1984 on mailers to
counter thf htera1urc put out by Mesa
Action.
\ fll'.r 1 hl'. '" m yactory for the rnunnl \l'ill. Hall again faced a lough
hattle to hold has seat on the Oranae
County Wa te r District. Hall
'lqucaked h) Mesa Action candiclate
Patric-aa .\ yne-; by !leve n votes. •
On the recent councal. Hall has
been pan Hf a thrre-man majority
with Councalmen Pcter Buffa and
Or\lllc >\mburg~y. both of whom he
'IUpported when they gain'cd their
scats 1n 1986.
Th'e thr<·e battled Councilwoman
Mal) Hornhucklr and Councilman
David Whrelcr on growth assun.
IBC has nearl~ 18 m1ll1on square
fc:c t of office space. far more than the
nellt h1ghe\t development. the
Stadium area. "h1ch has about 7
mil hon. according to the repon
collection of IBC fees from dr-1ng IKC' development has undergonr
vcloptrs. fres which were earmarked a maJOr overhaul sincr last fall. The
for street im provrment'i. cit y's method of tracking develop-Su~ucnt study by city ofliqal!I ment tn the complell as now com· ,-------------------------------------------
and a pri vate consulting firm con· putenzed. and 1s now sharrd by the
eluded that the city may simply ha ve data processing and community de·
h111 cn off more than 1t could chew. vclo{>mrnt departments. It was
Poor record-keeping. inadequate stafl previously donr by hand and was the
training and anconmtent apphcat1on sole responsibility of the community
of a com placated ordinance gowern ing development department. said
A total of 25 malhon squarr.fcc:t of
IBC !>pal·c '" l'UrTCntly occupi ed.
according to cal) staff.
'"The numbcn. lend further cred1-
h1l11 y to IBC'S ranking as the coun·
try's pnme corporate busaneu en·
v1ronmcnt." !laid Jay Carnahan. IBC
spokesptSOn and ~n1or vice presi-
dent of marketing at Transpacific
Drvelopmrnt < o.
.Last Ma). a M""athang rrpon '1n-
d1cated that basic !ltaff mistakes and -----an ana equate recor · ttptng systrm
re\ulted tn mau1 vr overallotmrnt of
.space au.hi: wrnplcll. At th( samt
umr. the repon noted that 'staff had
failrd to colk ct about SS malhon an
devrloper fees
The result The county·., most
ambiti ous officr devrlopmrnt
ground to a halt wh1lt' plannr"
scrambled to fi nd out ellaclly' whal
had gone wrong
Whrn the.,. found out. heads rolled.
Scvrral employr". tncludang thr
ci t} ·s de~~oprncnt director fo r morr
than car.ht yea~. lost their JObs for
I heir roTls tn 1he blundt'r.
.\s"astant Cat( Mana,er Paul Brady
recall' the IR · "nafu with mixrd
rmotaons.
"Looking hack. I view this as a
•11tuation where thl' c:aty·was moving
'°fast that no one took the! tame to put
the tools an placr to really mon11or
1h1s properly." said Brady. who WH
ta tlf"'Y l'e'SJ'Ol1sib1d.or ck1m11JU SJ the
18(' mess.
Most lrvtnr city offic11ls still
. reaard the IBC mill-UP as the blgrit
O~ANGE ........... .
. COAST .... , ~·
MMNMJICI
3J0 ~' 1!1•1 S•· eo.t11 ~ C.•
..
lhe compkx were blamed for the Brady.
problem. · Otlicaals ha ve also been ridil'lg herd
The < 11} < ouncal 1mmed1ately on developers who have not paid
slapptd an emrrgency ordinance on their share of the uncollected de·
I BC'. halt 1 ng thr approval of further veloper fres. said Brady. Much of the ~ts until staffer' could ~rt ou1_ uncoll~lYn.dL.ltaYL bttn re·
what had ha-ppened. -coupc;d.
The perm11 prcx.·es\ was rvt'nluall ) hnall'. the cit} as pre rina a
(C\umcd.-_bu1 the ~~»-. no pmpm:rho-bnng the 11 1
without its cost. In December.Com-ordinance and environment•repon
mun11 y Ot-velopmenl Director Larry into compliance with the ci ty's gen·
Hogle tendered ha\ rrs1gnat1on. os-l'ral plan. The ancons1\lency between
tcn!>ahl) to pursue a JOb an the pri vate · the threr documents 1s at the root of
\C'Cl~r. th.r IBC snafu. said Brady. The 1982 CatY: hat.I \OUr<'e\. however. said ~ 11< \tatcs that Ifie could hold 34.5
that Hogle s. departure was hastt'ned millio n 'lquare feet of drvelopmcnt.
b} the 18( debadc. Most of the whak 1hr 10nang ordinance for tlic
employees d1recll}' responsible fort ht' area allowed 41 malhon square fttt. IBC emm worked undrr H~e. Woolktt admitted at thr umr'that .\ rl·rent audit of IBC dt'velopment
the hu\lnC\!l 'co'mplc' \ttuataon dad \l'l thi: ~e velC?pment ~ap at 39 million
· play a role an Hogle'" re51gnation. ~uarc k'et. < 1tyoffic1al~are currently
"I think IP< had an effect on the U\1ng the 10nang ordinance fiaure
t1m 10gofh1'idtc1c.1on to go. I kn ow he unlll the} can bnng a pro~I to the
frrl\ pan1all} n·r,pons1blc for what < 11~ Councal. probably an October.
happened ... Woulktt ~ad. 'Miid Prad). _
.\('rvrdang to Brady. drvclopme.nt Brad~ will go brfore the council
an thl' fomplcll I\ nuw back on track. Wt'dne\da~ to' rtqU<'Sl I 10-month
"\\-('·, e mrt wit h developen and C'X tenc.1on to 1ht ex1stin1 ursrncy
wc 'n• up to date as far as what we said ·ordinance slowang_dt'velopmmt in
We-would do. ··urd Brady. · the comPJex. Thr current ursency
i\ cat) .. 'ltaff rep<>tt indicates that otdanance ell pares on July 29. and the
between 'it-pt. I. 1987, and June 1. rnunc1l 1Hr\>t \Cheduled to rnttt apin
1988. 1hc city anUC'd buildina pcrriiitt until .\ug. 23 .
' . . =,... ..~ ..
_,..,. ~""· 81>• tWI 1;.. .... Ufl• I • \11117• • Mondey·'••r It JtlU oo
-~ ~ pllpp Oy ) '30 p "' (Ml .,._,,. , p "' .... --a;,.,. f,•} ~'" .,.~,~ ' • .,. • .,... • ••••• '
~~ ttlJ.()r ...... c-"-'O eomp. .. , ..... , """' --~__,,,. ..,.()'la! ......... ~ .o-·~ ,_. -nw, M ,..,._., -1• tc«-••' ""'
-oA'COOJ"'I"' -
· Ja.tcaU 642-6086.·
What. do you like aboul the Dlify Pilot? What
don't you likt? can the number abo~e .and your
· menaer will be rec~rded .• tranlCribed and <k-
h ve~ lo tht apptop1111e cdttotT · •
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