HomeMy WebLinkAbout1988-08-16 - Orange Coast PilotORANGE G\ST
TUESDAY, AUGUST 16, 1988 25 CENTS
~JI approve_s 4-hotel complex
Council passes 34 M redevelopment
project that also in cludes homes, resort
homes. and 100.000 square feet of
resort. restaurant and retail develop-
mel}t.
Monda) ·s unanimous· approval
dre" praise from Roben Bone. chief
C\ecutl\e officer of the Newport
Beach-based Roben l. Mayer Corp .. ·
"h1ch ow ns the ..i4-acre tract.
En1hus1a!>t1c cit} ollic11tls '>a\ tht'' cx~ct 10 collect morl' than · S:?OiJ
m1ll1on 1n taxes from the project OH·r
a 20.}ear penod
By BOB VAN EYKEN
Of .... 0.-, .... ...,,
Wealthy tounsts will replace
barefoot surfers on a 44-acre stretch
of Huntington Beach waterfront
under a sweeping set of redevelop-
ment measures passed b} the Caty
Council late Monda).
NEW SLINE
Reagan cheered •
Exuberant fans wave
signs as President Re-
agan addresses the GOP
convention./ A4
Coast
Dan Lungren'spost on
the Republican National
Committee is expected to
keep him in the party
spotlight./ A3
Indez
The counetl's acta on ratafies plans
for a $345 million complex of hotels.
upscale homes and commercial de·
'elopment on•Pac1fic Coast H1ghwa}
between Huntington Street and
Beach Boulevard.
Included an the proJeCt are four
hotels-one of them a Hilton -875
They're off
.. It's been a long and productl\e 2111
'cars:· said Bone. ..The ci ty w1ll
rece1\t~ benefits in man~ categories.
There are economic benefits but also
101ponan1 !>OCtal benefits of having a
prOjCCI like 1h1s an the Cit~ ...
.\ long hne of'bl\ re<,adcnts. ~oml·
of them from the real t'!.tate 1ndustr.
1oined in prarsing the proJel t ·
Jacqueline Pncc a ta\ arcountant
"1ih a local firm. \aid '>he behl"\ ed the
hotel and rommemal com pin .... ould
be good for business
"It "ould ccnainh ht' n1tl.' to ha'l'
a nice hotel in thl' art'a tor ml'l'lln~.
instead of ha' ing to go 10 'e" pon
Four sea lion pupe were returned to the •urf
Monday at Cre.cent Bay ln ~una Beach
after being cared for by the Frfenda of the
Sea Lion for the past 2 ah month8. The pupe,
weakened by malnutrition, bad beached
themselves and were nuned back to health.
l:karh or Lung Beach ... she said.
-\nother resident. representing a
large professional groupr also gushed
ll' er the proj«I
.. Our Cll) 1s on the 'erge of a 'er)
l'\lltang redeH·lopment project. said
Jan "K'humacher president of the
Huntington Beach-Fountain Volle~
BoJrd of ~caltors ··!'l:e,er has a
pruJel·t bcl'n so discussed. anal~ zed
;ind d1ssccted It appears e' e~
Jd,t>r~ impact ha!. been addres.sed ..
-\ lurmer Huntington Beach ma) Or
~ad thc ut~ had tned and failed on
numerou!t occasions to come up wtth
workable plans for the redevelop-
me11t of the down town "aterfront.
.. It "as one of the mos.1 frust!)Ung
things in m~ eight \cars orf the
counC.1:· s.aad JerT) Matne~. who
!ten ed on the council from 1968 to
1976 ·· .\ppro'c this project Don't let
11 slip a"a~ again··
But the: "alerlront prOJCC-t has not
been "11hout ll!t detr.ictors. Some
do" nto" n resident!. and business
ll"nl'r\ lament the end of the area's
(Pleue .ee HOTEL/ A2)
Council assailed
over inaction
in blighted area
ResWents demand
Huntington fix up
Commodore Circle
By BOB VAN EYKE!'\
Of IN 0..., Not ltefl
Hunungton Beach residents
pleaded. argued and shouted Monday
about bugs.drugs and propen} values
1n and around the blip11ed Com·
modore Ci rcle community.
Residents, landlords and propen~
o" ners m ne1ghbonng developments
"ant the Cit) Council to do some·
thmg about cnme and bhght in the
troubled neighborhood.
But no one seemed sausfied Mon·
da\ "hen the council 'oted to take a
"a11-and·see stance. conunumg an
e'asung rehab1h1a11on loan prog'ram
"h1k bt'gin_ning the complicated legal
pnx·ess ot deSJgnatmg the neigh·
borhood a rede' elopment area .
The ~~-~ear-old neighborhood
began a!> m1ddle<lass housing but
detenorated 1n the late 1960s and
I 97(h. linalh re.iching rock bottom m
the earl\ I qg0s
incc then. maO\ ne" owners have
tal..en out loans ·from the cat} to
rehabilitate the neighborhood's run·
do" n fourple A buildings.
But residents of Hunuogton Creek
and other nearb~ neighborhoods say
Commodore C1rc1e·s mme and other
social problems have not ~n re-
duced
..We see our taA dollars going to
rehab1l11a11on projects that do'n't
"ork." said Cath\ Johnson. a rest·
dent of Huntington Creek.
he urged the counctl to take O\'CT'
the ne1ghborh6od. celocate ats rcsi·
dents aod convert 11 t.o housing for
senior c111zens.
.. Please cut vour losses:· she said.
Other res1&nts said the~ ·would
(Pleue .e COIOIODOllE/ A2)
Advice & Games
Bulletin Board
Business
Classified
Comics
A9
A3
85-7
88-10
A10
810
A'S
Renovation of LB City Hall on agenda
Death notice
Entertainment
Opinion
Police Log
Public Notices
Sports
~eather
A6
A3
810
81-4
A2
By BOB VAN EYKEN
Of tlM Olllly l'llol Slllfl l.
Pollet• crn plo~ees an Laguna Beach
are S\.\-cating and squeezing 10 quar·
ters that arc hadh 1n need of
rcno,at1on. cit} officials agree.
Tonight the C11~ Council mus•
dl·cidc whether to go ahead with plans
to do something..about it. .
.\t stak<.> 1s a $.:! m1ll1on expansion
Mesa to provide
hiring hal~ for
its day laborers
By JONATHAN VOLZKE 18th Street park each mornmg in
Of 111e o.ie,,.... • ..., hopes of getting a day's work
Costa Mesa's day workers can soon Amburgey led the battle. contend-
wait for work at an abandoned ing the day laborers had taken over
t::soline station rather than Lions the park and were keeping residents
f out He also called upon the lmmigra-ark, where they drew the scorn ° tion and Naturalization service to nearby residents who said the hun· arrest and deport the workers who
dreds of men intimidated them fro m were in the countl) illegall y.
using the park. His request drew opposition from
Councilman Orville Amburgey an-civil rights and Latino groups. which
nounced Monday that the ci ty is argued the city should not work with
nearing an agreement with the owner the INS.
of a defunct service station at Placen· City J>Qijce do not have jurisdiction
tia Avenue and 17th Street who to cbed citizenship. At the hiring
would permit the facility to become hall, however. potentiaJ workers
Orange County's first "hiring hall... would be asked to show identification
The city will pay St ,000 a month verifying they arc legal residents or
for the hall, which should open before eligi ble for work under immigration
the end of September. The site was laws. Roeder said. ~~~::ce~f3~~;~}sti:i~i; 1:t!!~~ lin1h~!~~tsm~ft:~d~ a oW.~fJ~t=~
homes, but still removed from rcsi-the hiring hall could verify whether
dential areas. officials said. green cards presented by the workers
The council ordered City Manager arc valid, Mayor Donn Hall said.
Allan Roeder last month to "take While the rqistration would not
whatever action necessary" to clear rtlie"e tf!lployers -mos~ly contrac·
Lions Park of the throngs of men -tors needma men for men1al labor-
1tnmtyt.atino5'-'Whot1theted a1tbc... Pleue Me lllalNO/ A2)
and r~no\at1on proj~Ct for
bekagul'Ti:d police and other cit~
cmplo~ccs. "ho must cope "'th rramped space. fault) air cond111on·
1ng and leak) toilets.
.. C11' Hall was built in the 1950s.
and 1n :rn old build mg like this. thmgs
arc starling to fall apan:· said Ken
Fran l... Laguna Beach city manager.
"\\'11h the police depanmem. the
maJor problem 1s that there just isn't
enough pal'l' ··
In a kttcr to thl' C11' (ounoil dated
-\ug 11 1hl' LJguna Beach Pohre
Emplo~Cl''> -\'>wr1at10n l'Ou~erated a
long h!>t ol lib anJ d1scomtons that
plagul· thl' ~x-rx·r.,on dl·panment
.. 01ll' in' l'Sllgator must do her
1cchn1cal \\Ork 1n an ·omcc· not much
larger than a hroom close1:· thl· letter
~~s. • .\notlfrr emplnH'l'. thl· 3<,.,oc1at1on
..a'\ 1s torced 10 "orl.. m an office
ltX-all·d in the depanment's jail.
"here -.he 1s frequent!~ suhjeCtt•d to
the unpka,ant odor and beha' 1or of
into\1cated inmates.
.. hl' 1'\ often in tears o'er the
lrustra11on ofha\lng to "Ork an such
Jn en' 1ronmen1:· the letter states.
-\nother complaint I!> 1ha1 second·
lluor toilets get plugged and o~ crtlo\lt.
Jra1nin~ through the ceiling and mto
a do"nc,1a1~ "orl.. area
Funhcr pohcedaam aircond1tion-
1ng unm 1n the police stanon have not
funn1oned for three 'eat'S and those
"<'rl..1ng upstairs have 10 put up with
tl·mperatures 1n the low QOs dunng
c,ummer months ..
One l'\t'O more disturbing claim is
that .. the ent1n.' upstairs secuon of the
d~·partmcot as shdin1t to the south."
(Pleue eee CITY I ill
Tribute sprillgs from tragedy
CM, Viejo families a-mong those who ·n
remember Flight ~55 victims toniglrt
By GREG KLERKX
Of .. .,..,,... •Wt
If you're driving out of Detroit
Metropolitan Airport, you'll prob-
ably take Middlebelt Road. As you
enter the on-ramp to Interstate 94.
th erc·s 3 wedge orirass between the
on-ramp and M1ddlebelt that is
neath groomed and more or less
unno.11ccd b) the parade of drivers
"ho pass 11 each da).
Toda~. that wedge of grass was
CO\Cred w11h no"ers. This evening.
It \\Ill be CO\Cred with people.
poss1bl) as man) as 700. .
One 'ear ago today. 11 v.as
co\ cred Y. 11h 156 bodies and black·
ened b) the shattered wreckage of
Nonhwest A1rhnes Fltght 255.
<\ '" 1hght cercmon~ that has been
a \ear in the making was to be held
at' 8:46 p.m. EDT. one 'ear to the
minute that Flight 255 crashed
momentsafier takeoff. killing t 56of
Its 15 7 passengers. The onl)
survivor was a 4-)ear-old girl.
The: crash. "h1ch claimed the
h' c" of sc' en Orange Count) resi·
dl·nts. "as the second-worst a1 rhne
d1sa. ter 10th<.> na11on·s h1s1orv. Pilot
error was eventual!\ blamed:
E"cn one vear la°ter. the fam1hes
of Flight .:!55 'ictims struggle 10
cope: "1th 1he1r losses.
Rhett Bushong celebrated his
19th btnhda) on .\ug. 13. IQ 7. in
Toledo. Ohio. He was among fam·
11\. His father. mother and t"o
brothers had no" n 10 from their
~tis ion 1CjO home for his grand·
parents' SOth weddmg annl\ ersal')
Fresh OUl of M1SS&On V1e10 High
hool. Bushong was planning to
pla) football at Saddlebacl.. College
Footl:)all was an important pan of
Rheu·s hfe He drcided to return
earl) to Cahfom1a so that he could
makr the first da~ of practice
Rhett had ~n SC'hedulC'd on
Contanental -\arhne But "hen thr
Continental 01ght was dela~td. he
made 3 fat.al w11ch. boo~ang a scat
on orth'-'CSt <\1rhne Flight ~SS
Hidl Ratliff, 16. of Coeta
Mesa died ln the era.ah.
Thl' mention of that t11ght
numN-r sull dra"s silence from
Rhen·, father Reid Bu hong said
ht~ fJm11' has not shal..cn the death
l)r tht' "happ~ i..1d. ··
.. , ou S('C his picture around and
stufl: and ~ou JUSt miss "hat )ou·d
ha' e tx-cn able to set tf he·d hved:·
said Reid. a science teacher at
Ensign Middle School 10 ewpon
Beach "He was al"a~s so happ~ I
th1nl.. "c rcall) miss his sense of
humor moc,t ··
Rcla11'c' of those "'ho died on
Flight 2 5 "'ere to gather toda~ at
thC' l'rash 1te. known simply as
.. The H111:· to remember "'hat the\
han· lost .\ concurrent cen-mon\ "a" planned m Phoenix. whe~
man\ of the '1ct1ms hved. A
menicmal se~ ice was hrld Saturdav
to Detroit's Ford .\ud1tonum. ·
Bu,hong said St\ M1ch1gan rela·
11\Cc, "cn.-·to anrnd toda) ·s mem·
onal ~nice Rhrtt's fam1h and
fnend" also "'II hold their own
pm ate '1g1l in M1ss1on Viejo.
Bushong 1 hoprng that the an·
nt' ersal') and the ''\gils will mark a turning point for the fam1I).
Fnda' "ould ha'e bttn Rhett's ~0th t\uihda\
'"It"" going.to be tough for anothCT'
'car or so probabl~ Wr have to get h, thr b1rthdavs and the an·
ni,crsancs. then l think things 'Wiii
mcllo" :· he said
\fan .\on Rath ff has been with
famah in Toledo s1nct Aug. 6. Her
(Pleue tee r AIOLIBS/ A.2)
Pros,· cons of off shore dri11Jng debated in NB
Opponents claim tourism will suffer:
proponents sound nationalistic theme
IJ PAUL AAClllPLEY ... .._ .......
Oran,e County's mulum11lion· dollar tourivn industry would be eodDecred if off'1hofe oil drillif\I were ~iteed alona the roastline.
aoc.I OIANla warnecf'Monday. Howrvu. clrilliq proponents ....,.. dl9I touritna woukt not be
harmed and mcnca would take a bl&
tep toward CMl'IY indt~ndcncc.
Those were the hoes dra"'"ll durina a tate Lands Commis.sion public
hanng 10 Newpon Beach
Tht hcannt WU lht tiahtb in a
series beint hdd by t.bc commiuionA
It i1 P~..:f information about. the state s raourus to enable u to
rule 1n1clhgeotl) on offshore 011
project proposals.
"We're e:\Ctted that v.-c'rc ~n&
totethcr "hat "c believe to be the ?int
blucpnnt C\Cf of the California
roasth nc... said comm1ss1on rcp-
rcscntah\C Stephen Hopcraft
bout two dottn spcakm 1>9rt1C1-
pa1ed 10 the afternoon heann& at
Ncv.l)On &lch C1t Hall. includ•na
county uptrvisor Thomas Riley,
cv.'J)On Beach counc1tmemben
Evelyn Han and R'nbd)'1l PlumTMr
and uauna Beada Councilman Rob-
trt Gentry.
Gt'ntn $AJd a rrccnt sune) of
tounst on local beaches rC:\ealed 88
petttnt though1 the sight of offi hort
ngs would detract from their r«-
rcauonal ei.pencnct.
.. The roast of OBn e Count} 1s
tounsH>nented. When )OU tan.
about toun m )Ou'rt talkina about
our lifeblood." he said.
Rile) axed the comm1 aon to
consider nat\Aral and 1cnt1fk rc-
soul't'n •Iona the coa thne. a v.-tll a
the socal. cronomt~ and land uJt
conflicts that could result from off·
horc dnlhna,.
1
Hart. rtprescnttng thr ~ague or
C1ues.. s~ud e'en though Santa
Barbara tounsm has grown. 1t would
be up t\ltlCC a mu h af offshore ngs
"eren·t blotting the' 1tw.
Plummer said that offshore dnlhn'
benefits lhe nation, bUJ 011 •"Orkcrs
<kmand for hou'1ng. ~'t'Tl al\d
other servtctS fall on local com-
mun1ttcs.
<\nd Seth Lccd.s. spaktf\I for the
en\lronmcntal lfOUP ,., Our
horcs.. wd the rommiSSlon iboWd
consider tmalar hcannp to suady
alt~matc entraY toutta and tnd the
count!')· deptndcncc on foual fuels.
But 0 11 com~n) reprncntativa
1d offshore dnlhna has an csccUcat
track rteord as cn·Hronmmtally n.
Clinton Bird of Arro ,.Jct poUuuoe
of the <'oa i.I watm can be lnced to
stwer h noi oLI tpilh. He allo
wanted most pcoptc woakt -00.)«1 to the •• or np °" tbr ...
.. , don't tlu~ =~in • opposed to :J .. ... ~ know1t ........... .,
the C'OWllr) ud .... • ... ck~·-.......... . ....... __ , 4
Al ONnge CoMI DAILY PILOT/ T'*Ctay, Auguat 18, 1918
Mesa City Council approves
third ~base at Metro Pointe
By JONATHAN VOLllE °' ..............
The Costa Mesa City Council on
Monday approved the most intense
.. ·buildingphaseofanydevclopment in
the city by approving the third phase
of Arnet Development Co.'s Metro
Pointe complex-1\ear the San Diego
and Corona del Mar freeways.
The 3-2 approval. with Coun-
cilman Dave Wheeler and Coun-
cilwoman Mary Hornbuckle dissent-
ing, makes way for the S 160 million
project.
The projec~ includes two 15-story
omcc towers. a I 0-story offict build-
ing. two six-level parking structures
and a two-story retail .building.
As pan of Its a~ment wtth the
city, Amel will pay $8.S million for
traffic improvements. A portion of
that money will JO for South Coast
Place off-ramps from the San Diego
Freeway, officials said.
The second phase of the develop-
ment. approved in February, called
-for Amel to put up $4 million for
traffic improvements. That phase
was targeted for referendum by a
citizens group but a Superior Coun
judge barred putting the matter
before the voters.
The fir t phase of the project
included two office buildings and 300
apartments which are already oc-
cupied. A fourth phase. which lacks
council approv~?lls fora 500-room
hotel and I 00,uvv-square-f~t of of-
fice space.
Opponents of the development
contend it crams too much develop-
ment into too little space. The density
of the third phase is the highest in the
city. but the entire project's density is
smaller than that of the Red Lion Inn
complex. officials said ..
COMMODORE CIRCLE FIXUP DEMANDED •••
From Al
examine the possibility offiling legal
action to spur the city to quicker
action.
.. We might have to do that," said
Donna Shelton, a resident of Hunt-
ington Creek. "We're not going away.
We're going to continue."
But landlords who have tried to fix
up the neighborhood say they have
not received the cooperation prom-
ised them.
And residents say the city could do
more to help address the drug
problem in the neighborhood.
'Tm here to talk about the human
element." said one resident, Arturo
Vasque-z. "Not everyone who lives on
Commodore Circle deals drugs. I've
li ved on Commodore Circle for seven
years and so has my family. I go to
college. But there is a problem. When
little kids sec someone dealing drugs
making more money than they could
b) going to school. it sends a very bad
message. ·
"I'm willing to volunteer my time if
)OU start some kind of program to
help these kids. We're tired of being
put down as just some minority
group. All we ask is that we be
considered as people."
Several owners who spoke at the
meeting accused the city of failing to
follow through with street and land-
scapin~ improvements. "We ve been negotiating with the
city for 21h }ears to get them to come
down and do some rehabbing in
Commodore Circle." said Bob Muse.
part owner of several buildings. "The
city hasn't done anything but broken
promises."
Another owner. Art Cortez. said
the cit' could enact laws that would
make 1i easier for landlords to enforce
Petition filed
to blockjail
_in cany on
A petition beanng 112.000 signa-
tures aimed at halting construction of
a max1mum-secunty Jail 1n Gypsum
Canyon were presented to the Orange
Counh Registrar of Voters.
At least 65.110 of the signatures
must be valid to qualify the petition
presented Monday by Taxpayers for a
Ce ntralized Jail for the statewide
election. June 1990. said Registrar
Don Tanney. The in1t1ative would require all
count) jails to be built in Santa Ana. a
mo'e supporters sa)' wall min1m1ze
costs of transporting pnsoners and
increase safet} for residents.
Count\ officials. under a federal
co urt order capping population at the
count) ·s central Jail. voted for the
G}psum Can)on location in July
1987.
overcrowding standards. a perennial
violation at Commodore Circle.
"I agree with neighboring property
owners," said Cortez. whose building
has been ~novated. "I live in my
building wi th my fllmily and I sec the
problems. My grievance is with the
city."
;.If we got cit~ cooperation. we·
could make it work." said Bruce
Bender. co-owner of th ree buildings.
"Commodore Ci rcle could change ...
Some council members, including
Mayor John Erskine, said they still
blamed landlords for many of the
neighborhood's l'roblems.
"What's missing in Commodore
Circle is pride in the communitl
itself," Erskine said. "But I don t
think we should blame residents. I
think we should blame landlords.
When I see two or three families
living in !he same two-bedroom unit,
the word that comes to mind is
'1ct1m."
Landlords also took some flak from
.neighboring property owners.
"\~ vehemently object to a group
of slumlords accumulating wealth at
oure,pcnsc," said John Crowhurst. a
re ident of Huntington Creek. "The
undervaluation of our properties is
the biggest cost."
In the end, the council voted 5-2 to
begin setting up a redevelopment
area. making the neighborhood
eligible for federal and state rehabili-
tation funds. It would also give the
city the power to enter into agree-
ments with landlords that would give
officials easier control over code
cnforce(Tlent.
The council also voted for an
amendment. proposed by Gra~
Winchell. to include a resident prop-
eny manager in the project.
HOTEL COMPLEX OK'D ...
From Al
informal character.
··Big dollars are going to roll over
here tonight." resident Marvin
Brown said~"We already have 1raffic
that is unbelievable. and here we're
talking about development without
adequate parking."
One down1own propcny owner
said he was opposed to the redevelop-
ment project. even though he would
benefit financially from 1t.
.. Sure. I make a lot of mone). but
what about living here?" said Doug
Langevin. ..You're witnessing the
death of Huntington Beach. It's great
if you want to be an absentee
landlord. But who wants tolivea·cross
the street from a four-stof') parking
structure?"
Bone said designs were being
drawn for the project and that
construc1ion could begin 1n Decem-
ber or January.
DRILLING DEBATED •..
From Al
Mike Fergus of the Western 011 Gas
.\ssociauon said developers Jlave
tried 10 argue that permmmg offshore
platforms "ould negativel y affect
'1e"s. )Ct major resorts are under
construction in Ventura County over-
looking ex1st1ng offshore fa cilities.
..\nd Jo~ce .\lie~. employed b)
.\rco Pipeline. said not only are
offshore platforms en' 1ronmentally
safe. but successful scientific and sea
farming programs arc being con-
ducted under those platforms .
The tatc Lands Commission "ill
incorporate the 1cst1mon) provided
at Monda) 's heanng into its Cah-
fom1a Comprehensne Offshore Re-
source Stud\.
.\ draft stud~ 1s slated for comple-
tion in June I q 9. II "ill be circulated
for re' 1ew and comment. follo"ed b}
public heann_gs and comple11on of a
final repon in 1hc fall of 1989.
HIRING HALL IN MESA ...
From Al
of the legal necessity to verify
ritizenstnp. i1 would scrvc as a
"natural 1ft1ng'" tool (or illegal
'~orkers. Roeder said.
Once the hall is 1n place. the Cit}
and the INS will in,est1gate possible
acuon against the illegal workers.
Roeder said.
But Hall said no further action ma)
be necessar:.
.. , en,·1s1on the undocumented
\.\Orkers v.111 probabl) go elsewhere ,"
H111l said. ·~he-feT~ getng-to-6ei>fenty-
of documented v.orkers to take the
\\Ori-. so there v.on't be a"' reason for
(Illegal v..orkers) to hang around.'"
Cm offi cinls said Costa Mesa's
hinng hall. patterned' after the old
union halls. ma' be the first an\-
"hcre -·
"II sounds good. 11 looks good ...
Hall said "The onl~ wa) we're going
to knov. 1f11'1l \\Ork 1s to gi'e it a 11') ...
F. AMILIES PAY TRIBUTE TO VICTIMS ...
From Al
16-}ear-old daughter. H1d 1. a Costa
Mesa High hool cheerleader. was
among the passengers on Flight 255.
Rath ff has been vel) involved with
a support group called Flight
255/Their Spirit LI ve~ On. and said it
has helped her deal with the loss Qfher
only child. who "-Ould have gradu-
ated from high sthool 1n June.
"Before this. evel) 11me a plane
crashed. you'd sa~ 'Oh those poor
people.' but two \\eeks later \Ou'd
forgotten all about 11:· Rathfl' said.
"Pan of the goal of this group 1s to
keep (the crash) ali'e so it's not just
another plane crash. To us. 1t ccnain-
ly wasn't "
Life has been v1nually devoid of
joy since H1di's death. RathfT said.
She has taken numerous vaca tions.
attempting to escape the pain.
"I gue s 1fyOUJUSt keep moving. it's
easier ... she said.
RatlJff said she 1s approaching the
anniversary and ceremony with
mi xed emotions. "
"I don't know if it's really going to
hel~y ... she said. "But u s going to
-
ORANGE ..... Pilat COAST .... .
MAiit OfflCE
JJO .,.._, O.r SI C:0.11 ._ CA
llol •Ollr-Bo> 15e0 eo.te ..._ CA 9262e
help keep this fresh in people's
nrtnds." eo • ,
There ha ve been a 'number of
'iug&cst1ons for a permanent 'mem-
orial at the crash si te. Ratliff said.
orneone suggested planting 156
Oowering trees in memory of the 156
victims. Others have proposed fund-
ing a hospital burn unit for children.
or a children's section in a libral).
Most of those ideas have taken a
back seat to the planning of the
memorial ceremon~. Ratl iff said.
The ceremonies and services were
not last-minute events. The support
groµp planned the event as a way of
helping people cope with the deaths
and also places victims' memones in
perspecti\e.
"It's been a release planning this.
jUSt putting 1t together," said Chet
Polee of Detroit. whose wife, Betty.
was instrumental in founding the
it!pport g'roup. "From this, people
draw some reverence for th'e vic tims 6 and maybe some release for them-
selves."
The PoJecs.-lost their 11~year-old
<laughter. Lisa Polee Klaft. and her
husband. Donald. in the crash. The
couple were married only a few
month~ before.
"To put a name or a word on what
~ou feel. well. you can't do it.'' Polee
c;a1d:
.\t 7:30 p.m .. police were to clo~
off M1ddlcbelt Road. Several or-
gan11at1ons have donated free park-
ing and shuttle bus transportation to
the crash site. Bouquets of flowers
c;pelhng out "255'\were placed on the
site Monda~. each bcanng th'e name
of a \ICtlm.
Then. at 8:46 p.m .. the names of the
dcaa "ere to be read. As each name is
called off. the attending family mem-
bers will flick on penlilthls gi ven to
them for the occasion. When the roll
call 1s completed. there will be a
moment of silence. The ceremony
will then be over.
There 1s already talk of an annual
vigil to remember the victims of
Flight 255.
RatliO'sa id she will be there.
"I'll be there every year," she said.
"I won't forget."
OIK '1"l 11' f•1Y711 Otl'I"'-1' '°'"'*' 6•1 •321 JustcaU 642-6086
t.tonotr FI y It '/OJ 00 '* ...... "°"' ll'IC* b; ~ 30 • "' Call Delof• 1 0 ""
•"<I 'fO'll c.aov """ 0e ~., CooyoogM 11183 ()41"9t c-t ~ c-c-, No "'""°' .. .,.. •.• I~ .01 •oll """I• .,. _,_,_ _.I ,,....,, ,,.., IHI tlO'~tO ., llloU! .,,_,.. I*
~ 04 Ci0Wf'9"! -What do you hu abou1 tht O.uly Pilot? What
don't you like? Call the number above and your
mes111t wiU be recorded, traftlCnbed and ck·
livered to the •c-te at1tor.
Tbe smnc r answtnnt IU'VICe m1)' be
uted to record lenen to I.be edi10f OD 11ty '°PK•
Contribuion to our l..dtns c:Olumn mu.i include
their n1me and 1elepbone number for veriftc:atJOn.
' Tell us trtblt's on your mind. •
_, •'IO s.-, • '°" 00 llOC ,...,.. "°"" Cl>Or Cly , • '" ~
tO 1 "' 81oO '°" copy " ~ ..,
ar.:e.llft
T1llphonee
Moll
()1t9tc-ity
Nw. .......
l ........ --
Warmer, drier air on the way
SUgtttty wermer weettw le In atore lot Southlm Calfomll
Wedneeday, u dry air floWI ec:ro. the.,.., llmttlng lete night
and Hrty morning cloud9 Md fog to the~ Md ._.Ong the eun
shine through elte'#hefe. forecast.,.. Mid.
HIQh• at the bHchet Wedneeday should range from the
hlQh 60t to mld-70., folloWlng overnight Iowa tonight In the
mfd-50• to mld-601.
Along the Orange Coast there will be eome late night
through mld-mo<nlng low clouds and tog ,,..,. the cout.
OtherwlM fair through Wedneaday with ~tly eunny days.
Beach lows tonight In the mid-SO. to mld-eGa. Hight Wedneeday
In the upper 601 to mid· 70s. Valley Iowa tonight In ttte IOw 50s to
low 608. HIQhs Wednesday In the mld-eOt to mkS·90t.
From Point Conception to the Mexican Bord« -Over
Inner waters. light var:t>i. winds In the night Md m0tnlng hourt
through Wednesday. Inda becoming weal to aoutttweat 15
knots with seu 10 2 f t In 1he afternoons and evenings. Wnt
swell 3 feet. Night and m<>f'nlng low clouds and fog mainly along
the south coast. Otherwise fair.
Newon.ns 95 71 Calif. Temps U.S. Tempe New y °"' City 97 74 ~ IOw f()t 2• llOut• ~et s Liil .. Le Ollllhome City t7 75 .. 11e1c1 97 12 Omll\I " 7f Albuquetque .. 13 Eurell e 13 S2 OflllnOo 17 73 Fr""° II 13 Mcft0tllg9 II S2 Philedelpnil INI .. Loe~ 93 12 A11et111 t1 73 Pho9nlll 107 .. PNO Rob1e9 et 51 Ali.ntic C.ly ., 10 P,ttsbufgll 80 14 Red 8lutl 80 14 8-'ll!llOt• • 103 ...
Blrl!WIQhlm 92 71 ::::t'eily 13 72 AeOdlng .. II
a-13 sa IOI 17 AeOwooCI City 11 5 7
8oelon 91 1• Reno 91 49 s--10 11 sa
Bu"81o .. 82 Alchmond 91 10 Sellnas 87 55
ClevellnO 87 1$ SILOUll 103 82 San co.go 75 64 Seit Lake Ctly 95 58 San "r91>C19CO IS 66 Columbuf. OlllO 91 .. Siii AnlOlllO 9t 77 Sen JoM 71 57 l)elM.FI Worth 101 ,. S..llle 14 51 San LUIS OOIJPQ 71 S3 Dayton N .. SP«*-79 54 Sloeklon 81 St o.n .... 97 12 Sy.ICUM .. 87 O..MOlnM 104 19 Twnpa.St PlrSbg .. 73 Hlgll. IOW IOI 2• l!Oufa 9l'dlng •I:: m
Oel•Oll .. 17 T(l9elll 100 72 &lratow II
Dululll .. .. ~· IM 50
EJPuo .. .. Tucaon 101 75 81gllul' 71 31
Erie .. 12 TulN .. 71 8llll09 .. 45 wu111nu1on,o.c . 103 72 Flir~I 71 34 Wlc:Nte 103 71 Blythe 110 10
FlllOtlltt " 41 Celelinll 87 57
Grlll\CI~• ti 59 Culvet City 81 58
Honokllu II() 74 L.enc:u1« II() 12
HOU.Ion 92 ~= Smog Report Long 8eecfl 83 80
lndl~lt 91 LA Alfoort 73 80
Jacllson,MIN N 10 Pllrn Sprtng1 tot ..
JICltaonville II() 72 Pollut1111 tlendltd lndea ~) 0-60 PIMdene .. 51
JUMeu 87 45 Rlv9flide .. 53 KMsuClty 103 71 c : 51·100 moderaM; 10 -1" un-Sen BernerdlnO t2 52
lNVl!lff " 97 hf\11. 200-2" ._., uMMllMUI. 300 S111ta All• " 51
Little AOck 97 75 llld IOOW l!Uardoue. Flr9I figure la 511111 1W ball 75 50
L-llle 97 79 ~ cie,'• llt._, pel. 8-ld .. SlnllCNz 10 51
MemllNa " 19 IOOly'a ptj ~t Sent• Mlfle .. S4
Mllmi Beacll 12 75 SM1 8Mc:lt to MacAr1t1ur 8Nd ... ~2 Tef!OeVfl//lfrt 75 38
MNIUlt .. 94 73 1Mne. S~ Veley ............ 5CM2 T0tr.,_ 17 57
~S1Peul N n Legunt 8Mctt (lorecut~---· 42 Weiatwoocl 75 80 ....,,,,,.. " 74 Loe AnoMe AlrpOft ..... -........... _, 42-42 Y-teVly 12 ,.
Eztendecl
Surf Report
Tides
TOOAY Sec;ono tow 1~10 p.m u
Seconcl hlgll 1t·5t p.m. 43
ftl>NllOAY
Firtl IOW 1:09 I m 1.4
Flr1l lllQll 12'• 1 P-'" • 9 Seconcf IOW 1 03 p m. 1.9
Sun Mii todly II 7 31 p.m.. ,,_
Weelneteley 11 8 15 a.m llnd Nie egelrl
et735pm Moon NII IOOay et t 37 p.m., ,,_
~1110S31m end Nll~
•t 1001pm
Radioactive water escapes
from Florida nuclear plant
MIAMI (AP) -About 3,200
gallons of slightly radioactive water
leaked from a spent fuel pool into an
open-air canal at the Turkey Point
nuclea~ plant today but ~sed no
health threat.a federal official and the utih1~ said.
day when a circulation pump valve
broke. said utility spoke~oman
Stacey Shaw.
laminated. Clark said. Shaw said that~ .
involved washing off their shoes and
clothes. ·
The water poured out of the
building. across a paved area and into
a storm drain that leads to a the
cooling canal. sai d Ken Clark. spokes-
man for the Nuclear Regulatory
Commission in Atlan1a.
(lark said the cooling canal after
1he accident showed no higher-than;
normal levels of radiation. ·.'·
Thl' enclo)ed pool adjacent to Unit
..i at the Flonda Power & L1iht Co.
plan1 about JO miles south of Miami
!x-gan lcal.1ngarou nd midnight Mon-
Fifteen plant workers who helped
clean up the mess had 10 be decon-
"It's not a serious problem." Clark·.
said. "It doesn't pose any serious
health threat to the employees or to
people outside the plant." .•. .. -
CITY HALL RENOVATION ON AGENDA ...
From Al
the land sale should be used to acquire on 11 for a long time." · .
more land for parks and open space. Councilman Neil Fitzpatriclc said
"There is a movement to use that he did not know wheth er there ~uld.
Franl. agreed that there arc struc-
tural problems with the upstairs
\l'n1on of the building.
.. But 11·s not going to fall down
toda'.lror tomorrow," he said. "In the
long term. 11's a problem that we're
going to address 1n our renovation
prOJeCt.'.
$2. 9 million for open space." said be am further delays or :Ql()di-, .
Frank ... And 1fwe were to take all of fi cat1ons in the renovation prvject.
that and devote it to open space Bob Gent I)'. another co).ln'cttincm-
acquisition, it would place serious ber. also spoke .of compr~misc. but he
constraints on what we were able to refused lO SJ>i!CUlate 'l)n"~hat.would
do in the way of renovation at City occur at tonigh't's · meeung. Cou~·.
Hall." d i woman Mart hi Collj$on said .she Three of the cit y's fi ve council would definitely vote for paying the
members said Monday that they were $2. 9 million oack jnto the general
On June::! I. Cit) Coun cil members
dccidcd to take about $2.9 million
from an expected $7 million land sale
10 rcimbur!>e the city's general ~und
for monq borrowed fur previous
projl!CtS.
trc fundr:lre expected to com
from the sale to the count) of 70 acres
111 S\camorc Hills to make way forthe
proi>osed San Joaquin Hills tollroad
plus an additional 70 acres for a
H'g1onal park.
not sure yet how that issue would be fund'. thercby.cle~.rflg the way t<? keep
resolved. alth9u&h au. agr_eed ,that the re.nov11ttoh'ptojcc-fo.ntaraet.~--
00Jh open S{'ace and the improve-Councilwoinan.wda Lenney could.
W1thout the re1mbu~me-nt. the
cit) would be hard pressed to take out
more money for the renovation
project. Frank s:ud.
ome cit\ residents. however,
think the mone) should not be paid
back. and that all of the funds from
SEMI-ANNU
SAL
20-5
. ..
ment ofworlong condit1onssho\Jld ~ not.be reached fUrfommeot.
given high priority. . Th,. c. o"· ... t~ ·ha" unt1'I Oc• 31 to Mayor Dan Kenney said he be-.i.. ~ "" , ., n lievcd the council would trv to-devise de,idc whether:to DU)' dte 140 acres.
i! wa y to earmark some extr'1 money Coun4y officials are waiting for com-
" for open space acquisition. but plet)Or\ of an enviconme'ntal impact wit~out jeopardizing the renovation report on th~'J>roposed toll road.
project. which Frank said could begin The planned . renQv?tion project
as earl} as Ma)'. would add abour L2,400 square fcctto
"I reall) don't see any further · City Hall, nearly doubling work
delays.'" said Kenney. "It s a very space. and rem~el anothet 11 ,400
high priority and we've been pl~nning sq\l:lre feet. ·. :
Clothing • Furnishings • Shoes
SALE STARTS THUISDAY, AUGUST 18tla
9:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m.
Polo' Ra)sih1-amt b.5outhwick 411ib.
COIE ·HAAN • .
~.
~ .
.. .
·,
. :
. "
..
.. .
Orange Coast OAJLY PILOT/Tue.day, August 18, 1988 A3
Wood, character
boats take over
Newport Harbor
State GOP post a boost for Lungren
Thr haroor ofNewpon Beach will celebrate I 00
years of boating this weekend with its annual
Wooden Boat Festival and Character Boat Parade.
#The festival. sponsored by the Newpon Haroor
Area Chamber of Commerce. will bcain Friday at 5
p.m. with a parade of tall ships and wooden ooats
through the haroor. Saturday and Sunday, at the
Orange County ~a Scout Base. there wiJI be a
display of wooden boats as well as bands, juggle rs,
children's ooa1 building and tall ship rides through
the haroor.
Tht' Character Boat Parade is scheduled for
Sunday at 3 p.m. and theTC are hundreds of good
locations to view the festivities. Call 644-8211 for
additional information.
Craft falr •lated
The Piecemakers Doll Show and Country Cran
Fair will be hdd this weekend at two locations m
Costa Mesa. The doll show is scht'duled for tht'
Piecemakt'rs Country Store. 1720 Adams Ave ..
while the craft fair will be held at 1281 Logan Ave ..
Suite A.
Hours for both events are Fnda\' from 9 a.m. to
5:30 p.m. and Saturday from 10 a.in. to 5:30 p.m.
Call 641 -312 for informa11on on either prog.ram.
Candldate nlgb.t set
A, "Fabulous Fifties" fund-raiser for Gen
Onega. a candidate for tht' Huntington Beach City
Council. will be held Saturday at Strausbaugh
Engineenng. 18460 Gothard St.. Huntington Beach.
The event is scheduled from 6:30 to 11 p.m. Call
536-3 I 43 for further to formation.
PC forum at college
The Saddle back College I BM PC User Group
will preseo1 a general Ulformat1on session 'Saturday
from 9 a.m. to ooon 1n Room 205-1 of the collegfs
Business anc.tGeneral Studies B.u1Jdrng. ·
..,The session 1s open to the public ,for ~11om!nal .
fee. and v.111 be free lQ members and first:ume
aueridces. CaH ·~su~ Gordon at 582-4650 for '
details. _ ,: . . ~ • ., . .. .
· Tomes s~lqar pl~nneod .
The • Orange' GOUfltY Bar; -\s~o~1ation's
. t9xic/env1ron'!lentaJ law ~ct1on· w11• present ll $ix-. .-
. hour semtnar on toxics tn Oepanmt'nl I' of the
· Ora°'e.(ount) Supetiortoun Sat~rday ffQ1119ir:m.
to 3 p.m: ·'
By AMY CHANCE
~--.....
NEW ORLEANS -Dan Lunaren's
unsuccessful legislative and legal battk to
become state treasurer took more than six
months and nearly $200,000. leavina the
longtime California congressman in
search of a new career.
But Lungren had little trouble heTe
winning election to his next political post
California Republican delegates unani-
mously chose Lungren as one of two
representatives to the Republican Na-
tional Committee. a job his supponers
hope will keep him 1n the pany spotli&ht as
he prepares to run for statewide office two
yt'ars from now.
.. It's kind of a consolation prize and a
little boost for whateve r his next step is,"
state GOP Chamnan Bob Naylor said.
He said Lun~n will be expected to
serve as a spokesman and secure national
committee suppon 1f the state pany
decides to mount an 1n1uauve drive to aid
reappon1onment efTons. A state pany task
force 1s cons1dcnng a 1990 initiative that
\\Ould toughen cntena to prevent Demo-
cratic gert) mandenng or a 1992 measure
that v.ould put a proposed reapportion-
ment plan ~fore voters.
Republicans alM> hope that Lungren.
v.1th his Washi ngton connecuons, will
help murn to ( ahforn1a candidates the
monc~ the committee plucks from the
". , 'The.cost is SI 5 for 0<!~A .rnempe.fs and $3.0. for -.. f non-mt\h~r$. For f.urthC'r· information •or r~ser'
vatio.ns: call, l;u1se Healey.at 786-37.73 or R\nh Anti · ..
Gray,(!1 541,-6212 .,. .. . · '··
• • ~ '· # /1' •• ";Stress forum ln FV
~ ... . ·. . '
. Vath'1.ay'i to D1scoyer) will present a one-day
Jtmina• Satuf\iay o,o stress an~ rela:tation from I ~o:
• 4 R.m. Saturday.at ll~ffices. J 83$0.Mt.-!Jtngley St.:.c..t Suit~~~)!: 1n F9un1a1n V~lk):.., ' -:_:,. .. -.
.· 6ilt:Harru v.111 be the'~peai:.t1. C.:<t'U.·~~4-~.~7 for-~0te11ntorma\1'1~ ·· : .. -·
• • ·< • • ~.
:;Aeapwic.~re open iiouse
.: . .\n OPt'n house at OrangQr. C'ount,'s ool).
acupunc'turl' school \\Ill tx' held Tt\Ursda~ (rom 6 t<J
-2:30 .p.m. at outh Ba)IO L'n1,ers11~. ll012 S.
Magnolia ~'e .'0arden Gr~e
Rep. Dan La.ntren
state's fertile fundra1sing ground
.\nd the) see the JOb as a l ha nee 10
ensure the 41-year-old congressman doc.-s
not fade from view as Go' George
DeukmtJtan·~ next choice for State
treasurer begJns to command legislative
and media auen11 on
DtukmeJ1an has )et to announce his
second nomantt to replace former State
Treasurer k'>se L'nruh. v.ho dit'd a }Car
ago
But l ungrt'n and DeukmeJtan aides
10s1!.t Lungren benefited from the pub-liut~ gent·rJted b' his lo)ing fight for the
1n:a~urt:r\ post. .\ illllt' Supreme Coun
dominated b~ DtukmeJ1an apppointees
ruled in June that Lungren's defeat at the
hand'> of \enate Democrats was sufficient
\0 l..111 hi'> rnnfirmauon
"l\enate President Pro Tern) David
Rutx'n1 ma} ha\t: tned to dt'strO) my
PQllt1cal (areer .. but in a strange wa) he
ma~ ha'e enhanced 1r b) "vang me
\IJtev.1de name recogn1t1on,' Lungren
')(1 1d "(h erall. m' namt' 1dent1ficat1on v.t'.nl up" · r.
H" supponas alMJ see the dt'feat itself
a\ l'' 1d1."nce ofh1s poht1cal potential.
· Thi." Democrats v. anted to dang Dan for
une reason and one reason onl) -tht') ·~
'>tared ul him·· said his brotht'r Bnan
lungrC'n "-ho 1s running da) ·to-da>
uPt·rat1 ons tor the California Bush cam-
paign
Dan l ung.rcn "as confidt'nt ('nough that
he " l•Uld v.1n the treasurer's Job that he did
not till-tor re-election -his d1stnct
tncludes Long Beach nonhem Hunungton
~ach -and oought a homt' in the
acramt"nto art'a before 1he coun issued us
dec1 ion He s41d he 1s now pursu1n1
··business opponun1t1c) .. 11nd ma} prac-
tice law
A!. a cungre'>!lman he hu conducted tus
o"' n l'able tl'k' 1\1on ~hov. e\ en other
week for the last eight )ears. and "said ht
would al o 111..e to v.ork u a telev1s1on
co mmentator
fhc onl\ sw11:v.1dl' ollke he rules out is
trea~urcr ~'1ng he v.111 not challt'ngt' tht'
per1ion \\ho lilh l 'nruh's unt).pired term.
He saHJ hi'> I 0 ~ear' ofe,penence on the
House Jud1c1ar) C ommmec qualifies him
for a JOb a!> 'itatc auorne~ general. but said
heutt'nant gu,ernor 1s also a poss1b1hty .
He "111 make a final dec1s1on after
Deul..meJ1an dt'l1des earh next vear
"hetht'r to run tor a third term ·
.. ..\ lot depend\ on v.hat 1he go,emor
docs You'd tx' foolhard' not to s11 down and lool.. at v.hJt the entire landscape 1s ...
\aid Lungren "ho humc 10 add that he
hope!I De ul..mcJtan runs again
Regard ks!. ol "h1l h rate he chooses
lung.ren 1s con~1derl·d hl..eh to be tht'
henetic1al') of lhl' puh11<:al organ1zat1on
Dcul..mt'J18n ha~ de' eloped in tv.o trrms as go,ernor
Karl muehan the gu' t"rnor·s fun-
d raiser. alread~ har, helped collect more
than $1 00.000 to pa' Lungren·s legal fees
fo r the treasurer light
".lntroducuons to acupuncture and demon-
strations of Qi-Gong and Tai C"h1 "'Ill be offered. as
well as a tour of the un1 vcrs1ty's acupuncture ch n1c
Free treatments also will be ava{lable. Call 530-9~50
. ·,., . .. : ... . . . , .,,, •J .·\:· . ·. ·: .... , . "'· '':"' .,.... ~ '\ . ~ . ''" ·.: . ·. Mov~ pvel', ~puda,. ·:,_ ::": . , . ;:. ·. · .. ~ ~ · · '~ .·. ~ ~ .. · '.. . ·-. · ~ ~· . . for additional information. ·
CALENDAR
Dolley, a 3-year-old~llow.tab; ~~lly4~:ride herakate~d. Sb~ by AndrewLed(9rd;Wbb o~rate.a dog training bualneu Concepta
wa• apofted a (Seacllrt vnt~.1*' H~t!n«itop ~~' ~11,.:-l• owa~ 'ln Dog Behavj.ot. :~ -. '~ _ ·· · : . · '
• 'I ' ~ ' l ! (' ,C •· •... '.,,. I !_. ,·I,•,. ~ .... ( I t • • 5 • ·""''" • ., .. :.. • .. ' "'•'... ... • .f: o I • ~ 9' ~
.;. ... ""•.. ..., • .. :.1 t . ' !' ... ·. .,.. . . •. cha:.:~~;;r::c·~~~~o~~~IE-11."---cou-nc-li'I!:.. ~~--·ger ei:l~~,~~t(~~t ~,~C1 p~qte.st ~ Te·m pta tto n'
Wednesday, Aug. 17 By GREG KLER'KX ·, ... ',Jaw~ ('\\ ~t1em darocl f;ntasl'?.fs..'.ibout l1~\t lOnLrad ··fhe great{'st lhing I can do Of,,.,. 0.-, ,.... • .,.. " "· ha'. mg Sl.~ wdl~ ~la'i;.~lagdt'J~ne-(.BalllDara ncn., I\ 10 mal~ a "Jand .. to challehge this··
µinl·d l)\lpulant' in Chnst1an music
,1r,ll''
• 2p.m.LocalA1encyFOnnat)onCommi11lon, . • H~rsfie,l and,ha,ing·:r famth "'11h her . {iunden ,d~ in orange Count' on board heann~ room. Hall of Administration. 10 l nllll' man) of the thousands \\hO are' .3.:.sus eventual!\ l\'Jl'C~ thi ·ierop1a11on ,,l,nd;l\ and IM3\ as pan o~ a gruebng
Civjc Center laza. Santa Ana. prole~ting the cont ro' ers1al film "The Last ·-and choosl.'sJo die ti~ the ~rpss · \.'rov .. ~t ·t~ medra rnl.ir 10 n il\ IV'.Ople
• 7 p.m. Lagana Buell Opeo Space Com-Temptation of C"hnst,'' Chnsuan s1ngt'f · · " ~· mJ11toa, council chambers. 505 Forest Ave. Ste\e GoodQil has actualh sctn th~ film .· -<:ioodC'n·s commCO\." rtl8~ wem indi st-~hind IN.' rilm. ho~cot 1. He appeared on • 7:30p.m. LaguaBucllParkiD&, Trafflcud ..\nd ht did not like what ht' sa'>' 1ngu1sh~ble from 011\L'rr, made amidst the thl· Tnn11~ Brc•~casung "\etv.Jrl on
(, 1cxkn ..._.,d .. Th l' Last T t'mptatlon of
( rr ,I .. 1' 1na,l.'Ura tt• from roth an h1stOn•
tal and rl·llg111u<, P\'~pe.:-11' e He also scoffs
Jl thl m\n 1c 'd1sda1mer that n 1s s1mpl) a
fl, llllt'U' D;.lrtrJ\JI ,,f Jesus
Ctrcalatlon Committee, council chambers. 505 .. It 1s indttd a blaspht'm)-It dt'p1cts furor owr the ~la rt in "-.orw~ epic." hilh 'l unda)rl)~h1 and plans ttl. tale his. caS<'
Forest Ave. Chnst as a "ascillatil)g. fumbling fool.'' opcn\•d Fl'ldJ' But \\hJt st'ts Gooden •n till' Ert'tt1,h Brn3dc~u.ng ~etv.otk la1er
• 7:30 p.Jll. Laguna Buell E.nvtronmental Gooden. z.i . said Monda~ ... It IS not just an 3pan lrmn 01her pro(t'c,tor JS that he has th!' \\l'l'I.. .
Safety Committee, Police Depanment library. 505 insult to <!hnst1ans. but to the Jewish and pul Im career on tilt' hAe for his beliefs \ n.lll.'\' '·'' t\ .ishington. D (. Go<Xtt-n
.. ,, or\("\(.' g t>t.'\ lrom the supcmatural to
lhl 'ubn.ituriil l ~n't has been depicted as k'' th3r J man in th1 mO\ 1e." ht> said.
Forest Ave. . Muslim peo ple. for whom He was a great In iront of j cro"d ·l,t thousands ·fast lxl-J O hJ, prflft"<,'>1onal c;fllj1ng C'~rt't't al;loul
• 7:30 p.m. Hutl.ngton Be1ell Tomorrow, prophC'I. and the general public. for whom "l'd. in Los "'Jlgetl'S. C10Qden tore up a thitc;l' \t':V' a11.1..' ,,nth~ Tnou~ Broack4"illllg
I r\''Pl't I the t onst11uuonal nghts of
\Ir 'x11N'\l' and \1( ..\ 10 frc-edom of
'f't't't h tn•t't!om ol rt"hgion I thank God
th.11 l .1' Jn -\mt•ncan am also pn,·1leged to
,h,1rl n 1ho'l' n(l.ht '" (1ooden said .. For
th" 'l';t,nn I frC'I that Mr orsese and
\ll \ 'hmild rei,pect histon.:-al truth ··
Strasbaugh Engineering Building. I 8460 Gotilard He 1s a great hmoncal figure and leader:· nJne-rt'tord dl•31 v.1th \K ..\ Recotds. a '\l't\\ orl. "1 ~ Rh h ( t'(ll... <ind The Pr.lt~ St The mo\ IC has come under fire from subs1d1an of MC A Inc.'\~ h1ch a lso owns ")1ngcr .. · . He V.JS -<1gne'<l b\. ~1.<. -\ tn thou~nds of fundamentalist Chnst1ans l'nl\l'rSal P1clure\ "chruaT\· .1r'tt·,r ht " 'l'!lg ·"C:r: i;tttdom ..
O\'er a co ntro' ers1al scenl' "here a dvi ng ... It does.n't maurr ... < ioodcn said of his fn)1w~'l..1 "' 1.tH mtn 1c -of:lhl'·'samc 'name . .. . ., ." ~ ~,
' . -..
. . .
Motorle st· ki• l~led 0 Laguna Beach " .. ~!~~~t o:"~~~~e~a~e~~n~~t~J~ ~~ n .\ lo-,ear-old .\nzona res1don~ "'a!i' apartment. She'd hC'ard .noise<> for
c11C'd :'.fonda~ for alleged possession about ;o mmutes before @.OH\i
0 · • · h• J , "· ol a dead I) weapon - a s'Wltch-bladc out ide :amied ~Ith hfr dog. Th~ 00, s rtega Rig W' ay knifr The male ~outh was stopped at lll'd
· Bro3d"3) and South Coast H1gh"ay. ' •• • . • ~ • • • . ~group of''hea' ~ metal groupies ..
, &ach equipment 'alued at S233 "ert· making too much noise orf
A 23-year-old Corona woman died
Monday when her car carttned out of
control on Onega Highway. slammed
into an embankment and oxen urned.
Theresa Ann Thompson was pro-
nounced dead' at the scene of the 9:30
-.m. wreck, which occurred 10 {'l'ltles
east of the San Diego Fretway.
Califo~ia Hi&hway , Patrol Officer
Ken Daily sa10. · '·.
Daily. said Thort}P9<?n wu t_ravel-
ina west when shel"triid', to pass t~o
slower 'vthiclts by driving 1n lht "'as stolen Monday from a Mt1n ratoga Lane. res1J.ent complained
opposing traffic lane. Ahhou&h she lkach location. ~h~' icum told.po!1ce. \ man on : ~th \l·ana a .. ~C'd
did not come close to h1ttiog any ..\ I q 6 To,ota 4:i.4 pickup truck pohce to ordei 1.,..0 ml'n lc-eping in 3 other cars. she swerved onto the din "as rcponed siolen Monda) from the \olko;v.agen bu to .. mo'e along ··
shoulder, the officer said. 2400 block of South toast Highwa~. The,) ~d parke-d fort hr n1&hl in front of She lost control of her car on the •• The truck 1s ~u1pped "ith desen ht~ lio~. .
soft din. and swerved across the IJnes ttres ,?nd had a b1cvcle in its t,led. • ~. • • .
·and hit a berm. Daily said. Thompson • ' • " Somebodv reported a P3n' 1n the was wearint• seatbelt, but tht' roofof In a separate incident. a ~ro)WT\ 011 field of ~lhs ..\' enue.
the car crushed the ~orhan. he said. I Q86 To~ ota Coroll;t "as reported
Thom_p90n died of head inJunes stolen Monda¥ fron a Pacific Coast
Diily-satd. • · H1ghv.a y loat1~n .. • -
· · Jtwcln valuedat'Sl .IOOv.asstolen
Fountain Valley
.• from a home on Laguna Canyon __________ .. .________________ Road. th~ victim told police Monday.
Gunshots \\t're fired ar a car h) a
passenger. in a fullo" 1ng car while ·
botp veb1clC's "ert dm mg near
Magnolia and Hel m t"arly Sunday
morning. Th~ shots den'td tht' .first
car' rear quarter panel but did not
1njurt IC, occupant Thel1' was no
apparent mo11'e for the hoo11ng ~nd
no susp«ts Man hit by train niay. ·
·already ha~e been dead
• An autopsy revealed a man run said henfJ's spokesman Lt. Dick
Olson.
Newport Beach
.\ homf on Pon Renv.1ck was hit
unda) night b)' vandals.. who
wrappedtoilctpaptr1nthetrccsand
used a gold marker 10 wnte obsce~
m~gcs on the e\terior "alls. • • • A cat burglar slipped into a home
on Aleppo and stole a purse v.b1le the
family slept The loss wa esumattd
at SS4S. • • •
• • • Four to ~t') oulhs a11emptedlo rob
a Foul)taan Valle) bu 1nessma• Thursda~ e'enana but lcn v.hen the~
d1sco,ered the n)an had no mone
Sc\cral )Outh1. bet"ttn 3-S. tood
guard v.h1lt ohe ''Outh sart>hed the
.
cos.ta·~ · ·
. \n w.~rMll d~~ ·and h1!> "ltt·'
S<?.ti.'IJn' !!v.'l"kent·d·a man aoou1 ~ le)
a 111 \\h1."l an int~der escaped v.11h
$.1 '"''.mca\h T~c:couple ll,1ng
irt";i·· Jp./rfti1cqt on the 2000 hl cx I.. C'f 't'" l''rt Boule' irrd weft' let"ping
"m:n tit,· 'u'-pt-tl entered through Jn
uni.I.. l·J tx·Jr()('rtl v.1ndov. Whl·n
1he alarm "'~DI l)ll the li'oman V.l)~e
up and !>J" 'th~ 1n,ruder chmbmg l'U'
the\\ indov. . ' . .\ man "ho had rt'ctntl~ purt>haS<'d
four flrt'S disco' ere<! the) had bttn
rc plaC'Cd v.11h old and worn tires The
'1cum p:a1d about S500 for the Good~car Eagle GT tires at Marl C
Bloomt 1n Costa Mesa. H~ ttr£n had
his carscn,~d at se' ~ral repa1t shops
and sus~s the t1rcs~ert e\changed
ot one ofthC'm.
• t •••
.\ cu~tomcr at Jhe Ma) Co. in uth
('03 t Plaia rcpontd Stt1na a man
tr"ab about 10 pairs of Jeans and run
,out 3 door ht' told tht stort ~nngt'r
q.e \\3t\'hNS the uspcct )Ump into a
car ilt tht entr;ancc m ~ htch a Sttond
'IU!iJ)CCt V.3S dm an~. The manaarr
failed to gt't the ~un~·s nllme or
phone number • • • rouplc reporicd m:-c1'll'\I threat·
l .1nt· rl'turm·d tt1 hl'r Che\' Blazer to
tind 'andal' had thrown paint. eggs
,and m.ipk "rup on the \.Chicle.
l\1m.lgl "J' C'\t1mated at S 1.000 • • • \ v.11man In ing on the I 00 block
it T .1h111 Dn'e reponed the loss of
tour ant quc hooks 'alued at S2.500
.ind l 1ght l loth napl..1ns that matched
J 1ahle loth 'alut>d 31 $3.000 The
\\nman lOnfrontt>d her 10-}ear
h• •l '1. l l'\'JX'r "ho dentl'd tht' lhet\ and
-.J 1.1 'hl' "a<> rct umtng to ~1t\ 1co
Irvine
k \\C'lf\ v.nnh s;1 ~50 was stolen
trnm a home in tht" I 0 block of
Rur,thns \\ind het\\een 4 p.m. and
m1dn1 sh1 \tond1n The ~a.r slidina
door "3' pn~d open. • • • . ~ n'h and 1v.o t1 cktt to the u~om-
1ng CXI Leppard C'Onctn at lrvmc
\kadow'i "ert' ~tolen from a home 'n
t hf I ~o hlocl of Strkele-y Monday
,tfternoon • • • ..\ ·,Jam hommer' Pl) devu:e wu
u~ to teal a ~ and white 1985
\ amnha motorc~C'le parked ln the
1000 hltx-1.. of Ha)e betv.ttn 6 p.m.
\und ' and a m Mondav
• • • • • mronc tole the nc~ from a
BMW parled 1n the SOOO block o(
\\alnut 'cnuc bctWttn 7 p.m.
Monda) and 1 a m this mom1ftl. • • •
. .
over by a train Monday as he laid on
lome railra.d tracks 1n San J uasa C8Dittrano may have ~n struck on
the'ladaadkilled before the train hit
him, authorities llJd.
n autops)' revealed trauma to L~
head. Olson said. Officials sttll had
nl>t dctcnniritd if the man was dead
btfore the train struck him. he said.
n Island Avenue rHJdent told
police that a buraJar enteredlk home
throuah a .slcyhaht on tM roof and
stoic S6,400wonh of ,Jf'Wtlry o'er the
Wttkend.
tore O~l\Cf ll &Ullpo1nt Whtn it
tumtd out the rn:tn had no monc •
the )OUlh ln led the \ IC'11m tO tht
ground and Otd
cn1ng phont t'all on the ansv.~nna
ma<"hine at their home on the .. 600
bl of Oru\&'t "venue ~ calttt
1denufttd h1m~lf u the ck\ll and
wamC'd the coupk to be prepattd ~ause. "f m comina to ~kc )OUt ~uh from ou ..
Jc.elf) v.-orth about Sl.000 WM
'tokn from lM 20 bloc\ of BUdS _,,~
Tbt man, tdnttaficd only as a SO.
year-dd tramieati was found dead at
tbr teene fo&lowiftl tM 3:30 a.m.
ICddent in"'vutt a Atchison.
Topeka A S.1a Fe llallwt)' ltlln,
"Appermlly. the train (~) saw
the rt'lan and sounded a ""'"" whaslk. but it didn't make a dtf· fmntt and tbe train was unablf to
stop," Olson said.
a • .....-... ca. ·
A _.oman who ti~ 1n the 6200
• • • ntd fum11ure \\Onh mort'
than S6. wa tolen from ontem-
~"11 Lift t)~ fum1wre. 1802l
Eud1d ,e .. ti(t•'ttn 6 p.m. unda
trttt me11me bet~ 7 p.a.
Fnda and 2 Lm lW"da). • • •
• • • ~ \t I \IOft v IC.)9 _.-oman lt\tndll'\I
a-pan on the 1000 bk>Ck of Corona
~ SIOk. brieblt ....
uni ktd Memdel ...W ta dlll 10 bled n( SkridU .... _ 10
Friday and 6 .... s.ta ... .
Or-.. C... DAILY PILOT I Tuetdey, Auguat 18, 1Ne
Reagan passes torch,
vision over to Bush
During vin tage farewell s peech h e urges
him t o 'ma k e it one more for the Gipper'
NEW ORLEANS (AP) -Presi-
dent Reagan, with a thanks-for-the-
memorics farewell to the Republican
National Convention, ceded center
stage to George Bush. voicing hope
that history will find "we had a
vision."
From the time he entered the
cavernous Louisiana Superdome on
Monday to take his seat in the
presidential box until he left more
than three ho urs later, he was
showered with affection.
He returned the favor with a
vintage speech extolling America's
vinues.
Before passing the symbolic torch
of Repubhcan leadership today to his
vice president at an airpon ceremony
and heading for his California ranch.
Reagan exhorted Bush to "make it
one more for the Gipper." He pledged
to do all he could to make Bush his
heir. while acknowledgjn* that "this
office is not mine to give.
Reagan's speech brought tears to
longtime loyalists on the convention
floor. It capped a day in which both he
and his wife, Nancy, talked of
relinquishing the political spotlight to
Bush and his wife. Barbara.
"There are times to enter, times to
stay and times to leave," Mrs. Reagan
told friends at a luncheon given in her
behalf.
.. Today, the curtain begins to close
on the Reagan era of the R epublican
Pa rt)." she said. "We've had a
wonderfu l run. But the time has come
for the Bushes to step into the
political leading roles - and for the
Reagans to step into the wings."
That same theme dommated Re-
agan's convention address. preceded
by a documentan: about the Reagan
vears and herafded by trumpets
blaring .. Hail To T he Chief.''
Standing before the 2.277 conven-
tion delegates and tho usands of
others in visitors' and alternates'
scats. Reagan declared he still would
be heard. even in retirement.
"When I pack up m) bags in
Washington, don't expect me to be
haP.PY to hear all this talk about the
twilight of my life." said Rea~n. 77.
"Twilight? Not in Amen ca."
But Reagan also made clear that he
doesn't desire to command the party,
saying. "I'll leave my phone number
and address behind just in case you
need a foot soldier."
Convention delegates frcquentJy
interrupted his speech with applause,
waving banners and cheering. Reagan
evrn got applause a few times for
things he said in the filmed namtion
of the Reagan years.
"Ei$ht years ago, we gathered in
Detroit in a troubled time for our
beloved country," be said. "And we
1gathered solemnly to share our
fd reams." .. When our children tum the pages
of our Ii ves, I hope they'IJ see that we
had a vision i o pass forward a nation
as nearl) perfect as we could,·· he said.
But Reagan did nol-let the Demo-
crats off the hook. even poking fun at
ont' point at a Democratic conven-
tion speech in Atlanta by Sen. Edward
M. Kennedy of Massachusetts. which
was built around the rhetorical ques-
tion of "Where was George?"
"George pla)'ed a major role in
everything we've accomplished.'' he
said. And 1n notmg that Bush headed
a presidential task force on reduci ng
the burden of ~overnment paper-
work. he said. ·And George was
there."
··w 11h George Bush. I'll know. as
we approach the new millennium.
our children will have a future secure
wi th a nation at peace." he said.
Delegates become nlnning mates
NEW ORLEANS (AP) -It wasn't exactly love at
. first sight They arc, after all, both conservatives.
But what started as rhetoric blossomed into romance
for Alvin Kukuk, a Robenson delegate, and Janet
Rungtranon.., 't'hO was for Kemp. •
They met following a Michigan Republicao conven-
tion. exchanged phone numbers at a delegates meeting.
and courted at a Conservative U nion conference. What
better place to pop the qu.cstion, Kukak thought. than at
the Republican Nat ional Convention? •
The mmghng of love and politics in New Orleans
seemed especially fitting to Kukuk. inspired as he was by
the nation s first married vice presidential prospects. Bob
and Elizabeth Dole.
· And so It came to pass, on a Mississippi riverboat.
v.1 th jazz m usic playing softly in the background and the
cnure M1ch1gan delegation on board. that Kukuk, a S 1-
)car-old township supervisor, picked Rungtranont. a 45-
'car-old college registrar. to be his running mate.
· They'll be tying the knot in November, right after the
election. They thou$ht it best to wait: Kukuk is running
for county commissioner.
The morn ins after the big night. they strolled through
the Superdome in matching Styrofoam campaign hats.
There v.as no shortage of people taking the same walk in
the same hats. but someho w. you just couldn't miss them
as the}' floated along bumping into the walls. each of them
d1spla~1ng a yard-and-a-half oftee1h.
u ~
Pre.ldent Reatu and Illa wife reepond to the cbeen after
hi• apeech Monday at the Republican National Con•entlon.
California contingent
claims address gives
campaign momentum
NEW O RLEANS (AP) -An
emotional Cali fornia delegation
cheered President Reagan's address
Monda} as an inspirational begin-
ning for George Bush's presidential
campaign. while noting sadly that it
marked the end of an era with one of
their own 10 the White House.
"It was vel), very moving. I fought
back tears." said state party vice
chairman Frank Visco of Lancaster.
"As one of his onginal delegates in
1976, I feel a tremendous sense of
loss. but at the same time a ·sense of
rebirth."'
publican League. the only California
GOP group to endorse Bush over
Reagan for president that year,
praised Reagan for not just recount-
ing his own record. bu ta I o building a
base for Bush.
·:.1t was a tremendous speech. a
remarkably ~killful JOb of bringing
George Bush in on all the issues Bush
win run on -the eco no m)'. fighting
crime. a strong defense." Gede said.
"So we could honor and boost George
Bush by cheering Reagan."
Decision
is made
on veep;
Bush mum
NEW ORLEANS (AP) -George
Bush said he decided today· on a
running mate for the faJI campaian,
but warned he would not "play the
game of 20 questions" to fuel specu-
lation about whom he had chosen in
ad vance of a n announcement later
this week.
As Bush flew from Washington
'1ere on Air For~ Two. the incum-
bent 'ice president said the long
process of selection was over.
··1 had ho~ to doll by the time I
got on this airplane and I have," Bush
told reporters aboard the plane. "The
dec1S1on will be announ~ before
Thursday night."
He said the fi nal phase in the
process came "Just befo re I climbed
onto this plane. Today. with finality."
"I want an opportunity to properly
notif> the person I will nominate,'
Bush said.
Bush brushed aside complaints
about his selection process.
en. Bob Dole ot Kansas, who has
been a t the top of many lists,
complained about the drawn-out
process.
"I don't care fo r 11. frankly," said
Dole. "I took no offense at that," Bush
responded today.
Another prospect. Rep. Jack
Kemp. said today he didn't think the
procedures were deme.aning.
"It's kept suspense 10 our conven-
tion." Kemp said on ABC's "Good
Mom 1ng America." "I imagine
George Bush is either clo~ to ~r has
made up his mind and that 1s going to.
keep the su!>pense ahve."
The rumormongers were having a
field da)' guessmg. but no one in New
O rleans could say they knew whom
Bush would tap this week. ·
"We didn't need ~mor control,"
said Bush aide Rich Bond. "It is more
like cunosit) control."
The names on the rumor mill:
State Sen. Bill Campbell of Hacien-
da Heights. who said he was first
elected to the California Legislature
"on Reagan's coattails" in 1966. the
vcar Reagan won his first term as ---------------------------------------~~11 fomia~~m~pra1sedR~gan
"for an inspiring message. ofnot what
Los Angeles Count)' Supervisor
Mike Antonovich. another longtime
Rea~n loyalist. described st as "a
traditional Ronald Rcaµn speech.
talki ng about the good in America.
motivating people to look back to
where we were. where we are. and
~here we can go.
"His idealism 1s as pure as it was in
1966." i\ntonov1ch ~1d.
Kemp: Dole: his wife Elizabeth; Sens.
Dan Qua)le. Pete Domenici and Alan
. imp'ion: All). Gen. Richard
Thornburgh and former White House
Ch1ef ofStafT Howa rd Baker. EWJDB : • ~. • • J • ....
Out of work? Wa nt to switch careers or
advance 1n your present f1efd? Going
bacJ< rn to the labor fo rce. perhaps afte;
ra1 s1ng a fa mily?
An Orange Coast ·College career or
cert1f1cate program can help yor.1 develt:>p. ~new skills q uickly They're':-fa st·paced.
practical programs that adults.appreciate
··ranging from one semester to two years
1n length
OCC is conveniently located off the 405
Freeway an Costa Mesa Cos-ts a.re fow
Tu1t1on is Just $5 per' unit for up to six
units. or $50 per semester for a full load.:
ORANGE
COAST
COLLEGE
~Ve 11 help vou get thr-• e·
Christian. from Sweden. is one
of many teenage boys coming
to the United States for the
1988/89 school year.
Christian has studied English
for 7 years, he enjoys wind-
surfing, skJlng. bandy an~ listen-
ing ,to music.
. I NamP.
I
I •
Dozens of different career and cert1f1cate
p rog rams are ava,lable Examples
include computers. dental a n~ medical
assisting. food servi ce management.
b u II d 1 n g c o n s t r u c t 1 o. n• .. ·d e s k-t o p
pu bl1sh1 ng. wocd processing, airframe
mechanics. photography'. adve rtising
d'es19 n : an"d· m~ny-rt1<?re 1 -• · : ~ • ·
Grwduetes of our occupat1ona• programs
score weU on lhe'ir .state .:e xam~ and
expen ence high rates of'employment.
Become an occ·student this fall~Clas·ses
began . Monday'. Augu~t 22 "Late-Starf '
classes get underway Sept 12 The
semester ends before Christmas
ASSE, a nonprofit organization, 11 looklng
for hoat families In your area.
1•111 Yim flaY LR-llffllf ,.,, ._.
1111111.1
Lllll I ; 11111 Rx
Ill 1111 •
he 3l'Complished. but what we all
accomplished together.
I .. 11·., tht.· end of an era ... He was as
good tonight as l''e ever seen hi m.
1 h1~ 1s .,.,,hat Bu.,h builds on."
C ampbdl ..aid.
The ~pcech also v.o n praise from a
leader of the moderate wing of the
California GOP v.h1ch was at odds I v.1th Reagan during much of his
go,emorship and presidency.
Tom Gede of Davis . .,.,,ho 1n 1980 I ~a'\ pre'\1dent of the California Re-
Dana Rohrbacker. a former Re-
agan White House speechwntrr who
in June won the Republican nom1-
na11on for Congress from an Orange
Count\ congressional scat. also
heaPed praise on lhe address
"It's the same Ronald Reagin v.ho
inSp1red a nau on." Rohrback.er said
"He laid the facts out and he touched
the hearts of the people. and he said
\C~ clearl~ that George Bush wa s
there."
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No Time for Lunch?
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Nev. names introduced by no one
in particular .,.,,ere Sens. John Dan-
fonh and Christopher Bond of Mis-
<.oun .
"I am nm running around trying to
gel 11." said Domenici. "But frankly .
1f 11 \\Ill help keep the mo mentum of
the past fev. )Cars going .. .1 guess it is
fair to sa) I'd do about anything."
Qua~lc began 10 have SC\:Ond
thoughts.
··Personal!~. 1f I had a time in ml
lift· to be 'ice president. I wouldn t
choose thi s time." he said. "If George
Rush th1nl s I can offer the most to the
ticket ... Dan Quayle will sign up
immediately ."
Baker. a former Tennessee senator,
continued 10 deny he is under
consideration: "My name's not on
that list. ... I've made it perfectly clear.
I've no desire to be vice president. ..
Bush. in a well-orchestrated tele-
phone call to campaign manager Lee
i\twn ter on the convention tloor. did
ra1!>e the possibility he will unveil his
choice a day ahead of schedule on
Wednesda\ . .\twater said Bush want-
ed to "JUSt leave it on Thursday ... but
Oe\1ble."
For one ' hopeful. the selection
procedure has already dra~e~ on.too
long. Dole said he thought 11 might
have been more valuable for Bush to
choose a running mate last month
and not give Democratic nominees
Michael Dukak1 s and Lloyd Bentsen
a head stan for the fall campaign.
RU Ff ELL'S
UPHOLSTERY llC. _,, ...... c.rs ....
1122 -R• .. CISTl--Ml-UM
LET THI BllT R•I IN TOWN
81 PART OF YOUR
SUMMER FUN
Thousands claim
they saw mlrcicl~
in skies of Texas
LUBBOCK. Texas (AP) -More
than 10.000 _people came to St. John
Neumann \atholic Church hoping
for a miracle. and after a dramatic
evening Mass during the Feast of the
As~umption. most ~ren't disap-
pointed.
Shortly after Monday's mass
began. som~ worshipers gasped and
pointed skyward. Others looked and
began shouting, "h 's Jesus, look!"
A~ the uci~ment brought tbe
Mass to a halt, scores of pilgrims cncd
and applauded. claiming to see ap-
pantions of Jesus and the V1rg1n
Mary.
··1 knew there wo uld be a miracle. I
just knew 1t." said Mamie Fcrtma of
Beaumont . crying and pointing llO the
sky.
She said th e saw the sun pulsa11ng
and then sa" Jesus.
A dozen priests standing on a
rooftop altar and 600 Eucharist
ministers turned their backs 10 the
crowd to look at the sk) and wave.
After minutes of !>ilencc. the pastor.
Monsignor Joseph James. facing the
West where people were pointing.
began to sing "Amazi ng Grace."
People in the audience whipped out
cameras to photograph the clouds and light.
Paula Mnchell. 13. of Dallas said
she saw Jesus and Mary as th e sun
burst through the clouds.
Jesus "had a gray1sh-wh1te beard
and he's got some kind of cape on.
Mary's wearing a crown." she said
"I sav. baby Jes us for an instant an
the sk}." said Koreth Varga he~ of
Houston.
For the estimated 12.000 people.
the pilgrimage v.as prompted b}
reports that a miracle would occur on
"1onday's Feast of the '\ssump11on.
the da} Catholics celebrat" Mal) ·s
assumption into hea' en
lhe charismatic pans~ has been
the foc us of national attention after
three parishioners began reporting
rece" ing messages of peace a11d hope
from the Virgin Ma.I') this ~pnns.
While man} cned and poi nted
skyw.ard. notevel)one sa" an appan-
11on 1 n the sk}.
Police quit stopping black
.teens, but still face lawsuit
By Tbe Associated Press
TOLEDO. Ohio -C1v1I nghts leaders claimed victor) but said the)
would press a SI million lawsun against the city even though the police chief
rescinded an ord erto randomly stop black teen-agers in a mixed neighborhood.
Police Ch1ef.Mart1n Felker withdrew the order Monday after separate meetings
with City Manager Ph1l1p Hawke}: LeRoy Williams, president of the Toledo
chapter of the Nauonal Assoc1a11on for the Advan~ment of Colored People.
and resident s of the Old West End neighborhood. "The procedure "as
implemented 10 address a series of cnmes that had been comm 111ed ...
Elvis ' fans mar.t date of death
M EM PH 1 -Elvis Presle)"s ever-faithful fa ns filed slowly past his grave
in a candlcJighl procession, and se nt stands offlowers shaped hke guitars and
hearts to mark today's 11th anniversary of his death. "Elvis. we mm you
tonight. We w11l lovc you today. tomorrow and forever." June Klein of No rth
Lewisburg, Ohio. said during a memorial program that began a la1e-n1gh1
procession past the singer's gra ve a1 his Graceland mansion. The st.ands of
flowers lined a walk beside the grave. Man y of the dozens of Elvis fan clubs
around the co untry traditionall y schedule their floral arrangements 10 am' e
on t.\ug. 16. the da) Presley died.
Pattern test measures Infants' IQ
'\ TLA NTA -A test of how long infants look at pallerns and faces can
help 1dent1f) children at nsk of sho"' 1ng menta l disab1hty b} age 3. a researcher
says. Earl~ 1dent1 ficat1on ofh1gh-nsk children allov.s concentra11on of medical
resources on the }Oungsters "Aho need them. and a wa~ to qu1ckl ) measu~ th('
impact of a1temp1s to help a child's devefopment. said researcher Joseph
Fagan. The test should not be used on infants 1n general. but onl) those
considered at nsk. said Faga n
WOR LD
Nelaon llandela ln 1961.
Black leader
Mandela has
tuberculosis
JOH-\NN ESBURG (AP)-Jailed
hlack na11onahs1 Nelson Mandela has
1uhe rculo <,1s. his laW\cr said today
aflr r '1s111ng the Alfican National
( ongre~s leader at a hospital.
l\mail -\\Ob. the lawver. said
Mandda'\ fam1I} were urging Pres1·
den 1 P. \.\ . Botha 10 allow an indepen-
drn t medical e'aminat1on of the 70-
'ear-old pn<.oner. South .\fnca's he~t-kno'-"n black leader. ~tandela "as transfe rred Frida~
from (ape To" n's Pollsmoor Pnson
10 nl'arb~ T~gcrberg Hospital.
Doctoro; sa) he has an inflamed left
lung and 1s 1n samfactof) condition
lol h>" 1 ng re mo' al of a drainage tube
from the lung. The} have not con-
firml'd pubhcl~ that Mandela has
tul"ll.'rl ulow, ,
\tan dl·la "as '1s1tcd toda~ b} his
\\1k. \\ innic. and ~oungest daughter.
lind11. as "el as -\}Ob. Several
hundrrd fX'Ople who gathered outside
the ho'\p1Lal cheered and gave
rknched-li!.t salutes as the three
cmcrgi.'d
.. \1r ~tandc:la 1s ven thin, but he 1s
on h1) fl'l'I. .. A)Ob said. He declined
111 sf>('culatc v.hether ~1andela ·s li fe
''a" 1n danger. -\ ~1a1cment was issued on behalf of
thl' \1 andela famil } asking Botha 10
allo" th em 10 choose a team of
docll.lrs to "conduct an independent
l'\am1na11on 1n order 10 re mo'e an}
douh1s ''h1ch the fom1I} ma)' feel
rc&ard1ng the nature . cause and cure
ol \fr \fandela· 1llne\s ..
Th...-rl· v.as no immediate response
from Botha
E.trlll·r 1oda'. th e ..\frican :-.:auonal
( ongrl'\S accu~d pnw n officials
"callou' nl'glcrt'' 1n responding 10
hl.'alth problems "h1ch led 10 \tan-
dda '<, ho,p11al11a11on
Orange ~ut OAJLY PILOT/Tuesday. Augu1t 18, 1N8 Al
·U .N. seeking $7 4 million
for Iran-Iraq peace force
UNITED NATIONS(AP)-TheGeneraJA~mbly
has t>caun nnsina from members the S 74 m1llton needed
to support the 1.300 personnel who are 10 monitor a cease-
fire between Iran and Iraq for a first six months.
The cash-strapped world bod} schedu led emergency
~ss1ons on the matter for toda) and Wed nesda}
Monday a U.N. report said the assembl) should
assess its 159 members a total ofS 74 m1ll1on 10 fi nance the truce-monitoring effort for six months
The Sccunt} Council created the U.N. Iran-Iraq
M1htal) Observer Group one v.t'ek ago after Sccretary-
General Ja\'ler PereL de Cuellar announced that Iran and
Iraq agreed to obsene a cease-fire beginning Saturda)
· The belligerents arc to begin d1rec1 peace talks Aug. 25 1n Geneva -
Preparations also arc under way for the fin( U.N.
na,al force, v.hich '4-0uld patrol the disputed Shatt al-
'\rab waterwa). the area where the war broke out in
September 1980. Iraq invaded Iran after weeks of border
slurm1shes.
The U n11ed tales. which 1s a.ssesscd one-<juarter of
the U.N. budget. is ciq~ected to ~ as~ssed about $23
million for the Pcman Gulf pea~keeping operation.
Bui Washington wan ts Arab nations and Japan to
donate cittra funds to the force. since they arc maJOr
bencfic1anes of peace 1n the reg.ion. Japan buys most ofiu
oil from the region.
Jn .\pnl. Japan pledged S20 m1Uion to the United
!'.at1ons for peacekeeping forces. half to be used 10 the guJf
and half in .\fghams~n
Con tr as r e tr eat in to Honduras
NEAR THE HO:'\DL'RAJ\-NICARAG UAN
BORD ER I ..\Pl-Hund reds of Contra rebels and c1v1J1an
supporters are trudging 1010 southern Honduras baSt'
carrips 1n a mass l'\odus and their leaders sa' fev.er than 2.000 fighll!rs remain in \i1caragua. '
v.eek from a central 1caraguan combat z0ne. The Largest
single grou p to date. about 2.500. was said to be
approaching the Coco River fron11er
Contra officials 53) the co mbatants. no longe r
<iupphed b~ atr drop 1ns1de Nicaragua. had to retreat to
rece1,e food and other goods no" a"a1lable through the
l '.S .\gene} for lntcrna11onal Dc\clopment. known as
-\ID 1n Honduras
Rebel offit'1als blame the l'. Congress for the
retreat. v.h1ch heg.an lour months ago and !('Ives the
smallest Contra torcc m Nicaragua s1nct' the L' S.-backed
fighters began thei r "ar against the lefttst Sandinistas 1n
1981 . The' sa' the nc" amvals JO IOt'd about 8.00&
Combatants and 5.000 Cl\ 1lians cam~d out In tents of
plasuc and l ' .. '\rmy ponchos 1n the rugged terrain. ~ore than I .OlX1 \Old1ers and Cl\'lhans returned last
Korean rioters
won 'tgive up
EOL L I ..\Pl -Radical student
leaders ~1d 1oda~ th e) "Ill not g1,e
up their an 11-go' emmt'nt struggle.
but admitted the~ fa iled 10 gain
public suppon to \hare the 01) mp1~
Games "1th communist Nonh
Korea.
Leader\ 1old I 500 cheenng sup-
porters al \ onse1 l ' nl\ ersll) in Seoul
the~ "Ill conti nue prt'ss1ng for re-
umficat1on of the di' 1dcd Korean
peninsula T he~ also said the) "'"
ha'e 10 make a greater d Ton to gain
public suppon.
Israeli soldiers 1naintain
pressure on Palestinians
8} Tbe Associated Press
BCRELJ . Occup1t'd Gaza lnp -Soldiers shot and cn11call} wounded a
Pak'>tm1an teen-ager toda~ .,5 '\rabs were treated for beating m1unes and the
arm~ maintained a two-da~-old curfew confinmg 650.000 Gazans to their
homt.>s .\ m1hta~ spol..t'Sman confirmed th a1 troops wounded a Palestinian in
thl.' \\est Bank town of Tt'I dunng a clash '-'1th 4.rabs throwtng stones and
bottles. The spokesman ~1d he was checkmg tht' hospital reports of beating
1n1unt.>s 1n the Gaza tnp lsraeh news reports said soldiers bctfed up patrols m
Gaza. l"eanng further clashes despite a curl't'"' imposed Sunda)' night after a
firebomb attack on I raclt c1v1ha ns in "h1ch an 8-month-old baby was
senousl~ burned
··we ha''t' to adm11 the road to 'T'a lnt-.1 t LJJl'' /1 S .,__ • un1tica11on IS still too far and thert' he .. ' c;u wa eJ! & .ine Uu.De9e peop.ie
mam diffi culties ahead. Further l\.H ..\RTOL'~1. Sudan -Thousands of peasant adults and children
muggle 1s called for:· said one lorced to drink din~ "ater becauSt' of widespread flooding arc expected to die
student leader. Oh Yu ng h1k. of v.ater-bome ep1dt'm1cs. a L' N health official says. Incidents of malana.
Riot police blocked students who I~ pho1d and cholera ha'e ~n on the nsc sin~ floodmgearlter this month left
trted to march out of Yonsc1 Monda) 1.5 million people homeless. Dr. Nicholas Ward. a World Health Organization
10 go the border truce site of Pan-ad ' 1scr on di arrheal diseases and 1mmumzat1on. said Monday ... lf some
mun1om for reun1ficuon talks with infected ~rso~ 1s passing cholera into the water that his communtty dnnks.
'\orth Korean student delegates C\ e~ perso n in that communit) can get 'ery s1ck very quickly.' he told
Police arrl'sted abou1 :!.000 stu-reponers at \\'HO offices in Kh anoum. Wa rd predicted 400.000 people. most
dt'nt s "ho took pan in demon-ol them under age 5. "111 de' elop diarrhea and other gastro1ntesunal d1sca~.
\lra ttom in Seoul ~onda' after and .UJ<IO of them "111 die
brcal..1ng up the march "1th iear gas ·---------------------~---
and bea11ng protesters Most of the
studl'ntc, v.ere relea~d after rcce1\ 1ng
"arn1ngs DDDD DDDDDD DDDD
The moit,ient yo~ apply
fot=a-bomeJoon,
''For
Wo111eu.
y''
we'll give you an answerer.
-When Gibraltar
Savings receives yo~
~omplete loan
application for ,
the purchase of /:'>
a home, we'll give '9
you a Code-A-Phone"
answering machine.
And believe us, it'll be useful. Be-
cause as soon as you begin the loan proces.s,
you'll want to be just as accessible as we are.
You see, we've -or rather, you've
-just created what is probably the finest
home loan in the history of banlcing.
It's called The Home Loan by
Popular Request. And it's based on the
suggestions made by you and hopeful
_ home buyers like y~u.
One of the things people told us
is that speed is critical.
So, among other things, Gibraltars
loan officers are now at your beck and
Code-A-Phone call 24 hours a day.
Including weekends.
Additionally, we've
trimmed our approval time
to a scant 10 business days,
streamlined our funding
time to a mere 21 days and
locked in your rate for a
full 90 days. All as a direct
result of the requests you made.
Of course, having an answering
machine means people like your realtor
will find you easier to reach. So you can
spend less time waiting by the phone.
And more time tending to other impor-
tant matters. Like shopping for wallpaper.
The answering machine is valued
at around $120. And it's only available
for a limited time.
So it'd be a good idea to pick-up
your old phone. And get moving.
~GIBRALTAR ~SAVINGS.
YOUR CHANCE TO CHANGE 1HE WORLD OF BANKING.
-=-=----€all 800-647-1100 ext. 140
.\lonth ly L«tuN'S On lromen 's Health Topics
.
Tharsday.Aagast 1 1
Ea~ Qisorde;rs: ·tt?ten Food
Co ntroL., }pour Life .. Anorexia.
BuJimin anrl Compulsh'c
On.~ re at ing
K uµ Pit S•! nbt• r,<,er
Program Dire-ctor. E. T>. l '.
Wedne8day, A.gust 17
Endomctrlosi~: "You Don 't
Hare To Lfre l\"ith The Pain -
Leet u n .· w1cl DiSC.'ltS..'iion
,Jo,~e Li/In. ,\f I> .. 0/l/G l ~\'
d Wedncsda,-. A...e-t h L!J ~lammojlraphy: ·Questions.
Answers and Peace uf .\/ind ..
Brian \riL<ion. \f./)
d ThlU"Sda)'. ~ u L!J ·n·ann l.'ps A.nd Cool Dow"'4'-
. \ Special Prc-scntatlon
by Fmn Dunn. Aerobi~ ln.•lructcx
.\'cwtilus PIWJ . \l'mhi~
R~--and lnlo.--.doa
(7I4) 554-1801
All kcturc:s presented ot 7:00 p.m. ln the
C onfcrencc Room.
Men att •"lcome to ottcud all l«tu~ .
.\sk for tnfonnnllon on our ncwl\' dcv loped
S.-.U8h ~ Lamatt cla ·
~~
HEALTH
t.T\\r O R._
s-ta AM fla.plUll Medal
1901 •• Ol'da , ...... ~ "-.;
........ .,.. e(714) ......
It's time to
control Mesa's . campaign litter
Cost.a Mesa's campaign trajl could be less cluttered after
the November election if the City Council decides campaign
reform is a sign of the times.
Next month, council members will review a proposed
law to regulate campaign signs. Actually, the city's movement
toward campaign reform involves more than regulating signs.
Another proposal would address campaign contributions and
spending limits, but a campaign sign law could have the most
immediate and visual effect. ·
The proposed ordinance would prohibit placing signs
anywhere except on private propeny. Jt also would require a
cash deposit with the city to ensure candidates li ve up to the
new regulations.
Candidates who played by the rules and removed their
signs after the election would get their deposits back. But those
who treated their signs like forgotten campaign promises
would pay for their lack of consideration. The cost of
removing the signs, if the city had to do it, would be deducted
from their deposits.
Cost.a Mesa officials have not taken a tough stand on
illegal campaign signs in the past because the existi n~city sign
lawdoesnotapply to political signs, nor does it provide for the
removal of tho~ signs. City Manager Allan Roeder wants to
solve that problem .
. He instructed his. staff ~o prepare a tough new sign ordm~nce for the ~ounc1l's review C3!1Y next month. During a
council study ~ss1on last week, he said the need for a new sign
law was pro mpted by "wholesale abuses" by some candidates.
We agree, and some of the evidence can be seen tacked to
utility poles and on fences weeks, even months. after an
election. ·
The model for Costa Mesa's proposed ordinance comes
from the cit) of Irvine, which bas a pretty good track record
when 1t comes to controlling campaign litter. But just for the
record it should be noted that much of Irvine's success is not
direct!~ related to the city's law ~overning campaign signs.
The absence of utility poles in Irvine eliminates many of the
favorite fixtures for signs. And, the city's largest landowner.
The Irvine C'o .. traditionally has been reluctant to let its
propcny be used as a home for campaign paraphernalia.
Nenher of these factors should discourage Costa Mesa
officials from appro' mg. a strong campaign sign law and
aggressi,ely enforcing 1t.
It's a shame some candidates who seek public office are
not considerate or responsible enough to clean up after
themselves"' hen the race is o'er. but the abuses are many and
easil) seen.
Costa ~lc!>a·s Ctt) Council has a chance next month to
g1' e llS c1t1zens some rehef from the garbage that has marked
past campaigns. Candidates need a medium to present their
names and campaigns to the voters. but Costa Mesa's
residents should not ha'e to hve wi th the l1tter after the
elecuon. ..
Contra aid
Ma.>.bc 11's a genurne awakening of understanding.
Ma\ be 1\ s concern about a part' ticket led by someone with
no f ore1gn pohc~ experience. ·
Wham er rhe case. Democrats In the Senate are n~
tal king Stns1bl) about restoring m1lita11 aid to the Conrras tti.
'-=1 caragua 1f tht' andin1sta regime continues to violate the
peace pledges 1t ha made.
That the ~and1 nistas ha,en·t done what they'd said
the) 'd do should ~urprisc no one.
This as a dedicated Marxist outfit. rndebted
philosoph1call). econom1cally and militarily to Mosco" and
Ha' ana. and its leaders cannot be trusted. .
The resistance of the Contras is all that pre,ents the total
dominauon of Nicaragua b) the Sandin1stas. That rc!l1stance
1s enfeebled by the cuto fT of <\merican aid ....
'-=o"' some Sentatc Democrats sa\ the' fa, or releasing
that 'w\tthheld aid for the Contras 1f the peace plan 1s not
honored. Well the)' should.
The andinistas oh' 1ousl> intended to honor the
agreement onl) as lo ng a~ 1t su11ed their purposes and onh to
the degree that it was con' en1cnt. The m1lita11 aid. which 'has
been "'aiting 1n warehou'\es. <1hould be released no'w\.
Alabama Journa!. Montgomery
Edwin Meese
Recognizing that our readers ma\ be getting tired of
editorials about .\ttorne~ General Edw1·n Meese. we promise
10 keep this one as short as possible.
Sen. Carl Lc\Jn. D-\t11ch .. has asked the Office of
Government Ethics to launch a new inquiry mto Meese's
conduct. rn~c another new probe was initiated by the Justice
Department seth1csun11 not many daysago. Le vrn 's proposal
seem s unneccssa11 and a political ploy.
One can har<ll) blame the Democrats for trying to make
hay. ofTM eese·s problems. but they face the danger of overkill.
Let s have one invest1gat1on at a time.
Meese. for his pan. conunues to make amazing defenses
of his. conduct. Now he has charged lnaThe never would have
been investigated by a special counsel if his two top aides had
not bungled a preliminary inquiry.
Doesn't he reali1e that acceptance of his charge would
require the conclusion that he chose inept and incompetent
deputies?
ORANGE COAST
llilJPillt ,.,.
c.!Ot .... ,..,
Aalelltf (jf.Of
~~~=:.~==-=""'==-"~~·T111Cllli
PutM/'4'<1 _., ~, <.! ,,.,. ,. r •1 News (61of
JJO w ~ St C:0.11 ~ C4
AOOI ,qr·~· to Bo· ........ '~ Cott•....,. CA n61 City£• .... , ..... ,,...... ....
.......
~ RN!! MwfllSl"I ..., ,.., .....
Clmi,. Ad~ DilKIOf ... ,.,.,.
C.tulll!Oft OiretlOf
er,.. ....... ............
.. Hts head at this point ... would have been high and proud. Adotlnever
looks better Jn his own eyes than when he '11 Canytnga dead rab"blt. ••
~*~ ~t. ,,~~l
~~-1
JACKIE
HEATHEI
Rodheim
touted as
best for
NB council
The opening salvo in the Newpon
Beach City Council war was fired last
week by Allan Beck. I'd like to present
the competing side of the story.
First ofall, lers look at the scat. It is
being vacated by Phil Maurer. To me.
Phil represents the quintessential
mayor and councilman. He made a
pact with his wife. Pat, that he would
only run for two tenns. This made the •
civic sacrifice workable in terms of
their life plan. Eight years would be
their gift to their city.
Peasants' revolt in Mexico
could spread to United States
I feel Phil could be re~lccted '
forever. he's that good. Hi s positive,
consensus management of the city
was outstanding. His cheery, whis~
tling style left & trail of smiling facci
wherever he went.
What a great ambassador he was for
the clly. Imagine the pleasure and
surprise when be spoke Spanish for a
presentation in Mexico. fiowever.
when he negouatcd with St. Tropez to
be our sister cit y. my sources tell me \\ .\SHINGTON -Issues of un·
rest sou th of the border are bound to
crop up ttme and again in this
pres1dent1al campaign. George Bush.
the entrepreneur. once did business
w1th \1ex1can oilmen and feels a close
affin11~ with that country. So does
Michael Dukak1s, who uses his fluent
Spanish t~ punctuate his interest in
H1span1c issues.
But Hispanic issues. panicularlv in
1he border states. ~o much deeper
than prom1s1ng cabinet posts. speak·
1ng the language or courting Lalin
friends.
The greatest threat to Me:ocan
stab1li1) as also a threat to the border
s1a1e . That threat 1s a revoll by the
mas..c!. of underprivileged peasants
1n Me\ICO .\t worst. the violence
rould spill O'er into the United
1a1es . .\11he ... e11 least. unrest among
1he underclass 1n Me'<1co increases
1he flov. of illegal aliens into this
COUlnr\
Thai makes 'Mexican efforts at
agrarian reform crucial to U.S
interests. If the Mexican go,ernment
1s not successful in red1stribu11ng the
v. ca Ith of 11s land from large land·
owners IO peasants. guemlla forces 1n
the rural areas will use the res ultant
hard feelings to rally the unhappy
peasants.
We ha' e seen a classified Central
lntclltgcnce Agency report on the
progre'>s of Mexican agrarian reform
tha1 1s surpnstnglv o ptimistic.
CIA operati ves 'in southern Mexico
report that thC' reform policies. in
sp11c of the corruption tnat pervades
the \k,ican bureauq-acy. are doing a
fair JOb of promoting stability ;tnd
discouraging rural gue~ ant.Yi!).
The Mex ican government11as con-
' 1nced the peasants. 1n most cases.
that the bureaucrac y is on their side.
t'nt1cs of the agranan reform
program sa} 11 "111 never g1 ve the
pcll~nu a decent Ii' elihood. and that
breaking up the land into smaller
O\\nersh1ps will decrease the nauon's
agncultural output and profits. But
product I' 11~ and profi ts don't seem
10 the be the point. according 10 the
C'I <\ ... We belte' e that the granling of·
inaltenable land 111les to peasants
pro' ides important psychological
and poltucal props for maintaining
stab1lit) ." the report says. "Social
setence Sl\!dtes suggest 1ha1 the pri·
ma11 goal of the pca<;an1 is c:ccuni~ ...
not profi t"5 ...
l o enhance tha1 '>l't"Urll\. 1he ~1c\1l·an go' ernment lhro" s 1n som"
social i.en arc program<, ~ health
d1n1c~. schools. agricultural C'X·
tcnsmn sen tees ThC'\ arl' all riddled
\\ 11h corrup11on and inenicienn . the
<I.\ rC'portc; But the\ ha'c ·done
enough good to con ' Ince peasants
1ha1 Me \ICO Ct l\ earl~ .\nd more
important. the,· ha'e nea1ed a
net .... orl. of Jobs· 10 hand out to the
locals a<, a v.a\ of en unng IO\ah'
The do .... ns1dc '" tha1 "'hen· rn· op1ing local leaders a:-1d red1stnbut·
1ng land doesn't "ori... the Me,1can
go' crnmcnl fall\ back to · its old
s1andb~ -repression In thl' past. the
go,ernmenl has not tx-en sh~ about
arb11ran arrests and e\Cn torture of
peasants suspec1cd of a1d1ng an)
gucrnlla insurgency. It works. accord·
1ng to the Cl .\ assessrtu:nt .. Ra1her
than rad1cali1C' the peasantry. this
repression scemc; 10 haH' he1gh1ened
the popular perception 1hat confront·
i~g t~c a uthorities entails a ve111 high
mk.
The adm1 n1c;tr:mnn of ourgoing
prC'~tdcnt Miguel dl' la Madnd has
emphasucd reform programs 1n
southern Me"co bet:ause. acco rd ing
10 the Cl.\, 1ha1 "a is npe for
subvers1 veo act1Vll\ and has frcquenl·
I) complained a&out neglect from
Mexico Cll\.
Indians 10 the south appear 10 have
been g1' en more access 10 go" l'm·
JACK r:..
AIDEISOI k. ~
' his French was not as good as his
Spantsh. No one could ever accuse
him of being an ugly American
though.
and DAU VAN ATTA
m<.·nt services than peasants m other
pans of Mexico. the C'IA reports.
..because of the special co ncern over
the welfare of Indians and the
potcn11af for insurgent rccruttment 1n
the southern border .....
The Cl.\ report includes a warning
1ha1. 1n 'iptte of the reform programs.
··pt·asanl ~1scontent ma) be moun1-
1ng an some areas. al a minimum. 11
'>eems better organized than in the pa'il. ..
Bl '\ l:".G .\ TICKET HOME -
Deposed Ph tl1 pp1ne pre·s1de nt
Ferdinand Ma rcos 1s shopptng for a
nnc·"a" ticket back home He has secret!\. ofTercd $5 b1lhon 10 be
allo\\cd to re1urn. and as prom1s1ng to
abandon his pol111cal amb1t1ons and
... uppon has successor. Corazon
.\qurno. Marcos added monc) to the
l.'quat1on aflcr Aq uino sent envo) s 10 talk 10 him carlter 1h1s year. Marcos
had hoped he could negoltate a
rc1urn. but 11 became apparent 1n his
meeting w11h ~quino's representa·
IJ\es tha t 1he) were there 10 (>Ump
him for 1nformatton about hi s hidden
wealth. Our intelligence sources say
that Aquino never au1horized her
e"' ovs to discuss a reconciltation.
·The\· ''ere there 10 check out rumors
about his health and to find out about
his wea lt h before he dies. But Marcos
\\asn't d} mg. and when he caught on
10 the dnfl of the conversation. he
"asn't talking etther. Now he will use
the monev as a barJ1,a1ntng tool
Jack Aadersoa aad Dale V.u Atta
are syndicated columalsts.
Has seat on the council will be
difficult to fill.
Last week. Beek told us about Jean
Watt. Her opposition will probably
include Ralph Rodheim.
lhlph grew up on Balboa Island,
Pearl Street to be exact. A graduate of
Newport Harbor High School,
Rodheim is a graduate of Chapman
College with a degree in psycho10$Y'
and a master's degree in admints·
tratton from Pepperdine and was an
officer in the Army.. ,
Ralph and his wife. Penny, and
1hc1r "'spectacutar 16-vear-old daugh-
ter"' lwed for 13 ye.ars In Harbor View
Hills and are now building their
dream house on Balboa Island.
Ralph was a high school teacher for
a number of years and then worked
several vears with homeowners
groups for The Irv ine Co. He now has
his own company. Rodheim Market-
ing Group.
What impresses me most about
Ralph 1s his eom munit)' involve-
ment. -\s chairman of the Marian
Bergeson Aquatics Center drive he
reports that his committee has raised
$900.000ofthe Sl.2 million goal.
Gov. George Deukmejian ap-
pointed Rodhe1m 10 the state Boating
and Waterways Commission and he
now serves as chairman.
I particularly appreciated Ralph·s
help with the Youth Task-Force and
Foundauon.
The co ntest for control of the City
Council 1s more a matter of style than
~ubstance. Both. sides want the op-
timum environment One side be-
lie' es you can achieve this by shut·
ting things down. The other rationale
1s what do we have to do to make
things work.
Her good deed turned into
a hare raising experience
A good case in poi;t was the
tnit1a11ve apinst Newport Center.
The mttiauve stopped the master
plan but The Irvine Co. has moved
ahead on 1l piecemeal basis. However.
we didn't get Pelican Hill -Road.
improved intersections and
Mac.\rthur Boulevard improve-
ments and we lost the teen center.
What did we gain?
Newporters need to realize that
ours is a mature city. We are almost
built out. The older sections of tow'l
are in desperate need of refurbishing1 What happens now requires planning
and teamwork.
S.\( R.\MENTO-The woman 1s
helpful b~ nature. and when her
neighbors asked her to watch 1he1r
house for a few days while they were
out of lO\\ n. she was glad to do 11.
.. The\ wan ted her · to water the
plant'i. pick up the newspapers. you
~nov.. the kind of thing neighbors do
for each othC'r." said the man who
told me this story. "They also had a
pool. and they told her she was
1Aelcomc 10 use il whenever she
v.anted."
o the woman watched the house.
he 1s a nurse at a hospital in the city,
and after v.ork. 1n the worst heat of the
afternoon. she walked over to sec that
the place was all right.
She brought her bathing suit and
her dog, and after she'd checked the
plants and the windows. she got into
the swimming pool to cool ofl'. She
closed her e)'eS, floating. The dog sat
at the edge of the pool. watching her.
She had betn 1n the water perhaps a
quaner of an hour when sbe realized
the animal was gone. She called him
from the pool, but he didn't come.
She got out arid called aaain, and then
heard the reassurin1 50und or his
collar coming around the comer.
s the d<>a cleared the comer.
however. some of this n:a55urance
dis.appeared. He was. first or all.
covered with din. no~ to tail. He was.
sccond of all. carrying 1 wet, dead
rabbit in his tttth. chanJing has hold
on 1t every rew SttOnds. tossina il
around in his mouth IO you couldn't
miss the fact that he had 50mtthin1
dead.
His head at th is point. I am
1uessina. would have bttn bish ind
proud. A dot nt\ler looks beucr in bis
own cyn than when he's c:arTylllt a
dead rabbit. n~-a). the .. oman wu at fint
~lted.1nd thm. mnnn~ t.IYt
the lamtl) kept a pct rabbit in a cage
cm the other 'itde of the house, she was
horrified . .\nd she ran to that side of
the house. and saw the empty cage
0' erturncd on th e lawn.
She pictured her~lf trying to
e).plain "hat had happened 10 the
rabbit. murdered while she floated a le" yards awa) 1n the swimming pool.
and CHI') wa~ she thought to say it
was worse than the last. And so she
did what man) people do when th eir
dog kills their neighbor's pct rabbit.
he pantcked.
From what I have been able to put
together about this. she turned to the
dog. who had followed her over.
scolded hJm and instructed him to
drop the rabbit immediately.
You might as well tell one to hold
its breath.
She pried open his teeth and
removed the rabbit. wet and dead.
She laid the animal on her towel.
rolled it up like a wet bathing suit and
started home. The dog would have
walked along side worry1ng"Over the
bundle in her hands. steppi(lg into her
path. I am guessing that more than
once the words ''bati doa .. came into
the course of the conversation.
At home. she took the rabbit to the
bathroom sink. and washed ofT the
worst of the din.
She drained the water. and sham·
J)OOtd It, the rabbit JCUIDI heavier Ill
the ume.
She drained that water. and rinsed off the shampoo.
She put the rabbit on another towel and bqan to blow-dry us roet. Ears.
t.111, fttt. evttyth1na. One side at a
time. I have no idea 1t 1ll how Iona it
t.akn to btow-dry 1 rabbit. but I •m
sutt 1t ittm«d lonter thin it was.
WMn SM'd fini1l1ed with the dryCf'.
5M (amtd the rabbit t.ck to the
houtt she had bttn aJked to waich -
PETE
DEXTER
I assume she hid it in the towel again.
as there isn•t reall y much difference.
for purposes of evidence. between
carrying a clea n dead rabbit up the
sidewalk and a dtrt) one.
I am also assuming she did not
bring the dog.
Bad dog.
And so she took the rabbit back to his cage. laid him peacefully inside,
and went hom e.
Natural causes. she didn't know a
thmg about it.
A day or two later. the neighbors
returned.
Shortly after they pulled into their
dnveway. the woman's phone bcpn
to ran~ Shc$tarod at it, knowing wbat
ii was. She picked it up. and yes. it was
her neighbor. who was hysterical.
The woman steeled hcnelf for the
lies she was prcpered to tell. but never
aot tht chance.
It was someth•na the neiahbor was
scrcam1na that stoPPC<t her. that a
manllC was loose. That some pcrven
had du' up the nciahbors' pet rabbit
-who d died the day before they'd
ltf\. by the way -remo"ed the anunaf from iu srave. and uck it
back in llS cast.
How $Jck can )'OU act. ri&ht?
l am only sunsin1 'Mre, but
somehow I think the dot eot in
trouble all over 1111n h~ ~ ,, • ,,,......,
~t
These arc the tests I give to council
candidates .
Who docs the candidate represent?
What is his/her management style?
What strengths does the candidate
bnng to government?
What are the cand1date·s goals and
ob1ecti ves for the ciry?
The '90s will. be critical years for
local government. AJI aJong the lini
both at the federal and state levels.
see an abrogation of responsibility.
The trend 1s to dump the job on t~
locals but. ~o hang on to the fundi ng
opportuntt1es.
In the next decade, we will need
local le.aders who will stand up and
deliver. We don't need complainers
and moat-builders. 1
It is within our power to return to
excerrence. ,_
It won't be easy~lt won't be cheap.
It will take a strong ~nse of destiny. Do you see Newpon Beach as a city
that works?
What arc you willing to do to matt
the traffic manaaeable? We have
round out that countina the numbq or cars goins throuiJl an intencction
1s not.enoull'. Thlt 11 what the Traffic
Ph15in1 ordinance is 1ll 1bout.
Arc you willina to accept new
roads? The city can't afford to bujld
them alone. Developers won't donate
them out of the soocSnns of their
heart.
The name of the PJne is quid prO
QUO. Wt need 10 bUild I tellll -
unckrstands 'Whit quo•a they .:i
w1'hn1 to acttpt to IC1 tbe necc
quid. I ,... ... ,, ... ~ ....
I Bflllf --., ., ~-,.,.. ..,.... '
•
CALIFORNIA
·'Model citizen'
• fights extraGitien
on murder charge
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A man
convicted of sccond-degrtt murder
for killing the mother of his 14-year·
okt girlfriend and escaping from
prison 14 years ago plans to fight
extradition to Massachusetts where
he is amonJ the state's most wanted
fugitives, his girlfriend said.
Arthur Alonzo Bembury, con-
victed of murder in Massachusetts in
1971 , appeared briefl y in court Mon-
day but proceedings were put off until
Sept. I bcc.ausc his newly hired lawyer
is engaged in a tnal elsewhere.
Gayle Babineaux. the mother of
Bembury's three children. said she
has received hundreds of encouragi ng
leuers from neighbors. friends and
strangers since the story ofBembury's
double life surfaced Last week.
"Certainly. whatever he's done.
he's made retribution." she said.
adding that she believes Bembury was
innocent of the crime for which he
went to prison.
Bembury, known to friends and co-
workers as Doug Henare. was de-
scribed by them as a loving father of
three children, a tireless volunteer
who helped troubled youngsters and a
budding real estate broker. He also
had occasional roles as an actor in
Hollywood movies.
But police who arrested him at the
Marina del Rey real estate office
where he worked. said Bembuf). 37.
was sentenced to life in prison in June
197 r after bein& conviC1ed of second-
degrec murder for the death ofh1s 14-
year-old girlfriend's mother.
The mother. Louise Simmons. was
shot to death at the front door of her
Roxbury. Mass .. home 1n Februaf)
1970. Bembury was accused offi n ng
two shots at Simmons after she told
him he could no longer ~ce her
daughter.
.\ warrant was issued for has arre!lt
after he failed to return to Norfolk
State Penitent1af) 1n August 1974
\
Arthur Alonzo Bemb1lry -
after a \\l'Ckend furlough to ,·1s1t his
fa mil~
Aab1rn:au' \aid that Bembul) bas
recc1' ed suppon from chantable
organ11a11ons he helped as a \Olun-
tecr 'he said the organizations.
"h1l·h a~sast need~ ~ oungsters. have
plcadi.'d for Bembu~ to be allowed lo
rnnt1nue his hfe a-. a model c1112en in
LO\ .\ ngelcc;
Pilots blamed
in Pendleton
copter crashes
CAMP PENDLETON (AP) -
Pilot error led to two helicopter
crashes that killed five Manne Corp
air crewmen near the Ca mp
Pendleton base last )ear. according to
reports on the accidents.
Hoth incidents involved Ch-46E
Sea Knight helicopters based at the
Tustin Marine Corps -\ir Station 1n
Orange County
Two separate Manne Corps repons
recommended ~veral procedure
changes as a result of the 1n,es11g.a-
uons. including some that ~ere
censored becau~ the' reflected
mccharucal proble~ "'1th the air-
craft. Manne official\ -.aid
Sea Knigh ts ha' t the second-
h1ghest accident rate uf all \1anne
Corps helicopter\ v.11h at lca\t eight
fatal crashes 1n thc pa\t '>l''en ~cars
officials !>aid
Ma nne In' cs11ga1ors tound that the
pilot of a ~a J.. n 1gh t crrcJ "'hen he
flev. into a cloud ban~ ~ept 3 and hit
a mounta1m1de near a n.•ser'e on the
northern an Diego< ount~ base ~II
fo ur Ma nne\ aboard d1l'd
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, August 18, 1988 A7
Gas Co. cutback
linked to drought
LOS .\1'0ELES (AP) -Southern
( ahforn1a vas Co. said 11 would bciin
cuuing back natural gas dehvenes to
'iouthem California Edison and other
clt·cmc u11ltt1eHarh toda' 1n order to Uln~f\ l' supplies for the WlOter.
The cutback of about 20 percent of
a' erage use was blamed on an
unusual!~ high demand for gas b) the
area·s suppliers of electnC1ty. prompt-
ed 1n pan b} the drought. which has
dned up supplies or hydroelectnc
po" er from the Pacific North.,,..est
.\lso. cogenerat1on fac1ht1es. which
generate electnc1t~ from heat have
u~d more natural &as than eApected.
'31d Fred John an e>.ecUtl\C 'Ice
prc\1dent for the ut1ht~
The cutback to last through Octo-
ber "111 force u11l111e\lo turn to 011 for
puv.enng generators adding 1n-
l rl.'ascd polluuon to the region 's
JI read~ smog-filled summer skies ··v. e're deepl' disappointed It
means the elt'llnc po"er generators
.... i11 ha'c to sv.1tch to din1er heating
111!. ''hich 1s muc·h more pollut1ng
than natural ga-.:· said Thomas
E1rhhorn a ~pokr:sman for the outh
Coast i\1r Quain~ Management Dis-
trict.
The gas compan) pledged to de--
II\ er gas supplies in the event of a
!>mog all'n. but said It v.as unsure if it
could meet demands on all first-stage
alens wht·n air 1s considered un-
healthful to breathe. but not hazard-
ous
The ut1l111es 1n,ohed are Edison.
the Los .\ngeles Depanment ofWater
and Po"'er. San Diego Gas & Electnc.
.. We had meetings v.11h the electnc
ut1h11es 1n late Juh and told them we
couldn't sustain their' er; h.Jgh le, els
of <kmand into the forest'eabre fu-
ture and "'e a!>ked them to reduce
their usage:· gas compan~ spokes-
man R1ch Pu1 s.a1d "'But v.e didn'tStt much in the v.a\ of results ..
Ho"e'i:r Hci"~rd Ra~. \1ce pres-ent of fuel suppl~ for Eda)()n. sa id the
company u'>t'd l~s natural gas this
'ear than last \l'ar ~nd he denied
repons that th~ problem had been
heightened O\ reltn1 do"n·llrne a1
t\\O nuclear J)O\\er plants and
Edison's u'c ot t>\lra gas for po"'er
wld to Pacific Ga'!>&. Electric
8lte ~~~~~~>r~~.~~~m~~?~~"~~,~~~L~a~~.d~~~•~••. I P~ natmo/ ~
group claimed respons1b1li1y for entering a Loma Linda . In another ~tatemcnt issued shonl~ after the raid. I
University Medical Center lab and taking seven dogs after .\nimal L1berat1on Front members attacked the After brHst sur~ry. the
splallering red paint on walls and office equipment. procrfiedures u<ted ~~ Baile} the Loma Linda surgeon whho =i:: ~1=1m ~~~ ·:.: . • .
Uni versity officials said the stolen dogs were non-pe ormed a ba1rvon-to-bab} hean transplant on t e you wtll tNke • . . ••
research animals and estimated the vandalism would cost infant Bab~ Fae in 1984 tnc:lt 0 .. , • ._ •• • • . ., , ~ .
$6.000 to SI 0.000 to repair. said spokeswoman Anita The statement acco mpanied b) a photograph of a Ofec:l\! " • • . • l/il · 1 ......
Rockwell. masked man \\1 th t\\O labrador retne,ers. said the group cc:lr ~ .. , .. • • " •••
Thebreak-in occurredbeforedawn Mondayatapart had ob1a1nedfilesthe~cla1msho"'"Bab} Fae's blood was db";":., . ,;• ~~ ~~ . of the lab called the Farm. Rockwell said. In addition to mismatched "'1th that of the baboon. ho"' her blood was ,ov · ···. -,..
the animal theft and vandalism. the intruders stole farm w11hdra" n for tei;11ng an adult amounts. and ho" pre-IOI d .o..· .. ·. ·~ l1 :i
animal records needed for the future care of about 100 em11ng bacteria in her s~stem "as purpose!~ allowed to A tow· r ... • • .. ~ ~ dilr1lt1111•U::ii1,i .. I ,,.,,., oo• . ...._, :-· :--,._ • • goats. she said. remain ;-• o•6o'"'o•~s o, e~• F h h f: I nc:l[Ulil ~ " • ~ "The cnm1nals performing acts that jeopardized the Balle~ sa id after Bah~ ae'!> death 1 at 1s a1 ure to I h~lth and welfare of the~ farm anim~s should be match bl~ t)~S "as una,01dabk ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Doctors tell
Chavez to
end fast or
faceinj~ry
DELANO (AP)-Afterexamimng
Cesar Chavez. three doctors said they
urged the weakened farm labor leader
to consider ending his fast. which will
be one month long 1f it lasts until
midnight tonight.
"We are extreme!) concerned
about the possibility of irreversible
damage to his health," the physicians
said in a prepared statement Monday.
"The longer he continues his water-
only fast. rhe closer he comes to
reaching the J?Olnl where his life will
be in danger. •
Dr. Marion Moses said Chavez
told them "he'll think about it."
She added that Chavez. whose fast •
went into its llst day toda_y._ had not
vet suffered irreversablc damage de·
spite the loss of 30 pounds. 17 percent
of his original 174-pound weight.
But the joint statement signed by
her. Dr. Fidel Hue~ and Dr.
Augusto Ortiz. said Chavez was
weak. dizzr. his uric acid level
remained high. and he was having
increasing trouble maintaining
proper fluids and electrohtes.
Chavez began a water-only fast at
the union compound 1n Delano 125
miles north of Los Angeles on July 17
to call attention to the UFW's boycott
of California table grapes and claims
that workers and Mnsumers arc
endangered by five pest!cides. .
This boycott began m 1984 Wlth
Chavez charging that .the state's
Agri cultural Labor Relations Board,
which governs farm labor elections,
had become ineffective under Re-
publican Gov. George Deukmejian.
More than 400 elections at individual
farms had been held within months
after the law took effect in 1975 with
the UFW winning the bu lk of the
elections and. ultimately. numerous
contracts.
· But by 1984. the union had lost all
t>ut one small contract in table grapes.
lhe crop that Chavez first began
organizing in 1962.
Chief admits to department
~uota system
RJVERSlD"'E fAP) -Rlverside''s
police chief admitted to being red-
faced after uncovering a discreet 4-~ear-old quota system that earned
pfficers a day off with pay for writing Jot• of traffk tickets. • Under the informal system, of-&eft who wrote I SO tickets a month ~-rewarded with a day off with
.,ay, said Chief Linford L "Sonny"
Richardson.
The chief said he was cmbl.nused
to learn of the practice Monday from
Rivmide City Manqer Doualu Weiford. who bad heard about it from
an anonymous tipster. . .
Weiford rela~ the tip to Rich-ardson. who c:h«kcd into the matter
tvea t.houah ht said he initially "'J*Rd it oft' as somethina that
couldn't~ ...
\ ~one above tht ran.k of ~nt ,,.. beta awatt oftht system. wtuch
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.. A • I
It's time to
control Mesa's
.campaign litter
Costa Mesa's c.ampaign trail could be less cluttered after
the November election if the City Council decides campaign
reform is a sign of the times. •
Next month, council members will review a proposed
law to regulate campaign signs. Actually,!city's movement
toward campaign reform involves more regulating signs.
Another proposal would address campaign ontributions and
spending limits, but a campaign sign law could have the most
immcdjate and visual effect.
The proposed ordinance would prohibit placing signs
anywhere except on private property. It also would require a
cash deposit with the city to ensure candidates live up to the '
new regulations.
Candidates who played by the rules and removed their
signs after the election would get their deposits back. But those
who treated their signs like forgotten campaign promises
would pay for their lack of consideration. The cost of
removing the signs, ifthe city had to do it. would be deducted
from their deposits.
Costa Mesa officials have not taken a tough stand on
illegal campaign signs in the past because the existin$ city sign
law does not apply to political signs. nor does it provide for the
removal of those signs. City Manager Allan Roeder wants to
solve that problem.
He instructed his staff to prepare a tough new sign
ordinance for the council's review early next month. During a
council study session last week. he said the need for a new sign
law was prompted by "wholesale abuses" by some candidates.
We agree, and some of the evidence can be seen tacked to
utility poles and on fences weeks. even months. after an
election.
The model for Costa Mesa's proposed ordinance comes
from t.he city of Irvine, which has a pretty good track record
when It comes to controlling campaign litter. But just for the
record it should be noted that much of Irvine's success 1s not
directly related to the city's law $Oveming campaign signs.
The absence of utility poles in lrvme eliminates many of the
favorite fixtures for signs. And, the city's largest landowner.
The Irvine Co., traditionally has been reluctant to let its
propert) be used as a home for campaign paraphernalia.
Nell her of these factors should disco~rage Costa Mesa
officials from appronng a strong campaign sign law and
aggress1vel) enforcing 1t.
h 's a shame some candidates who seek public office are
not considerate or responsible enough to clean up after
themselves~ hen the race is O\ er. but the abuses are man\ and
easil) seen •
Costa ~tesn·s Cll\ Counc11 has a chance next month to
gi\e llS ClllLCnS some relteffrom the garbage that has marked
past campaigns. Candidates need a medium to present their
names and campaigns to the voters. but Costa Mesa's
residents should not have to live with the lttter after the
elect1on.
Contra aid·
Ma.~.be 1t"s a genuine awakening of understanding.
Ma\ be 11 s concern about a pan~ ticket led by someone with
no iomgn pohc) expenence.
~hate' er the case: Democrats in the Senate are now
talking scns1bl~ about restoring milital) aid to the Contras in
\i1 caragua 1f the andinista regur1e continues to violate the
peace pledges 1t ha!. made. ~ ..
That the ·and1 mstas ha\en't done what the)'d said
the~ 'd do -;hould '>urpnse no one.
Thi is a dedicated Marxist outfit. indebted
philosophu:all~. econom1cally and m11ttaril} to Moscow and
Ha' ana. and Its leaders cannot be trusted.
The resistance of the Contras is all that pee' en ts the total
dominatton o f Nicaragua b" the Sandin1stas. That resistance
1s cnfeehled b~ the cutoff oiAmerican aid ....
~o~ some Sentate Democrats SB> the\ favor releasing
that "'llhheld aid for the Contras if the peace plan 1s not
honored. Well the> should.
The andinistas ob' 1ousl) intended 10 honor the
agreement onl> as long as 11 sui ted their purposes and onh to
the degree that it was con' en1en t. The mihtar; aid. which ·has
been wa iting in warchou.,cs. should be released no"'.
Alabama Journal, Montgomery
Edwin Mees e
Recognlllng that our readers ma~ be getting ttred of
ed1tonals about l.ttornc~ General Edwrn Meese. we promise
to keep this one a short as possible.
n. Carl Le' in . D-~1ch .. has asked the Office of
Go"ernmcnt Ethics to launch a new inquiJ) into Mcesc's
conduct. in:e another new proJ>e was initiated b> the Justtce
Department Sl'th1c unit not many days ago. Levin's proposal
seems unneccssaf) and a political ploy.
One can ~ardl) blame the Democrats for trying to make
hay off Meese s problems. but they face the danger of overkill.
Let's have one 1n,est1gation at a time.
Meese. for his part. continues to make amazing defenses
of his. condl;lct. Nov. he has charged__!hat he never _oukt havc
been mve~rgated by-a special counseTiT 1s two top aides had
not buniJed a preliminary inquiry.
p ocs.n't he rea!ize that acceptan~e of his charge would
require the conclusion that he chose inept and incompetent
deputies?
ORANGE COAST
llilyPillt
p~ .,..., dat c;t I~ r-11 Al
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AOOt (Oft~• 10 80•
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"
I
·'His head at this polnt .•. would have been hllh and proud. A dotlnever
looks better Jn his own eyes than when he'• carrytnga dead 111b1J1t.,.
~*~ ~ta ''~&e:'
~,--1
J1c11E
HEATHEI
.
Rodhe im
touted as
best for
NB council
The opening salvo in the Newpon
Beach Ctty Council war was fired last
week by Allan Beek. I'd ljke to present
the competing side of the story.
First ofalJ, let's look at the seat. It is
being vacated by Phil Maurer. To me.
Phil represents thO' quintessentfal
mayo r and councilman. He made a
pact with his wife, Pat, that he would
only run for two tenns. This made the 1
civic sacrifice workable in tenns of
their life plan. Eight years would be
their gift to their city.
Peasants' revolt in Mexico
could spread to United States
l feel Phil could be re-elected '
forever, he's that good. His positive,
consensus management of the city
was outstanding. Hjs cheery. whis-
tling style left c. trail of smiling faces
wherever he went.
What a great ambassador he was for
the city: lmagine the pleasure and
su rprise when he spoke Spanish for a
presentation in Mexico. However,
when he negoti"ted with St Tropez to
be our sister city. my sources tell me \\ASHINGTON -Issues of un-
rest south of the border are bound to
crop up 11me and again in this
pres1den11al campaign. George Bush.
the entrepreneur. once did business
with Mexican oilmen and feels a close
affi nity with that country. So does
Michael Dukak1s. who uses his fluent
Spanish to punctuate his interest in
Hispanic issues.
But H1!ipanic issues. particularly in
the border states. io much deeper
than prom1!'.ing cabinet posts. speak-
ing the language or courting Latin
fnends.
Thl' greatest threat to Mexican
stabili t,'r1s also a threat 10 the border
states. hat threat 1s a re volt b) the
ma ses of underpnvileged peasants
1n MC\ICO. .\1 "'orst. the violence
could spill o"er into the United
~1a1es . .\t the' en,.kast. unrest among
the underclass in Mexico increases
the flo'>' of illegal aliens into this
cou tnn
Thai makes Me,\1can efforts at
agr~nan reform crucial to L'.S.
interests. If the -Mexican go"ernment
1s not successful sn red1stribu11ng the
'>'ealth of its land from large land-
0'>' ners 10 peasants. guemlla forces 1n
the rural areas will use the resultant
hard feelings to rall y the unhappy
peasants.
We haH' see n a classified Central
Intelligen ce Agency report on the ·
progress of Mexican agrari an reform
1ha1 is su rprising!\. opum1stic.
Cl.\ operatives In southern Mexico
report tha1 the reform policies. in
sp11e of the corruption that perVades
the Mc111can bureaucracy. are doing a
fair JOb of promoting stabilitv and
d1scQuraging rural guerrilla ac1lv11~.
The Mexican government has con-
' meed the peasants. in most cases.
1ha1 the bureaucraq is on their side.
Cnt1cs of the agranan reform
program sa) 11 '>'111 never give the
peasants a decent livelihood. and 1ha1
brraking up the land 1010 smaller
ownerships will decrease the nation·s
agricultural output and profits. But
productivtt~ and profits don't seem
10 the be the point. according to the
CIA ... We belie' e that ttfe granting of
inal ienable land titles 10 peasants
provides important psychological
and poliucal props for maintaining
s1abilit~ ... the repon sa)s. "Social
JACK r~
AIDEISOll l\. ~
, his French was not as good as his
Spanish. No one could ever accuse
him of being an ugly American
though.
and DALE VAN A TT A
science s1ud1es suggest 1ha1 the pri-menl services than peasants in other
maf') goal of the peasant is security ... pans of Mexico. the CIA reports,
not profits." ··because· of the special concern over
To enhanrc that securm. the 1he welfare of Ind ians and the
Mc\1can govl·rnmenl thrll\\S 10 some potential for insurgent recru itment 1n
social sen ice programs -health 1he southern border .....
d1n1cs. schools. agm·ultural n-The Cl.\ repon includes a warning
ll'nswn sen ices The' are all nddkd that. in spne of the reform progra ms.
"tth rnrrup11on and ine0ic1cnc~. the .. peasant d1scontcn1 ma) ~ mount-
Cl .\ repon'i. But the~ ha'e done 1ng in some areas: at a minimum, 11
enough good to con' 1nce peasants seems bencr organized than m the
that Me\1Co (11' cares .\nd more pa 1:·
important. the,· ha'e created a BL Yl:-.G .\ TICKET HOME -
ncl\\Orl.. of Jobs· to hand out to the Deposed Ph1hpp1ne president
locals ac; a ":i' of ensuring lo\ alt \ Fc:rdrnand Marcos 1s shopping for a
The do'>' n51dc 1s that when · co-nne-"a' 11cke1 back home He has
opting local leader a:id red1s1nbut-~creth. offered $5 billion to be
mg land doesn't \\Ori... the Me,.1can allo\\ed to re1um. and is prom1s1ng to
go' ernment fall!> bacl.. to its old ab:indon his polttical amb1t1ons and standb~ -repre<;s1on In the past. the support his successor. Corazon
gO\ ernmcnt has not tx·cn sh~ ahout .\qu1no. Marcos added mone\ to the
arb11ran arrests and l''en 1orture of equation after Aquino sent en.'O)S to
peasants suspected of a1d1ng an) talk to him earlier this )ear. Marcos
guerrilla insurgency. II works. accord· had hoped he co uld negotiate a
rng 10 the CIA assessment. ··Rather return. but 11 became apparent in his
than rad1caliLe 1he peasantry. this meeting wnh Aquino's represen1a -
repress1on set'ms to have heightened 11ves that they were there to pump
the popular perception that confront-him for information about his hidden
ing the autbon11es en tails a verv high wealth. Our intelligence 5ourcrs say risk." · 1ha1 Aquino ne ver authorized her
The admin1strac1on or ouTgo1~'-oys to discuss a reconcitiation.
president Miguel de la Madnd has The) were there to check out rumors
emphasized reform programs in about his health and to find out about
southern Mexico because. according his weahh before he dies. But Marcos
10 the Cl.\. that area 1s npe for ''asn·rdymg. and when he caught on
sub,ers1ve act1vm and has frequent-10 the dnfl of 1hc conversation. he
h com plained about neglect from '>'asn't 1alkingcithcr. Now he will use
Mexico (II). 1he monev as a bar~inmg tool.
Indians in the south appear to ha' e Jack A.ndersoa aad Dale Vaa Att.t
been g1\en more access 10 go' ern-are syadicated columa/sts.
His seat on the council will be
difficult to fill.
Last week, Beek told us about Jean
Watt. Her opposition will probably
include Ralph Rodheirn.
Ralph grew up on Balboa Island.
Pearl Street to be exact. A graduate of
Newport Harbor High School,
Rodheim is a graduate of Chapman1
College with a degree in psychol<>JY
and a master's degree in adminis-
tration from Pepperdine and was an
officer m the Anny.
Ralph and his wife. Pe,nny. and their .. spcrtacular 16-year..old daujtt-
ter" hved fo r 13 years in Harbor View
Hills and are now buiJding their
dream house on Balboa Island'. Ralph was a high school teacher for
a number of years and then worked
several years with homeowners
groups for The Irvine Co. He now has
his own company, Rodheim Market-
ing Group.
What impresses me most about
Ralph is his community involve-
ment As chairman of the Marian
Bergeson Aquatics Center drive he
reports that his committee bas raised
$900.000 of the S 1.2 million goal.
Gov. George Deukmejian ap-
pointed Rodhe1m to the state Boating
and Waterways Commission and he
no~ serves as chairman.
I particularl y appreciated Ralph's
help with the Youth Task Force and
Foundation.
The contest for control of the City
Council 1s more a matter of style than
substance. Both sides want the op-
timum environment. One side be-
lieves you can achieve this by shut-
ting things down. The other rationale
is what do we have to do to make
things work.
Her good deed turned into
a hare raising experience
.\ good case m point was the
1n1uau ve aµmst Ne wport Center. The mit1auve stopped the master
plan but The Irvine Co. has moved
ahead on a pi~emeal basis. However,
we didn't -"get Pelican Hill Road.
improved intersections and
MacArthur Boulevard improve-
ments and we lost the teen center.
What did we gain?
Newporters need to realize that
ours 1s a mature city. We are almos&
bu ilt out. The older sections of tow11
are in desperate need ofrefurbishingJ
What happens now requires planning
and teamwork.
S.\(R.\MENTO-Thcwoman 1s
helpful b) na1ute. and when her
neighbor~ asked her to watch their
house for a fe'>' days while they were
out oflo'>'n . she was glad to do it.
.. The' wan1ed her to waler the
plants. pick up the newspapers. you
I.no\\, the kind ofthmg neighbors do
for each other." said the man who
told me 1h1s stof}. "The} also had a
pool. and 1hey told her she was
welcome to use it whenever she
'>'anted.··
So the \\Oman watched the house.
She is a nuN" at a hospital in the city, and after \\Ork. in the worst heat of the
afternoon. she walked over to sec that
the place was all right. ·
She brough1 her bathing suit and
her dog. and after she'd checked the
plants and the windows, she got into
the swi mming pool to cool off. She
closed her eyes. floating. The dog sat
1tt1 he--ed~ofthe-pool. watching htt.
She had been 10 the water perhaps a quarter of an hour when she realized
the animal was gone. She called him
from the pool, but he didn't come.
She got ou1 and calJed again, and then
heard the rtassurinJ sound of his collar comina around the comer. . s the doa clea~ the comer.
however. some o( this reassuran~
dtsa~rcd. He wu. fim. of all.
covered with din. n05C 10 tail. He was.
second or all. carryina a wet.. dead
rabbit in his tttth. chanaina bis hold
on it every few KCOnds. touina it
around 10 his mouth so you collldn't
m1u the fact that ht had somcthina dead. •
H11 head 11 this point I am
gucsiin&. would have been hiah and
proud. A dos never looks better in his
own eyn than when he's carryins a
dead rabbit. •
·"nyway. the -NQman was 11 tint
rrpulicd. and then. rt~beeiQg that
the lamil~ kept a pet rabbit in a cage
on the other side of th e house. she was
horrified . .\nd she ran to that side of
thl' house. and aw the empty cage
o'crturncd on the lawn.
<ihe pict ured herself tn ing to c~plain wha t had happened to the
rabbit. murdered while she floated a
few~ardsawa~ in the swimming pool.
and C\Cf') \\3) she thought to sa y it
was worse than the last. And so she
PETE
DEXTER
did what man) people do when their I assume she hid it in the towel aga11t.
dog kills 1he1r neighbor's pct rabbit. ac; there isn"t really much difference.
he panicked. for purpo~s of evidence. between
From \\hat I ha"e been able to put carrying a clean dead rabbit \Ip the
together about this. hr turned 10 the s1de""alk and a dirty one. dog. who had followed her over. I am also assummg she did not
scolded him and instructed him to bring the dog.
drop the rabbit immediately. Bad dog.
You might as well tell one to hold And so she took the rabbit back to
its breath. his cage, laid him peacefully inside. She pned open his teeth and and went home.
removed the rabbit wet and dt'ad. Natural causes. she didn't know a
She laid the-animal on her towct. 1hingll1>outlr.
rolled it up like a wet bathing suit and A day or two later. the neighbors
staned home. The doa would have returned.
walked along side. worryina over the . hortly after they pulled into their
bundle in her hands. steppina into her dnveway. the woman's phone beun
path. I am gticssina that more than to rang. Sbc stared at 1t, knowing what
once the words "bad doa" came into 1t was. She picked it up. and yes. it was
the course of the conversation. her neighbor. who was hystencal.
At home. she took the rabbit. to the The woman steeled herself for the
bathroom sink, and washed ofl' the lies she was prepared to tell. but never
worst of the din. got the chance.
he ~rained the wat~r. and sham-It was some1bina the nelghbor was
pootd 1t, the rabbit ,etung hea vier all S(tt~mina that stoooed her, that a
the tame. mJnta"c was laost. Ttiat some pcrvcn
he draint'd that water. and nnscd had du4 up tbc neiahbors' ptt rabbit
ofhht shampoo. -who d died the day before they'd
Sht put the rabbit on another towel ~ left. by the "'ly -removed the a~d bitpn to ~f) •• c~&. Ears. .nimal from its gra~. and stuck at tail. fttt. cvcrythtna. OM 51dc at a back in its case
time. I have no idea 11 all how Ion, it How sick ca~ )'OU tct. naht?
lakes to bk>w-dry a rabbet, but I am I am only autssina 'bttt but
s"tt n teem~ loi;tter t~n 11 *IS. somehow I think the dot iot an When shed finished with the dryer. trouble all O\'Cr apin.
she earned the rabbit bltk 10 the Pet~ Da,.,. 11 a ,,. •• w
houtt she h.cl been asked to *Itch -fttlutalla.
\
These are the tests I give to council
candidates .
Who does the candidate represent?
What is his/her management style?
What strengths does the candidate
bring to government?
What are the candidate"s goals and
ObJeCt1ves for the city?
The '90s will be critical years for
· local go vernment. All along the lini both at the federal and state levels.
see an abcogation of responsibility.
The trend is to dump the job on th~
locals but. ~o hang on to the fu ndi ng opponunit1es.
In the nut.decade, we will need
local leaders who will stand up and
deliver. We don't need complainers
and moat-builders. l
It is within our powcF to return to
excellence.
It won't be easy. It won't be cheap,
It will take a strong sense o( destiny.
Do you sec Newpon Beach an cny
that works?
What are you willing to do to matt
the traffic manqca61e? We have
found out that counting the number
of cars aoins throuah an intcmction
is n.ot enoulfl. That 1s what the Traff.c
Phasing Or\iinan(t is all about.
Are you willina to acupt MW
roads? The city c-an't afford to build
them aloM. OCvclopttS won't dou1e
them out of the aooctness of their
hdn.
The name of the pam is quid or6
quo. We need to buiJd a team tbal
undttstands what quo's they art
Wlll1na to llCaPI to ttt the ~
quid. ,
Ja8M .... ,,,. Ne•""" .... ., .,..,_., .. ~,.,.. .,....
CA LIFORNIA
'Model citizen'
figbts extradition
on murder charge
LOS ANGELES (AP) - A man
convicted of second-degree murder
for killing the mother of his 14-year-
old gjrlfriend and escaping from
prison 14 years ago plans to fight
extradhion to Massachusetts where
he is amonJ the state's most wanted
fugjtivcs, his girlfriend said.
Arthur Alonzo Bembury, con-
victed of murder in Massachusetts in
1971. appeared briefly in court Mon-
day but proceedings were put off until
Sept. I because his newly hired lawyer
is engaged in a trial elsewhere.
Gayle Babineaux, the mother of
Bcmbury's three children. said she
has recei ved hundreds of encouragjng
letters from neighbors. friends and
strangers since the story ofBcmbury's
doubk life surfaced last week.
"Certainly, whatever he's done.
he's made retribution," she said.
adding that she believes Bembury was
innocent of the crime for which he
went to prison.
Bembury. known to lnends and co-
workers as Doug Henare. was de-
scribed by them as a loving father of
three chilpren. a tireless volunteer
who helped troubled youngsters and a
budding real estate broker. He also
had occasional roles as an actor an
Hollywood movies.
But police who arrested him at the
Marina del Rey real estate office
where he worked, said Bembury. 37.
wauentcnced to life in prison 1n June
1971 af\er being convicted of second-
degrce murder for the death ofh1s 14-
year-old girlfriend's mother.
The mother. Louise Simmons, was
shot to death at the front door of her
Roxbury. Mass .. home an Februal)
1970. Bemtwry was accused of linng
two shots at Simmons after she told
him he could no longer see her
daughter.
.\ warrant was issued for his arrest
after he failed to return to Norfol k
State Penitential)' an '-\ugust 1974
'
Arthur Alonzo Bemb11ry
after a \\Cekend furlough to v1s1t has
fam1l~
Aabineau' ~1d that Bcmbuf'\ has
rece1H·d support from chantable
organ11at1ons he helped as a '<?lun-
teer. She said the organ1zat1ons,
.... h1ch assist need) )Oung.sters. have
rilcaded for Bembu~ to be allowed to
continue his hie a~ a model c111zen 1n
Los .\ngekc,
Animal rights group admits to raid
Pilots blamed
in Pendleton
copter crashes
CAMP PE DLETON (AP) -
Pilot error led to two helicopter
crashes that killed five Manne Corps
air crewmen near the Camp
Pendleton base last )Car. according to
reports on the accidents.
l:Soth incidents involved Ch-46£ ~ Knight helicopters based at the
Tustin Manne Corps A.tr talion 1n
Orange County
Two separate Marine Corps rcpom
recommended SC\'eral procedure
changes as a result of the 1nvest1ga-
t1ons. including s.ome that -.ere
censored because the~ reflC<.'tt'd
mechanical problems "1th the air-
craft. Manne officials !Mild
Sea Knights ha' e thl' \t:cond-
h1ghest accident ratt' of all Manne
Corps helicopters. "11h at least t'1ght
fatal crashes 1n the past \I.'\ en )ears.
officials said
Manne 1n\ cst1gatorc, tound that the
pilot of a ea i....n1ght erred "hen he
nev. into a doud bani>. ~pl 3 and hit
a mountaan'i1de nt'ar a re'>t'ne on the
northern an Diego Count\ ha~ .\II
four ~lanne'> aboard died
LOMA LI ND'-\ (AP) -A militant animal rights
group claimed responsibility for entering a Loma Linda
University Medical Center lab and taking seven dogs after
splattering red paint on walls and office equipment.
prosecuted.'' Dr. Leonard L. Baile) said 1n a statemen!. I In another statement issued shonh after the raid. Animal L1~ratton Front members· attacked the Alter breast 5urgery. the
procedures used b~ Baile~. the Loma Linda surgeon who choke ofttbfHstformlsoneof
·•.
... performed a baboon-to-bab_, hean transplant on the the most lmpottMlt decisions you will make. • -· infant Bab) Fae 1n IQ8~ tncJt u,, ,. ••. .~. ~: .....
.,
: _. ' ., .
Orange Coast OAILV PILOT/Tuesdly, August 16, 1986 A7
Gas Co. cutback
linked to drought
LO .\.l\GELES (A P) -Southern
(ahforn1a Gas. Co. said 11 '-"OUld bqln
rutung bad. natural gas deh\cnes to
uthern California Edison and other
dectnc ut1ltt1e\ earl} toda) in order to
tonst'n e suppltes for the winter.
rhe cutbac~ of about 20 percent of
aq.•rage use v.as blamed on an
unusuall) high demand f<?r gas b) the
Jrt'a'ssupphersofclectncll). prompt-
t'd 1n pan b' the drought. which has
dried up supplte!i or hydroelectnc
po-.er from the Pacific Northwest
.\l..o cogcnerauon faciliues. which
generate electnc1t~ from heat. ha'e
u'>t·d more natural gas than expected.
..aid Fred John an e\ccuu'e vice
pre'>1dent for the uuht)
Tht• cutbad.'., to last through Octo-
tx·r "111 force ut1ltt1es to turn tC101I for puv.enng generators. adding 1n-
cri:J'>t'd pollution to the region's
Jlread~ smog-tilled summer skies.
"\.'. t•r1: deepl~ disappointed It
mean'> thC' dectm po"er generators
\qfl haH' tu S\\ltch to dirtier healing
oil "h11.h 1~ mu h more polluung
than natural gas · said Thomas
f11.hhorn. a \f)C'l~e,man for tht' outh
Coast .\.1r QuaJ1t) Management DJS-
\nct
The gas compan} pledged to de·
ll\er gas supplies in the event of a
smog alert. but !>a1d It was unsure if Jt
could mttt demands on all first·staae
alerts when air I!> considered un-
heahhf ul to breathe but not hazard-
ous
The uuhues IO\Ohed arc Edison.
the Los .\ngeles Department of Water
and Power. San Diego Gas & Electnc.
"We had mteung.s v.nh the electnc
uuhues an late Jul\ and told them we
couJdn 't ~ta.in theic \ e~ mgh levels
of d('mand into the foreseeable fu-
ture. and ""'e asked them to reduce
their usage." ga) compan) spokes-
man Rich Pu1 said. "But \\Cd1dn't see
much 1n the wa' of results."
Hov.e' er Hl).,..ard Ra) 'ice pres-
ent of fuel )uppt~ for Edison. said the
company u~d !es~ natural gas th1!>
'ear than last 'ear ..\nd he denied
reports lhat th~ problem had been
heightened b~ recent do" n-ume at
t-.o nuclear po\\er planb and
Ed1son·s U)e ol t'\tra gas for pov.er
'>Old to Pacific Ga~ A. Ekctnc
-
Umversny officials said the stolen dogs were non-
rescarch animals and estimated the vandalism would cost
$6,000 to SI 0.000 to repair. said spokeswoman Anita
Rockwell. masked man"' 1th two labrador retrievers. said the group c.in ..,... ,.. r· • ~ ·r,_ ._ ...... , ..
mismatched with that of the baboon. how her blood "as .,ou• fcf-..c"" .ice:,., The break-an occurred before dawn Monday a.t,a part
of the lab called the Farm. Rockwell said. In addition to
the..animal theft and vandaltsm. the intruders stoic farm
animal records needed for the future care of about I 00
goats, she said.
The statement. accompanied b) a photograph of a I Oft'cJ)I "' • ,,. .. , rii1
had obtained files the) claim show "Baby Fae's blood was 401~ a c:-H.' ,. ;. ~
wuhdrawn for tes11ng in adult amounts. and ho" pre-l0t-" ,o..· · · 't4 l'( ~ C'<ISting bacteria In her S) stem \\aS purpo<;el~ allowed to A '0'"1 ·~ ,.. . ..,.. •,e dil ftl,111 {fh:J tl\
remain.·· I PJ OC.• • .iv·~··· ~. " 6
"The cnminals performing acts that jeopardized the
health and welfare of these farm animals should be
Doctors tell
Chavez to
end fast or
face injury
DELANO (AP)-After examining
Cesar Chavez. three doctors said they
urged the weak~ned farm labo~ lead~r
to consider ending his fast. which will
be one month long if it lasts until
midnight tonight.
"We are extremely concerned
about the Possibility of irreversible
damage to his health," the physicians.
said in a prepared statement Monday.
"The longer he continues his water-
only fast. the closer he comes to
reaching the point where has ilfc will
be in danger. ·
Dr. Marion Moses said Chavez
told them "he'll think about it."
She added that Chavez, whose fast
went into its 31st day today. had not
yet suffered irrcversablc damage de-
spite the loss of 30 pounds, t 7. percent
of his original 174-pound weight.
But the joint statement signed by
her. Dr. Fidel Huerta and Dr.
Augusto Ortiz, said Chavez was
weak. dizzr. his uric acid leyel
remained high. and he w~s h~v~ng
increasing trouble maintaining
proper fluids and electrolites.
Chavez began a water-only fast at
the union compound in Delano 125
miles north of Los Angeles on July 17
to call attention to the UFW's boycott
of California table grapes and claims
that workers and Cf)nsumers arc
endangered by five pesticides.
This boycott began in 1984 with
Chavez charging that the state's
Agricultural Labor Relations Board.
which governs farm labor elections,
had become ineffective under Re·
publ ican Gov. George Dcukmejian.
More than 400 elections at individual
farms had been held within months ~f\er the law took effect in 1975 with
the UFW winning· the bulk of the
elections and. ultimately. numerous
contracts.
· But by 1984. the union had lost all
but one small contract in table grapes.
the crop that Chavez first began
organi.nng in 1962.
Chief admits to department
-~ota system
RIVERSIDE (A P) -Ri~erside's
polic_c chief admitted to be1na red·
faced after uncovering a disc~t 4-
yw-old quota system that earned pfficcn a day off with pay for writing
Jots of traffic tickets. Under the informal system, of-ticen who wrote I SO tickets a month ~· rewarded with a day off with
~~~ief Linford L. "Sonny''
The chitf said he was embamssed
to lc:am of the ptaetict Monday from
Rivcnldc City Manqer Dou&)as
Weiford, whohadhea.rdaboutit from
an anoitymous tipster. . .
Weiforc:t ttla~ the tip to Rich-
ardton. who checked into t~ ~~tttt tven tbouah he said he 1n1taally
Joputtc1 it oft' as somethina that
couldn ·, be."
l ~o Ont above the rank of 9Cf1C&nt
,_. bttft aware of the system. whic.h
WM saopped U IOOll II depu\ment
.... learned o( it, llidwdloa saicl
-' ..
o·ecls·•o•""s 1>y ~ ~
Baile) ~1d afier Bah' Fae's death that his failure to I L-~-tu_r_a _~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ match blood I\ pes was una' 01dable
-~~~~~~~-_._~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-
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-0r.,. Cout DAILY PILOT/ TUMday. August 1&, 1988
Rr\ ll I.
L -• l I l ,)
Belinda Carlisle's
show uninspiring
Manhattan Transfer shows
variety, depth at Meadows
II )OU prefer pop music that i lijhl\\Cl~ht 3nd sweet, then Belinda
(arlisle s performance aturday
night at the Pacific mphitheatre was
foq.ou. '\nd if you enjoy wholesomt",
harmless entertainment. this co ncert
was for you.
JOHN
Roos B~t 1f1t'schallenging. spontaneous.
and mspmng shows that exctte you.
then this gig was definitely not for
)OU. There's a real art behind th e skill of surpn 1ng. Other than her mediocre
creaung ennchin.g. lastin_g pop musJc. lead 'ocals. the ex-Go-Go's creauve
The Beatles w11h their blend of t'ontnbuuons have always been
glorious melodies. harmonics. and rather minimal.
skillful s9ngwnting. were the masters (arltslc doesn't phi> an' 1nstru-
of the 1d1om. More recently. another men ts. nor docs he wnte an) of her group of Brits named Squeeze has songs. What'~ amazing is that people
made deltghtf4I. hook-tilled pop "err aC'tUall) hired to write such
songs for today's generauoo. 1ns1p1d tunr\ (from her latest
B k . ng "Hca,en on Earth" LP) as "LOH' ac in h I. a likable all-female NcH·r Dies." "Should I Let You In?"
group called the Go-Gos brought and ··r C'ct Weak ..
both ~harm and enthusiasm to their The ~cpetitivc and smothering
pepp) pop \ongs. Although, hard I) nature of her main theme -the love-groundbreak1~g s.tulT. their. Beaut) struct... emottonalh dep nd t and the Beat LP captured a band f, 1 · . • c en wtth con iderable t hem1str) and l:ma e -grc" t1rcsomc and reached
enough musical talent to produc~. its nadir dunng,,the mmdless ·::'io-
bounc' h11s hkc "We Got The Beat.. bod} Owns Me. Carlisle sang: No
"Lu'it ·10 lo,e." and "Our Li ., A.~ o~c can make me do. What r don't Sealed .. P "an1 to do -no. no. nobo<l~ O\\ ns · mt. nobody but \OU"
Belinda Carll•le
Plat·e On Earth" are ugar-coated
Ot&hlS of fanc} tbat. despite their
catt h} choruses. arc as forgettable as
'l'loterdaY\ lunch.
Om· n'umbcr. however. dtd stand
out among the rest. An atmospheric.
nw' 1ng <1elcct1on. "Circle in the
~.ind'' gt'nl·ra tcd a strong emotional
unJarurrent tha1 succeeded in pull-
ing th~· autl1encf in«>-lhe song's
ttuc,tions of self-doubt and lont-
linc~s.
But 1h1\ "as the exception to a
prest.'ntation filled with the kind of
d1\posahll' pop that's closer to TilTan}
than inion and Garfunkel. Carlisle
al'>o \\Ould bcnefi1 greatl) b} develop-
ing a morl• personable stage presence.
By GREG KLERKX
OllNOeilW ..........
Despite its deep roots in traditional
vocal jazz. the Manhattan Transfer
has managed to avoid becoming an
anachronism overt he course of its 17·
year career. The reasons for the Transfer's
continued success and appeal \\ere
apparent during an inv1gorat1ng. mu-
sical!) flawless show Saturday night
at Irvine Meadows.
Yes. the quartet performed several
vocalcse numbers. Yes. they did rhm
famous renditions of "Birdland" and
"Bo) From New York Cit>.''
But the) also performed a st1rnng
dcdicatidn to imprisoned outh
.\fncan mmorm· leader Nelson Man-
dela (It ma\ surprise some people to
note that the group 1s slated for the
•pt. 10 \Vorld Peace C'onccn at the
Lo .\ngeles C'ohseu m). Several songs
from the group's latest album.
.. Brasil," also were featured. fusing
South <\merican rh\ th ms. traditional
Jazz and pop ·
Thcsr numbers combined wtth a
smattering of throw-awa} doo-wop
S<?ngs and some pop standards in·
d1ra1c that the Transfer -Tim
Hauser. Chel') I Ben tine. Alan Paul
and Janis icgel -isn't willing to be
branded as imply a Jazz.vocal
ensemble. Althou&h the) don't wri te
their own tune . they are a cre~ttve
innovatt ve musical entity. '
The first half of the two-hour show
was almost solcl) devoted to Jazz
'ltandardo; and larynx-ben ing
'ocak'iC. which features the group
'01cmg mstrumcntal lines on sonJ.S
b) Quin(') Jone!> and Miles Davis,
among others. The vocalese olTcrings
ranged from the amazing -Ben-
t' ne • note--perfcct ~ ocahzauon of ,21
Benn~ Ba!lc)' trumpet line in "Meet Benn~ Baile~ -to the truly oflbeat .
<tuch as the Jon He11dricks lr.rics to
Clifford Bro\' n's ·•Jo, pnng. ·which
lncludcs references ·to Shakespeare.
Ponct de Leon and Sno\\ White.
HO\\C\ er. the htghhJht of lhe first
half of the shO\\ was Siegel's riveting
deli' er~ of Da vid Fnshbcrg's ballad
"You Wert.' There." The cavernous
amJ?hllheater was . pin-drop quiet
dunng the song. casil} the finest solo
number of tht evening.
After a 20-mtnute intermission. the
group returned and launched into
more pop-oriented material, includ-
mg the requisite "Java Jive" and the
group's mandatory version of the
gospel-11ngcd "Operator. lnfor·
mation."
Musically. the second half of the
show was a bit ant1cli mact1c, except
for the Mandela tribute. "Not~ From
the Underground." and "Hear the
Vo ices" by Brazilian hero and revol-
utionan Gilberto Gil.
But what the second half lacked iJ'l
musical depth the group made up for
wi th an abundance o enthusiasm.
mcluding frequenl and generally
sPontaneous interplay with the au-
dience. The mt.'mbers of Manhattan
Transfer's St).·man backup band alslo
had frequent opportuniues to shoi.I
off their chops. particularly excellent
recd man Don Roberts. What seeps through the Transfers
obvious talent and enthusiasm is ~
genuine love of performing. and a reaJ
afTecl1on for each other. Then a~in, a
group doesn't last 17 years wtthout
those qual ities.
The fact that these oldt.'r 1uncc; were G1 ,.e me a break. plea!le.
tht· hi~hghts of Carlisle's 75-mtnute Carlisle also paints pictures of a
St't said a lot about ht>r mfenor solo '>tmphsuc. blissful world of lo"' and
matenal. But 1t wasn't altogether fun. ··vacation" and "Heaven is a
In latrnl'SS. most of the few
thousand fans -primanly teen-agers
and entire fam1hes -appeared to be
l'nJO~ ing 1hemselvcs. The} came.
Tht·~ clapped and cheered. The)
orcas1onall~ rose to thei r feet. Some
t\l.•n brouiht Belinda flowers.
Dirty dancers revive oldies
, ......... u
TUCKE .. (PG)
11 ff2:1U:•1 11t ...
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COCKTAIL (A)
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But tlon t con~~rtgoersexpect more
creattH' 1mag1nat1on and some
passion from a performer for their
$20'} I \\OUld thtnk so. What kept
creeping into m} mind were lyncs
from a c;;m1ths' song entitled "Panic"
-"Tht music says nothing to me
nhout nn life ...
PJul <'arrack. who had to cancel as
the upenmg act due to his \\1fe's
1llnc'>'>. "as unfortunate!~ replaced b)
the acramento-based S) nth-poppers
Bourgl'OIS Tagg. Founded by ke}·
board1st Brent Bourgeois and bassist
~~ Tagg. this dismal outfit per-
lormctl pahaps the \ear's most
lacklustcr and bland Set of tepid
musings \.\hen a monotone-prone
Bourgeois ang. "There arc thmgs.1n
this \\Orld lean do \\ 1thout." he spoke
for me as \\ell.
By JOYCE BODLOVICH
Of!M0..,'11o411.tl
"Dirty Dancing," erotic. sensuous.
pfovocative. steam) -but dirt)?
Well. ma) be. And that ts exactl)
wh} the blockbuster mo,·ie and no\\
the concen tour are causing con·
ccngoers to &rrate and undulate 1n
the aisles. .
The Dirt~ Danctng conccn tour.
which has beeo tra' cling state to
state. landed at the Pacific Am-
pttheatre in Costa Mesa Sunda'.
The sho\\ features Righteous
Brother and Orange C'ountv resident
Bill Medic). \\hose "(I've Had) The
Time of M> Life'' duet wtth Jennifer
Warnes \vent to No. I thanks in large
part to the populartt) of th e movie
.\lso taking top b1lltng 1s sing-
er/song\\ ntcr. Enc Carmen "of
"Hung!') E)c:s" fame. the 1960sgroup
the Contours. who recorded "No"
$2.00 BARGAIN DAYS TUESDAY & WEDNESD AY AT STARRED * SCREENS BELOW
NEWPORT CINEMA
Newporl C1nl1r 6-44-0760
COCKTAIL(") TCJMClUIS(
12:00·2 00-4:15-f: :J0.10:30
TUCKER
(PO)
LIDO CINEMA
Newport-Udo 673-8350
IAT /SUN 12.15 UNTllJ:OO ,_.
MIDNIGHT RUN (R) Rc&RTI>tflRU-
5.30-1.00· 10·20
HARBOR TWIN
Herbor Wll1on 631 -3501
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662 2266
TODAY..,..IT IHOW a .oo
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5:15·~~-9:00
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CINEMA
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TODAY 12.11 UNTIL S.• ""
YOUNOGUNI
(")
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Q79-4 ,, ,
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ROGER RAl•IT
(PG)
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2.00.2 5-4:~ ~ .. •S-10·50
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THE RESCUE (PG) 12 15
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(R) JAMIE lil CIMTIS
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CLEAN 6 SOBER
(A)
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A MIDNIGHT "UN (A) M KlllCAT DtNtO
12. 30·3 00· 5.30·1.00-10:30
CINEMA WE ST
W11tmln1t1r-Gold1nwul
891 393!>
GENERAL
ADMllllON
WHO FRAMED
AOCER RAHfT (PO) 1230-l.00·5:1s.7·30·t~S
COCKTAIL (A)
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COCKTAIL(") TOMCUSE
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That I Can Dance." Merry Clayton
and man) of the cast dancers from the
.mO\IC
But 1t wasn't only teeny-bo ppers
who tilled the rows of seats. No.
indeed ..\might} roar was heard from
the audience \\hen oldsters were
a!>ked to indenttf) themselves.
.\nd that is because dirty dancing
music 1s 'intage. golden oldies that
ha' e managed to sustain youthful
memories for the 40-pl us group and
l'3pll' ate the musical heans of a
) ou nger crowd. "I \\3S born 20 Years too late." said ~1-,c~ir-old Marninne RoweofC'osta
\kSa Ro\\C had come to the co ncert
\\1th \\\O friend<;. The trio cnthus1asttcall~ danced through each
song.
"I lo' e this 'itufT.'' he said. "I took
S\'lng am httlc kid and loved to dance
hkt• 1hat But I can't find anyone who
tan dance 1h1s I \\ant to dance with a
gu~ that can S\\ ing me around.''
.\long w11h mto;-.1catmg dancing
numbers. solos from Clavto'n.
Carn1l'n and the Contours 1nsp1red
people 10 sta) on their feet .
-\nd the roc t..ing ·n· rolling didn't
~top at 1nterm1ss1on.
\\'hile taped music ma1nta1ned the
concert's ambience. a pon)-ta1led 5·
)ear-old danced up and down the
aisle m1m1ck1ng the dtrt\ dancers.
"hr recCI\ ed loud applause. I ..\l<;o rcce1v1 ng a thunderous ova-
uon was Medic}. His su rpnse guest'·
"as -not surp1S1ngl) -Righteous
II LARGER THAN LI FE
MOVIE-MAKING:'
T U C K E .R
Brothers partner Bobby Hatfield. 1 Hatfield appeared from the throng
of concert attendees and joined
Medley on stage 10 do their classic.
"You\ e Lost That Loving Feeling ...
But lhe dirt> d.ancing party didn't
stop \\hen the lights went on and
peo ple filtered from the
amphitheater Mos1 of the cast along
\\1th a mass of revelers met at
Fountain Valle} ·s The Hop. •
.\r1€1 again. th~ dirt) dancer duos
mo\'ed as one to ·earl) 1960s music.
But the~ \\ere not alone. The Right-
eous -Brothers and the Contours dug
1n for more rock 'n' roll favorites.
The t"'ontours' lead singer. Joe
Btlhngslca. said the Detroit group.
which disbanded 1n 1964, rein-
ca rnated ttself in 1970.
.. } hester PomJr. and I decided to
pull the group together again," said
Btllingslca. \\ho has been a Detroit
police officer since 1968. Billingslea
and Potts are the only ongmal
members
"One of the gu"s died. another
became a minister· and we couldn't
find the other gu) ... he said.
Because of the renewed popula nty
of the group. Billingslea said he may
4ioon rcure his police badge.
"I am on a ,·ear's leave of absence.
But maybe. if it keeps going the way 11
1s. I ma~ rcure tn May."
Billingslea 1s certain no\\ 1s better
than then.
"It's much better now. Why?
Because we are older." he laughed.
...
THE MAf'
AND HIS DREAM
NOW PLAYING
•MU
Mann Brti Plitt
S29 SJJ'
*OOAOHA (C-0tCotl)N 11
279-1190
*COIT A MIU
(010ll0$ So.1~ Cou1
Pl&t• ~6-1711 * FIK.Ll!ATOH AMC~Olll
!19?·6000
*HVNTIHOTOtl HACl4 fa,.arot Chlrllf C,r11rt
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0 LAWAADA Pat IC I lJ M rlOi ..... 2•00
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Safe sex vital ~hese days
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Recent!)
on a talk show in Seattle the topic of
teen prostilution wa discussed. One
comment (from the mother of a
reformed teen-age prostitute) di~
turbcd me. I would like to alen others.
As if 1l 1sn't bad enough that well-
drcssed men in fancy cars and thrrc-
piece suits (weanne wedding nngs)
pick up young prosututes. would you
bclievr that the) offer to pay more
money 1fthe girls arc w1lhng to engate
In ~x w11houtthe use of a condom~
A convicted sex offender in Seattle
who is awaiting sentencing tested
positive for the Al OS antibodies and
then v1s1ted young male prostitutes.
know1ng that he was infected.
After tons of information put out
by the surgeon general and other
health authorities. the public sull fails
to understand the need for safe sexual
practices.
Ann. I realize this letter might be
too explicit for your column. but I
behe' e that 1n 1988. noth1ne that
Eucates people 1s too shocking to
int. I am sure that Dr. Koop \\Ou Id
greatly pleased if you published m)
letter. -A READER IN SEATTLE.
DEAR SEA'M'LE: A few years ago
I coald not bave used tbe word
"condom" i.n tkis column. Today we
know tbat condoms can be a matter of
All•
l.AllHIS
Our marriaie is solid and we've
remained faithful to our vows. but
latel} I've been having flashbacks of
my teen years and sit for hours
brooding about the fun I have missed.
I spend enurel~ too much time
thinking about the past. It doesn't
seem normal. considenng that I
graduated from hiflh school more
than 20 years ago. Maybe it's because
life and deat ... AIDS us made fraak r I just learned that an old flame ~as
talk not only socially accept.able bat recently d1' orcrd and has bttn asking
mandatory. a lot of questtons about me. I was
pretty crazy about ham in high school.
We must get tbe message across to and although our relationship was
all people wbo are suuUy active Qulle innocent I've ne'er been able to
tllat wbllea condom is not 100 percent. put ham out of m) mind. I don't want
effective (it can break ucl come off), to hun m' husband no r do I want a
unprotected sex can resalt la death. divorce. but I am dying to sec my o ld
Tbe international AIDS conference boyfnend again JUSt to talk about old
in toctholm pat ott clepres1lag-tunes. _ .
news. Tbe facts are, dear readers, \l, hat do ~ou think . .\nn? S~ould I
tbat tbe world aatboritles on Uds forget ahout this gu~ or !>Ce him and
disease bave warned us that we must <oausf\ m} c:ur1 oslly once and for all?
putawaybllllonsofdollarstocarefor -DRE.\ME~ IN KENTUCKY.
AIDS victims IA tbe comlog years DEAR KY .. 'J'.be one tbat got away
because tbe disease is spreadi•I ucl al"ay_s see.ms hke a bette~ catch -
there is no cure in sight. Moral especially 1f your basbud s ~lrllne
judgments must give way to com-bas rereded and bis ~aisthne bas
passion and tbe economic realities expan~ed and you haven t seen tbe old
that will have an impact on all ol us. flame int~ years: • • • I ran think of five good reasons to
DE.\R .\NN L>\ DERS: I am in forgetabouttbe pastand concentrate
m~ ~~and married tom) high school on the future: four children and a
S\H't'thcan We ha ve four children. faithful busban~.
Wedllesday, Aagust 17
ARIES (Mar<.'h 21-April 19): Attention centers
"ondcr"'h~ the~ ga'e in soeasil)?'" Answer is that you do
nave something of' alue to offer. Circumstances fa vor
effons ,around balance. JUS·
ticc. public 111)age.
legal rights and per-
m1ssions. You'll be
concerned abo ut
pannership. unique
agrtements. mantal
status. Pisces pla\S
meaningful role. ·
TAURUS (Apnl
SYDNEY
DMARR
20-Ma) 20): You'll sa)' ... I thou&ht that matter had been
settled." You'll win. but do n't take too much for granted.
Law on your side. older ind1v1dual involved. Cancer.
Capricorn people figure prQm1nently.
GEMINI (Ma) 21-June 20): Finish what you stan.
reahze you arr rmana11ng ··sex appeal. .. Populanty o n
nse. )Ou'll reach more people. chance exists to hit
financial jackpot. Anes. Libra people play roles.
CANCER (June :!I-Jul} 21): Negouauons begin 1n
connection w11h sale or purchase of propen~. home.
You'rego1ng places. but more mone} as required. Funding
is obtained. pouabl}-through contact arranged by famil~
member.
LEO (Jul} 23-Aug. 22): lntu111on is on target. you'll
learn through process of teaching others Re stless feelings
work to )Our advantage -cunosll) "Ill be satisfied.
answers wall be obtained . .\~uanan pla~s role
VIRGO (Aug. 23·Scpt. -2): You'lf be more a-ware of
appearance. populant}. wardrobe. body 1magC'. Emphasis
also continues on pa) men ts. collecttons. ro} alt) checks.
receipts. accounting methods agmanan is 1n picture.
LIBRA (Sept. 13-0ct. 22)" You asked fo r assurances.
more security. No" you get them. and )"OU miltht ask. "I
SCORPIO ((kt. 23-Nov. 21 ): Be read) for chanee.
travel.' anct~. communtca11on fro m member of opposne
sex who urges '1 11. (landcsllne arrangement promotes
intrigue highlights glamor and e·mtement. Virgo plays
role.
SAGl'M' ARIUS (No\. 12-Dcc. 21 ): Stick close to
home ground 1f possible. 8). remaining with what 1s
familiar. \OU almost guarantee safety. added prc!>l1ge.
profit Re~ard 1n form ofg1ft highlights sccnano. Taurus
figures prominentl~ CAPRICOR~ (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Look beyond the
1mmed1atc. pa) close attC'nt1on to "psychic 1mprcss1ons. ··
Rela11ve who recentl} "d1sappc"ared .. will comJ"!lunicate.
could make sudden appearance. Keep options open. your
plans ncx1ble.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb 18): \\hat appeared to be
lost 1s due to be reco' t•red. Rela11ve pla}s prominent role.
'ou·11 be made to realm'.' that apparent thcfi was mereh a
loan. To a,01d frustration. possible scandal. accept
l'.\planauon
PISCES ( Feo 19-~arch 20) Mo ne} which had been
O\\Cd to close rdatl\e "Ill finall~ be paid. You might be
.,ckcted a'> conduit to relate news. Be interested without
hem ming tnl'\tm:abl~ '"'olved . .\ries pla~s key role
IF AUG UST 17 IS YOUR BIRTHDAY vou are
d' nam1c inqu1'>1t1,e. "ork "ell under pressure. are
rapahk of meeting Jeadhne'i. You are 1nten~. sentimen-
tal and harmon11l· v. 1th older 1nd1v1duals. espc"c1ally men.
( ancer. C :ipncorn !X'Ople pla) important roles in ~our
h t\.· ~tJJor Jomeslll" adJUStment current!) h1ghhghted -
l'Oultl include l hJnge ol residence or marital status. Home
'urround1ng~ "Ill appear "d11Terent." No,ember "Ill be
produc 11' c mcmor:ihle. out'itand1ng for~ ou this ~ear
--Spaghetti t ough en ,mar riage
"hat's a ··1um"" "Spagheni breaks up mo re mar-
riages than anything else 1 n Ital} .. So
says a student of matnmon1al matters
in Rome. "It's cheap. Sown cs. g1' en
so little mone>. eat 11. and soon get
overweight. Husbands look around
for thinner women. It destrO) s famil-
ies. It's cause for another decline and
.\ Half ubra. half CO"
011.I old Roman iogas ha' e
pocket~'! If not. that'<, cunous. It's a
mattcr of h1stoncal record that the
Romans In' ented thl' folding pocket
kni fe.
fall. that spaghetti... ••
Q. I thought gnvl~ bears were
vegetarians.
A. They're 85 percent vegetanan.
But the curious fact of life 1s that 15
percent of an) thing can ruin its
reputation.
Q. I Rnow a ··)akalo" 1s a cross
between a yak and a buffalo. but
\\hat GeofTrc-~ Chaucer "as grant-
l'd e'er:· )Car for being England·s poet
laureate was a "hole lot of wine. but
that's not wh~ he's so hard to rea'd.
' ou ran 11< an~· lahe at a lo-w-er altitude than most ibmannes can
dest·cnd. Sosa) s who lar}d their
crafts on the Dead Sea.
The oner 1\ a "easel It has a
lo-.able d1spos111on. The fisher is a
"easel. It ha!> a hateful d1sposi11on.
That's "easels for you.
E'cr:b(>d) uses last namrs now.
Q. \\ho "ere the hea' 1cst bo~ers to
fight for a hea') "eight title?
.\. Primo Camera. 259 pounds.
beat Paulino L'1cudun. 12q On Oct.
22. 1qn 1n Rome
Q In racetrack lingo. "hat's a
··morning glo r: ....
.\. .\ thoroughbred "hose track
record doesn't live up to its morning
"orkouts. lne' 1tablr. "hat? Some
horses and people JUSt do a lot better
in thC' earl) morning.
Ora• Coast DAILY PILOT/Tue9day, Augott 16, 1988 A8
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Complete tetevl•lon listing• In Sunct.y'a TV Piiot
Both vulnerable. Nonh deals.
NORTH
+A 8 3 2
-5
9 6 5 4
• 8 7 4 2
WEST EAST
• Q J 10 1 4 • 9 6 5
-4 l""'Q762
7 3 2 A 10 8 + Q 10 6 3 + A J 9
SOUTH + K
-A K J 10 9 8 3
KQJ + K 5
The bidding:
North East
Pass Pass
Pass Pass
oulh
4 -
WHt
Pus
Opening lead: Queen of +
Even monarchs are monal. How
often has 1he cry rung out: "The
king is dead. Long live the king"? It
is the story of this hand.
In first or second posiiion. we
would open thc·Sou1h hand with a
demand bid even though it mighl be
a point or so light. It has only four
losers and we would want to alen
panner to the fact that, if he holds
two aces, we arc in slam territory. In
fourth seal. !hough, we would settle
for an opening four-heart bid .
First, it's odds-against partner
holding two aces. Secondly, even
that might not be enough.
Against four hearts West leads
the top of his spade sequence. A
careless declarer wins in hand and
then finds that he has no entry to
dummy. He bangs out the ace-king
of trumps, but whm the queen fails
CHARLES
Go1E1t
to drop the contract is irretrievably
lost. Declarer must play everything
from hand, and he ends up surren-
dering a 1r1ck in each red suit and
two clubs.
A more careful declarer realizes
that his only entry to the table is 1be
ace of spades, so he will rise with
1hat card at trick one. squandering
the king under 11. He will then use
the eniry for the trump finesse. That
succeeds, but when West shows out
on the next trump, declata -must
ACROSS 66 The Avenge<
1 Defamation 67 Wiikes---Pa
6 Buttresses 68 Atlas e g
11 Mortar ml•8f 69 Bowler
14 An Astaire 70 European
15 Sun· pref 71 ·Golden
16 Mary TOdd's Boy author
spouse DOWN 17 Fathered
18 Hospital 1 R&O bldg
employees 2 Fist!
20 Demented 3 Onset
22 Swiss city 4 AntetoPe
23 Olspa1ctt 5 Permits
25 Old Persians 6 Calls
28 Wheal 7 Altar screen
29 Skillet 8 Worn
30 Of a secret 9 CobtMer
oroer 1 o APpte type
32 Stage wt11sper 11 Increase
J:e Locates 12 "--for
39 Indicates Adano
Ou1 ~
SHARIF !-:1
still concede a trump trick and the
contract.
The expert foresees that h.is best
chance for the contract is 10 find
East wnh the ace of clubs. After
winning the first mclt in dummy, be
leads a club to the lcina. When that
works, he is home. If it loses. be can
sull try to drop the queen of trumps
for tus 10th trick.
So one king had to be sacrificed
for the other to reign supreme. Long
liv~ the kini!
Plck a label before someone else does 42 Dispossess 13 Pester
'3 Spanisti art 19 Canon
works 21 Cup
45 Ou1ward 23 Card
46 Wither 24 Canvas stand 38 Closed caT S3 Retated
40 ResOYnd 55 Cold
In a recent column I challenged c\ woman in Elko. Nev .. said that
,people to come up with a cute name ~tnce the~ 're the largest group ever.
for today's Yuppies. who by the year "h) not call thrm Ba~) Boom-
2010 will be well on their way to Booms. .\nother suggestion came
becoming the lareest elderly popu-from a man in Los Angeles who said.
lation ever to live 1n America. ·•Wh> not call them Geriuppies?"
1
The response was underwhelming. ..\nd three rcadeTS sent word that a
Seven lousy letters. l 'n1,ers1t) of Florida gerontologist.
Patnck O'Driscoll, who dad a CQVCJ tt>phen Golant. labeled them
story on the aging Of Ame~a in USA"YEEPIES: Youthful, Ener'gct1c.
Today. referred to them as EldeT-Elderl~ People Involved m Every-
Boomcrs. A writer from Plainview. thing. ...
Texas. said columnist Harry Rose-You don't Sttm to understand.
nthal call~ them MUPPIES: Malutt ptople; this 1s important. Do you
Upscale P~st-Professionals. scnously want to go to the dog ra~s
San Joaquin Hiiis Rd . at MacArthur , __ __
Dally 640.5800
•
~·
E11A w. •·
Bo11Ec1 ,;.;_ L
and hear o'e~ }he loudspeaker. "Will
the person -"'i lost his Yccpie pass
please rcda1m 11 at lhr 1nformat1on
booth''"
Think for a moment how it's gom1
to look 1n a supermukct tabloid wufi
a picture of an agm~ Sean Penn and a
headline. "Gcnupp1e irk orBcing 1n
F1sfibowl, .\ttacks Paparaui."
I made 1t an issue onl) because I
don't kno" a person over 55 today
who does nol blanch when he or he 1s
n:fcrred to as a senior ciuzen. Golden
ager 1s "orse. Sttond SOs I~ too
descn pu ve T .,,,ililftters -oh. olc~.
'h mother hate~ all tho!lt labels.
For a" h1lr I called her a LOH' Boater
because she "as the onh one "ho
could naml." the ('3St cn•r\ \l.ct'k he
d1dn 't ltke that either ·
· You see. the prc~nt group
of .. older people didn't plan The~
v.aat~ around un11I a new aster put
a label on them or a reporter had 14
spaces 10 fill in a headline.
Let's apph ourselves here Tomor-'°" 's dderl~ art going to be wcll-
educatcd. 1nfluenual leaders (one of
the Yuppies told me that). The~ 're
going to haH a lot of pohttcnl clout
becau!lt there will be dost to JO
million of them Thc)'ll ha\e robots
to do their chom and take catt of
them 1f the) bttome .1ncapac1tated.
Thanks to cosmetic su~r; and
better eating habits. !he) 'II look half
their age. The) ·re toosoph1st1cated to
go for Hormone Ba hers or Wnnlde
Bu lcr. H ow about e"·
cnt)' metti1n.gs"
20% OFF ALL POTTERY .
SALE INCWDES:
49 Ms. Lupino so Eris· brother
~Fur
55 Vale
56 Circumscribe
58 Journey
60 Censures
53 Make pleased
2 3 4
14
17
29
32
26 Pettent W>le
27 Locale
30 Boundanes
31 Assayer's CUP
33 Beetle
35 Circle part
,, Ilk 57 Flaps u Baby tendet's
47 Rhymes 59 1(1bostl
48 Basebell stet 61 Motto
SO Supreme Bel'ng 62 Tine: pr ..
51 Lariat &4 Tlt '°' -36 PIMM
37 Escape_
52 Ant as Entf1y
s 7 8 9 10 12 13
by Bii Keane
"I'll take my frog now if he's
good and clean. He doesn't hafta
go into the dryer."
llAIUIADUKE by Brad Anderson
IN THE BLEACHERS by Steve Moore
•
B1L\.'.'.J
GoTIT
0
0
\; .
CARL CAM
liANDLE IT
~ \._
DENNIS THE MENACE
0
0
.\
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• I \ ~
t·I\_ I.'~
by Hank Ketcham
&
0
BLOOM COUNTY
ARLO AND JANIS .
.} SHOE i
t
.. Marmaduke isn't flt to hve with until he's
spilled my first cup of coffee! ..
/("""~
B·ICc
'JUST IGNORE HIM . ~ES JUST OOIN6 T~T
Sf~ HE WAN'TS 50\\E ATTENT\~."
l
PEANUTS by Charles M. Schulz
MV 6RAMPA SA'lS HE
HAS SIX 6RANOC~ILDREN
AND HE SAVS THAT THIS
FALL n.IERE WILL BE ™REE
MORE APPLYING FOR LIFE ..
YOUR GRAMPA ~E PR08A8LY
AAS A WAV GETS IT
WITH WORDS FROM ME
'™£ COMMAAOA>IT AA~~D ~T eJ6'JJ< MNl~ Wi? lV (,()~~ (OM~T~~G~1
r~~
•J JUDGE PARKER
GARFIELD
GAR~IELP. YOUR S NORING KEP"f ME C.JP MA L~ fME NICtH"f
TUllBLEWEEDS
. .
8·~
by Jim Davis
by Tom K. Ryan
i
.. : ...........
.,,
i ..
I
'
•
FUNKY WINKERBEAN
HI , IM GLCR1A DAZf I 1Ht sc.:n,J "'t> B£ ~ HEAD~£~~ ui:arvrtW HIGH!
DOONESBURY
•
by Jimmy Johnson
ALl'MOOOH I ~& VJ~ ~~ llf,'ff
by Jeff MacNeOy
by Harold Le Ooux
I N OT AT FIRST ... BUT HE WAS
CARRYING $ 287 IN CASH! BY COINCIDENCE I THERE WERE FOUR • 50 BILL9
WHICH MATC HED THE SERIAL NU MBERS -,OU
HAO WRITTEN DOWN'
I 'M NOT SlJf\E I WANT1'0 SIGN THE COMPLAll"(T'!
by Tom Batluk
/WT' ~RIENC13 CfM,... I
v i
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~
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I
I
' G i.:..:.:~--L....-~........:~~-"---~ ~__,,;i'-...__........_ ...... _._ ...... __ --'
by Garry Trudeau
Ir Jr l1XJl<S Lii<& A l/SERAL, ACTS ti!(& A UeeRAL, ANt?
SlfJNf)S l/Ke A /.IBERAL I
7HE OOPS Alie PftETTY 600()
THAT IT'S A LINRAL!
riJ{
<;
•• 11 .. '"°°t.~: ~ ............ ..... ·Ill I '"'9111..... • ............ •111
JUIJDN«) -,.,_ -ltl"O -..., ---0
TUESDAY. AUGUST 16. 1988
Twin•' Frank Vlola become• 118Jora' flret 1 ........ W:.Wler. 112.
Four-time Olympa.n ure druga r8111pent with U.8 ........._Ill.
Hey Mike Tyson,
here's someone
with iron hand
Karate has helped
Hydrick overcome
tough background
By KIRK WOLCOTI'
Not much stands in the wa) of
James Hydrick.
Two weeks ago. at the 25th Inter-
national Karate_ Chai:npionships an
Long Beach, the Huntington Beach
resident smashed 89 inches of con-
crete. weighing 3. 700 pounds, wuh
his bare foreann.
His next obstacle may not be quue
so bi&. but it is equally formidable.
Hydnck has challenged Mike Tyson.
the undisputed heavyweisflt cham-
pion of the world . to a boxmg match.
··Tyson has never really been htt,"
said Hydrick, 29. who stands 6-foot-4
and weighs 200 pounds. "I know my
expenise in fighting. I don't care how
many people he has knocked out.··
A ninth-degree black belt an Wu
Shu Gung Fu. as well as an expen in
Tai-Kwon Do and Sbib-K.a1 . Hydnck
has plenty of fighting expenence.
Should Tyson take on the mamal
arts specialist and past golden gloves
champion. Hydrick will donate his
share of the prize money to scholar-
ships for abused and neglected chil-dren. c_.,
Abused and negJccted himself.
Hydrick's life has been about as rock~
as the concrete he demolished in Long
Beach. w
Carolina b} a drug-addicted father
and a stepmother who he claims
.. beat him with horse wh1psand logs."
Following the beating to death of
one brother. H)drick. at the age of six,
began teachtng h1mselfmanial aru in
an efTon to sa \ e his other brother and
<.mer from f unher abuse.
··1 "as so detennmed to learn to
protect m~ fam1l}. that l naturally
caught on qu1ckl) ... he said.
\.\ h1le his mania! ans sk!Us 1m-
pr0\ ed 1'6p1dl}. his hfe d1dn't get an)
ell1er He "a" bounced from lostei
home to foste r home. tncludmgscven
\ears 1n a South Carolina mental
ins11tu1e. "here he says his h)per-
sens111' ti) "as m1sd1agnosed.
tk \I.as 1mpnsoned from 1985 to
last Januar. 1n outh Carolina and
L'tah for a "·cnmt> I did not do.'' In
prt\On he claims 10 ha ve been beaten.
1onured and kept 1n solitary confine-
ment for nearl) 18 months.
His records show that he escaped
149 11mc-s from prisons in South
Carolina and Georgia. includtng
thm: 11mes from death row. He was
finall~ -released through a federal
coun order. after taktng seven guards
ho-;tage Toda} he 1s neither on
proba11on or parole.
His feats ma .. sound almost too
much to behe\e:but believe 11 or not.
'1nuall~ e' el) thing 1s documented.
Through 11 all. H'dnck has matn-
tained a pos1t1,e attitude and
outlook." h1ch he attributes 1n a great
pan 10 mamal ans. Hts latest feat.
breaking concrete. serves as a release
'ah e 10 get a"a} from all the pain in
his past
Jamee Hydrick ebowa ·the form which keepe him .•.
Born 1n Passaic. N.J .. Hydnck
points to records which show his
mother dumpedJum in a trash can at
the age of one. He was raised in South
"It rela\e me and lets all the anger
come ou1:· said H)dnck. who med1·
tates and does 1some1nc e'<eretses
(Pl eue He HYDRJCK/83)
............. _,..... ___
th in king he wants lllke Tyeoa lD hcntnt rtq.
All Trojans are waitirig for is fuse to be lit
Peete & Co . ha ve more than ju st talent to
d~a l w it h in SC's quest for '88 campa ign
LO o\NGELE. -The buildup 1s
such that an~ 1h1ngks<, than a Pac-10
champ1onsh1p. Rose Bo" I ~nh and
'1ctof") and a fin1-;h among the
nat1on'sl'111c in college foo tball\ Top
I 0 1s going to be one' Cf). big
letdo~ n.
• .\ 12 ·page boo I.. is bet ng publish·
t'd for rekase -.\ Cenwn ofTro\
• ..\campusralh forthecarh-·
\Ca'>on big one-Oklahoma. "'•II be
'taged on Sept. 22
•.\II this. as "ell as Rodne\ Pet>te
and I bother returning stanei-s. and a
lOach "ho kno,,s ho" 10 bnng his
team ah<>' e the compet111on. gi' t'S
outhcrn Cal faithful reason to bt"-
hl'' t" that th1~ indeed 1s the Year of the
TroJan
Roe ER
CllLSOI
SPORTS COLUMNIST
L'\(. \\hen 11 hosts Brian Bos~ onh
l nl\ ers11' from 'orman 0 1..la· ho ma ·
\\ 1th1)UI \\ ebc;ta thl· T rOJan~ ha' e
sophomorr on Loci.. .. , ood. "ho is
capahk. and .\aron Emj nuel a \On
.. , hl' as a prrp "a<. b1 lkd as a po1en11al
Hl't"-man T roph' "inner
That's the <;1t ua11on at the l 'n1' a-
sit) ofSouthern Cali fornia. "here
rt>gardkss of!>omc hoks. the att11ud1?
1s that this 1<; the Yearofthc TroJan
• ..\ 25-,earrcunionofl ' Cs fi,e
national t:ha mp1onsh1p team'i of
I 962-63(foo1ball. baseball. men's
1cnni'i. men·ssw1mm1ngand mt'n·s
trael..11sschcduled for Oct ". thc
n1gh1 before C's Homecoming
Game, .. 1th Oregon.
\., t'tir Pl'l'tt• ..\.Co .. " h 1ch "111 be
pral'llt tngat l (I fro m .\ug 22-2-.
tht• onl~ thorn in the game appear; to
tx·th1?,cratl·ha1 ta1lba I... although
thl'op11on 'l'ne-; .. ,h1ch Peete\\111
Jtrl't't ma\ 1al..t• a lot ofheat off of 11
·,l', l' \\ t>bster. the ofl-lnJured
tail bat I.." hmt• mor;1 rert'nt setbad.
\\ ac. in tht·e~rh \tagcs oithe 17-IJ
eutr;. as "ell as running figure eights.
tht'n plant1nganddrt\ ing olT
ErrJnuel.a0-2 225-poundJUnaor
\\homa' beatfullball.. a\\\l'llac,
1a1IOjl 1..: depending on the s11ua11on
ha~ madt· enough m1,1al..l·, l'n the
ti1.·ld 11umbltn~1and uffthc li1."1J
1 punch1ng1 w till a chaptt>r
Tht" ho1 wm came" ht•n he" a'
\U\penckJ fur a~ t'ar aiil'r the pun1..h-
tlUt of former Fountain\ Jlle~ High
q.:irle1 "ht•n at a pan~ Southern Cal's athktK program
turns H.lO)earsold this cptt·mber
and the schrduk ore .. en ts ofTthc fidd
nvals the great l'\J)l'Cta11ons on the
field .
•The Beach Bo} s ~ 111 pro .. 1de a 6().
m1 nuteconct•rt following the Cal
game on No'. 5.
' 1cton o'erl(C L..\ No .. ember 21
..,as torn 1tgamen1s 1n his left leg.
rl.'main<,a b1gqut·s11on.
Thi.'\ had hoped anhoscop1c sur-
gcr) rould !>olve the wound qu1ckl~.
.hut 1t wa not 10 be and Webster "ent
under all tht' l..n1fcs.
··\\ e reall~ ha' c 10 pla} 11 b~ car ..
-.aid l S( ht•ad coach Lam m1th
"\\I.' Jon'! \\JOI lO pla~ htm until he\
rt·aJ, ...
\\ l'h'11.'r 'a1J hl' \\ant~ to se\.' some
pla~ 1ng 11ml· 1n thc upenl·r al Boston
.. oml' people lool.. a1 mt• a•\11 I m
an a\\ ful per~on:· \late' Emanut•I
.. But the people" htl l..no~ me
undcr<.tJnd and <>a'.· .\aron. 1ha1\
not' ou •In kss than'" o \.l.l'cks I o\ug. 27 I a
banquet on the floor of the Lo'>
Angeles Coliseum will honor">ome
l.OOOformerTroJan foo tball pla}ers.
• ~nd the two Big Games. LfCL.\
and Notre Dame. are 1n the JrOJam1·
oacb ard. The Rose Bowl 1s the sue of
the l 1Cl:....\gameand a week later
:-.iotrl' Dame' isllS the Coliseum.
He missed spnng practice and he
has )Ct to reall) put the test to 1t w11h
C <'•llce.et\l'PI I 1and hopdulh stan again~ 1 S1anfllrd !Sept. I 0) lfh1s time
<,Chl·duk I\ l'\ en dOSl'. lhal \\OU Id
ml'an hn' ould bncad~ for •pt 24
"hen thee)cc;ofthe nauon \\111 bepn
Em:inuel ha~ a'" ha nee to erase a lot
(Please He USC/83)
Trade rumors spur.
Dodgers in 1-0 win
Guerrero-Tudor
poss ibility places
game in back seat
•Guerrero 1rade7 See B4.
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Maybe it
just takes news of an impending trade
to spur the Dodgers' pitching staff to
victory.
As word spread that Los Angeks
may trade power hmer Pedro Guer-
rero to St. Louis for pitcher John
Tudor. Tim Belcher took his fifth
consecuti ve dcc1S1on and combined
with Je~ Orosco for a six-hi tter that
gave the Uodgers tbe1r I 3th shutout
of the season and a 1-0 win over the
San Francisco Giants.
Franklin Stubbs. who wo uld take
over at first ba~ if the deal soes
through. hit a fourth-tnning sacnfice
fly to drive in the Dodgers' only run.
He got the stan Monday night after
Guerrero took himself out of the
lineup.
The .chedale HOME
Tonighl-Philadete>hla , 7:3S e>.m.
Aug. 17-Philadell>hla, 7:35 o.m.
Auo. 18-Philadele>tlia, 1:05 o.m.
Auo. 19-Monlreal, 7:35 o.m.
Auo. 2<r-Monlreal, 7:05 D.m.
Aug. 21-Montrtal. 1:05 e>.m.
Auo. 22-New York, 7:35 e>.m.
"All oames on IC.ABC 1190).
them out . he'll keep going out there."
Orosco. who earned his ~venth
sa' e. reured all fi ve batters he faced.
He was 1n a much better frame of
mmd aftt>r this appearance than he
was earlier in the week. ~hen his
"Belcher pitched superbly and
made the run stand up,'" Los Angeles
Manager Tommy Lasorda said. "And
as Ion~ as Orosco can keep gcttin~
working relationship wt th Lasorda . ,,, w • .., m
(Pleue eee DODOERS/84) Olanta' Kem llltchell dl.ee. bat le late u DodCen' Alfredo Grtmn awaJb the tllrow.
rI'ime finally catches up with 40-year-old Pl'unkett
OXNARD(AP)-ThccomcbAck attempt
of 40-year-old quanerback Jim Plunkett came
to an end Monday when the Los A~les ~idcrs released the 1970 Heismah Trophy
winner.
Plunkett. who was the oldest active player
in the NFL, learned of his rclea~ after breakfast
Monday when first-)earcoach Mike Shanahan.
nearly five ~ears )ounacr than Plunkett told
him be didn l fit into the Raiders' plans.
"Jim Plunkett was OM of the ~test playen of all time," hanahan said, ~
aren'tcnouah ad.Jectives todcscnbcwhat he has
ICCOmPhshcd and meant for this orpn1ntion.
tw•s what I consider a pnme eumplt of what I
would call a 'man's man.'"
Plunkttt compewel 1n bis last offiaal pmc
for the ltatders in December of 1916 when.
Clelpiee 1 tom rotator ('uff. he finished out the
l
season as the first-string quan,erback.
He had surgery on his 1hrowin1 arm in
Februal) 1987 and didn't play last season.
spending what's turned out to be his 17th and
final NFL year on inJured rcxrve.
Plunkett 1ot his last chantc to make the
Raiders io the SCC'Ond half of Saturday's 27-17
prcscason loss to Dallas. but he apptaml
tentative and uncomforuble 10 the dub~s MW
offenic.
He completed 8-of-19 puses for 80 )ardt
W1th one 1nteTt"Cpt1on and a k>na pin of 18
yards. But the Ratders offense netted only 'H
yards 1n ~ halhnd dtdn't KO~.
"That wu no t,.. shoct." ..,untnt said,
how1na liult emotion. "I Just dtdn't thank 1t
""ould be tbasquick. h 's unfonuna~ bca~ I really wantird lO bt a pan of ttus club."
Asked ifbt planned lO punuc any pc>111ble
'
('are-er options else" here 1n the NFL, Plunlett
laughed and said. ··t don't think there's too
much demand for ~'ear-old quanerbacks:·
Plunkett didn't ph1\ 11i the Raiders"
preS('ason opener. a .4-10 lo s 10 San FranCtSro.
··J1m wasnotgom11obcmour o. I orour
No. ~ quanerback rotation.' hanahan said
Monda~ ··Therefore. we v.erc goma to go an
another d1f'('('t1on.
"Jim came mtocamp 1n C\C'elknt shape, a
&ood lS ~OU t"an PQS\lbl} l\k (m term ofl ht
endurance and arm stf"fntth. But an~t1me
'ou·~ 1n a camp that throv.-s as much as •e-do.
it's hard 10 ma1anta10 the 'el«1t) that )OU ha'e at a ~ou•r aac. Ht lost a httlt np on the
football, and that v.'ls o~ of~ rehOn he v.111
not v.ort '" our o. I or o. 2 rotation."
In hit NF\. rarttr, P1un\ett had 1.9'43
compkteon 1n l. 0 1 attempts for lS. 1 nrds
"'llh 164 tou~hdownf. and IQ mteTttpt19n!I
He quanerb3d. th~ Ra1de'"' to a V-1 q record in
5' rt"gUlaMca n stan' and an 8-~ mar~ in
postscason umes.
~s~ed about the emot1on'I of being
rt'lc:aM"d b' the Raider\ at1rr 10 'ears v.uh the
cluh. Plun\.ett said. -b' 1ou J\. I v.ould rather
be here I 1u t came 10 J.l'C It inothcT hot.
"But l ha'c no rtgrcts about m\ 10 )Urs
herc The' v.crc a lot better than m first ~vc:n
lat -..:cw ngland and San frutasco)."
P1un"kc11 J01ncJ th( Raiders •n ptembrr
JQ, 1f\cr prnd1nathc 1976and 1cn je&Wns
"1th tht <l~B •
Ht ~-a the fint man -~ed •n the 1971
?'Fl draft b) 'c-· E~~lfttt wtnnu-a ~
Hea man Troph~ dunna his ttnior ar at
• unford.
(Pleue eee Pl..tJN&&TT/M) ..
J eff Brown
Being No. 2
at No. 1 can
bedile1nma
By ROGER CARL.SON
OllM~NolSIMI
LO -\:"-GELES -JeffBrown. the
l.000-' ard ru her for Corona del Mar
High 10 IQ 3. has probabl) rushed for
another 1.000 'ards for the Uni ver-
Sll\ of uthem California.
The on1' hnch in that is the fact JUst
.30 of those 'ards have been ~forr an
audience. the rest has been on the
prac11ce-lield on the campus of
Southern Cal.
..\ tnbute to perseverance. the 5-
foot-I 0, ~I ().pound senior has spent
most of his college football career on
the c;1dehnes or on the pracuce field,
but the role of a backup hasn't put a
damper on anvthmg.
··There have been a lot of ups and
do""n!t:· he admits. "but you can
al"a~s find something pos1t1H' and I
kno"' "'hen I look back at m) days at
L I can fed good about myself."
Bro" n. whose-most memorable
efTon at Corona del Mar was a night
"hen he ru hed for 1I3 \ards on I 9
c-ame-s in a ~ -:!6 nctof)· Capistrano
\ allt'\. ha been fo~ to sett~ for
JU t one 11-}ard pun against Stan-
ford "'hen a sophomore as a personal
h1ghltg.ht at l 'SC
Ho"e'er. c-ons1denng he v.alked
on at l "1thout a scholarship after
one fall at (,olden \\est College. tht
re"ard ha\e bttn mo~ than what
appcarc; on the surfa~
He had alread . passed up potcntiaJ
rlolarsh1ps at Ca1 P-Ol)' San Luis
Obi po. Cal tatc orthridac and
Long Beach tate.
Ht' "'a evcntuall) granted a schol-
arship at SC after s1ttm1 out Llie
19 5 campaign. then was pan of bad~to-back bowl benbs at the
nrus Bowl under Coach Ted Tollntt
and tht Ro Bowl under Coac h
Ull'l) mnh.
Bro"'n could ha' c ~ttlcd for tcu
and probabh sttn far mott J)la)•"I
umc. but tht dcos1on was made with
bt& 11mc footbaJI a pnonty. ·
"I lu t -A'lntrd 10 pla)' amouc ~
be L • rtason Bro~.
H1 numbtnartfarfrom 1mpou111
Y.htlc at U
a ~ ht c:attied tiUf tunes IPlnM s.nfoftt far l'I,...,;
and a yar la1tr lllia ;..ial' -
ntt1H biiat ..... ,. -...
cama. tk .. -.. kldt°"1tbf12,... ....
ltdoaa"l .............
(Pl
Games will put test to U.S. athletes' Seouls
This time everyone will
be there in track. field
pole 'auhing's 20.foot bamer and the first
Soviet to win the event in the Olympics?
Ed"in Moses -Who won an un-
prc edented three gold medals in the 400 buries
between the 1976 and 1988 Olympics?
with the United States, the Soviet Union and
East Germany all competina. the medal count will be watched almost as closely as the
individual performances.
100. 200 or lonuump tWlct.
Lewis will begin his quest for aold in the
100, then competr in the 200 and Ions jump,
and complctr an attempt (or anotMr sweep 1n
the 400-meter relay, in which he will anchor the
U.S. team. By BERT ROSENTHAL Mary Decker Slaney -What American
"-Oman had to beat her own bad luck before
finally beating her opponents for an Olympic
medal?
Most ttcently. the three met in the 1987
World Championships at Rome. where East
Germany dominated. .. Anything l do in these Games will be
historic: Lewis said. "I have the capability o(
winning the 100, 200and lon1jump. J won't say
I will win them. but l can."
.......... .._,,.....,.,., The East Germans won the most medals.
31; the most golds. I 0: the most medals by
women. 23, and the most solds by women, six.
If the Seoul Olympics were a game show
ca tegory and everything went according to pl~n. the answers and questions might go like
this:
Florence Griffith Joxner -What Ameri-
C'an. known for her sizzling outfits as well as
umes, became the first woman since 1972 to
win both the JOO-and 200-meter dashes?
The Soviet Union finished second in totaJ
medals with 25. but the United States was
set'ond in golds with nine. The American men
also had the most medals. 13, and the most
golds. six, in their total of 19 medals.
Probably the biggest obstacle in bis path to
another fo ur golds is the sulJen Johnson.
John son is the world record-hol~er in 'he
I 00. Johnson is ranked No. I in the world. And
Johnson has beaten Lewis fi ve consecutive
times. although he still trails their series 8.-6.
Carl Lewis-Who was th e first sprinter to
successfully defend his Olympic cham-
pionship?
Daley Thompson -Who became the only
man to win the decathlon for three straight
Olympics? While the medals table will be closely
scrutinized. the individual performances will
come under a more powerful microscope.
Ben Johnson -Who. as the "World's
Fastest Human." spoiled Carl Lewis' attempt
to win four gold medals for a second straight
Olympics?
East Germany and the Soviet Union -
What countries finished 1-2 in medals? Puull~s abound· for track and field com-
petition beginning Sept. 23 and running
through the final day of the Games. Oct. 2. with
one off day. Sept. 27.
Occupying center stage will be Lewis.
Onl)' he. Jesse Owens in 1936 and Alvin
Kranzlein in 1900, have won four track and
field gold medals in one Olympics. No one has
won four twice in a row and no ooc has won the
··t am not afraid of Carl Lewis." said
Johnsoh. who showed he had fully recovered
from a tom let\ hamstring that sjdehncd him for
thrtt months by winning the Canadian Olym-
pic trials in a wmd-aided 9. 90 seconds. Jackie Joyner-Kersce -Who was the
superwoman who won bolh the heptathlon and
the longjump?
Sergei Babka -Who was th~ first to break
"People have a short· memory and lhey
This being the first 01'.'.'mpics since 1976
56~~ar-old 's d&Y-
in the sun is one
he'd rather forget
From Tbe Associated Press
NEWCASTLE. England -Balding. m
bespectacled building worker Ted Adcock
became a media sensation Monday after
grabbing the world's fastest woman.
American sprinter Flottnce Gnffith-Joyncr at a track
meet.
Branded in some racy tabloids as a middle-aged
mauler. AdC'ock. 56, told fnends and workmates,
ho\\ ever. he was simply after an autograph.
Gnffith-Jo)'ner, tbe world I 00-meter rccord-
holder. was preparing for her race al the Dairy Crest
meet at 9a1eshead. ':lonheast Eng.land. on Sunday
when mil hons of TV viewers saw Aacock leap a barrier
and approaC'h the Amencan athlete. who 1s famous for
her figure-hugging trackwcar. He was seen to put his
arms around her and, according to one newspaper.
"pressed his bodv to hers in a passionate embrat'C."
While officials manhandled Adcock away, Grif-
fith-Joyner appeared agitated by the incident. She went
on to win her race.
Back at work on a building site Monday. Adcock.
descnbed as sh~ and quiet by his 85-year-old mother.
Hett}. dodged reporters.
One of his C'o-workers. who did not wish to be
identified. said: .. He's very embarrassed by the whole
affair. He says that all he was after was her autograph
and people have got the wrong idea.
"Ted·!. a mild mannered son of bloke and just
wants to forget abo ut the whole thing:· the co-worker
said.
Quote of the day
Ho11t•ard Twitty, the 6-foo t-5. 21 0-pound
profe s1onal golfer. asked "h> he never pla~ed
football· "fkcausc I alwa}s felt I'd hke 10 keep all
m) blood inside m} bod>."'
Lafleur wants to be a Ktng
LO .\NGELE -Gu)' Lafleur. the
Montreal Canad1ens· all-time leading
scorer. has requested an invitation to train
with the Los .\ngcles Kings at the Kings'
conditioning camp at ViC'tona. Canada.
Lafleur adm111cd that Wayne Gretzky was hi s
main reason for cons1denng the Kings.
··LA "'as m~ first phone call." Lafleur said
through h1!. agent's office 1n Montreal on Monday. "It's
a good pl acf to pla} especially now that Wayne is
there ...
"I don't kno" 1t "c'n: read ) to commit ourselves:·
Kings general manager Rog1e Vachon admitted
Monda' .. .\· gu' lrke 1h1~ "ould be e'\pensive and we can onl~ go so rar budget-WISC. We'll talk to them later this
week ··
Latleur. '6. led the Canad1ens to four straight
Stan le~ (up champ1onsh1ps 1n the late 1970s. He was
twice the 'a11onal Hocke) League's most valuable
pla~er and 1~ 1ts1ed as th e NH L's 10th all-time leading
scorer
Lafleur said he had been thinking about coming
back 10 the spon He retired in 1984 in his 14th season
wtth the 'J H L Lafleur retired two months into the
season in an ongoing dispute over pla ying time with
then-coach Jacque-. Lemaire
New Lora test show no drug•
LO .\NGELE -.\ sl'cond drus test ml
on WBC ban1am"e1ght champion Miguel
Lora of Baranqu1lla. Colombia has re-
vealed that no amphetamines were in his
~stem. the asmtant chief ex~cutive ~fficer of the
\.. alr forn1a tale .\thlet1c Commission sard Monday.
The test result 1s different than one taken on Lora
O!l Aug . .J. th ree da~ s afler Lora successfully defended
his C'hamp1onsh1p against Albert Davila of Pomona at
the Forum in nearb) Inglewood.
The test taken .\ug. 4 re vealed amphetamines and
methamphetamincs 1n the system of the 27-year-old
boxer. _
Jose Sula1man. pres1dent of the WBC. has taken
the 1n,cst1gatt.on out of the hands of the State Athletic
Commission. ac(Ordtng to Marty Denkio. the assistant
C'hicf e:\ccuu"e offiC'er of the California group.
ula1man has said he will take into consideration
the result of the second test. performed at the UCLA
Medical Center. Depkin said.
-l~ttf.];i!Uiiil:£iii:tiil
Nagilng injuries bug Rams T • t 'W J' • }
u1sartt'e 1nj unc!. are givi ng Rams -. -WIDS _y _Jo a ~~~~~ John Robinson a nuisance head-[II] b fl
Rookk drfcnSt\C end Mike Piel ecomes rst (neC'k). rookie safetv ~tho~Newman (shoulder).
fullback Tim T)rrell (hamstring). linebacker Mark t g • 19th Jerue (knee) ?nd running back G'harles White (ribs) all 0 a1n m1~sed practice Monda} at Cal State Fullenon.
All are due back soon. but each day out for all but
White' huns the prcsea!.on progress the Rams are
hoping to make. ·
.. We're anxious to get 'em on
the fi eld.'' Robinson said.
.. Jerue's a ital pan of our defense
and "'edesperatel y need Newman
on thl' field so he can get goin~
.. T~rrell'sjust had a homble
camp with hamstring problems
and "e need Piel out there, too."
The Rams. 1-2 this summer.
\.\Ill break camp after their fourth
preseason game Saturday night
Robinson against th e Houston Oilers.
The' ·11 resu ml' practice ne\t Monda} at their year-
round fac1l t1\ 1n Anaheim.
··This 1 ·a '11al "eek for a lot of players:· Robinson
said. ··w c·11 be making cut s later in the week (in
an11cipa11 on of t he cu t 10 60 next Tuesda} ).
..\Ve ha' ea lot of dcc1s1ons to make. Not that many
areas are clear C'u t at 1h1s point ...
One \Ctcran "ho apix•ars to have made progress
dunng ca mp ts fullback Buford McGee. With Mike
Guman s1delrned after undergoing knee surgery and
rookie Robert Dl'lp1no banged up. McGee has moved
into thl' ~tarting role. ··He'.-..pla~ 1ng likl' the gu~ \.\e thought we had when
"e made the trade (sending Barry Redden to San Diego
in 1987)." Robrn!.on s~ud.
··He''> II kl· Gu man Hl'S a good football player who
ma kl''> pla~ ~ ·· .
Rob1n'ion nl'o said that guard Mike SC'had. 1he
team\ pre' wush d1sa ppo1n11ll'g first-round draft
choice from I ">!'.lb. has talen advantage ofh1s preseason
pla~ mg 11me
··Hl'' pla~nl ''ell through three games." Robinson
'31d .. He\' learl~ one ofihe mos t 1mpro,ed pla}ers tn
camp··
Tiger Joe Walcott dead at 85
PHIL \DELPH I.\ -Joe .. Tiger Joe"
V. alcott. a bt)\er and tra iner "ho trained
1hrel' \\Orld he?') "eight C'hamp1ons. has
died. He "as Ii).
\\ akoll. a lrg ht\.\etght. bo~ed about 200 fights
bt'.fore he became a 1ra1ner 1n the 1930s.
He tra ined Joe Fra11cr earl\ m Frazier's career.
JerSe\ Joe Walcott. whose real name wasArnold Cream
and ~·ho ma \ ha,·e taken his fighting name from his
trainer. and trn1c Terrell.
Tiger Joc Walcott died Sunday.
It wasn ·1 clear whether Jersey Joe took the name of
hi s trainer or ano1hcr lcgendar) Joe Walcott. a three-
11me ''cltcr\\e1gh1 champ from theJ om of the century.
said Tiger J<>e:s son. Ra} mond Walcott.
Jerse} Joe lost his hea' >weight title to Rocky
Marciano 1n I 951 . and Terrell was stripped ofhis title in
I% 7 b' Muhammad ..\h.
For man~ of his fighter!.. Walcou was a stem father
figure
"He tou~ht them ho\.\ to lrve outside the ring."
Ra' mo nd Walcott said ... He'd lend }OU money. He
brought ktd'i out of thc street. He was a teacher. and they
got guidance from him··
Television. radio
TELEVISION
4:30 p.m. -BASEBALL: Angels at New
York Yankees. Channel 5.
4:30 p.m. -BASEBALL: Atlanta at Pit-
tsburgh. TB .
4:30 p.m. -BASEBALL: Chicago Cubs at
Cincinnati. WGN.
6:30 p.m. -WOMEN'S VOLLEYBALL: Pro
Bea ch tournament . from Hermosa Beach
(taped). ESPN.
7 p.m. -BOXING: Frankie Randall vs.
Santos Chardona in a 10-round superlightweigbt
bout. from Inglewood. Prime Ticket. SelecTV.
7:30 p.m. -BASEBALL: New York Mets at
an FranC'isC'O. WOR.
7:30 p.m. -BASEBALL: Philadelphia at
Dodgers. Z Channel.
RADIO
4:30 p.m -BASEBALL: Angels at New
York Yankees KMPC(710).
7 p.m. -BASEBALL: Montreal at San
Diego. KFMB (760).
7:30 p.m. -BASEBALL: Philadelphia at
Dodge~. KAB (790).
WEDNESDAY TELEVISION
I p.m. -MEN'S GOLF: PGA The In ter-
• national. from Castle Rock. Colo .. ESPN.
Minnesota pulls to within 8
games ofWest-leadingA's
From Tbe Associated Press
Before Frank Viola chases Cy Young, he wants to
C'hase the Oakland Athleucs.
Viola became the first 19-game winner in the major
leagues and John Moses went 4-fo r-4 with a tiebrealuog
home run in the seventh inning Monday night as the
Minnesota Twj.ps beat the Detroit Tigers 2-1 in Detroit.
The victor) moved the Twins to within eight games
of the Athletics in the Amencan League West. someth ing
Viola \.\ants to C'OnC'Cntrate on for the time being.
"That (Cy Young Award) doesn't mean anything
right now." Viola said. "I'll take it at the end of the season.
I fl look baC'k and Isa}. 'Hey. I did prttty good,' then that
will C'Ome 1ntO play.
"The most imponant thing we ever achieved was the
"'orld champ1onsh1p last year. We know how to do it. I'm
JUSI ti') '"f to _gi ve ourselves a C'hance again. All the
individua stuff will be great -after the season."
Viola. 19-4. gave up seven hits and lowered his
.\mencan League-leading earned run average to 2.36. He
struC'k out seven and walked one in his sixth complete
game.
The Twins beat the AL East-leading Tigers for the
!>l\th time in seven games this season. with Viola going
3-0. Last )Car. Minnesota defeated Detroit in five games.
in the pla}offs.
Mo!.es' solo home run. hts second of the season. came
"1th l\\O outs 1h the seventh inning against Walt Terrell,
6-10. Mose also had three singles.
In Monda) 's other .\meriC'an League•games:
Royals 1%, Rangers 3: In-Kansas Citv. Willie Wilson
tnplcd and htt l\.\O doubles and George Breu had a two-
ru n homer as thl' Kansas City Royals routed the Texas
Range~.
Dann' Tartab"11. Frank Whtte and Kun Stillwell
eaC'h hit '"·o-run doubles. The Royals had six doubles in a
l 1-hll auark. -
Charlrl' Le1brand1. 7-11 . ga ve up seven hits in seven
innings.
Paul K1lgus. 9-11 . walked Stillwell and Pat Tabler in
the fi~t inning and both scored on Tanabull's oppostte-
fidd double.
Wilson led off the third with a double and Stillwell
walked again. Wilson advanced on a forceout and scored
on· Ki Igus· wild pitch. After Tabler walked. Craig
McMurtl') relieved Ki Igus and walked Tartabull. loading
1hc bases.
Brewers~. Orioles I: In M~lw~ukee. Ted~y Higuera
pitched fi ve-hit ball for eight mnmgs and Jim AdduC'i
dcli,cred a two-run double. leading the Milwaukee
Brewers over the Balti more Orioles.
Higuera. 9-8. struck out nine -including five
straight at one pomt - and walked none. Dan Plesac
struC'k out two m the ninth to earn his 28th save.
The Brewers scored three runs in the fourth off Jose
Bautista. 6-11. He allowed five hits and struck out seven.
Higuera gave up a thir~-inning single to Joe Orsulak.
who was thrown out steahne as Brad y Anderson struck
out. The left-hander then retired 11 straight batters.
In the National League:
Astros 7, Padres 3: ln Houston. Gerald Young and
Terr) Puhl ~1t two-run singles m the seventh inning as
Houston ralhed.
Nolan R)an. 9-10. won forthe first time in four stans
stn.c<; July 27. He allow~d nine hits in seve!l innings.
stnk1ng out two and walking two. Danny Darwin finished
with two inni ngs of two-hit relief.
With the score tied 3-~. Denny Walling opened the
* * Brewers 4, Ori06H 1 Twins 2. Tl9er$ l
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Houaton third baseman Denny WalllnC at-
tempta to make the play and a•oJd a col-
llalon u San Dte&o'• Roberto Alomar.
1Udea aafely Into thlrd Monday night.
seventh with a single off Andy Hawkins. 10-10. Rafael
Ramirez singled .. crai$ Biggi.o sacnficed and pinch-hitter
Craig Rl'ynolds was intenuonally walked. loading the
bases. Braves 4, Pirates 3: In Piusburgh. Ken Oberkfell
doubled and srnred in the sixth. then put Atlanta in the
lead "1th a 1wo-run tnplc in the seventh inning as. the
Bra"e rall ied and beat the Pittsburgh Pirates.
Charlie Puleo. 3-3. pitC'hed 4 2-3 scoreless innjngs
allO\\ 1ng four hits and striking out fi ve. Ed Olwine got th~
final out for h1!1 first sa' e since Aug. 21 last year. also
aga1m1 P111sburgh.
Bob Walk. 11 -9. lost his fifth consecuti ve stan since
Jul} 20. allo"' 1ng SI\ h11s in 6 1-3 innings as Pittsburgh fell
51: game bt'.hind idle N:t11onal League East leader New
York.
.\nd~ Van Sl~kc "as 2-for-4 w11h a double. triple. two
stolcn base and an R Bl.
P111sburgh led 3-:! in the seventh when Terry Bloeker
and Ron Gant singled and Oberkfell greeted reliever
-"tom s Madden "'llh a t"'o-run triple. Madden wcu
making ht!I first NL appearance sint'C being brouJbt up
unda} from Buffalo of the Class Amencan Association.
* * Br1ves 4, Plr1tes 3 Astros 7, P1dres 3
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MSr1n1vc • o 'o WtllmftJD 1 o o o the stretch and battling for ~:';'.n~: ,' o1 :00 :.!:~~~" n n command in the drive to 8•o••'°" • 11 o LOw..,c • 1 'o win the$48.000 turffeature .. _,,,, • 0 1,
TN!> is> a , T-• u u 11 11 race by a head at Del Ma r
T•ul k•• ..., ""'=' 011 1.._ 1 Monday.
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T-1 SJ A-U,ICM Up.
CLIP &
SAVE ----------------~ Co11put1rized : Kimball -expected to decide on his diving future today
·~£Only
'44** Front & Rear Wheels
Wh •• I lli•n-enf I INDIANAPOLIS (AP) -Bruce Kimball is "We haven't ~amed anytbina new," she said. release resuits ot blood-alcohol tests on Kimball
.. Ill I expected to announce Tu~a>'.. ~hcther be. ~ill :'At this point, thcjudic~ process will have to run saying that would be p~ofcssionally inHDOnsible'.
s.1 usttr. ~Mid toe 1o tuet lhllulact•m s soecilt· I ~hdraw ffro1m U.S. Olympic divma compet111on Its count and. dfpendinJ on the outcome, U.S. However. the charges mdicate Kimballrs-blood-
utlOll$ _.. rdwt11Clfll . ..., ~11111 Of tdtustioe ~ausc .o • ~ohol-related. mans~auahtcr charaes Diving will a(t ~rdinaJy." alcohol level exettded 0.10 percent.
tlltu$t '""· ..,.,..,,.. °" ...... 11pe I filed aptnst him Monday 1n Florida. Mclau.ahlin .said it was unlikely the sanc-•CMwtttes. r1111K. liCllf tr.Us. 4.., t1t1wt ftklts •lld I BarbMclauahlin,assistantexecutivedjrector tionina bocfy would have additional comment K!mball fac~5 1 m~ximum senten~ of •U ~s ,_.,,.. Mlc"'*son st,_. correcllOft "''" for U.S. Divina 10(., said ~mball schedu~ a before K.imblll's news conference. yea~ in pnson 1f convicted on all five counts.
Re¥...._ IM lflllallatloft titra. ~ ,....,., I news conference for this~· Kimblll. lS. fKn (~ stemmi.na from an Ai:ra11nment is scheduled foT Aua. 26 befott
UlllM _..., .. I .... • I.•-.,.......,. I . K.imblll, the country s 1984satvermedahtt. is .ua. I trafficacadcnt thatkft twotttn-qersdead H1llst>orough C1rcu1t Ju~ Harry Ltt Coe. ~H. I t.nlnd11napohsfortheAua.17-210lympkdjvina andsaxo\hen1njuredin8randon,Fla. Kimball is widely considered to be second
j I tnals at the Indiana University Natatonum. KJmball admitted drink.ii• at leat four been only to two-time Olym~1c aold medalist Gres •••••t• ''X" .liilu •H•/'fEA• The pract1tt areas 11 tht Natatorium art before the acaden~ which occurred when hjs Loupn1s 10 platform d1vma. The former Univer· restnctcd, and K.imbeJI could not be rnched for JC)Ced1na(trcruhed1n10acr'O'IW!atapopularteeft. sity of M1ch•pn star finished StCOnd to Loupn.is
rommeiu .Monday_ llt MfteOu'-abeNl"l-~ said. 10 ptatfonn and e1ahtb 10 &he &b,..mewt
Md.1u1tllin said U.S. Oivillf could not The Hallsboroulb SCI ie Anomey's office in spnnaboard event at the recent U.S. Oivi,. ~mtnt on the ctaa., filed lpUllt ltjmb&ll Tampa. filed 1n information Monday daarajna Cbamp1onships in Irvine
un11UK lbt VoUP h8d ~ ~·IO conftnn ~mball wub two counts of clrivint under the Kimbell won the t.1lvcr medal 1n p&atfonn
indtotndtf?tly lht c:oun KtJOn !•Tampa. . 1nnucnce-mamla•ter, ~ ~ felony, div1n1a1&he 1984 Olym.,.cOamn in LoaA..-. " .._ She said, hOwtver, tllat Kim..U has tamed and thttit counts Of dnvnlJ under tlie mfturnct afttt conuna t.ck from a 1981 car accidnd ill AM •~ rialn to compete and ,tblt y.s. Divint has "° wilh tttious pcnoaal nvurin. • tbinMlearft Arbor. Medt He broke alt 'hit fiall .,.,..._. _ ~~· . would d1squal1ty him becaute or the felony. lq in that crash and had to haw his ....... Iran~ lnddent. ' Stlt~ An~ Bill James bl:I dedined IO rtmovcd. ·-·~ '
I
4
Orange Coast OAILY PILOT /Tuesday, Augutt 16, 19N •
Four-time Olympian hurlstlrug charges
She claims track and field-
stars submerged fn dru s ·
quane~ at lolorado Spnngs. Colo ··1 don't
lno"' what 5he's tailing about ..
mllh a member of ever) l:. OI~ mp1c
team smce 1976. said 17 track and field
:.11hktes tested po 1t1vc for banned drugs in the
1984 01, mp1c Tnals and none "a" punished
.\lthough t>-1 U athlete'> tailed the lr\l!t none
\lo 11l lx-\U\l)C.'nd .. '<l ~·au-.< thl'\ tC\IC'd l><)\111 \ l'
for \llmulants contained an o'cr-the,oun1e1
ml.'d1callohs Or IO hl•rbal le3'> l S(X !lpol..C'>·
man 1\.111..e \toran ..aid hearing!> dctermanrd
that thf u!>C "J' l'athcr prC'..JcdarC'd or 1nad,ent•nt.
fu' l't n1ol' btHJ, tor traci.. and held 1n the
n1lld "'lw1e' Hut \ht found out 11 "8 on thr L < )( boannrJ hst
< >t11 Ila" an the \\~tem 1' that T ..\( ha,. a
\.lie h\t d1lkn·nt from 1he l SO( and the
l \Ol n1a' ha' ea Im d1fTl'ren1 from the 10(
llntl.'1n.111onJI Ohmp1l ( ommm~e)... m1th
\Jld
hormont'' 01 t:°'-Ullll' or ~pe<'d or thing~ of t~t natun· u
P11tl'n1,1cr .uJm1ucd lhnt the dJfTeren1 hm
\Jn creatC' wnlu\1on But he s:ud the USOC
ll''t1n1' \\lt'm do~:sn"t pun1)h athletes who
nt·nl to 1al..t· medit ation conuuning banned
'Ubl>lJOl'l'' .
SA NT~ BARBARA (AP)-Kann Smith. a
four-lime U.S. Olympian. said Monda> tha t
drug use by track and field athletes is rampant
in the Un11ed tates.
"Drug tcsung in tht co untry 1s a farce." the
javelin thrower said ... There must be a large
covcrup ...
Baaron P111engcr. execut1 ve director of the
U.S. Olympic C'omminee. denied 1he charge.
.. There as no covcrup." he said in a
telephone interview fro m U OC head·
"That\ a number f',e he:ird and a lot ol
other pcopk have htard." she said 1n an
1n1rn 1e\\ at the .S. track and field training
camp.
P111cnger <>aid Sm11h was m151nformed
··No one tested positive al the 1984 Olvmp1C' Trial ... he said.
the USOC" siud all athlete'i cleared drug·
tesung procedures after la~I month's U.S
Olympic track and field trials at Indianapolis.
l)m11h. "ho ha~ "urn a "Ju,t ~a' 'o· to drug~ slogan on hl'r \ap during l0ni pe111wn
has not H't been noutied "'hcther she \\3S
amon@ those testing poi.1tl\e at Indianapolis
But she 1nd1 catcd 1t ""a!> possible. becau~ she \\a~ talong med1cat1on tor S\\Ollen gland~ 1"0
da)'S before the compc1111on
\\ lwn \\l' h.t\l' wmpctillon 1hat 1n,ol\e)
lhl' T \( and the I<)(." e could be thro"' n into
J1lkrl'nl ll!>t'>. Fort·.\ampk. Munne 1n thCe)c~
rnuld lOmt· up po\111' c It t:ould be on one list
and not the other
II athktl'\ dedan· that the\ arc takin& such
nwd1lJt1on bclo1l' rnmpet1ng. the) won't bt
1x nah1ed Im te<;t1ng pos1u' e. P1nenger said.
\m1th "inner of li'e national women's I•'' din 11tk'> ~11d the l 1n11ed unes isn't the
unh t"ountn \\hl're athklel> abuse drugs.
Smith said thl' drug \\as not on 1he banned
list provided' b~ The .\1hle11cs ( ongreu. the
.. rl'\tin~ \hould bt· more spccafit· Peopk
"hl> t;il..t· ~udaleds or \ 1s1nc l>hould not be
l')\.'nal11ell lalo.e people "ho talo.C' gm" th
·1 hJ' c heard that ii "~~oph.· tcst positive .
the:' kderat111n "'Ill \.:I\ "h•t'h two should wt ta kl' , .. ~m nh \:.llll · .
Gridlock possible
at America's cup?
A uthor itiesgearing ..., '''·'' \.11 1>11.-~o arC'a· harbor
-----,..-------:...;,_:--------tiumlUU _.1Jl11 fci,;.u~.!UQl.Q....ul-AUW--_.,,
up for possibilities -...:l11n11 ltll-ll\ Jnd au.epung reser-\ a1111n' t\1 (arn pa.,scnger\ out to of over c r owded seas \\llth lhl' rau·~
\ \' l>II t 11 I \l't -1 hl' upwm
in~ \mn11.a ' l up ral.'l'' oil ~an D1qi,11 JH' \hJptn)! up ,,, a rhallengC'
lor till' I 1•.i'I < ,, .. ud ·" ''l'll thl'
t11mrl·t1:1g 'l" hJIJnd .ind '\t.ir' ~\.
\tnp\'' ,.nd 1.Jtl''
"\\t JI I\ PJll thJI \C'\eral
\hl•LJ\JnJ 1 l.,,1. ' 1.ould attempt to
trJn,11 th" .irl.'a 1t11l Point Lomal at
lhl' \Jmc ttmr ·· ..aid Pt'tl\ Ollicer ·c harln Embk1on ol thC' Coast
(Juard "htlh na\ the :w;1gnmen1 ol
pola1. anl! the 'Pl'llator lkt't
•()v; Joh,, lo l'nsure tht' S<llC't\ of
thll'>C l>Pl'\'tatur lr31J and 1hc 1"'0
\n er·,;f, ( up u•mpct110rs ··
T hl best-oi·thn.'e race <,enes bt-
'''el n Denna' Conne'' tars &
lnpt:S catamaran and '\C'\\ Zealand
\.hallcn~r. ~tichael Fa' s IJ::!.foot·
~ong sloop 1s SlhcdulC'd to stan Sept
··1 thin~ thr: \\Jtl'r \\Ill JUSI be ala\e
"1th h11a1' · ,,ml RJ\ mund Burk.
chairtnJn 111 thl· -..an Diego Pon
( llllllTil'''"ll .. flh t 1111.111,l d1.111nel at Ballast
Plll n 1 " l 'fl\"• 1rJ '" hi.· a 1.·hoke point
hH 't'"' 1, 11. ,1, ing ttll' OJ\ tu' ae" the
ran· JnJ up 111 tl'1Urn1ng ·· l:.mbleton
\JIJ
h e". 'l° :I , , :un. h C uast Guard
utli\ .i'' '111 rq•.ul<.1ll' ocean traffic.
opcn1n~ thl , ha nm· onl~ to ou1ward
hound buJt' kr Jhout 1hree hours
hetorl :i rJ,l' Jnd then to inward
boum• !1ua1' ll•r an unspecified time
a na 1 hl· r ,11, ,. " , ,, n
(>c.•ta1l' ,1! 1he rl'~tnrnon and other
racc-rdatt•d •t·gulations "'Ill be
ou1llnt'J 1n J ''oll\C:" to Manners ..
tha1 111t < oJ>t C.1uard said "',u be
d1,1r tiutt'J \(x. n to \acht clubs,
manna., JnJ 11her boa1:related bus1-
neS,l'' •hrnughout the state.·
o.llr,...,......, ..............
Jamea Hydrick eenda a blow to the baC ln dally ritual. HI• next que9t la to break throucb 100 lnchea of concrete.
\ti, ut J( ( oa<it (1uard \l'SSC'IS
andud1ng a r -foot cutter from an
Fran1.1 o and t\\O high-speed 110-
fncit cutter from C r~ent Cit) "'111 tx· "ork1ng 10 control trallic around
1ht· \menca's Cup race cour,C's
north"'l'St oi Point Loma.
Bt1J,,'f\ al<,o "'111 be abk to tune in
10 J 'penal marine radio channel
dunn~ tht' rau.·~ 10 rcr<'l'e spectator
tket in\trurnons from the Coast
(JuJrd Embk1on i.a1d. HYDRICK USES MARTIAL ARTS AS WEAPON ...
From Bl
se' en to eight hours eve!) da)"
.. A break is a d1'iplay of strength
and courage. It shows the ab1hl) of
the human bo<h and mind," he satd.
"ft shows that )00U can do anything if
you put \OUr mind 10 11
"It also sho"s kids that the\ can do
any thing. too. It gl\ es I hem a mental
push. The' don't have 10 give 1n 10
hate. anger and aggression. but can
use their bodies and minds 1n a
\\hen H ~dm:I.. blasted through ~9
inches of concrete .\ug ".he ecli psed
the pre' 1ous ,.,.orld record b~ nearly
60 inches His next a11empt \\11l be for
100 inches.
Big fight:
Lip wars
already
Bruno unimpressed
with Tyson's perfect
credentials in ring
\\E~BLEY. England (.\Pl
Frank Bruno of Bntain. "ho is 10
tight ~1 1ke Tyson for the "orld
hea""'e1ght champ1onsh1p on Oc1
!<. o;a\~ T'son's fear ome record "Ill
rnun"t for' nothing on that night.
"He's going to get murdered. not
me." Bruno said ~londay at has fi rst
ne" s conference since the fi ght date
was announced la-;1 wee-k.
"Th1<; fight will be about power. I'm
going an "1th confidence." the :!6-
'ear-old Bruno said.
· Thl' fight 1s scheduled to take place
:n Wembk\ tad1um at midnight
local time and \\Ill be lclev1sed hve 10
the L1n11ed States on Home Box
Office at 4 p.m. an outhern Cah-
fom1a.
T' son. ho"e' er. 1nd1(:ated the tight
s11ll.hasn't Ix-en set. although 11
appear onl~ purse "alue 1s in ques-
tion.
··w e realh haHn"t deetded 1fwe're
tigh11ng him or not:· T}son said
during a \ 1s1t to Cle' eland. "We still
have to talk and negotiate a couple
more dollars ...
Bn11sh promoter Jan 1s Astaire
announced last "cd that Tyson
-would fidlt the 16-)ear-old Bruno on
Oct. 8. r )son had prev1ousl) pulled
out of a planned Sept. 3 fight.
Bruno. with a 30-2 record. will be
making his S«ond attempt to win the
• world title.
The Briton. who 1s the No. I
contender with the World Boxing
Council and the WB -\, said he had
grown up sinCl' then and was a far
better tighter.
"When the\ beat me. I was a young
boy." Bruno 'said ... Now I'm a man
with hair on m) chest."
He said he respected Tyson's
reputation. but he had the ad"antage
of ha' 1ng sparred "1th the 22-)ear-
old unbeaten champion st\eral )ears
ago. "People hke )OU ma._e him sound
like a monster.' Bruno told rcponers
at the nC\loS t'Onfel't'nCC.
·• me \a}' he'~ a tiger. some sa)
he's baboon I JU t "3) he· a human
bcin' rm the onl)' one "ho' bttn in
the n~g \\1th him bclorr That's a big
a<hantaae for me I'll l!JO be one
stone (1 4 f!Ound ) hc1\le1 than him.
and he'~ fiahuna in m) O'i>.n back yard. .. Bruno Y Jd
To achieve this he must generate
1.114 pounds of impact per sqaure
inch on co ntact. As he savs. "'Some-
thing has got 10 give. If noi the bncks.
1he bones in m' arm."
Tatooed from wmt to shoulder.
H\dnck"s muscular arms ha'e been
kno" n to break through three pairs of
locked. regulation hand-cu IT at once.
His in111al training included
pounding sand "11h h'is fists. onc-
1humb push-ups and tree climbing
He holds 1he "orld record on a
machine dl's1gned to measure
punching po" er. "1th a punch
ml'a,ured al 103 pounds
From a runntng stan he can l id.
the nm of a basketball hoop. and 1s
thought 10 be one of onl~ 1"0 men
\~ hu ha' e accomplished I I ·foot
l..1l l..\ The oihcr ~as his idol. Bruce
Lt'l'
H'dml.. hopes his record-shatter-
ing u.>nrrele breaks "111 dra"' the
a11l'n11on of another idol. \11l e
T''on In 1%3 H'dnck "on the \\ orld C. hamp1onship 1n his manta!
am spcc1alt~ t..nocking out Peter
Rasc,m.in an a record 11me of 15
\CCOnd<i
··11 tu\)i.. T\\On a lot longer 10 "''" h1' 11tll' .. H'dml.. ~td
\\ hethl'r or not T' son at'cept!> tht
thJlkngl' 1'-up IO T:.,on E11her "'a~
l"h dncl.. "ho mo' l'd 10 Huntington
Beach an \larch to "ort.. on a mo' 1c
about his life. plans 10 cun11nue
helping children and getting hat
ml')sage across .
·· \Jan1al ans teaches ~ou d1~ 1phne
and ho" 10 understand ~ oursdt .. ht"
said ··1t teache' ~ou 1ha1 being a man
1s not being tough and brutal. but
accep11ng other°'> emotron<t and kam-
ang to wn1rol \OU~ell
··E:,en someone v.no ha' gone
thrnull.h hell can learn 10 do thl' things
I dl' ihe~ \'an changl" their att11ude
thr:r "a' 01 1h1n 1ng. Jnd begin
ut. '' ng"h·•''l?l)tngonar1und1hem
in a -~'"''' l' •Jtht•r lhJn J ncgat1' e
\\J\
PGA makes comeback
Oklahoma c o u r se iv es big boost
to one of the Bi 4 tournaments
ED~IO'.':D.Okla .(.\P)-lfthe PG.\Champ1onsh1p
hJs lost HS luster. as some have suggested an recent ~ears.
then this 'ear"s tournament could help bring ba...-i.. 1he
glo" a-;soc1ated "1th golfs four majors.
This PG .\ had four pla~ ers make holcs·1n-onc "'hach
1\ ~he' ed to be a record for a major champ1onsh1p T"C'I
of 1he aces occurred aturda' on national tele' 1s1on
\dt1lh ne,er huns ·
l nh t..e a ~ear ago at PG .\ :"a11onal 1n Palm Beach
Gardens. Fla .. "'hen a fungus "orl ed 11s "'a' an10 1he
1mga11on s~s1em and led to bnttlC' .,----:~
greens and complaints from the
pros. Oak Tree Golf Club "as 1n
1emfic shape and dre" ra'es all \\Cek
"I thank the co urse 1s as good a
championship course as \\e·, e pla}-
ed since l'"e been play ang the
PG .\ ... aid Lam Nelson. wanner of
1h1s e' en1 1n 1987 and 1981 .
··This 1s a great golf course."
l\ielson said. "This will be the
Manon or Baltustrol of the 1000s ... Sluman P~rhaps the biggest' 1cto~ tor the PG.\ came no1 on
the fa1n'a~ sand undulating greens. but rather alongside
thl'm.
Du nng the \\eel... a record I ~5.561 peopk came
through the gates of Oak Tree to watch Jeff luman "'in b~
three s1rol..es. That translated into S1 ., million in ticket
sales. al o a record fo r the PG..\ .\t the 1qs1 PG.\. the
galleries were disappointing)) lo"'
This \Car's tournamC'nl "as run w11hout a h11ch. \\1th
plcnt\ off'ood and dnnk a' a1lable on the course. adequate
parking and shuttl~ transponauon for 1he public. and an
c'panSl\'C and accommodallng media tent
..
··11h1nJ.. ''l"rc rnaJ..1ng .11remendous e1h1n t\\ adding
11• our ~taff. doing more qual11' "ork an _all art'J\ ·· Jam
\ \\ tri:' C\l'1.'Ull' l' d1n'l tor 01 the PC,.\ of \mer1lJ \:ltd
"-unJa·, '"l JSI ~l'Jr \\t' had thing'> happen thJI \\t're
unl1muna1i: This 't•ar"s champ1unsh1p 1\ thl· \tJndard
''l'0 rl' going w 1~ 10 perpetuatt' Imm heri: on ·
.\"\rr~ agreed the PG.\\ popular'!' hJ\ \\Jn~d
\Omt'\\hat an recent 'ear\ perhaps becausl.' 111s pla,ed Sl,
l.lte in 1he ummt>r \\hl'n baseball'' pennant r:i1.t·s Jrt
'hap1ng up. and "hen thl· 'FL and n>l1l'ltC f0-011;\alt
'>l'J'>ons are tiegmning. Thcrt> \\3' tall.. J ft'\\ 'ears .:igo
'l1Jtnh in the media. of rt·1urn1ng the PC1.\ 't• the mJtd~
pla' format 11 abandoned atti:r IQ '-
··1 1hink 1hcrl'·~ al"a" a roncern "h<'" '1 l' rnC'd1a
'-I" 'nu'rc.' slipping an 'our 'tature ·· .\\\\ft'' 'J d ··\\ t' (l'rtainl~ 1hmk "l··re a leg111ma1e maJor \\ l' 'l' ~ 'C'ar'
,,1,1 th1) ~ear But "e"re not ti"\ 1'lg 10 comPc.'ll'" th the
\l.1,ters or the l · Open \\ l'·re Jll una~ue ··
Thi'> \ear\ touma'11ent hJ' also t-.een .l ~11ur~r: ''
pndr for tht' ho<tt lll\ Edm1ind and for a ~IJIC ,11: :n 1n~
w chm ti ou1 of lht> ruhtik k-11 h' the 011 hu\I Cit the earl\
19 Os.
"\.\ 11h tht' 0klJht1m .1 r:,onl)m~ O\ er 1he l<ht fl'\\
't'ars. I think tht'\ nt't:lkd wmethmg poc.111\ r · \:\rd
tournament d1rrc1or 'a'll'~ Jupp "ho 1 .. O\l'r\et·ang ha
~0th rna1or ..... .\lso. goll '' J m.1Jor spon an 01..lahnr-a
.\s1Je from Oklahoma Jnd 0 1.IJhoma tale t'o11thall i11lt
"J major spon hl'fl'
'".\nd "e·\e had thl· mo,111utstand1ng \l'OJX'r;1t1l1n
f(om all le \ els of 1hr: 1.'l1mmunll\ of an~ iournamt•nt r, l'
been a pan or ... '>hl' c,a1J
.\" tre' echoed thl1't' 'en11ments
··oi..1ahoma h,1, 'hlH'n 11 can hos1 an' maJOr
champion hip.'" he ~a1J .. ..,t,uthem Hill\ Im Tull\al hac,
ho\ted ~e\ t>ral and <) lahoma C. 11' has r 1abhshC'd lhJt
1t"s a markt>t that can ho't Jnd '!>Uppon a mnJor
··The'·, t' prl'' l'n thl'' •.in ge! behind th1' ''pc tit
i\Ctl\ II\ and hJ\l' Jl10l' 1t in l'nl' l)I the \\OrSl e\·onNr.il'\
"l'.'<' had here·· ----------1 ~~~~-USC... ~~~~~~~~~~~·
From Page B 1
of bad memones.
Where are the .\ch11les· heels at C"1
There aren't man). and that's what
makes the picture so ros).
··Wt're srill look1ng fora backup al
quanerback." sa~ the coat'hes.
Those in the ru nning to ~omt•
o. 2 a,nd perhaps he1r..apparent. arc
former Newpon Harbor H 1gh star
Shane Fole> and Pat O'Hara. a pair of
red-shin sophomores. and freshman
Todd Marinovich. whoscexplo1tsnt
Mater De1 and Capistrano alle
high schools ha"e bttn splashed
acros Oran1eCou11t} ne" papc~
the past fouqcars.
C'ons1denn1Sm1th' aurc l"C
st) le. ~ou have to behe'c Folc) ha
tht"first hot. Howof\cn do )'OU fi nd a
quancrback not only W11hna to. but
'5Ct'kin1_a $Pot on w spttiar teams
(k1t'l offand P\!nt rctums)JuJt toaet
h1\ fC"tt on the field.,
Throtherquc-suon to~ an wtrtd.,
"\\ l" h;n c to dc"clop M>mc depth at "•Jc rett1,(r," ).ltd muh
I don't than k that's too much to ask
ofa tram with dream of No I
THE HOUSE DEBATE CONTINUES ...
"What Sets HOUSE of IMPOR1S Apart from the Rest?
144Je0.'9~• WMld I..,,__ .Jodooy
HOUS& ., l..o«1"9
C\olOl'JWf
Settle the Debate ...
Visit U• Today and
Decide for Yourself.
E.A'f raordtnary
Dollar Value!
HOUSE ol lMPORTS
·Hom<' of MtrctJc::.·Ben=
Dtal 213/714 MERCEDES
Dt ... _,i. .. °" O\olt>., • ~
""' WOl'I Au.>ord 14_,,.... 1 #~«.t ~TS
.£.'ltrCXJrd 11\<lMI
Semce!
lA Ana (I 5j .uld RtH•r k)t" 11 \l IJ f r\.Tlo' \
':i. lt
F1'e Coast Guard helicopters "Ill
"orl.. 0' l.'rhead. sharing air spact "1th
about 15 media helicopters and a
blimp 1ha1 "111 bt btaming aenal
p1c1ures for E P'.'. ·s race co' erage
In addition about 40 Coast Guard
.\U\1han boa1s ha'<' volunteered to
as)1St 1n · ro\\d control effons
an Diego Ba~. the third· largest
natural ba' on the \\ e t Coast " uh I
square m1iesof "ater has about 6.UOO
pleasure boats docked in the re-g1on
\!JO\ llt°lhose Ooats hkC'h "II OOl go
ou1 tor the first l" o (up races "h1ch
.ire ,,hedukd or. v.eek da,., Ho"'-
l'' l"r 0'li.1al' L'\Pl'Ct J'l int1a\ of ~.l.'.i,url \.r..sl: ~-m Orange Count'
Lor~ Bl·:ich. L ,,, .\ngc.'le' ~nd \en-
1urJ
BROWN ...
From Bl
22·\Jrd d.i'h !>c.'I up J lounh·\)u,mer
'ie d '1\lJI \\ hll h \t'ale<l J ll~l \ ICtOf\
11 <;ta~nlMd 10 snap a t'' o-gaml lo!> an~
,trt•:il. tr\ Pav " pl;n It l..ept 1he · 6
1.Jmp;.11gn afloat
He ''as al~v in on s1\ tacl..lec. in ht~
unaor 'ear a' a ml'mt'ler ol lhl 'P<'llal
ll'J me;
H1' ·oil' a\ a \1.'r ior h,.,,l", ··r ha'
1akcr ,rn a ma-1.ed lhange rn l'rg1n>
a~ thl' ';) 2 •u!lhal · 1' \ l·PJl I
.., r-,1nl'e l.ero' Holl
· I, 1T 8n'' n ~n. ~e., J tx'und'
.1•1.-: , J 'l'"' 'er. g1.• >d ti l' '41d
hh • ,a, 1-( la•c:-•h.:.' \he 'lh'' · He',
J' ~ .J J' Hol: a~ J ".(\\.11.l'r "ul hC'\
n, · .i.l same rul'ner
.;...,,. ht•ad _-oa.:-h al'-l "'"c' inl.' ,,.
H· 'r 'l.lrong ~lint ... Ol'l' v. h1ch "111 ~ .1 :· .11.kr·arl.. tor the Trc11am an their
, _,,; f,r national honors
"Pu: d1tfrrence 1n 1h1s 'ear\ team
''•'"111r ''"'nfiden1.t' · ..aid "mllh
K •Jn\'' Pet'te ha 1t and ''' dN'' l , \ •nw11er and Jeff Brn,,11 ,., a
11' ,k'1l per!>On ..
\JJ, \1111h ··Jc-ff, g~11 n~ h ~ a
,., ' t.h.11.11 an 1he fullhad .. P•" :111n rnr
'' Hl' realh pro' ed h 'l1'l' ' t-'
\kmbers uf the spectator fleet
"on 't be allowed to get closer than a
halt-m1k to competing vessels. .
··Ba~1call). it's not gOLDf. to be gr,eat
wah.h1ng from out there,· said Tbm
Ehman. chief operating officer of Sall
.\mema. "hach 1s organizing the
C\ ent a'> defense manager for the San
Diego ' acht Club
··\\ t' cnc.uuragc people to ~ta}
ashore and "atch tt on ESP!\ because
thl're "111 be cameras on the boats.
The' ·11 be much closer in •· ·
.\ larg<' '>pectator fleet also could
pose \Orne probtems for Conner's
catamaran "h1ch Ehman said could
be slo"'ed b' chopp\ "'aters from the
1h1111la The·'"" Zt"aJaoo boat. which
1' mulh Jrger and hea\ler rould
bc11er "<'athl'r chorr' lOndmons. he
'>Jtd
h•n in~ an:"1uhtJnJ:ng prmg prac-uce ..
Br "n , ~ J:tl' 1h1~ sC'ason began \\llh ,tartrng txhand quanerbaclc
Rodnl ' P~·r:tt· h'ut "1th Lero~ Holt a
n·1urn1ntt 'tarter at fullback. the
prOl>JX , '•or BrO\\ n 10 rem ain o. 2.
JI the P· ''l J\ \\Cll 3\ h1~ spec1al teams plJ\.
· 11 , tliugh · 1t:i1d Bro"' n ... But you
1u,1 ~a' e 10 l..eep a poslll\C mental
t·aml 11 mind and keep sa)ing. 'I
h.i'e a .. hann~ 1 ha'e a chance.
\\ hetliC'r he <;tam or not. whether
h1 carries 5t. times or fi,e umes. the
'~ ,Jmpa1gn appears to bta season
· ~mlm~rfor Br\'"n .. Ir~ •urftl' be around these pla~ers.
'herl· .irt' J lot 01 great gu~s. and
Rodnl'' ' J great guy He's a great
rcadetanJ 1al..t''>con1rol ofLhetcam."
'"\\ l' rC' tn 1ng 10 ICX'\JS on Boston
( ,1lkge and \)tanford.'" said BrQwn.
"h1,•,Ju't' \OU ...-an mes~ up. ~ou can
ha' ea IC'tJl)" n But Oklahoma. it's in
thl' had of l)Ur minds ..
Rt'grC't l "''\Jo·· said Brov.n , ··~ut I
h.l\ t' w adm11 1here ha' e been ti mes
llunng .,, o-a-da\S "hen 1t"s reallv hot
.rnJ .,J,tn~ to m'l\Clf "1...-an't believe
I m hl'rl ·
.. Rut O\' I ha \C' no regrtts •·
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Delllft WOftlen 1tt Anten W--fw 9 ,..._
• Conv~•'nt St"rvtc' • H~ Of Offk,. by ~
FASHION BY HIQUI, INC.
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17141416-1011 H~ s~;r,t~s to Pl41.,._..,
... Or8nQ8 Coa1 DAILY PILOT/ Tu.day, Augult 18, 1988
Olympic team debuts in Irvine
ut Coast Gun Club stte of
Sunday'sai uncompetttion
The South Coast Gun Oub in Irvine will be
the site of lhe third International Airgun Field
Target Championships where the newly ~lected
Olympic shooting team wilt make its debut
unday.
The event is held on alternate years m England
and the United States. This year, the British l='ield
Target Association will be .auests of the United
tates along with other a1rgun devotees from
throughout the world.
Pcgy Murray, director of advertising and
public relations for Crosman Products, said:
.. Crosman is proud to be a primary sponsor for this
event, the e_rocceds of which will be donated to the
Muscular Dystrophy Association. Our firm is the
acknowledged leader not only for the manufac-
turer of airguos for the serious shooter, but for s~ooting edu_cation. train mg and the eromotion of
a1rgun shooting as a sport of all ages. •
Also. making appearances in behalf of
Crosman will be Holl)Wood stars to include John
Russell. star of the TV series. .. The Lawman .. :
Richard Hatch, headliner of "Battlestar Galac-
tica": and Lee Purcell. who starred 1n "The
Gambler." These thrtt stars came together
recentl)' to have leadin,. roles in Crosman's
broadcast 9uahty video. 'Your First Gun -A
Family Guide to Shooting:·
Also known as field knock down. field target
shooting ha been e'<trcmel) popular in Great
Bntain and other European countries whcrt
firearms are prohibited. The shoot 1s meant to
simulate a small game hunt. A. typical Sunday s~oot near London \\.i ll draw as many as I .SO
compelltors. Field target 1s easier and much more
informaJ than 10..meter or silhouette matches, and
1s recent!) becoming very popular in the United
States.
Last November CASA hosted the First
nrwal California State F.T. Championships. This
new compcuuon drew over 60 shooters to the one·
da} event.
A field target consists of a flat , metal plate
approximately 10..18 inches high. in the form of
small game. such as rabbits, crows, rats. etc. At the
"kill zone" the animal 1s drilled to a 35.45mm hole.
behi nd which is a metal bullseye, or .. trigger." A
pellet cleanl} h111i ng the bullseye will knock down
the ·1rigger" "'hich then allows the whole metal
figu re to fall flat on the ground.
Any other hit will not affect the standing
target. the successf ull} knocked-down target is
smng re-se ttable from the firing point, for the next
shooter's tum.
These 1aracu arc pla~ in the field at various
distances (unkown to the shooters) from 10 to SO
yards from the designated firina points. The firina
points arc usually arona a patch in an open field or
wood , s1muta11na a small pmc bunt. The taracts
may be uphill or down in a gully, mounted up in
trees or pa11ially obscured by rocks. t~s or bushes.
No two field target shopts arc ever the same. The
trick of course is corredly estimating distances and
windage to score a hit.
The parallex adjustment on some scopes is a
much-used aid for judg.ing distances: actual range
finders are not allowed.
ShQ<?ters arc permi~ted to use any air rifles.
an) equipment, an) s1gltts and any shooting
pos1t1ons. The only rule 1s that the nflt' must be
supponed only by the shooter (no tripods, bipods,
sandbags. etc.). and the shooter must~ supported
only b) the ground or a pad of 3 inches maximum
thickness (no chairs. benches, etc.).
Most shooters use sponer type air rifles with ll_l~erate .t<? high-power scopes, and mostuse a
snung position. Some shoot standing or kneeling.
and some may shoot prone if the terrain allows.
This is a fun shooting event in the great
outdoors. at which everybody can achieve some degre~ of success wnhout the pressure normall)
ass~1ated with shooting competitions. It is a fa~1ly event, attracting many wome-n.juniors and
seniors to the fun of a field shoot.
~ .
Jlm Plunkett'• lonf football career appean to be at an ea'1
with hi• releaae by the Loe ADfelee Raiden llon~.
PLUNKETT RELEASED •••
-----------------------From-IH ---
Major League standings
American League
WEST DIVISION w L Pct. GB LIO
Oakla nd 75 44 .630 8-2
Minnesota 66 51 .564 8 6-4
Kansas Cit) 61 57 .517 131 ! 7-3
Angels 59 59 .500 15112 3-7
Chicago 52 66 .44 1 221'2 5-5
Texas 51 65 .440 22111 4-6
Seattle 45 73 .381 291h 4-6
EAST DIVISION
Detroit 69 48 .590 .S-.S
Boston 66 51 .564 3 ~
New York 64 50 .561 31: 4-6
Milwaukee 61 59 .508 91 : 6-4
Toronto 60 59 .504 10 7-3
Cle" eland 55 63 .466 1411! 3.7
Balumore 39 78 .333 30 3-7
~1 innesota 2. Detroit 1
Monday's Scores
~hlwaukec 4. Balti more I
Kansas Cit' 12. Texas 3
Onl) games scheduled
Today's Games
Streak
Lost I
Won I
Won 2
Won
Lost
Lost 2
Won
Lost
Lost
Won
Won
l ost
Won
Lost
Home Away
38-22 37-22
33-24 33-27
32-27 29-30
26··32 33-27
29-32 23-34
28-31 23-34
26-33 19-40
38-2 1 31 -27
40-19 26-32
33-24 31-26
35-26 26-33
28-30 32-29
31 ·28 24-35
24-33 15-45
Angels (Fraser 8-10) at Nt'w York (Rhoden 7-8). 4:30 p.m.
Oakland I Da"1s 11-4 l at Baltimore (Tibbs 4-9). 4:35 p.m.
Seattle !Bankhead 5· -1 at Boston (Gardner 5-3). 4:35 p.m
\ftl'.'aukel' ( .\ugust 7.'i) at Cle, eland (Nichols 0-3). 4:35 p.m
\.1in nesota I BlyJe, en i.11) at Detroit (Moms I 0-1 1 ). 4:35 p.m.
Toronto <Kc' 7-2) at Chicago (McDowell 4-8). 5:30 p.m.
Texas (Hough 9-131 at Kan sas City (Gubicza 14-6). 5:35 pm
Wednesday's Games
Ange.ls at Ne" ) ork 4.30 p.m.
~l innesota at Detroit. 10:35 a.m.
Oakland at Baltimore. 4.35 p.m
Seattle at Boston. 4:35 p m
\11l~ouke~ at Cleveland. 4:35 p m
Toronto at Chicago. 5· \0 pm.
Te\as at Kansas Ctt), 5:35 p.m
National League
WEST DIVISION w
66
64
62
59
55
41
L
51
54
56
57
61
77
Pct. GB LIO Streak Home Away
Dodgers
Houston
San Francisco
Cincinnati
an Diego
.\tlanta
~e" Yor~
Pmsburgh
~1ontrcal
Chicago
Ph1ladclph 1a
<it Louis
70 4
o'i 54
b3 54 5.. 58
51 66
51 66
564 5.5
542 21 l 5-5
525 4': 5-5
509 61! 7-3
466 I 1'1: 5-5
.347 2s112 4-6
EAST DIVISION
593 5.5
546 51·: 5-5
.53 61 ' 5.5
,496 11 ~ 6-4
437> 181: 5-5
436 I I: 4-6
Monda y's Scores
Dodgers 1. ·an Francisco 0
~t lanta 4 . ..Pmsburgh 3
Hou~ton 7. San Diego 3
Onl~ games scheduled
Today's GamH
Won I 30-28
Won I 36-24
Lost I 34-25
Won 2 30-27
Lost 32-27
Won 20-38
Won 2 38-2 1
Lost I 33-27
Lost 2 32-26
Won 2 29-29
Lost 2 30-29
Lost 2 27-32
Philadelphia !Carman 9-6) at Dodgers (Leaf) I 2-8). 7:35 p.m.
( h1cago (Pico 3-6l at Crn cinnau CBrownmg 11-4), 4:35 p.m.
~tlanta (P. mith 5-11) at Pittsburgh (Drabek I 1-5). 4:35 p.m
Houston (()fsha1es 8-91 at l. Lou is (Tudor 6-5) 5:35 p.m
\lontreal (Holman 2-41 at an Diego (Jones 7-10). 7:05 p.m
36-23
28-30
28-3 1
29-30
23-36
21-39
32-27
32-27
31 -28
28-29
21 -37
24-34
'e"' York (Gooden 13-61 at San Francisco (Hammaker 6-4). 7.35 p.m
Wednesday's Games
Ph1ladcl ph1a at Dod gers, 7:35 p.m.
Chicago at Cmcinnall. 4 35 p.m.
~tlanta at P1mburgh. 4 15 p m
Houston at . t. Louis. S 35 p.m.
Montreal at an Diego. 1 ll5 p.m
'1e"' York at an Franc1~0 1·.i5 p.m
OHO Ml fi"'lnt NlWPOttT LANDING -A ~15. '6 enolers. S• D•U 81 1>1rrecud•. 2• t>onilo. 2 veltow•eil. 172 macktrtf. 20 rock fish. 1t \C\llD•n. I S"HDSllHd. SJ C•lko DIU DAVEY'S LOCKER (,...__, 9"dll - 7 t>Oers, ?SS eno1e<s •se t>err•cuoa. 127 t1or1110,
IA VIUOwlail. 1 COCI I ,.lllt>UI, 292 C•llCO blU, 26 I sand Dan. 9S '1'1•t-ertl 101 teulPin, 10 rock lisn, 12 Ohle oercll
~ t I . . . ..
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Dodten 1, GIMltl 0 SAN FRANCISCO LOS ANGELES abrllbl Mlrlllll Buller ct RTnosn 2D G1rrells o Clark lo Mircnelllt A1dre1e rt Ynoblo oh Mf4v1n c ON11on or 8ren1v c MW1ms30 Uribe n OR0D1sn p So.ltr 2D T...is
• 0 t 0 Grlffln ss 3 0 0 0
• O 1 0 Sclosclli c 4 0 0 0
0 0 0 0 Gibson If l 0 I 0
• 0 0 0 MAnhilf r1 4 I I 0 300 0 Shelbycf )0 10
3 O 0 0 S!uObs lb 2 0 0 1
1 O 0 0 MHtchr 3o 3 0 2 0
3 O 3 0 WOO<lsn 3o 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Ande"1 21> 3 0 0 0 o o o o Orosco o O o o O 3000 8e1Gner o 2000 3010 Sn2b 00 00
2 0 0 0 0000
JO 0 6 0 T...is 21 I S I
Sc-"" """"" San Franchco · 000 000 000-0
LtK ~ 000 100 00•-1 Game w.nn1no RBI -SlubOs (3) E-M11cne11 LOB-S.n Frt!ICisco S. Los Angeles 6 S-Speier. Gnlfln SF-Sruot>s IP H ll ER H SO
Sall Francll'o OROOtM>n L 4·3 S I I 0 • Gerrtlls 0 0 0 2 2
Lei AneeiH Belcner W.9·• 1 l·l 6 O O 1 l Orosco S 7 I 2· l 0 O O 0 2 UmDlfH-Ho~. WHI, First. llunot. Sec·
ond. w1ni.ms. Tlltrd, EnGel T-2J7 A-49,306
HOR.SE RACING
Def Mlir MONO.A Y'S RESULTS
lllftl If 4l·deY "'-'~ ~) FIRST RACE. I I 16 M•ln Bas !\QSIO~t 1Corraf) ., IO IS IO 6 20 Bold So"t90 S1D•lle) 12 20 s '° Pa1erm1iano (C1stanonJ 3 00 T•me I •52
S1 EXACT A !3·11 D&•d '333 00 SECOND RACE. 6 Furlono\ Br1"0V N Pt Oinuuve II 20 7 IO S 40 Saran K1n9 1B11el 9 20 6 40 Tra il G•r1 1CorraH 14 40 T1mt 112 1 U DAILY OOU&LE (J·S) P&id U•5 10 THIRD RACE. I I 16 Miit Turi M1rv1n s Po, cv ISlvnsl I 00 • 20 3 40 ComOl•c111e <Toro1 9 IO s 40 DIV\ C.ont Bv I Mc Carron I •IO
T.rne 1 42
5.5 EXACT.A 11·61 oa10 SIS3 so FOURTH RACE, 6 FurlO!\O\ lr1shkile fSohs) 2S 60 10 00 6 40 Jeni•zio ISttvensi 6 20 4 40 A09arefl& IMtll II .cl T.rne 111 2 FIFTH RACE. 6 > Furtongs Sltooerv sliver IBlae.kl 14.00 180 l 60 Sen1or11v IGrvoer ) 10 60 S 20 Donner P1r1v (Oef111ouu1vet 2 60 T•mt 115 •
U EX.ACTA 110·11 oa10 '316 SO SIXTH RACE. 6 Fur!or>OS Irish IB11t/ Corazon Brevo <S1t>•llel Mv Nlr~oo ISofisl Time 1112 SEVENTH RACE. I Milt L•Cl<ttv Sohlltr (Pdril Burn! C1lro1 (Bleck/ Pe99v Perker <Correll
Time 131
17AO 610 SOO • '° 340 I 60
10•0 960 6AO
12 60 H O
9 '°
Al\o llen Oout>le Oecor1reo, Snaoe't L1ov . P1umoe1ra. Surrender Ooromv. Oanll1, Ora· 'l'latoc Eleoance C"ttr For N1n, L• Cresle Nuevo Scrarcneo Grev SePttmoer Oovt>le Otlll Pr•sc1••• s Cro"'n U EX.ACTA 19·71 011d S431 SO S1 PICK SIX tS· 1-9-10+91 oaid sn,317 20 w•ln three w1nn•ng 1tcke1S lllYt norst\) C1r-rvover for Wtdnesoav s 100,421 2t EIGHTH RACE. I I 16 Milt Turf
S ent Arr v11 McCrrnl 2? 60 I 20 3 20 Oav•e ' Lamo Toro 6 00 3 20 Ga unoe <Bare I 260 Tome I •2 Also Ran Gev1nt. Mv Vlroln•• Rett, ~roniewln9 Scr11c11eo None
U OAIL Y TRIPLE tl-9-3/ oa10 S~ SSJ lO
U EX.ACTA !3·41 011d 1161.00 NINTH RACE. I 1 16 Miles Anc1en1 Laav IOlnussvel 13 •O 6 00 • 00 BtfltVIDlte ( SoloU S 20 4 •O Bes I ADlf.lv tGrvdtr I I 00 Time I •SI Scr1rc1ted Grev S.orem~r Oovblt Oen1 Pr1.c11fa 's Crown
U EX.ACTA !IHI oald Sl~OO
S2 LATE OOUILE (l·lll oaid Sl7UO Alftndanct. 2S,151 Mututl Hindle· )S,600,07•
•
MondlV'I traMactlonl IASl.IAll Amtric.ell U..U. MILWAUKEE BREWERS-Acllveltd Bill Scnroeoer, catctie<, from ll'le IS·d•v Olset>MC
llsr l>i.UCS P1ul Mir1Dtll4i. DllCMr. on ll'le 15·
Clav d•Sill>led flSI Natlenal Lff9Ue OOOGERS-Recafi.d Ken Howtfl, ollctler, trom AfDuQU4tt'Que DI Ille Pacific COHI Ltaout. IASKETIAU. Na"9NI 9ailrltbll A•M<il'""' DETROIT PISTONS-Agreed ID le<ms wl111 Jtrnfl Edwards, cenle<, on a mulllvHr con· lrllCI -
UTA~ JAU~elHStd Bo Dukes. TOO<I Hofl~ilY and Aldwin Ware. guards, end Randal Smith end Andrew Kenn.CSv, forwerd~ FOOT8ALL
N•JIMll F..-.. LMt!U9 RAIOERS-Reteesed Jim Plunket!. -r· tert>1ck. Pn11 Gmnl\, ckfenl!vt 11nem1n, Owlolll Wf\ffler, offensive firMmen. Weller OOom, 110111 end, 1n<1 Jim Reynosa lirMl>lcker BUFF ALO BILLS-Weivtd Vinet Amoia, runn•no Dack. Rt001e Bvnurn, w1dt receiver Zelle G1<1son llrMl>ICktr. •ncl Pt1e Cur11.tn<11111.
nose racl\~ DENVER BRONCOS-Weiveo ronv L111v seftlv, Bol>bv M1ch0 lulft>ac+.. Loren Snydtr ouarttr1>11cl>. Tonv C01or1ro end G1rrv Frank, nose 11ckles, R1cllerO Calvin. running Dack. and R1vmono Pn•1f1os linet>acker Plactd Oen lle...,,sbero otteniive ltCklt •n<I C111r1H Met"· roll .ne1>11cker on nKJreo rtstrve GREEN BAY PACKERS-Reltasto Bud Ktvts •nd Rot>D e Bosco ouar1er1>11cu George LaFrance 1no recsov Wif,on, woOt receivers. Pa• hvlor. flnet>acktr, and Tonv Maves ano Jim Bob Morris. delen11ve becks INOIANAPOLIS COL TS-Traoeo Ttm Sr>erwon. 1 gnt end, 10 1ne New Vora Giants for an unO·KIOseo drafl cnoice MIAMI OOLPHINS-W11ved Garv Hu1stv oefens•vt eno. Anc Anoerson. Kenntlll Jordan, line1>1cker. Eric An0'9dt and Vlnctnl Warren w•Oe receivers and Derrick TMmas fulfl>lc~ , NEW ORLEANS SAINTS-lle1useo Paul Juroe•1Sen. w•Ot rtce•vtr Fior,.n Kemol ltock· er Tim McCa~ net>ecker Tonv SltOl\tns. nose •ec-re eno Ken Kao>an offensive ••nemen
NEW YORK GIANTS-S•O!ltO Joe Fields. cen1er Placed Harvev Cl11v1on, corntrt>acl<. on 1n1ureo re~ve Waived Mike V1re1on ano Cnar11e Sanoers runnlno becks Br.an S1s1ev •net>lcker Jonn Wi"l1ms 1110 Grt9 Harris w•oe rece -ers Dave Fu1re1 oeltns1ve eno Mike B14clt cenrer 1no Willie 8eecner Ol&CfklCker PHOENIX CARDINALS-S1ontd Va1 S1kanema, 1t1ck relurner, 10 a fwo ·vear con· tracr
Rims sdledUle EXHIBITION Auo »-Housron al Rems 1 " Tl Auo 26--llims •' S•n Di~ I Pm llEGULA!t SEASON Seot A-llams a• Gree11 Bav 10 a m Seor 11-0elroll al Rams, I om St>Df IS-Rams I I R&10trl, I om SePt 2S-Rams 11 NV Gfanls I om Oct 2-Pnoeni. 111 Rams 1 o rn Oc.r 9-Ra-ns &I All•nr1, 10 1 m Qc.1 ltr-San Fr1r>eiKO 111 llams I om Ocr 7l-Se1111a &I llams. I om O<t »-ll1ms 11 New Orleans, 10 am Nov 6-R1'1'ls 11 Phllaoeloll•a. 10 a.m Nov 13-New Orltans 111 Rems, I om Nov 20-Sln 01eoo 11 ll1ms 1 om Nov 27-Rams 11 Denver 1 om Oec S-Cn1c100 a• Rams. 6 om Otc I l-A111n11 11 Rams. I om Oec 18-Rems 11 S.n Fr1nc1teo. S om
TENNIS
Men's teurMment Ill Mason, Otlio) Finl Round SIMlts Slefan Edbfro tSwt<l•nl def. Eddie Eowaros IU S I 6·2 6·2. Pal Cash IAuSlrallal def •»euncer Voll\ov tSov••f Union), 6·•. 2·6, 7-6 Ar>dres Gomez (Ecuador) def Grt0 Holmes tu s 1 7·6 6·4. Jlmmv Ar'lu IU S >. def Kelly Evtrnden (Aus1r11t111), l·6, 6·l. 6·0, Anders Jarrvd !Sweden) def EouardO M•no tAroen· llnt l 6· I, S·2
Plunkett led the Raiders to two
Super Bowl victories. after the 1980
and 1983 seasons. He was named the
Super Bowl MVP after the Raiders
beat Philadelphia 27-I Oin 1981.
"If histon books are written,
cenainly Jim Plunkett will be a part of
the history of the National Football
League, the great history ... said Al
Davis. Raiders manag.ang general
paner. "I think he has to be one of the
great comeback stories of our time. a
least the last three decades.
Da vis said Plunkett will leave wi
.. a lot of great me mories. We're prou
of him. proud for him and proud h
could be associated with us."
The Raiders' plans for 1988, not ye
reveaJed by Shanahan, seemed to cal
for three quarterbacks. with Stev
Beuerlein and Vince Evans being th
top two.
Tudor for Guerrero
hinges on Cardinals'
ability to sign Pedro
LO .\i'\GELES CAP) -The St
Louis Cardinals. still tn ing 10 replace
d('paned ,lugger Jack Clark. reponed-
1~ "ill ge_t Pedro Guerrero fro rp Los
~ngcles tor kit-hander John Tudor.
"horn tht· Dodgers need 10 replace
the 1njun.·d Fernando alenzuela.
··1t's not a rumor. it's fact. It's true.
I don·1 kno" hO\·' 11 got out. .. said
Jgl·nt Ton~ ~ltanas10
It has lx·l'n reported that the trade
hinges on the Cardinals' ab1ht) to
<,1gn Guern·ro
The 32-,car-old outfiddt•r. a .309
Girccr hitter 1' '31d 10 be seeking a
thrl·C·\l'ar contract for an estimated
.. 5 m1l11on The C .ird1nals arc read'
to pa~ that. lll'CMd1ng to the St. Lou1·s
Pmt D"ratd1 The m•w<;paper said
thl· tradl· wukl be completed tooa~.
··\\l·\J lt~l· to ha'c Ciul·rrcro. but
\\l' H' gm 10 '>lgn him first." (ardmals
mJnJ~·r \\hill'~ Hl·r.tog said ... But
1he big thing 1' "l'·, e got to get a
prermer p<l\\l'r hitter··
f he Cardinal had hoped to replace
( l.irL. "ho opted for tree agenc~ '' 11h thl' ;\e..., Yllrk Yankl'es. with Bob
Hornl'r. Bui Homer. '>lgned two
\\l'eks afll'r < lark left. ha~ played onl~
110 games and hit JU. t three homers
\\Ith 3.i run!> batted in
Thl' otl-ln)ured Horner " out for
the rest nl thl· ~ea~on folio"' 1ng
shoulder surgen,.
The Dodgers had been shoppmg for:
a left-handed starter since former C'Y,
Young ~"'ard winner Valenzuela
"ent on the disabled list last month
"1th a shoulder mjur).
"I would sa' we·ve had scriou d1scu~s1ons ... general manager Fred
Claire said when asked about the
Dodgers· attempt to fill the void left
h' Valenzucla·s first tnp to the
disabled hst 1n eight ma1or league
seasons. "If "e can improve our club
and our pi tching. stalT we won't
hesitate to do 11... '
~cllhl'r Claire nor his St. Louis
rnuntl'rpart. Dal ~la'\' 111. would con-
firm thl' deal Monda\ night. But
Gul'rrl'ro and Los Angeles Manager
Tom Lac;orda ~emcd resigned to the
tr3dC
(jucrrcrn. 32. has missed 59 g;i mes
th!\ 'l'ar bl:c:ause of a pinched ~rve
cond11wn 111 h1.-. nc,·k. He's hit11ng
29S but" uh onh live home r!> and 35
runs batted in. ·
··1 don·1 kno..., ho"' the' tell about
that ( t\\.O months on the dlsabtC'd hst),
bu t I LnO\\ that \\hen I was out they
pla~l·d g9od." Guerrero said. "As a
mattl'r ol fact. the' were about seven garnl'~ up '' 1thoui me. and when I
came back. the' "cnt down. But t
don't thin~ 11 "'as because of me ...
DODGERS WIN, 1 -0 ...
From Bl
\\a'> detl'nor.i11ng bcl·ausc of the "'a}
Ornseo \\J' he1ng u11h1l'd.
··Tomm' and I ha'e been talking
about 11.'' f)ro,co sa1d. "Wl' have no
hard feeling<, O\ er 11. Wl· both "'ant lo
'"n and thl'rc·.., no uc;c ha' mg hard
feelings because that's not gomg to
hl'lp an~ bOd~. ··
Belcher. 9-4. 1s undl'f(•ated m eight
'tarts since June 12. He µq: up six
hm in "'1 1 inning~. including th ree tq,
Bob \leh m. Belcher struck out three
and ''al ked one. ··1 don·1 know 1f I made that ma ny
good pitches. or 1f the) were worn out
from S\\ ingmg their bats )este rday,''
said Belcher. refernng to tht' Giants'
15-run attack unda'." l\fter tha
thum ping ~esterda~. this was a big
win for us:·
Flyer captures Flight of Swans
by ALMON LOCKABEY
oe11, Pllor ao.11ftt wrt1at
Fl~er. a wan-57 skippered by
Richard Long of Bakersfield was the
O\ era II and D1' 1s1o n I winner Sunda)
of the Flight of the wans. hosted b}
Halboa Yacht Club.
.\s the O\erall winner Fh cr was the
"lnnl'r of the Bal boa ';acht Club
Perpetual
The r.cga11a "as sailed Fnda).
. :11urda\ and Sunda~ m light to
moderaie "inds off the Newport Pier.
Troph~ "inners m each division:
DI VI SION 1-I. Flyer (Swan-57).
Richard Long. Bakersfield; 2. M
Blue (Swan-59) Harry Thomason.
Newport Beach: 3. Lady Godiv
(Swan-57). Victor Fargo. San Diego.
DIV ISION II -I. Trumpete
(Swan-46). Em1e Townsend. New
port Beat h; 2. Toboggan (Swan-42).
Paul Querel. Newpon Beach; 3.
Mystere {Swan-42). Melton-Seltzer,
Manna del Rey.
DIVISION Ill (Cruising) -I
Reggae (Swan 38). Jim Ripp. New
port Beach: 2. Taleria (Swan-39)
Gary Sitzman in. Newport Beach.
TRACK AND FIELD ATHLETES FACE THE WORLD THIS TIME AT 1988 OLYMPICS ..•
From 8 2
don't recall that I beat Lewis every time we've
raced against each other in the past three
years."
Lewis 1s unfazed b'r that losing streak.
He proved 1t by winnfos the 100 at the U.S.
Olympic tnals 1n a wind-aided 9. 78, lhe fastest
ever run under any conditions.
He also doesn't think that Johnson is
capablcl>fb1astin.g out o-rthe bfocks iu well as
he did in the I 987 World Championships,
when he set the world mark of9.83.
And he thtnk.s he can run faster than he did
that da); when he equalled the American
record 01 9.93.
"I can run nmc-c1f.ht (leP.llY) or possibly
e9cn better than that.· he said. "l didn't run a areu nacc thAt day."
Lewis also believes he will run betttr in the
200 than he did at the trials. where he finished
second to Joe Deloach.
And he is confident of extendina his 7Y2-
)eat 'Winnina streak in the Iona jump, wtueh
reached SS at the trials.
JoynefoKenee hit a more modest winftt1'1
streak in the pindin&. two-<tai y. 1even.evmt
hfpeathlon. Slie is unbea en i11nce 198' and is
the oply heptltblcte to surpua 7,000 points,
taetuna • record 1 .21 s at the trials. Whtie she •111 be an o\·trWhdmina favonae
in the heptathlon. Joyner-Kerstt will have a
much more d1flk ult asslP,tment in the long
jump. There. her competition includes world
rccord·holder Galina Chistyalcova of the
Soviet Union and Heike Drechsler of East
Germany. wuh whom she shared the world
record until C1ust)akova took it this year.
Anot her double hopeful 1s Morocco's Said
Aouita. the world's most complete distance
runner with world records at t .500 meters.
2.000 meters. two miles and S.000 me1ers. He
won 43 con$ttutave races at various distances
on the track before finishing second in a J ,()()().
meter steeplechase last year-the first time in
ciaht years he had run the event.
ou11a ma) try both the800and the I ,S001t
Seoul
Soviet Coach Igor Tcr·Ovan~an ca~s the
pole \'IUlt "a complicated event. but he said
Bubka "makes it look easy.''
t the rate the stolid 8ubu is prosrcsssna.
havina raised the world record to 19 feet. I OY>
inches. he is cons1dcrro the No. l threat 10
reach the 2()..foot bamcr.
The maananimous Mota also is a world
record-holder. with a time of 47.02 in the 400
hurdles. and an 11hlttc with 1 m11t1ifictnt
w1nn1q treak. He Md I I ().,ar ~ o( 122
victories. includina 107 ftnah. befcri lotina
last }ear.
Slaney, world record-holder m the women's
mile and the American record-holder at all
distances from 800 meters to 10.000 meters.
has yet to strike Olympic gold -or even
Olympic medal. mainly because of injuncs or
a<'Cidents.
In her only Olvmpic apPCarance, she
collided with Zola ~udd dunng the 3.000-
mcter final at Los Angeles in 1984 -an
incident that became the Games' cause
cclebre.
Griffith Joyner raced into worldwide
prominence during last month's U.S. Olym·
pie trials wtth a spcctaculu senes of per·
formances 1n the women's sprints. including
an clcctrif)'ina world-record clockmg of 10.49
Douglas Wakihuru in the marathon. by Abdi of Ea'il Germany and Alessandro Andrei of
Bile of Somalia m the 1,500 and b} Aou1ta m Ital} m the shot put: Sergei l itvinov of the
the 5.000. Soviet Union m the hammer throw, and Jan
In addition. the African Olympic cont· Zctezny of Czechoslovakia in the javelin.
1ngent will include marathoners Ibrahim Other leadinJ women include Evelyn
Hussein of Ken ya and Juma llcangaa. of Ashford of the U.S. and Si Ike Gladisch·Motler
Tanzania, 5,000-meter runner John Nauga of and Marlies Gohr of East ~rmany in lhe
Kenya. and 3,000-meter siecplcchascrs Julius sprints; Petra Muller of ~st ~nnan~ ~od
Kanuki. Peter Koech and Julius Konr. all of Valene Brisco of the.-U.S. 1n the 400; Doma
Ken}!l Mehnte of Romania in the 800 and 1.SOO:
Track and field, the blue-nbbon event of Tat}!lna Samolenko of.the ~viet Union i~ t~e
the Games. al$0 will feature several other world I .SOO and 3.000. Manc1ca Pu tea of Romania 1n
record-holders. the 3.000: Ingrid Knsuanscn of Norway and
The men include Butch ReynoldJ of the Li1 Lvnch MCColpn of Britain in the 10,000:
U.S. and Thomas Schontcbc of East Germ•J'.1¥ Rosa 'Mota of Portugal and Grete Waitz of
m the 400: Joaquim Cruz of Brazil 1n the 800 orway sn the marathon, and YOfdank.a
and I .SOO: John Walker of New Zealand in the Donkova and G1nk.a Zagorcheva of Bulprit in
l.SOO: Eamonn Coahlan oflreland in the S.000: the 100 hurdles. '
Thompson was sufferinf from a severe Alberto ova of fialy in the 10.000~ Rob de Aho. Stella Kostadinova of Butprit in
groan injury durin& last year s World Cham· Castclla of Australia. To hihiko Stko .of Japan the hiah )Ump; Natalya L1sovskay1 of \he
p1onships. and 1t caused him to suffer his first and John Trcac) of Ireland 1n the marathon: Soviet Union 1n the shot put. and Petra Fefteo(
defeat in the decathlon sinct 1978. Oeso1tcthat Rastr K.m&dom of the U . in the I !~meter East Germany 1n the javelin.
lou. he tbJnks he can become the first ht&J'I hurdfcs. and Harald Schmid of West There also wtll be some notables m1111"1-
decathle1c win thrtt Olymptctolds and the first German) 1n the 400 hu,rd.lls. The)' include Bntons Set.ttian oe. the only
to amas~ 9,000 points. He 1'otds the wortd l!t<>, West Germafl1 ·Carlo Thranhardt mon to win two 01 mptc ,old medals in \he
rttOrd ofS.847. and Dietmar Moacnbufl an the hiah jump~ l.SOO. and Stt"c Oven. the 1980 Sold medahst
The Afncan distance runnensbowed their Robfn Emm1y1n of the Sovlti Union and an the 800: Joan Benoit Samvdton of the U.S..
durabthty at the Wortd C'hampaonships. with um· Myricks or the u. '"the Iona JUmp~ w1nncrofthefir1twomen'sotympecmanthon.
victories by Kenyans 8'11y Konchellah in the Willie Banks of the U.S. and Khris10 Markov o( and Grq f 05ter of the United S&ata. tht two-
800 mettrs.. Paul K.apkocd1 1n the 10.000 and BulJ,lna In the triple jump. Ulf Timmermann umc -·orkl chlmpi~n in the 110 hurdles.
•
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Tuesday. August 16, 1988 •
Execu~ive searches expand with OC industries
MitchelCTarsen & ZilliacUs partners
ave branch in Newport; London next
By LIUANA TAYLOR
0.-, .... c-., .......
Orange County industries are
growing, and 11 is time for Mitchell.
Larsen & Z11liacus 10 expand. pres•·
dent Roben S. Divme said.
Accordang 10 Divine. the manufac·
turing and service industries arl'
expanding thro\JghOut the state. but
mostly in Orange Count) with the
opening of new businesses in the
fina ncing. high technology. real estate
il nd mt"d 1rn I fil'l<i(
"If business gro,H. our business
gro\\ s." D" me said
Based 1n Los .\ngeles. the company
1s an C\CCUll' e search firm dedicated
10 1dent1f~ mg and attractrng excep-
tional top management and" 1duals
to major corporations. About 25
percent of its placements are outside
the United States an Japan. England
and France.
The firm." h1ch started se' en' ears
ago" hl'n Tom ~1tchcll. DKk Larsen
and Pat Z1lliacus left another search
STEWART PERRY JENKINS
Disneyland Hotel
wins meeting award
ShaDDon J. Stewart has been named ad,ertismg/pubhc
rela11ons/en terta10ment manager and F. Alan Perry catenng sales
representative at the Disneyland Hotel. Stewart resides 1n Newport
Be~ch and Perry in Irvine. The 60-acre convention resort recentl~
won Successful Meetings' Pinnacle A ward as a supenor meeting hotel
for the founh consecutive ~ear. The honor as presented 10 hotels that
have done an outstanding JOb an handling the needs of mee11ng
planners across the count!). Of 25 West Coast hotels recognazed. the
other Orange Count~ winners were the ..\nahe1m Hilton and Towers.
Anaheim Mamou and the R11z-Carlton 1n Laguna Niguel • • • The appointment of Barbara J. Jenkins as president and chief
execullH' officer of Franklin Thrift & Loan Association has been
announced by Dr. Nathaniel B. Kurnick. chairman of Franklin
Bancorp. Established in 19 Oand based 1n Orange. Franldin Thnft &
Loan is an SI mtlhon financial ms111ut1on. • • • Laguna Beach resident James C. Meneoni has Joined the In inc
office of Seber· Voit Commercial Brokerage Co. as associate vice
0 president. The 15-~ear 'eteran of the Southern California
commemal brokerage mdustr: "Ill specialize an land and
in' estment sales.
MENCONI OLDHAM GROE~E:\'DYK
• Jack H. Oldham, a partner in 1he Newport Beach office of
Kenneth Leventhal & Co .. ha been promoted to national tax director
for the nation's 13th largest accounting firm . In charge of the Orangl'
Count\ office's ta\ pracuce since 1984. Oldham "111 retain has
curreni respons1b1ht1l's plus "'" o'ersce de,l'lopment of ne" ta'
s1ra1cg1es. technical 1mplementa11on ofla\ la~s and coordina11on of
resources and information among the 12 Kenneth Ll'\Cnthal & Co.
offices across the count!')'. • • • Monarch Beach resident Sharon A. Groenendyk has been
promoted to 'ice president an Union Bank's Mortgage Banking
Group. She will be based at the bank's South Orange (ount> office 1n
Irvine where Timothy S. Carney of Corona del Mar has been
promoted to account officer . .\ ne" account officer in the loan
anah sis department 1n the Los .\ngcles headquaners 1s Linda J. Ball
of Ir' 1ne . .\n SS 7 b1lhon bank. l 'n1on 1s the fifth largest bank 1i't
Cahfom1a. • • • David C. Leone has been appointed customer finance manager
for the Industrial Electronics Business Sector of Toshiba America
lnc.1n ln ·me. He "111 rev1e" current leasing and rental programs and
formulate financial strategics for IEBS. including the Tele-
communication s,•stems DI\ lSIOn.
r • • •
In Huntington Beach. Lorraine Hartmann has been named
Southern Cahforn1a area 1nvestmcnt consultant for GLENFED
Brokerage Services. the retail 10\es1ment subs1d1ar: of Glendale
Federal Savings and Loan. • • • Micheal W. Jones of Irvine is now financial manager for Tbe
CenteDDlal Group lnc. He will establish a financial anal~s1s program
for the corporation in Orange which as 10\ oh ed in the acqu1S111on.
development. construction and propert) and asset management of
real estate projects. primaril~ 1n the Riverside/San Bernardino area
and Phoel\tX. Ariz.
lirm an Los .\ngeks to stan their o" n
has gro"n stead1h to become the
second largest retained search firm an
outhcrn California. With branche~
an an Franc1..co. ~cw York and no"
10 ~e" pon Beach. the partners are
plannang to ewand an London.
omeumes. internal promouons
aren't in the best long-run interests of
an organazauon. and it 1s necessal') to
hire somt>one from outside the com-
pan) That as "hen Mitchell. La~n
and Z1lliacus appears on the scene
It\ clients -maJor corporations in
the automoll\e. finance. com-
mun1cat1ons. medical and high tech-
nolog' 1ndu!>1r1e'> -contact the firm
"hen 'the' are an need of an e'ecu11' e
manager.' This po1ent1al recru11
''lluld ··under'itand and sol"e the
probkm\·· of the compan~. Dt' 1ne
\aid
The ~care h consultants• goalts to
find and approach the 1nd1v1dual who
ha'> e\h1b11ed superior performance
at rnmpan1es "h1ch are an compe11-
t1on ''Ith the client
earth consultants. :ii.ho are an
l.'harge of meeting "1th the client to a'isess m corporate needs and 10
understand the posn1on. also spend a
great deal ol 11me 1n the e"ecuu'e
marketplace maintaining data base
lOntain1ng informat ion on potenual
,and1datt''>
c >nl't' relru1tef"i 1dl•nt1f, the sources
Jnd pro\pt't ts to find the best can-
didate to till the JOb. the)' m1erv1e"
Jnd '>elt·d the potenual recruits
F inalh \t•art he rs nl'got1ate the com-
pen~uun pad.ages and close the
deal
l nJe( 1h1c, .. , !Mm ~OU e\l"CUll\ ('
managt"r\ earning a m1n1mum of
S60 000. are hired 'earh b' tho!.t'
corporations au:.ording 10 DI\ ant'
But calltng potenual t·and1date'>
"htle the~ are '>llll 1,1,or~mg for other
firm'> 1c,n't a problem 0 1' me said
lx"\auSc: "must pt•ople thec,e da\s are unhapp~ at their· 1,1,or~pla,e· and
almost l'' en une h'>IC'ns to "hat ont'
has to '><l' «about .i 1nh offl'rt ·
0 1\ inc nott'd that 'ear' ago firms 100~ t.trt' JI t'ntph 'l't''> hut no"
there" nt• ltl\J1:' tu t~t'!ll
\\hen '>t'..t'• 1 , •n,ultan1 .. ''orl.
O\l"r\t'J'> thl•, o.·,,11rr ..t1.qua1n1cd
"1th 1101 inh tilt' , l1t·nt·, nt•ed' but
al'>l' tht· 1. ulturt' t iht· ,·.1..1ntn For
tnl>tan e the retrutter in Tok\O will
endea' or 10 "~t't'P contacts ahve:· for
ne" d1t"nti. t t>ml' forth "ht'n "some-
unt· elst" refers 'ou ..
\nd that'> ihe "a' 11 1,1,orks for hu\1ne,,t'\ ..t i home too
In thl" 'c.>'' port Beach office.
D1' nl team' up \\1th g('neral man·
..1gt•1 Da' 1d v. eiss. Kenneth L.
Th1H111N1n Jnd John Erner)
\\ l' .,., "hu ..aid the Newport
Ht..1d1 otlilt' ""111 be the largest
rl't.11nl'd 'iear~h lirm sen ing Orange
.ind ')..111 Otl'tto rnun11es ·· has been
r' •h ed in l'\Cl'ut1' c search smce o.J~4 \n .:\-managing partner for
\\ Jrd Ho" di I ntemallonal. a search
11rm 1n Lu'> \ngcles. ht> focuses on
au tomot 1' t• Jt'ro!>pact" and eonstruc-
llL'n tirm'
Tht'' pulled in 10 12 '"nk t'\en
l-1 'ears a~o. "ht'n HJrbor !tu k
wa5 t'Stabh::,hed All !llgdl1rr 1!1c~ \t'
ht-en on hoard for 15~ \c~1r.
hu1,tn~. lhe cu~tome~ ,1,c " .....
·\n<l the~ kno"' h11\\ 11 "~.l
Qu1ckJ~. fairl~. comrll"tt'1 \
-.HarbocBank
Frum a.''t~tant m:111J~tf\ and 'Kr
pl'l"\tden1:1 to loan !<L1'tt<1nt-Jnd
the CEO. ·tht'\ know till" h:ink. the
Current ·Rate
\\ htle other bank-Jrt .... •t•'.'' r ...
\\1th ta~1ng afluJI. H.~ ·' i .1 •
conttnues lO bt-~tJ1'lr :-tr Jl,._ J' I,;
~tead' Just like' it' ,1r\\
%*
t \. i)r:-Jl.. 1..l.b \..s:lllt.tJ!'. "iU'. 4' ·.t-..
'..t .... C" lf'\1: ..
•" , '"'' .......
Y ields
%
Northrop consultants 1
spent $90,000 a month I
(\
LOS ANGEL~ (AP) -{:onsult~ Korean President Chun Doo H"an.
ants spent up to $90.000 a month the LO$ A.ngelc Tames reported
cntenaining South Korean 1ovem· Monda'.
mcnt officials to secure F-20 fighter In a )anuary 1987 1nten·1e" with
jet contracts for Northrop Corp.. investigators from Jones. Da). Re-
acrording to a published report. 3\ 1s & Pogue. h1n alleged that a
Jimmy Shin and the late Park S6.25-m1lhon deal Northrop signed
Chona Kyu. both fo rmer nightclub in 1984 to build a hotel in Seoul was a
owners. spent the money taking bogus venture.
officials to saloons. hostess bin and At one point in the intcn 1ew. Shin
Kortan·stylc acisha houses. accord-'~ said Park had propostd ttie hotel deal
ina to an internal invcstiption by a as a cover to provide a SS m1llton
Washina1on law firm hired b).' the lobby fund to be ustd to Pl> otT
1cros.,.cc company's board of dirt<'· various people. accordina to the
tors. report hin. who m1de tht atlept1on
No cumulative fiau"'s were avail· "hen his la"'~r was ou~ of the room.
able on the conslllt.ants• upenscs. but later reca~ed ind ~C3mbcd the hotel
the "'PO" said the lobbyil\t campa1an deal a a SC"htmc to act money for
went on for It least sevcnl ycal'I Park. Wtilll in 1984. Nonhrop has said the hotel dtll rt.' said Parle also nrnri::' that v.aS I lqlttmftC bull~ "CftlUl"t lO ~n1n ....... "' help the Koreans financ:c the
Nonhrop ~ up a SS m1 hon iund purcha5e or the fiJtttcr J('ts bu\. that it ~mably to ht u~ to PIY ofT • various pt<>ple includina Sou11\ (Pl ....... ROaTllltOP,..~
* r 'Cdcral rqtul.alJCtll rcqull'CS a \\1~111
1r1Crcst pcn.< for carty ""'1t¥ra"' I Annual
> icld t.scd ..... dial)' ClOITlf'O"id "i v. bcn I l'UTCSl
is left on dc~it for one-year ICml ft..c'. )'dd and
tctm Wb,JCct 10 C~. Wlthoul nouce. ...
nnua lly
0 DEPOSITS OF
$500 to $99. 999
FOR 180 DA\'
DEPOSITS FEDERALLY INSURED TO $100,000 BY THE FSLIC
·AMERIGAN .SAV
"AND ·tf31'N ASSOCIAtlON lllir
-'! ,.
..
.:
:
Ultraaystems added
to Hadson earnings
Hadson Corp .. the parent company ofUl1rUyttna1 lac. oflrv1nc.
has rreorted net earninas for the quarter coded June JO. ofS2, SI 3.000.
or S0.08 per share on.ttvcnun ofSl77.210,000. This compares with
net income of Sl.IS.S,000, or S0.06 per share on revenues of
S97.S96,000 for the second quaner of 1987.
For the six months ended June 30, net earnings were $3,069,000 or SO. l2 per share and revenues totaled $308.746,000. For the same six-
month period of 1987, net eamiJ\IS before the cumulative efTcct of a
chan&c m accounting were $2,47 I ,000. or S0.14 per share and ttvenues wett l 199.29 I,()()(),
The second quarter of 1988 is the first period rcponed by
Oklahoma City-based Hadson which includes the mulls of operation
of Ultrasystems Inc.. which was acquired last April. Previously
reported mulls of operations of Hadson for the thrtt·month and six-
month periods ended June 30, have been restated to rcfl~t the
ldoptfon of State of Financial Accountin& Standards, No. 96 -.. AccountinJ for Income Taxes." Net losses after cumulative effect of
lhc accounttnJ change were $2, 127,000 or -S0.12 per share for the first sil months oft 987.
Steehen W. Houghton, president and ch.ief executive officer.
stated, 'We att pleased with the operating results for the quaner.
Hadson delivered improved earnings per share as compared to the
same <iuancr of last year despite the issuance during the quaner of
SI 5.870,000 shares of common stock for the acquisitio n of Uhrasystems Inc. That acquisition has added a critical element for the
implcmcntatfon of our strategy to become a full-service energy
-CORlpaD • -------__ _
.. In addition the acquisition of tbe HRB Division of The SillJer
Co') which was announced durins July, will position the co mpany's Dc1ensc and Space Group as a leading technology firm in the collection
and analysis of signal intelligenc1e. While the debt and goodwill which
we will incur in making th is acquisition will cause a near-term impact
on earnings due to substantially higher interest expense. we believe the
long-term value to our shareholders of this acquisition will be substantial." • • • ToacltS&OMS.ftwareCorp. on Monday announced net income for
the second q_uaner ended June 30 of $6, 152 on revenue~ of S254.017 compared with a loss for the like period ended 1n 1987 o(S54.497 on revenues of $225,391.
The repon marks the third consecutive profitable quaner for the Seal Beach company.
For the six months ended June 30 the company reported net
income of $26, 758 on revenues of $575.611 vs. a loss of $95,086 on
revenues ofS41 l.140 for the comparable period of the previous year.
.. To date, our sales perfohnance is on target as we move into the slow summer months," said Larry Dingus, chairman and chief
executive officer ... Our position results over the first six months of the
year give us confidence that 1988 will be profitable."
"Revenues in the second quaner reflect the stan-up of
TEworksLAN shipments to AT &cT as pan of a previously announced
agreement," said Dingus. "In addition. we are generating consistent
revenues from our master licensee for FASTBACK. for the Macintosh ...
TouchStone Software is a leader in the development and
marketing of connectivity software that provides complete com·
patibility between a variety of computers and networks. • • • In vestor John W. Gildea has decreased his stake in Irvine-based
Laser Precision Corp. to 4.9 from 7.1 percent, according to a Securities
and Exchange Commission filin&-
From July 19 to Aug. 11 . Gildea sold 77,053 of Laser Precision's
com mon shares. lowering his holdings to 171 .315 shares.
Laser Precisio n produces optkal energy meters.
NORTHROP PROBE ...
From BS was defrauded in the deal. The
compan v has filed suit in an ctTon to
reco' er ·its investment from Park's
survivors and former associates.
Nonhrop's Korean business deals
arc under 1nvestigat1on bv a Los
.\ngeles federal grand jury. as well as
by the House Ene~ and Commerce
Committee. The Times said a sou rce
told it that Committee Chairman
John Dingell (D·Mich) has tried to
obtain a cop) of the report. but Jones Da} has declined.
.\ Nonhrop spokesman told the
Times he could.. not comment on the
Jones Da) rcpon because he had not
seen 11. The repon apparently was delivered to the board but was not
made available to Nonhrop·s man-
agement. according to the Times.
---~.
Fed likely to push interest rates higher
WASHINGTON (AP)-The fed-
eral Reserve. one week after its
dramatic move to boost a key intettst
rate. is likely to continue pushina
rat.es hi&h.cr. many ~onomists pre-dicted Monda y on the eve of a pobcy·
making mttting.
These analym believe that the Fed
has decided that higher rates arc
necessary to slow an economy where demand pressures arc bumping up
against tight labor markets and ca-
pacity restraints in the manufacturing
sector. .. We are facing the danger of a new
.... ago-price 1nflauonary spiral and I
am looking for funher tightening
steps based on a pe~ption by Fed policy-makers that the economy is
growmg too stl'ongly," said David
Jones. senior economist at Aubrey G .
Lanston & Co .. a government securi-
ties dealer. Fed policy-makers will convene
behind closed doors on Tuesday to
review the econom y's prospects and
<ehnn monetary policy for the next 11/J
months.
The meeting of the Federal Open
Market Committee comes one week
aficr the Fed. in a surprise move,
bOOsteOits discoun[ rate oyone-half percentage point to 6.5 percent.
An increase in the discount rate. the
interest the Fed charges to make loans
to commercial banks. is the most
dramatic si$-"al the central bank can send of its intention to push Interest
rates higher as a wa y of dampening
demand and thus fighting jnfla-
uonan pn-ssurcs. The.boost took many eco}lomists
b' surpnse. coming as it did only one wee~ before the Republican Nauonal
Con' ention. Many economists had expected that the all-Republican Fed
board. led by Chairman Alan Green-
span. would shy away from a hike in
the discount rate because of election-
' ear pressures. · C'alhng attention to inflationary fears dunng a presidential campaign
\\as seen as ccnam to heighten
uncenainty among voters about the
cconom\ ·s future. A discount rate
boost in· eptember of 1980 has been
cited as one factor contributing to
Ji mm~ Caner's defeat. Whale analys ts don't expect
another increase in the discount rate until af1er lhe No,ember election.
the) said the Fed will very likely
con tinue tightening credit by more
subtle means.
ince late March. the Fed has been draining the amount of reserves
OTC UPS & DOWNS
banks have available for makina
loans, driving up a variety of shon-
term intettst rates.
The federal funds rate. which is the
interest banks charae to make over· night loans to each other, has now
risen to 8 percent and many econom-
ists predicted st would climb by
another one-half percentage point in
coming weeks.
This ~~II force another boost in
banks'.AJrime lending rate, to 10.5
percent, economists predicted.
In the wake of last week's Fed
discount rate hike, banks increased
the prime to 10 percent, the first time
it has been in double digits in three
years,
Because the prime is uwd to
calculate a wide ranae of consumer
loans, from adjustable mo".'Pacs to
home cquit)' loans. the rate tukes will
quickly be felt by consumer$, analysts
said.
They also predicted funhcr in-creases in traditional fixed-rate
moruaes. A national survey by the
Federal Home Loan Mongage Corp.
said that fixed-rate mongaaes jump-
ed to 10.57 peroent at the end oflast week. up almost a percentage point
from their February low.
"Each week now. mortgage rates
are going to ratchet higher and we will
' ., •
see" 11 percent m~ probably
wjthin a month," ~icted Allen
Sinai. chief econom11t of the Botton
Co. Economists said the fed has no
choice but to move to push inttrett
rates h1ghrr bt'cause of widespttad indications of growina inOationary
prtssurts. The government reported last week
that wholesale prices, excludina the
volatile food and enc11y categories, shot up 0.6 percent in July, double tho
June increaJC. And on Monday. the.government
said that output in the industrial
sector climbed 0.8 percent in July.
' "
~--
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Tueedey, Augult 18, 1• • SI
TUESDAY'S CLOSING PRIC28
Stock prices advance
EW YORK (A P) -The stock market
ad\an~d today despite unsettling news about the
s"ollen U.S. trade deficit. rallying larsely on what
brokers descnbed as a technical rebound from its
recent lo~.
The Do"' Jones a'era.ge of 30 industrials,
"h1ch fell 33.25 points Monda) to lhe lowest close
tn nearl} three months. regained about half the loss
b) the end of trading. up 17.24 to 2,021.Sl.
Ga10mg issues outnumbered declines by
about an 8-to-5 margin on the New York Stock
fachange. "'1th 883 up. 564 down and 510
unchan~d
81g Board 'olume tot.aJcd 162. 79 million
shares, \'S. I ~8.56 m1lhon 10 the pttv1ous session.
The NYSE's composite index of all listed 1ssu~ro~09 1to1 47.49.
NEW YORK (API Aug 16
AM EX LE~D [R S
NEW YORK (AP) -Sain, ' Cl.~. orlce Tuesday end net cflenoc of the 1 most eclive American Stod E11cn.noe Ul.lf\, trading nalionelfV or more tn.n Sl N1nw V L.As1 Ck OomePtrl I '/ 1 3·32 _,..., W~l'l~Lat>S 1 9.''• + 4 Tl omm 67, .J, ....
N ~s ~, ....... +'' AM<lahl , 44 FtAuslPr l , l l4.
ICH Co J7 7''1 f"uasAlrCf fj· 10 , + i LorlmerTe 1 , 12'• T elesohere 11 • • -~
Goto Quon s
ME TA LS QuorE s
NEW VORK 1API -$DOI -"«'•-,...,_ Of-
Tuftdlt -'.~ SI 29~ t* ~ N~ 0-} IOOI
mot'll\~~ COf1i1* SI 02 ...SI 03 c.lll a~ VS _ .. ,,..e:.. ~ 00 --1• oer pour'IO II~ C-IOOI
ft"l(W"lf .. ~
LMCL )$.~ cenll a POurC1
Dnc: 66 '.'() _. ... POurCI -Tiii Sol "6 '9 v.lall W .... ~· !>'!Cl per ltl 0 111-U 'XI~ l "atinan 10f'IV o..iy _,
SW. .. S6 "S' -l•OI-0.1 NV Come> S001 rftOft!I\
~"'or ~Vil • S3SS oo-s3I$ 00 -'6 lb "-... Yon
.... l~ Wl 0().$529 00 tr~ O.I N' 1CCl'ltacll ~ SS3630NY lo'erCIOC)l-!t~or Mott
I w H ~ T Ny s E D ~'
NEW YORK CAP) Aug, 1' T"l
' 2'
NYSE L l~Dt~'.,
NEW VORK (AP) -Final Dow JoMs
.,.", for 1 ., .
.. '·'~·1 . . : 1 . .Jfffo1'1J .
urns l '5Stk •
NASDAQ s u ~M ~R r
Trade deficit grows
in big June setback
\\ \SHl,GTO'°IJ!.\Pl-Thel.
tr.ltk dt>lk1t 'iulkr<"d 3 maJor ~tbadc
1n June. S\\Clltn@ 10 SI: ) bllhon. the
go\cmmcnl !>lltd toda' The de·
tl•nora11on follo"cd thrl"(' straight
months of 1mpro' cmcnts
The gro\\1h in the tradt balance -
a <;h;srp ~ . pcrnnt "'orsc than the
\fa, 1mhalanC't ofS~.8 b1lhon -... ,.s
llt~ch to JOit f nanclal marktts.
Ju'n<'' trading honfall was the
"''"" s1nC'c Fcbrual') 's S 14.4 b1llton
dctk n. "'h1C'h mggered a 100.pomt
plunge m the Oo• JonC$ industnal
8' cragc when u ..... , announC"Cd 1n
..\pol.
The June deficit. as rcponcd b) the Commerce Ocpartmtnt. wu
ubstanti.all} "'Ont than had ~n
e'~led. M l ctonom1m had an· t1~pa1ed a dtlici t of around SI0.9
b1lhon asaoal> t cxptt'ted tbata nsc
tn 1mpons 9r'OUJd be partLIU)' OfT$Ct by conunued sro•,b of upons. Ho~~,cr. t \pons fcU by 2.4 per·
cent in June to a scasoaall) edJ&lllCd
$16.3 bilhon •lulc lmpons ~ to
an aJl.otune heh ofSJCJ 4 btlhon.
TI\( detttioraUOft poenkd up the
problem ~ U.S. poticymalen.
who h,a\"t stNll)ed for "'°" of this
dead<' to find wta)s to mt~ toarint
nck dcficrts.
Whilt us. Qpor1S --~ ....
1m"9'0\t1Mtltl bta-ol a ••II'-•
ttal dcclmc in the vatut of the dollr,
import$ have stayed at stubbornly
h•gh le\,ds despllt the fact that a
wc3ker dollar is now makina f~
good mon.-cx~nsive for Americ::a
con umcrs.
The .7 pcT'l'CntJumpin imporuia
June "as laid to a sharp rite ia import of clothing. office equipcDNt
and heavy ml(h1ncry.
The repon said that shipman ol
torc1gn capital goods shot uJ> by S900
mtlhon in June white stupments ol
con umcr aoOO.s rose Ul) S700 million.
'The wcaln 1n u~ rdlected
d«hnts in sht~t of Amcnc.
cap1ll..I goods, ..,-icuhW"al produca
and autos.
E'-m T.1tb \be dt1Cn0tltion, Ille
l' , u.c:k dcfictt for tbe tint IQ
months of the lUr wa Nn.ai"I at•
annu.al l'ltt of S 140 ballioft. doWll
h.a.r'Pl) from the-rcconS ddicit ol
SFM l bdhon Kt 1n 1987.
mmca'1 fomp oil bill d«liMd
Jljpdy 9 J-'° Sl.6 ..._==t
compattd 10 SJ • billioa ta ~y. •
\ht l\~ prR ........ 1111 ·---~ Sl6,l9,down ll cnt1._. Ma,. Aa ·~of7.l6 ........ 0f0il ~nn~datty,doWhla7.16
milliOG bUttlt. dail • ,,
•Ill Ult ..... CMlml ... ............
• Or1nge Cout DAILY PILOT I Tueedey, AUOUlt 18, 1988
CALL 842-5878
ff:::lf!iiiiifiiiiiiiiii=iir.if;i=;~!!!l!!L!!~21MI!!! C.ta 1111 lllt .... , ..... llB lal~ta Ptai anll C.t1 liu •M c.ta .... 2114 •Wfld ..... ... ...,., ... ...
If llmJ •BEAUTIFUL pertt, ntte. DELUXE 38R 38A, "2 llfl .. , •llUm I Mb te..... 38A 21A8a on the bey.
-..CATION Ot40UNf
Ml 11» &Jll . -,,.,.,,, '-u•-.... s ......
-
n..,, S»-___ ,.r\ .:ll-'-' tt• -
C .. CIC YOUR AD ,,_ l'IRIT DAV
tunMt. & OOMll vu. S8r meet• bdrme", AIC, up· 2eA. ga111oe. n::iym. ~ 2er ,.,..,Ba wtp. crptt, 28r. 18a. patio, ~pott IMO-dec:tc. ""*view. Harbor View HomH, 2.....S.. w/d, pool/tpa. gradel galore. "Gated ated, atepe to bayl bMch ~LI -=-a drpa, blllns, lncd patio $900 avl 8/15 873-3452 =• 1oc1t1on. YHr Somer.:~ ~~15~ $1215/Mo 131·1153 Comm" S229S IM0-0299 910 W. Belb01 Blvd. 83~120 Call 1·5PM EASTBLUFF Deluxe 28r Via Lkso~=~~&-1:8 ~::.. 844-ss5• evff, IWT•..... E'BLUFFS condo. SBA, 1975/mo Yf'tY. 875-9850 AlllT91nl 867 Victoria 'E' .... $720 2'ABa 1300aq tt. trptc.1.-.,....-__,,.,~~:---:-=-r----
IM4-l413 _.enda "Polyneifan Atmoepller•" 1....,BA. lmm.c No peta. •2BFV2BA 1925/mo yr1'f. Large attracilve Aptt In • 2819 Santa Ana 'C' ... 1735 new apJ:llances & micro, Unturn 28R 1BA. btt-IM. ?..,~.;:;:-~'"'£..:: cost~ 38iJ2:Jt:' ~,~2~= ~~ :1v1;~M~~~11~:·u ~. "1omc:ar ~~ '::. ~~~1~.~::.:-;t1':i 1..,. 21r/11a 1 ~~~~~~0m~r~: :~. ~-C1:=·
...,, ..... _____ ...,, ~9.~.' 3231 C1ay st: w/dhkup,pool.J.c,gar + •HARBOR VIEW HOMES 759.950e Of 873-5370 2cBardrPOf1m 1V~B•ry. no petsf95 dW~~/~O. ~~.ef5~. 1 yr leaseS1095. 8y11PPI. AYI 9110. Mature~ 4f.::,.•~:~-:...,~ Newport Hts. IM2.e353 eatpOrt, $095 & S12IO + 38r 28a H~raded. BRITE'. cteen ~ 2BR 2Bdrm 2Ba S810 IJ only. No pets 875·00N raef'd. ~4)946-41 Of :."'~"::;.:;::.:·.= •EASTBLUFF Executl\19 NC. No pets. 549-2447 Lit 'J>i~··.100-='' 19Aw/gar.$8 ~~5.:o 398 W. Wilton 631·5583 •rt LAF~&t~~!i6~~XR~l~H •.1.•:_,..150n ..... •·c-tor "'" .-., "'" -· 4BR 2BA OR FR Bay, llTf LJllT 11111 NW 1 o Balboa. Agt 8 • ---------..... , ,...,. ......... __ .,. .,..,,., ,,_ city A harbor.;.._: CdM 2BR 28A loft w/d hkup, •H.V. HOMES. 5BfUBA. Owner 811-790-7159 1 Bedroom S&40 gar .. A/C, + •tru, avall GIANT POOl:I Would you 3Br. 38a, patio, geraoe.
::..:-.. -......... ""' schoola. No pet•. $2950 garage $1300. 854-1802 Neer elem. echOol. No WINTER RENTAL Balt>oa 2Bdrm 1Ba $760 ~~; 91~~75/:~:...8~3n1• g:~v:p!r1~'~ ~fr0o1~81f.:ee lM
•·· ._... ... ---,. .. ,. + $4500teo. IM2.0350 BA petal L .... 9-10 mo'•· Penn Pt 2BFVtBA. ~ blk 301 Avocado 842-9850 • or from the bHch. Call ... --.. ,_ ..... ._,,....,,... •CLEAN 3BR. 2~ • $2150 mo. 720-1341 * to ocean°' bay, no pets, WITlf1L UITllll aat k tO<lay and move In Sep-WESTCLIFFArea 2-1,.._ :--~ ....... "": .:=.-..=-; EA~~j~Ex-~:,OS,:.,~~ /~o:7f.~ Ull• .. _. 5950· av 911u23-ot~ 2BR 1'nBA Twnhse. Frpte, .n..n. WIST tember 1st. 975-1877 I ref~ .. ~· :'·~
cellent flncanclng. !168 Miner St. 840-5010 lmmac 38A 28A. ram rm. cenu ••• llu MU gar. yard/patio. lndry rm. ··•T•n• -1101 llOAT111 ~~lti no Peti Se~/rno
..
~
$419,000. 780-1108 Bkr •DELUXE• pvt PoOl/tpa, grndr. l.M ....... quiet loc. 5850/mo. "" • ..... w'2 $1"5/mo. 85S-1508 1 HSE from ocean Uf...... 2617 Or IPIOllll 1, 21111 111 lfP r:+:r-MC--.. ""'--:-~.,....-.,....-.,....-
c ti a-• frpl.~ui~~~~~:f:i>hur, w ~pie~~:!, •:'so~ TSL MGMT 91:2.1603 Swimming pools. LlQhted Deluxe 2BR Townhouae In lliiC ........ ~ 1B.,.,.B•638.0405dave L91UYnuH II/ 1• •73•9013 n tennis, volleyball & prime Newport 8Mch~ Sjim[!!' rv ' "" •-~t ~ custom home ut re rig. v -•LJll * 11 Cl t I G W/D .... p ltttii RIYL (of• Of 131.7528 eves ..... · basketba . ose o oc. arage. • ... -u • :;;,mj~~~imr•• " A, IPaclous. Int. Short SIHMftl-YMllt-Corne yt_ltte.ditter t>Mch, actloole;-pat'ke &--C9b , .. ,~ lfttttlng, --.at Paclflc Memodal Park Emsttte ·romantic h-OUM, term '*'taro!(. $2300 mo. 2BA 1~BA. Close to bchl completely remodeled. shopping. many extras · Close to ~.,-all
Newport Beach country & contemporary Randy IM5-3334 900 SM lane 844_2811 Bffutlful 2BA ap11. Pool, 6401 WEST WARNER beach $875/mo. Wkly rentala now sv ·
phone 846-2263 stYtlng, 3BA 2BA. formal • -llU rec. room. laundry room. U2 H 21 4101 Hilaria I $147.00 Wk & up. 2274 •--c faral brktst & dining, trplc, all .._ "~ta I na 2114 Ready for Instant mo\'9-• _ TSL MGMT &42· 1803 Nwpt BIVd, CM IMS-7445
... 1 1 rt yd 4BA 2'~BA, FA/OR, large '-ft lnl Only $640 to $650/mo. * BR t cl 1retea ISH ~~:~.~Wd ~Ir:~ morei patio. 45' lol. Stto St. Lie + s200 OFF MOVE·IN ~at~d ~o~~e~. p~o~: Lg 2BA 2BA. d/w, tr19, lleat11a tt .:!! 31 ACRE ranch ilte, NW Vacant. s 1450/mo. $2750 673-7767 Avt 9/1 me81iBJIB AU ... am. spa lndry lac. $600/mo stove, comm pool, lrple. • ...
Arizona. Trees. mountain Donald Pfalt. IM2·9797 LOVEL y 2BA 2BA. trptc. 530 W. Wilton No Pets. Call 541-3391 ~:;~gs~ or ::5~~/9! o · l•;P'le .. ("'Q•?•?§'"'§elllR""'eo""A"oo~J
views. S 13,850 with HSY prime loc. walk to ti.ach ... 11,...11m TSL MGMT BACHELOR turnlshed on 1 story. tum, encl garage,
terma. 875-9408 & lhopa $1150/mo. For .,. •-722·9012 or 642-1803 t>eacll pool sauna e•· Liil llLE M/F, n·smt<. avlll llTWl'ied ~. call Debra Smith These attractive Apts fea-Sorry No Petti erclse wefght room. 3Bdrm. 2 b-'h, patio. $750/Mo. 720-9220 5~• """'9 5'"28 ture pool, spa, private•-------.,....---., ...,.. °' .v -.. patios or decils, gar~ *WT9••* S750/mo 960.0879 garage $1500 ·-·-. U.* E'SIDE 3Br 2Ba large --:====-====--,.. __ ,
I 22nd & 0<carportlnabeautlfulyLg1BR +lgwatk·lncloset, BACHELOR, skylight, Fem. sh' 38r/28a. matr .... ._.., ___ •z,.1•n• duple• w gar nr landscaped setting W/D hkup, gar. Avl nowl relrlg. stove. private en· bdrm, Yf't'1. IMS.2878 Orange. S 1000. No peta. S t c "" .... hi N -;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil 850-(390, &46-9036/eve orry, nopes. $875/mo. JHn or ra"' tran~. near .,..ac o AVAIL NOW! nr Airport/ • Bachelor S560 631-1266 pets. $475/mo. 963-4954 OCC 3B 11 ft 2,LBa ~EAN VIEW LSE·CdM NICE 3BR home, w/fam 2Bdrm 1'4Ba $770 . , ' w O • ,.. •
$3500/mo. 4BR 2'ABA room. s1150 121 lllTll min LIYI AT Tll IUCll ldry, pool. no g1t. $318+
HOUM, 3~ git, remod. Townhome 3BA. Comm. COSTA MESA Rent an on site travel VRIV Lu• 2bi Iba. frptc, S250de9. 631-7939
"HARBOR WOOO~NB pool $1100 142· 1U• trailer In our AV park bar, built·lnt, patio, prtlg. M/F 2BR 28A Condo Sec.
Waltt to Newport Cntr. Wlhrfrtlt ..... IH E' IOE 2Br 1Ba upatalra $525 538-8316. M Nr ocean. Mature adults. Bldgll Undrgrd prkg. = 21~·0:~so°!~ IULTllS 111·1• OCUIFROIT lBR FURN apt. !Of 1 adult, fresh paint, lnd;y lac. no Ima• 44 No pets $875 675-8040 Avail 911 Frenc:tl Park
WM~R
. ·' :.. . .. . .
... ARBOR VU HMS-NB non-smkr. No pets. Resl· pets $690/mo 271 'D' E. N H be t I 38A area, SA. S400Mo +MC
3BR. ana, ..._.. "'pts. City 111W,,.T 111 ... m UIT dentlal area. $550/mo + .6 h Pl ... ~ 0452 r con o a. gar. ac n ear oag. au rg 891-7048d 667·091Me r •-•-"~--... •--10•• ..,..-,..,_... uw YIAILY ILi de oslts. .,. ·~ utlls. 1 t . -• bk yard, ale S1000/mo. 2BA townhouse wlfrplc. IMJ latalt M ----..u .. lh .. vu $2500/mo. Bkr Datllng 2BA 18A + new 1BR 18A $850. 2BR 18A o-to.02201 E-557-7555 E'SIDE 2Br 2Ba twnllse tst Securtty negot, a.· 1 d/w, lndry rm. encl gar· NEAR UCI 28r/28a $«4/ ..... /ceaiel 3Br 1~Qa. 2 story home. U ........ , ornalll klt~~y.;dw~~:,u.:: $1250/mo. 3BA 2BA Fplc;. yard, gar, like new. tras 551-5763 home, age No pets $1000/mo mo +'n ut. F 22·28. reep, Approx 1500sf. Oall cab•· 1• lllt 33 ~le CALL S.....,. $1800. 4BA 3BA $2000. 1BA upstairs unit. Frptc, $920. 666·4019/days 800·527-8073 days only I 548-0390 or 661·2538 outgoing, n-emkr, prof I -• 1-__. lg M/BR 2 f · ...... ,. •--..t.a.-lttr refrigera10f.stove .. allu111· ... 0_24281...,91 &wtmds. ' -pref87:J..6856/854-4238
• I -· ....... . p, gar. ...... ...... 2111 675-M 7or631·1266 -· "'-lties Included 1n rent. .,.. v• . • .. ltac~ 2 41 111..l llPLD sundeek. Remodeled & 111-4111 S625/mo. 650-5894 GARDEN selling crnr 1BA ---------. Fii/Ji HM w/Uf
38A 28A Up 2BR Down. $379,500. Ask for Steve BA r kl 4 • • · PENIN. PT. Steps to ocean **2BR 1BA upper unit. & walk-ins. Nr lwys. OCC, view. trplc. garage. deck. • WITI llAT sun • S550/Mo • 720•1566
2ndstoryedc:t.dln 12183· e§OUU t A ental :=:;; li~i·~\:· w/gar & patio, beam cell * • ocean IEWPllT IUllU APTI. 889Sandcaatle,CdM
Btt·lna, frpics, double &46-7220 Of 850-3759 ~;~/wtt g:~~3~ar°' ~j & bay. Lrg 3Br 2Ba on fresh paint. encl gar~•· civic ctr, SC Plaza. No walk to bch Avail now 1,,;;uSl>f lf&CHC'JWJWtt
garage, $341,000 Incl In-Paradigm Realty Sept 18· WINTER rental dble lo1. Huge yarjj. quiet new carpet. $850/mo. o pets. S6J5. 64 t.3078 s 1175 incl ull 497-3644 .u. =o ........ 1IA . IA!,.: M/F 25-35 to shr wt M, 4
twlof paint & MW carpet. t .... 11 s 10751mo. Close to terry. Dau Ptbt 1121 loc Avail now. S2200/mo pets. 754-0986 Wlf lU lU s ~-~ ~so ," 18' "°',. BR dplx. NB/Penn. av Jlllll IUl.n a Microwave, ceill~ans. 2 Ldroom, 2 ba1fi fiOU5e. 673-7777 or 673~1941 2BA/.1BA VERY NICEI •WOull 211 *s650 1 ! parlung 'i blk to t h 1 ~ ... 1\~;;4 ~.':°:':...-:""' g.1• S550+/mo. n-amkr.
11Ml1. an. 1U1 S.C. PUB llU Gorgeoutl Patio! Y fireplace. garage. on PElllSIU PlllT patio crprt ldry rm close BuilHns, iet area. 8· 2 3850 ... , an IJTIA 875-0888
-Oestrable hidden 2 story. clean! 7141673-4 le, qui et cu I· de· sac. to shOpp;ng S6iStmo mo. No pets 645-2435 $850/mo Ju 64 • SORRY NO PETS MSTA BA ln 3Br/2Ba CM
... •.:::, ~ j; 4BA 211tBA. S3p29ool900. l.g 818/888-505215059days s 1100/mo 640-4072 3Br. 2~1;~~m~undeck 360 Victoria 548-8523 LIFE II l WCIU ltw~rt ltac~ 2Ht llO-Ot 11 hm, 5mln. to bch .. lg.yd.
COLDWC?U
BAN~eRO
f..>."JX!(.t the bt.·st: 111un• ........
The ultimate townhome 1n
prestigious gate guarded
Big Canyon Dover model
expanded & axpenS1vely
decorated 2 BA & Den
Golf course view. 14'-IOIO
..... ,1n1m1
We'll g...,. you the down 1n ••chg '°' a share of own-ership. You make the
mthly pymts & we share
epprec. You receive
100% tax benefits Must
have deef1 credit. Agt
957-«>02 Dys. Ev. Wknds
dwnstrsmstr, , . Yearly 2BA house laat. ltacL 14 2B od led Id hk 2151 p--•11c ·--'-'>ut Ideal for right P.-· • r. rem e · n ry • Jog Of ride lo ""' 2 e DROOM STUDIO son av8/ 1$450546-5543 w/applianees. garage & up, lnc:d yard S725 No Ave. 2BA 2BA. $925. No 1,_., Bath ptUio cable NICE Newport Hghts 2Br --=----,--.,..-..,.... l 1111111!11 l~sutndry lacitlty. AY1 Sept 2BA 1BA. 2 blks to beach! dogs. 2316 S111ta Ana pets 631~61071855-0665 ready. n0 pets s695/mo 1 Ba Gar pool, gas & N B Yng prof lootllng fOf
Unbehevable value in SC $1400/mo. CALL Ver Y c 1 ea n Y ndo Ave 213-431-3786 MESA VEAOE 2BA lBA 548_2682 water pd $750 Nowts same 10 shr 2BA turn
Plaza areic 4~9 3~. (714)875-9043 or ~l;/,:omU:.8573 ar . •2BA 1BA. patio. garage, yard hkups, encl garage: --650·!21~ or 780-141 condo on W~tciltf, non ~l·~GIE 979-8280 . 1213)924•3082 dish washer. laundry rm. SiOO 1st. last t dep 2Br. lBa. yearly. lndrr.· 1 NWPT SHAS 2BA 2BA smkr '475· Gil 548-5946
TllEUI IULn lal~ -B:~~~-~~11:· lt~15~! . _.!CUTI No Pets I. S650/mo 2867 Hickory Place ~:rr:i~2~g~m~·~uet Y 1 walk-m closet. great condl SEABAIOGE VILLA to shr.
.. ~"-SIU PeaaaHla 2107 crpt. paint, $HOO/mo. F llyr..slz• a418d• h 645--6662 or 650-2318 75 t-9483or498·1936 650 8055 Lg Living rm & mslf bdrm wlprol .. n-smkr, conMrV. -ome • • s 1100 Bkr 642·3850 fem HB all amen .. Cheri NEW Jl8diterranean s1Y' Avlimmed. 862-4417 :'extra Targe [;with a * •IEU NII** lmY HOIUTll * 111111 HOO• OCW FllllT l llT 960:.08901 213-4~3-2571 TIWll •E 2BR 2BA. loaded. ooean r _ ltacL 14 · mountain and A small, quiet complex 2BR w/gar. new carpets F d h h 1 2 Mastersuitesonwoodsy view Avl nowl LH -ua • sweep1ng Stud10.1Br.2Br2Ba,llk• t5670range "A"_.$695 r~i N~spe~:S5:~.:..8s5~ve 1 2Br 1Baupslrs,greatcond l ara111 fer Ht cul-de-sac with attached $1350/mo 642-0668 1 I H city lights VIEW. $2.650 new. w/balcony or prvt 636-4120 Call 1·5PM 1 $1200 bkr 642-3850 2741
garage. yard and ca· --North end, close 10 bch.. per mo. patio, lrplc. pool. spa. •211111100*
thedral oe.llng SELECT PENIN.PT.Stepstoocean frpl, view. S12001mo.. lllllllRULn lndry.Nopets.$550Up + R~ITllG Frig, dishwasher, stove •EASTSIDE STORAGE BH&G 751-5000 & bay. Lrg 3Br 2Ba on year leaH. 494-7079 llS·UOI sec VELMA 549-2447 lncl No pets 545_4855 UNIT. Single garage dble lot. Huge yard, quiet Newly furn hed singles. w/elec:trlcal outlets Incl .. laat.ltack I 0 loc Avallnow.$2200/mo YIEWSIH •lll•IAPT* 1Brcompleew1thphone •EASTBLUFF TwnhSe ~MC10U .. 1ut••Jlt'O.-id uOlpeid $120.650-5894
•2BR tBA. 2 car gar. spa, 673-7777 Of 673-l9'4I .... 1BA. sto111e. small yard. no service. . pool. park· Apt 3BR 2BA 2 car gar l.6·furr ... r~ iv.~a 1¥<!7
huge IOI, remO<leled Bath C.rtu ti llu 21 •GATED COMMUNITY* l lm •. pets. $540/mo. 650-4751 Ing, reas. wkly rates St5 No pets $10251mo.yr Isa t1''\ll• •••• 1j •llll'lf'lll\.nl 1 ... tidal
Great locaUon S 174,SOO 1 Spacious 3ifr. 28a 2 story SP•AKLING * FF will'l •h•s ad Isl week 644-1010. 8-5 Mon-Frt ¥lll { l..t'<Jl<v,..1U'M'lt1or11es ll lalt~lnt •B Owner•963-0752• •2 BDRM+ family room. lllllCAIYM E•cellent condition. no * " 080 N~ortBl642·2611 Wllhl•r.·p~<'\ Rrvwsrrom
Y lrplc. single garage. w/d BEAUTIFUL 2BR 2BA petal S2500mo 28A/lBA Includes small •SIPlll OCUI WIEW mvo~ .,. l(J(k"\comptete l aalaHI/ lice .. , La1aaali1a1 105 2 hk·up,rearunltofduplex w/goll course VIEW yard. one story. SPACIOUS IBr cls lobch 2mstrsultes.Newlydec0f N~v<·fV.frtnc. paswm-DH -.mo TUI-llW $1050 * 647-7540 * $1800 Also 1BR avail at S665tmo •. 675-4886 ~~ ~~~4~~ ::~~~j $1350/mo iS9·9314 ' l"IWllJ uylll('d'Cf1'MS<.oorn
••EXTRAORDINARY $1395. Frplc. wet bar, $400 1BA Duplex on w pa1dxcptelec 548.0492 -21•2••1• Fr lo •.KO'J'llJ.ll •..;rt...t~ WllTIUff ..... 3Br+bonus room beauty ., ,. micro, W/D hkups, 2 car 17th near Whittler Ave 1 n -, "' t ~'f'~l()n ,..,,,., \.ill~l•t~ Corner VIEW.Sult• Fam rm w/frptc, oversize 3BA 3''t8A condo. dbl gar wl•tra st0<age. oen· adult. non-sm()!(er only. Spacious 1BA. pool, lndry, Carport . ..PQOI Adulfs No TV Mll1 rl1()11' A FULL SERVICE
lute. lorml ltvl din rm. garage. top of the line all trat alr. All malnt. incl. Rental rel reqd. 548-3829 carport. Stove & relrlg pets S950/Mo 631·021 t The NEW W Westclltf & Irvine, Npt 8c:l'I 0~~~~e~t~a~:~.~~lln<l~ the way• S2000/mo Sorry, no pets. IM4-0509 VILLA BalbOa furn 2Br mcl NO PETS s55s + E WPOAT North condo DA DK NC\ v ~ 14 ... 1101
" 2B I f I din S350 dep. 642•1401 28r 2Ba and loft. ale. end rFV\ c: wr'-11' 1 497
"
1612
or
4•3
•
047 ·.;~:·h:~:· ~\1~:C~ EnlL~'!ll2~~.t900 de:.: ~mip:m!.ani mealiBllU ,sparkling clean 2Bdrm unit 2 car oar, pool. per. f714) 644-1900 LMfnhowtoplaytl'lellom l~rt ltac~ OceanBlvd.$12.25/mo sf allnewtyredec:orated bay vu. Lse $1800/mo. t'•Ba $740 All utlls pd lect loca11on.unturn.one _,u•s...~.-...., tNll'i t>Mnatttlngln)'OUI'
BAYSIDE coVES MONTHLY SUMMER ltke new h.ome. Poot: 532-8492/d 771-0426/n lPllTllllU.. Frig .• gaL Sorry. no pea. yr old St400/Yr tease ""::';.~~ clOMt Anlnstrvctor'•Wlll· u~~~-one ~r~ ~~A~A~O~AQI s~~~r ~ewl v~s t~ Cuat Metre s~~11~ ~an. ~rga~-,~~~w;a;1;1~~~54;2;~;90~5~~~~n~9~~~~;90~~~~~~~~~~~~~-~~~~~1;n;~~;~~·~ unit with den & large 873-5354 AOl S2300 mo Bkr 720-7432 I I Garden apts 84!laut1lu1ty
palto. Pro<:e Includes 11•;. Ziii landscaped grounds
root mot-or boat & 11111111 •HARBOR VIEW HOMES IJJJJXc IB Ale Condo Pool & spa, patlostdecks. J to Large IMng room. 2BA. 5BR 3BA. lam. room, 2 · r · garage or carport. furniture ust steps 1'1tBA. fireplace. yard, sto.ry, trml din rm, 2 F/P, Adult. quiet, gated t+ract, Sorry, no pets
bay in gated complex garage S 1300Mo 3 car gar . pool. ate $2600 N of . Plaza. S650 $30 Bachelor S590 ~~-~& sp:4oo.ooo 7 7 Poinsettia 720.1866 mo Gardener/pool ser-most util 775-2580 1 Bedroom $680
Jasmine Creek 3BA, vice incl. &47-752~ Agt. Aputatatl 2Bdrm W.Ba S800
-
"'·'"HI Ho" 1urnished s2150 *lmW* lilMi" 161~~8~~1-~_!-0856 1111~1 ... 1 .. ~. Wat rtr _.I I 0 REAL ESlATE I ••• .... • • 2·5brS900-$50001mo. agt lalaa• ZSOI 28drm 1•1.Ba $815 r IULTllSll1·HIO Mart1Ferguson&42·7706 1S1E2ts1St 548-2408 EXECUTIVE preferred --------REAL TORS Cozy bMCh cottage 2BA •TlllllffS• 2Br, t8a, unfurn, crpts, •BACH S595 Great East· llACI LIYlll 1BA. frptc. yard & patio, 3BR 2'iBA. lull bey view. drps, stve. frig. Yrly. Park-side locl Gar, cable av1.
100ydstosand 3BR 2BA W/O, garage. Steps to $2195 Avlnow760-1108 lng.626-8810'11t Clean&cozy 1BAS810. t:i=i JW • bch S 1150 mo. 858-1254 ---Grnbl1 wtBBO, lndry rm . ...... -... detached home Lrg II~-3Br/2Ba fully furnished. *YEA ALY S 1100/mo* Sorry. No pets. 631-8427
-'.
-•--Ing rm w/frpl, cathedral HUGE 3Br. 3Ba w/lrplc all whjbl gar, 'I• blk from Deluxe 2 Bdrm. garage
-~5 ceilings looking out on lrg amenlUes. near park & beh, NB. winter rental parking. steps 10 bay BEAUTIFUL E'Slde IO·
Beautiful 39R 12.~BA pv1 yard with great patio. new center Avl 9/ 1/88 s 14001mo 721-8113 Reis reqd. 67S·3063 cation. studio 10< quiet
home, lg msfr suite w/ $346 000 Call now ( 116) S 1800/mo 759~9194 working Fem. $450/mo,
frpl, )acuz bath. gourmet Grubb & Eiits 1154-8001 Ill 4112 BAYFAONT $200 clHnlng, total k.ltchen w/lots of goodies -----Pl• 1411 LICAT1111 • tBR yearly. parking. no moveAn $650 Come In c.it for appt $649,000 BIG CANYON SBA 3BA 2BR 2BA hae Petlo. yard, PENINSULA YEAAL Y Pe IS or am 0 k Ing person tor viewing .. fm IULn 1 large story Deane Home 2 car garage, S1950tmo 1 •3BA 2BA lower dupte11. S875 /mo. 673-6640 2527 Elden ·A' Add l den•walk·tncloset. •19 Begon i a Dys 2 garage frplc patio
111-111'1 pool spa Agls welcome. 6..o-4924 Eves 640·6244 lndry hkup, l12s0 mo. ' ti I 1 22 (714) 669-8955 'lltGreat 3BA 2BA upper
--duplex. garage. Nice lo-1111111 mll·PIM I CllTlllPIUIY CUii SINGLE story home on cation. s 1400 mo
LOWEST PRICE 2 story 2BA 2BA condo widen com« lot tn H~hlands •4BR 2BA. 2 story home
38r 2'n8a,..-ab00ocn Fam&d1nrm S279,714 3Br. 29•. db gar, onPeninPtwlfrplcAY1 ....-1850/mo incl gardener c~1 ti I cl vu $.435K. 891 -1702 Agt 640-8290, 675-1651 10/1. "'"" pa o. n ry Q rm. 2 car gar St700. NEW LISTING! +CONDO Tl1E>Prudential .,,. Waterfront 4BR 2BA 2 sty PENINSULA PT WINTER
753 Avocado S2l5!t. 2BR. 110.-,01•)160 0714 home In China Cove. •Cute 2BR tBA furnished
28A, 2 c.t git. 720-0455 Spectacular vlflW Yrly houM wtbay view, gar-
LAe Lennartaon Btlr -S3000 mo 675-4912 Agt age, frplc. S900/mo.
•Charming 3BR 18A furn : ; -.
:"·~; Merrill Lynch Realty
IPYIUSI •U.. NITIMTI
Popular single story with spectacu-
lar hill and ocean view. located
"high on the hill." $795.000
711 •••
ti HI 114 hH. W/D, 1i:age, big
*38A twnh Nm patio. $1050 mo.
Hgt• arH~f~ic. patio. YIW REITILS
Y9tY nice. 322 Qg1e•01 S9801mo 647-7540 * U11 UY 1MI 1/f
Remodeted hM 2Br t Ba.
me81iB1111 ~=:,,r:;~ r~~~
yard w/tpe, gardener.
TIW•llll s i~1'98 Of ~~:;9~5· ..............
Fl :::. ~..._. ....-.,.. •B.ACK·BAY area. 3Br,
r • ·-·-_........... 28a condO 3-<:ar-age d p.l<lndry hk~. pool , .. ......i ......... • .;.,_~--1o· & spa. :;orry, no petL "-· ........, ~~ ' 28drm 2'h8a 11070 •S 1250IMo•411-0150•
eee w 11th st IM2-4905 UYlllll -
2BR tBA built-Ins, fridge, 38R. 3BA. I t800/Mo.
dlsh/W, p . yard. NutrCI, Avall Seot. 1.
declwd cet Gt!. 1te2d o.ya itl-Mt-3134
Mey9r $850 541-34M W/enda 721..()165
*"' ..... * nr_.,,._
$800 1at & leet.131-1112 2Br, Den. 28a. frplc. PoOI
••TAl-LEVh 48A 38A, ~dt=~ =:.
2900 ICI n. s1aoo1mo atecs. '* 1«-155• '* Incl pool & lend9ctipe ... ..,.....,,..,,,..,,,.-,.,..-___.,,.--=-=-~ Ho.-.. 546-5llO WEST N••port 38A,
•EASTi1bf 18111 18A. ~=F,~~dOloat·
prage, W/D hkup. t .oe. tnp19Ce. St.350
Mutt. No pets M50/mo, IA"YFAONT Condo 28R
Scont ~2301 S1150
*LI •• NII •""':.7:ir"'"'· 11100 ftrpt. ,.,._,pd, ..,,... . OCIAN' 3M. fp, i,r:.:::.,,·-: J:-,. &':;;::,,.,~: ... ..............
--••• .,..., .. no ... --;f .... .,,,.,-;,.
....,._, llr ......
llllJPilat
41U
ir
4oea 9To5
~ DRESSING
lnro th• 1wlna
of """'°"· 4011: Fit and
flare. Wal1t
whittling coat·
..... ...ing..
Ing .alrt. 8hoft == f1z9110I018. .,.: Clleh1'9
fret·flowlng
•ott11no1. ............ Otaoon•• ,ott• ... .. ..... .. dlllh. ...,. .......
f8bnc. Mtae• ... 12tol.2.
OFJ'llllOOC.n DIC. It. -·. I ..Pl.w....,,._,. .... _,__
The Daily Pilot has a new way to turn
your Hidden1Treasures into CASH
5 10!t9
prepayment
4 Llnes-7 Days s 10.80
NAME
No manps In copy°' cancettatlon. Pr111att part1u only No Commercial,
Rut Estate~ Automotive. loatlng or EmplOyrMnt l'\ds Tt~rt Is no pr1ct
hm1t to what you can advtrtlst If you ~td to stU you couch, h1Qtl chAlr or
any unustd ~rch11nd11t-ca11 th~ Oa1ly Pilot C1ass1f1td staff or ust tht
coupon ~low Miii to:
llllJPlllt
o.-y ,.ltot. now. -.11.. c-. Miu. CA 92.U
642-5678
PHONE ________ _._
ADDRESS
CITY_ STATE __ ZIP _______ ---" ___
AO COPY: 4 tine minimum. approprllttfy 4 words ~r lfne .
AMf. ENCLOSED ____ ......,,...,.,..,
l
f(Ul)l)S
ARE FREE
Cal:
Ml-1111
COSTA MESA LOT, Build· gla .. on 8115, vicinity
"""' & -.to bullneet In 30th SI. NewC>0<t BMch (7P ) "7" ~473 OQwntown ., .. w/7 ..,. (on beach). ~5-4330 .. • .....
vice baYt ANO 800 tq. ft. LOST Oval 3kl diamond Tll mtll OITU
offlee. Juet llttedl HN!th atone S1turd1y 8/6 PllTIL --
rnottv.t• .....,, Ottered Near Ralphs Hatbo< Vu. 111111111 U
at$535,000. itREWARD •. 759·1914 ge=s191 .. ~:::;• LOST RING, tut ~ In ILm ·-
.. ~· Irvine Shopp4ng Applicatlone life ~ ac. Center Large REWARD. ted at the fotlOWlnQ
780-1113 S9ntlment.,. =tlon betWMn g;3Qam
LOST turtle from 1631-B to 4:30pm: Huntington
Irvine Av. CM. Poulbly Beach MAIN POST OF·
picked-up by mistake. FICE. 6771 Wimer AWi,
Family pet. 548-9159 Huntington Beach, CA ........ 926A7-9998.
II lllL ... , .. , ....
LH-1111.U FIT or PIT. Flexlble. SSl'lr. 15--1'5"1
CHUCK CURRIER • •e eeper O~l.llD TE• HARBOA REAL TY needed M· Th 8--6, 7mo
Offk» 873-4400 twins. Exp & rtls r• Entry level person to train
Relldence 644•5297 quired Gayle 498-6987 mator com!*'lys IOOking WUililJ HD CHILDCARE 2 Boyt 1 & 3 for. 52()..4045, Ellen Oay yrs. In N B home. 2 day .,,, __ llU
1l AL 1 f wk7am-3:30pmretsreqd ""'"--Ill t•lll EngUsh •Pkg 642-4415 Help. Female Pfeferred.
office & Whrhse. for lease Balboa Market 673-6310
7500 sf, light manlg. 10 It. OllLllUE ILUI 1111 FLMllT
accesa doors, 16 ft. cell-FT. my C M home Delivery person PIT. 2809
Ing, avail. lmmed. 540-8419 Newport 81, NB 875-1353
call M·F 645-6811 CHILDCARE WANTE ---......... =-----~ mature, n-s,,,_r, fern tor 2 RUYEIY PEI• !~~!!'!.!2f~iau!!~c~i!ll!_ children. nights, llve FIT. Seeking delivery •-..i-In/out call 892·8358 stocker person. Call tor
-appt. 646-7••1 sl!Catitl 2M4 latl'f!HI 5530 DENTAL
Utmll. IUlll11ll IDWl .,,.. ORTIO ASST
-,.. FI T. tun loVlng, last paced,
-The Orange Coast oaity Irvine office needs outgo. SALES COORDINATORS Pilot has an immediate ing ROA with exper
S 100,000 lo S250.000 +. part ume position (ap-786--0777 or 640-4292 Salary & comm. We oper-20 ate Internationally In the proximately hours per Dental
up & coming S30 billion week) 8SS1St1ng In the IEAR..._IST Legal Department Applt· ~I ....
water industry The SUC· cant must type 40-50 FIT. pleasant Newport
cessful candldatn will wpm and be able to work Beach ofliee, 4 day work
have substantial equity well with the public. week. 640--0921 lrom their sales force (Aecumng Income re-Please call Judy Oetting llSIW&Slll DP'I
sidualt) ~\6642-4321• £xtension Fil. Must speak Engllsh
•S30 Miiiion monthly · Apply In person. Mesa
sales Wlll/Ull•ESSO Verde Coovo Hosp. 661
•S15 Miiiion sales payrOll Booth rental s 100/wk. Center St. 548-5585
•S36.000 Expense salary. Personal phones sup---------
family college tuition. plied. J.W. Airport area. DISTRICT
complete lnaurance. 852-8808 Jonelle
Join our sucenstul pro-llll~EIEIT tenlonals earning five & lllPEl/IEm •
six f19ure monthly In-For small mlg company In
com.a. NB. Experience nee. In The Daily Piiot Is looking
•Entry level positions A/P/,A/R,payrOll & tor qualified Individuals
avail. general ottlee. s 10-s 12 to manage youth carriers. Celilornia Clean Waler 645-3861 Management experien<:e 1.-.112-lno P9( hour helpful. but wlll train .,_. a11 C&Sllll Base salary $375/wk +
UJ · FIT PIT potltions avl tor GAS ~ BONUS PLAN • .AM. Night & wknd shifts HAS: 11AM-8RM Mon-!leaty Te Leu Hf4 at Newport Oyster Bar & Fri ••-FIST GrlU. Appty In person Call Pat Maney, 642·'321
no q~. as IOW ., anyday except Wed. at x205 9-1 l AM daily lor
7'/.%. up to 10<We LTV. all 2 100 W Ooeanfron1. NB appointment
credit ok. 720-1752 -IPUITII ASST
1't WIDOW HAS SSS FOf front office. S..ing
tor TOs! S 10,000/up No motrvated lndlvlduat lor
ered.v /no pen. Call Oen-IHI paced practice
n 900 Assoc 873-7311 * PleaM call 857-1888.
f
lllLYPILIT
llOW. la7lt.
c..taltsa,U
•
...,. mTlllTlll
Train tor career PI T &
F/T.250-4064
• ,. EIRl_H_l _PU __ llO_ • ma UllSYUSl
Wool W1N train Start $6tlr lmmed. 8yr stylist moving
•medical. CdM 675-t579 No chenll nee 548-934~ HUT fH 1m1u11
Restaurant
ftTlllllY &--.. SST Good wtttl anim*
& people. Phone~~
Ing llittlls neceeury. 5'-'
da1s 7am-2pm In
Laguna Beactl •M-5481
ET HOSPITAL exp'd sml emmll groomer Meded .
& vet assistant. PIT, FIT So.UlguN. 499--5378
EA~i!KI Progr~~CdM Only one morning a week
for 5 nrs Must have car
~ Horn P!..US ~
allowance
sums
F /T ~fT Fleltlble "°"'$ SICHITT HAii
Ex prwt'd Benehlt COl'fd~~ ~
Apply ~thin unit. Coco s Beacn seeks a pnvate se-
i: 1, 2305 E Coast Hwy. cunty guard fOf 200-un11
through classified exotic Hawaiian plan1Sl ' SHtmrg-comm1UTon fragrant potpouri at the stylists Booth rental also
Anaheim Home& Garden available. Additional
Show August 20-28th c11entele proVlded. Call
Call 619-232-2600 or Eltzat>eth at 675--0511
Apply 1n person Thursday IRING' Govemment 1obs
August 18th, 111 Noon at • your area S 15,000-
lhe Anaheim Convenuon $68,000 Call (602)
Center, Booth 32 In the 838-8885 EXT 398
Arena No exp. nee 1--0-U...,.S..,..EC-=-L""'E,_A...,..N"'"'IN"""G=--re-sd..,..n"'.':tl
HITll&Tll IUCI
llllPEllHT
IEWSPIPH 142-1"4 ... ,.,
Corona del Mar 673-9050 complex Law enlorce-TNphone Salel
ment exp essential Ap-•it AT .... -IY -prox 60 Hrs per mo 1n 4·6 ~ --
1•2:Hll
Enthusiasm a Plus.
DRAKE
OFFICE O\IERf..Q.1\0
URI EITUSS
WlllWIEllll
ftEIE YM WllTt
•CLERKS
•TYPIST
•SECRETARIES
•RECEPTIONIST
•WOAD PROCESSING
•ACCOUNTING CLERKS
•DATA ENTRY
OPERATORS
HllSISI
Pall YIUTill
PlllllUIHS
CALL TODAY
18400 Von Karman
Ste 130 Irvine 47~2974
100'/• FREE to Appltean1
EOE
FLIUL HUYEIY
Perm Fil CONROY'S.
Costa Mesa 645-0246
homes PT /days. reliable,
car a must. ea.JI Julie
631· 1815 0< Iv msg.
e Orange Coast Daily
P1tot Is lootung tor an
energetic person to as-
sist our Olstnct Managers
3 days during lhe week
weekends and holidays
Applicant must have re-
ttable car with valid CA
dnvers license. proof of
insurance and OMV
print-out Starting pay 1s
$7 00 per hOUr plus gas
allowance
Come in to apply at
JOHil
PUMIHSTUllH
No e•p please. we train
you SS-$8 hr CALL
NOW 520-4050 Ellen Day
P /T SlClnUY /IATA
ENTRY /ERRANDS
NB S6 75 hr 720-1566
QUALITY auto body ShOP
needs employees Call
for info Located in S J C
240-1331
llAlESTln ... 11 Successful RE Co in
plush olllCe at Fashion
Island seeks OFACE AD-
MINISTRA TOA to handle
hies escrows etc MUST
be he d -Exper1 NO
sa1es-Sa1ary S 1500/mo -
bonu~ Send resume
to USA WILSON, 18
Corporate Plaza. NB.
92660 or call 721· 1200
A P"lric ~
Tf NO Rf
LI , •
Qf A., ' Hl"'° 330 ...... , St.
Ctsta •sa, CA 12121 IUl ESTiii ASST
Restaurants TllTIW FUTS-
-Ul• IUCll
Now accepting
ap pllc•t l ons ·
•HOST/HOSTESS
Apply 1n person.
TORTILLA FLATS
1740 So Coast Hwy
Laguna Beach, CA
Restaurant
WllTIESSES
Jolly Roger Day/Night
Shrft Apply In person
2-5pm 400 South Coast
Hwy, Laguna Beach
•ml/mtlSS
• 1111m1 Ill.I ........
Plea.se apply In persor
ANN MARIE s Restaurant I
2640 E Pacific Coast Hwy
Corona del Mar
IOAILCUll
French bakery seeks
outgoing clerks tor NB
and CdM storu Cashtef.
counter-work. etc PT /FT
llell . $5-6/hr, 645-0447
Aichi 673-2754 Scott or
JacQui fv msg between9am&5pmM-F OAG CTY 111 Top
Or call Beth at 642-4321 Producer seelts honeSl. 1n••L
ext 205 LIS'D -aggressive ex.per Photo F1nish1ng Counter llSIUICI Slticiters Agts 1o show & sell A E Clerk PIT FIT Bright resp
Ins. Agency Ptop. <;:as. SOI· w/Top Producer All person to work in new 1 hr
tellors. Leads avail Musi leads turrnstled Extreme-lab in C M 650-2424
be exp in Pers. Lines. ly h1 income potential _
Send resume to 16•1 SertOUs only need apply SAILllAT ClUllll I
Langley Ave. Irvine For details, call Lisa MAINTENANCE PI T
92714 (714)250-3338 721-1200 CALL645-7100
.aun11 WJS/WlllD
Hr Shifts but hrs are very
lle.1ubie Must be reliable.
trustwol"lny & able 10
work wian absolute min
ot superv1s1on An xlnt
EARN
$400-$1000 /WK
oppty for a rellred Peace • 6AM-12 Noon
Ollioer wno would llke 10 •No Nights/Wknds
work about 15 hrs/wk in •$7/t-IA • eommllralning
snort sMts & generally, CISTA IUA Mf.1111 at your own schedule Pis 1_ 1_.
call Mr Vollmer al CISTl IUA &&• •&•
17 •4)832-2525 s.111.1.112·12•
RECYCLE
throug~ the
DAILY PILOT
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It SOtle~. It I
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r~;~~~:;;~-;:;::o:;~o:1
ing a Daily Pilot carrier. I
Name •
: Address · I
I c1i> l•P I I Phone , _ _ I
I s... T1: Tiie..., Nit I
331 I . a., Sl L----c.~~.!!-----J.
Fon hme 1mmee11ate pos-
itron available for wtlole-
sale d1stnbutor of beef
wtne hQuor cigarette
and candy Santa Ana
• area 547-01"32
-..111',. . I I;" ( , ,',,I
,...r .-·-·· .. ... ) 'l)JJ
DRIVER
WORK PART-TIME DELIVERING
NEWSPAPERS. EARN UP TO
$600/MONTH. MUST HAVE RE-
LIABLE VEHICLE, INSURANCE.
AND OMV PRINTOUT. MON-
DAY-FRIDAY 2-5 P.M .. WEEK·
ENDS & HOLIDAYS ~-7 A.M.
NEWPORT /CORONA DEL MAR
& LAGUNA BEACH AREAS.
CALL 142-4131 UT. 205
:-A8" FOR mnt
Work In the ewr-expandlng
Newspaper Promotion fietd. It you
are sett-motivated and like working
with teenagers, this may be the
opportunity you've been wafting for.
S-PERWEIK
(Toawt)
WlttlPOlentlel
tott-PDWIEK
lrltured V11n, Wegon. OI
Large Seden 19 ~
CALL.._ ITIVINI
(111)4774'111
•
PROFESSIONAL intenor
designer BuSlness ex-
panded Immediate open-
ings Ellper~ecl only
•855-9756• ---IUllm••EP Needed for NB lnvestm«il
Co Excellent comm -
draw Mon-Fri 2·6 Call
Alter 11AM Pat 675--0023
SllYICE STATill lnt 1 F 'T PI T no exp nee
$5 19hr to start Apply in
person at 2546 E Coast
Hwy Corona dei Mar
20¢ PER LINE CLASSIFIED A'DS
A new Clc'!ss t ed rate tor Private Parry advemsers to sell that ~rchan·
d1se thclt ncls oeen f111.1,ng up rne 9"' age c'!nd tclk1ng up closet space
This is " spec1<"I otter for all privc'!te part) adverusers to st>ll merchandise
that ~sn t pricea over S1 SO
Ads will appear in tne Thursday Independent there is a S llne minimum at
20~ per 1tne So l'~ur tow cost D me\-A·L1ne ad 1s·only SI 00
DEADLINE: Monday S PM
PRICE : 5 Une minimum 20¢ per line = S 1.00
All ads are prepaid by coming into the lncu•pf'ndenr offtee to place your
.-.d or use t rie coupon below
Pnvclte Party Mercnanc:llSe only ads N o commt>rcral. hvestock. prOduce
or p lants
Each item mun oe priced 1n tnt' ~d w ith no items over S 1 SO
MAIL TO: Dimes-A -Line
lndt"pendent
Bo x 1560
Cosla Mesa Ca 92626
Or tome 1n per~on Independent I 7969 Beach Blvd Huntington ~adi.
Ca 9264 7 tnde~ndent Hours art> M onday-Friday 8·30 AM t o S PM
NAM E PHONE, _________ _
ADDRESS. _______ __,,~=------::7:::-------CITY __________ STATE ZIP _____ _
AMOU\IT ENCLOSED RUN DATES ______ _
LINES
-
SI 00 MIN
~ WOfCfS,.
No AOC>fev
tMUM
~r L1rw
1auom
-
,, . -1·-· $1
. .,..I .c> --,,. -1·=
~· ~ --·~ ---~ ~
0 ---c
J ,~~ -----·---. -
810 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/ TUMdey, August 1&, 1988 -..
TY, ..... ,111 ....... 1_1n_ .... _________ 1111.......,~~a.! ... !!!i!'!'!'!' ... !!::!!:!!l~"!!"'!!'!'•;•;""!!i;""!!I -......... ii
PKHI NEW VIOEO CAM-n• •
" Wlllll IU! MetlQ' 5w,"*good C«td_ ,.H_E_N_O_A_E_D_O_N __ S_c_• .. n·-·,1 1!5 'hii. AN dNXv a ...... ..,
PAV TOP---'°' •x-ROAst§ x~ COOklng I 1250 ~ TV 20". Gr~. Liv rm. dtn rm, COMMERCIAL CAAPET. DESkitmdeft&H, & i>«lenoe ... m1tr ... fOf Care tor t!le eld«ly. Mi.-....... ,.....5 eota. tabtee. ch.Ww. Liiie bllOw whlee, ltl)ld, i.terll m.e, 2 phorlfl .-SelllNk•. 72S.0279 Prefer daytime. S day -ow•ve ..... ......., newl 840-8500 d1yt 833· 15' I/ 1•mt, 3 typewrllera. ERA, tripod, S6M CMlo-lnctudlng ho611, XLT. vt,
., ... !Ota ol rnlac. IQUll). Aulo, C....C-) ..... ., ...... ......... FWrlg. a.pt 720-tH16 ' -yy weett. Xlnt r ... 5<67-"63 KENMOR R•frlgerator L-•h•l>e couch dining w!(ndt 7eo-etoo 6'15-422!. 845-4121
All arC:::--ant IOI white, Sm old, e>Cc:ellent lable. 6 ch1lr1 °& bUltet. lllfMI I Ulll Pttl THIODOllf ~~· eo. ,cond. s 1s. SAo-1':1 1ampe. 6'8-2812 f WllTll I l!x~eoon~-=-A=ouna=:.;, "'™=:
; ..... ~~~. r;:,..'!.~ =NY drl'l~ eO:::aAXftv t0ll: AYBEO. ~::, BAASS :~M6S7~ ~~05~1
A ~:,a,: :r~ :'"°":" ~~~~~~=== POBIN: ...
',-_,t• f CREVIER ·---~ un111
mtllW •1• .,.,.. -·-mo ••• .... git~ o1ni-"';~1e o.ic dtnlng t1ble, 11111-NEW. 2 mattrMSel. trun-.-rry "'"'" 1 I've lived here 6 weekt ~ :-"~•= w/4 ct1••· Tur~-the-uphlltd dlra • tof1 t1ble, die. complete. S265 16' NONA~ w/2 pMt-A home ot my own Ir keeps ~ •• ·~ t • t llttle ,.., end bOdy
wont
req'd. Comc>utw •""a +. centllfY. S2e5 S38-3362 call 7~5 •her 8pm 840-8733 diet SAOO. BOYS bUnk· With • lamlly to cate
T tan Au ..... 2 .. _.. NEW D bed Whit & UEEN SIZE MATTRESS bed & bureau $200 My love I wffl INte 118
.... ~. ....... ..,, 2-71'3 INYe muuoe
1tter 5pm 0 1 .. ' 'UQU9t ""'• OOL table • ..,1y 1900s, Br•••, 1!/mettr••~ & & B o x . o u 1 L T e o. Ste<eo nego 642-A029 646-6985 $1750/mo C.it675-A912 8 1h>C4~. needs re----..... BRAND NEW! $155 "..,...,,,-=..,..,...,--.,,,., finishing, 5950. 6A5-A228 trundle Complete $245 Call 846-A293 UWlllU .....,., A LOVABLE BALL OF
Sl l20 kit ID.-d I~ 13 SJJ. $ ,,ci IOadfd I lb6 I! as mtsi •~to '°* m m 86 1lSi •uto loadM ll'WT3" *** or 6A5·4121 •&A0-3733• Pienta 5 gallon size 2A to FUR. Hlmelayan kittens _ _.. kl ·'"'ed 1 ..-.. • · CFA registered. Shots. FAST moving sate. trldg. """' ng "'' wa etuwu, choose from. 6A5-A«5 Females $250.6'16-8131 b-----...----86 32SH ~sod '°* 1socm II!~~~~~~~ ftLPIYIAll
or American Flyer or L1011-
el model trains. 893-1015
BR set. table w/4 chrs. good cond, $50. Lg artist -
sofa. other Items. reuon-easel for signs & lg paint-LARGE wooden swing Ml SMALL FEMALE Calico 7 !!!!~!==:tJ!!! 87 32Si •~to. lolded •0609
able orloes 6A0-0388 ings $50. Hoity 8311-8489 $500. Rose Carpeting 70 weetts needs hOme. Call square yards 50 yards 7 6 0 • 2 6 6 4 • d a y 1
Sates -Service
Parts -Leasing
TODAY'S . .
NEWS
TODAY
In newsracks by 3 p.m.
(714J 642-4333
. Home Delivery Daily Pilat
f'tlll.IC fl>TICE ...
NOTICE Of PU8UC SALE
Of PHIONAL ""°""" •2'5171
Nottee ''hereby given that pursuan1 to Sect ions
21701-21715 of the Cali-
lornia Busi~ and Pro-
tenaons Code. Section 2328
of the California ConvnetC181
COde, Sectton S35 of the
Califomia Panal Code and
the prOViSIOnS Of tile Calt-
lorma AuC11on Licensing
Act. the underSigned will sell
at public ute by compet11tve
btddtng on the 31st day ot
August. 1988. at 12:00
o'clock PM on the premises
where said property has
been stored. and wnteh are
located at Public Storage
1725 Pomona Avenve rn the
C11y of Costa Mesa, County
of Orange. State of Cat1-
forn1a the goods cnattles or
personal P<ooertY desa•be<I
t>etow In the matt•s ol
Daniel Naslund. Sp G
308A-2 srtbrds misc bxs
surtcses. bec1tP<* James Lofland Sp B
039-clthes. sofalchr. m1SC
bxs. car tops. '4111cses
John Cramer Sp O
165-ctaina tatch 2 drssrs 6 ctarsltbl. crjb. p1nbil macn,
rockr
Barberi Mills Sp E
223-mi•c oas suttcse
cit hes
John Cramer Sp D
167-misc t>u seen• dsk.
c:vno dsk 2 cnrs spkr.
gardng &QUIP
Bradley Manet. Sp
G303H-tlfe rim. misc bxs.
Siiis ur prt1. ~s
Owner rttSenleS Ille righl
to bid at the sale Purcnases
must be made with cash only
and paid for at the ume ol
purch11e. All purchased
goods 11• sold u IS. and
must be removed at the time
of sale Sale subject to prlOI'
cancellation 1n tl\e event of
settlement be~ Owner
and obligated party Dated
lnis 16th and 23rd day of
Augus1 1988 Public
Storage Management. tnc
Telepl\oM (818) 244-8080
Agent tor Owner
Publlshe<I Orange Cout
Daily Potot August 16, 23.
1988
PlllJC NOTICE
Community News
Along the Coast
Nil.IC NOTICE NlllC NOTICE
a ....., a newspaper of general Cahlomia, the goods. chat-
NOTtcl Of "*-IC IALE clrculatton published in thla ties or personal pro1>41rty de-
Of 'lflllOMAL PltOPERTY county at feast once a week scribed below. In the mat·
•M517 1 for lour conseco11ve -ks ters ot·
Notice 11 hereby given thlt prior to the day of Hid hear· Richard Kaszblnskl Sp D
pursuant to Section 1988 of Ing. 192-l>ike, TV, floor ecrubbr. the CMI Code, State Of Cali-Dated JUL 21 1988 rug cleanr. misc bxs
lom1a, Section 2328 ol the .!AMES L SMITH. Judee Jeffery Sanders. Sp 0
Callfornla Com mercial ol IM ~lof Court 90-bed1Tme/mltr13 TV 2
Code. Section 535 ol tile Published Orange Coat ca< seats. drw. noor Inn
California Penal Code and D&1ty PllOI Joly 26. August 2. Rob Robinson Sp D
the prOVislons ot the Call· 9 16, 1988 16-bike. vac. 2 Imps. sofa.
fornta Auction Lk:en11ng T224 clfe tbl misc bxs. and tbl
Act. the unde<ligned wltl sell Kris11 Ann Segvm. Sp C
at public sale by compet1ttve flt&.IC NOTICE 30-2 r()Ct(rs. sofa. 2 drHrs
bidding on the 31st day ot toys
August. 1988, at 12:00 I UfllERK>ft CotMT Timothy Paul W1rren. Sp
o·clocit PM on the premises Of CALWOMMA. O 36-misc bxs. 2 tbls 2 where said prope<ty hes COUNTY Of ORANGE coolrs
t>een stored. and which are In ·Ae the Petition or Naser D1afa11 Sp O
localed at Publte Storage DONNA J. MANOI, on 133-chrs. misc t>gs cllhes,
1725 Pomona Avenue 1n the b9hatt of JOSHUA D. W. tootbx. rug. ski blls. skis.
City of Coste Mesa. County MANOS, a mtnof, for Free-misc b1(5
of Orange State of Call-dom from 'arental Cuatody Owne< reserves the right
torma lhe 900ds cha Illes or and Control. to bid at the sale Purchases
oersonat property descnbad c-No. ~ nwst ~ wl1I\ cash only
below tn the matters ol CITATION ANO and paid for at the urne of
Chan.es Lock•. Sp B NOTICE Of purchase All purchased
033-8 cabntS. 3 rockrs. HIAfnNG goods are sold as 1s and
sol~ 2 tbls misc bJIS TO: JAMEi FRANCES musl be removed al the hme
Landlord reserves the GIL~ ol sate. Sale sub1ect to prior
riohl to bid at the sale. YOU ARE Hf.RfBY °"" cancellation 1n the event ot
Purchases must De made DERED to appear on settlement between Owner
with cash only and paid lor ~25-11 at t:OO o'clock In and obhgated party Dated
at 1he 11me ol purchase. All Depertment 80 of the lu-this 16th and 23rd day ol
purctaase<1900dsaresoldas perlor Court of Or1n9e August, 1988 Public 1s. and must be removed at County loc:ae.d at 121 N. Storage Management. Inc
the 11me of sate Sale subjec1 lye-., IMta Ana, Call-, Te~hone (8 t8) 244-8080
to prlOf canceJtatlon in the '°""8, to._ c.1M why Agent for Owner
...ent of settlement between the cow1 ~not make Pubi1shed Orange Coast
Landlord and obligated Motdetdecletlftv.IOIHUA Daily Pilot August 16 23
oarty Oiied (l'flS 16th and D. w. llANOI treed !Tom 1988 1243 23rd day of Augusl 1988 ,_ parwnCal ~ol and
Public Storage Manage· ewfOd'/. ---------menr. Inc Telephone (818) You M¥e a n,ttt to.,.. 24.ol~. Agent lor Land-peer lfl penon and/« by Ml.IC NOTICE
l'tlll.IC NOTICE
lord ~. " JOU wWI to be Loan No. 175-01 Publistled Orange Coast ,._1ec1 bJ an att-y /MOKEDE
Darty P1to1 Augusr 16 23. and the cOUf1 d9Mtmlnet T.S. No. C"804 1988 you cannot affofd an at-UMT CODE C 1 t2.ol0 torney, -wlff be ap-TOWNE ESCROW COR-
---------pointed fOf you without PORA TION as duly ap-ctlarge. pointed Trustee under the
11 you fall eo appeer at etMt lotl6w1ng described deed ol
SUftERtOR COUflT time and place 1tatH tru51 WILL SELL AT PUBLIC
OF CAUFa..NIA, aboft, UM cowt "'8f tef· AUCTION TO THE HIGHEST COUNTY OF OCllANGE mlnae. ,_ ftvhta to the BIOOEA FOR CASH (on the
tn the Ma118' or the AWi•· control and cwtody of the forms which are tawtul ten-
cation ot Cha.ryie G Spragve minor dllld. der 1n the Um1eo States)
on behalf ot Primo Juan Dated: All 1t 1• and/or tne cashier s.
Jesus "Gamdo Sprague Cal GARY L. GRANVILLE. ()lf11f19d or Other checks
Garrett Gamdo SP<ague lor C-ty Clef1!, ly Cattlertne specified in CIVIi Code Sec-
Change of Name Hoeaelnl, DepvtJ hon 29241'1 1Payable in lull at
No A144 153 Published Orange Coast 1het1meotsale)allright,ltlle
ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE Oatly Pilot AuguSI 9 16. 23. and 1nterfft conveyed to
FOR CHANGE OF NAME 30 1988 and n<lW held by II under
Cheryle G Sprague on T229 said Deed or Trust tn Iha
t2•2 behall or Primo Juan Jesus ---------properly taere1na lter de·
Garrido Sprague Cat Gar-Pllll.IC NOTICE scribed.
---------re11 Garrido Sprague. min· _ __;...;;..;;.;.;.;;...;.;.;;...;.;..;;.;;;..__ TRUSTOR TONIE A PtaJC NOTICE ors hH ltled a petltt0n in thtS I M100 MOKEOE
---------court for an order allowing NOTICE Of'PUaLIC I ALE BENEFICIARY MARV
LEGAL NOTICE pet1t~r to change hlslher Of ftERIONAL Pltot'fRTY A N N H I C K E R S 0 N
Pr.OPOSEI> i-... name from Primo Juan .i:00101 S HERBERT R TURNER.
9UOQET fOfll Jesus Gamdo Sprague Cal Noooe is hereb)' given that TRUSTEE OF THE TURNER
FOUNT ..... VA.UEY Garren Garrido Sprague to p ursuant to Sections FAMILY TRUST EST AB·
SCHOOL DtlTJtlCT Hugh Branton Sprague 111. 21701·21715 ol the Cali· LISHEO 9122181 LOUIS K
The F ounta1n Valley Cal Garre11 Sprague forn1a Business and Pro-BITTON. SUSAN B Bin ON
School Otstrtet proposed IT IS HEREBY ORDERED fesstons Code Section 2328 M 0 RT 0 N L MARKS
budget for 1988-89 Wlll be 1ha1 all persons inl8'ested in of the Caktornoa Commercial HELEN L MAFlt<S. ED-
av11lable for put>hc onspec-the matler aforesaid 1ppea1 Code Sectton 535 ol the WARD W SOLOMON ANO
tton at 17210 Oak Street before tn1s coun tn Depart· Calttorma Penal Code and RENEE A SOLOMON
Fountain Valley CA lrom men1 No 3 at 700 Civic the prov1a;ons ol the Call-recorded May 29. 1986 as
August 22 . 26 1988. be· Center Or1Ve Wes1. Santa lornia Auc11on Licensing Instr No_ 86-221536 of Of-
tweeo the hours ot 8 00 a m Ana Cahfornoa. on AUGUST Act. the underlllgned Wiii aetl llcoal Records in the oll1ce ol
and 5 00 pm The publtC 25, 1988 at 2·45 o'clocit at public sate by competitive the Recorder of Orange
hearing on the pr<>Q09ed P M , al'lod then and there bidding on the 3191 day of County
t>udget for 1988-89 will be snowcause.1fM1y they have, August 1988 II 9 30 said deed of 1rus1 de· held II I 7210 Oal( Street. why said pettll()f'I for Gilange 0 cloel( AM on the premises SCflbes the IOllOWing
Fountain Valley CA on Sep. of neme Should not be whe<e said property has LOT 19 OF TRACT NO
tember 1 1988 at 7 00 granted beerl stored and whlCh are 6638 IN THE CITY OF
o·clock PM IT IS F'URTHER orde<ed located at Publte Storage COSTA MESA AS PER
Published Orange Coast 11'181 a copy of lhtS order to 2065 Plaoenua Avenue In MAP RECORDED IN BOOK
Daily Pilot August 16 1988 snow cause be publill\ed In the City of Costa Mesa. 256. PAGES s AND 6 MIS-
T245 Ille Orange Coast Daily Ptlot. County ot Orange, State ot CELLANEOUS MAPS IN
STARJING A NEW BUSINESS??
The Legal Department at the
Daily Pilot Is pleased to an-
nounce a new service now avail-
able 10 new businesses
We will now SEARCH the
name for you at no extra charge,
and save you the time ind the
tnp to tl'le Court HouM In Santa
.Ana. Then, of courM, after the
search is completed we wm file
your flctltloua buatnnl name
statement with the County Clerk.
publlsh once a weett for four
~· at requifed by law 1nd then file your prOOf of publi·
cation With the County Clerk.
Please stop by to file your
flctit1ous business statement at
the Dally Pilot Legal Depart·
ment. 330 West Bay. Costa
Mna. CaHfomta. If you can not
stop by. please call us
at (71•) ~2~321 . Extension
315 or 316 and we will make
1rr1ngements for you to handle
this procedure by mail.
If you ahould have any further
questions, pleaae call us and we
will be more than glad to asslSI
you.
GOOd lucic In your
new bUllnett'I
...
cyclone vinyl coated fenc· 646-8818 eves '
Ing & 3 gates Make otter 111-1111 •645-3083* FREE 2Y' old gldn lab mix.
M--IN_T_L_P_s. Beatles 1tt great llmlly dog. gentle, ko---=-.:--lC""---
Fleetwood Mac. Band on •IN-1114*
MO-....
1540 JAMBOREE ROAD
Open 7 dayw 1 week
1500 Auto Mall Or.
Santa Ana
the Run Reuonable PIT llU. PIPPIES
* * •6'6-SA'0 ** * Fawn & White $50-$100
• Extended ~ HOYrl
7 a.m.-10 p.m. Mon-Fri
55 Fwr. at Edinger
IPll l IAYI 'llf•mt•IT adl, 5 epd, ale oni6ee.
loeded (207MI) I 11.116 llYlll ULEJ ea<:h to ONLY RESPON·
Cou c h a nd chair . S IB LE , L OVINGl.-ar-~:-----,..,.c:-:
answering machine and ADULTS! 847-7194 or,,. __ ,...._____ 'l& llW
Service Hrs. Mon-Frt.
7:00 am to 10 pm THEODOR£
ROBINS dressers 846.o663 841-37t2 1966 lslXNDER 29'. llfnt U MBZ 450SL ·79
cond, ctasslc l\Jlt keel ht4 Otl4lfle1l Black/silver interior, 2 f 0 R (J
Co 6011 flll ita I cruiser. depth, kno111og. tops. lo m11es. $28.000. •1•ttr1 _ .. S VHF, ROF, head. atomic 4 cylinder -automatic. CALL 449-2383
• .. .... oo!' ..
( <' 't \.q ~
179/b o spec1al. Rent an HAMMOND f-582 Organ. 4, A von. ult-away, sunroof. Gold anadlzed MBZ 450SL '76, mint i---------
IBM PC clone. 6AOk. dual Obi manual. autom1tic, S 14,999 Am/Ev 673-0485 wire wheel• & rMtl1l1. cond. m.,, _ .. __.,, 2 d hies r tt $500 St995 080. Must see to -.. _,._.. rive, grapi.... 26. ree2so16 . up/lo control /obo lliJ1/Deck1j llrlft appceclalelll tops. green, $27,500. ware/1rain .. ...,. t-4 842-6901111ter 2pm 7122 85f:30SO A:ik fCx Alan
J I /F /Ar 1111.11 NII 30' sl3e tie. eiec1. wet•. 141-1114 tr 91Z aal •11
••• ,., •11 .6025 Studio mew/bench. Like tacllltle1. No live on Ul-1112 Red, 2 toe>•. Bi.upunkt new 1 1600 552-6477 board. $352/mo. 617 radio. $28,000. 553-1AOO
CARTIER $950 lg men's TV Stir" llectrtaict Lido Park Dr .• N.B. I~~~~~~~~~ '69PORSCHE912COUPE
18kl/stnls Santos watch 1 ' lllO 673-8800 'II_. Oii Chrome wheels. new tlrll.
sq lace. Serious lnqs LIVE-ABOARD partner-White. stereo cus, 53K All OrlQinal. 1 owner.
only. tv msg. 840· 1735 Kawai Console Pieno. ship tor sale. N.B. Marina. miles. e•tra clean. sun •SSSOO 552-0428*
.. Ch1pendale collector sailboat only to 45'lC12'6" roof. (1LKR014) $6995 c• •••.a -~Pso 'II NINI,.. 11•1 •ater1'1J1 6030 Item", Incl bench. Sac 675-3867 leave message _._ •" _ S t950 720-1704 Npt Bch I ' i CONVERT! 19 3 S3
hlle. 4 cyl, auto, air
cond. custom whM11 .
(42432) $6995 FILL DIRT -------1 llC. raaa,.rtat • Good condition A94-0252
WAITED! SELL Truka S &atn Dt•ntic 130I THEODOR(
(Up to 30 yards) TOYOTA '86 1-ton. EFI, BUICK '81 Skylant Ltd. 4-
autoFw/ over-drive. AC. d()()( A/C, AMfFM. orig. ROBI NS
thr ou~h classified AM/ M cass. xlnt cond tllllAlla ownr.XLNTcond.$21~~
$6500, custom cab ewer Navy blue w/biscu1t tnt 760 0 209 days or
FORD
, • t1ARf\1 J ' -' 132-Hll 142·Hll shell $550 548-07A8 $11,000obO 673-2 132 640-S228 eves & Mnd (_()\IA .... ~· • l. ' I
PlllllC NOTICE NllC NOTICE Mt.IC NOTICE NlllC NOTIC£ f'tlll.JC fl>TICE Pla.JC fl)TIC[
THE OFFICE OF THE 315--4700 the coort a formal Request personal property to: paymentbondlntheamount rnent Section. P. 0 . qox
COUNTY RECORDER OF TAC t027411 lorSpeclal Notlceoltheftl-ECONOCOM·USA. INC .. ol One Hundred Perc.nt 10 79. Sa c ramento,
SAID COUNTY Published Orange Coast Ing of an inventory and ap-Transferee. whose address (100%) of the aggregate 95812-1079. Telephone
YOU ARE 1N DEFAULT oaoly Piiot August 9. 16, 23, pra1sement of estate assets 1s 4385 Poplar Avenue. amount ol the bid. The eon-(9t6) 322-2871,
UNDER A DEED OF TRUST 1988 or of any petition or account Memph11, TN 38117-3715. tractor will at10 furnish There Is a nonreturnable
DATED 5128186" UNLESS T233 a.s provided In MClion t250 The persooal property sob-certlllcates ot Insurance Charge of $73.50 (chectl
YOU TAKE ACTION TO ol the California Probate jecl 10 the transler j1 gen«· evidencing all Insurance made payable to Offloe at
PROTECT YOUR PROP-nunilC MnflC£ Code A Request lor Spec.al alty delCfibed as follows coverage as required by the the State Atehltec:t) lor Md! ERTY. IT MAV BE SOLD AT rUUL nu NOllOe lorm 1sevallable lrom AT & T System 75 contract Mt ol plans and speclfl.
A PUBLIC SALE IF YOU I No. 104014 the coon clerk SIN 86232 All proposals shall be tub-cattons.
NEED AN EXPLANATION NOTICE Of DEATH Peutloners. Mary Ann CHH 578 milted to CJ Segers1rom & Prequalllteation ol 't>ld-
OF THE NATURE OF THE ANO Of PETITIOM Howell & Erna Joen Col-and IS localed at BROAD-Sons " the address lhoWfl ders under the State Con-
P ROCEEDl NG AGAINST I TO AOMeNllTEft eman WAY-SOUTHERN CALI· below not later tMn the day tract Ac1 Is not required
YOU. YOU SHOULD CON-ESTATE Of': ..__y I Rumu ... n. FORNIA. •7 Fashion Island. and hour spectfled heretn. Successlul bidder shall
TACT A LAWYER. JOHN IELFOflD Attorney• at Law. 11 Oo6d-Newport Beach. Caltlorntl All bids Shall remain vahd tor lurn19h payment bond and
1062 SANTA CRUZ CIR-ElfATl NO. .,, lhofa Drl'fe, l uH• .uo. 92660 The 1r1n1fer 11 10 be 90calendar daysatterooen-performance bond u ,..
CLE. COSTA MESA. CA A1...,.75 Lon9 leach. Catlfornla completed on or alter Ing quired by law.
92626 To all heirs. beneficiaries. 90902 August 26, t988. lh1s projeet snail be c;on-NOTICE OF REOUIRE-
111 s1 eet add eu or Published Orange Coast CARTER HAWLEY HALE s1dered a muo1c;ra1 public M E N T F 0 R N 0 H • . a r r creditors. contingent credi-O P' A 16 17 23 ST,....,I, ......... aY·. l"--1 C. ~or'"s proj-t an , ... Con· DISCRIMINATION PRO· common des1gna11on ol tors, and i>e<sons who may ally ,1ot ugust . • ' ..,.... '""' .._. -" .... '"' GO P'OP&IY is shown above. no be otht'rw•se interesied In 1988 lertla, V.P. "NANCE I tractor shall comply with the GRAM ( V. CODE. SEC-' I IS tw238 ADMIN. prOVISIOns of Sectton 1770 TION 12990): Your attention warran y is given as o ' the will or es1a1e. or both. of Pub11~ .. _.. "-a~ CA--t to 1780 lncluSIYe ol the Cal•· Is called to the "Non-completeness or correct-JOHN SELFORD """"' ""' ....... ness) The benel1c1ary A peht1on has t>eeri filed PtaJC NOTICE Dally Pltol August 6. 1988 fornta Labor Code regarding d111Ulmlnatton CISUM" Ml
under said Deed ot TruSl by t>y Mary AM Howell & Erna T239 the prevalltng rata and scale lor1h or referred to herein
reaSOfl of a breacl'I or default Joen eot.man in tne Su-K 42112 ot w'es establllhed by the whlc:h is appllcable to all
1n the obhgauons secured ""'IOf Court of Caltfornia ...._..__of lale DllDI IC NOTICE City o Costa Mesa. which Is nonexempt Stale Construe-" hef r ed ,...... ._.,... r~ on file al the Office of the t1on Contracts and to tftie 1 ereby 810 ore eKecul County ol Orange. reqlle$1· of "-al Property City Clerk and Shall forfeit "Standard California ~
Ind delivered 10 the under· 1ng that Mary Ann ~owell & at PrlYate lale I Sll01 signed a written Dectaratton Erna Joen Coleman be ap-No. A-l•l2'77 LPS NOTICE Of PUel.IC IALE penalties prescribed therein dltcr1m1natlon Construction
of Dehwlt and OefTland tor pointed Ill i>e<sonaJ rep-In the SUl)eflor Court of OF PERSONAL "'°9£RTY for non·compl1anee With the Contract $peclfieett0n" •
Sale. and wntten notice ol resen1a1t11es lo adm1n1ster the Stale of Cahtorn•a. 1n .i:22101 I code for1h herein The Spedfl.-default and ol election to the estate ol the decedent. and for the County ol Or· Not1oe is hereby g1veri ttaat C.J. SEQERITROM I e11tlon1 are 89pllcable to all
cau58" the undersigned to The pe1111o'l requests ange pursuant to Sections IONS. 3315 fMYlew Aoed, nonexempt State Conttrvo-
sell said property to sattsty authority to administer the lnllle Mattar oltheEstate 21701-21715 ol the Cali-CoetaM9M,CA12121 (714) llonContracts and Subcon..
said ot>hgat1ons. and there-estate under the lndepen-ol LAURA MOLER. AKA fornia Business and Pro-541--()110 I~: Ortll .. Myet1 ttacts of $5,000 or more.
alle1 the undersioned den1 Adm1n1s11atlon of Es-LAURA AGNES MOLER. fessoons Code. Section 2328 Published Orange Coast Pursuant to Section 1770 cau~ said nollce of default tales Ac1 (This authority al· Conservatee of the California Commercial Datty Pilot August 9. 16. of the Labof Code. The 0.-
and ol election lo t>e Re-tows the personal represen· Noooe 1s hereby given that Code. Section 535 ol lhe 1988 partment 01 lndustr1&I Rela-
c:orded Aonl 28. 1988 as 1a11ve to take many acttons the un<1er11gned wlll sell at Ca11tornia Penal Code and T230 •tons has ~alnecl the
Instr No 88-196503 of Of· Without obtaining .G<>Urt ap. private sate. 10 the highest the pro111s1ons of the Call-~al prevatlmg rate °'
ftc1aJ Records in the oflice of proval 8el0<e taiung certain and best b<dder, sobiec1 10 lorn1a Auction Llcen11ng Pl&JC NOTICE wages '" the county in whlctl
the Recorder ot Orange achons taowever the per. conlirmation of Mid Su· Ac1. the undersigned Wiii sell the ~k Is 10 be done. to be
County sonal representattve is re-perior Court on or afler the at public sale by cornpet1ltve .,... 15 liSted In the Department
Satd Sale wiff be made qutred to give notice to 25th day of August l988. 81 bidding on the 31st day ot STATE Of' of TranCtlon booll._.
bUI w11taou1 covenant or war· interested i>e<sons unleSS the oltloe 01 Phyllis M Gal· August. 1988, al t t 00 CALF~ anttttttl al Prevailing
ranty. e•press or 1mplted re-they have WllYed noc1<:e or lagher. 2266 N State Cot-o·otoc.k AM on the premises OfflCI Of THE W~ Rates. dated u 191
gardlng ttlle possession. or con5eflled to the proposed fege Blvd . Fuller1on. CA wnere said property has ITATI AltC~CT fort on Proc>OUI Form. encumbr~. to pay the action ) The independent 92631, County of Orange. been stored, Ind whtcil are OEPA~NT Of Coptel 01 thta boolllet .,.. on rema1n1nn pnnelpal sum of .. located at Publ1<: Storana OIJllRAL IERV1CEI hie at 400 P StrMt, 5ttl .. ,, adm1nistrahon aut .. onty will State of Calltorn•a all the 2099 Pt•~tia Auen ... -.1n-,...... F'loor. Sacramento, Call-the note(s) secured by said be · granted unless an rtght. tltle and interest ol ""'"'' • .... ADV£RTllMENT "" nd ail ble deed ol Trust. with Interest Interested person Illes an said consefVatee. in and 10 the Ctty ot Costa Mesa. INOI fornla, I are av a to
as in smd note provided. ad· ob1ec11on to this pe1111on and all the c:ertaon real property County of Orange. Stale of PUellC NOTICE any interested party on r•
vances. If an~nder the snows good cause wh)I the snuated In Iha City ol Callforn1a. the goods. chat-SEALED PROPOSALS qU::::HAIL J ltOCCHIC
lerms ot Slid of Trust court shoold not grant the Anaheim. County of Orange. sc""ri~~~f P1nr0P9<t1 .. _ ymdeat: 1~~ SbetarteoetVe Ar-~llecbyt.O~arto~ CHIO M ., ~LA~ ITAft tees. charges and expenses authority State or Cahfornoa. partieu-""" .,..,..,_ ,,. '"' "'' .,.... c of the Trustee and ol the A HEARING on the pell· larty described u follows. ters of ment or General S.W:., ARC~ T
trusts created by said Deed 11on wtll l>e held on SEPTEM-to-wit Sonya Young, Sp C Room 3016, t07 South Pubffshed Orange Coea1
ol Trust Said sale WIN be BER 7. 1988 at 1 45 p M 1n LOT 37 OF TRACT 2625 238-tbl/.ol Chrs !>gs cllhft. Broadway. Los Angeles. 0et:te, ~ ;uous• HI. s.
held on August 31. 1988. Bl Dept No 3 located at 700 IN THE COUNTY OF OR-3 bed selS. ale. 12 1mos. Cahfonmta, until 2-00 p m . tem . 1 • 1988
1 30 pm In the lobby to the CIVIC Cenler Ortve West. ANGE ST ATE OF CALI-watr cootr Wednesday. Seplember 2 t . T247
butldong located at 60 I Santa Ana CA 92702 FORNIA AS PER MAPS RE-George Ward Sp B 1988. at WfhCh lime they Wiii ·---------
South Lewis Street. Orange. IF YOU OBJECT 10 the CORDED IN BOOK 94. 084-2 Imps. keybrd. 2 chrs. be publlciy <>P«l9d and read nuntlC Mnl1C[
Calrlorma 92668 granting of the petltton. you PAGES 9, 1o & 11 OF MIS-Imps shdes. drSSf. 2 endlbl. 1n Room 1101 at uld ad· 1 __ .;.r..;;.;;.~.;;;.;..;....;""'~;.;.;;.---
At the hme ot the 1n1t1al should etlher appear at the CELLANEOUS MAPS IN sofa dress for a 5S7'I pubh,cat1on of thts notlOe. hearing and state your ob-THE OFFICE OF THE RE-Owner reserves the right REPLACE PCB TRANS-NOTICE Of PU9LJC aALI
the total amount of lhe un· ,ecttons or tile wn11en objec:-CORDER OF SAID COUN-to btd at the sale Purcnases FORMERS Of 'IRSONAL PROllEllTY
paid balance ol the obit-lions with the court t>etore TY must be made with cash only DEPARTMENT OF OEN· irm7t 1 gatton secured by 1he above lhe neanng. Your appear-. more commonly known and paid for II lhe time of ERAL SERVICES Notice Is hereby given tl\et
described deed of truSI and ance may be in person or by as· 307 NORTH SIESTA. purchase. All purchased L A NT ER MAN DE · pursuant to Section•
estimated c~ts, expenses. your attorney ANAHEIM. CA goods are told as 11. and VELOPMENTAL CENTER. 2170 1•21715 of the cal-
end adva~ Id $82.005 36 I IF YOU ARE A CREDITOR Tenn• of sale cash In law-mus1 be removed at the time POMONA tornla Business and Pro-
11 1s possible that at the I°' 11 conllngenl creditor ol tul money of the Untied of sale. Sele tob,ect to prior FAIRVIEW STATE HOSPI-tauions Code Section 2328 lime or sale the openmg bid the deceased you must file St.ates on confirmation ol cancellaUon In the event of T AL. COST A MESA ol the Calltornia Commerdll
may be less than the total your Claim With the coun and sale. or part cash and bal-settlement between Owner CALIFORNIA INSTITU-Code Section 535 of IN
indebtedness due mail a C09Y to the personal ance evtdeneed by note ,... and obhgated party Oatad TION FOR MEN. CHINO •
II available. the expected represenlallve appointed by cured by Mortgage or Trust lhtS 16th and 23rd day or CALIFORNIA REHABILI-Caltlorni~ Penal Code anO
opening bid may be Ob· thecOUrt Wlthinlourmonths Deed on the prpoerty so August. 1988 Public TATION CENTER.NORCO :::ni'!'~~ol L~en~
1a1ned by calhng the lolloW· lrom the date ol first Is-sold Ten percent of amount Storage Management, Inc SOl/THERN RECEPTION A undersigned wm NII 1ng leiepllone numbers on suance of letters as provided btd 10 be depolitad with b•d Telephone (8 t8) 244-8080. CENTER AND CLINIC, NOR-ct. the
lhe day betore the sale: (71.olJ 1n section 9 tOO of the Cali-Bids or olfe<s to be 1n writ· Agent lor Owne< WALK at publte .... by compeuttw 385 4837 or (213) 627-4865 p ,._,. Pubhshed Ora.,.... Coast COUNTIES OF LOS AN-biddlnO on the 3 i1t day of · forn1a robate """e The Ing and will be rece1Yed at O~I Pilot AuguJi-16. 23• GELES, ORANGE. SAN A.ugust. 1988, at §:30 Date August 1, 1988 llrrnt for lihng claims Wiii not the aforesaid ottte• II aoy 19J BERNARDINO ANO RIVER· 0 c;lodl AM on the premttea
TOWNE EICROW COfl· e~ptre pnor to four months Urrnt alter the ltrst publl-1244 SIDE. CALIFORNIA where Slid proper1y Ml
PORA Tl ON, aa u Id from the date olthe hearing cation hereof and before dw.o.·. PCB 729. PCB 730. been stored. and wNctl •• Trv1tee, •1 T.D. H"VICE noticed above data of sa.le. Pu S COMPANY, •t•nt, 8y YOU MAY C:)(AMINE the Dated th11 12th day ot f'tlllC NOTICE P B 735. PCB 737 ANO located at bile ton11119 c-ltlclMIR A .... taftl ,_ PCB ~4 1) 2065 ~Ila Avenue ln ~-1 • hie ltept b)' the coun If you August. 1988 NOTICE This proiect comprises the City of Cosla M .... s.a.tary, I01 lcMlllt lawtll are a person interested In Pttrlltl Ill. QatlatMf, ?a. etecrteal work 81 live eepar-County of Ofange. St1te of
St .. Orenoe. CA -(1'•1 lhe es late. yOu may Ille with !t .... ~~°':1:1 ~ IEALE':~~.AL• ate Siies. Including demo-Calllomll. the good•. Ch.It· kw°C~atOt ' .. _,_, NOTICE IS HEREBY htion. pumping. removal. tlelorpersonalproC*tYct.-
CA"L DAVID MOt.ER. Aa GIVEN that CJ Segerstrorn handling transportellon scnbed below. In the mat· c.....,....., & Sons Wtll receive sealed se>tH e1ein-up and on-111~ lers ot· ,......_. Ot""'9 COiiet bids up to the hour of 4 storage ol polyct'llorlnated Tracy Rffves. Sp. O
Deity PlloUututt lS.1'. Z2. o'otock Pm on tftie 24th day biphenyt. etectncal eqUlpo 178-wshr/dryr. frldg, .. INGil!>TON ,... of August, 1te8 for prOYld-ment and other generated shlVng,. SOI•. lbl/etwa. mt1C
n " M1U4 1ng and installing of ao over-items, and lurnllhlng and In-bu , rur Portland, Oregon. Ar· head traffic sign, together staffing new traostormer• Owner r~ the rtght HARRY KINGSTON.
of Laguna Niguel.
passed away August
14. 1988. He was the
proprietor for 28
years at the Bayside
Fish Market in New-
port Beach. Survived
by his wife Madell,
and a son John of
· --.. ---IC-..,,.-T-ICE ___ with all the 11P9Urten1n1 conduit. wfrlng and related to bid 11 the ..... PurC"-rangements are pn-r-"" t¥0f'k in connecOon thef• equlpm41nt On-sit• tr.,,. muttbemactewtth~only
vale. Directed by wilh, 81 deldrlbed 1n EXhlblt portetion and storage 11 r• •nd Plld ~ at the time°' M c C o r m i c k • _.. "A" (Brtstol Street II Anton quired a1atl 111... purchase. Alf purcllued
NOTICI °' Boulevard) The Contractors' State good• ate sold " ls. Ind Mortuary. In lieu of INTINDeD TitANl'ER Proposals must be tut>-License Board haa d•· mutt be remo¥ed at the time
flowers memorials to (,.._. to milted on the blank tom1a. termlnecl that contractora of ..... SM tubjeet to Pf'°'
U I d M h d · C.._.. Cwt! 3 I c:anoeletion In the event of n le et o tSt c.-. lectton shHtl 1 through • must be licensed In the ol-Mltlemelit ~ a-. c h u r c h • 2 l 6 3 2 ,.. 1(2)> pr9'>8f'ed and fumllhed lor IOw1ng clelllficallon to bid end ObflOa*' PllrtY Oeted
Wesl ey. S o uth NOTICE IS HEREBY ~~~rc',,~c.?. on~~Jd~~C-~lon ""'lettl end 23rd·-of
Laguna. V2677 GIVEN that Celt• Hawley SegerstrOfft l Sona at 33'15 tnspectlonof1f1 .. ll•wilbe Auguet. 1188 Pvbllc Hale Stor•. Inc., Trans-FllMIW Aoed Coa\I ......_ conducted by the State for Stor199 M~. lftC.
ftwor. wtloM addr .. II 1800 92626 • phone ( 7 14) ~· et loc:MIOna, datel T~ (118) 2......,.,, •T9'1NGHAM MARIE E. STRINGHAM , paased away
August 12. 1988 on Bafboe 1118nd. Mra.
Stringham WM married for 5,. years. when
hutbend Frank L. Strlngham plllMd away
In 1975. Mcw9cf Jo Callfornla from lllinots In
19 .. 7 to "9r Sh«man Oak• r~ Which
lhe IOkl and mov.d to Balboa llland In
1980. SM and her lat• hUlbend Who
worked for the South9m Pedftc Allleroed
oWMd and menaged mud'I r.., 99tat• In
the Sen Fernando Veley, and the femfly
IOfd the Sherman ThMt• and MTOUnd6ng perc.ta In 1983. Marte WM of Catholic fetth,
• devoted mother, gf'~her. end ...
much apprectllted by her femlly, end .. be
tor11y mlll9d by 9ft h9r 8'MW ,_, Mrt. g:w• ii IUMved by hlr daugM .. ,
(Mrt. <M1nrt ~; Betty (Mrs.
E. C. Auft); JUlntta (Mrt. H.H. P9llokl_ti
dl!Ught• Eweyn (Mra. How. d lw9neon) °' Peor6a. ..... ..,.,.... .. In ... ,, In
1917. AllO ...... = 13 ••tdc:Nldreft
end '' gr911J•ldw•••· PrtwMe .... *91 ... .. ~ Al••· NattaNll Va•w C*ri Ill i Qllpll. Plldftc Vim
North Kr Hmer 8 1vd • 54e-01 t0. !Tom 8.00 a.m. to and times II follows. ~ fof OWner.
A=::"i.o c::'= :,~ 5;00 p.m , Monday through Lanterman Oe\1ta,>me11-OallY ~A Orliltfe 1~ Ill Friday. At Mid offiM, bid-Ill Center, Pomona· Plant tte& ugu9t •
Cieri may MC> °"'ein copi. Operations Buildlng: T..,...
-::=====::::::::-iof the ~ and epeclfl-day, September 8, 1988 at t2'1
e1t1on1 tor Ill• oon-8:00 a.m. liilllil.,. "lllftftiOr
PAClftC Yil*
MIMOtttAl PARIC
Cemet*'Y • Mottua1y
Cnae>et • Crematory
.)~ P&c;1l1c; VtC'• Onw'
,,._.,.port Beacn
6A4·2100
MAMORUWN·
llT.OlM
Mo•tu.trv • Cemeterv
C1,m,;1orr
16~~ G1i .. r A~l'
C.0 .. 1• ~$.J ~O ~~SA
t~ed Improvements Calllornla Reh1bllltetlon ---~;..;;;:=~"";.;'.;.;:;:""-:...-All ~ or bids lhall Cent•, Norco Plant 0per.
be accompanied b'I a atront Eluldlng, Wedneidey. ~~
cetNW'• or cer1lflecl c:Ndl, s.ptember 7. ttea et 1:00 ~ ;;;-~ to tM order of C.J. a.m.
Se91r1trom & 80111, Callfomla lnttttutlon fof ..!!!! ..._ ~ to M 1Mat ten Men. Chino· Plant Osw· ---DmTIKT
percent (f~) of IN bid. or atione ~. Wedo•d~. ~ WN Un-.. ....... by 1 bOnd In laid mnount Septembef 7. 1M8 et 2 60 ..-rtct proPOeecUllu_. tor end~ to Mid CJ pm 1 ...... _..,..,........,
s.o.r.trom I Sona. 19*' Southern Reception PIAllc lnlpatton • -
by IN bidder end a Q0r1)0f· Center CMic. ~ ....,. lenwa ~. ""-ate tuf"Y Said cMC1! 111111 Oper8"°"' .,.._, "*'· CA from Aug, IS -...... I.
be forfeited or Mid bOnd s.ernoer t . 1t11 • 1.'Cfo 1988, ....,.,.. ... ....,. " Mttl -... ,.,... 1n a.m. :00 am. and •:JO p.M. Tiie
eaa1 IM blcldlr cllpoeltlng FelfYlew o..11opwea1 '~ ""''"' °" "'9 tM Nft!I dote not, wftNn c.tlW, 0oa.-.......... =.=•d bUdfet fOf
ten (10l Up .... ..,., °'**"" :.= r= .. be ...... -
::-todOIO, ll91Hfleton-::·--I, ll U :r.::.-r: ·=
TM contfectol .. be ,.. AH_.... 911811 ,_... ;JO o:~ P.M. ~ '° IUrnlltl ~ .. ....... ................ ..., .... Mild ~. ee.
OOfltlact a fWtftfilt ,., ...... --....... ., ,..,. ~ .• -·
tomience bOftd '" ttie _.,. ~• •-• lM ........ .. 0na ........... . ,._.. lMllNI.. .. ... ...... ............ .......... °' ....... -" 7'lwllFll -... -~·-.... and ............. c.... ......
• '