HomeMy WebLinkAbout1989-05-22 - Orange Coast PilotTeWlnkle
student's
dream
-comes· true
')
COAST/A3
THE ORANGE COAST .
Ted "ores of Unta Ana checks the heigh~ of• car In ~h• car hopping contest.
'
Students'
standoff
continues
In China
LoWridet. fans flock to fairgrounds
By ALEX \lllWAMS
OfllW~l'tleek.tff
Michael Ru her has a· lull har
stocked with a1rhne bottlc'I of
wh1 ke)'. &in and vodka 1n his truck's
R!ove b9x. He has a telcv1s1on set in fl 1s dasflboard.
But outraged moton ts need not
worry. Rusher, a Long Beach land-
scape contractor, never hdcs behind
the wheel Of his fire-engine red, full·
size 1974 Chevrolet stepsidc After
all. dnv1na the truck. on the road. 1n
the ram and l\arsh un. mtaht scratch
the Chevy's mirror-smooth bright red
paint. or 1arn1 h the chrome V-8
under its hood. Rusher said.
lo one sense. Rusher' musuem-
ptece was lake man) ~dans and
pickups on display lit alsa '89.
Sunda) 's lownder a nd truck 'lhow al
Orange County Fairgrounds.
The truck, which began lrfc puucr·
mg around outhern Los Anadcs
county filled with lawnmo"ers and
sod bags. sat bad and mighty at the car
COVER STOR" /IUVE~ll~t: Jl'STl('E
show, spinning slowl)' atop a mtr·
rorcd d1spla} carousel erected 1n tht
middle of a ca' ernous fa1rgroundo;
hall.
"I bough1 1h1s truck for m} land-
scaping bus1ne s," said Rusher seat-
ed m a lawn chair beside the trud .. ·,
d1spla)' pla1form. "But )OU can '>CC
how things got ou1 of hand ..
Out of hand, a1 lcas1 from the
workaday commuter's poinl of' IC".
might best descnbe the reincarna11on
of 1he hundreds of family sedans and
Shelter helps youth get new
chance to turn his life around-
By l.ESUE EARNEST Of -Otllly .... Sufr
Now and ap1n, the rhine tone tud
m Armando's left car lobe cauaht the
h&ht and par~led a he spoke with a
.ound of 1nccnty in his voice
He has learned to make a aood
imprt ion. After all. the only thin&
standina between him and another
stretch tnJUven1lc ball ts tht approval
of hu next set of foster parents, ana
Armando ha&es Juvemle haH
The youth, ~ho hu hvcd in eight
foster homci in his l S rears, doesn't
much hke the· idea of leavma the
temponry youth shelter 1n Lquna ~ch either. There he has found ---....,m~u,..-:::di·nttdcd counsclina. comfort.
rules and fncnds. But his time is up.
he says, 10 now he m~t con~ntrate
on mak1n1aaood1mpreu1o n on the
fostcT parents who arc schedu~ to
1nten icw ham m Juvenile hall next
~eek.
Armando tells his own Story a Imo 1
eaicrty. He hkcs to talk, he says. He
remembers when he and has 1:\
brothers and sl5ters "'ere take11. from
lhc1r home and placed in d1fTcrcn1
fac1htics. He's not sad about be1n1
separated from h1 mom and dad. he
Sl)S, sine.: he rcmcmbcrs them main-
ly as drua u~rs. but he mmc his
brothers and sitters.
But Armando was only 3 )cars old
when hi~ famtl) wa shredded apart.
Maybe he JU t lhtnks he remembers.
.. It's somet ina f ll never foract."
he 1ns1sltd.
Ncnher is he bitter about bc1n1 ..
bounced from one foster home to
another over the next s1x0)cars. ~ven
thouab m one he was mentally and
sexually abused. It was better than
be1n1 on the slJ'CCt, he saad And 1fh1
one aood adoption d1dn'1 iakc -he
ran away almost 30 time -~cit n
doe n't mean he'll have the same
problems afhe acts another chance
It's a short. bleak stol'). but M> art
the ht tones of many of the approx-
imately 250 )OUlh who find refuge
each )Car in 1bc lovmgl) re tortd
house a few blocks from the beach
What conttm' she I tcr workers now 1
that, as a result of a cutback m state
fund11JJ. the-shelter may have to clo~
by the end o(Scp1tml>er. -
The County JustJ~ ;)~~tem ci-ffllfe_. lft MMANOO/ IU'
Cost of treating sewage may rise
to . s ·19 5 per home to meet EPA rules .
8r M*ll'T aMKIR
Of .... ~ .......
Ps:aalr County naaation Dtttnct
oMdlll -..... it"• ... ·'° COit •• -.. n.u -...._ criw .., ... 1 JO
~ 10 UMl llftll, Mui awy the
lotid ttufr irid pipe the .......
......,. illto the ocean ........ ......._ liKh and Newik#'l 8-h. . .
111at"• tM prb Ull af .. iaalioe
dillrict omc-.. ... ,...""' '°
contbu~ current level• of tre•tment
at I.be planu in Hunt•naton Bffch and
Foulaia Vallk . If olkilall are required by the
Ea+N 11 181 PnMec!IOft Aeenc'Y to
m1*., ll'fatment by anottwr notch, :;.cirr COUid dimb to S9. 2~ btllton.
llicl ,..._...,. Nrftntl) pay about
SSS • ,.r for 1tW11t deapoul
-· IJ!DP If IUet and tup-;I I nwk ThM'°'91could ~to 17' to s ,,, per hoUlthokl
by the year 2.oos. officials said.
Rcpranaativn •~slated to make.
an ·~ at Huntinaton Bcaeh t uy c.ouacil' c:bamben toniaht to outli~ lllUft conhnli• the d11tnct beljon-. et 5 p.m. ·-· f1 is OM Of 1 teria 0( pmntataon
IO ..... oftkiUJ brioft MnllallOn di~ 4incMJn• 4licide WM&hcr '° Met~ EPA waiVtt to rontinuc
Dltftill -111 jlFY ......... , M to to ft.11 llOaAfl?J lfSI tr•t. ,. --1/N/Na/AJt
perk)' Japant"<;(' p1d.up~ tha1 <tho"cd
up undJ'
.\t lea'lt I !l,I)()() Pl'opk turned out to
the alsa. a<> did appro~1match 500
'>hov. l'ar cntrtl''> and another I 'iO that
v.crc turned av.a> because al'kl
promoter' wuld no1 fit them 1n.,1dc
thc gJIC!I
Conic 1anl'•. pro' cd that an} car
rnn be\omc 11 lu\\-ntlcr. from a
shov.room-lrc\h 1ssan n1ra to a
19.\0., Pl) mouth behemoth
(Please IH SA1.SA/ A21
GOOD MOR ---· -------..---~ --
I
Rlccacdo Mutl
conducts at
Performing
Arts Center
M IC/A IO
Activities at
fairground
snarl traffic ..
By ALEX \lllWAMS
Of -o.-y .... SilAlf'
Samultancou schcduhng of four
events at Orangt Count} Fair-
grounds, including a first~\Cr low-
nder show that drew far more v1 1tors
than an11,1pa1cd. created traffic snarls
that clogged Costa Mesa street on
unda)' afternoon
Salsa '1$9. a lownder and trud.
compcuuon· as v.cll as a '><'If·
proclaimed "famal) fie ta.'' com·
pounded 1raffic problems that t~ p1-
. call) eit1s1 1n the f:urgrounds area due
to the weekly Orange < ount) wap
Meet on the grounds. Costa Mesa
Pohce Lt Sam Cordeiro said
I n add1t1on. the Pal'lfn
Amphtthcatre. loaned ne" 10 the
fh1rgro unds: schcdukd an unu'lual
dayume pcrforman1;e, ~lattnl the
Pacific JaLZ re "'al for a 3 p m ~111ti
F1nall). the fauvound~ e~po'il\lon
center housed a gun ho" tha1 drcv.
vwtors.from Q a.m. to S pJD
4 'The bo)S v.ere conctmed about
gndlock al one ume," Cordeiro ~id
He said traffic around the fauvnund
hit its v.c)rsl around noon but wa
bad from about 11 a m to '\ p m
.\round nbon in appro·u~ttl\ '·
mile tnp on the Co~ Mesa Frtt"-a'
from 1he ~n D1cio frttv.•) to the
fairgrounds took·abou1 4S minute a'
1raffic poured oil tile ( orona Oel Mar
Fr«wa) onl) 10 m11T do" n and
attempt to merge into the fa1raround\
traffic
Organ1Lers of the lov.nder "hov.
adm1t1ed their unt'\pc"<'ledl~ large
turnout tangled traffic.
"We d1dn'I knO\\ what 10 e'(~t."
saad Harry Oitlc). a promottr of Salsa
'89. "We figured we would act a
~c f1C)l1<es ..................... 16-7
.5Pc>f'ts ................................ 8 I ·J
Nllstirlg:I ....... _,., ••...•• .-..•...• A10 W..,,... .................. -..... i••··· AS
Four Injured
In collision
on freeway
Four people suffered injuries Su.n-
day when the) v.crc CJCCted from a
truck that O\ertumed on the Costa
Mesa Frcewa)'. The truck flipped
after a colhsaoo witb a,nothcr picrup
truck .. thc Cahfom1a Highway Patrol
reported .
The accident occurred around 4· 30
p m. south of BakcT trett A whttc
Chevrolet pickup trUck wa tr1vcling
north when a blue-iray Datsun Kina
Cab pickup 1ruck chan&ed lanes 1n
fron1 of the Chevrolet. causma lbe
v.h11e truck to swerve to the left 1nt0
lhc ctnter d1v1dcr. CHP Officer R.
McCam~ reported.
The Chhrolct dnvcT then ap-
parentl) lo t control and struck. the
(~ase lff CRASH/All
m1n1mum ofl1.000 ~ple.and 1f'4"t
sot bc:yond aJI our expectation . a.nd
1m~ ted all of Orange County with
1raffic. v.c would h.1\e 25.000 I thtnk
1t's closer to ~S."
The promoler s~ud that oraao1zcrs
had to 1um av.a) at least I SO cu tom
cars and 1rucks. despite that, the how
admitted about SOO instead of the 200
anhc1pa1cd.
"We knew how m~ny people out
there v.ere interested an this son of
fl'lease rttZRAFFIC/ A2J
Crime
evidence ·
• a growing
problem
9y JANET ZIMMERMAN
Of-.~~"~
The worn tennis ball. plasllc beer
cup and ragged~ piece of
drywall t:ut from a cnme 5ccne wen~
C\ 1den c -ai lea 1 a t o oc ume
Nov. th.e heh cs where those and
9 theT c~h1b1ts n.~t. sometimes for
dozens of )t'ars. saa under the wcl&ht
m a basement of the Costa Mesa
Pohtt-.
This is the property room . The
d•na>. "-tndowlcss room t the hean
and soul of many an 1n~cstiption, no
matter how old. me of the odditiC$
hardly seem \aluablc. but ifs bctt~
to ha"c it and not nttd it than tO Med
1l and not have it.. detectives said.
, With increasina numbers of~
and socict)' tendtncy to-aid <:NM.
the collection arows. Guns. dnlp, money and f~ lets l&Dtfa.Dt items
have spread to fh c rooms of the
police station. ·
Cotaa Meu officen book 10 300 to
600 pi«'ti of evtckncc per moeda. but
onl)i about I 0 iccmure tran•""T•ho
CO\&rt in the same ume "l*iOd.
propcrt)' Officer 80b Bolt .ua. · c
"It donn't take • me,t .. l ..... ftau~ out that .ooett. or lilCI' ,o. ra
out of specie."
~~ 8ortl ...... to .. . menw . pan~ or • .... • ... ,,
ututt. in &M plMie .... _.. ....
lf'S IOI
~-. ' J
Bid to Influence regulator ~vei" Irvine S
Di\ YTO.N. Obio (AP) -Several U.S. senators., inchadina Sen. Alan
Cranston of California, allettdly met
with fonner federal bl.nlc board
chairman F.ttwin J. Gray in an
attempt to protect an ailing lrvinc-
bascd thrift. a neW$paper reported.
The 0.yton Dajly News said in its
Sunday editions that Cranston, 1)-
Calif.. Sens. John Glenn, D·Ohio,
Dennis .DeConcini, 0-Ariz., and
John McCain, R-Ariz .• met with Gray
in DeConcini's Washington office
Aprill, 1987.
Gray, then chairman of the federal
Home Loan Bank Board, &old The Daily News he believes the meeting
NB police
find man
lost at
·oisneyland
By City News SeMce
A mentally-retarded man reported
missing Saturday in Anaheim was
found Sunday in Newport Beach and
returned in good condition to the tour
group with which he was travelling.
"He was fine," said Dec Duncan,
Director of the New Directions travel
group he had Lravellcd with. "He was
a little disoriented when found1 but
was very excited to be back. with the
group."
Alfonso Navarette, 53, of Santa
Maria, Calif., was found by a New-
port Beach police officer on a park
bench in front of 500 W. Balboa Blvd.
at I :30 p.m. "just sining there," said
Newport Police.
Navarette_ disappeared from Dis-
neyland in Anaheim at about S p.m.
on Saturday. He was one of 25
developmentally disabled persons on
a travel tour in the parlc.
Navarette was brought to the
Anaheim Police Department and
then rejoined the tour group he had
been travelling with.
It is unknown bow Navarette
ended up in Newport Beach, over I 0
. mites away from Disneyland.
"Our best guess as that he walked
down Harbor Blvd.," Duncan satd.
SE\XIAGE
FromA1
"This will be one of Jhc most
important decisions t.h6. Orange
County Sanitatioh District will make
. for the neu 30 years," said l"om-
Mays, mayor \>ro tem of Huntington
Beach and chaLrman of Orange C.oun-
ty Sanitation District 11 , which
includes about 95 percent of Hunt-
ington Beach.
.. The decision will have a signifi-
cant financial impact on the entire
Orange County community, as well
as on the ocean itself," Mays said.
wu an apparent anempt ""\O directly
subvert the reauJa1ory procea" 1n
order to protect Charles H, Keatina's
Lincoln SaviDlland Loan an the final
days of a bank board examination.
The bank boa.rd reaulates savin..,
and loan~ 1 Irvine-based Uncoln Sa~n,s was
teized by federal rqulators for ''un-
safe and unsound practices" on April
14, a day after its parent company,
A!Mrican Contioen&al Corp. of
Phoenix, Ariz., filed for bankruptcy
protection.
American Continental is the su~
jcct ofa probe by t.he FBI. Lincoln bas
filed suit in U.S. District Coun in
Wubinaton· to be removed from tributot," Gray 11id.
llderal conterv~tors.hip. . . The Daily News saad Kt.a1ina and
At the meeuna. Gray saad, the hat associate. had contributed
tenaaors asked him to withdraw an Sl4.000to01enncampaia_n1;S6S,OOO
invqtment rqulauon Keatina had to DeConcint campai141; and
opp()sed. S 112,000 to Cranston caml,J!i1ns.
Gray sajd he was told that in The newspaper did not 1dennfy the:
eacha"fe the senators would per-asaocaates.
wade • their f rien4-;' who was not Gray \Old the newspaper DeC'OJ"l·
identified by name. to increase the cini made t.hc prop<>si1ton durina the
number of home loans made by his one-hour meelina. and said as &he
w1ituuon if the bank board would meetina wu endina. au fout scnaton
end its investigation. said they didn't want the mcetina to
.. It (was) a aross violation of the be interpreted as improper.
antcpity orthe rea"latory process ... The Daily News said a McCain aide
for the benefit of one person. who denied such a deal was ever offered,
happened to be a friend and con· and wd Craaseov ·, office did not
return pbone call •
Glenn &old the nc•pper he •t·
ttnded the mettina. but •id he wa
not aware any im:.'°.L"ety. "lhoanebody a ~tion li~e that, I had DO ktlo•ieclle·Of It, ..
Oknn said. Mcssqes frOm The
A$soclated Prus left at Glenn's
Washinaton office Sunday we~ not
immcdiatc'y an1wettd.
DeConc1oi press secretary Robert
Mayntt said the scnaton asked Gray
about the manner in which &he blnk
board handled the Lincoln Savinas
and Loan invesliption.
But bt said Ofty's dcScription of ilCe meetina is "dcs1aned to subtly
•U418t that 1001Cbo• 1a1aton are
do1111 somettlina improper~ they nute Q~ORI about how hil llft)cy
11 (IWjna -1th • very. imPG!'Ant
en&i&y &he• l\M a hu,e ampect on
Arizona and Cahfomla. ..
Calls to McOlan·s hoine Sunday
were unu1wtred. OcCondn1 was an Damascu.. Syna. on Sunday and
unavailable r"r commtnt.
American Contantnt.al spokesman
Mark Connollay told The O.Hy News
the meeung with Gray was amlnted
af\er DeConcin1 became .,,_.arc of
Keatina'a c.oncems th.at Ilic bank
board was ha~ssina bis mslltution
Poncho S•nchez (left photoJ pl•y• Latin ... u for fans at Sal .. •n whll• Mlehen N••J loses a n arm wrelttl"tl match to ~·" nnney. , .
SALSA
From Al
Salsa judges. therefore, granted
awards in 30 categories, ranging from
best classic custom car and best
engrne to best paint. best detailing,
best anterior and most orig.i11al:
Several entries, including a sinister
black 1959 Chevrolet Bel Air·con-
vertible, were accompanied by rows
of tall trophies and picture· frames
showing before-and-after snapshots
of the j~lopies turned into street·
creeping beauties.
But car comparisons were not the
only attraction at Salsa '89. The event
was also something of a Hispanic
festival, offering a menudo breakfast.
mariachi bands, Atlee dancers as well
as Mayan headdtess workshops and
pinata partaes. ·
The archtyp1cal low-nder rcbinh
l'romA 1 ... for aix yean. Bork said be can qu1c_~y
locate a sinaJe item from the 2S,OOO
piecles of· property there and has
misplaced only two 1i~ he staned.
It s the 1tranae anonment of ~vidence that makes aa.. ilutsi.der
wonder what the value polaibly could
be. hems that have clvttertd the
shelves of the Pr'l tC~.Y robm include
doorknobs twi1~ offin a ~tial bwliarY, a IWtcale from A drua
investiption that bolds a HawaiWl
lbin end peck of N~ dpmtea
and an electric blac.~k m.chlne
ooafitcauxl from a local•.
••At a critne tcene, JOU:,. ha Ye
one opportunity~ to collect ~." detilc:i~e Stt. Mille Mi~ laid. .. Sometimes we don't kaow •• wUI
end up beina~ in I~··
mar. have been seen in "Dressed to nighttime ccmetel) scene along each movies. We had one an· fwins; "Ray
Kil • "ioc Ray's l 971 Buick Riviera. side of the car. said, showina liulc excitement.
Ray, wearing tattoos and a Do<tiers Quilted purple crushed velvet cov· For visitors, memones of the Salsa
baseball cap, seemed tacitly deli&htcd ere<I the interior of the Buick. The show mi&h t consist not only of
with his baby, which sat roped off at same quilled fabric'covcred the trunk bro nzc-flale Chevrolet Monte Carlos
inside the custom cars hall. 'and blanketed the inside of the engine · hopping like boats in hi&h seas, but of
R.ay as an original member of compartment and the underside of a steady thump, thump, thump
Lifestyle. "'hach he said 1s Los the hood. rumbhna o ut the cabs of miniature
Angeles' first and largest lowrider The Buick was once a movie star. pickups
club. The club bo1lsted 75 members in according to Ray's fellow Lifestyle Rap musrc and• boom-box bus
the early 1980s, and is now down to member, Rich.ard "Rick '64" Ortega. sounded at times Jjke incoming
about 30. Ortega takes his nickname from his artillery, rippling through vanous
As Ray talked of the friendship his 1964 Chevrolet Impala S. which metches of pavement.
car club offered, Dressed to Kill sat appears the Strad1vanus of the low-Miu Rodnaucz Jr., 20. of Cypress
askew, the hydraulic lifts pumped up ndcr world. Ortega said that Dressed stood next to has 1980 Chevy Luv
on three of four wheels -The C<Jr. to Kill l'lad a prominent role m the pickup, wt11ch sat low to the ground
which no longer mo\.e under 11s own film .. Corvette Summer " and booming From the cab of the po~cr, reflected "-hate overhead The Buick. he said. picked up a pickup, Beach Boys singer Mike
hghls 1n 11s ¥-lossy pamt h1tchh1k1ng, post-tar "-ars Marl. love's \Ot(;C "arblec.J out of two sub-
Four bright hues -orange. yellow, Hamill and supposedly drovt' him to woofer speakers and four .high-end
royal blue and chanrcuse -formed Las Vegas 1n search of ht\ stolen t"eeters.
geometric designs to accompa,n) an dream car. But the treble was only half the
elaborate, highly dc1a1lcd mural of a "We have a lot of our cars in tor) Echoin(! out -of the cami>tr hell
of"The Love Machme," a oameleu
thuddana bass riff pounded out over a
120 watt S)'Stem for b&S$ alone. The
bass 1n back has lmle 10 do with the
music on the radio in the cab. said
Rodriaucz. a profcuaonaJ d.ascjockey.
The bass system 1n the t.rUck bed
runsthroughfour 12·1ncbPyleDrlvcr
woofers and two TMX IS-inch
woofen. he saJd proudly.
Mike's• father, Mike r., said he
likes equal pn<ie in The Love
Machine. Only rectntly, Jhc father
said. t.he linle p1clcup with the
airbrush baroque paint job wns a
mode-st yellov. (he'> Luv m temble
cond111on.
No\\, however. the httle truck that
couldn't 1s a show truck 1t 1s The
Love Mntll1nc.
And besides, the senior Rodnguer
said "h 's a family pro1cct "
been abused, some have Deen aDan-parents. He hopes to take the golden
doned. retriever with him when he movei. on
grandfather -who has a little money Juvenile hall
-ma&ht have helped them act on .. D1fTercni people arc goma to
their ftet, they thought. The)' got as evalua.te me and see af they want me
far as Las Vepc; before .the poh<:e . m t.hear home." he said. He w1 he
Once they get to the shelter, to the next home.
counselors get lo work 1ry1ng to His freshman )'e&r in high school.
resolve family problems and heal old rocky to begin w11h, was turning out
wounds. Whenever possible, the goal to be a success. Armando's grades had
as to reunite the family According 10 improved and he was voted mo!it
shelter director Karen Cervenka, 75 valuable player of his school's water
to 80 percent of the youth are back polo tram. And, often alone, Arman·
home with their families within a do had learned to cook by watching
two-week period. culinary shows on television and
In Armando'~ case, that "'on't be wntani down the rtt1pes.
possible. But 1fheclaims to make &ood onion
Sittina an an upstairs room of the nnas and tacos and to wuh and iron
shelter, with dark hair still damp frnm his -own clothes, Armando adm1ncd
a shower. Armando talks about his he wasn·l a model son to his adopted
more recent history. As he talk. he parents.
fidgets. He looks typically teen-age-"I hed to them. I tended to tell them
blue shorts, coral shirt, bare feet, the things they wanted to hear," he
brac:::cs. said. He also stole their je"'clry to buy
The past six y~~ with his adopted clothes and lo pay back a bet.
paren\s has been bolb typa c.sl and Tht clothes were particularly im·
iumultuous. portant to Armando, who tugs at a
.. We were constantly arguing. We white nbbed undershirt to how the
could ncvcraetalona." Armando said kinds of things he wanted to wear.
of lhc closest thing he's bad to a "People had always made fun of
famjly. He couldn't have his friends me, either about the scar on m) fa~."
over, his clot.hes weren't good he 531d, pulhna at a barl"ly v1.1abte
enouah. He was embarrassed and mark on b1SJ&W, "or about the way I
lonely. drc scd."
It wasn't all bad1 though. Armando FiflalJy, when tensions peaked at
had a dos. 'Christian -a areat doa home, Armando and a buddy headed
with a .. dumb" name chosen by his -for New York. where the friend'
The depanment came unde,.fire in
1984 when Groucho Marx &)asws and
wip uted as di11u1sts in two bank
robberies were inadvcnantl> de·
1troyed. Officials 111d at the time thllt
computtrdata on those 1tcmuhowed
they could be disardcd.
Since then, dctectavcs arc hesitant
to dispose of any property .. because 1t
wlll come baek and bite you," one
old-hand said.
The JO.year veicran said he recent·
ly stepped up efforts to di1po1e of
unnecaury cues and uf"IC'd m·
vestiplOrl to be more selective about
what they collect.
l Bork lltttChcd h)&h to reach a top
lbel( ~ hi• head 10 ~lttt
h.imlelf &om unwieldy pKkws. He
laid he tometima rttls ti& he's '11bliaa 1 loliQ1 battle. •· 1 put .. uff up Mre m 11ope 11 Mayl ...
Evidence can be d~stroycd, auc-
tioned or returned 10 ill owner after
the case is tC'SOlvtd and all appeal~
exhausted or is s1aned-off by the
1nvcst11ttor. All weapons sct..ted are
evenlually crushed and the scrap
metal sold "and may end up as... the
bumper on a BMW; Bork said.
Th' oldest propeny 1n Slorqe 11
from a murder investipuon 111 the
m1d-60s. Tbae i1 alto a can of bean$
and spoon confltcatcd in a transient
sweep, a bq of blOod-stained to~l
found in t.be ltrttl, and a rock that
was thrown lhroup a window.
The most common property' 11
weapons and computers. but the
ckpertmena allo keepe SI 0.000-onh
of ~ley~ millioftl of dollan in drup
and cUh and nearly 100 bityclel. ~
"We Ft to the ~nt wbere we're
ju11 ovriwhehned, Bork llid.
packed them up. there was a wa) 10 ~ throua.h the
For Armando, the road hai wound process without leaving the sneher,
from 1uvenak hall!i in Nevada and but soon he'll be headed back to
Oranie County to a sheller an Lo' JUVCntle hall for hi,\ 1nten-1ew
Alamitos. He wu booted from that "Ju11 the lhou&bt of _go1n1 batk
facility when he mooned a girl who rt.ally make!i me Jund of upset." he
was teasing him,· he said It was said "But I fiaure n's only 101ni be
stupid. he 1d Wlth a trace of 11 tp'in. fora couple ofda) so t can probably
and be won't do It apan ltve with I.hat "
Back in Juvenile hall, he pleaded for He's JUSt thanHuJ. Armando said.
another chance ma shelter that the la t 30 day the helter doon
"I told them 1f they JIVC me a we~ suit o~n. Hid they not been.
second chance, I wouldn·\ cau\C JUvcnale hall would have bttn the
'rouble and since then I haven't o nly "OJ>UOn. lf the fundan& ('Omes
caused trouble I don't think I have·· throuan· and the staff IS t11l hett,
His second chance came 11 the
Laguna Beach shelter. whert he sttd
he has made fncnds, told the truth
and decided upon 50mc aoats
When he's srown. he wanu to~•
policeman. a nee his be t vsdcs wtrt
1n busine , he th.ink he mt.ihl al be
a bus1ne sman "a a hobby:·
When he's 18. he'll start t ryana to
find bis brothersand s1 ters. And next week. he'll try to 1mprc the couple
who come \0 1ntcrv1cw ham 1n
CRASH
ftromA 1
Dltsun, which rolled ~\etal time
before h1uan1 the etnter d1v1der,
McCamey said
The Dai1un dn"t'r was Orqory
Vanloy. 19. of~ Vanloy was
hsied an Cltical cond1t1on at W~tcm
Medical c,nttr in Santa Aha. but a
hoapittl spokeswoman did noc d1 cl0tt his 1pcciflc iJ\juries.
Alto i._;ured an ll\e O.tsun ~:
Jon Bennett, 19, of Orlnee. -tao
suttered bum1 over hi• arms. chat,
-.S and ~· and -.. lilted in terioul coftdillon 11 UCI Medical
Ca\ef an Qranle;
Dll\'t Soboaewlki. 16. of o.r...
who .. lillld in ~ 00&\-
Armando 1a1d he w1U come back and
v1s1t
.. They're kind of hk.c my brothers
and 11stcrs, ·• huaidoftheotbef'youtb
an the helter. He's alto bcoome cl~
to the helter 110. The houie uper·
v1sorc'\ChanJCdeamnpwuh hlm he
said, f1nacnna tl'lc rhine tone lie
called "a memory ...
"I ..,111 bawl Hkea llttJe baby~hen I
have to leave," Armando 511d" "h ', a
shame you ha"e to say sood·b)c But
my lime ha.s come:• -.
dJt.aon ac Fount11n Valley RCSJonal
Hospaial y;ith unsptoe1fied 10,Jwic •
and
Pacriclc Mottram. I 7, of Orlntc.
who wa also hsted an sau fktory
condttton at Foutua1n Valley with
unspecified 10.Juncs
Tbc c:vrolct dn vcr ~-. Fran\
Frost. Jr.. 34, o( Corona def MAr.
Frott was uninjured...
CHP om«rs a&'.d all four injured
wore no teetbelu, While the oae
uninjured pcnon wore a .. tbeh.
Monrom wu elpected to be dat-e~ from the "°'Pit.al &aie unday nish~~ Sobok•ltt WU bei111 Mid
(oi •tion for .. ... iriochcr
dlyL said Uz 8f'OUlliard, Fouatain
Valtqt bospha&.•'pc)kCIWOIDU. _.,.Aka " ,..,
« \lllOH'I' 1nr11n'l
nm
HI 111.11' Hft\HI•
Transportation
meeting ta focus
on ride sharing
A transportation wortcshop and luncheon
presented by officials from CaJtrans Dislt1ct J 2, the
Oranae County Transit District and the CaJifornia
H14hway Patrol wall be held at 11 a.m. Tuesday at the
Jrvme Hilton and Towers.
Leaders of the seminar wall encouraae ex-
pansion of ndcshanna pfOIJ"lms at Orange County
employment sates while the S Freeway as being
widened: Emplo)er transponauon coordinators
from the 200 companies pan1cipating in the
proaram are advised to attend the free t'vent.
Amona the companie sponsonni the program
arc C.J. Segcrstrom and Sons, South Coast Plaza,
Irvine Spectrum TMA. Nordstrom, Safeco In-
surance Company, The Lusk Company. Building
Industry Assoc1a uon, Bergen BrunsWlg Corpor-
auon, The Irvine Company, Rancho Santa
Marpnta Company. CIMCO, J M Peters Com-
pany and Ba11k of Amenc.a.
For more information call the Cahrans
Helpline at 768-4CAL --
Authors featur~d
Authors ott. Berg. Patnck Reynolds and
Stepben Birmingham will discuss their best-selling
worksat a luncheon meeting of Round Table West at
noon Tuesday at the Balboa Bay Club in Newport
Beach.
Berg will address his novel. "Goldwyn," a
biography of the one of the founders of Hollywood.
Reynolds, feat grandson of Camel cigarettes
founder R .. Reynolds. wall d1scu'is -The Gilded
Leaf." 81rmangham is the author of "Our Crowd"
and "The Right People.'' and is a noted SOClal
bistonan.
C,all 548-1447 for funher lnformai1on
Court lnfomatlon hotline
A 24-hour recorded 1elephonc court-infor-
mation hne has ~n created b> the \\est Orange
County Mun1c1pal Coun to assist the public 1n easily
accessing mformauon on traffic school, bail.
warr&nts, police rcpons, blood-alcohol results and
not·auilty picas.
The 1nformat1on line. which was obtained from
DIAL PRO Inc of Los Angeles. will automaucall>
transfer the user 10 a coun deput) clerk 1fthc call is
made dunng normal business hour'i. The numbers
arc 896-ii 11. 896-7201 or 896-7 I 9Q ·
G~t rt;ady for 'Run In th~ Parks'
A new 'a MCA dass enabling runners to train
together before the Jul} 4 IOK and 5K "Run in the
Parks" will be held at 5:30 pm Tuesdays and
Thursdays bcg1nn1ng this .,..eek.
Thcclassatthe South Coast ' MCA. lS free to the
public. but pan1c1pants must sign up at the YMCA.
located at 29831 Crown Valle' Par~"a). Laguna Niguel. or l'all 495-0453
Treating th~ mentally Ill
I\ meeting on the treatment 11nd prc.,,cnuon for
the mentall~ 111 and 'iubsiancc abuse~ .... ,11 be held at
7 p.m. Tucsda) at the Tnn1t) l ln1tcd Presb}tenan
Church, E. 17th t. Santa Ana.
The proiram. ponsored b> the •\lhance of the
Mentally Ill of Orange County, .... ,11 feature H1masin
De 1lva. chairman of the Oepanmcnt of Ps}ch1at~
at t. Joseph's Ho p1tal in Orange
The public 1s in' 1ted to this free event <all
544-8488 for add11tonnl 1nforma11on
Copp~r-wh~~I ~ngravlng
The 17th centu"I") nn ofroppcr-whcel engrn.,,,ng
will be demonstrated b)' R<>&er lander at c1man
Ma.rcu 1n Newport Bea ~ from 10 a.m to 3 pm.
TucW> •
Selander Will engn&\e u:llellc Bowl, one of Steuben'~ m~or worl.· created in 1935 b" the
com pan)' 's first de 11ncr. sculptor idncy Waugh.
The frtt uh1b111on v.111 be open to the public.
Nei man Marcu~ 1s at 601 Nev.pon Center
Orne. cwpcn Stach More 1nformat1on ma> be
obtaJned by calhna 759-1900.
t · ·\l.t :'\D ·\H
Uonday, Ma y 22
• S p m. Hu~l_DJtOD Be.ell CU)' CoueU,
council chambers, 2000 Main t.
• 6. 30 p.m. Cotta Mesa Plaaala1 Comml11lon,
council c:hambers. 77 fl\1r Dnve
• 1· 30 p rn Newport Beaclll Clay Cowicll,
council chamber . 3300 Newport Bhd.
Tue ·duy, /Hu y 2.'l
I
• 7:30 pm N~•por1-~ UaHle4 lfool
DU1ric1, HarpcrCommun1ty<I'tntcr, 42S E. I th St.
• 7,30 pm Lapu 8~ad1 Ulilft4 'Sdloo
· Otttricc ... '4 •f £nca1te9, diJtrict office, SSO
Blumont trttt
Orange CoMt DAILY PILOT/Mondey, May 22, 1989• Aa
"' \ k 1 ' ' , r 11 1 f. u ' u 1
.Student's dream_ earns him a computer
ltyKATY~•
Of.,,. OlllfY,... ....,
Last October .-1\en children con-
templated their annual Halloween cos-
tumes, 13-ycar-old David Brussin, an
eiJhth"'lflder at TeWinkle Middle School
• in Costa Mesa, was p~upted with hls
own projcc\.
Brussm was developing an innovative
way to communicate with the first cooper-
ative international weather forccasuna
service with a computer.
The pro;ect, for a contest called "Dream
PrOJe<:t," was spcnsorcd b)j the Computer
Learn ing Foundltton Tcle-
communacauons Competition.
Out of 2S,000 studen1 who competed
nanonwide, Brussan took the vand prize
and won a Tandy 1000 computer for
himself and his school.1
"In October of 1988, I was informed by
my computer instructor of our annual
computer contest which I had woo an
honorable mention in the pnor )Car,"
Bru"in wd
"I decided to 1AVe this year's com pell ton
a try .... After about a week, I came across
the 'Weather Watch Idea.' Around three
weeks and 200 rough drafts later. I finally
came up with my essay with its two
diagrams to sc~d in.
"On MllrCh 21, I answered the phone ....
When I heard I had won the grand pnzc, I
asked, 'Can you repeat that please? "
Brussin said .he was thnlled because he
doesn't own a computer of his ow n, and he
spends most of his spare ttme in the
computer lab at his school.
He smiled as he fingered the e™'y he
wrote for the contest
"This S"rstem, I · proposed, connected
schools al over the world wtndr ~
equipped with computer systems and
weather instruments," he said. "Data
would be collected 24 hours a day and
fO \s·1· HR 11·:1·'
D.e,Nee~.,_.,..._..,
D•vld 8ru11ln 11t1 •t • computer terml~ •t TeWlnlde Sdlool.
entered by 1tudcnll in tchoolt. Tbc dala
would ~n be trananuttcd to a ceacnl
loca11on, procettcd and compiled iaeo a
user..fnendly map, which would be uu..
mitted by t~ecommunication1 co
subscribers Ill over the world ...
Brussin broke ioto a pin as be el.pl:aioed
tlis intention to experiment with hit
weather idea this summer locally with hit
friend Seth Blumenthal, who recently
moved from Costa Mesa to El Toro.
Brussin said he was introduced to
computers at aae 9, when he developed a
video math pme.
Smee then he basn 't stopped tbinkina of
new games a.nd SY'tems. Brussin said llis
idea last year. which won bonorab&e
mention frQm the foondation, WU one of
hls favontes.
··The project was for the handicapped
person to be able to move his chair· and
apphances by actJvatcd eye positions and
vocal commands," Brussin said. ·
Bruss1n. who 1s an avid reader, said be'•
read everything and anything deali• With
state-of-the-art hardware and toftware.
Brussan said he is so enthralled wi~
creating new computer programs, be
already has plans for his next project.
"Seth and I already have an idea
concerning a large scale arcade pme uaina
tcchnolOftY that has recently been dis-
covered, he said. "l got that out of one of
m} favQntc magazines, World and News
Wttk."
Mary Lee Clark, Brussin's computer
teacher. said' she is very proud of him.
adding that people seem to have a
m1sconccpuon about those wbo aR
enthused about' 1deo tcrmin_lls.
"People have the vte\\ of the computer
(student) as isolated," she said. ••But in
realty, the students spur off one another,
bouncing ideas back and forth."
March Fong Eu to addr~ss Golden West graduates
C'ahforn1a Secretary ol State Man:h Fong Eu will
address the uaduating class of Golden West College on
Wednesday. .
brhangc Program with All)o. Japan and \\ alll'mata
New Zealand. '·
Farrell has St'f\ ed as an in tructor and coach at
uolden West Colleae and has taught at several local hi&h
schools and college In 1980, he was stlcctcd associate
dean and athletic d1rC(tOr at Goldrn West and was named
associate d1r«·tor ofbu 1nes sen tees 1n 1982. He became
dean of admin1strntne service tn 1986
Eu. a former representative of the statl· k'gislaturc
and the Alameda County Board of Education. 1s the c~
offic10 member of the Cahforn1a tatc World Trade
Commission.promoting au1cultural and ind u~tnal trade
"1th 1hc Pac1fil Rim.
Theceremon~ will beg.in at 6 p.m. Announc.:cmcnl of
the outstanding c1tu en and outstanding student awards
v.-111 be a1ven b) Alfred P. FemandeL, chancellor o( the
Coast Community Dmrict. and Wilham W Carpenter
. In honor of the associauon·s late prc<,1dl"nt,
Sherwood Bailey. funds received wtll be used 10 ~\ 50
percent of the travel co ts oflocn l students "'ho will ~1s11
Japan during us Rice llarvest Fcsll\ al. called Tanabata.
in August. Japanese student will tra\cl to tiuntmgton
Beach for t\l.>O weeks in early Jul) Irvine to get Sister City
For information on con1ribu11 ns 10th•~ fund. la II Pat Dapl..us al 536-5579 or £6.-5202. Irvine officJals met in Los -'\ngele last wl.-ek with
. ". officials fonn Tsukuba 1cncc ( 11 , 1irpan. to S\&ft a
dean of college services. ·
Walter flo"'ard, president of the d1stnct board of
trustees ..... ,11 rccen c the class of 1989 and Ph1lhp &mard.
president of the academic senate. will p~scnt degrtt'S to
the 44 7 student5 who arc eli11ble for araduauon.
-prthm1nal') irecmcnt hnl..ing the t\.\O c1ues. Coll~,,_ nam~s busln~ss affair dir~ctor The prehm1nar, aerttment IS a first step toward :;,• ~ming offic1all> dcs1gn:ned· tStcr c1t1cs-. lrvtne and
Eu' address will precede the reception of the cl~
and a"arding of degrees.
Fund aids Slst~r City youth ~xchang~
A fund has been cstabhshed by the Huntington Bench
1sh~r Cit' -\ssoc1at1 on to as~1st in the cit'·\ Youth
The Coa t ommuntt} College District Board of
Trustees appointed Gene Farrell to the $78,()0().a->c•u
po 1t1on of vice chancellor of busme s atT:urs
Farrell said hr will \\Ork on de' eloping .i fund1n~
formula "that all conshtuenc1es in the d1stm:t dln airl'C to
and be~ into" •nd "111 stn' c to reno' ate ani.J rebuild tht· d1stnct s campuses.
Farrell. the dean of admm1stratl\ c sen"~ Jl Orange
( oast ( olkge. ba:amr interim '•~c chancellor of the
d1stnct .,.. hen (" M 1chael \\'eb'iter rt''>1gned from tht• post
1n "lo' ember
Tsukuba v.111 agree to mfonnal e'changcs and joint
actions 1n four area includinJ cit) go,ernmenL urban
planning. schools. ~outh aC11\lt1C and ... bu inlss tnd
1ndustf) -
Offic11ls from both c1t1e -including Irvine's Mayor
l...lfT) .\&ran :and l\u~utia'c; Ma) Or H1rosh1 Kurata -met
dunna th<' l J -Ja~n nta)or's conference sponsored by ·
the U. , Ctt.mbc'r of('ommettt and held b1annuaJlr..
Fin:iil cermon1e to seal the 1stcr C1t) acrord will be
held 10 Japan th1~ .\uaust and will be a11rndcd b> lrvtne
cit} and Chamber o(C'ommcrcc offinals.
Security firm's work, clients confidential
ly KATY BOUCHER
Of_O..,,._~...,
Roben Harrell builds hmous1ncs -
bullct-proofhmou 1ne
But 1r )OU ask him who he build them
tor. his ans"'crs 1 "That's conlidcnunl "
And 1f)oua l ho"' he make them bullet
proof. he .,..on't 541)
But he "111 come back wJth \he rtton.
"I'm Oil). that' clas 1fied mformauon. I
can teU )Ou. bo~e"er • .,..e build lbcm for
people accord mg to their threat-levels."
Harrell, a 38-)car-old cwport Beach
re 1dent. 1s a sale representative for
E.Accutl\c oach Builders an Carson. a
compan) tha1 M"ll hmou inc an lhc
stncttst confiden c to those w-ho mtJht be
clMs1fied as ·'htah profile personaht1cs."
"We do c'tended wheel-base on an>
type or automobile:· Harrell said. "Mo t
of the ~cars arc ·h1gh·hnc: like Rolls
RoyCt"s, Mercede or Cadillacs.''
ccordina to Harrell. protective trans-
pona11on 1s in grtat demand. and the
client' 1dcnu11c arc never rc\.caled.
"We nc"cr talk o ver the phone:· Hamll
said "We mo~tl) obtain our clicntelc from
a word-of-mouth ba$1\. We set up inter-
views and meet to d1~us'l the t) pc of
hmou int tl\at will be t SUit them ••
. ............ _....,,..., .......
Robert Harrell po1e1 with• ••cwtty-enhanced llmouslne outfitted by E•ecutlve Coach 8u1Nera.
fter the 1nterv1cw 1 completed. 1
thrcat-lc,cr 1s detenn1ncd Tacto~ that
help cktemune threat level include the
l)'~ of bu incs the ChCnt I tn and whether
he s h1dm1 from &n)one who maaht
endanger his hfc 1ndud1n1 the lav..
Harrell said he's dealt "'•th -.omr \had\
characters v.ho need prot~t1on.
-You can't d1sc111111na1~-their monc.¥
spends JUSI hkc an) bod\ else's.." he sa.id.
Ahhouah all the hmous1nc Harrell sclls
att not bullet-proof. the mlJOfll) arc
cu tom-madr
"People , ... 11 pend tens of thousand of
dollars on alarm n tems for the homt'l or
aut0mob1ks and don.·~ arc.t.b.e.
m t vulnerable 1n their c.ars:· be sa.ad
"With 111 thr gang-rdatcd dnve-b) boot-ma . therc has been quite a dem~nd for this •
protC( 11on "
Harrell said xccut1\e Coach Builders
dch"ers the one-of-a-kind limousine an
lln)~ere..from $1>.-v._-ecb tO-UO da)S.. uy
colot. ue. make or model.
Allthc1rbu anc 1sconductC'don1casb-
transact1on ba is onl) .__.
Trying ta mother (Tliddle-age children
Moat of us att to&aUy unpttP&rcd ptO\ 1de fa t~r 24-hour sent« than a
for: parentina m1ddle-.d kid Rotor Rooter plumbn.
There's no Dr. Spock on the subjttt, Ju t bttauJe our tots have acquired
or v*° tapes deahns with of&Prina a paunch and a fict·lift or t~o. they
in their mid•Jifc aitis. It's Yr1X1t th.al\., tha.n.k they're above mothcrang
lht colic. You can'\ cvm burp 'cm That's ndaculous.. of courx. but ~
and make it better. You also can't ha"e to humor them AJJng off,~na
order ~ 4}.~-old IOO to hit are "CfY touch) about tbca.r pnvate
room when he finntY announcft he's atrail'l;
aeebk of ~111 hit own afllin. When )'Our son the banker tan For thr ftrM time an mr maternal 190nina black leather bomber jac:keu
life I c1on•t now wbaa to l\ata About. and co•bo) boou. n's not un-
Betnt an uacm~ womn as• reuonabletoa umebe'srccapeunna
traumatic nperitnce. You now hi mi spent )OUth with the blonde
tha'e'1 tomtdai ... you ~dd be •ex trap In KCOUnuna Rut rHast Ioli~-., O¥tr-bUt WMI? Whtn Mk•n& Ma. If> ou're c:Qlht Pf)•nt.
my Ulli wm tel• .,. me, ..,Yed your ~ will k>lt tt.s l8Cftd
d' Mir .. , -bin.,. my ~1111hc btdloom·ponnnt p.tttry
..._,..,.. ~ fDr tbaL wt -*moted to tht ·beck pot'(il_
n.I iilitmMr re;ecac.. abOvt the wUhana m.ictuM. Mo.I WM bof'lil .. dam119t Whri ~ dagptft' ~clops I
c:oeU'OL 'hlft•"ucrisitor ... -e c:bip on htt ihoulder. rhancn &l"f woe' -er. --*1 IM t»ft"t a IMiiOitC an \M WOOd pde. l'lallJ. ,,.._ eqvl" 111 Wiiia beepcn. ••die.._ Mummy. Shnw don't
oellllll' ~ = lloe lilill for tille Moma. ~ blame ~·for ·f:'::.~'111£.lllill:L;tr t:. ta .: .:::;r; ~= ~.::· IW'dcs~
•
M Orenge Collet DAILY PILOT/ Mondey, May 22. 1989
tudents' protest in China goes past reported dea_dt ne
BEIJING (AP) -Students oo-
cup1ed Tiananmen Square in viol-
auon of manial law for a 1b1rd day
Monday as a reported ultimatum by
Premier L1 Peng passed. Hundreds of
thousands of ~pie filled the streets
to defend the students from a feared
milillry crackdown. •
City residents surrounded troop
convoys with thousands of people
and.blocked major roads with public ·
buses, trucks and garbage cans.
Protesters drov~ buses up to subway
entrances on th~ square to block any
emerging troops.
Supporters afso formed a human
cordon around the protesters at
Tiananmen, while motorc~ cl is ts and
bicyclists signaled their support b)
circling the square in a noisy pr~
cession.
'The Be~ing citizens. angered by
Li's hard-hnc stance, vowed defiantly
to continue their support untiJ Lhe
premier resigns. Many also de-
manded the reslgnation of senior
leader Den& Xiaoping. believing L1
acted on Deng's orders.
"Li and Deng '1t stopping China
from advancing," said a worker from
a machioe factory. "They should step
down and ·1et China become a
powerful country."
As the political situation became
increasiqgly murky, rumors swirled
around the city. One unconfirmed
report broadcast by students in
T1ananmen claimed Deng and Lt had
resigned.
At the vast square, students sang
the "Internationale" and the Chinese
national anthem as the reported 5
.
a.m. Monday (I p.m. PDT unday)
deadline for leavlna the square went
by without incident.
.. We will not mrcat from the
square," student leader Wang Dan
said over a loudspeaker. He led the
200,000 students and supporters in a
plcdae: ·•we won•t give up until we
reach our goals."
There were nb repons of move-
ment by soldiers who on Saturday
occupied major state-run news or-
ganizations and sealed off some roads
leading into the capitaJ.
Chinese sou roes said 1,500 soldiefs
armed with auLomatic weapons bad
moved into the train station about a
mile east of the square. but the troops
did not appear during the nit.ht.
The independent student unio.n
that has led the protests announced n
received a message from Li saying the
military would clear Ttananmen by
force by 5 a.m.
Tbe student loudspeaker an-
nounce.d that the union had re1ected
Li's ultimatum and called on the
protesters to remain calm and rt·
strained.
Beijing Radio and national tele-
vision denied an ultimatum had been
given and read a statement that the
troops' goal was to restore order, not
suppress the students. But it was clear
order could not be restored without
ending-the occupation ofTiananmen,
the focus of five weeks of pro-
demoqracy protests.
The students are demandina a
nationally televised dialogue with the
JOvemmenL, recognition of their
independent student unions and gov-
President urges Chinese to allow democratic reforms
BOSTON (AP) -President Bush, saying ··1
do not want to tee bloodshed" in China, ul')td
Communist authorities Sunday to go as far as
possible wilb democratic reforms and advised
demonstrators to "speak out for what you believe."
but I wouldencour'qercstnunt, .. he said. "I do not
want to see blOodshed." ·
Bush spoke at a joint news conference at
Boston University with French President Frar\cois
Mittcmind. His remarks came as ('Cportt
circulated that authorities would direct army
troops to forcibly remove protesters who ref used to
leave the streets of Beijing after a week of
remarkable pro-democracy demonstrations in·
volving a million or more Chinese.
Bush, who once served as U.S. envoy to "I don't want lO be gratuitous in giving advice China, emphafized that his approach was a
"We do support freedom of speech, freedom
of assembly, freedom of the press and clearly we
support democracy," the preSJdcnt sajd in his most
substantive comments on the tumultuous events
in Beijing and elsewhere in China.
cautiou one de t&ncd not ~to stir up a nuUllry
confrontatton." . He said he did not think it was appropnate ror
him to say what course the stu<knts should follow,
but uracd them to use a peaceful approach.
He offered this advice: "conunue to fiah~ for
wh1lt you believe in, speak out for what you believe
but beyond that I cannot go." .
He stressed several ttmes hi! hope that
bloodshed could be avoided.
"We revere the model of Martin Luther King
in this country for his peaceful protest," Bush said
Millions march worldwide to support protesters
Thousands of nauve Chinese march~
together in Hong Kong. Paris, Tokyo and scorcs'bf
other cities Sunday in a worldwide show of
solidarity with their besie&ed brethren in Beijin~
The Nationalist Cfiinesc government in
Taiwan condemned the actions of the nval
communist regime on the mainland.
In Hong Kong, a British colony scheduled to
revert to Chinese rule in 1997, an estimated
400 000 people virtually paralyzed the city during
a Peaceful march in suppon of the Beijing
protesters.
Media were generally supportive. Even the
staff of the Xanhua News Agenc'y, the unofficial
representative of China in Rong Kong, wrote a
banner to suppon the marchers.
The crowd marched for three hours, then
entered a raoc track and listened to speeches by
community leaders. movie stars and lawmakers.
In the United States, Chinese students said m
an open telegram that they no longer recogmu the
government led by Premier Li Peng.
''We 10,000 Chinese students in New York
Ciry and the East Coast of the United States arc on
the side of the Chinese people," the telegram said.
"We no longer recognize the 0 1inesc govern-
mtnt led b)' Lt Peng as a lepl adm101strau~n in
China and wt pled&e our complete d1sobed1ence
to such a hosttle JO"ernment."
About 300 students attended a dcmonstrauon
at the Chinese consulate 1n New York. Thrc?
students met with ot1ic1alsofthe Chinese consulate
m New York and delivered the teleiram.
Other rallies were held in Lawrence, Kan.,
Houston and Washington D.C.
Taiwan's Nauonalist go vernmen1 con-
demned the communist Clunesc government for
orderin& military troops to crack down on thc1 student-led protests.
emment measures to ensure freedom
of the press and an end to offici~I
• corrupuon.
Li called in the 27th and 28th
armies Friday night and declared
martial law in central Beijing on
Saturday. However, his inab1hty to
enforce martial law made it clear an
intense 'political struggle was going on
behind the scenes.
Zhao Zjyang, said br Cl\loc~ sources
to have resigned in protest. remained
unclear .. The exact number of soldiers called
in was not immedJately known
70,000 soldiers moved into the etty
center 1by subway and followed con-
necttnt tunnels to the walled palace,
the history museum apd the Great
Hall of the People on three sides of
Tiananmen.
The status of rclatfvel~ liberal
Communist Pany General Sccrctal) A Chinese source said 60.000 to
Bush says NATO must not drop guard '\..\TIO'\ ·\I, RHlt:t ·s
ly The Asioc:tat~ Preu
Reagan backs redistricting reforms BOSTON (AP) -President Bush, been in close touch with British Prime
facing disarmament pressure from Minister Margaret Thatcher on the
Europe, expressed concern Sunday missile issue, adding that he agrees
about "a arowing complacency with her that "we can ~et t<>acthcr on
throuf)lout the West" and said this vexing question ... '
Amcnca and her allies must not drop "My role has been behind .the
their guard against the Soviet Union. scenes, to be helpful in working this
He said' that in an era of "ex· problem ... to iron out those dif·
traordinary change" in the Soviet ferences," Bush said.
Union, "We have an obligation to Mitterrand said NA TO per-
temper optimism -and I am iodicalJy faces ·internal controversies
optimistic -with prudence." His such as the current one, adding he was
comq1ents came in remarks at Boston hopeful this latest difficulty would be
University, where be shared com-resolved before the summit opens.
mencement speaking duty with "I'd be happy if the views can be
French President Francois Mitter· reconciled," the French leader said.
rand. Bush returned to Washington Mitterrand fielded one news con-
on Sunday night. ference question by dismissing a
Pointing to Moscow's threat to comment from White House spokes-
retain some nuclear missiles banned man Marlin Fiuwater that Soviet
by a 1987 treaty if NATO upgrades its Leadtr Mikhail Gorbachev was a .
short-range arsenal, Bush said. "It is "drugstore cowboy" who~ arms
clear that Soviet 'new thinking' has control proposals laclt substance.
not yet totally overcome the old." "Mr. Gorbachev is worth very
Later, in a two-language joint news much more than that." Mitterrand
conference, Bush and Mitterrand said, dismissing "caricatures."
both expressed optimism that a rift As the words were translated, Bush
within NATO over short-ran&e Euro-· laujbed and said, "So much for
pean missiles could be bridged before Mar.Jin." He added, "J could defend
next week's NATO summit. . Marlin" -but he neither did that nor
A spokesman for.the West German disavowed the spokesman's earlier
government. Hans Klein, said Bonn remark.
also is confident that a resolution can Mitterrand devoted his com-
be reached before the meeting. He mencement address r:cmarks lartcly
said one proposal forms i basis for a to the environment al\d said, "lhe
solution but no agreement has yet earth is our planet. so let us save it.''
been reached. The two leaders flew here toaether
Bush said: "I think we could well after a day of talks Saturday at Bush's
have this resolved before the sum· vacation estate overlooking the At·
mil" lilntk Ocean on a rocky point•in
He said American officials have Kennebunkport, Maine.
ftrelldenta'Geor9e llush end Prencols Mllterrend of Prence
during • newt conference Sund•J followlng commence·
ment excerl1e1 et Boston Untventty. c •
They spoke belore a commence· also on the staac, were louder.
ment audience estimated at 31 ,000
people attending the ceremony at Bush's speech was desi1ned to ~t
Nickerson Field football stadium. In the stqe for the NA TO summit
the hometown of Gov. Michael . opening in Brussels on May 29. The
Dukakis, his defeated rival for the 16-nation mcetin& has been thrcaten-
White House, Bush iot a standing ed by di1C.ord O\.er shorwange nu-
ovatl6h. But the cheers for Dubkis. clear miuil~ 1n central Europe. ":
CHICAGO -Former Pre 1dent Reagan !kl1d Sunda)' the House of
Represen tatt\<CS has become almost a permanent chamber ~1th "'less. turnover
than the Supreme Soviet," and called for fat mess 1n cona,ressJonal redist~cung
Reagan urged state iovernments to s:t up b1part1san citizen commLSs1ons to
redraw boundanes after the 1990 national census.
"I think It will be a big issue 1n the 1990s and 1 antend to--bc 1n the t~tck of
it," Reagan said in a 20-mtn~te s~ech 10 more than 4,000 people att~ndang the
National Restaurant Assoc1a11on s 70th Rc~Jaurant and Hotel-Motel how
Reagan also called for •Mps to balance 1 thC' federal budget. mcl~dlng a
constitutional amendment calling for a balanced budget and the presidential
power to veto a budget ltnc b) line
Marcos rema1ns In crlt lcal condition
HONOLULU -Ferdinand Man·os remained 1n veT) cnucal cond1t1on
Sunday, and his doctors said the former Ph11tpp1n~ prcs1c:kot was alert and
respondin& to med1cat1on. Marcos 71. 1s undergoing k.idnC) dial~sts. has a
rnp1rator to help him breath and 1~ hookC"d up to a mon1tonng S)stem He 1s
alert and cooSC1ous and seems to be r~pondmg to mcd1cauon to light a
bactcnal infection, hospital official~ said ·
Ex -police officer gets death penalty
' -LAS VEGAS. Nev. -Jurors "'ho con' te:lcd a former Los naelt''I
policeman of murdering a Lu Vegas ~oc1ahtc and t"'o othC'rS decided Sunda)
the death penalty should be 1mpo~d for each of the Lhret k11l1nJS. Th<" JUI')
found Steven Horruck, 48. guilt)' on May 12 in the ktlltng of 011 bctrc Bobbie
Jean Tipton, her maid, Mane Bullock and dell\cryman James M)ers
Hornick. a Los An$Clc$ poh~ offit cr for 14month•1n 1964 and 1965 v.ho has ·
steadfastly ma1ntainod his 1nnocen(e. dedarcd afler h1i. conv1ct1on, "M ~ head
and my hean are clear."
-
MOHi.it HHlt:t ·s
~rug agents' plane crashes Jn Peru
Egypt welcomed·
Into Arab fold
CASABLANCA, Morocco (AP) -
Egypt was offic1ally welcomed back to
the Arab fold, after an absence of 10
years, as the Arab Lcaaue opened a
ministerial mcctin& Sunday to
prepare for a summit conference.
Man who saved civilians at My Lai
breaks silence for TV documentary
LIMA, Peru -A ~mall l s plane used 1n r~ru· an\1-druacffon era hcd
in the Andes mountaJn\, ktlhng the \l'C .t.mc:nC'an and three Pc:ruvtaM aboar"
offiC'ials sa1d Sunda)' U Emba\\) spokesman Charlci Lovcridae wd the
plane v.c:nt down Saturday tfiemoon, af\er It had lcf\ the jungle town ofT1ngl.l
Maria. He S1Jd the wreckage wa~ potted unday momma.
Lovcndge mused to provide: the name: of the passengers But he said the
dead t\m<"ricans included a DEA a~nt, tv.o hclirop1er pilots, tbc plane's pilot
a mechanic and a secunty officer from the em bass)'. In Wash1naton. Maunet
Hih. a O_E.A public anrormation ofli~r. 1dc:n11 fi~ the: dead DEA gent at Rick
Finley. 36. of Ft Knoi.. Ky
Moroccan Foreign Minister Abdel·
Latif Filali, in the opening address,
said, "We are aJI witnessing today an
important historical event demon-
strated in the panlcipation of the
Arab Republic of Egypt's deleption
... in our meetinas after a long
absence."
Libya is boycotting the session
because it opposes Eaypt's return to
the league, and there was no represen-
tative from Lebanon where there arc
rival Christian and Moslem govern-
ments.
LA.FAYETTE, La. (AP) -Hugh
C. Thompson Jr. blinb away tears
when he remembers the first chikt he
rescued from the My Lai mauacrc.
Pulled from a ditch, she was covered
with the blood of the women, old men
and children who filled it.
"I had a child about that size," the
former Army helicopter pilot said.
Thompson has broken • Jona
silence about the events of March 16,
1968, wben U.S. soldiers killed more
than 400 civilians in a Vietnamese
hamlet.
He testified at an Army inquiry in
1970, but wouldn't talk to rcponers
until TV producer Michael Bilton
made a ~nd request for an inter·
view, backing it up with a sample of
his work.
Thompson said the quality of that
work persuaded him lO talk to Bilton,
whose documental')' on My Lai 111'$
Tuesday on the Public Broadcasting
System show "Frontline."
Others who testified at the Army
inquiry said sold.ien wanted revenge
for buddies killed at My Lai, a
dctolatc cluster of rural villqes said
to be a Viet Cona •.J.ronahold .
.. They were 1upp0ted to 10 throuah
and kill off the enemy," Thomj)IOn
told The Daily Advertiser of Lafayet·
te. "There's only one problem. There
weren't any enemy."
Thompson landed his helicopter
between American offietts led by a
lieu1enant and an o~n-au bunke-r
where an old man. two old women
abd about a dozen children cowered.
· "J set down there and wallced over
... and said, ·Hey, thc:rc's some old Britain expels Soviets for sp1ulng women, old men and kids tn a bunJcer q-" .I
bore. Can you set 'em outr MO OW-Bnwn ordered eta.ht So' 1et d1plomatsand threeJoumah u
.. He (the lieutenant) said the only out of the counlJ')' for allqcd c p1onaic. and the So,·1et Union responded W1lh
way to act them out wa with a band an 1dentical set of upuls1ons tht Orm h Embu.sy s.a d unda)' "h~s a mirror·
arenade. 1maac act of re11hauon," ir R.odnc Q 8ra1thwa11e, Bntatn'' tmbiusldor to Thomp1<>n sajd he motioned the MOl()ow, told a news conference
children and old people around to his Britain said its expulsions "'ere leg1t1ma1c and that the Sovttt ~ponte
helicopter, then called tn his aun-was unjustified. Tht ov1ct n1on hud no lmmtdiatecomment on ealher Kt of
ships. which picked up the little cxpuls1ons.
~~· ' . "They would have aonen killed,"
he wd. Israeli army detains hundreds ... ............................................... ..
~ .
THANKS AMIUION -Air Force crewfeared collapsed 1E&USAL.EM-Thearmy'111d unday itd(talntd hUnd.redto1MMkm-
m1litanu in the Gau Stnp 1n ttie laraest sucb sWttp 11~ the Arab upnsina
bepn. Pnmc Mlftister Y1tLh&k. ham1r thrt~ttncd to n:sip if his pany doa
DOI blet his peect plan In continuc:d v1olc:ncf 1n the occupied laritonn.
Jlt'ldi IOklias shot and killed two Palc1t1n1an and •-ounded at ae.. 2S 10 cluba.
20U ,_poi, IMI.,
Alleylltwt
MX missile would ignite in silo
De Cabinc1 debal.eid propoeals to ICa1 off the West Bank Ind ~ a da>
after Pl.Q.led Ktivitta of'lhr 17.o.mocnh upriliftt 'oWed ia a laftct ac> kill an
lndi tOklier or tettler 10 ·~ evny Palatinian ktlkd by lneti troopL The
army on Sunday ,lifted a m•y curfew confin1111 700.000 ptople to thet1
boma in 0au.. but h 0,-na mutMid 10 jobl in lll'ICI beaautt o( a atrike 0t•rcd by the upri.._ a.denlaJP.
OppolltlOft l*t)' forms In Phlllpplnes
c.::~==·=~:..~::.:;.:aaa:c===~ ................. l111111G1111 .... P41stq dMilW110 ...... •11ioOf .-------------------lliiiiii1"'-.. -~Cll W .... ..at/Iii .. clQ a.9"91ici6 ol'IM NatiO-... ... .. l~"lllnll•l.-tl ........ ,., ..........
d Se& ..... Altlft •>1111•••-..Qil.aldor Exxon Corp . credit car center =:......--....._ ...... ---~ • .. i. .... ...,.. .,,.
not a fun place to work la ly
HOUll'oN
"l\llllH
II 0 \\ I 111 : ll \ 0 I I ·. U
' ly Roi C .. Report Syndkate
WASHINGTON -Herc's how
area members of Congress were
recorded on major roll call vo1es in
the week ending May 19
The Senate
J•~se plue deal
By a vote of 47 for and S2 against,
the Senate refused to block an
Amcncan-Japancse deal 1n "h1ch
Japan WlV develop the F'SX flJ}ltcr
plane for adding lo its arsenal 10 the
mid-1990s. This vote dunng debate
on SJ Res I I 3 appeared to rembve the
major con&rcss1onal obstacle 10 the
deal.
Japan would financ~ a $6.5 b11J1on
upgrade of General Dynamics F-16
aircraft lo its spec1fica11ons. put11ngat
least S2 b11l1on of that sum 1nta the
U.S. economy. Amenca -...oul<l hm1t
its transfer of aerospace koo" ho"
and require Japan to protcu an>
technoloaical sccreb 1 t rec'I' cs.
-
among other cond1t1ons negotiated
by the Reagan and Bu h admin1s-
trat1oos.
Don Riegle, D-M1ch , who voted lo
dlsa{)provc the deal, said "1f we
continue to ... give away the stragctk
strength of this country. we will reach
a po1n1 of no retum, and we are very
dose to that toda) ..
"We seem 10 be losing ~1ght of lht'
fact that Japan 1s our closest ally 1 n the
Pacific:· ~1d Malcolm Wallop R·
W)o., calling the deal good for
Amenca's na11onal sccunty
Senators voting Jes wantc:<l to t..111
the FSX dt'al w11h apan
Alan CranstOll. D · No
Pete Wilson. R . Yes
FSX amcndmeol
By a vote of 7~ for and 27 against.
the Senate amended SJ Res 113 t6
place 'llnCtt~r cond1t1ons on thc f'SX ~arplane deal bct-.1.ttn .\mcnca and
Japan The Adm1nistral1on ~1d the
measure intruded into lls const11u -
llor\al po~cr to negotiate with foreign
..
countries.
The legislalJon recommends that
Japan aW1lrd Amencan compani~ at
least 40 percent of the FSX pro-
duction and maintenance work. and
restricts technoloay transfers to the
Japanese.
Supponer Alan D1iton, 0-111 .. said
this spellina out o~nd1t1ons sends
"a powerful mcssa1c to Japan that we
feel this 1s a lembl)' Oawcd (FSX)
agreement "
Opponent Bob Dole. R-Kan .
called the amendment ··another wa)
. to loll 1hc FSX deal."
Senators voung ycs wanted to
further re tncl lhe Admin1strat1on's
FSX warplane deal "1th Japan.
Cran~ton • Yes
W1l'Son ·Yes
Minimum wage
B} a 'ote of 63 for and 37 against.
the Senate sent to President ~ush
leg1slat1on (HR 2) rat 1ng the mini·
mum wage for the first time since
1981 and beaming a subm1minum or
training wage for newcomers to the
v
Orange Coast OAILV PILOT/Monday, May 22, 1989 AS
n se ,. ..
12 ••
IU H n SI
•S 4J •l u
7S-•1 ,, 70
1• H
1>S S7
102 ., ~ .. ·--....... ... 11
1\ 6J
Ill ·~ 7) 4) ,. .. .....................
o.w · -•••
I'S 14
••Y•.,.IO l•p"' '"'"~~""'''.,7SJ •"" ~tnf>t l10Sf)m mogre port
urf r port
&I.ACM A•llA Swtf I"~ ,....., lp• Ai>grlc'• Covncv I 10
Or~ Cuunty t 1 10 For low 8 07 • m ·O 8
""' NQI> 1 Ol p m 3 1 ~ .... 0 ... 90 c Oll'l•y 1 ) 1 , ~ """°""" V~ntu•• <If 1 10 S.Condio... •3•11m 27 ~h'llh 1106pm se ,.., ... ••nt.N !.ou1h..,~11rrty Wnl•
ltw "'" St>t) lodil~ •r 1 \ p ff'\ '')e)
lw"1.,_ .tt \ 41> #"' """' "" .tt 1 $I pm
'"'"-ll VM\tu<A......, 01 .... '°""'~' -~tlf'l!)I lo\ A"91'1t1 M>d 'I..,~ count1n
l~-Yhl~t<Kl>S•.a M"""' ~._, ....... ,,l•t~<~
·~ortforcc. guide for House and Senate spending.
The bill raises the federal waat' revenue and dcfic11 dcc1s1ons affect·
floor from its present $3.35 an hour to mg the budget }ear be&tnning Oct I
$4.55 by October 1991 . and prov1d~' Contcnls of the budget plan ( H Con
newcomers with a training wage of85 Re~ 100) arc 1<lcn11cal to those
percent of the minimum. Tho~ first appro,ed earlier in 1he -...et'~ b) the
tame ~orkers would get 1he full llousc
minimum after 60 days. The budget re olut1on also sef\e
President Bush has said he will 'eto as an unoflk1al polt11c.:al dcx.·umt'nt
the bill because he favors a $4 25 lop u~<l b) Congrc s and the \\ h1te
minimum and a training wage COH~r Hou~ 10 lr) 10 con' mcc the pubhl'
ma more novice workers for loniter the) arc gammg control of thr
pcnods at a shJhtl) lower houri) rall' go,ernmcnt's Iii.cal probltm
The Dcmocrauc-draf\ed bill was ~nators \Ollng ~cs supponro thl'
supported by organized labor and • fhcal I 1NO budgC't resolutton
opposed by major bu!>incss organ11J Cran~ton ·Yes
11o ns. 'Wilson · Ye'
Senator vottng yes wanted tu
increase the minimum wage 10 S4 'i' The House
an hour 1990 dudgtt Cranston -Yes :.....
Wilson· No
B•dact!w The Senate vote 63 for and ·p
against to g.ivc final congrcs ll)nal
approval of the S 1.1 7 In I hon federal
budget for fi'>Cal 1990. a tenta\I' l
r ht' Hou~ pas~d :!41 tor and I~ 'i
against. the conterentc report on the
document CH <.on Res If}()) gl\ ing
< ongr~ ~pcnd1ntL ~"cnuc and deli-
c11 targcu for the fiscal )Car begmnint
Oct I The Scnalc follo"-cd uit
ORITI ·\Hlt:s
(below) and the 1990 budact (H Con
Rcs· 106) 1s now 1n effect.
The fiscal plan was developed by
the Republic.an White House i nd
lXmocrauc Cangrcss. It formalize~
President Bush's pledge of no new
tallCS but prOJCctS $5.3 billion in
largcl) unspecified new revenue.
The plan a)sumcs spcndin.. of
SI. I 7 tnlhon. revenue of S 1.07
tnlhon and a dcfiat withln the
Gramm-Rudman law's $100 million
target All ides conceded it avoids
tough fiscal dec1 1ons and that its goal
of a $100 m1U1on deficil is wishful
thmkmg. Members looldll& for a
bnght spo1 i.aid thC' agreement shows
the president and Congress can work
harmoniously toward fiscal goals.
Members voung )CS supported the
fiscal I 9QO budget
Roben Doman. R.-38 · No
William Danncmc)C!.i. R-39 -No
Chnstopher Co"· R-w • "'°o
Dana Rohrabacbcr. R-42 -Yes
Ron P•ckud. R_..3 -No
'
Coelho' s dairy interests questioned ay T~ Associated Preu
Nobel laureate Sir John Hicks
WASHINGTON (.~Pl -Rep
Tony Coelho O\loned an 1n1en:-s1 1n ,,
dairy m naacmcnt compan} al the
same umc he ""as push mg lcg1slat1on
to help maintain the proli1ab1hl)' ot
wmc datr) farms. a re' 1cw ofrcc.:ords
-shows.
Coelho. thC' House maJont~ "hip
and third-ranking OcmocnH in the
chamber, been me a limited panner 1n
Dairy ta~emeAl -'\ssoc1atcs 1n
Dcttmbcr ~: 3, according to h1\
financial d1sdosure forms
When he bought mto the partm·r·
hip With an tn\ cstmt'nl 'aluc<l at
bct\lottn SS.000 and $1 S.000. the
Cahfom1a tongrc man -.1.as a mcm·
bcr of the H ou!lt It H~stock. datr) and
PoUltr) &ubcomm1t1cc:. He became
chairman in I 98S, a pos111on he hekl
for tv.o )ears dunna the 11me 1he
controH·r.,1al 1985 larm !1111 "a'
pa~~
Coclho·s Jinanl1al 4)ca11ngs rui,c
been the subject ol pubhc · 1ntere\I
since recent dt)Clo urc., that a { ah-
fornJa sa' 1ngs and loan offiual
purchased a SI00.000 bond for
<. oclho when the congre man was
unable lo come up w1lh the m(lm•'
Dau; Management A onate., de· .
"ctopcd a computer <;Of\warc pro-
gram for manJg1ng d:Uf) hl·rds
allo"tnl farmers to Jeterm1ne things
\uch as how much milk a lO"'
produtcs and how much 11 e.lls
Coclbo's aide said fhe progr.tm .ilsn
1~ used b) \Ctennanans
Fred Hatfield. a Co<'lho .11d1· ..au.I
the con~sman ""as "comfortJhk·
enouah tn his mind lo rcal1te there
was no potentJtll for anythina that he
Deputies showered with gunfire
LO A G L -ht'nO ~dcput1 ,un I\ cd a 'ihO\\erol@unh1r \111u.l.t' a~ the) qut"toncd )OUlh pna'mC'mbcn fotlo""1ng a gun battln rnh 11 ';ii~ in J
-.1.ctlend of ttttt '1olcnccthat 1(111((1 a1 lca'.>t "' pcopk e1thl't nfthc 1.kpulll''
were hit 1n the hail of buUcts but t~o pn, mcm~r' ~1ng q11\·,110nc-d and a
""omon b) u.nder was .,oundtd in the l'I--..·ud count) !>hl'llll'\ 1 t K."
Gonz.ale1.
Thcdcputan ' petroh::anu~ pcppcf(d b) pun tire 1n the:? lO .i in 'hoo11ng.
w1thoneslua1mastuna11sspot liahtand another fi,e s1nkingn front lt"ndcr 1he
lieutenant said hots from u lc t t~o d1rcct1on,, but -.1.crc dc1crmin1•d nol tu
ha"c been a c fll'C bet-.1.~n M\al aroups .\ mghtlong \C3rt.h fa1 lnl to hx-;it<'d
the atl&d..c~
60s activist arrested at Berkeley riots
BERKEl.EY -Pohl't 1J M1 h t"I Dcl. rnur. the IWlfk a1:.11\l'lt anti
leader of t he People's Park mo,cmcnt."' ~ em\\(!d 1n conne\t1on "1th a rnH
that broke out durlna a 20th annl\Cn:JI) oh\Crv3tion of the takcu' er of the
p.uk Oclacour was arrcstcJ turJJI) niJfH :at lhe scene or the mcl~ l:ue I n<l.i"
near the n1"c~it)' ofC1hfom1a in -.1.h1ch I .OOOcckbranb t. nalcJ -...1th poht·e
amid anon ,anda.h m and loo11n1-1d a Bcrkek) pohC't: spokc'lpcr n He "'~' arrntrd for in't' t1pt1on offclon~ \antbhsm, 1n1;111n1• not. not1n and
sWTin11n 1lk&Jt1ir"e
Condor chick hatches
LOS A NGEL ES-The ClfTspnn or tv.o Los ~k loo condor\ hatched
unda) and i1dom1 'just brauti(ull)." offic1aluud. "The hat tuna ~ent \'Cf) q~uckly ··"id C1nd) Richardson, a 100 offic:1aJ. "It onl) tool about S minute'
ft'om bqinnana to t'nd and u· u '1all) • lonetr ptoccs .. hr 1d
h •ti na~~uk\I. a Konko~ Jndtan •utd &hat me.an ""el1 '!n'nJ
bc1n&. both ph)'Jk'a11.> rod pintu~u~;· Richardson W4 •
<lair) o r agriculture lOmm111ee wa'i
go ing to pass that \\J'> going to 1mrat t
d1rectl} on that investment ..
No law or rule pr.t!"'cnts membc:~
of Congress from hold mg assets ttlat
might 'con01ct w11h their official
duucs. The) a1c free 10 craft and Hl\c
on leg1sla11on that could affect their
financial interests
White Hou~ officials and other
eitecut1vc branch cmplo)ces. on lhc
01 her hand. arc b3rred under the basic
federal con01ct of interest la"" from
taking go,cmment J l 11on m "h1ch
the') or their 1mmcd111te fom11\. hilS a
tinancrnl intcrt'st unlc'>'i the\ obtam a
\1.31,er The: top pcnalt~ •'> l\loO ~C'il~
in pmon anJ a SI0.000 tine
In 11}1\'I < oclhu ,10,1 lhcn-Rcp
J.imes kl)ord'i. R · \ t 1ntrodm l'li .i
bill that, .imong other 1h1ngs. ""ould
pa) farmt·rs not to produn· mil\. 011 a
t 1 me the industn "as bcwt "1th
surplu~
The lcg1slat1on. "h1th dre" lht' ire
of con,umcr and m1l~·uscr imup\,
"'It d~tnbcd by ·oelho Iii a wh to
case some producers out of da•" mg
"h1lc n:t:uning profi1ab1lit\ fur the
rest.
Ulumalel), C'ongre\!I p3'l'IC<l lcg1.,.
leuon that call~d fur mode I cuh 1n
the pncr suppon progr.im. but
authotlled fl·derall) subs1dul·d hu\
out of t•nure da111 herds
Ellen Haas of Public Voile J '9t'lt·
~h led consumu lobb\ \I, ho luuttlit
( 0clho on da1f) prier \uppon
mcasun:s in 19 ~. said 11 '>tood to
rea\on 1hat 1f d<i1f) forml'l"i ''·•' health) the) might be ahlc w alhlrd 111
bu\ computer sofl"arc program~
Negotiations collapse
in LA teachers' strike
LO .\~( 1Elf~ ! .\Pl -Nego·
uators lor lhc ~ ~ 000-memhl'r
teachcn' union -.1.al~cd '1"3) from the
barga101ng t.ible un<l.i) night. \O\\·
ing 10 continue their \\ctk--Old tnke
unlc s<l1s1nu otTictalHomc up w11h a
new contra\.\ offer
'lo new talk~ ""Cf\' scheduled a\ the
""allout apprva\:hCd m second wecl.
.. M:an .. ot (the tealhel"'ll hoped that
thcf'( "'s ~Ou\& to be a "C'Ulcmcnt. so
<l1<l I." s:11d Wa) nc John n. prt''1·
dcn1ofl ln1tcdT('aCht'~·Lo Angclcs
''I'm 'Cr) up)C!l and I'm 'er) angl')
This 1s not <t fo1r ""n> to deal w11h
rmplo)ct'I "
The wnlkout tx-pn Ma>. 15 criP;.
phng the 700-squarc·milc school
d1 met fh e -.1.cc~ bcfo~ the end ol
the school )tar
· hool d1\tn1;t \poke -.1.oman
-01ana Munatoncs dechncd to com:
ment, prclcrnna to "a1t unul 'he httd
talked v.tth Roberta Weintraub.
8olrd o( Educat1 n Pft\t~nt Wein·
traub \I.a) una,a1lablc for commen1
b) telephone
Johnson and l\\O 01hcr union
rcpf'(Soentn\I\ eJ\\llttcd more than t\loO
houn t'or n<"&ot1.tlO"' from the Lo
An.Jclc' lin1ftcd hoot Ontnct to
am' c for a 6 p. m nq.ouat1 na sc saon
at the JowntO\lin Westin 8ona,cn·
1u1l' ltulel
Jo hnson sa1J 1 hl' J 1\tm: t''I 1Xl\1t1on
h.i~ not c.:hangcd m t'4o "'eel.' 111
co11trac.1 tall'
··Their mone) offer t\ e\ac\I) th~
wmc, an<l tht·1r offer on ..chool·l:l.l~·d
m3nagcmen\ their utTcr on return ,,1
docked pa\. their oner on tlcmcntJf'\
super\ 1;,10"n The\ 'n: not acccptahl l
the\ 're totJlh un.il-ceptablc ·he \a•~I
Details or 'dc,clopmcnts 1n fl cnt
l lk'I ha't' txcn sl..ctch) lx"l&u\C: o l J
nc~s blackout imposed b~ \t.1t1:·
mediator Dr.11 Mr' 1chin
The wnllout la~1 "ed. pla)t'd
haH><.: with education 1n the nc:11h
600.000 student d1 mct MM> 'tu
dcnti. walked out of cla sand me
Joined tc chc" on p1 ket line
Uunna the 16-month-lona In~"
dispute. tc ~hl.'.D M\c souabt higher
I nc.--. and mo~ ~}.in ho\lo the
d1 trKt'\ mor\' than 600 school-. Ut'
run
Ttaehcn cam bct~ttn Sl3 4-lO
ind $43, l 19 a )Car dcpcnd1n1 on
c pt>nencc and le' cl of <::du at1on.
The umon v.antu thrtc-)earcon111ct
with 26 percent ra1sc.1ncludmp 10
pcri;cnt • 1-.c the first )e-ar
The di\tnct has refused tu 10 higher
than :! I S petttnt ra1\C 0' er thr~
)Cir\
.~~~----------~~~~~--~~~~~~~~~~~----1
•••••••
•.
... -·
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • :IC : ••••••••••
LOI\;[)()'\ -f \1monm1 \tr lohn Hie~'>." inner ot the "Jobcl Mcmonal
Prue IO r ~onumtl ~1CnlC: IO 1 •r:'. dteJ \.uurd:.t\ I It' \I.ti \,
· He \l.'1'1 for man' \ea!') .1 kuurcr at the l ondon Slhool ol Economics
O\lord and C amhndgc.lJni'l'l'll•c' and .u the l n1,cn11~ of Manchester.
H ll\..~ ""a' a lre4ucnt u till 11\ monctan'm "h11;:h :uh ocatcs the c<Jntrol of
mun9 a~ the .. h1el mtthod ol t.lb1h1111g an t'.COl'IOm> The thcor). "-h1ch
pre' ail'> m Bnt.i1n .iriues that smct go .. cmmcnt control of the monc) supply
I'> nnc'l\af) to pn·, l nt high 1nllat1on
H1'i earl> "or~ ()Jrnlklt'<l that ot J.M 1'.n ne' \\ho ~lu.~'cd the money
;,uppl) "largch un1mporuant 1n determining <lcm3nd
lk ""a" knightc<l 11l I %4 tor h1.; -.en KC\ to c~ononuc
Hilb rt'(~\oC.-J uw Nohel tor h1~ ~or~ 1n lhc f"nl'I al <'lOnOlllll ('Qu1l1bnum
1hcon on 1h{"'-cf(-n-rm1n:itmn til prilt'\ 01nd J hk.a t1on o t rt'\Oun.'" 1n on c:con1:i1it~· Hl' \h~Hl'J 1he rr•I(' ~1th "-cnnrlh \rrtl" nt l!Jf\ .m.l l nt~Cl'Sll)
John Muccio, first U.S. ambassador to Korea
\\ .\ Hl'-LiTO'-John J \\u~lll' a can."('1 J1rloma1 aod the L n1tl"<l
\t.tt(''i fir-.1.tmh.H~<lor tu '\uu1h J...tH<:"a died f mlJ\ ot ~on c t1\e he1ln failure
al age l\IJ l\.iucuo "J' I \ arnhJ,\JJ111 111 \cuul "h1•n ""onh J....o~ invadt'<l on June~'\ 1~50 Jrhh•,I\ nlhJr¥t:Oll·~.1luitt1un,Jun!l$thchc1ghtoftbccn l).
\ natnc vi\ alh: \ttmola. It.th \tuu;1u y.n·\I, up tn ProqdC'net. R.l .. and
ar.iduatcd lrom Brtm ll l n1 \ e1\lt\ He later l'\'\:CI' ed 3 ma tcr's degree IO
intcma11onal rcla11un~ trom <.i<"orgc Wahington l n1,crs1t> ~1 ui;llO JOined the· fMet~n \<-f'llC 1n IQ:'.I Ht~ O\Cf'SCa~ ISSllflmt"nt
111cludcd Hamhuri. < 1erm;in' H<•ns J....l>ng ~hang~1. < hma, La Paz. Boh,1a.
P.inama. Ha,:lna. < uha. amh.l~~dor to Iceland and ambassad9r to
Gualcma!a
A ten kilometer tundraistng walkothon to .
tUnd the fight against AIDS 1n Orange County
SUNDAY, JUNE 11 1989,
Sta rt ing at Mason Park ln Irvine
S1gn-1n 9·00 AM I Opening Ceremony 9:30 AM
Wolk Begins 10:00 AM
TO REGIST-R .CALL:
(71.4) 645-6300
A8 Orang. Coaet DAILY PILOT/ Monday, May 22. 1989
New study barsts .the angioplasty Dubble
You know. it seemed like a aood
idea, but ll JUSt wasn't. In fact,
accordina to a recent $tudy published
in the American Medical Association
Journal, what was thought to be a
breakthrough in treating heart pa-
tients, may simply be making them
worse.
The balloon angioplasty, a
~urc that inflates a balloon
inside blocked passages Qf heart
arteries to open them up, was first
done in 1977. Without any scientific
evidence of long-term benefit. this
procedure was rapidly adopted and
currently is done more than 200.000
times a year at a cost of well over a
billion dollars.
If it surprises you to learn that a
dangerous and oxpens1ve procedure
\>eeomff-poput.irr-bcforc-scientt&
studies demonstrate any lo ng term
benefit, it·shouldn't. Embracing·un-
proven therapies bas been standard
operating procedure for modern
physicians for most of this century.
In this study, heart attack patients
first received a powerful blood thin-
ner, then were randomly assigned to
receive either the balloon angioplas-
ty. or oonscrvative therapy. Those
receiving the angioplasty did worse.
The death rate was higher m the
balloon patients, and there were other
significant non fatal comphcauons.
Roughly, I 1n 4 of those receiving the
balloon required a transfusion 10
rcptace tern btoo<tcompared to only I
in 20 in the cooservauve group. and
balloon patients required emergenc)
bypass surgery 19 percent of the lime
compared to only 6.7 percent in the
conservative group.
I was not suri>rised at these results.
aod in fact predicted them long before
.
they were publish~. I wtll also go on This oonfl1ct o f interc t is usually
record predict.in& that the angioplasty unrecoanized by the patient, who
will never be demonstrated b) SClen-trusts that any recommendation
tifically controlled trials to be su-made by a phy ician ls in the patient's
pcrior to conservative therapy many be t iotcrut. In addjtion. the heart
&roup of hcan patients that arc patient is always fnghtened, which
currcntJy receiving it. lfl am wrong, I limits his ability to rationally explore
will be the first to admit it and then the options. And finally, even thou&h
recommend my patients to have 1L the angioplasty probably doesn't help
Until then, however, I will not any group of patients over the long
recommend a dangerous therapy. -haul, and, an my opinion, likely 1s
then sh back and hope that it works. making people worse: it does seem
Actually, m y o nly question about like a good idea.
a~oplasty now 1s how much ad-
ditaonal damage the procedure in-
flicts.
Rest assured, many physicians will
simply isnore the negative studies
and contmue to use the angioplast>-
This behavior raises the quesuon of
physician-motivation. Sirtte pl1ys-
1c1ans materially benefit from doing
the procedure, there are serious
conflicts of mtercswn its use. In-fact.
two recent aniclcs. one 1n the AMA
Journal. the other 10 the Nev. England
Journal of Med1c1ne addressed this
very issue.
Modern medicine is becoming
more •~hnical and cerumly more
dangerous; but 1s 11 becoming better?
Now is cenainl} the time for all
phys1c1ans to step back and re-
member our most importl!nt ad-
monuion: "Pnma Non No (ere"
(first Do No Harm).
Jflllo Wbltater, M.D., author of
"Reverslog Heart Dlseaae" aod "R~
ver•"'6 DIAbetn," I• dlrtttor of tbe
Wb/Wer Wellons Institute lo New-
port Beacb.
Sometimes it works for ostriches, too
Sometimes; it's .OK to stick your
head in he,s.and -ostrich style -to
avoid'facinfi a problem. That's righl.
A little self-deceit can aJ so be vel)
.helpful.
Last week l talked about the
unhealthy side of avoidance and
denial and about how we can deny
away even the most pressing prob-
lems when reality gets too tough.
Hiding behind thoughts such as
"rm choosy about my panners so I
don't have to worry about condoms."
or "I've gained 20 pounds but I'm
lucky becau5c It doesn't show." or "I
only drink too much because of the
incredible stress in my life," may be
comforting for a while.
But experts warn not to depend on
too many of these anxiety-busting
illusions for too long.
Under the right circumstances.
however, denial can be a wonderful
and protective defense mechanism .
At those times. it may be all right to
allow for a httlc indulgence.
Thmy-one-year-old Penny told me
how, as she left her office building one
dark evening. she had become aware
that a man was following close
behind. Her instincts told her that she
was in danger.
Assessing the situation. she de-
cided that she had few options. No
o ther person was in sight, she could
not get safely back to the building, and
to run in high heels seemed fuule.
Penny's solution was to sJow down
Ph~ ~irian Su pen i~t1d \\eight Lo~~ Program
Ultrafastllo A State-Of-The-Art Weight Loss
Supplement Used By Physicians And Ho pi -
tals For The Use Of Treating Overweight
Patients
•Safe. Rapid Weight Loss Call For Jntormation
• Extensive Maintenance Program
• Nutritional Counseling 5 4 8 _ 1 8 3 O " "i
• 2-5 Pound Wei~ht Loss Per Week
• Cognitive Behavior Modification
• VirtuaOy No Hunger
and wait for the man.
''H1," she said, "couldJou do me a
really big favor? Woul you mind
walking me to 01) car? I really get
fnghtened m places hke this at n1gh1."
The man stuttered. tlushed. and
agreed -seemingJycaught otTguard
It was only after the} had reached
Penny's car. and she was safel> 1ns1de
that the man admitted to his d1.i.·
honorable intentions. He screamed
through the w1rdow 1ha1 he had a gun
and warned her to take more safety
precauuons in the future
As she sped away. Penny burst into
tears. lnwal denial bad sen cd her
well and allowed her to put her full
feelings of fear and rage on hold. in
order to do what "'as neces!>al') to
protect herself against a potcn11al
.-attack. h took her seYcral "'eeks to
fully recover.
Since then, she ne\er Joa' es hC'r
office unesconed, af\er dark.
Denial can come an t}andy in other
ways, too.
Shelley Taylor. Ph.D .. a UC-LA
professor says tbat all health) pcoplr
share at least these three illusions:
that we are all more capable and
likable than we trul) are; that our
futures wall be rosier than they rcall)
will be; and that "'e have more control
over events and people than "'e
actually do
These innocent e).amples ol "good
denial" promote opt1m1sm and
enable us lO meet each da) with a
smile and when It's necessal)'. n.··
newed hope.
O ther fngh\ening realities such as
fires. Ooods. abandonment and death
call for a little extra denial-help.
All pe~ons ha' 1ng to face a
termmal illness use denial, or at least
partial denial. not only at the 11mc of
in1t1al d1agnos1s. but from ume to
ume as they need 11. m order to get on
Wl\h hfC
omcone once ~1d "We cannot
look at the sun all the lime JUSt as wt
cannot face death all the lime." ·
This. ho""e' er. 1s not an e).cuse to
den) 1hc need for condoms. a healthy
d1c1. or to face up 10 an alcohol
"allerg ..
Bah humbug.
Dr. Algul I • m11rrla1e ud family
tberaplst Ia Cor~a• dtl Mar. Sbe
welcomes your respoases. II yoa wisll
• reply., pleHt> eoclos~ • •tam~,
...1e)f-addrtl6ed envelope. Wrltt to
LIDd• ~.,11ul, Pb.D .• c/o Dally Pilot,
P.O. Box 1560, Co•t• Mes~ IZIZI.
®
I I I \ I I 11 6 \ I l I I l I C I I I '· ,
Le•m to sleep better•• you •ge
Simple hyajene can solve most of the problems ~1th fallin& asl~p. and 1\ 's
a 1ood alternative to ta.k.ina hypnouc druts. Experts auuc~t taytn& actl\c
during the day, avoid1na daytime nappioa, and semna a tchcdule to rell~ ~n~ arise the same time each day. Forqo stimulantl befo.rt bed. aod onl) a t«ii'le
the bedroom with slcepina and sell -the latter may help you relax and fall
asleep easHy afterwards.
PatJnt C.re, April 1'; Jiii
There's no· such thing as a good tan
Children may sufl'hfrom overexposure to the sun w1t1Un the first 10 )Un
of life if protection techniques arc not followed'. Start by keeP,1ng tnfan~ and
children out of the sun as much as possible, especutlly those with fair sJcan and
light eyes. When they do go out, sunscreeo should be applied hbtrllll) on
cloudy as well as sunny days. At any tjme of year, t~c s~~·s rays arc .most
dangerous betwc<.n I 0 a.m. and 3 p.m .. so schedule kids act1v1t1es accordmgly.
Coalt mporuy Pediatrics, May, 1181
Hooked on laxatlves
Amencans spend $400 m1Jl1on a year on laxatives., fa~rn say many
paucnts abuse laxattvcs. pur£mg themselves at any hint of 1rrcgulant)'.
Lau11ve addicts "Can break the habit by gradually reducing the doSt or
switching toa milder product. at the same tame slowly 1ncreas1ng fiber and Ou1d
intake. Also recommended: regular exercise and atte.nding promptly to tlo<hl)
urges -which those who lave 1n the fast lane ofleo ignore.
RN magalDt, May. 1181
How dangerous are Insect stings?
All children get stung b} insects at one 11me o r another. causing local
swelling. redness and pain. But for one in a hundred . a true allergic reaction
may produce hives, d ifficult breathing or fafotmg. An oral ant1histam1ne t-an
be administered at the outset, but if respiratOI) or cardiovascular symptoms art present, seek emergency care immediately Teach children to recognw: the
culprits most hkcly to sting: honeybees. bumblebees, yellow Jaekets. hornets
and wasps.
"' Contempor•ry P~J11tr/cM, May, 1189
Beating Hodgkin's Disease
Hodgkin's Disease now has an overall cure rate of 75 pcrtcnt. wtth cure
rates of 95 percent in the early stagt"S The d1~sc usually appears as painless
swelling o f one or more lymph nodes. often in the neck )mpto m s of weight
loss. fever and night sweats susaest advanced disease. D1agno!>1s is made with
a b1ops} of the affected node· Once dia~scd. the pat1en\ should go to a maJur
can1.er center for fun her evaluation arill treatment
Patient Care, May JS, 1189
The myths about menopause
Many physical and psycholog1cal symptoms once linked to mcnopaustt -
from obesity and palp1tat1ons 10 depression and ..chnophrcn1a -are n'ot
recognized as pan of the normal aging process for both men and women
Today. the o nly symptoms directl) related to d1mtn1shing estrogen lhels
characteristic of this micH1fe 1rans1t1on. are ho1 flashes along with prolu'i(.'
pcrsp1ra11on and 1ncrcas1ng thmn1ngand dl)'ness ofthC' vaginal wall-;
RN magulne, Junt', 1189
'Say hayl It 's that time of year again
Doctors 53) that the "hay fc"er" \<.'ason -no"" a1 11<, peak -1-. the \\-OT\!
m re1.en1)ca.rs10 Cahforn1a's Central Valle)
The comb1na11on oflatc rains and warm "eathC"r has cau'>Cd gra !IC\ and
trees to pollinate hke mad, ensunng misery for the one 1n fiH among us who 1<i
allergic to pollen. said Dr Paul '1 Cloninger a ~cramento speuah\t in
atlerg1e-s and immunology
.\llcrg1c rh1n1us -commonly called ha) fever even tho ugh 1t has noth1np
to do wnh ha) -stnkcs 20 percent of the population, tho'it' ~llh a ~new.
predhposit1on to develop allergic\ to pollen from a vanet\ oftrt>c~. &rn SC'S and
weeds. C1oninger said
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Why· take the chance? Be a .. good friend,
show someone how much you care. Call
Bel tone and make an appointment for a loved
one now. Dial' 1-800-367 -2022. Many hearing
problems can be helped. A.saistance in the
purchase of a Beltone hearing aid will be
l .... ~~~~----~:~~~~~~~~~~!~?!!" ..... ~ ................ ,.. ................ ... . ,. .,.
..... 10191~'
Dot matrix printers
Offer affordablllty_
Thine AR thl'ft pha1n iDvolved to
US1ft& a computer. The fim is~ttina
information into the 1ystem, lhc
second is the computina process and
the third is l(tlina 1nformatiop back
OUl.
While there AR numerous melhocb
of aen~na information anto a system.
for m0&t casual computer uwn lite pnmary input device 11 tbe lr.eyboard.
tn other words1 t)'pina it in.
But the result oftbe first two pha'6
is judtied by the success of lhe third.
No maller how meticulously the 1nfo~tion was entered or how
tborouabJyat was pr~.1fucan't
be retrieved Ollt of the system. 1t can't
be disseminated and it can't be
apprectated by someone not look1ni
at the scrttn.
Apin. there arc a wide ranae of
options, but the pnmary output
dtvice for most users 1s a printer.
Printers take the clccironscally en·
coded mcssaies lhat the computer
peratcs as a response to user input
andsonware man1pulat1on, and tu ms
them into hard copy, the paaes of tcitt
and pphics that arc intended for
distnbution.
1 Jn t~c ear.ly days of perwnat
pompuung. pnnten were categonzcd
byoutputquahty. Therewettbas1cal·
ly Just letter quality anct dot matm.
pnnters. Letter quality printers u'ICd
the same daisy wheel tcthnoloay that
some electronic typewnters used,
while dot matn11 pnnters used a
mulu-pin impact head that put a
scnes of dots on the page 10 form
characters'. •
Letter quoJ1t) output couldn't be
d1st1DJu1shcd from t) pcd cop~, but
the pnntcrs were comparat1vel) slov..
an the neighborhood of 20 to JO
characters per second (CPS).
Dot matnit output was much
faster. anywhere from 80 to 200 CPS.
b\!t had that "computer gcneratcd"
look. It was acceptable for ro1Jgh
drafts, but not for acneral cor-
res~ndence or finished work
Neither was a total solution.
Pnnters have changed cons1dcr-
ably over 1he last few )ears. an bo1h
ou.tput, quality and speed. Not onl)
have dot matff\ and dais) "'heel
pnnte.rs improved. but the) haH'
been JOined on the market h\ la..er
and mk JCt printers.
Daisy wheel printer<>..are <it all being
sold, but the ad\ ent of lase r pnnten
has put them into a spec10Jt~ apph·
caUOf\S product lategor. Dot matm.
pnnters on the other hand. ho'c
thnvcd. The)' account for the largest
share of pnnters both 1n uSt and those
be1na sold, pnmanl) because of th e
lower cost.
The current crQp of dot matn\
pnnters are 1n a d11Tcren1 lcagur from
the models available fa,e )cars ago
Pnces have dropped and quaht) h1u
u1ettascd s1gnUican1I>
Even some lov.er-prn:ed un11s arc
now capable of producmg near·lette1
quahty <acnerall) labeled "1 LQl our·
put, or (ull lctter quaht) I LQ) output
that 1s all but 1nd1st1ngu1\hable from
daisy wheel ch1u11ctcr-;
And even the lea)t C\~l'l"ve do1
matnx pnntcr can do some le' C'I ol
NLQ output. On less e:itpcn~1H
models, leadrna pnnter compan1e~
hl\tc implemented an otT~t dou'hk
~tnle capability that 1nuccl5e<; output
quahty
The double stnkc feature 1ncrc11e1
the dot count from 9 to I per
character. h slo~ pnnuns down
somcumes by u much as SO percent
or more, but Ws still a lot faUcr than
dauy wheel units.
On more cxpens1ve printers, com·
panics have 1ncrcatcd the impact
printer beads from a nine-pm to a 24·
pm confiauration. substanttaUy m·
ereasmg cha~ractcr u.ality W1tbout reducing impacts Speed, 1n fact,
is genina even h1 er. Some ut)tts can
now run up to CPS.
Alona with fl'eatcr speed comes
areater capab1ht1cs. At one point.
bavio.u.raphics capab1hty (the ab1lhy
to pnnt charts. graphs and Ct'rtaJO
types of images) was considered a
tughly specialized fea ture for dot
matnic pnntcrs, now it's fairly com-
mon
It's still good, thouah. to ma.kc ~ure
that an) dot matnx purchased 1s
capable of handbna graphics. Many
software programs require it, and not
having that capability can scvcrcl>
hmat the pnnttr's appltcab1ht)
Print qualat ). speed and
capabahues arc the most 1mponant
co ns1dcrauons. but there arc others
For one thing. carnage "''dth The
normal Wldth is 80 columns. which
allo"'s the pnnter to put the same
matenal that's on the scrttn onto
paper.
There arc also 132 column-width
printers designed pnmanl> to handle
accounung funcuons. Mid·w1dth
um ts an the I 00 10 120 column range
10 allow for more vcrsauhty without
the hefty prices thal vt'ry wide
carnage models CalT). ·
As noted. one ma,ior advantage ol
dot matrix printers as cost. There :lrt
actually two a~pccts •f!,volved an
determining cost. The 11rst 1s the
aniual expenditure and the second the
cost per pnntcd page
Thc anaual e~pcndature w11h dot
maln.x can be qUJtc low. ome arc
available for under $1 00 Feature
bdtn ones.. however.· general!)' run
between $3 SO and S600. and the rt .trc
models that cost as much as S 1.200 to
Sl,500.
Operational costs arc alw lo"' h
\Ines with manufacturer and ho"'
much actual information 15 on a PJ&t'
but general!) the co t per p:ige as ~ell
under a penny. '.fhat'4i a frauaon of the
cost per page of laser pnnters. ~h1ch
runs from 3 ce nts to 6 lCDts "'hen
toner and ma101enancc an.· fal tmed
10
AH ~n all, when cons1dcnng uutput
quaht)'. apphcabaht) and t.MI. d1)t
matn~ prJnters arc a good outpu1
solution for the aH·rag1: computrr
user
NEXT WE EK. Laser and ink Jtt
printers.
Roo EUtN write• for maJ.or
r:omputcr publlt:•tloni aad lives In
Co1raM~.
Worr"ies spark happy
Wall Street watchers
lty CHIT CUHllR N-----N£W YORK -The i.tock mar·
ket's beha' 1or thl\ year has e'okcd an
old Wall Street m11\1m -when
stocks arc mana. they "climb 1 wall ot
,.Orr)."
Thr idea has a s1mpk basis 1n loa1c
As Iona u people with mon9 to
1nvc tare ~OrTted about the bu~tne :s
outlook and kcp11cal about market
prospecu, they 11.ttl' a tot of lhc1r
bu}'lnt pC>'ACf ID ~f\IC
Tb1unoncy PfO' 1de the fuel that
ktt1)S a rally aoina., more and more
inve1ton .,.Wual1)' arc con"ertcd to
the bu Iii sh camp Con~niely. when fear fMkJ and
eVtt)one is content v.1th bunnns
prospccu. the market becomes vul·
nttable to a Kit.ck beau It CVCf') OM
already owns stocks.
The way to an\int succa,fully,
t.hm, · is to pncu~ •·contrary
opinion .. -buy1na •hen thin look
dai'tett and lhna m the bntht
sunshine.
Oivca thu imple ~m1tie. ~ll>
ISll't cvtl)body •hoc n 1n\;estC'd 1n
lbC acodt matkn now hV1na a hfe of
eur?
om)' ab.lie
"Only then "'•II a drav.dov.n 1n h
r~"'cs and cit«SSl\e opt1m1 m
occur. undcmunma 1hc: tc~hntt41
trcnath of the market ..
Other onal)sts. by con1rac,1, rnn
tend that the m"ont) of tn\.c ituc,
have bttn lulled into 1 dangerou~
confidence that the Feden:aJ Re!loen e
n en&Jncer a "soft I n'dme" for the
economy. restra1n1nf 1nfla11on
without cau.,1n1 a recc ion
"lnvesio~. a IS 1yp1caJ late 1n a
trend when entbu.nasm LClJM. lulH
a umcd that alt 1s for the ben -a
slowdown that v.ould n~\ et drt'am ot
tumina mto 1he tttnsae t bit of a
rcc.euaon." m.11n1•1n Ju un Mam1
who ~ntc:s a markrt comment.at) for
Co"'en & Co. 1n 'e"' York.
.. ,n (&C'l, as 1s bq1nn11\1 to bt u1d
there nev~ haJ to be a rttC1 ion again
-c'\ccpt pcThaps an the tock\ one
doesn't own. h's not uactly 1 v.1111 of
"WOIT) an) mort'.''
People •ho 1tt to 10 a.pi nst the ~-.1h~ ttnrimcnt ha\'1: devtlo~
1CO.rtt or stauwcal > ardstkks to tr> to
m~lt
One of ~. cakulaltd b) In·
vaeon lalllllilllnca ol N~ aockllt
N.Y., .-tit ~....-of IJO
1nvcs&mnt ldvnof')· ttrV1cet 11 cw 1
fin u bullish. bansh, or on thr
(cftcr.
Or~ Cout DAILY PILOT/Monday, May 22. f9it
lnvestOrsbetting on new market highs
8Y JOHN CW..NW,
~ ........ ~
NEW YORK -Dfrttt1n1 the
economy 1 n't hkc gu1d1ng a
specesh1p, )Ct a lot ofinvC"StOI'\ ar~
making the companson. The)' arc
looking for an cconomk son
landtna from the IODi expansion
of the 1980s.
Con~inced it ain be done. the'
are puttana their money on thi.·
hne. b1dd1n1 up ~tock prices and
cteatm& areat deal of eitcitement
about lhe poss1b1hty of ncw high'
1n the market averages.
The popular reason mg ts thill as
the economy cools interest rates
>N11l fall , and falling interest rates
gcneraU) arc good for s1ock.s Lov.
rates reduce busancss cos1s and
they .anract money thal might
ha\e aone Into bonds.
The soft-landing the 1s ha~
pined many adherents. Brokers
are cal11naold customcn with ne~
ll 1 . I' I \ I . I-' I '\ D S
tJps Matket lttter wnlCD arc
ta!k1na about 3,000 points on the Dow Jones indu tnal 1veraae
Buitncs Wee~ mapzme dtdarcs
. "A Sof\ Landina Will Send the
Marltcl Soarina." Stocbarc ucit·
m& once qain.
What may be m1ssin1 from the
scenario, however, is the most
essential of all the inarcd1ents that
make up mar~ct Pra<.'ts, and 1hat as
profits. .
An economic cooling m1&hl
indeed be accompanied by lower
borrowrnarate , but v.on't 1t mean
lo"'er profits, too'! H1storicolly.
and logically. thal°s bccn the case
And if profits decline. what will
hold prices up'>
While some anH·stor"I m1gh1
d\\~ll 10 their ad ... antagc on thnt qu~t1on. others arc \\Ondcnng
wh) "'c should expect the Federal
Rese n e 10 guide lhe 77-month·
old cconomu.: expansion 10 a
acn1le, kind, son llndina.
That son of denouement is to be
wished for, of cou"sc. but w1 hina
v.on't make 1t come. For dccad ~
economic son IAndangs have been
a dream b ut hardly nn <'·
comp!ishmcnt. The economy re·
acts 1n ways that cannot be
forecast.
It was popular 1n the 1960s, for
eumple, to taJk about fine tuo1ng
Those who directed fiscal pohc)'
would Join w11h monctal') ollicinls
to make 1he economy danl'C 10 a
swttt melody·m which evrry note
would be perfect.
That notion d1dn 't c' en Inst thc-
dccade, Before 'the '60s were don1.•
the idea of fine-tuning h11d bct>n
trash~d
Toda). the rqu1,aJcn1 ol fin1.•
tuntng IS son landana Can II bl'
done" Ma) be 1f\.\e ha"c managed
to ass1malate a great dlal ul
information from the pa'it
lt.UIUH .. u• Ut+ • •n ll.U+ ,.. 1N Ult a 04 t>t+ .,
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""" 11 It .. It • • ,..... l fl , ... " UlG.. t JI .... D O.•-.,. '" ~ ~'J ~n: .. ~-· .. ... ~. . ... "' ... CAT~• U11 >t• .. ....,.. •ll• ldt _, 0 • ., ·~· ., _,," ..... . --4't'AJ t !Ut • D AIM t•41 lt.J ll • • .... 11 )t• fl (0.""' t it ... ~ .. (""'1111 "-~ I.It-• ~-"' •i-• ., •• _, ,,. t k• •
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Mcanv.h1lc, what abo\.Jt profttl?
The arm~cr to the profita ~
t1on m11Ju come lite: thit ~·
when year-to-)car companton.t
could turn nepttve At .the-m~
mcn1. profits compaR'd to a year
aao look heilthy. but thOIC com·
panson1 miaht tum paler m
October. h doesn't take lo sea to
male an mvestor m:onsidu -
JU tll low1naofpan1
Beau~ the tock marlct
u unlly aot1c1p:ues uch thinas.
the po s1bih1y of a decline in the
grov.th of profits could have
s1an1ricancc for investors right
now.
Nobody lnows whether the
stock market 1s going to soar to the
hl.t \Cll . But in the ne>.t f~w~ecks
man' tn\ estors v.111 be askang
tht'mscl\ c t.Uie eco11om1c 1ech·
nauans. hle tbo!ie an the space
program, ha' c the kills for the
JOb
1
A8 Or11nge CoMt DAILY PILOT/ Monday. M9Y 22. 1989
Behind-the-scenes wor~ers win Silver An
.
l<alren Mont9nMuft. Pat Smith, Riff~• Gordon and Diana Tobi••· '
By KAREN M. REED Safata and the crqwd enjoyed the 200 at the NewpOrt Beach Marriott
0t1ND1111yl"loc SUiff ribbing. but the 1989 j udging com-hotel were winners Sudy McDuiel,
Past Dolphin president Barbara de mittec obviously didn't push the Jim Roberts, Jeu Boyd and Dort
Boom, in explaining the history of the limits of the imagination when they Fltcb. Peay Blelen was also named
annual Silver Anchor Awards, said selected the five 1989 Silver Anchor (but was attcndina her daughter's
that some years there arc dozens of Award recipients -people generous graduation in Pennsylvania).
nominees, and other years arc more with their time and taJent who have .. This is our annual luncheon to
difficult: "(Paul) Salata's was a year not sought the spotlight. honor the unsung heroes of our
we bad to beat the bushes." Presented before the pthering of community," explained chairman
Nucy Baker. "The winners arc the
people who are always busy behind
the scenes."
According to Baker, some I 00
volunteers from the Newport Beach
community have been presented with
the small silver ,anchor {>in si nce the
award program's inception 23 years .
•ago.
"Anyone can be nominated," .ex-
plained de Boom. "You don't ha'1e to
be a member." That is, a member of
the Newport Harbor Area Chamber
of Commerce, the Dolphins' parent
organization {although de Boom and
others were ready to accept member-
ships).
The Dolphins is primarily a
women's networking group, or-
aanized to promote cultural and
commercial progress amona women
in the Newport Harbor area. Baker
said the group meets for breakfast
every second Tuesday .i>f the month
-but the luncheon was special. .
Starr Laclr•~· Ann Crane and Marie •vans.. Cost was $23 with reservation, $26
without, but it was definitely not a
fund-raiser, said Baker who -said
underwming was a must to pay for
the event. "We find ways to do thinJ.S
to keep Wlthin our budget and sull
make n nice." •
It wtas a bit ofa benefit. however. as
proceeds from the opportuntty prize
ticket sales ($1 ,002) were donated to
the Boy Scouts' handicapped scout-
ing program. Director Haak Haad-
ma.a accepted the check and thanked
the fAlhering for supporting the
scouting programs.
A few tears accompanied the win-
ners' announcements, including
nominatin' coordinator C«tl W.Jt-
lltld (she and husband Ralpll under-
write the cost of the pms) and
recipient Dorl Fltcb, but spints were
high. Councilwoman Enlyn Hart
had the honor of panrtina the awards
on each Wlnner.
Dolphin president Au Crane pres.-
,.
coted the -Dolphin's Whit~ Orchid
Award to two outstanding members
(who also happened to be part of the
luncheon Ol'Jllnizing committee:).
event co-chair Let Glllesple and
Mar)'JMlt Sweeaey.
Others ensunng ·the luncheon's
suc.ccss were Marie Evans, Doris
Farbaaccl, Elaln Gordon, Starr
I.Adey, &area Moateabaalt, hrt:11
Mots, Pat Smltb, Cllere Stark, and
Dlua Tobias.
. ' f-N e w wi'dows the -latest target of scam
. Two for the show •
DEAR ANN LANDERS: 1 hope
you will alert your readers t.o a scam
that is sure to entrap some newly
widowed women. I didn't fa)I for ll
because a few things didn't ldd up.
but I'm sure other ~ef_.stricken
widows will be taken in 1f they aren't
warned. This-is the way it happened:
l received a phohe call from a man
who identified himself as James
Mitchell. He said my husband. who
had died a month before, had ordered
a diamond ring for me from a Jeweler
in Qallas. He said my husband had
put down a $500 deposit and asked 1f
I'd Wee to send the balance. $2,473.
He offered to have Federal Exprcs
pick up my postal moriey order the
next day. I said, "That will be fine::
After gi ving it some thought, I was
sure that my husband would not
purchase a ring in Dallas and that I
was being conned. .
8ob Hope and 1t1t9er Mellisa Manchester perform on stage
of die Champs ••r•••• theater In Paris •• they record • TV show for Hope's 86th birthday. On the occasion, Hope
l••ned he was make a Knight of th• Le9lon of Honour by
di• l'rench pvernment.
J phoned Mr. Mitchell a few )lours
later and told him that I would have
the check ready, but I needed proof
that mnMband had indeed ordered-
the ring. When he saw that I was
backina out, he tried to pressure me
b) sayina l must t.ake \he ring because
my name had been cnaraved on the
inside. When J told him l djdn't want
it, he tried to sell me somethina else.
When that didn't work, he became
annoyed and said, 'TU act back to you
tomorrow." Of course, I never heard
from him apin.
RUFFELL'S IHll. BO\'D
UPHOLSTERY llC. bll ' 1112 -=-~~:::Ss!':l ... JS. Arctop . es .
-----.....-----..... , bear the'r love ~ Th& detectiv~ in Dalin-arc now
trying to track down this world-class,
-Could be you have an ''arctophile''
in the family. It's one who loves
stuffed bears.
ln Benjamin Franklin'sday, people·
powdered their w1p. wiped their
teeth, and scraped their tonaues.
Toilet kits of well-to-do colonials
often included sjtvcr tongue scrapers.
They tum up in antique collections.
Q. Aren't the lnsh the world's
arcatest drinkers?
A. World's greatest tea dnnkers.
anyhow. At 1.200 cups per capita
annually.
M .... y,Maytt
ARIES(March 21-April 19): You'll
be kept busy "runnm1 errands" for
others, includina another Aries. Spot·
li&ht on communication._ cducabon,
a6ility to fulfill lona-st.andina obli-
ption. Special: Take care in handlina
sharp ObJCCU.
TAURUS (Apnl 2~May 20)· You'll
be made aware of tntel'tst rates
savinas accoun!£ money that had been put aside ror s~l occasion.
Minor dispute involVJftl finances will
finally be amicably ldtled. Aquanan
plays role. When you look at a shadow. you GEMlNI {May 21-June 20): Lunar
see what's not there. It's the lack of upect hiaJiliahts curioa.ity, 1ntripe,
lt&ht you see. • unusual requests. Relative "con·
feucs" that valuabk article was
Q. Can barnacles choose their mi1placcd approximately three weeks
mates? aao. A void barah Hatemen.ts.
A. No, but it doesn't seem to Another Gemini in pkture.
matter. Each bemacle is both male CANC&ll (June 21-July 22): St~
and female. A barnacle's nearest Arin fMIMle. Be 1ware o( IOUl'tt
neiahbor is a candidate, and it doean 't material. MeChUical objtcf ••in need
even have to be that near. The of repair. lnchlda tioutebold item,
bemade his tbe toneett male matina automobile,
equipment. relative \o body site, of
any anjmal in existence.
To lum a erofeslional's buebell
bit takes 20 nu.nutes oa • hand tathe.
All automalic lat.be CU IW'D a comrnmial bel ia eipt eeconds.
Pretty ca.., thoee lld:utter ants. ncy .,.ow &heir own mUllltoom•.
sate-<>f-the-art crook. So beware.
folks, he is out there someplace,
combing the obituaries, looking for
widows. If you should receive such a
phone caJI, notify the d1stnct attorney
and the Better Busrness Bureau at once. -BOSTON .
DEAR BOSTON: naaks for Cbt
alert. If uy .. e oet \Hr~ .... beea
coatacted by lkls ma.a, pleaae let me
bow, too. • • • DEAR ANN ~DERS: I'm wnt-
1ni about the Wyoming woman who
said her husband complained because
she was too hot tn bed.
Lest you act the W1'001 idea. she
hastened to make It clear that 11 was
her body temperature that he ~"~
compla1nin1 about. He said she wu
like a "small furnace" and the heat
from her body kept him up at niaht.
Generally you consuJt an authonty
whcn .. )OU don't know the answer
You stiould have done so this time,
Ann, instead of suaacstinaycar-round
air condit1oruna or I body pillow. A
pbyStcian would have told you to
LICO (July 23-Aua. 22): What
a~ lo be "I011 cautc" is rT-
vtved. emphasis on cfuldren, variety,
speculation, physical attraction. You
could startle by diaplay ofluand apeed.
Wri11n material provides pemnent
anlonnauon. .
VlllGO (Aua. 23-Sepc. 22): You·n
win disrie co~q property
C>Wnmhap. Clolc neillaDor = c:oDCedet and court ec:tioG is av · •
llule&. ,... ... will be clarified.
Additional ft•cluvailable within lix ·~-' LmM (Slpl. 23-0ct. ll~ Mil-c111 •1iut1 liilde by ..aw CicMlld
advise the woman to Stt her doctor
and get her metabolism checked. An
overacuvc thyroid can produce the
symptoms she c~mplamed aboul.
[ have been reading and CO)Oy1ng
your column for year~ and It is a
pleasure to second-guess a lady as
smartasyou.Carryon'-J M .. MD
(BOSTON)
DEAR J.M.: Tlle "smart lady"
dJcle't exactly cover ltentlf with
&Jory wlteir .... came •P with tit.at
us•er. At lu1t 5H pbyslclaas le&
me bow I sooted. My &bob to an
wlto wrote. l'IJ sip &lb -TOMATO
FACE IN CHICAGO • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS We all
know that coffee can keep some
people up at night, but how many of
your readers arc aware ~0$2late
can do 1t, 100? , __ .... _-:-.~I. Tolerance vanes according to the
individual. but for me a wall bonbon
at bedumc and J will have counted all
the. sheep in New Zealand tiy dawn
Pass l\ (>n, Annie. -K URT S .
BOULDER. COLO
• OE.AR JtUR~ Tlaa.akt ror lite \Ip. HaNyuuuuuu.
• • • DEAR ANN LANO R · l hope
)'OU will pubh h your ans~cr to lhn
letter bttau~ thtre 1s a family out
there that needs help -fa t
My friend (I'll call her "Kn ta")
marncd a nice auy in 1978. He's a
sales rep and on the road most of the
time Knsia and Cal bad a son the
result an minor fine. 8e d•~ttc,
rcfu$C to hurl first stone. Com -
mumc.ate with person confin~ to
home. hospital What happens be·
hind ~nn settles<a9C.
ICOftPIO (Oct 23-Nov. 21); his
ncoessJry to ta.kc &re'1lter cbarse of
your own desuny. Focus on intensity.
passion, respon11bthty. dcadhne. In·
vmtofY. reveal rnorc value than
oriaJnally anticipated. Re' 1sc tait
calculations.
MGmARIUl(No.v. 2l-Dtt.~I )
All lip\als favor yo-.i.r dfo~ You
appeal to more people than an ·put mooLbt. Focus oa popularity, suc-
ceatf\al comDAetion of tnMICtionb
Plant solidified co~ina poe.sibtc
j . Green lilbl! ~ lDec. 22-Jaa. t9)•
Door may dOlt but anotha area of opportu~trill opn. Let p,~ ~·· IU'eM I ptndncl, cwtp.naltty,
~ of conVictioea. Oaftdes&.ine mll'I• ..... ID remance.. Uo. ~--:.1=:--»M. 11):
)ears ago . .\nice fa mil) unn. A.bout a
month after Junior wa'i born. Cal
gave Knsta a purebred ~agJe Cihe
went Crll) about th.cdog and treated
him better than the bab"
When Junior \\.8S ofd enoufh to
crawl, he beg;ln 10 pull Jhe dog~ tail
and hit him when bethought oobod> ~as looking.
A couple months ago. Junior began
unoauna in unupect~ and map-
propnate place-; Ftr t into his
mother's shoc,"\hen 1n her pu~. ne~ t
her Je"'el.box. Afier he W'.ls r:ium'ihcd
for nunmg the Jev.el box he found
some scissors and cu t ha~ mothC'r'~
stnng of-pcar1s
At first Knsta attnbutcd the un-
naung toJ ut\lor's lazine .. I told h('Tlf
it .,..ere laziness. he would JUSI \\Ct h1~
pants and not seek special places
La \ Chnstmas Da)' 1t sno~cd
hcav•I> .. I called Knsta to chal he
sounded breathlc s I ulced her \\hat
she had ~n dolng.. "f'vr been
playn1a outside ui the snow ~,th the •
doa." wu ·her rcpl} l a kcd .,..here
Junior was. 'he replied .. Up Uur'>,
watch1na 1ckvl'ilon. I ue ~ · What
do )OU Stt here. <\nn'> •tn me -A
WORRIED FRIE D.
DEAR f'IUEND: I aee a c'5Jd wbo
.., kW a ... •r ltera 4owa 1 llloase
&rylq a. 1et \Js mot.Mr's attntloa.
llrit&a ... ,J..-IMl41bttter1e• to a
fually dleraplst btfore we rud
aNet IMaa la ... .a..r pert of &le
,.,er.
w,.tt ts fulfilled despite .. (at~ an-
nouncement.'' You do set ~ond
chance, relative 11 envious and thcl'f
is talk about ··~-utcd money." r ru t
ftr1t 1mpre.s1oni 8> te.ach1n~ }ou ~m also team.
Pl8CE8 (Feb, I 9·March 20) Rtln-
tsvt confides concem rqa.r&na acn·
era& health • ..-c'aht. Your o~n quc
ltOM are IRIMrcd via 1pcc1al
~ or telephone commun1(1-tioa. Good MW ttecJvcd conccm10
butinete.~.
IP MAY ti II YOUR BlRTHDAY
~~occur at home within aa~ d9ys. F«us oa diplom«y, l'fnoe
vatioft. pinina coopeT'ltion or fam •1> mnnbet. You·n finaJly be rid or
financiaa.emotaonal drain. Curren•
ac:enario feetura d11tantt, lanauqe.
tra¥d. ability co luccalft.llly con-
clude deffca1e ~ Taurus.
~ Scolpeo "9IOM play 1mponant roles••~ lift. It ts likely you were tepUatld hm OM or bolh punts at
l'lllli~ _.,!!\You did btak ................... _._._
J
'Bl f OHl\I
• Police drug tests
merit praise
and questidns
The LOP officers in the Huntington Beach Police·· ..,Department hope to send out a strong anti-<iru11 message by
voluntcerina for random drua testing.
Chief Bill Payne, )li~ four captains and 11 lieutenants
deserve credit for ta kin• a personal stand in the war on drugs.
By voluntarily submitting to testing for cocaine, marijuana
and opiates, the pohce commanders arc assuming a critical
leadership role, .
Few persons care enoua.h to risk their reputations and .~ps profwional careers. In fact. Hunungton ~ach's tap.
officers seem to be the first in the county to make such a stand.
That is worthy of a commendation.
But the dcpanment's infl~e on the publtc would be far grea.tcr if the 213 sworn offi in Huntington Beach were
willing to follow their superi • Cllamples.
Unfonunatcly. the rank nd file arc not yet walling to
submit to random. voluntary rug tests. While, entry le vel
officers are required to submit to twice-a-year testing, other
officers are not tested.
A spokesman for the officers said they weren't protecting
dru& abusers. that all fiuntington Beach police officers are
opposed to drug use.
We betievc them. But even the most ardent defender of
the men in uniform mUJt admit the words ha ve a somewhat
hollow ring to them, cspecaally in light of national staf1sttcs
that show up to 3 percent of police officers use cocaine.
Actions speak louder than platitudes and the police
officers' reacuon has been confined to words. r
The officers say they have an e1planaiion. Thcl'. worry
the testing procedure might have flaws that could-recifilt in an
innocent officer be ing wrongly accused and ul11matcly ruined . ._
Cenatnl). no one advocates the destructi on of the
tnnocent, es pcc1all) of police offi cers who put their lives on
the line for us
But the explanation the officers have advanced should
cause the pubhc to shudder. Anyone who trusts in the law
enforcement system must be confused by officers' reasoning.
The same police officers who routinely make arrests and
rely on the '1epartment's cnme lab to determine the guilt or
innocence of the accused are te lling the public that ha ve no
faith 1n that procedure.
They seem to be sayrng*cnme lab can makf mistakes
that can resuh an the innocent being wrongly accused. If that 1s
truly the message. the pubfic should be afatmed.
0 ·1·11 f :H \ Ol('f :S
Street g a ngs ..
For well more than a year, law enfo rcement authont1es
and other experts have been warning Ventura County officials
that they be tter prepare for the emergence of the youth gang
problems that have infested urban areas to the south. ,
., Jolts (of realit)) came 10 rapid succession within the last _
fJ'lODLh. First, a boy was shot in broad d:a)ltght a he walked
al ong Marn Street. Then. two weeks later, a man was fatall >
stabbed as he walked alOnJ Ventura Avenue. Poller suspect
both attacks had their origins an gang acu v11y ·'
Now. hke a smoker who' dectdc:s to quit aOer a heart
attack.cit) official s have decid ed to get senous an dealing with
gangs. The Ctt) -ettnett declared war on-graffiti. call1~ 11 J
pubhc nuisa nce a nd vowing that cit ) work crew will
henceforth clean up graffiti w\thtn 24 hours of its being
reported. The council also authon u d the Poltce Department
to launch an enforcement program in the Ventura >\ venw.:
area that stop~ JUM short o f harassment. Troublema~ers on
the str~t will be 'hauled 1n for""even the mo~t mtnor
inf ractiofts.
Now the questions arc "'here to go from here -ho" to
fauh1on a long-range. co mprehensive approach to the gang
problem. . .
A.4enci e\ other than the pohce must be enlisted. The City
Council hould take a hard look at tts recreation programs and
evaluate whether its program\ for youth on the venue and
elsewhere are sufficient. T he schools must redouble their
effort at reaching out to youth at nsk to gang 1nvolvcment.
The city must rc\11cw its }ear-old DARE program in the _
school to sec whether more can be done an d1rect1n.g S'tudents
awa} from drug the root of so much c\11 It should tum to the
United Woy to ~c 1f more can be done by the Boy and Garis
Club, the YM A and other nonprofit agencie thar offer
proarams for youth
Ven1u111 Coaaty Star-Frtt Pr~•
Highw ay a llo catio n s
The) 're d o1n& tt ro u., agam . I he big cit) Poht1co' in
era men to TC band mg together to np off rural rc:~1dent~
The late t Cl(ample 1 • quite lttcrall). highway robbc~
There's bi& enon be ma made to keep in plac\! an arc:h::uc
p$Oline ta\ d1 tnbuuon formula that honchanges the \mall
counties nd allo"" lhc metropolitan count1~ to cash 1n on
the-big buc s.
... Through the >ea~. the amount ofmoney d1v1dcd up to
smtlll rountie h shrunk b«au~ of the ma ave growth tn
urban area . 1\lthough originally set up to IJ\C 2S percent of
the money to count1e based on the amount of ro3ds 1t
maintain . popul111on inflauon ha eroded the figure to about
7 percent. . What th t mean 1s large popul 11on counties hl.:c.Orangc
can pend S28.000 per nulc. Merced ounty, because 11 ha
man) more miles of road and man) fewer people. end up
with S 60 per male ...
Thert' arc bill 1n the st tc Lost'lature to addrc5s the
problems mall count1e\ have wnh road fundins. but th<' 811
Boys arc puuma up 1 fi~t. The don'& want,to l<?-.c 1 precious
dime e\/cn 1f the) are actuna more than thetr fair; ~han:.
The tc~crqr t~t we. the little pyt.. have 11 that aU these
new road bill nttd 1 voter·appro~td hike in tM p hnt' taic.
If w-e don't find a fair formula, 1hen we shou1d fight the
psolinc ta\ ...
ORANGE COAST
,_, ..
Ylllr .. ,.., ..........
.. a. ..... .....
Qtf-. ........ ..... ....... , ........ ........ ..........
... .. ..
..
•L1
Monday, Mey 22, 1988 A9
IOIJ\\ I\ 111,IOH\
Today is Monday, May 22. dte
142nd day of 1919. TheTe aft 223
da)'s ten 1n the yar •
Today' h1aJ\liaht in b1stocy.
Twentncan.,o,onMayll.1969,
as the astronauts aboard Apollo 10
orbited the fTIOOn, tbe s~ft'1
lunar module separated from the
command module and flew to Within
nine miles of the luoar sun.cc in a
dress rehearsal for 1he first moon
land ma the followina July.
On this date:
In 1761, the first hfc insurance
pohcy in the United States was
issued, in PhJladelpbaa.
ln 1856. violence erupted 1n the
chamber of the U .S. Senate as Rep.
Preston . Brooks of South Caro lina
used a cane to ~at Massachustus
Sen C harles Sumner.
lo 186!. the Great Train Robbery
took place in Indiana. Seven men
held up the crew. detached the
l0comot1ve, and made off with
$98,000.
In 1900, the modem Assoctated
Press, which succeeded various r~
a1onal news orpnizauons that bore
The AP name, was incorporated in
New Yori.. as a not·f'or-pi:ofi t news
coopcrauve.
In 1939. Ado lf Hitler and Benito
Mussolini signed lhe Pact of Steel.
committing Germany and Italy to a
m1htary alliance
Fundamental rights sometimes
need protection f ram majority
In 1947. the Truman Doctnnc wu
enacted as Conircss a~ropriatcd
m1l1tary and economic aid for Greece
and Turke}
In 19 72, the 1slaod nation of Ceylon
•became the republic of Sn Lanka with
the adoption of a new constitution.
Ten years ago: Canadians went 'o
the polls m parhamentary elections
thll would put the Progressive Con-
scr'\'8t1 \ eS in power. ending the 11-
)Car tenure of Pnme Min1s1cr P1errt
Trudeau.
...
I)' ~IL FERGUSON
In your ed1tonal o n May . 12.
"Cavemen may be close to J01ntng the
d inosaurs." the P1lo' once again
displayed 1ts co ntempt for Re·
publican conservatives This time.
it's Pro pos111on t03 which scncs as
the launch1n& point
I am accused ol ha' ing a "low
regard for de mocraq.·." for quest1on-
1n& the new law and the Supreme
Court for uphold ing 1t. and even of
harbonng feelings ol "11:ivulnerab1h· ty ..
I can almost hear the wmerellcla1m
to himself. half 1n 5hock and half 1n
glee. "this Ferguson must th1nl he
.can SB) an) thing and gel awa) with 1t
Lc:l°s skewer him'"
Nice try, guys, but llJUSt w happens
that Proposition 103 fo iled 1n m)
district. Yo u're cn111led to )our
biases. but us old·fa<1h1oned folks still
expect newspapers and even eduonal
wmcrs to check the facts before
making sweeping pronouncements
The proposed bill, B I 03. and
Propos1t1on 103's rate-selling and
rollback prov1s1ons violate the nght
of voluntary contract. which 1s funda-
mental to our free enterpnse S)Slem
To fine a business 50 percent of11s
)'CBr'S gJ OSS sak ror going out of
business. 1s draconi.m
We Republicans couldn't \·are kss
about the 1nsurancl'. industt) as ,,
campaign su pportc1 The record
cleady (hows, 1nc1dentally. that when the)~ gh e big buc l.. s. 11's to lhl' :
Oemocra1s. I and mo<>t of ~~ Rl··
publican colkaaucs 'otcd against the
bill and opposed rhe in1t1atl\e be·
cause "'e belie' c the~ \\ere 1mpl)
wron&,.
Auto insurance rates arc high
they're outrageou) But there are lot.,
l .t :TTt:HS
of reasons for that -uninsured
motonsts. massl\c fraud. huge law-
yer fees, outrageous medical claims
and windfall awards by ;un es and
Judges. to name a few
l he "tort" system 1s such that
insurers pa) ofT baclda1ms instead of
fighnng them be<·au!.C of the e'<lra
cos1s a nd m l s \.1ost insurers al\O
have a lot or was ref ul 0 \ t'rhead. Some
'illll make huge profits Most don't
Republican legislato r'\ and a hand-
ful of Democrats tned for years to
bnng real reform to the whole S)Stem
We were rebuffed C\el) lime b) ellht'r
the tnal laW)ers the medical pro-
fc s1on or in~urc~ Willie Brown and
man) of his lieutenants art them·
~Ives tnal law) e r\, and this nate..,..1dc
lobby 1s the largest single sourc.e of
campaign money · for their hberal
maJont)
As a result. our b1 part1san relorm
pack.ages were killed and voter$ faced
~1 ' confusing in1t1at1.,.es last )Car.
Propos1t1on 103 didn't addrc~a'n'
of the reasons for h1&h 1nsurancC'.'
rates But bccauSt" of the publ11.:·,
legJt1mnte outrnge over high 10-
'iurance rates. 11 was able to get ;u~1
O\.er 51 percent of the \Ole in .an
election "'uh one of thc poorc'lt
tumoulliO the !latc's h1s1ori.
In most distncts. Propos1uon 10'
failed and ~ould ha\e f:uled stale·
wide 1f 11 ""cren'1 for ma<.\l\C suppon
1n areas "'Ith high '1l'<.:1dcn1 rate<; and
man) uninsured dri v('.'r<;. like Lo'I
l\ngclcs. the acn dent fraud capitol nf
.\men ca
Ho""e'cr. c\.Cn 11 11 had n.'CC1,ed
I 00 perce nt of the \ ote. lhc fact 1' th111
"'c Ii' e in a rcpubhc not a pure
dem<X raq The public 'ihouldn t be.'
allo~t1f to \Ole their hand-. into
omeone else's cash l'C'gHiler
In our system. the mn.iont~ tan not
be permitted to trample on the ba 1c
n ahts · of the minonty -or to
confiscate their propeny. The faC'l
that the Supreme O>un upheld 1t
doesn't m&.ke 1t nahL No branch of
aovernmeot 1s .acred and n"ftthtr is
any ''majonty." But, our freedom IS.
The same sroups that promised
votC'r$ an insurll)tt ··free lunch" are
now ~nnina up an 1n1tiattve lo brlna
about a split-roll property tax. They'll
prdtn1se homcownen and renters
huae w rebates while aeuina ap-
proval to quadruple ~ornmetcial and
1odustnal levies. Any doubt il will
pus?
Follo"Mftl that, there is alrcad)' talk
of 20 percent rollbaclrs tn mo~
payments and ne-w home prices as a
cond11ion to build Whr ilOlJUSt \Ole
to low~r lhc pnce~ of al products pnd
.erv1ces by 20 pcrt en1
.1 foU&bt in J.hn:c v.an to pro1tCl
Amcnca. and t·m JUSI as scn0\15 and
dedicated as a lctislator I ha "C tned
to sped. out against an} attempt to
abrogatt' an> of our consrnuuonal
n&.hts. I spoke aga1n\t Propos1t1on
I 03 I'll also speak out again t tht'
split tu roll .\nd wh1:n the} try to roll
back newspaper pru:es or hm1t the
Pilot's frtt ~ptt(:h I'll fiaht ror )'OU
even thou&h some hbcraf wlll prob-
•bh all mt' a ca .,.eman
Gil Ftrp10• l• t)e 1c.te .,.
1tmblymu for ~ 4ltt AnUJtly
Dl1trlct.
Five )tars aao: The U .. Supreme
Coun ruled that law firms may not
discriminate on the basis of sex. race.
rch11on or nauo nal orig10 in promot· ina young lawyers to the status of
p&flncr
One )car o· Janos Kadar -
insll.lkd b) the Soviet U nion a head
of Hungary's Communm Pany in
I 956 -was replaced b> Prime
M1n1ster Karolv Gro z .•
Today's Birthda)'s· Actor Lord
Lauren~ Ohvter 1s 82. Cond11C1or
Peter cro 1 .SS Actress usan
trubcrJ1s S l ~ctor Paul Winfield 1s
4
Comments
welcome
The Dail Pilot wtkomes ••
your opinions on mattm of.
public interest. ·
Leners and IOf\ICTarttelesof ,
commentary must be sianed.
They should be typed or
aem}'-WOUCn. ~. LETTERS to the EDITOR.
DaJly Pilot. P O . Box I S60.
Costa Mesa. C'.altf 92626 . lf you prefer to dictate a
letter. you may call our
WE'RE LISTENING tele-
phone numbtt -642-6086 -
and le•ve a ~orded mcssaac-Ptcase lrcep these mess.an
bncf. Please tncludc your address and telephone number so that
we may venfy authorship
Sctiools ostracize learning· haiidicapped
To the &htor
My son attends Corona dcl Mar H11h 'ichool He " almo \t \loot 10 'en
attractive and ble ~with a superb ph\SIQUt' He has numcrou\ skills "'h1cfl
he has mastered thro u&h pc~"cntnc<' ~tud) prat t1te. t"mulat1on a nd
dcd1cauon. He 1~ niuural a.t tcnru.s..a.spo1t1n ""hic.:.bllt V.{\Uld dcfca1 at~ .. 19., per cent ofb1s classmates. He 1s an accomplished surfer and 1\ no"' l.Ompe11n1
1n local events, 1nd1catma his nank to be susxnor to mo\t ol ht\ d a<,\matcs \1'
son has been ndinamotorcyclcs since he w 4 )'Cars old I le has continued that
pon off and on for the last eleven )CU\ and oul~ ca 11)' rank in the to p ten of
the entire school 1n ofT-r d or racttr:s"k compct111on Ht ha lx't'n dov.-nh11l
sl11n1 sin~ 4 )Can old. e"en c'penencma wmc iruehna Europc3n .,lope.·
ndoubledly he ca n ski at a level supcnor to most of h1s ell\ mate
He 1sesj>tt,tally in1n1ucd by mcchan1cat devices c;uch as\mall le pov.tr raceboa~ a1rplancsand ra~ can The dulcrll) and mcchamcal s .. 11ls required
to race a five-foot. remote-controlled -poYrcr boat. a 70 mph race car o r s11t-foot
WWII model a1f'l)lanc 1s quite remarkable He ha e'~pt1onal pluencc for
such chatlcnies Morto"cr. l\c can tear down an cngint on h1 moto~Clc, boot
car or plane. he can r., thc problem and reconm~ct the cn11nc as ncatl)' a\ a
factory "'rapped .. ers1on What " so amaz1n1 ,, that not o ne o f thc!>C .. toll'I 11
rccosn1zcd b} the hoot Nor wa one of thew s1'1lls acqu11"d thro uah am
sumulus provided b) the Newpon-MeY S\.Stcm .
Allow me to sh.art 10me othcrcruetal tnfonnatton . M) son 1s vehement!~
oppo_K'd to smokina. dnnlunaand dru At t1m~ be feels socially dl\lant fro m
h11 da mite because one Qn be o trac•zed 1f un~tlhnf 10 dapt to l0<:al
cu tom: namely, unch1pcroncd pen1c1. dn.1~ and akohol. ;onunatcly. he h:a
an cx~pttonally strona bond ""ith hlJ \-Cl') ber older brothcT ,,,.,.h v.'bom he a~nds cons.idcrab&c umc and hu mldc innumerable fncnds aqoaatrd v.11h
bis outside mtt?Uts. He 1t VtfY Mptttfu.I of th.OK u>tCTKt1n1 i.n bh h"•DI
cnv1ron~t, and, •hen asked co-opt1"1tes fully. Uafonunatcly, my IOft is dyilcsjt Ud.stNilks with rapid dcmancl t)pe ractiM. IPdliiw and IOIM rnenah in mith. He mu\t mentally C.duiu
bjmxlf ao auy focuKd for the entire day. He has never ~n mv11C'd to Play lC'a.Dil ..,...._ tanas ~met cautt tbe ttnn•• toltb to be tncatncabty l~ to
otll) dlloic WbO cany his favor outstdt-ot' the 9Cbool (nviron Instead of tu"°" aad ~S.. ht. it rek'ptcd to that 1n 1diou la(k hole
heftin the prObkm atudtaturt dropptd; namely those outiide the acade'm 1c aonn. them..-CMDOt _.. die iackm.c nwasuam at &N corrttt ~·
My IOll wil 1WVtve..118d'° .,_ mucta ~-lhan I woald bav( e'er Pf1=d1Clcd
...... dlle .,...,lldad ~ ... filc:a.: but hiUamvaJ and po\llJ\-C ICJf'-
.... ~ .._ DOdUM ta.et lhe ·M lyMem hal Offettd • ~ ,_ ..,. M liil 1'een blmed -.tll 1 '1aecial eeethcr(I). people •bo
re.tyCM9, •doeoilllMtnayCOM&ant Pf'CSIUft)Oconfonn end b( ·~ \hit tbe .,_... cm ..,._ on tlllnn. To ~ ~ lhete ll'CC••I 1cechm
• Mve ...... IN n C. ..._, tm1n1tina,,... u.t iichffcm11 annudt ot • .,..._ _.... leil aelo the vu,· bti .. o( eech ditadvantl!ICd _,, • ._ Allr-.,.aM Mw'tol--.1n"Olvnnmtat 1Mtm0ol, t t.amc
to l"9l't a(8t =tlli~ I Ht lad by •l*'Of tmebcn that I bedl0-...1 dlllS •~diY•dledn 1oum •
JUM gne -my-malt• with"::~ but canaoc brina home h11 ti.,._ becillalt die bealiii aft not al •l ol IM ch I OQln. )mt =-WOil•& rfitl Ill II t ......... hm ... )!w. t"ODftnMd thill the: tllillilil'Nil W dW clm ... 1..,..oon-ao • .... -. impoted on .._, ... -.....,... ...... ..., "°' ............ hilh ltttooi
class 1n t 5 ye.m The kids ha ted lhc books and tbcu; reacher d1shkcd them
Wlut a "'a> to bnna JO) to rcad1 n1' What a wa) to u mulatc an e\ccllen1
teacher to ma\lm1ze her skills and those of hcr students' Hmr. can educated.
1n1ell1acnt sxople funetJon at Lht'1r tint 1n thc mid t of uch ch1ld1sh diet.ates
M;problrm n not h:lvrng a t'lue a to how to tile the "> tern It is filled
with tn~urc people 5eek1ng their own miniature ba of Po"'Cr that I am not
ure ll can be fixt'd ThoK 'khO have bouaht off on pohtJC' 1n favor of the k1J
actually attain l~ter financial benefits and unc<'onom1c perks (i.e nicer
d assroom and Cllll'I supehes)
We ha.,.c a numberoft~chers with a h1slor) of1n tab1ht)' The Ind cannot
nand them. but apparcnth the have played their card naht and scn1onty "'111
permit them to fC\ter Mthin the sy tern unt1 l 11e e.,.entu.lfy squeezes them ou1
The admin1 1rat1on lS aware of this ··bad appte·· problem, but lhc umo n
foreclo.cs 1hc•t-Ckttrc to $0lve.11. •
My t'i\O older ctuldrcn. who auend l ' and U LA ~pt'('t1vcly. i:.
throuJh Corona del Mar Htab hool "-Ith no such probient "t ou 11«. thev
were both aadem1cally supcnor and nounsht'd 1n pile of the )Stem, and iii
addtuoo tttt1'ed cocourqemcnt and sup-port from the few upcnor tcachen
1nterspcrs.ed thro'-'lbout the system
Pre 1dcn1 Buth 1s aware of the nt"ed to nunure our children •tth mort
outstandina ~chcrs and recommends f"('-..ard fi r t p pc-rformcrs imilar to
those ava1lablr lhrouahout our nonnal bu)tn communtl). The above
l\.etl&C student will benefit.. but ma)be more talent "''IJ. 10 ll .. -.y down to
thote le lifted h LI C.lltraord1nmly sad lhat so man)' hkc my n wtU 01t our
schools hkc ~1nful k1dnc) stones of the adm1n1 tral1on which anmacc Ln the
hope they Mil soon Pl th.rouah
There arc larae pe1'Ctnta&CS of d)slex1c and othtrwat' leanu"S
handicapped &&uMnts who are capable or hWl achi(vcment •n a po11t1YC
CDVU'OOmtDl. Our I)' ~ rd\aJn to rccosniie die nttds or iatmuoftbcte ticb
and 1n many ca • pcrmancntly .-an tMir ep by ilolatJ"I thtm u eciickmic
k-pen.
LO CHRISTIANO
Ncwpun-...
Ocean Vjew should pay off debt
To the liditor.
My -1fc and I '*C1't Pkatcd 10 ~
the ertide b)-~. Wilham in your
.. per <M•> "· PIF l> reprdina ·~ •k and '* of Khoc>I di.irict urphas proprny. h's~ to find out thilt our
.ldaool ldminutra&on M\ie cut a deil
""' WlH maU ntonq for ... 1U • In rcvttWI• my ~ tas
rttt1pts. I ftnd that ...._~,paid n
•~nee of uo • ~ ., 23 ,.,..
IDOft man S 1000 ao IM Ocaa v eew
~~•no-•-.,~ ,lllllwe Of' ... s 7.' 1nillioD •lliroftt .....
tM .. of publidy OWM4 .... ·--~ Md Sl homn ~·t lit \T,.aid to me.
l!hila~ephia Orchestra, Mutl
craAscendent cit The Center
itf-.Cl ltUSSEU.
.... ~ ....... It
The Orange County Philharmonic
Seciety pre~nted the justly re-
nowned Philadelphia Orchestra, Ric-
cardo Mut1 conducting. at The Center
for two dates last week. and those'
evenings have to be considered a
watershed in the cultural develop-
ment of Orange County.
Llstenang to these long awa>ted
concert performances in Scgerstrom
HaJI, with its much-praised acoustic
balance. it see med there could never
again be an> C).pericnce so perfect.
Even if one were ignorant of the
sheath of history, and awe. which
surrounds this orchestra. one would
still be mightily impressed with its
remarkable sound and grandeur.
communicated by Muu and the
ensemble of virtuosos. But, to Judi e
this world-famous orchestca on us
sound alone would sli~ht the style of
the conducto{, the incj1 vidua1 artistry
within the enemble, and indeed the
89-year history of the nation's
premiere orchestra, an of which
served to enhance the listening Cll-
perience an<J elevate it 10 a most
singular level.
Tuesday's performance opened
with the Fant.as)' Overture from
"Romeo and Juliet" by Tchaikovsky.
Ensemble brilliance was clear and •
C1tcitinaly mellow form the violins,
while the violas, cellos and wood-
winds were accented oordially by the
brass and bass. all complemented
wonderfully by the rumbling per-
cussion, which underscored the or-
chestra's power without the insult of
offensive noise.
It is aareed by most that the
Philadelphia Orchestra is among the
five top ensembles in the world. so it
was not unexpected when the respon-
sive Oranae County audience pve
Muti and his musicians a record 4-
m1nute-IO-sccond ovation Tuesday.
Mut1's ability to conduct is m<>5t
notable. He is gentle yet forceful, with
an aura of quiet control which can
only be appreciated by seeing him: the
fomal manner in which his arms
move; the open left hand which
moves with a grace that cannot be
described he~ the way he leans
emotionally toward the violins in a
manner others would find difficult to
duplicate.
Perhaps it is his ability to com-
municate feel~· with strength, a most unique aJity, which makes
him one of th world's ~t living
conductors. But. ltis appearance is
also eye-catching. From his shock of
black hair to his chisled. movje:star
facial features, he is a handsome
Italian man whose presence com-
mands attention. Y.et. he readily
shares the hmdiaht, unselfishly pres-
entina ensemble mcmben to be
recognized by the audience durina
applauS«.
As he has a rule of presenting an
American composer's work 11 each
concert, he bro\llht forth Vincent
Persichetll's Symphony No. S (Sym·
phony for Strin15), Op. 61 as the
second on tbe program, wltich was
followed apin by peat and Jen11by
applause to end the first half.
The second half featured
Prokofiev's Suite from the Ballet
·•Romeo and Juliet," Op. 64, in ten
movement . The unison of sound
created by all I 2 violas. with solos by
oboe, fiute, clarinet, bassoon and
other pnnc1pals. were unflawed dur-
ing both niahts' performances. Con-
oenmaster ~orman Carol and otben in the front row circling Muti had
numerous solos, trios. quartets and
more in both performances, all per-
fection. 1
Thursda) 's program was
Beethoven's Symphony No. 3 in E-
flat Major. Op. 56. "The Eroica" 1n
the first half, follo"'ed by a rousing
and wonderfully romantic reading of
Ravel's "Rapsodic espagnole" to
stan the second half and ending with
the fabled "Bolero," which brought
the enthusiastic audience 10 its fCct
for an extended period.
-
Michel Devil/e's ~La Lectrice' is . .
a delicately balanced·comedy
. ._.. (Mlou·Mlou, 19'11 reeds for .,.. .. .._.,.., widow
fMarla ea .. rest In ••u Lectrlce ... • pl•yfully iOphfstlcated
cCNWedy rtow at th• .. ,boa Cln•••· '
T\' l ,ISTI 'GS
ly Alex Wllllam1 ·
Of dw ~,,_Scan
Only, the French could make a
charming hule sex comedy out of a
stack of must? Maupassant books.
But .. La Lcctnce .. (The Reader). a
film by Michel Deville now playing at
the Balboa Cinema. 1s actually a
perky, modest movie -not shallow,
but happy to.play at the surface ofhfe:
its pohte ironies and mild eroticisms.
And despite the potentially we.ight y
ccntC{Piccc of classic ·French htera·
tu re, the movie moves ai a cinematic.
not novelistic, pace. Ce rtainly,
bavinJ actress M1ou-Miou nodding,
skipping, winking and pouting
through v1rt1,1ally every frame does
not hurt the film s allure.
Structurally, the film is a movie
within a book within a movie. "La
Lectrice," the movie.opens with Jean
(Christian Ruche) reading Raymond
7:00 7:30 1:00 1:30 t:OO 10:00 10:30 11:00 11 :30 • ,. ....
• r:=:--
• a-.(k! T•
........ Q
Jean's book. "La LectrJce," in bed. Baudelaire and Maupassant
His C)'eS 11re, and when hi!> girl-Another customer 1s a bedndden
friend Constance JOIOS ham beneath w1do"' of a Hunganan general "-hO
the covers, he asks her to read 1he demands to hear Gork), Ma~ and
book to htm aloud. She complies. Tolsto), and "'ho eventually enlists
From there. the book becomes the Mane's hclpshowenng the street wath
movie Jn her 1mag.10at1on M1ou-red carnallons in honor of Lenin's
M1ou's Constance becomes Mane banhday.
the protagonist of the novel. The custome~ contanue -the
As protaiomst. Mane d('('ades to lonel)' mh 11rl the rr prcssed nch
run a classified ad in a ne"spapcr bus1nc'>~man r or each. \.1ane
offenng her services as a reader. uch choose'> a prcSt:npuon no' cl and "-Ith
a career v.ould be the perfect outlet for each she embarks on an adventure
her prell) voice, she reason~ that somehow re' e-als more of her
Her JOb subsequent I> tall.es her own pe rsonal 1magmat1on and dt'sirc
through the bedroom of a wide T)pical of the mov1l'"'> emot1onal
assortment of customer who, for one caution Mane 5.kans the la" b~ finds
reason or another. must hire the ~es no punishment he sk.1rts a <;Cxuaht)
needed to read , w11h the crippled bo). bu1 offer\ no
One customer 1s a teenage boy meananaful encounter
beginning 10 realize his '1Uual desires. In fact. Mane sk1rt'i the deep
but confined to a wheelchair nflcr a emouon 1hat usually accompanies an
sen ous. and unspecified. acc1den1 (the art of ·1 ol\tO)'. Baudelaire or
Marie reads him erotically-charged tkethoven, whoo,c gamboling piano
Andre Watts.still a'ilinQ;
ticket refunds available
Renowned pianist Andre Wam.
whose 111-hcalth fore~ canccllnt1on
of his Apnl 25 recital ponsorcd ~)
the Orange Coun1y Ph1lhnrmon1c
Society,_ will not-be re hcduled this
season. according to a spoke person
for that organnauon, because his
doctors ha' e ordered him to curu11l
his activities for the remainder of the
year.
As the 1989-90 OCPS season tS
completely book~d. the earliest op-
portu n 11 y for Watts to rctum lo
Orange County will be dunna tne
SOWMIOI --~ CIHUIA lOO Nrwr-t Ctne~r DflW 644>()760 , ........... ..._,_ .... S IS,7JO tO l"9M•--•.•JO 1035
_.8ffTW,~.ltQS f CCMU~ •Jj~
D-.. .. :-U....7 t
-..-... a..A Cf#N• 1101 H•~b(>o ... S:""*C-'7• 4141 I ...... lt.IJO. 100
l -~---llllllS 4S I 10 IS J..,..,_ .. ,,,,,,,
........... ~SJ01>0•JO
··-~ --IMI /"-A~ ...... °' ..... 111, IOJI
-··-~W ltlOlristot\t .... ,,.,
1990.91 concert ~a\On
11ckholdcr\ to the .\pnl 2S t'cnt
ha\.c t\l.O options, according 10 the
OC PS they can rttum the f1cke1
without a refund. as o ta).-dtducllbk
donation to the 1et> or, thc:~ n
return the 11cket for a full refund
Those w.,h1na rcfund.s mu 1 return
the t1ckeb b>' June 15, refund "''"be mailed w>ttun two week!. of that J le
T1ckctb0Jdcr mqume ma> b<"
d1rrcted to the Orange County
Philharmonic Society at 642-8212. ·
sonatas link. scene w11h ~ene. under-
5eoring La Lectna-'s whimsical tone)
A parucularly memorable per·
formance come fr om Painck
Chesna1s. who ponrays the hamed,
ansecure eitecuuve "ho quick!) re-
\'tals h1 prunent motn cs m calling
for the '')oung lad)'" reader
advertised
Even m1norfigummthe film. such
as Bella. the "1dow's maid arc
antngumg in their odd. touching
struggle,.
In the t."'ld · ho"'c' er tht' mo\le's
success depends .Q.!L...llle '1e~er·s
attitudes about M~nC-The film., 1s
hers. and evet) nuance by evel) other
character falls back on Mane·., ul-
timate rea1.t1on or Judgement
When the nch mother of the n~h
lmle girl thes into frcnz} over Mane
uakane the girl to the cam1\..al without
pcrm1ss1on. M1ou-M1ou mu~t com·
municatc the proper -;ympath) for a
frantic mother while '>till showtnJ a
pla>ful 1rre pons1b1llt' undermining
the rage
Tndoer ~11uat1ons anse when
Mane encounter\~" lo most cases.,
the source or the 'SCl'ILJal fcchn.gs arc
pathetic. One 1s a t.npple. another a
paanfull> frustrated man
Ma rie must balance bct"cen char-
ll) and indulgence M1ou-M1ou as an
acttCS\ must be 1multaneou11I tn·
t1matc and di tant .t,nd she 1s
Ava1IJble. )Cl aloof. (ool. yet
.J>&5S•Onatt It' a balance that Fren~h
tcttt1 (or Amcncan a<:trc an
f rench tilm ) \ttm to walk with
1mprt~\1vc rcaular1t). ·
And 11's a Dalancc appropnatc to a
fLlm that rests on such a dch~te
prtm1sc. "La Uctnct," after all. IS a
t'On tcm orory comcdr with
8iUdcli1re in 1 ~ul.
...
I r
MONDAY, MAY 22, 1989
\ •• ."1 I . , .
,
First Team All-Sunset League baseball selections
Stllndlng, from left -Westminster Co•c:h Ken 01trow1kl, Ry•n Klesko, Oc:e•n View's Mike Bur ns, Fount•ln V•tley Karllner, M.,ln•'• M•rc Newfteld, Fount•ln V•ll•y'1 Steve
Fountain V•lley•1 Steve Gr•ck, O~e•n View's Steve Co•ch Ron Ron u Ruff•. Sining, from left -Westmlnster·s Montgomery. Sitting, from left. West111ln1ter'1 ..... "
Hern•ndea, M•rln•'1 Eric: Crocker. Oce•n Vlew·1 Glfry Bren Grebe, Marina's Marty Osborne. Oc:e•n View's D•n Stubbs, fount•ln Valley's Stev, unatstff. Ostrowwlrr1
Chrlstopherson. l!dlson's Jason Serafin, Westminster's Hern•n4!fea. Marina's Robin Lindsey . Oc:•an View 's Randy Lions •nd u Ruff•'• hron1 shared th• le .. ue c:rown..
UCI bumped off
in N CAA tennis
Spettal to the Dally Piiot
A !tttNS. Ga. -l 'C l's bid tor
an N~AA tennis t1tJe ended
Sunday. as the University of
Gcorpa defeated the Anteaters,
S-1. in the quarterfinal of the
• l OS th annual NC' AA Cham-
p1onsh 1ps at Henry Field
Stadium.
The Bulld<>&S won all but the
first sin&les to cl:um the win
Georgia bnnp a 2().5 m:ord into
today's semifinals whale the Ant-
CJILers. ranked No. 3 10 the nauon
and seeded fourth in the tour-
nament, end the season at 2S-7
The top.three singles matches
e:ich went to three sets.: lhrilltna
the homctov.n crov.d or S.000
Senior 'vtark Kaplan picked up
('9iHR IH Uct/12J
I H \Ch
Masters
will send
S tO State
ly ROGER CARLSON or-o...-,....s...-.
Edison Hi_lt\ fmhman hcllc
•---..,._..•-..=..>lor 1s the lone Oranae Coast rca
alhlctc to cam tv.o spot in Fnday"s
• Mutcn Track and Field Meet follow·
in1 Sa1urda) 's ClF 11nals 1n Yt'hich
cham.,,on"11ps on tht indt' idu.al and
team level v.-crc ~t.abhshed for 4-A, ~
A, 2·A and I·" bo)'sand airl ..
• Amona the "''nncl"1 wcrt Wood· bridae Hlah. prls on the team le~el
(1-,4}. IP•n; Un1~cn1ty HaJh pole
vaulter Josh Herndon (I ~) tn the ~
A; and Edison frc hman ~llty
Tayloe. who doubtC'd 1n the prtf 4-
800 and t,600. trona lttOnd place etTont in-
cluded Edison's Lc,ltc DriaP 1n the
&iris 4-A lhot put (•l:O); Wton•1
Dous Nichols 1n the boys 4-A 800
(I .~2 . l S: Mater Ori'' M1kcN1clton in
tht 4-A bc>>s J,200 (9: I S.62): West·
m1nsier·s SMiie)' Tochluk In tbf 4-A
attb_ 400 (S6.l3); and WOOdbrids•t
It.Ki Keffer in tk l·A prts To-
._ hurdlel (<M.8'>
frimf1 ~t an\olvcs the bri8
.nine marb from the combined Clf
ftMh in ach evein.: Wlth \be wrv•"I five bCM ca.ualif)ialtor tJw 5'att ~
whach will be held Jne 2-3 at IM
•mttlw.
Hete 11 a ..... lite OI QIMlf
COM1 Nia teuln for die ......., ~ Wida 61ir q...W,I ... .._. rroaa dtc s.hantay·s ctF l'IMh •• cermo. Colllt: .. ~LcMlit Mee11 CWvodtllMllt}. .... ....... 0-. Na. (&lilila).
1 =f~ -.. l:aWll R: 11•9 ''.'9-1!!~1111!!!.,.. 4:11 C I ~Mr-:-•"''' 11 (Mlllrl>ri), w.s• 11 .. r.
. .
Sea~t-F-Kings, a year to iemember
Often at th1 time of\ ear l'H tnund
m\S4 . .'lflool>.1ngbad.1hrough the file\
.it a }t"ar" h1l·h seemed unrQUl' "'rth
. "inners Inc' er} corner
It's the s:imc this tame around -
Orange Coa\t area athktc\l·ont1nul·
10 e>.lel ell a p.icc '>l-Cm1n~I' l.ir alwad
of1hc1rcountcrpans •
But tht!> lime thcrl··, \omcthrniz
e'\tta There\ the 1.:a'le of< orona <.kl
\1ar Htgh \\hrch ha\ \rm pl~ had .1
'1rtual oncc·in·.i-hkumc rull
through the tall. rnw thc.-"1ntl·r .111'.I
'uptodatc
It has bel'n a band"agon th.u ha' a
lot o(pcopll' \\ ondcnng JU\I hll\.\ can
one S(. hool rnnw up" rth thh mul h
succcs ?
How much success·> ~ell. thl'
tollo"1ng ''a l'1P\Uk looLH < or ona's>car.and1fan>onccan match 11-
th1s )'Car or an} other >car. in tcnm of
· Often at this 11mc ol )ear 1 ·, e found
mysclnook1ng t>acl>. through the files
at a }Car "hu:h seemed unique \.\1th
"mnc~ inc' Cr) corner
It's thl' aml' thr'i time around-
Orangc toJ t area athletes continue
to e\Ccl at a pacc sccmrngl~ far ahead
of their counterparts
But this 11mc .there·, '>';>meth1n1
c'\tra Then~·s thecas<.' of ( orona dc:"I
\.1ar High." h1ch ha\ o;1mpl~ had a
'1rtual on<.:c·in·a·lrkume roll
through tht' (nll.1n11> 1h.e "''ntl'r and
uptodall'
II ?la bct•n a h..tnd"'Jgon that ha\ a
lot of people \\Ondenng.JUSt how l:an
one school coml.' up" 1th thr'> much
success')
Hov. rfl uch su<."te'\ ., \\ cll the
tollov. 1ng 1., a l·aixule loot.. at Cor-
ona's >~_ilan)onci:.ao ma11.h rt.
th1s )enr or .i"'\other '.¥enr. in term of
shccrsucccs., in so man) come~ I'll
bc'lurpn ed
L1kea rC\tlh 1ngdoor, 1t began "Ith
Da \ c Holland'~ foothall tcam. v.hrch
"cnt unbeaten"' 11h a 'lt'lOnd straight
kagucchamp1onsh1p. capped b' thl
C If Or' ts1on \I no"' n nnd lt·d h\
C IF Pla\Cf\'I the \ l'.tr John .
t-..a Ill' 'il.l h . •
Then 8111 'tumncr 'Ibo} s took thl·
cTosscountr. k aguc talk.as wdl a-s
'I ·\JOH I .I·: \G I t :s
the ~late lhamp1on'ih1p in D1' 1sion
II
John Var. as. meanwhile. had his
"'atcr polo team on u.ric1.11won1he
lcaauccrov.n.as"cU a lhe( If 4·A
tnle
&sl>.ctb311'>Thc:"\ea King<, dad not
wan leaauc hu1 Paul Om · qurntr1
v.as the talk of the 'Mluthland an It\
up~l-dfl\cto the( If'·~ final~ a'i
"ell as the -..1atc 01' l'ltOn Ill ~mt·
final'
pnn' lound '>umner·s tra I>. team
(S--Q). \>t Ike ~tark \\C:llher·~ swtm
team< ~·0). Da' e lfefTern·~ tc{ln"
team l IO-Oland< harhe Brande '>
'olle>b3ll 1c;amall tak1nglcaaue
crO\\M,capJ)('dh} thC\olle)hall
t\.'am ·., '>tunnmg c.: hamp1onsh1p con·
queo;1of\11ra(o ta\aturda> night
Tht' golf team \\ll\ a ('(K"hamp1on
w11h Estancia. a 1ieam '' h1ch l'i headro
for the 'tatc Finals.
"lt'sthcbcstycarwc'vchad .
alhleucall)' 10theh1 tory of the
school:' confirm CdM s Ron Davi
who has been the 5ta Kinp' alblct1c
d.1rcctor fortbe put 22 years
"On one Fnday, thc last da) of
lcagucsca~n.. v.e v..on 1x vars.it)
ehampaon hips," point out Davtlt,
a1lud1 l'\i to mies wrapped up 1mul-
tancousl> b) both tract.. team and
both SI.\ am t~ms. a v.cll u the tennis
and \OllC)ball team
s for those iirls -freshman Ken
Phebus v.on the ind1 v1dual tennis
champ1o nsh1p la t faJI. as v.cll a
lcad;na her teammates to the league
and C IF 4-.\chilmp1onships.
. Brandc·s voile) ball team v.asa
league champ and CIF quar-
tt'rfinallst. socccr fini hcd runner-up
~ ..... CARLSON /12f
Ha as-roll on, rou · Brewers
Sch roeder's slam pa,es 12-9 victory
From The Assodated Press
8111 hroeder couldn't wail for a
chance to Nit apin th" fonncr tc.im
"I "as pumped up toda). Oh ~cah
I wanted to pla) 11ocll apin t tl\em ··
he said after his th1rd-1t1n1ng gr3.od
stam ~ thr Cat1fornra ~ng~I p;m
the Mal"aul.Ct" Brcv.er 11·~ unda' •
at nahc1m 1ad1um
"rhe aame was on T\ (tn M1l-
v. ul.:tt). and rm urc all m\ fncnd
v.~rc "'atchina... ·hrocdcr q1d
hrocder traded to Cahfom11 la t
winter attec 10 scawn "llh Mii·
v.11ukcc. came up after 8111 \\cgman
v.alked Jack Ho"cll 1n1cnt1onalh to
load-rlnr~~ -rr he h3d to do 1t o'er aiam.-·
CO\Cll.,COH,IH
\(heodcr said, refcmng to Mil·
"'aukce m3na er l om Trcbclhom.
"he'd do the \aml.' thma I hadn't
pla\cd'an av.eek But he rot a pitch up
to me and I dro"<' 11 "el ..
Schroeder's hot one of lour Calt-
lom1a h~1inc: run.-.. ga'c the \ngels a Q.~ lead
Oaudcll Wa h1naton dro'c m four
runs"' 1th an RBI double an the first. a
l"'o-run homer m the S«ond and n
.,olo homer in lhc St\lh, h1 fifth of the
~ason He also tn.J.led 1n the eighth
\\ ashm&ton is I )-for-.33 "'"h lhrtt
homcn and 7 runs batted 1n oHr
eight game sin~ he rtJ01ncd lhe
club He missed 10 pmcs af'\er hi\
~ugtntr <:..:m1lle, h~ a hou!oeh Id
a~1dent that left her part1all P"nl·
AWAY
Tooav-4dle
M23-Y.,-iks, 'JO
M1.-Yanllls. •.JO• M~S-Yanlu, 4 JO •
.M26-8oSIOf'I, •15•
M27-Boston. lO-OS
M2t-8011on, lO os• M29-8rtwen t US•
~erew.rs. sJs• MJl-8rtwer1. l\:JS
• All Oll'MS on ICMPC (1t0)
• C,,.n'* S
hz~
Devon White homered for the
fou.n.h consecuuvc pmc. Hts cl&hth-
-1Jln.Ulg. hom.c.c j&.\ t_ • \ .......................
~~n.
. Track needs good transfusion
and I~ d1Jiancn; 16 1 and• t .I 1n
cbcburdks: 4S.S and3.32.8 in \he
relay': l 9-6 and 40-9 m the lon11nd • tnp~Jumps. .S-JOand 1().:61n t~ h11h JUmpanJ\ault.~and l2'~1ntti(
't'tiabtsi Tbew~lfli11ma~JVswbo
(Oukt not make our top three Vatlfty
spots. Check.how thac lftal'b i1act
''''"'
I I .
..
Or ... COMt DAILY PILOT I~. Mey 22, 1981
Smith, Momreal cut dotNn
_Dodgers tN/th 3-1 ·victory
MONTllEAL (AP)-~ Slilitla knew what he had to do to beat the LOi
Aftlela D.odP'.' OD Suaday. . Slftitb petcbed 1 four-biner and H-.bie Brooks and Mike Aldrete h1t
conKCUtlve rw1-ecoriat doubles in 1 tbree-Nn fourth innma. leadin& the
Montreal &po1 peat tbC Lot Aqeles DocW!n 3-1.
.. That wu my pme becau.e l tepc \he llaU movina and off the plate,·• said
Smith, wbo pitched a complete pme for the tint time since July 8, 1988.
Smith, 4-1, struck out nine and walked one as the Expos snapped a five-llft\e~ue:icored in the sixth when Willie Randolph walked with two
outs and soored on Mike Davis' double.
.. He ~as real tough," Davis said. "He mixed up his pitches and he kept
everybody in.our lineup off balance ...
Dave Maninet. led off the fourth with a single off Mike Morpn, 3-2, and
scored when Brooks doubled down the Jeft-fidd line. Aldrete, whose previous
six at-bats bad been groundouts to seoond. followed with an RBI 1round-rulc
double to center.
Aldrete went to third on Ttm Wallach's infield out and scored on Mike
Fitzaerald's iround.er to third.
"h doesn't take a genius to realize I'm not swingin' well, but the fact that
Buck (Expos manager R~1) is stiltcing with me 1s a ireat confidence
builder," Aldrete said. "1 cant bc&in to describe the tbe number of things I've
tried to act myself going."
' Morpn allowed five hits in five innin~ and now has a 1.22 earM<I run
averqe.
0
Tieen 4, Rnall 2
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His dad suffers
attack at game
SEA TILE (A P) -The
father of New York Yan-
kees hitter Ken rhelps was
reported m cnt1cal con-
dition after suffenng a
heart attack during a Yan-
kccs-Sea tt le Mariners
baseball game Sunday
afternoon.
Len Phelps, 82, was be-
hind home plate at the
Kfogdome when he suf-
fered the attack.
A man sitt1n& next to him
pJJlled him mto the aisle
an d adm1n 1s t c r c d
cardiopulmonary resusci-
tation.
"T noticed his face was
turning red and his tongue
was purple so I knew he was
having a heart attack." sai d
Sean Alderman.
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T-11' A-lt~
CARLSON
Froml1
oflhe two, that's the reason. And. yo1,1
havetohavesomebodycoachinathe
kids, and they've done a fantastic
wouJd we bewithoutcoachcs hke
Brande and Heffern?
in leat~;and as already noted, the
Steve ~.mki's track team and
Doua Volding's swim team rolled to
leaaue ti tics.
It'u school with a whole wall full of
, championship banners in the gym,
but th1smay bethe year where they
have to find an addttional wall for the
-spoils.
"It's a combination of a few
_ thinas," explains Davis.
.. "First you have to have great kids,
and we've had a real blend of
outstanding seniors. as well as an
outstandinajunJorclass. It's the mix
f TRl\CK ~. "'°"' • ' Pole vault -Josh Herndon (Uni-
,. verslty), 14-0; Sean Ropn (Irvine).
14--0.
Shot Put -Orea Thurston
(Editon), S4-6. ,
.. ,. Alterulft
LoQ& Jump -Marc Rooscn
(Oceali View), U..7'h.
job." •
It's the coaching that comes into a
unique focus-there arc only six on-
campus head coachea, and IS walk·
ons.
Holland (football), Paul Orris
(basketball), Paul Serio (wrest!Jna),
Jerry Jelnick (baseball), Starkweather
(boys swimming) and Voldina(sirls
swim min.a).
AU of the rest are walk-ons, not
necessarily a negative, but often not a
positive because oho many phmlls.
''That is an amazina thlna. .. ad.mi ts
Davis. .. AJI the walk-ont. But where
Discu s -Orea Thunton (Edison), 163-0.
Glrlt
400 -ShelJey Tochluk (West·
minster). 56.23.
800 -ShelJey Taylor (Echson).
2:JS.33
IJ600 -Shelley Taylor (EdJIOn), $:0:>.10 .
3001..H -IC.ad Kcft'er (Wood·
bridle),44.8S.
"The whole secret is conunuity and
it's something we've bctn faJrly
successful indomg.and parents have
treated them OK.
"There'sa lo t of imput and mtcrcst
that parents have put in the com-
munity.
• "ll's really not a oncc-1n-a-lifct1me
season. at least J.bopcnot, but it's
certainly the best we've ever had."
And it's not over yet.
Ed Lavelle is still running, stm
looki na for honors in the 1,600 meters
in tracak· and HetTem's tennis team 1
in the F4-Ascmifinal1Tuesday. So
it's not over yet.
LOna Jump -Metus. McDonald
(Mattr Oej), 17·6"4!
Shot Put -Lcsltt Brills (Edoon),
41-0; Bev Oden (lrvmc), J9-$Yi.
Otrt. Altenaa.
400 -Kaci Kdfer (Woodbnd,e).
S7.IO.
11.fl!X' -Johanna Wallin (O:>rona
del Mar), S;09. 95.
J ,lOO -TanJI Brix (Un1vers1ty). t t:U 71.
eompry(on, bu1 detpitt fewer
num~even &ht~U ruadual
mectaareincredibly k>fta(• meet Lo
be immonaJ need not beemernat).
nonnaltnaaninaat l :4S aDd a.auaa uatll S;JO(lhe bai) or even 6: JO(~
WOl'lt).
'· .,,, ' .... ~,•ti \ J,
' Worst nightmares seem to keep
right on occurring at Oregon State
CORVALLIS, Ore. -A lhrce-pmon ---
team wiU evaluate lbe Orqon State UniVtt-* • aity athletic deoartmcnt, where more
COIChn, clerks and supervi10rs ra.-e blam1na ----
Athletic Director Lynn Snyder for low morale.
"We used to play a same around bett, sucuiq the
wont thin& that could possibly happen,'' one de~nmcnt
employee told the .Corvallis Queue-Times. 'Nobody
wants to play the pme any more because our worst
niahtmarcs keep comina true."
The staff cited a lack of ditect communication with
Snyder, an unclear chain of command and poHciet that
pit various sports apinst each other.
.. l have rcco&nizcd there arc problems· between
myself and the coaching staff and others. and I've asked
{the evaluation team) for suaestions," Snyder siid of the
morale problem. ,
Snyder has contracted with Tom Ford of Paa(ic
Research Associates of Stockton, Calif., to evaluate'the p~ and make recommendations for improvement.
Miiis eyeing Arizona five?
PHOENJX-ChrisMills,tbeKcntucky ~
guard ruled incltgjble by the N CAA, is •
considering transferrina to Arizona, a ,.,
Phoenix newspaper has reported. ----
Mills said about th~ weeks ago he'was considering
the Tucson school, accordinJ to unnamed sources quoted
by the Arizona Republic in its Sunday editions.
It is uncertain whether Arizona would be interested
in Mills, who has expressed an interest in UCLA.
. according to his father. Mills is from the Los Angeles l!~ea.
QI er r•: 01 1·11 t·: n''
''You always think it's (lheotfense) going to act
better. I sec nothing that it's going to change. It's
1oin1 to be a long year. We have to stop leanm1 on
one, two or three batters here. We have to stop
lcickina the dirt every ti me we make an out." -New
York Met' pitcher a.It Oteft.
Bulls go one-':'p on Pistons
AUBURN Hlll.S1 Mich. - For the ~
third straight playoffsenes, the Chicago Bulls •
needed only one pme to take away the '
homecourt advanta1e of a team that was ----
supcnor during the regular season.
The Bulls squa ndered a 24-pomt lead agarnst
Detroit, then rallied behind M1chael Jordan. who scored
I 0 of his 32 points tn the fourth .Quarter. and beat the
Pistons 94-88 unday in the opener of the Eastern
Conference fi nals.
Kings· win NBA lottery
The Sacramento Kings. "ho have neHr
"on more than 17games1n a ~ason. won the * "'BA lottcn ~unda) and the fir'lt pid. in the
collegc.dratt June:!, •
Gregg L ukcnh1ll managing general panncr of lhl'
team\ calkd the lotter. '1lloi: annthcr \lt'P l<l"ilrd
bringing l<..tng\' fan\ a .... inner fa cr. \a.cramento home
game has been a sellout <,mce the team mo' cd from
Kansas C 11) 1n 1985
Elsc..,..here Sunda)
•In lndaanapohs Da'' Jone5. "aaung ne.rvou~I) on
1he bubble for o ne y,.eel a!> the sto .... t'1t qualifier for the
lnd1anapolti. 500 "as bumped from the lineup bu1 got
bad. in b) quahf) mg h1~ backup race car almor.t 1 ml)h
faster
•In Fon Wonh. Ian Bal er·Finch ..,..a\ gnen
breathing room b) the doubte bogey that !>trucl down
Tim Simpson on the 14th hole and cruised 10 a four-
stroke \ ICtOf) tn the ( olonial National rn .. ttat1on
tournament
I}' ALMON LOCKAIEY
o.iiy ,.... lo.wt1Jolf ...,-;._.,
Pat Farrah's Santa Cruz-70 Blondie
out of Loni Beach Yacht Club
surpnscd no one Saturday and Sun-
day when it ran away and hid with the
fint c.dJtion of Newpon Harbor
Yacht Oub's Don Ayres Sr. Mem-
onaJ Skylark Trophy.
Font will be •Wed by Ctidrk Dempwy. adtletic director
at the University of Ari.roea and by u Ariz.ou aiWeUc
bUlineu oftlcer. • •
Ford IDd ~ve doae IUDilar comultina wotk at other univeni iac:lUd_ias Wlllainaton Sa*.
They beain their wort at Salce tbia week.
"He (Sn~) bM ..... me a memomadum be'•
prepared for thi• ll'OUP. outliaJJll What bis~ ~1 and I think be'1 ~y c:loil to bei,_ on Witt.., aa1a Oreaon Start president Jolm ~.
Snyder said morale ptotilmDa stem from a &W»t
budaet and an ol')aoina plU to rilduce deficits he inberiied
four yean aao. .
"J need todelept.emoreaulborityaotbat I can talk to
people more one on one," Snyder u.ad. "I have aoc had
time to spend tbc quality time 1 need with my 1tan:"
Byrne, who hu extended Snyder>s $7$,000 contract
fouoo\her year_. said be is aware of t11e complaints.
"'"Tkre s no 1«m we have mOi'lle problem~" h~
said. ''It's always difficult to keep morale up wbeft lbete
are bud&et difficulties."
AthJetic department employees, however, uy the
problem 11 more than a tiaht budaet.
'' ·
"Bad news, coach ... the new P-ltcher with the
terrlftc-looklng arm? Hee a lefty." ... ---
Calgary evens series at 2-2
MONTREAL -Mike Vernon aot the ~ bes t of Patrick Roy 1n the battJc of the NH L's
best ,aoahes, and the c~_lpry Aamcs altered 1 •
the course of the playoffs with a 4-2 victory
over Montreal Sunday night m Game 4 of the Stanley Cup
finals.
Vernon shut out Montreal for near!)' 51 minutes and
stopped 17 shots. and hncmatcs Doug Gilmour and Joe
Mullen scored second·pcnod goals as the Flames evened•
tbc scnes at two wins each
Al Macinnis added an 1nsuran~ goal wnh I 38
rcma.iruna and M uHen scored to to an empty net wuh 11
5eeonds left as Calga l) a\oaded its first thrcc-p.me losmg
streak r the season
T•LaVISION
s p m -COll•G• ••s••All: Clemson v' North CorOllna 11 Cl\Oi>el Hiii, NC , ESPN
S.JO P.m -aASeaALL! Chicago Cubs ol Hou,ton,
WGN.
9:30 o.m -TENNIS: C•Mltv 1ourn1ment from
Aspen, Coto (lai>e), Prime Ticaet
RADtO
No e vents Mduled
The S~l'lark Trophy rqana 11 pan
oftbe h~cint seric-s for the Ultra
L1aht Dis meni a.led• -alto
known u 0 raters and ULDB mud.
Blondte tcored daily wins in the
first two ra~ and placed ICCOnd in
the third. •
The Skylatk Trophy reaatta wu
sailed in conJunction with Ntwp0n
Harbor Yacht Club'• Ahmanaon CUp
Series for International Offshore
Ruic (lOR) ratinas .. 'The weekend
rqatta marks the conclusion of the
Ahmanson which previously was
sailed over ux weekends dunna the
SCllOft.
• M1tcbic<, CCHki~ by Hardy
and fornteT of Bahia Connlhtan
Yacht Oub was the Clall A WlnneT
Saturdal.Jn the third ract of BaJbol
Yacht aub'• 66 Series for Per·
formancc Handicap Radn1 Aeet
• PD1100 ~ skippered by Bill
FoBylhc of Bahaa Conotbian Yacht
O ub was the O au A wu\nct 1n the
Performance H.andK:ap Racana Fleet
(PH RF> di vtS1on m the second race of
South Shore Yac.bt C ub's Summer
H 1 baclu Senes
The Hibachi Senes is a midweek
race sa.1ltd anlldc the bey sW'tlnaand
ft.n.11bina 1n front of lbc SSYC
clubhoute. The acnes eontin~t"tfY Wcdn~y ni$ht tbrouah Au1ust
with a 6 p.m. start. Eatn month's
races counts as a separate ttria.
Overall winMr of the Ahmanson
was Quinteaencc. skippered by Don
H ujhes of Santa Barbera Yacht Oub.
(PHRF) yacbu. . •
Tbc 66 Series ,.... o~nally IO" named•• 11 conlilied of 1~ racct or
about sill houn mcb.· ............... ,
CLAS& A-I Mlldll9f, HarltY-'•"*• ....._ C.,...._ VC1 t llltteraie, .JeM CaalllF, ..... YC, l Ile AMII, l!rlW JIMMl!t, I~
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~.ISVC. SA.NTiutA•»-1. ~. C I..,_, UVC S~L.OS-1. Mil\, ,..,_. VIII-. UCI
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8011on
h lllmore
MllWa!JkM
Toronto Detrolt
W L 1' 14
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2S " 22 " 2'l 21
" 22 17 ll .... ~
2'0 21 10 22
19 21
11 21
17 24
17 25
16 24 ,.....,.. Sc.tr.a
.... II,, MllweullM 9 Clevtlend 2 hlhmcwe O
0.tro<t •. k•"M' CTtv 2 Tcwonto t , ~ l
Mlllnelot• '· Tex .. l
OelllMd s. '°''°" • "-York '· s.111e 2 T .. Y'IGWMI
Pct. ..
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47S ... 2
415
405
400
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~hi IA ~-•·21 et Toronto I Sll.O 3-2). 10'.:JS e m.
Cie.1 ... nc1 Iii.ck 2·5) et O.trolt t~ri.
2·61, •!lS om
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llCIWO H I. S;JO o.m.
Ken .. t Clly IL.elOrelldt J •I et T UH
CH-'! 2·SI S:lS P rn
Naftenaj LMeue WHt OMsMln w L
Cincinnati 23 11 S.n FranclKO 23 It
S.n oi.oo 23 11
Hou•ton 21 21
DedtW1 20 20
Atlante 19 2•
East OIVl•len New York 11 11
Chicago 11 19
St. Louis 11 19
Monlrta l 21 n
PhlltdtlPhla 17 23
Pllhb\lrjjh 16 1'.
SUftdaY'• karat
Molltrt•l l Oedter1 1
ftct.
561 S48
Sii
500
500
442
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537 ...
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S.1'1 Frar~cti.co lO, N-Vort. 4
Pflifaottonle ), Sen D'890 I
SI LOU•I '· Atlanta I ( 10 '""'~'' CtndMtll 1 O\Qgo 1
PtlliOY'Ol'I 17 Houston 5
T .. Y'•Gemet
GB ,
2
2 1
2n s
,,
'h 21 2
5
6
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(J), OWWt. 171 ~ANWtOll {u, Molitor
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Matuarvl TllundaY X-1-et '"'-'•11, • p m (If __..,.,,
S.tutda'I, June l or $un0ey JUlle 4-et Ull.,.., TBA (If MC.U .. fV)
I ASTl ltH COH~lltlNC•
Olka• "'-0.Welt I Mey 21-Chlctoo t•. Oetroa II IChtuoo
lead• Hf'1-\ l 0) W"""41L,I_.
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2·J 2 0 0 I 0
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WP 'A'etman ~-PM»t. Flrtt, JoM.ori.
Sec.end, -ltd, Tlltrd,CW11 T-no. •-u.m
NATIONAL Ll!AGUE
..... J, Oecl9trl 1
LOS ANGILH MONTlllAL
ltndPft 21>
MIDavltll
Mar"'91 rf cr-•p S..raoeo
St~Pll ~""'lb ScloKle c
Stlt«IY cf
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LM ...,_... .. Ill OIO-I
MlfllrNI .. -OOll-J E-S..re91 DP-Monrr .. 1 I t..08-Lo• An
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T-2.JI A-2•,231
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tt>e "" NBA co<-~•It to ~ ,,.'° June 11 t i t,,. Fell Fo-wn •n New Yo<ll 1100 "•n• were
de•ertlllneO l>V • o•terv o" S:u..cnlv 10 eno 11
w1M l>t determ•ntCI l>V • com lou on June I 11
I, Secr•,.,,.n•o
1 Los Anot lt\ Chootn
3 S.11 Anton'°
• M.eml S CllMlotte
• Cllt<•90 ''om New Jen"¥ I
1 Jnd••n• • D .... ,
f WH11&119ton
10, M MMOOI•\ ot O< en«.
11 Orle"CIO O• M .,,,..POI \
12 Portleno ll 8o\ton
i. ~ Ste te
IS. Denvt •
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19 Ptlll•O• onla (from s .. •Jl•I
10, Chk •to or SH ltle tlrom Mllwa.;1>.H 10
l>t determ1nt0l 21. Uten
12 Portland lfrll<"' New ·tor•I
73 At•en••
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Ntwt>urv Pt r1' 119 • 3J a l Fontena I IS I It
Arceo•• en •1 •' Et Oor•dO t 19 II
AMllltlC.AN L.IAGU•
llA TTIHG 1121 at Dett>-l.anslord, 0.klerd, J53 ••• .,., CTllCH O, )50 Puckett M-nnHOla
J.40 A Davi• S..tlte U., Patnw"o Teu\ m
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V«k 1'
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J3 L-.ro, Stetti. 'lt S<~re T .. u 19 HJTS-Puc1<111 M nne\Ote $S. Lenslord.
Oalt.ler>d. s.. A"'notct' s .. 11.. lt4 D. wi.n., CellferlU, SJ1 Petmelro. TUH S1
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Lansford, Oelo.1af'IO, 12, F'•lmelro, Tu u 12 A
Hefldersori New Vorll 12
TllttPLES-0 Wfllte, CeOtemloe, 11 P 8 rad
ltv. 8elt.mor1 •. 8 urli.1 llc»tOll S littvnold\ s..u.. S low> Bos•on • Polon.e 0.t.lel>O
• Yount "'"'-•ukM •
MOMl ltUNS-8 Jte1'\0l'I Ken'9\ "'"· 10 0... M weukft 10 Wn•lek., D•tro<t 10
NATIONAL LEAGUE
S1, Ill. Atomat, SMt OltPO, 49
OOU9LEs-Mll<htl, s.ti Franoteo, I•. lond~. PrlhburOft, IJ!,,Guarrwo, St Lovb, 13
Ooten. Houstori, 12 ~av. 1. .. .._,...., 12.
Tll1PU:S-ltaJGn Montr-MI S, 0.w-
CNca(JO, • It TllOMDMI<> Sen Francisco • T GwvM, San D·-4 W C'aril, Sen Frenc•l<'O
4
HOM.e ltUNs-Mltcl'll!I, Sen Frell(•KO "
Strewoerrv, N-Y«lo. to
\ l ·1 0 IC \ C I'\ f, :: ·.~
W*fl'Oft ~N
(at ~ N.C.I
t Sttr11n9 Merit" Old$FT!Oblte 100, 140 tit
molt 2 8r•tt 8odiM, Fora 100 /1
l D•le Jarrell Ponll.c, lOO
4 C>cA Trlekle. llut<lt lOO
Metw Del C11·SI et Occ-V..W (ll·t I)
S mi V•"•v 112·31 el 8el0w n Par• 16 • ti
(ulv., Colv 21 41 et Ml ell II 81
St Peu-tlS Cl et HH WilM>n 111 10 ll
~~'Cit J>o.y t,._!t .~ l.-llJ·IOI
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Nelnut t7 t J at Han 11 '' Miu .on v .. .o 1 lf·•I e• Senta Al'e 17 9
Wo tern 1 I• 101 et So..otn H•lls 18 1
J w Norin •20 11 al G endO•• lt·ll
S.llle ~r e n a t ar San Gebr e1 I " II
~Nllle•m I II 91 el Cl!rrllos 121 ti
Foo,ri111 119 1 et Notte Dame S 0 1 i• S>
l·A
Artnla C2J·3) et T111•11'1 119·11
Le WM 110 11 at Palmde e I 13 101
KtMedv 121 SI ~I Cenvon CC (13 II l
ElslN)(t " " •• L•ouM M·'" (1J " Sauous 20 • ·21 e r Gte<ln IS· 101
EUaMl.e 120·0 •' Coron• (IS 7 II
Norco 19 7J •• °"'"'° llS-fl ~··., vi.w IS 7 al Peim Oe~• 127 l l
SMALL. SCHO<>l.S
'1\H \ftlH '. ,.,
<•a. c n ....
•
l, lddY ~. letelum, 2.1• n .. rtct
rtQWO; olf ftecll'f t 11~, MfflonY s.tidov•I.
Seit lekt Cltv, "'2. 2, V1Ntmlr K•IO¥, Sovi.t ~. 2:105 t, Fllrlnwtl L-r. Meiclco,
2 IJ:D '• OoUI 1("'111, Horth,,_, Mlcl\, t .. l9
$, llltla ..... "-1"991, 2 .. S3 '· ...... """'°"· SOYltt Ut!lon, t IM? 7, AIHIY JoM•
Mft, .....,_ Of-. t(y, t lt1'J I, Ted """· ~. Ofllo, 2 IUO f . lOU ~.
Awtlfttowtl. Otllo, t:21'tt lO, Otmttrlo ~'• ~. Utall, "11 $0 ll, $191-........ ltalY. 2:22.lt l2, Ootntlllce Met'91'1, 1191¥, In.AO 13. Ill-EMtlme, Fr•nce, t 24"il
"· Sllvlo S.later, '9V11lco, t.25-24 U, Victor S.ncl\tl, PerNUaY, 2 2' S7 "• Anthony S.ncl· ovet, Sall L•k• Cll'I/, 2 27·n 11, Ptlleorlno
Clccaretto, North Oln\lttd, Ohio, noes. 18 Chrlt Miiier, Menltloll, Ohio, 2:33-00 19, Eie
Ol'lel Leta, rMltleo, 133 SJ 20 lloo lltornlo.t C~ml>lane, Ohio, U U 3 w..._
I, lrint k9a~va, Sovi.t Union, 2 lS 55
rece rec«d, Old record 2 tO a , Jene w11>1
Arl1one, 1911 2. lrl"' Sclvertftko, Sov"t UnlOf'I
2 Jt~l >. JMIS Ki.cir.tr. Hootlln•. M·M 2 Jt n
4, Gloria ltemlre1 Tamoa, Fle , 2 •l SI 5.
Marla Lenlsove, Sov,.t Ul\IOI\ 2 43-Ql • Nata "
l•llklfla, Soviet Un•on 2 St II 1, Susen kew~l. Sl\aron. Pe • 2 56 11 I, Cathy v en-
lut• Arll"OIOll Ve , 2561' f Ana·Mer•e
Mti ... Mt11lco 2·56 57 10, Brenda Clerk WarNI,
L.af1ve111, 1!10 , 3.01:19 II, Jtootn Pane~•"'
Erle , Pe, ) 07 S4 11. Gi.nd• Slavmet.er, Ctvdt.
Ohio, 3 11 SI 13. Wtn·Sl'll Vu, Kew Ga rdens. N V , ) lt'OO
HOC .kl\ ·~ ·,
NHL IMYefls
STANL.IY OW "HAU (laftt·ef.71
""-"'.., vs.. c.teanr
Mtv l•-<•'9erv J MOlltrt., 2
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Mav If-Montreal •. C••l>tr., > IJ 011
Mtv 21-<etoery • MontrN I 2 l~rtH 11.q , 2)
Tun on -et ~•toarv. •O~ om
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~
K•ola n (UCll def P1rli.e< •·• •·• 7 ' Enoct11 CGI "-f Kronemenn, 7·S, ,.,, •·•.
Monttne IGl Clef l rllJiU, l .. '6·1, 6·4, Middle·
ton IGI dtf Lut>ner, 6 ), 6·1, CllllcB IGI Clef
Kanroil. ' 3 ' 1, ~rllOll CGI Clef S.unat o 6·1 .. l . °"* ~"8o11nt! kerft TtllH (!lfiltlll'I S, UCLA 4 South Caro<•ne S. Callfo<-n1e 4
Stanfo<-d s Loulmne State )
Hlttl ldle9I M YI
Gii" T•AM "LAYOl'l"S IOu.,......11ah,, TlleMllv, J:UI ••• 1000 Oeks 119 21 •I S.nt1 8.rbera 122 01
Dan. Hill• 0 7 31 at ... w.-f Hat1Mr (lS·71
GWINI del Mal (17-41 ., C•m•rltto (1'•0 )
El Tor.o (21•)) •t '9tvtrlv HIM1 ( 1'·61
>·A WMdbrldte (17·4) Ill 8urt1enk (19·•1 Palm Sorl11os 121·01 a t San ,.,..rlno 119·l l
Sunny Hiits (20· II •I Dami.ti (21·0)
U IUM ... di I lf·ll •I La Qu nte 120-11
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DAV•Y'S LOCKU I......, hadl) -8
boall, J4J •Mien • barrecuda, llO bonito 1
yeltowtaA, • rock l1•h t NI but, 2'5 calico bau,
12 .. nc1 beu, l)S rnao.artt, lJ7 SCVloln 42 l>tue
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I Wlllle tff IMIU
H•W..c>ttT LAHOtNG -S boats, 12S
•no~• 95 sand t>eu 203 Calleo beu, tO t>onllo.
2 llallt>ut, I venowtah, 1 barrecooa 1 •~. s rock 1111'1, ll blue oerch.
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Gehr 121 2 II e t SI PaUI 1 l1 I · I)
l"auntalll Vlllrf Clf·4•ll al lttotMlll C2S·t l
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La Mirada (26·l) " MIHlon Vlelo llS-11
Montclair en 41 •• El Toro ( ll·l 7 S.n Cltmtnll (12· 121 et W Torrella (It •I
llternone 120· 7) at AntaloH Valitv Cn II lrvltle (1'-7) at S.dlltlMctl ,,..,,
Culver Cllv 117·3) 11 S•llOl.I• Ill 1)
Don l.UCJO 113 2· I) •' Ontario ( 14· lll ·euwand• <H·•I ar Covina (t2-0-I}
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s..011 -•Jt 000 11 •I IO ,._,,.
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6 Cllad L.Jttle F~d 100
1 Ernie IN.n, P011t4K. lOO.
t J•m Saul~. Pont.ac 100
Lll>tflY C,,, (11·11 •t CIV C"'-rt" 117 SI ,.IT •ACI 1"1 v -• .,.__,.. D•••' t it 400 llt
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tnc:IMet lit, Ml!c11e• San FrenclKO 317
H.,r Pll' -·• ) I• ltUNS-W Cler• ~n l'renco\CO l 1, L
Smotll ,t.11 • .,re )0, T Gwvnn S.11 D•990 19
A elne' MOil tr tei 27
t EOd a 81~Ktl••te. Old\mot> le, 100
10 l errv PearMI<> l ulek. 100
I I 8rad Tt•-Pontiac. 100
12 Merk Merlin F«O 100
llt8l-M1tcnell, ~n F~"CIKV •2 0 Neo C1~h l3 w Clar• S.n Frenc·~o. l l Gut',..,O S1 LOu•• )0 Gaierreoa Montreet ,.
13 J•rri lown. l'levrol•I 100 I• 89"11'1 Heu • ,., '9 I~ l ff ltlYl'NlnO. oro
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16 T t frV I vers C11t•rotet '9
11 Merli. s1a111. Ford, "
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642 -5678
CLASSIFIED INDEX 642-S678
F'ROll NORTit OllANGa CO.
FROlll IOUTH OflAMGa CO.
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631·1'00
6732 6900
760s3SOO
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STEPS TO S4ND•
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From North Orange County
From South Orange County
540-1220
496-6800
2124
OUIET 28A 2'~ 2 9tory
townttome, ••Ir• to
bdrm, flr-.pleoe, ~.
oommurvty PoOI, W•t• ..oe .,"'.,.. llOOtmo Agtl7Mt12 -
....... INdt 21
S127Slmo 48A 2.IA
terntey '"'·"'Pie. elf ...... so Frwy AVI 1115 IM2 P-.t• Clf e1a.s11~n
• 8Pecloue 28A. 1 ~
towntlome End Qllr, MG
..... .-to bCh, AVllll
now. lt30/mo. "3 •a
flWLOWER
RAT£S
$2.20 per day
That'• ALL you pay tor
4 lines, 30 day minimum
ln tM
SERVICE
DIRECTORY
INCREASE YOUR REACH
GET IN OUR IMPROVED 1=---=--.,.--,,.,.,---..,,--1 n-1 .. ...... ......,
YIUIWPAlll
FOf" mora Information
CALL TOOAVll
ISi Fii LOIS
IRlllEIT
Your
Service Directory
~MentltJV..
M2-G21
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lY'
SERVICE Aeeponelbte
edult. N .. port •r••·
LNW meg. 81'3-27"
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OrtngeCoMI OAJLY PILOT/Mond9y, M9y22,.. • &iiE5iiii~&iE5mii~~~iii5----------__ , __ • .._.,,4','I ~ ~1,1
.• .J.~~~-~--.L • ··Im pan TllUftl.. ........ ~----. IOUD •-IMY , . • .._,.. oc .....-... ,__, 1« • 1111 lllmlTP/l ,_,. rMIR-' MoM.'°'~._ ""*" =• ~.=.!
llWNI AirpOrt ,.... pertoft ~. oflloa tn 'ront Cito ..,..,ane• flll.Jll PAY Cell. :=H or ~ ,"!!;..:.*S:.:; ......., II 1' • .. tto.r ._ .._. aound't w/ofllou 11111•.""*twoe NNport ~ FfT or v.,., "-.,.._ lot M~~t• _ ....... E ........ ,..~ ............ ~IUOD+. PfT.~open ,MNon -.nd ,_... &-~& ... -.-
.... Cdoo ~ .. a t11u1aue Celm.o.ut H. !delal~ur, M 0 , t• ollae. c.I Jenn1w * No..-rc 1 1000/Wk Poterrtlal T.... .and. Mott ......
..... Cll• ......,.~,...lor GIN'LOllC-lne._,,lnft .,....7411 RfMi .. ,,..unHotma m.,k•tlnO omce ~· ~111d1at_.,._ .... ~ walk..__'°' • neede petaon w/bMlc .,1111... ,.,.. IWftl, M9)' Wottc. AM I • N ~tlOnt ptiae. E19Y nrt IAM· 12 Y" • ,_,_, you,_. ~~.oc~ -· 11-or""· No 911$>,,.,.. GUAA08MAAKtNC ttoon.NoW....endt 11911111 d .... ,...
....... ht ~ .... Pellttcle U7·nl1 e.ry HOUfly • 8onu1. ~t:\X'l :t:: f' l't 11 t13·10t1 NO EXP we .... a • ~ _, IOW9'y ..,,._. ... , ~ ........ 142.":4321 lit 4'1 OI' nl _.... rWOI .... 411 ...
wcMd ..... be OllOfleed •• Fl~ NWltd IO ...... a w6de 221 Watt tor b.ac>, _. ,.ALTORS •tB8"11A11 Call bef0<1 12 Noon AU PHI WAHTl.D MOViii ........ .. °==•~~~~~! ....,. "/!1411 new ~ 111,037. to iil,405 lfn-r.,. Of ttlPOl•lnlea for~ or 8en. NEWPORT BCH 813-3135 Of famoua Peoote on Ill· • ... a .-
oil Cell 71(). to 12 lftMl•t• Htrtngl n u• IOt • ,~ ftoMng In---s MullC/Vldeo r4ttell at or• COSTA MESA ~•-t919 , ••• l)MtOI, document•, =:a-a::-....... -20-Fi.._.... .-'::; ..... -PIT Area Cal (~) duav1a1 l natrument I 2 lllP/T -111•11 ..-.en-.r•lnOIVldual SOUTHO C '82·1240 etd , Phil or EMen~ ..._ tno ·--· ..,. _ _ __ ..,... 1·511·09-3111 EXT. menul.ctUNr,Mult,,_. :t "'-perweek An1~u.Ptlonet ...... typ1no to ~meintalnslort& Q•......,N G"'"VE a.o1a_Aa21-•.o1• 1 ..__...,. ...
aurntnlt .,,.)fMfOt AU W• "-"' ~Colt• '311 tor Cwt-u.ttn9' -good oftlot ... -, .;;;:.,: Cofone del Mer. CAI.I. M0-33()7 p.,'.kir:Q lot aecurlty No " .... 1~8-U3J -~... -~....... •" UllflDltt•• ..... PAI,. for clllldren, ..._. .,.._ '4t·9319 work ••II w/othera, 769-3M$ •icperltnc• naetaaary, __ _ • llllT LM .. W• kltdt.,... .,, IMN;JIW
13l-3090 kkPt/Aaat..f1111 time El(p, •VI IE i ~ Oppty rot 9dY11nOtmtnt ol l•PT•llT will tralll FUii compa,,y * TUYILAlllT * UMCHurnlturt tww ...,,.:~~
ASSISTANCE wfth car• Of f*l 'W/pttanl c:otnp., ,.,, uoo-1 1 aoo/wu lllly I• grMt, 141-3tl3 Peai.;:,, ..,&_ FIT tor N 8 Ptnln. o~ benellt• evallablt tor full 0 c Airport aru, PARS Home/office. •10-'300 .... mo..~~·'""·=·=r-==-r-a·
the 9'dltt)' No up nee key, t(c; Non·lmOklng, Ml 41CM, EJct. £.28. -•• -•-· -Ph<>Mll, mall, 50' WI)!" Um. app4ieant1 Apply In •:r:;~pretarred.Ex· BuytSell.973-8201 New DAYii6 Wiift & Prr ..
/hr. (;.ii Kat ..... , ............. t NB o""-Ctil -**HIT··-Lloyd Peat Control need• Sal + bent. Jeulce ptfaon Friday May '28 lent kl .,,..,,,on ---aa••• -........ 111 T • ~101 ... ., ~~ Soui'ti";orth •Tiii ** .... lair** T•rmlta Repalr Tech· , 813·07IO bal ' ' c WO< ng • Bttul anUque din "". u""9e. '"'""' -CM2· 11128 tam-noon M-F Fot ln-hov.. cataterl• Oellwr do0Umln1• from nta.n ~ carpentry -tween 12·2PM with ment. Immediate open-walnut Tab••· 8 Ohll6rt: ' trund.. 04Mftptefe. Babytfttet nMdecl M·F Locat td In trvlne Santi AM to VW!oul ·~leinelneeded Must ll•Jtlllll Manager . Ing Tra'ltl AdwnlurH, ctllna c:ab tx.ttfet & Mf'· U.6. *MCM1tl*
7 30-5 30 tot '-mo-old BOATS Salad/Soup Bar.Catnlar bUl lneHH In your havegOOddrlVfnortoord Otfloa lnNwpt Cntrneed1 ........ ~52~ • var S4,oo0oboll7S.2144 NI W·MOduler c "altt girl, H.B. .,.._ M•M.. WI• Apply In P«tOn at 3071 Econo-car No ..,, nee.I Call Charley, 979-8021 raeponllbte lndMdual to .... WllTll/WMTllll - - -lounge l mini ~. ~ 142·'831 Certified Ceptaln I<>< new E. Mlfaloma. Anaheim. We train! ar .. 1 Job I« AM EOE handle a variety ol dutlte 2:~: :::::~:t With cw for lunc:h dellwry Sq~,rand ~ea ~ ~ ~~
Ceret1kertt1oueek••Ptr 90' luxury motor yect11 Mon-Fri 9"'4. acuve outdoOr typeal 4 Mu11 heve ~ phone MNlc•, ••tab rovta~ 189$, 1600 121-87$1 b l:'N!colettl". Coet for aMMrtY Mien ec>upM , Cfaw of 4, Satc;om, pr1-CIC*'llnQ• ttart It 4 • m . ak•lla, ~ 3 pm & op. SECURllY OFFICERS PfOVlded &-1pm Mon __ __ U
250
..... tor
12711 IAM-3. "3PM,M•F.H8.Call "•tt, tw>~wt OVll.. 10 a m .1 p m, Of mid· erate 1 Kay $1100/mo WOfklor!ht beltl f:rl,'40·80c:aahdally a ..---.S 60ll C-all 71 ..,1~7 °'
....... M 142-73>41 '*' ~t• Mrld r• llllEWIYU ntght Stall Ull• .,., PHONE CLERK .Mtdtcal l Vacation ben· 11wm UMm I --ti.~ ........ _, .._...... .. •n,.... tume to #AIJ 138. e/o c.n JAN 114-7$1-0141 eflla FOf 1ntarv1ew, call .jl-....,, ~ .. -: 111~71
CHILD CARE 1 KIDS Deity PllOt. PO Boit t5eo, * * * *'* * * Johanna 7 t4/CM0-2370 ~~_,:,: & ~nt ~:1 910 147 A:.!r ~~~= ~2 QUEEN 8aE MATT ~a ~oa & ~21 i~ Co11a .,. .... CA 92828 WllTEI!! * * • W * * 2 Pert· Jim• poamon1 ~taur11nt No axper necea. Can WATID??AID 11 chan Stoteoa tMd•. 1 & BOX. OUIL TEDt
Oey9/Week 491.3557 ml!DPll ..... .... ............. **MM/I.-* * 1v1llable In Cu11omer now 114-174-48IO J1W1U1 large & 1 lm< JM5-2309 MANO NEW! l 1N .
Ree4 EJCp Aaqui tel ....... t ..... ·--s.vica Oepat1ment 7am •BARTEt40ER -UTlll .... Needed tor Jewllty •tor• n~ L.n CAU * '40-8TSS * Full-time mature ~ H ~~7204133 r ·~ We need For lrtendty <><Otr tak• '1o 1pm Mqn.Frt Of 11am •BUS PERSONS ..,___.__. to .......,P -ate loeala-d In lrvlna, St20 oti..ln•• ..,,_ ,...,.. _...._ ._......
111111
4 keeper needed Cootill\Q, " __ you lo delNtr pepttl In w/.35--40 wpm l plMMnt to 5pm Wed-Sun NHd 1 •CASHIER ,........., ·-.......,.. Knowtedgat>le & Quality "' • ,.. """' ....,, •-•--• • mutt drive 241-1111, the aerty morn.Ing houri · phone akltls Fun dee*1· good phone par900&11ty •DISHWASHERS Taa Gatdtn In CdM Sat-~llled a mutt 752~094 ttlll In carton 722-1118 N9w mett,_, ~ oon-
24 1·7221 BOYS IMI\ l'IDLS No fOlding la required ment' Cell Lynn, Santa <=OmPIJt• a plus wiu •HOST/HOSTESS urdays&Sundays 10am __ _ _ Frigidaire Elite 24 eu dltlon, a125. 7 1·1111
HOUSEK EEPER 10-1$ """Q9\ ~~~:_car and P'oof AM 714-751·1771 'trel n Call betwaen • 4 f:f ~ll~o.'h~. MP~ YOUTH tt..wat• & le. dl19, wni Ul!eeell I '2)15
hrs/wk A M lnCdM rM'· 1J·11JUllU PAY SCALES VARY! lffllllUll,/f 1 llam·5Ptn F0t lntarvww call atta< '873-2268 oett lt1m, 2 yn old, xlnt __.._ ~ P«f«:t tor Mom TURN YOUASPARETIME Fnl pec.d ottlcle tinwon-1 tam. (213) 489-1333 COUNSELORS cond 1850 875-2844 1-WAV «round ........
of ~ chll<lr!' INTO U OOlLARS_ • •Huntington 8eactl ment IMtt• mature Ind•· DAILY PILOT °' 17 '4ly72A5l"°!77 SllPPll/IHllVH I SUB-ZERO ratrlQlfrMUr, Dell-. depart 5126, ,..
Exp. req. 71~4" • Fountal.n Valley vldual Ptat .. nl phone llT" " UPS •KP prer Apply 8am-2 units. 38•72'' aactl. tum open, S 100 teOf\..,
HOUMkeeper/Nanny PIT WORK AF'TER SCHOOL volea. Iha tvi>lnQ Contact' l1M•2-4111 Rest~rante 3pm. Mec:Grtg0t Vaet1t1 We have Challen(llng po1-Was In custom home. 1 obo. 780-0812 Ml a• 24 h,.. wtt In Na reat-ANO SATURDAYS GET· Clll JC>Wlne Creney Robin Lewfi . 722·9588 bl ter Oltal•i FM OlllWIS 1631 Plt0tnt1a, C M lllona open for Hll-$1300 760-9757, evu a Diamond r1ng, K K. • d•n~. Sal rng from TING NEW CUSTOMERS OFFICE CLERK Lt typ;ng,, 11 ~~tntly lntar.rlawjng llYO lntllHT motivated people 10 wllnd1 IHl4-8900 da~ $ t,Ofl&; _, lllOloM.
S100-.S150 Wit Send r• FOR A LOCAL NEWS. (l1•)U2·1"4 1111 phon" tor plant· t or d ining r oom Eicp w/referenoea Set• supervise tten•gera in --PMrt ring, eprl311; ... eurne to Ad#140 C/O . PAPER NO DELIVERY IC~ '° Flex daytime Wa1trtSM• Apply •fter oll Great btne!lls the newspaper promo-Furniture 601 4 $275/obo. call -....
Oalty Piiot, PO Box 15e0. IN\101.VEO, ANO ALL HUITlllTOI 10-15 hraiwk 7&1·2271 ----10am to 3801 E Coast $375/week Corona del uonal lleld 983-025" eo.ta Mtea CA 929H TRANS P 0 AT AT I 0 N __ _ Phone W0<k
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......_ ____ ,-,,... PROVIDED BY 'AN Ottic.M•nag« Sm 1glrl Hwy ,Corona del Mar Mat CM4_·7l51 Guaran1Md1ncomeo1 IFootbOard wlth ralls, • Exerblke&rowMMNne. HOi\JSEKEEPER sHk• A.DUL T SUPERVISOR , IUCH _ ottlce at JWA Organlted, ¥111lS Aetaff &TAT-E FAAM-1'gent J I q~ t12e a T95" 840·~ itlnr~ 1751• ~ :~~~~:-: YOU CAN AVERAGE llDEPEllEIT s~~ !, 7:M:7e Sir lllllEWIYES IF~.~!i'?~~~~~ll & ~~~~n ~·-:.~~:!; $400 per •••k I EDAR CHESTS . ~5~~~.:=.'f =~~~~52 Rounna, $JS IEWSPIPEI WFIOlllUlll llHILllllTEIS g111 sto<• ca11873-7714 peraon 55~·1t15 fO lflrf H~~ .. c~=~ngF~ F~·1:.E~ft·:.=;
HOUS&KEEPER wanled. Coala M ... law nrm Mella !R•tall Ottlce Equipment TIJOlfl Into call 778-11144 drapea a' 1cin8 ..,,.ed·
wom.n to llve in Privll• S>erlOn tor edmrn11trallve Part Pt:;e~uy work "~, Sales Oellvtry. Fu1Hl"'41 Pr•·tchOOlltoddler P 1T With potential lor $1000 CHINESE Cor~ndl•
11
25. ~ '
room, bath and ealary. OR MORE dvtlet a peraonn4M man-°' exp ~ days Clean OMV ptint FI T M-F ~ tctlool per W9tk. Theee po1-bt tit lly
•&44-U lO• ao-nenf Of 1 P'lflon IOP-!~2 ... 3H2°;'r1l,.1 • 43o;'u~ out . Compeny vehicle UCI Campus 854-6030 lllofll are p.wmeMnt and ~~~non bot~ueioe'! e • WIL.lm. . _...,,.....-=-:,,., lllMIPlUTI port 11 a ff Other -fllc.ltent t>enelna 09·1 otter an axceti.ot oP· '5000 •I lllf MOTHER'S HE'LPER MAINTENANCE PI T rHpona1bllltlH to In· 228 Weit 1<><1>119 Uk portun11y !of 1dvanc;a-Te4erro":k•.ting I portunityl0t gf01Wthtno ~an.ls 5~~~~7 h • ..._. n••dtd approic 8 10 5"8-tSl5 ciuo. A.IP AIR, purchat-tor Cryttal Of Ban rMnt Apply in PW•on rap.a adv~t in tiaryn __ Fortreae t r.. ....
hra/wk, Bal boa 11 INFO~~~~~~ALL Ing Minimum 3 Y'• rel-PllYlTIPllTWFIOl Mon· Fri Hpm ITllEITS aur~ van. wtgon or CUSTOM 30"X30' coll .. ~c:Nlr·Llce~
$8.00/hr. Outgoing, Engl (t 1•) •••11tl llTIW UlllGAPI avant experience re-PfT No P nee Start $6 FllflWlY STllH w•lrWIYEI 1ar99 tedan Is r9Quortd 1ao1e w beYaltd glaM char ~ IPtMlnO 723....()511 • --lllllTllAlll QUjred as wall .. good •x $ 30 8Nd c ....-SWI Lota 01 opc>ortunll) 10 $7!1 5"' rr.zer S150 ger, FT/PT. _.... dnvtng ,.. lnl•rper1ona1 & com· hour Mon-Fri 1• 27oe Hatl>Of ostt llllLllmll QfoW wtlti u1 No •• K•ng I htedbo.rd dark ftlp UR wm ,..._ 5530 """"" 1 tie! municauon 1klll1 Send Call Sam, «M2"62112 NB M"a perlence necessary. we WOOd $100 121-8759 714/....,. ~ _ ..,w.m "°'"· "'l:.~ .... ~·~~~:'.. •• •• i"r° •• ~1 -D1.n1 * uuu ..... 1n • .., '"""· -.... AM ..,,,,... . cusroM MAoe co•: 1111n,. 1111 IUl. llflTI L.-..u Lg ~blntt Mfg Miking --c!,1' Or Sta 410 C M FIT M·F 7 30am-4pm II you are hignty ambitious, or PM No e11p neces..
1
TOUR CHAIR, 11 brwn, LIKE NEW.* llS &llllfll'T cabinet 1n1tallera w/at W lllllL I . C :;,28 • 5/Hr. beneht• No exp nerd working desire ary Hovrty • Bonu1 To actltdule en in ervoew muaege Mal.
2
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548
~
FOf °'*' HOUMI Cuttorn IN.It 3yr•••P Mual have OIU.lll ITmlll A nee Apply In person, WHIU'I & your O!Yn bUSI· M 2....a21 &.1 4-31 Of and find OUI >'OU' M fnlng Wu $4000. HCTlflc• ~---=~...,,,.,,=~=
homta. Newport e..ch own trudl ~tools 11.ppty We><ll ~°' ma~ oil·~ Pllml Boole• on Tape. 729 neu call Mr Bonn 228 Wait fer Deep. aak potenllal s2500 8a..5093 SUM M ER WEOOINO at... Salary • eonim Tn PtflOO, 11~0 lndu1trlal ,..ny PIT aummer WOl'k •etHr Own lranapor-Farad St.CM 548-5525 *432·9275 tor Cryat•I or Ben . DRESS and hand bellded I W
_.. .. N co CA .. -. ..... • I -CALL •• ••on Ot>I Bed $50 ve1 .... t r• tiat veil 1400 obo. Mu1t llve coae ..,.. "..,.· Of • S15/Hr. (114)&45-18.,.. tltlon 722-0243 P/T IE•UL lfftOI SALES Earn S2000 to THRIFTY CAR RENTAL •.., djnar $40 Washer/Dr,., Laguna~ 497-'115 1 ands req'd 873-3777 Wllll/W.H OLDI .. llOlnUT puml/lllTu PllP Mornl~• flexlbl• near S20 000/mo Set your Hae •mrMd openings tor (2 t3)'477 ·3163 S 150 Frig $200 Tralh • • •111 ... Piii YIM' FfT parmanenl poaltlon ""' .. -I Harbor/Bak• 957-0414 o.m echedul• Be your tip Im cu1tomer1 eervloe compac s100 848-5848 Wedding. 0r .... brend
,_. F 10 7 Friendl N t lOITI NPJ • IUfffTllWlll --. -own boA Call 239·46 1 1 agentl PM 1Mt1lllell. new; Wht .. lln w/leea & , L~lng 1
°'; -:or .. ~~· ~ neiohbOrtwoJ ptl'*.I:-Genetal office dutlet. must Eicparlence only Ownl , /T WFIOE OUlll· 2•hr• recorded meH&Qe "'" Mull enjOy ~ng Mtm~rsNps 5 540 Wtly .. ()( .... th<>M un~Md beeda, ••• Pd a nso. . . . ~~-:: m:,~:C:.O'~;~la lo mecy ~·211 1 . • type 40-'45 wpm. I~ tratuaportatlon Nrar.ort 3.4 day1 p er week SALES , wl publlC Xlnt OMV a OUJll OllLooo lteMtlll•ewnler'? AOll9fl1M SK 5850 497·7310
the 11 , prOduct .... a oew ---corrnpondane. & PO• Btac;h arH S9 Hr Phone•. flllng. S8/Hr 'llAIOIH• ·--a mutt 15-8.00hr •tncen.-a la41ptagal81einc:leM'· ttaoa~~~ s15 Binion mw~~t Cell llYUllTlll'fll.UI lot Mita and acctg d• 87Mg12Eve5"Q-3340 Corona def Mar offlee _.., .. n~ uva1 & •Int t>en•flt• aml>trthlptorqle tied lledlaMOfeou:ltlng..,. M&-5148 8uk:conitructlon0tr00f· partment, l'leve tome --, CM0-81 10 Equllable Flnanclal • 549•9151 494-1474 "*IOn __ 1~ &IC.perlenea requ. red computer knowledge panies ""ant• to lnlen.iew r---_ _...:.. _ _,_ ______ ,. -... --. ,_..,.,..,... I STiii Mu.t ~..,. raliat>i. ear Anav.tf phonae tor 2 PllO "a&.m o.Tlll tnl.fM dua11 ,o market ~~<:'>~ N!t. PIT ~nter help CM5-8&45 people Non 1m<>'clng FIT M·F 7am-3 30pm, compet111ve proauct1 lncf ~~~~
---~ Beaci't office Pll•m•• S4 50/Hr, benefits No IMYrlnce, Mutual Fund• 1n.:1rr101 FIRST TllE =:'.:t~T =-Cltrtt fot em glftWt"ap mtg Call Cindy at 7$9-9531 PP nee Apply In person & Penalon Plans Man ~ 1 I •
w un • eo Type 45 wpm Com· tor appointment SIPE'"'lllR Books on Tape 729 egement Potential train-1ollallty Evening• • putw •xi> hlpfl PfT lo ' n• F.,ad St c M 5A&.S525 Ing program, salary ~ aovrensERS some weekend• Call FfT Can Jean 751-49t0 LOSlll .... TllT eommlwoo flftt 3 ytatl, .-n 11
Motor Roptes
751. 1500 aft• 10 ~am __ -For 11.p1 Community 1n Paint ahop In Irvine la loolt· IUL ESTATE bena1111. Collage 01
11 .. n ••y CHOIOll Newport eeacn FT. PP Ing IOf Paitnl S4.IPtMtOt ... equ1va1t1n1 bv .. nau ax· * -For l1111ury tetldtntlal eom· req'd Cell Jennifer exl)WltnCed In l1nlah1ng Fm TIAJ C*itnt• Mlpl\JI Irvine a Fam at WCKd Ptrlect o' munlly In Newport Beech. 41e-a220 ot compulef parts Job Limited opportunity to jOln Century City loc;attont
Multi-Mat• OOOd typ.ng Call 0..11AM 180-3050 duties include national r•I estate m f · Call Mary 1141833-SI 11 ab•llty Profleltf"t 1n Mt· _ _ ---t.mlml Mtm kehng •tam """,, ",,_ Equal Ol>i)ty Employef
ting up & td111ng bualn-. Mimi 111.P GrM I Payt >Ont OMV •1 • Suparv111on llm•ted earnings For ln-
lettere Linda 4?6-3220 Oryelffn.tl oeed1 ell-must Experlenoad 0.-•Prac>ataUon of p&111 l0tma11on calf PETE v1. Secra1aty FIT wrkng with
-per~ °' I ttaln pendeble 5'2·8387 •Scntduhng OTIO at SELECT MIS/Teiacommumcallon Sll,llO/...-n Mon·Frt FIT etart SS 00 •Anal finish I BEnEA HOMES & I mgra Mac;Jn1ost1 MocrO· II yau have the C:OUr8Qe 10 CM2·5"Se aak IOf Tammi .. IO&l p /T GARDENS soh W0td & Exc;et pref
can n c;ould m11t.e ~04.I ---:. ---M 1~ E.llpanence Nec:...ary REAL ESTATE 751.5000 848-57~ •itl 3~ ric;h' 24 HOUR RECO 0. H U VUY lllYEI P /T •Ton-a '
NO 991-2837 For dental lab Moo-Fri • uea.,... .. 11 1'1f _ _,NMI __________ _,
Mua1u•ownc:ar S+ml •Thln1-I JllllPllJ,""', V D L T P~~lfJ=I of ~~Y c2~1~..=port ;:~tJc:,baek ofc sathr
17~~~4~=rs~ne VCLERICAL & INDUSTRIAL
accounting "91pful FleJC· " • · _ For appl, Lynn 721~788 CIAU ,.,, • W#ll .,....,,,,, 10
,. tlOUrt APJ>IY Pen · ••IYllS lllHI* •lllOAl llOIPTllllST 3848 Campus Dr . • 106 Across nyuver. l860 Ptacenlla For .. 1at>ll1ri.<S courltf lmmed CIC*'llng FfT Min RECYCLE Flt>m oc AirPort (714)152·1MO
Ave · Coett M... rOY~ r:.eedr & ':;' =~ 2 yr• e:xp • must Xlnl 28570 Marguerue Pkwy •226
&MlllTUTIYI UST ee........ 1 ., ptlon• .a111a req d oeov through the TU itPOAAlllY MISSION v1£JO FUhlon llland Exp pat
1
• t•tt. m ..... pad hol· a F.,-t1Uty Gr0tip CoSta DAIL y PILOT I UIVICH (714) 114-1182
tOt\ FIT us-9143 , ~~ ~=~~~Y ~ 5"0-d22 Classified Pages
car rout .. avall Current Haw•IJ'lfaoa .... wttl'loul Turn unwanted llYEITlllll
SILES
OMV report & proof of Ina the o-raoa .... your n..,,. Items Into
req'd Appfy It W9St•n In ~ mOh""'" t~su.I Stal" Cour*. 17805 ..-_...__ _____ "1 v 1 uu 1
Skypat11 Clrde, Sta E. ~~~~~~~;:~~!!!!~!!~~ lrvtfl.9 281· 1833 ~
T"-Oalty Pll01 and '"* ,. T~o Off~• Club
p-ancten1 Htlc• •ic· setka enthua1 aa11c ~leneed tdv .. • people lo ..tc as'* •tr .... peraon to ioen tlll)atlding ~ ienotr & DUt Plt'IO(I
ttatf NJ MIU Of print F1t11 hf• 726-49'41 background prat.,rtd
Luc:ratlve ~tlOfl E~ Stuff ... Nb tXO
pectiege. p-.. can or nee. Fut ot p11 ~ F0tl Mnd r-.ume to mew• lt\for~1oon a epc>U·
cation Mrld ..,. to P o DAl Y PlOT !;:J490 o...tbOtn Ml
330 w • .,. SI FLllllT, /T
Coa. ..._. CA 02t27 w.-tnde X1M OPC>ty to
Attn Und•Cat• IM1n N 8 8'4·1~13 (11') .. 2 .... 3l1
••SUYIOI .,,.,,. 0C Falfaround• c;11t•er AlllHI l\zbl WAJI Medi P'TI" l'letp All
Tr..,,_ No txpetienot poaitiona e11ell~blt Cell
Tr.wl & Mm b'O mon.v to m:3.pm S..6·4•67 E#n _... ~ leatn •rn· -=---~~-,----11 ~ ~· rr .. GiMiafOtf!Qi Cell Ctown Agency
2131t 1M143
11 to 16 Yeara Old
WO•IC I VININOS
AND SATUIDAY
YOU CAN A VHAGI "I Wilk 17500
OR MORE
Run your Help
Wanted Ad in the
Daily Pilo t for one
week. If you don't fill
th~ positio n. run a
second w eek FREE!
For more info rmation.
ca ll Maria o r Angie,
642-5678.
ACROSS
1 Sal '>41 dtOO
s l"""' 9 P\111~'-
14 A""'"9
15 yew
18 f,_..IO<·
11 Mt Ha~"
18 <;w u r•-
19 o-w.gn1
20 Ktn Of fife
21 Joi
,3 fJ14 tO U'J ,, Ct•
16 Handcul1
28 M&Orld M rs
29 W&Jll** 33 PMO<wna
38 Exam llWWef
37 Exclafnation
• Theo.ti
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401.11~ ., SciOn
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11em
46 C.:-"'9
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13 ~•I IO AVQ
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30 h••roie 31 ...... ~
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111•11 1lfil D•dlY 7:111• IU•
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Early mornin6 molar routl!:!' •"ailable
fu 1 h••·e de~ntlllble ··~icl anJ liabllil)
;,...rant'e.
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As a convenience to our Daily Pilot
customers We're Open Earlier and Stay
Open Later for New ads, Corrections
and Can cellations.
To Place Your
Daily Pilot Class/fled ,,....a.a
642 78
available 1n
W 11hni1st1r
Huntincto• ltlOh ·
Fount1in V•hJ
NO COLLECTING
NO SOLICITING
vfl! '"e One O~y a Wee"ll •
Mu'll 11a11e dependable c...r
l nd proof di insurance
C1ll 842-1444
A~k tor Joanne Craney
JS [)l~tcl'I
\6 '"' ll•bte t A.pt
40 " 42 Farm eound
OA~
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,.,.. ...... U .,2 ~INTl .. AIU... M·t4' -:,.... ...... LoW -A/C ---Adele 8'. ~. C.-,.....,. ...... ______ I ,._ ... --• f2I06 r Tilll llUI ....... ~ilt4-3758 080 Loed9dl Pll, Pll, eleclr1c John Mlnlchleflo, io4 -..C lmlll .-.. ~ ca.tt OI ~-. ...... &lo Mele It,. ANNIM. c..t. PICITml • ..... = County on ~ T~a CelCe OT '78 mlael X Int oond.I tatOI ...... 8TA~ N
epd, Qd 11W11 car. S11 --WtfldY Mlnlc:Mllo, 304 Til9 toloM'I,.,..,. we ... UINd 0teftl9 obo. '42·1518 (714)1310l64 =St .. A'*'91M. c.lit ~~-Qallw '91ot -I. fl,22. vw Golf 1911, d6eeel, TMe ~llMN 1e con-AIL we.uus. 115 t , ...
mpg, •·•PHd, 1/c ducted by hueoencht~.,.._ ~.: ~nonotOtl M-1
AM /F M . s 3, 2 o Tiie re9l1tr1nt com-oerea,.,..,,..,,.., 1151 ARWDml.D Of t57.o414 meno9d to lrlll'Met 11u• ~ Of Hunttnoton -----tl'------1 M .. .-... neee ""'* the 11c1111ou1 e.ct1 CeM 92M7 ,.._ ..,,_
---------1 bulll'9el neme °' namea T •e' II I 1Uta ... -Ill• PmUC ll)TICE llet9d •bOYe on May 9 1089 " bu ~ • con-PtemMMM .,.. ••
15m.••t1•12 1U.BS Aulol 9 . JoMMlnldffello ' ~4:'br.;r.~om-umnATI IT.
• 1!1•8111 ..... '15 BUICK CENTURY ti· fllCTITIOUe ....... 'Thia atetetnent wae flied tnenOed to ttanue1 but!-The tolowlno s-10na s.... -s.rvtce lion w ~c P/S NAm STATUmtfT w11ll the County Clefll of Or· Mii under the flctlUOUI ~ ...... Petti -L~ • IUMoof ~te ' rack The foltowlng pereone ere ange Coooly on May t , 1989 bueinest name or nemee A I.. CA81NETI , 18119
••I • 1J1 ' · doing buelnMI u F•tl12t u..ect lbOYe on Apt1I 24 WMNrlaton St, Foun1e
aa. .. & a -i-..a.. 1..n.a9 * SEA RAY 28' twin en-'85 NISS N PU • •• Exc•ll•n• condition SUPERIOR PROPERTIES, Publlthed Orenge COHI ,....... • v...,. Cellf t270I r~ rv-l1V"f glnes, rldat 11ch. re· --A • LSAR NX. $4500 875-7755 HtO WHt Oceanfront: Oeity p~ May lS, 22 29 71 .. ta Apll Sezenol, 2002
9 yr old brood mare & modeled to 1989 specs.~ Vans 9040 4~·900 ootmll~k AM/FSM. 1500SAuto ~ .. ,Or BUICK Century Limit Newpor1 Beec:ll, C•l•I 928'3 June 6• ·~811 -M-174 Thi• 1tetement WH llle<I Harbor .... ln .• Hunlif'9t
adorabl9 filly, both reg. 9axletraUer873-7877 ~~~tun~9 OOOenew II-anta "'na 198(),4-<IOO<,loaded,lo MeMn l . Reich, 6810 wllhthe~ntyClerkofOr· BMch,Cellf t 2Me
Arlblan1.mu•U•ll-mov-'85SCHOCKE1ect le N 1977 GMC VAN. runt 537-4521 OBO. 55 Fwy at Edinger mlle1g e S7 200 Weet Oceanfront, Newpott "8JC ll»TICE .,. County on Aptll 27 Tllila bualnHe 11 co ~:~~1;J::.bolhfor window curteln:. ·M~ &0CC:.·st!~~1;Je-~~95 -.85VolKSWAGENc -mO 7 DAYS I 83l-3084 • ~i.tCe11J·9=h. 84tO PICTITIOU8.,....H tNt P41tl41 ~'r.;'.~om
condition. $11 ,800. ---ABRIOLET M oon S SeMQe Hf9. MOn·Frl CADILLAC 1981 Sadan de Wul Oceanfront. ~port NAm ITATDll'NT Publlthed. 0rll'O' ~t menced to trenuc:t ··-m 876-4717 ~ak19~~ BU7S2. 2M"u3stt5sell t .pead, excel~~nt con: 7't)O am to t ·OO pm. VIiie. Fully loaded. E.xtr Beech, Cellf 92683 The lollowtno pertont we ~ Piiot May 8. f5. 22. 28. neu UIMW the llctlt
Fem, 10 mos. Brind'9 & '88 18' Biyflner, tr11ie(. ..... er. -.. dlllon.675-2804 · · cle1n. $3000 /ob Thi• butlneaa II con· dolnet>uelneetaa 19811 1x1MneM neme 0t
Whit• .. $350. 845-9788 cover. &.mini top. 95 HP. vw, Bu• ·79 very cleln, 844-8835 dU¢ted by • general pell· FASHIONS BY OENI~. M-148 !lated •bOYe on April 2
I ndl 'll 1••-11 Prl _ .. rlt I nerat\lp 725 Domingo Drlve, Ste 3. t~
FREETOGOODHOME:2 Mooring In water. x ntco Air condition, •-" •-I llAZl&'lllll CAOILL C 1982 E The reglatrant corn-Newporte..ch.Celit92eec> Apll&eunol Oeclswed cats. 1 Neu-675-1605. Asklno $5,000 AM/FM atereo, c111 Bronzltlpe~rl leathe< E.xoelt.nt condition new Oorado. atk blue, blue menc.cs to trentact bull· Lynn Wittie 7t5 Domingo TIWI atatement wu ll
tered, male, Hymallin. 1 comp+ete. . $3200 obo. 548-0720 Showrootn freshl(•05981) brlke•. 1u1pen1l~n & leather, Wlf•. tow mll• nett under the flct1t1oua Drive. Ste 3, Newport "8.IC NOTICE WlttltlMI County Clark of Or
Short haired fem11e. -. llLLlll .a..w.... l nlUH •THI tlr... 5-Speed. cuatom age. dleMI, dtgltal daah t>ullnell narM or nemq hech, Calif 112eeo anoe County on April 2 875 579 ... , , .. ,~.,.....s "exclullvely BMW" wheels. br1 & IOUll9fl. M300. 3-8203 1111ec:1 eboot9 on NIA Genie Green, 725 Doml· FICTITIOUa .,...., 1N9
• 7· 17' Aun1bou1. 35tip OIB, caassks -1540 Jamboree Road $4300 OBO 122-0441 MeMn l Aeool\ ngo Drive. St• 3. Newport NA.m 8TA~NT ~ " Fr.. to lovlng hom... $1100. Oya 5.A8·6 184 904 5 Newport Beach ---CAMERO • 1977 auto-This atetement waa hied 8eec:n. Clllt 92eec> The following '*'°"' 1te Pubfllhed Orange C0U D1nelub/Aottweller mix Eves 723-0154 1959 MORRIS Minor l.O·l4" MERCEDES 300 Turbo matte palpb new tires Vitlth the County Cterk of Or· Thia 1>U1tnea1 11 con-dOlno buatneu as: Da.lty P110t May 8. t5. 22. 211
pups. Black & Tin. PIP« s 1200 RebuOl engine DleMI _ 1983, excellent c:eaeite r8dio EXCEL. •noe County on April 26. ductec:t by. c:o-p.,,netl LUMEN ELECTRIC, 3001 1910
traloed. 845-4825 Spffd/~J Boats apart ( 19 7 w u E i 'II 'll '11 llO ll'I condition, 95k mllet. LENT CONDITION M~ 1989 The reglttrent com-AedhiU\191'1U9 Bldg 2 Suite M-t4'
SEAL POINT Hlmll1y11n 7016 846-7JOO _ Whl ;e, •slgn1I red, St3,000.&et·l325~-... 1$2250.962-&350. Publlahec:I Ore~~~~:::-°~ t;:~,1~C:S ~g~28Cotta M .. e. Callf1---------1
Kitten , regl1tered.
1
••• Ma._
1
_a_ 1977 CH'EVY M1llbu black ... The best colors Merced•• '89 280SL FORD Muttang '84 c:onv Dally Piiot Mey 8. 15. 22. 211 t>utlnet• netM or nemea S.rry A Fl0ten. 10 731 Et rta.IC TICE
1dorable. Himalayan --•" ....... , Classlc Excellent con-end the bHt prlceal Brown. two 1op1, air, 5 o. 5 spd. ale 111 power' 1989 llstec:t lbc)ve on NI A Centro. Fountain Velley '1C .......... --••
atud tvc ivlll. 650..()525 19' Trittar. 190.only 30 hrs dltlon On11'38'000 actull Before you buy. see automatic, mint Re-am/Im can xlnt c:ond' M-138 Lynn Wiiiia Calif 92708 ,., ..,.,. -new. $18,900. Call .SOI? miles Power t19'rlng I& Soulhern Callfornl1'1 co rd e S 2 0 . 0 0 0 $7500 aAS.30l8 Thta 111t~nt waa ltled Thia but1ne11 11 con· T ~~TATaMINT Muskal Instruments 985-2481 . brakes. automattc•tra,... cleanett caral 213-~41-6708 · rtB.IC NOTICE wi1h the County Clerk ot Of· ducted by an lndMdual he butJrw:: ::"'°"' are ~ mission Great car ·for , .. IUMIS llPHTI MERCEDES-BENZ 1982 JEEP-EAGLES enge County on Mey S, 1989 The reg111rent com-~ C II 402 16 h S C ov55 <a-/"'-.... /St grad ate M t t ......._ 30 n.. BEST DEAL "17MS mencec:t to trenteet Dull· ·
1
1. • ~Flu-le•. ""'P.ctw•.i·1--"'""'.....,•I-,.• UVUlS ora;gt II lu$3600. UI ... o ~ 1 1 _,_all St., Nwpt Bch 380 SL. Anthracite grey. GUARANTEED! FtCTITtoU8 9Ua.E81 Publllhed Orange Coest n ... under the lk:ttllout t4untlnoton Beach, Call! . ' : ... · 1022 eve or trade Id< IH HOO Very cleln 2 tops J 1 NA• ITATIMENT Oalty Pltot Ma 15. 22 211 bu 1 92&48 5012, open' hole.' hand • 'mini pick-up 54&-0202 • _ phone, extru. $28.ooO :O" fl~g-your bell The following persons are Junes \"9 'I · · lltt~!'~em:n "',.,;:1T': Edward Lemanski 402
mlde, Cooper tcale, 440 llWPT •SUP Tl 21' 'II llTllU's OBO. 650-7432 we~: beat 111 dMI end doing butlnelt u . M· 1&e 1984 • tt1h 81 •C. Hunhngton
pitch. $5000, 786-5537 Slll/.• • JJ•-IOll UmouJJnes 9050 IN STOCK ~ _ CLUB LIGHTING. 3520 w 8 A Flor hlctl, Celll 92648 ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;p;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;·;;;;;I · • • . MERCEDES BENZ 450SL .1111 ~tflOG ~ pine. Senta Ana Calll T~?1111,,,,:. wee lileO Thlt bu1lne11 11 con-Pianos & &nw ,.. '.85 CADILLAC atretoh lllT MALI 1975. blue/blue. excel-. JCCP EAGLE 112704 rtaJC ll)TIC[ with the County Clerk of Or· duct9d by an lndtvldlllll . r •-Misc, frw..:!......._ Limo. fully~. oood egu1ranl~ lo· beet 1ny le11t condition. priced 1o 32881 Camino Caplttrano Donald Carl Aelsehmen FICTITIOUI _,8 .. 11 engeCountyon Meyll 111811 The registrant com-6059 -..,......-..... , COf'dltlon $5000. leke bonaflde 89 INTEGRA · Mii $15,500 589-8119. SanJuanC-i>lttrano 5122 w Kent. Senta Ana NAmeTATEMINT ,41eou tneneed to transecc t>u11-
•YllT\_l_h_a._c•on•lole--P•lan..,o·.1 ,.__ over pymt WUI carry deal by S200. Offer exp 770-8084 · 411-1110 Calif 92704 The following peraona are Put>Uthed Orenge Coe11 ,_. u~ the llctillou•
Ebony. BeeotlfuL Tone. =c:4 r*'1 ·001 4 piper 980-8921 72 h~.afterpubllcauon •88560sL.Blk. l0tl(7411) Ottere'xp72hr1.1fterpub . ._,/r::.~~~~·~n1~. ~!~~ dolngbualneues Delly Pt1o1May15 22 211 ~~em:n O<Af>f":";:
Like N ew . $2000 '85 LINCOLN stretch .... su .. 11 '88190E.wht,S25K(2595) 112704 C~ARLIES CHIU RES· Junes 1989 1H9
494-1 4149 =CAMPER Limo ru11y ·1oaded ood AOl'IA '84300SD.57Kml.(6710) JOMPh MGG1n1ey, 44 13 r:-uRANl. 102 McFadden M·
175
EOWardLAmanlk1 , condition ssooo.· ~eke 1001 Quall SI. Npt Bch '85 500SEL. $28K (1028) AooMvell. Se111a Ana. Calll 112'::3 ~t e.ach. G:alll Thi• 11etement wu Iii.cl
Fltt OVer plct< up lruci<. over pym1 Wiii . cerry 112-2112 . '88 190E. 2.8 S26K (8275) 92703 Artalan Farmanfarmei 26 PUBllC N()TlC( with the County CWk ot Or·
T•• I.> ,. ' •
lv'ty equipped. X'lnl con-paper 960-8921 -· 88 Wgn. Whlte (8230) Thl9 t>us•n••• 11 con-Sneparagon 1rv1ne Ceht ll'O' County on Apnt 26 tjf11onl Andy 101 your FRlllS ducted by • ~al part-92714 . FICTITIOUI 9UatHe81 1989
UMll Like newt 837 8967 nerShlP p NAME ITATIMSNT F41"71 or 744-0'253. Misc. Vthldes . 9090 SHOP . The registrant com-llrlCll F1rmentarm11. 28 The follow!ng ~·are Pub!Wled Ofll'O' Cout ::=..,.~~:----=~':"!•--------GOVERNMENT SEIZED 414-NH ~ to tranMC1 bin•· ~mragon. lrvlne CeJil dOing butlneu.. Delly Piiot Mey •• 15. 22 29
Boats, Gtnei'lll 7011 vehicle• from $100 AT HOME' MGB 1977 eon .... rtlble. Mii unotf t~ 1ic:,111ou• Thia bu1ln•11 •• con· NEWPORT CONSIGN OE-1Nt
11· KITE. Good condhlon. F.ords · MercedH. Cor-• Clean. runs great. (C :t:O.~'bo~~ ~Pf'~ ducted by hutband end w1l1 ~~ ~ ~S:O M· l37
SS<Jo. 875-9814 Mocar~s/. vettet Chevya Surplus PETER ) S 2 3 0 0 . 1989 The r1g111rent com-Sh# Or • 2111••••••••• _ _,,_ _ _..,__:...· ---5coottn 00l8 Bu ye re Gul de ( 1) Make classified 84&-7700 MERCURY COUGAR '68 OoM1o Cet1 F ... tchmen menc«I to trenMC1 busl· a.~ori Dr me:' 1
d 1
18'0UFFIELQ.S5000. 805-887.6000 Ext advertising the best PORSCHE '78 e11 SC ESP warranty, 3K. mint. Thi• •tatement w .. '~ -under the tlcllttous Mar Cell! 92625 on• •
EXCELLENT CONDITION HONDA XR500 '83·-on S·22387 Very low Mlle a. Low book PP847-5416 wfththeCountyOlerkoiOr· :'i!t"':ov.'*': ~~~ M'aruyn Wooten, 912 HIRE * 673-2118 * • roa~ l\U tires. xlnt S900. --way to save time Whit et Black. .Alpina. MUSTANG 11H15. ortglnal A"1141.Cowttyoh Mey 9. 1919 27. 19" ......,. ... Alder PL ~ ~
• •FBEE* ---*848..fl0l8'* __ Autos lriiported 9100 and gasJ Botton Acoustic, Cllf· owner. r .. tOfad Mutt Pu 11 Or R= ArMlen Fermenlarmai Celt! 928e0
17 Speed boat, no engine. MOPED '84 MAS (red) 1971 FIAT SPIDER New l~ily Pilof ford, Xlra tutp. Mint Con· ... , Greet gr1du1tlon Deity ~P~ey 7 22 29 Th:1 11e1ement w•• flied ~':, .!?_ueiness
11 e~
tr1llefneedswork.lloats. Great o.ondlllonl $300 tnn&tlres.SllOO.'Leave dltlon Must Seell preaentl $5800/obo Ju,,.s 11189 ' · wllhtheCountyClerkot O<-Th VJ ~t ,..,
24&-9654 848-5755 -.. M...ag&-63!-5487 142-1171 $21,000 875-3381 840-5675. 777-op67 M-170 = COunty on ,Apr" 27 ·~ r~: :,~:C. ci:,r::•········
through classified
17071 E. Imperial Hwy.-Yorba Linda'. Cahfotnia
-. .
·THE BEST BUYS
1.N ORANGE COUNTY
·· AAE ON THIS PAGE
.. CALL ONE . N·ow1 ...
o. SADDLEBACK ·.
Sales
Le a sing
Service
Parts
• IRVINE AUTO CENTER
1-aoo-aa1-aan 114-380-1200
'\
~oU._th Count\v: YkiSWllEI 111 ISIZU
IP m
• PAITS °'91 SATUIDAYS •
• SBYICI ONN MONDAY NIGHTS •
& S A~~Y.IL~~G $ 0 NEW LOCATION! .
<
1500 Auto5~Ji~.N/.~f.TRn~~LL 135-3171 ·
Newport/55 Fwy. at Ed inger s.... Oep1 operi 7 ,dayt S4IMce HOurt M·F' 7-tpm
BUfNA
p~~I<
S TANT l"4
Pwtt Se1 ..... 3om
PACIFIC
OCEAN
... ..
•NO HASSELS
. • NO OVE.RPRICING
• OLDSMOBILE
• CADILLAC
• QMCTRUCKS
ru/582 -0800
SAN DIEGO FWY AVERY EXIT LAGUAA NIGUEL
AllY1rti11 11 Tllia P111
C1ll for ht•ll•
CA8.1&-~~ESE
DEALERS FOR THE BEST BUY
0 HOU S~~J}h\!'~JiIS, Inc.
2 Manchnter BoulcvanJ
Buena Park c
~SUPERIOR @I •
• t L CAMPBfl I
NISSAN/~~
• Lew fltoeet • H9 Gtfnmtclu • GfM• S i.ctiol'I
1 Fr .. l"d ly ,..,... • lac•fl•nt S.t••<•
lllU.._.larit a 4 Ml .. "' .._.
..
The ..,,.... of ~1dm•111\ Ho One to the OMvtew Ae0e4ll0~1t =to ...,.... ,_ ~ on .,. ~ of tu
.......... wt"dl ,,._. be aloceted tO the tM)UftO'on a.ari Red• ll~lt • r..-..,_,._,. II'* 11 1 tor ~ !he purpoeee-' lt* Protect llt'°9 IM eidsllfll limitation. wNdl ttlpulal .. tn.t tM ~ tJWlf not colect mew."'-' tH0,000 In tu
lnorefNt'tl NWrW during errr one flee.II ~. doM not Pfol/ICM ~ f11n01nO IN wccm'IA ~of the put*
.,,.,,....,. ..... pr~ PtoPONd '°' ..,.. Profect
THI AM£H0£0 M~L~ENT Pl.AN WILL NOT CHAl'fQE THE OAIG.IHA\. P~ ~ IOUHO'-AtES OA 'THE ORIGINAL
MSTNCTIONS ON EMIHENT OOM .. N •
TM genetel goelt and ot>jectiw. of the PfOC>OMd ~911910i>IT*'t Projeet we
A TM ~°' enW~ ~WllNn the Projeet Ar ... ~~· publle ~~IL I TM ~ pteoning, redeeogn rep6ennlng, d.-4 .. apment, reconetructlOf\, Of r~ of the Profect At• wNcfl WOUid ~·• hlot* Md 1>9tt• utlflullon of the Projed ArM end 1"-90YC011trlbute to the putMlc hMltt\, ~.end W91tar•
C Iner .... and lrnpf'OY-e the avell•blllty of hOVeing ~unltlee wffNn the Projed AIM ·
0 Alele1 In tne flnenctno, rec:en.tructlon llOO/or oonetruction of curbe, guttara, aidew.ikt. wat• dl9trlbu11on 11nee.--oe lfentmlalon llnee. flood corttlo4 impf~ts. ano ou-,__..,., putMlc lrnpf~ •
I. PrOlltde ~i...fOf property owner. opetltort of bueineelel, end t-ta lO ~te In the upvredlng of the Protect ArM
F 8trengtnen trie econotftlc beM ol the Pro,ect ArM '?1 atvnutat.ng new 9mp!Oyment end ecooomlc growth
A legll c:leectlptlOn ot the Proiect Ar .. ooundanee 11 ett.cn.d nwelo u ~1111>11 A for lnform•tton.I ~ • "'tlP lhOwlng the
ioc.tton end bounderlM ol the Pro,ect Ar• •• •tteahed hereto 11 Eichll>lt 8 ·
Anr Ind II lnt••ted '*'°"' mey lnapect and upon pe'f!Ntll of the coei.. of reproduction. ot>tlln ~ of the Amended
Aedeullosime11t "°'1rtOI Plan. end eny other Information pertelnlno !Nreto at the omo. of the City ci.ti. City H.•. 2000 Main Street. Huntln(lton 8-cll -Ctlllforn11
The ~~I Aoency nu l<IOQlecl Rulea Govemlng Partlctpetlon end Pref•encet by Ownen, Operetort of ~-IOd
Tenen11" tor the putpoae of tmp1emen11ng thOM 1 .. tur• of the Ameonded Aedeo1topmen1 pten Pf~ for pertldpetton by Slf'OC*'IY
OWMl'I and OCCUS*!lt In Ille Ptoiect ArM Coplet Of Mid Nlel .,. evlillt>le lor publtc lnepectlon ., IM ~ °' ,,... City CWll
Thie Notice Is Plll>llSl\90 c>u<want to tile ore.< or '"• City Council 'ol the City of Huntington e.ectl and tile Huntington lkaGh
A90evetoe>ment AQ411'CY
Oeted May • 1989
PubblNCS Ofenge Coast Dally P1lo1 t.4•Y I 15 22, 29, 1889
EXHIBIT A
ca.. MOCtCWAY, cm cua.
CITY Of HUNTINOTC* MACH
LEGAL DESCRIPTION-OAKVIEW AREA PROJ•CT
8£'.L sit~
MANDRELL
z
I ..J
i-
t u 3§
...
M IS4
g
m
:t:
(.)
~ Cl)
AMENDMENT NO. ONE TO THE OAKVIEW REDEVELOPME~T PROJECT
Project Area Map
••• Pro~t Area Bola'ldaries
•
'
Or..-COMt DAILY PtLOTIMoftcl9f, Mir a. .. •
...
'
-or._..0out DAILY PILOT/~. Mey 22, 1Mt •
by BH Keane COUJlfTER CUL TUJtE by Maratta & Maratta BLOOll COUNTY -. -
J'
r ARLO AND JANIS
"Daddy's in the kitchen fallin '
off his diet. n
llARMADUKE by Brad Anderson
··1 was afraid this would happen when I got
a car phone!"
PEANUl.rs
-
DENNIS THE MENACE
i
i
I
I ..
1 I
by Hank Ketcham
J
t
~ ~n. ---__ ---... ~~ ~
CAN 1 STAY OVER HERE RR A FEW UA"'t'S? MY 0&.D IS iRYIM' TO 61\IE UP SMOt<lNG. 4
'(ES, MJi.AM .. 11VE 6EEN READING
ABOUT Ti-115 VIOLINIST ..
WMEN SHE WAS EIGHT '1'EAR5 ~
OLD, ~ER TEACMEF. SAID,\' "1'0U
AA.VE LEARNED SO MOCH T~ERE IS
NOrnrN6 M~E I CAN TEACH YOU ,,
by Charles M. Schulz ·
NOT QUITE T~E SAME WIT~
'{OU AND I. ~U~. MA'AM?
GARFIELD
nw THIS Nf.W CAI F"OOV, C.ARF'IEt..P
TUMBLEWEEDS
&A£7,A~E:R ~LJt.t..,~ll\J6 ~AY.
.
1"HAl\JK ~WE'VE
OO'f1HE ~eKLV
mmP~ -ro ~we'le
1}{E 1'Wll.M.
DRAllBLE
by Jim Davis
YOO WOOLPN"f
t<IC' AeOOT TMAi,
WOOLP YOO?
by Tom K. Ryan
by Kevin Fagan
'tOO'VEGOT
IT ~ADE '
FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE
SHOE
WHAT W ~ ro """f I .MT TAKE. IT
WI™ 1l4E O~D OIL? AROVNP ~
JUDGE PARKER
DGFl~F.: THE FOllOWING :
l0MNOf~NG. ii 1b IURN IT IJ ON I uusr
WANNA Sn" IN FRONT . OFff
/
DOONESBURY by Garry Trudeau
~/QA)~~!\-
• INKJ PO£Jnt:s MO£ Hes
}l/1@t/)I ~~ ~~
~ 7HIN66 HA~ !JUN 60IN6 70 HILi, IN A HAMJ· IJA5K6rl
by Jimmy Johnson
by Lynn Johnston
I 'u. Cq1E ~ O'c::.~=Rrl
~ING'Tl-E
~lllNll.. COMMeR<:IAL
by-jeff MacNelly
by Harold le Doux
by Tom Batiuk
.....
U •f