HomeMy WebLinkAbout1989-07-05 - Orange Coast Pilot.
Helping Tennis Abortion New ·
hand for veterans backers postal
Laguna tear up fear the chief
artist grass worst '-...._ • CdM 1n •
' ARTS/A JO SPORTS/Bl WORLD/A4 ' 'NEIGHBORS/ A 7
THE OR ANGE COAST . . 25CENTS
WEDNESDAY, JULY 5. 1989
C.rash cancels fireworks at Fiesta
Motorcycle ·fatality mars otherwise peaceful 4th celebration emergency command post in the
parking lot behind City Hall in
anticipation of raucous rcvelcn that
tend to gravitate toward the Pcnin·
su\a. ly LESLIE EARNEST
OI' .... 0...,.. ,... SW!'
What was hailed as the county's
laraest free community fireworks
show was squelched Tuesday when a
truck delivering fireworks for the
Fountain Valley Fiesta crashed on
the Grapevine.
Officials enlisted Orange Coun1y
Sheriff Dcpanmcnt hclicoptcn to
"
Parade
draws
crowd,
cheers
9y R. LANCE IGNON
They came dressed in shorts. T-
shirts and bathing suits1 brows
shaded with visors. noses oiled with
sunscrttn. 'They carried ice chests.
foldina chairs, bags of food.
noisemakers and i~fants.
They lined a mile-and-a-half of
streets in Huntington Beach. all
2.S0,000 of'lhem. hooting. hollering
Flag-waving burning
Issue on Coast, See A3
' and clapping for nearly three hours
as the 8.5th annual Fo urth or July
parade lum'bcrcd past.
announce the bad news 10 celebrants
who had come 10 Mile Square Park
for the carnival and "Independence
Day Clttravaganza."
"It's been cancrlcd,'' a Fountain
Valley Polict-Department dis-
patchi;;r $aid Tuesday cven1n&-"Tbe
helicopter went over the park. we
put it on radio stalions and we had
offi«rs with loud spcakcn going
through the park."
The crowd was obviously disap..
poin1ed, the dispatcher said.
Later in 1he evening, an accidenl
in Newport Beach in the area of
Ford Road and MacArlhur
Boulevard took the life of a motor-
cyclist who colljded with a pickup
truck which was making a U 1um.
according to Lt Tim Newman of the
Newport Beach Police Ocpartmen1.
"The solo motorCyclist was killed
as a result of injuries suffered in lhe
collision," Newman said.
And in Huntington Beach, a rela·
1i vety quiet beach afternoon was
mamd when a male was stabbed in
lhe torso Tuesday night. The victim
was 1.alten lo Fountain Valley
trauma center. according 10 Hunt-
ington Beach Sgt. Mike Relic. No
other de1ails were available, he said.
"We had a slabbing down at the
beach and they're brinsing in at leas1
two gu ys for question1n1 and that's
all I know,·· Relic said.
In Ne""·pon Beach. where last year
224 people were arrested and J.000
ti ckets ""·ere issu~ in a 1wo-day
period. officers had braced them·
selves for fireworks of a different
kind.
Approximately 150 officers were
on hand as the dcpanmcn1 set up an
...,._,.......,..,....._. The regulars were there. The
Shrinen and their goo-fy assortment
of entrants: men on motorscootcn,
men on motorcycles, men in minia-Noelene HMl'lson gitts Into th• p•tr lotk splrtt of Huntington Be acft's P'ourth of Jul7 p•r•d•. More p hotos on AJ.
ture Modcl·Ts, men in day-glow forms for waving beauties and
dune bup,ics -all of them having themes of commerce, good will and
a r<?llicktng aood ti~c. . lndcpcndcl)ce Day. Elabor11ely
S1lvCfl batons tWJr.led high . over dressed riders on elaborately dressed
head a~1d-1.he Teutonic thumping of hones nashed fancy smiles while
march1na bands and 1hc backbeat of their animals lefi odiferous rcmem-
a rhythm and blues enxmb)t._8oats.........brancc:s on the asphalL
of varyiftlloph1stication made plat· Celebrities and Hun1ing1on Beach
-poli1icians W8\'ed from the rear scats
of impressive autos. The parade·s
grand marshals -Leanna. Joy and
Mo nica Crttl. 17-year-old 1ripkts
from Fullerton ....... drew hearty ap-
plause. And whistles.
Fron1 law-ns-on-Main--Street were
jammed with onlooken., often hold-
ing colas or beer.
Police didn't bo1her enforcing
against public drinkina as long as no
one sot out of hand.
In short, a hearty slice of Ameri·
cana.
··1 like to celebrate my country.
and, um, I like to go 10 parades and
sec other people celebrate thal we
have a lot of freedom," said 10..year-
old Alicia Lapp as she sat on a Main
Street sidewalk watchina the parade
with her.: younger sister. Monica. ind
friend. Casey Caston.
f\1canwhile in Fountain Valky's
fP'feaM Sff P'ARAOl/ A21
Residents warned of construction fraud
ly JANIT Zl-RMAN °' ... ~ ..........
Helen Mason scrimped and saved
to renova1c her home of 30 years.
She forp:d aht9d with the project.,
despite' a rccc:nt layoff from her
dl)cleanina job.
A 90-CaJlcd handyman came lo
ber house, appnjsed the job and
11vc her an estimate, for which she
promptly pejd half -$320 -in
eath.
lbat .... the lall tbe 71 ·yeat~ld
Social Security recipient ever saw of
the money and the youna man she
,hired from a news~pcr advertise-
ment to ptint her «•lings and repair
woodwork and screens.
.. I didn't mean lo be gullible. but
aosh darn it, how is one 10 know?''
1he Cosla Mesa rcsiden1 asked. "He
had a nice business card and he
certainly acted like he knew whal he
was do1na."
Such is a common complaint. it
tctmL Cossa Mesa police have at
tea.\ two ca1e1 or unlicensed con-
tractors who took money without
ever performing lhc work. Dcl«tive
Jerry Hollowa~ said.
·Police have obta'ined an arfest
warrant-for John Choma. 33. the
man who alleacdly took Mason's
money in early March, but cannot
locate him, Holloway said.
A second man, David Hallock, 32,
was arrested last Wct"k jor allqedly
cashing a $981.25 deposit check for
a job on Killdeer Circle that he
never performed, Holk>way said.
Hallock wu booked for diversion of
money received for construction or
improvcmenls. a misdemeanor that
carries a maximum one year county
jail 1crm and $2,000 fine.
The State Contractors Lirense
Board also can levy fines against
fraudulenl contractors and a home
owner can seek relief in small claims
coun, he said.
MalOn, like many othcn., was not
aware of laws sovcmina home con·
struction.
Anyone pcrformina more than
$300 work on a home must have 1
COl)trac1or'1 li~nse, said Dennis
BishoP'· a supcrvisins deputy in the
boards Santa Ana· office.
A valics-11cen lC"·number can be
verified with a phone call to the
board, he said.
"Moat people spend mort time
pickina out a new suit than chcckina
out 1<>mconc who is aoina 10 work
on the biucst investment of their
life, their home," said Bishop, who
offered a few guidelintt for hirina a
contractor.
fl'to--,.AUD/Alf
As law breakers wctt picked up
during the day, they were taken lO .
the command post fOr booltlna to
eliminate O\'ercrowdina at the city
and county jails, accord.ins to pol~'"ia:.,_ __
spokesman Tim N"ewman-.:---N'"cwpo
Beach polite ofliccn., who NcWman
said have been workina 12-hour
(P'lene see HOUDAY/A.21
Hero loses
wallet
• 1n rescue
off pier
lty Ll!:SUE EARNEST
OI -a.., .... SUI!'
A Rialto man who jumped off the
Newport Pier to rncue a man fta.t·
ina face down in the wat.cr di~
covered after rctumina to the pier
that his wallet had ·been stoaen.
Marcos Rodriauez., believed to be
a 2)..ycar.old l..a&una Hills rcsklcnt,
ffuna hi{nsclf oJ'f the 20-fOOl·hjp
pier Monday into water apPrO•·
1mately 1 feet deep, accord1na lO
lifeguard supervisor Gordon Reed.
Rodriguez a~rently suffered in·
juriCSafter li ltt1~0011om and wu
Unable to right himself. Reed t1td.
Kevin Richards. 20, was the only
one in the crowd watchina from the
pier who responded when Rodriauci
bobbed to the surface and oontinued
noating face down.
"I wasn•t really quite sure whether
he was ?,kin.a Around or what he was
doing.' Ric.hards said. "Everybody
was sayina ·no, .no.· they didn't wanl
me 10 '6· I don't know wh11 tbey
were thinking. ..
Richards stripped off his shin, hat
and shoes before climbina the pier
rail andjumpin, into the water 7.5 to
I 00 yards from shore.
.. , cleaned out my pockets rear
quick riaht before I dove in." he
said.
Richards said he talked 10
Rodfiiucz-as he swam t.ck to shore.
tellina him when the waves were
about 10 break and assurina him he
would be OK. Later, he uid, he
learned Rodri&uct does not speak
Enalish.
A.odrigucz appeared di10rientod
and seemed unlblc to move"hi1 heed
or llrnbi;R.1Cfiards said. After towina
him part way in, Richards was
joined by lifeguards who pulled the
man the rest of the way to lafety.
Rodriauet was in serious con.
djtion at Hoag Hospital on Tueeday
at\cmoon. Ahhouab the h.W
would not disclote J;is injuries:. Reed
said the man a~ to have suf·
fcrcd a spinal iajury.
Rtchards said he didn•t U.ink
about lht hems he had ~ft on lhe
pier until paramcdk:s had arriwld.
When he rctutncd to the pier, he
ditc0vtred his wal~. whkh con·
-P,re-serv-atioA of-A is tef ie-Bu~f-alo-R-anc·h-orged ~;;;~;;~~-
rcdni,natcs the land use from busi· sianificancc wi ll be disc:usJCd as part With these desi1nations .. h would Richards came lookina for bil
M:M-indus.trial to residential will of lhc cnvirbnmental impact rcpon tak,c ~n a~! of God 1,0 tea; down the ~!~~didn't come in and• • •u-,
prompt The Irvine Co., owner of the and 1he decisions will be made ac-bu1ld1n&5. Luna said. 1 tetewcd • Ht 11t[ !Hi:. ---OI .... .._. ......
. °"'the -)0,....; tbe tit< ha& .._. bf.all!lto, an 01d Wcst.:.ty~ !illlnll eomDlttt with lnclianl and a funOiul mhhec:t who dniaMd 1he
-.,... fQr the city o(tmne. T...,., many _.,,.im -the
-OI bun red dQbctoftl btdld-
!!111 --by • -:::..= .......... _.,
.......... and Ford .... .... -...... ...,., ... ., _ __.
..... l&NCI..,.. in•._
• St t WI! trradtt1 hiflh-ri1t1 ...
Cl f I hliums.
Some ofthne p1s1ers-by know'thc
colorful history of the property. But more often than not, they are un·
aware ofi1. The Mte is s1ill common· i::lcd· the Buffalo Ranch property te the loc:alion or the Lanp
fiuncial P\ua there for about • -A __..roots .,Qup of Newport lllcli ud 1rvine rnidcnts art tryina
IO td.atc u many people •' Po"-"* abou1 the 1ite'1 pest 10 p in """°" In prnervins the Ns1ic
ltuililj ....
n. COMll Mid drians f'Mf an
IMM_.. pion --that
)tl2&• ............................... AS
• ''""' -... ..................... 117 !\ I r:r.•·"""""'"'"""""'" M 2 ............................. ,
propeny, to raze the structures to cor<Jil'\alY. Campini said. But sin« homC'S can.still t?t ~uilt-:--anlbody 1u:nJLt'n 1 Wlet.r ..
build condominiums-or-homes.. de. au-tround -1he h1stone-bu11dtl\IS, ~-•" t..___ -...__ -.t-··n1 0-of 1•· ,..-h' 1 · I Irvine senior planner Marie Luna Be 'd 0 I y '"""" ... '""''~-""" ... ~' • '"J'' _ '""' 1ic: ,., 1s onca Newport . oc.h res1 tnt ave an· ~ on t•· pl<t -~ •i+ = .l.t-1'n t•· m~-'"t of 1 I uid the Cil".I cn\lironmental imr\Act 1 d f ' .. a 1"' .. ...., ""'--'--"* ...., """"'" ... Y rv nt. J' -dcrmas. 1 V1erhnL_ ca er o t1,KO pres-h•'• ......_._ -• ---rtpon on 1ht acncral P'•n amtnd-. ..., I _, he -•·-But lrvThe city officials and ~~ ment declares lhe site has historical erv1t10n can1pi11gn , s wom ..... I Rod!icutL
. rncnUitivCS of The lrvinc Co. con· ilani(teanct. As a mull: )>lannefl 1tructurts will e,•cn1ually be forced. ..Tbiere were: a buncll of--•
lend this won't au1omadcally ha~ hl\'e fC'COmmcndtd to lhe Irvine Out · theft who •• w-. ..... Ill&
pen. City Council ihat the buHdinas be: Feedina her fear is the f.c1that1hc .. Thi• py waa dw °"" .., •
K.lthkcn Campini, Irvine Co. rcdcsianatcd u 1 historical ttSOurrt current tenants of the buildinp are wnt in to Wp laitL ..
spottnwoman, aaid plans Rw de--in 1he tt~ral plan's land elcmcni on a ycar-to-ytar lta)C wi th The , llic:lwdl .W M __.. • .....
vctopment of the site have not yet and dcs1sna1td 1n c11.is1ins historical Irvine o. sa.st to do •·-*'-..... been tolidififf, But u f\ature de-site in the cullural resources cJc.. "'Th.Ole of us who've been around "'Maybe rd._., willl 11.,
~'°Pmmt is plainotd. any historical mcn1. Luna 111id. .,.._ .. •ANCH/Alt .,, nrn -••It-.
GOOD MORNING
C-*s ................................. .
Crall'llWOfd ................. , ... , • ••••• •
o..t\ notke1...................... • ~ .................... AIO
-,llton........................... AJ ,.,.. ~ ........................ ""
C.,lrltale. .............................. "' ................................ :: ..... ""
P\Mt notkts, ...................... M
Soorta. ............................... 11-4
lV ~ ................... ~ ..... AIO --.. .... , ...... t·················· AS
,
fficer ends career
in Mesa; heads .to
Elaremont as chief •n. .,_ ....
A 31-year law enforcement career la CoetA MM& will 100D come to an
ciM1 tor C.pt. Robert Moody, but be
it ~ on to another department
IO complete his life's dream of be-
*'9iftl daief of police. MoOdy, ,., Will head the 70..
--Claremont Police Depart· -bllianina July 17. He was la.did .,Y city offici&l1 there a1 ••a eve IMW>il professional with a broad
HOLIDAY ... ~Al •ys. were aided by officien from ()raaee County Sheriffs Depart-
ment and the California Hi.ab~
Patrol.
.. Everybody's here," Newman
laid late Tuesday afternoon as about
C ball dozen youna men sat hand-
_,., on tbe pavement nearby.
-Vacations arc canceled. Everybody ,..,..a the Fourth of July."
Althouah there were reports of
Ede throwina at approximate~y 30 p.m. Tuetday, Newman said
holiday wu shapina up to be less
problematic than in the past.
"lt'1 busy," he said. .. But overall
I would describe it u beina a little lea bcctic than in previous years. ..
From 6 p.m. on, poUce blocked
motorists' access to the Peninsula
t-ween 32nd and 62nd streets,
iouda of Cout Hiabway.
.... ically, it's pidlocked with
~s." Newman said ... If we
~ to allow vehicles in, you
9ould.n 't be able to aet emc,..ency
ftbida in."
Tbc ~ty of arTCSts are al· led. 1udl u drunk in pub-
dri~ WMler the inftuence, · . However, weekend
included ... uh wtth a knife,
•DI pm in tbe car, beina under JM ialluence of PCP and vandaJj1m.
• MOii offmden are ftom out of the Newman sa.id. ' ~rom bavi• rad all the rq>orts hm dlic • eekend, prot.bly 98 P,er-... oltbe peoiple arrated don't live la ow commwlity," be said.
All rmds lad to Newport,"
"
added. "You come to
aad brW the law and your
either ICt arrested or set a
o.rilll IM IAerDoon. the Penin-
, ....... DO "-icr' than moat
~-~~ w 1 II eedt. The utUa1 c:rowcb
..... oa porcbet aad belconiet
ll8e Newport lloulmnt. flip
him boma. Yehida and
I ...
IMWedle.~•ton
--fll .... Md n>eb ~the I~ •icldal. hhi .. or
..... -...... tlnlln in and ofdle llidor. MN9 ._ 19ey -;_ .. Iii Corona. .,_. climbed oa rocti,
bate of experience."
Moody bas terVed as a captain
with the local department for more
than 20 ~ includina atinu in all
four divisions of poHce operations.
He also has served as actina police
chief.
He joined the depanmenl as a
reserve officer in l 9S6 and was
sworn in u a rqular officer the next
year.
"It was a small, quiet town but
with a lot of community involve-
ment and spirit.," said Moody, who
has watched.Costa Mesa more than
double in size from the 20,000 popu-
lation when he started.
"As large as we've JOtten, we still
tine a core of people in the city who
pulJ totether and really make things
happen," he added.
One of the mos\ reward.in& aspects
of bis Costa MC$l service, Moody
said, was watchlna his daughter,
Janie Walker, become a reserve of-
ficer in the same department.
Moody's a~pointmcnt ends a six-
montb, nationwide recruitment,
which netted 132 applications from
2S states. His last day in Costa Mesa
is JuJy 14.
He said he looks forward to indoc-
trinatina his ideas and philosophies
into his new job. One of those 1oals,
Moody said, will be updating the
computer system and adjusting to
Claremont's 11owth.
"Becoming chief is the next natu-
ral step from captain," he said. "It's
wllere TcI like to end my career
somewhere down the line.'
swam and sunned themselves on the
beach. BuJ&ina with passengers, the
Calalina Flyer lumbered in nearby.
While the curbs were lined with can. park:ina places could still be
found durins the afternoon.
A homeowner on Ocean
Boulevard said the crowds were
liahter than she expected.
"We were ~orried about evecyone
beinf able to park,•• said Gwen
Davacs, who had invited friends to
celebrate the 4th at her home. ••Thex
all a<>t parkina places in the street.·
••we were afl raised in Newport
and this is the liahteat I've ever seen
it. .. said Bob Manciet, a Mission
Viejo resident and one of Oevies' auesu.
But lif~ Keith Head, who
was tendina the Newport beaches for
the third year said crowds came
early and left when the breeze picked
up.
"Earlier today there were tons of
people,.. Head said. •"The wind
IC&J"CI them away in the late after-
noon."
Head, who had made no rescues
a1 of' S:30 p.m., said the crowds were
less boistcrou.s than in past ycars.-
••1t teem• like there was just as
many OI more people out but peoete were not as rambunctious," he said.
"There was not as much drinkinf
and a lot more people wavina flap.
••1 don't know if it's because I'm
look.ins for it or because it'• been in
the news," Head said, referrina to
the Supreme Courts recent rulina on flaa bumina. "But it seems like more
people arc thinkina about it now
that it's come up.••
. Around 11 p.m . Tuesday evcnin ..
an uhibitor from the Sawdust Festi-
val reponed that the OIC&r Meyer
Wider Mobile was involved in an
accident that involved four vehicles
on Glenn~ Street, between Leaion
Street and Park Avenue.
"Everybodv on ~ ltRICt was c:nckint up ~ he 1&1d. ••1t'1 a very
funny ~tuadorl. Nobody tot hurt. It
WU a fout<ar pile-.ap and tbe Olcar
~ Weuie Mobile wu lhe fOW'\b in line."
Ellewt.ere alona the Ora• coat. ~:=a=:=: tultdillld c.rowda U compared IO pMl ,..,..
PARADE .•.
front A 1
Mile Square Park, the seventh an-
nual Oranac County Fiesta wrapped
up a six-day stint with carnival
rides, a ·ses music show and an
Elvis impersonator.
A planned fireworks show. billed
as Orlftgc County's largest, was
canceled, however, after a truck car-
ryin& the fireworks got into an acci-
dent and failed to show up.
The bombs did burst in air above
Newport Dunes Aquatic Park. wh~rc
the facility cel~brated an onaomg
renovation with tbe biasest fire-
works shO'w in its history. said park
manaaer Charlie S. Yi\tcs.
The park spent SIS,000 on 1,033
firework~ shells to provide Newport
Beach with its only legal public
pyrotechnics display.
FRAUD
from At
The auttalo Ranch property on MacArthur
9oulevard wa1 the first commercial pro-
~ NM ,.._ ~ LH ... ,_
J•ct allowed on th• lrVln• Ranch and 11
now destined for redevelopment.
Ask for references, look at
previous jobs and talk to the con-
tractor's suppliers and suboontrac-
tors, Bishop said. It also is wise to
JCI an explicit description of the job,
mcluding start and stop dates, in
writing. RANCH
from A'
in Orange County for a Ion' time
would like to the sec buildings
saved, especially since it's (the coun·
ty's) centennial year." Vierling. a
native Orange County resident, said.
The buildings date back to the
1950s, when buffalo roamed the
fields of this Newport Harbor area.
In 1954, G~ne Clark, owner of the
world's largest privately owned herd
of bison, shipped about 100 of the
massive animals from Kansas and
located them on 115 acres leased
from The Irvine Co.
The Newport Harbor Buffalo
Ranch was born.
Clark opened the ranch to the
public and built an Old West village.
Families flocked to the site to sec the
buffalo and other animals, ride
horses and a miniature train, test
tractors and other equipment. watch
authentic American lndfaos doin&
native dances and cat "Buffalo
Burgers" with cowboys.
Even today, many babr boomcrs
fondly recall childhood visits to the
popular ranch. "We used t9 drive
from Santa Ana. through all the
bean fields and orange groves. and
we would stOP, b~ on the way. to
Laguna Beach, ~ said the 43-year-old
Vierling. now an intermediate
school teacher.
The adjacent land also served as
the set for several motion pictures.
such as ··Rin Tin Tin," and a
number of commercial advertise-
ments.
Sadly, the popular ranch was
closed by the landowner after only
five years and much of the frontier
village was demolished.
But in 1961, famed architect Wil-
liam Pereira acquired the land lease
and located his offices in the few
remaining buildin~ and renamed
the site Urbanus uarc.
A self-proclaim "barn freak,"
Pereira collected pieces of barns
from all over the country and added
them to the initial two-story barn
structure, forming the sprawlmg
configuration.
Pereira made the silo his private ·
study and is said to have produced
his master plans for the UCl cam·
pus, Newport Center and the sur-
roundin& area while look.in& out at
the vast land from the glass-encased
sild'\hal provided 11 360-dearcc view.
The master planner, who died in
I 98S, further constructed a circular
conctcte platform next to the build-
inas to serve as a helicopter landin&
pad for trips between hjs Newport
Harbor and Los Angeles offices.
In 1981, William Lansc, founder
and president of Lange Financial
Corp., purchased the buildinp.
Lanae updated and rertovated the
interior. but carefully retained the
oriainal rural exterior of the build·
inp he had come to love as a tenant
and clote friend of Pereira.
Uke Vierlia-. Lanae'• acquaint-
ance with the 111e belan u a youna
child JroWina up in Oranae Co"nty,
apeciftcally in Anaheim. laftle, alto 43, can recall stoppina
at the ltuft'alo Ranch site to tee the
animals and to ~t a drink of water
duri• ~le ride• to the beach .
"I was always mtngucd with this
location, as many people arc." he
sara. .
So iii the mid-I 970s, Lange talked
to Pereira about rcntin& space at
Urbanus Square so he could relocate
his property-marketing business
from Anaheim. Pereira took Lange
on as a tenant and developed a
personal rapport with tho younger
businessman, with whom he often
played chess in his silo-study.
"That's how we got to know each
other," Lange said.
Lange remembers that back then,
"from the si)o. you could literally
see down to the beach."
With such fond memotics. of the
rn ulti-talcnted, visionary Pereira.
Lange easily decided to preserve the
buildings when he took over own-
ership. Today, the structures house
his company and approl{imately 10
other businesses.
Some changes were made to the
inside of the buildinp. Most of the
interiors arc modem, decorated in
light, airy colors. ComP.utcrs are
found everywhere. The silo is used
as a storaae area. ·
But Lanae's conferencd room, the
ranch's former dinina room, retains
the same homey atmosphere that
existed back when buffillo buraers
were served there.
Dark wood paneling on the walls
and wood furniture uude warmth
and comfort. Reddish wooden shut·
tcrs cover windows.
The head of a l8J1C buffalo hangs
on the waU near the larae stone
fireplace. The animal reportedly
weiahed 2, 700 pounds. the prize
buffalo at the ranch. accordina to
Sheila Starnes. public relations di-
rector for Lange Financial Corp. 's
in-house a~ncy, Cambridae Com·
munications. Ltd.
Jn addition to preserving the old·
fashioned feel of the buildinp.
Lanae has retained a relaxed, down-
home attitude in doin& business. His
employees rqularly hold barbecues
and volleyball pmes outside, and
allow Tabitha, a cal, to wander
freely in the offices.
Tabitha was oriainally adopted to
take care of the rodents who flock in
from the field, but these days. she
prefers in11ead'to walk on desks and
peek from behind computers, ove~
scelna employees' work.
The fireplace in the conference
room is lighted on cold mornings to
keep meetings cozy.
"We like to keep it casual," Lange
said. "It fits our working environ-
ment. That's how Bill (Pereira) had
it."
The other businesses renting space
in the plaza have the same attitude,
Lange-said.
With such a comfortable work
atmosphere, Lange na.tu~ally wou.ld
like to keep the buildings as 1s,
forever. But as a tenant who respects
his landlord, Lange said he is neutral
on the citizens' preservation effort.
"I have m ixed emotions.'' Lange
said of the campaign. "I love the
buildings. but I respect property
rights.
"We're on leased ground with The
Irvine Co. They've been ucellent
landlords. We understand progress
has to ta~e r.tacc too. I believe m
compromise.
Ironically, the Buffalo Ranch rep-
resentca progreu when it was oria-
inally built. The ranch was the first
development al1owed on the Irvine
Ranch, accordjng to Judy Liebeck,
curator of thG-Irvine Historical Mu·
scum.
"ll is the first commercial ven·
ture," L;iebeck said. "It ushered in a
new age."
Liebeck has been helping Vierling
ask the community to voice their
support of preservation of the ranch
to Irvine City Council members.
The women have set up a mailin&
address for Friends of the Buffalo
Ranch, 1280 Bison Ave., Ste. 89-6,
Newport Beach, 92660, to which
supporters can send pn:printcd post-
cards with their vote of supPort.
And althou&)l the site is too youna
to be desianated a state historical
landmark. Viertina and Liebeck are
workina on local efforts to at least
mark the spot with a plaque.
.. This is all Irvine has to hold on
to," Newport Beach resident Jim
MeVicker said, u he videotaped the
old structures for a business projccL
"That was yesterday," he said,
~intina to the Lanae buildinas,
'and across the street is now and the
future." Ucbcck noted the quirky irony of
pretervina a site where the develop-
ment of the Jrvine-Nc~rt Harbor
area was drafted. "It s kind of
interestina that UCI was dcsipcd in
an old bem," she uid with 1 laqh.
And beware of giving deposits,
Bishop said. It is illegal for a con-
tractor to require more than $1 ,000
or IO percent of the estimate, which-
ever is cheaper, for a down payment.
If a materials deposit is required,
make out a joint check to the con-
tractor and his supplier so both
parties will have to endorse it,
Bishop warned.
"No one is immune from this," he
said. "We have doctors. lawyers and
Indian chiefs who get taken to the
cleaners like anyone else. Be aware
and really investigate before you
start spending t~ big-buek"S."
The trend of illcgiumate builders
seems to fluctuate with the seasons,
Bishop said. Such fraud is prevalent
in the summer, when days arc longer
and more people have work done on
their home. he said.
About one-third of the 200 cases
submitted monthly to the board's
Santa Ana office involve unlicensed
contractors who don't finish the job
or have poor workmanship, Bishop
said.
HERO
From At
pocket, but I'd definitely do it
apin," he said.
Richards' mother said when her
son returned from the beach Mon-
day he said he was pleased to have
helped Rodriaua but disappointed
about losina bis money, driver's
license, bank card and other items in
his wallcL
"He was eretty upset about that.
but he said 11 was worth it because
he thouaht the &':'Y prob~blX
wouldn't have made 11 otherwtse •
Patricia Richards said ... He'd do it
apjn. He just couldn't understand
how people could be like that when
there was a man who was obviously
drownina and they ukc the time to
steal his wallcL"
And Reed said Tuesday he felt
bad about the theft and that miybe
some amnaement could be made to
reimburse the youna man.
"He did a real aood job,·· Recd
said. "I fiau~ somehow we'll reim-
burse him someway:•
Just call 642-6086 ORANGE ........
COAST --· r'al
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don't you like? Call the number a)>on and your
messqe will be recorded, trantcribcd and de-
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The same 24-bour amwerina tervicie may be
uted to record let1etl to the edit.or on any topic.
Contributors to our Letten cohamn must include
their name and telephone number for verification.
Tell UI what'• Oil your mind.
VOLa,N0.1•
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Wffll Of'IOCI. II)' ""' U montl>ly
* Now Thru July 3 lst *
Amling's Annf versary Sale
Clrcul•llon
Til•pflen••
EVERY PLA.NT 21'-OFF -
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T Orange Coat DAILY PILOT/Wednaday, July 5, 1989
Flag-waving ·a burning issue on Independence Day i
ly R. LANCE IGNON
Wavina Old Glory has always
been pan of Fourth of July, but it
took on heightened meaning this
year following tht" recent Supreme
Court decisio11 upholding the right
to desecrate the flag.
Fla,-wavers of all 3£CS, shapes and
sizes ined the sidewalks of Hunt-
ington Beach for what has been
billed as the oldest Independence
Day parade west of 1hc Mississippi
Ri ver. ,
A few miles away in Costa Mesa.
a Vietnam veteran ·handed out frtt
flags at a fireworks stand on Harbor
Boulevard. Rick Byers guaranteed
the banners tO be fireproof, not
because they Wt"re treated .,.,•ith
chemicals but because he tacitly
threatened to beat up anyone who
dared despoil them.
"'I wonder w~t kind of reaction
you'd get if )'OU walked out there
and staned burning one." Hunt·
ington Beach resident Dave Stonier
mused as he watched lhe parade
pass down Main Street. "'I figure
people would be more upsct if )'OU
burned the flag than if you torched
the kid holdina it."
While Stonier was overstating the
point, there was no question that
feelings ran strong for the Stars and
Stripes. Two young parade entrants
from the Windwalker Young
Marines carried a large banner that
read: ··we don't burn the flag,. we
stand and salute it." A man tn an
antiQue auto beld up a cardboard
siin that said: ··suppon the flaa,"
"We all come out bere and think
positive about the flag," J0t Witcck
of Huntington Beach said. "If you
listen to everyone at tbis parade,
they'd probably do somethinJ. about
it (the Supreme Court decision)."
they would pr'obably have help
'.from President Bush, who backs a
constitutional amendrt}en.t bannina
flag desecration.
Not everyone who was celebrat1 ng
the country's birthday supponcd
such an amendment, however.
As Huntington Beach resident
Joel $pencer saw it, an amendment
simply i'sn't necessary. The vast ma-
jority of Americans have enormous
respect for the tricolor and don't
need a law barring them from burn-
ing it, he reasoned.
"It's rather redundant. If peo/,'lc
are 'oina to do something like 1 at
they re going to do it anyhow," said
Spencer, a real estate salesman who
recently ga\•e away 650 flags as a
sales promotion and patrioti c
gesture.
Dawod Kahn, a native of London.
England. who watched an Indepen -
dence Day parade for the first time.
had a similar opinion. Great Biitian
has no protection for the Union
Jack. but that doesn't mean thc
citizenry lovt"s it any less.
"Thal (the move to ban flag des;
ecration) to me highlights ... the
insecurity that American patriots
have," he sa.id. "We're just as patri-
otic."
WE DH 'T
Winner of the P•trlotlc TrophJ' w•• this float froM ttle city of 0r.,....
Dally Piiot photos
By Nick Souza
,.
f'tleM Wln4w•llc•r Yo~ MMlnes attow their patrlotflm .. tf1eJ ...-ctl In ltl• Huntington •••ch PMM•· l'trew0f'll1 suctl •• ""' •• , ......... 0r.,... c .. n ........
I 1 ll I 0 I ll \ I 11 I
Improvement
There's 1 new spirit. a new look and a new day
a-dlwni"4 at the Oasis Senior Ce nter. Newport
Beach's 11n 10 Corona dcl Mar. whether they like it
or noL And to a«cnt this new joy on Maraueritc
Avenue, the cily will soon s1an the din nyina in Phase .,
at-Sas--is-impFess-ive, -bt:J t-t-Aey've just begun
the dcd1C'a11on and dlh1encc-of ihe S(Rtors 1tn:m·
selves. organ11cd as Friends of Oasis. r
What the plan details is Yt't\at c_yrcy.ont.. aLO.JJ
has JT1pcd about for years. Oasis .,.,·as a school, nol a
senior ccn1cr. The multi-purpose room cannot serve
multi-purposes. The office should be near the pirllint
lot. and thc parkin~ lot should be doubled at ~a t.
There 11 waste motion. lack of plan, and a atneral
feel inA of disorpnitation tht" way the center 1s today. I of the new c ... p1nsion
and rcmodclina pfOll'lm,
approvtd Liit •'C'ek by
tbc City Council. .---11 - -For some rimr; now.
r·
I
.
• The plumbing works. The oldt"r you get the more
important lhc plumbina becomes -the ccn1cr's as
Yt-tll as rour own. For years. Ron Whitley. dim:1or of
the city s Parks. Bcachn and Rccration Dcp:1rt1ncnt.
was haunlcd by tht" calls about the plumbing of Oasis.
Rot~rootcn were routine. It seems that almost C\Cf)'
other room was a bathrQO m. bc-c'ausc the Senior
Center started out as an clementa ry school. Finally.
in. dc&pcratoin. Jhc city al!1hoti.!£LJ by-NtL<mer·
atton:-11-nd lllllillL'd an enurely new ma,ior omlc1 10
tht sewer system rcplacina the: old rorroclcd and
cloacd pipcs.
Unlike 01her c111es. notably Irvine, Friends h3s
no official status. In Irvine. the~ is a Senior Citizens
Council which reports dim:tly to the CiO' Council. In
Nc.,.,•pon Rench. tht· seniors 10 l~rouah the PB&R
Department. .,.,·h1ch a«ounts for the ftct that for its
first 10 years or so. tht" center was administered hL a tcnnfs-suprn'isor. The-PB&'~dtpanment rcpons to
the PB&R.Con1m1ssion, appointed by the City Coun-
cil. It's no "''ondcr. In view of this tctup, that the
seniors often felt like country cousin1. 50 they 1ook
thln1s into their own hands.
If the mastcLPJ!n_is followed, the' multi·puf'1'0SC'
room Wiii bcton1e JUSt tllat.. WlThlnotonia! divicicrr-
10 prrmit half a dol.en events at one time. The Ot.M1
aardens will be mo\·ed around to one side, the parkina . •
I've heard rumblinp
abut 1hc tria chanll' 11
Oul&. 10 I IPC'ftt I day checkina it O\lt ror my·
telf, becau1e as 1 ~
prer.id<nl or Fri<ncll or
OUis I ha~ more than
JOit 1nolhct old lllddy·
duddy's intttest in 1he
11eo11h 1n<1 .,...,.. or111o
d1y'1 mature ~ty. And~-"""'' I lbond1 TM city's senior
' ,
~ ~
''"'•itlii•'\
c:cnicr diMtor -or
1U11ttvi--ii I -ftc7 .,._ ... -daiaty ~ ud .....,._,~winner at lJ!C"s
1a1i-1 C ... of Ott•ltOluo· HIT -11 ~ Jlldine-H1.... • ~ • Tbe ~· Pfllid&'ftl fll OMis it I WOIMft. a.11y. Tiit n111 _... PNOidr•• ind rm so~
Ill' 11tt I cvuld .....,.r, -lh< •H mt ftnl •I«
MMcknt ~-I Ml the 10P otd dawa, and Mr nemt
11 -Oildtnll.
• •
-ThcrC 1 btautiful new landscapina and a
blndstand on the spacious courtyal'd lawn. and a
memorial rountaln. and a g.ttat new ans-and crafts
room with floorina that •ill endurt shavn.as and pult)'
1nd spills, with <'abinets cnouah for evel')one.
But tht mo,1 important thina 11 O.~is is 1he
attiludt, and a pme plan and 1 survey of wants and
nttds -1 pro!Hslooal asscssmcat or what seniors
want and nttd. 1nd how the C'ity can most i:ffic1c ntly
provide the 1n1wtn 10 thetc wants and nttds-
There ;, t0 much improvement at O.sis tifttt I
•a up Uttrt that it's hard to know who deserves the
most fl'Odlt, There'• no doubt that of all th<' st"nior
ttnlln in Onn'llt ounty. t .... p0rt's is by far lhc ...... ....... ,..1.
Y" tM cit really has sp(nt 'ft"rJ hule of its own
"'°"">'· The-plant hscl(. 1h1nks 10 tht tcniu of h~ Mlnlllf' .,., W)nn and tht en1hu1iasn1 of a bind of
'rillif cltirtrl1. tht ... pl1n1 i111Ctf w~ot. linancN almusl ent,relt by r.o HlJD block arants. ('\Ct lhe ebJ«t1on ol P111J l()'doft', lltc ttnttt .., l'ffll kcrn 1h~ ll)
'
A aood exa mple is.the latest su~y and devel0i;>-
n1ent proaram that has resulted. With the help of th<'
new chief of staff -C<'lcstC JardinC-HtU& -the
Oasis bolrd throuah its Iona-ranee plannina commit·
let and its woman J)f'ffidtnl. bcpn to study just what
y.·as needed. Then someonc said. hey. tct's do it riaht:
let's call in the pros.
~ P(opk were intervkwtd, estimates rrcrivt'd, but
1ht <'hY"taid it was 100 late for the 1988 ~·they
v.·oukl have 10 -.1it to June 1989. and the tc:n1on had
h<anl 11111 1><r0rc. So 11\ey pul up Sl.000or1hclr own
and retained Rttrtation Systems Inc. of Anaheim.
Ttus w1 last Novcmbtt .
W0tkln1 clotcl)I wlm the lon&.fll'.'F plannin1
commhtct and the talfnted new s1afY. Rocreation
__.Syaicm Inc. produced 1 ~•rbbk: sur\'ey repon on
Jan. 11 , ind 1f\cr .thc Oasis bolrd approved 11. the
M1 tcr Man was prntn1Cd to the PBA"R Commi ion
on Feb. 7',
lot will be doublcd, there will be an expenslon of 1M
larac hall with an atrium re«ption arta and 1n ofr~
located near the action. whc:rc it 1hould be.
Oh. there'll be dilfcrina opink)ns, a thcl'e alwa~
have been. t once worked for a man Who ktddcd: ·If
you can't cause troubk:. thcrc·s no scnK in livi~ ...
Thal's true of a lot of scniors I know. But at ()HI.,
whUc trouble: may -~_!lit. thcrt are a coupk: of cool
won1en, elc:ttc: and Norma. and 1 ch11rm1n or tM tona·ranee etanni~ comm1tttt, Or. J""'9 ~
Lam11cril retired ch.c:f of mfr at Paw dtM'i H....,.
ina\on ospital, IDd I flnt~· ' ot 0...
lloyd Stilliop. Ind Ill -h ... flod fOll al
experience in risi"I above 1 IO• 1 ~ ..._
And on A ... 5, theft will llo I 'ii a
O.•i -.. '"" ldvllory -• ... Su~ttcw Tom Riley will be .. lla•n•t
11 Friondl or Olllit .-. 1 ... -..
comptde and furnW. dtle 1 a ' Is st• -.
........... ,,4*11 ea....•··· ..........
'
()qnge COMt DAILY PILOT I WednMC:Say, July 5, 1989 '1111£
Abortion-rights activists fear ban; O'Connor a key
WASHINGTON (AP) -Su·
preme Coun willi"IMll to tcrap the
coMthutional risht to abonion 1t
t111bli11ted 16 years• now teems
10 bi• oa the vote of Sandra Day
O'Connor, tbt only woman in the
nalion's luatory to serve as a justice.
Abonion-riahts activists said
Tuelday tbey lear the wont.
O'Connor .. never met a rqulation
abe doesn't like," sud Sarah Wed-cWt,aon, the lawyer who suCCHsf uly araued the 1973 cue of Roe vs,
HACIENDA HElGHTS (AP) -
Rcsidenu returned to survey the
damiF in their canyon neigh-
borhood on Tuesday after a wind-
wbipped firestorm leveled 13 homes and damapd eiaht othen, causing
an eitimatcd $4.3 million in dam-•· Residents whose houses were
.-Sled over by erratic names
bopaco&china throuah the neigh-
borhood Monday returned to their
homes Tuesday to protect them
from looters, even thou&h water,
telephone and electrical service had
been fUt off by the fire.
Los Aneeles Count}' Fire ~part
mcnt spokesman Joe Silva said four
people. were arrested !or lootina late
"MoDday. .., cannot believe they
would want to take more from
people who already have fost almost
everythina," M said.
Amons those returning the day
after the Monday fire . was PauJ Lubther, who was sratef ul to dis-
cover that his two-story Spanish-
~ boine was not touched by the oamea.
Wade that leaahzcd abortion.
"We can't look to the courts for
our protection on this anymore,"
said Patricia Ireland of the National
0111nization for ~omen.
Their growinJ dismay was
sparked by the h1ah court's rulin&
Monday that ~rely stopped short of
letting states outlaw abortions.
The deeply divided court con-
cluded its 1988-89 term by removina
some of the shackles that barred
"I walked up here wnh a ne1&h-
bor," said Lukathcr. ··we coulc:fn't
wait to find out if we had lost our
homes." Flames fanned by erratic
winds came within 20 yards of the
white stucco home with a red tile
roof and later consumed a small
detached recreation room nearby, he
said.
''When you thank what could of
happ,cned, this really was a bless-
ing, ' he said.
Also returning Tuesday was Don
Younger, who was visittna friends
on Monda> when he saw a plume of
black smoke coming from his neigh-
borhood.
When he tried to drive to his
home, fire offictals would not allow
hmr through, ~ he drove to a hill
where be could watch.
··1 saw the firefighters down on
their bellies savtog m y home. I wish
1 could hug them aJI,' he said Tues-
day.
About 500 firefighters on Tuesday
were left to tend the wildfire that
ravaged the upscale neighborhood
Monday af\er cool night air slowed
the blaze, Silva said.
states from re1ulatin1 most
1bon1ons for 16 years. It soon could
broaden state power even further.
The court announced it will re-
view three new abortion disputes
next term, aiving it a new opportuni-
ty to end Roe vs. Wade. •
.. There is no longer a m-.jority on
the court to support Roe,'' said Janet
Benshoof of the American Civil
Liberties Union.
Abortion opponents happily
agreed.
..
All shapes and sizes
Monday's "dec1s1on indicates that
Roe's days arc numbered,'' said
Randall Terry of Operation Rescue.
O'Connor 1s one of five justices, a
m-.jority of the nine, who have
expressed hostilit)' to tbe 1973 rul-
ina. She said in 1983 that the rulina's
central premise -permitting
greater state control as a woman's
(>fClnancy proceeds -has "no justi-
fication in the law or loaic."
But if the 16-ycar-old structure is
• •
A f .... I• plebe at di• U.S. Naval Academ1 looks at a
relattve llMNllltMn of a Man of the clau of I 99J, as fellow
plebes fll• In to tall• the CNth of office. More than 1 AGO
took th• ..... to "91n their first year at th• ac•d•rnJ.
tottering. o ·connor was not w1lhna
to topple it Monday.
The time is not npe to discard it.
she said, choosinf instead to uphold
Missouri regu ations limitina
abortion rights on narrower
grounds.
She voted, for example, to let
states require various medical tests
to determine whether a fetus at least
20 weeks old is "viable" or capable
of surviving outside the womb.
HOHl,D HRIJ:l-'S
By T~ Assod8t9d Prns
The court"s 1973 ruhng allowed
states to make 1t a crime to abort a
viable fetus -but the justices then
drew the v1ab1hty hne at 24 weeks.
The tests ordered by Missouri
"are to be performed whe~ viability
is possible," o ·connor said.
That could add SI SO or more to
the cost of an abortion. But.
O'Connor said, that "does not im-
pose an undue burden on a woman's
abortion decision."
Pro-Solfdarlty leglsJators take seats
WARSAW, Poland -Sohdanty claimed the~ spoils of its elecu.on
vactones Tuesday. with 259 of its parliament deputies and scnat'Ors taking
scats in the Nauonal Assembly beside the Communist Party that once
suppressed it.
It was the first time since the late 1940s that an o pposition gr'bup was.
installed in a Soviet bloc legislature.
"There were two great moments in m) life -the August 1980
agreements and today.'' said union chief Lech Walesa, who had a place of
honor at the front of the parliament. or Sejm. for the opening session. Sitting
opposite him a few yards away was communist leader Gen. Wojciech
Jaruzelski.
At the opening of the Senate fi ve hours later, Walesa and Jaruzelski sat
side-by-side at the front of the chamber and seemed to Joke wi th one
another.
July Fourth celebrated In N. Korea
PYONGYANG. North Korea - A group of Amencans held a Fourth
of July picnic on a nverbank in Nonh Korea on Tuesda}. sipping Japanese
beer, singing a Woody Guthrie tune and reading the Dcclarat1on of
1 ndependenc.e.
"Our country was founded b)· a revoluuon." said James Badger. a
Boston musician and member of the Young Communists League. "We think
it's Fportant to celebrate Independence Day. I feel vef) patnotic."
·Badger led the group of about 50 )'Oun~ Amcncans an a lust) rendition
of the folk song "This Land Is Your Land.' Others who gathered along the
shaded Poton River read the Declaration of Independence. drank Japanese
beer: ate cracicers and watennelon. and played volleyball against some
youths from Portugal ·
JQe Americans art in the isolated and rigidly communist nation for the
World Festival of Youth and Students, a political conclave of I S.000 mostly
lef\ist young people from 180 countries.
Reagan ·hospitalized with riding injury Four charged In plot to kHI Shamir
JERUSALEM -The army said Tuesday that five Arabs are charged
with involvement in a plot to kill Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir that
reportedly is linked to Vasser Arafat's mainstream PLO faction Fa.tah. SIERRA VJST A, Ariz. (AP) -
Parmer President Ronald Reagan
suffered minor injuries Tuesday
when be was thrown from a horse
while vacationina in Mexico, and
was taken to an Anny hospital near
here, his spokesman said.
Rcapn, 78. suffered mostly
bruises and some minor scrapes.
said spokesman Mark Weinberg.
.. He said be feels fine." Weinberg
said.
Doeton who checked Reapn at
Bliss Medical Center . at Fort
Huachuca pronounced him in excel-
lent condition. Weinberg said in a
statement tele~honed to news aacn-" cies in Los Ahgelcs.
The accident appercntl_y occurred
in the momina. said Capt. Juan
Lopez. a U.S. Army doctor who
exammed Reagan at the hospital.
"The horse Reagan was riding
bucked wildly several times on a
rocky downhill slope and eventually
stumbled."
The former president joked that
the accident was "my own private
rodeo," Weinberg said. The spokes.
man sajd Reqan is "an excellent
rider and he held on quite a while.''
A U.S. Army helicopter flew Rc-
qan to the hospital from a private
ranch in Sonora, a Mexican state
just across the Arizona line, officials
said. Rcqan has been vacationing
there since Saturday.
X-nys revealed no serious in-
juries, Weinbcr& said.
Rcaaan joked while in the hospi-
tal, and did not complain of aqy
pain, Lopez said. The doctor said
the only advice he pve Reagan was
not to iet involved in any stressful
exercise for the rest of the week.
Reqan was released from the hos-
. pita! that af\emoon. Accompanied
by his wife, Nancy, he exited the
hospital and walked quickly to a
waitina Army helicopter, which took
off. Weinbcra said Reaaan would
return to the ranch in Mexico.
Gorbachev
woos French
at the Bastille
PARIS (AP) -Soviet President
Mikhail S. Gorbachev, who seeks a
new revolution at home, visited the
site Tuesday where a mob stormed
the Bastille 200 years aao in the
uprisina that swept away the French
monarchy.
He bepn a three-day visit to
France by joinina Pte$ident Francois
Mitterrand for lunch, a tint round of
talks and a demonstration of
Europe's new high-definition tele-
vision.
Gort>echev and his wife, Raisa,
then went to the Place de la Bastille,
where they shook hands with
Parisians and tourists at tht acene of
the auault on the infamous prison
July 14, 1789.
'1-bousands of people crowded up
to barricades placed around the
speicious square many shoutina,
"Oorb,Y! Gorby!'1 as did crowds on
his v11it to West Germany last
month.
lleponers 1urroundcd the Soviet
le8der at the seeps of the new Opera
buiklina. to be inauaunned next
week in the pmence of President.
Buth and other Western leaders as a bieh point of celebrations marltina
the revolution's bicentennial. •
Unable 10 reecb more than a few
well·wi1ben, tbe Oorbacbevt
climbed .... into their .......
Zil lhna ... , Oli *.a.; lidt OI
tbe ~ laowever, 1111)' dimbed
The aUeged assassination plot aimed at killing Shamir last year during
a campaign trip to the sou them Israeli town of Rahal. shortly before Israel's
November election, an anny spokesman said.
It occurred before Arafat announced in December that he renounced
terrorism and recognized Israel's right to exist.
Soviet jet crashes Into Belgian house
BRUSSELS, Bclaium -y-A Soviet jct fiahter new over three NATO
nations Tuesday -after its pilot eJe<:ted over Poland -and crashed into
a ho.use n.ear the French-Belgian border, killina an 18-year-old man inside.
Offiaals of the North Atlantic Tiuty Oraanizat1on said U.S. F-1 Ss
intercepted the MiG-23 soon af\cr it entered NATO airspace and att0m-
panied it until it crashed. They said the Soviet plane was not armed.
The Soviet news qcncy Tass said the plane went astray after the pilot
ejected bcc.ause of equipment failure "durina a training night over Poland."
It said the pilot survived.
Fed to ease grip on Interest rates
WASHINGTON -Policy-makers at the Federal Reserve will co"ntinue
easing credit in an effort to keep a slugish economy from sliding into
recession, many analysts believe. That should translate into &ood news for
borrowers. 1
Costs of a variety of loans, including mortgage rates and ~me equity
loans. all are expected to bead lowtr throuah the rest of the summer, private
economists say.
The federal Open Market Committee, comPOSCd of members of the
Federal Rcscrve Board in Washinaton and five o( the 12 rqional Fed bank
presidenlS, 'Will meet Wednesday and Thursday for an important mid-year
review of where monetary policy is aoina.
Drug czar targets doctors, lawyers
W ASHINOTON -Doctors and lawyen, role models with "a special
kind of status," should impose strict anti-dn.ia standards on their elite
professions. says William J. Bennett, the federal coordinator of dru1-co11trol
polic.r,.
If you're serious about this thinf. you don't just ao banenna down
doors in the inner cities,•• Bennett said in an interview ... To those who have
been aivcn much. much is expected." "These are peoP.le who make a lot of money. who exercise a lot of
inOuencc in society,' he said. "They're role models. Docton and lawyers.
they have t special kind of status. One stands for health, one stands for
lawfulness. There's no aood excuse here."
Bennett, wbo has met in the put with heads of spons oraaniutions
and with Hollywood lt.adcrs. said he spoke recentl) with Asnericati Bar
AMOCiation Praident Robert Rav(ft and the Ammcan Medical Aaoda-
tion's chief executive otricer, Dr. James H. Sammons.
f \I II ftH,I\ HHll I'
CM mutllatloris at prison probed
....... VACA VIU.£ -Humane o"'cialt IUd T...-; d9ey Polled a S l ,000 rewn i• u iflOl't '° ftlld me cUl~a bl dllit IDlllilatioft deaths of Wild kitten• betieadod by inmatea at Vee.ville w ·IW'ilon . ..It'• .-U>' diar i& im'l IM._ "'9o are kiltins the animals. .. said ~~!!!"""!!'"" ,._AllnllO.-n1Nliwedinlc:tOroftbe Marin Humane Society, wbic:b was
........... .., Qj ..... by prteoan;
Pat\Mller, diNctor ot ~ for Marin Humane. aid indicatiou ... dae priaon'I llCuftty depanmnt wat .. it'I beiftl done 10 Upeet t.be imiiiiii nr ..
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Parking
citations
in LB go
high tech
By The Auodated Press
Parking scoffiaws in Laguna
Beach arc racing a new crime figh1er
1hat can't be s .... ·~t-ta lkcd inlo l~lling
the offender skate.
AutoCi1e . a new computerized
cnation system, can record the
make, model and license number of
an illegall y parked car and spit out
a traffic tickcl -all in less than 30
s«o nds.
The machine's cold efficiency and
evenhanded enforcement of local
parkin& laws ha.i led some officcn to
compa~ it 10 "Robocop," the pan
poli«man-pan machine or 1he
movie or the same name.
'"Beware," said Officer Marianne
Weber who on Monday placed a
machine-issued ticket on the wind·
shield or a car that by coincidence
belonged to an off-duty policeman .
.. we·~ Robocops now."'
The local police dcpanmen1 in
June bcc.ame the fint in the county
to equip offi cen with the new ticket·
issuing machines.
The departrncnt's six machines
can not only issue tickets in seconds.
they can also record various infor-
mation aboul can 1hat will allow
officcn to determine if the vehicles
arc stolen or if their ownen have
nct)ectcd to pay previous tickets.
The machines. which cost about
SS.000 each, arc expected. to brina in
Sl40.000 more in parking-tick.et rev-
enue this year alone.
"It makes our whole system more
efficient .. Police Chief Neil Purcell
said. "11 cuts down the amount of
paper work. The error factor a~
down 10 nearly nothing. We should
be able tO ISSUC Citations faster,"
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S urf Repott
k~e
definitely
worth keeping. Five suspects
sought in CM
barroom brawl
Chy News Servke
accOllllts are boringly simple,
The new Home Federal
Fmerald CD~ on the other
hand, is a multifaceted
\\Ul1der. To start with, open
a six-month Fmerald CD
with just $2,.500 and you'll
earn a special rate bonus of
more than half a percent
(F'dly~five basis points. to be
exact) The reason? \\e're
celebrating our 55th year.
And since this is our
fmerald Anniversary, we're
also offering you one of
tha;e when you deposit
Now don't think we're just
romancing the stone. \\e'll
compound your interest daily
Cos1a ~1esa PoliC'C Tuesday ""'ere
lookina ror five n1en in connec tion
with 1 barroom bra.,.,•! that lefi one
man hospitalized. •
Cosll Mesa police Sal. John Pher-
ri n said Esteban Bcrl\af-Olivarn. 30,
was hit in 1hc face with a broken
bottle when he interfered in a fiaht
betWttn hi s brother and anotftc.r man at the-Re-cf Bar ,_820 W. I-9th-St
He was taken to rountiin VaUey
Regional Hospilll and Mcd.ical
Center with l1ccrations to the head
and nc<lc •I'd possible 1.rtcty damag~ fotloWiila the 1111ck at 11 :40 p,m.
Monday. A Costa Mesa rcskltnt. Mauro
Ouzman Casimiro. ll, w1s arrested
-11 the tct:ne and bootted for asuult
and battery, bul Police we" still lookina for five other 1uapec1a. Phcr·
rin said.
___ ,...,,, ___ ,._ __ .. _ __ .,_
--~ 'ES lllJ•W c • .,....
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•
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Clloose a real
emerald(approx
imately half a
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(aboUt twice a5
big). Either is a
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Or come by any
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• Emerald ~rsary
56 offices serving the Greater Los Angeles Area.
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' i_
States can enact
toug"1er hazardous·
substances laws
ly JAMES H. RUllN
AIJO<l<tt•d l'r•n llllftH
WASHINGTON -The Supreme
Court on Monda> refused to ·bar
states from imposing rules on label·
ing hazardous workplace substances
that arc more rigorous or extensive
than federal regulations.
The court, without comment. re-
jected a challenge to a New Jerse)
la" b) business and industry rep-
resentatives wbo said federal law
preempts such state rules
The 3rd U.S. C1rcu1t ( oun of
Appeals last Februaf) upheld a fed·
eral judge's ruhng that allowed New
Jcr!>C)' officials 'to enfo1ce that state"-;
Worker and Community Right to
Know Act of 1983.
The appeals court said the Judge
walt ··not clearly erroneous .. 111 dee•·
ding the state law .. d~s not stand as
an obstacle to the accomplishment
of the purposes" of the federal Oc-
cupational Safety and Health Act of
1970.
threats to the environment.
The state la" goes further than the
federal law 10 somc respects. New
Jersey requires all chemical con-
tainers to be labeled, while the feder-
al law requires onl) containers of
hazardous chemicals to be labeled.
The state requires that the five
most predominant substances in a
mixture be labeled: the federal law
doe!> not
And New Jc~} requires most
labels 10 include the chemical name
and a special oomber used tO" idcnt·
1f) the sub-.tance The federal law
require'> the chemical or common
name. hut not the number.
The state la" was challenged b)
the New Jersc) Chamber of Com-
mcH e and numerous chemical.
fl a"1r and fragrance manufacturers. r hey said dual labeling would
confuse and overwhl'lm workers.
The 2nd C1rcu11 court said there
wa .. adequate testimony by opposina
experts that proper worker training
would dear up any confusion.
P1reworll1 shoppers gather at • st•nd on Newport c•n ••rn anywhere from S2,000 to S 15,000 during their
lloulevard In Costa Mfu on the eve of Fourth of July to brief fl1cal ye•r. Top sellers this year were Plccolo Pete s
select the~ f•vorlt• fiery •mu1ement1. Stands Hice this one •nd sp•rklers.
The two laws are similar 1n their
aim, requiring employer!> to warn
workers of hazardous materials. Thi.'
New Jcrse} law also is intended to
warn the public about potcn11al
The cases arc New Jersey
Chamber of Commerce vs. ijughey,
88-1845. and Fragrance Materials
Assoc1a11on ''· Van Note. 88-1868.
~pider silk may
provide ~trong,
lightweight fiber
U.S.-Chincl trade expected to dwindle
..
ly MARIANN CAPRINO ,,,, """'"' ..,_
NEW YORK -Mongolian
cashmere sweaters hang from
Bloomingdale's racks and General
Electric still hopes lb sell China its
locomotives, but the S 14 billion.
Amcnca. the spider is named for trade relationship between the Unit·
its yellowish webs, which CJtn ~ ed States and the People's Republic
NEW YORK _ In research up to six feet wide. 'has been damaged after years of patient nurturing.
that could provide new materials Kaplan, Stephen .... Lombardi Following the Tiananmen Square
for high-strenath cables. and Wayne Muller have de-massacre alld subseq~ent string of
bulletproof vests and sutures., termined the detailed chemical executions. experts point 10 pockets
scientists have tumed to one of makeup of the dragline silk. and of vulnerabilit) amons U.S. com-
the most delicate·lookin.& fibers are using that information to panics workinJ with China as v.ell as
in nature: silk spun by spiders. seek the acne that directs pro-a decline in Chinese imports.
Researchers want to learn duct ion of the silk. Lewis. whose ''It won '1 be because Americans
more about the JOSsamer threads work is supported by tht:"fcderal don't want to buy, but delivery and
because they offer an apparently Office of NavaJ Research. be-reliabilit) will be perceived widel>
unique combination of great lievcs he has found the gent'. He as aoin$ down. and that will affcc.t
strctchab1hty and strength. is no~ determining us chemical orders 1rrcspec11ve of "hether it's
details. ' lrue.'' said David M. Lampton.
Some day, 1C1ent1s1s hope. president of the Nauonal Commit-
spider acnes will be customized Finding a silk acne is impon-tee on nited States.China Rela-
to produce silks with charac· ant because researchers can then uons.
teristics most needed for various insert it in bactena or some other China had replaced otht'r Pacific
uses, maybe even clothina. orpnism that can chum out the Rim nations as a low-cost producer
Protein that makes up the silk far f h" r. I h. 1 Spiders themselves cu~tomizc o ovcryt 1ng 1rom cot mg to ug· their silk. A spider may produce faster than spiders do. That will µgc to tents while steadily improv·
half a dozen kinds for a variety allow further study of the pro-ina productivity and quality as
of jobs, each silk comina from a tein, to find out why it is so worker~ became more motivated.
different stand. Several kinds are stretchable and why it has other As Chinese workers and maQagers
used in webs. Another, called properties of interest. become more fearful of associating
d raaline silk, is what SP.iders use Knowina the gene should also with fore1iners. Lampton said. ··The
to aan.ie from the ceiling. Still allow scientists to alter it Some· problem IS going to be whether the
another is used to make a cocoon day so that the resultinJ silk will work force will continue to be as
for CUS· perform better in particular ap-productive.
plications. ''Communications arc snarled, we In contrast, silkworms spin don't know 1f lonfShorcmen will
o nly one kind of s.illt, said David One possibility 1s li1htwe1ght load ships on time; and American
Kaplan of the U.S. Army Natick but stronJ fiberglass-like ma-impon crs JUSt may not want to deal
Research, Development and En-terial1i which might be useful for witn those unccnainucs, he noted.
f.necrina Center in Natick, aircraft skin. hcfmets and other Witho ut Chin~ imports. Amcri-
us. applications. Kaplan said. cans would pay more for Nike run·
Some spider silk is nearly as nm& shoes, silk blouses and painted
strona as Kevlar, a l)'Tlthetic Another potential use 1s porcelain bowls.
fiber used in bulletproof vests. sutures, Lewis said. Spider silk Eltpcns say toy and game 1m-
sajd b ndy Lewis. bead of the appean not to provoke an 1m-porters, alrtad) stocking up for
molecular bioloSY deDertment at munc-system reaction from the Christmas, arc scrambling to line up
the Univcnjty of Wyomina in body, and it oontracts when suppliers in other low-cost nations
Laramie. To snap a danslina 12-moist, which could keep stttches such as T hailand and Mexico. Last
inch piece of ctnalinc iillt, for snua during the beahna process. year Chma exported S 1.17 billion
e.umplt , it is cstJmat.ed that one Still another possibility. if 11 worth of toys and games to the
would have to bU'I another can be produced cheaply enough, United States.
pte<:e of Jilk from it approximate-ls clothina. Apan from beina 15 On the 01p side. Midwest farmers
ly 10,000 miles Ion& supple as rqular sJlk and more would take a beating 1f their expons
Much of the work IO far has elutic, -spider silk has an "in· were curtailed. last ~r they ship-,_ ·-.a ... _ ......,,. lit ( bl ped to China about $700 million in 1ocu~ on UK "'!'..,1ne s1 o CR<li c sheen to it, almo t a whtat, the 18,..,.st U.S. e~n to the the ~den orb-waver. Found in metallic sheen" that suunts n....~ 1 • R ·.-1 · Aonda and Central and South mother-of-""arl, Lewis 111d. . ... ~p c s epub ic. accor Jng to the I ..-Com merce Department
==~;:=:;=::=:=:==:==:;=:==:=::==:=:~====~=::::=:;;;:::=;t Computer makers could lose a r .SJ~ miUion-plu1-0Ut~•-for-thei &oods. · t.f ilitary suppliers already are
bc.lrina the brunt of a presidential
In ~lll()()S of d-Ollars
10
8
6
4
2
1985
l
1986 1987 1988
Value of contract c ommitments• by U.S. part~s in Chenese
ventUfes; aciual numbet' of ventUf~S in patentheses.
In m1tkons or doll rs
$116
(, 7)
~
$37 ,,,,
1979 82 1983
$155
(55) -198S •• 1986 1987
·N ot • ..:11.1.11 doll.Jr:. '-1'-'nt .ln<I ~ not th{:IV(k' mOrf• 111.lt S 1 °'"'"" in contr.tt:.1' o.,
U <; O.I CompJni<' t<)< <'•P'OIJt•~ll't .JflC P'Oduet.on <1vl•n(} ,,._, 1q ,9 sa "'''•00
decree proh1b111na further sales to
China. Grumman Corp. said car11er
'this month 1t '4-0uld chm1natc 250
JObs associated with a SSOO million
U.S. Air Force contract 10 develop
and modernize a weapons control
system for Chinese fiahters.
U.S. companies that sell producto;
like powcr-seneratina equipment 10
the Chinese aoverment could face
trouble because China "i& going to
have a forc1an cxehanac shonage.''
sajd R~cr Sullivan. president of the
U .S.-Chma Businc s Council.
"They've take n 1 blj hit on their
balance of payments. They can·1 buy
wha1 they thouJbl &he ..would..b
and thcf re aoina to have to cut
impans, ' he said.
Rou&hl~ 80 percent of U .. (Orn·
panics' investment in China he in
industries th.at manufacturt goods
for the dome uc market. ulhvan
said. Plans for cxpand1na those oper-
ations are evaporating rapidly.
But most U .. businesse• arc not
ltkel) 10 suffer substantially. Whtie
they havt' committed $3.4 billion to
1oinl ventures in China. each firm·s
andividual cxposurt' 1s hmitcd.
General Elcctnc Co .. for example.
sold $500 million of locomotive ,
aircraf\ enJincs and medical system,
to C hina an the last five years. but
the number pales in comparison
with GE's annual revenue of ,SO
I 101"!:
And Ball Corp .. a SI. I b1lhon.a·
year container maker in Mun(tC.
Ind . has spent JUSI S.:! m1lhon since
I Q87 on m JOIOI '~lure in China. ··r rom our pcrspcct1,c. 11'!. a vrn
small pcrecntagc of sales:· said Bafl
spol..ci.man Brad Wilks.
·1111. c:ompan1cs do not want 10
mothball thl·1r China operations.
.. 11·~ cll'arl} not bccau~ of the
mom·}:· Su Ill\ an said. ·· 11·s the ef-
fort. The'·, t' spent five or six years
hullding't rl'la11on sh1ps.
I-or bu!>111c,,c,, 1hc a11rac11on is
fornmlahlc· Churn looms as the
"odd'\ f<l\IC !>t growing econom).
w11h a gro'>!. national product e-<·
pand1ng at more than 10 percent a
)eUr.
As a market for consumer goods.
China 1s '1rtuall) untapped. Thl'
n.111on·~ I I h1lhon population 1s a
solid reason .. companies are reluc-
tnnt 10 JUSI hdg 11 You can't JUSt
wnte oil 25 percent of the glohc:·
one ( h1na "atlhcr !>31d.
V. hale most L'.~ companies arl'
taking a "a11-and-sc.-c approach. a
fcv. have found opportunit) in the
cr1s1) Jack Shdmai.h. president of
the Ne" "ork·ba\ed trading com-1 pan) Shamulth & • ns Inc .. said he
has been snapping up Chinese-made
product~ ranging from silks to nails
Now that Shamash's competitors
arc sk1t11sh about hu) 1ng. pnccs of
Chinese-made goods are lower and
the goods arc more abundant.
The U .. Embassy tn Beijing said
some Amencnn staff of the 175 U.S.
companies oixra11ng out of the Chi·
nesc capital arc returning despite a
tra\el adv1sol") and the embass) '!>
counsel ag:unst 11.
The Chinese go,ernmC'nt 1s pull·
ing out all the stops to lurt' bus1·
nesi.men back. c' en as 11 simul·
tancousl) wa1c" a media campa11n
aga1ns1 the ', go,cmmcnt for al-
leged interference.
Atncncan companies arc being
bombarded "1th lona•$0ught con-
cesi.1ons from the Chinese. JOvem·
mcnt and at)p1cal prom1~s of
prompt pa) ment
Government-owned Noble
Tower. a modem Be1j1ng building
that houses foreign companttt. ~nt
faxc to C\er) tenant "askina them
to come back and that everything 1s
peaceful.'' ~1d one American ten·
ant.
But businesses are wary that the)
may become pawns an China·,
po"'erful propaganda aamc.
nt~ •A4-f>O$~Uotl
where "'e're manipulated and par·
adcd tn front of cameramen.'' said
Ball orp. 's Wilks.
D "t: A wonderful tool for the wise
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()01 Co
RHOOD s Wednetdly, July S, 198$ A7
Former mail carrier named CdM postmaster
9y ~TY IOUCHER
cw .. ~ ,.. """
The life of a postal inspector.
known as the police force of the
Postal Service, fascina·ted Linda For-
ness.
They carry 1un1 and look for mail
fraud and theft.
But the man who interviewed
FomeU for the !ob Maid 1he wasn't
agressive enou"', so she decided to
stay in her position u a mail canlcr.
Whether the man was risht or
wrons. he helped point her in a new
dirK11on -toward managemen1.
On Friday, Forness was sworn in
as Corona del Mar's postmaster,
supervising more than 52 em-
ployees.
"'Ins really. really lucky," For-
ness said. "Every place I've b«n
everybody has bent over backwards
and helped me."
master J~ piaz recoani~ed her
dedication and promoted her to a su~nisory position.
'I knew she was very special,"
Diaz said ... She was dedicated and
knew she had a responsibility to the p~blic. She had to aet that special
birthday card to grandma or 1ha1
act-well' wish out. She cares about peorl•. " saw her 10 from a carrier
concerned about one route 10 a
station manaacr con~med about 48
routes," be said.
Forness proved she was special han~lina . schedulina procedures: audits, gncvanc;cs and customer re-
lations.
She left Costa Mesa and mc1 "her
favorite," HcCtor Gardincz, 1cneral
manager and postmaster of Santa
Ana. He, too. saw something special
in her and asked if she'd take an
assignment in Laguna Hills.
She did, and worked as branch
manager of Laguna Hills Post Of-
fice.
U.S.MAIL st er
The neir.t th in& she knew, $he wu
offered ·• new job as quaJity control
mana_arr of the San Jua.n Post Offitt
in M1ss1on VicJO.
"This wa s a very challena;na ~
it1on, where we looked for wayt lO
improve and provide service," For·
ncss said.
Forness said she loved her assian-
ment. but when the position or
Corona del Mar postmaster c.ame
up, shr couldn·1 pass it bi .
"I love this community,· 1he said.
''Corona de! Mar has always been
m) little slice of hea ven:·
FolJICSS lives with her husbl:nd,
~~and J-ycar-olc:~ son. Matthew,
1n M1ss1on VieJO. As poslmastcr, she
will overve 1he facilily thal deliv~
a half-million p1«n a mail to more
tha n 15,000 residents each week.
.. I want 10 ma1 nta1n scrvi« stan·
dards and accommodate customm
anyway we can," she said . ··1 plan to
motivate employees. maintain aood
customer relations and cut costs
dowo.
Forness., a 12-year veteran of the
Postal Service, staned in Costa
Mesa as a carrier. Because of that
eventful past interview. she passed
by a ~ond OPP.Ortunil y to apply for
postal 1nspc<:1or and remained where
she was. Later, Costa Mesa Post-
'"It was a real experience," she
said. "I had just never managed a
force so large. There were 150 em-
ploy«s."
...,._,.....~...,
V•t•r•n mall carrier Unda ~orne11 wa1 named Corona del Mar61 u.s. po1tma1ter.
"I ketp thinki ng I'm dreaming
and someone is going to wake me uti
and tell me the dream is over," she
said.
Ma~ing miniatures .~ases her grief Laguna man's will
helps perpetuate
college's legacy
1y KATY BOUCHER
cw .. °""" l'IM """
Linda Schanz 1hinks and crtates
small.
Small, as in one-inch scale.
The Huntinaton Beach resident
has found a whole new niche in life
since the death of her 2)-year-old
dauahter, Cheryl, who died from
Down's Syndrome fi ve years ago.
Schanz, 49, has found an emo.
tional outlet through the design and
building of mi11iature Victorian doll
houses to onc-ihch scale. equipped
with li&hts. hand-craned furniture
frilly quilts, stained-glass octagonal
windows and woodrn-shingled
roofs.
''I am very conservative, pretty
neat and organized," she said. "Bui
when I do my miniatures, all 1his
fanciness and 'fru-fru' comes out -
some1hin1 ·1 couldn't imagine in my
wildest dreams."
Schanz said it all started when she
told her husband, E4. she had to do
somethin1 to rcleaK her anxieties.
Her spouK purchased an inexpen-
sive Victorian doll house k.it. and
they ended up 1os.s1n1 out everything
except the basics: the frame.
' The couple decided to take a class
to learn how to put one of these tiny
replicas toeether. She said they were
fascinated by the course and went to
wort immediately.
After about six months. the pro-
ject was completed. Although de-
sianina the hou~ consumed her. she
decided she didn't want to keep it -
but she also didn't want 1o j us1 "give
ii awaY ."
She decided to donate the project
to Make-A Wish Foundation in
Newport Beach, because children 's
chanly orpnizations are on her lop
priorty list.
She was thrilled when th e Dis-
covery Museum of Oranae County
c.ausht si~t of her work and a!lk~
her to butld one for them.
. Because the museum eaten to
children. her immediate response
was, "Yes."
"The museum is just fabulous,"
ly KATY BOUCHER
OI' -D.-y -k .tf
in& \\'a rid War 11 and marked for
4emohtion. With donations, the
univenily purchased this hi11oric
la ndmark.
"The stn.acture was broUJht to
Fulton piece by piece from London.
It was designed bv London's famous
architect, Sir Christopher Wren,"
she said ... Each brick, each stone,
and every original material was
numbered and placed in iu· oriJ.inal
state. It's just a work of an.
Phil Reynolds, director of alumni,
said the college has strict entrance
requirements. The school is small
enough !.D that sometimes there is
onl y one student in a clasvoom.
Harper said her late husband wtil
somewhat of a financial wizard, and
after araduatina fro m WestminJter
Coll* and Harvard Collqe of
Business 1n Boston. he moved to
Los Anacles and served u vict
president of Pacific Muwa1 Ufe In-
surance Co. He was instn1men\&I in
establishin1 Paci fic lnvestmc-at
Manqcment Co. and acted as its
president until his retirement in
1976.
She said althou&h business prcu-
ures kept him busy, he manqcd to
make at lca~t four trips a year back
lO Missouri to help ~1 th budJtls and
financial decisions.
.. He was an active alumni ... and
key financial adviser to the school."
Reynolds said.
The Allen D. Harper Library En-
dowment 1s expc<"lcd to provide an
annual income t>f aP.froximatcly S 7,000. The income w1I be equally
d1v1ded between t he purchase of
aeneral library acquisitions for
Wc1tm1nstc-r's Reeves Library and
for library ma1erials 10 suppon lbe
department of accounUnf. econ·
omia and busines!. administration.
'Boob-tube' is anything· but the boob of the class
1y KATY IOUCHl!R
Of ... ~ l'IM kill'
Nancy Davidson said she has
watched more than her share of
television -an e11imated 450 houn durina four ycan -but she could
hardly be called a couch Potato.
_ _,1---llavid.son,__JJ. 'LL,ju.n1or hiah
teacher at Niauel .Cills Junior High
School in La&un1 Niauel. However,
had the not 3iscovered the modem
qe o(colleae TV, she said she'd slill
I be lfnAlllina to act Started in her
career.
"I wu married wilh two c~ldren
when I st.aned tchoOI," lhc said. "I
oompkted f\al( of my.education at
COl1tlinc Community Collqe and
11111111' 110\Hll
the rest at Golden West before going Costa Mesa, Huntington Beach and
on to Cal State Lons Beach. Westminster. has rnrollcd more
"Midway throu&h my education. I than 100.000 students in "1clr-
1ot prqnant with my third child and courses." The classes air on the
didn't want to leave the baby or stop Coast District's public TV station.
my education." KOCE-Channel 50 in Huntington
Davidson pid her-oniy altt"ma-Beach.
tive to satisfy, manemal and cduca-"Coastline offers concise, to-the-1ionatdem1ndrwan01a~tele¥i5Cd-point,-lu.li.,.-$Ludy auidcs. rtview
classes, a uind which seems to bC" in sessions. mid-terms and finals. sreat demand w;th more people ju1• Davidson said. "It flt p(rfcctly inlo
aJina jobs, families and education. my schedult because 1 could record
"If I would have had to come the shows and study whilr 1he chil·
home from school and haule din y drcn slept."
dishes and taundry1 I doubt I would Drew Simpson. spokesman for thr-
have ever aotten tnrouah." collqe, says the prOlfllms provide
Since 19761 Coastline Community aeneral educalion counes. as ¥>'ell a! Colleae, whteh hasc locations in pleasure or vocational programs.
Fountain Valley, Corona del Mar, "The tc-lecourses arc the same as
1f )'OU were 1n 1hc classroom. ·· he tory. b1olog). and evrn frt"e -ha nd He said onr student completed 20
said. "The d1 ffcri-nce 1~ you M.'l )Our sketching O\Cr the TV. units 1n lelet:ourscs last )'Car and
own pace." "You have to~ very ded1ca1C'd.". obtained a dcarcc in EnaJish and
Simpson said all neccssa11 n111 · sht said. "Evrl) week you read tht" French while she raised her family.
terials are mailed to the-s1udrnt, and chapter tlcfore the lesson. then He said if sludel\ts can't A:iCOf'd
mid-terms and finals arc 11ven at watch 11. It's very convenien t. I classes or don't receive O'lannel SO.
any of their s1udy-1Ju1de locattons work.. so I n:rord Lhe class and wa1ch they c.an rcnl courses 1n their entire·
The tests arc n1ailed rn.ck to thl· II later." ty fo r $60. or individually.
student for thr student to rrv1t"" Schnc1 dr r sa id grades arc ifieinrtumphs-or-faill1rt l. Sim~n--pr~incd as oppo~"'cd.IJ•o•~g~r~add-=~S~jm\\'!pso~n~satd..o.th r Oran Coun-
s.aid courses a~ the standard I fl -ina on a curve. ty collcaes thi iOTl'e.r te. ccourscs arc
Wt:ek classes. and thr most ob\'iou~ "When you 1TCc1ve your courSC" Saddle.back Community Collcsc in
diffc rrnce 1s that the collcar 1s 1n material. 11 11vcs you a breakdo wn Mission Viejo and Rancho San1i1ao r _,1 • 1n Santa Ana. your home-. o points need..,...., to rtte1\'e an A. 8.
Mo11 sluden ts 11 rc to-enroll rd. C. Dor F," !.he said. Over the yeart. Goastlinc tek-
1akin1 coursl"s on othe r campu~s. as S1mspon said the proaram has courses have-won a number or
well as the teh:councs. educated many people who havr-awards includi"I the Ohio State
Catherine Sc hneider of Hunt-become professionals while workina Award, tht Goldc_n Eqle aod two
inaton Beach said she's taken h11~ 11 their jobs. Emmy1.
---
Mesa community leaders to wait tables for Arts on the Green
1 Cotti Mna community leaden will don aprons
and c.'OCktall tnys lo becOme amateur wahC"n and
t waitraatt from ' to 7 p.m. July 12 in .. ldentit~ Criais l II ," an evcnl bencfhtina 1hc city's annuaf family ans t"ati..,11. Aru on the Orecn. -the event wUI bt held 11 8irraP<>'mli'1 Ret1.11,1nnt
.. oa the IC!COnd level or South COISl Pl.ua. JJJJ Bristol
SC., ColU Meu. •
Coll 4l6-1490 for more lnlonnltion.
Ca•'fl ,,,, ~·
A ...uhop on how 10 care ror btao1ti1a1 will be
11111111 tOlll 9:30 a.ra. 10 noon on Wcdnnday, July ll at
9 ·• Ullrvy IOd Oonlens, 2447 E. C-Hipway,
C-dltMar. Tiii c.1 i1 SI S aad pnneisuation is R'CIUH'ed.. C.ll
• 67).Dil for ..... iaformolion.
..... Lodge 1M8tl
"""·~-Elb..-No.1959-. ff.1!:• ....,, .....,, II 10480 T~ SC., -IOI•
·-g, IM6-4917 ... -hi--
of daily trainil\I Monday throuah Friday a1 the South
Colt\ YMCA, 29831 Crown Valley Plcwy.. LagunM
Ni1uel. -Saa1on1 cost SIS for YMCA members And S30 for
limited members.
Oiftk-t-in l)'mnas1ics and "-1kido. the-m11rtial art
cmphlltzlna 1elr-dcfense, are also beina offered in one-
wetk ltllion1 of one. or two-hour daily tl•s.'"-(br airsc
l •'1:Jr In umnas1le1 and s and up in Aikido.
tll·YMCA for more information. ,.,.,,.,,ring skin c•ncrr
A he 'fll'OrkshQf> on '"C.hromi.a Sun and S kin
Cilll'tr" will be held from 7:JO 10 9 p.m. July 12 by
Irvine Commt.1nity Servlt"CS al North*OOd Community
Pltlr. 4531 llr)'an Ave. I:>.-. Volbt1 kmb«k will talk about the most CG•••H 1J'lllll of-skin ClllCCI , .,.non tmltmeftt
IMllaalll IM preventative mcuum. Skin p1fts and
Q1 I W tdc !"I!'!) will altO bt ditcuwd. Coll Do•id A-11 7l~J !Or ll)Oft lnfor· --Conn a 'fl ~
A~ -11-....., w111 beh<ld flt>m YID t p.e. IJ In -136 of tho AAlmiol""''""' lune· a• W• Coltcte. 1'61.._. Gokkn w.,
'
St .. Hun11n11on Brach.
Partic1pan11 will lenrn "'h)' anaer occun and hC1w
th.c: bodr reacts to 1t. Oi ffctC"nt ways to incrta~·
commun1catit>n w11h loved one~. ro-"urkcrs and friends
will be dlttus!Cd and drvelopcd.
Thr rost ts Sl 7. Call K'il -3Q91 for more 1nlOr·
matlon.
UNICEF glfr shop In Laguna
The. UNI EF a;n shop 1n -~auna Btach ,,. open
from 10 a.m. lb S p.m. on Fridayi, SA1urday1 and
Sunda)'I at lhc Ltauna Hiils ~11111 111 l B . Cout
Hlpway.
All occasion U NI F card· Dtt avai11bk a' wtll ••
a variely of unus~l aift ittmsc lncludina toys. booksc and
pmtt from around the world .
Procttds help provide btltcr health, l\Utr1tion and tducltion fOr---tM -workt'• nc<dint-thddrtft. C.11
•97· I •SS for mOR information.
. Youths sought ltN 'Ill/uni of Oz'
A IU.•wetk WOf'bhOp ror ~utf'll 1 10 I l ytan okl
culmiNlti!'f, In a prntft'6\iM of sonp an4 6.tl'K"n from
1hc movit 'Tht Wiurd of OI" wilf bt held from 3 ta
S p.m. on Tllllndayt, July IJ 10 \II· 17 11 th< C11y of . i.ac-lleldl II-Iott and Sociol S<Nicu ·Drl>tn· IMO~ SIS F.,.... """'
Kathy K.ahn. former iuidt:nt C'hC'u'\~oVIDh« with
Ballet M1st~s. and Linda holik. formerly a tint
soprano with the Pacific orale1 will teach the data.
Call 497.JJI 1 for mort: 1nforma11on .
A~nturrs In A flff•
frte Mldcshow depk:tin& safaris, u.U 1ftd'"" air
l:Nllloon nights a\•ailabiC' In 1'frk:a wil1 be tnl • "h~
e_.m. July 12 at Advtnlurt 16 Outdcxw Md Ttavil
Outfitttn. 1170 Harbor Blvd .. COJt&. Ma&.
C\11,11\11
n..n.i.,. J."'16
•
I • 7:JO •·"" Nacepe• ..... ft$ I 0 7 2
-ndl -JJOO Mup ....
• 7:.IO 1>•· .,_ Pas. co.iiolllli' •'~; -~·
d!alMon, I CMc °"""' .....
M ()qnge CoMt DAILY Pit.OT/ Wedneeday, Juty 5, 1919
f'\l'\lt\//I
Guests pr:-fze autQg~aphed books
........ ..,, ... 0.-
Author 11ttt1m1 Quinn f1eated) with M•rgot W•rren,
Merion Lederer and Marlene w11111.
8y VIDA DIAN
o.iiy fl'llo• c.,.,. ... ..,."'
Presidents, princesses and per-
sonalities in show biz.
The three arc always good con-
versation topics and three women
have found out the topics will sci~
books as well.
MHreea Reaaan, author of"First
Father, First Daughter;" Jadttb
Balabu Qttloe, one of Grace Kelly's
&ix bridesmaids and author of "fte
Brlde1matd1;" and Pllyllla Qalu,
who wrote "Star Mothers" with
Cher's mQthcr Georgia H oh and Sue
Russell, were at Round Table West's
books/authors luncheon last week to
discuss their wo-rks ... firsts for all of
them.
The Balboa Bay Club ballroom
was filled with more than 330
women who bought every book
available. After their luncheon and
the speeches, the women lined up
for autographs and the opportunity
to chat with the writers. The ones
not so lucky to buy before the sellout
were busy placing orders.
Two of the authors arc former
Orange County residents. "I used to
live near the Los Coyotes Country
Club (Buena Park)," said Quinn.
who drove down w1th Margot War-
rea, mother of actress Leslie Ann
Warren; Marlon Lederer, wife of
actor Francis Lederer, and Bruce
Willis's mom iMarlene WlllJa. (Just
the mention of Bruce's name in the
introduction ~rought on oohs and
aahs.J
Quinn's book came out in •gs and
is now in paperback. "More than
l SO moms of stars are mentioned in
my book. When it was published I
cclebnted with a trip on the QE 2."
Travelin& has been a big pan of
Reaaan's life since she moved from
OC. "I have averaged more than
250,000 miles a year for the last I 0
>cars," said Reagan. "Aftenhe book
came out in A~rit, I went to 19 ci ties
in four weeks, ' added Reagan, who
was wearing a lavender d ress with a
sparkly heart-shaped pin and
amethyst earrings.
be the subject of an upcoming TV
m ini series. "I've been asked who
will play the role of Grace, but 1
don't know. I'm wondering who will
play my pan. I met Grace through
m) first husband. He was her agent
and friend."
In the book Quine talks about the
excitement of the royal wedding, her
sub~ent visits to the palace and
what has happened to her and the
other fi, e attendants since 1956.
The authors' audience included
Donna and Jolln Creu, who were
responsible for getting the 12-year-
old RTW group in LA to form an
additional aroup in OC; Vtr&tata
Bnder, Mary Lo. Honaby, Pilar
Wayae with daughter AJau, Pat
Cox, Nora JoratDaeD, Jeuette
Seaeratrom, Judie Ar1Yro1, Elabte
Baamajlaa, Dottle Stillwell, Lacy
Lollaa, Beverly TllompsoD, Mary
Dell Barkouraa and Betty Porter.
Quine shared the news that her
boo1c about the bridesmaids goes on
the best-seller list this week and will
The luncheons are open to the
pu~lic ($25 each) with the next one
set for July 25. More info is avail-
able from 548-1447. Author Judy Quine and •everly Thompson.
llOICO'C OPI
••••ay, , .. , 5 AlllES (March 21-April 19): You're finally able to state, 'Tm released!"
focus on transformation from aJoom to joy. Recalcitrant family member
takes leave to no one's sorrow. Focus on discovery. romance. crea11vi t).
Parent's change a matter of survival
Celebrate!
TAURUS (April 2~May 20): You get facts. figures requested almost
three weeks aao. You'll learn where you stand and this will also apply to
unique relationship. You're on sohd ground. No need to "hcm-and-h:iw!"
GEMINJ (May 21-June 20): You will be drawn closer to family. News
of relative is not d ire, but could bring •-----------fonb facts of life. Diplomacy required
where finances arc concerned. New
voice will be beard. Taurus plays role.
CANCER (June 21-July 22): You
undcrao many moods but arc in com-
plete control. Lunar emphasis on per-
sonal possessions, 1nvestmcnts,
financial obliptions. Opponunity ex-1111111 ... lliillllil""'
ists to increase income. Virao plays .......... ..
sianificant role.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Moon in your sign accents personality. sex
appeal. This is your power play day. People want to be with you. want to
please rou. Focus on style, creativity, intensified love relationship. Make
,esturc. " VlftGO (Aus. 23-Scpt. 22): Situation that has been "hangmJ on" will
be finished. Scenario features secrets. glamour, tour of institution. Note:
Take care in bandlina of sharp objects, including kitchen utensils. Aries
repretetltcd.
LlaRA (Sept. 2}.()ct. 22): Some will sar. "You're going too fast!" They
are not correct. You simply arc lakina imuat1ve, ma1 ntaining your own pace.
PopWarity zooms upwards. You could win contcsL Leo figure prominent I)'.
..------.,-ICOlll'IO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Focus -on ;ntuition, character analysis,
settSement of family di'J)ute. Scenario features promotion. production,
added Pintiae. You'll be 11ven .. tough assignment." You will emcrac
definite victor.
IAGlnARIUS (Nov. 22-Dcc. 21): Lunar aspect coincides with dis·
tancc, ~· ability to set romance back on track. Forces arc scattered
but puzzle .P1cc:es wm come toacther. Complete story emeries. Another
Saaittarian involved.
CAPalCOllN (Dec. 22-Ja,n. 19): If you wait approximately two days,
DEAR ANN LANDERS: After
seven )cars of watching our daugh·
ter lead a wild. self-destructi ve life
that "ent against e'ef)thing she was
taught at home, I had to admit that
I "as becoming an alcoholic tr) ing
10 escape th<' nuscl) she "as caus·
1ng. I took )'our ad.,,1cc and "'cnt for
counseling. This is what T learned:
Parents have nghls. too. l had th('
right to sa). "I cannot keep you from
doing what )OU want to do. but I can .
let you kno" that I do not approve:
and am no" dC'claring your behavior
·orr limits: ..
I learned that our daughter w:is
not makmg me miserable. I wa'!
making m)'sclf miserable.
I learned that 1t was easier to li ve
without her than to tolerate the pain.
At first. I resisted all these ideas.
I aid: "I can't do It. My children are
my hfe." Then the counselor asked.
"And how 1s )'Our life?" I replted.
"It's hell."
l learned that 1f m} child was not
I .. 'I. HO\ It
const'quences "hen the roof ca H'S
in. -J.R .. IN NAPOLEON. OHIO
DEAR NAPOLEON: Coagratula·
tloas for gettloa yo11r act tofelller
bef~re yo. reacied Waterloo. bope
tbe parents and lttn·a1era wbo see
lllemselves ID your letter wm learn
from It. • • • DEAR READERS: The letter and
response above appeared In my
column In 1983; The clipping that
.. arrived In the mall seemed vaguely w1lltng to l·hangc. I had to change as famlllar but I didn't recognize It
a mallet of !>un "al. It wa!> not easy. until I r~ad the response. It. sounded
but I did 11. like me.
I learned that I couldn't savr m} Sure enough, ID \'ery small print,
c hild from herself. I now know that at tbe bottom of tbe cllppln1, t11e
people must accept the consc-sender bad written:. "Thi• appeared
qucnces of their behavior. That is In your column la USS. I c•t lt out
ho" they learn and 11.row. ud bave read It over at least 150
I "1 ou.~ tlus letter for two reasons:
to kt parents ii.now that 11 is never
too late to a scrt their nghts. and
that children should get th~ message
that the) cannot dump prbagc on
their parents and no t suffer the
times. It la time to rue Jt apln." • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: When l
mamcd m) husband 20 )ears ago. I
kne" he was not a romantic. but
being a pracllcal person. 1l didn't
bother me.
I soon disco' ercd that his idea of
a great present for me "as some-
thing he "anted. After several years
of bu} 1ng him nice $ifts and receiv-
ing electrical apphanccs for my
b1nhda) and at Christmas. I com·
plained. His next gift was a set o'
tires for the car.
Recently I've been under a lot of
stress. I've had problems at work
and our three children have not been
exact!} models of good behavior.
When my husband brought home a 1
box from a je"clf) store and handed
11 to me I was thrilled. It contained
a beautiful heavy gold chain.
I can't describe the disappoint·
mcnt ~hen he fastened it around his
neck and said. "I may let you wear
it sometime." An) suggestions? -
BLUE IN CANADA
DEAR CAN: Don't stud on one
foot waltlna for t11Jt clowa to allape
up. He Is a Hlflsll plJ. Take dte
money yH Hed to tpeH oa lllm ud
buy yourself aometlliaa Dice ud
HDeatlve.
Never on Friday for seasoned burglars
...,,
York City taxicabs won't stop when toward lhe skin. Takes awhile. But
you hail same is a lot of them are then it looks reddish brown· qain.
desire will be fulfilled. Emphasis on savinp account, financial status of one Some seasoned buraJars won't shave themselves. So who shaves
who would be a ''partner." Be aware of facts as they uist Scorpio work on Fridays, I'm told. Too the barber'? Put this profoundty
ttpretented.: chancy. People come home early. Or puzzlin& query to the fellow on the ~MPUI (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Focvs on art, crutivity. pin throup don't even 10 in. Mainb'~ thQ.Ygh_. next stool. He should say: Nobody Elkimos tend to keep their houaes
writleO WOrd. Lunar position aocenta participation in public affain 1 terious it's hard to set bail over the week· shaves her. Somethina cJse you can do to kill warmer than do people in the
undercover police can.
CODlidaaaion of marital status. ~udden chanae involves a91ianment. end. f' time at stopli&hts 1s itemize Western temperate climates. Or so contends ,........... · _ _ ---... bclieY~ beird.,.gde1CJDIM. o~&edDfil--w~efld1JRU ~hint fathioM that ... ha ... v-e--s-11
...._ (Feb. 19-Marcb 20): No ma~r bow romanf1c it miaht seem, Q. In wbote presidency were the wisdom. rrhe notion linaercd. remained in st~le for centuries. SW1
avoid .. ...._ .....-n:· Slidt to what you know, includina hOme blw. most American miJJionaim crutcd? with the Austnan dimdJ. Add Scot-
Repmr Work required in coaaection with Jarje botalehold item. You'll 90\ A. Ronald Rcqan's. Heimaey it an island off Iceland. titb kiJts. Any othen?
lnocMr Cbuce. -.. Baby birdS called puffins hatch in
• IULY I• YCKJa •tHDAY you are craliVf, capabk of pinina The 1ChOlar 8erirand Russell burrows Ilona the clift't above the Seuick Milon of old went below Wolila Wridlll. ~ ~phy. Metnberi of oppolite tex ftnd you poeed this one to a poup of emiMnt town there. Seven week.I later, 1n deck.I to tie down durina storms.
aURidlw, 1....,,IW oembli:Viilo, SlsiaariUI ptttonl pbly important ohiloloohen. and none could fiaure Aquil, Ibey ·try to fly to the ocean, Litcrap.y1 to put lhemldvee beneath ralll ill_JW a You CUl'NBtiy are CODClfnid Widl ...,...,.,., weipt. bo_dy It ouc fn a cenain YilJlet, ~re all but the bo&ildi&hta coaf'ute them. the WlftG and rain. That's ~ we iJIMlll. Y• _. ._...,, thta moodl. you11 impriat style and could U the. mm are clean lhlvea. is a berber They fall into tfic atredl. Children .ot the not-fttlin..·well phrase
.. ..., la llM." who ahava only lhoie who do not then IQ out all njabt. afoot. on bites. r.under the weathei.'t: --~.-.....--~-----"""""'~~~~-:-~~~~~~....,__.,-wri~...:....-....o.;...-iiiiliiii==-=;.;;-taoweYll'. with ~" to~
UP Cbl ~ bit& Tiier twn tMm llood of I W9irUa P:I IO its
looee 'bdmt momlns Oft tbe ....... launta When it'• in me cold water.
So said beut loota whitt thettin.
Albaie in Cbl MID. its blood retwaa
ftltlJH.t
That doctor of worldwide renown,
Sir William Osler, said. "A man
should ao out of this world u he
came in -chiefly on milk."
Do you bum up a lot of time look•nc for thinp you've misplaced?
Most_do most do. lf aveflle, you
<Sevote abOut a year of your lifetime
to such tearch«.
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Don't postpone
eff art'' to ban
deadly chemical
The city of Irvine's far-reaching environmental effort
to ban chlorofluorocarbons was detoured but not derailed.-
IB:Sl wc~k. C ity.o ffi cials should work diligently to keep the
p1onccnng ordinance on track.
Too much is at stake to let the law linger.
~t .is widely accepted that cho lo rfluorocarbons deplete
ozone 1n thC; earth's atmosphere, leading to increased danger
from ultraviolet rays, including the increased likelihood of
contract~ng skin ~ncer. Al~, the CFCs create a potentially
destructive cond1t1on 1n which the earth's surface is super-
heated. Left unc hecked , the greenhouse effect could dra-
matically alter Earth's climate, cause oceans to flood
devastate agriculture, making barren what was o nce fertile:
Irvine Mayor Larry Agran and Councilman Cameron
Cosgrove, taking their lead fro m si milar ord inances in
Berekley and. Por:tlan.d . are ho ping to blaze a trail into
Southern Cahforn1a, literally leaving a better world behind.
Ther~ is not much time to dawdle. Experts say C FCs
percolate into the atmopshere slowly, not showing their full
effect on the ozone for perhaps 15 to 20 years. Scientists say
today•s depleted level of ozone was caused by CFCs released
before 1980. They worry that given the reliance o n CFCs
today. we are faci ng a d ire situation near the turn of the
century.
In efT~, V.'t have a radioactive bomb ticking above us.
yet we continue to fan the flame on the fuse. ..
. Opponents of the ban .. ~ho arc largely fo und in 1ht·
business community, argue 1t 1s unreasonable to impose the
C FC ban a~ording to Irvine's current timelable. The
proposed ondnance targets July I. 1990 for compliance.
The business community contends it needs mo re than a
year to deve!op alternate technologies. Given the popularity
of the c.hem1cal s~bstance, whic~ is used in manufacturing
everything f~o m p1llo~ and. refngeran1s to silicon chips and
foam containers. business is probably not crying wolf. It
may take more than 12 mo nths to con1plete the weaning
from the hazardous substance.
And there are unknown hazards in replacing o ne
dangerous technology with an un1estcd one.
Still, business and technology can triumph under
adverse conditio ns. especially if ins pi red to do so. Motorcar
makers in Detroit, for example. managed lo make mileage
a priority with their automobiles when economic incentives
and pcnalities were applied. -We suspect a firm compliance date wi th penalties
attached, along with a j udicious waiver system. v.'ould ht."lp
provide the necessary motivation t o start protecting the
atmosphere.
0 I lll:IC \ 01( 1:s
Public school funding
California's public schools are due for a \\'indfall in
coming yean. thanks to high tax revenue and the Prop-
osition 98 budget initiative. It's vi1al that at least some of
the extra money goes for innovati ons aim ed .at improving
the schools' fini s hed product. graduates who join the work
force .
One guarantee of that is embodied in Senate Bill 1274
by Sen. Gary Hart. D-Santa Barbara, based o n a California
Business Roundtable plan for "free e nterprise in the
schools" -five years' worth of pilot projects to find better
ways to educate children.
The Han bill o ffers is a chance for teachers, parents <Jnd
principals to show they can d o 1hings better. Districts would
compete for $50 millio n a year in grants from the state
Board or Education to t ry any number of experiments -
as long as they pro mise results.
Support for the pilot projects runs the ideological
gamut from Hart and Assemblyman Jotln Vasconcellos.
both liberals, to conservative Assemblymen Bill Baker of
Danvi lle and Ross Johnson of Orange County. They know
~fornia has made progress but ~till ra,nks near the bottom
1n its dropout rate. Drugs and cntne sull plague campuses.
And many children, particularly those from low-incom e
families, still start school behind and keep falling back.
Those are ample reasons 10 try something new.
Coatr• Costa Times
ORANGE COAST Dli'1 .. Pi .. ·.·-·-·------
W'e l'!hW!f' * t'IMlf.
Tom Tait Edttor
Oon Fenlty Assocl1te Editor
Tom Clanin Ne_ws Editor
Steve Marble' City Editor
Roger Bk>Om Ftaturts EdltOI'
Oonrv Mooney Busfrwsi Editor
Roger C.artson Sportl Editor
Tom ludd Orcu1M1on Dhcl:or
Trtl Pupo CirCIJUtlon Mkl. Mgr.
Sob Franl< Homo Clttlwry Mgr.
Chalon Good Cust~ SM/Ice Mgr.
-l!~~~·11't.,.an~•.,.,.lllShoft ~~~~~~Ccw• .. ,
-w..a 0.0. Procouing Mgr.
Doml Jacob$0'1 c.-Mgr.
_,.,,, .. _ ~ -Mgr. ...... ,. .. .,,.,_, ---· a.rt,.,...... 01 hd ....
Judy °""'"II lf911 """· Mgr.
...... A. CillMI' .... s.dorW ...
..., L 1111 a1 "'I0'1 Alt DliW
_,, c.w ,.,, '"'--· ~ ,...... f\ I ,y F's i 0.Cebr
...... ...,. .. •• MER ....
:.:~~ ..... ~ .. 1.41 .. ,_
Scolt Om-. =:::~sir;::..
GI 11 ,,,_ C...,.... ...
. ..1\1\c; \C, \"!'. ilt1\i;. c\ 1<;(1..~ 'tl~El\ 1\W 0 \-lkc; W/71/ ~ft\i;,~
(~C. O\JI lo Ll~E l\\\~ 1\\t;~°R'to
\10\J\'c.L\:.SS M\.l foR&CI
· \\\\; D1'1'eS \\\~\ fi..R\:. ...
..
Bush takes cautious course . '
toward summit with Moscow
It's an unlikely opening fo r a
supcrpo"·er summit conference( the
president of 1he United States call-
ing the leader of the Soviet Union to
say, "Hey, let's get together."
President Bush say.s maybe that's
the "'a)' he'll arrange 10 meet with
Sovie! President Mikhail S.
Gorbachev "'hen the lime comes.
He's not saying when that time will
be, although he often is asked.
When there is a Bush-Gorbachev
summit, arrangements won't be
quite that casual, despite the presi-
dent's breezy suggestion. But his
latest observations on summit pros·
pccts underscore that such meetings
usuall~ are longer on drama than on
diplomatic resuhs.
What Bu sh's cautious course
toward Moscow lacks in excitc-ment
it may make up in continuity. The
president says he's comfortable with
the state of U.S.-Soviet relations and
feels they arc on the ri ght
wavelength.
He took his time getting there
despite unilateral troop and
weapons cuts Gorbachev announced
last winter and spring, scoring public
relations points 1n the proceu. Bush
orde~ a strategic review and stuck
10 his methodical pace despite com-
plaints in Congress. He announced
his proposal Jor swin. drastic cuts in
U.S. and Soviet forces in Europe at
NA TO on May 29.
Bush said he'd never felt J?fCSS-
urcd. "I said when I first came 1n we
were goin& to take our time and we
were goi na to study and we're going
to think it out. and we did exactly
that."
He seems to be handling summit
talk the same way.
"TheK will. obviously, at some
point be a meeting." he said last
week, "bu! I still feel I'd like the
mett1ng to be seen as productive
rather than just the meeting i1self.
" ... I feel comfortable about the
wavelength we're on with the Soviet
Union now:·
Bush said he thinks the Soviets
feel the same way. knowing that the
United States wants to move for-
ward on strategic arms reduc1ion
talks and on negotiations for con-
ventional force cuts.
He said that while a summit has
to Ix :sttn as productive. that
doesn't necessarily mean signing an
agreement as evidence of progress.
"I would like to think that the
criterion. the goveming critenon,
would be 50 that the world would
see the meeting as having been suc-
cessful. wmething good happrning
out of ii.
·· ... I've been around this track
long enoufh to know that you can
always whip out some1hing to sign,
a fishing agreement or something of
that nature.··
Gorbachev and President Reagan
did sign fishing and mariti me apec-
ments at thei r Moscow summit 1n
1988. Their major arms 1rea1 y.
eliminating intermediate range nu-
clear missiles, was signed at a Wash·
ington summit 1n 1987.
They met five times, all during
Reagan's second te rm. The pKsident
"'ho once called the Soviet Union an
evil empire spoke at the end of his
terms about a satisfying new closc-·
ncss in relauons wnh Moscow.
No such mood swi ng is likel y 1n
the new administration. While Bush
thinks relations arc headed 1n the
right general direction. he still is
"guided by a ceruun sense of cau-
tion." citing the trc-mendous dif·
ferences that remain with thc-Soviet
Union.
"I must admu thal I would not
ha•e predicted aner first tak.in& of-
fice 1hat iQme day 1 would be wax-
inJ nostalgic about my mectinp
with Sovie! leaders." Reagan said
before his final summit, in Nc-w
York. w11h Bush on hand as prcsi-
dent~lcct . "But here we afC', for the
fifth time. Mr. Gorbachev and l
toeether. in the hope of furthering
peace."
Bush said he won't 1ns1st that
there be .. a maJor treaty of some sort
before I would sit down wi th Mr.
Gorbachev.
"Mar.be we'll do 11 like !his; say.
'Hey. et's get together.' And I'm
inlCrcsted in wha1 he thinks about i I... •
But it's clear that there j5 no
hurry, and lhere 1s no hiah exptCt.a-
tion. T here's a ra11on o( realism in
that. U.S.-So,•iet summit mtttings
usually l\ave been significant be·
cause they were held ratbcr than for
any specific results.
Walter R. Mun, .. w prnltle11t
u4 col•mal•t lot 'De A•.oclatff Pn••. Ila• nportN oa W••ile1100
ud utloul pollllc• for more r.aiu
1$ yun.
Democrats
have not yet
begun to fight
To the Editor.
Wars are not avoided by one side
refusing to fight. We learned that
after Munich in 1939. and it was
demonstrated once apin in 1988
during the presidential campai~
when one candidate refused to fight
back even ·though-under repeated
attack.
We're seeing it again in !.he actions
of ex.Speak.er Jim Wright and his
part¥. In the interests or unity, they
call it But there \lo'asn't unity when
the attacks bepn and unit on't be
created b>:'. his quietly rca ·n
private hfc. Witness < c ''Ii J"'
memo about the suettisor Speaker
Thomas Foley, and then a link.in& of
his voting record with a hom05Cx·
ual's votinJ record.
The firina of the memo's author
was less a housc<lcanii:i.4 thal a
publicity. coup. And now its a large
piece of j unk mail from C.On-
grcss~a,n Newt Grin&rich tryina 10
conv1 n~ me and the other countless
thousands who also rccieved it that
Congress is work.in& 10 destroy the
Constitution of lhe United Slates
(the Democra1ically controlled Con-
gress. of course).
tr, in the interests of unity. the
Democraa mean Rc-publican domi-
nation of both houses or Congress,
then the Dcmocrau' tactic of refus-·
in& to fight back is an effective way
or achieving the changeover.
LEO WARNER
Santa Ana
Let your money
do the talking
To the Editor:
Since our politicans arr too
chickc-n to do it, all freedom lovina.
average ci1iuns must make our ac-
tions heard: BOYCOlT CHINA
GOODS.
MARY MACY
Col1a Mca
TOD\\ I' Hl,IOH\
Today is Wednesday, July S, the
!86th day of 1989. Thet"C arc l79
days left in the year.
On this date:
ln 1935, President Fra.nklin 0 .
Roosevelt silfled into law the Na-
tional Labor Relations Act, which
provided for a NationaJ Labor Rela-
tion1 Board and authorized labor to
organize for the purpose of colloc·
1ive bargainina.
In 1977, Pakistan's army, Jed by
General Mohammad Zia ul-Haq,
seized pawer from Pre1ident
Zulfikar Ali Bhuno. Bhutto was ex·
ec:uted in 1979.
In 1978, a Soviet Soyuz spacecnift
touched down safely in Sovie!
Kazakhstan with its 1wcrmcmber
crew. incl~ing Major Miroslaw
Hcrmaszcwski. the fi rst Poli$h space
lJ'I veler.
In 1983. Harry James, the swina-
era bandleader and trumpet player.
died in La5 Yeps at aae 67.
By fte AntdltH Prnt
Governor comes out of the GOP closet
ly RICK ftODftlGUEZ
Gov. Georae Dcukmejian is doina
some1hina quite out of character
these days -he's openly backina
o ne Republican candidate for
treasurer in 1990 over another.
But wait1 there's more.
DeukmCJian , who is not sctkina
re-election next year, has already
LI S Sen Pere Wj!son as
the person he wants 10 take his place
as aovemor.
And he's bttn "very encouraaina"
to Republican Dan Lungren i1l his
quest lo become attorney acneral.
Those kinds of rtvelations aren't
likely 10 land Deukmejian ln any
national sossip tabloids. ...Bui ~ lhe~ do_ reveal 1hat the
painstakin&Jy politically cautious
governor may be bccomina a lilt~
lcu so now that he ia contempladna
leavin& public offi«. And for some
of his political allies, it is a welcome
development.
"lnhctt.ntl)', he is a very cautious
person,·• uid attorney Robert
Naylor. a fonner AJscmbly Re-
publican kadtr and the party's rot-
mer state chairman. ··rm &lad to see
him become lcu bashJul a6out this..''
Even th.It time around. ho-.w:ver,
hi& early-involYemcat in the~ 1990
campalpt may have more to do
with arc:um111nca than a sb111>
chanac in hi1 P91 ltical approach.
.. My auess -and ifs purely
apeculation -la that It it more a
cue of iDdivtdual circumstances
than h is 1 th.art.St in philosophy,"
said the tovemor'a fbrmcr prea
oecmary. i.any Tboma, now vice
praAdent of C0111«1tt commua.ial·
lions !Or lho °"'"" ounly-lrviae Co. "'Haviaa aid lhal.; wi\h
lllirn leavi1 oft\ce f think he rt-eta a lot mcnreedont to betome in-
votvt<I lllan he hat b«o In Ibo -·-Olea a.,.,. dearty .,,... a
~~,H~t'= .. _ ..... ___ tr ..
_ ... .\llor ... ii -.......... ---~-........ 'IE ftlllr.-.... 1111111.• .. _ .... _ ......... ....
tMt ,_ Unru'-a Ol!mcoll
•
An analysls
When Anacla "Bay .. Buchanan. a
conscrva1ive former U.S. treasurer
under Ronald Reagan, declared in
April thal she also would run for the
st nex~ year. thc-ovcm or ~af-
Ocukmej1an's endorsement of
Wilson on May 31 was also predict-
able -pan of an attempt by Re-
publican Icade.rs 10 avoid a divisive
primary in ne~1 year's crucial
aubema1orial race. lt came when it
appeared as thouah there was no
other po tential Republ ica n
gubcma1orial candidate on the
horii.on -bc:fore former baseball
commissioner Peter Ueberroth dis-·
c.losed he was still exploring a poss-G•Of111• D•ulnlltdlan
ibl·c bid. ina key I OOlvidual roles 1n sev'entl
Althoujh he hasn't formally en-GOP campaians.
doned Lungren (or a1tomey acncral, "It's imptrative 1hat ~as a P.l!rtY
Dcukmcjian·s suppart would hardly do everythin& we e1n to bu1kl a
be surprisina. Lunarcn. an ex.con-cadre of leadership that can follow
.,-essman from Dcukmeji1n·s home-Ronald Reapn and Geotle Deu-
town or l.on& Beach, was the ao\·-km~ian and, pe:rsonally. l think
cmor·s first choice to be treasurer we'tt doin& that," Merksamer satd.
but bia nominal on was blocked by Still, some 1ont1ime Dcukmejlan
Senate-Ocmoor111. aupponen privately KmAfn puzz.led
The •overnor has remained and di1mayed over the aoVemor·s
charactcnstlcally cautious l n the lack of strona politic.ti ~nhip.
r1CC ror tbt Republican nomination .. Jn 1986, he ·took no role what·
-for lieutenant governor soujht by sbcvtr (in recruhlna candidates),"
Sent. Marian rk:l"ICl<>n of ?rlewport said one prominent Republican who
Beach and John Seymour of aUed not to be lden1ifted. ''Certain
Auhtim. thlf\11 have h:S-ntd in hia career
"My &un.t la lhat I.be: eovemor Iha •-h will not endorlc in that one btcau~ t ... ve ~u us to scntc our
it is a race btlw«n l'WO fritl'lda.," helda and try lO ~re them out."
said Steven Merltaamer, I Sacra-Amona those lb1np al'C the ap-
mento altomt~ and De.ukmrj\an'\ pointments of Hayes, who wasn't
formtr chtef or -SLafr. even a rqistcred Rc:pubelaln . and Olhon 10 ICey JIOt\$ ev<1I thouah they Whatever the ttatons for Otu.. dkl not havt rona hi toria oC ttfVkt, km~~~~ involvetnC'ftt, he is playfftt to the pany.
11 di l rok than ht did in the .. There art l\lY' lhat wen\ out on
1916 ala~ ek-ctiona ."':~ Mmt• a limb and nevt:t ~ '"Y'thina in
btn of~'' own p1ny cntte11'ed him t'l:.turn ... Thctt ts 1 feeti~ amona fOr fltl!nc to ~l1 °' tnCOUJ'lllC ..,..... ofua out lhtre that it 11 a one-
1\cpu:bhcan candida1es. way 1ttett.. There 11 no ~ny ktratty
In 1ddlV~ many of O.u· 1nd no -1 loyally," .aded 11ie ~iaa·a cnia advittn durint his Rtpublk:&" aoun:t:. tll .... ..,. llllf ,..,. In olftet -~ N•7* Nfl<l0dod lllll -PIOllle
--· Tll-f\and .. ilC1' ,.._,. -·-~-...... bl Somutlll• ind -'1 wril« polntmonts. "TM 1nnl-..1 II oel K.. KN<llialln -are •ireld)I PllY· u..r., bot I think 11 I• held by 1 VtfY
•
narTow aroup of people, mostly folks
who thoul)\t they should have been
picked.··
But bo~h he and Merksamer now
say they wish lhat ltie '°vef'riOr had
played a laraer role 1n recruitina
statewide candidates in 1986.
"I wish he woukl have sottcn
involved in "86:' 11id Na lor. '"I
think he wouk1 have pla a con-
s IV I n
Party suffen from a lack o a bench
in the secondary con1tJtu1ional of-
fices.·· .
Added Merksamer, .. , think we
had a wonderfully JUCCCUful firtl
term, but if I have any .,s it•a
tha1 We "'-ere not more 1a1ve."
Ocl.lkmcjian bu k>na achewod
the rok of political ''ti~"
preferrin& not to Lake aidet in Re-
publican primary election• or to
hand-pick candidatct. ·
Tliosc ckllte to the aovemor•r
pt.rt of his distaste for the rolt J\C!nt
from his own ex perience in I'll
when a group of influcntiaJ Re-
publicans 1ricd to push him out o1
lhe GOP primary for tovemot IO
clear the way for thtn-Lt. Oov. Mike
Curb-
.. He hu been at the recclvint ftd
~~.~:~~=-~ =· the JOVttnOt'S ptreU MStMy.
M0tl Republican--0.uk~lan.. priacipol ......, role In 1990 will bo io ..., 1•
l'Und111lli .. Ind IO pve 1111 -..
lO lho ~bl-llilte la ... -
eral Jlecl""" ......... ~,;,:, ~~
win olllco In 19'2, ~'ii: \md'an wou\cl be lldive I.a ID\ ,..... .......... -_, ......
profile qy,
"He ·-,... ... ..,.. 10 _ ... _.,_ ........
old '°=-=-·~ k.-llid. "'tlazs't r:,, ~~ ~.wu_
Wit he dMln"'l,... 10 ... 1111•
Mm, I lllin II trill Ill 1111 -• 1'90." ""2•t ,_. • D I •..., --... '''" ..... . ,... ...... ....
'I
.,
AlO DAILY PILOT/ Wedneedey, July 5, 1989
. ~ ' I
Fund-raiser ~et Thu rsday for ailing artist Wing
lly TIRY KINNIDY
~ .... Ceuu 41""'•
Andy Wif1f'S abstract paintinas
pulse with• vitality, joy, shades of
satire, and bold splashes of fun that
bunt outward at the viewer like
detonatina rainbows.
.. Creation moves me the most.''
the S9-year.old Laauna Beach artist
I \ I I' I I' f ~'
• •
.
says. In tact, creation is WinJ'I main
focus. It is as if his paintmas are
sugestina that both beainnings and
endinp are intrinsic to each other,
codependent. And by virtue of this
fact, death cannot ever be abstracted
from life because. from Wina's per-
s~ve, death is nonexistent. Crea-
tion is all.
The man wbo draws forth this
vision of immortality from the life
process is very much like the work
he creates -powerful. The more
eneray he spends) the more he ap-
pears to be receiving from an in-
visible source.
It is impossible, therefore. to think
of him as a person who is seriously
10:00 10:30 11:00 11-:30
llltof
e.-i R
Tai (Pin 2 of lolp
Complete TV llstlngs In Sunday's TV Upda te
OuR NEW GARDEN FRESH
LUNCHES ARE IN
Bur ONLY UNTIL SUMMER
RuN£0 -uT
ill. The fact is, thouah, Andy Wina
might die if he doesn't have major
heart surgery as soon as possible.
The tall, thin painter and con·
structionist whose pale. unlined face
is framed by wind-blown hair and a
white beard, looks intently at you
when he speaks about wa nting to
have the surgery.
··1 had a choice." he confides. "I
could stay. or I could ao."
Wina's countl")·river brown eyes
necked with sold grow dark even in
bright morning sunlight when he
remembers making that decision:
"J sat down with my Sis and we
talked about 1t," the unmamed art·
1st explains. From \>Ch ind his glasses
you can feel the nver deepening.
"But I can't go. I've s111l got too
much work to do. l'm not ready to
leave yet."
Once he learned the heart surgery
was imperative. the uninsured Wing
gave has sister, poet Nancy Wing.
permission to start a fundraising
campaign she felt would save his
life. As a result. she alonJ with many
of his supporters. organized a show-
in' of the artist's work, hoping to
raise the $50.000 needed to cover
the cost of the surgery. Without the
money, Wing will not be able to
ha ve the operation.
The fundraising exhibit debuts
Thursday evening, July 6 at Piret's.
a South Coast Plaza bistro. between
7:30 and 9:30 p.m.
"Wh~1·s ama:ung." Wing
elaborates, "is that it's the second
time around for me. In 1983 I had
the first surgery. The> P.Ut in a
prosthesis, and for a while things
worked out OK."
Lagun• •••ch •rtl1t Andy Wing 11 the focUI of • fund·
r•ltlng •rt exhibit opening Thur1d•y •t Plret'a In South
CCN11t Pl•u. Wing's f•mlly •nd friends hope to , ....
SS0..000 to en•bl• the •rtl1t to under90 crtttc.I h••rt
IUJ'l•'Y•
At the 11me. Wing's benefactors.
also led by sister Nancy managed to
collect about $30.000.
Unul recently, he felt fine. Then.
quite unexpectedly. while on a work-
related trip to Santa Fe. New Mex-
ico, Win$ began to experience ex-
treme daseomfort. "The altitude
made it obvious there was some sort
of problem. I came hQme and went
to the host>ital and h'lld tests done.
They saw right away what I needed."
Much olWing's emotional sup-
port comes from the community of
Laguna Beach. where he has hved
since 1959.
"In this place, we're one big fam-
ily,.. Wing expounds. "No matter
who's bcina born and who's passing
on, we stay a big family. Many of the
kids are born hcrt and the old
people are able to Sta) here until
they pass on to the other side
There's unity here:· he says proudl>.
"We care about each other ...
However. Wing claims the Laguna
Beach that he came from Green-
wich. Conn .. b) way of New York
City to scule in 30 years ago s1mpl>
does not exist. It's changed so rad-
ically, according to Wing. that he 1s
more alarmed now than ever over
the continuing development.
The ·60s and '70s changed me,"
he confesses. "I became an en-
vironmentalist. ..
The artist 5a)5 his act1v1sm
escalated at the height of the hippie
era. "when the town fa thers decided
to dump everything out here in the
canyon. They blanket zoned 11 for
manufacturi ng. ..
These days Wing v.ork5 long
hours trying to finish up as many
projects as possible. The matenals
...... ,. .. -e~~ ..... ,_ .• ~· "'· }IX•!•!.:,•!•!•:•.•:•!·~·:• .. • .. •:• ... •!•!•-·:·
IA1MAH '°1~ • 0112 ao-1 .. 10MM & OolJr. 11"5-1.30-2.» .. 1w.1s.1~.e.s.
16AS / ... 3~at
ll.ll» ls.6:.»10.00 Mo'-•o.a.-
Check the
Classifieds for
details.
he uses in his most recent compo-
s1t1ons are often found objects. ordi-
nal") things that turnout to be sur-
pnses when looked at from a dif-
ferent perspecti ve.
"I consider these objects to be
embued with a certain magic," he
exphilns. ·
To Wing these objects that some
might regard as sill~·· project a spiri-
tual level of being. in the manner of
the lessons of the "Tao Tc Ching."
From an assortment of materials
including discarded paint can lids.
paint rollers. and fallen eucalyptus
branches, come works with such
ton~ue-i n-cheek titles as "I Coun-try. · and "The USA Buffalo Pig.''
It s impossible to take life or death
for that matter. seriously when you
are havinJ so much fun.
Paret's 1s located at 3333 Bristol
Street. Costa Mesa. For mort infor-
mation, call 724-1460.
Newport Beach
IDWAllOI lffWf'09'T CIHUllA JOO N._,
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She comes back
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WIMB LEDON. Engl"and (AP) -
Chris Even staged her grca1cs1
Wimbledon comeback Tuesday anq
added a drama1ic nounsh to what
may be her final appt.•arancc al tht•
All England Club.
The vi('tory put Evert in to the
Wimbledon semifinals for the 17t h
time in 18 )'cars. ,
The 34-ycar-old AnH:rican . "''ho 1s
cx.pcctcQ to retire at the end of the
year. was a point away from traili ng
4-0 in the final set and '"'O points
away from losing 1lu.· match before
rallying to beat Laura Golarsa of
11a11 6-3. 2-6. 1.5 .
·· n the middle of the third set, I
thoughl. "This is not the way I want
to go out"' Evert said, ··1t's almost
like I felt I didn'1 dcscr\'e to losc that
wa~·;~rt's ncx.t opponent, defending
champion Steffi Graf, also had los-
ing on her n11nd "'hl·n she beat
Arant7.a Sanchez 7-5, 6-1 on c_·cnlre
Coun. SanchcL scrvl·d for thl' first
set at 5-4 but Graf won the ne.\t
seven games against the:' 17.year-okl
Spaniard. who beat Grdf in la~t
month"s Frenc~ Open final.
.. It "as not re,enge, bu1 I "·anted
to play ?sa1nst her and pta~ be11er."
Graf sa1d . "I should have t·onll" 1n
n.r.ht fron1 the bc~1nning. When I
d1d, I "'On alrno!it every po1nt."'
Eight-time chan1pion Mar1ina
Navratilova "'Oil n1ost Of her points
againsl An1encan Gretchen Magers
10 set uP a scnufinal meeting with
Catarina Lindq v1s1 of Sweden.
Na,·ratilova overcame a shaky
serve in the first set to beat Magers
6-1. 6-2 and Lindqv1st downed
Rosalyn Fairbank of South Africa
7-5, 7-5 1n a baule of unseeded
players.
"I knew what to expect,"
Navratilova said after rf'aching the
semifinals for the 12th consecu\1\'e
year. "I had the edge there. Ex-
perience count.s for something."
Just ask Golarsa. the lo"e~t
ranked pla)er in the quarterfinals at
No. 87 and the first l1alian "'Oman
to reach 1hc final Clllht at
(Ple ase see \l/IMBLE DO N /Blj
Graf gains redemption
for French Open defeat
WIMBLEDON. England (AP) -
That was clay and this was grass.
That was Paris and this was
Wimblt'don. And this lime, the
queen of tennis remained on her
throne.
Steffi Gra r. upset by Arantxa
Sanchez in thf' final of last month's
French Open, beat the 17-ycar-old
Spaniard 7-5, 6-1 Tuesday to ad-
vance to 1he Wimbledo n semifinals.
"She played much bcllcr than she
did at the French Open," SancheL
said. "I tried to do 11 again but she
playl'd incredibly. I couldn't do an)-
thing.'"
world's lop-ranked pla)l'r. ~:11d "I
wa nted to play bclll'T 1han 1n Pans.
Maybe it's the reason "h) I "'as not
as pauent as usual.''
Three weeks ago. Sanche1 and
scrambled for every ball on the slo"
clay of Roland Garros and forced
G raf into a slew of unforct-d errors.
espcciall~ fron1 her shced backhand.
Thl· West Ciern1an . "'ho "'as suf-
fenng fron1 n1l·ns1rual cramps. nl·vcr
found her champion's touch 111 1ha1
match and lost 7-6. 3-6. 7-5.
In her mon1ent of glor). Sanchc1
rolled on her back ltkc a Joyful
pupp) as she bcramc thf' youngcs1
winner of the women's title. A dc-
jec1cd Graf nc"' ho me and prepared
for V.1imb1C'don.
' 'L
WEDNESDAY, JULY .S, 1989
,,.. .
SOl·"l 11 \I I
Batbusters
capture
tourney
The D~ly Piiot
ESCONDIOO -OranJ.e.County
Batbusters p11chcrs Jennifer Brun-
daie and Rat' Ri ce Jim1tf'd the
Fighun· Fillies to thrtt hits while
Chf'ryl Longl·wa~ and Shannon
Dolan had '"'0 hits apiece to lead a
3-1 victory 111 lhr champ1onsh1p
game of the E~o nd1do Frttdom
Tournament 111 girls summer soft-
ball al·tion Tucsda).
Brundage. of Irvine High. lhrcw
51 • 1nn1ngs of 1wo-h11 sofiball with
no walks to earn the victory, depan-·
1ng aftl'r al10"'1ng a one-out single 111
1hc )l~lh . Rice. of Fountain Valley
li1gh, 1hrcw l!t1 innings of one-hit .
one-walk rchef 10 earn the save.
l.ongcw<1 ) of Kennedy High and
Dolan of Fountain Valley High each
wen1 2 for 2 "1th a double. run and
RBI to leaJ an eight-hit attack.
Dolan 'ioacnficed Longeway 10
third ba.sc 1n the first inning afier the
laur r opened the g.amr with a
doubtc, and Brundage singled home
Longc"ay for a 1-0 lead.
With o ne out 1n 1hc §CC:Ond 1n-
n1ng. Toni Gofonh reached on an
error <1nd took second on Jenna
fPle•se ·see BATBUSTERS/IJJ
HO\ 11'\f,
Transpac race
remains close
l y ALMON LOCKABEY o...,.....,._..,...,,...,
If dail y position reports arc cor-
tcct. the )5th biennial Tra nspac race
from Los Angeles to Honolulu
prom1!iC's lo be one of lhe closes1 on
record .
W11h the yachts approaching the
halfway mark toda). 11 would appear
lo be an yone's guess as to who will
be lirst 10 finish.
As of Tuesday's 8 a.m. rollcalt, it
would be a tossup bctw«n P1ul
S1monsf'n's Santa Cruz-70
l~•te SH TRANSPAC/aJ)
l"li SIDt:
•M~le .... n/•Z
• All· Star narter /•I
Graf said that oner she sto{>pect
rushina to finish off the Spaniard.
her ga me came 1ogcthcr. She said the
victory was S"'CCI.
"It was not re venge but I wanlcd
to play against her," Grar. the
But "'hen Sanchez faced hf'r aga1n
Tuesday. Graf was readv to pu1 the
IPle•se se-e GRAF /Bl)
M•rtln• N•vr•tllov• stretches In •n effort
to retur n Gretchen M•9er1· volley In their
women's 1ln9le1 qu•rterfln•I m•tch on
Centre Court. Navr•~llov• won. 6 -1. 6 -J .
• s .... 1,,. GehrJe/••
• Horse re1ult1/ll4
Record-setting Abbott
still has long way to go
Angel left-hander
happy to throw
for w inning team
From The Auocl•tRd Press
Jim Abbott set a major-leaaue
record and imn1«1iately put it
into perspective.
When 1hc 2 1-ycar-old lcn-
hander heal the TcAas Ran~rs
s.;i Mo nday niaht for his scVelltll
victory, it set a rt<'Ord fof major
lcquc victories by a first-year
pro.
Abbott, 7-S, bctlered the
rc_vious record set in 1973 b
1 u ven, w o was or
Philadelphia. Abbott is the IOlh
pitcher to bcain his career in the
m-.Jon si nce the amateur dran
bct.an in I 96S. When informed or hi-1 record.
Abbott said he was aware that
Burt Hooton bcaln his cartet
with two vktories for the 1971
Chicaao Cubs. then .we nt on to
win l 91 ~or lequc pmes.
"So I've IOI • Iona way 10 l•t"
Abbott said with a chudr.le ... This
record is nice. We're in lhc
mKid'°-of a penn1nt.race. lt'1j1i1"
nice btina 1 contribul int factor.
"It feels aood to be on a team
that f'tels ii can win."
Abbott's perfonnance h11 ktpt
the Aqels on the httls or Oak-
land in the Amtrican Lcasue
W<tt.
"This l1 a pretty key tcrin. I
~·about lMt., u _., 11 the
... IMI I llldn1 yet beo1<n a
1eam from the Wat .. 11id Ab-
boll, who was 0-J •'"''his own
d\\lition.
Abbott'• 14 ... ns have.-come
111intt 11 difftrent &aim" The
oftly onetltcbu,..IO .... an
AL W<ll IOn Min-u4
~ Teui 10 ftft ltib in ... ia.U.. llNCI< ... oi>t. ,.._ -•ftd miml I} of Ille
... IS -Ito-. He loall'ld Mtwned--Nn •"'II' to
171. --·--·-.... a&llilt,r.·• ...... Dlil: ...... ...... ~4c;:~ =_111!.••-&:-~.r:.:1111•• .. -·
.. ' . --........ -
An111111 .. ,.. .... left·INM141e41 ,._..., """'Mltoft Mt•
.. Rf1r•.., • d 1 r &.a11ue vkt• ... ~ • flnt ·J••..,...
some '"',. Nnnina. 11 t1 kn 1
'A'hik to ~ t.ck in .,ear 1ner that
ll)-Off with my shoulder."
Abbon hid no tro"btc with the
Ra,..en. c.A«P! for two J•ms he
cr<at<d hlmwtr.
Abbott Ditched at the Unlvtfl-
ahy of Mldtoi lo< lhrer ~ Ind WU tile e th p&a1Cf" tekraeid
ln lhc Junt, I • dr8f\. ltca••
he ~ tut •mmes 11 a ftWllt--
b<r 01 1k U.S. Ot)'ftlpic -·
"-did ... -·)II ...... •11'1• ..... 'dlil thtl --
'II \JOH l .t >\61 t: II \SI II\ I I
Armas home run lifts An-gels
Th ree -run shot in ninth tops Texas , 5-2
From The Associated Press to get him out.'' Wal ly J n~ ncr d..:iublcd w11h ont
Texas ~med to be tcmp11ng 131c oul in the n1n 1h and took third on
but, seeing ho" Kt•\ in Oro"·n had an infield gruunder Davis was •n -
manhandl«I Ton) Arma!i all gan1c. ten11onall y "alkcd before Armas hit
tl.1anagcr Bobb~ Valcnunc d1dn"1 re -hi$ s1.\lh hon1c run 1h1~ year 1n on1}
ally ha''<' a choice 47 a1-bats.
-Choosing to "'alk ("h1h Da' 1" 1n-"'This was my biggest hn 1n a long
\'\f,11'" Ill Ill 11 -Tonlon~.,._,.,, 7:3.5
Jy6-R•ntMl'"I, 7:3.5 •
Jv7-Twlnt, 7:J.5
Jvt-Twln1, 1:20/
Jvf-Twtn1, 2:05
Jvl~ Jyl I-AH-Stir G1~./
Jv12-klle
1cn11onall) and instl·ad fa ce Armas 11n1c," Arn1as said. '"The last 1wo •All i.1m11 on ICMPC r1dlo 1710>
w11h two outs 1n 1he n1n1h inning )Cars. I ha'l'n't pla yed rcgularl). rm • Ot1 1eiev1,1on . Cl'tlnnel s
Tucsd3) night. 1he Ranger~ paid IOr no! satisfied "1th that. bu! I'm /On 1•i.v1Slon , Cninnel ..
it "htn 1\rmas h11 o thrtt'-run honll'r pre!\\ happ) no"."
to give ("ahforn1a a 5-2 ''ll"tOr) Wi'll1r Fra$Cr, 2-4. p11chcd three and Jack t-fowf'll hn his 10th home
'"1-fc thro"s real hard and "as innings of 1hrl't'-h1t. \hu1nu1 rchtf run.
&citing me on breaking hall\ al l a.ftr:r M1kc \V111 ga vl' up s1x hits tn Texas pulled to within a run in the
night. So I c:.:pcc tcd 1he breaking ball si x 1nn1ngs. fifih when R ick Leitfi Slnjled-wi1lr
aftin.'" said Arn1as. who continued Brown. 7-). allowtd s1~ hus. 1wo outs and llCOrcd on Steve
his ho'\ h1111ng ancr a brief lull struck out SC\ en and walked o nt 1n Bcut hclc's double. The Rangers tied
Armas had been I I ·for-I q cnu·r-his S1.\th cornplctc aamc. it with a 1wo-out nilly in the sill th on
ing this ~fll'S. but "'RS 0-for-ti The gantc "as attcndt'd b) 62.390. cunsccu1ivc singles by R1f1el
8JO.inst Tc.\as unut lining a \\U1st· the larars1 c.rowd 1n the mllJor Palmc1ro. Ruben Sierra. and Julio 1~nd-l--sltdtt-froo,--Bro~>A"'~· --il<>ea1tgutt-t-h~ff-f1T-&work-.s--Fte.ne<r..-c::---:--:c~=::------
.. l.vc go1 no C.\cuses. It was JUSI a night at .\nahci1n Stadium. II was Franco's 61st ROI, tying
bad pitch," Brown said, "'You can"t (·ahforn1a look a 2-0 lead 1n lhC' him with Sierra for the American ..
throw 1nyonf' that pi tch and C-"t>C\'I 1h1rd when Lance P•rT!Sh s1n11led Lcaauc lead.
Cards' Magrane five-hits Dodgers.
Valenzuela throws
w ell, but receives
n o support, loses 2-1
ST. LOlJIS (Al') -Joe Maamnc
sccn1~ to be 1iun1ng an appr«1a11on
for his tl'1unnla1cs.
Ma1ranc llilchc.'<I a fi,•e-h11ttr ror
his third s1r111ht v1c1ory as the SL
bouis ~•rdtnals b.c•l the Los An·
aclcs 00d1-cn l-1 Tucsd1y night.
.. It k«:psC'\crybody In the pnlc."
Ottic Smith said of Ma&ntne'' ef-
fort. ''His lat.t two outfnas nave bt"<en
vef') 1ndkativc of what can happen
if he allows 1hc auys behind him to
pl11."
Cardinals mtn&IC'r Whltcy Hcnos
taid Maaranc netdcd only 76 pitches
to stt throuth thC' Orst c11ht inninJs or the aame. whk:h was pl1yt'<I 1n
1v.·o hours and 12 m1nu1cs.
··Hc threw 12 in the ninth. Ht
th~w tO or \hem to (Mikel
M1nh1U," Hen0& Slid. ..tic's
ca pable of ao•na Ou1 1heft and th'rowina 1hat ldnd of pme e\tf)'
time."' Maarsnt who has betn bothered
intcm1 ittcn))" b)• l<'ndtt clbow. rclif'd
hce\'1ly on h11 fa,1 blll 10 bc11 Los ~b for the ICC'Ond lime tht -· . "Ho ......... fool'_, ha « 10
llnM CYt l')bodt out to win~ )OU'vt
llO IJf,111' 'f Ill Ill 11
JU51 aot 10, Jtl them out." Dod~n.
manaacr Tommy Lasot'dl said.
··~1aarane kept the blll doWTI and
101 •head of the hitlrn."
The C"ard1nals S<'Ortd two runs in
thc fi'rst 1nnin& off Fernando
Vak.·nzutla, 4-7, J()llC Oauendo rol·
1o-.·cd Vince Coleman's doubte •nd
'4lh eon5«uti\•e tucct fu l stok:n
hist v.ith . M«tfit'C' ny. Otz~ mhh
thcn doubiC'd and $C.Of'CCf on Ptd·ro
Oucrrcro'1 sinate.
V1lcn1uc:ll aUowtd four hita Ind
stru(k crit sl• bt'°" lelvina for 1
p!'\Ch·h111tt in 1hc Kventh •
.. The onl)' -.1y wt ~n win prntt
, since-,.-c·rc not hht1n-.: 11 to plich
a sh utout," tasorda •1dJ.n cWrib-
'"' I.Alt ,,..i..· b9<'1 pmbl<m. "Fernanda f •dcd a ll)Od p sm-. but
•"t'tt ftOt h1tdna... •
M11ranc. wtule ~ftl his
ClnM.-d.~run IYCraat" to 3.14. tNCk
out one ind walked. 1wo n route IC>
his fbun h co mptete pmc t• tr.it._ six st.an
iMe romina. off the ~ 1'91
on 1'pril JO. M..,.nc tm • 7~
l't('()rd and 1 1.&5 ERA . Ovtrall. M
is 8-6.
"If lhtre'1 one 1h "' I rally Wlft1
10 do it's be abk to win .n lhc now mo. .. Ml&tlnc uid.. "Tblt c;ew'l Cppc,. t ll the umc. bul I ta9 do 1
11<11cr job 1toan I -b<fott.·
Mi<i<c) H~l<hcr utplod ... -outt in 1hc ftrtt lnnl~ oe a *1tre
1hat to' PIM Milt ••11111 '8 ,,,., ............ _... ... ....
""""' Oucmro'• llll -am!!' Ille
in 11 ., .... Cml11•a. cauclt•-•111•• 9<11\.1, ..... l
ift tM IM;of ..... -
011u1• lholh top Shawon Dunston
.... airborne over San 01-·1 Leon Rob.:
,., Lome•,.....
eru •• h• w•tch•• his t hrow from second
to first duri n g • doubl e pl•J In th• third.
.
Schulze's day finally comes
Yankeeearnsreca~ vvin
from The Auoclated Preu
On the SOth anniversary of Lou Gehrig's farewell.
Don Schulze came back.
.. 1 kept hopin' my day would come, but you never
know," Schulze said Tuesday after he led the Yankees
past Milwaukee 1-0.
Schulze flVC up six hits. three in the first inning.
for his first b1&·league victory since July 20, 1987, with
the New York Mets. He bcame the I Ith pitcher to start
a aame for the Yankees this season and got his chances
because of several injuries to the staff.
"To get that kind of performance out of him was
special," New York manager Dallas Gr&n said. "It
came at a time when we needed it. And we didn't give
him much breathing room."
Tom Brookens. who like Schulze played in the
Detroit organizatton last season. singled home the only
run io the fourth inning off Frank Tanana. Don
Mallingly went 3-for-4 and extended his hitting streak
~17 pmu .
Prepme cermcnies honored Gchng, who said
farewell to bascbaJI between games of a doubleheader
on July 4. 1939.
In other American League ~mes:
. lndlaa1 3, Wltlltc Sox %: Luis Aguayo hit his first
home run of the season and Scott Bailes won for the
third timo in four starts for host Cleveland.
Bailes, 4-3. allowed two runs on six hits in seven
innings. walking none and strikinf out two. Doug Jones
got the last three outs for his 20th save in 23
opportunities.
Melido Pen~z retired 11 straight batters from the
second inning until Jerry Browne walked with two outs
in the fifth. Aauayo then hat his first home run since
he had one for the New York Yankees apjnst BaHn
last Sept. 13.
Orioles I, Blee Ja11 0: Dave Schmidt pitched a
perfect pme for 611, innings and Gal Ripken drove in
three runs at Toronto. Mark Williamson finished the
combined two-hitter with 2 2-3 innings of hitless relief
for his seventh save.
Schmidt, 8· 7, lost the perfcct-pme bid when Tony
Fernandcz beat out a bunt single down the first-base
line.
Dave Stieb, 7-S. allowed five hits in six innings,
struck out five and walked four. Toronto has lost four
of its last fi ve pmes.
Brewen f, Red Sox 3: Paul Molitor snapped a 2-2
tic with a lcadofT home run in the eighth inning ofT Joe
Price, 1-4, and B.J. Surhoff added a sacrifice fly in the
ninth for a 4-2 lead at Boston.
Chris Bosio, 8-S, allowed seven hits in 7l/, innings,
struck out ei&ht and walked three. Dan Plcsac got the
final four outs for his league-leading 2J st save in 26
opponunities.
Mariacrt 3, TwlH Z: At Seattle, Scott Bankhead,
7-4, allowed three hits and one run in 71/J innings to win
his fifth consecutive decision.
Mike Schooler pitched the ninth for his 18th save.
allowing a run-scoring single to Al Newman. With the
tying run on third and one out, Schooler struck out Tim
Laudner and got Randy Bush on a flyout.
Allan Anderson, 9-6, gave up three runs and six
hits in eight innings. striking out three and walking one.
RoyaJ1 10, Atlllellc• I: Bo Jackson homered twice
to give him 20 home runs and 20 steals at the season's
midway point for visiting Kansas City.
Bret Saberhagcn, 8-4, won his fifth consecutive
decision, allowing five hits in seven innings and striking
out a season-high 11 .
Eight men left out for minor league
mistreatment of much maligned ump ·
From The Assocl•t•d Prcu
MIDLAND, Texas -fl was a night for -'".• ·~. fireworks when Wichita visited Midland in Y'
the Texas League on Tuesday. and not just
When announcer Barry Sykes responded to.the call
by playing "When Will I be Loved?" by Linda
Ronstadt. a tune that bcains with the lyrics. "I've been
chea1ed, been mistreated.'' Owen tossed him.
Reds' Browning nearly perfect because of the aerial showcase celebrating
the Founh of July that fans saw after the game.
Umpire crew chief Brian Owen threw eight men
out of the game, including the Midland public address
announcer.
Midland Manager Max Ohvaras was thrown out
immediately afterward.
The last six CJCCtions carrrt in the eighth inn ing.
when Midland reliever Luis Merejo applied a hard tag
on Wichita's Dave Hollins near first base and both
benches emptied.
Phils' Thon stops bid in ninth
'<
Tom Browoina had the perfect 11meplan to beat
the Philadelphia Phillies. Brown in& came within three outs of becoming the
first major lequer to pitch two perfect games as the
Cincinnati Reds beat the Philadelphia Phillies 2-1
Tuesday ni&ht at Vetenns Stadium.
Dickie Thon hit a drive to right-center field that
went to the wait for a double. One out later. Steve Jeltz
tot a pinch iinaJe to score Thon and chase Browning.
John Franco s<>t the last two outs for his 22nd save.
"l jusl tned to throw pitches where (catcher} Bo
(Diaz) wanted, low. They hit some hard but right at
people, .. Brownina said.
Brownina. 7-6, struck out four and walked none.
Brownin_1 pitched a perfect pme last Sept. 16 at
Riverfront Stadium qasnst Los Anaeles. His gem
apinst the Oodacrs was 1he 14th perfect game of at
least nine innints. "We iust ut there talking. We've all been in this
0
c.-. s. ~ .... ' IA .. •eo · OICMO .. ,.... .., ....
1tetw1t• Jttt W-('f 4010 ltAIMW a f t I t ~t ft 4 I I t
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C:-• •••• "*-"' I ttt 1.-.,.,,..... ,.,,, " .......... --·-·--· CM.-----· •-T......... t. TO-~--t U»-$efl °""' 11, CN-• c.-1 .. ~-.... _ ......,_ • ........
_!_~.. -•, , • ' ' , ,_ I t t I 1 c:. . ,,,,, ... ,.'l,.. • ••••• ...... I f I I t I . ............ --~·· WI ""'.L ..... ...... ~· ,.,_, HIL ~ ...... _
0
0
~ ............. ,
.... "'AM:llCO "'"1eUlll ... .,.... •rll• lulllref •OlO ...... 4 11
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ltlltta tltt DtllMo'lll JOI
Utleol• ".. .... • •• ........ f'f t I I I lllM"' I t I ~ rl t t t t L"'*"' • t t t ~ .... ,, ~ .. , .. Olt-• t t It LV.W.< JI I M<CIMI • t t t t Kr-" I t t .... tlfl lttt ltlM«• ••• .._., tttt ........ l tt
o..tllltlfl 1 ••• ,,_ Ml t l T.... •11 .... .. .... =·.. . ... , ~ ----· ......... ~IL._ -,,_,.. .. """*"-• ..,_.--_ ~--Hlt-V ........ t ~· .::::: mi . ..: :m .....,_, .......... ....._u ..
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.........
• t-J 1 I I t ,., . . . . • • • • •
.U-W""4 t 1 t t 1 I IC._., t-J 1 1 J t I ... t l•J •••• t ~~:...!-: ••••• ""' Kr-. all-~·--· "'' .............. ...,......., ,lnl. ~ ..... ~"TllW.hilil. .,.....,.. ,._14,lk
situation together before. I tried to stay nice and
rclued," Browning said of the atmosphere in the
dugout.
Ast,.. 11, Mete S: Mike Scott became the major
league's first 14 pmc-winner this season and host
Houston scored eight runs in the first inning off Bob
Ojeda as the Astros beat New York.
Scou. 14-4, won for the eiJhth time in his last nine
decisions and it's the earliest in his career that he has
won 14 &&mes. His previous best was in 19&6 when he
won he won his 14th on Aug. 29 and went on to win
the C)' Young Award.
Cube i , Padres 1: Andre Dawson had three hits.
drove in one run and scored another. leading Mike
Bielecki and host Chicaao past San Di~o. Bielecki, 7~4. allowed no runs, five hits and struck
out six in six innings. He left the 11me t>causc of a
bruised hip sustained when he was hit by Tony
Gwynn's line drive in the third inning.
Pt ... tes 5, Olut1 I: Jose Lind and R.J. Reynolds
drove in two runs each in Pittsburgh's four-run fifth
innlna as the host Pirates beat San Francisco for their
sjxth victory in eight pmes.
Randy Kramer, 3-4. allowed two runs in five
inninas to win his second consecutive stan and beat
former Pirate Don Robinson, who lost his second in a
row after winnina four straig~t.
Brave• t, ElP" S: Jeff Blauser had fou r hits.
includina a two-run double in five-run first inning, as
host Atlanta defeated Montreal.
Staner Marty Clary won his second straight de-
cision since he was recalled from Class AAA Richmond
on June 2S.
0 ••1. ......._I ~ATl ...... NLPMIA ....... ..,.. ..
\.IWl'lt a f I I I °"lifl Cf f I I
0...1 .,,, -· ••• __.,,, t It I V~rt J t t ""'"'.. . . .. . .... " , .. •Oe\lltd J... ....,. , ..
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Msr11Wa J, TwlM 2
...... tOT~ •&nL• ....... .. ..... ...,. • ,. .. ~!!.."':: 111 u tt kll-111 ............. . ~9" cf f I I I AOl"1t.. f I I t ............. ~· '"' ONlll» f 11 I C-lf 2 t t I
In the second inning, Midland catcher Otto
Gonzalez appeared to catch a foul pop near the screen.
but Owen ruled that he had trapped the ball.
U.S. Cup match off again
NEW YORK -The on-apin. off-_
apin World Cup qualifying match between ~~
the United States and El Salvador is off
until July 23. at the earliest. ----
Joseph "Scpp" Blatter. the general secretary of
FIFA, decided Tuesday not to have the game in Los
Anacles and said 11 would be played at Tegucigalpa.
Honduras., or in Canada.
"The match will not take place in the United
States," Blatter said in a telephone in terview from
Pattaya, Thailand. "It cannot be in the United States
because all the national associations did not agree. The
match is postponed ...
The 11me was thrown into doubt last Thursday
when FIFA, soccer's world aovemin& body. sajd lhat El
Salvador couldn't host World Cup qualifiers for at least
a month bcausc of crowd disturbances at the June 2S
match aplnst Costa Rica, a 4-2 loss. ·
On Friday, El Salvador asked that the game be
moved to Los Angeles. home to many expatriate
Salvadorans. but FIFA said the other three nations in
the aroue -Trinidad and Tobaao. Costa Rica and
Guatemala -must approve. On Monday, Costa Rica
and Guatemala objected.
"Costa Rica's attitude is understandable," said Jose
Ramon Aorcs, president of the Salvadoran Federation
of Football. "They are ahead and tbcy believe that
chanaina the sitr would be aivina the U.S. an advantqe
-and that would be the end of Costa Ria'1 &Olden
dream of ~ina. in a final."
01011 01 IHI U\\
Owen tossed three players from each team. includ·
ing Mercjo and Hollins.
Wichita won 9-1.
I'\ THI-: 81,t :.\('HEHS
·-,----~ ... ..__ np;.q-
.\I .
'··· \\I
Israel tops Maccablah fleld
()Nell rt • t t I CHewo a J t t ""'-'Ill ft t t "-tt J I I ~-,.,. IAk•< , ••
Owwt• J t t t Gtlfleoy('f It t t =~ : : :: :=:: ; : : : ........... , dean of .... _ -.;---in. --~• l1t1el won the Maccabiah Games' first ....._. .. '.I I ""-" J •• • ""' ..... ~·~ a;DUU'I aold medal Tuesday -in aymnastics -* =::. ~ ~ ~: MciM"ec > • • • ~nd ~~ty athletic repraentative a.t OeorPa Tech: and led all countries with five aolds and two OltH ltlt ~· ttt ........... .... ......... . .. ,,_. ··:· ,_ JltlT ... •II .... .. _
c...... ----... = ••. ,_,
1-C)f'o-C_._H ~=e, 1111111 1 LCT-<MctMtll. ~~ ..... •?••• . ........
=~ ~::: StauatJcs in the hands of an eftlJneer are like a silvers af\er the fint day of competition. ----
T... 11 1 , 1 ,..,.. ,. , , , lamppo1t '° a drunk. They're used more for The Uni\ed States was second with two aotd. two
........ ..,. "'"-: • tt1-1 suppon than illumination." silver and two bronze medals . ..... • • •-> Canada and A,.ntina won a total of one silver and , ·~~o. ~~ "r1': two bronze medals each, followed by Fnnce with one
"-• "1 • " • .. --;. 90 silver medal and Great Britain, Brazil and Hunpry
;s::'u·• ,1_1 : i i ~ : NFL deceives on drug topic with1:,:1~.:'~~ ~~rnched the 10;d medal ~"
":. ,., ' • • ' NEW YOR~ _ The NFL has turned 1Ymnutic:a With 27 !.A40 collective points. In thc.ind1v1d· ~r.· ..... _.._.. • .,.,,.. .. ._...,_.:·."-, ""1-J-1-"-1 -,~,:--""'up=--·ec:ant evicleDCC" Of lllkit dru~,~u~se~~y~-'llllll~'k---.Y-tllM. ftnli com~tition, lsraeh toldier Ron Kaplan, ~-,., j • • • • p1a~ but deliberaaely ~vcs lhe im· 19, won the aold with a score of 55.60. while All· ~ ., 1 ~ ' • ' PreiliOa h Ml 1 Mriout prol>lem becaute it American Scott Schiffer, 22. from Bartlesville, Okla. ~~-r--~':.~""· .-. waall IO ..Wun its~ ant~ poUcy, accordina and Randy Fleisher, 21, from Canada tied for a silver · '-t• A-11.• to du.-*'• illUe or a-ru musna\ed. · medal with '4.9~ poinu. ,_ ~ In other ~ru news: "
0
... • article •tided .. The NFL Fails lu C>nta •Jelle N.,-.m of The Netherlands broke away ~-" ~ w..ra~~· turned up wa.:. from tbe PICk in the final stretch to win the founb 1tqe ..... ~ and mtlleplW!DW. of die Tour de France cyclina race. Acacio da Silva of
UCD la "*" e:¥CrY r.cet of the NFL'• dr1ll PIOl"Ull· ~ .. f!Cilll with the main P'C>UP. retained the lead 1.e1111...-.. lllve miMU\ed the dhneDliciDI of dnai la die L.MlaY event. u. ~~ · · · depelldi111 on their pubtiC •A Na•:-·• r...i.-:.-Athi.-1-••• ....:.u·on of.· fl .. 111• fll the lllOIMllL----. -~~ 1111;:""' ~-= _..._ ..._...........,. .... di •-=-..11 .... .._ ftdal •YI be't la favor of sivim additional a.id to
-~ -lli1•"'"•1 ~ •lldllll .. kh• provided it wouldn't come in the form wllo are ~ and thole who hive or.• 11n11 IM baerd :.=•
.... _. NCM eucudve ltJcbard Schultz •YI _, ... , ....._. lbould be Ible to ,et mpenctina
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O•klancr1 Dave Stewart became the first
American League pitcher to win 1 J games
~ ....... _......
Monday a1 he bids to earn the starting All-.
Star a11l9nment In Anaheim next Tuesday.
WIMBLEDON
From Bl
Wimbledon s1ni.:e Luc1 a Valerio 1n
1933.
Golarsa 1s I J }t:ars younger than
E\'ert, anl.l the gap shu~ed during
crucial n1on1en1~ 1n the match.
Facing a bn:<1k po1n1 1ha1 would
have gi ve n Gol<1rsa a 4-0 1t'ad in the
final set. E'en hll three straight
winners 10 hold <.cr\t" E"en more
remarkable 11o·a.-. E'er!'.'> clutC"h pla}
wht'n Golar~ mo' cd to w11h1n two
points of' ictor} at 5-J and JO-O.
Ever\ JUI back 10 deuce w11h a pair
of w1nn1ng backhunds. a service re·
turn do11o·n the hn e and a passing
shot. Then she ca1ne up 11o 1th the
shot of the mal( h.
Golarsa h11 a .-.harpl} anp:lf'd • ol-
ley that seemed out of E\'crt·.-. 1 eaC'h.
bu1 E'ert tha~·ll 11 do\li·n 111 the
double~ alle} anll st•n 1 bat·k a bli~t~r-
1ng backhand that pasS<"d Golarsa
and landed JUSI 1ns1de the hne
.. That's th1: point I rem1:mb..:r.'·
E'1:rt sa1ll "At that po1n1. the match
11oas .-.lipping J11oa \ frum me. bu l that
shot ga'e m1: 111\p1rauon ··
Stewart nears All-Star start TRAN SP AC
From Bl
l\·tunguuM: uul of ~i.ln Francisco and
M 11chell Rousc.··s Kt•1t·hcl-Pugh-70
·rax1 IJanc1:r fro1n (. al1forn1a 'l"acht
('lub.
~OAKLAND (A PJ -Dave Stcwarl may have
clinched the honor of being the start ing pilchcr for the
American League in next week's All-Star game.
Being the first in the league to C'laim 13 victories
this season puts the Oakland Athletics right-handc. high
up for the role next Tuesday in Anaheim.
A's manager Tony La Russa. who will run the
American Lca&uc team , was non-committal -in fact.
even non-i nterested. ·rhc All-Star Game. 1.1.·as "the
furthest thing from rny mind." he said Monday night
after Stcwan had puchcd a 1-.0 victory O\'Cr the Kansas
City Royals.
Instead, La Russa Y•anted 10 1alk abou1 the pitching
hr had just seen. Mark Gub1cza pitched ror the Royals.
and if not for a nuspla} behind him. there n11gh1 OC'\'Cr
have bttn a score.
"ThOSC' two gu ys 1ust don't gi\'c up anything. .. La
Russa satd. ··stew hal.l to be great tonight to ix•at h1111 ··
At I J-4. S1cwar1 bccon1e'i th l' n1a1or'\ second I).
game winner. Houston's Mike Scott "''as lhc firsl 10 h11
1hat platra u in the Na tio nal League.
Stewart held 1he Royals to JUSl fo ur hlls in e1gh1 -
plus innings and he was toughest "''hen he rl·t1r1:J :!O
consecu1 ivc hiuers from the St.'Cond 1hrough the l'1gh1h
innings.
Still. La Russa stoppt:d short of allo11o 1ng Stl·~ar1 to
add another complete game 10 h1~ r1:cord . much to ih,·
displeasure of the 36.000 fans.
Figure 1h1s one out ~longoosc
had loggcll the n1os1 1111l1:s from lht·
stan off Poin1 Fermin. but Taio
Dancer was two n1dcs closer to
Diamond Head.
Four more }aclu.-. ha ll passed the
l.000 niark TueMl:l\
\\'1nds had ea~·d ~hghtl} Tuesda ~
but the ll'adl·rs 11ocn· 'l11l ..a1hng a 16·
knot northt·a'>Lt·rl' v.11h ).fl.foot fol-
io~ 1ng !i.l:a!>
La Russa·s decision \\.'art n1t•t hy hoos from lhl'
crowd and B glare from Stewart. "ho ael.no,.k·dgl·,11 hc
standing ovation 11o·1th a wa\c of his glo'e
"Therl" are no heroes in a one-run game.'' S1e11o:in Tr•n•i»c . T d h IELAf'SED TIME LEADERS said later.·· ony 1s1ust try1ng 10 get a win. an we ll\c c011tatK• 1r1m L•1 ..,,,.....1 !hat Strong bullpen,'" I M()n'lOQIAI Paul Slrnon!Aln S•n J'•nnc•K O
Orange eo .. 1 DAILY PILOT/Wednetelay, July 5, 1989
f\'t'M broke on the next point
"'ht.n Golar'3 h11 a vollt'y wide. 1ht n
11oon lhr ntAt thrrr gamt'1 10 l'Om-
plett· the ~urnng comeba,·lr.:
.. I was wondering 1f I had thl"
reserve to rome back."' E'en ~1d
"Thank heavens, I did ...
GoWrsa was asked whethl"r 11 "·as
her mistakes or E\'en·s magic 1ha1
spelled the d1fTerenC<'.
.. , think ~he won 1t." Golar~ \aLd.
··V.1h1:n I 11o·as up 5-·~. she pla}t'd her
lx'sl gan1c. Thafs why ~ht··s ( hns
[\ert '"
·rhe comebact was f \l'rt·s
grcat1:s1 Jn 110 singles matches at 1h1:
All En11.land Club.
The women's sc:nufinal.'> 11o1 ll be
pla)ed on Thursda). Ev1:r1 \\Un ht·r
first s1~ n1atches against Graf hu1
1he Wcs1 Gern1an hai. 11o-on the la~l
st\en. Na,ralilo'a 1s 11 -0 against
L1ndQ\·1st.
The men's quarterfinals toda} •n·
elude Stefan Edberg vs. Tim Ma )-
011c. John l\1 cEnroc 's \lats
\\'tlander. Bons ~:ckrr \\ Paul
Ch<tmhcrhn and l\an Lend]'' IJan
Goldie.
YC 1,°"6 "''II•. '1 r., D•nc•' Ml!Cnell
Ro ... e. C•ll•oo-n,. Y( I a.is l !til•I' Bullel
JO"" ~L•"'• IN•li.,._, V( ! 029 4 l!IOndll , Pit F.,,... Lono B••tl\ V( IOIS ~
D•um1M1! Don "'"''' J'. Newoor• "'•'t>I>' V( i 0\0 6 (T>•n<e ll:o~1 McN.,11• Lo.
An111~• V( 1.oot. I E•oh,,.lon ll:o!M"
Oou111>1• CVC "9 I P•e ... 1c•e• li!o• Q,,.,..
LAV( ~1 ~ Clle•I •. H1I IN••O e v e 9". 10
P11n0fl,.,.,ono.,m, Ooo•""' WllOm•n C '!"( 'U
CORRECT ED TIME 5TAlllOIHG5
OVERALL-I r •• 1 D1ox•• 1 Monooone J
B~ndle • .!.•••If Bu1i.1. S M \ D•"•' JOl'>n•IOn Wao~li<• '!"(, 6. ( .. 1nce
CL ... S!> A.-1 r.. D•nc•• I Mo<lllOOIAI
l BIQ<\Ote. ' !>il•t' 9.,1191 S ("•nee CLA..S..S. 8-1 M·l. 1 An.,re Cn•roe\
JICOO!.O<I Montete• P1nu''"" vc l 0.CI P
lio". D••• M~·nn•• e ve.• li!1 1>"• 0 ••"
P••l•ou·~ N><V( ~ '"'•"• >ic llc••e (•ci.1• ~'
F•1nc • V(
CL.A SS C-l MM«"" Min Bcxi LI"' LBVC. 1 'hl•I ll:unnf" Lon P•ICI ll:•cl!mO<ld
Y( l lllo•o••(>U!i S<on P1ne !Mi"'• Cru1 VC
4 F ll\f\ L•OO• J,,m,\lg•. Hl"'I" V( S
("•"'"'" ~re.e POD<>••cl\. Ktno 1-f1r00t VC +MS-I 0..•1 Bouncn (uC• Cooo. Lo• .. ......,.., vc 1 Sw1n1 llllnci G•o 81..c•
W•'~'· vc l wor1<1 "''°"".,.'"' llooett Bro ... n .S..u\l hlO V(, ' Dl ll>tl,I•. Ml•I Mlcr>e! ovc
.
.GRAF l
from at
Leen-agr Soan1ard 1n her place,
"In tht· French Open. I played
'"~ good," Sanchi:1 Yid "~lerc.. I tncJ 10 du the same buL ... sht didn't
nu.-..-. one ball ·•
In the first ~\, another s1unnin&
upset loon1ed Santhl'"7. played Graf
as tn P.ins, forcing errors rrom lhe
defe nding champion· s usually dtvas--
lati ng forl·hand.
K1ss1ng her racket and pumping
her fi.-.1.-. on big points. Sanchez's
bubbly enthusiasm won ovt'r thr
("entre c·uurt Cto\lid as she rallied
rrom O·l to 5-4.
At the ehangco,er. a buzz of ex-
IX'<'tanr) filled the packed stands. A
rept:11t1on of her Pans 1riu mpb
scem(·d pusMblr and Sanchez. en·
couraged b~ a hugl' 0' auon. served
for the firs1 st·\.
Sudden!}. hr-r g.ame fell apan.
BATBUSTERS
From Bl
Sansonl··.-. ..a(nfiec. but SanliUne. of
fkcan \'11:v. High. reached safely on
a 1hro11o ing t·rror. pulling runners al
first and !l(:rond. Longeway singled
home Goforth and Dolan s1ng1cd to
left to .-.tore 'ianwne for a J-0 lead
In 1hc ....:m1finals . Santa Maria
R1ghett1 l·hgh's Goforth hurled a
con1pk·1e gamt• four-hit shutout with
fi ve s1nl.eou1s and one walk. wh tlc
Jt•nna San!L.onc singled 1n Rueda
Flor1:s for the game·s onl} run to
lx'a1 the F1ghtin' F1!11es in the double
el1m1na1 1on tournament.
In the quarterfinals. Kennedy
H1gh's LongC\li'a) threw a two-hit
shutout w11h five stnkcouts and 1wo
11oalks as Brundage singl ed 1n Dolan
for the g.ame·~ on!} run to...dcfeaLthe
Casc,t·ucs of Phoenix. An1.
T"ent}·four tea ms competed 1n
1hc four-da} hohda) "·eekrnd 1our-
namen1.
liiiiiiiiiliiiiiiPiiiiiiiiiiiijiiiili ................. ~ ... iiiiiiiiiiiPiiiiiiiiiii ..
Franz Opper shares
Gehrig's anniversary
Retirement coincided
with birth; disease
also afflicting him
By RONALD BWM .... -... ~ .............
1f the\ live long enough -!ind
1hemsCJ ,es 1n 1h1: same si1ua11on.
ALS also 1akl'S a dc,·astating loll o n
the fan1ilies of its \'JCt1ms. ~l os1
families cannot anOrd outside help.
Tht• sheer ph ysical and el)l'otional
demands of caring for .;uV . .\LS r•·
11ent can tear a famtl} apart I 11
docs not. the s1ra1n 1ne"11abl} leavt•s NEW YORK -Fifty }ears la1cr. an indelible 1n1pnnt upon 1hc fa mily
the chilling 11o·ords again cchocd menllx•rs _ especially the chil ·
1hrough Yankee Stadium. drcn.'·
co~~~:} ~)Sc:ria~ · 0,~~j(' -~ '. To write this speech. Opper hnd his nurse hold up cards with groups m)'sclf -the tuck1cs1 man ... man of letters. Ht blinked when sh(' had
man -on the fa ce or thl' earth the card ""ith tile letter he wan1ed . . earth f.'art h.'' Then he blinked when sht• point«!
Up on the 5"orcboard. Lou Gl'hng to 1he nghl lcttrr. It must have taken
was saying goodbye to 1hc Yankees. lla}S.
the unforge t· ··Besides Lou Gehrig. o ther
table speech no1able people v.·ho have succumbed pres~rved by 10 ALS include Vice President
Mov1e1one. t-l cnr)' Wallace. Senator Jacob More than four dolen Javits, actor Da vid Ni,·en. n1us1c1an
Charlie Mingus and eon1poser
workers for lhe Dmitri Shostakovich.'' he wro1e. Amyotrophic L a t c r a 1 .. , also learned there .... ·as precious
Scle rosis As· little funding ror research 11110 the
soctation stood cause. trca1men1 and cure for ALS.
on the foul That is why I and thousands of 01her
lin es . each ALS victims and \heir families arc
" ca r 1 n g a Lou Gehrig w grateful to n1ajor lrague baseball
replica of Gehr11fs No. 4, noL o nly for its prodigious fundrais--
tng efforts but also for ra!sing l~c Franz Opper 11oas born on Lou naiiona\ a"'·arcncss of 1h1s tragic
Gehrig Da)· -July 4, 1939. At 28. disease:·
he was put Jn "Who's Who 1n America.' He .... as counsel 10 the Lou Gehrig's Disease strikes onr
HouSt' Energy and Commertt Com-in 100.000. Most ,·ictims d ie within
n111tee. Ten }Cars ago. he was three to fi\•e years. But Opper. who
stricken .,.,1th Lou Gehrig's Disease. \L ves 1n Che'')' Chase. Md .. has
Ht has be-en unablt· to talk fo r four fought and ne\cr losl his sense of
ye ars. a pnsoner locked 1n his O"'" humor. Jn his spt.'t'i:h. he k1ddrd
body. Giamalli for old an1cles in the Yale
"He's so th rilled." his wife Alumni News.
Barbara said as a nurse auended to ··Giamatti was not one for con-
hcr husband . who is unable to move ven tion and regaled his readers "'llh a moM'lt other than his eyelid!. baseball rmphasi:zing the pcnnanl
Opper was a )'ale classmate or races with style and wit. When he
Con\missioncr A. Bartle tt Giamaui disag~d with a ruling of the
C · · F · bascbi&ll commissioner. whom he '"dv~punty JroTmh",11s5a'°rr"•"" ....iran~~ .... ·ould later succeed. he called him f----;!;:;;!;!'~'¥.;;'!,:.,;;';~~'*~'~"1""';:;.-"A.;:::i,;;rd-of-Misru~e1-1alkcd game ccrcmon1cs t al ma <' II as h much a tribute to Fran7 Opper as to about a prominent catcher w o
Lou ~hria. could not throw out Am!' Caner and
Since he is unablr to move. his of a shortstop wh.o cou d not hit a
dau&hter Gretchen rroeiVt"d the fire hydrant with a broom. and
bronze suuue of 1he Iron Man from bandied about statistics that showrd
Mel Allen, who was 11 Yankee ,the wron1 teams won pcnnan11."
Stadium on Lou Gehri& Day, She Remember, 1hl• is coming from a
was to read a s~h her father wrote man who hasn't movtd in )'ears. A
-blink by bhnk ov~r several d•)'S few weeks aao. he wrote a brilliantly
-but for some reason was not funny leuer to thr commissionrr's
allowM to. Herc is what Franz. office. He ni-h'rtrndcrslood Prte
Opper wan ted 10 1.1y: Rose was keeping them busy and
.. Ten yearr. a&o, when I was concluded that, If nothina rise, the
-CSlqno"'1 with A.LS. I had no~idea R?drrt'IJJtaitt was 1u1l\y-of tli(
whaJ_lt was. I $00n leam«t that it is worst hair in m~or·leq.ue histoty."
a prosressive nerve disorder wh ich "I think his hope is that by tellina would lcavt me completely para-people who have: the disttsc, he'll
lyzcd, 1ble to move only my eyes aiv~ them strenath/' Vlnctnt was
and unable 10 use 1he muscles 10 , sayina now .... You don't know what
l>tathe. Had I the resources or 10 SI)' 10 him. Whtl do you say to
insurance to conlinuc, I could ao on someone with such a serious dis·
a rapirator. t had enouah insurance case? •le: h•s 1 lot Qf' oouraac and we.-
and ltM IM'fflliYf"-for the rcapirttor. all adore him:·
I _,.lid to a in)' d1u1tuer and son Hi&h 1bove: home pla1c. Oppcr's
...,. up; they were 7 and J old ycatt unread tpeteh said it •11.
old at 1hc dmc I wu d'-lnOICd. "This is my )(hh binhdly and I
"One caftnol ·~-the reel-thank ~or lrque bucball fbr 1he Ina or beint uappfCt inside 1 liftkts bat binhday pmenl I tlave evrr
body\ able «> communkltt only by rttel\led and for lhe wonderful &10
bliM na. unku one hu bccft there. the)' have bntowfd upon all A~ ~ • law, all ALS virtims -\lk1i ms. ..
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijjii
DINNER
FOR TWO
Check The aa.illeds
For Details
PENNZOIL
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• limit 11 quorl• ol •ol• p rice
• S.t.~ JO, IOWlO, IOW40, JOWSO
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• L-• 7 ~· "'~ ptote 4•1 • 16<H~~
TUllO TlK WASHll • n.. ..... .-.. _pt ....... .......... • w;"' ,, .. P<"'"'
...... w.~ 1488 Solo Svd• • 11000
• Umil 1 • 199 7 99
lteg.o ..... 2." SIOFF
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I 1.;m!t 1 ol sol• t<• • Fo< mot! ford r GM .. h.c:le•
KIT YILOUI&
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I 0.ep ~. +u11 d•""'°' =·"' 237 •U..,.t 1ot.ole
pt<CI • IS 01 =.,,
CHAMOIS
3988 65-TH IATTEllT
• With b eftoflil
75 MOHfM .... U
TWO· TIAll STAllTEltS
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• lemonufoctu•ed
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"' -• -L -- - ---=----~-~---~ --~~----
011119 CoMt DAtLY ptLOT/ Wedn.Say. Juty 5, 1989
I
I .: IHI l\14Cthl1
, '. • • 11 :~\I 1 '.;.,/
.... UAeUI ITA-11111
AIM'tr:• L.eetlle
hltlrnor• New York
Mllwauk• lotion
Cltvllend
Toronto
Detroit
.... .,....
W L so 33 .. 32
45 36 .... 37
41 .,
31 43
32 S2 last DfVlsleft 4' )4 .0 .,
.0 43 ,. .,
31 43
JI .... 31 .,
TlleMIY'• le-.,_. S, Tt1t•s 2 H-Yortl 1, O.lrolt o
Clev.Cat!G J, Clllcato 2
Mllw•Uk• •· 8oaton 3 aattlmort 1. Toronto o S..lllt J, MlnlltlOta i
Kansu Cltv 10, 0.ki.nd 1 T__.tO--
oa
Tt1ta1 (HOUOfl S-l l t i A,.._ (Flnlev •·•I,
7:35 p.m O.lroll (Palmer 0-3) at New Vort (Hawkins
, • .,, ·~ p.m. MltwaUkM (Navarro 1·01 t i Boston (Bod·
dick.tr S·7), 4!35 P.m, Chieffo (Rtuu 7·•1 ti Cl9vtlend (Swlndtll
10-21, 4:35 p,m.
.. Jtlmort (MllKlll •-ti 11 Toronto (Kr;
7·7), US o.m.
KanMI City (Lt lbttndl S--11 al Oak .. nCI
(Welc'll f-4), 7:05 pm
Mlmnola (Oy« t-11 ti Sffllle (Htrrls 0-1),
7:05 o.m. TllUf'MaY'I ~ Texu al .,....., 7:35 o.m.
Ottrolt al Ntw Vork, 10 a.m.
Kensas Cllv al Qtkland, 12:1.5 o.m.
Mllwtulr.at •' 80$ton, US P.m. ltlll~• al TOl'onto, 4!35 o.m.
Minnesott 11 S..lllt, 1·05 o.m.
OnlY oames Klltdulad
NatleMI LMllUI
West DfVlsleft
W L GB
San Frencl~co
-Hou11on
Cincinnati
.. 34
47 36
43 39
l'ct.
.515 .566 .524 ,..,. Jlh s .. ..., Sen Diego .DMetrl
Altente
40 43
39 43
34 ..
EHt OMMorl
Montrtel 46 37
New York 42 37
.476 .J!S 9
14
2 .c11rc.oo 43 31
.55"
.532 .531
.513
2
31h .....
IS
SI. Louis 40 31
Plft1bUrgh 35 43
r Phlledell)hle 29 50
T.,..._Y', k-$1. Louis 2, DMIWI I Cllluoo S, San Di.tlo 1
Hewaton 10, New Vork 3
Clftchwlll 2, PtlllacMlorila I NtsburOfl S, Sall Frtncltc0 l
AllMfe '· MantrMI 3 T ...... 1 ~
·"' .367
DMilM"I (Htnl\iter P-71 ti St. L.ouh (TtffY •-n. s~s pm,
C#KlnneH CMaNar l ·l l al ~It IMcWllllamt 2•1), 4:JS Pm.
' San Frt!\Cltco (Wilson 0-11 ti Pltt1burtlh
• IWd 7-4), 4:3S PJTI,
MontrMI (Dt.Mtrtlntl 1·1) ti Allanlt (LIHI· QUiii S-4), 4•40 p,m.
SM Dlteo (ltasmuu.., >•SI al CllkAtoo (SlftdllrMn ,_,,~ 5:0S p.m.
Ntw Y~ IDanlnt 6•SI t i ~Ion IK-'*' >-•I, S;JS P.tn ~·~ DMilM"I ti SI Lwb S-OS o m.
Stt1 Dleeo ti OlktllO 11:20 a m
Ctnclnnell al N-Yorll, 4:lS o m.
Stn Frtnclsco 11 Plll1bur911, 4:35 om
Ptllta0ttonl1 ti A11tnt1, UO o.m
()nly """" Kfladulld Near M ·Mter'I
MOTE: A 1111 of no·llll bids IM1 rtaCflad 1111
nlnlfl IMl"fl 11\ls MIMI!\ wltfl ctett, oitehl''s '*""· It~. af'ICI D4avar w"«I broke uo tht flO• •hit•
Aorll 23 -Noltn lt.,.n, THH, N.i10n Liriano, TOl'onto, one-out trlolt ..,II 21 -Kirk N\CCuklll, Ctllfor"la, Nellon
Llr .. no, TOl'IH'llO, ltaooff dolMt
• #My 4 -JOlln Farrtlt, CltveCtnd, Kevin
s.llttr. K•11U1 Cllv. no·out alnglt.
#My 10 -#Mrll Len111ton, Sfflllt, Tom
• ~. Toranto, ltadetl alnell
Jvtf 4 -Tom 9rewnt11e, OnclMall; Dk:aJt Thon. ...,......... lltdotl douClll
l tl\111,0llCI
AMSRICAM a.aaeu• ~··---' CAUPOlt•A ., ....
JO 0 0 JOOO 0 0 0 0
• 1 2 0
4020 •• t 1
200• 0001 l 0 0 0
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M lf t T ... sc--. ....
•r11111 4000 • 0 0 0 4000 4 I 2 0
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4 I I J I I I I
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Tticet ... 011 •-1 c...... tt:t • tt:t-s TWo oull whtft wlnnlnt run tcortd.
E-f'ltlchtt'. OP-<ellfornla I. LO&-Ttltta I, Callfo<nlt 1 7&-auect\tlt, Jovntr
Hlt-+iowa• (101. Armat (6). S-BuecNtt
If' ""••HSO , ... ,
K8rown L,7·S 12-l ' s s c.........
MWlll ' ' 2 2 I I
FrtttrW,2·A ) ,
HIP-tnc1vl9lla bv MWlll.
0 0 0 0
Umtllrts-Homt, COOlt; Finl, Brinkman,
Second, McCltlland, Third, Coontv
T-1:54 A-62.JfO
Yri, tS, ~ CfliCMo, 15. ................
'""""' ,......Y'• ..._, , .... -,,. .. "") e Al • H flc1. TOwvllfl SC 1:1 Mt 50 117 .3~
Lant.In Cln 77 2'S .. hM 3SJ
WClerk SF 12 296 SS " .»4
Gutrrtro SIL 7' tn t1 " .191 ltulltf SF 1' tM 4' ... _,,.
Itel"'" Mon 14 2SS 45 75 7'4
.. Jotwon NY 74 276 S4 It m
Mlldltl IF e I 1'1 S4 IS .m 0$mllfl SIL 72 2n )f 1' 2'0
Mclt•vtch Nv n K7 tt n _,.. .. ......_ DMIWI 7' 2tS 34 IS .211
It U Ns.-4t TllomPlon, San F rtncltc0. SI;
WCttrk, Stn Frtnclsco, SS, HJollnson. Ntw Vorll, S., Mllchell, ltn Frendsco, S4; 9oncti,
Pllbburett. ~; TGwv1111, Sen Di.tlo, 50 •
ltl~tc:llelt, Sat1 Francllco, 7', WClark.
Sa.n Frenclaco. 5', OH.... Clnclnnttl, 56, HJoMson, Ntw \'ock, Sot, Guwrtro, St. Louis,
SI
HITS-TGwvnn, San Dlteo, 117; urkln,
Cincinnati, 10., WCter", San Frtncltc0, "·
e>wen, Houtl!H't, IS; Mllehtll. San Fr•nclKO, 15, ltAlornar, San Dleoo, IS; .......... ~ u. DOUILES-Wallacfl, Monlrffl, 25; G'*'·
rero. St. Louis, 23, ltalnts, MontrMI, 21; Bonds,
Plttst>ur9". 20, Mltdlall, San Frencltc0, 20;
Murrty. Los Aneelft, 20.
TltlPLEs-ttTllOmolOll. San Francisco, I,
NATIONAL L•AGUE :°!':':'~ieds.~~'1°· 1• &onlllt, Pltt~9'\. '·
CardMfs 2. Dedltrs I HOME RUN5-M.lldlatl, San Fralldsco. '7;
I.OS ANG .... S ST. LOUIS HJollnson. New York, 22; GDavls, Houston. 16;
IOrll-. Mrlllll Slrtwwrv, New York, 14, EDavl1, Cincinnati,
Gonaal1c:f
It ndllltl 2b MHlcllr If
Murrtv lb
ManNllrf
Hamltn3b o.m.tvc
Andtlnu
VtltnlleD
SMlbvOI\ APtnap , .....
• 0 0 0 Cot.mat1 If l l l 0 IS. • 0 0 0 ()Quend 2b l 0 2 I 5.IPLEN 8ASEs-<CINman, Stlouis, 31;
• I 7 o OSmltll 11 3 1 2 O Yo\A, Houston, >01 ONlxon. MonlrHI. 25;
l 0 I O Glll!frat lb l 0 I I TGwvnn, Sen Dltoo, 25, ltAtomer, Sen Dleoo.
l o O O Llndmn lb O o o o II, Raines, Montrttl, 11.
4 0 0 0 8r~y rf • 0 0 0 PITCHING (7 daclslons>-Oe#Mrllntl, Mon·
3 o l O Pndltl'I lib l o o o lrt•I, I· 1, ..,, 2,5', Rtusdltl, San Francltc0, lo Io MTllmPc:f loo o 12·3, .eoo. 7.17, Derwin, Houston, 7·2 •. nl. 7.37.
7 0 0 0 TPtN c 3 0 0 0 Scott, Hovston, 14·4, 771, 2 50, Ftrnalldea, ~IW
I 0 0 0 Mait'tf'lt o 3 0 0 0 Vorll, •·2, .750. l 00.
0 0 0 0 STRIKEOUTS-0.L-. $tLoul1, 105,
II I S 0 T..... a 2 ' 2 Smo01, At .. nla, 103, Hurst, San Dle9o, 100. ~ ~ IMltlel Scoll, Houston, "· ltldlw, ~ '7. L .. ~ 100 ... 000-1 SAVES-Frtnco. Clnclnntll, 22; MaDtYll ,
St. Leu!• 2'0 • Ob-2 S.n Dltoo, 21; MIWllll1m1, Cfllceeo, 20; Burtle,
DP-Los Anget11 I LOB-Lo• AllCMlts s. St. Monlrttl, 1•1 DtSmltll, Hovllon, 16.
Louis •· 28-<oreman, OSmltll, Dtmostv. , 38-MHtlehtr SB-<ottman (311 SF-()Qutndo
... " It ~It •• $0 L•~
Vattnala L.•·7 ' • 2 2 2 6
APtn• 2 2 0 0 0 2
St, Lautt
Maortne W,l -6 9 S 1 l 2 I H8P-G1Jtrrtro by APtnt. WP-Ma11rene.
v1i.n1uell1.
UmPlrn -Homt, DarflnJJ, First, Honn, Sac·
ond, Monlaoue. Tlllrd, Wtndelstedt
T-2:12 A-35.~2.
MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS
A1MtkM LMtue
(T'llrwtfl T_..Y'I 0-l
(laMCI all U6 tt Mts)
G Aa It H f'ct.
Slat"rt T.. to 321 S4 IOI .Jlt Franco T.. ao 2'7 40 too 337
Pucktll Mlf'I II 327 40 110 .336
Ltnsford Olk 74 2'3 JI N 317 tons Biii 75 300 .. " .l73 StelnOacll Otll. 70 tSS 20 12 m
lalnn Chi 1' 21• 42 • l21
Sax NY '° m 4.5 IOS .319 IMltlnelY NV 71 310 37 '7 .31)
Grutler Tor 74 300 41 '3 .310 ltUNs-Slerr•. TIJIH , 5', McGrHf. Toronto,
SJ, Ttltltton, 8tllimort , SJ, IJackSon, .KanM• City, Sl; Dftr. Mllwtukat, S2, RHandlfson,
Tew • l'rM<• tat w1..-.., ~ranee>
NOTE ~tsulli ol 1111 lourfll ltil of 1ri. Tour oe France C\'cllng rtet -1 ISl·mllt leg from
Liege, 8elglum lo Wuciuellal, Frenet:
l Jt lle Nlldt m, Nelhtrlt ndl, SuPtrCOl'lflJI, 6
t'lou". 13 minute,, SI 1econo1
1 Jesoe,.. SkiDDY Dwnmertt TVM-; 3 '.conm
l>elllr>d
l Jot'lan Mu\Muw, 8t'91um AOR. ) • Jerome Simon Franc:t Z·P"'9f(lt. same
time ~ Soren Lllll041, Dtnmarr.. Hlstor·Sl9ma,
same time
• M19utl lndura1n. Soetn, lhvnolds, S sec· ond1
7 Joael Lltcktn,, 8tlillum. H•laclll, same
llm• I. Glovt MI Fldan11, llt lv. Cllatttu d'Ax,
ume tlmt
llOH'I IC \C l,f,
,
t lliettr Plettra, Nettwland•, T"VM. \MN
'""' 10 ~ 1(..,.,, lrtllwld, l"OM, -llmt
'I ~'"'-" ~Niii, Nellle<lanclt, Ptltr111"8, M mt llMe 12. Cal'to 1ornt111, ttlolum, Domt•, 1ame ,..,,.
I). .... AndtrlOll, Aullrtlla, TVM, stme
time
14. EddV Plackewl, laltlum, ADlt, Wt1t
llmt.
15. EtlaMe dt Wiidt, ~. Hlltor•S*"t,
Umt llmt.
W. Jo4 HMa, ttlolum, Hllac:llil, Mmt tlmt
17. Fr• Hotlt, ADlt, -time
IL ltu4Y Dflatntni. ltttlum, PDM. samt
llmt 1'. .Jelme VMamtlO, Spain, Ktlmt, Hmt
llrnt. 20. JMll·PllUI Vt" ~. Ntllltrlandt, Ptnasonk , Mmt time AIMrtcaM. 7 ........ wt C:-41aM
27 Haitian Dtlll!Otf't, Ntw ZHteno. 7·
Eltvtn. stmt time
ll. Ciemard IadrOOllek, Austria, 7·Eltvtn.
YIM time.
42. lt!H't l(lef.C. lou!Oer, COIO., 7·Eltvtn,
Mmt time. 43. Sttve ltutr, Ctnada, Htlvtlla·La
SullH,Mme 1111'9.
'1. Andrew Hamotlan, 8ouldet'", Colo., 7·
Eltvan, ume time. If. Grtt LtMond, MlnntaPOll1. ADlt, Hmt llmt. •
"· Dao·Ooo L..aurll1an, Norwn, 7·Ett-nn. Mint'""'· 127 Sean Yttts. 8r11t lf'I, 7·Eteven. H mt time
136. Jell Pier" San Dltgo, 7·Elevtn. S,77 IM. Rov Kt11ckmat1, 8ouldar, COio • 1·
E It van. 11 :41.
1'1. -'-'is Vt0etrbv, Denmark, 7·Eltvtn,
H rnt flmt .
C>wtll Sta!Mlnln
(Aftff*ir .... l
I Ac:acio Dt Sllvt , Portugal, Carrar1, 17
llC>ufs. 16 minutes. 37' seconch
2 L lltlolt, 14 MCOl\Oi Defllnd
J Tlll«rv Mtrle. Franca, Su0tr·U. I 57 4 LalKenl Flllr>0n, Frtnc:t. Su0tr·U, 2 31
S PaKal Simon. Franca, Sulltf'·U. ,. ...
' Rtul AICale, Mexico, POM. 2'52
7. Gtrtrd Rut, Franca. Suoer·U. 3:00 I Eric 8reuklnk. N1tlltr .. nd1. P1nasonlc,
3:03.
9. Chrlsloolle Ltvt lnnt. Frtnct, Suoer u. l:OI 10 SKlbbv, 3:1L
11 Vlf'ICtlll Btrlttu, France, Suoer-u. 3 20
12 Domlnl<lut Gerdt, Fraf'ICt , Svoer·U. 3 26
13 IC tUy, 3;27
14 LtMond, 3.21
lS Eric Vaf'ldlfH rdtn, 8tl01um. Penu 0111e,
3.31
1'. Patrick T~. Btl91um, Suoereontn, 3'31
17. JOt'JJ Mulltr, SwHterlt nd, POM, 331
II. Frtns Mautt1, Nttlltrlt l'ld\, Sooer·
contn , 3:36.
19. Gtn-l•lf TlleunlsH. Nlflllarlsneli, PDM
3 3'
20 Yt tts, J;41.
~ 7 •• ....,.., •fld c-._
27 Htf'TIPiltn, 3 U
~ Kitftt, •06
.-Zeoroblltk, • 09
31. Da"lbtrg, • 19. 3'. La1Kllltn, 4:27
• t. 8t1Jtr. us. 149. Pltrct, 10 51.
112. V'"4N'CW, 17:00 Ill Knlcllman, 11 16.
••*•••• Cit WO::*llfPI. .,..._,,
M•M ............ 0.....
JoM F'lttWtld, AUltre!la, and AllOtf'I
Jarrv•. SWIOtn, dtf JOhn Llovd tnCI Sttvt llltw, arlttln, "'alllovtr, Hen aroad and Sftfaf'I
Krueer. Souttl Atr1e1, dtf. kott Devit, LatJJO,
Flt., tnel Tim Wllllson, AllltYllt, N.C .. 7·5. •·2, •·l , Jim °'•btl, Tucson, ,Via., enel Pafrkk
McEnroe, OV.ttr Btv, N V., dtf. Jolt Dalllf tncl F'atnando ltotM, lrtJll, 6·3, 6•7 (2·71, 6·•,
•· 1, Jakob Hlaltll, Swllatrland, and JOlln Mc:EMot, COYI Neck, N.Y , dtf. Milli Dt·
f'almtf, Kno11vlllt, Tenn , and Gtrv Donnally,
Scottidalt, Tenn., 6-7 IS·71. 6·•· 3·6, 7·5, 10·1,
K~lll Currtfl, Austin, TtxH, Mid Davia Pait,
Laa v11111. dtf Z.fflllan All. lfldollt1l1, and
J-itwsn Canltr, 8tvtrleY HIMs, .. 3. 3 ... , •·l, , ... (I ... )
Tlllnl ltMfld ~
ltlck Laacfl. Lnuna 8taell, N.Y . anel Jim Putll, P110s Vtrdfl, dtf. Jim Courl«, D•dt
City, Calif., tnd Pttt Samoras, RancllO PalOs
Vttdts, 7·6 17·31. 6·3, •·4; l(tfl Flach, Stt>rln9,
Fla., and ltobaft Stouso. Sttltlno. Fla .. dtf
Gul .. umt Raoua t NI Erk Wllloeradskv,
Franct, 6·7 <3·71. 6-1. 3 .... •·3, •·•. Darrtn CtlllM tncl Mark Kreltmann, Austrlllla. cMf
Gort11 lvenlsavk, Yugo\lavl1, encl NICOIH Pt<-
1lr1, v-1ue1a, •·J. 7·6 11·61, 6·1
WOM•N Out"9rllNll SIMM Martina NtvrtlllOYI, Fort Worth, THH ,
dtf. Gretchen Magera, San At1tonlo, 6· I, 6·2,
Celtrlna LlndClvlsl, Swtdtn. dtf RolalYl'I Ft lr·
bani.. SOulll Africa, 7·S. 7·5; Steffi Grtl, Wfll
Gtrmanv. dtf Arantxa Sanc11t1, SOalt1, 7·5. •·I, Chris Evtrt, Boe• lteton. Fie~ dtf L1ur1
Goltry , llttv. 6·l . 2-6, 7·S
TIWd lttufld '**" Katrina Adams, ClllctllO. tncl Zina Garrl1on,
HOV\IOI\, dtf Cltudla ICOlldt·KPICfl Ind C11udla
Porwlll, West Gtrm1nv, 6·7 13·71. 6·3, 6-0, Jena Novotnt tnd Htttna Sukov1. C1ec110110·
vakla, dtf. #Mnon 8olle9raf, Nttlltr .. ndi, tNI
Ev• Pftff, Wflf Gtrm1nv, •·l, •·1, 8rtnda
ScllUIU, Httlltr1anch, tnd Andf•• Ttrntsvarl,
Huneary, cMI. Ellttbttll Smvtle and Wtndv
Tutnbull, Aintrana, 6· l, •·l , Nlcolt Provis,
Austrtllt, •nel Elnt Rtllladl, Soutll Africa, dtf
Patty FtndiU, Sacramento, tnd Jll Hatlltr·
lneton, Ctnada, 1·S, 4·6, 6·3; Sftffl Grtf, West
Gtrmanv, t nd Gtbrltle Sabtllnl, Ar0tntlna,
dtf. Jan11v Bvrne, Au.trtlla, •NI ltot>ln Wflllt,
San Jolt, •-2, 6·3. Marllna Navrtll10v1, Fort Worlll, Tuts, and Pim Shriver, Lulllervlllt,
Md , dtf. Etl1t Burgin, 81lllmort , aNI Rosalyn
Felrba.1111, $oulll Alrlca, 6·4, 1-~ .t1-~l..
LAOtU f'LAT•
Secefld •tufld SIMM Sara Gomtr, Brllt tn. dtf o.oolt Graham,
F-taln Va ltv, 6· I, •·•
Vt TS RANS
Pint It tufld Slntllel
BOii Lull, San Crerntnte, 1c1lll., dtf. lom
Okll.tr. Netlltrltndl, ,., 17·2 • 7-6 (7·5)
U IJCACTA Ct-SI Mid 11>• ll DML Y ~· l .. t-!I Mid Mil »
..........
lteONDtDO 1'9'•1DOM TOU9tMAMllNT ........... .......... '· c....,...... teniutltf't 000 100 0-1 > I
CtltWlltl 000 000 ~ 2 1
LOllMWIY end Bou, MH!na and LAii• W-LOllM"'IY L--Mldlna ...........
.._,....1,P ...... f' ... e
Flllfltll\' Flll1" 000 000 ~ 4 2
Btlbusten 000 000 01-1 1 l Ollvtr and Mullenlx, Gofortfl end Calado1.
W-Goforll\. L-Ol11tt
PIMlt ..... tws J, ,....., p ... I
Fltlllll'I' FMllel 000 001 0-1 l 7 ··~''" 120 000 •-3 I ' Mtrll11t1 alld Mulllnex, lr\lndt9e, Rici l'l
and loax, CtHdOI. W-lr11"da1a
l.-Maftlne1. 5-alce
(j011 ....
NA .......
('nwwtfl ......... 0..) Saf"'9 .. .....,..
..._,
I, Tom Kitt, "4' 2 (tit), Curll' Slranet.
P.v"t Sltwtfl tnd Ciiio &edl, 6' SS S, FrtO
CouOlts. 6' '° •. Grto Norman, '9.61 7, Mer' McCumDtr, ".II I, Ptut Aalnotf', 6t 17 t, Tim Slmc>IOI'. 69 99 .Ml. Mark O'Mhrt, 70 01
Dr1vtne Dlsteftd
l, Ouflv Waldorf, 271 I 2. Lon Hln11.i., 277 2
3 lllt l, Ed Hutnef'lk end ICtnnv Perrv. 276 I
S, JOC!it ModO. 27• • 6, 8111 S•f'ldlf, 274 3 1. Pllll 81tCktNr. 273 I I. JoM M(;Comh.11, 273 0
'· Fred Covotfl. 1n t 10. Divis Love 111 271 2 DftYtne Ac~ICY
I Calvin Petit 122 2. Mlkt Rttd, 7'3 l
De•id EOwtrCll, 790 • Htlt lrwln. 7t7 S. FullOll Altem, 771 6, Noell. Faldo, 710 1. Curtl\
Strtf'l9t, 766 I, Ian 811!.tr·Flncll. 765 t, Two
llfd wllll 764
Gr-In 9tffUltlteft
l. Bruce L;.llkt, 716. 2. Mark McCumbtr,
104 l. Dave 8trr, 691 •· NOian Htnkt, 6'3 S IHt l. 8fM Glasson and Jolln MalltHt v, 6'2
7 Ille), Ptut Arlr>otr and Jim Gallaglltr, Jr "6 9 Grto NortNn, '85 10. Two tlao wllh
613
f'uttlllt LMdtn I, JOl'ln Huston, I 7l2 7 (lie). Jonnnv Ml• .. r
and Jim Catie<, l 71> • Ultl, Clll1» lleck af'ld DoMle Hemtl'IOflO, 1 731 6. Sttv• ,,_,, I 741
1. Lt rrv Rlnli.tr, I 745 I, Deve ltummttls. 1 70 t. Two t1t0 wllt'I I 14'
f'eratfflran
l. Fred COUl»lt\, .271 ·2, Crtlll Slldlef, 119 3 (fie ), 8111 Glanon end JOMny Miiier, 117 S
(tit) Gl'f'lt S1utr\ encs Grt0 Norm1t1, 716 7 Di ve ltummens. 11) I. C"lo 8tct,, ;212 •
S1tve Jones. 110 10, Pt ul AllllOtf, 10t
lt ... LMdtn I, LOfl Hlnli.lt, l l 2 (tltl. Crt19 Stadler
Sltvt Ell!.lf'IOIOI\ !>coll Hoell, St.vt ~' I ncl Sit•• Pelt t 1 Four htO with I
DEEP SE \ ,.._
DAv•v·s LOCK•• ,...,_, had!) -1
boats, 2'f anottr1 ,,. barrKuda, 401 bonito, 242 Calleo btU, 523 H nCI baH, t rnacktrM, 10
blue 11\arll (2 rtltHtd), JS Kulolt1, I white HI
bHS, ' blue -ell Oakland, "· "Bl-Frtnco, T11111. 6.li Slerrt, Ttu1, 61; IJtc:k,M>ft, K1n1a1 Cllv. », Ltonard, Saalllt
.5'. Gatlll, Minnesott , SS
HITS-Pvdltlt, MlnlltlOlt, 110, Slat'n,
Ttu•. JOI. Su, Ntw Vorll. 105; GaMaoner. Cllkato, tCM, Franco, Tuts, 100
DOUILEs-Puctltll, Ml-.c>lt, 27; Slat'ra,
TtxH , 27, '°'"'"· 8011on. 73. Reed. Boston. ?2; S art tied wltfl IL
Sl,l("TH at.ca. HO • .,o. sUrf FV"Ca.,_ ICrcllal 11 IO I l'O L..cll~ Lalfl•le< ($,,._I J IO Alta ........ (F*-oel TltN 017 SJ
N•W~T LANDING -6 boats, IU
,.. tneltn 210 .. nc1 btu, 114 btrrac:uoa. 111 uo bonito, 13 rntektrtl, IS roallall, l2 scutpln, • 400 callco bin, 41 blue -di, I bleck s.a bin
UCOlft1 llACS. 6 '"'~ Tronl F""" lo..ltl 16,. '-" 0 0 .
TRIPLES-WNM, ~ f l P&rtdltY, Bal·
llmort , I, Sltrrt, TtxH. I; 8ocllll. 8oslon. 6,
ltrtl!Oldl, Seattle, " HOME RUN~. Mll1¥tukat, 21,
&Jackson,. l(ansts Cltv, 20, Talllel!H't, 9•111·
mor1, 10, McGrlff, Toronto, II; wtllletat,
o.troll, 17
STOLEN 8ASE5-aHtndtrson. Oalllencl, n. Eaov. T .. 11, 2'; .................. 241 Sall. N-
Vcw1l, n, Wlltn, Chkaoo. 21
PITCHING (1 oedslom>-Monl90f'lltnl, l(an·
aas City, 6•1, .157. 1.A7, Swlndtl, Cltvtlenel,
10·2, .m. 2 n. TGOl'dOn, Kansas Cuy. 9·2, 111. 2'3; ~ A,..., 1·2. .ne. 2.1'1 Bttterd,
.. Ill~•. 10-3, 76'. 3 12
STltlKEOUTS-ltvtn, Ttxaa, 13'; Crerntns,
1o11on, 117, Vlola, Minnesott, 109. Bosio,
MllwaullM, ts. Gu1>1c11, IC1n1a1 Cltv, n. SAVE~c. MHwtukat, tl. DJollts, o...i.no, 20. Rus..il, Ttxaa, 19, SdMlolet,
$Miiie, 11. F¥r, l(an1a1 City, lS, Rlthtlll, New
L.ecT-co.wio.....-..1 u• uo Our Olt I.MY , .. ,., s ..
T-l lU U DAILY DOUILa 111 IOI Nlcl
116UO
l'OUllTM ••ca. • "'"°""' A61l T,.. MM (-1 IJl'O IM ue c-0n Tiie aid tOM•l 11 .. 1•• a.1 ~· COa~I It .. Tlrtle I 1U
12 IJCACTA (I0-71 -MmlO U DAl\.Y nt•l.I 00-1·101 -17'tll0
,lt'TH ilt.CI, t mlla WaYIMU l&anl n., It.. '-• O.era I l'lftca• Jr I uo > ..
"-~-· IV--) J lO Tlm!f I.JU
U IUCTA (10-111 -1141t2'
Ml.IC NOTICC
.....,... •t.e•. 1"' ......... lurl
-Vry TCMt (Mlal lllO UI 700 SNek Hltll IMCCttnl UO • 7t Tiie M. V ~ COIVW"I Ht Time 141• d IXACTA (HJ Mid ,_..
SI lltC.c ...... Clt-lt-t-10-lo-t·l+SI ~aid 17MI II .. -wlnnl"9 llQ.ef (..,,.,. nor-I, Mid U,$47 !O llw'M ..........
llcll.ell h l• ...,_I T-'f'• -'<:IL nw c.f'-us ... I), ..... l'lcll -.... O<"'-IJU.7" t7 "·--··'" M<l!Ull Ha .... M.JUnt
MCOlllO llACI, l1t • ., .. C~ lte .... (s..911 S.IO > .0 J .0 T-.....,.. <terreK•I uo Ut Tr.-Horfl IH I l~I I Ot
~ .. 1.J. U DML Y DOUllL8 ft ·JJ -'1UO 11 •JtACTA 12-61 Mlt lll 1t
U elCActA ll·ll Niii lk.o
WVIMTM at.Cl. l7t Ya<dl
Mr -r'tllot C5'Vll91 t40 •II I • ,,_ l~•I ,.. ,.
~,...,<_,I J1t
Tilfte --~·' U IXACTA C•·ll Nld U I IO II ~ SIX CJ-1+1+•> h lO M 6Jt 00 !O -wlM"'9 l~el (lll --1 Mid u,. .o 10 .,.,., ..,.,..,,.. llcll•" (fl••
(rtlffltd)
IASalALL
Am«lcall LMeut nttaD RACa. -•Wclt MefMW. (F...,.,MI f.. 1 .. >IO_, NEW YORK YANKEES-Sent Clluck Ctrv
Pllc"-t. to Columtlu1 of Illa lnttrne tiOntl ''° Ltague to• • ?0-Clav rlfl•Dllltttlon H\IOnmtfll .-,. 1..-11 CCMOBal llO VCl!Nlltt ~ (DiaetlCkMfll
nm.••'-"-., Ill.ACTA (l·J) Nlf .~ ..
l'OUaTM aAC.. -.,., .. l •lY Hel-1$ ... ) t• .. I 1 IO -a c-Tiie 9-CWl>lal SIO
Miu S-t#lllltrl TllM o.1s n U IXACTA lt•SI -SIS.,.
l'll'Tlt at.Cl. >• YWcll
... , ..
u• , .. ...
nm. f'w O.iw.t (Wlllal S .o Uo 1 IO
-My Fri9fld CFl'WYI )IO J .. C-''"' I'-(Gwclal 1M ~ .....
NI.IC NOTICE
1.. NaltaMI LMtW
Jto PITTSBURGH PfRATES-AellvaltO M·kt
Lev1n1tre, catclltr trom lllt 60·Clav CS•sa!Jl90
hsl Sent DaM 811aro.110 catct>t< ou1r1e111 to 8uflal0 of lllt Amero<an Auocla tlo<'I
IAS«ITaALL N•"-1 ........ AIHdlltlefl
GOLDEN STATE WARRIORS-Slonta
Ltonaro T1v1or. torwtrd, 10 • one·vur con tr1ct
ltallafl Ltteut SCAVOLINI PESAltO-Rt·slolltd Oarw1t1
COOk, glield to t two·vttt contract
BAILEY tuubeth Balley. l(&e
93, born Sep~mtx-r
11, 189~ in Tenn.
pelled away June 30,
1989 ln Foun&aln Val-
ley. Mra.. Balley a
homemaker la
IUJ'Vived by her 4
dau1h\er1, Thelma
Gruber of Hunt-
lftl\or\ Beach, Nadine
S. Taylor of Hunt-
u..ton BNch. Mary mlm (George) Koop
of Vucclapa and
Laura Ma.rinekovtch
of Whittier ; 2
brother& David
Homer Williams of
Poway and Ralph
WUUama of Whltuer.
al*> aurvived are 7
1randchildren. 4
treat erandchlldrf!n
and 4 1reat-1reat
poreilon, t20 Newport lflil9. Stele of Ce#ifornla
Center Drive, Suitt 250, 92MO
Newpott Beech, CA 112860 Seki property 11 detcflt*I
This buelneu It con-In ~•I a1· All ttoc~ In
ducted by· • genel'tl pert-trade. tllrtur•. aqUlpment,
nerlNp good wilt end other Pfoperty
Tlla regt1tren1 com-of thal one houT photo buti-
menoed to trtnatet butJ-neu known u Olfect One
cot#1 cWtc.. r1t•.,. °" ttle 11 the CMS. Etch ~<Sef rnuat tubmll Thie buelMN 11 con-tnO the ~ti plan desig· ll'etltloner In ..,.. ltw: TAICT office IOCtied II wUll 1111 bid • CUhtar's ducted by . ., lndM<lual nation for the tltt 11 Open JC>tet ftOl.AHO RAPIER Phytleel Ftdlltlet Planning cheelk OI' certified check Tlla regl1tra111 com-Space-RecrH llon t he ts3 I . luc:IWVWOOd Ave. Trdar, 1370 Ad1m1 A..,. • made pey1ble to the Otdtr or menQad to trtnHCt bull· prOf>Olad pro)eet 11 COOM·
Orange ~~o' 5 ' Cost• M.... CA 112826 the Huntington Beach Union .,... und« the llcUtlOUI lent with both ..... land UM
Orange ally Piiot Cop1ee may be obttlne<I °" High School Olttrlct Of bid Du9lnea name Of namea and zoning IOf the pro)eet June 21. 28, July~. 1989 ,.,.. A copy of ....... bOnd .. Ml lortll In the con-~led •boYe on NIA .,..,
,.._ lt\el be potled It the 1r1c1 dooumentl In en Y~ Vang A copy of the raqUMt le°" "8.JC NOTICE !Ob 111e. amount of no; leta th~ lfvt TMt 1tatement WN hied Ille wmi the City C.k. City
h IMll. be mandatory upon percent (~) of the eum C>ld wfth the CoYnty Ctatk ol Or· of Huntlf'lgton 9-ch. 2000
N0nca TO Ille CONTRACTOR lo wtlorYI u t guarent• thel the blO-enge County on June 12. Mein StrNt. Huntington
CONTaACT09'1 the Gontlact It ewarded, tn<I det will enter Into the 19119 8Mc:ll, Ctllfornta Any 1>9'·
CALL .. PCMt 8IDe upon eny aubcontractor ptopoMCI Contrect II the F4IM7 ton wlllllng to comment on
School Olttrtct. co .. t under Midi CONTRACTOR • ..,,,. It awtrdad to him. In Pubtlllhad Orenge co..1 111eM '9Quet11 may do'° tn
Community C*9e Olttf'lc:t lo pey not leat lllan Iha .. Id the event of !allure to enter Delly Pllol June 2 t. 28, July writing within 10 daya ot 11111
°' C«ona del Mar.
Mildred (Robert) a.ct of Galt, CA.; 2
...... Nanm. Kiem.
aid~ 2 00 o'clock ~ r1t• to all worker• Into tuell contrtct, IUCh ... 5. 12. 1989 nottoe by providing wrliitn l'M of the 13th cley of Ju/ly, ~by !Mm In the••· eutlty wMI be fort.lted W500 comment• 10 tilt Oef:>trt· ,... eout.ion of the contrtci Ho bl<lder mey withdraw ment of Community De· """'~"""' ,.._ of 8id ~ Of· Ho ~ mey wtth<lrew Ills bid tor • period ol torty-ftBJC NOTIC( velopmeni, Envlronmen111
floe 9f Olredor of ~ any bid tor • period of euty 11119 (45) oeyt attar the date -Tf110U9 .,...,, Aetour~• Section. P o
'"8. letty K*I, Coe.I Coln-(IOI daya .,,_ the ~ Mt Mt for the opening theflof ~ ....... ,,................ 8o11 tllO, Huntington BNch ·~~~~"""*YCoie09~. 1310 kw the opeNno of btdt TM loWd of TMt ... ,.. ~ .............. ,.,_ .. , CA 92641 """"-""'"'" .... ~no per90n1 ••
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Orange Cout DAILY PILOT /Wedneed91, Juty 5, 1Mt •
El
642-5678 From Nonh Orange County
From South Orange County
540-1220
496-6800
1169 COili Mola 2624 COltl Mnl 2624 NN9ort ltldt 2669 VIClllDn •ent111 272}
CLASSIFI ED IND EX 642-5678
Ntwpon ltlCh
LIGHT I
BRIGHT
1069 CosuMtu 2124 NfwJK?:1!1tlCh 2169 NNpott1tlCh
Ll&ll 1PT111 HARBOR VtEW HOME TIWIMlll .-EASTSIOE 28• 1Ba C.01-llWPllT lllllTI NewpOrt Be.ch, QUllT
lurnlsflM hOl.IM ,_...,
bl.Ch. $850 per ....
Private 0111y. twf.-5114
PROM HOflTM OfllANQE CO.
FROM IOUTH ORANGE CO.
M0-1220 .. ... uoo
--·--· ·--· .. _ -· -·
Ol.t.Dl.IMll
IM•Ch -"' " .. .. -... .. :::. :a:: ............ ... ,,.._ ......... ........ , .. L•
' ,, '
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CHECK YOUR AD
THE ,IRIT DAY ... -· -............ -.. -.. , ..... --·--·-· -.... -... --......... .. ~-.;'Ci :r..:'7!:."':::.; .. ,_ ... -· -........ .. --... -......... -·-·M-... -...... --· .. ._ .. ,_ .. _ ... _ "-.. ---...... _.,_,. __ ... ..-..... ~.-· ...... . _ ... ___ ....... __ _ ........ ....-........ --..... M. --... _ ... ---.. ---··-·
' ' . • t
1(11 ~ , 111 \ ,
"'" .. ,, .•
•II I I t \IKIJ
'·•••y• ~ •,11• I J
'>'I' • tH,
r "'""'' •" ,_
' ' '" lfl
Be•ulllul Medllerreneen
decOfalor home wle11tra
large yard & lu1h land-
tcaPlfl'iJ IUF10Undln9 &Pl
& loun1a1n •BR • uureet
lwo marbll llrepl1ce1
Prlcld II $609,000. c•!I
SE L ECT BETTER
HOMES & GARDENS
REAL £STATE 751-M>OO
IEWNITIUCH
2BR 18A. 1msll yard.
clubhou1e, swlmm•nj
pool, JM:uul 111 In •
Stat Mobile Home Park.
55 -. No pels. Boat 1110
pos.!ilb!e. MUST SELL!
MOVING out ot Slate
ONLY $28.500 or best
otler e ves/673-5820
day!/642-432 1 •~! 43 7,
esK tor Rhonda.
3BR 2BA home on v&1y tmmae 4BR 2BA. Den qul•t locatloo, llghl •!\Cl tage, trplc, sto\19, pvt en-
prlvat• lrM·lined SlrMI Sorry no pets. 12200mo bright. 2 llfep!M:el. pool. lranc•. 1mall yard,
w/laige IOI. New roo!, •;,Se<: 640-1022 douple garaga. $1550. $875/mo 5•8-1827
tencu. door• & wlndOWI, LARGE beau! 2Br 2BI 722-738' •E'S1o£'2~ lBA. btlam
11500/mo ,. 1 Y'" 10 townttM. 2-car pvt enc11;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.,.;;;-._..;,I c.lllng1. lrplc, gar1g1 2
buy at $329,000 E•-9•1. auper clean. w1Jk to Ap!rt!MMJ per.ans No pa11 $785 •
c1u11v1 ll11!ng! CALL beach. t 1195. lmmedlete -S800 sec 1150-1798
01117 War4 poueslion 970-2993 llfbol •E·s10E. 1Q.ciou1 Ciffn
111-2142 l ;;;-:~=~~::~·1 :l1~~ond~!,,..,....,..,.l.l606~~12Br 1R11 pool, ca1:11e I' LWll Wlll , av11l. $1.0 :> No pets • •Laro-2 Br 1 Ba 1't 1148-5 137 !•om 111m·7pm WSll yr1. new C1rport pr1v111e __
Newlf 1BR w/IQl'mal dine
area, D/W, oek ca binets.
qiJ191 foci Lndry l.c &
pOOI, Snol ac111 Nc:i pet1
1695Curt11831·12&6
llWPllT lllllTI Newer 1BR w/formal d1r>e
1te1. DIW, oak cablr>etl,
QUIB! lo<:' Lndry lac &
pool Sng1 adlt No pats
1695 Curt II 631·1266
BA YAIOG6 community ol pa t Io , S 1 3 0 0 I m o *Lg clean & qu1e1 "'4111 Nie. .tdR. atrium AY1JI
llWPllTUllU&PT1
•WlnNITIUPI• EXCLUSIVE BEACH
COMMUNITY
2BA 2BA bay vlew1 Micro.
d/w, l1pk:, g1r 6 en1oy
our prvt blM:l'I $1675
•Also 1BR 11 $1250
AH maJl'll8'18flCI 1n1;I
•-lllHlmur SORRY -NO PE"TS
IW.111-Hll
WEEKLY
Balboa 111. 2BR MIO
Panln, 2BR t;OlllOI 11IO
Panln 3BA Oi.;plea 11.000
Ocnfronl 3BR ftM U.000
OC:ntront 48R ""' $3.000 •••rtt ............ .. -. .. ,.,.
Newport Beacn, 2BR 2B.A 673·2422 Vlt'de 2BR 2BA, GI •. nv 111 2635 S.1'118 Ana A\19 ON THE BLU FF NA HOAG R t Wanted
upper level unit. Plan B FURN 111 ciesi 18, 16, drapes,enc1Q81agti 1nd'1 $795/mo Small com · Lg 1Br,lrplc gispd,walll · oomm• es
Very llQhl & bright, 1n. !ndry BBC SOliJI only ....0 1795 No Piii 640·2495 pl•• 548-5582. In CIOlll $725-1 750 2724
eludes wasner/Clryer & pe11 ' Vrly !~ $865/mo -. MESA VERO£ * IPll •U F'ool. 9P1 aar °' earoori * OCCAN-FAONT-
lr!Q Community pool & Brlan.(714fll75·8816 2BR tBA lower, garage 329 AVOCAOO ST •J .. ··.~~OT T~~6RA68C3E0 NIWPOf'I 8Mct110..,.... IPI fhll un1 I •S Im· _ $700/mo NO Pill' * 1 ~per1or.,.. -~ bf ~ 1' OWIOL macul1te HURRY QN NORTH B1ylroril Vrly 540•5446 * 28R 1BA. smell llde ylrO ,. io-3061 THIS ONE' A!lk1ng Sp.:ICIOU1 , lBR, hplc , pool11d1 patio· nJ1 w •-PLEX near Hoag Hospl· 1625/mo 1
S 1550/mo patio AemOdttle<I kitcn 3 BR, 2 BA upst11r1. t1esn carpel, mirrored d1n1ng tll 28• ''"'B• 1 gar, in· * CdM Homl
BIG CANYON 28R 2BA $1050/mo 675-3457 carpet d••PM & paint rm.new0/W,Q91hnglan "°" lodry, over garage Prof MfFN/!IFMr.28RIBA
2 Story fwl'll'IOUM 2Br upper level, plank oak Only S800/mo Nr So S875/mo 6'2-1850 N-carpal/painl Reis patio, tr~. laundry, wlll.
1''>Ba. ga1 . PoOI. 1'" mi floors. wasne1/dryer. Bl'boa Penlnsuli 2b07 Co111 P1111 g 0 C Col-SUflny ~E'Slde. 2 BR. 1 BA seso Al!, Agt ~8·3 1 g5 1o bCh Imm $550/mo.
lo belch Sll751mo No svb-lero. balcony view ol lega 720-873 privale garage & yatd BEAUTIFUL. ••lrl !arg.e 852-1351, days.
pa11730-8228,581--0227 golf course Calhed•ll •2BR, 1BA.completere-$525/mo -dep MoDl!e S800l mo Near lhops & townl'IOfnes!ylelOI near 760-1077,91199.
H cemn91, hteplac•. wet lurOl$1\9<1 $925/mo 1 yr nome No pet1 M1tu1e $Chools 646--4631 F11h1Qn l111nd. 2BR 2BA FEM PROF. m NB b911Utf.. llEllUITWIOIOll oa1 PoOf, sp1 & tennis lease Ava il now ' edults Quiel. secv1e rrplc, no p111 $1050 1 .. 1 20R 26A "''·Pool,
81112 Llnde nwood. N• couri Asklng$1395/mo 6•6-21128 ,Geo<ge 1'W1 Newpo11 &46·8373 lfWlflECllATll 85•-77420f 854-1855 l~Ui 151omo. Avllil
8e1cn/Garlle1d 3br GREENBRIER MOOEL lfl -28Rwlg1r,btt-in1,lncdyCI 2'1'1ba . 2-car encl gar. Over1oc»i1ng Big Cenyon •Ll21R 1U I* wlpatio 636-4120 1-5PM LlllUTFlllTIPT Imm, 759-3023
Nu pnllcrpt Patio. lrplc goU course 2BR 2BA Frplc,9aragt1 No Piii Lse meatiBJIH 667 Vic1oria ·o· $720 2BR w/beautlluf bey view! HUNT INGTON H•rbOU,,
Prem1te1 hal· Poo11Spa TWNHME WIDET ACHED 857· 1776 or 760-1713 26 19 Sanla Ana 'I' $735 yrly 1173-4026 Fam prol to stir 11'9 38R
N-pet1 $12 00 mo GARAGE, WHICH 15 llW"ITPlllll•U - - ---~~=~~= 2'11BAtio..J•.l380l mo + 111 f La1tt $600 Sec RARELY ON THE MAR· e 1.PAJJTllllTI fRl1vl E'slde E•ec Tlllll&ft'IWIPTI ',\ulMIUei.8"0-1210
I • 510 13000 move In 84 7·604 1 KET Lovely night lighl •BACHELOR-Cute & Ttiue 11trac11ve Apls lea-Twnnm 6yr1, 3Br 3Ba 2 SpeclOUI 2-3BA (som• "'"'"''"=:;::;:;:o;;:-'°" lll"''""~'1'ii;r'~'[liiiii'"""'"l ~D~Y'~l~E~oo~.~96~•~-6~9~8~8~W~•~o~dl view 01 Fa.sruon !.sland cory uppei w/small tur• poo!, spa, private et1cn gar $1450 Nsmlv1 w/oce11nV1t1W)onF•irway M/F 25-35 raepon 10 f/lW
.IT .I aMT1 Aiking S l8SOtmo kit Chen, lull blllh No patio• or C1aek1. garage 233 161n Pl 835--0705 of NewJ>Of1 Beach Coun· qulel de1n 38'" eo.ta _,, HW1t H rbour 2142 parK1ng $600 ' ,,..,111& orcarpQft1n1Deaut1lul1y ---try Club Oated comr'fl , 2 MeN f\OfM, wld. $310
Win Olnnet For Two! • I Dill CHf I E'LJtl It•' •LARGE 2BA lBA upper 11ndsc 1ped !et11ng car gir•ge w/itorage ..,y, ut~ & c;Sep. C.. Ok. wan11r1HT IO' llCI llO-IOOO ., l .. ·1401 duple• wllg balcony, 1 Sorry, no pets UleSliBAU FrplC, wld hkuPI pool & Olvld. &46-2722 ~
3BR. 11mHy room 2BA ~ .l~.A..V car ~~~~eR:~~5:~;;'0
20• ,e~r~~ 's~o spa No Piii Now leas•no M/F (25. J llhr comlortM:lle:
house. S2.5001mo lease KU",Flltl\ •I 675_.9 12 iBdrm 2B1 twnhM 5865 APUTlllTI by APQI ~7141644-0603 2 BA Condo w/~ 213-:.92~ \t\X 'I \.._~j' l~.\ ·11 LARGE studio step! 10 121 c1masT•En Spe•ll.hng clean. large v~s.,~~ .. "·,~ar,~~. ·.~ B .. ~~2~+ = -· ,~.. ' ' COST"...... G1tden •P!J Beau1tluu,-........ ....... .. ¥... ~ ....... Irvine 21 44 ""'--L ,_...... oeacn & !lay 49 Imo ",..., "' ienasc;1p•d gfounai catlot'I Av111811 Nop411.---uUIJnc;,~-._ li~~~~~~~;;;;;;.;;~~l~~~~~~~~g~1 ·2•e•A-2"e"•,.-"1","""w,,...,•1o","11 llll llU IHI'-~~~!ne~~~3;'.~Y144 Call 142-1424 POOi & spa, p;1tio.1decks TRW r9qd No lee S8SO MIF !or 38A C.M. '*'91. Corona~ Mlf' 2122 Sau;1re, A/C lg petlo. JBA, 2BA $1600tmo y11y TIE 4 SWHS ans glt>t Of C&fl)Orl Imo IM. 6'•-721 1 Agt nr acc. Own phone lne, , __ ~ u.. 1012 FURN Sharp 1BR Duple• pill ok $9SO & $850 BIHGrund'f RUr 675-61611'c"o","on-•"d"•"l"M'•"•-""'l6'l'1'12BR. l'tBA Townnome , Bedroom S680 1 ~------"--,...., Gog all $415•14QO dlip. ~~~ --0 0 h Pag Dav•• at 85•-5402 11 , , 2Bd1m l'10B1 S&05 Sant i Ani Heights A .... 111mmec1. 97t--lt22
.... , ..
~.-1u1•t ....
f" <i1I• ... ulel. secure, eec LlllllT ICUIFllDIT 1111211 pool p11l•O sm1 pe o 161 E 1811'1 51 6'1 2-0856 1684 llWllPllllll aree Neat respon adult 1,-....;-...,,..-.,..--..,..,138R ook net 1 $775 ~8-3623 ---------Shat• OCEAN FRONT Ta~ 1ecord• 1now 3500 u 111 a g1tdf'll' pct No pets L.IQuna Be.ch 21 48 C•••',",~,' •• ,', ."!... Ai..,c.'3· IDO •-1 Li1••2111 · "*~ .. -.. ,.,. -· -2BR. a..n, retO. Nf"'*r --$850/mo '" 760·1236 " -~ 6 60 --CLEAN 1BR lBA. garaoe . ..._. .... or -· _,, M/F. No Dl"UO-. AVW 11! Upper & Lower JBR _ ~ *EIEULI UY* car pkng $4000 722-4 Chaiming 2-Bedioom 1 !auridry tac1flllM, y1rd 1 Bttdroom 1870 Win Dinner For Twol Imm. S650mo. '46-442e
1001
Units Numerous up· --. •OCEAN VIEW 5BA 3'hBA Huge IOI, View· NEWPORT AREA 2B• cot-Balh lronl Duple• Fire· $720/mo ' $500 sec dep 2Bd1m 1' •Bl $7951,;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I
grade1, bf!~ht corne• ~O· 4BA 3•.i,eA. l1mlly rm, 2 Dane Pt to C1t•Un1 tage in tl'lfl counll)' IBI, pl1ce .. $900/mo Agt * 966· 1521 * 2250 Vanguard 540-96211 Mtsc. Rem.ts PROF l1mi6i non-ifriJir ~!~~8~~;2,~2~1r1ell l1plCS. 2 c e r gar $AOOOfmO * 494-2023 smill btldiooms. no g11 67~4912 HLIUTIWllllU 1 a;;~-----30 ,,_ nMdstoatlwtlyoui""
ID ·-u-o • ., •• ,,,,, S:il9SO/mo Agt 673-5354 '''°· •.• ,·1 ~~ 724-9909 ~ "'.cl CM/HB. 836-52:41 -,.,...,..,,-,.,...--...,,,,,,,1 No. Laguna, wllk !o bch • "v-OCEAN View large 1BR 2 BA, t'-'I BA, trplc, encl 28drm 1"•Ba ,.. Oppo1111 Cate Scnool 1C:osti Mesi 1024 3H'Omes 10 6Cean Btvd. 3Br 281 main hM. B11Ba quiet. deck, stove. relng garaoe. •Id nkup, new 151 E 21st St or 972-2020 P l. 1335
360° ooean, canyons & 3BR 28A, !em rm, S2SOO del1Ched guest q1t1s IEWNllT n11uc1 No pell s 1000/mo yrly • Cle<:or, lg pr!va1ll petlo, no Prof l•m n /smkr •br
mini view 3BA 2BA EASTS!OE 58A 3BA on mo 111. h111 • sec 218 $2300/mo. * •97-99 18 Specious 3BA 2'~BA 2 utll. Avall 81 t, 675·6143 pall, Quiet EIOen Ave u .. _.. ... ~ 2640 t>Mutltul NB condo dOM home Ol'I n1111op Fence. lree-llned s1•eel 3BA Jasmine. s I 759-9070 story condo n1 pool $875/mo 673-8632 ~... .._., 10 benl All ern.Mhlee,
pvt road , 01Ch&•d 1n-20A POOi nome on cul--2 9 Huge maste1 . lrplc, wld lBA $6SO or 2BR $800
come $695.000 or will de-111c Agl 673-8700 af:~~trg~~·ve~;~:e ·~:~. Newpert &eiCh 16 nkup, 2 c11r par11.1ng, Costi Mtsa 2624 UST lllE Downstairs, 3 tllOCkl ~:01:::.S ~= ~c.
tr•d• 101 OC properly LUSE OPTIOI •WESTCLIFF 3~R 2BA $1150/mo Agt 675·49 12 Sparkling cleal'I 20d1m llm. new crptlldrps, 1 car from ocean & HB pier
979-2127 or 855-6997 2BA. dbl garage 51995 2·car gar, p1t10, lrg yard ' 1 B $750 All 11 Id gar S6SOmo 760-8364 960-0130 after 5pm J SR 2BA home on very Agl 1173-5354 NICE 2BA 2BA New crpt. '/, 8 u 1 1 pe N•wOOrl Beien RelP
Y1WllUll
AfftllULlll
1-TWOI
!ardn1, wa!k lo schools '"'• ,,;,,,, 015.......,saJ Ga1age SOfry, no pets EAS T5IOE 2BR 1 B.A eo--~-,0,-. -4 blockl private tiee-linect street Charming French Country 1400/mo 1se 650-5600 · .. ~ • 1960 WA LLACE ..,..,..,.. pro! lemlll, walk lo Day wllarge lot New roof. 2 BR House. So 01 PCH paOo gar wlopeoer No 642_1•24 f;.f.2.4905 C1rport, lau!'ldry room !rom Desch. 111 uhllt~ 6 !>each S3SOlmo •
fencea doo1s & windows. •EKCLUSIVE GUARD• Pe1s. $675 6•6-9797 Clean No pe1s $700/mo paid. no 0'11 $'500/mo -s•--·· 01•0·-AnllQu a ll•lufel10A . ...... ..-"""
SlM>Otmo , 1 .-
8
r to •GATED COMMUNITY * 5 MINUTES TO BEACH' 211 -C 16th Pl 6"
4
--0
452 \!~·~-5~·1~0E.e~s~-•~·~,.~~~~1i~~~~~~~F~I THIS quiet, peaceful 10-
caOon \1 lu•t the 1n1w&1
1tter b1lt11ng our free-
ways! Enjoy your summe< 9Vllf'lino• on the Deaut1!u1
dldl, Of lalr.e a lhOfl waJ~
10 IM pool Of \ttnl'l•S It 5 .u l'llr• 11'1 1>eauntu1 Villa
8albOll Thll I• I
~I. neu111Uy deC-
orateCI condo wnn •n
aoundance ol Ule, mu-
rorecl doors. e1c C•ll
OOtflf 10 ... thll nne P•OP-
11'1y s 1117 .900
,~ massive lrplc, recenlty lW ~-buy 11 $329.000 E•-redone i.1tcnt1ub zero 11111 DAIYll llCE UY YI IEW LIWEI 111111 E'SIOE 1Br-uo i~. caoie 1669 Hotefs/Mottfs 271 8 clu11ve llsl!ng! CALL patio wlDOllt-in BBC & 2BR 2BA 1ownhome Oelu•e 5t1Curlty condo 2 .,. IBA. $5SO·Sll25 nkuPI walk -In close1, Newport ltxh -
TH·llDO
ClflJ War4 m 0, e Av 1 11 11 1 1 5 micro, t1plc1 tn LR 6 m.s!1 ma11er S1J1les, 2BA 2 ur .,. 2BR. S6SO-S 725 111-2242 51,800/fl'\O 661-9526 BR, wet bar. w/d hkups, 2 p1rll.1n9. h~ balcony v3BR. $900
IEWIOMES
12 New detachBCl cus1om
homes. situated 1n E;1s!·
Sidi Cos! a Mea.e priced
!Of QU!ck sale OPEN
HOUSE EVER'fDAY!
1;;;;;;;;;;;;;---...,.,.,,,1 car gar. cenlraJ a11 All Av! now! $15001mo Agt G•sh••tr pd Pool. gar d lw
l(osu Mna 2 l 21 m111"1tenance inc• Sor1y. 675-49 12 6'2-5073•650-6069
$1,250 NEW Cepe Cocl
3 Br. 2V• Ba, l1p1C. lg
CloSets. pvl b1lcon1e1
used brick/yard Beach
l)reeies 845-2566
2BR 1BA re1r house.
cerport, alley a ccess
5650/mo 1slflast • $300
sec 263'"' 81oaow1v
722·81172 al1&1 II
No palL 6"4·0500 l• .. iiiiiiiiiiiii!-.... ~
s1225tMO 3Br 2 '~B•. 2· 11 TIE HLF CHRSE
car gar. new carpet & 2BR2BA. l6001/l8igC1-
p11nt .Av11t now 4309 nyon townhome Pvt
Patrice Agl, 557-4373 entry. dbl garag.e. lovely
Ctll'ltu1y 2 1 Pro I v-, qu+et s~t11ng at
2BR 2'..,BA Condo highly S 18501mo
upg1aded, lrplC. Newport North 51400/mO Avell 2BR 2B.A Bay11Clge uppe1
l\OW 729-7250 497-9918 "B" Plan wsnr10ry1 re-
Wc!YitFlll!ld
IPlllTllllTI
Large attractive Apls 1n 1
1>eauUlu1 gerOtlfl '8tt1ng
POOlllPI Gar1ge or
c111rpa11 Sorry no pets
2Bd1m 11 .ea 5775
D.ALEBOUT ASSOC ""'"""''~' &31-7300 *CIZlHDISEI **'DO'TllUOI •=~...,~~H~L~•~I ~l'~"~';'--l !EEil~;::;~;::;~;i£~1 S 1, 195 2BR. Piiio, tndry,
< ;1·~ ;F, 1· l.KJNS lrlg•rator, db! garage
AIC Avell lu1n1shed al
Sllghtly mo1e1 $1550/mo
Coll lllH I l'j.r111 l1••
Tll·IOOO or 144-140T
2Bd1m 28a SBOO
J98 W WlllOl'I 63 1·!>563
Irvine 1044 1Br 1Ba, wtd hk up, new 1911 of parking 648-9666 carpet, garage, Slorage ---HTl lOTI MOTi ahed . Lsrge yard •WDLIFF• s~~~~K ' Turtlerock 2BA & den only $750/mo View E•e<: 5B1 3Balamlly
$335.000 View 01 cu~ & 387 Aochetlter nm $2500 Agt 786-7327
COLDWC!U.
BANl(C!RO
nature par~ , 7 Rust lino TSL MOM f 842-1603 --Wind Centu•> 21 Prof -3BR 2'~BA Newport Hgl! •Mesa Vet'de lo quiet 3BR WIO, 2 car gar. g•rdener Fran Lugo, 557-•373 2BA . !rplc, lg clOMll, dbl 1w11er pd Famn~. no
REAtl< I
\)\'('I \"t..'rl' I~ ~ ·11
REA LTORS'"
PllllHU "llT
I Bedroom
241 W Wiison
$640
642·9850
5655
631·0960
\BA l1replac1. encl ga1-
age , wa lk -i n clo1e1
$65-0lmo A~111 July 16tri
Belly 644-2270 eves
llUTLHITIHI
!BR IBA. lrg P8llO, pool,
lrlge. g11 •nci. clean, up-
1lalr1 No petl $595/mo.
$500 MC 145 E 18th St
•645-5221 •
West N-porl 1 toouse to beach 3BFI 2BA. yrly
S1,2!JQ/mo Avail Mid•
July Bkf 842-3850 HQTI HOT• HOT· 1•rage, dlw, encl Piiio, pals $1400/mo 11111a11
Tu11terock 28A & den onty 1150 No Pttls 640-2495 S200 de(! 252 Palmer Two cnarmino, o1<.1er 2
$335.000 View 01 city & •Nwot Riv•efl 48A 2,,,8 A 1150·6017 or 1173-0365 SIOfy homM 1n an e•-Upgr11<1ed 2BR, new stove Uflltlll nalur• park 17 Rus1llf!O elusive ar•a F1plc, ga1 -par11.1ng, encl p1t10, Wlfld Cln!Ufy 21 Prol, f rplC,gar,yard,pool,tP• ll1Du,..Ylll1s 1,., decks or patios w 181n ~, S7251mo
..... F1an Luoo 557-4373 Sl•OO No Pill 722-80!' 2 BR Townnom11 with UP 8 88-.,
lmmec 3br 1' ;oa. ltpk:
qui-el. completely 18t"ndld
1v11! now. tnd1y rm,
n/JM1 Su$1.n 540-3666
Large JBR 2BA upstairs '"
4 -~e~ Nr CCC Garag11
1040-C Valenci1 $900
mo No pat• 545-79!3
GorQeOU• 2 11ory C•oe1:;;o;;;o;.,.,-,,..,,,.,,-...,.,,:I Eves/WKnd1722-8140 10 1,820 i ll. golf cou'se *C~ ~~ocn• "$1f,'~1mo 731--• evenings
Cod ~ 5 Br, 3 a.. Newport ltlCh 1069 --322E. 23idSt vtew1, lrpk:s, wld hkups. •3BR 2,,.,8A $200()/mo •2BR 1BA on lhe bluff nr 2Br \Ba Goll Course MIST SEEi
TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
wt'Wll 6 light, t.,racoU• -3BA 28A, ''rge yard, AV "1/c . 2-car 1ttch gar Call bCn. Quiel P~I lndry
Ull lloor•. Be<btlf' carpet -.UH UTFlllT:* ~. ll3fi5tmo wllh 9·fi tor •POI 760·54~4 WILLA IEITW hkup, yd, g1r $725 Pet View 0.C". quiet. lttnnis
GtMI eunny ioc.tion E•QUltlte Contamporary 9ar()en&f 844-0711 OCEANFR0NT-PEM1NS 111..4111 ok? 646-1264f6A2-9666 57251~4 Joann
......... ~a'::":ri~~:::c.:· 3BR HOUM, t• ... Ba. big 3BR 2BA-$1750. Re8lod, 81gCanyon Sea l~ana •2BR 1BA 01110 garage T5L MGMT 6"2·1603 •Co•d0·~" -ll1ll PIYllllT! L o+lr 6 slip $2 050 000 yaid near South Coast new appl Av1H 1mmed 3BR, 2\~BA COl'ldo 9(>11 D/W. c 101e l1undry No•• He•bOf 8" Adami 2 6 c..sr.lfo ~ r9 '5 Plaza. g1rdel'I•' 1nct 723·0352. 760-8818 OOU•MI ~oew sec gele room No Dell Sfi50lmo H) s~"'" W1'll glV1 you the down In ~~rund'I Rttr 67 ·616~ fi45 6662 &SO 23 18 BR. 1 8-'. gar19t1. w/CI
ACROSS 61 (.illSll •:'10"'
6-4 c1"11"' "'P<"'' ..... R@'CI"''",...,..,,
66 .,11n<lit' 6: a..1 ... ,
DOWN •11chg tor a shar1 ol own-*LIU llLE* _s_•_•_501mo 5_:1-5747 EXECUTIVE TOWNHOMEI ;~':,'.nc~~~ I~ ttll'I~:~. -•IU~Plll.I• hit.up, no pa1~;67~7B t• ... ~:·,1<
ll'lhlp 'fou mak• the $785 CUTE C1pa Cocl 2B1 OcHn vHtW, bl<:ll.• lo gol s 1 8001,.,0 Call Judy * * * Hickory 5 735 -,., n .. ,..,1>,. ....... 1 .... no .. 11 ... r.
m1hly pymll & -1h11e *11Jf101l* wood Hoo''• new COUf M . 2BR, 2',.BA 6 M~tz GoldweH Ban11.e1 •21150 HARL.A AVE • E'SIDE ~UST SEE1 NEW 16 lamr, 1 50111 0,~,
app11c. You r•c1lve Sopn .. ucated ll'ld eleg;art c1rpettpa1n1 1u1etu1ed d • n I 3 . 5 0 0 I mo ' 644_9080 A 1m1ll, Qule• comple• iro 2Br ,2B• many •Ires. 11 P'""''1 3 SuPttl"'"" ~
100% la• benelllt Mu11 hOml commanding main brick Sm fenced Y''d IC RB H.60 786·7500 1BR ).pt1 moderately bll -+nl, DIW, lkylight 18 "''"'""" 91,1,,.,.n(I
n1ve c1ttan credll Agl cn111MI v1ew1. sllp tor 645-25&8 LARGE 3BR, 2 1/.,BA SU ISL&ll s;1eec1 Soma tellu•e ca-gar . S IOSO 642·7334 l9 s~mtio• .io Soun'"'"
957-8002 e>y., Ev~ lltgl ylcht plus 2 imallef All NEW CONDO STYLE CONDO on prBUy gr-. Outstandtng gate-gu•1ded ttdral te11+n91, b8lconJ'. Nwpl acrOll the llr"'I ~ ~~~"'"' C•l•'°'"'"''
Vil•• e•LBOA side 1ie1, ov1rstzect 101, •2 ·-•aom, 2 bath belt In 1n • B1ull1 2BR ~ den. 2'..,BA. 2 garage L11t.e new & Vll"f' '' ,~ ••• -.,,., !> 0.11 ,,,, .... '"" " ..... 1~• .. 0n1ne~on eourae r,r1v11a."Poot 101.eeo. Sngl tv• 2BA lraie O•' ... ~~ 6E1i llh•"ll"<'I PEHfHOUSE with ocean $2.060,000. Call Cnet1 •3 beelfoom, 3 balh S 1950/mo C111 Ruth r"""s N 579$1 · 1665 26 Ct1Qu"11"' 7 w:,,11,.,0 .•-•am ••Ira large Swlll 723-0858 G .,. Ir""" mfCro w/d Sachar, Brok.II' 997-4051 All !he bells Whistles! aundry 111 · MC o NO pels mo 77 NoO ~<nCIJL ~ · 81 ' ...... " · 0, 730·•200 $3350/mo • 760-5.064 pell. Velml'I 549·2447 l1vine Ave 11 1 72'0·9422 • , .. ,.n
Pl!lVIOUS l"UZhl SOl.VlP
deck. Spaclou• 2 ~~,m~~·~,,~b~b~&~E~ll~"~"~•~•~ll!0~•1~~""~'·~·~·2~s~'~"~'~"Pi·~""~'~~==~~~:;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~====~~~~~~::::~~~==::::::::::::::::::~~i'~'~'~~~··~·~·~·:::~-~~~:::~--~~~ ---~ .. ~· ... ~·~~ lc10! 9 0.1c•v ~.1 ~r:o!pi~)'ll0:1~1h •LIHIAYFIHT• UDIUYTIWUIMI .
pool 1295 000 Local!Ofl! Location! 3BR 2•.+BA, 2 Cir g•regl. comm, · Supetb Home! ~r"t foc•llon! Er\d Unll. ... l!t•t .... ,. tic. Spaeloul Lcilt ---_,_ VKanl Extra t1rge doc:kt ...,.. · ·
-
111r1ilTD"S Wiii con11de1 !fade Call S 12 7 5 1 mo . Pt•' I
63I·1•00 Caro lyn Roi,, Me,rltl Proper!'" 1412-9797
873·6900 1.ynch Re1ny 073-7877, lllTlllU.k"'I
760,3600 73-7212 *LAROE 1JP9rtded 28R ;:;;:;:;;;;;;~=::"""\'~1 Ult taU ., .~ ... =n~' 2'~8.A 2 atoty, 2 patlot, m flllnd 1006 107 VIA RAVENNA _ cou111ry kllctlen, pool,
*1.1Ki NtW.CUl10m38R S8A2 8AM75,000-· =~~j~~-V11~
31.A DUTCH COLONIAL 875-9130 AQt 175-4912 ;'*~~10-• iiii'•r.•1~111ur.1,.11•l--~ ... ~;;11;.;;::.,.;;•._· -
8115 PIRATE 38R, 28A, 39FI 2BA twnhfM dpl•, ?...u-J022 SPA,1440,000 4954303 torlnlldlnklQ,tndr')'.lfl>fC, ,,_,...'iij-~-~~~~1 -.iij-·f-R ~-2c.,-9.,11ge ly ... d. Xlnl :r cou-oa •Stu.I .. fllTTllUm cond1Nopeta.11osomo.
dloOfl .. 2 k>t rile.-DUl!d· CONOO .•. llY OWNER Cutt 11631·12tl8
:7. =. lo ' .aa Onty 39r a11ea. ger .. Mcil.lded . 54 wM 11911000 •2 BIQ EAS Slot •• 3BR 2. • Aot e1~ DIWW· N·a. i30·0620 2v.BA 2 •torv. Flfep1.c1.
.ioe ot --2 c.-etat-0-. I 1:tOOlmo.
Hwy, fOf SaH ti)' ()wnel', ....... ... Av .. 17116 "91875-4112
Ill ~ 81. OPEN 28A, l!IA, trplc, pool, .. ...... ---;.~~~~~~·~·~IH-~01!0~~-~::::;~-..... ..... --38A 28A. lerOt ,.., y•O,
2 C* G'W•1 ~ 7/t al t 1250/rno -t nttt •
•
Let ..... Y•
lel y .. Pu,1ct~
.. Cl1111n.1.
641-MM
for intormatlon
& surprlltngly
low coat.
...,._
Ul·IMI
, WIN
DINNER FOR 2
AT
H 1stont Walel'fronl Roauranl
Ttll
CANNIRY
F IND OUR HIDDEN
I.
LASSIFIED A DS!
ONTEST RULES
• Imply Rnd ou.r hkklcn clufifird JIJ~ M"1f)\t'Wtk'~ 1n o ur cl•s"flt'd ~11on,
u1 and pule 1hc ads on the 'f'ntry bltnk •n..i m•1I 1hrm 10: OAIJ 'W
PILOT. JJ() W. Bay Sltttt. C'M tJ MCSI, C'1 IJ.?bl'1 rfo l)innrr (or '
Conm&.
1. All entna mu'I am\C by Fnd•> noon
). Winner will bt c~n.b)' nndom dn1v.'1fl&. •Rll """inner·, name w11! 11)(X'11
In 1he folk>wu'S Friday'• pe.prr One winner prr v.·«\
4. Contttt ""II nin 6(11 ·1121
-
-------ENTRY BLA NK-------.
NAME
ADDll
CfN,STAtt
O..Y PHONE
. '
'"'"''""° -...... -
)J -'ctive 10 Wotn51""1 35 Pun'"'m"r" 1 1 COM:>! 31 "!yt"n' 12 B.q t•l J9 Dec..larf' 13 POloshfo~ •o Sa"""' I>"'' '1 A.esol\.I• .. 4J [.,5, ,,.....,,. ~ 111n1ttau '5 $t:l\ll>Oulfl -'3 HaJM"y ' ,, X"' non .. •• Lile J.t o•r :?II do ,..,.11 ""'"'"Q ·~ v.,.on.-, ... ~ :l'I UIM'I •. ('"'t"""' 50 , ....... tart
47 .. g .... <C ' \() ~1""00" '' I l>•llll"Mlft -SI ""••m•Hvl' 34 ..n [."""'~ ,, ......... 11 53 Pit.IUe t\IOt 52 Samplf'Cf .,,..,. 35 N Y 1:1t. •6 (;(VII"''""'' SS-fo-.Kllen !j ... l'IOUMI rnetTlll"'! HO!ll'Nl!U">• '""' ,. . Sii WetQl>t vn•• 37 t\11~ 4 t UQnl bull> ,.,_ 39 01sorne u" , .. -8 1 Ch"l9(f nau,,... •• •tlfl(, ~7 AMttc•
'' G1•r1 •f• 40 As-.a t>' •t 'l•I ., .......
' ' • ' 1 • • " " ..
"
"'
" • ..
" .. .. ..
-
l012 b11bV f'll'9 dog w/CO/q/ t-===::~~-•1,111/--NEW POAT develop•r llU llTIT
9 "'*'-· ,,...'°' "°'* Found on bWll In N e'I H•ii& llll.U II you have the '°""9941 lo nwtt FIT typing cop14a1, ADYEITISlll All'f, _,..,,..., IALllA IAY Work In tl\e HunMQton or 1200 aqlh tMwport + ~. IOl-e124110 11s.2011 -11Wf 111111· cell, tt could mllke ~ bngt'lt a .tiling to \ufn mt11 •Al 8ffCf\ .,... Several of ~~rone ... _p~!"p~' I&&••·----FOUND -Lo ... 'r. ~.or,d.·PfooeMISpr•no•d' rich! ~~~~~;,~o com~ Dor\ 722-7862 SALES lllNll llPT CLll ~;::.·~~r= ~---_..,.,. -·· 1 untte Rlllrtngl I ..... MALE SIAMESE KITTEN •u ' -CPA omc. needl Book· Oala Entry pettonnel .,,.,.. tall 115-ff44. l)lttllftg 17ttK AllO N.8 M tnO Old, vie 441h. 8hei9tt Ind mor• Com-UIU/MllTll 1111 ""'* Exp . In GL. TB The Dally PtlOI ano Ind• E11perience 1n wrtllng. edll· ReQutr .. at leal e montM ~....;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=;;;;;;;;;: ~...._ lilftnOI t.tu.t lelboa Penln1ula. puter ~ ~ pment In· For tandWlch lhof\ Full & FS Prep, end Computer pendent 1Hk1 ex· •no and page leyoul Will •IUll IU &TYlll of e-.per~. and • Commtrdll ,roptrty be eold at M2·3160 150·e785 :lud~FI = Y0k;" 10 PIT Nancy fM2-5422 Input H B area 984 5156 per1enced ad11 Hlet· au111 editor In real es-summer posl110n1, 1a1t typing 1peed of 35 w0td1 2778 -M'P n II • avlll· -peraon lo jOln expanding tile. au1omot111e and food ••Pa mu11. FT per minute Greet pey ________ l.011 Harbor •hopping able If you quality Call 1tafl Ad tales or pMt adver1111ng aupplemenll 9 epm and t>eneht1 Short and .. Lllll cntr. Bleck Male (714)$35-7388 .•• • • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • background preferred Wiii conalde. ••patience • .::.;...,,.Tll long term position•
2,GQO 'at St 25/sq ft, Cockapoo HH Uttte NATIONAL TECHNICAL e Lucrell11e compensation over degree. Ablllty to -"' Other opening alto avail
4 ft ""''•U _. .. OE NoduleonhMd Aw#atdJ SCHOOLS. 730 N • FEDERAL DEPOSIT •package Please call or handle va11e1y of 1ob FTforourtennl1ciub, lnSoOrangeCounty c.11660-MH Euclld, Ste •202, • aendraaumeto tunc11on11nal&11-paced 2-tOpm 1
'l'
11
• i.*. 34~.:i4:e8523· L.OST:-M° Rottweitaf. vie AnaMlm, CA 02801 • 1~• IDANCE CORPORATION • environment CALL •OMn&IL UIYH Al~~:"~L Hoeg Memorial Ho.pita! NTS HMdquarter1, 458 • l1"'11\ • DAILY PILOT PT, Fri. Sat. Sun only _ .. ,,..,.,.,._ LARGE YARD Approx °I"""'!" 2904 7/1. Needa medtce1ion' W. M L King Jr. BIVd. Lot e e IU·Ull ll•·4I•· Peopleorlenlad t6H_. Beach Blvd, Well·
H>.OOO aqlft w/houae. ...... I.... 373-0931 805--29&-48'3 AnoelM. CA 90037 e • 330 w Bay St. Ask for Trisha Gab1a or mlnater (Pavlltlon shop-detaehed g11age & large S tOK UM .. ' , • C ta Mesa CA 92627 Mary Carter For appo1n1ry1ent, pleaM p I n g o e n t e r l
1torage unlt1 C·2 Zone Of 1 A~" lOST OR FOUND A PET. • SENIOR All>ITOR, GG-511-13 • 0• · Equal Oppty Empl. call6,.5·5000. Ext, 521 714-8,.8-4814 juSI off E 17th & Coata rec m-LOW COST Spay/Neutet • Attn Linda Caster __
MH• 3 year term W•k•·upe Plck·UP Mall· Refef'r.i. NO F!E. • (Salary Ran•e ··-•(t•t•4•184-2·.43•2•1-•f -----------DELIVERY DRIVER Load· S2900/mo Agt 1175-8700 •Mak• depo91t •CALL 97S-PETS• • • • Ing a unloading furniture
11'1 time to vacation ·--$4 $ ftEllOAL IELP Dena Point ba9ed co LUil IPTlll 71415<4~2255 REWARD! lost I~ bOln.l&i l018 • 5,233 • 58,806) IUS DRIVER $ml educational media co BOYS AMI'\ GIRLS 498-9486
2 000 IQ h commerclal Nugget watch ( ) • LICENSED $9,97 lo llatl needs SHARP aM-around 1111 DICTA-PHONE TYPIST
building In ·Costa Mesa lnwstmtne on Balboa Peolnaula l I v a . I n H o u • e • TR~INEE $8.08 to start person for data entry, Iii-12-11 YIJll U Type •0·50 wpm. Exp
Renting al 75c sq fl n....--. 2908 848-380t k ••,P • r 1Ch11 d C • r • • Musi be 2 t yeera old and Ing. cust ave. etc Fie• Rs RE needed Call Krlatln
Slralghl leue w/optloll E Jnr===JO "''!. ,.,.,_ 3002 ::~;oy~l~d. f;r yr '~';;Ill • ha.,.. a ctean driving re-h<S Pay commensurate TU~~rYJl~s cxftlAR~IME * ••7S-0983• *
10 buy at S220,000 Call N Y 14-1 .. • retum on baby Mature woman n • The FDIC IS looking tor a Si. Auditor to staff cord lmmed vacanc1e1 wlexp Wendy. 646-4486
tor de!~ W .. ~~~°=''c~o=~ L •0-IM1~ WM1111 smkr, e~ G.vy. • thetr Costa Mesa Office. Applicants must pos '°'Bus Drivers and Bui WORK AFTE." SCHOOL ..nas WllTlll -11 If• · ••1 .. · .. 3 • 0 oae 1 .. lbe In 14 days Mu11 IC)elk aome Eno· • Hu I"' .. k -.t'""4ft f th pt Driver Trainees Special OIEllT 11111 AND SATURDAYS GET· LOSE 10-14 LBS IN 14 -.. 1·1142 AMOO. v _.., .t N WI Only COit la. food! 1111'1 Luxury private room ~~ a uOTODgn nO"t"ul>e O e conce S, cerlillcatH only Can Teller for Newpotl Beach TING NEW CUSTOMERS DAYS ONLY COSl IS
'*645-0HS• & bOard J200rwti cor-• theones, principles-and practices of general and 558-34"06 lor lnto E!)E office wm train qual FOR A LOCAL NEWS-FOOD. 84S-0265
A "'untu >'' l~·all.'
Money To loan 291 ~ GENTLEMAN ~· lady ona del Mar. c.n weal(. • cost :iccount1og. auditing. taxation. budgeting lt•rt·htl Stllttlt candidate Compe1111ve PAPER NO DELIVERY lllTlll WUTll
•WIDOW HAS SSS 4 f 0s1 for companlonlf'lp and daya, Cindy 720-o 1o 1. • and analySls of tmanc1a~statements 80\ lravel aeiary &. benelns Call INVOLVED. ANO ALL Thole wtio would Hk• 10 s 10 ooo up No cred .,.. No help with crou-drMalng evening a & weekend a e ed Th I h Don't haaltate to llquldat.. Diana lor lntflf'View appt TRANS P 0 RT AT I 0 N ION 10 10 1• lb• In 2 Wks
pe;,.,ty Cell Denison P.O. Box0551, Newport Nlle,844-741& • IS requir IS IS a career pos11on w 1ch =ttlOMne:r·ulldltema (714)955-5359 PROVIDED BY AN
Auoc 873-7311 NOW! Beacn CA 02MO SENIOR COUPLE needs • offers an excellent benefits package Entrance ADULT SUPERVISOR ~~~r~a7o':U1:~~5~~ R,;!~L Av~~151m~ 1~ ~: OEITlflEI--Thank 'you St J~ lor peraon for Hght duties • salaries are based on education. experience. .pc,c:re:!:>~c,c:r~~~~~v YOU CAN AVERAGE He~~th40&L0tF1EetPCRenoot.,ucTs
on 19th St 760-8384 A . .-.. F le M .. favors received through 4-7pm .,~ .. W! Oflve & • training and previous earning level. 19Trmo1 FIRST-TIME .. ppro._. ann ae ... p. 1 ~-•--J M 1peak eng1 • .,, v41·3525 I I Ii RETAIL STORE 10< tease pral .. 11 S225. Alto your mer.._... •. · -e
2.100 IQ II. popula; comm'! & lndu1t'1, land, TUil Yll n. ~ Ernpk>Ymtnt 5530 • Applicants must submit the following forms to ADVERTISERS
Westchlf .,... Up::er propoMd conat. 83S.Sl23 FOR FAVORS RECEIVED •S300 A DAVI• • the address hsted below or call (202)
N1t#porl Ba~ 675"34 3 --INT~~~~~:S~J00U~ E Taking phone orders • 898-8890 to receive forms. All apphcallons
ST•E H lfflOI · · · Pe 0 P1 e c •" Y 0 u • must be postmarked by July 14. 1989 soo or 1~00 1/1 887 w. ~ Strvkts 3004 714-658-1403 EKI 12 e
19th, CM Agt 541-5032 ACT NOWlll •
-------1LOll i Found 292S ml l ,_TF .. 1 llllll llllTY f&ll • FORMS:
Industrial 2788 -=====-===1 He8d 1hota. -ieg cerc:s., r• Sales help neec:Md 1elllng • ..,....._ ____ ._...., • sumes. comp. Total 1roplca1 plants a pol-e
Standard f orm 171 "Personal Quall·
fteallons Statement" form
1170/17 ·List of College Courses OR
llanscnpt 11~~~sro .. rFTdr~~on.11n odffook:41r, package, $575. Pror pourri July t2th·23rd • -fnl IU'\ ADS prepared by Cynthia See Roberta'• Inc In per-$7 Imo. 1240 Logan \IUl1ll Huffman 213-982·8700 ton at boothl 707 & 708 • e
Ave. Costa Meta Oya he c Bid • 540-9352 E11 6A8-0681 ARE FREE in 1 ommerce O on MAl TO· U.S. Off ice of Personnel Manaaement • HAVE July 9th· 11th lrom • · • lndu.trtll-Commeroal 1oam-3pm No pl'IOne • Los Angeles Area Office •
1111-... 141 ft tiffs CaR: A NEED? calls pleaset • 845 S. f 1geroa. 3rd Floor ATTN CM .•1
t1B.-CM.Mu..Nowl.Uslng WI PAY WILLI • Los Angeles. CA 90017
PRIME PROPERTIES Read the classified pages PT ASST MGR COUPLE • •
71>4-845-3940 142-1171 ond you're sure to fill 111 Part 11me, MfTil retlrlKI ex-• fNr 1 .. an Equal Opportunrty Employer • · y J perlenced. 10 unlt1, "~ •
__.......,_.._;..;;..;;..._,;,,;;..;.,;;. __ ._._._._._._._._._._._._._._._. Cotti MeH &42-9190 ...!.! ••••••••••••••••••
........... , ...
15 yr1. ••P Local ref
·~ .. ,~ .... e RE OOELING
e WINDOWS
•DOORS
•CABINETS
CERAMIC TILE NEED COMPl/TEA HELP?
Bath1, K1tcllen1. other We aet up 1y1tem, write
Economy prl<:ea. FrM program1. gel you started
E1t. 841-2505. 497-8775 Adam. 64_.·2052 or
SUPER TILE/MARBLE Vlp. 759.~34
• •r' '
Run your Help
Wanted Ad in the
Daily Pilot' for one
week. If you don't fill
the position, run a
second week FREE!
For more information,
call Maria o r Angie,
642-5678.
$75
OR MORE
FOR MORE
INFORMATION CALL
(11•) IU·IOl1
BOYS & GIRLS
&ITH IOIHL Jiii
Be part ot a Super Seles
Crft HlllrlQ lubscrtp· lt0n1 lor Ille Daily P11011
• A11eraoe $40 00 10
$60 00 per week
• WO(k 3 hours each
weekday evening
******** DISPATCH DRIVEf'
DAILY PILOT needl a per-
1on lor pick-up and de-
llvery of ad copy. Mon
t-5. Tues-Fri 9-6, Sal
8-12
II you have a good driving
record and enjoy dri11tng
thl1 Job '1s· 10< you Call
Mary Carter at 642 ... 321
eKt 275 altflf' t2
******** l•IYllllOlllSI Train 10< lndullrlal Cater-
ing Rll. Hunt Bch, Irvine
Tom. 8'8-1030 1-4pm
lltftll
CROSS COUNTRY
No ••P nee. CA license re-q u 1 red MacGregor
Yachts, 1631 Placentia.
Coata Mesa.
••IYlll• T .. m drtvera neecsecs. 3
yra exp. Katie, 829-1662
• Win pr1ze1 end bonuaes iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
• Muat be 12 10 15 yeara
Old and 1111e In the
Huntington Beach or
Fountain Valley area
• Tr11nspor1at1on provided
Cell from 2pm lo 6pm only,
please
(714) 843-909~
DRIVERS
WANTED
llWVIPll llLIYlllY
• N-port •Balboa
• Corona del Mar
One day pet weal(, early II•--------AM BEGINNING JUl.Y t3TH o.p.ndable ear
• DECKS, ETC
Oualtty Work-Free Eal
Complete Kltchen/Bathrm
Countertop replacemen1
Beal Prlon! Ref1.
Dan ~3-8449
~ ~... ~ prool of Insurance NllllUIPUIUI Rerool/Repalrs All work •Paid to trf\tel worldwide
guaranteed 722-7537 •Free rm/board on ahlp EJ
·$2.30 per day
Thal t ALL you pay ror
4 ~. 30 day minimum
1nthe
SERVICE
DIRECTORY
L• 647-1958 ---lllltlU. 142-1111 SmaH Remodel & Addns
8athrm .. w11drobe-door1
30 Yfl 0 C Ouattly WOf1t
~ ~~
' ' ' '
'\ •••• l •••• . . .
WE gel9 ahd h~ together
Strip-lnttaU. advice to the
cruy Oealgn conaul•
tatlOn, a.Int refa 933-7172
IMf•·IHMI
IEPUI ,,. ............... . '.awu .... 01.
ll•tt 1111
Llt#4tl040 * Ml-1111*
For • pro~ took et • tw ,., •. Mau . .2 .. 9-9455• * Stump Grlf\dlng * * TrM Removal Svc • 919 ff Avef-oe Stumpe. Den IM-1700
•No •KP req'd 540-3332
HIRE
th1outth cl•ssif1ed
642-5678
. ,,
7
4 \
..,..GOOD EARNINGS
V'NO COLLECTING
l&UM2-'IU ......... ...,...,
EaminGI unllmitad Tue
order• f0< our produe11.
at home or your office
11.._857-4701 H1 K510
:Jun .Afl,,. Sc,oo/ Wo,.J,
11 te 16 Yeer1 Ohl
WOIK IYININOI
AND IAYUIDAY
YOU CAN AVRAGI NI WB •7500
OR MORE
CAU SHARON
• 714-143-9091
All ~ANWO.TATION NOVIOED
IVANAOUlT~ ----
tUI: A ttHI
vlllue• Afl 1"\1rt1
htwe •" et .. uc ............. _.. ...... tD ·-= ~ .. .,,. ......... ..-,n
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or PM
ery. • 842 ... :!
228. y
for Cl')
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pettofl
off lc
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type/~
touch. ., ..... •• Tennie 1
eervic.
ual to
In 1-i)
qulf•
COfd ..
ablllty
bullneo
19'axac
9'19t.
Ba Iba
... $-50
GIFT S
POF
Bettle
1:30prr ..
Help no
hOUH(
Teena<
own ci for D1
~
lnturar
C eree
Saler
983·58'
UIA
Hunt. Bt
Mln3y
LIGHT f
1v wt. I
GINGI
WEAR. ...
Compute
llland,' -· PIT, ex
191and, I ... ..... =
as: ., .,
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6-Star " Sun 4-1
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1100/dl
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DISTlllCT
lllllllEll
"Full or Part·llm9
"Early A.M thin
• Mu11 hive r•ll•ble
~ lrw:l ln9U!'W1Ce • Good $.i.,y &
MllMQ9Peld
WIMllMJ-UU
9 A,M .• 5 P.M. M-F
8 A.M. • 10 A.M. S.t.Sun
~·i.
.... Teoh, W. =---,..,.. C"Al..L • t Tt•a·1. 1.0.L
-111 llllUIDTill * '9UTllLY 11111 llYllWS* * PAii YlllYllll * *••-"* * P•THllllll *
-1111
lillllllfTl.O.
PART TINE
Stuclent. 13,....
.. oldor.
Eam S30 • SIOO
~ Dmlyl'li.t
insurance.
1d•1•pu·,...-•.
2130a.m ... S:-:Wa.m.
1-·,
ABOVE AVERAGE EARNINGS
Call 714/642-4333 between 6:00 a.m.·5:00 p.m. (M.f)
6 a.m,. I 0 a.m. (SAT & SUN)
'REAS AV AILAB!-E:
•
Haatlngton Beaeh
Cesta MeN, Fountain \'alley,
A New .. rt·Beaeh
Motor Routes
available In
W11fllli11t1r
H11tlllfoil ll1oh
Fount1l1 Y1ll•J
NO COLLECTING
NO SOLICITING
Ollt'9f One Day a WMk •
Muat haw deP«ldable car
and proof of 1-Wlee .
... t42-1444 .
Mk for Joanne Cr9MY
'
•
BOATS
j288 , Camirio C~•trano
SAN JUAN CAPISTR.-NO ...... 1.
• 1n,,ooce amount m.y ••-oeeo ac'IUlll ~ CO.I
aue to 1nc1ri1 1v11
provided to lhe dffler t)y
rnaf!Ulk:tu•• Offer ••-
04ret •8 1'11'1 afler pubjj-
ca!IOf'I Sele eJ1clud11
Wran;lert In Sloclil
S7?..? or s11?..?
Reach 30,000 to 85,000 households and over 212,500
readers In the Dally Pilot and Huntington Beach/Fountain
Valley Independent.
7 9 9 for 10 words. 4 days or
1199 for 10 words, 7 days
Extra words 50¢. Call Now! .
Private party ads only, No Commercial ads.
The Daily Pilot has a new way to turn
your Hidden Treasures into CASH
5 101!!>
prepayment
4 Lines,-7 Days s10.80
NAM E
,
No c'*'f" In ca,y ot aincel...,._ P'11¥.tr.• ~,.,on!)' No Comm.tcW. If•• [ltllC. Avtomotfv•. '°":J or Eniployment Ads. Thtre IS no pf'IU
)trnlt lO 'N't\llt you <In MtvcttlM you Mt'd tO ~your (QUCh. high thillf
Ot,¥'f1 unust'd rnet<NM•te·-rtw o.iiy fl'ltoc Clbslf'le.o su« 0t"" the --.....
0...,-l"IM. JJO W ... a., C-..... CA t161•
642-5678
ADDRESS, __ _
CITY _ STATE ll~------~~1
AD COl'Y: 4 llno lnlnlmum. ~lty 4 ~ per lino.
l\Mf, !NCLOSlD _____ _ , __ VISA Of a.l.C., _____ _ ·----------~·--to ... Dellf ____ ,llO
•
•
I
I ' J
I
by Bii Keane COUNTS• CUL TUil& by Maratta & Maratta
.. , don't like 'Jack and Jill' or
'Humpty Dumpty.' They felJ and
broke things."
by Brad Anderson
"He just wants to be ready In case anyone
decides to go someplace.·'
MR.ATTOlNEV, DO '<OU MIND
IF I ASK '<OU ABOUT 'l'OUR
MALPRACTICE INSURANCE?
OAltPISLD
7-~
DBNIUS THE llSRACB
b Hank Ketcham IOI~=> ~
1-5 l
I
t
by Charles M. Schutz
RATS ! ME MADE ME
LOSE M'I' HAT ..
--.
by Jim Davis
WHA'T Po YOO WEIGH TNE!>f rlAY~ OAll'FIE.LP
BLOOll COUKTY
~'TEJll' JllJl.M MIS
MIT A Mt. l1fJlmlfN.. I TN#( N6;1 ~ dF .,,. f/Qil' £111.
ARLO AND JANJS
Nfiler, r .-t.N .•
I
FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE
SHOE
t'M ON6 ~ "NOS£ GUYS wtto ~ NEV&R NE.£0
A CMl.WL.AR r'&&.E~ . .
THAT'S .JOCKO'S PHONE NVM6ER, SAM! :I DON'T KNOW :IF HE'S HOME I :IF YOU CAN'T GET HIM, CALL N'tE BACK I
THANKS, CHET/
by Berke Breathed
1NEY 5lfJW -~~ VIXEI'" " ON HM) ll6AIN
t.ASr Nf6lff,
)
by Jimmy Johnson
Ul<g ~~D/~, COM-8.?>~~~K
'NOW TO HEAR THE VOICE ANO FIND OUT 1F HE'S THE SAME ONE WHO TALKED TO ABBEY!
,//,
by Jeff MacNelly
by Harold Le Ooux
by Tom Batluk PURKY WlftDRBltAR
00 QOO MIND C>JArflf\lG,
WHIL.E 1 1Rt.> ON A FE.uJ 1MI~,~~
NO ~EM • , • :Z:'U.. l051 I r.~IC.. GO 'f' CAN DO srAND A~D AND o-tEGK ~I .J ... .,..
()(Jf ALL fHE OJfE GIR'-5 1MIS &>ME. OTMER 1lME "'
GOING 04> !
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