HomeMy WebLinkAbout1990-06-19 - Orange Coast PilotNn peope'dNd. s men .. u11tU1y .,.._./M John nl ~ Crun di • .., .... Soudwm ~./Al
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THE ORANGE COAST 25CENTS
GOOD
MORNING!
Ii's Tuesday, June 19, 1990.
and here's what's happcnina:
ORANGE COAST WEATHER:
Morning low clouds will burn
off and the afternoon will be
sunny. Westerly winds to IS
mph.
Today'• ltJp/low
Yesterday's hi~/low
Tomorrow's htgh/low
SPORTS:
Majer Leape BaHMll
Al!rh 4, CMe•1• l
~1.a ...... 4
U.S. o,e. • ..._,
Hal« lrwta
11/IZ
67/60
68/60
24-HOU• HOTUN•
TOTH••DITO•
642-6086
... ~-AJftwdetaffl
INSIDE THE NEWSROOM:
Supervisor Harriett Wieder
tried her hand at a new line of
work Monday between sched-
uled appointments at the Hunt-
ington Beach Civic Center ...
Borrowing maintenance tech-
nician Mark Boone's office for
an interview. Wieder promised
to answer his phone and lake
mcssagcs ... Surc enough,
minutes after the interview
started, a call came in from the
upstairs administration of-
fices ... First, the caller was con-
fused that Boone suddenly had
a secretary; then she was sur-
prised to learn that secretary
was none other than Harriett
Wieder ... The supervisor ex-
plained she was taking
messages. and the caller said.
"fine, your first message is tell
Mr. Boone the founh floor
men's room is plugged up" ...
Wieder relayed the message
and continued the interview ...
TUESDAY., JUNE 19., 1990
c ·auntry· club raided
Manager: Politics behind gambling sweep for e the lireens ou1.
Amburgey laughed at the claim
and said he had no desm" to run a
golf course.
ly IOtl VAN EYKEN
DMl)t NM S..., \I/-
COST A MESA -Dozens of
police officers broke up a suspected
high-stakes gambling den at the
Costa Mesa Golf and Country Club
on Monday, a move the club's man-
agement says was overblown and
over dramatic.
Vice officers from the Costa Mesa
Police and the Orange County
Sheriff's departments handed out
nine misdemeanor citations for il -
legal gamblin~ and confi scated
$6,500 an cash in the raid. Police Lt.
Gary Webster said.
The bust came after a two-month
investigation. Webster said.
"We had received tips that there
School's out
were men gambling in the men's city of measures he was taking 10
locker room at the club and that it halt illegal card games a1 the club,
was a high-stakes game known as· and that the raid would not have
Hollywood gin," Webster said. "Ac-been necessary had the city allowed
cording to our information, one him to complete 1he measures.
player lost $4,000 in a single game. "They had iiO cops there,"
These were men who were spending Charvet said. "They had the sheriff,
a lot of time there." Costa Mesa police and the ABC
Webster said there was some in-(Alcoholic Beverage Control). You'd
dication, as yet unsubstantiated. that think there'd been 18 murders. in-
at least some of the men cited are stead of some guys playing gm
profcssiQnal gamblers who had bttn rummy for money.·
using the club as their principal ~ Charvet suggested there might be
place of business. some pol11ics behind the raid. He
But the club's general manager. said some members of the Costa
William Charvet, said it was he who Mesa Lions Club were involved in
1nit1ated actions to halt gamblinJ at card !)laying and that in direc ting a
the club after receiving complaints complaint against them. he had
from members and employees. come inlo con01ct w11h politically
He said he had just informed the powerful members of the club
Or•ne• Coest Coll .. • student Duane
Peters celeltret•• th• end of• 9ruellfte r••r . of ......... .., leunchlftfl ""
o.., ..... ,..... ., ......,. --
lk•t•boerd off a step near Newport
and Harttcw boulevards In Costa Me ..
MondeJ. His frtend1 look on.
.. City Councilman Orv Amburgey,
City Manager Allan Roeder and
Police Chief David Snowden are
members of the Lions Club. he said.
"After I make a complaint about
the Lions Club. I get raided."
Charvet said. ··That seems an amaz-
ing coincidence."
Both Roeder and Amburgey dis-
missed Charvet's ins1nuat1on.
"Mr. Charvet 1s incorrect."
Roeder said. "This raid has been
planned for several weeks."
T~o mon1hs ago, Tim Green. 1he
son of Hal'T) S. Green, Charvet's
employer and the lease holder for the
club. filed a SI milhon claim a$_ainst
Amburgey claiming the councilman
1s involved in a consp'f racy w11h two
others to g.ain con1rol of the club and
He said Monda) t~ he knew
nothing of 1he eambhng raid un1il he
learned about 1t at the City Council
meeting that night.
"This guy has got to be out of his
mind," Amburgey said. "For some
reason he wants to blame all of his
troubles on Mr. Amburge}, when he
hould be looking closer to home."
Charvet said most golf clubs have
places where members and ~uests
can pla> cards. He said a portion of
1he men's locker room at 1he Costa
Mesa club had trad1t1onall} been
used for card playing. but that he
had a11empted to halt the g.ames
when he received infonnation tha1
players v.ere g.ambhng.
"l moved the tables out.·· he said.
I Please see RAID /hck PageJ
Traffic engineer
says intersection
at PCH .. dangerous
1y IRIS YOKOI
OMl)t ~ SUofl llfrltH
NEWPORT BEACH nsafe
dnvmg. inadequate pauses betw~n
s1gnaJ h~ts and the wtdth of the
intersection combine to create
dangers at Jamboree Road and Wes1
Coast Highway. a traffic engineer
with the Automobile Club of
Southern Cahforn1a said Monda)
Clu b Tra~ Engineer Uar>
Fo~en, wh~s asked by a Newpon
Beach couple to e>.amine the 1nter-
secuon. noted a number of concerns
at the site over the weekend and
plans to discuss his findings with
city traffic staff and with state De-
panment of Transponation officials
sometime 1hi week.
Supponing the complaints of
man) local residents. Foxen said ht
believes the cny and Caltrans could
adJUSt the signal hght uming to
provide a longer defa}' betwttn the
end of one green hght and the
beginning of the green hght for cross
traflk
··The v. 1dth of 1he in1ersec11on
warrants looking al a dela~ pcnod."
he said "It's d1sqet1onal). but 1f 11
Y.ere me. rd be inclined to taKe a
clo~ tool at 1t. ..
But Foxen said motonsts must
also do their pan to drive more
carefull) through the bus} 1nter-
secuon
''It's son of a hard pill to swallow.
but people do make errors:r Foxen
said "h's no1 all the signals. Because
of the w idth of 1he 1ntersect1on. 11·s
necessan for motonsts to be extra
cauuous· as 1hev approach.
.. The two (drher error and inade-
qua1e paust·s between signals) 1n
comb1na11on w11h 1he na ture ot the
traffic and the width of the inter-
section create a po1en1ial for prob-
lems."
Many locals blame the dozens of
colhs1ons at 1he intersection -in-
cluding 1wo March fataht1es -on
the closed lanes, v.-ooden bamers
and out-0f-s~ nc traffic signals result-
ing from the highw.t~ wtdening
!Please see PCH/ladc Page)
HOT NEWS: The Oruse
Cout DaUy Piiot will un veil its
expanded weather ~ge on
Wednesday ... It will be -
according to those. who have
seen it -the best in Orange
County and among the best
anywhere ... It will run in color
and will include extended fore-
casts, detailed information on
boating. surfing and fishing. a
special report for those travel
ing locally, nationally and ev n
internationally and - of
course -complete tide infor---r.....,~-------------------------------~-------
mation ... The Delly Piiot
weather page debuts on
Wednesday.
\lllATHD NIO
oaAN a>PDTIONS
........ Altlw ......
Air ...-.r.: Moderate witb a Polluaut Standard IJldei ol · 13. . .
..... • Fairlblpc
in Ntwpon lelCla witb 1-3
loot .. "' ~--....... w ... 66-61 ----~ luncudl. --...... mlioo ... otr
OM1H• lllud tad die c.o.. I ,, • 111121 I .......
... .., ... .-..1 IO II
Docl ..... ,__ -... 1ften1ooa end evnlaa.
Sou .......... 3 ...
8rf~ 85
Business AS
Classified 85-7
Comics . A8
Crossword 85
Enterhll~nt ~6
Horoscope 85
Obituaries A2
Opinion A9
Police Log Al
Pubfk Notices 87..S SOc~ A7
Sporu 81-4
TV Listings A6
Weather AIO
Totla1'1Tll1sp1
.,,,. DenocrMlc l'aftY
II llft • mull -~
,,,. ol WMf1 "',.. °'~ ...
Laguna Beach may
fund AIDS groups
ly KAREN AUGE
Delly l"'tloc SC.., 111-
LAG UN A BEACH -In the wake
of a private fund-raiser that fell far
short of expectations, groups that
serve AIDS patients may soon ben-
efit from city go vernmeot's gen-
erosity ..
Lquna Beach. the first Orange
County city to form an AIDS educa-
tion task force, now is poised to
become the flrst to earmark funds
for agencies that care for AIDS
patients.
At the uraina of Councilman Rot>-
cn Gentry, $10.000 tw been set
aside in the city's bud&et for qencies
that work to faaht the diseate.
The council i' expected to ap-
prov,e the fiscal 1990-91 city budfct
toniabt at its rqular mcetina.
Tlie city's AIDS E.ducation Task
Force will have the final word on
which aroups act the money and,
how bit a chunk each receive., Gen-
try said!
Howeve , the councilman sua-
&ested that Laauna Shanti, the
Irvine-based Al.OS Services Foun-
dation, the ~·s Ahimsa Care Center and the una Bcacb Com-
mupity Oinic ould share the
money.
Gentry proposed the allocation at
the May 1 S council meetina. "We
need to think about more than iust
education. We need to set aside
money for agencies that serve people
with AIDS who are Laguna Beach
residents," he said.
Gentry pointed out at the meeting
that nearly 200 Laguna Beach resi -
dents have contracted the disease.
The per capita number of .AIDS
sufferers in the city is far higher than
that of the rest of Orange County.
Still, only 60 people turned out
Sunday fo r a Chamber of Com-
merce-sponsored fund-raiser to ben-
efit indigent AIDS patients of the
Ahim11 Care Center.
Chamber leaders had hoped to
raise $30,000 for Orange County's
only AIDS hospice by hosting a
brunch and an auction.
But the event fell far short of the
mark, gcneratina only SS.440. ac·
cording to Terry Neptune, chamber
president and owner 1of'the Tivoh
Temcc restaurant. where the event
was held.
Neptune said that SS,300 of the
total came from an sales, which
meant that only 103 tickets were
sold to the event. Of that number.
only about 60 people actually at-
tended. Neptune said.
He said the low turnout combined
with his investment 1n food and
employees' salaries had caused him
to reoonaider whet~r to host the
fu*raiter .n. ·
,
Sund .. • 8ryent
S 7 50 ,000 off er
presented to
shooting victim
ly EMILY ADAMS
DMl)r ~~ S1•fl llfrl'l•t
NEWPORT BEACH -C It} officials confirmed
Monday the > 've offered S 7 50,000 10 a man who' was
mistakenly shot b) a Newpon Beach police officer as
he strolled along the beaC'h with hi s wife in September
1988.
undaga Bryant. 27. 1s seeking a SI m1lhon-plus
settlement from the c11y The c1v1l u11 is scheduled to
go to tnal nex t Monda)
While one published account said the city had
offered Sl.5 m1lhon to the L1benan 1mm1granL Ctt)
A11orne) Bob Burnham said the settlement offer was
half that figure.
The Cit) Council d1 u sed 1he case and appro"ed
the amount offered dunnJ a closed ~ion on June 11.
C'tt\ Counc1lv.-oman E'e~n Han said.
·The 1nc1dent that has now cost th( city more than
$60,000 an l~I fees. according to tbe cit y's personnel
depanment. txtaan Sept. 4, 1988. At about 3 a.m .•
Police Officer Derek Dun ~n was called to the Balboa
Pier. Someone had rcponed a Hispanic man was
roaming the beach wtth a sa~-0fT shotgun.
Uuncan spotte<S t:trya nt walk:1ng on tbe beach wnh
jl'tHM 1H SHOOTING/Back l'•f
City tries to fill fluoride cavity
., "°911tT llAltt<llt 0-.,.,. ...........
HUNTINGTON BEACH
Proposition 6S and the state Dcpan-
ment of Transponauon apparently
have taktn the btle out of the city's
fluoridation prosram. which 'Vottn
~in 1972 to fiaht tooth decay.
But offid aJs m 1n t~ process of
puttina tttth t.ck into 11-eir faaht
apinst tttn-.ed cavtt~ rtal soon.
Officials beean ftuorldat•na the
d ty's drinktna water supply 1n 1973.
And lilt praaram "'porkdl)' wcnl
wu.bout a huch ·until about 18
months ago ~hen a state propo11lJon
t~ effect. rcquin"a the c1ty ~t new equipment lo protect apanst
hazardous waste pills of lhe fluor-
iM chemical -h)drofluoinhc acid.
The city's water supptr hasn't
bttn utjccted with nuondat1on since
that ume, 11CCOrd1n1 to L11Mia Dally.
senior water ckpertment analyst for
Huntinaton Beach.
Water officials plan to tmd no-
uces out 1n the cu water btUs nt•t·
month, 1nform1na ('()n umtra of
•hat the)''ve bttn m1 1na.
Howe vtr. money has been found
an the (It) bud&c1 and a Ouondation
truck has been purchued at more
than SI 00.000. Daily said.
81ds arc slattd to 10 out for the
tar* to haul the Ouonde to lb~ Ctty'a
nine wells where it's 1nJCCted.
Mun1c1pal Wuer Dlstnct officials
said Monday that ftoondeuon n
opoonal and is prKtlced oaty by 1 ~-=
few water d1stnct1. Hunhf\l\Oft
kach and Fountain VaJliey att bf..
beved to bt the only c1t1C1 m ~
County that ftuondate WMtr tup.
.......... \IVATl•/9edl '.' .. -·--~
1
Peder•I clr119 czar Wiiia.. ..,.nett a.Ills to repcN"ten
In s.cr ... ento M~~.
Drug czar says state's
drug laws· permissive
SACRAMENTO -National drug czar William Bennett con-
tended Monday that California's permissive drug laws have sparked
a high level of drug-related crime, and that if the Legislature won't
pass tougher laws then the people should -by ballot initiative.
Bennett. director of the Office of National Drug Control Policy,
was panicularly critjcal of California's 1975 law reducing the
possession of up to one ounce of marijuana from a felon y to a
misdemeanor. The law, authored by the late Sen. George Moscone,
0-San Francisco. called fo r the issuance of a summons similar to
a traffic violation, and fines of no more than S 100.
"When this law wa~ passed it was mistakenly believed that it
was safe to possess small amounts of marijuana.'' Bennett said in
an address to the state Senate.
He recommended stricter laws against users, and later told a
Capitol news conference that the "legislature bas failed to meet its
rcsponsib1hty." He said he wouldn't name the legislators responsible
for the 'weak anti-drug laws. but recommended that the voters use
turn to ~he ballot initiatiye if they persist in doing so.
''If you don't get tough on drugs, they will get tough on you ... The
laws of this state should be as tough as any state. and they aren't,"
he said. ,, ·
Senate President Pro Tern David Roberti, 0-Los Angeles, -said
he disagreed with Bennett's req uest for heavier penalties for
possession of small amounts of marijuana: "It would load our
prisons up with lots of people who are basically law-abiding citizens,
espec1all} }Oung people who should not be wnh hardened crimi-
nals."
Bennett said '35 states have heavier penalties for the sale of
manJuana th an California.
He also recommended letting judges take the professional
licenses of drug defendants. and he proposed suspending drivers
licenses. especially of the yo uni.
California should be throwing more money into the anti-drugs
battle. Bcnnen said. sa}1ng the federal government has-mo~ than
doubled 1ts expendJtures in California for all branches of the battle,
including law enforcement. treatment. prevention. education.
-By U.e AHocJatd Pre11
Gunman, accomplice arrested
in robbery of van in Newport
By HOUY \I/AGNER
and IRIS YOKOI
Dally l'llof sun 11frlten
NEWPORT BEACH -Two men were arrested on suspicion of robbery
Monday after one of them allegedly stole a woman's vehicle at gunpomt.
The gun-totang suspect. Pedro Delagarza. 18, of Santa Ana, was appre~ended 1n Westminster after the 1 p.m. robbery. His alleged ac-
complice. Angel Penera. 25. was arrested at his Hawaiian Gardens home.
. The gun used in the robbery was recovered from Periera's home along
with several other h3ndguns and riOes and two stolen cars Newpon Beach
Police Lt. Al Fischer said. ·
Monda} ·s robbery occurred an the Hughes Market parking lot at Irvine
Aven!-le and Wes tchfT Dnve, according to Police Sgt. Andy Gon1s. A
Hunt1!1gton Beach woman had Just entered her 1989 ·Astrovan after
shopping when she was appmached by a man armed with a gun.
The gunman ordered th e-woman out of her vehicle, )umped in and drov~ ~est on 17th Street toward Costa Mesa, Gonis said. The ve hicle
descnptaon was broadcast after the woman called police and Fountain
Valley Police Officer Kurt Ulnch. spo~ted a van ll_latch1ng the description
on the San Diego (405) Freewa)' in his city. Gonis said.
In1t1al attempts to stop the van failed. but the dnver finally got off the
freewa y at West minster Avenue and yielded to police officers from Fountain
Valley and Huntington Beach. Newpon Beach police offi ce rs responded to
the scene and took the man mto custody.
Information obtained at the scene led detectives to Periera's Hawaiian
Gardens home, where they arrested him and recovered two more stolen
vehicles and o;evcral guns incl udmg a semiautomatic handgun. Fischer said.
One stolen car was from Costa Mesa. he added.
Delagarza muially ga ve a false name to police. Fischer said, but was
1denttfied through fingerpnnts. He was wanted o n a felony burglary warrant
10 Los Angeles, Fischer said.
' HUNTINGTON BEACH -Tbc
City Council Monday ni&bt ap-
_proved I $ 178 million "bold-the-
line" ~ I.bat will provide for tbc
coutrucboa of a children's wina at
Cenual Ubri,y and.beefed up police
praence in the OU View area.
1be City Council also ateODed up dwtea for residential curbllde t.rUh
pickup 1enice1 &om $7.50 to S9.8~
I month.
Tbe coUDCil voled down a meesure to put IUel on out-ok&ate
telcpboac c:aJlt that would have ~ aboul s~ooo. )'eel. Mayor
Tom Mays and Couacilman Wes
Buniater voted IPiotl the teJe.
pboae tax.
The tax requ.ind five votes for
apprOvalJ.. but could only. muaer
four u U>unci.lman Jim Silva wu
•
,. .
ablenL Slater and Warner avenues -and
Tbe counc:U approved lpeadi~ allocated Sl4 900 to e•tend boun
S4:9 mU,Uon. for~ ol tbC and ~s'at the OU View Com· cbildttll s wt~ at the library. · munny Center.
The council allo voted to spend However they wilhhckl aJ&oca&ioo
'$440,000 for a suoneer police pres. of S90 exx>' for a hirina ball for c~ in the OU View commu!'ity, dayWOtken until they .find out if the ~ bu been rack~ .. by cnme, community supports 1t. . vio&eace and pna ac:tJv1tJes. "I don't think we should fund at c;ou.na1. m:emben approv~ .• until we set a feel f~m the resi-
pe>l.ice ttauoa an the area -wb1ch 1s dents," said Coun cilman Don
west of BalCb Boulevard between Mac.Allister.
Californians to take protest to Kansas • • •
lly RON Del.ACY 8fO, after watching the ABC tele-to send real meat bones as symbols said, and they were aftll)' W1~ the ~ ,_,. s.Mc.e VJsion news P!'OJnM ''20/20'' de-of their concern, but they switched Californpans Against ~pPY Mills for
SONORA -The two orpni.zen pictina filth and degradation in Kan-when they learned ..,-icullural of-cxponin& bad pubhc1ty.
of a . California dembnstration sas' commercial kennels, where pu~ ficials wouldn't allow unsolicited "Why shouldn't we react this way
apinst puppy cruelty in Kansas will pies arc allegedly stacked in wire animal bones to·entcr the state. when some bozos in California' de·
fly to Topeka today, ·g;ve the sew-cages to endure disease and injury So about 5,000 pounds of real cide to send some bones to our state
emor some dot biscuits Wednesday until they arc shipped out. bones, donated by Californians Jym-arid now dog biscuitsr' Stephan
and maybe confront the auorney Two weeks ago the Kauman sis-pathetic with the Kaumans' ·cause, said. "I say any self-respecting
general who called them "bozos." ters stancd a mass mailing c.ampaisn arc being mashed into d<>& food at a Kansan ou&ht to tell · them to f o to
"In ljiht of comments calling all of some 25,000 postcards from Cali-local rendering factory. Proceeds hell, and that's exactly what am
· Caljforruans bozos and telling us to fomians to Kansas Gov. Mike Hay-will go to the Kansas Humane So-telling them to do today."
go to bell," protest co-leader Ellen den, cbidina him for trying to "cover cicty in the name of Gov. Hayden. Mary Honch, Stephan's press sec.
Kauman sa.id ~onday, "we feel we up Puppygate." Last week tber, ~t th~ir rally, the Kaumans and rctary, acknowledged Mon~y that
have an obhgataon to go to Kansas." hosted a "No More Puppy MilJs • Cahfom1a Assemblyman Sam Farr, the "bozos" quote got considerable
Kauman and her sister Sandra, rally and dispatched Sonora trucker 0-Montercy, decried a bill Hayden negati ve reaction in at least two
who run a chocolate factory in east Ron Kelso with a load of donated bad signed that makes it a fe lony to states. "But people misunderstood
Sonora, are the founders of "Cali-dog biscuits he was to deliver to take photographs in state animal why the comment was made," she
fomiaos Agai nst Puppy Mills." They Hayden. faciUt1es. said. "He didn't mean all Cali-
launched their movement a month Originally the dog lovers wanted The next day, back in Kansas, fomians. just the ones who criticize
Hayden and state Attorney General Kansas laws without knowing what
Bob Stephan called a joint news they say."
Multi-million dollar-pollution
suit filed against 8 state firms
conference to deny that the new law Rid! Epp. the governor's press
gave any protection to puppy mills. secretary, said the new law is "total-
It '!Yas aimed at preventing photos at ly ,onr~lated to th~ puppy mill situ-
animal research laboratoncs. they ation 10 Kansas.
LOS ANGELES -State and fed-
eral officials filed a lawsuit Monday
against eight firms that allegedly
dumped ca ncer-causing DDT and
PCB along Southern California
coastal waters since the 1950s.
The unprecedented suit. filed in
U.S. Distnct Coun. is an attempt to
enforce federal provisions requiring
pollutinJt companies to restore dam-
Obituaries
aged marine environments, State
Controller Gray Davis said.
Targets of the lawsuit include
Montrose Chemical Corp .. Atkemix
37 lnc., Stauffer ~anagement Co .•
ICI American Holdings. Inc .. Chris-
Craft Industries. Inc .. Westinghouse
Electric Corp., Potlatch Corp. and
Simpson Paper Co.
-By Tte AuoclatH Pre11
~~kansas executes patrolman's klller
VARNER. Ark. -John Edward Swindler was electrocuted
Monday night for the 1976 murder of a patrolman, becoming the
first Arkansas inmate to be executed since 1964.
Swindler. 46. was declared dead at 9:05 p.m by Lincoln County
Coroner Ke ith Griffi n. On Saturday, the Supreme Court had denied
Swindler's final request for a stay of execution.
The inmate spent his final hours at the penitentiary 10 southeast
Arkansas with one of his lawyers and his spiritual adviser,
Monsignor James O'Donnell of th e Immaculate Conception Church
in North Little Rock.
· After the exC('ut1on. O'Donnell read a statement from Swindler:
Michael Hart, 41, stepson
of Newport councilwoman
"I have no animosity toward anyone. No grudges. I appreciate
the c.are and Love others have shown me and other people on death
row. I hope this brin$s to light the injustice of capital punishment
and the need to abolish It."
-By Tte A .. oclatH Prn1
Gra veside ser" ices were held
Monday at Paci fic View Memonal
Park in Corona del Mar for Michael
John Hart. stepson of Newport
Beach Councilwoman Evelyn Han.
Hart, ~ho died of cancer at the
age of 41. was born in Pomona and
was a fou rth-generation Cahfomian.
He graduated from Newpon Harbor
High School but spent most of his
adult hfe in Oahu. Hawaii. wher~ he
owned a boutique.
An a111s1 b' avocauon . .Hart later
moved to Sedona. Anz.'. where he
opened an art gallery. Has 011 paint-
ings and sc ulptvres have also been
shown in Newpon Beach. his step-
mother said. He returned to New-
port Beach earlier this year to be
wllh his family.
In add1t1on to hi s stepmother.
Han as survived by ha s father. J.
Lynn Hart · of Newport Beach:
brother Jim Hart of Newport Beach;
three stepsisters. Pat. Janet and
Pam; and grandfather John L. Hart
of Costa Mesa.
News of the weird
Happy Father's Day ... in triplicate
NEW YORK -When Father's
Day started. Frank Gonzalez was
JUSt another candidate for Lam aze
class. Seven hours later. he was
celebrating the holiday with his wife
and three new daughters.
three newborns -Amparo Crystal.
Esther Chnsuna and Mani) n (no
middle name ~et) -were all doing
well at Brook.l}n Hospital. said
spokeswoman Carol Rubiano.
Arthur Lowell, ex-Newpqrt resident
"This is one I'll always remember.
rm sure a rot of people in my family
will remember this one, too ...
Gonzalez said about six hours 'after
mectmg the triplets born Sunday.
The infants. who were three weeks
premature, were put an the neo-natal
intensive care unit because of low
b1nh weights. Amparo weighs 4
pounds. 10 ounces: Esthe-r Christma
1s 4 pounds. 7 ounces: and Marilyn
is 3 pounds. 7 ounces.
Graveside services wall be held
Friday in Edenton. N.C.. for Arthur
Carter Lowell Ill. formally of New-
pon Beach. Lowell died suddenly in
Atlanta. Ga., at the age of 36.
Lowell, who attendt d Newport
Harbor High School and served 10
the Manne Corps .. was the son of
Col. A.C. Lowell Jr .. who died in
1978, and Mrs. Evelyn B. Lowell.
He is survived by his mother. who
resides 10 Newport Beach: and sis-
ters Pats} Shon of lrv me, Molly
For the record
It 1s the Orug~ Coast Dally
Pilot's policy to promptly cor-
rect all errors o( substance. To
report an error or clan'licat1 on.
call 642-431 I and ask for the
city desk
Lowell of London, England. and
Charlotte Lowell of Menlo Pa.l'k.
The famil y asks that memorial
donations be made to Cupola House
Association. Edenton. N.C.. or the
U.S. Navy Memorial in Arlington,
Va.
"I Just thought about that on the
way to the hospital: it's Father's
Day. And when I got there. all the
nurses were congratulating me. wish-
ing me a happy Father's Day. It was
vet) mce." the first-tame father said.
. Madeline Gonzalez. 30. and her
Gonzales. 29. said he has no plans
to mark any future Father's Day
with a repeat performance. "These
are the first. and probably the last,"
he said. "I don't think there'll be any
more after this.·
-By Tbe AuoclatH Prr•1
Editor's Hotline
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Clrcutetlon Telephonn
"' ' .,. ,. '
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VOL. 14, NO. 170
j t t t I ~·I t J ;f,1 f tf\Q .fl(. ~ tf Wt~y Cf¥tr1'e...1
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THUllaDAY, .--11, ,_ THURaDAY; Nim 21. 1•
7•·--P.IL ~ l:IO·MOP.11.
NEWPORT BEACH LIBRARY NEWPORT BEACH LIBRARY
858 San Ctemente Dr., NWIPO't le•ch 158 San Clememe Or., Newport BMct.
••llVATION MGUlllD (114) 1111111
All f"°9e ~~ .. ,_,.,,,. • .._ J f ,,,_. Piii~ .,.,..,, """9 JoM W.,.. l'r'*-" Md ,,_ 8lr'f CloOlby '°"'''°"
,
-
Newport's mayor
suggests new drag
Youths can make peacetime use
o f Tustin 's vacant blimp hangers
C om..,eaa1 oa local
eOl•mu fin &: New-
por1 Beach Mayor
Ruthelyn Plummer bas a
peacetime use for the Tustin
blimp hangc~: ''Get the kids
off Balboa Boulevard, let
them do their weekend cruis-~i;:,.t.hrouab the blimp hang-Jim
Inducements would be Wood
spotlights, bleachers and gen-••••miiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiim; era.ls as j udges. "And think of
the .If.Cat .echoes," adds Madam Mayor. tonaue-onJy-half·in-chcck.
. T~!n,k of a way to change the name back to Onnge County ~trport, plea~s N. Post ofWestcliff (and many more). No new
ideas. but ,heres hope: At a Balboa Bay Oub monorail meeting, Don ~oth. chairman of the Orange County Board of Supervisors. slipped,
... Jo~n :~ayne .... or 9 range County Airport ... whichever you want
to call 11. So let s call it Orange County Airport. This column will And the Super Sup said it's OK. ·
And remember the trade-off for an airport name change? It was
tC? call the Rams and Angels the "Dukes." That hasn't hapoened. but
did you catch the name of Newport's new pro tennis team~ It's the Dukes!
Did anyone notice how fast $5.1 million disappears? The eight
bedroom, South ~~gun~ Mediterranean villa listed a week ago
Sunday at S .18 mtllton. 1s now a bargain-basement $12. 9 million. The
owner. a retired Bechtel VP living in San Francisco. wants off the
Orange Coast.
A fre1b baleb of local Ideas: How about an "Ugly Car Show"
as a fund-ra1S<;r? Corona del Mar's Jordan Otterbein offers $25 for t~e oldest. uglie~t car ~ith a phone in it. His current record: "A '74
lu:ne green. Cadillac with duct tape and clear plastic for side
windows. The C<?1led phone antenna and brass license plate holder
were the only things not rusting." says Jordan, adding. "the plate
holder reads. 'Harbor Ridge.'"
Ba~d on the rash of recent frauds. Ed Croul, the "Dean of Dad's
Donuts proposes a Scammers Hall of Famo for Newport Center
"We'd have a Jim and Tammy Faye Bakker Room, 1he J. David ·
Wing and a mock up qfa telemarketi ng operation." envisions Eddie.
On .a he~l~hter note, Nc.wpon Beach's running impresario. Bob
Hogue. 1s wa111ng for a T-shirt Hall of Fame. "I have a closet full
ready to donate." he 5a) s. adding. "the rarest is an ongmal Round-
the-Ba)'-in-May siglet. •·
A final fresh idea comes from Eastside'C'osta Mesa. Jill Potter
wants the just-cleared "triangle-square" land al 19th and Newport
saved for a downtown park. "A cool lawn. with a dozen shady oak
trees would be perfect." Anything but another hectic shopping
cenler. sa ys she.
Local ~.bops fo r people wbo bate to 1bop: "Sure, we sell
adventure, answers fl oor manager Jennifer Richards of Adventure
16, on Harbor n~ar 19th. "Rockclimbing. ri ver rafting. backpacking,
horseback camping ... and next week there's a talk on mountain
climbing in Russia." she adds. The store has adventure books "and
a reading corner for people who hate to shop," points out Jen~1fer.
'_'Arc you k1dd1ng. a place to read? This place is so small," cnes
Dottie Ibsen. co-owner of Fahrenheit 451 in Laguna Beach ... vou
don't walk mfo 1t: )Ou put it on." The Coast Highway bookstore has
17,000 lllks m literature paperbacks. a video rental libral) and 12
fresh copu:s of dcr Spiegel evcl) week. says Ken Ibsen. a rela tive of
the author Henrik Ibsen.
urawa) 's Spcciall> Shoppe on Balboa Island IS a "woman's
hardware store ... laughs Le nor Larav.a~. "we 54:1l buttons. bows,
beads and )ams." T~1:nt) )Cars aeo. she bought 1.500 pounds of
colorful "seed" beads from an anuque store in New York. ".\nd
we're sull selling th(•m:· ('hips in LarT) Laraway. The store's
specialty is custom needlepoint. but "beads bnng a lot ofbu,ers," he adds, at $2.39 a sale." ·
Here's an oppo ite stol). "One da) a Ncwpon Beach doctor
wandered m and ended a five-year search." sa\S Randy Macintosh
of(onlurs1's 1n Fashion Island. ''He bought an 1801 $1 0 gold piece
for S 11 .500 .. The rare com gallel) also has rare baseball cards
including. "a n11nt Mickey Mantle for $10.000." adds Macintosh. An
attracuon not for sale 1s the store·s entry: it's a S1'-ton vault door
from a 1930s Chi cago bank.
A s1m1lar store is The Galler) of Hi story in Crystal Coun. A
recent ale was an autographed photo of John Wayne on the set of
"Flying Leathernecks ... Also available: a letter from Abraham
-Lincoln to the I I-year-old girl who urged him to grow a beard. "It's S 1,250,000,'' claims the curator.
Does the Galle!)' offer the works of any newspaper columnl!ll'I'!
··There's no demand," the curator pomts out. adding. "but ther1:
seems to be a lot of them out there these days."
Jim Wood'1 co/oma ru1 Suad•y1 and Tue1d•y1.
Huntington gets 1st
helicopter in county
• In Hontlngton Beach: In 1969. Huntington -
Beach Police were the first m Orange County and the DID YOU
fifth in the United States to in111ate a helicopter patrol KNOW
program. It began successfull y when Sgt. Bob Mor-
rison. while on a training flight with an instructor.
saw a 5-year-old boy fall into a pond. landed the
helicopter, picked the boy up and returned him to his
grandparents by landing in a residential street. •.
• la Newport Beach: Bolsa de San Joaquin is the ~-----'
name given to Upper Newport Beach on a map submitted to the
Mexican government 1n 1841 with a request for the property.
• In Costa Mesa: Al Ogden, grandson of early Harper settlers, was
chief of the Costa Mesa volunteer fire department during his 25-year
service, and w~s a longtime member of the school board.
• In JrvlDe: William Wolfskill, whose ranch included what is now
the northern part of Irvine, was li sted as the third wealthiest man
in Los Angeles County in 1852. owning $80,000 in land ancts.
• la Lap.na Beacl1: In 1957, The Festival of the Arts began to
offer scholarships to Laguna Beach High School students who
excelled in graphic arts ,and crafts. In 1970 scholanbtp opponunitiet
were broadened to include dance. drama. music and writina. The
festival also gives part of its proceeds annually to the Lquna Beach
Art Institute. UCI and Saddlcback College as· festival scholarships.
Stt you in rhc archives! Send your contribulions to Did You
Know?Oru1e Co11t Dally Ptlot, P.O. BoA 1560, Costa Mesa: 92616.
Compiled by Anne Spinn.
Here arc the winnina playinJ card numbers
picked Monday night for the California Lottery's
daily "Dccco" game:
'VHearts: 7.
+clubs: 8,
OOiamonds: Acc.
•Spades: 7.
.
Inf ant critical after ~ear drowning
SANTA ANA -A year-<>ld Santa
Ana airl was listed 1n critic:al con,.
dit1on Monday after nearly drown-
ina in a bucket of water.
Stephanie Santos. who had been
pllyina near haJf.fUU ftv~lon
qtcr bucket. is bcmt kq>t alwe oa
life suppon system$. a nunint su~rvasor at Western Medical
Cmtcr sa1d.
The 1lrl's mo1hcr told polk:e tbe.
toddler walked onto a side porch of
tbe family home at S02 . Broadway
about 3:20 p.m.
Minutes later, che other children
saw the Jirl in the budcet, her head
under Ole w_ater. Clark said. P~ice and paramfdics ~rfonned
contanuous CPR on the airt ~ntfl :!I. anived at the hospital. aan
-llJ' Of1 Nflrl &enke
Carter brings charity to county
Low-income homes ; , ..
t o be constfucted
ly I' AUL AltCHtf'LEY o.-y l'lloc ,..l<M w ....
RAN~HO S~NTA MARGARITA -For-mer President Jimmy Carter and his wife
Rosalynn will headline a groundbreaking oer-
em<?ny .Wed!lesday fo r a low-income housing
prOJCCt in this south county community.
The Caners will join Millard Fuller founder
of Habitat for Humanity. a Christian' housing
ministry that has built or renovated more than
5,000 holl'_le~ ~orl~wide for the poor.
Also joining in the 6 p.m. groundbreaking ~II be Peter Ochs. chairman and CEO of The
Fieldstone Co.. and officials .from the Santa Marga~ta Company. Both firms arc contributing
to Habitat's 48-unn condominium project. Th~. Caners' involvement in Habitat for
Humanity has focused international attention on
its ministry.
Joe Pemng. president of the Orange County
chapter of Habitat for Humanity, said the ap-
pearance of Fuller and the Caners underscores
the significance of the project.
"President Caner has shown his true ded1 -cati~n to Habitat by going out and actually
helping build homes for those m need " Pemng said. '
The Canei:s will arri ve from Tijuana where
they have been working on another Habitat
project this week.
A rall y and walk w1:re slated today at Mile
Square Park in Fountain Valle y to raist> public
awareness and funds for Habitat for Humanity.
The Christian housing organization also has
two smal~ projects under way in Orange County.
Families are selected based on stable em-
ployment. need for affordable housing. income
and other factors.
Habitat spoke "'Oman Francine Burton said
families must be w1lltng to contribute 500 hours
of labor lo their o"' n home and to other Habitat
or communtt} sen Ke projects .
I
•
•
"
. A#"-• ""···
.. Unlike o ther prO)CCts. this one 1s designed
to gl\ e th t.> pan1c1pa11ng families more than a
roof," Bunoo said. "It 1s designed to give them
a sense of v.onh.''
The homes arc sold to the fam1hes at no
profit, with :!0-)'car. no-interest mortgages. Ma-
terials. land and labor are donated.
Fuller founded the o rgan1zalion 1n
~ormer President Jimmy carter nall1 In a door ,,_ while ............. a ilGM e lft
Tijuana, Mex ko, Monday. • ·
1
.
Americus. Ga.. in 1976 ince then, 11 has included Secretary of Housmg and Urban De-
doubled 1n s11c cvel) )Car velopment Jack Kemp and Atlanta Ma}or An-Bes1dc~ the Caners. notable \.Olunteers have drew Youn~. I
Ex-county
investor
indicted
LO <\NCil-1 rs -f·orml'r Or-
ange Count~ 111 \l''it ml·n t ad,, 1scr
Robert J. cor .. aut has been IOdtClt'd
b~ a federal grand JU~ on 39 counts
of mail and \l:Cunttl'' fra ud for
alleged I~ bilking '5 '"' l'\tors ou t of
more than SI J millt on. authon11c4'
said
The 1nd1('tmcnt agJIO'>I (.or!>JUt. J
fo rmtr Costa Meo;a rl·s1dent now
li ving in Tulsa. Okla . alkgl'!I that hl'
set up and ran an tn\l'\tm1:n1 l'Om·
pan) calk d the ".\lpha r rust." 3C·
cording to As<.1,tant l '.S \tl\>rnc\
John F. \\alsh. "ho ·~ handling the
case
C"or~ut fraudukn11\ indUl'l•d in-
vestors to purcha)c 1n11:rci.1' 1n the
trust b) prom1<11ng that the 1n,es1-
mcn1 would earn I:! ix·rr1:nt tnlcrest"
from consen atl\ c investments. that
the investment v.ould tx· fulh Sl'-
cured by bonds and that 1he "1ruo;1
would charge no comm1ss111 n' nr
fees, the ind1c1nwnt chargl'S
Howe\ er. thl'"il: represcnta111rns
were fal se: Onl} a fraction ot 1he
monc> g" en to Corsaut wao; in-
vested: intertst paymenls "'l'rl' paid
out of the pnm·1pal of the in 'c4't·
ments. the 1n,cstments "'ere .• 11 hl•st.
onl) pan1all> ~cured: and morl'
than $100,()(X) "as paid to Corsaut
and emplo)ces m omm1 i.s1on~.
bonuses and "o,erndcs:· th1: indict·
ment charge<;
Also. ( o~ut .1nd his 1mmed1atc
famtl} rl'CCI\ cd neJ rl\ SJ00.000 1n
trust funds in the ll(months of its
existence. and all but a frac tion of
the S 1.5 m1lhon invcstt.·d in the trust
was either taken b} Corsaut or
squandert'd. th1: 1nd1<.•tmcnt charges.
If convicted, Corsaut fal'CS poss-
ible fi vc-}ear prj on terms on 39
counts. as "'ell as millions of dollars
in fines and rcstitution. Wal h i.aid.
-By tbe D•llY Pilot
OCC summer enrollment up
COST<\ MESA -Orange -f':':'.-::-r."!'.WN.•.'.t.>.'
Coast College o pened its s'ummcr
session Monda) with a 5 percent
increase 1n enrollment. ummcr NEWS
session enrollment this 'car 1s BRIEFS
11 .626 o;tudents. up from th'e open-· '
ing enrollment of I l.07M students
in the I 98Q summer \CSM>n. Sum-
mer enrollm1:nt 1n l'18X "a~ .452
students.
OC( '>Ur'nml·r -.C\\IOn 'itudents-are also taking
more clas'>e<. th 1!> ~car a' eragmg I b classes per
student ~1tm· thJn '100 classes are offered this
summer
.. , .\ -.cnind '"-"l'd., 'umml·r 'K'\<.ton begins June
25. "'1th ong111ng "'Jti..-tn rt"g1stra tton a\'ailable
through Jul) 6
"\\'hen all the numbers are 1n "'C c'J>t'CI our
fi nal \umml·r rl·g1•.trat.10n tall~ to top 13.000," said
Susan Aro" n. :w,1x 1:lll' lkan of .\dm1'i'i1ons and
Rec:ord~ at thl' lampu<. rhe 1-'.l>OO mark would be
thl' largc!>t \um mn l'nrnllmcnt in the campus' 42-
~ear h1s1on. '>he addn l
Red Cross centers stay open
.\NT..\ •\N \ -.\mcm·an Red Cross blood
centers rount~" 1dl' "111 remain Of)t'n and operating
despi te a labor 3l't111n h' 150 laboraton· and mob1Je
operations l'mplO)Cl:'I a 4'pokcsman said Monda).
.. The cum·nt hlood suppl) 1n thl' Los An-
gl'les10rangc Count~ hlood rl•g1on 1s adequate and
safe:· ~1d ar1:a adm1n1\lrJtor Norm Kear. -we do
not ant1c1pa tt.· an' d1,rupt1on in the dclt1.el) of blood
to hospitals and ~111 contmuc to suppl ) them as ah\a\S ..
Laboraton managcmc·nt !>taff '''II process and
tc t the blood and a conungcn > plan 1s m place to
ha'c local!\ collected blood tested b' otha Red
Cross regions 'houlJ 11 be needed. ·
The labor al't1on " hl·ing taken h) bloodmobile
unit drl\crs and laboratof') personnel ~ho are
members of lhc Brtllh1.•rhood of Tcamsters. Local
Freighl DnH•rs Nt) :!Ot\
Se ' eral '"hedull·d bloodmol:i11t' '1~1h for unda)
and ~1onda) "'etl' l'am d ed a~ a result of the labor
actton. but blood J rn1.·s planned for the rest o( the
v.et'l are C\J>Cl'l<.'d to run on )Chcdule.
Donors "''h 4Ul''ill<.ln or d1re<'lt'd donatio ns
ma) rall thl' Rl·d t roi.' at 8J5-5J81.
Drug program gets funding
Fot r~T.\I N V.\L LEY -The city's polict"
department has received grant fundmg 10 begin a
Drug Abuse Resistance Education (DARE) program
from the ~tatc Offace of Criminal Jusuce Planning.
The prog.ram proposed b).' Chief Elvin Miali was
ralcd ninth from among 58 plans submitted by small
law rnforcment agencies-and wilt be implemented tn
elementa~ and middle schools this fall
The program 1s the result of a two-year City
Council COfl\mttment to install the D.\RE program
locall}. h "as first on the counc1rs priorit') list for
ne" programs this )car.
In add1t1on to $47.500 in grant fundtng. the
cou,..I has comm m ed S 16.66 . 10 the program and
Miah has launched a dn"e to raise another $20.000
fo r the program from "11h1n the communit). Con-
tnbu11on) of SI. 700 from Fountain Valley Rotal)
Club and more from pri' ate industn m the Cit\ ha'e
reached S7.000 · ·
McColl suits threatened
Fl LLER TO!'\ -The L'. . En' 1ronmental
Protection .\gency said Tucsda\ 11 will sue five 011
companies for refusing to · direct!) monitor
groundv.ater beneath the World War IJ McColl toxic
dump site in Fullerton.
"I cannot understand the 011 companies' refusal
to conduct "'ork which 1s dearl) m the best interest
of the McColl commun1t\," said Jeff Zelikson
director of EPi.\ 's regional h·a1ardo us waste manage~
mcnt d1' 1)1o n .. It 1s clear the companies do not
intend to compl) with our order. and we att now
prepared to pursue this matter in the courts."
Zelik on said tht' caSt" will be turned over to the L: ... Justice Department.
La'it Tue'ida). hell 011. Union 011, Atlantic
Richfield. Te\aco and Phtlhps Petroleum offered to
fund the gro undwater monnonng. but said the)
would not do an} on-site work.
0 11 compan~ spokesman 8111 Duchie said the
offer to pa) for the groundwater monitonng was
made becau~ the companies fear hab1hty for the
ent1n:-cleanup 1f the) enter the e1ght-actt McColl ·
Siie.
He said the companies maintain the Defense
Department 1s rcspon'i1ble for cleaning the site.
''The "'nstc generated was all pan of the (World
War II) elTon and the manufactunng of aviation
fuels for that was pan of the effon:· Duch1e said.
"The Dcpanment of Defense controlled all aspects
of thal manufacturing."
Between 194.'! and 1946. 011 companies 'dumped
as mut h as I 50.000 tons of petroleum refine? waste
at the site. which 1s now encircled b) a gol cou~
and hou tng de' clopmcnts. The site "as placed on
the EP<\ "uperfund list in 1983.
-From 111111 ud wire report•
Phone caller ends up talking to police
NEWPORT BEACH -
An un1dcnt1tied man who
harassed a woman wtth half 3
dozen thrcatt"nang and sexual
phone calls found himself talk·
Ing to a pohce officer on 1he
seventh call. ~
POLICE
LO G
The officer v.as at the
woman·s home in the 900
block of Ba)s1dc Dn'e Lakin& a
report of the phone rails when
the caller phoned again. The officer answered and
SJ;X>ke to thc calkr, who would not identi fy
himself. but sa;d he wns calling pcoplt-at random
to &Cl "revenge against SOCtcty" for putting him
back m pnson.
The ex-con ..aid he had JUSt gotten out of
pnson.
The officer got the man to agree 10 stop
calling thc 18-)car-old v.oman .
Cotta Mna
~ man ~1S\1nf. "'' datc ~ood n1gh1 <~n Saturda) sot
more than hC' h3~1nf\J for
TM man rt~ned that he "'as 1n th<' middle or 1
km, v.hcn the airl ~ v.ai bu.ss1ng C'\Cla1mC'd "oh m)
God:' He lookC'd up lo ~ anothrr man ~m1na and
s11111na1n1 his fim at him, Ont' fist pun<"htd thC' k1~r
naht on ttlC' \.tuer. knoc k1n1 out his tooth.
Tht 11rl l1tC'r told hC'r date 11\11 tht man v..ho ht'
tum •u hcr c\·bo fr1cnJ
0 Tv.1> '1dt'<k.n\et1c rtt<>rtlc:ts and a tekphone
\laluC'd at $600 "crt ~1,oned m1"1n1 from the ha~ Our Sel~cs .mC'd1c:il rhn1r loc:itcd at thr tlOO bl k or
Hamilton trttt
0
.\ rt'\h.knt m th(' llJO bhx k ul MC'loch LanC' reponrd that "''mr,1nr c\ploJC'd a pla.s11c pipe bomb 1n
thC' \hruhbt·r. .1111"'1c hi\ h<lmr ThC' C'\plo ion, "'h1ch thC' man \J1J "'unlkJ hl.t· a .. ,hotgun hlu1:· rtportC'dJ)
blat ~C'nrd thr 'hruht-cr.
0
.\ "'Jn "' ing 1n 1hr .':!)('() block of MaplC' Strttl rC'portC'd that ,,1nm1t1C' \1~1lc lhC' hood from his ChC'\.C'I· IC'
Huntin~ton Beach
ScHrJI 1.'ill\ reporwdl> 31'\" beina ~1llC'd 1n the 2200
block <'I fl<mdJ ~tl'l"('t, 11 ording to a neighbor. The
~s1drn1 '1t1d lhn1 .11"\l"n1r was dctectcd 1n maci..cl'('I \Oa ~~ fouml rn thc hu~hcs and tn thC' Sll'~ cats.
0
.\ v.oman ~1111 ~he: u~d \Glct parkina at PctC'r'' Land1na. hut un 1,1nt..n.1'"n mtm ixnuadC'd thC' \alc1 to &t\C' him thC' kr ' to hrr ear ThC' rt'jtstrat1on al
tumC'd up m"~1n1. and 'he '4td \he fC'an that thC' ma n
"''" buralan1t her hou\t" in !\tnnton . 0
ThtC'"tS rut 1hmugh 1 l'llo .. ·i.. ron,cn1blc top to ia
'4h1tC' C'amaro 1n the 1\1)00 hind . of ConnC'r °"''t and stolt' a ponablr rompJll ,1,, pl 'er
0
'cral pc-ople rl'po.}rtt\.11) "'c"' bcu'lli for monc and hlnlHtnl CUSIOmC't'\ 1n front off) [')on l 1qUOf. 4 16
Pa('1fk C'oa" H1&h"a>· . . 0
V•od~ls rcponcdl> \hot up a house 1n the I ~ooo bloc~ of Elm ttttt
lrrine
Thl'tt' mC'n ~tok 11 "°l'm1n's punt' l'<lnta1n111J, credll card' at ln 1nt' Madowi mphttheatt'T shOnly l.')(f'Ore
10 4 pm unda'
0 ComputC'r gamC' ol und1sdo'IC'd 'aluC' "'C'f'C' ~tolC'n
from a homr 1n lhl" first bloc!. ot Crttk Road ThC'
1ntrudC'r " bthl"' C'd 10 ha' C' C'ntC'l't'd through an un-lockC'd pa110 ~hdC'r bet"ttn noon and 3 45 pm
turda'
0
.\ blu<' 1cn.i <"hr" p1 ku p true\.. lt~nsc numbu'
34~()''. "IS s\olt'n bel\\ttn 5 pm turda) and 7 a.m.
undn>
Newport Beach •
" rtMdt'n1 1n thr ~.WO bloc!. of Redlands AvC'nuc
found after nH)\ 1n1 hC'rt' from Studio Cit) th'al a aold
pen and $2. 00 cash ~~ m1s~1na fro m a dcst dra•cr
0
<\ 27-~car-old "'Oman got a bnuted 11\d swollen
no~ ind abru10M on her shoulders and hp when she
tnC'd 10 brt'a~ up a ft&ht bC't'4'ttn bC't husbtnd ·~ another min In thC' parl:1na lot or Ba cl1fT MO'tl. 4$S N 'cwpon 81.,,d
0
<\ hC'a\\·\tt man hit a 26-~r~ld Ncwpon •.cb
man 1n thC' ract 11o11h a bottlC' dunna a f\lht al Woody'a Wharf 2\1 C'V.l>Ofl 81.,,d ·o
" ) I· taN'lld man 1n the 600 block of M.,.,act
AvC'nUC' "'oke up around 4 30 • m to find a man s11nd1na o'er l11m h6ld1na 1 n11hh1tn. Tb( m)"ltm<*t
min Otd "'htn lht vtCt1m Hktod what hr ._ ctot..,
0
Robm Edward 8ll)'IOCk. 11, of Mockllo, ... '
ll"tfttt'd Oft tht ~ " 20.tl ,,rttt after potige .,.....
him I i'W oompltttly n\Mk, ~. oa U. no M
beteh. ~ unem ployed labom wu booked in jul oa SSO Mtl
• I .
i • •
J
·,
•
AIDS etJUcatlon
topic of conference ·Nine die ln-gu,..man' r•m
SAN FRANCISCO -Bebe a trim bM*dlQp o/ aa .,._lecl
one million Americaaa infected wi6 tbe AIDS virus, a ..-¥e
..,...... of education of front-line pbysidaaa and tbe public wu
MPOUDC*t OD Monday.
Tbe aecond anaual AmericaD Medical ~lion HIV con-
lnDce, combined with 1 camP!iJn, by tbe Cea1a1 for DilCllle c.ontrot. comes oa the eve.oftbe'"SWlt lnwnatioml CodnDce on
AIDS iD San Francitco, wbicb awu W~.·
"Vinually every physician wiO see or HIV dileue fintliand within the next 10 years." AMA Senior Vice Prelident for
Medic:al Education Dr. Roy M. Schwarz 10ld a news oOnrerence that
kicked off two days of meetinp.
FDA approves use of quicker HIV te$t
HERCULES -A Bio-Rad laboratories test that CODfinm HIV
positive rcsults., and works nearly five times fUter than any similar
technique, bas been approved by the Food and Dr\11 Adm.irultrltion,
the company reported on Monday.
. I
9y ION WIOllD
A111fl' ,,,,_.,...
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. -A pm-
man ''IC*Sed for war" Monday
stalked throuab an auto loanAtom-
pany that bad repouessed his car,
firina at cuaiomen, lhootina under
~at bidina employees and leav-ina eiabt deacfbefore killina himaelf.
Five others viCtims were listed in
critical but stable condition after ttie
late mornina shootinp by semi-
automatic aunfire at the General
Moton Acceptance Corp. office
south of downtown.
The aunman also killed two
people on the streets near his Jack-
sonville home Sunday, authorities
said, apparently shooting them at
random.
Some ol lbe wounded were llMM
seven or eilbt times eecb. bolpiw
spokeuncn said.
"'Tbe MQpOCt appuently went in
the front door and shot a couple of
customers." said Jacbonville Sberift'
James McMillan. '"Then be weat
ri&ht tbroqb tbe office in-
diacriminatel abootina em~
then turned ~e weapon on bamaelf ...
The panman, lames Edward
Pough1 42, 1 day laborer from Jack-
sonville, hid recently hid 1 vehicle re~ by GMAC, the sberift'
wd. McMillan said it was not
k:nown if that was the sole motive.
The company said the car was 1
1988 Pontiac Grand Am repouessed
in January.
Pough beaan firina almost as soon
as he wal~ed through the door,
McMiltan said.
Approval for the test for the the virus that causes AIDS means
it can be used at bloodbanks and labora10ries around the country,
said Bio-Rad Treasurer Jim Vi&Jienzone, who estimated tbe world-
wide market for such tests at S 18 million 1 year.
Richard Langille. a GMAC em-
ployee, said office workers dived
under desks when the first of about
SO shots rang out in Monday's at-
tack.
"And then we realized the guy was
pointing bis gun underneath
people's desks and killing them one
by one," said Langille ... I just saw
the bottom of the carpet and just
prayed."
After shooting two customers, one
fatally, be methodically went from
desk to desk firina his rifle, wit-
nesses said. •
•&-. ....
•wue wOlllen ..... to one wlcllw • ....... ,II ••w•
to • ...... .er -llul•nc• .,.., • ,..., 1110011nt .-e Ill JMbonv••·· "'-· . Vialienzone said the FDA issued the approval late Friday,
culminating some five r.ears of research. Bio-Rad is an international
manufactuttr and distnbutor of biologiocal research poducta, clinical
diagnostics and analytical instruments.
-B¥ th A...a.W Prwa
The aunman used a .30-<:aliber,
clip-fed semiautomatic rifle for most
of the shooting. but also had a .38-
caliber revolver, authorities said.
Police found several rifle clios, some
e01pty and some full, inside the
office.
"There's numerous mapzines.
Pension protection agency gets court's support
WASHINGTON -The Supreme Court
gave broader powers Monday to an agency
guarding the pensions of 30 million American
workers, making it Jess likely that taxpayers
will have to pay billions in bailouts down the
road.
appeals coun ruling, if not overturned, could will discourage other companies from termin-
havc led "to a financial crisis similar to that ating pension plans through bankruptcy man-
currcntly facing" the government insurance euvers.
program for the savings and loan industry. Michael S. Gordon, a Washinpon pen-
"because, amona other thinp. we could not
afford to make payments tnto these three
pension {>Jans.
By an 8-1 vote. tbe court said the
Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation acted
withjn its authority when ordering LTV
Corp. and its subsidiary, LTV Steel Co .. to
restore pension plans with unfunded
liabilities of $2.3 billjon.
Government lawyers told the justices the
Referring to the pension corporation's sions lawyer, said the rulinf wil ~vent
current deficits, Labor Department lawyer companies with troubled pension funds from
Joe McGowan had said, "If they go bust, the seeking the protection of bankruptcy ~
taxpayer picks up the bill -j ust like the organization.
S&Ls." "It was a loophole that could be ex-
James B. Lockhart, the PBGC's ex-ploited. It's closed now and it's a good thing,"
ecutive director. said Monday the decision Gordon said.
"removes a·cloud that has been overban&ing LTV said m a prepared statement that it
the a1tency for 21/1 years." He said the ruling had filed for bankruptcy four )Cean ago
"It will be the companyts objective to
continue to seek a resolution which re-
cognizes the fact," LTV said.
Labor Secretary Elizabeth • Dole, who
chairs the PBGC's board of directors, said the
pension corporation's victory "will help dis-
CO.Jilr&ge unwarranted tennination of pension
pfahs and encourage better funding of pen-
sions."
-By rte A.,oc.laled Pr~" -=====================-===========::;-r================i
•
Your husine.•,s dolla~ can·c work for you if they're
nm in thl: right place. Call ill> today about our
inte.n.: ·t·bearulg corporate account-,.
lll•HarborBank
-\X'e're interested in your business.
I· 111~ li..-J1 h J .. , \lJrn1111' l!um1111(11m Harbour h1uf11J111 \,tllt•\ In in1· ¢
I ~I~ i -.41 1111 • I· 111 '\ll,\\ q· ~~ • \kml ... ·r FlllC L:.I
Nation's niayors told:
Check NOT in the mail
CHICAGO -A leading con-
gressional Democrat bluntly told the
nation's mayors Monday they stood
no ch;mce of getting billions -or
even millions - more for urban
programs. from expected federal de-
-fense saVlngs.
"There's no money for such pro-
grams until the budget blockade is
broken," House . Ways and Means
-eomm ittee --Chairman Da-n
Rostenkowski told the U.S. Con-
ference of Mayors. "The peace
dividend is already going to be
swallowed."
dampened the spirits of a group that
for three days had been makin~ the
case that cities need a mul1ib1llion
·dollar infusion from the federal gov-
ernment to fi~ht drugs, poverty,
housing. education and other prob-
lems.
Rostenkowski came home to Chi-
cago to tell the mayors they would
· be goini it alone._
"Yours is not an easy task," the
congressman said in a speech blam-
ing the Reagan administration for
most festering urban problems.
--------------------------l-------------l Rostenkowski's address to the
"He devastated everybody," said
Boston Mayor Raymond Aynn.
-By ne .t.Neute4 Pm• more than 200 mayors quicldy
plus numerous rounds in bis
pockets," said Deputy Ken
Bozeman. "He was loaded for war."
Court: Police
can question
DWI suspects
WASHINGTON -Police
may aslc susj>ccted drunken
driven most routine questions
and videotape their answers
without warning them of their
rights, the Supreme Coun
ruled Monday.
The 8-1 rulfog in a Penn-
sylvania case means slurred
responses to questions about
age, height and weight may be
used to convict motorists who
have not been told they have
a right to a lawyer and to
remain silent.
But the coun said police
may not ask a suspect more
difficult questions -for ex-
ample, the date of the driver's
sixth birthday -without giv-
ing so-c.allcd Miranda wam-in~stice Wiitiam J. Brennan,
writing for the court, sajd
responses to questions about
height, weight and similar bio-
graphical data arc "admissible
because the quesuons fall
within a routine booking ques-
tion exception which exempts
(them) from _Miraoda's cov-
erage."
The court ordered a state
coun to consider reinstating
the drunken-driving convic-
tion of Inocencio Muniz.
-By Tff A..,oc.lated Prns
Huntington Beach ~
Fourth of July Executive Board ·
Presents An Evening At The
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
THE DAILY PILOT
IS ON THE
6
'
•STREET
~~~
Saturday, June 23, 1 990
7:30 p.m. to 1 2:30 a.m.
The Palm Court, Huntington Center Mall
FDR TICKET INFORMATION CALL
96D-BB99
$20.00 Per Perean Donation •
Evening Caeual Attire ..-.
All Proceed• Wiii Benefit The B&th Annual .
Fourth of July Celebration
TICKETS MAY BE PURCHASED AT THE DOOR
~+~
CONTRIBUTING RESTAURANT BPDNBDRB
BACI
Chicago for Ribs, Inc.
French Bnttany
I 'f
Salud
The~d
VOILA
Yen King Seafocx:1
Love at Fi~t Bite
.
Lucci's.
\,\tater Source
Heublein Wine Oistnbutor
AIR
• • he range Coast Daily Pilot now pro news o
: K-OCEAN 103.1 FM -the Number 1 Orange County based
: FM radio station -five times a day. Listen to us at 6:50
: 7:20 and 7:50 in the mornihgs and 4:30 and 5:50 in the
: afternoons.
• Catch Pilot editor William Lobdell in the morning with Rick • • • •. • • • • • • Lewis, host of the Breakfast Club, 6-1 O am. • •••••••••••••• •
..
• • • • •
• I
1,4
~ )14
1 v. J-16 v. 1 v. J-~
I ~~· ffi:rJH,:
l i tt19'd un
Olvi°x wt SP Inc l . J u htwt Acxi.lmwlB BIOOOf'e un
New mopping
center planned
9y NU LOM ,,..... ..............
NEWPORT BEACH
Two county devdopen are -
joinina forces to build a 12-
acre. S20 million sboppina
center in the new planned
community of Foothitl Ranch
in south Oranae County.
Foothill Ranch Co., an af-
filiate of Lquna Hills-based
Hoo .Development. is entering
into a joint-venture partner-
ship wtth Newpon Beach·
based Pacific Development
Group to build 110,000 square
feet of retail space. The site,
on the northeast comer of
Portola and Bake parkways in
the Saddleback foothills., will
include a m.;or supennarkel. dfU4 store and other smaU
retail stores. Free-standing ~
taurants, a gas station, car
wash and a bank arc also
planned.
Coldwell Banker was named
exclusive listing agent for the
center. Jim Costanzo, as-
sociate panner for Pacific De-
velopment, will oversee de-
velopment of the project. Pa-
cific Devclopmeot has com-
pleted 250 shopping centers in
California and Arizon during
the past 25 years.
"As the first and 'only
planned center in the com-
munity, we ant1c1pate tremen-
dous market interest," Cos-
tanzo said. "The site will have
excellent regional freeway
proximity and eventuallr,
serve a total of 3.900 homes.·
ft HAT '\\'SE DID
NEW YORK (AP) Jun. 11
I ~ )IEW YOllK ••• , --........ ~ II ~ es r9'>0f'led b~ T~ele S't'1temt ·i ..:.,.,1 '"'.,"rcr•t• 1noex: a. 103 ·• lme ete: 10. ~ I Rete: .00 r cell ioen rete: 9.25 l ~..:'Iii' merket rate:
. Lest l7s
T ...... .U..1t,1llO
Financial advisers
host seminar today ;:
my llUSS LOM • director of the SBA's Santa AAI !I o-.,... ....... ......, office. Othn-= inchlde Roeer , NE~RT BEA~H -The ~;1u~ inre~::1ii ~= ! Wasb1nat~n D.C. ~~or. o~ the Philip IQ&less. PfUident of Ubefty ;
SmaU. Busaness Adm1nistrauon s In-National Bank; and Ron ~skew, · 1 novatJo~ ~':'d T~bn~I~ Develop-president of Pacific Inland Bank. t
ment ~vwon. wtll JOlll .. a host of The conference will also feature financi~l advlsen at Meet. the representauvcs from private equity Fu~ a conference on busmcu funds includ1na Vasta Group, fun~~ at I p.m. today at the Le Southern California Ventures. Mendie~ Holt! ~ere. Brentwood Partners, DSV Partners, Oraanizc~ Wilham Cruttenden 1.11 Crosspoint Venture Partners,
said lie behevcs the conf~nce wtll Riordan Venture Management, TA
be on~ of.the larae~t gathcnnp ev~r Associates and Medicus Venture
of equity investors m· Southern Cah-Panners. ~
forrua. The conference is 00..sponsored by
Roben Berger, from the Small Cruttenden & Company, the coun-
Busincsa Administration, will dis.-ty'J lar&est investment banking firm;
cuss SBA grants available through Ernst k Young. the larJest world-
the Innovation Research Program. wide professional services firm; and
Louise Williams, program manager Riordan & McK.Jnzie, a leading law ·
in the Office of Competitive Tech-firm in· the field of venture capital
nology from the California Ikpan-and leveraged buyouts.
ment of Commerce. will address A post-conference reception wall
state-funded research and develop-allow ~n1c1pants to meet indi v1du-
ment projects. ally wnh fund managers and govem-
Other topics include SBA loans, ment repre~ntauves. Registtation as
guarantees and the secondary mar-$95 and more information as a\a1l-
kct, discussed by Steve Waddell, able b} calling 75/-5700.
School board wants Trump hotel
LOS ANGELES -The school
board voted Monday to try to snatch
away the Ambassador Hotel prop-
eny from developer Donald Trump
to build a hi~ school mstcad of the
frump-envisioned hotel and busi-
ness complex.
The Los Angeles Unified School
District Board ·or Education,
hand.ina Trump yet another ~rob
lem, voted 7-0 to use its eminent
domain powers to confiscate 17.6
acres of the 23.5-acrc propeny an the
city's Mid-Wilshire SC'Ction.
School officials say the Am-
NEW YOttK (AP) Jun. 11 ,
n
..\:t!EX l .. E..\DERS
,.ETAl .. S PRICES
NfW YOM IAPI -Scio4 ,.,..,.,_ ..,.._, Pfl09
i.toftclsy
~ 13$0 -pe>und, NYC-, IPOl _,11\
""°" C...., · St :Z32S • IMl'lflCI U S _,_._
C...., · 115 10 c.ite ---NY CooNll -"'°"*" Mon ...._. . .s_.u ·--Die .• , --·· • --__ _, n.. · 13 7397 t._ .. w-. _,.,_.,. pra -Ill I ....., • $4 840 Hend). I H.......,, I~~ Cl<IOMI
--.... en -·~ OI HY Come• IPOI .._,,,
bassador site as the best pl~ to
build a tugh school to relieve studenc
overcrowding. The district has been
busing about 3.000 s1udents a day
from the neighborhood to other
schools. .
But attorneys for Trump Wtlsh1rc
. Associates, the investment ·gro up
headed by the New York b1Jhona1rc.
have fought the dmrict's etTon to.
ac~uire the property.
DOW 'O'ES A\'EllAGfS
'\\'SE l .E.\DERS
GOLD PRICES
j I ~Con~(o: ...,.,. DOWNS ~rt
l iY~~ 1 LAft. -B'-~ r 1t·1 ~~ I l~ Low .11s
. !en al oer: . ~ IO~~f~-7.9
1l: n:~r"\,_ .. ""°" -..Y · S2IO 004290 00 -71 lb fl.... ......
Yorll
! rFi svst ltt -114 . 4 r:!C 4 Soectrumlnfo JMl-1 1-16 . s cotiCJCa"m I . 1 YMr. ~&6
,...,_ • MM 00-SAet 00 troy <>L H Y t-
trecl)
,....,._ · MTt 10 H Y -....c --1100, O• Mot>
le It ooetlnt YOU "'oner to .. ,,. 11to1Myt
"' __.., ~ II l\el O«O">f "' t l<. -C"""'IO'I too' ~ "'*"= .. ..,.,II.~ .II> c· ,..,. "'O< "'~ '"' oJ JS(}(),,
S•O(J() GI' ~. -.. ;• 'J • .,., ,_ :i.-.,,.
-... /»It ic:• ._.. ...... "'
STANDARD PACIFIC SAVINGS
llt lltVH '" IXClmc>MAL c..••om•• MNIU MOT ocamON .. ,.,,. ,,,.,.,,"O
r l W• •"~ II-~~ MM•I C-kift9 •"" , ....... ec:c0<inl• with NO monthly I ' • '"" ... ., II It\• .,.l•nc• 9"• Mlow Ille "''"'"'U"' r9e1ulrem..,1
I : : I
j
I !! I _ _J
or>ir11 SCIMCES
lllNlllUM
aM.AMCIE
'1,000
1,000
10,000
AINIUAL
HITIMIT un
lrRCTm
ANNU~
YllLD
1.~
1.1..,. 1."°"
"''-l ..,. ol'c"«Jl"'(l l'IO V.O"!IS 01.,. o,..,._,,, S1or ~,.,..,Ne-
e>C"ee• a.,..,, ..... or • ..,...."~"' '
t; ~ 10<°' l'QTll"'I • .,.,
",,.. 8et>4 bl< "'-' 4'<"' V ..IC" U.>-..
• " 0....-i OtllOM
l'leaM call Of flop by O<it ol!ief -l.i OUf Cu .. OM., $en>1Ct A.art .. ftlall .. l .. , ..... to"°" ""'Y you_.., let SlanclOfd Pectfle s •• ,..., ... ,. <•••Of •II Of YD<ll
.,.,.., .... ,,..q.
Sl ...... 4 '><1111 h .... I l o~..,..,.,......,,., __ , lit..:• (l ,,...
(71') MIMNIM (IOO) Ul-IAYI ... .., ........ .,..,. .......
-~ ....... .., ..... ...,<e>tol lOOOOO-• OOl'-••~IO ~ ...... oo •~ ......... -~on"'°"OIV -O•Olung~•
I
BILLS
Helping with home ownership
Making It posalble for low and
moderate-Income people to be.
come part of the American
dream Is the specialty of Paul
Thomas, loan production man-
lgef at Standard Pacific Sav·
ngs In Newport Beach.
f'•ut Thom••
0 POINTS
• Lowest rates • Fast processing
• Direct lender • Purchase or relt
• Other equity loans available
~OLD STONE MORTGAGE L:.J Smee 1819
·.~.~ (714) 662-1012
Thomas, 49, Is an educator
turned banker who relocated
from Colorado two years ago
and joined Standard Pacific laat
December. He left a career as a
teacher. coach and principal to
move Into the banking business
18 year$ ago, heading up a
number of mortgage corpor-·
atlons In Lakewood, Colo.
"One of my pet projects, as a
member of the Community Re-
investment Act, Is overseeing
loan origination and processing
for people In Costa Mesa, Santa ·
Ana, Huntington Beach and
Westminster with loans for
homes In the S 150,000-and-
under range,·• Thomas saya .
"I'm proud of the CAA program
and the f11et that Standard Pa-
clftc 11 O('e of onty two or three
thrifts In the arN lnvotved In It."
was a past president and direc-
tor of Alternative Homes for
(ouths, a program for abused
and d isadvantaged youncr ·
people. A home was dedicated
In his name In 1983.
HOW'S BUSINESS?
• Professional typesetting
•Brochures
Active In softball and
.yefghtllftlng, Thomas also en-
toys walking around his Balboa
Island neighborhood. His son,
David, Is a junior at Cal State
Long Beach.
Thomaa works out of the
Standard P11elftc Savtnga omc:e
at 4590 MecArthur Btvd ., Suite
200, In Newport BMch. He can
Thomas waa active In youth
actlVltlel In Colorado, where he
· be reached at 955-0538 for ad-
dtuonal Information.
h '' h.anJ to .imt~ wlwn )"N It~
t~ 4ibtltty l1cl w.tlk To pl.a) iu drr1w
pl®""' To chmh .ll'l'N'
But th.it i. WhJt h.tpJ't'M wh.•n
" dilld ha muK'Ul•r d~trophy
, Mu~lar dV"tnyh 1;<1 tht
n.tlM for" poop l'1 t,l~W'l th•t
wtoal..en and dfostm h~ m\Aj('I
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mutM:l" lnMl•U\'.t t-t-"'"~1 And 11
r,m'lht-1'\"Y~
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i..' \anon I" tnh 11,jt to Ntt MU'
ml.tr dy tn>ph AnJ on C'hmtm.u
EH ol 1981, MOA "°""l(h(orro
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) OUT do""' n It t.i1v
• Logo designs
• Print odVertlsemems
• Radio odvert1sem ts
Fett coMU11.1tJon;
(714) 847·1981
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I
DAILY PILOT I Tu 11 lllff, ~ tt, *O
'Gremlins 2' Is
campy~ silly fun
~steel Ma
ly DOLOftS MJICLAY
,. I ?.._Am....,
A succnsful sequel usually requi(H strona and inicrntina
characters or unique and compelling situations. Or, the sequel simply
has to be better than the ori,Unal.
Wath .. Gremlins 2 The New Batch," the most exciting cbaracten
aren't human. and the siruation would be compellina and scary if
it weren't so silly.
This time around. the mutant M~wai trash a computerized
office building in New York, gulp down v1als of experimental aenetic
drugs and leave a trail of green slime, garbage and confusion.
U1zmo has been living peact'fully with his keeper, Mr. Wing
(Keye Luke). the wise and mysterious man who first introduced the
little critter in "Gremlins." Daniel Clamp. a send-up of Donald
Trump, is a greed y developer who wants Wing's little c uriosity shop
in Chinatown so he can build yet another sprawlin& steel a nd cement
monstrosity. But Wing. who is ill. won't sell.
When he dies. Clamp sends in 1he wrecker's ball. Gizmo flees,
only to be scooped up by one of Clamp's rescachers from the
company's genetics 'lab.
Billy Peltzer (Zach Galligan) also works for C lamp. He's the
najve. trusting lad whose father gave him Gizmo as a cute present.
Billy's true love. Kate (Phoebe Cales). 1s a tour guide 1n the building.
Billy rescues G12mo JUSt as the deranged Dr. Catheter
(Christo pher Lee) is about to dissect him. But Billy. who knows how
Mogwais can dangerously mu1a1c. goes out to dinner with his push y
boss. Marla. and 1upidly leaves Gizmo alone m his desk drawer
telling the creature that omeonc will pick him up.
G11mo. of course. doesn't stay put. He gels splashed by water
which 1riggers the birth of muta1ions who take things a step funher
and become those obnoxious and evil h ttle uglies who JUSt about did
in Bill) 's hometo"' n. This time. the) 1ake over Clamp Center and
threaten 10 take Manhattan.
Clamp's empire is s hredded -from his "Microwave Marge"
TV show to the g<.>netics lab. The microwave is a campy allusion to
the original movie in whic h Bill y's mom nuked a bad gremlin.
There are other camp) nuggets as well -G1zmo as Rambo,
Clamp and Marla (the name of Trump's alleged g1rlfnendl. vampire
bats and Chns1ophcr Lee. one of cinema's most famous Count
Draculas.
ly TOM TITUS
Ollll¥ ..... c. ........
When. audience members are
brouaht to tears -thro~ either t~y or hilarity -it a ample
evackncc of a well<rafted play, stil·
If ully presented. When it happens
for both reasons durina the same
show, there is cause for rcjoicina.
Robert Harlina's .. Steel
Maanolias" is that rarity in lbe
thcaicr -a play that can doubl( you
over with lau..,ter and then admin·
ister a thumP.mJ blow to the heart
while the sm1lt 1s still on your face.
h's an exciting, entenaioing and
enriching evening presented by an
o utstanding cast at Oranae Coast
College in Costa Mesa.
Director John Fenacca has
elicited some superb performances
from his casr· of six women. who
ponray tbc hairdressers and cus-
tomers of a beauty parlor in C hin-
quapin. Louisiana. Ifs an inside
look into a woman's world (by a
mat~ playwright yet) that sparkles
with comic warmth a nd simme rs
with an inner anguish waiting its
tum to bubble to the surface.
The rcali1ation of Harling's multi·
la~cred pla} is no easy task. In a
rclati\'eh hnef rehearsal period. the
actrcssei h:n c fashioned credible ac-
cents and l\.\O uf them have acquired
the nccel.!>af} hairdressing skills to
render their constant stage business
believable. Character relauonships
arc cxcept1onall~ strong. under-
sconng the play's tillc.
In a beautifullv crafied ensemble.
the first among equals is Susan
O'Connell. who deli' crs a gut·
~renching climactic portrait of a
mother on the razor-Ihm edge of
emotional trauma O'Connell excel
Chris~ Cr•v•n works on s1:1un o·conne11·s lt.,r In ••steel
M•gnoll•• .. •t Or•nt• Coast College.
as an old-line mo1hcr·constantly a t
odds with her grown daughter's
plans for her own future. craftfully
balancing conten11 ousness and
mother!~ love into a full} realtzed
charac1er. It is a performance 10
cheri\h.
Kathy Collins renders a splendid
account of Truvy, the o wner of the
beauty shop. who fires off wise-
cracks with adm irable marksman·
ship. With more one-liners than a
character in a Neil Simon coroedy,
Collins keeps the pace bright and
bouncy WouPout. even wbea dark·
c:loudl bover overhad.
,...--~ rives under a cloud of rny11ery
wealben a eerict of~ . .
Cristy Cravn briall a
Dliwte '° I.be pcoceedi• a ftni
ODDU'Ut to tbe othc'r Louiuu folbj
Judy Andenon cnricba tbc ~ witb a compeUina vulnerability ..._.
belies ber exterior ~\!= O'Connell's pb~y dauahter, whole prefetace for
becomes a nanni.._ 111 of IOl"tl.
Lonaine McWitliam1 draws 01
tome oflbe show's funniest dia..., '° undencore her chanarr of u irucible town pillar wbo eajoys lift
witb only an old dot for compen~
but as drawn kickina and ICfQlftiaa
into a romantic relationship. Bettie
MucUenbera compleies the cast u a
tentcel, elderly lady with a penchanl
• for travel.
The down-home adventures an:
played out apinst the colorful
beCkdrop of the well-appointed
beauty shop desipcd_. and c:oq-
structcd by David Sca&lione. Color,
in fact. runs rampant throughout the
OCC stage. with Eric Person's cos-
tuming a visual highlight of the
show.
"Steel MaJnolias." an Orantc
County premiere. has been ticketed
for an extended three-weekend run
- a wise choice sinoe the pr<>
duction is o ne of the finest or the
year on a college or community
stage and sho tract sellout. au-
d iences. P orma are Jiven
Fridays and Saturdays at p.m , and
Sundays at 3 p.m . uotiJ July I in the
OCC Drama Lab Theater, with res-
ervations being taken at 432-S880.
Bill). Kate and their v1s1ung neighbors from Kingston Falls put
an end to a gremltn ta I.co' er. Plus. Clamp decides that smalltown
nsions could be more profi1ablc than sk~:.crapers and gives Billy a
prom ot1011.
The Mog"'n1s arc gone. c:1.c-cp1 for G 1zmo. who keeps his Rambo
headband and sta\'i with B1lh and Kate.
Don't loo!.. for l·h1lls and ·thri lls. 1hough. The bad Mogwa1s arc
more comic than e' ii There's a h) per. bug-e)ed critter. a ruby-
lipped vamp and an mtrllcc1ual who plans to lead his brc1hem 10
Broadwa~ 'iho"'' and 1hc bc.'c;I re'ltauran1s in towns (gn·mltns love to.
ea11.
New videocassettes run the gamut
"Gremlin'> 2" I'> big un frcnz) and mess. It's al o good for a
smn·re laugh or t\\O. But lhl· uniqueness of the crca1u res 1s gone.
E\<.>n (111mo 1s no longer precious. but s1m pl> o rdinary.
Directed b} Joe Dante "Gremlins.:!" was produced b) Mic hael
Finnell. with Stl'\l'n Sp1l·lberg. Kathleen Kennedy and Frank
Marshall as eu·cutl\C produ crs. It 1s rated PG·l 3 Kids will love
I l.
TV listings
By MIKE PEARSON
icrapfn HowNd Nrw' St'rvK~
\l~·I ~11 ....... II/II/ 1 .. 1 ... I II\ I I'"''' "'·'"" H
"Mv Left Foot" "a!\ a mild up~ct
winne'r at thl'i )Car''i O\l·ars. cap1ur-
mg both best actor and upporting
:ictrcso; a"ards. But like most small
films. 11 pla)cd a rcla11' ely small
number of \Crccns during m theatri-
cal rdeasc. and 1f \OU wan1 to find
out wha1 all lhe f~~ " about )OU
h•ne \uur chann· nO\\ that this gem
7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11 :00 11 :30
NBA 811htball Pllyo•• Gt>amP'O"st' p Pott a.mt Whffl ol Jfo911dy' • Rttcue 911 1R1 Ir S•e1.,, .-News Wisequy
F na•s · Port•al'lO at Ottu)t Com a Show Fortune
EMtf\ltnment Hard C09y Mltlocll Tne Buooies 1R1 In !ht HHI of Ille Night
Ton 1 In S1ereo1 -E 1a ~~~
M9fC)f l eegue 81114>111 McCIGYd A l"IOSl•lf yoong 'Noman (Marlt!"t Ha11 en plans a
A s 11 Wt! te So• Con1 a muroer to 1eve 11•e death ot ner s s1er
A8C Newt :; f.,. ~ Lot Wllo't 1111 Wonder RoMannt Hr Coach 11r I A 1 Sou? Years Ste•eu1 Ste•eo ·
NBA 81 .. tlblll Pll oll1 Cont O Retcut 91 1 tRI tin 5terPOI ~ PM Ma
Love S.11 of Love Newa Newt
Connection Connection
Mtdn19h1 Caller Ta~" BJ .1 News
Ille S~ee!!...@ 1ln Stl''._!''1 ~ __
News Cheers 11n
..,,e·e~
News
Nt•S
Carol 8urntn
11'1d Fnencls
Current Altair Pto Court Wllo'1 Bou? Wondlf Y Rostanne Coad! ttMr1ysomt
M·t.·s·H Cwrent All11r MoYlt ••• "S.ICtl RH" {19671 Two men get caugfl! uo -n News
t~ norr0t~ of the Marine 111vast0n ot Rea Beac~
I Love Lucy
Tonight Show iltn_Ste~ I Brottrers 11"
Ster~
Colby $flow Higllt Court Movte: • • • "WlllenbflV: A Htfo'1 StOtY" f IS85 O<arnal News Anenio Hall 11° S1e•eo1
t-r-----------_.._P_a_11_~_ot 2] Ric11aro Ctlamtier1a,11 AloGe l(r'9e __
Mac:Nffi Wrld Wor1cl of MttropOIMn Opet• PreMnll De• R r.g De~ N bet .lf'I;"" 0 t! Wa .. .-•i!
Ltlwef Corio Anmitls ot 41 I" ''"'"'' 1Pa" 11 Metropot•tan Opera PrtMnls
Conhll\ltl
Wlleel of 11nstdl Edition Mlllocll The 81>d0oes 1R1 In Ille Htat of ttle Night Midnight Callef T a~e Bd~~
FOttune ~ In Stereo ~ £ 1a 1RI In S1ereo1 • tf1e S11ee1s R Ir Stereo •
Prt1M IN l.ofd IPtl tM the l Ofd Bth11'1d !he Dr e.v Htll t----+------------------'-·-·--1Sctnes ~n Opera PreMnU Der R 119 Des ~tie ungen 0.e Wa 111t 11~ S1ereo11Pa11 2 ot 41
Mcmt· "0.C. Wilde" Conl 0 P11 Mont.,, Ole lmptOY . Eiwnno ... er Movtr ••• "Otclf Wiidt" t 19!>91 Rotien "l'Y-'l'V'-----1
McMt: "Norma AN" Cont o McMI' • • • "The G#i in !ht lltd Velvet S .. 11SS51 Mov1t: • ••'. "Nonna RN" f 1979 Or~ma1SaLf1110 PG
Showtlopplfl SolOttr'I HolM Movtt .•• "Julia •nd Julia"! 19881 '<ct•~ T .irrer R
McMt Cont o Grand~ on: A r" 11946! Otson Welles Ou~~t "7 Year Itch"
r-;;;..;_....:.....~Bl:.;.;.Mllell~---1.;....:;.J~~r..:..;;,.y:..::..:.;.;..;;.;;._..:.:.......;...;...:..;;..:......;.;.;.~....:......:....:..:..----------4~Sj)ofts;.,;.c.~C~tn...;;llr C~ss~Summ•r ~(R_J __ ~
McMt •• "Die~ Tracy" 1194!> M Ster I Plld Prog.r1111 700 Club
r-;=:..:.....+;:;:c. . ...;.._~:.;;....i.....;...;.~..;__-----i.....:.....~.:....!....,;..~~--'-Mo....:.....Vlt.:...."C..:..NeerO....:.....· T--de....:.....V....:ctr....:.....ano" Carmen Sev,lla ,Zlbludov
Mo¥-. "PIP\" Com a MoVlt· u ' 1 "Young Guns" (1988) Em•1o0 Es•ever A :, Crypt Tales ""]MOvw. u "How 1 Got I~ C .. 119891
l-!!!~e~~~-.......,~-~Hot~tl~T~~~o~n~er~~ !Movie: u "8rotherhood 01Ju11ice"119861 l<eano Ree1es ~""' For Hir_e __ _
Movw. "Sayon111" Cont a 1Movrt· u "Fwt Wtlh Fwt" 119961 V~g.r,a '·'all~ PG 13~ u "SwHt l.Jes" 11989 Wn!'d)l ~Warm Nott"
Otnnia Looney Tunes DoM Gilts S.Wllclltd ;Gtllfl Aerts I§ Ried ~ight IFtm. 2·Ntghf 'La ·In fatty Duh
W lloom NllloNI Cytlt L F 1nv,1at-ona R y World Soccer Ca •orn a ~1 P0t• ana
MljOt Le BIMtltll Houston Astros at Los A s rs (l111e1 Olyrn c Spor1s Sanes: G -,•inas1rcs --
Movte: ~·· "lltlo1181ut•"119881 Mannew BrooertCk Mov11: • • "Two Moon Juncbon" P988l Sne11I Fenn R Movtt • "Rt~lf)s" A
llMW Con1 ct Movte: ••• "Sltvtf Strtllt" 11 976 Come4 'Gene w,ioer J•H)a h Ev n 1Part 3 ot 31 -
Moone: "5m1-8tn" Cont O Mcmt: u 11 • • luMlns" tt9881 ~'te Mldler PG O MoVlt' •u "TWIM" 119881 At!JOIO Scl'warzenegqer PG-
WH llOMt" (1968 Orarna1 Pairie1a Neal MoVlt: ••• "Caffft" i19S9 Orama1 S•wie Macl.J.ne 1--..;.;.;.;._+;.;.;;,....;;......;...;._...1-..;._;.__-,.....:..;;.~:..;..___; _ __;_.;..-.;..,-~ ~ ----
---+-----'--.-------+-----...----~Bo lll'Q Jul an Salts vs W~lreoo VaSQv8l M11m1 VICt fin S1ereo1
News ·. . P.t IMov .. : .. • "Tti. °"P" 1 tcr• Mvent J'I' Ja: 1 e111e eissN '• 7H h 1e ~~;.;,_,+:..;;..;..;.;~---'-Nt.::..w.;...;1~• _..i.;;..:;_;_;;_;;.t..;~..;;..t!;_;;_..;_,_,,_~-...JL...8tnn-+p;;;"=-1.ioe Franklin --"P1rd--11m -
1tt1 Stret1 lllue1 USA T 1 c.;c;--"MovlOll Sc•rlttt"
Complete TV listings· Jn Sunday's TV Update
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ · ACC.iD'E"NTS ~
: ON JAMBOREE ROAD :
I
• I •
: If you have lpformatlon concerning :
• malfur)ctlon of the signal lights at Jamboree •
: Road and Pacific Coast Highway,, please call :
• collect to the Law Offices of David J. Bennion • ,
: and speak to David J. Bennion or Pam Glovan-:
RUFFELL'S
UPHOLSTERY INC.
Whete You• OeHo• C.nn More'
ltn HUllOt II.VO COSTA MfSA S4a.. I I S6
of a motion pirturl' makes its video
debut.
The Ilk of Irish painterwriter
Chri'lt) Arown i\ chronicled in swift
and compcll1ng la'ih1on here. due m
no smC\,11 part to lhl' fa(·t that Brown
W(\\ fc1~t> and '>I). dc::.plle being
born a paraplcgK
His famll~ assumed thal ( hm1y
was a .. cgclabh: tor the most pan.
Onl) ht'> mom {sph:nd1dl) played by
Brenda Fricker) nl'\ er ~we up hope.
In fact. one of the mosl astonishing
moments m the film is the ~enc
"here. a'> an adole<>CTnl. Chrnty
<>truggh:<, \:tlianll~ 10 '>t'nbble the
"ord ·· ~lu1hcr" o n 1he lloor. grip-
ping the i:halk , .. 1th Im lcfi foot.
Bro" n ·., kit foot. 1 n ta1.1. "'a' the
mu)l jg1lc part 111 tm txx.I) -he
u)ed 11 10 paint and. la1cr. to pen the
autob1ograph~ 1hat hrought him eel·
cbnt\.
HJ "a' no t a llHT I.. c;oul. !hough.
and a, portra,l·J tl\ Daniel Da\-
Le\\'lS lhcrc I~ mon· rhan a touch of
the de' ii 1n lhl' ,1 rrng.1n1 an1~1 "'ho
usl·d h" abundant r harm 10 "educe
"omen :inJ Im til'rll' tl·mpcr lo
keep the uut\ldl' "orkl lrom en·
croach1ng on h1'> .1 111h111un-.. No man
to be.· p1t11cd "a' ( IHl\I ) Brown.
D1rcuur J 1m Sha1dan has a '>Pkn·
did flair for l aptunng lhl' \.\Ork1ng·
cla<,s ~nt o t pm! \\ orld War II
Ireland In l;HI lh\ 1n 1url' of this
mo' 1c h<.·u11Til'' .1 'l'umdan cha rac-
ier. But !ht• real hnrn:' a·n.· ll'\.\ is
and Fril ~i:r In .111 1nJu,1r~ gl\l'n 10
art1lin· thl'lr ix·rfor rl1.111l l''> arc pure
rc\'ela1111n
Back to Rack ,\/(, \f l ·' Video.
\1HS. 95 mm. R~llcd I<
Con\ ,·nrwn.1/ u 1,tJo m h:J' 11 that a
lilm pn >tlun·d h.' I< 11gcr Cu rm.in
~hou/<f /I(• dl\flll\\t't.f llUI of h:Jnt.f as
B·mU\ ll' m.murc O/fc11 that 1~ rruc.
bu1 nut 111 the c."'' vt' "Ba,·k To
Back... 11 /11d1 lflJt'l'f5 a formula
5cnrr ~'1th \O much St) Jc· and rc.'n·
'ilOn 1ha1 'ou can ·1 hdp bur rnkc
no rice
In I'''' I .Ill .irmornf trud .. 1. mb-
h<·d of S .. m1//1w1 and nnh one
guard 'llf 1 1' C\. I ft' f>c.·t:<m1c.·5 a j,anah
1n h1 .. homcrcrn n :mcl the object of
h;1rn·cf On his clcatlil:,,:d. he begs his
ddcst sun (/Jtl/ P;/\ wn J to prove his
mnoc:encc Pa~ton nncl his brother
c.•mh.1r/.. on a p:Jinful rrck through
Movie listings
~ewpor1 Beach
IALIOA CINIMA /O'I I il di>·-tltwl hi\ l\/U
Tie M• U ... Tl• Me Dow" I 't \
IDWA•DI NllW .. OllT CINIMA U J 'J~••I
fH fM [1t .,,,. 6 44 07HJ
aHtr 10 th• , "'"' e I I <•I II 4' I I \ It fl I(>
I I 4\
, To1.01 ••call 1111 1. tt; 1 " !41 II HJ !\ • Dk lr Traer I'''. I. Ill I • 10 I ~ I()
IDWA•DS Ill.AND CINIMA I ,.,.,. I• ""' ""•w p. t (,.• f'f ,t.4« /I~
Total •ecalt flll I I 4\ I 4 t0 I 'I I\ 1 I 1 \
Kurt Russell •nd Sylvester Stallone star In "Taneo and
C•1h:· due out on video this week.
the de en 10 do 1us1 that -locau·
the r111ssing truck and cash aner 15
yc·ars -and find themselves squar·
ing off wHh a mysterious hitchhiker
(Apollon1a) and a cold-blooded
shenff. the latter bent on cla1mmg
the monc1 for himself.
Pa:aon icnds c'f'c.·d1bilitJ to h~ role
as a lawyer turned bounr) hunter
and dm:ctor John Kmcadc k~ps the
plot twists comin, so fast you hardly
have time to notice the gaps in logic.
A nd the endmg justifies the mean&
here -a shootout at an abandoned
gold mmc that n·sol' cs all the ques-
tions.
Is "Back To Back " a great movu•?
No way. But 11 has more than a fc"'
compel/mg momcnrs that will hold
)Our mtercst.
TRAN S YLVANIA TWIST
MGM/VA Home Video. VHS-Beta.
82 mm.
The times that ti'} a man's soul
urc not cxclusHc to rc~·o/urion Ju,/
ti'} s1ttmg rhrough a lame-bramcd
mov1£• that nps off every 'hit farce
from "Blazing Snddles' to .. Air·
plane, .. yet docs n dismal JOb of ir.
Robert Vaughn and Tem Copley
1 A-fM• 49 H_,1 1~1 11 IS 1 I~ 4 I~ h I\
A kl 10 lO
I -fMf 49 --if I I I\ I I\ ) I\ \ I~
•k>'IJOllK>
4 0-• ....... t l ll'G I 'I 1 t\ l ti) \ 4\ A l(J I\
\Or•-I fl'C. 1 Ii I/ I\ I IO • •\ I I\ 9 lO
I> llMll te tfM r ....... J 1PC..1 I I H I JO S I\
1 4\ ll)IS
I ~r•H)' W-1111 1 / )() J I\ \ H 8 I\ 10 JS
UDO CINIMA Nt'WP<>ft 91,d .. 1 N~"""°'' V~
1>7 J ll l\O
Dkll Tree)' 11'(.1 \ JO II 10 10
~OllT THIATitl /'l()S I tu .. 11•t•<llt"""~11n tl"'l , ........ _ ... 1 q lO
I IDWA•OI CINIMA (INTI• 1101 01,.,bot
""'°'""~"' v,,~ c~~· ,.,,. •1•1 1 f.ul •eu11 1., It 10 II •S 10 •s I
1 -.... ...... ,_. • 1rG1 ' •s " • s 10 lO l 0. ....... I lffi I Ji S I IS • t0
• ~·"7 ·-ll'C.1\1\ 1 4\ 10
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• IMclt T•ecy fl'GI \ to I 10 lO
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head/me .. Tronsyhrania Twist." the
talc of a virginal actress who heads
to a dark castle in Transylvania for
the funeral of her father, a mys-
rerious cad who Jen when s~ wu 2
and hasn •t been heard from since.
Vaughn 1s her uncle, a moody vam-
pire rrying to get his hands on an
ancient book of evil spells.
Then there's rhc young man
(Sieve Altman) enamored wi th
Copley and along for the ride. Wh•r
passes for humor here is little more
rhan shallow jokes and 8-movie
backdrops -includmg stock foot-
age of an angry surf poundin1 the
shore. You would ha,,c to be deaf.
dumb and blind 10 ger any joy from
this tra ''esr}. • New releases m srorc this week:
"The Image" (HBO): "Tango &
Ca~h" (Warner): "Hean Condition{"
"Till' Forbidden Dance... "Wi d
l one" and "My Wonderful Life"
(RCAColumbia): "Night Eyc:s"
(Pnsm); "Always." "The Wizard"
and "Murder By Night" (MCA): and
"Dick T racy. Detective" and "Dick
Tracy Meets Gruesome" (Media).
Huntington Beach
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· • netti. MR. BENNION REPRESENTS THE •
: JACOBSEN& WHO SUFFERED INJURIES :
• AND THE DEA TH OF THEIR WIFE/MOTHE,. •
• : ON MARCH 12, 1llO AT T~IS INTER· :
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Carol & Company
Opera Pacific gala Southern flavored
Necklines plunged. Hoop skirts
bustled. Frankly, even Scarlet would
have been lfpstaaed at Saturday's
"Showboat. An Evening in the Old
South, " the fifth annual Opera
Pacific Founders Gala.
Tours of the party site -John
· and Donna Crean's Georgian styled
S0,000-squarc-foot paradise, yet un-
finished, were offered -but most of
the Southern flavored frolic was
outdoors in the shadow of the
Creans' columned castle. Twenty
two women paid $850 in under-
writing fees to dress in antebellum
inspired movie costumes and stroll
the Back ·Bay estate of the motor
home mogul.
Carol
Donna •nd John Cr••n honed pMty at .... a .... ....,. Humphreys .., •• ho••·
topped her ensemble with a black
_bat trimmed 1n red satin roses she
·bought in the French quarter in New Daily Pilot pllotos
by Lee Pa)"H
~
L.M.
•Boyd
·Beware of
elephants
Elephants kill more people every
year" than sharks do.
Russia's Leo T ols toy said
Abraham Lincoln's innucnce will
last thousands of yean. He said
Lincoln's anatness dwarfed the likes
of Napoleon, Caesar and Washing-
ton. That impression of Lincoln, left
by Tolstoy on Russians. remains
today.
Men who taught school in the
New York City of 1872 weren't
allowed to go to barber shops for
shaves. Disreputable places. barber
shops. Stay out of them.
()riainally.' sheep didn't have
much wool. Not until fast-footed
herders rcbrcd the woollier ones.
That more w1Ves than husbaruts
1' remain faithful has Iona been as-
.... swntd. A recent sorvey pins down
the statistics. Fonr·five pncent of
the husbands said they found fickli-
.,. ty "difficult." Only 21 paunt ohhe
wives ecknowlqdtcd thal
turacon have no teeth.
It's ap1nst the law in wht ertand
for children u•r 12 to ride in the
t'ront seats of ~rs.
••••••••••••• Orleans; Lois Aldrin sported black lace and called herself the town
Gala co-chairwoman Mary Ray-
mond's gown was worn by Lesley
Ann Downs in the TV mini-series
"Nonh and South." .
"I feel like I'm playing dress-up,"
she.confided ... These gowns arc very
hard to walk in, you just have to
keep a sense of humor."
"It's heavy," agreed Marilyn Ran-
dolph, who paid an extra $200 for
husband, Charles, to dress in bis
Southern gentleman movie garb.
Candice and Roger Schnapp play-
ed belle and riYer boat gambler. "We
all went down to a huge costume
house in Hollywood to be fitted,"
explained Schnapp1 with a nip of her
nower trimmed wiglets.
Coif kina Craig Brown and make-
up artist Richard Stevens added a
splash of glamour to most of the
costumed underwriters. among them
Milli Wicscncck. Laila Conlin.
Jeanette Scgerstrom. Pat Dolson and
Barbara Glabman.
Theme attire was encouraged for
the $1 25 per person partygocrs. but
not all paid Opera Pacific to dress
with Southern flair. Gayle Anderson·
rented her costume, as did many of
the attendees. Some used what they
found ·in their wardrobes: Ellie Bura
madam; and Nora Jorgensen wore a
wiso of white feathers.
.. There's so much 10 talk about at
a costume party. It's so fun to sec
the people look the way they do,"
exclaimed committee founder Max.
inc Gibson of the record crowd.
Funds .were estimated at St 10,000.
Cocktails consumed. the 385
showboaters moved from prcdinner
gambling and silent auction tables to
the white hnen tables that dotted the
lawn fo r dining buffet style on a
Mississi ppi menu catered by Turnip
Rose.
When the last !>ucculent hush
puppy was devoured, the JIU seren-
ade gave way to the steamboat
whistle and the debuta nte-styled
curtsy and a parade of cpstumed
underwriters. Afterward. Opera Pa-
cifi c artists sang " howboat"
fa von tes
..After the Ball Is Over" JOited the
opera lovers from the world of
"Make Scheve" into the real world
of endless valet parking lines.
But there's more! The Crcans are
underwriting the Opera Pacific Pro-
ducuon of "Showboat" which opens
July 13 at the Orange County Per-
forming Ans Center.
OIMl•I •nd MarltJn .. n.
dolph. alaln• Lucas
Breathing this gas no laughing matter
DEAR ANN LAN DERS: Recent-today. Joey I would be happy to have hi m.
ly you printed a lctter·dcscribing the DEAR ANN LAN DERS: 1 won-Joey graduated from high school
recreational use of nitrous oxide Jer how many grandparents are rais- this spnng. He weot to the prom and
(laughing gas) with a response from ing their childr:en's children. "Joey" took the seniqr tnp, which he will the American Dental Association. I remember for the rest of his life.. All would like to tell ~ur readers that was a product of a hasty marriage d I d ,
f: and a bitter divorce. His parents these u tras cost money an on t nitrous oxide can atal. went on with their lives. remarried have JllUCh. but he is. an ap-
Our 17-year-old son took an after-and are enjoyin' their second famil-prcciative, thoughtful lad and I'm so
school job at a yogurt shop and was ies. This boy 1s not welcome in proud of him.
found dead on his 15th day of work. :ither home bcc;ausc the stepparents • As a grandparent who 1s rarnng
The autopsy declared the cause of Jon't want the financial burden. my child's son. t fed truly blessed.
death was accidental nitrous oxide Joey showed up at my door two When 1 think of what could have
suffocation. years ago and asked if he could hve nappened to Joey. I shudder. I'm
We learned later that the shop had with me. The look in his e)es broke sure there are thousands of readers
a tank of nitrous oxide to charge up my heart. He said if I couldn·1 take out there. Ann. wt,o arc also raising
the whipped cream dispenser. The him 1n, it was OK. he could bunk their grandchildren. I want to say to
lad who trained our son on the job Wlth a friend. I knew his fnend lived them. I know how hard it 1s at time~.
also showed him how to trap the gas in a dangerous. drug-infested neigh-but if s certainly worth 11
. DEAR ANON: Yow've addre11ed
t~ 1raodparen&1, Hcl Dow ltere'1 a
word to die granclcllllldren: I llope
yoa realize ltow l1cliy yoa are.
Please tre•t tlto1e older folks wltll
t~ love and respect U1ey deserve.
V °" owe tllem more tun yoe will
ever be able lo repay.
Ann
Landers
SEARS '5000FF Thru June 30
PAINTING SERVICE
in a plastic baa and inhale it to get borhood where there were killings "NO NYMO U G RANNY IN
an cxhilaratina effect. What he alm05t every night. Of counc I told CHICAGO Seana painting service saves time, mess and agg_ravatlon. A
<tidn 't Jtn9w was that nitrous 01tidc, -=======================::::::===~ name you can trust for quality and service. Have the job done . when undiluted by oxygen and in-ft.A.l haled in this manner. can be fatal. ..... -fffJim-DY-~Nlrs-eutnorized .,..nter&;-
Sincc our loss, we have watched in
hO{f'or as v'-rious TV shows depict
the inhalation of nitrous oxide as
fun. Believe me. Ann. this is a
danaerous way to get a h1ah end
people need to know it.
Please use your column to inform
all fast-food manaaen and thole
kids who fool &rQUnd with ps that
they are playina with instant death.
Those tanks should bt in locked
closets With no hote a\tached, and
all employees should be t.old about
the danaen of inhalint the ps.
We will pieve for the rat of our
lives becaute our ton had no idea of
what nitrous o•ide could do to him .
1f'_you print tbis lener. oleue lave
off the name. -HEARTBROKEN PARENTS
OBAR PARENTI: W•et e .... .,. -.. ~ ........ . ftlM,.... ,.., ... ...,............ .. ....
tlel ,.. ....... ., ............
-.
R
At Sylv.in ~aming Centers• we can help evch the best
student m~t new challenges in ahy subject from reading to
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..
6 WAY BEAUTY & PROTECTION
non,.--,, {1 ,,""
' U l.-' 1 • .' l I --' \; I '
OrMge eo.t DAILY PtLOT/ Tueedey, June 18, 1980
o·-.. ·-"" °"" ., Co.-""" ...
by 811 Keane
0 Eat that piece of carrot,
PJ. Pretend it's an
orange crayon."
MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson
COUNTER CULTURE by Meratta & Maratta
\A~ZAN'S Sl~NDE~ I
DENNIS THE MENACE
PBANUT8
HOW WOULD VOO Llt<E IT
IF VOO WERE PUT MW OM
EARTH JUST TO IE EATEN ?
GARFIELD
•
I &UESS l WOOLOH'T
LlkE IT ...
.... ,
by Charles M. Schutz
MAt<ES /I.£. 6'.AD I WASN'T
BORN A CARROT
by Jim Davis
by Hank Ketcham FRED BASSET by Alex ,Graham
! t~J
.· i
~ \
·1 d1dn"t chase any cars. ambulances or
tire engines ltke you did, but believe me.
I had a hard day "
NANCY
. / 1JU~ PboJ.. l~ I( Attte:.'
100~ ~VATE !
A RLO AND JANIS
MY CAR 8E.liM> AAKl~G
A FU~'( 001~ fO[).A.'(
TUMBLEWEEDS
DRABBLE
i OClN t ~1~ li.
~o 'IOORE-~~
I~t-AAlQ\e5r Gu" ----·
l>N tARl~
ROSE IS ROSE
·.
·r ' -
. .
~Guess WHAif I JUSTFEU AWAKE !"
by Jerry Scott
by Jimmy Johnson
.
by Tom K. Ryan
by Kevin Fagan
by P.at Brady
~ No, -mAT tu.SN'r tm~" w~v
I ~flME6 COO~ ~H.~~ ~~/
r-----.$"
..
SHOE
~a;'(ai~
prl&tJIOt)~ ~~
j()f} EX~ftJE~CE,
P1sneyWorld
£>1PIU(~~T
c.fFJCe
JUDGE PARKER
I CAN'T LEAVE ANYTM ING
LYING AllOUNO &IT YOU
STEAL ·1T .' ••• WHY ?
r 'ft41Nt< w£ UAV~
!I ~lilON ~'(~
IN A N~IJ 1U~M€. P~K
W~'iZE. gf"A~f/~6-...
--I 'LL B E S TOPPING A T THE
COURTHOUSE B EFORE I
GO OUT "T'O SPENCER
FARMS FOR OINNER,
GLOR IA I --
FUNKY WINKERBEAN
1l4ERE'5 NOfHING fY'ORE REL..AXING
IHAN 5 rf"ff N6 A1"1H E 5HORE ...
r
J
I •' :I
J' ,l ·'
A. WHOLE eox OF CHOCOLATES, AND YOU E~T THE l.OT f ... WHY ?
0
by Jeff MacNelly
by Harold Le Doux
CER TA INLY NOT, SANCHEZ'
THE FACT THAT SHE A Sf(EO
YOU WHETHER l TOOK
OIVORCE CAS ES DOESN'T
MEAN SHE WAS
CONSIDER ING O NE I
~
by Tom Batiuk
ll5rEN/NG -ro 1"HE SOUND OF 'THE
H'.'PDOERMIC 5QRtNGE5 AS 1'Hf!..' ~ ~1N5-r 1HE. R()(J(G ! l t------r •r-----.
FOR BETTER
OR FOR WORSE ' by Lynn Johnston
WH C C E S 1 I I' I I' I f o ~·:: ~~~: ~:. "...;:
" i.. .. ol r-1\io J IM
!
f
..
Orange COMt DAILY ptLOT/Tueed9y, June 11, 1110 A8
-
•
ORANGE COAST ..., ....
An Independent Newspaper·
Publllhfid by Poge Group Pub11sh1ng, I~
leliiert I . Pote. J)festden1 & duel e1tecu1ove ollocer
Wiliom s. LelNWI, edllOI
• S..V. MorWe, monogor1g editor
Deft Fentey, eduorool POge edotOI
Ston Wymen, new1 edolOf
Gr .. lr..ai1, Coty ed1t0f
•..-lleem, feo1ures ed11e1
•..-Cort.on, \potls ed110< Car.a Humphreys, wc1ety edi•or
llliot Stein, Jr., choirmon
Getold W. Ackea, Jr., generol monogor
WoheJ lvnou9h1, 1901-19M, founding publisher
~dltorlal
ll; PCH intersection
flunks the basic
test of reality ·
. w e a~e not traffic engineers. Nor are we police
o fficers. But one doesn't have to be either to figu~e out there's something very wrong with the
con,este.d Pacific Coast Highway-Jamboree Road inter-sectto~ m Newport Beach.
Smee reconstruction of the intersection began last year
there have been d02ens of accidents in the area. And while
that ~ay not be unusual . fo r a busy intersection in a busy
town, the nu~bers at th is comer are going off the chart
So far this year. there have been 29 collisions com~
pared to 49 for all of 1989. •
Two people were kill~d at t~e troubled intersec\ion in
March. and .on a recent Fnday night six people were hauled
to the hospital after a two-car accident.
There appears to be a common thread to the accidents
and near-misses. The victims and the would-be victims
blame t~e configuration of the hu$e intersecti on, the timing
of the lrg~ts and the road work itself.
And '" a recent survey put to Orange Coast Dally Piiot
readers. scores and ~ores of local motorists took the time
to call . and complain about the intersection -many
~xpressmg fear. dread and confusion. Of nearly 200 column
mches of responses -more than enough to fill this entire
page -only one person said the intersection is safe Ou~Judgment is that it is not safe. Not by a long ~hot.
Wh1.le the road work was laun~hed to make the
intersection trouble-free and to uncork an area of town
where congesti on 1s the norm. it has had the opposi te effect.
It has brought chaos.
The ma in prohkm seems to be m the three tum lanes
that swc~p toward Jamboree Road from eastbound Pa cific
Coast H1~wat The process of arching toward Jamboree
across Pacifi c Coast Highwa y 1s the surface street equivalent
of the mfamous El Toro Y where the San Diego and Santa
.\na freewa}s con ' erge -collide is more like ii.
To even the most cautious driver. it i~ difficult to
complete the left _turn ~fore the oncoming wes tbound
traffi c on Pacific Coast H1~hway gets the green light.
It appears that three left turn lanes are just too many.
And w1thou1 argument. the timing at the signal should be
adjusted to p(·rmtt all motonsts to clear the in tersection
before oncoming traffic 1s allowed to blast off.
The intersection may ~ass the computer tests drawn up
by traffic engineer\. But ll flunks the basi c reality test.
Dr~vcrs ~peed in th is part of town. People arc in a rush.
Dnyers Jump ofT the line the moment the signal fl ashes
green. People don't always look.
What needs a look -a second look and even a third
look tf that's what 1t takes -1s this in tersection. As it is
now. the mterscctton is an accident waiting to happen.
Today In history
Today IS Tuesdav. June 19. the r 1987 h s I 70th day o f 1990." There arc 195 n · t e U · · Supreme < 'o un days left m the )'ear struck d own a Lo u1S1ana law requir-
Today's highlight in history: 1ng any fubhc <;ehool teaching the
On June 19. 1953• Julius a nd Eth"I theory o evolutio n to teach crea-' 11on1sm science as well.
Rosenberg -con v1ctc.-d of passing •
U.S. atomic secrets to the Soviet One year ago: Cincinnati Reds
Union -were e xecuted at Smg Smg manager ' Pete Rose 4'ued baseball
Prison m Ossining. N.Y. arguing that Comm1ss1o n('r A'.
On this date: Bartlett G1amatt1 should be
In· 1586. English colo nists sailed . prevented from heanng allegauons fr~r:n Roano ke Island. N.C.. after that Rose gambled on ba~ball
fa iling to establish England·s first games.
permanent settlement in Amen ca. -By Tiie Associated Pre.,
..
Doonesbury By Garry Trudeau
Commentary
Cohtacting sex partners of AIDS
victims best way to control disease
ly IOIBE· CHRISTENSEN
-and R.E. DfTTMAN
.. Pa!1!1Cr no tjfica11on·· is o ne of the most 1mpon-
an.t tradtt!onal. methods for control of disease trans.-
mined pnmanly through sexual intercourse.
T~ci.ng an~ notification .of contacts for sexually tra~sm1ss1ble ~1seascs was onginally proposed rn the
United. Sta~cs m 19 18. The method was implemented
as policy m 1937. under the guidance of Surgeon
General Thomas Parran.
Parran's popular 1937 book. ··$.hadow on the
Land," assisted passage of a I 938 bill that set up a
control program for syphilis and other diseases known
to be sexually transmitted,
Today sexually transmitted diseases also include
AIDS. chlamydia. hepatitis B and possibly cervical
cancer.
Central to the prevcntion and control of syphilis
was the early 1dent1ficat1on. no1tfica11on and treatment
of sexual contacts directly exposed to the disease
through recent sexual contact These Contacts were at
the greatest nsk o f development and spread of the
disease. T~us. the expandil)g chains of syphilis trans-
m1ss1on within a community could bt' broken
Contact tracing also has been employed to ~ontrol
other diseases directly transmitted from pcrson-to-
person. Before effecti ve methods of tre-atmenl tu-
berculosis. a communicable disease. was largely 'con-
trolled through earl} 1dent1fica11on and 1solat1o n of
mfcc11ous perso ns.
Onl) by 1ntcns1ve hOOSC'·tO:lioilse searches for
1nd1 v1d uals exposed 10 smallpox cases were the last
local smallpox infections eliminated in May 1980 b y
the World Health Organizatio n -almost 200 years
after an effecu ve means of prev('ntion became avail-
able.
Where mass educauon. mass varc1nat1on. and
official rePQning programs failed. actl\'e case-finding
and contact tracing succeeded in finally erad1ra11ng
this deadly d isease. ·
When reltable HIV antibody tests became avail-
able in 1985. routine panner noufication for the
control of HI V 1nfec11on became possible.
Tho ugh w1dcl) accepted for co ntrol of other
sexually transmitted diseases. panner notification has ·
received only limited attentio n as a control measure
for HIV.
The le ngth of the incubation penod for AIDS. and
the Staie at "h1ch a case becomes infectious 1s
uncena1n. However. 11 is. a ~1ent1fic fact that 'the
disea se can be tra nsm11tcd to others long before the
full-blown syndrome develops.
Whereas AI DS 1s offic1all)' a reponable disease in
all 50 states. HI V is only reponablc in J5 states and
only four of the 15 require names to be reponed. Only
four states allow partne r not1ficat1o n.
The issues of confident1ahty and d1scnminat1on ar~ complex and inte rtwined with the issues of
manda1ory testing. rcponab1hty. and panncr notifica-
11on.
Must the right~· o f the 1nd1v1dual always be
Commentary
p~otectcd at an) nsk to society'> Do not ind1 v1duals
directly exposed to great danger have a right to know'?
. I!' a democrac) such as our.,. the rights of
1~d1v1duals derive from the .. social contract" that
binds us together as a na tion. a state. or a community.
In tames of great danger. for protection of the com-
munity. should no t ind1v1dua ls give up a few nghts?
These questions were posed b} society long before
the HlV ep1dcm1c. H1storicall}. we have favored the
maJo nty. Quarantine reiulations. contact tracing and
mandatory 1mmunian1ons and testing (with or
wnhout Jnformed consent) ha\l' been used to protect
the public health.
Ho wever, 1n the HIV epidemic. issues of con-
fidentaality and d1scraminat1on present fundamental
challenges to o ur society. pan1cularl\ 10 the public
health and legal srm·ms ·
One of the first studies of the CO\t-etTecu veness of
trac1n~ of HIV ca\C\ wa rl'J><1ncd in the Journal of the
American Medical A<osoc1at1on in I Q88
From one man ""ho tl''tcd positive for HIV
ant1bod1e'i, a rural South Carolina health dcpanment
traced his I 'l rcpon cd o;e, contacl'> a nd 1dent1fied 83
sex con tact'I ol lll V ant1boch -pos1t1\C men Of those.
64 were rcsu.knti. nf the count\ 9 percent agreed to
be tested for l'\ 1dl'nlc of HI inlcc11on: 13 percc.-nt had
HIV an11 hodu:'i.
Six month\ later. thl· mL·n were rc-e\ aluated
Compari ng reponl·d numlxr'I of !>e\ual contacts for
the Sl\·month f>1:nods bcfon.• and after the initial
m vc 11ga11on. the number of named 'IC' contacts
decreased b) 2 pcrcent for ::int1ho<l~-po 111ve men and
54 percent for ant1bod~-neg:iti'c men.
None of the men re poned u-;1 ng condoms bt'forc
cntcpng the <.tud) . .\1 the '11\·month follow-u p visit.
80 percent al the anllbod) -posit!\ c men and 69
percent of the an1 1b(ld~·ncg.at1,c me-n rcpon cd using
cond oms.
The CO\I of th<.' entire 1n' t'q1ga11on. including
salaries, field re!>ca rch. roun\chnB and tc!>tS. was $I ()()
fo r each pcr\u n te\ted am.I Sl<IO fo r each man
1dcnt1fied as ha' 1ng HIV an11hod1c\.
One-on-on(· education ol 'ie\ual contac ts m a) bt'
m uc h more effcrtl\C in controlli ng 1h1s e pidemic than
mass educa11on or mas.!> \Crt·cn1ng.
F('deral directed health care lcadcr\h1p 1<. dcsper-
atcl)' needed to coord inate a nJllonal or glo bal ba1tk
aga1n::.t HIV
We need pubhl' hl·alth lcg1'llat1on not onh to
<:oordmatc control and rnntainmcnt. but to pre\ent
HI V d1~m1nat1on. coc,rd1natc testing and re-
ponab1ht). a nd 'ipcarhead a conccn('d effon to pre-
,·cnt the -.prcad of HIV from the I milhon 10 1.5
m1lhon c1t11cn\ alr~·ad' infeued
Where IS tocla) ·, urgent I) nc('ded Thomas Parran'>
B~ Or/steHea is u epidemloloo prole.,or •t lk
UalveNity of Texas Healtb Scleece Ce11ter la HHlt•
ud R.E. Dlllmn Is a sur1N11 at tff ~ter. ftl•
article Is ex~rpted tor tbe Oraoge CoHt Dally Pilot
from "Prlorltle1," a joura•I of tbe Amerlcaa Coudl
oo Scleoce ud Healtb.
2 Live Crew's bad rap: Blacks
may be obscene, but not heard
ly NOAH GRIFFIN
When Florida cos» ,11ulcd the rap
group 2 Live Crew on obscenity
characs. they may as well have ar-
rested the First Amendment, too.
They have succeeded m defining
ObsceJl ity whe~ the Supreme Court.
lqaJ scholars and many com-
munities have failed. They have
neatly drawn boundnrics that c.l·
elude black rap lyn cs from frtt
speech pro1cct1o n. even when the
sonp arc heard by co nsenting
adults.
To paraphrase former Justice Pot-
~er Stewan on obscenity. they know
11 when th(y hear 1t. But. the las1 I
read, when~ Live Crew perform~ ~t an adult club in Hollywood. N ..
11 tamed its lynC'$ down for the early
show. and nobody held a aun at the
heads of patrbns. who atte nded the
late show.
In the arrests of black rappers l
Lave Crew when white comedian
Andrew Diec Clay 1sn·1 challented
for 11m1larly offensive matcnal -
althou,ah they perfo rmt!d 1n different
j uritdictaons -there is the ln·
ete1pebk SUDCSllOn of racism.
Amenca 1s labeled o b. enc -in
poht1cs. from Mar('u., Ga rvey to
Louis Farrakhan. in music from
Jelly Ro ll Mo n on to 2 Live Cre w
The black Broadway composcM
Noble and 1sslc. 'l'ho wrote roman-
tic songs of the ·~o... wert' told b
their publishers to get off the ro-
mance ... Blacks don't cxpcnencc ro-
mantic lo~c:· they were to ld.
When JB77, rhythm and blues and
rock 'n' roll first appeared o ut of
black music-tradition\, the '-'CT(
considered forms o f "JUnlllc mu,1 ·•
Ult1m atd }. white$ who advoca1c
black censorship arc the '1ctim of
their own racist d ichotonw The ·
neatly labt'I black as obSC"tnr .ind
white as naught>• Bia k 1 per-
manently unredccm1n while white
1s #Cmporanl} astta). Blad. 1s st'\·
ually ofTen51vc ~hilt white 1s al~cp
tably $C'ductivc.
Whites also are '1C't1m11ed b
thctr IO~·hcld tertot)'pc, o( blaCk'i
as uninh1b1ted. part1 ularl) m the
a~s oflu. drup and rock 'n' roll
~ L1H C re"·., I) nc-. art crudt'. but
the} reOect the rcaht~ of teen-age
libidos. blad . or white. It may be
ho<'king to some b ut before a rela-
11onsh1p tum<. onto lmer·., l,ane. the
on-ram p ·~ called ~-, drl\C
\\<hates. ll"IO. haH ~•retched the
hm1ts -cHn 1n the old day .
H11s nn)'onc li~trned 10 ··L6uie
Lo uie" by the King'lmen late I} 'l The
l)ri<''i ~e figured out in high hool
did not put 11 in the da"' of a
nu~n rh-,,me
Nobod~ ·, pulling C 1un' N' Ro~!i
down from the stngt' lor p:uently
racist and homophob1 remarks.
There is dcarl> a douhlc '~t:lndArd • t
wo rk here -1u.,t a'I 'l'hen whi tes mi~~have at Fort Lhodddale
the 're being m"d> 'l'-h1lc bla ks at
V1rg1n1a Beach arr noting.
i\n1sts arc always' te'llll\• the
limits of \OC1ct)\ and hod value
doc!i haH· a cerl:un markctab1hl\.
hen .sct111Tg bo undarrc.-s o f
ccn r1h1p, c.-thnoccntn m 1s a con-
trolhns cultunil q :1nd ard wh1 h. b
defin111nn, would c elude all groups
beyond the pale -.pate .white.
The Qucsuon no " ts, will 2 Live
C'rtw bea• the rap'> The flonda C09S
~cm to be Ml ma that blacks may be
obscene. but no t heard.
In wtutt soocty, wut•s black ls
viewtd as bc1"1 sutpcct. The burdtn
of proof sluf\s from IOCiety to the
black anist to how why his wort
._ ___ !!!11!!!!!!!11!!!!!!!11!!!!~ ... --ll!!l!!!'!!!ll!!!!llllllllll~---------J_ ou1h1 10 be permitted. Histontally. -~ .anytbina b.lack and uncooarollablc.io
Tiu1 blaclt-1s-raw.and-wh1tc·•S·rc·
fined mtntaht.r hH llUfVIVcd lO this
day. h ktt~ J&n and R&9 Jt'OUP
black, but symphon)' • ol't~tra
wbitt. It k«ps modem dan<'C black.
bu• bellet whuc. And. as 1n the ca!lt
of 2 La ve Crew. black .grou~ arc
consadered obscent while whnc rock :_:.P ~ups are merely . ··bad
NMA Grlltlll 11 • SM ~
)ffrul&t ... «"Oti,...,,. wrllft
,_. Mir Onlp c.nr Dldly ... L • ,.
• t -.
• l ..
..
I
. .
\XIHllam F.
Buckley Jr.
Don't take ..
U.S.-Britain
relationship
for grante~
LONDON -I choose to re-
member an aphorism histonan John
Lukacs made many years ago. name-
ly that It ma) well tum o ut tha t the
most 1mponant h1storacal datum of
the first half ~f the 20th ccntury was
that the British and the Americans
spoke in a common tongue. and the
most 1mponant of the last part of
the century that the Russians have
white skins.
In the past }'ea r. Soviet-American
relauo ns have shifted so abruptly
that a funher 'ih1ft ·becomes. if not
likely. at least thinkable. If China is
going to develop into the China of
T1ananmen Square and the Soviet
l!nton the Rus.,1a of the great e man-
C11?at1o ns of 1989. the n it becomes
thinkable that 10 years from now,
we wo uld be plotting common de-
fense measures with the Russia ns
against a China · 1\11 of that 1s both fantasy and
phantasmagoria . .\nd 1t rests. 1n a ny
event .. o n the assumption of an
enduring special relatio nship be-
tween the United tal<.'S and Britain.
which "c tend to take for granted
but which has ne,cr taken full~ into
account (a) Amenca '-; 1nchna11o n to
1solat1on1sm. a nd (b) Bntain's re-
sentment O\er pivotal American de-
cisions tak~n d uring this century.
Tht.>se were resonantJ) voiced by
Professor Jonathan Clark. a fellow of
All Souls C allege. Oxford. in a re-
cent piece an the unday Telegraph.
Now Brother Clark 1'1 a provoca-
tive fellow. He will write that, "In
culwraLtermsA WeMem Europe wu
as i.wamped b> the real mcncan
'aluc'i (d1' orcc. abon1on. hom oscx-
uaht). consumcnsm) as the Amen -
can colonac'I had ht-e n b) Bnt1sh
cultu~m\hi." I !Sth century.'' That 1s
nice contentious stuff. com ing from
a gentleman who..e country 'l'as so
earl~ on 1dl·nt1fied w11h homo~x
uaht} ai. to cause us to "ondcr. ~5 ~car<, ago. whl·tha the incidence of
11 1n .\mcnca wa-.n 't related to the
brain drain the Rnt1sh "ere com -
plaining. about .\nd an)"a). for
dc!!Cendan~ ol Hcnl) VIII to speak
about the 1nc;111u11onahzatio n of
d1,orle 1n .\merica 1s end eanngl}
impudent. .\bortion is a i rcat indus-
tf\ 1n .\merica. but nothing b> com-
pan'>on ""h • andina' 1a.
But Profe\'lor Clark ha<. some
'>Ohd h1Stoncal poant'i 10 make. and
hr paanfull~ recnll'I th(' painful miss-
1\ C b} ·Pre\1dent Woodrow W1lw n
10 King George an 1919: "You
must not -;pea k of us who come over
here as cousin'!. still less as brothers:
I
"C arc ne1thn 'ie1ther must }OU
think of us as .\nglo-axon . for that
tt'rm can no longer he nghtl> applied _
to the people of the l 'n1ted States.
Nor mu~t too m uch 1mponancc in
1h1s conncc11on be attached to the
fact that English is o ur common
language :"\o. 1herc.-ar(' onl) two
things "h1ch can be estabh hed to
ma1nta1n do11n r<.'lau ons between
~our countr. and mine: They arc
communll~ ol 1d('als and interests."
~1r C'larl ad.no" lt.>dgcs that un-
like \\oodro" \\ il<.on. F DR m stant-
1) \1d('d "1th 1hc Bn ush 1n the war
"1th H1tler But he reminds us that
1t required Pearl Harbor plus a dcc-
larauon of "~Ir b} Hitler against the
l n11ed tate'I to o' ercome the.-over-
v. hclmang d1'lpo\1t1on of l\meni:a to
maintain neutrality It wa not until
the foundation or N .\TO 1n I 949
and the enuncir1t1on of the Truman
Doctrine that thr lJ .S. took over the
e'phc1t defcn~ of Europe and o f
Great Bn taan But t hat special reta-
11on<.h1p Ja-.ted only until I 956,
"hen "e pulled the rug o ut from
Rnta1 n and francc'11 m ove an ucz
to prc\<ent purhllnd Third-World-
n<.'"" ".\fter 1945 th<.' m yth of a
'special rclau 0Mh1p' rebounded on
Rnuun· at th(' pc>mt of the bayonet
the ronM1tu11on., of Germany Italy
and Japan wcrT reconstructCd o n '
American lines. and the lln1tcd L.....
, tates made 1t 1mPoss1ble for Bntam
not to eQu1p ll'i Third W orld cO:
Ionics with 1m1larl mappro pnate
con t1tut1on:tl ideal ... •
Mr. lark has a long and highly
scrv1ccablc.-memory. He bUamc.s the
1nab1hty of the 8nt1sh 10 face up
early on to Hitler on the great naval
disarmament tn.i de led by mc.ri -
ca aOer the 11·st World War nd he
cite the 1n' a ion of Amcnra b)• the
In h a the poht1caJ reason for the
1$0lationi~m exprc scd by Wilson
before that war. and for the refusal
of the Amenc ns to ,101n in the
Lcaaue of ntion
It 1 n't. then. cntarcl> clur sa1hr\1
fo~ 1he Un1t~d 'tatcs and O~
Bntatn, notw1th~tandin1 the ton,'
and fnendl 'lhaJo~s cut by the
mencan role dun"' the f-.tkland(
war and the Bnu h role dunna the'.
Llb)an 5tnkc The 1ntcll«tual Ctatil
in {rrcat 8 nta1n acknowledtt'I l.hat:
the military trcl\,th thclc days 11 1
the Western Hem1 phcfe. but dtthn"
tt to bu1kt policy on the mum.,...
that \hat 1trtntth 1s always at tbt
da P<>Sal of Bnuth policies ,,,,, ... '· ~ ''··· . ., .... ,.,... oc...-""'-'*' -.. aru,ra. a... Dall7 .
' . '
'. .
·:
' ' J • • w
j
AIO ar.,.. C... DAILY PILOT/ T.,..._, June 11, 1110
Rape suspect' s
trial postponed
one moi:e time ·
ly EMILY ADAMS
D.-y ,_ , • .,, llfrlt.,
SANT A ANA -A former ware-
house workeT who prosecuton say is
responsible for a wave of rapes and
burglaries that terrorized Hunt·
ington Beach and Fountain Valley
four years ago will probably watt
another month -at least -before
facing trial.
Robin Scott Dascnbrock, now 2S,
was ordered to stand trial in early
1988. He is accused of raping seven
wom en -one of them on two
separate occasiol}s -sexually as-
saulting four women and bur-
gltlrizing scveraJ homes before his
capture in 1987.
A series of delays. described by
one police officer as a "mockery to
our judicial system" bave con-
sistently pushed back the trial date
and left Dasenbrock sitting in Or-
ange County Jail for more than three
years.
Prosecutors have pointed at
Dasenbrock as the source of the
delays. citing a frequent change of
defense attorneys. But the so-called
serial rapist's c urrent. and founh.
lawyer said 1he case·s complexity 1s
the real sticking point.
"It's like trying 23 separate cases
in one trial," said James Odnozola.
who added that the prosecution has
a list of about 200 potential wit-
nesses.
The tnal was scheduled to begin
toda} before upcnor Coun Judge
PCH
From Al
work. Al least three legal claims
have been filed against the Cll} so far
b}' accident victims
Robert R . Fitzaerald. Because
Fitzaerald is c urrently hearina
another case, however, Duen·
brock's trial will be continued,
Odriozola said.
Funher re-scheduling of the case
will probably take place to work
around the vacation schedules of
lawyers. Odriozola said.
.. Each time he (Dascnbrock) is
slated to appear and doesn't, victims
become more apt to forget, make
mistakes or move away," said Hunt-
ington Beach Police Lt. Ed McErlain
·in April, after another delay had
pushed the trial date back to today.
In the meantime, victims and wit·
nesscs have awaited their day in
court.
The string of rapes Dasenbrock is
accused of are believed to have
begun on Nov: 4. 1985. The last
attack was in January 1987.
During that ume pcnod. Dascn-
brock is suspected of creeping into
the homes a nd apanments of w~men late at night. One Fountain
Valley woman who identified
Dasenbrock as her knife-wielding
attacker testified at the preliminary
heanng that he said ... Hi. remember
me from last year," when he broke
into her house a second time.
The 45 counts filed against Dasen-
brock include ra}>e. sodomy. forced
oral copulation. assault wuh a dejd-
Jy weapon and armed robbery. If
convicted. he could be sentenced to
more than 200 yea rs 1n a state
prison.
25 to 30 accidents a year are ex-
pected at an intersection of that size.
The intersection has been the site
of at least 29 collisions this year.
while there v.ere 49 accidents 10 all
of 1989. according to police records.
O•llr l"llot pMto •r ~nc•• a.-
On UCl's deserted, post·graduatlon campus, recent
grad Jennifer DeJoya and her boJfrlend Dan Rlpll
head for his motor scooter -th• only vehlcle In the
usually jammed llbrar1 parking lot.
0
..
Grieving mother
h.qpes hit-and-r.un
driver f oLind soon
9y HOUY J. \llAGNaR Dll!1 ..... SWft .,...,
HUNTINGTON BEACH -Judy
Przybysz had planned to accompeny
ber daUfhter to enroll in summer
tchool in Huntinaton Beach on
Monday. Instead, she spent the day
mak.ina funeral arranacmenu for 16-
year-old Melissa. who was killed by
a hit..and-run drivcT.
The accident, which happened
around I p.m. Saturday on the Riv-
enide Freeway just cast of Imperial
Hiahway, broU&ht to an end the
short and troubred life of a teen-aaer
who familY members say bro uaht
jo¥ to everyone who knew· her de·
spite her own problems.
She had only \Vceks ago found the
confidence to tum her life around
after running away from home a t 14,
becoming pregnant at l S and Jiving
birtq to a son. Acc. five months ago.
Her revelation came as she was
serving time in juvenile . hall for
trouble she had been in before she
ran away to the Midwest.
"She was just a tiny little thing but
she wanted to take on the world."
her mother recalled. "She was so
excited about going back to schQO)
now that she knew she could do it."
Because of the 24-day sentence for
attempted auto theft. "Missy"
Przybysz had been reunited with her
mother and family for just 31h days
when she was killed.
"She came home a month ago and
had this time to do in ju venile hall,"
Przybysz said. "In our hearts shc"s
been with me but she couldn't go
home until Wednesday."
MISSY had fled home with her son
after suffering abuse from· a
boyfriend and was glad to be back
with her family. Przybysz said. She
was a cheerful person who preferred
to shoulder her burdens alone but
was always ready to help with some-
o ne else's problems. especially her
family's.
"She j ust had a way of touching
people because she could sec the
briahtcr side of everything... her
mother said. "Even m ) adult fnends
-----=
MelllU PrqbJH
Jricving for her daughter, Przybysz
as convinced someone must have
seen the car or driver who caused
the accident. She has issued a plea
for information about the car that
hit the. o ne in which Missy was
nding with Danny and friends Sat-
urday afternoon.
"The fact that this man was weav-
ing in and out of traffic has me
convinced someone must have seen
him." she said ''It's probably not
the first time orthe last time he'll do
this until he is caught."
Little is known about the car or
driver. Przybysz has· a partial de-
scription of the driver -an older
white man -and the car -big.
dark blue and shiny. And. she
added. "11 must have hght blue paint
from the car m v daughter was 1n on
the left front fender. because there
was a lot of dark blue paint on her
car.··
City officials 53) the v.ork has no t
caused the accidents and that factors
such as speed, dnver inattention and
alcohol use are more Ilk.cl} culprits.
Officials also contend such a large.
busy intersection natural!) racks up
_a i ugh. accident count.
till, c1t\ staff a nnounced last
v.eck the) ~ould take a closer look
at the intersectio n and sec 1fthc road
v.ork. which reponcdl) is three
months behind 5ehedulc. can be
accelerated.
Tony L1udz1us. associate electncal
engineer v. ith Caltrans. said Monda}
that state workers have been adjust-
ing the signal light timing on almo<;t
a da1h basis since construl·t1on work
began. 1n spnng of 198'>
The uprootioe of th\.' roadwa) for
the v.1den10g caused thl' loss of the
traffic light sensors io the Coast
H1ghwa} pavement. \O Callrans had
to set the signals on an automatic
t1m1ng \)Stem. L1ud11u\ said.
SB,000 reward offered
in girl's stabbing death
-f~lt siosc . !~. h~r,.. .
With smgle motherhood in com·
mon with Judy. Miss) hoped to
finish school and build a career as a
cosmct1c1an while helping her
mother raise her }Ounger brother
and sisters.
The California Highway Patrol
has asked anyone with informa11on
about the dnver o r the accident to
calJ 567-7 187.
Friends of the family have set up
two funds at Sanwa Bank in Santa
Ana. o ne 10 help with funeral ex-
pense' and another to help take care
of Ace.
FoJ1:cn o bsen cd thl' 1ntersec11on
from 3 30 to 5 pm on Fnda~ and
again for an hour around noon11mc
on Sunday Some of his obser>a·
tton<,:
• .\ high \Olumc of slov.-mo' mg
b1c)cle traffit passes through the
1ntersect1on. v,,h1lc much of the ve-
hicle traffic approaches the 1nter-
sect1on with .. some speed."
• Many motonsts run red lights
there.
• i\lo;o. a number of cars enter the
1ntersec11on dunng the "latter pan ..
of the }ellow signal. These cars arc
legall} in the 1nterscc11on. but before
the., make 11 through. the cross
traffic stans to m o'c out "v.1thout
an) thought. ..
The cross traffic '' "obliged to
look into the 1ntersec11on and ) 1eld
to anybody legall ~ 1n the 1nter-
<;ect1o n," Foxen said
Foxen noted that \uth a h1gh-
'olume 1nterscc11c1n v.111 ne,er be
I ()().percent prnhlem tree ·He said
SHOOTING
From Al
The t1m1ng v.as set d1fferentl~ for
the morning and e'en1ng peak hours
to accommodate tht· higher 'olumc
of traffic at those times. ht 5a1d
And each 11me cun\trur 11on crews
shifted lane ... Caltran .. readJusted the
signal urning to al'commodate the
change 1n the traffic pattern. accord -
iog to L1ud11us. In cooperation v.1th
city traffic 'itaff. additional signs and
lights were a~o· posted 10 try to
min1m1ze confusion. L1udz1us said.
··we·,e been kind of fighting the
construction... L1ud11us said. ..,
hope 1t"s o'er soon ..
But hkc Foxen. L1ud11u'> 1nd1catcd
the roadwo rk can't be hlamcd for all
the accident '>. Motorists c;hould
knov. a constructio n 1one 1s alwa}S
goi ng to he a bit mo re dangerous
and dn'c acrnrdrngl~. he said.
"Traffic 1s \.Cf) heav) from all
directio ns and uphill on Jamboree
from both approat he'i ... L1udz1us
said ... , thin!I. people arc JUSt no t
careful enough v. hen the} approarh
that 1ntero;cct1on ··
Beach
.\NAHEIM -.\nAnahc1m group
Monday o tTe rcd an SS.000 reward
for information leading to the arre'lt
and con v1ct1on io the murder of a 9-
ycar-old girl. who authorities believe
was stabbed to death Fnday b) a
burglar or burglars.
Autumn 'Wallace died at her home
on Hudlund Dnvc ~h1le waiting for
her mother and sister 10 arrive. said
ShenfTs Depanment spokesman Lt.
Dick Olson. The mo ther found the
g,irl's bod) in a bathroom about 5:45
p.m .
Olson said 1n\CS llgato rs. who
haven't uncovered an} clues thus
far. will re-1nten 1ew neighbors and
talk to resident'> who were away over
the weekend.
.. We're trying to get an} infor-
mation on an} thing people might
have seen that da). e'en 1f the)
think n's un1mponan1:· he said.
.. we·vc received a lot of phone calls
and we're checking them all out."
Olson said extra investigators
have been helping on the case.
The fam1l) ha\n't been allowed
"Wi: ha' e no fears a JUf) would rule agaiost us.
his wife. ca rr)ing a port.able radio which Duncan
apparent!) mmook for a sho tgun. Duncan ordered
him to frcCLe .. t hen fired his own shotgun as Bryant
!>pun around. acrnrd1ng to palice repon s.
J',c alwa)s said the offi cer acted reasonably under the
c1rcumstance<1 ... Burnham said.
Neither Br)ant nor h1!1 lawyers could be reac hed
for comment
Last M arch. former mayor Jackie Heather asked
Burnham 1f the Cit) could provide some financial
assistance to Bf)ant and his family. who were in-
ehg1ble for financial a.id and faced medical bills in
Pellet'"> SC'crcd anenes 1n Bf)·ant's left arm and
damaged h1S·'>tomach and colon He's had skin grafts
and ~urgcm·s to repair hie; 1nte<1t1nes. but still has onl)
limited u-;c of hie; left arm:
After 1n ves11ga11ng the 'ihootrng. the Orange
( ount) D1'itnct Attorne~·s Office cleared Duncan of
an) c riminal charge'\ He remains o n active dut) w11h
the Pohc.e Depanmcnt
While the Cit) ha<; decided to offer Bryant three-
q uaners of a million dollars. Burnham said he believes
a 1urv would ul11matel) rule in favor of Newport
CllCe<;S of $300.000. .
Burnham con.., meed Heather 11 would be impru-
dent for the c11y to offer Bryant money. she said at the
time he managed to muster some support for the
Bryant•s cause. but 'lald most people "wouldn't e ven
talk to me about 11:·
A fo1 mer rab driver and soccer player, Bryant has
not been abk to work since the shooting.
back in the house since F nda \. to
allow authonucs 11mc to go o\C'r the
premises v.-11h a la\Cr detection sys-
tem. which can locate fingerprints or
clothing fibers that otherwise would
be in.,1s1blc.
Earl:. in the mvesugau on. a
chemical that e nhances fingcrpnnts
wa<1 pumped into the house, which
had been sealed. Olson said.
The fam1l} 1c; sta)in$ with friends
in the meantime. he said. He charac-
tcn1ed the neighborhood as ··an area
where v.-e rcall} haven't had any
problems. not even burglanes."
Olson said SC\eral Hems. includ-
ing a ;rv, videotape recorder. micro-
wave oven. a mirror and personal
items. were stolen from the house.
The reward was offered b) the
Anaheim Ot11ens .\ga1n'lt Violent
Cnmes Reward T1u'lt. ·
Donations can tx· made in care of
Wells Fargo Bank. P.O. Box 629.
Anaheim. Calif Q~80S. attenllon 8.
Mangione.
-By City Ne•u ~rvlc~
WATER
From Al
plies.
Daily said that fluondat1on is
geared at reducing cav1t1es for
school-aged childre n. It's reported!}
helpful 1n combating cav1t1e'i only 1f
)Oungsters dnn!I. eight glasses of
water a da). she ~aid. ·
Fluorides occur naturall) in water
supplies. 'ihc aid. In H un.tington
Beach'. wa ter contains .4 pans per
million in natural cond1t1ons. The
fluondc 10JCCt1on boosts 11 up to I
part per m1lhon. she said.
The c ity pays about $70.000 a year
for 1ts fluoride supply.
Przyb)'Sl said some of her mak
fnends had prom1<,ed to do things
with her boy'i Oanny. 10. and
C'huck1e. 9. but never made the
promises good.
When the aa'MEftt happent>d Sat-
ardey. M itty and two fnends were
taking Dann} to play with her
frie nd·s computer.
.. She wanted to make up for him
what c' Cf) body else had let him
down on... Przy b) s1 said. "The)
wanted to go Fnda). I had a bad
feeling about 1t the da} befbre and I
wouldn"t let them go. I couldn•t
explain it and the) couldn·1 under-
stand so I let them go Saturday."
Haunted b) her premonition and
RAID
From Al
Thc-shutdov.-n of l:ard pla) ing 1n
the men's loc!l.er room apparent!}
did not discourage the ardent game-
sters who. accord 1 ng to ('har:.vet,
attempted I<> move to the women's
locker room.
.. A woman. o ne of o ur wa11resscs.
was 1n there ~uh her pants down
when the\C guys came in ... Charvet
said ... She shouted. ·Hey. rm in
here. get o ut.' but 1he) evidently JUSt
laughed at her and wouldn·1 get out.
the) said the~ were there to pla)
card\··
. .\ftcr the 1nc1dent with the
women·~ locker room. the gamhlcrs
apparently moved back to the men·s
room, despite a sign that had been
posted \aying .. No Gambling. ..
Chai' ct ..aid he had informed
Roeder on Fnda) that he 1nt<"nded
to mo.,e a wall and therc:by
ehmmatc the area 1n the men's
locker room that had been used for
Prz)b)S2. who had held her seven
childre n together through a yearlong
stint of ho melessness and some hard
times o n welfare while she attends
nursing courses at Orange Coast
College. 15 lr)'1ng to regain her
strength. Shl' 1s bracing for a custody
battle -which she hopes to a void
-with the bab} ·s father.
Comparing Missy to her sisters -
l\lesia. 4: Ken. 14: Jennifer. 19; and
Stace). 2 1 -Przybysz said her
sur>i\lng daughters are Ace·s o nl)
hnk to h1'i mother.
.. Thnt''i ho~ he''l going to know
his mom. hy being wuh these girls.
I want to rn1~ him:· she said. "It's
her. he·s part of her. the only part we
have left."
card playing. He s~ud the area would
then become pan of the bar. Card
playing would be allowed under the
new arrangement. he said. but 1t
would be under the scrut1n} of the
management.
He said he sent a memo of his
conversation with Roeder to the city
on Monda). ho urs before the raid.
Those cited under a Costa Mesa
CH) Code ..ect1on proh1b111ng visita-
uon of places of gambling were
Wilham Thomas Gtarner. 54, of
Irvine: Kenneth Gordo'n C hase. 45.
of Fountain Valley: Richard Phillip
Archer. 49. of Costa Mesa: George
Edward Dcrnbach. 61 . of Santa Fe
pnngs. Lall) Lee Leach. SO, of
Rosemead. Charles Edward Baker.
50 of Costa Mesa: and Herben Hans
Stricker. <>I . of Santa 'Ana.
Two country club cmplo)'~es. 34-
year-old 01ane Rae Run)'an. of
Co'ita Mesa and Luu; Cardenas
Gon1ale'i, 15. of Santa Ana. were
also cited.
The citations cary a maximum
fine of $100.
rylorning clouds to clear; afternoon sunny Tht AcQi·W•at.• fortcatt '°' noOn, Tueedty • .NM It.
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KEEPING
COUNT
Ride
Talley
Donald's
memory
will linger
In the words of Mike Donald and
those before him: Nobody re-
members who fi nishes second.
Hopefully, that won't be true with
Donald, the 3S-year-old journeyman
who finished second o n Monday to
Hale Irwin in the 90th U.S. Open
golf championship.
Hopefully. Donald will rebound
from his heartbreaking, sudde n-
death playoffloss -the only such
extended playoff in Open history -
to one day wm a major cham-
piooship aod have his own day in
the sun.
In your heart, though. you know it
won't happen. You know what hap-
pened last weekend and on Monday
at Medinah No. 3, that forest with
tees and greens outside Chicago. was
Mike Donald's time.
Yet, with a one-shot lead and j ust
one final hole to play. Donald hat his
worst shot of the five days - one of
those "Oh. no" hooks off the tee and
into the trees. gallery and deep ro ugh
- a nd his lifelong dream began to
fade.
Mike managed to stagger home
with a bogey to force the sudden
death. but It was an11<hm act1c.
Once in the clutches of an old pro
like Irwin. it's almost impossible to
wriuJe free.
i his was one U.S. Open. though.
where you could shed a tear fo r the
loser while still feeling good about
the winner.
Indeed. it was Irwin himself who
said after sinking his winning 8-foot
birdie putt on that first playoff hole:
.. Mike gave me a chance (pause) ..
. God bk.s.S him.l_almost wish he
had won."
The gods of golf. though. bless
only those who hit it straight and
keep 11 straight. and nowhere is that
more e vident than 1n the .S. Open.
which the45-yca r-old Irwin has now
won three times ( 1974. 1979. 1990).
No one as old as Irwin has ever
won a U.S. Open.
I was there when he won at
Winged Foot (Mamaroneck, N. Y.)
15 years ago and marveled then at
ho'A he could hit the small. elevated .
slick greens and hold them with long
irons nece ssary to reach the long par
fours.
lrwtn displayed that same
marvelous skill on Monday when ht:
deliberately hooked a 2-iron upward
through the gusting wind and over
trees which guarded the green at the
par four. 436-yard 16th at Med1nah.
T hat shot. above all others. won the
(Please see TALLEY /831
INSIDE
•• _... C..,C U.S. loam .. .. , , . .,.,.,.
• 1'1111 .. Idler pltc ....
D1•11ra to l·I Wlll/U.
•.1•l1r crew..._.. to ......... 1••••d"-'/ ...
•Arm ro ... llup/•J ............. , ..
•9111f ..... lla/M
~Piiot'•
~ 1-900-~7171
ICOUI NtO K'HWULC
LA11 .. l!AIUNO NIWS 14 HOUU
ClO&• -TUESDAY, JUNE 19, 1990
Irwin fills ·cuR at 19th bOle
He tops Donald
in. sudden death
for U.S. Open
MEDINAH. Ill. -For Hale ·
Irwin, winning the lJ.S. Open Golf
Championship was a matter of
1-2-3.
He won it Monday in the first
sudden-dtath playoff ever used to
decide the American national cham-
pionship.
He won it only after gritty Mike
Donald gave him a second chance
with a bogey on the last hole of a
scheduled 18-hole playoff.
And it was the third U.S. Open
title for the meticulous, articulate
man who became the oldest winner
of the tournament most pros rank as
the toughest in. the game.
"The third's a charm. It's a
fabulous feeling.
"Because I'm so old, I feel
blessed," said Irwin, at 45 a year
older than Ray Floyd was in his
1986 Open triumph.
With the 91st-hole victory, se-
cured by an 8-foot birdie putt. he
reached a plateau achieved by only
four other men. Willie Anderson,
Bobby Jones, Ben ftogan and Jack
Nicklaus each won four O pen titles.
No one else has won as .many as
three. •
Irwin, who previously won in
1974 at Winged Foot and 1979 at
Inverness. had to come from behind
for this one.
"You never know if yo u'll ever
have the opportunity again.'' he
said. "And for a while, I thought that
an opportunity was all it was."
He had to have help to win this oae.
''Mike gave me a chance," Irwin
said. "God bless him, I almost wish
M had won.''
Almost, but noi quite.
The help came over two days, on
two lapses by Donald, an obscure
career struggler who twice had one
of golfs great prizes wi thin his grasp.
A 70th-hole bogey in Sunday's
final round dropped him bac~ into
a tie with ll'Wln and set up the
playoff when both men finished
regulation play tied . at 280, eight
under par.
And another bogey by Donald, on
the 18th hole of a playoff that was
scheduled to go only that far. gave
Irwi n a second chance.
That, too. dropped Donald back
into a tie. He and Irwin each played
(Please see OPEN/84)
Disabled, but"'
not unable
o-, -,.... • ., ll4'ftt17• ·-
Corona del Mar High student Jade Calegory Is starting to
make a name for hlmself In wheelchalr racing events.
CdM High's
Category hits
road · in chair
ly PATRICK LARKIN
04111)1 ,,_ Corrp_..,.
CAPISTRANO BEACH
When fo urteen-year-old Corona
d el Mar High stude nt Jade
Calegory co mpeted 1n the Los
An~eles Ma rathon earlier this
spnng. he turned in a respectable
time of 3 hours. 15 minutes. The
o nly differe nce be tween
Calcgory and most of the othe r
com petitors there .1s that he d id
it in a wheelchair.
But this isn't one of those sad
stories about the handicapped
boy that everyone 1s supposed to
f~el SOf11 for c;trugg)jng through
life . It's quite the contrar)
Sure. he·s been through 16
surgeries to treat damage to his
body caused b) a disease known
as Spi na B1fida. But (alegor)
d oesn't feel !>Orr) for h1~ con-
d1t1on. and he d0<.•sn't want an)-
o ne else to either
..I thmk it's ea!>1cr to accept 1f
you're born with <,omcth1ng h ke
this." Calegol) \31d . "I imagine
that 11's a lo t tougher 1f )OU get
in a car accident and end up
paraly1cd.··
Spina 8 1fida e'tposcs nerve
endings in the <;pine. usualh
before birth. In Calegol) 's case.
the damage occurcd in nen cs 1n
the arc h of his back which con-
trol the lower pan of h1o; body
He's not paralyzed from the
waist down. but he does have
limited use of his lower limbs.
<;ategory turned . to wheelchair
racing a few years ago. but was
best known befo re his prowess 10
racing as a child actor. Tops on
his acung resume 1s a stamng
role in the movie .. Mac and
Me.·· Calegor) played a young
boy who saved an ahe n being
from the government.
"I made the movie when I was
10 or 11, a nd I've also done a lot
of te levision as well ."' Category
said . ·'The movie was a fun
expenence. I stall have an agent
and stall get offers "
Ca lcgory also has acted in
episodes of ··.\hen Nation."
"Kids. Inc:· and "General Hos-
pual." He began acung whe n the
producers o f the popular soap
opera sent out a call fo r a boy
who could do tn ckc; in a wheel-
chair. Calcgof)' ansv.~ the call
and they suggested that he
should hire an agent.
Beside mo' 1e!> and telcv1\1on.
Calcgor) also sen es a'> a
spokesperson for the Easter ~al!>
"Kids Who (arc.. campaign.
Calegory 1s a frequent v1<;1tor to
high schools ex plaining the penis
and tnbula11ons of being 'Ahcel-
chair-bound .
Presentl). Calego0 1s concen-
trating more on high school a nd
racing He·s still a no .. 1ce in both
aspects. cons1denng his age, but
both school and racing take high
pn onllC'i
.. I ba'>1call~ don't compete
against o ther people ""hen I
race.'' ( alcgol') "31d "I compete
(Please see CALEGORY /12)
McCall le_aves card in Cleveland camp ·
Rod McCall. anxio us to make an
impressio n. certainly d1dn·1 waste
any time making his presence fe lt.
While in Cleveland for the In-.
d1ans' m in1<amp last week, McCall
blasted one mto the upper deck at
Municipal Stadium.
"He popped a few eyes open that
day." said Cleveland scout Ed
Crosby, who signed McCall last .
week after the' Ind ians drafted him
1n the ninth round. "Most of the
kids are really nervous (playmg m a
big league ballpark). The front offi ce
called me and told me he hit one on
the second deck -1f )OU hit one up
there in Cleveland. )OU hit 11 pretty
well."
To say the ballpark in Cleveland
1s big ""ould he an understatement.
It's huge. O ne of th<.' biggest ever
made.
No ball has ever been h11 1010 the
center field bleacher\. The height of
the stadium roof 1s 115 feet.
equivalent to a n I I-story building.
Cleveland Mun1c1pal Stadium.
which opened on July 31. 1932. has
the largest seatmg capaclt) (74 • .t83)
in major league baseball. So McCall
got all of It.
A 6-foot-7, 215-pound first
ba~man with unhm1tcd po""er
potential. McCall wa taking batting
practice during his first and only day
o f the mm1<amp. which lasted five
days. McCall. you c;ce. am .. cd in
Cleveland as quickly as pos'i1ble
after s1gn1ng las1 Tuesday morning.
He made 1t in time to spend the next
day working out at Munici pal
Stadium w11h the other signed draft
picks.
"He was a nxious 10 get to
Cle .. ·eland." said Crosb}. a former
infielder for the Indians who began
scouung for Baltimore 1n 1980
before being hired as a Cle' eland
scout last November.
"He did a little hustling. II was the
last da) we could send him to the
COMMUNITY
COLLEGES
Richard
Dunn
mini-camp. so ""C 'i1gned him 1hat
mom mg and he was on a plane that
(Please see OUNN/84)
A,. t..1 .. ptwMo
Hale lrwln celebrates birdie
putt on 19th playoff hole.
Parrish,
Abbott
key win
Catcher's three RBI
help Halos extend
Sox losing streak
CHICAGO -Lance Pam sh 1s
hot but don't ask him why, he
doesn't have an) answers.
Parnsh drove m three runs with a
t~o-run homer a nd a smgle Monday
night to lead the California Angels
and Jim Abbott to a 4-1 vic tory that
extended the Chicago White Sox's
losing streak to fo ur games.
'Tm trying not to think about 1t,"
said Parnsh. 'Ahosc two-run homer
m the st'venth inning was his 13th of
the year and sixth this mo nth. "I JUSt
ho pe I can keep 11 up. I'm very
com fortable at the pla te and I'm
trying not to be aggrcssn e •·
Schedule
AT BAT
Tue: a1 Chicago• 5:05
ON DECK wees. at Chicago 5 OS
IN THE HOLE
Thu; KanYS Citv 7 35
All gal'Tlfl on KMPC radio (710)
• On TV, Ch s, SC Si>ortsClla nnel.
Manager Doug Rader said he 1s
"vel) happ' ·· for Parnsh.
"He has h11 some big home runs
for us and he·s doing a fine JOb
behind the plate.'' Rader said .
Abbott 14-5) allowed seven hns.
struck out Sl't and walked one 10 the
eight innings he worked Bryan
Harve} finished and p1cl ed up his
ninth save.
"I would've liked to have seen
tum pitch a complete game." said
Rader of ~bbo11 "but he was losing
his stuff and 11 was the n ght thing to
do for him and the team ·· I had a
fresh closer in the bullpen ..
o\bbo11. ""ho has ~n all of his
game~ on the road this season. said
"I've thro wn be11er. b ut that's not to
..a} I'm not happ) w11h the wtn. It's
nice to get untracked against a team
that 1s ahead of us in the standings:·
l\bbott'<; hec;t effort came 10 the
third inning. 0111e Guillen smgled
and scored on the fi~t of two
doubles b\ amm\ • sa. who took
third on the thro'A Abbott then
retired the ne~1 three ballC'rs leaving ,.
So\ll ~trandcd
(Please see ANGELS/Ill
lntine tabs Curtis
athletic director
Community College Athletes of the Year
Schulenberg steps
down to concentrate
on tealf1ing, coaching
ly PATRICK LARKIN
Daly "'°' C0tn ...... 11t
IRVINE -Rick Curtis. busmcss
teacher and football assistant coach,
has been elevated to the position of
a thletic director at Irvine High.
Principal Gary Norton announced
Monday.
Curtis, who was previously the
Vaqueros' co-coach for football
alona with Terry Henipn and no w
serves as defensive coordinator, will
take over the position from Barry
Schulenberg on July I. Schulenberg
had been the athletic director at
Irvine for the past 1 O years.
"IJ was an opponunity that sort o(
came up suddenly," urtis uid.
"One of the btgest attractions to the
job is that I'll be able to keep
•coac hina." •
Schulen berg 'Stepped do wn to
pursue other interests on the cam-
pu1, panicu .. rty a return to coech•na
and a more active role In the
c&auroom, accordina to CUnJs.
"Berry was an e"ccllent athletic
director for us." Cunis said. "He did
.. ., awful lot for this h1ah tehool. ru
nttd a Ot o( luck rollo~1n. him."
Prior to comina to Irvine 1n 1986,
..
the 34-ycar-old served as head foot-
ball coach at Un1 vcrs1ty High for
fi ve years where he was named the
Sea View League Coach of the Year
for football 1n 1981. He had earlter
coaching expenence at Serv11e and
la_Juna Hills. This season. beside
beina on the football staff. Curtis
assisted in varsity basketball and
was the head golf coach.
Curtis is tryi ng to set up a pla n of
attack as athletic director.
"I've a lready started 1n on the
budget," Cunis said. "The d•stnct
has cut It by S 10.000 and hopefully.
I'm &O iD& tO be able tO get It back.
Otherwise I've go t to sit down and
fiaure out what gets cut and by how
much. ·
"Our number two pnonty is get-
tlna the best coaches we can to fill
the vacant poS1t1ons we have:"
C4rtts will head both the boys and a1rts athletic dcpanments at the ha&h
1ehool. which is a de parture from
the past when .the duties we_rc
lharcd. In order to h&hten the wort~
load. Cunis announced that Lisa
L1mp would be brouaht on to wrve
u aui tant athletic director.
Limp, who also act: as head toft·
bell coach for the Vaqutros. was
named as ac\ina air1• athletic dircc·
tor approiumatcly st.\ w«ks •·
The school combtncd both the aarts
Md boys depanmrinrunderCuni
so that Limp could devote more
time to the sof\blll team .
• t
• . •
,. Ot .... COMt DAILV PILOT/ T....-ir • .-.11. ..
.S. soccer earns pral
.... CIANSUR .._._.. __ ._.. blow the bua,les and ctwJe.
The Austrians' ft.nt two pmes
were dktated by tactics. Apinst tbe
Italians. the Austrians played
cautioualy and tried to keep the
1eore lowt not wantina to be embar-
rassed. Tney Iott l--0.
nan into all the time.
FLOllENCE, Italy -By losina jU11 I~ to Italy last Thursday, we
~we bdona in the World Cup. Now, we have to prove it apJn
tompa •inst Austria.
It will not be easy. Austria, like us,
comet into this third pmc with two
losses. Unlike us, they came to the
Cup with great expectations. Before
the Cup, they had a run of succefSCS
and actual!Y a superior prc~up than
even the Czechs and Italians. They
were thiAkin& quarterfinals or even
scm'ifinals.. so they arc keenly disap-
pointed.
In tbe second same, the Czechs
were able to Sit t.ck because of tbe
aoal difftttnce in tbtir pme apinst
our team (a S-1 U.S. loss). so that
made it difficult for the Austrians to
Play their pme. The Austrians lost
that pme 1-0 as well.
In the NBA. an lliah Tbomu or
Malic Johnton is toina to bave
cenain privilcea that the fint-year
pant cloeln't ftt -bow odlef •r-
en defend ap.tnat them and bow &be referees treat them. You have to .-y
your dues before you can ICt retpeet.
to it's not a surprise. I someumcs
have to explain that to my playen.
This will be a wide-open pme.
and we have to come forward. It
could be hiah scorin.a. On the other
hand, if one team sets down. it m1y
tum out to be a blowout -some-
times the flesh sets weak, even when
the spirit is willina.
Yet. we both can still qualifx with
one win. Goal difference wtll de-
termine qualifyi ng for the next
round, so the)' are _goin.g to come out
with all guns blazing. They know a
2-0 or 3-0 score will get them into
the next round. Plus. in their eyes, i\
would be a disgrace to lose to the
United States. They arc going to
When tbey play us: ·the Austrians
arc aoing to be coming aU out.
charging from the first whistle. A
defense becomes a little lax when
you pla¥ all out, but the Austrians
JUSt don t think we can hurt them on
the counter. That, at least. is what I
perceive from ex perience and from
what has been coming out of their
camp all along.
That attitude shows we still must
earn respect, both from other teams
and offi cials. It is something that we
lt will be a different ehallcn~
than the Italian game. With Austna
puttiDJ out all the offensive am-
munjt1on, they will be vulnerable on
quick counters -if we develop a
good possession pme, we can get
some people in their box.
'
Comparing statisties is for losers,
but. when the Austrians played tbc
f'
Sports break
Foreman pounding
opponents on road
back to world title
LA VEG.\ -George Fore.man.--~~
263 Pounds of rippling mass packed be-.~ .....
hind his fists. moved a step closer to a ._.
heavyweight tit le shot 1n his reborn career ----
with a quick-wo rk second-round knockout of Bra-
zilian .\dil'lon Rod rigues aturday night.
The loquacious and lumbenng Foreman. who
spent 10 ~ears building his ginh as a preacher in
Houston. stu ng Ro<lngucs "ith a left Jab-right hook
combination with less than one minute remaining in
the second round .. ·conds later, Rodrigues was on
the canva~. the 'ictim of a powerful left hook.
Rodrigue~ "as counted out. thus ht-coming the
22nd str:ught '1c11m in Foreman's comeback· career
an(j the ~Isl 10 be sent reeli ng with a KO.
Rodrigues, outwt:1ghl·d by 44 Pounds. also be·
came the \evcnth man ro be knocked out b) Foreman
1n eitht•r thl' first or \etond round.
"I didn't come hcrl' n ix·c1ing a quick knockout."
the 41 -)ear-old rorcman said .. I was looking to stop
him somc"here around the <.t'\Cnth ."
But Rodnguc'i liu lcd to protect h1m~lf in the
second round 3'> Foa·man 'i talkcd him near the ropes.
and bcfon· he knn \ \\hat hi t him. he was heading
so uth
Nuggets covet Thompson
Gcorgc:to"n C oalh John Thom(>sun ----
1s cons1dt:nng Jn offer to bcrnme general • '(.
manager ol the De"' n :"u&gl'ts ' e
-He'<. hcl·n al)proat·hc.:d "•Ch an op-----
ponuntt~ Jnd he·., dt:ud1ng "ht:ther hl' wants to
pursue 11 lurtht·r .. Oa' 1d Falt.. Thompson's agent.
said Monda~ "H t'> prewnt 1nten11 ons arc to remain
bul I'm not '>Uggcsung <;omcth1ng co uldn't change.
In othn ha,kl·thjll Ol'"'·
•~tan IJnd ass1"1tan1 roaches Hilh Hahn and
Adam Pre)er ha'c dl·ntl'd conducting preseason
\.\.Orkoutr,. and \I\ pla~l'r\ '>:l) no illegal "orkouts were
conducted la')I )Car at 1hc College Park campus.
Another w ach and 1he pla)cr<. have ..a id cond111on1ng
drills ma) ha\\: been m"tal.c:n for prc<.ca<1on work·
out'i "h1t h art: proh1h1tcd b} the NC Al\
TELEVISION, RADIO
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Pr1111c I 1l ~rt
RAOI<>
Baseball
'> pm -\ngd\ al { l11cJgo \.\ httc.• \<1\ KMP<
(7 llJ)
7 311 p m -• llOU\ICIO JI l>cll.fgcr\. KA BC (190)
7 311 p m -\an D1cg11 .11 \an Franc-1\Co Kf MB
(76<J)
chair ··
IN THE BLEACH ERS
.~
i
-
II
· We ll. OK Maybe one quick game to 21 .. but I
stil l think th is 1s a pre tty dumb idea."
f ,
f
No Thomas probe ongoing
L' .. .\ttornc~ ~lt:phcn Markman af-----
firm ed ~ondj) 1n Dl'tro11 that Pistons •.,
guard Isiah fhoma' l'I not the target of a '-~
gambling tn\l''>ttgauon or fl'deral criminal ----
charges
"Wh1k I Jm not. uf cour-.e. able to descritx-the
details of an} grand. JU~ 10ves11ga t1o n. given the
promincnrt: of r huma .. and the att enue n that this
matter ha'> rne1,ed. I '-'Ould like to clarify the record
a\ best I <.an at 1h1., t1mt:.'' Markman said.
In Olhl·r "-tP. OC\\')
8 An t:\t1ma1cd 21JO.UOO tans turned out to cheer
back-to-back :-.: H.\ champion Detnot Pistons in a
'1ctor) pa rade.
Fan\ llm·d V. uodwan.I A\i.'nue and jammed into
the Hart Pla1a amph 1the:i tl'r on the Detroit River.
'>Orne a<1 earl) a<. I 0 a m . for the parade and 20-
minuk rall) 1h:11 began fo ur hours later.
The n·kbra11un continued with a rally at The
Palaet.• of ".uhurn Hills. \.\.h(•rc at least 23.000 fa ns
'>al utcd the "inner~.
.. It 's bel'O a great )car fo r <.'v<.•rybody involved ,"
P1'>tonc, captai n l\1ah Thomas told the roanng crowd.
Wimbledon tabs top seeds
Ivan Lendl and Steffi Graf got the
top !teed~ at Wimbledon on Monday.
whi le John Mc[nroe benefitted from past
ix·rformanc:cs and was seeded fo unh.
~
Lendl and (,raf. No. I on the men's and women's
computer rankings. were handed the top spots by the
All England Lawn Tennis Cl ub for the grass-court
Grand Slam tournament that stans June 25.
In other 'P<>n'i news:
• Amt:ncan Amy Fraoer won her opening round
match at the women·., final tuneup tournament for
Wimbledon. beating Juhe Halard of France 2-6, 6-2.
6·4. Nine matchc~ were washed away, includtnJ those
of Marttna Navratilova and grass-court rookie Jen-
nifer Capnat1.
•The M1nne"1ota Nonh Stars called a news
ronfcrence toda} to introduce their new head coach.
Twin C111es tck v1!>1on stations KSTP and KARE
reponed Monday that former Montreal Canadicns
captain Roh Ga1 ne:y would be the Nonh Stars' 16th
coach.
8 Six dnvcr!t arc wi thin 193 points of the lead in
the NASC AR W1n~ton Cup national st~ndings after
Sunday·~ 500-mile race at Pocono (Pa.).
-By tlte A110dated Pre11
Q UOTE O F THE DAY
AJldy Van Slyke, Pittsburgh Pirates out-
fielder, on a fastball thrown by New York Mets
pitcher Dwight Gooden that registered 100 mph
on the radar gun: "ft looked like an aspirin. I
didn't even see 1L"
CALE GORY,
From 8 1
agarn11 m~lf I'm JUM trying to
lower my 11 mt:'> -)OU know. ge t
faster. Right now 11'.,. re.illy keeping
There''> muC'h more to Calegory
than JUS t racing, however. He likes
to pan1c1patc in all sports. and he
doesn't let hi .. disability get 1n the
way
afte r seeing him m a full -body cast
. and be ing so upbeat. he always
cheers me up."
There arc a few problems for
disabled people that Calqory is con-
cerned about. Most of them arc
easily resolved. but 10 some pan$ of
the country, government and people
in general have been slow to ac-
comodate the disabled.
me in shape."
Rather than.7follow1ng a stnct
workout schedule, Category prefers a
more liberal cour\C. He often trains
by JUSt going out with h1 mother or
somet1mc'i b> lifting ~eights at
school. ihe LA Marathon has been
the highlight of hi s racing career.
"It was really fun going through
all the towns and seeing all the
different people,'' Calegory said.
"They let u nan a htt le earlier than
the adults. but Lhc:r 11t1ll pas'led us up
at l boul tho 6-m1lc mark. The)' ~ere
reall y 1mpre~\lve."
The ,Looi or Calcgory·~ trode IS
obviousl y a wheelchair, but it's not
your tandard ho pital i sue typt
This cha,ir resemble more of an
ltahan racing bike.
"I enJOY racing a lot. but I ltkc 10
do a lot of other things as well." CaleJO~ said. ''I'm learning to play
tennis and I ltke to swim. rn fact. I
can play every sr,>n except for foot-TaJcc for example the wheelchair
ball and soccer. · ramps or "curb cuts" installed in
Some people may think that sidewalks at inte~lJons. These
alegory was robbed at birth They / cuts arc prevalent in California, but
figure he should tx-treated '4111h are lacking severely in• other states.
compas•uon a~d pity and go .out or , "We're lucky livina in CaJifornia,
their wa y for him. But he won t ~ave bec.tuse almost every intersection
any of it. He sa ys he has no com-has cwt> cuts." CaJcaory said "But
plaints ~nd has never go~ten upset I've gone to New York and. there
about his plight. . aren't any. Also, stairs can be quite
"I ·Just want to JO out and do a problem and there could be tome
everything I tan," < alcgory said. "I better pubhe transponat1on as well."
don't want anyone to do anyth1na Caleaory knows that these and
out of the ordinary " other problems will take a Iona time
"These chain an: JUSt built for
speed," Caleaory said "The racina cha m are longer 1nd lt&htcr and use
10. peed b1C)clC urc fhe ch:un. ate ...__...o ___ a k>t mott Mhca1t &han my reau&ar
. "Jade ha, always been an insp1ra-to rnolve, but he maintains hope.
uon to me," h1 mother K1thtnnc He alto wants to keep racin1 and be
said. "Sometimes after a lonf hospi· successful at it. But no matter what,
tal sta y or another surg ry, would ~e's alrtady uccttded in the most
be more deprc\\(d than he wa~. 1mponant1atpects of hfc. He knows
Some time .. 1t \C!Crl" hkc the parent'I the t11fferchcc between winning :ind
bear the bnmt af th~ ,11ua11on. bOl -~ins a WJn~r.
...
ks first
IWiMl, Ibey were outlhot 20-7. We ~ ouuboc only 14-11 -1-7 in
the iecoDd W: t.'e came Within a
abc>t tbat rolled betweeD &be plic•a
lep oltw. die--. Of course, tbc
IWilDI lMNDoacf I ,..aty kick off a
po11. but lblt'• tbe way it son.
They bad mon .,.,..UOn time
tban we did, but we llowed them
dQwa. Tbal ... pan ot our pine
plan. If ~ play the taken. you
must lake ·away their fa1t break.
That'a What we did.
I told our p&ayen before the pme,
.. If we plat::" best pme and they
play their pmc, then they will
win. We have to make sure that they
don't play their own pme." We did
that.
I'm still mulling around what
special words need to be said before
the third p me. I don't decide that
until the prepme mcetina and until
I look the players in the eye. Before
the last aame, I discuSsed the quality
of winners. What we had to do was
come out u 1 wtnaer • ._....... ot
the reaulta. It baa to do .nm 1Ui1ude.
If you cany tMI lahd ola winer
Wouabout &be eame. you c:u wait
out or the l&ldhun witb )OUr ......
up. ~ we weat out IDd played
lite winners.
After the Italian~. the Italian
press. wtiicb hid been fairly critical
of us and openly questionina our
prcsenoc in the C\lp. praieed our
tactics. They had to~ reuona to
ditdain us after the p me aaainst the
Czechs. But then we played the
Italians at their &cvel, in their city.
To their credit. tbe media said we
deserved ~ise.
What's ironic is that even thouah
there is an Italian about-face, we
didn't aet any credit for what we had
done · from the En&lish-speakina
media. It wasn't until a few days
lateT, when the British and Ameri-
can press had seen the reviews in the
other European papers, that they
bepn tentatively to approve of our
play and tactics. It seems the credit
victory
""., comes from our own
fi'f.:s a combination, .,.,...._ ol
litdl~= ..... ld8'I we ._., bave
thM 9)od i ol ii beina a
by lie ltaliul.
Al rw llid._~~'-~ co ef1191111 been~ I woke
one moraial to rMd that I
retiled and lliade tbe,announce
in ~ bUI I bad been Tirnnia Md llid noth'
viously there ue tome • wriaen in Europe u &here are ·
other places.. Sometimes people
rumors Just to have better ·
Quetuona have been rw.lted
my status in l 994, when the W
Cup comes to the U.S. If you
me now am I aoina to COKb in•
I'd say, yes. that's my plan. I will
down sometime at the end of
year wiah my fa mily and diacu
what'• the best for us.
a.t 0.-ler I• ~ el * U. .. ,,...,~,,....
Argent ln•'• t••m c•pt•ln Diego M•r.clon•
m•lnt•ln1 po11e11lon of b•ll •• ltom•nlan
~
defen1em•n Mire•• ll•dnlc f•ll• down tn
World Cup soccer •ctlon Mond•J·
Argentina bounces back;
to advance in World Cup
ROME -Defending champion
Aq~entina. which had such a dlsap.-
poant1ng 11tan to the World Cup,
qualifi ed fo r the second round Mon·
day ni$ht with a I· I t1<' against
Romania. which also advanced.
goalkeeper 1lv1u Lung said. "It 1s a
fantastic thing for us. It was a great
game and a fa ntastic achievement.
We showed we were strong ph)SI·
cally and at all levels."
defending champs figure to meet
either Brazil or West Germany in
the nex t round.
·"I am not looking so far ahead
JUSt yet," Coach Carlos Bilardo said .
"This isn't the same team as in
1986. We are a younger team. After
what happened in the first game. it
wasn't easy to qualify."
Cameroon. an upset "inner over
Argentina and Romania 1n earlier
games. won Group 8 despite a 4-0
loss to the Soviet Union in its last
opening-rou9d µme Monda). The
African champions seemed to be
coasting throughout the matt·h and
lost for the first time C\er in the
World Cup. The) had thrl·e ties but
did not advance in I <>82.
It was an especiall) strong show-
ing b) the Romanians in the face of
confrontations back home between
ant1·go' ernment dissidents and
police. The disappointing Soviets. who
were second to the Netherlands in
the 1988 Europea n championships,
are headed home.
"What has happened left traces 1n
our heart," Coach Emerich Jenei
said. "We arc alwa)S thanking what
we left behind us. We hope that
eq uality will triumph." The negative image presented by
rowdy Engl ish soccer fans apparent-
ly will keep their club teams from
playing an European tournaments
for another year.
Romania wound up second in the
group afier rall ying to Ill' the Argen-
tines. Gavnl Balint got his second
goal of the tournament, 1n the 69th
minute. to produce the 11e after
Pedro Mon1on had gi ven Argenti na
the lead in the 61st minute.
Romania and Argentina each fin.
ished with th ree points, one behind
Cameroon and one ahead of the
So\ 1ct nion. Romania gets second
place because 11 had th e same goal
d1fferent1al as Argcn 1111a. plus-I. but
scored one more time.
Since 1985. England's clubs have
been barred from those compet1-
llons after nots at Heysel Stadium in
Brussels resulted in 39 deaths.
"We are very exc1tl'd." Romaman Argentina ad' a need as o ne of the
four best third-place teams. But the -By Tiie A11ocl1ted Pru1
Area roundup
ace to host baseball tryout camp
The D•Hy Piiot
The MaJOr League Scouting Bureau A
will conduct tts annual tryout camp Friday _A"
and Saturday. beginning at 9 a.m. on the
Orange Coast Collegt baseball field.
Players between the ages of 16 and 25 are welcome·
to try out. No fees arc required.
The scouting bureau. in business since 1974 and
currently directed by Don Pries. works for all 26 major
le.ague teams.
. "The bi&&~st t~it)g the tryout .. camp does is giv~ a _
kid a chance 1f he s not drafted, bureau scout Dick
Cole sajd. "They th ink their bubble's burst. and it's not.
This way they've got a chance.
"It's a situation of bei ng showcased where some·
body can sec you. Major leaauc cl ubs arc look.inJ for
ballplayers all the time. All you have to do is bn ng a
&Jove. If a boy is an American Lesion player. he has to
bring a note from his coach, that's the only stipulation."
The scouting bureau cannot sign a player, but the
orpnization submits repons on. players they feel arc
wonhy of professional baseball .
Pitohers arc clocked in 'he bullpen while position
players arc Limed in the 60-yard dash. Catchers and
position players also throw from their respective pos-
1t1ons. Players arc invited to play in a game followina
the morning sc ion.
About 20 to 2S &eouts from different orpnizations
are scheduled to be in attendance, accordina to Cole.
Rick Oliver. Bud Pntchard and Ed Sukla arc the other
bureau scouts. Dan Dixon is 1n charae of the camp.
Heredl.a ,et·for Orange Coast
•
Aaus1jn Heredia, a three-year vanjty
staner for the Estancia Hifh basketball • ~
team. has made a verbal commimnent to ' ~
play for 0n"IC Cout 'Collete ntxt teaton. ---The 5-foot·IO, 140-P!JUnd point pard led the Eaalet to the CJF .l-AA ude avenaina l~.9 points and
sb uailtl per Jlmc. For his tfl'ons.. hf was named the
Daal1 . Pllet'• Sea View t.asue Most Valuable Player.
Htted11 " cum"nlly pla)1n& for Oran1t Cru~. a dub ttam ~on 111lnt mainly of coflttt pfaym.
Price honored as scholar-athlete
Irvine re\idcnt Robbie Price, a track -· and rross country standout as a senior at _.. t,.
Saddleback High. was named the CIF State 7
Boys Scholar-Athlete of the Year. -----
Price topped a list of Orange Coast area· athletes
honored as Student Athletes of the Year by the CJF. All
honorees were presented with certificates at a recent
Angels game. '
Price. who will maJor 1n electrical cnainttrina 11
UCl. had a 4.55 G PA. He received a S2.000 scholarthip
from the CIF.
Jon Tana of Estancia (3. 79), John Van Uden of
Laluna Beach (3.88). Doug DeJardin of Mater Oei
(3. ). Andrew Wind of Ocean View (3.67), Theresa
Conway of Mater Dei (3.64). Julie Thomas of N~n
Harbor (3.65) and Tracy Reines of Saddlcback (3.6)
were also honored.
Boyd to play baseball for UCLA
Travis Boyd. the stanina Sttond x baseman on the Manna H1Jh CIF 4-A •
champion baseball team. has s11ned a letter
of intent to attend UCLA.
Boyd. who hit .368 in the Vil(lnas' final eipt pmes
(.24.S o verall). was also the •uan1n1 poant auard on the
V1kinas' Sunset Lcuue champion buketball team. A
transfer from Mater l>e1 High. he played in the Onnet
County All-Star Basketball ame ·this sprina.
He will play blseblll only for Bruins' COICh Oary
Adams.
"He was a hiah profile blskctball player and be
only played baseball thrrc months out or the ~r."
Marina bawball coech Paul Renfrow aaid. "He a not
one or thOtt kind of auys you cal\ look at the stall and
tell what kind of player he is. He helped IOlidi'1 ua in
the middk and he was a bia Pin o( our winni111 thr
championship. He ttortd a key run an almoac every
bellSJmt' 1n t~ ptayofJ's. Hr' JUlt •na to AC' bctwr ind bctkr an(J"'b(Ucr -·
Al .... ,, ......
-----
Manlnez adds ta.Dadgen'.lepcy.
22-year-old strikes out batters. with best
LOS ANGELES -When Ramon Martinez wu called u_p to the ~ leasuet for the ftn&
titM in 1911, the vacancy he filled on &he Los
Anaeles Dodem' roster . Wit created by the relcate of Don Sut\On.
If the 22·)'teM)ld Dominican risht·hander't
fint full tealOn in the ~on it any indication
it won't be the last time thole two names are
intertwined in Dodeers folklore. ~Inez, the most popular Ramon in this
town since silent screen star Ramon Navarro. has
enaqed in a see-saw banle this season with
Boston's Roaer Clemens for the major lcqut
strikeout lud and with the New York Mets'
Owi&ht Gooden for the National Leaauc lead. 1f be does win a leque strikeout tit.le,
Martinez will accomplish somethina Sutton
never did in his career, dnpite winnina 324
pmes and strikina out I 00 or more ·batters for 21 oonsecutive seasons.
"It's pretty obvious that he has the talent to
be an exceptional pitcher," said Sutton. an
Atlanta Braves broadc.aster who watch'td the 18-
strikeout Jlme at Dodger Stadi1,1m on J une 4 that
put Martinez on the major league map ..
"He·s a hard-working, nice. teachable kid.
Barring injuries or other influences. that n1&ht
could haveJ·ust scratched the surface."
Fernan o Valenzuela was the last Dodger to
lead the leaaue in strikeouts, in 198 1. Sandy
Koufax was the last to do it during a non-strike
year, 1966. Tim Belcher came within one
wbeft I st.nke out 18 betters, but I don'J worry
about jt," Manintl said. "Not now, maybe at the
end of the season. I only look for the strikeout pitch when I'm ahead in the count·~ ·
Maninn was called up for aood latt _year
afttt fannina 127 betters in 113 innings for aa..
AAA Albuquerque; he has walked only 25 batters
this season.
With 102 strikeouts 1n 771/J inninp,
Maninez is on a pace that wo uld bypass the top
five players on the Dodgers' all-time list. That
roster 1s headed by Sutton and includes
Valenzuela and · Hall of Famers Don Drysdale, Dazzy Vance and Koufax. .
"When Ramon first came up, he was very srcen," Dodger catcher Mike Scioscia Jaid. "He
had a tremendous fastball and changeup, but no
breaking pitch. Now he's coming up with a
curveblll that he's very consistent with, and I
think this is going to put him in a positjon as one
of 1he top pitchers 1ri our league. He's a verr.
mature young man for a ~l!Y onl y 22 years old. ·
Of his seven complete games in the majors.
four have been shutouts. He has struck out 10 or
more ballers five umo'I. including the 18 Atlanta
Braves that tied the club record held by Sandy
Koufax since l 959. Marline~ retired 18 con-
secutive ba"tters dunng that three-hit per-
formance, and his strikeout total was the largest
of any game in the h1S1ory of Chavez Ravine.
Martinez. who pitched at Docfltr Slad.ium
for th~ first tirne in 1984 11 1 mamber ol IM
Oommican Olympic Team, returned \0 tbat
mound Sunday lor the fint tame tisace .U. I 2).
piich, 80-tlrike ~ over the .. vea and
WIS just as dominatina.
He rccov~ttd from a lhaky fitst three inainp
t~ r~1rc lhc. last 14 San pieto P8dm in a foul.
hll, elaht-stnkeout, 14,·Pt\Cb effort that pve him
a kape~leadina five coms*ie pmn at the time.
He escaped a bases~loadcd, no-out jam in Ille
second inninJ and pitched ~o-hit ball durint the
fLDal 6-I innings.
"He has a great f11tbai.1 ;• Padres outfielder
and NL RBI leader Joe Carter said. "The fant
four or five innmss. he j ust didn't look like he
was 1n any kind of rhythm. Then from the .Ulh
annina on, he 1ust stancd oourina ps."
Martinez. 6-0 with a 1.44 cat"Md run •venee
in his six starts at Dodaer Stadium this year
leads the stafT wi th a 7-3 record and a 2. 78 earned
run average -his lowest since May 3. Five of
t~qsc v1ctoncs have come in his last six ck-
c1s1ons.
tr he has a flaw. it's that he takes 100 Iona
between p11ches. He works so deliberately that
the average lengt h of his 13 stans thil season is
3 hours flat. Although his five complete g.imes
have been decided m under 3 hours, three of
them have required 2:46 or longer to play.
Do ... ew pitcher •••on Martinea tu11 become the ace of
dM n.tf with the loa of Orel Herlhlser to lnJtff1.
·strikeout of league-leader Jose Dcl..con a year
qo. No one in the Dodger camp would be
surprised 1f Maninez ended the Jong drought.
"I know there aren't going to be many games
··1 don't think Ramon gets on the mound
without knowing what he wants to do with the
baseball,'' Sc1osc1a said.
"l've talked to Ramon about 1t," Sc1oscia
said. "Someti mes he's just gathering himself
mentally. knowing what he has to do to make a
pitch. So I think there's a method to his madness.
and I think maybe 1t ~ould be a detnment right
now to tell ham to JUSt go out there and stan
working quack.er."
Baltimore chases-Boston a-ce,
ends five-game losing streak
Clemens surrenders six runs
as Orioles earn 7-2 vict ory
Mired in a fi ve-game slid. the Baltimore Orioles
went out and hammered the maJOr lcaJues' winningest
pitcher, Roger Clemens, for six runs m less than two
tnnings to end his seven-game winning streak.
Baseball's a crazy P.me. isn't it?
~~ "What's so crazy? ' asked Balli-
,,-more manager Frank Robinson af\er
_.. the Orioles beat the Boston Red Sox
7-2 Monday ni&ht.
"Tha1's just the way this game
is -unpredictable," Robinson said.
"You go out there and face a pitcher,
you have bats in your hand, and
you're dangerous.
"Tonight. people said Boston wa s a Ioele It just
goes 10 show you that you never know what's going to
happen." Robinson said. "That's why they play the
game." ·
Clemens ( 11 -3) had not lost since May 4. He was
touched for seven htts and six runs -three of them
earned -in I 2-3 innings. ·
h was his honest outing si nce last Aug. 6. when
he left after one-thard of an inning because of an elbow
injury. He hadn't been chased since Aug. 14. 1988,
when he lasted only I 1-3 innings agaanst Detroit.
"I JUSt stunk 11 up." Clemens said. ··1 didn't have
a whole lot working ... I just featured the ball 1n the
middle of the plate. If you do 1hat. they're going to hit
you."
Th<' Orioles did Just that. With the score 1-1.
Baltimore sent I 0 men to the plate 1n the second inning.
Greg Walker walked, Tim Hulen sin&lcd and Bill
Ripken got a bunt single when Clemens fooked toward
1h1rd base and then threw too late to first .
After Steve Fmlcy struck out. shonstop Lujs
Rivera fumbled Mike Devereaux's grounder to let in a
run. Randy Mill igan then deli vered a two-run single to
right ·to make it 4-1.
Clemens struck out Mickey Tettleton. but Joe
Orsulak singled in a run and Cal R1pken did the same,
ending Clemens' night after 49 pitches._
Dave Johnson (6-4) allowed nine 1lfts. three by
Burks. It was the first complete game-by an Onole
pitcher si nce Johnson did 11 on May 18.
In other Amencan League games:
• Tlsers 7, AIJlleUcs %: Alan Trammell and John
Shelby homered to back the six-hit pitching of Jeff
Robinson and Ed Nunez for Detroit. Shelby's homer.
just hours after being called up from Triple-A Toledo,
was only his second in two years. Robinson (5-5) won
for the first time sn five stans.
• Royals I, Mari.Hrs %: Bo Jackson hat a three-run
homer and Mark Gub1cu struck out nine to continue
his domination of Seattle as the Kansas City Royals
beat the Mariners. Oubicza (4~6) won his seventh
consecutive decision over the Manners since Sept. 28,
1987. .
•Brewen 4, Yankees %: Robin Yount, Dave
Parker and Greg Brock hll RBI singles in a four-run fi rst
innina and the Milwaukee Brewers held off the New
York Yankees.
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Yankees' Sanders
balks at demotion
NEW YORK -When )he struggling New
York Yankees turned to yo6th. "Neon" Dc1on
Sanders was supposed to heat things up.
But "Freon" Dcion is ice cold. nding an O-
f~r.-24 slump. balling . I IJ and faci ng the possi-
bility of'a tnp to the minors. Which is fine for
most players. but not Sanders. who also plays
cornerback for the Atlanta Falcons.
Sanders has said that if the Yankees ~nd him
back to Colum!>us of the International ~ague he
wouldn't hesitate to finish the baseball season in
the Falcons' training camp. which opens July 21.
If Sanders Sla)S with the Yankees past that
date, he would be docktd on a per diem baSIS: if
he sat out the cnlll'c football season. tla1 amount
could Jump a~ high as 75 percent of 1he S2 million
s1gn1ng bonus the Falcons pa id him.
On tht other hand. leanng the Yankees would
cost anders his salar) for th e da)S he missed.
Sanders' ba'>cball agt•nt Ban) AJO.elrod said on
Monday.
Axtlro<l a<l<led that both teams knew 11 had
alwa}S been San~krs' .. pnv1lcgc and intention" to
begm the football season on lime. But that was
before a mediocre rookie-\Caso n with the Falcons,
combined v.1 th a more 'luccenful spnng traaning
w11h the Yankees, convinced Sanders to give
baseball anotht r 'lhol.
-By the A11ociated Press
• Ru1ers 7, Twtas J: Rookie Scou Coolbaugh.
recalled from th e minor hours earlier. keyed a five-run
second inning with a two-run smglc and Charlie Hough
pitched a four-h111er as the Texas Rangers beat Minne-
sota. th e Twins' 10th Ion rn 11 AAmes.
In other National l eague
gamc'l
• Gl1n11 !, Padres 1: Trevor
W1bon baffied ttn D1l'go for the
second time in a v.el'k and red -hot
Matt W1lhams hit his I 4th homer a!.
the surging San Francisco Giants
beat an Diego 2-1 Monday n1&ht
fo r their 16th v1ctOf) 1n l 7 games
this month.
It was also the Giants' ninth stra1sht victory. their
longest winning '>trcak •unce taking 10 1n a row in 1982.
San Francisco improved to 35-30.
•Expos 5, Cubs I: Dennis Maninez pitched a four-
h1tter and Spike Owen tied the National League record
for consecutive crrorless gnmcs 1n a season by a
shonstop as Montreal beat slumping Chicago.
Tom Fole y. staning his third game at S«ond base
in place or Dehno DcSh1elds. had a two-run tnpk and
an RBI double off Mike Harkey (5-3) in suppon of
Maninc1 (5-4)
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-~~
Houston shortstop R•f•el R•mlrez complet es double pl•y •• K•I o•n1e11 1llde1 an. ~.
Dodgers' B.elcher tops Astros ,
Daniels, Murray
lead w ay at plat e
as LA w ins, 5-2
ly BERNIE WILSON
,..,. ,....,,. 11/rtlet
Schedule
AT BAT
Tue· HOUl lon K 7 JS (tiom.)
ONDECK ~ We<!. Houston 7.JS (home)
IN THE HOLE
Thu Idle
All games on KABC radio (790)
• On TV, '" 11. K Sp0rttC'1armel
and back into plav. with Belcher and
Ja\ler sconng ·
Murra) then tnpled into the n&ht·
field comer for the third run· and
scored on Hubie Brooks' sacnficx
fl).
LOS .\NC1FLE~ -Kai C>Jn1l'I\
hit a t"o-run doubll' and Eddie
Murra)" followed with a tnple. h1gh -!1ght1ng a rour-run third inning as Bill (iulhcksun (4-'\), who beat the
the Los A.ngelcs Dodier\ pound<:d Dodgc.>ro; ~-4 la,t r uc~a} 1n Hou~
out 14 hits v.hilc beating the Hous-ton. allo~cd t\\u l·Jrncd runo, on
ton .\stros 5-~ Monda) night eight h1b 11t \I\ inning.' f..<H.h
The victor) "as ttmpcrc·J b) Dodger \tarter had a1 lc:i!>l onl' hll a\
another 1nJUr) to Kirk Gib on. who Los .\ngdts h~1ndcd llou,ton 11
has hccn on the ncll\t' roster less founh 'ltr.l1ght IO\\
Daniele, nl\o had t~o \!Ogles. Mur-
ra} got his second RRI whe n· he
dro"e in Ja' 1er with the third of four
straight singles otl relu.~"cr Dan
Schat1edC'r in the $('\ cnth The
fourth 1nglc, b) Brooks. loa&d the
bases. Mike . 1osc1a popped out and
. :,hatledcr gave wa> to Danny
Da~ in. w ho thre-w one pitch and
got M1._e . harpcrson 10 ground into
a double pla).
than a month. He 'ltrainl·d hi'I njht l wo of tht lhlgcr~· run\ 1n the
&rain runnmg out 3 -.ingle 1n the hr<ia third v.tn: unearned b<.-causc of
inning. lie lc:ft the game and v.ill be 'lhonstop Rafael RJm1rt•1\ error
re-examined Tuc\da) b) Dr Frank .. Belcher opened the inning with a Jobe single and. with one ou t. took scc-
G1b'>On s1ancd the \Cason on the ond when Rnm1rc1 fumt>led a
disabled hst. re1..o cnng from 'lu r-groundl·~ b) ~tan Juv1l·r. who n··
Mariners trade
Coles to Det roi t
• EA TTLE The cattle
gery last year on has left ham<1tnng placed (11b\On Danu.•I\ ramc wnh1n
He was act1,a1c<l Jun'-'~. inc~cs '!I hr~ 11th homer. but the
Manners traded outfielder-third
baseman Darnell Coles to Dctroi1 on
Monda for. ou1fielde1 Tracy Jonn.
marking the second time the M's
have ent (oles to Detroit. The third-inning upming helped ball boun,cd on th\' n·ntcr-!ield ~all
Tim Belcher (5-4) to his fif'.t '1ctof)
1n nearl y a month. Bckher's la st w:u
May 23 at (h1cago. which he fol-
lowed with three straight no--de-
c1111ons and a los'I at Hou,ton last
Wednesda~. Bck hcr allo~ed t~o
run!. and nine h1b in 71 1 1nn1ng11
Ja> Ho""cll . the third r>odgcr
patcher. worked the n11Hh for hi'>
third save .
ANGELS
from 111
"That sort of took the wind out of
our sails." -.aid Ron Clark. filling for
manager kfl r orborg. v.ho ~ns tll
cw Jcrsc\-for the high school
graduatton of his ron. Dale "If wt·
had scored tha t run nnd tied tht·
game, it might have hcen a diflcrtnt
game. But g.1ve bbo11 credit. he
worked his bull off."
Pamsh sinak<l in a run tn a t~o
run second off lo~r Jack McOo~ell
(3·4) aod hit his I 3th homer ofT
reltcvcr Wayne Edwards an the
seventh into the lo"cr uc k m left
field against a 20-milc.irn-hour
wind.
lt marked th~ fiOh tra1aht game
inn wt\lch the Angels had lmmercd
and was the 1xth homer 1h1~ month
by Parrish. who h11 a grond lam at
Detroit unday
The nacl orcd t~1 e 1n tht<
.-.crond. DavC' Winfield bro~e an O·
for-8 streak w11h a kadoff double.
-Hy IJI• A110Cltle4 Prts1
Orang~ Coast Daily Pil ot
Dodgers Play~r of Day
Tim •etcher, allowed j ust
two runs on nine hits .over 7 'A
Innings to .earn the victory.
TALLEY
From 111
The 28-)'ear-old \oks has strug-
e,led to push his balling average over
.200 much of this sea.son. l\s of
unday he WU batting 2 I 5 with \WO
home runs and 16 RBis in 37 games.
Jonc<i 1Ci b3llang 229 th1~ season
w1th four home run\ and nine RBis
1n 50 game\
-By Tiiie AHocllled Pre11
1 have pla)'cd Medtnah o. 3.
although not 1n 1t~· re-de 1gned
structure. and I was amaLed at how
well the pror. performed there
pl. ~off It put l""1n 1n w1th1n 8-foot throughout the Open, t'iptttally on
b1 rd1r rJn~l' ~nd ht• u>n,rrtl'd. do . und3~~nd Monda) when the
1ng hl'I lkllut hl 11nc 'hot. rnther pre u1 ( V.il\ grcatc!\t.
than IWO, with IU'I IWO hoks tu pl3\> nm I\ not 3 golfcOUf'S(' whctt one
This wall gol tht• old-tuh1oncd can be fnvolous. even if contender
way, a full, 18-hok pla)'off, a Billy Ra)' Brown ~hd to a penny at
decreed by Gi\ &ulc'I, certainly his golf ball on unday and come
the faire t way to decide a mnJor pcr'lously-clo~ to drawing a t•o-
champ1onsh1p. stroke penalty.
Ver) quickl y the-J'..lfl1<'1pan11> nd 11 was wmething which hap-•
began phi) mg each othc1 tMU.~ad of pcncd between Donald and Brown
tJ\r golf l'<>Ur~· 11 wa .. m!llch pla • which fortvcr insurrd that th11 1s
each mc:a!>unng hi!. ,hot h ) the lo-one runner-up who won't be for.
cauon of the opponent' b311. and I Ollen. It wa • unday. on the I 8th,
Donald. the leader from the ninth wath Brown nec<Jin110 make a I ~-
hole to the 18th. could not he cnti· footer to ttc, .,., hen Donald idled
cited. only appl:tudcd. over to htm and said, simply "Make
, He hit Ion& and §lnuaht, he 11." taractcd hl'I 1ron!o thmU&h th~ wind But 811ly Ray dJdn't make n (Jl'ttl,.
ausl ID\O the middle o(the arttn\, ing for a SS6.879 bonsolauon prize) •
and he putted con!trvota vcly. lag-and Mike Donald ldva.nad into 11~ whenever at wa.s prudenl Monday"s I 8·holc playoff which~
ht held his lc."ad and rrv.1n. came a 19-holc mcmOI')' he would
normall the tr:ughtcr hitter. had to hl(e to fo~t.
scram bit' to i..y ali ve. He won t be able 10 forttt 1t, of
It w1 beau11ru1 aolf. enhanced for courte, and knowina how the ~_,., --... -.-(!ti, ., L-W ..._._ lft>, ~II II)) ..._ ...... .. ..-._"' ...._ ... ,,,_..,_ a. "' the National ~-i•' ,~ .. ~ ..... '''
a... • " •"' • • 1...e-.ue Pliyec of the
"-" ... 1...M ' • • > i Weelt. ... • " • .... '° .Orange Coast Oalty PHot
,.,,,_ ,.,.., of Day
TV viewers b)' the nat, luas l(C(nt capnc1ou1 &od• tif l()lfwork. he may
and e"tpencnce of commentator never have that opponunaty llli•· . ....... ~"'~' ~ -~ ~.,,,. . .,_u _._, ....... , ..........
, . ' ' t
I • • •
• , ) l • • I 1 I f I I
I • • •
• • , •
~ ' 1 ,i 1 1 Ryan. 43. btat the Ath· ewi-1..11 , :n : t ~ ! ~
o. :=!:,!.! : .. 1 ~.,!_..! Jet1cs S-0 1n O.kland on ::,.:: • • • • • • "~.,. June It. atnk.1nt l\ut 14 o=:. • • -• 1 , i 11 ""*'" """"·-'"'' llW111'91'l, and walkana 1-0 -.._ .,.,.,,.. '~" ,,.., ..-L_, nw-. o..-'"" · ..._ ~ ,,..,.. t--..-~-'=====-f-*• " ,.,. · -1'1 A11u• ... Prete '~11 "->•.• .
'
J1111 M '•H, .-Ow.cf one
"'" on .sewn NU over _...,. JMlnp rm founh vklory
Dave Marr, and~ able to watch AtC't ,..., ts• I.a C.nn• t in•
TV on a Mo~ afternoon felt •tWke,.,, w1 • r wall' 4,. ..
almo,t 1u115a1 not bc•ftl hound to ~ a.I 0.., ,.,,., _, • t0n\Cwor~ dcf'tlbe.l)W)'oft ~,,_"..,.,,_ ~. I'll .., m
w111n'l avai bk. • ,..,....,.
• .. ----------------~ ---
Newport Aquatic Center. girls he~d to natf9na/S .,.,._ .... , ____ _
. . • I •
.. ., PUftlC
...... c. ........
NEWPORT BEACH -Rowin& at tbc Newpon
Aquatic Center ealenld a new dimension Ulil lpriJllo
wben ita jUAior woman'• quadruple tcUll crew wu
inviied to ~te at tbe Junior Natioul RowiQa
Cbampioosh.ipe an Indianapolis. June 21·24.
The competition wiU be conducted on the ASA-
1ponsottld £aa1e Creek Reservoir coune and will in·
elude ao elite selection of rowina powers. IUCb a1 Boaton Rowina O ub and Detroit Bolt Oub_ in the fint
event of national proponion1 for the Newport cn:w•1
newly developed junior pf'OIJ'All\.
MAJORS
STANDINGS
AmertcM L-.ue
WHfDIVIMC*
a...-~ .... Ml-.ot• s.a.me
T1111 Kem.a1Cnv
W L Pct. Ge
u 21 .. 1
Toronto
'°""" Daffolt MllWaUilff
Ci..94alld la!•lnlor• lit• Von
l1 14 A01
" » -31 l2 4'2
31 3S 47t H l1 01
,,. )6 ...
RAST OIVIMON . ,,
J5 H J1 :M 30 )J
" n JO :M
71 «I
MMmY'• sc-........ •.en~ 1
l •"lmor• I, l o•tOA 1 Detroit I, Oealand 1
l(•llMll Citv • S.a111t 1
MAwau•w 4 -vori. 1 T•-•• 1, MiMiMOll I °"'" 9.,,,.. ~ T-v··-
• 10
II
" IS
IS"'
........ iM<C .. •lM 4·31 at Cnlcago ,...,.., •·SJ, s·os om
OelL,."4 (Stew•rt f ·fl al O.trolt
(Te,..,.. S·41 • >S o m e.ff•mort 1M11ec1i1 J.Jl at Ciew4Ano
IF.,, .. l-41, •.JS D m lo\lon (W:IK•ar I )I at TorOAIO (C ... ul·
11 >-SJ. us o m Sffllle (Swan 1•01 •• Kan .. , Ctt• \Farr •·)),us 0 m.
-York ICarv l ·11 at MWw•U&ac Clo'IO 4·4}:-1.lS o"'
M•-.ota IAnclaoon 1·•1 •• T., .. (Jeflcoel 1·71. US om w--.Y'•G•-· ,,,,.... •• Cnlceeo sos om Oa•tano at Detroit 10.JS • m
New Yor\ et ~I••~"" l 1 lS • m
l a·t-• at Cle".,."° •.JS o"'
Botton •' Tor0tt10 •J.S en" S.a!lte at IC•nw• C11Y S.JS om
M•nne•ote •• r,,,, SJS om .
N41tlenal LMeue
WIST OIVISION
Cu..:~11
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San O>itao ~· Hout'CM'I ., .. _,,,.
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AMERICAN LEAGUE
Aneets 4, Wftn. Sox 1
CALf,OCNIA CHICAGO
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NATIONAL LEAGUE
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HOUSTON LOS .&NC.ELI\
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TRANSACTIONS
lASlaALL ,..AJOI! LEAGUE CIA!>EB•LL 1NTEI!
NAT ON•"-?&lfTN£1t~-Narr..c Slt ve
8aat' V•CI O>rn •dent tor lMrt\ Ofv9"00 ,..,.fll
A,_.ou .. ...._
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JOl't•\ ou~• t'<»' 10 tht' ~•'' • Ar'ar.,,~, •°' D•'~ C ' '"' ro N~ Pv<nu ea Jo<>n s-. o. outt-"om
f o-900 ot fhf t!'\1t'"•'~•1 !..••OU. MILWAUIC;EE llllEWEllS-P11tct o
"'•"' Mof.1·°' M<.ond Otnemi•.n. on '"' 11·
01 '1 dt\.I~ 11\t lltK• ieft 0 1-"t \WtYf'9'1 .m .. .,,.,. •"Of"' ~ •• , ~ .,_, "'"*'<..,,
AuOC: e'fO" TE K•\ llANC.C 11~-P'IC.., S•tn
8ve<.M.. IP'\1rO 0.M>"" •~ Of! '"'-I) Ol 'r oi••Oi.cl ... I C••taO .. o SColl Coofl>aUll"
tt\lro ot\em.en, frOf"'! 0-011"°""• (1111 ot ""' ""*·<•I'll •uoc1att0f'\ TO•ONTO I LUE JAVS-C,..,...,
,.,,...., W eP'f\ OJlf l"Oef Of'\ •I v*'\ TMall U l 10 l h tall >1 ~ 14 S ''Of'l"'I '"• O•tr-O't f .,,.r, k .,.1>v -...
" ... ,,.., 000 100 010-1 LM A-\ _. 000 Ol•-1 E-ttam•rat , OP HOU\OOfl , Lo•
"nee•• I LOl-HOu••Ot" I LO• An-10 1a-o.f\j., Je-Mu"•"' H•-G<N '°"
tt ) S&-!.f'aro.'M>n '' LHeH \ 11) SF-I•-•
N•-L-CH•C&GO CU&S-Ptacoo Jt•omo
Wa!tOf'I outf,•MMr on '"" 1s a.a• d•\.lt>i90 Ht •.c11*ed Ga1v Val'\J\O outh .. ~ ,,..otn
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BASKETBALL
lnMrnarl~I
U i MEN'$ NA TIOMAL TEAM
(at C-•de '-'"'9<, C• I
NOT[ ffle~ .,, '"'* «i-e~ "'"'g co" t•~'' 'Of' IS rci•~ '°°'' •o oe dt'tf.t'n'hfted
ftt""t •' ,..,. rwt~I 't•f"' l"W"O°'' CAfl"tO ~•v ••a~U'td • ,.,.~cu• •'°"' a orovo ~ 10 f"9 ·\t •• .-Ot rtOu<.ed ~o 1i o.-Juh•
10
11.0f!nv A•Cle'•O~. G<to#l>lt Ttcn Tooo 0t'f .,.,l,,H\ 'Ll\.r \ C#8tl1ft0 00 Oo·
f'T'l•fttOl'I, 86tl0¥ ftwr-., Ov•t Ct'\tt.U·•ft
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l ,f1v !>""'""' \<'•CJ,. ""-" ll•"<MM
ll•n•u ''" < ~"'"~ Con"<'<"t"' Oow St'Ntf\ M•t'°"'I 8ryen• St.th \ltf"t•~,. C•.,tn<• W .. fM,.,aoott SOU•~" M "~'
t N ~v W1 am\ NC (f't•"""'
BOXING , .. __ ,
JU N 1 0 • FE ... T Hlllt W[t0+1U-laward ,..,, .. l~tonl Otl
Je&u• fi'OH 11..00 .a"_...,, 111 ll·r-
un...-. OKlllOft to ..... IM II ( title
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DEEP SEA
aASl<•HALl ... _ ..... _A,_ .. _
MI NNE SOTA TIMll!llWOLVES-An-.nceo ,,,. rt•ie· ,,.,'°" Of too Zutttteto. •"'''ltU COKf'I '°
~ C.111 OKOfN A1" eu \fa'lt COl<ft •ttf'! '"" 0 • ., Me,,.,.tC•\
'°""Sl11NG TON 11.K.lE TS-Name<!
JOftn Na•n et-•I man•-C_ .. .,....._. .. , ... la_
"IL I ANY PAT •O<>Hr N•tned c;., alO
011 • ., _,,. manaw ano 111n~tor oo
MU•f oo.ratlOf'!t .......... -~ ElttE WAVE-$1tft94 ''°'' MlllWl .... l _,o, •no Karil• 111\Wr,,laa" IOl'w••O
'00TIAl..L _, ...... ~
HOUSTON Olt..E•~-S•..,•<I Ml•t Jtotl«' t~"I 09<' to • one·...., t"Oft• .....
$AN DIEGO CHA•C.EtU-$19 .... f.m
SH'l<tr '"""'ne .,." W_"'-.. A_,_
W~F-Aw110.0 . lren<,hlM to Fr•AA .. ly1t, WHI c;.,,...ny
COl.LIGI • MIO-AN.E•ICAN COHFUEtKE-Namto l(an llf'I-c.Offtff\ful-
EASlE•N WASHINGTON-AMO\lllC ...
'"81 II w'lf; dlKOftll-lt1 NMOt~ alld
•tt\tllfllt ••ttlt't •otr•'"' wousTO-A-...cM ,,,., Fred GI• ..,t •'* ran,,., n .. """""'"'' .,._ UCLA
... ~.~\IV c::::." !::'° G~tll11:::~\~
t11lllt~t .-i. inlorme toO'I O•rt<•or Nt(l10\.L$ STATE-,,_... ff\al n •II '°'" 11\t ~,....,.. Ctftl«MC• .itec• • lor Illa lfC l·'1 1(--• MO!tTHl•N .t.111ZOHA-M-o. .. lakeO tUhlai!I NtMtMI Ca.<11 aJICI tt<ru•!tne ,_.,,.,.,.,
~ITTSIU•O-Allf'l)Ull(to tN , .. .,.,.
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" ·~. -._., l..e'#I\ .. ._. COKll ~ Ille! IM l..u•~""
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u_..n o ,.'IC! !Mu.. * .. ,,awoa. J 0tNr1..,,..,1 N-Ce•OI $ w._ ...
_,,. I "'"°"' • ..-wt• • II mec:•t<tt, -l"'• •'llltl" e ... ctor .., ""''"v -" 14 °"'"''•~ 1t '4 ...... I .. c.-t "" i , T(MPLE-........ C...,ltfw C11t1\
-.. ... .... ......... ..... .._(MCI\ OAV9M l.OOC•• ,......,, ._., U$ NTE.llHA,ION•L•A.._. .. -I llHI\ JM~ tit Mr?k\IW, 111 tM 1..itl!a14'1 .. WOW. W.ltlll _ .. ....... t yf4IO..,aH JTJ callct ..... 11 ._ 9'tlll11t1t ....... Oel ~IMI(~ ,.._ Jotwl
... ., ~S m«Urtt M ""' -• It'! Kr~ -Oon ·~,,_,,lull l!IN
rtlte-1 I _..O -· t Ultlltllol 9'tl\ltlll -.,!Ml lMCM\
NAC'1 quadruple llCUll -or q&lld, u it ii popuJuty
called -couiata or Heidi Scbenet, Kristen cro.u.
Jeune Garrison and Anne Phillippi, all &om ara biab
ICboola. Croleau and Ganiloa are ft'om Newport
. Haltlol' Hiab, Scbetler is f'rom Univeni:i::iah in lrViDe
and Phillipp& from Corona Del Mar · .
'°do lb.ia." S&ncban taid or his crew. 04We would lib
to win (iD l""k•Poli•). but all we cu do rilb• 110W
is uain bard. do our belt and • what bappeDI "
When ubd about what l'Owin& meut IO ber.
Phillippi, wbo ii a aenior and will bave IO mill a.
ancSwatiOD iD order IO cc:c· uplainod. ........... so much. I love tbe to&al • lion a.Dd dildptine daa& U ader the leadmhip or Coecb Bob Stncban, the
team bu experienced a very 1ucceuful KUOn. flnilhina
a cle>1e teeond '° LoDJ Beach Rowina Aasociauon at I.be
state championships in May, then comina beck with an
it takes. and I.feel aooct about sivina 100 pen:ent."
Phillippi. whq won f.hc state championtbip ~
1eulll event earlier tJliJ teason. wiU also combine with
Scbetlet to row in lbe double tcuU division iD ID·
dianapoli1. She plan1 to continue her rowina experience
at San Dieao State, where she will be tran1ferina nut
fall
impressive viaory over the ume &eam two weekt later
in a reptta at Newport Beach.
"We have a ~t bunch of airls, who rally want
For the record
. SOCCER
1"°WertdCutt ,.ST •CMHH> ._ ..
w L T ., •• ""' a·C1c~ .. 1e , 0 • • l 4 a·tl•lv , 0 0 ' 0 4 Auatrle 0 7 0 0 1 0
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So•iet Uftlon I 1 0 4 4 7
• ·QU<llffiet tor MCono rounci ._,..,.,SC-, .......... _,
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$-0 7 0 7 • 0 ~, .. ,..., __ ,_ _.,.,.._
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lat Milan, ttatvJ
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(al P-...., $1<1¥)
Ir• an.a "' Nt'"••'°'"°' "'00"
BOWLING
PBA Senior <>I*' lat \I Clla,..\, -I
1Th•9"111 •h .. -.1
I 1
I 1
1 1
1 P,,11 P0111'\\lr..• am.na Ntb t '11 1
1t,cF'l1,o t~'ft•' rtf'rn•no,Of'I ""'"• 1 •1•
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l 'f "'flef L...C •rt •owe 11'1
} JO""' Pee. t < ~I LO~•\ I H~ t 8 ·+l
C,ei,;mt ., 'Gn On•o 1.)St ' (l•'•f'I(.• He'rt•••Y s.." Al\tOl"l.0 ' )lt 10 J•n.1:
O•<t ' s ..... ,,.9f fl ff•U I )71 " .....
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""a ltf'OO·ne • l IJ 1l Oev•O If •M M(F' ., .. ~ W1\ 1 lOt
u G-oe .... g ""o• 1• 1 xn is o...
Wa.-T1o1P>e.IO M iu 1 >01 1• fh• IN•ao'"' le G't' I• I 1'I II C. l Molltr
AIOvOueroue I 191 II llO" -
'T et.O""tl Nur>1 I ,,.l
1t Puo Af'fGit\\O" 8rO'I• "'I Y 1 1'1
10 "'" c;,;•~. T1•oe~ Tt>I\ I"'' n lf•t l 9, .. &tACf'I \P'l•1on Pt •"d Don McCuttt
Hl9n••"CI '"" I 190 TS. M'•t tt...cn
ltt\IC• M·<" 1 1.. 74 80'li0 Ha~O~
W•'""" ,..,,... C0-io I 111
U.S. <>I*'
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l•t-.•I
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.,., •• Oot\al(J '110 000 ., 10 n 11-JtO
N" '•"'° 1s. t it n n .. 0 -111 I t 11 .. l •O"" IS. 11' t9 II •t 11-111
~· 1r ..... , U • 111 .. 10 n 1>-m
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Stt•t J-• \11 IJI 61 16 14 tl-11• S<Oll HCKn UJ 1)1 10 ll •• n -114
Tom S °'"""''~ 1n 7ll 10 I• .. n-n. J M Olar.o. 1n 111 11 " '' n-n. F,..11~ lM"' Ul 111 I> 10 .. 13-1'4
L•"• M,lt l lS ,,, n 10 •• 14-11S
J•""l-H \IS 117 ll 10 I) 10-11S JOM Hu\IC)f\ \IS ~17 61 n ,, 11-n s
JOM """41n \IS Ill /1 II 10 11-1.S
Sco11 S """"" \IS 111 .. 1l I) 1)-11}
J9" S"'"'a" Sf) 117 .. 70 14 IS-1'S Lu rv N••O!' II~ 112 14 61 •t 7S-11S
'"'' • siranw '11 "'l ll·IO .. IS-79' Ian W-nam '17 14.l 70 10 14 11-1'4 ~to•• E"l"O'l)<I 111 '4J ll·/1 l»••-n. Cortv p .. ,,, \I I 30t 14 10 IJ 10-'ltl
1 ... r..••·•111 .JOt 1•-10 n·11-n1
J""'°°Or••· u 1 >at 13 n '' -111 WtOO Ht .... ""' \II 30t 10 IS " _,.I
Pav All_, •11 J0t n 11 •f 14-117
Cn•o CIK• \10 0'11 II 11·13 T>-1ll
M ~·Hui-• \10 on ,. ... 11 1s-111 I• Pnll M><;U l\Oft 14 11 II 11-1Jl
•• •• ,, .. , '10 on 10 11 1t 1..-,..
J·..,,G• ""' J• w n 1 11 ••n 11-m ha k rvr .. n ' 7) 70·•• 11-m aooL""' wn • 11 ·1• n 11-m ,,.o ...... M.n 1 n •' 1•·n-m Mi"t ll••O M 771 70·/J ._ 7t-7t'l On1a Fro.,, II 711 11·11 11 13-7t'l lloo Twn II n t •• /1 U ,.._,..
t<>'" r ,...,.., st 711 11·10 IS 11-7t'l
~:;.1,:;;:ns.",;,11 ::-r: ~.~:
loOOv llllaO•on\, It 111 /I 1J 71 ,.,_,.. S.•• 1a11e••••o• '8.n• ,,_., 11-1..-m Jaco NIC .... ,.., M 711 II 74 .. 1..-m
C•• o Pan• M 611 11 /I .. ,._HO
0•••"""'-'' \t 141 IJ·ll 10 11-191
•-• TroomP>O~ M 141 11·1J·l1·1S-1tl
Oa•t Clalf M, 141 1• II H 11-:rfl
-• McCu"'°"' W 141 7'·&1 /4 1)-1'1 Anav Nor•n U 11• 1'· 11 /I 1..-m
I •• G!e''°"' s$ 114 11 IJ 17 1...-7'1 •••Siewert U I.. 10·1•·n IS-7"1
G'" Tw•ff• u 1•• n 10 n 11-m
L•l\f\•W•Ot.·n• u ,.. n·n 10 1t-m I OI> G...,_,. 14 6'4 1 H O 74 11-:rfl
Gil Moreen."·''' 10·11 ll 7t-1tl •·D••IO Duv•• • 11·n 11·11-m
1 .. ,,,.~-" u ••• ll·Tl 1S 7S-:rfl TD"' It••• M.••• IS-10-14 7.._1'1
\con v., .. _ M U0 11 •• 11·1..-1'•
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On .oGral\..,. ... IOI 11IJ14 ,._,..
Ho•••a T•"'" u SOI '""'" 11-m area r •• .., u .SCll 10 I• 1 .. t 1->01
M•-t Smotl\ U sell 11 11 11·-->0l
• .,..,. Wy1 .. M IOI ,._l)•ll·U->Gl
~lf'\amat~ ._....°" °" f1ttt ~ Of \udde>n•W.IP't
etttr b01~ .,. • .,, '~' I• •n an II -
01 .. ~11
TH••e Oil -· W,.., w .... ·--lfOl ''°J·tS --· -1'1> • ., •. ,.,, JO .... -·· If ... lf!>Cl·~I lfil JIK-MIO .. u\ 1 .. 1. 1 .. 1. lf17 ltlO 1'4•1e lrw.n .•• ,. ""· '"° -
PLAY~, ..iiTOllV
ltOl-lN A-\Oll II} a.I ••• Sift.ti\ 116) Mv'""• Hunt (i\ol(I 1'4•"'~'°" -.. ltCQ-W•~ia •n-'°" till C1t1 Ot "1CI l rown ( .. I l ailUllOI G ( Wrl MIHl, M J
lt0t-Fr.., Mel-1111 Oft W"1 ..
$1\'\•IFI (l)l My... Hllf\I '"" H-ton -.. 1'10-Ate> StMll 111) .,_. JoM
'k09r,...!I CU I •llCI ~-Id imtll\ (71)
Plllleo.tllll .. Criott Clue. Cl'lt•tnut Hll , P•
ltlt-JoM Mc0...11'1611 (llO) °" ""'''' l taflr tf1l •no o-.. 5-IH I (Ilk.-G C WlltalOft, 11
lfl>-F•f"<I\ ~· 1121 ... ""'"' Vat .... 1111 ""41 Ct•8'd llay (1'1 Tiie
c-1,.,, c1111>, ••01111•11e. Moo"
ltlt-Wall.,. M-1111 .-i Mfkt
llriHl\I 11'1 l •tt t ur" ( C, WMI -IOI\ Mau ~ -· (7tl .......... (tli'(•\lltM l.ltl. In•-. cc '"-· MY ,., w Ma<,.,_ ( ..,, ... ._,
::::: I l .. f, WottcMI... C C WOtttlty,
1'11-T.,.,.... ......... ,., ..... .,,. ,_ ,,., 0.•-1 c ( o.io-,.. ,,,. •W-. ,..,... 101 .........
IOM\ (I .. ) OWINMa ,:_, ( ( Mallt-. "' 1'7t-....., JOM• (1'1) tHI Al ltH!ow 11 .. 1. W...... ,OOI G C ~-•lll Y
How our Orange Coast area
baseball products are doing· ,..,... ...... , "9vw,--.,........,..cmu> ..... • • , ~ .. • • Ir ... ltlctt Amerel <Eslencle, OCC), ... Vencouver (AAA) .JU .. "' a 61 • 1 1• Tom .. lne (UCI), OJ=, Ponlaocl (AAA) .$ I f1 2 1 1 • • • Jemea luc:cfll(1 (fMrlne, GWC), 21>. Hun11vl .. (AA) .1.S 16 a 10 12 1 1 • ,
fMrtv Cordova COCCI, OJ=, K-"e (A) .J74 J61M 1' S4 , 4 I 14
Lou Delley (Ca.ta Meul, C, S.llnea (A) .m 17 .. 10 1J 0 • 2 7 llol*v De&ardln (Mater Dell, u , AINftv CAA) .m • 114 ti • 1J 0 1 11 JoM Ecdn (Mater Del), dtt, Or1Mdo (AA) .1tl ,. " 11 " I • • 7
Jeff Gardner (Eslencle, OCCI. a . Tldlw•• (AAA) .2ll " * 21 .s 2 1 • 14
Dwrln Garner COCCl. 21>. Tutu (AA) .m S1 1'1 • a I t 0 ll
8-Hamelln Urvlnel. lb, Omelta (AAA) .1• 16 "' 17 • 1 0 s " Mike Huvter (Marine, GWC), 11, S.lem CAI -61 m n 71 t 2 2 •
Joev Jamet (NewPOtt Harbor, OCC), II, Cllnton (Al ... 61 221 f7 " IO 2 11 14
K...,ln KUMr (SCCI, 21>, Clinton (Al .m S1 ll1 tt a I 0 1 11
Jeff Ktnt (EdllOll), a . Dunedin (A) .. .,m .. .. " 2 11 a ltven Klnko (WestmlMter), dtl, DurMm (A) .171 10 40 4 7 1 0 I ,
lrtnt Mayne ~Cotti MeM, OCCl. c, Mamonls (AA) .240 • 217 n 12 I 2 I 40 lobby fMlcflem CM.titer Del), u , Omehl (AAA) .n1 S7 m n 40 t , 1 lO Andv Moll (GWC), a . COlul'nbu• (AA) .tt1 71 254 J7 74 1J 1 I 41 Jemie Nelton COCCI. c. Portland (AMI .m tt a I " , 0 1 I ltlck Nellon COCCI. of, )N'eveport (AAI .11' 17 M 4 • 2 0 1 2 Jeff Olllrdenk (UC I), a . Palm Sorlnes (A) .2'5 SI 1t2 16 a • , 0 22 Gree O'Helloren COCCI. dtt. Dunedin (A) .2" ., 2• '5 74 " 2 I • Crelo Paquette (GWC), lb, Modesto (A) .225 67 24t S4 56 • 1 IO 12 ••• Ptten COCCI. lb, VfKO 8tecf\ (A) .212 ., 220-12 61 12 0 • 51 O..,....Ofldt (Corona Of! Maf), 2b, Tucson (AAA I .M7 2t 167 41 51 10 1 0 It Steve Sorlneer <Marine), :lb, ColO. SorlflO\ (AAA) .m 1• 16 J2 12 1 , 21 D1v1 Sl1ton COCCI, lb, Rlv«sldt CAI .us '7 24t ,. " 13 I 14 ..
"*Mn fltlyer, ...... tMm (dlU ) ... .,. • • '" .. II • .. G1rv 9UCllllS (Hin. 9eKh. GWC), Edmonton IAAAI H 1n "' 0 • 21.2 2t 10 14
Jim FOleV (OCC), San Jose (A) 1-0 2.90 12 I 1 no 24 2t ,.
Tim FortUllN> (SCC>. 9eloll (Al M uo 21 0 4 &1 2t H 11 01vld Holdrldoe (Ocain View), RHdlno (AA> ~ Linton <UCll, Svrecuse (AAA) s-s 4.36 12 12 0 M.O 61 •1 ,.
S-• Ut 12 12 0 77.1 n 21 55 Klf'I Luekllam (LOS Aml901), OsceOll (A) J-6 3~ 14 14 0 11.1 a .. • Greoo M.tlrlln (GWC), Mvrtlt 9eaeh (Al 2-2 2.J7 23 0 ' 30.1 15 21 40
Mlllt Mlsurec. (OCCJ, KtllMN (A) •·S UI 13 13 0 IO.O 71 22 51 Ed Pierce COCCI, 81stbell Cltv CAI 1-0 2.St " 0 > 24.1 22 11 f7 Rod Polsi1n1 (I rvine>. Ptnlnsul1 (A) 1-2 2.11 11 0 5 20.2 17 11 15
TENNIS
W~Meds
181 w--l,,.._I .-lS·JulY I
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Swt<Mf' ' JO"" McEnto. (Ovf Ne<•
N v I A"dtH GO"\t1 Ee"•-• T•m
Ma \'001 80\tOf" 1 8164 Ci .bef'• P .o:
mof"t I ••"Olli •v <., \te ,, Ciro"• flo.f'I'• Mot" 9 J m c...., er o-C·"' F,. 10 Jona\ h •nllO" Sw~ It G.1o1v F"at~t
F' •net 17 Po•t ~amor "'· 11 a'IChO P•lo•
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Nem• Montv I Mo••u s.·o VO IJ'I
1 i'&"· C.•a• IS71 171 ) Matt !\a .... _,......... ,...., ..,~
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1• .. ..__ P•o• ' \110 000 It Htt• llt .. I S'9 nl
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t Tlw..,tlfl ,_.,,, Tau-I
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NAC, a private, non1'f'Oftl Olllftizllion ~
10 dnelopiQI and ~ Ofym~ rowt. ta,uias and eanoe•na. will be Coodaacuna leama
prapun1 for chi.ldren .ct I throual\ I 3 ~ Jul 9. lllbiDd tbc efbtl or tie newly tefected ctinctor Pa Priol.u, NAC will continue ill pll &o PoPUllriae
•ter .,ant and annct more memben. whoee num
DOW tlcieeds 450.
The center located on Upper Newport Bay, h
a modtm 8,000:square-foot boltboute with weiabt Ulinina equipment, locker rooms and lhowen. u wel
u a public dock and bea(:h area. It offers ~kly c_
in 1euUina and kayakina.
OPEN
'romll
the extra 18 in 74, two over par but a respectable ICO
in the winds that gusted to 3S mph over the No.
coune at the Medinth Country Club, at 7,195 yards lb
lonacst ever used in an Open. So, for the first time ever in an Open, they wen
back to the No. I tee and began play under a sudden
death format .
"Standing on the tee, I had a pretty good.suspicio
that SOJneone was 1oing to birdie that hole,' sai
Donald, who had done it himself Saturday, Sunday an
earlier Monday.
He wu right.
With the wind bloWing straight into his f~
Donald played a low second shot under the austs an
ran it to the· front of the green, some 30 feet from th
flag.
Irwin took a different approach. He played a high
second shot and let the wind stop it some 8 feet from
the pin. After Donald missed his long putt, the ball drit\in
off to the right, Irwin ran the winner home and wen
leapina into the air before being embraced by his wifi
and daughter .
It was not. he was quick to recognize. an artistic
triumph. But it was achieved in a manner that bas
become Irwin's trademark over 22 seasons on the pro
tour.
He ground it out.
He kept plugging away. making the most of what
be had; grinding and striving and perscvcnnJ. lt is the
method he has used to collect 18 victones and a
respected rcputa1ion among his peers.
"I had to keep pecking away. Not a great day, but
I had to stay right there." Irwin said .
He made some mistakes. too. A couple of fairway
woods from deep rough, on the fifth and 12th, did not
tum out the way he had planned. Each cost him a
bogey.
He was three over par for the day and two shots
behind Donald going to the 16th tcr.
"I figured three solid pars and the championship
1s mine." Donald said.
He got a rou1inr. 2-putt par on the 16th, but ll'Wln
birdied from about 6 fet"t on the hardest hole on the
course and the margin had been cu1 to a single stroke
with two holes to go.
The f 7th was halved with pars.
DUNN
From 81
afternoon."
McCall batted .340 with c1ptt home runs and 31
RBI for Orange Coas1 College this S{>ring as a freshman.
The Houston Astros had drafted him last June out of
Rancho Alamitos High. but failed to sign him.
"They had a chance to sign him before the draft.
and l thought they would." Crosby said. "But I'm
happy they didn't. I was a lmle bit surprised."
So McCall officially became property of the Indians
at 9:30 a.m. that day. then caupll a flight out of LAX
at I p.m. and touched down in Cleveland at 8 p.m.
(EST).
"I was scared," McCall said Monday from Winter
Haven, Fla., where the Indians sent him to play in the
Gulf Coast (rook1r) League "It was fun once I got
around and got to know everybod). Most of the 01hcr
players fiad been thef'C a few days. and I JUSt got lhcre,
so 11 was kind of weird.
"(The towering BP home run) was down the righl-
ficld line and landed in the upper deck aboul three or
four rows up. I wasn't doing 100 good before that.
because I hadn't hil for a month or so. But l thought
about the thin~ (OCC Coach Mike) Mayne had lold
me. I can't (descnbe how l felt). l can't explain it."
The Indians were in Detroit. so McCall and thr
other recent signees were unable to rub elbows with the
big boys. It was one day of practice on the big le.a.Jue
diamond. The next da) was reserved for physical
exams, then it was off to Flonda.
"l want to get out of here." McCall said. "ll°s hot
and muggy. The . other da> it was 90 degrees and
raining."
At this pace. McCall won't be tn Florida long. After
all. the fndians arc going to be in need of a first
baseman. Keilh Hernandez is 36 and injured again .
"I thought he had a chance matnly because of his
size," Crosby said. "I liked him an htgh school, but 1
wasn't overly excited. He really improved from high
school tO' has first year in junior college. Once I saw him
at Orange Coast. I was impressed by how much he'd
improved .
"You don't sec 100 man) 6-7 kids.. but he's vcr)
agile at first baSt:. He moves like a smaller man."
McCall's bat will get hi m to the big leagues ~uicker
than Hernandcz·s career could come to. end. With Jtis
potential. Crosby secs a future star .
"He just needs to learn how to turn on the ball and
p~ll the ball," Cro!lby said. "If he does. you'll Stt a
different Rod McCall. If he learns to pull the ball and
gains confidence on the in~idc pitch. he·s going to hit
the ball out of sight.
"Our organi1at1on was looking for a power-hitting
first baseman and b) sign ing Rod. hopefully we've
fo und 1he answer to Kotth Hernandez -and who
knows how long he's going to play."
McCall is the first player Crosby has signed since
joinin• the Indians. Among others. Crosby landed Craig
Worthington while with Baltimore. Crosby played with
1hrcc big league teams. 0
. On th.e recru~ting fron~. Orange C'o~st came away
wtth the biggest pitching pnze: Ocean View thgh right·
hander Duane Page. a I 5th-round selection of the
Baltimore Orioles who IS a definite-major tcaaue
prospect.
Page said the decidin& factor was teamina that
Mayne was coming back to be the head coach. Now if
o~ly Manna catcher Robin Lindsey would make up his
mind. ·
0
Former ()('(' standout Kevin Reimer. who punish·
ed many fastballs wh ile playing at Coast 1n 1983 and
1984. has no gripes about being a pinch-hatter for 1hc
Teus Rangers.
"The c:oncem 1s bcm~ young (2S) and C9".1"i na off
the bench." Reimer said. • I ve bttn doing th• job, and
I don't care if I play everyday. I just enjoy bcana hctt.
Being young. a pmch·hitter is a tough job to have, but
I'd say bcina a DH is tough. too. and I've dont that a
lot."
Guess bcin.g 1n "The Show" 1sn'1 all that bad.
0
The annual M-.ior uague Sooutina Bureau 1ryout
camp 11 this Friday and Saturday (9 a.m.) .at Oraf\IC
Coa.st Collqc. I remember 1oina in 1983 and 1tt1na one
o.f my former teammates. pitchtr Kelly Simon, ,et
Sllftcd. .
imon W. picked up h the Seattle Marinm after
the l'ft'O-d.\y se ion wh('n thC' bureau ubmtttcd itt
rt port.
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Hunt. ltlCh 1040 ly SYDNEY OMARll
....._.LITS" 1Taetday, Jue It
Tl ... llUll t ARIES (March 21-Apnl 19): Unusual opportunity eJUsts for
12.100 sit lot. 4-&BR. 3BAll financial coup. You'll add to possc5'Sions. you'll also have access to
home wtpool. apa. ott1<:1a1 legitimate financial infonnation. You could rcctive inside tip.
paddle tennia oourt. flre-1 •
pit & BBQ area AV ac·I TAURUS (A ·1 20..M '0) M . . h·ght "•h o.S. & mature prOduclng . pn .a~ .-. : oon an your Sign 1 •.-~ts citrus trees Spectatj agaress1vencss. confidence. m1t1at1ve. Do not follow crowd! Spothght
financing & only 11ep1 10 innovation. willingness to take chance on romance. Yo.u'll win
the t>Meh debate concern ing property ownership.
----1-11111 $529.900 CHUCK & LJZ JO NES 8'&-5743
FSBO. SACRIFICE 5Br 38a. 4792 Hermanaon 2827 all. Next to Hunt Hbr $489K Aon 848-8727
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Scenario features intrigue. mystery.
sense of direction. Focus on teaching. learning. rcumting with famil y
mecnber. Excellent meal tonight could help settle differences.
Aquarian plays role.
CANCER (June 21-July 22): Obtain hint from Gemini message.
Key is to diversify, to make inquiries, to ·keep open mind without
being gullible. lntormation received related to diet. nutrition -
valid. Pay attention!
_____ -_-_;;;'!'! LEO (JuJy 23-Aug. 22): Foothold gained in connection with
UaLw\l ltlCh 1048 promotion, production. display. Attention revolves around business. .,. •ft LIT career, e!evation of ~rcstige .. Those who previously ridicultd could
Ocean a city vleWI. 21,740 now be in awe. You re a wtnncr.
a.t. w/plant 10 build an ••t•te In guard gated VIRGO (Aug. 23-Scpt. 22): You're in your natural habitat -
area w/pvt ~acht A features clash of ideas. Emphasis also on written word, flirtation.
value at St.395,000. Call short trip involving relative. Proper perspective surfaces.features P~~~~~~e:o?AE foreknowledge and style.
UBRA {Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Domestic adjustment revolves
around earning power. recent acquisition relying upon credit.
Durable household goods could place dent in budact. Reunion
-------~ tonight will fcat4rc display of affection. ,...,, V!tJo 1067 stoRPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): You'll be provided with cover
--------story. Means don't tell all. protect sources. Lunar 'position accents ,... Tl llW ~blic relatfons. pannership. mamaae. Time is on your side. Pitcn.
Owner hat bought Virao persons play roles.
1not,.,.rl Beat buy In
Mlulon Viejo!. bike to SAGl'M'ARlUS (Nov. 22-Dcc. 21 ): What you have bttn duckina
=~::· ~1~:i; can no lo1nacr be ev~shdedhor pu~~~beasi~~ Fa~ flha~~,.~t they ex1ist. bedroom retr .. i. 1.75 not.mere y as you ws t ey m1..,t . """nano ........ ts cmp oy-
bath, La Famllla Model ment, baSIC tasks. dependents.
on large cOfner lot(owr ,
9500 eq.ft .) vaolted cell· CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. I 9): Influence spreads. crcatlVlty
Inge ... large country featured, physjcal attraction highlighted. You'll be iaying, "This is
kitchen. family neigh· 1oin• to be an exciting Tircsday." People ~ drawn to you some bofhOOd. OM fl~ 'II;~ fj..I-th . I • ONL y t2 f2.500 CALL WI con ·~ car ovc. .
~ow WONT LASTI Krit
•· c.n~2t TOday AQUAJUUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): You're ready for ftesh start.
reetty &e1·21 pre"pered to take 1tcpt which insu.re future ttlcurity. Let go of that
pan of pest wbicb ~ dcsttuetive, demoraHzina. light is now abed _......,;. ______ upon vtt0r. enthusiasm, l'Omance.
Nlwl!!!.lllCft 1069 ~ (Feb. l 9-Marcb 20): Intuitive intcUect Yte>rb ovtttimc.
'W'OCIAN V1'WS W You know without formal study. you pefCICive f\nu~ ha~ninp. L~8~Pf1f'M-= You~U have luck in mattcn ofspecu.latiol\ by 1tick.ina witti number 111ONncty~-11w 1i i 2. Emphasis also on rood. ,
LS!IOPT Wall to beeetl. II" .JUNE It II YOVR BtaTBDAY: You are dynamic: indcDen· ~ :O..:*• dent, leMUal and many claim you have pant Cl(). Stay away &om
642·175t. at).4&e·t13f· OOff!m.itttts, lead rather than fc>llow. You are romanUc. capable of -aenana.to heart of mattrn. CurTCnt 1C1Cnano htuns added relPOftli· ~ IUl. ILll bility, dcadtinn. financial ~rd. marital status. possible addition
BALBOA PENINIU\.A 1 to family. Leo, Aquarius persons play imponant roles in your life.
SPECIALIST Before J\lnc is fillasl\td you mjaht be llyl"lo "Tbit time l'm IUrt
___ 1.._1_..... about lctvt!" _Sepcember will also be memorable.
·.
ly ,ATlllC WALKER
Taetclay, Jue lt
· ARIES (March 21-Apnl 10): Contradictory planetary influences
certainly Stt!ll to be making this a time of emouonal highs followed
by qulle devastating lows. However. having badgered close associates
to lay everything on the line. you really cannot complain if what you
arc now told is not exactly what yo u wanted to hear.
TAURUS (April 21 -May 21 ): Tender and long-suffering you may
be. timid and easily swayed you are not. In fact. those who have let
you down or given you the runaround recently are about to discover
JUSt how forthright and forceful you can be.
GEMINI (May 22-June 21 ): Were it not for a challenging aspect
between Mars and Neptune. }OU would be 1n high spirits and as free
as a bird. But th ere 1t as and here you are -still unable to make
any long-term plans until a joint financial. business, legal or w
matter is a thing of the past.
CANCER (June 22-July 23): Both employers and panners seem
to be giving you the runaround at the moment and no doubt you
are close to breaking point. However. beware of going way over the
top and bringing about a rift or separation that would be nigh
impossible to heat.
LEO (July 24-Aug. 23): What came to light recently appears to
have sown seeds of doubt where there should be trust and
tOJethemess. However. try to realize that pressures of work and
manor health problems tend to make others offhand. argumentative
and uptight.
VlRGt) (Aug. 24-Sept. 13): Mars now at odds wtth Neptune
denotes conflicts with loved ones or close companions and confusion
over financial arrangements. However. maybe you needed to be
brought up short and remember what has been achieved through
joint endeavors.
LIBRA (Sc{>t. 24-0ct. 23): What transpires after the 21st will
give you a fair idea of just how important the next few weeks &t(
going to be for career or professional interests. Also, how you must
conduct yourself in the face of antagonism or rcsentmetft in your
very personal life or on the home front.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22): It may take all your renowned
willpoWc:r and a tos of lip-biting not to co into battle over what you
consider to be a breach of confidence or etiq"cuc. However. there
really is far too much at stake for you to play all your trump cards
just yet.
SAGl'M'ARIUS (Nov. 23-Dcc. 21 ): Keep remembering that
Jupiter. your ruler. is stall supporttd by Pluto in Scorpio and
therefore. no matter whet loytd ones. colleagues or close associates
think. say or do, no one and nothing can act the better of you over
a joint financial arTangcment1 or business matter.
CAPRICORN (Occ. 22-J~. 20): Althouah there is a New Moon
in your opposite sign of Cancer on the 22nd. this should only tern
to remind you that when we dina to pain we end up punishlna
ourselves. Added to which. other planctuy influences should now
be giving }'OU more cne11y. ftesh hope and renewed optimism.
AQUARIUS (Jart 21-Feb. 19): Accept the olive branch partners
or close co.;ipanions are now certain to proffer and then oo~ntrate
on setting blck into peak phy 1 al condition. You have been throuah
the mill emotionally and your body is tclhna you to calm down,
conet youf"S(lf and forget about settling penonal or probional
sco~ (Feb. 20..March 20): Don't miss out on a sina)e
OpPOn\lllit)' to arf your op1n1on1 and I excn your authority and
indepcndcna-. Pluto in Scorpio 11iU 1u~ by Jupiter has I.be
ability to ~verse all the dreary and neptavc tttnds of the put h
months. also fo~ othtn to settle their outstandina debts or honor
their moral obtiptions.
IJ' YOUll BlllTHDAY 18 TODAY: The planetary tci-up on your
bin.hda)• is a rather contrad1crory one and 'it would tttm that
circumstances beyond }our control are about to force you to
reconsickr your lona·tcrm career prOJpecU and ftnanaaJ position.
But mt assuml -even a major upheaval or ~rpniz:ation wtU be
to 1our advantaat.
..,.
540-1220
496-6800
Or.nge COMt DA.IL Y PILOT /Tu.d8y, ~ 19, 1980 •
HHIDfil .
..en C' for JUmpmg to gamt.
h>r thC' opcmng ~aho. w <",t
cho)e a <.afr trump rather than nsL
lead111g from a tenace DeclarC'r v.on
and drt" another round of trump~.
ending in dummy Wnh Wtst
markC'd for almost evC'r) missing
card , d«larcr "'a~ m danger of los·
mg one hC'an. onC' diamond and two
dub~ unks\ he could arrangt to
C'ndplay West. and that 1\ Cllactl~
11.hat South set out to accomplish.
The qu«n of diamonds wa\ run
to \\-est'\ Ling and back came a
diamond to dC'clarcr'<. nine. Ne:>.t
camt a lov. htar-t and West could
not afford to ri!>C 1!.lth thC' act "'ith·
out pre,enung de<larer v.11h a 10th
·md. Ho"C''ec. planng lov. proved
tl1 ~ no bC'uer. as dedarer qui~ l h
PfC\\ed
Dumm'·., king of hcar1s too the
md. and declarer ca,hC'd l"''
round' of diamond!> 10 gC'I rid 01
one ol the 1ablC'"• hearts. :-.Ou" dC'
darer exllt'd lo\tlh lhc qut~ ot
heart<. 10 thC' acc. "h1ch left \\ es1
11.rth a cho1.:c of unpleasant op11ons
.\duh "ould hm11 dt'\.:larer·~ lo t'r~
m 1hJ1 ""I 10 one. and anv 01her
plam sull -... ould allo11. dC'darC'r 10
ruff m dumm~ 11.h1le dl\cardrng a
club from hand Either 11.a). tht'
defC'ndc" lo\Ould gel onh onC' dub
tnc:k. 11nd 1hree mo.:L\ tn all
TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ACROSS
1 Meil s
SUCC'eSSOf
6 Intrigue
t1 Chance
t• Omol tn
ptonunc&atlOl'I 15 Vlohn maker
t6 Fermented
drtnk
t7 Desk. e g 18 Thing trom
outer spacie
20 MOfe rtu"*1
22 Saltpeter 23 Fas1ener
25 Spring
28 Tunes 29 Ash wllhOUI
fins
3-0 Some bullets 32 Church arH
~Disturbs 39 Journals 42 Length ol
some 1olo;es
43 Ran qUtCkly 45· Smelting
resid\ie
46 R«Suces in
rank 49 Pro -
SO Asian 11tte
~Eats a meat
SS Thal glf1 s
S6 An1ra
S8 Deer feature
60 Count
63 -blue
66 Clauillecls
67 Creve
68 Site
69 8-r OfOet'
70 Listens 71 Rage
DOWN
t St•e
2 Guido s note
J Roel< of
4 Lotiled
S Destitution
6 Sn8'> taker
7 COiumbus
find
8 Spor11 Item 9 Goddessot
~ dltcOfd
10 A carnivore
11 Wett lnd!M
country 12 Conver1 13 Equal• 19 Long narrow
Inlet 21 US patrtotte
Of9 23 Globules 24 Kindled anew
26 Lily type 27 Tara Sita
POet
30 Threnome J t Pll)e part I
J3 ·we t""
WOfld 35 Menu WOtdS
36 Leugt11ng
g9ntly
J7 DoOf sign
38 Appeer-s
40 out
su1>91etMnteo
• 1 Tra11ef type
44 Given
4 7 Pnncipl('S 48 Appro• so Fleece StCon~t
52 TrNt 0801)-
53 Thllt chap
SS -ot Troy
'i7 Geo<g1a
59 Volcl r\O I.
PtOOUCI r
61 C1111ar e O
62 -Malla
6' Sttmulus
65 PoetlC
c:ontr1C11on
• j • • J
l
•
ONCRETE & BRICK
l•U•ll/UIT... ~ m•I Will look like nu. 722·6625 __ .. ,
.,.. llllTlllTlll rucY ELECTRIC ••lftl INST ALL & REPAIR SERVICE CALLS SEA· l.IWll IATEI 854-17n 8"3-90'4 VICE CALLS FREE ESTI-
---MATES Ltc =527459
EJ TILE installed & Repatred CALL Tracy 548-2317 ~ Prompt Courteous Serv1ee
Free Est. & References. IESll'l·Ollll'l Wiii
John & Shelby 846-8178 All phases Lklense
Child Care $2.44 per day
That's All yov pay for I llJIAllE
4 lines 30 day minimum IFvll or PfTlme 1n my Costa
in the Mesa home 645-7848
SERVICE·
DIRECTORY
For more 1nlorma11on
CALL TODAY" .
ISi FOR LOIS
Your
Serv1oe Directory
Representative
142-G21
ht.110
1EXP Childcare In. my
J home FI T Pti Any age
Svnv1ew•e1em Scttt area I Reas Rates 841 -2708
.. 1&un IAYCOE
LIC Lunches Snacks.
Teaching TLC 964·6057
lllllTI AYIU Aeg\Jlar Hovseclean1ng
Svc Shampoo carpets.
floors-windows 63 1 ·8511
Compt.lf''
Reas Rates 836-5523
Floor lns1a11a11on<.
Rrpa1rs
-~------
* N WQmm' will hovseslt your home 25 yr HANGING/STRIPPING
resident Refereooes By Uc:560875 VISA-MC
Day or Week 489·9119 673-1512
YOUNG executive couple SUPERIOR Wallcovermg
willing 10 hovsesll 1-4 1nstalfallon Removal
months Reference avall Wall Repair Prompt. Uc
Call Greg 589·0116 :566215. Mark 642·6842
L-1ndscape Lawncar ..
• TREES •
we gal• sM hang t0991M1
Total Interior Remodeling
Sefvlce. ADVICE TO THE
CRAZY. 633-7172
FIND ....
throuRh classified
...._.,.;. ... '• iC.•• ,; -.. --. -- - --
r
t
!!! .. -~---•-.s ..._. -.. _ •~i::--..-...... --a....-1-•
,..,M0011ll'Mff.1a-Turbo ..... :.-:e;c._ a..::..:·= ":m.':1"1?1 1 -..i;IT.w:z:r 111em1:.n.,... "£:11l1.V 11•J 1 "1:1:f.16n•r• ":::8'M_.
........ • ,_. 7t owner, 17 HO i& Good.......,, lllD._,. Thi ................ The .............. .-1TAff APT ,,.. ....... ...,... .. "-................. n. ....... ..--~--·--101 21-t4n. · IGll11aundl1a .... ....._. ..........._.. n.1111t1,...... ~---..... ._......_~ ., ••• II.HO oao • (114)AT-Zllli NOMI MM.DtNe .... ANO IC ALAIAMA CIOllle....__ J IYITl.MI. S.H ~T •UllMHI CMMNO -~-• .. TfTUTE, 411 I 11111 It .. ITMEl' 'AfllTNIRSHI,, IUllTIA 'AUl9tl Mo ...... "-* Clrcile. C.O.. lltVICH. IOOt 06Me ..... C... f111M. ,., •UUITW AIM.!.... •11 la'ml -.. RCURV tlll c..., m .co.e. ...... c.11 &.TD .. 207 ,..., ....... IOC&ATU. •Uc.a. ........... CA t2UI Lw ............ Clll -7
-....... •1mMlo, (•11tll1) be...,., -1111 :.':ft."'-:•:.:~ Allft Q. T9Wl0r, tHO ="l•On a .. cfl. CA =· CoMe ...... CA .= ~~.::::. ~ \ Qfwe, 2001 ..:=-=:a-=:
.... , Y1 -~-H.,.. 4'7·IOU . L8tlltpwt Oflve, Wett· Thotw L .,,_..., 207 t<rletl A. , .. ....,, tH CAllllt 0.-LMie....._...a..c.., .,.. ~ ...... "**-· c.lf, ntl3 ~ It , ~on Coeta .._. It.. Cotta Tiiie buelNM It ton• Cellf t1W • Tiiie lillAi IW • ..,
.......... .. Ona. 2 ~ It ........ CA.... ...... CA .. , dweted Illy. an lftOMcMll ,,_. •. Otw., aoo• ..,.... w "'.,. .••••
..._.... ---llrvlne1Cellf.tl1t6 TNa INllW .. oon-Thia bueiNM .. oon-Th• , .. lttrant COlft• 06enalw.Newpon9Mdl, The ,....., ....... MM-:~;;~~!~~i~~~~~··----~;;~~ .--Wf ic. Altf\ur, 133 INfter ducted Illy. M lftdh'ldull dueled by. M lfldldfuet ,..,... to tr.-ct ..._ Cell 92"0 ....,... 90 .,.,.... ~ ·-' IJ lft • ~ ONnga, Celf tatll Tfle r .. latrant COM· Tfle r .. lttrent COM• ,_ Wider tN lcUtloua Tfllla ~ 11 «:Oft· ,_ W-. .. l'ltWIA llr .... ITK•W •1111 bull... it con· ,..,... '° .,.,._. lftMCed to .,...,. ..,._ ~ w. ., ,.._ cluct9CI bY-~Ind_. 9uelnw ...._.,, .._, 5 • ~. .. "-• by. • geNrll .... MM _..., .. IC11tlow9 ,.. wndS .. lctltiOwl ...... ~ on -H . Ti. regi9trMt(tl COM• IMwe on; NIA
(t ~LOST, VOUR GAIN! .... . ~ neme or '*"" ~ ..,.-. 01 '*'* tttO ~ to treneact bull· M9rt0°""'91
... 4CRIFICEt LH~n.e ...... ,_ _ . The r~:= = = .._. on Mer 22, lilted mow. on .Mle 1, tllO = 0 Hamlin .... ,_ llMlr !fie fl0Wou9 '* l I .... -...
n11•••• .... •••••••11n1 ~~t:'a ~ 1111111 ... "'*'.,. ~ Thofwl.JW119 ~:.r.=.,.. Med ........ c::"C: .. 0r. =!:.~~~"":;..,.~~--ere~ -18001 White, loa~. ti 8utlMea Name(•I tlat.o Thie ......,.., .,.. flied wftll the CcMlty Ctark of Of. .,. County on ~ Haney s. Greene tllO • ~~~~!!!~~~~' hrlou1 lnqultera only CAOILLAC''7t C.D.Y. .,,..., 2-dOor. IOeded. abo¥9°0: ~ 14• tttO ...._ tMCounlyCWlc of Of • .,. County on Jwne 12, 1"° Thia ......... , --Nied ....
.ACURA1MIL.egend.tuly •t=7t:::;~,1~· p:rt ::;:::•llock•d· ~~O~Ex~·=· _i':'~~· WM .... .,. County~~ Publlltled o!::.~ ~~~r.l':.1~ :::.•~ty~lw!!~: ~..:-7..=t toeded. exoelent con-E i.u... • ' • goo wnn IN_.. .. , C6lrtl of Of· ~ 0r-. COMt Delly Plot June 1t 21 J4lt'f ttl() ttlO 12 1t 1MO dltlon. 111.IOO 010. 119n""'"' 714/345-0851 trll\lt)Ortatlon. n5-M40 MOe CcMlty on Jwne 5, OellyPllotJune5, 12. 111,245. 3. lb, tlllO ' ' T!i&t . ,_ ' ' T .....
552·5133 PO CHE 11161 1800 $t000 080. 723-1288 PLY M 0 UT H 198 8 lllO 111() T810 PublilMd Ofenoe COMt 1---------
.AUOI ttl2 4000 Coupe S " P a r K a r m a n CADILLAC '79 EldoredO. c..ve11e Turbo. Loeded. PublitMd Of ~ T557 PmUC llmC( PmJC llJTIC( M ~June 111, 21. July •~....; .. ;.;;;;;;;;:;;:IC;..-;.,. mi anrf Notcttbeclc Coupe. FUiiy DIHel. S tlup. etK ... inainte!Nncerecorda, o.JlyPVo1June-:ftt1 2I __ .,._,_, . • • . r
':nd: ~lg . ow~ ,..torect. 8'ac:kltan. Re-Loaded. $2500 080. ncellent condition. July3 lllllO ' . ' ,._ ,.,,-. PICnnDUaMllllllM PICnnGUaWM T-594 ~11m•
.... 850. 758-9321 COM. =· ~;0005 """'englne(37 .. ~D-) 644-8889 ~-~·182~~-~,.; • T-578 PICTnlOUe WU T~w T~~ we PmUC NOTIC( The tollNftg,.,... .. . .-.N. ....,. CADILLAC '84 F f -...., ,,... MAl9 8TAW ,,. ·-·"' P9f90nl •e ~ bu1it1Mt M! doing bu11r!w ••
BMW 11M 52a.. 42.000 Prtvate party. &43-0733 convertible ~od(. ac,':J PONTIAC '78 SUNBtRD ftaJC NOTICE Tiie ~! .. ~· .,. ~L~ -~y BER· SfliKE AFRICA SAILING ~A=· JU8T KIDOIHCi ... Ffit ::!~:; 1n:•·s.,=k PORSCHE 1972911T. Re-44K, black/red, dloltai 91,447 mile$. $500 080. ll-17111 ~ERSmeD · ACCEP· TAINA. 1555 Meu Verde CHARTERS, 507 Orange TM following P9fl0"• -Of ••. eo.1a Mffa. Catff
lmm•cwlatel • $15 950 itored, like new. Call me. dean, fully loaded. MTNT. Auna. Cell 831-7837 '1Ctm0Ua.,...M TANCE. 2705 w. Coatt Eat •11£, Cotta Meu. CA ~Newpoft a.en. c.ilf; ~ ~ M: 112::_,w...,_ 1100£6.
Gary , . 474-400,4 /d 14,000. 642-2923 $11,500. 534-2042 NAm 8TA1'W ~~Newport Beec:n, ~ L Bertaina. "1555 Monlta Gail SIOan, 507 22~8 . :NDVi~:.~l~Tve:: ~. HuntlngtcWt Beedl,
850-0230/e PORSCHE 944 t988, S.: CADILLAC '86 .... .. The lolowlng Ptlttont are In. H-• 27415 Sea--Meu Verde Eatt 11 !IE. Orange Ave.. Newport Anehelm. Calif. 92eoe Celif 92647 •
BMW '78 320I = :~~~C:= 8-utlfUl Sab6e I Jml 811 . ~::::: ::Ot>Mflome cape, Cap-: Beacn, CA Cotta Mela. CA 112628 ~· ~= 11 con· Robert~. 2236 E Vlr-~~~con
ExGeli.rtt Cond, all·r•· Interior AM/FM cutett ... •wt.LI A/T, AIC & mud\ rnor.I Park Auoclllet 3187-H 112864 Thia builnett· ls con-ducted by: an lndivldllal '~Ave · Anaheim, Ca61f. The regi1t1ant(1) c:om-
eotd9, $3,500 ()BO, pp lt41feo. ·Electric ~ $9,900. 846-4848 o r (STK•7811) Alnway A...,_, cOata Mila: Thia bualn111 11 con· ducted by· an lndMdual The registrant(•) ·com· Sander 20 30 menoed to treneact bull-eve.13'1 ·8540, days door 1 k aunroo. 548-3959 ..... CA92126 . dUctedby:allmll"'P•rtnet· The r1gi1trant com-~ to trantact t>utj. Allen '°": 1 ,_ utlMr the flctttloUI
&31-1780. oc I, ... 11. AIC. Jonn Hancock Mutual Life lhlp ~ to transact bull-ndef the F I IOU Kayne, Corona, Caltt. 9t7t9 B al N me( I II ted 41arm with remote. Ex· luMlhe Pill• .. lnaurince Compenv A The regt1tr1nt com-neu undet the flctltlout neu u tel t 1 TllJt bu1ln111 11 con· u n .. t a 1 1 •
tended warranty. 36,000 llf' UI 'll JM 1111 MllSICl!uMtta eorporli1on meneed to tranwt bull-buslnesa name or ~ ~C:. J=~~~tted =P by: a Qef•al P«t· ~ ~a~~lllO -.. JM I. mu... Excellent con-D llft.LI John Hancock Place neu under the flct1tlou1 tlsted above on n/1 Monika Sloan This ataternent -Ned
AewleM(2KWM351) ~~~·:~~~ Miii s14.ooo Fu!llact. equip., mint con· Suite 200, Two Copley ~bo~ orM;~ ;.-:;a,~,=:-wu filed Tn11 atatement w• f...CS ~r~is~~:~, :,:: wtlll tn.Countyetark of Of·
.. I
-
, _____ 1_10___ d1tlonl (236479) Place, Boaton. MA 021 t7 1""""' Y with li'le Cou t Clwll _.Or· wltn the County Clenl of Or· nets undel the FiCOtk>v1 MOe County on Mey 21. • • ..... 'M Huntwood Park Partner•. _.., n Y "' atlg8 County on June 5, B N e( 1 1990 . ....., _ 111,111 ltd . 1 California limited Iris H1rw1y atlg8 County on May 25, 1990 ullnets am •> l1ted ,_,.,., -,.111 ..... .. ... a partnerltllp This statement was ltled 1990 ,....., ~ above on June 11, 1990 Publlthed Orange Coaat
-STK 7864 3187-H Airway Avenue with the County Cieri! of Or· Published Oranoe Coast Publittled Orange Coest Robert Bauw 0.lly PMot May 29 .lYne 5 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ll A ftW -·--. 111-1111 11
Cotta MeH , Cellfornla ange County on May 25, Diiiy Piiot June 5, 12. 19. 26. Daily Pilot June 12. 19. 2I, This 1111ement w11 flied 12, 19. 1990 . • •
mn•t···w RS CPE AfT, V-t. A/C,
Sc>«kllng Red. It nu ~1•20SM9)
_... 11;iiiiiiiiiiiiii~ 11IAll 92626 1990 ,._. 1990 July 3 1990 with !he COUf'lty Cle<ll ol Or· T-54a OUl ..... A"°' .............. Tnla bullnoH 11 con· Published Orange Co11t T582 · • T.58 t =County on June 11·;---------
l •• Ill ducted by; a 1olnt venture Dt!!J. Piiot June 5. 12. 19. 26. . • •-.,. llllftftl'r F..-:1 I PBJC ll)llC( :::: :::.:: ::t: lmft'MflfaD Tht regittrant com-,,.., T555 ~..._ ""'iw; Ml.JC NOTICE PubllShed Orange Coal!---~~...;..;.;;..;,,,;,,=---·••~ l~ll Ml.m nttmW.. 1--------•lmenced to tranwt busl-FICTITIOU8.,_ll FtcTITIOUe.,_.. OaityPllot.June.li 26,~ '~A~ .. ..... (.,_, ~ A ---------n.u undet-1.be. llCtlLIOut MAISSTATllmNT · 3 10 t990 • -
•fl,._ tMI UlllJ9~ M :~s. ~i. (~~iS:;,~ Ml.JC NOTICE :~!':' 06/04/90 doing :::::: :aons are T~~'::., • • T .591 ~ = ::aon• are 11UM .......... 111-llM .
0 .,_,_Cl1111 QIZZ'll) Alm .,.. HUNT W 0 0 D PARK ACTITIOUI .,_U G p M MAINTENA,..CE & doing bullnest aa: FRANKLIN FINANCIAL .
135 3 n • • ACTITIOU8 ..... U PARTNERS. LTD., 1 Call· NAm STAH•NT LIGHTING PRODUCTS FAR H 0 RI Z 0 N Ml.JC NOTICE 3250 E.Coaat Highway, Cot· • 17111 IN •••Ill NAMEaTATDmNT fomlalimltldp1rtnershlp The tollowtngper10n1ar1 3419VlaLldoSte 287 New: FINANCIAL, 2172 Dupont onedel Mer.Callf.92625
1500 AUTO MAU Ort. 142 ... 11 The foll?Wlng '*'°"' 1te By: Rtch1rd Hall & As· doing butmess u : port Beach CA 92863· Drive •217, ll'Vfne, Callf. ~~A~U. Cnrlttopher E. Hobaon
DATSUN '73 240Z, no air,
good car. $ t500 OBO.
71'/536-6070
u11u doing busineaau: aoclatn Inc a Callfornl1 CABR ILLO PAL MS L ;: 0 2,.21 927t5 Inc .. a Calif corp _..,,.AfMAUTOllAll , _________ FASHIONFAIRLAUNDRY corporaiion.ag-alplrt· APARTMENTS. 13 .. 5 E::B coet'::'.s. CA L Wllllam1andCo .lnc .1 Tnefollowingper90n11te Tiii• butlnat ,, COfl• """*l frttway (55) DODGE '89 COLT & DAY CLEANERS, 570 W ner Cabrilto Parll Dflve, San1a 92627 · • Ca:dornla corporation. 2 t72 Going buliness as. dllc:ted by a corporetlon at t .... SIMa Aita 5 speed. a /c am/Im ttltn St .. Costa Mesa. Calif Rtenard A Hall, Presldenl Ana. Caltl 92701 Tht1 business 11 con· Dupont Df1ve •217, Irvine. APPLE tsi .FINA~~L The reglttrant(tl com-11 1(e d 921127 This statement wu filed Village C1brtllo Palms ed Cakf 92715 SERVICES. 1210K•t..,.,...,, mencecs to transact buti-
DATSUN 81 280n !';~~===~~~ $;;;, ~·7;~~93 nt con · Ronald C Watt, 2 t872 With the County Cieri! o1 Or· Ltd . a. Ca11torma hmlted d'fne ~. ~.~i~ 0 • Southern Caltf Land Corona Del Mar, CA 112625 ,_ under the FlctrtlOul Exceltent cood 1 OWn« 5 PEUGOT Huron Ln . Lake Forest. ange County Ot\ June 5. p1r1nersh1p, 2400 Main meneed t~ t ,:NCI ctiu':. Corp . 1 Cahlornta corpor. Raymond K Brandt. 1210 Bullne11 N1me(1) h11ec:t
spd, T·t0(>9, bronze with '1111.a.e --•• ._ DODGE '89 COLT Calif. 92630 t990 -Street. &.1111 201. Irvine. def r atton, 2172 Dupont Dnve KM4 Or . Coron. Del Mar. above on: Mey 23, tllllO 1an leatnar Interior. ---.. -Exceflenl cond ition This business ta con-F411CM4 Calil.92714 . neu un tne fictmoui •217.trvlne.Callt 92715 CA92825 Chflttopher E HOl>lon
$4,300 840-7741. S26'5 A~KIBAR). Private $4400. FIRM. 631 -628:i ducted by· an tndlvldutl Publlshed Orange Coast This buslneu 11 con· ~::-.'~~a= M': ,"a;: Thia . business i• con· LoutM C Btanot. 1210 PrMkl«tt '
D TSUN 1982 280zx 2 2 party 4·5556 Mike Stanley Tne reotstr1n1(al com· Daily Piiot June 12. 19, 26. ducted by a llm1ted partner-Lenora F Grov.: · ducted by. a gen«al part· K.., Of . Corona Del Mar, Thi• 1tatement wu filed A .._ · TOYOTA 1996 4R __ menced to transact bust· July 3 1990 snip · netlhlp CA 921125 With !he County Clerk of Or· Automatic, air, power 47K p unner. FORD '66 MUSTANG 289 ness unde< the F1<:t1tlou1 ' T -587 The 'reg111rant(s) com-1 This 'b'temen~ was 111~ The reg11tra.n1(1) com· Thia bus1ne11 · 11 con· atlg8 County on June 8. window•. moonroot. b k ow:c steering, Automatic AIC 95% re-1Bualn1ss Ntme(s) hsted menced 10 transact bus1.1w•tht~ ounty 191~. 0 ~-mencec:l to transact bull· Ouctedby·t1usbandand wif1 1990 Good condition. S3,000 " es. · cruise. stored. Asking $6500 above on May 21. t990 ness under the F'lchltous Inge ounty on •y · ness under ti'le Fict•llOUS Th e registrant com· ,.-
559--7426 AM/FM cassette. Excel-723-1,.49 · Ron w111 rtllJC NOTICE Business Namelsl hsteo P blshed o!,990 ~ Businen N1me(s) lilted menced to transact bull-Pubhhed Orange Cou1 lent condition $10.900 _ Tnts statement was hied •bove on March 14. 1990 u 1 •noe above 6n May 30 1990 ness undef the fictitious Delly Pilot June 19 2e. July
080 Ron. 714-892·3474 witn the County C18fk ot Or· FICTITIOU8 llUStNESS PMtp McN1mee Dlily Pilot June 5 t2. l9, 26· Lawrence E Oecrona, oua.neu name or names 3, 10. 1990 ......... ---fMl'lllAllU ange County on May 21. NAmlTAft•NT Th11 statement was hied 1990 President hstedaboveonnotyet T-591
A dr ........ mectl~~ s .. !.OYOTA 11 wagon -1990 me toltowlng pet10nS are Wllll the County Cier'k ol Or-T565 Tn11 Slatement was hied LOUIN c Brandt, Rey-----------··· ...,.., ale. low pkg. good r-IP F45711S doing bulineu IS ange County on June 5, with ti'le County Clerk ol Or· mond K. Brandt PtaJC NOTIC£ & m oonr oof too t cond · S 1.500 ob o: Auto . arr. j:hsette. Pubhtned Orange 'Coast TRAITS MARKETING,409 1990 rtllJC NOTICE 1nge County on June 5. This stttemeot wu flledi--·--------~10358481 540· 1~2 (880396) Diiiy Pilot May 29, June 5. 30th Street. Sulle B. New· F4Sa51 FICTITIOUS 9UIMll 1990 with li'le County Cle<k ol Or· ACTITIOUe -.-aa '"91 TOYOTA '85 TERCEL. . UHi 12, 19, 1990 port Beach. Calif. 926e3 Pubhlhed Orange Coast NAME STAn•NT . F45a57 1nge County on Mly 25. NAME ITATD9NT •---a....1 AMrl 47K AT •c 4d I T-551 Venesa Helen Walker. 01111y Pilot Ju.,. 12. 19. 26. Tl'le followi"" persons Me Pul>ltlM<! Orange Coast t990 F4l9m Tne lo!IOWlng peraona are __... · • " • r. stereo. n..4ef11••ln 4()9..B 30th St.. Newport July 3, 1990 d<11ng buslneU 19 Delly Pilot June 12. 19 26. Put>hsned Oret1ge Coat dOlng ~ 11· IJl..1111 cassette $3800 142-M10 "8JC NOTIC[ Beach.Cahf 92863 T-577 ACU-POLARITV FOR Juty3.1990 D11tyP1totJune5.12 19.26. C•IREALTY WORLD· ~~~~~~~~~1------6_7S· 7097 Jul11 Etlln Stewart. 25 I WELL BEING. 120 23rd. Ste • • T .575 l990 . FREEDOM (b)AMERIC AN = VOLVO 1988 700Turbo FICTITIOUS.,..... Berlllil'f Court.""'"'· Calif rtllUC ll)TIC[ 1 2 8 Costa Mesa. CA T CAPITA L MORTGAGE
HYUNDAt ·86 EXCEL Wag. 29K m1, auto, tint FORD '86 THUNDERBIRD NAME STATEmNT 9Z 7l5 9262°7 . COMPANY. 1800 E McFIO-Red. trouble fr ... 37K mt, win. mags. loaded. per. Elan. Fully loaded. must rne follOWlng persons are This business 11 col)· NOTICE Of Or Pllrtck Devereaux den, Sult• t tO, S1nta Ana.
4tpd Sdr, hatchback. air. feet cond . $20.295 OBO. sell $7 , 900 lJBO . dol119 t>use_.ar. dvcteo by a general part· APPllCATION '°" Holiman 320'• 2310 Cos1a SAVE Cellf. 92705
A .. /F.. $3 195 ACT HEALTH & FITNESS nerShlp CHANGE IH Meu CA 92627 . L Squwe tnc . California
"" "" CHI, • SS 1·045S 72 l-8338 CLINIC. 20311 Acacia. Suite The reg1stran11s1 com· OWNlfl .... OF Thi~ business 15 con-Tn11 bu11nen 11 con·
OBO. 673· t ia7. 24nrs. --VW l967 BU G-230. Santa Ana Helgnts. menceO 10 1ransact bus•· ~COHOLIC oucte<I by an ll'ldlvtdual Tl ME ! dueled by 1 corporation
JAGUAR 1989 XJS con-Excel cond $2.400. FMI 'II 11-n Callf 92707 ness under the Ftettllous HWfllACME LICENSE The reg1s1r1nt com· SAVE The reg11trant(•I ~om-vertlble Doren gray 650-0403 720 9790 -Of Varm1t1a Jutts t29 Bu11nass Name(s) hsted l-'4-11 meneld 10 tranUCI bus•· menoecs 10 tranMC1 ~ cream ln.t4Wlor. lSK miles: ___ . · • Eddie Bauer. Iulo. alloy Corsica Drive. Newport above on May 21. 1990 To Whom It May Concern ness under 1,_. l1Clilt0us ""8 under the Actllloue
3-36K mile warrant . Ex· VW 1970 Squareback. re-wheels Well cared for Beach Cahl 92660 V~ Walker T o N v w I N business name °' names M Q NE y ! Bus.neu Name(tl Hated celtent coodltiOn ~Mf 1tored, second owner. 123GRPS70) Tn11 business 11 con-This statement was filed ENTERPRISES, INC 1s ap-fisted above on May 21 above on June7. 1990
moving. $49,000 OBO recent rebuild All black 111,111 ovcteo t>y an 1no1v1dual with Ille County Clerk of Or· pty1ng 10 the o.>artment of t990 · L11n MguY9"1. PYetideot
768•1595• 770-5523 intenor. Ian painl. new OrlfterUW Tne registranttsl com· ange County on June 5. Aleol'lollc BeYetege Contro: Pa:nell D Hottmlln WITH THE Tht1 stat.,.,,.,.t was hied
I
ures, rubber. seals. meneect to transact bus•· 1990 to sell atconotic t>eve<age5 This statement was l•led CLASSIFIEDS w11h tne County Cieri! of Or·
MAZDA 1985 GLC Hatch· cnrome. and bra s 1900. 111·1111 ness under the F'lctitious f'45a4t " 9430 Wamer. "c & D. w11n 1ne Coun:y Clerk of Or· ange ·cwnty on June 12 back. Gray, automatlC. 962.1628 8ustness Namet•I .11sted Pu1>11sneo Orange Coast Fountain Valley. CA 92708 ange County Ol'I May· 25 1990 excellent condition. ___ ___ above on Maren 7. 1990 0111.,. Piiot June 12. 19, 26. wrth ··41·· On-Sale Bffr & 1990 F451492 ,_
$2 700 36 770 Or V11rm111a Jurts July 3. 1990 Wine (Pub Eat Pl) ltCense Pubhsheo Orange Coast 642 5678 Pub11$hed Orange Coatt · · 1·9 VW 197S Bug While runs Th1$ statement was hied T ·578 Put>1ts11eo Ot1nge Coast Dally Piiot June 5 12. l9. 26. _ o..ty Pttot June 19, 26, J4*t MAZDA ·ea 323SE greal, excellent con-FMI 'II U-1 with 111e County C:ent ol Or· Dally P11o1 June 19 1990 1990 3. 10. 1990
AM/FM/cue ale LOw ml dltlon S 1.950 964-5917 5 speed loaded. only 35K ange
1
County on June 5 T605 T.fQ!
$5 500 · ' ----miles Absolutely tm· 1990 '°jlliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimmm••••••••••••••m•••iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii • 557.7095 vw 1983 RABBIT GTI. maculate (=058844) . F45a9 I
MAZDA MIATA t990. black SO.OOO ongtnal ll ltl Put>hstied Orange Coast snowroom car Ilk• new mlles $3 ,300 OBO ' Daily Piiot June 12. 19 26.
$13,995 080. 779-0181 499·1493 0.llfelAl•I July 3. t990
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii VW 198S GOLF, 2-door. 1,1.JHI T-579
Must sell Good con· 1:::~=~~~~ dltlon. 4 new llres, "8.JC ll)TICE Kenwood pullout stMeo, 1---------
back tinted windows. fMI 'II fflmA 'ICTITIOU8 M191NEll
sunroof. s•.800 nego-Cassette. Charcoal color NA• STAft•NT
t I ab I e . MI c n ••• e . e111r1 clean• (2NL98'4) The tollow<ng petlOnS ate
213-470-6466 IHI • 0°b'1~~;io;'N~ CO N· iiiiiiiiiiiiiii~lvvw~d:1~987 Cibr •olel ""4hralHMH STRUCTION CONCEPTS-• Black/black. extended 142-H11 CCC. 939 W 19tn. C-2, mz '1111111. warranty, alarm, original Cost• Mesa CA 92627
Only 4 0 ,000 mites. owner, always ga~aged, Marilynn Rtgnall. 939 W ,28yy144) exc e llent condition. 19th C-2. Costa Mesa. CA
' ••• ... $3,750 OBO 733-2401 921127 .,..,._ F• 'II This business is con-
..... -V W 19 8 9-F o lll G L 1111• IT mt duC1ed by an 1ndfVfdu11 BARGAIN! Under low The re gtstrant com· 111-1111 blue boOk $5.950 Mint V-8. AIT, AIC, loaded, A menced 10 transact bust.-
cond1tlof'I. all the goodies! Black Beautyl (" 188596) ,,... unde< the hchttous
964-7362 Must see! 111.... bu1tnen name or namea
MERCEDES t973 220 0.ntll Allrl 111~ above on May 23. Body, tlr• good. needs VW Convertible Super· nv
WOfk S 1850. 722·8919 B H ti• 1 9 74. new Ill-JIM Mattlynn Rlgnall motorltoP. $3.800/0BO Tn11 11111men1 was meo
MERCEDES 1978 450SL 8S4~9651213·654·6540 w1tn tne County Cletk of Or·
2 t09L BEAUTYI MINTI - --•Lit 1nge County on Mey 25. S20,900 080 Cell for In· VW '85 JETT A 1990 F.-formatlon 714-Ma-4013 4 Or, anrl, ale, excel cond. Locked In atorage garage Publtsned Orange Coal!
' S&.000 OBO. 640-11044 '89 MUST ANG GT. witn Daily Piiot June 5 t2 i9. 26. MERCEDES 1982 240D fots ol extras and only 1990 ' ·
58,500 ml, 'Ivory, perfect 4.900 mt. $12.000 Ran· T559
eond. $12 ,500/o bo. AutosDomeltk 9300 som,645·66~--i---------
7141760-8792. GOVERNMEN T SEIZED "8.IC NOTICE
MERCEDES t"4 TurbO 1• mYILD and Surplus ventcles 1---------
3000. Excellent con· *111111•* from $100 Fords. FICTITIOU811UStNEll
dltiOn, aun<oof. chrome Air. pis. p/b, tltt. 2.5 mer Chevy•. Corvel\ ... etc . HAim ITATDmNT
wneela. Ctlampegne f e u 1 • n g 1 n e . 5 In your arH For Info call Tiie foltowlng '*'°"'are
palemlno. $11,550 tpd.(8205-119368) _1·800-827-IOSI ex ... ~ d°t:"R~~~STRtES
553-1810 .. ,. JEEP 1977 CJ7 PAINTING, 20031 Marini
Mercedee H.Beedl Chrysler Black. conven hard top, Ln , Huntington Beacn, Callf
1-... IL •.e• -•1 run1. must Mii S3.000 921411 --... OBO. 723-4083. Robert Cralo Campti.ti, .. 1 .... 1 1 .. -a-20031 Marina Ln . Hunt· rw1• w.-LIAll A LAlll lngton BMcn. Calif 921411 Ill.... Lu11Uf'Y equipment pkge, Tllll butlne11 11 con-p/1, alarm, 3.3 titre V-6., NI Liii dueled by 111 individual Midnight blue. netural ultra drive 4 spd IJllM fD ..r'I rn. regJ1t11nt(a) com-
Palemlno lnt•IOr. euto.(727147) 60 mo elOMd end IMM ... menced to tr81)tact bull·
lmpec:cebly cered for by 11l.la tax of $18.75 I* mo. nett undl< IN Flct1110U1
It• aote owner. $46,000 H. BEACHCH.RVSLER S 184. 70 to at•t(lncl $750 8u1lnN1 Nemet•> titted 494•7748 MJ..e111 factory rebatei To1al of above on. NIA
MERCEDES 450 SLC pymnt1 $19.122. End of Aot>ert Crllg Campbell
1977 Hcellent con -· ..a-•-1• term purchase option Thia ltllement wlS flied ' "3 000. . .. 4'JINf WI $44 t".76 Subj...,.t to with tl'le County Clerk of Or· dltlon, beelutlful. .. • AJr Auto ,.., window " ... eoun J s mllH. Meny ntraa. ~er'. tinted g ..... credll app rova l .= ty on une ·
115,000. 142-5t50 50/SO ... ,, w/ recliner•. (ltll.r9582) ~
MEACEDES 74, Relocat· am/fm at.,eo.(704322) All NI• Km Publllhed 0ratlg8 Coeat
Ing Mua1 W I Beige. exc. 111... H. BEACH CHRYSLER ~ Not June 1~. Ill. 245.
COftd., $5,000 H It . H. BEACH tHAVSLER MJ-IU1 July 3• 1990 T-MO
f~!:=:' =·.:.)'I or ..... LINCOLN ·71 Continental. --------... LI ... 111ft 490 engine Auna good. "8.IC NOTICE & lall 'TL IN Alt 4 whl dttC-bfalt• tilt $ t250. 9EE. &42-0587 Plennoua .,_ ...
Perfect conCt,tlon. 1 eetctre>Nc '"9d ~trOI: -um ITAT'Umn' .._, 11,000 mi. WNte, _.,_ -... .......__.. '4250. Cell Donna em/fmceM,19er.:-_-~:"'-1 .... UlWI .. .,.,,......_....,.~.,.
474-11'1 lef'n..5pm oetr..-(4&2092) PtiMwNte Meuty Alt IM ~==UIOUOR,
ME .. ClDH '71 280 H ..... ti~YSLER toytl(•eo3132) 1043 N Coast~.~ .I ti I ._.,. 111... leedl. Celll tHSI DAN. !i:= ona ..... 1 ,... Jerry a Olene Nott. 1043 <>n. OM* Otter. ...... .... N Coa•t Hwy • 1.aoune Wiii tred• Spo!.'.' ? .... llllD Ill-.. IMch,Cllll. t2t51
Olellc SM-01-Luxury Equipment pllge. Tlllt t>wllneaa 11 con•
lall •... p/....., eeourl'Y ~. dueted by en~ Mlftt CIOnd. 11,0GO ...... wtte wf1f C.,,_I,, tllt, Tiie reglattent(tl COM• crue.. ~ .. lid tMf'°8d to tfenMCt ~
IMOll• .. ,,,., •Miine -•.._k7'1tf1) .... -... neaa. unoer • ,.ICtlttout U7.lcm.C.liM016. -~-,,=·,·-_ .. ,.,... 8vtlneee Name(tl tia'911 iiiiiiifiiiJ4ii!!!,ii~ M ~ °" ~ 15• 1111 1811 'If• H SLER Auto aw, M , cr\M. cw. .-ry w No91
Ulll w .... ,..., . ....1 Pl'Mnd. Pnodl• Extr• 1llla .......,.... .. llM 17,oao .......... or _ CIHn LO• mll .. wlttltMCountyC!ertlofOf·
10• over ltu• ... --OESOltO) -. COi.in~ on -.. t. ~7117 Qov'I ....... ,..,.,..,.. -1tlO ,_
~ ,::::: ~ ft1dsscl1Hl11 111uu ,... ~ c...
WE WILL Daily Pilat . LL tNibEPEN°DENt E Costa Mesa NEWS
U R Newport Beach NEWS
· Corona Del Mar NEWS
AR ~:::~~~:r3weeks
your car isn't sold, we will run your ad
for free! ·
NO STRINGS ATTACHED.
Jw~t call us to renew your ad .
Run 1 O words for 3 weeks at S 18.50. 55¢ each
add~ional word. Must be prepaid. A word constitutes
anything that has a space between it.
For individuals only
ATTACHED ·-------------------------------·.
\1 NAME--:--------------------PHONE-----~---------------
: ADDREsS CITY--------------
1 STATE--------ZIP----CH£CK t----AMOUNT ENCL---
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: MASTER~DMSAt EXPIRATION DATE
I MlSSACE: • r
: I I I I I
j =: ==i=====: ==~.~-=;~:&;~=====:::;::=:.=.=.=.=.=*.:;~;~~==-=:.=:
~. i l~==*=! ======*=I =~!=====*=I =====c
I MAIL TQ DAILY rn.atm WllT IAY ITUit COSTA ~SA. CA_. ATTNt NO 11mNCI An'MJm>
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1-IOWl1-3m la1 t10. ..... Dair .. ':., ... t2. ,.._ ...
Open7..,...telpfftl11 ... T~74 li111 .......... ~~!!!!J!!!!!!J!!!!!!J!!!!!!J!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
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STARTING A NEW BUSINESS??
The Legat Department a1 th'e
Daily Pilot is pleased lo an•
nounce a new service now avail·
able to new businesses
We w1U now SEARCH lhe
name for you at no eKtra charge.
and save you the time and the
trip to the Courl House in San1a
Ana Then, ol course. alter !he
search tS coml)leted we w1U r11e
your l1chhous I business name
statement with the Cqun1y Clerk
publish once a week ror tour
weeks as reQuired by law and
1hen hie your p1oof of pubh·
c ation w1lh the Coun1y Clerk
"
I Please s1op by to hie you•
llc1111ous business s1a1ement at
the Daily PllOI Legal Oepar1 -
men1 , 330 West Bay, Costa
Mesa. Cah!orrua If you can no1
stop by please caH us
at ·11 14 ) 642-4321 E•tens1on
315 or 316 and we wJU make
arrangements tor you to riand le
this procedure by mail
ti you should t'lave any lurlher
Ques11ons, please call us and we
w1U be more than gtaa to ass•!il
you.
Good luck in your
new business"
f-601
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