HomeMy WebLinkAbout1990-06-20 - Orange Coast Pilot.,
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THE ORANGE COAST ·2S CEN T S
GOOD .
MORNING!
It's Wednesday, June 20, 1990,
and here's what's happenina:
ORANGE COAST WEATHER:
Skies will be mostly clear after
patchy foa and low clouds bum
away.
To4ay'1 ~/low 7t/I!
Y-es1erday's "h~/low 67 /S8
Tomorrow's high/low 75/52
SPORTS:
Majer Leape Bateball
A.11tel1 I, CMcaae I
~eni,H ...... 1
WerW C., Setter
A•tr1a I. U.S. l
J~HOUR HOTUN•
TOTH••DITOR
642-6086
SeeP ... AJfor......._
INSIDE THE NEWSROOM:
From tile folb wlto ta•Pt
tile Beatles to om: The Heaven
on Eanh Development Corp.
announced recently that the
Maharishi Mahesh Y ~ plans
to build SO ''stress-free ' Cities
of Immortals throu.al'out
Nonh America -ancludina
one right here in good ol' O.C.
"But wait "you're probably
sayina. "is there more?" ... You
betcha. bunky ... If you've aot
the required S60.000 to S2
million investment· you can
own a little piece of subdivided
heaven ... Amenities at the
planned (master-planned?
heavenly planned?) com-
munities will include
Maharishi Sj:hools of the Aae
o( Enliahtcnment, Maharishi .
Ayur-V'eda Health Centers and
Maharish i Festival Halts.
De'Mt: Today we debut a
n~ column. written by Irvine
attorney Randy Sue Morrison.
offerinf advice on one ·or the
most difficult issues anyone
can face: Divorce ... ln today's
offerina. which appean on paae
A7, Morrison offers insights on
joint custody of children, Cali-
fornia's "no fault" divorce law,
and pre-nuptial agreements ...
"Inside Advice/Divorce" by
Randy Sue Morrison will run
every Wednesday.
DelMlt II: And today we also
unveil our expanded weather
page, which features extended
forecasts, travel information
and complete tide information
... The color weather package
runs on Alt today.
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WEDNESDAY, JUNE 20, 1990
Jewelry store thief nabbed
Enjoying INOTk Police: He masterminded
oth~r Orange Coast jobs
....,N« ..... .,0-W ........
catclllft9 IOllle r•y• on the SS Preeway
construction site.
l y IRIS YO KOI
0...,, Not Staff "'"' ..
NEWPORT BEACH -A Redon·
do Beach man allegedly responsible
for jewelry-s tore thefts an Newpon
Center, South Coast Plua, Mission
V1eJO and San Dieao County was
arrested last week after he ran off
with 10 rin&s from another Newpon
Beach jewelry store. police said
Tuesday.
Gerald Roben Boyes. 23, who 1s
wanted by authontics m Florida. 1s
charged Wlth multiple counts of
commercial burglary. &rand theft
and possession of s1olen propeny.
His bail amount was increased to
SI 00,000 from an original S 10.000,
Newpon Beach Police gt. Andy
Gorhs said.
Boyes had a no-bail warrant is-
sued out of Aonda on charges of
robbery and escaping from a work-
f urlough program, but the warrant
equated to $50.000 bail 1n Orange
County, Gon1s said.
Boyes 1s accused of stealing
$4 1,000 wonh of jewelry in NeW'pon
Beach alone.
A framer by trade. he was arrested
Fnday an Gardena by Ncwpon
Beach det«tt"cs who tracked him
down with the help of license plate
Afghan general suffers defeat
Huntington withdraws parade invitation
ly lltORRT BARKER
0-.. ,._ ~ ...,,.. ..
HUNTINGTON BEACH -It's
nothina personal, but Afghanistan
aeneral Ramatullah Safi is not in-
vited to ride a float in the Founh of
July parade. Caty Councilman Don
MacAllister said Tuesday.
MacAllister said the Afghan free-
dom fighter. invited to the patriotic
event by Rep. Dana Rohrabacher,
R-Huntln$ton Beach, may pose a
sccunty nsk because he's been a
major figure in one of the "hot spots
of the world."
"Rohrabacher 1s invited, but the
general isn't," saad MacAlhster, the
City Council's liaison to the Fourth
of July Executive Committee.
To ensure that his messaac comes
through loud and clear. MacAlhstcr
said he asked City Administrator
Michael Uberuaga to inform
Rohrabacher that the general 1s to be
"dis-in vited" 10 the 86th annual
parade. balled as the laffeSt patnot1c
event west of the M1ss1ss1ppi.
Rich Barnard. an assistant to
Uberuap, said Tuesday that there
arc no facts to back up ~unty
concerns.
Rohrabachcr couldn't be reached
for comment. but an aide in Wash-
ington said his office had heard "no
concerns" about sccunt)' from
Huntington Beach.
Rohrabacher reportedly met Safi
while tounng war-torn Afghanistan
after the congressman's election to
the 42nd District m 1988. Fluent 1n
English. Safi guided Rohrabacher
through the banle-scarrcd coun-
trys1de where Safi and other Afghan
rebels fouaht Russian soldiers.
"I received a telephone message
that Congressman Rohrabacher had
!Please lff AFGHAN/hck P~I
Kil~ing-rape case
in tiands of jury
Huntington Beach
man faces life in
prison, no parole
ly EMILY ADAMS
0-.. ,._ lufr w ....
SANTA ANA -The fate of a
Huntinaton Beach man accused of
rapina and stabbing a 47-ycar-old
pandrnother 120 times with a pair
of manicure scissors is expected to
be handed to a Superior Coun jury
today.
Robert Allen Carter, 22 faces life
in prison without possibility of par-
ole, but his attorney said Tuesday he
will try to penUldc juron to reject
such a 1evere punishment for his
client, whom he openly admi's
m urdered the woman he'd met only
boun before her bnatal death.
A robbery chaflC related to the
murder was dropped Tuesday and
with it one of three special circum-
stance aJ leptions Carter faces. He
still faces allcptions of ras)c and
tonure, either of which could cost
him life in prison without chance for
parole.
The j ury has already seen Caner's
videotaped confession in which he
admitted stabbina Beverly Aleun-
dria Holzmiller to death with a }.
inch-Iona pair of manicure sciuon
in December 1987.
Holzmiller was found nude in a
Huntidaton Beach 011 field near Ala-
bama and Huntintton streets. She
had been stabbed repeated!}' with
the manicure lcisson and suffered a
broken neck before she bled to
death, a patholoaist testified.
In Caner's confession to Hunt·
inaton Beach police. he admitted
stabbina her -but no more than
four times -and <knied rapina the
woman he'd met less than 10 houn
earlier.
"Ttferc's no questton he killed the
woman. but there was no rape," said
,,,_ ... see STAI/a.de '•I
.......... ~ .. ----..... " carter, on trlal for •llN•r anti rape, ltar" .,.._.
• tlle case II 91¥en to Ille J~ TueMaf.
information from a witness at the
June I J robber) of Mozaffanan Jew-
el ry. 2901 W. C~ast H1ghwav.
ln that robbery. a man walked
anto the jewelry store and asked to
look at some rings. accordma to
Gonll. After the salesclerk laid out
about 10 rings, wonh about $27.000,
on the display pad. the man .,.abbed
the pad and ran off, Gonis said.
A Newpon Beach woman who
was. drivin& east on West Coast
Highwa y 1n front of the store saw
the man as he ned. The woman, who
asked not to be identified; said she
and her 13-ycar-old daupner sud-
denly saw a "prcppy-lookin&" young
man m khaki pants and a white
oxford shirt running out of the store.
with two older men in ties chuing
af\er hi m.
"The }oung man ga ve a quick
look over his ~houlder and then
daned out 1n fron1 of my car." the
witness said. "He was really sprint-n .. 1 ~e woman followed the man as
he ran across the highway and up
~vers1de Dnve -toward O aff Drive
Puk. She then drove up to the man
as he got into a Peugot parked near
the park.
(Pteaw we RINGS/hck P..ael
A hairy
police
story
ly IRIS YOKOI o...,, l'tlot Staff Wtfl"
NEWPO RT BEACH
Pohcc Chief <\rb C~mpbcll
demonstrated Tuesday that he
1s head and shoulders above
th e rest -even 1f there 1sn 't as
much o n the head as 1herr used
to be.
Campbell got a ha1rc-ut -a
short, military-style number
that doe5n't leave much scalp
to the 1mag1nat1on -as a
challenge for two of h1~ officers
to get their hair shorn. too.
AccordinJ to Pohcc Sat
Andy Gon1 • the shear mad-
ness bepn when about a do1en
aravcyard-sh1f\ offi~n ~ntly
decided, on • whim. to act the
short cut, .
After the o fficers went un<kr
the razor, gra veyard-shift
fPtHM we HAIR/a.ck ..... ,
Coa~t residents want open .space
' • t • I • Survey: Not ef!ough county residents would back bond plan
ly MIN MIGi __ ,... ........... t
LAOUNA BEACH -Onn,r
County midcnta want optn 1pec:e.
peenbeltt and canyons -includina
Llpna Canyon -pro1eded from
' drieloDlnent. and more lllu hall In willi119 IO .. y IO do it. •t euepc for Ibale in Lapna
IClCCOrdint IO· a survey rcleapecl
Tuetday.
The turvey, conducted by a aroup
.arcbilll for a compromiie in the
bettlt over ~ to develop ~ C'.anyon. found that SI per-
cent o( county reeideftta would .-y
S20 a year for 20 re-rt IO ptHCtve
the canyon and other undeveao,ed
aita.
But 1n Laauna Beach. where rt •·
dent• ha\le · vocaHy oppo5ed a
planned Irvine Co. development 1n
the canyon, 76 percent -.cnou~
for a two-thirds m.,,9nty -said
they would Pl>: $30 a )ear to
pracrvc the canyon. nd 66 RC.rctnt
taad they wouad pay up to S 100 a
year to 1equ1rc the propeny.
.
encouraaina and d1t<'Ouraa1na.
"I'm encourqcd bccauK clearly
the people an t.aauna arc willina to
put their money where: their mouths
and lhe1r picket s11M arc." Lenney
Qld •.
"But I'm d1srourqed bccauK the
consultanu tell rM that we don't
have enouah (strona 1upport) to IO
countywtdc With a bond IMUe ...
ballot a $200 million bond mcai\lre
that would buy the canyon f'rom the
Irvine . Co and permanently
preserve 1t The 20-ycar bond alJO '
would fund purc hata of otha' en·
vironmentaJly sen11tt~ lands in the
county.
But Lenney r.a1d she thouaht the .
survey had duhed hopes for a coun-
tywKk bond l UC. lnttad the -.ad
she and other city tadcn may
pu'1ut a ~Una Bach-only bond
measure or • creative finanant .. 10
-·
'-ch. IOO h c:ounty voters •Y
tbly would indwt w lncnues in
.... 10 ~·v ud ~ Llp1ll
Cuyon •ther QOeft ...-e ~
That flauN It f'ar lbon o( the .W0:
thinh .... owit,, ..,. ...... to ...
a countywtcle 1a1 inu 1111.
Lapna Belch Mayor Lida Lcn-
ney. a member of the l.aluna Laurel
A4vitory Group -tucb ~
the wrvey. saad the results~ both
Opponents of the Irvine o.'s
planMd l.Aeuna Lauttl Pf'OJ«1 had
hoped to Platt on a rountyWldc
stop the development
She acknowledeed that. on ;.;;ill===-..........
,,.._ ... tM LAGUNA /ledt , ...
' ' .
" ....
levant \lle~k's king has releVant se~ret .. .............
... JI? ...... .•• *'Tbebio-B''#:'U:-i:~ ....... Sunday
I0'9eiduwdu ~lnWYantXV,
U.. •National Jerry =~·· Kobrin beillla2~~ ··--------· blcbelor.
Sohowoome
tbe event ooordinaton. Barbara and Jim de Boom or
Newpon Beach, received a call this week from a
woman in upstate Vallejo, requestina another Ameri-
can Airlines ticket so she could accompany her
fooddbero?
"Who's this?" they isked.
"His wife," she said. Oh .•
The de Booms buddied hastily with their client.
the usually unflappable Paul Salata. and it wu agreed
that all accommodations should be doubled.
But that's as far as they:d go. When funher
adviaed that Theresa and Demetrius Davis have an 8-
month-old son, Damien, Salata snoned: "Our hospi-
tality doesn't include a baby-sitting service."
Gracious, what a grouch.
YH jast bd to be ~re. I peas, ud ~ Dally
Pilot was: Because columning collcques Vida Dean
and Judy Chamberlain enjoyed earlier deadlines, I'm
left with the leftovers from the fabulous fete flung
Friday by the Juvenile Diabetes Foundation, honoring
~ OraQ1e Oo&d Cout lil&Da aa "Men of lbe
Decade." 8'1• bey, I'm not oomplainina. Even the ICraPI an~ · n...e weft., many memorable bappeninp at tbe
doubie-bunllld blat, ....Sa& lbe 0eDe Autry w ...
cm Heri• Muaeum in Oriflllb Part, that I coulda't
scribble a.it~· I mean. •ben 1 the laat time you uw tbe AJllell'
Gene Autry and the Ramt= Froeliere _,.., happily sbarina the same ~.without beial
ftaDked by batteries of' lawyers? D IOIDe sporUaa
circles. that alone would've been wonb the $300 price
of admission. And yet. tbere they were toeetber.
omeiltina pllques to tbe bonoreel, down-to-earthman
)obn C. Crean and ..,.ceman Buzz Aldrin.
As one awed onlooker oblerved: ... can't wait for Georsia and Gene to embrace, look soulfully into each
other's eyes, swina into a romantic d~ and then vow
to merae their Anaheim sUldium suites.
And how about that all~w show, in the sweet
name of charity? There WIS Danny Thomas, no less.,
sharing the emcee goodies with our own Pat Michaels.
There was·one ofmyf11vorite funnymen, Norm (Mr.
Malaprop) Crosby, merely fracturina the black-tie
audience. And there were lovely and talented Anna
Marie Albergheni and Gloria Lorina. sinaina sonp the
way songs should be suna.
Even the usually acerbic Mr. Blackwell, new
$20,000 nose and all, was oozing charm all over the
stage while presenting posies to Donna Crean and Lois
Aldrin. (I offered to show Mr. B my column about his
recent face-lift, but he said he'd wait for the clippina
service -no pun intended.) Yes. it was that kind of
transforming night.
You couldn'I I.brow aa = lodr.dllllr without =='f.:::Uc:!:. c.:.=. a:: Jeee,.._a.1~ Ruta lee, n.r-R...U.
Sandra OOuld, Siu ~.....,;and pb oaly bowl wbo
elle.
No& to meadoD the cbanered bu**" al .....
imported hm ~ tbe c..rt KarcMn. ..
i;-ReV. Bob Scbullen. ihe Jilnmr ROOllVelta. die a.deli
Vuquew. Bob Qt• lll*m (clw Sbirlee Md to
anead a kinsman's ~tioD ri&es). tbe Oil
FC1D10D1. the BuciJol9--. aad Hall oCFame
cbatmen Pilar W8:m S11unne Pienle. UM ~=~ ~-:-::e K:.';!,.,~tbe-Alan O'Kains. the Or.ltill Mandarb, and too many
otben -well, I've ~t only two fineen.
(Note: The .. unidenti&d" dude in tbe Monday
PUet pboto caption,~ witb Mary aad Jim
Rootevelt, was over-oblipna ~· eJtec Manball
Klein -who didn't mind the anonymity as Iona 11
Frontiere was spelled riabt.)
· (Second Note: Your beloved 0.0, Pl.let wu the
only county dailX to be represented -which meam,
golly. there must ¥e been all sons ofimponant socials
goina on that njaJtt. But. 11 editor Bill Lobdell likes
to say, "Wejustkeep tryna harder.") · -
Yft, I 1et a let of lenen ............ lalm: There
I was, swappina smoke with cipr-lovina James
Coburn, and I asked if he'd Anglicized his name from ·
Kobrin. He denied the chlrae.
"My folks came from Latvia," I pressed. "Where
did your folks come fromT'
Bei!'f, an actor, he relished the line. "The
Cobums, ' he said, "come from Compton." (
Tlllll 11 • • .., ~ -..... •war. Oeorlil ~ looti .. lliolutely denlina, b8d IUCb I WODdlrftll time at 1M JDF party tbat sbe invi&ed dal
Crealll IO attend a ..,..... ~· . So tbia ilD't IUCtly news, f'iaht? ~be 1nvila many
&ieDdl '° watda ber Rama perform ,...,?
Well, this inviiation ii OD the &;. lide. h's for the
Ram..cbieti eahibition tcbeduled Aus. 11 -at ..
historic Olympic Stadium, in Berlin. R Si ' lt'1 a trlfte Mia..., .. , It's~ ~n . ms •
of Sin Juan Capis~ an ·~-winruna ~ .
(ski feeturcs a sPecialty), bu received recop.1uon &om •
a publilbi.na house in Pridceton N .J . :
" letter received the other diy advises Sims that :
be'• been nominated for inclusion in "Who's Who • Amo~ Risina Youna Americans." . It 1 beartenina to know that my lonat.•m~ buddy
is sU1l rilina became, if memory serves. his di~
tinpilbed newspaper career belan when ~ contem-
porary was a typetetter named Johann Gutenbera.
(Don't even bother to uk Bun Sims bis qe.l did,
and all he'd concede is that "it's in excess of the
freeway speed limit.") . ,.... ...... P" 1• a~ In case y~·re I~~
for somethi~ to celebrate tomorrow mom1na. ptxyisli
Barbara Noms oflrvine bas a sugestion. She and
husband Arnold received a call from friends Gloria
and Owen Huahes of Sun City, wishina them a
"Happy Summer Solstice" on the morrow. .
(For those who like to sleep late, be adv~aed that
on June 21 , precisely at 8:33 a.m., the s~n wdl be .
farthest from the equator. And you won t wanna miss
that ... ) Jerry I-61U'1 colrun• ru• 'WHftl4•Y• ut1 .,.,..,, ..
Orange Coast People/
Drew Motta Newport,_\lictim i:nay settle out of ~ourt
.
HE IS~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
A Newpon Beach resident who recently graduated from Cal
Poly San Luis Obispo with a degree in applied art and design with
photography. Motta graduated from Newpon Harbor High School
in 1985.
WINNING PHOTO--------
Motta's photograph. titled "Eyeglasses:· was used in the final
competition of the Great GTO Western Printoff, an international
printi n~ press operators contest. The photo, pan of a class assian·
ment, is a closeup view of eyeglasS(s. Motta said his photo .was
picked because it was difficult to reproduc.e: The three runners-up
were also displayed at the Gutenberg Festival in Long Beach, but
only Mona's picture was used in the competition to determine the
best operator of the Heidelberg GTO model printing press.
ENRICHING EXPERIENCE------
Motta, who was invited to the Long Beach competition, said he
had "never seen anything like this before" as he watched the three
finalists running the presses simultatncously. "It was a great
opponunity for me to see another pan offhotography I'm not so
familiar with," Motta said. ''It got kind o nauseating after seeing
3,000 copies of the same photo coming off the presses."
STARTING HIS FUTURE------
Afier a wceklong vacation. Motto will head up to Glendale to
work in the Disney Corporation's lmagineering Depanment. He will
be photo documenting a number of the compan~·s projects.
. -By 'Wel#ly E1tn
News of the weird
By 801 VAN EYKEN
Oall)t Not Su« llf-
N EW PORT BEACH -Sundap
Bryant could get some aood
financial news today, for the fint
time since he was mistakenly shot
by Newpon Buch police 2 1 months
ago.
Bryant, who was crippled in the
shooting. fi.Jed suit against the city
asking for S 1 million in damqcs,
plus unspecified punitive ·damages.
The case is scheduled to 10 to trial
on Monday. but a settlement offer
from the city, disclosed this week,
could keep it out of court.
Teen suspect
in shooting
in custody
ANAHEIM -A 14-year-old boy
suspected of shooting and killing his
younger sister will remain in custody
until at leas t July 5. a prosec utor
said Tuesday.
A hearing in Orange County Juv-
enile Coun to determine if Richard
Hubler should be released to his
parents was continued until that
date at the request of the public
defender, said Deputy Dist.n et At-
torney Brent Romney.
Richard Hubler's 12-year-old sis-
ter Gema died Monday about I :30
p.m. of a single gunshot wound.
She was shot between the eyes
with a Sll\all -caliber rifle last Thurs-
day afternoon as she sat in her
bedroom. poli~ said. Shortly after
her death, the Orange County Dis.-
trict Attorney's O ffi ce fi led a murder
charge against her older brother.
-By City News ~n·lce
For the record
It is the Oru1e Coast Dally
Pilot's policy to promprly cor-
recr all errors of subSrance. To
repon an error or clarification,
call 642-4321 and ask for the
city desk. •
Samy Abdou, owner or the
American Speedy Printing
company, said his business bas
received a bad rap in the Hunt-
ingtop. Beach police togs.
Abdou said that complaints
about loud parties actually can
be traced to live bands practic-
ing in an office near his facility
on Chemical lane.
. Dinosaur recaptured after short cruise
CORALVILLE. Iowa -A
dinosaur roamed the Eanh briefly
-or at least that stretch of Eanh
that lies between the Sinclair and
Amoco gas staiions on U.S. High-
way 6.
ate symbol -floated IOOS( from its
mooring outside the Sinclair station
during Monday's floods and cruised
along the highway in this
southeastern Iowa town.
Marketing m41nager Dave
Arenstdorf said. "It was something
to see, all those cars honkina at the
dinosaur."
· The dinosaur - the familiar
: brontosaur that is Sinclair's corpor-
"We decided to go lasso it before
it got down to Amoco or something
and desened us for good." Sinclair
Arcnstdorf said the dinosaur wu.
roped and tied to a telephone pole,
where it will remain until it can be
moved later this week.
-By Th Auoclald Prwa
Editor's Hotline
Just Call· 842'-llOllB
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·--OtstrlOuhOll/
l'llnl Menactt
Bryant's attorneys are to meet
with City Attorney Roben Burnham
today to try to reach an qreement
on the settlement.
funher on the case. pon.
The report says Bryant spun
around when ordettd to freeze.
Bryant and his wife say the offiQer
fired before he even had a chance to How much the city is offerina
Bryant is unclear, hoV<Cver.
Bryant. a 27-ycar-old Liberian im-
miarant wu with hiJ wife, Marlene,
near Balboa Pier at about 3 a.m . on
Sept. 4, 1988. • move or to ideatify himself. ""
Burnham said Monday that the
settlement offer was S7S-O,OOO. but
Bryant's attorney, Christian Keena.
wd it was twice that fi1urc.
Newpon Beach police bad re-
ceived a repon of a man on the
beach wield1na a siwed off shotaun.
Accord.in& to a ~lice report.
Pellets from the shotaun blast
entered . Bryant's left side and arm,
damaaina his stomach and colon.
The arm sustained serious nerve
damqc and a severed artery and has
been rendered virtually useless, ac-
cording to Keena.
"My understandina is that ·it's
S 1.5 million," Keena said Tuesday.
"I'm rccommendina to him that
SI . 5 million will take care of his
family's financial needs."
Bryant and his WJfe were ap-
proached by two officers who or-
dered them to .. rreeze."
Burnham refused to c.omment
Rcponedly mistakina Brya~nfs
portable radio for a weapon, Officer
Derek Duncan fired a sbotaun
round at him, ~rdina to the re-
An inquiry by 1he county District
Attorney's office cleared Duncan of
any wrongdoing in the incident.
OC beaches draw 85,0CX>
NEWPORT BEAC H
About 85,000 sun lovers made it to
Orange County beaches Tuesday,
drawn, perhaps, by water NEWS
temperatures of about 70 degrees. BRIEFS
The largest crowd was re-
poned at Newport Beach, where
an estimated 52,000 people took to
the sand, said lifeguard Mike
Campbell, who considered it
"pretty uncrowded today."
The air temperature was 68 and it wu a couple
of dcirtts warmer in the water. he said.
It was only 65 degrees in the water at H unt-
ington Beach, where about 30.000 people soaked up
the raxs.
Lifeguard John Barth said the crowd was "on
the smaller side of average."
"I still think people haven't really gotten going
in the swing of summer yet." he said.
Firm distributes grants
COSTA MESA -Three recipients of Yaohan
Corp. grants panicipated in a presentation at Mon-
day's City Council meeting. Members of Share Our
Shelves, Costa Mesa Model Engineers and The Costa
Mesa Historical Society were · on hand to thank
Yaohan for rts contributions.
SOS, the latJeSt private poveny relief qcncy in
the county, received S 10.000. the Model EnJineers
got $8,500 and the historical society ~ived.S 1,500.
OC doctor killed In crash
SILVERA[)() - A Mission Viejo doctor died
Tuesday when a flatbed truck rolled over on his
small car, forcing closure of Santiago Canyon Road
for nearly an hour. the California Highway Patrol
reported.
The alternate route to the Santa Ana (5) Free-
way was closed between 8:20 and 9: I 5 a.m .. af\er the
crash, said California Highway Patrol spokeswoman
WFD has the finest
selection of
PLATT
in the South Coast Area
Since 1952
Linda Burrus.
The Orange County Coroner's Office indentified
the man as John Hung Edwards, who died at the
scene.
Ex-Newporter honored
NEWPORT BEACH -Roben M. (Bob) Allan
a former longtime resident of Newport Beach and a
staff commodore of Newport Harbor Yacht Club,
was recently honored by the Monterey Coast Guard
Auxiliary fof"·two life-saving incidents in Southern
California, one of them in Newpon Beach.
Allan, now a Pebble Beach resident. rcocived the
Ptaque of Merit for saving a baby's life on a burning
boat in the Balboe Yacht Basin, and the Certificate
of Ooerational Merit for the rescue at sea of thrtt
people in a capsized boat in the Catalina Channel.
The two incidents happened within a month of rach
other last July.
Transportation grant due
LOS ANGELES -Federal Railroad Adminis-
trator Gilbert Carmichael this week is expected to
award a $250,000 grant to the California-Nevada
Super Speed Train Commission.
The grant will be presented Friday during the
commission's meetings at Caesars Tahoe in State-
line. Nev.
The grant is for up to half the cost of con1ractual
suppon to evaluate and verify· the benefits and
impacts of a privately financed. built and operated
300 mph train between the Las Vegas Valley and
Anaheim.
-From 1i.Jf ud win ttf'Ot11
Here arc the winning playing
card numbers picked Tuesday
n~t for the California Lottery's
daily "Decco" game: ~Heans: 5
+clubs: 3.
ODiamonds: 8.
•spedcs: King.
WFD -HOME FU8NISHINGS ·& INTERIORS
18030 E uchd • Fountain Valley -(714) 540-2275
• • •
Getting here 'from
there forget It
Handy guide should h~lp natives
get ready for the summer tourists . -
Summer is wha(
tomorrow? And
alrqdy we are beina
descended upon. They are
comiq from Ohio and Colo-
rado, from Downey and
Bakersfield. And they arc not
all aoina '° Disneyland.
Lesions ofthem are com-
ina here, to Joe Wambaugb's Fred
"Golden Oranae." So it Mart in seemed reasonable to scout
the Orange Coast, just to
make sure all is in readiness.
By starting just below Seal Beach and arindina on tbrouah
Newport ~nd 1:Jtguna and Dana Point d~~ to San Juan Ca)>i1trano, we ~v~ simphfied your summer by dev1s1na a son of tourist auide.
This ha.ndy tool offers you ready-made ans~rs to many of the
odder questions you may be asked by visitors and tourists. The Fred
Column passes these on to you as a public service and assumes no
responsibility for their unsuccessful use.
. Best Way to Get to Laauna from The Queen Mary: Sneak up
on 1t. Take the freeway to San Diego, then drive back up the coast
Worst Way: San Diego Freeway to the 73 Freeway, Newpon ·
Beach. Down Newport Boulevard throu&h Costa Mesa to Pacific ~oast High~ay, then down ~H. Should take them about three days.
1fthey surv1ve the Jamboree intersection.
Ugliest New Building; The Pierside Pavilion at Main and PCH
in Huntington Beach. ·
Prettiest New Building: There arc no qualified entries so suggest
anything t~at isn't pink with a tile roofand palm trees. '
. Scuzziest ~a~h Bums: T.ie between the crowd around Newpon
Pier and the gnzzhes at Huntmgten Pier.
Most Beach1ocrs Per Grain of Sand: Tossup between Big
Corona and Laauna Main Beach.
. Most Impassible Town: Newpon Beach, of course, which is
npped asunder about three.qwarters of the way from border to
border.
M.ost Confusing Phenomenon: Direction of the Orange
Coastline. Road Atlases make it look as if it runs north and south
but it runs east and west. Really it docs. '
. Most Obnoxious Teen-agtrs: A quartet oflouts on tbc Balboa
Peninsula who play Stop the Can. By running back and forth in the
cn;>sswalks in a carefully programmed pattern, they can manaac to
br;ing almost every car to a screeching halt. Prediction: One of them
will soon become a tread face, and there will be a hue and cry for
more stop signs on Balboa Boulevard.
Most Cops Giving Tickets: Huntington Beach with nine albeit
five were watchinf. the other four. '
Tile Amertc11 Cap Ruaeda: While Orange Coast sailors arc
~i~g to figure out whether th~y can raise the kind of megabucks
1t will take to compete, 21 foreign yacht clubs representing IS nations
have filed challenges.
There arc the predictable entnes: Australia, Enaland, France>
Italy, Sweden and, of course, New Zealand amona ihem.
Then there arc the unl?redictables. including first-time
ch~llengcrs Japan, the Soviet Union. Yugoslavia aod Switzerland.
Swtucrland?
You bet, ret;>rcscntcd by the Swiss Ocean Racing Club. That
must be something like the Greater Kansas Ski Club.
Looking for a good local angle here. we called Donald Willet.
who is commodore of Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club, the first West
Coast club ever to challenge (wttb T. Patrick Dougan's Columbia)
for the Amcnca·s Cup. Perhaps Bahia Connth1an would give 1t
another shot?
"We thought about it." the commodore said, "but I think we're
JOinJ for a new roof instead." Showd be some roof. Dennis Conner
1s said to have spent maybe S20 million winning the Cup in Perth.
We also put an a call to Bill Ficker. the Newpon Beach architect'
and past commodore of Newpon Harbor Yacht Club which won
the Ame.rica's ~up in !970. He was out of the country.
Lonn Weiss. president of Newpon Ocean Sailing Association
and Of?nge Coast. coordinator for the America's Cup Organizing
Committee. hadn t gone any:wherc so I called him.
What did he know about any Orange Coast yachtaes putting
together an America's Cup effon. "Nothing." replied Lonn. who as
usuallf good for much better quotes than that.
.. haven't heard anything. Not even rumors. And you always
hear rumors."
Isn't any Amencan syndicate goan& to challenge champion
~nms Conner'? "Well. there may be another group from the
Midwest, and a couple from the East Coast. But those arc jusl
rumors." Lonn cautioned.
Peter Isler as one declared candidate to face-off with Conner. But
fund-raising may be even tougher 1f he doesn't brush up on his
match-racing technique.
Last weekrnd, on his home waters m San Diego. Isler was
blanked in three days of racing by New Zcalandcr David Barnes.
Help Wuted: Audrey Moore ofNewpon Beach asked the Fred
Column for help an solving what has become a m-.jor problem for
her.-If Audrey can't remember what MacArthur Boulevard was
called before it was renamed in the m1d -'SOs, she may ao quite daft.
Surely one of the old hands hereabouts can come up with the
answer and save this dear lady. If you can, give u$ a call on the
hotline.
Fred M•rtl• '• col•m• ,.,,,,. MOIHlay1, Wft1Ml4ay1 ud Frlday1.
Orl9lnal
bulldt ... of
Dr. Geral
llau•• '" t MS.
Newport had only
one doctor in 1·945
Dr. Gerald Rau11 Wis tbe only doctor in New-
port Beach for many yean. He opened his office in
t 9•S. riaht at\er World War II, at 2830 Newpon
Blvd., at the comer of 29th Street. It was called
DfDYOU
KNOW
<l t Central Avenue 1hen. ,,
Rausa's wife, Betty. worked in his offl« in the
.19S91. They ~d~ed o!' .to the bu~Jdina in the rear and •
tt stJU stands tn its onasnal location. He practiced and • made house calls from there from l 9•S to t 961 . His ___ _.
widow llv~ in Newpon Beach. and his daual\ter is in Santa Barbara.
-'Conlriburtd by Betry Raua ., I
. Share your memorieJ with Did You Know. Send yourconrribu-
t.1on1 to Did You Know, Oraqe Ceu1 De&IJ PUN. P.O. 8o.t 1$60,
Newport Be«b, 92616.
-c-tll'*' •r Aw .,_
Season has first brush fire
LAGUNA HILLS -A brush fire
iuetday near the bOrder of lapna
8e8ch and LMuna Hills burned
about an Kft pr.,... and brush. rare
authorities uid.
The ftre near Laauna Canyon and
El Toro roede 11aned ~l l ~
p.m., ..W Latuna a.ch Fire Chief
the leaSOn,.. he added.
No suuctures were thrca1cned. but
a ~on of El Toro roed was cloeed for about 40 minutes btaute of
heavy smoke. Oewbefry sud.
The fire started w~ spertJ &om a construction wortu·s poWct saw wutect dry .,.... Dewberry Micl.
Parents earn an A for Grad NI • "
ly AMNIDA \llltAY
Dllllr ...... ,.._ .....
LAGUNA BEACH -h's time
for biP school senion to aet a little
crazy. Scbool's out, 1ummer's here
and colleae is riaht around the cor-
ner. But the tradition has a new twist
-the parents are aoina crazy. too.
Whether hunched for hours over
comput.en, telephones, buckets of
.paint or arauina over details, parents
alona the Oranae Coait arc readyina
for t!'e bia event: pad night.
This year, the Or ... e C..1t DUiy
PlMt visited parents in Laauna
Beach, who received a $2,000 Na·
tional PT A arant to help them create
the "Greatest Show on Earth."
The parents hope they can keep
the students busy on the campus
field from dusk until <iaWn Thurs.-
day ~o keep them from drinking and
dnV1ng;
Sitting on scraps of construction
paper on the concrete floor of a
small Laauna Canyon Road ware-
house, parents of graduating seniors
at Laguna Beach High School
worked out last-minute arrange-
ments .
"It's fun because we've gotten
husbands and wives to work on it as
a team," committee member Ann
Hansen said. "There's a lot of
positive that comes out of it ...
especially the relationships you
build with other parents at a tam e
when your kids arc leaving the
nest."
Surrounded by tall brightly
painted boards destined to become
part of their circus train, Hansen
and a few others in the 20.member
committee discussed bow the
aroup's remaining funds would be
spent.
The committ«. which is trying to
get all 173 graduating seniors to
attend the 33rd a11nual event. is
• luring the teens with prizes like
videocassette recorders. compact
disc players. television sets and even
a trip for two to Hawaii.
Through receptive local busi·
nesscs. residents and fund-raisers.,
the group has raised $30.000 for the
event, SJ.SOO of which goes to
prizes. The rest pays for bands. and
surprise "circus" attractions. Parents
expect to raise S6.000 from the SJS
entry fee. and hope to have some
funds left over to pass along to next
year's committee.
"It's gone from crepe paper and
balloons to a full-time JOb," volun-
teer Jeanne Butcher said. "It's a
labor of love. The best pan I thank
will be seeing at all com e to lafe an
front of you. I go home at night and
I say this as my th erapy. I'm drcam-
inJ in Technicolor now. It's a cul-
mination of all the tame and energy
that we've put into our child."
Like Butcher. parents $3Y their
children gain a new respect for their
effons when they notice how much
lime is devoted to preparing for the
event.
The fi rst mt't'tan g· was h<'ld in
September. and 111 the last two
months part'nts have meet almost
daily. ,.
Diana Gehling. who with her hus·
band put on clown make-up and
costumes fo r a recent graduation
night preview. said she was able to
Helplng present the ;·Greatest Show on
Earth .. grad night are parenu lfrom leftl
o.iew ............... ..,_
Ann Hansen, Jo.nn• .. a.er, DavNI H•1•n
and Jeanne •utcher.
Grad night Parties
~ popular·traditicin
COSTA MESA -Graduation night parties arc becomina more
and more popular every year -not just with students, but with
schools. community organizations and local businesses.
In just four years. 1he number of Oranar County bi&b schools
offenng grad nights to their students has increued from four to 48.
And the concept, which 1s to gi ve graduatina teen·aaers an alcohol-
frcc all -night pany, could go nationwide, if a local aroup of parents
has a say .
"In Orange County. all the communities that have orpnized
grad nights ha ve had no reponed incidents of alcohol-or droa·
related accidents. anJuries or deaths," said Elaine Goodman, ex-
ecutive director of the Costa Mesa-based Grad Nite Foundation.
"That's why it's so supponed by law enforcement."
Goodman saad about 40 parents and school administraton now
volunteer for the non-profit group, performing training scminan for
parents hoping to stan their own event.
Goodman said she expects a new branch of the orpnlZltion,
whi ch was created by parents at Newpon Harbor High School in
1986. 10 stan next year an San Diego, and m Los Anaelcs the
followtng year.
The Grad Nite Foundation this year received a SS0,000
Disneyland Community Service award. and recently received a
$2.000 donation from Pacific Mutual.
Goodman said her organization also encourqed the Irvine Co.
to donate S 1.000 each year for graduation night parties in 13 area
high schools, which 1he company has done for the last three years.
-By Ami .. Wray
get an idea of ho"' \COtO~ felt about
the eve nt whalt' dastnhuting invata·
tions.
"For m) huc;hand, thas was not
an> ens) thing for ham to~. but he
JUSt loved it." she ~ad. " ne of the
girls said afterward 11 was he first
lime all v<'ar she felt lake a senior.
And having them \I)', 'This as so
rad. th as 1s so rad." at was w darhng."
she said. "We touched th em."
Although Gehling and other
~naor parents know they cannot
a ttend the event. which as
chaperoned b) Junior parents. she
5ald she Will mass Sttlnl the StU·
dents' reacuons to the surprises she
helped arrange.
"h 's going to be real hard not to
be there," she said.
Single parent Bruce math said he
volunteered for the event after rc-
al m ng ll would be one of the last b11
efforts he could gi "e bas son.
"It's probabl> the last gifi I ca n
really give my son and all has fnends
that's really lar&e from me," Smith
said. "I know when he gets married
that it's going to be his wife's parents
who arc go mg to do all the wort." ~
Smith, who attended Laauna :
Beach High School's lfaduation :
njfht in 1962. remembered bow sur-;
pnsed he was when the event was :
almost over. :
"I don't think any of us until :
about 4 a.m. realized that we we\'en't :
coming back." he said. "This year, I :
don't know about a lot of other :
pattnts, but for me it's been a year :
of letting 10. It's been probably one :
of the most complex ycan I've ever :
bad. It's hard to be a sin&le parent ,
and have your child proud of you." :
Smith's son Kns said bis father :
has been "obsessed" with the event. :
"I have a computer in my room :
and he's work.in& on it for two or :
three hours a day tyi>ina reports, .. :
Km Smuh said. "Hes doina a &ood :
JOb." :
Gehling's daughter. Liz, said she :
has someumcs had to do more :
around the house, lilcc fa.xina meals. •
but the effort has been wonh it.
"I'm really glad that I bave in-
volved parents," she said. "No one :
knows how much ... tir:nc and eDef'I)' :
the parents have been puttina into :
1L0
:
"All of the lcids I've t.alk:ed to arc '
crazy about it " said Mary Youna. •
74,orpnizcr of the school's first pad :
night 1n 1957. "It wa.s just u bta as '
an event then as ll 1s now ... "
Like today's events. Youna said :
the fi rst grad night was created to
k«p yo uths from drinkmg and driv-•
mi. •·we had 80 tudents 1n lb.at
graduating class. I think WC aot all
but about one to come." she sa1d. '
"(Paren ts) took the cafeteria and
the) covered the walls 1n black
plaslJc and put futurisuc pamunp
on it. First wc sc:rved them dinner·
an_d then t.hey brought their bathina
suits (to go swimmmg). We had
music and dancing all night."
Officials working to clarify alien policy
ly IOI VAN EYKEN
COSTA MESA -Mayor Peter
Buffa and City Manager Allan
Roeder arc m«tmg wtth Housing
and Urban Development Secretary
Jack Kemp in Washington today to
try to hammer out a compromise on
a controversial proposed policy of
withholding money from organaza·
lions that serve illegal aliens.
Last August. the City Council
enacted, by a 3-2 vote, a policy
under wh ich organ izations recc1v1ng
federal community develo pment
bl~k arants through the city would
have to \enf) that the people they
served were legal res1drnts of the
United States.
Man) chanucs and other or-
ganazauons serve people in need
wtthout askrng for proof of le-gal
residency.
The policy was suspended. how·
ever. when a HllD official an Los
Angeles told the Cll) the measure
maghl violate federal ant1-d1s-
cnmanauon laws.
Two weeks ago. however, HUD's
general counsel. Fran._ Kcaung. sent
the cit) a letter -through th e office
of Rep. Chns Co,, R-Newpon
Beach -andacaung that the policy
wouJd no t violate federal law.
Upon heanng the news. Coun·
cilman Orv Amburge). who had
proposed the pohc) m .i\ugust, said
he mtended to reintroduce at. Coun-
cilman Ed Gla5$ow also said he
would suppon rei nstatement of the
pohcy.
Two others. councilwomen Mary
HombuckJc and Sandy Gems. said
they would not suppon 11.
And Buffa saad he wasn't sure
what he would do.
Three days alter the ~tpt of
Kcat\ng's letter .. howc"er, Kemp
quashed the general counsel's culma
and saad he wanted to m~ WJlh cay
official~ and 1mm1grant nahtl grou~ an an attempt to clanfy and
possibly revise HUD poltcy.
Cox. wbo was acting as intermedi-
ary between HUD and the caty, wd
he believed the secretary's intention
was not onl}' to protect the rights o(
legal residents but 10 ensure the
humane tre-atment of 1llepl immi-
grants.
He saad he believed Kemp might
even seek rc v151ons of fedcraJ 1mmi-
grat~?n law, wb1ch he. c.aJlcd ''bid
law.
The mecung 1s scheduled for l
p.m. EDT. 4 p.m. Pacific time.
Gunman gets S430 from motel clerk .
FOUNTAIN VALLEY -
A robber escaped wtth S430
after pullina a gun on a front
lobby clerk at a Econo Lodge
motel Monday niaht. police
said.
~
POLICE
LOG
The robber walked anto the
lobby of the motel at 91 25
Recttation Circle Ind started
talk.i na to the tlcrk at about
10:30 p.m .. accordina to police
re pons.
He asked for chan&e, but when • the clerk
looked up, the robber pointed a revolver at her
and asked for money. He then ran out the door
with the cash. pohce said.
Co.ta Meta
Someone broke 1n10 1 car pu ktd outs1dt 1 m i·
<kn l's homo and stok S 1.260 wonb of proJX'n)
Roller .U1cs. JUmptt cables. a sttf"CO. caiknc
t.aptS and even a spare 11rc wcrc itoltn TM ma<knt
wa1 'nllde the home 11 the tamt of the thtf\
0 A buralar madt ofT •1th S 1.00o ta.,en from a car s-rkcd an the .)()() block ot unnK C'11-clt • 0
An Onnae C'oes1 Colletr ~tudent let\ her S~ mountain bike inside of her t 11r When she rctumtd.
her bake W1ll aone
0 A Wakeham Part t"lftftr rcponcd that tht walli of
1tw women's rauoom had been pra ·paan&ed with .,.mu.
old Foun111n VJllC~ woman somt11mc bclWttn Jan q and unda' T 01al 'alut of 1ht stoltn 100<h was
u11ma1ed a1 SI<~
0
A man tx11ntrJ 11 gun a1 lb-car-old Hunun11on
Sta h v.oman Monda\ 11~ she \II 1n h" car 11 a Ralphs
marl.r1 but ht latrr fen lht scent
Huntington Beach
<\ m1dent u1d $0m('()nt pulltd up SI 00 1n flowtrs
lh'1 \he had planltd thc da) befort in her front yard 1n lhr 600 block of Wtldt C'lrTlr ht lat.er found her planh in a nr1.ihhor'~ truh can. sht saad.
0
<\ rt'\1th:n1 1n 1hr 600 bloc\. of 18th Uttl said
~mc-onr ;,1olt htr dos The ntAt da~ shr l'C'<'tavtd 1 call
frum ~1mrt1nt unknown olftnna 10 n:tum htr ptl for
mC1nt). \ht ~1tl
0
l h1rH·\ broli.e into a IO<'ktd p~ in thc 9400
bl0t.li. o( Mololi.a1 Onvt and \IOlt> 8urlboar~s and
lilltl~Ull\
D ._ v1c11m rttumtd homt an the 2ll00 block of
Aonda trttl 10 find a ""andow tnttn m1SJ11\J and a
v1d~u5tllC r«Ordt r stolen
D
Tht llrt\ and whrd i fTJ'(>rlcdb wctt' taken ftt>m • rC'd rord r~n parlcd an front o( a lef'\'ltt dnvcway
al \\ alson Ford ~In. I H Beach 81\'d.
. 0
<\ 1111oman aid she 1nv11cd a man to com< 10 he\'
~nmt 1n t~ 1.)()00 bloc.. of Aulnay Lane. but he
n: u~ to IU '-l" whl"n ukcd 11 1bout l:lO a.m.
0 Prcscnp11on boll!n 1ha1 may have bttn taktn ftom
a h p11al W"Cl"f found a1 the Boys· and Oub' club. 9191
Pioncet u~.
'"'* A •'OIJl•n rcpontd that lhttt mtn took he\' purw
$\Inda}' niahl dunnt a rolt('Cn ll lf"ltftC' Meedows
Amphhhtatrt c
unda> momma. Th1t\CS ap1)1lttnll)' enlcred the eatery
throu&h a windov. 1hu v.as boarded up.
0
~ woman complaantd 10 police that a SH hood omamcnl was taken from her whatt Cadillac unday
v.-halc 1hc car was parktd an front of her m1ckn\x on
Grttn Trtt Lant
0
Two \ n1ro)ll T1~r Paw lltts valuc-d at SI SO waoe taktn from undcmc:ath a Chtvrolcl truck s-rttd on
San Lton
0
Four lttn...agcn tnc._cd a I O.ynr-old boy anto actt1n1 off his 51lvtr GT Mach I ba._t and then toot t1w b1kt Sunda)' 11 Harvard . .-.vtnut nur the AT A SF
Ra ilroad tracks 0 .
ha'"'' cream was spra'td on a houtc, yard aad ft n« on Wttping Wood siturda)' nllht Of S\lndl)'
momina 0 Patao fum11un: was thrown onto tennis couna aad
IJ'lffill WU 111101ltn On a teheduhna board earl)' Sunda. )' mom1na 11 1ht orthlakt Ttnn11 Cl ub on Eutlab.
llida Oewbmf.' 00lt ... °"; ant v~tion ft~ o( _,,_•Mir -"'",,,,,.. An num.ated JlOO Wat takn from Lun"°" Pma. 144SO C'Ulll'CT Dnvt. bttWttn Sat\lrda)' niaht and , \.
M ~ COllt DAil Y ptLOT I w.dneeday, June IO, 1llO
·HELP FOR PARENTS! I
YOUR CHILD DESERVES EVERY CHANCE! \
Children & Adolescents Don't Usually Say ~
There's A Problem, They Show You Through:
• Boredom, apathy o r fa mily conflicts
• Poer grades; truancy, or runaways
• Alcohol or Drug use
• Isolation, depression , moodiness or
. poor self esteem
FOR HELP, CALL TODAY!
1 ·800·540·KIDS
( 1 ·800·540·5437)
Call loday tor free pamphlers on any ot rhese 1mpor1an1 lopics
(..n.t(>rrn 1)r 0.Ntt •·
(..rwt(1 S4••~Ml ~t>HV ,,...., s .. ~..,.,
("lldr•" ...... """ • f)tv,....,_~.-n n•>•""•
A.rh "'"" <>•·•c "' {Jr,...Jt~ l ,,.,.,,.,"'q U·~bfthf"\
Trw• I ""'' Whv c..111 ' P~y A111w....,. A~t_t "'i.t.t1uul P.,4.NJ' Htr\
l..~•• A gu_,.• •o ~,,. '' rv. • .nrt ptnf1 .. ,•..,,n.tf'
Counselors Are Available 24 hours a day, 7 days a week
Flag amendment
goes to House
8y ftAUL ftAGI
ft I'll ..........
WASHINGTON -The House
Judiciary <;ommittee voled narrow-
ly Tuetday to send a constitutional
. amendment proleetina the flaa to
the House floor for a vote, u an
Aaocia\ed Preas survey showed the
meaaurc lbon of tbe suppon needed
to pua C.onareu.
Tbe 19-17 committee vote set the
slqe for a showdown in the House.
pouibly u early as this week.
.. Tbe close vote ... indicatet that
it's 1oina to be a fairly close vote on
the Door, .. said Rep. Jack Brooks, D-
Teus, lhc committee chairman.
The AP survey said as much, and
indicated that uncommitted Demo-
crats <Will play a large role in de·
terminµig the fate of the amend-
ment.·
In the House, supponen and
those leanina in favor outnumbered
opponents 2SS-1 IS, with 289 votes
required for peuaae, the survey
showed. Of the 63 who were un-
decided or had no known position,
SJ were Democrats.
The s;rvey found S8 icnators
were either committed to or leanina
toward the amendment pushed by
President Bush, leavina it nine short
of the 6 7 needed to pus. ·
Twenty-four Democrats and four
Republicans were either committed
or leanina against supportina the
amendment.
The top Democratic leadenhip in
the House and Senate are ve-
hemently opposed to ·the amend-
ment, but a vote against it is seen by
Democrats and· Republicans alike as
risky business in an election year.
. Mayors appeal for
peace dividends
CHICAGO -New York's David .our cities."
Dinkins led fellow' mayors Tuesday Oink.ins spent only the morning at
in a populist appeal for a piece of the the conference because of his role in
peace dividend despite a warning planninJ for South African anti-
from Congress that cities likely a~nhe1d leader Nelson Mandela's
would not share in any defense visit to New York today.
savinas. But his speech was full of rhetoric
· "We arc obliged by the needs of welcomed by the mayors a day after
the people we represent -the ma-House Ways and Means Committee
jority of Americans -to put our Chairman Dan Rostenkowski told
claim on the liberated resources of the mayors they stood little chance
the Cold War," Oink.ins told the of winning more federal ·aid soon.
U.S. Conference of Mayors. "The Dinkins IT\_ildc.. .o.o mention of
money that had once financed a-rma-·· Rostenkowski.
ment factories can now help rebuild -By Tbe A•1ocl•ld PreH
Lihcoln
seizure
pondered
WASHINGTON -Charles
H. Katina Jr.'• me of Li~
Savinaa and Loan Auociauon
amounted to a .. pure cue of
fraud'' costina taxpayers more
than S l .S billion, a aovemment
attorney said Tuesday.
Keauna's lawyer, however,
rcjec\ed the aovernment'• con-
tentiona and suaetted tbat
U.S. District Court Judie
Stanley Sporkin must overturn
the aovemment's April 1989
seizure of th~ Irvine SAL or
risk unravelina the entire S&.L
bailout. .,.
Potential buyera of rescued '
thritU won't trust the aovem-
ment if rcgulaton' arbillal)'
and "capricious takeover is al-
lowed to stand, said attorney
Ronald Fein.
"If the private sector can't
rely on the government to
apely the law in good faith ....
rational businessmen arc just
not aoina to invest their moner,
in these kinds of institutions, '
Fein said.
Afterward, Keatina told rc-
poners he believed he had re-
ceived a fair hearing. but
vowed to fight any adverse
decision.
"I have full confidence t.hat
what this judge docs ... will be
a fair and honest opinion," he
said. "But 1 don't know if it·
will work o ut for me .... We
have at least gotten a trial and
America has gotten a trial."
If Sporkin grants the govern-
ment's motion to dismiss the
suit, Keating said, "We'll be
fighting unti l the day I'm dead.
I have no intention of being
raped by the U.S. govern-
ment."
-By Tiie A,.ocl•led p~,.
High court upholds Prop. 1.1 5
SAN FRANC! CO -The state
Supreme Court refused Tuesd3y to
block immediate application of
Proposition 115. the prosecution-
sponsored initiative approved June
S that overhauls criminal court
procedures in California. ·
The.justices denied review of an
a{>pellate court order in Los Angeles
dism issing a public defender's
challenge to the new law as
premature. The court's action was
not a ruling on the validity of Prop-
osition 115, but 1t allows ;udges and
prosecutors around the state to con-
unue implementing the measure.
Later in the day. Attorney General
John Van de Kamp's office planned
to ask the coun to meet in a special
session this summer and review and
uphold the validity of Proposition
115. .
"We've cautioned distnct at-
torneys that until we get a ruling
from 1he courts. any decision by
local Judges to apply this is going to
be one that's at nsk." said Chief
Assistant Attorney General Richard
Iglehart. head of Van de Kamp's
Criminal Division.
He disagreed with the Los Angeles
public defender's observation thal
the measure was causing chaos in
trial couns around the state. but said
·that "to some degree. Proposition
115 probably did cause chaos to
defense attorneys ...
Dubbed the Speedy Trial Act by
its sponsors. Proposition 11 5
shoncns court procedures and re-
stricts defendants' rights in a variety
of ways.
-By T~e A••oclated PttH
THE COAST GUARD . ,
WA -NTS YOU.
ORJ\NGE COAST
A Public Service Announcement brought to you by the
------------
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ftlc..N' fC.,f.>41f11..f h\ July 8, 1990
1( hJrl1.1hk dim,1111111, ·" Jlh.•" rd '" l.m ,.· 11 I H~ I I IH 1 • ·
-----------,::--------------.----· .
' -
GE .COAST BU
Venture capltal drying up
In affluent Orange County
Ir Xl't NlfHIONY can dram -reomenwives ftom ~ plan looked at. A dMJ that
9'IW,... C.• • •• • 10 venture capila.I firms repeatedly comes in over the tranlOm i1 like a
NEWPORT BEACH -Invest· 1tresled the aame met111t: Above novel lookiQI for a publilher.
meat money for hiah risk;. hiab all, \hey said, today's 1ian .. up com· Of the deals that do aet financed,
fn)l1 veDIW'et in C>ranp U>Unty pany needa a IOOd manqement ! most invesiors, such u rJim
itrild up •fican\Jy last year, laid team, 1 lfOW1h industry And • ~ a partner at the Ne"pon 9"IO'Y Ro..• partner at Emat A un~que product. Baeh oitic; of OSV Partnen. in1i1t
YOUlll and one of Lbc sponton of Of tbe 3,000 buaineu plans ven-on oblainina a at on the board of
tbe uaual "Meot the funds" con· ture capiwiats look at each year, the company they invest in and
f'erlDCI at Le Meridien H01el on on~ 1 dozen will pt the S l million playi~ an active role in the com·
T'*Clay. ~milliop requested, the pennen 1>9ny. 'You can't make an invest· A.ccordi= to ROii, the pool of Baaically, explained Bonnie ment and walk away," he noted.
venture cap la.I available lo ~ Renie, a partner with Southern Cali· Amona the venture-backtd com· fr1r%ufi:1f:'t~8 ':'°o 1pped8 mi'filrli~omn fornia Venlures. an investor is loo.k· ~ies represented at the conference Sl8 1 int for a deal that will brint 10 times included Corus Medical'. a Co1ia in 1919, ecboina a nationwide trend. the money plunaed into it. Other· Mesa blood bank that has received
.. ida beiQI a much amaller ~se •. the pin doesn't outwciah the Sl2 miUion to date without yet ~ be II.id. the funds are aoina to nlk involved. puslna the break-even 'point The
I mucb more divene lfOUP, with Explained Roaer Davisson, a part· investors, includina Mike Henos, a IOftware ftrma bavina made the bi&-ner with Brentwood Associates in partner at 3i Ventures in Newport
pt comet.ck. Los An&elcs: "We invest when our Beach, say they expect to wait S to Orule County health care and arced overcomes our fear." 7 years before gettina their money
medic:af companies, which reaped 78 Accordina to most of the vent\re out. ~nt of th(.,available doUan in capitalists on the panel, the would-Accordina to Rou, one of the
1917, received only 23 percent of the be entrepreneur needs a reference Ernst & Youna partners who s~ke
funds in 1989. from a lawyer, a certified public at the conference, the so-ailed 'exit
Spnkina to about 2SO people -accountant, or an investment banker vehicle" for venture capitalists has
mallY of whom were hopina to like Cruttenden & Co .• a sponsor of chanacd s1anificantly over the ptst
finance their vmion of the Amen· the conference -to aet his or her two yc..rs.
Carl's Jr. ad campaign
targets ~ ispanic market
ANAHEIM -Carl's Jr .. res-
taurants today are &akin' steps to
atttact Southern California's grow·
ina Hiapanic market.
An advertisina campaian being
launched this week marks the fint
time Carl's Jr. has advertised in the
Spanish tanauaac on broadcast
media.
The campaian consists of . three
30-tecond television spots that will
be abown on KMEX Channel 34
and KVEA Channel S2. Founder
Carl Karcher makes a cameo appear·
ance at the close of each com-
mm:ial, sayinJ "We'll be waitina for
you" in Sparusb.
O I C I p, \ ' U D 0 M ''
. .
"We arc entering an expanded
phase of marketing for Carl's Jr.:·
Group Vice President of Marketing
Bob Wisely said. "Los Anseles has
the sccondlaraest Spanish-speaking
populatjon in the world and Spanish
1s the domi nant or preferred
lanauaae for the majority of this
population. We cxprct to scncrate
new interest in Carl's Jr. and pin
access to many new auests."
Employees will wear buttons that
say "Bienvcnidos a La Estrella" -
"Welcome to The Star" -and
postcn in each restaurant's lobby
will aid Spanish-speakina aucsts up -
familiar with the Carl's Jr. menu.
-By City Neff• ~nice
Stock prices post
moderate gains
NEW YORK -Stock prices post·
ed moderate gains Tuesday as late
bargain hunting and computer-pro-
aram bu y orders gave some direc-
tion to an otherwise lackluster
session.
The Dow Jones average of 30
industrials rose 11.38 to ·2.893.56.
Advancing issues outnumbered
losers by about I 0 to 9 on the New
York Stock Ellchangc, with 778 up.
708 down and 519 unchanged.
Big Board volume totaled 134.93
million snares. up slightl y from
133.47 million in the previous
session.
l
-"' ~;l~. _, ---
l!&t .. ·~i~:I l =a
Up the Ladder
Dayle Eby sales manager
· for Premier Services Inc.
u.,le ~ bu joined PnaMr vices depertment1 in lhe COit.a
R11111rm M1'f1ftl IM. or Irvine Mesa otficc.
11 nalioaal aaJet rnanqrr. Eby i1 • • • · · respona.ible for client service and Ona ~ ~ JOlned .._. account ma1W1tmen1 in Premier's 1.., lAel C.. of Irvine as we.Inn
Southwest felion. She will ovmee raional ~es manaser. CardweU
\be ~pany's home marketin&. "'111 supervise 12 mes reprftenta-bomeftndina. monaaee and trans-uves for ~lb Mu~ and ~.1tt ponauon manqement services to Lock d1v1110ns. Prior to . JO&Dlftl uulferrina corporate cmpl(1:fd Master, Cardwell wu di1tnct man· ...,._ Dr
n.... · fi · qer for the Norelco Co. Muter comes to ..-.._mier. rom ol~· Lock Co. i:a the wortd'1 larJest . 1987. Bated in Minnea_poli1, IDS it Ban~r Relocation Co. in manufacturer of padlock&, 1 owned by American fJIP"CS'· Lquna Hills where she served as subsidiary of MutttBrand Indus-• • •
account manqtr. tries. whkh is a subsidary of Uaa °""" was appointed na·
• • • American Brands Inc. tional sates manarr II the W"1111 tueUn Carpe was fromoted 10 • • • S.111 C.Ul P .... hotel in Cosu
manaai• partner o the Costa Ttder WatklM was named dis-Mesa. Qa&esby will be responaibae
Mesa office of Laualhl Ir trict manqer for IDS Flaudal for corporate and allOCiation
Berwadl cenified public accoun· Serven i.e. in Irvine. A personal aroup busineu from the Nortbeut
tants and consultants. Carpc is financial planner, Watkins joined reaion and the San Francisco Bay
repladna Artil•r Nemlroff. who IDS in' March 1987 and was named area. She was formerly national · was promoted to manaJing partner trainina mana,tr in December sales manqer at the Westin lenoll
of the firm's Los Anacles office. 1988. Since joining IDS. Waikins in Atlanta and has 10 years e~
Carpe has been a panner with the has ranked in the top 2SO IDS pericnce as a mectina and incen·
company since 1982 and has scr-financial planners out of 6.SOO tive planner. The 39().room hotel
ved as partner in charac of the nationwide. He wis named the top recently completed a SI O.S million
audit and health care advisory scr-JDS planner for Orange County in renovation.
M H .\·1· '\\st: DID
NEW VORIC CAP) -/lliOMV rttft tor Mondev H rttlOrlect bv T.Wate 5vstemt Jpc~•lt lnler«.tt ra1e Index: 1.126 Prime Rate: 10.00 il~ount Rate: 7.00 rOlter call io.n rala. 9.25
g,-1 ~rs°' martlel rate·
t:::i l:1fn ~~iA, ~~j~·~Mr:
r
GOl .. D PHl('ES
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NEW vo•uc <AP) Jun .. 1t
NEW V~ll (,<ll'l -SpOt --fMt91 ...._ T.....,_V Mil Bl I u gq 7350 per DOUnCI NY Conlea 1001 montrl
""'°" C..., · SI M IO I PO<.no US -..!:':o;. 115 10 C4"t9 per CIOW"O WY ~ 11P01
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Tiii • 13 1641 \M«ela W• comooet!• OtlOI -lb I ....., • S4 l30 Hel"Oy I H.,,,,.... (Otlly G9lly ~}
..... • S4 125 I* \toy ~ NY ColNa 1001 _..., ..-°" ..._., 12toOO.UtOOO I* 7t IO "--·-....,_ • "6M 00-.... 00 tro, Clil NY 1-
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Mon Ci~ealn ~.f eoo\li"~rtmarv· daVI, 7.4
davs. "'n 1 oav-. 7. 1 vear, 1.• CLASSIFIED 642-5678
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
THE DAILY PILOT
'IS ON THE
AIR
• • he range Coast Daily ilot 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 mornings 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. • •••••••••••••• •
•
• ...
•••• • • • • • • • • •••
• • • • •
..
M DAILY PILOT/........_, Jww 20, 1110
Cowboy Junkies show new confidence
l
llya&YAOAMS ..._._ .........
SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO On..,., a.ck-lit with a siQ&k pink
liaht tor ber fint nwnber, Muto
Timmins appeared u solid u a wisp
of cotton candy.
But u the Cowboy fank:ies swuna
into their second number Monday
niaht at the Coach House, the band
dropped some of its shy, ethereal
imaae and revealed a different brand
of-blues. • The rcverem. whispered vocals
Timmins became famou1 for on the
Junkies' critically acclaimed album
"The Trinity Session" were still evi-
dent in most of the numbers, but the
band also proved they're capable of
ting out music that borders peril-
o sly close to rock and roll. Imagine.
In the ban • t year of touring,
Ti m s 1c own as the lead
wou n't even face her
audie . Now a veteran of three
albums -including their most re-
cent release "The Caution Horses"
-Timmins went so far as to joke
about breaking into a sweat after
dancing on stage.
Of course. Timmins' idea of danc-
ing 1s swaying slightly as she watches
her brother. lead guitarist Michael
Timmins. play. But the fact that she
joked easily with the capac1t} crowd
• revealed not only the group') grow-
1'V Listings
7:00 7:30 8:00
Th• Cowbor Junlll•• wlllcll w• ... ,... ltr MldNtel,
M•rto •nd Pet• 1'11111110M •nd Allan Anton, .....,. -
dellvered • h••rtf•tt ••t n die Co.ell Houle MGMaJ n'9h•· Th•r wlll return to the dub for two dlowt
Thursd•J·
mg comfort with performing. but
also the more forthright style evi-
dent on "Caution Horses."
For many fans of the Cowboy
Junkies. 11 1s Timmins' half-whis-
pered blues and sly shyness that
embod\ lhl' charm ofth1s band from
Toronto. Canada. Still. they se~med
to forgJve her departure from that
style as she proved she knows how
to lead a faster pace with earthier
vocals.
Launched into the limelight after
their version of Lou Reed's "Sweet
Jane" received ample radio air time.
one might have thought the Junkies
8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11 :00 11:30
could bave moved into a ~
venue. At the same time, one i1
ba()PY they haven't outarown the
i.numatc atme>tpbeR of the Coecb
Home.
Oose-quaneredt dim and unoty,
the room teem• JUSt about ~ect
for the intimacy of tbe band s par·
ticylar blend of country, blues and
folk. Even the two loud drunks in
the blck ef the room seemed a
fittina, if annoyina, t.ckdrop for
this homespun aroup.
While the Cowboy Junkies have
relied on re-.arranaina the music of
other sonpritcn for their material
as much as they've drawn from their
own pool of talent, their openina act,
Townes Van ·Zandt, leans on no-
body but himself.
Van Zandt may pull from the
same influel\CCS as the Junkies -
blues. folk arfd a little country west-
ern -but his is a style of music
which makes Margo Timmins seem
like a hyperactive cheerleader.
Melancholy and thouahful. Van
Zandt has been described b)' others
as one of the more influential song-
writers on the folk scene. Both Lyle
Lovett and J~ Ely credit Van Zandt
with some of thtir success since
emerging from the folk-country
scene in Austin. Texas.
While most of Van Zandt's lyric;,
can be hard to catch in the Coach
House -especially with a couple of
drunks roanng in your ear -he's
worth listening to.
Townes Van Zandt and the Cow-
boy Junkies will return to the Coach
House for two shows Thursday.
Cajun Queen Ida
rules at Saddleback
111 ltCHAllD DWll ..._ .... c.. .........
If uyone could looten up the 1opbi1ticat~d audiences of
IOutbcrn Oranae County, Queen
Ida is the one. The "queen" of ~un music had a sold-out crowd
on their feet. dancina and clap~na
to her inf~tious Louisiana ~un
music in Saturday niJht's appear-
ance at Saddleback Collqe in
Million Viejo.
Descended from French immi-
grants driven out o(Nova Scotia
by the British in the 18th Century,
today's Cajun population is a mix-
ture of black and French (Aca-
dian) ancestry, bonded by a dif-
ficult life in the Louisiana bayou
country. Their story reveals a his-
tory of extendina a helping hand
to localblack and lndtan popu-
lations, developing a mixture of
traditions which have created a
thoroughly American form of
music a.s 1rrcsistable as that of the
Pied Piper.
With the simple melodics of the
French music as its core. the Ca-
juns freely adopted the character
of black Jazz and white country
music. Played on accordion and
accompanied by guitar. saxaphone
and washboard, Queen Ida and
her Bontemps Zydeko Band
tr.catcd their audience to some real
soul mu~ic. crossing ethnic bound-
aries to include everyone in a
propam of rolllckina, sometimes
Sid always compellina music. Her ~ face reflectina her total in·
volvement in her muaic was the
cue for everyone to join in.
The well-used dance noor was
in perfect keepina with the nature
of the concert. The many empcy
ch&in in the audience and the
ever-expandina number of
dancen were evidence of ~un
music's mqic.
Zydek:o music is a popular form
of music amona the Cajuns, con-
sistina of a four-measure phrase
repeated four times with vari·
ations, followed by another com-
plimenting phrase. The constatit
repetition, enhanced by an evcr-
compelling meloclic development,
turns the most reserved and stem-
faccd listener into a stompin',
clappin', grinnin' participant.
Queen Ida's concert was a part
of the Performing Arts Series at
the college sponsored by the
Mission Viejo Company. Next in
the series is Saddleback's Summer
Stock Theatre performance of
"1940s Radio Hour." AUf: 7 to
19. The production will re:
construct a nostalgic one-hour
radio hour from the 1940s.
Tickets will be S 11. For infor-
mation, call the college box office
at 582-4656.
• D •
WllMI of Jtopardyl O Ameriu. Homlll Lift Jekt Ind tilt F1tmen (In $90ftln!I ChMct (In Stereo)
Fortune a CNltit Blown !Un Stereo):: Ste<eol o o
~ Hltd Copy ~ MyWMt (RI 1ln Slngtf I 10.er JoM lln Oulnlllm LNP (In Stereol o
Tlllliallt Stereo) c Sona Stereo) :;
Movie: • • • "Return ol • M.ii C•lled HofM" (1976
AOveottJ1eJ AICha<d Hams Gale Sonderaaard
.....
...... WiMM ..... T~Sllow
(In Stereo!
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St. J~seph' s awards ~cholarship
• Eqilll Jutbct (In Stereot O Newt NigfllliM 0
• M'A'S'H CUITM Hw Wcwld's Gtutett Stunts lln Sterl'01 News I Lo~ Lucy Jtltnonl c;
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•
CoMr Sllow Nigtll Court MoN: • • • "Purple R1111" 11984 Mu5'Clllt Prince ~p()llOnia News lo Koteto Moms Day
IMcfMlll W*I World ol Mttropolitln ()pef1 Present• Der Ring Des N.oe1ungen Soeglr1eo
Ltfnf Contd AllllMlt •l
WllMI of ln"6t Edition Untotwd MytltntS R tr Stngtr I -DHI JoM 11nrau.ntum Lttp tin Steieo1::;
f'ortunt ::; Stereo!::; Sons Ste•eo1 :J
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Behind tllt jGlvHI Df. Wllltalltt CllnstiWy
Scenes MecLtod On Tnal
PrllM Ille LOfd PtatM Ille LO«! R W. Sctllmbleh
Mttroe>olittn Optr1 PTtltflts Der Ring Des 11/!beluogen Siegtriea Thi' rnottar Siegrroeo g•ows to marinooc Dantes tile dragon w11oen IMcNtll
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Pttrf M11on Trie Case 01 HorM Reanvllob Htwtllf1 M¥Y Tylef 'Dltk Van 9ts1 of Saturdly Nlgllt Lsvt Hurt of 11\t Plld Progt8l!I
Ille Nf!alooent ~vmtll\ I IMoott ,[)ytie Nabon
A&E LlvlllQ Dtnotroutly Rey SN!tity It ltle lmprov Amtr. It Wer l~• Our Century (Pan 2 of 21 l.Jving DlllQtfously
AMC Movir "How To" ConlCl Mov11· •••'. "Gentltmtft Prefer Blondes" (19S3 Mus<:al) MoVlt •••"How lo Mtrry 1 ~t" f19S3 Comedy!
BRAVO Lenny~ SCOFF Movie. uu "fotr Hulot'a Holodlf" 19>31 ~MllSIC School 1MoVlt u• .. Noon Wine" !1985, Fred Waid IStylt _
DIS MoYit Co01 d lDlnQtf llr Movie: ··Mofltf Goose Rocti 'N' Rhrme" G 1Movte ••• ··Tiit Lonoest Day" 11962 0tama1 R<..'lar1 Bu!'lon G
ESPN MajOr LtlQUt II~: Teams TBA Contd SpottsCenter llMOl.D j Spons j~tf iSutMa ln"6t PGA IS9ottsCentef
FAM 700 CklC> Sclrecrow end Mrs. Ktn0 Movtt ••··Dick Trecy't O.ltmma" pg.7) IPlld Proortm 1700 Club
He() ~ •• """* Cldlllc" (19891 Ont EaslWOOd PG 13 ~· ••• "CH u D II; Bild Ille Ctlud'' R ,,,,.~. Htllt Attacll ··SIM Trti V"
UFt . .., j"°'91 Chnstmas 'Movit • • ••Cave In'' 11979 ~sel Ray Mt_,ncl SfltnMr F0t Hirt
MAX Movit: ••• .. PllMC 111 NMdlt Piii!" (1971) Al Paono PG Mov1t. ••••"Aton Min" (1988 Drama) Ou$1111 Hollman fin Stereo) A :; u "Sh.ta"::;
NICK o.nn.. Looner TUllet Doble Gillt 9twrtcMd Green Acrtt !Donni Riff Sil Hlahl !Fem. 2·Nloht uugfHn P1tty Duh
PRIME DrH lll Teem Tl'ldlloft Pro leldl VolftW From lndll113pol•s (Rl ~Fun IRlclnQ ISoloflta Rodeo ,
SCLA 5polU HtaftllY Mljot LNGue 9tMbll Houston Astros at L0$ Anau s ~s 1t.ve1 !Hall• of F11111 S9oft• lnt1 Wmtllna
SHOW MoYit "A World" Contd ,Movir. •• ., "The Klrttt Krcl, P111 rwo· 119861 PG Home Elltt!1llnmtnt CMttr Movlt •• "Jlhltl" (1988)
TBS Wrestllna Ctasn of Ille Chall1PIOl\S XI Couiat Ous" IRJ IMov11. ••• "uat Tl91n From Gun Hill" (1959 westetnl Evefllfttn
TMC MoYit Cotir d FimwofU (Al MoVll: •••• "wtlo Ff'llllld AOQtf R1tlblt?'' /1988t PG 0 Mowft: •• "P9ntetnUry 111" (1987) A "llcl Dnnt"
00 MoYit ... J "Jot lllttltty" (1957 Comeov1 Audie Mut;>lly Movtr ••• "The Aid lldoe of Colnae" IMovir. ••• "Altglltny Uontlna" (1939)
USA Milmt Viet fir Stereo) MurOer. Sflt Wrote Movie ••1l "'Tht Ctwll Ullt Murden" (1990 ~se1 MIMli Ya (In Stereo)
WGH Newt :; USA ToniQl!t Twiliallt Zone IMlonum. PI ,MoN: '~OM of 1M Yi*on" !Movie: "Y'*on VtnONllCt" TIMn fOf lltt
WWOfl INtwa :. 50 YNn Ago Comedy Jeck 8tnny Pltd Procnm Jot Frenlllin Pltd Proar1m
•
Complete TV listings in Sunday's TV Update
What Can You
Do For 569?
• -1 RUFFELL'S
UPHOLST~RY INC.
Wh••• You• Oollor c .... , M«••
l <I?~ HAlllOl llVO COSTA MfSA S~l-1 Ut
St. Joseph's Ballet Company. re-
nowned for Its work with inner city
children. recently held the first
round of m three-part competition
for youn~ artist<>. The focus of the
competition is to create an original
ballet based on story. scenic design
and music selected from those sub-
mitted by youn~ inner city artists.
The winner ol the wnting phase of
the competition. that of creating the
story for the ballet. I) Sang Quang
Tran. a Junior at Santiago High
School in Garden Grove. Tran. a
1988 immigrant from Saigon. sub-
mitted an inner Cit) love stor).
chosen for 1h '1v1d portray:il of the:
eonf11ct and problems facing todn} 's
urban ~outh. He received a check for
S 1.000 from artistic director Beth
Burns 1n a cercmon} at the high
~hool.
Three ~emr tinahsts "ere a"'arded
$250 each: Liem Due Nguyl·n. also
of ant1ago High School. Monique
Serrano of Valfc} High School JO
an ta .\na: and Ke' in Lee Mitchell
of Thomas Jefferson H 1gh hool JO
Los Angeles.
The music and visual art~ com-
pet111ons will be held JO the fall of
1990.
Bums has also announced an
open audition for aspmng \Oung
dancers at .th e l·ompan)' 's studio on
Jul)' 14 at 10 a.m. Ro)'s and girls
ages 9 to 19 arc encouraged 10 try
Movie listings
Newport Beach
SA&.•OA Cll .. IMA /(J'I f 8-•"" " 6'.il • fo I~ I~ 10 n. Me ~. n. Me Oow" ' Q I\
IOWARDJ NIW~O" CINIMA 11):1 "J.wp.•or
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WHEN IT
COMES TO
FRESH PASTA,
I WEGO
Nothing.·
l )r l'\ en dun~. \\'hrn \ 1111
\I.I\ .It thl· Rl·J ( 11111 I l111d .It
01.\ll~l' ( nurlt' t\irpon. thl·
pn"rl11lt11~·'
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I 11 tm \ich nunutc~
flJR'lll away. AnJ
Ne~ port Be"' .ind Balboa
hlanJ .ire do~r ~ill.
Of course, plentv of
J1H'r'lion' Jre .a~bble n~1
hl'll \t till' li11td . md111l111i: l11w
r1·,1.1u r.1n1,, l1111n~~·'· .111d .1
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''l-.llll rnom, ,,1una .1nJ 'P·'
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d1>ubl(' 1XlUf1<Ull\, \Ouh· \Uri'
to ~l1 vuur mom"\ \ \\ orth
Whether \ll\J do l" er. tlun~
.. or nc1thm~.
•RB>uon
OMNGE.OOL'NTY AIRJUT
\ ToGREAT
I) LENGTHS.
)
-· Come taste scrumptious,
easy-to-twirl pasta mode
fre sh every day nqht here
at The Olive Gorden
•
Wt 1r:RE /\ 1.1 1 i IE BE.~r I
3050 8nStol St • <..o l.l MC)J • (7J.4) S40-70::0
,,, '"""' • ..._ .... , '"· f. t· A,...'...... J....• ~ .. M .. -d • ' ~ i1111~"4 i l•i 1~ ''"""' ""'" 1 ~ .4 liw I•• "<1'•• "I• 41<ofl "' .. WI~'"' ••1'!
. . •
• 16811 &.och 81vd Munt1ng10n 8!!()(.h • ll 171 l 1831-d St (ocro" from '~" (.,,,110$ Mi;>ll1
• Broo Moll Wo., O<•OSl from the Mot Componf ..
t
out. Scholarships are available for
successful applicants. Classes are 2
to 4 da)'s a wee k. Dance clothing
and co.,tumes are supplied. as are
performing opportunities and field
trips to sec professional dance com·
panics ..
The studio is located at 220 E 4th
St.. tn the Fiesta Marketplace in
Santa Ana. For informa tion regard-
ing the compet111on and the audi-
tions. call the company at 541 -8314.
Laguna Art Museum
acquires a key work
The Laguna Art Museum has ac-
cepted a ma1or assemblage work by
contemporar) artist Bruce Conner.
A gift or the museum's Contem-
porary Collectors Council. Conner's
"Cross" ( 1961 ). 1s a kc)' work b> one
of California's most influential art
figures in the 1960s and since.
Partial funding for the purchase was
supplied by a 1989 at1onal Endow-
ment for the Arts grant.
"Cross" 1s a seminal wo rk. made
at the height of Conner's activity in
assemblage (he bagan working in the
medium around 1958 and by 1963
was moving toward filmmaktng). It
has been included and illustrated tn
th e catalogues of both his retro-
P'l'' (i--r.t.-1 1•0 ,,, ..
I Total •ec•ff l~I I I • ~ J ~ Kl I ''I\ I I , s 1 _,,., .. H-t jRI I/ IS } I\ 4 IS I> IS
R JO 10 j()
spec11ve exh1b1t1ons tn 1965 and
1967 and in New York·s Museum of
Modem Art ex hibition ''Primi-
tivism 1n 20th Century Art" tn 1984.
"The acqu 1~11on of Cross signifi-
cantly enhances and expands the
scope of the Laguna Art Museum's
collection ... said Charles Desmarais.
Director of Laguna Art Museum.
The Laguna An Museum 1s plan-
ning to show Cross in rotating exhi-
bitions featuring works in the Per-
manent Collection. Prior to the mu-
seum's purchase of the 37-by-191h·
inch wood. metal and mixed media
assemblage, the work was owned by
Lee Kaplan; Robert and Lynne
Dean; and originally by Dennis
Hopper.
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.
ORANGE. COAST SOCIETY A7
Carol & Company
trauma Society goes West~rn at Knott's
Oranae Coast biawip pulled on
their boota and blue jeans for Fri·
day's "Country Wntcm Spectacu-
lar" aiven by the Auociates of the
OrantC County Trauma Society.
More than 800 cowpokes jammed
into the Gold Rush Camp at K.nott's
Berry Farm fot the S7S-pcr-penon
hoedown.
Pegy Goldwater bay, dressed in frinled red suede and dusted in faux
jewels, chaired the bambuster.
"Anytbina we can do to prevent
death, I'm for it," she rroclaimed
durina the roarin' cocklli reception.
When the pqarious crowd wasn't
· yykin ', they were smack.in' their
l tJrbvcr-....t!tC'. farm's famous fried
cbiclcen ~Y~~~ p ie.. /
Hostess Vifll~rc
membets when Knott's berries
Carol
Htimphreys
weren't so famous.
"We were IO poor when we were
kids. We aie mostJy black-eyed peas
and beans. It's fun for me to share
my aood fonune and open the park
(or the Trauma Society," Bender
said of the 4th annuaJ ptherina
which raised an estimated SS0.000.
Ticket ~ included the ute of the Knott s, but few wanted to leave
the biab eftC'IY fun for the free
amuaments across the road. The
place was jumpin'. Most tried a
country whirl on the dance floor and
two-sieppin' to the superb Western
bud. Olhen people watched.
Arnone tbe head swivelen:
•Couldn't miss Tina Schafnitz in a
jaw-droppina red leather act-up.
• Paul Bender sasbeyed in a denim
dusier hiahliahted witp a hand-
painted 6ronco rider purchased
from where else but Virginia's Sho p.
•Pam Goldstein's earrings dusted
her shoulders.
• Georae Brennan's hair dusted his.
Also chit.chaued wjth Kent and
Carol Wilken, Irv and Ha"m ctt
Wieder, Claude and CC Whitney.
Sa~sy Lub)', Mercedes moaul J im
Slemons with out of state sidekjck
Gmnaine Free, Sue Hook. Betty
and Bill Palmer. movie mogul Jim
Edwards with has wife Pany. Betty
• Moss, Maura Egga n back briefly
from her successful apanment hunt
in London, Beverly Thom pson with
beau Bob Bucci, Mary Ann and Lon
Wells, Judie Manto, Marcy and
Maurice Mulville, Ann and Wolf
Stem and Mary Lou Hornsby.
The OC Trauma Society works to
prevent drown1 ng, to increase
awareness of the imponance of
helmet use by cyclists, 10 ensure
auto safety and to prevent deaths
caused by dnnkang and driving.
"It's better to prevent trauma than
to treat It," said Dr. John West, tbe
society's founder.
.............. _,'-P.,_
P~ ..__. mNI nn. Sctlafllltm •e welc•••d ~
host ... Vlr..,... Knott .. n••r ...._,.
Tr• .... SoclelJ Pounder Jofln w ..
wldl P•ul •ender •nd his ion 9oll
•ender.
Wolf .-d •nd Ann Stem wldl CC •nd
Judge O.ude Whltn.,.
Cowpokes Bob •nd P•tty Geort• •nd
Je•nne and M•ch••I Keele.
Hoedown ch•lrwo111•n p_, Goldwner c .. , wlttt
her tludNUMI, 9oll.
a.....1ne Pree with
Sle•ons.
Jl11t
lnsld~ Advice/ Dlvorc~
Joint custody can be a· Uncle Sam can be taxing
to-parents of college kids complicated arrangement
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Recent-
ly. I mailed my check. along wtth my
federal income 1ax return, to Uncle
Sam. I no"' have a question that
perhap~ you or )Our readers ma) bt
able lo anslol.er. Last )ear I spent
almos1 S9.000 for m) oldest daugh-
ter's college tu111un. That amount
will double "'hen hc.•r yoi.nger sister
stans college 1n two ~cars.
Thanks for any help you might
give. Q: My buabaod ud I are 1ettt.1
a divorce. He jHl &old me daal lie
WUll "jolal CHtody" of OU' c .. u.
drn. WU& does &Illa mw?
Custody is divided into two
pans: legal and physical. Joint
legal custody means 1hat both
parents participate equaJly in de-
cisions such as education. religion.
and medical care. Joint physical
custody means tha1 each parent
has the children for cenain times
during 1hc week or monlh. This
does no1 necessarily have 10 mean
thal time w11h 1he children as
divided exactly SQ..50. Sharing ar-
rangements should be reasonable
and should include consideration
of the needs of the children as -.ell
as 1hose of 1he parents. Cau11on:
joint cuslod) only works success-
fully if parents learn to cooperate
with each other.
Q: My wife of 15 years jaal flied
for divorce. How can I slop lier?
You can't: Sance 1970. Cali-
fornia has what we call a "no
fault" divorce law. No longer do
you have to prove grounds such as
adultry or mental cruelly in order
to get divorced. "Irreconcilable
4th Annual
Charlie Brande'
Orange County
Volleyball
Cam
==July 23-July 27==
Corona del Mar High School
Open camp to all bc11nn1ns through
intermedia te skilled participants. The
cart\p will include fundamental and
technical skills. setting. pns1ng. ser-
ving. and sp1lufl&· Designed for 6
man compc1111on, 1he OCVBC 1s a
fantasllc way 10 set 1n shape for lhe
upcomma school )ear~ lnstru<'tor:
Charlie Brande and coach101 staff.
Boys & G irls. 8-1 6 yn
.Mo n-Fri 12:30-5:00 P.M.
CdM H iah School
S 125, includes T -Shirt
TO SIGN UP CALL
(7 14 ) 644-3 I 51
< o-~tOted b) ''"' f ''' o( 1'~pon 8rad1 1'11rl• lk9t~ •nd "Kl'flhOn lltpertrMlll
,fJity Help Make
!~~ A Child's
Dream Come True
,., .............. :.-..111 ..... .,..., ............. ., ... c.. ,_, __.. (?M) ...
Randy
Sue
Morrison
differences" att the only magic
words 1hat the judge has to hear in
order to grant the divorce. T his
means that eittl'cr party in a mar-
riage may file for a divorce
without claiming that the other
person was "at faul1. ·· Talk to
your wife' and sugges1 counselling
as a co uple.
Q: My wUe WM'& let me see my
C..Udra beeaue site uya daat I
am bd.l9d • cMhl Hpport pay-
meatt. I J••t Iott m.y job. I doa't
bow wlaat &o do.
Your ex-wife cannot legally re-
f use to allow you to sec your
child ren if you have a valid coun
order for visitation. The obli-
gation to pay child suppon is
completely independent from the
right to see your children. I rec-
ommend that you call or wn te to
your ex-wife's au om ey immedi-
ately to help you enforce )'Our
visitation righ 1s. and 10 modtf)
the child suppon until you get a
new job. Remembtr, howe,er,
that you can bt 1hrown in10 Jail
(yes, Virginia, jail) for fatlure to
pay child suppon.
Q: My boyfriend aad I are get·
&me married la JHe. We are· botla
U ud are jHl 1tart1a1 out. We
work, b•t laaven'l saved a lot of
moaey. Wllll all tlals talk of
prn•ptlal a1reement1, we were
· woederta1 wltelller we 1laould do
one. Wlaat do you &lalnk?
The usual purpose of pre-nup-
tiaJ agreements 1s 10 protect each
party's propeny righ1s as he or she
comes into 1he mamage, as well as
the income you earn after )'OU are
married . Since the two of you
don't have any assets. and are
both workmg, save your time,
money and energy and work on
your new mamage.
llMHly Siie Morrlsoo, • •lllte
Bar ttrtllled famlly ,.,.. ·~clal-
111, practlcn ,.,.. I• lrviJJe.
The question· \\ h) ma} m)
neighbor deduct the interest on a
S65.000 boat loan llhc boat as large
enough to quali l~ as a -.et.'Ond homc)
while a pan~nt "ho as struggl ing to
put his children through college t!o
not allowed to J cduct a '>Ingle dime
of tu111on'• At lcac,1 monc'} \pent on
educatio n will bring some benefits to
the federal go,emment when that
college-educated child has skills that
will put him an a hag.her incomc
bracket. I fail to !>ee how a boa1 loan
1s gomg 10 'iuppl) the federal govern-
ment w11h a darned thing.
h 's obvious that I ha ve missed
somethmg in tnmi. of where our
pnonttcs ~houll.l ~ Perhaps ~ou
can bnng me back up to speed
-B D. C'r)stal Lake. Ill
Dear Crystal: Sorry, my ,friend,
I'm just as confased as you are. In
fact, I've wondered for a long lime
about tlais grH~ unfairness. In my
Ann
Landers
-M H .. ~Clol. ) o rk
Dear New York: Yo. are rip& aa...t ~ •. Muy movie stars wear
llauet ud looll pretty daroed &ood fa &km. It woald boos& the caHe
eaormously lf 1tbey were courageous
ellOG&la to Wear gl&llel OD &lac
ICrttD.
DEAR .\N~ L.\:--;DER'\ In a
recent column a "'nter 1001. a parent
oplaloe,.coUege hllUoa noeld be tu to task for slappmg a ch aid "'ho
ded•c tlble ud I •rse yoe readers to continued to a k for things an a store
p•l Ute lleat oe yHr HtUttort. ud .... after being told repc-atedl) .. no "
con1re11men aatll we 1et lite job That letter brought 10 mind the '>'ll\
doae. I handled 1h1s problt"m "hC'n m'
three som were httlc DEAR ANN 1!.ANUERS: Wh) ts When II was 11me for uc, to go
11 that all the TV shows pon ray shopping "'c "'ould deterrnml" an ~h1ldrcn .. who .. wea~.., glas~s as advance Y.h.cthcr 11 wa., a .. bu\lng
dweebs and nerds . da}" or a "look.mg da) " II 11 was
My daughter is beautiful. athletic, "looking da) ·· 1hat"s all there was to
accomplished, scns1uve, fashio nable 11. They could loot. but thl'' knew
and an excellent studcnt. She hap-t>tttcr than to a k for an\ thing. If
pens to need &lasses. In 1h1s day and one of them would hint. all I nC'Cdt·d
age when ch1fdre n need all the self-10 SI)' was ... What I.and ol dn} 1s
csteem the> can get. I hate to Stt this?.. .\fter that. then.· w3, no
1hem ponrayed on television 1n this funher discus ion
manner. s1mpl) because their v1s1on On the "bu\lng da\S·· "'c cc,tJ~
is less lhan perfect. lashed a hm11 ·on ho~ much the'
How can I get the word across to could spen~ -E F 10 Bo ulder
the 1d1ot1c ~elcvts1on people that uear E.F.: Great Idea. It 11 also a
they are humng ~haldrcn because o f 1ood way to laelp cbildrea under·
1h1s inscns111 Vil) . stand 1•ldellne1.
West End West's hardware enhan·ces honte
Decorative hardware has been a po pular Ite m In
California for some time, and -according to Steve
Goldstein of West End West -It's~ serious element
of a home's development from the standpoint of
both Interior design and structural Integrity
Goldstein, who runs the Laguna store at 3337
Laguna canyon Road with David Schuck, considers
decorative hardware as a serious element of a
·home'• development from the standpoint of both
Interior d..ign and a work of architecture's sti'uc-
tural Integrity. "It must be more than Just another
pretty face In the home." he points out.
"It mu1t perform Its function perfectly, u well as
tatefully, for an extensive period of time," he adds
"That mMn& the finest quality coupled with finer
design -solid brass .
.. 1here 1s true value In solid brass," Gold1teln
notes. "It doesn'.t wear out. It yield• beautiful cabinet
polls that won't break off In your hand, dOOf' lock•
that won't fall apart. jam .and lock you out of your
house. and faucets thaf do not corrode and look
unsightly. It all comes down to quality."
Goldstein's professional eiperlence Is unuaualty
extensive. lncludlng both conaultlng and product
design commissions from many of the lndu1try'1
major manufacturers. TheM unique experiences
make him one of the most knowtedgeable people In
his field
For additional Information on Weet End Weet.
contact Goldstein or Sc~uck at 494-2264.
Do A Duet
• TOILET Aeg.•...-
'31111
..
Put It on a pedestat or go for the truly royal
ftulhl Our manufacturer's overstock on
toilets and pedestal sinks (purchased aep-
aratety or purchased together) are at a
aavfngs that will keep you sit ting pretty.
MenyOther
Modet9to
ChooMFrom
PEDESTAL
SINK
139500
'289 11
T I t' \.--------
!{an~ .... l'amn~'·
br.1tl'I •t-. pin ....
.ind pt.'ndant.,
avmlablt.' in·
14J.... ~nld and
c;tt'rling 'th t•r
.·CREATIVE JEWELERS
• • o f l. " x " " 'a B t' a r It -
353 North Coast Hwy. • Lapna Beach I
I . . ..... ,_,Isl I .,. .............. . (714) 49-M849
OPEN 7 DAYS FRU PARKING I
I . . Of•.._CA_,
\J
'
'
M . Orenge C... DAILY PLOT/ Wedi .... June IO, ...
TBS
FAMILY
CIR.CUB
f)11106' ..... ... °"" ..,eo-. ....... ...
"See if you can get your fast-
ball over in less than
three bounces."
MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson
r:.:;J . -
I
DBNKIS THE MENACE
•
GARFIELD
..
••
by Jim Davis
r AM P'EASONA&.l 't' L.00tCIH6 FOll'WAIU:> 'TO COCPER WfATMf.R
by Hank Ketcham FRED BASSET by Alex Graham
NANCY
"No. Pierre can't come out
ano play football!"
ARLO AND JANIS
TUMBLEWEEDS
f7N'f 1HA1 ~A1
WORi'H L-i???
PAJAMAS lR~1URe?
DRABBLE
0
·ROSE IS ROSE
by Jerry Scott
IF l 'flEREtfr ~~<:,
bO MOO-\ FUN . !D &E. eiORE.D
OUTOF ~ ~U.'
by Jimmy Johnson
~y GOOOOt~' 1i(Af!,
VOi.JR TMIRO MOT PO<i !
:::--.._
by Tom K. Ryan
by Kevin Fagan
by Pat Brady
~.t~vwcm 1\CU. PU\£' ,.. ,,. .'
?;
..
SHOE
'fhe U 5. Nary
announc~ Way
that 17ecau~ of
h~~tcuts
JUDGE PARKER
1t has solJ it~ hiffaly successful
Manne C:Orps di VlS10n
FUNKY WINKERBEAN
to I/1~ney for-
.an Undi SCJosed
amount or cash.
by Jeff MacNelly
An eb,h,r.a+-e
ne.w t~me ~rk -··-..
l.c; plan~.
by Harold le DoCJx
by Tom Batiuk
Hl-':/AA.AA !l 1 WA5 AFRAID OF
~15 ...
@"' J ~~
FOR BETTER
OR FOR WORSE
. .
J
I
J
I e
by Lynn Johnston
...
J
•
··--•"•'• el .... ..... ·-"--<It ti. '-.............. ~ .... i. -d•
OEWKlC
I I I r I
OVAJO I
11 I I I~
' •
Pub11\h~ by P099 Group ~. lflC
I..._. I ...... prMtdent & chief eHcuhve offiC.,
... Stein, Jr., choirmon
GeroW W. A41cea, Jr., general ~
Walt. ~h.. 1t01-19M, founding publl\het
Editorial
Keep community flavor
in 4th of July parad·e
I f ever there was a day made for kids. it is the FOW1b of
July.
Summer is in full swina. the days are 10Q1 and. lazy, the
wea1her is warm and sweet and the nation it in the mood tor a IOOd
1ime. Barbecues, homem.ade ice cream, sandlot buebaU pines,
firework shows and -of coune -parades.
Life could be a whole 101 worse.
And one of the nation's la.raest Independence Day pendes ii
ri&ht here in Huntinaton Beach. ibis year will mart the 86tb time
the ~ has been unrolled in the beach town. It is. by aay stre1Cb,
a shce of down-home Americana that bas endun:d throuP IOOd
times and bad throuah ~nds and aJitz that ha~ felled a.er
traditions.
But that may be chanaina.
There is evidence the parade's coordinaton are considerina
steps to smarten up the celebration· by bannina children under the
•. of 14 from marchina and eljminatina marchina poups of more
than SO. Undecorated Oat bed trucks. which pus u &.ts in the
parade, would also get the heave-ho ..
Visions of the larger. older and more famous Tournament of
Roses Parade in Pasadena seem to be dancina in the bads of local
parade coordinators.
The future -not to mention the very identity -of the ~
came into question most recently when a local chapter of the YMCA
Indian Guides was bounced, at least temporarily, from the pende.
It rums out the Y Guides and Indian Princeucs did not provide
proof of insurance or drawinp of their float by the June I deadline.
No matter that the aroup has been in the parade for yean or that
its "float .. consisted of a truck.
The younpters will find out Tbunday whether they will be
pcmtltted to march in this year's parade or whether tbey'fl ha~ to
pull up a '?iecc of curb and watch from the ~Ii~ .
While 1t would be a shame to scrub the Indian Guides. the biJFt
issue is whether the annual Huntinaton Beach puade will conbnue
on as a homespun community event or ao tiltina the way of a mOR
stepped-up urban celebration. ·
We believe the city. the coordinators and all tboee who wort
so hard through the year to raise money for the parade would be
making a big mistake to chanac the aood tbina they have helped
build.
Keep the lods and the community flavor and let Pasadena worry
about precision and pricey floats.
Today In history
Today is Wednesday, June 20, the
171 st day of 1990. There arc 194
days left in lhe~ear. Today's highJi tin history:
On June 20, 17 6, in India, a group
of British soldiers were captured and
imprisoned in a suffocating cell that
pined notoriety as the Black Hole
of Calcutta. Most of the men died.
On this date:
In 1782. Conaress approved the
Grat Seal of the United States.
In 1791 , Kina Lows XVI of
France attempted to fltt the coun-
try. but was cauaht. -ay ne A...n.ld Pm.
When Wrhin9 to the Oronp Coost Doily Pllet ...
The Orange Coast Doily Pilot encovroges correspondence from our
reoders. We request letters be kept to opproJC1motely 300 words. Any
CC>frespandence s1gnif1contly longer thon 300 words will be printed ol our
discretion OS 0 Community Commentary, Guest c°""'*"°'Y or Editorial
Response. .
Community commentor1es ore reserved for issues pertinent to cities
ond towns olong the Orange Coosr. Guest commentones moy pertain to
ony public issue. Editorial respanses ore reserved for rebuttals to editC>fiol
pas111ons of the Orange Coost Doily Pilot.
letters considered to be libelous or 1n bod taste will not be pt1nled.
Writers ore l1m1ted to fovr submissions o month. AM correspondence
must be signed ond include the wnter's address ond telephone number for
vet1fico11on purpases.
letters should be addressed to the Orange Coost Doily Pilot, 330
W . Boy St., Costo Mesci, CA. 92626. Attention: letters to the Editor.
W riters with questions ore urged to colt the Doily Pilot 01 17141 642.4321,
h t 352.
Doonesbury By Garry Trud~au
()qnge ~DAILY PILOTIW8* 11t1t9, ..... a .. M
..
GOP prospects for this fall
and beyond are l~oking grim
After tqinnina the year in an
optimistic mood. California Re-
publicans are takina a much more
somber view of the J*ty's prospects
for the fall election -and beyond.
Tbe likelihood Democrats will wqe
a much touabef fllht for JOVemor
and may continue to dominate the
ttdistricliJ\f process has trigercd
the pcssimJSm.
What especially disheanens some
veteran GOP fiaures is the Iona-term
outlook in the conpnsionaJ del-
cption and the California state
Lcaislature, where Republicans have
Iona been stymied in efforts to ~
pin majoriucs.. Democratic control
of the process for rnbas>U>J con-
pessionaJ and lqislative dtstricts
obviously explains pert of this fail-
ure. But ifs not the entire expla-
nation.
Early this year. Republicans look-
ed forward to a partk ularty import-
ant race for aovttnor in which they
were united bthind one candidate,
Pete Wilson. while Democrats were
divided between John Van de Kamp
and Dianne Feinstein. GOP leaden
also thouaht that they mi&ht have
the Democrats on the run. at Iona
last, over the issue of lqjslatjve and
conaressional redistrict.ins. .,
Democrats had cemented their
majorities into place all throuah ~
1980s by artfully gt'l"ry'nlan3crina
election districts. The particular un-
fairness of the conpnsional district
lines drawn in 1981-82 •nacmi Re--
publicans all throuah the ckcade and
led to reform proposals that would
have prevented the Democrats from
dominatinc the next round of ~
districti1l4 ID .1991.
Feinstein's victory in the Demo-
cratic primary has been as sobtrina
to Republican leaders as a bucket of
ice-cold water. She now is seen as a
much touaher ttncral~lection oppo-
nent than Van de Kamp. the can-
didate that GOP stratqJsts -and
most other observen -oriJinally
had expected to be the Democratic
nominee.
The bia fear amona Republicans
at the start of 1990 was that Feins--
tein mi&ht drop out of the contest
They simply hoped that. by mount-
ina a viaorous effort. she would
soften Van de Kamp up for the fall
campaip. GOP strateaists could not
imqine, however. that Democratic
voten would select a PfO«atb pen-
alty moderate over a liberal for the
top of their ticket -a nominee who
would offset the advantqeS. mod-
erate Republican like Wilson would
have had apinst a liberal Democrat
like Van de Kamp.
Concern over lqislative races is
what unified Republicans bchlnd
Wilson. GOP conservatives -most
of them. anyway -saw him u
insurance apinst another set of
Democratic FfTYlnaDden of leai,..
lative and conpnsional e*tion cli,..
tricts. As aovttnor. he mj&ht forte
Oiemocrats to prod~ fairer districts
by tbreatenina to veto their plans.
Wilt00's election was only one of
the defenses that Republicans
planned as protection apinst Demo-
cratic gerrymanderina,. Two rc--
districtina reform measures, Prop-
ositions 118 and 119. were destined
to be on the .June t.llot, and op-
timistic Republicans looked forward
to at least one of them passina. Both.
however, went down to defeat by 2-
to-I marains. the result not only of
a well-financed and shrewd De~
cratic campaian aaainst the
measures.. but also of incredibly
i!"'Pt efforts by GOP stnteaists in
their bthalf.
Now. while some Reeublican op-
eratives privately arc ra11n1 Wilson·s
chan<lCS apinst Feinstein as no bet-
ter than even and perhaps less than
that, lqislative Democrats .,.an
have a aood chanc:ie to control re-
districtina.
This contributes to Republican
&loom on the national level as well.
Democrats arc also mwna major
efforts in aovemors' races in Aonda
and Tex.as. where· Republicans cur-
rently are scrvina u chief executives
and where conpasionaJ represen-
tation also will incttUC as the result
of this year's federal census.
Texas and Florida each will pin
lhrtt scats. California will pin
Kven, possibly even eight, seats to ao with its present 4S seats, already
the larant dclcpt1on in Conatcss.
lo Florida. an incumbent Re-
publican aovemor faces an uphill
fiaht for ·re-election. In Texas. the
GOP incumbtnt is rctirina and his
party's nominee for &Qvcmor cur-
rently leads in polls. but the Demo-
cratic nom1n« is 5een as within
strikina dist.a~.
Democratic v1ctonC"S in all tbrtt
JUbtmatorial con1pts would make
1t possible for the party to draw
co~onal district lines that
would funbcr strentthen its control
of the U.S. Houte of Reprnenta-
tjvn. Tbis led one especially somber
. ,
Martin
Smith
California GOP operative to ot.rve
privately last week. "The Re-
publtcan Party may bt terminally tll
10 the United St.atn as a lqislativc
pan .·•
While most observen are sure 10
view that pronouncement as over-
stated. the GOP. as a kaislative
party. does have a striking rcwrd of
failure in rucnt decades. both in the
U.S. House of Representatives and
in the California Leaislature.
The last time the GOP controlled
the House was from 1952 to I 9S4.
Republicans also held a ~ority
~ &om 1946 to 1948. Except for
those two sessions. Democrati have
held House majorities si~ 1930.
The GOP has not controlled
either house of the California Lesi,..
laturc si~ 1970. Two senaton
&om Los A•les County. Newton
Rusaell and Robert Beverly, are the
only present Republican lqislators
ever to have been part of a GOP
majority in Sacramento. Both were
membcn of the Assembly when the
GOP held a 41 -39 maJority an
1~70.
Republicans would be k1dchna
themselves 1f the) tned to blame all
of the party's trou~ on Demo-
cratic control of the redistriclina
process. In C..lifomia. especially, the
GOP has contributed miahtily to its
difficulties in leaislauve racn.
The state party orpnizauo n. split
into ideolosicaJ ficuons. 1s less effec-
tive than ever. This split is reflected
in the state lcJ1slat1 ve GOP
caucuses. especially 1n the Aucmbly.
where Qnc prominent constrvatjye
incumbent. Wilham Baker of Dan-
ville. lobbied a national pro-life or-
pnization to oppose two of his
fellow Republicans in their primary
elections earlier this month. The
increased influence of the rchaaou.s
risht amons Republicans has further
polarized the party.
Maltllt s.Jft " • SectutM• .._, NM=efet I# lk Orup c.ut ,,.,,, ,..,.._
L«ren
Gun cartoqn
costs Pilot
a reader
To the Editor:
As a proud citixft of our pat OOUD~ I support our freedom of QIM~Dll aad tbe •• to esprw oae·• opi.nioo. However, I WM dit-
pasted at the .. c:anooo .. of a ~
pm with an acc:om.,..W.. Ii• of its
fuactiou (killint people) Wt ran OD
the Ormie CllMt .,.., Piiie'•
opinion pmee. .
Would you like to meet the
"plleman .. whQ tried to sneak into
my apartment until cob~· face.to. face with me and my n? Or
bow about my friends• fiancee who
was -almost raped by three men in a la~ room, until be showed up
with his handaun?
The printina of this ••cartoon'' 1s
in the worst of taste, and I'm afraid
that rm not aoina to buy your
newspaper anymore. It used to be a
fine paper.
RONALD YARBROUGH
Costa Mesa
Old Newport
worse for wear
but not tacky
t
To the Editor: .
While catchioa up on unread newspe..,ers, I came across ML
Yokoi's arncle on "Quaint, 8'Jedy, a
bit wonc for wear" Old Newpott or
North Newport Boulevard.. I admit
to the aae ·or some buildinp. my
own included, which bas WKlef'looe
refurbishing many times, but
'"laclty" no! At least not on the top
of the bill.
Consider the variety of business in
this buildin& alone-. We have one of
the bitacst naa shops in the country,
we have an advertisina aaency, ft
have a creator of waterfalls for
beauty and serenity in your land-
.scapin&. we have a Realtor, and a
sectttaria1 service. Please dou 't
lump us with massqc parlors.
motels. ban where they start drink-
ina at 6 a.m.. and otbcT odious
comparisons.
I can remember when the city
wanted to have a frttway made of
our street. We barely escaped that
fiasco.
And while Mr. Mtnney0s plans for
hts project arc adma.rablc. ~ -as
owncn as a whole -are not adverse
to nsina up en ma.sse to quub a~mpts to force on us undesirable
undertakinp.
I believe tbc ci1y. and yn, .the
county has missed the mark by I 00
pcrcnt. This is the rema.inina strip o(
tbe first road 1n Newport Beach. As
such, it should ~ thouabt of and
named as a btstoncaJ monument.
thereby prcscrvina a small piece of
what Newpon Beach was in the
beainnina,. Before Cost.a Mesa was
even a twinkle in someone's ~-
Do us the counesy at least to refer
to us as sedate, hardworkina. quiet
tenants of an u~and-<'Omina byway.
JUNE FARRAR JOliNSON
Newport Beach
Who was most upset.7
To the Editor:
I've always wondered a htlle
about 1'e Pllet'a feature news
ittms. You're story on June 7 "Stun-
nina upstt ends Aaran era" 1s • aood
example. ln the center of the P9l'C 11
a bic picture of Larry Aaran.
I don't Stt any picture of the
winner. I suplJOst that if you had
cov~ the David vs. Goliath story
you would have had to KW
Goliath's head beck on in order to
1Ct a aood ptcturt of the loter. I
suppose that you were the one upset
by the lttat Upst\, since you In•
structcd the voters of Irvine to vote
for Aafan. JAMES BOLDING
Costa Mesa
Rabin poised for a political Coup
I
. WASHINGTON -A blcbtatr of a new Mideast war arc risina u
political COU.P to bt attempted inside Arab states build new weapons
the Labor Party by one of Israel's almost u lethal u lsrKl's 'nuclear
1 most mpectcd and powerful fiaura mi.UCS. but Bush and Secretary of
over the put lO years could tnDf.. S&ate James Baker have been unable
form U.S.-lanel relations. now at to lure Sbamir into their peace pro.
their most friaid J)Oint since the caa.
Israeli fnvuion or Lebanon eiebt Enter Rabin. ,His lo~ pl of -.. aeo becomiat prime minister and be8d· "'"f'Ormer" Prime Minister Yitzbak iat a 90vanment commit~. to
Rabin bu to&d &ieftds be will teek, lerious pact talks with Palcs1UU&D•
to oust Labor Party leeder Shimon woWd be written off as a romantic. Paa befQft the end of June, pa11 a even~ ambition except for
no-confidence motion in tbe two filc:1on. • ttne.t to overthrow the new riaht-fint ~ the polls that show tihn
wins Ukud aovmnncnt and then ao to be the most popular politician in
to elections. Hi1 ..a•tfonn would' Israel a counuy where everybody
commit Labor to a ~ plan aiml· coeliden himtelf • politician. Kil
lat to tbe U.S. propolAk ~ by public IWMtina rests on bis military
Ukud. e1ploiu, aoina beck to the war for
WMn the deal we dncribed last lndel'e:ncknc:e. and on bis reputation
week collal*'d and Lltud•s =-lOr no-nonten.r 1tr1iaht talk in • wi.. Prime Miai1ter Yiu k pany...:_~t h&s Md weak ~ip
Sham.it abaDdoaed plus to for r--dlle old Uhd-Labor unity '°~ Secoad is the pervasive pull oftbe
ment. labia ...... pluaiae Im pol-U.S. c:oaDeelioa. a mystal aad ma-
idml move to IUip dlle ... de o( terial boed baad OD tbaced valun ._..,.p 6om Pem ud pat it · ud billion• ol doll8n in aid.
_. oe bis on ~ ~Iott Rabin·• U.S. ~ty is ~· lt ia 1977 wMn. aa prime mi....,. known ia Intl, aiVlftl bam a poltb·
he WM dnl(ld lnto a minor Polid· cal cu-edit With llneli• worried cal •nde'1. ud Perw toc>k o~. lbout tiyed Amtrican retaliou For• um• s... ud lnel. ...., ..-&r.
....... ...,. -I ••• ...... .,.,..... oftkU .......... .... , ... , ... .._. •• Ir. I ..... ud ,.. D1;MW• In
Wrbde to bnel-NllliM pwe. watc1U111 d\il llabin P.l'tal ~
dlilliil U.S.-lnel retalioes. Fan dolely. but no Ont wtU ....-. or .. .
Rowl.id
Evans
Robert
Novak
aeno.as talks W'ltb Palestinians ewer
the f\ature of the West Blak aad
Qua. What pan.ly earned ham IMt
mpect .,., bis touah policy at lbe
OUtJet of the intiteaa 10 eftt'OUflll
banb intinudatton <Jubbilla ead Um~nt -while nm. out
lethal punishment by tM r.erti army.
• 1 Capitol Hill. llt:p. Met~
.adcr of the pro-Ind con-IMlional bloc. llid he ..,_. .. m
labia that ··eunuit ot die ,_.
~ .. muttbecoauaUld. Hetold
us -'°"" ...... aft -·--.. that '°"" 'COmba .... ol .... .
and !bamir aNld bri11 ddl .... "
... Rabi• believet -... -aucta a combinauon 11111 fl1llCI
.... by. .. .... ._.,, ........ •r• ••••••t•N • .._..,
... $ • ,., .. Gs •• a... ....,. ......
•
'
l '
&10 Wldrt 11...,, June IO, tllO
Workers
c;empleting
Nixon
Liorary
9y JIM GIWSPIE a.r--.......
TI IE BACK PAGE
McDonnell Douglas sues over r~Cket pa~s
t • I •
LOS ANOEl.ES -McDowU valve No. 46 ii not deUvert&fby 5 mended more money fOt tbe valves, work,ed out. bu& Eaton Nftmd. ~ n. McDonnell. Dout1as .Hunt-Doua&at Corp on behalf of its p. m. on Jane ll l 990. ind1lde Air tbe Rtt ·~ ~ '° the luiL iJlllOG 8-d\ f'acility ii ~tdnt an
Huntinlton bb facility filed suit F0na a.me 'priority lluacbet In May, Eaton boad up valve The brw:b-okonlrlet suit did inimediate coun Ofderfom"LEaton
Tuetday llliast a contractor. claim-wbicb bave been .. ed IM pri-No. ~ fol' delivery but ,reftaled .to not •Y bow much money wu paid to turn over valve No. .ud ina top.priority misaile taunc:bet ority ratina DX by the Dftlident of bud at over uaJel:t tbe bilber ~ for tbe valvee or bow mucb more otben; an order for it to ClOn~~ coWd be balled beca'use the firm hu the United States... the sull uys, ... met, ICCOl'Clina to tbe IWL EalOD wuled. It •YI McDoaneU tbe contract without a pa)' raate,
8Wed to deliver a critical part for iu lddiaa that DX ia the .. biabelt na-McDonnell DcM11'11 ~ otrered DouaJaa auffered m ore t baa anorney fees and any other feea the
Delta n rocket. • tional priority." to pey the~ anto an etaOW Sl00.000 ln damqes due to the coW1 aeea flt to aw&ftt.
Tbe aeroapece firm is seekina an Eaton Corp. officials could not be ICCOunt until the dispute coWd be delays. -•1 Cit¥ Ne., ~
immediate '"coW1 order forciQa El reached for comment after businaa ~ Eaton Corp. to tum hours today.
YORBA LINDA -Workmen
Tuetday were puttina the final
touches on the Richard NiAon Li-
brary and Bin.bpi.ace, u officials at
the center prepared for openina cer-
emonies to be attended by Nixon,
President Bush and former presi-
dents Ronald Reapn and Gerald
Ford.
over a key valve by Frida~ or risk The suit u~ McDonnell ~
blockina an im portant Saturday contracted watb Eaton in July 1987
, launch, alona with additional Delta to build valves for the Delta II,
U launcbea. deliverina one a month at a soecific
LAGUNA
l'rom Al
bond meuure on the ballot is in the
hands of tounty supervilon. <>ru.
County SUpervisor Tbomu Riley,
who participated in the aarvey •
could not be reached for comment
Tuesday.
II.id all memben of the Lquna
Laurel Advisory Group alJo con-
tributed.
Speakina to reponen at a walk-
thrciuah o(the $21 million, nine-acre
facility in Yorbe Linda, Executive
Director Hugh Hewitt said all work
would be finished by the July 19
dedication ceremony.
During a tour of the library,
Hewitt predicted that Waterpte
Hall, with three Watergate tapes,
newspaper headlines from .the Nixon
presidential years and the former
president's explanations of his a~
tions, would be among the most·
visited areas of the 52,000-square-
foot facility. ·
Calling the display "a full and fair
treatment of Watergate," Hewitt
said the public will be able to listen
to the "smoking gun." "cancer on
the presidency" and "hush money"
tapes made during the height of the
scandal that chased Nixon from of-
fice in 1974.
Also expected to draw large ·
crowds is the Presidential Forum
Theater, which will feature Nixon's
videotaped answers to about 400
~uestions, including his personal
hkes and dislikes and events during
bis political career, Hewitt said.
Nixon was answering many of the
questions on film · as recentl¥ as a
month aao. Hewitt said. adding he
considered the theater "the heart
and soul" of the entire library.
Other exhibits include life-size
statues of some of the world leaders
of the Nixon years, including Soviet
General Secretary Leonid Brezhnev.
Ch ina's Communist Party Chair-
man Mao Zedong and Egyptian
President Anwar Sadat.
Much of the furniture was tracked
down by Clara Jane Nixon. the
widow of Don Nixon. Richard
Nixon's brother.
.. The launches which will be ir-price. But Eaton failed to mab tbe
reversibly and irreparably delaved if deliveries several times. then de-
Fountain Valley ST AB ffromAI budget ·more
than revenues
ly WENDY ESTES
D.ily Not SUff ..,,. ..
FOUNT AlN VALLEY -A $40
million 1990-91 budget that dips
into reserves and institutes a hiring
freeze was approved Tuesday by the
City Council.
By a 4-0 vote (Councilman James
Petrikin was absent), the council
approved the spending plan, which
exceeds projected revenues and will
be supplemented by funds from re-
serves for future capital replace-
ments.
In addition, upon the recommen-
dation of Mayor Lauann Cook. the
council approved a hiring freeze ,
which includes leaving the economic
analyst position open. Filling any
other openings would be evaluated
on a case-by-case basis.
Exempted from the freeze would
be fire1ighters, firefighter-para-
medics and a planning director.
which are considered essential pos-
itions.
The general fund operating budget
totals S 19 m illion. All city budgets
added together show about $40
million tn expenditures and S38.2
million in revenues. with reserves
making up the difference.
The council vowed to maintain
existing service levels .
defense attorney Michael Horan.
In closina arauments scheduled
today, Horan uid he will try to
persuade the jury to throw out the
two remainina special circumstan~
that could send his 22-year-old
client to prison for life. If the jury
finds no spcciaJ circumstances exist,
Caner faces a possible sentence of2S
years.to-life.
Superior Court Judge William W.
Bedswonh agreed to drop the rob-
bery ChalJe after evidence showed
Carter did not intend to rob
Holzmi,ler, but only picked up her
purse as he Oed. He left behind
several pieces of jewelry and threw
the purse in a garbage bin nearby,
Horan said.
Carter allegedly met Holzmiller
earlier in the evening of Dec. 16 at
a Huntington Beach liquor store. In
·Carter's confession. he said they
went to pany at his friend's house.
where they spent about seven hours
drinking.
After looking for a place to stay
and being turned away at two
houses, Caner said they ended up in
the 011 field where they decided to
have sex. He claimed that he
stabbed Holzmiller after she mocked
him and said she had AIDS.
Carter was arrested two days after
Holzmiller's body was found. after a
man who'd seen Carter with
Holzmiller notified police.
AFGHAN
From Al
own, the city miabt bave difficulty
aeneratina tbe SS<> million to $70
million that county appraisen uy
the land is worth to the Irvine Co.
But she added that she hoped
residents would not have to settle
for just buyjna part of the canyon.
Rustic, tranquil Laauna Canyon
has been in the eye of a development
storm for yean. In November. the
Irvine Co. q:reed to halt for one year
its plans to put 3,200 homes on 800
acres nestled between L.aauna Beach
and Irvine.
The company qrecd to spend the
year participatiDf in negotiations
with the two cities, the county,
which has J. urisdictaon over the
pro~rty, an several Lquna-based
env1ronmental aroups.
The developer aareed to the neao-
tiations, despite having most of the
approvals it needs from the county
to {>roceed with the L.aauna Laurel
prOJCCt, because Chairman Donald
Bren "is more interested in con-
sensus than in communit}' op~si
tion," said Irvine Co. Vice President
Carol Hoffman.
Hoffman said company ex-
ecutives were not surprised by the
support for open space preservation
evidenced in the survey. "We've
rcc~ized for some time that the
pubhc is interested in conservation.
This is another step ·in· acknowl-
edging that."
Unlike Lcnney. Hoffman said she
could not rule out the possibility of
a bond measure turning up on a
countywi de ballot. But she said the
company would contin ue nego-
tiations in hopes of reaching an
agreement.
Ultimately. the dec1s1on to place a
subordinates to contact the U.S.
State Department to look into Safi's
background.
Tbe survey. performed by J.
Moore Methods of Secramento,
queried 700 rea.istered voters
throupout the county. The poll
questioned 200 Lquna Beach voten
sepuately.
The Irvine Co. provided much of
the fundina. Hoffman uid , but she
Tbe survey also revealed that 32
percent of residents think new '*s
would help unsnarl traffic, while 60 ~nt said buildina a monrail or
lilbt rail system would relieve con-
. aestion.
Of those who responded to the
survey, 79 percent considered them-
selves to be conservative or moder-
ate politically, while 74 percent uid
they were environmentalists.
Golden West receives calculus grant
HUNTINGTON BEACH -The
National Science foundation bas
approved a SS8,000 pant for Gold·
en West ColleJe to improve com-
puter software in its pre.<:alculus and
calculus curriculum.
The funds will be matched by a
RINGS
From Al
As her dauahter wrote down the
car's license plate number, the
woman pretended to admire a
nearby home under construction
and then alanced at the man.
"I smiled at him and he nodded."
she said.
The man pulled on a red cap and
dark &lasses and drove off wnt on
Cliff Drive while the woman went
back to the jewelry store and gave
responding police officers the license
plate number and vehicle descrip-
tfon.
Detectives on the case recovered
I I pieces of jewelry from a Lawn-
dale pawn shop. including seven of
the nngs from Mozaffarian. Gonis
said.
private source, brinpna the amount
donated to the project to SI J 6,000.
Collqe officials believe the pro-
arams will be especially beneficial to
students with lanauaae difficulties.
-8y ,._ .OellT PU.I
time to react." Gonis uid.
The witness to the June 13 theft
said the physically fit, blond rin&
stealer looked like any other New-
pon Beach citizen.
"If you saw him walkina through
Fashion Island, you wouldn't think
anythina of it." she said. "So every-
one who's seen him (flcein&) prob-
ably thouaht he was just joging
alonf. whife he's running off with aU
this Jewelry."
HAIR
,romAI
watch commander Lt. Michael
Jackson and field Sgt. Jim
Kaminsky •ot into a discussion
with the chief about •ttina the
same type of cuts, Gonis uid.
"Some sort of dare situation
came about, and they said if
the chief aot one. they'd set one
too," Gonis said.
Crash seriously hurts cyclist
invited the Afghan general." Mayor
Tom Mays said Tuesday. "J had
concerns about security and I passed
11 onto Don because he's the liaison
to the parade comm11tec.
"We want to find out his back-
ground and see if there are groups
that are anti to his political
philosophy," Lowen berg said.
MacAllister said the Fourth of
July Executive Committee was in
favor of putting the parade off limits
to the Afghan. but chairwoman
Donna Cross and treasurer Dale
Dunn said Tuesday they were un-
aware of security fears.
Boyes is also a suspect in similar
incidents on June 8 at Wyndham
Leigh jewelry sto~ in Fashion
Island, 1n April at Merksmear Jew-
elry in South Coast Plaza. two rttent
incidents in Mission Viejo and two
others in -.San Diego County. Gonis
said.
Kcepina his word. Campbell
took a trip to the barber Tues-
day and came back a little less
hairied, so to speak.
Now, Gonis said. the rest of
the depanment is waiting for
Jack.son and Kaminsky to do
their part in the hair-raisina
situation.
COSTA MESA - A motorcyclist
suffered compound fractures to his
leg and head tnJunes when he struck
a car pulling into a apannent com-
plex in the 300 block of Victoria
Street Tuesday afternoon. police
said.
Conrad Byron Hart. 18. of Costa
Mesa was taken to Western Medical
Center in Santa Ana. said Costa
Mesa Police Lt. Alan Kent. Han was
COAST Moady dea1 with
pa tdly fog and
'°"'cloud•
Wednesday and
Thuraday
listed in extremely serious condition
and underwent surgery Tuesday eve·
nin&, a Western Medical nursina
supervisor said.
Hart was driving east on Victoria
at about 4 p.m. when he hit the
Nissan Scntra turning into the dnve-
way. The motorcycle hit the car's
rear fender. sending the bike into the
curb. -By tM Dally Piiot
72 71 74
"I don't mtnd having the guy in
the parade if he's not a liability.
"And l don't want to make a big
thin& out of nothing. but I don't
want to be responsible for something
happening."
Police Chief Ron Lowenberg said
Tuesday it was "premature" to de-
. dare Safi a security threat. He con·
ceded that reports o f Safi's proposed
visit caused tnitial concern.
Lowenberg said he asked I
TODAY: Mostly
clear with patchy
fog and low
clouds.
TOIORROW:
Su nny with fewer
clouds. Slightly
warmer.
13 15
Dunn said that Safi was scheduled
to come to Hunt~ngton Beach last
year and rid~J-.hOrse in the parade
with Rohrabacher, But both bowed
out for reasons that weren't known
Tuesday.
In all the incidents. the theif
matched Boyes' description and
posed as a customer at first. Gonis
saad. In the June incident at
Wyndham Leigh. a man asked to see
the saleswoman's own wedding rina
set and then ran off with the rings
when she took them off. Gonis said.
The man never displayed a
weapon, Gonis said. "He was
smooth enough to pick uP'>the items
and run off without anyone having
Since they were scheduled
for the pveyard shift Tuesday
night, Jackson and Kaminsky
could not be reached for com-
ment and were still unaware of
the chiefs new look.
The Accu-Weather forecast for noon.Wednesday, June 20.
®
moming .. 70 .. 70 70 W.slefly
afl9fnoon wioda
10·1s mp/1
Wednesday
Mollly d•at
skies
Wednesday and
Thursday High•
In the mad 90a IO
106 Lowa m Int
law«601 to
law« 70t
Moldy d ... With
"'" Wedntt4eyy.
Alletnoon end
e"tening •lndl
ebolll 10 mph
Hioht In IN 90I
Lowt SOI to mid
IOI
Alt quellr, WIM
,~"""" moder• D Y«y
~In
fleS,UflC:O..
I Awluln
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OCEAN REPORT
Poor sPI~ along !Pie Or•~
Coast W!tPI 1·1 1001 w"'1n.
weu •-N
OCEAll
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BOATIG
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hghl Ind vWllble. Souflwetl awell 3 l•t
Patchy lai. night hough W1y morning
log and low doudt Wtlh IUnrty 9111 ..
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TODAY TOMORROW
Sunri se ........ 5:42 a.m. Sunris~ ........ 5:43 a.m.
Sunset. ........ 8:05 p'.m. Sunset.. ....... 8:06 p.m.
.... Moon
June 22
() 0 ()
1at Olr.
June~
•
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July 7
Lal Ctr.
July 15
HIGH LOW SHOWFRS IM~ T·STOlfMS R.UfflflES SNOW ICE SUNNY PT. CLOUDY CLOUDY
TRAVELER'S REPORT
NATIONAL
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OCEM
SPQIIS
Uoyd
Tice
Hawkins:
A star-
on rise
~ongboarder finds
· suc::cess despite
back problems
"Gosh, do you think we oould .
wait''til later to do this?" ... typical
response of an unassumina, quiet
youn1 star ~n the rise, in this case
Joey Hawk.ins.
Hawkins has just come off a
brilliant perfonnance in winnina the
second annual Huntinaton Beach
Surfina Museum Benefit Pro/Am
Lon&board contest, along with S 1,000 to top it off.
The Hawk.ins story started when
he competed for Huntinaton'Bcach
Jiiah on the national champion's
surf team. Hawkins wasn't the bi&-
acst name on the team, but he was
an important part of the group that·
won four national titles during his
hi.ah school ycan.
lfawkins' father Ronnie was an
avid lonaboarder back then and still
is, alona with being his son's coach
and advisor, but in those days Joey
was into his shortboard only.
"I never could realty sec myself
doing this, but now it's a reality and
I miaht as welt do the best I can at
it while it lasts,'' Hawkins said,
Then came the back problems.
"It wf.s kind of a lingering sort of
injury, the kind you ignore until it's
too late, then you're bummed," he
said. "Doctors said that I might
never be able to surf apin and with
my aoals of becomina professional.
I felt almost like my life was over
with, at least the surfina pan of it."
Hawk.ins was out of the water for
almost the entire year, a nd it was
touah watching his peers doing well
in competitions when he couldn't
even surf.
"I was seeing all these people
doinJ well that I knew I could beat
and 1t would1ust act me so uPKt
that I couldn t deal with it."
Hawkins said.
Hawkins. who won the Juniors
division and the super heat of the
Huntinaton Beach 12th Annual city
contest, added, ··1 j ust son of disap-
pcarecfofT thc scene for awhile
there."
After some time of rehabilitating
his back injury, Hawkins went back
out in the water, but on a semi-aun
type surfboard. made for bigger surf.
"I needed to take It easy or I
would hurt my back all over again
and then I'd really be in bad shape."
(Pfe•se SH TICE/IJJ
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ICOlll MID IClllDUUI
LATS UHUCJ NIWI M llOUU ---
•CLASSIFIED/BS
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 20, 1990 I : J
Sour en~lng
to World Cup
fOr U.S. sqUad
Extra man no
help in defeat
to Austria, 2-1
By RONALD BLUM
FLORENCE, Ital y -The Unit-
ed States started tne World Cup
with a flop and finished with one.
too.
The team that had hoped to
show the world 1t was ready for
soccer's highest level lost to Aus-
tria 2-1 Tuesday night despite
having a o ne-man advantage for
the final 57 minutes.
It was a dismal end for the
Americans. who made their first
World Cup appearance in 40 )'Cars
and learned they still arc far from
the top. They finished 0-3.
matctl!ng · the United Arab
Emirates for the worst record in
the tournament thus far.
"We paid ours dues:· U.S.
Coach Bob Gansler said.
· Players said thty were d1sap-
po1 nted. Enc Wynalda sounded
almost apologe11c.
we don't expect them to be,'' he
said.
The team was brash, aJmost
cocky c.-rtin& in. say1na it thoua.t\t
it could' advance to the sccona
round. But the Americans ~re
put in th eir place by Czechoslo-
vakia. Italy and Austria. losina by
a combined 8-2. .
"I'm not sausficd, I thou~t we
could have done better." said for-
ward Peter Vermes. who missed
the net twice on good chances 1n
the first half.
The Amencans showed almost
no offensive creat1v1ty and only
occasional first-rate play in their
three games. They never had the
lead and their defense made huge
mistakes.
Yet despite the d1sappoin2tmcnt
the team saw signs of hope.
pccially in the final two gam .
both onc-aoal losses. .
"If anythin&. we found ou we're
closer than we thought." mid-
fielder Tab Ramos said. "We
always knew we were far behind.
If anything. we ended by a high
note."
U.S. pl•r•r MktUtel WlndlKtwRann tall••
control of the ball frolll Austrian ,..,., Andr••• Heraogln durlnt Aunr1a•1 2·1
victory In l'lorence Tueldar night.
"The United St1ues needs to
know we're not happy w11h 11 and
The Unitcd0States got a gigantic
break 31 minutes into the rouah
game when Austnan midfielder
Peter Anner was CJCCted for kiclc-
(Pfe•K. see U.S./14J
Whatever happens, it's completely irrelevant
ly ff0\11 ARD L HANDY
D411yl"llot C.,,. ........
dratt
NEWPORT BEACH -If you have been
around this area for the
past 15 years. you have
undoubtedly heard of Ir-
relevant Weck.
Irrelevant Week, co-sponsored by the
Oraa1e Coast Dally Piiot, is a zany, of\cn
un~redictablc and fun-filled . sometimes
senous week that brings a myriad of events to
the city.
If you are a new-
comer, the chances arc
aood that you have never
heard of the event that
annually honors the last
The brainchild of Lado Isle resident Paul
Salata. who once cauaht a touchdown pass in
the Rose Bowl for USC as his chief claim to
athletic prowess on the amateur level, it 1s a
conaJomcration of nonsense for the most pan.
player taken in the National Football League · · Salata also lays claim to havin& played for
the San Francisco 49crs as a tight end. That
Newfield tops
area 5-A choices
Seven other local
players selected
to A/1-CIF squad
The DMfy PNot
CULVER CITY -Eight Oranac .
Coast area hiah school baseball play-
ers earned All.CIF 5-A laurels. in-
cluding first team acclamation selec-
tion Marc Newfield of Marina, the
First Interstate Bank Amateur Ath-
letic Board announced.
Newfield, the No. I drat\ pick of
the Seattle Ma_riners last week and
sixth overall selection. batted .46 7
with six home runs and 20 RBI
while leadi n& the surprisina Vikinas
to the CIF 5-A crown at Anaheim
Stadium on June 2.
Ocean View shortstop Daniel
Hernandez. a repeater on the All-
CIF team. and Sca hawks teammate
Duane Page made second team.
Edison outfielder Donnie Smith and
Marina·s Robin Lindsey (catcher)
and David Schultz (utility) also
earned second team.
Hcmanda. outstanding wuh the
leather, batted .368 wuh 12 stolen
bases and 25 R"lJJ. Page, drafted in
the 15th round by Baltimore and
headed for Orange Coast College
next season, went 1 ~2 with a 1.70
ERA in 74 innings pitched while
gaining'"Playcr of the Year honors an
the Sunset League.
Smith, also a pitcher who went 4-2
with a 2.22 ERA, hit .428 with seven
home runs and 20 RBI. He also
scored 24 runs and was selected the
bnngs his connection with the NFL into
fQCUS. Each or the players honored to date.
including this year's honoree Demetrius
Davis, .has logged a more outstanding col-
legiate career than their benefactor.
That doesn't bother Salata at all and once
he takes the microphone to present the recipi-
ent with a bundle of gifts on Sunday until he
says goodbye on the following Sunday. 1t 1s all
fun and games to him.
.Davis was taken by the Los An&cles
Raiders as the 331 st and last pick of the 1990
draft. Like Salata. he was a ught end 10 collqc
for the' Uni versity of Nevada-Reno. This
should gi ve him an extra git\ or two from
Salata's wardrobe.
The week begins with a Press Conferen<je
sponsored by the Daily . Pilot on Sunday.
Davis 1s scheduled to amvc by American
Alrhnes at 3 p.m. (other past winners have not
been as punctual with their arrival pla ns).
He will arrive by boat at the Balboa &ay
Club for an opening press conference and
reception which is scheduled for 4: 1 S. In
addition 10 interviews for the press. he will he
f PIHM see IRRELEVANT /Ml
Bell traded
to Raiders
LOS ANGELES -Grq Bell,
a thousand-yard rusher for the
Los Angeles Rams each of the
past two ~sons. was traded to
the Los Angeles Raiders Tues-
day for an undisclosed future
drat\ pick.
Although Bell has been the
Ra ms' No. I tailback for the past
two years, they signed fonner
Seattle Scahawks star Curt
Warner as a free agent dunna the
off-season and also have two
young tailbacks. Cleveland Gary
and Gaston Green. waitina in
the wings.
A S-foot-1 I, 21 ~pounder, Bell
came to the Rams from Buffalo
in 1987 an the three-way deal
that sent Enc Dickerson from
the Rams to Indianapolis.
Bell. 27. 1s a veteran of sax
NFL seasons. He was a first-
round drat\· choice by the Bills
out of Notre Dame in 1984.
Bell was voted tnto the Pro
Bowl af\cr his rookie season.
when he rushed for 1. I 00 yards. Mater Dci shortstop Lio nel Hast-
ings. who batted .457. also made
first team All.CIF 5-A .
Five players made second team
while one, Ocean View pitcher Jim
Gwaltney, ea rned third team.
·MVP of his team . Smith, an excel-
lent outfielder with-a great throwina
ann, also plays football . He's sched-
uled to play quarterback fo r Bill
Workman's OCC team in the fall .
Lindsey and Schultz were two ke y
members on Manna's CIF cham-
(Pfe•se SH AU-CIF /111
...,P-..,.._ .... ~
Mar1na·1 ltoMn Und••r flefll and M.-c Newfle~ •arnH
second and first t•.,.. All·CIP S·A honors In ltlaeltall.
He rushed for 1.137 yards last
year to rank fo unh in the NFC.
-By TM AIMClated Prut
College Athletes of the Year
•
• t
..
••
Hiii, White dellVer In s-a win
Consecutive two-run doubl~s rally
Ang~ls to third straight triumph •T MT Scrn~
Wiit .. Clllml9.. .l t t=P..r:-· •. ., JCS MOOSHI. ,.,...,. .... weoa into ta.e pme battina .237,
Wbi ... 206. Frt""'9•......, ,_ ·
ODCAOO -Dollllie Hill and
Devon White, a couple of 1uyi
llnl9liDI at tbe plate, caine tbtouab witla couecutivc tw<H'\ln doubrcs
Tuelday niaht to rally the California
~It to a S-3 victory over the Cbica&o White Sox.
.. I've been ~ since I bad some trouble with my aboulder, but ru Ues> womna and ru .Id it back." Hill, a product of f.dilon Hieb and ~ Coest eou..
said.
Al -• ICMPC,.. C111t • Git TV, a.. 11 • ... ..a. nll
It waa tbe third strai&ht victory for
the AJteels and the White Sox's fifth
straiabt defeat. their loneest loaina atrealt since they lost before last
year's All-Star break.
"We needed it, I needed it. eve~
body needed it," White said of his
double that scored the winnina runs.
"rve been st.ruaJing a.h I season Iona. I know rm better than my average
lbows. That's why rm in there day-
in and 4ay~ut."
"Both hits burt us,•• Chi~ Man· aeer Jeff Torbora aaid. lddina that
be didn't plan to do anythioa apeciaJ
becaute of the loaina · atreU. .. We
need to Ny positive riabt DOW.
Lately, we're blowins leads. I
thouaht Danny (Pasqua) had put us
Hill, who made the club in spring
training, had been hot earlier in the
season but slacked off lately. Hill
Ora~ Coast Daily Pilot
Angels ~ of a.y
M.ts •1ct1:torn, who ~
ed the tin-' '1" ....... of
shutout relief f« his t Jth sav•
this~-·
·Sports brea
This month proving
that ~some athletes
improving with age
Seem like old times?
It is.
In the merry month of June. so far:
•·45-year-old Hale lrwm became the oldest
player to win the U.S. Open.
8 43-year-old Nolan Ryan became the oldest
pitcher to throw a no-hjtter (No. 6).
• 52-year-old Harry Gant became the oldest
driver to wi n a NASCAR event when Jle won the
Miller 500.
Some other grand. old geezers have looked good
this month, too.
Chuck Daly. at 60 the oldest coach m the NBA,
helped the Detroit Pistons earn a place in league
history by leading them to back-to-back cham-
pionships.
George Foreman. at 42. improved his record to
67-2. by knocking out Ad1lson Rodrigues.
Told by man} that they couldn·t maintain their
level of achievement. these gentlemen proved their
critics right. They got better.
Irwin. figured by most to be over the hill. danced
over hill and dale m celebration of his sudden-death
victory Monday m the U.S. Open. which he had·
already won twice before.
"I've never considered many things impossible:·
he said. " ome are just improbable. But I never
looked at my age as o ne of the factors ... I always
felt I could do it. (\nd I always wanted to do it."
Ryan is a journeyman as Hall of Famers go. First
one team. then another has been afraid to take a
chance on the aging superstar. But Ryan has paid off
every ume -most recently for the Texas Ran~ers,
who were on the winnmg end of his sixth no-httter
(No. S was already a record). ·
"It comes so late in my career that 1t makes it
extra special .'' said R)'an. whose fastball has dropped
10 a mere 98 mph.
"J ha,en't gotten bored with no-hitters. yet," he
sai.d. "I don't know how many more chances I'm
gomg to get. blu tfte way I've been throwing. it's
certainl:r not out of the question that I'll get another
shot."
Gant didn't figure to pJay a role m the Miller 500.
Instead. he won 1t -his fi rst \'ICtory in more than
a year. '
"f hope I win the m ost of anybody at this age "
he said. "You're never too old." '
John Myers. a spokesman for the American
Association of Retired Persons. said the AARP "has
argued for man) years that age 1s no bamer to .a great
ma.n_y ~~mgs. including excellence m physical ac-
uv1t1es.
The orpniza11on cites the recent victories by
Irwin, Ryan and others as evidence that "older
athletes are j USt as competrt1 ve as they were in their
youth."
Histor} bears this out. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar ran
the floor 1n the NBA Finals at the age of 43. Gordie
Howe and Satchel Paige played at the highest level
into their ·sos.
And. when Bill Shoema ker and his mount
Ferdma!ld ~on the 1986 Kentucky Derby, they had
a combined age of 57. The horse. of count. was 3.·
"Youth and enthusiasm are great. but age and
craftiness ar~ better for n:ie. As I get older I get better,"
Foreman said after finishing off Rodnques in the
second round aturda;r night.
Then there's Andres Gomez. the French Open
winner.
He·~ JUSt a pup at 30. but he was I 0 years older
than his finals opponent. Andre Agass1. and 14 years
older than the \A.Omen's champion. Monica Seles.
Winnin~ the title was a nice finish for a fine
career, nght
Wro ng.
"I see this as more of a sunnse than a sunset."
he said.
Nonh Stars hire Gainey
BLOOMINGTON. Minn. -It was
an easy choice for the Minnesota Nonh ._.-
Stars to hire Bob Gainey, transforming .•~
the former Montreal Canadiens captain ----
from best rumor available to best coach available.
"We were looking for someone who had won at
the . Na~onal Hockey League level. who knew the
dedJcauon and effort at takes to win," GcneraJ .
Manager Bob Clarke said
TELEVISION, RADIO
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IN THE BLEACHERS
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Surgery planned for Molitor
. Paul Molitor wall undergo surgery ~
today on a fractured knuckle on his left
index finger. Milwaukee Brewers team •
physician Paul Jacobs said Tuesday.
Jacobs said a pin will be insened into the finger
during the surgery at Sinai Samaritan Hospital in
Milwaukee. Molitor had a CAT-scan Tuesday, reveal-
ing the need for surgery that co uld sideline the
Brewers second baseman for at least six weeks and
maybe eight. Without the surgery, Moljtor was ex-
pected to be out four to six weeks.
In other baseball news Tuesday:
• Baltimore placed outfielder Phil Bradley on the
21-day_d[sabled ltst retroactive to Sunday because of
injuries to his lower back and left wrist. Bradley wi ll
have arthroscopic surgery later this Wttk to explore
a ligament injury in the wrist. the team said.
8 Andre Dawson of the Chicago CUbs has taken
the lead among outfielders in balloting for the
National League All-Star team. According to figures
released by the baseball commissioner's office,
Dawson has 490.21 5 votes to 468.084 for San Fran-
cisco's Kevin Mitchell. who was first la.st ·week.
Sims released by Patriots
Defensive e nd Kenneth Sims, who ----
never lived up to his potential as the top ~
pick m the 1982 N FL draft. was released ~
Tuesday by the New England Patriots. -----
The team said he failed to stay in proper physical
shape.
· Sims violated a two-year contract signed late in
May that required him to remain in the Foxboro area
for off-season workouts. Patriots General Manager
Patrick Sullivan said. He was overweight at a team
mmicamp earlier that month.
Sims was released 16 days after being arrested for
alleged possession of a small amount of cocaine in
Austin, Texas. after he was stopped for allegedly
speeding on a highway.
In other spons news Tuesday:
•Ton' Brooks. a top rusher dunnf Notre
Dame's I 9k8 national championship footbal season,
has been· readmitted to the universi ty and will be
eligible to play this fall, a school official says. Brooks.
20. of Tulsa. Okla .. withdrew in 1989 after Coach Lou
Holtz suspended him from spring football practice for
unspecified disciplinary reasons.
•The yacht Arcadia took tint place in the
Newpon, R.I.. to Bermuda Rac.e with a corrected
tame of 72 hours, 41 m inutes and 52 seconds.
•Eclipse Award winner Sunday Silence will
car.ry high weight of 126 pounds in Sunday's SI
million 1-follywood Gold Cup at Hollywood Park.
Just his second weight assignment of his career,
Sunday Silence was given two pounds more than
stablemate and Santa Anita Handicap winner
Ruhlmann.
•Eight-time Wimbledon champion Martina
Navratilova swept through two rounds of a women's
tennis tournament in Eastbourne, En&land, los.inajust
eight games. But No. 2 seed Zina Garrison and 14-
year~ld Jennifer Capriati were defeated in the 1eeond
round at this south England resort.
•Aaron Krickstein. bothered by an arm injury
for about a month, said that he'.11 likely skip
Wimbledon in order to aive it a chance to heal.
Krickstein made the comments after defaultina an
openina-round ma tch of the Manchester (Enf,land)
Open. He was the top seed in this tournament and
had been assigned the No. 8 seedina for Wimbledon,
which beains June 2S. • • CbarJcn aeneraJ manaaer Bobby Bcathard says
be bas approached former Baltimore Colts and Ra.ms
q~nerback Ben J ones about playing for San Oiqo
this season.
-From ne AuodalH rr...
OU
. Pre4 WetUae1, acneral manaaa of WABC
radiot the New York Yankees' flaPbip station
Who na1 Hked that Yankees principal ovmer peor,e Steinbrenner either tell the team or brint
tn a knowlcdtcablc bateblll man and &ive him
full po~ ·to run it: "We paid a lot of mOi'e')' fO!' the f'iahts (to broadcut Yaakcc pma). We
think the Ntw Yon fan ctaena a bC'ner
product and ~ want our money's worth. I want m~ than Yankee traditio.n. 11 want 1 com~ ~nan inm.''
..
ll#LMt ... tit
w W.,~ 811duUn durlnfl tint lnwlllll ,........, nltht at Veterans Su..._.
Toronto's streak halted -at-stx-;
Liebrandt slows down Reds
Rookie Dana Kiecker limited red-bot Toronto to
three hits and two unearned runs in 8'h inninp and
Ellis Burks tripled home the 10-abead run in the ninih
leading the Boston Red Sox to a 4-2 '
victory Tuesday night that snapped ~ the host Blue Jays' six.game winnina
streak. iilCM l&M."'
After Toronto's John Cerutti ~ held Boston to two runs and eight
hits in eight inning. Duane Ward
( 1-3) took over in the ninth. He
started out by walking Dwi~t Evans
and Burks followed with has tie-break.ins triple pest a
diving center fielder Mookie Wilson. Burks scored on
a gro under by Tony Pena.
• bd1aa1 5, Orioles 4: In Oeveland, li&bt-hittina
Felix Fermin got a rare extra-base bit off Greg Olson
Baltimore's near-perfect relief ace1 in the eiahth innini
and scored on Sandy Alomar's s1nale.
8 Tl1en 7, Adaletlcs I: Alan frammell drove in
four runs, three on a fi rst-inning homer, and Cecil
Fielder singled home the tying and winnina runs in the
fourth inning at Tiger Stadium. Paul Gibson (2-1) was
the winner with 31t'> inninas in relief of Frank Tanana.
who gave up six runs and eight hits in 3'1'> innings.
•Royals 1, Mariaen I: Kevin Scitzer tripled home
t~e decisive run in the second inning and Kansas City pttc~ers stranded 12 Seattle baserunners at Royals
Stadium. Kansas City won for the fifth time in six
pm~s. Steve Farr (5-3) gave up fi ve hits in five inniD&S
in has second stan of the season.
• Rugn1 S, Twin 4: Pete lncavislia homered
with on~ o ut in the seventh inning to bruk a 4-4 tie
in Arlington as Texas handed Minnesota its 11th loss
in 12 games. lncaviglia crushed a 3-2 pitch from Jo hn
Candelaria (7-3) some 411 feet over the center-field
wall. It was the eighth homer off Candelaria this season
all by right-handed batters. '
•Yuk~ 5, Brewen I: The usually punchless
Yankees built a four-run lead for only the third time in
23 games and Chuck Ca ry pitched out of two big jams
in six scoreless innings at County Stadium.
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Braves beat the visitil)I Reds 3-0 to stop a li.x-pmc
slide in the ni&htcap of a twi-night · ..
do ubleheader Tuesday. -. c;-·-·
The Reds won tbe opener 4-2 14@!'.A
with a ninth-inning raJly that fea-·llJllll ,,
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second game on an RBI single by Ron Gant and a hit
batsman. Jim Presley's eighth homer. off Tim Layana
in the ei&hth, accounted for the other Atlanta run in the
ni&btcap.
•Padres 4, Gluts I: At Candlestick Park, Sao
Francisco's nine-pme winning streak ended with R~
en o Alomar gettmg three hits and an RBI. San Dieao
stopped a three-game slide.
8 c.bl l, Expos I: In Montreal. Chicago's Shawn
Boskie won a duel of rookies with Mark Gardner and
the Expos' Spike Owen set a Natjonal Lcque record for
consecutive errorlcss games in a season by a shortstop.
. • Mets I, Cardlaals 0: David Cone pitched a four-
h1tter and New York kept up its power show bcatina
John T.udor (5-3) at Shea Stadium. The Mets. ~bo have
won nme of 11 games. got home runs from Kevin
McReynolds. Orlando Mercado and Howard Johnson.
• PWuln %, Pirate• 1: Dickie Tttoo's 1in&)e with
1wo out in the 10th inning scored John Kruk from
second base at Veterans Stadium.
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Otenge COMt DAILY PILOT IW~. June 20. 1110 •
Going to bat on a different ballfield ALL-CIF ''°"' ••
p.onlbap team. Lindley, an inspira-
tion ~hand the plate. b.it .400 wi ab
four homers and 3 l RBI. He 1tNCk
out only ei&ht times and scored 20
runs.
CUL VER CITY -I've beat in.
volved ill '-eball lincc I WU old tDOUlb IO NII around the ....
awiaj a plMaic bat. create iJDllinary
..... ud tbrow 1.1enllis ball ~tlle ..... doot. After tbe IJl.Clf VOUaa lat week
in &be Kaizulr.a Room here at the
ucieat Memorial Auditorium, I
bow now that I've come f\all circle.
Never have I experienced uythi•
like th.ii before.
Ob1 sute. Other spons writers are
fticnoly, they feed you tbete
ICNIDpUOUS BL T's ud Bud Dyer of
the Amateur Athletic Foundataon of
Los AQteles is the finest moderator who ever walked the planet. But,
wow! What a faaht.•what a war ...
wbataday. .
You could say I'm familiar with
this pme. Without tryina to sound
Loo overbearina, I unclentand play.
en, I can detect talent on any field
at any time and I've probably watch·
ed a million pmes. Maybe a •
million's stretchina it a little. but
who's countina? •
FQr two yean, I played fi)r wages
-24-years-old when released by the
Minnnota Twins' organization. To
make a long story short, I thouaht
.... I'd seen everything this grand ol'
aame had to offer. But apparently
not.
When it came time to put up,
lobby, negotiate and promote our
Orange Coast area high school play-
en. I felt like it was another bases-
loaded situation with nobody out
and the clean-up hitter standing in
tbl boa. ~bis cbopl.
Some of &be.-...,., tepretCD•
iatives bad to •vc tbe meeWll euty, but anywbeft from 16 to 11
wbere OD band. raisint U'IDI iD the
air IO VOit D Dlayen they flll wel'e
detervi .. of AlJ..Clf' recolDilioa.
We •tanid II l 0 L~ walbd out '° ~ outilll lo& at &Al p.m. S0me will say an~ IO lute the
other wriaen lneo votiaa for their area players, elhical or not.
h'• suppoled 10 be kept to "on·'
the-field credentials" onJy, but there were reponcn 11yina tbillls lib, .....
and be·s really a neat kid, he bas a
peper route early in the momina
becautc bis parents neod tbe money
... he's worked '° hard and no one-from bis school bas ever made All-
CIF. Plu1, hep aood arades."
Well, that's fine, and 1 cenainly
have all the sympathy in the world
for a player with linuled rcsourca.
but there are plenty of scbolar-atb·
lete trophies to be pUsed oul and
there's nothing unusual about a hi&h
school baseball player havina a pen-
time job.
Votina for these All-Clf teams
1QeS strictly by numbers. how a
player's team finishes. what kind of
an impact the player made ... and it
helps to have made AJl-CIF the
previous year or signed a letter-Of·
intent with a four-year college.
Admittedly, th~1 was fun. "'For the
first time, I realized how these teams
arc selected.
Anyhow, here's a few highlights
and lowli&hts:
• Mmi• Hilb'• Mate Newfaeld,
wbo bll quick wrists reminilCeftt of
Henry Aaron, was a flnMeam IC·
damalioa pick on the S.A tum . Eiabt Omit Coast ara olayns
Mte nameCI IO the three S..A teams,
but Newfteld and Mater Oei abort·
stop UODel Halt.inat ~ the only ones b &be ftnt aeam.
I put Newfield up for Player of tbe Var~ which I felt he cte. ICl"Ved.. consickrina the Vikings won
the Clf S.A title. Newfield hit .440
with 10 home runs and 31 RBI as a
junior, then was pitched around
moat oftbis year. Can't blame the
piacben.
He's a pure hitter who belted six
homers this season, drivina in 20
runs while battina .467 and scorina
30 runs. Newfield, drafted No. I by
the Seattle Mari.nen and .sjxth over·
all, was the best player on the best
team in.the S-A. Simple as that.
Westlake, ranked No. I in Cali-
fornia for most of the season and
No. I in tbe U.S. the finaJ week of 1
the regular season. wasn't bad. But' it
lost to Marina -which finished
third in the Sunset league -in the
semifinals.
And, of course. th~ere argu-
ments for Player of the Year -
legitimate ones, too. Westlake had a
pretty good catcher named Mike
Liebertbal, who was playing that
position for the first time in his life.
Liebtnhal was also a No. 1 draft
pick (Philadelphia) and the third
player taken overall. He batted .448
with I 3 home runs and 43 RBI.
PREPS
Richard
Dunn
We went back and forth. Tbe
rep0ncrs from the Daily News and
other papers in tbt San Fernando
Valley were push.ing hard for
Liebenhal. I was pushina for New-
field. Liebenhal won. by a landslide.
finishing with nine bands in tbe air.
West Covina's Charles Poe (.480)
had three votes. Aaron Seja of Milli·
kan (.470) had one vote -courtesy
of the Long Beach ·Press~Telcgram.
Nt'wfield had two votes. Oh well.
0
OK. OK. I admit it. I overdid at
oo Sean Patterson. Manna's senior
nght·hander who went 6-2 wath a
2.33 ERA.
If they don't look ltkc grt'at
numbers. you're tight. But. hey.
those darn Vikings won the pennant!
For this level. they won the World
Series. The)' can't do any better.
Patterson was Marin~·s work·
horse. the o ne who shu t Mater
Dei (4-0) in the quarter mats and
totaled 72 111 1nn10gs in 1990. He also
had one save and bas ER~ was 2.1 l
txfore the Clf title aame at the Big A.
Now. u5ually CIF champton1
have four rcpre~ntat1vcs on the All·
Clf teams, and Pancrson was the
foun.b, behmd Newfield. catcher
Robin Lindsey and utility player
David Schultz.
Patterson didn't make it. Few
hands rose when 1t was his tum on
the chalkboard Yes. I pushed Pat·
tenon as hard as I could. and I'm
sure I was getting some funny looks.
But you don't stt statistics for the
others when you first put a person
up.
His ERA was t'mbarrass1ng com·
pared fo others. Some were at 1.12
and I.SS and 1.42. Sorry. Scan. but
2.33 didn't cut it. Somt' pitchers
wert' 11-0 and 10.2and 11 -3. So 7-2?
Nope. no way. These other writers
wouldn't buy ll.
Talked to Manna Coach PauJ
Rt'nfrow the da} before the voting
and he ga"e me the lowdown on his
bo)s. Ht' wanted Patterson to be put
up.
The other wnter ... made me shut
up.
0 So getting back to oar bases·
loaded situation. I walked away feel·
ingas if r d thrown nothing but
pitcht's on the black of the plate and
worked out of the 1am. No doubt.
I'm looking forward to the nc't
IODlng ID 1991.
Rieb Du.a ls • D•Jlfl Pilot Sport•
Writer •bose col•mo ·~•rs re1·
tdarly.
Pl9¥tr. ICllell 0.vlll Tre vtor, Rlvenlde Polv
Milon Sele. Ml'*811
CMt'IM Poe, w-.r Covine MMe Newfleld. Merine
Joe GorOOtl. $11"' V ... y
Mlon Wllllemton. TO!'rWIU
Llonel ~•linll'. Met« o.I 11..,on Hoelwl, w~
Martin Mna, SI JGM 9o1co
JOeV ltOMlll, 11.ltmanY
Mill• Uelleirltlel, WftMel<• Mike Ebv. W..._.
~rlclo EJ1ev11, CUIYef' Cilv
Cllrl• Miiier, LM.-ood
WCC*O TIUM
Brvan Judice, ltl-•iOe Poty
Donnie Stnllfl, Ed!Mn
Enc Con.ulft. T~ra1>ee
0..-Smlll'I, EIMllM-
Tl!o Quli.t. Diamond .. r
Den Redlneton. E•-•ni• urrv ~11ar1M, Mllllllan
OM!el ~n.noer. Ocea11 view Mike Pine<ro, WHI Cov111a
De¥id Sctlulrt Marn\9
!too.Ji LlnclJeY. Maron.
Ouarw P•M. Ocean V>ew
Brvan McK .. I<. H H Wll1.on
Oavlcl It-Lall.awOOCI
n.•o TEAM
Yr.~ ....
5'. OF m
St OF At
St Of' -St IF M1
" IF an Jr IF ••
St IF •• 51
Sr IF ...
Sr. UT .M
&r UT An
Sr c ...
St p ll-0
St P IM 5t PIM
St bF .AJ• St OF •1'
Jr
()F -St
()F -St IF .llO
St IF ...
Jr IF 02
Sr IF .Jfl
St IF 0 1
St UT J71
Sr c fOO
Sr PllM
Sr p 9·2
Jr p 9-1
JKOO Crul CIWI~ l\lanOI Jr OF "' OF .._. Brent Cl'lrlll•nwn, 1.000 Oa•u Sr
Trov Dunleo, Cu1¥t< CllY Sr
o.MI\ 8rloll1, IC.a1t11a Jr
Jim Quiroz Fonta na Sr
CPI"\ MlllOll. H H WllSO'I Sr
Tony Gonu•H . ltut>tOouA St
IC.ennv HooO S·rN Va kv St
Kurt IC.•1M a. lt0111no Hin\ Sr
lt.-CS Alilan, 8e¥t<l'f HiM\ Sr
Jim GwattM¥, 0c .. n lllew Sr
Slleoe Summe"· E~anr.e S•
Oa nnv Gray G~le Sr ,.._ .... y..,
Mltil• Lieoertllal, Wflllau
IF JU
IF •73 IF l90
IF 43J
IF ltl
tF ~
UT -c "3 p •• ,
P •-o p ,.,
Thompson ponder/1Jg
offer from Nuggets
to leave Georgetown
ValenzLiela ends own streak
By LEE BYRD
~"~ .......... you do leave. they land on thelt
feet," he added.
Fernando deals
Astros 1 1th road
/oss ... in a row, 5-1
By JOHN HORN
_.., ''"' v.ltttn
LOS ANGELES -Fernando
Valenzuela ended a personal four-WASHINGTON -John Thomp-
son acknowledged Tuesday that he's
"very excited" about an offer to
become general manager and part
owner of the Denver Nuggets, but
said he has yet to decide whether to
·leave Georgetown after 18 yean as
the Hoyas' head coach.
And "the Jesuit Fathers have been
·awfully nice to me ... Thompson con·
tinued. "I would not just run out of
Georgetown Univenity without giv-
ing them some consideration ...
Thompson denied reports that he
already had recommended can-
didates to succeed him. "I'm still
coach at Georgetown." he said. "I'd
be crazy to recommend somebody
for my job."
John Tltolllp1on
. game losing streak as the Los An·
geles Dodgers handed the shaky
Houston Astros a club-record-tying
I I th stra1~ht road loss Wlth their
fourth stra1gh 1 victory. 5-1. T ut'sda y
night at Dodger Stadium.
Valenzuela (5·5) allowed four hits
m seven innings. struck out SIA and
walked four while beating Make
Scon ( 4-7) as the Astros lost their
fifth straight.
Sull. the former Celtic reserve
talked like a man whose NBA lug-
gage, if not packed, is back o ut of the
closet.
Denver has "offered me an op-
ponunity which is an exciting
chaJlenge." he told a campus news
c-0nferencc. "And all of us live for
challenges."
Thompson reponedly has been
offered a package worth more than
$6 million over the next four or five
years, including a $700.000 salary as
genera.I manager and as much as 4
percent ownership of the Nuggets.
That ..share would be worth about
$2.8 million.
Thompson. who has taken the
Hoyas to the NCAA tournament 14
of his 18 years and ,won tho 1984
nationa,I championship. said he
would make his decision "as soon as
possible," but 1t will await consul·
tat1on with university officials and
his players. And "I have not spoken
to one.player" yet, he said. "lfl were
to leave, I would ceruinly sit down
and taJk to them first."
"Yet, I am giving consideration to
an offer ... Yes. I do think that it is
only commo n courtesy. if you work
at a university. to sit down with
those people and make sure that if
But he made it clear he would
expect to play a strong ro\e in choos--
ina a successor if he docs depart,
adding. .. This program will work
fine if I'm not here. I think 1t would
be a great program.
"If you think I'm considerin_g an
offer. you're absolutely riptt. If you .
think I've made up my mind. you're
absolutely wrong. .. he said.
Thompson's agent. David Falk of
Arlington. Va.-based ProServ. was
in Chicago Tuesday. as were Nug·
gets general counsel G len Grunwald
and team president Carl Sch~r. But
Thompson said Falk was not there
to close a deal.
"David's m Chica10:· Thompson
sai4, "but at has absolutely nothing
to do with me ... He also happens to
represent a young man named
Michael Jordan."
Bob Wussier. a co-owner of the
Nuaets. said Thompson "is
wandering around the city. talking
to friends and figuring out what to
do." He said the Nuaaets had made
a specific offer to Thompson on
Monday and arc awa1tinJ a yes or
no. with no funber negotiations ex·
peeled.
"We've all airecd we've to go· set
back to our laves:· Wussier said.
"We'd like to get it done."
Scheer. similarly. declared "The
ball's in his (Thompson's) court."
Several NBA teams have at·
tempted to woo Thor;npson from
Georgetown. where he cams more
than $400,000 as coach and has a
shoe e'ndorsemcnt contract with
Nike that pays him about SH0.000
a year.
In December 1989. the Nuggets
were purchased b> bus1ncssmt'n
Peter Bynoe and Bertram Lee, who
became the first bla,·k owners of a
pro spons franchise. Later. Wussier
invested S 17 million and became a
co-owner.
Thompson called ~n,cr's offer
"far more serious.. than any
previous NBA bid.
Asked 1f it might lead to him
coaching the Nuggets. he replied.
"My name 1s not m cons1derat1on
for coaching an)thing. In thl' N B~.
sometimes the coach docs nothing
but coach ... whereas the general
manager's responsabiht> 1s to struc-
ture the them. And I think I'd find
that as i~teresting. ..
Bleier to speak at Irvine banquet
The Daly Piiot
IRVINE -Rocky Blei.er ~ a not-~
very-big. not-too-fast but mcrcd1bly de· ~
termined a thlete when the Pittsburgh Steel·----
ers footbaJI team picked him up in the nut-to-last
round of the 1968 NFL draft.
Before he could prove himself as a rookie. he was
drafted agajn -this time. for combet duty in Vietnam.
A few months later, crippled by enemy rifle and penadc
wounds in both legs. Bleier faced his bigest cballeqe.
He could barely walk. and certainly wouldn't run,
doctors said.
But he did of course. after a two-year strualc,
rejoin th
0
e Steelers and contributed to four Super &Owl
wa ns.
What brought Bleier back promises to be a fascinat·
in& and inspiring topic for guesu at tbe Irvine Chamber
of Commertt Annual Installation Banquet on Friday
night at the Irvine Hilton and Towers.
Bleier will be the keynote speaker at the black·tie-
optional event which will bcain with a no-host cocktail
reception at 6:30 p.m.i folfowcd by dinner and the
prOIJ'lm at 7: IS. The rvine Cbam&er Citizen of the
Year and Member of the Year will aJso be named. in
addition to the installation of n~w officers.
For more information. call the Irvine Chamber at
660-9112.
Keays hit .454, eighth in the county, last season.
and shouJd contribute immedjately. Phillips said.
Pysa. r hit .364 with Allan Hancock and tned out for
the Canadian National Team last wttk. He and
Dahlpcn both played for Phillips at Saddleback Com·
munlty College two seasons ago.
Imus went 5-1 with a 3.10 earned run a vera'e at
Shasta. Phillips said the 6-foot-2. 200-pound ngbt·
banded pitc~r should be in the three-man rotation next
season. The' Vanguards' entire rotation was drafted
earlier this month, and the only one who could return.
Raphael Garcia. has signed with the Toronto.
Dahlarcn was a key at Saddleback in 1989. and a
starting catcher and leader for Chnst College Irvine this
spnna, hitting .275. Dahlgren will replace Oc'nni Berni .
a graduating senior power hitter who was drafted and
sianed by theBoston Red Sox.
.. He was a leader for me behind the plate at
Saddleback, and he was at CCI too. and I know he will
be here." Phillips said.
Ex-Edison pair honored
Fresno Stafe softball players Manha •
Noffsinacr and Terry Carpenter. a pair of '='
former Edison High players who helped the •
BuUdop to their third straiaht runner-up •
performance at the College Softball World Scnes.
Eddie Murra) hit h1i. ninth ho mer
Orangt Coast Daily Pilot
Dod~rs Player of Day
Pernando Valenzuela,
who allowed four hits and one
run an seven Innings to snap a
personal four·game losing
strealc.
TICE
From 81
ht' said. "M> sponwrs had all but
forgotten about me b) then. I wa'>
prt'll\. much 1ust surfing for mvself ..
Hawkm!I ll>Ok his dad's longboard
out a couple of11me and liked at .
and figured he might as "'ell take
that route.
"I was JU.SI taking things a da> at
a lime and since longboarding was
t'asy on m> back and I liked at. I
figured I'd gave 11 a chance "
Hawktni. started 1mpro"ang and
got to the point of competing n·g·
ularly an amateur conte'>t'> 1n the
longboard1ng d1,·1s1on W1than less
than a year. he emerged as the local
favorite and !.tarted his profc-ss1onal
career longboarding with an 1m·
prcssive fif\h pl.lrc at the tirst Hunt·
angton Beach urling Museum con·
test in June of'8C).
Hawkins has been '1l'ad1I) 1m·
proving sint·e then and hll a high
point 1n wanning the Pro/ .\m Long.
board d1' 1 ion of 1hc Astrodcck
Spnng Surfabout held at the Hunt·
World Cup
. ratings
low in U.S.
NEW YORK -The \\'orld Cup
game betwC'Cn the n1ted tatcs and
Ital) was watched b) 82 JX'r«nt of
telev1s1on viewers in Italy. but o nly
four perunt in the United tales.
sec signs f OUr players ~~i~!\~~~eric.i and Ac.adem1c All·Amenca honors
\
. Noffsinger, who was accorded fint-team All·
Raungs figures rcle;ascd TllMday
b)' Turner Broadcasting shov.cd the
game last Thursda) got a U rating
• and i six share on 1t'i TNT able
network.
COSTA MESA -Sou hem California America honors. was tttond in the Big '\Vpt Con-
Collcae baseball coach Charlie Phillipa an-~ fe:rcn~ in hi~11na with a .372 averaec ancf hke her
no unced the signing of four "impact play-~mmate Ju.he. Sml~h, notched a CC?nfettntt record for
en" who he said will all make ....;or sanaJe-sason hats with pl The 1en1or also became the
contributions for the Vanauards next teUOn. . all-time NCAA hits leader th\s 1ieason ~th 3~7 hi~s.
They include fl'Uhman outfielder 8nd K~ys of Cal'Denter. a sophomore h~I studaes m~or with
Sonora Hiah and thfte junior uamlcn -outftdder a 3.JQ GPA. was accorded third &tam Acadcm.c All·
Justin Pysar of Allan Hancock Community Colics in Amenca siatus. On the mound. &he pitcher went 22.8
Santa Maria ri&ht-hanckd pitcher Matt Imus of S6uia with a 0.37 ERA and 106 strikeouts in 208 inninp. She
Community' Col. and catcher Man OabJtren 1'f also had 29 complete pma and 1.l ahutoutl in 31
Christ Collflc Irvine. appearances. 29 of them swu.
Alamitos Bay Yacht Club dominates
The Diiiy ....
Alamitol Bey Yacht Oub •ilon
dominaeed I.he Slbo4 senior and
mMten cb&moioftlhipe sailed out of Udo Ille Yadu Oub.
The win.net of the ttnaor division
WU Kevin Dumain of ABYC with
ftve poents, aftd the winner of the
m111en daviaion was Dale
Bertillitcr, alto of ABYC.
The tmior divisioft WU fof sail· on• II and over, ..S the masten for
sailon 40 and over.
Thiny-nine turned oua for lbe U·
f'ICle event evml The top ftvc in
eecll divilion: SENIOR (16)-1. Kevin Dumain,
Al~C. S ~~u: 2. Matt Ga~io. lallia Corin..U.n Y • 17: J, Mike
Sentovich, ABYC, 17. H, 4. Jeff'
Ollon. Newport Hart»or Ye, 18: ~. DcMll Tculie. ABYC. 20.
MASTERS (23)-1 . Dalt
leftilailer, AIYC. l 7: 2. Bttty Ban,
San °'CIC> YC. 17. 7': l . ~Oaks.
AIY~ 20. 7'; 4. Phylis DraylOa. ..
NHY\., .)().~ S. Tim Mulvaney,
BCYC. 31.75.
The ratanf 1s the pcrttntaJe of
televisions m the llmtN States
tuned to the gamt' and the hare is
the ptrttntage of tt'lc' "'ons that art
on at the t1mt'.
The . . pme ae1nst ztcho lo-
valua the prcVlous unday got a 1.8
rating and a six share and was
watched 1n 858.000 home . ,
The pme ap1n&t Ital)' was watch-
ed 1n SSS.000 homti.
The first pme was on at 11 a.m .
on a Sunday . mom1na on the East
Coast of the UmtN States. while the
tte0nd game was at 3 p.m. on a
Thursda) afternoon.
The fint St'\.en World Cup aames
on TNT u ·crqed a 1.0 n1t1na and a
three share . _.,_,... A.UeeM ... ~
m the filth for Los Angeles. which
had lost Ii ve straight before 11s cur·
rent winning strea._.
Pitching on three da}s' rest for the
first tame 1n two H'ars. Valcnzut'La
allowed a !>Cventh:inn1ng homer to
Case) Candaelc and held the Astros
to a single b) ott through 611
innings Candaelt' has four car~r
home runs. three against the
Dodger\ this &eason and two off
ValenLucla.
The Dodgers scored four un·
earned runs with the help of t"·o
HounoncrroB1nthefourthastht'y
kept the Astroi. winless on the road
sinct' May 31 at San Francisco. At
9-24. Houston has the wo rst road
record an tht' maJor leagues
Tht' loss matched Houston's club
record of 11 straight road defeats
from Aug. 4-28. IQ67
Reserve catcher Ale~ Tre' ino.
playing li~t ba')C for the .\stros in
place of the 1n1urcd Glenn Da' is.
missed a backhanJC"d attempt on a
ha.rd r.ro undcr b) Kai.Daniels for an
error to open the fou rth
Murra) follo"'cd wath a .,inglc
\\ 1th one o ut. \.1 1 l c \c10-.cu rca ht'd
first un a fidder') lhoacc. "Ith Mur-
ray ~ting the throv. at ~cond.
con. who "'al\..1.-d Mal e Sh.ari>-
crson thrc<.' str.ught lime"~. "'alkN
1ng1o n Beach Pacr .\pnl I in thl· tx'<it
tnd1v1dual -.urling pcrfomlanCl' f''t'
e\C'r "'•tnci.~d 1n longbo.lrd111g or
shortboardmg. 1ndud1ng contC'c,tc,
hke lht' Op Pro
lkcau!>C of hng<.:nng had pre>h-
lems. J lawkans had to 'Ill out for a
coupk of"'ccls prwr to th1'> 'c;ir-.>
Surf Mu~um l'\t'Ol <tnd "'a\~ ft"d
up \.\Ith II. ht' COO\ldl'red gt\ 1ng up
surling t'ntarcl ~
"I "'as tdling people I wac, rt'tinng
and that was at.'' Hav.krns )<ud
"Conte ts an: w full of 1t that I
might as \\ell u..e 11111 m) ad\antagl.'.'
once in a ""h1lc.
"Yeah m> ba1:l ,1111 hurt' but
Oa' 1J Suuh1, .. a ~r 1a famou\
martial art\ c,ix·n and father of
surfing legend OJ, 1J '<uu1'Aa Jr l_I'
:-working on 11 and ht' ..a~ c, he l·an 11\
at, no probkm
"He hac, dom· 11 \.\Ith othrr<. c,o I
trust ham"
H.l"'kin' hac, a plan and 1t'11 c,ct.rt't
C\CCpt for thl~ point
"l JU'it "'orh·d out a c,p<rn~orc,h1p
with Gold'-.(i)m and I'm tro1n1ng
hard M ) dad "'ould hkc to ~{' what
I can ~n c,horthoarJmg. so I'm not
ruhnit that out I J on ·t v.ant to
..
I\
schedule
AT •AT
Wed: A1tro1 K 7 JS (home)
Thu: Idle. Y!' OMDECK ~ M;
IN THE HOLE
Fri Reo1• US
All Nmft on KABC radio (7t0)
• On TV, Ch ll, K Soor11Channel
him on four str.11ght p1tche~ to dnvc
in Daniels. Alfredo Gnffin·., sacn -
ficc 11) Kored Murra)
Yelding. pla)ing shomtop for
t'rror-plagued Rafat'I Ramirel.
botLhed a ground ball b) alenzuela
and made a thro"' an tht' din that
Trc' mo could not handle. It scored
Sc1osc1a and Sharperson
Houston had won ~·,. ~tra1ght
games before Its currenl dro ught.
0
OOOGER MOTES -·-llNf1IMI 17-ll IKH ,,.,,, ~ (7·•> In ,,,. ..,Oft f1nai. .,
7 lS 1onlof\t Tiie ~"' ••~• Tl1un4•• oft
tl'lefl ¥1\ft Conc1nna11 for 111r" """"end oemtt
10 -a "1 ·9e,,_. roacl l••D Houl!Ofl
o.aGad "~~ K• ~-on t!M IS·csav
O•,,_llleO ltsl TIA'\Oav -'1ecl•¥et¥ ~lelv
Qoeflll• Wffef.O e '1•aoll9CI mu~ WI 1'14\ ~
r111 cave wn • o.mno our.no Mon«Sev"1 oeme
•O••Mt ... ~r, To ••• '"' \i)OI on ,,,. ro\I~ the. A.\tros rtcalltO onllelOer O.we
• .._.., a C~on• ..., "'JV>I H,9n orOdUCI trom
Tuuon ol ,,.. Pa<lfl< CN•I Lff9Ue
t'lahorate un an) thing be ond that al
th" point but I definatC'h.h;i\l'' a
plan. and I'm gu1ng to go through
\\Ith II ..
Ha"' kin) hac. \ hangl·d "nee hie,
da)S of !ohonboard1ng onl) but he
ma1nta1ns tha1 ho"C\C.'r \.\t'll hl' d()('~
he I) sttll tht' ~me t'B'i\going person
and has 'alue!. "111 nl'' er l hange
"It felt 'o l1llcr "'inning 1hat
contest lasl "'~'C'll·nd, bul I'm c,1111
the same gu~ .. he s:ud "I don't
"'ant to he \Orne ~tar or ha'e JX'Oplt'
lOme up to me "anting m' auto-
graph or soml·th1ng I gu('c,c, I JU'it
lt._c w be <,on ut to m\\t'll and
f3m1 h That\"' hat'~ important ··
Hj\.\lln\ d1ic,n'1 reahtt' IU"il ho"
c,uC(cr,<,fuJ he re.alh "Jt prllk•c,\aonal
c.urfing. "~'lording to thC' 1JIC' t
PS.\-\ press rl·ka\l' n inl.unang rat·
angs ancJ pnll' mone' "'lln. tlawk1n\
ha earned more .,o (ar th•' \Car than
Bud L1.1mas John Parmc.·ntcr ott
Farnsworth, ( olb' Oulla"' Bobb\
Lockhart or Mar~ "vt oreno JU't 10
name a fev. ofh" ~ontem puranc'
Lloyd Tltt Is lk D•lly Pilot
~ao Sport• Wrltu ••on col•m•
·~•r• every WHll~sd•J .
-
.. Ow• .. eo...DALYN.OT/Wldrl11-...... ll.1m
MAJORS
MAIOll &AMUe ITAMlllUll ....... &.W .......
W L a n
D 25 14 D
J1 II
D 36
2t D t7 ,.
.... DMlllll • • ,. .
3S 14
• 32
= = 22 40
T...-Y'• lcilrW ~ 5, Clllc.eeo 3 Oetrelt 7. ()Mlend •
Clrlelend 5. a.itlmore • ao.ton ,, TOl'OlllO 2
KMNI City 2. $eltllle I
New Yotk 5, Mllw.uk• I
Teut 5, Mlftneeofe • T ..... ,..,..
N. .. -..,, ....
AM
A7l
.Gt At
4
' n ll 14
""'
1 ·~ ' ·~ 7"' 14
~ (l..enaton •-•l et ChleMO (H~d
S-•l. 5:0$ p,m.•
Oeklend (W91Cfl 10-2) el Detroll IP9trv S-Jl,
~.JS e.rn. New Yori! (J. J-. 1-0l II MllWeUll ..
, (.-ow.ti 0· 1). II :J.S a.m.
&elllmore (Herntsch 6·l l et CleYelend (Cen·
c11o111 7·3), •:ls P.m.
lotton (Gerdnef l·ll et Toronlo !Stieb t·1l.
USP.m. S..ttte (HOiman 7·5> et Kanse1 Cltv <~
2·2>. 5,:Js P.m. MlnnMOte (Drummond 0·2) II TeitH (I(,
lrown •-•>. S:lS o.m. l. ~·~ Oetroll et ,......., 7:35 o.m.
&tlllmcw• at Clevelllnd, US o.m.
.,... York 11 Toronto, 4:lS o.m.
Kensea City et MlnneM>t1. S:OS o.m.
Only ""'" Klleduled
......... Leetue
West DMtMft w L
Clnclnnall '° 2\
San Francisco lS 31
Sen oreoo 32 31
Dell9lrl 32 33
Houston 26 39
Atlente 24 39
.... DMtMft
Plttst>uroh 31 2S
MontrHI 37 29
New York 32 29
Ptllladelsifll• 33 30
ChlcaQOI. 21 39
St. Louil 27 31
T_....v'I kwes
~ S, Houston I
Clnc:lnnelf •·O. Allente 2·3 ChleffO 2, MontrHI I
New Vorll 6, St. LOUIS 0
.-ct. Ga
.656
.SlO 71h
.5Cll ' .492 10
.400 " .311 t7
.'°3
.5'1 2VJ
.S2S s
.S2• s ·'" 12
.41S 12
PhlfadeWlfa 2, Plthtlllrgll 1 < 10 1111\tne•I
San Oteeo •. San Francisco l
T.-V'10-
Hou1ton (Clancy 2•6) at OeMrs (It
Marlfner 7·3), 7:l5 P.m. Pltt~rOll (Petter\On •·2) al Pllllade191\la
lltuffin •·61. f>.lS a.m. St Loul• (8. Smflh •·SI ., N-York
CFernendea •·Sl. \O:lS e.m.
San Oleeo l&anes 6·•) •I Sen Fr1nclsco
l&uN<t tt 7·1!. 12::u o.m
Chkeeo (G ~u• •·71 11 MontrH l <&ovd
l ·J), •:JS o.m Cincinnati (Armsrrong 9·31 at Allante
IGr-l·O), •·40 1>.m TlwrMeV'& GMM
Clnclnnall •I ATianta, •·.O o.m
0n1v gemt sclledulld
AMUUCAN l EAGU•
Aftlilh S, WMte Sea J
CALl .. OtlNIA CHICAGO
Polonia If
ScllOffld u
J0¥11er 11>
Winfield r1
Parrl'n c
C01¥1tdll Howtll lt>
OHll 20
OWlliltCI T...n
Mlrlllll S I 2 0 LJollntn ti
• O 2 O Venture 31>
S O I 0 Caioern " • I I 0 Paloua Of\ I I 0 0 Fisk c
2 I 0 0 CMrtnt II>
4 0 1 0 Flelehr 21>
4 I I 2 Sota rt
4 0 I 1 GuHlen u
l1 S 9 4 T .....
sc-.. ""*"'
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CHca9' - -__ , E-LJOMton, Howtlt 0-CalffOr"fa J, Clll· c:aeo I. L08 -<:allfo<nla 7, Chieffo 4
28-<alde(on, OHIU, OWlllle. 38-LJCIMM>fl
Hlt-Pua ua 161
'" H R IR 88 SO c.......
McCu tclfl W,S·l
Fell«S
Elcl'tllorn S.13
CHca9'
s s l l 1 ' 2 1·3 I 0 0 2 I
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MF"erti l ,,., S S 4 ' 5 ' Pett.,..ton l·l 0 0 0 0 I
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lladln,1111 2 0 0 0 1 2
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MPertr P•ltMO to l t>atttn In 11.. 6111,
McCHklll pltclleO ro I t>alltr In Ille 4111
WP-McCaskfft Umplrtt-+-lome, Cl•r~. First, Pl\flllo\, Third.
Hlctcoa
T-3.11 A-21.Sft
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Ded9erS S, A1tret 1
HOUSTON LOS ANGILIS
Veldl"9 u
Agosto p
XHrnnd1 o
Doren 21>
ltOllOl 20
11911!0 c
GWllton rf
C1mlnfl 31>
Ortla H
Ca no"d
Trevino It>
ScoH o
llamlrr n T .....
lllrltlll
4 0 I 0 LHem 1 20
0 0 0 0 Jevltr cf
0 0 0 0 Oenl•I' II
• 21 0
o 0o 0o CGwvnn H Murrav 111
J 0 I 0 8 rooll' rt
l 0 0 0 ScloK la c
• O O O Sl'irprsn )I>
4 0 0 0 Griffin u 4 I I I Va1tn1i. P
) 0 I 0 Crew' P 2 0 I 0 MHtCflr Oii
2 0 0 0 Gott D
l2 IS 1 Teteb
ker•1" ...
Mrltltl
S 0 I 0
4 0 I 0
3 I I 0
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l 2 l I
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4 I I 0
1 1 0 I
l 0 I I
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0000
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0 0 0 0 n s • 1
Hev1• - -1•-1 Lft AMeiet -•If ... -s E-Trevlno, Vetdlne L0a-t1ouston I , Los
Anlltlt$ I 28-Scloscle Hfil-Murrav It>, Can·
datie m sa-e111111o 2 1101 SF-Ofltfln t .. HRIRUSO .... s...,
Scoll L,4·7 A90$10
XHrnandr
6 I
1
' s I 0
3 0
LM M9llft
V•lenrleW,S·S • 1
CrtWI I 0
Gott , 0 O
Umolrts-Home, Hervev. Fir",
Second, Haflfon, Tlllro. Grtt11
T-,.1 A-4S,OS4.
NL Al·Star """9
(Tlll'Wlft ~.,,
CMCMr
I l I
0 I 1
0 0 0
I 4 6
0 0 I
0 0 0
Crewtord,
I, Benito Sanllato, San Ofeoo, '1f.t4S, 2. Miiie Sdftde, °'""11 .,7M. ), Tooo Zelle,
SI LOVll, 70S,671. '· Terrv Kennedy. Sen
Franc:laco. 1'2,., 5, NtllOll Sentovenla, 13S,221.
6. Crelt a1"1o, Hou11on, in-. 7, Mitt•
Lavani.rt, P1t11b\lrgh, 171,211. t . Joe Glrwdl,
Ctttcaoo. 11l, lfl ' "'"' .... l, W'N Clerll. San FrenclllC:o, 7 ..... n. 2. Mel'"-
Greoe. CllfCffO; 2'6.ttO. l . ""*" Gelwr ....
Montrffl, 20t,f09. '· P9dro Ouetrel'o, SI. LOUii ,
IH,Ol6. 5, Jack CIMk, Sen O\elO, nt,511. 6,
Olen!\ Oe11I\, Houston, 111.JIL 7, 1-.Mllfn'f, ~ ",211. I. TOdd lenJlnetr. Clflclnllett.
7$.tlt. ............
1. ltY11t Sendl:left. c111c-6, 11s,m. 2. Dellno
OeSfllelcH, MonlrNI, :r20,Af. 3,RCIM!'IO AlolNlf,
Sen 0\e90, \U,•S4 '· llOCMtY T~. Sen FreMIKO, 1ci.11t. S, Grtel J9ftWlel. ..._
VO'k, 1H.J24 6, JON Oeu9nOO, SI. Louis.
1n .7'1. '· w..r1-o~. ClnclflMtt, 110,"6.
I , Jott Lind. ftlltal>ur9'1, 91,0ll. ,....,.. ....
1. Ctirl• s.oo. Clnc!Mell, at.UI. 2, Howerel JoMtofl, ,._ VoB, )11.172. J, Tin\ Welled!,
Mon1rte1. ·,,.,m •. Matt wi111emt. Sen ,., ....
cleco. , • ..,.. S, Ttfrv ....,....,on, St. Loult,
HORSE RACING t1
-
For th~ record
•• SOCCER
TENNI S
MM'• ..........
Cef Mllfll:t 11tar, • ._.I ...................
AleHndef AntonltKll, Auarrla, o.f. Petrlell
Oe!Welltl, Loa .,,...._, •·l , <>-•. •-2; MlctlMI 0ie111. Ptec9nlle, def. Mellvel Wallllneton,
Swerta Cr... Mlctl.. 6·J, •·•; Nie* lrown.
lrltelfl, o.t. Tllomet Hoettedt, s..-n. '"'· •·•. •·>; IUchefd FromDeNI. AutlUMe, def. .....
Nvtlore, Sweden, 7·•· 7·5; Chrltto ven
Re111111Kg. Sol.Ith Afrlc.a. def . .Jeremy l atft,
lrltel11, 2·•· •~•.•·•;Eric Jelen, w .. t GermenY.
def. v•1 ,..IOM!mo. Flnlend, 1·6, 6·2, •->; Garv /ll<AJMr, Soult! Afrlc.a. def. MMe ltoaMf, Swflur·
lend, •·7, 6·•. 7·6; 0.11 Goldle, McLten, Ve ..
def. Mtlen SralMr. Caadlotlovltllw, 7·•. •·•· 6-•; K•tv Evernden, New ZHlend, def. Jent
Wohtmenn, Welt (;ermeny, S-7, 6·•. 6-2; Aki Itel!~. Flnlencl, def. Aaron l(rlelltltln, Groue
ll'olnte, Mich .. 6··'· 1-0 (retfreOl; Kelly J-., San Oleec>. C)lf. Mlchltl Scl'laMI'&, HOli.llCI, •·3, 7·6,
Merit Kretvnann, Au1tr1lla, def. Paul An· MC-. &rldllellemc>ton. NY.. 7·6. •·•· 6·4; ,..trkk Kl/Men, Well Gerrnanv. def. A~tw
C•""' l rllafn ••• ,, 3·6, 7-S. ,.... SamclrH.
RencllO Pelo• V«#I, def. AltllMndr Volkov,
Soviet Union. •·6, 7·•· 10-1; Glled atoom, lwMI, def. Jim P\1911, Palos Ver#I, ,.,, •·•, 7·6; JoeY
ltlve, Fort L•uOerdaft, Fi.. def. lta'"""
1Crlt11nan. lnole, •·7, •-1. 6·3
w ...... ...,,,...,.....
Cet •eatMufM, • ..._., .................
Martine Na•ratlloYa, A-. COIO., def. AMe
Mlnltr, Aullr•ll•, •·2. 6-3; Manoi\ 8olleref, Ille
Netllef' .. no., def. Rechel McQulltan, Au1trelfa,
6:3, •·O, Robin Wlllte, Sa" JOM, dff. C.l•rlna
UndClviat. SW9dell, 6·2. 7·S, Nathalf• Twalat,
Frence, def. Nfcole Provla, Australia •·•. 6·3, 6-0; Marv Joe F«nander, Miami, Clef Patty
Fenolctc, Sacramento, 6·7 12·71. 7·& (7·3), l·O
retl,ld: Laure Gotaraon, Italy, def, Zina Gar·
rlaon, HO\nlon, 6·2, 7·S. Lei'-Mnllkl. Sovlel
Union, dtt. ICerlnt Quentrac. Frenct, 6·2. 1·6,
l·S; N•t•lf• Zvertve, Sovie! Union, Otl. &etav Nalleltan, 1Capa1ua 8•Y, H1w•fl. 7-S, 7·6 17· ll,
Gretchen Meters. San Antonio, oef Jtnnlfer C.0tl•ll S.OdleOrOOk, Fla., 2·6, 6·4, 6·2. Jana
Novotna C11CNK1ova111a, def Monlaue J111tr,
&rlleln, 6·2, 6·2, Netalla Madv~e. So"ltl
Union, oet ""'"' Frailer, ltochl"tr Hiii,, Minn .
7·S, 1·6 (7·31. Lori McNell. Hou"on, cwt.
Cleuola Porwltc. W"' Germe"v. •·•. 6·2. 7·•
<M l
SWIMMING
YMCA ... ereup
NIEWfl'OltT·COSTA MHA '-"' .,.. s.rw Setvr•Y'• •eMlth aovs
s-•·veer ·e6Cll 25 tr-1 KeYln MCCov. 25.06, , Adam
11.eo ... o, 30 21. 3 iut.n ltarnui .... 30 31, • Erllt
Ftl'rM, JS 57
2S Dt'Hll-1 McCov. ll .. , 2 Rtm1>1¥. 34'4,
l. Keoko, •Sil
2Soac.k-1 McCov, l2 •., Ram'•"' 45'6: 3
FertM. S2 IS. 2S flv-I McCoy, 42.Sl
1·1•YMr·e6Cll
25 "-'· S..n ltordtn, 20. ll, 2. Joev C~I. tU«. l Garrett ElrlcA, 2Ut
ZS t>rHtt-t ltorden. 21 II, 2 Comforl, 1' 16.
1S t>eck-1. Comfort, 2' 46; 2 ltorden, 2Ut , l.
Elrlck, 41.3'.
25 llv-1 Rorden. 21.76, 2 Comfort, 2'.06. l.
Elrlcll. l6 .. •• , •• .,..,.e6Cll
SO fr-I J.itr..,. Tr.evtr. 3217, 2 Ju,lln
Mltt•r, .. 52
100 llv-1. Tllever . 1:43 \3
SO 1>rtast-l Tl\aver. S6 t7
SO oaclt-1 Tiiey«, •271
ll·ll·ftU·tllft
SO Ir-I James Comfofl, 2'.IO, 1 G•vln
Garrlneer, 32.SS, 3 Laurtnl Raina, '1.13
100 llv-1 ComfMI, 1 1101
SO DttHl-1 Comfort. 4Sl6, 2 Garringer,
SO.U , l Reins. I I• 3' SO t>ac"--1 Corntor1. 31 17, 1 G>errinoer, .0 74; :I ltelnt , I OS.62
SO ltv-1 Comtort, 34.St. 2 Gerrlneer, ... 12.
200 IM-1 Comfort, 1 41 "· 2 Gerrfn9tr, l ll 16
G .. U
S·6·YMr•elds
2S ,,_, Wnhnev Fteld. 11 Sl, 1 Anlltla
St1111tr lO '9
25 IYH ll-1 F .. 'd. 3'42 2 ~l1fller. 3'•2
25 oac ... -1 FlelO, 26'9
25 lfv-1 Flt !d, 27.9', 2. Sl•ll<er. '1.7• 7 ••• .,.., ....
25 tr-\ C~tnev Ooo. 20.02; 1 Emltv
T,,a ¥er n 91, 3 Oenlelle Ftl'rN , 15"
2S l>r•Hl-1 OPO. "·"· 2 Tllavtr. ll 06 ,S ll•c"-' Tnavtr. 27.ll. 2 FerrM, 3' '° 2S 1111-I Opp, 249S, 2 Tl!avar, 3'.3S
tyNr-.eM
SO tr-1 EllraDelll McNt1M SI 00 2 ICtvv
Mc N•lll. I 00 )t
SO t>rtast-1 K. McNelll, I IS 7t, 2 E.
McNtlll, l.31.SO
SO Daek-1 E McNe!H. l'Ol 96, 2 K McNtlM,
1-07 17
IOYMr·-SO Ir-I Jennllt r McCov-1. l013, 2 AHIM>n
AIH 1Uf¥, 31 S2
100 llv-1 Ai.atuev. 131.7', 2 McCov. 1.l3.ll
SO l>rtHt-1 McCov . .S 14
SO 1>ac11-1 McCov, 39 71, 2 Alestuev, '°IS
SO tty-1 McCov, 39.06. 2 Alttlu•v, 3• 41
200 IM-1 McCoy, J-ol 03 11.12-veer.,..
SO tr-1 Carev llt10, JI ... 2 l'l•nne
WIC!Mr, lUI, l Sheena Oltl1. 40.31
SO DrHtl-1 tllead, )f,13, 2. Wldttf, U.A7, l
Ofell, 5'.SI.
SO l>ack-1 Widger. 4S 32, l Ofelr, So.tol SO fly-I O!t rr 47 8'
GOLF
..
lflt .... C.
~T ....... J ••
1<1u .... ulllle I I t Aullr'9 I I t ............ • J •
• ..... flor MCIOlld ....... Tl ........ ...... ,
ttelv2,Caedl0el0¥e!Ult ( .. ...._. .. ,
A1.11in. 2, UMIM ..... I .... ,,..,,
W L T
1-Cl!MrOMI t 1 0
•• ltOIMflle ' 1 1
•· ArlelltlN 1 1 I leVltt Uftloll t 2 0 ~ for MCOlld r'OUlld .,..c
.. ea ,. . . ' • J • I J I
I ' I
.. ......
J • • 4 I J S I J
' ' I
W LT UeA .... • 2 11·1fa1n 2 o o J 1
Co.re Rica 1 I 0 1 I ~ I I 0 2 2 s.-n 020 2 • 1r-1Uellflei. for MCOftd rOUNI T ..... , ....... , .. T--.....,>
lra1N va. Scottend, llqpll , ........... ,
Sweclefl n Cot11 R lca. noon .,__D
2
0
W LT eP eAfltl
11·W"t Ger,,,.n.,. 2 o I 10 J S
•· Vueotle11la 2 I 0 6 5 4
x·Colombla 1 1 I J 2 J
United Aral> Em 0 3 0 2 11 0
·~Jlfln fOf' IKOnd round ~·'--, .. ....., ....,,
Vugoai.1111 •. Unll9cl Aral> lmlrelft I ( ........... ,
Wut G«many 1, Cotornble 1, lie .,...
W L T GP eA
11·a.t9lum 2 0 0 \ S 1 SHln I 0 1 3 1
U"'9\11¥ 0 l I l J
South KorM 0 2 0 I S
11-quatfflfl for aecond round
l'llurMev'• ca....
(et v-. flllVl
8elllivm vs. SHln, I e.rn.
(et u... flllV)
Soult\ Kon• "' UNOUaV •••. m. .,...
.... • 3
' 0
W L "" GP GA ,._
EllVPI Enewnd
0 0 2 l I 2
0 0 2 I I 2
tr ... nd
Ntlhlrienda
· 0 0 2 I I 2
0 0 2 I I 2
llMlr*v'• Gamel
(•t Catlltl. ~)
England. va. Egypt, -· (•f .. alenfte. Sidfl
lretend vi. '"fllerlanch, noon
AIJttN 2. UnttM S"'91 \ , .. ,__,.....,,
UnfleO Stet•'
Au"rfa
None.
S.C.-Hatf
0 1-1
0 2-2
I. Auwle, Oerl' 1, ft!I\ minute; 2. A~trle,
llodu I (Streit«), '3rd minute, l. u,,itec1 St•tft,
Murrev I Cllemotl. 131'0 minute. • Vtllow Cerda-llak, Au,, 22nd minute;
Calfg1uri. US, 26111 mlnutt; h nlu , US. 2'tll
minute, Peel, AUi l2nd minute, Murrav. US.
'1sl mlnutt, llthll\9tf. Aus. 41111 minute, Wind·
lacllma nn, us. 51111 mlnult; Llnclenllel'W, A111.
Mtll minute; Gw1Jm1yer, Au&, toth minute.
lteO C1rct-Arln«, Aus. lltd minute.
ltefer..--1 Sharif (Syrlal Ll"ftmett-lor9ftt (Au,1r1lle), Petrovic (VU9C)li.vla).
A-3',517
L~PI unflld s111t1-Meota. Ooyft, 8ank'
<Wvn•IO• ss111 minute), Windl\Cl\menn, Htr"-ft.
ltemo,, Vtl'mft. Arm"rone. MllfrtY, a.ftloll,
C1ll11lur1 (81tu 70111)
Auatrl-Llndenbtrgt r, Aigner. Peel, Pfeffer.
t,11"· Artner, Pol"tr lfiltisl,,.., 4'1111. Oerla,
Rodu (Gfall!Tllver 141, Strefltr. H«roo
DEEP SEA
OAV•v·s LOCKI• ,......., -.cit) -• t>oet,, lit 1no1en . .o3 barracuda. 116 t>Onflo, 2S
¥tll0wt11f, • roekfl&ll, I twillbut. l blue ,l\af1l, 20 K\ilpln, SOO tnKll«tl
Ml~T LANDtflG -' OOel&, Ill anetera. .. &and l>aH, 35t 1>arra<11'da. »bonito.
1 ne1111ut, 2 y1110w1a11, 12' mactt«tt, 10 roe11nan: u &euloln, "' calico baH, 1 wtlllefl"', ' c.Deron
TRANSACTIONS
IAS•I ALL
Amencell l.MtlM
•
8AL TIMORE Ottl0l.Es-Plec:9d Phlt lr9d·
tev. CHJlffalOtr, on the 21-daY dlaallled 1111.
SEATTLE MAltlNEltS-Tr.-d Merlo Diez.
'"°''stoo, to the New Vorfl Mets tor Brian
Gl•en•, olldlef; •Hlened Glvena to CelMrv of
Ille Pacific Coell LMllUe.
....... l.MtlM
MONTltEAL EXPOs-<IPtfoneCI John Cos·
letlO, Pilther, to lndlellePOlls of IN Atnetlcen
Anoc:lerton. Sltned Ralmonoo Calllirl, anortllOP. Sfened &en Vanryn, Pita..., alld u"9Nd him to
Ille Gutt Coa$I LMg\11 NEW YOlltc METS-AuleMd .Maf'lo Ola&.
tllorltlOO, to Tldew1ttr of Ille lnl«natfoflal LHgue Slened J«om¥ aurnlu , ou"leldef;
Pet« Wai.er, TOOd Dou,,,., Mlkt Sciortino and
Steven Thoma•. olleller&; GerllanclO Vina, MC·
Ond t>aaarnan; and Jaton Kini elld Pl'lllllll SCOtl,
&IWl&IOOt, and H<ned 11\em 10 P'lttatletd of IN
New Vork·Penn LMtUe. Sltned "-'on Ledetme
end Mlcal't Franklf,,, PIOl'tstooto D1N1ifl Devis,
third DeMl'Nn; CetNr Ven RYllMdl, Rollert
Caroentier end James Mallfred, Pltctlera; 9llCI
Hli9necl tr.em lo KlntlPorl of IN ~en Leaeue. Signed MlcllHI Patrlal allCI lteyl
CaJanova. catcl'ltr,, Demond $1nllh, oulf~; E rlc CorbeN, Steven Sevrnovr and SC:otty Wll·
llaml . oltcfle(\, I rle,.. OauOe<:k. first 111-"•
Terrall w1ttlam,, lllorl•IOP. •nd TllOmat Allton.
M<ond 11eaarnan, ano ualeMd them 10 Ille GIHI
Coe'' L ... ue. PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES-Slened JOl'lll In·
erem ano Cl\ad Andtf'IOll, oltt'Nra; frill
JUOIOI\, Infielder, end T fOY PWMI\, MQnd
tle&aman.
ST. LOUIS CAltOINALS-Rec.atltd Danny
Co•. pl!Cl\er, from L.CHJl,vllle of the American
Auoclallon ano Placed 111m on IN 60-dlY -eencv meo1ca1 Hat. . SMer ,.,........ ..................
llllAOENTON EXPLOttEltS-Sltlled t
11\rM-v••r ..... 10 NY In Dayt-IMcfl. Fla
IMK•TaALL Cu lt4 • &el.tr .... As...._
GRANO ltA .. tOS HOOPS-'treded Loren10
Sutton, tuerd, end Alber! Sllfll\M, t.irwerel, 10
Ille A!Mn'I' "•troont for Deren Queenan, 9U.ttd ,OOTaALL ........ ....... L-..
RAMS-Traded Gree &tijl, rumil1111 o.ctl, to
111e Lo• Aneetts Retoen tor •n unctltclOMd ctraft
Pldl NEW ENGLAND PATltlOTS-lt .... Md
t<-tll Sima. defen,I,,. Ind. •
PHILADELPHIA EAOLEs-519Mel w ..
HOC11cln1, frM aafetv, 10 • -·YHr contract,
N0ae8Y
................. L-..
MINNESOTA NORTH STAR.........,.,,.. 901>
OllMY coed!.
TO.ONTO MAltLE LEAF,_. .. ...,_
Lukt ltlc!lardaon, deft11Hm1n1 L•u
FrancMCflettl, rleht wine; end 0 .... TM1eu-.u
tnd Kent Hulst, e»ntera. A.,.Md IO leffM •ht!
Mlkt MQeJ, center.
COLL•GS
HOWN-Announced rHltf\etlofl ot Cllft St.venton, MK":cer coedl, eff9ctl,,,. tt !flt Ind ot
lllt \990 Meton OAVIOSO~ Olek Coeke 11e.-..
()oecl\,
KENTUCICV-AtlllOIHICed l'MltNllofl of
Critlt Cwneron, ~1, l~mellofl Cllrector. to
Mc:omt dlfectOf ot merlletlne eno '"'"*MM et
tht Unlveraltv Of flltorlde.
1.0UISVILLl-Nenleel 0-lalo.tr ......
Goecft
MANHATTAN-Hamed TOll'I Suttwriend
wotNll'I Hllllellt INltltefMI CMCtl.
, .... INOlllELD-Nel'lleel Deryl Arrovo
w•-.ttfM c..ai..
Big c•tch
Costa ..... , Dan Veweller flefll, show n
w tdl Don Nldrenon and ban e ll ScllroHew,
rec•ntfJ landed tllt• JOO.pound __..n at Palftlaa de Cort••• on llaJa'I .... Cilpe.
Colombia celebrates late tie
Goal in final seconds secures
deadlock against Germans
and plus-I goal differential will be enouah to assure it
is one of the four best third-place teams.
The Germans, whose goal came from Pierre Llt·
tbarski only two minutes before Rincon connected.
were impressed by Colombia. .
1y aAHY WILNER
,.., SponJ "'"" ..
ROME -Let's pany.
That's what the Colombian soccer tum had in
mind after pullina out a 1-1 tic in the final seconds
apinst West Germany on Tuesday. Freddy Rincon's
whistle-beating 1oaJ set off wild celebrations by his
teammates and Colombian fans.
.. Having ccnainly qualified before this match re-
duced the concentration of my team," West Germany
Coach ·Franz Beckcnbaucr sajd. "Colombia played very
well in the first half and perhaps deserved more than
what they got. I had been expcctin' a 1ood show from
the Colombian team today. They will do even better in
the next matches because they arc growing in form and
confidence."
Yugoslavia had no trouble with the UAE, which
lost all three games in its first World Cup. The
Yugoslavs scored early and late, with newcomer Datko
Panccv setting two of the goals.
"Tomorrow, we will have a pany in Bologna,"
aoalic Rene Hiauita said after Colombia advanced to
the second round of the W3rld Cup for the first time.
"But what a pany they are ~oing to have tomorrow in
Colombia and in Medellin. • "The most important thing 1s that we won an11
advanced," Coach Jvica Osim said. "We were the
favorites. but we had to prove it on the field. Higuita plays for M~dcllin .. as do ~ight . other
Colombians. For now. their hero 1s the quiet Rincon.
who took a pass from Carlos Valderrama that put him
in free on riJht wing. Rincon's shot slipped through the
legs of goahc Bodo Jllgner.
"For me, there is gttat satisfaction in gettinf to the
second round," Rincon said ... But I hope this is JUSt the
first of many other victories for us."
"My team was a bit nervous because it had to win.
and we made some mistakes that would have been very
costl)' against a stronger team."
Meanwhile. Italy tlinchcd first place in Group A by
beating Czechoslovakia 2-0.
More than 50,000 of the 72.510 fans at Mean.a
Stadium had come from West Germany. But they w~rc
drowned out at the end by the small Colomb1~n
contingent .. whic~ danced. sans and _w:wed flags In
tribute of Rincon s ttoal. And their team s advancement.
Italy was led by its two !'cwest ~tan.ers. Salvatore
Schillaci and Roberto Baggio. Sch11Jac1 opened the
scoring in the ninth minute. heading the ball home after
Giuseppe Giannini mis-hit a shot into the penalty area.
Baggio made it 2-0 after a iuperb solo run throuah three
defenders in the 77th minute.
The victory guaranteed Italy will-play its sccond-
round game in Rome. "Now, my teammates and I can celebrate," Higuita "We did not score numerous goals, but they were
significant," Italian Coach .Azqlio Vicini said. said. .
West Germany. whicb had scored nine aoals in ats
first two games, took Group D with five points.
YU4oslavia, a 4-1 winner over the United Arab
Emirates, was next with four. Colombia's three points
U.S.
From 91
ing Vermes in the left leg.
But the Americans were unable to
take advantage until too late.
"It's · frustrating that we didn't
make it to the second round." de-
fender Jimmy Banks said. "We have
the feeling we didn't play as well as
we could have." .
Andreas Ogris scored for Austria
on a counterattack four minutes into
· the second half and Gerhard Rodu
made it a two-goal lead 14 minutes
later .
Bruce Murray scored for the Unit-
ed States with seven minutes to ao.
taking a pass from Ramos and put-
ting the shot through the arms of
aoaJkecpcr Klaus Lindenberger.
It was an unusually dirty game.
There were nine yellow cards -four
to Americans -several shovin1
matches and Anner's..cjection.
Austrian Coac h Josef
Hickerberger thought the U.S. team
did OK.
"I wasn't sorprised at how well th'c
U.S. tum played tonight," he said.
"J saw them in the World Cup
warmup matches and apin1t ltalr,.
when they played elttrcmely well. '
Even with a victory. the Ameri-
cans would have had only a slim
chance of advancing. Most of the
players will 10 home Thursday and
take a month off before a July 28
exhibition pme qainst East Ger-
many in Milwaukee.
Banks said the experience pined
in the three losses was invaluable.
"Every time we 10 out thett we
learn a little more and act a {ltdc
to~er." be said.
Sance both teams came in with 0-2
records( much of the exdtement and
spcctac c of the World Cup us
miHin&. The announced attendance
was ~.8S7, but there appeared to be
many no-shows in Stadia Com·
unalc.
Many of the spcctaton were
IRRELEVANT
,ronil1 ...
honored b~ntt County political
and civic rs, sports celebrities
and S.Jata.
After the interview and temi·
teriou1 p0nion of the propam.
SaJaaa takes over. He showers Davis
with aifb and verbal homaee.
Amotll tJat sift• are a key to the
city tblt 1eldom IN to unlock any
doon. No pat recipient ba1 been
forced 10 u• the key to eatricaie
bimlelf from the weelt·loftl blntF
or inl9ftllY and fun that lies ahead.
Included in the week•• .aivitiet
arc two pf tou.rna,nenta, one of a
terious natwt and the other o( a
And they did not allow any JOiis in the openina
round, beating Austria. the United States and the
Czechoslovaks, who finished second.
Andr••• H•rsot lleftl Of Audria att•= to tall• tlle Mii aw•J frOM U.S. pl•J•r P•ul C.lltlurt In Ila" T.......,.
listening to the pme between Italy
and Czechoslovakia goina on at the
same time and cheered loudly when
Ital)'. scored or came cJose.
What they saw wasn't pretty. In
addition to the yellow and red cards,
rdcree Jamal al Sharif of Syria
callell& .o· fouls. 18 on the Unated
States.
The United States. which hasn't
ldvanced put the first round tince
1930 played even with Austria in
the first half. But the defente broke
down twiet in .the sceond half and
Austria scortd both times.
()pis' goal came when he took a
pass from Rodall at midfield and
stttaked down the left side. blowin1
past Banks and Michael Wind-
1schmann. Caris then cut toward the
net a!\11 lifted a l S-yard, right-footed
shot over the let\ arm of plkcepcr
Tony Meola, who had come out to
cut down the an&lc.
Rodall's aoal came when Michael
StreilA"r found .an openina on the
riaht side, Jpricued toward the cor-
ntt and crossed a p111 peat three
U.S. defenders. Rodai then beat
Meola I-on-I.
ridiculous nature: a Beck to Bal that aoodbya be aid here before the
Niaht ai the BalOO. Pavilion; a ~~ party leaves for las Vcau. Balance
at Disneyland· the annual BBC of the farewell• will be said ln Reno
Sporu Hall of f amc benquet; a day b)' th0te traveliaa to the Nevada
at Hollr,tood Park: a Super Stan ctties. Thi1 is a depanurc frotn nor·
compcudon at Newpon Dunes; and mal procedure, nothh-new to
a trip to ~eno via Las Vcaas. Salata and his sente of bitlante and
With O.viJ cotnana ftom Reno, cq,uality for th~ he and the com-
the lrTelcV1nt Week committct mittee arc hononna.
voted aJmott unanimoualy to make At th0te not in the know can eee,
a S\Ol>'OVCr in Las Vt111 this yeer · this week is strictly one f'or f\an and
rather than ao directly to hlt home-frivolity fQf the ~Git pan with a
town. In pat yan. the ncounee llrioua vein inleljeeted now and
has flown to Reno on American theft .
Airtinn. stayed'at Bally'• Casanb And whn the rttiplHt hnd1 for
and Resort and returned to Nnwpon trainint camp -1th the teem that
8cA(h for f1~U1. 1tlttted him, he It kast knows what
Salata. tn the inttmt ~ •v1na not «> HP«I fTont th~ pros S.laaa
money for charity, ha ._UfACd hu &akn care or that.
I . •
. . . Or!!p COMI OAalY PILOT fWedrmd!r, June IO, ..
Bull~tln board
Swim l~ssons
T~ 'Lot :\lamito1 Rlmetion aad Com· DIUIU~ Serv~ o.i-n-1 wiU be ......
Red C'roaa certi&ed lwillUDhlJI ...........
11 Monuny and .Mt and d6~ ~ at Ille
Loe Alunil,Ot H .. DOOi .:t••i• Juae 25. ~wdl1-el lu•23aatlle echocil'1 Adaptive Room..., dw pool ()pea t'eliatradoo f\lftl from 10.11:)() I.ID. .
'f• for lbe coune are S20 aad dilcowa11 ue
offered for teconcl and lhird family members.
Golf tournam~nt
ne UDiled Way ol'Oraall Counay will hott Ille alada ..... Wat a.iiioMI Oolf Tout·
UIMDl 09 Julv 16 II Mile IQUlft OollCourtl
in ..... '/...,. ne 165 "".,... .. iacludn ..,ar. caf\, dinner and~ bll. Ooltn compete lor
loftltlt drive, •uailbant drive, c:IOIClt to the
pin. low '"*• low net and punlna inlide the
c:irclt CODIClll.
Lawn bowling
The Newpon Hatbor La1Wn Bowhna Club
will bold ill annual Pmacknt'• Cup 0pt0 Palra
Tourumeal oa July H .
lolh the 1911 CbamplOftt Ed Quo aod Sulie
Bellard and tbc 1919 champions Oail Hodpon and Olenna Weber will c:ompete.
Sklmboard contest
Sk.tm board ln~tional wall hold iu ftnal
contnt of the 1990 le&IOft on June 23 at Alito lac:h 1n Laauna lk9cft.
Entry rec fOr profeuionats 11 SIS and StO ror
amateurs. The fee 1ncludet a T-shin.
For mo~ information. phone 499-6182.
For more lnformation. phone 127-9010. For more information. phone '4-SJOO.
Competition beain• at lo a.m. and runs
throuah<>ut the day, The event 15 open to w
public:.
For more information, phone 644-41 38.
Golf tourney Wom~n's pro tennis One-on-one
Tickets are currently on sale for the US0.000
Viflinia Slims of Los Antcln tennis tour-
nament held at the Manhattan Country Ctub
in Manhattan Beach, Aua. I J.19. '
The eiahth annual LA Raiders/Boy Scouu
Invitational Oolf To urnament will be held at
Riviera Country Club in hclfic Palisades on
June 2S.
Benefit golf
The Fullenon Golf Course wtll host local ·
qualify1na for the American Golf O ub Na-
tional Championship Tournament on June 30.
Liken star ... c. Green and Danny MannaQ&
of the Clippers Wlll appear June 22-23 a t the ~ seoond annual Taste of Oranat Count).
Younpters wall ha\e a chance to ao one-on·
one w11h the pla)en and be profeu 1onall)
videotaped. Expected to c:ompett in the tournamenf'att
Fttnch Open champion Monica Sein. Martina
Navratilova, Gabnela Sabatini and Mary Joe
Fernandez.
The tournament bencfi11 the Boy Scouts of
Amerlta and inc:ludes many spons and Holly-
wood celebrities.
L-0eal q ualifiers will advance to the rqional
championship and finals to be held in Las
Veps November 17-19.
The event runs on both da)S from noon to
11 p.m. at the AT&T Tower an the Irvine
Spectrum. Adm1ss1on as SS for adults and S3
for children and stnaors. Ticketl a tt available at TicketMaster
Outlets. our by callina the tournament office at.
(213) S46-77S3.
For more information. phone (213) 41~. ext. 227. Entry fee is $40 for American Golf Members
and S50 for non.members.
For more information, phone 871-741 1.
For mo re information. phone 4SS-3703
LA Games Free swim
Preliminary competition in the 23rd annual
LA Oames will be held this weekend at 20
locations throuahout the Greater Los Anaeles
area.
The Caty of Los Allam11os Recreation De-
partments invites all families to Join it for the
first Super Summer Kickoff scheduled for June
23 from noon to 3 p.m . at the Los Alamitos Hi&b I. Act~es will include free recreational
swimmina and pool .. mes.
Bell golf benefit
Machelob Beer p~scnts the sixth annual
Rack>: Bell Mem<.>nal Scholarship Fund Golf
Classic at Brookside Golf Course on June 29.
Irvine boxing
Ernie Chavn . unbeaten Huot1n1ton Bcac:h
weherv.et&ht. will top the June 2S bollina card
at the . l rvane Mamou Hotel. meetana
Hcdaemon Robertson of Los Anaeles an the 10
round main event.
Formerly called the LA Watts-Summer
Games. thas eve nt has been the premier multi·
sponina event for Southern California students
(or the J>aSI 22 yurs.
The Games bcpn after the 196S Watts riots
as an attempt to brina the youth of the area
tosrtber throuah athleuc competition.
For mo~ information, pho ne 827-9010.
The tournament features a scramble format
and the S I SO entry fee includes arcen fees can
tee &Jf\ and admission 10 a luncheon and ~porn aucuon.
Chavez has a 10-0 record and has won bas
last two bouts at the Mamo u by lrnocltouL
Robertson l\as a 21-7 • I record. Deadline to enter is June 22
For more 1nformat1on phone (21 ))
Finals will be held June )().July I at El
Camino Collete in Torrance. All competition
at every venue is free and open to the public:.
821 -641 8. .
3-man basketball
Benefit golf
Ncv.pon Center Assoc1at1011 wall sponsor the
1990 "Swing for the Klas" golf tournament at
Ncwpon Beach Country Club on July 16.
The best ball scramble format beains with a ~hotaun stan at noon with a 10:30 a.m. check
Tennis tournament
Passing school
Saddlcback Coll~c quarterback coach 8111
Cuneny 11.111 duttt his St''enth annual West
Coast Pas ina School for quan erbacks. wide
r~avcrs. tight ends and runnana backs. July
16-20 on the school campus
The Los Alamit0t Recreation and Com-
munity Strvicn Department will be off'erina ).
man basketball lcques for the summer with
rqi.strations beina acttpted swtina J une 2S.
. There are sev~ diVJsions and the entry fee
as S7S per team wttb a S2S deposit and players
will be aiven shin s and awards.
For more information. ·phone 827-9010.
ID. ~ C~m of the tournament. which includes
barbeque lunch. cocktail reccpuon and silent
auction. as S 12S -pan of which 1s deductible.
The event benefits the Ped1a1nc Cancer
Reascarch Fo undation in at the Childrcns
Hospital of Orange County. .
For more information. phone 720-8488.
The 29th annual biendora Tennis Cham·
pionsh1ps is currently accepting entires for its
tournament running July 28-Aui. 5. Entry
deadline as Jul) I 3 at S P.·m
A 'ancty of d 1vis1ons will be ofTertd fo, both
men and women, ma•cd and singles and
doubles w11h S2.SOO an pnze money bcma offered .
Ent') fee is S20 for singles or doubles.
For more 1nform:111on. phone (81 8)
33S-8640
The school as o pen to boys fro m Junior All·
Amenca ie ... el through ht&h school
The school includes non-contact 1nstruct1on
an the passma p me as 11 relates to quar-
terti.cks. rtte1vcrs and runn1n1 backs. Demon·
st.nuons b) maJor collcv plaJers wall be
featured as "''II classroom anstruc11on with the uSt' of video
C OSI ·of the program 1s SI SO.
642-5678
CLASSIFIED INDEX 642·5678
FROM NORTH ORANOa CO. M0-1m
fROM IOUTH ORANGE CO. -1111
THE DAil Y PILOT
Cl.ASSIFIEO
OH ICE HOU~S
I eiephone St r.•te
\4on fr• 8em·5 3()9m
Bus•nt$S Counlt • M f a OOam·!> ()()pm
DIAOl.•I
PVBLICA TION DEADLINE
Monday frt S 30 AM .
T11itldl7 Mon S 30 PM
WIOnHOly Tutt S 30 PM
T""'Mlly Wed S 30 PM r..oay TIMI s 30 PM
Sat11t0t) Fri S 30 PM
~ay Fn 5 30 PM
CHICK YOUft AO T .. ,tRIT DAY
I ne 01ity P110t strives IOf elf!C*ICY and tCICUfllCY
He>wevff occu 1011111y errors Oo occur P ..... l!tttn
w n11n your ad 11 rl!IO o•c-and ClltC-You• ICI deity
Rte><><t errors 1mme<1111ely lo &42·5e78 fhf Ot tly P110t
ttcce01s no 1tao•My tor 1ny ff•or In en ao-tiMf'llftll for
... 1iic1i ,, may o. •Me><>nl•~ e11cep1 IOf'll'MI COii ol ll'MI
space e<tu11ty occul)lt(I oy Ille t<•Of Cr.Oil CM only be
il"owtO for lhll l •tSI "'"'''°"
Any 1tn0Unt not Pt·O w•lhtn JO d~ fl requited Wiii be
,.,111.cno ~•not ~m1110 10 lifu111Ce dletgee computed
11 1 , ... of '"' unpetd 11 .. ence per month ... COlleetk>n coats and eny •••~ 1t10fney'1 ....
••••••
I .# L~
. . £-)
. 11
.
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\
Fl~:D
For thore 1nforma11on. phone S82-4644.
From North Orange County
From South Orange County
540-1220
496-6800
1002 coron1 dtf u. 10 22 Hunt.lel<h I 040 Ntwpon leach 1069 lllM>I Island 2106 Cosu Mtu 2124 IN!'2°" Buch 2 169 Ntwpon lel<h 2169
,.. ________ _
COU>WC!U
BAN~r.J
····•u Lill" , ...... -*3BR TownhM NewPort •WATERFRONTw/BOAT LSEIOPT W•lk to beach -a 11ft • •••• SUMM~ RENTALS Hgts Dbl gar . lrg yard, SUP Dock & deck 2BR 3Br 2Ba beach condo ._ l'.-1 llAOI BACK BAY/CITY LIGHTS AVAILABLE' frptc. lndry hkups S 1225 2SA 1 blil to beach New IUndeek. pool, 2-cM gar
Ch•rmlng, Intimate 3 12, 100 elf lot, 4·~BR, 3BA 4BA 2BA home on lrg IOI. W•rfrNf.... .... 322·A Ogle 847·7s.40 rarnat & paint Lg L111 rm 642-8759 2'3-4~ 1939 bdrm a•t·a·way. Just homewtpool, spa, offlclal By owne r Princlpata -.. -
atepa to t>Mch. Bay vista peddle tennis court. fir• only $459,000 721·9590 lll&.Tlll 111-1• Eutalde 3BR 2'1'BA 2-Sty *llrpk all b1t-1ns · pant· NEWPORT CREST 3BR
from 2nd floor llvlng pit & BBQ area. RV ec-twnhrM. 2 car ger lrple. Ing $2500/mo incl utll 2 .. BA gar PoOI tennll & muter it ~-C .,076 Vrly lse OPEN Sat 10·8 S1600· 21a'..548-4067 Of The~~· ~r ... wi h deck & su • CHI & mature prdtluoing Hlfl lemtntt Furnished 2 very large BR, baleon .... small pet ok 3808 River 548-8774 213-378-96S. No Pets
Ul.11 •11.IL Md t spa. citrus trees. Speclal 2 DELUXE DUPLEXES on 2 BA. pa110. w/d, frplc S l250 Nr 20th/N"Port 7am-8pm 854-5331 780-3eoo. $1.089.500 financing & only steps to adjacent lots. t700 aq tt $1.050/mo A~all Sept. Blvd 575.49 12 Bkr
1141... ~l\TI 10He"1 th• beech apts. 3BR 2• 1Ba. 2 car. Wint• rental 675·6565 9Ul •••••ins * lllffS Lil Ollll
LMgeet plen 1 10._..1 ltOMI' a.w. M.lf-&-1•11 frplc, decks overlooks --- ---BR houM In quiet netgh· BR 2'~BA. 217ar att ~
Newport ShorH. 3BR.
2BA large family room
yearly. plus your own
sandy beach S 1750 per
mo 642-49 17 price R 1 REAL T~ S529·900 qu .. t park. S445.000 IOf Corona dtl Mir 2122 txx-hOOO on the Eu ts1dfl vtew PoOI p. rem In ea,•11!~ m3• CHUCK & LIZ JONES duplex. or bo th for r•SE OPT O Cat QI( Sn 51mo Call $2000 mo 760-96"2
mecul1te mu t ·......., 848-5743 '865,000. 498-t307 *L"'"" I N New u• ~""2 BR. 2.5 BA w/2 fir• 2BR 2•;BA Wiik to ............ •llAI .. ... Newport Shorn 3 BR 2
pleciee •• den. a ltmlty COii.i Mtu 1024 SMu AN bAcb. ~·ry Ellen. Agt. LG modern 2•2 condo. •2Br , • .,Ba. '850. •2Br BA garar.~bloek lrom
rmoomOfe.' bfeeltlut nodt & 11., NWI Roger'• Realty 875-2311 dbl gar . ~!cony. W/D 2Ba. S875 Gar inside beach a ceilings
,. Hetahts 1084 BEAUT JBr 2,l)Ba. 2 lrplc, pool & waterfalls. Baker lndry Agent, 998-3 t95 ~Z!~~ 1~~~nt-~:~~';'~ 14'-IMI OWC tat TD. 1950 aq tt. Great tocetlon, llke n". gar. Berber crpt, t>eem te.ar $1150 637-3708 •NEWPORT HEIGHTS*
4BR 2BA rehabed, r• Llf'"! lel<h 1048 S212,000 Open S•llSun oeils skylls tub spa EW EASTSIDE 2BR 2BA Nr Harbor High. ocean NWPT Hgts 3Br 2Ba lrplc Corona die Mar 10 22
... IM.ll ~ 13tK to H ttK
2 n..-crnr lot 780-1155
duced to S26 t .OOO --LIT 12-•. t532 Bruin Berk Ln $2000 Riek 646-2983 upstrtri unit. 1 car Hoag Hosp 2BR 2BA pool. hd wd n. new ldtldn Agent, 850· 1220 ••--H By O'#ner 64 1-507 t -----1 n c 101 e d g a r age den trplc, ma1nt pool & area/pnt POOi HfV, gdnr
000 M Y I I , ~ ac..n & city lliewt, 21.740 BEAUTIFUL 2Br 18a, encl 5995,mo 722..0582 tncd yd Gar $1175/rno Incl $2000/mo ~5-2500
• O'l9I ou n ..... a.I. wlplena to build an Moblt Homa gar. pall<>, garden New ~5-2893 Irene wloptlon to buy. $1.750. •tate In guard geted paint. Walk to bMC:h hon'9 3BR, 3 BA _ SEA FAIRE -1BR 1BA,
3 BR. 3 BA, comm pool. erea wl vt beechl A for Slit 1100 $1200/mo 972·2079 Comm PoOI S t 750/mo VERY SPECIAL BLUFFS frig. w/d Incl patio AUllll-WWid! geted. Bkr M&-5792 value 11 f l,395,000. C•ll Wiii conlider tee w/optln G·Plan Ute& airy, recent wlv+.w S1200 Agt, Jlm-
nly 145,0001 Mob lie lllT Ill Ill flLlll PATRICK TENORE * IY IWlll * Costl Mft1 2 124 to buy. Bkr 848-5792 remodel 3BR 2BA, small mie. 675-4467 t.ynne Val· tionM. Steps to pool end Newport Beech. Like new ocean 111ew • grnbll No entlne Props, 6'3-9333
bay. 2 Bedroom. 2 Betti. 0n the Market! Will be 2BR 2BA. lrpte, p•llo lmlU Tl .. I. pets s20001mo t952 -0 lmll
"'"tlO end cMck Seller wlH SOLO this wee kend I 8eysl<Se v 1111ge on the 4BR 2'i BA 2 car tunny Vista Caudal 673-47 t4 1111 ,.... . Greet locetlon & prop.. ....., ...,.,., lu ... ' R F. p FR 1BR 1BA turn 208 34th St flnenoe. VICMlt I reedy! erty AMI $294 500 ~y .... th""""' c buOUM. petk>. P 11 . L . • • I PoOI pets BACK BAY & City Light Vu S6501wli. 631-8280
Meke Ott:1 Tradttion.i etc $55,000 673-13 14 Eno Unit, S 1300/mo, Va-,e;';~;imo 675~48 Beaut 3BR 2' i8A, priv LM lll-Ufll AMlt 631-7370 LIDO PARK mobile ..om;: cent. Don Plett 842-9797 epe wlvlews. avall now Versailles. qu .. t StudlO BR
Chine Ccwe end , y 1067 28r 18a. ~rpott, ator· $2800/mo 646-5550 egt Con<lo Pool. 19a, aeuna, ~·:~o o':'~•;ul•~••th 21~~~ i;:,~bco"'e::~~~k •WALK TO IEACH.2;~ 8:u~~~!~~2ri:.:r:~~~ ~~';;jg~!~~ 6!:-~~.";0
towntionM, 4 attytlghta, locetlon. Single lemlly 11UJ 28A. bonua rm, lrg mstr, •r. commun pool, A/C L..
big 2 car 11•r1Qe. a deteched. 31A. 2·~BA. PWI Tl· Acrtagt 11 25 llU • -welk In ctoeet. WIO hk i l600/mo 750-9536 Agt l•""==u:l!l:ltf:l1b:::==== berOaif1 et ~-..ooo Aeeclng 1315.000. Bretl• Owner hu bought _ BR 2BA + t _ ue>e. dbl ger. patio., lrg __ I'! 111 lllUI cooperetlve O PEN 1notherl Bett buy In •BUILD YOUR DREAM 4dJtlon grNl~d.~:. yd w/gerdnr, aml pet Ok •CLIFF DRIVE OCEAN l lalM>I .. Uf/-1-1 SAT/SUN or celrfor ep. MIUlon VlejO!. bltee to ESTATE Over 5 ecrea In SlJ50imo ~ Plitt 1 1200/mo. 918-~75 BAY VIEW Charming 2 IUnd 2606 polntment, 541-7001 i.e. patk, & ahopplng 3 preatlgeous Bernerdo 131•1291 ...... _111 B<Srm, 11 .. BA houM 1 _ _,.iiiiiii-..---"""!i•
320E.21atSt,C.M.Al<A bedroom with Mu ter Trall • Agt Mindy ..... r11 St200/mo 631-6359 2 BR + din 1BA WI I BllM ColN Vlet• Court bedroom retrH I. 1 7S Prudential Calif Reelty TIW•l•S C-d 1 Mar· aru upstrs/dwnstra wlvlewl
IUtLDING. Corona 1 _. ~ Mth, La Ftmllla Model (819) 4'0-S621 ·S IAI llOO-HOO aq ti =~ful ~ story Point Just slepa to bch Frplc.
Hlghllnda,tMQheotner .. ., .. , ~ on lerge COf"t! lot(over del M•r home (2•,; yr• lull kltc'*1. angl cer g•r.
fecllwoodedcenyon, Hew E'elde Conetruc:ton. 9500 ~.n.) vaulted cell· Lots for Salt 1400 -· 11-:-T ..... a, ___,,,,-,-... Stertlng from 12200/mo old) 3 BR IMng. dlnl"" l 1 1500 mo 818-247-2446 ~wllded.cenalf, 38R 3'"'8A townhomee, Inga, large c ountry '"""" ~ '",. ,.._. -1 (114) 53f.7383 • 2·, B ... 2 --:...iiiiiiii:;i -. plle=r.':. mtrror9, cathedrel cell, tip, yard, kltc:hen, family neiOh· I'm mfl .U cerport, kld9 01(, no peta, ~mlly room•. 1 '_AAAI . ._ •11•1• * .......... ... ....... s.~ ood fl _. •..07 000 .. 1-2144 car gereoe m ....... a... . _tut> ... P...,... -petto, ger +patll"l. ,,_t both . ~ r_.ace 2 A·1 Iota, ... s. •1eo ~ ... """1 occupency S3.3oo1mo 2 BR. ' IA. n.w paint .
.. ·----~· ~. o.'::N ONLY •2 2•500 CALL 723-5300 R 28A CONDO. enc:t2· LE K nee •• 80t-328·3167 or carpet St,095 64&-064S • ..,._,...,._.,, S2ISK HOW WONT LASTI Kris CM garege, MW pelnt. 38a, 23 Sltver Creecent 901 364 7837 Of
Ooe9nltwd.loobtobey. DAILY. 2337 Elden. ~~~~21 T~ey I.I. WIMld 1625 ()(Mt locetlon. llOO/mo. A.IC. MC, 3-eet ger. MW eo;-2';..()313 ... ~ 2607
..enMCSC..lllM.;:s.: Agt. Ml-3112 ·-·r -.....ate p-~ 972·2011 pelnt In/out. 12500 IM -.....--m••..-,....,.,, -•1 ----1 IR,1 BAon ~atreet --·•-"• UPGAADIO 31R, 21A JUHKIEAPTS&HO SES opt.545-2442,154·7127 .._. ... H _..., Weltl to bMCh Avel4 6130 rm,tdeoke.yltd,room homelnNor'thC.M.XLHT F~ OK •28A 11Aceblnlnwooda Ouefd geted comm .
to9dd.utr1pM(lng. ~&actloole. Nlwportlffdt 1069 Doug7141...e..o117 on bluftl Ilea living rm, •lllllftfm cvatomhouM.POOl,Jtc,5 Utll lnc:I. 1 775/mo "iii::::[!~IUIO.OOOlyAppt 11ao1mo. 4'9-0335 ,.-uun-'''*· yerd. dbl oer •s Sherp 1.a1ory. 2 matr I A •• ..._ IA, eai1 GIQI, e15 ..... letn I ---M&-1284 or 842-Mll bdrma. 21A. H t·ln 75M19t
ml! ml• m 2 IR, ! IA In Hewpor1 * ** * * *'* * llltcMn, "'-.te· vece nt The f>rud9ntlel Celltomll
Yow --. of 4 °""°"' y~ 1034 ~errace. Frelfl pelnt. neiw ,_ mYIL....,. 111251~:,._Donald,_7 Pf•" Aaietty. tow!...,_, ~1 --ttoor., veutted Oll_ililngf, .a.---r d ~ -• '"' -_,... V"'-..,....,,ES Cletl llPP'Oll,..,.,.. tlC, tm . °"" 9Uft l117,000. l50-32S5 .. ~:.·.: =.. HAnvvn 1,..,,.. """""
Treetop--.,.._Md t-4. 4 M . a IA. poot. OClAN ......
decka, 3 '"'""''· 011.000. 111.uu L00upte•!l)rimeioc.t1on. ..._, ... IM: 1
1 =-= = lllO,:: :.:::;000• 0.... ara. lnvlle. 4_../HA. IM0.000 m li02 ......
....,.,, ......... •· ( -.. , ... Grundy Atty.\111·8181 -••••••••
~-·"' •• ",."" .. : •• :. U) . !"61 ~L j L ••• <>!.!. w~o = NW.-r TERA • 3bd lrptc ..... 2...U lownfl01•1
-F ~ cANll "90. IACfll.,ICI .. -·--· I 1 1150 end unit. o..a.. '"*· "'°"*• ........ b9dl ta· ~-· ... 47'1 .... ........,. eundedl. pool, 2-c:er Ill' ltWP TOWERS • 2 Id, b9y SNlflO, pool, Mnn1a, I nts Mr. ~ poota. -~'"". •t elf . .._. to Hum 142-1151. 213-4M-1t3t ¥W $1450 mo. No PITS 7H .. 11 :;;-~=...-: GP-Bl!H ..,..._"°" ..... 121 •n99• Lt00 ••u -rt 1 bd _ MfM '"'°~ ~• Jm
......
lflllD• ..... ~ .. _l._....... -'""l reburblatled. y~'\1ALIOA • ....... 169 N0001fM8'1mmer m10_. a;;;
OwNr --111 ~..;...~:.!,, t"~ ~. den, '*" rm I l1droom 311111\ • M ~ ~ 17M1~1 1lfll .... "'*Y ""· "°"'· ....... ,.....,., ...... ,...,.. IOlf H5H.. RICVCLI ~,_....11"900 o.t;d 11100· '°°'"" . ltl?llmo. •GA'9 • ~ MON~ ....... retne.~""'·"°""' ~=~-.GOO !ft. llA .._ + two I Mii -· • IAVIHOMS ·I bd + den •••I• • IM'llf't •M 29A. ...._ 1 P9'90ft l?lllmo • .. .... -• * w-. 4 • •· ~~54::1~"" i.ome.moo. a1Mroom.t 1.et1 a .... ..i-. .. wlndl NMrty.,.._,,... _, 'Y' 11e. AwWi 7tt . ,_., ..... tM4.. through the _ llG CANYON • I bdiol°" 'emlty "'91 l1IOOlmo. .. ._ "*"° flf//Wletyf '"I UJOOtmo.121-eaG Cti1 M047• C.F.<Jl'.f FJJ<JNS 111n• ... •t1 ..,.. ..... 111· ....., a...· •. a., LIDO Mo11L£ HOM ~--..... --.,,,..-
, .Ll ... 11"1'1.'"t ~':':;::~.!.!:' ...., ... IALIOA PfM~SUl.A Wlltffltll ..... 111, Ll'ITI". 9'llct ""-.. w/*9 "or19e All PA'"< Llfl9 29A. fl* """-" ,,.._, dee*,
................. SPECIALIST lllL!m 111· 1• r~ I 0.....-........ Ind lorry. =to...., pvt~ ..._. vww, ,_ _,...,
HU,__ Ct111tt'-d Pegee IJ..... 1M 111.-No 144 OIOI tmo.17~ l 'f?ltmo • nMtta
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......... .,,., **' .... t\t ............... ,... • ....... ... *-• I -.:--,....,., .. 9111 ~ .... lltldl folt Lndry, ON THtu':'°'• It-~·+.: •. : . .:r.i;..:..111.:c..= =·=--..:-~~-Aw9ll.-1.•1.attt a90Mll.JM. ........ l1,4IO to -.1 IA."' IA Ulll.-·-T 1 IOAM. 11A ............ lltl oondo. M* M .,... llllM. AA a •1111 ..,. .a.. ..... 111MllAO In -llACHIW..'°._.,Nopelt o.11y•1 M.Mloto•s1,frpl0.No ·-.lllo .. 5 '71 •QUAINT llA H A dhr,lgdolM8; .. oook. Ilda COlll ,._ lmll tM, 11A..ill4'1d0eetl. 14t-t•t ,..._ ...,.,_ + ~ Ull. -lmf 111D--liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-iiiiiiiiil
DuplU. l tow, Nftka ...... ~end 11!'.J patlO Incl. Ci t OK. lllOIM0. 772-4IOI. .... •• --A-.now.111-t ttt ~ ,.___ ....... "' mAoro.wld.i~~""'~ "211NO~940449' 1416/mo . ..._..902 •• nmw• My oat a 1 • * Mfl ...., In~ ...... ______ _ ~~ftOmo.Awt ~ .... ii~~~ uanm . ~~3:~ r..,_,,<t11~1:'1s!::e.frpki· :.=-:,3":. ~-= Mlld1111~-...ooo · ~~~:.'.ra:·~ =-a~~
_ ..... c1oe11t1,__ .... .., wPOr'. POOi from • ·-... of '°""' Or.... . -...._. MCHeLOA APT. 706" ino. dlw. '*'°• 81'199 No-.....:auo . PlllllDIU ~.Pool,..,.,....., 111 ••• ,. ___ Clll,..._11~• nu NOW! JumlM. LM" rooM SAO NO ptfS ..0-1411 111' 11A twntl... Loft --· MO, ,.,. A/C, yard. -"ir· .. NOOCilALi'iiCi Col1'( '
:::lry~oo,;;= :1~ ta R rectec IMO/mo Incl S715/mo +l 700dep.NO lllWll ...... llllTllll 7 Owwlluldlr:;fllltuftd.. setOtmo.'un23.;513 gu. wat.f. eno1 eareoe peta.142-2818 ,.,. w/IOft & balcony. No •t&Sladroome N.I . MIF non.,,., prof, ine.att714» I0-2136.
*lf'llcle-•·bed. 11cti.n. ....... ~~..:l>t:~· N•lllW/lml ftlaflm&I =-=~:a:" & OWrtl ~Loene Av.at.bee.
14t-7154 2323 Elden H•TSIDE """'W PVT llA peta .... ,mo, 1151 P• •UnlumllMd Meer bdrm w/IA, POOi. ft ... 11111. \pacloua 28R 1 'hBA ~ ,_ cfflo Ave. See Mgr *Cloee to bMd1 lndrt. PttOna. llV9ll 111· NEwfiOitT llACH ii~LJ!!!!liC::C::::;;;;;;~i 'twnfw'M. ()oM lo ~ ........ APT. d/w, wld hk upa, a.101. 95s-oee5 •F,.. ht.CALL TODAYI 1450+ dep ...... 5437 /E corner W•tdllf Dr ' 5530 :00 ~~ :.~~~r;'t L. r g. 2 BR 1 .,., BA =:nr.=~4= ap-QUIET E'alde 1BR duplex, VIW IEITILS NI. m/f to ..,.,. new .., .. m.,OMC. lrvlna Ave. H6gtl vlelblllty
townhouM. Laundry rm. pvt ywd. Single adul1. ltMl l 2 Lg BR and prvt beth. tr.me. 1ato eq. ft. patio, all bullt-ln ~ 1800/mo + def>O•ll•. pkng,w.iktobeactl l421 ..... 111 Cos!LMtsl 2624 $825"/~-;8 Thurln lharp 18R houee Avail 711. 142-3985 per mo. 646-1279 ...., HU•I
l200 OFF MOVE-IN TSL MGMT 832-2232 w/flr9C)laee, yard & gar-WESTBAY APTS Mlle. Renub Newport 8eaof'I room tor NEWPORT IE.ACH ,_ ....... _., ....
2BR 1BA w/gar. bltln1, age. 1775/mo. 1200 OFF MOVE·INll rent actOM from bMcft. Fu&Copyhrvlceon811e COSTA MESA tncd yd w/patlO. Wtr pd. •Clean, quiet lg 2BR 2Bdrm w.a. $815 looms 2706 Reaponalble non/emkr. .....,11 370 E. 17th St. 1200 flf,
887 Vlctotla 'I' ... $735 1BA. lg CIOMll . d/w, new 1BR Apt 1550/mo. TRW 2Bdrm 2S. "35 541-4404 . High vtllbltlty trafllc. Call 636-4120 9·5PM crpt. "9!'tlcal1. encl gar. req'd. 132 Cecll Pl~. 151 E. 21st St 548-2408 PVT t>ath/entr. xtra io up. Nftpott laland HouM 180 80 FT, Corona del Owf'4W (213) 276-1373
I
•i I
~ .,. GREAT LOC. lBr lBa, trg 1735 NO PETS 640-2495 Curt 11631-1286 --------stairs room. HB 1 mile to m/f non/amkr d ock Mar. Good patttlng, Cell~!!~!:=:~t!!!
patio, upper unit. new •SPACIOUS 1BDRM• E'StDE. 2BR W.BA. Patio, 1 Bedroom M80 bch. Male non-amkr pref. avali alto · 1450 Per mo Ken, Agent e75•8700l!i 2 FOUND a Mldoga. Smell
crpt. Refrlg. gas Incl. No Vaulted celling. new ap· pvt gar. NEW carpet, 2Bdrm W.Ba S795 s.495 Incl utll. 962:4163 call Tony ~5·5309. ' * * ** * 1• llf·I • Ull blk/Wht Tarrier. med.
pets. $635/mo. 645-5853 pllances. carpet, drapea. flooring, paint & drapes. 22~~~uard 540~26 FUR!" 1BR:-so+ prof male Newport North twnhm 12111111 l /F long Mir off White In
pools ide locati o n . Sml bldg on cul·d•sac. 1 Bedroom 1695 non-amkr. 2 min to bch. 2BR 2~BA pool jK W/D 1117 W•tcllff, NB MOOIM~; 3:352 ~· N8 ~ F.V. 639-7019
1BR DUPLEX w/1tove. Balcony. private & quiet. Laundry room. $765. 2Bdrm l'l•Ba $8lS Npt Crest. POOi. tennis. non,-smkr fem n/pata Agt 54l-5032 • · :t0f'~~r9Cio:Wicf8!~1t $650 & Up. 722-7195 752-155"4 or 786·922"4 131 e teth St 14g..6816 $500 utll Jncl 645-6003 • S600 utll/pald 76().-3().47. 1200 SO FT. w/tront
$815/mo. * 650-7549 WESTBAY APARTMENTS Wll 111 llOO/M Nr SC Plia In beautiful lg NEWP-T HGTS. M/F 20-30 ·~~A~O~x-:. °:':t>!: o~::-. :;~,:::. &~T:. .HO If, •• YI.I. -S200 OFF MOVE-IN! Av a I I Imme d . Ca I I Hunt. a.ach 2640 home/furn. Shr bath. non amkr to ahr houae Blvd. Pvt bath. 525 aq ft1 mlnal Way, Coeta M ...
Featuring POOi, spa, 631-4088 after 12 noon w/d, poof. spa. S400/mo w/2 othefa Mair Br/S. S500/mo. * 79().9792 ~0-9352 Large 1BR 1BA w/gar. patios. enclosed parking DELUXE Tri level 3BR. loft, + dep. 556· 1737 $500/ A. d ~8-6343 ---------•---...,.-=-----..,... $595/mo + S500 sec SOl'ry, No Pets. 21~BA, Roman tub, 2 f/p, mo. n 'Y ltl l /f 11•1• HIOO SQ FT air cond of-
1970 Wallaoe 631-1879 1 Bedroom $665 LIW, LIW 2400at. Nr Hunt. Harbour Hotels/Motels 2718 N·smkr, 22-32 ahr, 3BR 4001 Birch llA. NB . flce/w.,ehouM fOI' IM, 2Bdrm 1 ••Bl $770 $ 1495. (213) 860·9513 -1BA. 3"4t h St. NB ~" Agt 54 t-5032 930 W. 16th, C~ta Mesa.
2 BR, 2 BA NEW. quiet, 825 Center St ~'42-1424 llVE II I II IU WI lmL view. 1425 Avail July 200 amps, hloh cell, truck
F•ADS
ARE FREE
Cal:
MJ·llll ~~: c;;~~· :;~ic. s'~~;Y WESTFIELD APTS • N!! }~ ?i~ & ~,!. Wkly rentals now avall. 833-4919 Pattie. A~:-~ In t'9· :artr. ~ e ntrance. Wiii divide .
6-45·0302 E'S1deStud10. S2000FF MOVE·I N' •2Wllnftlm• Nr oc!a.~ Gara . No S147.00 wk & up. 2274 RETIRED secy. Travels a 900~54()() 1
.ti ~itr~: 63l·9067or 472-1o79 ·--------$"450. 650-5286 ALL UTILITIES PAID *' ~ nEE• pets.960--623 1/6~1776 _Nwpt Blv~ 646"7445 lot. Wanta to put some Iv. ratea. ~11 M ytlme. Avanable now-Upgr9ded ---------
----1 Bedroom $655 Ullffe41fftrtll l /2 ~ ----'-furn & personal effects .a•.atOll OfflcetWarehouM apace FOUND Black/whltlah 2 II llHll FLHI 301 Avocado 642-9850 BACHELOR UNIT, quiet, 5 VKltlon Rtntlls 2722 somewhere to come back -• rgi 1001 w. 17th, CM, young Catlln Huntington Largeyard.nloe carpetlng. --------Spacious lBR, like new blks to beach S500/mo tooocaslonally.Very flex-C:.M./N.B.Preatlglou1500 900-~00 Sq. ~t. Great Beach on June 10th,
lmrMdlate opening• •vall·
able. Wortr. from 2 to 24
hra per day, flexible
achedullng. Mel(ly pay.
Cell Home Ca.re Connec-
tlo n fo r morr Info.
714-880-8863.
1111/COll.
STiil Rllll llW1
II AT IUll IY ....
•8am·Noon +Mondaythru Fri
•Noexpnec
Coat• MeH 548-6919
drapes, built-Ins, ceiling 2Bdrm 1• .• Ba $775 condition. $665 Retrlg. Inc I u des u t II Illes Fantastic View, near Ible. Under $350/mo. Pis to 3400 a/f In Bank bldg. for R&O, HI-tech. Call (7 14~9770
Ian, d/w, encl garage. t 398 w Wilson 631-5583 ra nge. micro. pool. 536·854 ~ _ Balboa Pav Bayfront. Iv full Into on msg ma· Close to everything. anytime 434-7080. FOUND: Cat F.nl 1 --------• C:~::'fg~~r :~32~0275 1210 OFF' carpcrt. laundry. alt ulll-DELUXE 2BR 2BA. marble 1BRiA s soo;;k J uly chine. 650-7655 FABULOUS DEAL! Agt UH~•• n II.II hair biaclt ~back & ~ • Illes paid, except electric frplc, skyllghtl . W/0, l· l4 ug 4· · I-:._ 1 I_..., 831-7370 .. whit bOOt & tripe on --eR"'e * AUA MOANA APTS '* No eta. (714)548·0492 gar .. near Hunt. Harbour 2BR $950/wk Aug 25-31 ... ,. •• , ......... , 'Local In one of Newpoft • I I * 1 1 A Upper Newly 1 & 12BR. lBA. O/W, P 1975. (213) 880•95 13 Vera 213/375-5500. $ftklng female room-E. 1ttlt St, l.M. Beach's.beat malntaln-s ~ly. h~~:'~ i~~.,F~~~ *ICCOUIT
DECUTIVE redec .. D/W. gar. ~~ beautiful pool area. large Mesa Verde 2BR upper. . --_ KAUAI -OCEAN VIEW 2 mate. lrvlne near UCI. Prime storefront loc. areaa. L.lghl lndultrlal or B ook 9&3 5697 rm. c!b~4;.u:~s • rec room & laundry room. quiet cul-de-sac. encl BR 2. BA Condo Gott Master bedroom, at-389 Of' 927 If. 873-6022 llOl'age. DMslble. Call taln Valley. ::_. --close 10 shops & buses garage, $695 • sec UQun! Beach 2648 · n h · tached bath. $425 mo In· . Donovan or McMahan, Lolt Diamond T ennl1
S585·S675tmo 498-1936 or 751-9483 1 BLK from beach ocean ts~;~~· ks~ ;~!49:.~~S8 eludes utilities. Call Early E SIDE c:ata M .... 120 Agents, 259·9500 Bracelet, week of June
Growing newspaper has
FfT opening for 3ll ex· perleneed display sales
rep. Base salary ~ com-
mission Contact Marilyn
Holland. at 642-432 t be-
tween 8-5 pm EOE
WTSllE
IHllaJ
530 W. Wiison view walk to d\lllntwn w mOl'nlng/late afternoon. sq. ft. rlvate entrance 11th Balboa vicinity.
TSLlllT NPTHTGS2BR 1BA,lrplc, Stud'10 $600/mo. $300 Laguna \lllkly rental. 733-881 ~---f~~:~~ Avalf lmmed. lncomeProperty 2790 Large c ash reward. 2BR 1BA. small back yard.
Gas W/D hkups $750 No
pets 645· 1631 All 4PM
722·9012 or 832-2232 gaiio, lrg yd. gar. lndry dep \BR $800/mo. $400 Beautiful ocean view ROOMMATE WANTED lor ------723-0880.
Sorry No Pets u1e1 No pets $875/mo dep. Util paid 497 ·4581 Steps to bch 2 BR, pvt new townhome In Costa EXEC Otllce Suites near KAUAtllo· 9 OCdEAN GVIEWt LOST on FOUND-A PET.
HHIDGI-:
By CHARLES GOREN
w ith OMAR SHARIF
and T ANNAH HIRSCH
Both vulnerable. South dt·a"
NORTH
+ KQJ 72
• Q 9" • 8 s J
+ Q J
Wt:ST t.AS1
+ 10 6 SJ + A
•K S •?6 3 2
• J t QI0 \1 7 .&
+ "965 4 2 + K 73
SOl'TH + 9 II.&
•AJI08 • ""62 + A tO
T he b1dd1ng.
~outh Wf\t 'ort h t.a,1
t ST Pa~~ J + p,,,
J '1 Pas~ Pa~" Pa''
Opening le.ad h \e of +
~tudy the b1ddin11 and pla> ol !hi\
hand. At the end. decide "h11..h, ii
an}. ot 1hc pla>e" arc guill) ot a
blundl'r and ho" gra\ can error 11 "
Agains1 three no rrump \\ C.-\I
made a normal fourth-be\! lead,
won on 1he 1ab e Declarer kd rhe
k1hg of ~pade,, follo"ing ~11 h the
four from hand ""hen Ea\t 1001.. rhe
acc. The club return "'a\ 1al..cn per-
force m rhe clo\cd hand and a <.pade
10 the q ueen re\ealed 1he unfor!u·
natc brea~ Dedarer ~ould ral..e a
fine\~ for the ren of ~padc\ b\ mm·
282 E 16th 646-6074 pkg, & garden 494· t602 Mesa Large bedroom JW Airport, 4770 Von vaca n con os. rea n YlCATill II .. T plus bath Locked com-Ka.rman Ave . NB. FAX. locatlonl S 1,350,000. ~f:t,;.o~tc8~~~.~ttr0 Newport a.ach 2669 plex. M/F $490.00 recept. copier. conl rm, 714-492-3558 available 978-PETS 1111111&1. INll month plus ·~ utllltle1 kllch. tree parking & col·
In Orange County Steps s 3 5 o . o o de p 0 s t t lee. 1-sty bldg. furn. mo-LOST small HQUS E PET. ·--------ing 10 hand and running the nine. IEWPllT IUAllA APTI to the surf · 360" view! 668-9433 to-mo at $350/mo. Coo-WHITE RABBIT. vic. of
1>u1 \lm:c \\ C\I "'ould refuse.-10 ~O\. *WITI l l lT SLIPS* Over 3.000 sll. elevatOI', ----taC1 Al Quinlan. 833-9550 Marine Ave. Bal Island Alfllnlm
er So1Jth "'ould ,1111 bc 10 hand and EXCLUSIVE BEACH 1acuui ~ many contem· Shr fantastic COM beam --S Call 673-3773 WISTUT
h.' d COMMUNITY porary amenities Avl July cell hse 2 BR. den. 2 BA. esxecr:•ve F~ll ervlce "EWA-ROI LOST '·~·· a ve no "'3> 10 get IP ummy 10 2BR 2BA • den Beautiful 1st 10 August 18th frplc. w/d, S695/mo t u e · e w P 0 rt .,
ca<.h 1he 'Jladc.-,, lmtcad, declarer bay view' Micro. dtw. wk 1ytm1h1 a t es dep'~ utO 760-6511 Center/Fashion Island. l•·-·--'-~-.------1 GOLD ROLEX WAT H. Y r Ocean & courtyard views. uuM~ vie Hunt Bch 6-40-2204 ran the nine ot heart\ and \\'e\I fireplace. trash compac-714/499·6290 lltr UH laJfrtlt a,t. Priced from 1500 Call Opportunlt'!S 2904 REWARD! '~ored the l..1n11 togethc.-r \.\Ith four tor & garage En1oy our Female. non-s moke r Lisa. Of' Christi. 644--4492 l ___ ..,.._ ______ I
d ub tricl..\ for a l\.\O-trid . \Cl prvt beach $l900·S2350 R "'11"''"1 673 O --------.. . All maintenance incl oommates VJ a nted .....vv mo. • 111 Four o ffices avall In New· 110 llLUll Ptrsonlls 3002
d\\hah1, it .inb>l!h in~, "Cnl "'°"& *hatSH,sElfra* 2724 Stot--2742 pert Beach. 1225/mo ea. lllllTIY DWM.6'7",255tbs,38 yrs. an \.\ o'\ 10 ame. SORRY. NO PliTS B 0 or all for $800 per mo enjoys the beach. travel.
(m 10 the 1op of th<.' da" 11 }Ou CALL llO otll :;~ ~n~~!~·L2iy~~:,~ ITIUll-IYs/lllTa Incl ~II. 7 14/631·7~ andcandlel1tdlnners.sks
J\\1.'\\Cd ~outh "1111 cgregiou<o error' • furn sunqeck. SOLO-De A.n.z.a Bayside VIilage ...... ..,1 220' No llmlt on N rning polen-29-39 fem tor fun and
in hot h b1~d1ng dOd play f hat rla) FLEX. lrplc steps to bchl 300 E. Coast Hwy, Newpt On East 17tfi . Street In tlal 1rs the opportunity Of Possible I t., pis send
er dc,mcd 150 ixrccnt ol the blaml' •21111 $100* $460 dep 631·85'46 Beech (714) 673· 133 t Costa Mesa. 846-4330 :~~n~i!?~r.:o~~~:L~ ~~~~~·, 7g tep 0Ph~~=
to r lhc.-debade In the ,H1\.l1011, Fr ig dishwasher. stove Huntington Beach M/F, n· Mr Day. 756-3286 1761, Br•• CA 92621
Needed for part time pos-
llion, 15-20 hours per
week RespcnSlblllttes in-
clude Ad lay-out cus·
torner service & generlll
office duties Organized.
detall oriented person
with art background
preferred Wiii train Call
Karen. 642·432 1 Ext 3 t7
IOI' appolnlmenl lo Inter·
view. Pertee• IOI' student
~outh 'hould haH~ ral\ed 10 lour Incl No pers 545-4855 smkr Walk 10 beach
\l"Jde' \\Ith three trump\ dlld 3 rull· •EASTBLUFF 2BR 2BA S425/mo 71 4·962-6291
IOI-! 'Jlul' '" dub\. I our 'pade' Pool ftreplace view or 818-812·2878 Paul
GARAGE SALE
AIDE·LIVE IN F non 1mkr
Assisi teacher 1n whlchr
DESIGN fir m expandlng Schools & Ro o m · S 5 0 0 I m o
Wiii train new decora1ors lnstrucUon 3012 645·2357
h h , _, .1 coin-op washer fdryer riui,: I or m1g I not ma .. c. vcpcnv· 5999 NOPETS 722.8011 COSTA Mesa New exec
111g on thl' pl3) and dclc.-n'~" hut home great location•
lhd!'' irrc.-le\anr •NEW 2BR IBA, covered fireplace oath, w/d
i\nd then there', nn e\\.U'C lor µarking bu111.1ns pvt S475tmo * 548·5335 pa1 10 S850 /mo no1 m..il.1ng the ~onrrad V. hen Ea\I 714-979 9991
rrndu\.rd rhe J-<.' of 'p.idc' JI 1"1'" $100 IOYE-11 llllSll
l\.\U, dcdarcr \lwuld h,l\e un
Fem shr Nwpl Hgts 3BR
3BA condo lrplc, w/d
S400 • ', u111s Reis req d
760-2563 Eves 642-3707
It's that time again! Make sure your ga rage
sale is a succeu by advertising in clauified.
Start your ad two doys before the sale to
a ttract the most buyers.
c A l LUXURIOUS 2BR. 2BA hlcxl..ed the l'1gh1 or n111c \\'ht•n de-Pr1me 1oca1 Close ro t>ch Fem to shr 3 BR. 3 BA I
CdM house N-smkr 6 Mstr BR avail $456/mo I
721-8914 Iv mesa 1 42 -5678 d.uer nl'\I led d 'fMde IO lhl' queen, , Fr pie Loaded with
he \hould ha\e chO\l'n the other amen111es s 11001mo
hitih 'JlOl\.ard tor that purpme. Call Paul 548-3343
No", when'L:o,1 \hOw\ 0111 on the ,------============~==
\t'Cnnd spade. declarer ,an rc1urn 10 •
hand """h a d1..imonu <1nd kJd 1he
carefull> pre\cn t>d lour ol 'pade,,
ftnc\\lng the 1ablc', \l'\t'll fh<11
"'o uld ha'c perm111cu dedarc:r to
ral.t 111 four \p<1de tric:I..,, one heart,
tv.o diamond\ and l\.\O dub\-JU\I
enough 10 mal..c: the game
Call 960-67"42 '* • '* • * '* .... Titer l-Oelt1l11t IJrllH Je~a t1 Ul,OOI Flnal Exam Prep Summer ALL POSITIONS SNACK VENDING ROUTE Instruction 642'.5034 1·900-654-2255 ext 403
I LOCAL FOR SALE 8am-8pm 7days $14 fee
CHEAP H19h gross each
machine weekly 200•1. s ELL ~lrllnes S6-15/Hr return on Investment Will train Hiring all pcs
Call Mac 1·800·346-0645 11 1on1 C•ll (3 13 1 948·9800 ext A 1084 VENDING ROUTE Local
Great extra Income Must se ll qu l c k l y
1·800-933·99 19
Mercha ndise
throu~h cl.m1f1ed
lllWlllll SYC IPR Day & evening snills Must
type, wtO train $5/Hr
Costa MeH 540-1777
Assemble produclS 111
home earn up 10 S400twk
no e xp, ez work Info call
1-504-~63·6t94 e~ 1163
UllllUP/T Light Ma nu11c tur1ng
Hours tle•lble $6-up hr
Call Carrie 549-52 11
TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ly SYDNEY OMARR
Wednesday, Ju e %0
ARIES (March 2 1·Apn l 19): This could be o ne of yo ur m ost
cithilaratm g W ednesdays. Sccnano features roman~. style. freedom
of citprcss1o n. Ne w 1nte rc'its eq uate 10 new peo ple in your life. Leo .
Aquanus pcr'io nc; pla) roles
ly ,ATRJC \IVAIJ(ER
We48H4ay, JllM H
ATTENTION Book Lovers
Earn $32,000/yr pctenllal just reading bOOkst S 10
011 our regular $35 lee II
y o u c a ll no w 714-239-4603 Ext 203 ARIES (Marc h 2 1-April 20): No o ne can really upset your apple·
can o r 1ivc you a ha rd tt me unless you lose your nerve o ver career . IOOllEEPEI
ACROSS ow"er
1 ~very S6 La~e 57 Nortnwest 5 Loc.allnq shrub dev1C1! 58 Spmt lamp 10 Links ur111 59 Cr.er s 14 -gin shoo I 15 Daughter Of 60 An abr as.ve Zeus 61 Proclama1'°" 16 Spnere
17 Ar120'\a sight DOWN 20 man
21 E~toned 1 Discover
money lrom 2 Out ol a ga1e
22 Spoons 3 Beds
23 VIC'tory S•O"S 4 Hor HRH
24 Amalgama1e 5 AanS&Cke<l
25 Buller or 6 Zodiac s19n
telly 1 Ow"er 'i 28 111-lempered paper
32 clock 8 Con"ectov" 33 lce-nockey ,.Ord
SQuads 9 Ebbs
34 Grassland 10 Become lirm
35 Rubber type 1 1 Russian city
36 Shoe 12 ma1esty
11cc:essot1e!i 13 Omer sogn
37 Le1 out t8 Steel girde<
38 Simple sugar 19 Green spots
39 Pathways 23 Cruz 40 Harass 24 Predicaments
4 I Not 1n 25 Peasant st>oe
43 1nv1gora1ec1 26 PGlatial
44 Floor covers 21 Hindu r n 45 Ca"vas sheel 28 Bad ha IS
46 Ctot'11fl0 29 Of an inter.
49 Grape drink nal Ofgan
50 GPs org 30 PMce1ve
SJ Monuoello s 31 Despised
33 Beacnes
5 6
15
7
PflEVIOUS ~ZZLE S~YED
36 Generos•ty 37 Type ot meat
39 Eyes of
Mars
40 Old-hal
42 WroilgdOll\gS
43 Pub devole@ 45 TIU now
46 Vapor pref
47 He ano she
8 9
48 Ripped
49 Voicono
Qoddl!!IS
50 11a11an city
51 LIS&
52 Med sub1
54 Pr8'ervl's
55 Grid arb1le•
10 I.I
16
13
TAURUS IApnl 20-M a) 20): Money picture actually bright
altho ugh )OU m1gh1 be temporanly discouraged. First sian of
recovery 1s that )IOU locate lost a n1clc. Focus o n income. personal
possessions. unique collcct1o ns.
GEMINI (!'y1ay 21 ·June 20): Moon 1n your Sign h ighlights
tnd1v1d uaht}. personaht). seit appea l. Accent your colon: silver,
bnghl green. )Cllow. Social afTatr ton1gh1 could lead to valuable
conlact!i. Sagmanan 1s involved .
CANCER (J u ne 2 1-Jul) 22): Yo u arc not locked up but m erely
tcmporanl~ dcla)cd . Yo u·11 be o n time. prc~nt at crucial mo ment.
Secret 1nforma11on 1s leaked -to yo ur advantage. Scorpio native
confidec;, "I adore )Ou'"
LEO <J ul) 23-Aug. 22): Eitccllcnt for resea rch. rcad ina and
wmmg. f11rtat1o n tha1 1\ harmless and stimulating. Lunar position
h1ghl1ghts fulfillmen t. spccula11on. wishes that co me true. Gem ini
will figure pro mancntl)
VIRGO ( .\ug. 23-Scpt 22): Career opportunity apparently
mis\cd I 0 da)\ ago will once agiun surface. Majo r dom es tic
adjustment ts part of d)nam1c sccnano. You'll get money, vindi·
Callo n and loH. Libra rta,., role
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct 12): ('heck Vargo mcssaae. Backstaae
mancu' cr'i eve ntually prove beneficial. Focus on design. the ab-
stract. 1n vcnt1ve nc\S. Yo u'll learn m o re about o il. moto rs. auto-
m obiles. Kc) is 10 c.otrectly d efine terms.
SCORPIO (Oct .. 23-Nov. 2 1 >: Check Can~r m essage. Focus o n
responsibility, m ino r cn m that involves deadline. Emphasis o n
praducllon, promo11o n . .,trong lo ve relationship. You'll learn m ore
abollt financial 'ta1us of close as~1a1e. •
~
SAGITTARI US (No v. 22-Dcc. 21): Look beydhd the im m ediate,
l'Cahze yo ur po1cn1ial 1s greater than in rcceht past. Burden is lifted.
you'll be rrec 10 exp ress your true feelings. spotlight on partnership.
ma magc.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan 19): You recently wondered, "when
should It get stanedtr· Ani;iwcr is. "The future is now!" Take
ini11a11ve. stres~~nginahty, willi ngness to ma ke fresh stan. Leo plays
s11nifi cant role.
AQUARIUS (Jan . .20-Feb. 18): D1versi'fy. check various aspects
o f subJecu 1ha1 intrigue. Focus o n learning. teac hina. addana to
wa rdrobe. Yo u'll be more sensitive ~han usual conccm1n1 body
image. Ph)'s1cal attraction d om inates.
PISCE (fcb. 19-Marc h 20): Check Aquarius mes~. Give full
patx to 101cllectual curiu~1ty. Focu~ o n dCSifO. archilcc:ture. ver-
satility, 1nv1tat1o n lb, travel. You'll be 11)'1na, "What a lively
WcdneS<:by!" P.anicipatc.
IF J UNE ZO 18 YOUR ~lt'tHOAY: Before June is finished a
ma1or do mes11c adJustment will take place, m iaht m u n you
temporaril) lea ve rcs1dcn~. Current cycle htahliahu compleuon,
broad canvas, d 1~\nct poss1bthty that yo u will travd and could f&JI
mad ly 1n love. Jn Jul) v11o r returns. techniques arc perl'ectcd, yo u'll
meditate and find that an~wen are w1th1n. You are loyal to fam ily,
have aourmet appetite a nd m ino r d1aestive ~. Capricorn,
Cancer persons arc drawn 10 yo u. A u,u1t will be pt0duct1vc, e~cmna
mo nth
.,
or pro fessional issues. H owever. you should be so obsessed with Looking tor PIT exp
change. reorganizing and strcam lintnf now, employers o r com -Bkkpr for family ownea
pet1tors wtll be asto unded by your 011r, mgenuity a nd determination . business Musi nave • Bkkpg e.cp on computer TAURUS (Apnl 21-May 2 1): Don't wait for o thers to give you c au o.ane(714)644-6800
the green light. for you now have all the ammunition or infonnacion
you require to forge a head, a lso make business associates aware that
as far as you arc concerned, one cycle or era has already come to
a close.
. GEMINI (May 22-June 2 1 ): Complex planetary act ivity now
indicates that partners o r business associates arc certain to come up
with som e new argu m ent or com plaint. H owever, if you honestly
believe you have been trea ted u njustly. then by all means stand your
ground o ver mo ral o r financ ial issues.
CANCER (June 22-July 23): Planetary activity in your opposite
sign of Capricorn indicates that you art still tryina to rekindle
something that should be well and truly o ver. No one takes kindly
to d ism inal o r rejection but. an this instance. you are no lo oser in
a position to argue.
LEO (July 24-Aug. 23): For quite some time now you appear
to have been am~zangly pcrc.cpttvc -particularly about career o r
lo ng-term interests, also hea lth matters. Therefore, what transpires
over t&c next week or so sho uld make yo u even m ore aware that
you must ne ver again go against your bunches or instincts.
BOYS
AND
. GIRLS
ID RUDY
IOW FIR
SllllR JOBS VIRGO (Aug. 24-Scpt. 23): A llhough you may believe you arc
doing your level best to preserve a lo ngstandina relatio ns hip, in fact I AfTll llllll WMI
you appear to have taken the wro ng tack. Therefore, a llow lo ved
ones or clo~ associa tes all the freedom or licente they teek -far
too much is at stake for a comple te break o r separation to take place.
LIBRA (Sept. 24-0ct. 23): Eac h and e very event in one's life is
like a thread weaving a pattern that is u nfokUna by desian.
Therefore, 1f you arc no w co nfro n ted with a ~or decision or
obstacle which could alter you r future comfort and teeurity, then
simply let ao and let things take their natural coune.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22): Before the Sun cha~ sips on
the 2 1 s1 you need to cast a beady eye over a lona-aenn investment,
then make it a pparent that since what yo u have and own has been
accurl)ulatcd throu~ your o wn efTons. you arc c:atainly ®t about
to forego cenain n ghts o r bene fit •
SAGmARIUS (Nov. 23·0cc. 21): Nothina in nature is filed or
constant. T he refore. why do you still feel yo u m ust use cenain
methods or stick to a ~t ro1,.1tine? T he.Sun is about to chanae sip s
and both panncrs a nd collcaaues will be look.ins to you to take tlK
initiative and put Io na-term pla ns into o peration.
CAPIUCORN (OK. 22-Ja n. 20~: Make the most o( what you
have and o wn and do n't try to prcchct the o utcome of situatiQJ't on
the ho m e front. A clash o r confro ntation may bt unavoidable but
o nce the dust has settled , all the u ncertainty a nd fcclina or isolation
you are e~pcriencma will di,.ppcar.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 2 1-Feb. 19): Foraet about othcn' attempu to
undermine your confidence or secunty. Friday's NC'W Moon will
enable you t~ differentia te between what you imqine you want and
wha t you actually need to tackle both intensely penonal or work
• Start M rnlno e111ra
money tcxlayt
• Part lime~. 3 h0ur1
eactl weetiday even109,
Mlllng aubacr1p11on1 for
the Dally PllOt • AV« age $40 00 lo
$60.00perweeti
• Win p112 .. and boO\lteS
• Ideal tor Junlof High
1tudent1
' Tr•n1POf1atlon I• provided
prob~ms with determination and complete honesty.
PISCES (Feb. 20-Marth 20): It rould bt said that you arc 1111 I 11111U
CXpcctJftl to rttcivc a d ividend or an emotional invntment. l"aat IMrner or exp·cs. pey
However, that 11 only pan o f a rather com plc-x story and you must :'.,:OC:. t11111 level
no w wait and see what tran~ittt around tbe time of the NC'W Mooa wortctrrlt 13, :;1wOOfJ.
on the 22nd before reac.hina yo ur final conclusion. • ·
•• 111 ••• IF YOOll l lllTBOAY IS TODAY: If you care to took beck over '°' b.,.ioe ,....,,.,,, in
the past s•• m onths. you will no doubt wonder how you ma~ ~rice~ 17/Hr
to cope with so m uch d isapproval or rnmtmcnt. Howevd, 111~•111 ~.:i"'Thuf==-~
wo n throuah and ea.med >ou r spun. you must now make snore !'me ,-.. ~ Mr o... .,
for yourttff and, above all, en o ounetf. _ _ M 1·1MO
• 1
-----
$2.44 per day
The1'1 All you pay fOf
• llnee, 30 dey minimum
In the
SERVICE
DIRECTORY
r-or more lnlOfmatlon
CALL TOOAYll
lllFllUll
Y04M
SeMee 06rectOtY
AepreMntatl¥9
142-4121
ht. 111
TILE ln1telled & Aep•lred.
Prompt Courteous Service
Fr" Ell. & ~~en. .
John a Shelby. a.46--8178 Aepelr. ~/Ceder
Full°' P/Tlme In my Costa
....... home 645-7848
Post repleo.. C M./N.8.
Jim Whyte. S.2·720&
~ , r I ~ ~ t
H. l 1 •
EXP Chlldcue In my ...... ~
home FIT PIT Any•·
lawn· Tr .. Shrub·lnltall.
Sprinkler ln1tallallon
Tree Trimino & F*'noval
lawn Malnt & Cleanups
Rotollllng. 432·880.t
BUY throuah clmlfled --
......
...... •• I .. DODCll. .. COLT LN>OUI .. a. ..... Ol.DI tt70 0... lu-.. --IM6o , AuW, ... ....... .,._, a/G, .,,..,..,. 0.... ...... Doora. ......._ I-door, ....... -...., ........ ..,. m, ...... --. 1t1e.1 n111toond. Good.._..,,~_.. ....... 1 own. . ...._,...• .....
IOllO .... wl ,......_ .... m-am • lound. 11too. • 2 4 so . I!• eel I• nt ._. ..._ °" 111lllO ....._.
M\lfnll--11dfl.(104m) DOOGI •• eot:f C114J 147-IJN 77MMO = '1: .. -: ._ INCi llfMCI. =~·~ Excellent condition. .... .. CelinlrCllrtltfOr· Awe. '~ v.._
H. RACH RYii.i,_ S.WOO. flRM. 831~ .. •at• PLY M 0 UT H 1 t I I .... ~ °" June ti, ta10I ' '
..... Electrie IUIWOOf, M1.m1 ........ . ~ ..... --.... Allt"9 CarawlleTurbo.Loedld, ttlO,_.. o.M ............ 10ll1 deor loc:tla, aeeta. AIC. , ~.,. ell meln~ ,_,.. • U ltted Or .... C... ,_.. AV!t., l'ountllft Vet-
Allwm wtth '*"*· r:x. 'MU-... ~..!! M~TA!!. Ht '°"' c .. 1-11 w' excellent condition. • "°' Jwne acr. 11. Jtllo/ • CA 111'0I OW Wt•
tencMd wwrenty. Sl,000 AJJ 4 *"' dllo .,,...., '* .... ._,_, "'"'• """" ,. ..,.. · 13.llO. 2u..eaol dirt; •· 11, 1tl0 hla IM*MN le ootl· ,__.
mllet. bc•ll•nt con-~ 'Peed control: et0f9d. 1~1~1 M500. 1111111 a..1 131..ee 11 ~nde wOU dYcted by. • lndtl1d11el • On '*"-vtL.10. end a,
dltlon. Muat Mitt S t4,000 Ml/fm cw, ,.., wtndow .,...-PONTIAC •71 iUNiifi) The ,..ietrantC•I oont• ttlO, et 11 TeaMOIOn oeo. t32-e110 ctetroeter.{452082> 81 ._.7 m1i. 8500 090 PWUC mTICl "*"'*' '° .,.,,._ butt-~ ..... 111. !MN w
111.111 .... 11118 "'"•.Celltst·7U7 . PIOTmoutlll••u =--~~•=-= ~~~"°.:; 'ir.M MlllL WU. It. BEACH ~HAYSL~R .. • M!"6UAY t• Coug8; Mm ITAW on: Jwne 1, 19'0 ~proPerlY dui 'tMd •:
S2645 (4KIBA~. Prlv1te Ml-1111 ~~aee)''· CHHlle. =~~~~· :::~ ~j ........ ~=::~.,. ~.:::.,,, w• flled ,.:·~~~·~~IJllUI-• P•;~:~:i~~~5GL Lux:==-:kge, ...
41705047 A/T,11J~!·~mor•l '"e:,~,"T:.~'N~p~~ ::.•=ty~~!:'r,: =~1=~~:~M~
4x4 Wafon 5 epd a/c p/ ... 11 eecurlty alatm ftt1.IN lt••lll (STK08M) IMotl, CA t2M3 1tto CELLANEOUI ITUIEO lllmwe1ita . ' ' I • .. I 1 ' a.ae .. 11 ...... Merle M. 0Hlorowakl, ,_ EQUtPMENT AND Ul.000 aunroo . atereo. alloy w re Wn covert, t It, ... 1112 E Ch9W Cll Dr Publlehed Orant19 Coeiat (IUPAEIENTINO THE
whls. car cover. bike crulM,automatlo deektld .......,. ......... ~ CAf120f.... ··Dally Piiot June 20 27 July PftC>CeEDl,AOMTHEILI
rack. $4,000 0 8 0 pull down.(738161) •• 1111 Thi• bu91n•H II con· •• n. 1tt0 • • 0' 1113 POAICHE, COunty on JUn9 I,
836-9702. 111.All · FORD 'M THUNDERBIRD r--••• ducted by. an lndMduel W-018 IJCENIE NO. 2N8L7") quotatlone wltll qualifler-.
TOYOTA 1g9e 4Runner. H.BEACH ti-fRvSLER E!Tli F~ • ~·o ~ Tiie reglatrenl com· WM Mind PllfWI to ,_.., td °'::::.:-" .':., ~ ~~:k.:0w:c. '':~/::: M2-IU1 121-8331. ;::* ~ ·~:~11=; Ml.IC llOJ1C( :="';~~~c:c=8: b:~~7. 1~ :ove :::!' ~
AM/FM cassette Excel· i~--·-Nl'Jlll'M ~-=81~31;:ne' ~A~H T~:::W°:'':"a!d puiy·3• ttt0 T-5M lft=1benoneoneuct1dey
1«11 condition. $10.900 Gov t . Nlzut• & turptve -,_'II •11111 lllll i8 a M•le M. OUl<KOWllll The 1o11ow1ng '*'°"' .,. wttll r.apect to lleOed Ylc)I,. Ind time .-Ctttd by tlle
OBO. Ron. 7 14-892-3474 Corwu", luxury car1. Eddie Bauer, auto. aHoy .. '11 llTl.All STK*7H4 T~ •t•tament wu filed doing bullr'9ae M.: atlon(•) of Sec:tlonCI) 112 of PurCllMlng Menag« · -rovorin wanon-v1n1 & truck•. Call whMI•. Well cared for. --111,411 •1111 the County Clerk of Or· ADVANCED SALES AND ltlePenalCOdHnd 11HO(a) "8JC ll)TIC( Tll• ~ful bidder 5 epd • 1·900-321·3366 Ext 170. (23GRP570) ................. ange County on June 13, MARKETING, 21485 OP-of IN Health end Sleety thell Nrnilh ... lnturenoe
. al e.Stow pkg, good Open 7am-10pm S 12 fee 111,111 Apu,'~~neldr •• tlp"1'1occrutNk•. • Ecxt ... ra' •• 1111 1tt0,.... brook, Mlaalon Viejo, CA Code. You are llereby PICTITIOUe ..-u oenlflcatea or other reQllired cond • l ,500 ob o • ... , r--••• Pu~llhed Orange Cout 12692 notified tlllt the Dlttrlct At· Nam 8TATlmN'T 111bmln•1• prior to any
540-15'2 11111 'I' .,.,..,.. CIHn. Low m llu . Deily Piiot June 20. 27. July SteYen Weet, ume torneyofOrangeCOuntyllM The follotllllnO '*'°"' •• ~ ... order being 11-
TOYOTA '85 TERCEL. lllil. U.1111 111-1111 (1ESD810) 4. 11, 1990 Tlllt bu1lne11 la con-Initiated proCMOlnga to f«· bo'ng bua1ne11 u : ~ ~
47K. AT. AC. 4dr. stereo, loaded. low, low miles. llffl w024 ducted by: an lndlvlduel felt the abo~deacrlbed JO'NES IAOS .. 3941 W. AIMdrtl.flW ~
c a s s e 1 I e S 3 8 O o Priced to Miii 673-8695 ~. l•••ln "8JC lll"ITll'r Th• regl1tr1nt com-property purauant to Health JWcFadden Ave .• "C", Sant.a ....,_ .., ... Cltr
675-7097 or 722-io3 1 ... , .. 11 """"'· rta.JC fl)TIC[ menc9d to tranuct bull-Ind S1f1ty Code Sactlon t'n• CA 92704 IMltne*' ....... Cell· -----;..;..~--neu under the flclllloua t 1488.4. Terry A. Kloe>ll•. Jr,. 311MI ..,._ ·
VOLVO 1988 760 Turbo fHI 'II Ullll I FICTITIOU88U8MH FICTITIOU8 8UWll butlnftf n11M or niim. You are ln1true1ed that 11 YellOWllone Circle. Chino C..... If.-..,, Cltr
wag 29K ml. auto, tint lllOl'llamlY 5sl)Mdloaded.only35K T~':ic!!!.n:'!Zi 1 NAMSITAnMINT 111ted1boveonM1y2.1tt0 youdellre1oeon1 .. 1111etor· H11t1,CAg11ot Cleft!. Cltr., .._ .......
wtn, mags. loaded, per. m llH . Ab1olutaly Im-Why rvn 111 ovw town when 1 1 ··• r • Tiie following per1one ere Steven w .. 1 lelture of thl• property. Larry R. GHek, 31141 W. INotl
feet cond • $20.295 OBO. lllU maculate. ( •058844) you can locate part• for your 00M1sbua nen ••: doing bu1ln"1 11· .Thi• atatament wu flied PMrlUanllO Health end S•f• McFadden Ave .. "C". Sant• Publltlled Orange Cout
551-0455 STK•7876 ll,110 antloue auto In ct...,fled? tori• c~.~~':'.E·c~~2~~.; Bo11 Window · c1aanlng #1111 Ille County Cle<k of Or· I)' Cod• Section 11488.5, A"• CA 92704 Dall)' Piiot June 15. 20, 1tt0
-VW 1967 BUG 11,tll "-.. tel a-•rl Ti~ s Terb~•ll 73 1 Inc .. 20373 Ac1cl1 St .. Senta 1nge County on June 15. you mull ni. •verified claim Thi• bu1lna11 I• con-FW·MIO - -rtlll.IC fl)JIC( Shallmar · •C Co 1 'M An• Height• CA 112707 1990 ,_ atallng your Inter"' In the ducted by: 1 llmllld partner· ---------Excel cond $2.400. hHlltftt PtllffM 110 111·2111 CA 92627 ' • 1 .... Jimmy c ir1 Boat, 20373 Publllhed Orange Cout Pfoperly. You mutt Illa thl1 lhlp
650-0403, 720-9790 110-llOO NOTICI OF This builnese 11 • Acecli St.. Senti • An• Dally Piiot June 20. 27. July cttlm in Ille Superior Court The reglatrant(•l com· 1----~;...;.;-.-..... __ .:r A~ICATION TO con Hefghll CA 112707 4, 11, 1990 of lhe County of Orange menc:ed to trenNCI bull·
Vvv 1970 Squareback. re-llLL ALCOHOLIC :iu;~!" ~~ ~;.:~~;v~dual Thi• 'bualneH 11 con-W025 •llhln thirty (30) d•Y• of tile MM u"dat' the llcUllou•
stored. second owner, , 81VIRAGll me"ceo 1~ ,,.naU, :rr;· ducted by· en lndlvldui l llrat publlcatlon of thl1 No-butln"' n11M ll1tld above TO ADMlfllTEA
recent rebuild Alf black lllOl 'll FNI II FllTIYI To wnom n Mey concern: ,,en under tile llcllt1c!; The reg lat rent com-•-ic MftJICE lie•. unleH you receive oo: June 11. 1990 ESTATE OF• Interior, tan paint, new Cassette. Charcoal color KEMNITZ. Jack r. 11 apply-business name filled lbova menc:.c1 to trenMct bull· ... -. nu IC1ual notice. (PINN uM Latry R. Gllell p.e.uE p ·
tires, rubber. seals. .....In SH extra cleanl (2NLg84) Ing to tile C>ap1r1men1 ol Al· on June 12 1990 nnt under Ill• llcllllous aTATWMINT OF Control Number 90-0008.) Tiii• atatement WH liled -LA •
chrome. and bra $ 1900. STK:r7896 IHI cohollc Beverage Conlrol to Tim Terb~sh bullritss nime or nemes AaAHDOt•INT OF You mull Mrve an endorMd •Ill! Ille County Clerk ol Or· AVERS 91&8
962· 1628 Sl,lll ..._ _ ... _ 1_ ...... 1 M ii •lcoholtc bevereges 11 This statement wu 11180 ll•led 1bove on 6/4/90 UM OF '1CTITIOUI C09)' of the Clllm on the DI•· ange County on June 11, PAMELA ••t ... rt -•• 400 M11n St 91lt>oa CA #Ith the c c Jim 9011 trlc:t Attorney of Orenge 1990 PAULINE AYERS
VW 1975 Bug White. runs .MJ .. 10 112661 w1111 "-'5" ON SALE •llO• couC:::;'~ i.;~n:' ~;· ·Tiiie 1111eman1 wu tiled Tll:u==gNAMlpereona Cou~ty (Aun: Thornu J P , 0 '•c ~ CASE NO. A113117 great. ucellent con· EIH1tiY1 P11ti10 llC BEER & WINE BOAT 1990 · #1111 the CouMy Clark ot Or-'lave Iba doned tile 1 Borne. Deputy Dlatrlct AJ· ublolhed range out To al helr9,
d111on $1.950 964-5917 110·1100 lloense(s) ,. ..... ,, 1nge county on June 4. 1118 Flct7t1ous Bus~::. torney) at 700 C1v1C Center Dell)' Pilot June 20. 27. July bene~~
VW t983 RABBll GTI, PubUalled Orenge Coast Pubhstted Orange Coast l990 Fuasl Name Advancea Siles 1no Drive w .. t. Senti Ana, CA 4• 11' 1990 conllngen
black 50,000 origin al F•I 'II Daily Pilot June 20. 1990 lllly p,101 Ju"8 20 27 Jul)' Published Orange Coast Marketing 27894 Cln· 92701 wt1111n ten (tO) days of W-030 pet'IOn9 • nwy
m iles S3 300 OBO CADILLAC '71 C D.V--W-021 11 1990 . . Dally Piiot J1me 20. 27, Jul)'i nemon Mluton V;ejo CA the filing of tile ctalm In Ille 04hefwlle be In
499.1493 Po wer wtndowsllocks, lllTAll ITOllY ' ' W-029 4· tl, l990 926112 · • Superior Courl/Clvll ttMt wil Of Of bo4tl
A/C AM/FM good V-8, A.IT, A.IC, loaded. A Ml.IC NOTICE w023 The Fictitious Bualness Dl~~o~•ilure 10 timely me rtlllC fl>TtCE of: PAMELA P.' AYERS
VY. 198 7 Cabrlolet transportation • Black Beaul)'I ("' 188596) K-5'11M NllC NOTICE N•me raferreo to ebove wu lnO MCura •'verified ctelm OAAMOI COUNTY rv8e~AMEl.A PAULINE
Black/black. extended $1000 OBO 723-1288 110,410 FICTJTIOUI auatNEll Pl&.IC NOTtCE ~~/~g ?.;~2county on 11111ng an 1nteretl In the auNMORCou..-T A PETITION ti. been
warranty alarm, ortglnal CADILLAC 79 Eldorado C.11faJ lo1ra NAME ITATIME.NT ACTITIOUa au ... 11 THE COSTA MESA ZON· Steven Wnt 21485 0111· property In 1119 Superior 1'0 Cl¥tc C9'Mf fMed bV DONAl.0 L.
owner always garaged. Diesel Sharp 61 K lll·2IOO The fOllOwlng persons are NAME ITATIMINT ING ADMINISTRATOR Will brooll Mln fOO Viejo CA Coun wlll rnult In the prop-Dr. W•t CROOKER In ttMt ~
excellent cond111on loaded $2500 OBO dOlng business as The loUowong person 11 RENDER A DECISION ON ~26112° • · erty being daclered or or-1Mt8 Ana, Court of Calibnla, COunty
$8 750 OBO 733-2401 644-6689 Continent al Mobtlehome dotng business IS MONDA y JUL y 02 1990 Thia buslneu II dared forfeit to Ille St111 of CA. ll701 of ORANGE Perk Assoc1a1es 3187-H SKIN WORKS TATTOO. ORAS SOONASPOSSIBLE ducted b a limlle:part~':: Calllornl• Ind dillrlbuted Pat11Joner Wllltem N. THE · PETrTtON
V W 1989 FOK GL CADILLAC 84 Factory llLPI AtrwllyAvenue Costa Mesa ,313 E Balboa Blvd . Balboa THEREAFTER. ON THE ship y pur~an11otlleprov111onsof Woode.Jr '9QIJ9Sla that DONALD L.
BARGAIN' Under low converttble, mock top Locked In storage garage CA 112626 . CA 92661 FOlLOW1NO ITEM Tiiie 111tement was filed Heallll end Setety Coda Sec· R11~no1"t VlvlaMa CROOKER and
blue book $5,950 Mtnl 44K, black/red. d1g11ai '89 MUSTANG Gt with John Hancock Mutual Lile Aroee LYM Allen. 313 E I ZONING ACTION #1111 the Cou"IY Clerk ol Or· llon 114811 without lurtller Urllcll 000.' CHRISTINA IRWIN
cond111on. all the goodies• dash fully loaded MINT 1 1 d 1 lnsura"ce Comp1"y. A Balboa Btvo · Balboa CA ZA-90· 11 FOR DOMINIC 1nge County on Ju"e ts, noptlceubll~~rolng,1 Coaat c ... ,.~~17659 APPEl. be ltppOinted • 964·7362 Must see• SI 1.SOO 534-2042 ots o extras an on y Messacllusetts corPOr1111on 92661 CASCIO FOR A MINOR 1990 ..,....., nge _,.... pe190nal r..-nta""9 to 4,900 mt. $12,000 Ran-Jolln Hancock Place Tiits buStness ts co"· CONDITIONAL USE PER· Steven West Dally Pilot June 13. 20, 27, NOTICll Yeu ,....,.._.. adml,._ fie ...... of
VW Convertible Super.
Bee lie 1974 new
motor/lop, $3.800/0 BO.
854·69651213-654-6540
CADILLAC '86 som. 645-6693 Suite 200 Two Copley ducted by an tnd1v1dual MIT TO ALLOW A SHARED Publlalled Orange Co111 1990 tued. Theoewt ma, ... lhe decedtnt.
Beautiful Sable J EEP 1977 CJ7 Place. Boston. MA 02117 The oegistrant(s) com· DRIVEWAY IN CONJUNC-Dall)' Pilot June 20. 27. July W·Otll =~ .. ~ ~t THE PETITION
SEil. I YILLE H1m1wooo Park Partners menced to transact busl· TION WITH THE CO ._. --1CMI ,._ ...,.,... a•-.i... ... I Black, convert harSd top. Lt.. a C111ttor"111 11m11a..: ness unoer Ille lic1tt1ou1 N· 4. 11. 1990 ___...... wltttm ao::r:,;,Reacl ·•..-~ ........ , .,
$9 900 646 4949 r ns must sell 3 000 " u\I STRUCTION OF TWO RESI· W028 --• adi'nlnlaatr ttMt _..,. • or u . . p1rtnersh1p bu&1ness mJme ltSled above DENTIAl UNITS LOCATED P\8.JC fl)TJCE IMlf ~!'-..._.. ,.:_ ... under l'9 l~ldent VW '85 JETTA . 548-3959 OBO. 723·4083 3187·H Airway Avenue. on Nov 15 1989 .t, T 197 1 AND 19751 y0uw1.,, 10...., ,,...,. ~~ of ~
4 Or. snrt. ale. excel cond, --------• LEISE l UUll Costa Mesa c1111rornia Aroee Allen .t,NAHEIM STREET IN AN R2 K l7M vice of 111 11torney In thit Act. (This auchotl1y .. $6.000 080. 640·8044 926?6 ThlS statement was tiled ZONE ENVIRONMENT AL NOTICI OF m1ttar, you allould do IO allow fMt pereon.i ClllLUC 'll FH LIU Thll bustneu ,5 con-N•th the Counly Clerk ot Or· DETERMINATION EX· JESKO MIZUM PURIUANT promptly to 11111 your writ· ntpreeema!M to ._ Autos DotMstk 9300 U IEYILU 1211.10 Pll ... Tll ducted by a 101"1 venture IJ,noe County on June 15. EMPT DORISE L J ES TO HIA.LTH AND ten rnponM.11 any. may be mainy llC1lon9 wllhouC
Fulllact equ1p .m1ntcon. 60moclosedendlease . Tne regostra"t com-990 IFTHEABOVE ACTION(SI . KO, IAFITYCOOINCTION ltled onllmtt obtanng court aoonw.i 1110 CllYILEll d111ont {236479) ta ol s18 75 ' minced 10 1ransac1 l>uSt· F4e0910 IS/ARE CHALLENGED IN pa.seed away June 18. tt47tlt,_ AND Avta<M I.lated Ila lldo <19-8elore rMing ~ .,,.Y S... x per mo eu unde• the l1c1111ous Pubhsned Ora"ge Coast COURT, THE CHALLENGE 1990 Survived by NOTICE OF INTINDID mend100 El trlbunl l pueoe ~I = * UCE * I 111,111 $184 70 to s1art(1nc1 $750 business "ame 0< Mmes Dairy Pilot June 20 27 July MAY BE LIMITED TO ONLY daughter s JaC'k ·..,, ,.Ofu:lrTIMI PURIUANT oacldlr con1r1 Ud tin tu· how9Wf ttMt
Atr pts p/b, Ult 2 5 Iller factory reba1e) Total of 1ts1ee1 above on 06t04t90 4 11 1990 THOSE ISSUES RAISED IN Cassidy a~d Jerr1y" TO .. ALTH ANO ~~·.·~tr°'o .!!_ue30Ud0,~!" repr..tcaw. wll . be le ul eng i ne 5 CrHitrllW pymntsS19122 End of H UN1 WOOD PARI< W-027 WRITTE N COR · IUITY ......,._ .,_, .,. .... ~lredtD=nobto
SPCl (8205-1193681 111-3 111 term purchase oplton PARlNERS UD a Call· RESPONDENCE DE· Saunders. 5 grand-COOlllCTION lH II lnlorm1c1on qua lnter..-d ur-.
11230 $44 12 76 Sub1ect to tornoo tomotl!'<I partnership Ml.IC NOTICE LIVERED TO THE ZONING children. Mrs. Jesko tMll.A •lgs~ Ultld a.... IOllcH el h9y hew nob Of
HBeachChrysler credot approva l By Richard Hall & As· .t,DMINISTRATOA PRIOR was L ibrarian a t On Facruary II. 1990. 11 conM1.n ... 1..,... ... 11 coneeneedtDIW~
•,.2 -•l (Stk:9582) soc1a1es Inc ii Cahfornoa FICTITIOUS aUSINEIS ro THE ABOVE DATE M V Cos 4109 SN.1hor1, Apt B. New· ,.. ""'un ---.--o,,, ~) The lndepeodeot .. ·-· c1m 'H ClYlllEll All, •• Ill Ullll 0<pora11on a general part· NAM( STA'TDl(NT FOR FURTHER INFOR· esa erde. ta po<1 Beadl. CaMlornla, the .. 11 uunto. debtrll heoerlo actlr*lill8tion ~
1110 FIRTM y BE c c RYS E e• 1he tonow1ng persons are MATION ON THE ABOVE M esa and F ountain pr()(>t<ty oescnbacl 11 tnmedletementa. de "'a Wll be grwieed uNee9 an
r111A Ellf ITATlllWllll H AH H l R R1cn11dA Hall President dOlngbusinessas 4PPLICATIONS -rELE· Valley Libraries S1.200US CUARENCY m•"11"~.:.,,•u ,,,'11P'.!_e_!!! Inter.-. per90n ._an
Luxury equipment pkge Auto. air cruise. power 142·0111 Tho• Slatemenl was toled Oeltle. 11665 Quartz PHONE 754-5245 OR CALL M be r N . WU MNZed 6tirauan1 10 llCr .... •Y e,.un•. ,,_...... objecton lo .. petition
P s alarm 33 lltre V·6 locks 1111 (2HPE l43I 11ntneCou"tyCler~of01-Ave . Fot.mtaon \/alley CA A.T THE OFFICE. OF THE <'m r O alive Health l"dSeletyCodeSac· -reg11tr1d111tempo. ~ ltlOW9 aood «**
ultr a drive 4 spd 1•111 SELL nge Coun1y on June s :12708 PLANNING DIVIS ION Daughter s of-tht""tron 1147 1111488 {by th• 1-TOTHE.R£SPONOENT Yltf'f tie oouif~ noc
auto (72714 7) • 1990 N1101ne Brenema" t 1665 ROOM 200. 77 FAIR DRIVE'. Golden W est, Costa Newport Beach Police De-Tiie petitioner llu flied • gr.nt ttMt au~. 111141 Tlltt4 " ~" F~ Ouartz. Founta•" I/alley. CA COS TA M ESA CALI· M W • Cl b panment petition concerning your A HEARING on fie
8 ' •rt 1 11 Pubh5hea Orange CoHI 92708 FORNIA esa omen s u · Tne property wH Mired merrlege II you l•IJ to Ille 1 pe•tlon will be "9lcf on JUiy
H EACH CHRYSLER 1•2-0010 through classified .. 11~ P1101 Junti 12 1~ 26. This bu11ness " con• PubllaheCI orenge Co•st She also had been w1111'"pee'10 111eged vlol· raeponM '°"1111n 30 daya 01 5. 1990 •t ,,45 PM in 1•2·0IS 1 142-1111 Ul't' 3 1990 ducted by en 1nd1v1ouaJ Daily Piiot June 20. 1990 named Costa M esa 1t1on(1) of Section(•) 11351 Ille d•I• that 11111 aummoni Oeot. 3A toceeed .ii 1oo IJlll••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••ITl-5l8l7•1T1111e.re1g111s11r1a1"1•c1o1m1-••••••••W~·~0~20a W oma n o f th e Year. ol tile He11111 end Safety l~~Yt!n,X::JC:;d~ CMc: Cemar DrM W..C. Fu J · 'll Cooe You are lleraby s.nta An8 CA '2701 n era services WI notified 11111 tne Dlllrlct Al· court m•y enter a judgment IF YOU OBJECT TO
be h eld Thl.'"Sday tornay 01 OrengeCounty1111 contelnl"g Injunctive or ttMt gl'Wltlna of ttMt petition
June 21. 1990 at 3:00 lnlU1ted proceeding• to tor-other orders concerning you ahoutd' iippeet at 119
•
WE WILL Daily Pilat
ELL INi~EPEN°D1ENi
Costa Mesa NEWS
U n Newport Beach NEWS
I{. Corona Del Mar NEWS
AR ~::~a~~~r 3 weeks
your car isn't sold, we will run your ad
for free! .
NO STRINGS ATTACHED.
Just call us.to renew your ad.
Au~ .10 words for 3 weeks at S 18.50, 55¢ each
addrt1?nal word. Must be prepaid. A word constitutes
anything that has a space between it.
For individuals only
NAME-------------PHON~-------------
ADDRESS CITY--------:--------
STATE ZIP----CHECK #---AMOUNT ENCL. ---
MASTERCARDNISA# ------------EXPIRATION DATE ----
MESSAGE:
I R&Milmwwwnwk I ·:
I l I l :1
I I I 1 :
I I I l I
MAIL TQ DAILY PILO't UD WUT I.AV STaEFT, COITA MESA, CA ... ATTNt NO STalNGS AlTAOfED I ~-·----------------------------... . ------------------------.
P .M . at Pacifo: V iew tell the ebova-011.acrlbed dlvltlon ol property. tPOU••I i!iMd ..... your . property purauent t6 Health 1141ppor1. clllld cullocly. child OI .. wrlntn
M e m o r 1 a 1 P a r k end Setety Code Section 111por1. 11tornay '"'· co111, wtth l'9 court
M ortuar y C hapel. 11488.4 ind auch otller relief•• m1y be ttMt hMttng Y041r
3500 Pacific· View Dr You are tnllructld thet II be vr•ntld by lhl cour1 Tiie . ..,._.nc» m.y .be In .• you dellre to contest Iha tor· g11nl1hment ol weget, tall· ~Of bV yoou; ~ N~wp ort B each . ,ellure ol thl• property. r"got moneyorproperty or IF Yc:Af ARE A
Frien ds may can at purauenllo Heallll end S•I• Olller court 1utllorlt1d CREDfTOR Of •
the M ortuary for vis ty COO• Section t 1488 5 proceedings may alao result. cootlogent c:ndllOf' of fie
i tation W edn esday. you mull Ille• ver1lled c1111~ ~OJ. 111::._ Cteftl -dKll•ad, ~ mult .. 11111ng your 1nter•t In the -l _. • • •w· your a.Im WMtl tie court
(today) from 4:00 to property You mutt Ille 11111 Dotie hftl., °= Claftl and m.11 1 oopy '° fie 8:00 P.M Bunal at m 1n tile SupertOf coun Wllllem N oods Jr. pet90nal ,_,,....,....
Pac1fa· View M ern-ot Ille County of Orange 25381 Alic11 Pkwy. Suue aoooln-.d by "-cour1
w1th1n thirty C30l oeys of the 347. lagune Hiiia, CA 112653 ~in four monthe from oraal Park. P ac1(1c first put>ttc:auon 01 11111 No-Publllhed Or•nge Co.st ttMt delle of tlr9C leeullnce of
View M ortuary. OJ. lice unleH you receive D111)' P1101 May 30, June 8 leneis • ~ In
rectors. 644-2700 IC1ual not1Ct (Ple•M uM 13· 20· 1990 MCton 9100 of fie
E!immliiilmm•ISuperlor Court Number Wllff Calitomill Prot.11 Code. II 61-67·90 I You mull MrVI The lime tor Mina cMln1I
an enoorMd copy of tne rtlll.IC NOTlC( wil noc •!!Ph bebe tour claim on Ille OlllrlCt Al· I monlls from fie hearing
torney of Orange County "*-IC NOTICI di• nobd ebo119.
•liliiililiiiiiiiillim!(Attn TOOi Borrla. Deputy NOTtCI OF MOUllT ! YOU MAY EXAMINE .. Olllrtct Attorney) 11 700 FOA QUOTATIONI the lie hepC by ttMt court If
Civic Center Drive Wnt. R.,,o , I~ •• a per.on
Santa An•. CA 112701 w11111n NO . ...._ interested in lhe "'8te
ten ( 10) day• ol Ille llll"g ol Not tea 11 hereby given lhll I y"41 may file Wfth fie oouri
1111 clllm In lhl Superior the City of Hu"llngton a ~I ~I bf
Courl/CMI Olvo11on BHCll, C1lllornl1, lnvlt.. S~ NOC1oe of fie ating
Tl!• tallura to timely Ille quot1Uon1 tor REMODEL of an Jnwntoty .,.a
and secure e verified c111m OF 111 FLOOR POLICE DE· mppraial of ee1aC. -· 111t1ng en 1nter .. 1 In 111a PARTMENT. ' or of any petition or ••••••••II property tn Iha Superior Coplel of Ille Request tor llCCOUnl .. provtded In "' Court will r11ull In Illa prop. Ouot1t1°"1· R F 0 . No. MCtion 1250 of 119 ... 1111.. erty l>etn~ declereCI or or· 9().000-0628 m•r. be ob-Celitornill Prob8te Code A
llU 1•1 ... 1, ed lor ell to tt.e S1111 ol 111neo from tile o lice of tile Requeet bf Soecial Notice
•••• ,_ C11ttom11 1no dlllrtbuted Purcll111ng Meneger tor the I form le 1vallebte fflOm 119
M0t1u1ty • Ctlapet purau1n1 to Ille pro11111on1 ot City ol Hunttngton Beecll, court~
Cremation Htatlll and S1111y COOe SK· 2000 Mat" StrMt. P 0 Bo• Atlof!"9Y_ few P9tltlonw:
1 10 Br08Chrray loon 11489 wlll'IOUI l\Jrlller 190, Huntington Beecll. C1li· 1 GEORGE R. HAN. INC.
C notice or !!earing Io r n 11 9 2 8 48. (7 1 4 I 2140 hsl Cotonedo
oe1a Meea Publllhed oranr coast 539.5221 auo1111on1 111a11 """ 1
•
.............. ,Deny Pilot June t . 20. 27. be aubm11teCI on tile City Anehelm •CA l2IDI 1990 form, end lhlll be prepared I Ortnae C:O.I CMlfy Pilot
W-018 on eccord1.nce Wiii! tiler• IJuN~.21.27.1090
STARTING A NEW BUSINESS??
The Leg11 Department at lhe
Daily Pilot 11 pfeaMd to an-
nounce a new Mrvfce now 1v111-
1ble to new bull,,......
We will now SEARCH the
name for you al (10 ••tra charge, ·
and uve you the time .and the
trip to the Court HouM In Santa
Ana. Then. of courM. after the
search la completed we will file
your flct1t1ou1 bulineat name
statement wtth the County Clerk.
publish ~ a week for four
weeks 11 required by law and
then file your proof of publl·
c1tlon with.the County Clerk
Pie... atop by to file your
flctllloua bulineaa 1tattmen1 11
the Dally Pilot L,al Depart-
ment. 330 W"' ay. Coata · M .... California. If you can not
atop by, pteaM call us
at (714) 842·4321. Ex1en1ion ~.
3115 or 318 and we will make •
1rr1ngement1 for you to handle
thl• procedure by mall.
If you should have any further
quatlona. s>te•M call u• and we
will be mort than gt1d to 111ltt
you.
Good luck In your
new bualneaall
,