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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1986-05-06 - Orange Coast PilotTUESDAY, MAY 6, 1986 · Council gives itself a ·r&ise had to fly to Illinois Sunday foUowina a death in his family, City M2nqer Allan Roeder said. No public comments were offered on the council's action. recent tepalatioo. C.O.ta Mesa's pey incrate muat be approved a lleCOnd lime by tbe couocil and uoderao a 3Q.day waitiOI period before tat.ins eff'ect. FAIR Car pool lane foes cla1m accidents increased 77% BJ USA MAHONEY ................ Hornbuckle, Nonna Hertzog and Donn Hall aave preliminary ap- proval t0-1l 47,,crcern-nlkc," wb.lcb would boost the council's monthly salary from $408 to $600 -the ma.iumum aJlowed Costa ·Mesa by state law. State auidelines approved in 1984 pennit councilJ in cities with-POSHl: latIOoS6etwecn 7J,OOO and I SQ,000 to raise theirbese monthly salaries up to $600. C.osta Mesa'• population 11 abouf g'6,SOO. Many of the council membcn -COoc:eded '1wsy-~foftable­ sivin1 tbemeelves a (liee, but their city duties were takina time •WIY A aroup oppoeed to experimental car pool l4net on the Cotta Meta Freeway claim• that eccidtat rata bave incrtaled 77 peroen& llDCe the _ mtricltd ute la.Da-.,.,.. lM1alled lue No+ember: --. . Cou nci I members Ma ry Cout A 14-year-old lrvlneglrl aald she lied about her age to a man accused of -motesttngher ;/810 Painter's first aid training aavea toddler from • chOklng to death./ A3 California Deukmejlan has until Thursday to take stand on offshore oil drllllng ptartand Bemoeratlc legislators urge him to do so./A7 World Soviets admit radioactive contamination has spread beyond evacu- ation area./ AS Sports Marina High football coach Dave Thompson has submitted a letter of reelgnatlon. /81 Entertainment Where will the escalating salaries of today's movie stars stop? /84 J[ Advtce and Games Bulletin Board Business Claaaifled Comics Death Notices Entertainment Opinion Police Log Public Notices Sports Televlslon Weather BS A3 A9-10 87-9 86 89 84 A6 A3 89-10 81-3 84 A2 Jurjgets witness ·testimony froml980 By LISA MAHONEY Ot ... Oel!J ..... ...., Thea1~ear-old \Clllmonyofa key prosecution witness in the fint kid- napping and murder trial of Rodney James Alcala was read to an Oranac County Superior Coun jury Monday after a Judge ruled that emotionally troubled Dana Cnippa wu un- available to testify at Alcala's retrial. Prosecutor Tom Goethals and a court reporter took turns reading portions ofCrappa's 1980 testimony which linked Alcala t<1 the wash where 12-ycar-ol<i Robin Samsoc's remains were found. The testimony was read after Judge Donald McCartin ruled against a defense motion urging that the IJ"anscnpts not be prtsented to the j ury. Crappa. 26, on11nally testified that she saw a man who appeared to be .Alcala "forcefully stccnng" a blond Council members Dave Wheeler and Arlene Schafer were abJent. Wheeler had asked the city staff to put the pay raise on the aaenda, but Police chase -enasin crash By TONY SAAVEDRA OfhOel!JNM ..... A truck sma.shed into .several parked can at a Costa Mesa gasoline station Monday while Oecin& from authorities during an undercover narcotics operation that nened a S•h million worth of cocaine. The driver was arrested at the Bristol Strcet Texaco station and a passenger was nabbed about IS minutes later, hidinJ in a woodpile at a nearby house, pohce said. Two other men had been arrested minutes earlier before the mile-long. high-speed chase from South Coast Plaza parking lot to the p.s station. Narcotics aicnts confiscated about 2.2 pounds-of cocaine-, with a street value of $500,000, af\er tailin1 the suspected drug dealers to the Costa Mesa shopping center1 Montebello Detective Alan.Price wd. The auidelines require that the pay increase be done before the end of 1986. Annual salaries can be raised thereafter by only S percent -the same limit used by councils before the ..Eollowi~cek-Hlvestiptien, - the eiabt-man team &om the Loe Antclcs County Sheritrs and the Mo n!ebello Pohce dep&11ments also scarched three homes in Santa Ana. Monterey Park, and Upland. They recovered $1 ,000 in cash, bandauns and a sawed-off shotgun believed to be stolen, Price said. Narcotics detectives picked up William Xavier Gonzal~, 37, of Upland and John Garcia. 32. of Whittier at South Coast Plaza after watchinJ them make an alleged drug transacttpn with two men io a Ford Ranier pickup, Price said. from their jobs. , • Hornbuckle, who eatimaaes that lbe work.a JO boun a week on citY. buaioeu, calaalated bet council salary ·at a pocketful of cbaqe per hour. • ~-PATlllKS/A2) The claim is in llwp conuut to Slate Departmeot of Transportation statiatice that show a decreue Ul ecc:ideftts since the eApenmeat bepn. Bill Wanf. -a member of Driven for ~way S.!etyJ laid be compared the number of accicknu reported dunna the fll'lt 13 weeks of car pool lane operations with a three-year avc:r"lle taken from an unrelated Department of Transportation ~port. (PIWM ... CAil POOL/A2) Valley's teacher conflict grow~ng BJ PAUL ARCllIPl..EY ... PHIL SNICIDEBMAN .... ..., ...... Tension between Foun\ain Valley School District trustees and teacbm iocreued Monday when the district obtained a court order to halt picket- in1 outside boa.rd membcn' homes and the teacbcn vowed to UIC other atratesies to win cont.ract coo- Cietlions. The dispute is tied to ddficuh coot.ract n~tiauons that concluded A.pril 22 when the the elementary school district's trustees im- pk:mented a contract without the · approval of teacben. Terichen bad worked for about t 0 moo tbs wnbout a new c0ntnct. • Monday Oranae County Superior Coun J udae Harmon G. Scoville !-;.~-="'-=--I-t.UUed I peclimi; . . . ~ tacbcn not to cootanue pick· etllle outlide .,.,.... bomet. Asaittanl Superinteadenl Roben S.m pica aaid the judlie naJed t.he pic:kctina violatet trusua' coaathu· tiooa.1 riabt to privacy. The F"ounta.in Valley .Education Auoaation, representiq about JOO district teaeben, in turn bu filed a unfair labor practices c.haraie apinst the district with lbc Public EmpJoy. ment Rclatioos Beard· The district has not been officially notified of the cbarJC, Sampica said. "We feel we have not oommiued any unfair P.ractJces," he added. The truck fled from the pari.ing lot. zooming south on Bear Street and (Pleue .ee CHAS&/ A2) Ja.ter Lala Arlu, 34, la an•ted by Loe AJICel~ County aberlfr• depad• after be ......................... and a MCODd 8Upecf all .. edlf fted aatbortdee m•ldn• a aareodce .... ,. Meanwhile, about I 00 instructors heard encouraaina words from Cali- (Jlfeue ... T&ACDU/A2) RodnflJ Jam• Alcala girl into the brush by a roadside turnout m the foothills near Sierra Madre on June 20.1979, the same day that the Huntington Beach girl disap- peared. Samsoc's remains weft' later found near where Crappa reported seeing the pair. Crappa's testimony 1s considered cruciaJ to the prosecution's case since she 1s the only one who has placed Alcala at the scene of the k1llina. (Pl .... 1eeW1TNB89'/A2) Body of nude woman found JD. Irvlae By PAUL OCBIPLEY Ot .. Olllf .......... Irvine police say the woman whose nude body was found Monday in a Northwood home by a real estate •Jent may have died under suspicious circumstances. Police have not confinned the identity of the woman, described u a Caucasian in her 20s. The body was found in the house at 13 Encina by a real estate aacnt who called police at S: 11 p.m., Irvine LL Mike White said. The aacnt's name was not released. Police would not comment on the cause of death or call the case a homicide until the coroner completes an investiaation, White said. How- ever, he said there were "suspicious circumstances surroundin1 the death." White would nc;>t eonfinn an initial report that the woman appeared to have been blud&eoned. lnvestiptori were at the home today lookina for clues after obta.inina a search warrant Monday n\&hL After the body was discovered, police walked door-«Hioor, iot.erViewm1 Developer must pay $2 million to Old World store owners in HB .. By ROBERT BARltER OfhOlllfNM ..... DevcJopcr .Josef Bischof wu or- dered Monday to pay $2.4 million in damaaes to store owners and the busmc.ss asS0C1at1on at the Old World Shopping Center in Huntinaton Beach. . Bischof, who was accused of fraud and conductioa a "rca&n of terror" · that included the alleged 11nain1 of Nazi sonp late at night, said today the trial was a sham and that he will appeal. "It was a b11 sham and most of 11 1s lies," he said. "Their Jewish lawyer called me a Nw. It was not a fair tnal Where 1s the Justice in the Amencan system.? "h 's not fau. I try to bluld somethina and create JObs and t act such blame. I prefer the Nu1s to what 1s going on here." Bitchof, who ia1d he came to this oountry from Gennany in 1952. must pay $777,SOO to the 12 individual store ownen and the same amount to the Old World Owners AUOClataon. plus another SS 16,000 in actual damqes to the as50eiat1on. Bitchof was accused of under· cstunarin& the squa~ footaae of h1~ restaurant and beer prden and of not e>evin• his faiT shatt 1n aucssmept (Pl--_. TRIAL/ A2) ne1ahbors. White wd the owner of the home was reportedly on vacation in Mex- ico. The s1 o&)e-story home on the Enema cul-de-sac north of Irvine Boulevard and Culver Drive wu for sale. A Century 21 for sale sip is posted out front and a lock box iJ attached to the rtSl&nce. Mooring policy rocks bOat ID NB By S\JSAN HOWLETT Ol .. Olllf,... ... Thlit's a httJe boat in Newpon HarbcW secured between two cant and a pt~ of rope Althouah 1t hatdty appears to be worth more than S 100, the precious mooring makes the tiny vessel's value I 00 times that much. The harbor's moonna wan arc a fact·of sea hfe in Newpon Beach, but the rules of bettle may be altered by a proposed city ordinance. The amendment under consider· (Pleue eee 11001URO/A2) State's top woman. Surf er chasing waves and degree LAuu MEii Police investigating r.etarded boy's death By 1'08EkT IAR~ER ................ Oepenmcnt of Education at I S2Sl V1ctona Lane 1n Hunllnaton 8cacb C•tchtng the bt1 wave isn't Ahsa Schwarutetn's dream. It's catchin1 the naht wave. In Austnha recently, she was able to do 1ust that -enabllna her to eam fourth place in the World Tour of the APOC1at1on of urllna Profe 1onals In her aecond year on the pro- fessional c1rtu1t, the 21 -year-old Lqunan W1S the mo,t improved woman surfer m the world. She 11 aJso the hiahcst rankma C~hfom1an woman surfer. Schwanste1n m1aht have placed even h1ghtt in the world standinp. Fresh from takinaa teeond place m tt.e Forcnz.a World C'up at Hale1wa, Hawah. hwan.steih s uffered a surf- in1 accident that romld h~ return to C1hfom1a for knee SUJ'ICIY. A ftcr nea.rly a six weeks of rchab1 h- atton sbc rcJOincd the tour in Austral- ia whtte she placed third 1n four consccuuve conte ts. finally ranlnna her fourth 1n the world And an unluc:k)' draw pilled her qainst the renlun1 world champion, Aonda's Fneda Zambe. 1n all four contnu. Two Austrahan , Jodi Coopa from Albtny and Pam Bur· ndae o( idn~y. didn't have lO ftcc Zambl unuJ the final . Ye& Schwarute1n 11 anythin,but a full-nme bcac bum Wben sbt 11 pot chaslna waves, shc'scha11naadqm:. She ha• the diat1M'tion of beina the only profes lonal woman surfer who also attends collqt rull 0u me. Althouah she has had to skip IChool to compete, she stall plans to anduate from UCLA only a ~ar behind K'hedu~ with a deatte 1n IOC'I010lY PEOPLE IN THE News and an emphasis in buaines Summer tehoof hu been a mutt "I want to padua~ from UCLA and ute the dqrec funbcr dov.-n the hoe. I bopc to aet a job in the aurlina industry or teachi~" &he Mid. The demands of dual catttn can be overwhelm1nt at t1m and often leave liule ume for 00U1Juns ha (Pleue ... TOP/A2) (t Hununaton Beach police arc 1n· vC"Stipuna the death of a 14-ycar-old 1evcrely retarded boy who d9td Sunday, three day af\cT ht was physically rntra1ned by a female teac:her at a Hunttnatoo Beach school. Lt Jim Walker d1 lbled Monday. The dad bely was 1denufied u Garth Pico, a resident of F11rv1~ state ho1p1taJ i1) Costa Mesa. who was bused to the-0111 Educauon Cn\tcr opcnted by the Oian County P1co rtportedly "ICled up" on lbe bus on his way to achoo1 Thunday "lOmtnj. aocordma to Walker. Tbc boy then becam~iolent 1n the classroom. allc ly throwina f'Um1turc and auau una othtt yoq. ten -• l"bc teachtt reponCldly cm~ 1pccial restraJnlftl techru~ua '°keep the boy from burtina bumdf ud others. Wal 1d. Plto, wbo WU dacribed 11 &mall , ~ ... OSATll/U) / M • QNnOe CGlllt DA~Y PILOT/ Tueed-.y, Mey e. 1888 . TOP WOMAN SURFER.CHASING DREAMS .•. holaAl wrfina wu,. . "But I eltjoy bavina two separate lives. It aJve1 me a broader per- spective," she said. Jim Toomey, Schwanstein's hiJh ICbool IOCX'ler coach aod the duutor of student activities and athletics at l.quna Beach Hip School, thinks 1hc didn't surface as the world champion because of ber dual com- mitment. "h's impossible. You have to go for it and be in school or surf." be said. But Toomey admits if Scbwarzs- tein continues to dro~ classes only durina world competition. lhe'll stay in the beat. "Next year she will win It all, there as no doubt aboutjt. She has made an impact on the judges," be said. "She is the direct antithesis of what you'd think surfing is. She is one of the top athletes in this whole county." Schwarzstcin had a 3.8 grade point av.craac in hi&tuchooJ when she took the 1980 World Amateur Cham- pionship and now maintains a 3.0 at UCLA. While on tour Schwarzstein spends five or sill hours a day paddling the waves on her board. When in Laguna Beach during the summer she m~ only surf a few times a week, thou on weekends she hits the water or five hours each day. To make up for lost time on the waves and to prepare for the 1986-87 A<\P Wnrlti Tour th11t N-g1f\c in CHASE ••• J'romAl east on Baker Strcc1 at about 60 mph with unmarked poHcecars m pursuil. said Costa Mesa traffic officer John Pherrin. Hovering overhead were two helicopters from the Los Angeles County Sheritrs and Costa Mesa Police depanments. The fleeing truck turned into a Texaco station at 2985 Bristol St. and crashed into 1hrce construction ve- hicles and an air compressor before coming 10 rest in a concrete planter. No one was in the parked cars. although at least 10 men were working nearby. "The people were all running for cover," Pherrin said. Dnver Florencio de la Vega, 39, of Monterey Parle, was arrested at the gas station. Passenger Javier Luis Anas. 34, of Santa Ana fled two blocks before he was captured by Costa Mesa police, Sgt. Matt Collett said. All four men were free today on S50,000 bail. Enaland this Auaust, She eliminates supr from her diet and ha.t been ridlna a bicycle to rebuild stttnath in her injured knee. .. And I look a lot at tbc men's maneuvers," she said. Competition for the best waves in the heavily-used local waten can be touah at umcs, cspeciaUy in a male- dominaied spon.1 But the nine-year veteran modestly said. "I can bold my own. . "l have met a lot of guys surfing, and I have found them Mlly sup- portive overall and they want to know how )'.OU arc doing (in competition). And if you are in (>Osition for a wave, they let you have it." But at must be the love of the sport that draws Schwanstein to continue because the winnings can be little compared to other spon s. She won S 1,200. for talcina second place in the World Cup but said the average wfnntngs tbr a year of surfina are only between $8,000 and $20,000. And when sponsors requtre win- nings to be used to help pay travel expenses the savings account can dwindle fast. Last yur her sponsors paid for all of her trips while this year's sponsors asked her to pitch in on travel. "There isn•t that much money in surfing but it is enjoyable and I am able to travel around the world." she confessed. · TEACHER CONFLICT .•• F rom A l fomia Teachers Association Presi- den\ Marilyn Bittle at a geoeral membership meeting Monday, ac- cording to Thomas Conry, president of the Fountain Valley Education Assocation. "She assured us that teachers throughout the state suppon us in our effons to get the Fountai n Valley School District to bargain in good fai1h," Co!lfY said. Association spokeswoman Kathy Wri&ht said Bittle told teachers they will nave to fight. .. T eachen are angered by the dictatorship in the district." Wright said. "Marilyn just returned from Russia, and she equated our school board ~·th what she saw over there. She tho t s · ening that it's happening here.·· Teachers also anted up $2,000 for a political action committee that aims to elect two board members in No~mber 1987, Conry said. Wnght ~ teachers will attend Thursday riigllt's school board meet- ing to lobby trustees to return to the ' bargainmg table. If the t¥>ard refuses. teachers will renew their picket lines. Wright said they would picket schools. district offices and trustees' work places. The contract implemented April 23 included an immediate 5. 7 percent salary mcrcase and a lum~sum bonus of S 1,200 to $1 ,400. A second salary increase of 5. 7 percent goes into-effect Juty I. followed by 6 percent increases each of the follow~ ang two years. Teachers disagreed on the amount of the pay raises, on the right for teachers to choose an insurance carrier and on teacher transfer poli- cies. Burt R eynolds sued LOS ANGELES (AP) -A movie director filed a $25 million lawsuit against actor Bun Reynolds, claiming Reynolds punched him in the face and knocked him unconscious during production of a new film called "Heat." DEATH OF RETARDED BOY PROBED ••• l"romAl for has age, Slopped brca1~ing after he was restrained. He received emerg- ency treatment from paramedics before being taken to Humana Hospi- tal in Westminster. Doctors declared the boy brain dead Fnday and he was taken offLife- supporting respirators Sunday, Walker said. After conducting an auto_psy. the Orange County Coroner's office ruled Monday that the boy died of asph~· • 1at1on. Walker said there have been no arrests. but poli~ are treating 1hc incident as a homicide investigation because the boy allegedly died at the hands of another person. Walker said that a choke hold was not used by the teacher but he declined to name the teacher or elabora1e on the technique she used. · Names of the boy's parents were withheld pending the ouicome of the invesugauon, Walker said. Hugh Kohler. director of Fairview state hospital. said the boy had been a resident for about two years and may have had anti-social behavioral traits. There are about I ,OOS full-time pauents at Fairview; about 200 of them are manors. Kohler. who's been director for about nme months, said that to has knowled~e there have been no deaths at Fairview while a young resident was being restrained. "Each staff member receives train· ing(on proper restraining techniques) every year," he said. In cases of outbursts, he said several staff mem- bers hold down a patient by the arms, legs or waist unt-il the episode subsides. "We make sure it's not d ifficult (for the patient) 10 breathe." he said. Kohler ·said he has n9t been advised on techniques used by the teacher. Gill School Pnncipal John Wright referred all questions to a county press liaison who was unable to provide any information. PAY HIKE APPROVED .•. F rom Al "At $600, this will stall be volunletr work," she said this morning. "We've all felt the pinch. If we expect to attrac1 quality people, we need to make sure they aren't financially penalized.'' Hall explamed that he is as c1v1c- mmded as any elected official. "But when c1v1c duties stan takrng money ou1 of your pocket...," he said. "There are a 101 of people who just plain can't afford 11." Although the council approved a 5 percent increase an 1985. it was the first pay raise the members took in four or five years. Roeder said. WITNESS' TESTIMONY READ TO JURY •.. Fro m Al incident, he said. .. Cool, gHsty winds kiss Coast A WM1Mr tront bMttftQ ~ COOi elr from off the Oregon co.-WM ~ ~ 8outhem Celttome tOdey. bringing outty wtnda, clouda, and • Chance of ~ In the north«n deeltta. Sklee ..,. ~*' to rem.In pertly dOudy UVough tht night, but !<> dew Wedneedey, aocordtng to the Nltlonal WMther s.Moe. Wind• ... •xpteted to guat to 26 mph In oouia1 .,. ... todey. Ak>na tht 0rtnge Coeet It wtll be pen.zc,. otoucty tonight with aunny tklle w~ Gutty weetwtv 15 to 25 mph at tlmee. Hight In the mtd to low 70. et the bW:hte. Low. rn the upper 40e to upper SO.. Hight In the upper eC>a to mid 70t In the velley9. Lowe In the mid 40e to low SO.. U.S. Tempa ....... °"'City IC! t7 Nottolil.VL N u OllW-Oily 13 70 .. &.e ()MN IO 46 ,...,,.,,Hy ti .. OrWldo ... •7 :::::qw n 41 't'J = V" 12 M .. ao "'-'Ill " m ==r.. ..... 11 ... ~ 11 " u .. An.rite ., 12 Sfl0wtr1 Jlonlwld.Olt IS •1 AdlmloClly 12 12 l'fo•ldenoe " SI Nellonel WM--..C. NOAA US Oilol OI C:O-.C1 13 72 AUlllln =~ 12 IO ..,..,_.. .. 11 ., ... S..JOM ., 47 ~ .. ., Ill 31 Calif. Tempe SentaAtta n IM ... 6t 40 tOllOfl ... •• ~ .. M ..... CtUI " 47 81U.. .. 71 .......... .. 40 ""'* n 91 left IAll• City 67 .. =:·-lot 2t hOo#'9 MdlnO •I• m. lerlla Woflloa .. M c...-61 2t 72 er1lfteld • • n A T.._v-., " ~on.I C 71 .. 8en ""'"'*' 16 44 ~ tur.11• 67 44 f Oll'MOa ~on.wve. .. ... a.nle •• 10 aa Clfw1oete.H.C. to IO 9'y'~ ., ,_ 71 4t Y_,.Vf\' .. .. 51 )5 ~ M 37 ~ 10 41 ~ ., $6 n N g;i: ~ IO .. ~ ~ Smoa Report 13 .. T.,,.,...I ,.,,_ .. • ,_~ ~ 12 64 Toe*la .. IO T-to 62 llled...,,, 62 " Columl)u9,0No 13 t7 TlllM 1' 11 ......_, City e 1 .. J10111Mnt ~ lrldD u-i~ 0.100 DlllM-l"I WCW11\ n 11 11 ..................... lot .-llllM = a .. W-'*'91on.O C .. 6t lecr-W 13 42 =:, I00400 .......... tor • ... UlrlM WWllla .. 10 ., O.Molriee 16 N Wiii•..,.,. .. IO ... Ol-eo •1 .. ........ "'"" ...,. .. 92 IO __.:J!..;._,_.· _.,It prMlul Oelroll a .. ..,, 'tWnGlloo °'*"" .. • Eztended lanta9attler• 70 •• d9y'• '*· ltoc*ton .. 43 .,,._ .. • Hlgll. ao. lot 24 .._...,... .. :rJ'I\· = eo.i ............... -... -...., ,...... u • 11-41 App. V*t M Or-.~... .. .. '-.o n 40 ~ .. ~.,. pettocS. Loom a.ntow t2 o .....,~Loe Angela. .. '7-IO :=:" AeplOt a 43 71 • ~ nor1'I 10 llOflllwwl ..,.. ~ ~ n " ""-' ... 53 .. -~~72107Mlh ...... 64 :: Tide. ~ .. • ==-= low9 IO , Hlglle 7' 10 M _.. ..... 71 HoMUu 11 74 ~low9&310M. ~ .. ·r, "°""°" IO • .. 1 TOOA'r ..,..,-.i* •1 17 Surf Report Ol"'-Clly 11 IM 8-tdlow t:ftp,m O.t JeoQon, ... 15 .. L°"9 8-111 • M a-id lllgfl t:44 pm u ..._... IO 17 ...,,..... .. .. "'-M 42 &.oCATIOlt lml 1HAN Mofwo\Ole Tt .. .... w., ~City 12 IO ...,._.,...,, w poor MIN,_. n 51 !'lrwl IOW 1.27 Lift 0.2 MonWey 92 51~ .. .Me..m . ... L8t\'egea 13 17 .... .-Y.~ M poor Ml. WllOfl 1141 37 Jow 2:11 p.111. u utlle Roell eo .. 40lfl---.~ M .,_ .. .. ....... ., ~ hoond lllgfl t:CMp.m. u LollllJio;lll ::--·~ ,.. poor .....,...,.. 16 • 5 poor ......,...,, .., ~a.e °"""° 77 82 81#1 .... = Ill 7:4!J""'· ...... .._....,, IO ,. 2-4 poot ,. lp1ng9 ., 57 w---,81 MLlll. _...., ......... 11 • 2-4 POClr ,.......,.. 13 4t .-1:41 p.m. MplH1 "'*" 11 u W .. 9'm!P:M .. IO ~ 72 41 .._ .... ::f .. s::t.:;· ,... HalfMle ... ~w ... ........,.'° 71 4'~•1:1Llll. .......... .... on-. 13 • ..... 8ell~ 14 " .lft. MOORING P OLICYMAY ROCK BOATS ••• J'ro m Al ation by Newpon Beach officials seek to solve two problems, according to a letter from City Attorney Robert Burnham to all moonng permit holders. The city is trying to make sure all boats moored in the harbor are seaworthy and it wants to stop the practice of transferring mooring per- mits by scllina the boat assiancd to the moorin1 for SI 0,000 to S 12,000 more than what the boat is worth. City officials including Newport Beacb Mayor Philip Maurer say the proposed changes arc simply in the interest offaimess. But there promises to be some TRIAL ••• J'romAl dues for advertising and mainten- ance. Bischof claimed that his business occupied only 8,389 square feet. The jury found the actual total to be 33,25 l square feet. He also was ordered to pay the owners' associa- 1ion S 11O.798 to build a club house that store owners said he had prom- ised. Julietta Lewis. who operates a clothing store on weekends and who said a second store was closed for lack of business, has battled Bischof from almost the inception of the 45-shop village in 1978. She testified that Bischof sup- poners sang "Nazi songs" outside her window late at night, that her tires were slashed, ·her cat was killed and her residence above her shop was smashed. She testified that Bischofs son allegedly tried to run her off the road whale commg home from a city Planning Commission meeting. Rohen Lewin, a Newpon Beach attorney representing Lewis and others, charged that Bischof was a dictator who treated Old World shoppin' center as his "personal domain.• moonng users who are not at all happy with the proposed chanaes. Newport Beach resident Bob McCaftrcy sent letters to about 900 of the l ,221 Newpon Harbor mooring users this week, urging them to attend a 'meeting scheduled for Wednesday on the issue. McCaffrey said he had· to have his auorney help him in obtaining a list of people with city mooring permits. The meeting of 1he Tidelands Affairs Committee, at the City Coun- cil Chambers at 7 p.m. Wednesday, will be a public forum on the matter. and will not result in a immediate decision. The city has a 25-year waitina list for the moorinas to provide some son of order and fairness in the way they ch~e usen. But the list has been left relatively untouched because moS1 people transfer the moorinp through word-of-mouth. According to the letter distributed by Burnham to mooring users, the city is considerin1 restrictions on the transferability ot moonng pefnlits. Permits could be transferable only to members of the pcrmittee's immedi- ate family or to a person who aquircd a boat assigned to the moorina upon the death ~fa permittec. CAR P OOL LANE ••• homAl - The three year average shows 12.8 accidents a week compared to 22. 7 accidents a week reported since the car pool lanes opened Nov. 18. "The safety factor as much worse-than the public has been made aware," said Joe Catron, chairman of Drivers for Highway Safety. CaJtrans statistics tell a d ifferent story. A 90-<fay car pool lane evaluation repon released in February showed tha1 the number of accidents dropped from an average of2S a week prior to the installation of car pool lanes to an average of 23.5 a week after the experiment began. Dsivers for Highway Safc:y takes issue with Caltrans statistics not because they arc wrong but because they are "skewed," Catron said. CaJtrans compared the first 13 weeks of car pool lane operation with a seven week period during which the freeway was under construction so it's not surprisina that the pre-project accident rate is high, be said. · But Sharon Greene, project director for the transponation commmion, defended the CaJtrans comparison. "The P!C":~roject seven weeks is considered by Caltrans and the CHP (California H~ghway Patrol) to reflect pre-proje<{t conditions on the freeway," she said. Greene disputed the Drivers for Hi&hway Safety claim that the freeway was under construction during the seven week period from Sept. 30 to Nov. 17. "The seven weeks is the only portion of the pre- project period that is free from construction " she said. Greene said she hadn't seen the Drivers for Hiahway Safety figures but said it was based on "older data" ttµlt may no longer be applicable. She n:ferred other questions to Dave Roper, CaJtrans district deputy director. Roper was in a mectina and could not be reached this morning. Car-pool lanes on the Costa Mesa Freeway stretch from the Riverside to the San Diego freeways. The car pool lane experiment will continue through November. Alcala "'as conv1c1ed tn 1980 of kidnapping and murdenng Samsoe. The slate Supreme Court ovenurned the conv1ct1on 1n 1984 forcing a second tnal Under questioning from Goc1hals, Stai ti confirmed that memory loss is a possible srmptom Of the Slress dis- order he diagnosed in Crappa. nightmares and sleeplessness because ol the guilt she felt at not having ·-r-... -.-.-_-_-_-_-;_ ___________________________________ _.._ helped Samsoe At one point in testimony, Crappa said she would wiflin&ly have exchanged places to Scheduled.to repeat her testimony las1 Wednesday. Crappa instead an· nounced she has no memory of the incident or Alcala's ensumg trial. Crappa, a former forestry worker who is now a registered nurse. claimed to suffer from amnesia. She said she may have $ubconsc1ously blocked ou1 all memory of the event and 1he first 1nal because she's "no1 }Cl reMy to deal with at." Monday McCanin ruled CrapP.a "mentall}' unavailable" to testify after heanng from.a psychiatnst who treated her in 1985. An1hony Stallt of Kaiser Hospital an San Bernardino tesufied that Crappa appeared 10 ~uffer from wha1 he called a chronic delayed post· traumatic stress disorder. She could not remember events related to the murder or a more r~cnt unrelated ~~~~~E Daily Pilat MAIN OFFICE l YI h~• !It, S1 1•4 .,...,. 1.• In allowing her earlier testimony to be read to the jury, McCanin com- mented on 1he "obvious fra1lt1es of 1he witness" as evidenced in her 1980 ooun appearances. Crappa was a reluetant wuness who fleshed out her testimony only after long. uncomfonable silences. Dunng a 1979 ·preliminary heanng, Crappa only claimed to have seen Alcala'scar in the area the night after Samsoe disappeared. Later, she would tell how she saw a man who looked like Al~la push mg a blonde girl toward 1he brush near the hillside turnout June 20 Stall later. she admitted finding Samsoe's mutilated body June 25 then fleeing without telling anyone of the gnsly discovery. Crappa claimed to suffer from save tfie girl. But Crappa refused to cooperate with invemgators who approached her about testifying a~in saying that she did not want to dtscuss the case. "It's obvious to the coun in this type of a situation that the jury should have this information available," McCanin said Other evidence apinst Al~la in- clude a pair of earrinas found in a Seattle locker he rented. Samsoc's mother identified the earrinas as resembling ones her daughter often wore. A former Orange County Jail inmate also testified that Alcala made 1ncnminaung statements to him in 1980 concerning the Samsoc murder.· Detty Plfot l>etlYef'Y le Guaranteed 1<11 eclQt~t &. • SW ~ t•• .,...., ..... ;t.11 c~.a. e•i ~e _.,._ & t0<10r •• 1 11•7 •31• Justcall 642-6086 MoncM~·Fra, u vw 06 llOI ,,... YOuf PI C* Oy \JO om ct •c.lcrt '""' t"<I you< '~ De ~eO cw, ••· ·n~ <>• ~tot'' P\.D'tl'""Q c.,..., .. , ,.a .,.., •' "" ..,.,,.,'°"" ..,_,or_. ~"• D" td•~· .. ,,,...,t, '+-..... -., .. -.:~~., • ,,.~, ~ .. Ollt ., ~or • 11r<'Of'I cw.,., • VO~ 71, NO. 121 • What do you hlte about the Daily Pilot'! What don't you like? Call the number above and your messqc will be recorded. transcnbed and de· livered to the appropnatc editor. The lame 24-hour answenna service may be used to record letter1 to the edJtor on any topic. Contnbutors to our Letters column must include lhtar name and telephone number for verifkat1on Tells us what's on your mind S.1..,0.r llld ""41y II '°" 00 no! ·-.,_ '""' b1 1 • .., , .. O.•Ot• j 0 • "' encl "°"' COO\' .... M-e<I Clroua.tlon Tele~ • • A Summer Essential Our summer~ blazer tai/omJ exclusively for us of a wol and ccmfonabk l!Opial/ weight l'tOO/. Wt also off er this cJasstc in a blend of doaon,lwool and a f tt11her weigh/ ~ldnjlannel Perfect/or the~ wttllher ahead Gentlemen's ~ lnspued by Traditm 46 Fawon liland Newport Bead\ ' (714) 64().SJIO • l l GooclWill honors lta top achievers Candidates polled on Dew freeway Goodwill lnduatriet will honor its top pwdoate volwiteer and achiever Tbunday at the ~· ann~ commwlity dinner, to be held at 6:30 p.m. at lbe Airponer Inn Hotel in Irvine. Ellen Ooukl bu been named achiever of the year, Lonlino lalu lbe top padwate and Rosa.lie Ha.ncock tI.e honored volunteer. Tickets to the event are S25 per pcnoo, with information available from Betty Undsay at 547-6301, ext. 301. Parole coalenmce 11et Y't!e Annual State Conference of the California Probation, Parole and Correctional Association will be b~ld May Wednesday throuab Friday at the Marrion Hotel in Anaheim. The conference fee iJ SI 10 for auociation members, S 120 for non-mell\l>era. One day reais.- tratio!' JS $45. For further Information or to rqjsttr call Bill Brooks at 634-7 l 39. ' Afeu GOP poap m eet.· ' The Costa Mesa Republican Assembly will bear the Republican candidate for the I 5th Superior Coun bench, Anthony Rackauclcas at its meeti.na Thursday evcnina at the Charter' Savinas Bank Buildina, 1700 Adams Ave. Costa Mesa. -ryie seu.ioo is ICheduied for 7:30 p.m. Call Dennis Skupmski at 631-7816 or T .R. Johnson at 549-4272 for further information. PanJJellealc meetbJ611et Loma Mills, loll,ltime president of Lquna Federal Savinas and Loan, will be the auest speak.er- at Wednesday's meeting of the Luuna Beach Panhellenic, scheduled for I p.m. at the home of Gladys Gray, 23932 Flom, Laauna Niguel. Mills will speak on "Laauna Beach as I See IL" Call 854-8868 for additionaf information. . . -Am lecture .clJedaled Nancy Ebsen of NeWl)ort Beach, president of the California Theater Council. will speak to · Women for Oranae County Thursday at 9:4S Lm. in the all-p~ room of the Tustin Public Library, 34S E. Mam St., Tustin. Ebsen will djscuss the arts in America, California and Orange County. Call 639-6954 for more information. B'nal B 'rltJJ meet .iated Actress Romolo Temkin will give a dramatic reading of "I Remember Mama" at Thunday's meeting of the Simcha Chaeter of B'nai B'nth Women at the Proarcssive SavtngS and Loan office, 19900 Beach Blvd., Huntington Beach. Tbe prosram is scheduled for 11 Lm. and will include a buffet luncheon. Call Kay Tass at S36-l 795 for reservations, RabJe. Clinic anaoanced A oeifbborhoocj, low-cost anti-rabies vacci- nation clinic for dota will be held Thursd&y at the Seal Beach Fire Stauoo, at 8th and Central The clink will be conducted from 7 to 8:.30 p.m. at a cost of $3 per dog. Call the Oranae County Animal Shelter at 634-7287 for details. Irvine reewayproponentsmeetln t tswee to etermf ne ow to pu llctze survey resu ts By PHIL INEIDERMAN Of .............. OTpnizen of Irvine T,.flic Solutions. a committee that favon coDlt:Netion of three oew South Oranee C'.ounty freeways, have tcbeduled a second meetina this week to .decide bow to publicize. Irvine City Council candidates positions on street and biah~ i11ues. But co-orpniur Steve McArthur in- sisted the aroup is not ded 1trict.ly to the current council race, in which 10 can- didates will compete June 3 for two 1eats. .. We're aoina to say that this is what needs to be done " McArthur said. "But we'll work with Utyone (on the council). This comminee ii 1101 aoana to disappear after the eleetioll." About 25 people attended the poup•1 orpnizatioaal meetiGI lut week, and abOut 35 othen o&red to bdp the committee, tbo\alb they could oot attend the meetio,. McAnbur sai4. • The poup's leCODd meetina is ~ uJed for 7 p.m. Thunday at the Wettperk I ~~ulverdale) Oubbou1e, 3754 Hamilton McArthur, a lhoPP.ina center developer and eiabl·ytar tc11dent of Irvine an-nounced formation of lrVine Traffic Solutions at the April 22 trvioe City Council meetiQ&. His c:o-orpniz.er is Scon Roam& the ahow ,,........_ 11p for tM ll"9taclt competition la tile <>raqe eom.x_~a: ID '-1t111 are memben of tile lntne-..._c aad tbe l"aUertoa Cupterof Rig~t -· action saves baby. BJ TONY SAAVEDRA .............. Gay Kartman never IOI aroaod 10 learnina any lifetavina techniqua, IO lbe improvited Sunday when her ,...-oJd niece bepn cboki.q on a piece of aoDle. Firli. the Costa Mesa woman ma ltd him in tbe child's mouth, imdvenanty jammiJla tbe &uit furtberdowD little Alila ~sthroal Next Hartman. 2~, the t.by ~ the feet and bepG . bet, bopi.Qs lbe aODle would Dloo OUL It . 'L ~ Finally, Kartinan did the only ocher tbina that came to mind. · Stie penicbd. · ..I freaked out and ltaned .,.,._"'i-.. Hartman said. ---:- The screaml broupt her houlc. paimcr, Carl fristecl. down from tbe roof. W-db two ~ but firm wblcb 10 tbe b9ct. Frilted cleared the child's windpipe ud in the proce:u recruited a new ltladen1 for lifeaavina clules. . " .. rm. c:allioa SL JOleJ)b'• Hoepi~ en.> to lip up '~d;:-s a H.anman after Darty ~l . the . ..... ber . .,, SembJan 11et for Netrpart Two sociol~cal semioan will be held at the Balboa Bay Oub m Newport Beach this weekend. A PJ'Oll"&JD called .. Meo, Women and Sex" will be.offered from 8 to 10 p.m. Friday at a cost of SIS, wrule I teen heart seminar, nploring yOU1\I people's emotions, is planned Saturday from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. for a SSO fee. Call 642-~SJ for il\fonnation. 5-year Newport.;. Mesa tran.sit plan calls for new buses, continued fee ··~bis time, .. she said. Tbc episode bepn O\atlide 11anma·1 Mapolia Avaue bomt, wbere lime A1iMa at OD t.be sidewalk q\liedy ..... her iuncb while Har1maD and tbe cbillf 1 mother watched.. .. Alita was 1eethin&andeotaeoocS ~ of that ... and IW1ed chotiJll," Widl ~hr, I.be 1i6y IUCf&aTy went limp while iu liPI named btue, the aWlt «membef'Cd. 87 NATALIA AMER Scbniererrccommended that. beain~ DllfNltOeuo 0 s 1 in June, all bUJCS manufactured before Newpon-Mesa trustees would immedi-1973 and all vans more than 10 years old be replaced by new ones. ately ha ve to order at least fo"! new .butes Accordif\4 to 1 memorandum, the · ~ntendent John Nic:oU.co.nfirmed the district's need for more butel and aid the board is ditcuaina the pouibility or lowaina bus fees for kinderprten throuab l 2tb..,ade studeota. . Tumina the child upside down. Hartman shoot AliJU lite a doU belort =:ny tdepbonina C°'1a ~ ..,. Tue8day, May 6 t~ ~dle the ov~ o( riders if the • Transportauon Department operate'l 36 of d1stnct abl.~ons ats SIS a month bus fee, its48bu1eSon bomo-tc>tchool runs,a total transportation manaaer Raymond that cannot accommodate the increase in .. Before we come to any decision -e shall explore all options, tatina into consideration the studenu' welfare,.. be said. Before the emef'IC'DCY uo.iu arrived, Frilled saved Aliaaa by uJi.na lifelaviQI techniquet be k.imed' at -Si Joeeptt '1 H ·tal . • 7 p.m. Hadqeoia Beacl Plualq Com· mJnloa, City Council Chambers. 2000 Main St. Schnierer said. student numbers. ~ Fristeds never bad to ute the rescue methods OD their frqiJe IOI). But the lessons came in bandv Sunday. • 7 p.m. Oceu View ScMol Dbtrlct, l)jstrict Board Room, 16940 8 St. The prospccl ofofferina free bus service .. The cost of maintaining our fleet • b3 7:30 p.m. Badal* Beacll Sdool DIJtrjct, district education center, 204S I Craimer Lane. Wedne8day, May 7 • 9 a..m., Costa Mesa Traffic CommJ.,1oa, City Hall, 77 Fair Drive. to students next year prompted Newpon-iocreues each year u we pay inflated Mesa Unifed School District trustees to prices for obsolete and difficult-to-find . review a five-year plan by Schnierer for ' parts." Scbnicrer said. uDIBdina the district's fleet. The buses in the fleet are an averqe 18 -Parents pal bus feet ofS 1 S per student, a vears old and Schniem-said his depart- maximum 0 $40 per family, for every 20 ment cannot put anr more of them into school days. daily homo-to-schoo ooeration. Oil ApriJ 23, parents o( Bear Street ttudenu expreued their concern about transportation and the need to provide extra bus let'Vice for children in cue Bear Street is cloeed. The su~ will be explored further at the board s May 13 meet.ins at Harper Community Center. ••eart picked up Alisia, turned her sideways and pve bet two aooct blows. With tbc tee0nd one, the apple just a.bot out,·· Hartman said. "Mr God, rve never cried so bard in my life..• • 6:30 p.m., Co1ta Meu Redevelopmeat Acacy, City Council Chambers, 77 Fair Drive. ·• 6:30 p.m., Coa1t Comosalty Collete Dbtrlct Boud of Tn1&ee1, District Board Room, 1370 Adams Ave. Golden West plans 4-year college transfer hontlrs courses By G. JEANETTE AVENT want to go to a four-year college right after graduation. univemty in t.be1r JUruor year, sau1 program coordinator Sheila Brazier. Brazitt. "You don t iet the ,,penooal attention." • 7:30 p.m., lrvlne Commalty Se"lcet Comml11Joa, City Council Chambers, 17200 Jam- boree Blvd. o., .... c ••• ,, •in• Golden West College is planning an honors program for students who do not The honors program which starts this su mmer with an English 100 class, is aimed at students of"supcnor ability who want to transfer to a fotir-year college or For some students, the cha nae froml!tiah school to college is overwhelmin A many universities. "lower-division c arc large and rather anonymous,·· said The advantqes of the honors prosi:am include smaller classes, lower tuiuon than a four-year school, and an emphasis on academics.. she said. Couple must stand trial in pizza delivery man's death GLENDALE (AP) -A couple charted wi th killinaa Domino's Pizza delivery man and robbin& the pizza parlor where he worked have been ordered to stand trial later this month. At the end of a four-day preliminary ticarina Monday, Mu- nicipal Court Judie J.O. Smith or- dered a May 20 trial for Mitchell Carlton Sims. 25, and Ruby Padaett. 20. B antinetoa Beach Two thup alleaedly Jumped a mao at the pier late at nliht and took his wallet oont.ain.1111 $60. --nic vic:tim said his attackers tried to choke him and then beat him up. • • • Bul)lan stole wheels and other car body parts io the 7000 block of Slater. t • • TlUevea en\cmJ an apartment to tbc 6<XX> block of Warner th.rouab a locked rear bedroom window and 9'0lc-two suits v.J.cl at saoo. Sl.000 io jewelty Ind a SJOO video c:a*11e rocorcder. t.•. Someone stole 1430 in lki oquipmcnt over the lut two MCkendl from a mldimce in the 19000 block ofCokbesicr. Thiev~ ~ r9'2 Merc:ury Coupr up oo btockl 1n \he 9000 block of Tahiti aDd 1tole four tlret and wf'l«ll-two ftrc 1n11•bee.I . l ' lharalan stolq a ISO boys' Schwinn bkydt valued at SI SO from •..,... ln the 1000 block of Bodcl. t .• • A p-ocn 19'8 volbwqtn v1Jucd at Sl,000 wu stok'n wbcn the ownm ~ft h ~ Sims, who once manqed a Dom- ino's in South Carolina, also is clwJed with the robbery and slayina of two worken al a Domino's outlet In Hanahan, s.c. last Dec. 3. f>ldaett i1 wanted for questionin1 in th<*t killinp. Smith upheld charaes th.at Sims and Padaett murdered delivery man John S. Harripn late last Dec. 9 in a motel room in Glendale. unlocked and keys in the iplition. ••• A 1952 Comet that had a .22-caliber IUtOmltic pn in it WU ltokn, I Com· · modotc Cude resident reported. C\&Jprita ftred 1 BB~ into a boux 1n the 9000 block ofV mi. Mar. CIUSll\I S2SO inda.m-.c. • • • A t <Hpeed bf~ valued at S 120 wu stolen in &ont of NatJOnaJ Lumber at 9rookbunt and Adams. • • • A SlOO st.eftlO wu ''*" ftom a car tn a c:srpon ln tbe 7000 block ol Warner. • • • Astereoaftd two~~ywue stolm ftom a 1910 Foc'd Faumont 1t Quinn's Automo~~ 7407 S..tier. A wallet WU~ taken from under an t1ftDioYel's '«bkai ()p(o ll ln the 1 ~ bloCk o(San..WC. .-r _.-,:. Someone stoic facial ianner at a •un tan ~. 1504 l Edwardl. NewportB•ao• A burs)ar .rho aPCiMnlly utcd a pau by io mttr • real acatie omce ln the 4400 bfock ofVon ltamwi took SI 161111\lmpe I • I T.he West Columbia, S.C.. couple also are charaed with two counts of attempted murder and three counts of robbery in the holdup early the next momina of the Glendale Domino's, and with the theft of Harripn's delivery truck. Two employees of the pizza parlor were tied in a walk-in rcfriaerator in such a way they bad to s11nd on tiptoe to avoid hanaina themselves. and cash. • • • About S370 1n jewclty and towels wen: ~ported stolen ffom 1 abop IA the 2200 block of West Balboa Bou.levard. • • • A baske1beJI backboard was teJ)Of'ted stolen ffom loe1tion in the 800 block of WM 16th Stre.et. h wu worth SI SO. • • •• A Harbor lalc office was reoortedly buralanzcd by someone who too\ crodit catdt and currency. The owner reponed $13$ mla1na. Int.De An AM/FM CUKtte dee.It WU stolen &om an untocked blue conven1ble Volk• wqen parted Monday at the 2000 block or Butinett t« Onv.. ••• Tbe rar window or a BMW paikod on the 17000 bloet on:iilltne Avenue wu btoken Monday and.the rad o was stolen. A comP-U~e~~n and aPOhanca, valued at SI ,wv, wu atokn Moftclay f'tom • businm Ol\ Rl~One. • •• About StO wu stolen floom a Toyota .Corolla parted at a ps ataoon on the 4600 Moe.It orc.ampur Drive ' • • • About SSOO was stolen from 1 buildina on Construct.Ion Circle West Monday. • • • Two tr1ns1sters walk mans were stolen from an industnal site on the 2300 block of Mato Street • • • Three IBM personal computcn were stolen from and industrial site on the 17000 block of Red Hill Avenue Monday. • • • Some computer toft~. valued at S6,24J, was stolen from 1 bunness on the 17000 block of Fitch Monday. . . '. A black mountain oicycte wu t.aked from Blue Jay Parle Monday while 1 the wheels and tires ~ taken from 1 silver BMX boys raana bicycle 'Chained to lhe front yard of 1 home on the S200 block of Michelson Dnve. Co.talleea A 1tlcviS1on tel. !'Milo and stereo. all worth SSOO. were reported 1tolen from an ap&11men1at 2074 Wallace Ave. between 6 Lm. Satllfday and 2 a.m. Sunday. • • • A 1tlevi11on and 1 computer pme, wonh SSOO. werc reported stolen from an 1p&11mcnt1t 1933 Wallace Ave. bctwttn 7 1.m. and 6:18 p.m. Thurtday. Entry was made throUfh an 09Cn window. A home In the isOO.block of San Juan Lane was bufllaNed and three bfdroom windov.-s ~"smashed betMen 7:•0 a.m. and 12:30 p.m. Monday However, noth1"1 wu reponed Stolen. • • • A tool bo• and oonlttlt valued at $293, . was reported stolen from an open prqc 10 the 2400 block of Rue de Cannes between 2 p.m. Friday and 8 a.m. Saturday. Foa.ntaln Valley A resident of the 17200 block of San Mateo told police that late Sunday or eatly Monday someone broke into a U-Haul tr1iler conta.inina hu belonainp. The trailer was parlced near tus home. The IOsa, estimated at SI0,67S, included ~ equipment, 1 television tet, V1dco recorder and furniture. • • • A Hwninatoo Beach resident reported Monday that his btue I 98S N1uan pJCtup truck was stoleft t'rom the Elks t.oo.e LO Fouftta.in Val~ a& 10480 Talbert Avt. The loss was estimated at S8,SOO. Oftioen arrested j~ Sydoey Bur- rows, 32, of fountain Valley, on 1usp1cion of felony vandali1t11 Friday niabt aft.er be a.llt:FUY uaod 1 buebeil bet and pieces of fumjture lO damate the interior of tns formc:r~'r1friend'1 home on the llSOO bloc Saft Marcos. Accordina to the pol.OC n, Burrows did more than U .000 dam• to f\amiture, walls 1.nd windows. A raident of J.e• 10100 block of La Haaeoda Avenue 1ep<11'tod Frtdly ttMlt a buf11at fon:ed open a al.id.in& doOr at his lpattmct\t. ~ km, estimated It $2,0)(), 1ndudcd lt.tftO equipment, a tdtvl11on .et anda~ • •_t __ A lnldent of the IUWU block of Quail Coun reponed Saturday that .omcon.c ~0111b thr~at halts plane LINCOLN Neb. (AP} - Authorities aald a charter plane has taken off fN>m the Lincoln Aj~rt where it had been delayed nearly c1&h t houn by a luaa&e 1e1rch after an ap~nt anonymous phone caller said there 'wa a bomb on board Rick Maher. Federal A viauon Ad· mmt5U'ltton 11r taffic cont~Uer, said lhe Jct America plane departed the Lincoln A1rpon at 4:4S a m COT todly. the plane that was travcllna from Ch1caso to Lona Beach, ca.lif .. la.ndcd at 9:06,.m. CDT Monday on tbcwest cd,e o the 11rport. ' stole 1 SSOO telcvu1on tel from her h<MM- • • • A resident of the 18200 block of Jacaranda reponcd Monday that aomeooc entered has unlocked red 1971 Voat. wqeo and stole business keys, 1 sweater and denture&. The "loss wu estimated at S8SO. •• ! __ A resident of the 18.JW block of Ward Street repon.ed Monday that b.1s aokl 1976 Chevrolet van wu stolen. The lou wu esumatcd at $4,000 . • • • Someone entered 1 vacant home Sun- day on the l8000blockofYotem1~Cowt. ditconnected adraio pipe 10 the bethroom and turned on the water ~ to the ~tine. ceilina and plwnbinc wu csumated at Sl.000 Man held in · c hild molest A two-and-e-half-montb anvestip- tion led Irvine pohce to anat Ray Eben Otandlcr, 691 .~~ sull)i~ of teven counu of ClllJO molesiar.ioe.. pobce Mid. Chandler was analed and booted at Oranac Count}' Jail Friday. Bail WU ,Ct It $50,000. A Jail sooblm&D. said he WU not in~ Moadsy:·· Set. Dick Bowman laid police were upped off by tbe modlct of a 9-.~ old lirl. Omtna \be iD~•"'*kMl pohce coniacted three oc.ber v.ctiJm who had not reponed \be .._... incidentJ. Bowman.. wtM; ~ '* rcleuc any dc1ailt oo tbe c:.e.. llid the stau.e of limtiatiou a. at: on mOll of'tbeotbcr.ue.,d aid. and th.at the ~ cowata wen .a, for acu ~y c:ommiled --'_.. t.M C)..yar-o&d PtL .....- .. • J I Origiilal Mercury astronauts mark ,.silVer anniversary LOSANGELES(AP)-Tbeywere accustomeel to suoocss in the spaoe reunited to commemorate the 2Sth program. . anniversary of America's first man-"This kind of sets people's thin.lrin& ned s~ fliptt, but five of the strai&htcned out a little bit," saia · nations original astronauts were Slayton. "You realize we aren't ever brouaht back to earth by the gravity of aoina to build a perfect srstem and recent space-program disasters, in-they are subject to failure.' eluding seven deaths. Shep&rd responded curtly when "It's been dangerous for 2S years. asked what be would tell young We have to cope with it every sin&le people who might no~~ fearful of day," Alan Shepard said Monday space. · night when asked if space flight was "If they can't see beyond what's rislrieT now than before. happening. if they can't see beyond It was May S, 1961 , when Shepard the risk, I can't tell them anythinJ." became the first Amencan in space Shepard said: "They've got to see that • aboard Frccdon 7 and acknowledged going in." his accomplishment with a cool, · "There was a lot of doubt and "Boy, what a ride!'.' cynicism about flying in space" when · Fellow Mercury astronauts Scott be went up in 1961 , Shepard noted. • ~nter, Gordon Cooper, WallX The SI SO-a-plate dinner benefited ScbUTa and Donald K. "Oeke ' the Mercury Seven Foundation, Slayton attended Monday's black-tie which was formed two years ago to dinner at the California Museum of award scholanhips to outstanding Science and Industry to honor students. More than 200 people Shepardandhis 15-minutesuborbital attended, said organizer Pat Neal. A Oiaht. number of tables were t>Urclwed by The astronauts were dogged by aerospace firms, including Rock;well reponers who wanted their opinion International, TRW and McDonnell on the series of recent space mishaps, Douglas. seven crew members. · plans to attend because of a Senate .. t-A- Democrats urge. governor. oppose -offshore drilling Deukmejian 'has a chance to ake or break coastline' SACRAMENTO (AP) -saymg "Duke: Tell Hodel NO" on a placard, some Democratic lawmakers uf'led Gov. ~rae Deukmejian to fon:e- fuUy oppose a plan to open most of the coast to offshore drilling. . It happened Monday at a Capitol news conference. Said Assemblyman Jac k O'Connell, 0-Santa Barbara, "Weare calling on the governor to redeem himself. He bas a chance to make or break our coastline." The Democrats said the Re- publican aovemor has until Thurs- day to formally comment on a new plan by U.S. Interior Secretary Donald Ho<iel to open more than 70 million acres along vinually all of the state's l, l ()(}.mile coastline for lcu- ina. off Sonoma County, pan of the Sao Mateo-Santa Cruz cout, a latte area off San LuiJ Obispo County, a teetion off Santa Monica Bay and a tarp Itel off Oranae and San Dicao counties. accordina to Assemblyman Sam Farr, 0-Cannel. The federal government control.a leasing in waters more than three miles from shore. Ooser waters are controlled by the state. Kevin .Brett, Ocukmejian's deputy press secretary, said the admini• tratioll was finalizing its commenu on the leue propoM.I and would have a detailed response by Thursday. The governor drew sharp criti~6 last year when be ~nt. a telepam1o the House Appropnauons Comnut- tee opposina extension of a four-year mortarium on new federal oil leuca off California. The nex1 day, the committee rejected the extension by a single vote, 27-26. But alter Hodd proposed a oeY( five-year leasi~ plan for California waters, DeukmeJWi. who is up for~ election this year, sent lbc secretary a letter complaining about the speed with which Hodel was moving and asking him to reconsider his decision. including the Jan. 28 explosion of Sen. John Glenn, D-Ohio, the a#Lll ..,..,.. space shuttle Challenger that killed seventh Mercury astronaut, canceled Comedlua BU1 Dalla (I~ rial• utronaat Alan Sh--' Slayton said America had become · at lloaday'• retlDioD of ercary utronaata. -----~SSl~O~n~·---------------------......... --=== ~~--~~-----------.................................................................. ._. Areas most likely to be leased cover part of the Humboldt County coast. the Mendocino f£unty coast. an area 1f you've been l~ ome improvements, special investments, a vacation or college education, now is the time to check out our more affordable home equity loans. For more information follow the arrow to any conveniently located Bank o~cabranch.Orto .. Bl ~ly by phon~ call 1-800- 551-n\1Mon.-Fri.8a.m. to 8 p.m. And take advan- tage of our low rates while they last. Cumnt ,_.Nbiec:t to cbll..- 3-mantb Va.n.blc ...._ (wtchouc cap) 950% 9.82% __ ,.... .,.,. ...... ..... --·------- Bank of;Amerlca • Border issues.divide GOP Senate hbpefuls CANYON LAKE {_APJ -Re- puo can Mike Antonovich, running for U.S. Senate, says soldiers should be usectto patrol the Mexican bordtT. But primary election opponent Bruce Herscbensohn says this wouJd make the United States look like a totalitarian state. He suggests a six- fold inc:rCase, to $2.S billion. in the border patrol budget. Three other Republican Senate candidates also offered their theories on immigration during two separate candidate appearances Monday. Five of the 13 Republicans seckjng the party nomination for U.S. Senate had campaign events in Southern CaJifomia Monday. Republican voters in the June 3 primary in four weeks will decide which will go apinst•Democratic incumbent Sen. Alan Cranston in November. ' Reps. Bobbi Fiedler of Nortbridat and Ea Zschau ofLos Altos ap~ togethCT on Michael Jacksons talk show on KABC radio in Los ~lea. Hcrscbensobn, a former television talk show host, spoke at California State Polyteehnic University in Pomona. He then joined Los Anseles County Supervisor Antonovich and Assemblyman Roben Naylor of Menlo Park in a cable television debate jilmcd at a Canyon La1te near Lake Elsinore in southwest Riverside County. Antonovich said illegal aliens com- ing from Mexico cost Los Angeles County $130.5 million a year in welfare and $271 million in other costs. Pistol linked to Ramirez tabbed as 1nurder weapon By die Associated Pres• LOS ANGELES -A gun previously linked to "Nig.l)t Stalker" defendant Richard Ramirez fired the bullet that killed a Monterey Park man, a ballistics expert testified. Los Angeles County sheriffs Deputy Edward Robinson testified Monday that a .22~liber semi-automatic pistol introduced as evidence in Ramirez's preliminary bearing fired the bullet that killed William Doi, 66, of Monterey Park. In previous testimony, Jesse Perez said he bought the ~un and pve it to a woman friend in Tijuana. Police recovered it there. Robansoo testified that tests on bullets showed at least four guns were used in the series ofkilliop with which R.amircz is charged. Anon blamed for LA library fire LOS ANGELES -The $22 million fire at the Central Library was definitely set by an arsonist and a federal agency is offering a $5,000 reward for information in the case, authorities said. Officials have re.leased a drawina of a man in his 30s who was in the northeast book stacks shortly before the fire bepn last Tuesday and who is wanted for questioning. but Fire Ollef Don Manning said the man is not a suspect. A thorough investiption, including interviews with mo~ than 300 library emplqyccs and patrons, has show that the fire was deliberately set, Mannin• said at a news conference Monday. However be refused to give any detads about the nature of the anon and whether thmmable liquid or some type of incendiary device was used. Record ,AIDS death toll In SF SAN FRANCISCO-A record 7 l AIDS deaths occurred in San Francisco in April. local health officials said Monday. The 7l AIDS deaths last month compared with the previous high of 68 deaths in March. ln'addition, the 90 new cases reported in April was the second highest monthly figure on record, trailing only the 101 recorded in February. City health officials said it was impossible to predict how Ion$ the bi&her numbers will continue. "They arc reflections of what was happening some time ago, not the transmission of new infections now," said Dr. Dtan Ecbenberg. the city HcaJth Department's communicable dUeaJc chief. Lucky mUk gem clean blU of health BUENA PARK -State officials said no traces of pesticide have been found in Lady Lee milk sold by Lucky supermarkets. "Lucky milk is OK and we've given them the OK to put it back on the shelves," Tina T~ spokewoman for the Food and Agriculture Department, said Monday. A · that supplies milk to the Lucky store chain reponed that tests by its private la indicated chemical contamination. NeitherT~rt nor Lucky Vice President Kenneth Cope knew which pesticide had been indicated by the initial tcsL But state tests of both milk in dairy tanks and milk already pack.aaed in cartons ~ proved neptivc, she said. "We ran samples from the same tanb. Evcrythina we showed with our iensitive equipment and control tests, evcrythina &&owed ncptive~" she said. "The defmitive tests on the milk canons showed nothina,. •• YOU'LL fLIP OVER . ICE SKATING .:. I ' .-- Tokyo sU.mmit ends smoothly; trade talks due Major revision in monetary policy adopted by allies TOKYO (AP) :::-Leaders of the world's most powerful democracies ended~ three.day ··smooth summit" today, cal1ina for a new roll1ld of trade ta1b, adopt.in' a major revision in (Donetary policy and dodJina the touc~Y. · subject of a1ncultoral subsidies. . As the annual session closed, the dollar plunged to anoth.er post-World War II low .. inst the yen, a disappointment to Japanese busi- nessmen whose expons become less competitive against a falling dollar. Khadafy pr~lses Tokyo extremlsts NICOSIA, Cyprus (AP) -Ubya's official radio today rejected what it called vque clwges of terrorism leveled at Libya by West.em leaden meeting in Tokyo, and quoted Col. • Moammar Khadafy as prais~ Japanese extremists for "wreckina the Tokyo tummit. The praise from Khadafy apparent- ly was in reference to Sunday's firing of rockets by Ja~nese terrorisu durins the sumt1llt's opeo.ina cer- emonies. The rockets missed their target and exploded without burtina anyone. A Tripoli Radio commentary, monitored in Nicosia, later said .. the summit failed as the Japanese people decided to liberate Tokyo, forc101 the heads of state attending the summit to nee from Japan like lizards." U 1 I pt II In the final communique of their 12th economic summit, the leaders of the seven industrial democracies patted themselves on the back for the reoent decline in oil prices while recopizina the need for long-term stability in the market. The leaden declared their three da~ of meetinas a success. 'We have achieved our objectives -in short. mission accomplished," British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher said. "lt was a smooth summit," said U.S. Treasury Sec- retary James Baker Ill, who spearheaded the currency and trade initiatives for President Reagan. In a declaration issued Monday in Tokyo the seven leaders plcdaed counter-measures against ''any state which is clearly involved in sponsor- ing or suppc)rting international tef- rorism, and in particular Libya .. " Preeldent a-can O'eet9 Jaft9.D•• Prime lllnl8ter Yuahlro N•k•Mne at lhe nut Gr today'• RIDID.lt HHIOD ha Tokyo. "There is no change in our (Japan's) Middle East policy," Nakasone told a news conference. ever assembled to protect a summit. "This (summit statement) is intended No one was injured, and no serious to defend us from torrorism and does damage was reported, but rush-hour not mean we w~uld .~opt economic traffic and mass transit wel"C snarled and other sancuons. One of the most notable and untt5<>1ved -disputes involved farm subsidies The Reagan adminis-- tration hU been cuuing subsidies at home and would like to see a commitment from European.nations to do the same. The Europeans are cool to the proposal and the leaders agreed only to study the issue. for a time in this city of 11 million as Italian Prime Minister Bettino people return~ tQ work at th~ cod of Craxi said the leaden agreed there a thrcc-:<fay liol1day. . . would be consultations among allies The issue of terron.sm, which bas before any new U.S. air strikes against dominated the summit, was under-Libya. scored by a threat-from Palcttinian radical Abut Abbas, in a broadcast report, to target America for terrorist attacks. The 0 smooth summit" was marred somewhat by the audacity of . Japanese saboteurs. Smoke bombs packed with firecrackers exploded in subway and train stations around Tokyo. The incident was interpreted as a barusina tactic by Japanese radicals intent on embarrassing the laraest. most intensive scurity force "Let him try," President Reagan declared, responding to repon.ers' questions. The final summit gathenng wu a state , banquet given by Emperor Hirohito at the Imperial Palace. For many of the l~ers, it was their first opportunity to meet bis eldest aon and eventual suooessor, Crown Prince Akihito. While summit leaden approved a tough antj-terrorist statement, brand- ing Libya as a sponsor of terrorism, Japanese Prime Minister Yasubiro Nakasone emphasized there was no Between summit seuions today, Reagan met with French President Francois Mitterrand, a Socialist. and Jacques Chirac, the hew Gaulli.st French premier. mention of sanctions. Jordanians arrested in Berlin bombing By tM Auoclated Presa BERLIN -Police said today they have arrested two Jordanian-born men in connection with a Mareb bombing -in Bertin, and were tryina to determine whether the men were involved in the fatal bombing of the La Belle dilcothcque. The Reapn administration cited the La Belle bombioa, in which an American soldier and a Turkish woman died, as a reason for the U.S. bombing of Libya on April 1 S. U.S. officials said Libya was behind the disco attack. A police statement identified the two arrested men Farouk Salameh and Faye:i Sahawneh, and said both were arrested Thursday. The statement said both are suspected of taking pert in the March 29 bombina of the Gennan- Arab Society building in West Berlin. Investigators are .. also checking to determine if the two men are connected with the April 5 La Belle discotheque bombing," the police statement .said. Artakov.fc tied to race la1V8 ZAGREB YuaosJavia -Prosecutors in the war crimes trial of Andrija Artuk.ovic presented documents Monday implicating the 86-year-old defendant in promulptinJ race laws and murder. Anukovic, former interior miruJt.er of the Nazi puppet state of Croatia, was extradited Feb. 12 from the Uruted States, where he had lived in Surfside Colony, Cali(, since fleeing Yugoslavia after World War U. He 11 accused of war crimes and faces death by firinf squad if convicted. A verdict is expected by the end of this week. The prosecution presented official pzettes of the Croatian state showing Artukovic estab- lished and administered Crottia 's concentration camps. In the main conccntrallon camp of Jasenovac, at least 700,000 Serbs., Jews, Gypsies and political prisoners were slaughterccL according to official documents. Soviet. dlunn AfgllMJ trooJM ISLAMABAD, Pakistan -Soviet forces disarmed many Afghan soldiers and surrounded the capital city of Kabul in the days just prior to the resignation of Afghanistan's communist leader Babrak KarmaJ, Western diplomatic sources said today. Citing extensive re~ns from Kabul, the sourccs said Afghan secret po~ quickJy broke up pro-Kannal demonstrations by women. students and others. The extraordinary Soviet security measures apparently were igtended to guard apinst any backlash from Karmal's supporters or the Afghan armed forces. The government announced Sunday that the 57-year-old Karma.I bad asked to resign as Afghanistan's Communist Party leader because of ill health, and that be had been replaced by secret police chief Najibullah. lfanddafreedomrefaRd JOHANNESBURG -President P.W. Botha has repeated that South Africa will not free black nationalist leader Nelson Mandela unless he renounces violence u a means of ~litical change. Botha reiterated the govern- ment's poSition following new calls for Mandela's release. The South African Press Associat.ion quoted Botha late Monday after white opposition legislator Helen Suzman met Mandela in a Cape Town prison and then urged the government to free him unconditionally. . 10o·s. 17 mg. utar". 1.3 mg nicoune. light lOO's. 11 mg ... tar"'. 0 .9 mg. mco11ne. Kings. 17 mg. "tar". 1.2 mg. mco11ne. Menthol Kings. 18 mg. "tar". 1.2 mg. nico11nc. light Kings. 10 mg. "tar". O .8 mg nicoune av per cigarette bv FTC method ) .~\c~~f~ _'?'"?' ' ' El ROLL ·1ow "fort,,. right start In life" llAWTHOllE-=- CHllSTIAN SCHOOL ALL DAY KINDERGARTEN Kindergarten thru 8th FAU SE•ESTEI STAIIS SE,T. Btll * Door to Doo T ransportatlon Where Possible • Reasonable Tuition • Arithmetic, Reading, ~·lnG· wtth P onlc EmphaalZed • Before & After SchOOI Care for Students of Working Perenta (6:30 am-6:30 pm) A PAIVATE SCttOOl ~ DISTINCTION FOUH~ IN 1942 IN ,_,. .. YIU.IY 1IUlllllDlaT (114) 111-1111 Soviets admit ttiey underestidiateCI the nulr.e plant danger ~ MOSCOW (AP) -Au\boritiel at the Cbemobyl nuclear plant initially underelcimaled the daqer &om a Jlay Dlolioa KmnliA oftidal llid =~ ~ to evacuate- bed b nctittioo ~ ... II o( them in .mo. condillOll met Finl Deputy Health Miai.1el'V"-y I. Vorobyev. -'-~~'!ft EdaoUll earlier Soviet ... T..,!!J Vorobyev said two people~ ' ncarby ti for more than 36 b°ikiaics the accident, wbiCb spewed radiation into the atmoll)bere, likely WIS triMaed by I cbemkaJ ex- plolioa. Tbe blu1 occurred at I :2) L~ OD April 26 Uthe power-olaat WU~ into a tcbeduled shutdown. · Mid Deputy Prime Miniller Boria N. Sbcbert>i.na, wbo ii beadi the ·90vemmeot inquiry into ~ aoei· dent. Shcherbina said the evacuation of Pripya'i a town of lS,000 near the Ukrainiao plant. did not beain until 2 p.m. April 27, more than 36 boun after the explosion. The evacuation ·WU complded two b~ and 20 minutes laier, be said. F.artier1 Soviet officials llid four commurutin - some 49,000 people -were eV11CU· atcd. About 100 people were initially contaminated with radiation, Sbcberbioa told a news coofereo<le in Moscow. A tetal of204 people were hospital- in the ea:ident. One worker died after beina burned over 80 perceat ol bit body and another died after ..... bit by I fa1linc object, the deputy belJth mimster uid. Some mwUci.,.i worbn myect io Pripyat after tbe accideGi to Uep the city NDDilll. but Wbcn radiatioa levels increMed, thole watken UC> were evacuaud, SbcbefbiDa laid. He said an investiptive pern- meot commiuion wu !onned &Del some of it.I memben arrived near the plant wit.bin boww oC the accideGt. They found that .. lhole oa the spot did not sjve oeoeuary evaluation to what took place." Sbcberbina llid the panel bad not reached a final cooclusion on wba1 bad happened at the Chernobyl pmt. .. We need some time. IOllle c8reful calculatioOJ. There is too bi&b a price lO be mi•~-~, .. be Wd. acktina. "'the most prooaDIC CIWIC WIS the reactor experienced a cbemical ex- ·plosion.·· J_ And pt a Home F.qaity Lou Q:amjl ••Eat illjalt 48boan. You're invited. For a very fruitful talk with the bc:ma.t Be~ficiar. One-on~. JOU'D get an answer on JOUr Home F.quity Loan in just -ts hours. No commi~ just you. a Beneficial ~r-and the best lunch hour you've eYer had. ne '°" •• att11e fDllowt.c wm--· AMHRl- DW. UncoW1M..Soit91«> .. ~ COSTAMDA- 3't20S.Btt1to1Sl~Sut .. 330 ~ CPMP'- 9M1\o111111kerSI. .121.f100 nTOM>- 2310..e1T0n>Rd .. Su1te 1.. . .58Ml11 "'ll.f."10N- • 5125. H.t>o<BIYcl. • • • . .171404 OAAOINOM>YE- W!!OQlapfNn,.,,. .5»210ol I.Mat 1$,000 lo U00.000 ....ii,,. reol ,....n, ttUNTIN010N llACH- 18121~ 8MS .. f't.ACIJfTIA- 1180 'lbft>e uncia 81\0d .. J>fUMQE- 777S. MalnSl., Suite 10 "Beneficial. 1a1k to the manager, and JOU're tatting to the boa SURGEON GENERAL'S WARN ING : Smoking By Pregnant Women May Result in Fetal Injury, Premature Birth , And Low Binh We ight. \ I I .1 ~ COMt DAILY PtLOT/ ~.Mey 8, 1Ne . Insult to B.eggie I wasworthyof 1 designated hit I Being rich is easy; it's the famous part that causes all I the trouble. Take Reggie Jackson. for example. The controversial Angels' outfielder and designated hitter, tlle self-proclaimed .. straw that stirs the drink," has been the central figure i,n several off-field skirmishes during his glorious career. When he starred as .. Mr. October" for the New York Yankees, Jackson made headlines for his battles with owner George Steinbrenner and manager Billy Martin -both of whom he publicly branded as liars. Then there was the famous televised dugout shoving match with Martin and several run-ins with people who charged him with violence. Jackson found himself hip deep in bot water again Saturday in Milwaukee after he was recognized by a man who reportedly wanted his autograph. Putting aside for the moment the issue of why someone would be overcome with desire for a stranger's signature on a piece of paper that wasn't a check, it is probably safe to assume that Jackson has been the object of thousands of requests-polite and rude -to scribble his name on almost anything that will accept ink. Sometimes, for whatever reason, he has refused. Perhaps he was tired when the auto~ph-hunter asked. Perhaps he was in a bad mood; he m1~t have been Saturday after the Angels lost il second straight game ro the M*tlwa.u~ee ~ Brewers. 'Perhaps h-ejust wanted to be left alone to enJOY a quiet dinner with his teammates. Perhaps be got tired of being frea[ed like a freak. - Whatever. As the early version of the story goes, a man in a drinking and dining establishment called Major Goolsby's asked Jackson for an autograph. Jackson declined. The man then obtained an autograph Jackson had signed previously for the bartender, confronted the ballplayer at his table, ripped the autograph into pieces, threw it on his food and said something obscene. According to press reports, Jackson then grabbed the intruder the same way he grabs his bat. It was all over quickly. If this an accurate depiction of the series of events, it would take a saint -and not the New Orleans variety- to tum the other cheek. A person in Reggie Jackspn's position has to take alot. But it is wrong to say that he accep1ed the negative· aspects of his lifestyle when he made the choice to play pro baseball. In the first place, hardly anyone chooses to play professionaJ sports -they are pre-selected by the system. The. most talented children receive special attention in school. They are encouraged to play so others may bask in the glory they reflect on their institutions and their fans. In the world of baseball , th e brightest of those young stars will be drafted into the minor leagues right out of high school, although some will play in college for four years before succumbing to the promise of wealtli the major leagues hold. From the time he hits his first Little Lea$ue home run to the day he signs his first multi-year, mult1-million- dollar contract, the superior athlete's attentions are channeled into the game. He may r~tire from the game Without ever havin~ made a conscious career decision. So, when Reggie Jackson signed on with the Angels, he agreed to play baseball for money and he knew that he had a public image to maintain -for his own good as well as for the team and for the game. He did not, however. agree to si t meekly in a chair and be insulted and abused by a lout whose motives are better left to be dissected by a psychologist. · No, Reggie Jackson should not have htt this guy - if he did (he denies it.) But, if he did pop the guy , who can really blame him? Opinions expressed in this space are those of the Dally Piiot Other views eKpreased on this page are those of their authors and artists Reader comment Is invited The Cally Piiot. PO BoK 1560. Costa Mesa. 92626 Phone ~2-6086 By tbe Auocllled Preas r oda> 1!> Tuesday. Ma} 6, the I 26th day of 1986 There are 239 days ktl an the year Toda>'-; highlight m history: On Ma~ 6. 1917. Germany's hydrogen-filled dtng1blc. the Hindenburg. cKploded on landing 1n Lakehurst.NJ.. killing 36 of the 97 people aboard. On th1~ date· In 1840, England tnLroduced the first postage !'itarnp. In lk61 Arkansas seceded from the Uruon. In 1910. the Sdward1an-Age an Brita an ended with the death of King l:.dward Vil In IQ 15. Babe Ruth hit his first major-league home run for the t3oston Red \ox In 1915 the Works Proa,ress Adm1n1strat1on began operation In 1942. in World War 11. U.S. forces under Gen. Jonathan Wamwnght ~urrendered Corregidor to the Japanese. In 1954. medical student Roger Bannister' broke the four-minute mile at u tralk meet an Oxford. England. His time was 3 m1nutcS, 59.4 seconds. In 1980, the remains of e1aht American servicemen killed in the aborted m1ss1on to rescue the hostaacs in Iran were flown to 1he United States from Tehran by way of Switzerland. Ten years ago· A severe canhquakc struck nonheutern Italy. collap~1ng entire sections of towns northeast of Venice near the Yugoslav border and k1lhn& about 950 people. Five years ago: The Reaaan adm101strauon ordered the expulsion of all Libyan diplomats m Wash1naton And 1t was announced that Yale architecture \tudent Maya Ying Lin had won a compe11t1on to de 1gn a Vietnam War memorinl w11h her proposed V-!ihapcd monument. ORANGE COAST Daily _!li_lat ,,.,. Zltll EdttOI TemTelt Ml~lllG (d1t0t °""'..., City Edt10t r..-.ci.. N9#1 E'!tltO< Cr ... INff ~Ed1t0t ...., .. _, ClwrotNun Cot\ltollet .....,, L.. c ... ,... Proovc1ion M•neoer ,.,,,I(_. ~cutatM'll'IMI~ .... .,., ••lfWJ .,.., .... ,ll'O OiitctO< C~~!~OI .... · 'Sharlatmadart viewed Khomeini as a cynical ct!arlatan who used relJlllon to further his penwnalamb1tlons. lm<s UKE'lllE OlLINl>~1 WASHED DP. JACK AJlfDSa90N Oola••lat Sf ARC HLI GHl WALTEI Bu11ouc1s No.2 Les Steffensen wrote ".-ca-· Newport· s charter. helps Ami os Vtejos State to confiscate land owned by_pot growers Federal prosecutors finally have an answer for cntics who have charged for yea~ .that they're lenmg Calt- fomta 's several thousand fulltime manJuana growers off without much punishment: This year they'll beg.in confiscatmg s1gmficant amounts of land used b.Y pot growers 1n the "Emerald Tn- angle" region ofNonhern Califo rn ia. prcd1ctin& the tactic will sharply reduce this year's California man- 1uana crop. · More than SI m1lhon worth of land in Humboldt. ' Mendocino and onoma counttes north of San Fran- Cl.SCO is at stake as two dozen alleged man1uana farmers go on trial th is spring. Some authont1es have said man- 1uana 1s the leading cash crop in·th1s area bttween San FranCisco and the California-Oregon state line. The region ts known for the high quality of its seedless sinsem11La man1uana. said to be the most potent pot available in Amenca. All 24 indicted growers were nabbed in last fall's Cahfom1a Cam- paign Against ManJuana Planung, a three-month effort by federal. state and local agents whick netted illegal plants with a sLreet value of about $300 m1lhon. Under the 1984 federal Com- prehensive Cnme Control Act, any land they used to grow illegal narcotics can be confiscated without a separate c1v1I lawsuit. as pan of the penalty phase in trials where growers are convicted. In addition to the loss of the land, convicted growers face penalties of-up tn I 0 years tn pnson and a $500,000 tine THOMAS ELIAS "We've been telling people we arc going to seize and forfeit land and now they may begin to believe us ... said Assistant U.S. Attorney Peter Rt>bmson. "We think thi s will dis- suade a lo~ of people from growing man1uana. Authonties so far have confiscated only one parcel under the new law, a 208-acrc ranch owned by Ricque and Natasha Kuru in rural Mendocino County. about 200 miles north of San Francisco. Tl\e Kurus were arrested for growing 5l 1llegal plants just four days after the law took effect in October 1984, near the close of that year's marijuana harvest season. Their property drew only two mock bids when federal marshals put It up for auction a year ago -one for I 0 cents and the other for 30 pieces of silver. Robinson says he"s certain the land at stake now will bring genuine offers. with the proceeds going to law enforcement agencies to the three counties. "The Kuru land wa~ valued at S 115,000 only because 1t was isolated enough to be used for growing pot," said ilobtnson. "For any other use it would be worth a lot less and it had a 1100.000 mortpge. &>there was little or no equity in 1t and oot much reason for anyone lo bid much moner ... The new batch of properties 1s mon: promising. Robinson said. conceding that some of it also has been .overvalued tn the past because of its isolauon and man1uana-grow10g potential. Some properties are an small cities. while others arc rural. "We expect to confiscate the Land 1n all 24 cases. with 16 properttcs at stake," said Robinson. "We're onl y going w1th our strongest cases. We won't ewen try on I 0 others where the actual owner isn't as strongly linked to the growing activ11y." Lawyers for the accused growers maintain property confhcauon is too harsh a penalty for these alleged crimes. "It is a temble statement of where our society is going if someone can lose their home for growing a few plants, while murders or rapes can be committed on someonc·s property without running that risk," said one attorney defending several accused growers. Responds Robinson, "The penal- ties for those other crimes arc more $CVere. A murderer would be happy to walk away 1f he could get off by merely handing over his property ... It will be up to juries to decide the merits of those arguments, but at the very least the federal effort ought to quiet any cnt1cs who worry that pot growers risk no more than a sla{> on the wrist when polluting Amenca's you th TbomH EUH 11 a Santa MonJca- bHed cohamnl1t on state l11at1. -11a1:11 :r;i.u1~1;ti,fi!.1J.111:1 .1--------------- Iranians protest Khomeini's treatment of fellow holy man Clergymen riot after rival ayatollah dented medical care. proper funeral WASHINGTON -C1v1I unrest led by 'Shute clergymen is sweeping Iran as a result of t~e Ayatollah Khomeini's vengeful dec1Ston to keep a nval holy man from leaving the country for caricer treatment. The mullah. 85-ycar~ld Grand Ayatollah aid-Hazen Shanatmadan. died painfully 1n an Iranian hospital. and was then refused bunal proper for one ofh1s rank. So far, Khomeini has responded to the nots and dcmonstrattons with his usual ruthlessness, throwing hun- dreds of mullahs an jail. He is clearl y worried by this latest challenge to h1s rcgJme, rcmembenng the imponant role the Moslem clergy played in the shah's downfall and Khomeini's own rise to power seven years a&o. In a country where exccuuons of suspected opponents have become commonplace, why did the death and d1shon orina of one man 1anite unrcsr an c111es across Iran? State Depart- ment sources explained to our a~ sociate Lucettc La&nado that Shar1at- madan. unlike Khomcani, was a truly benevolent rch.aious leader WJdely beloved by lranians and especially the lower clcray. He even looked hke a Yint. one Iranian cxpen observed. In fact,. it was his devotion lo his rch&Jon that made hanatmadari the taraet of Kbomeini"s implacable wrath. The two were amona only a half-do1en arand ayatollahs. and therefore of equal rth~ous nature, but Shanatmad3n cntiCJzcd Kho- meini for '1Ci11n1 temporal authonty and 'ICtttn~ up a supposed!)' "lsJamic Republic.' Shanatmadan believed that ayatollahR should not Wleld eanhly power, and he v1e~d Kho- me1n1 ., a cynical charlalln who used rehg.ion 10 fun her his penonal amb1- l I --- tions. Khomeini implicated Shariat· madan tn a coup attempt several years ago and had the old man placed under house arrest. Then, several months ago, Shariatmadari was diagnosed as ha van& e1tbcr prostate or k.Jdney cancer. His doctors asked the regime for permission to take him 10 the West for treatment of his life-threatening disease. Though granting of such perm1ss1on 1i. usually routine, Kho- meini rejected hts rival's request. In Shariatmadari's fi'nul, agonizing days, visitors were not allowed to pa y their respects. And Khomeini's vendetta continued even af\er his rival died. His body was spirited out the back door of the hosp1lll, sources told us, and the regime penn1tted none of the funereal ceremony befit- tina the death ofan eminent spintual leader. "Herc we have the JOVemmcnt of an Islamic republic ao10J after a holy man," said a disgusted State Depart- ment source. who described Kho- mein i's lteatmcnt of Sharillmadari as "abastly." U.S. lranian ex pens are parucu- latl y interested in the turmoil that followed Shan1tmadari's shameful ltt.ltment. Shute muUabs have led riots in the street• of Qom, Tabriz and Moshad. 8&uars cfoscd down in protest over the aovcrnmcnt's ac· lions. St.ate Depanmcot cable ttafll~ reponed major diJ1urblnQCS as re- cently as last wtek. Another snnd ayatollah named Oolpayepna tw tak~ Shariat~ madan's place as an ouUpOkcn critic of Khomeini. Ool~ycpni sent a telcanm to Khomeini proteltina the Lack of a proper funeral for Slwult· JACK AIDEISOI and JOSEPH SPEAR r: madari and bis "bunal m a bidden place." Golpaycpn1. whom Kho- meini has also placed under house arrest, complained thal the regime's actions "arc agiinst Islam and the Koran." Footnote: Supporters of the late ayatollah •·amount to millions of people," sources estimate, and· dis- content extends far beyond tbe Moslem clergy. In addition, royalist clements have become emboldened by the unrest, and arc plannina their own demonstrations against Kho- meini. • BANK.6R"S HOLJDAY: Senate bumbling will aUow the nation's banken to continue eitjoyina the lucrative "float" on depositors' check.a -usi~ the money free for several da)'1 until they deian to let the cu1tomer write checks apinst the deposit LeaisJation passed by the House wouta force banks to make the fuods available wtth1n one business day in the case of •ovemment aod small checks, and Wlthin seven days on out-of-state checks. But Senate Bankina Committee Chairman Jake Oam, R-Uta.h, tacked the bill onto &eneral blnkina lqislation. probtbly doomina it to slow death. And apathetic Democrats hive d«bned to put any heat on Oam. J•d Aliff,.,.. Ull JfJHfl#i s,;e.r •rw lfN/nt-' COIU19.llU. • In last week's Searchlight I told you a great deal about tht late Harry Welch and the fine things he did for the Orange Coast area. It wu Mr. Welch's profound belief that ~s in development could come only if competitors should ~mpete ~s friends, not as enemies. That IS exactly what be brought about. Actually, the Orange Coasta:rea bas been extremely fortunate in the leaders who developed under bis inspiration. One of them who bas never had the credit that is due him is a fonner lumber and wood producu dealer named Les Steffensen. Les is one of those rare individuals wbo is content to appear as if be were not the leader he is but as a "number two" man. One thio1 he did would be a credit to any ··political scientist." He stud- ied the government of the City of Newport Beach and all its paru and wrote the City Charter. He wrote it in a lol(ay that no doubt wciuld have pleased Harry Welch had be H ved that long. He knew that it wasn't possible to have a completely fiabt· proof city government but he came as near to it as was possible at the time. As he observed at luncheon the other day, he thin.kt Harry Welch would have been pleased. The formula is rather simple. The ci ty is divided into various areas. To be a member of the City Council the candidate must live in that area but be or she must be elected by all the voters of the city. The result is that each councilman. while he must "look after" the inlCTC$ts of 1hc people who live in his district, he must ocvcnhelcss re- mcmbeT that he must SCTVe reason- ably all the c1t1zens of the city. There are. for eumrle, the coun- cilman from Corona de Mar, an&tber from the eastern oceanfront area. and soon. T.he way in which he gets to be the mayor is a little interestina it.self. Section 404 spells it out. "On the fint Tuesday following any general or special municipal election at which any councilman is elected, the City Council shall meet and shall elect one of its members as its presiding officer who shall have the title of Mayor. The Mayor shall have a voice and vote in all its proceedings. He shall be the official head of the city for all ceremonial purposes. He shall have the primary, but oot exclusive, re- sponsibility for interpret.ing tho polJ- c1es, programs arid needs of'tbe city government to the people and, as occasion requires1 he may infonn the people of any maJOr change in policy orprognun ..... Of course. tf you were to say, as I did, "Les, you did a fine job,'" he will immediately respond, "I didn't do the JOb. There was a board of f~ holders;" Okay, Les. It says right here J. Leslie Steffenson, Chairman; and I have it on aood authority from certain other members of the free. holden group that while everyone offered an opinion, it was usuall y a yes or no on one of your SUggc1tions. Today Les bas no public office. He just d~ the thina that suits him best. lie is number two man in Amiaos Viejos, the orpnb.ation tbat was established by-Harry Welch. To be &Utt tberc's a man ca.lied Prcsidente. That is a fortner Justice of the St.ate Court of Appeal, Bob Gardner. But Les is in the spot he always likes best-number two man DurinaJudaeOardner's tonaabtcnce in which be bu been Cbief Juatice of American Sa.mo.. la bas openly run the show with onl.Y the help of the secretary, Bob MtCurdy. Oenana back to the Charter of the City of Ncwpon &acb, it was approved by the electorate in 19S4 and became effective on January 7, I 9SS. It has been ameoded only oace, in 1966. -Pretty aood record, Whal 1 think should recommend this to tome of the profete0rs of political ldeoce at tbe UniVtnityofCaJjfbmia-&JI \be c:ampu.xs., Well, it now appeaq fm out of tape wit.bout livinl you &ht fWJ 1tory on ljany Welch Memorial Part and how h became the Du.nee.. I'll try to do that not week. wa1 .... ..,., ..... " ... ,,...., ,, ...... , ..... , .. . -. I :J I Republican roeee llatbua Bula, wUe. of Vlee Preelclent Geoqe Bula, ud ~· Coaaty lkapenlMr.Bnace Jlf•tandeadli.lrea boaqaet of Oowen pNMDted to ber Monday wbea abe wu a iaen of tbe <>ranae County RepabllcaD Party at tbe tmne Jl9toD. Sumner explains strate'y behind write-in campaign By PAUL ARCHIPLEY Of .. Olllr ........ County Democrats ordinarily would wrile ofTtbc Republican-heavy 40th Congressional District -par- ticularly the primary race -and use their hmited funds and time for more promisina races. But rather than write it off, county party chief Bruce Sumner finds himself runoiri& as a write-in can- didate against Art Hoffman, the official entrant in the Democratic primary. , Hoffman, 29, a technical writer from Santa Ana who doesn't live in the 40th District, is a disciple of ultra- conservative Lyndon LaRouche. When local Democrats learned Hoffman was the only person to file for the primary, they faced the same embarrassment that befell the Demo- cratic Party in Illinois where two LaRouche candidates woo primary races. Rather than suffer a simjlar scenario, Sumner is running a loog- shot campaign as a write-in candidate for the Democratic nomination. At a press conference ob Monday, the retired Superior Court juCSae and fonner state assemblyman revealed how extensive the effort will be1 while accepting part of the blame ror the need to run the race. He said two people indicated to him they would file for the Demo- cratic primary, but both backed out. Hoffman found himself unopposed. .. They got by us," Sumner said. "I take some of the blame, and that's part of the reason I'm running. "Had I known, I would've been on the ballot and · saved myself thousands of dollars." Sumner isn't saying exactl y how many thousands he'll need to educate Democrats on the write-in procedure. But to date he has raised $15,000 and loaned the campe.i~ $8,<>00._he · State Attorney GcnenJ Jahn Van de Kamp will headline a May 23 fund-raiser in Newport Beach for Sumner, and media consultant David Paine of Paine & Associates in Newport Beach has been hired to ditcct the campaign. The Sumner team so far has lined up 13 phone banks and 300 volun- teers to call Democrats and explain his candidacy and the wnte-in procedure. Sumner also hopes to raise enough to send three mailers to Democratic voters in the 40th District. He emphasized Hoffman's link to LaRouche made him an unacceptable representative of the party. .. I don't want the rest of the country to look at ~nge County llnd say you've got Republican congressmen who arc an embarrassment and Democrats have a LaRouche alterna- tive," the Newport Beach resident said. ··1 represent the legltimatc party effort to present voters with a legil- imatc alternative to the Republican candidate." Sumner sa.id he would debate LaRouche, but not Koffman. He met Hoffman at a recent convention where Hoffman told him be believed anything LaRouche believed, Sumner said. And LaRoucbe's. behefs, Demo- cratic leaders say, arc bizarre. Among other claims, LaRouche has said that Queen Elizabeth of England 1s involved in drug traffick- ing, that the Israelis arc masters of the Libran economy and terrorism -as wel as agents of the Soviet Union - and that a number of U.S. Senators' wives arc KGB operatives. Cruise 1nissiles ordered for possible Libya attack By die At1ocJated Pre11 WASHINGTON -The Navy has been ordered to dispatch more ships carryin& cruise missiles into the Mediterranean, as U.S. military leaders consider possible use of the weapons in any f uturc assaults against Lib,a, a broadcast report said. CBS News reported Monday night that use o the missiles 1s being considered by U.S. defense officials preparing contingency plans in case further actions arc ordered against the North African nation. One of the cruise missile-carrying ships ordem:I in10 the Mediterranean was the nuclear attack submarine that ran aground 1n the Straits of Gibraltar last Tuesday, the network quoted sources as saying. The missiles would carry conveot1onal explosives, the network report said. · Teacher given $1 mUllon, relnatated ATLANTA -An English instructor has accepted $ t ,080,000 and reinstatement as settlement of her successful lawsuit against the Universjty of Georgia for firina her after she protested preferential treatment of athletes. The lawsuit by Jan Kemp, a teacher in the remedial srodies provam. trigcred intense pubhc scrutiny of the university and its treatment of athletes. Kemp won a jury award ofS2.58 million against the state last Wlnter. but U.S. District Jud&e Horace Ward later reduced that to $680.000 and told Mrs. Kemp she coufd accept the lower award or seek a second trial on punitive damages. f ollowinf negotiations, the state and Kemp reached a settlement. avoiding a second tnal. The state paid Kemp S.1 .080.000 and will reinstate her on July I . She will have seven years to acquire tenurt. and she will not have to report to the two officials she named in the suit . Saadl mlaile Ale f~ confident W ASHJNGTON -Conarnsional opponents of 1he Reapn admm1s: trat1on's ptoposed $354 million sale of miMilcs to Saudi Arabia say they are confident they have the votes to block the deal. The opponents say they have enoulh votes to not only pass resolutions of disapproval 1n ~b chamber. but aJso to override an c~pccted presidential veto. Althouah each hou~ could vo1e on the issue thiJ week, a pOSSible snaa could develop in the Senate 1n a dispute over the 1ehcdulioa of action on an unrelated bill loosening gun control ttttnctions. C~e7'• daf161Jter left oat of will POOOHK.EE.PSIE. N.Y_ -Actor James Cqncy left nothfoa to bis only ti v1 na chi kl, and named bis spokeswoman and her huiblnd a eucuton of hi, estate, accordina to bJs wUI filed an Dutchess County urroptc Coun. C~ey, who died Mateb 30 at his farm, lcf\ bis peraonal bclofl&inas -fumtture.. clothloa, can,jtt.telry, art-to h11 "'ifc of 64 years. FranCH .. Willie" C.qncy Tbc mo~ star let[ his adopted dluahter, thleen Cqney Thoma, of Cahfom11, and hia arandch1ldrcn ouJ ofihe will. The Wiii stated no reason for the cxcluJJon of hHt dauJ}tta. .. YOu help us keep our priorities strai t. Walk into any Imperial avings branch these days and you'll see u~ wearing bunons with a message that really makes sense: UVou're #1." Not "We 're # 1 " or some o ther way of telli ng you what a big deal we think we are. But an honest, simple statement that let~ you know we have our prio rities in o rder: ..: 'You're # t ." Quite a switch, isn 't it ? A big financial institution that realizes it's in business to serve you. Yo u 'II feel it in the way we greet you. The way we listen. And, yes, even in the bunons you 'll see us wearing. See for yourself. Our a'isecs are in the billio ns. But the n1ost va luable one is you. Making your investments work harder is a top priority, too. , ometimes, the proof o f our priorities is in o ur products. Take Cenificates of Deposit fo r example. Our tiered Tomorrow avingssm CDs are designed specifically co be responsive to your individual needs. They're n()( just a series of one-size-fit5-aJI accounts, but savings opportunities which answer)iour financial priorities. Imperial avings CDs pay solid, safe, competitive rates-naturally. But they share the . pecial advantage o f al lowing you to choose from shon or long term. , make small or large deposits. And enjoy e ither liquidity or long-term growth. To learn more· about the tiered CD right for you. ca ll us toll-free, at: . 1-800-243-CHEK-NOW (1-800-243-5669) Bener yet, stop at the lmperial Savings hranch nearest you-we'd always prefer to see you in person! ~ H Association Hundngton lle9ch 19021 Beach Blvd. Where Tomorrow Begins Today. .. 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Althouah startinJ Jam Ryerson Productions wiu tou_gh two years aao. he decided be was ready to leave lhe on-amera side of television. Today, has work is distn'buted on cable and VHF stations. His Newport Beach-based flrm pecializes in creat- ing video p~ ~leases, tra.inina tapes and COTJ><?rate prcscntatio~. -mostly special events, tclev1s1on commercials and publtc service an· nouncements. Ryerson recently started a major project for the c.at1fornia Department of Commerce, Office of Tourism to produce 1nfonna&ive video news re-- leases for their "Califomias .. project. He has completed productions for Disney, Knotts Berry Farm. Pacific Mutual Ltfc Insurance Co. and the Anaheim Visitors and Convenuon Bureau. Ryerson is positiorung his com- pany to tap the markel created by new cable and utellite television stations. In many cases, they can cul pro- duction cosu by binna an indepen- dent production company rather than hiring their own staff and buying equipment. "We can fill in the (programminj) holes and enable stations to contain their costs. We cim do a projccl cheaper than a station because our overhead is sc& up differently. We don't have the money tied up in equipment that the stations do." he exl>lained. Orange County and Southern Cali- fornia corporate and media needs for news covera,ae are sbifung more to video, and with the current changes in the networks' leadership. stations are slow to hire staff as they await further impacts of cable stations and in- creased usage of video casene re- corders on their ratings and market shares. Jim Ryenon. n,bt. dlrecta crew ma.klq a '"4eo newa releue for corporate-client on location ln On.ate Coa.nty. "They don't know what the future is.going to be," Ry«Son said. end of a 12-ycar ody~~· After finishma IU&h school in Chicago, he joined the Air Force and became in1ercsted in broadcasting. serving at Bia Spring. Texas. hiJ mstru~p_.$bim& 'obas_a09untry western disc Jockey at a aianon he managed. His boss exposed bim to a , But his currenl position as owner of a productton company represents the After he taking a basic class whale (PleueMeVID&0/A9) RB Industries' retail UJlit ~pf or sale By lite AHoc~&ed Prest lRVINE-RB Industries Inc. has decided to seek a buyer for its retail division, RB Furniture Inc .. af\cr two RB executives announced plans to make an offer for the unit. .. The board of directors hired Financo. a Philadelphia mergers and acquisitions company, to price the company after Lawrence Crink, president of RB Furniture. and James Bnghtmao, vice presiden~ of finance for RB l ndustries, said they were interested in a leveraged buyout of the SS RB Furniture stores. NEW VO~ (~~p -~tNL ...... ~100 Oat II ffi~' 1t10w1 1rie ''New York StockExctianoe 1locks end warr1n11 ll'l•t 11av1 oone llP on> fl'le mo1t end down the moil based on i vi tora:fcil percent of cfwlngt r~erdleu of volume l m•'lne IS for MondlY. IBTX a I of8 No ~urlllfl trading below S2 are 111(1-o~p -v~ed. Ntl and percentage dlenges are !he ~ lp8 dl1 trence between the previous clOs ng r5 ngy n pr ce end Mond1v '1 2 P.m . •nellnd or lc t N UPS m ind ~· ~e~t Lest: t C~ ~{ci1·1~]·:·. ~~~~P 1 ~U:,'lv~em 1 ~~ 11~ ~~ l ~v~rnre 6 Trenscn Inc "• ~ Up 2 v~ En 7 Publjcil Ind 31h 11• UP l .... II I NIMlneSY ,.,. 'h Up 7.. 4 Kor.. d 9 Alrbn Fri 22 Jlh Uo 7.3 S MexlcoFd David Poshms1 a Fmanco usociate, said be will appr-oacb other rctaden who ~t be interested. SWllcy Goff, RB lndustrica chief operatiq o'::!J said the board was receptive to the executives' pro because "basically it would en.bance abarehokSer valuea." The buyout proposal comes at the end of a Iona struggle to tum RB industries around. The company Iott $17 million last year on revenues ofS 116.S million. In the s1.x months ended Dec. 31, the company reponed income of$734,000 competed with a losa ofS2.7 million for the same penod io 1984. Revenues were SS4.8 million com pated with $61.3 million a year bef orc. 6;:;;~~ ~~o •Vlh-~.a . Ind :rs WI IPCI of i~~ m-VJ 1 -1 -'lo 11 -1 ~7 = ~ -"" -v. -21M = ~ -1'.4 -....., -,.,,. 3\.\ ::. ~ i -"" -,,., -VJ \o ~a -11111usmn~------------- The Great American 6-Month CD The greater your balance, the greater your rate. Minimum baJance $1.000; rate and yield above are for $50,000 balance. Fjve clifferent rates for five different balance levels. There are maey other terms available, from 32 day. to 10 years. AU insured up to i1oo:CXXl by an agency of the federal government With IM off...,e-. '-t'n '"ll Orange ( ount\' Anahdm Hilh. Balhoa N.tnd. Balhoa Ptnm,ula. ( ap1~tta~ ~adl. EJTom. Founaaln \.tlln ffuntinl'ton fkaJi. l..agunn Rad•. La nn ~1111,, l.qJJ~ IJl~I. \h "'"\-~JO. Mon.lrd'l Ba). ~poc1 Bt-actt. Onm¥f. n C'lnnmteo \.Jn C ~nwnte. A~1da Pk:o, ''"Juan Captstrano and WondhndRt •c.,,.. '"" ..,,. ,. •" , .. ....... t ,.._, • ·•· """" ~· ,.,,,, """"'",.""' """" ,..., .. ,.. ... ,., • ,.i .,.,._ .... ~" •• .. • ............. .,,..... ...... &r•• ... •' #\4',..,_ ,,,. 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We don't know if a pro. and when R~n wu dltcJwpcS ducdon bas been utcd unlell a 1wioJl from the 1ervace ab. month• late1', be notifies ua when they aired it," be knew television would dominate his aid. ftature. ..You have to set to know the But after IJ"lduatina frorn the producm and news editors Who University of Illinois, be dl1COvered make the decisions.. We tend infor· the lot of .a newly detreed broadca1t mation lbeeU Ilona with the video journalist wu di.Ima[ relala to inform ttationa about tbe Nobody wanted to hire him. location and other appr()priate beck- He read lSO rejection• from pro-arou.ad." spect.ive employers wbo said they ---------dldn't like bis writ.ins or his voice before he landed hit fi.rltjob-wiih 1 television ttation in Texas in 1971. Two yean later be wu hired by the CBS affiliate in Phoenix. But his bia break came when KABC hired him to start its Oranae County bureau. "We were No. 3 in Oranae County when I started, went to No. I in a year and remained there for five years. We aot better retinas in Orante County than in Los Anaeles." he remembers. ' "But Channel 7 wanted me to be increuinfly controvmial • ... In the . news b\Wness, you are completely .at the mercy of the news. I was never oft'. There wu always some~ that could happen. I aot tim1 of death, ~Y and destruction. Meclaea"' Bill "•nsvcbecb a jet aitne comprwor rotor follcnrm, a rot1tlae malatenanoe lupKdon far metal fatllM aad--conoelon of a United AlrliD• DC-10 --1ne at tbe operatlou center In lu haaeleoo. ltacb year 11Dlted oftl'iaala 1,IOO ~•from lta S&Oalrcraft Ill a federa117 appnned pre•entln malntenance procram. · • Coverina Ora.nae County wu my job alone for three years. They finally hired two more peo~ in the bureau but Oranae County is the sixth laraett metro area in the country. "But there were upects of the business that I loved. Doiq feature stories ... in Oranp County was fun. "If they bad wd. 'Yea, you can do all feature stories; I miaht have continued. I'm very a.tad they didn't because I don't know ifl would have staned this buainesa." R.yerson's 'network of contacts front bis KABC yean Were valuable in solicitina aa:ounts for bis com- pany. He also knew where to find well-qualified ~lance cameramen and technicians. Oreo munchers m~rk _75thyear . "' . While workina on a production for double dollop of cream in the middle. Disne~land, Ryerson met Suu.n That cookie now is the fifth best-Clark in mar.ketm& and hired her !or sellina cookie in the country, the bis own company. Toaether they company says. contactclientsanduae-whatelae- Creme-filled cookie's trivia abour:ids;but name ortgtn unclear ByCOTl'ENTIMBERLA&E Two yean ago, a mint-flavored a video brochure to ~tell _prospective version was brou&bt out. clinets bow Rycnon Productions can "It's a very good brand franchise. bclP. publicize products or issues. By expandina the tine, they may have • We take items tlult would make brou&bt some additional consumers lcaitimate news stories and by u~ NEW YORK (AP)-You can split into the market," said Georae our expertise in the news an the chocolate wafers and scrape oft' Pierides, an analyst with Standard & documentary fields, we fashion the the supry filling with your ~wo front Poor's Corp. Other · flavon could ~=0fc,:!.~\!! :J~.fit into the t~; or you can throw cautton to the come follow, he said. To usure eft'ectiveneu, Rycnon wind and, mu.ncb .them whote,. Y~u .. Nabisco, based in Panippany, N.J.. escbewi special effects or results.that can d!-lnk cm 10 milk or smuh em m declines to detail Oreo's sales trend in look like commercials. your tee~· . , recent years. Sunshine Biscuits also "We see to it that the video preu However tt s done, .1t s don~ lots: won't provide such numbers. The rcleue is a piece that the station can Oreo ct).OC?late sand~cb coo~es are American Bakers Association in use, then decide whether to UIC local the worlds top. a;ellina cookies -Wasbfn&ton. and the Millin&. and or national distribution," be aid. For information and an appointm with a certified urologist call n;tore than l 00 billion have been sold Banlc.ina News say they don't have the "We stay in constant contact with smce they ~re introdu<:ed 1S years fiaures. the appropriate stations but aettina a&C?i .aa:ord1q to the Gwnneu Book But competition has been heatina. people to actually use the piece is the of wortd Records.. . up. . . . . . bia problem." Nouna ~e an~1versary, Nabi9:00 In April, Sunshme B1scu1ts 1n-Ryerson sends tapes of the video Brands ~nc. ts takina the ~pportu~ty troduced Hydrox Doubles, which releases to news editors at pn> to provide most of ~e tnformat1on contain extra cream filling plus one of contacted stations. If a station is you coul.d ever possibly want about ihree flavors: mint1 fudge and straw-realty int~ted, he some~es aives the cooki~.. . . . berry. . it an e.xclu11ve releue for its market. On~. tidbit . Nabisco omits, not -sunshine, based io WoodbndJe, Measurinabowmanystationsu1ea surpr:i11~aJy, ts that the Hydrox NJ., is plannint an adverti&Jna video relate ii not euy. (213) 595,3454 oook;ie is okier. Invented. by an campaian claimin& Oreos sometimes "There is no way to monitor all Eqliabman, Hydrox_ ~kies were arc m.de-with lard, while Hydrox .-_:.=:..:._::=.__:___:: _____ _c=========================== ft~ soldin thtroo~ntfy !n I ~8, says cookies always arc made with vea-therr maker, Sunshine Btacutts Inc. ctable oil. But Oreos are more famous, and by "We're kind of takina off the ~oves far better seUm. . , and taking on the competition. ' said If all the Oree;> cookies that were Alexander Nichols, director of ever eaten were pt led one on top of the advertisina for Sunshine. other, they ~ou!d reach t~ the m~n Nabisco has no comment. The and bac~ twice; 1fptaced side by.11de, company describes the cream fillina they'.d arcle the equator 130 limes, as a blend of suaar and oil. Nabisco say~. . But lf it's Oreo trivia you're after, .The cookies arc sold m 2S coun-Nabisco has plenty: tnes., and .abo~t S 1 of ev~ry SI 0 spent _ More than 1 million Orcos are on cookies 10 Amencan grocery produced in an eight-hour shift at five stores is spent on Oreos, the company bakeries. It takes an hour and 3S says. . . minutes for an Oreo to wend its way Nab1sco says tt has been foraotten throu&h the process. where the Oreo fl!lm~ came from, but _ Over the yean, the size of the amona. the .theories ts tNlt com~y cookie has vaned. The current, 20- executJves JUSt liked the sound of tt. year-old version is I l/4 inches across. Another is that the name may be _ A standard Oreo contains 47 derived from th~. Frcncb word for calories, the company says. ~~~~ or. The oryamal label . had the _ Oreos cost about $2.29 for a 16-proouct name 10 aold, with 1otd ounce bag. scrollwork, the co~pany !:8ys. • _They are most popular with 6-to Jn l 97S, Nabisco .mtroduced 18-ycar-olds. Double Stuf Orcos. which have a RUFFELL'S lJ>HOLSTERY INC. -. '•om CMrt ...,., lH2 i-. awo .. COSTA IEA-541-115' SHOCKED! ~' " UllITT ..... ·~· Esll957 I b 131•n40 '41 Okt .... ...,. llMt. Ne•,.t---.ca. RIFI NOW Y 0411 Home h Y0411 lett 1n¥91tment 15-YW AIEI OWNflt occ FllEI OWNElt OCC APlt. 10 06 7M -916-0IOI VANOUMD MOITUOI --CouioaA'nON IYUIY~n IOl'A a LOVI llAT IPICIAL t10ll." 642-2255 2640 A¥9n St., New!Mft leed\ ---- AMERICAN AIRPORT TRANSPORTATION & LIMOUSINE SERVICE. INC. 8u ... /MlnlbuS/llmoualMS Stot1onwogon1/Vona/ rN a Ooof to Ooof S.Mc:e Prlvot9 Chotfef1 and Tours 1-800-524-1 300 JltlYerdaing Art lenlcs•• ,/ .........,0.. ...... 0..-.. ,/ W9Ml~· l0. ... k-.•• ,/ ,.. ........ ~ ....... ~ ....... QUPlllCI •SWPOBT (714) 720-9191 ......... C-Dr. "'--' ...... CA ... ,. OUr- hasthe Op9nlng a C*flcat1 .ccc>unt at Aadtc 811W9 Bank ~ JUM 30, 1918. No purchw MetlM~ coutd be Ont of tht greetnt~YoU'ft ..-,,..... So cetch our Grand Slam oftllf Few current,. ... °' m04'9 Sfmpfy ~ a 85-0.V oetibte account wtl'I a minimum lntonnatk>n. cell 1 ~Of~ In the coupcn bekM depoelt of $5 000 Of.'"'"'°"" or longer~ acoount r---------------., with.• m1nimUm d.poatt of 12.500 tram• eourct oe. IMrl -I an •xllting Pllcttlc eccount. Wl'I not ontv gl¥I you COtftP9t· I MllM1--------------=- ltlw ratH, weie glw you two ttcheta to • 11t1*<.1 ~ J I ~·or P9dM home game. oouf'lMY of IN es AoeM ~ ~---__,; __________ _ SpOrte ctub and a 35mm catntt1 ., cerrytng caee CMmtt I ; I 2 he tlcMtta and 1 camera per houllhokf). *-.-...--I ~ .... ZAp eoa I For twfY QUaltled aoc:ount. .............. ~~ """--' to the CYldc Fbolil FoundMk>n to Mep tlnd • cure tor Cf. • · • I e....our"ll-..Woftd..,..I 1111 lit 1·~"-I ~1 1 · ""'111'*''----_, Win an ac:tk>n·pecMd trlP fof two to the h two game. •of 1 ..,.. 11> ~ ....... ..,.., ,o 1011 ~ eo...,..... CA t212t DP ..J tht 'Nond SefiM. .Mt fttloutan tntrybm at~ local bfMCh L--------- - ------ ' t l . - .. .. , . NYSE CoMPos1 n TRANSACTIONS TlllllY'I ....... ... Stock trading mixed NEW YORK (AP) -The stock mark.ct managed a mixed performance Tuesday as the Dow Jones industrial average gave back a Portion o ( Monday's gatn. The market improved in the afternoon as buyers returned th~1r attention to blue chip stock$ and the Dow Jones 1odustriaJ average closed with a modest loss and well above its lowest levels of the day. , Interest rates were the subject of some spcculauon today. The United States and its six leading trading partners agreed at the summit tn Tokyo to more closely coordinate their econom ic policies to reduce volatility in currency values. Although orchestrated interest rate reducuons weren't mentioned as part of the accord, analysts said the agreement could lead to lower rates. WHAT AMEX Om 1 WHAT NYSE Drn NEW Y~K !AP) M.Jjy ' NEW YORK (AP) May 6 AMEX LEADERS GoLo QuoTE S Dow JoNE S AvERAGES METAL S QuoTE S NASDAQ SUMMARY To 1 'oott tUl.5 .m Marin:fl 's Thompson resigns But have the Vikings really los t their foot ball coach? Prin cipal says th ey·n talk leavina, Toibin said Monday h's not nec:na.- arily so. "Davesubmittedaletterwhicb I've not yet .... accepted" said Toibin. "Hopefully we'U re- solve this in the ne.xt couple days. someone of Dave's caliber, you don't want to lose him." By ROGER CARLSON or .. ia.-r,......, Dave Thompson, the coach who trans. fonned Marina Hi&b School's imaae as a loser into a perennial-winner on the football field, has resianed his post with the Vikings, citing lack of administtative t>Kkina. "The~objust hasn't been as rewardingas it should be,• Thompaon said Monda)', confirm-i~his letterofiesipation prescntcci to Marina Principal Ira Toibin. "After eight yea.rs thiop should pc running more smoothl y. More concrete things could have been done." But. while Thompson has stated he's Sox sizzle; Halos fizzle Hurst baffles slumping An gels with eight-hitter BOSTON (AP) -Manager John McNamara says onlr time will tell if - the Boston Red Sox s pitcbina is for real, but right now he's very pleased with bis hurlen' perfonnanoes. 0 This could be the year of maturity for this pitching staff," McNamara said Monday night after southpaw Bruoe Hurst scattered ei&ht hiu in a 3-0 victory over the Anaels. It was the An&els' fourth strai&ht loss. "There still is a long way to go, but I like what I sec," be said after Hunt lowered the American League's best team earned run average to 2.74 with the Red Sox's first shutout of the year. Hunt, 2-2, outduelled the Angels' Mike Witt, also 2-2, striking out five without issuing a walk. He allowed only one bit after consecutive singles by Bob Boone and Gary Pettis started the fifth. It was the Red Sox's seventh -victory in the past eight starts. "Maybe this staff being maligned so much over the years has got us together," Hunt said. Hunt and McNamara ~ that speedster Steve Lyons. filhna in for lame Tony Armas in oenterfield, saved the victory with a spectacular divi ng catch on a line drive by Wally Joyner and then doP.ling Boone off second to end the fi . 0 The catch by yo was the turning {><?int, no qu n about it." Toda7'•1ame A.Qel1 at Boston, 10:05 a.m. WEDNESDAY'S GAME Toronto (Oaocy 2-1) at Angels (Sutton 0-3). Time: 7:35 p.m. 1- TV: None. Radio: K.MPC (710). Hoffman's double and Wade Boas' single) in the third and I was determined not to give it back," Hurst said after improving Boston's record to 12-1 in games in which pitchers have held opponents to two or fewer runs this season. Hurst. who follows Roger Oemens in Boston's pitching rotation, said he took advioe from the big ri&ht- bander, who set a major league record by striking out 20 .,ainst Seattle last week. Just before the game, Hurst said, "Roger came up to me and told me to take each inning one at a time, not to look ahead." "That's exactJy_ what I did: I made each inning a different game," Hurst said. "I didn't strikcouJ 20, but I got a shutout and that means an awfuUy lot to me. "I made aome aood pitches and Sot better u I went afon1,' he said. "I got into the proverbial voove. I've been su:ugaJina a little with my controf so this is a big pickup for me." Two of his assistants, Andy Donepn and I.arry 0o¥le, were in a mutual sense of disarray after beanna of Thompson's resis;nation. Donegan, who is also the 1ehoo1'1 athletic director, said: "Obviously we want· O.vt · Thompson u a head coach very much. This is the very, very worst timina. lfthisaoes throujh we're stmply not JOina to have spring practloe (scheduled to beain in two weeks). Doyle echoed DQnepn's feelinp. addins; "I knew be was unhai;py, ~ut I wish be would have sat down with us (h1sassistants) and p ven us a chance to sec if we could find a way.' , Thompson, considered by many u one of the P-temier prep football coaches in Southern Cabfomia, has guided the Vikinp to a 58-32-4\ Hurst said. "Steve did the ·same \bing to save a game for me in Oakland last year. He's a hustler and plays hard." "We scratched o ut a run (on Glenn "The kid (Hurst) pitched a nice pme, nothing eye-popping, but good," Angels Manager Gene Mauch said. "We got some hits, but not enough with men on base. Witt pitched good, very good, for seven innings. but those two runs in the ei&hth made it very tough for us." Tlae Aneeta• Bobby Grieb flree to Ont u Boeton •a Don Baylor alldee into aecond on . . record in eiaht years, which includes ponioos of two Suntet Lasue cbam~onlhips and berths into the CJF ~yo1fs six umet. Thole matb compere with a school which had teen one winning teason (~ uodet Leon Wbeeler in 1970) in the previous 1 S eeuons - and never a hint of a CIF playoft"berth. Four ofhil lot1et were in the CIF Bia Five semifinals in the i:ut 6ve years, and almost aMuallyit'abcendonewithastaffthatbubcen put t<>tether in a piecemeal situation. That's the crux ofTbom~n·a dissatisfac- tion with the school's adnunistration, wbicb bu not responded to requests for full-time, on- campu1 usutance. -• Specifically, Thompson's top offoosive Hnccoach, Mark Rehlin~ full-ume teacher, but at rival Huntinaton h Hi&b. Another top assistant. John Seeley, left four years aao for Valencia Hilb after repeated efforts to find him a position at Marina went unfulfilled. "That .. 6_~~ •·" llid Toibill. ·•we wen i1 a 'RIP liUJMiOG (redactioe i• (oroedec~'* of ta.e eft'ecta of Propoeilioa ll and inina enrollment) . '•At that time the entire diJtrict WU ill I decline aod they 'riffed' • number or~ and it went &om year~. ValeDcia came ia and offered mm a ,.....,. contnct. I• was so~ethina we simply couldft't do." Anothet llli1wn, Tim Reed. ranaim 11 a substitute u.cber. .. Not mettina Reblin& a poeilioe ii IOl'e spot." said TbomplOft. .. I"'mjust • lk rypeol peflOn wbocao write itotrarid 1ay'Hey, tee you later ' J :.When I came }\eTe I aid the lllOlt impor.tant thina was co.c:bet -to build a ...n: .. Everysummerrve bad to to OD vacatioe wooderina to m~~Will 1 have a lioe ccecll when I ,et bKk, " · lbomP19G. "You ,et t little cynical and =e wbeD .. ~-llA .. ,., ' VOLLEYBA LL • 1 Three area teams-bid --~ ,for finals h 's down to the four top1eamt in tbeCIF. ,. That's the situation toniabt in the temifinals of the hiab IChool 4-A volleyball playofti .. Edison bolts ,.........,. .... Be8cb at Golden W~Q>l­ lcs and Newport Hatbor duds Dua }{ills I t Llpoa Beach Hilb.. Both matches bqin at 7:30. ~I.ail ;D II The winoen play Saturday niabcY: o'clock) at Marina Hieb for the cbampsonship. · Sea View champion Newport Harbor is matched apiut South Cout Lea&ue champ Dana Hills, a team the Tan defeated early in the te&IOn. Newport is &ed by John Alstrom and Juon Nedelman. "Out of the four teams left, Dana Hills probably controls the best of any," said Newpon eo.ch Mike Neece ... For us to win. we're 10iQf to have to pus the ball bec:aUllt. they terVe real touah. And, we're 1Dina to have to serve touch.·· In the other pme. it's Suntet Leaaue champ Ediloo apin.st Sea View runner-up lAluna Bach. "Ediaon i1 a aofid team with an out.standina middle blocker ~ Hanan)," said Laauna Bach Bill Ashen. "They've oome so far in the tait five or six years. Wben r first started. if )'OU were IDinl to tell me we MR JOin& to-Re EdiJon m llie CIF semifinals, I would probably have lauaf>ed u:,u. YOU Can aecfit Dan Glenn ( · o's coach) and bis playen for that." Glenn bas aeen ·the Artists and is obvioosly impressed. the front end of a doa'::ifilay started by IUcla Qed••n •a poand lloaday DICbt. .. Lquna &each is one of the .stronaer teams at the net. They compare very well to Dana Hills in that they're IU.lly a sttona-hittina team." said Glenn. Criticism Despite nine beers, fan says he wasn't intoxicated key factor into unconsciousness appeared before Mil· fellow Angeis Donnte Moore, Rick Burleson across the street. from th~ h_otel where tbe Man says Jackson choked waukee County D istrict Attorney Michael and Rob Wilfong. ~I~ were ~t'S!t~ ·~Jn:c~:e~ i B t h t · McCann who opened a fact-finding review to "I guess I was upset" when Jackson refused a. ut p.m. Y n erry S im in 0 unconsciousness detenni,;e if charges should be filed against to autograph his ticket from Sat~rday's. M!!" hall~ ID a_loss to the ~rewers. ·----a Jack.son waukee Brcwers--Angclsgame. Weimer sa1d. I He ~P~ off h1.s ~tch ~nd. s':-1~ to d i i MILWAU KEE (AP)-A man who had McCann quesuoncd three people in the was embarrassed." . chok~me~ Weam~rsatd. HesaJd, Pick0tup, ec S 0 n been refused an autograph by baseball star informal hearing Mon~y and said he would Weimer, who appeared with a blac~ened pick!.' up. Next tht~~~tl,~ =~ :!:::u:ri Reaaie Jackson said Monday he drank more like to hear from others. ancludins Jackson. left eye, a cut abo-.:e the lefteyeb!'<>w.,acha~ could~~~~~at all" Weimer said .. 1 S t. J ohn'sstar than a six-pack of beer before he was injured in He said he could not pred1ct when the front t~th. and stitches under has chm. w e ld • vth • 1 perfectl still .. a weekend barroom scuffle with the Angels' review ~ould conclude. sarcastically thanked Jack.son as he passed the cou ,; •. sayr~dh~~·~·t :ember r~lin• ~r sa ys he'll enter Player Weimer an unemployed office worker, ballplayers table. . ci~efa th bl ff ~ · · 26 r Ra w · also told McCann that a companion and "My voice wa.s under control," Weimer h1tt1n1 his oe on e t.a. e. .•s 00~~1on. But Donald Weimer. • o cane. is.. bartender told him it wouldn't be advisable to said. "I was more embarrassed than anything Scott ~etland, also ofRacme, said he d1dn t see later told reoorters be was not intoxicated. f th his rnend ran but saw blood when be •ot to NBA J une draft "I didnft-foel I wasaffccted," said Weimer. do an~g ra~h with an autographed paper ehlsc. I~. was more or less a spur o e moment Jack.son's table and saw the ball~yer pjck:ing who admitted to drinking about nine been plate given to htm by a bar employee. t mg. h <tO 14s d w · m 01.-000.r B W · b I · the bar Weimer says he then remembers Jackson t e .r • -poun etmer up UK • ,, • Saturday afternoon. "It was spread out over a ut e1mer, as e was eavmg . . M Ja kso "was rather oold about it ., ...... • NEW YORK (AP) -Despite all the accolades Walter Berry received this season. he said it was the criticism. not the praise, that in- fluenced bis decision to enter the pro ranks. long period of time and J had eaten." tossed the tom.up plate bearing Jackson's pulling him back to the table to IJOr c 0 od • Weimer, who claims Jackson choked him .signature onto the table where Jackson-sat with Goolsby's, a popular hangout for sports fans Hetland recall · I\ "This year was a great one for me, and still l wu criticized that I was not to1>-notch materialJ" said the 6-8 forward from St. ohn's, who was selected Player of the Year by The Associated Press ... If my stock would go down a great deal next year, ifl had a poor season, they would fQIJtl about everythinJ and then where would I be? So this is why I feel J have toao now." Don't bet against Lewis going to UCI Mulligan s ays he has ood ch ance of getttngex-MD star B§rry, wbo said only two weeks ago tharhe would return to the Redmen for his senior year. becameeliaible(or By CRAIG SHEFF the NBA's June 17 dRt\ by submit-°""',.......,....., tina bis name in a letter postmarked The bettina hne on Tom Lewis last Saturday. becomins a UC Irvine Anteater is The leaaue said it required a letter about S.S. postmarked . by. r:nidnight Satu~y And UCI basketball coach Bill requestinaeh&ibthty. and not a pubhc Mullipn is one auy wh<? mi&ht wqer announlltment. a buc.lt or two, assuming he was a I betti"I man. "All I know in !heart is that Mullipnthinkshehuavcrya ood wanttoplay(in~e A)," Berry said I d' th ~ of bis chan~ of m nd. "No matter chance at an lfll e 1ormer ater "''he-I _,-~packed I've aot to live with Oei Hi&h sensation, who recently had .. '"' -his USC scholar$hip taken away from it. Riaht now, all I want to do is set on h' at......... am. ....... "Yeah. I thank we've aot a aood But some NBA officials question shot becaulC of the fact Tommy whet.her Berry. who averqed 23 wants to live in this area. This l!I points, 11 .1 rebounds and set a school where he made his name. And It tame record with 76 blocked shots this_ .down to us and USC last time," wd aeuon. ts prcpami for the pros. Mulliaan Monday. "He's not ready to play at our level Lewis, USC's 1cadina ICOt'tr as a yet," NBA supencout Many Blake fttshman lut season, mlde contact said tut month. "He'd better stay in with Mulllp.n last Thunday. 1ebool, work on bis outside shot, "He ~ed. to us and said he had a.n bandlin& the bell, shooti.n&. the JU~P: 1~tere1t 1n ao10a to Irvine. My athletic er Walter it an ins.ide player f!P' director then 1ent a letter to (Make) now. He c:an•t do that tn pro ti.II.' Mc<ke (lht USC athlt'UC director). Apparently he (Lewis) has been released. but we have not seen that letter of release. as yet," said Mulligan. Mulliaan says Lewis fiaurcs to get a bi& rush from other colleges in the next week. "I know that the day after we talked to him, Kentucky met wt th ham. And Terry Holland (Vil)inta coach) was tn town last weekend. So I'm sure there are quite a few schools that will contact him.'' Mullipn says he would like to recruit Lewis before May IS. "The NCAA has a dead period between May I S and June IS which means you can't recruit anyone. no'\ even a transfer. lt'll be like st.artina all over if we don't recruit him before May IS." said Mullipn The UCI coach fiaures Lewis would have to sit out a year, despite the fact his scholartbap wa not renewed. .. As ~ interpret the NCAA rules. he could not play nCJlt season. But 1t miaht be a lo00 Idea for him tO sit for a year, anyway," u1d Mullipn. "It would be aood for him. He need to let thlnp die down. He's been carryina a baa load on his shoulden." Lewis. alona with two-uthff USC' frrthmen. Hank Gathcn and Bo Blll llalllpa Kimble, had beeh aaven a deadline or Apnl 25 by newTroJan Coach George Ravehna to infOrm him whether they planned to attend U nut year or transfer to another achoo! The deadline a.me and the thrtt did not contact Ravelina. so the ronner Wasbinaton St.ate and Iowa coach recommended to McGee that their 1Cholarsbips for the J 986-87 a~m1c year not be renewed (Sc'hol1nh1ps a.re renewable on or before Jul¥ I for any oollqt athlete). The 6-7 ~Wiit a three-time All..Cff telcctJon at Mater Ot1. led the TroJ•n 1n tc0nna th11 ~t season Wlth • 17.6 averaae. - They live up to their nickname in Dallas Mavericks giving Lak ers prob lems in West semifinals ----~----------- INGLEWOOD (AP) -Before the NBA playoffs beaan. o nl y a few teams appeared capabfe of preYgJl.ting the Los A~lcs laken from succeufllll} defendani their NBA championstnp by bcatin& them an a best-of-fives or best-of seven series. few would have identified th<- Dallas Mavcncks as one of thosc teams. The Boston Cclt1cs. ,ure. The Houston Rocket~ Mtlwaukec Bucks or Ph1ladelpbia 16cn. maybe The Dtnver Nugets• pcrha~. But tht' Mavencks? As thmp now st.and. the Mavencks arc m a posi\ilon to lcccp the lake~ from becom1na the fi"'t NBA club to repeat as the teaaue champion since 1969 when the Cclucs accomplished such a fea t. W1nMrsoftwostra1&htaamcsovcr the lake"' td deadloc\ the Western Conference semifinal acnes between the tea.ms at 2-2. the Mavcncks now need to wt n two more p.mcs to knock out the Laken and advance to lhe oonfercnce final Thty'll ~1 thctrfirstcbance toni$ht when pme five of the best-of-seven scnes 1s played at the forum. Tipoff time 1s 7:30. The StAth pme wtU be played at Reunion Arena an Dallas Thursday ma.ht. A seventh game, ifoeoessary, is scftcduled at the Forum Saturday afternoon at 12:30. Whtie the Mavericks, who wett 44-38 dunna the rqular se&IOn, hav~ proven that t.hey have to be taken seriously. at the very least. they've aot a long way to ehmmate the La.kcrs. who had a 62-20 regular-season record. For one thin.&. they haven't won a pl•yofT t@me at the Forum in five tncs. For another. the Laker are still the Lakers. "Now. it's a thrce-pme series, and they suit have the homc-<x>un advan~ tqe," Dallas Coach Dack Motta aid "We c.an puff out our chClll all we want. but we 1tJU have to pro~ ourselves on the coun." Said Coach Pat 'Riley oft.he l.akcrs; "We'"' 0 We've been here before. We've betn ID fron~hi.nd We" won't ha~ any Pl M lleftinl read " "l1m a Iona way from beina tc.arecli" Earvin .. MllJC .. JobntoG ol the Lake."' a.d ... You ,et teated Mae.a you're down l-2." The takers bombed \be Mavaieb I '°"116 in the opener ., J • • a. ., At 54, Shoem.aker stlll, Ian 't .fllifahed piling up number s LaRa•• on. the way out? ; ~~:::!~~~-p~U · T r lbe wins again know that I'm ;?:rouah.f! t.alussa said Mooday ni&ht. PnmUti•tdel E fNGLEWOOD ' -Ball Shoemaker, lhe winnin1ffi jockey in thoroua,hbred history. could retire comfortably on the e:am1nas from 8,S38 vict0rics. But lhe 54-ycar-old • Shoemaker isn•t ready. He stm 11 eqer to ride. Shoemaker doesn't compete as of\en as he used to, but whco he docs, he is a feared rider, especially in l>ia racn. Sh"4"mlktt scored a popular victory Jast Saturday in the Kcnt\&Ckv Derby, guidjna ' 17-1 shot Ferdinand to a 2Y•- 14:Dgth triumph in the first jewel of 'the Triple Crown series. When he crossed the finish lane, he said he thought of the recent Masters' aolf tournament victory by 46-year-old Jack Nicklaus. Shoemaker then did some· thina that pro golfers can't do at any age, because lt\cy compete in I • only one big event each weekend. Shoemaker flew to California Sunday in tj'me to ride Palace Music to a come-from-behind victory in the S l 59,200 John Henry Handicap at Hollywood Park. Shoemaker rode Ferdinand to victory from last place in a field of 16 at Churchill Downs Saturday. Sunday, Shoemaker was in foW'th place in a field of five before rallying for another thriltina triumph. Ferdinand's victory was Shoemaker•s fourth in the Kentucky Derby. It had been 21 years since his last winnina Derby ride. Shoemaker has woo 943 stakes ~ccs and 218 even~ worth more than SI 00,000. But he hasn't lost bis zest for riding. "l don't want anyone else to nde him," Shoemaker said of Palaoc Music. "This horse looks like he's '-oiog to be a real good one the rest of the year. lfhe wasn t this good a horse, l might not have come back (from Churchill Downs) until later." Quote of the day Brtaa Downta1, the Angels' leftfielder, asked if a recent over-the-fence catch of a dnve by Seattle's Alvin Davis may have been the best of bis career. .. , don't even know if there arc any other contenders." Brook• offered Wlnnlpegjob ST. PAUL (AP) -Herb Brooks, ~ former coach oft he New York Rangcn, bas , been offered the head coaching position of the Winnipeg Jets of the National Hockey League. The St. Paul Pioneer Press and Dispatch reported today that Jets General Managtr John Ferguson interviewed Brooks in the team's offices Monday and was very enthusiastic afterward. · "I think it's going to work out," Ferguson told the newspaper. ''E vcryone connected with our hockey club is very excited about the possibility that Herb Brooks may become our new coach." Brooks, 48, led the University of Minnesota to three NCAA championships during his tenure with the Gophers from 1973 to 1979. He coached the U.S. Olympic team to a eold modal in 1980 and after a sixth-month stint in Davos. Switzerland, became coach of the New York Rangers for nearly th~ seasons. He quit the Rangers in February 1985 following a disagreement with the club's hierarchy involving bis authority to farm out and bring up players from~c minors. • _Most reccntl), Brooks coached Team Manneso to the U.S. Junior Olympic champ1onsh1p in Ne England. Canad lens take 3 -0 advantage NEW YORK -The Montreal Can-~ a.d1ens-got a goal from Claude Lemieux and ' 40 unwittinJ assJSt from linesman Ray Scapanello an beatine the New York Rangers 4-3 in ovenime Monday night 10 take a commanding lead tn their NHL Stanley Cup semifinal sen es. "It's one thing to lose ... Raf)gers Coach Ted ator said. "But not that way. I'd hke to be beaten." Sator was upset with 1he Clrcumstances surround· ing the wtnning $0?1, when M1k~ ~cPhce picked up an errant pass by W1lhe Huber at m1d-1c.e, roared down the left side and set ur Lemieux for the wanner on a breakaway at 9:41 o the extra period "Obviou11y • I can do 1 better job and the ~ shows I baven•1,•' he said. "lfl were the owners of the White So.:. rd ~bly fire the manq,cr." Jerry Reinsdorf, White Soit board chairman, acknowlcdacd mcetina with LaRussa and club Prtti- d~nt Eddie Einhorn shonJy before Monday niaht's Yankees-White Sox pmc "to discuss the team." '"The fact Ken ~Ison (lcneral manqcr) was not tbcre should not be misinterpreted," Reinsdorf said. "It was just another tllfftinJ the owoe11 wanted to bold." Asked what it would take to fire LaRussa. Rcinsdorf said. "hls not doina a Job we think he should do." "l used to th.ink before I aot into baseball that it was pretty dumb to fire a manager when the goina1ot rough and the team was havina a lot of difficulty," Reinsdorf sa1d. "But you have to think of such thinfS as attendance and how the public reacts to the team s showina." he said. Asked spccillcally about birin& Billy Martin, Reinsdorf satd, "J have always felt Billy was a great ma°*r and over the last six years since I've had tbe team, there have been times l have given serious consideration to wanuna to act him. Jets c ut All-pro tackle Powell NEW YORK (AP) -The New York [il Jets. who quickly went after offensive c II• linemen in last week's NFL draft, ha ve decided to cut five-time Pro Bowl tackle Marvin Powell, according to a published report. The New York P.ost reported in today's cdittons that Powell's agent, Bradley Peter, told the newspaper Monday night that Jets Coach Joe Walton bad decided to cut Powell, an eight-year veteran out of USC. "Marvin is surprised ... djsappointed ... all those things," Peter said. "Of course ifs totally out of left field. We weren't prepared. l don't understand it ... " Last week Powell was elected president of the NFL players' union. Powell was a number one draft choice by the Jets in 1977. The 6-S, 270 pound tackle was named offensive lineman of the year in 1982 in votina by lhe NFL coaches. Bucks even aeries with 76en PHILADELPHIA Milwaukee Coach Don Nelson said a calculated gamble gave bis Bucks a 109-104 victory over the Philadelphia 76c rs Monday night in the NBA playoffs. Nelson said he went to a small lineup, featuring Paul Pressey, Ricky Pierce and Sidney Moncrief as the Bucks evened their best-of-seven Eastern Conference semifinal series at two games each. The Bucks, Central division champions, regained the homc'court edge as they headed home for Game 5 Wednesday night The 76ers, runnerup in the Atlantic Division, stole the homecourt advantage when·they spilt the first two games of the series in Milwaukee. Philadelphia gained a 2-1 edge in the series when they won the first of two in Philadelphia Saturday. "The small lineup was the big difference for us," Nelson said. "lt has been good for us all season." Arredondo KO. Smith in five LOS ANGELES -Rene Arredondo m knocked out champio'n Lonnie Smith in the fifth round Monday night to win the Wodd Bolling Council super lightweight championship. Arredondo, a native of Mexico City who now lives m Los Angeles, landed a jarring right cross that sent · Sm 1th, from Denver, sprawlina to the canvas. Smith lay motaonten as referee Marty Dcnkin ceunted him out. Now 37-2 with 33 knockouts, Arredondo weighed t39'/• pounds forthc bout that bad been postpon¢"five times previously. Smith weighed l 391h. Smith, making his first defense of the title he woo Wtth a knockout of Billy Costello last Augu~t. was unbeaten coming into the fight. He is now 22-1-1. Television, adio, TELEVISION No events scheduled. RADIO 7:30 p.m. -PRO BASKETBALL: Dallas al Lakers. KLAC (570) WE DNESDAY'S RADIO 11 :20 a.m. -BASEBALL: Dodgers at Chicago, K.ABC (790). MARINA'S THOMPSON RESIGNS. • • From Bl you have to coach off the seat of your Donegan finds himself wearing two pants. Jobs have opened, but they caps -as the aide and as the athletic haven't opened up to our people .. director Thompson admattell he has been "As an A.O. l don't know much close to th as dec1s1on for the past fo ur more than the fact he turned tn a lotter years. of resignation," said Donegan. "I was "lt'sbecnbrewang IJustdadn.thke never aware he was really seriously the way I was tiving." he ~1d. considering It. l was completely "for e1~1 years we've sought a surprised when Ira showed me the situation hke Bob Lester's (El Mod-Jetter. ena High) and Foothill (Ted Mullen), "From what l understand Dave something hkc that. We've had our ~ad he has had five years of prob- chanccs (for a permanent starn. we lems. should have five nght now ·· "As an assistant, I have two thtnJS The Y1k1ngs' staff under Thomp-to say: First. my greatest times m son mcludes full ttme teachers football arc in working with Dave . Donegan and Do) le. along wath But I have a lot of remorse in that he Rehling and Reed. wasn't willing_ to sit down and talk to Thompson said 1t aocs deeper, us as a staff before he made has ancludang such non-help as an practi ce decision field cond111ons and general upkeep "A lot of this has been above and of the weight room and lockcrrooms. beyond anyone's control. As long as as well as "some finnn caal areas." \OU have teacher's unions that say Summing up the total package. this person bas to be hired before ThomJ)Son said· "It JUSt starts eaung another . there arc a set of rules we at you." have to follow ... 1fit's last in, fint out When Thompson amvcd at .. I don't know what else to say." Manna he came from a Lynwood · Toib1n voiced optimism that 111 High program which had produced a could be resolved dcspa\c Marina's 42-18-1 record an seven years under constant drop in attendance, which is has d1rcc11on. but he sa1d he had no now down to 2,670. ln thc..'70 Marina specific plans to apply for another wa$ the largest school in the CJF with head coachinJJOb over 4,000 students. "I would hke to get back an th~ ''.We're losana I S0-200' kids a year. aroove in the classroom and marbe which mean' yo u lose 3-4 teachers to . 10 back to school for my maste~,' he keep~~ .. said Toibin. "ft makes 1t said. very wmcult . "There are a lot of poss1b1lat1es as "But I know that's how you wtn 10 •n assist.ant. possibly Oranic Coast, the Sunset League. You out-coach Oolden West or Long Beach State. I people. You play the Fontanas, ,. don•t think I'll have any trouble Serv1tcs and Lona Beach Polys in fin.dins 1 posttion." CIF, you're not aoina to be physically He also admitted he was open to supenor against any of them. reconsideration, ~tatina. "Well. that'i "I understand Dave's position, but a posaibility. Th•t auy at Fulle~on, he's a little too hard on himself. He (OcoflC) M~ua.m, l\e returned. fell he had been hen ei&ht yean and McQUa.m resia,ned his basketba.11 the program should be further alona. position at Cal State Fullenon, but My comment as, if you look at the abanlythnaftcrdecaded toJta)'Wlth pravam when he came and now, tbe Titans. there's no comparison. ll's lik.c niahl and day. "There arc a lot of positives he has contnbuted. He has created students who believe in themselves and it's something only be could bring. Our program has pride. class and be wins. That's something you couldn't say about our football program eight yearsaJO." Addationally1 Toiban found some optimism within the conversation. "I think things are more optimistic than a year aso. The lottery is a possibihty. Our supcrintendant (Marie Otto) has suggested using money to drop class size, which brings in more teachers. "l believe the district's first check from the lottery was in the neigh- borhood of $1 ,000,000, and r uncfer- stand lbC district will be aetttng something like four checks a year. "J believe it's being recommended that $650 000 be used to lower class size, and that potcntitlly means I S-20 teachers in the district. So. if Marina aot two or two and a balfleachers out ofit, it would a real poJitive thlng for us. "Our experience in the put is that Jood coaches make aood 1eachcrs. Larry Doyle is a good example. He's an excellent math teacher. You can't each a skill on the field if you can't teach a student in the clusroom." Should Thompson stand firmly by has letter the V1kan.is wdl open tbc position up. accordin& to Donepn. "We'll have lo open it up and it'll take time:· said Donepn. "There's no one on our uaff (to fill the vacancy). If this is all true. lhen I auess all interested applicants can contact Marina." "An on~mpus0011cb would be my preference,'' said Toibin. "I would JO to the supcnnten'\:Sant to uk for apccial permission, as tw been done wilh other schools. I would hope we'd be treated 1n the same way." .. Cleveland takes eighth In a row; Quisenberry loses Frem AP dllpatdes CLEVELAND -Pat Tabler and the Oeveland Indians pve the K.tn-sas City Royals 1 lesson in new math, and it added up to another victory for baseball's most surpnsina team. Tabler. doing what he docs better than anybody else, bounced a bases· loaded single off the chest of Kansas City second baseman Frank White in the 10th inning Monday night that pve Oevcland a 5-4 triumph. The Indians extended their wtn· nina streak to eight games and remained in first place in the Ameri- can Lcaaue East, 12 perccrttagc points ahead o1the New York Yankees. Tabler, with a career mark of 24- for-38 wath...the bases loaded, got his chance after Royals reliever Dan Qwscnberry intentionally walked Brook Jacoby with one out and nmncrs on first and third. "You•ve got to load up the bases to set up the double play," said Oeveland starter Don Schulze, who was long gone by the time the situation arose. "But with Tabler up there, the game's over. The guy's about 99 for 100 with the bases loaded." The lndians were playing at home for the first time after a nine-game road trip, and the start of the game was delayed for IS minutes because of traffic jam caused by late arrivals. "Thas town's cJtcated, and the fans were into every pitch," said Phil Nielcro, who relieved in the 10th inning aod aot the victory. A crowd of 27, l I 8 saw the Indians tic the game 4-4 in the ninth apinst Quisenberry when Brett Butler chopped a two-out sin&lc over the head of third baseman George Brett that drove in Otis Nixon from third. Quisenberry had not allowed a run in nane appearances this season. And even though Kansas City lost. Brett said he had enjoyed the game. "It was fun playing here for a change," Brett said ... The Indians are for real." KANSAS CITY 1.Smllndn Wiiton ef lrell lb Whllt2b B1JC>onl ID uwN Mo~ltv ~· c ASlll _.. Ori• pl\ Blencln u * •• ., 11111 s 0 0 0 s 1 ) ' S I 2 0 s 0 2 0 4 I 1 I ) 0 t ' s 0 ' 0 4 I I I 2 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 CL•VILAND Butler ef Frencon Certer If Tnmtndh JKot>v )I) Tebler lb CC11tlM rl Nixon" Berr11rd 2b Allenaon c MH1UDll e.nooc ,, •12 4 T ..... tc.. lrt ""** .c>rllbl 4 0 l l • 0 ' 0 4 ' 0 l s 0 l 0 4 0 0 0 S 0 7 I 1 1 l 0 1 1 I 0 l 1 , , 2 I I 0 ' 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1S s 10 s ICMM1 aty .. .. 121 0-4 ~ •t--•l t-S OM ou1 wM!I wlnnlne run ICOl'ed. Geme Wlnnlno ltBI -Tellier (21 e-..111on1, Blenc:ellne. DP-<lrtelen<I t LOe-K1nM 1 Cflv ,, Cllvtleftcl t. ta-White, Motlev. erell, Sundl>ert. Hlt-hm11erd (21 S-lutter. Alen.on. llancet.ne. l«Nuerd SF-<-rter. Lew K.illl•CltV l.IOCndl Hul1m.nn Qul..nDerrv L,O· I ~ ·~ " ..... so 1 ' 2 2 , 1 l 00000 l l·l 4 2 7 I 0 SchulH 1 1 I I 0 l Biiie\ 1·3 2 2 t 0 0 Ytll 0 I 0 0 0 0 C1m1cno 1 7·l 2 1 l I o PNllltro W ,7·2 I 0 0 0 I 2 Yell Pllcn.d lo l bell« In lht ''" UmPlrtt-Homt, PnlMIP\; Fltll, McCov; Slc- ond, \IOlllOOIO, Third, Wtllle T-3 1) A-27, I II Yan.tees 4 , WIJlte So:r l CHICAGO -Rickey Henderson hit an upper-<ieck home run that snapped a seventh-inning tie and gave the New York Yankees a 4'-1 victory over the Chicago White Sox. The Yankees won without Man- a,er Lou Piniella, who started servmg his two-game suspension imposed by the American League for bumping an umpire. Coach Joe Altobelli ran the team in Piniella's absence. Chicago lost for the sixth time in its last seven games. Joe Niekro. 4-0, gave up four hits over 7 2-3 innings for the victory. NATIONAL LEAGUE Plnl•lla L>a"c Righena fin ashed up with hitless relief for his sixth save. HendeTSOn's third home-run of the season came with two outs 10 the seventh and broke a 1-1 tie. The blast to left field came off Chicago starter Rieb Dotson. 1-3. The Yank~s made It 4-1 m the ninth on Willie Randoll>h's two-run single off reliever Gene Nelson. The White Sox reached Niekro for an unearned run in the first inning. With one out. Wayne Tolleson reached first when second baseman Randolph fumbled his ground ball. T ollesoo stoic second and scored on Jerry Hairston's double off the naht- field wall NIWYOAK RHnd•n cl Rndlllll 2tl Mtnely lt> Wlmi.ld rl Etltel'dn Griffey If Henev c Pi>lr\JIO Jo ~mn TOfllls * CHICAGO •btllbl S2 2 I • 0 2, j 0 t 0 l 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 • 0 0 0 ) 2 I I 2 0 1 0 C1'"'9I• cf Tolle1n Jtl Beltlff rf Helrstn on FIU,tf H onltl lb Hulett 211 Gulllen u Sldnotrc Crel9 P11 MHllc Jo4 4 7 4 T.,.,1 Sc-. llV ""*"' .. ," .. • 0 l 0 • 1 0 0 • 0 0 0 • 0, 1 • 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 ) 0 0 0 ) 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 l 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 12 I 4 1 .... Y1111 • 000 010 101-4 Ctlk.I.. 100 000 000-1 Gtme WIMl1111 Rll -ll Heftderton (I) E-lt~. Pltller'*> DP-New York 1 LOB-New York a, Cnlc.eoo • 21-Helnton. -HR-Pttll1rul0 (4), ll Hllldtfwn (l l. S&-TolltM>ll (6), It Hll\dtflOfl 2 (It), Cer!llllOil , 1171 ·~ "· ...... so ARLlNOTON -Lance Panilh hit 1 s*f of three-run homm, sp&rtina t.he Detroit Titers put the Texas Rangers 10-.3 in a rain-delayed pme. Parrish capped a six-run outbunt an the fourth in.Dina with a home tu4 off Jose Guzman, l·S, and ~it bis siJ1t.h homer of the sea.son m the ci&hth off Dwayne Henry. . l>an Petry, ~2. pv~ up seve~ bit& in eilbt inninas for his first ~tetory since A9ril l 4. Ouiman, a roo~e. l~t his fifth straiJht pmc after wui.runa his fint dccis1on.. . . 1 Detroit scored in the ICQOnd 10.runa on a double by Pit Sheridan. and a I sinale by Dave Collins. and Texas I tied it tn·the third on Don Slauaht"s double and a single by Scott Fletcher. The sW1 of the pme was delayed 40 minutes by rain, and the Tia;en broke it open in the fourth foUowm.a another 25-minu\c rain delay. * DITROfT • T9XAS Whlllkt 2tl Tret'llf'lll .. D1Evn1 lb 1.NPerlh c SPllrMdfl Her.,.,dh Coles lb sn.tklll rl Htrndon If Co411ns cf Ltmonc1 T...,. ... ," .. 4 2 2 I McD ... Cf 4 2 1 o Htrren 2D S I 7 0 08rltn lb l 2 , ' lllCVfh rl 2 0 0 0 W.,dlf ) 0 0 0 LAPnhdtt s 0 1 0 Sle\IOlll ( s 1 2 0 ''*'* )b • • I 0 0 Flttchr u 4 I 2 2 Porler 111'1 I 0 0 O W.nn u 401tlt f T...._ k#e lrt ""** .,,_, 4 0 0 0 • 0 0 0 4000 4 I I I • 0 ' 0 4 I I 0 4 I l 0 J 0 I 0 2 0 1 l I 0 1 1 0000 ,. ,, J 0....... Ill .. at-11 Texes •I I• •-) Gemt WlnnlllO IHI -COIUM (1). E-<olft, luecl'lllt. LO&-Ottroo I, T•xe• 4. 28-01. Ev11tt, Slwlden, Whlle.ker, Sleu9hl. C041lo•. Coln. Hll-l.n. P•rrl.n 2 (S), lncevltll• (4). S&-Tremme41 (2) o.trelt Petry W,2·7 ONMI Tex.11 • \ I " It •••• so 7 l l 0 , 0 0 0 0 2 Gutmen I., H 32·) I 1 J 2 S RWrltht 2 l·l I 0 0 2 1 ..... ...,_ JN!tlv'o w .•· o Rto,,.111 s.• Cllkffe Ootton I., 1·3 NeilOn WP-OolM>ll 1 2·l 4 11·3 0 lOO •HtnN 2 7J)l2 0 0 0 1 Ml~::pjret-Homt, ~. IF1r!, ~IOI!~ , , 6 2 J _ 7 5e(ond, McKMn, T'hlrd, Clerk, 1 7 7 2 T-2M. A-9, 1'2. IJl"l'IC>lrts-Homt. l remlt•n. Flnt, Rot, S.C· ond. HlrlChbeek, Tl'llrd, Bernell T-B2 A-17,341 Bl ue J ays l 0 , A's 6 TORONTO -Lloyd Moseby drove in four runs, mcludmg a two- run homer that broke a s1xth-mning tic that powered the Toronto Blue Jays over the Oakland A's 1~6. Ernie Whitt also hit a two-run homer for Toronto, which rappe<l 12 hits in winnmg its second straight game. The defendjng American League East-champion Blue Jays had not won consecutive games since April 11. With the score tied 6-6, Damaso Garcia led off the Toronto sixth W1th a single. Mose bx then hi l a l · l pitch from reliever Bill Krueger, 0-1.t over the righi..field fen~ for bis tounh homer of the year. Whitt homered in the seventh off Krueger after Cliff Johnson walked with two out OAIU.AMO PnlMIP• 2b 1ocn11 lb Centee~rl t<nomn <1n Ou8tkrlf Len•frd )ti MD1vl1ef Griffin n B11nec Peters Pll T .... 1 * Tott ONTO •b, "bl s l lo ·Mo .. bvcf 4 I I 0 Ftf'Mdt n 4 1 2 2 Mullnll• )0 l O O O ton 30 4 O 0 0 Uoll\lw lD 4 1 1 0 81111f 4 2 2 3 Btrfleld rl 4 O O O Jonntn Cit! l 0 1 0 Whlt1C I 0 0 0 Gertie 2b >6 4 IS T ..... Scef-e lty ..... M rllbl S I 2 4 s 0 2 0 , 0 0 0 2 0 2 0 4, 1 0 4 1 1 0 l 1 I 0 1 ' 0 1 ) 2 I 2 • , 2 2 M 10 It t O.ldMCI DO 011 OIO-• rer..-oao sn *-10 Oemt Wlnnlne RBI -Mot«>y (2). E--Lensford, Gercle. L09-0ekl1'1d S. Tor· onto 1 28-tletht, UPlhew. HR-<en..-c:o (ti, M 0 1vl1 2 (2). MoHOv (4), Whitt (1) SF-JC>MM>ll 0.llllftd Rllo Krueoer 1.,0· I Atllef'ton T ....... ·~ H 1t•1t II W JH 4 S S J I 41'3 I S 4 1 0 MO 0 0 0 I AIHl nOtf' • 1-l 1 S S 1 l Elcnnorn W,.3·2 • 2·3 I 1 I 0 ' HIP-Klntmen (by ElcMorn) WP-Ale11endef Umolres~. Cousln1, First, Even1, SK· ond, Mlrrlll; Third. Hendry T-2 SO A-10,111 Brewen3, Marlnenl MILWAUKEE -Paul Molitor broke up Mark Lanaitohts no-hit bid with a run-scoring single in the fifth inning and added a solo homer in the eighth that led the Milwaukee Brewers over the Seattle Mariners 3-1. Langston, 1-3, put himself in trouble in the fifth by walk.int Rob Deer and Paul Householder with one out. Molitor followed with an RBI single, and Randy Ready then de- livered another run-scoring sinaJe. Langston toolc the loss despite fimshing with a three-hitter, includ- ing Molitor·s first home run of the season in the eighth. Winner Tim Leary scattered five hits in seven inninas to improve to 3-2. Dan Plesac pitched the final two innings for bis second save. Seattle narrowed the Brewers• lead to 2-1 in the seventh when Gorman Thomas led off with his sixth homer of the year. HATTLa Owen11 &re41e'/ ef AOevl1 lb Dt-t.<11n ef GTllmsdfl C.ldern rt Trt11>112ll Bonnell" 1t1mo13b l(Mrntv c Cowent Pll Yeeoerc T ..... * MILWAUK8• •btll .. > 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 2 0 I 0 0 0 0 0 4 I 1 1 4 0 2 0 • 0 0 0 • 0 0 0 l 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 1 0 I 0 0 0 0 0 Jl IS I T ..... kw.W ....... ..," .. , 1 2, 3 0 1 1 I 0 0 0 • 0 0 0 • 0 0 0 , 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 I 2 I 0 0 , 1 0 0 l 0 0 0 ** --ltl-1 MIW1uhe -.. 111-J G1me Wlnnlne ltBI -Molltor (2) E-OWtn. LOl-SH llle ,, Mllweultet 4. HR-G Th0ml1 (61. Motllor (1). Sl-<elderoo\ 2 (3) 5-0wtn S.."'9 unoston L.l·l l!Mwli* .. I H ll 811t II IO l , l l I LMrvW,3·7 7 s l 1 I ' PleMC S,2 2 0 0 0 I > LMrv phcl'led to I beller In the ttl'I Utn91re...-+iOl'M, Ford. Flrll, Oercle; SK· ond, l(osc; Third, RMd T-2·17 A-6,j'4 Horner's blast puts Reds away Hts eleventh-inning homer sends Cincy to ninth straight loss From AP dlapatclles ClNCJNNA Tl -Pete Rose and the Cincinnati Reds thought they had a much needed victory in hand when the Atlanta Braves• bullpen stomped on their fi naers. Cincinnati had chances to prevent a nine-game loslna streak Monday niahtt rallying in the ninth, 10th and l J th innings. But five Atlanta pitch· en teamed U{> to extend the futility, forcina Cincannati to strand five bascrunners in the last three innmgs of a 4-3 loss. Bob Homer hit a two-run homer 1n the 11th off Ted Power, 0-3, for the winninJ marain. a.nd Paul As.scn- macher aot his first m~or-lcague victory with relief help from Gene Garber in the bottom of the inning. "We were real close there," said Rose, the Reds pla~·manaaer who has suffered throu.n. l 3 losses in the last 14 aames and 11 in a row at home. "We had the r\Jht people up. They just djdn't act the job done." Rose docsn 't know what else to do to act the Reds out of their worst home slume of the ~ntury. "We don t even get a bloc>~ (hit)," Rose said. ''That's the WI)' It S JOll\I. When it rams, it pours, a.nd n's been ra.inlna for 1 very Iona time·· ATLANTA * CINCINNATI SMn!IMrl A1nmtnrP Gerwo Remlra lb MurPllv cf Horner ID Herw" ATllOm• n Vtronc HllOOtd 2b 15'NlhP OtdmonP Mc.Mr1N 0 Wtnotn f1 ••rllltl • ' 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 S 1 I 0 s ' 3 0 • 1 1 l J 0 0 0 5 0 ' l • 0 l 0 4 0 0 0 J 0 t 0 0 0 0 0 0000 1 0 0 0 SlllWllU c 11CPCl1 )ti Perlltf' rl EMlkv ID T JOl\ff If eoevls cf 'lltlllblecf ... pl\ IDlu c °"'"' 211 lrownnt P Ptrtt Ph FrllleO P lllltt•"" ll'owtf' P lllrllltl s 1 1 0 5 I 3 0 4 0 1 0 s 0 0 0 s 1 ) ' l 0 ' 0 I 0 0 0 l 0 1 0 4 0 2 I • 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0000 1 0 Q 0 0 0 0 0 Tlfeh I 414 94 T.._ 41 J 12 2 ... " ..... Allellte •••n-• ClltdMlfl • •t •t II-> Oemt WIM!nt ltll -WOtner (2) E-SllNlO't!I DP-Atlante J. Clncinnetl I. LOB-Atllnt• •• Clnclnnell • 211--<0llCffClon 7, a Diet, Stltlwel, ~llfly Hit-Hortwr (4) SI-OHier (2) S-S.t'llPlt SF-+fOrntr A ...... Uml"' Oedf"nOll Mt.M11ttrv Anllmenet W,1·0 Oe1w S,2 ~ • N ••• H SO • • , , 2 1 1-310001 l ·J 0 0 0 0 1 lM 1 1 I 1 0 MlOOOO ltownlnt I 1 J 2 0 4 Frenco , 0 0 0 I I Po...-L,0-) I 7 7 1 0 0 1. Smllll Diie~ lt 1 IMltleo In IN ftl\. ~t '1nl111 Pt-9. Dier UmPffe~. lnotl; Flrt1, Quiett, $te0n<I. • """. Tilltd, ll'llfOM T-1.U. A-11- Eipo96. Plilllla4 PHH.ADELPHIA -Neither Montreal c.aichcr Mike Fatt&fflld nor Philadelphia ~naacr John Ftlslce was surprised when fupo~ Manager Buck Rodgers flashed the bunt sian in the eighth inning. "I consider myself a pretty aood b~nter," Fh.zgerald said after scoring Tim Wallach to break a 4-4 tie. MONTRaAL lt1lne1 II Wlnoflm cf Dewton rl Wlbtttr rl ar~us l(rnctlc lb Gellrrt lb Welledl )b I.aw to l llrdtlo c J'tl\ptn.., ltMrdon II Tlbtlt p WnNtd 1111 Sdllldf p FIUOtrlcl c * PHILAO•L.Pt41A Mrll .. J 1 2 0 3 1 , 1 2 0 0 0 4 I 2 7 • 1 , 0 ) 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 S I 2 0 > 0 20 ) 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 1 I 0 1 0 0 0 0000 0 0 0 1 MTl'lmel Cf Scnu)b Semuel2b khmdl lb Ht'l'ft II OWRM>ll rl O.uttonc .Jeltl .. HlldtonP GGron IM\ C..mllft11 T141"""9D ltueller o A~ll l.~111'1 ,.,."' ledrOtllP • •t> 4 T ..... se....~ ""** •r11-. 5 1 l l 4 0 I 0 s 1 1 0 S I J 0 • 0 1 0 4 0 l 2 , ' 0 0 • 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 ooto 00 0 0 0 0 0 0 0000 1 0 I 0 0000 0000 J1 4 It > MMlr'MI • ,. m-• ............ .. Ill --4 Gem. Wlnntne ltll -ftllr•91d (1) 1-eroou. 01"-f'ft~ I. LO.-#«!· ,, ... t, ~ ti ,, ldlmltt. n... Wlnnlnehlm, 1te•. 31-lt'ook&. H~ Trtomoton m. Wte>•ltr (2) SI-0.U.lon (I), L•• (I), Heyes ()I $-Fllaterlld SI'-(; WlltOn. MMll"MI • H •HHto 'l'l«lbt ' •• , •• kltlllder W,1·0 1 0 0 0 0 0 ... ,00n s,a , > o o o o .......... HllCllOll 4 I l ) 1 1 Cermen 2·J I 1 1 2 1 T•lilvl l.,O 1 M 2 I I I 1 lturt11 M O I t t O ~ 2·> 1 0 0 • 0 ltelr0tlen I l I I t I T•"""" ..,ICMd IO t llelNtl Ill IN 1t11 w~. VINlll• ,....,_, lflCtlltnOlr, ~. wtw, ~. •eMetl, n.ni, o.Mutfl T-J 12 A-It.Of. t .... LaMUeSTAMDMtel ....... "--.. ST~ • W L ~ .. ,. 12 .sa I) 13 • 1 11 IJ .A11 IY'J II 12 .ot 11'1 10 IS MO '\\ ' 17 .,.. s 1 " .JM s~ •AST~ IS t .6.5.J " ' .., IS f A25 ~ l)lt-"51 t> It ..$6S I II 12 411 4 Toronto 11 14 ~ s -.. ........ ... lonl,.._O ~T s, KaMU cttv • no IM!nol> orOlltO 10, OeldenO 6 New York 4 C11ic..o 1 ~· 10, ;: .... , Mllw_... a, s.111e 1 o.w..,.,.~ T....,,...._ Alllllla (Slelon )•I) ti lolton (loyd M l Oelllend (Heh H) el Toronto (ICev 0-2) S..ttle llwlfl 0-I) el Mhel.«• CNlrna 1-1) IC~ Cttv (liedl M l et ~ ICendlottl Ml, " New York C•etn'\Ultffl M ) et a.:.oo (S..lltf 2·2), " Detroit (l.ePolnt 0-0) 11 T1u. (Mowh H I." lettlmore (Davia 1-1) 11 Mlnnet011 (Vlole 3-1), n ••*•• .. Y'• ..... T0t011IO at ..... " IC-.1 City el C~. n New Yorll et ClllC.aoo, 11 Detroit ., r ..... n lettlmore et Ml-11, 11 lo&IOll 11 l!MI ... , n Mllweull• 11 o.kleno, n ........ .......,. WIST DMMOM Houston W L ~ 01 Sett Frenclsc:o $enD119o DMlwl Atlente ClnclM911 IS I AS2 IS )l .m l'h 13 1t . .520 J ll 14 A l 4 II I) .451 4'h 5 " .231 ' IAST~ !MwYork Molllr•I PltlWlurllfl ~ SI. Louil chic.oo 16 4 .aoo 11 'IO .545 s 10 10 .JOO 6 ' 12 .Gt 7'h ' 13 AOt • ' ,. .lfl '"" MIMIY'1 SC.. MonlY'MI 6, '"'1lledllptile 4 Alle1111 4, Clnc:lnnlll 3 (II lMlnosl Onlv oetMt~ T ........... OMlwl (W*tl 3-1) et Clllooo (Hoff· men 0-1) Houllon (I(-H I at New Yorll (Goodin 4-0), n MonlrMI (McGeffloen 1-0} 11 P'lltladel- Jl/lle <Certton 1·4), n $en F l'MCltco ( ICrultow )-1) et PO· tt11Ur911 < lteutCtlel 2-2>. n Allente (PM'!w 2·11 et ClnclnMll <Oullldlton 0-3), n S.n Dll9o (Tllurmond M l et SI. Loub (Coll 0-2), II WUW111•Y'1 Oemet DMlwl •• Cll!Qeo Houtton 11 New York, n Monll'MI I f Plliledelotlle, 11 S.n Frendleo et PlllNluren. n Allellle et Clrtcl,_11, 11 Sett D'-9o et St. Louis. n A.MalllCAN UAGU• lled SH l. Miits 0 CAUftOttMA ~ Mrlltl 4 0 1 0 OwEvn1rt 4 000 '°"''*' J 0 l 0 &udllY lb 4 0 0 0 ltlce" • 0 0 0 a.vtor Ofl 4 0 I 0 Gedrnen c 3 0 I 0 &ln'ttt 2b 3 0 I 0 l..VOlll ct 3010 Hoftmnu DtlO T ... k.-IW ..... Mtrlltl 3000 2 0 1 1 4 0 0 0 • 1 '0 3 1 I I 4 0 I 0. 3 0 I 1 3 0 0 0 4 1 2 0 • J. 3 c..... ----· ..... •1 • a.-1 Gemt W1nn11!t RSI -9oe. (J). D~nll I, eo.lofl t LOl::::(dfornla 6, lo&lon f. 28 I loffmell, RIU 2, Downlno. S&-Sc:no41eld (2). SF-eerrett. • " ..... so c..... MWlll L,2-2 7 2·3 I T 3 S 3 Forldl 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 .... Hunt w .2-2 t • o o o s H9P-Oownlno (bv Hurtt) ~urat, MWlll. P&-eoone 2. Umc>lfH-Home, ICelll!'; Flrtt, Coonev; S.COllCI, Pellrmo; Third. Younv. T-7-JS. A-IUN. ............. ('Tllreuttl ~· Gemt) Jeck ton Jovner 9urllton Downlne H*'41rldl SC:hoftlld Wllfono O.Clncet Orlctl looM Jonel Petti• Miiier NllTon T .... IATT1MO Al lit H Ha "l122 5 IOI 20 l5 I 71 11 23 I '320>0 s ... 1 14 s .. • IJ 3 .0 s 16 0 102 10 25 l 41 ' 10 , 74 ' 17 2 SI 11 12 2 fl • 19 0 33 l s 0 1 I l 0 lfl '" M2 J6 ftf'TCMIMG ... i-ct. ll .m 19 .324 • .324 22 .m • .311 1 ..271 1 .2'1 1' .HS 4 .237 4 .%30 ' .l0'1 5 .204 2 .IS2 I .\4) 1111 .2'12 ... H N SO W·L•RA Cortlett 12 S 5 6 0-0 1.50 Forittr I 6 l f 2-0 US Wiii 41~ lf 14 34 2-2 l.Q2 Mceeik.. 37 34 ll >O 2-2 l.lf SlelOll ) I 30 f 16 J-1 4.07 ltomellb :n 2f 14 " 2-1 U3 lrvden "'~ " " 13 2-0 .... , Moore 14 I\ 7 12 M S.16 Fend\ ~ 13 4 f 0-1 l.41 Mt011 2~ as 1 14 o-l t.12 C.lldelerle 2 6 I 0 0-0 11.00 T.... Zll1h m • 1'2 14·12 UI Se-. Moore 6, Forldl I. COL&.aG• STANDINGS P'CAA Ca• ....,. W L T UC Sente let11w1 15 l O Nevldl·Las v ... s IS S 0 C.I Slele Futlef'IOll 12 6 6 Fr-Stele 10 I 0 UC !Nine I 10 0 Pec:lflc S 13 0 Sen JoM Stale S 13 0 Lone hlctl Shile 4 14 0 . .. ...,,,._ OWr'll W L T 40 11 0 32 " 0 J6 17 0 2' 2' I " 24 2 20 25 0 1t JI 0 1l 31 I Cit Stele FullrtOll et UCLA (3 PJ!\.I ,,....,., ..... UC lrvlnl el Fr.Mo Ste .. C7 P.mJ UC Sente ~1,at CS Fullerton m PKHlc 11 Lone hedl Stele (2:JO) Sen JOM Stele et Nevede·LM VeeM (7) ss ........... UC !Nine et Frlll!O Slife (7) UC Sente S.l'Mr• et CS Fullerton (1) Pec:lflc et LOllO leedl Ste,. (I) Sett JON s1e11 •• ~ veoes m ~ca-­UC ll"vlne et Ft'9lllO Sr.le (I) UC Sente a.rw. et CS Fu119non (1) Peclflc et Lone 9Mdl Stete (I) Sen JoM Stete el ~LM v ... , (1) ~-1'~ UCLA Sr.nford Arl2- USC Arizona Sl•I• Cellfornll Ct SI w W L T 11 ' 0 " 11 0 15 12 0 12 IS 0 11 " 0 ' 11 0 Owwll W L T 35 2\ 0 l2 ,, 0 37 11 0 2' 2A 0 ,. 2.S 0 31 22 0 COMMUNITY ~L•G• leU9' Ceest CI f M ce Or•nte eo.11 ltend'lo Settlleoo CVPrWll FulllrtOll CerrltOI Goldlll w ... JN. SM Antorllo SeddltUClll Compton W L 01 1t 3 IS 6 l 12 ' ' 12 ' ' 12 10 '"' I\ 11 7"' • ~ 10~ • l4 '°"' 0 21 II TMIY'1 0-(J:JI) Oren91Coal 11 Compton F~ el 0.... W..1 Cypreu et •lftdlo Senl!No CerrllM el Mt. Sett AnlOnlo TIIWMllY'I ..... (J::lt,l. Mt. S.11 Antonio el Or1n119 Coal Golc*I W.1 •• ~dNl>edr lit 911CN> $en11eeo et F ullrton Compton et CV.W.Ss HIGH SCHOOL S.....LeMM W LT H "Owen View 10 2 1 Huntlnetcn IMdl 1 6 0 3"' W..lmlnll• 7 ' 0 w. Foum.111 Veley S 7 I S MMIM S t 0 S'h Edlton 4 f 0 •~ "Qullllled fw CIF Pllvoffs TllllY"I..,._ Oc:Mrt View 11 Hunllnoton 9MCh (l:IS) WftlmlMler el Merine (l:IS) Edhoft n. Fountetn Vlllev el Miii S-rw Pwti In ~"*"'· ..... (Jllf) oc.tl View et W..tmlnlter ................ Merine et Edlton <,_I Founteln v*" et Hunll11eton hedl Ill Cllllllllt.....,.,....) S.VINU... W LT .. ~ Il l Estendl I 4 0 l'J Unlwnltv • 4 0 "' lM4-"' lltCfl 1 s 0 1'1t Cor.-WIMer S 6 1 3 ~I Harbor S 1 0 3\.'t Woodtll'ldee 4 t 0 4\o't Coll• ~ ' 10 0 6\.'t ,....,.. --(JI\$) eor-WI Mer et COiie Mfte Sed dltbildl et E stencle NewPort ...,,_ ., 1..--htcll Woodtll'ldle •• Ufllv.nltv ~·-­S.Odl•••Ck ., c-.. M¥ 13:15) Coltt MRI el NewPor1 Hertlor (3:15) Unlven ltv et L.--9"ch (l:15) Ellendl If Woodbridge (7) , ................... , leUtll C.tt LMtw w LT oa •1rv1ne ' 2 0 •Cep!Streno Vllllv I 3 o I MIUlon Vlllo ' l 0 2 L..HUn1 Hiiia 5 4 I l Dene Hlll1 l S I 4'h El Toro J 7 0 6 SM a.men.. 0 10 0 l 'h ·~ tor CIF •voffl T ... v'I ...... IJJ Ceol1tr1110 Vllllt\I ., l..eeune HI~ 0-...... If S... Clltmlnte El Toro II ~ V"4o ,,__Y", ..... ()) Mi..-V"4o • ,,.,., __ _ 0-H .. tl~Hllla El Toro ti Sell C*"9nte c••.....-r..._> Charge s dropped agalnet San Jose LONO BEACH (AP) Authorities have decided apinst fllina any cha.rae apinst a top hiah school football quarterback who wu armted by Lona Beach Police last week alo~ with six other studenu at Wilson Hiah School. Bobby San Joac, a senior who bas ,tped a tener of tntent to aooept a sch olarship at UCLA. wu arrested last Thunday for allqedJy off~ to ~II cocaine to an unde~ver police officer poshtJ u • student, and with stealint the $SO paid for the dnaa by the female offiocr. -'ff o~ver, dty and county PfOtoo ccuton said Monday they had de- cided not to fUc charaes ap1n.11 San J()IC. "At this point. the cue baa been rejected," said Los Anaeles County Deputy District Attorney Carmen Ruanctta, who added that she felt the dwp could not be proven beyond a re&IOuble doubt. The Lora 8eacb City proeec:utor'a decision ap.inst fiUna clw'lcs was ~ned by police nan:otics Sit-Mlke No IC'lion bu yet been taken on the alJe:lltions ap.iost the othc-r Wilson studenu um1ed on tbe ICbool cam· pu TM five boys 1Dd one prt, wbo were not identified becaute ~ ~ uader • 111 werearrated for;, .... sale of marij~ ClOCaine. twb11h &ftd metham_pbeta.mn>es to the undercover officer. ~ > e MaA ltLAYOfl'fll SeaM,.... ( ... ti_) WHT•RN COMP•R•NCI L.Mr ... vs. ......... ...... ClfW l..ak.,.. ••• Oelet 11' l..M.,.. m, De1as m Defle1 110, L.Mera lot Oellel 120, L.akera 111 !Wies ti.ct. 2·2) Tonlllflt-OeMu et Latten, 7:30. Tllundev-<Aken et Dellu. CllMMI f el 6:10 p.m. S.lurdl...-0111111 et L.eltera. 12:30 p.m., If MClttll(V a-. ........ Houllon 12', Denwr 11t Hou.ton 11f, Demler 101 Denver 11'. Houaton 115 Denwr 114, Houston 111 lot) (Slf'lel lled, M ) Tonltltl....a.nwr 11 HoualOfl Tllur'MMv-Houston •• DeftYlr S.turdl~ et Houston, II nec:ess· lfY IASTSRN COM'•UNC• A.._w....._ lo&ton 1Cl3, A"'"'9 fl lolton 1", Allellte I°' lo1I011 111, Alltnla 107 Alltnlt 10., lostcn ,4 (lolton 1eedt .., .... 3-1) Tonltltlt--Atlente 11 loston T~sdlv-eo&ton el Alleflte, II lleClela· •rv Sunde'i'-Atlenl• et lolton, M n1C»1UrV ...................... , PfllledllPnle Ill, Mllw~ I U Mllwlull .. 11', Pllilede4Ptlll 107 Pnlledtllltlll 101, Mllwaull• 1113 Mllwel.«• I°'· ~ 104 (S.1" tied, 2·2) • Wedneldl¥ ~II 11 Mllwlull• Frldlv-MJtw~ et Pllllec:lllonle, If _ .. rv • Sundev-f'tllledelDftll 11 Mllw•ullle. " neottlel'V NHL ltLA YOflP:S C. ... Wit .... ( ............ , .... Yft ......... w. MMlr'llll MonlrMI 2, NY R....,.. I MonlrMI '· NY hlltera 2 MondeY'I KOi e Ai\olltrlll 4. NY ••noer• 3 (Montreet lleds ..,1e, l-Ol w.dMMll.....-MontrMI 11 NY ""'"" FrlOl~Y • .,,..,.. el MontrMI (If -le'V) Sundey-MonlrNI et NY Re~ (If -ry) 'lffdl•ldlv, /!MY l ...... Y ""'*'' et ~ '" necftlltV) .. "--" 'ft. ~ St. 1..oull 3, Ceteerv 2 CeiMrV I, SI. Loult 2 TanWll ~el St. LoYll !Ser ... tied, 1-1) Thurldl¥-<ellllrt et St. 1..ouls S.lurdlv-St. Louis et CllNtv Mondlv--CelMN et SI. L.ouh IM ,_..,.,, w.. .... .,. /!My 1~1. l..ouh •I C.lolrv (II ~ .. ry) ..... (lt~La~ SUPEllt LIGHTWEIGHTS -R-Ar· r9donOO (Los AnMlft) KO'd 1..onnle Smlttl CDlmler), flfltl rouncs. •(Arr~. 37·2. WIM World lolllne CouncM c:tlltnc>lonlt\IP. Stnlftl now n+ 1. LIGHTWEIGHTS -09<¥ eet1nH COuedele1-r1, M111tco) IC0'1 RelHI 1..lmOll (Me11lco City), fourth round. MMdaY'I fnl .. dtelll IAS•aALL Amw1ceft l.tMUt NEW YORIC YANKEES.-Sloned ROii HUMV, catelllt', 10 • multi _, COf'ltrect IJll911ll0ft TEXAS RANOERS--AC1lv•led Cller'lle Hough, Pltclllr. R .... lld Deve Rotema, e>11cn.r ....._..L__. PHIL.ADELPHIA PHIL.LIE s--f"lsCWCI Cllrlt J1 me1, outflelder. Oii the dl1eblecl ll tt ftOOTIALL ...... ,-..a...- DETROIT 1..IONS.-AMOUllCed IN re- llrem9111 of Oou9 Enolllll, now tec:kle. INDIANAPOLIS COi.. TS-Wefved SCOll Vlrku1, defenllve end. Miil• Hee~. Oe- 19"slve OeCll end Golden Tele, wide r.- cetvw -PHll..ADEILPHLA EAOLES-Sl1111ed Tom Bond, dtfenllve ~. SEATTLE SEAHAWK~ Tim luriNm end Meurklt Eldrtdee, euaros, TINY SurnlMrlleld, ~· Eet1 Conwev end Jim Ro'il•, ftOM ~, P•t st11or• and Peter Ntleflen, llnltlldlerl. o.rrvt ~ro, corner1)eek. eno •ooer weoer. tldlll. ttOC.ICllY CALGAlltY Fl..~rSianlid ll'ett ~wine. lO • mu11r veer c:vntr.ct. MINNE SOT A NOR TH STAltt-E•tendH "" COl'llrlld of Lor,.. HeM!nt. llMd c:oedl PEACE IN OUR TIME! Come hear a free lecture entitled ''Prayer: an Effective Approach to Peaceu by J Jack Hubbell, C.S.B. Membtr of t.M OuUt11n Sc\tncc Board of Leciurcsh1p Saturday. May 10. 1986 10:30 a.m. Edwards Newport Cinema 300 Newport Center Dr. E•U')'one ' ia Welcome Newport Beach , , Child C'.arc Provided at Second Churclt of Cbnst.. Saenu11 3100 PlciOc View Dnvc, COM Boston ·Roe~et lighting a fire letdown. H• pro.ect dlilaa ....... Suday. M t1nCt CMlt 10 _. allowed ODl)' ..._bits dlft-Ii* iAAiap io I ~I victory 0.. ilae O.klan<I AthJedcL -Ht WU memally bc':at hm all die BOSTON CAP> -He•s called anentioo -CVet')'ODe looki .. lw • R .... _ .. · iQt.etviews and ~--bu1 M • oc~t by ht1 teammates, aod '"°' '*' IDd did Im~-.. .__ R~OcmcmoftbeBostODJtedSox ·= b BdJ Fi -:..a .. u~ is li&bt1n1 up the ecorcboard with bis Pl coec -.. "9 fut&all bl everyt.b.ina out ud Wll Tbe23-year~ldriaht·handeriaone =~until be finally ru out ol of the hottest pileben in the Ameri-••A lot bf lhlao happened ti.Dee Ge can Leatue. wtth a ~ tt!COrd., a 1 .. s2 20 11rikeouta, .. aemem llld. .. , .. earned run ave.raae ai:KJ a m~r worried it would cany ovu IO •t ., leaaue RCOt'd of 20 strikeouts 1n • statt apinst Oakland. For'Vlaate')', J .P~cout mania is th · · didn't let 11 a&a me, but J .. WI'/ nvina 10 • mentally tired. ~on's little Fenway . Pa~ . es.-"I wo.n't kt it bappaupin. naa•a pecially w~n qemens lS P'~ behind me. J'm not 1.a11n-about die After a acnous ri&ht forearm uuury strikeout record •nvwn~ last Aua, JJ thJUtencd to eod b11 _,... · career, Oemens now is belpioa t0 line ··He's .fun t0 catch.~ ~ Soa up l1rinp oftbe letter .. K., on the rear catcher R.idl Gedman Mid. I pat my wall of the ocnt.ef field bleachen~ &Jove i~ a IPOt. and be ~ti n. Hit thanks to a youna fan named flick control ts amaz.ina for a pau:bet wlM) Kaplan of neatby Newton. throws so bard... . Lut Tuesday, on a cold nipt Clemens. wbophc:bed the Uavefti. bcforeonJy 13,000fana,andwbilctbc ty of Teua tO the NCAA Col~ • Boston Celucs wen= beatina the Wo~Seriescbampi~p~ 1913,• Atlanta Hawn in the ICCOnd round of m~lltfent, bu~be rem1.nda lit1.eften of the NBA playoffs a few miles away, Dizzy Dean wtieft be ta.lb. qemens did wb~t no m~or leque In Pflilina Gedman for ca11iaa ao pitcher bad done m 11 J years. ..excellent pme, ••be said: .. I tell you., He struck out 20 bitten in n10e me and him play pitch and calCb and innings in a 3-1, three-hit victory over it's 1 Jot of fun. Me and him wort well the Seattle Mariners. · to&etber ... After a hectic four days, most . Despite his Dean-like pammat, base~ observers felt ~c bard-qemen1 is strictly ao .. A" student in tbrowina Oemens was m for a bU work habits. ' Irish finding oUtit's ~ not all fun, games _......,.___. Holtz Is cracking t11e whip at Notre Dame sprtn football drills SOUTH BEND, lnd. (AP) -It's aoing to be a different pme at Notre Dame this fall, orebestrated by a new football coach who cracks jokes - and the whip. Lou Hoitt, who · su.coeeded the embattled Gcny Faust. alrQdy has won his playen' respect as a tough taskmaster. "WheQ be says jump, we ask how hi&b." said fifth-year senior guard Jolin Askin. "He cracks jokes when tbinp ~ goina right," said sophomore quar- terl>ac1r. Steve Belles. "But when il comes to getting thinp done, he's touab." J{0Jt2 -slim, red-haired and bespec\acled -is also a master of OJ»liDen and aa amaeeur ~; both skills may come into pil)tfc)tC the season is through. Holtz, ~9. rep!M:es a coacb who was 30-26-1 in five seasons. Faust's ac- complishments would have been acceptable at most schools, but not Notre Dame, where exoelleooc is expected and good is never aood enough. Yet. if the alumni expect Holtz to wave a magic wand and t um the prosram around lDl1aGUy. they bad bet1er th.ink tpin. "1 am not a miracle worker," said HoJtz, who brinp a I 16-6S-S record tO the Golden Dome from J*t • coaching stops that included North Carolina Swc, Alta.Dau and, rnio.t reccnllv, Minnesota. .. rm a footbl.ll coach.'; But the alumni aren't the only ones lookina for a new direction. Holtz'• playcn expect th.inp to cb.anae as ,. well. "It's a new start,... said Shawn Hctfcrn, a fifth-year senior guard wbo adds, .. rm al.ad 1 have the opportun.i- \y to come beck. .. I heard a lot of areat trun., about Lou Holtz and found out they me true;· he said. .. He doesn't have a whole lot of i-nence with his qu.trterbeck.s aD(1 he'll be the first to tdJ you," II.id Steve Beucrlein, who was yanked in the spring pme after \OSlina two inter- ccption.s. but came b9ct in t.bt ICCODd • balf witb. psir orm peues.. When HoJtz toot over, some thoupt be might bypus Beuetteia., a pa.uer, for Terry Andryaiak,· wbo iJ the better runner. But Hoitt already bu named Beuerlein his No. I quartet'bect. That may be becaux Notre Dame lltc:b • strong runnina attack and Holtz's be$t ta.lent includes ·flanker Tim Brown. split end Milt Jackson and ti&ht end Alvin Miller. Coast area girls co11Jpete in MV tennls tournament Two Orange Coast area residents will be among the 96-girl field from 30 states and Puerto Rico competing m the 11 ~annual Seventeen Magazine Tennis Tournament of Champions beginning Wednesday at Marguerite Rccrcauon <:enter m Mission VieJO. Deborah Graham ofFountain Val- ley, currently ranked No. 5 10 the UST A national I 6s and No. S in the I 6s of the Southern California Tennis Assciat1on, will JOin Irvine's Juhe Willett, ranked 52nd and 11th, ~ spectively, m the 16-and-under com- petition for the first time. Graham attends La. Quinta Ht&}l. The event is single ehmmallon (with-consolation play) a:nd also includes 18-and-under and 14-and- under divisions. A wards will go to the top rwo in each cat.agory and the consolauon champion, with a "most promtSmg j unior player" bemg selected foT a $3,000 travel grant award. Graham's recent national tour- nament _sxperienoc includes a quar- terfinal appcaraboc in the Head Easter Bowl event in Miami in March; a runner-up finish in the Fiesta Bowl I 6s in Scotuda.Je, Ariz. in December, and advancing tO the semifinals of the UST A's National Indoor 16s, held in Ausbing. N.Y. last November Willen , a sophomore at Wood- bridge High. has tournament credits including a semifinal appear&!lcc in lhe Whittier Junior Open last F'ebru- ary and quarterfimll losses in the l 6s of both the Anahetm Junior lnvita- uonar (October) and the Pasadena Jumor Open (September). .. WOULD YOU LEAVE ME UNATTENDED? • Havt VOi.i named a gu.c:Uan f.:>r your crtlldren? * Who will manage ....._ fOf your Children end grandd\Uctren? * Oo you know th11, without 1 trull your children and ~lldr.,, must bt g!Ven YOUf •tat• •t IOt 18? Come to 1 "9e .... ...., on wtllt and tru.s11 whef• you will d 1CUM the tollow4ng toPIC8 w11h attorney ......_ A. "'"""'te1' Jf. en eat•J• p£enntng ~' • How to ~ a gu41rd en Of trust• • How to mak• ture yoor Mtlt• goes 10 your children Ot gr1ndchlldr..-i. not tOmtoneelM. • How to dedUC1 your chlldr.,,·• PP9"M9 ror cotteoe P<tvei. IChoot i..on.. etc 1t How to 1V06d pro~t• and legal , ... ~ How to •vo4d Of minimize deeth taJt• THURIOAY, MAY It 1W -~-JM". llTATE PLANNING SE-.AR , N1 •portl.lbrefJ Mart...,. ...... 2005 Oowr Dr .• ~-port IMon-c.I M l-aGO tor--.. ,cur....., ADIMlllOM •• ,.. .. ..... ... , Cl.Ill ..... (I) -~ .... .. . -.... . YOUI Uf( IS CMUIC" ..... lttt (l) edwarda souTH ~d 'W ,ird-., ••AH.!~~ \ t , " ! ~i .. ' ~ ... .. ·~ . .. .. .. . rri .UY llllM "llll CITY" (I) U\U\. ltll ··w· .,. . IU(" (I) 1!! t• R"tlRal.MI "Y1tllTS AIE ILM" (I) '" 100 1000 •TIU&MI "wtSE CVYS" (I ) llS "''"' llO" (rc-u) 't). 19 90 ....... "TllE IOIU '"" H O CPC) "NUCl ICAHIY l '"" 6 4S. llJS (I'S) edwards HUNTINGTON !MS-0388 flf &.._~ A' MA• ... fl, ... Hl•H Tl tli 0 l 1Nela.,... . I ' T~· 'WT If AlllCA" (PC) HS .... , ... , ftUIC(" S 40. IHI '(PC-ll) COAST PLAZA ' S4S-2711 P 9 JWI MAIM! UMIWllW "TIE Clltl N"U" I 30 (PC 13) .. tuaTOl AT SUNJLOWEfll ; ••••flmcl "'Ill COt.11 NIPU'' t:45 (PC Ill "MT If lfltCA" (re) 7-tt ••••Pm "WISE CUYS" (I ) 120 "'TME •o•n rll" edwarde BRISTOL S40-74'4 "LUCAS" (rc·ll) • 00 "UITJEIS" I"· t l) 61S 1000 QM fiii M iiii lff lllMilS "I llWH WAYS TO DI(" (I) 600IIS,1020 edwarda WOODBRIDGE 55H>655 BA,.AANC af&Sf OJ 1 lq •f• ••t1•Nf ;i ·11 •• ; 11 1 "COtS IUST 1£ CIAlY'' edwarda VILLAGE CINEMAS 891-0567 af ACto4 al -wO 1 e1 •I'.\ -~•'H Of <..&flOfN '•P'tV"f f 'l\l'Y ST&HfO .. . ·11· ;II ; •• 8Rl,f0l AT UA(AIUHU~ SANT A ANA ur llUlCU a • re fiiii "1 llWH WAYS "LUCAS" (rl:·ll) P.• TWJ & .. • TO DIE" (II 1 lG "lECUD" (PC) 11s. '10 "'OUCE ACAtlMY 3" I.JO u fiig ... iiiif -=-=="':!""!' ~~-1..,.,010=--"'-"~l-"CllTTEIS" (rc-u) "LUCAS" 1rc.u1 u.• ma m, IMS 6 45 10 IS a IS "UC(H" (re) U.M nu Im .. ,.ETTY IN,,.... 100 "t m l Oil IEY. llW",...,.,,=-=....,'=20==1,,....000...,.,.,.,crc,.,,....11.._1 __ CRITTHS" (rc·ll) I IS, 10 11 (I ) if M TWg N, JM! 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AS CAQ' "TME IOY I• ILUE" (I ) 600 100 JOot fl.OG JUEi & WH UlO lflSON "llUE CITY" (I ) 6 JO llO 10 IS IZ.DO 11111 m IOM IWllS Sllll Y lDMC "TNE MHU PIT" (re) H~ HS JOJO IZ,QO TMll IU SISSY SPACU "VIOLETS All l lU(" (I) 'O I JG ,lt R•maw llC*ID l'l'fOI 'JO 10 NllCtl, YHI UH IS CAWIC" (I) I 0 41111 &1• I lt U.MJMllDI "CM H " (rc.13) Ut. 119 "WU1 & stsn1r 1• HS tn lfG U) . , •t , ........... ,,., ., .... ,.,,.,.~1..1'4'_' ,,•Aut " ,_.. ... , ' . "•O llTIUT, H $UHHIH" (re) a oo ·fiJilll'.S lJI" (I ) US '3S • "DOW• & OUT I• IEV. NIUS" • 00, 10 IS ta) "f•H llOF" (I) l·lO edwarda SADDLEBAC K 581-5880 t l f f1A I) A(• A T IH}I Jl!,lf l p fl fl)Jlt ~ . I ; '; "LUCAS" (rli·ll) 100 ..... l "' 1• """" 6 OS 10 00 IP'C Ill P•uuaw "DOii l OUT IEV. lllUS" I JO 10 20 IRl "MUR PHY'S UI" (I) po 11.•ooam "fl[[ l lDE" !RI l lO')O R'1'°am DU WAHACf Slllfl. "CllTTEIS" l'C· 1 l ) 100 10 101~ IJMIIQlnt "IO IETIEAT •O SUHUDH " (PC) 'u.us, IUS IZM IMll 111 lfl Mll>GlS "I MIWH WAYS TO DI(" (I) I IS. HO edwarda MISSION VIEJO MALL J6• Fino I D JWY fO CllO-•All f • uanaawa 4 IHG• ~IY ST£MD "WIS[ CUU" (a) 1no no o o n••JHtn IZ.MIWllml UIO lllSGI AllY MOY "IUl cm" (I ) I S.~7-t.tt• ....... "CM N " (Kell) 1•s. s~. 1•• "LIW" (PC·ll) edwards •,1>11TH ( liA',T L A l,t/NA 1q' 1 1 I • .,,, • .. •t UMWI ........ sdms" •• (N.IJ) "Nnn•,. .. ut. •••ere ur ••• (N) • ...... awr•IO . .W" • • 1111 ''n Ofenee COMt OAALY PILOT/ Tueedey, Mey e. 1Mt • 1: TV L 1\llN(;S lauc Bayee ---to tbe. of 8tepfanle llramer c .. Bm1ter" tonlCJtt at 9 c NBC, Ch&Dael '· Star salaries: How much is enough? By BOB THOMAS .. ,,,...._..._ LOS ANGELES -In the 1940s, Cary Grant and Irene Dunne couJd earn $150,000 a picture. Today Sylvester Stallone aeu S 12 million for actina in a movie and Dustin Hoff- man can collect $6 million. Chapman Symphony Orchestra Sholund Scholarship Concert -Progra m - Ch1chestt!r Pilams" by Ltonurd Benuttin Thomas Sheets, Conductor "Oona NobtS Pact!m" b~ Vaughan Williams John Koshuk, Conductor SATURDAY,MAY10 8:00 P.M. Memorial Auditorium 5.5 Adults. SJ Students and ~n1or Citturu VISA MC A<"«J>tfd For Tickets Ca/L (714) 997~6812 ,.,.. •UOMIM.&Y ......., 11&.UI CITT 1111 Ill ........... , .. NITTY IN fltNI( .... 111 Star salaries are soaring to dizzying heights these days, prompting con- cerns that the film industry is losing its cconomjc balance. The escalation, some in tbe indus- try say, is caused in pan by the new aggressive com parues, such as Can- non Films and Tri-Star Pictures. wbicb need big names to market their movies and ire willi~ to pay hla bucks for recoanizable faces. "The trend continues down the line," said An Murphy, Daily Var- iety's financial expert who teaches film at tbe University of Southern Califorma. "Stars of the 1960s and 1970s like Bruce Dem and George Segal arc asking $750,000 per picture and getting it, whereas they were paid $400,000 before." Stallone is the current contract kin&-MGM-UA paid rum S 15 million for writing. dfrectina and starring in "Rocky IV." Columbia recently completed film- ing of "Ishtar," ccrstarring Hoffman and Wanco Beatty. The salary for each was $6 million. Stars and their aaeou arc loath to discuss salary matters._ and the nu- dlos refuie comment. However )'e.: cent published reports cite the follow- in1 rates: S 12 million: Sylvester Stallone. $6 million: Dustin Hoffman, War- ren Beatty, Robert Redford. SS million: Eddie MU!P.hy, Richard Pryor, Harrison Ford, Bill Murray. $4 million: Paul Newman. Jack Nicholson, Bun Reynolds. $3 million: Arnold Scwa.rzen er, ----Newport's Cannery Village------- r.==:::===(Aff ~Do .. DINNER NIGHTLY 6:00 P.M. to Midnight M ondays & Tuesdays: Two Dinner• for t16.96 Wednesdays: 6 Coune Italian Dinner •9.95 2900 Newport Boulevard• Ne wport Beach• 87&·2968 ..... .,.,..., ..... ...,.. JO » MNCa YOUll UflllCMUNG 1111 , ........... , ... edwards NEWPORT .. ~·-· :. :::·~.~·::.~ 644 0 760 J4a.I •llt • ••( alhtvl - Robert De Niro, AJ Pacino, Che Cha.se, Meryl Strcep, Goldie Hawn $2.S miltion: Diane Keaton, Sal Field. $2 million: Jessjca Lanae. Ja. Fonda, Kathleen Turner. S 1-S l.S miJlion: Sean Pen Madonna, Mickey Rourke. To Cruise, Richard Gere. The list does not include Qi Eastwood, who works only for b own.company; his annual take wou. put hlm near the top of the list. Nor c the fiaures tak.e iota acoount u perocntaaes of profiu cucted t st.an. Hoffman bas ~rtedly drav. $25 million for rus interest I "Tootsie." Menahem Golan, ch.airman , Cannon, and Yorarn Globu~ pres dent, insist Cannon's star salaries a1 based on sound business practice Globus used Cannon's deal wit Stallone for ucobra" as an exampl• The star was pajd an unrefundabl $500,000 with the promise of a tot.a salary of S 12 million if tbe movie wa made. "We sold 'Cobra' to our worlc distributors, and as a result th1 picture wa.s assured a profit before 1 started filming," Olobus said. An Murphy said the extended product life of fllm s also has con- tributed to skyrocketing salaries. "After a film plays in thcaten, i· goes to cassettes, pay-TV, cable TV network TV and syndication." he said. "In anticipation of these n~ markeu, qents and lawyers an ma.kinadea.ls that include an Uiumed percent.qt of future reoeipu ." Critics araue that tbe salary ete.ala- tion is suicidal for the film industry, addina to the ever-mountina cost o( a movie, which hu riten from S I 0 million to SIS million in five ycan. They also cite tbe failure of such ·~ movies u tbe $28 million "Rhinestone,•• for whlcb Stallone was paid $4 million and Dolly Part.on $2 million. POLec't'~Y ar WK IN TIAININO"' ............ .1"99 NIUONIAU \' ...... •LUI cm Ill 111•11• ............. Michael Ca.inc reportedly draws SI m illion a movie. "Everyone talks about actor's salaries .. t" he said. --------------1 "What about produceru What about the milb'ona Steven Spielbcra made on two pictures alone, 'E.T.' and 'Indiana Jones•?" OIMLll- MU•'"Y'I LAW 111 ... ,. ..... , ....... '" °"'' .... ,.. Ml .... ........ cannu .... 111 .... ,... ... , ...... .... LAKEWO ("""" !>uuth latlltM IHl(h f!ltl II o.t ho NO •IT'llAT, NO luaRl ... 1 1111 ll1U bat a.a.I NI Ital IMI ..... .,.~CL-. VIOLnt Ml 11&.UI ,...,JI ,,,. ,,., &iJt '"'.,. n• IOUY~ !Oil~ &.IOI .. .,.. INe II» ... a.ii lilt 1 .. 11 ANAHEIM """" ""-·-.. U« " scx.c> .. -.... , !ft NO atnlAT, NO IUllB••"I _,,_,.. LAIT ...... _., .. dKB ... '"""MM• ORANGE u..,> • "'r' -;:;z.i..: ~ ta''"' .......,. .. LAW t111 .... ~ , . • , r .....~ ... - Vtof.JTI Ml 11&.UI "''" lllHltH .. 11 ... 1 .. ll INi """" ..__.. TMI C<M.C>a PURPU"'t" ........ , .. ,.,. flltlTTY IN PW«,.., .. IMI ... .. ... , .. , ....... .. LUCM..-.t11 -.......... ... -, .... ...-.. ,.,.. ... IOMIM&., _, ..,. cm 1111 WJa.81• pquca ..... , 11 ru1 1t101 .............. , .. e IAY ONLY Ml 411e .. u ,...,_ ........ a MaLUOM WAYI TO Dtl m Ml .............. . MONIY PfftNt , ....... WllllD ICllNCI ,..., .. ........... Wiii OUYl 1111 c1mr: ....... ~ HIWAY 39 .. .i ::; L::::LU <»olf A 90IMD ti "°-ICl'llf.Ne NO atnlAT, NO IUllB••"' .... YeoaT'I LAIT •MON"''" , ...... 1111 '"' CltlCll .. IH THI MAil • Mar '" TIY•ll"" 11..t"-------"'"1' ... ,...,.,. lo HABRA ., ., . :111J 1 .. ~ . ~ACAMMTl1 uat • n••••"' .... NOi .. ~ ... "*~-­ MONIY "'"" .,... NOi ...... Wiii 4MIYI • DOWtt MeOUT '"llw.' laU• IT'S BELOW MIAMI. N-0/V!t:NE THE I.AW tR.~ . • !<~PICT\ll( I ......... -·-· .... .-..~ ... ·-·-.. _ .· ~~--·­·~=a::.; .......... lL TOllO ... ~ HOW PLAYING ,.,.. .. h~OM• ( ... llfsC..W .... llftJt Sl•SMO tvt •lS lllvwt l••t10t _.. M*'llM UA~•• ~..,,, __ ,..... C.-6>tHSl COSl UllA f011111itf0t"• tlo' ,,,,.,. tJt )~I ~·ct~ -LA-.. A!Wlt• ,.,...., ' PK.I( • Gll~•jy ~ Alln<!I °" ..... sn ''" .,, '9$0 COlrt*SA ""°'" .. ~0!>9' ... ,.. IMU" ..-a r-v,.,..c-u••°"".,, .,., UJJl1' 7 AOAd•'"--1' Awer•• OUT fW AFlllCA .... IHOWIAT ....... ,. IO IO 0-" ·~· t•t IHOWS A .J1ob •••• .... 1 100 10100 -·'"919'> SHOWS A l' I I I : 11 l tU 71H • t 1JS et.AMCITY c•u .... ,,,, ... .. ,,., .... . T .. WOWC'W"'fTOle) SHOWS AT 1111 :J :lf . "' ...... IO IO DNtaca• (a) -,Ill C: .. Htt JAffM .... , .. , ............ ~·, '9vt ._. .. I• 01e 11111•• C~G) fOUC11 ~ ... ~"' A .-lt ~ .... , D•• 11111 Id ID ID - ry Jy >e n, 1l ll is d 0 1C y n n 1f I· e I, h e .I s W"='MaJ7 11:1 CMarcb 21-April 19): ~cw approach brinp favorable financial rcsultt. Bred from 1>9st procedures 11 necessary. Be aware, alert, sensitive to public trends. You'll locate needed material. Leo, Aquariut fiaure prominently. . TAURUS (April 20-May ~0): Learn by teachina -cycle h~. CttCumstanca take sudden tum 10 your favor. Intuition rinas true family m~mber will ~ate ~or conceuion. Financial pleture briahttr than onainally antiC1pated. · GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Give full rein to intellectual curiosity. Means ask question'...t make inquiries, _________ ....,, __ delve beneath sunace indications. Member of opposite sex is drawn to you, will make no secret of"it. Saijttarian plays role. , SYDM( C~CER (June21-Ju~2): Lunar, n Emencal cycles are such t r,ou tum 0 IA~I "outstandina performance.· You'll on more solid emotional-financial ground. Spotllaht on charisma, 1en-••••••••••• suality, physical attraction. LEO (July 23-Aua, 22): Be ready for cbaqe, ttavel1. variety, opportunity to advanoe io business. c:ateer. You'll be capable or expressina ideas in asticulate, entertaining manner. Geminj, Vi.tao, Sqjttarius natives will play ...outstandina roles. VIRGO ~Aua. 23-Sept. 22): Good lunar upect coincides with travel, bi p~blishina, dissemination ofinl'ormation. You'll obtain fundin&, you'll make rianajor d~mcstic adjustment, you'll purcbue items aimed at beautifyina o ourroundmp. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Lepl procedure could be "complicated." Get expert counseling in COMectJon with finances, possible inhentancc. Define ..-erms. steer clear of get-rich-quick schemes. Pisces, Vi.tao pJay outstandina roles. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): This could be your power .. play day. You'll break from past, lcaaJ decision aoes in your favor, member of opposite sex does care and will prove it. Focus on lepl affain., marital status. Capricorn. plays role. ..... SAGmARlUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): You'll complete project, you'll receive plaudits from peen. Focus on employment, pets, dependents, aeneraJ 1hcalth. Reach beyond previous expectations. Aries, Libra figure promi- nently. • . CAPRICORN (l)e(:. 22-Jan. 19): Good lunar as~t coincides with , ,Physical attraction, charisma, children, cban&e, vanety, excitement of discovery. You'll make new start and imprint your own style. ., 1 AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): focus on security, residence, dealings with older people, includina family memben. Sense of direction and purpose can be restored. JntuitioJt.fiaurcs prominentJy, you'll-know what to do at crucial moment · · P~ (Feb. 19-Marcb 20): Diversify, give full play to intellectual 1 curiosity. Lunar cycle hiabliahts shorttrips, visits, ideas, theembarlUng upon 1h 1l new, creative bobby. Pbotop'apby could figure prominently. Gemini, &gittarius play roles. • ' IF MAY 7 JS YOUR BIRTHDAY you arc an unusual combination of spiritual and scientific. You a.re a perfectionist and your own most severe • c ritic. You arc stubborn, sensual. loyal, determined, capable of perceiving the ' real as contrasted to sham. Pisces, Virgo people play important rolct in your life. You main tam an aura of glamour, mystery, mtrigue. You find secret meetings clandestine rendezvous excjtin&. crcativc.-productive. You'll travel in May. August could be your most memorable month of 1986. ~ '• ,,.. ............................................ __ I# ·:::·Marriage best with ,·a balance of power 1 Q. Can you conlf'adict the claim lhal the besl marriaac occurs when p nc spouse is dearly the leader and 0 ,,thc other clearly the follower'l A. Can indeed. Love and War experts cite the old line: "Power corrupts and absolute power corrupts 'lab$olutely." The more power a spouse gels over a partner, they say, 1 the more likely that em~wcred · spou~ will become impossibly die- t.atonal. The best marriaac oocurs, they say, with a balance of power - , ,wherein each tolerant spouse knows exactly how -much the other will &olerate. "Head of household" 1s a legal desianation in Burma. In coun cases l\r.iherc relevant, th~ title is stripped. from a man who drinks too much. 'True, courts everywhere find defen- dants "incompetent" But the refusal in Burma to rceogni.ie the drinker as "bead of household" is quite specific ' and usual. No doctor should wear a beard, 1becausc beards are germ carriers. Such was long the common belief. And many a physician still adheres to that notion. · Downtown Tokyo has a glass- encloscd police box. Officers who ~e therein arc picked in part for their looks. Breast m1llc kills bacteria. too. LM. . BOYD and atmosphere around the world between the tOJ>$ of the taUcst trees and SOO feet below sea level for everybody except fliers and deep-sea divers. the biosphere is where it's at. "How Iona have those people in the Middle East been wagina warsr' inquires a client All I know is history's tint compulsory military trainina was ordered more than 2,SOO years aao by Penia's Cyrus the Great -with S-year--0ld boys. Q. What kind of mileage do the 18- wheelers get on the freeway? A. About 4.8 mpg. typically. If you bake in alus dishes. you can reduce the oven temperature by 2S degrees, I'm told. The color red is in four out of five national flap. +.A. Q. What's the "biosphere?" L.M. Boyd I• • •Y•dlc•tH . I . A. That thin shell of earth, water col1m•l•I. PEOPLE - Creative notes can drive teachers nuts SPOT TlfricrrEUNCE for a oeriod of about 15 lean, the only reafly creative writint did wete noies to .cbool repniina my kids' abtences. For a period of I j years they complained that I never showed any imqjnation. No matter why they were ,abtent, every note read the ume, "Plea.le e~cuse (NAME Of SICK.EE) from classes on (DA TEi as (HE/SH~) bad an UPICt stomach. • I told them when I learned how to spell diarrhea I'd get a Htle more creative than they wanted me' to be, so they droOPCd it. Now that women arc out into the tabor marketplace and boldina down professional positfons, 1 suspect the quality of notes from home bas improved. A hi&h schooJ guidance counselor frbm Ohio bears me out. Sbe offered a samplina from a mod\tr at~~·· .!Sub~n Question: (NAME OF !DENT) WU physically and men- ly incapacitated and unable to rform any academic or recreational activities on said date. Incarceration was limited to (HOME ADDRESS). Any repercussions or discussions should be referred to custodial parent, (NAME OF PARENT), on or before (DATE)." l can just see the chaJlenae of readinJ these notes and without punch1n1 up the occupation of the parent on the computer, try to figure out where the parent is comina from. "Dear Miss Weemble: I'm not a doctor, but I play one on television. That's why when Ritchie came down with-a fever yesterday, I gave him Extra-Strenath Hammerdol ... for his sniffling, sneezing, snuffing, whinina. whimperin&, sniveling and excessive complaining. In just 24 hours he was Ena BOllECI , Both vulnerabl South dul NORTH •A lO St Q 106 0 Q106' •87Z WEST •7 CV AQ982 O KJ832 •9& EAST •Q964 \/K7fl43 ¢A976- •Vold OUTR •K J85 ~ bis old self again ... ronen and \I J demandina. Let him back. in class. ¢Vold Please!'' • A K Q J 10 6 • 3 !?r bow about this one? Th~ bidding· Dear Dr. Stalwarth: The most South West North dreamed-of spou OD earth actually 1 • 1 \I Dbl exist. Beacbfront hideaways. no 6 • P e clocks and a spot on earth thit is •H Pu1 timeless. Our dau&hter, Debbie, was, _Opening lead Ace or v experiencina it air with her parents last week (for under $596, gratuities not included) at IU'upclebu, Hawaii. The seven-day packqc included car rental at $20 a day with no mileage added .on. If you CID afford to tutor Debbie for the seven days of school she missed, you too can afford paradise. Call meat the Escape Travel Bureau between 9-S and ask for Debbie'• mom." Can't you just sec the ambiauous notes from politicians, "deals" from car dealers, totally illegible scratches from docton. and cassettes from anchofl>Cnons that look you right in the eye and are accompanied by visuals? It's a shame my kids arc 11own. I've a,ot .JC.Yen ..l>oob and 20 ycan of columns under my belt. With that IUndofcreativity, Id bewilliDJ to bet that my IUds wouldh't risk IDlU~i:f~ day of school if their life depe upon it. You can't afford to ignore spot l'ards Possession of intermedtate cards can determine how you ta.ck· le a 8u1t This hand 1s an excellent example In the partnership style, North's double of one heart was "nega· uve," 1.e . for takeout in the unbtd suits and not for penalties. East's raise to four hearts wa.s well· Judged and made 1tre difricult for South Ile eventually decided to gamble on the tact that his partner held a useful ace, and contracted for the small lam 1n clu bs West-led the aee of hearts and continued · the suit Declarer ruffed, drew trumps in two rounds and now was raced with the prob- lem of how to tackle the spade suit. There was nothing In the bidding to Cu1w Gom lndlc.te wMch defender was llkely to hold the queen. The fact that Eut had sho,rn out In clubs madt> It a bit more llkely that he held length in pades, but that alone was not conclusive. Which way would you take the spade fines~ &nd why? The key factor Jn declarer' dtti· slon was that he poMet&td the eight or spades. That card meant he could protect again t the possiblity that East started with four spades headed by the Q.9. De- clarer led a spade to the ace and re· turned the ten ot spades. East cov- ered and South won the king. When West failed to follow. it wa a slln- ple matter foT declarer to get ~k to dUrtUJ\Y with a trump to leaG-.n- other spade and take the marked flneae for the nine Note that If West had started with four spades to the Q-9, tMre ts no way that declarer could have brought In the suit without lost. Tell the clergyman at your own risk '::~~~, SCC\l~~-/££1/'s• ::: DEAR ANN LANDERS: A whiJe back you printed some lcttcn from people who went to their clergymen for counselat yoursugacstion. They aU regretted it. I hope after you read my _letter you will stop giviog that advice once and for all. Herc ts my Al• Lr.us story: · When I was 1 S I got pregnant by a ••••••••••••• boy I hardly knew. Neither of us wanted to marry an~des we were too youna. My iinkr was v~ supportive and allowed me co stay at home and have the baby. (l pve him up for adoption.) · Two ycan aao my father was transferred. I .enrolled m coUcac and made some neat friends. For the past JO months I have been datina the most wondcfful auy in the world For Christmu Rob pve me an engage- ment rina. I had never been so happy in my life. I felt I should tell him about the baby but I was afraid of losina him. So I went to talk with ~e pastor of the cbun::b both our families attended. He told me 1 should tell Rob and ifbe really loved me it would make no difference. A week later I found out that the minister had informed the whole congeption about my confession. He said they needed to know so they could pray for us both. Rob's follc:s arc furious and arc pressurina him to slop seeing me. My parents are embar- rassed. I'm ashamed to show my face. Please, Ann, don't tell anyone else to confide in a cJergyman. -SAD- DS BUT WISER IN W. VA. DEAR SADDER: TM a4vtce l1 aoad. It'• J OU mlal1ter wllo 11 a kl.Uer. NIHey-alM memlMn of tlle clerp Ht tf IH woe141 llave kept tMtr mMtM sbL Too bad Y" drew a clanertnp. Be 1MUd be reported to 11111aperlor. • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: For th.e second time in a month l received flowers (wired from OlJl of state) and in both instances I knew the senders well enouah to be certain they would not have ordered such puny, bedrq- &led lookina roses. In other words. I fiad not received what my friends paid for. Both times 1 phoned the florist and said, "These flowers are a far~ from what the aeoder intended.· The florists apologized and sent out lovel}'. fresh bouquets immediately. Did I handle the situation prop- erly? Should anything further have been done? What do most people do when they are victimized in this manner? -SHARON B. IN ROCK- VlLLE. MD. DEAR ROCKVILLE: Mott people aree't •• 1any a• yoe. Dey accept blf.._cl Rowen ud write a lonly tMM•JH Mte layial *'e botiqwet Wll ''beaeUfaJ." M7 Oower mavea, SoUy Hammer at Rolltley, saJd ao cHtomel' lllottld accept wtlte4 Oowen. All red,._tl 1"9ld do wut yo• did. Call ucl . complaJD. If a f~ replacemeat tu't offered at o.ee. *'e HIMler lllottl4 be DOtifled IO lite co ta.lie kl• b11llleH elaewm.ere lD tk f11tve. • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: What docs it mean when a man ovCrtJps in restaurants? My husband bas th1s habit and it drives me wild. Is it his qo or what? We argue about this all the time. Please answer. -NO SHOWOFF rN OMAHA. DEAR NO SHOW: Wut clo yoe ~ overdPPlac? 'ftele days 17 perc.t H a luclt or dl.uer tab ll aboet r1pt. If you llHbud ttpe onr H percat I'd aay lie wa1 l.uenre. -----.....,~.OAT I ~ ----- 0 l-'0<199 ....... ol .... ,.,..., tcro,..bled -d• be- low to lo<"' fou• .. ....,i. -• I AGHRNA I I' I I' I I HULSS I _O_ ... _~_;(_:._:~_! .... ~r,_1_£l_Tf_•_s _1o_j _J_l..._ .... l _ICIJ TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACftOH 1 Melville captain 5 Photo finish 10 Aoerbfc 14 Infrequent 15 Dress up 16 - -town 17 Peacil type 19 lnteet 20 Pr .. tlge 21 S..Ocue 22 Cape Breton 0< Maul 23 Certain trallerl 25 Gamble 26 Pitch 30 "What's up -?" 31 Facffitauno 34 Red alga e1Ctract1 36 Light beem 38 Link• wee 39 NP of GNP 42 Veraalllel NUOn 49 Lowty wortler 50 Sp-1\Csh artk:te 51 Fracaa 53 -and th•• 55 "My -Sal' 56 Anoestor 61 Informer• 62 Kepi head - 64 From agate 65 Contributor &6 Dark red 87 Shamble9 68 Ml1hmut'les 69 Chlld· ver DOWN 1 Circle parts 2 Suspend 3 Ditty 4 PropenSlty 5 Gathered 6 Know-ttow 7 T.yphoon 8 Now Me>clcan1 9 Ogled 10 Futurw farmers 11 Form excessive row 18 Gloomy - 24 <Allf)ld'• kin 25 Tycoon 26 Thruhod 27 Tew 28 MOOf\1 29 Thr .. pref 40 Oenlals 41 OecllM 46 CUii 48 Newt media 51 Clog 52 Mendie 53 Vetl6cte 54 Hu.ky 55 TralPMI 57 Intent 58 F ency case 59 Smooch -.- ' . Actor's marriage blessed in London 43 Compulaion u Explostve 45 Rlverlllel • 7 Puppy aouno 12 Neic1 to Aust 13 Show 3 1 Atwayt poet 32 Death pref 33 Mount 35 Furniture 37 Weapon 60 Pine or teak 83 CoV9nant r ,, l . L By th Aatoelated Prett LONDON -"Dallas" tele- v\sTOn actor lto lterdeval and his wife, Ava, had their marriaae blessed in an Enalish oountry church. a month al\er they tied the knot in California. Kercheval, •9, and hie 35-ycar- old bride bad the marriap bleaed while boneymoonina in Britain. Kercheval said be amnaed the ceremony at the tiny Jilorman church at Orston in Not- ti n1hamshire because his ancestoo settled in that rqion of central Ent)and after the Norman Conquest 1n I 066. "We wanted to act married in the church because of the family connections with the area but the 'Dallas' producen could not spare u the time.'' he wd. "This is the next bell th•na." eat•apajamu PRINGFIELD, Neb. Spr1nafield·Plancv1ew H11h Schoors yc.atbook will reature onain.al anwork of the chubby, ll• llmiclwn.I ~nical cartoon cat Garfield on its cover, says a spokeswoman for the cbarM:tcr's creator, Jl• 0.Yll. Kevin Broderick.. the 1ebool'1 ~rbook advi1er, bad tt!Cldved initial approval from the ayndj- catethatdiltributes thecanoon to u1e 11udent-drawn an of Garfield for the )Utbook. but as the pubUllun,a deadhne aot near, he wu told the yeatbook CQuktn 't UJe ~ cbatacter. Broderick Mid he decided to plaid t~ cue with 0.Vls. Kim Campbell, O.vi1'-1CCRtary, saad • althou&}l the student-drawn an was cute, it wasn't up to spcc1fi- cations. She said sbe told Brodcnck the company would improve the conoept and tend the tcbool a piece of ori,;nal an. "Unfortunately, we had to bill them for it," she said. "It would have been nioetoaivc itaway, but we pve a lot to chanucs. We felt they were a client and W'C must uut them u such." The school p&id $230 for the acrt. Broderick said. Road private CHALL.JS, Idaho - A Judae 1s stand.inc firm ln his dcci11on that linaer ear... &Jq s.,.....•, rOld on her ranch in the Sawtooth Mo\lfttains is private. Seventh Diat.rict Juct,e Amota Beebe recently denied a motton to reeontidcr his docision iuued in October. 'Tbe motion .,.. meet by t-o ne\abbon of Sorcnten and ~er huibe:nd, Rick Soreneen, throuah YtbOtC ranch Ute road I p&llCI. 1 I J • . ... • TllB PMOLY c~cus by Bil Keane "Yeeulk! It's a STUNK!" . -MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson It ' I BIG GEORGE by Vlrgll Partch (VIP) BLOOll COUNTY U.S. ACRES "Litter bug!" DENNIS THE MENACE by Hank Ketcham .,....-~<f..,-FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE "No more getting up to let him in and out, In and out, in and out!" PEANUTS '(OU DRIVE ME CRAZY! • MOM I WHEN WILL l HAVE EHOOGH WEJeHT so 1 CAN 'THROI/ IT Aft)LJNt) ? I , "C1-~f ....... ,~ .... ' by Charles M. Schulz THAT'S NOT VEl.V ENCOURA61N6 !!! SHOE WE~VETO. YOU MUST BE Tl-4E WORST OUTFIELDER IN ~E HISTORV' OF BASEBALL ~ ."'..P ~ JUDGE PARKER GARFIELD -.. TUMBLEWEEDS DRABBLE ROSE 18 ROSE ~ fll);T ()(~·~. PRDOUC'T5, 1M6 ''NON-lDXIC" tAeEt.. t S CO/IEM'ING-10 Iii,,/ I WAS AWAAf. WU.F 1Hf: f\J1<1Kf. sa.u~·m1N' sc AREP M'( HORSE. by Jim Pavis BILLY? !>PEAK ro ME! ARE. YOU ALL RIUMT?! by Tom K. Ryan rrs HA1W 10 st.a:f' Wl1H ~ A HORSei1fvlN610~ \) ONPl:R VER ,fl7. by Kevin Fagan - by Pat Brady a l HAVE TO RU N DOWN TO THE POLICE STATION FOR A CLIENT ..• DOONESBURY .. by Jim Davis by Lynn Johnston •ODE1b A .. O\St-'W~ ,'?_r~ 1111!.IMV\. by Jeff MacNally AND LOOKING L.IKE 'tOU ~ WMAT'OJ'fl.E~. by Harold Le Doux SHE WAS NAMED ·woMAN SHE'S RAREl.Y SEEN AT OF THe YEAR H IN '85. THE COUNTRY CL.Ue ... SAM ... ANO I'VE SAT ON A euT 008SIP HAS rT THATHEf\~Ol8 A. FIXTU"E ""T THE ~ TMEf'e! ~~- by Tom Batluk by Gary Trudeau .. International Clasaifaed Advertiaing Week preeenta a SpeciaJ opportunity for us to show you we 're working harder than ever to meet your needs. Whether you're• Classifted nader or Cluaified adyertiser, we're here to uailt you. Let us help you meet your advertising challengea. ORANGE COAST PUBLISHING COMPANY .. Ct•ssified Adverli1ing 642-5678 •PRIVATE PARTY RATE ( · o Canctll•tlon) --- 4 line. S time minimurd I .60 per lin~ Example: 4 line.. 5 d•>·•· 112.00 Prke m~ t be in('lud~ in ad Rate dou not appl)' lo Commercial •tt'OUDI&. Boaticag. Automotive.. or Real Ettale. 0 CANCELLATION OR CHA GE o nt'e the ad bM run. Cuatomer i1 respon it>le for the foll amount. Mother's Day Greetings Show Mom how much you ca re with an affectionate greeting. Our Mother's Day greetings page will run Sunday , May 11th. A 5 line greeting is just $2.50. Additionat lines .50¢ each. Display ads are available. Ca ll for additioncrl information, 642-5678. Your Greeting: & . -. .. 4 f I t J , I ... .._ GI lrll/!!e Rll ..... !!!!!-.J!!!!!l...J!!!lllll!~!!I!!!!!!..~~ • flt n... , ____ ....,_,~==----== .__.._ ... .. lft ,, ... ". "°"'' 4-t lrftB __ .., Jf t !"4lf • -• AM .,.. t6f lwtl1Mly. .., oft1oe. P/l IV" llA 1 1 'I lk 11• ...,_ Of. U... ~. OOlfto Vlfted ....... _... ... llUI Ula •l'IMW . .... ..... '9 .. tD '111 I lwd .... cndt IMlllfler&. Cll117.al00 ~ ,.. tMo. ~ .wJUUL .... 4'111111r .. _. H4I COllMU09'1 ••· ll,I ........ t• ltJllll• ,..._ofc:Mdrtn'UP• • ....... I I d _. ..... Pll••illl. Oii MAL ISTATI ACOOllftl IHOYUYt ..... 11 ~ ...... ::...·= ~.: ._..,, .. 1&1-4800. ..,.,,.... ,..... '°' ......... pit ....... for ... ••nicer leorur, GAGE..._ LM9'0lltOMoe.<>r.,.. E.1"' G,OMP•n1. ~ Md ..,.eftde. £ARN eu 11111>,•forOllh. lntlnft~for•pro. Oountry art• Ix· +COMi• lmMd ~~---NtlM•~in-PlflHCff only: Call llndrwuMto: for 1--.d ......... UftllrV A~ ...,tohendl9~ 75t,.180 or_.. P.O ~-Oeneroue employ,. llUnltl ---Com.-~ phone toed. ... -.. • loll 4365, Coeea ...... . ~ dleoounl, ...... All .... ~ lt'IOnhmln ..... IOll CA~ ... Plltd-vwlOI-.~ ~ ~ ,._'YPl~Md P.O.lolc penon Moft.F"rt' 1 .._,. ~ btlilO oMol lklla. -· l•IJ C..Mlle.CAeaeat ..apm, 'W no ____ ,_ I I~, "'"""'81dlA.12t<WtcNr --.1n111am11 Cll~714H3-1083 °*"· oMoe. full ttme Mon Attn:TlMG1 ... ,,..,, unu ... -IU'1 CllbetWllrtt-4ilm..Mt M ...... -..~ *MOOfN1 '"'r'tt~ or 213 ~1. ttw Ftt a:ao to 5:ao. _. , ..... ~... Bltdftll. nt-e7?1. •ooo 141-W toe. Inc.. ~-Mau.. tocpt'd erwgetlc No ptione Olllle Pllw. W.t1111n1Mr.... ...., c:t: • ... HatlMW,... l'ftOOl1nt -oovu. "-L -.eoeo 1111n•m• PtOOte on.n* Ptr'IOtl <2nc11ewt,., ~ eo.> _,..,... • .... --- , .. Cit* forbueyotfloe ... EOE M/F ...... .,, I ... .,_,_ &W • -....aJleatll llM _., .. , "' omc.. ocOOf'POt ..... ,.z.. . ttY<>u.,.lociklrioforutra novciMo.o .. uotn. ~"= Mature,""'"*r.oomC)lofo Salary •11'00-mo Nft exotttno chlldfen'e UUl/111 M ependlrlQ mcwwy, or .. ~~~= =.'i~.:8t: ~ CdM pteOtioll mot~ tndWP, It D.O.E.162-0233 ltore"' Fun lone. Full or lnwnedlete QPlftlnoe '°' to 00 .,... Ilk• Maotc Ing for 1~ ~ p.ople ~111 WortuNn. ,_""" ... tltty bookkMIPlna, flt, Mlaty p/tllM .... needed.Cal pit ..... peopte and Mountatn, t<nona 8erTY ' for ...... .., 1 . • =s· =· fteO, 85l-et50 R!CEPTIOH18T : 0t IY 1n9g: 432-5224 cuNw1. Home imfltov. Fenn, or wtn Prez. Md o _. • 8t, LA ' Buy blfof'9 • · Buey Newpon leech ment cent• eicp • '*"-Awerda. Cell ue nowt w. .......... ttooee to 91 I MIA;:l-~ .. a ~~r,-~AOWen~~ Bullden oHloe. Mu•t UIZ/f._.. Plwe 9CIPfy In Ptr'IOtl MV9 _..,.. oPefllftQI In WI llitl flHJ:;1 -liiiiiiiiWliiiiMiii"'"-organ~ onen.. hh9 good teMc>hone F Of PIT ..... eicper, Tuee Of Tl'luf 8-1tem Of C.M .. H.B. or F.V. Aa""--.... ....... , tad I • w IMnMrMd~·· Pf"flf.Knowtedgeof.,.. 2-4pm L-P Hom• M2~ ..,.. , .. IUl"E .. IATUllR. Wftt1 W1o ~. • Huni..';:"S..:: ofc.bu9y PlelM =...:"'"" helpful. PIMM appll Cenlar.' 1275 8rt11ol, APT MANAOER COUP\.! .... .. tncfll 2 ..... JltN tft- !xpe1tenc.d In office wtll trllln rlgtlt per90n,:: c~=y~. 4750 Von ~~ 1~ ~-F 1 Com._., EEO MIF. w/eicp for~ 90 Unfl Watnutt ...,._ oondNoot ~ :OS2ft00 -.. VOLVO ·a GI.. IUIWt, IN' Pfoc:ecNNe anes t..._ Gretchen ua-12u. Kwman .101 '65-0IOO lllD llllWlll Garden Apt, CM. ~$300tc.l-.et07 wend.,*""""~ ... phone ...._ NI time. 1:30-!pm. • · ---·•-Sataty+bofwl+~ No orla1-1366. HOBIE U TU,.10 ............... ..... '"""'.,.....,,. -.T/IMllBI• .. _U.111.11 Nlllmeoouniw-...No pec1&u-4t14~ ,. Ill WfT'*1+.V-.Oood D/131.acllSlllM-4122 envtro.im.•11. ~70 111.IWWllY 8UNDAY8etourlU. hperlenoed Selu· 8un./e¥e'e. 8M 8*'9. iR ocftd. t1200 • ..,..111 VW'tslUG eurwoof Mn. Aumn Now le IM ttme to inM oMoe In Npt c.nw Cell P9r'tonel ~ ..._ WAIGHT HARDWARE.. All'f •TUE . llD-: Dye; eiw/Wllndl .....S130 • ',.. -iiiiiiiiiAiifiL I tNt rnoYel • Mon th ru Fri · 9.5 OMoet We need ~ 121 Rod11111 • C.M. Needed for tlU9y tllt fOod DetMi 1t7tf I 1ot Air moecw. clUldl 1 ..,_. •••••• , ..... BAY ESCROW, o.c·. 2nd M•eoeo EoE BALBOAISLAHOA!ALTY 111.11 .. lllfm'rl rwteurant. m&.e have LES ts1 .. 1~ .... /Di..... Condi 14.000 ml good Ell~I. trw. '1175• =. ~'= ~ otdalt * irnm,o • .,... _11,1• • • 11w111 ~· onlyt Muet ftelcM* """ ~ 1 F'NGIOAJAE. eroee Top Jtl! oondl 0ne wt •1100 •M-2M2~•7..J117 Atlmede. FVty Muit tngforutrong~. _, ltE8Al£8&AENTALS ~ ...,._IOe. Call yr expeti.nGe. Aopfy ,,_,. hell .,_, lcll '11 GALAXY. 17", 247 080U41tl05 VW '71 8'ag, ...,_ oond, oomelnto...:-.· Outltlndlna opportunity 1~4-eicper.Comput., -MT•••._ duttngoft.tnt73-5630. Coaetal c ..... --··· metc.et,Jdntocftd ..... ttout9onengine.llw. DATSUN '11 HOZX etereo, new ti,..' =-=,,,..,.,..,,,...,,,..,,,-_,_. _..,..~1 fortherlgtlfper90n, helpM.OCer.831-2'45 -• -..... · taurant, Werner et •190.122 Riiy -..-. NIQO. TurtM>. Jdnt ocftd. ~a&rw.117IOOr AEGISTi,.EO NU,.SH beneftte, profit llWlng. '9 ...-rllf V~ buey N.I ~. Cl ... ~UUll Eucld,ln~V-... .,. ..... L C..Mwtcd;5'W215 """" 1tt< ml tt= lredeforPoNdwor'9r-= ~~1:h ~r·lc.11 Lynn Exp'd~ttmeforNBC<W>-LAYAR.U73-l900 ... Air& llT Good co~dttton.1~&0 .............. _L auto.' •. 1 • 0 P£- 0 '. 0 ~f!"' IWl.c.ll4ttsM ~ FTl~dlern, IUtllng FJrm. Xlnt ~ MTM. -a.rvtoe lletton tlfend MM741 iii , .. oue ,u o~o. vw CLASSICt 1_. ,._ ~ l!'lcp. po .., not M-......... w'~· ~ pr . FIT & pt;f ..... pot. High "............... ~ ~IT147'•'•1TE 0 E AiiiiGEAATOR ~· +;;;-MM120 Ev MO NtO ... QUk*lyt Everif1hlno req.Xlnt-.,YJ~ •neg• 1-0lrl Office . ..,.,. ___ pr .... f11hlon boullque ln ExperteocedfoodWWt'I .._.,., ... _ • 11ouft.froethe · -.... DATSUN Claaelc 1970 retlult.IOObar-t Ten. Incl. mlMOe-FOf Into. Type, beetc blckpg, MY UN. Sellty negot. F1U FW!lon 1a1 Alrtum Ct fOf only! I.Wt In penon a. ........ CM~7t ., ...... 1171 al IC1rl9. Mint .,.,,,_ & 240-Z red on bll ~ AM/FM ce.. 1nMriot In cal Home Heetttl Re-uperw/comput.,.hefp-hrl. GrMI~ cat! appt 714-ieo-ee.44. • .._,2~-PM CASHIEA/A!CEPTION • ., N.B ellp. U 4.000. oon2 ..... , ,.,.,,,,· *-. =::4cs. '*-_, IOUfCe Center, 151"3803. ful. WHI tnlln. Xlnt oPPtv Judy 875'-3 1 m .. ILla _,,..._ioed full or part WASHE" DAYlA8 81S-OMS, 54'-0rn \ brek•. ,.int. batt and tUOO but w11 1t1.....a._1/ADL: ...... for,.....,,. penon to ado Retllll UMe help needed tor OE w..._ •1H: OM • IWl•rm Nm ow cowr 13,250. Cll Celt Ml>-«>el w.IHI....... .,.... ~=~ ~'s.:J· T•bkal/Tr.... WT..,. Faehlon I.Mend retall ~ 175; eleCtrlC dryer AlurMul\. 11iaoi0Tllkel nowl47-e1a. or 850-2527 IHve -Hll&ZllPHllU . SHI :-'111ona"°;~ .... etONE0£144-!070Tert MO. 7'4-840-2149. en.GM5otl4M77t HOH001tMCRXIExdn't .,,_,get tmmedtlClil oPen1na ewill-GIRL FRJDAY U&JI &IK CAiifiEMf Ff/f'f eor>-WASH!A oondttlonl loededl 80 •~All--• .--• ....--............. .a. for AIP pen'Oft wlltl For N.B. P.-rittng Contreo-lllT lllY&l flTTll end Pert Time J)OettloM: lllT/lllTllll tact etore mtNIOtf', 2851 EL.ECTNC DRYER . IUflflMb/ltlnlt 0wt MM0t 7~7550 or •iar oonlttuction ~~ound tor, ema11 omo. a ..,.. Experience neceuary. II.... IMne A •· C.M Awox 1~13751ot>o · '. ftll 5159-1331 ,__. 'Md knoWl1dQe °' 11en t10UM ut•~no norme1 831-2931 --,_.,. ve.. . • ... • ·~ • ..__. ·--·-.... '°' • .... otftoe dutlee. Start at llLll PDm 831~ eep, '1. 30' N9wport ..... Dode. MBZ ·ea 220 Coupe ..,,,.. ~ QOMtructton co. f..0:-:~ noo. 7am-7pm. 122-1m lllm1111111 AppMcentt-* to wonc • llTUll• .... lltmlW 9ITI ........ UH Pow ltoat or,..,..,._ a..ut. oond. Wht1r9d 1uitc.n.f/l/l.'/RENAUL NewDof1 8eectl ,,..... 1 YMr °' more uper · n.x1!>'-~ .,.. .,,.. llll11llAm P•m DAUO CLERK o11 m..e trif. l200/mo. 11eet1 Iner MIOOlor ,... JEO cal t59-0S61 M;F Ouallty lndlvldu•I with 0 .C .,..._ 831-2345 coureged to llppfy. PIMMcal EJcperteiioed Mon-F"r1 from I llY ,_,. 762·2614 Ev _.nt7 ofr. 762-tt41, 1562,.131 • ~ A~·-·L 1lblltty Ind lifnbltlon 10 lllNITll We offer exOllllnt t>M-fotanlPP'-._., e-5:30pm... L£8 ..., .. ,83 •T-MaZ'•noeLio.tkbtul. • • ._\ .,. ._....., ~,"""' a In-earn boll lneurence · ~ promotion• fn)m IALll& UY ILll o..~ '&40 8584 H8 11.-~ ,.-• t.nor D116grt firm nMdl bullneat, oooedenttooa. 1 yr or more exper wtttiin, and an oPPl'y for r,_,,_,,, · NA Fr. PYov. Form din FREE r1gMa to bOM doc* ""'" t.-, lntertor, aut~ Hper'd recept1typ111 cMc>endable. AveJtabte 831-2345 O.C . .,..._ tho .. quellfled end Ul-.. 1121 EASY ASSEMBLY WOAt<I tult9, otta l3500 ~ In Newport Mertna In•-mMtc, "'· CMtettl. 2 n.rtlng 5115, n·anik. lmmedl•tely, typing LJll Silt lnt.,...ed In 1 ,_.. <»-H08Troere 1714.00 per 100. 0-.. l1S60; eel lbl • IUO: ~z=7of onMla time. tope7tooe14.2_1~~.,...tPMI 8-ltlful Offtce envtron-'**Mry. Contllet Jon r... ··~ WAHTEO peyment. No S... O.. OCCdlrt t1IO; eof9 io. ..._ 141720-0M4 - ment. 0 .C. Alrocw1 ,,_ Netlofl 873-79tl. * WJi * Awf'/ In l*'IOn Mon-<Fr1, ":,_~llPPIY In per90n t1ll1 Hnd etamped Mat MIO, Jdnt ~70l5 8 L I p 8 A y A L MBZ '113008EL U ~ M . 147-5725 c.rv.y Vlllege DYNAMIC..._ proO'W". ~. at tne follow. ...,..... Gt1nder ~ envelope: ELAN-903, Nft IOf9bd fi50. o.1cJ 25,30,a5'40'IO' 72K ml, modill &wt WllOtl IRVINE AUTO . CENTER 714-951-3144 800-428-7 485 ••••••••••••••• Telemerkellng. Un ltd Ing location: =n~ 1~': Pacific 3'.411 EnterpriM Rd, Ft. =/br... wall unit S3SS W. COAST~,_ ~ Seco. Lltw A potentlel 873-6428 Mlle•/ ....,. .. -,. . . Pl«oe. FL 33442. • coftbt Mt '460: din ~ M ~"'' Ille• new, Bite. ,... ______ .. Penl·n1• Now Ava1·1able Sheri, l73-3082 Bill 7227 Edinger Aw. wana1..-rm Halrl Fant optyl Pro-~ ~ ~~ 11&1 .... ~illll 12.000. 7eo..oe31 ------- '"IRLINE Huntington s..ct., CA. lmmedlete~Fl.lll greeetve etytlet w/dd ._rn _..,..:. oountry -r-MIZ '72 iiOit dk grw " Equal Opportuntty or P(T. at I cllent•I N& Nlon new oM din ... MT5: eofa/ • new ....... ~ cat..t C · ULll lllPL ~ Reltaurant. Coelt mgt. Syd 87~21 I0"9 MSO. >Ont. ~706111trdM/ condl U 500 '0801 AR R 0 UTE S Exp'd, n-emkr. 7eo-aaee 11t•• Ht -Hlgtlway, CdM. A.-for PLANTS! INTERIOR Plant 8-lt. Aetian WI--cot ltll .. I Mii M0-o181 ~ --.f/TP/T LoullM0-1381 I C•P• melnt FT /PT lbl .. '4SO; ... unit 'UAON6XCMl86 m ....... Earn Extra Ca•h For De/Ivery 01 Thi• Papet HUNTINGTON BEACH FOUNTAIN VALLEY INDEPENDENT ASST MOR. & SALES Fun Neutlcal Gift & WllJlll ..... ••-• woman pref. ~I tor cp: $275; din ... wl eflrs IY trldc, to many. --to * . "' ·-· people! OUTGOING! 0.. C.Othlng Store. Looking .. ••UM& polntmentl 543--9585 '475; lllnl, 543-4705 lilt. Pert. oond. 11300 Ugh1 M:wy~ •• .,._,.,, pendlble •• .,, nMded for.,, ..... 11911c penon -080 After 5pfft ~ cones., ortty M K ml ..... for new Balboa Fun Zone to help out. Call: Day/Nlgtli Shtfte open! ORDER PULLER: SpeM CHILDRENS 8 PC 0. ' vtoe recordl, 1 ya.w werr candy store! 875-3370 or Chwtlee L.oc«er, 3443 Via Apply In pereon 3.5, fluent engllah. Opp I. ~ -=· Excel cones. ... .... tMllf. (111113) eet-0232 pm-T ... 1 Udo. Npt Bctl. 875-4230 Mon-Fr1. 900 BrWtol St.. growing co. Fltlme. 1515 7~ ,'1400, eac. Needlwor1c,l1o0, 111- Newport &wt\ SA/CM., .. 540-5850 1 04 N.Bc:h 542-et24 -• CHI 752-2801 Pitt Timi Hurle'a AjOe Contemp. glMI t~ ~ .... .., MOTOR ROUTE ltatrai ISH Retlef wor1c1 2 daya p.f ~ "'" 9uptio1. °'*"ti [I , .II 1ooe = 8t>1H8 -~~~!"""""'....;;;,--. .,,..., retired pereon ..._ -°' i.O. F0t quick 11--~ · · .... ., .. comedl Expertence help-.... 850-9123 .,., Of pm. -Available In Irvine area. $300 to $600. No collect- Ing. 3-4 hours a day. Mon. thru Friday afternoon. Sat. & 'Sun. morning. Call 642-4333, ask for Kirk. P/TIME Evff. Selllng fut. Cell 432-8014. MODEL HOME 8e11na out IU. llAlll 11111111 appta.5c>mto9pm,Mthr 2191 Cenyon CM. 14* llllBI F, S.1 9wn to 1 pm. No PllT·Jm Olk tbtl ctti. trom S25 DOMESTIC & FOREIGN 1 lwm ..n1ng. s.wy + bonul. P~ w:-=-:1F lo Oelc btvd.,.,,., •15, ""'* lllllY TIYITI ~OfT:'eaa~ Ma Houee ancs mM• ~ 0111 1p1c sa a up 1,..1 BEACH llVO. ·~~~ ~'=: ca111. 15/Hr + bonul. ~w ... ~ .. ~a!...!! 114/Ml.... chrm ~ M trttw a DIT "Illa ~ twW ,..,.,,. to ..-.......... ~.. men.-·-· BHutlful Co••• M•H Adl2t, c/o Daly Piiot, moet Item. bnnd new 4 ...... ilht/J•. HOHOA 8ANTA ANA BUICK DEALER Deliver 1 day a week. No collect ing . no soliciting. Must have dependable car, truck or statron wagon and insurance ORANGE COAST ~. meture couple PO Box 1seo, Coete M&-12'4 1131 7141547-3665 w/prevtoue uperi.ic., Mw, CA~ Queer\ 11111 bed, portaD1f FORD 11111 FtJO (•1FMU44)3',571 ml. IN and fld '-'lo oo-manaoe 1-.0, rnetiooeny ...,. · ..... • CU.-MEAKUR •15 WM 5 ORANGn COUNTY 278 unit comp6a ,,.., ,_ mftY cab!Mt. MUST SE.LL tom. VI, auto, P8, radio, Lb nu •ts l60it.t "':; L Newpon BMeti. Mu•t PmME. No'411ng. a...ry. 875-7305 loddng ""~ duel "* (1NC82t1> 7tt-tt52dye We Offer: ~~~~ ~!f"'9~~.~.;1;n:, ........... Ull ::t .':,'&,.~ = 491.1m 9'/l'*ndl •New car Sales OallyPilat 330 W. Bay St. CALL 842-1444 Ask for JoAnne Craney Costa Mesa, CA ,, .. 11Pt. Newport Vtllege ~ M2·5844 ; ;w111t. wtbblAd 83M010. a to 15pm •Used car Sates ::'· 714-M:n~:~.-llllHT• DRESS. aa 5, ,... .. ._.._. CHICK •Serv:ce Virginia, Aun tme11 oomputertzed ~worn. 1150 or e.t It com.. with bucket •leasing rM11urent omc.. FIC Otter. Cell~ ....., tinted glele, redlal IVEllllON •Elcellent financing blcpg peyroll,pereonnel, * HOUSEHOLD rTEMS• '"' and ~ for Im-PORSCHE DUER typing, '°""' "AP" uper. * MUST BE SOU> * mediate Ol!Mry. ~eat growtngCo. adv. op. * 714 I• •M• (Stkl 2117) (Ser# 6271) ctttvU.-':kr port. HB.,... $1500 mo. ..._._ HI .. ,..__ OOOJJ Cot19ct 213 924-1423 2 WHEELCHAIRS: One ORA:oE'COAST s.t'.~ s;;::~ 0 IJ©~ _..,....., __ , --•I MobllaMS & 1 Hlggl. 1125 Jelp/AeMult O __ .................. __ MAGIC BRUSH PAINTING llll MAT-.. Ot ofr. Stalnliiee ...., 2524 Hert>or Coate w... CHIC• . $2.40 per day TIEii int/Ext. Tu-c:oet Paint & Needed~ of.. we I k • r (Inv a ctr• I .. 1111 1•1 2926 HWllOr lll¥cS. M2·1lll, I AHR ID Fr ....... ltc'd. 831-2345 To ~ ._. ,. ..... __ Apr. Acoult.-.:,. n.-... acpecuofrlQolno!Mllna St5totr. He-<Q02 w,'EJUION C.M. 979-2500 ~ -'P'~ ~ -... .._, exprequtrad".l»!ilwc:.11 ~ .... ~ That'• ALL you pey fOf 3 llnea, 30 day mlnwnum In the Aemodetlng,rmlddtttcne. f ~ up, lewne. i51-:M78 Jobl.4~/~7 507-810:..,PNI. Eleo Port REDWOOD• ..S!.c-.tHWy CAD '15 COY. a--.. Any type rec>eir9 by lie ~ PAINTER NEEDS WORKI J AC U z z I· FI t I I • 06i I ~ a.-11 lttw - SERVICE contra ctor. All work =E cNlln .n:e~7l1o~· Tr..rTr1m/Owlup compl Int/Ext, ce111ng1. reftn cetl. T......,.,.__ ::-= =s:r'' Int a loededl ~ 671-•tee unttd"':'~1K.~~ gu111n1eed. All pftMM. free Mt n..... · 111 gardening. Come>etltlW (2e) yn exp. WOf1c guair ~""' • • 7,000ml. 123,000. Kurtt ~~~;::;~~;;=:~ firm pp 494-0ll7 Fr .. •t 7 14/554-2803 · --v· pnc:.e. Chodt M2·2173 Devit P~"4-3a37 laf E41hr ....._ New JACK LA LANE 852-8900 btM1 M dalyt r:; ------- Ooon-Aec*r·Alt .. ttona Clml!!!!!!!! llutan STEVES Property Mlllnt. ·hrf.. ... --1 ="a.:-~IHp. .. ~-~ NABERS ~:~~:;:.~::~~ llWWilll aocrw;a;: brlCkWOril. '"~~ =·1T;.r:1;': a Cal.,.., apm 1561-2124 lllW g"=,:..OOOml. c•n11 11C -:=-------cu.tom 0.... & Mirror ooncnte. Comp pettoe. Energetic ~ neeci.cs Ru 0 811 KA RAST AN -NILLft Cu,tts wont, wellll. lldtng door9 15 yruxper. Me 4834 TOP QUALITY PAINTING : .. ~ a Mar1!~ AMERICAN Orlentelel SIMPLY THE BEST * HUOIOT * L.AAOESTaarcno.. DIRECTORY CALL TOOAYll &llFll Liii ~ lnetaletlon etc. A· 1 Gtw. 5'a.1507 BRICKWORK. Small Jobe lnt/Exl refs. ,,... eet. ·-1 for the Otenge One 10Jl 12 t~ of the fine. s.-. 8erWle -lMllrlCI • MA8TW Tl * of .... modlt, tow,...... ~r Wont & Qeenlng.. ~ NewpOf1 eo.11 Mw. 411-1122 Ut-11M COMt ~Co. go Id b 1 ck Oro u n d EVAOPf.AH DELIVERY * AUA ROMEO * Cedl'teol In °""II_ MS tn1t&111ttona. ~734 trvtne. A9re. 876-3175 ' p . le .... ll••M glOfMtr1c del9'I saoo'. 1540 JAMe0REE RD. * 8AA8 * ~· Councyta. .. todllyf __ TES Tr9e ttim IJtrial ~ ~ vokla I Older 12x11 "::J::: NEWPORT BEACH liMli RJIAl 100 C..nt/Cncrtti Dump rune. C.M.IN.8. SPECIALIST BLOCK FXR+HfRd 1RttRJOA8 muet, no llXl*tlnoe,... lonea. Good AdjaclnttoFttNonllewl ..... sf ctlM CONSTRUCT .,.._Jim Wt1Y'•. M2·7208 FENCES. Cement, brick. HANOINGJSTRJPPING quired. ldeel for ~ '300. 54a.5127 Mary1 Open ~ Deyu Week • 1 , 2tOO Harbor atwd. 1-------· Grade-HIUllng-Concme . •GEN. HOME REPAIRS. Call 24 In. 54u 729 VISA-MC873-1512 ~·· high.:.::: JftN11119.-/Jli 840-64.U * TQ.-00 * C08TAME8A Ac ... tica) •I! R .... R1t•. 84M&S 1 Paint. Drywall. ~ STUCCO MASONRY-TILE ANDYS WALLCOVERING a meet=.. HcMn: I•-~ ... , ltM 1 M 'Tf ftij REBLOWN OR PXINtEb OrtV9Waya, petlol. pethl. etc. Gary a.45-52 PTl ~~:,·0~· ::1~ lnllallatlon a Almo'llll Mone,-.;:;;;;; 5:30pm LAAGE 8eLECTION °' 8!2..1~ ~~ MtNT COHO. teeoo. Aleo Int/Ext Pllntlng etc No Job too emlll. HANDY ANDY • Mllint & ' .. Int. Painting.. 548-4013 to 9:00pm, Saturday . Nlf IDml.. NEW & IJ8B) IMW'81 U 11 • I 4 2 0 O 'Ce I I . 144-4117 LIC#288597 831-9296 Reu. Mlclcey, 53&-0553 RepalrSVC.HCll'M,Apt& ., Wallpaper lnatetlatlon& 9:oo.tn to 1:00pm. Start SCUlPTUAE by Thomea Lim---7141114-1127~Tlrn CAOtLLAC !LOOll@: a....ial C.IW Commera.t 7fJO. 719' RemOYe All types. comm'I at •4. 00 /hour plue Holend. 20lc20 A 8teel et VOLUMI 8ALU llt wlbttc lfw .....;.. Ind _..,a ••HANDYMAN•• *"1..,..* & r•kfl: Joe 845-5190 bonulel. Prtvete .. ' •1500.:.£'02>122-1333 Of BEIMCI. LEA8ING .. Lllll bou •t•;eo NO Pk••;ra~y I will bebyalt In my m Lit-Of "'*' I do " all! CLEAN & EXPERT phone, 0111111 lttlr•. 161-4nw 3870 H ~ Ave ILL ... CAfDtT llAO c'ftlOIT 1-"'"'P'!-·P-IJiil--.--Meaa h<>mel Full or part ,... • Over 25 yw. ~ We gala lhcl henQ together Home ..,,..,. wetoon... Al&l-·.__1 L,,.;,. ..... ,... · --~ ....._ COL 8x of any time 1 U&ll•-tJp Pat 531-557g or !Ya mag. Uc. T-111.421 130-1353 Heng/tt~Achice to the For lnteMew eel Me. .,.._. ........ ..,..... _. 11118.I ""'vwn Pml f'9q. TOP, HE LI PIX 87~9 Lanae. S4M352 YOU BUY • I IHSTAU. ••ABC MOVING•• cruy . ..., era no on.-rt. at ~· ll14llaiw Newport Beech loc $76 ' ,_ . ' *" 730 M M F Yari lltf • (No. Chtn'V -.-a) •••--MMI036/a7~. _1 u. Elec. Lt. PtumblnQ. Qu6dc a CaNM T13804e' Pla•W 8 4 2 -4 3 3 3 b wt n ; 'IJIRDdk; T'....._.w.i ·-......... CAMAJltO ..,.,.. '81 ' Jatnl'L ta .. a1 ct Gar.Opnra.WL&48Mt4 LORATE8502-0410 !1 hm·3pm. Or after Oood1Npe,t120 OPENHWN~ 13181Hert.orlfwd,Q,O. T·Top,7800~1'N,one Know ~ t ROBIN s CLEANING Mn• Home ltnptcw-n·-.• H.., D',... ,.. 5:30pm et M2-N71. ... 7121 DA 114-2IOG owns, loaded. ... oond, c:tl*1 & lnt~pr~~ 1 SERVICE: lthroougNy ment/Nplllt etc. oue1om -·-d.im ·AJI~&~ S4000 ....... 1tl>1 s10.00.Brycn432-~7.;· ~=ioed=7 ==~ ·~~~·· DRAINSCLEAAFroml15 TELLEll ~~~ 11Jblt Reuon1N. Rat... Fr9e la-11--St Movtn. Tnaured F~~u~· IMd wood top) + p™ x;;; B!!!L! & E.IUmet;:r Ouallty Work, ..., Uc. T12~. M1.a.427 . E.lt•bli.Md a & L It mMclN!ig ............ ng ._. MG-5t18/ 61-2958 NEW Ww.tlouee 81Gr11ge R.J'e COMP\ETE Home & ...,CINftg for a oar.er duced to --~. PP ~ldng • ~ & 4 . LT HAULING -MOVING Buelnw Matntenence. oriented lndlv1duel tc (714) 752-1 ... Wateri>Jooftng• 831 199 HoolMdeenlng cerp9ta & Qaraoe& Yard anupe llYll-llll PIUmblftO IP9d•ll1. ,.._ wortl••Udme....,ln ,_ 1 L• II lltl .. , upholstery, w1ncso... etc. Jon "6-i192 ~ eetlrnMel. 63&-2"1 our Fountain Valley I SJ:rli Gf o;uang Klrbya M.int. 031-6272 Haulng. MoWlg. ~ By trr.I« p6eoe. 548 3M5 fl9liiii .... =::. .. n:. ~m.: lm.lJI ... Ml TNll ollenlng, vwn61n. , KAY'S CLEANING 8~. upe. 1 Deya. Loweet rata. Plldll/ ;:u;;c;; ilD" to MfNmum e ~ ..._ 2nd IMel.. d•seaows & compcund, WCJL 867-24311 R-'d Spedelllt. tne d, Cal &any, 722-ee73 -MAN<!T EVAL F .... 111C1*1e!M» 0t M yn ¥ d'9dl •140, UI ll!IH • _ _.__ BoncMd. lie. IM-5703 ,..-._ etudent Ila lNctc Photography-Wedding• c.I for~ AM 7J.~7 C*fW"•IO ~ ... Found-Pretty Ktny "'-.......,, ~ on:,. Thank 8oudotr-Portre1t-RM1. · ..... ~lftO, ""°:~:doe of ~ S*1 ..,_ 7 mo Xct..ttlilllio Xtt I Logo. I L.IW:: you, rc!l.'1~ 18111 Llcenold. Bob, •7~7 ~ T and -~ OU.-FME to gd hoft'9 " not Dll9t s.v. Bloc:hur-. ~ •a ........... ~ ~ _ -w •oms .... w. °"" a olllmed. '42&1541. Typeeetttna GRAPHICS ···-·••m•m• •CONST. CLEAN-UP• _..... -·· ·--oompltheoltw ..... =:-:-=~===-..,,.,.,.,,.,,,.I MewPOA'f:.72()..9191 -. ~ a T,.. 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Tilt • lllolllf iitlef'iln Huetty AKc:GCi -----·---Ho Job 2 bta Ot 2 llNI 7yn Union eicp. Ul24'30 MAT CIMXMIC fllnO •ldlldNn, ttlote. won. C..-1!7 Fr• .... 843o72 ,-,... llt LOW RATUI DtldilCttw, ~ lllJIWllT Int ~ ...... & ;irr ... in x;;;: &a; 1y ~~r~ ~ Compeete ~. oen·i 11111n .. Tllll M Kttdlw. .,..,.._ 122-e1a • ....-. ____ ••..,'r-------i AMlodllf'lO • M Typee OM a Ar UM>OOA ""*"'· ,,.. ""'*'O. ,,. .!!',!Mom. 9111~.. IWIW tliiii'-uwma ......... 8t~c eet.Mauro,ta473 ....,.. or 241 -. Equcl~ WI DO IT ALLI L.lc'dl lnt/ DOORS OALQN!ll ~ Upe•Tree TOppfna FIN! PAINTIHO' 8y ~ LET THE 8UN8fflNE IN ~ 11--.. ... P..,._, ~. te1 3584 c... ~~ ".9f:rt.,.. ~ IO¥ i>.Heul. •d a.nor. 11 ~ cj::tfJ. ~ wtnctow ~ _.... llM ~ carpentry a.Moe Met(;~ . cuetomert. UC. 2 Ltd Cal (714) ... .., I ::!! ,:. '=I!! &56R WWW c 18111 ... _..,..,_.h*tddlUonl TheNl-Your tes-4114 Pn Window 011 • ..,.. _,., 1 .._... rN10. bOOb. ID'•..._ Doorltec. 14MllO rtnm•aw K.C.TMISEIMCl A.A.A. 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ADVllTISI IN THI DAILY PILOT'S CLASSIPllD PAGIS _ PRrv A TE PARTY AA TE (No Cancellation) 4 UM, .5 tim. minimum S .60 per lj,_.fxompl.1 4' lines, .5 doytS l 200 • ~"""' be~"' od .. IC 5 New la the M•Mn t• meke lt'9 ltvcka. Sen the.. unneeded heu .. held were•, evt• 1rewn doth•• or toy trudlt lty e4'vertftfnt1 yeur ,.,. ...... e tedeyl Only~ ,.er llne (4 llne mffth•tt•m) D1ilr Pilot Cl111ifi1d 842-1878 ... 0 \ ' , • . .. ••• ----- 0HAN~l CoAs r -~ --~- Glrl ln molestittlon case testifies shelled about age Wore mother's clothes and makeup to make defendant in sex case belt eve she was older By ROBERT HYNDMAN ot ... DlllJ ......... A 14-year-old Irvine &itl admitted Monday to dressing in her mother's clothes and lying about her age \o a man now accused of sexually molest- ing her al his Newport Beach home. Thegjrl testified in Harbor Munici- pal Court that she borrowed a blouse and skirt from her mother and wore jewelry and makeup to make tbe defendant think she WIS older. The girl's testimony came Monday morning on the second day of the preliminary hcarina for Ne~rt Beach real estate investor John Walter Patridge, SS, and his wife, II Sim Kim. 46. The couple is charged with four counts each of lakina nude photosraphs and havtng iDep1 -ex with a m1nor. Judae Susanne Shaw found suffi- cient evidence for a Superior Court trial on the charses and ordered the couple to appear for an arraJinment May 19 in Oranae County Superior Court. Owing qucstionin' 1 by defense attorneys. the girl Slld she lied to Patridae, tellina him she was 22 years old and worked as an accountant for a local manaaement firm. The girl said she contacted Patridae Everybody ... every person. every family. every group ... is different. and we all have different health coverage needs. That's why Blue Shield . California's health coverag e lead er. offers a variety of choices. Blue Shield of California has contracts with more doctors and hospitals than any plan in the country. A choice of deductibles from $250 to $2 .000, a choice of plans for individuals of all ages . families and groups of all size s. throuah a personal ad he had pla~ became sca.re4. but tried no~ to let on in The Resister newspaper scek:in& a for fear of bem& cauaht 1)'11\& about "youna. pretty bi-sexual lady" to her age. share .rthe aood life." "Do you thip you pulled it ofl'r' "I WIS curious what kmd of people uked Jud&e Shaw. · wouJd put those kinds of ads in the "I thi~k so,:' ~ an1~rcd. . paper," the girl said. The girl said m earµer tcstunony The &irl said she made amnao-that she went aJona with the alleacd ments over the phone to have the sex acts and pbotosraJ>h• for fear of defendants pick her up outside her • not bein& pven a ride home. lrvine apartment April S when her Later that da~. s~e told the<'.<>~· mother was not at home. she WIS cons1denn1 comm1tuna Once they had arrived at tlac suicide. . . . couple's home on Westcliff Drive in She told a fnend about the tDCJdent Newport Beach, tbe girl said she and her friend notified police. After a brief'investiption, Pat.ridle and Kim were arres1ed at their Newport Bcacb home April 17. , Defeweattomeys Byron McMillan and Dennis McNemy are arauina that their clieull bad no idea the lilt was a minor and was lyin& about her qc. They also claim th~ girl ~ never fon:ed into any actJoos apmst her will. Patrid&e is being held in Oran&,e County Jail in lieu of SI00,000 bail after be was denied a bail reduction on April 21. His wife is free on S2S,OOO bail. -- If you have to pay for your .own coverage, you know how low these month~ rates• are for the Blue Shield Preferred Plan in Orange County. If you're buying for a company, call your agent or return the coupon below to see how much a Preferred Plan can save you. Yo u're special. You want to decide who your doctor is go ing to be: you want to decid e how much you're going to pay for coverage. $250 Deductible Under JO .and how much you 'll pay when you need care. Blue Shield offers these choices. The Blue Shield choices mean you can select a plan tailored to meet your needs." Dis~over for yourself. how Blue Shield is right for you. Blue Sh ield. The Choice Is Yours. Ii v. eaU: Shield --::~hlel~ ca~ii --:..U::.oo-(41S)-44H2921 c:A California Box 7168 Los AnaeJa (21)) 642·S4SS I f • tA1•'0fl'"•• -.... <••Id' '"""' ~n Fr~dsco. CA 94120 ·.. • J Please send me information on the new Blue Shield Patttared Pim 1 D For Individuals and Families ... I D For Group Coverase for my Employees. fEmpl~~es:.::~;::;~ NAME~---..~~--~~~~~~~--~-----'"'"--'-.......... ......-.____.... _ _,_~ . ) ADDlBSS~~--~~--:...~-CITY~~~~- PHONB AGENTIBIOlBll ........ ....._ __ ~__.._---__......_..-._ . ·L--~---~----~--------------------------~ t j · " ::~ .. • • 2 Person Family 1 .......... $1000 Deductible *These monthly dues ue b illed quarterly. ... $103.45 SMt• ., .... $39.50 .... . .. $56.00 Blue ·Shield of Californ ia CAU FORNIA0 PHYSICIANS' SERVICE • J ~---------~--..---------~ i---I ·J r • TUESDAY, MAY 6, 1986 • ·~---== , . 25~ hild-killing testimo;ny allowed ey eyewitness in retrial of A cala lost emory;juryrea 6-year-old account ............ The six-year--0ld testimony of a key lion witneis in the first kid- pping and murder trial of Rodney ei Alcala was read to an Orange unty Superior Court jury Monday er a judge ruled that emotionally Painter's first aid training saves toddler from chocking./ A3 California Deukmejlan has untll Thursday to take stand on offshore oil drilling plan and Democratic legislators urge him to do ao./A7 Nation Radioactive fallout from Soviet nuclear dt._ter detected In atmosphere qffWestCoast./M World Soviets admit radioactive contamination has spread beyond evacu- ation area./ AS Sports Marina High football coach Dave Thompson has submitted a letter of resignation. /81 Three area high school volleyball teams are In tonlght'sCIF 4-A vol- leyball semlflnals./81 INDEX Advk:e and Games Butletln Board Business Classified Comics Death Notices Entertainment Opinion Pollce Log Publlc Notices Sports Televlslon Weather 65 A3 A9-10 67-9 66 69 64 A6 A3 69-1 0 81-3 6-4 A2 troubled" l>ana Crappa was un- available to testify at Alcala's retrial. Prosecutor Tom Goethals and a female court reporter took turns reading. portions of Crappa's 1980 testimony which linked Alcala to the hilly wash where 12-year--0ld Robin Samsoe's remains were found. The ~olice I chase ends in. crash By TONY SAAVEDRA Ottll90.-,,... ..... A truck smashed into parked cars at a Costa Mesa gasoline station Mon- <1ay afteT its occupants tried to escape undercover narcotics officers during a sweep by Los Angeles County Sheriff's deputies and Montebello police. The dri~r was arrested at the Texaco statJon at Bristol and Baker streets, while the passenger was nabbed roughly 15 minutes later after hjding in an adjacent house, police said. No residents weTC home at the time. Two more men bad been arrested minutes earlier during the under- cover = operation, marked by the hi&h-s chase from the parking_ lot of'South Coast Plaza to the gas station about a mile away. Narcotics agents picked up Wil- liam Xavier Gonzalez. 37. and an unidentified man at the shopping center, however two suspected deal· ers fled in a Ford Ranger, said Costa Mesa Sgt. Matt Collett. Traffic officer John Pherrin said the truck zoomed south on Bear Street and cast on Baker Street at about 60 mph, followed close by police units. Hoverin&overhead were two helicopters from the Los Angeles County Sheriffs Department and Costa Mesa Police Department. The fleeing truck attempted to turn into a Texaco station, which is undergoing remodeling. but crashed into three construction vehicles as well as an air compressor before coming to rest in a newly-built concrete planter. Pherrin said. No Qpe was in the parked cars. although at least I 0 people were working in the area, he said. Driver A orencio de la Vega, 39. was arrested at the scene. Passenger (Pleue eee CRASH/ A2) Demos to pay price for anti~La Rouche effort By PAUL Al\CHIPLEY °' .. .,.., .......... County Democrats ordinarily would write off the Republican-heavy 40th Congressional District -par- ticularly the primary race -and use their limited funds and time for more promising races. But rather than write it off, county party chief Bruce Sumner finds himtclf running as a write-in can· didate against Art Hoffman, the official entrant in the Democratic primary. Hoffman, 29. a technical writer from Santa Ana who doe$n't live in ELECTION '86 the 40th district, is a d1sc1ple of ultra· conservative Lyndon LaRouche. When local Democrats learned Hoffman was the only person to file for the primary, they faced the same embarrassment that befell the Demo- cratic Party in Illinois where two LaRouche candidates won primary races. Rather than suffer a similar 9Ceoario, Sumner is running a long- shot campaign as a write-in candidate (Pleue eee WRITE-IJlf/A2) Top woman surf er in stat~ chasing waves and degree Catchjng the big wave isn't Al_isa Scbwarzstein's dream. It's catchan1 the riaht wave. In Australia recently. she was able to do j ust \hat -enabling her to cam fourth place in the World Tou~ oftht Auociatjon of Surfina Profcss1onals. In ber 9e00nd year on the p~ fcssional circuit, the 21-ycar-old taauna Beach girl was tbe most improved woman surfer in the world. She is also the hiahctt ranking C.Ufomian woman sutf'Cr. ' Scbwarutein miaht have plaocd even higher in the world 1tandinp. Fresh from takina a seoond place in the Forcnza World Cup at Kalelwa, Hawaii Schwanste1n suffered a surf-lna accident that severely injured her knee. She was forced to return to C..tlirom1a for SWJCf'Y. After nearly a month-and-a-half of rcbabiliation 1ht n:Joined the tour tn Austraha when: she plaocd thud an -.· uuu MERK PEOPL£ IN THE Nl ws four contcCUtivc coolcsts. finally rankina her fourth in the world. And an unlucky draw pitted her a&&inst the rankina world cb&mpion, f'fonda's Fneda Zamba, in all four contests. Two Au,tr11ian women, Jodi Cooper from Albany and Pam Bumdac of Sidney, didn't have to face Zamba unttl the finals. Yet Schwarzstcin ti anythlna but• (PleueeeeTOP/A.2) . testimony was read aftu Judae Donald McCartin ruled apinst a defense motion uraina that the tran· scripts not be presented to the jury. Crappa, 26, orjgmally t.estifled that she saw a man who ap~ 10 be Alcala '%rcefully steenna" a blond airl into the brush by a roadside turnout in the foothills near Siem MadreooJunc20, 1979, thcaameday that the Huntington Beach airl disa~ peared. Samsoe's remains were later found near where Crappa reported aeeina the " ~...:.,..., aestimony ii considered ~the proeecution'1 cue since lhe ii the only ooe who bu placed Alcall at 1be scene of the k:illina. Alcall wu convicted in 19"80 of kidnappiaj and mutderina Samsoe. The 1Ca11e ~Court overturned the COii~ in 198-4 forcina a eel:c>Dd trial. • Scbedaled 10 repeat her testimony laat Wednetday, Crappa instead took the atand and announced she bu DO memoey .of the incident or Alcall'• Loe An&elea County uerlff'• 4epatl• a.neat Ja't'ier La..18 Adu, 34, one of foar Victim testifies in molestation trial shelled about age By ROBERT HYNDMAN OtttleO.-, ....... A I 4-year--0ld lrvine girl admjtted Monday to dressing in her mother's clothes and lyin• aboQt ber age to a man now accused of sexually molesting heT at his Newport Beach home. The girl testified in Harbor Municipal Court that she borrowed a blouse and skirt from her mother and wore jewelry and makeup to make the defendant thinlCshe was older. The girl's testimony came Monday momina on the second day of the preliminary hearing for Newport Beach real eitate investor JQbn Walter Patridge, SS, and his wife, U Sim Kim. 46. The couple iscbatled (Pleue ... OlllL/~) -_co__ --- e~trial. Crapp.. a former f~ worter who it now a ~ nune, sbodred IM counroom wbeD abe claimed to auftier &om .. 7 •• Sbe aid lhe may bave 'Ubcoatciowlly¥ blocked out all memory ollbc eveat and the~ bec•aee llilc'• "'not yet read witb it.7 .• Mo y, Mc:Cartin naled Qa~ ••meatany. '"'8vai.lable" 10 &eltify after~ from a psycbiatrilt who ttealed ber lD 1915. . Aatbooy s.ili of Kailer. Ho.pita! Woman found dead in Irvine Nude body discovered in Northwood house that was up for sale BJ PAUL A8ClllPLEY ............ A fQltor found the Dude body of& woman in a Northwood home in lrvi.ne Monday, and police aid the woman may have died under ~~ (.08firmed tbe identity of the woman, who they dacribed at a Caucasian in her 20a. Sbe wu found in at a boUle at 13 E . --:.a ,_..,: ___ • ..._ Lt. ... i :1.... ~Dal ~ UTUlll; .....-~ White. The fQltor called police at S: 11 p.m .. , White said. Hit name wu DOt relNMd Poticie could DOl comment OD 1be caute of death or call the CMe a homicide until tbe coroner com- Dieted bis invatiption, ~·laid. However, he eaid d!iete were .. . . circwnl1aDca IUrT'CJWd.. '~th. .. 'ite would not CODfirm an initial NPOrt tbat Che woman ..,,_.s 10 -~ beea bhi ~· ~ wen ~ doof'-to-door Monday eveniaa ta.Ibis to oeisb-bon. Pol.ice were atilJ awa.iti.aa approval of a leaf'Cb wanut late Moedly 10 ~ enter the bome and COftfirm the identity of the body and investipte the ICCDC. White m,.:~1 owner of tbe home was · y on vacation in Mexico. The sin&lc story home on the Enclna cuf-de--uc nonb of lrvi.oe Bou.leva.rd and Culver Drive wu up for Ille. A Century 21 for sale lien is potted out front and a lock box i1 attached to tbe raidence. Death of retarded boy investigated By ROBERT BARUI\ °' ............. Huntington Beach police arc tn· vestipting the death of a 14-year-<>ld severely retarded boy who died Sunday, three dayi after he was phyiically restrained by a female teacher at a Hunlin&ton ee.ch School, Lt. Jim Walker disclosed Monday. The dead boy wu identified as Garth Pico, a resjdent of Fairview State Hospital in Costa Mesa, who was buted to the Oranac County· operaled Gill Education Center at t s2s2· Victoria Lane. He reportedly ''acted up .. on the bus on his way to tcbool Thunday mornina. accordina to Walker, and then became violent in thecluaroom, aUeeedly throwina furniture and u- aauftina other younasten. The teacher ~ employed special ratrainina ~ues 10 keep the boy from hurtina him.Jelf and others, Walker said. The boy, who WIS described U small for his IF• stopped brcathina after he wu ~ stTained and m::cived emersency (Pl--... D&Aftl/ A2) -_Payhike - for Mesa council -approved ' I .,, • Ofange CoNt OAIL Y PILOT I Tueaday, May 8, 1980 TOP WOMAN SURFER CHASING DREAMS ••• Pnila/41 full-time beaeh bum. When sbe is no t c~ waves.1he'1cbas~a d~. Scbwarutet6ltas the disunct.lon ot beina the only professional woman surftt wbo also attends collqe full-time. Althou&h she bas bad to skip school to compete, she still plans to araduate ftom UCLA onJy a year behind ~bedule with a dqrce in sociology and an emphasis in business. Summer achoo! has been a must. "I want to &raduate from UCLA and use the dearce further down the line. I bope to &et a job in the surfing induatry or teachina.'"she saiq. The deamnds ofboth careers can be overwhelminf at times, and often leave little ume for polishing her surfina lk.ills. ~eut I eajoy hav1na two separate Lives. It gives me a broader per- spective," she said. Jim Toomey, Schwarz.stein's high school soccer coach and the director of student activities and athletics at U,guna Beach High School, thinks she didn't surface as the world champion because of her duaJ com- mitment. "It's impossible. You have to go for it and be in school or sun:,." he said. But Toomey admits ir Schwans- tcin continues to drop classes only during world competiuon, she'll stay in the heat. .. Next year she Wlll win itall, there is no doubt about it. She has made an imp,act on the judges," be said. • She is the direct antithesis of what you'd think surfing is. She is one of the top athletes in this whole county:· Toomey said. Scbwarzstcin mainlained a 3.8 grade point average in high school when she took the 1980 World Amateur Championship and now maintains a 3.0 at UCLA. While on tour Schwarzstein spends between five and six hours a day paddling the waves on her board. When in Laguna Beach during the summer she may only surf a few times a week. though on wcckeJlds she hits the water for five hours each day. To make up for lost time on the waves and to prepare for the 1986-87 ASP World Tour that begins m England this August, she eliminates sugar from her dJet and has been riding a bicycle to rebuild strength in her injured knee. ";(nd I look a lot at the men's maneuvers,'' she said. Competition for the best waves in the heavily-used local waters can be tough at times. especially in a male- dominatcd sport. But the nine-year ... .. Delly Not ,.... .., "-hipe All.ea Schwarateln of Lapna Beach la rlalng ln the ranb to become a world-cl ... auifer. 0 veteran modestly said, "I can hold m y own. "I have met a lot of guys s urfing, and I have found them really sup- portivcoverall and they want to know bow r,ou are doing (in competition). And if you are in position for a wave they let you haven," she said. But it must be the love of the sport that draws Schwarzstein to continue because the winnings can be little compared to other sports. She won $1,200 for talc.in$ 2nd place in the World Cup but said the average wtnnings for a year o t surfing arc only between $8.000 and $20,000 a year. And when sponsors require the winnings be used to help pay travel expenses the savings account can dwindle fast. Last year her sponsors paid for all of her trips -while her sponsors this year asked her to pitch in on travel. "There isn't that much money in surfing but It 1s enjoyable and I am able to travel around the world." she confessed. EYEWITNESS ACCOUNT READ TO JURY •• ·. Prom Al mented UJ>?n the "obvious fra1lt1es of the witness · as evidenced in her 1980 coun appearances Crappa was a reluctant w1tness who neshed out her testtmony only after long. uncomfortable silences. Dunng a 1979 preliminary heanng. Crappa only claimed to have seen Alcala'scar Ul the area the ntaht after Sam~ dJsappeared. Later. she would tell how she saw a man who looked hkc Alcala pushing a blonde girl toward the brush near the h1lls1de turnout June 20. Still later. she admitted finding Samsoe's mutilated body June ~5 then Oecin~ without telling anyone of the grisly discovery Crappa cla1med to suffer from nightmares and sleeplessncs~ OClau<,c of the guilt she felt at not h~I\ 1ng helped amsoe At one point in testimony, Crappa said she wttuld ""llingl~ have exchanged plac~ to save the girl But Crappa refused to coopcratl' with investigators who approa<:hed her about test1fving again saying that she did not want to discuss the case. "It's obvious to the court in this type ofa situation that the j ury should have this information available." Other evidence agamst Alcala in- clude a pair of earrings found in a Seattle locker he rented. Samsoe's mother 1dent1fied the earrings as resembling ones her davgh~r often wore ..\ former Orange County Jail an mate also testified that Alcala made 1ncnminat1ng statements to him in 1980 concerning the Samsoe murder. GIRL TESTIFIES SHE LIED ABOUT AGE ... From Al with four counts each of taking nude photographs and having illegal se\ with a minor Judge Susanne Shaw found suffi- cient evidence for a Supcnor Coun tnal on the charges and ordered the couple to appear for an arraignment May 19 in Orange County Supenor Court. Dunng quest1onms by ~fense attorneys. the girl said she lied Lo Patndge, telling him she was 2:! vea~ old and worked as an accountant for a local management firm. The sirl said she contacted Patndge through a personal ad he had placed m The Register newspaper seeking a "young. prett) b1-sc\ual lady" to share ''the good hfe." "I was cunouo; what kind ol people Patrons capture knifing suspect G ARDEN G ROVE (AP) -Cus- tomersat a l1quorstore. responding to the picas of a bleeding. distraught woman. chased down a man she said had attacked her Judy Buettner. 31 . of Garden Grove. was treated at the Un1verst1)' of California at Irvine Medical Center for 11 superfictal stab wounds to her head and upper body and released. said police Sgt Randy Tucker When Ms. Buettner ran screaming into Kork and Bottle Liquors at 1.45 a.m. Sunday. Glenn Zachman and an unidentified customer ran outside and cornered a man in the parking lot. Tucker said. Zachman wrestled the man to the ground and held him . George Valentjne Chavarna. 29, of Santa Ana, was booked for iovest1ga- t1on of attempted murder. ~~,.,.~~E Daily· Pilat MAIN OFFICE )lO Wftl 8ey !)I C "" Uft& C A would put those kinds ot .tds 1n the paper." the girl o;a1d The girl said <;he made arrange- ments over the phone to ha"c the defendants pic k her up o ut'i1dc her Inane apanment Apnl 5 -when her mother "-a'> not at ho me. Once the\ had amved at the couple's home on We'itd1fT DnH 1n Newpon Beach. the girl ..aid she became scared. but tned not to let on for fear of Ix-mg caught l~ing about her age "Do ~nu think \OU pulled It 011'1" asked Judge Sha"' "I think so," \he JJlS\i.crcd The girl said in earlier tec;umon) that she v.ent along v.11h the alleged '>C~ acts Jnd photograph'> for tear ol not bc1ngg1\t•n a ndc home Later that day. she told the coun, she was considenng committing su1c1de. She told a fncnd about the incident and her fncnd notified pohce. After a bnefinvcs11gat1on. Patridge and Kim were arrested at their Newpon Beach home April 17 Defense attorneys Byron McMillan and Dennis Mt Nern)' are arguing that their clien ts had no idea the girl was a minor and was lying about her age. The> also claim the girl was never forced into any actions against her will Patndge 1s being held in Orange ( ounty Jail in heu of SI 00,000 bail after he was denied a ball reduction o n Apnl 21 His wife 1s free on $25.000 bail MESA COUNCIL VOTES •.. From Al about lSt>.5tXJ Under pre' 1ou!t gu1dcltnes, Cit)' council'> were limited to annual increases of S percent. '>aid Cll) manager Allan Roeder If the raise is approvt"d on a !>econd _reading, ra1se'i in follow1ne >Car\"' 111 again be limited to a maximum of 5 percent. Roeder said. Although the council approved a 5 percent increase last year. It was the first pay raise the members took in four or fi ve years. he said Approving the first reading were Mayor Nonna Hertzog. Vice Mayor Mary Hombuclc.le and Counc1lman Donn Hall. Councilmembers Dave Wheeler and Arlene Schafer were absent. Wheeler asked the city staff to put the pay raise on the agenda, but he had to fl y back cast on Sunday following a oc<11h 1n his family, Roeder said. No public comments were offered o n the council's action. A second reading and final adop- tion 1s slated for May 19. " Roeder said the ordinance would take effect 30 days after final adop- tion. CRASH •.• P'rODlAl Javier Luis Arias. 34, Oed to a nearby house, where he was captured by Costa Mesa pohce. Collett said. Deputies and Montebello police reponedly had planned other raids in the county later the same day No further information was avail- able Monday. Dally Piiot • Deffyery • la Ouerenteed Ma '"'°'"' II • '~4\0 {...;lt•a ~""' "• {1;~2• Qu9l90•dl ... 2·$4179 -& .0.tO"ll '542 43C'I Justcall 642-6086 MQndf p., nci.1 " ""' dO --yo... .,.,,. .,., ~JOp m Utlo.'Ote1p"' Coc,Y"G"' •1181 0-•"Y" Con• P,,,t>t<f' "\I ~_,, "f<. -ttor• ...,,, .• ,'°"' ea •!lo'• '"'•"• O' A1'to""" -,.....,, ,,,., .,. "P'O<lul..., ... °''' """" • P"' """'°" ol cop,"Ql'I ..., ._.., "991 pot!. ""'° •. .• ~-,(JO,.. (V~ 144 8001 Suti9C• 1-o< Dt C••• ~ S~ 2~ "'0'-1~"Y by .... $1 00 ,_.,,,.. What do you hke about the D11ly Ptlof? What do n't you hkc" Call the number above and your message Wlll be recorded. transcnbcd and de-- livered to the appropnate echtor The same 24-hour answenna service may be used to record letters to lbe editor on any topic. Contnbutors to our Letters column mu t 1ncludt their name and telephone number for vcnfrcat1on Tells us what's on your mind •no r-~Y w oe a-_ _, saiuroa• ·~ ~, 11 ,ou oo ""' ·ec-rOUt Ct.!py Dy 7 e "' ' (lel;/tt 10 ..... no...-~ .,..,.....,., Clrout.tton Telephonff CtoudV .... durtng the rnomlng hcu9 Wiii beOOfN pertly c~ afternoon <N« the Orange Cout, the Ntttonal WM 8ervtoe Mid. *"PWatu,.. wilt pttYalt, With hlgh9 ranging trom 85 at the~ to 72 INand. Sklea Witt cteet tonight and Wedneedey. with too.i notth to northweet wind• blowing 15 to 25 mph. OWrnlght IOM wlll range trom 48 to se, with hlgha on Wedneeday 88 to 75. A amall craft llCM80fy 11 tn .n.ct for the outer OOU1al """': wtth northweeterly wtnda btowlng 15 to 25 knott tOday ana tonight end 11rongw guttt nMr Pt. Conoaptlon. COmblned .... wtn ranoe from 7 to 13 Met. Inner coeatal weten wtH ho9t 3-to 5-foot wind wavet thl1 afternoon and evening under .partly cloudy att .... U.S. Tompa LOIMlllle 15 61 .. 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"9d llUlt 112 41 = .. 7.40 p "'· =-;... 83 n " fS1 l'ledwoOd City 11 49 oon 11Mt todAly al 4:60 Lift MCI Nta Ot91111'111 IS : Smog Report Secr-10 17 47 ....,, .. 1:66 p "'· Clt• ..... o,HC 7t .... 13 51 Hentord 13 47 .... ......,~'° 73 ~ Surf Report ...... M 42 ........ -=d "'°"' jpll): °''00 Ian GaDtial 74 HonoMll 17 n.-. ~'°'.._,... Ian Dl9go 97 M • Houlton '° 11 ...... I00-300 ~ tor II: Ian l'f8llCl90o 12 ~ LOCATIOll ICD DA ~ .... ICI. 11 ... -...,,_.,cb& r:,:rr-•111t1N 13 aen.i-47 Z-e.atl M w ,,.._, .... II ~ ,.,......_.,_ San1AAN n 14 9en1a Monb S--4 WSW ...,,_ M ._...,_, 70 43 ~ 8-lll S--4 WSW ~Qly It M =c-_ ___ .......... _ .. _... 17 ISaf*Cna ,, 47 Ian D19go County J.-4 WSW LMV..,.. a a Or-. eo..r.ty-·-·--·--··-.i12 ..,,.. .... " ., OullOoli lor w.oi,_.,. ina--. L.11111 "°'* '° ......... I Loi~ ... --.-50 IMlaMonlol ... M .... llndlllff WRITE-IN CAMPAIGN TO COST MONEY ••• Jl'romAl for the Democratic nomination. At a press conference on Monday, the retired Superior Court j udge and former state assemblyman revealed how extensive the effort wiJI be..z while acccptina pan of the blame ror the need to run the race. He said two people indicated to him they would file for the Demo- cratic pnmary, but both backed out. Hoffman found himself unopposed. "They aot by us," Sumner said. "I take some of the blame, and that's part of the reason I'm running. "Had I known, I would've been on the ballot and saved myself thousands of dollars." .... Sumner isn't saying exactly how many thousands he'll need to educate Democrats on the wnte-in procedure. But to date he bas ra1sed $1 S.000 and loaned the campaign $8.000. he said. State Attorney General John Van de Kamp will headline a May 23 fund-raiSCf' in Newpon Beach for Sumner. and media consultant David Paine of Paine & Associates in Newport Beach has been hired to direct the campaiJD. The Sumner team so far has hned up 13 phone banks and 300 volun- .teers to call Democrats and expJajn bis candidacy and the wnte-10 procedure. Sumner also hopes to raise enouftb to send three mailen to Democrauc voters in the 40th district. He emphasized Hoffman's link lo LaRouchc made him an unacceptable representative of the Party. "l don't want the rest of the country to look at Orange County and say you've got Republican congressmen who arc an embarrassment and Democrats have a LaRouche alterna- tive," the Newport Beach resident said. "I represent the legitimate party effort to present voters with a legit- imate aJterruuive to the Republican candidate." Sumner said be would debate LaRouche, but not Hoffman. He met Hoffman at a recent convention where Hoffman told him be believed anything LaRouche believed, Sumner said. And LaRouche's beliefs, Demo- cratic leaders say, arc; bizarn:. Among other claims, LaRouche has said that Queen Elizabeth of England is involved in drug traffick- ing. that the Israelis arc masters of the Libyan economy and terrorism -as Brace 811JDDer well as agents of the Soviet Union - and that a number of U.S. Senators' wives arc KG B operatives. DEATH OF RETARDED BOY PROBED ••• Prom Al treatment from paramedics before being taken to Humana Hospital in Westminster. Ooctors declared the boy brain dead Fnday. and he was taken ofl'life- supporting respirators Sunday. Walker said. The Orange County Coroner's office ruled Monday that the boy died of asphyx1at1on afier conducting an autopsy. Walker said there have been no arrests, but police arc treating the 10c1dent as a homicide investigation bccaus?the boy aJlegedly djcd at the hands of another person. Walker said that a choke hold was not used by the It. _______ , teacher but he declined to elaborate on the technique the teacher did use. He aJso refused to name the teacher. Names of the boy's parenu were withheld pending the outcome of the investigation. Walker .said. Hugh Kobler, director of Pairview State Hospital, said the boy bad been a resident for about two years and may have had anti-social behavioral traits;- He said that there are about I ,OOS fuJl-time patients at Fairview State, and about 200 of them arc under the age of 21. Kohler, who's been director for about nine months, said that to his knowledge there have been no deaths at Fairview while a young resident was being being restrained. "Each staff member receives tram- ing {on proper restraining techniques) every year," he said. He said that in caJCS of outbursts, several staff mem- bers hold down a patient by the arms. leg.s or waist until the episode subsides. "We make sure it's not djfficult (for the patient) to breathe ... he said. Kohler wd he has not been advised on techniques used by the teacher at Gill School. Principal John Wriaht referred all questions to a county press liaison who was unable to proVlde any infonnation. A Summer Essential Our summer~ blazer tailored uclusiveiy for us of a cool and a:mfortable tropcal weighJ YoOOl. We also off er this clauic in a blend of tJocron/wool and a f «11her Wfighr doeskinjlamt/. Perfect for the~ weather ahtad Gentlemen's Cbhing ~by Traditioo 46 Faahm Islam Newsxn Bcadl • (714) 640-8310 I I