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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1986-05-31 - Orange Coast PilotOC deputles favor job actlon Unfon leader says lopsided vote could lead to new talks '" ftSV&.M.t.&llL!! Of ... O,... ....... Ora~e County Sheriff a deputies voted over-whelmin y Friday to authorize a walkout or other forms of ob action in an effort to break a stalemate in contract talks with the county. The final vote, conducted by telephone during the day, showed 435 deputies favonng tho drastic step and only eight in opposition, accordina to an association leader for the deputies. "h wun't even close," said Robert Macleod. manager of the Association of Orange County Sheriffs Deputies. MacLeod wouJd not say what, if any, action was planned in the wake of the vote. He indicated that the vote itself might be enough of a barpinina chip ORANGEC<MST • to resume nqotiationa . .. We're hopeful that the vote wtll speak for 1t1el(, .. said MacLeod. There are about 900sherif1'sdeputiesin Oranae C.Ounty. About 800 are members of the usociation. Deputies petrol a multitude of communities in the county u wen u Newpon and O.na Point harbors. Contnct talu broke ofTThunday with the key areas of dispute centerina on pey and benefits .. No future nea<>tiatin& aes&ions have been tel. The cunent contract expires July 3. If deputies were to walk off' the job they could be violatina state law, said John Sibley\ the county director of employee relations. He 111d strikes by public employees are illepl if they jeopardize public health and safety. .. The possibili~ of a strike by sheriffs depuoes is of concern to us.' said Sibley. "But I don't think our deputies would strike illtplly. They're too conscientious for that." (Pl-... ... DSP'OTl&8/ A.2) SATURDAY, MAY 31, 1986 Marine Skyhawk jets collide, tumble into ocean; pilots safe Accident occurred while planes were refueling tn mtdatr Two Mannejetsout of El Toro collided 1n night Friday, but both pilots ejocted safely u their al.rcraft tumbled into the Pacific Ocean near San Clemente Island. The pilots. identified as Capt. Steven N. Bider; 27, and Capt. Lionel J. Rotelli Jr., were rescued and wd to be in aood condition. accordin& to a Marine spokeswoman. The A'-M kyb.awks were en· aasect in an aenal refuehna ex· ercuc when the acctdent occumd 66 mtles south of San Clemente Island, said Stt. Anne Lanon, a spoknwoman at the MariM Corps Air Stauon tn El Toro. She said tbe airplanes. both based at the El Toro air station. sank immediately. A helicopter was d1spatched from the Not'lb Island Naval Air Station 1n San Dieao to rctneve the pilots from the water. They wert flown to the aircraft carrier USS Ran,er, which was on man· euven nearby. Another hchoopter was dis.- 25~ . patched from El Toro lO mum the pilots to the Marine bate, abe wd • Cause of the accident is under lOVCSllplloft. Jn March, two clvi.liu jeu collided dunna a traioina exercile near San Oemente ls.land and all •board both plann wen: killed. The same month, a Marine fiaht.cr jet crashed in Laavna Hills but the pilot and bis .,._... ejected safely. Several days earlier. a pilot and crew memben safely e;ected from a Navy jet bcf~ it ctUbed IOlO the ocean ofl'San Dieso. FOMCASTa ON A2 LaRouche will debate Sumner To cross swords via satellite; Sumner - in LA. LaRouche in Washington, D.C. By STEVE MARBLE ud PAUL ARCHIPLEY Of .. O.., ......... In a surpnsang tum, uhra-con- servative poliucal pundit Lyndon LaRouche and congressional can- didate Bruce Sumner of Newport Coast The Dally Piiot's new columnist Nancy Mcin- tyre takes a humorous look at the brave new world of aging./ A3 Hearings are under way to determlhe whether the planned U.S. Fitness Academy Is built In the heart of the AUso Green- belt./ A3 California A tour bus carrying resi- dents of an LA retirement home plunges Into an Icy river Friday, killing 18 people./A4 Wi>rld Two Soviet cosmonauts were to attempt another space walk today./ AS Religion Churches win a victory with a new IRS ruling that attows them to determine what activities are re- ligious./ Ae Sports Edison Hlgh's Kaleaph Carter goes 60-11 In the shotput at Masters Meet Friday -best In state this year./81 Beach have agreed to debate on Monday via satellite. Sumner, a write-in candidate for the 40th Congressional District and chairman of the OranJ.e County Democratic Party, will debate LaRoucbe from a TV studio in Los Angeles. The perennial presidentiaJ candidate will be in a studio in Washington, D.C. The »minute debate. scheduJed to begin at 10 a.m. io Los Angeles, might be picked up nationaJly by the Ca&le News Network and locally by KOC&TV in Huntington Beach. "This is really startJina that we were able to pulJ this off',.. said David Payne, campaign manager for Sumner. He said the two have agreed not to discuss Orange County issues or the issue Sumner bad hoped to debate - whether LaRouche and hts folJowers should be considered legitimate members of the Democratic Party. Sumner chaJlenged laRoucbe to debate, rather than LaRoucbe dJsc1- ple Art Hoffmann. Sumner's only Democratic opponent in the 40th District contest. Hoffmann is no more than a "l.aRouche puppet," said Payne. Sumner agreed to launch a wnte-m campaJJn tn the 40th Distnct Con- gressional pnmary because Hoff- mann was the only candidate on the Democratic ticket. Local Democrats said they didn't want to let a LaRouche candidate use the Democratic Party in the 40th District race as a platform to spread l.aRouche's polit1caJ philosophies. Also. if Hoffmann WUls the pn· 0.., .... ,......, ............ mary he will automatically pin a ~t on the county and state Democrauc Central Commjttces.. Democratic Party leaden find the uhra<onservative laRQ'JCbe and hit political philosophy repupant and have expressed alarm at bit thousands offollowcn nationwide. Payne said the debate could mark an important step for Democrats. "Foryean all of us have sat around (Pl_.. ... LAJl01JCD/A2) Irvine hopeful raises a bundle By PBU. SNEIDER.MAN Of .. ..., ....... Irvine City Council candidate . Thomas M. Jones basn.ised Sl0,900 tn the two weeks before the June 3 elect.ion, pushina his campai&n war chest to more than SS6, 700. The influx of money, most of it from developers and business~ put Jones' campaian funding far ahead of the other nine candidates. Jones' campat.gn fuod is believed to be one of the laraest ever raised for an Irvine electJoo. An attorney, he 11 president of the Irvine Chamber of Commerce. Both he and Hal Maloney have the chamber's suppon. Jones nearest rivill in campaign funding lS incumbent Larry A&nn. a slow-ifowth advocate. AJf&D raised S2,000 an the last two weeks, brinsina (Pleue eee DlVllU/ A.2) Classic • carnng cracked INDEX A cabin cruteer ezploda Into flama o•er Newport Bay Friday -all for the lateet Charla Bron.on mo.te. By ROBERT BARKER Of .... 0.., .......... Advice & Game~ Bulletin Board Classlfled Comics A10 A3 84-6 A11 88 A7-9 87-8 C1-24 A6 81-4 A8 A10 A2 Movie magic explodes on Newport Bay Fountain Valley police detectives and Cahfom11 Highway Patrol in-v~t1gators have cracked a m-.jor auto theft nng that allegedly specialized in stealing clasStc Ford Mustanp in Founuun Valley. Costa Mesa, New- port Beach and other pan.s ofOranac County. officers said Fnday. Death Notices Entertainment Public Notices Real Estate Rel lg Ion Sports Television Trivia Weather By STEVE MARBLE OftMO.., .... ...,, When the cabin cruiser exploded and the yellowish flames curled into the slcy above Newport Bay, Tom Matthews thought the worst. "Hell, I dialed 911 to sec if I couldn't help those poor people out," said Matthews, a resident of Dover Shores. "l mean to tell you that mother blew up." But Matthews, hke others who reached for their telephones in panic. fou nd out he'd JUSt been treated to a btt of Hollywood magic. The explosion, the cabin cruiser. the hellish flames, all of it was for the benefit of the latest Charles Bronson movie, "The Assassins.•• Bronson and his actress wife, JiU Ireland. have been in Newport since Thursday filming scenes for the action-thriller. Sherlff's foes pour on heat Patrol ser cant.Jud e attack Sheriff Gates ~n issues, tntegrtty Sheriff-Coroner Brad Gates' :hallengers ,.Y he 1s to blame for allo'W1n' county Jail crowdina to reach cnsis proportions. He 1s the one who ha~ caustd norale to sink in the henfrs Dcpan· nent, they say. His opponents, a municipal ooun udac and a sheriff's patrol seraeant. 11y Gates ouaht to allow the sbenfT· :oroner role to be pill becautc o( :onfl1cts between the t>NO pos1uon1 And he should back ofT from supponina construction of a l ,SOO- bcd jail in Anaheim in favor o( one. tarac facthty an a remote location. Bobby D. Younabloodand Linda Lea CaJlwn say. Wfien not arauina the issues in the key county ra<lC, Younablood and Calhpn have attacked Oates' 1ntean· ty. Youn&blood has tcveral times asked the •te Attorney General to mvesttp.. Oates for a vanety of allcaed wrolldoinp. Calli.pn'1 ~ hu included a lcmna battle oYer her r1ght to accuse Gata of illeplities in a candtdatc's statement 411\ributed by the Reai~ trar of Voters. OattS sa)'t he 1s bcang unf11rlr, lambast~ by a "mavcnck jud«e ' who was once censu~ by the state Supreme Court and a wnter of "scandalous and false statements." Both Younablood and Calbpn arc unquahficd for the shenfT-ooroncr job he says. Oates maintains he did all he could to set motT jails built 1n Orange Countr m the ellht years ,,nee a fedcra Judae orde~ an end to crowded oondiuon11n the main jail in Santa Ana. He blames OOUJ)ty supcNJsors for not authoririnaoonstructton ofa new J•il unul they were slapped wtth a contempt citation in l 98S and threat· encd with a second one apinsi 011cs h1msclf thls Apnl The I .SOO-bcd, mcd1um-max1· mum steunty Jail propo:ted for But Matthews. an admitted Bronson fan. was hardly amused by the all-too-real-hfe scene that un- folded before his eyes late Fnday afternoon. "I was thinking. 'here l hve an a town that almost canceled its only public fireworks show two days ago and now-nght in front of my house JUSt about -a boat blo~ up hke an atomic bomb." LISA MAHONEY Anaheim is sortly needed to ut11f}: the federal coun ol"der reprdina Jill cond1uons. Gates said He sees no reason to $pht the hentT-coroncr rolt's and profe sc tanorance about tht' low morale hi' opponents say is nfc W1thin the department G1tcs has in f•ct httn endorsed by the A ~t1on of Qr. anac County Deputy . hcnffs. Jn t1lk1na W1lh votcn. GlltC1 cmpbl.lizcs hts l"('('Ord He CTC<hts h1m9Clf wtth forming mo~ than 400 Netahborhood Watch aroups He ~ ... maar/A.2) .. ; Filmmakers. who obtained per· m1ss1on from ci ty officials to stage the explosion. attached the 70-foot cabin cruiser to a fake Mobil gas dock near a seafood rcst.auranl an Newpon Bay The boat. named "Nomad" before filmmaker'> purchased the craft and chnstcncd ll the ·· pread Eagle .. was detonated at 4 53 pm. -c11:actJy <;even m1nut~ tx-forc a cny permit (Pleue aee EXPLOSION/A2) The 1rail led fTom the OrallJC Coast to a half-acre storage lot 10 Mira Lomu 1n R1vers1de County where 12 stolen 1964-1966 Mustanp were found Tuesday, accordmJ. to Fouo'" tam \-alley Detective Mike M.,;or (Ple&H Me CAR ltIJlfO/A2) HB priest arraigned on additional counts By ROBERT BARgER ud STEVE MARBLE Ot .. o.llJ ........ A Catholic pn~I pleaded innocent Fnda) 10 1wo 1dd1t1onal felony child mole•aatton charge" allc-gcdh m~oh · ma altar boy'I II 'it Bona~cnturt C'hul'(h 1n Hununaton fka<'h The Rev •\ndrcw Chn•.tian <\ndentn 1 now characd with 26 ctuld mole tauon coun1' He ha, pleaded 1nnoetnt l\l all nd~n. frtt on ht~ own re· eogru.ranC'c. 1$ aC'cu~d of molc\ttn four or fi ve altar hoy' who'lt t1m1h~ wo"h1~ at tht church at tht> llmt> of the an ed cncounter'i TM allfted incidents occum"d at the church 10 .\nderstn' ear or at a pmll( rtStdcnct owned by the lhun h. Hununaton Beach detcctJv~ ~·d l\nderscn who spoke 10 the mcdi• bnt>fl\o last month. wd he 11 innocent of the charaes. which ht> descnbed u totall}' unfounded Wilham Monroe. the pncst's II· tomry. s.a1d the cnminal aJlept1on arc nothina more than ".,oss mi• undentand1ngs and eugcrat1on " Thr altar boys we~ between the agc'i of 12 &nd 14 at the ume of the allqcd molntations. which police rontcnd dAtt' hack to 19 l .t\ndencn, l-i. '' not act1vt at \be church curttntly. His attorney bu not 'illd whc:re ~ti Ii Vint at Pf'CICft "\ ---------------- r .. \ d e>r.,. Cout DAILY PILOT I Setutday, May 31, 198e Look Ila, DO bandaf TlllrtHn-J e&r•Olda 8t••• !f eeke (lef t) and Paal ww...... botll of ca.ta 11 ... appear to be~ tbem.MIYee l"rldaJ ~ aboud tbe roller couter al the Coeta 11 ... -l'fewport Barbor Liou Clab'• 'l et annaal Pl•h ~~ and Canal.a.I. Tbe uua nent, wbJcb beaeftta eom.e 411 aroupe, ooatlnaee today from 10 a .m. to 9 p.m. and Sanday from noon to 8 p.m. Ariane laun ch falls KOUROU, French Guiana (AP) -Scientists at mission control blew up the Ariane 2 rocket minutes after liftoff Friday night when the third stage failed to i$nite, throwing the unmanned missile off course, of- ficials reported. They said the payload, an Intelsat telecommunfoations satellite, also was destroyed It was the European Space Agency's fourth failure in 18 Ariane launches, and the third time the problem Dellr ,._,.._.,.,....eart.. involved the third stage. EXPLOSION STARTLES RESIDENTS ..• From Al allowing the explosion expired. The explosion took place in New- pon Dunes -the site of the annual Fourth of July fireworks show that council members nearl y canceled. The irony wasn't Jost on Matthews. "'ho claims dozens of neighbors were as startled as he when the boat blew up "If we're goin~ to blow things up. what's wron$ with fireworks on the Founh'>" sa1d Matthews. 'Tm not against movies but. ho nest to God, this scared the hell out of this neighborhood. ~·My dog -well, I'm not even gomg to go mto that. But when you're sitting here and a bomb goes off and a boat bums up, it tends to shake you up a bit," said Matthews. He didn't say whether he plans to sec the movie when it's released. IRVINE DONATIONS REACH HEIGHTS ••. From Al his total to about S46,000 The figures were filed Fnday w11h the Irvine Ctt) (lerk's office To comply wtth state law. can- didates in all races had to disclose their campaign finances as of May 1 M. But an Irvine law requires council candidates to file an add1t1onal report b) noon on the Fnday before the election. These repon s must list add1t1onaJ funds raised and spent between May 18 and May 28. On T uesday. Irvine voters will fill two council seats from the field of I 0 The election has generated intere~t because its outcome could alter the pace of development 1n '" ineand the city's support for three proposed south county frttways The candidate~ were ex peot:d to be campaigning hard this weekend to generate votes. ( anc.hdates aho ha vr distributed mailers, 01CrS and nCWl>- papcr ad<; -all of which requ1rl' s11able expenditures Jones' la te-Ma) contnbut1ons in- cluded mon~) from I.:! ~ople em- ployed by The Koll Co .• the Newpon Beach-based dc\-elo pmecn firm that has projects in I"' ine Other dona- t 1ons came from executives with South Laguna-based Diversifi ed Shopping Centers and Newpon Beach-based San Joaquin Refiner) ~s of May 28, Jones reported he had raised S56.754 and had spent $54.685. The $2.009 Agran raised included money from labor organizations such as Asbestos Workers Local 5, Fire- fighters Local 1014 and International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers Local 441 . He also received a donation from Gerald and Marcia Weinstein. Gerald Weinstein is acting dean of the UC Irvine College of Medicine. Agran's wife 1sa physician on the UCI faculty. Agran has reponcd spendin$ about S50.000 on the campaign, wtth un- paid bills totaling $5,358. Agran ·s slow-growth running mate, Ed Doman. rcponcd he collected an add1t1 onal $5.173 1n late May, mostly 1n small donations from residents. For the campaign overall, Dom an reponed that he's raised S 19,219 and spent S25, I 24. H 1s unpaid bills total $9,580. Maloney, the other candidate en- dorsed by the Chamber of Com- merce, collected late donations total- ing $8,463. The money came primar- ily from people affiliated with plan- ning and development companies, including Urban Assist and Di- versified Shopping Centers. For the full campaign, Maloney reponcd contributions of $38.075 and said ho's spent $36,327. Other May 18-28 funding dis- closures for the Irvine candidates included: •Jean Hobart raised $3,450, which included a $3,000 loan from herself. That brought her cam paign contribu- tions total to $19,677. •Scott W~llman raised SJ,053, which included a $1 ,000 loan from himself. For the fu ll campaign, he's raised $8,580. •Mary Aileen Matheis raised $2, 726, including gifts from the Building Ind ustry Association and the Committee to Elect Harriett Wieder. Matheis also loaned her c.ampaign Sl,555. •Gary Steven Bennett reported he has raised $535 thus far. •Candidates Anthony Korba and Clarence Becwar had not turned m tll,e1r late-May staternents by the Friday noon deadline. DEPUTIES •.• From Al Macleod said he hopes the djspute docs not lead to a strike. CAR RING CRACKED ... But if there is a strike. MacLeod said there is case law involving striking sanitation workers in Los Angeles that seems to show that publicemployees can leg.ally strike. From Al The cars are worth about $50.000 E" 1dence of another 12 or so stolen cars was found at she storage lot Thursda} b} (HP 1n\est1gators. v.ho obtained a warrant to search thl' prt·m1ses. MaJor ~aid fhe Mira Loma resident. 1dcnt1ficd a<; Werner Moorcnwe1ser. 42, wa~ arre'ited on su~p1c1on of posscs~ing stolen property. He allegedly chopped some of the cars for partc; or <;old the stolen Mustangs after changing the engine 1dent1fical10n number<\. Maior sa id The arrest of Moorcnwe1'\cr. who was descnbed a~ the leader of the operation. had its beginnings 1n Fountain Valley on Tuesday night when an offi cer saw a 1965 light bfue Mustang makrng an illegal lane change on Newhopc treet. The dnver. whose 1dent1ficat1on 1s being withheld, parked the car m the middle of a nearby street and ran when he saw the police car. Major said. But police summoned Zeus. their German shepherd. who sniffed out the suspect in a nearby woodpile, according to MaJor. The car he was dnving allegedly was stolen 1n Westminster. MaJor ~Id. The county has offered deputies a 4. I percent pay increase d uring the first half of a two-year pact. Deputies are seeking a 6.8 percent pay boost and a 2.3 percent hike in benefits. Macleod said deputies walked away from the bargaining table be- cause county representatives refused to change their offer after five meetings and a weekend session with a mediator. Fnday's vote should convince the county to "get scnous" with their offer, said Macleod. "I think theirex~tations are Just a little high," said Sibley. LAROUCHE DEBATE WILL PROCEED ..• From Al and laughed at L y nd on La Rouche. .but n(')v. 1t''. not 'IO funny," ht' ~1d. "Wt:'rc at a point now where we can ignore him and hope he goe~ away or we can confront him And that'\ wha1 we're doing. .. LaRo uche 1n1 t1all" reJected Sumner's propo\<'d fo rmal for a debate Jn e1 nine-page ma1lgram sent to Sumner. LaRouth<' \31d. "It is ob- ~cene. scumlou'>. and false for you to allege that the 16 candidates endorsed b\ the NOP( (the "lollonal Demo crat1c Polle) C omm111cc LaRouchc's pohucal arm) 10 that locahty \O 'bhndl)' follow H1ur preaching that 11 MAIN OFFICE ,, "'"'' "'•· . ........ . "• 11t1•M A • f. t• MJ'M A l 1t ;·t would be usclc<ic; for me to debate' them. "It 1s false and libelous to repeat the calumny that you do not believe that I am a Democrat Those matters are not debatable: the issues. the pohc1e<; arc." LaRouche c;.a1d 'iumncr c;.a1d 1t appeared LaRouche was attempting "to get me to ad mat he 1s a Democrat and the LaRouche people belong 1n the Democratic Party "My pomt 1$ they have no place in the Democratic Party,'' said Sumner "fhey'rc entitled to believe whatever they want. but they don't accept the pany hne on almor.l any issue." LaRouche's rambling ma1lgi-am touched on a vancty of topics, including homosexuahty and drug abuse. He described San Francisco as a virtual "necropolis of the walking dead," populated by AIDS victims. Hoffman. who has echoed many of La Rouche's sentiments during the campaign, distributed literature Thursday charging that Sumner is a candidate backed by organized crime. In Hoffmann's tract, Sumner is linked to a vanety of ocher figures, 1nclud1ng the Bank of America. MGM and Jill St. John "We're all m this together,'' umner said with a chuckle. O=t • ..,,..,,,,. ~·i '61& --.\..,.,or .. , "'2 •ll' Justcall 642-6086 I• Guerenteed ~.,,...,., ,t>$, It you 00 llOl -'fO'll ~ll'I' ~ JO" 11'1 Ull Delo!• 1 " "' end 'ffN COOy -~ 1141 ~ .. ----------- "<'•' ~·· l~ I CJo•'"-1" '' l'ut"'"'"'ll C""'t>•"• "'" "'•••· \tr"' ~'S ti ,,,.,..,,,.,., .-J!l(.1'•• ,,.It•• ~ \'1 • .-.t~ <1'_., .. "eittt t ,.., M 'f'P"r-4.W:~ f#tP\.•J' ti~•• ,,.-. ' , t "-f•(,j f ...,.,,. VOL 11, NO. 151 a What do you hke about the Datly Pilot? What don't you hke? Call the number above and your message will be rewrded, tnnSQ'lbcd and de- hve~ to the appropnate cdttor. The ume 24-hour ans-erina service may be used to record lelten to the editor on any topic. Contnbutors to our Leuen column muJt include their name and telephone number for venfk1t1on. Tells us what's on your mind. • ' ktU<Olty ~ ~y " '°" 00 llOI ·-'°"' GOj1)' "" 1 • "' !Mb• 10 • 11'1 Md ........ c;ooy .,....,td Clrculatlon , ... ~ MC* 0r-. Cou<otr ,._, .. ~ Cloudiness expected on Coast The FofecMl/tor 8 pm EDT, Sal ,_. 3 1 70 0 U.S. Tempa Hlgfl, '°'* lof 24 llOWt eflClllt M S ·Q~~ f ..0.TS llJ'll. .. L9 -o.-. .. n W1tm-coio......,. AlllMy,H y .. 11 n -Y""Clly .. <'otlow•" RMI rU1r•s Snow Occ~o .,... StattONfr a..,. ='q.,e M 42 NOftoll.Va. IO .. 72 61 ~Clly n .. ~ _,...,_ ~<• H()M u~ °"""".A C~~.r A/tdtot-.it 68 47 .,. 11 A..,.. to .. OrW>do .. .. 17 ., Atlen11c Cky PNl•lll1: u .. .. AUllln 79 72 ""-* .. IO Calif. 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M aw a..ena .. 60 7:6tp.m. ........... 83 t2 ,... aw ..,.. ..... 71 51 ..._ .... lodly .. 1:64 '·"'. ,... ... ~ ....... 16 t2 Ollllodl lof lundey: ..... Mona .. IN ..._,, M 2:33 a.m. Ind .... ~ • ....,,... ... .. LJnl9 dlellft. Modrlofl 102 61 2:66p.ni. S H E RIFF GATES' F OE S POUR IT ON ... From Al says he also formed a unit to help prevent child molestation and has expanded drug enforcement pro- grams. Midway through the campaign, Gates stopped responding co Young- blood's attacks, saying he was tired of defending hi mself against the judge's allegations. Youngblood has accused Gates, against whom he has a federal harassment suit pending, of shad y real estate dealings, obstruction of JUStice, filing an incorrect address with the county registrar and using campaign funds for non-ampaign ex'pcnses. l"he Attorney General's office has issued no findings on any of the allegations. Youngblood's latest charge came Friday when he accused Gates, in a letter to the Attorney General. of using $59,000 in cam paign money to pay off a note due on some Palm Desert property. While Gates has ignored Young- blood's attacks, he acted quickl y to keep Calligan 's charges from rcachina the voters. Gates has spent more than $40 000 on attorneys to prevent Calli~n from printin~ allegations against him in the county s official voters' pamphlet. An Orange County Superior Court judge ruled Calligan couJd not use the pamphlet -which is sent to more than one million voters -to accuse Gates of having illeplly owned a bar, covered up the drun\en dri ving arrest of a deputy and spent millions on temporary fixes for J&1l over- crowding. Calligan has appealed Judge Judith Ryan's ruling that her statements were false and misleading and she is challenging the constitutionality of the law that permits candidate's statements to be censored. A hearing is scheduled after the primary, and Calligan has vowed to seek a new election if her appeal is successful. As an incumbent, Gates bas raised and spent mo~to keep bis job than his challen,ers combined. He began the year with S 164,911 in his cam- paign kitty and raised another $68,140. So far, Gates has spent SI 77,080 primarily for radio advertisements, attorney fees and political consulting services. Calligan ra1sed $9,358 and spent all but $926. Most of her money went to pay for the edited candidate's state- ment Campaign manager Robin Reisdorf said contributions dried up after the April 3 Superior Court decision favoring Gates. Calligan owes about $30,000 in attorneys fees, some of which may be forgiven. Youngblood ac.cumulatcd about $37,000 and spent about $22,000 primarily for advertisina. including a taped telephone message. He also expects $105,000 in last-minute pledges, aocording to bis latest financial disclosure statement. Both Younablood and Calligan say they arc confident of forcing Gates into a runoff election. Galt$ has only faced a runoff once -in 1978 apanst sheriffs deputy Sgt. Loren Rusk. Gunman upset by foreign tongue A 70-year-old Linda Isle resident was arrcstcd Thursday after he al- legedly pulled a gun on two men speaking Persian at a Newport Beach gas station. Jean Gleis told an employee of the Mobil -station ~t Bayside-Drive and East Coast Highway that be objected to the attendant not using the English lanauage, accordina to Newpon Beach police spokesman Howard Eisenberg. The unidentified gas sta- tion attendant was spcalcing to a friend in Persian, Eisenberg said. G leis left the gas station and apparently went to his Linda Isle home where he got a small, stainless steel TCvolvcr, Eisenbe11 said. He returned to the Mobil station at 3:30 p.m. and allegedly pulled ffie gun on the attendant. Gleis was arrested later by Newport Beach police at East Coast Highway and Promontory Point He was booked at the city j ail on the misdemeanor cha rge, Eisenberg said. FABR[CA" FLOOR FASHIONS SUPER EVENT! 1683 Placentia Ave. Cos1a Mesa, 92627 646-4838 Now on sale thru June 30th ere Swan Court, The Ritz and Design ( by Fabrlca. Choose the one of these new & exciting Fabrics carpets that compliments your lifestyle & budget. Come In today; don't delay. • carpet aaJes • lnttallatlon • custom draperlel DEN'S Famlly C.rpet &mnns Since 1894 • In Costa Mesa 29 Years ' • .. Orange Coaet 0AjLY PlLOTl8aturdey. Mty 31, 1988 AS TLC searching for volunteers Volun1eers 10 deliver meals and V1S1t home· bound senior c1uzens arc bc1na rccnmed by Costa Me11's Project TLC. Voluntee11 must have their own lt&nsportation and deliver meals five days a week for 1 'h to two hours a day. TLC home-delivered meals offer an aJtcmative lo institutional c~ for older people wbo can no lonaer fend for themselves. Mileage reimbursement will be provided. CaH the volunteer coordinator al 63 I ·8170 for more 10forma1ion. County planners set hearings on Fitness Academy Senior councll meettJ The Jrvme Senior Cirizens Council will hold its next monthly general meetina Thursday at the Scnjor Center to discuss the status of lhe new senior center and adult day care center at Woodbridge Community Park. Call Lhe center at 733-I OSS to arrange transportation. Salling program set "Genatnc Sailing, Hawau to Newpon Beach" 1s the title of a lecture with slides showinit the adventures of two Newpon Beach senior cit12ens, Bud Descnberg and Dick Sweet, who sailed 2,700 miles from Honolulu to Ne~rt last summer. The program is scheduled for Fnday at 10 a.m. at the Oasis Senior Center, 800 Marguerite Ave .. C-0rona del Mar. Square dancers wanted The Quickstcppers Costa Mesa senior citzen square dance club is seeking other expenenced couples tOJOin them every Thursday at IOa.m. at the Downtown Community Center, Anaheim A venue at Center Street, Costa Mesa. Call 545-5669 for furtheT 1nfonnation. Retlred teachers to meet Proposed facility in Aliso Greenbelt faces local, state scrutiny By LISA MAHONEY °' .. ~ ........ Hearina.s to ddtcnnme whether the planned U.S. Fitness Academy may be built in the bea11 of the Aliso Orunbelt bcain Tuesday. The Oranae C.Ounty Pl&nn1na Com· mission wtll conaider three items oecess. ary to permit coostructjoo of the fitness trainina facility at that time. Tiahtly scheduled bearioas include a second chance for public comment before the commiuion June 10 and a tentauve June 2S airing before the Board of Supervisors. If approved, the academy must then pass state Coastal Commi&s1on scrutiny, problbly in August, said Ken Winter, manaser of urban and environmental plannina for the county. For the non-profit NataooaJ Fitness Foundation to build the academy on future county parkland, SUpef'VISOrs and the ooastal comm1Ssion must approve an Environmental Impact Report. amend the "Aliso Viejo Local Coastal Plan and i ue a coastal development permit. If aU aoes as planned, the county will then leue 190 acres oflhe pobe!t to the f'oundauon and oonstNCUon plans can ~oceed. Winter taJd. The f'ouodauoo was s;ranted a 2S-monlb option tn J-.nuary on the property straddlina Aliso Creek.. C.Onstru<:tion ofa fitnm ac:adem y in tbe Aliso Greenbdt has been contJ'OveniaJ in some quaners. Local environmentalist organizations such u Laauna Orocnbch consider the rent•frec lease proposal a pft of public park.land. The spot piebd fort.ht academy was oripnalJy supposed to be used for a rcvenuc-aeneratina act:Jvit)' that would pay for development and m.&.1n1en- ancc of Abso-Wood Canyon Rqiona.I Park. But COUO\y SUpt'rvlSOrs believe I.be fitness academy will add to Onuwie County's prestige by focuSJna nationwide attention here. Foundation principals include Georae Allen, a former coach of the Los Anteles Rams and Wuhin&ton Redskins aod currently chairman of the President's Council on Physical Fitness and S90N. Allen said the academy will help Americans become phy11cally fit by train- mg school teachers, Little Leaaue coaches and others about fitness. Allen wants the academy lO be com- pleted before President Reagan leaves office 1n 1988. The South Coast Div1s1on of the California Retired Teachers Association will meet Friday at Oubhousc 5 in Leisure World, Laguna Hills, for a noon luncheon and installation of officers. John R. K..jng. state president of the assoc1at1on. will be the guest speaker and the cost for the luncheon is $6. Call 581-0259 for details. Wal.ken step out The walking group of the Oasis Senior Center in Corona dcl Mar meets every Friday except the first· Friday of the month at 9 a.m. at the c-enter's multi- purpose room. Walkers car pool to a diffcrent1)3rt of Orange County every week. Everyone is welcome and there is no charge. Call 644-3244 for more information. Shaken up for practice Han~n Beach ft.rem.an Bob Tletaworth checb earthquake '"Tictlm •Richard Badaon while WUll•m Scarlett llee awaldn& aid ID the back.Ooand at the tralntna tower ln Bantl.n(ton Beach. It wu only a drlll. bowe•er ... public .enice acenclee teeted their readleM. Haclaon and Scarlett are llarlnea atadoned at the ltl Toro bue. Senior health care financing without federal aid sought Physical therapy open house slated In observance of National Physical Therapy Weck next wee~ the Orange County section of the Amencan Physical Therapy Assoc1ation will spon- sor an open house at its fac1hty. 4950 Barranca Parkway. Suite I 06, in Irvine. Thursday. Activities will involve viewing ofa back school program. instructions 1n taping techniques for prevention of spons anJuries. sports massaging and CPR recertification. CaJI 550-4081 for funher infonnataon. Wo.iben 's seminar set A three-part lecture scnes for women will be presented. beginning Thursday .. on healthy rela- tionships with sclf-hypoosas. Janeen Hahn-Cun- ningham. a mamage and famll y therapist, will lead the lectures from 7 to 8:30 p.m. at 2900S. Bristol St.. D-1 05. Costa M~. The program 1s free and reservations arc available at 641 -7084. Gay support group p1eets The Oran~e County chapter" of Parents and Friends of Lesbians and Gays will meet Thursday at the First Un11ed Methodist Church, 161 S. Orange St. in Orange. Orientation for newcomers begins at 7 p.m. followed by the 7:30 meeting and discussion groups until 9:45. Call 998-5844 for further information. Panel selected to find new LB High principal By LAURA MERK Olthe0-, ..... 1\llfl Two commu01ty members have been selected by the Laguna Beach school board to serve on a selection committee to 1nterv1ew candidates for the high pnnc1pal position opened after Tony Ortega re- signed. Psychologist Dean Shapiro and Irene Thomas were selected to seTVe on the 01ne- member committtt. Other members of the group arc ac11ng supenntendent Fred Good. school board members Charlene Ragau and Jan Vickers. teachers Barbara Carson and Hal Aki ns. California School Employees As- sociation member Karen Ford and Laguna Beach High School senior Amanda Pay- ton. The commi11ce will spend June 3 and 4 1nterv1ewiog five.candidates chosen by the school board and will then return its recommendation to them. The board has not yet selected the top fi ve candidates. Fnday the school began interviewing the top eight candidates to fill Billy ~mes' position as superintendent. The inter- views will conunue today and a decision is expected by June 10. Barnes was ousted from has pos1uon as supenntendent in December 1n a con- troversial dcc1s1on by the board that brought a torrent of cntic1sm from the community. He had worked for the district for I I years. Shortly after the school board refused to renew his contract, high school pnricipa! Ortega handed in his res1gnat1on after completing only one school year with the d1stnct. Auto pioneer E. Floyd Hubbard Orange County automotive pioneer E. Floyd Hubbard died Apnl 24. He was 77. Hubbard. born in Santa Ana in 1909. was a panner at BB&H Motor Parts in Anaheim 1n the I 930's and early I 940's. In 1946. he opened Beacon Auto Parts, Inc. in Newport Beach. He moved to Dickson, Tenn in 1968 where he retired Hubbard 1~ survived by his wife, Mary; sisters, Mane Jenkins of Santa and Nannette Fountain of Oregon; son. Gene C'. Hubbard of Newport Beach and daughter. Kath y ween} of Chico. He leaves three grandchildren and one great grandchild. By ROG ER GILLOT'T •••••b•••,,_.,... Finding a way to ftoancc a national system of catastrophic health care as "without a doubt the pre<mineot issue of our time," the head of the U.S. Health and Human Services Department said. But Dr. Ous Bowen insisted the Reagan admmistration is committed to findmg a solution through privatc-<SCCtor insuranoc, not through expansion of existing govern- ment Medicare programs. · Separately, author Richard Bolles said economic upheavals of recent years arc forcing an increasing number of Amcn- c.ans to search for new careers in m1d-hfe and later. "Nobody can go to work today confi- dent that a year from now that Job wlll stall exist." Bolles said. Bowen and Bolles spoke 10 AnahClm on the final day of a three-day coovenuon of the 22 m111ion-membcT Arnencan Associa- tion of Retired Persons. Bowen, ad~ing more than 1.000 convention delegates. assured them the Medic.arc Trust fund is expected to remain solvent ··wen into the late 1990s" and said the adi:ninistration is comm_it~ed to relyina on pnvate-scctor c-0mpeut1on to hold down spiraling health care costs. But he said the question of how to finance catastrophic health care as the biggest issue his agency 1s facmg. "Jn the area ofhcaJlh care financ10g. 1he issue of catastrophic and longterm care is without a doubt the preeminent issue of our time," Bowen said. "It is in this area that ours can bea legacy that touches not only our generation but the many generations o( Americans to come." An internal department study of the issue 1s expected to be completed by Dec.ember, he said. The Reagan admamstrauon plan to rel) on private insurance companies to run such a program has drawn criticism from Democrats. Tuesday Arizona Oov. Bruce Babbju and U.S. Sen. Alan Cranston of California WCTC strongly crillcaJ of the Reapn plan. On another issue. Bowen praised the Reagan adminstration for slowma tbe b..t&b inflauon rate of the 1970s. wtllcb nc termed "the cruelest tax of all .. for elderly on fued incomes. In a separate talk. Bolles told convention delegates the lradiuooaJ theory that most career changes were voluntary and were made in search of more satisfyiqjobs is no longer ture. · Because of upheavals in the economy in recent years, he said, people are beina forced by loss of jobs to ICCk new careers. And often. be said. ••people arc aom1 to new careers they hate from ones they loved.·· Bolles termed~ such c~ .. wort· quakes .. because of the seventy of th.ctr impact on pcople·s work, financial and family lives. The main sources of the economic dislocation arc competition for low-paid workers overseas, the shift to an infor- mation and aervioc economy instead of one based on manufacturing. and ·the avail.ability offcwcr hi&h-paying jobs. Young workers who flnd themselves out of work often have httle trouble reorient- mg themselves to new careers. But oldCT workers who have invested years <kvelop- 1~ skills find it more difficult to change. he satd. Older workers also sometimes find themselves victims of age discrimination. the AARP says. The group's executive director. CyriJ Bnckfield, said Thursday that the AARP intends to file suit qainst a major U.S. company 1.atCT this year 1n an effort to get a precedent-setting ruhn3 qainst age dis- cnmmation on the JOb. An Invitation: Attention OfQ..,lzatlon pr•den11 and eec- retar ... : We want to Mlp mate• your upcoming .,,.,,,,, meeting., eemtnera Md fundrel..,. aue- ceeaful. Send bf1-f ~t1 lnc!Udlng time, place, C09t (If 1ny) end • phone number for eddhlon., 1nfonne1ton to· Bulletln Boerd. Oreily Piiot, P.O Box tsee>, Costa ....... m2e Chancellor to address UC Irvine graduates By PHIL SNEIDERMAN Ott ... 0..,"9tlltlff will be Andre Pap11lon. an t•nginecnng ma1or from Westminster dents will be scmor class oo-pres1dents Gregory Meyer of Merced and Peter Hanson of San Diego. computer science. and Rebecca Swett, a film studies ma1or from Anaheim, will be speakers Repon1 Of your CIUb °' oro-Nta11on·1 actlvttlea -llh community wvtce Pfofeet• Of e6ec'tl0n Of omc.r. -lhoukl be dtrected to the C<lmmunlty New9 Editor .i tne aeme eddr ... Non-r~ btedc and wtltt• photogr~ .,. "*'>me. UC Irvine Chancellor Jack Peltason will be the featured speaker at the campus' 21 ~1 commencement ceremony. scheduled for I 0 a.m. June 14 at UCI'~ Aldnch Park Dunna the ccremony.1hc u01 vcrs1tyw1ll award 2,380 degrees, including 1.8116 bachelor's, 283 master's. 120 doctoral anu 81 medical degrees. The student speaker UCl's College of Medicine will hold its presentation of candidates. known as the hooding ceremony. at 4 p m June 13 1n Aldnch Park Addressing the med1Cal 'iChOOI''> gradu- ating class will be Dr. Rohen Moser. executi ve vice president of the American College of Phys1c1ans in Philadelphia. A special convocation for UCI honor students will he held at 7 JO p.m. June I Jan Crawford Hall The ceremony rccogni1eci the 20 students who are graduating sum ma cum laude (the highest honor). 59 rc-- coanazed as magna cum laudc and 162 graduating cum laudc Dr. Thomas A Stand1 h. professor of 1nformat1on and Members of Ph1 Bena Kappa and other honor soc1et1es also will be recognized at the convocation. along with rec1p1ents of <ipec1al honors for academic achievement and service An 1n111at1on ceremon) for the 140 new members of the UCl's Mu Chapter of Phi Beta Kappa is scheduled for 4 p m next Fnda) at the lln1 vers1t y Club peaking for the medical <iChool stu- Enjoy your trip to the ndof'Age' Age 1s like a country. It's a nice place to v1su. but nobody wants to live there. Myths and rumo~ abound that you can'tact a decent meal in this place. the clothes arc frump).'. there·, no sex. communication 1s ml and the only entertainment 1s bmgo. Don•t believe cvery1hana you hear about the land of the setting sun. Thert are plenty of fruh interests. pleasures, and challenges. You have to search for them, though. This ain't Pins. The old ada1e that you get out of a country what rou put into It certainly apphes. If you re prepared to hate the place you'll m1u the s1n,aular aurac- udns. Dauntless travelers who accept the bed wuh the &OOd wilJ find it an 1ntercsuna adventu~ The real downCT1 in ttus land are the mirrors Thcl m\kt'wyOU look older than you rec . 4it Every da)' S.000 people an Amcnca tum 6.S This 1 n't coununa the 20.000 who he about their qc It'~ time we not only make the be~t of • 4 • a&ina. but enjoy it -give or take a varicose vein. lfyou count the years from 50 to 80 or mort, you're a Iona tame growina old. Wh y waste precious _yeani moon- '"' oveT the "Good Old Days." oflo~t loves. corporative ukers. and the pressures of upward mob1hty? Our arandmothers never had the time to pursue personal mtere lS Well. medicine has aiven us that time. Today it's possible to bavc two or th~ careen. Whatever you·vc yearned todo, lt'y itl Who knows: You may be the world·s old t un- d1SQOvered o-pcl"I in.sc:T. At the very least you could carry a spur. Colonel Sanders, Grandma Mose and Zsa Zsa prove it's ncvtt too late. Alinaisnobo lofchcm csJub1ltt. Thm arc infirmitJes and ~tnct1ons Someumes acnouJ illncs'ICs You mull cope with hm1tat1on But th(' body 1s b ite a v1ntqe car. balk)' to s?An in the monun• wuhout a luc-k and a few CUr'SC' You ha"c to how this cranky and wondrou' machine NANCY MclNTYRE who's boss. Work is the ble s1na of the lc1surt class. It provides s11mulat1on. fun. therap)', self e~ttcm and. not lcHt, money. When you d1Kover what you're rcally good at, and ,, discovers you, bells go ofTand the blues ao down the dnun. Ate hH a bad 1maae 1n Amcnca Thcrt arc m1lhon, of u .,.ho don't wnr hair ncu. thick tockinp or .,.annie drc'~ with bu1h-1n aprons. Mad1ton \Cnue would have us 1u1n,a 1n our rockers wa1tin1 for a collect call from our Inds. or tanng moodal\ out or the wmdo" '"ndma our false 1et'th, wol'T)'tnl ahaut 1r- rcgulanty Time doc n'1 1urn you •nto a stereotype. Whot<'ver you are at 40. you'll be at 60 or 70. but more so More: yourself lf}ou're cranky. you'll be crankier, 1f you're nn opt1m1st. }ou'll hana 1n there What', old? 81oloaically spcakm1 65 " ~till )'ouna That ouaht to ~ the bon v1vants out there At 1S )'OU ma) be rt'achinJ for )OOr car trumpet At 85 you'll b"'Jabout youraac At 95 vou'll act mamed ap1n · If 100 years 1s the summ1l of the mountain. l'm at base c.tmp gcumg rclldY for an uuault on the north face I've carefully packed my Maalox. rth aupponcrs.. vitamin E, hormone ctt.tm, and bran flakes. If I make 11 to the tol), I'll probebly rett1ve a congatulatory telqnm from P'res1deTit Rcapn I'll be hcrt every week to cxc:hanat some main. and thou&hts on mellowina m Amcnca On lift's Journey from diaper rash to P~ytnp. humor 1s tht' best pain rtlie\ltr 1]'1] 11~ iJ lJ@ ~ ® ~ @ :i) ~@ I -----------~1 I ~: ' • Tour bus careens off road into icy river, killing 18 WALK.ER, Calif. (AP) -A tour bus carryirta residents of a retirement home carttncd at l\.iah peed oJT a tw1suna mountain road and plunged into an icy, sw1f\-runninf nver Fn- day. killing 18 people and anjunng 24, authorities said. rhe death toll made 11 1he worst LI. bus crash an nearly sax years. There was confusion over the number of people aboard the bus. and divers searched the West Fork of the Walker River for more victims. The bu1, bnnging passengers back to Santa Monica after a four-day outing to Lake Tahoe, was 90 miles southeast of Reno. Nev., on U.S. 39S when it bounced off a fence and plunged down a 15-foot embankment into the West Fork of the Walk.er Raver. It flapped over and then lodged upng.ht on rocks with us rear npped apart an a few feet of racing water. the California Highwa}' Patrol said. The n ver is near flood stage and seven feet deep an some spots. Mono Count}' Shenffs Depart- ment investigator John Daniels said the accident apparently was caused by C\cess1ve speed and no other vehicles were involved. The condition of the Jmer was not immediately de- 1erm1m·d. "Then: wl·re bodies all over the place:· said Alex McEwan. owner of tht nearb., Mountam Gate Lodge. who hclpe~J rcmove the v1ct1ms. "I bclu:'e qunc a few got washed out through the back when the windows pop~ out. A couple of the people we c.amed out died at the side of the road." Rescue workers and all available ambulances and helicopters ft-om SO miles rushed to the scene, ei&ht mtles south of Walker tn the Siem ""Nevada. More than five hours after the I 0:30 a.m. PDT accident. divers were still searching the water downstream for more bodies. ~ "You JUSt don't lcnow wluch way a body will go in that stuJT," Dame ls said. "lfthcy were to hit a rock.. there's no telling where they might wind up ... CHP Officer Michael Parish in Bndgeport, Calif., said that in ad- dition to the 17 dead, 16 people were taken to Mono General Hospital in Bridgeport and five were airlifted to Washoe Hospital 10 Reno, Nev. Three of those flown to Reno were reported in critical condJuon. The bus was operated by Starhne Tours of Santa Fe Springs. Penny Hanson, a spokeswoman for the company, said the passengers were mostly residents of the Santa Monica Tower retircenJ home who had been .. on a relaxation tour in South Lake Tahoe and were due back this evening." ..There was a lot of blood and lot of internal head tnJunes,'' said Manne Gunnery Sgt. Daniel Tretteen, one of more than two dozen Marines who helped pull the injured and dead out ofw1odows. Ng faces new charges over missing SF family The Marines. stationed at the Pickel Meadow Marine Corps Moun- tatn Warfare Trainina Center a few males away. were called to the scene about a half-hour af\er the accident. The bus left skid marks on the pavement and apparently rolled two or three umes before 1t hit the water, Trcttccn said, and was "pretty well beat up wnh the roof caved m and the back nppcd up." Judy Sobel of Van N4YS was parked at the side of the road fixing a tire on her motorcycle when the bus went by. She esttmated it was going SS mph to 60 mph when it passed and said she heard the crash seconds later. She and her fnends helped pull seven people from the wreckage. Officials could not immediately say what the speed limit was at the point where the bus left the road. but said the ltm1t generally drops from 55 mph to JS mph in tw1sung sections. l!.S. 395. the main highway be- tween Reno and Southern r'alifomia, parallel!> the river as 1t wmds through a mounuun canyon The National Transportation Safe- ty Board dispatched a six-member investigation team to the site, accord- ing to !>pokesman Ira Furman in Wa!>hangton. Ben OlandJ. general manager for Starhnc. said the bus was ifl scrvi~ less than a year and had been inspected by the C'HP last October. The °""orst U S bus crash 1n recent years was on June S, 1980. when a tour bus carrying mostly senior citizens from Dallas to Branson, Mo., plunged into a 40-foot ravine near Jasper, Ark ., killing 20 people and inJuring 13. On Feb. 18, 1981, a commuter bus crashed through a guardrail near Quantico, Va .. and down an 8(}.foot embankment into a creek. killing 11 people and injuring 13. GM workers OK contract FOR SUPERIOR COURT JUDliE * I * * , Office Nu m ber 5 ' II for t he candidate w it h the m ost f xperience • Integrity • Honesty • Dependability j}oe Baeitta Joe ~arilla has 23 years experience as a top Grade IV Senior trial deputy d1stnct attorney who has tried robbers, rapists, murderers, -hu ndreds of cases of all kinds. Joe Barilla has convicted & sentenced criminals to state prison when his opponents were still in school. -t¥ A WORLD WAR 11 NAVY VETERAN * FOR THE DEATH PENAL TY tr FOR VICTIMS RIGHTS AG AINST -Rose Bird, Reynoso, Grodin, Mosk Endorsed by the California Organization of Police and Sherrlff's - the International Union of Pollc.e Associations, AFL/CIO, Judges. Attorneys, business people, city council members and members of the community. VOTE EXPERIENCE • VOTE JOE BARILLA PaJd for by Joe and Bette Barllla • ' Bas driver who wouldn't help dying glrl defended By Ge AsMelate4 Pra1 CHICAGO -A rookie bus dnver, suspe!'ded after ref~sing to mak"c: a one-block detour to take a dying airl to the ho~p1t.al, was f~llowlf\& overt~ stnct niles that \>rohibit dnvcrs from leaving their routes without penmss1on, a unionoffictal said Friday. The 9~year-olda>rl died early Thursday, ~hortly a~r a passcnaer carried her a block to the emeraeney room at Children s Memonal tfospital. Ben Perry, a city bus driver less than four ~onths when he refused. to make lbe detour as being made a scapegoat, s.a1d George I?aJmu, vu:e president of Amaipmated Transit Unio~ Local ~41. Dalmas said he hJm~lf' was disciplined about 20 ye.arsago for talc.ingan tnJurc<J ~~ngertoa hospital two blocks ofl'hjs route. and "was told never to do 1t agam. Nicaraguan dlplomats' travel limited w ASHCNGTON -Nicaraguan dJplomats can no lonicr trave~ to the Los Angeles or San Francisco areas without ~rmission fro.m the l!n1ted S~tes government, State Department officials said,. The restncu~ns are in ~t.al!atton for similar actions taken by Nicaragua against U.S. officlals traveling in the Latin American country. department officials said Thurmy. 41 lndlcted In alleged drug ring ATLANTA -Federal indictments unsealed Friday charged 41 people with operattn~ a SI billion coca1ne-smuggling ring that shun.led df'UI.' fr:om Colombia to a1rstnps in GeorJla. Alabama, Tennessee and northe.m Aorida, and then to Miami for distnbution. The indictments. unseaJd m Atlanta, resulted from a nearly year-long underc~ver anvestiga.tion b>: law officen who posed as airstrip owners interested an J01mng the nng. said U.S. Attorney Stephen S. Cowen. Federal grand Junes tn Macon. Mobile and Birmingham, Ala., K.noxv1lle, Tenn .. and M1am1 also returned i~dictments against some of those listed m the Atlanta indictment. Cowen said. More than 100 officers arrested 30 of the 41 Thursday and seized about $6 million in property, said Ron Caffrey of the ll .S. Drug Enforcement Administration. Alaskan volcano spits steam, ash ANCHORAGE. Alaska -P:ivlof Volcano erupted Friday for the second time in two months, spilling steam and ash up to 17,000 feet high, a geologist said. The eruption of Alaska's most active volcano was reported by pass10& pilots Friday morning. said Tom Miller. a scicnust with the U.S. Geoloeical Survey. Miller said the eruption posed little danger to humans near the 8,905- foot peak, located 600 miles southwest of Anchorage at the sparsely inhabited tip of the rugged Alaska Peninsula. Pavloflast erupted on April 17. Miller said the peak has erupted at least 38 times in 200 years. with at least six eruptions in the past dcc.ade. Postal official pleads gullty to payoff• WASHINGTON -The v1cecha1rman oflhe U.S. Postal Service's board of ~ovemors pleaded guilty Fnday to takmg illegal payoffs in exchange for tryine to steer a $250 million postal contract to a Texas company. Peter Voss} a businessman who was co-cbai rm an in 1980 of Ronald Reagan's presidentia campaign in Ohio, also pleaded guilty an a three-count felony information in U.S. Distnct Court to embezzling money from the postal service. Prosecutors said he collected for a first-class airline ticket when he actually traveled in coach class. Voss immediately resigned from the eight-member board of governors, which is cxpectc..-d to award the $250 million postal contract later this year. Man lndlcted In smok1ng Incident onjet Court clerk leaves $1.5 million estate WINONA, Minn. - A high school dropout who never was paid more than S 11,970 in 47 years as a court clerk. bequeathed more than SI .3 million to two colleges from an estate valued at $1 .5 million. Joe Page earned his money through "frugality. good investments and the fact that he was constantly employed." said Joe Ac1schman, director of development at St. Mary's Cort and a confidante of Page dunng the last few years. A childless widower w died last September 10 days shon of his 91st birthday, Page bequeath $884,000 to St. Mary's and S4S6,000 to the College of St. Teresa, both · Winona. "He just thought the Catholic schools here did good work for th community and ought to be supported," Aeischman said. Chicago christens America's Cup entry CHICAGO -Launched in Rhode Island and tested in Narragansett Bay. Heart of America was towed downtown Friday for christening -the city s first-ever entry in the America's Cup race and an improbable prairie drea.m. Jayne Thompson, wife of Gov. James R. Thompson, christened Heart of America to cap an hour-long ceremony that drew hundreds of onlooken. S..1y Jiii 1111 ·--F11 Cll1111'1111 IPllC ...... 1,.... P11Jo Sl1tq A~_,. Sltlllt1 Dllh • Lw1 lnt1rtlirnlnt 8 AM • 2 AM. Dally Sunday 8 A.M to 12 Midnight •28 E. 17th St. Costa Mesa Presser pleads Innocent CLEVELAND (AP) -Tcamsten union President Jackie Presser pleaded innocent today to charges of labor racketeenng and embenlement stemming from an alleged "ahos1 employee" sc heme at a Cleveland local. Presser, recently elected as national leader of the 1.6 million-member union, was arraianed befonl U.S. Maaistrate David S. Perelman. .. Sovlet official sees dim chance for 1986 summit BONN, West Germany (AP) -A Soviet news agency chief said Friday that prospects for a second super- power summit have dimmed because of Washington's "restrictive at- titude" on nuclear arms control. Valenun Fahn, director of the government news agency Novosti complained about President Re: agan's tentative plans to scrap com- plia~cc wt~ the ,SALT 11 treaty. The Sov1et official said he was skeptical a summit can be held this year. "If the United States continues its restrictive attilude to disarmament, I am not sure the summit will take place," Falin told reporters at a news conference here. . Soviet leader Mikhail S. Gorbachev and Reagan met in Gen- eva last November, and agreed to hold a summit m the United States this year. The Soviets have not agreed to set a date. On Tuesday. Reagan announced be decided to dismantle two Poseidon nuclear submarines and stay in compliance with limits set by the 1979 Strategic Arms Limitation Talks treaty, SALT II, which was never ratified by the Senate. The president said the United States intended to exceed the pact's limits later this year unless the Soviets reversed arms programs that he claimed vtolate SALT II. an accusation the Kremlin has rejected. Refemng to Reagan's decision. Falin said: "I don't know what more we can offer the U.S.A. to continue to Shultz: Replace obsolete SALT II HALIFAX, Nova Scotia (AP) - George P. Shultz urged the Soviet Union on Friday to negotiate drastic cuts in nuclear arms as a replacement for the SALT II treaty, which he described as "obsolete, unratified and being violated.·· The secretal)' of state also sa.id ~e Reagan administration remains hopeful that a U.S.-Soviet summit will be held later this year. He spoke to reJ?Orters at the close of a two-Oay meeting of NATO foreign ministers ~bat was dominated by arms control issues. Shultz said 10 defense of President Reagan's tentative decision to aban- don SALT II later this year, which has come under criticism: ''The president is saying let us shift . . . to a form of restraint that looks at behavior by the Soviet Union. that looks at the responsibilities the Unit- ed States has and the alliance has for the maintenance of our defensive deterrent capability." He acknowledged that some mem- bers of the alliance disa~eed with Reagan's position, includmg Wash- ington's closest allies. abide with the agreement, unless of course we declare ourselves the 51 st state of the United States." Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/8•turday, Mey 31, 1988 .&a Chernobyl nuclear plant A helicopter paaeea by the d•maced Chernobyl nuclear power plant ln the • I Ukraine ln th.la photo releued Friday by the SoYlet newa acency T ... Cosmonauts planning spacewalk Bonner rages at threat by Moscow LONDON (AP) -Isnorin.a a wamma from Moscow, Yelena Bon- ner accused the Soviet Union on Frida)'. of tryina to black.mail the West into silence about bcr hust.nd, exiled dissident Andrei D. Sakharov. Mrs. Bonner met Prime Minisier Marpret Thatcher and the two women stood with their arms linked outside the prime minister's office. Mrs. Bonner told reporteri she ~ jccted a threat implied in commenu made Thursday by Soviet journalist Viktor Louis. Louis, who oft.en conveys Kremlin information to Western repoTterS, told reporters in Mo900w be doubu Sakharov would be permitted to leave his internal exile 10 the cloeed city of Gorky because of Mrs. Ion· ner's outspoken views. "The statements (by Louis). seem to me to be simply black.mall,•• Mrs . Bonner said. ''It seems to me they wanted to scare Madame Prime Minister (Mrs. Thatcher) by this statement and other Western political leaders into not mcetina me.·· She said she bad seen many of Sakharov's supporters in Britain. "I hope our mutual eff'oru will be successful and be will be freed." she MOSCOW (A P) -Tass reported The cosmonauts' mission began in K.azi m and Solovev arc the world's said. that an unmanned Soviet spacecraft mid-March aboard Mir. They spent most experienced space travelers. Mrs. Thatcher sa.ad, .. I've uaund returned to Earth on Fnday after about seven weeks aboard the space They have spent nearly 11 months on her we will keep wth with Dr. docking with an unmanned orbiting station before reaching the +year-old space missions and made seven space Sakharov, who is such a distinpiabed space station, and added that two Salyut 7 on May 6. walks totaling 27 hours. scientisL .. c~mo~uts will ~tempt another ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ space walk this weekend. Tas$, the official news agency, satd the Soyuz TM, a new generation space capsule, landed on Soviet territory, but did not give the exact location or time of landing. Soviet spacecraft usually come down, how- ever, on the steppes of Kazakhstan in Central Asia. The Soyuz TM was launched May 21 , docked with the space station Mir two days later and started its voyage home on Thursday. Soviet officials have not revealed the purpose of the mission. Tass said the capsule was the first in a "new series with improved techni- cal and operational characteristics which opens a consecuti ve stage of development of Sov1et manned spacecraft." On Saturday, cosmonauts Leonid Kiz1m and Vladimir Solovev wtll attempt their second space walk in four days. the agency said. It said Soviet television would provide live covera1e of the space walk. K.iz:im and Solovev left the orbiting space station Salyut 7 on Wednesday for nearly four hours and put together a prefabricated tower of trusses standing 50 feet tall. Soviet news- papers said the next day that such a structure might eventually be used 10 linking two space stauons, but did not specifically refer to Mir and Salyut 7. Mir was sent into orbit on Feb. 20 BAT. Olltyj Soviet stars hold relief benefit u ~ . and has been heralded as the basis ofa Alla Pqacbe-Ya. the queen of SoTlet pop. and other So'riet •tan are pictured d~ their performance Friday nltbt before an audience of S'o.000 ln the nation•• ftnt rock benefit. Proceed• will jo toward Tlctlma of the Chernobyl nuclear dlaaater and t1ae ... t cleanup under way ln the Ukraine. The 21h-hour concert wu held at the Olymplyaky Sporta Complez. built for the 1980 Sammer Olymplca. • • city 10 space. Officials say it can accommodate sax visiting spacecraft, but at as not known many cosmonauts it has room for. Announcing today's space walk, Tass said the cosmonauts would emerge onto the surface of the Salyut 7 station for the eighth tame this 22.1 c1 ft lo Fred • Yh Chier Rack • Adjustable Door Shelwts llW • Lift Out Eu Tray • lceMMerReady s99911 O~IEEFE I IERRITI ,......llmi::::::=:=:;:=:~ Counter To, RCA I HR VCR liortWIYI htl w/lrentr L•rs• 1.1 cu ft • Wireless Remote • Express Recordinc c1,1oitr • 1,000 Watt Bro'"*'t~Ellti:m::•~nt~~!!!~ • Variable Power Control • Handy Browrq and Meal Rack IOW '23915 WHIRLPOOL Lars• C•••itr -------" .... , • ony 27" Mete 1 • S Wish Cydes pMI • 3 Wltlf levels ---•(HJ Cleln fltlf < OILY '35911 L1r11 c1,1oitJ I CJ las lryer ~ 1. 3 Orylnc Cyclts Ti.,,1,....i • 3 T ~ Set- • KrWt Cart ----___,-• Plotttu OILY '36111 • • Speed Search RCA 19" Diagonal Remote Control • Quartz Tuning System • Auto Color Control • Auto Contrast / Color Tracking OILY '29915 OILY '29911 luiH-11 lisllw1sll1r • 5 Cylces • Ener1y Saver Option • SOllld ~ted OILY '23911 Ulll 111 rt1 SU tllCO ~"" .g ,,, • I lKIOC Cl&ST ... • .,._...__ --- Newportklds.' choirs present 'Moses' musical The combined ch1ldrco's choirs of St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church in Newpon Beach wiU present a mus1cal called "Moses and the Freedom Fanatics" Sunday at 4 p.m. at the church, 600 St. Andrew's Road. The show will feature narration. solos, costuming and acitng by ch1I· dren ranai04 in age from 6 through 13 yea11. No tickets are needed and a free-will offering will be collected. Call the music office at 631-3821 for information or child care reser- vations. • • • The Rev. Robert A. Shuller of Rancho Capistrano Commun i1y Church will continue bis scnes on "The World's Greatest Comebacks" at ~unday's 9:30 and 11 a.m. ~rv1c-es. Vocalist Debby Smith will be tht' guest soloist tor two special numbers. Rancho ('ap1strano Community Church IS located at 29251 Camino Capistrano. Call the church at 582·2700 for funher infonnation. • • • "Running Against the Wind" is the mle of Dr. W. Terry Van Hook's sermon Sunday at the United Methodist Church Laguna Niauel Minis1ry. The service. which includes communion. will begin at 9:30 a.m. The church group meets at the Crown Valley Elementary School. 29292 Crown Valley Parkway. Laguna Niguel. Child care 1s provided and further information 1i. available at 495-78904. • • • The Rev Wilham J. Eilers will present a sermon cnutled "Every- Vatican ambassador resigns after rebuke WASHINGTON (AP) -The State Department has announced the resignation of William A. Wilson, the U .S. ambassador to the •Vatican who was chided by his superiors for malong an unauthorized sccret trip to Libya earlier this year. State Depanment spokesman Charles E. Redman gave oo reason for the resignation and declined to answer questions about whether the departure had anything to do with Wilson's trip to Libya. Wilson. 71 , a personal friend of President Reagan and Secretary of State George P. Shultz, was appointed as the first U S. ambassador to the Vatican when diplomatic relations w1th the Hol) Set were established 1n January 1984. Wilson had been serving as Reagan's personal envoy to the Vaucan. His tenure tur;ned controversial in late March. wht'n the adminmrat1on confirmed that he had gone to Tnpoll, wtthou1 permission, to meet Libyan leader Moammar K.hadafy. The v1i.1t took place after the United States had accused Khadafy of sponsoring the terronsts who attacked the Rome and Vienna a1rpons Dec . 27 and while Amcncans were being told to stay out of Libya. ., •· No details of the discussions have been revealed. ShuJu told rcponers at that time that the W1lson-Khadafy mceung "creates a problem for us in that we have been 1ellingeverybody that we have withdrawn outsclves from Khadafy. !.O obviously it's an embarassmen1." At the same ttme. Shultz said Wilson "1s doing a fine JOb tn tht' Vatican.·· "He 1s a very fine man and if you consider what's happened in our relationships with the Vaucan since he's been the prcs1dent1al envoy. you'd have to Judge that in a very quiet way a great deal has been accomplished ... Shulu said Wilson graduated from Stanford Umver;1t> wllh a degree an mechanical engineering and served JO the ordnance corps in World War II. He was active in real estate development. cattle and the 0 11 industry in California for many years. Even after his appointment as ambassador to the Vatican he remained a member of the board of directors on the Pennzoil Company. .......... ,.... The UNITED .. METHODIST CHURCH Ca.le Mese FIRST UNITED METHODIST CHRUCH 19th St. & Harbor Blvd Church School 9·00 Worship 9:00 and 10·30 Charles D Cieri(, Minister C0918 Mne MESA VERDE UNITED METHODIST CHURCH 1701 81ker Worehlp a Church School I :» 10:00 1.m. Or yv1111am E Steel 979 Sn4 N ... wpun &.-ao.h CHNIT CHURCH av THE HA UMTl.D METHOOIST 1400 W Belboll Bl"d 173-.S Rev Lewreoce T Young ....... & C~ ldlool t:IO A.M • ..., ~ldoeel Md 0., c .... 7:114.ll .... ~M H1.1n11noton S.ech North COMMUNITY UNITED METHODIST CHURCH 6662 Heil Ave 842-446 1 Worehlp S«vlce 1:30 a 10:00 1:30 Sunder School 10:00 Fountain Velley FMIT UNITEO METitODllT CHURCH 18225 Bushard St 112-2183 James A Hadley, Pastor Wonhlp a Church lchool t:30 A.M. <t NEWPOHI Cf NII ~ UNIHO M£THOOIS1 CHURCH 1I01 MMguet'lll AVI COf'ona def Mer M4-0745 .._,,._, Ir Clvch Schoel 9 JO • m Rev Burley RYRowe COllllITT CIUICI COICIECATIOUl '11 ••••UW. ·"·· eor...,., llar huN I . llt1, lltfster 10 ll. s..u, l0ts•ip ..... , ... t.W1• o;,..,., '"'''"''I.I• ~ lllWOll aWll (Rtt-1 RA88t MARK S Ml1.£R S*llAJ SOtc(S In I'"' S.t 10>11111 I fm~, SI>"'°' I \I I 1 ldty nt Month 1 JO Rtlit~ws S<lll!Of Adlllt Id Youtll Gtouo~ Sontti 1111 c..-.a. ~ .. ldl ........ , 144-19" Cettl~ AIM WetMt ~.,_.,_, fllft1MI ¥111 "Mite PRESBYT£RIAN CtUtCH Of Ttl COVENANT 9fuc. A. Kume, .. Mt« Terry McCantl9 01r.c1or of Adult MlnlllrlM Ton• Alceraz. Dtrec10f of Chlldren·e Mlnlslrlft Sin!IJ ,,.,._ -l .lO & 10;00 IJll Clvdl Sdloel - 1:*111 lll'u A4Mb 10·00 u1 l\nery <•• nlbMt - J lO & 10-00 I.Ill. Y"I*' -7·00 p.111 2850 Fairview Ad .. Costa Mesa 557-3340 CHRIST LUTHERAN CHURCH fMossouro Synod) 780 Victoria St .. C09tl '" .. Lother V. Tornow, PHtor &31·1811 arvc. JHILe, l"Mlor WORSHIP SERVICE 1:00 10:30 AM S41lday School & A~ 8lllt Clm 9 211 AM Clw11 lt~n Clmltnt ar y Sctlool 548-6868 ST. MARK PRESBYTERIAi CHURCH E astblull Or & Jambom Newport &ach Re• Wilham Mc:Quoid Pasto• A\\I R,w Robfrt P Stewart Assoc PaslOI Rooter Wlutttn ~USIC Oireclor WorsMp 9:30 A.M. U1c.tio1 Clines 11:45 l .I . ClllNC...,,....... fw lltl· C.-544-1341 SHIR HA-MA 'ALOY HARBOR TEMPLE REFORM ~•"Ill 81-i~••d P ~'"I '"'°"'., a C nrblvtl Oi 111,.. Ar~ SIM•"'• ~woe« II#~~ t.I Id~••~ (t ~I) l~1nto c~ ........ m ... ,, .. •• • •• $ 1 Stbbeth Servtc•• friMy (...... I U '' ,..., s-.. nrrt ''*' t4 t11t --. I lt ,. Sem•i t111 • ..,.,,.lmttt Am 21 H ltr flsC• Church of St. Matthew bytheS.. "1•• ......... HOLY COMMUNtON IAQ4~Y..-....A.M. ..... r.--.... --- body Has a Somebody" Sunday at the I 0 a.m. worship service at the Neighborhood Conareaat1onal Church in t.aauna Beach. The Revs. Ma.rpret Ann and John Reynolds, fonner min.istcrs at the chu.tch. wall present the second an· nual Matt Reynolds Scbolarsh1p Award to Kalco James Waiau. a student a t Fuller Theological Sem· inary in Pasadena, durina the ser· vices. The church is located at 340 St. Ann's Dnve and more information 1s available at 494-8061 . • • • Dr. Chris Schriner, Costa Mesa author and maniqe counselor, wlll speak on "If Your Thoupus Were a Symphony: The Eathet1cs of Con· sciousness" at Sun~y·a 10:30 a.m. service at the Orange Coast Unitarian Univcrsalist Church. 1259 Victoria St., Costa Mesa. There 1s no admission fee and child care is provided. Call 642-2142 for further information. • • • Conflrmation Sunday will be cel- ebrated at the IOa.m. worship service at the Shepherd of the Hill$ United Church ofC'hrist, 30121 Niguel Ro:td. Laauna Niguel. Rev. David Sandbera wall prc~nl the class for church membership. This year's class includes Jenny Swanson, John Florey, J.J. Lindgren. Todd Russell, Shane Von O rossc, Kevin Barr and J~m Padayao. CaJI 495-1310 or 831--0522 for additional information. • • • A movie about the hfc of Jc5us will be shown Sunday at 6· 30 p.m in the fellowsh!P hall of the Laguna Prc<iby- tenan Church. 4 IS f"orc5t Ave .. Laguna Beach. Tbe church's Chnst1an 1nglcs Fellowship wall hold a potluck dinner tonight at 6:30 and a break~ast meeting Monday at 7 n.m. ( ull 494-1555 between 9 a m and 5 p.rn for details • • • The Sisterhood of Temple Rat Yahm of Newpon Ruch/Irvine will hold its second annual Qucenat' Sch1ff·Gortz Sisterhood founder award luncheon and fashion ~how Tuesday at 11 a.m . at the Irvine Halton. Rec1p1ents of th1 year's awarcb art cumnt sisterhood president Nancy Marcus and former president Malcj Scholkoff. Reservations, ot $36 each. ue be• ng accepted Call 644-1999 for more 1nformauon. • • • ' A morning of fun and fnendship for children 3 to 8 years old is planned tor ne}t Saturday at the Shtr Ha· Ma'alot-Harbor Reform Temple at Ea~tblulT South and JamlX>rce Road '" Newport Beach. fhe e\oent IS scheduled from 9:30 a m to noon and w11l 1ncludc a v1s1t to classrooms. Further information is available al 644-7203 Churches win right to define religion New IRS r:ulln settles Ion -running hassle over true-exempt status of church activities ---- By GEORGE W. CORNELL NEW YORK -American churches have won a key round m a long battle with the Internal Revenue Service over their contention that it's their right -and not that of government -to determine what activities are religious. Some church attorneys called the outcome a "watershed" victory. But others said further IRS changes were needed. and may be JO the offing. The strulJlc ba.s gone on for nearly a decade. wtth some church agencies defying IRS insistence that they are not integral to relipon and thus must file annual financial reports. Several church units, such as Lutheran social services in Minne- sota and a Tennessee Baptist ch1l- dren 's home, have gone to court about the issue. winnina basic points in their cases. But for a long time. the combined church protest. pushed lhrQJ.lgh a broad, ad hoc church Coa.titlon o n IRS Definitions of Religious bodies. "fell on deaf~" says the Rev. Dean M. Kelley, coalllon teerqtary. But a newly revised HtS approach. published May 19. will for a.IJ prac- tical purposes. satisfy the church .......... ftrlP ... 'f J ......... em HARBOR CHRISTIAN CHUftCH (01.clp!M Of Cllllet) 2401 lrVIM •• ··"'' , ..... ... ..,porl .. M; .. 145--$191 Morning Worship 10 AM " Sunday School 9 AM ObJe<:t1ons, says Kelley, also church- state affairs officer of the National Council of Churches. Basically. the question has centered on who defines rchgion -the churches themselves or the govern- ment. The lRS. under its long-time procedures., has defined church "inte- grated awtiliancs' -those exempt from filing financial returns -as those that were "exclusively re- ligious." But many church institutions - colleges., hospitals and other oper- ations -were deemed not "ex- clusively religious" by the IRS. and were required to file repons (Form 990) on such matters as revenues. contributors and expenditures. The churches sec such institutions as inherent to religion. "The church hasa right to define its own ministry," says the Rev. C harles V. Bergstrom. head of the Lutheran governmental affairs office in Washington. D.C h was on th.at basic point that the churches toolc tlleir stand. Their lawyers say the IRS has now agreed to a new procedure by which a "group ruling" will be apJ>lied to orpn1z.ations listed by denomina- tions as entitled to tax exemption. However, those organi~ations NEWPORT HARBOR LUTHERAN CHURCH Rorer J. Btr1. Pastor Kim Eifert 1Cro1stad. Pastor W•SltP IHYICl 8 AM & 10:30 AM (lntttprtt• fOf the deaf al I AM) Slll>AY SCHOOl 9:15 AM flnery Cart Avabble wtl.OMl lH httr Ir,....,.,. ltacll 141·1111 WQ,...h1r anJ hur th" pract1nl, Chriol·CC'ntC'red . b1blocal mcf'aac. 1'HOW TO DISCOVER YOUR SPIRITUAL GIITS!" ' n, Jotin tlulfoun, J• Sunday, June I, 1986 '""~ A:30 ~nd 10: IS A.M . bl\.'1 <;t Andrews Road ~ewpcm Bt'ach. Cal1fornta (714) 631-28 0 tacr~' from N~n Harbor H11h School"' lrvlnr & ISth.) • IEW TllNO 0111111111 011101 111 •• 1 .... ., ..... ... (THllllls 1111111 If ... ) "A llllltllJ Mllll, 1 llllltlly Ull" s.rvtoea 10:00 a.m. TOOAY ONLY Dt (leanor C. Jackson s1111111, .,,._. ~. ,,,., 1 "-' C1HHr1i 10 JO Dial-A-Prayer 646-6464 ~--..... Or Elunor C Jackson Mt-11U ~aguna Presbyterian Church "Church of Chimes" • ,,..., dvdl •• tM s.11 c...e,. s ..... s...... .. llllM ""*· / S..., Wom1, l :t>O • ll:IO.. J Nruwry Can hm4td•&uar !kMol lor &1.1 llW WHkday hopaa.1 fM ClUtlrta, Y•d • Aftltl 41 5 F'ortst Avt • Phont 49'· 76.5& Or Attlw J T .... ,. -" Cl •...... !It. £ .... C ..... OJAL A·PRAVE'R 9'-PRA V Be sure to worship at a place " of yOur Choice ~ hsted will be treated as "integrated auxiliaries" -not required to file forms -only if they generally gel at least half their support from churches and do not mainly serve 1hc general public. Attorney Gary Nash of Dallas. chairman of the church coaht1on. says the new I RS procedure "appears to signal a staning over by the lRS in its effon s to develop a satisfactory definition" of a church "integrated auxiliary" While the term. "exclus1vel} re- ligious .. remains in IR regulations forthe time being. coalition memben. say they think that son oftest will no longer be used by the IN.S. "The s1gnticance for churches and their ministry orpnizat1ons-teach- ID$. healing. preaching_ and other missions of churches -1s that the exclusively religious test apparently will no longer be used." Nash says. Nash. counsel for the Southern Baptist annuuy board. adds that "we expect the IRS to announce shortly a project to revise the existing regu- lations to be consistent with this new revenue procedure." Hubert Forcier, a Minneapolis attorney who won a federal appeals court rultng that the IRS "exceeded its authonty" 1n applying its "ex- clusively religious" test to Lutheran Social Services of Minnesota, says: "I believe the IRS. or Congress. will never again attempt to use a religious test in the code. But technically we <.ull have a lot of(church) mst1tut1on~ 1hat won't meet the internal suppon ICSI. " He callc; the new procedures a "95 percent" '1ctory: saying ant1c1pated but slow processes for taking ouflhe "exclusively religious" provision rnuld take 15 years. "I thank this poses a difficult question for the churches whether the) want to continue test cases." he adds. "Man) of us have worked for yea.rs on this issue. and there have been many d1sapppomtments and delays," he sa\'~ ··But the statements th.at govemmen1 is attaclcing religion prove to be unfounded by this active coopera11on .. The lo&1am first beg.an to ea~ m 1983 when the U .S. assistant Treasury secretary. Jo hn E. Chapoton. wrote Kelley, inviting the coahtton to meet With the assistant IRScomm1ss1oner to discuss possible solutions. The revised approach eventual!~ resulted. Frank lngraham. a Nashville at- torney who recovered a fine the IRS levied against the Tennessee Bapust Children's Home for refusing to file form 990. says the "cxclus1vely religious" regulauon remain~. but he adds: "To get the procedure changed on the enforcement of the regulation efl'cct1 velychangcs the regulat1on. It's the pcoccdures that the field agents follow .. YCNI WI# 6-W~ -And ,.,...,,, FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH M•ln •t Ad•m., Hunt"'Oton S..Ch Morning Worship Bible School . Evening Worship SUNDAY: Ac-,..,,,,°'--~ a..w.. 9·00 AM 10 45 AM 600 PM M<!.1> f""I OI .... 1.1-. & Alo.1 M 1(.,11'" l.loNttt<t ... .. oe !Oen Otrecto< of c"""-EOuUllO" OtAL-A•OEVOTIOH -Pl-MIO; omce -531-2.5et "'re.ct.Int Chrlel Sine• 11t5" .. Alr-\T JAtvfE WELCOMES YOU atJMDAY WOllllHIP HRY1CEI 7:30 AM • Holy Eucharist Rlte I 9.00 AM • Holy Eucharist Rite II 10·45 AM • Prayer and PralM Euch81191 Rite II Church School • 9:00 AM Chlld Cere • 7:30 & 9:00 AM (Music, sermon and child care at 3 services) MIO-W.K WOlllKaHOP Monday-Friday • 8:30 AM Morning Prayer Tu.aday • 10:00 AM Eucharltt & Healing Service Wednesday -6:30 AM Holy Eucharllt Fr. GHbet1 P. Prlnce, D.D. Priest-In-Charge Assoc .. Fr. Brian Cox. Aulstlng The Rev. ThomH Henry• Dt. Wllllam Roberts• Mr Samuel Shafer S.\INT JAMES EPISCOPAL CHURCH '1111./ Vial 1do • N~wpon Beach • 714-67~·0210 CHRISTIAN SCIENCE CHURCHES BRANCHE'5 Of THE MOTHER CHURCH Tl<E FIRST CHURCH Of CHF11'5T SCIENTIST IN BOSTON MASSACHUSETTS "Ancient and Modern Necrom•ncy, .,, .. Mesmerism and Hypnotism, Denounced" lrvlne-Flrat Church of Chrltt, Sctentlat Rancho San Joaquin lnl•rmedl1t1 School 4Mt Mlchel90n (Neer Y•I•) Church A Sunder School-10:00 A.M Reedlnt llloom, 4330 •1rranc1 Pkwr . Sult• 145, Sto~rMk Plan 10 A.M._. P.M. Mon. thru Set. 10 A.M.-7 PM. Thureday <-""trO L '"_. C" -.;ooa, \ hf"nrt"\.11• Newport Beech-Flrat Church of Chrlat, Sclenlltt 3303 Via Lido, N•wport a .. ch Church A lundey School-t :OO A t0·30 A.M . Reading Room, 3315 Vie Lido thru Sat t A.M.·5 P M. Tt.Mt.-7-t P.M . (.f\(td 'f'l•.a.d f 1H1t"1•.,, "4 1if' t' 10 £ ... ftw 4 '''°\ , I~ Newport h.ch-Second Church of Chrlat, Sclentltt 3100 Pacific Vl•w Dr., Corona del Mer Church a Sunday School-10:00 A.M Reading llloom-3500 .. , .. E. COHt Hwy .• CdM WfDlflDAY fVf .. TflTIMOIY •ET.a I P .M. AU CllUICltfl All are cordially 1nv1ted to attend ltle church services and enjoy the privileges of the Reading Rooms Child Care Provided AT ALL SERVICES s.,.,. Te,io: "A Wo!'d•r·full World" CtUCH Of REUGIOOS SCOC£ ...... Ol1"9 ......... ~of~---2205 MAIN STREET. SUITE 23 HUNTINGTON BEACH. CA 926d Adulta & Jr. Church 8 00, 9 45 & 1 t 30 A8¥ Ptgvy 8uHtt ,or lnform111on K9-1331 Trouble in River City Orange Cout OAJLV PILOT/Seturct.y, May 31, 1Ne A'7 'All My Sons' revival newly relevant 8y WJLUAM GLACKIN ....................... LOS ANGELES-Arthur Millet's "All My Sons" is dated in a oostalaic way, in certain small details -tbe docto r m 1t makes boute calls and chaflel SI 0. But the bit thinp about it wtll never dlle: responsibility, respect. So i1 is hardly surprisina lhat Bill Bushnell, artistic producing dj. rector of the new Los Anseles Theater Center, would choose this 1947 hit. Miller's first, to open the Classic/R e vi val series or bis 1986-8 7 season. It aU swu quietly. 10 the po y&td behind the 1wo-story wtute house desisner D. Manyn Bookwalter hu fashioned with pat credibility. Joe Keller and his younser son, Chris - the older onc1 Larry, wu killed in the war, but not an a P--40 -are readina the paper on a lazy Sunday momina. But there's a tension in the air: Ann, who was p'1 only Larry's fiancee but the dJuaKtcr of Joe's former partner, ts comina to visit, and probably to marry Chris. ~er father stJll 1s serv1na a Iona pnson term. Joe, who swore he had nothing to do with the fatal o rder to ship tbe pan.s. aot o ff with a shon one. When we find that Kate Keller still is clin&ina to the idea that somehow, somewhe~ Larry 1 suJI alive - choains W1th a fanatici m almost mystenously beyond reuon -we feel the wheels of fate besin to tum. The play stilJ works not JUSl because of its new relevance, but even more becauae the people are reaJ, and above aJl because the theme is pat: responsibility beyond aclf. h 's not enoup to be sorry, the embittered Chris tells his parents, they must be more: .. You can be better! Once and for aJI, you can know there's a univer1e of ~pie outside, a nd you're responsible to 1t." Bill Pullman. as the 1deahsllc ~ movina 1n this last soene. And Joe . KeUer is pitiable, and absolutely believable m every ner· vous. •naratiatioa moment. as biJ father. frank Lubeyaod Ruth deSoea u their innoocnt you• nejpbon, Jim Jansen and Sl~da Shaw as their . dJte0otentcd ones, Juhe Fulton as • Aon and Gf'CIO'Y Wapowaki u Ann's 1ndianant brother, 00110 foratt ' Eric Ratican u a likable kid, are all very fine, wannJy and humanly r!lbt. But Nan Maruo .as Kate, chnch1na • her dream, mouI\tift& to an .,ony of auilt and remorse at the end or Act a and sittina there-, stilled by her own • storm, at the bqjnnina. of Act Ill, creates a memory that, like the play, bids to last a to~ umc. "All My Sons contlnucs t.brouab June IS. Fortickeu. write the Tbealtt • Center at s 14 Sprina SL, Los Anedes 90013. But when Bus hnell began work on the production in mid-January, he did not foresee just bow startlingly relevant it was about to become. ··one o f the thinp theater bas to do is deaJ with the important verities," he ,.------------------------------------------ said the other day. "My first thought l ___ r:::::::::='.'."---;---;~=:;1 was that the father-son and mother- son relationships were important, 1------------------ and they are, of course. But I 0 days after I p icked the play, the sbunJe blew up." M iller's plot turns o n the action ofa small-town businessman in World War II wbo lets defective parts for fighter planes leave his factory be- cause he's afraid that ifhe junks them, the delay will lose him the contracL As a result, 21 P-40s crash, killing their pilots. ' Find Out What's· DaYld Dalton u Harold Rill roma ncea Llaa May a• llarlan the librarian ln Newport Harbor Btgh School"• production of "The llaaic Man." The Meredith Wlll80n maalcal will be preaented nat Thursday through Saturday at 8 p.m. ln the Harbor llialh aad.ltorlum and tlcketa may be reaerTed by callfnC 760-SS 19 weekday• between 8 a.m . and noon. Nobody has accused the people respon sible for safety at NASA or the manufacturers of the Challenger's pans of such deliberate acts. But senous questions have been raised about whether the pressure to meet schedules mfluenced the judgment calls that launched the shuttle June 28 And regardless, the tragedy it.self g1 ves an uneasy immediacy to the storm that anses m Miller's play, in ' cooki~~:r::ts Orange coas Jn ·s Restaurant s undaY resen ts a SOAP SUMMARY 1he back yard of Joe and K.ate Keller, when the truth 1s finally laid bare. Miller himself. m a soberly stated 1nterv1ew tn the progral book, docs not mention the Challenger tragedy, but says: .. The same corruption of the ~pint I was t.aJking about in my play is. 1f an)'lhtng, worse now." Kelly locked away on 'Santa Barbara' Miller wrote the play while the war was still o n , to ·'straighten out the morality of the country .... Basically, and child support When a screaming what the play is talking about is the ma1ch ensu~ between Monica and Alan. community. If there is no sense of 1hc uiunsclor throws 1hcm ou1 of 1he obligation to it. we're all left to one Menu Qu\de c~\ect\ori of con ven\en t st restaura~t ' orange Co~ \ets you f\n d menus th a kin g before whafs cOO out t to din e. .. you go ou Nobody Covers the Coast Like We Do Pickup extra copies for your summer house guests. At news stands by 7 every morn- ing. By LYNDA HIRSCH ALL MY CHILDREN: fhc cr.1trt· 1u"n trams of Tad's plan 10 build a h1ghv.a~ "hen Palmer gr1s condcmnallon nolKe Tad refuses 10 back dn"'n lu h" l.imah '\ demands 1ha1 he halt the proJeC'I l •nab Ir w resolve his problems with Joe. Tad decides to move oul of house June ask<, Phoebe for part-ltmC' JOh ( m·a Jnd '1atahe arc trapptd tn\1de ron\lnR 1111n· eleva1or Enca appallt-d "hen Jcrc:-m\ rescues "Jataht' first Tom comt•\ tu E:.m.i' rrscue Enca wants Na1ahc arrt'slcd "'ht'n Nadaht' bcg1ns 10 dutch her ,1omach. she 1s rushed to ho\pttal Em·;i 1ells Jcrcm)' the} ·re through Pa1nr k and \\ ade cement their plans 10 hump oil Phoebe Jane bum\ m)\lrnuu~ le11cr .\ rormcr JO hn of Donna·\ named < dh 1n alls ht'r at ""ork Enca IJ'es "4a1ahe thl' ~1unnmg nt'"'S that the man "'ho mamed \lataltc and Jertm} wa\ an aC'tor p:ud b\ E.nca • • • ANOTHER WORLD: Bn11an' am"c"at 1he lJban to tonsok ( ·athn I )onm1 arr1' cs and spot~( atltn an Branan) ·,Jrm~ C t-c1llc manages 10 get Cass bad w her 'Illa "'here ht' dcc1dt'~ 10 go on hunsl·r \tnke un11I sht' releases him L11 tcll\ ( a1hn that ~all) was 1hrca1ened by Brntany at the pany Thomasina has bct'n acccptt'd a1 l 1CLA and Carter decade\ to go ICJ C ah(orn1a with her When Branan~ goes 1n10 prt'mature labor, Donna n•fu-.e\ '" help . ·~· ... . "'. AS THE WORLD TllRNS· I r.inn1l· bt'heves Mama ktllt'd DOUJla \ Fla1nr bt'ht'"es Marcia wa~ rt'spon\1hlr lor l arohnt'·s death Tom doc\n '1 hchc:-' e ll.1m 1s telhng him tht' "'hole ston dhou1 the night Douglas was murdered John ans1s1en1 that .o\nd) l:omc and lt'c v.11h ham Lucinda order1 Tad 10 gt'C "'ilC\t' work Tom quesllon\ fr.ionic whale Holxon mov~ an for l(O\\~\am1na1ttm Hobson works at d1.-.c.rcd111ng \1ar[lo Ti.Id 'uddenl} reahzt'\ there's a Hlnm•t11on bt'twet'n Barbara and l onm I r.innac rcmembel"'i 1ha1 she wa' fe\1)<1D\1bh: lor Douglas' death Margo lt'ams she·\ Prt'S- nan1 When she goes 10 tell Tom. she spot\ Barbara stroking has hair Bnan tell\ Barbara ht' wanb Tom and \largo reconciled Margo and Hal almu\l km • • • CAPITOL: Zed called 111 morgue lo 1dcn11fy Victor's bod)'. Jenn~ dc1ennmcd 10 find her father's killer Zed learns that Victor disappeared from the watnt'ss protcctton proaram just before his death Ba.Iller tells Clanssa he wants to elope Baxter upSct b)'. mvs1cnou'> phont' ,,111 Unaware that Elsie want\ her lo lake her wa11rcss shift because she ha5 a dale "'''h Dylan, Brenda agrtts IQ the 'I< ht'dulr switch Tre) overhcal"'i Yusef lll'C thr order 10 kill Sloane and Ah when tht'\' arc about to lcavt' tht' palace o\h and \lo..1nt' arc an restaurant whell lht' killer 'lnl..cs l\h fights off Jamal "'ho 1~ captured Myrna want\ Kate out of her home .b \oon as pou1ble • • • DA VS OF OUR LIVES; A rroud Kimberly and Shant' 10 10 hosprta w11h lht' baby 4.1 the hospital thC\ dcc1dC' to get tht' bab) tcstt'd 10 Stt "ho 1he father I\, hanc or V1c1or C1e111ng hold nf lhr lah IC1ts, Emma chaOJC') the l't'SUh\ Ncal tcl!\ Shane aod V1cior 1ha1 V1c1or •~the bah~ ' father Emma 1dmm to Ale\ that \ht made sure the lab lt\IS gavt her the an~""c' she wanted Mike tells Robm thar ht'r nerve wu reconncctt-d in surgt'I') hut the\ both ~lizc 1ha1 her C'3rl'Cr 8\ a surgeon may be ovt'r Vactor filr' laww11 for custody of the baby (. nmhnc SOC\ home' 1<1 act 8 g(ln, ('ame nlO\ llW:I) bcc~USC \ht'·~ unable to accept Romnn as hcr lath<"r Do stunned when ht' lt'nm• that Vlttor not Shawn, is h11 b1ologu.:al falh('r • • • GENER.AL llOSPJT AL: h\~t' IC'll\ I t•n that Kevin " murdtrtr He then 1mn~ Anna to act dooor 10 rclea\C Ten from sanuanum Kevin •p1n1' Ten 3"il} Patnck rcf\J~ 10 ~h<'H that "'t'Vtn wn' 1nvol"ed 1n any of 1hc muHkrs ~\ i\nn11 and Jake amvt 11 pm ate island, t rra rtahzN 1hc only wa., 111 ewape Imm "'rvan I\ to hit him o"er hC'11d l'-1th roe. k I era stnkC'Jh1m on ht'ad and "'e"n tall\uffd11T 10 h1\ death Jal..r It'll' 1 en he'll take rcspon11b1hty for Kt'\tn., death < ''"n' alJttS 10 let Mike h'e \\1lh [)(rt'k Mon1n1 and .\Ian 10 10 m11mlllt' \OUn~lor on orden from divorce iuda<' '1.fon aca stunned -hen s!K learn\ .4,lan \111n1 h<'t lor alimony custoch of i\l1n Jr nnd faron uflke ~yang they should have 1mmcd1a1e another's mercy." di\ orce before one of them lulls the other Because he wrote the play in such Gl'IDING ucffr~ Simon tnrs to ex-tellingly human tenns, his message plain to Ale.ll wh> he wanted her to bchevc still has power. as Bushnell and his he was her brother. When Alex wants superb cast dem onstrate in gripping no1hang1odow1thh1mhegocst0Jcss1efor terms in the Tom Bradley Theater. comfon Jes~1e tells Simon she loves him the largest of the four playhouses in ' II.' le unable to find Maeve. Reva tells ham lhe center. \he:-ma~ be the ont' 10 blamt' for Mat've·s .--------------~-------------------------------------------~ disappearance and then explains how \1acve ma)' ha~e seen her k1ssana Kyle. Flt'tcher accuSt's India of t'mbeulement. Fletcher escaJ)t'S from the hospital 1n order 10 ~arch for Macvc. Ph1ltp finishes his no' cl Claire mll rcmams in cn11cal 1."nd111on -\Ian Spaulding helpmg Baron 'lln Halk and embezzle from the Spaulding r uundauon by havinJ money scn1 10 ')ophaa the baron's maid • • • LOVING: When Loma 1s conv1c1ed of murder. Cabot dectdt's 10 fire Zach and act another law) er 10 appeaJ the case. Spider ~oe~ after Tnsh and Steve an Montreal. 'i1an rears that A ,,a will never allow her or J;11. k· 10 ~t' the baby again. Steve and Tnsh agree 10 help Jules on undercovrr dope dral ""h1ch mvolves Pierre Blanchard. Hunt continues 10 harass Dolly Ke11h catches ham at 1hc1r houK and tells him nc"cr to come back or hc·11 be sorry. Shana and Doug conunue to sec each other • • • ONE LIFE TO LIVE: Jenn} and Brad loll ow Da' 1d after he's taken away by hnw t hn1 grabs Monica. demanding 10 ~nov. Da' ad's l'hcrtabouts Bchev1ng Craig a threat. Richard ha~ plan 10 gel nd n t ham Connie 1s afraid that Brad may bt' murdered an Vienna Tina impressed w11h l'ord but stans 10 feel guilty over her fechngs for hrm Donan tells John she's l'nnccmed about Paul Kendall John takes lwcr '.Ml\ 1ng that he wall try 10 find Paul for hn Cr:ug holds gun on Cassie sn lounge \\ hen Richard Stts thrm. he shouts Craig 1 um~ 10 shoot Cassie Cord distracts him "11h lla~hbulb whalt' Rae hard Jumps Cnug. In \ 1enna. Clint and David fight w11h 01c1cr A.ficr Daelt'rs knockt'd out. Chnt un\hackles David Da' 1d and Jenn}' have ht'anfch reunion • • • RYAN'S HOPE: ()(', ltn. finally feeling tree. tells Jack ht' should support and help Rid.. Rack. who was shot an upper chest. decides to io to bookie joint and get mont'y for V1nnae. Pal removes bullet and agrees not to go 10 pohcc t'Ven though it could JCOpard1u his medical career. Dakota tells Pal he should work an the cl a nae w11h Evan Rack shows up at Ryan·, prom When Ryan d1~overs he·, been shot ~he:-1s homfied. Rick passes out and 1s 1aken 10 hospital an shock Roger lets 11 shp 10 Jall thal Maggie wrnl straight to Frank when Jill had amnesia, but that Frank rtJectcd her. Jill 'hocked that Dakota made 11 seem as though Frank and Maggie had become loven • • • SANT A BARBARA: Charged with Dylan's murder. Kell} taken 10 sana· 1anum G tna gets nd of evidence wtuch ""ould nonerate Kelly Raped by Marte. Man doesn't d1vulgt' the rape to Mason but docs talk 10 "•sler Isabella Oma eonft'sscs 10 Eden that Kirk tned to kill Eden and that Gma tned to pull plug on C C ' respirator. Sophia confides 10 l aoncl that she had breast canctr but doctors feel she will be fint' • • • SEARCH FOR TOMORROW: unny reah1es that Bela has crush on Llza Sunny 1cll\ Bela she's urrd of t'vcry man in Hrndt'r10n being 1n1t'rested 1n Liu and onl) cons1derin1 ht'r a fncnd . Caancy upset when ~uinn. Burley and Lt. Ol"lnd show up for dinner. Stu and Wilma nearly make love hut Stu pulli back. say1na that he care• '° much for Wilma ht can't take advanta&e of her T.R.dcctdcs tostnk.eout on ht'r own Sunny su11>naed when Bela whips up dinner for her at btr apartment CnanC) sugests that Quinn share •'*"' ment with lum and Su11 Uo)'d tell' 1..t.n · that ht\ reAdy to d1vortt her Bela and b1cllc make lo'e l11a tt'lls Jo that sbt urts for Hopn • • • YOUNG AND THE R~TL . TeU1na pohet 'he thinks Jack •hot Mr. Jill decides to 10 at\er him. Police d«tdc 10 ltccp Jeck from ao•na 10 Tah1t1 N1kk1 1Tfu11e1 10 bchc"c Jaclt shot Jill Enbtf\Jns~ful an tr\'•"I 10 •top Ka\.c·~ dnnkma Victor 1t'lls !\•hie he -.ants to marry her the minute h1i d1..,ortt ts final from N1ldu OFFIEFtS TO TM~ PCJ6LIC AS A bi ceriJ :' ~1 m n11, t•1~J;i411 a On Entire Stock ot Men~ Clothinq aod FUrnishinqs I Rising operational costs. failure to realize anticipated income and lack of sentiment on the part of our creditors, forces us into this position ... sell off the stock, convert the merchandise into cash and let tomorrow decide the future. Every effort will be made to weather the storm . Therefore: effective immediately, the entire stock has been placed on sale at a fraction of its true selling price; everything Including the newest arrivals fo r spring and summer. There are no exceptions .. no restrictions. If it's In the store. it's for sale at "NEVER AGAIN PRICES." This sale 1s for you .. Don't MISS it! Over One Million Dollars of current and just arrived suits, sport coats, slacks dress shirtsl ~ies. and assorted sportswear will go on sale at reductions of 30% to 50%. IF 'f()(J()VtYREMEMIJEI< tW£ J>At.£ IN~ WHOl£ /.IFERMf ••. THIS' fl//J. 8£ THE ONE.I 1HE \ELL1 N(, OF THI~ ~TOl'K '~NO W AN URGEN T NE~fSSITl ~.Vlll"­ Am9rican £..,,... e« ..... *TUSTIN STORE ONLY -· -- STORE HOUIS: Mon -Sot Sun 10-6 11 -5 -------------------~ 621 Soulh B Sattt 'Wldn, CA 92680 Phonei 7141731-7151 '"'' 11u always Ntn • ct111llty 1torw anel ..n 11~n 1 4111111ty stort 11n111 Ille 1111 Clly ot 1t1 11111~ hi ~ ,_ICH 111 .... IMftlleMIM wttl IM .. yOll "",_, .. to 1111111 Wit fOll " not fltln\lllf Tl111 ult at tor rou Dtfl t 1111aa 1t• ' ~.l\t ',d11.1hlt· t!.1-.ohne ll\ pl.rn n1ni.! -.hopp11t ~· t 11p.., tu lr><'<tl "t ort•' ;ul "·r t'~"'~ 111 11w Dally Piiat -t_ ................ ....._ __ .....__~· ---- --. • l A8 Or.nge Cout DAILY PILOT/ Saturday, May 31, 1988 ·' TV LISTINGS _.._ U~~::;y ,....., IUCKAOOEN """"awort MCN'Y 11(1)8 PAAISl M LOAD 1lll WfEK IC OOUNTAY ... MOYIE H \.i "Wt U¥t Agtln ' (1~) Frtdtlc Mlfdl. AMI. Sten. 'l) WAES1UfG -t.30-.. TM8 WEB< IC IASEIALL e tW'P'f DAYS 8 9 EWOKS AHO OAOID9 AIMJfT\JAf HOUR Cl SUPER SPORTS AMERICA Cf) OHE 8TtP BEYOHD • QUJBAH'S l8l.ANO • WALL fTI&T WEEK CD GOATBWA: FROM 8UU.ETS TO BAL.LOTS 8 PUNKY HWSTER Gil OHE WAY GAME Gr) P\A Y8All -10:00-• Cll RICtiE RICH e a~ LAVERNE & SH!RLEY FlV -~MAKER ., MOVIE t••,i, "Tarzan Ands A Son" (t939) Jollmy Weiwnuller, MIUl'een O'Sul- livan e CATS ANO DOGS G ... COOP£R'S ORANGE CXUITY fl!) CHll.DAEJtS CINEMA ~~ H Just One O! The Guys" (1985) r.::: Clayton RoMef • • •;, Dracula A 0 1972" ( 1972) Ct1ns1ophef Lee. Peter Cushing CS:MOVIE ... '1 "I Thri A Foor I 19621 Susan Haywafd Peter FIOCll (I)MOVIE • • •;· "Dune · ( 191Ml Kyte Mecl• dllan FrwalCI Annis -10:30- • (I; OUHOEOMS & DMOOHS 8 WHATS HAPPENINGn 8 @) SUP9I POWERS TEAM: GALACTIC GUARDIANS 0 Cf) PVTT1N' Ott THE HITS •• VICTORY GARDEN C!) teiA D WESTBROOK HOSmAl ®MOVIE • t • "Relntree County 119571 Ellz· aoeth Tay\Or Montgomery Clift CL. MOVIE t • ' "The ~EndlllO Story' ( 1984) Noah Hall'll#IY Barrett Oliver l=-TMIN ~GOUMIET Di\Llf:'IMI Ml>ENA8CAR -n:ao- 1 (I) GET ALONG OANO M1W ON M HrT'8 9 AIBICM IAHDSTN«J K8t HOW'8 CHINEIE COOKERY I QAfAT 8'1a. MOE ARTMEl.EMf ...v JAY JOHNSTOHE'S ANGELS AF'TEANOON -1to0-I =::zsroooe G UOYIE • • 1i1i "T,,. Neptune Disaster ( 1973) Ben Gmata. Yvet1e Mlmleux Cf) FAME .MOYIE t "Unbettable Oregon" (19811 Lu Fq, Sun Chitr'I e b.l>OOLD l lOOYWATCH HOGAN'S HEAOE8 DEAF WORLD ~ MOYIE **"'"Son O! Fury' (1942) Tyrone Poww. Gene Tierney ~~GAMES * * • • AmacltuS (1984) F Mur· ray A.t>tahlm. Tom Hlllce -12:30- 1 ~= AT THE MOVIES l lOOYWATCH OAf.AT SPACE RACE (I) WONDER WOMAN @ MOVIE H• "Clpncom One 11978) ENlott Gould. James Brohn MEADOWl.ARK LfMOH MOVIE t t ''°' "0,A RY l I 1985) Mary a.th Hurt. Mldleel McKean (l)WOVIE *'" "Children Ot The Com (198'1 Peter Horton Linda Hamltton . -t:00-1 ~CUP SOCC£A 8 AMBICA'S CHOICE IASOAl.L m MOYIE * • "Nero Wolle' ( 19791 Thayer Da- vid, Anne Baxter fDOOCTOAWHO 8!) CHAN.ES TAYLOA '1\)WAESTlM -P ' DANCE FEVER -1:30-IJ Cl) C8S SPORTS SPECIAL O MUNSTEM 0 SETTl«J THE PACE ~ OAf.AT Sf'Al;f RACE m BEHN> THE 8CeHES -t;(I0- 1 :llHllO· MOHO Ott THIBIOI 1=.Kl>8 U~ "Thi Recera" (195$) Klrtc Oouam. C.er Aolnero I• lmY JfM fllOll•Otl TB.EPHOHE AUCTION MOYIE *** "Mlc*I & Maude" (191MI Oud· ~Moore. Alrry ll'W'O FAME QWUS CHAMPUH TAU<S wmt -2-.30- 1 :1'rm SPORTS Lmea THITfWIOC8 I GAEAT SPACE RACE FAMILY ONE WAY GAME (H)MOW * • "Brewt1er'1 Mlttlont" ( 1985) Richard Pryot. JoM Candy CD MOW • t "Cal' a Eye" ( 1945) Ortw Bar· (£°'~111'111 Wooda. * • ·~ "Morocco" (1930) Gary Coo- per. Marlene Dietrich -3;00- D 80I UECKER'& WACKY WOfl.D Of 8PORTS e MOVIE * *'~ ''U'I Abner" (1959) Peter Palmer. Julie New!nlf 8 AUTO RACING G llOMC WOMAN 9)MOVIE * • \.i "Clambalce" (1967) EM• Pres- ley, SNlley FablleS •WJYA t11 OAfA TEST SPORTS l.EGE.N06 Q!MOVIE • •·~ "The KJng O! Marvin Gar- dens" ( 1972) Bruce Dern, JllCk NI· ctlOISOn 8.i> CHRIST\AH UFESTYlf MAGAZINE (l) ST AR TREK (S)MOVIE * * * "The l.Jttlt Prince" 1197'1 Richard Kiley, Gene WllOer -3:311-8 PGAOOlF D ~anNO ~Of SPff.D AMO BEAUTY e DOOGEA camw. G) THE CA08SINO Cl) R8CINO fT All t1JJ WIDE WORLD Of SPORTS 6!) HBITAGE SINGERS -3:45- • DOOGEA PRE-OAME _.:00-D ST AR GAMES G FAKrASY ISi.AHO (!) rrs A LMNO G)BASEBAU I~ 8!)8ENNYHINH !:WAYMaCA .. "Thi Big Helt" (1963) °*"' FOfd, Glotta Graheml ~~ • t t "Thi Sutt Thing" 11985) John ~. Oaptv,. ZA.wga. ~:ao- l ~ T~~SPOm UOTOAWIE( BJAOP!AN JOUANA1. MOVIE .. "Gtaca OuiQW;" ( 191M) Kattta- r1nt Hepburn, Ntc* Nohe. CDMOVIE h "Gymklta" (1985) Kurt Thotn&a. T~anl **"' "Fandango" (1985) KtWI Coe1ntr, Judd Nelton. -5.-00-• aw.tPtOMS: WON.D'S GREATEST AT'Ht.ETU I 8TIIC'Tl. y 8U8IB8 FAME I= SHEEP SOUADAOH .. ~ "Z.Wdol" (1974) Sean eon. rttrf, Chwlotte ~· e MOW t t t "Poctcet Money" ( 1972) PllJI Newman, Lee Marvin. I OAf.AT Sf'Al;f RACE DllNO If FRAHCE Cl) W'A'S'H ILv~Lf . WAESTUNO MOVIE ttt "Duel In The Sun" (t947) .i.tl- nlftr Jones. GregotY Peck -5:30- UNEWS G UOTORWEB< AUCE 9 AIC NEWSQ Q!..C:NEWS !~ (I)MOVIE ' t t t "Henry IV ( t98-41 Matcello MISlrolanni Claudia Card1nalf EVENINO -8.-00- 8 Cl) C8S NEWS ..C:NEWS D MOYIE • • • "The Honeymoon Macnme (1961)SteYe McOoeen. Jim Hutton 8AICNEWS9 G atl.DAEN'S MIRACLE NETWONC TEl..ETHON .DllNO .. z G) NATURE • .1 t1J) WMP IN TI Q! MEDICAi. MARVELS 8D A08ERT SCHIJU.EA m TOl<\a) 6Al'ZENSEH ~MOVIE t * '" ProtOCOI I 198'1 GOidie Hawn Ctlns Sarandon I -ON THEMJIAIER GNAT RA.I.WAY JOUANEY8 THIWOALD e TREAIUAE HOUSES Of lflTAIN l ~HOUI t • "Thia It Thi Uft" ( 19 .. ) Donald O'Connor. Suunnt FOii• ~~ lMAKEPfACE t t•t "Amadtua" (191M) F Mur· (ii=· TomHulce. U~ "Dune" (191M) Kyte Mac:LI· chlln, FrWIC*CI AMII -t.:30- -~STORY ~ DAVE AOEVEA -10:00- 1 IMGNUW, p .L QI '89«JTON STEELE NlW8 MOTHER AMO 80N eAMENCAHPlAYHOUSE (I) atLDABt1 ww.ct.E NE'fWOfl< TB.EntON CONTINUES !~LEMON t t \4 "Loeln' h" (1982) Tom Crut11, Jalt Earle H~. (8)MOYIE "Al Summers Ole" (t9861 Scott Glenn. Jamie Lee Cur11s. ([)MOYIE 0 \4 "Code O! Siience" 11984) Chuck Norris, ~Iva. TWLIOKT ZON£ -t0:06- • l.RSTYlE8 Of THE RICH AND FAMOUS -10:30- 1 IN SEAACH Of_. SNEAK PREVIEWS AACHER8 ll&BtDEHT NEWS -10'..45- • 8POATS PAGE -11:00-• ••Im at NEWS · 9 MTV TOP 20 VIDEO COUNTOOWN Cf) T AlS FROM THE DAAl<SIDE .MOYIE * t 'h "Blood Feud' (19731 James Stewar1, Strother Martin eBENNYHU ,. ~Mt Hlllot'• Holldly'' (1953) .--1at1.Nat*~ L~tOmOI I CND STA'fON.8U88EWlil HOT&U l#fCA: TEARS Of FM9fE -11:aD- l ~~NOHTuvt ftlWl'08S SPCRT8 WEBCBI> i~ ••'A ''81ow·UP" (198e) David = vaneaaa Redgra¥t ... "Cwrlt" (1976) SiMy Sploak, f~oo.o * * "Thi Perlla O! Gwendoline" (11184) hwny Kitten, 8rtn1 Hutt -11:36- (B)MOYIE *·* "Btewster's Millions• (1985) Ric:tlard Pryor. John Candy -11:46- !~tEWSQ "Model BtMvlor" ( 1985) B<uce to':d Bekins. • ·•NeYer Sleep Alone" ( 1984) John l..etlt. Victoria JICUon MOYIE *"' "To M A Good Night" (191M) Jennlter Runyon. Forrtll Swanton -12:00-1 ="Ott THE HITS • • t "Shatt" ( 1971) Richard Rol.wldtret, Motel Gunn. • CHIJHH'8 MIAAClE NETWOM TB..ETHOH CONTIHU£S i ::=rtEWS OAHClt Ott AJA (!)AT THE MOVEI -12:30- • NAME Of THE GAME e AMBICA'S TOfl T9f Cf) MOYIE • * • "Sbc Bridges To Crosa" ( 1955) T QnY Curllt, Julie Ad8QIS e MONTY PYTHON'S Fl YING aACU8 8 SAMIOAY AUVE Cl>MOYIE • * • * "A Ltrter To Three Wives" (1949) Jeanne Crain. Linde Darnell. arv-s1:00- .WOYIE * • * "Mrs Miniver" ( 19421 Greer Garson. Walter Pidgeon Cl) Qtl.DfE(8 ~ NE1WOAK TB..ETHON CONTINUES ~~BEAM * • "e.chllOt Per1Y" (1994) Tom Kria. Twrry Kltaln -1'16- 'R~ Colton Club" (1914} Rldlwd Gitt. GrtQOIY Hk'ttt ([)MOYIE u "Cara Eye" (1985) Ortw Bw· 00.;;:n-Woodl **"' "FlndlllQO" (19851 KM! Coe1ntr, Judd Helton -1:20- MOYIE *'" "GymUta (1985) Kur1 Tilclma Tttehlt~ l ~,oa· •HEWS~ ~IEYOtlO -to0- 9 MOYIE * t ·~''Three'• A Crowd" ( 196$) IM· iHagmtn. E J ~er HrT cm ('IN ST'EREOI wow **'" "Cu,_ O! The Undeld" ( 1959) Eric Aernlng, Mldlall Pate 8 QltEWS l~HOOUE t t \4 "The Mott Olngerout 01111t" ( 1932) Joel Mcef11, Fay Wray -2:30-g ArC()N) GUIDE ~=OHENEWS ••~ "South Sea Woman" 11953) Buf1 Lencaster. Vltginll Mayo fD .IOt4N Wlil8EA -2:50- -3:00- l ~S MIRACl.E NETWORK m.ETHOH CONTlNUE8 ~::>THE SCEHf.S u ,,; "Code O! Sllenee" 1198') Chuck Norris. Htnry Sltva.. (Z)WOYIE *'h "Chlldr., O! Tiit Coro' (198-4) Pel• Horton. Linda Hamilton -3:15- G!) AEUOK>US PAOORAMMIHO -3:25- C)WOYIE • t 1"1 "The NalleO Face' {191M) F1oO« Moore. Rod St91gtr . -3:30- " LOST IN $PA/:;f -3:45- g)MqfrE * * *"' "Macie FOf Each Other" ( 19391 Carole Lombatd. Jamee Stew- art • MOVIE. * • ·~ 'Web Ot Evidtnce" I 1959) Viti Johnton. Vera Mlltl -11:00-H) SUfMVAl 1J Cll POU POSl'TlOtl P PIJTT1N' Ott THE HITS =~c?'==-~-L ..:::::;::=m===RElJGIOUS===-===~====IHG::...=========~i Shandlingtakes Joan's 'Tonight' duties WIBI 111 IDll n • yoo... By JERRY Bl 'CK ··1 tend to talk about things In m~ Hn finaf. ff it t-.f. 4~ r.-...io.. writ~ ltlc. Rela11onships. my new house. 11·0t n ID'U m~ dog. I don'! Lalk a lot about Alllf hit mith I LO~ ·\:".('~I I\ -ll \Ou "'ant lu f)Oltt1cs. although that's an area I'd nlll 111 ftllll B... kllO\\ the lall'\t Ill (,arn ·5handling\ like loe>.plore more." life all ) uu ha' e to do ,., lt~ten to h1<. ror more dt'la1ls about Shandhng's L wllow rnmed\ on tclc' 1!>1on ltfC'. tune into "GarT) Shandltng's 0 "I'\(; JU~t bought a new house and Show.' the original wnters for NBCs moved into 11 "he said ··1 hve alone "Saturda~ Night Live." I have a dog. I'm th1nkins of naming .. It's li ke the old 'George Burns Mii~ tllell -Is 11 lis fit m> next dog Mrs. Shandhng. ~ho"".' ""here Burn-; talked to the ~ . f----------------. camera It's ltke a situation comedy \jjj/~ but I break the fourth wall and talk to ...:;;. the audience. The fir~tep1sodc 1H1ght '>atd .. There·~ been mi talk about me replacing Joan Ri vers a'> pcrmam·nt ~ubstllute host I've no tdl·a "'hJt they're going to do .. Shandhng refused to <'omnH•nt about the well-reported feud ht·tween Carson and Miss Rivers \handling \atd man~ pcoplt' think he\ from Ne"' York. but actuall> he wa-; horn and ra1.-.ed 1n Tucson '\nz He \lud1ed elctLronit engineenng nt the l n1vers1I) ol Anwna and took hu<,inc~~ and crcat1H" "'nting m graduate ~hoot He mo' ed to u>s Angeles and qu1tkl} hccnmc-a wnter oftelc ... 1s1on s11uat1on comcd1e\, including "San- ford and ~on·· and "Wt•lcome Bad .. Kotter·· NOW SHOWING! out of m\ life. I break up wtth .i girl and mo\.e into a new plan·:· If you can't wait until September. he'll be the guest host of N RC's "Tonight Sho"" ··for the weeks of June :! and Jul) 14 handling ha'i been host three tim<.'s in the pa'it three >cars He is the only person besides Mis-. Rl\ers to be subsutute ho~t during that time ··Eacrt time I was calkd the night before Once the> called me the same da>." he said ... So I dtdn•t ha' e much ume to prepare. which was f)robably a good thing in retrospect I d1dn·t have a\ much time to get nervous a~ I do now 'J wac; not h.spp~ wnung mua11on lOmcd} .. he <.lid .. I \.\3\ al .... ay~ f.ic;c1natcd hy standup rnmed>. I think it'!. :s real art. The very first time I got on stage 11 ""urkcd. so I ""as l'ncouraged to con11nue UW1111 m mo ,ACflC ANAIOI Dll II IHU P&U m 4993 UA MO~fS I HlllH llllYE 530 '40 I CDWAllDS WCSTBllOO« ORAHE 637-0340 AMC OllANGC MALL HAHE 634-3911 UA CITY conn w11T111m11 19i ms CDWARDS CKMA wm U Tiii • (DWAll.DS SAOOl[BACK Sil S&IO OOll'f n1110 POl TllGEIST II THl OTHEI SIDI ~1 1 1110 l lO • JO •·40 I 10 lO U t POllCl ACADtMY 3 BACK IN TRAINING "' 00 •• , • lO PUTIY IN PINK f'O t , " • JO 10 ll THUNDER AUN Krlli I 00 )00 100 100 I It 00 ---. ~ ,, .-. ,_ 9 ' , WUICS t I 00 I 40 10 10 ,,SS Of THf s"ou WOllUN • Ml 1 1 LOW BLO W t 100 •101)0 cR1nus l'G-ll 1 U t •O 10 J9 bOti\i SH•IO )11;; JINN AT CLOSE RANOI t lll0 4441U WlSf GUY\Jt1 >• 10011 ANAHEIM THUNDH RUN "'· I DfATH WISH Ill t LOW 8l0W t AT ClOSf RANG( 1t ~AlVADOR t UGIND rPOt ORANGE 1'• eH Ot \ t ,., t C•t,...t! 'OM UUtU fOlll OUN 1,.1 GlTIING IV(N 111 1ffVI OU"1Nl llO SHORT Cl•CUtT IN • IRON lAOU ,.. 111 • LA MIRADA DOUY STlllO POLTH GllST 11: TH( OTHH SIDI 11'G-ll 11 >o > .>0 • is • •o • o to 10 OOle f SflttO"TOM UUtU TOP GUN 11c:. I 00 l 20 S 40 I 00 10 lO \11.;1 GllnlNlf•O SHORT CIRCUIT 11c:. ' I l :IO S 4l I 00 10 10 )Ill w.t1 t OS l 20 S JO, •S I 00 OUT O J AflllCA .... 00 4 I 0 7 10 '~ JO Or ONlf l JO t H J lS \Nl•ll l>HV1IW I 00 THUNDER RUN !>Goll I J 00 S 00 1 01 t 00 10-SO P•ETTY IN PINK llG-l>J 11 40 & •O I &O LUCAS ""u 1 &O & &0 10 40 BUENA PARK e tCMAJID tt'IYO• JO JO DANCH . YOUR LIFI II CALU NO c11 OOWN AND OUT IN llVHL y HILU II ) JAIU i'UD "° alST Olff NSI " UfVf GUTTINllHI SHOil Cl•CUIT 1N 1 llON IA.GU 1,._IJI LaHABRA .i~u .. tlfVf °"1tt •••.o SHOtT Clli:UIT 1'61 IRO N lAOU N-UI GATEWAY ECHO PAIK 11 11' 4 1' o tO I 11 10 lO DOW N AND O UT IN 8EV£AL Y HILLS 111 I :IO S >0 •110 CROSSROADS 111 J JO 1 lO ll 10 Ul rtA SIUID $OllNO HlVUTII \lllllOHI C08RA 111 I lO l JO I •I 1-00 10 t I DOll Y nn10 SIAH l>INM AT CLOSE RANGE 111 110 .,u GUNG HO 1~•>1 ll 11 6JO IC>-41 AL.JIM ALDA SWHT LllHTY 1'°1 t )I l •to MASK f~UI 2 20 ... 10,. .. lTIYIJlll UAllOHI COIRA '91 llllOTICTO• 111 l'Ol THGllST Ill THI OTHI• Slot ''°""' CAT'S IYI (,...IJJ THUNDI• •UN rl'e U 1 DIATHW1SH 111 m tOM UUUI TO, GUN '"' ILUI CITY (II He'll he \ubbing for Johnn) ( arson during the weeks Joan Ri vers was <,uppoo.cd to sit 1n That 1c;, before '>he announced her new latc-n1gh1 show on the fourth network being planned b~ the r o.\ Broadcasting Co. 'Tm JU~t doing the two "'~'t.'k, " he RUFFELL'S UPHOLSTERY INC. "Allogether. l''t hcen on 'The Tonight Show' about :w lo 10 11mes. But unfortunatel}. there·., no train- 1ngground for hcinga host You can't go an~ .... here to learn 'r ou learn on the JOb." Earlier th11> year on \hn\.\ol1mt. ~handling put together h1'> own talk sho"' o\ctuall>. what he did was the 25th ann1 ... ersar) tor a talk show that neH·r was. Th\' Showt1me special "'ac, l'allcd "The CiarT) Shandling Show: 25th ~nn1versal) Special " "I think some people had no idea "It too~ a lot of rou rage 10 get up on \!age thl' fir..t time I was very lnghtencd .ind I wa' incrcd1bly sclf- consnous" H 'SW EET LIBERTY' IS A SW EETHEART OF A MO VIE." Where Yow Dal¥ Co•tn Morel "'hat was going on "he <>aid "I got the 1---19_22_HM1a ___ Bl_VD_ .. _cos_TA_IE __ ~_1_1_1!16_~ idea eight years ago when I wa., a Hl' "'as c;o Jetermined 10 makC' 1t a<i a \tan<lup lOmlC that he gave up .,.,nt1ng for th e sitcom'> "I went from makin~a lot ofmonc-. to no money at all which <.ent my pan:nts into shock. to sa) nothing of 1he girl I wa!I dating."' he said "I performed at amateur night at the Comedy Store or al the Natural Fudge Co .. a health food restaurant I rcmcmhcr ll was a big thing ""hen 1 "'on S2S at amateur night at St1d-) finger\ I •t lh '>Ji tUI llll ll'll·\~ '>ll\l\X PG «Jt ~ A UNIV£ RSA! PICTURE -NOW PLAYING - I , ... •1i•• ... A. ... t.O••• titU• .,,.,., . .. ._, ••Jofllt.t I ~I\ ...... ....,.,.T...01'1'>Jrri MA(1 lff~~, .. ~ MAC'" ,.............. ...... . ..... .. .. • ..,.... ..,'t(_.t ... _ .. OILU v tit•AAO• rt•ut()t , .... '"'~ JllL. ··-VJ'''' •t • ~.l.MOlt ¥-..,0 ••• , ...... ,,,,. -.av,.rp "'-~ ......,.~~ . ... ..., ... "No. 5 is a IO~' 'Tll \I 0 ,,,.,, •f\ .. ,l>P'Jl""Ol.'"T•l'IO' ~ 'PG q ,! ·~·~~~~~~·,.~~~· .___ ~· "'" •• .,....q,'W''•~<A ·-u •"Ullflt..Of~ HACM •wtttM!IOfUI • ,,. ,_,.1 ~ " ' ' • "' ... .... •MO•Ult. 1•¥'1ft I •• j ... .. -. ... ,, .,~ ~ I\ •CC.TA•Jr& •l••AOA ·~ .. -..~ .. 4 ..... ~, ..... ,, ~l'<o!' ""'/110 •COlfl •ia,li • .. l .. WA ~"'··· ,.. ..... ..., ... )ii.,.... ..... v¥ •k-... '110 (dfll"lir" i .. .--.c: Sll'f'H '-U1M1 •lillu 'AA• • . .. .. "ti' • " .. ..... • .. D.t-.UUI"" m ......... .. _ ---- ft IOUT ITlllO ...._ .. , ... M2-4ttl UA MOW:S I CllU IDA m-41&4 lDWAIDS TOMI conn .,,..,34.m3 -llt-1771 STMUt• II IMl m mt llWll•AP\.ALA ._,, 9llA t71-'l4l et.I-SZJ.1'11 lDWMDS CllJM t:OOD "CW-IC &ATtWA' en r• Ml·MOO ..... ""'JM mo mwMDS n ra.o mw.s 111Ssa ftJO MAU ..,. ~au *lfln9 n1a 1 mw ~ _.,, tiMI conu l\A MIU (2U) ltl·OW llllWnl ltl-XU -fARD SQ1.1ME 'M:fle MIWAY J9 Oii_,. ........... 1nw-"tB• • &a .m.10 Y9 IM-Wl l wnter. I thought. wouldn't 11 he funm fot someone to have an ann1vl'r!MlrY \ho .... as though he'd hcen on :!'i ~e.lr'i .. "The turning po101 ""as the first time I dtcl 'The Tonight Show,' 1n March 19~1 After that I began working regularl:r .. POLTERGEIST II TILXJ[] ®'ITDCJ~ffi @D~ ~~~~NOWPlAVING ~~~~ *llllA * lllVllll MISSION VII.JO •SANTA ANA telwarcu 8r1no1 5'!0-74" Mann 8rA 1'11Dt ~5.338 EC1w1rdt WOOCIDrlelg• EC1w1r<1s VllJO l'w1n ,,, OIJ'5 930-8990 * COS'T'A MU A Edward• Harl)O( l'Mn 931 3.!lOl IL TOflO f.dw1rdJ Sadd i.beck '81 5880 * I.A MlllAOA PKlfk s La Mlt.01 llM2400 t.AGUNA HACH Eelwtrds SOuth CoaJt 4117 1711 •OllAllGE Cln.clOmt 1!134-ZSS3 OllANOt Stlellum Ott•• In 8allc8770 •STANTON EC1w1rO\ Vll·•o• Cent.r 891 O!Wi'I WUTMINST'tll P11<lflc I HI Wty 39 Onvt-ln 891 34113 • Hurmtii<ffiii l&At H ( -· ~o '"=-' £dw1rdJ therur Ctntrt . [I J 841-0770 "A CLEVERLY ENGINEERED COMEDY, A WARM-HEARTED FARCE-FANTASY." .. -CHARLES CHAMPllN t05 .ANGELES TIMES Fl1 l:OO, 1:15. 10:15 SAT/U 2~00, 4:00, 6:00, l:lS, 10•15 edwards LIDO CINEMA ~"IA'=':-673-8350 • "A MUST SEE FILM.'' la<k C lllrl I \A IOl>lo\ "SIZZLING AND TENDER. A lovr uffiur bctWt'C'n 1wu womrn done wnh )tylC' .md punuu11C'd with homor Wollam ~.~I l1All.'l,l JI 11.l \l ~\I RVll l fRI 5:45, 7:45, 9:45 SAT/StM 1:45, l:4S S-45, 7:45, t :45 erfwar ds TOWN CF NTf R .. ~[~·,~~ ~.~:·" "751 -4184 I Kirk Douglas, Burt Lancaster mix it up as 'Tough Guys' First teamed in 194 7, veteran actors now playing agtng hoods in new movie By 808 THOMAS f SS,,,_...., LOS ANGELES -Police cars raced into the train yard, the officers ready to do benle with a couple of agina tou&h ruys. An army of cops fired hundreds of rounds from rifles aod shotau.ns at the two hijackers on board the grand old Dayli&ht Limited. When the smoke cleared, K.irk Doualas and Burt Lancaster stepped down from the oil- bumina steam train and headed for the a.bade of the train shed. For the 69-ycar-<>ld Douglas and 72-year-<>ld Lancaster, retirement is out of the question. They arc making their seventh film t~ether, "Tough Guys," for Disney s Touchstone Films. The two stars play old-time robbers who return ·to an inhospitable Los Angeles after spending 30 years in jail. Bored with their humdrum lives, they return to their old profession of robbing trains. That sets off a chase that leads them and the train to the Mexican border, ~ursued by the cop who had once jailed them, Charles Durning. The other day director Jeff Kanew staaed the Douglas-Lancaster escape, witb Durning's army of police finng at the two tough guys. A helicopter parked nearby whirred slowly, the sound of its engines almost ob- literated by the deafening din of the fusillade. The train staned to move unlll the d1rcctor called, "Cut!" The loco- motive with its bright new paint was 10 the contrast to its surrounding_,. In the background were rows of other railroad cars, unwashed with paint peeling. The train sheds and service building_, were dilapidated and layered by years of Sm<>J. The old Daylight which once pLied the Southern Pacific route between San Francisco and Los Angeles and became the Freedom Train during the U.S. Bicentennial, looked good. It stopped running in t 955 and now resides at a retirement home in Portland, Ort. Lancaster stepped down from the locomotive first, an erect figure in a pcnod pin stnpe sun and snap-brim fedora. He spoke in has fam1har. chpped sentences. mostly in adm1ra- t1on of the Daylight. "What a wonderful locomot1vc," he said. "This one was built m 1940 and continued on the lane until 1955. A bunch of railroad buffs completely rebuilt the engine so it works perfectly now. Look locomotive wheels are marvel." at the size of it! The weighs 237 tons. The eiaht feet tall. It's a He drifted off to his motor borne and dressing room. Lancaster is not very conversant on movie sets. Douglas is. "What fun I'm llavingf' Douglas said. "This is making up for what I missed in my childhood. I never had trains to play with. • "Now look. I aot a put bi& train for my own toy. I get to play cops and robbers with guns, police cars. even a helicopter. How could anybody be sc luck yr' The Douglas-Lancaster teamin1 goes back to just after World War II when they were brought from New York for contracts with Hal Wallis. They first co-starred in 1947 in "I WaJk Alone." Ten years later, the) played Doc Holliday and Wyatt Earp m the classic western "The Gunfight at OK Corral.'' They delved into George Bernard Shaw with "The Devil's Disciple" in 1959, followed by "The List of Adrian Messenger" m I 963 and "Seven Days in May" (I 964). Their last film together was the I 977 "Victory at Entebbe.'' "Was Burt in thatr' quened Douglas. "I only worked only one day, and I didn't see him." They alsc co-starTed in San Fran- cisco in a play, ··The Boys of Autumn," appearing as Tom Sawyer and Huck Ftnn in their 60s. • Dou$las, also dapper in a wide- lapel, pm stripe and fedora, remarked that be and Lancaster have remained friends over the years but don't often see one another. "We used to play golf together. but in the past 10 years I've been playing tennis." he said. "Occasionally we'll have dinner, and ifl need something I'll give him a call, and he does the same with me." K.anew said the mspiration for the rete.aming came at last year's Academy Awards when the two actors made an appearance together with Douglas' son, actor-producer Michael Douglas. The "Tough Guys" filmmaken found the ideal over-the- bill desperados. "They arc basically pl,aying their own ages," K.anew said. "Burt docsn 't want to be 'The Crimson Pirate,' and Kirk doesn't want to be 'Spartacus.' They're happy being what they are: Bun. quiet, withdrawn but with heart: Kirk full of crazy energy." lUX&MY THl.ATlfS TOO~Y'S TIMf:S ONLY * W~LK·INS * U . •at••'" Ma,lnHI enoted by () -CINE-Fl GONE- SPEAKERS ARE BACK S Mte.a ...-0 nut SHOWS AT 1 :11) ):)0 5 :41110 10:15 llO llO DNCEa fa) SHOWS AT (I :30) 3:35 5 :40 7:45 t :SO 7 Otc.trl ·~ MO (N·1J) OUT Of' A .. •ICA .a) (1 :10) 5:20 t :2S Pretty SHOWS AT (12:45) In Pink (f'0·1l) 3 :55 7 100 tO:IO 3 :25 6 7:30 qt.Ut);Wrelj•:•J,,tl6) 'rs!!~lif:.i:") 00..A CllO ftlMEST .... ., (1:30) 3:405:101:00 SHOWS AT (1 :00) 3:1S 6 10:10/ln70MM S:307:45610:0S Ho J>u1e1 SHCMrT ClaCUIT flt) SHOWS AT (1 :10) ),Jo S:.ZS 7 :40 6 t :41 .-.T~aTY .. ) SHOWS AT (1 :20) ):)I) 5 :40 7 :50 .. 10:00 , T09' OU.. ... SHOWS AT th:tsl 2.40 S:OS 7 :)0 t:S~ In 70 MM ~PfT"'91 SHOWS AT (1 :SS} 3:55 S:ll 7 :5S .. t :50 STADIUm a UI 1110/!!trrllt !If!! Sith"' s "'Sl.K SND> .... ,, PIUI Co-.-flt 8Ht DefenH (A) ~ml Tit• Proteeton (Al Ho f'HMI swsu ~y CNI PIUI Pretty In Pink (N ·UI IO IO DAie&• flt) PIUS Co-Hl1 Hollywood Vice Sq1.1ad (A) ~•OUT• _,,..LY .. u.s ... Tfle Color Pu~I• (11'<1·1':1) LA MIMU IMllYl·f" Sri.I .... ~., ,. ........ .,, ,,. • (7141 .,, tilt Rush rockers show style and substance By TONY SAAVEDRA °' .. .,..,,... ..... They attract much the same crowd as gaudy rock bands Ratt and Twisted Sister. But Rush's version of heavy metal is more finesse than muscle. While most hard rockers perform with all the artistry of the World Wrestling Federation, Rush's thoughtful lyrics and complex. yet compelling riffs pull the group out of the sophomoric. The audience Sunday for the first of a two-night stand at the Pacific Amphitheatre in Costa Mesa was a yuppie's nightmare. Males sported shoulder-length hair and sleeveless black shirts emblazoned with the insignia's of bawdy rock bands in day-glo colors. Despite the evening chill, most of the rockers were kept warm only by the tattoos on their arms and the beeT in their bellies. But their allcgjancc to Rush testi- fied that maybe, just maybe, their taste wasn't aU in their mouths. Bassist Geddy Lee led the tno through a solid show with few onstage atllcs but overflowing with displays of musicianship. Lee, guitarist Alex Lifeson and drummer Neil Peart have developed a style in which they each appear to be playmg solos while playing together. Like three rivers flowing into the same ocean, Peart's meticulous drum fills. Lifeson's frantic-fingered gujtar licks, and Lee's intricate bass riffs merge almost effortlessly. Lee's munchk.in-like voice, ac- complished without the benefit of helium, does -however -bcain to wear a little thin. And save for the SOOJS "Big Money" and "Manhattan ProJect," most offering_, from their latest "Power Windows" album lack the urgency or rhythms that make carlir hits "Tom Sawyer" and "Limelight" staples of FM radio. The audience was brouJ}lt to its feet wnh the first song, "Spint of Radio," and stayed that way throughout the show. Opcnmg were the Fabulous Thun- derbirds, who would be justified in adding a few more superlatives to their name. The powerful vocals of singer Kim Wilson and eJlpcrttse of rhythm-and-blues guitarist Jimmy Vaughn make the Thunderbirm more geniune than other boogie bands seeking to put the roll back into rock. TOM CRUISE I OP GUN w A, ~ -~_J~~~NJ~~!~fil ~~~ •Pl.AYllG • ~(W WOMlD PK ll~I '··~-... t{)A(t llN PROOI.\ I~ .... HAI < OM lll\I 1...-Vl \IClR\_., .tR!\WlORO/l.J\Nl --JMt SPtlD ._\\,\\'Nf (R W1 000 ot'M\ I ltlll\f(lf't1t R l<ARtN kOPll\S -.,Ml\Rk ~ , ...... -...-AAl.\N lOf Ill\ •---.. K~ N-.... .\NORf\\ lAM . \\.\\'NI < RA\\ll>RO -\\llllM4 I\\' _,. Wt\\'NI CRNMOROa MOflt W lMI ... .\"il.>RI °\\' l .\'lol ~ "'"'~n 1111«..., ·-- ,,. .... :;::.:: .~ I 0t8"g9 Coelt OAILY PtLOT/Se1urctey, Mey 31, 1NI A9 'Future' top sci-fl flick HOLLYWOOD (AJ>)-''Beck to the Futwe" and .. Friab& Ni&ht" were ch<>teo the best films in three ~or catetories u the Academy of Sc1ence FietJon, Fantasy aod Horror F'tlms announced its annual Saturn awards. was chosen lhc Best Fantasy Film Coral Browne, wife of actor v .. cent Pncie, wu named best IC1n:ll (or htr role 1n .. DreamcluJd." Steven Spielbera'• "Bade to the Future'' was the winner in the Bca1 Science Fiction catqory. It also took the Btst Special Effects title and the movie's 24-ycar-<>ld Nr, Michael J. Fox, woo best actor honors. The acackmy mo ~ted three 1pecial awards. The Life Ca.rttr Award wen& to Vioceot Price. Tbr 1s;. ye.r-<>ld actor i• best.-known for bis roles in such chillers u ''Kouse ol Wax" (19SJ), ''The Fly" (1958) and "The tsnaler" ( l 9S9) and has ap. pearcd in over I 00 films. Friabt Nia.ht.. was ch0ten Best Horror Film aod also took best writina honors. Roddy McDowatl, the film's co-star, was named best supponina actor. .. Ladyhlwke," the story of the tranformation of a woman into a bird, The Geo~ Pal Memorial Award for special effects was presented io Empire Pictures President Cbartel Band. Woody Allen was given 1W President's Award for his whimsical role in .. Purple R<>te of Cairo ... 1t • ' 1UCI DGlJY STlllD JClltmm 1 1P ... (PC) t• J:JI, UI, tH, ld .. ~ .... ~U) 12:15, t.15, U5 ,:15, ... 1 ... 'UW" (PC-U) 2:51. lell. tl'Jt 1 'ftml • .... (PC-U) 1:11.~u 4lUCl&1Ms&O S\'lWJllll suu• "ClllA" (I) lZ:ll. tll. .......... t ... "TllCll.M~ 4:JI, 11:11 IPI-U) "tit tf ARICA" (PC) ,. 1:15 "JUI SPW" rrc) 12:1$, tl~U& 6;Jl,M~ lt4$ ,. ----.,.Tllml, r ll:a. !:a tll. l:JI (P'l. lJ) tll. ltll (SIT lat lU N ....,....., ....., CllClfT" (PC) 12:11, 2:11, .. ... ... , .. "• lftll" (PC) ll:4$, bCS, S:tl 1:1~ ,. .. .. lllUTWlll WICl "9AI" (I) l:te.>:t0,5:11, 7:te.ti0 4 TUCI ll tu SllJl:O "ClllA"(I) tUI, UI, 4:ll, ' •• t ... 1•15 (SAT ca T lt.JI N) .... INICO. "" lit IS W." (I) til lllU~ 7A.t• ., 4 fUCI mllO t'Clltmm .,.., ... '", l:A, "" l1' .... t•• ..............,,,.,,_...; 'WUTLmn"N Ml ll;tl, 2'.A, l:JI, JAJ" -lz:tl, !:a ,... 7:1$, Q NY. SAT "INCi a." 7 ... 4lWl ... STmD "ftlTOCOIT r ,._IJ) 1-. .... 5:9.1-.1:11 (+SAT •Y lM NI) --...lll ..... U:a. 2:ll. 4!11 •• tll. ll:ll fll.U) ·-·-~ l'ft.maRllAm 'CllM"., lA ltl i&,. ..... ........ ..,._TEICOST r (PC-1J) U:JI, ~ ......... l:JI 11:15 (SIT cay 1~ NI) snw '*' ttMJS .. .... ,~(Ml IUS. 2:H, 4.H .... u .. ltll ---------------.-----~-----------------------~ • Koffee Klutchers playing perfectly u.11d1y, Jue 1 1 .. I AlllES(Mareh 21-Apnl 1 9):Sudd~nlythesun sh1ne5.1 rep acing S<?O!T'Y weather." Lunar. numencal cycles point to excitement. rrccdom. c.reat1v11y, dialogue. ideas. ro mance. You'll be with people who appreciate you, encourage you, love you. . . . TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Fam1.ly secre~ 1s r~vealed. M~or ~omest!c adjustment is featured. Key 1s to be d1plomatt~ without at?ando.mng baste pnnciples One close to you needs tender, lovmg care. Aries, Libra figure The GWC Koffee KJatcb flclled its mu cles tlus wed., chaJlung up the only perfect score and increasing its lead to five points in the early stage ofTnvia Bowl VI. Veterans LoUy ud Co. and new- romer Pro Am each missed only one to move up in the standings. Some entnes may have been sidetracked in the mail because of the holiday. In answer to Lolly's query about the source for ·am's la4't name in TRIVIA BOWL VI STANDINGS owe 1<on .. K1u1e1111 11 l olly ' Co (IOI Nency PtlOr (9) John Au.-/Dell Pell M<lli (8) IQO,., Cnetyt & Frlendt(81 fl\tlenoere(!I Pt0-Am(10) • Rlclll w., ..... (41 • 8oO Con)'9<1 (2'~1 • At.ooln s-(31 l MIAQ .... 101 •no entry ,_,,., nett ol ..., oeo<• •-O.O 39 34 32 32 32 32 28 Ill'" IS IS 8 ··Casablanca." JUSt move your eyes down the page to the gentleman wh.o operates in the space below t~1s column. Here's your next I 0. keeping sn mind that the last one wasn't intended as a tnck question when onginall~ conce1' ed I Clarence Oddhody 1s an odd character from what movie? 2. Johnny Yuma was the hero of wbat T V western'! J Who slung the hash in the cafetena in the arch1e comic stnp'1 4. What S president once "'as a New York State count) shen fl' 5 On what in trument was the famous "Third Man Theme" played? 6. Debbie Re)nolds played the title Toi Tnus role in the movie "Mary. Mary." What actress. now familiar to TV audiences, originated the pan on Broadway? 7 Name the onl) NFL player who has appeared in the uper Bowl 1n three different decades. all with the same team. 8. When Charlie C'haphn spoofed Hitler 1n "The Great Dictator." who did likewise to Mussohns? 9. Bing Crosby died 1n what forC'sgn country? 10 HoVv old was Bobb) Ewing when he v. as k 1 llcd on .. Oalla!) '>" Last Wttk's Answers I ''Butch Cassidy and the Sun dance Kid" (Etta Plac.:e) 2. CBS (Bicentennial Minute) 3. Mr. Beasle; (Blondie's mailman) 4. T1be1 (Yangtze headwaters) 5 "On Your Toes" ("Slaughter'' musical) 6. "Mame" (Up'iom Dov.ns) 7. Rick Miller (F1sk·s relative) 8. "Kiss and Tell'' (C orhs!) mov1l·) 9. De!>er1 Inn (Howard's h1deawa\) JO. Mr. Walker, for the Ghost Who Walk s (the Phantom) Send wuranwcrs to TRIVIA.c o the D:ui> Pilot. P 0 Bo11 1560, (<>Sta Mesa 926!f> ~II cn tnc~s must he ~el\ed b\ ~\.nJncscJ:n. otht'"4Ht' half the pia.1 c·r ' /a~r scnrc will h<· awarded. prominently .. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): What seemed a "a Iona shot 1s closer than originally ant1c1pated. Cycle f~vorable. you'll make fncnds and. mfluen.ce people you could also hit fmancial J&ckpot. Pisces, Virgo natives play roles. SYDNEY CANCER (June 21-July 22): Focus on power. authonty, intensified rcla- 11onsh1p. lnd1v1dual who appeared o "cold" is actually warm, and you'll MARR discover this quality One you admire ••••••••••••• returns the compliment. . .. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22); You coul~ '_'sad away from . status quo. Emphasis on journey. P':'bltshing, crcattvuy. ro~ance,. a~1ltty . to com: mun1catc ideas. needs, feelings. All stops arc out, sky 1s the limit. Aries. Libra llgure prominently • VIRGO (Aug 2J-Sep1. 2.2). Light 1s s~ed on area previously dark. you 11 rece1"e peninent information concerning credit ratings. ta~es. license requirement!>. rules regarding possible 1nhentance. Leo. Aquanus play key roles. " .1 • · I t' LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct 22)· Emphasis on 1am1 y _umt. s~~1a "'.lee ings. n:un1om. plans for future Spotlight on home, secunty, dcaltngs wu.h older 1ndiv1dual~ who haw your best interests at heart. Cancer. Leo. Aquanus play kc} role.-.. . . SCORPIO (Oct. 23-No'. 2 I): You get JOb done. you meet deadline, you earn plaudits from fnends and (am1ly. Focus on safety, sccunty, long-range prospects. urprise '°"1tat1on comes via telephone call. Involves exciting 'l<l<.'lal e\ent. SAGITl'ARIUS(NO\. 22-Dec. 21 ): Be w1llmg to revise. review. to rebuild on more suitable structure. Focus on chansma. change. vanety, children. 'I ou'll be center ofaurac11on. you'll be surprised at how many people really do care for you. . . . CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Dialogue with landlord or pr<?pnetor 1s featured -you'll learn plenty about future prospects and b~s1c values. Romance: will not be ahsent. Gift is on the way, represents genuine token of affection . AQUARIUS (Jan 20-Feb. 18): Empham on dr:-ips. v1~1ts. unique ~ommun1cat1on from family member Be recep11vc. d1plo~a11c. an.d gain hint from Taurus message. You are going places. but details remain and patience 1~ required. Money picture bnght. P ISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Define terms, realize that wha!. was promised wsll be received Means debt 1s going to be paid. A ver) glamorous" 1nd1v1dual could come into your life. Mystery will be solved. Swedes originators of Chinese checkers IF JUNE l IS YOUR BIRTHDAY you are independent. creative. at times '><.'It-centered. talented. original. sensual. You now are on m.ore sohd l'mot1onal·financ1al ground. You made numerous ellc1t1ng contacts last year _ man\ are due 10 bear fruit Leo. Aquarius people play important ~oles in ,our hfe. You possess intense intellectual curiosity, you are versaule and ha .. e admirable <;ense of humor. You also are romatit1c, your affairs are intense and voo c,eldom do anything in halfwa} manner. You'll have "new lea'iC .. in June. Teen beer parties led youth to death The Chinese plavcd some th mg like C h1nese ched.er'> thousand., of years a$O A game calll'd "Halma ' But 1t died out. Then the Japane'>c rein- troduced 1t to ( h1na a ccntuf) ago Howeveor. the Chinese checkers. as vou and I've plaved tht· game. originated 1n Sweden IO 18811 You can make thoc;c lat cells '>mailer. but you can't make them fewer So says an authont} l'n weight reduction It e"<plain!> the unhapp;. ob' 1ous. Best v.a y to (.'Ontrul -.our weight 1s never put o n too mul·h in the first place. How old were ~ou when you kit home? That age at which )oun~tcr'> take off on their own hasn't changed all that much O\.e r the centunes. evidently. Anstotle Ill out at 17 b It was a Mr \\hippie.' -not thl· one who squeezes toilet paper on T\ - who first photographed a ~tar In 1850. he rigged a daguerreotype plate w the end of a I )-int h telescope and \hot Vega That sloth doe'>n 1 get muc h nourishment out ot lhn.-.c lea' c.-. 1t ats 1t builds only about halt the muscle mass of otht'r mammal' 1t<t -.1ze Expect more about the mu\l le mac;.., of sloths as dl'mand warrant., Nobod\ know'> v.hcn· grapefruit got <aaned It c.an bt.· tratcd back to Barbado'i .\ 4'h1p·c; captain lOn~ 1t there But from "'here ' You 5hed Sf1 m1ll1on '>kin tC'I " .1 da) In them arc haucnJ flw<>1: bac1criacm1tano<lor I h<11°'>v.h:it thl· bloodhound \mt'll\ ~ h\ \fn.1co ha' li"c 11mc' J4' mam h1g eanhquilkC'> d' C <1hforn1J 1,n·1 "'ell under<,t.ind. e1thn fhcrc wa" a ll01l' 1n old I t.1wa11 "hen 11 was forh1ddcn undu prr1altv nf death for ml'll and woml · to rat together PEOPLE L.M. BOYD Half ol all h' mg land <.pet 1es nsc;h on onh 5 pcrct·n t of the canh", land surfatt· -1n the rain forl''>I'> In thl'l1nginal h:i.-.eball the ball had to be pitched underhand. and a hall caught on the fir'it bounn• was ;rn out. l\1an' 11 not mmt ol thl· Ml 000 people "'ho tall on escala iorc; t'' e~ ~car hlaml' their htfocals DF \R ·\"IN LA NDERS: Please print this letter. I behe\e 1t could ~ve !.Orne )oung hvcs. l\n 18-year-old died in an a.uto- mobile accident. "John" was killed on impact and seriously inJured an innocent family When he was found he still had a can of beer 1n his hands. I am angry that someone so young died needlessly. but I am angner because some people cannot o.r will not accept the truth that 1s so evident. When John was 14 (and all through hts school years) his parents thought nothing of letting him have beer parties at home for his friends. When local authont1es (Khool and police) would not look the other wa;. these same parents were outraged that their nghts were being threatened and () ~ hat'o; wrong with \l'r' 1ng wine 1nfnnged upon with \JIJd. pray'' , When John became involved in A, l'o oth1ng. if the salad rnnta1ns no other accidents (snowmobile. motor- v1negar Wine thinks 11·., too good for L~clc and Jeep>. a1tempts were .made vinegar Wine doe'in't mu(.'h care for to (.'0' er up h1o; guilt and take him otT .,ulphur. either That\ v. h\ ynu·rc not the hook ..,uppo4't"<1 w serve v.1nc \\llh cggc; Hts parents encouraged his su1l'1dal. ant1·soc1al behavior ~Y not Rn11.-.h la" decrecc; no child under controlling 1t. Those who tried to age I() lJn he con' 1C'ted of a cnm1nal intnvcne were abused. threatened ollen\e ~<> one cunning Englander and reviled. Now that l 8-year-old lad regJstned his uir 10 the name of his is dead. Today 1s his funeral. I hear infant son ama4'4'ed a parking fine weeping and moaning. "How could dt·ht equs,alent to ahout i 9oo. and this happen?" they ask. If they read left thl wurt a w mm·r ha' mg pa HI this lctterthey and others will find the nnthinti answer. -ANGRY IN POTOSI. 'I oungg1rl,oftht• 1gcnan Ibo and lb1h10 tribe\ arc <,cnt to .. fattening hou<,c\" fl) put on wt•1ghl A Int of weight fh<· faller, the better 11 enhanll'\ then· ma trunontal cltg1hll1- l\ In J 1111 ofturtk' too the fcmak' 1'\ b1eJiq '-ot hnghtl·r not -,w1 ftcr. not ~trc •O>fl r Ju<tt h1ggn I \I Boyd N>lumn1<il /'I " syodic•ted WIS. DEAR ANGRY: I wonder wben parent• wlll wake up to lbe fact that beer can be ju1t 11 Intoxicating H bard liquor If taken ln sab1l8JltJaJ amount1. lo fact, beer drunb cu be tbe mo1t du1eroa1 of all because tbey don't consider beer an Intoxi- cant. Tbank you for sbarlag you tbougbt1 today. I bope It wlll make muy teenagers as well as parents stop and think. • • • OF.AR ANN LANDERS: Thts ANN UNDERS problem isdnv1ng me nuts and I need ) our help. It's ourneighbors. They are nice people. good friends and usually very thoughtful. But they (and many of their acquaintances) are horn honkers. Al 7.30 evef) week-day momrng fnends honk for their daughter to let her know they have amved. On Sunday mornings, usually at 8: 15. the first person in the car sits there and honks for the rest of the family 10 hurry up. They also honk for each other regularly at other times of the da} and nigh t. What is wrong with these people? Don't they realize that while they are up and about. others may be trying to sleep. or just have a restful day? It only takes a minute to go to 1~e door. Better yet, when someone is e)(pect1ng a ride he or she should be watching and ready to leave when the car pulls up. I have three teenagers and they do not honk for others. nor do their fnends honk for them. lfyou pnnt my letter I'm sure the guilty parties wtll recognize themselves. Thanks so much. -REDMOND, WASH . DEAR RED: Don't bet lite rent. My advice 11 to speak to these nelpbon la 1 friendly way ud 11k tllat tbey 1bow a little conetderation, not only for yoa bat for tbe otber nelpbors on yoar block. Sometimes people doa't realize tbey are uaoylag uyooe until tbey are told. So my advice to yoa It at followa: Don't Jatt tit tbere and 1team. Speak ap! Carver role model for 'Roots' author By tbe AssoclAlt'd Pr~ ~ DA. YTO"l. c >h111 -Pulitzer Pnze-winnrng author Alex HaJey cited his encoun ter w11h '\C1cn11st Cieoorge Wac;hington < arver a4' an example of hov. entouragement from role model<; l11u fd improve education Hale}, author ot Root'>." wa!!. tounng 3 C'1t}' \C'hool l uc\day when he related ho"' h1\ parent~ took him to the Tuskecgcc In· n11u te 1n Alabama llS u teen-ager and he wtt!> introduced 10 C arver whoo;c agncultural ~~arch won him world acclaim .. To tlm day I've never for aotten that ... ht \aid 'I'm ~u~ Dr Carver d1dn•t go around 1h1nlcin,f of h1m~lf u a role model Jillian appeal NEW ORLE.AN~ -.\ctre'~ Ales Haley Ano JLUlan. opcn1na a sym· pos1um on cancer. made an emotional plea Wedn~y for ' Ann JUiian Y..-omcn to ~ constantly alert for ' the warning sranaJs or breast cancer J1lltan. who has undetJOne a double mastectomy, said her m1ss1on is to "break the silence" on breast cancer -second only to lung cancer as the leading cause of death from cnnccr among Amen- can women. "My fai th pulled me through .. that and some good medical people," Jillian 1d at a breakfast speech Chargea brought NEW YORK -Telcv1son talk-show host P~I Doutlwc has not seen the last of the Lyndon LIRoucbe supponer he ta.naJed w1t.h in an urpon scuffic two weeks ago. W1lha.m Ferauson, 24, br<>u&ht characs Tuesday. alleging that Donahue "did with mt'Cnt auauh {Fcrauson) by punchin' h•T 1n the ear causma a contu ~on. • WEEKLY BRIOGE QUIZ Q.J-NelthPr vulnf'rnblt>. a.. .. South you hold •854 'VAJ632 •AQ10~2 The h1d<!1nf( ha~ pnweedecl South West North East I v Pass l + Pass 2 • Pas,; 2 NT PaH ., What du you Incl now'.' Q.2-A-; South , vuln erable. you hvld· +AKJ3 .7 AI092 •KJ98 Your riJ{ht hand oppont•nt opens th1• htddin~ "1th om• spack Wlwt art wn <io y1111 I akc"' Q.:J-A.., South v11l111•r'ahlt'. you hold +A8 . K76 AKQ763 •KS ) 1111r n~ht·hand 11pponent o~ns the b1cld1n)( "II h ont• ..,pad1• What ;tC'( IOn du ) Oil t ,lkP" Q.4-Both v11hwrahlf', as Soul h you hold ?QJ I 097652 >93 +Q76 The b1ddin~ ha..., prucC't>df'd North Ea.!11 South l • I ? What do yo11 hul now" Q.1>-A-. Sour h \ 11h11•rabh' y1111 hold· +AQ765 9 •109742 CHARLES GOREN OMAR SHARIFF ThC' bidding hlls proct>ed<'<f ' North East South w .. ~, I ) Pass I + Pass 2 NT Pass 3 • Patis 3 NT Pass ? What 1u·t1011 do you I .lk1»1 Q.6-But h v11ln1•rablt·. a" South yo11 hold: •83 \795 .JG +AQ107632 Tht• b1ddin)( ha-. pro<·1•t•dt•1I North East South I NT Dbl~ ? \\ h <tl 1.H't 1on do you I akt•'' Look fur an'>Wt'r<, 011 Monday 1~~~:t;~' S©R~µ-~£trss WOID UMI -------Edited by ClA Y I. '0llAN 0 Reorrorige letters of the four scrambled words be· low co form four simple words I KRAQ UE I I 1 1 I I I T U LAV I L-.......LI __._I ~r .........__.!~} --~ II-............. A_S......--K....,,R __ T.----.1 "'! . 1 13 1 1 I was iust wondering. Daddy . . _ _ quizzed my young daughter1 how do they know that no two I snowflakes are -····? ~-.... ,~-R .... , _I...,..,Z_E..,.,,,..../ ...... ,---1 0 Complere rhe ctiuclde Quored . . .by f.llorig ,,, rhe m1»ing words L.....--L-..L..-L--......1.-.....___. vc..u develop from slep No J below 8 PP INT NUMBERfD LETTERS IN IHESE SQUAPE S A UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE lETTE~S V TO GET ANSWER SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS J s Quaker -Vault -Stark -Zipper -ALIKE ·1was1ust wondering. Daddy," quizzed my young daughter ''how do they know that no two snowflakes are ALIKE?" TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS t Movie 5 S Amencan coin 9 Jelly 14 Meaning ts -Stravmsl<y t6 Screen t 7 SI< in problem t8 Prude t9 Drawing room 20 l egal bar 22 Cleanest 23 Trot or pace 24 Cultivated 25 Wrench 28 Logger 32 Canine 33 Summoned 3<4 Screw pine 35 SupPorter 36 Abated 37 Slain 38 Go quickly 39 Fed up 40 The ones over here 41 Magician <43 Horse mackerel 4<4 Stand up 53 !6 59 45 Wade a rcver 46 Gdtf snot 49 Detenorated 53 "Only - - 54 Street sound 55 Perpetually 56 Perent 57 At -presto 58 Hoarfrost 59 Boat nggcng 60 Unwanled growth 6 t Blacl<thorn DOWN t Detonate 2 Castor's kilter 3 In case that <4 Wood 5 Apple 6 Wading bird 7 Defile 8 Soc 9 Took on 10 NYSE un11s 1 1 Fence unit 12 Wedding vows 13 Penny 2 1 Satisfied 22 Reduced 24 Carried 25 Asian VIPs 26 Salk's conquest 27 Potentate 28 More elegant 29 Come to a point 30 Jagged 31 Badger's km 33 Insertion mark 36 Sicker 37 Quivers 39 Goblets 40 lrlsh town 42 Stingier 43 -'" foggy 45 Bam8f 46 Weakens 47 Stratagem 48 Roster 49 F1n1shed 50 Depraved 5 1 Verne hero 52 Newsprint source 54 In what way 10 11 12 13 by Bii Keane "Look! Grandma used to hang clothes on a jumpin' rope." BIG GEORGE by Vlrgll Partch (VIP) "Thou? I had 1 tittle accident with the garbage dl1po11I." by Brad Anderson DENlUS THE MENACE "Marmaduke, we do not bathe puppies In the kitchen stnk1:1 PEAiruTS GARFIELD rT's COCONUT, ISN1T IT? IT'S COCONUT!! TAKE IT AIJJAV ! TAKE IT AWAV! by Charles M . Schulz I CAN TELL ~l~T l AWAV IF t'M IN TME ~ SAME ROOM WI'™ A COCONUT COOKIE ... by Jim Davis GE E 'fHANt(~, &UT. I 'M N01' l THINK I'll JOS1' HAVE 5C>Mt TUMBLEWEEDS WHA1 A FA-rl:: A?N10AS PAFFY' A PROVE OF rom AS E:~R I ppty-601.CH E:P A 171PSO'.. l I I "' DRABBLE R08El8R08E , IN TME MOOP f:OR ~AFOOP OF YOOA CNICt(fN! FOOT 500P by Tom K. Ryan IS rr ~~p 10 ~LJNCe EMCK FROM PISHPAN HAl\lPS !' by Kevin Fagan by Pat Brady BLOOll COUJllTT U.8.ACRSS SHOE t rc»I? ... °'-t> ~ rarl ~ 1*T (.Q)&.0 9E ~~ICINTSiM. JUDGEPARDR HI I I 'VE GOT A PIZZA Mete RlR A ~R~ FM'n.> ! DOOIUSBURY • Orange CoMt DAILY PfLOT/8atw~. Mey 31, 1Ne AU by Lynn Johnston. rrSifeaoa.ftll!IC. ~.l!!!L. ····rrSife.~ ~~ ~~ ........ &tc>CK'8. by Harold Le Dou~ by Tom Batluk ~,IMADE. GOOD 1lME ! ·. i .&12 Or-. Co.ut DAILY PILOT/ Saturday, MIW 31, 1988 Democrats endorse primary candidates Bruce Sumner By PHIL SNEIDERMAN OftlleDellr ...... ..., Attempling to separate marn- stream pany candidates from ··poten- 11aJly dangerous·· followers of Lyn- don LaRouche, the Democratic Foundation of Oran$e County 1s making endorsements in scveraJ local races. One of tho~ backed by the foun- dation is Bruce umner. who 1!1 waging a write-in campaign againM LaRouche follower An Hoffmann 1n the 40lh Congressional Dastnct The d1stnct includes Newport Beach. Costa Mesa. Founuun Valley, Laguna Beach. Irvine and pan of Huntangten Beach. The winner of the Democra11r nomanauon will square off in Ncr vember against the Republican canadidate, incumbent Robert Badham or challenger Nathan Rose- nberg. The Democratic Foundation and the affiJiated Democratic Associates describe their members as .. men and women dedicated to revitalizing the pany an Orange C'ounty." They say the 85 foundauon mem- bers pay S 1.000 annuall) 10 belong. whale lhe associate . numbcnng 465. pay $50 per year The groups plan 10 purchase news- paper ads and staff phone banks to alcn Democrats to their endorse- ments and to separate these can- didates from followers of LaRouche. In a prepared statement. Bernie Schneider, chairman of the foun- dation's poliucal action committee. said. the JTOups .. felt at was necessary to get mvolved an this pnmary because of the LaRouche sttuauon "We view them as extremists and clearly not in the mainstream of our pany. They present a bizarre account of political thought. and they are potentially dangerous" LaRouche"s v 1ews, supported by congressional candidate Hoffmann, 1 nclude alleg.auons that former Henn Kissinger and Walter Mondale are Soviet "agents of influence," that the Holocaust was a myth and that the Nonpartisan candidates also on ballot By PAUL ARCHIPLEY Of Ille Olllly Piiot lt9'1 Voters stepping into the voting t>ooth Tuesda} will be thankmgabout tht• cand1da1es vyan$ for state and federal nomanat1ons 10 their parties. a\ well as some of the more con- tro\ crsaal issues like Proposition 51. Bui they'll also be electing can- didate~ to a number of nonpartisan flO'ilS In three count) races. the ancum- 1\cnts are unopposed for rl'-elect1on incumbents are being challenged b) one or~e candidates Recbrder Lee Branch. wllo ha~ skippered a rocky boat since ha~ appointment in 1978. faces two challengers Tuesday Branch weathered a bh'itenngaud11 la\t )ear when he wore two hat~ a\ recorder and county clerk. The audit found the clerk's office 1n d1sarrav and its staff unhappy. <iupen asors reversed their dcc1s1on 10 combine thc two offices a!I a rnM- S<l\ ang measure Branch resigned anJ "as re-appointed to the recorder'<. post recorder-clerk oflice'i. the) appointed Cial) Granville. an ac;~astant to upcr- vasor Ralph Clerk. to clean up the lier!.. ·s onice mess .\ recent post ·audit ~' ealed Gran- ' allc had met or e\cccded count\ proposals for improvements sin<."t' ha' appointment last September He 1s being challenged b> l I -H·ar deputy county clerk' eteran Marshall Noms who behe"es his npenenrc an the otlice makes him a logical cho1Cl' to lead 11 cases. dcchm·J Another long-llml' count\ em- ploH-e facing a challt'ngl' is D1s1nc1 -\ttome) C'~1t H1ll..s of Santa Ana Hacks has be-l·n Orange Count) 's chief proS«utor for nearl) :!O years He was first appoina•<l to the post in IQ66 to fina h thl" unc"<ptn:d term of ht prC'Je\.-cssor H1d.s 1s being l h.dll·nged b) Depu- '' Dastm·t .\th)rnl'\ .\ C No' ack of lnine Rl'Undang ''Ut thl' nt)n-panasan ~amp;ugns '' tht· rJn· tor public adm1n1strahlr Queen of England is involved an drua trade. Locally. Hoffmann has accused hts opponent, formCT judae Sumner, of having connceuons with orpnized mme and drug dealing. At a news conference Thursday. Sumner asserted that "the LaRouche menace as real." Regarding his own write-an race, he added, "'It's a very difficult campaign because there's nothing on lhe ballot to indicate I'm an it." In add1t1on to SumneT, DemocratJc Foundation respresentatives said they are endorsing David Vest, Jo Mane Lisa and Ray Anderson. who Missing candidate arc running for congressional and r.l.fnr.iiri .\<1•a•mhlv nnminations in central and north Oranac County d1stncts ap1nst LaRouehc can- didates. Orange County Dcmoc:rats .tna- ditionaJly prefer to save their hmated resources for November contests against Republicans, rather than pri- mary in tra-party squabbles. But Sumner described the LaRouche chaJlenae as "a blessina in disguise .. that has "energized Demer crats who may not have been in- volved in tbc past." Candidate Hoffmann could not be reached for comment regarding the foundation's endorsements. fhe) are count) schools Super- intendent Robert Peterson of Santa .\na. Auditor tevcn E Lewis of In ine -who was appointed by the Board of Supervisors and Treasurer-Tax Collector Roben L C11ron In live other count) race!>. the His challenger<. are Larr) L Bale~. of Tusun. who de cnbes himself on the ballot as an audator-darer- tor/treasurer, and businessman Greg Winterbottom of Villa Park When the board c;plat uo thl' l ount' -\sseso;or Bradle\ Jan,bc; l'' M 1ss1on \· 1eJo fact's one challenger ior the post he has held since his appointment 1n 1975 Deput) Assessor Da v1d Holben. also of Mission V1eJo. said his boss has continued to assess propcn) at higher rates even though propen) "alues ha"e levelt'd off or. 1n some .\pfX'•ntl"\.1 int umtlcnt "'illaam B.l~cr l.lfln tnC' ~·l:amc public :idman- 1straior la t .\pnl tollo"'1ng the retire- mt•nt l.,f Jamt·, ~kam \ 1l°tM Hobb ot El Toro. a buo;1- nl',sman and Jll\lfnt·). J) challenging Bal..l.'r IN the S<i' ~ti" per )'Car post Republican Senate candidate Ed Davia holda a milk cartoon with a picture of of Ed Z.Cbau under the word ... mfMl.nar" durlna a break In a tele"t'ialon program. Z.Cbau wu the only candlClate abeent from the ahow. At rtibt la Mike An-.. tonovtch, wbo brought the milk cartoon to the atudJo. 0% ONSEALYPOSTUREPEDIC EXTRA FIRM SAVE 1h OFF TWIN SIZE EA PC FULL SIZE EA PC QUEEN SIZE SET KING SIZE SET Reg Reg Reg Reg 00 TWIN SIZE EACH PIECE 259 95 SALE 119.00 319 95 SALE 159.00 799.95 SALE 399.00 1099.95 SALE 549.00 SAVE 30% TO 50% ON OUR ENTIRE SELECTION OF SEALY BEDDING 6 GREAT REASONS TO BUY BEDDING AT WICKES KING AND QUEEN SIZE SOLD IN SETS ONLY 1 f • '" " .. the w1rlt r • ,., 11 ,, nt tl"rtr<ic1m <.els anCI the • • • I· 1•r11..J tu q /\ 1, " t•n ~ 2 " '" 1 no1c.1 ''' t' • 111 '"'' n <11w<. '"America t , '"!TIO'<:.: ttHJ C • i\1; 3 1nv ot our rn•st sellers or 4 ' ' 1• ' lh•· bec;t ~ 1lt1• • .1,.c;e ot our <;11P .1nd~orume t• ' I 1nq pf)Wf•f \ 5 ' r ~"' • 1 1 W1rkf>5 r:har<;w ulan or we II v <;; or M.;<.terCnrel 6 ', 1 .,,.,, .. ~.,.,, •• • "!"'l?t.....i "'~ <;tan<1 behind evetytning Wt· , " 11 Tr 1 1· , , .niees ot Customer Sa11sfac11on ,. ~AU·. t·,\J>~ \\ l·.J> ESDAY JUNE4 7 3 TOUGH GUARANTEES If for any reason you re not happy with your furniture when you get 1t home. we will lake 11 back within seven days tr you find the rt1•n t1c ;it item in slock elsewhere within seven days for less. we will refund the d1tterence We Wiii gave you a five year hm1ted warranty aga1ns1 fa ctory defects in workmanship and construction Details available in our stores 4 WAVS TO CHARGE. Our convenient Wickes Revolving Charge Amencan Express C~rd. Ma sterCard or Visa ANAHEIM Sdnt,1 An,1 Frwy nno MrtQ noha PhonP 714 821-8550 VAN NUYS: San Diego Frwy and Sepulveda Blvd bet\W'en Burbank and Victory Phone 818 780-2244 WEST COVINA· S;in 8MMrrtino Frwy and Vincent Phone 818-919-1971 COSTA M~SA: San D1eoo Frwy and H rbor Blvd Phone 71 4-540-8242 Ooen Monday thru Friday 10-9 Saturday 10 6. Sunday 1? 6 ·, Three on Democratic ballot in. 58th District By PAUL ARCHIPLEY Of IN 0.-, l'9oC 118ft I Three Dcmocrauc hopefuls are sounding a common theme as they battle for the opportunity to challenge Assemblyman Dennis Brown. R- Lons Beach, 1n the 58th distnct an November Brown as running uno.pposed an the Repubhcfln pnmary for lhe dastnct that spans large ponions of Hunt- ington Beach, most of Long Beach, Rossmoor. Sunset Beach. Seal Beach and Signal Hal l. The Democratic contenders - Peggy Staggs of Huntington Beach, Michael Ferrall and Andrew Kincaid, both of Long Beach -agree that increased school fund mg as one of the foremost issues facing the state Lc&JS- lature. Staggs. 54, a history teacher for 20 years at Golden West College. has campaigned on the need to share someofCahfomia'saffiuence with its public schools. The hfe-long Orange County resi- dent also supports Proposition SI, the deep-pockets 1nat1atJve, and favors funding and protection of state rec- rea11onal areas. Although this as her first try for elective office, Staggs was a county delegate to the state Democratic Committee and served on the Orange County Democratic Central Com- mittee Another pohtacal novice as KJn- c~ud, who said the state's public schools were once ranked among the best in the nation but are today merely averaJe He advocates in- creased funding and programs to improve the education system. Kincaid. 39, also supports in- creased lies and trade between Cah- fom1a and countnes lining the Pacific Ram. He proposes creation of a state development research council that would focus on developing trade practices designed to boost the state's economy. A UCLA graduate. Kincaid earned a degree an psychology whale also studying pubhc policy, ecorromics and administration. The Vietnam War veteran is a, director or commercial investm~s for Century 21 Park in Long Beach. He also as a former national repre~ntauve for the AFL-ClO's American Federation of Government Employees. Opposing the two political novices as veteran Ferrall who served an the Wisconsin Legislature from I f/70 to 1980. Ferrall, 48. also favors increased funding for schools. particularly for bu aiding new schools as well as aiding local school dastncts. But hts pnmarly campalgn theme focuses on Calrfomia's unchecked growth and the pres.sure that growth itt putting on communities' infrastruc- ture. ancludana police and fire depart- ments. transportation. and the en- v1 ronment. He would seek ways to expand the state'c; tax base to help fund the infrastructure. needs of loc.al com- mµ.oaties. Ferrall has a master's deJ"CC an polaticaJ sc1enc:c from the Umversaty o( Wiscons1 n He ~ently quit his JOb as lesislat- 1vc affairs dnttlor for the Pon of Los Anaeles to conccntra tc h 1~nerain 0" the campaign. ·+ Ammoan lW Cro.a • SATURDAY, MAY 31, ~- Warriors fall short in finals BJ IUCllARD DUNN ...,,...Ocie a •• 1 LAK.EWOOD -Defense was the strenath of Woodbridp's softball team this season, but that strenalh became a weakness Friday night and so the Warrion fell abort of their CIF 3-A title dream. The Warriors' sixthcrrorofthepmc turned out to be its most costly one as Crescenta Valley pushed across the 10-ahead run 1n the top of the eighth inn ma to win the OF 3-A championship, S-4, before I ,SOO fans at Mayfair Park. "Our stren&th .is defense, and tonight it wasn't u strong," Woodbridae Coach Susan Hall said. "We came throuab with the hits, but the defense wun 't there. It was probably our worst defensive pmc of the year." PlayinJ at your worst defensively in a championship game certamJy won't get you many CIF titles, especially when your team relys so heavily on defense. · But the Warriors perhaps felt the tension a little more down the stretch as an infield error in the seventh inning aJlowcd the faJcons to take a 4-2 lead and another in the eighth let Cresc:enta Valley's winning run indircctJy cross the plate which lifted the Falcons (24-4) to the title. Denise HuJst was hit on the elbow to open the eighth by Woodbridae left-hander Patti Russell (10-2), who bad pitched the Warriors into the finals with four previous victories in the playoffs, to start Crescenta Valley's Crwenta Valley'• Lelanl Art11 la tale at MOODd bue. beadnC the ta.a of Wood- ..., _... ......... a..,.,.. bridle'• Jenny Allard 4arla& CIP S-A eoft- bUl aame at Mayfair Park Friday. winning rally. (Pleue Me W All.RIORS/82) Woodbrldle'1 Patti Rawnll dell"'9 pltcll. • Carter tosses 61-11 at Mas'ters Meet He posts state best mark; Henson stuns field twice 16th birthday with efforts of S7-I Pl•, 57-71/• 59-5 60-01/• and 60-8 before uncorking bis final throw. Any one of his last four attempts was good enough for No. I . By ROGER CARLSON CM .. o.IJ .... IWI "My coach told me I needed a better angle with my arm, to explode my hips and get my legs under at," continued Caner. NORWALK -The gci'\eral purpose of the Masten Meet is to finish among the top five in }'Our respective event -it sends you to lhc State Trials here at Cerritos CoUegc June 6. . • ... We worktd on it all week," said Edi son weight coach Tony Caarelli. "It was strictly technique." Carter admitted he entered with extra incentive because of last week's disappoint- ment. Edison High's K.aJeaph Carter, however, wasn't buying that theory Friday night, not after having been upset here at the CIF 4-A finaJs by Arcadia's Dan Tunnicliff when he produced just one Jcpl L..,row in six tries on the way to a less than inspiring (for him) S7-6¥ •. "M coach told me to forget about that top five we were going for No. I." effort re-establishes him as the state meet favorite. "When you're No. I you have the advantage of watching everyone else before yo u go." said Caner. "But, of course, everyone is expecting something of you. too." Admittedly 1mtated by the upset loss and described by coaches aJI week long as "(bleep)ed," the sophomore responded with a state best of 61-11. His personal goal? "Whatever I can get," said the happr. Carter. "I didn't want myself to feel hkc I did last week," said Caner. who celebrated Thursday's Meanwhile. Estanc1a's 1-2 punch of Enc Dorn and Doug Miller each qualified for Things_finally break Dodgers' way, 6-4 PITTSBURGH (AP) -The Los Anaelcs Dodgers got a lucky break to pull out an extra-inning victory Friday night -Pittsburgh Pirates pitcher Jose Deleon forgot to brcalc to first base. Steve Sax beat out a bases-loaded infield single with two out in the 11th inninJ to score Reggi e Williams with the winning run as the Dodgers rallied past Pittsburgh, 6-4, the Pirates' seventh loss in their last eight games. The Pirates are 1-6 on their current homestand and 6-17 at home tlus season. Walhams drew a onc"'Out walk off Deleon, 1-2. the fourth of fi ve Pirates' pitchers. befort Deleon hit FrankJin Stubbs with a 2-2 pitch and walked Mariano Duncan to load the bases. Sax then hat a grounder to Tony Pena, {>laying first base for only the third t1mc this season. Deleon was slow to cover first and Sax won the footrace with Pena to first. Pat O cmcnts replaced Deleon and walked Ken Landreaux to force in the second run of the inning before 1ettin1 Bill Madlock to ground into a force out. Toda;y'•game Dodgers (Honeycutt 2-2) at Pittsburgh (K.appcr 0-4). Time: 4:05. TV: Channel 11 Radio: KABC' (790). Sunday's game: Dodgers at Pittsburgh. I 0:05 a.m. "I'm not gomg to chew him out: no one knows more than Jose what he did wrong. rm not going to crucify ham for it. But that was r very fundamental play, and it was e kind of mistake you can't make i you're gomg to win a game lake that." ax felt as soon as he hit the ball there was a chance he might beat the play out. .. "I had my head down and I didn't sec him (Pena) field 1t," Sax said. "I kind of cued the ball. at was spinning and took a weird bounce. I was running hard any I knew Pena would try to flip it to the pitcher." "We've lost a lot ofemes liJcc that. we'll take one of them, • si1d Manager rommy Lasorda. whose Dod&crs ended a three-game winning streak. additional work next week., Dom 'oing 22-101/• in the tonajump and Miller negotiating 14-4 in the pole vault, No. 4 in each event. Dom, however, left with the disappoint- ment of missing out in the high juij)p1 his leap of 6-7 good for just sixth place. The Estancia combination and Cjl.ncr combine with Edison shotputtcr Mike Smyser (fourth at SJ-3¥•) and Corona del Mar junior Michael Bain, who qualified on Wednesday with the best discus effort of the day ( 179-1) for the state trials. Two major surprises came for Orange Coast area sirls. First -Newport Harbor's Mauic Henson stunned the fields in the 800and 1,600, clocking lifetime bests by a considerable mar.Jin in both, 1oin12:09.17 and 4:.53.02 for a ttethna double. Secondly-her longtime nemesis, Wood- bridac Higb's Sherri Smith, the Sea View league champion in the '400, 800 and 1,600, failed to quaJify in either the 800 or 1,600 and misses a return c~cnt at the state meet. "I kind of surprised myself," said the University of Mississippi-bound Henson. "I laid back throu~ the first part of the race, but t wasn't pvina up. I was JUSt positionin& myself. "I laid back and j ust told myself'whatevcr happens.'" She took the lead with 200 meters left and ran away from the field, much as she did in tf:ie 800. Other area girls to distinguish themselves with berths in the state finals arc Ocean View's Debbie Orr, Edison's Nicole Ritchot and surprising Lisa Coleman of Marina, who put together a personaJ best of S-6 in the high jump to tic Orr at third. Orr aJso qualified in the triple jump, maintaining her reputation as the Southern Section '1 best with a 38-0V• on her first attempt. easily toppina the competition. Harbor's Henson was a surprise winner in the 800, clockinaa personaJ best of2:09. I 7 in an ~vent which saw the event's leader, Smith, being boxed and bumped early and finishing ~ ... cARTBR/~l "That's the first play you work on in the spring, the pitcher covering first base on a ball htt to the right side," Pirates Manager Jim leY.land said. "Hc(Deleon) knows that Jn a baU hit in that situation, get over. It's as simple as that. ... Tom Nicdcnfuer, 3-2, pitched two scoreless innings in relief for the victory. pitching out of a bascs- loaded Jam in the 10th. Plttabari,b lbortatop Rafael Belliard takee the late Ba.row u Dod&• lMLMraaner ate.. a.a .Ud• Into MCODd with etolen bue 4arlDC teCond tnntna Friday. Angels~ troubles doubled = Baltimore turns four twin-killings into 3-0 victory By CBBIS MONAHAN ....,,._Ocie C fl I -· When the Anacls p ve away I S,()(X) ba.eball P,oves to younptet:1 befote Friday ~t's contest wtt.b the Bal~ more Orioles, they probably didn't realize it would foreshadow whas wouJd ta.kc place in the pme itJClf. A few of the balls they bit found the ajveaway gloves in the stands, but i sreat deal more found Orioles, iQ.. eluding four that started double plays.. With aJI those baJls findin& &Jovca. they man.aged only four hits u Mik_e Baltimore (Davts 4-3) at Aqeli (McCaskill 3-l). ·: Time: 7:0S. :: TV: None. -: Radio: KMPC (7 10). Sunday's pme: Baltimore at Angels, 12:07 p.m. • flanapn, Nate Snell, Tippy Martina and Don Aase combined to shut out the Antels. l-0, before 47,S87 at Anaheim Stadium. · With the loss the Anaels fell to~ pmes below .500 for the fint time since Ausust 28, 1984. They al.IQ dropped mto third place in the AL West, a haJf-pme behind Kansas City and 21n games ~hind lead.in& Texas. · Though Flanagan, a left-bander, made the stan, be lasted oi two inoinp before leaving with · tnen in his right shoulder. That's w en the Orioles went to Snell That must have lifted a few spiriu m the Angel dugout, considerina they were 3-12 in pmes where a left • hander got the decision. But they were probably better off with Aanapn in there, compared to what Snell did to them. All the fiaht-handcr did was throw six shutout innings. aJlowin& just thrccc hits in earnmg his second win in as many decisions "I got ahead of the hattenand threw the ball where t wanted," said Snell. "My sinker ws working rcaJJy well. "The double plays arc sometbina I usually gel. I don't have to do anythtnit -just throw the sinker~ (Pleue ... A1'0&Ufa) Drivers gear f o~..,green flag Jarryd latest French Open upset victim INDIANAPOLJS (AP) - A srcen flag is what everyone is waiting for. A green ~ck is what the drivers arc aoin& to set toda)' in the twice-delayed Jnd1anapohs SOO. Even the driven may be a little pttn after a six-day layoff. Everyone from the 33 starters to ABC, which will again t~ to send to millions of homes the lint' live telecast of the world's richest race, to the upccted cro'Nd of up to 250,000 at the Indianapolis • Motor Spced\lrly wdl btt.ath a collective si&h when the cn11nes ro&t to life at 8 a.m. A arcen naa will also put the rocket-like can, which qualified at an averaae spttd of 210.279 mph, on a l'h-mtlc oval that has (PS ....... UfDT /82) D&any 8alll.aa , ...... f~ practice naa. PARIS (AP)-Sweden's Anders Jarryd was a V'ic11m oftbc upset bu<:. at claimed more victims Fnday at the French n tenrtis championships. The act1on-J)9Ck day q s intcmiptcd for about 4,000 1pcciators whel\ they were evacuated from one area of the Roland Garrot stadium durina 1 match when a tick.in& sound wu heard comini from a suitcate under the.stands. It turned out to be an alarm clock JltT}'d was the victim of fellow wedc Ulf tenlund, who hocked h1m1elf with a 6-4, 6-l, 6-3 VlctOry The 19-year old Stcnlund 101ns top ICICd han Lendt of Czechoslovakia, No. 4 Yanntck Noah of France. No 9 Andres Gomez of Ecuador, No. 12 Guillenno Vila of A11tntlna. No. 13 Johan Krick of the United Stat West Germany's Oamir Ktreuc and Guy fof'IC'-of franoe in tht fourth round tenlund did noc fiprt in wcden's h1&h hope ..,)en thetoumamau bepn •ilh fouroftht top ~tn teed tepn:xntina the ndinavan C'ountry Af\er fi"c ~s. thOle bopa ft()'al lie W1th . I detendma champion and No. 2 seed Mats W1landcr, Stenlund. and another upstart. M1keal Pcrnfors. "I JUSt tned to win pmcs. not matches," Stenlund said aft.tr has third consccuuvc stra1aht· set vtctory. "The first match (agamst West .Germany's Andreas Maurer) wu the key match. After that, t aot more confidence." Wilander and Pcrnfors play their thard ·round matches todly. Top seed Maruna Navratitova led the top halt of the *Omen'& draw into the fourth round, wbilc two lttdcd Amencans -No. 10 Z.1na Gamson and No. 16 Terry Phelps -WCIT upset. Italian teen-aacr Laura Garrone ousted Oamson 6-2, 6-2. and Bul&aria'a Katmna Malccva eliminated Phelps 7~, 6-0. Also postina thud-round v;ctories were No 4 C1aud1a Kobdc-1<.Jbch of West Germany, No 6 Helena Sukov1 of hoslovak.la, No 7 Kathy RmaJd1 of the United talc No 12 C•tanna Lu\dqV11t of ~n and 14-year-otd Mary Joe f.cmandc1 of the United tatcs ...... ___________________________________________________ --- The Swcchsh men's conun1cn~ aJI of whom were considered strong contenders ror the French Open title, included No. 5 tefan Edberg. No 6 Joakam Nystrom and Jarryd. Nystrom, who has won five tournaments this ~tar. tumbled 1n the first round. Edberg fell tn the second round to PcmfQn. a Swede: who honed bu game at an Amcncan uh1 vcrs1ty. After losmg to tenlund. who is ranked JUSt 17th 1n wcckn and IO lst 1n the world. Jarryd was tipsct and ~ffitd. _ "I don't know What ha.ppcntd." he satd.. "J can't pu h my~lf to win. I have no f11tm~nt anymore. After the the first set. 1 had no &\Ill. ' tenlund 1 play1n11n ha' Ant Nabtsco Orand Pnx event. hav1na eamcd enouah computer Pomts an sattlhtc tournaments In Morocco, lbliy, Austna to p in entry into the I 28·pla)'CT draw In bi ·only other attempt to play in a Orand Pnx towiwncnt.. the tockholm Open, be lost an the fim rwnd of quahfy11'\g. • • - Festive kickoff set aa Mezico hosts •La Copa Mundfal • l"naAP ..... ~ MEXICO CITY -The 13th soocer 21 Worid CUp is set to kick off today 1n 1 blau of color and pqcantry that fora month will put Mn1co nur the center of lhc sporting world. Dcfcndina champion Italy will play Bulgaria in the operuaa prnc of a 24-team, 52-matcb tournament that forthe next four years will gi vc one country the bragging fllbts to the wor1d's most popular team spon Festiv1t1es will open with folk danC'lng and a parade of children dressed in the urufonns of the competing countnes. It will end in sweat. cheers and tean on lhc floor of Aztec StadJum. • The stadfoms have been festooned With the flags of the v1s1ltng couotnes, the shops arc filled wuh World Cup souvenirs and the taxi dnvers W&nt to talk about "La Copa Mundial," and who will w1n. e Olramoto tope LPGA e•ent by 3 AJaboa.. .. fired a P UJ>dcr-par 70 !I Fnda to taU a ~ot lead an.er two rounZ of the LPGA Championship ll the Jack Nicklau.s Sports Cent.er 10 Mason, Ohio. Okamoto, a nauve or Japan an her Ji:\lh year on the LPGA tour, followed a first-round 66 to move to S- under-par r 36 midway through the second of the four m~or champ1onsh1 ps of women's aolf. In a aroup thrtt shou ~~:t 39 came first-round leader i..rt G&JMc:i; Pat('B , the tour's top money-winner. Ml.My Moett, Mal m -De•lla and Ok-Hee K1 . . ln the 5eeond round o the Kemper Open in Bethetda, Md .. C.UIJe Bolllq hot a 70 to move seven under par and take a one-stroke lead over four golfen. Fred Cotlpln held a threc--strolcc lead after the first round but fell four strokes ofTthe paoe afteT strugglina to a 77 and I 41 total. Couple , who ucd the Congn:wonal Golf Course record W\th an 8.-uoder-par 64 1n the opening round, lost four strokes to par when be shot a seven on the par-3 16th bole. B.w.y Clampett, Mlle Reid, Larry Mlae and Wount TltomJIOlt each finished the !>Ceond round at I 38. one stroke off the pace. Greinton ecratcbed from race s a CARTER POSTS STATE BEST MARK ••• homBl out of the money at ei&bth. "I was surprised." said Henson "I ju11 feh rcall)' aood 1 b una beet al the first lap &J'ld was ao1aa to make my move on lbe tee0od stta.iahtaway. but bef~ I could aei there I bad 10 mtte a move. Tbm,, I JUst huna on ... Not quite -Hcn10n pulled a"'ty an convinana fashion down the stretch Her C01Cb. Bob Van 1ck.lc. said s.be'd go (or both here at the state meet. "She's done an awful lot for us (in a four-year career) and she defin1tel)' Smith senJed for 1 2: I J. 90. came together tomaht... said Van "I ~ot boxed and bumped and it Sickle J • M h · bad was It e I was ruonina. but I wasn't.," .. t s one ume aag.ie asn t said a tearful Smith. "I knew my the pressure." There was no duel wnh Sm1tb,just coach wasn't soma to let me run the a couple of ra~s which she had 10 800 at the state meet. but I wanted a finish among the top five. and she pr. I just had a mental breakdown." responded witb personal bests thJtt The mental breakdown obviously almost defy logic Her 1,600 pr was earned over into the 1.600 as Smith, tnmmed by su seconds. the No I qualifier. ran out of ps at Fifth 10 the 800 was Edison's the end and was nipped at the tape Nicole R1tchot at 2: 12.20, while fiv~ne hundredths of a second by Buena's M1challa Lewis for ~ fifth quaUfyina spot. Also nu111na from the state meet will be Newport Ha.rt>or'1 Bulf)· Rabbitt. a four.year standout for the Sailors who was tl)'ltll to tetum in the 3,200 meters. She had lbe No. S 1p0t within racb with 10 meters to So and a l~me1er lead on bet nearest rival, but lost her b&la.nce and fell. R.abbm had ione out hard behind the stiff pace of sophomore Tracey Williams, and moved back into second at lhc bell lap. She nearly lost her balance wt th 300 meters to fo· and finally she simply went out o sync, fallina on the tartan track. She recove~ and finished, but too late for the quabfyint berth. "I don't know what happened." wd the UC Irvine-bound Rabbitt, nuning a scraped elbow ... I Just lost my power. I was stru~ing every step ofthe way at the end. The tournament originally was set for Colombia and almost swttched to the U nitcd States befott ~ttling here. INGLEWOOD -The ant1c1pated ~ * * * * * * ~~~l~=j~~~si~ci:~;.!~G:;~~"t~~~ ~ Masters track * * * results BraziL the only team to have qualified for all 13 World Cups, ts here. So arc West Germany and Italy. compctmg in their 11th Cup. and Arsenuna, Hungary, Mexico, England and France rn their ninth. c.anada. Iraq and Denmark have qualified for the first time. London oddsmakers have installed Argentina and Braziras the favorites at 7-to-2. fo llowed by Uruguay at 6-to-l , England at 9-to-l, Mexico and Italy at 12-1 and France, Denmark and West Germany at 14-1. The wide open tournament m this cconom1cally distressed country is bein1 staged less than a year after Mexico was rocked by disaster. Mexican authorities have spent almost nine months cleaning up from the Sept. 19 earthquake that killed 9.500 people and lef\ large areas of the city m ruins. Scattered piles of rubble remain, and the skeletal fonns of some buildmgs stand twisted and broken, grim reminders of the force of the quake that measured 8.1 on the Richter scale. The eanh shook m the captt.al agatn Thursday afternoon, but there were no reports of damage or tnJury from the quake measunng 6.0 on the R1chter scaJe. The epicenter of the quake, felt onl y lightly 1n parts of Mexico City, was located 242 miles to the southeast sn the Pacific Ocean. For the most part the est~ has been swept clean of debns. and v1s1tors ~e far more images of the World Cup than the disaster Quote of the day Sltve Alford, Indiana Un1vers1t) guard. on college basketball's new 19-foot. 9-mch three- point field goal which goes rntoefTect next ~ason: 'Tm gotng to let 11 n}." Rabbitt commits to UC Irvine Buffy Rabbitt. a standout d1'>tancc m nlnner from Newport Harbor High ')chool. has signed a lttter of mlent to attend UC Irvine an'd compete 1n track and cross country. accord mg tc> V 1nce O'Bo> le, lfC'I 1rack-<:ro\s country dtrC('tor. Rabb1ll was Orange (oun ter Runner of the Year this year and has been All-Orange County the pa:r.t two years. She won the (IF 3-A cro'll> count!] cham· p1onsh1p th1~ season and tin1'ihed 10th at the Kinney National Cross Country Champ1on\h1ps A pre' rous st.ate finalist ID the 800 meters. Rabbitt is.geanng for a spot rn the 3,2()(1 meters al the '>late champ1onsh1ps June 6-7 ''Bu ff) 1s an oum.andmg J)Cr\on and II wrll Ix a thnll to have her in our program .' O'Boyle ~1d "She and Amy Dabul (earlier s1gnee from I em pie ( m) add CTCd1b1l1t} to our n\ing program at l (I .. Arizona, Loyola win openers OMAHA -Dave ~herme1 h11 a two-iii run pinch homer with two out 1n 1he bouom of the ninth to cap an 8-7 come- from-behlDd rally that lifted Anzon.t over Maine ID the first round of the Colh:ge V..orld Scnes Friday Fifth-ranked Amona. 46-18, ad .,,ance!> to Mon- day's wtnners bracket game aga1n'>t Loyola Mary· mount, 50-13. The L10n\ posted a 4-3' 1ctory over L'iU. Seventh-ranked Marne. 41 -22. heads into a Sunday eliminat100 game against LSU. 54-1 3 da} has faUen through because Gremton has a shght leg injury, according to a Hollywood Park spokesman. A field o f seven was entered to run in the $300,()()().. added race Fnday, but Grcrnton wasn't among the entncs. The injury 1s not believed to be scnous. the spoke'iman said Prccis1on1st, who wtll be ndden by Chns McCar- ron. was assigned high weight of 126 pounds for the one· mile race for 3-year-olds and up. Precmon1st drew the inside post pos1t1on. (1re1Dton was also scheduled to carry 126 pounds 1n what was supposed to be the ninth meeting between the two smcc the beginning of 1985. E.ach horse has won four times in their previous eight meetings. Television. radio TELEVISION 8 a.m. -MOTOR SPORTS: lnd1anapolls 500. Channel 7. 9:30 am. -BASEBALL: This Weck 1n Baseball, Channel 4. 9:30 a.m. -MOTOR SPORTS· North Star Nauonals drag racing. from Bramcrd. Ohio, Channel 9. 10:15 a.m. -BASEBALL: San Diego at Ph1ladleph1a. Channel 4. . I I a.m. -MOTOR SPORTS Inside NA CAR. Ch~nnel 56. Noon -WRESTLING: Channel 9 I p.m. -WIDE WORLD OF SPORTS: Boiong. Gerry Cooney vs. Eddie Gregg. New York Msn1 Marathon (delayed): Water sk11ng. Masters Champ1onsh1p at Pinc Mountain. Ga Channel? I p.m. -WORLD CUP SOCCER. Ital} V\ Qulgana (delayed), from Mexico City. Channel 4 I p.ni -WRESTLING: Channel 56. I ·JO p.m. -SPORTS SPECIAL. Volleyball -NCAA champ1onsh1p (Peppen!ine vs. USC) (tape). from Unt versity Park. Pa .• BtC)Chng - Pan~Rouba1'< 172 mile race (tape). Channel 2. I 30 p.m -MOTOR SPORTS: Setung the Pace -lnd1anapohs 500's contribution to automotive technology 1s explored, Channel 7. 2 p.m. -MOTOR SPORTS: Raci ng on the Edge -An off-road race through the wild terram of Nevada. Channel 7. 3 p.m. -BOB UECKER 'S WACKY WORLD OF SPORTS: Channel 4. 3 p.m. -MOTOR SPORTS: NASCAR 600 (tape), Channel 7 l30 p.m -GOLF: P<iA Kemper Open. from Bethesda. Md. (delayed). Channel 2. 4 p.m. -BASEBALL Dodgers at Pit- tsburgh. Channel I I. 4 p.m. -MOTOR SPORTS: Speedway America, Channel 56. 5 p.m. -CHAMPIONS: World's Greatest Athletes-.. Dr. J.", Channel 2. RADIO 10: 15 a.m -BASEBALL: St. Louts vs. C:1Dcmnat1, KNX ( 1070). 4 p.m. -BASEBALL: Dodgers at Pit- tsburgh, KABC (790). f p.m. -BASEBALL: Baltimore at Angels. KMPC (7 10). ANGELS LOSE TO ORIOLES, 3-0 .•. From Bl let them htt the ball " And hit the ball is what mo\t clubs do agamst Snell. Orioles' Manager Earl Weaver says that 'rn ncll's big league career he has allowed !ewer httsand waJkscomb1ned than 10nrngs pitched. ma)' not be there all the 11me, hut he ha) to be aware of1t when he hats You have 10 ha vc all your concentration to h11 .. "If Joyner's ground ball doco;n't find Murray's glove, we would have had one hell of an inning." said Mauch. "It's not unlike the baJI Fred Lynn hit in the sixth, but Lynn's didn't find anyone." Although the six rnnmgs equaled his longest stint of the year. Snell said he "felt strong and I could have gone uut there for the ninth " Weaver went instead "-Ith f1ppy \fartrnez,ju'it off the d1sa hled lts1 and then former Angel Oon \a!.C, who after walking Brian Do~ ning wnh one out, got Doug Dd 1nce~ on a 1-6-3 douhlc play to l·ntl the game. carru.n&.ht\ -\mencan I 1 ,1gue-leading IJth sa\C Dcsp1ll' going I for 1 DcCincc'i' average I\ sull at a paltf). 223, due 1n large part to the fact th.it he may have \Cparaled his shoulder Ma y 6 diving for a ground ball 10 Bo'>lon "h's a football shoulder It's scpar· ated !>houlder," said Mauch. "It doc\n't hurt all the time The pain That may have been a large factor behind the foster move that the club announced after the game. The Angels arc sendmg catcher-outfielder Darrell Miller to Edmonton and recalling 1h1rd ba'iCman Jack Howell. Wh en llowell does get mto the lineup ( \fauch would not say how o;oon). the Angels hope he can rnfu~ \Orne spark into It. The Angels arc hitting thl' ball hard recently, but without many good results. The Angels did have two leg1mate t hanccs to gel somethinJ started The tirst came 1n the fou rth inning. Reggie Jackson pinch-hit for Rick Burleson and singled to center That brought first baseman Wally Joyner ro the plate aga1 nst Snell. He hit a one- hounce bullett. but it was right at ht!> 11ppos1te number Eddie Murray. who 1410 .. cd 11 and 1urned 1t into a double play INDY 500 GIVEN THE GREEN From 81 ~ no1 \Cen any 'it'nou\ actwn 'ilnC"e Ma\ 22 -lhe final full-scale practru· ~S~IOO The S3 m1ll1on race wa\ wa\hcd away last Sunday and again on Monday before track officials, fat:ed wtlh prospects of rnnt1nu1ng bad weather, made the unprecedented cbo1cc of po 1pon1ng the race until today • The fOfC'Cast 1~ \for rxirtly sunny skies wuh a 20 perce~ chan~ of w1d( scattered thundershowcn. whi ch would have no more 1han a tempor- .uy am pact on the race Tempcratuu:!. ar~xpectcd in the low SO... The wcck·s 1nactivtty ha' left the u phalt track without much rubber in the rac1DI aroovc. The rubber, laid down by the Wlde, sltck race tires, an help tbeeanadhere to tht tr1ck It can o.IJO alow them down. "It'' iW.I clean. 1t"s what wt call a green racetrack," Al Unser Jr ~ud followin~ Fnday's 30-mtnutc w3rm. 11p practice. hm1ted to 120 mph. That cond1oon could cause prob- kms. particularly at the )Ulfl when lh( cars arc running close t<>aether. th( turbulancc from their ground df('CtS aerodynamics gi ving the dnv- cn. tnore to think about than JU'lt '1aying out of ~ch other's way Rick Mears. the l'C<l0rd -sett1ng polc·winner. said, "It would hav( been green on Sunday. If you re- member nght. it rain~ bc1wecn (the practice o n) Thursday and Sunday. It wasgrttn then It doesn't make a darn bit or d1ffercn~ be-tween then and (today)" "You 1ust ha ve to take 1t a lttde easy," \lid dcfcndina champion Oanny Sullivan. who will Star1 neitt to Mears m the middle of t}lt front row. t * AHGIEl NOTES -The Pt"Ole$1 ft~ bY Mane~ G-. Melldl over the oround oeH c~llston tn IN Mev ?l<d ~,,,. e;el1u1 N-vora. hH ~ O'lerlurneel bY Ame<lcen LMl!Ve President Or • ....., ~ "I'm no1 iur11<IMd t>«euH Ille vest melofllv ere dlMlllOwed." .. ics Mau<.11 "I didn't even bOlher •Hdlnv Ille u otenello<\, tv•I Ille bO!lom line. I .. w 11\e Play " TM otev In ~•llon lnvOlved s.c()nd !>Hemen ltet>v Gridl •n<i Venkff llldlev ~ Henderson, runl\lnv to l4'COnd on • oround beH. cottldeo with Grid! Whlle flnl oe-n w..., ~ l1el0e<I Ille oe• end threw oul Hendenon el MKoncl Finl beM umolfe OM MerrtMn ce~ He<\Oef'\Oll +Of 0011rue110n, bul ~ lllete umolrt HNI ~ overrut.cs, rulli>o Ille! JOYMf tied flelded Ille beN Defore IN colll1lon, ttlertfo<"e Grich wu ruled few tnterl9nlnc:e . . Tt!0\1011 ,... renk1 only nll'llh •mono Ille Anl*t In oe111ne ...,.,.." ( ,.,). MCon<S oe-n ll• W"'"' 11 oe111no them when ttiev count fhfouoh 46 oemes. he leech •" 11111en wlltl runMf1 tn KOtlnv oos111on •• iss 111 +Of l I) Ol'I ,,.,. OPCIO$lle end of Ille 1'1111!>0 1o.ctrum " tlllrd buemen 0-. o.anc.., 0.Clncft' ever 111• hu fellen 10 belOw 130 ••• "Thi track will be green. everybody will be a little irccn. It will make everybody be a little more calm at th( beginnmg. It will make them ~ule down and get into 1hc groove." Kevin t opn, who.,.prcc1p1tated a cr~~h at the stan m 1982 when his car suddenly veered sideways as the field approached the flagman. said. "You reall y don't k..now anything about the tnack or tbe handhna. that's for sure. I think the ftnar1 thm1 to do 1s to be very safe and cauttous and take it easl as much as posS1ble The first !.p1sn t that important. but it's important to be safe.'' "h's peen. it'1 definitely ifttn and ifs goin1 to be very fast at the t:q1nnina." added Mario And~tti, the 1969 winner who is eJ1pcctcd to make an early charat ancr stamna 30th. inside the I 0th row <•• c.rr-. C-...1 STATE 04.JAUl'YlNG Mli•T 9evl 100 -1 C.IV\edv <Ouerle), 10 St, 2 Eetv <Ml.lfrl, 10'3; l. weam.n IWnn.ke), 1061, • SI~ (Minion Viele>). IU•. S Jotlnson <Gehr), 10.'7. Olhers 7 . .,._.., (Wue '*91, 10.ts.. 200 -1 Cen<1edY (0....rt•). 21.JI, 2. Ealy (Muir). ?l.J.4, l Rllei (Hewie Viste). ?1,2, • JOMson <Gehr), 21.76; S. Herrh <Simi Vallevl. 11 11 400 - 1 Holllt cs.me Ana Vallev), 41 31. 1 Frtu (Anallelnl). •J2, l Colemen (Duarte) 41-33, • Sheler (~ ~I. •.o. S. 8rl9o1 <Cen1enn1e11. •n. IOO -I Ler04 lt>eMt't ), 1 SU7. 2 S«en\Oll (VI"• Peril ), 1~..00. l. Olson (El Oof9dol, 1.S. ,., 4 0 '9ovte (Hemet), 1'504 1,600 -1 Serretos (Mor-Velevl. • IS 40, 7 Zimmer (Simi VelleYJ. 4:1s.41, l McCred>..eft ILOYOI\), •·ISM., 4. Rodlenbech (Tcwret>Ce), 4 16 78, S Ven Vvt (SI Peull , 4·1L07, Other 6. • ..._ (C-dlf Mer), 4:1U7. 3,100 -I. Muccwn (R~). ~°'· 7 Ert1e1 IGlendalel, 9~ lt, 3 0 St-00. CSeuguiJ, t'OS.74; 4. lmtev (Temc>te Cllvl, 9.06 14, S Veit C8u.nel, 9'1• 12 I IOHH -I JoMIOl1 (Keteti.I, ll t7, 2 8reO•ll•w ISeueusl. 1' 20, l Ftovo IEtMnN>wetl, 14 71, 4 8Uf"nell (Lynwood). 14 n . S Hel IGennhel, 14 2S lOOtH -1 JOhnson (Keletlll. 37 26, °1 8•e4SlllW IS•ullUl), J1 ••• 3 Vellerv (HewlllOrM). l7 83, 4 8urnell ( L vnwOOdl, JI II, S Fl11* (Notre Dem.I. 3' 11 400 , ...... -I Ouerie ... 47, 2 HeWlhOIM '1 ... 3 Ellenflower, 4176. • M«nlnvtoO• •193. S S.nle Ana Vellev, 4?0S 1.600 retev - 1 HewlhOfne. l IS 75 1 Ouertt, l1Sl9, l Centenntel 31627 • EIMr1110wer J 17.90, S Mornlne11de. l 1167 HJ -I Tl!Otnel <Ven•ur•I. 6-ll, 2 (lie) M«eri (Sen Mef"DKI encl ""-'e (N\IUIM), 6•1, • Martin (Arcadia), H ,S. ~ (A1uM), 6·7, OlftW· .. '*"' <•llMde), •• ,, U -1 Hudson (~I. 13· l\.'a, 1. l(no• (Anl91ooe Valltv). n-~; :a. Hoolll (Lakewood). 22·1~. 4. Deni tldlN!de), l2·lt\4o1 S. Cemes (Simi Velltv), 22-6 . T J -I. MOOlls (Lakewood). Sl·O"'>, 2 llt.Wnefl (Lynwood), 49-IO'h, l w-.,,.,s IMl.llr), .,_~, 4 Wood1 (Hewttiorne), 49~\'l. S i<OO-lnSOft (Covlftel, •~ PV -1 Slocum IFoolhllll. 14-t, 1. Cov· 8'ubiea IL& .Jordeft), 14·•. 3 Mon-ls (8ur· rOU!ltlal. 14-4, 4. M9er <•ltliftde>. 14·41 S Wl!l1ems (Wvltel. 14·4, °"*'' a. "..._ 11._), 14-4. SP -I. C.r"9f (IE._), '1·111 2 TunnldlH (ArCMle), Sl·t \'l, l Lowther (Simi Vellev), S4·1~. 4. SmV1W (lclMll), $J·J \le1 5 Hempton (Mlllkenl. S2· 10'..., Gtrtl 100 - 1 Slllft (H•wthonie>. 11 71, 2 eurMem (Rio Mewl. 11.n. l. Veucil\n IL& WllMllll. 17 00, 4, Slmmon1 IEI Monte) 12.07, S &ennett <Comoton), 17.lS 200 -1 51119$ (HtwlllorMI, 23 '1, 2. VeUQM (LI Wiison), 2• IS, l Smith (Quertr HIMI. 7H1, 4. Arnv (Hewtl'tol'nel. 2S09 S Slmoton (~ Putt11os l. 2S 71 400 -I Sennett (C-tonl. Sl SS, 7 lrvtno !LB Polvl. SS 27, l C¥esenes 181"'°!> Montoom ery), S7 11, • Wleoetllaus (Rio Mew>. S7 71. S 8iunm ITllOllMnd Oeksl, SI 02, Olt1er1, 7. c...,_ <!Mftt>. ff.ff. IOO -I • ..__(....._,He,_.), tiot.171 2 ~ 1w .. 11e11e1, 110.31, 3 Grevs.on (Min ion Vlelo). 2 10 '7. 4 Koc:twl 1ven1ure), 2 11 3' s •""'-' ( ...... ,. 2:11.JI. °''*' .. """" IW ........ ),2:11'0. 1,600 -I. H-!New_, He,,._), 4cU.0'2J 2. 5coOle ($8UOUtl, 4:.S4A3. J, BtYMI (....._le), 4..56.49, 4 JOu«ler1 <West!Me). '-57.41; $. Uwlt (8"9fla), U7 •s: Other. L S..-(...._ llfw.t),.td7,., ............ ,. lc1"11t •. .... ,..........,, ....,.,,, lclUS. U OO-1 Wll'-M• (Moullleln Vlewl, ICl:14.10, 2 Ferrell ITl'IOUMnd OeA•>, 10" •. H.J7; l. ~11111 tNeWbuN Perkl, IO'Js.99; 4. Oabul (T.,,. Cllvl. I0'.300, S. 8elOl"e (Peladef\t), 1~. °''-' ........ (.......,.. ...,.,,, ......... IOOl.H -I Vletleo (~l. ll.64; t SlrYltnOM !El Monie). IW: 1. Mc9rlde (UI Polvl. 14.32. 4 Ice (Celonl. 109, !.. Edwttlh (South PHedel\e), 14.40. lOOLH -1 Vickers (~). 41 '2; 2. Ice IC.Ion). 42.92; 3 Wllll• (H•wtl'tol'ne), 42.K; c MentlllP ITllOUWnd O.k1), Cl.50; S. Edwerlh !South Pe..csene>. 4:UO. 4CIQ reiev -I Hawn-M, 45.fl, 7 Hueneme, •1 OI, 3 Rio N\eM, • 05; 4. ~ncl Oeb, 41.2S; S. Marni~. 41.52. 1,400 rlle¥ -I 1-tewltlOrne. l'AS.57; 1 MllMl>n Vlelo, HO IS, l. konll 9eedl Polv. utn; • Comttton, l".52.7'; s. MornlllnlOe. J'5ol 13, Other t. wue ..... IS.._., ........ lcMftt«, Smlltl), a:sa.n. HJ -I MC8rl0e (L9 Pol\'). S-1; 1. CerreK.A IAnalWlml, S·I. 1. ( .. ) c..._ (MwtM), ~ (0.C-View), S-6' S. PollocX (Wnllekel, S--S. LJ -1 Mlleflell (Diamond Berl, 11·10'.it, 2. Smllll (Quertt Hilts), 11·114, l. Henion (Lvnwoodl. 11· I'•· 4. Edwereb (South Poeaene), 11-11-.. S-er1n111ey (Muir). 17-1'4. T J -I. Orr (OeeM V'Mf), ··~I 2. StreMt (lndlo). 37·1lill; 3 Wrlel'll IE-enH), J7·3'h; 4 Mantlllp (TllOUWncl O.k1l, 37·)14 , S Mows (Motnlnin!oel. 37· I'" SP - 1 Ge• (Rowland), 47·4\.'a, 7 Lovell IEI MoOenel. 43·7 't, l ~ (LB Pol\'), 0 ·2. 4 Wheicllet IAllOUre ), .0·1:\1., S I~ (NoGeift), l9·S'• WARRIORS FALL IN TITLE GAME, 5-4 ... From Bl F-reshman short~top KnM Janitor reached first safely on a fielder's choice and eventually scored the wrnnsng run when Le1lan1 Artis' infield single brought her home from third with two outs her back after crashing into Ingram m shallow lcll llcld. "They really didn't come up with an.y big hits," said Hall. in reference to the errors which allowed the Falcons to pull ahead. "They ~ored on errors." Kell)' Ingram had sacnficed Janitor to second. but an error at third base -which would have been the third out -loaded the bases before Artis' 'iOft mfield grounder scored the go-ahead run. Schoonover made n 3-2 Crescent.a Valley m the sixth when Leslie Payton's ~oring fly ball brought her home after she'd singled and moved to third on Jenny Allard's single. Woodbndge (23-4), which won the Sea View League title wuh a 14--0 record. has been the toi>-ranked team in the C'IF 3-A d1v1s1on since the first poll of the season Rus~ll pttched well for the most part. but her su pportmg defensive cast had a breakdown in the tcam'!i most important cuntest of the season. Ru\scll allt'lwed only five hits (most of which were of the mfield vanety). ~truck out seven and walked five. Hamelin signs with UCLA Four of the five runs she allowed were unc3med dunng the eight mnrngs she pitched Two of her walks. however. scored. Both were b)' lcadofTbattcr Lisa Enckson. Bobby Hamelin. who batted .537 this season in leading Irvine High to the South Coast League championship to gain th~ league's Player of the Year award. has signed a letter of mtent to aucnd UCLA on a baseball scholarship Hamelin. who led Orange County ID both home runs (7) and RBI (37). was a three-time all-league selection for the Vaqueros. "This team doesn't know how to quit," said Crescenta Valley Coach Dan Berry. "They haven'tqu1t all year." Woodbndge managed a dramatic rally m the botlom of the seventh to send the game mto extra mnr ngs Hamel!n. who was also a two-t1me all-league choice m football. mcludm$ bemg named the league's Defensive Player of the Year this _past season, turned down a football scholarship to Notre Dame. Three errors by the Falcons and a single by Lisa Wehren produced two runs to tie the game. Susan Spring (2 for 4) opened the game for Woodbridge with a single to left, but the ball got past Cresccnta Valley left fielder Kelly Ingram to let Spnng take third. U.S. poloists fall to France She scored and gave the Wamors a quick 1-0 advantage when No. 2 h1tter5andra Schoonover nrcd out to left. which shortstop Janitor caught before landing on MARSEILLES, France -The United States National water polo team dropped to 1-1 ID an international tournament here as· Spain tallied a 1().8 victory. The Amencans defeated France in the opening round. 7-5. Horse racing results HlllVWMCI ~ark l'atDAY'S alSUL TS ( 1'ttl .. '7 ·•Y IWI Ml ... M "'"""91 P'i.tST aACIE. 7 fl.If~' Rldlle FNte (Stevenll TM CM'I Led (81eCk) Lllllt Roe.It Hlllh ISOll•l Time 1.16 1100 SIO 400 u o 300 ao Also ren. Bel>v Ou~t. Weter Jackel. Meo• Flesh, e1e1em11t. HCOHD llACE. I fu•lono' F1Mtwl119 (Plncevl S 60 l 40 7 60 Jumolne Jel<lln (Velen1....ia1 14 40 7 20 Nellve Fortcall (McCerronl • 40 Time lJS liMW Also "'"' ~I. Mleml l(ld, C11tef QI Fire. Simmer. Wind Al Hl1 eeck, Qul<:t. 9rloede, GOiden Dellverv, Vei.nlle lslend, Ml Fevewllo n DAIL y DOUILI <•· 10) oeld "'IO TM•D ••Cl. One mire 8old Wev 1c11nerosl MOllent Selle lo.lehovuaveJ Golden Senner (Stev..,11 Time-1:39 1300 S40 )60 410 HO uo n IXACT.A IS-71 oeld S70 to l'ou.tTH uca. t furtone' Aclrnel (H«n•ndH) OrHm Polley ($1blllel Jedvn'• Cl'IOlce (Qllverei l Time 111 4/S 19 IO 1 00 soo soo no uo SJ •XACTA (7·3) Peld 110400 l'tt'TH ••Cl. 1'.11 mlles on lurl JOte (Sleven•I I• JO 110 4 60 Plumb Slrelont ISotlt) 17 oo uo OH·Lexl/llllonlen (Plncevl • t 00 OH Member• (Mete) t 40 Til'M uo U IXACTA CS-II M IO "'1 IO SIXTH •ACI. 1 lvr•on~n Or"90 (Velen1uelal W1 'N S.. IH«nen<1e11 ~. nd Sew (Steven•) 1:24 llS 104 IO '9 IO 17 00 S40 oo uo IXACTA 0•2) oelcl \1,33100 SI •ACI. One mile Slrelofll S (Pfncey) 10 60 4 60 4 40 8ulllon I ronl uo • 60 FIMI •elft SOlltl S .0 Time· )1 )IS IS I CTA (7·101 oeld S1'450 I I< AX (10·S 1 S S 21 oald t l9AJ6.60 lo sl• IMlflt llek•ta (fl've hon.ell. C.rr"Vo..., OOOI s1eiMtn IMMtTM •AC._ 1"" l'llllft °" tur1 G ... nf Arefr¥ INICC.,ronl 6 40 6 40 l 20 SOit .. 1$1 ...... ) uo • 40 ) 10 Attenllon I~.,) 3 60 Tlmr 141 1/S. Alto r811 Ftllllel'IOt ltUI«. Oen Tl'latdl, aetOll PHW. ll9M Celtltl. Sllvw C.., Ac.dtn\y "-' IS Ix.ACTA (M) NICI UUO _..,.. •M1 I ' ml1" o,_, c-.. CVllllNUl&e) WNI Mtelc (~I IUllM ("90rOtel TlrM UJ t• UO JIO 110 uo 6..0 AIM r~ A l(lu FOt Kelle, ~ SIY'lt. 'Miiie OW-lutm, IJut lvM Crvln. ~"'• .,.,_, °"" d IJlACT A ll·t) N 'O 11• 00 A llendltnct l 4Jll Lft ~ P'•IOAY'S aHULTS I 2'ttl .. S2·flllflt ..,.,.,_ M 1Me""9l l'•ST aACI. SSO 'l'VdS Smollln lnv .. 1men1 IEOwerdsl 410 2 IO 'l 20 Plesoorter (MllGl'left) J 20 7 40 DH·Ken Run Some CCerdore) 7 40 DH-Exira IW>nev (Leckev) 2.20 U IXACTA 11·1) oeld 11100 HCOHO aACI . JSO var~ DHerl Fen Oencer (~chn> S60 340 260 0.-1 Rewero (8erdl 17 IO ~ .O Vuoo 9ov (Lewlt) 4 .0 $1UCACTA 14·71 oelcl SS360 TH•D aACI. >SO verds Cut N Run (8erd) Tl'leh•kld (Meler) DIKOverv One (H Gercl•) 12 UlACTA 17·5) 460 HO 210 13 IO 11 00 )60 1'04AtT A . 3SO verds Olvmol( l'I (H Gercr.1 Serewei. no1 1Her11 Plen On (Werd) Time• 1 . P'll'TH •A I . )SO veros Hemnu Rovel 111111 (Werd) Henelels Frollc (White) OH·Elevenlh WMOflt !E Gerclel OH·8lamtftOl'I Mlclnlllht (Lecilevl $2 IXACTA 17,61 oeld 170 40 SIXTH •ACI. 400 vero. El Yendell• (Floueroe) HOOlled On A Ffflln ( 8r00k Golt\ll ~lrl4e <Ber pm. JO .• ......_ n IXACTA (l~oeld SIM20 SIVIWTH aACI. )50 verch 300 410 •60 2 70 140 tlO 2 '° uo 3.JO 4.10 lme Oollll8 Mo <Meter l 12 00 S oo J .o l voone (Peullnel I IO s 10 sir-Mtrmeld li...ett..,) .. o Time: 1712. " IXACTA 1a~21 oak! Ul 60 81GHTH •AC•. 3'0 vereh &wsv ~ (l..ck..,l Ll1&a0on (Werd) f lte CNnwton (PurC8111 time 17 9S. HO )40 210 $60 uo s QO 12 llXACTA (I0-1) Mid '1t «I NINTH llACI. 350 Yllfds l.UCklftl Kid (Dldr'klltM!I) Merrldoa lll'nl1' (WNl•l Tiie Oltta lllulloft lterdl TIMt-,, a. 12 lltACTA (5--4) Nld ....... 140 uo ''° 700 u o S.60 U ...cK llX (1•7+MO-Sll!Bi. t11.J21 IO to OM WtMllle tic.et (1111 MriWl tl ~ Shi ~·--Mid l20.00 to 40 wlanlne llO.ets ( flVt llOnee). TINTM •ACW. 171 veros Tnh A ,..._wre (H Gerde l 1 .0 UO UO Cal c.... (Her'!) uo uo CNC891 "9tll (I o.rdal UO "Time:-4 11 0 tlXACTA (t-1) Nld U. .0 IL.IY8:wnt aae& 3'° yerd\ IN Me11.lclllt C:IW .. I! Ore) IUO 6.lO 120 lteel """ (Cfweer) 310 uo Wet Dr-(LKll..,) ) Ml ftme. 174> n Ix.ACTA IHI .... ,,,. Attlltldenc• s.m Fe ....... x ~ert (8'~) l'lltDAY'S •ISU\.TS (2'ttl .. u..-.. --· ,,....,.., l'•ST ••Cl. One mile DK• HHvtlllY 8rM1e IGr..indY) 4 60 ) to 7 60 PrOUCI COU<llrY (Leck..,) 10 00 5.40 8ronze Glory tAnderson) l 40 Time 7:01 21S n UlACT A (1· 5) oel<I "6.20 s•CONo ••c•. One mne oec• CooewlnN (Kuetlief) UO 7 40 ? 20 Kevt Doolen (C~n) 740 UO HouM 4'>Pr~el IMCGreeorl a 40 ., !)AIL y oouaLI 11-11 N ici s 11 '°· SJ IX.ACTA 11·5) oeld 11530 TM•O llAC•. One mile oace Slolerl Moments (Perll8'l l 60 2 to 2 «I Windemere (Sleeth) • 20 2.tO Annie Rovele (Plano) UO SJ IXACTA (6·5) oeld JU .0 l'ou.tTH •Ac•. One mire oac:e Reclnv Senner !Andenonl • .O UO J..40 PllmlOll ( Perkw ) l.10 3.60 Wtredlne IHvme11) 4 IO Time: I SI P'I"" lllACI. One mlle ~ ~v Troul>'e (Grund\') 1.0 400 360 El Peco !Cetslnll 6 40 • 70 Win-L~ l5cllenkal 440 U IXACTA (4•11 oeld SlCO 50 MXTM llAC•. One mite oece Gren Mldl>Y (Perktf') s '° uo 2AO Amv1 P9tt (,..ttl'senl • .o 4..0 Wind ()<....., !Anderwn ) J tO U UCACTA 14·)) oeld Ue 00 llV .. ITM llAC8. One mlle 119(:1 Merteftd 'WOro.41 (Aodr-) uo 2.10 2.69 Lllllt Jorey 15leettl) S.00 4 00 CeM Olsmluecl (Perklfl lAO Time Ut 2/S U •XACTA 12·61 N ici Sjl SO llOHTH •Ace. One mile oec. Sll.'-"S l..HW (Cr""8nl • 20 t IO 2 .0 Two OeMfta ((uetlttrl UO UO lAll'I CIW'fsllne CO..-) 3 40 TlrM: HIO 215 U IXACTA (1•11 oeld SIUO ... .,,. llACI. One milt NC•. Heno....,. Lotlell tCrOONl'I) 7 60 UO l 00 Vendllr t.«ne <"'9fto> 1140 sto itlVlnt •omto A CAndwMMI) U0 Time-~ 2JS. A IXACTA (J-41 oelcl 115'00 n ...c.te •• n cw N_.,.,.,.,, ~ 11..m oo 10 flve wlMlflt llc:Mtt (II• •-1 U ~ $l11 COMOlelloft Nici Ml 00 10 t2 wlMlne lldleh (!'Our l\Oftft) TWMTH llAC8. ON m1e Melt. 0111'1 ,., Clllme (~) ,.. l• ,. Wttfter"'-"°"' (ftarll«I 1.-S.40 Pwtleul ~ 10.-) .... Tln\t *-u IXACTA !1•5> .eld N1 .. l&..•VIN'nt llACI One rNle ..c. Miron (si.t'h) tl..~ 1 to UO "-4Y kie (l.ICl!evl lM J to ·-""' llC."'411erl ... T.,,.._ t:OI i fS U IXACTA IH I Mid '1CIUl Alt~lltt USI Orangl Coast OAJL Y PILOT /S11urdey, M.y 31. 1918 .. Jays' Stieb breaks out of pitching slulD_Pt! He wins for first time in 11 starts, 6-0 over Chicago From AP dltpatc•es TORONTO-DaveStteb, becked by home runs from Rick Leach and Rance Mullm1ks, won for &he first time io 11 starts this year w1tb a four-.., hitter Friday night as the Toronto Blue Jays blanked the Chicago White Sox, 6-0. Stieb, the American League earned-run avcraae leader Last year. had not won a reaular-scason game since las& Sept. 27 and was 0-6 going into Friday night's pme with a 6.83 ERA. "I feel the monkey's off my back," Stieb said. "All these people who contributed to this tonight should be very happy. But I'm the happiest." Steib has always had success againsl Chicago and is now 13-3 lifetime against the White Sox with a 1.74 ERA. Stieb who walked lhrcc and struck out five, gained bis firs& complete-game victory since last Aug. 4. It was the sixth straight loss for Chicago. 1 oronto gave Steib a 2--0 lead in the first. With two out, Lloyd Moseby walked, stole second and advanced to third on George Bell's infield single. Moseby scored on a wild pitch and Bell scored on Cliff Johnson's single. Leach increased the lead to 3--0 1n the four-run fourth with a solo homer on the first pitch from Joel Davis. 2-2. his first homer this year. Two outs later, Tony Fernandez. walked and Damoso Garcia singled. Mulliniks then hit h1s fourth homer to put the Blue Jays ahead 6-0. The shutout was the 21st of Srieb's career. Mir ti ii 3010 , 0 0 0 4 0 I 0 t 0 I 0 I 0 0 0 l 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 3000 , 0 0 0 Oerde 1b Mulnkslb MoMllVd ... ., .JotlMft clll ~clll ~lb 9•rl'1411d rl W)llllc ,.WMChU f1. 4. 'f ..... ........ ~ Mrlllll • 1 , 0 4 1 I ) ) I I I 4 I t 0 1 0 1 I 2 0 0 0 4 1 2 I 2 0 0 0 )000 > I 0 0 • '' J ~ -----T...... ••lb-6 Gtme Wlnnl11t lltll -Hone. DP>-<lllc:eoo I, Toroi110 2. LO&-<hleeoo 4, Toronto 6. 21---MoMD\I, LMCll, h ln.• 3&-eeM. H"-i.ffd't (I), Muttlnllla (4) Sl-MoMCrt (14), ••rtleld m ~ J Oevlt L.2-2 Sctlmldt Clel'll 'f ...... H It •llt H SO ) 2·3 1 ' ' 4 1 l t0022 I 1·3 0 0 0 0 2 Sli.t>W,1·6 f 4 0 0 3 5 HaP-S, l redltv bv S.lleb. WP-J. Oevl1. Umt>lr..-H-. Roe, Finl, lltrMtl, Second, llrem ... n, Third, HlnellblCt.. T-2:40 A-J1,12S Bre,,en 11, Indlan• 7 CLEVELAND -Cecil Cooper drove in five runs with a double and two singles and Paul Molitor home- red, singled twice and scored three times in his first appearance in three weeks as Milwaukee beat Oevcland, sending the Jndjans to their sixth straiP.tt loss. Milwaukee rookie left-hander Juan Nieves. 5-1 . won has ti fth decision without a loss this month, giving up five runs, four of them earned, on I 0 hits, strikjng out three and walking three in six innings. Mark Clear worked out of a bases.-loaded Jim in the Indians· six-run seventh and went on to gain his third save. The Brewers are 7--0 in games started b y the 21-year-old Nieves in May, although he did not get de- cisions in two of those. Molitor. who had not played since May 9 because of a slightly torn hamstring. led off the game wtth a ' ' -~1 , . . -• ~., . • .. ~ ~ j ~ .. .. homer. his lhird. apmst Cleveland starter Phil N1ekto. 3-4. • Ml'-WAUKll CLIVll..ANO MoMIOt' II Allfl n c-1b Oollvledtl Sveum lb DMrrt Genlnr 2tl Mannno cf c ... _, ""'"_. 5 3) 2 4)? 0 ' 1 , s 5 0 1 1 s 0 4, 4 0 0 0 4 0 I 0 s 2, 0 4 , 1 ' Bullet cf FrellCO u C.rttf" T!lrntn on JKObv3b Teblwlb CC.ltlll rl EWlllmt If Hl11onlf MHdlf e.rnud2b hndoc 4l 11It11 TMllll Sc.NllYIMlllel .. ,._. a o 1 1 s 1 3 0 S 1 I I 6 1 2 I 4 I 0 I s 1 3 1 2 1 I 0 2 1 I I 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 4 0, 0 4 0 I I •11u1 Mltwautr.. 1'1 a4 001 -11 aw.MM .. 100 --1 Geme Wlnnlno Riii -Mo41tor 13) E-5veum OP-Mllweul<M 1 LO&-Mllweul<• 10, Cleveland IS. 1&-<000tf, llerna1erd, TllO<nto<1 3&-Mannlno 1 HA-Molilor (3) SF-tlutler If' H It lllt aa SO MIWtllk• HlevMW.5*1 Mc:Clute Clffr S.3 ~ ' 11 s M 2 2 ?M 2 0 4 3 3 1 2 I 0 2 ) P Hltllro L,3·4 4 1·3 6 s s l o EHtertv 0 3 I I 0 0 Ker" 2·3 1 4 4 2 0 Yell l 1·3 7 1 I I 1 lhllu 2·3 O o o o o Eellwlv pUc.tled to 3 blllll'$ In lht Siii, Kern Pllehed to 4 betters In 1"41 6111. Nlevfl PllCl\td 10 4 betten In the 7th WP-Yeti, Ci.er Umolres lloml, Hllldnr, Flril, Cout ln$, Second, Evell$; Third, Mll"rlll T-1'42 A-16. lot A'• 6, Yan.keesS OAK.LAND -Jose Canseco's 15th homer of the season gave Oakland an early Lead and left-hander Cun Youns pined the victory as the A's stopped New York 10 end a five- pme losm11trea1c. Anet the Y aok.ea too le • 1.0 lead in the first 1nruna on W1lhe RaodoJpb's run«Orina double, Oak.land ramed for two runs in the bottom of the first off loser Joe Niekro, 5-3. Bruce Bochte walked witl) one ou\ and Cameco blasted a towmn1 homer bilh over the lef\ field fence for a 2· I A'alcad. NIWYOttk * OAKLAND •r11-. • 2 2 0 • 0 1 I 4 0 ' 1 4 1 0 0 • 0 1 1 J 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 • 0' 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 20 I 0 I 0 0 0 Pt\llllP\2b 9ocllll 1b LAMtrd lll Cent41CO 11 K!WMll di\ MOevla rl ,,..,.,.,If Grlfflll u Wl!l¥d c .Javier cf M >I> ,...._ s--.-. ....... ebrll_. s 0 , ) 1 I 0 0 t 0 I 0 4 I I 2 • 1 I I • 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 I 0 0 ) 0 0 0 3 2 I 0 >1 '.' .... Ytrll . 100 002 --> 0........ 211 101 00•-• Geme Wlnnlno Riii -C•niteo 1•> I!-< Youne. Griffin L09-N-Yori! s. Oakland 7. 28-ltenooll>n, Flsctlll11, ""-Devi•. Jevter, R HendwtOn, AOMldle, Piii""'· ~ Hlt~nMCO (15), l('-tl (IOl Sii-it. Hencltr'IOll 2 ()5), Grlff111 11> ,.. " It ... •• so .... Yertt J. N .. ro L.S·3 Ore~ OHJMd 3 2·3 1 4 1-l I s ' • 1 3 4 C. YOUM W.J·l 6 I l 3 0 ~S.1 l 0 0 0 0 C YOUllt Pltcn.d 10 2 11tt1en tn '"' 7th HBP-<;rlffln bv J Nitkro, P..n.ruto t>v C You11t WP-J Hllllro 2 Umplre.-Homt, Wlll<e, Fir$!, PllllllP\. S.C.· Oll<I, McCov; Third. Sco11 T-l 09 A-37,449 Marinen8, Tlgen7 SEA TILE -Bob Kearney's RBI double in the 12th inning gave Seattle the victory over Dct101t, stopping the T1rers' five-game wmnmg streak. Jim Presley, who had four hits, lead off the 12th with a double off Chuck Cary. 0-1 After an un uccessfuJ sacrifice attempt by Dominao Ramos, Kearney lined Cary'1 grs1 pitch over left fielder Dave Colhns' hnd for the pmc-winner OITltOl'f WllllPr1b C0111111 It O.lvnsltl LNPerVlc !M>lmndll Colel3b L.Ml'IOll cf Sllerldn rl Tremmtn Mrlllll 5 I 1 J 4000 S 0 I 0 • 1 0 0 $ I I 1 s 2 J 1 4 1 2 1 '0 0 0 s 0 1 1 * MATTU Rtvnldl tD MGMld AO.vii lb ~· GThfnldll Trtelll 11 DHechnrl Prttle\l:lo ltemotu v .. w c Cowen.Pf\ 1(.., ..... c eerlllll sooo • 0 1 0 • 1 I 1 lOOt 10 0 0 411 I 6 1 ) I 62 4 I 60 I 0 2 I 0 0 I 0 0 0 , 0 1 1 ., 1 a1 T .... sew.~ ...... u • ., s ~ .. llt -__ , ...,.. n• m '11 •1-1 One out ""'*' wlt'lfllno "'" tCOrtd. G-Wlnnlno 1te1 -l(Mrnev (2) E-ltamo• O~rott I, S..lllt 3 LO&-Oelrotl S, S..tn. 12. 28-0 Htncllnon, L-. PrlMev. K .. rnev )e-<.oleL HR-A. 0.Vls (t ), ~n (3), TtftetllA (7) Coltt m, Whitaker (S) S&-COllM (51, RfVllOlcti Ill S-A. O.vll HRC•HSO Dltr9lt Mof'rl' Sclltrrtr Klno Cerv L,C>-1 ...... 6 7 1·) 0 I 2· J ) l 1-3 3 4 4 I I , 2 1 I I 10 3 I 0 2 4 , M Moo<e tl·J t 7 7 3 S M. You~ l·J 0 0 0 1 I Ladd ) 00011 Hui'""'"" w.1 2 7 o o o 1 1 WP-HulJmelWI llei.--scl'lef',..,. KIM 2 Umplr_..._. Mc.I<-. Flrll. Clwlt, Secolld, Sllulodl, Third, Morrl.on. T-4l01 A-17,741 Royal• 12, Rangen2 KANSAS CITY -Rudy Law hit three doubles and scored four runs and Steve Balboni and Wdhe Wilson each homered to power Kansas City to a rout ofTexas. DcMis Leonard. 5-4. gave up s1x hits through seven innings, struck out four and walked one befort g>ving way to Scott Bank.head. The loss went to Bobby W1tl, 2-4. Two Tellasoutfielders left the game ... with mm.or inJwia Pt-. lDca~; twisted the knuckle on the · finser or h.i1 kft band While stntuit out1nthe6f\handOaryWerdwu~: by 1 pitch in the fim X-ftyt ot: Ward's left elbow were nesauve, ~· Ran.sen $pokesman said. ·:; Wilson led off the Royals' fint witi! 1111 fourth home run. then LO~ math walked and ICOrcd on La-4: ftnl double. A aroundouUcnt Law to: th.ird and be made 1t 3-1 on an infidct~ out by Frank WbJte. .~ Law walked in the lblrd.:!i"' second when Witt threw wildly to fi on an attempted pickoft'. and when shortstop Cunis w~ threw wildly to first. .: Balboni doubled leading off • fourth and went to third on an infield'. out After Smith walked, ...._ doubled to score Balboni and put Smith at third. Mickey M.ahkr t.bea: relieved Win a.nd u.rreodcn:d 1 t-o-~ run s1n&le 10 Georar Brett. TIXAJ McO.-..cf PIClor1l lb oetlttl 111 rncvolle rt BJ-H Ward" 0Wrl9"1 rl Porter dll H¥r•ll l'b MMc.<IOc Petre c Wllltr\11 u * ., ... • 0 I 0 4 1 ' 1 • 0 0 0 J 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 0000 3 0 I 0 3 0 0 1 4 0 0 0 2 0 I 0 '0 0 0 4 I 1 0 l(AHSAJQ'TY .,. .. w-.....cf 4 t I Motll'lr1 It t Umllflll ,,. L.ewrt ••> Br.ti lb J I I ~vorlb I I I wttttea S I J •~a ••• Of'ttdl I I I Mdl .. c#I 1 t I Sufldllr9 c • • • B4lllolll lb , 11 Aleleiru SI t T...U J4 J 6 J 'f.... lll 12 1l Tt.tH kiw9Wlllllilllll--~ "-' Qv ., ,,, --Geme Wlnnlnt RBI -Law (21 E~ttt, SUncltl9fo, B Wiii, W Pacior.. OP-Te..s 1, 1(-C1tv LO&-Teus 1, l(enw, Cltv lO 29-taw • llell>olll Mc.Dowel, w~. HR-Wll$oll (•), Balboni (7). $a-L. Smllfl cal.·~! ~ H ..... ' Te .. t II Wiii L,2-• MAllllW R wrltflt ~ ~ov )2-) 4 ' 1·3 , I 3 , 2 7 ' • 1 I I l ) 2 I 1 2 L-dW,S-4 1 6 2 1 1 Benlll!Md 2 o o o I HIP--Werd bv L-rd ~ti. • UIN>lr--"omt, Reed;""'"· fliord, s..iil; Getcle. Third, KOK T-t 40 A-1Jt.Al• . . ~ ~ Faltering Cards drop fifth straight 'I'Yri.tY 13, RedSo.r6 MINNEAPOLIS -Roy SmaJ• homered twice, dnving in four and scored thr~ ta.mes and T Brunansky also n omcrcd to Oesterdrtves fn 3, as Reds come back to post 6-4-victory --- Fr-0m AP dl1patcb~1 \INCINNA Tl -Ron Oester drove in three runs w1tb a pair of homers as the Cincinnall Reds came from behind to defeat St. Louis, 6-4. handing the slumping Cardinals their fifth consecutive loss. Joe Price, 1-1. pitched H1 hitless innings in reliefof John Denny for his first wtn since last June, before he was disabled bya sore elbow. John Franco pitched 1he last three innings for his seventh save. Loser Ray Burris, 2-1. allowed just three hits in the first five innings, but two of them were hom~rs -Bo Diaz's 1h1rd of the season with the bases empty in the second. and Oester's hner over the right-center field wall with Diaz on by a walk in 1he fifth to tic the game 3-3. Oester's homer was his fourth of 1he season, matching his combined total for the last two years and saving Denny from his s1llth loss. Denny had a rough time, falling behind 3-1 by yieldin$ seven hits and a walk in just 21/i innings. Willie McGtt doubled home the Cardinals' first run wt th one out 1n the third and scored on /ack Clark's double. Terry Pendleton rounded out the three-run mning with a sacrifice fly. Bums hit player-manager Pete Rose in the lo wer back leading off the sixth. and Parker moved him to third with a single. Nick Esasky pulled a two-stnke pitch down the third baseline for a tie-breaking double. Oester led off the seventh with a homer off reliever Rick Ownbey for only the second two-homer game of his career. The Reds added a run in the inning when reliever Pat Perry walked Eric Davis with the bases loaded. ST. 1..0VIS CollfN11ll M«l .. cf V•nS/vtl rl &liroer P JCler• lb Htr'r 2t> Pndltn 30 05tnllh U ~Ille llurrla P Ownbl'V P , PPtrrv P L•ndrrn rt T ..... * CINCINNATI ebrlllll 4 1 t I Mllntf' d S I 2 I ROM lb 4 1 1 0 ,.., ..... rl O O O O Esukv If 4 0 I 1 EDevls ti 1000 e.tt30 1 0 O I CncPCn u )120 FrencoP 4 0 0 0 llOlel c l O I O O.ster 2b 0 0 0 0 DtM'I p 0 0 0 0 Price p I 0 0 0 Sl"wll t\ Jl 4 f • Ttttb sc-n~ .. .,11-. • 0 1 0 3 I I 0 J 0 2 0 l 0 1 1 0 0 0 I 4 0 0 0 3 0 I 0 1 0 0 0 3 2 2 1 • , , l 0 0 0 0 ~ 0 0 0 2 I I 0 n "'' 11. l,AIUll OU IOI Ol I -4 Ctndl!M• ... 111 --· Game Wtllfllno Riii -EMiitv (2) OP-St Louis 2. ClnclnMll I LOI-SI. LOUii 7 Clnchw111 6 211-0 Smllll. Burris. McGM, J Clerk, EaHk\I Hiit-ii Olea (J), OHlll' 2 (S) S1-Mllt1t< (5), COiemen (23) SF-Ptlldltlon. Kevin M1tchcll with two outs m the 10th innmg to hft New York over the Giants, the Mets' sixth straight vic- tory. Thompson hat a bases.empty homer to left field wtth none out in the top of the I 0th to give the Giants a 7-6 lead. * SAN ,ltANCISCO NEW YO.I( Aldrele rf M!nlo<1 P MOevllP Btrenor o WCterl< 11> llrtlllv c L-rdlf CD.vii cf Qulllom lb A Tllfnl\ 2t> Urlbln L.CO.SP Le'll"' p MldndO Oh JRobn'n P Gleddlnd eltrlllll l I I 0 I 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 0 1 I S I I 0 S I I I • I 3 l S I I 0 4 I I I S 0 1 I 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 l 0 I 0 0000 1 I 2 0 Ovi.,tred 9ckm1121> Hrnndt lb C•rttf c Slrwt>rv rt Mllcn.f Pll F011.,.lf Mc0wMP H-.ol>fl Droscoo Ttufll Oh H.Jon'n pn Knlo111 lb S.nlene u Berenvl P ADUllere P MWllsonH 417U7 T ..... s.c .... 1w ...... Hrlllll • 1 I 0 4 I 0 0 S I ? I 4 I 0 0 , 2 1 0 I 1 I 0 2 1 I l 0 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 l 0 I 3 s 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 7 0 0 0 lS . 11 '4Mlf'~ OU 901 OIO 1-7 New Yen lD2 010 000 t -1 Two oul wMll wlnntno ru11 scored. Gema Wlrtnlno RBI -None. E-Urlbl LO&-S.11 Frenclsco 11, New Yori.. 6 2&-W. Clerk, GleOcMn HR-f'osltr' (1), c Oevl• IS>. R TllOm-(2). Sll-e.c:kmen (4), Dvktlre 1 114), Leonerd (6) SF-Kn'9111 2 SMl"rMCIK9 L.COH LHtcev J RoolnWll Minion M. Devi' L,l·l 11.,-enouer NewYertr ... " It ... •• so • 1·3 2·3 7 , 1·3 0 1·3 s 6 6 6 ? 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 I I 0 3 1 I 0 0 0 0 0 0 I 0 Berenvl 11·3 6 2 • 1 7 Aouller• 3 1·3 2 McDow.. 11·3 3 1 0 OroscoW,2·2 2 2 I I I l M. Devi• Pllcllld to 1 bell., In the 10111 HBP-Atdrele by McDowell WP-Aoulltr•. llt<enouer. UmPlrt.-HOtne. Enote. Flrit. De· Muth, Second, Aunoe. Third. Pellonl T-l.57 A-31,243 Cub• 6, Braves l C HICAGO -Ryne Sandberg hit two home runs and drove in four runs in support of pitcher Scott Sanderson to lead Chica10 past Atlanta. Sandberg bit a three-run homer on loser Rick. Mahler. 4-5. in the first inning after Davey Lopes had singled and Gary Matthews walked. He also homered in the third for his fifth of the season. It marked the seventh time in his career Sandberg had homered in successive at-bats. The last lime he did 1t was at Atlanta last August. Sanderson{ 3-2, worked six inning., and didn't a low a run. He gave up four hits. walked five and struck out four. Pinch-hitter Billy Sample spohcd the shutout when he hit reliever Ray Fontenot's first pitch for his fourth home run in the seventh inning. It Fontenot's first save. St. Lelllt Burri' l 1 I Ownbrf p """"' aero•• ,,, " It ..... so The Cubs picked up a run 1n the 1 fifth when lo(>CS singled with two 1 outs. went to tbtrd on Mahler's CTTant ~ pickoff attempt and scored on a s 1·3 ' 2·l ) 0 I l?·l I 4 • , 1 , 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 Clld'IM" Ot11nv 2 I ) 1 ) J I l'rlclW,H 32•) 0 0 0 l F,.nco S t l f 1 1 0 p Ptf'rv ootcl\H rot ktttn In Ille 7tfl HIP-ROM l)V t um' lelll-Otnllv Ul'l'IPlntt-..ome. Kllllw. Finl. Frownrn1111, Second "'-Oii. Third, Devkhon T-'1l A-24 lll Met. 8, Giant. 7 NEW YORK -San Fr&DCI (I ~horutop Jose Unbe collided with rookie 1Ccond baseman Robby Thomps<ln and aJlo~ Rafael n- t1n1·, infield pop n to drop, 1COOn1 double by M1ttbcws. ATLANTA Morff\O rt HerPlf Pll McMttrvP Obtrklt lb ~fihvc1 Horne< lb G~rvlf Remiri " Vlr11llc Hut>brd 2b Slmmn•lb Mellltf P S.mc>le rf T9teh * CHICAGO •I> r II Ill ? 0 2 0 I 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 0 1 0 , 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 3 0 I 0 '0 0 0 ) 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 l 0 l 0 2 0 0 0 2 I I I LOOI' lb Mallhwtll Oenllerd Slldelro 2t> Moretndrl Dumm lb Muottrv c1 JOevl' c OuMIOfl H S.ndnn p Fo<11-1 p 31 I 6 I T"'8b Sc9r•ll'f ...... u rlllll 4 2 2 0 2 1 I I 0 0 0 0 ) 2 2 4 l 0 I I • 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 • 0 0 0 • 0 1 0 , 0 0 0 I I 1 0 )1 ••• .... "" .. -1•-1 ~.. JOI 011 ltJt-16 Game Wlnnlno RBI -Sen~o (U E-MAl"ler OP-<lllc.eoo 2 LO&--Allenle I, Clllceoo 5 2&-Slml'l'IOll$, MOteno, Melllltw1 HA-S.ndblro 2 IS), S.mPlt (f l S&-l.C!Oft (7) Mor-(6) H It l!a aa SO base m 7'h innings and snapped a two- game personal losing strea~. Reardon came on in the eighth inn mg to record his National League-leading 12th save. MONTltEAL Wlnoflmcf Wtbtler If OeWIOn rt BrOOlla n H-ITlll H Wallach lb Geler'rg lb Lew2'11 Fllllll!'kl c BSmflhp AeerCIO!I p * ebrllbl • 0 0 0 7 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 , 0 0 0 1000 3 0 0 0 ) 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 J I 2 I 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 HOUSTON Bour.I Puhl rl Cru1 H WeH"'9 lb GOevlt lb Ger.-2b 11•111'1 c Hetcher Pr l(tr'feld p Thon U Cltenldt u Scoll p "$1\bv c 27 I ll T""" Scer'eW ...... •b ," bl 4 0 I 0 • 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 ) 0 0 0 2 0 I 0 3 0 0 0 l 0 I 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 , 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 ". 1. Mellfr'MI 000 010 000-1 Alelltt Mehler L,4·S Mc.Murtrv CMcaee 6 , • s 1 I 6 "--000 000 000-0 3 Geme Wlnnlno ltBI -FlllOll'akl (0 S."dlrJOll W.3·2 6 4 0 0 S 4 Fo<1tenol S.I l 2 I 1 0 1 WP-S.ndtnon. PB-J Oevl1 UtnPlrtt-+totne, T•••· ~Int, Crawford. Second, C Wl«lem1, ThlrCI, Wtndll$1edl T-2 '2 A-2S.SJ7 Expos 1, A•tro•O HOUSTON -Bryn Smith and Jeff Reardon combined on a threc- hitter and Mike Fitzgerald homered and singled for Montreal's only hits as the Expos defeated Houston. Smith, 4-4. allowed only one Hous- ton runner to reach as far as seoond commodore COMPLETE SYSTEM Computer /Disk Drive/Color Monitor 64 ••............ $471.11 '28 ..... 711.11 Citizen l 200 Printer, G-Whiz Interface & Printer Paper $241.11 Aprospand 6'4 cartridge expander ... $27.11 JM 11 OJ 514" OSOO NASHUA (10) 514'' IONUS I' IJ sw · ssoo "·" ..... .... * * N•w for llM * * Vld•o Acqulaltoft Sytt•m. C•mput•r•y•• • Includes camera. digitizer. soft- ware. Internal card. and ca~s. S~arate view. automatic sync and adjust~nu make 1equ1s1t1on or up to 64 grty ltvcls In ltss than I 2 OP-MonlrMI 1. LOB-Montreal 1. Hou1ton 3 HA-FlllOll'•ld <Sl SB-Wtt>sler fill. Gerner (S), HetCMr Cl fl s--9 Smith I~ H It Elt ea SO ,...,,..... B SmllllW 4·4 AnrdOnS,1? H.u.-. 7 I l 3 12-) 0 0 0 I 4 0 0 0 , Stolt L,4·4 I 1 I II ICertlld I 0 0 0 I 0 Umt>lrfl-+iOIM. Rll>llv, Fir", Puffl, Second. We•t, Third, II Wllllel'l'I$ T-2 14 A-13.15'1 Plilllles 2, PadresO PHILADELPHlA -Kevin Gross pitched his fourth complete game and first shutout oflbe season as Ph1ladel· pb1a defeated San Otego, for the Printer Sale FREE PAPER WITH PRINTER PURCHASE Citizen 1200 NLO Citizen MSP-10 NLO Citizen MSP-f 5 NLO Citizen MSP-20 NLO Citizen MSP-25 NLO Citizen MSP·35 LO Panasonic 1091 NLO 191.11 261.11 351.U 311.aa 47'.aa 4".U 241.11 RS-XT COMPATIBLE RUNS ALL 18Mtm/IMS-DOStm PROGRAMS • 8088 C'U • 6401C • 2 Dr1vts •c1oc1r •C*M.ar • IJSWPwr Supply • Par*1/Gamt/~f1al/Ltgnl Pm Ports • 8 E llp.lnslon Slou • Monoor aphics • Ambtr Monitor • At 1Ctyl>O.'tfd1 • • COMPLETE SYSTE M • • •aaa1• *Color add $2$1.11 seconds ts 19.95 .__·20M __ •o_._dd_._5_1 .• 1.•-• ~-------•-1_1_.11_1 Wordperlect '4 f Wordstar 2000 Hayes Compatibf~ 2 etocka South of the San Ot.go F'wy (40S) In Fountain Center Pia. .. RS Com~uter Center 18826 BROOKHURST ST.•FOUNTAfN VALLEY, CA 92708 7 I 4·963·3202 MON·fRI 1·7 Sf\T 11 ·S CLOSED SUNDAY ' Phillies· fourth stnught v1ctOI) Gross. 4-5, allowed eaght hits, striking out four and walking two. Padres starter Eric Show, 3-3. worked six innings. * SAN OllGO f'HIUIOl&.rHIA Flennrv 21> Gwynn rf Mcltvldc1 Gen.ev lb WVnMCI Hettlft lb Mertlnt If Ktnn.dv c TmPllnu Sllow o Kr\lk Oii Llfflrt1 o lorg Oii T.,._ ur"lll • 0 ' 0 4 0 1 0 f 0 I 0 4 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 4 0 I 0 J 0 1 0 4 0 0 0 , 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 Stone If GGr01tH MTllmod Semutl 2t> Sc:lwndt ll> Heye. lb GWlfloll rt 0.Ulton c Jeffl H KGrou P l4 I t I TeAb Sar'I" ...... •IHlllll 4 1 , 0 0000 • 0 0 0 ) I 1 1 • 0 1 0 J 0 I 0 • 0 I 0 , 0 0 0 , 0 I 0 l 0 0 0 it t 1 I *'*" .. ---· """' ..... 000 .. Ob-2 G•mt Wlnnlno RBI -Samuel (3). E-McRevnolds OP-Sen DllOO 1, Ptll~· Ohle I LO&-S.n Ot.oo 9, PlllleOtlllflle t 2B--OwVM. KIMICIV, Fleftnll'V Gervev Jetta SI-$._ 111 o.v1on m If' HltCaHSO S..Ole9' Sl'low L,3·3 Lefttrll ............. 4 ' K GrouW,4·5 9 HllP-OeultOfl 1>V SllOW 1 2 0 0 • 0 I 3 0 1 0 2 4 Umotrn-+iomt, Oevl1, F1fll H•n.n. Second Sle!IO, Third Gr-T-1 1' A-1U20. Minnesota past Boston. ~ ... * ~ M>STOff -SOTA i-.~ •r"lll •r lamttl ?ti l I I 0 ~ d 4 2 '°"' lb s , l • StMlv • • , a· 8UCl<nr Ill 4 0 2 1 H""* lb S J It-on 0 0 0 0 amn111y rl SI f Rte. H S I 4 2 9ulll If 1 1 l ',J. lle'llor dll S 0 1 0 Helc:Nr If J 0 r. t OwEvnJrt 4 0 1 0 Ge«tl'b 4 I a Arme'cf 5 o > 1 ~aa • 1 ~ $ulllv111 c J 1 O O RRd c 4 1 GedmellC 2 0 0 0 0....M S 1 hi Qulnoni u ) 0 0 0 ,v, Si.Mot lb 1 O 0 I :;. T..... .. SlS J T9'111 •111.,; ~..,..... .. .... 121 ,. ..-s MllllM.... -... •41, G•rM Wlllfllno R81 -l•Ul\9n9kv (2) =~· E-OU1,_, h<re!I OP-eotloon 1. ~ tote I L~ton 12, ~ t 19 .... Lomt>erdOnl. lll"unen&k,, e.rr.tl. GMitll, It Geone HA-Smehv 2 Ill. en-tav ( S&-&u"' Ill ..... .. Woodward L.,0-I 2 3 5 3 2 1· Loller I l ·I l 3 3 2 • Crewforcs U ·> 6 • 4 2 Sembflo 1 "3 l 1 t AAlll••... • VIQje 37-J 10 S S lJ At,,...tonW,J·l S 1-3 S 0 0 1 Woodwerd Pltcl\ed lo 7 bell.,., 111 lhe C """'Ot' d Pllc:hld !O ) belt«'I lft IN 1ffl. " HllP-llUCl<Mf 1>V Vlole. Umo!rn-+iome, Plllermo, Flr'tl, Brink Second, Keh¥ Third, C-T-l A-1'Mf lV~ I GUNS & ~ l & AMMO HUNTING I FISHING EMPORIUM Wiii Be Celebrating The ~P&e~· of their !-y; NEW STORE In ~ MONROVIA with a DIALER BLOW-OUT SALi! All items 1n oil storft will be marked down for 3 DAYS ONLY! FRl.-SAT.-SUN . MAY 30-31 & JUNE 1 UtAM,US: POWNING e COl l e Wf.A THERIY • RUGER AMERICAN SECURITY SAFES e PENN • SHIMANO SABRE• FENWICK • DAIWA • & MANY M~Elll HUlllY FOR BEIT IEIB1mll lllTllT CIEDIT llll'AREll LT.D. TO ITOCI • W It 1 ?0 ltool1'VM St St. 1 Fountuin V • CA 91708 "''., 96 IUO ••• mlACIKI l•Mt ........ O.OYIA --------_...._ ______ --- '119 lobwood llYd lohwood, CA 9071~ .......... ,u , - <>r.,.. 0... IWLY Pit.OT/ 8aturdey, May 31, 1"8 ~ . . 0 " . " MA.JOA L•A.U• STANDINGS ~u..ue WHT~ rtaH IC.9Mel City ,..... Oelllancl Mlnnewte ChlGffo S..llle W L ,. n n '" n u n ,. " 11 .. T1 17 31 •A ST OIVISIOM eosron N-YO<k a."1mor1 Mllw•uk" Otlrolt Clevelend T~onro J I IS JO 17 ,. 17 ,. 11 n ,, 12 14 12 26 ..... .,.. kwft 8alllmor• 3 """* 0 MllwaullM \I. Cltveland 7 T0<onto 6, Cl'tlc.aeo o !(ant.at Cllv 12, Tuat 7 Mlnnao•• 13, Boston s S..ttlt a. Detroit 7 (11 lnnlnotl 0.kland 6 New Yori. 3 T .. 't'tO-t 614 GI , '"" 3 s~ s~ • 631 IVJ m ,,,., m '"" sn 1 471 t 451 10 8ellllnO(e <Devit •·JI •• """* (MCCa.i.111 I l), n Clll<:eeo (Ali.ti 1·0) •I Tc.ronro (Alt••nde< ) 21 Mllweyt.M (Weomen 0-Sl '' Cltvtland Scnrom 3·71 New Yori< IGul«Y 4·l l et 0.kland (Plunl< 0 l) Tuu IMnon • II er IC.entu CllY (Gublcu 1·~1. n eotron IHun1 4·)1 '' MlnMiOla (Smllllson \ JI n Oerroll <Terrell 6· ll er SH111t IL•notron >·41. S41r!d1Y't Gamel Balllmore e r All9lb MllweukH el Cle,.Nncl Cllic.eo •' T0<onto 8otlon •' Mlnnnote Tuu et IC.an1u Cltv New Yor .. et Otkland 0erro11 er s .. 111t NetlilMI L.M~ HOU ti on Alla/Ila ~n Dill>O San Fral'citeo ~ Clr>ClllNll New York NIOtllrtel ~,. Cll>etllO Plull>uroll Sr LOUii WEST OIVISK>N W L 76 19 74 n 14 21 24 n 73 2S 11 lS EAtT OIVl~N )I II 16 " 19 24 19 2S " 2S " 77 f'ricllV't k-. ~ct. m S21 571 Sll 41' 419 13' S91 .. 2 '32 390 312 ~ 6 P111111urvn 4 ( 11 lnninotl Cllic:..llO 6 Allenle I . Ge 2'1> ,..., 3 4..., 7 ' 1211> 13 141'1 IS\., New York I, Sen FrencltCO 7, 10 Inning\ PlllleOell>fll• 2. Sen Olffo O Cincinnati 6. Sr Loult 4 MonlrH I 1 Hou11on O TedltV'I Games ~ IHoneycull 7·21 al Pll111>uroll IKIP· '*' 0·41 n St Lout1 IF<>rtel't l ·l l er Cincinnati !Brown· 1no 7·41 Sen O'"° IOrt vKt>.v S-3) el Pl'tllaOell>flla HU<lson 2·l l Allenra IJoMton 6·31 ar c 111e.aoo IEckerwv 12) ~n Francl1co IGe rretts 4·S) ar New Vork o..cla 6· I) n Monlrffl ITlbbl l·ll •• HOUllOf\ llfyen 3·6) ~V'•G­~ e1 Pllr11>uroh Sen Dlt90 el PlllleOelPhle Sr Loult t i ClnclMall AUenla et ClllCtllO Sen Fr•nclteo at N•w Yori< MOnl•tel et Hou\lon MAJOfl LEAGUE LEADERS Amerkan LM9Ue I T1w'IUtll TlWndeV't '"'-'I BATTING lt3 el Det\l-6009\ Bollon, .J71. Yount, Mllweull" 371, Puckt ll Minnewte. 3". Ma11l1101v. N•w "°'"· 340, e.11. Toronto, 371. Lvnn, Belllmort m , O'Brien, Tuu , 3211, Lemon Ottrolr llS, Grttlln. Oeklaod Jll Ml.>frtv Belll,,_• 311 RUNS-R He<>Oerton New York, 43, Pucktll, MlnnHOlt. H PllllllP\, Otkland, JI. 0'8rlen, Texas. 3S. llBl-Cen.ac;o, Oaklancl 44 ~ • .u.m. 41; MalllnelY. New Yori!., 31 Puelo.ell, Minne-'°'' 36, Murrey, a.111,,_e 3S. Bevlo' Bo\lon :M, Btll, Tllronro, :M, Rlet Bot ron. 34 HIT~ucket1, Minnewre. 71, Manlnoty, Ntw Yorll, 6S, B0091, Bollon, 62, Mo\llt>Y, Toronro. S9, ,..,,_, A1191h, SL OOUBLES-MetrlnolY New York, 16 B009l Botton, IS Ow Event Bo\lon, lS. Ta~ Clltvete no, IS. Buckner Bo,1on 13 Oewftlne, """"· ll ; Rice Bo\lon. 13 TRIPLE~ ere 1180 wllh l HOME RUNS-.'9-. Aflelf\, "' Puckell, M111nnole IS. Can\KO Oeklano 14, GM lli MtnneM>••. 11 8arlte40 Toronro 11 ISaVk>' Botron, 10 BrunanlkV Minnewlt 10, LN Parrltn. Detroit, 10 STOLEN 8ASE5-R HenOertOO. Ntw York, lJ Ce~lotl, Clliceoo. 23 MOHOY. Toronro, 13, ""''llil'"'· Btlllmore. 13 Bulltf Clevl!fancl. 11 PITCHING IS Otclttonl>-Clemtnt Botton. t 0 7 69, HaH , 0.klencl, 1· l, 1 S4. Terrell, Otirolt, t ·l, lt7 BodOlcU r , Belllmort. S·I, llS, Resmun en, New York, 5-1. 39S STRrKEOUTs-Hur\I. Botlon, 14 Clement, Bo110<1 II Hlvue<• Mllweut!M 74 Rho, Oakle"<I 1•. &lvltven Mlnnet.Olt , '3 SAVES-At .. , Btll•mort 17, Rl9nalll, New VO<k 11. Srt"lev. Bot1on I, O. MMra, ... ,.,, 1; H•'"'· Texas. 1 Jame•. Ct11ceoo. 1 Ht rnende1 Oerroll 1 .............. ,,,.,...... .,,.. ... " ..... , aA mNG (f) at Delt>-OWVIW\, Sell '*98, .HJ bv, ~ ... HJ; ...__., New '(CIR, .JllJ Kllleflt, Ntw Yorti.. -*: C. lrown, $111\ Prwicttce, .>:»; lrooka, Mofltrwl, .lll1 L-d, $111\ Fr~. JIJ; w.-,., Houlton, .lltl OOlrtlMI, Alteftla, )IS, It..,_, MofttrMI, ll .. .. UNt-<#WVM, s.n ot.6o, )); llta!MI, !N>n· trMI, »1 w. Ci.rt!., Safi "renclaco, Jt; eroo1<•, MonlrMI, '9. Herllalldti, New YOl'il, '9; MclttvllOlclt. s.n Oltoo, 2t; .,..... ~ "· ltl.....,.roou. Montreal, .0, ~ ~ M1 $Cllmldl. PN\adtloNa, ,., C•rlar, Ntw Y0<ll, 31, Perkw, Cincinnati, 31, Hornw, Atlante, JO, C. Oa11I•, Sen Fr•ncl.co, 29, Mc"tvnollb, San Olt9o. 29. ltn. Pll1'bur9'\, 29, Waa.dl, MonlrMI 29 HtT~WYM, S.11 Di-, 61, ltay, PO ltbureh, 57; Hafnancle1. N-VOl'k, Sot, b lnet, Monlr .. 1, S4; llroot.a. MontF .. I, $3, Leonaro. S.an Frt ncl.co, 53. OOU8 LEs-Heves, pt\l~la. IS. R It•· ynold\, PlttlOureft. 14. Het'Nndtl. N-York, 13 TltlPLES-COltn\a", SI Louil, S, Mor-. All9nll, 4, lt1lne•, Montrul, 4, &root.•. Mon lrH I, ); M<:O.., St. Loula, l , Mlinar, Clr>elnnall, l HOME ltUN~ MtnM1. o..n. lJi 8root.s. Montreal, 12, G~ay, San Di.vo. II, Pa rker. Clnc:IMtUI, 10; OawllOl'I, MonlrMI, 9, J Oavl1, Ch~, 9, Mclleynolcls. San Oltoo, 9. STOLEN 8ASES-Coltm9n. SI. Louis, 21, ~ ~ ., ltalMI. MonlrNI. II, Doren, Houiton, I•; E Devi\, ClnclMall, 14 PITCHING (S oed\lontl-Oertlno, New York. •-o, l.ll, Oieda. New York, 6-1, I 70; IC.trle!O. Houston. S·l. l,4S; Le Cou, S.n Frenclteo, 5·1. I ti, Fernandez. New York, S·I. l 06. IC.-. Hou.Ion, 1·2, 2.13. STltllC.EOUTS-Scoll, Houston, 17, V~ ~ 161 Wtkt\. DMeef\, 6'1 Z Smlll't, Allent•, 47; Goodtn, N-Y0<k, '2. SAVES-0 Smltl't, Houtlon, 11, ANrOon, MonlrH I, II; Gost.ave. San Oleo<> ••• OrOKo. N-York, •• Frenc:o. Clncl"n•ll, 1. Le Smlll't, Chlcaoo 1 AM•RtCAN LEAGUE Oftltft 3, ......, 0 IAL TIMOtt• e AUFCMtNIA Wl911ln12b Hudltf 2b L.acv rl Lvnnd """"Y lb ltlP41.en u ~hdl't hnlclur 3t> ReY1rO lb MICVono If Sl'lelOv If C>emPlY C e.llrllbl e«irllbl S I I 0 Burletn 011 I 0 0 0 O O O 0 AJck1n Ol't 7 0 1 0 4 I 3 I Joyner lb 4 0 I 0 4 0 l 0 Oownlngif l 0 0 0 I o o 1 O.Cncs ltl l O I O 4 0 0 0 Hetldrek r1 ) 0 1 0 4 0 I 0 Grk:n 21> 3 0 0 0 l 0 I 0 ScllOfllO u 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 "-'"' d 2 0 0 0 4 010 Wllfon9otl 1000 o I O O Narron c O O O O lOIO e oonec 2000 ltJonetd 1000 J2 3 11 3 TMWJ JI 0 4 0 Sffr9 bY IMln9I .....,,_.. 000 001 111-l ~ 000 000 000-0 Gerne Winning RBI -Munn W E-BtnlQuez. Grlcti OP-Beltlmore 4, Cell tornl• 2 LO&-eeltlmort 9, Cellfofnl• • 28-Slleelt Ml4 Vouno S-8tnlQVe1 .SF-MurrtY 2 Lecv IP H It Elt 18 SO .....,,_. Fllnteen Snell W,2·0 T Marriner Ana S 13 ~ 1 I 0 6 l 0 I l 0 0 1 l 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 I 0 0 3 ' 0 Romanick L l ·7 I I 3 11 3 o Brvdtn 2·l O O o O O HBP-OtmP'41Y by 8ryOen WP-Aue Umcilrtl-Homt. OeM.lllQef' Flrtl Atllly Sacon<I. COOla llllrd McC~l•ncl T-2 2' A-7.517 NATIONAL LEAGUE OodeerS ,, PlntlfS 4 LOS ANGELES PITTSllVttCH 11> r l't bl $ 0 0 0 ) 0 0 0 0000 I 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Indy 600 lineup TODAY'S n'ABTING PmLD (Driver hometown, car number, chusit<nainc and four-lap avcnac quahfication speed tn miles per hour (R-rooldc): ROW l I Reck M~ Bakenfteld (4), March-Coswonh 2. Da.nny Sulbvan. Louisville (I), March..COSwonh 3. Michael Andretli. Nazareth l>a. (18), Marcb..Cosworth ROW! 4. Bobby R.ahaJ, Dublin. Ohio (3), Marcb.Coswonh 5. Al Unser. AlbuquerQue (I I), Penske-Chevrolet 6. Kevin Cogan, Redondo 8eaeb ( 71 ), March-Cosworth ROttta 1. Tom Sneva. Paradise Valley (33). March-Cosworth 8. Roberto Guerrero, Colombia (S). Marcb..Cosworth 9. Al Unser Jr .. AlbuquerQue (30), Lola-Cosworth ROWt 10. Ed Pimm, Dublin, Ohio (66), Marcb-Cosworth 11 Emerson Fmipaldi, BraziJ (40), March.Cosworth 12. Johnny Rutherford, Fort Wonh (21), Marcb-Coswonh ROW5 13. R-Randy Lanier, Davie, Fla .. ( 12), MMch -Cosworth 14. Pancho Carter. Brownsburg, Ind. (IS). Lola-Cosworth 15. R-Jac.ques Villeneuve, Canada (81), Marcb-Cosworth ROWI 16. Danny Ong.a.is, Sant.a Ana (25), March-Bu.ick 17. Tony Bcnenhauscn. Indianapolis ( 16), March..Cosworth 18. Josele Garza, Mexico (55), Marcb-Coswonh ROW7 19. Arie Luyendyk, Holla nd (61). Lola-Cosworth 20. Geoff Brabham. Australia (8). Lola-Cosworth 21 AJ. Foyt, Houston (14), March-Cosworth ROWS 22. Raul Boesel, Brazil (22). Lola-Cosworth 23. Scott Brayton, Coldwater. Mich. (7 1 ). March-Buick 24. R-Ph1l Krueger. Ind1anapolis (42), March-Cosworth ROWt 25. Chip Ganass1, Pittsburgh, Pa.(59). March-Cosworth 26. Jim Crawford, Scotland (3 1), March-Buick 27. Rich Vogler, Indianapolis (6), March-Cosworth ROW 10 28. John Parsons, Brownsburg, Ind. (95), March-Cosworth 29. G. Bettenhausen, Monrovia, Ind. (24), Marcb-Cosworth 30. x-Mario Andrctti. Nazareth, Pa. (2). Lola-Cosworth ROW 11 216.828 215.382 2 14.~22 ~ 213.SSO 212.29S 211.922 211.878 211.576 211.533 210.874 210.237 210.220 209.964 209.635 209.397 209.158 208.933 208.939 207.811 207.082 213.212 211.202 208.079 207.948 207.590 208.911 208.089 207.894 209.756 212.300 31 . George Snider. Bakersfield (84), March-Cosworth 209'.025 32. :uR-Roberto Moreno, Braz1l (9). Lola-Cosworth 209.469 33. xxxDick Simon. San Juan Capistrano, Lola-Coswanh 204.978 Ave~e for 33 .. quaJifiers-Record 210.358 mph (average in 1985 -208.138). x-A.1,ldrcni qualified fifth but car damaged in subseq uent crash in practice and backup substituted tm-race. u-Moreno qualified 15th but car damaged m Thursday practice and backup substituted for race. ux-S1mon was late entry Friday when Dennis Firestone withdrew from~ce because of damaged car. NtrrOtl Jeck ton Oownlno Jov"er Grl<:ll Burleson Henorick Wllfono S<:llOflelO Jonet O.Clnce1 Pems Boone Miller Totals Aneel 1wreen (Throutll l'rldlV's GarM) BATTING ,U It H Hit II 3 6 0 119 11 l7 7 162 79 49 s 194 XI S9 16 13 11 24 ' IOS 1l )0 I 101 15 ,. 6 102 rs 21 2 115 IS lO S 106 27 76 1 IH 16 YI S IS2 16 34 1 1)1 14 19 1 4l 9 0 1606 m 427 s.s PITCHING ltll~ct. 4 333 " .311 25 309 41 304 4 m 10 ,.. 16 177 ll 165 11 261 16 24S 24 213 IS m 11 721 l 209 lit ·"' "" 4:30 0 m -Rio MeH (74·0 VI WHltrn (15·4) l·A I pm -Arresle 121 ·11 "' S.uvut (11·9) I· A 10 • m -GlaOslone 170·7· II v1 8a10wl11 Perl< I 17·6•21 Smal~ (f'rtdalf'• Sc-) PrOY•Otnc• tl. LlnfltlO Cllrllll•n 1 Oranee Countv Al·star .. ,,,. T""4111Y, )UM 10 (•t Gtewr , .... 7:l0 p.m.) SOUTH ltOSTUl Pes..-1'\evtr IB-Jtfl Br~n• OF-Nelllen Cell OF-Prill cneu SS-Al Conrrere Sn 2t> LenOra d MaOICI< 30 APt ne o Aeon P Mer\llal rl Scloicle c &rock lb RWlllm1H SIUOO\ If Duncan u H.,.sl'tl" P Vend8rg P Ceb91t Oh Howell o Me1Uk ort NltOnfur O C.oeno Ph Anoun JO eb r II bl 6 0 3 7 S I 1 1 6 0 0 0 0000 0 0 0 0 4 0 2 I S 0 I 0 3 0 0 0 0 I 0 0 4 1 I 0 3 1 I 0 I I 0 0 0 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 0000 I 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 BonOs d Ortulel< r1 Wlnn p MOl11 Ph Guenrt P MBrwn Ph DtLton P Clmnlt p RllC>Otn Ph R•Y21> Reutent pr Orllz c Bream lb AAeylOi H TPent c MOrrl1n lb BtlllerO n Menlftl lf IC.11•1118 u Bltlllckl o 1 0 0 0 Wiii I~ H H SO W·L ERA 76 61 21 61 4·4 320 SS--Cllrl1 Clftrtll OF-8111 Oevmuoe So-I Eolson Ct111.,reno Vt llt Y Oct1n View UnlYenllY Foolllll Oct1n View Min ion VltlO Founleln Valley lr'Vlne Geroen Grove Maler Del Dene HIHt Foollll" S I 3 0 Corbell 2S II 6 14 0-1 360 sa~ 57 11 1s l ·2 4,. 6011'.1 60 11 sa 3·3 '·"' 60'1'.1 u 27 75 4·4 • 61 0 0 0 0 Romanlo 0 0 0 0 McCH klll 4 I 1 0 Sit ton 5 I 1 0 Fortrtr l IO 1 e rvoen 1 0 0 I Moore II''> 14 7 14 3·1 Ot 17 IJ 7S 17 20 1·1 '94 19 16 9 IS l·l 5 71 u~ 61 9 26 7·S 70S I 0 0 0 Sulton 3 0 0 0 Flntey I 2 l I 0·0 It 00 2 6 I 0 O·O II 00 I O 0 O C•notlerl• I 0 0 0 01~\ Almon u 40. t 4 T-. 3 0 1 1 Tetals 1' 4 ' 4 r Save. 17 24 10 13 O·I 9S3 412 o• 165 276 n -?S u s ~· 1. Corbell 4 Ollltf1 I Sc.«t l>Y ........ Les Aneltft UO 000 000 02-6 Plttabu'11t1 000 400 000 00-4 Gt me Wlnn1n11 RBI -Se• 141 E-Bream SIUl>Ot DP-f'lll,l>uf'llll I 1..08-l.ot Anotln 9, Plllt l>ul'llh 11 1&-LtnclrNu• Aey SB-Sea (Sl. R Wlllltmt 111 SruOOt 13). Dunc.e n 11ll. .t.lmon Ill s-Herthlit r 1.. .. ...-.. Hton1ser Vtl'KM Berg Howell Nl@dtmlutr W,J 1 A Pena Revu S I '""'*'"" B•eteckl Winn Cuenlt Ot l eon L.I 1 C1tment1 HBP-SIUOO\ Ov A Pen• ·~ H It Ell 81 SO ) 1 ) • 4 4 4 3 1 1 27 l I 0 0 7 I 0 0 0 I 1 I 0 0 1 l 2 l 0 0 0 I 3 0 0 0 7 I 0 0 • 6 3 I 1 I 1 7 ·3 I 1 ) 0 Del eon 4 l 1 0 0 0 0 0 7 2 2 2 0 0 I 0 WP-Oelton, UmPlr-Home llennerr. Fl"'· B•ockle noer Second. Monreoue. ThlrO. WtYtr T-4 II A-10,6()1 Coleee Wond Senes (et OmaNI, Nao.I "r1dllv'l Scartl Lovote Merymoun1 4 Loul11ene Srere 3 Arozon• 8 Maine 1 Teclev'a Gemes Miami Fie (41· IS) v1 Qltlet>ome St•I• (S4· 131 lndlt nt Srere 141·191 vt Florlela Srere (SJ·lll Sundl'I'• Gamet Loul•l•na Slate IS4· lll '" Maine 141·2?1 Miami. Fie ·Oklahoma Start loter vt ll'dlane Srete·Florloa Siii• loter MeftdlV't Garne LoYol• Marvmount ISO· Il l v\ Ariton• 146-.. J Tue\deV'I GMM Miami. Fla ·Okl•hOm• Stale winner Y\ In· Olene Stel•·FlorlOe Siii• winner Hltfl scMel Clf' f'INALS IT edtv et Dedetlr St9dkHT\ l 4-A 130 P.m -E\Pertnte (24·3·1l vs t 19·11 Fonlena 2B-e oo Doren J8-Jlm Dovie 18-BOC>O" Htmetln IB-Jeff IC.aNOH C-Mlkt IC.ellv lB~lH Ln ,,., OF-JOl'lo MCTtl>Otrt SS-Troy Peuls.n C-Terrv RelChef'I c-oon Roberson ~lcherO Ft ulkt P-Jtfl HH CI< P-Weyne Helm P-Merk Kiefer ?-Brien SnodOY P-Slt Yt Surl<:o l • Qulnle Foun111n Vellty Min ion Vltlo Et Toro Hunrinoron Beech L•oune HIH' Garden Grove lrvlne Tinlin HORTH ROSTE• ~H.-"'9Vtf 7&-<orev Aha rl OF'-Pt ul Buncl't 18-Tlm Cl1Ul'<:nln OF-te.tvln Clancv C-€r1c Coa l&-<urlls Henton OF-<:arl HOimes OF-Rot>Ole Kt lzerolf OF-TodO lloYO C-Mlke Ptrker IB-Jtff Ptlredtl C-Jaton Rotllll C-AlldY Au~llto Ss-Mllle Sfltmtr' 18-J T Snow S$-ttoberl Stuer! P-OevlO Biro P-Mlke Gr"' P-Slevt Hetweo P-Scoll Hotcoml> P-Rlcl't LodOlno P-Oevld Tellert SdlMI EI Modtne Buena Park Vetencle E\e>e<an1t E•e>e<anre Loe rt Maonoll• LOI Allmllos IC.t ltll• Anelltlm El Ooraoo Ser'Yltt Valen<: It Canyon Lo' Ale mllo• So<>o<t So<>o<• Trov Etl>tf1n1e El OoreOo Western Wttlern Carew reportedly offered contract Former Angel will , make his decision in next few days LOS ,, M 1ELES IAP1 -Rod Carew hac; hecn offered a ton1ract to play and will make a dcc1s1on w1th10 a few da}s ac; to whether he'll return 10 ba~ball this season or formallv retire. a 11pokesman for Carcv. ..aid Friday Holmes threatens suit against IBF PORTLAND. Ore (AP) -I or mer heavyweight champ1oh Lam Holme\ ~yc; he will sue the Inter national 8oxin& Federation 1f 1hr <>rga011at1on fatl\ to overturn h1\ ..\pnl 19 Joo;c; to Michael Sp1nk'i. "What thry ha vc to do 1\ tell \1 1chael they made a mt"itakc and tben apolog11c to me for malona a mistake and 31vc me my t11lc hsck." Holmes said Thurlday "I know lhey're not ao1na to do II Bui that will lead to htt&at1on. and thac'~ what n's aJI about." In Portland to attend the IBF convcnt1on. Holmec; \31d he would iuc for ''hundreds of mllhon'i of dollars. 1( f ha ve to," trying to make llP for los1na the income that goes Wlth lhe t1llc and lucrative ch1m- p1onsh1p dcfcn~s. ~pink!. who won the IBF title with a dcoston over the pr-ev1ousJy un· defeated Holmes on Sept. 21. 1985. rttaened 11 with the controven1al I 5- round decision last month "Rod has received .an ofTer from a maJor leaguc team." the spokesman tor Carew. who asked not to be 1dent1fied . told The Associated Press. · Money has not been discussed, but 1he ballclub that contacted him said th c obJ~t1ve was to have Carew as a member of the team and working out l on tract details would just be a formality "Rod said he will make an an- nouncement no later than Monday as 10 whether he will continue his career or formally retire as an acti ve player. Rod has scnously considered playing, hu1 he's also scnously cons1denng rc unngand the decision will he made h} Monday.'' ( arew 40. has won seven Amen- an League batting champ1onsh1ps and collected the 3,000th hit of his htg-league career last August. After playing 12 years for the \1innesota Twins. Carew played for 1 he o\ ngels for the last seven !OC&sons. Rue the Angels decided following the 1985 ~son that they would not offer him a contract for 1986. going instead with 23-year-old rookie Wall y Joyner at first base. Carew had uid on May 12 that he had gJ ven up hope of play1na ap1n. A few days later, he said he would defi nitely not play 1f he hadn't been offered a contract by June l S. Carew hH a career blttmg average of 328 and 3.0SJ h1u. the I 3-h1ahes1 1oi.l 1n btJ league hJStory. He hit . 300 or more 1n IS of his 19 b11-lcque \Casons. Last year, he led the Angels 1n h11un1 with a .280 averqe. Joyner has been a sensation for the An$Cls. Pnor co the team·s pmc a.aa1nst BaJttmore Friday maht. the left-handed hm1na Joyner was h11t1n1 JOS with a bti lequc..kadina 16 home runs and "41 runs-battcd·in. ----------------- Spirited return Tenala nu T•oolcll Jlfoall of P'ra.nm bomac. UGlllld tJae central court rrtctar da.rlJai b1a rrench Open match. K.,...OM!t (9' ....... Mll.. c'*"" 1o1111o ~dnion- ISotlOy o.m...1 Wl'VMIH Mike lt91d OM Fortman 0orWt Hal'llt'llOftd Cutflt Slrlll'Ot Fred COUCl!ta JoMCOOk Cnilt $ttdllf "°"' Maltbie G,.gNor1n9n lotlOv Wadllln1 J.C.5-d lob LOl\r Steve Pait M.lkt Nlcoltlle 9uddY G.rdner Howard T wllly Oh •ld()orln Gr111 Twlo9f Tony SI"' Dinny HHl()er Mike McCullclu91't At'llltYOlllerd Mark Pfeil J.tf Grvvlel David Ptoc>let Mike Gove AndrtwMaOH Jeff L_I, ltonnlt Slack Mark O' """" Joev Slndtltr JoMAdamf Lennie Clef'ntnr. Cl'tlJt hcll Tommv Vetenlfne BOO GllOtr BOO Twey R uu Co<;11ren R !di Oelc>ot Tom Sltckman e ri.nClaar Dennis Trl•ltr Steve l!lowman John Mal'teffev Devis Love 8 111 Gleason WlNltWOOO Joe Inman Bin lvHlton Cl'terletCOOOY Gery Haltl>wo Cl'trl\ Pwrv RuCeldw .. Er"le Gon111e1 eoooy Pancrar1 GaorH Arcner OevlO EdWerOs Tim Slmc>ton Jim Oettt Harrv Taylor Oeve Rumrntls Oan Ht lldtrton 8rt11Upoer Loren lloberlt GHMoroan IC.ennv IC.no• Ll'GACha~ (If MeMrl. Ol\lel AVli<O OklmolO Ok·H"Ku Lori G1r1>ec1 Mindy 1'More Muffin SOencer·Otvlln P•t&f~y 8edl y '"""°" Cindy Madlev Hollls SleCV Allee Altrman RoOln Walton Lauren Howe PwnnvPuh Mvre 81actl wetOer Julllnurer lllckl Feroon Connie Cl'ttlleml PtllV ~ln Shtron8errerr Dalt Eo9tllno Jen St'911tnlon La ura 8e1111l't Anne·Marl1 Ptlll Pally HeYel Ro1leJ-. JbAnne Carner Mlu le Berrtolll Marv Owvw K•lllv 8tktr OtwnCoe $en()r'a Pelmtf' Otoortl't McH1ffl1 Jodv Aotefltllel Amy Atcoll BerbThomtt Marra Floueru ·Oolll Nencv L.Ol>tller Martl\I Neu.a P•lll Alu o Jene GeoOflt Lauri Pererton Slllrlev F uriono S.llv Qulntt n Ctll'ty Rtvnokh SIM• Bertolecclnl Otoor •II S« Inner Jane 81al0c:k OlanneOallev JudY Olclllnton 8etll0anlel Ott>OleManev Val S.lnner Penny Hammel Tammy ~reorlckson Cerotlne Gowan Jene Critter Kr 1111 Arrlnoton Vklll Ttl>Of o.t> Rldlero 8onnlt Laue< Marlene FIOyO Nencv Scraoron Tl'ter'tle Henion Al1Uko Hlkeve M411• .. Wl'tlrmlre 6'·10-1)1 61·10-1• 74 ......... ,. 67·7l-131 61·70-131 70-6,_139 71·6t-ll9 73-47-1.0 .,-n-141 n-•,_141 73·6t-141 71·70-1•1 n_.,_ ... , 70-71-141 10·7t-142 71·71-142 12·70-142 12·70-tO n -1o-1n 11·71--142 ... ,.,_,., n -11-1..:i 73-70-143 6t-7-143 73·70-1'3 1S·6t-1'3 73·7o-1'3 73·10-1"3 73·70-1'3 11·71-143 10-73-1'3 n -n-144 7)·71-144 71·7>-144 71·7>-IU 70-7-IU n -n-144 14·70-144 69·7S-144 73·71-144 71·7~1U 12·7?-144 10-1-144 '1·n -1u 71·73-IU 61·76-IU 12·73-14S 71·7-14S 14·71-145 71·7-US 71·7-US 15-10-145 7S·70-14S n ·7J-14S 74·71-145 n-n-1.s 15·70->•S 11·7-l•S 7S-70-14S 74·76-146 73·7)-14' 73·7>-144 16·70-146 7HS-14' n -74-14' 70-16-14' 74-n-14' 74-n-146 7S·11-14' 14-n -146 '6·70-136 61·71-139 6S·74-139 73-66-139 n -•1-139 '7·n-139 74·66-140 10-7G-l40 69·11-l•l 72·6J-141 69·11-141 73·6J-l47 71·71-142 71-71-1•1 70-11-1•2 77·70-141 61·7-t42 77·70->•7 12·70-142 70-7)-143 70-7>-143 10-13-143 71·11-143 69·1-143 n-n-1u 71 ·73-144 13·11-IU 16-61-IU 70-7-144 '1·73-144 14·10-IU 73·71-144 71·73-144 73·71-144 n-n-144 72·73-145 73-n-145 10-7S-14S 74·11-145 76·6J-14S 71·1-14S 7l·n-14S 7l·n-14S 74-n-146 72-7-144 69-n-144 73-7)-146 71-7S-14' 76-70-146 7l·7l-14' ll·t J-147 73·7-147 75-n-147 '•·7>-141 74·7)-147 13·1-141 71-76-147 71·16-141 n -1s-141 73·7-147 74·7)-147 75-72-147 74·7)-14? 74·73-W 72·76-1 .. ~ . ' • • SO"aALL "-tc:Mll Q, )-A !" ... AL.I Cllt llM'ttW hi" I ~ v..,., s. w11•1W1t • CrK Gtnta Vella'/ 000 °'° I l-5 ~ • Woodbrldllt 100 00 I ~ I t Linell tr om 1114 T emolt. ""'Mii ano Pay IOll w -Llnosrrom ,,., L-Auuell. 10 1 Je-Oover ICVI Cll' l ·A "HALS Arrovo 1. Et TQt'O I TOOAY'S GA.Mal (•f Mntllr l"wtr) s.MI SCMttJ J lO pm -Avelon v• Llnfleld C11rl•llen l·A • pm -Ptrtclelt n Mlratetlt 4•A Founleln Vellev 125-41 vs. SI Jo~. Lt lo.twOOO 120 1 II T•NNtS freftdl °"" (at ~•m> l'ltlOAY'S RHULTS W-'t T1'IH It_..~ MartlN NevrelllOvt (U.$) def Claudle Porwlck IWKI G«meny), 6•3, 6·l ; K.ell'tY RlnelOI (US l dti Ro\ Feln>anl<1 (U.S.l. 6-1, 6-1, Leu•• Gerrone Ol•IVI def Zina Gerrlton (US ). •·2. 6·2, l(ererlne Malltve 18utvarlal def Terrv Ptlelol. 1·6. 6-0 M«!'l,,....RMN ~ lvt n Lencll 1C1ecl\0\l0vakle) dtf Cllrl\tlan Mlnlun l IAroe11!1n1>. 6· 1, 6-1. 6·2; Ulf Slttnluncl (Sweoenl d.i Anders Jarrvo <Sweden), 6-4, 6-2, '-3, Guillermo VIia' !Arvenllnal !Mt. Jan Gun· neruon (Sweoen), 7·6, 6·2. )·6, 6-1, Yannlck Noel't (France> oet Farnanoo u-(SHln), 4·6. 7·6, 6·•. 6·3 •••• ••••• MOTottCYCLa RACING Sl'••DWAY (tt °"""' COll!ltY ~) S<:rtrcll mel" (4 laPl) -I Ktllll ChrlloCO IWl'llllter), 7 M t Faria (COllOll); ) 8ra<I Ollltv (Sen Cltmtntal 4 Sreve Luoro (lllvw\Jdt) Hendlc.P main IS lap)) -I Oxltv, 7. Alen Chrfftlen !Huorlnoron llHCl'll; 3 Tuff McBride (Grand Terrecel; 4 Cllrl.co; S. Luc:wo; 6. Jo1V1 S.noone (lllclle Canvon) F .. rureo match race (Desi 2 of JI -8ooby Scllw•rt1 1Ntwpor1 8eacl'tl def OxteY, 7·t Second OMslon meln -I .t.len Hancock ICO•I• Mete) TlllrO Olvl•lon meln -I Oouv Oler IHunr 1ng1on S.a<:h) Allenoer>ee -4,7'1 0.. ... tlsNN DAVEY'S LOCKER (...._., ... dll -S bOett . 113 enoltrt 49 t>erra<:uOa, SI bonito, s PlellOUI, II roci< ""' 390 callco Dell, 12S Miid ball. 74 KU!Pln, I wl'tlle Me beu, S ~. 1 cat>tzon, 14 ~ktrtl NEW~T LANDING -3 boall, 6S •nolln I~ t.and beu, 161 cailco 11au, 2 thMC>Sh .. o, 76 Kulllln, S rock fltll, 2 ca11t1on, 13 mactcer"tl DANA WHAllF -6 boalf, " engllfl 419 oeu, S oerrecuoe. a 1>onllo I 11a1111u1. I vel\Owltll, S tl\M(>l/'1 .. 0, fS mecillftl ~l"ldlV's ~· f'OOTIALL ,....._., ..... L....,_ DALLAS COW80Ys-+lamao BOO Actllft. YIU O<ftkMnl pro-Per"M>llM4 OETROtT LIONS-Wt lvlel Don u1ter, of ftf'lakle tacklt. 51ontd Lerrv Curll• end Kevin Powell, Oeltnflve ends, Tim IC.H rte, wlOe receiver, end CecD Cox. tefetv ro lr..--t contrectf ST LOUIS CAAOINALS-SlontO Derek K.tf'I nerd, off9ntlve ouaro HOCKaY Na!llMI Heaw t.-.ue PHILADELPHIA FLYEAs-E11tended con· rrect of Miile IC.~. coach. COLL•Ga CHEltltV BOWL-..afM<I R-IO 5-\ a110 Jonn Tomlinson Olrtctor• of Cherry 8owt, lllC CLEVELAND ST.t.TE-Announceo resit· nation of Cl\lrlle COOCllP, women's llaPal11911 coach Fountain Valley site of Run For iiberty Race fOr benefit of statue restoration slated for June 28 . The Stroh 's Run For Liberty Ill 8k race will be held locally at Mile Square Park in Fountain Valley on Satllrday, June 28. Added this year will bea Liberty 2k fun run which will begin at 7:30a.m., 45 minutes before the Sit race. The Run For Liberty will be held in IOScitiesacross the United States to benefit the restoration of the Statue of Liberty. The entry fee for the race will be$8 untilJune 22 and $10 from June 23-28. Anyone(runnen, walkers and wheelcha1rathletcsofall aaes) is eliajble for the race with awards presented to the first-place overall male and female winnen ofboth the 2kand 8k racesrec:civinaacustom- made Run For Liberty nt award. Also. each participant who finishes the 2k fun run wiU receive an official memento and first throuah third places in the 8k run will n:ceivc commemorative awards from the race. Ted Danson. swofNBCs popular ahow .. Cbcetli .. was recently ap.. pointed to terVe u the official spok.espet10n and honorary cha.ir- man of tbi1 yeu'1 run. '"Th11 >U!z we'veeddcd the 2k fun run so that au Americans can peruci- Plte by runnLna,joai~ and walk· I~" Oanson said. '11us means wt all Orante Count).' m ideots rtptd- lcs of athleticabihty will have a cha.nee to Ibo-. their Pl triouc spm t by supporuna the tr0b's Run For 0£MllS Bnsn1•us RUNNING Liberty.'' The Run For Li bcrty is sponsored by The Stroh Brewery Company and co-sponsored bySpnnt Communica- tions. The run is su pponcd by adidas, the official athletic footwe.ar and apparel supplier for the run. Runnen can reaister by p1cluna up entry fo rms wher-e Strob's beer is sofd. All runners will rc<:e1ve a Run For Libeny 111 T-shirt and com- memorative booklet contaenmg endi- vidu~I race and time rc~ults. * """'*'-KMcMe SATWOAY ~c......--...~~--­holm 10 • m ("1ldl evenh) #'IS 11 • m. (flelO ..,.,t,> e1 0--. West ColtM Elltllltt ere""" end womtn 1n n....-.,..,. ... ~from ... ao wlttl 1 1'•• ,._,lrtd TAC '991\lrttlon MimW, IVtl!Hlt 11 f"'t mtet few W.. , .. Is .. few flt'tt event end M for Ndll~ t'l9nt1 .,;flfl $20 fM for nlley ...,,_ ~ dtffed *'"' '""· wfll1w •llCI ._ rMIClon few lfte llnt ~ -.c.. 111 ~ flvt~YMr ... ll"OUO '°°' "'*-lnformalloll, ~IN~''*"' CallfOl'nt. Str1Jtn et,,..._..., ................. ,.~ .,......,.._._.._,ntt• m. at Vtter111't AdmM!tlrtlloft !ti Wftt L• A"91M11 CertlflM, Mllftle. to.• -. C.WM F• It t lO wr1t1 T ·tNrt w "wl"*'I""" n ,.,. tw ~ 119Mftt ~ ~ '°' ll'IOfe lnf'Df'melloll, llMM <tl)l a,_.,1 ._ .. o..a, •.-.-~7J0 a.m (mlle), I• !ft. IA , 1*.) •I LM A...-Ceullf'I Ft lrtrO\INlll, ~ ""I\ tltwtllT~ etlll SJ Wlflleul wllll t I lalt Ne '°"' ,,_.. .....,_, .. , OflOtl .. ,,. $.HI ,.. CALL 842-5878 F CAWNG FROM NORTH ORANGE F CAI.UNG FROM 80UTlt ORANGe Avoid capital ~ gains tax. ·. Support the American Heart - Association. ~I I _:zJ tarket .,,,,_ .. ., -;;-... By supporting the American Heart Asso- c iation you may: • avoid capital gains tax o n appreciated securities o r other property ~ • reduce current and future income taxes • p rov ide a lifetime in- come for yourself or beneficiaries • avoid probate a nd publicity • maximize new estate tax savings It may pay you to inquire about the Americ an Heart Asso- ciation's Planned Giv- ing Program by con- tacting the American Heart Association, 7320 Greenville Avenue, Dallas, Texas 75231 . Sometimes, it can be better to g ive than to receive. SERVICE DIRECTORY ------- TODAY'S REAL ESTA TE CLASSIFICATIONS 1.002-2790 ARE IN THE REAL . EST ATE TABLOID SECTION Seu y. ''""'" CllCIMlllW, Mt-S61e for Information & surprisl ngly low cost. ' Orange CoMt DAJLY P1LOT/Satuntey, May 31, 1Me ... New It ttt. ... aon to m•k• bl9 bvcka. Sell the•• vmMedM hovMh•kl ..... ,, out- er•wtt cl•tM• -toy trvcka by advertising yew .......... ,.dayt Only AOt ~·r llfto (4 lln• mhtlmum) -D1ilJ Pilot Cl111ifi1d 142-1118 IJ'S 111111 TO mBI IR WAS Ollel IO IBAIY 111111 ,.._.,_. __ , IY Looml 11 llE IAIY PIOT'I CUlllBS. J 0 Available In Irvine area. $300 to $600. No coltect- lng. 3-4 hours a day. Mon. thru Friday afternoon. Sat. & Sun. morning. Call 642-4333, ask for Kirk. ORANGE COAST .,.., .... 330 W. Bay St. Costa Mesa, CA penin1• Now Available CAR ROUTES E•rn Extr• c .. h For Del/very Of Thi• p_,,., HUNTINGTON BEACH F.OUNTAIN VALLEY INDEPENDENT Deliver 1 day a week. N collecting. no soliciting. Must have dependable car, truck or station wagon and insurance CALL 842 -1444 Ask for JoAnne Craney -0Nnge Coee1 DAILY PILOT/ Saturday, May 31, 1988 .... .. la!lp! tlll,........ tilt -..~n.-. ................................ &alll ........................ Aalll .................... . Tmaua--. --··.... · 1111 4 .......... ~ DATIUH tlOZ ·n. Sep, llflTlllDIW'll vw~·u.cm..... ...~ ...... FOAO &Cort Gl •• , • II II .. _...., '2-::''T.V,IV.,...,Mn. M' v~ -. -* oonct. Aki, fnlG9. c.......,aepct T boll. OOftd 1Untf new ANKJ\.J epd, *· cweo•. *'* VetYllne4UlllY COlll*d MM oft ..... pwr,wtr, .... of---. ...,_, tuts. 1<.nny tatlon..,... IWMIP«· tne AM!ri.t c:M..n.. W-Mll Ht.,lol. IJ:t oond. -RIMI.I trom 11 .,..;. tr.-.. =hlno Ilk• new. -. Utllmoi IM 111. ll0-1171.Muet... VlnlMM,iMi4'n MO-Ma 16fJOO CADlJ.AC .. vw,.......,. '2JM.(11 ~Con* -··•a ....... ,..... """*"· ........ docka 15 Ot M&-HOI M·Mn ............ -~o TO 811.L AT vw iUiiifi IUO ·n Wtlt LAMl.STllUCTK>N WI. 110-1 1 • .. OOftdUot • ...,..... & .,,.. ...... McMng . WAOUOKTIAONTMLI 6"0iCi iUP.. ....._ a .. -11• onwfl\OOfW IOKml *Y ot•mocMl.low,...... FON> Eacott 'l2. 4bi( = .. ':,,t':,. coar-.. ~1ea1t1e1" a.n Qlrnante • _.. 909 • cM6rl to Off/it. Up'° 45' a .._ • ._., "*':~1:;, ml clMn. t. c••Mtt•. C.-... In ar.,...-*• ...,.,, Jtln!,_~ .,,.. • .._.. nWectvOd cOnct. t oei1t ~to 24' In em~ • U ,IOO, ....._..7. Coun1ytS. .... 12495.(1&4703).....,.,._ ·~·.... otn.146 41S1Mn •ldlorlige,931.....0. OA '71CVCCWIOOftl ..... 11•00 84..m*l, 770-7001. ""'-"' ~ voa • till ti I ENO Tl!." ft ..... 11 Jdntoam1tm:r,'":'1'= ..... ........ •• ..., FORD '15 Muetang conv • ;:!d~...:f"::'':n: lllY~ m11tllen.., I mo. AWi 111/lt 714 n~7:!54••• • •™ ... '11 2t00008~E~· ,_,. 16'11 fl.Illy reetcw.d, r.ott v1: maket• hlth echool i WXAtm. AXWWW 1464111 .,._, _. riwu-.... 4 ctr auto.""· 11K m1. WNt.,bladt 1nt ---.·oo1age llNdentl Lii •1-11aa ITEMS ror loutlqv• .. ,..,. ...... JAG '74XJ 12 2~ lcyt. Mo. alroond.. CADILLAC .... ·n. ..~ *"""°· powel' ll!IOO. 871-34t1 l lftOOollah••I Houri: JC PENNEY'S FJUOO Openl~ June t , In Good locetlon t71-'4S6 VI COfW9l'tlon, b!Jrgan. Uc# 1IYL 140 8tk 4523 8IMr met., ~ taattw. 1 brs• I ~ end muot't ::o'=~~a.~= 1~~~,e.=: ="•:im"":::d~ ........ ,... ~=t.'i,.:t~0:':'. .,.. =:":c:=.: ~~·~ ... ~'. Ru!M'~~obo t:OOam to 1:00pm .. 8tett 7&9-(11 ) 127~10 For "f'I Sr ... In Nf)t 11uoo. pp. t7M220. • SVOOULTKlfSWCOAUONETNY Sulukl, no-1001. Mere. 64().M30. c LL 1712 THEODORE I at 14.00/hour plu1 SEARS l<ENMORE *•White WEDDING & ...,.,..,.._ IM-11110. JAGUAR SOVEREIGN '15 CADILLAC '72 hdan ROBINS =~· cPmleWeeual delkattlre& DRYER DRESS, Sa 5, ..... wa-•• U Anln t~-~· Offf'//W '1'Y lttlt le deVllll, yYn'I root, all nv ... , • B xtt __.. S50lobo beer! worn. S150 0t eeet -·-'' '· ...... ttcttt. ..,_., cc..1 ISUZU .-i~ rubber. xlnt cond WDf1ten weloome. rown, """'"'• on.. c.ii l50-e2el FOf 24' lk~ lnMY xtr•. EPA/DOJ $1 . ·~· A&A2 F0t lnterMw c.il Ma.v &42·5351 731 2927 -2 .....,. 3000 -• ....tn -<r"\NV FORD JOf>O HARBOR BIVD (0\TA M l\A f>41 0010 .,.... 5:30 Mon.-Ftt. -°' PHILCO !'°I' $150, ACA • ... .... ••• 81W'611 .. ownr. W Sat. et e.42·11111. fualtut tilt bll(/Wht"fe TV '35, patio lllM fr..,.mdea WAHtEb'.uen I Women I llY ..... =~5=:;.:::::: . M~~: :.= '&4 CADILLAC '7t S.:t.:i •Int cond. Muet ... --1·1-'M_C_L_ICK __ .. Reb1t eng. new bf111 • .tc . .,,,, $4800 Call 780-1211 AUDI/RENAULT SPECIAL SAVINGS ;:.1~ ~· ~ LU Ml-1111 ronn rock.,.. '350 ... Cua!l; MH BMcf\ 1mporta, 152..oeoo =:.~~ t!-'e.:''~~ COPPER=~tleYel 1~~elect=~~= Auto~A/~~. MOO mo ror PIT Nl1Y AM CALL l73-1t34 · molded picture-plate, good cond, M76 Or Beet UC# 1JVW062 Stk "87 JEEP • CHEV '78 ~ 4 ctr ale alt Pl. pb, beaut 2 tOM paint, Mlctt A1~ ml, al recorda 12500. 541-1"3 ON QUALITY USED CARS 11n. 7111-4144, 7·11111'11. 20" dllll'll. "Otd HOfM-C>n.r 541 lllSI 14111 4 PIECE LIVING ROOM lteed" delilgn, 12151090. Wl1Jlll SET L.Nte new. H .. oek Mrs. Ertc*. ieo-2234. '78 Golden FakX>n, 20', MACGREGOA YACHTS trim. Peld S755, ... $215 .. ale, new tna, ~. 1131 PLACENTIA, CM Celtl. 952-4254 SEARS colored 21 TV I hitch, llke new cond mo old, Ill• new, remote $5000 OBO 93CM>IOll ...,.... Wu... MOVING SALE Boy8 18 In. control, coet MllO Mklng VW WESTFALIA •10 HU ~-~::"~ =10~.m:!n ':!: Exc.llent cond. atove, THEODORE ROBINS FORD lObO HAAllOI l!lVr> co~ TA MHA ~~ 2 0010 91PMX.,.CTIC..w"X'P'("PINIP'IQW.R§11@'";;;(~..-. w/bevel glue. 873-1432. conM meker, 173-8232. lrldg, •Ink, S3 ,HO, 1ng poe111on to Cll9 f« 557-3140 mz ... 1111DU dey patient No ~ HIDE·A·BED sa7.50 l 8hepe Buntt b9dl wtth 4 -.._---/----92 mu... new uphol, only when' trevellng. 1' Couch 197.50, IMng drewere. bookcue, ••••7• $3900 (208)378-9788 Excel reta. M4-8015 room chelf $47.50, Iii cloeet, l8dder $300. IBM ......... Mii good cond. e.42-4397. S•l•ctrlc Typewriter li2 sOzOki GS 558 MBZ '81 180 B I Compl rMtOfld. xtt cond. IAVINE AUTO CENTER 714-951-3144 800-428-7 485 WlllYAIJ.111111 USED CARS & TRUCKS COME INOA CALL FOR .. IPPUlllL O.ULLO ..,..,, 11211 BEACH Bl VO. HUNTINGTON BEACH 141-11111 ..... 1111 '13 All>I 5000 TtltBO ,__.,,._ ...... ~t .. ,..,., LJ).•~ '9895 '84 TOYOTA !!!!!!!2~---Hll/Hen chelt, I drwn, $200. 1° K9Y Add mecn KATANA Under SK ml, IOlld mahog, 4'wtde W 125· Student claMroom g,..t condition S 1800. Aatitul MIO Tappin. reng• gH. deelc 125· 549-13-45 Clll Mtlil 545-e591 Mutt Sellll $3,500/obo, 5se.&78/786-4439. MBZ '81 30080 ,I CHEVROLET S..10 Blanr 'M . V8, MO,.., cond .. full power, 2·tone palm. T rlllof pk,. 211f< m11ee. SI005. (15 1111). Cormier Suzuki. no.1001. 1t------------------1 a ...... ULI NeV9r uMd. Almond 30" MOVING SALEI *-•..-* S200 &42-2730 3 glo~ ~llard lemp ytc,. KAWASAKI 1978, rune Tlffanylffvef,Dreeden.cut • totien teblel & IMnG rm grHtl 1300 OBO. gl111. mlrrora, m1ny KREISS CHAISE-Mauve & c:tierte Mett8nne cfolll 548-9074 cryetal ttema. 2817 Eat blue pattern, coat 11500 fr-dlb drfrldg much a t 1 __ tie all Cout Hwy. Coron• Del Ilk• new 1795/obo, more 854-1417 ' •"mi!•,._e ....... ..,.!iloia.__ .. _,....-. Mar &40-2497 · Ma~ I ----------------NEWPORT BEACH TEN· IUIA51 enth/palo, par1 cond. ol1g ownr, U0,500. Oya 833-9078 Evea 497-1897 AHO TRYING HARO£R CHEVROLET c.maro '83 • Full powel', low mllea. Aplln• whit• llnlah. 15995. (14421 1~ Cormier Suzuki, no.1001. omY. IAYILU 'II '84 ELDO BIARRITZ f/pwr ........ (2~) $14,.55 NIS CLUB Flll'fllly mem-ALL UID berehlp. Tran1f1rr1bl• I llllU MBZ SLC '74 All EX-I TRAS, lootll new, exoel-1 tent condition, blu1. j $16,000 8«-105e. TO BE =I ·SALES •SERVICE •PARTS •LEASING . Loaded with power brak... Beauttrul two lt------------------1 1950. Cell 133-8821 DOMESTIC a FOREIGN PANASONIC PV 1730 HI-llAIEY TIYITI ~H!.iVC~.yr g:! 18881 BEACH BLVD. dinette, lounge fold ou1 11•1141-1111 •l.LHM'll* 1 Blk/pal. Int., euparb con .. 1 fully eqpt. aunroof • ..,. Vk:e rec:Ofdl, 1 yr, W8fr. I avallable, (042280) ,ARC(SI ltM NIOlh ON 111[ W[SI ·coA)I tone paint, r/redt., a.- tom wheela. low mllM ind much more (2AA Vl3e) $4995. JohnlOn & Son line. Mere. 5-40-5830. 1981 CADILLAC SEVILLE $9,895 Queen.bed, ~ 1083· 4 ftMI Drift/ J..,. . UPRIGHT frMZer S150. 3 1131 111,111 Mll.!1111 I EVERY MODEL & COlOR CALL TODAY BUICK DEALER CHEVY '85 Blazer S10, V8, ll------C1Mllc--Mlltl--121'm14--I ----~ 4x4, 15K ml, air, lt..O, end tlblel, 1 cotrel S30 .'iiii'iiiiiiiiJii-... c:n.t °' drw ... 5. .. 'II ... a wind llr cond S50. 2wey YOURS FOR wall fumlloe Ilka nu S75 IMMEDIATE DELIVERY boat trailer 15 rt Gregor (Stk# 2117)(Ser# 5271) •llTI 100I Quell St .. N.8. I 833-9300 MERCEDES BENZ 450 SL 1984 • Beautlful. Both topa. chrome wh"ll. '>(llJTH rnuNTY 1A .. 1 1 BE A( H fjl 110 ~iLJ'n 1rH. Tur~ Bf AC H (714) 842-2000 '82 CADILLAC BROUGHAM IN extended wwr 111,200 (213)438-5n4 Evee ORANGE COUNTY -DODGE Col1 '&4 • SltYer 0.'Dtc-•. '" (lflU050) t1tlon. Nowl S2H5. SPICIAL GAIAGI SALi IAD ::~~~et• nn-oRA~~AST ONLY ~ /llne. CALL 642-5671. laher, four foot, good Jeep/Renault (003542~ Prtoed to NII. ----. -------Beech lmporta, 752-0900 VW 72 BUG, red with bllCk 1m/fm, good cond. We Offer ' met. Great trenepor-$9 f 8 9 5 •New Car Sales (204253) Cormier •Used Car Sales Suzuki, 110-1001. 11---------------___. c o n d I t I o n S 5 O O 2524 Harbor Coate Meu ltMraJ llt2 laat. ltack llfl 968-8149· Ml-1021 Fttl MXRREf • luRE 7 GARAGE SALE. s.vSun ''" •• ,.. IHI Tncb s c.po. va11ey c11r11111n Sch M•y 31 , Jun 1. Wern« & XbORXeLE k1 I I lNs 10 '71 EL cXMINo V-i. auto. 32032 Del Oblapo, S.JC Edwlfd1. 8602 Wrenfleld good hOIM ONL YI 8 wkl 1m/fm CUI good WOOt Crert1, antlquee Av Hunt. Ben. HouMhold Good variety. Bo• trlln-truck. Beet., offer. Mu11 boutique ltem1. USED & gooda. clo1hel, tum. etc. ed. 918-7808 NII. 780-e800 QOOO. 10llTI to 4pm NISSAN Sentre Wegon '84 MUST SELL Miki offer. • Auto. llr. eand beige, 760-6e00 xlnt cond. $4995 --------( 128484). Cormier VW '78 CONV. White w/ Suzuki. 770-7001. bleck. "" top, lnt/eld perl 1m/fm CUI. 45K ml. PEUGEOT EXECUTIVE S8250. 780-8800 •Service •Leasing •£.xcellen Fmancmg R rn5MO©~ •-IL.... Li:.. ,,,.. SAT/SUN. 22072 HULA HUIAMl .. LL v ... ...-UM v. CR 24 h bolt Ire.lier 8' wood & &lumlnum. Plcil-• HouM o;m0 1ftlon S•l• S500/m1ke olr Mlec Up 842-104'8 11111 1l CARS -19 8 5 G l -....,..,.-,,-,,------MODELS • Low mllea. vw '79 CONV. completely MV8f•I to chooae from. reatOfed, yellow/tan/blk Sterling 11 $9495. over $8000 lnvHted. 292& H••-81•0 (387387). Beach lmport1, Make offer. 780-860() C.M 979·2500 ,52-0900 VW C1mpar '74 W•t---------plua 5 fll'l'llly gatege Nie. houMh<>ld, Come... F t good h G 12 PNMnQ«. Good condl 110 Martne Ave BllbOI I--' ll.u ~-:n ~hep/Lab°:::: pu-; e.42-5181 lllend. Set/Sun 11-5. n1at . '" plel 8 week• old, 3 left. Aatl .. ", cenu ffl.., 1112 GXRXaE sxLt sxt. May 122-1ea1 ... ve meuege c1111'" tMs PORSCHE 914 °71 CUTE ph1ll1-Pop top, •It cond. BUICK '84 Electre Station CARii Red/Blk · run• mul1 Mii. $3,200/obo, W1gon Very clHn, grMtl Inter v/goOct, ext 55&-6378178&-«39. ~~~~.d4~~t20.utru n/ptllnt, llTl/lm cauette. VW KARMANN GHIA '71 iRi sXLEI uany heme I !!,.~~.= 1~· KITTENS FORD UOsfXNG 'ii Something f« 9vetyone tibia, l1mp1. chelra, 3 DARLING MALE Conv, IUto blk top, pe, $3310. 644-7810. Gr.en. orig. clean. rune CADILLAC ·n Coupe De 1970 Pon Provlnee. NB clothll, b1by llama. 10 WEEKS OLD p b . 2 8 9 v 8 • n g. .s.1urd1y 8-4 lremed lr1 mite 17 BU\CKIWHT 875-ele2 $3900/obo, ~13. Olrage Sale Couch. , TV. Snowepple (Wood-Jntlry/fsn/Art Aat" baRrW I refr1Q, lld etc 25-·S 180 bridge). Off Blue Lake So. 1125 -710-li Av'oc.do Coron• & Al1buter 786-5443 ALF OMEO del Mar. Sll1 10: 1 2 Caret Engagement rtng, It'• Alf• _..,her In --------SAT/SUN 1:.-: top a 1 IOll1er1. With di.tnond Newport It 8Mctl Import• UTllMYtte 1 ::~P:""4~ ·T~~l~d'!: wedding bend. wt11 gotd., 752-0900 518~ IRIS (Alley) Turtle Rodt. 854-8742 Pd 11400. Sec:tfftoe f« .. MOVING-ALL MUST GO S950. See to llPPfeclete. ta lltla 1 Laiau hick II ca11 r« appt 842-5109 IMW ·-===-~= lJllU IUOI ......... leMe ,...... SI ,. P1tlo M1 8 pc yellow PBC Paid 113,000 Mii S11,000. Salee~P~E-~:!,ng 111 IWIP •En $380. Wrought Iron blk Have receipt•. MUST EUROPEAN DELIVERY IJDIK MOIOll ... , l'llRC\( Ill Al fll < tlf VROl I I H19ho l (Ju•I"" <; .. lo & <;,.1\IC~ $TE•t11" #OTOllt wur H S I <"•" H .. , E.,.,-y Sunday. Orange patio Mt. Burl-wrought I SELL. &42-1Ge0 1540 JAMBOREE RO. Cout College. Fllrvl9w & Iron g1me table S~5. WHITE mink, ftOOf length NEWPORT BEACH 6 7 3-0900 Adema. Coat• Meu. Ad· Antlq04J wtll1• bdrm M1 zlP-•·Part to knee length Adjecent to Fllhlon 11181\d l'=::=:=====~ mtlelon & Parking FREE $195+ muct1 morel Sat/ labulou1 orlplnal elze ()pan 7 D119 a Week = * PEUGEOT * SpeceeS10. "32·5880 Sun 10·8. 497-1304. 7-9. Coat StoOO. Mii e.40-8«4 * MASTERATI * 13« Mornlngllde Dr _ · $3500. 645-1209. 1-------- ANTIOUE d .... I * ALFA ROMEO * deek ba~ft:i. ~· 1 l~rt lock IHt Office Fanitu• U\RGE SELECTION OFI *SAAB* BIITER* t1ou~ho1d lteml, etc: 1 --mi Xnfklu•. NB A ka!ent I047 NLEWM& ~.;1.e.?. B ... M.W'SI ~BEA HO 2«2 Eklen (In beck) Sat & Sun llam-3pm ,~ETS -I Set-&.tn 10am-3pm 0 I k ch a Ir . bed . HEAVY DUTY VOLUME SALES ' I ' m an UUJ . ~h~~=:'d ~. 8 FT TO 12 FT SERVICE a LEASING I * 752-0900 * ... ,...... """"" 549-3710 3870 N Cherry Ave. 2773 Bunting Clrcle, M ... E'BLUFF MOVING SALEI LONG BEACH SAAB TURBO '81 Verde. Slit 10-3 Sun 9-12 Kenmore wuh/dry $300, Ptb Aalaala (No. Cherry exlt-405) I Btk, AC. loaded Olrage Siie: 290 ROM furn. TV. art. etc. 2207 cXVXueA king a;;; (l 1•)111-llH <2BLK217) 11495 Line. Slit/Sun 8-5 100% I Vl1t1 Oorldo, 759-1456. Spaniel• Blenhlem, M, Trec»-tna Welcome 8Mch lmporta, 752-0900 proceed• go to Hunt· SUNDAY 8:00 to 4 00 Champ aired, lhow qutty. OPEN SEVEN DAYS 1SMB '80. GrMt grid. girt. lngton f ~c.."_ .. Speclal I FRI 10-2• SAT 9-3. TOYS. 870-4822 Of 870-15ee. PeM perlormence. Int. g:-..:,~ Of ..... ~I kldl CIOthee, houMhOld KITIENS Healthy a Heppy mwn llllPUI I ~a:ic. 12800• Call 1tem1. kldl tum. book• r..-lor IOvl...., l'lome. DELIVERY DEPARTMENT GARAGE SALE Sun/Sun 25c .. Picture framea. s2o/~. Incl kit:;.,.. plcg. WE LUSE Furniture. toYS. ~. , 42 1 RlveB!de Ave guarentM, 850-8&33 McLAREN'S BMW ILL IAIEI =-~-,::;~1:m•· LIDO COLLECTIBLES LHASA APSO Al<C M·F 11119, S-S till 8 I •llELI 3087 Kll.....,oott C M Sun 8 30-4pm, 118 VII Honey colored 5 yr old 828 S. Euctld St. ___ ._,~ __ •_· --1 lth1ca. antique •llver. mile. FREE 'to loving FUiierton, CA llerfMr ....... Lg patio tbte (Cuatomlzed china, Unen1, furniture, home 548-9050. 714-8808300 AMI). gd cond. Bike c:ntld l carpeta. t0011. . 213-e91-e701 13861 Harbor Blvd, G.G. carrier. Big Wheal. muctl LIDO TREASURES Piaa" 0r,... &&•-2100 m«e. 1147 Peularlno. Sun June 1 8.~.00 HSI ~-... ~~ISIJ!I S1turdey 9111'11 549-M70 1116 VIA ITHICA . Oualitv REMINGTON Qprl ht, SUBARU 4WO Wegon '80 Mini V8n. Ur• & wn.t• noueew1rH, eppllancee, s 5 o o . o Bo , 11 4 • White flnleh. Greet •~-u__.. fu • d 11 .. ~ t 1•-cond. $2&95. (724828) . ......... n-1ld m 0 II-nen1, .........,... or _..... 786-5251 ev9nlngl. ... • • ••• c hee. cttlldren'1 ciothel a I mirror•. Cry9111 & lllver _... __ • -o r m I • r S u z u k I • toys, Moped Sit only 9·'MAGAZINES: Life, Loott. •rrt1....... 1111 Lllllll 77().TOOl. ~ 818 D1trell St. 850-6206 Sat Poat etc. 40'•. 50'•. Lidl.. ~ cLJGe I cg MOVING SALE. Flretl 60'1. 4' ltlci! of Vintage $70.Glf1'1SchwlnnV.,..._ Cornll Flra1 Servel Many Adi, $20 Ill. 'Y $30, M«l'I Sc:hwtnn ~ a trtmendoul 1tem1 Lltge o.it tat>te. 422 El Moden1 848--01 11 Cont S75. M&-3008 HI~ of ,__ & W:'~·A ~~:u~ ~' Mlac hMhld 1tem1 Blk•. n 1 lttrM, IJ..m.kt catefutJy prepated ~5 E~e Ave C M p1tto Ible & ctlalra. mite .... pt' .... -.d BMW°I In I -.,,..,..,.,.,...,..,,-,,....,....-=-.,,.-· -=--lllver p11te. lludent d8lk 8'ocik I MOVING SALE Set/Sun S1turd1y 8-5 1807 Pon COMPLETE eudvclo I --AMP It --............... • - Houeehold lteme. mllc Sheffleld PlllOll COior TV, R, • -"--· 1 5$4100 2973 Andro1 tuner. cueette, "*"'.,.. ,.__ ...,.~ ,:============ StrMI Coe1i Meu MOVING SALEI Like new S850. Jim ~2te3. nurh II I -• • deelgner ctotl'lea cryatll ...-Wl••• ,-· QUEEN 1111 bid end new ml1c ho~aehold Truaprtadtn ->r·ftFl LR frame. $75 OMk 195 ltema, furn, S1t·Sun 9-4. -~~- ' 418 E. 18th SI Coet1, 531 RlveBl<M Ave NB (11~ -.a111 MeM. 54M25a PIANO. Antique Upright, fnrtr INtl 7112 •/ S.t & Sun 9am~pm lnl11d caee. Clew Foot 14 ft S:: Ra; Fm ... -.Cl.olm.•il· .-.... ii ..... liilliiillji ... 115 E. Wlllon, nr Orange I Stool, $250 with 4 ... ti a 35 hp out· • • - HouMflold good. tQyS, 1 422 El Modena 848--01 17 board mo10f on traller -------- 9tc. See you therit REMODEL OVERBUY with Ntctt. Good oond. BMW 1119 320!. Concord 1..._ ______ _ SAT 9AM. 2203 POMONA Home & C>mc. Rattan. $18!50. &40-9033. Jlereo. top condll1on. Al- AVE. Kitchen Item•. kid• Lan11tbl& ctiraw/glatop loye, 4•Pd 18200· lllEJ TOYOTA blk• end toyia. Brend S225 Bd1rpd1 '8$20. 831·5"7'. n•w Men·1 Cowboy Cullom "lndl1 Ink" $150 110. tralter, lo hrl -BM_W_3_1_11_, -. .,.-.-.. -.-,blu-. l&LIS t>oota a morel 1' dlpl1y modulee. deei( •ldru. Call Ma-3&44 Mo. loeded. mint cond, lllYIOE I SATURDAY ONLY 9-3 Plr11, lbl tops S5--S50. WESTERN BUILT eun roor. 37K a ml. Wllll Bookcuee IOf1'1 gemee l Ski & 11nnl1 Cltha & gear Claetc Bey L.*lncft..T_. $13,500 obo. 7111-8101 houMhold lteme ,....; •2·•100 MllC &48-&991. I br .... over $30,000 BMW '78 2002 E'xlnt 1eaa1 9-c:tt Blvd. Ad•m• a Albr1tro11 I ;:~~«•Dr Fr1 a ln...at~ Mktno *13,.llOO. cond, tight, ltldl. eun/r1. 11•/Ml .... I 20N Goldelieye Pleee xn """"'• mu.t ... 0 -s>-mu1t wt v~ CIMll. 1--------... •If a11 •ai •& preclete, 645-1173. ...-11 87" "" TOYOTA '72 Cofone 4 Wlflr °'Yr S100 ea: alee --.... -c• ' -' ' _.,;; puehrnowr S15; pwr Sile of Newpor1 r1cfl & Lfi .. 11 fllf OAT8UH 2IOZX '83 • 8lt-~:::~~,,.:~ s30 ectoer; dltlwlflr $100; gee le mo 11 11 0 11 I g n a r -lllTlll -Yer, 5 epd, T -top, fUll obo 548-~ 1/~ r-. $150. Me-5641 clothea, fure, new & UMd .... .. power ... (5eo2ta). -------- tumlture. 1CC9110f1ea, " lmmee, io.ded, O/B, tr1r, 4 Corm I a r 8 u auk I , TOYOTA •n Ce1c1 GT LB • ... laia )'OU can tNnk of It · It la ...... UISO. 770-1372 710-7001 5...,. AC AM/FM/ceea '~ .l <t.a probably herel _.., ' ' .., •MY •fl CATALINA 30. Oteael. 21 DATSUN 2.IM 1113. hM alarm, ~-. new Int y~f~ furn mot Old, mint cond, •71 • ......_·-..._ ~t-1191&.Ml-20&4 fr• oo' Sunday June ' ·ee loeOed Muet Mil .,..._ ....... ·-_., \ebte, I ack oomc>O-10 00 M, to 3·oO pm Cell PM (213)431_.200 I ~ Nw drat, rM>ult TOYOTA '12 CreMfda, nent, alt oooter. paper-13e1 Oeiuy Dr ang, A/C '3500/080. My loaded, belu1tful dbl back• 10. Wfl. gaimea. (Dover Sttot.) ~ LIDO 14 All acowon., ~2700. model MQ50/ob0, muet ~ elbume. mi.c. tr....,, good condition , -. mull .... ~108 ;;;-i, M 10~£.d. all ltlf•ta H75, 115·011 or ~O:':.tft2'1°:S :.~· TOYOTA •15 CellCe GT =.c~ t>twn a 1111 720-1422 I *· o1~ P.1pch v.,Y unback. 14M, 5 llC*d. LOT8 Of ooobiEii m l"'b/l•lia I lhatp s10.300. 4t3-.e131 m . Alc. lmmeCUlet• UL Baby clothH, dl•h••. ,. DATIUN ·n 2IOZX ..,. •10,IOO 173-83e7 a FXUitti treedmlll. le)'tng ...... ..,. wNe,rw etledow,bt• TRIUMPH TM '73 ~ Tor-, dottlea. f\Hnltur9, much muc h more ... WllTD• oomP 1tereo Mint oond ENJOY THE SUH Nw well. gd ur ... 11500/obo, VIiie, aharpl Rune good. M4-8601 $1995, OBO. 845-5401. DODGE '84 D1ytone Turbo,lolded.elec,caee w/llTIP. 5 apd. nu tlr•. louver9 Ste95 963-6980 F•IUAIAM'll 4 DR. 8 cyt. IUto. etereo. Stk #4493 11HI -----~-~- 1983 CADILLAC BROUGHAM '12,995 ' \. • 10100 llodc Meredith Or Sat/Sun 20101 OrcNd. F« new 41• Power ~ l~~out t11000 C1C1 bf1111 ,.,_ axNuet AuM ua~~ n1~~~~~~ ~~~7~-~1m~111~ ~.11~ IL~--~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~==~~~~~ I ....... THEODORE ROBINS FORD •' Jtd HAIU\08 f\l'w'{J CO~TAMl\A ,,I} 1)1)10 er.,.. COM11 OM.V PLOT/I .. dlt . ..., 11, - ' \ -----------------------~~-- -Or-COMI DAILY Pll OT/ Salu«ley, Moy 31, 1- IWUC- The South East Regional Reclamallon Authortty I• preparing • Hegallve Oeclaratlon for lhe project described ~ow. A ·bfatt" Negative OeclllfatlOn la on fOe at the Dtltnct omce and la aYallable IOI' public lnspeclk>n. A Negative OeclaratlOn wtll be conlld91'ed for approval or dl .. pproval by the Board ol Dlreciort ot the Dlatr\ct at Its meeting to be held June 12, 1988, at 2:00 p.m. at the City Council Ch11tnber ol the City ol San Juan Capl1trano locllted at; cny Councll Chamber City of San Juan Capl1trano 32400 Pueo Adelanto San Juan Capistrano 92675 The proJeet conSlsts ol the loHowlng: Aqulaltlon: Real property from 11'19 Dana Point Sanitary Olstrlcl f"OPSO") Project No.: N.A. Project Namti: Dana Point Sanitary District Property Acquisition Pro)ect Location (specific): A portion ot that real property belonglng 10 the Dana POlnt Sanitary 011trtc1. adjec:ent to the DPSD offices and parking lacHltlel located at 3.4 152 Del Obispo, and adjacent to the SEARA Regional Wa11ttwater Treatment Plant Profeci Location: (City) Dana Point (County) Orange Oe1eriptlon ol Nalure, Purpoee and Beneficiaries ol Pro)ect; See altachment .. A" Name ol Agency Undertaking Pro)ec1: Sooth E.ut Regional Reclamatlon Authority Contact person· Wiiiiam Becker Area Code (7 14) Phone 770-6296 Mltlgalloii measures to avoid potenllel slgnlf1:C9nt etlecta: See Attachment "B" Wiiiiam -.Cller, Stan Member FteeponalM. lor Prep9reHon Data: May 2i, 1986 1. NATURE OF PAOJECT: ATTACHMllNT A TO NOTICE OF P«EPAftATION OF NEGATIVE DICLA.ftATION SERRA lntfll'lds to acquire certain r&al properly from the Dana Point SanUary Olst.1ct ("OPSD"'), wtilch property 11 adjacent10 !he OPSO ortk:el and parto:lng llciltty, and Is also adjacent to the SERRA J.B. Latham Wast-ater Treatment Plant. 2.. PURPOSE OF THE PROJECT: The acqulaJtlon ot the property will allow SERRA to more eflk:lfll'ltly and more economically complete the renovation and e11.panaion ol lhe SEARA Treatmenl Plant and operata the plant In the ruture. 1 aENEFICIAfUES OF THE PROJECT: The t>enelicfarles of the project will be SEARA, SERRA'• membfti'" agencies and the customers and eonsumers ol those member aoenclea. 1. EARTH RESOURCES ATTACHMENT I TO NOTICE OF .-REPARATION OF NEGATIVE OECLARATtON A. Dffcrlptlon ot Potentlal Slgntnc.nt Ett.cta: Some disruptions. displacements, compaction or overcoVCtflng ol the M>ll may occur; minor change In topography or ground surlaoe rellel fealurn: e11.poaure ol solls to wind and water erosion unlit constroctl()n activities are completed 8. Mltlg•Uon Me.aurM Involved: Reference 11 hereby made to Iha Environmental Impact Report for the Expansion of Inti J.B. Latham Regional Wastewater Treatmenl F•cmty which was approved by the Bo•rd ol Olrector1 ot SERRA on March 13. 1986, by RMOluUon 86-05 (the ··EIA"J, Per Page 20 Ol lhe EIA: 1 Facllltles and structures associated with the proposed support tacllltlas which may be built upon the subject property should be deakoJned to withstand posalble earthqu•ke stresa; 2 All excess e11.cavated materials from the subtect property ahould be dlspoMd ot property. 2 AIA QUALJTY A. Dffcrlptlon ol Potentlal llgnlftcent Ett.cte: 1 Fugitive dust m1y be generated during construction. 2 Addltlonal eJChaust emissions may be caused by construction activities on the subject property 3. Pollutants may be gilflerated from the followlng stationary 90Urces: n•tural gas consumptloo al Iha plant site lor standby Power to support laclllllas Which may be constructed on the sub)ect property; electrlcal power to meet the demans ol any support lacHttles Which ve placed on the subject property B. MIUgallon ..... uree lnvotved: Fleterence Is hereby made lo page 38 ot Iha EIA· 2 ·Control fugitive dust during construction by regular watering of roadways and ex.cavated ma1arlals: paved roadways should be cleaned as necessary to reduce duat generated by moving equipment and eJ1cavated malerlal removed from Iha sub)ec:t property sl'lould be dlspoMd ot properly 3 BecauM !he Regional Treatment Plant la located In the SCAOMO It Is required that the planl use The best avallable control technology fBACT) lor new source em1111ons. 3. NOISE A O..Crlptlon ot Pot.ntl•I llgnfflcanl Enect: Some excea1 noise may be created by construcuon activities on ~ha subject properly. 8 Mitigation Mea1ur .. lnvotwld: Ralerence is made to psge 50 ot Iha EIR Adequata mum.rs are to be uMd on con1lrvctlon equipment and construction activity Is rutrlCled to daylight houra. 4. T .. ANIPORT ATION/CIACULA TIOH A O..Crtpttoft ot PolenU•I ·~nlftc:Mt (rt.ct•: 1 The proposed projecl will h8"9 a ~ry minor direct on circulatlon In !hat cara whleh currentty parl( In the treatment p111nt site wm park on par1tlng f.cill1191 con•tructtd on t he tubJect Pf"opet'ty. During construction ol thfl proposed e11.p•nslon. there wlll be • lhOrt tw m iner .... In tr1mc gener•ted b)" A. Con1truct1on work&fs driving 10 and from the slta; e Hauling ol 1xcavaled mater1at1 trom the alte: and C. Oellvery ol tuppnes and equipment 10 tM Sita 8 . Mlt19atl0ft llMaurM lnvotved: Ref•ence It madt to P&oe 30 Of the EIA. 1. Adtquata tramc control and w1rn1ng a1gn1 MOUidbt uaed11 llCIQMlpolntstothloon1tNCtlon a1t1, efPIClalty durtng !*'lod• -'*' 111.cavated mattrtal la bthig tran11POr19d from the aubjaet property, In 9dd ltlon. removal of excavated m1ter111 trom the 1Ubtacl property ShoUld be r..tnct«t during P4tlk tratnc ~,. In the community; 2 No MltlgeUon mnaurM •• r9qutred beclu• txla11ng tr.me: l)'llterM .,. 9d9qua.tt. ~oce11on ol pwtl:lng lacttltlM will not reault In a atgntnc.nt 1ncr ... In trertlc lolowtflQ IM comp4911on of the pl1nt •x~nalon. Published Orange Cout Dilly Pilot May 31. 1088 S.703 "8.JC llOllC( "8.JC llOllC( OltDINANCI! NO. 11-14 AN ORDINANCE OF TH! CITY OF NCWftORT KACH U..-..0 MCTtON 5.11 OF THI NEWl'OllT MACH ~ll'Al. cooe "'"'-TO GOING OUT OF •UllNE88 IAUI The City Council Of the City OI Newport BNch do. hrafeby ordlln .. lolloWli: Section 1. Chiapte< 5. 1& ol the Newport BMCh MuNclp.11 Code Is amended to reed u followll: Chllpter 5. 11 GOING OUT OF BUSINESS SALE ORDINANCE Sections: 5 .16.005 5. 16.0 10 5.16.0 15 5.16 .020 5. 16.025 5.16.030 5.16.035 5 .16.0.(0 5 .16 .050 5 .16 .060 5 .16.070 5 .16.080 PurpoM and Intent. Definitions. Exceptions. Watver. Permtt Required. Appllcatlon tor Permit. Investigation/Permit Approval. Permit/Term• and Condition•. P8fmllflran•f•. Surrender of Bu•lnesa License. Revocation ol Permit . Appeal. lectton S.11.00S. PurpoM and Intent. The City Courocll finds and dedaree thal the provtak>fis ot this OrdlnlnCe era '**""Y to turthair lignlncant laghlmlt• Ctty lntereats In that: (A) Sales t•• con1tltutea a 1~nlflc•nt POf'llon .of revenue to the City or Newport 8Mdl Ind purchuer confidence In the Integrity ol persons conducting bualnffl within the City ot N9wport Belch ls Important to melntllt\lng a ~ OI ..._ lex. ·The laHura ol merchants 10 l•lrty canduct the r....&;s lor ''going out Of butlneu MNa" or Qquldatklna OOUkl airoda ~ confidence: (8) Prolonged llqUldallon or .. going out ot bualnaiaa" S-. could ttltld to cr•t•, or IMve the 1mpr...ion of, bl6gMtd or economically depressed condlllon1 In 1nd around the ioc.tlon of thl .... ; and (C) Liquidation or lorced .. 1n 1re'frequ.ntty ch1r1Ctertzed by Lergs bannlnor llgf'ltWhiehClfl "*'"In \ltalUal bllght, end the presence ol a large number ol person• which Cln result In trafnc CORQeltlon, nolle. Md lttter. (0 ) The City Council ftnd1 and declar• that the provisions ot thlli Ordk\ance .,. nee 111..-y Ind appropriata to reduce the adverse lmpacta that can reautt from llqutd1tlon or ootl'IQ out ol buslM8I Mle8 oonstttlnl with m!Nmel lrnpect on thl t1gtrtl of bu911'18SS owners and OJ*'aton. Section 5.11.010. o.rt....tttons. For purpoM1 ol this Chapter, the lollowlng word•. t•ms or phr .... Shell be defined as provtMd In this MCUon: (Al ··s ale" means any sale 01 or otter to Mtl, goods or menm.ndlee to lhe oenerat pubtlc lor tM decl1ted putpoM of OIUlng business at that location, or for 1he purpoaa of d!apoamg of damaged good• Of men::hlndlM. (B) "City Man-oer" muns the City Manager, the Flnenoe Dnic1or, tha Buatneu UcenM $upervl90r and tMtr reapecttw d~neea. lectton l.1t.015. l•c.otloN. The provisions of this Chap1er shall not apply to, or attact, the following: (A) Sa}es conducted by persons ecUng In their oflldll capacttl• u public Offtolats: (BJ Sales conducted by persons acting purauant to prooeea or°''*' llluecl by• CCUr1 of oompa1:ent jiursldk:tlon: (C) Duly llcanaed auctk>neera aelllng at M aoctk>n. Sectino 5.11.0:ZO. Watnr. The City Manager may, upon receipt ot • wrmen iappl!Cltlon req~tng s waivs lfld apecftytng the rwona tor the Nquelt. waive the requirement• of this Cha.pt• If n la determined that Ill of the goods or merchMdlM propoaed to be .old In the .... were damaged within the City of Newpoft BMCtl by tlr9, tlOod, MrttlQuake Of almlllf dlwt• wMa In Iha ~11111fon of th8 person or entity prQPM!ng to hOkt the Nie. -.non 5.1t.021. Pwmh "•qulr9d. . No person sl'lall conduct any sale wtth0vrllra1 havtng obtllned a permit from thl Chy to oonctuct the ..... lectton 5.11.030. Appllcatton tor ,..,,..tt: (A) An appllc1uon lor the permit required by this Chaptw th•l1 be nled with the Finance Director It leltt ~ty (20) days prior 10 the date oo wtileh the Nie Is to commence; (BJ The 1ppHcatlon ll'lall be aocompanltd by 1 I• of $25.00. (C) The appl\catlon 11'1111 be In writ ing Md algned1 ui:tOer penatty ot parjYry, Dy the P«SO" conducting the .... Of by an authorll:ed r&prtlMRllllve Of the bual,,._ ll'ltlty conouctlng thl sale. !D) The appllcatlOn shall contain the lofloWlng lnklnnlltlon: ( 1) Th• addreN OI the locaUon II whlctl the .... II to be conducted: (2) The d•I• and times during wtUch the ... II lo be conducttd; (31 The type of ownerltllp ol the bualne9t Ind, K othair thin a sole propnatorsl'llp, the poaltlon hetd with the buBIMM entity by the person signing the IOPllCllOon; (oil The re1sons for, 1no the nature of, the Mle; (5) An Inventory or ltatement Mttlng forth the quentlty Md OeaCrlpdon of •II goods and merchandlM to be .old It the .... with sufficient intorm•tlon to pennl1 ks.ntlftca:tlon of the good• 1nd "'*'chancH• upon lnBP«:llon: · (6) A statement dMcrlblng the quentlty and deac:rlptlon of Ill gooc:la Md merc:handt.. ordered prior to th8 dlte 01 appllcaUon but not recetwd by the ~leant: (7) In th9 even! the appllefitlon Meka •n extenMon of Iha ortoinel '*"'"· M lnWlntory Ol lhl good1 lhllt r9ml6n WI atodl; Md (8) Such other Information u the City Maneoer ~ eswn nee 111ry In deterrnlntng Wheth« to ltll.ll the permtt or lnY extension. (E) At tha Ume the •PPllcatlon ls llltd, iappllcant 11'1.il grant permlealon to the City M81'111ger to ent•. ctunng nonMI buelf*8 hours, the property or prem1 ... on wtlk:h the Siie ta to be conduct«S for the purpo99 of~ !hi ICCUt8C)' 61 the inv..tOtY statement required by this MCllOn. hctton 5.11.0ll. tftfttttlgdonl'Penntl """°"" The City Maneoer m1y conduct an IRY99tlg1tl0n prior to taaulftol of the permit. The Qty Men.ger ah.ii grll'rt thl permit upon a determination th•t the st1tements In the appHc.rlon .,. trua Md the propoeect Mle cloea not vtotate any City Ofcll'IMDI Of atate law. The decltl<M'I to gr1nt Of deny tha permll llhlll N made M laMI ten (10) de)'I prior to the SChedoled COtM"•IC*'Ml•t ol the sale. The Chy Maneoer m1y lmpoee condtUons on the pwmlt • 111'9 r« 111ry or IPPfopNte to protect the 1i11 .. •1S ol the City and !*'90nl realdlng or WOritlng nMr the loutlon of lhe ..... lecHon 1.1t.OIO. '-mltlterm MCI C........ (A) A permit Issued purtuant to the nrtt appllcatlon atilll extend for 1 period ol alxty (90) d., Md thlltl be 1Ubjaet to the conditions apacilled In IUbMCtlon (Cl and condition. lmpoeecl Dy the Oty Mlll\aQ'I'. (Bl Permit• granted purau11nt to epptlcatlon tubtnltted after uplletlon OI the Origtnll p«mlt INll extend tor a per6od of forty- ltwi (45) dlyt and thall bt IUbjact 10 the conditlonl apect"'1d In IUbWtlon (C) Ind oondtfforta lmpoMd by City Menaglt'. (CJ All permits l9tued pur9Ulllt to thtl Chlptw lhlll bt 11JbteCt to the foNowtng condltlonl: I 11 The per mitt .. lhllH compty wttt\ 8'1 IPPl!Clbll City «dtnlnolt Ind stat• iews; (2) Permltt .. ll'lltl Mii only thOle g00d1 aipeclttad In the Ol1(tlnall kW9nlory Of the statement deecnblng goodt ordered, bl.II not riscetved . (3) PermlttM Miii not angege In • falM, lrMldultnt or deoeptt\111 buelntea practlcl In thl oonduc1 Of tM ..... Ind (4) Addltlonll conditions m1y be lmpoaecl on ttlt permit~ to lallJMOe K. In the optnlon of the Ctty W. ..-. tt'°9e condltlOns ire neceeaary or approprl1ta to protect the lnt.....U: of the City or '*"°"" f'Mldtng or woftelng ne. tN IOoltkwl ol the .. 1e. lecHon 1.11.-. Pwtnttnr.....,. A permit INUtd purauant to the !"ovttlon• of thta ChBPI*' INtl not be trwterebte. hcHon ........ ~of ........ L.lo9nM. A peraon lllUlld a psmlt puttuMI to tN9 ~ter ahlll. st the time the permit II fltl1 ltlued. tur"'1der the~ .._ 1.-ued to 1i+m for the ~ bttna dleoontlnued. hcflon l.1tMD. ,...ooa ...... ef rt.rMtt. A petmlt gr1nt9d purlUltU to thlt Chap!« m11y be rtw*.edby the City Manager Uf)OR a ~natton thet the eertnlttee Ml lal*I to compty With thl prOV'llklnt of thl1 Chepter. or COl'lidtttoil8 lmpOMd on the permn. In tM twnt the Qty Mel •IS' determhiel then 11• grounds for revocation, the City ~ llh9I (/""8 'M1tWI nottoe of ritent to,...,... tilt pet'fntl and fhl right ol permlttM to requ99t a hMl1ng before the Ctty ........, wttNn tM (6) cs.,. from the dete on""*"' nottoe II fih'lr'I, The notice et*! bt eocompantect by CGPM of llr'f OOCutnenta In the PD II 111lon of the City uan..,. tMt ""'*"to tilt arouncll for revocation. Nottot than be dMrMd gtwn ""*" depoelted It the IJnlMid Stat• rMll, fttlt clell poMlp ~.and" actdt•11 ~ to psmltt .. at the .cldrlN tf\own on the 9PS)btlon tor permit. " tht permfft9e doee not reQUlli a tlWtng WltNn M (9) dlya, the decllk>fi of the City Mtntger .n. be 1tn111 end permm .. et'8lll heW l'IO ~to .,.,..i. In the...-.. h permfl-,...... 1 hetnng, a h8et'lng wlll be t*<I wlttMn tlw (S) deye of the,...._, The Pl'"""'-rrwy 8PPW' In p&"IOn, Of "*"II a ......,.,.. tiQr'9d Under penahy or pWluf'y apeclf)int the ,...,,.. wtt)' the p.-TNt "'°'*9 not bt ......... The City Mlf 0 tNI noilfy psmtttee, 1n wrtttna. ot the decltlon within flw f5) der-lfter' ... hWtnQ. Thia tlOttce aNll ..... "-rwon fOr •.._..,.,aw MIVIM psmltt• of the rlgtlt to ~ to ttit ctty Counoll. lecllonl. .............. A permluee mty llPPMf a d9CllkM--~n by thl Ctty Mmwolr to tmpoee condltloo on a permit, denW'lna • permit, °' ~ 1 permit b) "Mng 1 written 8PPM ~ thl Cft)o a.ti......, M (I)..,.""' tt.-. on the notlCa o1 thl deol96of1 Of n. Qty M1r11ger. Thi City Coundl may Mlf' thl ....., dt appoint 1 hllm; oftkm to •• • ...,.,...,., Ind "*"'" f1nC16n;11 and recommendltlOnt. The Qty Councl ttWI ,..,,.,. tb dadlkll1 """'*' ftrfe (I) .,. afttf' the '-1ng or IUbmft tN ..,,.,.. Ind recommendatlOna by. titenng omc.r. Thi ...... Of ~Courict .... tie llnel. SectlOn 2. Ttits Ofdfnanot WM lntroduorld at I,..,.., Of tM Cfty COUftdl Ol tfl9 City Of tMapOf1 ~Mid on lt'9 12ttl day of May, 1He,.anct ldopled on the 27ttl Clly Gf ...... 1 , t1Y tM tolowi• vote.~ • AYES. COUHCILMEMBEAI A.Qiee, Cox, Hlf1. Maurw, """""* NOES. COUNCILMEM8EA8 - ABSENT COUHCILMEMHRS Heather, 8tr..,.. --·-ATTW•T1 ._. L ......... C..... Publlllhtd o,..,. CoMt Dealy PIJol Ml)' 31. 1Hll COON GEORGI! W. COON, M.D. BeloYed bu. bend of. Jane c.oon. Lovin& father of Geraldine Dill; Jen- nette Younalov•: Mary H. Johnaon; Goo<p w. Ccoo>. ''·· ~-Solly ........ ....i-.,Dut- tan. Dr. COCll .. .i.o """"-by 18 ..-. children and 16 ar-t 1r1ndchlldren. Dr. eoo...,.. ....... _ the O.niverstty ot WlalomJn In 1920 Where he Wll eJeded .. Phi -Ka-. He completed hi• edUCllUon at Ruah -CdJeao, Chi· -· lllindio, wlleft he W8I a member ot Ph!Rho&.,..olt« retirement from .. ..---· ...... Califomla. Ill'. and Mn. Coon -'° their home in Ccr· OM del Mar were they lived fot 20 J.n. Dr. C.ocn WM II -l'ellow Of The -CdleaoOf Sur1eon•; • Patt P\...Met1t of JUwr- -County_. --;N...,.n -Yocht Oub; Klwania and New· port -!Awn Bowlinc Cub. l'ri· Vl'9 f.amUy ....... Sunday, •t Padfk: View M mFfal Pwtt, Newport-· In liou"' -u.. lamlly __ _ _.,.,..._ .. <hartty -.,_ M«tuory, -... M4·2'100 ·--IPJDF'~ Ceo tr r• .. , ,=-:-.:...=. • •• ;11 .... _.,.. MMIM'AW. ... -.......... Qen11u, ~·= 1&21 . ... c..-. .... COVER HOME PROVIDED by COLESWORTHY & CO. ~. A PECIAL ADVERTISING UP Pl.EM.ENT VOL. S. NO. 22 ATURDAY MAY 31 , 1986 • . I ~--------~------------------------------------- ORANGE COUNTY GUIDE TO REAL ESTATE ORANGE COAST l1ily PJlat 842-6878 • PAGE 2. Mancet MllP 3. George Elkins Co. 4. Unique Hornet . 5. Coll9W()f1hy Co. 6. Grubb & Ella 7. Hlltbof RMlty 8. Udo RMtty 9. Hunt & A.llodat• 9. nm eo.t AMltora 11. Aemex of Coeta Meee 12. Aemax of Coeta Meea "---· COVER HOME PROVIDED by COLESWORfHY & CO. COVER HOME PROV10ED by COl~WORTHY & CO. NEWPORT BEACH CUL-DE-SAC LOCATION -5 BEDROOMS • Great hom.e for fam~ly living and entertaining. Private larce lot With sparkhn& pool. formal dining, parquet floors in f amity room. Walk to schools park and shoppin& village. $259,900. ' ' VICKI KRAUS VILLA 8Al80A - 2 MASTER SUITES a OCEAN ~ · Where else in Newport can you enioy an ocean view, swimmmc pool, spa, security gate. and wa" to beach? 2 Master bdrms. custom decor for only $179,900. Larae assumable loan. SALLY SHIPl.EY I JOYCE OA80l T NEWPORT BAYFRONT HOME W/PIER a SUP · One of the areas best values! 4 bdrms. family room, upstairs retreat. secunty system, 3 fireplaces. separate ullltty room. Quality construction. Ample parking,. Move~n fresh. $1,075,000. DON De THOMAS OP£N HOUSE Slit l ·5 606 HARBOR ISLANOl>R. N.B. V~R8AILLES CONDO · Perfect for singles and priced n&.ht too at $79.900. Delightful Bachelor unit with Shoji screens dividin& sleeping quarters. A pleasant woodsy view & all the amenities afforded more expensive properties i.e. security gate. pool, clubhouse etc. JOYCE DABOLT /SALLY SHIPLEY NEWPORT BEACH CONDO -LEASE OP- TION · $1,000/mo. with $5,000 option money will move you into this stunmnc Villa Balboa condo w/ocean view. Complete security w/guarded gate, pool & spa. Owner must sell! SUBMT. $127,800. SAl.L Y SHIPLEY I JOYCE DABOL T NEWPORT BEACH, WHEN ONLY THE BEST WR.L DOI · Exquisite details such as skylichts. new befber carpeting. mirrors, redecorated kite.hen enhance this spectacular penthouse condo 1n the Villa Balboa. Tranqull rreenbelt view. Furnishmgs may be Pl(rchased. Absolutely turn key. $154,000. SALLY SHIPl.EY I JOYCE DA80l T NEWPORT BEACH · Very special home. 2,600 sq.ft .. 4 bdrms. 21h baths, family room. Expanded and uperaded inside and out. All new paint a!ld landscaping. Vacant. Must sell. $349,000. TRUDY STUBBLEFIELD NEWPORT HEIGHTS · Unique 3 bdrm home. in fantastic location. Add 2nd story and have a beautiful bay vH!w. Close to shopping. beach, yacht clubs and restaurants. $249,500. ~ MARY JANK/AHN BEMENT OPEN HOUSE S~ l ·5 411 RlvERSIDE, NB QET READY FOR SUMMER · Invest or enioy 1t yourself. Newer pride of ownership home plus income on the beach in Newport. 3 bdrm owners umt with blt·tn kitchen plus 3 bdrm apt with blt .. n kitchen and patio. MARIA BERCOVITZ/MARIL YN TWTTCHELL NEWPORT CONDO ·See the best of Orange Coast from 1 deluxe condo above PCH. Walk to the ocean or enioy your own community pool, spa & clubhouse. 3 bdrm, 2 bath, laundry room. hreplace, 2 balconies. $275,000. Owner anx10us. ROGER BROWN NOfPORT aEACH CUSTOM 8AYFRONT HOME ·Impressive 5 bedroom home. Dramatic curved staircase 1n entry. Lots of Imported marble and crystal thfoughoul Spa on deck plus slips for 3 boats. Perfect for entertaining. $1.900.000. DEA BURTON OPEN HOUSE SAT & ~ 1·5 500 HAR80R ISlANO DR. STUNNING UN088TRUCTED OCEAN a BAY VIEW • Possibfy the best in aM of Newport! Two bdrm, two bath penthouse condo in the Versailles .. Large walk-in closets w/mirrored doors. Impressive fireplace make this your permanent home or your weekend hideaway! $228,000. JOYCE DABOLT /SALLY SHIPLEY BEAUTIFUL NEWPORT BEACH CONDO FOR $10l,OOO · Highly UP&raded one bedroom, one bath condo at the Versailles. A must see for a young couple buying their first home, or mature couple moving to smaller quarters. Attractive courtyard/fountain ex· posure plus security gate & pool. $106.000. JOYCE DABOL T /SALLY SHIPLEY BAL80A ISLAND QUALITY REMODEL · 4 bdrm. 31h bath home plus 2 bdrm apt The kitchen is a gourmet cooks defi&hl Skyteahts and leaded windows ere.ate a br!Cht atmosphere. Lovely street close to So. Bayfront beach. Easy walk to ferry. MARtl YN TWITCHELL CORONA DEL MAR SPYGLASS HILL -NEWPORT MODEL · One of the lowest priced 4 bdrm homes available in the area. Exciting view of hills, reservoir, and city lights. Full master suite with spa tub and steam shower. New carpet, new water heater. Roof recently inspected. 3-car rarage. Assumable loans. $385,000. MARIA BERCOVITZ OP£N HOUSE SUN 1 ~ 40 DRAKES BAY. COM THE RIGHT PLACE AT THE RIGHT TIMEI Unobstructed total view Larp lot with space for expanS10n. First lime offered. Located in original Harbor V'eew Hills. Many exciting poSS1bihbes. Pool & rock waterfall in lovely courtyard sett1ne. New 3-car garage. 3 bedrooms & family room. Priced for queck sale. $420.000. BELLE CHASE LEE OPEN HOUSE SUN 1 ~ 949 GOLDENROO, COM DUPLEX -OLD C.D.M. · Pnde of ownership is reflected tn this beaytifuMy maintained duplex. Each unit features two bedrooms with numerous amenities plus a four car gara&e. Great rental area. Almost $300,000 of assumable financmg. Offered at $335 .. 000. LINDA TAGUAN£TTI CUSTOIMIUL T BY OWNER ·Only ~ block to beach. 14 yeaf otd custom home has 3 bdrms. 21h baths. family room, formal dinmc area & oversized double rarage. Added bonus · some water view! Very well priced at $369,000. CAROL PANGBURN CONTEMPORARY DUPLEX NEAR BEACH . A truly outstand1nc PfOperty. Wood & Class desltn wrth many ext1tJng features. Excellent rentals or owner plus income. May consader exchange or carry back. $465,000. • ~GREER OUTSTANDING PROPERTY IN OLD C.D.M PLUS INCOME · On a my picturesque stree~ large 3 bdrm with family room, wet bar, 2 fireplaces in an authentic Spanish motif. Includes separate and very pnvate oversized 1 bdrm income ~nit. LINOA TAGUAN£TT1 COSTA MESA MESA VERDE · Expanded 4 bdrm, 3 bath charmer. Extra larre family room, large kitchen opens to ~ yard with pool & spa. Thre«ar garare. Master bdrm suite with spa tub. bay windows, cedar closet. $290,000. MARIA BERCOVITZ OPEN HOOS( SUN 1--4 1796 ORIOlE DR., C.M. COSTA MESA FOURPLEX · Srtuatcd on the westSlde. close to schools & businesses. These u111ts are always rented. Each is a 2 bdrm, 2 bath & has it's own carage & private yard. Invest now whlle interest rates are low $278,000. JOYCE DABOL T /SALLY SHILPEY IRYINE IN WOO BRIDGE, IRVINE · Exceptional 3 bdrm, 2'h bath ndo. Newly painted & ready to move into. $153,000 l.E STARK AFFORDABLE TURTLEROCK HOME - 9111,500 FEE · Perfect tor the buyer seeking a pnme area at an affordable price. Sunny, single level plan on corner lot. Upcraded & a1r-eond1honed. Great local~ Walk to park, pool, tennis & schools. SALLY SHIPLEY I JOYCE DABOl T LAGUNA NIGUEL PRESTIGIOUS MONARCH BAY TER( RACE · Macnifecent custom. one story home with a htaflly desirable floor plan on a hurt lol Four bdrms. 2'h baths including separate maid's quarters. Call on numerous amenities. Estate sale. $457,500 BOB scon II IOllTA. • It.ml -Back bay and night light view from 3 bdrm, 2 bath condo, end unit, sunny patio, on greenbelts. $229,000. LMD.Y Tm• M IOO -Its speclall 3 bdrms, on · a lovely greenbelt loaded wtth trees. 2 story townhouse. 1830 sq.ft. $240,000. SPECW. • CUYll ISi.Mi -Upgraded Pinehurst model, 2BR. den, comm. spa, tennis. pool. Big deck wtth small view. Tasteful! $210,000. UTIU W.. ... -2 units, full Balboa Island lot, fireplaces, patio, cloee to bay. Income $18,000/yr & bulld dream home. $295,000 COllU ID. Ill CUSSIC -Modernized 2 bdrm, 1 bath charming home, jennaJre, tiled spa, stained glass, space for office or studio. $295,000 Yi llCIOllU ft(W LIT -Make an offer. You might o••lllilttef.'" • own It. Owners want out. $50,000 down. O.W.C. Mii a •• $225,000. 7: Ni ' IEAITifll OU ILlffS -Desirable end unit. wrap ,,,~, o#e around patio, highly upgraded 3 bdrm, A/C, f\Jll f(, • security, on quiet cul-de-sac. $238,000. . 1• llYll( • Pl£SHT ClllfTlOI _ 1 bdrm + con-Energet1e Denny Markos hos been,t.in vertlble den, In popular Orange Tree. Streams. real estate for over 40 years. Talk tennis, pool, activities. $115,000. b t d · L 1 Sh ' f d a ou en urmg cnanges. e s ace 1• CAPISTUIO, $14,IM -Rare flndl Trust liqui-. datlon calls for sale. Townhouse near pool, quiet variable rate mortgages, com- cul-de-sac. Sold In present condition. $64,000. puterized lock boxes, home wor- IACK IAY TOlllOIE -Newer, larger Cape Cod ranties and c'ty · ct• d style with 3 bdrms. Bay view, sun decks, and . 1 inspe 1ons ... an A/C. Master suite has cozy fireplace. $225.000. whipped them all! Her sales for the ---$315,000 TO *'50,000 --- llCCEST FLOOt PW -Setler wants offers on Jasmine Creek, plan 4, 3 bdrm. 2 story, comm. oool & tennis. Just reduced. $335,900. IAYFIOIT LOT -Complete with a cozy older home! Balboa Peninsula sandy beach. 3 bdrm, 2 bath with cute cabana. Just $450,000. past month exceed $1 million! After 40 years in the business, Denny Markos still thoroughly enjoys serving her customers and clients. Top that kids!! $519,000 to $845:000 --- TIE CUii Of Cll -In this older oceanfront home. extra large tot, 3 bdrm, formal dining, den, rec room, separate guest house. $845,000 Fiil SAU -Priced below curre.nt appraisal, 4 doors frem Big Corona, spacious family home. 7 years old. Immaculate, brtng offers. $~5.000. ---OVER 11 •LLION --- in. cm UTATt -5 bdrm, 1 St<>ty home. ocean view, Laguna's ftnest area with private beach, comm facilities. $1, 190,000. l ft.U •Tm IUff -In San C*nente, spectacu- lar view of the Pactnc, 5 bdrms, medlterranean flavor, owner wtlllng to flnanoe. $1,500,000 ~ flW • Tm llmT -Spectacular 6, 700 sq.ft home on 'Ii acre OYWlookJng eecluded beach & coast tine. $4,300,000. IPEI SATllllY 1·1 OAIH 111• Alll $358,000 W ._. ~ 3 bdrm. 2 bath, private beach aocea T. Wallick It.II .. $845,000 ...,<?oeanfront 3 bdrm. foreY« vtew .... $369,000 312 and 2/ 1 duplex In great location llll .. $545,000 Unique 3 bdrm, 1 blk to beach lllffl $238,000 End Unit , 3 bdrm, many extras 1111 .... aw. M. vonGetdern ,,, leWia 8. Hutchings 221 .. .-.. H Markes ....... F. Scott-Evans OPEi SlllAY 1·1 llY11l TUUll $396,000 UllQU( IPPOITllITT -For family desiring lovely. spacious 4 bdrm pool home In prestigious Irvine Terrace for under $400,000. 21111 ...... v. Slnclalr A LOYUY UflSTYU -Harbor Ridge townhome with Private 4 bdrm. pool serene view of city and beyond. 3 bdrm. 3 bath, OAMll IU... $3S8,000 111 ..... ~ Impeccable condition and A.C. $642,500 3 BR, 2 BA, private beach eccess M. vonGeldem TIE PltC£ IS llCIT -Thats rare these days, so Is a 5 bdrm single story In Broadmoor. Immaculate, sunny and private. $369,000. HT STVfJ II JI( UlllT -A 3/2 and 2/ 1 duplex In Olde CdMI Cul-de-sac near footbridge. Cozy feel and atrium In owners unit. $369,000. UCHA IEACI -Cottage flavored 3 bdrm, a block to Victoria Beach, newer and nicer, with a peek of blue view. $435,000. CWSIC IAYCIHT -Beautiful neighborhood, love- ly 4 bdrm, 3 bath pool home with spa, large yard, fruit trees. and realistic price. $325,000. CH ltWIH -Potential view, 3BR, 2BA, access to private beach and very anxious owner. Lush follage. sparkling .pool, large rooms. $358,000. .. FllE SAU -Priced below current appraisal 4 doors from Big Corona. spacious family home. 7 .,. M SS.5,000 years old. Immaculate, bring offers. $580.000. Oceanfront 3 bdrm, foreYer vtew ll• -$369,000 3/2 and 211 duplex In great location ......... IM. 8. White •1•1aM1a e. Hutchings SlT ton W1(W -From beamed living room watch bay and pavllllon. 3 bdrm, office. counyard, designer kitchen. Unique at $575,000. SlllY l lllCIT -Townhome overlooking all of Nwprt Beach. Perky 3 bdrm, 3 bath. retreat off master suite. In Harbor Ridge at $661,000. •unt1 $210,000 "..,.. .... Tasteful Pinehurst 2 bdrm, den, am. vtew T. Boland HT A MS£· A IOIUT -LB compound: tenms cour1, spa, adobe walls, tile roof, pool, view of the Pacific. Plenty of bdrms. $745,000. kll -$545,000 Unique 3 bdrm, 1 bfk to bMeh lllffS $238,000 End Unit, 3 bdrm, many extru 211 ........ H. Markes .......... F. Scott-Evans IJlllllllllUJ~ ~. UALT~i. fJlti-f)f)OO. AY AT MMAlr'IHUR 80UUVAJU> IN ODa\1NA DG.. MAit OUR SPECIAL TY IS PERSC)NAL SERVICE COVER HOME • NEW LISTING This exquisite "Paula" plan is like new. 2 bd., 2 ba., family room, large master suite, o ne level. Price includes the lana. 443 VISTA PARADA $256,900 PRICE REDUCED $10,000 Irvine University Park. Outstanding family home across from big park, pool, tennis. '4 bd., 3 ba., family room, formal dining. Air conditioning. Spa. 4 932 TAMARACK $275,000 GREENBELT LOCATION Very popular "Angelita" model. One lev~I, 2 bd., 2 ~., la~ge greenbelt off back patio. Private end umt. Price includes the land. $215,000 SHARP BONITA MODEL Beautiful greenbelt location near pool, plantation shut- ters, 3 bd., 2 ba., one level. Prrce includes the land. $205,000 BALBOA ISLAND light and airy, charming island home. Cathedral beamed ceilings, neu- tral decor, 3 bd., 2 ba., plus den, beautiful patio. Lots of windows. Priced extremely well. 222 SAPPHIRE $334,900 EAIT8LUPP • POOL One level, '4 bd., 2Y.t ba., large pool and spa. Security system, 2 fireplaces, large family room. Lusk built "8" plan. leaseshold. 22M ARALIA, Ma $294,900 BEAUTIFUL SETTING Well located "H" plan, 2 bd., 2 ba., close to pool and Back Bay. large trees c reate private country setting. Leasehold. 2154 VISTA IMTRADA, Ma $1•9,500 .. •AST ESCROW Two story "Franciscan model, 3 bd., 21h ba., beautiful sunny patio. Nite lite view of Newport Center. Pri ce in- cludes the land. $219,000 640-0020 \ IUPER8 QUALITY THRU-OUT This totally redone "Delores" plan is unsurpassed. French doors, larlJe back patio, view of Back Bay. End unit privacy. J bd., 2Y.t ba. Price includes the land. $3H,OOO POPULAR ONE LEVEL Spacious "Linda" model, J bd., 2 ba., wrap-around patio, large kitchen with walk-in pantry. Private master sui:e. Price includes the land. 409 OMDA, Ma $220,000 RARE HQ" PLAN features conversation pit with fireplace. J bd., 2Y.t ba., shutters spacious living area. Near new carpets and tile: Price includes the land. $239,500 LOWllT PRICE IN 8LUFnU This owner is very anxious. Great starter home, one level, 3 bd., 2 ba., shutters, air conditioning. Leasehold. $149,500 · Eastbluff VIII••• Center, Newport Be•ch I I . I • ru IS Jlf.SIDENTIAL BROKERAGE SERV~<:E WIEIPNllllm-u....... 11,111- This 4BR, 4 'h BA, FR, bonus room home is unde'loing a face lift with new paint and new carpeting. Located on the water in a guard gated community. Owner will carry new 1st T.D. with extremely attractive interest rate and terms. Ed F8cano and Maureen White. EHIH~ ..... First time offering. An elegant 4BR Manoi' collec- tion home with 1 spectacular view location. In- terior amenities include marble flooring, custom wall & window treetrnenta and wonderful pool sized lot with spa. Belle Partch. ....... ~..,. ...... Six 2BR. IBA pride of ownership unita plus office apace. Excellent Newport Beach location. Renta are low for area. Sandie Fix. IUll llPW ., 1211,111 1211,111 Extraordinary income unit in great condition in best beach area. Both units 3BR/2BA plus large private yard wlbarbeque. Owner will carry flna.ncing on attractive terms. Pa ula Bailey. MITA .U YM.• 11a,- This lovely 3BR home in Mesa del Mar has just had a major refurbiahina and has a brand new roof. It's in move-in condition and ready for love! Coby Ward. IUWllW aal,111 Spacious & desirable single story home has vaulted ceilinga & skylights. Private conununity includes tennis & pool. Decorator perfect & great for entertaining. Park like yard. Four bedrooma, 2 'hBA. Onwers must .ell by July 1. Hurry, this won't last! Diana Pnmer. .. YllW UINI • 1111111 WllW laU ..... Customized one level 3BR plus, 3 1h BA home on extra large lot with panoramic ocean and sumet view. Ideal location on quiet top street but conve- nient to all shopping and achoola. Game room with its own bath and bar -a great place for children and parties. Maxine Propp. FUIT .. YllW ... an 11.-- S ituated in Irvine Terrace this custom 3 year old residence features the finest quality in construc- tion and finishes. The re9idence contains 3BR, 3 1h BA and hu a unique lower level room de- signed as a wine cellar, trophy room etc. View the boat parade while swimming in your private pool. A must see for someone 11eeking the best! Ann P eters. • U1Y11 -YILllTlm laT man 11,111,111 This 5BR, 4 ~BA traditional home ii in impec- cable condition. lncludes, formal living and din- ing, separate library, family room with wet bar and fireplace, pool, spa, sauna and most every- thing else you might desire. Fabulous fairway location. Danny Bibb/Stephanie Grody. .. ..,........... ..... This immaculate 4BR. 3BA home la a real je;et Includes beam ceilinp. French doon, cmy brick fireplacel, all surrounded by luah gardens, large pool, spa and Kol pond. Perteet for outside living and enterta.i.n.J.nc. Reduced price of $685,000 and owner willing to talk! Danny Bibb and Stephanie Grody. •IHLl-... FUllUUlll 11 ..... Four bedroome, 3 lhBA, cuatomlled manor home Plan 2. IUch oak stained paneling, parquet f1oon and marina pearl marble accents throughout. Splldoul panekd family room wtth fireplace. Le.rte lot. beeut1fully landtcaped. Two fountalna. pool and IPL Danny Bibb/Stephanie Grody. ' . .. ~#2 ~wlc ...... , Suite 1.00, SITllllY llLY IRVINE TERR. SUl,111 1UI leMrtft •· 4BR. FR. pool 1-5 G. Amato SPYGLASS Ml._ I llem lay 3BR. FR, spa 1-5 G. Roberston PENINSULA ..... 111• I. ..... IW. 3BR. wtr fmt 1-5 H. Denny OCEANFRONT Slll,111 IHI W ............ 5BR, FR. spa, w tr fmt 1-5 Allinaon/Alliaon LIDO ISLE Slll,111 221 Y1a ... 4BR. FR 1-5 M Cooper Slllll llLY SPYGLASS Slll,MI • hrt lay •• 5BR. FR 1-5 M Bulkley SEA ISLAND ..... JI ..... ftlh 3BR, FR 1-5 G Amato HARBOR RIDGE U,111,111 H ........ •· 5 BR. FR. pool/spa 1-5 M. White C.O.M. ....... HH , .... •· 4 BR, view. FR 1-5 C. Allison PENINSULA Slll,111 1111 Wttt lay 4BR, FR. bay view 1-5 H. Denny MAJ KAI s.ut• 1J2J a.,.Wt •• lBR, wtr fmt 1-5 Chichester/Macnab HARBOR RIDGE 1411... 12 ........ 3BR, FR, view 1-4 C. Crozier COVES SIM-tll..,... .... 2BR, view 1-4 C. Mason NEWPORT HTS Ull--La .W. Duplex, view 1-4 H. Strock HARBOR VW HLS. ....... Hll DMWt 3+BR, FR. view 1-5 M . Propp HARBOR VW HLS. Ull... 1121 ...... ttt 5BR. FR, view 1-5 C. Ward BIG CANYON 11, 1... 11 ...... TrM 5BR, FR. pooUspa, View 1-5 S Grody BELCOURT ....... H .......... 4BR. FR. spa, wtrfm t 2-5 B. Partch SATlllllY I SllllY BIG CANYON Sil.... 12 ...... TrM 5BR, FR 1-5 Allison/Bibb SPYGLASS SJ,lll... T., tf...., hlet Vent Iota 84-85-86 8-8 M. Ingold CAMro HGHLNDS SMI-.... t.rttM4 3BR 1-5 Godshall/Nilsen C.D.M S1,1H,lll 2211..,... •· 3BR. wtr [m t 1-5 Chichester/Peters BELCOURT Siii-It w...t •. 1. 2BR 1-5 S Vogt BIG CANYON Sl--1 ........ 5BR. FR 1-5 S. Grody •Y ITIPI Tl Ull 1111,HI Pri~ reduction on charming 3BR, two story pe~ home with some beach view from large family room. Owner leaving area and says "SELL!" Paula Bailey. 11..,.tPUI 1111,111 Spacious 2 story 3BR, 2BA condominium with huge living room, spacious dining area, powder room and large master suite. Land included. Beverly Morphy. ..... , ll ... Spectacular remodel by Rolly Pu.1aaki featured in Home Mapzine. Elegant front hOUle with !BR den and gourmet kitchen. Soaring beamed ceil~ i.Jlgl, dramatic interiors. Rear guest hOU8e with 2BR and kitchenette. Large private patio with spa. Lovely lmA11 community with beach and tennis oowt. $7~.000 leasehold. Hallie Strock. IUmfll UJJlllT IMl,111 Dover Shores -wonderfuJ family home. Highly upgraded with wood floors, skylights, billiard room, 3BR, family room, lots of chann. Private pier and slip. Security system. Bar bara Aune/Stephanie Orody. -•Ml I -'I MDT A11-Full on ocean view. Private pool, 2BR, 2BA +den. Air condidonlna, lk.ylichta, French doon plua the amen.itiet that th1a pted cunmwuty hu to of fer_ Ann Peters. -..... 2 11••tm llLI" 11.-... Just reduced $100,000, fonner owner tl"anllferred and our 1corporate client aaya lell now! Five bedrooms. 4 ~ baths, formal d1.n1nc. an4 a country kitchen off a cosy family room. A ~te estate w1lh room foe pool: OM of Big C-anym's finest view location&. banny Bibb/St.ephan.le Grody. • Ull'll • -DTlft IHI• Preeently 4BR, 2~BA. formal Uvtnc and dmi.ng room, perfect foe expulllon! Prime cul._uc location, over ~ acre with view! of aol.f coune, mountains, and dty u,hta. Available under iJUt terms. Submit youra. Danny BlbblStephan.ie Grody. • 111111 HIUllll fUI I --Located on large comer lot, thil :um, 2 ~BA home ii perfect for family & en1er1ainment. Huge expanded family room with fi.repblce, Jarse for- mal living room and di.nine room. Excellent Uaht exposure &hows clean and briehl Excellent value. Danny Bibb and Stephanie Grody. Ullll ... ..., ., .... View forever, beautifully maintained oider Laguna ~-Uled brick ternce, Juab COW'tyard entrance with secluded 1WtJDm1ne p:>ol. Three bedrooma, formal dinJna roam. den-maJda qWU"- ters. Barbara A~. ._mr•wat•• .. •--•"i11nm1n ~ E.asy in · euy out fcw wOl'k cw ph~. ~finest sanda "on" location with _, accem to all of Newport Beach culture, ~and buli.nem. Thia superb architect home ol 8BR + den and mMter suite w /fireplace and airoondltioninc hM .. Atlan- tis" views. Priced fairly at '87~.ooo. EMy to~ by Appl. Tom Al.limon. llllPTmlU.Y U.. -11.-... An opportunity to k~ yow-70' boat in front of your own home. Recently resr~&ed 4BR with fonnal living and dining, larJe bnald.Mt room, private study, and huae mMtel' ute with fire.- place. All light and briebt and contemporary feeling. Over 140' of water f:rontace with a 70' dock. Includes land at $1,200,000. Martha Mec- nab. WITll, WITa, lt&iiW ..... A choice unit in a choice location for water oriented people. Full on view of the t.y. A 1Jftl opportunity to unleeiah your deccl'atinC lldlla. Thia desirable oommun.lty hat full med pool and gate aecurity. Martha Macnab. m1Un,.1• ... Build your own bayfront home on PJomon:ory Bay. Lot 50'xl00' lncludet a per penniL Pcmible for 55' boat and home over 4,000 aqJt. Private cul- de-sac location. Only a few waterfront Iota 1vall- able in Newport. Beverly Morphy. ... •tRln -,_Lit 1111,• Triplex on the beech. !'.lic;f1 2BD, 2BA in IJ'Mt condition. Onwen UIUt hliit eepuate d1ninC room. Upper viewina deck. S.,.. for 4 can. Vim att expansive and locaticra convmimt few ctinlnl and ahopp(ng. Call office tor renta. Bwerly Morphy. 111111 1111 ..... , ""LmT ... .,..,.. Dramatic from top to bonom. eulmlna.dnl in the interior atrium. Theft are 3J11t. with a most intimate retreat included In the muter adte t.blt spans the ~·. entift width dowrwtalrL AJlo included in the home are 3.BA and larae family room. Maureen WhJte and I'd l:mano. .. ......... 1&1111181111 ... Ill .... "Jodelle" model behind guarded gate ln pres· tigioua Harbor Ridge with spec1aCU1ar viewa oC ocean, bay and d ty Ughta. This 3BR, 2 ~BA family room home has been reduced $50.000 and is ready for immediate occupancy. F.ci beano and Maurttn White. Board ~ident Outlines Cbanges in R. E. Market Bv: Jim Hathcock Since entering the real estate field 22 yeari ago, Terry McCordle, cur- rent president of the Newport-Costa MMa Board of Reoltori and presi- dent of Century 21 -The Real Es- tateri, hos watched the organization grow from o board consisting of o few neighbors to a group of 1,650 brokerages. However most of the offices today have only one or two agents. In f oct, only 200 offices hove three or more ag4tnts. "There ore maybe 1 0 offices with 20 or more agents in the entire board," 50id McCordle, adding that he thinks the trend will reverse itself as franchise offices like Century 21 , Grubb & Ellis, Coldwell Bonker and otheri continue to capture higher percentages of the market. Regardless of the size of constituent offices, their porticipotion in no- tional, state and local boards hos enabled local Realtors to increase their level of professionalism, said McCord le. When he entered the field, McCor- dle remembers having fewer educo- tionol requirements than today's aspirants. Now, new licensees hove to take a college-level course on the principles of real estate, complete -45 classroom hours at o school licensed by the state, pau the state exam and then complete two additional col· lege-level courses during their first year as o licensee in order to remain licensed. Once the new licensee hos passed the exam and completed the ad- ditional six cred~ours of continuing education every four yeari to keep their license current. "The board pushed education and it hos mode for a much sharper group of brokers and 501es as- sociates," 501d McCordle who recent- ly returned from the National Board of Realtors convention '11there agents from all over the country told rep- resentatives in Washington O.C. what they thought of proposed legislation to eliminate some of the tax deduc- tions for mortgage interest. One of the best functions the board performs for the consumer, soid McCordle, is setting up a mechanism for interboord arbitration. Accord- ingly, agents con settle disputes in their own quorum without going to court. Dealing with a real estate agent who belongs to the local board assures buyers and sellers that they will by using the most advanced controcts which hove been designed to provide complete disclosure about properties being pufchosed. McCardle 50id he has seen the purchase contract and receipt form grow from one to four pages. Now, a physical inspection has to made of the property so that all parties ore aware of the dwelling's condition, agree on what repairs have to be made and as a result, eliminate unpleasant surprises ofter the escrow has closed. Geological inspections have to be made to assure that no structural damage has occured to the home due to subsidence or other earth movement. McCardle said another big step has been taken in recent years to ovoid misunderstandings and poten- tial problems by requiring a full agency disclosure. Agents ore for- REALTY bidden to play a dual role and represent buyer and seller in a trans- action unless both parties are mode aware of the agent's duality. Recentty, Mc Cordle 50id the New- port-Costa MelO and Huntington Beach-Fountain Valley boards ;otned together ~ purchase o computer system that provides current cross references on listings in both areas. "The co-operation worb out well for both boards. We help each other expose our listings to a greater number of potential buyers," McCar- dle 50id. The Harbor Area's Oldest Real Estate Firm UW.MWI 1122.- Well located Newport Beach condo with 1 bdrm plus a separate convertible den. 2 full baths. detuxe gourmet kitchen. private deck, ex- pensive carpeting. full security building. Large assumable loan. Try a lease option. ll fDT • lll UY t1.-.- Spaclous alngle level 3 bdrm home perfect for Indoor-outdoor llvtng on prestigious Harbor Island Rd. Swimming pool. famlty room wtth bar and f0tmal bayakje dining area. Pier and float can acx:omodate a large yacht. Owner wtll flnanoe. Ulll .. -...... 112..-Speclous i4 bdrm family home with sweeping bay and city lights view. Famlly room, dining room, 3 car garage -the Ideal home for an active arowtno family. Ownera moving out of state say nsELLf' ........ ---11-. Luxurtoua 1 bdrm ~~ t\ the ocean *'-of the hwy. Walk to \ ~·~808. wet bar, large encfoMd pat S ... ~t• end unit. &Mutlful """ * .. * """ 11i..-Fabulous rlchty decorated 1 bdrm condo wtth bay, OCMn & ctty vtewa. Large private sundeck, high cefltngs, full eecurtty building. lTTllTlll Ula .. The Harbor Realty rental department has a waiting ltst fOf' dealrable year around tenants that want to live In Newport Beach. If you have a gar~ apartment °' home to rent, call our rental department for fast professtonal servtoe. UYPMIT man uu 11.-.- Sprawttng bayfront home wtth 88 feet on the bay. Located In excluslve gate guarded Bayahores. i4 bdrms, famtty room, large bayaide patio, plenty of room for a pool. Reduced to Mttte•tete. 2812 BAYSHORE OR. OPEN SUN 1~.- ........... ... Fabuk>u• white water vtew from this apecioua 2 bdrm 2 bath condo. Huge muter sutte, formal dining room. high cathedral ceOlnga, large pri- vate sun deck. ww .. * u.sY-. ~ E.xqulaltety decorated 3 bdrm townhome wtth family room and formal dining room. Chotce locaUon near pool and spa. A rMI lhowpt808t ····---I ..... Charming 2 bdrm upatalrt unit In popular Hunt- ington Townlhlp. Party me deck -very private. BMuttfuffy maintained ground• and community pool. Walklng dlatano. to ahopping and park. community pool, epa end remada. (213) 628-2828 (714) 873 4400 2M5 EAST COAST HIGHWAY-CORONA DEL MAR The Future Is Today At Lido Realty Lido Realty built its reputation on creative marketing and promotion of property in Newport Beach, Costa Mesa and Laguna. We ore pleased with what we've done for your neighbors in the past, b ut we • are vitally concerned with what we con do for you in the future. Constant innovation is the cornerstone of the lido Realty marketing philosophy-and we've got something new for you! This is real estate in the year 2000-NA TIO NA L VIDEO. CO MS ELL REALTY SHOWCASE -------- Notional video is a revolutionary new videodisc system that allows more potentially qualified buyers who are in the market for a house like yours to see it in a shorter amount of time. And that con mean a mu ch quicker sale for you. On a television monitor, we can show buyers quality color pictures of your property-as well as provide all the needed information on cost, size, special features, amenities and location. That way you con be sure that they o re interested in buying before they actually visit your home. Best of all, your home can be shown not only to our clients and by all the other reoltors in the area, but also by firms and corporate relocation offices throughout the country. For the first time, people who ore relocating to our area will be able to see your home in advance. Your home will get more exposure to more potential buyers than ever before with national video-and it won't cost you a penny. National video is another innovative reason why, when it comes to real estate, you should put your future in the hands of Lido Realty. We' re one of the oldest firms in town, and still first to offer the best marketing methods available, to serve buyers and sellers. •By AHOY LANG Q. -Every once In• whlle, I have to retlghten 1erew1 th•t over • period oJ time h.ve come looH. ta thefe eome 1pecl•I w•y to do thl• or I• It Ju1t • c•H of fllllng the hole with eome kind of wood flller •nd then relnHrtlng th• 1crew? A. -The method you mention Is fine In most cases. There are, however. other ways of tightening loose screws. One is merely to Insert a longer or thicker screw Into the same hole. When this is not practical. which it might not be because of the limited thickness of the wood. you can fill the hole with a small piece of dowel, putting glue on it before inserting tt You can fill the opening wtth sawdust mixed with glue. Or you can fill 1t with pieces of toothpicks coated with glue. Some- times, If you are In a hurry and find that a screw has become loose in a hole. you can tighten tt by winding a few strands of steel wool around it and redrivlng the screw. · Q . -I ••nt to gild 1ome picture fr•mea • 1llver color ln1teed of the u1u•I gold. 11 there 1ome 1peclel l'echnlque to thl1? A. -·Not especlalty, although there are some things you should know Your best bet Is to go to a store that sells artist materials or articles for craftwork. They carry both the silver metallic finish you need and an instruc- tion booklet on the technique of usmg it. A well-stocked paint or hardware store also carries different kinds of gilding materials. Q. -We went to UM ceramic tll•• on the floor of our petlo. I know the difference In eppeerence betwMn glazed u ... end unglazed m ... but I'm aot'IWWhat hazy • to when which kind 1hould be UMd where. C•n you help? A. -Generally. glazed tiles are used indoors. but are excellent if the patio ts proteeted from the weather. Unglazed tiles usually are best for areas exposed to the weather, but In certain areas you should get the non-slip type. In the outdoor tile category are patio tiles. which generally are irregular. and quarry tiles, )Vhlch generally are reg- ular. The word "generally" is used often. since there Is some crossover m the kinds of available tiles. dependmg on the manufacturer. 'Nailing down' facts to help identify right sort off as ten er for job By ANDY LANG "Hitting the nail on the head," "nailing down" an agreement and "getting nailed between the eyes" are among the many expressions that have . - - l their origin In the fastener we call a natl. Oddly enough, the nail Itself has what can be a puullng designation. It is called a 2-penny or 2d nail, a 4-penny or 4d nail, and so on. According to legend, generalty accepted but oc- caslonaJly disputed, the term penny originated In medleval England to describe the number of nails of a given size sold for a penny. To confuse It further. the letter used to mean a penny (a small d) is an abbreviation of a Latin word meaning penny. Although the terminology is still used, the best way to buy nalls is to ask for them by size and let the dealer figure It out. Here are some facts about nails that will hetp you make the proper selection when your do-It-yourself activities reach that knowledge category. Common nalla are, appropriately enough, the m091 common. They are general purpoM nails and the kind you usually get If you don't spectty which kind you want. Common nails have diamond pofntt and nat heads. Box nalls are llke eotnmon nalls except that they haw thlnnet shanks. The other type of nall you are llkefy to use often It the flnt9htng nail. It has a small head and can be driven below the eurf ace. Some have tiny Indentations In the heed to factlttate drlvtng the finishing nall below .the wood with a nallset. It Is uaed for trim, cabinets and (l'teue ... !fAJUJIOfftCe 9) 1 DAILY "LOT/llaAL UTATW •liiil•••iil•••----------... -------.. --IMnmDAY llAY .... 1-/PAm ... NAILING DOWN FASTENERS .•. 1'romPaCe8 the Ilka. A bit heavief than the finishing nail, but the same type, Is the casing nail. Aleo similar, but smaller, Is the brad. Besides the diamond points found on common nails, other varieties of points are found on naifs. Needle point naifs have the sharpest of all points and are the euiest to start prior to driving, aa when making boxes or applying gypsum board. A naU with a blunt point helps to eliminate wood splitting, since It cuts and bounces Its way through the wood. It Is often used when working with hardwood floors. There are even what are called pointless nails, which give the greatest protection against wood spllttlng, since they cut through the fibers of the wood rather than follow Its grain. Chisel point nails are Ideal for driving Into heavy timbers and therefore usualty are long and large, often referred to as spikes. One kinds of nail. called a side point, Is for clinching, when the protruded pointed end is to be bent over for driving. This Is only a small part of the story regarding the many varieties or nails. For Instance, many different finishes are found on nails. Cement-coated nails are used main- ly for economical holding power and give some protection against cor- rosion. Hot-dip galvanized nails have a pure zinc coating and are used for roofing and other outdoor exposure appllcatlons; they give good corrosion protection and have a thick, rough appearance. Etectrogalvanlzed nails have a very thin coating for limited corrosion protection but are bright, shiny and very smooth. Annealed nails have undergone a heat-treating pro- cess that enables them to bend rather than break under force. Another fastener of this kind Is the hardened nall. aleo heat-treated to prevent trouble when used on hardwood. Another heat treatment, ~ned to make the naJI free of any residue, turns the fastener blue. White average do-lt·yoursetfers may never have a need for most of these special-purpose nails, they should know that no matter what kind of project they are working on. they can do the job better by using the right nalls -and the right nalls are In existence somewhere even If they have never heard of them. In all cases, you can Increase the holding power of your fasteners If you use nails with threaded shanks. Even In this area. there is a large variety of types. Some nails are ring-shanked, some have annular threads, some are twisted, some are fluted, and on and on. And. of course, there are "cut" masonry na!ls with square shanks. (Do-lt-yourselfers will find much valuable information on various sub- jects In Andy Lang's handbook, "Prac- tical Home Repairs. " which can be obtained by sending $2 to this paper at Box 5. Teaneck. NJ 07666.) Hunt & Associates REA L EST ATE 640-4868 2125 San Joaquin Hiiia Rd. Newport Center EXECUTIVE CUSTOM -GOLF COURSE VU Spacious & sophisticated, this 4 Bd, 5 Ba, custom designed. by ~alla~e Neff is California living at its best! Located _on the 18th f~urway m Big Canyon. From courtyarq entry thr u the gracious & ~prawlmg floor plan to par kling pool, separate citrus and rose garden, right onto golf couse it's the entertainers delight! PRIVATE POOL HOUSE W/SAUNA, enormous basement and over 4200 sq.fL t<;> charm you. 24 hour guarded gate. Owner may assist. $995,000. Call Jen Hunt to see. 18 CYPRESS PT. LANE OPEN SAT 1 ·4 TOP OF THE WORLD That's the VlEW from this magnificent manor high on .a hill ~ Har~r Ridge! Thi.a }usurious 5 bedroom, 7 bath refl ect:B tbe ult1m~te tn quality throughout. Bo&At.s a l!brary! step-down f~ily !oom wtt.h fireplace, gourmet kitchen and incredible master ewte Wlt h iiauna, fireplace, walk-in "cloeet room" and VlEW. 40' p<?OI and spa. Owmln may consider trade. Try your home or commercial as down payment Offered f;~lt~LGAR OPEN SUN I-CS AspJ.ialt roof shingles off er fire resistance Eight of 10 property owners pick asphalt, most with fib erglass llJ tMAeeocleted Prw It's probably time to raise the roof, If your home has celebrated Its 15th birthday. One way to gtve It new llfe -and fire resJstance -Is with reinforced asphalt sh Ingles. An estimated etght out of 10 home- owners who are building new homes or rerooflng choose asphalt shingles, most reinforced with fiberglass, ae- cordlng to Edward Haney, fiberglass marketing manager for PPG Indus~ t ries. The fiberglass makes shingles fire resistant, he says, adding that they "will not easily Ignite, readily spread flames or emit burning embers that could contribute to \he spread of a fire. How can you tell If your home needs a new roof? "Shingles should be replaced If they are curled and blistered, worn or torn on ridges and In valleys, have nailheads protruding or show patchy color from worn-off ceramic granules," says Haney. who adds that the most pres- tigious are the new three-dimensional . ... or multllayered, flberglue ones. ''You can give your roof a rugged. dlttlnctlve appeeranoe with thre&- dlmenslonal ftberglaaa lhlngle9. "Theee Shinglee are thicker and layered and create deep shadow lines that enhance a home's appearance. "A roof of three-dlmenatonal Shingles adds to a home's awb appeal aAd vmue wtl8n aetHng It." In ch~ng the shingles, Haney advl188, the first consideration 9hoUld be the weight, rememberlng that the heavier the shlng'8, the longer Its ltfe. The ex1ra weight Is mostty uphatt, and 280 to 350 pounda.-per-square products can offer up to 10 years to the life of a roof, he says. Asphalt shingles usually have an approximate weight of 215 to 350 pounds per square, with a square equalling the number of shingles that wlll cover 100 square feet of roof. To determine thd number of Shlngkts needed, calculate the total square footage to be covered, add 10 percent for error and then dMde by 100. This gives the number of squares of shingles needed. A typical 1,000-square-foot roof requires 11 squares. Haney points out that shingles are packaged In bundles -with three, four or five bundles per square. depending on shingle weight -and If shingles are to be transported to a job site, It Is Important to know the number of bundles. IRVINE ffiAST, RFALID~ BEI'IER HOMIS AND GARDEN Behind the security gates of lasmine Creek you'll find this lovely l bdrm • tn· level home with an unobstructed view of the hills. Top condition thru-out Come and see what S35Q.000 will buy in this prestlce area of Corona del Mar 4 DOORS FROM THE SAND with lhls eiiceptlonal l bdrm1 2~ ba, Custom deslcneo furniture. drapes <1nd w•ll1>11pers £Ye'Y\hlnc Is I~ duded In pur~ price B@d~ and family room on the upper ~ wfth view ol CK'e•n and Nrbot 2 car iii· iached praee sno,ooo New· port 8eKh 18124 CULVER, IRVINE, CALIF. WATER AND NIGHT LIGHT VIEWS lrom almost every t00m in the hou1e Watch the ducu and wlldll~ on the reservoir 2 bdrm. 2~ ba plus llbfary 8uilt by I M ~t~ Priced at Sll.,.000 Owner ~ys tMlle I FANTASTIC VIEW ol nJcht llchts Md aumets from this ., bdrm. '1 ba Ptes~ dent Home In Turtle Rodt £verythlnc has alre~y ~n done from the etched and bevtied ~ at the ~try 10 the Fttnch doors to the ~ dedt petlo with fl~ p4t and 880 You tnvst -thlt e•~ UonaJ home ~ dec.ldfnc IR\' 11' l < 'OA. T. ,_°"_a_nyi_h_•na_eiw_s_435_· ._ooo_~ R l . .\ l.I OR~· 768-7500 t!ACH FHlM 11'11>U'!NO£NT1. Y OWN~D AND OP "AttD -___________ .._.,~·----~--------.-------------------· ~AG•tO/SATURDAYMAYlt,1'96 ................................................................ ~ Deluge of requests slows loans April home ly K.C. WILSON ANO RPBERT SELINE The mortgage Industry Is experiencing far more requests for financing at this time than It can feasibly handle. The loan packaging process that used to take 30-45 days Is taking up to 60-90 days In many cases. It doesn't take a mortgage banker to understand why this Is happening. It's the low Interest rates. Low Interest rates triggered the refinancing boom. This boom has created a shortage of qualified people to process these loans. The first step requires the the borrower to fill out the loan appllcatton, gather up supporting account numbers, W-2s, paycheck stubs, stock verifications, etc., and authorize a Factual Data Credit Report. This report requires the calling of credit/Income Information and a deposit as payment for an appraisal on the property being financed. In the next step, the Information from the loan appllcatlon goes to a loan processor, who sends out for all the verifications (your employment, mortgages, etc.), orders the credit report, orders an appraisal and coordinates with an escrow company to handle the legal documents for all parties. The Industry-' ts experiencing an Incredible shortage of qualified personnel to handle this workload. There are a couple of employment ageQcies that have evolved In order to deal with this problem. The Oxford Agency handles piecing permanent workers with experience in the Industry. Rainy Day Temps Inc. handles the placement of temporary help In this Industry. Because these companies only deal with qualified, experienced people, they have been In- valuable to the mortgage banking industry. Most of the time prior to the boom, companies like these spent most of their time marketing themselves to the mortgage companies because with Interest rates so high there were a good deal of qualified loan processors out of work. Their priorities have now shifted to find more personnel, qualified to fill the needs of the clients they already have. "Unless interest rates go up, t don't see I h any change in the current situation," says Cindy sa es reac Arnold, president of Rainy Day Temps Inc. Next, your loan processor sends out the credit f; t t 1 report request. This used to take 24-48 hours. With the as es c 1• p current request load, it could take as long as seven to 10 days for this process. The appraisal used to take 3-4 weeks. Now, many appraisal companies have stopped • 1 g 7 g taking requests. s 1 n c e They've realized that In scheduling It would take between 8-10 weeks before the appraisal could be seen. Your processor In turns spends addltlonal time hunting for another approved appralsor to handle your request. Now let's say we have entered a completed package after 65 days to the underwriting stage. Then your request is placed In date order to await an approval -that Is. If you've met all the requirements. After approval. your loan will be drawn up and then sent to your escrow company. At this point, your check Is prepared. The escrow company you have been working with now handles the paperwork to issue the proper transfer of funds. As you can see. there are a lot of different people that come Into your loan process. Having someone qualified can certainly speed things up. In many cases, we see people learning the job while on It. When the flood of work comes in, they are unable to handle It. Temporary services are hit hard with requests for help. The market Is experiencing a shortage of help In all areas of mortgage banking. So now that you know what actually goes on when processing a loan, please bear with the situation. Remember. your request Is being handled as fast as possible. K.C. Wllaon I• manag•r of a,»rallone for KalHr Mortg11g• •I «JO N. Tuelln, Sult• 120, In S•nl• An•. Rol»rl s.11,,. I• preelt»nt of S•lln• • AuoclalH, •n lldffrtlelng •nd pub/le r•l•llon• firm In Ca.I• "'"-· .... By JAMeS ROWLEY •1111' "'"'---WASHINGTON -The decade's low mortgage rates pushed saJe9 of e~lstlng ho In AprU to their fastest clip In 6'"1 years, yieldi the largest annual tncreaae In median prl since 1981, an Industry survey said Tuesday. Those sates lncfeaaed 11.3 percent tr March to April for a aeaaonatty adjusted ann rate of 3.56 million units, according to t National Association of Realtors' mont survey. The April pace of home sales was 17 percent faster than the Aprll 1985 rate of 3. million units, the Realtors said. It was also t fastest annual rate sfnoe October 1979, wh homes were selling at a pace of 3. 77 million unit The median price for an existing singl f amlly home lncr'8Md $1,300 last month $81, 100 -up 8.4 percent from the April 19 median of $74,800. The median Is the point which half the homes sold for more and half f less. That annuaJ Increase was the bigge appreciation In exJatlng home values sin February 198 1, when median prices jumped 8. ·percent from February 1980. 1'ousehold growth declines Interest rates, now hovering above 1 percent for conventional mortgages and 9 . percent for Fedeft!!.. Housing Admlnstratlo loans. were the ma~actor In the spurt In hom sales. the Realtors said. "Famllles are dlacoverlng that attordabillt conditions are bener now than at any other tlm In this decade," said Clark E. Wallace. th JfJy RANDOLPH E. SCHMID WASHINGTON -Now that the Baby Boom generation is maturing, the increase tn the number of American households Is expected t o slow in the next decade and a half, according to the Census Bureau. There have been sharp Increases In the number of new households In recent years, as members of that giant generation born following World War II reached adulthood and began setting up housekeeping on their own. But that generation, born roughly between 1946 and the early 1960s, has for the most part completed college now and finished establishing new house- holds. either as Individuals or families. Following the boom was the so-caJted Baby Bust. a period of tow birth rates that t oots with a shortage of students and Is about o uclng the number of people avallab t form new households. Thus, the Census Bureau projectlo s anticipate that the number of new households befng formed will decllne through the year 2000 -although the total number of houMholds wilt continue to rise. The United States added about 1. 7 mlltlon households annuaJly at the peak of the maturing of the Baby Boom between 1970 and 1980, creating a jump In housing construction and sales of furniture and other houMhold Items. The reoeufon In the early 1980s hetped curtail ·that, though, and between 1980 and 1985 onty 1.2 · mllllon new houeeholda were Mt up annually, Census Bureau flguree show. The Improved economy Is altowlng fot' more hOUleholdt to be formed currentty, however, wttti the 1986 total expected to be about 1.5 mllUon. The new Ceneua 8tudy Mid annual houMhotd growth In CQmtng yMt'I coukt rengre Wldefy. The meddle of tM _. of swojectk>nl made by the ~ cell few.,,.,., ~ gtowth of 1.4 mlllon by 1980, declllllltg to 1.2 mlHon through 1995 and 1. 1 million through 2000. That Is a drop from a 1. 7 percent Increase In 1986 to only 1.1 percent In 2000. Those rates would bring the current 86. 7 million American households up to 94.2 million by 1990, 100 million by 1995 and 106 million by 2000, the Census Bureau projections show. The combination of fewer new households being formed by young people and the aging of the Baby Boom generation means the typical household wlll be headed by an older person. Thus, households headed by someone aged 35 to 54 will show the largest Increase over the coming years. By age group, the Census Bureau projects that households headed by someone under age 25 will decline by 145,000 annually through 1990, drop by 69,000 between 1990 and 1995 and then Increase by 25,000 annually through 2000. For the 25-34 age group, the figures anticipate an Increase of 219,000 a year until 1990, then a decline of 195,000 annually through 1995 and a drop of 385.000 a year untll 2000. Households headed by people aged 35 to 44 are likely to Increase by 708,000 a year until 1990, by 534,000 yearly to 1995 and by 285.000 annually from 1996 to 2000. For the 45-54 group, annual household growth Is expected to be 338,000 untll 1990, 677,000 from 1990 to 1995 and 714,000 from 1995 to 2000. Annual changes In the 55-64 age bracket are llkety to be a decline of 143.000 until 1990, then a dip of J~~ untll 1995 and an Increase of 334,000 through For people 65 and over. growth annually will be ~~to 1990,297,000through 1995and 152,000to Among other finding• of the study: •Merrled-couple houMhotd1, currentty 58 per- cent of the total, are llkety to lllp to 55 percent. • Non-tamffy hOU8ehold1 -people IMng aJone or wtth non-r.lattvw -.,.. currentty 28 percent but Mkefy wMI edge up to 32 percent by 2000. ' association· s preslden1. The surge In home sales partially reflects .. tremendous pent-up demand" among peopl who couldn't afford to buy a house when tnteres rates were 12 percent to 15 percent several year ago, saJd Realtors apokesman Walter Molony. "A lot of people were sitting on the sideline waiting to aee what was going to happen I Interest rates," Molony said. "They hadn't eve been thinking about buying a home for som time.'' The actual number of home sales wa 335,000 In Aprll, compared with 277 ,000 I March and 283,000 tn April 1985, according t the Realtors' survey. ReglonaJty, the biggest Increase In t;om sales occurred In the Mfdwest, where the annual pace jumped 15.8 peroen1 to a rate of 1.1 million units. The pace of extatlng home sales in the Midwest tut month waa 37.5 percent above the April 1985 rate, the Realtor• Mid. The South had the MCOn6-blggett monthly lncreaee -a 13 peroent gain from March to an annual rate of 1.22 mtlffon untta and 7 percent above the rate during the Mme period last year. The NortheUt poeted a 12.7 petcent lngeue to 710,000 unfta, which WU 26.8 percent above the April 1985 rate. The March·to- Aprll pace of home ..... did not change last month In the West -ataytng at t~ual rate of 530,000 untta, up 1.9 percent from a year ago. The NorthMat Ille> had the targeet annual Iner .... in home~ -up 19.1 ~cent from APril 1985 to a medtln prtce of 1104,700. The Mldweet wu nut with a 13.2 percent jump to SM,200, foloW9d by the Weet. wMr9 prices lncn111d 5.8 percent to $100,400. The South poeted a 5. 7 petClnt ........ to 171.600. LIDO ISLA~D UM llYFlllT 11,410,000 ITILIAI YIW IUITEIPIEIE Lido Ille b~ont,cu.tom, thr .. bedrooms, 3 baths. Award-winning tlte noors & walls thruout. Muter suite hu steam room and hot tub. lnkebe>tl cuatom carved bed, headboard and Cf9denH w/canopy, trench armotre, leads to muter bath "To Stay". Carved wood wall aculpture 188x94" "To Stay''. Thia Is a must to .... M.ny Item•, too nurneroua to llst. .. . .... , ... BROKER MEMBER IAYCREST • 1r:11CEI Must sell four bedrr .. ~ \\ur baths, formal dining, family roe e. \\ liit.,ard for pool, lots of trees. Owner sa.., .• 1ake offer. A steal at s21s.ooo. Iii I MYIE IMP SPYILASS s•tl,000 View, large 4 bdrm "'~ \\•, 3 baths, formal living, dining, tarri._ \\ 11t ... 1eakfast room. den, spa, large yard. ~ •l•YIEI~ NEWPORT BEACH IEWPORT IAYFIOIT Four bedrooms, three baths, formal dining, family room. view plus room for two boats one up to 50 ft. Assume exJstlng lease option with outstanding terms and low down. Great buy at $910,000. INlllYIElllP IALIOI PEllllll.t 1211,000 Two bedrooms, 2 baths, formal dining with fantastic views of ocean and pier, from this oceanfront condo with security gate and under ground parking. Wiii "trade" up to $400,000 range In Newport. Great second home. ..... , ... lllTIESS FllEOLOSllE 11111 110 IEWPllT Fabulous view of Bay and OCean from this 3 bedroom, 3 bath home with large game room and pool. Steal at $552,000. Must aefll ...... 1. CAMEO SHORES LEASE IUmFIL FllllLY ... E With panoramic ocean view. Quiet ne6gh- t>orhood wtth private beachea. Completefy re.. modeled -never llved In 4BR, 5BA pool home. $3,900/month. •&U1·12" WElmllSTEI IFFIOE LEASE I 850 SQ.FT. of prime offtce locatlon, prfvate bath, divided otnce, end unit. 90$ per foot.1 Gross lease. Comer of Goldenweat and 20th Street. CllTA IEll IFFICE SALE II LUSE 6400 feet of 100-~ office space wefl decorated I with ample parking. Prtced below marl<et at 9Sf N.N.N.FT. or $724.000 saJe prtoe. n -·-ow a NEWPORT BEACH 1121,000 IEWPllT IAY I IOUI YIEW t' Ocean & city light views from all rooms, 2 : bedrooms, 1~ bath, fireplace. "The Penthouse'' Versallles. •a.u1-1211 ~ SOUTH COAST METRO I ,a 3% DOWN -Owner occupied. a 01111 SELL IFF 15% DOWN -Non-oWfle( occupied. 1 1 BORMS from $63,500 2 BORMS from $73,900 3 BORMS tram $84,900 I Walk to S.C. Plaza! • ..... Ul-1211 Dovi1'1 F1v1rit1 R1oi111 1--------------------1 ·1 I! 2• Hyd••~~~·cru~ ~~: ~~~-, aus0 •,I Ii them In a double plastic: bag wtth rofllng pin or use I I your food processor). 'h cup butter melted. Mix with I I cookies (already crushed) press Into pyrex pte plate. I I I Refrtg untn solid. I i I Heat In double bolter -~ cup mllk (I use canned mllk) I I -24 regular size marshmellows melted, bfend In mtlk I . I well and cool. I I Mhc 'h cup cream de mint. 'h cup cream de coco I I (White) -Whip 1 pt. cream and bfend In cream de mint I I and cr .. m de coco. POUf' Into chilled pie crust. I I Sprlnkle top wtth a f9W of the cookie crumbs. lta veiry I rich and dellctoua wtth coff•. Very almpte to mak•. I I Make It ahead of time 2 or 3 days la OK. I I 11 It you have tried any of my recipes and have a I I queatlon or just Ilk• them pleue let me know. At I home 760-1580 or teue a message at the office I I ss1-1~ee I f L--····•-••••••••••••• 'i 234 E. 17th St., COSTA MESA. 631-1266 I _ •• , --M i i'}I --= G'Pi--'fi1H .,.. ,,,,, __ ijii§i --•••• --••en --e;•mw .... ,,ti --@•@j ,. : ,. l l'AGa U /IATUDAY MAY II. 1.. DAI l ;@i'N --e•m:a .,.. ··•si:• --•;tiki ..,.. 141''=' ~ G%1'' ~ l ;@Wi --#tl@}j --•11'¥ --11,11 RYMr I RAE RODGERS 131·1• l TllCI IF ElllPEI IEllTEIUIUI ELEUICE WITH PlllUllC YIEWSI This unique custom home Is complimented with a distinctive European flair. Situated In Newport Heights. Comprised of 4 spacious bedrooms and 4'~ baths. Bullt In 1978. 180° views of bay & ocean from all IMng areas Including bedrooms. A unique Island kitchen with every amenity. Master suite has fireplace and sitting room with oversized closet and bath area. This property has an excellent presentation throughout! Shown by appointment. $529,000 w llllDS 111-1211 ElSTSllE 1111,100 Charming 2 bdrm, 2 bath home. Large lot with fruit trees. Two fireplaces, warm spacious family room. Price has just been reduced -owners. moving out~of area. W llNUS 111-1211 REALTORS ® Dall fer Esti•ate 1f lartet Yal11 HYHr ... 1 •• FMtrlWlcatlet• SWEEPlll DCW YIEWI $301,000 ONe of Newport's BEST vl~buysl Superbly remodeled 3 bdrm 6"""' W 'l baths. Open beam ceilings ~ ~ ti-... rhe kitchen Is a dream -all 09\~ _..,es. Oak flooring. Views from formal llvh ·Y and dining rooms. This home has uncompromising detail. Asking $309,000. W llllEll 111·1211 EXCLUSIVE CLIFFHAYEI lllLIEIS' llUI Huge lot -almost 10,000 sq.ft. One of the very best areas of Newport. 3 bedroom Ranch style home includes famlly room and pool. Re- modeled kitchen and bath. Vacant and ready to selll Asking $325,000. OPEN SAT/SUN W llMEU 111-1211 IEWPDIT HEllHTS DUPLEX Superb 3 bedroom unit with 2'/r baths + family room. 2 fireplaces. Completely remodeled -A perfect owners unit. Fully contained one bedroom unit In rear. G.M.I. $1 ,800. A very fine property. Asking $245,000. New EXCLUSIVE llstlng. Call for an appt. W llllEll 111-1211 IElmllllEll VILLA Newer Clltthaven reeldenoe In prime locatior 4BR, famlly room, ptua «t-ro library and 3 tu baths. Soaring OIM'' ~ "It marble entl" This most drs s () ~. Will lend Itself to an decor. New pc. .... 1 exten8've decked area., beautiful property wtth all conveniences. Exce~ tlonal value. $429,000. OPEN SUN 111llllD'111-1211 IEWEI CISTOI llllll ISUll • $411,000 Exclusive! Thls beautiful custom home has tout bedrooms and 31~ baths. The versatile floor plar can be converted to lnciude a separate apart· ment. All the charm and location you could want Asking $495,000. Pleue caJI for appointment -~...a111-1211 4111 CISTll wm llEST UlllT Expansive Newport Heights property with re- cent 2 story addition. Tasteful traditional design with oak hardwood flOOf'S and two brick fire- places. Large famlly rOOfT\.overlooks pool area Fully contained guest unit In rear or property and much more Asking $349,500. Call for ap· polntment. OPEN SAT /SUN IAE llllDI 111-1211 I ~ l IL.OT/ltlA1 ISTATS::;;~::-1;;::;;i:::i;:::::::==-:==:"!~~==~~~== twJUMI Eikl .-..Eli§ ._.. .__., m M ._IATVSJAY llAY II, IW/PAa t11 ~ --···-----Eli'Ll' ~ FiiWI WM9C 'PNM' l5'Mll( '''"'MW iii§i --•• ,, ....... ..,.. •• ,. ___ , CURT A. HE~a, I .,,_,_ REAi:. TORS ® IEW LISTlll PlllE ClllEI YIUllLln COSTA IESA ·I.Ii. ZOIEI UCLlllVE Lot size is 110x160 excluding corner U.P. Im- provement is approxlmatety 3,200 sq.ft . Three SK capacity fuel tanks and security fenced and gated. This type and quality location property Is rarely on the market. Owner will finance with accpetable down payment. $360,000. Call for further details. OftT I. IEllDTS II 111-1211 IEW LISTllli USTSllE C.I., 11-2 IYllUILE/IEllOEI 1111 IAY YIEW Spacious 3 bedrooms, 2'A bath townhome wtth formal dining ovettooklng Newport Back Bay. Attached 2 car garage and private rear yard la Ideal for entertatnlng friends and famtty. Juet listed for S 149,900. lllT a. •-Tl I 111·1111 C.I. TWll llPLDEI ~H II lllE Totally remodeletf •· \ 0 'Ut. Townhome style apartm<s 0 ~ ., .. natety 1,000 sq.ft. unit. S.G.I. Sl .• df<lng $174,000. lllT .., .. 11111 I 111-1111 MEW LISTllU IElllD PlllFEllllllL 11110 EYALllTill 10 llUUTIH Nice three bedroom, two bath with oak hard- wood floors. brick fireplace and large yard. Won't last at $155,000. lllLIEll' ... 9 unit condo pro)ec:•o-' 0 und breaking. C.M. recorde ~· 1..-..., and all plans. $345,000. OllT l. HllEITS 11111·12 .. ""l. 1111-1111 IEW LISTllli YOUf PRC•~11n HERE llLIOl POllT • "llTOI Beautiful newer Bait---, Q features three bedroom lnclw'' 0 1..-.o> master suite with master bath. S .,um, formal dining room. two fireplaces •• da.kfast nook. Don't wait to see this home. $400,000. Shown by appointment. IEW um11 • IEllCEI Costa Mesa. Marina Hlot-' 0 Large famlty 3 bedrooms w1th 2% .. ~ -' and breakfast nook. Short bl~ Q ~10 the beach. Owner has moved °";1 -·M and needs quick saJe. Asking $149,S<Ai. OllT A. mlllll H 111-1211 CALL FOR Al ESTIMATE OF MIRIET VALUE OF YOUR HOME '90 FEE OR OILllATIOI IUll llPLD Excellent locatlonl Walk to beach and bay. Each unit has fireplace, 2 bedrooms and 1 bath. Owner may carry 1st T.D. 11u 111•1·was ...... ra .. 111-1211 SPEOTIOIW YIEWI T otatly cusotmlzed Interior featuring gourmet kitchen with atl new cabtnett. LMng room with leak floors and Imported marble fireplace. French doors and outltandlng Back Bay view. See to appreciate. 1359,000. 11.l I 11•1 WBllB 111· 1111 ILIFFI YIEW MIN 180° view from thlt luxurioul home situated In one of the moat ~rabte .,... of Newport Beacti. 3 bdrm or 2 and a den. Bay vtew and night lights. Only $228,950. Ill I II• WlllTD II 1· 1211 OllT l. IEllllTI 11111·1211 ... IEW 01 THE 111110 • llYllE PERFECT. large 3 bedroom. 21h bath executive home In Turtlerock. The extra large yard Is "right out of House & Gardens" and feautres a spa surrounded by lush plantings, a dining gazebo and a lovely view of the hills. Call for showing of this special home. Asking only $299,000. .llOlll llllLDUll 111-1211 IEW LISTlll • Wll'T WT Across from beautiful park In center of Mesa Verde. This expanded 4 bdrm. family room home Is 1-a-r-g-e and r-o-o-m-y. A ser- vice/hobby room, spa and front courtyard entry are alos special features. H-U-R-R-Y on this excellent value at $189,500. .111111 ...... 111-1211 IESI YEllE Excellent property . . . 3 bdrms, family room & large private yard. Sectuded master suite. 2 upgraded baths and solar hot water heater are also attractive features. REDUCED TO $16.4.900. Mllll llK'"ll 111·1211 c1m1 IEWPllT 1111m Prime location, -4 bedrooms, -4'.ti bath, family room home. Also featured In this newer custom ~ned home are -4 flreptaoes, vtew of gardens from all rooms, format dining and 3 car garage. REDUCED TO $378,000. .111111 llKLmll 111· 1211 ~---- JIST LISTEll SU ILIFF 011111 Highly upgraded Executive Townhome with 3 Bdrms, 2'.ti Ba., In serene setting. Community tennis courts, pool, spa and solar heated water system. Asking only $147,500. Won't lastl 111111WPIL111-1211 Ill COYll IEHOEI Tl 1111,000 Security gate with 2 bdrm., den, plantation shutters, highly upgraded. Assumable loan. Move-In condition with community pool/tennis. Priced for fut Mtl. ......... 111-1111 ... Ill.I. 111-1111 I I I I I a· I I I I I , ~ I I I I I I ' I I I I BROKER MEMBER 234 E. 17th St., COSTA MESA• 631-1286 I I j ll I .- -"' I > HOMES FOR SILE 1 I EIRODI ** 1323 Bayside Or., Mal Kai 6"4-6200 $429,000 Sunday 1-5 2 I EDRDDI 975 Bayside Cove. Coves 6«-6200 $630,000 Sunday 1-<4 12 Belcourt Dr. S., Belcourt &«-6200 $695,000 SAT/SUN 1-5 **3608 Miramar. N.B. 6"5-0303 $359,900 SAT/SUN 1-5 30 Startl~ Ct, N.B. 64'~3 $115,900 SUN 1-<4 2 BR plus Fii RI or DEii 1407 Bonnie Doone Terrace. CdM 6"4-6636 $355,000 Sat/Sun 1-5 28 Canyon Island. Big Cany"" 675-6000 $210,000 320 Narw ssls, Corona Del Mar SUN 1-5 675-5511 $269,000 Sat/Sun/M 1-5 v29 Ocean Vista, Sea Island, NB 760-3834 $529,000 Sunday 1-5 3 BEDRDDI * •350 62nd St., Newport Beach 6"4-9060 $265,000 Sunday 1-5 **2215 Bayside Drive, CdM 644-6200 $1, 195,000 SAT/SUN 1-5 4500 Cortland, Cameo Highlands 6"4·6200 $365,000 SAT/SUN 1-5 •li77 Costa Mesa St, Eastalde Costa Mesa 6"2-5200 $2 17.000 Sunday 1·5 200 Del Mar, Costa Mesa 631-7370 $150,000 Sat/Sun 10-6 **1014 E. Balboa Blvd., Peninsula 644-6200 $995,000 Saturday 1-5 466 Gavlota, Bluffs 675-6000 $238,000 SAT/SUN 1-5 118 Via Quito, Lido Isle, N.B 644-9060 $521,000 Sunday 1-5 - !\.."~ .-. ~ ---~-. - 3 IR 11lu1 Fii RI or DEi * * 14 Balboa Coves, Newport Beech 650-2709 $470,000 Sunday 1·5 *833 Cameo Hghlnda Or., Cameo Hghlnds 675-6000 $358,000 SAT/SUN 1-5 v4'6 Canyon Island Or, Big Canyon, N.B 780-1900 $320,000 Saturday 12:30-3:30 V'46 Canyon Island Dr. Big Canyon, N.B 760-1900 $320,000 Saturday 12:30-3:30 • 17 Carmel Bay Dr., C.O.M. 759-9100 $537,500 land Incl Sun 1-5 * 511 Clltf Drive, CHtfhaven, NB 6-42-5200 $322,500 Sunday 1-5 * •3023 Country Club, Costa Meea 6"6--0303 $439,900 SUN 1-5 2907 Ebbtlde, Harbor Vw His. &«-6200 $559,000 Sunday 1-5 * •9"9 Goldenrod Ave., CdM 759-9100 $420,000 land Inc. Sunday 1-5 901 Lombard, Sommereet Cltl-Home, CM 751-3191 $150,300 Sat/Sun 1-5 •8 Morro Bay, Spyglass 644-6200 $475,000 Saturday 1-5 221 Narcissus, Olde CdM 644-0121 $S.-5,000 SAT/SUN 1-5 32 Ocean Vista, Sea Island 6"4'-6200 $499,500 411 Riverside Ave., N.B. 759-9100 $249,500 •Sandcastle, Corona del Mar Sunday 1-5 Sunday 1-5 760-1900 $425,000 Sunday 1-4' 2093 Santa Ana Ave, Costa Mesa 54'6-5605 $179,500 Sunday 1:30-5 2.0 Santa lsab91, Eaatslde Costa Mesa M2-5200 $169,000 Sunday 1-5 28M Serang Pl, (Meta Verde), CM 631-1266 $164,900 Sunday 1-" 12 Welllngton, Harbor Ridge 6«-6200 $479,000 Sunday 1-4' ••3'491 Wlndtor Court, Costa Mesa 6"5-0303 $199,900 SAT & SUN 1-<4 4 IEllllDI •2600 Cliff Drive, Newport Beac:h 659-6700 $375,000 Sunday 1-5 •2001 Kewamee, lrvtne Terrace 675-8000 $396,000 Sunday 1-5 2109 Mlrwnar, N.B. 6"5-0303 $399,000 • 1880 Partcvtew, Costa Meea 8-45-0303 $205,999 SUN 12_. SUN 1-5 14' 12 Serenade Terrace. lrvtne Terr 759-8700 $327,000 Saturday 12-" 3-420 Summeraet Clfcle, Costa Meea 759--8700 $205,000 Saturday 1-5 4 IR 11111 Fii Ill 1r IEI • 2208 Port Ourneea, s-wtnd HVH, N.8 . 759-9155 $479,500 Sat a. Sun 1-5 * * 721 Bayakje Drive, Newport Beac:t\ 631-1286 Saturday 1-5 * • 18 Cyprese Point Ln, Big Cyn, NB 640-<4868 $995,000 Saturday 1-4' ••52 Drakes Bay, Spyglass, CdM 6"0-5664 $459,000 Sunday 1 .. :30 4'0 DrU,. Bay, Spygl .... COM 759-9100 1385,000 Sunday 1-" 1358 Galaxy Dr. Dover Sharee, Nwpt 8ch M2-5200 $895,000 fee land Sun 1-5 17 Goleta Point, Spygl .... C.O.M. &«-9060 $615,000 Sunday 1-5 ••3013 Java. Costa Meea M5-0303 $385,000 **3308 Ocean Blvd, Olde CdM SAT 1-5 675-6000 $845,000 SAT/SUN 1-5 2224' Pacific. C.O.M. 6#-6200 $895,000 Sunday 1-5 1601 Port Abbey, Newport Beach 759-9100 $3-49,000 Sat.Sun 1-5 1800 Port Bermouth, Harbor View. N.B. 6"2-1355 $274,000 Sund1y 1-5 ·••2• Rockingham, Bek:ourt 6#-6200 $895,000 Sunday 2-5 • 1724' Samar Or, (Mela Verde), CM 631-1286 $189,500 Sunday 1-<4 •18-49 Seadrift Dr., lrvtne Terr. 844-6200 $429,500 Saturday 1-5 *2028 South Cap41ila, Meta Verde, C.M 557-3118 $214',000 Sat/tun 1·5 *425 Tuatln, Nwpt Hgt.a, NB 631·1286 $349,500 Sat/Sun 1:30-5 125 Via Koron, Udo '81e. Newpott Beech 631-7300 $487,500 Sunday 1_.:30 221 Via Nice, Udo late 844'-6200 $550,000 1101 West Bay, Penlneula 844-6200 $550,000 I IEllllDI 309 Poppy, Corona Del Mar Saturday 1-5 Sunday 1-5 673-MM $399,000 Sunday 1-5 ~53S.PeU,LaQunaNlguel 4'97-5893 $790,000 Sat~un 12·5 ' I II ,111 FAii II er IEI • * 17 Bumlna T,.., Bia Canyon 644-8200 f1,195,000 Sunday 1-5 12 Burning T,.., Big Cenyon ~ $875,000 SAT/SUN 1-5 • * *500 Hllrbot lalend, NB 759-9100 11,900,000 SAT/SUN 1-5 ••eoe Herbor lllend °'· N.B. 759-9100 81,800,000 Sunday 1-5 7 =r:·~~ SaVSun 1-5 4 Morro Bay Or., SoYalua ~ te35,000 Sunday 1-5 ""'• *33 Rldgellie, Hllf1>ot Ridge. NB 780-8333 $3,500,000 Sat/Sun 1-5 ••25 RldQellne, Herbor Ridge ~ $3,950,000 Sunday 1-5 •• 1883 s.mar. ca.ta MeM 645-0303 1259,000 Sunday 1-4 1521 S.C.•t, H.V. HHls ~ 1527,000 Sunday 1-5 ••e Tr1t111ger, Hert>or Ridge ~ $1,750,000 Sunday 1-5 •••&208 W. Oce.ntront, Oceanfront 644-8200 1875,000 Saturday 1-5 I lit u • ...., y .. Sell y .. ,,.,,,.,. Cal CleutfW, 642-5671 for Information , fa surprisingly , low cost. llElllll •I Lota M-85-86 Top of Rocky Pofnt, SPYQCMa 644-6200 $2,700,000 Sat.sun 8-8 I 11111111 Fii II er IEI *""'2 Winged Foot, Big Canyon.NB 760-060e (8 bath•) Sat/Sun 1~ CO I DOS TOWIHOIES FOR SILE 2 IElllll 1741 (10A) Tustin Ave, Coattl MeM 646-4380 $125,000 Saturday 1-5 280 Cagney Ln # 102, VIiia Balboa, NB 645-0303 $149,900 SAT 1-4 Perfeed•• l•t•e A ht Corona del Mar: In Exclusive Irvine Terrace ... WaJtin& Distance to Yacht Cluba, Golf, Tennis, Fashion Wand. Newport Center, Balboa bland. Completefy Remodeled-2 Bedroom, Den. To tee ii to ~ppredate. OFFEU•AT Pll,- ANCY IMlllNINO RIAL T 714 144 ·=.:·:::..--- IMUllDAY llAY II. 1 .. /PAM II 2 II •In Fii II er Ill llEll .. 882 VIRllQe er.k, eo.t1 Meea &45-0303 $134,000 SAT/SUN 1-5 DU PLUES 'FOR SILE 414 o.hlll. Olde COM 875-8000 *3e9,000 SAT/SUN 1-5 309 LI Jolla. tMwpott Hghta 644-8200 $379,000 Sunday 1-4 •Spa •Poot **Wltetfront ***Wltetfront & Pool ...-Gtw addr .. 1t gulll"d gate -------r. • , .. ~·.: •. I. • •IALISTAR ..... _ lllS I_,..... tlH s-c-,..,. DEADL•I .......... ,(_ 11)0 lol•f-O"ftl' )I)) s--c--. ,.,. a.-Dlr«IOtY FOii SAU -~·~ t,,, M$till0l"IV .... 11•1 -·-,.., PUBLICATION DEADLINE ~-.co.i t •-"') LO'\ c.,..,.. ,,,, ---· ,,., -............ , ... c..o..io. ..._.., & T""'9day HOU SIS/CONDOS ~1o k Mo.,.d IJH s-c-)176 ~(~'"'-"O , ... Monday .. ...... Fri. 4:30 p.m A.no Pio« Ftlelay SiOf' ~(opV(O"'O 7171 ~·-, ... c-... 1007 lo'tfO' ~ 1•00 Tuesday ......... Mon. 4;30 p.m. AMI ~ T lllllOld Set\lrMy ~ ..... 1llO '"''""' 16'0 lo'boo ,,~ 1000 °"' Ot Co ''099'~ I))) °'*'-...... o.y,..,,.., ......... -... 1007 °"' 00 s.-··Of'O"'t I ))0 S..:W..0 Aff'O~., 11'4 Wednelday ... TuM. 4:30 p.m. --. ...... ....., -op-\tfOll"(I ..... , 1011 ~._.,.,.-.c,..°""'" 1)7) ~Coot•~• 1116 Thurtday. .. .. Wed. 4:30 p.m. """--,..., ......, JO NY' ..... diP ...... on ·~~~ .... .. *' 'lo.l-.l-1\U MISC. llNT ALS •h•O~ 07• t-~~ HOO ,..,,""" 1190 Friday ..... ... Thrvs. 4:30 p.m. • ,....,., .. lie au0tect IO, but ~'°""'' 1076 fl I.;._ 10()0 C-/10.......,_, 2707 not lmltedto."'-...::r:- fl '"'(I 103' • f w°"~ ton °"'*'"' 1·10A Saturday ........... Fri. 3:00 p.m. puted at I 'Miio of Ille blMrtCll tll-l.M'l•()ol'l\toKit~ 10)• ·-· 1106 Sunday ....... Fri. 3:00 p.m per "IOMll. .. collc*Wt CIOllla lltld .,..,,_,..~ .... ...... Mo"? ..... ,,.,. 104(' APARTMENTS --1111 ..,.,.""'9"'0'"':1'~ •r ..... , c;....,o 1¥11 Yoe ...... ....-. 1111 -. •lllTALI a~&t<>o• IC)d _ .. _ 1"°6 _......._ '• v.. .. in• CHECK YOUR AD THE FIRST DAY °'91""'"'0 Hlfi 10)0 HOUSES/CONDOS ~·~-"Cl 1607 •-w-o 1n• p0o·N) ""·tJVf' 0)1 (Qlpr\J•O"IO a..o,.., 1611 c;.,._. ........ 17.0 '°'-" J()f'.,. 0)! C..-•o< J•O. ( O'fOflO 0.i MOt 1017 --11'1 The o.lty Piiot 11rlwe fOf efficiency and eccurecy. H~. occaalonally ... "~.,,. .. (\07 lolboo lto~ }106 O\•O ~'4 161• "4.v •~ ,,.,. em>n do occur P..._ U.ten ...nen YOUf ed la reed bed! and dl9dl your .... po ... e,,.,,.~ 1()69 lolbc>o ,_...,'° }107 '"°"'° .°""' 1616 ed dally Rec>oft en-Ofl 1~1tfy 10 642·5e78 The Delly Pilot ec:c>ePll ...... ~-070 (~ ............ ,, ' t '""o t•U ..... °' ">«-'"•' ,,._._. ,. (O'--a ,,, ~ ' '· ·--· .. 16)• COMMERCIAL no llabtllty f0t eny en-Ot In an ao-ti-n.nt tOf ~ 11 mey be ........ 4 ..... )I< oo -""'" -: ,. "~~8ot-ua._ ,...,., I.E. SAU/llNT responllble exceot tOf the coet ol IM..,_ ectually ocx;up+ect by the .... 0 • ... .,,.. ... °'-""'° ."" .... } }6 ,,,., " ''"'""',.11 "" , .. ,,, ,l 11 '1~~0'" t'i•MI.,., ·-17)() err0t Cfedll can onty be allOwed tOf the llrst lrl..-ll<WI '"" 1,,... .. 11>4• -........... -1161 ~ OQ· N) ,,, , ......... ._.1'>11,., .14 \f>Ov"O .. """ ,,,.. "" ""'~-u 0H-c""••-1769 ....... ~ • ..,.. &r0t• , . _ .. ~ /O)O 111• THE DAILY PILOT OFFICE HOURS t_ .... ,._.. MISC. R.E. ... .,,,.+.-io•'=-' "o•bft..;: '. ~ .... ""'¥,. ,.,, °""" ... U¥\ 1116 Tele: M-F 1-5:30/COUNTER M-F a-s ' .. vlu to-••• ,.,, -11• ¥ "''"""-~l"O ~~ .. ,, .. ""-'t• 1661 }190 ,, .. . .,, . ................. "". 166• ...... .....,,,~ SCYfHEBYS llt•l ltt•t• Fer Sale :a.anal ltn~ll 1112 c.nu ... .., 1m1c.nu ... .., 1122 Cetta lllu 1124 l:\'Tt.HX\TIO~ \L RE.\ITY Gtanll 1112 .1111111111111 FIDllTDAUINI ... ut.-1-1 .... IB +lnl Tllll ... 1 OPEN SUNDAY 1-5 ,Of YOUR properta NO !JASMINE CR!'EK: Plen I: 2 -1 -759-6700 I WAI.I Tl lll IUll 7 SANDBAR I obll atlon by TOP IH Ullllla BR+ den. Hot tub& -• .,.,_, HARBOR VIEW HOMES Shlnlngly CIHn newHlghly dellreble Pfan 51 PR~DUCER . Calll Prob•t• .... uee.ooo. llc)'tlt•l271,000.0pn MESAVEADESTEALSI carpeta, tlle, kitchen r• with expanded deck.j PATRICK TENORE Home & G'*1 Coruige,Sunda)'1-5.3tWhlt• S~~otAeglonal JUST LISTED! A r~odeled and done. 28r +convert Den 180• penoram1c vi.w. nu-es1-12M 45' tot. I weter. Blu 193-3173 =· 2~"1 3~ ;ea. expanded Portof1no with French 2 -=hr o•r•o• Only '"'ou' upgraoee ca.-I ii~~\:·· YllWYllWYllW LIVE AT THE BEACH • IQ ·,,.:: doors and windows, hardwood S139.999ALS~u1t sell. thedret c.lllnga •• aky-•• ~ ,-. j 503Hm1Drl\te 32e Orcnld -45' Lot :":!~~u to floors, air cond1t1on1ng and :IBr 288 2 atory, 2 c.r oar-llgdhta, etc. 2• houfguwl 6-J Lge lamlly ~ clOM to 10% Down. owe 1270K mow. sm.ooo -oe Recently remodeled e g 9 t 9 19 cu' t Y • '" I beach, 5bd, fMI. room, + GOLF COURSE VIEW enclosed entrance Situated on 1159 000 ALSO 1379,500. Call tor prtvale I formel din room, OCMn.t OCEAN VIEW HOME Fabuloua cuatom nom. nearly one third of an acre. this Jacuzizt. trench doo11, ;~-= °"E~~:~k• Tm a.Tlllll bey, mountain and dt)'l48' • 38a • IJ'991 yd, Wonderful noor plan exceptional home has four marble n00<1. altytlght. TIW•I•-• LAii llghta vtewt Huge meet• dedc & apa.. S350K. L.. Enjoy the lltew9 from all etc etc °""' 1800 sq rt RE4 j bedroom aulte. '640.000 720-0455 °' 780-te19 llvtog ., ... °""* mov-bedrooms. three and one-half si7sooo IAA.._V BIG CANYON 3 BR. 2'~!F°' Information cell Cote ttvated~OOO b h I Lo f · rf'F'lir. I I bath. SpecteculM golf &I of~ 875-5Sl1 Of REMODELED IRVINE SOUTH COAsT.AAEA at ~pus a guest room ts o sau.~:,~~fl'Z,~;~your \I'" ·r \"" )1' l'J " ·11 llQhtooovtew. Reduced t0, 494-2342. I ~::~~ ~M~ •Br 28&. country ktlc:hen, potential and priced well at JUSl patio Sandy beectl 38, 1 \\ f , ~ c 1-.... ~ •• ~ 12 ••a·•• l trade tor iiM:om. pr~ new beth Juat lilted. $35!1 000 Ad :: 3i on 1 y s 1 1 9 9 9 9 -· s-.-I 11Um1191 Ylnf I •rt y . 121 9 . o o o . °""* bought another WESTCLIFF DOCKSIDE RE 722-9730 IMTI Ol&IT YILU 1 410..,.. hllM •· Cuatomtz.d 3 8'+ largej 642-0385/49J.5e71 Oulet atr .. 1 Stepe to TR DITION NEW LISTING , l ... 1.. bonu1 room. t.Ultl ~ t • l Zf perk. Only s19uoo. A AL SIPEI llOATlll ProteulonaJty decoratedj acaplng. Prime Coronal 1 111 YWlll TlllW Pt rft'<'l for the young execut1vt• Beau1 sgl story. 2BR 2ba !owe< Unit wtth enclOMd del Mat tocatlon. Prtced 3Br 11/288, comer IOt. 2 IULUTlll with J l.:i rge or arowrng fam1lv condo wttrpk: Many up-redwood decked patio.I right •t $425,000. ml. to beedl. Drive by MO-UU r. grades Walk to mkt1 & White ceramic Ille In .... ._.._ 1""4 2017 Maple Ave ott 19th Theres room to roam around restauranll/Westclltll kltC'Mn, bath & dining! . I 1441 ~ ea I SI $122.500 Owner ms.a m11 tlus four bedroom. den. threl' and Plaza/LARGE P•tlo/~eta area. Beat location nur' •• •--. 2131•7&-<>780 Thia charming IW>f'M hu one·hJlf bath horn<.' Fresh paint. to outalde $125,000 uth pool, In adult ., ... Com-,,._ I 111-llM •H-FlllllllHU 38drma. 288 and 11 altu- Laurle Altr e.&-4380 ' muntty pool aaune and -nu ••I ... l U -ated on cul-ct.-aac n..... ne\\ drapes and ready Lo movt• ---· STO 000 I r1c• !*ow apprelaal. ..,, .. , L d h weight room. , ·. *MUI ftlW-· Fantastic buya. DOVER 1 b1oek from the pat1I in cJrge yar wit ,room for a VIEW · lnluss 142-1200 eui1om exec 1 l1ory "&ti REAL ESTAT!. 75g..5080 Seller 1a arwoue. ao ca11 pool and R\ or boat stordge •Br P<><>I IP' Oi>en Sun-Do .. now to ... thla wond«1UI Onlv $320 OOO \d 004 day 1-5 52 Drakes Bay 1 ~. 3~•Iaa& + =·~ If IWIEI home A1klng only J PETE ·~~=====~~==~=~~~.'."'.5.;9·;000;...Ao~t•f>.4-0.;;;-;;-~ apa. Beet area. Nothing Br 1tt88, tam. room, U R, S 182 •000· Calf Anne llke ltl Model home cond F/P, Quiet M .. Vwde McCUland 831-12M at sseo.ooo (Incl Land). llft.011121A St. 1149,000 • ·~i~~ \.d J BARRETr ·.. REALTY BIG CANY ON BUY OF THE WEEK NEW AND PERFECT This one of a kind. fabulous 4 bdrm. 3'h bath custom home nas all those amenities you've been looking for Incredible extra large private view lot with spacious pool and entertainment area, only steps to a beautiful park. Furnished and finishing touches by Canterbuy Interiors. Asking $1, 195.000. 17 Burning Tree Open Sat-Sun 1-5 For more Information call DANNY BIBB OR STEPHANIE GROBY· BrubherEllis RESID£NT1AL BROKERAC.t: '\ER VH E'- 844-6200 lasffMll O.. 288 + 18drm, 1 Betf't OwnfBltr 6"'1·1ee5 •••• ·--~· &40-5580'"ANYTIME Apartment. Nice con-BY OWNER Eaat 11de h3 £ i --------, dltlon Sy Ownr 873-7227 amall 1 bd on ler • IP"---------------. llPl.DIY.... 50x150 lot 11oot Near beectl 3Br 2Ba Trl- ~Merrill Lynch BUS. 760-7088 RES. 760-2611 MERRILL LYNCH REALTY BRINGS THE MERRILL LYNCH QUALITIES TO THE REAL ES- T ATE MARK ET. • MERRIU. LYNCH • MERRIU. j. YNCH REAL TY •ELAINE ~OSE • DON COUTURE CALL FOR OUALITY ASSISTANCE $389,000. 3BR/2b• & 6"'&-M17 an 4 pm ~-~ da~OO:v 28R/1BA. $31,000 an-MESA VERDE 48R+ OWNER Call 87~72 nual Income 0t ._ oPt. den/bf 21,\be., 2 aty/pool 87~78 °' 759--02M w111s.ooo dn. s. t1y <>PenSIS. 1-s. 1214,0001-::ll=l-=Y:--.:l=O...,..f//,...,ll=-l"""W~O appt. 875-2424 Aot Jeck 557..3118 ~ jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-;;i:miiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii New duplex on latge cor. BEST II BLUFFS ~.~~~!!::>eo Firm TlllllY OUl•lll-3Br, 2Ba, lux off- white carpeting. Nearly new kitchen appliances, large enclosed private patio. Immaculate move-In con- dition $177,500 L.H. IPU UT/Ill 1""4 HM Yllll H L - IPRTIOIUI UY NW-Lovely 1 level, 2Br 2Ba custom one of a kind. '42' by 12' patio on view side, on beautl- ful Vista Caudal. $219,500 L.H. •"'*mm a..m• .. "" lWI • 1-. 1111 lllllm I Pim Tlllllll l lLLl ll II I Ll f f I ,_ana •Tm UIT 1111111111. .. llft llYlll -... UIW. IELEI I . DOWD ............. 121-1412 Ult I .., w1t11 tM 11,.m PDnnF•I WCN'klng ooupte. 38drm 2~8e. 1800 If c..,. Cod 11y, tip, dbl gar, clOM to bd'I. Gr .. t 1oc. S 180,000 8y O'#Nr. MS-Oe 18 111111 llllT em.. Febutoua 38r, 38e, 3 <**•. Tlle entry. Many upgttldea. ....... Bdrm '* ~ cemnoa. ~ ptec,.&~.c.. ....... To...i 751~111 SELECT PROPERTIES WM*q . . . .......................... ______________________ ~~~~--------~ 2204 W1t1rfr1at Ir, C41 Nestled among stately trees sits this home that "dared to be dif- ferent.'' New '4 BR home plus 2 BA cottage on oversized lot. ExcUlng kitchen has beamed oelllngs and skylltes. 1-tuge muter suite. family rm, sunroo~tqr.rnfl~lnlng rm and more. •IM,- 13 ....... ,, •••• The addreaa you give wtth pride. Profesalonal decorated 3 BR home plus 1 BR apt. Muter BR wtth cozy fireplace In attttng area. Tremen- dous walk-In ctoeeta have apace saving bultt-ln1. Formal dining room and spacious khchen to ec- commOdate the whole family. Encl<>Md bayfront patio to enjoy the sandy beech Md the bay view from thele apecta1 offertng. 11.1•,111 --·-'--- COLOweu BAN~eR ~1 ----- OPEi THIS WEEIEID ti S tt61rt!M ...................... S49UOO ........ Sundaf l·S UIO 19cml LJ~ ............... $5'1,000 ....... Sat/Sill l·S 37 be f ........ au.._ .... $475,000 ......... s.laf l·S l2 ...-........ -.................. "50.000 ...... s.-., l·S 201•11• ....... _ .......... snuoo ..... s.-.., 1 s 2 Y.ml!h .. -........... -"'5.000 .. --.~J l·S 11 ~ .. ----·SHS,IOO ... S.VS.1·5 J3 ........... _,_,,_ .Sl.508.00L Sat/S. 1·5 Jll Witt•, .............. -. Slf5.,IOO_ ... Sa .... J 1·5 W4 rwt l.-...._ ... _._ ... m .oeo ____ s.., 1-s 2101 Tedlt .... _ ....... 13",000 ........ Sillibr l·S .. ........ .. ........ --SH7.000 ..... S..Uy l·S n ...,...,··--·-............. sm.ooo ,_ ..... s...N1 1.s 2011 SIMllfl-...... ---SlSll/N.. ....... S.UJ 1·5 UlZZ ....... ldL .... -.S.US.000 ....... s.t/S.1·5 Within this very private tranquil set· ting you will find 3 BO + den, family room, formal dining area & 2 full baths. The fabulous master bath fea- tures a jacuzzi and floor to celling ltallan tlle. A must see at Just $169,900. Ask for Dutch, Agent 546-2313 546-0116 •Film lMllll Bulld your own 5,000 Sq. Ft. + home with pool on this beauttful corner lot. Priced to sell $329,000. Call for your personal showing. ••FILllT Rare on the IMfi(et. Y81e model 4 Bdrm, 2'h beth with extra large mttr bdrm w/fireplaee. family room. Good locatlon on greenbett near pools & '*"· This one won't lattl CeN fM appointment. $198,500. ~215:'!5 j).,.e '7ce '71111 I Lots of room for swim, spa, sunning and bar-be-cue parties. Quiet hllltMde location, ocean and hill views. Large poof, spa, gleaming hardwood floors. 3 large bedrooms. cen- tral air, eecurtty system and morel Only $385,000. ""JIU 5.iu "'1111e! There's a 2 room and bath tutte for mom and dad + the muter suite and guest bdrms for youl w .. 1 grounded on a valuable 45x 118 R-1 lot. Only 1 block to ~ & shops. Vacant and ready. $399,000. ·~<>W#ta dd JIM ·~673-8494 l417 (. c.ast ""'·· c.-..... . \ '""'9!'11.,. ... ~~.-.i!ll • ••••• a111111.. ~ ...... , .... & ___ -···· ta•IWIO I ft&WI Ma.IMl9fti-iiiliiil .~ ... II ............. .... er-.&.11•11 : SAVE I , "ii ,(l $13so• ... ,1 ........... .......... ................ • Month·to-month 1110 available ·Furnished/ unfumishtd • fitness centers. tennis. SW1mm1ng Models opt n d11ly. 9 6 .SO.'• no pets Newpon Beach No ., t1vm1 A11enut IM llttll .... N~rtBHchSo 110016th S1rett (IC Dover) Ml·llD ~ ______ ..._ __________ ._ .............. ~ ly A GOOD AD bet-us help. you filJd your market! Our experienced ad takers can advise you how to "tell all about it " ir) a low-cost classified ad . CALL ONE OF OUR FRIENDL Y AD-Vl-SORS TODAY! --=:..:-.....--L-Cl-ASSIFI 642-5678 Daily Pilat WE'RE HURTING. , ... , ltlJi.: '" .. "' .. llt""" "r\ ''f"C,tlltl\t t "' ,., .. ,, ••f "'"' ''*"' ..... ,, , ht I u-.1•141M I hUHI t1ht.lftJlt l""ff'i.,.,fUtl' ~.~I' ltllt\tnUltJit ''"'"', .uu .1n•thll""""" """'t""' ,,. .. ..,. hdp American Red Cross . . MEIA. 1 125/lfto. 8'otllgt or 01r t•I t •H e.seoec .......... ..._ ..,... ( tC>dOt on pr1 WES "CL·•• BL 8G '• ~ ,..., :. .. ..... . ;. . . . WM*n ' . . ::r,~-:--·-======='--~ 1 1 m-AG• 20/SATUllDAY MAY II, .... __________________________________ DAILY PILOT /lltl.AL IUTATS NEW 3 Beacoi:i Hill Collections open today A special celebration begins today at Beacon Hill In Laguna Niguel, where Taylor Woodrow Homes is releasing three separate neighborhoods: The Summu. The Highlands and The Vistas. The Summit Is Beacon Hill's newest and most spectacular residential col- lection, a limited edition that will eventually feature just 104 single- t amlly homes. Thirty-eight of the view homes are now available In Phase One. Located on a bluff, The Summit homes feature New England-style architecture and Interiors that range from 2,457 to 3,002 square feet. Homes feature as many as five Montecito • interest list being compiled Standard-Pacific Corp. Is compiling a Phase Ill Interest list following the near sell-out of its first two phases at Montecito in the new community of Rancho Santa Margarita Forty-two of 51 Phase I and II residences were sold within hours of the project's recent grand opening. Situated between Mission Viejo and Coto de Caza. the 5,000-acre Rancho Santa Margarita new town Is planned and being developed by Santa Margarita Co. "Because of the large number ot home shoppers who have expressed Interest rn these homes, buyers were selected by a drawing for the available Phase I and II residences," said Standard-Pacific vice president Steve Scarborough. "The result was opening day sales of more than 80 percent of the first two phases." The single-family homes are priced from approximately $120,900. The one-and two-story homes are 1'eslgned to-renest-ear~y California architecture, yet focus on the require- ments of today's professional couples, growing families and active senior buyers alike. Four floor plans offer from 1, 198 to 1,682 square feet. They range from two bedrooms and two baths to four bedrooms. 2'h baths. All feature living rooms. famlly rooms, and two-car garages. Three of the tour floor plans (P1eue Ne MON'JIECITO{hCe 22) bedrooms and up to three baths: all otter three-car garages. Amenities Include formal libraries with built-In bookshelves In one design, master bedroom suites with private retreats, up to three wood-burning fireplaces, built-In wet bars, upstairs retreats, bonus rooms and country kitchens. Prices begin at $249,900. Following the success of Phases One and Two, Taylor Woodrow Homes is now offering a third release of 25 homes at The Highlands, a collection of traditional Cape Cod-style. slngle- f amily residences priced from $156,900. Floor plans range from 1,4 17 to 2 ,033 square feet in one-and two-story options. The homes offer two and three- bedroom arrangements with optional dens, game rooms or lofts and two-car garages. Features include ceramic tile or wood parquet entries. up to two wood- burning fireplaces -h'lclllding one In select master suites -skylights and vaulted ceilings throughout. Second- story decks are sited for views of the coastal hills and ocean. The sixth and final phase of townhomes and condominiums is being released at The Vistas. Priced from $123,900, this popular Beacon Hiii neighborhood has re- ceived an enthusiastic response from homebuyers. Four designs -from 1.121 to 1,439 square feet -have two or three bedrooms, up to 2'h baths and direct access qirages. ~~njtles includes ceramic tile wood-burning fireplaces, oak parquet or ceramic tile foyers, vaulted ceilings. skylights and multi-paned and fanlight windows. View decks ar~ situated off the master suites or llvlng rooms. "Some of our finest ooean-vlew (Pleaee 9ee BEACON IDLLJPaae 22) Lake Foreat'• new SllyYlew community off era stn&le-famlly. three-and four-bedroom bomea. Sf yview ho1J1es introduced Grand opening celebrations are July. All 59 homes are being under way at Skyvlew, a community released In this phase. of single-family homes in Lake The homes feature three-car Forest. garages with direct Interior access Priced from $174,900 to and interiors with vaulted ceilings. $222,900, Skyvlew offers two-story skylights, and ceramic tile or wood homes with three and four parquet entries. bedrooms, many with views of the Amenities include deslgner- sucroundlng._hllls....Iba)Lar8-a'l8il-selected l~u!§s and bar - able In a dozen exterior elevations. ware and a wood-burning fireplace "These are the homes that many with custom fireplace mantel. families dream about." said Kathy Every home Includes a family Dantagnan. vice president of sales room and some plans have a and marketing at Glenfed Develop-recreation game room. ment Corp. "Due to the great Garden kitchens wfth green- locatlon and affordability, we have house wfndows feature a water- been drawing a lot of Interest from purifying system, combination self- potentlal buyers." cleaning oven and microwave. and First move-Ins are scheduled for automatic dishwasher. The master suite has a double wardrobe or walk-in closet and mirrored wardrobe doors. Some suites otter a double 'door entry wood-burning fireplace or oval tub'. Energy-savina features include fully Insulated exterior walls and ceilings, energy~fflclent water og_and.gas.1~ ~l'.-heat4ng. To reach the community, take Interstate 5 to the Lake Forest Boulevard exit. Turn east and continue to Fernleaf Drive. Turn right on Fernleaf then right on Corby. The sales office Is at 25881 Corby Drive. open dally from 11 a.m. to dust(. For more Information call 85S-.101 . DAILY l'tLOT /llllA&. aTATW SATIMDAY MAY 11, HM/PMIS JI . ' Artists conception only ... ,, ' I I I t I I I I ' t 'l Eager home ahoppen await the reaulta of a dra1::fi for Phue I and U single-Ii y detached homea at Standard Pacific Corp.'• Montecito in Rancho Santa Margarita. Forty-two of the 61 available homes were aold within houn of the project'• opening. A Phue m lntereat Hat la being compiled now. MONTECITO .•• FromPage20 have breakfast nooks. Rancho Santa Margarita Is planned to Include a 400-acre business park, a 230-acre town center, neighborhood shopping centers, schools, a sports complex, various recreational facili- ties, a network of greenbelts. bikeways and trails. and 2,500 acres of open space. The homes at Montecito will be within walking or biking distance of a 13-acre lake, and near a 12-acre community park with night-lit tennis courts. a picnic plaza. baseball diamond and soccer field. To reach the project. take the Lake Forest Drive exit from the San Diego Freeway north to Trabuco Road. right on Trabuco ro ErTon>ROacf; le on Toro and right on Santa Margarita Parkway. From Santa Margarita Parkway turn left on Antonio Parkway, right on Vereda Laguna, left on Avenlda de las Flores. and right on Calle Alpinia to Monteclto. For more information, call 858-1322. Models are open Tuesday through Sunday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and on Monday from noon to 5 p.m. Palisades' release accelerated Plans to release Phase IV of Palisades at Laguna Heights are being accelerated by Standard-Pacific Corp. following the rapid sell-out of the previous three phases, company rep- resentatives report. The Palisades residences are the largest single-family detached homes In the mas1er-planned Laguna Heights community in Laguna Niguel, built on lots averaging 8,000 square feet. "Demand for these homes is such that buyers have been willing to camp out for days prior to each phase opening in order to be assured of purchasing one of these residenoes:· said Standard-Pacific vice president Steve Scarborough. "In addition. hun- dreds of homeshoppers continue to visit the models each week." The homes are designed for growing and es1ablished families alike. Prices begin at $179,900. Four two-story floor plans offer 1,932 to 2.956 square feet . with three to four bedrooms and 2'h to three baths. One plan Includes a bonus room that can be used as an exercise room. study or entertainment e-enter. All of th homes have three-car garages. Country-style kitchens feature hand- finished oak cabinets, ceramic tile countertops and breakfast nooks. Dual vanities and separate tub and shower ~re found in master baths, also appointed with hand-set ceramic tile tub and shower surrounds. Interiors feature clerestory wrnaows, sloped cefllngs. ceramic tile entries, hand-built masonry fireplaces, formal dining rooms, separate family rooms, raised-panel interior doors, decorator- selected lighting fix1ures, custom hand-troweled ceiling treatments, and antiqued brass door hardware. To Join the Phase IV buyer interest list call 249-8676. Models by Carole Eichen Interiors Pallaadee reeJdencee a.re tbe lara- e.t elncl~famlly detached homee are open Tuesday through Sunday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Mondays noon to 5 p.m. Take the Crown Valley Parkway exit from the San Diego Freeway. Go west on Crown VaJley to Street of the Golden Lantern and lum left on Street of the Golden Lantern, traveflng 1 'h miles to the project. in tbe Lapila Betcbta eommamty of Lapna Nlpel. Harbor 'Heights proves a success The Wiiiiam Lyon Co. sold 27 of 29 homes the very first day when It opened the latest phase of Its Harbor Heights development In the hills above Dana Point. .. As In all previous phases, there were several families camping out the better part of a week to reserve their favorite floor plan and lot location." said Lonnie Casey. sales manager for the community. , . "As each new phase opeM at Harbor Heights, the excitement for these luxurious single-family detached homes continues to build," added Casey. The new phase featured the same six floor:. plans that have attracted .thousands of visitors to Harbor Hel hts at DanaWoods since It opened sales in November of last year. Prices for the one-and two-story homes begin at less than $162,000. Designed by the architectural firm of Hales-Langston, Harbor Heights' homes range from 1,516 to 2,519 square feet. Prospective buyers may select from three-, four-or five- bedroom designs with up to three baths. "Anyone with dreams of a peaceful atmosphere In a casual coastal setting will feel right at home a1 Harbor Heights," said Casey. "Many homes In the latest phase wlll have spectacular views of the hills and valleys over- looking the ocean and harbor." When complelfd, Harbor Heights will Include 180 h'lmes. Buyers have a choice of five two- story plans, and one single-level plan. The Fairhaven. Residents of Harbor Heights will beCome members of the DanaWoods Community Association, providing them access to the existing comunlty park, with Its clock tower, swimming pool and cabana. Monthly association dues are currently $66. BEACON HILL ••. From Pace 20 homes are available at all com- munities,·· said Gordon Tlppell, presi- dent of Taylor Woodrow Homes. "Serious buyers should arrive early for a choice selection, especially since each previous phase at The Highlands and The Vistas has been greeted by long lines of anxious buyers." To reach Beacon Hiii, visitors should exit Interstate 5 a rown Valley Parkway. Proceed south toward the ocean, turning left on Clubhouse Drive (at El Niguel Country Club). Turn right on Niguel Road, left on Ridgeway Avenue, left again on Mount Vernon and follow the dlrecilonal ligns to the model complexes or sales trailer at The Summit.-" For more Information, call The Sum- mit at 661-8811, The Highlands at 661·2767, and The Vistas at 661-2755. NE WPORT BEACH NEW LISTINGS 81111mll-...... F•_... a-. u-1 C,...,•tM twnty home. 3 BR. ...... .... ... Breethtllktng View of city lights. mountains, ocean 8rld tunMta. Subtle eteganoe awaits you in the 3 BR Vfl!fY sophisticated home. Dramatic vauned oeHinga, private downstairs master suite with pttvate outdoor spa. gorgeous amenities. 3 car garage, cu~. prime location! . fl' BA hM .._ 1r.-:e. mk:lc-we. ... fcnnlll ~ room. nice ~d ... fruit tr...s An --.zing vMlel ... ..,... . ... Big and beeuttfutl lnvtttng and gracious warmth of woocta. lp9dal tlles and luxurtous carpets throughout. OutstllndJng buy on a YfllY epecial island oompe.te with dock and side ttel for your flotlUla. Let UI lhow you thls perfect 3 BR, 3 BA home. East to ... -Just call. H .... .. ... Lefsure oceen IMng at tts affordable best! A deUght for entertaining -balmy breezes, wet bar. baJcony patio extra bedrooms for guests. Owner Is mottvatedl Call todayl .,.,...,., ...... lnvttlng newer 2 BR on the water wtth private dock for 2 boata. No need for remodeling. just move In and enjoy your boat In your front yard! *"111-----U..,... Let's go the eountry Club! Facing gott course tucked away at end of cul-de-sac, you can walk to play. This 3 BR. 3 BA home has a sunshiny kitchen, complete bultt-lna. Impressive fireplace In IMng room, plus an eX1ra large private back yardl Just listed. ---.... This chatming goff oouree remodel has 3 BRs. 2'h BAa, Jacuzzi tub tn muter suite. All ~ kitchen, IMng room wtth ftreplaoe, Pella wtn- dows, securtty system. pool and spa In 20x30 courtyard. A fantutk: buy for the golfer who wants au thla and many other extrasll llU-...... 4 BR. 3'h BA, custom ,single story home near Mesa Verde Country Ctub. Huge famlty room. with cozy u98d brick ftreptaoe.Gourmet kitchen. centraJ air. MCUrtty. pool and spat This wtll flt you to a tee! llU-me.-Big and beautiful Mesa Verde estate! This Is executtYe IMng at ltt best wtth 5 large BRs, 3 BAs, and a bOnuS room aeparate from the houaet OtYe Into the cool pool or soak In the warmth of a epaJ Freehty painted wtth new carpet. Cukle-MC locatton Close to a park and Country Club. What a terrific buy! ---..,.. Graciow _. BR + den Mela V«de home has evwytNngt Loc:ated near 2 gotf coursee and 2 parka, bMut1ful ywd with pool and patio, and side hideftay pmk> off the den. new add-on famlly room 8rld ~ quarters wtth Its own entry. Bring In your offer! CPEN HOUSES ll'IWlll .na.. 3013 Java I.---· 4 BR, Pool $385,000 1--6 auoa1 .. 3eC>8 ......._ 4. • a a 2 BR, dock $359,900 1-5 mYlm& 3491 W•ld9ol Ct. 1.- 3 BR. tennis S 199,900 1-4 .... , .. 280 ~ Ln. #102 '· --· 2 BR. Pool $149,000 1--4 .all.U 3 BR, Pool ...... 4 BR. Wet bar ...... 2 BR. dock ~·-5 BR. Spa m?llll& 4 BR, Spa m?llll& 3 BR, Pool m?llll& 3 BR. Pool ... ., .. 2 BR. Pool Sl•lY 0023 Country Qui> ()r;e., ---·-1-5 $439,900 2109 Mlr8rnar $399,000 3608 Mlr8rnar $359,000 1863 Sarn8r $259,000 1880 Ptll1Mew $205,999 3491 Wtnd9or $199,900 862 VIiiage er.- $134,000 30 Starfish Ct • $1 15,900 '··-12--4 4.·r •• 1'"'5 .._ 1-5 ..-1-4 .. -1-6 L Ill 1-4 r--~------------~ I I I Cut the Co.5t of I selling your house. 1 Smft to.. JOS oa prodliidl mad I ~~_....Md .... , w._ . ..,._.,,____ I c.......,.._ • ..-_.4'1.....,. .._ _ _. _ _.....,..,..._I I ---~...,.-.1..... .....,~CA-~,,. I ---I .. --·"..__._._ ~ wmted!!,.,. frielY*~D~ hM e1eYer --.-----,-- and tMtefu1 det'orator ~~ yard. utility L.. - -- - ---- -- - - - - - room and curb ~I! Wonderful locadon in Me. Verde; a community where people care! 6 4 5-0303 ---11-.-•••por1 r.,.., Ant ttme or.-ec1 "•1•• lot911aw•-9edllded Nldc ...... f9bub• BR. 2~ BA. Mow In coodllioo! Won"t ...., COSTA MESA --..... ~ CoeM metro ~ MlfWlowty or· gm1mct "°"" wh twnily w dlf"•ted. FonMI Mng and clNng roomL M Th •ep6ece. -.Aid tarnly room wftt\ MC011d Ir.pace. bull- In ..... m.st• ...... ~ tub. ~--st\ldy (could be 4th BA}. CSttrat •. a.v-t lot In tract with COYS9d pdof --..... FW:ll•IV pooll6de 1et1..rt Two w belb- rooma, trw. bedrooms. with •lbetel•ttm ,... modell'G-...., ~ Cll now. don't ..at ---·--..... ~ Pw19ct tor todll(• modem ~. Thia 3 BR. 3 BA hes a *ve kltchela. Ml)9I m den. ~ petto wftt1 ape. A bttght open teeing! 2 BRa .. mest9r ...... End unit. ..._ ·--Thia tOWtli°"lome is undeniabty d I I lg; tied for c.1- funie Mng. So nu:h to ~ for u:ft • IOw prtcel ~I ring 4 BR home hM tM COit .. •.cea of home .... A/C, Qble T.V ..... lghtied pstto Y9'd. custom ~ & "*w.a. IOllda of storage. a.N• .. ~ Don't milil tiaonel mu-,_.. Relil country IMng In this 3 BR r.nc:h 8tyted hofMf Cozy wood burning at~ In ldded fMWly room. Country kitchen,, large .,.,__.. ywd, IOeds of *>t'8ge. R. V. KC Ill tool Wfwy wait, W todayt ---....... Upoi eded C-i*n. 3 BR. 2 BA town.'°"99 _... 2 cs geraoe. comnvWty tpa & poofl LoweM priced c-pw., yet In the .. condition. Strwn & •• off the ,., patio. W8lk to South eo.t Pima. 2211 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA IESI ... I • I ' PAG• J4/SATUttOAY MAY 11, 1 NEW LISTINGS waw llLIM 11n.- eest location, lowest price & fulty furnished. Immaculate condo In Newport Beach. W1Jk to beach. Community pool & spa. CaJI today! l&Ymll ..... Great famlly custom home. 4 BR, 4 BA. solar heating for huge pool, cedar closet, formal dining room, loads of storage. ExceUent buy. UUU PmlllU HH,111 Prime location, pier, slip, view of skyline. Adap- table 5 BA remodel potential Top value with growth bullt-ln. New & hot! l&LIU PIWaA 11,221.- Newly remodeled 3 BA Cape Cod bayfront on prime corner location using finest quaJlty ap- pointments and Interiors. Pier & slip . LIDO ISLE UllllU .... Located on quiet end of Lido. Dellghtfut 3 BR . newly painted & carpeted. South sunny paUo, beamed LR, brick fireplace. ~ Ullllll si11.- Lovety Cape Cod with separate guest quarters. 4 BR. 3 BA, beamed ceilings, mammoth copper hooded fireplace, brick south patio. UllllU ...... 3 BR on 52' lot. Great location. Your opportunity to build home of your dreams or live In as It. Existing home upgraded with charm. UlllSUll ....... A great alternative to condo living Is this 4 BA regency manor with huge living area and almost no exterior maintenance. UllllU Ml..- Archltectural design, glass, Ught and dramatic decor In this 3 BA contemporary home. 3 fireplaces, security system, corner lot. UllllU ...... Sophisticated 8Ntgance. 1 112 year•. trench doors. 3 fireplaces, marble floors, 5 BR. 4 BA • maids room, famlly room & much more UllllU •t--Owner wants offers on beautiful bayfront duplex. 3 BA. 2 BA, fireplace & bay view patios for each unit. EMy to convert to single famlly. Ull llU ,, ..... 5 BR home on north channel. Country kitchen, 3 fireplaces. gigantic master suite, rumpus room. Pier and sllp for 50' boat. Ull llll 11,A .. .- lnvltlng & charming 4 BR Englah Normandy on south bayfront with sandy beachl Two master suites. Pier & slip for large boat. UllSIU 11,IM,M 75' prime Bayfront lot with dock for 90' boatl Lot split Is possible. A perfeci opportunity to build your "Ideal" home A MEMBER OFniE SEARS ANANCIAL NETWORK OPEN HOUSE 1-5 llTllllY -lDIMI , ......... 4 BR, FR $3.42,000 L. MC LOON ....... a&.I , .... ., ... 3 BR. FR $349,000 J, CAMPBELL ........ l&.U 1111 ....... 4 BR, FA $398,500 C. MC MAHAN SllllY ...... 1111 ..... 3 BA, Fee $179,900 K.PAAKER .... ,~ ......... 3 BR $265,000 J. MERTZ USTalff , ....... 3 BR, Fr, Spa $278,500 E. OLSON ... 111 1/J ..... 3 + 2 BR $329.000 M. MATIHEWS ...... -.u Jltt ~ll••• '4 BR. FA $3-40,000 0. VAL NTINE -TDUll , ......... 4 BR, FR $342,000 M. PHILLIPPI .... ,~ .. , ... ~. '4 BA. FR, View $3.45,900 H. NEIGER .... .. a&.I , .... ., .. 3 BR, FR $349,000 J. CAMPBELL ....... -.u 1mtuu.e '4 BR. FR $398,500 l. MC LOON Lmlml , ...... '4 Br. FR $.459,000 M. GUTH Lmlml ,, ..... 3 BR $521.000 S. HARRIS .,.. l~.., 6 BR. Oen $875,000 M. R EDY ... _, -=· 4 BR 1895,000 EADIE/9 NTS Lmlml HlftaLNt._. '4 BR, Bay $1 ,350,000 C. RUMSFELD JUST REDUCED UIRll-1111 ... Location, location, location! 3 BA n quiet green- beU. Walk to ahoppJng & Fashion llland. Beauti- ful upgrad" throughout tool! IPTIWI al 11.._ Setters designed thl• 5 BA home to Insure maximum prl'lacy for parent• & nofsy teens. Gorgeous cuatom home -priced rlghtll 644-9060 NEWPORT BEACH -lllffl ,,, .. One level. 3 BA end unit. Parquet floors In kitchen & entry. nice grass entry & patio OU11ook. Well maintained & nicely decorated. • lllYll .,,.,. Wonderful 3 BR, 2 1/2 BA condo wtth wooden floors, wet bar, formal dining room, rwr. kitchen fireplace. sunny patio, community P/ . • ...,,, an..- eeaut1tu11y maintained & decorated 3 BA condo. Private & serene setting with peek of bay. Parquet entry & white tile In kitchen. Olffllftl ...... A rare property! Legal trlplex, apacfout lot, excellent rental area convenient to au MrVlcel. Assumable loan, mo. to mo. tenant• . WTlllFf $211,M u . Happy to show this meticulously maintained home In prlmo location. 5 BA, 3 BA, 3 car garage, dog yard & upgraded tlle kitchen. l&Ol l&Y IHI• Charming country home with french doors and windows 1/3 acre horse property. Priced to Mii. WTlllff 1211,111 Enjoy top-shape, remodeled 3 BA featuring large yard, Inviting patio & wonderful spat New Roper oven & micro. Assumable loan. IAY•m IJM,MI Immaculate and remodeled, this 3 BA, 2 BA home Is In move-In condition! Custom kitchen In cherry wood; a cooks delight. Land Included. SU-..... Beautiful 4 BA home with large lamlty room. Exceptlonally lovely patio with private pool and spa. Wood floors and lots of red brick. ..,..... ...,.. Bay and nlte-llte views, 4 BR, formal dining end pool offer comfortable llfeatyle fOf' couple Of' small famlty. ......... .. ... Out of area Miier 11 reellatlcl One of the be9t view locations with tremendoua amount of up- grades. 3 BR. 3 B'A & 3 car garage. •lllYll .. , .... The ultimate In townhome llvtng. Subdued sophlatlcation with high oelllng1, mirrors. crown moldlnga and plantatTon ahutter1. ---11-. Expantive views above park toward Fuhk>n llland, harbor & OCMn beyond. Extra large decks for entertaining! 4 BA & private spa. 11¥11111111 ..... Tranquil aecluded location, aerene water and night light view, QuaUty oonstrucilon through- out. Guett quarters overlooks pool & spat •U1111 a.ne.- Expan11w \llewl from thl9 megnlflc«lt 6 BR estate. Authentic flxturea & dnlgn prevd. EnJOy 4 flreplaoea, library, FA, gourmet kitchen. 2181 SAN JOAQUIN HIU.S ROAD,IEWPOIT BEACH