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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1986-06-05 - Orange Coast PilotI THURSDAY, JUNE S, 1986 . Sheriff.may fire election loser I • .c ............ ates has 'lost confidence' in Calligan ."l ......... s deputy, glad .Youngblood ou~ a s judge BJ USA MAHONEY Of .. Dlllr,... .... 0ranie County Sheriff.Coroner Brad Gates says he's alad hts over- whelmina election win Tuesday has left one opponent without a job, and be vowed to fire the other unsuc- cessful challenger 1f be can ftnd just cause. Coaat Orange County la ex- pected to receive about $2.2 mllllon If offshore oll exploration and pro- duction begin off the Or- ange Coast./ A3 California A 10-ounoeboywho started out aa a frozen embryo fertlltzed outside his mother's womb was born Wednesday./ M Sports Yankees' Joe Nlekro fllrts with no-hitter before al- lowing eighth-Inning hit In beating Angels, 11-0./C1 College World Serles has area flavor with seven area products compet- lng. /C1 INDEX Advice and Games 83 Boating 8 1 Bulletin Board A3 Business 85-6 Claaatffed C6-8 Com lea a.. Death Notices C6 Entertainment 82 Opinion A6 Paparazzi 8 1 Stuna by ctwaes of nunqenal incompetence and crimmal actjv1ty durinathecausttccampaip waatd by Municipal Court Judae Bobby Don Younablood and sheriff's patrol sersean1 Llnda Lea Callipn, Gates said Wednesday be was happy that the election results caused one thorn in his side -Younablood -to lose Laser clinic opens atUCI By G. JEANETTE AVENT More than SO years ago, science fiction hero Buck Rogers used luen to fi&ht off creatures from outer space. On Wednesday, doctors, retearehen and community backers opened the Beckman Laser Institute & Medical Center at UC lrvtne to fiJtlt a different le.ind of war -a war ap mst cancer, heart disease, disfiauri na birthmarks and to study the mysteries of the cell. Accordina to its president, UCI professor Michael W. Berns, and its principal backer, Arnold 0 . Beckman, the non-profit institute 1s the firstofats le.ind. Funded by pnvate donauons. 1t 1s the first laser Yaethty to bnng together laser research and medical treatment under one roof. The 25.000-square-foot, out-pa- tient clinic and research center built on the UCI campus will open Mon- day wtth 11 patients and h1ah hopes for ats future. Beckman said he hopes phys1aans 1n theoommunaty will take advantqe of the institute. (Pleue eee L~R/ A2) hJS_JOb .,, • By choosin_a to campaip for the Pott 0£ sheriff-coroner, Younablood pve up the opportunity to seek ~ election to the judJC1ary. WMn hil current term ends in January, Youna· blood will be replaced by the wi nner of November's runoff electiort be- tween James M. Brooks and Paul S. Robbins. Gates said Youllfblood was elected aJudac"byafluke in 1980and "hu been an embarrassm ent to the CJ'U1li· nal 1usuce system .. ever since. He sa1d be wu "happy to be able to remove him" as a byprod.&lc\ of bis winninJ. ~lection to a f ounh term ushmff AsforCalllpn,a 1.S-yearcmployce of the Shen tra Oepertmcit, Oates said she has lied about him throuah· out the campaisn and he has "lost all confidence in her ab1hty to be a deputy to my department' u a result Gates said he hopes Callipn "will be a big enouah penon ... to look for a job somewhere else" and promised to help her out the door if her conduct .., ....... ., .............. Dr. lllchael Berne demcm8tratee a-Ober optic luer Uecl for lnternal n.rakal~proceda.ree at the new BeicJrm•n Luer Inadtate at trc Infne tbat opened Wecl.ne.day. Police Log A3 Public Notices C6-8 Sports C1-4 T e levtslon 82 Weather A2 Suuiner claims victory; Hoffmann won't concede Senate backs Saudi ahns sale WASHINGTON (AP)-The Sen- ate today cleared the way for Presi- dent Reapn's sale of missiles to Saudi Arabia The 66-34 vote sustained Reapn's veto of a resolution which would have prevented the sale from takina place. It would have taken 67 votes to ovemde the veto. Bcausc the Senate sustained Rcapn's veto. the House will not havt an opportunity to vote on 1t. Conarcss has never blocked a ma1or weaoons sale By LISA MAHONEY Of1Na.9r ......... last minute wntc-m candidate Bruce Sumner has declared himself the Democratic nominee an the 40th Congressional Otstnct. But his oppo- nent. LaRouche follower Art Hoff- mann. refused to concede A band count of ballots cast m the close race was expected late today. but Sumner, 61. a former Judge and chatnnan of the Orange County Democratic Party, declared victory over Hoffmann and his controversial leader, perennial presidential can· d1date Lyndon LaRouche "I hope this will be an end to the LaRouche effort 1n Cahfom1a," Sumner said Doing bunny hop leads to unrequited . case of puppy love i Rabbit 'fi xed· after romantic interlude --.,,...,=--=---.1. with pit bull b~ddy Rabbits arc notonous breeders. Thty reproduce faster than a high· speed copier. And thanks to Huah Hefner. who made the mbbit and his curvac1ous bunnic'I symbols of l'amour. the Iona-eared hopper is assured a philandcnna reputation. But when a Hunt101ton ~ch hare succumbed to puppy lo.ve recently, 1t chanced the kind of~te that awaits a black widow's mate. The Casanova couon"il is But· tcncotch, pct and companion of Dawn Cook. The object of Butterscotch's aflec- taon'I was Bamey. a '\0-po~nd pit bull owned by· Dan Adler, Cook's boyfnend. Adler cquired the ncwtsom pup a t"Ouplc of month• ago. and But- tcncotch .11nd Barney. became fast friends "They elayed. ate and slept thcr." Cook said. Hamey would t.tk. .,;ann rabbit; Butterscotch uldJump straiaht up, atarthna thf doa. They didn't kn or cart that th wtrt diffi rent animal• ut 1pnn v. ';•n the air. and , Pau~ ARCHIPLEY . TH E LIGH TE R SIDE Buttencotch's hormonec; coursed throuJh his seven-pound frame The bunny wanted something more than a pal m Barney The pit bull knew ,something wasn·1 quite riaht F111ally.last Saturday n1aht Bamry wa• fed up with Buttrrscotch'~ ad- vance i. Dr. Joel Pasco. vctennanan at the All Creatum Care Couqc 1n Costa Mesa. said. "Butterscotch start«! doina what male rabbits do at spnnatime. So the pat bull put h15 foot down -on the rabbit's head." Actually, Barney did what pit bulls do wen He exercised h15 1aws on Butterscotch. .fonunatcly for the bunny, Coo and Adler stoppt'd Bame) bd'ore he made Bunencotch ant.o hueap ffi r. Cook lOO Buttcncotch to Of. Pasco for treatment of h11 wound While tflc~. she had the iood doctor ("1 Ma aOllAJ'fTlC/ ~2) Final but unofficial vote tallies show Hoffmann losing by 4 per- c:entaie points However, the 30-year- old technical wnter from Santa Ana said Wednesday, "It's stJll too close to call. It's not over" Accordma to unoflietal election results, Sumner appeared to have 52 percent of the vote compared to Hoffmann's 48 percent Computenzed vote counung ma• chines showed 16,342 wnte-1n TOtcs -presumably for Sumner -com- pared W1th 14,883 for Hoffmann. A hand count of the ballots 1s required to weed out other possible wnte-m candidates such as "mom" or "Mackey Mouse." But, since no other legitimate candidate besides Sumner conducted a wnte-m campatgn. he said be 1s "satisfied therc'senou&h ofa mal"Jln" to put him "3ftly 1n the winner's circle Rosalyn Lever, chief of county election operations. agrees. "In every election we have a few other names thrown m. but I don't thmk. there will be more than a handful.·• ~he said. Whoever is declared winner will face Republican incumbent Bob Badham 1n November. Sumner entered the 40th D1stnct campaign March 25 after he and other stunned Democratic leaders learned that the then-unopposed Hoffmann was a LaRouchc d1sc1ple LaRouche followers have al'I ex- treme oohucal outlook that mcludcr\ (Pleue eee 8UlllUR/ A2) to pet rabbit. • pves bim just caute. But neither Yo"'ngblood nor Callipn havHny plans to drop from VtCW. Tb~ lowest. vote-.ettcr with l 7 percent, Yowlsblood dC1C0bcd hi• campaip loss as "another lkinm b in a Iona war•• with Gates Refdrina to allqationJ of im- proper real estate deals between Gates and county developers that he has broujht to the state attorney aeneraJ, YounJblood said, "If there 1s an honest cop in the attorney sen- craJ'1 office, I think t 1 ha vc some serious problcml. He alto id he would pursue &a carher complaint -allesi l Gates filed a (alsc lddreu with Lbe R~strar 01 Voten -Che -'"1vd courts YouQJblood re- fcncd that complaint to lhC attorney ceneraJ, •ho taken no ac1JOD u )tl. C'~llina Gates IM tool of .. · money buddies who put him up lbeR to do their biddina.;" Youngblood (PleaM ... SDIUJT /.A.2) Pleasant problem in Costa Mesa:· Too much money City mus~ decide what to do with a n $800,000 surplus By TONY SA.A VEDRA Of .............. In the comina months, Costa Mesa officials mwt deClde what to do wuh a projected $800,000 that the city must either return to taxpayers or act voter approval to spend. . Cit.Y. Manaier Allan Roeder, whUe unvealina next year's proposed i$47.6 million budact, reminded City Coun-cil members this week that they still have some unfinished business with the ~t spcndma plan. Buoyed by extenslVe commcrt:w and busmess development in the South C-Oast Plaza area, Costa Mesa is expected to SUJ1>lSS the spendin1 limn unr;>OSCd by the 1980, voter- approved Gann initiative. The Wt·ncb city wall simply make too much money by the time the boob clote June 30 on the ftteal year. acx:ordina to a state formula that sets the limit accordioa co poJtulation growth and mfiation. Broce Sumner Roeckr wd be will JUgest the money be pui 1010 a separate ttust ac.count until the counal docid.es whether to -return it by oft"eri landowners a property w break or to call an election seckina ~ on to spend the money on pubbc unpro"c- mcntS. He estimated the a"Cf'IF individ- ual tu reduaion would probably amount to a mere $21 if1he aty opts for the refund. Roeder uid be doesn't expect oe~t year's budget to surpass the spendioa hmn because of projected dn>91 in federal fundina as wen as In focal bed Wes. The proposed budget for the fixal year beainning July I ancludcs $89,000 for a new three-member parkina en!orciement unit as well u money to hire l 2 more fttcflJhten The unotrtcial 1986-87 speod.ina plan is l perocot ldwer than the currentS48.S million budFt. with the dccrca5C oomina from a pl\.UlllC io new "work pro,JCCts. A proposed $39.2 milhon in operational funds com- poses the lion's share of the S47.6 million n. while $8.3 million is • earmarked for capital improvements. Stnc:e the city is nrsotiltina salaries ~-~/A2) Explosive chemical detonated By PAUL ARCHIPLEY Of .. O..,,.. ...... .\ Hununaton Beach politt bomb squad detonated an explosive chemical Wednesday after It was discovered in a crowded downtown" medical center. Officials rvacuated about I 00 .. people. includmg doctors, nurses and patients, after the chemical p1cncactd was discovered at the Hunttngton Prof~s1onal Pharmacy, 18700 Mam St The bomb squad removed the chemteal from the pharmacy and transported 1t an a sand-filled dump truck to tht finna range at Gothard Strttt and Talbert Avenue (Pleue eee EKPL081VE/A2) Irvine school board secrecy in principal transfers Under fire By LESLIE EARNEST Ol .. o.llr,.. ..... .\ 'ocal aroup of unhapp) tcai;hcl"\ and part'nls turned out Tuc\da} to tx-ratt tht lnmt LJn1f~ School D1stnct board for its cl<l..c.-d..Joor de("ls1on to transfer two pnnn f\11\ to d1fftrcnt schools. The main problem. anoni1n~ to Diana Klappcnback. prcc;1dcn1 of the Part'nt Faculty Orpn17at1on a1 \,1n t1ago Hills Elementary ~hool 1\ that the de<"1\1on was made without .. um. c1ent opportunity for commumt) commtnts ··we have w mctbing that wt could add to a denc;1on-makma pr<XCSS, .. c;he c;a1d Klappcnback u1d 'he made plans tor the comma school vcar th1nluna Ma..,lyn Boyd would still be pnnet- pal. Tht ,uddcn transfer. K.lappen- back said, has bttn a pcnonal blow. "Shc'c; (Boyd) bttn a strona force throu&hout our community. not JUSt our ~hool," 'he ,.td. ·•we were told we had a very (Pleue Me PRJllfCIPAL/A2) Russian roulette shooting suspect like d b izar re r isks· BJ STEVE MARBLE Of_o.llr,... .... A Huntington Btach man chargt'd Vt-Ith finna a fatal aun,hot into a fnend's head wh1lt allt'&Cdly pla~1n1 RCm1an roulette was d nbed tn coun Wcdn~y a a man v.ho courttd b1urrc and n k) bthtv1or The fatal ~oottn was no\ tht fir'\1 time Rand) Do s Keller pll)t'd Ru"1an roulette or en 1n mk· ~ pmn of • id pol) 01 tnct ttomey R1ct Tophcy Keller. 29. once took pan 1n • IK> called '"\u1c1dc run·· an l'a den with fncnd' The ol)Ject of tht ,,ame wu In • drl\C throu&}l town without ~toppina 11mffic signal' The prosecutor u!N his dnc"np- uon'5 of Keller-to convince a Mun1c1· pal Court Jud in Watm1n lCf not to lower Ktllcr's SH0,000 t.11 Keller 1J charged w1\h murder tn the hooting of Geo -H N la 1111ho hot ontt tft lhdl1tt Ma~ 31 . • Has attom y, Paul Me)cr. described the hoouni as an aoctdent Hunhn ton h pohce, lhou • said the two men re e ln I mod1finl ve ton of Ru roulct a pme m which a bullet 1 ptated 1na~ (Pl .. -OO'l'IJfQ/ A2) ~ lf ~ I , pl lb is 01 ir tJ' f1. tt 0 w ~ a Q n bi tJ p • , • a u e n ~ , I L a I< e p t r • • J s • ... Al * Orenge Coast DAit. Y PILOT I Thurllday, June 5, 1888 Deputies to revive cont aet talks BJ . VE MARBLE ................ bisaruntkd sbcnlT's deputies have ttd to mum to thr barpinina tabt nat ~eek in ao elTon to revive contract t.alkl. whlcb brol.e ofT late t month amid threats ofa walkout by the county's laraest law enfort'C'- mcnt aroup A ttpr'C$Cntative of \he ssoc1at1on of OranJe County Sheriff• Deputies and a county nqotiator m~t privately Wednesday and •arttd lo ITSUmC M&Otiation -"'We·rc 101na to f \iC 111 tr) aod 1ee ... othina·1 aoi 10 happen now·· what happens,' ~atd Robert be todAy after n!VC'alint nca0. M Uod1 spokt!man for the depu-• tialions -ould be rnumed. 11es lSSOC'l&Uon. About 00 of I.he 900 henff'!I Mac~ said nqouation) prob-deputi~ in the cowuy att members ably wdl ~n urfy next . k, of the auocaalion. ~put1cs . ov~rwh~lm1~1ty ~·· Dc,..ut cs ba\·c asked fora new t•o-P~ their d1ssatisfact1on Wlth .. 6 8 county admlnistralo~st w~k by );~r cootRCt and a · pcrttnt pay h.ikc an the first ear oftbe pert. They votin& lo authonzc a s kc or some also "'ant a 2 / peroen\ increase in other jOb acuon tf con tract talks wert bnidi ts. · · not ~umed quickly. Macl.eod had set a deadline for today, mdicauna some dmuc action m1abt follow. The county also wants a two-year pact but one that calls fora 4. I percent wage boost in the fint ytar. . . EXPLOSIVE HB CHEMICAL DETONATED •.• . P'romAl When the chemical wa<, detonated, at sent a cloud of smoke s~trhng inlo the air and blasted a hok thr« l~l wide and two fttt deep. The chemical was found by phar- mac1st Scott Dunham in a lour-mch· long. I 1t'l·mch-d1amrtcr .container. said Huntington Beach fire protec- tion sp«1ahst Mike Tam1)'1.Su Dunham. who had bttn at the ptutmacy about two months. rcahzed the danacr of the unstable substan~ and called fire officials just befott 2 p.m. SHOOTING SUSPECT ... Ptcnc acid, us~t:ound an hqu1d form, starts to crys · e and becomes m~wnaJy unstable with qe, said fire Capt. Tom Poe. 1l becomes "shock scns1tJvc," meaning 1t could explode 1f Jarred. From Al , revolver and pant( 1pant~ takr turns sp1nnma thecyhndcr. holding lhc: gun to their head and pulhng the tngger ln the modified \ers1on. police alleged Nagata \pun the revolver·s c:yhnder and aimed 1he gun at Keller. He pulled the mgger hut the gun did not fire. pohce ~1d Then Keller took 1he gun .. pun the C)'hnder and plall'<l thc harrd a$31D'>t Nagata's fale. ~1d pohlr 1 h1<i llmc 11 fired. offile~ \aid <\ third per<,un "ho alkgedly w11- nc'i'>t'd the c;hooung ~alkd police and paramedic' Na[lala d1t'd at '>hon 11me later at Fountain Valle\ Re- gional Hospital trauma center Toohey said Keller's background reveals a pattern of"'b,zarrc condul 1" including involvement m pre\ 1uu'> games of Russian roulette Meyer rcponedly dispute\ h1' cltent was playing Russian roukttt• at the lime ofNagata's death Judge Kathleen O'Lcaf) rdu!>cd 10 lower Keller's bail and SCI a preliminary heanng for June I b II convicted of lint-degree murder Keller could tx ~ntenced to hfc 1n prison "There's some medical uses for 1t. bu1 you have to keep a close eye on 1t," Tamiya.su said. '11le tonier you have 11, the mott unstable it becomes. The chemical wasn't on 1he-phar- macy inventory of reactive or shock sensitive substances. he said. "We're checking into inventory control of the pharmacy," Tamiyasu 'iatd. "We're rcqu1rina a thorough inventory to make sure there are no other hazardous chemicals." The Hunungton Beach Ftrc [)e.. partment ~as sent out 6.00Q packets to firm~ W1thm the city to determine -....h1ch one~ need perm.us. LASER INS T I T UTE OPENS AT UC IRVINE ••• From Al C )u1pat1ent la-.cr \urgcne., now performed at thl' l < I ~kdtlal < cntrr 1n Orangr will be tran.,lcrred to the 1n·smute, and morr thi.ln .:!CJ LJ( I researchrr<> haH· obtaml·d [I.ran!!> to du research tht•re BcrM said the u•ntl'f ha\ al.,o Ix-en rcrngn11ed by thl' l ' I) go\ lTn ment a~ a county resource and olher un1ve-r· s1t1e\ will be able to u-.e the lanhty The idea ot a centl'r built around la-.cr rc\Can.h and 1rcatmen1 began a~ the brainchild of Beckman and Bcm., four >ears ago. Beckman. a chcmlSl a) well as a philanthropist, s.a1d he decided to fund nearl)' half of the buildmg'\ S 7 m1lhun construcuon costs becau\C he ~a~ mtngued with Berne,' wurk in las.er research and felt lase~ arc "an intcre'>tlng develop- ment -.... hu\e time ha., come." Ekck.mi.ln s.a1d he -....anted the t:entc:r at UC I bemuse BcrM. a graduate of < ornell.1. -...a~ therr "Berns has a tremendou~ reputation in the appli- ra 11on ol la~~ 1n b1olog).:· !>aid Beckmfln Beckman·s s~ 5 m1ll1on gift and a SI mil hon gift from the SmathKhnC' Beckman Corp were matched b) contnbutaons from commun1t)' donors including Amencan Hospital Supply Corp .. Cooper LaserSon1cs, Inc. Fluor Corp the Monsanto Co and the Irvine Co. The fac1ht} has re~e1vcd govern- ment approval for both rnnven11onal and experimental laser trratmcnt<., said Berns. • Standar~ la\t'r treatments ap- proved b) many insurance plan!> include the reattachment ol retinas treatment of eve tumors and cautenzat1on of pe.pt1c ulce~ The centrr ha~ also rl-CC'I' ed ap- proval from the f-ood and Drug Adm1n1strat1on to expenment with laser.. m 1reating blocked 1lrtene!> Sc1ent1sts hope thr techn1qur may one da) be used wtth or replace )UCh current thrrap1c~ as heart bypass surgery. .\Ian Wile. assmant professor of surgery at UCI said, "Now we're thmkmg about using the laser to weld blood vessels and nerves togelhcr. For instance, a finger reattachment takes up to three houn with conven- uonal techniques. With the laser. we can potcnuall y cut that time to 30 mmutes " The center was designed around the 30 to 40 lai.cn it will ultimately house. The laser beams w1 II be literally l>fPCd to the six laser treatment rooms. Instead of caning around 1100,000 to S200.000 worth of lasers from room to room. Berns said the laser beam 1s transmitted to the operating room through fine strands of fiber optic matenaf. Berns said he also wanted "an environment that would not scare a pa11ent half to death." With its S\c}hghts, soft-patterned carpets and lasers tucked awa)' from view the fac1ht)' looks more hke an office building than a rned1cal faciht} SUMNER OPPONENT WON'T CONCEDE ... From Al ad .. oca11n(I. quaran11nt•\ for A.104'\ \ 11 .. ttm\ LaRuulhr also claims the <)ut'cn uf f ngland and the Rock- efcllt·r~ urc involved in a drug cun\plf,ll ~ In u1mpa1gn1nl! against Sumner. Hollmann allcgc:d that thr anomc) and former \tall" av.cmblyman had mob tic~ and tlru1i l•innet lion' V.cdnc~da\ Sumner \lammed LaRnuche f1.1!1o~er.,· da1m\ to be lcg111matc mcmhcr' of the Oemu- aat1l Part). lilflintt 1t a "lraud and a dncpt1on .. Dc..cnhing h1m,cll a<. a moderate. "iumm·r said hr .. d11Tilult -....in as a wn1c-1n c:and1datc wa~ a "repud1at1on of l yndon LaRouchc and h1) effort .. · Sumner's campaign '>tr:ltl'g) focused entire!) on the-LaRouchr threat and on teaching voler~ ho~ to ~nte his name on the balloi At onr point. he IJebatcd LaRouchc on televmon Fear of LaRourhe 1nfiltru- 110n has been a rccumng thcrnc: in Democratic elecuon' auo'' the (Ountry this June lihould the hand rnun1 confirm \umncr'\ nomination, he will !urn h1'> energies 10 baultng Badham. a fi-.C'-term GOP incumbent in a Re - publican stronghold. Badham has held onto the d1c;tnct -which includes Newport Beach. Irvine. Costa Mesa. Laguna Beach. Laguna Hil~. Laguna Niguel and portions of Santa Ana -c;1nce 1976 despite repeated attack'i on his penchant for taxpayer~supponed­ tra vrl and frequenl abscncec; from the Hou!>t of Representatives whale hr 1c; abroad . R OMANTIC R A BBIT ... Badham·s failed RepubllLan challengrr Nathan Rosenberg focused on the congressman's 1ravrl habits. voung record and alleged u~ of cam paign funds for personal e«pcnd1tures but garnered only '4 4 percent of1hc vote From Al takc tht• ''·"'Ii out 111 Bullt•r\\:otth'' lllllOnla1I ,\II part1n hnrx· that nl'Utl'rtng Butter'i<'olch ~111 prl'\Cnt him from t><-rnming the hurc 111 tht· dog that bit tum As one of Dr Pa'>lo 'nur<\C') noted "MatmJ 1& wmmon for rahh11~ to do but trying a pH hull 1<,n't \h<.>wmg good Judgment .. Pasco. who spct 1al11c., 1n e~o11c animals. said ht· m·utt·r., a lot of rabbits "UnlC'i'> you hrrt'd them. thq l.tn be kind ol bother!tome," Pasco ~aid "They'll tr) to matt" with cat ... t"•t'n furry bedroom \lipper., It can be pretty an no) 1ng when tht' '>lipper<> arc on your feet." He has al<>o neutered ferret" and raccoons and ~•II "onn handle" cocka11cl<. He onte ~a'> asked to neuter a buflalo, hut dC't hncd But of the many rabbits he ha<. cMcd for in the pa<,t 12 ~car< •. Pasco found Butter'i('otch to he ~ix·c1al. "This one had more human and doa chanlctemt1n than I've ever ~en," he ~1d ··uc had high hopec, when he tned to mount and breed a 4 month-old. 30-pound pit hull · Cook rnnfirmcd Buttrn.cotch 1s a charaC1er %c got tht' bunny at laster a year ago VOL. 71, NO. 158 T hl' rabbit hou<,<.·-traincd melt o.tl~ayc; talcing care of husmcs<, on the patio rather than in tht' house ( ook and Buttt·r'>lOtch take walkc, -~an\ lca\h -Jnd they have \1milar appetite' "Jk cah Jn\thinl( I ~:u" < ook <,aid 1'111a, '>paghet t1 , chcc'>l'hurger'> IJU\t led him a r·rench fr, .. Buucr'>Cotc h aho cnJ<>~'> fre<,h veg etabks da1I} hut dt,<Jain'> onions He come' when tJlled b> name. .111d !>kep\ curled around ( ook'• head at night < ook a ~ rct<tn at r nex TC'Ch· nolog)' 1n \anla -\na dunna the da> and a modtl for Show and Tell Fashions 1n ~ ulkrton al n~t takes Butterscotch "'1th her when ~he can When sht• rC{entl\ new batk 10 her homelo~n 1n \1.uyland. Bu1- terscotch ~ent along Recovering lrom h1' ~urgcry Rut- terscotch will hkl·h \low down h1\ ha1rylifest)k ( ook and Adler al'<o hoP<' Barney and the hunny will remain fncnd5 But Ju<.t 1'n case thl' pair have pro-.1ded \Cparate quarttn 1n thC' )3rd Tht·re's JU'lt no telli ng whether Buner~otch might trv again to lake a hull bv thC' horm But Sumner said that dC'fecllon from thr incumbent shows thrre 1s trcmendou~ d1ssat1sfact1on with !he representation Badham 1s providing to the district ~umncr knows he will have lo rely on Republican unhappiness with Badham 1f he is to wm !he con- 'gres'l1onal seat. "A lot will depend on thr reacuon ofRepubhcans as well as Democrats." he said Wednesday. adding that he plans to adopt and "augment" Rosenberg's platform as h1\ own · Correction "IE\\ 'rORK CA P) -The As· soc1atrd Pree;<,, 1n 'ltones about the tnal of con~1cted Nazt war criminal AndnJa Artukov1<.Y 1n Zaarcb, Yugoslavia. erroneously reported !hat he had been declared lqally bhnd and ~nilc hy US. JUdietal authontae!> · Artukov1c''I attorneys had arsucd that their client was legally bland and senile and was incompetent to partac1- pate m cxtrad1t1on proceedinp, but no "luch finding was ever made by U <) autbont1es. OallJ Piiot Detl~ety te GuatantMd Justcall 6 4 2-6086 ... , '"•Illy ~ '~ 00 l'OI -'°"' -.,., ~JOpm ~· ,,,,., .,., .,.,.., '°"' -lie -911 What do you hke about the Daily Pilot'> ~t don't you ltl.'.t? Call the number above ~nd your me;::Je Wlll be m:orded, transcnbed and de- hv to the appropnate ed1tor1 · . The vme 24.hour answcnna strv1cc may be used to record letttn to th~ editor on any topic. Contnbuton to our uuers column mull mclude their name and telephone number for vCflfication Tell1 u1 wh.at•s on your mind ••iloa, - , .. 1QI dO ~ k-~ ~1Joy1~"' tai~• 10 • "' •"II ""JI c;q>y .. o._.., , Ctr too T1llp."\onel Cloudy and co·oler along Coa,st C0GMr tempttetut• CM be expect9d Fl1day thfovghOUi Southern CeltfOrftl• ••.,...upper_..,., ttougtl movee over the W•tCoett AIOnQ the coutl ne, the merlM ~ th.al hU btougttt night end mom1ng tow oloudt wl.H perlia1, with moetly fw lki. In the att.moon1 8MChel will ... hlgha In the mJd. to upps eo. Friday ah• IOWI tonight dip to the mld-608 to low eo.. In the ooutll valteya, hlghl wilt rMCl'I the mid-70. to tow IOe foHooMnO ovtm~t towa In ,.,. mld-608 to low eoa. Along the Orange Cout there wll be low doud9 night and mornlna houri becoming fair Friday ert.-noon. Saghity ooolW Frlday.klaha1ttt1e~Frldevlnthernld-touppertl0e.L.owe tonight In the mf4-50t to tow eo.. Hlgha In the vafteya f liday In the rqld· 10. to low eot. Lowa tonight In the mkS-o50e Co low eo. ( From Point Conoac>tlon to the MtJdCan 8otdtr -Inner watera: Light varlabi. wind• night end morning hoUta beCOfnlno weal to eouthwest 8 to 14 knot• In the eventnga. ....... u 10 U.S . Temps ~ ..... ... H .............. n .. ......... 1• • r .. Le .... o...... IO n Alben1 Hy '° .. .... YOf11aly ,. • .. Cl ~.va 1t a SllOW.,, ~ 76 .. °"..,._. en., .. • C.Hf. Temps· Tidn Ardtol11Q9 Sot ... OlftlN .. a AIMnle " .. ~ .., 11 Atlrlllc Cll't .. 12 .... .,. .... R • TODAY Awllrl ., 111 "'-*' '°' ., = ..,. ... ,. .... ...... .. . ...... a.mr.:i..,. 2 l:tp.11\. t I ......_. 13 11 ::::r.,_ u .. ..... .. ., • )Op"' ., .. 71 10 .. ..... ., ... 5.-d "'Oil •11•ywim ... ... N ,...._,Ote 11 f7 ,_ .. II ,_.., lclllon n Ill , ..... n p UNIMW • IO f'lrlol IOw )S)alft 06 9wfltllO " II :::rcn) u • ~~=' ,. ::~ tO 21 un ,. c:.., ell 60 12 Q ., U7pm u CfMlttllJ!on. I C .. 71 ""'° .. 44 .. _...._ .. .. low IMp.lft. •• o..n.ton,W Va 83 et ~ 12 II ... ~ .. ., !l-whlgl1 CN!tofldCC 17 u St l.oull -.. • ...... °" n M tlln-!Odlr•t111pm,,..P11Mp 5i: 87 60 Sell LAI<• City .. ., ........... 11 M 11641am ""°---r:••02PJll 12 M .,..,,_ ,, .,. lllNit 7' M M09I\ _. IOdml' M 4:-t..., • "'-76 . ., e-ttle ., 5" 91f1Dil99 10 :if pnci.y Ill • 41 • "' "" llOM' .. CIMllncl 13 " ... !IPOr1 16 u -~-., COUntlul.OlllO '° • SIM*-" S1 ._.....,.. 11 Ill 102P"' ~Worttl 11 .. 13 IO ~ '° 57 ..,,._. Oeytoll 1t • T....,...tPtnCIQ ., 7'3 HIQll _ .. 14 ....,_~··u"' Surf Report ow-71 56 T~ ts ~ °""~ " .. T-101 74 o.tfoft 17 41 T-12 10 ~y~ S3 LOCATtOll llD IHAPtl IMulfl .. 42 w~.oc .. .. llef1flow 10 I '6 Hunllng1on 8-:fl i.:r pocw !rte 77 .. WlcMa 15 .. a..... 12 " ..,_ .1111\y ~ 2 poor .,._ to .. Wiit_..,. '° .. ...,._ M 51 4°"' ~ !Mwpott 2 ,,_ ''*'**' 73 ... 8lyt"9 106 ,. 22nd ,.,_, ~ 2 poof ,.,.. =~ fir: '3 61 Smog Report Llll'tl hKtl 73 61 11.iboe = 4 PCIOt ~ 13 M L.-l·t pocw ~ • M 1en C!Mwtte I 2 poof Gf'Mlf ... I " M polllllAln( llMCWd lndu U*t 0. 100 NRpcw1 llMdl 11 12 w .... ~ 17 2'49lne 12 ~ ()nWto I I 51 .SOU- ~ :=o; .. / .. , . good. lC)0..200 ~ lot~ ....,.. 8prWlgl 108 74 .... Clirectkln people. IC)0..300 ~ lot ... ll'aNdeN 77 61 . ... 73 12 10 J00.400 --.... Flrl1 llgur9 .. ::=-cs-: : Eztended ---·~ 11 73 IOClll(•Olt~. ~ .. ~ ell(• .n-.WCI pa ::::--I .. 71 ... a.. '° ti &1 47 ..,. ,,... n 11 :.:.: ~'*'IJ low c:iolldll OI .:&\ ~Clly ... N SM a-ill to~ 8IVd 60-Sl ~Me 1$ 11 ..... ::.1'i. .. oariod LAIV-O-10$ 75 ~hdll'r=-v..., 1~M ._,..Ow 10 M '-Y.,.._ ...,_._._ uni."°°' '° 71 L.-9Mcl> 60(10f= T.,_V....,. 15 ,.. ...,.,. .,., 10.::a .. OC*I to .. IAullow9a 71 • Loe Nlgll9 AlrpOt1 v--. 71 62 mid...,. lnlMd .._ to 12 PRINCIPAL TRANSFER SECRECY HIT ••. From A l talented pnncipa.I and that her talent& were needed elsewhere.·· Boyd is being replaced by pnnc1paJ John Inmon from Rancho San Joa- quin Intermediate School. The rep- resentatives from Rancho were equal- ly dismayed. ·"Our main complaint is that our principal is bctnl taken from us." said Carole Kellog. a Rancho teacher. The change, she added, has upset many people. "No one at the school is happy Wltb 1t," she said. As a result of the board's action. four district school, will have new pnnc1pals next year. includtng Stone· creek and C'ulverdale Elementary schools Thr parents· complaints were directed largely at Supenntendcnt 5tanky Corey. who rccommend('J the transfers Corey said he sym- pathizes with the upset c111zens because of their "feeling ofloss." Howrvcr. he stood by the dec1s1on. ~}mg. "A transfer of this nature 1s .. cry much like launching a ship" and that to tr) to tum 11 around now would be too risky Although some speakers did ask the board to reverse its decision, most seemed pan1cularly upset abou1 the way the dcc1s1on was made Jane Rivera. a ~nt whose chil- dren attend Sanuago school, said. "We were told the decision was made 10 a 30-sccond penod behind closed doors." S~k1ng for the group of parents w11h whom she was s1t11ng, Rivera said, "We JU~t want wme answers, that's all " Board member' admitted that the) may have made a m1'ltake 1n exclud- mg the public from thr dcc1s1on, but they defended the transfer itself "I have some regrets" about the lack of communaty mvolvement in the dec1s1on-making proccs<s, said board member Mary Ellen Hadley But she added that the t111nsfer of principals was slill a pos1t1vc move. "I believe ~at we did was in the best interest of the school district." she said Trustee Gordon Getchel aam:d, "The real problem here was the process, and not the dcc1s1on." The board darected its !ltaff to find wa)'> to assure s~caent pubhc panic1pa11on when future adm1n15- 1ra11ve transfers are betng considered MESA SURPLUS ... From A l with its 520 employee~. 1nclud10g pohce and firefiJhters. pay r:uses arc not included in the prehmmary budgrt. Roeder said any increases m :.alary would be added later He ,FXPtets most of the cost of cleating a parking enforcement oper- ation will be olTsct by an ant1c1pated nse in parking tickets. Thr workers would be civilians and would patrol thC' cit). c1t10g violator<; parked 1n street sweeping zones. handacapppcd spaces and fire lane'I. They would also enforce Costa Mesa's 72-hour park· 1ng hmtt Budget planners expect the cny to lose about S 1.6 million m federal grants and revenue shanng funds to congren1on.a.J speodina cuts. SHERIFF GATES A 'SORE WINNER' •.. From Al said 11 was "a shame when the good fu)sdon't win even if they're broke If had S 170.000.1 could probably have elected Charlie Manson." According to the most recent campaign spending reports, Gates -;pent S 177,080 to win his j()~ Youngblood spent less than $25.000. Learning of Gates' comments about her, C.aJltgan called her bo~s a sore wmner who docs not support thr Democrattc process. "I'm shocked he reacted that way l lhought he would be a bcuer winner," \he said. Calligan, who spent about S 10.000 during the campaign - pnmanly for her candidate's state- ment -netted 18 percent of Tues- day's vote. . C'allipn maintains she ha~ told the SPECIAllY FOR DAD" AND FOR YOU JU51 m time 'ror Fathers tny. June 15th. wert offering our basic "WOOi 6t polyest~~ . hopsack blaur for Sl4900 Regularly $19,.00. ~ OC(ll• mg colon includinj the Classic Nevy. Abo. Crom Ma~i; the all wool Huddcrsftdd aoplcal WO ltd lack in eight tradi- tional colors for S69 00 &q,tl1rly S90.00. Now the time to rreat Dad & yourKlf w the.K wardrobt ndal duril'1g the endtt month of June. Stt you soon Vim tWnd • ~ .. (714)&tt0ltr4 ,, lruth aboul Gates. whom ~he says 1s costing taxpayer; m1lhons for tern· porary Jail fac1ht1es. 11lcgally owned a bar m the la tr I CJ7(x and covered up 1hr drunken dnvmg arrest of a shentrs deputy An Orange County Supenor Court Judge ruled Calhgan's allep11ons false and m1slead10g as wntten in a draft cand1date''I 5tatement she planned to send to voters. The judge barred the pnnunaofthe allept1ons. An appeal of the lower court decision has not yet been heard and, should she w10, Calhgan u1d she will ask for a new election. "I still have my court heanna. I have every faith m the JUdicaary and the law," she said. "If they look at the merit~. they can't do anyJhing but find m my favor." C.alhpn warned Gates he had better be "very, very careful m thr way he goes about seem& that I get another JOb" Calligan, who 1s five Yctrs from retirement. said she has a flawless record and doesn't plan to do any JOb-hununi. "I tutve ll JOb. Gates' arropnce sec~ out of every port He thinks because I don't respect him, that make"I me unfit to be a deputy " Calligan also promised to run apin apinst Gates should he seek a fifth term in office "T'll be hete in four year1 and the nellt time. I'll be more pre~ and I'll have a bt~ foundation (ol suppon)," she wd. l"lf" • Mesa political session slated . Mauriet Holloway of the Costa M~ Chamber of \ommert~'• Poht1caJ Action Commincc will addrc the Costa MC1a Republican Aucmbly nut Thunday It 7:30 p.m. at the Cha11cr Savings Bank bu1ld1na, 1700 Adams Ave., Costa Mesa. • Holloway will speak. on such to_p1~ as Mesa Action, arowth in C<>sta Mesa and the free: enterpnsc 1ys1em. Call Denn11 C)kupmsJc1 at 631-7816 or T.R. Johnson at S49-42n for more information Needlepoint •emlaar •et Reservations ~ now bema taken for the Amencan Needlepoint Guild's annual teaclung seminar, scheduled for Oct. 12-24 at the Newport Mamou ~otel 1n Ncwpon Beach. It ~I be hosted by the Point to Po1n1 chapter in Huntington Beach and 1nformat1on is availablc at 893--0221 evenings.' Alcohollc forum at OCC . ~· Co~nty alters airport scheduling By LISA MAHONEY °' .. ~,... .... Wuh their Iona-term airpo11 access plan an a bold1n1 ucm, Otal\IC County 1uperv1.ors peed Tucaday lO mili some intenm chanie io in urc compliance Vttith an airpon senlemcnt brtween the county and Ncwpon Beach. Supervisors want to be QCTU1n the county does not violate pa sen~rJimitsor departure curfews a~ to in its settle- ment with airport nciahbor Newport Beach. Because of the nt'Cd for federal review, adoption of a master plan -intended for July I -will be delayed until at least October. Once adopted. the plan wlll hm1t 1Jrhne operations to reduce lhe impact 11maft noise his on urround•na mid ntial ·ntiahbotboocb 1n Ncwpon Beach and uruncorporated ota Ana H~ts. In the meantime, UpcN1$0n have agreed io immedialeJy roll beck a 10 p.m. curfew on airline depanura by JO minutes and to eliminate three of SS ave daily departures (ADDs) rC1ulaled by noise level. The curfew change will avoid repeated violations of the 10 p.m. depanu~ deadline, Airpo11 Manaatr George Rebe Ila said. He 111d some a.irli ncs have schedultd depanures so clc»e to the rf'ew that they routindy viol.ale it He ted the 9:30 pm. depart~ deadline in rcspoMe to resi t tom· plaints. Rebell.a said the oil.ly alternative it to cancel fliahts that have not dcJ)llntd bY I 0 p.m .• an action \hat would seriou ty inconvenim~ pauc~ Reducina the nwnbct of daily de. penu~• allowed between July and Octo- bcT will reduce the chance that the county would vtolatc: its qreement with Newpon Stach to limit the . number of annual passenarn at John Wayne Airport to 1&.n million, Rebell.a 1&1d. Wath no formula for controllina ~n· A one-day seminar tquchmg on the famil) ~-•-PCUbllem~~!d--1l)y--ehirldreir of alcobolrcs w1ll be offered Saturday from 9 a m. to 4 p.m. 10 Room 112 of the Social Science Butldmg at Orange Coast Collqe 1n Costa Mesa The fee 1s S30 and additional information may be obtained by calling 432-S880 Surfside · service surfaces . on sands Laguna firm on · Canyon criteria • Book sale in Irvine The Fncnds of the Irvine Pubhc Library will hold their 11th annual used book ·sale at the University Park branch, Lexicon and Sandburg, Sunday from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Memt>crsh1~ an the oraani.ta11on wall be accepted. Rabies cllnlc announced An ant1-rab1es vacc1na11on chmc will be held Wednesday from 7 to 8:30 p.m. at Sandpoint Park.. 3700 S Birch St. in Santa Ana Heights. The cost of inoculations 1s S3 ptr dog and funhcr informauon mr.y be obtained by caJhng the Orange County Animal Shelter at 634-7287. Beauty program slated Fran Carman, a beaut> consultant for Mar; .Uy products. w1ll conduct the program at Wednes.- da) · s mee11 ng of the CoasU1 ne chapter of B' nai B'n th Women. to be held at 7 30 p m. in the communH)' room ofSouthem \ahfom1a Savings, l 547S Jeffre> Road 1n Irvine. Call 651-8619 or 786-1204 for transporta11on or addrt1onal 1nformauon. Medla talk scheduled Publicist Jan Knowlton will address members of tha South Coast Metro Rotary Club at next Thursday's meeting. scheduled for 7:30 a.m. at Alfredo'o; Rco;taurant 111 the Westin South Coast Plaia Hotel Cf.>sta Mesa Knowlton will speak on obtaining better press coveraae, and funher infor- mation I'> available from Chip Chlheroc at 863-1262. Women's lecture planned A lecture for women titled .. How to Deal With Anger -Minc and His" wall be presented by mamage and family therapist Janeen Hahn· CunninJham next Thunday The session 1s sched· uled from 7 to 8:30 pm. at 2900S Bnstol St .. 0-IOS Co!>ta Mesa. and 1s frtt Call 641-7084 for re~rvat1ons. By SUSAN HOWLETT Of tlle 0.-, ,..... ..... A new beach patrol 1s hatting the sand in Balboa an umc fo r the lazy days of summer But this uniformed squad issue~ submanne sandwiches instead of c1tat1on'I. The surfs1dc service idea 1s the brainchild of two 23-year-old Orange County entrepreneurs who rece ntly opened the Bayside Cafe near the h1stonc Fun Zone m Balboa. Joe Cohen and Paul Ygolln1 , both of Fullenon. said they were tu~ of workrng for someone else and wanted to take on the rcspons1b1hty of, running their own restaurant They decided they needed a gam- m1ck, somethms to set them apart from aJI the others selling a quick burger and frozen banana. They call 1t the "Balboa Beach Patrol," and it's the first direct-order beach service m Newport. Four members of the Balboa Beach Patrol take 10 the seashore every day, armed with cla pboards. menus and numbered flags. Cohen said. Once on the strand, they take orders from ' hungry sun seekers A numbered flag is planted next to customers. who arc saved the bother of leaving their towel When members of the beach patrol finish taking four orders. they return to the Bayside Cafe. -where the orders arc prepared for delivery. "lt'!I goma fantastic," ( ohen said Cohen and Ygohni. who have known each other since k1ndera,arten. have dreamed of going into business for themselves after working in food service. "We were ured of having someone else tell us what to do,' Cohen said "You know how It 1s." Will fight widening of perilous road until Caltrans capitulates By LAURA MERK. Of ... .., ........ Dissatisfied with the Ca.lifomia~­ ment of · Transportation's (111&1 CD· vironmeniaJ study on the widenina of lquna Canyon Road. the Lapoa Bclcb City Council said thiJ week it will cootin'8e to oppose the project unless cert&lD demands •~ met: - The council fir11 outlined iu con<:em1 last September aft.er reviewina a draft of CaltraJU' environmental impact repon But City Manager Ken Frank wd Caltrans refuses to seriously cons.id.er the COUGcil'• poSltion. Lquna Canyon Road is one only two ma.>or connccuna routes the city bas to the rest of Oran County. Because the road widerun& would re- quire 'ubst.anttal ~ tn some places and the u1e of land prcv1ousJy daipted for open pace, council members say Caltrans shouJd be wtllina to neiotiaJF.. Council membcn said Tuesday they wdl try a.pin to set up a m~ng with Caltrans io work out an qrecment. The council'1 conditions: • That Caltrans retain the 811 Bend portion of the roadway with added protections such u a c:cnttt m~ instead of crutina i new roadwaf" bY- licina throu&h the hillside. • That CaltraJU put in a landtcape mecban for safety P"f'POICS and to leaaeD the cn'f"lronmcnt.aJ impact the widenfoa will have. An Invitation: The Bayside Cafe. which began service on the sand 1n late Apnl. will continue through the ~um mer Cohen said. Bayalde Cafe Beacb Patrol memben Charla Murrockl and Tom Carroll take orden from •anbathen Rebecca Holloway and Jenntter Bloom. • That all utdity hnes be ~located undersround. • That more flood stud.Jes be conducted 10 insure adequate flood protection. • That sians be anst.aJJed where tbett are deer migration crou1ngs. Attention organ!JAtlon prHldente and NC- retar ... · W• want to help make your upcoming ewnta. mee11nga. Mmin•r• and fundr.i.n tue· oeeatul. Send bri9f anl'lOUflCelMntl tncludlng time. place, coat (If any) and a phone number for additional Information to Bult.tin Board, Dally PllOt. P.O. Bea 15e0. eo.ta M ... , 9282t. University Drive study funded By LISA MAHONEY Of IM 0.-, ,._. II-" artenal highway<;, U01vers1t) Dnvc will someday be extended between Irvine .\venue and Jambortt Boulevard just nonh of Upper Newpon Ba}' A1rpon and the Manne Corps Air 5t.at1on m Tustin make University Drfve the only practical crossover I n the area, sa1d Bob Petcrson. scruor transportation planner. • That 1 traffic signal be mstalfed at Irvine Bowl and Broadway at Beach Street. • That Caltrans dump excess dirt in the canyon above lrvme Bowl instead of hauhna II away. • That no construction take plaet> dunng peak morning hours and evening conunutc hours . Repor11 of your club Of Ofganlutlon'1 Ktlvltlea -Ilk• community Mnlloe project• or eltlctlon of offtoer1 -lhould be dltected to tM Comnwnlty Newt Edltoc at IM ume eddr.. Non-retum&t>W blactc and white photogrl!PN are w9come. r he propo\cd c11tens1on of l n1versll) Dnvc through Santa Ana Heights will be the subject of a snt~month. SI 5.000 count> stud) to determine 1fthe planned cast-west traffic link can be ehmmated from Orange Count)' 's master plan. Environmentalists and residents living near the proposed road extension have opposed 11 since.it first appeared on county plans more than I 0 years ago. The) say thc road wall damage thc sensitive ecological balance of the tla) a<; well as degrade ex1sung neighborhoods. If not constructed. Pacific toast High- way. Bnstol Street and the Corona del Mar Freeway would have to bear the burden of ancreasCd traffic that future development in the arca will ~nerate, he said. >\ccord1ng 10 Frank CaJtrans has only agreed to the la"t two cond1t1ons. He also wd the EIR was inadequate and dad not meet the normal requirements of such a study. Thuraday,June5 Fifth D1stnct ~upcrvisor 1 homas Rile) failed May 7 to convince fcllow board members 10 tra\h the proposed extension But Tuesda) he won suppon tor a stud} addressing the need for the conncctor and the effect of removing 11 from count~ plan'i But the road C'(len!>10n ha~ the firm r,uppon of county tran<;ponat1on plannen. who say 11 ,., needed to prov1dc a cnt1cal ca'it-wcst travel corridor hetwecn Irvine and "'lcwpon Beac-h The road would serve commercial uses around John Wayne A1rpon, including research and dcvelopment parks the I rvme Co plans to build near UC Irvine. .. Thcre has bttn no ;1nal"s1s of what speeds wall be ~re or of what IJ"lldmg will be necessary." !.aid Franl -issues he said arc usuall) addrni.ed 1n ElRs "We \hould let them know they arc m for a rough battle 1f the)' continue this wa~:· said Councilman Bob Genlt) C:ount) \Uptrv1'i0rs have voiced 1hC'1r 'iUppon for the r>rOJCCt '" the P3SI • 7 30 pm., lrvlae Plannln1 Commlaalon. ( ll> Countil Chambers. 17 200 Jamboree Blvd. Accord1og to 1hc countv's ma\ter plan ol Barner~ hke the ha\, John Wavnc The stud) approved b}' supervisors will analyn· the effect of ehminaung the lJnivers1h Dn'e C<tten~on PoucE LoG Police seek peeper wearing just shower cap and a smile By SUSAN HOWLETT Of .. Ool9J,... ..... /' Newpon Beach poh'c arc 1n- ' e~t1p11n, a ~nes of indecent cx- po\urts 1n a Corona del Mar nciah- borhood. featunnaat least one flasher who wears onl) a ihower cap The man bear\ 11 leac,1 wme \1milant) to a su pcct police w~ ~ekina la1c Int year dunn, an earlier ru)h o( indecent e11po urc' and Peep. 1nii TorlT 1nc1dcn1c, 1n Corona del Mar. accordin& to Newport ~ach pohcc spukc'lman Trent Hams · Harm said 1hcrc. . .h1ve been four n:pons of 1ndc{ent exposurfc, 1n the Laauna Beach Pohcc art: loc)t<mg tor the pet:\On responsible for paanung a ~ no· puking curh wh11e on Rlumont Strttt The C"hanae wa~ noti~ Wedncsd.a) mom1na • • • A diamond nn valucd at S 1,000 wac, reportedly \tolen from a c.ar parkC'd WC'<JncW) on C 'pl"C$\ Ori vc. • • • Pohoc arre\teJ R(l~n T homu Ponsolk. 211, on ,u,r1c1on of a sauh and battet) Ponwllt was arrt"cd following an 1ne1Jent Wednesday night at Br dwl'r and < oa\t H1 h· ~-)· . . . Tht' ov.ner of o ~I ol pearl\ tot~ police I utsda) 1hat th(' ~tore <1n Bea~ h u·ttt that wa~ to -. nrk on lht" I~ past month 1n Corona del Mar ·\II of thc 1nc1dents involved nude men One of the repons descnbed a man -clad only an a haht<olored c,hower cap -who approached the homes of women rcs1dcnl'>. Harris said The latest incident occurred at about I a m Sunday near a home on Mangold Avenue The \U,pt'Ct de ~nbcd as 35 10 4S yearc, old and we1&hma I SS poundc,, wu d 1sco' ered 'ltanding an front of o hc:droom wmdow b) a 34-year-old woman who reponed the incident to pohcl' Repons of a man weanna JUSI a shower cap and shoes ""ere rC'ce1ved by Newpon pohcc late lul )Car 1n the Jewelry had apparcntly ttonr. out of bu<uness. The pearl~ an: "nrt.h an ~timatcd $400, the v1(11m told poli~. • • • • Two motonsu. were llrrc'it«I on ~u,p1cion of dm1n1 \lndtr the in· nuen~ of alcohol. R1ch11rd ( UrtC'I Dclpdo, 28. was,topl)('J at V\011 m. Wednesday on Catalina and Anita . 'trceu Andrew Alan I {e)\.\Ood, 2 \.of uauna Beach was arrc'it('d at 2 a m Tuesday on Nonh Coast H11hW1 :at C'rcsccnt Ba). Int.ne " black Columbian "pr()< m" J1r1 b1kewu11olcn from a school on Thiel A venue Wcdncsda) ... • • • Snmc auto pan' wm "okn from i • old ( orona del Mar area Ham, said Pohce are not sutt if thc same man 1s involved an more than one of the recent incidents. but Sunda) 's shower-cap~ suspect ·1ooks 'en similar" 10 the man rcponcd at that time. said Hams The earlier 1nc1dents were reponed by women who said the) came home from work and saw the prowler look•na into the bedroom window ac, they und~ued. Ham~ said. Ham' 111d the number of and(.'( cnt exposures typically increases dunng lhc summrr season. and wamC'd potential v1ct1ms to be warv of nrangers in their ne1ghborhocxh under the hood of a Nr park«! on Promenade. • • • Motorcycle appattl wa' 'tolrn from a blue Honda C1" 1c Wednr'l<la Newport Beach A bur&lary 1n the 1800 bloc~ ot lkdforJ netted S 1.325 an 1e~ln J: ... • • • • • Buralan ho apparcntl) pned optn a lock 1n Sea t land ~lected $2,900 1n JCWdl'). camera and tek- v1 ion cqu\pmmt. • • • .it Buralan whoJmashed a windo"' of I home 1n the I SOO bloc;lc of Placenua too 1 stttto and othtt 1tem:. worth Sl.OlO • • • A 1935 Ford Bronco \ rcroned \lolcn from Fifth Stj'ftt andl'cmlcaf. • • • A pur<te wa!> stolen from a home m tht' 40<> block of 38th Street • • • .\wallet was taken from a rcs1denle in the QOO block of West Oceanfront .\bout SR60 was mmma-. .... -~burglar took a S400 tclev1s1on set lrnm a homl' an the 400 hlock nf jum1nl.' • Huntington Beacb ~golf hall '>haltered a window to a rt\1dencc on Rogers. near tht' Mcado" lark Country Club. fhe o" ner -;aid the wandow has ~en broken \eVeral times b) CrTant BOif tlall\ • • • Burglar\ 111mpcd a fence and \tolc lawnmowel"' and edgers from Mr. B lawnmowers. I 70l 1 Pa)mdale • • • ThlC''e' hrokt a window and \tQlc S SO Imm I < are l !~A. 18541 Beach Rlvd • • • Burglars entered a home m the 200 hlock of W1ch1t.a and stoic S82'i an Jewell") and 1 SI SO answenna ma- chine • • • Burglars stoic a telcVls1on set and a guitar af\er entenng a home 1n the 1.i< on block of Geneva • • • ~ resident tn the 4000 blod• of "-eel\ said a $200 surfboard was s101C'n from a Volkswagen par\..td 1n a dirt lot Coeta Me.. Mu\lcal instrument\ wonh S2.~00 and S900 in tools and c~mping equipment wert reponed stolen from ~parate m1nMtorq.e prqes 11 2950 Bear 5t The hasp wm cut off tht garage doors • •• \ T·top and a purse were rcponcd \tolcn from a 'fhunderb1rd parked at h1anc1a H1ah School. 2323 Plac<'ntia Bike crash victim~dies \n Ir' ine man a1t1c1lly lnJUN'd in a "kwporl tieuch h1cychn1 acodent 11\t month d1C'd Tue:W\ m the lntcn~1ve <arc \Jnu at ·Fountain Valle)' Trauma Ccntcr. Yasuo Sh1k1, SS. died of ma\\lve head lnJUnes ufTercd '" the Ml) I I amdcnt on Rack Ra\ Road accord· ana to h0$pital pokeswoman \hcala I oo;tro \h1._1 hit hi hrad on the road or curh when he colhdt'd 11111rh another h1r 'Chst. an;ord1n to Newport lk:l\:h poh{·e 1nve t1pt<U Mar._ Mill· Cf ~ Shilo 1s a v1<"e' prt,1den1 at Kyowa .<\men o. < on> of Ir' 11,r, llnd h1, f: ~ly 1 .. rcportcdl~ an Jat11n I: I hl' accident OC'Cum.-d when Sh1k1 ~,., riding downhill on Back Bay Road about '400 fttt w('.st offAl'tbluff l>rn<' at ahout I p.m Ma) 11. Lola 01on Reil. 5R of Gardt'n Cira\ie, wa ndinp, uphill Roth hie ch't' 'ccrrd to avoid a rolh\1ol'· hut '('('l"t'J 1nln tal h other. police \aid Reif \Ufle~ manor bru1~ when \he """3' knocked ov('r Shr wu 1rutcd h' Newpon Reach fire llr· panmcnt paramedu; al the S«nc. end 4\h1~1 ~•' \Cftl 'o the lrluma tntrr for 1mmed1atr "u c" Nr1ther htC)llJ 1 ,. .. , .,,~Anna a htlm(t. Mllkr Uh1 i\ve betwet"n ~ pm and 7 30 fl m Tuesda\ The loss was rcponcd at S55:\ Fountain Valley ~ resident of the 11600 hlcl<:k of Gladstone rcponC'd Tue'lda\ thal omcone broke a re~r shding gla .... door t~bWJ).anzc hl.i home The los!. included stereo and v1det1 equipment wonh $800, S 1,500 1n c-a .. h and JCv.clry wonh \500 FVmanheld in rape of girl, 12, in Oregon A Fountain Valley ~1den1 wu arrc\tcd Wedne'ld y on rapt and 50<.iom) charae~ 1nvolvina a I 2-ycar- old Oregon 11rl. Fountain V1Jlcy PohC'e Detective Rid. Chni1enst"n Mid En~ l..t'mucl .\1an1h. "41 , was arTCSted w11hout 1nmkn1 at Lo< Anst'k"i lnccmauonal ~1rport. where ht wa\ returning from 1 bo•me\ tnp to Ne'14' \ ork Chns1cn~n ,.,d Aun.ti was bookrd into the Oranac County Jail on 1 warrant obiaancd b> poh~ 1n <1hland, Ott . ch•fll"I t~ man Mth first-0 n~ and sodom). Chn ten n 1d t~ Vlctam hHs 1n on and t t the o en arc allescd to have occurred over the :t s"J ~ Hr •d the irt on1) recently tol authont1es about \he 1n1;ident • \\h1ch ~ulttd ln the warranL 'zariah wa knoWft to be hv no~ m r-c>untain Valley, and I pohC'C were oon td to ass1 t 1n h11 &rTCSl. Chnstcnscn :II.Id } I Woman impregnated from frozen embryo gives birth to boy LOS ANGELES (AP) -A robust. 9·pound, 10-oum.·e boy who started out ., a frozen embryo fertillLed outside his mother's womb has been born to a Los Anaeks area woman in Ole oauon's first succes!>ful appli- cation of this pr<><.'edurt. The boy was born Wednesda} IO a woman idenufied only as Monique. who spent IS years fruitlessly tr)ing to bear ch1ldrtn MClnique was one of four women in California and Loo1!.1- ana to become pregnant after rece1' • ina frozen embr)o tran,planis -but the first to give birth. · procedure to \I.Ork . "We JUSt actually Wl'rt• humonn1 him by having this done.'' Monique told KCBS-TV "h was ntcl' though -no surgery. .\II I had to do was coml' have an implant and go home -no pam," Monique said The 1elev1S1on station photo. graphed the delighted parents hold1na their ne\l.born son. The parents asked that thl'ir last name not be revealed for pn,aC) reasons f • I Mother Monique cud :es her froseu embryo baby. "It's been a long nine monthi.." s~ud Dr. Richard Marn bead of the in vitro fertilization and embn<o re- placement program at Good Samarattan Hop.,11al fhe ho~p11al where the bab.,. wa!> borq ,.,,ai. not Frozen embr)o transplants are s:ud to have resulted 1n 11 births world- ""1de 1 he others wett 1n Franct-. England Holland and Australia .\II four U S ""omen who had the·. 'IS4 degrees below zero. The mbryo. transplants had suffered damage to fertilized in a laboratory o 1de the their Fallopian tubes "omb. ts thawed for impla auon in The frozen embno implant the womb three to four day after the procedure 1n' ol-.es lree11ng a mother ovulates and the terus 1s fert1hzed egg that has developed onl} most recl'pnve. volves removtog eggs from a woman's ovaries and ferttlizmg them ID a Petn dish, th'en implanting them 10 the womb wtthin 48 to 72 hours. disclosed · Monique (lnd her hu,band. (ran .. said they reall} didn't nf>l.'ct Mam» eight 10 16 cell!> in 1tqu1d nitrogen at l\ormal in-vitro fertdyzat1on tn· Damaae to the frozen embryos occun in 40 pc;rccnt to SO percent of the frottn embryos. Mam said. Mompleadsforbaby's heart surgery LOS .\"lGfl f" 1 \l'l -\ \vung. unwed mother pleadt•d fnr a hospital to give her dying hah~ al hanrc to It\ l' as the 1nst11u11on ~1d 11 "retom1dt'r- tng 11s refusal to 11 .. 1 tin' Jesc;e a' a candidate for a hcan 1rani;plant .. The on~1pre~nt that I wuld e'er ask for 1s a-(hancc form' <,on'., l1fl· - for a heart tran~plant -· ~1 he'll h;n e a chance to reach h1~ iir"t h1rthda\ ... the mother 'IJl1d Wt"dne\da' on tier 17th b1rthda\ Anita Roch~ell .• 1 ,pok,e,""oman tor Loma Linda L niver<;1ty Medical Center. said Wednesday the in111al refusal was being' reconsidered. . ··.\II potenttal transplant pauents are subject to conttnumg eva)uatton as the1 r sttuatton may change. ihat of course applies to Baby Jes~ and anr. other potential transplant patients. · RCX:k'-"etl o,a1d. dechntng further com- ment J~-.e-su~sfully undCT'i'ICllt sur- ger: "°ednesda.,. at an undisclo~ Los A.ngelcs hospital to improve Arco won •t sponsor executives' memberships in biased groups By the AHoclated Press LOS AN(ifl E:~ -bclUllH'' uf \tlant1L R1chtil'ld ( 11 who belong to clubs that d1scnminatt• will no longer rclCl\t' lOmpan~ rc1mbur!>Crncn1 of their membership fees. Ano< ha1rman lod'Wnck <. ook said Cook ""ho I\ also chief exccuuve officer. announLed h1.-. deL·1s1on in a Ma} ~8 memo that did not 1dent1fy specific cluo<i Ho~e\er t~o umdcnttfied Arco otlic1als ..aid that tht· new pohc> affects ahout '" e>.ccut1' t'~ who helong to thc C ahfom1a and Jonathan clubs 1n Lo\ .\n~l'lc' and the Dallas Petroleum (fob ( ook'o; Lkc1s1on follows a decade of lntl'rnJI dehJte al .\rru o"er the eth1l'S of c'ccutl\·e' hclongmg to dubs that dl\a1min.1k· ag.ain't "'omcn or minont1e\ Amnesty benefit concert tour opens SA."i FR.\N<. l~l 0-A roct-mum concen designed to benetit Amnc<.t\ International started a '"'1t~ tout hefore a cro""d of 15.000 that pa.id S 11l a ucket to hear a star-s1uddcd hneuplcatunng l l 2 and \ung fhc mus1c1ans ""ho . performed at the ( o~ Palace in adjacent Dal~ C 11~ \.\-ednesda~ nisht includnf PeterGabnel,Jackson Bro~ne. Lou Reed. Bf\an .\dams. the "'le"1llt: Brothl'r' and Joan 8a('l The )uung. mo'itl} new wa"e crowd started lining up outstdt• . 1lmost three hours bl'forc the -;old-out Lonrert started. waiting m t'h1ll~. damp log .\mnest} lntcrnat1<Jnal. a worldwide human nght~ group that promoll'\ the release of pollttcal pnsoncrs. l'Xfll.'<.'t' to ra1Sl' $ ~ ,ntlhon from tht• c,enc<.> that include\ a stop in L m Angele' f nda) followed h~ 'ihow' m Den vcr. •\tlanta. Chicago and Ne~ kr'>c't . Second suspect held ln .cop's wlfe slaying Fl I I I R I n !'i .\ 'l'rnnd man wa" tx1 ng held toda' 1 n uin nt'l t IOn "11 h the Apnl mhht·r.-\IJ>1ng nl a Lo' .\ngl'lcs roltu dete<ll"l '\\lie. and oOKer' lOnunued to ,l·arlh tnr a third mJn in the ca~r David ~rntt P1tkcnng 2 I. ot Brea was arrt\t,·d V.cdne-.da\' fo r 1n"est1ga1ton of murder armed robber\' and <;o<fOm) b) f ulknon police and wa<, being held Wtthoul hail at f ullerton ( 11\ Jail. s~ud <art Don Hank.ht·ad Ll<;t month. rohce am.· ... ted \con M1chat:I Katlin an l~·\l'ar-old tran\lcnt 1n the ')la\lng ot Brea hou\t:\lo1h: \1artL' \ndrca \1almgrrcn Kat11n had rlcadcd innocent and face' a Junl' 27 preltm1nar. hl·ariny in f ulk·nnn A Gift Dad Will Really Eat Up! 'matker Hickory Farms has traveled the world to collect unique Items for Father's Day Choose from over 100 different gifts In a vartety of sizes and prices. From SR.50- 889 99. We ship gifts! Phone Ordera Accepted. SOUTH COAST PLAZA Carousel Court 540-6991 WESTCLIFF PLAZA 17th & Jrvfne. Newport Beach 642-0972 tilvod flow in hts heart and extend hts hie "'htle the tranplant is considered. 'aid the Re' Michael Carccrano of "t Ph11l1p's Catholic Church in -Pa<sadena He helped publicLze the c.a~<: Susan C arpcnter McM1Uan. of the Right to Life League of Southern Cal1forn1a. sa1d Jesse's parents were told a Loma Linda commtttee would set up a meenng among doctors the parents and the baby's grandparents McMillan said late Wednesday that a Loma Landa p~ych1atnst had asked her to arrange a meetmg today for a psycholO&Jcal evaluation of the grandparents. She had said earher that Jesse's parents, who have requested con- fident1altty for themselves and Jesse. are w1lhn$ to give custody of the mfant to either set of grandparents 1f that would malce Loma Linda doctors relent Groups vie to keep guards from Latin America stint l OS ANGELES (AP) -Members uf t\loO activist groups vowed to block 00 .. George DeukmeJ1an from send-· mg 60 California Air National Guardsmen on a two-week trammg m1ss1on 10 Central Amenca begin- ning Fnda> We feel that smce there 1s no nauonal t'mergenq and there 1s no threat to our countf) that C Deu- kmeJ1an I 1s "iolating the law by c\po-;mg these Caltforn1a National C1uard.,men to the hazards of serving do"'n in that area:· said Ans .\n<igno\. 'ice president of the Amen- am for Democrattc .\ction 1n \outhern California The group ')Sid 11 would JOln \\Ith tht· National Law~ers Guild and three 1nd1v1duals tn a lawsuit they planned to file today to block DeulcmeJian's action. Wilham Smith. represcnung the National Lawyers Guild, said they had intended to file the request for a restraining order Wednesday but delayed the filtng 10 make mmor wording changes Col Donald J Fok}. chief pubhc affairs officer for the Cahforn1a Atr Nauonal Guard. said guardsmen from throughout the nation have rotated twO.\l.eek assignments 1n Central Amenca. Guardsmen took o"er mainten- ance of three ( ·I JU uttltt~ cargo airplane!. at Howard Air Force Base m Panama C11y in 1977 he said . Tenants slle over plague ot rats and cockroaches IO~ .\N<1ELES CAP) -Residents 111 a d1lap1dated bu1ldmg who say they rC'gularl~ fight off arm~s of giant rats. ... warms o( cockroaches and }OUlh gango; that roam their hallways have !>Ut'd the building's owner for SI 0 m1lhnn ~tlorne~' representing the "ipan1'>h-spcaking residents related n1ghtmansh stones of cockroaches h11ing children in their sleep. a rat they said tncd to drag a baby from 11s hcd and another rat that allegedl> attacked a man in the shower The} said b11ten children and ten<int'> feel rats crawl over them tn the n1gh1 and some adults stand guard O\ er hab1es all night. fight mg off the rodent\ with brooms and slingshots The lawyers opened roach traps on the front !>teps of the building on South Union Street near downtown to display dozens of· huge· cockroaches. some suit crawling. which they said were caught 1n the bu tiding overnight The lawsuit. filed in Supcnor Court as a JOtnt acuon by four pnvate and publtc interest law firms, accuses 6u1ldini owner Lance J Robbms and his business associates of refusmg 10 make re~1rs. curb vermin 1 nfestallon or provide reliable water. elcctnc1ty or 'lCcunty tn the 40-unit building. which houses large families Robbins said Wednesday that none of his employees in the building "have seen any rats" DAILY DINNER SPECIALS All daiTy dinner specials served with soup, salad, choice of potato and dessert. Thursday (Served 3-10 pm.) Top Sirloin Steak $4.65 Friday (Served 3-10 pm.) I New York Steak $5.25 COSTA lllV1ll • 3125 Hamor a1.S o Frwy 17'901 MacArthur II SD frwy . ., - Tutu will defy S. African ban on gatherings Anglican bishop raps government· s speech restriction JOH~NNESBURG (AP) Anghcan Bishop Desmond Tutu said today he wtll bold cburcb services on the .10th ann1vcnary of the Soweto riot$. m appa~nt defiance of a government ban on gathennas linked to the upris1na. Tutu. who ~turned Wednesday from a trip to Europe and North Amenca. crit1c1zed the ban ordered by Law and Order Mtn1ster Louis Le Grange. Le Grange has banned all public gathenngs through June 30 wl\h any link to the Soweto nots or the Freedom Charter, signed J une 26. 1955. The charter set out principles for a future non-segregated South Africa. In Cape Town, an aide to Le Grange said the ban mcluded church service unless they avoided mention of the Soweto or Freedom Charter anniversanes. The 1Ude spoke on condttton of anonymity . The government earlier banned outdoor mecungs, except when authoru.ed on an 1nd1Vldual basis. The new ban. wb1ch extended to indoor g.atbenngs, was the aovem- ment's most far-reaching effort to ward off what 11 fears will be widespread demonstrauons by blacks June 16 Also today. blacks stoned a super- market after police moved 1n to stop the first meeting baited under the new ban -a planned rally and news conference by the United Democratic Front anti-apartheid coalition. Riot poltce cordoned offtwo blocks as United Democrauc Front sup- porters streamed out of a church·run butldmg where the news conference was to have been held. The group's supporters dispersed after stoning the supermarket The United Democrat1c Front had arranged the rally to call for an end to the ban on the Afncan Nauonal Congress. organizers said. Marcos-jailed journalist to negotiate peace talks MANILA CAP) -Communist rebels have chosen a former Journal- ist who was Jailed under ousted President Ferdinand E. Marcos to negouatc a cease-fire to their 17-year- old guerrilla war, President Corazon Aqwno announced today. Aquino said she would appoint a government negottator w1th1n 48 bours, but declined to release m ore details. ''I'd like to be extra carefur t don't · want anything to upset or derail thts effort of the government." the presi- dent said. "The mere fact that they named one of their negottators is good enough for me " Aqumo said the rebels named Satur Soccer fan• brawl Ocampo. 47, as their representative. Ocampo was )3Jled by Marcos 10 years aao on subversion and rebellion charges. Marcos all~ed Oampo was a ranktn~ Communist Party official. It 1s not illegal to be a Commumst ID the Philippines. but the party ts outlawed because 11 advocates the overthrow of the government. OcamRO escaped from jail in Ma> 1985 while on a liberty pass to attend a National Press Club election in Manila He had been the business ed11or of the Manila Times until Marcos closed the paper down. Aquino announced the break- through at a news conference marlung her first I 00 days in office . FJaa·wanni eoccer fan wu amona tboee lnjured when a Joyoua cele6raUon of hand.red.a of thouaanda of fa.D8 at the World Cap matchee In Medco City turned 'riolent Tueeday near the Independence Monument. Police reetored order. Widow of Gandhi assassin charged in.Sikh rampage By die AHocla&ed Prell AMRITSAR. India -Police charged the W1dow of Indira Gandhi'• -assassin with murder today for allegedly leadtng Sikh militants on a rampaf: throuah the Golden Temple tn which a auard was stabbed to death. Police said Bimaf K.aur Khalsa, the 35-year--old W1dow of Scant Sinah. and 90 others were chu&ed todayW1th murder. attempted murder and noting. Theysa1d l69olher people were arrested for quesllonini. but official sources put the number detained at 307 Khalsa was not among those detained, and Punjab security forces today combed 60 villages 1n Amntsar and Gurdaspur dtstncts, both stron&holds of Sikh rebels. look ma foT her. About 200 Sikh militants armed with iron bars, swords and bamboo staves. went on a rampage Wednesday after a "Malt' Day" rally markma the l('Cond ann1venarr of the Indian anny assault the wh1te-ma.rble complex. the holiest Stith $.hnne. Mn. Gandhi was killed Oc 31 1984. five wccb after she ordered the army onto the sacred arounds to root out extrem1 .. t'I who were u'lina 1t as a rcfuae. WaldbeJm con•ldered ••Soviet agi t BELGRADE. Yu~lav1a -A forma Yuao~'4v mtcJli ofticcr said Kurt Waldhe1 m's name WllS IJ ven to the Soviets 1n •194 7 f9r con 1dcnt1on u a pos,1ble agent after Waldheim -u identified n a ,u1pect tn war cnmcs.. Waldheim, the former U .N. 1«rctary-icneral ,, the con~rvattve Pco(>lt's Party candidate in Austna's prntd ntial runoff election Sunday. Allepuons that Waldheim was involved in N11i war cnmcs have made the election the most bitter prtsidential nacc in Au tna 's h"tory. The alleaation that Waldheim was cons1dcred for dc~lopment u a ~,iblc aacnt was m de by nton Kolend1c, the YU(Oslav 1ntclli~ce chief and deputy he.ad of the m1htary m1u1on in Vienna an I 9•6-48. in the May 31 cditton of the Belgrade tti-Wttk1y map1ine Dup. Ou said 1n a ~tory about Kolcndic tha• Bclvade ~ulhonhcs sent the YuioJavm1htary mi 1onlatc 1n 1947 a listofJOallc war criminals then hvina 1n Ao tna -tndudina Waldheim. • • , Reagan pep talk brings support for tax overhaul f WASHINGTON (AP) -Prest· dent Reapn pve the entire Senate a pep talk at the White House today, de<:larioa bis commitment to a rad· ical tax overhaul plan and JOinina sponsors of the lqislation in tryina to head off amendments aimed at preservina sele<:tcd tax brcalcs. After the pnvate breakfast meeting. Senate Democratic Leader Robert C. Byrd of West V1f11nia said. "I'll be very much surpnsed 1f tt isn't passed by the Senate by a vote of I 00 to notbina." The Senate opened debate Wcdnes.- day on the proposal that would sweep away an array oftaX breaks -such as the deductibility of contributtons to mdividual retirement accounts -to make way for cuttm& the 50 percent top andividual tax rate to 27 percent and the 46 percent maximum corpor- ate rate to 33 percent The Senate, movina on to other matters, has interrupted action on the tax bill until Monday, but backers of the measure hope to pass 11 within the next two weeks. "I believe we're on a· roll," said Search extended for Israeli • spyr1ng WASHINGTON (AP) -Federal prosecutors who obtamed a guilty plea from former Navy antelhgence analyst Jonathan Jay Pollard on c~es of spying for Israel say they will press f01"Ward with their in- vestigation of an Israeli spy nng that operated 10 the United States. U.S. Attorney Joseph d1Genova satd Wednesday 10 documents filed in U.S. Distnct Court that at least five Israeli citizens were 10volved an a spy network that used Pollard, a onetime CIVlhan employee of the Navy, to supply classified defense documents on countncs host1le to Israel. Pollard and his wife. appeanng toeether. pleaded guilty to espaonaJe charges, and federal prosecutors said the Pollards' co-conspirators 10· eluded an Israeli Air Force colonel and two diplomauc officials. The lsraeh citizens were Rafi Eitan. an lsraeh intelligence official who allegedly directed the nng; Col A vtem Sella, an officer an the Israeli Air Force. Joseph Yagur. a SClencc Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole, R· Kan. "Tax rcfonn has a Ion" Iona history and this sort of 1s the capstone." About 70 of the Senate's 100 members ~~ Rea.-n's invita- tion to the lobbying SCS'IJOn tbat was to include a pitch on the president's "sweater strategy" -the need to pass the bill without amendments. Backers believe that if the Senate pulls a single thread out of the tax bill, the entire measure may unravel NonetheJess, amendments wlil be offered. particularly on the prov1S1on of the bill that would cod the deducttbihtyof contnbutions to Inda· v1dual Rctm:meot Accounts. "There'll be some amendments called ui>:' "Byrd said. "They'll be voted up or down, that's the legislat· ave process. There's strong support for some kind of IRA amendment." Sen. Bob Packwood, R-Orc., chair· man of the Senate Finance CQmmit· tee, which drafted the tax bill, docs not expect any mltior amendments will pass because each would require paying for the change it would make. attache at the Israeli consulate an New York: and lnt Erb, a secretary at the lsraeh embassy 10 Washington. Moreover. add1uonal documents filed by the prosecutors say that Pollard also met with another Israeli, 1dcnuficd only as "Uzi." at the Maryland home of an lsraeh diplomat. Not named 10 the indictment 1s llan Ravid. deputy science attacbe 10 the lsraeh embassy. who was recalled along with Yagur after Pollard's arrest last year. Shakeup continues for NASA directors CAPECANAVERAL,Fla(AP)- Thc reurement of Wtlham R Lucas as director of the NASA facaht.Y that supervises shuttle rockets continues the shakeup of top NASA officials. and agency leaders predict more chaOJCS after the Challenger com· m1ss1on reports on Monday Lucas. 64. announced Wednesday he will retire July 3 as director of the Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala. He has headed Marshall since 1974 and bad served three years as deputy director. Since the Challenger explosion Jan 28 that killed seven astronauts, NASA has paned a new adminis- trator. director of the shuttle pro- pm, director at the Johnson Space Center 10 Houston, and has sum· moned the former manager of the Apollo moon program to conduct an internal review of it~ management 'itructure. The prcS1dent1al commission on Monday will blame the accident on defects in one of the two sohd-fuel booster rod.cts that were propelling Challenger Under Lucas· leadership. Marshall engineers supen 1sed Morton Thaokorsdevelopmcnt of the booster rockets. Several Marshall managers told the comm1ss1on they d1!>8grccd wath Morton Thiokol engmcers who op- posed the Challen&er launch because cold weather might 1mpa1r 0.nngs designed to keep hot gas from cscaptng through booster rocket JOIOtS. Several of those Marshall officials have been reassigned and one has retired. There also have been person· ncl changes at Thiokol among of- ficials who overruled engineers Major nuke weapon test in Nevada 'successful' By lite Anoclatecl Prest LAS VEGAS - A ma1or nuclear weapons test. the 12th announced shot smcc the Soviet Union 1n1uatcd a unilateral test moratonum. was conducted th as mom1na an the Nevada desert The test. code·named TaJO. was detonated at 8:04 10 a shaf\ I, 700 feet beneath the surface of Yucca f1at. about $0 miles northwest of Las V~s "It was a very successful test." said Department of Enef'I}' spokesman Jim Boyer. "Everything went fine. very successful." Power of Soviet ml .. lle doubled WASHINGTON -U S Arms Control Director Kenneth L Adelman said today the Soviets' new C)S..25 long·range nuclear m1ss1lc has twice the destructive force of ats pn:idccn~r. the SS.I J He called 1tsdcploymcnt "ac!ear violation" of the unrat1ficd SALT II treaty Adelman said its throw-wetaht (total destructive force) was recently declassified. But former U.S nciollator Paul Warnke condemned as "a tragic ma<>take" President Reagan's decision to scrap the I 979 trc ty in rcspon~ to alleged Sovact violations Hanger •trike for homel~ ends WASHINGTON -Match Snyd~r ended & four-day fast after the White Hou~ said 1t would release a $965.000 "down payment" to repair a crumbhna shelter for the homeless. but Snyder said he won't give up his fight until the mt of the promised SS million 1s turned over White House deputy press secretary Peter Roussel yid late Wedocsda> the Department of Health and Human Scmccs had been directed to release $965,000 to the Da,tnct ofColumhaa for the shelter. As the White Hou~ issued ats statement. Snyder )Oined hands at the Capitol Hill shtltcr with Sen Mark Hatfield. R-<>re. and sapPtd water from a styr.ofoam cup to tnd a fast four dar after ht bcpn rcfustna rood and hquad "Until the aareemcn1 '' fulfilled. at 'not fulfilled,'' Sn}dcr "'id . Hen• llbented from Delaware heahou.e HARTLY. Del -An undcraround anama[·rights aroup calhna 1tstlt the Farm Freedom F1ahtcn raided a henhou~. official, U), 'inatchana 25 ch1ckcM \. and pray-peinuna the walls with Jopns 1ncludin1 "Animal \uschwit7 .. The \ raid on Syd I'• Ea Farm 1 b<i'heved to be tht tint of at, kind to prottjt farm animal abu~ an ~~<' United St.ttes. Lorn Bauston, Prt''adent of the Farm Santtuary. a national lfOUP that monatoM abu'\(' of farm anim1\I,, u1d Wcdnt'iday. \ FOR • DAD'·S •N' GRADS .. DAY - FOR THAT SPECIAL GRADUATE A.$185.00 8.$165.00 C.$150.00 D.$235.00 Pictures sflghrly enlarged to show detail. CHARLES H. BARR We!>tcliff Plaza 17th and Irvine "ve Newport Beach (71 4) 642-3310 9->J.M Member of American Uem Society ~ ~itl\ER'S DAY SPEc14 thru June 14th l 20°/o off June 1st thru June 30th 8-C cups Reg. $44 NOW $36 D-E cups Reg. $48 NOW $39 White, Beige, Black A blanket knitted of the purest and softest conons Perfect for Dad 17th & Irvine Avenue, Newport Beach, CA 92660 Telephone (71'4) 645-0792 creatively packaged 1n a kraft .paper bag. $45.00 (with monogram $53.00) 1714) 642-7081 OuALrTY IN FASHION, Fooo. G1FTs AND S ERVICES FoR You. I ANDEE'S PLACE • ANTHoNv·s SHOE REPAIR • BANK or AMa:tlCA· CHARLES H B~RR JcwnrRs CHAMPAGNE. CROWN HARDWARE • D IANE • DR Et.DEil. OPTOMETRIST. H ALLIDAY'S Haors FROG.EN Y ozuRr SHoPPE • H 1ac0Rv FARMS'· HuGlfES EL RANCHO M ARKET. IMAGES KATIE M cGUIRE PIE & BAKE SHOPPE. THE MINUTEMAN WAY. NEWPORT-BALBO~ 5AVINt.OS 5Av-0N DRuc • SHEU 01L ..:i.THt. SToREKEF.PER • THE STOREKEEPER FoR H ER VFTA'S INTIMATE APPAREL • Vmco WAREHOUSE· W~Uf'f Puz.A CUANERS 17th & IRVINE. NEWPORT BE~CH . .. Majority can ~t rule when most folks don 't vote Whoever said .. the maJonty rules" knew more about the theory of democracy than the reality In practice. it is far more common for the majority to abd1c~te Tuesday m Orange County. two supervisors. a sbenff-coroner, seven county administrative offic1als and three judges were elected by only about 19 percent of therople who lave here. Even acceptmg that only about hal the county's two million-plus residents are registered to vote, the turnout of 37.5 percent was the worst since the t 982 gubernatorial primary, officials reported. .\n enterpnsmg person could draw a bigger crowd for an Amway party. Certainly. a c1t1zen of this great countrv and th1~ great count} has as much right to refrain from 'otmg as he has to' ote. Civic duty is another issue. Our representative democracy is based on the assumption that the governed will chose those who will be entrusted with the government. If 100 percent of the eligible voters were to exercise their franchise, those elected should -theoretically, at least -represent the consensus of the communlty It has long been held. therefore. that as the duty of a c1t1zen to' ote 1t 1<> the minimum a soul'l\ asks of one v.ho enJO}S its prot~l tJOns and benefits · The farther the le\cl of part1c1pat1on tails, the less representatne the result may be said to be. When the government fails to reflect the values and ideals of the people It makes the rules for, It 1s not truly democratic. Rather. it ts the expression of an inordinate amount of power invested·in the hands of the few electors ""ho were suflic1ently m o tivated to vote It 1s the antithesis of democran .\path} took the blame, but there were some prctt~ interesung races in the middle of the t1d.ct In the 40th Congressional D1stnc t. Republican incumbent Robert. Badham faced what may have been the 5t1fTest pnmary challenge of hts career Nathan Rosenberg put up the mone) and the organ1zat1on to keep Badham and the contest in the headlines from the opening gun to the elm.mg bell On the Democr~uc side. the introduction of ultra- bizarre Lyndon LaRouche and one of his followers created quite a sttr and forced what ma} have been the bnghtest spot an any of the races: a successful write-in campaign. The ultimate Democratic nominee, Bruce Sumner. marshaled hts party and got more than 16.000 people to complete the unusual task of voting for a candidat~hose name does not appear on the ballot. It was not only a "1ctory for the Dcmocrattc Party. ""h1ch was aghast at the idea of the LaRouch1an who ~heves -amo!1g other weird things -thaJ 5umncr and the Queen of England are dope dealers 1twas 001..• of the fev. '1ctones the S\<.tcm scored Tuesda-.. .\lso o n the ballot .""as the con tro\ ers1ai Propos1t1on 51. the .. deep pockets' rdorm 10n1at1\C. It was cttha about tns~ilhng fairncs., into the method ot awarding damages in ·civil .,ult~ or about toxic waste disposal murder and rape. depending upon which hne of propaganda one chose to accept. Perhaps the voter'i were convinced that the choices were less than the} appeared. that in the grand scheme of things. either option on any question would be equally acceptable -or equall} detestable Perhaps they were nght · But It ts certain. our democrall<. svstem as we ha\C known n cannot pcr'il\t when the go"ernmcnt of tht• people and for the fX'Opk 1s not e lected h) the ma1 ont-r ot the people. Opinions expressea 1n this 5per;e are those ol tho Dally Piiot Other 111aws expressed on this page are those of their avthorci and artists Aflader comment ts 1nvned The Daily Pilot PO Box 1560 Costa MesA 92626 Phone 6-42-6086 Students hold their own version of 'Hands ' e vent To the Editor. Mo.,t children probably Wl\h<'d the} could have been a part or the "Hand., Across .\mcnca .. event that was hcld May 2'i The children at \c'quma l lcmen· Lary ~hoot 1n We'ltmin1ter rouldn't all partKtJXllC but they dtd the ne't Oc'lt thing. they held thc1r own C.-\enl. ·'Hand-; ..\crm~ Sc-quoi.1 \c. honl .. and donated S246 15 to hdf' th<' hungr. :and hom<'ll'\'i tn 4-mt'm:1 l'r1nC1pal Citl} ( 41rrono .ind Vice Princ1p.il Duane< olhcr MJi'c a hrtcf rund11"' n on the purp<>~ of H;inth -\( w" \mt" rt ca \.1 ~ \l. t•ll-.. ii ktndng..im·n tCJl her led the ivoup 1n ORArJr.E COAST Daily Pilat Pu~,.,.pi, • t ,.. ,. • ~ l\9r .St ~·• "-"""'-_,.,,,_.....,. • ,y ........... \ \ingtng "{,t>d Hii:.,, \menca·· and •· .\menca the: Rcaut1tul .. The c.h1I· dren then hckJ h.ind'> and 'pread acros'I the c:nt1rt' arl"<I of thr pnmary and upprr gr<idc plu\'ground At :a given \1gnal lrom lhe principal, they held up their hand\ and shouted ·v.:~ llelpt'd lfamh .\cnM Amen ca . Mayhc the\ couldn't all part1r1pat<' 1n the "big" cH·nt. hut they all 1'lilrt1c1pated 1n tht• "'r>ml" of low and ~1-. mg. and thul'' whill •t waull lhoul tn the lint pl;,ace ,,.,, .. lll\I ['2' T9fft hlt ...... "Ir''° F I '*' '9"tef t, [O~O' Tom Ci.ntn Nii.., f dtln< C:r• IMf'I SOorl& E<fitiw Cit 1' C \RROL/O Prin1 q1.1I, Sc:quo1a \chool W1•\tm1n~tcr I 1! 1~t"1 .___, ChlltCtlmen ~''°""' ltoMrt l Camntt ;/jucll<J" ...._nn!J'!I T •ry IC lftdle ' llalton M nnQf'• ..... ""...,..._., U-1r••l!f'IO Q.i'!!;;IQ< ,..., ..... ". ia"'-T~ OWK1111 / "When tJmesarebadorsoon tohJttbeskJds(cH rlUe wlll}klssyoufor yourdonatlon.Andwhenthlng. aregoodand/orpolntlngupwardthey get picky.·· COMMENTARY ----------- Charities an alternative to economists' forecasts In bad times. they take anything; in good, they're picky Ry STEVE FREEMAN r hl· l't 11nom1'it\ of our a.auuual \(l'nc arc a Im h hum'.h. t learl) the'\ \hun II\ \tret·t t\ rx·~ J\ the-~ engage 1n .rnd lurtha dc,dop J patois of thc11 1)'11.11 lhc) v.111 rnddk tht'ir pred1c11on' and pronum·1amento'> to u' 1n <,uch murk~ '>tull a' 1ero 1.oupon T rca\Urtl'' l und{ln l ..ilc f::urodollar'>. tht• ·~all ~trl·~t \\-l·clo; ehc\ ·• Banker\ .\ctcptantc\. the Federal Rc\crvc '>Uppl) of 1. red1t, M -1. M-2 \1-1 \1-2' '\o\4 there's a lx•auh' It 'l't:m\ thl' \l(ln\ .;re good when c11h1.·r M· 1-or1~ II \.1-2''-mCl\CS up or" 11 do"'n ' Or ,., 11 C'11hcr or ma\. Ix' m·1ther"l \1umho·JUmho a\v.1rl 1n (lOh- hled~goolo; But cp.ad I hd1c'c f''t' \tumhlcd ano" a 1hcor> a\ 'alid as an)' of their\ -and mJ)'ht-even -.alidcr (II M· J and M-2 t.an '>land I can tl\l' valtdcr I The prtnl 1plt· '" \1mpll .. ll tquatc'I the"' 1lltngnc\\ or rl'lut1an1.e of chan- tahk organ11at1<1n\ to a1.-cept dona· 11un'> When 11mc'> arc had or <;oon tu h11 the 'ik1d' the\ ·11 k1\\ \OU tor rnur don at Ion \ nd V. hen th I ngs lfrc good and/nr po1nt1ng upv.ard 1hc) g1.·1 p1tk ~ Rcu•Tlll\ I h.sd occ:a-;1on to put th' tlll'l>n to tl''>t Alter pnx:ra\ttnat1ng for 'rear\, I mar'lhalcd the '>Ult' and \lacb I no longer wt"ar (All really 1n good cond111on. but '>UbJeCl to cunous metamorphosis Garments long hanging in clo~ts contract about the v.a1st wh1lr lengthening in the leg) Plied on thl" floor, they were a stack l tt.·et high I had, too. a double mattrc~c, 1n nccllent cond1t1on •(Re- 1m·d when I acqu1re-d a king-s1ze-d hed) Mattre'>$e'> arc clumsv. hard to 1rn nspon and block off a ·101 of space v. hen 'itorcd in a closet I particularly v.:anted to~ nd of 11 Dropping by the thnft shop. I explained to a pleasant lad)' what I "'1shrd to donate "\\e t.ould use the doth1ng." she allowed "but not the mattrelo) ·· It ~ems mattres~s have to be ..an1uzed or fumigated or )Ometh1ng- or-other beforr being pas~ along. Moreover lhr thnft shop would not p1l k up The donor had to cart the \tufTh1msclf However she suggested an organ1zat1on in Orange I phoned the outfit 1n Orange and. onct' again was ad' 1~d the mattress was n)'ct Orange lad> -;uggested C1oodv.1 ll Goodwill zapped me nght tnto hold. Finally the vmce Ye:'>, they would take the stufT. Pad.up 1n my area was on Thursdays. at any time during the day and dunng work1ng hours 'But I am not home al thal time:" 1 npla1ned "Saturda}s would be good or 11 could be weekda:.-s rarl> morn1ng and late afternoon ""~On) ··she said and suggrsted Salvation \rm~ \ahat1on Alrmv l·ould take all. even mattress. but again p1Ckup would be.-dunng working huur\ However. they potnle-d out that 1f I would leave 1hc stuff on the porch with a note stating "For Salvation Army," the) would pick up on the following da)' -which they did. Q.E.O .. Forget Henry Kaufman's forebodtngs. the conJcctunngs of Rukry~r·s "Wall Street Weck" gang. Milton Friedman, Paul Volker; Syl· via Porter, ct al. Herc we have 1t: Clearly 1he economic pulse can be read from the no-stnngs-attachcd donation No. not from the chanty ball seeking contnbut10ns. or the floss) fashion ~how or even from the break dancer performing on the ~treet for handout. Thrcr of thr organ1z.at1ons 1.on· tactcd turned down my donation. Probably having trouble gcttmg nd of their stuff. Surfeited. Couldn't sell 11 or give 11 away Obviously a sign of good 11mes. One organization. to whom th~ world appa~ntly dtd not appear qu11r so roseate. ac~ptcd the donation. perhaps even eyeing hard times ahead And thrre you have 11 The consensus· three to one for good times Thus through calling the chanttes. )'OU can quickly ~nsc the economic trend. No longer need one hunch furrow-browed over incom- prehensible financial data or hang word-for-word on the telecasts of the economy's wothsaycrs So tt's Nirvana once again for us '\1mple folk Back to the comrc pages we go. and the c;oap uprras. and tho~ dand)' suprrmarkel novel!> Steve Frt-emaa I• a Newport Beac:b bu111Jeumao SALT !I's a n anachronism that deserves to be junked The real balance between two sides can· t be changed \1r Rcag;rn·, announcement that wt: d11 nnl mlc'nd to feel bound by SAi T II unk"' lht"' SoYlet I Inion 'ihapc:' up nn lhl· matter of com plianl l' wa\ .i wondt>rful tontl not alom huau'r of the effect on the Kremlin v. h1l h 1\ aJX>plec11c a1 1h1'> official puhlH <tl knowledament of 11'> t hea 11 ng.· Tl1l ortlcr cth.'<t the announct'mc:nt~ has had 1~ 10 flu'ih out 'full statcmcnl'I of the '>upersll11ons we hvc by, or al least tho'>t that Amencanll hvc hy who C'arnc\tly bcheve lhe way to preva1l 1n the 'itrusgle for the world 1s to havc-thrc<' di\annament ttealt" per )'Cat with the Soviet Union Tb.c~ ncnonou'ily re-;uh tn nothing We ma~ a'i well re.enact the Kellogg Rnand Pact Remem~r·> fhat was the one 1n 1he lat<' '1C>--m which all the 'itgna· tom'' fors~orc war a'i an 1n~1rumcnt of pol1c\ It wa<; the black mu'I that prelcded World V. at II Sen .\lbert (1ore Jr. of Tennc'l'itt ha!. talfcn fronl and len1er 1n thc- lOntroveny and 11vC'I 1n a prom1· nenth ft'atured op-ed p1elc 1n The Nev. York T 1me'>, fi vr reason' why what Mr Rcapn did was not only wrong. hut ~ wrona that h1storv Wlfl rcrnrd 11 I) h1~ greate'll error l>on'l you o,.('e, Mr Gore wnte ... the Sm 1c1 IJ nmn ha'I a "hot" productton ltnc for the production of 1ntrr· continental hall1st1c mt'l'ilk'i. "and can qu1ckl~ expand the num~r of lllarheads nn its aJrtad) dct1IO)cd SS IX hea\y m1n1I~ 8)' con1ra~t. we ha\ e one 'lukewarm' production hne ind no rc.\l 1lb1ht) 10 Q\JICtl) 1ncrcuc thr number of warhea<h we have deployed" WILLIAM F. Bue KLEY Uut surely 1h1~ 1s bc!.1dc thl' point at 1hl\ Juncture" We have heard 11 \31d no""' for almost 10 yearc; that we are talkin& about redundancy that we have cnouJh inventory to de'itmy the ~'1et Union 10 time\ (or whatever) amt that 1he Soviet$ have com· plemcntary mventory So that 1f 1hry increase 1t, why hould this worT} us'> Already the ~VI('\ (Inion ha\ what It need-; to destroy our land hascd m1\"lc\, so that in any rvent we are · depend1na on the othrr two leg.'> of our triad the bombers and the sub- manncc; Unless the Soviet tJnion fiaurcs out a way to develop a m1n1le that will find our bombcn 1n the air and our c;ubmanncs in tht ocean. it will not \Cnouc;ly alter the balance by 1ncrc-a'>tna 1t'i inventory ofSS.18' or of 11~ new SS.2•h and S..2S To the r~tcnt that 1t " a contc t in tech- noloay. we arc dt'termaned, Wlth or without SALT II. to pur\ue the development of a Sleahh bomber, and 1f we think we can have time enou&h to launch an MX . tht'n we 'houfd get on with its deployment. And we arc alway' frtt, even undC'r SALT fl. to develop a mobile' m1s'l1lr. So what l'I the JCnator afraid ot" \.\'ell. he has other points He \l)'S 1hat under S~t T H, 1hr Ru 1an1 woulc1ha~e 10 di,man1le and destroy ·:car n'\orc launchers than wt will an the nc~t scvml >~n" R1Jh1, bu1 that 1 merely a subtrartion from rtdundancy l\n't 11? In the out 10 years or so, the Soviet Union has increased ats inventory by approx· imatcly 8.000 warheads, and we have reduced ours by about 8.000 So that 1f such a polanzat1on was voluntanly countenanced. what harm can cornc of an increase tn 1t. provided the Unatcd States ~tay~ above the threshold ncce<1'i&ry to assure deter- rence? What about, the point that the Soviet Umon. as a totahtanan state can crank up the assembly hnc fafler than we can, hampered as we are by democrauc misg1vina.s plus the ccon- om1cs enforttd by Gramm-Rudman? Again, we were a'ISured we do not need more of what" on the H9Cmbly hne What is not yet on the asstmbly hnc 1s the SOI, our proJCCtcd spac,c shield; and the Amcncan people have not yet, God 'NIVC us. ruled out 1t<1 development. But the senator's rnost vulnerable point is hts suaa,est1on that our own misbehavior contributes to Rus'llan obstinacy "President Rcapn hall called into question the ADM treaty with what m ny believe ts a prepostcrou• rt1nterprctauon of one of 1t' important provisions 1ovem1n1 new and eJtot1c dcffns1 ve S)stems " There is a 'ubtle point here. thouah 1t works ap1Mt the ~netor's the'li•. It is true that the interpretauon of the ABM trtaty we ittently played wtth -that 1t docs not aovem Star wa,.,_ becust Star Wan tcchnoloay was not amona the 1echnolo11cs the deYelop- ment of which 11 protcribcd b)' the ARM treaty -sounds sh1f\y. a hulc erm1c. to use column11t Mea Green- field's tavontt' word. But that 1s a ~• on for sc111pptn1 the ABM treaty, which hat been an 1nachron1 m for yon If Mr. Rc:apn will JO full circle and miounet &hit tal\lleofcobwc~ lhcn wec .. n havra full hohdav. As It 11ands, we should dcc:larc • half·hoLiday. Wllll11JJ B•ctl•r 11 • •Yfhllt•tt'fl ~uutlll. TSV&,UBllAN Bualneeeman Jac1 AIDEISOI . and JOS[PH SPEA R Official loses his cool in crisis Analyst berated for not s-upplytng non-existent data WASHINGTON -If you think the govemment's suprr-secret 1n· telhaen~ analysis 1s conducted 1n an atmosphere of cool calm efficiency, let us take you behind the scenes at the State Department dunng one ~cent 1ntrmat1onal cns1s. Eyewitness accounts malf.r the: hush-hush Intelligence and Rc<iearch Office sound like the officers' mess on thr aood ship C'ainr at strawtxrry 11mc On the bndgc was Gerald Sutton chief of State's trrronst intelllgence branch. Al the helm, so to speak, wa~ 1ntclh&encc anal)'sl Julia Romer Here's how she began her !lubsequcn1 report on the s11uat1on "On Feb. 4. 1986. at approximately 10 am .. 1hc current mtelhsence watch wa$ handling the lsfi\Cli inter· cept1on of a Libyan plane. Mr Sutton's analysts were apprised of the incoming traffic. which was mainly press items " (There's a JOit. State Department c;pooks. with all their resources. knew only what the} got lrom the pres~ ) The Israelis had forced down the Libyan JCt exl)«tinJ 10 find tcrronst~ aboard. But the> lound onl) ind1a· nant Arab diplomats. Twenty m1nutts after the first 1ncomins "traffic." Rottier reported. the first intelhgcncc cable amved - with bad mformat1on. "The infor- mation really did not add anything new 10 the press reports except for the erroneous note that the aircrafi wu a 727." she reported. In the midst of this fairly tcnst' s1tuat1on. Rotucr wrote. Sutton "stormed into the watch area" and demande-d "vociferously" to know why he had not been infonncd of recent developments. The reason was thal there had been none. but when Rotucr tried to explain this to Sutton. he shouted at her. "Shut. up. damn'it1" according to her rtport A few moments later he -yelled at her ;:$tt down!" Half a dozen antclllgencc anal>sts ~l bewildered by the boss' outburst. Analyst Jame~ Maxstadt wrotr 1n a memo that while he and Rottier we~ working on "flashboard" (computer) mes~ges. Sutton stood "benrnna (Rottier) for not calling as man) people a'i he would have wished." Rott1er's report to her bos'I. Paul Molineaux. chief of current tn· telhaencc. said that Sutton's verbal floaama had her ··almost 1n tean .... I was publicly and severely abu~d and hum1ha1ed M)' colleagues and I find Mr unon's behavior appalling. un- accrptnble. abnormal. abru1ve, abuo;1ve and, most of all. un- profcso;1onal." In his own report on the inetdent. Molineaux noted that Rottier ''is a competent, hardworkine employee,'' and added: ''(Her) dcscnption of Mr. Sutton's lanJuagc and demeanor 1c; consistent with my own observat1on'i of his approach to ~roblcms and interpcrsonaJ relat1onshtps." Molineaux reported that Sutton su~quently admmed that the 1nfor· mat1on he had accused the analy'lt, of h1d1na from him did no11n fact exist Mohncau~ s~ud he had "kept somc- records" on Sutton. and stated: "Mr Sutton somettmcs takes a deniarauna approach toward subordinates, ranf· ing from nit p1ckma to mocking thrtr ab1h11c<1 " Sutton declined to discus the Fth 4 1nc:1dent A'I for Moltneaull'-. rtp<m. Sutton told our as~1a1c Corky John'lon "Mr Mohncnui1 app rtntly has certain problems with me, hut (he) has hts own .. problem~" Hr added: "I havr been around tn .the Forc1in Service for 30 yean and · found some people have liked me very much. other1 have hked me le5 nd these arc the things you have to deal w1th.'' Footnote Sutton d°" appear to have friend~ as well as cnt1c., in F<>uy Rottom. He wa1 not ~lttted tor promotion to the senior uecut1vt" ~rv1cc and will bt ~av1na lhr Fore11n ~rv1cc. But ioure" told u' that plans are afoot to rehire him as 1 civil ~rvi« employee. One 1aur"v familiar whh the 11tuatJon wd this " lepl but t5 "a travesty of the wholr. ,)""Item" An 1ntcmal cable d1~lo'!CI that Sutton wtll bt leavina for Europe 100ft IO do con uhinJ ork for the State DeP1nment under th am· banador·at·larac for co•ntcr- terronsm, funded by the "1n- tcl1t1cn«coihmun1ty;· the tnp W'lll 11\t three weeks. Suuon u1d he h d no plan beyond th11. Jad AM.nu &ad J ar. 1ptllcatH r.lmnAlr• ti .. . . Let's be honest. (Considering our namesake. would you expect anything less?) Huntington Beach needs another savings institution like it needs another couple tons of sand. Even our insured Money Market accounts. All of which means if your cur- rent savings institution seems to pay more attention to your . money than it does to you. drop A discouraging thought for the by LJncoln. . Where you11 always fin ! us ready and willing to help. Faster or9inary savings institutio But an incredibly encouraging thought for the extraordinary Lincoln Savings. · than yG>u can say "bodaciously gnarly:· Lincoln comes to Huntington Beach with a rather refreshing phi- losophy that's been winning mends and influencing savings habits all over Southern California and in our other 22 branches for quite some time now. Very simply. we care as much about you as we do your money. "Come on. You really care about me more than the other guy?" you ask. "We certainly do:· we reply. Take this simple test. Ask a typical teller to step outside and demon- strate their Automatic Teller Machine for you: Then drop by our brand-new, full-service office in Huntington Beach. vas beach bag you see here. (Our way of • thanking you for braving the dust while ~e keep building around you.) And you'll find all the answers to all the questions you could ever possibly ask. Ask us. for instance. about any number of savings plans designed to meet your personal needs. z w 0 ~ 0 (!) Or words to that effect. l::::t. N MAP NOT TO SC.ALE 1 . Our newest location at 7662 F.dJnger In Huntington Beach, (714) 841-173a. You'll be greeted with smiles. handshakes and the free can- Get a sturdy, canvas beach bag free Just for dropping by to ~ .. Jfl" at our newest location Including our high-yield Cer- tificates of Deposit. From $500 to $100.000 and every\Where in between. With maturities from 7 days to 10 years and every- where in between. And our interest-bearing Check Yes• checking account. Our 24-hour Teller Yes ATM with photo ID cards. LINCOLN SAVINGS While supplies last. ALH.AllBRA BUllBAN1t 300 E. Main St 3800 W. Verdugo Ave. (at Chapel Ave.) (a t Hollywood Way) Alhambra. CA 91601 Burbank. CA 91.!SOS (811)) 28Q·6343 (818) 841·3703 ANAHEIM HILLS CAMAJULLO 5791 Santa Ana 2JOO Pondcrosa Or. Canyon Rd. Camartno. CA 93010 Anaheim Hills. CA Q2&r11 (~) 931-0QOl (714) 9'74·4410 OOWNEY ARCADIA 100.33 Paramount Blvd 200 E. Duane Rd ( t Florence Ave.) (at Second Ave..) Downey. CA 90240 Arcadia. CA 91000 (213) Q27·2'00 (818) 44,:?080 • I GLENDALE HOLl.XWOOD 100 E. Glenoak.s Blvd. '°'° Hollywood Blvd. (at Brand Blvd.) (ne r La Brea Ave.) Glendale. CA 91207 Hollywood. CA 90028 (818) 247 6300 (213) 400·0211 GRANADA HILLS HtmTINGTOM 178!51 Chauworth St. Bl.ACH (at Zclzah Ave.) 7602 Edinger Ave. Granada Hills. CA 91341' Huntl~ton 8cach. (616) 303·5041 CA 92047 HE.MET (n4) 841-1738 1111 s. State St. LAGUMA HILLS (at Stel!!On) 23001 Moulton Pkwy. He~t. CA Q2343 (Moulton Parkway (714) O!S2·2701 ping Genter) • U\guM Hilb. CA 026'3 (~4)M0·4050 I 1$3.5 BILLIO.N IN ASSETS LAKEWOOD ROWMG HILLS SHEll.KAN OAKS TUmN 5247 Hazelbrook Ave. ESTATES 13701 RJvcrslde Or. 14161 Red Hlll Ave. (Lakewood Shopping 2QQ20 H~wthome Blvd. (at Woodman Ave.) (next to Stater Brol.) Center near Wards) (at Crest) · Shermao0ak.s.CA91403 Tustin. CA 9:2680 Lakewood. CA 90712 Rolling Hills Esrates. (818) 7&3·3130 (714) 7J0-024' (213) 630·1404 CA 90274 SUM CITY WEST LOS ·1.0s ANGELES <213) 3n ·75n U\27 Bradley Rd. AMG!Lf.S 630 W Stith St. SANTA ANA Sun City. CA 92381 112M National Blvd. (at Hope) 1631 N. Bnstol St. (714) 679·6801 (at Sawtelle Blvd.) Los Angeles. CA 90017 (at 17th St.) lOIUlAHC! Los Angeles, CA.90064 (213) 028·4131 Santa Ana. CA Q2706 21149 H . th Bl d (213) 4'8·0481 (714) '47 or1 aw om~ v PANORAMA CITY Tomnce. CA ~3 14'20 Roscoe Blvd. SAlC'TA MOMJCA (213)'40·4222 (near Van Nuys Blvd.) 1400 fourth Sr • Panorama,1tv.CA91402 ( t 8road-.>.•ay) ~ (&18) 894· 94 Santa Monica. CA 90401 • --·-(~13) 451·QQ31 --- I I • .. I ·0pcn Saturdays at all locauom CJCCept Los Amtl~~ l • J i i I ' I I' I \ .. County d1i~ $2 million if offshore oil drilling begins BJ LAURA MERI Of .. o.lt ......... Orange County 1s cllpccted lo received about $2.2 miJlion an federal f'und from the st.ate to help case the stress on police and fire dCJ)9T1ments 1f offshore oil Cllploration and pro. ductaon ~n off the Orange CoasL ln addiuon, Orange Coast cities will begin vying for a portion of the $10.4 mtlhon available for caucs affected by the future leasing and uplorataon. The money 1s intended '° pay for oil depicted from st.ate reserves io areas where federal tracts and dnlhna are adja<:ent to state waters Federal law has n:qu1red such reimbursement smce the Outer Con- tinental Shelf Oil and Gas Leas1na J>rovam was adopted m 1978. But the state and federal government could not come to terms with what was a "fair and eqwtable" reimburse· mcnt, said Bill Sessa. press secretary for the state's Environmental Affairs A&ency. The state received about $300 m1lhon, which includes money ac- cumulated since 1978. wd SeS!&. l.cgaslaton. previously earmarked most of the money lo supplement tht" state's budsct and higher education About $24.8 million will be d1v1dcd between 19 counlies tn block gran1s and SI 0. 4 million be shared by the c1t1es through a competitive apph· ca11on process. Sessa said. Although the state will continue to iet money each year. 11 will not total nearly as much as the current $300 million, he added. "I think we oughl lo go after some of the money for a number of reasons This money will help with heavy lounst costs and could be used for peripheral par"ing," saud ~una Beach C11y Councilman Bob Gentry "The county should use 1l for (pro- grams lo clean up) air quahty prob- lems -lake (beglnnm&) van pool· 1na." Ger.my sa1d Newport Beach ( ounc1lwoman Evelyn Han saad, she 1s anxious to get some of the money for her CJty. "We will ac1ivcly pursue iettina some of that money for the Upper Bay drcdgfoa project and ma1 ntenance of 1& h will be somcthin& for the whole county to cnJOy," she said. The money 1s lo be d1stnbuted amo ng vanous counties bAted on several cntcna. Sessa said Fac101"\ include the extent of each area's coasthnc. the expected amount of 011 producuon in the next five ;cars. population, and the amount o lcas- ma and development impacts ex pectcd in each area. The counties would be left to dctcmunc, throuab public hcanna-41. how lhe money ought to be spent. Cities would s1o16mit proposals to the Environmental Affairs ~ncy for a portJon of the S 10.4 m1llion. The money could be used lO hire ad· d1uonal city planners to handle the workload created by the increased development, such as onshore u~ port fac1ltllcs "When people lhtnk of offshore dnlhn& the) lhank of a riJ in the ocean. In all places wh~ there is offshore dnlhng. there are onshore plants for proccssina." said Sessa. Currently. most of California's offshore oil and gas 1s processed at onshore facihucs fed by undersea pipelines and 1s concentrated in five counties -San Luis Obispo. Santa Barbara. Ventura. Los Angeles and Orange. The federal govemmcnl's plans for offshore 011 lcasing over the nc:xt five ,..11=::;11 years arc uncertain .illl Other coastal counl1cs rumored lo OLES HOME CENTERS o GllACE company CORDLESS SCREWDRIVER High torque driver always charged & ready to use Fo<wardlrev8f'S8 swrtch 9 amp motor 2 year h'>me use warranty -OR- 2 SPEED AUTO SCROWI& JI& SAW Use as scrolhng or sabre saw (7571) 29.27 .. 11uUcltn COIDUIS 3/8 II. DRILL/ SCREWDRIVER lightweight. revers1 ble dnll Recharges 1nonly 3 hours 37.93 (MOOll TM! heat Mltingt • PORCELAll 221/z II. KETnE &Rill Baked on porcelain enamel finish tasy to clean ash catcher 42.88 1 \~nht>(lm Large bot1om storage shelf "'Handy work table Control console CO•PUTER HUTCH 51.32 CO•PUTH DlU 4911, "x231h "x29'h "H 71.4! SMOOTH I EASY LATEX PAINT INTERIOR FLAT 7.48 : S•OOTH I EASY SEMI-GLOSS ~ ...... 8.88GAl IAllCO HlO snu 3·SPEED 52 IN . CEILllG FAI wi'lll un m 44 91':~:. 8 EACH 3 SPEED STAIDlll6 UI II. FAI 24.77 3 SPEED 20 Ill. IOI FAI 17.88 SHELWJIG • 1124 .... fN(>. -or• 2.87 2.iiil tTlll lllll HAIWU OllnloHO•E llPIOIE•EIT EICYClOPEDIA 18.85 f.ACH • 1111/;t;:::ll be included tn the lnlcrior Depart- ment's plans,, but which have no productJon facilities, CQuld u~ funds to evaluale leasing proposals or plan for possible onshore support facth· ucs. Sessa said. The state released the draft f,u1dc- lines for awardmg the grant unds, and 1s asking for public comments by June .25 , The final gu1dehnes a.re ;;:::II expected to be m place by early July. In the draft guidelines, the proposed awards arc: Los Angeles. SS million; Santa Barbara, $5 million; STURDY ALUMINUM .LADDERS 16 FOOT EJTEISION LADDER 38.33 20 Ill. ROTARY GAS 35 Brtggs & Stratton maxi engine Features 50% larger gas lank, starts easier, runs quieter 011 dip stick included MOWER 8 FT. STEP LADDER (2035M) AITRO·TU CUSHIOI 4 II. PADS i .4! 1.41. 7.14 lt.12 11.11 11.11 11/J llTIOOll 25 FT l.U 50 FT 5.n 100 F'T I.II k ..... BRASS EITR Y LOCISET 8.84 (400TCP) ASIOITEO FURIA CE FILTERS 2 : s1 =:1 ... WEED EA TtR &AS 14 II. TRIMMER 138.34 '+tl!lii~IL:IJOll.IV'.. TRASH BAii • cmT·• Wl• "~~::nr 1• ClmT ·U ULL• ,. cml·1l Will CUil 125 HC PIPE 11• 11.1• n. 49c EACH Orange. $2.2 million: Ventura, $3 million; San Diego, S 1.9 million; Monterey. $666.389; Santa Cruz, $338,864. San Mateo, $596.354: San Francisco. $399.033: Mario, $485.117. Sonoma. $479.968; Mcn- docmo. $936.261, Humbo ldt, $886.334, Del Norte, $353,584, Napa. $7.812. Solano, $1 68,979; Contra Costa. S 128.053;,,. Alameda. $90.294. and Santa Clara. $104,862. Land sale by school approved By LAURA MERK Ot the Delly ,._ I i.fl The C~lifom1a Coastal Com· m 1ss1on cleared the way for the sale of some surplus school land in Laguna Beach despite a staff rccommcn- dat1on thal a lracl map for the land be rejected Laguna school offietals have been trying to sell the Alta Laguna property near the Top of the Wo rld for the past six years and recently received city approval of a tract map for the property " The school board even began accepting bids for the land after tclhn& prospccuvc buyers that the comm1ss1on would also approve th.c tract map -bul last week the comm1ss1on staff recommended de- nial Cit) and school officials convinced the comm1ss1on to approve the plans In a 9-1 vote last week. Two com- missioners abstained. Last January the City Council approved a tract map for 38 lots at the 11 6-acrc site. but onl y after several meetings and several changes m the plan. The d1stnctalso dedicated 7 .5 acres to the city for an athlet1c field and open space trail. Over the years. developers had told school officials trying to sell the site that lhey wouldn't be interested unless the d1stnct took the ume and expense to have plans for lhe land approved first The d1stnct hopes lo make aboul SJ 8 m1lhon on the property. Coastal Comm1ss1on staff con- tended the subd1V1sion would disturb the area's animal and botanical hfe The staff was also concerned about plans to grade a picturesque knoll. Clyde Lovelady. school business manager, said only minor grading would take place on the knoll and that viewpoints would be made available throughout the development., which 1s now fenced off from the public. Accordin$. to Lovelady, the com- m1ss1on dchberated 15 minutes after presentations from Mayor Martha Colhson. CityJ.~.nager Ken Frank. Director of ~mumty Develop- ment June Catalano and school board President Carl Schwarz County jobless rate down again By LISA MAHONEY Of .. .,..,,.. .... O ran1e County's jobless rate de- clined sh&htly dunna Apnl edging down o ne-I 0th of a percent from a low 4.2 percent 1n March The ranks of the unemployed dropped by 500 people to 49,500 dunna the month. accordma to fiaurcs ptov1ded by the State Employ- ment Development Department. -OLES HOME CENTERS o GPAC( compo~~ Only Mann County at 3.5 percent had a lower unemployment rate than Oranae County Oranie County's unemployment fi.aurcs were matched by San Mateo County. Unemploy- ment tn lo. Anaeles County wac; 5.8 percent dunna the month. Statewide, unemployment was 6.8 percent dunna Apnl The national rat~ was 7. r ptrctnt for the same penod. ' SANOAeRICL COVINAf811)l31 0771 FAST COVINA(818J 987 !>1:11 HACIENDA HEIGHTS 18181:t33 ~''" ~0NAOVIA (811)303 IS61 PASAOENA(l18)•4M5J7 AOSEMEAO (81 I) 2U-0040 ROWLAND HEIOHTS (8181985 Ul8 W£ST COVINA (818) 1111 .) 138 SOUTHPA6AO(NA(818)441 !1101 I.A VERNE 1?'14) 503 0612 IOUTHaAN L A COUNTY CERAITOSl21Jl924 8130 GARDENA (213) f)32-29JJ LONO BEACH (21314~ 7!>&1 NORWALK ('131188 1991 TOA~ANCE. (213) 370-SMO SAN PEOA0(2t3) S47 1122 SOUTH roi:-AANCC (2131S30- ., IAN ,lNfANOO VALLEY BURBANK (213) 849 e«J 1 NORTH HOll VWOOO flt81 78~ 5600 NOATHAIOOE (118) 388 ?1 RE SE DA (81113•4 -028 1 WOOOlAND HILLS (1111341 86!>0 OXNA~O '80Sl 3 12fA All the rates listed arc adjusted for 1easonal fluctuations v.r1th the excep- tion of Orat'I County. Oran4C County topped its l"Vtou~ record m terms of avadable ;obs dunng April. Oran County firms offered l.02 million position an uu:reasoef 6,400 over Marth fl ures Tounst related employmCTit c- countcd for a tarse chunk or the job pan. lncrUsed employment at ra- t.auranu... amu~cnt~ perlli and ho- ttls prov1<kd 1.900 Jobt in Arm I 4 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. • ~ • . ~ . . .J D1ilJ Pilat _ THURSDAY. JUNE 6, 1988 ANN I.ANDERi U COMICllM Prepare to hoist a few: Beer Can Series starts By ALMON LOCIUBEY .................. ' That m1dwttk summer yachllng madness known u the Beer Can Senes gets under way today .out or Balboa YachtOub. The Beer Can Series is a Thursday evenma race Wlth yachts from 20 to SO feet racing ins1de the bay. The Beer Can runs through June and is followed by the Thirsty Thursday Senes in July and the Champqne Senes in Auaust But by whatever name. 1t LS a cocktatJ hour spectacular for residents who live alona the bay!ront on 8alboa, Colhns, Harbor and Lido islands and alona the peninsula bayfront. It is also an insurance underwntcr's nightmare as the b1a boats spht tacks 10 the narrow confines of the bay ror early two hours every Thursday evenina. accident. Nowadays the t'8(e iutarted off Balboa Y ICh t Club in etcht clasaes at 10.miautc anterv1l1, 1eodina i1 a semblance of ufety. The event IOI its name when tome CttWman on a raana boat in the early days stuck a beer can on a per bcinf used u a tum1n1 mark in the non.b Lido Cba.nnd. t aU started when a couple of ownera of SO lO 60-foot meter yachts kept at the landina made a waaer one evcmng for a race down the bay and back. The late BOb Zieale!J then manager of the landin&, pve them a 1wt and a nnasb. No one but tbe two owners rcmcmben bo ~°" me • raoe, but bd'ore the week was out otbtt owners c:haUe~ the previous two and tbe insamty was on. Photosraphcrs from all over Southern Cah(omia came down to photocraph the the uny spectacle. • Tlte tbiQI arew 10 fast in the fint two years th.at it WU decided to have the It.art in the tumin1 basin at the W4 cod of Lido Isle WJth Newport Harbor Yacht Oub takina char&e. Thia photo wu taken off Newport Beach darlnC the 1978 Beer Can Serlee. The racee are echedulecl to beCin tOJliCht u th1a year'• aerlea klcb off. But as spectacular as 1t someurnes is, it is nolhina compared to the early days of the event when as many as 100 boats, rancina up to 70 feet. would start off the Newport Yacht Landin&. round a mark an the north Lido channel, race down the bay and around the bcllbuoy outside the JCtty and then beat back ap.10. In tho~ days, more than two decades ago; all of the boats started at once, but there was never a serious NHYC ran 11 fOf only one year before tum•na It over to Balboa Yacht Oub who bepn to spoil 1t witb regulations, handicaps and all manner of red tape. Trophies are even given for the winners in each d1v1s100 at the end of each month. Better to be safe than sorry ALMOI loCUBEY Reverse Argosy begins Saturday This is Safe Boating Week -by proclamation of th• President of the U.S .. no less. But ~fe boauna 1s not JUSt another one w«k of the year affair. Acst 11 be used to check all of the safety gear and procedures that should be uppermost in -0ur manck before <:astin~ fr<>m the dock or slip, or hauling anchor. Its an odds.-on bet that very few of the boats shoving off for a weekend cruise have all of the safety equip- ment aboard, much of 11 required by law Take this hst down to your boat and check around. Better yet post It 1n a v1s1ble place to check before setung out to sea -either for the day or for a week Personal flotat1onal device (PFD -also known as a life preserver). Don't forget that the law requires one for each pcnon aboard (Coast Guard Approved). and that they be read1l) accessible. Bailer or manual pump. Not rt· quired by law. but mighty handy to have aboard to the event a fitting lets go a packing gland gets leaky, or any BOATING BRIEFS number of dt!>aStcrc, occum wh1k sa1l1ng. Navigauonal lights Required b~ law. Check for the lights required aboard a vessel such as yours Requirements differ for vanous s11c of boats and arc different for sail and ~f'.-beats., Hom. whistle o r other approved audio signahn& device Especially important when fog closes 10. Visual distress de\ ice Must be ( oast Guard approved Fully-charged fire ex11ngu1shers U S. Coast Guard approved. Checl for number required for your boat. Two anchors and adequate hne for average anchonng s11uat1ons. Not required by law. but sometimes vitally important Paddles or oars Not much use taking to the dinghy or lifeboat 10 an emergency 1f )'OU have to paddle with your hanqs. Flashlight or batter) lantern Use· ful for work aboar-0 an dark places. or for auxiliary signal lights First aid kt\. Should be stocked Tooby resigns from Eagle Challenge The Eagle Challenge, one ofs1x U.S. syndicates competing for the nght to challenge for the 1987 Amenca's Cup, has announced that George Toob} founder and chairman of the board of directors, has resigned. "I have found that my rcspons1b1hlles Wlth Eagle were more than l could discharge at this ume," Tooby said "I Will continue to follow Eagle's p~s., wt th great interest." Tooby, 72, founded the Eagle Challenge Syndicate to September 198' Eagle 1s the Cup challenger from the Newport Harbor Yacht Club. "Without George's forcSJght and his WlSh to make it happen. the Eagle program would not exist today," said Gerry Dnscoll. Eagle director of operations. "His dnve and ded1cat1on to the pro1ect has bttn an insp1ra11on to us all." America's Cup challenger arrives The mystenous Amenca's Cup challenger RI amvcd to San Francisco o n PAPARAZZI .,_ Paal and Ginny Bender try for aactlon ltem. . Dr. Bob and Boiuali &pa with commi ., with everything from Band-Aids, headache medicine or seasick pills, suntan lotions, and even splints for broken bones 1f you know how to use them -the sphnts, that 1s. Doclung hnes and renders. (an save a lot of damage to the topsides of your boat-when coming alongstde a dock or other boat Chart of local boaung area (or others if gomg offiliorc), and a knowledJe of how to read them Extra hoes. ln the event you need to tow someone -or be towed you~lf, Tool lut a'ftd spare parts. Murphy's law says that anythmg that can go wrong usually will Radio. To call for assistance or answer a "mayday" call Know the government rules of radio etiquette Foul weather gear You never know when the wind or seas can kick up. and there's nothing more useless than a cold and miserable crew. Rear-view mirror -and an ob- servec -for water sknng. So you have also the necessary gear aboard. How about a cast-0ff check- hst Check. the weather forcc:ut. File a float plan. (with the Coast Guard or fnends and relatives on shore.) Conduct a rouune 1nspect1on of your craft Check fuel supply Remember, the Coast Guard no longer renders as- sistance to non-hfe threatening emergencies. Stow all loose aear. A place for everything and everything securely to its place. Review emergency procedures Not only for yourself but Wlth all persons aboard Ventilate your boat, run b1ldgc blower three to five minutes before starting the engme. Also use your nose. Happy and safe cnusmg. Monday and was taken to a shed where u was hidden behind large metal doors. The boat pulled into Anderson's Boat Yard in nearby Sausalito after a long tnp by truck from its builders 1n Mamaroneck. New York. The vessol, due to receive a new name when 1t is cbnstened June 24 at the St Francis Yacht Club. 1s the product of des1aner Gary Mull and computational physicist Heiner Meldner. who took a year's leave from the "Star Wars" program Missing from RI were the "graphttc composite a"pendages" skipper Tom Blackallcr said were provided by a Utah aerospace firm. and the lcttl, which will be installed later The Golden Gate Challenge syndicate launched lls first boat, USA, 1n February Blackaller said the new boat 1s "radically different" from USA. "I l's far beyond the state of the art," he said. Blackaller and his crcv. Wiii measure RI agamst USA on the ocean north of the Golden Gate Testmg will start an ~veraJ weeks as soon as the boat can be fitted out and launched The orgamzers of the S 10 m1lhon Golden Gate Challenge ho~ to recover the America's Cup from Australia. They are after a 27-inch-high. 8-pound Bahta Connth1an Yacht Oub will be the toene ofa larst raft-up of boa" Saturday when a fleet of sailµlayacht.5 amve from Cabrillo Beach Yacht Oub on the first ICJ of Bahia Yacht Cub's Reverse Ara.osY. After a m&ht of boat-bopping and sboreside festivities the fleet w1U set sail Sunday for the race back to Los AA&elcs Harbor The event 1s patterned after Newport Ocean Saihna Association's Arp>sy 10 which 1 fleet sa..ils from Newport to Los Anscles Harbor and back apin the following day. Lido Isle Yacht Oub will stage 1ts annual Lido Raft-up race for Lido-l•s on Saturday. Capistrano Bay Yacht Oub has achcduled a sm&le and double-handed regatta on Sunday. In other Southern California Yachung Association arcu: Lot A.qe_les -Loac Beadl Cabrillo Beach Yacht Oub-Reverse Argosy. Saturday, Sunday. Suta MoakaBay WindJammcrs Yacht Oub -Charley Brown Regatta, Saturday. King Harbor Yacht Oub-Buoy Battle Spino.aker Scnes No. 5, Saturday. California Yacht Oub -Blue Star Rcptta., Fnday, S&iurday, Sunday; Overton-Tanner-Walsh Series, Saturday. South Bay Yacht Racina Oub -Smg)c-banded keel race. Saturday: Women On Water race. Sunday silver um, lost by the New York Yacht Oub in 1983 after the longest winruna streak m history -132 years. Fourteen challen.Jers, mcludmg boats from su American ~dtcates, will compete in three ehmmauon rounds of 13 races each in Australia startJ.na Oct. S. The winner Wiii raCt' the Royal Perth Yacht Oub defender for the cup in wa1ers off Fremantle in a best-of-~ven ~nes starttng January 31. 1987. Besides the United States, the challengers include Great Bntam. Canad.a. FranCt', Italy and New z.ealand Still no home for Voyagers YC Voyagers Yacht Oub -the third oldest an the Newpon area -1s qain Without 1 home and 1s seelong new quarters. After the club lost 1t.f lease on lhe bayfront quarters at 28th Street and Newport Boulevard, the mc:mberslup sought a merger With South Shore Yacht Oub. wruch has a clubhouse on-the bayfront on Coast Highway. "The proposed merger Wlth SSYC was turned down by a vote of its membcrsh1~" said VYCcommodot'CJohn R. W1ebcl. "It was a shame that the time and enort has gone for nothing." he wrote m a memo to the VYC. ~. MS auction in Irvine a roariJ?g success The $40, 000 proceeds should be used for some additional research into MS . By MARY WU HOPKINS ~ .... Cerr 1IJI114ecot Dick HaHmu and fhe o r his buddies wait be Oymg the f'nendly slues to any destinat1011 of their choice wtthin 500 miles The flight an the Kmg l\ir plane, donated b) St John Kmts (owned by Marie ud Bob Gray), was wo n by Hausman with a bid of S 1,200 at the third annual auction and dinner of the National Multiple Sclerom Society. Orange County chapter at Irvine Hilton and Tower\ Another lucky winner was Wally Nielsen \l.>tth a hid of~ 18.500 for a sleek. red 1986 Mazda R 'C-7 Turbo. MS board president Ed Arnold and ph1lanthrop1c;t Bob Gageuelm conducted the hve auction that was 1az1ed up b\. \1S·s support group. VIV;\ (Very Important Volunt«rs in Action). Members danced along the runway 10 fashions appropnate for items offered 1n the auction kits and modeling was amngcd by ltJtty Leslie, fashion coordinator for Fashion Island stores Other items offered to the auction were a gourmet dinner for six at the home of PUar Wayne that ~nt for $1 ,000: a set of Calloway specialty aolf clubs, plus a round of &olf for four at Santa Ana Country Club went to Jack deKnif for $800: Jo Gleta' bid of $1.500 was h1ah for a Marc C'hqall lithograph; JerrJ Brodie's bad of $300 was high for a tnp to Catalina plus an executive suite at Hamilton Cove. and Carel Webster'• bid ofS2.,600 was the h1ah bid for 1 diamond necklace. Before the gourmet dinner and It ve auctio n. more than 400 guests pthered in a section of the International Ballroom to bid on an auracuvc display of cclcct1c items cleverly arranged by Martlyw Raa1mu. "R.a~oltd Heaaee of W«ds & Co arranged all of the silk flower displays, ' Manlyn s~ud A gold lame cloth covered with a table set for four wuh Ftrz Floyd china 10 the same pattern that 1s used in the White House. and a red cloth covered a table set with red and white china \1Sd1rcctorPat Meldell(she's moving east 10 June>andSally Tyne started at .s..a--tn bnnama items mto the hotel for the auction "We arc known as the 'd)namac duo." Me1dell said wtth a lauah. As Lorelb and AJ A.er enccred the room. she 1mmed1ately stopped to check the G1ba-Nobha furS. "I fotaot my glasses," Lorelea-e:itcla1med "This 1s the worst mght to do that." But she wore Aucr'sg)asses long enough to place her bid and win a white mmk Ja~ket Guests were arccted at the silent auction by benefit co-chairman ClaJr McNaJr, who has been fighting MS for\\ year Proettds ofS40.000 wall be used for research and direct serv1ce programs for victims of MS ··we arc happy to raise mon~)' for research." Arnold said "But this event also helps the community learn more abOut MS " Here and there were Dort H~rt, J~ ud Jack Kelly, Lyu Hd Larry Vaqlm, Carol abd Dews Carpee•er, Sllltley &Dd Hal M.tteatbaler, Zee Allred, Betty Beldeta ud BW Palmer, Dorl ud Jack dtllnif, Mary 1114 Jim Roosevelt, MlmJ ud Tom CrottoD (s~e was hlgh bidder for a fur coat). Marte 1114 Bob On7, Glaay ud PaaJ Btttder,Jleue Qd Nld DooUa, PHi. and Mel Feldman ud C..crenmu Bob B~ ud wlfe. A.Doe. Paparanl It eclltM by Dally PUot tyle editer Vtu Deaa. .... ...................... So Hod.pan wttb Carol Webster . Go~ and dolla: Bob oaa ancl Sci Arnold. • • • .. Marilyn Monroe 7t 111111 6-TUCJ D<Ul STUfO IOMCNSl "TO' CUI" (PC) !>ll 100 Ill~ 4 TUCK OOUIY ST£1£0 AUii AlDA "SIUT UIEITY" (PC) 7 IS UO 71 111111 6 llACll 11.IU SIOIO SYl'1CSlD STAllOll "COIU" (I) 6 00 l'OO 10 00 AUii ALDA "SWECT UIEITY" (P'C) 61~ 1 30 IOJO UCLUSM l..cAGUOT "DESUT NEAITS" Ill H S 14S H~ "Jlll SPUD" 10 ... ' ruu D<l.lt SIBf.O IOll ~ "TO' CUI'' (P'C) 6 00 I U 10 JO 81Ua COii "01 THE CDCE" (P',·11) 6 l0 1 30 IOIS 4 IUU 00.BY m.io IOM CNSl "TOP CUI" (P'C) 11s ua edwarda BRISTOL 540-7444 8J11U OL U M&CAllTHUll l 6NTA ANA 4 llACll D<UY $1£1£() mTH WlllAMS "POLTEICEIST II' (PC·13) 6l01l01 s 'THUNDER IUll' "MHllAH & SISTERS" UO 10 l~ l't II JO JO OAllCCR' (I I .. ~ 4 rue• OOIJT s rrno All Y S.U OT "SHOIT CllCUIT" (P'C) 6 IS I I~ 10 I~ •dwarda CINEMA CENTER 171-4141 HAll8011 a&.VO a AD4MI M«IA VHCIC C!•T'lll cou.a•u 4 llAO l.l IU \T£1tf0 HI W $ltR SUI d:»f "COBIA" (I ) ~co•· C" ---'THC COLOI P'URPLE' q ·~ I'<, I I OUT or AfllCA ' ' "LUCAS" {PC l ll 6 JI' lO 'PIE TTY IN PlllK" ___ I _lO_,_,i_IJ-.1 __ _ 4 IUU !nlT SIO(O CIAJC; I Ill SOii "P'OL HICEIST II" (PC 13) ~H l lS 1000 MAii AlDA "ll[(J UIHTY" (PC) IOI I IS ltlS mi" W111 1AM "POlTUCUST II" f'C-tl) ··~ii 10 JO MariJyn would have been 60 By JEFF Wl:UON A I , , , ,._ Wrtllr LOS ANGELES -Sex Jodde .. s Manlyn Monroe, the platinum blonde actress who entcrtillned the po~rful and wooed the world 1n her t&&bt. low-<:ut dre~. has not been forsoncn on what would have: been her 60th birthday. Hehum-fiJled balloons reading "Happy Birthday" and bouquets of flowers were dchvc~ throughout the wec:kt'nd to the crypt marked "Manlyn Monroe 1926--1962" at Wt'Stwood Village ~metcrv. 10 males west of downtown. Bom Norma Jean Mortenson o'n June I 1926, the mystique and <ptnt ~ •'> n IJ• ---"OUT or UllCJ" r ll.B "Tl" TO IOUllTIFUL" s "SMOIT c11cu1r· (P'C) 600 100.1000 --.. II.HAii PiilC( Ct ltli 1 Ill sell "P'OLTEttlltT II" f'C·ll) 6 JO. LJD 10 IS "P'l(ffilllP'lllll" • r, 12.08 "THC MOIUY "1" (PC) ' 'JAKE SPEED" ..l.UO II IAIWI PllCI 01(111 "'llAMS 'POLTEICEIST II" (PC-13) 00 I JO 10 IS "ECHO 'AH" (I) ••s llJlR ·· HAllllAH I SIS TE IS" ••o 101~ 1'61J1 "THUllOU RUN" ll..Oi ' l'UCll OOLIY SltlEO TOlll CMISl "TO' CUI" (PC) S4~ •.•. It IS 4 llACll DCUY Slll£0 AUii N.OA "SIUT UIEITY" IPCI 11\ t lO ' TUCll DCUY ST(l(O JlllTlt w.llMIS "POltHCEIST II" (PC-13) 7't0, ,... 4 fUCll DOllY STOEO AllY HIDY "SHIT CtlCUIT" l'C) ' lO, a.JO. It lO 4 IJACll OOllT S ltJ(O Cl-"' T lllSCll "POLTHCUtT II " ("·13) 1;00, t.GO t I H I 10 I'. II I "TltE MOIEY P'lf' (PC) 1·00 "CUllC NO" l'C·ll) BO. '51 CN > Ml,OIM 110 ilHllN Pitier mTH Will.WIS "POLTUCEIST II" (PC·ll) 6JO llO IOIS "NOUYWOOD VICE SQUAD" (I) W l C IOIUCAllNG IOM catiSl "TOP' CUW" (PC) HS 800 10 I~ MO IUGAtll PIJCf- cu lG I NU SOii "P'OLTEICEIST II" (PC·ll) 6l0130101S -10 WUJi PRICE SYl VlSICI S 1 All Olf "COllA" (I) 1 00, '00. 10 4~ ~ "PIETTY II PIH " "LOW BLOW" (-R)- 101 •t .. "THUllDEI IUll ....,.. 'HOLLYWOOD YICC SQUAD" (I) '•'J edwarda SADDLEBACK 581-5880 "TRIP TO BOUIHIFUL" (P'C)••mm~•i H 101) COOS MUST IE CUZT" aoo 11'61 HWWIPllOI STl ~SIO SIAllOll 'COBIA" (I ) ~IQ I lO 10 I\ ---"AT CLOSE IANCE'lba · JO JO DAllCEI" (R) ... rue• 00l9Y SIUfO 'AH Y SKIOY "SllOIT CllCUIT" (P'C:) •OO 1110 IOto 4 IUCIC ll IJA SltlfO SYl VI'S!() S TAllOll "COllA" (I) 111 I lt It IS "JHE SPEED" RICllAAO NYm "10 JO IU(H, YOUI Uft IS CAW C" (I) 1• J" ~n 1n t• ' llACI SlOIJO r~ "T 'C r (") I Jt U~ S 11 I• It A "HE MOIEY P'tr• (PC) '18 100~ "CUllC: NO" (PC·ll) • 00 "IHZll" (I) ,00 101~ "COOS MUST IC CRAZV" I )0 O'G 'HOUlWOOO VICE SQUAD" (R) "LOI ILOW" (R) , ,. "I MILLIOI WAYS TO DIE" "MAHAii & SISTEIS" 7 45 (l'G 1 l J "Tl" TO IOUllTIFUI " H S 94~ (l'G IOll I H Wl llAMS ta Alli I Ill SOii "POLTEICEIST II " (PC-13) 6 I~. l lS 10-.0 edwards MISSION VIEJO MAL L 36·1 6nO I D FWY TO CllOWH VALLEY snwmo STAUM "COIU" (I) 1 oe a• see 1 llO ,. •• 10 •• Alll SMIDT "SIOIT CllCUIT' (PC) lllS 215 HS 'JO • JO. 10 .JO 4 llACll !nil S l(J(O IOlllauM "TO' '81" (PC) 1.a. J,. 1 oo. u~. 1010 snnsnt srauuE "Cotb" (t) I IS llS It IS mTH.U CIAIG f ltilal "'tlTllC(IST II" (PC.lJ) • U). 10 It• ( of Marilyn Monroe lives on for many of her fans have surfaced throu&hout the yean but rtmatn unproven upla.nauons of the death of Monroe, the purported mmrcu of fonncr PrttJdcnt Joho F Kennedy and hi$ attorney aenmJ- brothcr, Robert. ihc Kennedy family has repeatedly refused comment on any association between Monroe and the brothc.n., who both died 1t the hands of assassin~ "She <.·amc up from nowhere and ~t!oals for herself She had a dream an full filled u." said Ricci Ter· ranova, a lonaume fan from Manna dcl Rey who s.a1d the actress had 1nsp1red him. He left flowers at her crypt Sunday Terranova, who was born two yea~ a fl er Monr~·~ death, said v1s1ttnJ her home: was has most pnzed personal memory of the: actress. He posed as a potenual buyer when. the small Brentwood house recentl> went on the market. Forrest Andrews, spokesman for the ttny, tree-shrouded ceme~ry sur rounded by h1ah-rise bu1ld1nas. said a stead> stream of people remembered her birthday "There have been quite a lot of people who came by and left flowen on her ~rypt dunna the weekend," said Andrews, who was unable to estimate the exact number but said at "I sot a sen~ of the warmth that I a\~oc1ate "'-Ith her." he 't.Ald It was the ~me home whC'r\' Monroe died of "probable su1c1dc:" nearly a quarter century ago was dozens. • But the mysuque of the popular actress didn't die with her on Aug. 5, 1962. The tragedy of Marilyn Monroe -1hc drugs and booze. the broken mamages and unrt.qwted love and finally her death at the age of l6 - ha ve hn$ered. Theones of murder nd covcrup For years. Monroe's fonner bus.- band, baseball great Joe DiMaggio, had roses dell ve~ to the crypL The deltvencs stopped several years ago. "h 1s my understanding that has last wife had a prc-nuptual agreement forbidding him from continuing the dehvef) of flowers." Andrews said. TV LISTINGS DOlBY STEREO LJllll IUll 497 -1711 EDWMDS SO. COAST LAGlN oesTA llU 751-4114 EDWARDS TOwtf COOtl -otlTl MEil 979-4lll EDWMDS CIDA CDITTJt *U llUll 52l-1611 P'Ac.le GATEWAY IUllE 634-2553 *EL T• 581-9500 *lltlSlll ftf.M 364-6220 mwARDS n TORO mwMOS lll$SION VI.JO MALL lllltlll 639-1770 911¥111 154-Ull .,YllTll 191·0567 STAl>lM Oii-it EDWMDS UllVDSlTY EDWARDS VI.LAGE COfTD 110 529.5339 *U uau (213} 691-0633 w1111111m1191-3693 MANN BREA PLAZA AMC FASHIOlf SQUMC PAC.IC ti-WAY 39 DI-It ewllTMlllTH • UA WESTlllCSTDI TWIN HS-5333 •4 TRACK ULTRA STEREO aARO&JN MATIH••• M ONDAY THRU SATURDAY 1ST 2 PERl"ORMANC l'S t•CfPT M0\•0AT~6 S TAAAED • ff'('AtU"(~ -~·I•]•ll 11 J1~J1 !UO J ,..11, S C••""" I ,_ & 111 flACll OOllf tnuo "* Ct\llW TOP GUN1,.1 1.00 3120 l 1tO t ·OO 10120 DOI.IT m110 POLTllGllST II: THI OTHla SIDI t'°-IJI 12.ICI 2ll0 41)0 tt40 t 1SO IOrU POLICI ACADEMY 3 : UCK IN TRAINING fPOI I 1.ot•·OIJO PHTTY IN PINK 1P0-1J1 '"J ... It It THUNDH aUN l'°-1>1 I 01 ) .. SM 7r00 .... 11 00 -II JliH 1111 ftcullr II Ot t ""'• 9 1/1 WHKS t•I 1MI ... 1•10 KISS Of TIU Sl'IOH WOMAH 111 J11S 71SI LOW llOWt•I , .... ,. ... CalTTllS (N-UI 1Ut.4'1•.Je ANAHEIM f1H~l11 tlHtltmer \ftt•ft fwr ..., -~ ..... , .,,...,... THUNDH IUN '"'"' DlATH WISH Ill fll LOW llOW Ill AT Cl.ON UNCH 111 IAl V A.DOit Ill Ll'OIHD 1"1 «•J•tJ:@m (11C) ~tMllU 1!z 6 C.2"'t• "*(II.HM rcw ouN..- om1NO IVIN flt ~ 8VTTIM91 .. SHOIT CllCUIT ,_. 1aOH IAOU •1t1 LA MIRADA GATEWAY ...;./.;..;U..-1"4-.....•~..:.•.:::lil;;.:"•:::.••..:.;;•h:..:W<~•·::.;."'~'"41 UJ 111s , .. , \" Vtl••x 11 ..... DOUT sn•to POLTHGllST II: THI OTHH SIDI IM-UI 11 JI l JI t U .. .o I 4S 1•M OOLIT tnHOITOM cau111 TO" OUN INI I 00 l JO J 'Cl I 00 1e.>0 STIVI 01/TTIHlfRO SHOIT CIRCUIT 1..a1 loll J.M s-.s a-eo 10.10 &Af .... ., 1•0J J JO Stl01'4S lrOO OUT OJ AFRICA t'OI I 00 4 10 7·10 101)0 Uf OfolU 1 JO 4 41 I011J SNlAW PllVllW 1.00 THUNDH RUN ,,.u, 111' l.00 SIOO 1 t05 tiOO I Otto "llTlY IN PINK 1,._u1 1 i 1.o 4140 11•0 LUCAS ll'0-1~1 , ......... 10 •0 ttCMM•NTCJe JO JO OANCll, YOUI un II CALUNO Ill DOWN AHO OUT IN llVllL Y HILU "' JAKI "110 1N1 HIT DlnNll 111 ITIYIWITl ..... IHOaT ClltCUIT t"I llOH IAOU "°'" loHABRA .. ~;;u :J • . . . ICHO PAIK 111 llS•U6·10 1 1S IO:MI DOWN AND OUT IN HVllL Y HILU !JI 1 lO ,, ... 10 CIOSHOADS 111 JJO T>O 11 10 uuu mno ~ ULVllTll STAlLONI COHA,.1 I Jf)>llOIOlltU OOllT lflllOlllJU4 ,,_ AT CLOSI lANGI 111 • ,. • u GUNG HO ,,.,>! n,11.,>0 10-.1 Al.AH Al.AA SWlfT lllllTY !NI • )I,, .. MASK i-u1 l 1t ... It,. ITlVUTn """Ol'tl COllA (WI Paonaoa,., POlTUGllll llt THI OTMD ltDI fN.111 CAT'S n1.,.u1 THUNOll IUN i-111 DIATNWtlH 111 111 TOtll U~SI t~OUH "' llUI CITY "\ .. ~ . . . . . . . . Decisions, decisions Robin Hubba.rd(~) and Oary Bell debate the cond.ltioo of a baffled Tally BJ • ln a .cene from .. What the Butler Saw•• at the Gem eater. The play will be reYlewe4 lD Friday'• Datebook aection of the Dally Pilot. .. ,._. ,.,11r·. "tf" Tfllli.A~AS jlllfCJi'lt I MA,(J,A/""1#-• ~ TOM~ -12:40- Cl) MOYIE • "a.op.trl Jonm And The Celklo Ot Gold" ( 1975) T amn Oob1on, S1ella Stevena. ())MOYIE t •..t "To M A Good Nletlt" (1914) Jennllw FMlyon, FClnell Swnon. -1,2:45- (C)MOYIE .. ~ "8'-dy" (1914) Mantllw MocS- lne, Ndlolll cage. -1:00- • lllEPBCJ9fT NEWS (!)MOYIE .. * "The Grloll ........ ( 1940) Bob Hope. bullet• Goddwd eMOW -=~:TlllJP"" GUN==='~ w PG~ A PARAMOUNI PICTURr fo * * ''Tiww Slllor1 And A Glri" ( 1953) ..llnt Powel, Gordon M1cAte 9 NEWS PAIJlRVAH CP)Kl*GRJ l.: --·------.....: . NOW PlAYlll8 -............... ----NOW PIAYING - • ..,. •ui.Lla.I -...,....,..._. -.._.u.,.... ._. ..... -. ...... ---~ -.no •C..~ ~~ •IMf'f&MA ...... iw....... .. ... ~c... ---~ -~ _..,. .. rt11 .. , ... .. -_....._.. .,,.,. .............................. """" ....................... ..., ·----··~ . ~ ~ :=~ .. r--== =::.~ •=.......,. [:::· ... :-=.]l..!ijj;f+Mr) 7 Otcan OUT 01' AP•tcA 0'91 SHOWS At I II & t 1H "Durty Nelly'a" OPEN FOR LUNCH & DINNER Monday thru Frtday 11 AM to 9 PM euJ1Dtt0rN·•• 1 , o l'lu• ~··ur 1'1 Plflll '"° u It t 10 CDUA l•J lllOLftaOQST H .... ,, (liJOl Cl•4 0, J :fOe OO 6HOWS AT,t 100A~J U 61~1 10 / n70MM l t '"OJt<I 6 I , I Ne~..... • SMOlfT Caacut'T Utl IHOWS AT (t I 0) (2 20) 11a• 1 14l) .. ''"" , ... -r::,e;:r,~r,, (2140) t OI 1:JO t ill 1'1 JOMM DIUVl I• OllM I•...,, W .. • ............................... ------------------------------~~~~ f : FrtdaJ,Jaee • . AR[ES(March 21 ·ApriJ 19): Empham on tnp~. visju., 1hort rcporu. ca.Ila wh1ch could relate to close rcladve. accent also on ability to get to hean of mattcn, espcctally where romanoc 11 concerned. • TAUROS (April 20-May 20): You recc1 ve ddJt1onal 1nfonnat1on which CO\.l~d bclp you correct .. financial error" Emphasis on payments. c-0Ucct10M, ~b1lhy to locate article lost, m1ssina or ~tolen ReunioD with family member 11 also part of IC'tnano. • GE'!fJNI (May 21.June 20): Moon in your sign hi&hli&hts charisma. pcrsonah\y, populanty, ab1hty to mili .:· vaJuable cont.acu. Your chances for "••-innina" increase, and you could beat the odds. Lona·<hstance call telates to social event, journey SYDNEY 0MARR CANCER (June 21-)uly 22): Check details, read between lines, realiLe those who rely upon you art "watching <.loscly " Focus on employment, depen- dents, care of pets, general health. You'll have chance to remodel. revise. review and rebuild. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Focus on exchange of ideas, fnends, desires. emotJonal fulfillment, ability to tum 1n "outstandini performancc " Scenario htghhghu charisma. physical attraction, vanety of exc1tm1 .. encounters." . VIRGO (Aua. 23-Scpt. 22)' Professional superior helps you achieve goal l>on't force issues, mettly state case in d1plomat1c fashion. You're due for surpns.e of pleasant variety. Money picture brighter than ongmally anttetpated. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Favorable lunar aspect co10c1des with spiritual development. prophetic v1s1ons. communication. publishing and travel You'll also enJOY your own company SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov 21 ). Spotlight on financial obhgat1ons. mone}' status of business panner or mate, news concerning possible 10vt1tment or inhcntancc. Rp J1onsh1p grows stronger. you'll have more responsib1hty and chance foflrcatCT reward. SAGl'M'ARIUS (Nov 22·Dcc 21). Emphasis on public rclau ons. partnership, ability to reach beyond previous expectations. You'll also be wnccrncd about mamage Cycle 1s completed. bamers arc removed. )ou'll be free to 1mpnnt stylr CAPRICORN (Dec 22-Jan 19)· Ba.sic issues dominate New procedure 1s ncccnaf}' 1f progress l'i to be obuuned. Accent on health employment. affairs of heart You gain by d1splay1ng p1oneenng sp1nt and Joie de v1vre. AQUARIUS (Jan 2~Feb 18) lntu1t1on nngs I.rue -spotlight on l hange, travel, vanety, children, crca11 ve endeavors. Member of opposite sex finds you highly attractive and admits it. Leo and another Aquanan figure in dynamic sccnano. PISCES(Feb. 19-March 20): Key 1s tod1vers1f}, to be versatile. to tx: "in lUntact" with those who share your ideals. Long-range prospects include IJnd purchase, home, greatersccunty. You have nght to be opt1m1suc. refuse to be dejected. IF JUNE I JS YOUR BIRTHDAY you possess sense of drama, have unusual singing or spcakmg voice, can be sclf-mdulgent. appreciate luxury. music, fine arts. You could have a "sweet tooth·• Taurus. Libra. Scorpio people play important roles 1n your hfe. You'll complete maJor project this )Car. you'll reach more people, you'll bend of obhgauon which was not your uwn to carry 10 first place. Major domestic adjustment takes place 1n June - lOuld include change of residence or manta! status Augu't will be memorable for ~ou due to money and love. Terrorists looking for world attention What do terr.onsts rcall> want? '()ppos1t1on always inflames the enthusiast. never converts him," wrote Johann Schiller. He wasn't alludina to terrorists specifically. but some students of the matter contend Schiller's obscrvauon applies. Ter- ronsts so era ve attention they regard a publicized declared war against them as a victory. Quite so. How they regard 1t 1s immatenaJ, 'though Whether 1t forces sbeltenng govern- ments to crack down on them, that's what counts. The Rock Island Railroad once shuttled a "ram train" through west- ern farm country. It was equipped with mystenous gear manned by two rammakers and their helpers. A private enterpnsc notion. that Didn't cost as much or last as long as later government shuttle projects. But for three ycan there -from 1891 to 1894 -the people beheved 1n 11. Q Who thought up the nouon of &1V1ng damond engagement nngs to prospective brides? A. Sellen of diamonds m Medieval Italy. She who has been around awhile PEOPLE L.M. Bo YD knows that bcauuful legs arc tiurly common. but beauuful hand\ are rare. Claim is only one woman 1n S.000 has what might be called txaut1ful hands. Q When a wild elephant raisc\ Its trunk, tt's about to charge, nght.., A. Npt nltht. sir. EvC'ry hull, elephant or other signals a charge by lowenng its h Watch bo mg matches. You· Item . 33(' in our Love and War man's file 1s a hoc dehvered by that ancient literary light Seneca· "It's hard to keep a wire admired by everyone, and tt's hard to bve with a wife admired by no one." What's said about a wife is also said about a husband, and mor'e often. probably. L.M. Boyd 11 • 1yadlc•tH colaal1t. Grads and jobs: Shotgun wedding Cohab1tat1on? Parents of youn& adults have learned to live with the idea M1ss1ng church on Sunday? Hey. there are some things you can't force DroppinJ out of college? The rauonaJe 1s you can't Live your children's lives for them. But 1f there 1s one thlOJ parenu stand firm on. It's a wcdd1na. They want to see theirch1ldjoin bands Wlth a steady JOb at the ..altar of employ· ment and promise to love and to cherish from this day forward. for retirement benefits or for mergers .. for pay raises or layoffs . 1n sJuml)' and in stock sphts till death do them part. You're 'itting a clash these days between a generation who believes a JOb 1s hke an arranged marriage ... in ttme you 'II learn to love It -and their children wh&1cel employment 1s a stepptng stone to lu.nch. Each generation brinp to the work ethic an important ingredient mem- ory Parents remember when jobs were non-existent. when education opened doors for the pnv1lcged ... when compromise was a way of hfe and pride was a luxury no one cou1d afford. A man or woman never forgets what 11 is hke to be out of work Ever! Their children also have memones. They remember a good standard of hvmg, as much education as they would tolerate and a father who was never home to enJOY the spoils and cqunted the dJys until he retired. Sometimes 1 get the feeling young people wish they could feel the same things their parents feel about a JOb That it would bring them fulfillment. make them feel productive. a pan of things. So why do they resist being woven into the fabric of the Amencan dream? Maybe it's because most of them do ERMA Bo11£c1 look upon a "Job" as a hnde .. a lifC'llme c:ommiuncnt to what To "settle down •· amass five room' of ma~enahsm and spend the re'>t of their lives mak1n1 pavmt>nt\ on months two week\ lonKcr than the money. What if the job 1s great'' Are they trapped for a lifetime 1n a web of ambition and corporateclJ_(Tlb1ng" Do they lose a part of themselves'> While they're ··mamed" to a Joh do the} IIUSS out on other exc1 ting ad ventures and possib1ht1es? I!. "fooling around" out of the the picture.., ~re thC'1r dreams a pan of the pnce.., If the future is filled with ap- prehension about the state of the world. what have the)' missed by being ••traditional"' and do1n& what 1s expected of them. Meanwhile the "ou:cs of t'Jt• penence challenge thrm to .. grow up," "take your place in society." "settle down" and "la}' the groundwork for your future .. This is the season when ever; graduate in the world 1s hem& asked. "What are you going to do wnh the rest of )'Our life?" They are often ,accused of being "insecure" ""hC'n tbey answer they don't know Who 1s more insecure? The man or · woman who I\ afraid to let go . or the man or woman who 1s afraid tu h.111K on? When you knov. that. you'll know what vou're going to do with the rc\1 of your hfc. Divorced women get better of the bargain DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am wnung 1n response to "Pualed in Mill. Valley." Her answer was in- sightful but there are many reasons more divorced women arc happier than divorced men. For example: The woman usuaJly gets the house. the furniture. the dishes and the better car She has the sccunty of her familiar environment. She almost always leeps the children In many cases she gets enough child support to cover the mortpge. the uuhues and· then some. Actually, the divorced woman en)OYS the benefits of mar- riage without any of the rcspons1bihues. By contrast. the divorced husband ends up m a small apartment without a pot to cook in. no bed linens. no appliances and cheap furniture. He must become accustomed to a lowered standard ofhv1ng with what money he has left after paymg child support He secs his children every other weekend. By the time everyone 1s relaxed and settled in, it 1s ume to take them back to their mother As for your comment, "Divorced men discover that bcm~ on the loose isn't all that temfic." 1t is unfair to assume. Ann. that all divorced men wanted to .be "on the loose" Many are v1cums of so-<:alled liberated women who demanded their freedom and got 1t along with all the comforts of a kept woman Speaking from m> own npcnencc (and that of several divorced m en with whom I am acquainted) the women usually come out w8' ahead -EXPERIENCED IN ATLANTA. DEAR EXP ERIENCED: Eacb 1ltutto• 11 different, b•t I bave bad ma.ay mon letters from wives wbo were d•mpecl after U or 30 yean of manta1e wbo .. 1d they bad to go to work "'lie Uaelr ex-baabaad1 were llvtn1 Jt ap ~ltb cadet youn1er ~ .. tbelr claa11tter1. Tiiey wer~ reaeatfal ANN WDEIS ud bitter -a.ad wl~ 1ood reason. • • • DEAR ANN L4.NDER5 Can )OU imagine what 1t's like malo.1ns lo\ c to man who refuses to wear his uppt·r plates'> Well. I can tell ~ou It's lii..c k1ss1ng an ovem~ tomato As you probably have guessed I am no spnng chicken. but I'm not dead enher Mike 1s a sweet gu} and rather scns111vc but this toothle's routine really tums,me off I don't want to offend the man but I can't go on prctendmg evcl")thl0$ 1s Jovel) when 1t 1sn't. The problem 1s that he thinks it's OK to keep his choppers 1n the dresser drawC'r or in his pants pocket unless he 1s eating Mike does put his teeth in his mouth when we are .... 1th people he wants to imprei.s. tor example, the minister and his wife I think 1 am entitled to SC<' him look decent too. not all shn\cled and sucked 111 around the chcei..., Al\O he can't talk plain without them WhC'n I a\k him to repeat what he 53)\ hr tC'll\ me I n~d a heanng aid It'<, damned annoying. Other ~nior c1111en' must havt' thl' same problem Pka'>C \nn help u<. all -JUST< All MEI ILLY. DEAR LILLY· Tbt ru1on pM>ple remove tbelr dentures l1 bec-aose tbey bort. Mlk~ needs to go bacll to tbe dentist wbo made bl1 deohlrea aad ask tut daey be adjusted. Or, maybe be need1 to g~l a new set. For beaven's aake quit sufferlna In silence. Tell him. Steinem to women: Drop into sy stem . • • . . • . ! • • . If . • .. .. By tbe A11oclated Preq NORTON. Mass. -Fcm1n111t wnter Glorla SUIDem is Ufllnl women to .. drop into the systC'm' and part1c1pate in a sceond wave of the women's movement. "Don't let them tell you that your JCneratton 1s more con· ~rvauve tn th-e conventional sense:· she told 272 araduates at Wheaton C'olleir. "For one th1na. they arc mcasunna rad1cahsm by the '60s standards of mC'n drop- pin& out o f the system Well. we lmow how to drop out." i.he ~1d . "We've bttn do1ns that for years." .. "What's radical for women • Steinem !>lad Saturday, "1~ to drop into the 'Y'tem to bC'-come phys1c1st11 po.l.1t1c1ans and de. c111on muers 'Hold dream•' POR fl.AND, Marne -Vrt· t'rln nC'W1C.UlC1' Doa&lu £41- Wl ... I told Jf'lduata of the Una· ve,..at)' of N"ew En&)and't Cotlqe of Osteopathic Medicine' tha' the .. orld "you youna people cnte~ - ~--- Olorta Steinem ~me two dt<'tdcs ago fttM\, 1n retro pcct more 1nnottnt. more tranquil, than the world of today." Bui he '81d thty .,hould hold onto their dream' •~ ph)"1oan~ and no1 ht d1Koura1cd by world that at umt" f.ttmr. v1oltnt ;and uncann1- Hc c:allcd lho!e dream• thr "touchston of our characters·· Edward totd the 68 snd tc:\ that Chasal 1 "world o~aut of conf(m. of lovt." .. Act cleaned up N '\HVll LE - ( ountl") '1ng- C'r and songwntrr Jany Pay- cbttk, who\<.' up·and-down caret"r has ranged Imm pn,on '>lints and drug abu~ 10 hit records an~I awards ~}\he's no~ read} tor a more ~table hf<' :ind "I don't even dnn~ beer an)mnrr · Paycheck, 1n Na,hv1lk to promote h1or. new "ngk. "Old V1ohn," ~1d ht''\ ticiun a new ht:\hh proaram and " hfi1na wc-1ght~ and (':t(lni "the naht fooch" Hr "•' rt"lea\Ct1 IA't month on ap~al lrum ,10 :l\'311lt 1on\1~· t1on Hope'•wtna• l O~ •\~C.El F$ -8 b ff pe ~a!t tt«ntl) m de an Hononu') Nev 1 ;\v1ator h' ttuu·, ot tht Nev} John f l.e mAn 1r in ctrtmon1c a1 ~n._.(,,111 Fla Lehman p1nnrd the gnlden ~I~ on Hope in front"' IOJIOO na' il and mannc ~noel at the Pens;icala C1v1c Audttonum ., Otange Coas1 DAILY PILOT/Th North-South vulneri.blt• South cll'l\IS NORTH •&•2 ~A 94 0 K. J 10 IS +762 WEST ~A.ST ., •QJ8 Q Q J 10 7 Q K 8 ~ 3 2 9742 0 83 •A8ft3 "+Q.llO SOUTH +AK. 10 7 ~ .$ ? tJ 0 A Q 0 +Kt i Tht> bidding. South West I+ PaH :t • Pus Paa• Pua North Ea"' I NT ;Paa. 4 + Pa 'I Op.•n111g lead QuN>n 111 "'-o ma1t1•r how ra-.:,. ~··ur ton I ra1·t <1P1•m'I, tuk'' unw 1111t 111 con •lldf'r thf' tw'it hn•· Al ruhbn bndl(e or in tf>am CQmfwt1t 1on your fir'lt duty l'i to makf' )'our contra('!, 11H•rtr11 k" can wall I.Rt ., 'lllppo'>t' you n•ad1 four ... padP'4 110 thi> au1·tuin ... t111wn Your Jump rebid in yournwn '1111 wa.. .. in· \ 1tat10nal, and parttwr·~ art' Jpng a11c1 thr1·1• trump" wert• mort' than tw n1.'t'd1•d to nu~ t 11 l(amv At fir~t i(lann• 1t m11(ht 'Sf'em that v1111 11t•ed t'llhE'r a 2-:l trump break, ur t lif' ctte of dubs uns1de, or t.h.e pla)'t'r with three diamond" to havf' the long trump to makf' your I 11nt rat t Ir VOii lookt-d no further mt11 the matter you would proba- bly be defeated You would wm th~ np<'nm11. lead .md bang out your t111th trumps. When Ea."lt turnt:d up with a trump tnrk, you would have t11 def 1de whether to play on d\a· monds or l ros!>J to dummy to h•ad a 1 luh toward your king Wht('hever \ &RY CHARLES GoR£N . OMAR SHARIF ltn<• yuu dto!Se, you would doonwd w cltfnl b~cause the wen• not ~11111ln~ that day ' flowev~r. 1t you want t(J rely on your ~kill rathf'r than the detti , you could insure> your contract. Wm the a< e of ht>arts and lead a trump If f:a. .. t follow with UM! 1•1ght or ninf', "imply ("UV~r w tit lb«! '""· Wc.,t might jtN that trtck. but yu11 l'.an \,\ 10 any return, dr trutnp'S and then d15eard a club on thf' tabll'':'I tong dtamortd. You would lo~· 1lf "'°'ton trump and l WO dutJs If Ea.'it prudut•f' an honor Of\ your trump lead, win and er to dummy wtth a diamond to Ind an- other trump. Again, you Intend t'ovenn~ whatever card Ea.<5t pro- duc.;f"', And your tt'Chnique is re- warded. As the cards lie, you pick up th~ trump u1t without I~~ a tnck, so &hat aftttr you dta<:ard a duh on th~ fourth diamond and Ind rnwartt tKf" kang. you I~ t\1Jo dub trick"' ~"<"au~ We!'lt has tl act•, hut no mure. For Information about bar Gottn'11 new aewalf'lLer for bridle playere, wrilf' GO Bridge ~uer, ,,0. Box 4.fU, Or- lando, Fla. 32802 ... .C21. el? : €~ ~j. • 9 i hi ! >~; "°" 4 c.lr« ,..... ...... ........., } ~• cc,n•1~ m,. "N>f"t9'' 1~ ._,..,.0--_,._~ wlf" Tt"li • j eli ~:t & -~ ::it •• 9 , .. -g L t .. ' : TODAY'S CR-OSSWORD PUZZLE ACR099 t Diagonal 6 s:iaa11ty 10 Appendages 14 Mall drink 15 Agonize 16 Single 17 Semblance 18 Rain hard 19 Rend 20 Damaged n Broadcast 24 Artlcle 26 01scloses 27 -on 10 underslood 3 1 Baby-tend .32 Knocked for 33 RespUes 35 Bantfs river :l8 K1ase!. 39 Mentions 40 11eckle 4 1 Ant1gon1sJ 42 Destined 43 Alcohol 44 Needle11sh 45 Paid back 47 Sol@mn vehicle$ f\1 N Y Cltv 2 14 t7 20 3 27 28 29 32 38 52 58 62 65 52 N•med 54 Disappear 58 Al the peak 59 Narreuve 61 Peep Show 62 Weathercock 63 Farm b\Jlldtng 64 Lack of accent 65 German rMtr 66 Hallla 67 1mpar1s DOWN 1 Mflager 2 Monk 3 food thickener 4 Asian nctt111ei1 5 High hmb~ 6 Stearm SOYrCt' 7 Maple Qflnus 8 Comtort 9 Uproa s 10 Little towl)r t I Bryant or G•llelle 12 Mallet 13 Luges 2 1 Re1rea1 23 Shfllf!P ge11u~ 25 EllCf'llence 27 Young •mmal 28 Collechon 29 Shark JO Dis1nchn~ 34 Pauover teast 35 Shuttlecoo 36 ln$lrument . 37 Junction 39 LB>' 40 EngMde• 42 Endurino 43 0"41 or two 44 Complainer 46 Coxcomb 47 Hurl 48 tnwarC1 49 In harmon'r 50 Color 53 Fl11vor hert> 55 Do hou,eworl.. ">6 Launch 57 Loud 8hOYI!. 60 Sm1111 hOIJSt" 11 ,~ 13 IM Orange Coest DAILY PILOT/ ThUreday, June 5, 1988 THE PAMIJ,Y CIRCUS by Bil Keane BIG GEORGE by Virgil Partch (VIP) 'I don't like yawning that long." "They're probably married." • , '-... J MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson Eight hamburger patties are missing and you refuse to eat your dinner .. that's all the evidence I needl" PEANUTS E>(CUSE~ • DENNIS THE MENACE by Hank Ketch~m "(""~ (0 5 l j • ANt> NO TWO FLAKES ARE ALIK~." by Charles M. Schulz -----------. IF THERE ARE Au;:eAO!f 700, 000 ATTORNEVS IN T~IS COUNTf<I( W~Y DO WE NEED YOU 1 ATTORNEVS l-IATE QUESliONS LIKE. T~AT ~ >J ' BLOOM COUNTY u .S. ACRES by Jim Davis I WOHPER WHAT 1 6UOO&..P PO MNM.. W£ COUU' TAKE. THEM TD WrTH TH~ c.oAHc.oe~ 1 IT !t£M6 TM£. ST~t ANP Gf:T A RfFONO A eHM\£ TO WM'Tf THfM FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE by Lynn Johnston by Jeff MacNally ---,( by Harold Le Doux L~ JUDGE PARKER l"lrn:6'Fil~~~ GARFIELD TUMBLEWEEDS by Tom K. Ryan DRABBLE by Kevin Fagan ROSE IS ROSE by Pat Brady ~NESBURY r-rt (C)7He 8tA'IU5. \ by Tom Batluk by Gary Trudeau I . Orange Cout OAILV PILOTl'n1ureo.y, JUM 6.1911 M COMPL Payingc;ittention to customers breedssuecess I TomPeten Peters turns up heat, shares passion - for excellence with KOCE supporters- · BJ ROBERT HYNDMAN °' ... ...., ......... To be suoceuf\al, business owners should become obsessed with their customers and the employCCj who aut mOSt cUr!aly • wtm thos,e-co~ tomera, says the author of best·sellina business books. "Create a customer-obleucd com pan~ The only ru.aoo you're tn bus1.0ess is to serve your customers, .. said Tom Peters. co-author of .. In Search of Exocllencc" and" A Pw1on for Exocllenoe." Companies should find ways to measure customer satisfaction and put improvements into action am- mediately;Afeten told a luncheon crowd of~ gathered Monday at the Irvine Marrion Hotel to raise funds for public TV station KOCE. According to busincs~ studies, about 68 . percent of those who stopped patronazmaa pan1cular busi- ness dad so because of the d.JslntcTcst or andtfTcrcncc shown them by the dealers. Petcn wd. In tddtbOn, only one out of each 16 people who have problems wt~a company's product or service bott\er to complain about it More than 90~ percent of\ those non~mplainers, however. never come back and they tend to tell o!Wio not to do busancss wrth that fimf e1ther Peters saad. But 1f businesses would take the time to ensure that their customers were '8t1 ftcd, they could profit immensely. "We find that 82 to 95 percent of those whose complatnts arc resolved do come back," Peters said. ·• ~­ member that the cost of acquiring a new customer ts five umes higher .. than hold.in& current one•." Ciona eumples .u dJvene as a C•dtllac dealcnhap in Texas and a IJ"OCICTY JlOrc an Conncctacut.. Peten said prov1d1n1 biah qualuy and service is much mo~ 1mponant to a bus1nea'1 succeis that the pncc of 1lS aoods and service,, should be reduced, he •ld. conuo\JlllY mGO.,.Le. The Japanese auto induury, wtiicb "luc;t.ion as the eoemy;• he Peters cited often for ats suece&SfuJ d quoted a bus\neucxocutive Wbo orpnizationa.. have oM supervisor onoe Jd. .. We occd to make our for every 200 workcn and arc much mi1"1.cs las&cr." mo~ cfr~J!tlY run than tbeu Au.ouamptc, Pe1.etltald Lhe O'f'J countcrperu_ an the United Statts of tben-fotd cbairman Lee l&CIOCCI wbett there 11 a UpervllOr for 11:vtty 'llllbeD k wanted \be OC'troit auU>-"'Marilee share 1s dnvtn nluch more by quahty-xrv1cc-annov1tson th.an by price-cost-~le," he said. ·~ 1n ~~ity have• far more potent effect on market sh.are than price." 1 O ~":fv~J:S-tJlat delnct from hiah . ma~ company to build a co quaJrty eooda and ten'tca abo vmi · "1houtd iJecetinnuate~ Pt ttts aid.: M1:enm:inl;i!ir1'icsi:ltm:tt1bct'C::oa:x---1 Pcttn also recommended that buJlne owners emphasi1c thoa.t employees who deaJ most directly wttb tbccustomen. Manq,erund the obstacles lbcy create for workers "'Stamp out memos. Scad none Rnpood to none. Send bade all memos seot to you with a 'Not Read' seal," be said. ·•Rid younelf - immediately -or obVlOUS insults 'uch as nccutJvc partina spaces·· Peters i.lso advaacd oompan1es lo ~ .,, 6'1> 'h ~ ~ ~ '4 .... + ~v, t ~ Name L.Mt Cl'lg l Clr~tan ,,_ -4\lt , Ca<dloolrn T Ull ~ -I J NIMlneSv ,,~, 111\alm ~' Ind II !:itt\V~~A 9'aacsna8a1 1 l.omnMto wt COMP RS Amuican Moclela XT & AT Fully IBM Compatibl. • 6'0K • DUAL 360K oesc Dlt!VES •CLOCK • SEllAL. 'ARAU£l. GA.Ml. PatTS • GAAl"HICS • MONITC>lt •MS DOS 2.1 Jo.I. w ., •• ••• Play the Smart Tenant Game Fol/cMI the road to University Tower and discover you won't have to PIJ.ll for a lot of th1'1gs m this new. flfst-class office b111fdmg • A prtme Irv/no locatton without ma congosNon ol the central bus1n6" al9a. only minutes from John wayno Airport • Easy lrtHJWay access • Froe part.;mg for ronanrs and guests • A nOlU'by parlt. /Of !O'}ging or rQ/axing • R staurants and Vlopp;ng at 'fOUI doorstep tn The Market· plllC . an alrffcty..opell ret1Jll, mJtaurant and onrorta1nment CM tor • Vl6Ws ol snow-capped mountams or green rollmg hills from the only olttce tower 1n University Town Center. Orange County's fK'WfJSt small town:· whteh lnclu®s a vanery ol new housing • Locatod acfOS.S from UC IMmJ, 1n mn Airport Morrc;UCI Tnsngle O,,.n Summer 1988 • A~d Davison & Fergu$0n LNSlnQ Offloe tn n.. Mat1etpla<» 4249 Qunpus Drive, Surla 152 /r'Mf) eer;'lomle 02ne 1Y4'854..Z.CS EJtC/r.JSNe Leewig ~· ''"' room & eo Tom Acid m, 8ob Stil1wogon -. • ~ J • I& • ... 1) .. • .. ~ ... ~i.: .. IC l) • 1'1 I ,,, ... &1 1 t Jg;: • ?? •• • 77 • r, .. ll •• ·' . ..: l:fl\i IMIJMHI WMJilf fai · . TIIUllSllY'I CLOSI I PllOll 011• " ~-· l~•· ,,.. Market stages late rally Nf w 'ORK ( ..\P) -Blue-chip ISSUCS set the pace a' the stock markt•1 st.tgcd a la te rall> Thur\da} Interest rates ha \t~ been on the nsc lately a\ l'\ 1dcm:e has accumulated that economic growth rnighl be ~peeding up The \tock markct'o, re'>pon..e w tar has been amhi ... alent with trader\ altemauvcl} showtng ~oncern about the interest-rate nsc and some optimism ahout prosp«ts for corporate tamm~ Thur\day. open-market mtcrcst rates were mixed -<iteady to down i.ltghtl> m the markets for rrea'luf) bills and note., but a hit higher on somt long-term go ... emment bondc; In ... estor'> 1n both markC'tS .ire expected to.~e their ne\t cue from the gmcmmcnt's repon Fri ~ on the cmplo}ment s11ua11on tor Ma} Analys" eJtpect the c1 ... 1han unemployment rate to sho~ no great change from 7 I pcrtent 1t'i rt'.'admg for Apnl WHAT AMEX DID WHAT NYSE Om NEW YORK (AP) Jun S NEW YORK (API Jun 5 Prev Prev Todeh dam Tod.v ·:~ Acsvanced ' Adv~nced ml Oecllned ~ ft} ¥atned ¥nchenQed ncNin!Md 0181 iUUH 1 el lf;ue' New 11'9M i~ 39 Newll Ill ~ New IOWl 9 New 10w1 : AMEX LEADERS NEW YORK (AP) -Sale\, 4 pm TllurMSav price and net cnenge 01 ll'le 10 f'iEW YORI( (AP) -Sa , Om Tllurld•v orlce tnd net che"99 ~ the IS moll ac.live New York Stoek xcnenoe 1ssue1 trading na llona Iv •• m o s t acllve American Stock Excnanoe onuel. tradi ng na llonall't' at more lllan $1 Name Horn Har LorlmarTel n more lllen Sl ~~~Eltc ~e>erry CP ~l!::kJs EComm O"'-Plrl AT nd otal~ell g F1A us1Pr n W11111Lab8 AM Intl ~lRoeb monlnc LL Corp Al'.TlerT&T RCA (;rotle< -. 8ev1rlvEnt IBM -• AmExi:>reu AvntllllC AMR Ct>"P PenllECp Occl!Mnl Pet , Colo QuoTES -----o=--=- METALS QuoTES - --- NEW YORI< IAPI -~PO' nonlt«OI• ..._.., Pf• M n,,,,90ey ....... lftllnl !>4 "6 G«111 I* POuN1 NY Come• "101 .._,,. clottd WtO C....-r · ~ 99 <*Ill I pound U 8 cleatlnel-1 ~ 81 15 C«llt I* pound. NY Come• tpol MOnth ·clOMd We<! ~ 19'~ 2 I C19111t t P<l'tnd ZIN • 35 c.ntt • poun<1 ~tel f1ft S3 4570 ,..,.. ... W_.. COf'l>PO"'I• l)t1Qe per lb I .._ U 180 '*~Hendy & M.,m.,, .,_ $S 1541 per l•O• ounce NY eom.• '°"' "'°""' clOMd Wtcl ,,..,_, $270 00 128!> 00 P'W 11Pb 11 ... -~0<• ,._._ S. 12 SO M 14 00 d-< "*'""'"' oroy Ouncol NY famous 1a b<ils ... ---------'-''-"~ ...... ----::......:...-----------· II Dow JoNES AvERAGES State crowns on line SeveraTarea prep ' standouts in hunt for track titles---.___,..--'l By ROGER CARLSON °'..,.,..,,...,.,,,, NORWALK -It began with dual m~ts and invitationafs. developed mto league finals and CIF cbam- p1onsh1ps, and now for the cute of Oranae Coast area track and field athletes, concludes with the state finals, here at Cerritos Collqe. for Esl.aoCl& High's Eric Dom and Doua Miller, Edison H1gh's Kaleaph C.arter and Mike Smyser and Corona del Mar's Mike Bain, it's the final hurdle. And, for Newport Harbor's Magic Henson, Ocean View's ~bbie Orr, Marina's LIS.a Cakman and Edison's Nicole R1tchot, the same holds true. Twenty-seven from every comer of the state 1n each event meet Fnday, with one third of \he field qualifying for the finals on Saturday. Heat Wlnners and the top su other marks qualify for the finals in running events, with the 3,200 already seeded into the finals. The discus goes at 11 a.m. (Jirls) and I p.m. (boys) with the balance of field events at 4 and 7. The first runruna cvenl is at S. Except for Henson in the 800 and> 1.600 meters, and Ritchot in the 800, it's all wrapped up in the field events. Dom, a rwo-time CIF 3-A cham- pion m the long Jump, has a best of (Pleue eee 8TA TE/C2) ...., .......... _, ................ ltdi8oD B1'Jl '• K.aleapb Carter la at the top of the bea•e wben lt coma to California'• hJCb echool •bot-patten. Be wtll compete in tbe state track and field cbamplon.abipe ht.day. * ly Plat M•rtln• Navr•tllova geta acare, galna French Open flnlll9. C2. h Cincinnati'• Tom Browning throw• one-hitter over Cube. Cl. -Hot shot: Carter wa:r1nS ·UP for state Edison· s sophomore Shot-puttersports - t opquaUfytngllirow- By 'OSEPB DUDEVOIR .,.., ... C:..u J ful His first name me'ans .. successor" in Eaypttan. and K.aleaph Carter ll hoptn& there's somethint m a name this weekend at Cemtos CoUcae That's where the Edison Htah sophomore shot-putter will try to succeed to the state title wbcn he competes m the California track and field meet Fnday and Saturday. .. , used to hate my name," says Carter. "But I guess now it has a mce twist I would hke to tee that name come true at the state meet." It very well could. since Carter is the No. I thrower in the state after his miahty heave of61-1 I in the Masten Meet a week ago. So uJang for a wm 1sn 't out of the question. The only improbable pan 1s th.at Carter is but a sophomore. .. It's a surprise to be 1n the state meet and be onll a sophomore, .. says Carter ... 1 d1dn t plan on mak.ina it untJI my senior year. I can•t beueve I have a chance to WlO 1t already." His coach, Tony Ciarelli, says a lot of people can't believe bow good Carter is. .. Nobody could imagine -Katcaph beina this sood already," be ·says. "But he IS a &ood, intclliaent. hard- worbng lad with a lot o( natural athletic ability. "If be applied himself, he could excel at almost any event" Carter did enter some other events for Edison dunna the dual meet season. And be came far from cmbanassina him.elf. He posted times of S 1.6 m the. 400 and 15.8 m the 110 hiah hurdles. Carter also ran on the Chargers' 400 and mile relay teams. While play1n1 tailback for the Edison football tcarn. Caner ran the 40-yard dash in 4.6 Amon& other th1np. be scored 13 touchdowns as a sophomore starter for the Characn' CTF Big Five co-cbampionshtp team. Another remark.able thin& about CMtcr 1s that he isn't your typical shot-putter as far as physical at- tnbuies 10 He is but 6-.o and 190 pounds, but he is dynamite Kroll c.be n~ He is so explMive," tayt CiartlJL ··That's has atrcn&th. .. . a areat dccathJcte, •• be adds. .. we·u slar1 addtna some 1ump,u:ia C\lenU to his schedule next year. ' The sooner the bttter (or carter. - who says he sees bit Rel dlcam just two years away. "My ultimate &oal and dream as to be in the J 9d Ofympics. .. _ &)'t Caner "I would love to be lD the decathlon. bu( so would a lot of other people. But l'U a:ive it a &hot." Gem ng back to the hot, Ciattlli says C.arter 1s ranked no less than No . 9 in the nation, accordina to Track and Field News. , Even tholJ&h he"ll ao in u tbe top seed, Caner feels the chue for the state tttle i wide open. He abo feels · nc'U h.ave one advantqt aoina in. "The pressure will be on tbo.e other guys, cspcClAUy the laUon. .. he says. "l know I have chaooe to come back two more times. Tbis i$ it !or the seruon rm Soina in with a very rcl.au.d attitude." • Speakina of seniors. Mike Sm)'IC:t. Carter's cider teammate. will join him in the Stile meet by virtue o( a throw of Sl-3"2 t the M.uk:rl. wbicb was a:ood cnou&b for founh. · .. I"m ovct)O)ed for Mite ... •YI Catu:r. .. Him bein& there is the ruu!t of four ycan of v~ ~won.: He rally 4ncne5 this. . -. . · Carter han •t made lt t.:'O:n bis own bard work. Other th.at have bro&.l&ht him so far and*> early in his career arc his QUi.ck:ness and (Pl--... CAln'lm/C2) Niekro's no-hit bid thwarted It's the 'Coast World Series' Pettis' eighth-inning double lone Angel hit in 11-0Yankeewin By JOSEPH DUDEVOIR o.llr .... C..u J •ul Whtie Joe N1ckro's knuckleball danced hlle a butterfly, Dave Win- field's bat stung hke a bee. and the Yankees' pitcher nearly dtd a two- step into baseball annals. The We.dncsday night crowd of 39,676 at Anaheim Stadium saw Nickro flirt Wlth history and the Yankees pound out a 11-0 win to salvage the third and last game of the scncs after the Angels had won the first two Angel Manager ~ne Mauch shruged off the loss. ,., ............ J oe Nleluo pitched a one- hltter WedDe9day DlCbt. to throw a no-hitter . 7 a rea products competing in colle e championsh ips By CRAIG SHEFF .,..,,......,.. .... Dave Rohde and Mark Senne have taken different roads to the College WoFld Sencs. Rohde And Senne are two maJor reasons why the Univcn1ty of Arizona's baseball team has won its fmt twopmcs in the College World Series 10 Omaha. Neb. Both skipped around their first two years m collqc. Rohde. an infielder, is a Corona dcl Mar Hiah product who played at Cuesta CoUcae his freshman season, then swttcbed to Saddlcback for his second year. He did so well for the Gauchos, Anzona pve him a scholarship. After overcoming a back injury a year ago, Rhode has been an instrumental force for the Wildcats this season Senne played biab school bell at tiny Orange Lutheran and spent his first year of coUq e at C.al Lutheran. Sm~ C.al Lutheran used Senne as a pitcher, he did not come to bat one time. So Senne moved on to Orange Coast Collep:wbercbc really blossomed. He batted 1n the No. 3 s~t for Coach Mik.c Mayne's Pirates durin& the S41C&SOn, carmna All-South Coast Conference honon. He also earned a scholar- ship to Arizona . This pest season Senne led the Pacific-I 0 m RBI (79). He slugged 13 home runs and hit around the .390 mark, aaimna AU-Paafic-10 ho non. .. He's the best undrafted player 1n the country," said OCC Coach Mike Mayne pnor to this week's m"or leape draft. "He can really Oy, and he's aota great arm. It's a Joke that he's never been drafted before. He can do tt all. He's had two areat years in the Pac-JO ... Rohde and Senne arc among a aroup of -seven area products playina m the Collqe World Series this week. The othcn include Loyola-Marymount's Mark Stomp.Eric Reinholtz, Jcff Goctuch and Fred Tuttle, all of whom played for Oranae Coast College in 1984-85. aJona with ex-Mater Dci standout Bobby Dc.Jardm. Stomp, a left-hander, 1s one ofloyola·s top pitchers. A graduate of Mater Oct, Stomp won 14 games m helping Loyola to the Western Colleaiate AlhlctJt' Confcrmce Litle and t.bc West.cm RClional championship. Reinholtz posted a 7-0 record durina the reaular season and alona with Tuttle~ at Ocean View. Goettsch, the los~· pitcher in a sett.ck to Anzona Monday n t. has a 9-S record. A Costa Mesa High pr uct, Goetl5Ch h&$ been Loyola's stopper out of the bullpen. De.Jardin. a freshman. ls Loyola's .econd baseman. . Two other county pcoducu include Loyola senior outfielder Billy Bean. who prepped al Santa Ana H1ah, and Aro.om sophomore outfielder Dave Shcnnet. from Cypress ffi&b. Bean bas been a four-year staneT. Sbcrmct was the hero Friday for Anzoita in the openioa pmc of the CWS with a dramatic inch bit. two-run homer that came witntwo outs in c last of the mnth, Jivma the Wildcats an 8-7 win over Mame. It's been a Cipderella story for Anzona thus far. Jerry K.in'd.alr1 Wilde.au bad to win lhcir ftnaJ three pmcs of the 1C110n (aptnst Arizona State) JUst to pm a tic with Stanford for second pl~ in the Pac-10 Southern Divmon. That earned them a berth m the Central ReaionaJ. wh1ch the> won in 1m- press1vc fashion . TonlglJt'• game None scheduled. FRIDA Y'S GAME An1el1 (McCaskill 4-3) Cleveland (Schrom 3-2). Time: 4.35 p. m "It wasn't meant to be." said N1ckro. "It would have been nice, and I was down a little after the hit, but it's sull nice to get the Wln for the club." a 1 On the pitch Pettis hit, Niekro said: ..It was a down-and-in knucklcr, not a bad pitch. I can't second guess myself, even though they (the Angels) were probably lookmg for knucklcballs. Game halted; Loyola trails Dodgers glad to come home TV Channel S Radio KMPC (710) "If it's not one N1ckro. it's another." rcfenng to Joe's brother Phil. who has won more acclaim (and games) by passmg the 300-wtn mark. "That's my pitch and that's what I was going to go with 1t." Cy Youna is the oldest player to throw a no-hitter ( 41 years, three months). tossing his m 1908. N1ekro 1s 41 years and seven months old OMAHA, Neb. (AP) -Oklahoma State bas played only 21h games 1n eight days at the College WorldScnes, and Coach Gary Ward doesn't like 1t. Phil even has a no-hitter. He threw one apinst San Di($O m 1973. Joe (who has 210 wins) tned to match his brother in that dcpanment but came up a bit short Niekro went eight innings and threw 134 pitches before turning the mound over to Al Holland, who retired the Angels m order. "We nad fun for a while." said Yankee catcher Ron Hassey "We went wtlh mostly knucklcrs because we didn't want to get be.at Wl\h anything but our best pitch. "I've never been on death row, but I think playma baseball m Omaha may be the closest thma to it." Ward said. "It's painfµI to sit around and not play." The Cowboys did more sitting Wednesday night. Their game against Loyola-Marymount was halted be- cause of ram With Oklahoma State leadina 7-4 N1ckro (6-3) pitched 7211 innm~ of no-hit ball before Gary Pettis hned a 2-1 knuckleball down the naht field hne for a double N1ekro settled for the one-hitter Pettis was h1tt1ngonly .235 when he ruinrd N1ekro's bid to become the oldest patcher tn maJOr league history "I'm a htllcd1sappo1nted to get that close. but it was good while it lasted." The Cowboys had scored seven runs in the fourth inning and were still bettana when the pmc was suspended until today. The loser will be eliminated from the tournament. (Pleue eee AJfGEL8/C3) (Pleue ... LOYOLA/CS Hanan: He weighted his turn His newly-acquired strength pays off on volleyball court By ROGER CARLSON Ot ella o.llr Na! Ital! If you've ever had that fceltng of discouragement because you're not a starter.don't be d11maycd. Dan Hanan knows the fcclinf. _ Hanan is the CIF 4-A volleyball Player of the Year and he's headed to Stanford on a acholarsh1p after lcadina Edison Ht&h to a 35-5 record in two ycan. includln& beck· to-back unbeaten Sunset League IC&!Ons. But u a nnhman he sat on the bench most of the lime, became a starter on the junior vamty as a ~phomo~ and earned aU-lcquc .as a junior before bloswmina into nauonal prominence.this past year. • He will lead the North All ws apinst the South Fnday ni&ht at Newport Harbor Htah in the Ora'l'l1c : County AO-Star.pmc. : The All-Star 11rts play at 6:30, tollowrd by the boys at : 8. : HaNin'\ expcncnce as a non-,tarter went a.s dttp as • three month• So when he spent bts tenior ye.tr on the • bench with the be ketball team. but he'll admit 1t didn't rt•llY bother htm that much becau a ho puts 1t, "I knew I wa behmd Ooua Katona and not a lot would t accomph htd hut I wa n•t about to quit " for Hnnnn the transformation fmm .. ~ood" as a JUntorto MVPstatusasa scnaorcan be wrapped uptnJust two words We1&ht trairuna. It bcpn under junior vanity b ... kctbaJI coach Jeff Bishop, who has moved on to become the bead coach at Santa Ana Valley. "The WCl~t rrosram has definitely done it for me, .. said Hanan. 'Al summer Ion,. and com1na in af\er basketball. I went into volleyt.11 a lot more confident. I knew l could do mote thi~1 bit harder, block stronser." At 6-6. 185 pound nanan'a improvement is as dramauc I'\ his physical stature. He entered Ed1son as a 6--0 freshman with no bac~und in volleyball. • After basketball (u a freshman) I didn•t have 1Dythin1 to do," rccallJ Hanan. "So I tried out. I bardl~ pla)ed at all. bct'aUJe I wu playina behind a aophomore. • Obviously 1t didn't hold him back. and after bccomina heaV11y mv~lved in lbe wciaht prosram, with emphasis on the lcp, 1t has all come toaether.- ''Hc's &Otten stronger and scW an>wins." said hi'I t'oach, Dan Olenn, who in two ycan has yet to lose a Sunset Leaaue match. "He started b1tun1 harder and jumping biahef." That, Ilona with the bl ic mentality or a 4. l p itudcnt, hu tumed Hanan into the complete pia}'Cf. ''He's real ratt," con tin Olenn ... He's the most coachable kid I've ever been around Ke pie up aod 1 mattcno...abtoapplytbi uway. tto .,oct about knowtr\I what the other m d •nd uus!ina 1mmrd1ately to what they do. H fit 1n at ta.Diord (Pl ... &DD0Jre/C2) From AP dlspatclaet The Dodgen bc&in a sevcn-pme homestand tontlht against Houston and Manager iommy Luotda is hoping his club can foraet about Wednesday's nightmare loss to Ph1la- dclph1a. ~Tbcnoorncomm•tt.edfiveerrors to help the h1llies to an 8-7 wtn. Aggressive bascrunnina by the Phillies and the errors should have been enough for an easy win, but the Dodgers almost look the pmc back. ··1 think I sa1d about four times that this isn't goi ng to be easy," Pb1lhes Manager John Felske wd. But we held on. and that's the big thing." The Philhes completrd their mo'\t successful home stand sin~ 1977. with c1gh1 wms in nine pmes. In Houston (Hernandez 0-0) DodJen (Honeycutt ]-'' Time 7 35 TV None Radio: KABC (790) Friday's pme· Houston Roen1ckc on half of a double steal. The Dodger errors also produced four unearned runs for Philadelphia. at Los A.ngelcs now has com mittcd 6 7 errors th1'i !Cason. tops in the maJor league~ "We·~ goma to do evcrythin& we can when we put men on base.·· said at Felske "h helps when you can put pressure on the other team •· The Ph1lltes broke a 1-1 tie an the third inning with four runs. aided b} Glenn Wilson's two-run single Wlth 1911 they won e1a,ht 1n a row. The th(' bast's loadrd and throwing errors Dodgers ended thetr road tnp wtth b} Dave A.nderson and Manano two wms 1n nine pme\, dropping . Duncan their road record to 7-19 for this "You can't &J\e run'> a"'a~ hke Dodgers. 7:35 p.m ~son that.• said Dodge~ Manager Tom .\!though outhit 15-7 b} the La~rda of his team's loose pla) Dodgers. the Ph1lhes stoic four bases. "\ ou can't give four and five outs an mcludmg home plate bv Ron mnm&" \1 \ I Purcell jockeyed into position for a record victory Pint-siled q'1&rterhoN Jockey Tami Purcell will be lhe first wo1Un rider or driver in history to win a stakes event at Los Alamitos Race Courv if ihe capturts the $484,000 Kmdrra,arten 'iaturday The pre,tig1ous Grade: I. 3SO-yard spnnt 1s the ncbcst event on lht" calendar for two-year-old~. E&J,ht qu_alifymgracesfor1he K~derpiJen we~ held May 27. "'Ith 1 total of 62 horse, vying to be one of the top I 0 finalists Desp1tr ndang with the handicap of )..~o broken \~m a rcc.cnt tnumn&.nushap, PurccftP._ilot~ ttit._ cisty anlY colt S1r1Ic A Way to a ume on 1 fi. tymg three ways for the fifih fastest timr of the niitlt She also 'qualified two mounts. Dashm Dear and C.av1 Tron, for the J(jnd~rgarten Con~olation to be held the same niiht ..:? The sprang-summer Los Al meet is ~he fi~t time Purcell is stauonNi al a pun-mutuel track. Desp1tr a prom1s1n& record. he found 1t difficuh to break an to the big-time circuns. Tex.as tramers James and Donna McArthur art responsible for bnnaina Purcell to California. But McAnhur admit!> even he wasn't paying much attenuon to Purcell in J exas. "My wife told me to 'watch th1i. gHl nde' for a whole year," he said. "She kept telling me. w finally I got to watchm' her ride at the All American futunty Trials in New Mexico She won the first con50lat1on so back in Tuu J lel her nde and she won ra(:es I decided she could nde with 'rm here so I gave her a shot and she took it." Quote of the day Wtutey Heno1, St Louis Cardinals man~ aeer. whose team IS Last Jn the Nauonal League ID hlls, runs. un-basc percentage. home runs and total bas.cs ... What we could rcany use 1s a couple of shutouts But I don't know 1f that would be good enou " Services s et for driver Tolan LO!) ANGEL £.'i -funeral serv11:es Ill ·for former race c.tr dn .. er Johnnie Tolan are scheduled fnda\ in his nauve Denver a family ~pokesman ~1d Wednesday Tolan. considered one of the nation's best m 1dgel car racers in th<." I CJ40s and early 1950s, died of cam.er Monda) a-t S(luth Ba} Ho<ip1tal in Redondo Beach Tolan '>'as 68 Tolan. whu m recent years made his home in Gardena. was tht> 1946 and 1947 Rocky Mount.am midget car champion and wao; the 1952 AAA natmnal midget champ ..\lthou&}l m1dge11.ar ra<:mg was his forte. ht.• tlrow three times m the Ind\ 500 The funeral s..·n Ile-. will he held m Den' er Tolan 1o; surv1\Cd b\ his w1du'-'. Aleen and two brotherc; · Epsom Derby to Shahrastanl EPSOM l ngland -l.)hahra<,tan1. !?J owned by the \ga f\.han. trained by Michael Stoute and ridden by Walter Swinbum. held on over the final half furlong to wrn the 207th running of the Epsom Dcrb} Wednesday. Shahra'ltant collected the SJCi8,890 first pme for winning the I 1•1-m1le Engh,h cla'l'ilC Favored Dancing Brave. owned b) ~ud1 .\rab1an Pnncc Khalid Abdulla. trained b> Gu} Harwood and ndden bv Grev1lle Starkev. was !>«ond Mas'hkour, owned ·b}' Omam Pnnce Ahmed Salman. trained by Henf) ( cc1I and ndden b} last >Car's Epsom Derb) winning Jockey. Amencan <itevc Cauthen. was third Angela algn three draft pleb Tbe An&cls have 1nnou1~c:d lhc • 11a.ni~ of three ofthe1r 2S selecuon\ in lhii \\ttk's free -aent dB.ft. incluJ1na first · round picks~ Stc\ens and 1 crence Carr Stevens, 18, hit .4U for Lawttn~ (Kan.) H1ah School with four home runs and IS runs-batted·m. ('arr, an I S.ycar-<>ld from Sali bury. Md., h1l •39 for lknneU Hi.&h with eight homersand JO R Bl and wa~ uccessful Ill all 23 of his stolen ba!>C attempts. Switch·hillinJ outflcldcr C>.md Gnllonc, 18. was the OthCTSAyed Sl&ned The els also announced that that have m:111lcd natu-hand pitcher Urbano Lugo from Midland of the Texas Leaaue. Giant& lose Clark, Gladden ' MONTREAL. -A~ a re41uh of • coll.Wons, lhe San Francisco Giants will be without rookle first baseman Will Oark andu11terfidderE>a1t6taddcn-fora wtrik:- Oark injured his elbow m a colhs1on with Montreal EJCpos first baseman Andres Galarraga while a running out a grounder m Tuesday night's 7-6 San Francisco victory Gladden, more scriout'ily injured, tore a limament in his n&ht thumb when he r.in rnto teammate Jeffrey Leonard in the ninth. .. Clark's anJury looks hke it'll put him out for about 10 days," San Francisco Manager Roger C~1g said "The ~t X·rays were negative. but we'll take some more pictures when we get home " Gladden will be out four 10 \Ill weeks, Craig ~1d Paul keeps IBF champion ship . EAST RUTHERFORD. NJ. -m Jimmy Paul went to war wnb West• minster's Cubamto Perez Wednesday night and kept the International Boxing Fedcrati6n lightweight championship on a maJont> Jcc1s1on after 15 brawling rounds • The fight was marked by savage c~changes to the head C$pcc1ally 1n the 1 .. s1 ~ven rounds.# Many ID the spar~ uowd. announ~ at 3.219 in rhe 20.~scars Brendan Byrne Arena. booed the dcc1s1on but Paul St"emed to have built an edge with an excellent left Jab and -;ohd body punch mg in the first eight rounds. Judge Paul Gibb~ scored it 143-142 and Jud&e Rocky Castellani 144-141 both for Paul of Detroit. Judge Ed Levine called it 14 3 14 l NCAA s hot put mark shattered INDIANAPOLJS -R11.e·s Regina m Ca\'anaugh. three-lime na11onal collcg1ate indoor champion. shattered the meet record ID the women's shot put twice Wednesday dunng qualtfy1n~ 1n the weather-plagued N( i\A Outdoor Track and Field Champ1onsh1ps. After the start o f compct1t1on 1n the opening program of the four-day meet wa~ dcla}ed 2 hour!.. 40 minutes by heavy ram and lightning. Cavanaugh unleashed her two big throws. · The first, on her !>Ccond throw in the qualifying. tra-..eled 57 feet, n~ inches The second. on her third and final try. measured 57-61·1 Those surpassed the NC AA record of 56-8. set b) Ramona Pagel of San Diego State m 1984. Texa~EI Paso's C}nth1a Henry leaped 21-11 1-. leading the qualifiers for Fnday'-; final m the women·s long Jump. Among tho5C J01n1ng her m the final were Flonda State's Esmeralda (1ama of Brazil. UC. LA's Gail Devers. and Southc:rn ( ahforn1a's Yvette Bates and Wend} Brown Telev is io n, radio TELEVISION 6 p m -PRO BASKETBALL: Bmton at Houston. Channel 2 10 pm -WRESTLING Channel 56 RADIO 6 p.m -PRO BASKETBALL. Bo~on at Houston. KLA( (570) 7 30 p m. -BASEBALL: Houston at Dodgers, KABC (790). TOMORROW'S RESULTS TONIGHT fjJ Orange County's only stock market closing prices will be available in the Daily Pilot ot the following S1Jlected stores and news rocks. Why wait vntil tomorrow when yov can /ind ovt tonight on the str~f no later than 6:00 pm. Store owners who want the late stock editions call ... Single Copy Sales Director at 642-4321. Corona del Mar .,.,_.._, 30.49! c O<XI ~ ...., ~. Son Mlo~/San looqvin • t.o C.fttl-U..wt St- Coc.tt Hwy • Mof\l'*•i. .... Wl*fet fftft Gift i"~ >omw .. & lotk any •Or-a.·.~s. •• c-Hwy&Or~ Laguna Beach • ·'c.r4.M.ttet ·~,._,, • Orde.C .. ,~. COOlll Hwy • Vi4tfo • McCc6 Drve '"'• 292~ • 1.e....i C.....~&)rd Newport &.ach ..... ~ .. ~~,....rf-7 .1~&a...oltvd MftvtelC'"9 ,...__.."l~ ~'---• ,........ •I ~ ...., ' 20tll Sf .,..,_,.u..- 31•& .......... u $'-Of"- • ._..' l'edflc c-Hwy M..._A_( ..... h l Huntington Beach AA.,......, 0.1 ... .,.,w_ ~'~ • .• Irvine Cup slated at UC/ Twcnt)·th~ youth SOC1CCr teams from throu&bout 9ra.o,e County and as far away as Saoia Barbata will ~·ompe1e this wct-kend in the fmt Irvine CupSoccetTou_mamentat UC Irvine. Sponsored by the The Irvine Com· pany m corvunctioo with UCI and the American Youth Soccer Auociation (A YS0)1 the Divuion 311rtund boys teams will play matches Satu_rday and Sunday, with final fOundJ Sunday. June IS. OpeniJlf cettmonict for the tour- nament will bqin at 9 a.m. Saturday. reams that will bt compctinJ in the toumamcnl, with coechcs, include: D1v1$ion 3 airts: Mission Viejo (Gary Wisc); Mission V1eJO (Art -Rtehardsonr,-€cm'°"'Buena Pm k (Bob Van Herk): North Huntington Reach (Jerry Vinland); North Hunt inaton Beach (Tom "Freker); South Irvine (J.K. Blaldtk): Huntingron Beach (Vicki West); and Los Alamitos (Dennis Parker). ·•· Divis1on 3 boya: Cemtos-Buena Park (Atl Partida); Ccmtos~Buena Park (J. Janobolat): El Toro (Derek Grills); Santa Barbara (Gary Gud- nason);· Newport Beach (Gary Sm1lh); North Irvine (Darrell Wil- liams); Jlunungton Be.a.ch (George Russo). .. Division 4 boys: Mmion Viejo (Gary Barker); Central Huntmaton ' beach (Al Dages); North Huntin1ton Beach (Larry Hames): Ne\vport Beach (Tom Rimmer); Central Hunt· 1nJtOn 'Beach (Stan Janocha): Laguna N1~uel (Bob McKeman); North Irvine (Larry Hugo), Tustin (Gary Campbell). • 81' ATE TRACK MEET ••• homCl 23-<t (thttc llm~ u a jun or oo the way to the state meet In Sacramento). and eotm wllh a 22·101.4 here at the Maners meet. Milin, who won the )..A pc:>le vault champion hip w)th a 15-6 effort, q ·lied at 1:4-4 at the Masters. CanCT, a sopbomore who ju11 turned 16, n.iablished himself as the favorite in the shot put with 1 heave of 61-11 at the Masten meet, his final attempt in a scnes which saw him do ootbina but improve AmOl"ll his puts were effons of 60-01/• and 60-8 before his 61 • I I , the ~l 10 the state th.is year and among the top 10 1n the nation. Bain of Corona del Mar, a Junior. was the No. l qualifier ID the d1SCU!\, an event held at Valenoa H1a.h lut -week. Hu-~ of .of 7'f.t putt~m 144 the hunt for a medal. Smyser wenl "53-31/• to qualify for the shot put trials. pracuct but never bttte1 than S"'4 unul her S-6 qualifyin& effort 11 the Ma ters. Orr who ha a bnt of S-10 10 the h1gt\J~mp, qualified wilh a S-6 at the Mastc~ rneet. R11A:hot cap) her hiah school ca.ttcr with a berth 1n the 800, a new event for heraf\ermuchsue«uin the 1,600 a, a sophomore and junior. She went 2: 12.20 to p:t the fifth aod lai.t ~pot from the Southern Section at the: Master5. Fnday'a venue finds shot.pullers ( artcr and Smyser startina at 71 as well as Dorn in the long jump. Miller vie 1n the pole vault at •. and Bain goe$ at I 1n the discus. On' and Coleman are in the ba&h Jump at 4. and Orr con11nut1 an t&e rnple Jump at 7 Hen.on and R1tchot ao m the 800 n1 +.tt-;-and' lle11$0t111J attempt tn nie 1.600 I\ ~t for 7:S2. CARTER. • • J'rom Cl Henson, smothered ~ the dom1· nation ofWoodbridge's Shem Smith durin1 the sea.son. surfa~d. with 11 rcsoundma double 111 the 800 and explosiveness. alona with his areat 1,600 at the Masters meet. events in concentration. which Smith fatled to qualify "Probably my strongest point ia my Henson postN llfcttme bests of mental rehearsal," says Carter. -1 try 2:09.17 and 4:S3.02. o;tay1ng far off the to keep a pos1t1ve state of mind and let pace before coming on strongly in the whatrver 1s 'oang to happen in the final 200 melers. nng happen.' Orr was tbc SouthNn Seel ion's No A lot has happened over the Jut I qualifier in the triple Jump. going year. As a freshman. Carter threw 33-0¥•. She has a best of 39-4, SS-2-a fine toss even fora senior. Jn accomplished on th~ wa} 10 the ClF,,, fact, that would have g1ven him a 4-A crown. state meet berth. She is also in the high 1ump. a!I well ( 1arelh it. hoping for a 7(}.foot as Manna's Coleman, a late<omer throw from Caner by the time he's a who has gone as high as S-9 1n senior Navratilova reaches finals PAR IS (AP)· Mantna Navratilova dropped her first set of the tournament before gaining a berth rn-the French O~n women's final. beating Helena Sukova 4-6, 7-6. 6-2 today in a match-the top seed said she easily could have los1 In Saturday's ch:imp10nsh1p. th e top-seeded Navratilova will meet the wtnncr of the second semifinal betwet'n defending champion Chns Evert Lloyd and fifth-seeded Hanna Ma.ndhkova The turning pomt for Navrahlova was the second-set tiebreaker Sukova. the sixth seed from CzechoslovakJa, led 4-3 on a drop volley but couldn't manage another point, let alone the three needed to win. "I could have lost that match easily," Navra.&ilova said "I was three points away." Sukova's words almost echo.<! NavratJ!ova. "I can't be more disappointed," she said. "How close was ,., I was three potnl!I away.." In 13 previous mec11ngs. Sukova. lhc sixth seed, had beaten Navratilova JUSt once. on vass at lhe Austra~n Open an 1984. Navratilova had a nine-match wmnl'ftg ,treak against her and had encountered httle difficulty in making 1t to the semifinals m Paris for the third consecutive year and the fourth time ID the last fivo. But the world's top-ranked women's tennis player stancd sluggishly, and -JO a match that began in bright sun,hme, was delayed for a h•lf hour by rain and ended with the sun again shining bn&hlly -she seemed to than~e a' frequently as the weatller. She served three aces, but had four double fauhs. She would run down Sukova's shots and return them with Celtics wouldjust as soon wrap it up HOUSTON (AP) -The Boston C cities ~1d Wednesday th;at wmmng the NBA lltlc at the Houston Summit would be Just as good. 1f not better. than winning 11 at Boston Garden "Even though we think 1t would take an All-Star team to beat us JO Boston, it's a grtat feeling winning on thr opposJOg team's home coun." Cchics forward Larry Bird s~ud "On the road, all the fans arc agaJOst you. and it's <tat1sfying to WID ttlat way." The Celtics, leading the best-of-seven champ1onsh1p scnes 3-1, can capture lheir 16th NBA title tonight (Channel 2 at 6) w!lh another v1ctort over the Rockets at the Summit. A Houston wm would send the series back to Boston for game six and, if necessary, a seventh game "Last year. Los Angeles won on our court and we Just sat there stunned.'' said Bird. who hit a decisive threc- point basket with 2:26 lef\ that hftcd the Celtics to a 106-103 victory in Tuesday night's fourth game. "We couldn't believe that anyone could do lhat to us in Boston Garden" acrobatic clan, only to ~nd "mpler groundstrokcs long or volleys into the net. The earlr pan of the match. Navratilova said, was "frustrating. . thought I cuuld break her every hme. and I wound up losing my serve "J didn't play badly, I didn't play that well A lot of it was she was putting so much pr~ure on me She's never pla>ed me that well before She pla)ed better today Chan she did when she beat me in Australia. Sukova broke Navratilova an the fint and third games of the first set and never had much trouble 1n taking the opener At thal point. Navratilova was having trouble with everything. includmg her wardrobe. After the rain break, with an occasional drop sull spitting on the red clay of Roland Garros' cent~r coun. Navratilova began play weanng a blue sweater and a pink baseball cap, the long bill protecting her gluscs from the moisture. EDISON'S HANAN. • • F~mC l • nght away." Stanford won the recruiting war in a battle with UCLA. UC Santa Barbara and Loyola. offenng the combination of athle11cs and academics that the I fi-year- old couldn't tum down "They run a weird offense ... said Hanan. who 1s hopeful of ~ming first-hoc status as a freshman. "They use three middle blockers on the floor JUSt two rotations apart, which puts a middle block.er on the floor every other serve. and two middle blockers on the front hnc on the other serve. '"they worlc lhe1r m 1ddle blockers agamst their bettC'l' hitters. You go where the opposition's best hitters arc." Hanan is an alternate for the West a.t the Nntional Sports Festival thj5 summer, and 1t was his appearance as a candidate for 1hc 20..and-under class1ficat1on which pined him immediate collcg<.' attention. The day after UCLA saw him. he received a letter of intent in the mail from the Brutn'i. And, UCSH became very interested. but Stanford had 1he inside track. Edison didn't quite go the distance in the CIF pl4'yoffs the pa\! two yea~. exiting an the 4-A semifinals ID 1985. then in the finals th i<, year. both against Dana Hills "One of our goals was tb get to the finals.'' said Hanan. "My ~rsonal goal was obv1ou'ily 10 wm 1t. But beating Laguna Beach wa~ a big Jump and will always stand out in my mind. "We played Dana Hills better this time. it took them five Instead of four game~ (to wm)" The merge into an nil-star group ha, been an CM) 1ranm1on for Hanan "J like to work with other guys and the (ali~r of players will be a lot belier." said Hanan. "It's not hard at all (to become a team unit) Each player knows his position" Horse racing results Hter#Md fl'anr Lft Alamtm , ..... I("•"' W•l*HOAY'I ... UL TS WID"UOAY'S aUULTS (et~) (n. ti '1·•Y lllel ..,..... ... ,,_...,.I <1'111 .. n . ...,. ,....,._ .. ,,_..,.., WIC»tlSOAY'I allUL TS P'talT aACI. 6 fu<IOnOt P'lllT •Ac•. >50 nreh Cl'iN tf 4J·nMM llef°MSI ,,_.....) 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"' °"""" (""91 ~-Ut sa• <..._l •• 1: Jurnllltll (l...,,, I •• ''" o.. cc...-...1 uo ~..,_CM!ltr'°"I nm., 1J7 Tlf'N .•• TWM Hl 111 tJ IXACTA U 11 Hid U.a U IJCAC'TA t1 SI Hid 07.'9 U IXACTA 17•tl 111eict "'1 • Al!Md•'IC:ll 16 '11 A lltftelenc.t ) l6l All,,.."CI 1,6"11 • r .... a+ ............ ._ ........................... _. ______________________________ ~~~~--- ... Orange Oout DAILY PILOT/Thur9day, June 5, 1911 West Germans ANGELS FALL TO NIEKRO get ~le; Danes, Paraguay win MEXICO CITY (AP) -WeJt Oenn111y rallied 10 tic Vruau11y 1-1 . ParaauaY ed&td lraq, m1k1na its World Cup deout, 1-0, and Denmark beat Scotland, J,.0, Wednesday at the World Cup Soccer Tournament. Reds' Browning one-hits Cubs,2-0 At Nezahulleoytl, Denmarlc'a two-run lnple and acored on a Ru1er1 •. Wblte Soa Z: Rookie Prebcn Ellyaer made up for stvmll su1c1de-squeeie bunt by Lu11 Qw.n-Pete rncav,alta, Ruben Sierra and missed chances by sconna in the S9tb From Cl Winfield Pf<)V1de<I t oft"en h e fireworks with a pair of homers lO paet the l~hit New York attack. He now ha• 10 on the year. "Toniaht we combined put IUt- tina with are.at pitchina. and this iJ the re$ult," '4id WiofieJd ... We need a few more pm.es like th11." LOYOLA. AnJd mncr Roa Roma • Who ti.ad 11 ~co up only onebom ru!' ln ht1 W. 34¥> annsn,as was icti~amd twice by Winfield brrarc ltf\cd for ~l.ievcr Chua Finley. Wan6etd, the Yitnteca' ri&h1fit.ldetr hit bOtlle runs b11 fint two times up bef o"' drawina an inttntionaJ walk wtth men on KOOnd and third in the fourth tnDIDS. • • From Cl Left-hander strikes out nine, yields only second-iiintii single ones in the eiahth inning as vmtina Odd.ibe McOowell hit home runs and mmule to beat Scotland. Elkjaer ''Tht waitin1 1s very difficult," San Francisco Tallied past Montreal. Bobb¥ Witt and Mickey Mahler dribbled nround Wilhe M1Jler at the Ward said. "•The anxiety rise1. It's a Me nwh1le, Niekro wu mOWtna down the An~ls right and left In 1he seventh, New YOrt centcrfielder Riekey Hendenoo made • fine runnina cateh on Rob Wilfona'1 blooper for the last out of the tnmni. The Giants cTilSCd G 2-1 deficit aa combined on a five-hitter., visitina 1op of the penalty area, then 1Cnt a I 0-hJ&lHtress situation.:• Candy Maldonado doubled with one Texas beat Chicqo for the six.th yard kick off the fa r goalpo<Jt and into Wednesday's second J&me. be- From AP dl1patcbes out and took third on a single by strasglu time in a week. the net. tween Miami. and Louisiana State, Jeffrey Leonard against Jeff Reardon, lncaviglia's two-run homer in the Jn Queretaro. West Germany was also postponed uotal today. CINCINNATI -Tom BrowntnJ. a rookie 20..game wtnner who 1s ---hfwtng-e-tough-~mr; ·de-- c1ded to go back to basics. 5-3. Davis followed wnh his triple third inning, his 10th of the season, dominated the game for tht final 60 Therc<;tofthe CollcgcWorldSene~ and ca me home on a bunt by helped pin the loss on Tom Seaver, minutes and got a goal from Klaus schcdulewiUbcpusbedback one day, * "l had one thing in mind out there -go out and be agp-cssive and shut 'cm down," Browning said Wcdn~­ day night after pitch in' a one-hitter in leading the Cincinnati Reds over the Chicago Cubs, 2-0. Quinones, who hit two triples earlier wbo had come off the disabled list Allofs with only five minu1es remain-an NCAA official said. o•me roeo rr10 Frldev 111 Cit~ Ullr• irrth~pmt'. ---nrtter1n mt aav. •t-1':UofrtZ-y:ttd left~ The Cow60ys IOOi&fbl thebir-n;rslTuil=.::. i::. 1;::: ~Anelli;,,;., Pirate• U, Braves a: Rook.ie Barry 1'wln1 10, Bloe Jaya 4: Tom kick went into the far comer of the on a walk, a dou e y 11mmy n1s ,.,,.11011.11041 111 Mlclland. * ~ ., Bonds drove tn four runs with hi.s first Brunansky and Roy SmaJleili::ch hjt net, the Germans were frustrated by Barrapn and a fielder's choice. Bryn Michno 11 1r1nl119s ooc:Md, nlfle 11ttt, ,.. """ I h d t 0 S ... ,.1... t b d d · Uruguayan goalt..eper Fernando K d .a. th Bl i. lone "'~" 1111t -•• tlld tour stt*-'tt."" maJOr-eaguc omer an w .... 6'"" wo omen an rove 10 runs 11. osco an ?n ony acAm~n .-iu ,...,,_1" on tht 2l·d•v 41...._. ... , ..... as Pittsburgh routed host Atlanta. and Jeff Reed also homered. leading Alvez. smacked RBJ smglcs, and SefJJo ..._Is now 1n '* 110t.aul011 Of -..'"1'11 .-. Rookie Mike Bielecki, 4-3, got the visiting Minnesota past Toronto The Uruguayans took a lead 10 the Espinal hit a two-run double to give on tt1e a11-11me 1111 tor M"'* c:e1.111111 *"~ 1,71). h. 511 F · fiifth m1 t b '-ft b S 1--...1 Ml• next 1aroe1 Is "'9t sci., wflO It tlxlll wttn victory, scattenng seven its over 71 rank Viola, 5-5 allowed four runs . nu c on a rea ..... way Y the Cowboys a _. ~. 1.n• oames Ad4 '°°'*with 111, 9UMltlt dow11 BrowninJ. who allowed just a clean second-inning single to Jody Davis, struck out a career-high nine. The lef\- hander ratscd bis record ~o 3-5 with his first complete game 1n 13 st.arts '"!'lings. Jim \Yinn finished up for his IO seven innings and won bis first Antonio Alzamend1 who stole Espinal $00red on a doubk by Of ltlcll.-t ~I" TueMlav'• ..,,,., ~ third save, pitching 31/1 innings of game against Toronto 1·n nin• ,. .. _,.r Lotbar Matthaeus' backpass. dnb-Monty Fariss Former Ocean View hti now '"'-" out :ro "' H WOIM-oe uw "' __,...... bl d t d " d h r: k d · lltaJen Wllh ~ rWMIM tlle Ol1ly A""9I , hi tless relief. decisions. e pas a e1en er, t en 1a e Htah and Orange Coast ( olleae 10 •OP9ar 1n au u ~-Atiout me on1v "*" A1tro1 4, Cardinal• ~: At t.he Marlllers s, Orioles 1: Spike Owen goalkeeper Harald Schumachcrto the ~·tcber Eric Reinholtz replaced Jovner ht•n·r oone toi 111e ctW a.•••• ..... A od M'k Sc tt t hcd ground Alzamend''s h t t th and RBI nr oeu. DICMc:IM ml•..a anottwr .. "" *"""" str ome, 1 e o pi e six· wcnt4 for4anddrove intworunsand · 1 so a e open yaoa pvtupan srn&Jcto lniwao anoutder TNMNltflllvttNOl\""9 hit ball for eight inninas and Jose Alvin Davis and John Moses hit solo net hit the crossbar and bounced over Robin Ventura before play was ,11a1o111 "' lefl-f'ienotr1 nit"'' lfl'IW tMv won • this season. Last year, Browning said he threw fastballs about thru-quarters of the t1 me. This season, he said he had been throwing 50 percent brcakinf, pitches. Cruz drove in \wo runs with a double home runs as Seattle downed host the aoal line. suspended ~more was 1.s1 .>une JulY w11e11 the¥ "tutW ~a~~h~~~~~. &lb~rc fj~~~~i~i~~~~~~~~~~~~·~~=~~~=:i~~~~~~~·~1~~~M~me~~-~~~:~~:=~ Louis' four-game wioni~g streak. Mike Moore, a 17-game Winner last Scott, 5-4, struck O\lt eight a~d took season, pnched a seven-hitter and over the major-league lea~ wnh 106. ended his personal three-game losing Dave Smith pitched the n1nth for his streak. Moore, 3-6, struck out one and "I don't know what 1t was, ·he said. "I can't pinpoint wil y I wasn't agg.resM ve." 13th save walked one in his fifth complete In the Amen can League: game. "I threw a lot of fastballs I went nght at 'em today," said Browning, who also contributed two hits, inc-lud- Red Sox 6, ladlana 4: At Fenwav Royals 8, Brewen I: HaJ McRae Park. Don Baylor., Bill Buckner and hit a two-run homer and Steve Re>-Quinones hit home runs as Balboni homered and double, pacing Boston ~at Cleveland for its fifth vis1ung Kansas City past Milwaukee. straigh t victory Balbon1's last eight hits have been 1ng an RBI single, . I Browning walked two and allowed only one runner into sconng pos1t1on in helping end Scott Sanderson's mastery over the Reds Sanderson. 3-3, had won his ~vcn previous career decisions against Cincinnau . The Red Sox won fo r the ninth lime for extra· bases. Dennis Leonard. 6-4, in IO ga mes. Boston ~sed llS record got the victory white Juan Nieves, to36-15,1hbest stan sincego1ng41-9 5-2. took the loss. an 1946 . • Tigers 8, A'• &: Darnell Coles Reds player-manager Pete Rose led off the Tounb with a double, took third on· a single by Dave Parker and c;cored on Nie\ Esasky"s sacrifice f1 y Quinones, a rooloc, hit his first homered, doubled twice and ~vein ~or-league homer in the fourth rhree runs and Lan~Parrtsh aJ d Lou inning, a two-run shot that gave Whitaker also homered· as troit- Bosto n a 4-2 lead ended its fi ve-game losing str ak by beating host OakJand. Buddy Belt walked in the seventh and later scored on a single by Browning, wh ich kn()fked out Sand· erson. In other National Lea$ue ga mes Meta 4, Padres%: Kevin M11chell's RBI double broke an eighth-inning tic and Bruce Bcren)li and Roger McDowell combined on a Jwo-h1tter as New York defeated v1sitmg San Diego. George Foster, whose run-sconng Sl rtgle 11ed the game 2-2 1n the sixth, opened the eighth by drawing his third walk. After Ray Knight got an infield hit, Mitchell doubled down 1hc left-fi eld li ne lkrenyi gave up two hits in six mning.s. McDowell, 4.0. pitched three innings of hitless relief Giants 4, Expos%: ( h!h Davis htt a * Giants 4, EXPM l SAN FRANCISCO MONTREAL A1ort1e lb Brenlv c MldOOO rl L.c>nard lf COnlsd Qulnons lb RThpsn ?t> U•lt>e u LaCou 1> -YnQbld e>n JRob<un o ab r II Ill lb r II bl 4 0 0 0 Ra•ne• H • I 1 0 • o o o w 111>,1., rt ' O 1 o ~ I I 0 Burke o 0 0 0 0 3 1 I 0 OaWM>n rf 1 0 1 0 4 I 1 1 Wlnllf!m Cf 3 0 1 0 l I ? I Ga1arro lb • O 1 1 4 0 3 I Krech< lb J I ' 0 7 O O O Reeroon o O O O O 1 0 0 0 WohltrO rl 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Law ?I> 7 0 0 0 t 0 0 0 Ftti~ICI c 3 0 0 0 Newmnn 7 0 0 0 BSmllho 1 0 0 O Wale.Ch lb 1 0 0 0 JI 4 t 4 Tetllll lO 2 I l Sc-lrV lnnlfl9I 5-ft F 1"9ftdsca 000 000 130-4 ~· 000 101 000-1 Ga,.,. Winl\lr>g RBI -C Davi' (2) E-Mal<IO!\eOO. Krentt'llCkl R ThOm~on PP....San FrallCIKO 3. MonlrHI I LOB-San FranclKo t. Montreal 3 7B-Meldonado. A T~ 319--0ulnonn ? Kr1nchlckl. C 0.¥11 S&-R Tl'tome>lOll (3) Raines ; 121 ) Brenlv 171 s--<Nlnonft, Uribe LaCou II" H A EA aa so * Met\ 4, Padrfl 2 SAN Otllc;Q NllW YOflK Fi.nnrv 7b Gwvnn rf Mc Rvld cl Gervev lb Kannedv c Martinz H wvnned Jorg lb Tme>11nu RovsJer n SllOw P McClfllfs p l(ruk Of\ Wallerp Lett.,,, 1> T.-. abrllbl 7 1 0 0 l I I 2 • 0 0 0 • 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 l 0 I 0 0 0 0 0 ) 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Ov"'lre ct Bckmn 2t> Teufttl 'lb KHrnoz lb Certtr c "1"9rf F°'ler If KnlgM 3b Santan~ n C~crn e>n Mltc11tll u B•rttnYI 1> Slrwbv ph McOwllP 'D 2 l 2 T.-a k-IW lnNn9S abrhlll ' 0 2 0 4 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 • 0 I 0 l ' 0 0 « I 2 0 1 l I I • 1 2 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 I 0 t I 2 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 ll 4'. Saft '*"-002 000 000-, New Yri 000 002 Ob -4 Game Winning RSI -Mllc114111 (2) E-Sl10w. McRtvnolO' OP-San OltoO 2, New York 2 LOB-San Olevo 1 New York 11 7B-Ov~slre. MllcheH HR-Gwvnn (61 IP H R Elt ea so Sane>-.. SllOw McCuti.n Watler L I I Leff er ts New Ytf"I SI l 6 I 7·l I 0 1 I 0 1 7 0 0 1 ? 0 0 Berenv1 6 2 2 2 McOowtll w.• o l o o o 1 ) 0 1 Watter PllcMcl 10 l 1>11lltr1 In the Ith HBP......Flanntrv by Berenvf Umpjrll~ Fr~ml1>9, Flrsl, Halllon. Sa<;oncs, Kiili«, TtilrO. Bonin. T-2 52 A-16 73S * Attrft 4, C.rdlnala 2 ST LOUIS HOUSTON Cottman tt McGHcf lltnSlvk rl JC1ar11 lb H.,r 'lb PnOlln lb OSmlthn Heelhc PPerrv 1> Hurdltoll Burri' 1> LYllre C Tot11b tb r II bl 3 I 1 0 Doran 'lb 4 0 , 2 CRenidl n 4 0 0 0 Welli"11 31> • 0 0 0 GOavl1 lb J 0 0 0 Cruz ti • 0 0 0 Walk.;. cf l 0 1 0 Band 1000 Puhltl 0 0 0 0 OSmlll'IP I O O O l!lali.v c 1000 Scolle> 2 I l 0 Halchtt tt l2 2 6 1 Tehil1 kwt llv IMan.s ab r II Ill 4 1 I I ' 0 2 0 4 I I 0 l 2 0 0 4 0 2 2 0 0 0 0 2 0 I I • 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 l 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 lO. 7 4 St. Ltult 000 001 010-1 H011•1911 200 020 Ob-4 Safi Francilc.t LaCou 6 ) 7 I 1 3 Gama Wltinlllil RBI -Doran I 1l o o o 3 .lB~~'. Lou~0~,;~-s1 ~~~~n°"''o~2~ J Robinson w l 1 ~ .. B Smltll 6 I l 4 I l 1 S AHrdon L.S·l 1 2·) 4 l 3 1 1 Burke I O O 0 O ? HBP-Brtnlv bv B Smllh UmolrH-Ho,.,. Rennert F1rsr Monlague Second, Darling, Tlllrd Wty#Jr T 2 45 A-1.l'l<I * MarlNn S, Orteles I SIEA TTLE BAL TIMOAE SB-<oieman l 1311 Bau 111 McGH 161 St. L.Ub Burris L.2 7 P Perry HtulfWll Scotl w S • 0 Smltll s ll umolrll-H'"Tlt C WIHlam•. S... no T-2JJ A-11,396 II" H It ER Ml SO 47)6 44 4 J ll l 0 0 0 . , 0 0 2 , 0 0 Crawtorel, F "'' Wendlll,111<11, Third Tela Rev111os 2b Motn cf A0avl• lb F>nelot. 011 GT11msdh Prtsltv 31> Trtabll tt OHeasn rt Owtnu Kn rnev c T.._h •llrht>I abrhbl * s 0 1 0 Wiggin' 1b I I I 0 TWln• 10, IMue Java 4 4 1 1 1 sn.11>v cl 4 O I 1 MINNI SOT A TORONTO 4?11 Rlohnu •OOO abrlllll ? 0 0 0 Murray ltl 4 O ! O Puck•lt cl S 0 O 0 Garcia Oh I 0 0 0 S'-I' dh 4 O 1 O GHlfl 3b ' 0 0 1 UPll'IW Pl! eb r h Ill 4 0 I 1 I 0 0 0 4 0 I 0 4 0 I I 4 7 ? 1 J 0 0 0 J 0 I I , 0 0 0 1000 A I 1 0 4 I 7 0 S 0 0 0 Stnlqur rt 4 0 0 0 Hrl>e~ lb 3 I O O lorg ?I> 1 1 2 I Mi. Yong" 4 O O O ernn•kv rl S 2 7 3 MoMI>\' ct J 0 I 0 OMallv lb l 0 1 0 Bu•l'I K S 1 ? 0 Bell If 4 0 4 1 Oemow ' l O O O SmaHv dh S 1 1 3 Jot1n1on lb 4 0 0 0 M s 10 s T.t•h u I ' I Lml>fdZ 1b 4 2 l 0 BtrlltlO rt Aff<I t 1 2 2 2 Grub9r 3b Score bl! ~ Gagne u 4 O 1 I Mullnks lb s.e• 011 001 200-s aat11rnwe 091 ooo ooo-I F ernndr n G1rnt Winning RSI -()wan (2) 8Ma rlnz c >4 • ' 4 OP-.S41111t I, 8altlmor• I LC>e-Seallle ' T""' l7 10 12 10 Tehils k8" 11¥ IMln9I Belllmort 6 HR-A Davis 110>. Mosel Ill MllwwWta no 001 S00-10 S8-<R•Ynotd1 IJ3), W'99ins (U) s MOMIS ~erem. 000 101 200-. *"" II" H It l(lt BB SO Gt~ Winning RBI -Brunanlll<v (3) OP-Minnesota 1, Toron10 7 M .=:;::.J • 9 7 1 I l I ~ 8-MlnnflOlt 5, TorOlllO 6 28-B Martinet Dixon L 5•3 6 1 3 1 4 4 • l HR-Brunanskv 2 (13), Smanev ? 110> Btll If). T Mar11Mz o o 1 l 1 o Rttd I II Sl!l-G•OM (4), Lom1>11rdoUI (2) Bordi ? 7 l 7 0 0 1 1 IP' H It IER 18 SO T Martinet e>tlclle<I ICI I l>alf<lr in trwo 1th \/lo~ ' 4 4 3 s WP-M Moo<t a • , 3 Umolret-Homt. Br~loan Flrsl, Jollnson. P•::.:.:... 0 0 O 0 Second, McCov, TP!lfd koll T ~ A-11.0.1 Slleb L 1 7 • ? J 10 • 1 • s R•v .. a ,:\,. • .,, ' KANSAS CITY MILWAUKIE aorllbl all r hllll 4 I 1 I Ganll'lr 2b S 0 I 0 Wilton cf LM\llhlf 8r•11 lb Whitt ?I> McllMdh 8a"'°'1l lb Sun<lbro c Molltv rt ASalHr U l I 1 I Yovnl cf ' 2 1 0 S 0 l 1 Oofl\'lt Oh 5 P l J S I I 0 Mal'IMO '" 0 0 0 0 •222 O..rrl 40 00 S 1 7 1 S<:hrodr lb \ 0 I 0 4 0 0 0 Svttim lb ' 1 l I ) l 0 II HMtf\IO<' II • 1 I 0 l 0 O 0 JC e\JIM " 4 I I l Cerone c •I 1 I J6 t 11 • T9'llt1 at • 11 6 k#9111V ....... K•ll:M• Ctty on 100 021-1 MIWtutlM 100 fl2 Ofn-6 Game Wlnnlno lttll ~ L Smith <2l E-J CatllllO. Sveum, Ball>Onl. While OP-KtnMI Cllv I, Mllw11vk .. ? L09-K11m.es Cltv f, Mllw•.,._.. t 2&-0o"v.. M<JlN, 8atoon1, c-lB-Yount. HouMf!Olde• Hfll-McltM (J), S""'"1 121 Salbolll I 101 58-\.. Sml111 (•). Younl 111 Wll•on 1121 S-A Salazar KallM•c.nv ~row •• f!arr &1.e-. 0\11.enDerrv S,-4 M!Mt\141• II" H It l lt 99 $0 s • ' ) t J ) 1 0 0 0 1 ] 0 0 ' , . , 1 l 0 0 0 0 0 I A, .. er 1 1 l 1 ? 7 1 0 Caudill I 0 0 0 0 0 WP-Viole 1 PB-8 Marll1191 Ume>lrH-+tomt. Barnell 1'1r11 Tschida, Second HlrKhbeell. Tlllrd Roe T-2" A l0.13-4 TIXA$ Rafteln I, ""'tte S.11 2 CHIC.AGO McOwtrcl Fltlcllr U oar1tn lb Jncvgll di'! Ward If Sltrre r I lluechi9 lb Mtrcaoo c Wll•rsn 1tl •tl r 111111 • 2 2 I S 0 I g • 0 0 4 I I , 4 ' 2 0 • I I 1 2 0 1 0 4 0 I 1 4 0 I 0 Ce~ts rt Tl>l1 .. n :JO BallM• rl GWtlllt lb • H•lr.ln dh t<llllt If Gull., n HUltll }I) $ltl11nerc Crvr~ JS s,. s , ... " kw..., ....... llO, II Ill 4 0 0 0 HOO • 0 ' 0 ''O 0 0 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 J 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 4 1 2 1 ) 0 I 1 n is' Ttu• en °'' •1-1 c111ea.. •• ... •-t Gt me Wlnntno 1te1 -1nce.,1ooa 14l OP-Chlraoo 1 l08 Tu a• '· ClllCIVO ' 2B-811lnea. Sltlnneor, Wero Hit-Si.tr• 12l. 1nraYl9H• 110>, McDowell f7l i e-c.rur t <2> Mt0owtll 11 1) &..-...... Ill Tau1 a Wiii W l • Mal\ltf s l "' ....... so s • 1 1 6 s 0 0 0 s CHICAGO Oun"on s. L~lf Sl\dbrg 2b Morttnd rt Ctv3b Ourhm lb J01 vlt c Oernltr cf GMlhWp/I Mul)llrvd S.nor111 P Fon1eno11> SPiiier Ph T9telt * R.cta 2, CW. 0 •l:trhbl • 0 0 0 '0 0 0 3 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 J 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 l 0 1 0 2 0 0 0 I 0 O·O Q..O 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 CINCINNATI Miiner ct Row IP Part<wrl Esar.llvlf Venabltlf Btlllb Slllwdn BOlaz c Onltr 'lb l!lrownnoP 'U 0 1 e T .... ScMe ... ""*"" aerhllll l 0 0 0 3 l ' 0 • 0 2 0 l 0 l I 0 0 00 2 l 0 0 4 0 1 0 l 0 I 0 l 0 0 0 l 0 1 1 • , • 2 Chica.. 000 000 000-0 C~ll 000 100 lb-2 Gamt Winning RBL -Esar.llv (41. OP-Chicago 2. Clnctnnatl I LOB-<:hlc.890 2 Cincinnati 7 2S-Rose SF-Esullv II" H It l!R 99 SO Ciika .. Sanatrson L ,l-3 Fontenot cana-11 6 ?-3 6 2 1 1 J 1 1·3 1 0 0 2 1 Brownlr>0 W.3 ~ 9 I 0 0 2 9 Umolre,-ttomt, Stello, Fin l, PoncJno, S.C- ono Gr1911, Tlllrd, H•nrev. T-1.59 A-17,039 * Pinta 12, &raws J P'ITTSllURGH A TL.ANT A Bond' cf Maun1111 Onula~ If Rav2b Khehft n Bru m lb RRtvld' rt Almon II TPena c ~llz c Morrlsn 3b Btlllard n Sieleckl D WIMP Tetlh .., '"Ill s J • ' ) I 0 0 000 0 ) I 0 0 I 0 0 0 ) I I 2 4 I 2 l I 0 I 0 • I 2 2 I 0 0 0 S 1 I 0 4 1 2 1 l 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 M.oreno rt Wardp Cllml>ls Pfl Otlerkfl le> Murllflvd Hor~ lb GPerrylf Re6ifr1 n a.Aecllct t Hubl>rd 21> JoJhn'" p McN\rtrv 1> Har-rf Jt It I> 10 T.-.S Sc-lrV•Mlnl& aerhbl ' 0 2 I 0000 I 0 0 0 5 1 I I l 0 1 0 '0 0 0 • 0 0 0 ' 1 1 0 ) I 2 I 2 0 0 0 ' 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 Jl l ' J PttTMurtll 040 610 OIO-12 A tlant9 00 I IO I 000-l G•mt Winning RBI -R RevnolOt Ill E-ttubb.1'0, Jo Jof!MOll. G Pernr. Ramirez, Murp11y OP......Ati.nta 2 LO&-Plmt>urgn 6. Allanl• t 2a-&enec11c1, l!lonOs HR-A Reynold\ (SI OOerkfttll (2), Boncn 11> IP' H fll 1111 aa SO l"lttlbllrtll Blt!Klll W ,.3 WlnnS,J Al&Mfll Jo JOhnson L,6·• McMVllrY Ward WP-McMurtry s 2·3 ' 3 1·3 0 31-3 11 ) 3 l 3 s 4 0 0 0 7 9 2 1 ? s 2 7 ? I UmolrH-Home. Pu111, F1rs1. wnt. Second. B Wllllan"t•, Third Rle>ottv T-2 SO A-14,012 OETlllOIT Wtiltakr 2b Cotllnt H Gibson dh LNPanllc OaEvns lb Co1"3b Ltmon c;t S1*10n rt Tramm1 n * TieilN I, A's S abthbl 4 1 I 1 2 0 0 0 l 2 0 0 4 2 I 1 4 I I 2 s 1 l l 2 0 0 0 'I 0 0 1 4 0 0 0 OAKLAND Ph!HI~ 'lb 8och1• lb Lan•frd lb OHlll ?b C•nteeott Knomn dh M01vlsrf Peltts H Ou8•krH Griffin n l!lall'le c JtYlar d • t. t T .... sc-bV """'* attrllbl S I 1 0 s , J ' l 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 3 l 1 3 • 0 0 0 I I 0 0 1 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 « 0 I 0 • 0 2 1 1 1 1 0 MS t S Oetrelt 004 010 102-• OMtMd ioo 100 200-s Game Wlnl'llnQ RBI -ColH (4) OP-Oelrolt 2 LO&-e.lrl>lt 7. 0.kland 7 28-Colft 1, Oa. Evens. HR-C.enMCo (161. Wllllakw (6), C~ (f), LN Parrlati (Ill SB~rlffln (I) Glbtcin (6) $-<~Ins SF-Sllttlclan Oetr'tlt Morris W,5·4 Hernander S,1 OelrlMd II" 6 1·3 • , 2·3 1 " ....... so s s • 4 0 0 I 1 Plunlt L,0·2 2 1·J J 4 4 6 0 La"9for'CI l 7·J I 1 1 0 7 Moontv"-m 2 1 3 I l l ' 0 On'lveros 2·3 1 o O o O WP-Morrla ••Ill-Plunk Pl-l!lallle Umolrtt-+iomt, ltalllv; F'lrll, Coot.; Second, McClrttll4tncl; Third. Oen1tlnwr T-l .U A-11,7'3 Reel Sex t MdleM t CL.IV.LANO 90STON Sul.-cf Franco u ''"' ... ,, T11tn1r1 Oil MHafflf 9trnzro ?b Tab!« lb Jf«ltly JI) landoc T .... a .. , ..... S 1 J 0 Barrell 111 4 1 , I '°"°' )ti 1 1 1 0 lliuckfll' lb ) 0 0 1 lt!C11 If ' 1 ) 1 ••vtor clfl )011 o.om~c 4 0 0 0 OwEvm rt 4 0 1 0 Lyqm d • O 1 O Qulllorlus )6 41J. ,.. .... ~ .......... ..," .. 4 0 0 0 4 I 2 0 • I 1 7 A 0 I 1 l I 1 I • 0 0 Q > 1 1 0 • 0 0 0 7 '1 1 , '" .. ~ -•1 •1-• ....... .., -ti• ' G9m. WlnnlnO Ital -°""*'" (11 OP-eo•ton 1. Loe-<~ t, k•ton ~ 28 rranco 2, M. Ht , htna1et'f, to.o.. ltk:e Hlt-QIJ~l (l).L l ucSIMf IS), 9avtor 1131 Sl-eutltr ll>l Sfl-fllOrnfon. P M•~ltHSO ~ NleWI l S 7 ) I l 7 S • f l (()l'llMIW.. 4 1 7 1 1 « ClllCH• s .. v., L 7 1 C I l 11 ) I ' ) l 1 1 ,. Nltllro L..J ·i 1 '1 '0 .... • . ' ' l ' Pie~ l·l I 0 0 0 0 M<'CM't l 11100 LtOtlef'd o•k~ 10 t Mllen lh lllof tth, ltlefll olk NO lo 1 11911"1' Ill the •111 H9P-L \ml!h l>V Cocanow ... W L~nard U"'O,,._-HOIM 9f!Mme", F'lrS1 C-• flllrd. Pa-.rmo T HM A-11,flJ ..... "'" Mckeon O•wltv Jamft WP-I Witt l I 1 o o o o 1 Wood1nre W )-1 It > 111 J l J0 I I o o o O Cra .... ford 2 t 1 l t I I 1 0 1 ,, .. V $ t t ) 1 I t 0 0 Umplr t>-'inmt, CC>vllln• fir•• r: .. 11& S« OFICI ~rrl T"i•d H•~ry 1 '\J A-11 ~· HI.. lavlOf bv ,. N•9'~ WIL-WoodW¥d Umo•rtt-~• F'CM'd. ,.Int, Gercie. 5«· olld kMC, Tiltrd, lt..O T-ttlf' A-t)'MI ltad10 lhaek Compact Disc Player Cut 31% CD-2000b y Realistic" Cut •so 17995 -.. -• • J -------------11995 Low Aa S20 Per Month On CltlLlne • Reg. 259.95 Lowest price ever. No rumble, distortion or sur- face noise. All you hear is the music! Program- mable 15-selection memory. Tri--spot laser pickup system. Buy today! #42-5001 Reg. 219.95 Lo_; Aa 120 Per Month On CltlUne• Record cassettes.from AM, FM,,phono or &- track player. 17" -high speakers. *13-1221 3-Way Speaker System Optimus*-45 by Realistic HALF PRICE 69!! Reg. 139.95 Reg. 199.95 Low A• 520 P•r Month on CUILlne• Programmable extended BASIC. 8--0olor graphics. sound effects. #26-3127 12-Band Equalizer 8y Realistic -11111111111111 lllllltlllfl ~ Save 7995 Reg. • •40. 119.95 Take command of vour ht-ti's frequency response! IMX"' ex- pands sound image and cuts distortion. #31-2010 TM Sc~stica. 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O MIWYOtU( ltHncu11 cf Mt'""" lb W\l!fltld rl l•Alefdll HUMVC CALllllCMtNt4 .. r11.i t0 I 0 • 2)' l , 1 , .... ll••(f Jv'IT*' II> • allrtt.i J 0 I 0 • 0 0 0 MATIOMAL L•AGU ......... 0.0.....1 LOS AHG8Lll "HILAOIL .. HIA Duncan" Se• 2D L1nclra cf Manl\atrt ktoKl•c aroo 111 St~ll AMtMI )!> Heolll•r p Metuk Sit\ .Al'tnep Medltll pf\ VendlrlP ••,11111 e•rlltll S ' l ) ~lone H 4 I 0 t I I I 0 GGrou If 0 0 0 C S TRIK&.OUTS-Clemell•, lotton. tO, Hut•I. 80ilOll. "· HIOIMI, Mllwlll.M, "· ltllo. 0.lll•nd , •• Motrla. Deffoll, n SAVErAeM. 81ltlm0rt, It, lt!Ohtllt, H .. Yori. 12, Stentev, lottoll, '· Merri•, THH, •• "'""•l\dtl Dtlrolt, I. . " ~ I 1 1 • 11 0 S I J I 4 I 0 0 S 0 J I S 1 1 I Dow-" ._J<lltft elf! • 0 0 0 i. 0 0 • 0 0 0 ) 0 0 0 l 0 0 0 J 0 0 0 1000 I 0 0 0 J 0 4 I ltotfllc-cf J I 0 C ~ 0 0 0 Samuel 2t> 4 1 I C ~~ ''""""""' .......... ....,.., .. 0 " Sclwndl Jo ) 1 I c MAJOR UAGUa ITANOCNGS "·--" PlirUIO lll --~rl JKHowllO Wlll-1' Scllot Id .. loone c N1rron c T...aa •Ill S<.lluJO IOOC IATTING II• 11 M">-itt v, ltllltllufofl. :nt. G"'"""· Sen oieeo, '41 K ,......,...,, New Vewll, 14, C. lrOWll,, Sen lllrencl11a1, m. oroou. Montr .... n1, Kltfttll, New Yon, m Amwtt.aa LMllue It "4lllfl 1" Fl1Cfllln u 4 I I I He~ lb ' 1 2 2 4 I 1 O c.wr"'°" rt • o I 2 NIA ,LA YO,,S ~ .... , ...... ..,_., HOUSTON VI. M>STOM (Al llf'MI 911 Chltllfltl l) to•fOll 112, Hou•IOn 100 wt1nOM~ l010 DeuU°"c ,IOC w L ~· Tt11e1 11 ,. )1' '"._.•Clly ,. n .SIO ....... 1' ,. MIO 0.lllancl 1S 2t 4n Mlnnftote 10 l'2 >IS S..lllt 10 )1 .>IS ~ " )1 llO GI I 41 II 11 II 29 0" ·~ l 1 • ,.,, kllf't bV lnr""9I Hew Ytt11 IOJ Olt ltl-II c"'""""" ooo ... ooo-o '"" I 1 I O Joltn11 c 1 O o C 0 0 0 0 )eltf n 4 0 I I I 0 0 0 KGr1n' p l 0 I C 0 0 0 0 Ttli.ulvt P 0 0 0 ' Cerm•n p 0 0 0 C MTnmoPfl IOOC 811drotn o 0 0 O t RUNS-OwYM, S.11 Oieeo, »J ~. Allenle, )4, It llltYnoldl. lttttlbufolt, Jl, ltllnit\. Mo<llrMI, J3 ltll-ar00111, MoftlrMI, ~. Mll"INI. o.w.n. •1 C O.v11, S.n l'r111elte0, )1; Horner, Allenle. ~1, Schmlcll, Pnll1dttolllt, )) Htn--owvnn. Sin Oteoo. '9. K. Htrn•nct.r. lk>••on 111, Houston t~ Hou.ton '°'· IO•ton 104 lotton 106. Hou•ton 103 Uk»ton lt•d• .. rte•. Ml aAST OIVISIOH G•mt WIMlng ltll -Wtnfi•ld 141 E-ltan<IOfol'I, Wllfo/111, Pttll\, kllolleld, Fl1 · <Piiio OP-New Yor~ L Callfornl• 1 L09-Ne .. hi.I~ -.. 7 15 1 T..it ll I 1 S ken bV '"""- New Vor• . .._'3; s .. , ~ 621 ltev. Pit• hbvroll. '1 ~ndl>trt, ClllCA90, '1 DOUBLl:s-HevH PhllleltlPnle If, It It•· '"°Id• PlllMIUl'Qfl, IS, ., .. I'll, ltlttSW"oll, 1', Oun11un Cl'llCego, 14, ltn, jltjlllOuftlll. 14 lltlPLES--C-n, SI LOiii•, S. Mo<lt'IO, ron'9111 -lo••on at Hou•ton • om Sul\dav -Houston at Bo••cm. 10 • m 111 '°''°" N-Von ••lllmore Mltw•~ DelroH TorQl\10 c~ l4 IS " 20 1' 1(j ,~ n ,, 1) ts u 1' 71 '°" •IS 4 • ~., . \00 10 ' ffO 11 411 ,, .,, 11 Vork 10. Calltotn•• s ,, Htnev. PHOU• Ptll,t Hlt-Wlnfii!kl 1 ( 10) !:Hier t ~) SB-It Jone, 1 !tl Le• A..... 100 100 •11-1 l"tlllll....... • .. 101 00•-• Game Wlnnlllil lt81 -" Wit.Oii ,., I~ .._wY"1! ~-Hevet, And«\Oll, O..ncen I -.., H It la N j() OP-PllUMM4Pflle 7 L.C>e-Lot A_, I. Pnlla ~le I 28~endl'Mu•. S."'-4. He<~IM• At•ent1 S. McGee. St I.Olli•. 4, Miiner, Clllctn• "'''· • Itel,_., Montr..,, ' HOME RUN nllel, DtdfW&. 1)1 -MfY) Wec!llhdav -Mo"''°" at BO•'""·• om m nteflMl'V) AM """" ~0 T WMMM9v'•k-• H-Yortr 11, ....... 0 J "lle~ro W 6 J Holle rid ~ Romani<• L J ! -~~ - 1 0 0 ) S HtvM Hlt-8roc.1> Il l, DuftCen 141. Stut.o1 I., 0 0 0 0 I S8-0u11uon 1141. SIOtM 111 K Grou 111 01 1 ~o.nldi.e m, ,..,,...,.. 11~ M • •• 66 '° 8'00tl•. MonlrMI, 12. Oewson. Moftlrtel, 12. G1rvtv, r..n 01t00. 12. Mdt..,nold, S.11 ~. 11 Par~.. ClnclMell. 11 KMIMI Cll1 I. Mllweull .. 6 11 J ~ • STO~OI n1~1f. St Loul• )0, O\lllCM. Dtdllln. M1 ltelnes. Molltr .. 1, 21 Doren Houllon, 14, DVtl•tre, N-Yon; 14, C Devi•. C1ncl11nt1I, 14 OITroll •• 0.11:1-l'A! s M/nnnote 10. T0<on10 • S..ltla S. B•llimore I 9o1ton 6, Ctevelenci • Te••• S. (lllU~ 1 F •<t'tr 8rvden P8-Heuev f'? ] A l 2, 3 4 ) , s l Umptre• Ho~ Cl•r. 0 LMAftelet\ 0 H.,,,,,,.,. l ,S• 4 4 I A Pent I vencie e ... o 1 1 • • ~ 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 I WMMtdlV'I 1rW1dloll11 IAS8Ut.L ~LteWI T-o(~ Oem.1 Ol'IC) Morr11011 T!llfll Fir\!, ~111<x--S.C· ltttlad91111\la ...fW"••rt t -2S6 1t Grol\W,S S • 10 !"ITCHING I' o.tt1IOllO-Oerllno. New YO<ll " 1, 361 Ktrlttd, Houlton, s 1, Ill. uc:ou $ao Fr•nd~. S-1, 2.SS, K.nt_, Ho1a1on, t·7 1 .It. GOOden, N-York, 1 2, I,, ANGEL$-Slllfttd LM S1tvet11, Terena Cetr and Oevld Grlltonct. oulfleldtrt. ltec.atled Urt>eno LUf6, !Mlc;htr. from Ml<ltend OI lllf TuH I. ••oue end ennounc.d llwtl flt wlh rtrneln on the , t dev dlubltd 1111 S.tltte ( Leno11on, •-•l et 8•1t1mon 1 OIVI\ •·•>.fl A ,. 61• TtkUIYt 2 3 l Cermen I 3 O O O O HRIKEOUTS-Scotl, Houuon, 10• 0.ka.nd (H•el 1 II al C"I< •llO f Allen I 0 n Anoe! 1v.r1 .. 1 (T'twtutfl WHNwM\f1t G.arnet IAl'TINC Bed•o•l•n S.1 . r-1 1 I I O V•Mnlutle, Dtdtlln. 171 Weld\. ~. 7J1 HtOlllMI', ~. '91 1 ~1111 Alie/II• •I CHICAGO WHITE SOX-Actlvetecl Tom $ff • ., DltcM< lteu'*I l rv•o L.lltlt, ~, trom Bufl•lo ot Ille Amtrlcan Auod atloll Sent lrylfl Ca.rll, Pflctler, lo ltuflllO PIMitd ltttO Nl(flOI' OUll~, Oii ltlt IS·dev d•Mbled U\I Bo1ton IS.liers 0-01 •I MllweukH (W1Nm•n 0 S>. n K C.•ou pole~ 10 l bellen In IM '"' H8~Samue1 ov H•nnlMtf UmPlfH-HOrne 0.Mutn, First, Ru"Vf' ~ .. ( SAVE$-O small. Hou•ton ll, ltNrdOn MonlrHI \7 FrarKO, Clnclnnetl, t, Go-. Sen O•ev<> 9 Lt SMllll, Chiu9<> I, Oroteo. N•,. 'fori. I, worrtU $t Lou" I Mlll<IHOI• l!>rr>•lll\Of! ~ ,, ., I(·""' c ,, GuthCl9 J 4 11 ~error1 JIC l"Oti Jov"tlt Gr<" Downing Bur,.1on He<'dflO x"«lfleld W11tono P11111 JOIHI\ OeCln••• Miller •• •• It H J • Ut>d Pellon• Third EllQMI T-7 '8 A-26 tll Hit Rat ~Cl 0 116 • N•ttoMI 1.. .. .u. ,,. 7) ·~ I ,, lU MAJOR LEAOUe LeAOERS Amwk.an 1..Mtue MIL.WAUKEE lltEWEltS-Sent •a111y JO ROOldou~, ""' O.M!Nln. lo hlolt of tht MldwHI LHil\ie on 20-dev reflaOIUl••IOn 11(0 lll'•m WIUT OIVI~ 111 lS 61 11 4J ,.., C ..... Wwtd iene• 111 e>mMa, Neb.) w......,..,.,Se..c I Tlweutlll w.-.M111Y'1 Gamet I w L 1"<1 GI HOV\IOn ,, " SIG t) " 11 J , m Ito ) I S1 s ,, ?19 $en Fran< •Co n 1J ~· I "1 IOI 14 II I II 211 BAT TING I IOI at belll-llooot Bo•ton Jq'} YOulll, MllweukH, 347, Puc:lo.ttt. M11111'1'\0I• JS7 Beu, foronto Jl7. OolM•, Mttwe""" Ul TORONTO BLUE JAYS-Slotltcl Steve Cum mlnG•. Pli(.l'\e(. AMr-OaledkowltC, C..ICIW. Jecrv scnunl<, shortslOP. encl B•rrv Sl\~11. 1111ro DtMmen to minor MNI-CA>nlr.CI• Allenlt " ~~ SIO l "1 10/ ~noi.oo I\ ,. 00 •• '"' ~· 1• ~ ... •:.1 • l 110 Ctnclnnet 10 ,. 417 • 161 II 7Y I II ,, )I ) 20 I\ n 1 1) 18 10 2 ,, '111 ltuN!r-lt HenderlOtl, ...... Vl>fl . 0 15' 1~~ 290 C.el'I\• 9 -0..tellOme lit 1, Lovo4• Merv• •1'loun1 4, tUlotncltd In lourlh, rein Garr•• 10 -Mleml Fie •• Loultte11e St oe>O rein N•ftelwlL.eteut EAST DIVISION Ill 11 11 , 40 \ 17 m P'uckell MlnnHot• '6, f>twt11p1, 0.Meno •O IOQQ.1,...ao•ton, 31 Allf-Cen'9W, Oo1en<t, i.o. Je-. At!091,, 01 MalllnQIY, New Yori •2. ltlct, 80\IO" 40 B•vtof, 8011011 J9. Bell, roronto, 39 T9'11911t'' G•rnH C.eme ~ Olll•llOm• Sr I SS i.) v• L ov04• CINCINNATI REOS.-Atlnounctd the tflkl• ntllon of Oovo Outt'u~'· d1"tetor of stedlum 011trellon1 s~ Creo Lonklfow. cetcner, and Ktn Wiiii• pltc,.,... II °' 1A I 11 H 10 l& 1111 \0 1 I cl9 10 , tH 1 ,,, •l 14~ ·~ 11 4 v ·~ Jfl ' I ,. 223 0 J 209 ISO ••l comotellon of iu•P9ndtd oeme I IS 207 Game 10 Miami, Fte '" ltl "' Loul•l•na 0 1 061 SI fl~ Ill PITTS8UAGH PIAATE$-Slonect Mtlt1 N•w Yo,. MonlrtAI Pnlle<>elr>n • '""•bu•or Cll<•oo \I LOU•\ '11 lt ~ ,, 11'1 II '" 800"• HO..,tll Ttfth 11U 2S4 4H s• llt ·* HITS-Puckell, Mlnne101a, 80, B0\111' 811\ ton 7S. Mtlllngtv Ne ... Vork 10 &.•l Ttiron•n '1, Alo 1~11111. 61 OOUBLE!>-8000\ Bo\IOfl 17, l•"' "•~~.n C11v Ito M•lll •Oly New for•. 16 o... E ·•~\ B~u•on IS ltk• 80\IO" lS hbler ( .-v• .. "CJ I~ Wallter. OtlCntf' HOCKaY NetteNI .._..., L.M9Ut W~y'& Sort\ PMe0.1ot1 • I ~ 1 ~ITCHING I~ H II SO W LERA 6' S4 lll "01 342 6J ·•·l 3 .. NEIN 'fOltK ISLANDERS.-Tradtc:I M.ae Murrey, cen•ec to Ptlti.dtiollle for • liltll rOund O•O In "" '"' emeteur drelt P•11.o...ro11 17 Atlente ) •• ,. lO ~n Frenc•v.o •, Mo!'lreel 1 N•w lfork ' ~" 0 eoo 1 Wll (tr0.11 McCH~111 ~·••on l!OnM11•K I ~ or•••r Moor• 8rvden $ultOI' Flntev F·\CNtr CanMl••111 Tot•h ?• 20 I 69.., ., lO l T1!1P1.ES-0Wen S..•lle •. 11 •re •·rd ... ,,,, TENNIS ,.OOTaAU. NetleNt ........ ~9" C !lC•l\!'el 1 Ch.c;ego 0 Hou1•on 4 !>• l.Ou1i 2 ~, 1 n 1• 61 47 11 French Ooen 11 • • • s.c ~6 ~ 3 4 SS Tedey'\ G•~ ••ll•J\lon l>t•rnenoa1 o Ot et C>odvrtr\ Hf)nt\f -''' l l n 19 ,. • U l I US HOME RUN!>-Je~, Aft91it, 111 C•"\t<O oa1 a.nd 16 P..<ketl, M1nnesote, IS B••IO• 8o11o)!I ll Brune~111v, M•nnl!\Ot• t.) G••ll• M1nne1ote IJ, LN Perrl•ll. Oetrou, '' Wettd Cup a.ccer 111 Mexke llftll WMrltMMY'l kllf't' (el ,..,b) TODAY'S ltlSULTS Wtmtn'' S..-nlflMI 5"""' HOU!o TON OILERS.-!olQnect Ken LK'f, run· n1ng beck &rien Welter, offtntlvt IKllla •rid Lvllll Meosen. Offensive llneman 19 ,. • lS l·) S11 )0 I IJ II P~·•ad••1>l'1•e I Mud\rJro l ~ ao M1lntr.a1 • ! l>OI \1"'1 ., 11 7)11616 31 l ~ 631 HOLEN 8ASES -It H!ln0er1on. Ntw .-or•. 31 Cenvetos1, Cnoceoo. 1•. Mowov. Toron10 t~ Wlvo•ns 8altlmor•. 14, Butter. C••e1en>J ll lttvnold• ~eotte tJ (,roup 8 IMHICO Cllvl Per•ov•v I, lr•q 0 Mt'""• Nevretllove <U $I def Helene ~uko11a IC iect•cutov•" I• I • •· 1 6, 6 1 WIDMISOAY'S RISUL.TS SAN FRANCISCO ..,..,_W•l¥td Paul Clewis, wide rtetlv.,, •nd A~I Mervin, ci.ten•lve tnCI l 1 " .,.~ 6 • I I 0 6 n Nt11t ft,r• 01Ma 6 21111 Pll1\tJ1HtJt' lf-1\>o•r I 4 n ~ s 0 1 6 I 700120 0 0 0 II 00 PITCHING 16 dt<lllon1J-<'.le,,,.,,• 8o•IO" 9 0, 1 44 Hte\ O.ti.l1nct 1 I 1 !lot &odd•<"'•' 8e1llmort ' I l 7• r.,.,_., O.lroll, 6·1 • H E•Cn"«lrn, Toron•o S 1 093 N•1>vt1 MOweu• .. S·l 4 91 Re\m .. utn Np.., 'fork S·7 4 O? C.rouo E (Quereterot Wt\! C.ecmanY' I UnnMS--•'MllllllLeewe l.ll'u11uev l Oenmer• I X.oll•nd O Molft' t OUen.nlnctl S...... ARIZONA OUTLAWS-Acoutred Ktr.I (1'1•(611< f;O~•\l•Y I I i>' :01 ou \ I or\ ~ 4S1 OS llO IOO 1" U U l Ttdlov'\ Oeme\ C.rouo A IPueo••l -1t11v •\ Ar1111nllnt Bu1uerie "' ~·~ l<.0<ta Htn" Leconte f F '911Ct) d.i Andf'el Che\nolo;ov IUS\f'I) 6 l 6 f •·l, MlkMI Pee ntort ISwedenl Off &c,r,, B«"f IW"'t C.... menv I 1 6 6 • • 1 6 0 0.A'fai.. 11neoecker t )1 n ~t •r'& Sri tr J ~ e' \•r o ,..,,, ,,.,, •. •" C.rouo C ll .onl -F'rerK.t • ~•1•• Un•<>n COLL8GE OREGON-""•"*' Gtoroe Uotlon •Ull1'nl ,,._., Otlketbell Coteh S·41 n CALL 642-5678 IF. CALLING FROM NORTH ORANGE IF CALLING FROM SOUTH ORANGE 540-1220 498ol800 I LOST MY OWNER BUT FOUND HIM ARER I PLACED AN AD IN THE CLASSIFIEDS. lea1 lata tt Per Sale !Gt•tr•I 1002 ,ll!J!rt lt1d1 lOH ICttt• •eu llZ4 jL•ea• ltac" 2141 Af!f!!tatt C..11 •111 MM 'c:..11 •na llM Cena 11tN MM L!pu..... 1141 Ga.aaJ 1002 FIEI 10 E'YlLllTill IEWPllT llAOI •SH~AP W•tlM<M 2Br FABUl.OUS OCEAN *OllOU Tllll* CLEAN I SHARP 2 BR. ....... Ot YOUR propentea NO i MPLUll I tS. Dpht Tiie nra, crpt•.11C1nyon Vlew-1bd, 1ba la1llM Cutt Studio, ut111 Incl cpta I drpe. OIW, W· me81i8.AU Cute l ?118r. Oood .121 000 obllgellon by TOP 2 unite neer ctiannel 1 ~rpa w/d l'lkup, ger '800 duplex, g.,, wd dclt, l1un, lalad 2'°' 1475 Lg 1Br. gategct. egct. no pell. SMOfmo. etM. pertc all utlla • ....,Piil' OOI PRODUCER Ca 11 Greet atertlf prop«1y ., -: ~111;~~~9dlt 17115/mo, 4118-1297 §f06io APT ONFORN Hurry 1650. Rare find 28' &4S-5&n .. IPU'fm11 lnct Onty 2& ottwt ""' DD PATRICK TENORE Priced only 11 s t80 ooo 0 1 • F~ provl<Md. pet111ng. 281, frplc lea& FM EU1 eo.te MeM newer FM1Uttng bMutlf\11 lend-evallable. F• Well loc•t9d lit floor 83l·t2ee 3bd. 2bl up 1bd, 1be •U&llSITIMI• l•nprt .. .,~ Zllt utll pd, $&50/mo yrty, Tllllm 111-1111 prvt28r1S.,veult9dcel-~. eeo.. pool/~ nuam ll~ VIiie B•~ SpK!oua 1 Iii car parkl"G Prtc9d II Fncd yrd Pet ott trok: 2 H 28' 2S., Nwpt --~ •CIMn 2Br 2S. "' SC rm & kltcMtl Sngl OM· ~ Sony. no~ ~ condo In gate guato.d ~~ down, lrpa bit lne & 4 48r 2b1 2 Cit g•reoe ~ 1v1ll now, 864-117711 lngt In IMng rm, dining Petlo/dedc.1. G.,egm or _.... Bdrm modelopeneonto ::: $255.000 eundeck. e1cs12.0 FM. Sh~.Mrtl'ltonee, tieiaf. lal"ta P1aia1al1 Pteu SA Cerport, egcel700/mo CellSheryl 18drm M201";r'tliiliiiiiii;f e>rtvatt 9flCloMd patio 3bd 2b• upper unit TE m dbl oar. comm poo1 ' Z&O'l I patlO, poo1. Child <* e. e1w111 Of e31-12M 28drrn 2e. 17961 * 1 mllll ... O.Uxe bullt-ln ltllehen ,._ • J •--lO't" w/frple btt·ln• & vi.w 01 LH lll-UIO tenn S 1295 IM S 1800 1750 NO PETS 722-e<> 11 125 Cent• St 842 1424 Aefrtg, dWiw......, & stow c:arpeta & window Wiacsei 1-rtal t _. -bey a OOMlll LOW. unit Oelu-. 38R 2b1 W'IMOe MC A'fl 517 831-3025 ji5001Utll i);Jd ltc;:;:;;rlrlg _ • lnol NO PET8 5415-456 AnuceltentvaJue •~YllW-* 2bd. 2be. lrpk; & Pv1 F/PI, m1n1 ocn vu 2 car 2 +Oen 2 Stry twnl'lm9 Lrg 18R duplex. 4 10 ........... B .. H Wllfffll-•l•M•ITM• ,.,_ "S P•llo OwMt' mO\llng out 2218 e P_,,,flc A ,..___ XI H.,dl"G Belboa Pen 1 ~ U #9 (1l•) 673 ••tv1. l"""''om exec 1 •tO¥Y It f ,295000 gat _. v ..,.,..n vu nt cond ldult nop«e 547•1155 Wwit a -.ctlon Of grMt A.ft1g.dllhwM!wlatow ~ Down' b•y & ocean o .,.. · s 1000 S..-calt&«-8722 Nwpt Terr $9110/mo · 11••nmm EASTSIOE 280, 28A IMng? W• can oftw eny-Ind NO PETS~ vlew9 3Br 3S. + tern & 1 OcMn front. 4bd. 2b• wkdY9 Of •ti 5, 7511-t 104 575-41112 Viti• Rentale Nwpt Penln 3Br 2Ba. ger, -Nr Senta Ane./21tn St, tNnQ from 1 .-nall apt to l=,--,,-::--,..,--.,..---,,..- A•llWll COl.E of NEWPORT nu ~lty told moet of our current lle111'1g9 We neve mo<• t>vyer1 than n«>mM to nu ,,_ need• We lnlltte you to net your vll~b .. ptopetfy with UI. COLE of NEWPORT ol fer1 you complete end prompt r•pr ... nt1tlon nowl Note. *9 h•,,. evall Ible FREE WC>f1tllh099 !Of 1ou to k999 up wtth tne con1t1ntty cttengtng , .. 1 Nl•t• rn&rtc-'. •guide to pr01.c:t your latgMI tn "-'tnen1 Cell UI tod•yl OILllFMWNIT tll-1111 1pa Beet .,.. Nothl"G down, 2bd, tb1 up, good ---lndry, lrplc Yrty 1 1300 8uutlf\.lt largt Apta In & S • 4 bdrm "°'* tt look· 28' 1S. UPC* A.pt: Gw llke 111 Mod .. home cond tocatlon. wlnter/1Ummet Eutllde 2t>r hOUM lelaure 1tnnl--• VIII• Rentel• 576-41112 quiet neighborhood. ctOM to*" Jr H ' lnQ In CM NB. or HB 1795 Yrty: 311'-" ~St It S580.000 (Incl Land) rent 1I1 Prtctd •I patio g•r • yard klde 1>41t1 I Bdrm, 1 B•th, new <Moo<. POOi Spe No pell. d/w, lg 1-noed yd, P9tlo, INt • flr'I •!of DthWlhf refr1Q deck •_...,.. I,,._ $429,000 s750 53M190 1 ger•g• pool, bltln• C.rtaa ••I •ar IHI 1Bdrm "65 Ind encl~. coin-op ~°'c/i:.., L that s.. Sund.y 1o;oo.12~30 .. 11111 -· Sett Alty IM Hurry se75 FM 2B<lrm l'l•S. S750-$790 i.un. 1dltld,1 P9C <*, w1r "'""' Mo 55eOANVT1ME_ TIWllT Ill-IMO .... a"'* 151e 2,,, St s.a-2408 pd, 1aso + 1850 dep, TSL MGMT &42-1903 ••Br11nc1 ,...., 2er 2a. Ctttl .... 1024 Tha~~~!!I 2br -----28r, MW decot, ~·I •FREE CABLE TV Le 18' 8e3-C7515 llQ1. no IM Ht. • ~h~lce 1;t· ()~~ bua • yrd klda/cet •toolflHT• .:.r.~m 71'Z !.~. & 28'. 2e. ().,den Apt.a NEWPORT HEIOHTS 2aann. 1 Lffi. Q . a;;, 7~~·713 0( M~~ir.'' llW Yl•lf meny othe<a ev•ll•ble Ehte 2Br. g.,~. ,,._ •~---Poot rec room '5215-Bachelor Only 1476 ne w crpte & drpe, i--------- Lerge 2 e1ory 4Bdrm atfa C..1t 539-6180 Belt Riiy IM decor mlrrora ell bltlna •CUTE 2Bdrm, IS., g.,. $e55 710 W 18tti St Lndry• rm 1865 INtne belcony, 9"CI gere ge •Ufflm -· 2'-tS. femlly h<>rM Aalt· •trt 1011 E'SIDE2BA tb1,ger...,. 2 yrly Of11y l1300 FM 909 & frplc $850/mo •MESAVEROED'lux28r, ~Ave A 720-IM22 1710 7141846-0964 L.g28r2&9.bMmoellnge. Ing S 183·500 llKE' NEW 366 h BA -..-TIUl.EIT ITl-tlH 875-41112 Vlfl• Rentals 2S. MW decor d/w E·llcM 28' 2Ba, w/veuhed balcony, frplc. Other• CONDO Bonu1 room, ~:~'~:· mo~~ ~~ 39R 2·~ bl N----cr..t UUT Wll 1 u '.ock 0 ed gerag• .• lnd,Y oelllng9, frplc. dbl Oat 2SR 2b•, ap,e/drapee. •valtabie 11200. F.e Traditional ............. 17115 No P9t• 640-2495 w/euto DI** 1875 • patio, garage. dl•tl-TB.Diii 111-1111 1/t, NGUrlty 1yt1em lky-1198 3434 IHve mao Condo Wilk 10 beach, Sundeclt, vtew, av111 now 1" 1 .. , MC w 5 2 per-wuher. coln lndry.1 ________ _ I{(• }l It y lltN, P•Ooldeclr rr .. h New 2 t bd :?'Ab poo11tenn1112 c11 ger 11150/mo+dep. ~255 Sparkll1l9 OIMtl 2Bdrm. ,001 NO .-1. 860-1798 1895/mo, 848-&451 390, 2BA, FlREPLAC! paint, new cer1>41t, 2 cer mi ' rma tt. 1 S 1325, 2131427· 1135 1'/•S. M95 ~ ce.rpet.1 "9' W/O Hooll~. 1 a. Qllf. fl:\ 1-7:no gerege s 115 000 I 2 car encl gar Twnl'IM -Small 18r, compi.tety,... & d c All 11111...... ·-y= ... ., ..... a.. s•3•1 II 854 143319711 2079 · 11y1e No Pet 1595 3BR/2BA I.ow. Duplex mod.i.d se251mo 38, r• u ... .......... -•• -" " mo, a ve now. ---5~251or472-11253 1 Step1 to aand 11350 paid rig, o-reoe 1 GARO£N APA MENTS lBr 18&. c:rpta, drpe Eaey 842-4387 OILY 104' DI I WC •• ~u.11 .. n Furn /unfurn Quiet ldult. ~~"r:d~:ry ms~~~ Chlld <* No pel• StrMma, QM 880. thrv-~ove·ln. Only uoo. ..--1• F •-• OO New Eut!M<M 38r 2'~S. 2 Mo/mo tet+SO 49a-140e 1990 Wallaee 042-<6914 out Pool, eptl, auMe, ..,.here avail F.. _,__..r N-duplex on lerge CO< H eeJf 11 11ory Townriome All Cell Anytime 122-7834 Or A.tier &PM 643-e629 ClubhN. encl prkng, TIL8DT 111-1111 NMr StloPC»nQ c.t\t• rw IOI 11311.900 Firm s UddNX ISaneremlc 1m11n1tte1 S 1250/mo BA YFRONT 28R/den. Unlurnlah•d Bach•lor •NICE 2BDRM 2BA* Sf)9doul 18' S50l5 28r 1726 No pell '40-1364 Prtn onty 759·5080 ocn vv. wal~ to etor•. V1t11 R.n1.i1 575-41112 lrplc 2 IPC park g MC Cloee to bMd'I Prvt ..,.. Lndry f9C dlw Fncd peUo 28a w/trplc, d/w 1728 l.rtiM l&llll ... Wf BHt. lucfa 1040 •dull pk, 1 bc1 by ownr. ;rPENTRIOOE COVE• bid~ S l850/mo yr Irene. t Adult snf'd No peti Mao Nttn*r9 Avatlnow Sorry,nop«a OMXNdEfREl Ltg iiK 3er 2a.,2 c. No-· 9 'f' OWNER-T ownhouM $34,950 C&lh 4119~ 2Br 201 Condo11195 Ov8f ~:,/~O~ ~R;,d~ MOO Inc utlta 573-:J474 7f50.. t4 15 or 042•1528 2000 Pereona 54&-ee72 A.IC. '9fng. tennfia/pool, SHO 8"4-1ofo' M M-F' 2bd, t'~b• uaurne a 75 lntal1 1•11• & llrHm• New bldg 12100/mo yr C"tl •na 16 Sou Neer Nwpt Hat• 41 28' no p e u •97 5tmo1.,,---.--------FHA loen. nr rec ., .. & d9COf W/d hkup 2 car W1terfront Homee Inc 50 th Coat Plua 2S. w/petlo Within'-" ml 1atlletleec 780-87M Eutbluff deluxe Apt. 28r 0001 frplc eparkllng GntraJ 2102 ier W/Of>nr Ill mo + 111·1• etM 1Bdrm, air, r.'°9d to bc:h l800 No~Atl 2'A8a, dbl enO( gar ' 500 MC 5411·2447 &a~ield pool, ca,rport No pell. a..-& Wltnd . Meteflendl•cpportunltlel W/fMtQ opflf Aec pool clMn, treeh paint, .;c Stepa to ~ 11508 pi;;; •~LI I 64M7111 ""'" • 1 In dal9lfled • Nltt bringing ar-. NwfY 1'9nbveted SSl.500, llM ioea w/b1tln1 & ger kid aat. ltac" 2140 Ill O&IYM... lPAITlllm aeoo H&O, 2bd, 1b•, PUI UU UllM ;:'~~:1ntownto ~7•~·"'5 ~-onl'i ·-... ---··---L•tH a ltae" f041 53118l\llAgtf... 386.3eX1ooo so H 2:i,!:~9JCC:-:0°7~ S..ullful.CIMnlatgeGat-compi.1t1yrerio11at9d.on E'*'-18R. u'" pd,~ -:.=!! -.............. or83042 .... llUmlllll IOUI laJka 'I• ml to b9aeh. S 1::tll6tmo, court S 18116 759-00711 <Mn Ap11, P9tloe. declce, weet 17tti ,,.., Whmlef cptldrpe/more 1825 appt lftlllt .... ~ Kit EnlOY the Luxuty Of !tie COLDWC!U. BANl(C!RO d. y. 8. 1 I 4 2 4 ------IP• SOfry, "° pet 5'48-~8211 '°' more ct.ta. only 86()...3813 649-0433 beaullful IUfTOUndlnva of YIE'W wru PeaJa11la 2107 •v•lwkenda-"'42·5707 CLEAN 3bd. 2be. Hvbor 2B<lrm l'l·B•th 1720 11e12•-11a.. .. Ullll UIT 5Br 5S. • frplc;e, m•ld'• Xvetl mra JulY 3bf 26. yrty $400'• .ju1t blk ocn lbf Hllandll Ue $1200 mo 2B<lrm 2Beth 17-40 Ill .. , ,... ··~ I qrtr9. :\tit get Wei~ 101 updll19d klldblO., dec;lo. compl kit trM utlle m~ gerd/weterpd NOPETSI 3119 W Wlleon 831-5583 Patio A«ng 731W18ttt WW~LI -=-a In~ 2:::"'nr: ____ ,. bch S750K Op11n s1300 5311.e191 Agt I• now 63Mt&I Agt IM ~2389 or 548-tlee. Streei. IA 573-7187 a•gf .. ll ""',._ 2 .--.. IAUM .... llU Sat/Sun II 5 3 .-.32 Holly --INSTANT IN _. ..-. car Qllfl09 """' ll Mil I Drive South L•gu"• t.rm-•el l&U2I22 5 BLOCKS TO OCEAN F'ncd Ill gerden IPOt 2br SS 16/mo 18R 18A. 111 llUT LIUTm L.-e brand,_, Al utllt1ee opener he guarded .,., 3 ,...8~ "•I""' Scott andCo4119-t600 ·---a-* flegent c9d•r ~ gtu1I no11t1~!~~1.,1Sf~, ... gw bullt ln1 lndry rm, m$1501mo 2br 1'Aba petd Poot OtftlQe. 1 •M12 ..... lt ..... IJl!~~~~~rom n ...., • ~, _, -"-28drm. 2'•Hta faintly '" -• ...., be90h I 9'lope townl'IOUH, QrMn~t. Oflltd Ok No 1)9CI 11..., ...,.. ___... hom. 8eatn C411Ung1 In lAJ H I lllla lOH Lg 2Br hOme n..ty r• room & <Mn P1ulll crpt1. LIDO ISLE Yrly ..... 736-741 W 18th St lndry rm •II blt-lna 28drm tS.th 1110 Int 8' tt ti• .... n- IMng room lovttly tnrw [[i§uRI! WORLD id'R rnod4tled, 2 c•r gar, yard trplc, 11t.tn<Mek Dbl oar Charming 39R 2btl, avd TSL MGMT 842·1903 2078 Tl'lurln 301 Avocado fM2-H50 n I............ ...., patio, rNtlCUIOUI oon-2ba Condo cent H/ .. In-Wiii eonlllder =· Frig & tully m•lnlllned yltd NOW, no pell $1800 mo 2bd. 1be. E'IMOe, newt)' TSL MGMT 042·1803 POOL-PRIVATE PA.TIO • Month to month LrJ,~'!,2'.tBA ~'=-:. dltlon A hO<M you muat 1104! i.undry, gat wtopnr. atove, yrty S 1 50 FM tto-1111 1 409-3-400 own/bltr decor119d, frplo, P9tlo, Bachelor Unit In South New d/W, trplc, ctoee to11 ~-/mo . ... i ~HIO 150 deg vu oc.11n TIUlm l ll•tlff AVAIL NOW 480 NEWPORT SHORESt 3bd, gat 1700. AvaJleble nowt Coet1 MeM ar .. t for X·LG 18' a&ea. 2~5. also 1v1l11tbl1 fSL MOM\°''• 1942.1903 ... M'lll MUI ~I comer IOC9tlon 9Cfoee from tl'le beeCl'I in plctur .. que Cart1bed 8ulld home Of two unite on Mdt of thrM iev.I 45 ft Iott Alklng '333.000 p« IOI (7 14) 673.......00 ~r•:~·· ol~ ~' .. c: •l lllTMlll• .. l2BA Nr A.Uenta/Magnoll1 '1ba, 1 bllt to betl. pool,. 6-48-t709 =lll~~10":25/mo EA8TSIDE 1581-2841 •Furn11htd/ N!WPORTMARINA APT'ii 85 1 5• 1835 7 w n "r 1 room, 11>9, full tcttctten kite lam rm C:O!"bo, lrptc, gar. patio $1200 yrty 2 Bdrm, 1 S.th. Xlnt lo-1 2 SHA.AP ANO CLEAN OAR-unfurn11htd • Ba yfront 28r, 21•. Cable rv Incl vwy .... d/w, fenced yd. patio, 1 MCUffty 8"42-<6811 cellon. lrg IMng rm. lllff APf WfNW DEN APT. 1BR. etCMI & • Fitness centers, Oen. M6Cro, frpto, erlOI l t:Jlrf ltac• lMt clud«S 1375 FM l1und, dbl gar. prdnr P<l IU ISUll-patio, encl geregce. no vaulted c•lllnga, prvt refrlo-t"ator, no pete. Qllr p,_, bctl S2!M · •"IJ'AcE i coDFdattt; TIWm Ill-IMO 11150tmo •MOO deS>. peta M60 tM-2111 balcony, redecorat.-d u201mo 64t-13n tenn11. IWlmmmg •AUK>• ··-•-1••1 kldelp•ll ol( Clll Lg 3bd. "be,~ rm. ale. 2 BEDROOM 1beth ......._. 18$5 2151 Pactnc A.¥9 28drm, 28e 117H. lorry. -,.._, .,. So of PCH 5 rrn ped belle ~755 agt, no ,.. MC 1y91ern ~ud.ct • n c 101 • d 1 ~ ;·g;-5 3 t • 5 1 0 1 pm 0 , Sl'WP lair;e 2 ·Bedfoom Model• open datly 9 6 no~ 71CM>t1t M Eitec hom. latOt ywd '°' a II or d 1 b I e d • c: or N"'W LUXll'"" H""'•c patlO, pool epaJ • pn, ...... ,mo ..... ¥1-1 86~ No.-, d&#nttal,.., Abeotutety Sorry no ~ti entertaining p1u1 meny dlhWShf pool M50 11 '" "' """' move In cond, many ......,., --_.. ....,., """'9CUta'te. Ollhw....,, IPllllll 1111ru Hepplly lhown by s39.e1e1 Agt coet N9Yet ~pied, 2200 IQ amenlll••. c a ll LH 2210-C RUTGERS Clean qui« 28drm, gar· WtdoMd loollat1419 Qllf• Ntwpott 811ch Nn 1 MILE TO~ ai>91 l3e4 500 -rt. 3bd. 2 -"· ba, w le to M2-M05 28R 2be. ~. 09,. ege t child Qt( MOO/mo 909. Pat1Hltl• grounde 880 lrv1111 Av-.nue 5-42-"87 Unfurnt1tied 18drm, I .~W. ~-3"'2 .. 1 or>tloft. SPACIOUS 3bd, 2\.tba, tOf, 1000 lq ft olean, 1300 MCurlty cs.ooalt 1880 Avallable June (II 16thl I/ ' 8elh, nreptace, ge.regce, -.,, .......,. "' Vwy• Cleen 1.1t1f\Jrnlehed bultuoe. cpt1/drpe, M60. Call 860 7427 191h/21tt. No P9tt. ceal 145-1104 ...... )/11/i~( ,// S&OO~ :~ o~:"ln. T/l'lome, PfV/Qutef. 38R lownh«>uM Comm pool cell 548-8300 CLEAN I SHARPi"i'A. 5"M21t Ntwpon BHr.11 So §Gd, 11);'. -™ P'• __ Ta. 2';..ba, lrplc, matr w/huge 11050 mo. Bob Kann 28R 2be townhOme pan· cpta & drpe DIW get• T8 ftl'flllll M&Olmo, 11t & IMl l300 R E A l T y Cttll .... lu• tub. nr BMctl/Adama +714 1537-2270• try rm, pY1 P9tlo, '1.unct age no pelt ~{mo 28f. •lfll/ll ~ ckpe. 1700 18th s11 .. 1 Me,.., 1bd apt In Dina 'BR tiX. la ;tOfage an.s. S1 JOOlmo Ev 0&9-440e Try • cottave a1yta ~ carprt, atoregce ltled, lml 8"46-5577 l:lftlna 1'nod Yfd w/petto (11 Oovtrl pt_ 1M-OT•1nu-4541. aurFIHD-mT nucerpt/cfrapee,nopeta ,_.__ 21u rent.i ~A P«Mded pet Ok Mt5 110 Joann c;;;;;;-... Comulgh Come 13&-<1120Cel 1-IPM 142.stU ~-• llTIYITQ tt50 "8' Mey9r. lhow by UTia. -1&115 tnccs p111 !bM1t1 Mt-0433 or 850-3e73 t>uy·tnctwlfled M7 Vk1orte ''C" "78 ~ Huge IOt AJmoet 10.000 ~t M50+ ~ 549-MM !it 2L'. new Turt' MO& AQent t• . • . u ...... PINU .,....,, H....... h. -.. IQ rt 38drm. famlly ----Pointe Condo et-10 "-ta •-.. • ... ,. ____ ... -"'-" ·-.,. . •A room. Po01 V~t & 28A btigtl1 lefge IMng rm, pool A .. au Jul .....-hl VERSAILLES Condo HR -•-_. ~ ... 28A tie wlp t 7IO ·A...,.,..,_.,,.,. AiWii&ff reecty to Mii SYbmlt 111 new pelntlcpte & ruga N/emkre. &&4-2~ · 2be encl unit In ~ loO TC>ft AAIA. CMlt., No,.._ r-....ui '''""" •» I CHAHN«l. "'°"' ofl•ral Rn Roger• '750/mo, no~· ~ -w/mlnl bey vlfW l frPO, WOODLAND Y *'*14 .. 24U•• 11&1..._,.. ""°'9t 1 BOAT IUP ~ 131.12oe P'flt t7t-32a'7 ~DO 2 bdrm. den, Univ 18'0/mo A;t 644-7211 w4rnc»2 1 MUIYllW-.~~"~~>· .,...,,,.. io-:!:.::n~~ ,.-11••• APARTMINTI . -..1~t:1t: • um LIT?Y 38' 2a.. ,.,., tncd yrd, refndg, $1000. IM-76t0 ac-rl W.W °"*" ewlf.. Coftlt' "''°' Oii! pldtulyluph Quilt. comfortlbll hv let u. d-•p y.. . LCJWty ~ ..,.. d ~ -~-___ 1 patio. w/c: p«.a. Otherl atl4l9 doe9 to bMd\. cloM It ITllWIY' & So. Cont Plata .-Ollly 1111 '" to t 119t tommdl'lofWlnCotona . IN btet1000 Fee La~..... 2141 l llmflDTIL beec.11 Gal Hlilatlle N0'1TUlWC ; .... Met AoOW to ptl-w~:~ TD.llD1' llMlll d!XCHI !63. 26.. ..... ....... ...... LAUllll'f..... Sin YH; h,.._rt,t vate bHCfl. ThtH bll)"W A.-'°' Kitty CtRCL TH I ~IOUI, IPUkllno ITl-4lllttl1M171 •a-a-........... , r •r• bedtoome A ~ 7n-,501 Here 1 anot'-H ped . ~ w, "J>lc. no ..._.. - TWD Oedl.9 ,.....,_ ""' -c:rp1dd ... _ --"" 100 P9C• 11350 mo '--I ••-a-•••1-1 ... I t ' *"' ~A, other r:'" .:;r., 8at18un 71UM·204t 0t l11t• Cuti ••tfl -..--• liiilVV •NM1M• 0 1129'-a~•d•YB llM 1 ....... 1 'TS0.'760 Call ClllllflM, Im~ 2 lltl) 5 rm 2be CHARMING WOOde CO¥e toxONY 2idrm 2 .. .... mAf a .... warm 9ICL ...... .,., ....... "'4th0ut f/~~u oar .... lddum 280. 1&A Dlnlnt. den, Cclndo, 8'. Albini. •1• .... •••••• • 642-56 71 tN ...... 91111 ~ lltme pel 153M1to .__"'CS, petlO, <*! II, frplc, lew l Althur £)ay9/ n Ma. 1 H 1nm...iAed .... Atty,_ gctnr. tlffS, <l ._,29). 131-<M01.-.nJ1•781t i.;.;..;;.;;;.;...;-.:..~~~~-t •• ·l~ 7~·910() , ., - .,, .. r M!ttdd!t .... $2.4fl'per day ThM'• ~ pey for 3 htf,~My mlntmum In the SERVICE DIRECTORY CALI. TOOAYll &llFMLlll ' ' ' • • • C6 Oranqe Cout DAILY PILOT/ Thunday. June 5, 198e I A -l ------------------------------- ' • IUEYTOYOTl w.11 &EIVIOEI LUSlll 18841 e..cti Blvd. 114/141-1111 """ 'll llAll n Wagon, NM good, lmOg cert "°° 775-75e3 IN u.s :A. ANO TRYING HAR0£.R TO El I •SALES •SERVICE ·PART& • LEASlNG l ANC,ISl iN1t~I II• ON IHI .~I • 7A EVERY Menl ' COLOR CALLTOD4Y 979 2!>00 THEODORE ROBINS FORD 101'>0 HAllllO• 111110 (0~fA MlU. 641 0010 FORD '62 fltcon Conv Whlt.rT en. """' loolC.e grMtl Mu8t ..... beet offw. Cell b9lwMn 10 am end II pm. 8?$.704e FORD '78 Torino, eter.o, auto , PS/PB. n.-d• ~ $!001080. u II BUICK '81 Pane A~. Ewnlnge 497--4595. !Oeded, new J*nt, moon-.,...FO.,....R"'"o,,....,·1'""a"""M..,..U""'s'""T,...,A...,..NO=-v""'e"-" roof. CB. am/tm, air, new Many xtru, lender dented b9t191"/ $4to0 &46-0Ma runa well $1880 ~ beet NABERS CADILLAC on.rt .. wttnd. Me 1464 FIU'11'111T& Red. enrl, air, Od cond '2000. Call 5-45-~ --------------- "'1IC llOJIC[ Pae llJl1C[ NOTICE INVITING UA&.E> HJI cc .... IRQIECfTY • No .... • o.f.ult 81-014180. AP •s1....a1-11. ,1tao.a. = Frnt. It No, H - 11-014116, AP 451-521-o3. HN OI, ~. W*-" L.. 14 o.kd•. No. 100 • ~ 81-015320 A' -483-271-22. t:Sl.30, Broedmoor Campue View Community~ No 101 • o.ld 11·015803 AF' 511-132-SO, bt.30. Northwood A8ICI =···· No 102 -o.tlUt 81-02110t , AP 130-11-'ts. ...-a.12, Evant. JoM F .. 2'40 PGclt Ln ••• 303. No 10S -o.ta'8 11-021517 , AP 932 .. 94-011, •1225.M, am.n.t. w-.n e.. ~10 Fem8ndo 8t., #110. No.. 104 -~. 11-0211ea. "" '33-11-111. 1180,11, Zlober, Jolt c .. 17 "°""'"' wtnd a., ·1••· No; 100 -°""""' 11 ·021154 .• AP 934-75-0Sa, '2111.U. Mc Un, .,.... c . .Jr ... Cod 8rOOll .... ' .. ()range Coat OAILV PILOT/ Tl'lutlday, June 51 10M 0 NABERS CADILLAC @ 2100 HUIOR ILYD., COSTA IESA (114) 140-1100 (213) 111-1211 • Best Prices • Convenient Location • Great Location • Super Service • Courteous & Knowledgeable Sales People if 0 STERLING MOTORS WEST Chevrolet • Porsche • Audi '41 E. C.ast hy., le.,.rt haoll 111-0IOO Highest Quality Sales & Service e SALES•LEASING ru.mtm ro YWt flIDS BY EXPERTS HARBOR -sueARU 13861 HAR80I Bl VD. GAJWEM GaOVC 714-554-2800 213-590-0259 tm. IQt.IJI 7:30 AM -5:30 PM SATt AM -2 PM • EARLE IKE VOLVO .,.,. Alwa.,, a hui,:c inventory .,.,. Alway' Ji.,i:uunt pri1..c' ,AL -, • 5FAVfC( • FAStt J< • PA HTS • BOOY SHOP. J 9n\) llarhor BlvJ.,.l 1,,ta Ml·'a 7 1416) 1-K8KO The Best Car Buys in Orange County are at the dealers ·1isted on this page Mo•:vo HIGH VOLUME DISCOUNT DEALER SALES, LEASING PARTS & SERVICE 28802 Marguerite Parkway • Mlaalon Viejo, CA 92892 (714) 582-2880 (714) 364-1210 0 THEODORE ROBINS .. O &>~th C<>t1nty--®-f ~ BIWER [N]@TI@oo@ FORD U.S.A. 's # 1 Thunderbird Retail Dealer Modern Sales. Service, Parts. Body, Paint & Tire Oepts. Competitive Rates On Lease & Daily Rentals 20IO ll1rlter llt~., Cetta 1111 1•2-0010 tr IG-1211 o · SADDLEBACK Sales Leasing & Service Parts IAVINE AUTO CENTER 1-800-831-3377 714-380-1200 G) JIM CLICK AUDI/RENAULT/JEEP c ' ,.. WE'RE OUT TO BE #1! IRVINE AUTO CENTER 41 Auto Center Dr. Irvine 71 4 951 -3144. (8 00 428-7485 d'1\ 0 CREVIER B M W ~ ""' SALES • SERVICE • LEASING 'ft;;ll "Where Professional Attitude Prevails" apeca.t111no In Euro.,.en o.tlvery. e.ceti.nt a.lec:tlon ot N9w end c.r•fully prepered UMd BMW'• alway• In stock 835-3171 208 W. 11t St., Santa Ana Corner of Broadway & 1st St Closed Sundeys GSTERLING SAUS -SEIYICE -UASlle -run Overseas Delivery Speclallsta OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK BMW -ROLLS ROYCE 1540 Jamboree Rd. Newport Beach 840-8444 G) JIM SLEMONS IMPORTS 1301 Ou•ll St. -N•w C•r Location 1001 Ou•ll St. -R"•I• Dl~l•lon · World's Largest Selection of 0 Mercedes Benz A 833-9300 Wes . Lmtt1 . r1ru . s.mc. . 1o4y "°' EARLE/KE TOYUTA - VOLKSWAGEN/ISUZU CALIF'S 111 1 LARGEST VOLKSWAGEN DEALER NEED WE SAY MORE? Parts Open M-Sat 8 • 5 30 Sat 9 -4 p.rn Servi~ m-Frl 7 30 -6 p m 11711 BEACH Ill VD HUNTINGTON BEACH 714/ 842-2000 '>I Al Fil AC.11 .· WE LEASE ALL MAKES CALL US FOR FLEET PRICES Just o Short Drive Away .. 1 33375 Camino Capistrano 493-3375 SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO 831-1t75 o COMMONWEALTH VOLKSWAGEN • G'NG! s.t.ction • Low Price• ® • Eaay flno:nc:tng •Ho Gimmicka 'FAMILY STORE SINCE '63' LES • SERVICE • L.EA!JllNG • PARTS • ttODY SHOP 8ale1 • Servi~· -Leasing 7141846-9303 BRIBroL A'l IDING!R • Ml• 0110 BUICK Lo.lus JAGUAR ISUZU 0 the PROFES~IONAL APPROACH 71 4-979-2500 2925 Harb or B oulevard • Costa M esa, CA • • SAN JUAN C:.AP1$TRANO G UNIVERSITY OLDSMOBILE HONDA 2880 Harbor Blvd. Cnta Meaa 540-0713 3 Block• So of 405 Fwy. ' BOB LONGPRE Or•"9• Cot.lnty'J Oldest & Largest PofttJ.tc 0.•tenhlp •1 IHCh lhld • ttw 0.IMn Grow ,,....,,.y . . f 714 892-6611 f71416H-llOO We perform ;r1 Ponti.IC warramywol'k, rfOltdlns ot · Wl>'here )'Ou ortgln.1lly purd\INd )'OUt car • ONlf llCNIDAY 8VDlllNll ""'8. ... P•. \ __ ..,_ ... 0 .. 0 HOUSE OF IMPORTS • Eese of Ownership term• • Lease convenlence-12-72 mo • • 'Setect from 100+ new and pr&-owned • Dettvery in Europe option dlal Mercede1 714/213 837-2333 Santa Ana (5) FrHway a Beach In Buena Park G CONNELL CHEVROLET 2121 • ., ... , ... ~ ......... .. Over 23 Years Serving Orange Co~nty Sales • Service • Leasing 546· l 200 S,.aal Parts U1t 546-9400 MONDAY-FRIDAY SATURDAY SUNDAY 8:30 AM -t :OO PM 8:30 AM -8:00 PM 10:00 AM -5:00 PM G TED 10~ FORD/ISUZU Your full aervice ford & Isuzu dealer • Sales • Service • Leasing EA.S ) to FJND ... EASY to DEAL WITJ-1 2 b/!1 north of S.ant• Ana Freeway on Beecb Blttd, 6211 BEACH BLVD. BUENA PARK (714) 521 -3110 (213 ) 921-8681 0 amagai PONTIAC • TRANS .,, • FlllCBIRO • SOOO ST! • p~RfS(NHf • 80fff Vil l [ I CRAHO PRIX • ~Btlltl CONVERT18tl • T 1000 • GRANO.,, I• Sell Eldte•Ht amagai PONTIAC FIERO 2480 Harbof lhd. Costa Mm Newport B .. dl 714/549-4300 amagai SU BARO SLASHES e PRICES! e ON ALL ... 1988 MODELS IMOlR MY CIRCl*ST AHCES W[ Wll NOT BE UNOCRSOLO! ---·--- SUBARU 2480 Hartior Btwd. Coll• ..... Ntwpcwt Btldl 714/549·4300 G OUNCE COAST JEEP /RENAULT # 1 /11 Till W11t 111 flirt 1,. 11/n-Ftr I fun ' 0Dtn2e • sALes r-Loa'"St. s EAv1cE m• ""-.,.,o • LEASING -c:oeu ... .._ • ACCESSORIES DEPT 549-8023 . «> ~ r <:MDPBfl I NI SAN/~ lfKH • Lew PTkb • Ne Gimmicb • Great Selection • Prt.ndly P..,.a. • h~lent Service 18835 leach lcxilevofd (7 14) 142·77•1 HvnflflQIOn leodl (211) 592-1463 ..-'Excell nee In Sales Service & Leasing ..-'Orang County'• No. 1 No Haaate DeaJ rll we HAVEMAXEY DISCOUNTSlll (71•) 147-1555 18881 Beech Btvd., Huntington Bch. .. --~~~~~-~-~-~-~-~~~~~--'-~~~~·~~--~~~~~~--~-~-~-~---~~~~-~~~~~~~~~-.;.~~------...-.-.. .... ..-.-..-..i1 .... .-.....-.......,-.-,._~.,...___..~---- --, I 2S~ • FOMCAITI ON A2 THURSDAY, JUNE 5, 1986 Sheriff may fire oppo_nent Gates glad 1 election oe ostjudgeship, vows .tiifire deputy o ran or. i-s job By LISA MARONEY Of .. .,.., ....... Oranae Couoty Shenff-Coroner Brad Oates saya he'• glad his over· wbelmina election win Tuesday bas left one opponent without 1 job, and he vowed to fire 1 second unsuc- NEWS LIN[ Hotahot ltdl8on JUcb eophomon Kaleaph carter will Mell the atate dtle ln the llhot pat thla weekend at Cer- rito. eoneae. c 1. cesaful challenaer if he can find Just caux. Stuna by ch&raes of manaaerial incompetence ancl criminal activity durina the caustic campaian waaed by Municipal Court Jud&e Bobby Don Younablood and sfierifrs patrol serieant Linda Lea Calli&an , Gates said Wednesday be was "fiappy .. th.at the dectlon results caused one thorn _ More election coverage, flna1 r .. ult90n pegn M-5 JO)'.> somewhere elx .. aJMS ~mis«t <o bdp ~ out the door if per conduct gi..-cs bun J p st C8lJ1IC': ilf"trtnfde -Younal>Tood -=To fote..___tw-een James M. Brooks and Paul S. his job. , Robbins .• By choos1n1 to camPAJan for the post of shenfT-coroner, Youoablood pve up the opportunity to teek re- election to the judiciary. When his cumntterm ends ID January, Youna- blood will be replaced by t&e winner of November's runoff election be- · Oatessaid Younablood was elected a Judae "by fluke" 1n 1980 and ''has been an embamument to the crimi· nalju1tioc system" ever since. He sajd he was "happy to be able to remove him" as a byproduct 6f bis winnina re-election to a founb term APLJII JfllJ as 1henff. As for Caltiaao, 1 l S-year employee of tbe Shenfr1 Depattment, Gates said she bu lied about him thro'Ch- out the campai,n and be bas '1ost au confidence in her ability to be a deputy in my dcpart~ent' as a result Gates said he hopes Calhpn "will be a b11 enou&b penon. to look for a But neither Younsblood oor Callipn have any plant to drop 6'o Vttw. The lo.west vote-setter with 17.3 percent,. Y ounablood delCribed bis campaian lo" u .. another 11tirmi b an a Iona war .. witb Gates. Refemna to allqatioos of im· (~ ... 8Dllln/A2) T.raffic reporter Bruce Wayne's plane crashes Fullerton aectdent kills newsman; wife broadcasts report By Ge Aaaoclate4 Pren Bruce Wayne, a 2S-year traffic report10a veteran familiar to millions of Southern Cahfomwu, died Wednesday tn the fiery crash of hts plane, and bis wt re calmJy broadcast 1 report from the scene. reportina duties as radio statJoo KA· AM't .. Eye in the Sky ... The s1Qak-enaine plane crQhod tnlO the trailer O( I perked• temi• trailer truck and bunt into twne. Wayne, who "5 alone an the ~ became the third airborne '° die lD the line of du~_0 ia~ C-ali(orrua in the put lO ycan. Cout Orange County Is ex- pected to receive about $2.2 mllllon If offshore oil exploration and pro- duction begin off the Or- ange Coast./ A3 Lola Wayne, rU:ht. wife of radio traffic reporter Bnaee \f ayne, kneela and pr&J9 by baC contatntna ~ ~·•n• near wrec1ua&e ·of Ilia atacle-ea&ID• plane ln Fullerton. Wayne'• pl&nemiabed llhortly after takeoff from hllenon llanlclpal Airport. Wayne, S2, was k..iUed momenu af\er his Cessna Cardlnal took off from Fullerton Murucipal Atrp6rt at 6 IS a.m. to bqin his morning traffic Lois Wayne rushed &o t.bC CTUb site just ~ o( the airpon. calmly dacnbed the ICeDC ud re- counted aeeina Wayne'• ch&md body u she was io~ by telepbooe on Los ~ f'lldio station K.fl- AM. She latef oied in the arms of thole (Pleue ... TJlArl'lC/A2) ' LaRouchian refuses to~oncede to write-in candidate World Soviets say declsJon to abandon SALT 11 llml- tatlons endangers plans for aummlt meeting./ Al Sports By LISA MAHONEY Of .. .,.., ........ Last minute wnte-an candidate Bruce Sumner Wednesday declared hamaelf the Democratic nominee in the 40lh C.OnpcssiooaJ District. But his opponent, LaRoucbe follower Art Hoffmann, refused to concede. A hand count of ballots cast in the close race won't be completed unul late today , but Sumner, 61. a former JUdac and chairman of the Oranae County Democratic Party, declared victory ovCT Hoffmann and bu controvers1aJ leader, perennial prnt- denual candidate Lyndon LaRouche. Yankees' Joe Nlekro flirts with no-hitter before al- lowing eighth-Inning hit In beating Angels, 11-0./C1 INDEX Turnout in primary a dismal 36 percent Advice and Games Boating Bulletin Board Bualneas Classified Comics Death Notices Entertainment Opinion Papar8.l21 Police Log Public Notices Sports Televlslon Weather ~ 81 A3 85-6 C6-8 B-i C6 82 A6 81 A3 C6-8 C1--i 82 A2 By TONY SAAVEDRA Of ... O..,,... .... Apathy smothered the pnmary elections Tuesday. with Cahfom11 postma its lowest voter turnout m S8 years, while Orange Coµnty regi~ tered its lowest showing sin~ 1982. A mere 35. 7 percent of the county's I m1lhon rqistered voters went to the polls. despite superv1sonal and coun· ty aovemment positions that were up for arabs. Statewide, Cahfomia ~· corded a 40 percent tumouL The finaJ unofficial tally showed 662. 785 of the county's rqistered voters and 7.4 million of the 12.2 million statewide voters stayed Pit bull stop fixes bunny; they had been best friends Rabbits are notonous breedcn They reproduce faster than a h1&b- spcc,d copier. And thanks to H&Jlh. - Hefner, who made the rabbit and his curvacious bunnies symbols of l'amour, the Iona-eared boi>per 1s assured a philandcnna reputation. But when ,Huntinaton Beach hare 'uccumbcd to puppy love recently, it chanced the kind or fate that awaits a black widow's mate The Casanova cottontail 1s But- terscotch, pct and companion of Dawn \ook. l he ObJCCI or Butterscotch's affec- tions was Barney, 1 3().pound pit bull owned by Dan Adler, Cook's boyfncnd. Adler acquired the new.born pup a couple of months •10, and But- terscotch and Bamey became fast. fnends ··~ elayed. •to and slept toaethcr, .. Cook 11id. Barney w.Puld bark, scarina the rabbit: Butterscotch woul<!Jump str11&bt up. 1tarthr11 the d<>a-They didn't know or care that they were: different animal' But sprinf was in the air, and Butterscotch s hormones councd lhtou&h his seven-pound frame. PAUL AICHIPLEY TH[ LIGHT ER SIDE ttons. Or. Joel Pasco, vctennanan at the All CTatutts C..rc Cottqe ID Costa Mesa, said. "Buttenootch started do1na what male rabbit!! do 11 1pnnaume. So the p1t bull put his foot down -on the rabbtfs head." Actually, Barney did what pit bulls do well. He exercised has JIW1 on Buttencotcb. Fortunately for the bunny, Cook and Adler stopped Barney before he made Butterscotch into hascnpfcffer Cook took Buttencotch to Dr Pasco foT tttatment of has wound Whtie there, ahe had Ole aood doctor take the starch out of Butterscotch's couontall. All panic hope that ncutenn Buncncotch will prevent him from bROmtn the bltt oftbcdot thAt bat him, home. Althouib Oran&e County 8icked up another I . 9 percent. or 20, 14, ID absentee ballots, county election of- ficials said the show1D& was &Joomy. even for a charactensticaTly low pnmary. Election officials had pre· • dieted a voter turnout of at least 48 percent. "There JUSI wasn't a whole lot of interest 1n the candidates or the issues," said Rosalyn Lever, chief of election operations The lowest tum· out previously was 46 percent ID a June 1982 auberMtonal pnmary Aside from the apathy. Lever said (Pl-... He TURJllOUT I A2) "I hope this wtll be an end to the LaRouchc effort in Ca11fomia." Sumner said. Final but unofficlll vote talhes show Hoffman los1na by four per· ocntaac poi nu. However, lhe ~ycar­ old technical wnter from Santa Ana said Wednesday. ··11·s still too close to call it's not over." Acco1'<hfll to unofficial elccttoo results, Sumner appeared to have S2 percent of the vote compared to Hoff mann's 48 percent. - C.Omputerized vote coununa mt· ctunes showed 16,342 wnte-10 votes -presumably for Sumner -com- pared with l•,883 fOT Hoffmann.· A band count of the ballots is reqwred to weed oot other possible wnte~tn candidates such as .. mom .. OT .. Mickey Mouse.·· Bu~ Ii nee oo other leai timat.e c~tc besides Sumner conducted (Pl--._ LAJtOOCBS/A2) Explosive cheipical found at Huntington pharmacy By PAUL ARCHIPLEY 'Of~,...'""' .\ Hunt1n1ton Beach police bomb squad deton· ated an explosive chemical Wednesday after 1t was discovered 1n a crowded downtown med1caJ center The chemical was found by pharmacist Scott Dunham in a 4-1Dch·long. 1 1/i-ancb~!Jametcr con- tamer. wd Hunllngton ~ach Fare Protection Spectal- 1st Make Tanuyasu Dunham. who hAd been at the phamacy about two months, rcahzed the dan&er of the unstable substance and called fire officials JUSt before 2 p.m. Officials evacuated about I 00 people. including doctors. nurses and patients. after the chemical p1cnc ac14a,was discovered at the Huntington Profoss1onal Pharmacy. 18700 Main St The bomb squad removed the chemical from the pharmacy and transported 1t, ID a sand.filled dump truck to the finn& range at Gothard Str~t and Talbert Avenue P1cnc acid. usually found 1n hqu1d form, starts to try$taJh1e and bc'Comes mcrcas1n&)y unstable with qe, said fire C~pt. Tom Poe. It becomes "shock sens1uve ·• meanina 1t could explode if Jarred. "There's some medical uses for 1t, but you have to keep a cl~ eye on u. ·· Tarn1yasu said. "The lonacr you have at, the more unstable 1t becomes When the chemical was citt&atcd, 1t ~nt a cloud of smokc sw1rhna into the air an~Qla\tcd a hole 3 feet ··No one was making estimates on the scns1t1vtty wide and 2 feet deep. ' (Pleue eee DA1'01tROU8/ A2) Laguna say!! s~ate ignoring highway project concerns By LAURA MERK Of_O.., ........ ()1ssat1sfied with the ( ahfom1a 'Department ofTransportat1on's final tnv1ronmcntal study on thc w1denina of Laauna Canyon Road, the La1una Beach Cit) Council said Tuesday 1t Wlll continue to oppose the proJCCI unless certain demands arc met fhe council outlined its con«ms la\t September after rcvicW'ln& a draf\ ol ( altrans' et vtr0nmcntal impact rcpon But ( 1rf nqcr Ken Frank , Ii said Caltran'> refuse to senou'lly consider the council's P<>'ttton. ~una C•nyon Road 1s one only two ma1or connecting routes the city hu to the rest of Oranae Count) Because the road widcmnJ would • rcquitt substantial lf'adina ID some places and~ use of land pttviouslr. dcs\gnated for open space, councll members ~ C•ltrans bould be wilhna to ncaot1ate. Counol mem- ben said Tuesday they will try in (Pl-... ... LAOU'RA/ A2) Transfer of principals in Irvine draws protest By LF.SLIE EARNEST °'-0.., ""4 ..... A \ oul aroup of unh•PP> tcachen and perent turned out Tu Idly to berate thc Irvine tJn1fled School Oi11nct board for 1u doacd-door dttl\!On to tr1n,fer two princ1.,.11 to d1fTtrent 11thool The t>unn)' wanted someth1n1 mort than 1 pal in Birney. The pit ull knew 10mcth1n1 wasn't quite naht. i:mall). last Saturday niaht, Bamey 111 fed up with Buncncotch's afftt· Aa one of Dr. Pasco's nuncs noted. "Matins is common fornbbits to do. (Pl ... PtT/A.2) pet rabbit plt b: u. ........ ,....., ...... 1 ..... tter8Cotch, wbo wu The main problem. ccordiDa to Diana Klappcnba It, p ~dent of the Parent f aC'uhy Orpni~tion at .... n- ti o Hill Elementary oo\, is that the d i ion lnacfc without su • c1enl oppon11nity tor murut • •• t I .. ) At OranQ9Cou1 DAILY PILOT/ ThUrwday, June 5, 19&0 TRAFFIC REPORTER DIES IN CRASH ••• Pro Al at lhe scene, includJna rcportcn aod photoaraohm Sandy Mcfarlin, a teetetary 11 the airport. Mid that as d\e plane took off. "One or our airpon ICfVl« worken beard the plane bKkfirc and aaw 1\ make a lharp lcf\. and then he beard an explosion:· "I am at tbe era h '1tc of• (Ce11na) Cardinal," MB. Wayne wd ti her intn-v1ew was broadca1t hvc. "There 11 no paint or a number on the au·cnft. The 11rcraf\ dtd have 10 ellploSJon on 11t1pact " She wd her hu,band "wu within reach of his 11tatC1l dream, ond that would be 10 cclcbrolt h11.ilver (25th) anniverury in traffit rcpon ina an about two wcc:j(s " Mn. Wayne lat r told • pbotopa· pbet: .. I bewnodoub lhat1t'1hlm," end knelt to uy tbc Lord'• Pra)cr betide the body ~I conlaJnjna the cbaned rcmairu. Officers at the tccne bowed their head.11.1 ·~ prayed. ··He often 11td tf he tuid to 101 ht wanted to 10 an an &1rplane 1na he wanted to 10 quickJy," u1d Mn. Wayne, a former Eutcm Airlines fl1&ht lltendanl. Oranae County Deputy Coroner Rick Plow• ta.id altbou&b there wat no medical eVldel'loe, •l'fhere as no doubt in our m1nch that 1t was Bruce Wayne... He ujd a dental check would be made to be ablolutely sure On lhe radio, Mrt. Wayne 111d her husband had returned home sh.alcen on Tuaday 1 tr bavina a clOIO call jwt btfore la.ndina at tbr wne eirport. • .. An airctaft 1wooped risbt in front of bam u he was appro.Chloa." 1be ta.id. ..He came in (homo) 1 little whiu, u I've teen him many umea.. and II.id, 'Well, that wuacloteoDC:·•~ Dick HaUcn, 1 duty oftlccr for the Federal Aviation Ad.minittntion. ta.id there wa1 no fotat the time of the craah. the cloud bate wu at 2 000 feet and viJibllity Wit S mila in hue. · The National Trampo.nation Saf~ tY Board was investiaatina- A• a pilot. Weyne "had a perfect safety record," hit wtfe uid "He had weU over ) million &II' oules " TURNOUT FOR PRIMARY DISMAL ••. From"Al the vottna T uesaay went ,moolhl> "All tht way around 1\ was une11c11 tnf.." ~ht' ~·d Stattw1de, a iJoom) Secretary of Statt March fona Eu, pred1ct1n1 a 47 pcr\.cnl turnout before the vote~ actually started to roll in. blamed the lack of interest on a large number of undet.:1ded votef\, and a pauctty of emouonal ballot l'>Sues The ell-llmt' low turnout for a ( altfomta pmnarv wa, in Aug us t 1928, when 36 9 ptrccnt of those regntercd voted Jn tho~ da)'>, thr prcs1dcnt1al pnmary wl.I held .cpaRtely 1n May So that state pnmary contest didn't benefit from the added draw of the pnmary that set up the battle in which Republican Herbcn Hoover defeated Democrat Alfred E. Smnh The next wont turnout was lhe 4) percent 1howma in tht ~rc11denual pnmary of May 1940, which resulted m the nominations of frank.ho D Roo~veh for the Democrats and Wendell WilJlc.ie for the GOP In 1942, the Cali fornia pnmary turnout w1147.2 percent "h 's a &ad state ofaffaars when only S.7 m1U1on c1t1ZCDJ detemune the cand1datct and iasues for 26.6 m1lhon re11dcnts," Eu 1&1d Tuesday. Iona before the final. even lower tows. were available. The h1ahe1t turnout for a C altfomta pnmary wu 72.6 per~nt 1n 1976, when the Dcmocrau sent Jimmy C artcr aptnst GC'l'l.ld ford. Tbe h1ahcat turnout in a year when the prctidency wasn't at ttakt wu the 68.9 percent 1bowina an 1978. when the Proposition 13 tu-cuttina in- uiatave wa, on the ballot. PRINCIPAL TRANSFERS PROTESTED ••• From Al y,ere needed el~wht'H' Bmd "'being rcplaced.b) pnnc1pal John Inmon from Rancho ~n Joa· qu1n Intermediate \chool The rcp- re\t'ntatne'> from Ran\. ho were equal- " dl!>ffid)ed "Our main LUmpla1nt 1s thal our pnnupJI "bt'1ntt taken lrorJI us." ~td < aroh: Kellogg " l<ancho teat:her J he lhangt.: \hl.' Jddcd. ha~ up\Cl mjn) ~opll· "!'.11 onc: at the ..chool 1\ happ\ with 11 '\he \aul ~~ <1 re\ult ol thl' h<1Jrll'\ action four dt~lnll '>l.hrn1l\ will have ne"" principals nellt )l·ar indud1ng 'itonc: creek and ( uh crdillc l lcmentan '><:hool~ The parl'nt\ u>rnpla1nt' werc- 'hrc."cted lariely at <iucx·nn1cnden1 <itanlc} < ore) who re<:ommcnded the transfers. Corey ~1d he sym· pathazes with the up-.et c1uzcns because ofthe1r "feeling of lo'I..," However, he stood by the dcc111on, \aym&, "A transfer of th1'> natu~ ,, Hf} much hke launchina a '>htp" and that to 11) to tum 1t around now would be too m ky Although some r,pcalten dad a!lk the board to reverse 1u dec1s1on, mo~t seemed particularl y upset about the way the dCCISIOO WU tnade Jane Ri vera a parent from C)an. taae,o. said, "We were told the de- cision was made 1n a J().sccond pc nod behind closed doon ·· Speak- ing for the group of parents with whom 'lhc was s1ll1ng, K1 vera said, "We JUSt want '>Orne an\wer:s, that's all " Board members admitted that they may have made a m1Jtakc m eitclud- 1n1 the pubhc from the decision, but 1hty defended the transfer 1uelf. "I have some reareu•• about the lack of communitJ 1nvolvemen~ 1n the dcc111on-makin1 proc:eu, wd board member Mary Ellen Hadley But the added that the transfer of pnncipals was sllll a positive move. "I beheve wh.at we did was ID the best tnlcrHt of the school distnct," she said. Trustee vordon Getchel all'eed. "The real problem here was the process. ana not the dec111on ... The board directed its staff to find ways 10 an urc sufficient public pan1 c1patton when future adm1n11c- 1rat1ve transfers are being considered LAGUNA OPPOSES HIGHWAY WIDENING .•. From Al to set up a mcclln~ \.\.1th c altran'> lo Y.ork out an agreement fhc lOUncil'~ urnll1111111' •That ( ultran\ n:w1n lhc lJ1g lknd portion of the ruadwa) with added protc<:tmn'> '>U~h a'> a t t'nter median 1n\tcad ofacatan" a neY. roadwa) b\ ~ltc1ng through the h1lls1dc. • l ha1 C alt ran\ put 1n a land"4..a~ median for \&fct) purpmc\ and 111 lcs\en the environmental impact thl." w1drntng will hnvt- • fhat all u11lm line'> hc relocated undcrfround • hat mon· flood \IUdH:\ he condurtt'd 10 enc.tire adt-quatc tlood prolrl 11on • That \lgn'> bt' IO'>~lled where there arc deer m1grat1on uos'>in&S •That a traffic signal be installed at Ir.inc Bo\Atl and Broadwa'f al ~ac-h \treet • That ( altran., dump exec\\ dirt 1n the can)on above Irvine Bowl 1 nstead of hauling 11 away • That no con\trucuon take place dunng peak mom1n1 hour\ and evening commute hours According 10 Frank. (ahran\ ha\ only agreed to the last two cond1t1on'I He al'io \Std the El R wa<, inadequate and did not meet the normal require· ments of such a '>ludy "There ha'> been no analy'll'> of what speeds Wlll be safe or of what grad1n1 will be necessary .. said Frank -issues he said arc usuall y ad- dressed in EIRs • .. We 'lhould let them know they arc in for a rou&}l battle 1f they continue this way." said Councilman Bob <.rentry County susxrv1wn have voiced their suppon for the proJcct 1n the pa~t "The supervtM.>~ say the road 1s to be widened That's their pnmary concern," Frank told the council. Allhou$h the prOJCCt ha1 been a topic of 1n1ereM for Laguna Beach residents 1n the past, few pco~lc attended Tuesday's mctttng to voice their op1n1ons DANGEROUS CHEMICAL DETONATED ... From Al of tht'I 'tufl hut H>U dvn't 1.1oant to take.' an) l bantl'\ I, 'Had 1t' cxph>dc<l 1n tht' phjrmaq there .... ouh.J vef} ltlr'cl) have bt'cn 1n1urtc\ ant.I ddmagt• to thr hualdinv. ·· he \jld J he l hem1ual wa\n·1 on the ph.u· mal') 1n\cntor) 111 rcallnc or \hrx.k !)Cn\lll\.<' \Uh-.tanlc'> hr \ard "Wc·rc t he(king rnto inventory ~1>nl111l 11l thc pharmaq ." ram1va\U ~1d. "We're requinng a thorou&h invtntof} to make \ure there arc no other har.ardou!I t hemac.al\ " The already vast and growing array of chemical!! and a new st.ate law ha vc frustrated the· fire dcpanmcnt in 11<1 effort\ to rcguldtc huardou\ m1t- tenals an the city. I am1~a'u \aid "It''> really bt''t'ond our depth lCI bt' able to 1denttl'I' all that pharmat tC'I have·· hc -.aid The state-mandated HaJ.ard ous Ma1enals D1scloiure Program re- quires companies to ltst all toxtL flammable u plos1vc and other danaerous \Ubstances The Hun11 ngton Beach fire De· partment has sent out 6.000 packet\ to firm'I wnhm the city lo determine which one\ need permits "We don't know how many there will bt'," Tam1yasu ~1d PIT BULL STOP FIXES BUNNY .•. P'romAl hul 1n1nl( ;i r>1t hull 141n't \howing Kt111d 1ucl1tmt•nt l'a\ll1 wh11 \pn .. 1al11e\ an clloll{ animal\ '><lid he 11eulrl\ a Int of rahh1I\ "I n !(',, ) 1111 hrl·lll tlwm, the\ t.1 n ht.· kind of h<11ha'41m r f'a\Co \,Jld 'I hq 'II lt) 111 malt 1A.1th cal\ l'\Cll lurry ht-druom \lipper• It 1.. .. 0 be prctt) anno~1ng when the \ltppt " .ire on your leet ·· Hr ha\ al'><> neutrrr<I lrrro I\ and ract:oon\. and will 'ioon handle t1Kkat1el\ l ie: onl~ wa\ :J\kcd to nruter u huffalo hut dechnc<.I But of the m;in> rahh11<, ·tac ha\ 1 ilred for 1n the pa\l 12 'fCdr\, l'a\<.o found Ruttrr\lot{ h to he 'l'l'-. 1al •• Th1'1 unt had more human and doa charactcO\llC~ 1han rve rvcr ~en ," he u 1d "He had h11Vi hope .. when he tn ed to moun1 and hrercl a 4. month-old. )Cl pound pi t hull " ( ook confirnwd Rullt"n< otth " a ,h ractcr She Jot lht' hunny .tt (:.a)tcr 11vcar110 MAJH Of'9C! no .-. ... e., •• Cot•• ...... " "" •'"'-• , ~ Cot•• """ " ~n1• -.. : 6'71 --6 .... O' .. 11•7 01 VOL 71; NO. 111 I he rabbit hou..c trained ll 'ICll, alway\ taking cart" of hu'linC'I" on the pat10 rather than 1n the hou'I<' · C 11ok and Uuttcr\Cotch take walks -\anr. leash -and they have \1m1I r c1r>pct1te'i "He eats an't'lh1ng I cat" Cook \aid . ''f>111J 'p;tghctt1 , l hec:w:bur1cr\ I 1u1,1 l<'d him a French fry .. Buttcr\Cotch al\o enioy\ fresh vq - t'lablts daily, but d1'1<J;uns onion\ ff c comes v.hen called by name, and ~lecp \. urled around< ook''I head at n1aht . fook, a o,ccrct.ary at l ntx Jech- noloty 1n \ant.a And dunna tht day and 8 model for \how and r ell Fa\h1on1 1n f ullc'non at n1&}lt takes Runcncotch wtth hr1 wht'n 1ht can When 1hc rclcntly Ot"w had to hcT hometown 1n Ma ryland. !:Jul· terKotch went alun& R~oven na from hi\ "1rr.cry. 8ut- l('r~tch will ltkcly ,low down h11 ha1ryhfcatylc C. ook and Adler also hQpe Barney and the bunny wtll remain fnends. ·But, Just tn case, the pair havt provided separate quancrs in the rard There's JUSI no telhna whether Butterscotch m1aht try aptn to take I bull by the hom1 Correction NEW YORK (AP) -The Aa.- wcaaled Preas, 1n stones about the tnal of convicted Nut war enminal Andn1a Artukov1c 1n Zaareb, Yuaoslav1a. erroneously reported that he had been declared lcplly bhnd and ten1le by U S 1ucftc1al 1uthont1e1 Anukov1c'1 attorneys Md atJued thll 1he1r client was lqally bltn<f and ac:nale and w111ncompelent to pan1c1· pett an extradiuon proceedin11, bu1 no 1uch findina was ever made by U.S. authonttes. Justcall 642-6086 "'°"°'' F<IOlr " f<:A; .tt• l'OI ,.... "°" p.-"' I 'klpm cal i..f.)r• t D"' -Y°"' OOSI• IM .......... What do you hke ebout lhe Daily Pilot? What don't you hkc., Call the oumbeT ebo-ve and your meHa,e will be recorded, tnnscnbed and dt- hvertd to the appropnate cdnor. The same 24-hour ao•wcnna JCTV•oe mey be utcd to record letten to the editor on any toptc. Cont.nbutor1 to our Lettm column must include their name and t.clcpbone oumbcr for vmrlQtion. Tell• ul wh.at'1 on your mind. _ .. "" .. ,-~" '°" ___ .,..,, CC1PY Dr 1 t If\ o.tore •O • "' .,_. '°"' C-. _. ......... iii 2 Afternoon sunshine fore cast U.S. Tempe -~C@~ ,_,., .. w111m_ c ............ ........ ~lp lll.~ SN>wott• "-' '"'' ... ~ Occiuc»o..,.. ~,-... N/Mtfr,IC y IO .. ........ 12 ti ---• "'°"" "~ ..-I.I '-<• ==: ... .. 11 ............. M n ,. .. .... ~ 01 11 u Md* ... ... .. ...... a ,, Calif. Tempe ~ t1 .. ,,..,... Ti .. ..... Qty .. .. ........ 71 M A.-. f1 ,, .. er... 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SHERIFF SEEKS TO FIRE OPPONENT .•• From Al proper rcaJ estate deals between Gates and county developen that he has brouaht to the state attorney general, Youngblood said, "If there is an honest cop tn the attorney gen - eral's office, J think Gates 11 J,Otng lo have some senou1 problem•.• He also said he would pursue an earlier complaint -aJIC&JnJ that Gates fi led a false address with the RCfJstrar of Votcrs -throuah the c1v1I courts. Younablood also re- ferred that complaint to the attorney acneral. who has taken no 1ct1on as yet Calltn& Gates the tool of "b11 money buddies who put him up there to do their b1ddtn&." Youn1blood wud 11 wu "a 'lhame when the &ood fuys don'\ w1neven1f they're bTok.c. If had S 170,000.1 could probably h.ave elected Charli e Manson " Accord1n1 to the mo'lt recent campatlJl spending reports, Gates spcn t S 177 ,080 to win h ts JOb Younablood spent leas th.an S25,000. lamina of Oates' commenu about her. Calhpn called her boll a sore winner who docs not suppon the Democratic proceu. "I'm shocked be reacted that way. I thouaht be would be a better Winner," she said. Callipn, who spent about S l 0,000 durina the campa1an - primarily for her candidate's state· ment -netted 18.4 percent of TuC1day's vote. Calhpn marnw111 she bu told the truth about Gates, whom 1be says ts costtn1 wpar.cn m1lhon1 for tcm· porary Jail factl1t1ct, tllcpJly owned a bar 1n the lak 1970s and covered up lhe drunken dnvma arrest of a shenff's deputy An Oran,c County Supenor Coun Judie ruled Callipn'1 allcpt1ons false and mwcadina .. wntten 1n • draft candidate'• statement she planned to send to voters The Judie barred the pnntmaofthe allcpllons. An appeal of the lower ' coun deasion has not yet been beard and, should 1he win, Calhpn said 1he WJll ask for a new elcct1on. "I still have my 11Mn hearina. I have every fallh in df't"judjc1ary and 1hc law," she said. "If they look at the ments, they can't do anythin& but find 1n my fa vor." Callipn warned Gales he had better be "very, very careful m lhe way he &OCS about Kem& that I J,Ct another JOb." Calhpn, who 11 five years from rctll'ement.. aaid 1be has a flawless record and doesn't plan to do any JOb bu.ntJn_a. "I have a Job. Gates' arropncc seeps out of every pore He thinks because I don't respect ham, th.al makct me unfit to be a deputy •• CaU1pn also prom11Cd to run apm ap1n1t Gates should he Sttk a fifth term 1n office ''I'll be here m four ycan and the next time, I'll bt more prepared and I'll have a b11ier fo undation (of support)," she 111d. LAROUCHE FOLLOWER NOT CONCEDING .•. From Al a wntc-1n campa11n. he said he " "satisfied therc'senou&h ofa marain" to put him safely tn the winner's circle Rosalyn u ver, chief of county election operatton1, alfCCS. "In every election we have a few other names thrown an, but I do n't think there will be more than a handful," she satd Wh~vcr 1s declared winner will tacc entrenched Republican incum· bent Bob Badh.am 1n November Sumner entered the 40th d11tnct campa1sn March 25 after he and other <,tunned Democratic leaden learned that the then-unopposed Hoffmann wu d l...aRouche d11C1ple LaRouche followen have an ex- treme pohl1cal outlook that includes advocatina quarantines for AIDS v1ct1m1. LaRouche also cl 1m1 the C)uccn of EnsJand and the Rock- eftllers are involved in a drua compiracy. SPECIAllY FOR DAD AND FOR YOU ~ in dmc for fathen Day, June l,th, 'M'rt offtnng our bask wool & polyattr. hop111ck blaur for Sl49.00 R.rgularty Sl9500. Sb cxclt lng colon lncludtna the CWAcNavy. • Abo, Crom Maju. thL all. 1'001 Ku.ddcnfitld aoptcal wonwl lick tn eight tradi- dol\ll colon (or $69.00. Rfaularty S90.00. Now l.t IM d.me to rruc Dad &r youn.elf to th«:K ward.r• c:Mtndals during the tndre month of June. XL you j()Oft. ~ lo campa11n1n1 apmat Sumner, Hoffmann allqed that the attorney and former state astcmblyman had mob ttea and drua conncct1on1 WednC1day, Sumner 'lammed LaRouche followers' claims to be lqiumatc mcmben of the Demo- cratic Partl, calhnJ. ll a "fraud and a decept1on. • Dncnb1n.1 h1maclf u a moderate, Sumner said his difficult Wln 11 a wnte-1n candtdatt wu 1 "rcpudiaoon of Lyndon LaRouche and h11 cfTon." Sumner's camp111n 1tr1te1y focused enllrcly on tht LaRouche threat and on tcachana votcn how to wnte h11 name on lhe ballot At one point, be debated L.aRouche himself on telcv1s1on. Fear of LaRouchc infiltration has been • ~mna theme m Dcmocrauc elecuon1 across the country th1' June Should the hand count confirm Sumner's nomination, he Wlll tum . . • h11 cneraie• to battlinJ Badham..:. • fi ve-term GOP incumbent tn a Kc- pubhcan 1tronahold. Radham has held onto the d11tnct -which mclude1 Newpon Beach, Irvine, Costa Mesa, Laauna Beach, Laauna Hills, Laauna NiJUel and pon1on• of Santa Ana -11nce 1976 dcsptt.c repeated attacks on hlS penchant ror wpeyer-1upported travel and frequtnt abtcncca from lhe House of Reprt1CntatJ vca while he 11 abroad Badham's f11led Republican challenaer Nathan Rosenbera focused on h11 travel Flab1ta, vouna record and allflCd u~ of campaian funds for personal eJ11pend1luresJ but pmercd only ~.• percent 01 lhe VO le But Sumner uid that defection from the incumbent 1howi there is tremendous diasatisfacoon with the representation Badharn is providina ' \ ~----------------------------------~----------------..... ------------------•.,...------------~--------------------.... --------------------------------•~=---~~------------------~~-·~~-\