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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1986-07-07 - Orange Coast Pilot.. • MONDAY, JUI;Y 7, 1986 Holiday violence shocks polic.e Newport o ftcefs taunted. hit by rocks in riotous confrontations over weekend Officer Stan Bressler said a erowd chanted profanities at him lobbed a bottle that hit him in the back. One p1trolman, Jeff Cantrell, was taken to the hospital when a M200 firecracker -equaJ to a quarter stick of dynamite -exploded near him and cauted temporary hearins loss. By STEVE MARBLE °' ... .,.., ........ Newport Beach police sai(! today they were stunned by the level or violence and "blatant disreprd for human hre" exhibited by revelen who poured into the beach city for the Fourth of July ~kend. Wimbledon Wat Germany•• Borla Becker powered~ lftD Lendl In • t Mta Sunday to clalm MCODd atratcht men •a •tncta champlooabip at Wimbledon. 81. " Coast June graduates In Hunt- ington Beach garnered $5.5 mllllon In scholar- shlpa,/ A3 Nation Membera of a para- mllltary organization de- tained 15 Illegal aliens at gunpoint until authorities arrived./ A5 World Conditions on the first two days of the holiday weekend were riotous, far surpassina the VJolence seen in pest ~· said a police spokesman who indicated the confrontation with police may have been planned. Several officers were injured by 1ocks, sand-fiJled bottles and fire- crackers. In all, I S9 people were anated Friday and early Saturday. Nine wtte booked on felony cha.raies of assault with a deadly weapon on a police officer and another four on suspicion of battery on a police officer. Patty Darnall of L&iuna Beach •bee up a ceramic piece created by her hua6and for their booth at the Sawduat Featln.1. The featl~al betan lta 20th year In the arttata• Police anesled 2+. people durins the tbrce4ay holiday weekend. "The thins that seemed 10 critical was the blatant disrqatd for human life -and not just aimed at P<>lice officers but fellow partien," Officer Howard EitenberJ Rid. Police can were damaaed by rocks as was a sheriff's jail bus bonowed from the county by police as a temporary hoktina facility for thote anated. Vandalism was wi~ as resi· c.._.. ... n RT/A2l Elsewhere, Coast f alrly quiet BJ PAm ARClllPLEY °' ... ..., ....... .. The Fourth of July weekend ftzzled out like a aare-and-sane part.ler Sunday, with Oranae-Cout authorities reponina a quieter thin normal holiday. maned only by the sJurmisb between police and drunken 1Tvelen Ul Ne~ Beach Friday. ·rve been here 27 years, and thas has been the most mellow I c:ao remember,·· said Lt. QjfTMcBnde of the Costa Mesa Pol kc DepartmenL •·No (Pleue ... COA8T/A2) Forced balanced budget illeg<:il Key provision of Gramm-Rudman unconstitutional By JAMES H. RUBIN A110dated Presa Writer WASHINGTON -The Supreme Court declared unconstnuuonal today a key provisio n of a law requinng a balanc.ed federal budget by 1991. The ru h ng jeopardizes eongress1onal efTo ns to cut spending and reduce sp1rahng defit 1ts. The JUSttces, by a 7-2 vote, said tht' ct'ntral prov1s1on of the G ramm- Rudman ~ct -ordenn& automatic deficJt reductions -violates the const1tut1onall y mandated separ- ation of powers between the ex- ecuttve and legislauve branches Tht' lav. wrong))' empowers an officer of Congress, the comptroller general. to perform an executive function. tht' coun saJd. Gramm-Rudman contains a fallback provision that allows Con- arcss Itself to vote on a deficit- rtduction package 1f the automanc feature v.~rt' invahcbted. Dllllr .......... ~.,..... .......... colony with a Saturday opeotnc. It rune throagb Aue. 31 acrou from the Fattval of Arte' grounda on Laguna Canyon Road. Marcos'& running mate attempts a revolt./ A4 INDEX Advice and Games A9 Laguna begins artsy summer The much-anticipated ruhns. on the last day of tht' coun's 1985-86 lcrm. came 22 days aftt'r ABC News reported that tht' court was about to stnke down the law. That repon •ouched off a nurry of speculation about the future of Gramm-Rudman and the source of an apparent rare "leak" providing advance word of a court dec1s1o n Tht' cue provided one of the most significant constttuttonal confronta- tions in recent years between Con- gress and the Wh1tl.' ..-louse Bulletin Board A3 Business 85-6 Classlfled 87-9 Comics A 10 Death Notices 89 Entertainment A 7 -8 Opinion A6 Police Log A3 Public Notices 89 Sports B 1-4 Televlslon A8 Weather A2 By ROBERT HYNDMAN Of ... .,.., Not ..... Laguna Beach's annual cclebratton o f the arts kicks offth1s week with tht' popular Pageant of tht' Masters and three maJor art fesuvals. Tht' Pageant of the Mastt'r'>.,leatur- ing hve rccrca11ons of ma1or works of art. begins Wednesday nigh I and runs through Aug. 28 at the Irvine Bowl, locatt'd o n tht' Festival of Arts grounds on Laguna Canyon Road Art celebrations include the ')awdust Festtval and,he Art-A-Fair, wh1<.>h opened Saturday, and tht' Festival of Arts. which runs m con1unc11on with the Pageant of the Masters. Stagt'd annually since 1933, this )'Car's Pageant of the Masters offers 25 prc~ntat1ons in which h ve models rt'matn frozen as statues or against a painted backdrop while special light· IOJ eliminates shadows and 11ves the hfe-s1zed art a decidedly "non- human" look This ~ason. m ore than 130 volun- Irvine health foundation formed to fund research By PHIL SNEIDERMAN Of"'90..,Netlteff A new foundation. backed by a S 15 million arant. has been t'Slablished to provide financ1ara1d to health educa· t1on and rc~arch programs in the Irvine community The Irvine Community Foun- dation was set up by the board of directors of the Irvine Medical Center, a new ho p1taJ being con- structed 1n Irvine The SIS million arant was obtained from Amencan Medical lntema11onal, AMI, as part of 1ts aareemt'nt for the nghts to build the nt'w lrv1nc;hosp1tal The operating en111y for the hoso1· tal includes representatt vcs from People for an Irvine Community Hospital (PICH), Irvine Medi· cal/Dental Society, UC Irvine, Saddleback Community College Dt\· 1rict and the Irvine area husine'I<; community "Now that AMI has pnmary rt spons1b1hty for building the ho<;p1tal the Irvine Medical Center Board believed that 1t would be 1n the best intettst of the community to create a 5eparate foundation to man11ge, an· vest and disburse the proceeds from AMI fbr chantable purposes." David Sills. board chairman of the new fo undation. said in a wnnen statt'· mt'nt S1lh 15 a tormt'r Irvine Caty Coun- cilman who now serves as an Orange County Supenor Court Judge. O ther foundation board members 1ndude Irvine Mayor David Bakt'r, a rn-founder o f PICH Carol Hoffman, pa'>t president of PICH, Gary Hunt, a "•cc president at tht' Irvine Co., John R Miltner. vice lhanct'llor ~t UCI; Dr Gerald 8 . Sinykin. vice president Qt' the Fluor Corp . and Timothy L. Strader. board chairman of the Lep cy C omJ>'tflies Sills said the foundation will make grant\ cJ1clus1vely to support .. health. (Pleue He IRVINlt/ A2) teer cas1 members from thro ughout the Orange Coast and south county will part1c1palt' m the show Among the onginal art works 10 be recrca1ed arc the recently minted U.S com of the Statue of liberty designed by John Mercan11. local artist Robert Blumhagen's acrylic-on-canvas work "Gom' Surlin'," and tht' annual fi nale. Leonardo da V1nc1 's "Last Supper" Tickets fo r tht' two-hour shows. which begin at 8.30 p m , art' avail- able by calling 4Q4-I I 45 Pageant of the Mastt'rs organ11er\ will stagt' a ribbon-culling and open· mg ceremonies at 10 a.m Wednes- day. In connectton with the openmg. a special post office subsuwon will ~ opened through Sunday in whic h stamp collectors can purc hast' t'nvelopes w11h a SJ)t'c1ally designed cancellation stamp hononng lht' pageant Outside the lrv1nt' Bowl. lht' Fe'il1· val of Arts will be presented. featunng the v.orks of about 165 artists and (Pleue .ee ART8/A2) Mountain lion, cub captured in park where girl attacked By ROBERT HYNDMAN Ofhl)elly,... ..... A mountain hon and ht'r cub were captured this wcekl.'nd m thl' Ronald W. Caspers Wilderness Park. 1n the same campground a "i H'•H· old girl was mauled 1n last March Wildlife experts, w11h the help ofbloodhounds. trapped thl· l111nl '' and her cub early Saturday. thrtt' days after the two were spottl·d nl·ar the campground cast of San Juan Capistrano The mother was found and tranquilized and tht' cub tapturnl Tht'n the two mountain hons were sent to the state Fish and (1.imc Department's Sacramento laboratory for study. Both an1mal'i ,11,11 known as couprs, were reported 10 be in aood cond1t1on. The parents of laura M1chelk Small, the El Toro gJrl mauled 11,. a (Pleaee Me LION/ A2) Gran,d Jury avoids harsh confrontation O~tgotng OC panel 'attacked problems instead of people during its year's stint Grand JUr. Its 11tk (.'vokc\ an 1maac of power and ~rc~cy. 1mposma clo4'Cd-door 1nqu1nn and we1ah1 y dC'C1,1on<i For mo,t. Its functtoM seem cloaked an m y,ttry. Th()S(' with a pa 1na fam1hanty with the body arc likely to cite its indictment po~e"' whtn QUi11Cd on a Jrlnd JUI'\'~ J ut1e 8u1 in ( ahfom1a. the I Q.mt'mbt'r body ~J)t'nd, mmt nf 11\ 11mt ~rvm as a aovemment watchdoa -pokina into county operations 10 Stt how th~ machinery 1s work1n1 and l'C'C- ommcnd1ng improvement\ Far from wrapp•n• themsclvt'!l 1n 11 shroud of secrecy. Juror\ want the pubhc to know what they have found Beforl.' the 198S-R6 Oranar County Cirand Jury lef\ office Jul) I 1t 1,,ued a baker\ dozt'n of rtpon\ c~1m1n1na. amona other thtnl'-· mtdt<:al ~rviccc. at Juvenile Hi.11 nnli Ornngl.'w0<'1d 1hr :· treatment of public drunks, lht' function of superv1sonal aides and ctntral court sccunty Jurors al'° conductl.'d t'1ght cnm1- nal invc<1ttpt1ons, four of which resulted in tnd1ctmt'nt!> The makt'up ofthl' Oranat' < ounty C1 rand Jury chaoses each July I C and1datc\ arc nominated b)' Su- penor Court JUdge<l or by a ~lec11on committee They ire 1nterv1ewed. tht'1 r back· groundul'\' 1nvc,t1ptcd, then IQ arc ~l«ted from a pool offinaltsts In many wa)\. the IQSS 86 Grand Juf") WI\ t) p1cal of prtvious one'I Iii mt"mh<'n Wt'rr mo'ltl\ tcach<'f'\ rt'· ttred busincu cxecu11v~ ond a.- sorted other profcs'i1onal! "fhO had ttmc to invest in the volunt«r pos1t1on But dut' at least 1n pan to the leadership of foreman Gerald Charlton, th1~ yc.ar's Jl'lnd JUf') reports lacked the sharp t~th of Pl'\'VIOUSOOM They didn't point finacn. tht'y d1dn.'t namt' namt'1. and M>mt't1mes. to get the pmnt, 1t was nCC't'Ulry to read betwetn the lint's. · Charlton, a Khool tt'acher. formrr police officer and father of ~vt'n. \11d mrmben of tht outaoina arand JUf) wantt'd to avoid ,p11t1na mate h<'c. with the subJe<:ts of their in4ulrll'' "I think the b1gcst c;inglc th1n(I, v.r did this year wa\ 't't out ot a confronuve mock," u1d the 54·\Car old Fountain Valley rc'11dl.'nt "We felt by attacking prohl<'m' instead of people. you're more li ke!\ to get thmt.' att0m_ph hed." hC' ~1d Whetht'r mort cfTcct1ve or no t. th<' d1frtrencc in approach ..-as evident 1n the atrtencc of hctted rTbuttal\ 10 ,hortcommp detailed m the rtl>Ort' There wa\ barely a pttp of protc\I even wht'n the supl'rvi~n Wt'rt' obhquel) ch1dt'd tor ~'"I rudl.' to the pubh{ I .n'1 \tl\r thl' I 1U!4-K~ ( 1ran,1 luf'\ To check wha1 has been dt'SCnbed as a spreading canct'r of red mk threatt'n1ng the natton's economic health the Gramm.Rudman law established an automauc mechanism to ahgn spcndmg and rt'vt'nue mort' doseh Tht focu' of the t'ffon 1s 1he comptroller gcnl'ral. head of Con- gress· General A.ccounung Office. v.ho1\appointed ""the president toa I ~-)'t'ar term and ma> be removed onl\ b\ <. ongrcss (Pleue eee BUDGET I A2) HBseeking to refinance Civic Center By ROBERT BARKER OI -o.-, lttlel ltafl ll unt1n~ton Bealh Ul) ollic1als "ant 101,1kl' out ;i 'K'n>nd mortgage o n thl' S 11 ~ m1ll1un ( I\ ll (enter and Jll ihn· ,1.111on to gel bl.'ner ti nanc1 ng on a 111111-,tun du\\ntuwn parking garagl' !'h rt•lin.1nunl! lhC' l 1"1l CcnlN .ind fll'hll' \t,lll(ln and 1ndudmg 1h11\l' I ~-H·.ir-olli hu1ld1ng., with thl.' proflll\l'd f).irkrng \tructun:. thC' c1l\ .. 1.rnd' tn ...-., C' JOl1ut $400.000 a '!'Car "l'J '0 H":-ir' otlil 1al\ ...aid I hl· ul\ "oula rl.'lC'I\(' a h1ght'r ti.ind rntin~ .rnd lov.cr interest ratt' b} (PJeue eee CJVlC/ A2) LISA MAHONEY Focus ON THE News l'arntd th<.' 1rt ot rnun1 ~hool1 Supc'rtntcndcnt Rnhc'n Pttt>Nln by rnndudintt that the l>rp nmcnt of l dUla1ton duphcates ~"'~" my '<-hoot d1'>trtet., aln-ad pro \lde ..\n angn Pttt'non calltd the rTPort an "amatcumh hungk" that read "hkt" a cnm1 hook " Fifth 01\tnCt Suren IStH llioml\ Rill'\ rl.'11' ted 1n ag1tatt'd fac.h1on (Pl eeeee0RAND/A2) l .. Al 1t . Or1ngeeoe.t DAILY PILOT/ Mond1y, July7, 1988 . -~UDGET LAW UNCONSTITUTIONAL ••• .. .._Al The GAO, now btAded by Charles BoW5btt, is a watcbdoa aamcy that a\Mtltt fockra.l ~ms. A special lhrtt;Judat court last Feb. 7 ruled thu Gramm-Rudman brt'aches the separation of ~wt~ between the executive and letJ lativc brancbc-s because of the comptroller nenl's role. ARTS FESTIVALS •.• homAl That unsicned rulina was aulhored by Antonin Scalia. the federal a~ls coun judae selected by Pm1dent Rcapn for elevatJon to the Supreme Coun. The Reapn admanistrati<>n uracd the hiah coun to trike down the comptroller aeoeral's role. even thouah Prcsldent Reagan signed the legisl1t1on and has called repeatedly for reduced federal deficits. craft.smen. Ahhouah 1 walk by the displays 1s u favorite way to spend the pqeant's niahtly intermission. the festival grounds can be enjoyed at a more lcisun:ly pace from 10 a.m. to 11:30 p.m. daJly. Adm1ss1on 1s $2 and discounts arc ava1l1ble for senior citizens and children. Across Laguna Canyon Road are 1wo more art fesuvals, both markmg their 20th anniversancs this summer. The Sawdust Festa val. created as an alternative to the Festival of Arts. 1s showcasing work b> more than 200 artists and craftsmen The An-A-Fair. located JUSI south nfthl' ""'ti"(' i:-,.~"""' •~ ~ u1r1l'ii Ari festi val featunng the work s of artists from throughout the United States. NEWPORT ... From A l dents and shop~cepcrs rcponed win- dows smashed A publl( restroom at the Balboa Pier rcccl\ed $1 ,500 1n damage. And there 1s evidence that some of the violence may have been planned. Eisenberg s;,;ud. e'lplain1ng officers found several stockpiles of ~nd-fillcd bottles. One group of celebrants Lhantl.'d .. Palm Spnngs, Palm Spnngr,." ap- parently referring to a not in that reson city dunng Eastl'r week. police said "From wh at l'"e been told there is some indication that some of the people we,re there not to part) but to engage 1n a melee," Eisenberg said Every police officer "able to stand upright" was placed on dut't dunng the hean of the hohda\ wee~end. Eisenberg said There are about 145 officers 10 the depanment. not count- ing re sen e officer~ "ho also "ere used to quell the dl\turhances .\s scheduled pohLe sealed off Balboa Boule.,,ard 10 1ncom1ng trallic at West C'oa'>t Haghwa\ and again at 32nd Street to thl' bcal h It wa'n ·1 necessan to block Nev.port Boulevard The biol kade reduced tratfa hut seemed to ha'c lt11le impact on the the number ofpeopk "'ho turned uut for lndepcndemc Da} rnes "It \l.3S a SUl(C\<; 10 that ll redlh l'Ut down on the numhcr ol lars but 11 didn't seem tu l ut do"'n thl· cro"'d ·· Eisenberg ..aid <:.eashore Dmt· tl\:l\l.et"n ~2nd and 52nd street' -an area ~no"' n a<, "pan> anamill Cit> .. to lixal<, -"'il'- declared an unla"'tul ac;sembh an~d shonl~ after nightfall Fnda' and police mo' ed through the \tn:ct. d1sper~1ng crov.dc, 'vlort: than a dull'n pn1plt v.t."re .trrested on \usp1c ion ot inciting a not or for failing to lea'l' the \Cl'ne ol a 1101 Other'i IA.ere arre'>ted for pm· -.ess1on of a dcstruu1' e de' ice d1s- nrdcrh 1.onduu ilnd 3\\ault Of ihe nine people: arre~ted on \uspaon uf a\\aulting polt1.c ofliccr'>. •>nl) t"'O "'ere h\tecJ a' Ne.,..pon Bca1. h re<,1dent\ I Jl h "'a' helcJ on $25.(X)() hall Admission 10 both fcsuvab. which run through Aug. 31, a SJ. With about 250,000 aucsts at- tracted each year to the Page3nt of the Masters, and nearly 300,000 visiting the an festivals. traffic e-0naest1on and parkina in Laguna Beach can c:rtute headaches. C1ty buse~. however, are available to take visitors to and from down- town from the Laguna Canyon Road parking lot near the Clty hmits. V151tors might also choose to park outs.1de the city and nde count) bu~s to Laguna Beach. The act was defended by the rnngrcssional leadership The Supreme Coun heard arau- rtl{'nts in the case April 23. ( h1cf Justice Warren E. Burger. announcing the court's decision on his last day presiding over a court ~ss1on. said ... No one can doubt that Congress and the president are con- fronted with fiscal and economic problems of unprtttdented magni- tude" COAST HOLIDAY ..• Fro m A l i.tabbin~. no i.hooungs. no fireworks. trouble~ Nothans hke Newport Beach. "We JUSl had our regular stun. EH~l)bod) ~nt to the beach or Palm Spnngs." he s~ud Even Newpon ~ach quieted con~1derably after Friday's unwelcome flfe~orks. "Other than tht' mclce on the Founh. we've had nothing." said Sgt. Gene Sen~al. A total of 1 59 arrests were made between sundown Fnday and 4 a.m. Saturday after 70 police irappled with drunken crowds along a 40-block stretch of Seashore Drive, said Jailer Nelson Ferguson Charges included inciting a not. refusing to disperse, public drunkenness. assault and battery on a police officer and resisting arrest. From 4 p.m. Thursday to 8 a.m. Sunday when Newport officially ended its holiday watch, 244 arrests were made, Ferguson said. Over last year's Fourth of July -a four-day weekend -Newport Beach police recorded 326 arrests, he said. Huntington Beach police "'ere no busier than last year. said Lt. Ed McErlain. "Slow and bonng." he said about the last da) of the weekend. "Aftcrt..,_ Fourth. we took a dive.. T Fountarn Valle>. Laguna Beach and Irvine likewise reported an une,entful holiday weekend "'We had a bottle rocket roof fire that caused about SI 00 damage." said In int' pohce Sgt Mike Ogden. "but nothing other than that It's been a quiet weekend" It was relauvel)' quiet at the beaches. too Orange Coast beach officials reported mostly average crowds unda) when spnng-ltke weather cooled the 'erve of man)' sun seekers. A.bout 30,000 lolled below the cliffs at Laguna Beach Sunda) where clouds ho' ered until m1d·afiernoon, said lifeguard Mike Longfield. "There wasn't much action. hardly any surf. and the clouds kept It prem cool."' he said. "I was out boating. and at was miserable." Lifeguards only made about half a doLen rescues. Lo ngfield said morr than 40.000 would be expected on a warm holida) there Al Huntington's Ci ty Beach. only 20,000 braved the chill Sunday, said Lt Steve Davidson. Crowds were larger both Fnday and Saturday. Despite the smaller crowd. lifeguards were busier than in Laguna due to np tides. Davidson said "We had a prett) quiet f ourth The weather wasn't that great. It was gloomy. windy and cool "he ..aid. "It wac; pretty mild around here for a Founh of Jul) weekend." Lifeguards were busy at Hun11ng1on State Beach, too. making some 200 rec;cues Sunday. said lifeguard supervisor Joel Wamasaka. "There are a lot of np currents The) 're \.Cl)' powerful and vel) bag." he \31d He estimated about 15.000 to 20.000 beachgoers looked for the sun there. .\!though lifeguards were kept bu!I) throughout the weekend. Wamau~1 ..aid o' era II last year was busier "last )'Car was hot and beautiful. and there was a big S\l.ell." he said Bolsa Chica reported about 16 000 stretched out on the sand there "It wa' real slow." a dispatcher said C-ahfom1a H1ghwa) Patrol officia ls reponed onl) one Orange Count\ trnffic death. 1n C'emtos. b) unda} evening Statewide 48 people died on the state's roads dunng the three-day Founh ut Juh hollda). (HP c;pokc~man Kent Millon ~1d Last )ear there "'ere 71 dl'alh~ during a lour-da' Independence Da\ hollda\ . · ~-f11ton said therl' were 1 071drunkcn-<lm1ng arre'>t\ this year. compared 10 2 500 during the longer period an 1985 The< HP d1dn'11.omp1k inJuf) s1at1\l1l'S tor the hohda~ 'la11on""1dc J!P holada~ tratn1. death\ \I.en: rcrnrded b} 5 p.m. Sunda} -Robert Hyndman also contribllted to this story. IRVINE GETS HEAL TH FOUNDATION ... From Al lo thl' \UClt'\\ ol lhc prOJt.'ll sunny skies for most regions Molat r flowing up from hj6 c.Atomi. wttl bring twgh cloud• to ttie touthem mountelne end deeetta. but lklee were •lCPtettd to be moe11y tunny Tueedty CMW tllllt ,..t of SoutMrn c.i1tom1a. OIM late night end Mrly morning low ctoudt and fog Wltt'e ••~ed along tht oout, dtewn lnla.nd by a ~r• zone over Mstern Nevada, llCCOtdlng to the Nattonel WMther Sefvlce. U .S. Temps °"'4lfle 1• .. OrlMclo " 11 ~ " 74 .. Le ~ lot 11 ... ee "'"'°"'llh • 10 17 II POttlen4f,Mllnt n .. .. 17 .. onllncl,P,.. .. If 16 61 Pio.-ioe 10 14 N n IWIWI IS '11 ... u ~Cit)' u u l:t 71 .._.... .. 62 .. "~ 17 10 IO II llLOIM ti ti 13 .. ... LIM C11y U 16 7 I II Sin ""'°"'° N 71 17 72 ...,.. .,. .. 1:1 11 •• IP0'1 a 11 r,~=-= ~;: " n T~t "".OO ., 70 Calif. Temp• ~ :: ~= 1 I: : Hiii\ IOw. tot 24 llCMt MCllnll •U • "' ti II T*9 .. 16 ........, 10 13 t 1 1~ w..,...on.o c t1 11 ll#9I u 63 IM.i.Alw Sen1e °""' a.tltaMMle a.it•_._ TaN8Vt/Wf T- 71 ., 10 .. 76 .. 71 .. TS II 11 a IO .. WlllNle t2 71 '-t2 63 ti 71 W.W...... IO 10 ~ 16 13 -----------~ ~ ---------~=·.. ~ : Surf report ~ ~Extended :::..=-: : a.oc•"°" 71 54 "9dwood Clly n M " .. Late"""' -"'°"*" ----~ ... .. ... --....... '' 11 1oo-u.co.-~ .. ~ ·-·-... -·-· IO 91 ... In._ 1411* .. lo '*"l'OI. =-l*go g : ---~.Newpon 11 " S'°"'"W.mllMIOllOlowto. ~~·!'.!.'!.I. ..74 ~ ==.:i 71 54 Vfl/lttr1 lnh~'°910ml040e _..___ ,. -lllbMWedgil • 17 lo. In' ~ IOa 10,.,..... 110dl10ft ~ 13 i..-leeoll 13 47 Hlgll, low tot 24 hOura tlld:ln9 •16 p"' Sen C..-tt 73 47 ~ Vtllftflt t3 M WM« Temp• IO 71 Tfd-..... ow '1 14 Swell dhcllon· Soulfl H 74 -...,,_,1 17 6$ Sout"'-1 ,, 72 llo8-7t 37 H 811 TODAY llythe 104 n eo 10 8-'td iow 1;33 p.m. 2 e ~ 11 eo :: :: s-ohlllh t:61p.... e1 ~ : : Smog Report It 71 ~aoAY McwOWI 11 .. t4 ti "'94 IOw 6. 1t ~ ..0 • MGl:UUla 80 M t2 72 l'lraclllQll 1~40p.m 3.7 ~ M M 16 T1 8-16 low 4.11 p.m. 21 ....... 102 79 M 72 9-14 Ngft lo-21 p.m. 9-0 *"'llOtt .._., II IJ '° .. ~ 16 12 11 ... ..., .... ~ .. 1~7 p.m.. ,... ........... 102 71 16 70 T....,., M 6:41 a.m, Md .... .-, It "-dMI 12 eo ti 72 107p.m .......... 17 10 N 10 ..._, .... I~ II "OS P"'. ,... 9M ..,_dlno t7 14 M 71T~111:11 Liil. Md .... M t42 len~ D 11 14 711 pm Sin~ t3 M CIVIC CENTER REFINANCING SOUGHT ... From Al lumping the bu1ldmgs together, ac- cordin$ to Robert Franz. dire<;tor of admin1c;trat1ve services. "We wall jCt a higher bond rating because a City Hall is regarded as more essential to city operations, and rhe city is less likely to default on it than a parking structure," he said. Ci ty Administrator Charles Thompson said today that there's onry a remote 1>9Ssibihty at best that the city could deflluh. "The whole city would have to go belly up," he said. "and that's not very realistic." Officials are working out financ1aJ plans that wall result in the sale ofS20 million 1n tax-free municipal bonds .\bout S 12 m1lhon would go towards the construction of the 1.200 space parking structure. AnotherS7 m1lhon \l.Ould go towards the C1v1c Center complex and SI million for admin1!t- trat1ve costs The parking structure. to be located between Walnut and Ohve avenues and a block inland from Pacific Coast H1ghwa), as regarded as essential to downtown redevelopment. It is one of four such structures that consultants !>ay are needed to handle '1s11ors to a rejuvenated downtown and about 180,000 ~uare feet of commercial space adjacent to Main treet and on both sides of Pacafi' Coast H1gh wa) Ca ty Adm1n1strator Thompson \aid the debt from the bond sales will be repaid with revenue from tht' parking ~tructure and pledges from the general fund There as also a poss1b1ht) that a parking authont) a\sessmcnt dastnct could be formed and that tax increment funding could be used . The city would pay off the debt at an interest rate of 8 percent, about a one-half a percent less than if the two government buildings wert not in- cluded in the bond sale. City Councilwoman Ruth Bailey said today she inallally opposed the lumping together of the buildings m the bond sales. .. I thought most bond issues should deal with specific projects." she said, "but this will save a lot of money. I still have a concern about putting a mortgage on City Hall, though." LION, CUB CAPTURED ... From Al mountain hon 1n the park March 23, believe the aduJt mountarn hon captured Saturday may have been the one that attacked thear daughter But Fish and Game officials said that hon, an adult male. was trapped and killed last March, shortly after the attack on Smalt Its paw pnnts and other evidence matched those found 1n the area where the girl was mauled, officials said. The Smalls. however, sajd they're skeptical. "The P.roblem is, we haven't had any coopcrauon ... to help determine 1f they've really found the nght one," Susan Small said this mo ming. "We have no way of knowmf-.. Small said she believes the investigation following the attack on her daughter was inconclusive and could not have accurately 1dent1fied the animal responsible in the attack. The Smalls had filed a $28 malhon claim against the county, charging that the public should have been warned about the danger posed by mountain lions in the park. That claim was denied Thursday and Small said a lawsuit Wlll be 1nat1ated soon. The state has yet to re~pond to an additional $28 million claim. "If this mo~ntain lion (c~p.tured Saturday) was the one, they have really been negligent to have 1t in the park all these months. And if it's not. maybe it's still there," Small said. "Either way, it's scary." Laura Small, who suffered multiple skull fractures an the March attack. contmues to recover following six surgenes. "She's doing much better," Small said. ''She's walking a little better. But ll Wlll probably be another year before !he part of her skull that was removed heals properly ... education 1.hantahk '>l1cnttf1l ;10d cultural Ol'l'<.1' ol the rl'\Hknt' ol thl' \:II\ ol fr, 1nl' ilnd the count\ ul Orangl "'11h l·mphil~" 11n thl· health need\ ul thl' tommun1I\ 1~1 hl'alth lare 1\\UC\ in thl· lr\lnl· u1mmun11' "Ill tx· a dl'll'rrnanrng lador .. \ill<, ~1d grant\ will not be limited 111 t•nd01A..ment\ or lund1ng lor ongo 1ng program .. He \a1d capita l grantc, tor building proJCU\ mav be made but onl\ ''hen the foundation board determines that <;uch tundang 1c, \.Ital I oder the toundat1on·, guadehnc\ grant\ "•II nut be made lo rel1~ous I ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~. organ11.it1on-. lor rcltg1ou~ purpose\. Ht: JcJJccJ .. T ht· 1nll'fe\I ol the loundat111n in ne"' .md 1nno,atl\l' prnl!rJm\ \\Ill not ll'\WI II\ l<>ncern tor C\labh\hl·d tn\lllUll<ln\, hO\.\C\t.'f fht." rcla11nn,h1pof ,1 'JX'<.1fi1. nmgram <>rgan11t.'r.. ~a1cJ group<, """hmg 10 I dppl~ fur grant\ can obtain an apphnt11un packl·t b~ "ming to the lr"lnl' ( ommun1t' Foundation P 0 Bo\ 17831 . In int.': 92713-7831 GRAND JURY A VOIDED CONFLICTS ... From Al ""hen thl· t 1JX~·h l ( 11 and Jur) urged supcn l\t>r\ tu \lup \tulh 1ng nc"' ai rport site\ ancJ p1<.k line (1 he~ \till ha,en't.J He ...... .., al'><1h'1d 1A..hl·n thl' I 'J7l/.XO (,rand Jun hht'>ll'<l thl' htrard'\ de- <. 1 c;aon to ignore the acJ' I Cl of c,ta IT and choose a 'ub.-.equrnth problem· plagued \.Ole-lounting \)\tern tor thl· registrar~ offin· Rik) L311t'd thL· reporl "J u\t a lot of \1ond;1\ morning quanerback1n~ ... The 1985-86 C1rand lur' didn't tal.c on the ix·n·nnaal -.rnd .11"''')' n >ntro\erc.1al -1op1t\ nl thl' J.itl ;111d the dlf'f)Orl C harlton ..aid the airport l\\Ul' ha'> hccn 'o;tudacd to death" and oth·n·d no fresh ground for 1nqu1n Jurors dad look at thr 1~11., and decided lo monitor thL· \1tu:11mn hl' \31d 5pcaking gencrc1ll\ < hJrlton ob ~ned that ·•ot1cnt1ml'' JU'>I uur in terest got thtn&'> lakl'n care ot One area of concern that ( harlton \tlld JUror'i w1i.hl'd tht.'\ had \tudat•d was land de .. clopnll'nt Ii' the IHTtl' MAIN OFFICE ' l'tf " • t1 V~a A Ve .~,,,. I , r ::-'°)\\'8 "'*~ iA ~,, /~ 1uror'> agrl'l'd lo undata~t.' tht· qu<.'' t1on ut v. hethcr road'> '>t'WCf\ and other public taullt1c'> were ~el•pang pace v.1th commercial and rt·~1<lent1al de' clopmcnt. tht.'rc wa'> JU'>I not enough t1rnl' to rl''>l'arch 11. he 'aid C harlwn·, 'll'""' of count' go,1.·rn - ment after a \Car of contidcn11al talk,, ob\crvation and rnmpan~on w11h other rnun11c\ differ<; c.1gn11icantl} II um that ol prC\.1uu\ H'ar\ grand 1uf'\ loreman Thoma<. Kehoe Kehoe and a handful nt kllow 1urors roundl~ tr1t1l11ed lOunt" opcr· JtHln'> and called lor a top-ln·b<lltom m 1.·rhaul ol a \}\tern the\ .. 1e\\cd a' outdated. indlic1en1 and undl·r-or- gan11cd But r harlton 'aid thl' gmernml'nl 1c; operating e'tremeh "'di t.onc,1dl'r- rng the c,1ze and magn11111k of 11\ rc\ponstb1ht1e<, .. ~peaking for thl' JUI'\ ( harlton U('~Cnbt-d ne\\ ( ount) .\dm1nl\• 1rat1ve Officer Lam Parn~h as "a hreath of frc:'ih air" Pam1;h, who IA..3\ appointed after the pre" 1ous grand JUf) k h otnce. hac, tx-cn S)'\temat1call) reorRanmng lOUnl\ Jgl'Jll tl'' "'llll 11nlc lui.' or furor ( harlton \a1d his }ear a~ JUry loreman wa' "t.'xuting and challcng- 1ng and f1 U\tratmg." He doesn't rule out the po"1h1hty of ser'vmg again. But tu indicate the heavy time cJl'mancJ' plan~d on Jurors, Charlton dc\cnhc<l d plaqul' hl· had made tor hi\ \1,lfC . It rl·,1J, "Barbara Charlton. Grand 1ur. \\Id~>" of the )car .. Correctiop \ f nda\ \tor) in Datebook incor- rt'l lh 11\tl'd the length of the Pageant nt the Ma\tcrs ~how 1n Laguna Beach Thl· program featunng hve rcc- reat1on' of maJOr works of an. runs tor Jnt>UI two hourc; n1ghtl )'. beg1n- n1ng Jl X 'fl pm I he pageant which run\ from Jul} 4 through .\ug. 28, attract\ shout 2 50.000 people each \um mer For t1de1 1nformat1on. rnll 494-114~ D•llJ Piiot Dell very I• Guaranteed ~ ~, ... '''°"f " ' c •• ...,.~ e•? !>678 ~ & "'"'• ••1 ,,~, Just call 642-6086 ~ ........ 't,,.. .... " .... * Ct, VOL. 79, NO. 188 'What do ~ou hkt about the Dail} Pilot, V. hat don't ~ou la ke" Call the number abovt and ~our me~sage will be rtcorded. transcnbed t'nd dt'- l1vered to the appropnatc editor I The ~me 24-hour answtnna ~rv1ce mav be used to rt'cord lettet1 to 1he ed11or on an> topic Contnbuton to our Lcuen column mu\l include their name and telephone number for venficat1on Tell<; u' what) on you r mmd ~JODI!' a D001Y• 7 "' •• .., '""' QP1 ~ j t .. i.o-. .. •l Clrculatlon T ... phonee ~· HOUR ACC•SS 7 OA rs Large Units! High-J:ech Security Systems Ask About Our Business Discounts/ 17th ITAEET /Elf· 645-2711 /TOA AGE 670 WEST 17TH STREET, COSTA MESA, CA 1 Monte Carlo Night slated in Newport The Ne~eh Conference and V111tors Bu~u will hold its ninth annual Monte Carlo Niaht July 18 at the Hotel Meridien. Admission will be $25 per perpon and each ticket will be ~chanaed' for chips and eHJibility for door prices. lncludjnJ trip io Las Veps, dinners at local restaurants, cruises and resort weekends. A seven-piece dance band will entertain and the dress is black tie optional. Call the bureau office at 756-2072 for ticket reservations. Dog tralnlng workshop A workshop on security and alertness trainml for dOJS will be conducted Sunday from 6:30 to p.m. in Room BC-8 of Saddleback College in Mission Viejo. The topics will include methods of teaching a dog to become alert to strange noises. bow to sound ap alarm bark and how to curb excess~ve barking. The fee is S l 0 in advance ofS 12 at the door, and participants should not bring lhejr dogs. Call 582-4646 for further information. Summer slngles sealon set "The Summer Single faperienee: The Self Cycle," a two-da~ workshop, will meet July 18 from 7 to 9 p.m. at Irvine Valley College and July 19 from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. at Cameo Shores in Corona del Mar. Swimming, sun bathing and an evening barbecue arc included and the fee is $35. Call the college at 559-3333 for registration details. Second-hand smoke studled A workshop dealtn& with health issues aassociated with second-hanCl smoking wiU be presented July 19 in Room 113 of the Counseling and Admissions Building at Orange Coast College in Costa Mesa. The session, from 9 a.m. to noon, will de.al with health issues raised for non-smokers by being forced to breathe the smoke of others. The fee is $15 and tickets may be purchased b} calling OCC at 432-5880. Better Breathers to meet The South Coast Medical Center's Better Breathers Club will meet July J 9 from 4:30 to 6 p.m. in the auditorium of the hospital, 31872 Coast Highway in South Laguna. Pharmacist Stephen Lash will speak on the uses and abused of medicat10n as related to people with breathing disorders. Call 499-1311 . ext 2186, for add111onal information Spanlsh CPR class slated A Spanish-language class in cardiopulmonary rescus1tat1on will be ofTered July 21 and 23 in Room 217 of the John C. Coelho Blood Center. 601 N. Golden Circle Drive, Sama Ana. The courSt' will be taught by a bilingual instructor using Spanish- language materials. Call the American Red Cross at 835-5381 . ext. 233. for details Stepparent group formlng Mamage and famll;,-tht>rap1st Laura Rush 1s organizing a support group tor divorced and separated stepparents. heg.inningJuly 19 from 10 to 11 :30 a.m. in Huntington Beach . Rush and attorne) Bnan Neil Burg will conduct the sessions on the first and third Saturday of ca~h month The fee 1s SI 0 pt>r meeting and those interested may call 848-5804 for the location and to make reservations An Invitation Att9ntion org<lfliiation prflidenn and secretone•• We wont to help mah your upcoming e11enn, rrutetings, seminars and fundroisers successful. Send brief onnouncemenn including time, place, cost (if any) ond o phone number for additional information to: Bulletin Boord, Doily Pilot, P.O 6o11 1 560, Cotto Meso, 92626. Reports of your club or organization's activities -such os community service projecti or election of officen - should be directed to the communify news editor at the some oddren. Non·retvrnoble block and white photographs ore welcome Monday, July 7 •7·30 p.m .. Huntlo~lon Beach City Council, Cit) ( ouncil Chamber;, ~000 Main ~t Tuesday, July8 • fdO p m .. Irvine City Council. ( It\ ( ounnl Chambers. 17200 Jamboree Blvd. PoucE Loe 87 ROBERT BA.AUil ....... ....._ ... June anduate1 11 eevcn hith school campuses in the Hunt.insion Beath Union H iah School District pmmd 1ebolar· ships, awards and panu valued at more than SS mjJlion, achool oftkia11 ttpOrted. The tehOlll'lhip ~)'Off: It $S,•8S, 771, is believed to be the h1ahest in district history and is up 10.9 penient from last year despite a drop or 280 atudenu. "Thi$ 11 our best year ever," dillrict Trustee Linda Moulton said ... Each year we (djstrict students and teachcn) outdo ounelva. We do better and bttlef and rm really pro\ld, .. sbe said ... It reflecu llJ'ont ICldcmic requlremenu and IQOd teachtts and briaht kids." Students at Edlton, Fountain Valley, H\lfttinpon Beach, Marina, Ocean View, Wertnunster and Winterabura hip 1eboots received·~· ranaina from ~ ytat pa11u to four-year teholanhips and academy appointments that include full tuition and expenses. · Local orpniz.ations and compu1es. inclucUna the Huntinaton Beach Chamber of Comme.u, local Kiwanis clu~ the Pedaling across America Hundreda of bicycling enthualuta follow 26 official entrant.a Sunday momlnC alone th~ Santa Ana River bike trail at the •tart ot the Race Acroea AMerlca. The race from Huntington Beach to Hwa\iJitU)ft 9-ch Co: arid the diltrin OOllan for Scholars~. cocun'buaed cub towanl the YO\l"lf1ert" lljper educa.- 1.IOD.· Founwn Valley Hip ScbooJ. the l&rlett 1ehool in the dinrict, · brouabt f n Sl,3S6.S4S, the hiahelt total Fountain Valley's enrollment or 3.200 1tudeot1 ii down 100 from la. at year. But tht IC!hola.r· &hip moACy lOPI . last year's tow by S2S7.089. €diton H.iah School placed 1CCOnd with s 1.1 2S,Sl8 aoina to 111 1eniora. Last year, district students eamcd Atlantic City I• the lonce.t non-.top bicycle race ln the wort~ covertnc 3, 107 mile.. Dennt. Bock of Coeta Meaa (lea.dine the pack on the rlCht) pacee the rlden. Chemical used to paint boats occshows 1. k d t -. i·c . . topsuIDDler Ill e 0 marine I1e pOISOilIIlg enrollment By the Associated Pre11 ..\chemical mixed in paints used to keep barnacles and algae off boat bottoms 1s suspected of poisoning marine life in harbors and marinas as the chemical leaches into coastal waters. a marine chemist says. The chemical tributyl11n. or TBT. 1s the most poisonous substance ever mten- 11onally put in coastal waters. said Edward D. Goldberg of the Scnpps Institution of Oceanography. who urges the chemical be banned on pleasure craft immediately. The levels ofTBT measured in Southern California mannas far exceeds safe levels for organisms such as m usscls and oysters, he said. . "If the use 1s continued. if there 1s more extensive use as barnacles become resis- tant to (present levels). then the impact will be more widespread in more or- ganisms." said Goldbel]. who 1s studying TBT for the State ofCahforn1a. Boat paints containing TBT showed up in the 1960s as an alternative to copper- based anti-fouling paints. The new paints were favored because they kept boat hulls clean for years. Goldberg said they are up to 1,000 times more effective than copper- based paints. There 1s no substantial threat to higher organisms from the chemJcaJ. But Gold- berg said blending intuition Wlth obJect1v1- ty would lead to a ban as the federal government did with DDT 10 the early 1970s, even though it was not cert.am that the pest1c1de caused harm to humans. The Navy proposed last year to paint tts entire neet with the anti-fouling paint because of a potentJal annual savings of hundreds of millions of dollars in fuel and maintenance costs. The Navy, however, was ordered by Congress to bold off. Annual Clean Harbor Day on Saturday Clean Harbor Day. an annual commun1- l) event aimed at beautifying Newport Harbor. will be held Saturday. The fifth annual event, sponsored by the Newport Harbor Area Chamber of Com- merce and The Dally Pilot, begins at 8a.m. The day will be spent picking up debris at assigned locations 1n the harbor and on ncarb) beaches. Interested ind1v1duals. group~ and boat ll\' ners arc encouraged t9 part1c1pate. The following zones. are targeted for dean.up. Peninsula i>o..int to Adams Strel'I. A.dams Street to 19th Street. Lido Village and Finley tract, Lido Isle, Arches bndge to Back Bay bridge (Mariners Mile). Back Bay, Balboa Island and the little Island. Balboa Island bndge to China Cove, watercraft. · Volunteers should bnng trash bags, gloves. rakes or nets to gather the debris. After filling the ba$s, they may be left on the end of any public or private pier in the area for pick-up. For more information on pan1c1pation. call Bruce Chilcoat at 760-8238. Groups and companies interested in part1etpal1ng should ~all Mary Powell at 786-4291. Bay boat owner-Ci re needed as well. o\t 8 a.m.. they sho~id be at the Cannery restaurant to pick up trash bags and re<'Ct ve an area assignment for the morning's work. After the debns collecuon. at about 11 :30 a.m .. volunteers are invited back to the Cannery for hot dogs and cold dnnks An awards ceremony and part) for pamcipants will be held there following the day's clean-up effort. fhc first 250 part1c1pants will rece1VI.' a commemorative visor Orange Coast College's. summer 1986 enrollment 1s the largec;t in the Costa Mesa school's 39-year h1stol) campus officials said A record 12, 1 I 2 students have signed up for summer classes. a 6 9 increa~ over last summer's record registration of 11 .330. according to officials. ..Our final enrollment figure should top the 12.200 mark.·· said Wayne H. Wolfe. OCC's associate de-an of admissions and records. "~veral 'late-staning' classes will begin dunng the next two weeks.·· OCC officials said this summer's "seat count .. is 8 percent above that reported Last summer. meaning an average-student 1s enrolling in more classes this summer than last. The college reponed that 41 5 percent of this summer's students were takmg classes at the Costa Mesa campus for this first time this summer. producing a I 0 percentJump 1n new students. compared to last year OCC 1s already accepting apphcat1ons for its fall semester. which begins Aug. 18 Late-start classes lasung 15 weeks begin Sept. 8 Fall reg1strat1on begins Jul> 28. Regis- tration permm an: a\.allable in the OCC .\dm1ss1ons Otlice. v. h1ch 1s open from 8 a.m to 7 pm 1>0 Mondays through Thursda,s . .ind frum 8 am to 4.30 p.m Fndavs Mo.re 1nforma11nn lln fall enrollment can be obtained h\ 1.alling 4 r:!-'772 Suspect in 2 liquor store holdUps slain by police 20. of M1ss1on Viejo was arrested at I :40 a.m. Saturday on Bluebird Canyon. And Martin Madeline Val- en tin Helsen. 34. of Orange was stopped at 11 :50 p.m. Fnday on Park <\venue. Newport Beach A Persian cat worth $600 wa' stolen from a glass d1spla)' case at Russo·s World of Pets at Fa'ihton Island. kmfepotnt to hand over thl' da\ ·, receipts. • • • More than S 1.500 1n damage wa'> down to a public restroom at the Balboa Pier. Huntington Beach Th1e1,es smashed a windov.. to a residence m the I 5000 block of V 1ctona and stole Jewelry worth cveral hundreds of dollars. • • • Sllmconl' stnle a pur,1· co nta1n1ng S40 1n ca'>h and credit cards plus m1scellanous llems and 1dent1fi- ca11on papers from a shoppmg can 1n the Target parl.ing lot, QR82 .\dams A.\ c ••• .\ $..,00 n-hor..epowt.•r Evinrude boat motor ~as stolen from a garage in the I tiOOO block of Bimmi Garden Gro11e police mvestigaung two liquor store robbenes went to a neighborhood tavern in search of a man and shot and killed him when he allegedly pointed a gun at an officer. authorities said Saturday Gal) D. lynch. 42, of Garden Grove died of a gunshot wound in the chest in the parking lot of Micke~·s har 1n Garden Grove Police Lt. Irvine Several scant1h d ad females. seen $1tt1ng on a ccmcnttwall near Jcffrc) Road and the Santa .\na Fm.·wa)'. were reported to polH:c a' a trafhr ha1ard • • • Juveniles n·portedly put firework\ 1n a mallbo>. 1n the CiOOO hlock ol Yearling Avenul· Sunda' nen1ng 10 an apparent attempt to him' 11 up . ' . at abou pm ~unday fh1') were gone hy the <' polu:c 3m vrd • • Police receive compla1nt!I jt ap- proximate!) 4 p 1 Sundn} that 1uvcn1le'I W<'Tl" \Ctt1ng off honk r0t·ketii in lront ol a rt''l1denl e on Welle<1ky • • • A male wa" arrl"o;tl·d and h1•ld in thl' Oransr ( ounty .Jail at .1n111nd 10 r m \aturday fot pt1\\e,,1nn 111 h1•rntn opium and uK111nc al I Xl)(JCI Von lo;.arman \\(' Stuart Finkelstein said the tavern was a hangout for Lynch and his g1rl- f nend, who was arrested. Carolyn G. Nielson, 32. of Costa Mesa, alleged to have dnven a getaway car in the robbenes. wa'i booked for mvest1gat1on of armed robbery and murder. Finkelstein said. She was being held . tfl heu of Costa Meu Wh1k 'lhc wa!. at the movies at 660 Town Center Saturday. a woman·, SI XO cassette stereo was stolen from her car between 2·25 and 4:1S p.m .\pparently. the thief used only his hand'> to open the car through a rear pop-out window • • • Tools \\Cre stolen from an auto repair business at 3149 .\1rport Loop .. ometime Saturday or Sunday Ac- cording to a police rcpon, a vC'htclc was u'lcd 10 push 1n the warchou~ door to gain entry • • • ..\ unknown \U'ipt"Ct entcrl"d an open garage in tht• 2200 block of Mapk Street on S:iturda-Y at about I \0 pm ,ind made ofl "'ith a dutfrl hag ot women·, dothing. a heach n111\<'r h1nrk and a llaili•\' l>:nul~nn m1rnir • • • •\ m.lll l.11kll ,, ll '1lk'l: "' th1· '~()(I hint k ut ( 1)lnr.1\ln 1'1 \:Jtd • S250.000 ball. Lynch was 1den11fied by witnesses as the gunman who robbed Hen - sbaw's Liquor of about SI 50 at 7:28 p.m. Fnday. 1nves11gator; said Wit- nesses to another robbel) 15 minutes laterdescnbed Lynch as the man who robbed Vi's Liquor of S 100 police said. "We've got your dog." The black. white and sable shelt1e was apparent- ly stolen sometime Friday between 3 and 10 p.m. The resident . a fonner Costa Mesa police officer. c;aid the mouve may havC' been reH·ngc Laeun• Beac h The owner of a blue and" h11c 1982 Honda Passport motorcycle reponed 1t stolen Sunday on Circle Way • • • .\ purse and its contents, valued at SI". were stolen on Arroyo Dnvc. the v1ct1m told poltce Sunda)" • • • Police nrrc,tcd four motonst~ on 'iusp1cion of dnv1ng undC'r the in- lluence of alcohol. Wilham Jo'ieph Rousse-au. 28. of Laguna Beach wu arre'ited at 1 50 p m Sundn} on ( ilt'nncHc '\trcet Hownrd t ylc 'Wll,on, ~M of Lagu na l\cath wo' 'toprwll ill ' n m "'iaturda\ on ~1uth < 1~a<1t lli1thwa\ I 111\ Dn\.id l uH'ro • • • A bicycles worth S550 was stolen from a garage on the 400 block of Clubhouse Lane. • • • Two bandits, one armed with a switchblade knife and a set of hand- cu ffs. lleld up the Shell service station at 1000 Irvine Ave. and escaped wllh S250 tn cash. The attendent said he was dozmg when the men tned to handcuff him to a chair and -when that didn't work -ordered him at • • • Burglars broke a window 1n the 15000 block of Huntington V11lap.l' and stole a \ 1deo cas!>ette rerorlkr valued at $350. • • • Someone kicked in a door 1 n the 16000 block of A Street and stoic S 5 '" s1h er dollars. • • • Thieves cut a padlock on a daragl· door in lht' I~) block ol Nichol\ and stole a tool box and tool!> "alucd atSl.175 Man wltb. sword kllls two aboard Staten Island ferry NEW YORK (AP) -An emo- !Jonally disturbed man armed with a 'lword killed two passcnacn and wounded nine others on the Staten Island ferry today, police said. The attacker, who 1dcn11ficd h1m~elf a~ a Cuban "boat person." wa!. laken into custody by a rcu~ pohl'e officer who wa~ nd1ns the ferry <iamucl l. Nt'whouS( from Man- hallan to-4\tatt'n l!lland. official'\ ~1d. I he former nfftccr. ldward IX-lpino. fired ont· 'hot dunng thv l:lpt11rr hut no 1mr wa\ hit h\ the bullet, said police spokesman Joseph Mc:C'onV11le. Amona the wounded were a 16- )'Car·old Staten Island girl and v1s- 11ors from Kan!\&$ and .\ultria. ac- cording to a ho!)pital spokesman .\l\o in need of medical attention was ~mconc who suffered card1af. arTC\t, Mild John K.ilcoolev. a <1pokc,. man for Emergency MN!1t~I ~r\. tCe\ which sc-nt ambulance\ Th~ attal·k~r wn\ 1dtnt1ht·d h, lkputy Pohl l' C omm1'\IOnu R1d1 l\rd C"ondon a' l11an C ion1.1k1 / • • • Th1~·vt>' pnt>d open a front door at Big n P11111 I 4Q 16 "'iprmgdale and .-.wk a \I 00 radio. ~(\(I tel<'' 1s1on )ti and $5t) in la~h • • • < ulpnts "ma.,hl'd a v.imlnv. 10 the 11.i-in ( ad11lac <. oupt> de Ville in the '1unil\ of Mcmpht\ and \rrn v. and \toll' a S) 000 wlcphun1· • • • Th11·' <'' 'tok SI UOO 1n ro\\umc 1cv..dr. alll'r hf'l'akmg .1 v..indow at Nall Trend loo91 (r11th.ird Irvine drug store robbedof$200 .\ lone gunman robht-d an Irvine drug ~tore of ubout $200 at ~ l<"tng time Saturda\ night. f'Ohl·e-\aid ln·me-pohcc Sa1 JC'ff Kcrmode said th<' man entt"rtd the 1 hnfh Orua <itorc 5404 "al nut .\ ve at about 9·05 p m dt'§played a handgun. toolt monn from ('8<ih rt'&l\ltf'\, then ned on foot N" 1nJurte<1 were rtponcd Thr robber W11\ dc~nbc-d a~ a while m•n. ·~ '0 year. old and 6-fttt u1ll with a medium build and hlond hair llr wore 1 blue b3~ball ntp na' \' blu<' '>hlrt and 1c::1n and a hlur w1ndbrtak.er-t\.pc JIC c\ A 4 * Orange Coelt DAILY PILOT I Monday, Juty 7, 1988 WoRtu ---~ -------- ~arcos' ally to end revolt after saying he is president MANILA (AP) -Arturo Tol~n­ trno, the runnina mate of Ferdtnand E. Marcos who proclaimed himself Philippine leader with the support of hundreds of aold1ers, said today he will end his rebellion within hours. . President Corazon Aquino earlier pve Tolentino 24 hour<J to end what she called a "desperate" challenge to her rule. The 7S-year--0ld T olentino, who ran W1th the Marcos in tht fraud- tamted Feb. 7 elections, took tht presidential oath of office Sunday, tying he had been pressured to do so y Marcos loyalists. Marcos was eposed by a civihan-m1htary revolt Jnd fled the country in February. ~After takina the oath of office. •.i olent1no took rcfuac with a cordon bf soldiers in the Manila Hotel. but kft by the fifth-floor fire escape today for a four-hour meeting with a )overnment representative. ~ Tolentino said his polit1cal sup- porters still at the hotel will walk out ~rly Tue$day. It was not clear, however, whether the 100 or m ore soldiers at the hotel would go along. Tolentino said the question of whether soldiers will leave "will be taken up by the military amon$ themselves." Military men who took part in today's talks did not comment after the meeting ended at the Army-Navy Club, next to the U.S. Embassy on Manila Bay. "The purpose of the rally was the oath-talong. and that has bttn achieved.'' said Tolentmo, who was sworn in at the hotel before about I 0.000 Marcos loyalists. "There arc poht1cal issues to be discussed with the go,emment, such as const1tu- t1onaltsm. democracy. the rule of law." Tolentino s~ud he rtte1ved no assurances from the government 1t will not file charges against him. but said a meetana between the two sides was planned Tor noon Tuesday. No aovemment officiltl was immediately available for comment. A~uino said Sunday she would file ~d1t1on charsos against Tolentino. In a news conference earlier today 11t the presidential palace's auesthouse, Aquino said she was not concerned about Tolentino's revolt, which she said had been °insupted by Mr. Marcos." Marcos. tn a telephone interview today from his exile home in Honululu. Hawaii. said he could not yet make a "fair comment'' on the situation because "I am not a per- sonal witness to what has happened." But he said in the interview with Manila freelance journalist Sol Vanz1, "My main concern is that 1t might divide the armed forces and result m the Communists ge1nng stronger. 1 hope this wtll not happen." Sunday. however, Marcos spokes- ~ontras 'profit in currency sales ~egal, State Department asserts ~ WAS H 1NGT0 N (A P ) -M1am1, not in some black market" m o ney ~n ved from the non-lethal .N 1carasuan rebels. thro u&,h their con-and tu m ed over records of the aid with money that couJd be used to 'trol of U.S. non-lethal aid 1n two transactions to the State Dcpanmcnt buy weapons ··a carelell way to :;M1am1 bank accounts, sold dollars for April 17. handle funds. Once It aoes into that .a ~rofit in currency conversions and Bosco Matamoros. spokesman for pot. there's no telling what it goes 'fntxed the extra mone)' wtth their the Nicaraguan Democratic Force. for .. ""general funds." according to a State FON. 1he largest Contra arm). said, Last ~ear's law grant1ng the $27 .Dcpanment document ··The d1fferen11al (from the dollar million 1n non-lethal "humanitanan" •The State Departm ent"~ !><tles)wasusediosupponthecomba-aid required President Reagan 10 ~1caraguan Humanitarian ·h -tants' fam1hesand refugees" and thus "establish appropriate procedures to ..s1stance Office. which disburses the was in hne wtth restnc11ons against ensure that any humanitanan as- )1l1d, first learned about rebel control bu}1ng weapons. s1stance .. 1s not divened (through "of those accounts on March 10. fi,e But congressional investigators barter. exchange or any other means) ~onths after the aid program began, ~ho have reviewed the records said for acqu1stt1on of weapons" or lethal odepartment lobbyist James W Dyer that like other invoices provided by \upplies 531d 1n a June 9 letter to Rep Michael the rebels for purc hases in Central .\lready, the General AC<iount1ng ::Sames. 0-Md. Amenca. 1t 1s 1mposs1ble to venf)' Office. Congress' inves11gauve arm. Dyer defended the dealings as \-ahd1t) of the receipts. has cntic1zed the State Depanment ... legal and accountable " saying the Rep. Leon Panetta, D-C'al1f.. who for fa iling to establish adequate < ontra rebels converted the mone) sponsored a resolution of 1nqu1f)' on safeguards to ensure proper use ol "on the foreign exchangl' market in how the aid was spent. called mixing more than half the mone}. ------ Arturo Tolentino man Arturo Aru1La said in Honululu that since leaving the Philippines 1n Februar), Marcos had wntten a letter to Tolentino. telling him that as his vice president. he should take over in his absenct Japanese Liberals collecting biggest election landslide TOKYO (AP) -Japan's long- ruhng Liberal Democratic Party ap- peared cena1n today of sconng its biggest elecuon victory ever, a stun- ning parhamentary landsJide that coufd boost Pnme Minister Yasuh1ro Nakasone's chances for a third term in office Based on computer projections of the 63 m1lhon ballots cast in unday's \.Ollng. Kyodo News Service and Japan Broadcasting Corp. said the LOP wa!. assured of winning more than the 27 1 scats needed for un- contested control of the House of Representative!> Both Kyodo and Japan Broad- casting· predicted 1ha1 Nakasone's part). which since I 983 had relied on a coah11on w11h a m1nont} party to maintain a \hak ~. two-\ ote margin 1n 1hc 5 12-scat lower house. would capture at lea\t 100 seats. Malaysia hanl':.,2 Aussies convicted of g dealing By &k Asteelate4 Preu KUALA J_.UMPUR, MaJays1a -Two Australians convicted of drua t.raffickina were hanaed ot dawo Monday despite picas from ro~ 1overnmenu to s,are them. Brian Oeofftty Chambers Jr., 29, ~n~ John ~v1~ Barlow 28 were the first Westerners uccuted under Malay .•a ' touah a~U· dru la~s. Defense attorney K.arpal Sinah told. reporten o.uts•de the mw1vc stce' gates of Pudu Prison that authorities had informed him through a small window in the ptes that the two pri~ncn bad been ex~utcd at 6 a.m. Reporters saw a black truck. leave the pnson at 6:~0 a .m . A pnson officer, who would not g;ve his name, said the bodies were .being taken to the •ovcmment hospital mortuary for a postmortem before being released to relauves. Fraud charged in Meilcan electlon• C HIHUAHUA, Mexico -Opposition pa~i~s c.haried th~ ruling Institutional Revoluuo nary Party wnh 1rreaulanues ... in the Ch1~uahu~ elections, and one leader blasted.,1ts claim of victory as a JOke and an insult. "We·ve seen serious problems. Mauas ~esta, a spokesm~n for PAN, the main oppos1t1on National Acuon Party, said dunng Sundays state elcctJons. "The presidents of the polls have rcfulCCI to allow our poll watchers into the polls. And one woman said the ballot boxes were al.ready full when she went to vote.'' he said. Ez-CIA agentcl~ed of et1plonage chugn LONDON -A former CIA aaent and Navy commandtr ~led ~n Britain on an espionage cbarg~ was acquit.led toda~ after the prosecut~on said he had duped the Soviets with useless information. The prosecuuon was ordered to pay $7,500 in court costs. Lawyers for the defen~nt, former U.S. Navy Cmdr. John Bothwell, formerl y of ~a~beth, Pa .. sa:1d later he was considering a suit for wrongful arrest ~nd mahc1ous pro~ution. The lawyers said the allegations ruined Bothwell's import-export business. Both_well, 59, an American who lives 1n Bath, England, was arrested Feb. 16 as he tned to leave for Austna. World popalatlon to reach 6 bllllon today WASHINGTON -The world's population reaches the milestone five billion mark. with the binh ofa child sometime today. The Populauon Institute reports. "Never before have so many people shared space on this planet," observed Werner Fomos. president of the pnvate institute which studies population questions. "five billion propably puts the world population about at its carrying capacity. It will be difficult to feed, clothe, shelter a nd employ many more people at more than a subs1stance level ofhfe." added M. Rupert Cutler. executive director of Populat1on-Env1ronment Balance, another population research group. Rapid populatio n growth ha.s stretch~ the resources of the world and the prospect offuture increases raises qucsuons of how to cope with their grow10g needs. populau on experts generally concur. France to pay tor slnklng Greenpeace sl:dp PARIS -France and New Zealand reached agreement on their dispute over the sinkmg o f the Greenpeace ship Rainbow Wamor, with France to pay $7 m1lhon in damages for the bombing attack. PTCm1er Jacques Chirac's spokesman said today. The spokesman. Denis Baudouin. said the compromise worked o ut by Javier Perez dt Cuellar. the U.N. secretary-general, includes the transfer of two French intelligence agents !>Cntenced by New Zealand 10 the case to a French military base at Hao, an island in the South Pacific. The transfer 1s 10 take place before July 25 and the agents will have to stay at Hao for at least three years. the length of a French overseas military posting. Baudoum said. Pope assails drug dealing during visit t o Colombia Pact averts U.S.-Europe farm trade war BRUSSELS-The European Economic Community formally.approved a tentative accord today aimed at averting a farm trade war with the United States. The EEC's governing Council of Ministers. comprising high-level officials from each of the 12 member governments, endorsed the agreement reached last Wednesday by the EEC' exccuuve commission and the Reagan admin1strat1on. Tht accord gives the United States and tht EEC' until the end of lhe year to ne$Ollate a final settlement of a dispute stemming from a tighten mg ofSpan1sh restncuons on imports of farm products. which occurred as a result of the nation's entry into the EEC last January. ( \RT.\C1FN.\,(olomb1a(APl- f'ope John Paul II, on a pllgnmage to thecountn that supplies much of the "orld's cocaine told ( olomb1ans 1n 1h1s former sla\.e-trading capital ';un- da) that drug add1c11on 1s worse than human hondage The pope al!.o 't\lled the ruins of .\rmero "'here 23 000 people died 10 a \Olcan1t erupuon in ._,o,ember. anct-pra\ed before a huge concrete t.ross erected atop a church now 1otall)' buried 1n volcanic mud. John Paul winds up his weeklong \ 1\11 to ( olomh1a toda' with a lnp to the Caribbean coastal city of Barran-all costs·· tranicl.1ng to a bondage even more qu1lla. where he plan~ to gl\ c a John Paul prayed in a Canagcna feari;ome al t1ml'S than that of the speech sanctuar) commemorating a 17th blacl. i;la\l'\" The pont1IT then fliec, to the centu~ Jesuit pnest ~ho called Dcakr<o of uxa1nc and manJuana Canbbcan island of St Lucia "here himself the ··slave of the slaves·· \mugglc an c\t1ma1cd S ~ billion he will say Mass on a knoll oHr-St Pedro Claver would paddle out "-Orth or nan:ollt \ out of< olombia looking a yacht-filled harhor out'tldl' to sla\.e ship\. which brought ahout calh }ear the capital. C astnes 200.000 blacks from .\fnca. and tr) w The drug trallicke,-.,. angered by Restrlctlons adalnst Mandela dronned .\fter a se' en-hour stopo .. er thl' care for them and conven them to ( olomb1an gO'-l'rnmcnt cooperation &' rr pope \.\Ill then return to Rome C'hnst1an1t' in extrad1t1ng \uspccted dealers to the JOHANNESBURG -Police said today black act1v1st Winnie Mandela In the steam)' Canbbean c1l\ ol L1ken1ng drug u~ to en'ilavement t nttl·d Statt~ ha'e \Cl off bombs. has been freed of all stale-ordered restn ct1ons. formally ending more than 10 Cartagtna Sunda). John Paul 1s\ued a the ponuff said "Toda) as in the threatened the president and even years of government restraints Also today. police reported 15 black miners strong condemnatio n of drug abu..e. 17th century. the 1h1rst of monc~ ofTercd the gO\ ernmcnt a SI J b1ll1on were slain in fac11onal fighting. and that police killed three guemllas m a which he called "a new form of takes over the hearts of man)' people hnbe to l'nd 1ht• e>'-trad111o nc; shootout north of Durban. Tht killings brought tht weekend death toll to at slaver. that must _be_p_re_ .. _e_n_t_ed_a_t _:i_n_d_t_·o_n_v_e_rt_s_th_e_m __ th_r_o_u_g_h_d_r_u&--.. __ T_h_c __ o_\ crn men t reJected thl'-'o'-fl_e_r __ le_a_st_2_5 _________________________ _ Begins Wednesday ,July 9at10 a .m. Neck Pain Sufferers. Havel Got Sew up big saving~ A Story For You ..• Mr• P~t John•on, Co1ta M~•a, Califomja ''\Vlwn I in1un:J nw neck earlu:r thl\ w.\r, I WJ\ 'l.m:J I l;>uld hJrdlv move ar .lll I tou ldn 't do mv 1oh, or even t.ike c:irc of rnv.,clf l'J hccn m che hospital for a \\hole wcC.'k, hut w1ch ahsolucelv no results. Ir 111<.r hurt ltk.C.' the J11.kem, and-I 1ust Jidn 't 1..nc '" \\here tt 1 tum ''>< 1 I .1,kcJ \<>me do'>cfnends for ad\ ice ·1 Ill\ ,,lid. ·c.,n ,cl' Dr Y:irwcxxi. H e's J neck .111d h.Kk pJm 'JXll.ill\t .10d we knm\ he l.lll hdp . "1\1 nner hcc:n to a durupracmr ~fore, h111 nn fnem.f<. trusted him 50 much, .and I '' J\ 1n \Ulh pa111. I wcnt.-Bov, "h.ir J grc.lf dcll')IOn ro umc m be sure this nc~ prohkm <loc:sn't n:oc.cur. Th:it~ personal ancnrion, anJ rim's cxactlv what I want. Call him todav I know he can hdp VOll " 646-0516 Yanvood Ch1ropracnl Otlile Wilham J Yarwood Ooctor of ( 'h1mpractll 136 Rr<MJ\, ·" Cmra Me'ia, ( al1fom1a 926'1.- Mou ln•uranc~ Acccpt«i Z - .--Dr. Yarwood's Risk-Free Offer . need to be <.att~ftcd We beht:''C that \'OU I '-e Pat w.c>. or t. nil ~f\ u.c, '" \ w1thnurpnl e\M\' h»00,aluc That You can label yourself lucky with savin~ of up to 70% on our elegant suits, sport coats, .. Dr \,Ir\.\ nod, trom che first consulr.mon ! \\ l11d 11'frrr), \\ J\ so kind .ind undcrstand- lflg he re.div helped CJ'>c mv fears (which W,l \ 110 \llliplc [J\k ) "Attc.-1 che l'\..lm thac foUowcd the free tomulc.mon, he told me, in detail, where rht• \OllH.c ot my pain was, and he .1 .. kcd me 1f ltl· wukl O<:glll rd 1cvmg my pain 11~IH .m ,\\, Jnd would I ltkc co conttnuc our p1'lfc:s .. 10~~ .,cf\'ICC ti..t'I two-part• abser • iftcnno vnu '' n wlw. wen: l " . f your .,1n~tact10 ll f gl13ri.iitcc o \utcly "" ~ rec d c only each .md accessori and sportswear: ,.. - 1111 J\ J p.ment of course, ( 'iaid 'Ye~" "~ k \\a'' crv ~entk when he performed a \:Orrct.t1C1n m mv lower neck, Jnd I hcgan tcdmp. hem·r th11t day '~h prnnr here I\ c.1mplc If vou \Ufltr from nc\:k pain, h;u;k pain or hcaJ.tChe\, t.tkc It f mm .a friend .and ~e Or Yarwood todJv. "I k dun~cd m\ Ilk I'm hac.k w work. no\\ .rnd I 'oll "·e Dr Y.arwood fmm ume \'1l"'it, ;ind tor ~.1tm1~eb~~v can ,;~me into eve I')' member n v~~ t'NlTlAL co'NSl1l our office for :a f R ~in.) TATlO'N (:a s 3o value per t·--we be . become a pincnt, ~cond. it yo\I '\l be able to help )Oaly that we /:. __ _ hevc ..cl "" c-u ihc n11ht to n:JU!I' \'OU that v.c'rc e,1v1n~ yo I" tn pa\ u., n:h& or t.M\Ccl That\ n~ht \'ott bl<lll J tor M\\ pavment t or be rc1m ur<>e imma pavmtn ' a ck fnr am ..er. KC, e« \'OU'vc .U~uv ma rformcd 1.\ a t1oo or rrcaunen~t~rrfAL CONSUL· ' ~~ult of vour f . ra from the nrnc TAilO'N wtthtn 72 hou imtnittOO or ~'0\1 ~cctvt \'l)Ur ~f\'l'-C· Cl! tn:nrncnt f\\ff t'NIT\Al. all ~ now tor your t.~~Ut.lA110'N 64(>-0516 • I I • Lady Liberty back to work after her big birthday bash Paramilitary U.S. mum on Panama grioupholds lllegalallens NACO, AIU. (AP) -Fedttal otficiala laavc condemned ,a . ...,... m.ib&ary OlpftlDUOft they said do. taioed IS iJ.,a alias at ~PQtnl WASHINGTON (AP) -De R~ apn admuustnuon. wbk:lt has beell cntic&I of teVenJ coattill Mlole auihOritia ~Y. have °"'' d •• dl\lf. amualial. is mauu .. n•"I aria sdeace lboUt alleptions that Panamanian official lft d«ply ias. volved in iuch tctivities. NEW YORK. (AP) -The multi· tude qf maaniflccnt am that was Liberty Weekend ended with an erup11on of lasers, fireworks end belloon~ tcndin1 millions of dazzled ~v~lers homewud with one lln&erina v111on from amona many -the silhouette ofa rejuvenated lady. Sunday Hollywood produced a slam·bana. all-out, red-wh1te.and- blue birthday bash for the Statue of Liberty with 200 Elvia Presley look- alikes. a SOO.member marcbina band, 300 Jaz:zcrcize ladies and stars. nan. stan. But today, af\er a four.clay ccntcn· n&al extravapnza that celebrated the $66 million restoration of the statue Lady Liberty 1s on duty once aaain...:. the dianificd beacon of New York Harbor. liberty Weekend cost up to $32 millwn to produce, and offietals sa1d tickets and telcv1S1on contracts may not quite cover the costs. Kraft seeks cause of food tainting GLENVJEW, lll. (AP)-Kraf\ Inc. officials say their plant in Richmond, Va., will be completely sterilized while searching for the cause of food contamination that may have sick- ened more than 170 people an seven states. The stenlwrnon was to begin today. said Kraft spokeswoman Randi Kal11an at company head- quarters 1n this Chicago suburb. U .S Food and Drug Adminis- tration investigators and Kraft of- ficials will be "taking apart parts. cleaning pumps and product ser- vices." she ..aid Sunday "They're workang on getung 1t completely cleared to make sure that everything has been completely san1- uzed and ready to produce again . hopefully within 30 days .. She Slressed that none of the reponed illnesses had been pos1t1vely linked to Kraft's Polar B'ar ice cream bars. CALIFORNIA Livaditis admits guilt, wants to die LOS ANGELES (AP) -Steven L1vad1t1s. accused of three slayin~ an a foaled Jcwelr; slore holdup. said he 'itabbcd a guard becau~ he talked back and shot a saleswomen to prove he was scnous, the Lo'i Angele~ Herald Examiner reported toda) . · 'Tm $U1lty." Livad1t1!1 told the paper in Jailhou'ic 1nterv1ews over the weekend. "l reali1e that I violated one of the most important laws. I too~ other people's lives." "I'd rather they JUSl executed me and get 1t over." he )31d "I dread II\ 1ng this type of life I appreciate freedom." L1vad1 t1s. 22. is charged w11h murdcnng three employees at thl' Van Clcef & Arpels Jewelry shop in Beverly Hills. site of a I J•,:-hour police siege June 23 In the Herald 1ntcn.1e"". he de- scnbed stabbin$ security guard Wil- liam Smith. 54, in the back because he was uncooperauve and shooting saleswoman Ann He1lpenn. 40. in the head a~r pohce refused his demand to makc-ltelev1sed statement The third person to die. !>ales manager Hugh Skinner. 63. was 'ihOt by a sheriffs marksman who mistook him for the gunman trying to llee with three hostages out a back door L1 vad1t1s also 1s charged with four counts of robbery. five counts of false imprisonment for taking a total of five captives and three count'i of kidnapping. He told the Herald that despite the advice of pubhc defender Michael Demby, he plans to plead guilty Tuesday in Beverly Hills Municipal Court. Calling his capuve'i by their first names, L1,ad1t1s claimed most -.vere cooperative and said they outvoted him in settling on a plan to escape in the store's car Toddler slain inf oster home POMONA (AP) -Authont1cs alleac a toddler who was abused by his parents was then beaten to death in lhe foster home where he was placed The slaying of foster children 1s "extremely rare." \Std Carlos Sosa. asStstant director of the Los Angclc<i County Department of Ch1ldrtn's Services He said more than 10,000 children arc in foster care in the county and onl}' two or three uch death, had been reported in the last five year1 <\n autopsy showed that IR-month· old Carlo~ la-. died from mull1plc blunt fortt head 1rauma. the cor- oner's office 'i81d turda)' The child dtcd at Pomona Valle~ Coyimun11y H01p1tal on July I Police Octcct1\c Ronald Windcll allcacd that &tt)' l cm'lt..1 While. lO. thc daua)\tcr of thr child'' foster mother. "admitted ~tnklna lhC' hoy numcrou\ time\ with a \andal mtr an e'tendcd Jl('nod ol t111ll' • While WI\ arfC'~h·d am1 hookl·d for invr,t1J1,at1on <1( rh1ld t•ntlangl."rttlp, Still, 15 Vice President Ocorac Bush put it at the closina ceremonies, "It's been quite a week.end ... A ca.st of 5 ooo. includina Uz.a Minncm. \he Pointer Sisters, Willie Nellon and Kenny ROIC1'$. per- f onncd for an audience of S0,000 at Giants Stadium in the New Jer1ey Meadowlands. Tbe real star, \houah, was the crowd, which on cue used fluhliahts to light the darkened stands in shimmering red-white-and-blue SW'I and stripes and spell "Liberty" aero lhe highest tier. At the end, the cast formed an electric map of the Umtcd States; the performers and crowd sang" Amenca the Beautiful," and fireworks, lasers and balloons decorated the sky. The finale was typical of the ways 10 wh1ch Libeny Weekend, orchestrated fbr lhe visual impact of teleVlsion, engaged lhe eye. When President Reagan shot a laser beam across New Yol'k Harbor to set in' motion the illuminadon of the statue. be abo uiaettd an avalanche ofirnqe1. R'otjust \he 40.000 sbellt lhat burst over the harbor on the Fourth orJuly, aendina rcflect.iona ofred. blue. told, silver and aroen ricocbetina otr ala towtn and calm watera. Not JU t the 22 tall 1hiPt1 their sails npplina in the brce'ie as they brouJht a bu of the 19th century anto the ctty. Not just the simultanc.ous swcar- t na·in of hundreds of new citizens around the country. It was bhmp races over the HudJOn, C-.iun dancina on Wall Street, a harbor so full of pleasure craft that the few reported ac:cidcnts were notable because there ~ so rew. It was the m1lftons who took part - how many millions no one-knows, but city officials had expected more than six million until au\hori~ arrived. .. It'• ao•na to bne to atop, .. aid Daniel lC.naua, cb ef ckouty U.S. attorney. "Wedon'1 want them down thm doina that:• ''It's one thina when you're in the sheriff's auxdi~ or 1e>mcthina and make an arre t.' K.nauu said. ··1t•1 qui&e another when you're ptayina co~ and robbers on your own and stop people qainst their will and hold them." Tom Posey, he.ad of the Alabama· based Civilian Material AulltaDCie, said Sunday that memben of bis orpnizauon bad violated no laws. and he denied that the aliens were held at sunpoint durina the incident early Saturday. The aroup was m the border area look.jng for drua traffickers .. and they happened Ilona some illepls," be sa1d an a telephone interview. ~ Supreme Co~rt bolsters schools' right to suspeiid over vulgarity Privately, U.S. ofticials tay there 11 conclusive evidence that the bad of the Panamanian def'tnte fon:e. Gen. Manuel Antonio Noriep,_ bu mloed hu,ae profits from narcotics tnffick· iq. A former top U.S. diplomat in ~tral Ammca calJcd Noneaa ''the richHt man in tbc recion. •• DAILY DINNER SPECIALS All dally dinner s~la/1 Mrved with soup, salad, choice ot potato anddeaert. Monday (Served 3-10 p.m.) Fried Chicken (Half-a-chicken) Tuesday (Served 3-10 p.m.) $3.35 WASHINGTON (AP) -The Supreme Court s1gmticantly broadened the d1sc1phnary powers ofpubhc school administrators today, ruhn& that students may be suspended for using "vulgar and offensive" lan&uage. violates the privacy rights of homosexuals. -Ruled S-0 tha\the federal courts can review civiJ rights decisions by state IJCDcies. The decision ordered further proc:eedin.JS an a suit by a black faculty member at the University of Tennessee, who characd that his 1981 dismissal had been based on discnminat1on. Brochettes of Beef $3.95 Wednesday (Served 3-10 p.m.) By a 7-2 vote, the court upheld the three-day suspension 1n 1983 of a Spanaway, Wash .. h1~h school senior for givmg an as~mbly speech filled with crude sexual allusions. -A.greed to decide whether a public employer may promote a woman over a·morc-qualificd man to help act women into higher-ranking jobs. That case involves the appeal of a man denied promotion to a job as a dispatcher by Santa aara County, C.lif. Teriyaki Steak $4.55 In other cases. the court -Said. in a case w1lh enormous polent1al impact on lhc future of capital punishment, that 11 will decide 1f GcorJia death sentences arc meted oul 1n a racially d1scnminatory way. It agreed to rule on whether unconstllut1onal bias can be proved by stausucs showing that lollers of white v1ct1ms draw death sentences more often than killers of blacks -Ruled 6-3 that states are free to close down.jor lengthy penods of ume adult bookstores found to be public nuisances because of the on-premises conduct of their patrons. The coutt upheld a New York law that allows closure for one year of an~ premise, including bookstores, found to be a public nuisance. -Let stand a Texas law making "deviate sexual antercourse" a cnme. turnmgas1de arguments that the law ·nw t)l)it~tl hum:m heart hec1L11 just under three billion time.\ in a lltl'time <:oronan he:lrt d1se:.L\l' l~Ul tragicaJI) ntt that m1mher down <.'I llls1derahh • To exercise or not w exerose. .\ st'll\1hle tbet :md a rtf,)ltlar l'\t•rc1se progr.Ull Lan hdp maintun a health\ heart E\trti~t'. ho\\t•wr. l.ll1 ~111.ul u n I wal th\ hl'art .. In the school discipline ruhna, Chief Justice Warren E. Burger wrote, "Surely it is a h1ahly appropnate function of public school education to prob1b1t the use of vulgar and offensive terms in pubtic d1scourx." Matthew Fra.ser's onc·minutc speech an sup~rt of a fnend's candidacy for student body vice president of Bethel High School contained no dirty words, but it caused a brief uproar among his fellow students. Officials at lhe school in suburban Tacoma suspended Fraser. Now a student at UC Berkeley, Fraser sued school d1stnct officials with help from the Amencan Civil Liberties Union. • I low thc11. do \ c JI 1 detl'l11l 11 lt • ti te ~tall' t >f) t >1 ir I 1eart ~ •An incredibly accurate pk1ure. ct15Sfully tre'Jte<l thous~md' and thousand." of canltac patient'i Our Institute stands read\. m fart, for \'irtuall\' anything that )ou m:t\ ht· one of till' t(>rtun:tlt' who'll spot thl' chL\Sll' s\ 111ptoms Chest p'tin. shortlll'S.\ of breath. numhm-ss in tht t'Xtrt•m1tws. l'll Then ag:tin. \OU ma~ not A stress c·chocardiogram. in our l'\jX'rience. oftl.·r~ a tp% certtinty of tlw p~·nce-or non pn..'\l'nCt.' of coronary artel) di~Lw r:.m happ1..·n to or affect the human I wart •A 21st century technolog) to track down a 20th centun killer. \\e rnll ll stn~.., echo t ~tr<liograph) And it n"'J)l'l~'lll\ the .th~llute state of th<' :lrt 111 detern1inmg the stllt:' of the hu1rnm helrt fou sim ply lie tk>\\ n 011 1 it tr tahll' ~u H.1 pt.1<.htl awa) It~ one of the mo~t soph1~t1 t ~llL'tl d1agno~t1c toob in canLi:tt ll ll tlitine l< xlm AmJ 1t~ 1u~1 one of the ad '.U\l't'tl screernng tt->Ch111qLK~ \'tl' six·oalize in. 'fhgether with tralliti1 >nal prcx.~ure5. our ) 1.,pace age t~ting prov1tk.~ a thomugh understaJl<lillg of the condiuon of --vour heart • •Orange Count)~ Cat lwten 1 ... 1t1011~ halloon ang1opl:L'lf: h\ p:L'i.~ \'aJn· n•placeml'llL\ \\e GU1 she 1\\ \ t >LI hem h > ship ~1m >kmg. rt.'tlttrt· stress. e-Jt het ter get fit And 1t \Oll\l' had .t hl'art .ttt:tL~ \ ou 11 he happ\ to know \\ r haw .t !\Uperh rehah1htat1on program A ll\'lmidml tlwn tlJrt\'l\ :th,,olutel) saft• and p:tinlt~' soundwan>s into your dw!'t , ) prt>mier heart ... .._eo-& institute doe~ more '. than take your Thl' waw~ bount\' 1mn • m'('f :u i<l around your heart and pn ><h K ·e .1 rn< >\in~ pll1un· t1 > ht· n:ac I h\ our ~k1lll'd ph~ s1u.m .... l'h.11\ II ' pit1ur~ ~t l11dt• lf<1sp1~~ and Rt•hahihta uon Center h:.L' maintained a rt1)u t.tu on tor st.lll' of the art metlJcaJ rare for 1warl) thn.ie decade\ An<l in that tmw. we\e ~u Helping to Qe~ all we touch. "'' IDA Fmm family support to therapy E\'crything to get you up and back into ) our regular routine as soon as possible • t-800-+f 3-l'Sl. Call that numher t< >r a fm' hrochure on ho\\-to rt'Cog- rnzc. and mot\" 1mportantl~ .. ht:'lp pment he-Jrt dJ~4'e Call n J!so for much more int(mnation on our ~11rcrhl) staffe<l lfeart Institute :md IL\ spttial ech1 > c:trtbograph\ department Call it tc lr vourself or for some c mt· you cart' al)( >ut todm I \l'f'l l\t l .m d1, '' 11ndPf'\ tor \ 1111r Ill 1th .h1'1111.tkt· s11n· 11~ hu11tltng It up \111 h ·;tm tg 11 dm\ n • THE HEART INSTITUTE AT ST. JUDE HOSPtTAL I ~ah'-ol cl~-aut fadliltt ... lot 1tw prt H'ntkm. dt'1ec:1k>n and rthstbilhatkm of hnrt-ttlall'd p"*'tnl! IOI f. \aknda ~ Dr. fuUt•r1on, lallfomla 916~ 1-800-44)-2782 <all durin-t.u~~' houf'. '· l . . M * OfWlge Coal OAIL V PILOT I Monday. July 7, 1988 Congressman " dismisses logic · in blow at AIDS Congressman William Dannemeyer (R-Fullc~on) got in bed with Lyndon LaRouche on the AIDS issue Wednesday. La Roucbc, the conspiracy theorist who used to appear in presidential campaigns as frequently as Joan Rivers used to appear on the "Tonight Show," has sponsored a ballot initiati~e th~t, if approved •. would bar people with AIDS (acquired immune defic1ency syn- drome) from food service, teaching ~r . ~ea:1th-related jobs. By some interpretations, the mittauve wo~ld permit the quarantining of anyone suspected of having the AIDS virus. Dannemeyer said he does not support a blanket quarantine. . The initiative already has gathered enough signa- tures to go before the voters in November. So Dannemeye r, who has been leading an anti-AIDS crusade that has failed to gain broad ~pular suppo~ nationally, apparently bas found a constituency for his view that .\IDS victims pose an unrivaled threat to society. That this position has virtually no support m the medical and scientific communities has detered neither the congressman, who made headlines last year when he declared that AIDS rs transmitted by .. spores" o n the breath or saliva of an infected person, nor his Latest ally Most experts. however, including the nauonal Center for Disease Control in Atlanta. Ga., have cone I uded that A I OS cannot be spread by casual contact. Only intimate sexual contact-. usua~ly h~mosexual - involving the exchange of bodily fluids hk~ blood and semen or inJecu o n with a contaminated mtrav.enous needle -usuall y by illegal drug users -are considered likely sources o f the almost-always fatal cond1t1on. Dannemcyer al so plans to introduce legislauon that would make 1t a crime for someone with AIDS or someo ne suspected to be an Al OS carrier to engage m ac11vllles that could pass the disease to others. Coming from the man who was all too easily convinced that the .. spore theory" had ment, that sounds hke a law that could l.Ontain a dangerously broad definnio n of .. act1v1t1es that could pass the disease to othe rs." Dannemc\er introduced five AIDS-related bills 1n the House last 'vCar None have become law, which ma> be the greatest tcst1mon1al to the good sense of the Congress ol the l 'nited States since some of the boys got together to wntc the Const1tut1on a couple of hundred \ears ago. · Danneme\cr's basic distrust of human bemgs "'as revealed m one of those bills. which was based on a consp1ral.y theol) that would make LaRouche proud T o eliminate the threat of"blood terronsm" -the deliberate donaung of AIDS-infected blood -Dan- nemever in troduced leg1slat1on that would make It a crime' to r anyont· in any of the AIDS high risk categom:s to donate blood. High nsk categories include all homosc>.uals and intravenous drug users. according tl> federal publi( health guidelines. There 1c; a pattern in all this, and it is an ugly one Mr Dannemevcr 1s too ready to depri ve c1t1zens of their basic nghts. His arguments that these particular pcopl<: -gays. m o..,tl\· -pose a real danger to their neighbors cannot be supported scientificall y. Yet the congressman 1s either unable to a nalyze the a' a1lablc data and formulate a responsible policy from 1t or he prefers to twist the facts in a way that will allow him tCJ promote h1mselfasa c hampion by generating fear that could turn one group against another. J u\t how far Danneme:,.-er will go to twist logi c on this 1ssut· wa\ re\ ea led b)-none othe r than the congrt•ssman himself Wednesday when he said· "Public health problems are too important to be left to public health otliciah · Who. prJ) tdl would Mr. Danneme}'er ha"c U\ cntru\t v.1th our puhl1c health problems'? Poltt1c1ans'> Opinion<; Pl<prP'ISAd 1n lh1'> space are those of the Oa11y Pilot Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and artists Reader comment IS 1n111tflc! The Daily Piiot PO Box 1560. Costa Mesa. 92626 Phone 642-6086 TooAY IN HISTORY fi} the .\~~oC'lat.-d Pre'<~ T ridj\ 1' \111nd.1\ lul\ 1111· I \klh d,I\ nl I 11X6 1 ht'rt.' .ire 177 ilJ\' ll II 1ri l ht' \l'Jr r ptf;n \ h1~hli11h1 Ill I l\llft • f l\C: \C:.tr\ .1gn 11 luh t 11~ I f'tt•,uknt •fragan ann<>Uml·d Ill V<11uhl --num1n.t1t· Judgl' \J111lr.1 I"'' 'l < nnnm ol \r11on;1 to ~·rH' 11n lhC' I \ :surrt·ml· c 11urt < 1 < 1 nn11r lw<.1111 1111· h1 )1.h u1ur1·, hr\t kmak JU\tlll' < >n tlll\ d.tll' ... In I ~,4 King' 1 11llq.•1 11 '<l"' '111!. c II\ UfX'Ol'd I hl' \1..honl \\1n1ld IJh'r ··tk· rl·n.1ml·d < 11lum1'1.1 I t\1\1'1\lt\ °'; In 11'1~11 t \ .innn.1111111111<,1hl11rn1a1.1.,1, rm1lla1mcd j<, lh{ \\.tr\ .ind • 'Stn('\'' 1A.l'r1· 1,11,1·d .11 \lnnt1·1i:\ .tlt rr thl \Urrlnlkr ot a Mc111can g.trrl\on • In l Xl15 lour r)(,·11rlt· \\Cit' h.ingt•d IO Wa\hln$10n. D ( altl'r ht•1n~ 1nn,HteJ ••I l• n'r111n11 '-'llh l<•hn \l,tf kl·' Booth rn the a\\d\\tnJt111n 11f l'1t''-ll.knt \hr.1hJrn I 1111 <1ln In 1 :-.•1x thl' I n111 .. 1 \1,11n .111111 'llf I IJ1.1.J11 In llJ4J . tlunnl! th1· ~1·111nd \\mid ~ar ll.\ for<r\ landed 1n ltt'l;rnd 111 • Jnr<.'\tall an\ Na11 '"' ,1\11111 In I 'I 'IX Prr\llh n t I I\\ 'Kh I I> I 1 '''" hnwer \lgned the ~laska sta tchuod b1 ll r l'n \ear\ oljl•J lhr· I r111rol \t;1tn \Jld that Sm tel authontte\ had \harp!\ rnl1H 1·d thl' h \t I 111 1111 ro\\,l\l r.11l1.t1111n t>eamed at thC' I 'S fmha<.\\ 10 • \10\111\\ ,,,,. f nt• 'l""' .1g11 lir'1ll\h 11111 pol1u· hrokr Ufl a third nt(4hl ol r<1u<1I '111krtll' •in thr I rl\tl·tlt dl\1111 t 111 f l\•'rpool I hrnitthl Im t11d,I\ r no 11\Ul h ha\ hecn \aid (lf the heme' of htSIOf) -the ; trong men thc tr1111hll·,11rrw nwn 11.1.-11 llttk of the am1ahlc lhe ktndl} and the ·wkrant " \tl'f'h1·11 I t·:4rnck < ;inad1an educator and author (I H69 19441 ··,....-~~~~~~-~~~-~·-~~-~~-~~-~~~--.., ORANGF CGAS T Daily Pilat p~..., ... ,..., .,., ',.,. -• "I ... f\4, I ~le lri'•-. A 11'..._, ·"'~· f ' l't6t'I ('"""''• .... 111ll'tl ''.mi lint ! r r.,,. r.11 ~}ft!IAIJ "O ( j I Don,_.., ,,, (1•1 , r-c~ NttoN'" I •l<l•lt .._.,., ClllHC~IMf\ GontrulW ,.......L.Cefttt.U P•OOOc;litltl Mlll.llgtW TwryK...._ C11culllt0n Mitn•• """~ M.,keling ()lr~IO< ...... ,INtrftne Clnq,T~ ()lrec1or '• ·'Reapportionment Is the process by which the pa),,, in;::,wer preservesandenhance thstpowerbydolnaasmu h am~ea humanly possible to the polttlcal po ltton oflheot/tt!i:pany_. Pasadena's little old lady motors down car pool lane Manages to t rap more than a dozen drivers behind her I 1.1.a~ dn\ 1ng o;outh on the ( O'>l<I Mc'>a frccv.a\ the other da) v.hen I \tumbkd upon one of those l111lc "1gnet1e\ that happen v.nh great rcgularm tiut are \O easily m1S')Cd l hcn·1.1.a\acar1om) left.a \1ntagc Ph mouth v.tth nn trim. ot'l\ 1ousl:v the ht;tlom of thl' ltnr "ht'n 111.1.a\ hu1fl .tnd '>Old Tlw lad\ \ltllll!:'. nn !ht: pas!>cng1·r '>ldl' OI thl' lrl>nl .. l.'al IA. il\ Jflparentl)' I 0 her m 1d-tiO\ to earl\ 111'>. If memor. '>Cf\ l'\ 'hc had a J11tit: hat on and v.a\ .,1tt1ng there lol!long 'er~ pnm and prupcr Tht: drl\t'r ol Lhl· l ar v..a<, a lad) of ~rhaps the ..amc age . and "a~ lOmpkleh in'ohed 1n drn mg her (ar '>he gra'>pcd the stecnng "'heel tirml) at the 10 and 2 o'clud. po~1t10n\ and wa-. hunched forv.ard v.1th her lurchcad almost touth1ng 1h1: <;teenng v.hcel. lomentrc111ng complt:tch on kt'ep1 ng hl·r car "'1th in thl' lane ltnc\ I hJ't' no \.\-a\ 111 kno1.1.mg v.ht'thcr \hr 1.1.-a\ \1111\lg nn a prllov.. but 11 Jppcarcd a' 1f 'hr "'err watching tlw road b\ looking under the top nm 111 the Mc.cnng wheel She wa<; not tall rnough lo <,ee over 11. ' I wai, doing about 60 mph. a '>J)(.'cd that I find sausfies the rc:negadl· and outla" in m} makeup wh1k· not a11rac11ng the a\lentmn of the police. hut I v.a\ <>o capt1 .. atl·d b) !he S<.enc B1u HARVEY that I slowed to the same 'ipeed a!. the lady 10 m\' left Fony-flve mph Traflit \\a\ pretty light. '>O I wac;n't too rnncrrncd ab<1ut he1ng doblx'red from the rear I noted the look of 1n1en'>c tontcntrauon on the dn.,,er\ fan· a'> '>hl' ptlotrd her 'chide do1.1. n thl' lrcc1.1.a\ I "U!> a hltle awed and mure than a httk ad mm ng of the fact that th" lad' at hn oh .. 1ou!>l\ ad,ancl'd .ige had the intestinal lon11udr to 't'nture out into thc no- man'o;-land that 11ur lrl'l.\\il\ ~\Stcm ha\ lx'rnme .\'i I 1.1.atchcJ sta' ing a little to the ri:arof her and as far tu thl' right ofm) lanc as 1X>'>s1blc '>O a' to not make ht:r led threatened I noted a red 'IX>ns- t~ pe titr tome sucam1ng up behind her fhl· drt\t'r of the: rt'd l:lr managed to kel'fl from '>pl.111cnng ht•r jll u' cr the road b\ a rathcr cnergc11c: appll- rn11on of hi'> hrah•\. and 1mmcd1at<.'l\ <,tarted hllnkrn~ hi\ ltghl\ al b.l'f · '°)he ,,,,., nbll"lllll' to hi\ lhl\h1ng light\ .\<, I tmHinued along al the 'aml' \peed a., \he. I noted '>C' l'ral other car.. ealh <;lamming on hrakc'> to a' md ihc 1>nr 1n front. until there v.a\ a ltnc of ahout 12 car\ dn,cr\ honking horm 1lJ\h1ng light\. hp' mo' mg rn what wao; undouhtt·dh language not n1 for the lad) 's ear'i some even shaking fist'i It occurred to me that I was probabl) blocking rhe wa) of an)one who wanted lo pass her on the nght. but on second thought. decided that I wa,.n't. You see, I was on the freewa1y Sne was in the commuter lane o.\nd, she had e\ery nght to be then· I sped up to my usual 60, and about a mile down the road looked 1n m~ m~r. There were about I 8 car\ behind her the last time I looked l've,.tlot1ced a few things about the lommutcr lane lately. First oO. thl·rc are an 1ncred1blt number of c;k1d marb that cross the doublc )'ello1.1. line that marks 11s outer limit That'\ nut to~)' people don't skid OH'r othl·r lane boundnes. hut under normal urcumstances -where e'er.hod\ I'> gorng about the \ame ~peed ~ '>Ul ha ">kid I'> likel\ to re~ult tn a \lmplc trnder-t>1:nder That"' not of cour-.1.· thl' la'>C "'here one dn .. er 1\ doing .Wand '>ktd'> into the path ofanothcr "ho" dmng 60 ~ <;econdl) thc\ ·,e 1nuea..cd lhl number of Bott'\ dot'> f)'cllow rl'llcl'· tor\) defining thC' rnmmutl'T lan1.· from unt' to three auo.,., I don't knO\~ \.I.hat that CO\t, hut I do knll" 11·.., gut to he three t1me'i the amount budgrt- t'd for tht:' 1nstallat1on nf '>aid dot\ Finall)'. tht')' ·ve \lant"d 1n.,tall1ng base' for the p~ Ion' de tining thl· lanc I don't know 1.1.-hat that lO\l ertht·r hut I'll bet II Wa\n't tndUdl'd II\ the unginal budget .\pparcntl)' the} 're gorng to \l'l" th" boondoggle through to thc h11tcr cnd regardles!I of what 11 rnw. U'> Co/umalst 8/11 Han<<'Y llv<"s la Huntington Beacb. ·_· 11Q1ii!MMI ~ ii#JMd·l'lil·J---------------- M exi caITo p position party acts to prevent vote fraud \\ .\'\I II\/< r I <>N -o\ trad1t1onal mor<ik hoo,I('( otrllllOF. Indian hra'vC\ hcaJtng 1nt11 h.111k \.I.a., "Toda\ t'> a good da\ ln J1r " r heir latter ·d,t\ 1..0U\ln~ SOU th Of the bonier "'ho h,1 Vl' run Mexico's rulrng PRl pMt\ '1nte 1929 ha "r a ll''>S honorahk ii more pohlll3ll)' pragm.tltl. trad111on "ita) 1n powcr ,rrl\ wa\ \ou l ,111 lie cheat and '>ll'al hut \\1n the l'll'tltc>11' at anv cost . fherl··., littk 1t·;l\11n to ,uppo\c that the-. are not nriw follo-w10g that duh11iuo; trad1111ir1.1'> thl' .... ote count" conllnuc\ tod." 1n the llorder .;1ate of c hthuahua I hc oppo\ll111n "a11onal .\ctton P,1rt\ 1..0mmonl> knov..n a'i Pl\N ha<. pred1ued the CU\lomaf) electoral lh11.aner.. and made plan1.10 pre .. ent 11 PAN lictded cand1datrs 1n all MIX mun1npahl1e'I of C h1hu_ahua. and took \tcp'> to ha"c oh'ier\l'f\ at C"l'r' polhng hooth to "tn 10 cn\ure that rl''ttdcnt'I do not \ otl more than om.e .ind that ballot hoxl'' are empty '-"hl'll tht.' poll\ open " "' the Mc:rn o ( tt\ "'11:1.1.'i l "<platncd I hl.'\t.' tact1n the blunt 10,tru mt·ntc, ot clectoral fraud -an: not the ~ilc1 1mag1n1ngH>f a paranoid oppos1- 1111n F-vc n when thl·1r candidates v.t'rt' favored to 'Ntn, 11ccordmg to 1ntcll1gtncc <,ourte<,. PRI bo'iser. haH' rt\Orttd to a 1.1.holc ar\t'nal of dirt\ me k., to ach1t.·ve mtrk11l at the poll;, I nr t'umpk •Hundred\ of lcachers ha11t• \tuffcd ballot hoxc" the da) Ix-fore an clt'ctton ( omplatnt\ and ~met1me' riot~ havl· been touched ofT when volC"r' who wa1tt'd hourc; to cast their hallut\ earl\ found that the hoxei, 1.1.-cre too ru·11 tn hold C\en the firc;t vote:!> •Man) known or 'u~pected P"'N \upporters have \hown upon election day onl) to be turned away bccauK tht'1r n me' had m)',.cnou~ly d1up- pc"art~d from the rt&J\tra11on """ • Rottlc'i of indc:hblc ink thal ttn• \uppo\t'd 10 he u\C'd to mark the thumb\ ot dep.1nina voter\ ha ve httn found unofX'nl·d I hi\ ml·ant that J>RI \Uflp11rll'T\ Wt'rl' allo\o\l'd 10 VOil' repcatl•dl\ \omi:tmil·, ,.,.llh the b11arrc rt•, ult that th<.• 'otr total cMccdrd tht· rnt1rl' pnpul.1t1on nl the tommuort\ • T hl' drawn-out 'otl'·count1ng pro<.C'\\ gt' l'\ lhl' hl''>I t>flflOnun1ty nt all to ng .in t'kl lion Oppo'illron obc,erv<.'r' arc \1mpl" l'JeClt'd forc1bl) from tht• poll1nK plttce\ by police No k\\ a figuri: than thr ( athOltl archbl\hop of ( h1huahua .\dalbcrto .\lmr1da \ ~1ertno. ha~ '>pokcn out 1h1'> time in a pa'iloral le tier dcnount· ing .. ote lraud -while careful!)' not menttonrng the PR I hy name l'.lcc- 1oral fraud he told hie, flock, "emcrg- l'\ not uni) 1n tal'i1fica11on of votc'i hut al<>o rn all thn\l' reproachable method<, that lcad to weighting the re'iuh'i 1n fa\01 111 one party, going mer the hl·ad ol trcc r lect10M by 1 ltt1en\ .. Prc'>tdrnt M 1gud Jc I.a Madrid's 'auntt'd ·•moral rcno111111on" has hccn un.iblc-10 c urh the c:~ce,..es of regi onal PRI b<mc'> Indeed the CIA ha'> concluded 1n a secret report that whtlc de la Madnd did win the: 1982 ck ct1on. his maJOnty wa\n't what he and thc PRI clai med On the other hand lhe ('IA also doubts that PA N. which wa\ offictall) credited with only I() l)('rcenl of thc \;Otc got !he 46 pc"rcc:nt 1t d;u med What wa\ lhe altual re~rnll ol the I QH2elc:c11on 1 Our ~urcec, tn Me:uco \a\ the PRI keep\ two ~tc, of book\ the pubhcl) announced official vote count and the true. unt•mf)C'red count (which 1t need\ to puac thc depth of popular oppo\lttonl F1gurec. rt · portedly 'lhppcd out of thc tllah·lt'"el m1htary office whtrt thC' \Ccond ~t of hook'l i kept show('d th;lt PAN had won ~2 percent ul thC' 'ow -an .,ton hma \how of \trcnr.th, but C'IOtc! to thC' (IA., t'"ittmote One of thr mo11t outrugeou\ 1hcft<; of an C'lt<:t1on 1n rrtent year-. wa1, the I 9H S gub(ornatnnal racc in ~onorn. where the popular tna)'or ol C 1udud ObreiiM o\dalb(orto ko\3'\ I ot')('1 , • JACK AIDERSOI and JOSEPH SPEAR seemed a good bet lo wtn for PAN So PRI offic1al'i simply charged him with vague cnmcc; and convicted him They d1dn'1 quite dare put him rn Jatl and finall)' let him run 1n the election But thc PR I cand1claw won and P .\ 1'i da1mcd fraud HALL OF SHJ\Mf:. Dr fd11h Thomas. the h1ghc~1-rank1nf black woman in the .\gnculturc )cpart- menl. 1s being fired after she pubhcly charJed that the dcpanment's fa. 1ens10n Serv1cc wa<1 denying nutnl1on services to m10ont1e\ Department officials den) that th{'rc 1s any connection between her public charges and the d1<1m1<,<ia l, of cour\C Meanwhile Thomas tells us that her bosses were evenhanded rn their d1scnm1nat1on against mrnonties: They refused her requc'll'i to conduct nutnt1on classe'i m Guam. the V1rg1n lsland'i and Puerto Rico, as well 8' rc,tnct1ng her official Vt\lt\ to hlaclc c.ollcgcs. W .\TC ti ON W .\STE Dunna on<" 1 1-month pcnod, tht' federal govern· ment 'ipent an estimated $8.6 m1lhon on 1neffect1ve med1ctne for Medicaid pauents. the Health and Human 5crv1Ce'i Depanmc:nt's inspector aen- eral reported The drugs were actually purchased h) '>late Mcd1ca1d aacn- ue!io wtuch were then ~1mbuncd b)' the Uealth \arc F1nancma Admm1, trat1on The Slit( aacnc1ec; told the I(, that the fcdc-r11I a~enc)' hnd nealccted to tell them which druJ" hacl been ruled "k'-S than effcc11vc-" by the Food and Drua Admin1Jtrat1on, And Wt'rt thu"i inehg1hle for federol fund ina J•ct .Ud~r•oa alltd lblC' Vn All• •r~ 1yndlc•t~ C'OlllmJJltl• • DAN WALTERS Stage set to redraw districts Indiana case may have a profqund effect on California SACRAMENTO -When yo u get down 10 rt. reapportionment -the redrawing of ltg,isla11vc d1str1ct boundane' to comply w11h popu- lauon changes-is the most blatantly pohucal act known to mankind. Fa1rnen. log.ic. public interest and respect for the inlegnt) of govern· mcnt count for nothtng. Reappon1onment 1s the process b) whtCh the pany 1n power preserves and enhances that power b) doing a~ much damage a'> human!)' possible to the poh11cal pos1t1on of the other pan). The 1.1.-a\., to accomphsh that. especial!\ in this era of computers and detailed fX>ht1cal data banks. are man) ll mauer'> not "'hether the part> 1n power 1s Democrat or Repubhcan .\mencan poli11c1ans from the earliest da)s of the repubhc ha"e 'i1mpl) been incapable of drawing new dt'>tncts for themselves and their colleague\ without trying lo bend the result-; for personal or partisan gain. "(Jem mander." a term first ap- plied 1n Massachu~tts 174 years ago. 1'i the v..ord for such exercises and 1t certaml~ was accurately applied to the I 98~ reapportionment plan wnt- ten h\ the dominant Republicans in Indiana o.\lter the plan was in place Democrat'> won 53 percent of the 'otes in the 19M2 leg1slat1 ve electton"i hut .... erc a-v.arded onl) 43 of I 00 '!Cats r hc Democrats sut'd and a cunous polt11cal alliance developed The Republican!> who had been s1m1larl:, treated b) Democrattc-controlled ll'g1,1a1ures in other states s1dcd w11h the Indiana Democrats m their la~­ '>Ull o.\mong them were C al1fnm1a Re- publicans who ha\C' complained. "'1th perfect JUSttficauon. that the) were skewered rn the 11182 rnn- gre!>~1onal and lcg1<;la11-.e reappor- uonment plans 1.1.ntten h) 1hc Oemu· era ts lhe most hlatant of the C ahforn1a gerf) ma nders was the redrawing QJ 4' congressional seat!> b} tht late Rep Phil Burton. who de!><'rtbed the lru1h of his labor!> as "nn rontnhutton lo modern art .. · Before reapp<>n1onment the con- gressional delegation then 41 seats fa1rh represenled thl' O'erall \Ollng patern of the: 'ilatr -22 Democra11c \<.'ats and 21 Republitan seats .\ftrr Burton had done h1<, magit the: Repubhcan., had 17 and the l>t.'mocrats 28 The: rurrrnt lrneup 1c; 27-18. onc Dcmocrat ha' ing fallen m ll/K4. l.'\t'n though c,<)p con- gre'>s1onal cand1datc'> 1.1.on more votes than thc1r Dcmocrauc oppontntc, 1n tht· l i1is4 elC'ctron'I In trulh the Dcmoual'> '\IOI<.' at lca'>t four and perhaps li ve con- grcrnonal seat\ from the Republicans rn ( ahforn1a lhrough reapportion- ment. The Rcpubhtans' own legal ( hallenge to the Ru non plan has been \tailed tn the: courts. however. while the Indiana ca..c ~ound ll'i wa) through the Judicial proccc;s Last week . the l f S Supremc ( ourt had ns say Blatant gerrymanders that unfa1rl) penah1c a part) are un- con<;t11u11onal, the court said but the I nd1an;1 case docsn ·t cross the threc;hhuld of outragcou~ne'i'> · It wa'i good news and bad news for the Rcpubli,ans rn ( ahlom1a The) would have preferred the: Indiana challenge to havr sutceeded. as 11 did rn the lov.er courts But the ruhng did give them a chance to presc; their own SUit Republican leader1i beheve that thc pattern 1n California will meet the 'itandard ~ct forth hy the Supreme Court hut the Democrat~. of rou~. d1~gree All ol this 1s happening a .. the JOCkey1ne for lhe next round ot reapp<>rttonmcnt, the post-I 990 census version. 1s beginning. Jt take!> control of three cnt1lles - two hou~cs of the Legislature and the governonh1p -to run throuah a part1i.nn reappon1onmen1 hill. Re- publicans believe that 1f th<')' can control at least one of tho~ in the 1990 elt'<:t1on , they can compel the Democrat~ to deal with them on :i party-neutral or b1pan1~n ba•m It may not prevent • acrrymander 1n the overall sen~ -a plan that protecu incumbents' 1ntcreit5 reprd- len of public policy considtt111on, - hut at least It would preclude one party from dom1nallnJ the other. A truly fair rtapl)On1onmen1 of the Legi,laturc and the conven1onal delt'ptton after 1990 would produce C"normous changes 1n the makeup of both -and perhaps lc:a1sla1on that arc more rcpre~ntat1ve of the ~talc"' cmcra1na 2 ht ~ntury profile O•( W•lt#,.. 11 • 1yndlc•tMI colom)fl•t. .. Perk-ins unlocks the Bates Motel lor.a thl-rd tlme IJ BOB THOMAS ...... , .... , ... .,._....,. LOS ANGELES -The Batet Motel, complete with tnck or treat hower, is ooce apin opco ror busines . Let the traveler beware. Nonnan Bates is manaama the place once more. You remember Norman. He's that polite fellow who spent ~2 years at the funny rarm after 1 cenaui unpleasantness at the motel. The con tin ulna adventures of Not· man Bates can be witnessed in ''Psycho Ill," with which Una venal is chllhna the nataon's lheltm this summer. This time Anthony Perkins not only plays Norman but al.lo directs a cast that includes Diana Scarwid and returnees Hugh Gillin (Sheriff Hunt). Robert Alan Browne tthe diner operator) and Lee Gar- lington (Myrna the waitress). Perle.ins' new status as symboltzcd by his office ao the producers· build· W\g at Universal Studio. Dressed m executive clothes and lean as a college freshman, he came from behind the desk to discuss the new film and explained why yet another tale of Norman was made "Because it has a story to tell," Perkins said." 'Psycho' was based on storytelling. Alfred Hitchcock told it to his dinner guests and kept them enthralled. "'Psycho II' had a good story, and that's why 1t 1nterested me. I was even more impressed by the story that Charles Pogue wrote for 'Pyscho Ill • After all, what can )OU do with the basic clements· the house. the mother. the motel. the girl in danger> Unless you can find something new and ingenious. you end up with a pointless story hne that bores the audience .. Everything depends on the actual happenings We have no monsters. no special effects. no creatures from outer space. no occultism. nothing supernatural All the events are what reall\ happens." Having approved the sc1pt, Perkins to11sd a curve ball at the Universal "RUTHLESSLY FUNNY FARCE." Mlcbatll Bu1W1t, OLVfGm COUl'tTY klGllTU RlITHIB5S PEOPLE -NOW PLAYING - ~ --... ' .. _ l--..... .,1. ......-.- • -.. 4'DI ------T__.__T_ ..... o.-~ a.-. .. ,.. . .... --,-.......... ,..,. ...-~ ..... ~.... .. ... , -·-, .... -........ r.. ,.. ....... ....... ,,,, -~ TE= r.;.,,,,:§J ---· ........ ' .. _ ---.. .., oecutlvn: He ..... ~to d.UUt. ··11old thftn, 'Thtte att my tttm$, • and J pve them the aml>unt or salary, .. hesaid. "Theyukedwbat the amount would be ift IC'ted only. "The same.· I said. What 1r I 011ly directed. 'The 1amc.' I think they Sot the idea." Did he have any qUalm1 about dircctin1 hil fir1t movae? "Couraae comes from an affinity for the muerial," he said. "Dick Benjamin hid no problem with 'My favorite Year' because he knew what it was like backstqe at a TV variety show in the 1950s. Affinity can aive you a kind of Dutch counae. ·1 don't know from booms and dolly tracks and lenses and arc lamps, but J do know what goes on at the Bates mansion and the Bates motel And for co-workm I cho.e people whose eyes glowed when I discussed the movie with them. They were zealous and intense, and they turned out to be generous and a half. "I've always found that the more experienced hands arc the most enthusiastic work.en. When you talk to people who arc expressive and guarded, watch out. But get a war- horse like (cinematographer) Roben Surtecs, and you're ahead of the game. Give him an idea and he'll say, ·we can do this!' He's the kind of help you need, not the ones who let their resumes do the talking." Anthony Perkins was born mto the actanj world 54 years ago. His father was Osgood Perkins, a d1st1ngu1shed stage and screen actor who originated the role of Walter Bums in "The Front Page." "I got my Equity card an 1947," remarked Perkins with a degree of amazement. At 21 he made his film debut as Jean Simmons' boyfriend 1n .. The Actress." ·He played Gary Cooper's son an "Fnendly Per- suasion" and starred 1n .. Fear Stnkes Out." "Desire Under the Elms .. (with Sophia Loren). "Green Mansions" (Audrey Hepburn). "Tall S1ory" (Jane Fonda to her film debut) and "On the Bcac.h " MATTHEW UOO£IUCK FERRIS BYEllER'S DAY OFF ON man\~ to take it easy. A .. AAAHOUNT ... CTUM A PG ll «» ' --:...::-. ... -....-.-.~..-............... ~-- NOW PLAYING ... ·-... .,...,,. _ ... . -..... ... UJ • --... _ -. .. . . ....... ...... , .. " ~ .. .. ~-(>... ... , .. ., --•• ,.'llO ~ , .. .,..,. .....,_,..,.,. .. .... ' ............. tn'G ,. .... .,. .... .c:att•u ·--... -u ••• . -a>o '»' . .......... ,.,,, ... "'' ... -,., __ ·"~ , ...... .. --, ..... ,.._,,_ ... ,rll\#" .,.._ ,, ...... --- ''A FABULOUS F ILM OF R EMARKABLE ACHIEVEMENT FROM TIM HENSON AND GEORGE wcAs:· -NEwroR.XrlMEs I) I! I I' I• I ·"~1··-~--.. -~.., ·~i-•'!;Slll~ w . .,.,,,..._ .......... £ lllU COllA lltlA • ruu.lllTOll •lllV9l ...,.,.. -... , • ,._., 1,:.. , .. _.,.,....,._, UAQlyC-- • ..,~ -'ll"I ••• c,..-. 5$1 0656 U. lt• ~er.. .. 1111urM1l ILIOllO -1~llACll i.-_... ·~ 17••1a 11>o .... ~ ,.,..,a,..,,,""', t,.,....,._....,. ,_.,.,...._~ ,,._c-.. .,....._.,_, ""..,. I.! i;......, ..,cm ~J·1•1 ......,.,. in~~· •COSIUllU "'' •'"f ~'Tl•••• • W. AMCO-..lolol WID'C 1t•1•~ IMTAl'l.,_ ··-Or¥• 111 l1'Ql•171•1lol3JOI• ·-·"~ ---- "Exhilarating masterpiece." -OIMcl Sheehan KNBC-TV LOS ANGELES "About last night..~ IRI:'\ M•HAM Ill-.... " ....... 41\ .......... ~, .... '" .. •COll••tA ._, .. '"""'" •uo-... ,."" ....... . . . ....,,.~ ... .....,. ..... W••••' .... 1<11\ .. I ~,, ··~· QDlhlllU ·--. ... ... t'W't¥JI.' .,.,... ... , 0\.6 •L ra..o •LA HAl"A OAANGI EC1w11da SaddleC>lcll AMC fasttion SQulrt UA City CinetN 634·3911 se 1.seao 191 OU1 QANJIN~ ~ANGa Eow1r$ WtlllftD AMC Ofl'IOI M.tll 530..cl1 &37 OJAO t) K I It HI ·-,,(..,... ... ~.., Wll'T•Hn• ....... ftl - ,, ....... ,u"" l I•"""""""'"""' .. , ...... ~ ... -..,. .. ,_ "" ~' A..,,.t ,,,., Or ' ... ,, • l)l ~ SANTA ANA E dw" ch 8natOI ~7U• I • ,. Orenee C.. DAILY '11.0Tflll f I• ------------ Asianstry·ngto Hollywood on stereotyp Anthony Perkloa In l 960, Alfred Hitchcock cast him as the mr,stcrious Norman Bates in "Psycho.· . "The '60s were a bad time for me," Perkins said. "I hit a personal low when 1 would take no horror roles, no psychopaths. I wouldn't tour in stock. I was an 1d1ot who didn't want to do anything. "Then I went to Mexico for a picture called 'Catch 22.' I lived in what was virtually a commune, along with other actors and actresses and members of the crew. We spent a long lime waitinJ, sometimes months at a time. I rc.ahzed that I wasn't pan of the human race. I was a narrow, remote, caoustic.al blur. ''When I finished my work, I got on a plane for New York and went immediately into analysis. 1 re- mamed in analysis for mnc years." Perkins married actrcss-pbotogra· phcr Berry &rcnson when he was 40 and they have two children: Osgood. 12. and Elvis. 10. "There 1s no real secunt) in hfe, but I am sull mamed," he said. "We hve here in the hills, five minutes from the studio. My career 1sact1vc. I did a film (Ken Russell's) ·cnmes of Passion' and TV miniseries. I spent a year on Broadway with Mia Farrow 1n 'Ro- mantic Comedy.' I am a happy man ... -NOW PIAVING - Wi ... ,.., ... l'lau 5a.SJ311 Ci&iiil lb6i Ld-doSoutl\C-l d? 1711 MilJiA ;.liil LAGUllA HIW hnft< • "'-""''~ Ld-d• 5oCA • i...q., ... 0r> .. 1n121 ~0 "'""'""764>4611 COITl MW •OiliiGZ tctww111 Cl-"• c.-.u-c.-rJ9-41•1 w Z5SJ llUlmtlCTiltl HACH f.d~rtlJ CJ\M't•t Cenrr• 141 <TT70 lmlil t ch .. fdl W-'l><•OQ• SSI 0855 •CJ1i1111Dl In •iiiTAiiii EOward.l l rilto Stl).14oM * WUTMllUTtll Edw1rdsC1,..,.,1 Wot 11913835 ( ~~-~~! ) r * PAIS(HfEO IN J . ._. ,,_,~. . ........cn .......... 1·. •1 UC'RAJQ)lJE lnrf •I II•,,._..., LOS ANGELES -E\en t'lcitm has its trend1. and rl&ht now, A&ians Kem to be the ta'Et or choice. In the movie 'iJltccn Candles." appcarancn by a char1Cter named Lon, Duk Dona were accompenied by a aona. What if the charaaer was black and a banjo plucked a few bars from "Gone Arc the Oays?'" · In "Year o( t)\e DraJon ... New York's Chmesc community waa di~ played u cowardly and &a-01-domi· naled. A bcauuf ul Asian ielevi Jon Journalist falls in love with a white cop who cfOt\n't even .P"'lend to bide has contempt for Orientals. A Cha· n~·American cop can't seem to figure out how to dnve 1 car. Both movies were made in the cnh&htencd 1980s. · So when the Los An,eles--blscd Japanese Ciuzens t.eaaue heard that "Guna Ho," the Paramount Pictures movie about a Japanese car company openina an American plant. was aamina for a much broader audience as a television series, they insisted on looking over the producer's shoulde~. Paramount Television •arced and hared the Los Angeles consul tin& firm of Hirano, Hokoyama &. Associates 10 review the pilot's script, chcckina it for correctness of detail and any possibly offensive passages. "I was not critical of the ponrayal of Asians in the movie," said Irene Hirano. a partner of the consulting firm along wtth J .0 . Hokoyama, director of Asian Pacific Amcncan Student Services at USC. The firm normally serves a number of corpor- ations doing business in Asta. "The movie made the exccuuve from Japan seem very human," Hirano said, and 11 "tned to look at some of the human problems that come with Amencan workers having to deal with Japanese wh o come here to open car plants." The television pilot was bought by ABC. according to Paramount Tele- v1S1on. but the network will make several revisions on characters and TOMCftUlea ":"===rfl(l)lln Gllt== w .... PGf"I A PARAMOUNT PlClURl Jr.".\:!I -·--... --~ ... --~. aAltQ .... MATINS&S MONDAY T ... AU 8ATUADAY I BT 2 PEAf'ORMANCES • fXCllPT HOl.IDA .... & STA'°'-01*1l'llATU"'l8 LAKEWOOD r nter tlUIUI tSllJflc.'11 S, ~·· -' ... Tues ... ., nlllO TOP GUN IMI h U WJ tiU &.» lttU IOllT fl'lltO'IMmMW ...... flUIS IUILUl 'S DAY Off (,..Ill IJ1MJ>M4.M ..... Nl ... S IOU'~™iili•a UNDll THI CHlll Y MOON ll'O-lal t2t~ 21M S11S 7145 IMS .. IOllT MINUl'elUTCllTSlAl IUNNINO SCAllD fll ,,., ........ ... AKEW Crnler South 12rnn• tUl/fK..tty 111 ot1 A"'' _.., llllfOID>-....... UGAL IAGLH INI l11M ),.S S1U It 11 I e.41 llOONO OAHMIJlfUI IACK TO KHOOL ~Ill u,.,..,.,.. .. ,..,..11 .. .OUT muo .,.._, .. VIT0/9"" ..... IU'THUH "°'LI Ctl ltt• !tll W11 ... WI , ... ANAHEIM Oltl11t t!fl(Lmg U1 .. fm CH ro•;(lUN\ .. 1141 Cl•ll'< lllAnNIW UOOfllCll PIH ll I UIUll'I DAY Off f".UI 'llTTY IN "NK ,,...,, ~' ,,.,,.. .... uo IACK TO ICNOOl fN.l>I PIX (II T~ UUtN TOP GUN1N1 aLUI CrTY 191 ,.YCHO Ill TMI HOWLING II llO TIOUIU IN unu CMINA "' DUHl.,..1a1 LA MIRADA ,,_ •._ .&..... DOUT tlUtO • T10U1U 11 unu C1t1tA,,..' >1 ,.,, ............. ., o.\HNT DI Yn0191T'1 MlOU8 IUTHUSS ,.O,U (IJ 111• i.• •JO ..is, ... ••• OOUT UHtn Ul'" MACCHIO NOllTllCU ~"" .. MOlln A KAUTI KID 'AIT II (NI lbJO tiU l1H 7o4S 11111 CMIOIT MIHU IUNNING KAllD 111 loU loM S·4S .... 10.U MATTHIW UOOHIU flHIS I UILUl'S DAY Off (l'O-IJI lb4f 1,4S 4•IO MS t-ts 11 OS lOM CIVIN TOI' GUN IN ) BUENA PARK OltlUI 4'JllL••nle W ti !un Cli>;f fl "'111"1(1 IN 114 I 'C'AI I" ~y DtvnO IUTHUll ,.0,ll Ill DOWN AHD OUT IN a1Vlll Y HILU Ill .. ._, ....... IUNNINO ICAllD Ill WISI OUYl111 lo HABRA .• ~;;.. :! . . .,._, .. 'lfftO IU'THLHI PIOPLI 111 DOWN AND OUT IN alVlll.Y Milli GATEWAY (1U) •H ma f.,., s .. Y!ll!J v- DOUT lllltlO/PttlNCf UNDIR TMI CHIHY MOON ,,..,II ... ..,. .... ,,., , .. ,. DOUT Jr'UIO IOI lOWI AaOUT LAST NIGHT ISl , .... ,. .... ...... " OCXIY ITlllO llOIRl llDf~ -· UOAL IAGU (JOO) lt)O , ..... ,. l t4f lttU OCXIY tnllO LAIYllNTH (N I I M J•U J4f 7,., ... AMOKAll AHTMUI ~lit •••••• SHOH CIRCUIT 1N1 u1 .. u ••u NIMCI UNDll TMI CHIHY MOON ,.,.,*! WllDCATI 111 IM. .... MACCMtO IC.AUTI KlD 'Alf 11 tNI CIOHIOAOS Ill ... n..-MQeO:ICI PIHIS IUlllll'I DAY 0" !M-111 'llTIY IN ,. ... ~Ill !09HtT ........ II\. I.ACK tO KM00\,...111 ,,. Ill t'onte'J""'briOR tbf ftrlt lt"1W I bfOldc:ul tn January. One dedMOn will be whether to ma.in the .ervica of Hirano's firm . .. There's a lot oflack o(know&ed~ about the many dtffC'mit ,,.oupt or Asians, and the-d1ft'eren« bCt~ccn new amvals and tbitd and fo~rlh· a,cMration Asian ~· wd Hirano. "The otbcr i1c111 i economu: con· dilions .•• that bas'cautt'd a baclda h apinst la.rsc c:-0rporation from the Far East, such as the car indu1try. mak.inl them I IC'apeaoll (or Amen· ,.. .... llllf PmO nmc.m --r., .. (N) WU:ll. 5cll,. .. WJ • TUCI llCUY mJIO ...... '1WL ucur cPC> u ... ?:ts, ue. 1• t:» •mn _.. .. FUllS MWrS MY lff" (PC-U) f'tn111'SATIDY "Tl( CHIT IOISI emcmr (C) l2:le. I U. UI ~15, , ...... ~ ...,_,...,,. "utl TO SCllll" (N·U) U:•. Z:ll.4'11 •:•. u . 1•.ze JO • ' TUCI DCUT mllD t111 cam "TOP UI" (PC) ••. "'· ..... us. 11:• 4 TUCI llQUT SlOlO 1£TT(-.0 "IUTIUSS PlOPl.E" (I) u. t 4, ...... • 1UCI .,., mlDI ·•1•1•1 SCAIO" (I) 1210. 2~ ... I IS Ill. I•• • raa "UltH TMI CtlHIY 1oor l"·ll) 12 l , 4, 6. I 10 AllTHOlff l'lltlllS "'SYCtlO Ill" (I) I 00. l'OO. S 00 7.tO, uo. 10 40 "g(ltCQ UTHI " I lO. s JS, t JS (P$.I)) "IOOI WITI A WO" i:•. ,. .. l2.51 Tl l'tt "WYltlTI" (PC) I U, J IS.SU 7JO. t lO .ool(Y OMliOfRO "HCl TO SCllOOl" 1200. 200. 00 uo. 1·00. 10 00 {l'ii·ll) llMTTIOlaUIOllCll FUllS IUEWl'S NY Off" (K ·ll) I 45, .... , I IS, I.JI, 10 • "UEllCAI UTO" U4S (K-lf) "ltC Tlfftl.( • UTTU CllU" (PC-ll) ll IS 215 H S 'IS I ll 10.JO "UU&. uwr (PC) IH~ HS SU t• ltlS "ltc 110UW II unu c ... r (PC tl) Ul~ la H S '1~ •• 11• ...UTlltml'I .... (PC.13) u ti. ue. ue ue. 11s. 1u. ~~ "UCIT1..._" (N.lJ) I.HI. tte. ... ............ "Tll CIUT MISl KTtCTM" (C) 11 4S I JI J IS HI 1-U 12'1 1 .... OA•-'UlfttllT' (PC) ........... s ... , ...... 4 TUCI ICUT SlllCO ~ln!TO ·-.muss PlOPlr' (I) 1, J s. 1, '· ltu "aaOtCAI UT1£1" 11s "TOf CUI" (PC) l IS SJO HS t5t l'llllC( "UHH Hl Clem IOH" (PC·ll) ll l 4 I I IS It U • Tlll1I llODCllCll "fUltS lllWl'S tAY OW' (PC· 11) I U JlO HS I• tllS Pll IOITA "WATE lit II" (PC) I JO HO 6 U I JI 10 JI 11()11 lOWI. "AIOUT WT 11$tlT'' (I) ll JO. 245 s 00 7 ll, us ..,,llllf. ··uCAL EACW" l"l llJ11 llS ~4~ 115 ... Ill Cll GA 'fl OllO "llHICU ura£1" NnlWSAMDAf (N ll) "fHllS llWil'S tAY Off'' (PC·lll 12 u. J lt Hl.1U. IHI 0 "TW Cir (PC) 1 •HS llt &•le~ "Tl( CllJT IOISl tmCTM" (C) lltS I.JI JIS s• '-.. S. t.ll "l9CITllAl(WI ST.Z .. dlO. "UOUT WT llCIT' (I) 12tS. lJl.US , .... •ts ..a "UHH Tl( CHnY MOH" (PC·ll) 145 400 •·1s •·• ... AllTIOrt l'OllllS "'SYCMO 111" (I) 12 IS, 2 IS. 4 IS 500 .... ltol UllMIMCCllO "WATl lit If" (PC) I lO HS, ... 115 l•lt "l.AIYlllTI" (PC) I ll l JI, S • 1 J9. Ut "IY UTTU POIT' ICalll DM&lf1lO "UCI Tt SCIOOl" 11• 2'• •• 6• I• lt:J11 (P$.ll) •mn .... "ftllSS tlWD'S .. , OfF" (N.ll) 1• ns, s •. 1·.S, 1 .... Hl-lA ··wan lit 11" (PC) ll tS. t ~ ... us t-• IHO l .. t Janet Jackson in 'Con trol ' of L Ps .. By th Aa.octat .. Preu ll!ltklrt) 2 "lnvl•lllle TOUC11" o.nt\l• (Allanlkl 16 "~lul'llle." "-' SNtl lov• <EMl: Amwl<al The followtn1 are Billboard's bot reeord hits u they appear in ne11.1 week's 1 uc of Billboard mapzme. Copynaht 1986. Billboard Publi- cauons. Inc. Reprin1cd with pcr- miuion. 3 "Tlltft'• .. a.cl Soni•" l ll't' OcM11 (Jlvtl 4 "NUIY" .._,,.. ~-(Aa,#11\) ~."Who'• JOlwW" E l Oder .. IGlwdvl '·"~" P91er Oebfltf (o.ffwll 7 "0.netr Zone" l<eMY Looe\M (Coll.tm4>tt l I "No One t1 to lleme" Howerd Jont• (Eltlllrtl t "Your Wtlclftt Or"m'" T,.,. Mooctv 811141• IPOlvdOrl 11 "l.OVe T~" lllod $1twtM'~ (Wern« lrot I II "/lM4 A'*'I Y04J" lleMnd9 CW11W llJU.I It ''Modtt'n Wome11" l lllV Jo.I (liM) 10 "l.~e No Ottlet Nlelll" JI SHclel 1'4MI T'Of' Ul't I "ContrOI" JtMI JaclotOfl l.44MI l "WlllMr In You" ~1111 Laetllt (MCAI l ."Wllltnav Houtton" Wllllnav HouttOll '"'''''' HOT llNGLH l.''HOldll'IG leci. tht Vtert" Slmolv llltd -·~ - NOWPlAVING -·-~l&LI ·------·--o.-1'11-41... .. .. ,....,, DIM> --•AU.S'f UI-----MC----... ,.. 12UI•-NNm --... _ --... ._ ... ----... ---... , l·-·••MpMI I 10."Tuff E~ll" Tll• F•DU~• Tllunderblrdl (C8S·AUOC1tltd) 11."Glorv of 1..ove" Paler C•ter1 (Werner llro• > 12 "Llkt e llOCA" 800 Seoer & T,.,. Sliver 8ulltl 81nd IC1pl!ot) I) "On Mv Own" Petti l..•8•11• & MICllHI McOolleld IMCAI lt "When t .... Hffrt ltult• tllt Mind" G Tiii (Arlt ti) IS "Cru•ll On You' Tiit Jell IMCAI RU Ff ELL'S UPHOLSTERY INC. .... , ..... c..... .... ttll -ll9 .. CISH IEA-141-llM The Pros · Since 1957 IUIITT llSIUIU '-"So" Paler Gebl'lel IGeffenJ )."lnvltlblt TOUCll" Otnffl• (Atlantlcl '"Love ZON" Blllv Ocean (Jive) 7."Llke e llloell" Bob Seoer & ,.,.,. Sliver Bullet Bend ICH llOll a '"Too Oun' $0Undtreck" ICOlumblal t "T,.,. Ofhtt SIOt of Lite" TM Mooctv 8ru.& (Polydor) 10 "SIW' Ven Helen (W1rnw Bro1.l II "GT It" G Tiii I Arlllt) 12 "PIMM" ,.., Siie» 8ov1 IEMl•Amtf"lct ) I) "Tutt Enuft'' Tiit F1bulotn Tllunoet'blrdl 1cas-11uoclal9Gt It "ltelt1"9 Hell'' ltun·O.M.C !Profile> IS "lt1IMO on ltldlo'' Journey tColurnblt) 1' "Picture Booll" llmlHY ltld IElaetlrel 17 'PllV DMP" Tiit Outtlatd IColuml>la) II "Htart" HMrt ICaP>IOI) If "Sir-Ill In Numbers" ll SO.Ct.I (UM) 20 'P1r1CM" Prlllce & Tiit llevolulloft (Plllitv Perk) Bill Cosby ripped off SKOKJE.111. (AP)-The owner of a record store here was the victim of a robbery, with the thief taking a life. • Non-smoker med stand-up replica of Bill Cosby. , Rates being used as a promotion for the star's new comedy album . A replacement cardboard Cosby --··])isnqalond.--831-7740 was found, but this time the store 441 Otd Ne•port atYd. owner a1tached to it the same tape • .. Newport 9MCh, Ca. used on records and cassettes to set off .. -----------•! theft alarm systems in th~ store. Rel iv• Lady Liberty's Birthday Party Through Our Dookl Missed lhe S1otue of Liberry celebronon1 This book •S so colorful 11 s the ne•t bes1 rh1n9 Through our p1crures ond rexl you con feel the somf' tOY everyone felt or lody l.Jberry s rededico1100 ceremony ond ol~ expenence me grondeur ond mo9n1f1cencl' of the Tall Shops Lody L1bl'rT)' s 1 OOm Anniversary is o hmrred ed111on souvenrr boo~ rl'plere woth lull color photos ond 1nlormonon of rhe greot lody who •Mptted your porents ond grondporenrs ond rhl' s101ely ships rhor helped celebrore he• birthday It so once on·o·hferome opponun1ry for you to shore 1n rhe warmth ond e1Cc11emenr of h1srory s b199esr porry leorn rhe rrue s1ory of how rhe humble people of rwo norions wo~ed together ro creore rhe '>totue of ubelfy leorn rhe locrs ond h1srory of rhe Toll Ships See photos of lody l1berry you .,e ne.,er seen AJr.o lflduftd rlll 1 A rvll Col0t PoH•r of o Toll stllpl C,e1 o ~16 95 volue for only $10.00 plus ~I 00 Sh1pp1n9 C, Handling ,,. • ._ ch~" on.: I enclose poyment by check or money 01de1 (ho19e nw oed•• cord Ame.,con EAp1eu Voso Moste•Cord Ac,1 No Evp Dote ____ _ S19noturP -------------------- N~mP ____________________ _ AddrPSS ( r1 -----------'>tote ___ Zrp ____ _ FDN PRODUCTIONS 1090 Eddy Srreer Providence RI 02905 ( 401 ) 94 1 61 04 & Try Your Hand At Cow Milking! ' '·' That's right. co w milking. In keeping with the theme of this year's Orange County Fair which salutes the Dairy industry, the Daily Pilot is sponsoring a cow milking contest at the Fair. So-o, all you city folks w.ho have never milked a cow can have some fun doing it .and , maybe, win a prize for your efforts ,. All you need do is sign up below. Clip the entry form and send it to the Fair Even 1f you've never milked a lOW .. come. we'll teach you how! '86 range _ County Fair ·-----------------------------------------, damp On Over Cow Milking Contest Yes! Enter me in the Daily Pilot Cow Milking Contest, taking place at 7.30 pm on Sa turday, July 12th in the Livestock Showring at the Orange County Fair As a contestant. I will arrive there by 7: 15 pm CH ECK CATEGORY 0 Youngster 16-11 yrsl 0 Adult 118-54 yrsl 0 lunior ( 12-17 yrs I 0 Senior 155+ yrsl ~AME AGE 5 TRfET ADDRESS CITY llP DAYTI MF. PHONE t SIGNATURE Send t hie; e ntry to 'UMP ON OVER Cow Milking Contest Orange County Fair 88 Fair Drive, Costa Mesa, CA 92626 TO"n lufy Ii I qAtt1 l:.ntnes must be received by Friday, July /I , /986.· ENTER NOW a MAIL voua ENT8 V FORM TODAY! ' '----------------------------------------- .. WUU•m Se.Ddenon (center) u Larry trtee to break up a -a-bble between bla bl'Otbei' Duryl (John Volatacl, left) ancl bla other brotlaer Darryl (Tony Papenfa.M) oTer the affection• of a new wala.. on .. Newhart" tonJCbt at8:SO on CBS, Channel 2 . (%)ON THE AUi 8CEME wmt m.lYWl.DER -t:aO-l ~OM! 'f'fW'9 JOHN. M.0. PMMAGAZINI HONEYMOONERS -t.00-l i ~aAWE **'h "Th• &ecutlon" (1985) l.otet· ;. ~*1e Hlfl*. ***"The Cny Treatment" (1972) Jlmee Coburn, Jennifer O'Neil l ~MAmM AIYER JOUANEY8 MOYE *** "Bii" (1981) Mldtey Rooney, Delv*Oueld. I PRAISE THE LOfl> STAll TAEK -...... MOYE "Slow IUn" (1988) Enc RoOer1a. =Angelo *** "The Ad'.llntw• Of Tom Sewytr'' (1938) Tommy Katy, Jale Moon. I ICl!NT Nlfl) DNJ AXTUL INOl!P818T NfWI MOVIE *** "o.-1' (1978) John TFM- ~ OIMl Nlwt~ 'ft~ .. (1915) Cher, Slln EJ.. llott. (C)MOVIE • t t ''The Buddy Holly Stor(' (1978) Gary Bully, Don Stroud. -1~- i m ON HOU.YWOOO COWI1t&N< 8N!N< PREVllWS ENTERfAIMHT TONIORT 100CUJll MOYE *''The Dlncn" (1981) John Lelle. Rlctwd Pldleco -12:15- *'** ........ (1915) Cher, Sim EJ. llott. ®MOYIE ** ''Termini! Choice'' (1985} Joe Spino, DllM Venora. -2:00-1 F~ H "H Conqund The World" (1958) Pet• am.. a.w.1y QM. llnd. 8 8 NEW8 -2:»- i IN SWOf Of_ l8tll> THE 9C8E8 NJEP9llEHT MEWS -2:86-- ())MOYIE • * "a.di ' Chong'• Stll Sine*· In' " (1983) Rldwd Mam, Tommy ~ --Newport's Cannery Villageci • DINNER NI GHTLY 6:00 P.M. to Midnight Mondays & Tuesdays: Two Dinner• for • 15.95 Wednesdays: 6 Course Italia n Dinner $9.95 2900 Newport Boulevard •Newport Beach• 67~·2968 lllll1I '3"8770 STMIUIDa ... P, RI N Ct CUnr/er the (UtRRYffiOON U 11111 (ZU) "1-0UJ MIC FUID SQUMl U .._ SZl-1111 PACllCUtnm Hl ._.A.aJlltl aMa • ......... -........... . ..... ........ -- IUMl '34-25SJ snncmcmo WlllW111 ftl-lHS IDWAIDS CIOIA El ftllWTD • PACflC llWAT 39Ila ... 1'1-3193 --•ec:All IUfTMDI ...... ., (1:00) (1110) l 1t O 1 110 A tl140 DA y CWP t ....... -= IHOWS A U tO:f (Ii II) 11:10 7 t4t 1 OtOI A80UT LAST MeNT , on (U1Ul Cl•IO) l 1ff7t0 • totlO -CINl·fll O~E­IPEAKIRI A"I llACK STAOIUm a . . " o ......... .. ~a.-n. .. , lll'ivt ... lt .... allt II lPO•t It A\'l:'lr .. ~, I• ._,.I' HllU ( ) ~=n-· IU tH) (l1H1t1U 7tH 6 t • I o, ... ,,, "'"" .,_. ... _, ·~·:\"•o r• IUUIAft IOO It ... , ~ ~ltlO) 11'....,.to AIM w1.t1f,,, (II' (U1 ti) (ltHl 4i'H 7 1tl6t1 I J totH "'''!i ......... KAAA IQOH J ,.., .. Qw .. ..._, 1f:1 O.-I • M..,vJ. • Mdt I CWitlt!t . Elderly have been T ..... J,Juy a h h • ~(March 2' ~AP"4 19): Deci ioo i1 reached in connection with seem ~~tma.. Your ~ttton 11 strona. you'll pin accc to confidential t rou cf 1 t before 1n1ormat10.n. Sccnano also hiahhaht reunions, revival of interest in manuc O" ana and 1e1cnces. · I Every once an a while, a teacher wuh imqinalion will create a project for her students that brinas the future into the classroom. TA UR.US (April 20-May 20): Dia deep for information, realize that many of yourdcs1resareduc to be fulfifled. F'ocuson motivca, crutivcendeavonand chf~nae of aceocry. Member of opposite sex ls drawn to you, will make no secret 0 It. I ~member readinaa few yean aao where a teacher tried to simulate GEMINI (May 21-J unc 20): Sianificaot domestic adjustment occurs _ parenuna by havma students pair off rel~tcs to lifest¥1e. pos ible chan~ in and tie an ~ 10 one of their toes 24 residence or mantal status. You'll receive -------------hours a day. would have chosen an unusual aiR. romance fitures promi-explosive o some kir\d for com- nently and money surprise 1s due. parison. but the cu worked.) The plan was to g.ivc thern loOOle idea of the CANCER (June 21-July 22): Define SYDNEY constancy ofra1sm1 a child and how t~rmst look beyond the unmcdiatc. pay your hfe revolved around its every atten tion to "psych1c impressions." o need. Focus also on spiritual values. travel. MAIR Recently, I read wbcrc a h1ah special rcadina material, communica-school teacher an PittJburah wanted uon. Pisces. Virao play paramounveles. her students to have so~ a~i.a· tion as to what It is like to arow old. . LEO (July 2l-Al.\&. 22): This could be your power play day. Emphasis on achievement, deadlines. responsibility. chance to hit financial Jackpot. Love relationship intcnsifies .. Older individual now ready to return favor. Capncom plays role. VIRGO (Aua. 23-Scpt. 22): Emphasis on break from past, ability to attract people who a ppreciate your special abilities. Restrictions arc removed you'll be encouraaed to write. publish, communicate. ' LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Take initiative, be direct, state ca~ in confident manner. Member of opposite sex helps you eet to heart of matters. Job gets done, Y!>l.!'!I feel refreshed. strong, optimistic, ready to assume add1t1onal respons1b1lny. .SCORPIO(Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): Change of pace 1s necessary-vacatton with family member proves beneficial. Sense of purpose. direction w1 II be restored. Former teacher 1s again available and could become strong ally. SAGITr ARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21 )' Many of your most attractive quaJ1ucs surge to forefront. Emphasis on travel. social atTaus pleasure pnnc1ple added popul~nty You'll be more aware of appearance, bcidy unage. Gemini.figures prom mently. So. she had them fill their shoes with popcorn to f cign bunions, wear ilasscs that distorted their vision, givina them an idea of cataracts, and pie~ up coins from a purse and do other simple tasks with their finaers taped together to imitate anhritis. I was talkin$ to my mom about this and asked her 1f they had left anythina out. II took her all of two seconds to say. "They should have taped a rccordina to their back with a man's voice that kept repeating all day in their ear. "When do we cat?' That would gl Ve them some idea of what 1t 1s like to have a retired husband around the house. "Maybe 1t doesn't seem hkr a big deal," shr said ... but 1f they want to cxpenrnce old agr. they should gi ve each pair of students a loaf of bread E111 BOllECI and a c.tlen~r so they can keep tnck of how Iona 11 takes tor two people lo Ut a loaf of bread WllhOUl havlnt to freeze it and.toast 1t to thaw out. "And don't foriet the arm-a- ten11on. If they attached about ~ inch.es onto each arm. they would probably know someth101about dial- 1na l)hones and rcadin& menus or newspapers." / " The ideas seemed to flow. Their arms would have to be bound to their side because it's too painful 10 act them over their head, so they wouJd walk around with the labels han&ina out of their dresses, the zippers would not go all thr way up, and the httlc hooks would be wide open. I thmk it's a areat idea for one aeneratton to ao to the trouble of understand1na another one. After all, the elderly understand what it's lik& to be young and have flat chests. no muscles, people bossm& you around. reluctance to loan you a car. and apprehension about the future They were not only there once 1hey're back there apm. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Be ready to revise. review. to rebuild on more sunable base. Close relauvc seeks your counsel and approval Be sympa~hcuc but express views in frank manner. Short tnp could be part of sceQano. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Make inqu1nes, ask questions. satisfy cunos1ty. Someone wants something for nothing -member of oppo!ille sex likely to be involved. Protect self 1n emouonal clinches. Virgo. Saglltanu~ figure prominently. Discriminating diner turns Ann's stomach PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): What had been source of fear, apprehension could now be transformed into leg1t1matr reason for celebration Loss 1s rcco~cred. family dispute 1s seuled. financial picture bnghter than originally ant1c1pated. lF JULY 8 IS YOUR BIRTHDAY }'ou'll travel this year. you·11 be more popular, demands will be made on your 11me and you'll be morl' aware of appearance. body image. You'll add to wardrobe. there Wlll be tendenq toward extravagance. However. clements ofuming and luck nde \\Ith ~ou tor mo'>t of the year Anes. Libra play 1mportan1 roles 1n )Our hfe 'I ou are direct. courageous. headstrong and must exercise cauuon when handling ,harp objects. In July, you makr new start and romance "'Ill be featured Very few smart alecs among Asicin children Rarely do you sec children ofrrcrnt Asian extraction show off. Thr man) scholars among them tend to speak, when there's need to speak. directly 10 the point. Though not ovrrly scnous. they never seem inclined to act "cute." To what do you most at- tribute this stra1Jhtforward behavior? When a maJor pubhc company changes its name, you can be prett) sure countless stockholders Wlll lose track of their own holdmgs. particu- larly 1f inhcnted. Billions of dollars in assets go unclaimed, therefore Busi- ness watchers frequrntl) note 1he great costs of name changes Bui the~ don't ~> much about the'iC 'i1lent gains Sir. arc )OU a fa1her-1 n-la\\11 If so. what does your daughter-in-law 1h1nk of )ou'1 She doesn't') Maybe not Students of fam1l)' mauers say a young woman about 10 be married carefully analyzes the personality of her future mother-in-law, but rarely considers the character of her futurr father-in-law He's no11n her picture. evidently. L.M. Bo YD Chrnt writes: ''Man 1s the o.1ly animal that doesn't routtnel} Lake da}'11me naps .. Thi~ cl1en1 docs not know man as I kno w man .\ Brahman pne'il ha., to "'a!>h in running Y.ater before he can eat nee Just gelling there. o n an overland tnp 1n df) countf). he can pntnear !>lane.: 10 death That fronuer legend named Rullaln 8111 also was a mo' 1e produn•r If 34 percent of )'our \\eight " 11\ >our legs. )ou'rl' t\p1cal L.M. Boyd Is a syndlcatt"d columnist. DEAR ANN LANDERS: My hus- band and I eat at a neighborhood reMaurant that serves good food at reasonable prices. It 1s very convc- n1 en1. Almost every time wr go in there we \Ce a young man with a paralyzed woman in a wheelchair. She cannot feed herself and ha!> trouble swallow- ing The food runs down the sides of her mouth. and onto her chin It 1s trrnbl) unappetmng. That couple ha"e rumed man} meals for us. We ha\.e spoken to the manager aoout th IS and he 5a)'S he docsn 't know how to handlr the si1ua11on. Apparrntl> he 1s obhga1ed by law to senc thesr peoplt We have told him that 1n the future. if wr see that couple "hen we come in wr are going 10 lea .. e .\pparently others havr told him the same thing. Can you give us your opinion of this s11uat1on? We feel sorry for the woman but aren't we entitled to a pleasant meal for our money? -A CHICAGO READER. DEAR CHICAGO:-Your letter made me 10 furious I can barely see to type. Apparently you believe that only beautiful, able-bodJed people should be allowed h1 public and the others should be locked up, out of slgJU, so they don't upset anyone. I appla ud tbe courage of tbat budlcapped womu wbo 11 tryhi.1 lo lead a normal life. AJld bow wonder- ful that ber husband ls wllltn1 to upend tbe eaero to talle her oa t to dine. If you can't stand to look at ber, wby not just tarn your bead? If I were In tbal restaurant u d ll.new wbo you were, I'd much rather look at HER than you. People like you make mt llt'k. • • • DE&.R ANN l ANDERS: I was \learned when I read that letter from 1he parent\ of the 18-)'ear-old bo)' Y..ho was in the Medical Center at Dan mouth -the re'>ult of a hazing Jn1dent A1111 UllDEIS The parrnts didn't Jcnow their son had been a patient until they received the bill. whereupon thr> telephoned 10 find out what had happened. They were told. "Sorry we can't givr }'Ou an} information. Your son '" an adult You'll ha\e to a!>k HIM \\hat happened " If that had been MY kid I would have sent the bill back 10 the Medical Centrr and told them 10 send It tom} "adult" son and collect from him. - M.l.N .. SAN FRANCISCO. DEAR M.l.N.: I r eceived do1en1 of letten from a ll over lbe United Stale• and Canada from readers who shared your sentiment• aad au1- 1ested lhe 11me thtn1. Thia may be another one of those &Imes . when everybody knows better tbu any- body. • • • DEAR .\NN LANDERS Regard- ing the leuer from "A Disgusted Coed": She should be glad she doesn't hve 1n Philadelphia, where the first three qursuons asked ofa wo man are What 1s your (full) name'1 What does your dad do for a hving'1 Do }OU want to go to bed., Of course. thr third · question would not be asked un11l 1he man checked out thr ans"'rrs to the first and S«ond que\t1onr. 1n the Philadelphia oc1al Register ( EHr, unattached male in 1hr Main Linr ha'i one I Sign me -DISGUSTFD "'ITH MEN OF THE ·sos DEAR DISGUSTED: You·r~ 1ravelln1 ID the wrong circles, bon~y. Maybe YOUR first question should be, "Do you own a copy of tbl' Philadelphia Social Regl1ter"" - "'"' co on from there. Iowan answers door-here 's Johnny By tb~ Associated Press .\ V 0( .\ loY..a -Jobnny Carson'• spokesman 1sn'1 ~}1ng 11 happened hut Moms Berndt 1\ sure 11 was 1he star of ··The Tonight how .. who knocked o n his door one quiet afternoon. "A~ soon a\ I opened the door I rccogn111.:d who he wa., -Johnny (arson." Berndt said of his \.l'i- uor "He ac;ked ii I knew that 1t was h1~ houo;c he used to li ve in. and I aid we had heard that." Berndt stud. adding that the Carson family moved to Avoca in 1930and li ved in his house for\1x years before moving to Ncbra'ika Charla<' Barrett. a < ·ar~on llpokesman 'in1d the star wa' on a ont-weck vacauon and was 1n Malibu Tue~ay Barrell \aid he "knew noth1n1 .aoout a trip to I own ""( ar~n '31d 1t was .1 .. pur- of the moment 1hina ·· \J1d 8trndt Of lhC m-mlOUl(' \ 1\11 Singer return• M\ RTL( REl\CH \ < Rcxkcr Jobo Cousar Mellencamp ha' returned to tlm rc<;(>rt cit)' he vac111onrd 1n u a 1:hlld The 34- ycar-old Indiana na11vc pohteh dcd1n('d to answer qu<'~taon-. Tucwny. hut told 1 rtf)oner from J ohnny Canon 1 he C hnrloll(' IN < I Ob..cn er hl'., lung l'nJ1)h·d '"fl' 111 ~hnk Rc:tlh Mclknramr \\hm1• mu\ll locu<>e'I on m1ddk·l IB\\ Mu.J. Y..C'lt('rn folk\, .. m~ll IOY.n\ .111d farmer\. hit' lx'l'n l11l·ndl> .1nd .... 11t1n~ to "in auh1llr,1ph., l«HH ""land ll1<.nl .. 'kl\ I k·, been \l'<'n nd1n111hr ""·" t'' on 3 mo1on1cd 'urlhoarct and John Couaar Mellencamp 111oltng .1wund town 1n ~ 'inlatt1 < hl'\' lOn\l·r11hk Princely throng \HI H II> \ "l \\. '(' I hl' pr('mlC rl' ol rod. 'tar Prtnc~·s n''" mo' a• hrnughl .u Ir<;'' Rosanna Arqlat•Ut, "'nlltr"I Joni Mlttbf'll, Sh~lla £.. and RaJ l'arttr Jr :ind 1a11 mu\111<1n Thomas Scott to lhl\ m111in~ .tnll ranlh1ng hl"-n ot I 'i 11110 • Thl· ll'khn11c., al\11 Jlll'lllkd .1 part\ tor "HI\ KmJI Rallne.,, a lier ' 1cY.1ntt · 1 ndl·r T hl' I hl·rr' \.1 oon · I 1\a Harlxr ~II .1 h.111·1 m.11d Y.On thl· chann• to hu\I tht.' pn·m1l·re ol the mm 1l· .ind lhL' part) ilfll•r .... .1rd h' he1ng thl' 10 OOOth tallrr 1n .rn \.11 \ n.t 11unul rull-in l·ont'''t T h1• n11. !.. \ldl·o t llhlr l \ l h.tn1wl 1.1111•·d thl' part\ I" l. Wr iter better < Ol l IM Iii \. \ < P1wt .rnd no' el1\l Jamt'I Olrkey "ll'nl\ a Intl Jlk1 \Urttcn to fl'llHI\ L' .t hloo<l dot fwm hi\ h1ain "'lmh hi\ Y.lfl: \tlld Y.11\ lilt' thrt'Ull'OIOI\ · I k lllrlW .. ,.r, 1 low to 1k,11h ' hi\ "lk. Deborah ..:11,1 lfr h.1' h.1ll hr.tin \Urttl'r~ 'ti' n1a1111 hr.1111 'urgl'I\ Aul h1• rnll1cd 'en \ l'f\ "'di .. I )1{ i..r' ti' .1 proll'\'ior JI ah,· I n1,rr,i1' 111 'io111h < 11t11hn.1 1n < olumh1.1 un,kr""l'OI 1·11wrg\'lh' nl'"'"""~'·'' Mond~l\ n1ah1 a1 l<1d1l,1nll \.kmm1.il H11\p11.1I l>1l kl'' .1111hm ol "r>..·l1q·r.1nH' had 'utkrl'<l lrl'm h1.•,1,lal h,., Im .l~llll '"'" mnnlh' h" \\Ill ,.11d .. / ,, gr.,.. C... DM.V MOT'lll'tllltlllt ... .,., ANIWW TO wmLY PIDQll 81JJI Q.1-At South, vul.Mtabt.,, )'OU hold: • •A.11... <:>QI ¢tel N4 Tb• biddlns hu pl'OCIHded: Nort' But lotlt.lt w .. i 1<;> Pue l• ..... a <;> ,._ t What action do you take? A.-Your queen of hearta ii a hua utet, u it you.r ace, and perhasi- even you r doubleton club. Don't rebid apada and make partne1' think you don't Ulce hil hearta. RaiM t.O four beatta. ctJ-Both vulnerable, South you hold: •AJ 102 <v8a 0Qt5' •'711 The bidding has proceeded, Weet Nortll Eut 8"Cla I 'V Dble Z 'V I • .,... a• .... 1 What actlon do you take? A.-You have a borderline ded- alon. Partner la showing a pretty fair hand with his ralle to t hree spades and you have a useful hand where you have pro mt.ed little. However, the vulnerabUlty ~ favors the brave, so we would choose to bid rour spades. Q.3-Both vulnen.ble, u South wtth 60 on score you hold: •KQ9 'VAQU OAQe ... 71 The bidding hu proceeded: Eut &oath Weat -Nort.ll 1 • Dble 1 NT Pue Pa.u Dble r... I Q P ... Pue ZNT Pue , ... 1 What action do you take? A.-Don't flog a dead hone. You have already told partner you have a very good hand, and he haa informed you that he Is poverty· stricken by ramng to compeu over two no trump. You have some chance or defeating your oppo- nents, so let them struggle-Pus. Q.4-As South, vulnerable, you hold •K&3 'V6542 0 973 •7&2 The bidding has proceeded Weet North Eut Soaua 1 • Obie Pue 1 What action do you take? A.-Follow the example of the chap who said: "I've seen my duty and I done It!" Partner asked you to 0111 SUllF Q.1-Netther vulMrabJe,·u Sou you hold: •KQIOll 'VKJll 0411 H The btddlna hu proceeded; Nortll Eut S..tll W.i ........ lt ..... INT Pue f What action do you take? I A.-We know that JOU have e • aceleu hand and that ~ puaed originally. Neverthelai,, we tee no reuon why you thoulft• not take a normal action. One of t.hil!; reuona you opened th.la band a, that )'OU be.Id both ~r 1N.lta, ., 10 ahead and ahow the leCOnd one. Bid three be.a.rtl. Q.6-Both vulnerable, u you hold: •SQ.Ill 'Vlotl ¢111 The blddlng hu proceeded: w .. i Nortla Bui e..o 10 DMe '¢ f What actlon do you take't A.-You can\t aff ord to be ahut olf of the bidding-partner mlght not. be able to act again at thia level\. t Bid four apadea. True, &.hls adiafl runs a certain amount of risk, b'f you have a good suit and your~• la worth far more than ita pol.al• count might suggest .. • • ~ For Jalonaattoa &M.t ~ Gona'• new aewe.leuer f1' brtdp pla7en, wrlt.e Gorri Brut• Letter, P.O. Bo~ '418, ()r. l&J1do• Pia. ·~·· TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS 1 Tyrol peaks 5 Elected 10 Weight unll 14 Rebullder of Rome 15 Nonsense 16 Divorce city 17 Sllmulus 18 Flower 19 Ontario river 20 Kindled 21 Affllctlon 22 Mouse 24 Cow 26 Loon 27 - -mort de1ected 28 Bonus 31 Fast 34 Harmonized 35 And not 36 Solemn word 37 Dried dishes 38 Off-white 39 Pro 40 Challenged 4 1 Fantasy 42 Roman VIPs 4'4 Farm animal 45 Sleigh• 46 Noble 58 50 Charge 52 Skulk 53 1/100 krone 54 Conllnue 55 NYSE group 57 Claim on property 58 Preoccupied 59 Conture 60 CuNes 61 St Pierre and Miquelon 62 Nol smart 63 Whale L)WN 1 --Sa11on 2 9th cen1ury pope 3 Talk idly • Fairway 5 Onlarto city 6 Fru11 7 Ceramic piece 8 Flnlal 9 Mulcted 10 Leveled 011 11 Adoration 12 By-end-by 13 -Royal or Blanc 2 1 Unconcealed 23 Roman po.t 25 Shower 26 Ale 28 Cal s-paws 29 - -lender be 30 Tympan 31 Collection 32 Love dftlly 33 Optical device 34 Wearl8S 37 Roved 38 Work pref 40 Club charges 41 We&Pon 43 Dulls 44 Iran dlatect 46 Mas ... 47 Sele - 48 Upright 49 N«Vous 50 Fields· UI 5t Fuel 52 Pride member 56 Hail• 57 Reain 10 11 12 13 16 19 • .. I . ' I .. i • I ' • f ,. by Bii Keane "This is my favorite place - inside your hug." MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson "Don't cry to me ... you're the one that volunteered to baby-sit them today." PEANUTS GARFIELD BIG GEORGE by Vlrgll Partch (VIP) -------.::a l fl - "No, he's not about to Improve his mind. He's looking for five bucks he stashed somewhere." DENNIS THE MENACE by Hank Ketcham 'SuRE rM SURE He·s LOST ... l HEARD ~EONE CALLING 14 1M~ 11 by Charles M. Schulz T!-4AT'S EASY' JUST DON'T GET OFF THE BUS ' by Jim Davis WMAi A NIGHT! 1 DREAMED GOOP MOR.NIN~,vARF'IELP. iHE HOU5f WA5 SORROONP£'1 WOOLP YOV LIKE TO GO OUT? BY A PACK OF VICIOUS IX>G5 '-----~ CMANTINC$/5ENP OLJT TME CAT! 5ENO 001.na: CA'f!'• TUMBLEWEEDS ~ DRABBLE o~o l ~AVE. A 00E.5TION ~v ROSE IS ROSE 1 7 by·Tom K. Ryan by Kevin Fagan by Pat Brady BLOOM COUltTY ~L~)«I 6IJ WI (N 111!J • f'lfl. U'f'$ 1MJ(.. MllN 1fJ !f)ffl.. I FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE JUDGE PARKER LJNAWAR.E THAT HER HUS6ANO IS AT THE HOSPITAL V191TIN6 THEIR DAU6HTER . HEATHER WARNER CALLS SAM AT HIS OFFICE I I KNOW THIS IS AN IMPOSITION, SAM . 6UT SINCE I CAN'T FINO HANK, COULD YOU MEET ME AT THE DOCTOR'S OFFtCE? I 'M NOT SURE I'M uP TO TAKtN<:i ANY MORE BAD NEWS ALONE 1 FUNKY WINKERBEAN DOONESBURY T.HAMl..JGV TNPl9.10 ~IR.I/Ill ' by 8ef1<e Breathed by Jim Davia by Jeff MacNally ~,~? I NEED A eet:r. by Harold Le Doux by Tom Batluk by Garry Trudeau \ Boris left little doubt Lendl whipped tn stra1 t sets by two-time ktngpl~ backhand volley while he tar. on the around. The victory '" the world s top grass-eourt tournament was wonh S 196,000 and made Becker the younaest player to reach the million-dollar career caminas tnark in ten ms. WIMBLEDON, EnaJand (AP) -West And once more, he stood at the end of the Germany's Boris Becker cranked his power · two weeks as the best player on pss. pme up another notch Sunday to defeat Ivan· ••All durina the tournament, I felt veryaood Lendt M, 6-3, 1-S and retain h11 tJtle in the out there. It seem a to be my court," Becker IOOth men's sin&lcs championship at said. Wimbledon. It also 11 Martina NavratJlova's court, Navratilova teamed wtlh Pam hriver lO take the women's doubles on unday before Arnericans Kathy Jordan and Ken Aadl defeated Navratilova and Sw1t7crland's Heinz Gunthardt (or the muted doubles crown. · Wimbledon this year was va&d by sunny s.lciei and warm temperatures. with rain o n JUSt two days. The fine weather helped the tournament set an attcndence record of 400,032, some 2,000 more than a year qo. princ:et1 bul to the -ll"lw~rry-ble>M nahl· hander from Leiman, West Ciermlfty, who this time beat Lcndl, the ~·· top.ranked pla~r. "This match had everyth1na," Becker wd, "the defendina champion apuist No. l. To win in three atraiabt is a pretty 1ood feeling.•• After he rece-ived tb.e Challenae Cup from Jean Borotra, the oldest livioa W imbledon champion, wbo captured the title in 1924 and 1926, Beeker chatied briefly Wlth the Duke and Ducbm of K.enL l.hc set KOreS would indac:eae. But _. he neCided it. he ... able 10 R*b bid b' ... 8C'let a airrvice winner or a vOQcy 10 ~-· a point. t.endl, the reilllina_U. <>Dea and F1'C11Cti Open champion m&ki.na h i1 Int appear_aooe in a WimblcdOD fieal. WOD OAI)' rune fcwa' poinu than Becker an the eattre tnatch. ~ when he walked otrtbe court u rwner-up. a,t IPJ>Clred \bat the U.year-dci Czcdl bid pined the admiration ud respect ol all. "A man, a youna man, a boy -whatever where on Saturday she captured her record- you want to call him, call him champion," tyin& fifth consecutive women's singles crown Lendl said of his 18-yeai:-old conqueror. and her seventh overall by defeating Czeehe>- It was a champ1onship performance in slovakia•s Hana Ma ndJikova 7-6, 6-3. every way by Beeker, who thrilled the crowd But her bid to become the first player since on Centre Coun with IS aces and, in the Billie Jean King in 1973 to WID three clinchina game, a spectacular cross-court Wimbledon titles in a single year fell short. Sunday's crowd of 19,807 IDcluded British Prime Minister Marpret Thatcher and West an President Rjchard von Wieuacker, nd thinas got so crowded in the Royal BoJt H!at more chairs had to be brouaht in. But the last day of Wimbledo n's IOOth edition belonae<S not to politicians and '"Tbcduchet.uaid, 'You'vewon ll two years 1n a row. Your ambition now is probably to win it five times like (Sweden's BJom) Borg.'•• Beeker said. "I said. 'See you in three years then ·" BCcker's victOry wasn't as ovcrpowenna as At the bcain.nina of tbt thitd ICt, die crowd aot behin.d f.endl, who hu ~er traveled Wida ) a larae fan club. T--sh.itu aupportina the '°P seed could be spotted ill tho ltaDdl ud two Jirts wol'e topuayina "Smile. Lendt:' 1 e&IJ fof h.im to break out of bis usu.al dour on-court appearance. Weat Germany•• Borla Becker holda hla .econd atralght winner'• trophy at Wim bledon aloft after hi• acrambllng efforta abut down IT&D Lendl (right) of Csecha.lo•akla. Rookie leads Dodgers Willson , Impact win Challenge Cup By ALMON LOCK.ABEY Delly .......... ...., And the bottom hne was that Impact did not cli nch the wm until the last weather leg when the wind piped up to 18-20 knots. LOS ANGELES (AP) -Jeff Hamtl- tol'I knows the Los Angeles Dodgers don't expect him to be another Bill Madlock. Not Just yet, anyway. Thc22·year-oki rookie has sufficient- ly pluued the defensive gap created when Madlock went on the disabled hst wnh a pulled grom. Tonlght'• game St. Louis (Forc,ch 6-5) at DodJer• (Pena 0-1) Time: s·os his defensive play 1s g1v1ng the Dodgers food for thought. "If you don't dnve 1n the run!>. }'OU have to ~ve them somehow," said Hamilton. who has only five hits an 30 big-league at-bats. but had a two-run homer washed out m Cincinnati last Tuesda) ''When )ou'rc not h1111ng, you have to concentrate on defense Defense wins more games The ancient San Francisco Perpetual Challenge Cup. oldest yachting trophy on the West Coast. will remain in the Balboa Yacht Club trophy case for another year. That was settled Sunday in a sudden-death handicap match race when Tom Willson and his BYC crew steered Ron Melville's Andrcws-39 Impact toa 15-second victory over St. Francis Yacht Club's Schumachcr-38 Wall Street Duck. skippered b't John Bcnrand. over a 19-mile course off Huntington Beach Wall Street Duck got the start but was soon overhauled by Impact who went on to a I :26 advantaic at the first weather mark.. Walll Street Duck sk.ipper John Bertrand aod crew gained two t;econds on the first rcachina lea,. Impact p10ed 22 seconds on the second downwmd leg. And while his offense has weak, he managed Sunday to collect his first pme-winnlDg RBI m the maJor leagues 1n a 4-3 victory over the Pittsburgh Pirates. "Right now it's just a matter offill1ng the spot while he's out and play hard every day,'1 said Hamilton. "I .. Just approach it as a short-term thmg. 'Tm j ust happy to get here r'm JUSt TV: None Radio. KA B( I 790) TUESDAY'S GAME St. Louis at Dodgers S 35 hoping with the expcnencc rm gelling under my belt now. maybe they'll bnng me up again m September" Hamilton knows he won'1 be around 1fand when the injury-plagued Dodger<; get all their playen health> again. hut Rick Honcycun. S-4. all()wed seven hits and all three runs in six innings for the VICtOry Ken Landreaux. who entered the game 1n the third inning as a p1nch- runner for inJured Franklin Stubbs. began the winning rally with a leadofT single against reliever Jim Winn. 1-1 The margin of victory does not tell the whole stor). Actually. Impact fin1sccl 3 minutes and 24 ~conds ahead of Wall Street Duck, but under the International Offshort Ruic handicap system had to give the San Francisco challenger about three minutes. nine seconds. Impact's lonaer waterline length paid off as the wand freshened and she increased her lead to over two minutes on the square run and picked up another minute on the final beat to the finish. The BYC crew wert skipper Will.son, Jeff Madngali, tactician; Dave Jo hnson, bowman: Rottr R1tzdorf. rnast; Ron Melville. owner. Keith KJlpatrick and Robin Sodaro. trimmers; Alan Andrews (designer) m am sheet, and Randy Nulle. grinder. .... .. Blue Jays get a double jolt "I • I Spaniards ~: use 8-8 tie for crown Angels· McCaskill puts the -cap on lost weekend for Jays TORONTO (AP) -The Toronto Blue Jays, JOited by the trading of veteran pitchers Doyle Alexander and Jim Acker, were happy to see the last of Kirk McCaskill and the Angels. as well On Sunday. McCaskill breezed through the depleted Blue Jays w11h a s1Jt-hitter an pitching his team to an 8-2 victory that enabled the Angels to pull w11h1n one-half game of fint- place Texas ID the Amencan League West. Toronto was reduced to a 21-man roster. Aleunder and Acker ""ere traded to A.tlanta while 1nficlden Damaso Garcia and Rance Mull1n1ks were out due to illness and a 'lore shoulder. respectively. Dennis Lamp. 2-S. normally .1 reliever, started ID place of Alexander and was charged with the Angels' first two runs. "I consider 1t a break (not to have faced Alexander)," said An~els Man- S•elyn Aahford win• 100. Tonlght'11 game Angels (Witt 9-o) at Milwaukee (Wegman 2-7) Time: S 35 pm TV. None Radio: KMP( (710) TUESDAY'S GAME Angels at Milwaukee. 5 l5 pm ager Gene Mauch. "He was alwa~s tough on us. But I think McCask11l would beat him He got 'iome strikeouts when he needed them with runners on base Most of the better pitchers can do that " McCasloll bree1ed through the first four mnmgs. setting the Blue Ja}s down in order He held them to three hits through eight inning\ before giv1Dg up a run and three hm in the ninth. "I got awa> from 11 a bit in the ninth." he said "I wanted to end the game quickly. I d1dn 't hear down and make the pitches I had been making earlier." hit a p1nlh-h1t thrce-run homer 1n 1he ninth McCa!>k11l, 9-5 finished w11h nine strikeouts in notching his sixth com- plete game and ..even th victory 1n his last eight decisions The An$els nicked Lamp, who was maklDg h1\ fir'it start since Jul} 4, 198 S. for a run 1n the first inning on singles b' Jae~ Howell and Rob ~ 1lfong around an infield out. Lamp wa' rclte\ed b> Mark Eichhorn ~hen Ruppert Jones doubled with one out in the fifth and Pcltls greeted him with an RBI double Joyner also doubled. giving the Angels a 3·0 lead. Toronto )Cored in the bottom oft he fifth on Jr<;se Rarfield's double and 11 remained l I until the Angels added fr, e rune, 1n the ninth off Stan Clarke iust rcralkd from the minors. Jone' ll·d oil with a single. went to <;econd on ( lark's balk and scored on a singk h} Pettis. After Joyner sacnficed. Reggie Jackson doubled to score Pcms and continued to third on second ha\eman Ganh lorg's throw- ing error Offensively McCaskill re~el\ cd suppon from Gary Pettis and Wall}' Joyner who had RBI doubles in the fiOh inning, and Bobby Gnch. wh0 Pinch hiller Doug DeC'inces grounded out and Brian Downing walked hcforc (1r1lh hit his thre-e-run ~~·· Wally J oyner'• •llde forceta ·Toronto'• Tony Ferna ndez to take to the air on the way to a double play ln Sun day' a game. homer · U.S., Soviets continue nose-to-nose MOSCOW (AP) -Female track and field stars Evelyn Ashford and Jackie Joyner, 'iw1mmcr Leslie Daland and basketball All-American C hcryl Miller all excelled Sunday to spur the United States' success 1n the Goodwill Games. For the second consecutive da), the United States and Soviet nion matched gold mcdAl'i ac; each na11on colleced six. 1nclud1n1 three apiece m track and field and sw1mm1na. After thrtt days of compct1t1on in these 1nauaural games. which cont1Duc until July 20. thl' ~v1ets lead the United State' 47 to 38 in total medals and 14 to 12 m gold'i However. the Amcncans arc making a tremendous impact m this cit}'. where the} °""rrc denied a chance to compete m the 1980 Olymp1c'I ~use of a boycott ordered h> President ( artt•r after the Sbv1et inva'i1on of A.lghanistan Ashford. who ~t tlut thr 1985 .ca~n to ha vr a child. clear!\ 'ihov.C'd her comehacle wa'i complete. edain·a Heike l>re'-h'>lcr of F..4\'t (1cr- many an the 100.meter da'ih, with both ~11nwn clockrd in a .. parkhng 10111 '\t"Cond\ Joyner. who set the Amc:nran rrrnrd in the ht'plathlon this year, established a world record for the first four events of the punishing ..even-event, two-day compcuuon with 4, I Ci I point\ Daland. thedaughtcrofU S c.w1mmingcoach Peter Daland claimed her ~ond gold medal ot the compct1t1on. l: .. ptunna the women's 1.500- meter freC'St}lt' 1n 16 15 88. a pcr<1onal hest Miller 1hc star of the I Q84 l \ 01\-mpic tx.skctball team that won the ~old m<."dal in Los Anacle ... scored 26 point'i. leading the undeteated ..\mencans to their ~1:ond \llton. QI 70 O\er Brn111. Thr Soviets produred \Oml· rc:markablc pt•rtormances a.swell. In tmck nnd field. Rohert fmm1yan bcrnmr onl} the "'"<th Ion& Jumper 1n h1c.tnl)· and tht· fil\h ~ 1thout the aid of wind -to \Urf>a" the ~II· 1001 mark \Oaring thn·1.· 1nt•ht'\ lunhrr lor a f 11 rnrx·a n r<'C"ord In mrn'<, <>v.1mming. v.mld·r1.•H1rd holdt•r \ lad1mu \alnikm Igor Pohan'>~' and \ Jd1m '\ arnshchuk each won their 'IC<'ond gold medal\ Sa ln1kov, who smashed h1\ world record in the 800 Fnda}. won impres<;1vcl}' in thl' I, CiOO fn.'C'il)lc in 15 10 87, while Polyanksy, winnl'r of th( 100 backstroke Saturday. added the 100 hal kstrokc to his gold medal collCC11on winning 1n Cjfi O:! a personal best 'Y aroshc huk. thr gold ml'dah\t m the 4001nd1v1dual medley Fnda)' took the :!00 ind1 v1d ual medic}' Ciunda) in :! 02 8' .\nd the c;o,.1ct women's basketball team al\O remamcd unbeaten. down ID& Yuao.,1a .. 1a () "\-51 tor m \Ceond '1ctol") The ~ ... 1ets and Amencan!> mee1 Thursday night 1n the final pmc of the round-robin basketball tournament A~hford. the world-record holder 1n the women'<. 100 at 10 76 and lhC' 1984 Olympic champ10n was slow out ol the hkH.:k.o; and appeared out of contcnuon again\\ the frontrunnina Drr~h\ll'r wllh at>ou1 'O mrtcr. rrma1n1n1 But 1hrn .\\hlord put on a trrm<"ndou\ bur.t of<.Pt"t'd ,,u.,. n th<' middle of tht' tr.11 k and 11utlcan~ th<' k" l'\Pt'n<'nced Orech,I<'• 11 th(' tape- U.S. poloistsdrop to second with tie atSixNationsfinal · SFVILLE. SPA.IN -The lessdn was given two summers ago when Yugoslavia grabbed the gold medal at the Los Angeles Olympics by virtue of an identical record wnh the Amencan wa1er polo team. mcludmg a tie m the final\. but with a better goal d1ffercn- t1al for the tournament Ciunda.,. 11 happened again at the Six 'lat1ons Tournament as the host Spantards battled to an 8-8 standoff v.1th the l ~ to claim the crown with an 1dent1cal 4-0-1 record. During the previous four games -with JQ84 Ohmp1c Games gold medali'\t \ ugoslav111. Greece. France and < anada. lipatn''i margin of 't IC- tol"\ "a" two goal'i better than that of the l n1ted tatc'i -thus the edae in ca<;(' nt a uc 1 n the \tandangs and m the pool It "a' the: final tuneup for ll 5 C oach Bill Bamett"s crew before this week., lOmpcllt1on 1n Moscov. at the <..rocld'W11l C.ame' and the verdict oOset a lour-goal cfTon b" 1984 C)hmp1an Doug Burke. .\l'\o 'iC'onng for the U.S were James Bergeson (twice) and Kevin Robcn'inn and Jod~ Campbell. The l I S 'inappcd a 4-4 pm~ at halft1mC With three aoals In the third quarter hl U'>ume 1 7-6 lead. Aft.er , C\pa1n 11ed 11 at 7 Burke cut loose with • his founh ao.il to IJVe the Amcncan thr lead. ..., pain hov.evl'r ralhed with 1·ss • left to ti(' I pmc which featured I 1 fh·c-on·fi\.e 'iituatmn ~1ncc the tee· I nnd quarter when M1kt Evans of the ' l l \ and a pamard were e1ected for ~ brutahty foul" • The schC'dult m Moscow find$ the l S open11lJ ~·1th Holland on ' \\ednt-~I). followed by pmC"I with Grttee (Thunday). Hungary ( f n - da\o) We\t ~rmany (. turda)") and th<' \a\ ll't l lnton C unday) Lasorda among National League All-Stars' stalf · ·Waltrip win• with o ld flame From AJ> dJ paCCkl NEW YORK -Manqers Tom ~ Luorda of the Los Anacles Dodgen and -Davey Johnson of the New York Mets were named coaches of the National League All-Star team Sunday by NL President Chub Feeney and All-Star Manaser Whitey Hen<>&. He~ mana,er of the defendina ltaiUe cham- pion Cardinals, will manqc the NL squad in the Hou ton Astrodome on Tuesday night, July I 5. The leaauc also announced that Hal Lanier, the ma1ll4Cr of tht' Astros and a former assistant of H~rzog's, will _patch battma practice. Herzog will bnng alona one of his coaches. Make Roarke as banana pract1Ct' catcher Johnson wdl be coaching an tht' All-Star pme for the first tame. He played for the Amencan Lequc an 1968. 1969 and 1970 and for the NL an 1973. W.Orda This year will be Lasorda's seventh All-Star appearance. He m;rnaged the 1978. 1979 and 1982 teams and coached 1 n 1977. 1983 and 1984. Meanwhile an the Amencan League. managers John McNamara of the Boston Red Sox and Pat Corrales of the Cleveland Indians will be the coaches at the All-Star game, according to AL President Dr. Bobby Brown. Quote of the day "I feel badl)' 1f any of my personal troubles this year brought an)' clouds over the clubhouse. I sensed that man)' of the: guy!. were In my comer and understood that after 20 years in the business 11 was imponant for me to get home to my family. I wall mass these ~U)'S a lot. There have been man)' good memones • -Boston Red Sox pitcher Tom Seaver, on the effects his presence ma) have had on bis former White Sox teammates. after being traded to the Boston Red Sox. Fourth straight for Ballesteros VERSAILLES. Franct' -Sevenano !I Ballesteros of Spain won has founh straight title on the European golf c1rcu1t Sunday with a two-stroke vactol) an the S 195.000 French Open Tournament The 29-year-old Spaniard shot a final-round 69 for a 269. The S3 I .000 first pnzt' boosted ha~ earnings to S226.000 after only eight event~. in which he has never placed lower than founh ·Vicente Fernandez of Argen11na had a final round 68 on the par-72 La Bou he course to fimsh second at 271 His runner-up ched. was wonh S20.60U West German Bernhard Langer posted a 68 Sunda) to take third place:a shot behind Fernandez. Langer v.on S 11 600 Nack Faldo of Bnta1n fired a 70 to finish 1n founh place al 274 He oocketed $9.300 - .. PRICE£ Costa Mesa Southwood loqu0< Harbor & Wilton Alb.f!Mnt Spwe't Horlxir & Ado"" Harbor & C..1t.r Alpha a.ta Stater lrothen 17.+. & ~o<>to llnn 27nd&Newport Horbar & W1l;l')n l 9!11 & Pomona lob't ~ loy The f'ontry 17.+. Fullerton Foir•11eW & Boket l vclt"a Uqu"' Thu~y folf~••"" & lok•r Harbor & Fo" Olarti.• t Chill U S l'Mt Offico N•wfh.rt & lllb•rt Harbor & Adom1 CI/ S h0<m0<y 2 ioo foorv,.w Harbor & i 9th Vitia OruJ' • Cwcle IC 19'11 & iac..,ho Harbor & W1l;on Von• i 6~4 .,,,,,,a Ano 17.+.&CX~ N•wport & 0.1 Mn• Coco• Corona del Mar Horbo• & Adon•1; Wo .. cl1ff & N•""P'>" AlbettMn't Oo~l'ilot 1049 E Coo1t Hwy 3 ow ao, "'' Denny t Arturo'• Toiler Shop 1~i E Coa•t H'"'l' Horbo• & C.••'•• C..Co • t 7.+. & ~~wpr,rt f.,..,..,,, l1klnd Otpptly O.nul 130~ f Cao•• H'"'l' New~ & ll•ood"'"Y 1440 E C001t H~ U·lnn uer '(M7 M0<Af1!\ur vd 19111 & full•rtM El IC1nche Htl~ton loqu• Eu•• &lutf 0.1 Sol 50 ., ... Ge!Mnt Ht· Time IJqvOf Son M1~I Son Jooqu1n i 1.+. & ,,.,,,.. G..d IEClfl Huf ..... 11 •ancho Fath'°" hlo<>d ,.., & 1 ... ,,,,_ Guild 0.1191 liquor Mo#t Son~· & s..n '°"'l"'" i91h'~•o••'> "°'•r Uqu• long 1 Or119• I 7.+. & 0r0fl9• 793 f Coot! Hwy K•kerllqv• luclry MoAett '12'19f Coo••H...., Harbor & V1t10••u Mo lofk«'I Mamo I 11it. & 'ulf.rtM Newport Center NewpertOf Inn N\Qf'lno L.14111er JomborM/b~ lloy 19"1 A ""'"'""'" Mlllor't Ovlfl'"I • Ornele'• Uquer St0<e ( oo•t H:l & 0.thtd 17ftl&Ot~ f'ocrflc ••n« Motltet Mlnuto ICln\ 3347 f Coo" Hwy ........ po,, tiny ,.uffln1 Mf ••• loquer '/10'2 f (-··Hwy f 01rv,.w A. A•<>Codo •alf.h' ,,..,m't Hnrbof I. v., to••a on Romwy & Son M!Q'.••• •Cln<htle l'J ·~ .... ""'~ & Newport 19"1 'o-• Reaoll~l ··r::· f Ott ""c>H Doi Sol ,.., ',.,,,.,. us , .. , ote lond .. Market HOO COOlt H-, ~,, I. Santo 1 .. .t.et Zweb« ""9tmocy -7 ....._., 1301 f C00tt H....,. H11rbor I. G.ti.r H...t.61 & ~ta y,.,dfi f'lor-& VOC"to•~ Laguna Beach l'loceMIO & S\lpet.o< 1673i.-• A"'-tMn' W11toft& ,.,.,,.,..,.. 100 S C.-t H""l' w. • .., Alpholoto H~&WOf (,.,_ Vnlley & N19u<11t •Con N fNN:floUtrl,,. 110n• Oarn1J Walerlp, drivina a car that bas .. bad many facchf\s 1n a d de of racina. won · NASCA R's nm Busch Grand Na· tion•I Senes road race Sunday. "That car is 10 ytan old. I won the fint race I ever drove an and bo~fully 1'11 wan the last It's been a {Chcvn?ltt) Nova, a Buick, an Olds. and now 1t'sa Ponuac," said Waltrip. Wahrip posted an averqe speed of 82.079 mph to finish 9. S seconds ahe d of pofe~si ner Terry Labonte .. • In Oeveland, Duny S.lllvH was able to overcome oppressive hc~t and humidity and a stop-.and-ao penalty to 'Wln the Cleveland Grand Prix lndy<ar race, his second stt1iaht rccord-seuana victory ... In Le C~stellet, France, Bntaan 's Nl1el MuteU in a Wiltiams- Honda won tho French Grand Prix, his third victory this year. beatana world champion Alain Pro1t of France in a t.act1cal tire and fuel battle on a treacherously slippery track . . . Jn Barstow, ft.ob MacCacllree of La~ Vegas scored a narrow victory an the I Sth annual Fireworks 2SO off-road race. The 21- year-old dnver piloted his Porsche-powered C'henowth smale-scater to an overall elapsed time of 4 hours, 54 minutes over the thrt'C lap~ around the aruelmg 77-mile MoJave Dcscn course U.S. squad rips China , 107-81 MALAGA. Spain -Kenny Smith of m Nonh Carolina scored 23 points Sunday to lead the United States to a 107-81 romp over Chana an a first-round game of the men·s World Basketball Championslups. Smith and Anzona guard Steve Kerr combined to hat eaght of 10 three-point shots as the United States, 99-63 wanne~ over Ivory Coast on Saturday, won its second a.ame 1n as many stans. Chana is 0-2 The United States makes its next s~ tonight apinst West Germany. which at 2-0sharcs first place an Group C wath the Americans. West Germany beat Ivory Coast 88-70 on Sunday. "It takes a while to get used to the threc-pomt play." said American Coach Lute Olson of Anzona a former M~rina Haah coach. "We have people like Kenny Smith and Kerr who can shoot the thret'-pomt goal wtth ease." Television, radio TELEVISION Noon -GOODWILL GAMES: Men's basketball (from Spam), swimming. track and field. women's volleyball (3 hours). from Mos- cow, Channel 5. 6 p m -BASEBALL. Oakland at Boston (dela)'ed). (hannel 7 7 pm -GOODWILL GAMES: Sw1mm1ng. basketball. women's volleyball. track and field (3 hours. delayed), from Moscow. Channel 5 7·30 p.m -HORSE RACING· Holl}'wood Park results. Channel 56. 10 p.m -MOTOR SPORTS: Speedway Amenca. Channel 56 11 ·30 p.m -GOODWILL GAMES: High- hghts (I hour). Channel 5. RADIO 5 p.m -BASEBALL S1. Louis al Dodgers. KABC'(790) 5·35 pm -BASEBALL ~ngels at Mil waukee, KMPC (710) TUES DA V'S TELEVISION Noon -GOODW1LL GAMES· From Mo~­ cow (3 hou~). Channel 5. TOMORROW'S RESULTS TONIGHT Orange County's only stoclc marlcet closing prices will be available in the Daily Pilot at the following seleded stores and news raclcs . I ' ' Why wait until tomouow when you ~an find out tonight on the street no later than 6:00 pm. Store owners who want the late stock editions call ... Single Copy Soles Diredor at 642-4321. loot Loqu0< 600 N Coou H""Y •-dway loqu0< Orugg,.t Alg0ft9u•n & Oovenport El •ancho Market 778 llroodwoy Algongulfl & 0o ... 11pon lu1hord l'ha<macy HI lndepend.nt 1.&.& fo,,•t• &.och & Talbert 0fClelC Jon'• •ottauronl i 390 N Coo1t Hwy BolMJ Ch1<a & H&il luck~Mo<htt liqu0< lorn '1 .& t Alli<O Magnolia & Adom1 Mona<ch Drue• Llqu0tllqu0< S Coo11 Hwy & ( """"' GoldenW9'1 & WorflO• Valley lucky Markoh ... fl:iu0< &ol"' Chtco & Heil 331 halm Atlanta & Mognolla 7-(lo.,,.n Mt 8 loqu0< )rd & Coo1t Hwt WarMr & Poc1f., Ca0tt Sp.,,ot loquer Hwy •orl & S Coo1t Hwy •a~• U S l'ott Offico ldenwe\I & Warne• forr•1t & fteo<h Mo Gato loquor l/endom1 &olWJ Ct"<O & Wor,..r I own Cont.t & ~i111uel • 7-Uoven ViKo9e °'"' Goldenwe1t & Mcfodct.f• ht A,.. & Coo11 H'"'l' SunrlM loquOf &tookhvf\t & Hamilton Newport Beach US f'ott Offko 67 41 -Homer ..,., • Ovt,,..t 9"' & Pa<,f< Coot• Hwy P0<ofl( C:00tt llwy & .t.tl,,..t<1 & Mo9"0l.O ao~""tl Club V.nt Sprot1gdolt & f d111Q9r Poc1f1c °""Hwy Wa<n• C..O.ner Liqv.r lolttoo , ... .,_, w,,,,.., .\ '\pttngdnl• Moon ' llolboo &l"rl lolHa•bo< loqu0< &olboo &lvd & A 9ute Irvine lo~Llquet O<tfl< C OOtl Hwy .\ ... ,..,. Hetol Sue• ~·· et Mo.Arthur & Oupc>nt Albenaen'• 8olboo &lvd & t St+. St C.om,C" & C.or,..11 O.H\cfe. 11 ()() w l'or1f1< < 001t Hwy Alpha to Culver A M1<h•I~ • Hvri ..... Morlo•t Coco'• ldo ltlrind C011\pu1 & MocArltlut ·U4ea-lit ,..,,.. 1"•4' Yale ltdo ltlond Jnmbor" & 1<11tol Mlnvto Kine El •oncho Mottet f'ICl'enl>o & ""P'!''°' Un1vet1t'Y & .Mo<hefM>f' Sofowoy J.hn w...,... Atr~ '°Y'•de & JOfllbor H MO#t f.,m..,ol • 7-llo.,.n loqu•SI°" llolbo4 tl..cl & 2°"' St ~-nUqv.r Mt<helt6n & u,,,,..,...., lr.-&Mota 31 ti ' toll>-...... ludiy Mertroh 2·W~ot Woln.it & J.ttery tolban aMf ' l•lot>d ,.,,_,.. I( "'9 us .... ,OHlc. Irv-& S."IOI .,,,., ... & f'oc1f1t (M•I .... 1 ....... ~-Hwy 1.-&MHG Mot.no A_ l..,lbon h I s..o .. Cul¥or & Wnlnvt Huntington Beach ~ ..... .. rcto I Mo<A.....,, Aftiort-'t U I l' .. 10ff1«ie Oo~&w,,.,.., No((-& .Mvrptly .. ~!Iv,,.' ""°"'' v .... ......... IO<r....ca & c,..~ lr_.,.hv,,. & Hnm1llttfl ,,_,_ 11-;d & y ol• ---...... --_· ----. .,,,_~~-- O'Grady gets first tour win CROMWELL. Conn. (AP) -A count-record 62 Sunday wasn't enou&h for Mac O'Grady's first career PGA lour victory He needed a onc- hole playoff. SUGAR LAND, Tells (AP) - Amy Aloott ran in a Iona birdie putt on the first playoffhole to btat Lauren Howe and win tbe S300,000 LPOA Mazda Hall of fame Champion1hh> at Sweetwater Country Oub Sunday. Alcott, who' challenpd in the final round before losina to Nancy Lopez. in last year·s tournament, held on this )'eat for her 2.Sth carecr victory and first of 1986. O'Grody, who is playin' while appealina a six-week suspcns1on and SS,000 fine by POA Tour Com· missioner Deane Beman. missed a four-foot birdie putt on the playoff hole but Roaer Maltbie massed an even shorter pull for par to gave O'Grady lhe S 126,000 flrit prize an the $700,000 Canon-Sammy Davis Jr -Greater Hartford Open. Mac O'Orady blntl•. Alcott's victory aave her at least one victory in each of her 12 years on the LPGA Tour. Howe, overcomin& a senes 'of 1njune1 and ailments, char&ed into co ntentJOn with a final-round 68 but couldn't sustain the momentum on the first playoff hole, the par-3, 188- yard 16th hole. "There arc tames when you spread your winas and )'our molecules nse ha~er than they ever have before," 0 Grady, who needed 17 attempts before finally quahfymg for the PGA Tour, said. O'Grady has been embroiled an a runmn& feud with Beman since the 1984 USF&G Classic in New Orleans when O'Grady alleaedly verbally abused a tournament worker. "For the dn:amers of the world, the people who'~ sp1nt$ have been fraamentcd along the yellow bnck road. this 1s a day I share with them." O'Grady p~scntcd his case last week to a three-member appeal board at the Canad1an Open and a decision 1s expected soon. ··rm not hCTC to snck it to the PGA Tour or arind any axes," O'Grady said. ..It's just that they've been anconsastent in applying their regu- lations. We'll just have to wait und see what the decision wilt be." Alcott's tee shot on the playofTbole rolled toward the cd&t of the areeo and Howe, wbo had rut firtt, landed an the frin&t. Howe, chipped to within a few feet of the hole. "The sun 1s stall goma to shine and m)' wife 1s stall gomg to love me," Maltbie said. "I got beat by a 62. why should I be ashamed of that." Alcott then s~pped up and sank only her third birdie of the day to end the weather-delayed tournament. Despite temperatures an the mad-90s with 75 percent humidity. O'Grady finished with an eaale. el&ht birdies and one bogey for a I 5-un<fer- par 269 1otal on the par-7 I. 6, 786- yard Tournament Players Club of Connecucut course "Playing on the tour comes down to being lake a test pilot on the X-15," O'Grad>-said of the experimental rocket plane "You have to perform, )'OU have to be adaptable." The former C'onnectacut TPC' re- cord of 63 was set by Peter Jacobsen and.Laguna Hills' Mark O'Meara in 1984 and matched by David Lundstrom in 1985. The Greater Hartford Open moved to the TPC from the Wethersfield Country Oub three years ago. Maltbie started the day at 10 under and had six birdies and one bogey for Alcott missed a birdje pun on No. 17 that would have ~veo her the lead and finished rqulallon play with her second straight par round of 72 and a 4-under-par 284 total alona with Howe. Howe made the biggest charae. starting the day at even par. She caught Alcott W1th a birdie on No. 17 but mas5Cd a birdie putt at No. 18 that lefl her with a 4-under-par 68 for the day. a finaJ-round 6~ lnrlne Marriott boi:J.JJI card The 0a~1d Hill Fight for the Handicapped leatunng I' amalt'ur bo"ng bouu. will be held \unda) from 2·5 pm at the lrvineMamott Hotel Hill a tight end for the Los Angeles Rams will be JOined b) teammates Enc Dickerson. LeRoy Ir' tn Norwwod Vann and Doug Reed and oaht'r notablt' boxing name~ al the C\'Cnt, whoSt' pro\eed\ will benefit the Carl Harvc) School for the Orthopcd1call1 Handicapped in Santa Ana < urrcnt and former bow\g greats Carlm Palomino. Dann~ "L11tle Red" Lopez. 1984 01) mpic champion' Paul Gonzales and Hcnl') Tillman Mando Ramos. Alberto Davila. Carl Harve) and Hector LopcL will also be on hand Door pnzes including au1ographed Rams' loolballs 1tcli;et\ for ..elected Lakers and Krnp' games and dinner theater pas5.('S will also be g1,ena11oa\ Ttlket\ priced at SIO S.W and SH arr <I\ a1lable b) phonmg 241 -64)5 Team Cup volleyball on ••Y Men'$ l98401ymrt('\;Olleyballaold medaltm )l..Jrch Kiral) Pau Sunderland. Craig Buck \tc'e T1mmon~ (former Newport Harbor H1t1h \tan and Ou\ty Dvorak (former Laguna Beach H1t1h \landoul) will he among the top com· pc111on 1n the Team (up Volleyball sent'' ~hcdulcd for Tuesday. Jul) 22. through \\.edne'\day August b, at the Forum in ln- gle"ood T hl' four team l0mpc1111on will hold doublt'· hradc1 ~ on 1he n1gha of Jul} ll, 2 3 JO. JI and \u&u\t \and bat the Forum c">ther top \tar. 1n the ce>-<d lcaguc include \ing1n ~m11h Rtlct Luyue1, Pat Powcn, Mtl.<' Dodd Dale Keough (former Corona del Mar lh&h \larlcl). "'ma Manh1es Laun:I Bras~y i...c\'ICll and R 11a \rock ell. a member of the.-11184 I \ "omen's Olympic s1l\;er medalist T tl ket\ are on \ale at the Forum Box Office.- and at all T 1cke1mutcr loca11ons. or <"an he ordC'red h) phonmg 12 I 3) 4KO· '1.32 Beneflt pro ba•ketb•ll 1ame 'll \ \lJI\ 1ndud1 ng Larr; Bird h1ah I homi.I' I >um1n1qut' W1lk1ns and man'< other\ "'•II 1oin h11,11ng l.akrr\ guard Magic Johnson 1n ,, tx·nl"11i ha\lo.t'thall gamr for 1hc l n11cd Negrn c ullcgr Jund \unda). Au~ 10 at 7 "\()pm al I C I \' Paulr~ Pavilion Othn pla;c·r~ slated to at1l•nd arc Ralph \,1mf)\on. ~.trk i\gu1rre < harlr\ Barkle). B)n>rt \lllll ~fa had ( •>Opcr Rcl!it<' T heu\ C I) de I >1nkr Rol Jndn Blackman (ht" Mullin l\1k1 -.. .indl'11oeahr Herh W1ll1.im' 'lpud '-"<'hh ancl l<.urt Rambt\ r 11 kC'I\ arr 110~ on Yk at the: l C LA ( en11al I or kc I Offat: and .u all T tl keama\tcr locatmm \ blalk ltl' dinner "'II al\o br held the night prt:lt'Cdina the pmc .11 thl' < cntuf) Plaza Ho1el w11h all pnxeed\ &otng 10 the l n11ed Negro C olle&e fund Bod,..urfllJI cluunploaUJ~ The 10th annual World Bodysurfin& Cham- p1onsh1~. schtdukd for Fnday throu&h Sun- da) ~ua 22-24 1n Oceanside. a~ acccpuna entrant~ unul Fnday, Au& 8 The thrtt-dar 1ma1eur evenl. which will leaturc S 10.000 1n pnzes .• viii have compc1111on 1n nine men·s catcaoncs and two women's ra!Cgonrs. Troph1n will &o 10 ahe top six in each age bracket and a 5pcc11I trophy and prizes will be awarded 10 1he arand champt0n. The event i~ tent.ahvely SCh«.!duled for 1he OccanStde Municipal P1rr. bul may be mo,ed to the sou1h harbor JCll) Entl') fee ts SS and and entl') blanks ma) be ob1a1ned b} phonina 1619) 433-2520 or (619) 439. 7370 Bant.am•eltb t boi:lag a t Forum Franktc Duartr 08·6-I) w1IT' mttt unbeatrn Jt\us Salud (20-0) for thr S50,000 first pmr in the final of the Siroh's Bantamwr1gh1 Tour· nament Thursda) a1 the 1hl' Forum in ln- &Jrwood "l'o on the evening's card will bc a hravyweiahl battle between LarT) Ale'lander (27-10) and Eric Curry ( 12· I).· Aleunder has already beaten defendin& ~iroh's champion Stan Ward by knockout m the toumament and Curry decmoncd Cahfom1a hl'avywe1gh1 champ I)ee C:-olher 1n earl\'·round actton · In other lt&111we1ght eltm1na11on bouas. Afncan champion Sam Ago Kole) ( 15-0-1) will lace Chris Calvm (20-4-2) and Shrtdon LeBlanc ( 19-2) will take on Manuel Batista (24-2) Body•u.rfl.al cbamplon•lllp Re11st,..uon ts now being accepted for 1hr r111hth annual Carlsbad Parks and Recreation Department's Bodysurfin& Champ1onsh1p scheduled for Saturday and Sunda> Aug. 9-IOai Carlsbad S1ate Beach A&e aroup compclltion will be hrld for both men and women be11.1nn1ng al 7 a m Au& 9 Re11strat1on forms are available at San Die.Jo County surf shops, at ahe Harding Commun11y Center in Carlsbad or by calhn& 1hc City of ( arlsbad's Adult Spons Office at (619) 438·SS88 Form~ may be r('lumtd tn pcrwo 10 the Hardina Community Center, 3096 Hardin.a 'itrcet. from 8 a.m 10 4 pm Monday through Fnday or by mail to the City of Carlsbad Parks and Recreation Depanmena c/o Bodysurlinii Champ1onsh1ps 1200 Elm l\ve Carlsbad. 92008 . Fees are SIO with T·sh1rl anc.l SIO without Penn nipped at Henley HENLEY-ON-THAM ES, cn1land (AP)-Two titles for the United States at the world's most famous rowa na event, the Henley Royal Rcptta, helped atone for defeats an the final of the two leadina events for caahts Sunday . Complete Racing Coverage Entries, Handicaps & Results The vactones. an the Double Sculls (. hallengc Cup and the Wyfold t hallengc Cup for fours both were achat'ved by the Charles River Row- 1n,1 Auoc1at1on or Boston Both wann1n1 boats conuuned members of the tJ S hahtwtalht ,qu <.I Henley 1986 may he better re· mtmhcred, howt"er, for the trcmcn- dow~ rt<'C that saw the Unavenaty of Pcnntylvanaa narrowly dc(cated in 1he final of the f'tlltta's premier In th~ the Harvard Un1\lert1ty frc,hmen I . 1•11 P1•1at event, ThcGr11ndCh llcnacCup.and lo,.na a maan1ficent struqlc an the -----------'I l.ad1C'\ (hallenac.-Plote final ' h "t .. Red Sox make Se&.ver a winner a SulliVan 's 3-run homer gives him 308; - Rangers slip, lead pared half game-. - mm u dhpa1c1tet B.OSTON -Tom Seaver. maluna h_..-aecond appearance for Boston, pitched seven solid innllla,s and won the 30~th prne of'-h is career Sunday allowina four hits and an unearned run as the Red Sox defeated the Seattle Mannm 7-3. Tbe ~l:}'car-old Seaver, acquired from the Cb1c.qo White Sox on June 29, allowed four hits and one un- earned run 1n seven in01nas. Seaver, 2..() with Boston and 4-6 overall, had to sweat out the victory when Seat- tle's Jim PresJey hit a two-run homer, his I 8th, off Joe Sambtto tn the eiahth inning to make it 4-3. However, Boston's Marc Sullivan htt his fi rst home run of the seaso11 m tl)e bottom of the ei&hth with two t'Unners on base and Bob Stanley recorded his I 4th save. Loser Mark Lanaston, 9-6. was locked ina l-1 tiewithSeaverandhad retired 12 banen in a row when be walked rookie Rey Quinones, batting Just over .200. on four pitches to start the sixth. The Red Sox went on to score twice on just one hit. Quinones went to second on Marty Bamtt's sinJ)e and Wade Boggs, the major leaaues' leadin1 hitter, sacn- fic:ed, loading the bases when Lanaston 's throw to third wa~ too late to get Quinones. Jim Rice waHced on four p11chc'I. forcing home Quinones with the t1e- brcaldn' run. Another run scored when third baseman Presley fumbled Don Baylor's grounder for an error and Tony Armas made It 4-1 in the seventh, hilling has foun h home run of the season and has first 1n Boston since April 22 Langston surrendered a run in the first inning when Barrett si ngled, stoic second, took third on an infield out and scored on Rice's single. The Manners tied the score in the fifih on singles by Spike Owen and Harold Reynolds. a field ing error by center fielder Armas and a sacnfice lly b)' John Moses. * Aecl Sox 7, Mll'!Mn l HATTI.If • , BOSTON Mo~•cf PBredl" H Pr"l9v lo Ptlt!Pt lb Trlallll rl SBr.oi.v c OHtdtndll 0w9fl u Rtvnlch 211 RNtl•n p11 Tttalt nrlllll l 0 I l Berr•ll 1b • ll 0 86Q91lb • 1 l 2 Stepltn lb l 0 l 0 Rkt If l O O O Bevlof dfl • 0 O 0 OwE vnt r1 • 0 1 0 ArmH ct • l l O Roml~ ct l 0 l 0 Sulllv•n c l 0 O O Ovlnont u ll l 1 l Tet911 k-"" ""'*"" lb r II Ill ) 2 , 0 , 0 0 0 • 0 0 0 ) 0 1 2 • 1 1 1 • 0 0 0 l 1 I 1 0 1 0 0 • 1 1 ) ) 1 0 0 )0 1 • 1 ** oao 010 010-J a..-100 001 lJa -7 <ieme w1nn1no R81 -Rice 111 E-S8r.oitv Armet Pr81!tv Berrett OP-Suttle 2 L08-Sffllle 6 Bo\lon S HR~v 1111 Armet «•I Sullivan llJ S--8ooot SF-Mo~ S.."'9 Leno.ion L.9·6 • 8"Nrl Senar W.4·4 1 SemOlto 2 J BStanlev S I• I 1 l PB-S Brad'-¥ U"'91r81-Homt. VOl800IO !>«one!, Jollnson, Thtro McCov T-14l A-27.62S 1 0 \ 2 2 I 0 0 0 0 I A'•8, Bre.-enS MILWAUKEE -The Oakland A's came throu&h with a rare victory toaet the staae tor new ManaaerTony LaRussa. ThesJumpmaA'i, who have lost 25 or their la.st 31 pmcs, defeated the Milwaukee Brewers 6-3 Sunday be- hind the pnchina of Jo~ RiJo. who broke a fi ve.game per10nal losina streak. Jeff Newman, interim manager whale wa1tm1 for laRusu to take over, sud he felt aood about the victory except for one th.tna.. "I wash I could have ~ven htm eiaht in a row instead of JUSt one," Newman said. LARussa. hired last week to succeed the fired Jackie Moore, missed the three-pme series apmst the Brewers, intending to join the A's today. Sunday's victory broke a seven· game Oakland losina streak. ''I'll be glad when it's over, ror lhc team's sake," said Newman, who had a 2-8 record as mtenm manager. "Now we'll start a new era under Tony. I'll do everything I can to help him win." LaRussa, fi red this year from his ( h1cago Wh ite Sox manll$cnal post. wi ll bnng with ham longtime fnend and pitching coach Dave Duncan Wes Stock. the A's pitching coach under Moore, lef\ midway through Sunday's game for his Washington state home. He was expected to stay in the A's organiu uon RIJO, a 21-year-<>ld nght-hander, gave up three runs m the third innmg. then settled down until the Brewers threatened in the ninth Four Oak- land runs in the '.ICve nth made the score 6-3. 1 "It was tough beca use of the heat (a humid 86 .degrees at game time). It was so hot warming up 1n the bullpen, I was feeling weak by the third 1nn1ng," said RIJO, 3· 7, who usuall) depends on his fastball. OAIU.ANO ?Miii>\ 2b MOavl' rf Lenllrd lo Cen~o I ttno""' Oil aoc"'' lb Mur!>llv cf Je"er cf Grtttln n w 111ero c * A'• ,, Brewen J alH 11111 ) I I I • 0 0 0 • 1 1 1 • I 1 0 4 0 0 I • I I 0 • 1 I I 0 0 0 0 4 1 I 1 ) 0 0 0 Mii.WAUKEE F e104tr If CMoorec Yovntct OollVlt Ol'I Rlle1U Mennno rt Sveum lo Schroor lb JCetllM 2b ROOIOX Ofl Wt11mnor l4 6 1 S T~ k _llV ........ eb r II Ill s 0 0 0 4 0 1 I • 0 0 0 • 0 0 0 ) 0 1 0 4 0 I 0 • 1 l 0 4 1 , 0 l I 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1S ) ' l Oaklencl Oii JOO 400-• Mlw•ulrM Oil oao oao-J <iemt Wlnmno R 81 -Griffin Il l L08--0eklanCI , MllwelikM 1 28 S.Cllroedtr Rtlt\ 38-J CHllllO SB-CMoort I SI Muronv (21 Griffin 2 I 1t1 Ph<ll•os 1111 I~ H Ill Elll aa SO Oelrlaftel Rlto w 3·1 Ontiveros S. 7 12)9 ))1 1)0000 ww.~ .. l H rvL 6 I ?i.,ec Ci.er PB--CMoore 6 1 ) • • • 1 ) ) 1 0 1 0 0 0 Umo.r••-Homa Rot F1f\I S.COllCI Brtmf04n, T111ro 8e rnel1 T-234 A-169n I l 0 I 0 , Horner belts four hoITiers He joins select list: But Expos get last laugh in I 1-8 win From AP dispatches A TLANT .\ -Bob I lorner of lhc ~tlanta Bra' es became the I I th player in maJor-league history to h11 fo ur homers in a game Sunday. over five al-bats against the Montreal Ellpos The Bra ves s1ill los1 the game 11-8 Homer, who raised his c;eac;on total to 17 homer<i. hat solo homer; m the second, founh and nan th innings, and a three-run homer in the fifth. He fouled out to tint an the 'lt'venth 10n1ng after the fi rst three homers. The last man to hit four homers in a pme was Ph 1ladclph1a'41 M1kl' Schm1dtatCh1cagoon Apnl 17. 1976. in a I ()..inning game. fhe lut man to hat four 1n a nine-inning game Wt\) San Franc1sco'c; W1 1l1e May\ at Mii waukce on April 10. 1961 . Homer had never before hi t more than two homer~ in a game, though he had done that 18 times "In my wildest dream~ I would neve r have c~pectcd to do an)'thmg like that." Horner ~1d "I h;id a good w~k today" "The home run p1tchec; were a fastball. two breaking balls and a fastball," Homer u 1d. "It'\ Just on1· of tho~ thin11 th3t happrn~ und you can't explain 1t I certainly don't t~pect that to hApfX'n again anytime soon " The fint homt'r, leadina ofT tht• ~cond, went ovtr the lef\-field fenn· It came on a I ·2 nuch trom hpm "an cr Andy Mc<iaffigan and guvr the Braves a 1-0 lead. McGaffiaan also gave up the <.e' • ond. a shot to deep left-<:cnter on a fir"t patch after Mc<iaffig.an had "ru<"k out Ken Ob(rkft'll and [)~k Murphy to open tht' 1nnm1 t Ii~ third homer C'lme with th e count full It went to let) nnd scort'<.I two runne". It camt' off naht-handcd reliever Tim Rurl e and cu t the Brave,. deficit to 10.7 the final homer l'lm~ on Montrt'll relief ace Jeff Rein.Ion 1n the ninth Bob Homer accepta a hlah- five after htttlDi the fint of hi• four home run• Sunday. 1nning. with the Braves down to the1r laM out Homer hat Reardon·~ lir\t Piil h over th(' left-center field f<'nn: * liXPOI n, 8r1"" I MONTllaAL A Tl.ANT A W.O•ltf H Wright Cf Oew\O!'t rf Broolu u Wetlech lb <ielerru lb Krnch< lb RH rOOfl o Fll•WIO c N.-mn71> McGttuno llu••• P l aw lb ab t II lM ' , ~ , 6 I 2 I 6 I 2 1 s 0 , 0 , , 0 0 , 0 0 0 I 0 I 0 0 0 0 0 ) ) I 2 . ) , , 1 0 I I 1 000 I 0 0 0 Mo<eno rf Slmmn•lb 00..kfl 30 Mvrl>llv cl Horn« lb <irlttev If ATllOt'I\' u V<rOllC HvllOrO 1b Cllmblt t>h v l rMr D ZStnltll o 0..smc>np Semo«e Dfl Atnmchr o Remlrr rt ebrllbl • 0 ' 0 I 0 0 0 S 1 • I s 0 0 0 s ••• s 0 1 1 4 0 I 0 • 1 I 0 ) I I 0 0000 0 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 0 I 0 0 I 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 Jt 11 "II T.-.. s.c-i.v..__ ,. I 14 I Mefttnel otl * 1•-11 A .. Ma l lt IM Oii-• Game w1nn•"9 ital -WfOJltf 161 E ~lt><ntt Welle<h OP-Monlru l 2. Allente 1 L08 Monlrffl 10 Allalltl 6 111-0ew\On Web•ltf Fllllltf'eld WrlQlll 8 rOOI<•. VltU•I ~l11tio.rll Kranclllc"-1 HR-Ht><,,., • 1111. Mtw men CI) Oewwn 1111 Wt lhlet (SI SD-W.Otlar U?l Grltttv Ill ~ McG1ttk11n Ote1mon t<rancfllc kl ,,........... Mc<ittv.n 8UfU W 6 2 lteatdon S,lt A..- 1.-M Ill KR ea SO ., J • 11 ) 4 12 ) 1 1 • 0 0 I I 0 1 0 ZSmitll L 1 t • I I 1 I Ot-4 1 1 I 1 Aunmtl" 1 1 I l I Gerl>« 1 1 o O o o U•n1111 1>1tc"4d •o • bell•n 1n tn. Siii HOP G11<1rreoe 111v O•Ol'Nlflt, rt11oera10 10• Oedf"IOfll 11'1 Vlrtll UIT'Dittl-Homt Po<>tlnn flf\I G•t9t ~ Of'd Devi\ TN•O Herve" T-J Ott A 11 I,_) Iadlan• 8, R0781aO CLEVELAND -Tom Candfolti patched a four-tuner u the Cleveland lod1ans won their seventh con· i«utive pme and handed K.anaas City a clu~record ninth oon$C'JCUtJve defeat, beatinJ the Royala. The Royals sutfered eiaht-same losmastteaksin 1971, l974and 1980. Tbeir current IC>-tame losina streak on the road also 11 the lol\pt tn club history. The Royals ended lbe road tnp()..9. C.tndiolU. 7-6, struck out four and walked rour in pitchina his ~nd shutoul of the season. The knuckle- baller has seven complete pmes, accounting for all his victories. Kansas City's Denn11 Leonard.6-8, we nt 7 t-3 inninp and was charaed with aJI the Cleveland runs 1n sufTer- ina his fourth stra1$ht setback.. Leonard walked Tony Bemazard with one out in the bottom of the third inning. Bcmazard stole second and took lh1rd when Julio Franco lined a sinaJe off Leonard's left fooL One out later, Andre Thornton smaJcd for his I 0th RBI in the last four pmcs. The Indians made 11 2-0 in the sttventh when Chri s Bando singled with two out and scored on Bcmazard's douhle and wrapped 1t up wi th th~ runs in the eighth. Joe Carter led off w1lh a sin&)e and 'tole second. One out later, Mel Hall was intentionally walked and Pat Tabler's single ga ve Cleveland a 3-0 lead. Dan Quisenberry rcheved Leonard and was greeted with RBI singles by Brett Butler and Cory Snyder. The Royals' biggest threat came m the founh inni'htL when they loaded the bases With OOMUt On a walk tO Fra nk White and singles by Jamie Quirk and Grq Pryor. Lynn Jones bounced to Cand1ott1, who started an 1nning~nding double play via the plate The dcc1s1on leves Kansas City an a tie for third place 1n the Amencan League West with the Chicago Wh11e So~. seven games off the pace of Texas and 61h behind the Angels * lndle111 s. llovats o KANSAS CITY CL•Val..ANO 8'1rlllll nrlltlil Wilson ti LSmllll tl Or•• d" Whitt 2t1 8a1oon1 lb Qutrii.c Prv0< lo MCRHl>ll t...Jonttl rt Snclb<O oh AS.terr n Tetal• 4 o o o a ... nu d 211 • 1 1 1 l O I O Franco u • O l O J 0 0 0 Carter rl • I I 0 2 O I o T11r111n on • 0 1 1 • 0 0 0 MHel H ) 0 0 0 • 0 I 0 Nixon If 0 I 0 0 ) 0 1 0 hlllef' lb • I 2 I I 0 0 0 8utlef Cl 1 0 1 1 l 0 0 0 Snvoer lb 4 O I 1 1 o o o 8 anoo c • I 1 o l 0 0 0 JI 0 4 0 T .... , ll S 11 S k •re bY ""*"" . KlftMJ ClfV 000 000 IOO-t ~ •1000 1l•-S C.•mt W1nnlno RBI -Tl\Qrnton (1) E-L Sm<th Cendt0ll1 Frenco OP'-tt111ui1 Cllv I CleveleflCI I L08 -KenM l (tty I , Ci.veland I 1B-L Smith, 8tr~1erd SB-lletnerard (9) Cer1er I 161 ltlMHCITv L-•rol..,6·8 Qul.enbetr., a.vt6eftd CendlOlll W 1 ·• Pll-Bendo I~ H R lfR ae SO 11J 9SS 4• 2l 1 0 0 0 2 9 0 0 • urno<r••-Homt Br.nkmen. F1rl1 TKn•O• S.Cono. Cooney T111ro tc.e•te< T-2 ff A-19 "3 Pblllle. 12, Red•6 PHI LADELPHIA -Pinch-hitter JefT Stone doubled and homered in the third inning as the Ph1ladclph1a Ph1lhes tied a maJot-lea$ue record "-Ith ~ven extra-ha~ hits in an c1ght- run rally as they defeated the C1n<'ln- na11 Reds The mark for eittra-base hits 1n an innmg has been reached five time-; previously The Ph1l11e\ had I 0 hits 1n the game, but eight were for extra bases and seven came in the third. Philadel· ph1a had four doubles. a tnple and 1wo homers in the inning as they matched a record last tied in 1949 also by the Ph1lhes against the Reds Stone batted for the pitcher leading off the third and finished the game 2- for-2 as a p1nch-h1 ttcr Ron Rocnicke al~o homered 1n the third. for two runs The Ph11l1es trailed 4-1 entenng the 1h1rd Stone oprned the inning agam'it Reds staner Joe Pnce. 1-2. with a double Gal) Red us doubled home Stone and ~ored on Juan 'iamuers tnple. Rocmcke then hn his fourth homer of the season. puting the Phtlhes ahead 5-4 Mike Schmidt re-ached on an error b\-short~top Wade Rowdon and \Cored two outs lutcr afier a Ronn Re\-n olds double * ..,_. ... , 12. Aech S CINCIN'4,\ Tl ll'Hll..AOlf L~HIA Mll~cf RoM 1b Perkar rt EOevlt If llfowdon n 8tlllll Buttta c Ottftf 2t> Price P Powtf o Oe nl-4• of\ Tarry o Wllill O Vffl•OI °" T...,, tb r II tlil tb r ll bl )000 Rechnll 1212 3110 S.'"'*2tl )111 • 0 0 0 R_,kl\ d 4 I 2 • 1210 5<""'4130 1101 l O I 1 Aouevo lb O O O O 4 0 0 0 HIV81 lb ) 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 (iWlt\Oll rt l 1 1 0 • 0 I 0 RoR•vl\ c • I I 0 1 0 0 0 J-411 u l 2 I 2 I 0 0 0 T Olfyar p 0 0 0 0 I 0 I I SI-1111 1 , 1 1 0 0 0 0 Huf"M 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 ~hu Oii 1 0 I 0 1000 T4111•11v•c> 0100 l1 S S J TllW• lJ 11 II U SC-IW ....... C.._tl 211 Ml --$ ,.,... ••1• I• Oii Nx-11 Oeme WIMlne ••1 -•oen•c"-• 141 E-8uteni, Semuet, Rewdon OP -P!\ll•Ott p1111 I L08-<lnc1Metl S, PhtleOttOl'llll \ ?a •ote. GWlltOf\, SIOM, RedlJI. RoRevnoldt Jtlll Ja-4towoon k/nutt, Oan194, H• henlCt.e 14) SI-(3) SB-E Devit l tlSI Aeclu• ISi SF-R-lc~• If' H R I • 88 to CllKWla1! Prfct l 1·2 11 > • 1 • 1 4 Po-)1J?1101 T ... rv 2 I ) I ) ) ) Wlll1J ? l I 0 0 t ~ ...... ft)ltvtf ) I 4 ) \ •~umt ) l I I I T ... ulv• 'f\I )•I J 0 0 0 0 Wf'-T011v•r , .. ,~ Umoor" H-h ie Flr\I Cra..-i"'O \f'< Ol\CI c wm • ..,,, fnlf., O.Mu•"' T H1 A-1t •10 CHICAGO -1ulio Cru~ and John Canacloti sin&)cd home n.int in the 1CCOnd 1nnins and Wayne ToU.eaoG and Steve L~ns drove in insuraoce runs to lead Aoyd Ballllister and tho Chicqo wtUte Sox to a victory over the New York Yankees. Cruz. and CanaclOSJ bit twc>-out R 81 stn&le• 10 a three-run lllCOod 1nruna olT loser Doua Drabek. 0.2. Tolleson drove in a run in I.be third with a sacrifice fly off Bob Shirley and Lyon~had a run"9CQnna sinaJc off Bnan Fish in the elJhlh. Dave infield put the Yank.ea ahea 2 with his 13th home run in the fin inmng after Don Mauinaly s1naled with two out. But Bannister, ~. allowed onJy one other hit, a third.inning infield sinale by Rickey Hendcnon, before depa.rttna with two out in the sax th. Oav~Schmidtand BobJameshdd the Yankees to one rut the rest of the wa y, with James pitchina the la.st two innings for his 13th save. It was Banmster'1 second start since coming offlbe disabled hst June 17 because of anhroscopic surgery on has riaht knee. Jerry Hairston opened the Chicago second with a double and went to third on a wild pitch two outs later. Lyons walked and Cruz sinaled to score Ha irston as Lyons went to third. Lyons scored on Drabek's second wild pitch of the 1nn1na and Cruz scored on a bloop smgle by Cangelosi Chicago added a run off Shirley in the third when Hairston walked with one out. went to third on a sinaJe by Carlton Fisk and scored on Tolleson's sacnficc fly. Hairston walked with one out in the eighth and Fisher replaced Shirley He allowed two-out singles to Tolleson and Lyons that produced Chicago's final run. The setback dropped the Yankees into third place m the American Lcaiue East, two percentage points bthmd Cleveland * WNte Sox s. v.-ees 2 N•W YOllK CHICAGO RHnCltn Cf Rndll>fl 2tl Mlnolvdll Wlnfi.cd rf Rotnlct. lb PH Qut lb CWaJ/lln H &erre lb f>VlrvlO lO WvneQar c EeJiar c>ll FIKhlln n Zuvetle u .... , .... c Tl'lalb abr ll Ill 4 0 1 0 3 0 0 0 4 I I 0 • I 2 2 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 l 0 0 0 , 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 , 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 Canott1 c1 <iulllen H Belntt rf <;Wetkr 111 Halntndn FISI< c TOllftn lb Lvon•" Cru1 2t> )0 2 4 2 Tetalt k.-llY ....._, ellrlllil 4 0 1 1 ) 0 I 0 4 0 I 0 4 0 0 0 l), 0 4 0 I 0 l 0 2 1 l I I I • 1 1 I n s 10 4 MtwYWll -000 M0-2 CMca• oi1 OOI 01x-s (iarne Wlnn•no RBI -Cenoe!CKI 12) OP--CIUQOO 1 LOB-H-Yor1l l , Clllceoo 1 2&-eelnti H11rtton. W1nflelcl HR-Wlnfleld llll SB-R Htnoenon 14tl S-TOlleton NtWYWll Orebeft. L ,0-2 Slllrlev FIJ/ltf CNcHa 8 ennllltf W.S·• Schmidt Jernft S 13 I~ H • lflll ae SO 11-3 ~, 3 ,., ~ 2 l ) I I ) 0 7 I l l I 0 2 2 1 s 0 0 0 0 2 1 2 l 0 0 0 , 0 0 0 l WP-Orebeft. 1 Uml>lre.-Home COOlt F1r1t Second 0en111near nwo 1t .. v T-2 S6 A-26.lSS NEW YOR K -Sid Femande1 became the Nati onal League's first I I-game winner and Howard John- ~on and Kevin Mitchell homered, leading the New York Mets over the Houston Astros 5-3 Fernandez. 11-2. won his sixth stra1ghl stan He gave up a run on sax hits and five walks in 61/1 in mngs before unng 1n the 95-<iegrC(' heat. Doug Sisk relieved. and Roger McDowell got the last two outs for h14' eighth save. John'ion hit a two-run homer and a double. Mitchell connected for a solo home run and Len D) kstra went 3- for-4 with a double as New York won for the mn th ume 1n 10 games and upped their National League East record to 55-22. The Mets panned the los~ on Mark Knudson, ()..3, who was seeking hi\ first big-league victory The rookie nght-hander worked three innings and gave up three runo;, uni} one ol them earned Johnson doubled with one out 1n the Mets' seconaand scored when l::d Heam followed with a grounder that rolled through ~ond baseman 8111 Dora n for an error Dykstra 's sangk drove home Heam • Mets S, As~ J HOUSTON N•W V°"K 00<en 2b f llOn " cru1 on c;.,,,., 30 <iOev1• lb Lc>Oel o <ielne., oh OIPlno o Wa'91no °" Sen rt PflkOYll\ H Welkw cl Mlr ... 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" ...... so • ) I 1 • 0 0 I 1 ~ 0 0 , l t J r ntltl W II 2 4 1 ) • I I ) 51,k I 2 J , 4 1 2 1 McOwWS I 1 1 0 0 0 0 Ume>ore\-Homt BrO(kfa ,..,.. r •\I Wtv .. !>Kono Mon•eoue Tlll•O A ""• T-JOI A-lt 011 Orlolm 1, Twl.a•O MlNNEAPOLLS -Ken Dixon. wnh ninth-i nning help from Don Aase, snapped a personal four-game losing streak and hot-luttinf Fred Lynn homered for the game s only run as the BaJtamorc Onoles blanked the Mtnnesot.a Twms. 01.11.on. 7-7, allowed three s1ngl~. walked two and struck out six before Aast came on for his 22nd save after Kirby Puckett si ngled wuh one out in the ninth. Unttl the nanth, the only hits off D1Xon, who lost a 1-0 dcc1s1on to Milwaukee lallt Wednesday, we~ si n&)es by Puckett in the fi rst inning and Gary Gactti in the second. Lynn's hne-<inve over the n&ht· field fence off Neal Heaton, 1-7. leading off the fifth 1nnma broke the scoreless tic. Lynn, who also singled. has 13 homers this season. including four in the last three pmes agaJnst the Twins when he went 6-for-1 1 wtth eight RBis. Heaton, who wao; making IOOlh career start but first since coming to Min nesota in a June 20 trade wi th Cleveland, f.mshed with a scven- h1tter for his third com plete game of the season. The Twms backed him with five double plays. tying the club record. * ontM• 1, TWIM 0 aAl..TIMOlllf MtNNKIOTA J8onlll 2b I.K V r1 lllollen u Murravon ShetllyOh Lvnnd 89fllQUl lb MllVonott llevtrd lo Oemot• c T9'9t\ Mlrlllll ) 0 0 0 Pvcllt ll cf •010 BV\1111 2 0 I 0 H"*' 10 1 O 1 O Brnn"'v r1 2000 SmellvClll • I 2 I <iMlll 30 l 0 0 0 Lrnbfdl 211 ) 0 0 0 S..1e H l 0 o O <iaone u l o 2 o Hetct>r Oii 11 I1 I Tlllln k_..,......,. .. , .. Iii • 0, 0 • 0 0 0 ) 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 l 0 I 0 ) 0 0 0 l 0 0 0 , 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 ll . J. ............ •110 •-1 MllacMla Oii • 000-0 Geme Wlnnlno RBI -L 'llnn Ill E-GMlll 0,.._..ltl,,_t 1 M W..Ole S L08-8eltlmore 6, Mlnnnot• l 18-IUolltn. Oempwv HR-1..vnn till S-J Bonni. ......,_. Dixon W.1·1 AIMS 1'l N"9a111.,... I~ H 1111!111 aa SO I I•) l 0 0 2 6 1·J 0 0 0 0 0 HH lonL )·1 t WP-HM ton Urnplrn -ttomt Scott """ E"a"' Secono ~rv. Third. CO\nln' T-210 A-12 101 Padr:a 2 . Cuba 1 "AN DIEGO -Marvell 'W ynne homered and And) Hawkins and Rech Gossage held Chicago to eight hits as San Diego Padres defeated the Cubs. Ha"kins. 6-5. thre"" 7i., innings as he lasted past the s1,th inning for the first 11me in his lasl four st.ans He struck out three C ubc; and walked three. stranding nine runners through the openi ng s11t innings. Gossage threw 1111 innings tor h1\ 15th save. The Padrco; <;potted Hawkin'> a ~-0 lead 'Wlth W)nne\ first-inning hnml· run and a ~entice 11\ b' <ram Templeton 10 the-tou'rth Templeton's ~entice 11\ lollo""cd singles by Kevin McRe\nold11 and Steve Garve). The Cubs scored their run "' t hl· '>IXth. After Tem F-rancona and ltw.1 ' Oav1<; singled to open the inning. Shawon Oull,\ton singled 1n a run wtth one out Ha"-k1ns t'S('3J>C'd funher damagt' when ht' got huth Jerry Mumphre)' and Da'c Martinl•t 10 fly out. Cubs staner Scou ~antkNin \.ti worked five innings and gave up tour hits while stnk1 ng out thrct• .ind walking one. Guy Hoffman and l (•l· 'math pitched the la'it four inmng~ {1ar} Matthewc; led the ( h1lago attack with a double and <;inglc hut W8~ t" ICC left 5trand~d at '>('('OOd htt\(' .. ... ~ 1. Cu'" I CHICAGO SloN OlEGO OMrtnr Ci Hoffmen o llo•lev rt <iMlllWl H Sndt>rt 1o Morefnd ri Ovrnm lb Frencn 11> JOt vl' c , •• lb M rll lll • 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 ~ 0, 0 ) 0 0 0 l 0 0 0 , 0 1 0 , l 1 0 • 0 I 0 4 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0000 ) 0 1 I ) 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 Wi;11ne cf v•yM rl Mc•vlel\ II Gerv•v 111 Tmottn u N•llle• lt> G.OlUI.,_ 0 ... .,,~ ... ' ,, .. nn•y ?II ......... "' 0 ltov,ttf )0 ell r 1101 • 1 , 1 ) 0 0 0 ) ' , 0 l 0 I 0 1 0 1 I 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 ) 0 0 0 l 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 \oe~ 10 Le$mtth o OUfl•lon o ~nd<tn P ~hCf T'°'*' U I f I T...,, k _IW ..__ ,, , 1 , Olk... ooo 0t1 eoo-1 Saft 01eee IOt I• IOa -1 <itmt Wlnnlnc> ital -WYl'nt rn OP-<nk.-Uo 1 L Oii Clltc•to 10 Sen 0•..,.., • JB-<..-) t:.• Mefllltw' Wv~ Hll-Wvnnt 14l \~ -Ce MellM•\ (7 V-Te~t0<1 ClllC-S.."°''" L 1 6 Hotlm•n l t"mtlh Sell Ole98 Hawk•lll <i11t~M \I~ i.-""'" •• '° \ 4 1 1 I J n 3 ~ 0 0 I 1 1100000 11 l I I I l 1110000 IJmo••el lln<"" i.. ll!rr f f\I ~ •NOmm "U ~(lftll ¥•''" T'ltf(l O•• "'~ T 17\ A 17 1t7 12 asslsts for Phillips MlLWAUK:Ei (AP) -00· land tea>nd bMtman toa1 ~ bpe bad 12 lllllJtl uaday lO tic tM maj« )eaaue recold fbr IHI position an the Alhlrtics' 6-l ~ictoey OYCI Lhc MiJwa\lk« 8teWetL Tbe lul Amcn(';e Lape p&ay- er lo bave 12 ·su in one pine wu Don Money of MHwaukce oa June 2A, 1971. The last National ~ ptay. CT to rqislcrthal many l.Jlisu was Juan Samuel of tM Pb.iladclphia Philliet oo Apnl 20, I 98S. ARLINGTON. Tuu -Frank Tanana and Willie Hemanda oom· ba ned on a seven-halter as the Detroit Tigers defeated Tcxas and mapped the Rangers' four-game w1nmna streak. The only run5 off Tanana. 8-4, ca me on homers by Scott Fletcher 1n the third innmg. has ftr1t of the season, and Gary Ward in the etahth. his fourth. Hernandez retired the la t four batter$ for his 17th save. The Rangen' AL Wm lead dwin- dled to a tialf game over the Angels, who took the second or their thrtt- game scnes at Toronto. After Fletcher's homer lied the ga me 1-1 , the T1am scored three tames in the founli on a walk., a bit batsman. a wild pitch and a baJk by rookie Bobb) W:tt 4-7. Darrell Evans nan.cd the upnsing with a one-out walk and Darnen <.oles s1n&Jed him to second. Johnny Grubb was hit by a patch. load1n$ the bases. and Dave Bergman's smgle madt' It 2-1 Wm then uncorled his 14th wild p1 tch oft he "><'.lSOn allow111& Coles to ~ore 1lr Tl9ln s, "--' 1 oaTaOtT TalCAS Wfllte~r 2t> Tramm1 u <i•b-. rl OEvnlclll COlftlb <i•UOCI If L-cf B ... Qmll 1D Snenonn Httnoon I! 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A-21 145 Gmnta 8, Cardlnal•3 \.\"' FRi.\NC ISC () \tC\l < arlton madr h1'> debut for ~an F-ranc1sco and was knocked out in the fourth inning Sunda\ but the Giant'> hailed him out ~1th a s1x-run rail~ 1n the eighth for an 8-3 victory O\<er the St Louis Cardinal~ The 41 -vear-old ( arhon, acqua~d as a tree agenl b\ the C 1ants la'it "'eel. after Philadelphia released him on June ~'i. gJH' up three runs on l'1ght h1t\ in '\ I-I inning\. I k ~as in trouhle rarly m his tirs1 \l<in \lnCl' fanng ~t Louts and the ..amt p1t1..her Dann) ( o~. for th<' Phillies on June 21 Neither pitcher g.ainl"d a dl'u'>1on in that last meet1na. and neither got one Sundav ac; < arllon rt'ma1ne-d at 4--t! ( Miion lcf1 trailing l-0. but the (11ant' narrowtd 1110 '\-2 then scored "' 11me' in the eighth on a sangle two ,,tlnfl,l' 1l1c\ <1 ..qucclc bunt and a 1\\11 run d11uhk l'rr<lr hy latcher Mike lk.1th < 01rlt11n kll tlt:hind .:!-0 1n lhc third "twn h< ga H' up thft'C' \angles and ;a ~;ill.. \\ 1lltr \ti< 1C'1.' '>mgled with one 11ut Jnd \H'nt 10 third on the pla) ~ hl·n th1 h.ill rolll·d undl'r ngh1 liddt"r ( hilt p3\ I\ itlO\ l' • Ol1nt\ I, C..rdln9b J \T LOUl\ \AN FlllANCISCO '"'""'" . Mt <i~• t ll•H l! 111.n1(•" t L•"0',.,. r• Vel'\\f'tt. "' ...... ~,. ( 0 \,...., , .. ,, ........ \1 )t> S>.14 •" l~ Co• 1> ~ 111< n•r ct I! Tllotn 20 vonoold u O•v•• ,, flrnwn Ill "'"''"'"lb 1 eonero1 ~··fli t' ".,, ••• Of\ ••ff.th D Ur100>" 'lllldnoo on Ouinon• u ~ .. rnon o MOtvl' p llloc>OrO Oii '1111nl0f\ D ••-vc n J i1 , r .... ken Ill• ...... ettrllbl • I 1 0 1 I 0 0 ) 0 I 1 ' 1 I 0 J I I 0 ~ I 0 0 1 I I l 1 0 I 0 0 0 0 0 0 I 0 I , 0 1 0 I O 1 1 0 0 0 I 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 I 0 •• I' " I.WI\ •! IW --) Saft fl'rMClllU - -.. -1 (iamt W•nn·~v lt81 -L~rd Clll E-CO•~·' Cc• Huth 1 OP-!141" l'ranclteo 1 l09-St Loul' 7 Se., Francltco • 1B-<o•f'mt n Unlit \8 COiemen CUI, • T n<>mN4n 11 '-< o • 1 A f "'°"'°'°" Gtt ••" ~r •0un,io1Qnc1 IJv•"'-' St L-• Coa l 1 1 ""'°'' .. o • ., ... 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Uque WUT Dt\MtOM Sen Frencl.co ~ton s.noi.eo Alie/Ila ClnclflNlll DMlilr't w L •S 37 43 JI 42 39 " 40 JS 43 )6 45 •AST onMaOH ....,.Y°"' Momrwl ~,. SI l.oula Chic.No Pllll!Mwtf'I s.s 22 .. ,,. 31 40 » .. 71 .. l2 .. ,..... ... kWft DMlilr't •• ftltt~ ) ..... "'°"' s . .._!Oft ) ~ n. 0nc1nne11 s Monlr .. 1 11, Allenla I Sen 0"9o 7. ChlcHO I ~" FranciKO I. SI Louil 3 TMlrY"tC0.- .. ct. s.49 531 519 S06 U9 .... 114 s.. . ., '11 '10 410 GB , . .., 1"'• 3» • . ., " J 11 1 13 73 , 13 l $1 LOUl1 (ll'oneti •·SI •I ONliln '"-0 ,, n HOU1ton (Sc.olt 1·51 at Montra.1 tM41rllnu O-Ol. n Clncl11nall IGuM'CUol'I S •> at New York coarttno 1·21. n All•nl• (Palmer S•6l at Pt11taoetl)l'lle Cllewlev 10·•1. n Pittaouro,, Ill~•·•>•' S.n D~ 15.now 1 41. n OlllY ga"'" M:Mdi1'-<1 NATIONAL LEAGUE DedliWI 4, ,.., .... l '"ITTS.UltGH I.OS ANGELES Bono• ci 8elllero u ~11111111 AlmonH ..... 71> Morrlsn JI> MOie r ll> M8rownr! ll ll Ylch Pll ()rt11 c Breaml)l'I uwa,,1n u ~u..eur o Winn p O"ule• l>I' Ollo«><1n o T"9h allrlllM .. rlllll f OOO Su?1> 3270 l I 2 1 Blluual r! l I 1 I I 0 0 0 llWHmscf 4 0 0 I J 0 t I Slut>C>I fl 1 0 1 I 0 0 0 0 Lanor. II 2 I 1 0 f 0 0 0 Ca bell lt> 3 0 0 0 f 0 0 0 How•ll D 0 0 0 0 l O 1 O T re••no c 4 0 0 0 I O O O Hamltn )I> 4 O 1 I l 0 I 0 Shtotev '\ l 0 0 0 I O O O N..Ontur p O 0 O 0 f I I 0 M411Uk lt> 0 0 0 0 I 0 I 0 HC>f'eVCll P 1 0 0 0 I 1 0 0 "'melnV rl I 0 I 0 I 0 I 0 0 0 0 0 M l t l T ..... kara by......_ JI 4 t 4 ~-000 110 000-l L.M A,,... JOI tol --4 C.enw W1nn.n9 R81 -Hemlhon Ill L09-P llU>urqll S. LO\ "''108~ 6 18 S..• JB-,.tmon se-~. ' 1 '" s--<abell s. .. If' H • E• 99 W> .. ~. S.UY8\lr 1 I ) S l J I I W11111 L I l ) 2 ) 2 l I 0 0 o ll01>1n1011 1 1 o o O o La1~ Hon41vcutt w S • • l J 0 1 N-n1uer 2 0 0 I 1 Ho .. ell S.S I 0 0 0 0 1 WP-W1rin Bf( S•uYeur P8-0rliZ Umolrn-H~ MCShefrv. F inl We\t S4Kond 80111n Tlllrd, B Wlll1em\ T 2 l& "'-'17 S63 Fow hOfM runs In • eame A~nLN- Lou Ga,,rtg New YOf'k JUM 1937 conu cut•vt Pet S.rrev. C lll<aGO Jutv II 1941 ht gelTiit 11 1nn,,,o, Roc•v Co1av110 C1••N nc! J~ tO t9S9 COf't.eeur1v• ... "9NILM-8ot>OY Low• Bo\ton ~... lO 119' co" ~ut11te • Ed o ... ,,.,,,. Pr11~IOll•• JulY IJ tt96 Cnuc• l(i." Pl\1teoeton1a July 10 1936 10 nnmqt G•t HOOQ4t\ Brooi.tvn Alrlluat 3 I 19SO JM AOc;ock M we Jktt Juty ) I Its.I w 111-. MaY\ Ser> F"r•nc•KO Ao-lO 1961 M•ll.8 Scflm10t PT-·t~Ol'1e Apr I 17 1916 10 ,,,,,no1 eotl\.4Kul1vt &OI> Ho-ner Atten•a J.,1., 6. 1916 'MMIUCAM UIAOU• ~1. llUeJenl ~.... Ta.OMTO •r11111 s,, 0 • 1,, • 0, 1 J I I I J I 2 t I 0 0 0 ' 1 •• 2 0 1 1 1 ' 1 3 5 0 0 0 • 0 0 0 36111 I T"9b SC....IW ..... ., .... •• 1 • • 1 ' • •• 1 1 J I 0 0 , . , ' • 0 0. J 0 0. J 0 0 I 3 e DI HI 6 > ~ ... 01111 ·-· r....... • 110 •1-2 Game Wlnnllle 1ta1 -Wntone UI 1!-Ftrnandea, lore. DP-<•Hlonlla I, TOf• onto 2. Loe-<a11tor11i. t, T0tonto • te-tt .JonM, flltftlt, JO)'Mf, larflelO, It• J•Ckl Oll Ja-Wllln Hlt-Grldl <• > S~ttls (Ill rJ HoweM, ,._1111. Jovner I~ H••Raeso c:...... McCallllM W,,_S T ...... Lamo 1.,t ·S ElcMol'n Caudill Clark.a &K-ClerU 1 ' ' 4 1·3 5 2 ,.3 .. I 0 I 4 2 , l 0 s , I 0 s , ' 1 , 1 0 Umotrft +iome, McKNll, Finl Clari. S«· OllO snuioa. Third, MorrllOll. T-151 A-l6,lf7 JoYfltt Jack'°" BurleM>n Oownlno Pelllt HarldrtCk Wtlfono Grich Jonft DeCincH How~I Narron Boont Scrlot1el0 T~ ~.,,.,. ... ITllnlutfl SuMllY't GMM I aATTiteG Aa " H H• )If SO 9S 1' 10f )4 '° 1 "' ,,. 4) , ,.. .. ,. ' 266 o40 71 2 1SJ n 3' , 111 11 4S , 121 IS 37 1 .. " 49 156 30 6? $6 ll 1) o40 • ' n1 n •1 'l07 J2 ., ,,... )ff ... '"ITCHING • • 10 2 l 3 ' ., •••~ct. ,, 307 31 ,,, IA m .. 213 26 166 21 2SS ,s m IJ 250 19 246 43 241 11 237 • 225 II 207 1• 20? l1S .2S9 I~ H aa SO W·Ll•A Wiii llS 110 '7 111 t 6 3 27 Cort>efl ~ 29 1 l 18 2 1 J .a Flnlh IS''> 16 10 ll 10 lS2 McCesl"li 12:µ., IOS 46 112 9 S l St Fouler 211 l3 12 21 l· I l 19 FllQ\er 16 17 7 1 0 0 4 SO Sutton 91 96 II S9 1 S • ~ llom.ntek ~ 109 38 36 S 7 • 9S M~e 10 16 10 16 I l f ts Cooeo. S 1 1 l 0 I 11 1S Carw>etu1a 2 6 1 0 O·O 1' 00 Tatan 704 ,., "4 ~ 4l·l7 4.St $avn Moore 1 Cor'Clell 6 For11ar 4 TENNIS Wlmlll9don ""-"' ~ ll'INI\ Bo"' Becker (Wt\I Germanvl aet IY1n Ltnol 1C1ecno,lo•eklal, 6·f 6 3 7·S Wtmen'' Deu06e\ l'lllala M4trline Navralllove CIJ S I Pam St>rtvar (Us I def Hana ~ndllkova (CIKhO\IO••l<l•l Wendy Turnl>ull IAutlralla). 6·1 6 3 MIHCI ~ l'lnalt 1<a1rw Jordan IU S 1 Ken Flach IU S 1 oet Me rlino 1'111.,0lllova (US 1-11a1111 Gutntn•rO• (SwlliertanOI, 6·l J 6 , ConMCuftve Wlmb6edon winners WOMEN ,,,.... Suienn• Lenolen 1919 2) Mer11n11 NevratllOva 1991 86 Faur Heletl Woll\ Ml>t>OV 1917 30 Three LOll•e 000 lt91 93 Lou•~ 8rOV11" .... " M.a.i•Mn Conno11v · 19S7 s.4 &11i.e Jean K •"9 1966·61 Twa M.et.Jd Wa•ton 1814 tS LOii•• Ooa 1N 7 U Cnertotte COOPf!r 119S·t6 Btanc,,. 8 •,.0tftv H ••rd 1199· 1900 0¥1)1.,.a Oouotest Cnam~1 1903·().4 1910 II IQI) 14 Hei.,. Wtlll Moo<I• 19)2 )) A ti..11 C.•t>W" 19S7·5' Ma•·• Bueno 1959 60 B•lllf J .. n K•no 1971-n. Maritn• NavratllOva 1919 19 MEN Sit W• 11a m llent~ow tltl 86 ,.. .... H Laur f Do"•"• 1907 06 81orn 8nr11 19J6·90 Ftur R911g1e F 001\frtv, 189J 1900 Antl'lon• W•ld •no 1910· ll Tlw'M 'Fred Perrv 193•·lS Two Jolln Harllev 1879·80 Wllfr'-<I 8addf'IPV ib I 92 Jolnua Pim 1191 94 Arthur (,or4' 1908·09 Biii T1ldtn 1910 21 Don 8 1Jt.lgt 1911 Je Lew Hoed "~ ST Roo Lll•tr 1961 61 1961 69 lloy Emotr\on 1964 6S Jnr.n N""' coml>t 1970·11 JoM McEnroe ltal·I• Bo•\ Becker 1915·86 ~ > • WOMEN'S BASKETBALL GoeOw• GerMI Cal Mn<-l 8u111ar·1 19 Cac:hO\lo••~·ll S2 Un•tl!O Stat•\ 91 ~rer 10 ~v1et Un10t1 t.J Y o.JOQ\IA••• ~1 .-~ - Angel, Dodger schedules Sund•J 13 •Anc• al Rld Soi 10 05 Cub\ 41 Oedttn I 05 July 20 81~, Im •I Ana•. I ~ •Oedatful Cfrds. 11 IS Red Sot at Alli• I O!> •Dedc•s al Cu~ 11 20 •A111t1s at Sulllf I 35 ktd~ di Oodaen I 05 3 10 Aalela OD racllo Dodlen oA rad.lo IDIPC (710) KAllC(790) Aqeb OJI TV Channel 5 J>odien cm TV Channel 11 •Denote. TV .... Mond•y July 7 Ana• at Brewen ~ 35 Cards at Oodaen 5 05 14 21 Bttwtt\ 11 Anctts !! 0/ 28 Alie• 11 As 5 01 Giants at Dedctn I JS Ancell a! I •in) 5 J!i Astros •t Ooda•n I J~ 11 Tueaday 8 15 AllSW C•mt ~I Hou\IOn 5 JO I 22 8•t•m al Alie• 1 J5 o.dcen •I Pualn 4 3!> •Allam •I A s I J5 C1;n1 al Oedctn 1 35 •Anctil •t I wins 5 .l5 A\lrO) <1! Dodten I l!> 5 12 Wednnday 8 Allctb •I 8rt111trs 11 35 Cards •t Otdcen l 35 18 23 8ftwtfS 41 Allsels 1 J5 •Dedctn al P111ln .. J!> 30 Matis •I AS. 12 I!> C..nts al De4cen 1 J!> e Ana• at Twins 10 I!! Astros •I Dedcen I 05 13 Thurtday 10 •Anatll at Rr.d !.o1, 4 35 Cubs al Oodctn 1 35 17 24 31 Allaels •I A ) ll I 'l 7 Sumr •• Anctll I J~ 14 Friday 11 Alie• al Rtd So~. 4 35 Cubs •t Ood1ws, 5 20 18 25 flfd So• 11 Arte• 1 3!> Oeclctn at Cub! I O~ Aug.1 Aftttll .i Stalllf I 35 Reel\ 11 Dodc•s 1 35 Sulik! 11 Ancm I J~ •Ooda•n •l Rids • J~ 8 15 Saturday 12 Aftttll &f fled Sol 10 05-I Cubi •l °'411••. 1 05 11 8t11tlm 1t Allc• I~ 09da1r1 11 C•rds 10 20 Red So• at Anc• 1 05 •Oedten 11 c~ 1 o~ •Altrtb 11 Sunlf 1 05 Rtds al Dedctn 12 20 Suttle at ~· 1 05 Oeclcen at Reds 11 20 2 • 18 Statue at Anc•. I 05 •Ood111n al Reds. 11 IS •Twins al Anatts 7 3~ Ooctcen at A.srros ~ J~ f w.ns JI Altfels 1 35 •Oodcen at Aslros ~ 3~ rw1ns at Mi• l J5 •Oodcen al A.srros 5 35 A s at Ancets. l 35 •Ooctcen at Giants. 8 05 Asal Anc•. 705 Oedaen at G14nls. I 05 MMI'• twwnement Gr9atw Hat1terd OWi! (at C,_wtl, C-.) • Mac O'Graov '1?•.ooo 11·69·67 6?-269 llooet ~lll>te 7S.600 66·61·JO·M--l69 Scolf Hodl 3' fOO 71·66-61·61-111 ~rl< O'MNr• 30.400 69-n -64 -67-271 Pa\ll Allll08r 30 '400 61·10 66 · 69-11? Tom Wat\Ol'l ?l,450 6S·67 J0· 71-273 Tim SlmoM>n 1l.4SO 04·66· 74·69-273 Curtis Siren~ 23 •SO 71-6~S-61-713 JOhn COOk 11,tOO 6'·69·69·61-?14 c rup Becti 11 tOO 66·73·6S·J0-71• Miila Oonalcl 11 900 69·61·61·6-27f Oa11 Fortman 13 lOO 6S·61·n·10-11S 0.,,1$ W•ltOll 13.300 66· 71·73·66-?H M Cale••KC,,1a IJ JOO 70·69· 10·06--1/S )OM M4tneHev 13 300 61 71 61 61-US Oev1d Lund1from IJ 300 69· JO· 6J 6~ 21S J•m Dent l .11Q 61·69·61 17-216 Gerv H11t1>erg I.no 71·67·67 10-116 Jim Gallaohtr 1,8?0 11 61 n 6S-116 Cterance !lose a 1'10 69 11 61 61 216 Scon Slmoton l ,l 'lO 61·67 12·69-176 Oen PQtlt I 110 69· 12 67 61 776 Kennv Knot S.A IO 66·69·67·7S-771 MIU McCulloug,, S 810 67·73 67 J0-211 M••t Hurlt>ert 5 810 69 72·61·68-271 Merl< HevH S 810 70 61 I) 66>-771 Devtd E<lw•r<ll S 810 69 71 1!·66-271 Tom Kile 4,lSS 68·69 69·72-778 0 A Wttt>rtng 4 JSS 68 11 70·69-171 llonnle 81ec• 4 JSS 69·69· 11 69-218 Lff Trevino • lSS 70 JO 70·61-778 Loran Roo.<t\. 3SS 69 17·69 61-17' 8"•" Cloer 4,3SS 69 11 68 69-271 JoM AO•m1 4 lSS 10 69·69· 1()-218 Peter JeCOl>un 3 4S 71· 61·61 1 I· 719 Ho.,.erd Twtllv) 14~ 11·61 69·71-119 Co-ev P•••" l us 69·69·70 11-219 S•t•e Jone\ l us 71 69 70 69-'17'1 St•~• Pate 3 14S 69 69 n 6-119 Mark Pit· l 145 70· 70·70·69-219 JOO•e MUOO l lfS 71·70·61 70-779 on Hickie 1 Q.4S J0·7H.a 11-790 B•"v P .. rot 1.04S 73·69 61 J0-790 llluu Cocnr•" 1 04S 11 J0-70·,9-1'0 L TllO<'nPM>n 104S 69·73·69 69-110 E aua roo llomero 2 04S 14 ·"6 11 69-190 Fuuv z-1ar 1 04S 61 73 14·6S-1t0 0 E1c,,.H>er~r 1 Q.4S 69 69·73·6t-2t0 o/Vevne Levi 1 Q.45 10 69 11 69-2t0 Sam llanoop,, 2 Q.4S 13 61 10· 10-190 Antonio Ceroa 2 04S 68 13·69 71>-180 R•<t Oa/PO\ 1.617 1) 61 69 71 -?t I ~till\ F•rgu\ 1611 71 71 69·71>-?tl Fren1'. Con~r I 612 69·70·7S·67-1tl Roo Curt I 612 1!·69 7l 61-781 Mark McCuml>er 1 611 67 12 71·71>-711 Jav H&o l.5'17 11 66 71 1•-181 Ol(k Me\I I. S47 13·69·68 12-181 8•11Roger\1 5'17 11 61 13·11-111 C.&r• KOCI! I SoolJ 12 69 1l J0-787 JI. won on l•rll not• ol o~ert1m• 1>tev GOLF Laguna l!lffdl Goff Association MONTHLY TOIMNAME HT <•t RatnlMlw Canven G4H Out>> A Flltftt ',. S•8" Bo.,.•n t S· 1-71 Incl ADf' C. rza I'\ &~ 14-11 ) C,,uc.11. I< n-Oer 84 11-13 1 O<>u11 110,.,. 86 17-14 8 ""-"' '"" v Bro ... .., 81 17 70 2 • ·• l Mel "'°""'•• 90 11 73 and Fran~ Hen\en ~8 1~1) 4 UPll" Mo"OW 92 IJ-11 Woman's toum11ment Het of F•ma 0.Hk (al S11911r UM, TalH) • Amv Alcott '5.000 70 70 12 72-184 Leur•n Howt 17 750 69·73·7'·61-214 Amv Ben1 '10 750 67 11· 1S·13-1 .. LOrt C.1r~C1 1S.7SO 1• 73· 13·67-117 M•u•e 8er1ao111 11 625 7l·7•·74-~?t9 Ja"•' Cote\ 11 07S 7S 10 1l· 11-?t9 V1c1t.1 Feroon I.ISO 12 11·13·11-190 Sall• Lillie 6.f11 74 71·7S 11-191 L••• Young 6 •10 II 13 JS·n-291 Ok· HM I< u 6 '10 16 13·69· 13-291 Cindv H 11,' •'10 n ·n·73·7)-291 llo\·• Jone' 6 •'10 11 1\•7S·7,._291 L•ur,. Rini.er, 4,SOO 13 7'·7S 7!>-292 Cl'tri' JOMton 4 S00 73.13.72.7.-292 Ketnv B1ktr f SOO 11 14 n 1S-m PPtln• Hammet 4 SOO 10 7l 11·11-292 JuOv 01C>.1Mon ) 900 69 1S· 71 11-193 S.nore P•lmer J S2S 7• 11 11 n-194 Laur Petanon 3 S7S 1l 7l 16 n-19• Av•~ o Okamoto l S25 11 1) IS 7.-294 P•• B•1a10 3 sis n 11 16 IS.-194 Su\•t MCAtlo\ttr 2 878 /1 11 1• · 1"2-295 Sn•rt•v F urlOllO 2 878 10 16 11 n-19S JOOy RoHntnet 1171 19 13 10 73-29S Dawn C.oe 7 177 11 18 n 73-29S Jut•'""''" 2 171 H· If 7?· 74-29S Je111 Gt dd•s. 1 t 11 H JO· 73 · 77-2'15 Sl'terr· r.,rner 7.313 II 16 II 11· 796 Catnv JoMston 2 113 /6 16 10 1'-196 C·nOv Rericlt. 2.31l n 71·11·16-296 PeflY Snee,,en. 2 11) 13 74 13 16-296 OH<lee Luker 2 173 }) 11 JS 11-196. Oen•\e Stre1>1g 7,.018 79 74 11 12-197 Debo•• Menev 1.011 76 73 /J 7~ 191 MB Z1mmermen 7.011 10 IS 1S·l7-291 D•1> 1l1Cn1ra 2.017 11 10 19 11-291 8 Pendtroa\I I 6IO 74 16 18 10-198 AM• Merit Palll I 6IO /6 11 13 n-198 Nona Foult I 6IO /4 11 1) 14-?91 8fltv _.,ng 1 610 /6 14 14 J4-791 A1tc• ll1trman, I 6IO IS 1S 1• 1-299 LtAnn (HMl<ll V I 110 11 15 14 11-199 M U1f Mc(,aorot I llO 1• 11 /6 1'1 299 Sut Ertl I 370 16 IS 76 1'1-199 Jack•• Btrhcl't I 310 II 19 IS l•-199 More Bozarth I J?O 11 16 11 14-799 Carotvfl H 11 1 J?O n 11 1l 71-799 Cetnv Mar no I 110 17 11 1~ lt>-300 v'" hl>Or 9n ,, IS ,. 10-lOI 8etl't 01n•e• 911 13 11 11 1>-101 M.!rgarat Wero, 911 JS 16•14 76-301 LuLong llad •' ,,, /J 11 JS Ji>-301 Ma•ient Hegoe 110 71·12 16 11>-)01 S•"• Ouontan 110 IS 14 IS 18-307 T.,.•ete Henion 110 /1 7S TS·I0-307 L vnn Conne I• 6ta 1• 11 JS 76-303 Bari> ThOma\ 691 18 7} 16 11>-)0l M,tz1 E<IOt 630' IS 18·11 74-)04 A1t1s,on F •nnev SSS II 16 11 lS-JOS JO Ann We\l'tam SSS 1'·74 11 7S-30S IHl\h Arrington, SSS 16 76·71 7S--30S Su\le 8eroov 44S 11 16 71 ·1S--l06 Lvnn Adem\ U S 16·73·11 7S-l06 LH ll• Pea r\on •O IS·11 11 17-306 )oanne Pecllto, u s 15 IS· 79· 17-306 Pallv Joraen '45 13· 1•·71·81-106 D•oorall Skinner 44S 1l I• 11 ·81-306 Lenore Muraoka 390 16 76 80 7S--l07 l arrv Jo Mvef\ 163 74 78 82 14-108 Su\lt Bernlnv 'U1 ll JI 11 J9-J08 X-wtln \u<l<ltn oea1n C••ovott c FliGfll I l••t E•r •t Jecot>• S8 18-10 and 1 I') 811•er 91 11-10 ) •rr·e\ ,,,., "¥ on ,_,, l l M ,,,., •6· II JI Dll'li.111 I B••O" ~ n\me n 96 n 14 1 8 ! Q w\On •6 11-11 1 N111>" p,,,,,.o, •• n 14 E """'' I Vf'rno" Lf' I 96 16" .q 7 J 1 itn C.OO•I' 107 ~-1) J II f 8rU(f' P11~0 I0)•76--17 '>Pf'4td ro,, .. nc• IOJ » 11 ••O D·•· B•OP 107 7~ ,, SWIMMANG ~ilGarMs (at MMUWI MEH 1001>ac•-I toor Poivan'"" IU~Sll l ~01 1 Stroe Z.1>0101nov USSR> SO ll l 01•11 C.ovr1l<'<\~O I USSll 1 SO 16 'lOO no1v1duat rnad .. v-1 V8d•m Ynro111Chu• USSll 1 2 02 '3 2 8 11tv SleP .. 11>" I U S I 7 03 36 l llo,, tt arn•w~ lU S l 2 Q.4 SO l soo ··-· V!ad•mlr Seln,kOY IU'>SRI 1Sl017 2 Scoll 8rec•p11 IU S I Hl13f J fduero Petrov (USSR IS 7518 800 trtt re.av-I Untied Steff\ A 1Pau1 llOO•<'llOn Sean K l!lton Randv E v•ran J!),,n Wocne111, 1 21 IS 1 Soviet un.011 1 11 U l un1tao s1a1t1 8 Jptt Pflor Cl'larrev Siro•' De"' Kerlt.\4 s~oll B••cll.ell 1 26 2S WOMEN 100 oac~ I Cerme11 B•Jn•Ctu 1llloman1e 1 026) 1 Aneta PelrHCot)U •i:tom.an1111 I 0161 ) Natetva Sh11>•ve•a IUSSll 1 I 07 93 ]00 1f1dlv1<1u<1I mtOltV I No•m1 Lun11 1Roman11• 2 17 32 7 Y~t~na Denatoero•& USSR I 1 ll 03 l T otn•a Booom•IOv 8u111ar1a 7 18~ I~ tr•~ I Le\111' CJ•lan<t IU '> l 16 IS &I 7 An•• 1\1\otr•no tE.1\1 C.e•manv1 167010 ) Ja,.et E•an\ 1u S 1 1&7492 800 1ree rttay I un11to State\ B !P11Qt' Zem•na Jutta C.ormen 11.etrw Collin Andru Hevt\l 9 tO 49 2 Unortd ~tale\ A 1<.atr•• Htt1croft \.•\• G•fll>\P•• 1<.:anv O••'f!\ Star. 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Je.-.r\ P•'t"\D\#r-~ F•a COLLEGE MAllQU[' ou•tll>a a .!Vl\(Or..SIN l•arT tO M.irv ftter Mu•Dn• #0,,..,.f' \ b6\ .. tltJe CC.•U1 Orange County Fair Handicap Shoemaker boots home Hidden Light Hollypark results Oranee C4MlntV R•dnv F•lt TOHIGHT "'"' "'' , .... n.oo •••~ on """ race o.oo ·~•eta• on r•UI 2·J·S·6·7·t · 10 Pkll II• reua H•. 4-t O.lv _,... on racn Ne. t -10, I D•• I of • ll O.v Meet Tr•cll; O..r Fut. Ft•ST •AC([ UO Verdi Ouertf!f'l'IOrt~ ourw '3,000 Tl'lrff ve•rt old .,.<I UP c111m1no Price '3.100 Scramllno JM ll P•ultM in llutM41 llou9,,neck S WM' 112 Ike The Vlkt E G•rcla 172 ll-Youno K OIMrfcklatl 119 S...n Tea SuMv J ~ in lt1ver<1at• ()li.1e J Lewi\ 112 Anot,,.,. Van4 It Fioueroa 117 Fiew Klnq 8 Fie><'~ Ill 122 AIM Ii ...... Mou <.•la Bar 8 FIOIH 111 117 SCAAMLING JOE 11 11 Ra11 a"d ortm t• 110 ••dar ..... '°' OIUI llOGE" YOUN(, ) I tougfl ca mpalq,..r ,,,,s t.ver PIVEltOALE 0 1! IE 10 1. pri(;a ,,. • .,. lr•lt nee• LONC.SH()l II< E THf VIKE SECOND llACE 170 n •O\ '.h1erttrh0r\t PUl'H '3.000 T,,rM '(e8rt Ol<I •"<I UP Cte m1nq Price '3 100 Had• La rk Hunl 111 8arl1tan<1 J llutr 1?2 Sam\ An~ S Wlllte 121 Tl!• F n llv•• K 01CUlrlCll.\atl 117 C.one JOl'lnSM A Paulltlfl f I in w1nc1y tces J Lewis 1n HH Surt RO'flf 8 FIOrH 119 &<>e1nq 10 It Flo.-o. 1n ...,.. ..... Count Mv Aca1 It P•ulfne 121 11? THE FESTIVAL 12 11 L .. olno ••Cler LO\ Atemllos ,,_, eboefd GONE JOHNSON 13 11 Very <1ulctl musl lie c-lcMfld WINDY !(AS 16 II C-ble rlaer coulcl oat '"•'• 1nn1g,,1 LONC.SHOT 8All1SLAN0 TH .. D ltACf I 11" Mita\ T,_,,.,Qflt>rt>O PUl'W .. 000 fl\l'ff ..... "Old Cle m•nt Prlee '10 000 MaVe F•eVI A fl'" tr118tl081. t 14 ~ ~VOOY Enrkl'.Jer II• ~"8"9t Mu\lc: L S'"'1tn I lot lttver COi# C •i.e._ J' lot Doc ~ L ()r1e941 11~ fntry 0 8'( J Cl"*"°' IC IOI' 8etw-TM LIM 0 Garr•OO '" 1t1vc• COOE <~ 11~10 11• n comm.no and sllOulO llold s wey 00C ~HOW If ll 0rOP1 note" en<I Ir•'-Wldl r11em ni \UM.MEil PL• vaov ll II Sold eflon• .. sr '"'"" •' DMW LOHOSHOT 1TltAHC)E MUSIC ~TH •&<•. C luflOnt't Tllo<CMNNlr..S °" .. "000 Three ~' Old and ue Cllltmlnt ~le• Jl,'°' S.llOft ln¥e'I G Muftc:tw 11' E nouol'I "00. J .. UHi , ,. $0e"lstt D•n 0 lrt111t.ernoff I 16 Hut C• aov A l'alterto11 116 l'eYOUt T Cira.,_. 116 TERRY TURRELL Oarlno Jerrv ll Sll>llle t 16 Aim Adllem J Lerrr>ert 116 ScOOllem C,,u<:k C Blee k n 11 ltun For Buttermilk J Aragt)n 11~ lcv Touc:,, E nr•ou•I I 119 Aha E._.. Vouth Perk C. Stevens 116 Not,,.rn Graen1 En•-.ouez 17) I 16 ~lan1 Bov !tock• 116 8unt>otfl A C•t•anon t 16 SKOOKUMCl1UCK 12 I) He\ 11\f c11n or 111,, flfllcS ano MW out in \hero ,1vi. SAil Oii~ ENVOY • l) Pr•"'91j for ~I could Pv•• ulf SunYI_. OARING JEllllV ,,.II Has or.i•a al>lhly Oii lhll O•at beware l:ONC.~HOT Al N" A OH EM ll'IFTH •ACI 6 fu•tonos T11Qrouonnr,.., C><Jr .. '7 soo Two vee r otO m•1<1en\ c1a1m1no Pr tea '"31 .000 Crafty Crato N Pedroza 111 M.e1'.t A Pockatfut 0 C.arftoo 111 Ftrir ~001er It S..l>lll• 111 Movow Dewn ll Oovoltn 111 Tluart Bet I A C utenon 118 Chine E nergv A Pelf anon I 19 C11mo A Fernenoer 111 TISSAllS BEST ll I) C.ooo loeecJ 1g•lnll ttrelol'lr mei0tnl·M rn1 ca ll FlllST !.HOOTrll If ll Trouble •n oebul e .c .. t.111 t>ullrlng rtder uo CllAFTV CllAIG r& II \tH OY *OI~\ IOI O.l>ul·ca0ttl>le 1n11nar l ONC.,HOT CHINA ENEllC.V SIXTH •ACE 6 turt0nOt TnoH1uo,,t>rl!I PIXMI M 000 T"r" veer' QIO e~'1 ,n Cta1m11111 ~"" SS 000 DHert Jewef J '><011 I l• Crou w .11 M<J' 11.,.n I'' U~cover Ea g·e M A Peorora 116 Tille A ltttl It S•l>lll• 111 116 COdVI C11ance 'L 1(-; 11• Ftvtnq Oue C 8•er• 114 °"""'•' Wev L E 0r1eoa 116 Wooo S.P C. .... , 1t1< •~ 1 It ""'"'P NOian A L (es'•""" ' •• ~or 81ft E nm>uar 11' AIMI ...... ,.. .. Tt,.,,. EscoOar II~ a... aOl<I Mo•• It S•l>I''• r 11 rn KICh POO J areiw•~ 114 COOY ~ CHANCE 11 I) Hard 111 OenY lhts Mid • '"OV PMILl IP NOLAN I• II Prl,.,. aurnote of a 'Horte flW ,_._ TAKE A ltEST 16•1) Wtl n-.d very ~I '" lhll tllCll lOtll(. SMOf OltlCNTAL WA.V HV .. f'rH •AC• •I) ""'IOllO' Th<><ouOtl l)rtd -.. ,, 000 ---------·------------- I.,,,.,. veor\ n1d end vi> Meoden\ Arovt 0 EU.!1 A Soll\ llS '"\P••e<I Poo L E 0.-tega 11 S l111r1 C11arm M A Pedro111 1 IS E 11trlon E 011111nouHV 11 S T1Jr" Tn Erin Oouqlll\ llS •ndu\lrv St11ndard O Ga rrido I IS D•H\ Up Danov J Scott I 1) I 1S S1111nf'\ Bnl A Paller\on I IS 81uf P11trot J C.ru1 1» H"'"•"• Oamf' A L Culenon I 1S Abo E li9111M 8rtll\ rnallf'rl>'lv T Ul)l'le m llS SllPOtrt \11ver J L !". ...... 17) In To•• Iv t. .. uome J L KetnPl 1?1 B' 0 \aro\ J Sco11 11 11S AVOUE 0ESSA!•1 11lle 1l1hm eaoe 1n vtrv tont8'1H>ul naet C.lAll S CHAllM 14 II Ha\ l>Hn •nO<k•"9 ~.,,, wllh IOU11he< foe EC.ER TON 6· 11 1>1oceo ... 11 for <Ml>ul l>Y .., nnong ,,.,,,., LONGSHOT SHANES BEST EIGHTH RACE I I 1, m1le1 Tl'IOrouqht>ra<I ou•u WI SOO Tn••• ••11•' otd ano t.P (l&•'TI ng Pr Ct lS 000 T 40•.t er A F-trnaro.1 o ~ f'a\aC.• ·•• '>•uO• T l1Pl'l&m I 16 (1~trl( 1\1\~nt A l Cntan<>n 116 E ••1>9• C.re~ t to N•••r Jnkt M A Pt<troza 10t T J'"' Tov C. Munce•! ''' If\ Jumo•ng Beer ll S•l><llt 116 EL JE 8EL 16 II llaol NOrl<Mr\t nas ,,. •• , ra<td '~'' c,,.aP IT S JUMPIN BEAR IS 11 H•g~ 1.,rn ot the sw·ff mav rwt•tr took l>•Ck T ABULAll I~ II E•~s1ve slretc,, •10 LONG· SHOT l'fASl&ILITY STUOV NINTH •ACI 6 lurlOno\ Tl\Qrou11n1>rao P•irH 11~ 000 AOO.O Jue11ano SI•~•' Two veers Ol<I I ucu" Lol<ev P A V•ttn1uete 1 ll Jtltte\ C.1gato L Pln<:av 111 Haray C.uv A Pall•rM>n 11J Ouaf.lv C. Slevefls 11) C "fJ<ote11 Baits L f O<'t~• 113 C. unl'Q C 8taell • Ill JIL Sl E S GIG ALO fl ~I Demot•\"-d loa\ 1n verv me>r!'nlva maiden win OUAllF"Y !S·71 w~1 Drtd coo no ra111no "°"" ~ c HOC Ol ATr tlALl!'. 14 It(.,,,. to llano n lest Kid '•'' tn v....., touo,, ,,.., LONGSHOT CUNEO TINTH •Ac • I 1 16 m ... , T-t)Ug!tt>r9d ~, .. "~ """ veers Old and UP C • m1nq ~k• ti 000 CHU" 0 •11< ~ It Sll>llla 116 ~•""Y Pt\t P•llOll IOt Oltn'IO"Ot F~ OH ' L f Or-•t-Q• 116 •ulflal I! L 1(.-t 11, H1i{lll A L C•tfell0<1 I 16 Native ~ J Lambert 116 Notlrll<UI,.,.,. Gral>lt 116 Ct11re Eeota A L Ftrnanoe1 11' 14ACHL. 11• II SOii<! tffwl tn a QOOd ""' last OrCHtt '°' W•nnt,,. ~ort NOST•ADAMUS ... 11 WI~\ f.Cal a/Id WH '""° uo on ~ Gar• turf OIAM()HD\ rott DEAN 16 I) Cltvtt trelner elld '°"4MllOI rl(Hf IM m ue> LONOSHOT \ANDY PASS ••ST llT1 C00Y'$ (HAH(£ It!" hot ... IC. "LAY fl l~H!L 11111 ltacaJ 1 - IN(1LfWOOD (AP) -Hca ... 11> ta .. orcd Hidden Light. ndden b:,. Rill \hocmakcr. tool the: lead earl\ and drc"" ofT to a ti ve-length ';ctnn \unda\. in the Sl57 IOCJ Holl.,.wood Oak<. for l -.car-old filhe"> a1 Holl'f- v.ood Parli. · \n Fmpre<,~ nddcn h~ (1.H":> '>tn,ens. came on to fint'lh \Crnnd \I 'I. length'> 1n front ot 191<5 falsp<,e .\ward winner Fam1h \1 .. le ndden h-. C hn' Mc(arron · · Th<' shun fiC'ld rr'>ulted from <.tn t'l.l)Cctc<.J stan b'.r Mda1r. the un· (.klt.'att'd grc't till~ who in'itcad heat a f1rl<.J nf \ ~ear old colts Saturcta~ here 1n th\.' $400.00() 4.i1IHr ~rcen Hand•· cap H1d1kn l 1gh1 raced the I 1a milt's1n I 4 7 4-51ust two-lifth<1 of a ~LOnd ofl lht· '>take) record \t'l h}' T1pp1ng Time 1n 1969 and equalled hy Fran'5 Vttlcnltnl.' tut yea r t or 5hoemakcr, S4, nnd trainer ( ha rll c: Whmingham. 7J, Che VICIOf) wa) the 225th time the} had com- bined for a ~tl\kt'i victor). including the Kentucky f>torby with f-rrdinand th1'> yt'ar Los Alamllos r esults SATUltDAY"S I.AT• ltHULT (LllJt llf H ·•• _,. llwM -'INl •LIVUfTM •Ac• 110 varda Ct'14rtOttti 9ut IL-••> 1' llO tuv' Mlto 11..«•evl IW Tll'W a Tuff {WMe Tlt'n4! 0 4617 .. 0 6.0 •10 HO • 00 At'° lten C~ Tom Tl'la lt-"9 l eedtt Cl\aMft I H lar Jal •De"" r.,. P•t• 0-.·•• Ca\11 Scr•ICMO Corrtl'Ntnlary Ettat Concao1 ~et Oa" "'t\Oin'f<I C>ftt n IJCACTA II 1> Mid $11210 Note Joc•n ell•"" Oii E n and Tiie Pace Totat "'lltlld•~ for "*''Int U7 614 Oa ty Avtf•te Allfllel•nct • ~ ......... " -C8CMI• $1~· ,, Total Mutue4 llool CMeellnel ... OSI '73 Dally .t.Yeraoe Muluel POOi 1119 •SO All•11ct•ntt 10 tU Holvwood Pltrll SUH DAV'S llESUI. TS (S6ftl Of •1·0.'I ll>Or~C>ra<I "'""'"'' FIRST •ACE. S 1 lurlon\l\ Penerverence <Stevenl) C'11\0\ I McC1rront Prince Sau•tres I Oet111\0u\\hf' Time I OA1 AOO 1 40 210 740 210 HO Alto Ran Wtlda•n•n Bound Boo W Pr·r~ Savone Tower Ser alC,,td NM• SECOND llACIE A 1,,, tong\ l (lveJe110 (t oro l AD 0<-1111nat I 8teco • Gevltott IS11>1tle ) Tim• 1111 ~00 IMJ 180 \60 • 10 DO Also llan Our Coo•.tttta \ur,. And '"'"" Ottlent Comtn•nc! Al>O•e Th• R~\I Whv Not Te~ N'•oml Lu. Car'u" Ir nq 0 I< 1\1\av Sc.ta ldlacS Mv Onlv Ona Vo<tor•e Port U DAILY OOU8Ll S 91 l•ll d S9 80 TI4taD •ACE J 1.,, "'II' A,1~ PO#•r T ~ )0••81 ·Soto) K••••• Leo 1v ... ,.,.,..., Time 113 l Al\O llen 8• '"'•""'"' ''••domo Gu•h trHmer Summit llun Ne•v,...., Cl•nt Bui Lt11Mr Scratched None ll EX~CTA <S ti P••d s~ 00 l'O""TH •ACE I • m1i., nn turt CorrldOI Ktv fSla•er>\I l 00 HO 110 Solslatn tM((arro111 I 00 710 1 10 A llanllon 1 She>tmai.er I 1 llO Time I fl A "'''° ll•n Coatl•rig Cn11gar M11l'"'~ Swallag• For\Yllle Bov Scretcl'lt<I No11e U liXACTA CI 6l Pft1CI \A 00 fltFTH ••c•. 4 tur1<>nos Doria's Ot l•Ol'll IV•tan11MHe1 Sano Olgoer IKHlltfl Mott Dafermln.O '~'•••"'' Tl!M 1 °'' 14 -IQ..._1040 AOO HO HO 00 AIM> 1ta11 Powerful f v•\ T 1n111t1 EntQ4tt1• Eoo 8u<lt; Covo.,1ro Scratched F•t11iv letll lS EXACTA Cl JI P•·d l lll 00 JIJCTH It C• I nt ·• War Oet>I ••-""'"' E•tran•• S ••8"\) Ca•o s Hotlvwooa 1011••'1>\I Tlfria I J\ 4 ,, "° ~00 l «> 110 260 l IO ·~<) !ten NO"lll n Ne• •• ''"" ll·Chard H . O..-n•• D lte ~• A P•to.-.. Seratt,,.,, If ' NOi Mv JO(; n •x•CTA 10 ,, .,. d l .. ,0 HV.NTH •AC ' l\Jf !Q1'gs O•••"' Al>our Y(lu \"o•ma•ar I ''Odlno Etty IM<Cl,,°'11 8_, t Wallet Cl••<~ I Ttma I 10 1100 600 •tO uo •10 \20 Alao ••n E•~I Moo In C.onn" r.i CNI 8• .. M•rlll11 01~11( \waP kretclM'I! I u'• Mia U •XACTA II 11 t1.11<! UO\ "'1 \l Pt(I' ~IA ? \ I 10 11 O•td S34,171t0 Wtlll 13 wonfler\ •·• flor\l\I S1 fl'ICk ~Ir co>n\Oto••on Po 1d H99 80 '""'" 46S winner\ lllve tteir\t'\ 1 l 114 SOO ~l ( .,, 1ov11r EIGHTH AACE I I I& mlle on turl 81\MD'\ ll1no l\l"••M I~ 60 610 ) 20 Or De•• I Snl)t'mo• ~· • 00 1 I() C.o Dence• •M• C 1rrr11• , 60 r.m. 1417 Al\o Pen P•t>ft• 11inn P'l Ano O•c Peutlvo Ov•el Loe\ "'d•••\CllwunQ Screlt~•<I llemo•lflet\ Oanc•l>et. Bo11na ~!·<~•"• u lXACTA 1 0 O••d l l)O so NINTH llACE I t m ·•\ Htddtn t 1~nt ~~~m•k•f An E mpreu Slh4'flll ~am11v St•• Mc(arro,,l T·mt 141' AllO llan PrOtl•ll• P,oteqt \( ·e ti "9d M~1,.1r U EXACTA ) If pa1<1 '14 'iO I 00 110 OUT 2 llO OUT OUT TINTH RACE I 1 ,.,, .. , on l\j(I Too Muc" For T v 1s1 .. ansl IS 80 ll••"O" :Dala"<>un•nl 1ro11 I •.O•r I fOfQI ,,.,.,. ... ~ Also Ran llota Cerm~t o.~ Tr" EPMln Down\ Morwrav 8ov l(lltyglfln Or Forti Ton Futv \< ratcl'led Court Ano So•r~ U IX ACTA tQ 611>4110 ''~I 00 All811C!ence ll ?IS Harness legend in critical state N EW 'ORK (AP> Bill Haughton, a Hall of fame harne \ racing dnv<'r 1m1r1e1 rt'ma1 ned 1n l nucal wnd1tmn ~unday w11h head 1n1ur1<''> \uffercd 1n a lhrte-horse ~pill \aturda) night 111 Yonken RaCt'WI} ~tank) ~antcr. a Hall of Fame mt·mtx·r and lonatimt' fncnd and m al ot Hauih1Un. \31d unda} thtu the h::!·)t'&r·old Haughton W&\ 1n u wma a1 tht Wc~lcht'\tt'r Med1eul < cntt'r at Valhalla. N. Y A. \f>oke,man for 1 lauahton ~ fam· ii ~•d ~unda\ afternoon that 1h1 famll)" had nn rnmment On Jan. l , 1980. Hau&Jlton·, ,.,n, Pt'1cr, al"' a dn .. t'r·tra1nl'r, wa~ k1Uet1 "hen h•H'ar hit a ttlephone pole 1 he "'' lta' 1n1 th<' Meadowland, at Ea'1 RuthtrforJ, NJ wht'rc he had drs\rn lk ~J'> 1\ New chief picked for First ·American Je11 Barrera has been named president and chief uecut1 ve officer of Flrst Amertcu Buk 6 Trut Co. of .Laguna Beach. Barrera is the former interim p~ident and chief executive officer of San Dicauno National 8-nk 10 Enciniw. He succeeds Pew M. Plsey, who resigned afte.t..her marriage to Ora'W County financier l\obert Gata. • • • Mlclllael L. Meyer, manaa.ina panner of llf.llDetll Levnthal & Co.'1 Oranae County office, forecast a shift of instJtuuonat investor interest from offices to industrial and retail buildings at an Economic Development Council Forum at the Los Anaclcs Area Chamber of ,, , , . . ' A \ ~ BARRERA MEYER BOUCHER Commerce. Whtie he found the real estate industry in a robust condition, he ~•d that "only developers and investors with derp pockets and patient money should be playtng the game." • • • Huntington Beach resident Craig Boucher has been named senior vice president and general counsel for Irvine-based Signal Landmark Propertes, Ille. He succeeds Wilham R. Allen, who ha!> reured. Boucher has been with S1anal Landmark since 1979 • 'l • Tbomaa R. Bolton has been named a vice president of E.F. Hatton & Co., Inc. Bolton 1s branch manager in Hutton·~ Ne~pon Beach office He Joined that firm 1n 1977. A Corona del Mar re\tdent. he 1s a member of Hoag Ho1pltal 5St CJab and the Balboa Bay Club. • • • Home Federal SavlDg1 and Loan has presented a salec; achievement award to the Bolsa Golden West office Accepting the award at Home Federal's Irvine sales conference was Phylll1 Schroeder of Huntington Beach. • • • Jonatllan E. Scllut&l has been appoinled regional vice prcs1dl'nl of CommerceBanll, responsible for markeung efTons at lhe bank's Newport Beach headquarters office and Long Beach loan product ton office: Roy T. Log1don and Jane L. Pagler have been appointed vice pres1dcnt/commerc1al loan officersfor the bank. Logsdon wall work out of the headquaners office. Pagler for the bank's South Coa\t reg10nal office. Shuetz had served as vice president of the commercial banking group in the Long Beach office of Golden State Sanwa Bank. A Mission V1cJo resident, Logsdon most recently served as vice president and mnager of the Santa Ana office of Valencia Bank. Pagler had been vice prc!t1dent of adm1n1s1rauon for Supreme Finance of Long Beach ••• Jou J . McKerren, a Newport Beach CPA. has been honored b~ the Call(ornl Certified Pabllc Accoutant1 FollDdatloo for Edacalloo and Re1earell as rcc1p1ent of the 1986 Award for Mentonous &rv1cc The award was given an recogmt1on and appreciation for Mc.:Kcrren \ record a!> a foundation instructor in con11nu1ng educauon for members of the profession. McKerren 1s a member and shareholder BOLTON SCHROEDER MCKERRAN of King, Hen1lee & Jack1on of Newpon Beach He l'i a UC Irvine, Extension D1v1s1on. faculty member and ml·mher of the '-ewpon Harbor Arca Chamber ol ( ommercc and thl· Industrial League of Orange County. • • • Fred J. Barne1. pre'>1dent of Smith laternatlooal lac. an Newport Beach, will be leavini the company later this year. Dunng the ne't se\eral months hc will devote all his efforts to managing the patent 1t11gauon appeal as well a!> assisting JelT) Neel) chairman of the hoard and chief e'ecuuve officer of the firm on 'araou~ nthn matter:. • • • Jim and Bobble Larkin of Red Carpet/Larkin & Auoclatei 1 n Huntington Beach. recentl> attended Red C arrx.·1) 20th Jnnl\l'f"1r\ con\Cnt1on an Honolulu. Ha~a11. • • • Merrill Baller of Inane was one ut nine indt' 1dual'> rell'nth named to the ( altfornaa Bu1ld1ng Industry Hall ol f-amc Butkr t'> a licensed ct -.11 cng1neer and general building contractor and prc~1den1 of Merrill Butler Jnc a real estate development compam tk ha\ con'ltructed over I 1.000 rcs1denttal un1t'I tn the past 'O vear'> • • • Orange County intenor designer Carole Elcben wa'i ,1 tcatun·d speaker at th<' Home Industry fa po '86 held recently an A1lant;1, ( 1a Eichen 1<1 president of Carole Elcben Interiors, Inc. an ~;mt.1 \na. \hl' spokr on future trends in re-s1den11al 1 n tenor design anc.J pre'rn tcd I hl' re .. ult\ of her nat1onw1de 'ltudy of f1rst-l1me hume bU}l!r'> • • • JamH L. Anderson has been named president and l h1l'I opera11ng officer of Commercial Bankers Life Insurance Co. 1n Ne\\ port Beach John S. Rouu au. who ha~ been president of thl' firm ~a nee 1971. wa\ named chairman of the board and chief e\l'lUllH' ollicrr • • • Chuck Cortrigbt ha<, Joined AST Research. lo<' J\ dm·t"tor nl marketing for thc new 'lystems group Loca!cd an lrvanc o\ \I I\ il leading supplier of software and hardware for pcrwnal wmnu•~·r' SCHUETZ PAGLER and computer ~\''items ( 'ortnght 1s to direct marketing of a nl'W Turbola~r pnnt"cr that <\ST C)(e>eCt~ 10 introduce in the spring ~ . . \an ta .\na resident Le1lle Kepbart JOtns the All1tau ln1urance Co a~ a <>ale'\ agent i;;he wor~cd previously a~ an assocuuc an·11un1 c'lecuttvc for Jansen Public Relatlon1 an Santa Ana Kephart " .i I Q77 graduatc of Newport Harbor H11h School and me" cd a bal'hclor''i dtiftt from U( Santa Barbara • • • Cat•y L. Coveney hac. been named markeuna dm1n1w:uor l~u Grtffla Towers at Hutton Centre an the South Coast Metro < 1nll1n Towcn 1s he1na de\.eloped hy Metro A11odatt1. a JOint \Cnturt of GrtfflD Really Corp. of Newport Beach and Abmanton Commerc-lal 0evtlopmHt Of l 0\ n1elcS (. OVene) ISA &rldUltC Of thC' \ nl\ C'r\11 of Southern Caltforn11 and ic, a hcc-n'>C'd <'altfMn1a rral C\t:ltt• tk'> pt'OOn • • • CUrles N Sabatlao, ~ llt' prc\1tknt of Amtrlun Mf'dlul lateraaUoaal, ID(. of( 0<1t1 Mc\fl, l'('(.·entl) cnmJ'lll'led an •nh'"""r '1Cm1nar an mana t"mcnt dc-velopmcnt .lt the llun:uJ I rll'l'r\lt\ Graduate School of Ru\tnC<t'I ~dm1n1\tra11on • , ·Nielsen gets Rotary awarq for ~is community service By JlM HATHCOCK Oe1tr,... Ceo 18' I 1•111 Irvine Co. President Thoma• H. Nielsen ba} received an award for community service from the New- port-Irvine Rot.ary Club. The club started the Corporate Community Involvement Awird three years aao and past ~pients include the late J Robert Fluor, Auor Corp.; Oen. John K. Davis, USMC. Manne Corps Air Bases Western Dtstnct; and Walter 8. Gerken, Pacific Mutual Life Insurance Co. In add1tJon to irantina Nielsen and The Irvine Co. temporary custody of the a Iver cup, the club funds&-$ 1,000 Paul Hams Fellow in Niel'ICn's name. The Rotary Foundation 1s a non- profit corporation that provides worldwide grants and education awards for international excha.n and university scholars, teachers, business and professional people. The foundatton also fundt scholar· sh1 1)), provide' match1n1 fundt for international chant.able and educa· tional projects and ts uy1n1 to provide pOho 1mmun1zat1on for over 23.5 million children 1n develop1na countncs by I 99S. Nielsen was promoted to pl"CSldcDl and chief operat1n1 officer of The Irvine Co. an January 1983 after servina four years as senior v1ee ,president and one year as vice president in charae of the company's community development d1v1S1on. A native of Fullerton, Nielsen earned degrces 1n civil enginccnn1 from the Unaversnr of Washanaton and busmei;s adm1n1strat1on from Stanford Univeo1ty's Graduate School of Bu ineu. ' ActJvc an the Bu1ld1f!J Industry Assotlltion, President's Coun•il a.nd the California Roundtablc, Nielsen also 5erves as chamnao of the Economic Developmeni Corpor· ataon of Oranae County and on Tbe lmnr Co. and Pacific Mutual Ufe Insurance Co, boards of directors Nielsen's pubhc and c1v1c ~rv•~ affiliauons include the Oranac Coun· ty Council of Boy Scouts of Amenca, the Los Angeles World Affairs Coun- cil, Orange County Perfonnina Arn Center and a vane1y of other affiha- uons He and h1~ wife make their home m Newpon Beach Tbom.u e. l'fklMD Mexican workers hurt by inflation Stock market takes record skid today NEW YORK (AP)-Stock pnccs took a record-setting drop today an sclhng touchcd off by economic womes a.nd bcansh statements by some prommcnt analysts By SALLY JACOBSEN ._. ............. MEXIC 0 CITY -Despne hefty raises this year. the Mexican workers will see their wages nibbled away by soaring 1nOat1on and they hkely will be left with less tn their pockets to s~nd than last year Wages have shrunk so much that. according to one economic anaJys1s, workers' purchasing power last year was back to the level of 20 years ago "The person who made the mini- mum wage in 1985 on average could buy exactl y the same things as he could tn 1965." said Jonathan Hea:h. senior economist with the private Me)(1can forecasting proJCCl, CIEMEX-Wharton Inc., an Ph1ladcl- ph1a "He has e)(actly the same purchas- 1 ng power There has been no progress 1 n 20 year\," he sa ad fhc minimum wage for unskilled worke~ in Mexico C1ty 1s 2,065 peso\ a day. or about S3 33. The minimum wage an the lln1tcd States as SJ 35' an hour Partly because ot the cfTcct on workers. \iexacan officials are reluc- tant to agree to add111onal belt- t1ghtcning mea<,ures as they worli. out a fre!>h rcscuc package v.1th the 1nterna11onal financial communal} to handle the lOUntf) 0 \ foreign debt ot ncarl)' SI 00 bt I hon. Indeed, the)' have said in recent days that the) intend to seek enough financial help to restart an economy disrupted for four )'Cars by falling 011 prices. and make \ure 11 grows J percent to 4 percent in 1987 and 1988. .\nalysts predict 11 will contract b} at least 1ha1 much this )Car. to register thl' thtrd downturn 10 live year5 Mexicans are well aware of their plight "People arc tired ol hvang in this cns1s," said Marco Antonio Torres Vclazqucz. 28, who dnves a tut and takes odd JObs to help support his parents and ~ven brothers and sisters sull hving at home For middle-class Mexicans the cras1s means canceled tnps to the United State'>. fewer new cars. post- poning maJor purchases and dipping into savings to pay bills For the poor. 11 means cutting back on the nece'i~1t1cs of ltfe Adelaida Bolio de Perc1. who travels \IX hours a day by bu!> and subway to earn the minimum wage as a maid an a well-to-do part of the capital. can no longer afford to regularly buy the two quaru ol milk 'he, her husband and four young children used to consumt 1n a day The children now dnnk instant coffee . which she buys oncc a week for the equivalent of S2 75 for a large Jar l'he) moo;tl) cat tort1llas, eggs. beans and 'ioup Thc-y bu) chicken once every two wcckc; becf and pork arc out of the quec.uon . She recall<. 1ha1 a le~ )Car\ ago she spent 2.000 pe~o<. 10 fill a )hopp1n& bag with grou~ne'> "No""." she '3)'S, ··that.., nothing." \he spend\ S,000 pe'iO'> laboul S8) for tar lee;~ than a full shopping bag now and thc food in it lasts only threcda)S. Since the economic cns1s began an 1982. Heath said, the minimum wage after ad1ustmen1 for 1nOa11on has tumbled 32 4 percent i;;ranang 1n I 982 Mexico put an plate auo;tenty mcasurc'i work<"d out w11h the l 1 n1ted Nat aon s-afft Ila led In 1ernat tonal Monctaf} Fund a\ part of a linanc1al aid plun Lack of good data blam-ed for crisis - in insurance field 8)' JOHN CLNNIFF '-l \.\ 'I ORI<. -'' lalk. of 1nlor-mat1on ..aid lhl· prolhsor. hes at the rcent of the 1n\urance problem -a pmhlcm m.Hk up of high premium ui\t\ high damagl' awards. and an 1nahtl1t\ of man~ customers 1oob1aan .1n\ 1n,uranc e ··v. h,lll'\l'r change'> need lo be m.idl' mu\t lot.u'> on the basic dilem- ma ot thl' an~urer. ani.J 1ha11s a lack of 1nll1rma11on ··he \aid \.\ illlam C Ounkclbcrg, Purdue l n1Hrc.1t\ el1inom 1c~ professor, of- ll'" that· 11p101Cln as a basis for undl'r\t,1nd1np, a dilemma that of late '" pmdunng more charge'i and l nun1en harp,e' than solut1onc; - "hall' thl \1lua11on worsenc; \\JX'l t\ of the \1tuat1on are found almo'it t.·,en"hl·re L 1abihtt in- 'uranu: I'> too custh or not offered dlXt\lr\ pa\ huge malpractice an- \urance tee' corporate directors can- not ohtatn pro1eu1on against 'itock- holdN'> \Utt\ nc~ companies are denied am an<;urance produc1 ltah- tlll\ an .. urance 1<, retu~d \ lalk ot 1nformat1on ~ad 1h1· protc .... or. " the l·ommon ingredient an all He goc' un to e\plaan ·-what is a gamhle tor each of U'> 1~ '>Im Pl~ a 'il:Jlt'>ltt. for large numbers of U\ , .. .\It hough \\ol' dn not know precio;e- 1\ which of U\ will he an an an 1den t. ~c dn k.now that all Iden I\ do occur at a fo1rl)' \lead) and prcd1llahle rate \nd thl' J\crage 10~1 nl the~ alTl- dcnl\ 1c; al'><> knov.n · Thi\ 1nformatl(ln. hl· C'<pla1n'>, allow' 10'iurcr'> to take gambles or mk\ and. through larttc numbcl' . lCln"en thcm into CO\h \nd the\<' l o'it'>. plu\ ·odauonal mone-. for ..alanr<. and overhcad. arr a' erag1:d llUl a' prcm1um' But \\hC'n p("ople hccomc 1n\urnl he rnnt1nur.\, a "moral ha11rt1" 1k,c-lop'> fhnt "· "hcn f)foplc ha'c tire 1n,11r.1nlC', tor C\amplc, th1'\ tend to 1nH'\I It''' in homr lirr pre,ent1on I h1· rr,ult "inon· hnll\l' fir<'' .rnd ll'l,1wtl 1lr11th' .ind an11111t'' 1h.ln V.l' v.ould ha' l' 11 lhl'rl' "err nu 10- \Uranlc ·· he\..!\\ \\1th l1ah1lil\ 1n\ura0ll' "l' drtvl· mofl• carell'\\h anJ v.hen we hu)' protection lrom theft "c 1n"est lc'i~ an thl'lt prl'H'nllon The ..amc with I health 1nc;urante when we h;ne 11 "ego ICI the dcxtor mon• ofkn than ~1thout ·· I What dm•c; all 1h1\ haH· to do ~•lh tot.la\·., tn'iurancc problem'"' ··~·imply this To ansun· ap.aan\I .i nsk an amurcr mu!lt hil'l' 1nlur- m:111on c1hc1u1 the lrrquenC\ nl .in adverse event'<; onurreml' and lht• co\1 of each l'' ent when 11 nH ur. .. Then 11 muc.t havl.' a large enough I number of part1c1pants 111 rnn' ert lhc gamblco; in10 known rn<.I\ · In man\ 1ns1anll'\ ho~eH·r l''>- pel'lall\o at a 11mr \\hen tx-ha .. 111r ,., changing 1nc.urer\ do not ha\e p.no<l up-to-datc tigurr\ on thl' frequl·nl \ and cost nl c;u1t'i Moreo,er an c;ome anstancec,, the tn!lurahle par11e'>do not c0Mt1tutc a group lar(lc enough to permit a'eragangol co\t' Dunkc-ltx-rg d1~sn'1 lei tn'iUfl'f\ otT "'11hout hloml' It as true hr ma1nt.11n\. llMt 1nc;urcr<; \ha"ed premium\ and gol 1n10 dc'ltrulll\e rnmpettlt\C halllc'> c;imply 10 ohta1n nHlnl') In 1n"c~t at I the high 1ntere'il rail'" that r"'tl'd 1n the early 1980., and which ha' l' c;1 nee fa llc n .. SomC'what mor<' rcwon'>thle tle-1 havaor 1ln thC' part ot in~uranC'e rnmpante'> and ltmal\ nf guadeltnc'i for ltabalth '>C'ttkmt'nl' \\1111ld am pro\C thc 1um:t1on1ng nt tn\urann markc1' ·· h<' \U\\ \.\ho tor t'>.amplc. \hould dl'udt "hat II wrnnaful tkath I\ "nr1h 1 .\n: 1111 \\ ronaful Jeath'i the \lmC 1 ~hOUld \lex Ii.holder\ be ahl<' to \UC had man11gr""' Dunl;clhc.·r& Jot•\n't hllH' thl· ,tn\"-Cf hu1 he-'uggnl\ that thr markc-tpla1 e maaht •· '' lllO\Uml'I\ ~1lm<' 1n\ rra"nl\- h .iv.are til the: n<.ing ui't ot an- c.ur.tnte. 1n 1c-1m,11I prtm1um\nn1111n lhl• ava1l,1h1ltl\ nl prndut I\ .11111 '4.'f\ Ill•\, tht'\ v.ill think IV.Ile.' .1~n11 th1· '"l. ol "'1tlrnH'nl' h,1n1kd """' n 1n thr 1 n1ir1r1111m Analysts said traders apparently returned from the long July 4 weekend m an uneas) mood over evidence of con11nu1na wcak.nC$5 m the economy .\. monthly survc)' conducted by the National Association of Purchasing Management found declines last month m production. employment and new orders The trade 11oup's compos1t.c 111dcx recorded 11s sharpest decltne an nearly 211i years For much of the time lately brokers have been tallung of slugg1<1h business act1v11y as a plus for the market. 10 the sense that It seems to increase the hkehhood of another cut an the Federal Rescrve'sd1scount rate. . But toda) observers 'laid concern was mounting that a d1scount- rate cut had already been so widely forecast that the prospect had been fully taken into account by the market .\.ddmg to the market's weakness was the news that two well- known analysts -John Mendelson of Dean Wmer Reynolds and Roben Prechter. publisher of an mvrstment adv1M>ry service -had turned negative on the outlook for stocks The Dow Jones averaie of 30 1ndustnals fell 61.87 to 1,839.0Q. exceeding its prev1ouHecord point loss of 4 S. 75 points on June 9 of this year Far greater percentage decl1neo; have octurred an the pasl. when the average was at much lower levels. But that was small consolatton 10 traders coun11n~ up their los~ today Declining issues outnumbered advances b)' about 6 to I on the New York Stock Exchan1te. uDurty Nelly 's" . OPE FOR LUNCH & DIN ER Monday thru Friday l I "M to 9 PM • ING UNDaTHE TONIGHT! AT1:30P.M. THOROUGHBRED RACING NIGHTlY, MON.-SAT., THRU JULY 21 JOIN US FOR AN MNING OF EXCITEMENT! • 10 AdK>n Pocked Races • Elegant Dm1ng at Competrtive Pnces • Exotk Wogenng: fJCodos •~So< • Doily Double • Plenty of Pooong LET'S HAVE A PARTY! Group discounts avatlablc Schedule special night now! Phone 714-995-1234 213-431-1361 .--...... .... ~~ ORANGE COUNTY RACING FAIR 4961 l<otello Ave Los Alomlfos 714/995-1234 • 2131431 -1361 nron "'" llM' u 11.,-c.. ::ir.t. I I :r;!n 1.l6 .... .. '11 J a.,~~ ~I JI 1 ~.~. j ilrtne ~t..: I u l ~1 a.on l60 I -,_ - FMC I O FPL Go 104 II JI FeCICtr M lS ~~he! I l Felr' of l Fell10 tt F1mOlr Fl'!tltl f 1 m~~ · 11 F .. Eo ~so F~s Sl ~~·: '> ~~~ ~ ~ ~:-Jin°'. l·~ H lM F~t HI 14 x20361 Ferro 1 20 7) )fO F PA l F~ll 1 46 14' ~I Pen~ F11S r • Fir 011~ l FltHln 11 FIAH OH Ft9kSv 1 ! 10 F~lll ~II Fl\le l &t FIB •• F!Tir of• 1 F9Tit of4 FICltv 1 FF! 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I~ jf f ':=I,. ~: ~ J , .. ._,. ___ ----~ _. -~ ---~ ----~ ~ -~ ~ NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTION S --v -Ct> I .. 14 t li'.Wo "* pfJ611 VMrtl" '3 V•nl>t" I 10 1t Va/CO ~:f! .. pl ,. )7 7 v ... rrv· ValO 40 fi Veecoo AO IJ ~= llOe ~1~1"' v. "" ~. p~ v ,r:n ' v y u ~=-,,. tJ ~I( "' 2i1f w ii People' NEED classified Daily Pilot classifieds work for you. ca11 642·5678 for quick cash sales. WHAT AMEX Om 1 WHA T NYSE Orn NEW YORK !AP) Jut 1 NEW YORK CAP> Jul 7 T~~ Prev Advanced ·~ Adv1nc.d T~L Declined Oeclfned ff 9 ¥nctt•noed ¥~~ olellfisues ~o New h ohs New~ ht New lows New ws "2 ~ AMEX LEADERS ~ - , GoLo QuorEs Prev d•li ·~ ---Dow JoNES AvERAGES : METALS QuorEs NEW YORK (AP) -Soot noni.roue meiel P,M*I Mondey A""'""""' · 62 76 oen11 pet pouNI, N'f eom." llC>QI morotll OIOMd wees C...-· 97--681\\ oentt •pound U S ci..tlnetlM• c....-90 00 oent1 -pounO NV C:omea 11C>4>1 month OIOMd wees Leed• 22'~24 -111 I Cl()UnCI Zlfto • 41 _,,, • pound, d411Merees n.. • 13 6163 ,,,,...,, w .... OC>ml)Ollt• pnc• pet IC> 1 ...,., . " 075 -ounce Handy & H""'M ..... • S6 089 per troy ,,.,._ NV Cclmttt opot tn0<1lll cio.ecswees ..._,. ueo 00·&290 00 -18 It>"-Nww YMk ,...._ $437 OOS43800 CIOIMellC IMrCl\Mt lroY ounce NV : NASDAQ SUMMARY The atock m•rketa were cloaed Frld•y To lbott Llfl.S from U"\Ct. Rohzrt ToltxJU. da.~\gn st.1Jd\o in aormzl vellay Uui world~ f\11tZ.9t. hondelzwn t.~ ~I~!. tllll rtzr!Q.ct.9dt tmd elwey.ei tin lo~t !Yllczr.t,1on ~Tt bzoch lflt f),~\100~\on:i,1\'t/611'1 5()7Q ·~L1t:wcxx1'11l ""9L 1001 ~ bl'-'Ci, 21~200 ~7 ~ ?'•ctdim"S 2~~th 1okrl"'4 ,818/Xl4t 9~~) 111on Um.dh 10to9. ~u...r :1 lOto~t ""'~Y noon ti:>~ I CALL 842-5878 . ~ •' ' . r . ·~ --- COLDW<?U BANl(eR LI .U" - 759-9100 ... INTO SAVINGS The DlilJ Pilat hos Q new way to turn your Hidden Treosuresi into CASH with o $7.60 Classified Ad. ?.60 or$S.60 with prepayment 4 Lines-7 Days-$7.60 No change• In copy or concellotlon. Private parties only No Commercial, Real Estate or Employment Ads. There is no price limit to who1 you con advertise. If you need to sell your car, boot, couch, high choir or any unused merchandise-call the Doily Pilot Classified staff or use the coupon below. 642-5678 ---------.~--------------------------- NAME ADDRESS CITY PHONE STATE ZIP AO COPY 4 ltM m1n1murn opproM1motely A word' per line AMT ENCLOSED c1« .. (\,,. VISA or MC Are you a \VbKriber 10 the Dolly Pilot? """ o"• YES 482 SmArt easy cro· chet' A groat tabard lo wpar ~nd wear Usf' bahy varn 1n ono r:olor edge in ?nd rotor 01mrt1on!t s11es 6 14 inrl Send S3 25 phJ<; 7~" postage handltnQ tor each pattPrn 8'ftd IO ~"'.:'!fn t"::' .::.~ C.~ .. lf'f 11m """ ... Mdlwa ~ 11111. l"lllrll ......., HEW FOA ONlV S 1 96-~ lull-<:dof Cat. too of CNfta -pattemt bOok• ~ crewel croa 11ttch. needlepc>tnt latch hoe* quilting . .ir'ld mot9 LAURA WHEELER c R T s .. US, lmAT A~ WATm 9IA. MSP&•A••ll Ta 11.&1U•r n , .. 1111 .a.•• St11 v .. p,.,.,t Cell ca. ........ 642-5671 for Information & surprisingly low cost. ... 12 ............ ........... .. ............. • Month-to-month also 1v1il1blt • Furnished/ unfumlshtd • Frtn111 centers. ttnn11. SW1mm1ng Models open d11ly, 9 6 Sorrv. no pets NfWl>Ort Beech No 880 Irvine Avenue let ttll MS-1104 Nf!Wpon Beech So 1700 16th Str111 (11 Dowrl M2-~tU ~ Traditional Realty ~\ 1-7370 Fm• •• Cit ..... I Ofaoge Cout DAll.Y Pit.OT/ Ml')Odey, JUiy 1; 1988 ~-.. Cledeal/!I!! __,_,....... ~~~=!.!!!!!!...-..!!!! --.. ..,.,.. 1=;;;;iiiiiiii~ 1-------........ 1=l!!!!!!-.._.i=:=•..J!!! ~,:-~-==: 1111 rnmn 111111,..1 tan Mwt ._ Hllf' V.., ~!!" --d-•&1 -8ollool Ot•du••• or =:-i.t~in: -... ~.._.,_.._ Multbe~ 1Jmn1dl1M ...... tote tl't klUd\ ~= end Wll poomed. '*Y 01wlfte4t Adwitttetno saeonw ' >ant~ ~ ..-•· T...,_,.• ..,......,. ~· ,.._. ~ ,. perfllnoe, but .. trell\. PW't..eime, oou6d' MR ..,_to: Aln::lll, PO 9clll eel.-, U1-12M Into .... time. ~-z......,., 8-d\, CA ··:M~J ).~ Pl•t9d.41WSI"'= 121A-1913 !(fj;mw ::W:·:::-E:.1111 ic ....:.. to wottc"'"::.. ~ = ~"""' Monlcel40-14Q.1.. ~ -··---· -"*'t pM oommllelon • .,...,,,.orp/t,cel tMr¥egOOddlMngNOOrd n-.. Oel ~ °"°" es eorone Def Mer~ AOllll .i ~ -.n'. -· ~ '*' Ml. IEDE"' •• 11, WI lllll 14.2..W1ea1.302. s.w-,~. ~M C M ~ PolNIM• °'*' _, lllf_._ 2W.1•130M w.,nnoe .,.. .. ofb, • · · 8ante Ane Mwtc-= La •t.a1•• ,.._,,. ~ w!Oe1 Gd •'I• .a APPMNTICtiHIPI (WOM from It*' lroe.) ~ Ttelnlng ~. .. ftl)IU ftllT clMlmed wtton -undet in.nnoe.Seme ~• Meded to flll lrrlrnedlttl MU8T OEUV!R "20/mo. Cell Ml 9'lt9lr DAYER. 1100. 141 S2lt ... I see out ed _, todllY'• t?.,: .... in..ln ... ,--High IOhoof or• 17-2t HAViNiWi,AP!M no HP neoH t U J, ki!HMOREWAiHERAHO ~-AppYll ~ "Aeoeptlonlat". Ane. am Of Matty ~.:..-&~ po1ttonelnour5 Need ~t ~ I~ ot eft lpm iiAMKEHMORa ~~ ........ :* STATE Fiii 136-1800 tlon. ~ be to pt rt on w I 11 g ht ea...-.2 Al!f'RIG!AATOA. .._.,, I AECEPTl0Nt8T good retooett. Meny ven/atetlon••oon, Frotll ft-. Good Cond. Pool ...,.. i', IOlld Olk, -------- ....a11 • ... -••••.., evdable In ttectroNot. 1 :30em -4:JOem r-'-----'250 u1...oa ou., temp oue '-* 111111101 entry ,,_, wlfMt grow--9M5111l-r'--I oommunleatlone, enD"' MOO/mo end ~ Olli _,_,...,w,. . '9H obo. ftowtnG "*" 'l!!P.Etlea ino. fMndly pubtlther. ~ ....,. Long'• neer1ngamore.bollllnt ......,w 1~ Ill II 1100 e•a.G41 II I IDll Type 40 wpm, know 10 DNg StoNe In CoN t>9neflt1 1ncludlng so ' ·I Ml hnltue llH · ti, II Jill eoeta ...! ,.. tst•t• ;rso't11~~ ~ ~~. :.~,:y :!:::c'a~!: ~~''!""!!'" .. IYlllMI l llYPLZI• ~~:AK1T1~ m111t1iiw11 1 --... -----........ eyndlcatOf need• full 5M-Ote8 workrng wtth pubOo. p1U1 mucti men. Cell to1 ,..;.. cati ~1PIY· &lel'glltto .,_,.. ,__, U1 •t.a1U 1215 oao. 111-74t0 lnclMMI u ~ ~- cllerge bookkHper ~ Selety oommeneuret• ,,... 800-262-4538/0669 to conduct • MMI~ (keep Cllllno). boerd. °'-' oondltlo!L '74 ~ van. ~ Someoompuier*-PWon Aeoep4JOlllet wfth up. Xlnt beMflta. Of (213) 2"-8317 .. 12 J08S AVAtLAalE. Age 8tucfV tot ... er.,. Amtque e.tta• Merbll TV i4TilL.JTe De8H. ft Aootboerdt.WOOdlrM-lled. NMg. •• '*' ... 19M compatlbl9 Meded. OIEllT 11101 Cell tot eppt. 131""223 Mondey-Fttcltly ' 17-25 •. ~ PtlY wftll Im-Coell Pu~ Co top drea« w/rntrrtK. •~1" • ~ ........... ton\, lnftet. ....._ toot GIN. .eo. Malte Oflw, Th• le I growttl potltlon ' medlete beMftta. Tl'8Wll --.. · Stmmone twin bed Ind -"' " -~ pumJ). NM ~ 'M . c.11417-6178 In 111 u.PMdlna nrm •llm&• 4PT MA.NAGER needed ~ .,.., the ............ ,,.,.,,., newr 1-.d t145. uo. 7S -OHO Of 1795. tn-7124 LIL:M Saler; reilge Sll 000-llEOEPTIOllST HITllY--tot 18 untt11P1 complex In trlllnlng proorem ~ P'tMMnt ~ wlOe • Cell 17Mtn l7M 174 p -... -, 120.000/yr 842-3991 eonq to N :-.;:,~ CM. Mult be rnented, 1nD1 now In moet w mu9t. no ~ ,. BE0A00M SET~ WANT£D..8ALIOA BAY ... IMtl Tiii CJ.... ... Trowbnd09Equlty0f'OU9 lllTl llU pereone ~tor t"9 eernk9tlln000dhtlftt'I. ftiida. .. 12 M~. Celt quWed. ~tot hcllM-S CLUB Fem 11 'f 1f'......... F&iS@W&Sbf Ntwpof18tYdetBeySt ftnt9t Eutop. Cty9tate & ~~o·~·M .. ~2H-8H1 or ~· high~ p:~:-... a::: M9mbeehlp, cell deyt Hull & tr•ll•t ISOOO ITATIONWAGON-17.IOO ... llllfll .V• need en lndMdulll wfth Ceremtc:e. lQn1 beMftta. Co 5N-O JO#WI StMgmt ~. 1 rnoonlat~ Houre: Cell matt 722.nu. 714"833-2MO, EJtzell9Ch. ..... 1812 Ortglnlll good wood,~ Property Menegemnt Co., ~· 1G-«9Y abllUel Cell 0-.... IS2~135 C<ieta ...... CA 92821 ~.... Monch1y .. irt:tey 5:30pm DINING sm ORIENTAL • 11' T~llrd ~ OMC. wctuttng .......... looldngfortulltlrneboal· ~and~~ f /T-lllD lllll---N.ecstd tot,..,.,,. IL,... to t :OOpm, Seturdey tab'-1 4 cNlr't 80UO .......... 1111 180tlp, '78, tow "°"'9, !!.!.~~: keep« Experlenoe In wort! ~ ONifcJ. ••••-~ tell eeor.. fff tn awi11 t:00em to 1:GClpm. 8Ullt ROSEWOOD 1111 -llmlN cov., "*'Y ..,.._ ,,._, computettHd eocount-,.::::,·:~ Contactl.alrte~ Auety,..,..now:11. EOE. ~70 •t U .OO/t1our plu• ONLY*3500.873·~0 mYllTI-ttoOO 080. C•~· rr14 )11•D345 Ing. pr09WfY man.-p~ briinoi'credtt ~In per.on 2736 . ••DIEi -~ PrtY&te deelll I W/Q9a,8.,.._and 176-02U , ment bllOkground ptef'd unk>n -w----• --LINGERIE SHOP need• CoMt Hwy, NB ... Mgr. •• ,... =-· oe•u•I ettlt•. KING az wtrbel ..... 1.... oNrver $500, ~. 1r-••a a.... ....... • •• Selery commen•ur•t• ......---..,_. r~btl P9"IOfl M lrnmtdlate op91lllioe, tot wofter9 we6ooi1-. 4 poet f1ern9, heeted _,'Tl -wfth•~· Send Mu.tbeebletowortlwtth dY9 per wtc, ..... UP« II.. atodllngnewproductltne For lnteMew Ollll Mery 1200 ot>o. •Hh/dry rn. It Tft Mii 0MC 11011p,"*1Nr9dto, • .., r98Ume to TSL MOMT =~:~rl•mcx;,nta wl~h Pfef'd.154118444 Full-Tim• Incl wkndt. et Melor ~-. •"-6:30 Mon.-fl'I. or 1150, chetra 115 ... 5 ™· ii tiger I fWI I~. In pttrM ..._.. 188 E. t 7th, ate 1-A, Min~ ecy ~ ~ · .. If••• -.. Good 1)9)', growth Co. 4 M\dt heW own trenepor. t-3 a.t. et 142-M71. pelntlngl. 15'1~157 Ce11co ~heir 10 .._ port tllp. Prof !Mint. Co8ta ~.CA. 92827 Exc:t pecke • .,, _. loeltlonl. ArJ9fY In P.· tetlon, mlnlmun 18 ~. MOVING SALEI FrM 'to good' home. t7000obo161.ao40 StMPLY THE 8DT lnt ..... ted ...,__J Cati· Copley Colony Cebl• 800. M.,ro Cw WWI, gr1"9)'81'd thlft onty. S4 n~/--Top quellty turn din Mt (714)838-14271"1-18813 'nn-•-nm S.-·~-~ .E.EIW. .FF.OE ' .--. Vl81on of Cotta M.u Me 2950 Herbor Blvd. C.M. hour & up. Cell hm-Spm I ..... r-... ...... .....~: . ~:":--.,....,,,...,..,.,.,.,.,,,,.......,__,.~ -· (714)241-2171 an Immediate opening tot Collect (213) 462-5165 . ?roductlon co. Inter-'"''"''• ""'""-gtw din FREE LOVINO MALE CUddY CeOln. 140 HP, EUROPEAN D!UV! STATE F ••• I remanc.t ..... rep. In-a.All 1 lllftll Pert time vtewlng for ~ground ~::::. '::., ..... D081E·NHd• good 0 /8, treller. 11600. 1~.JAMIOA!! RI). W• are Miking lndMduafl an dlvldual muat .,. eo· And= y WOftt, All egee & typee. • en-home. kMI kldt, eben-811-e872 N ..... PORT BEACH 10 perform a variety °' llSIUIOE greeefw. a Mlf-aten., lrntrl9dlett 1tlr,llc-....1 No aper Meded. No ~· ~r~ doned et kenn•I ·n 2,., m ... Y .....-. Mteoentto'Mhlonlltllnd genlt'el omce dutt.. andwtHlngtowoftlNQhtl GOADONMOVI ,_. (213)4el-<4672 ·-7·-·SMl•.., ... ,.._.n !Wf.-9799 " ~"" """' °'*'709yseW• Typing at 45-55wpm r• end wHkenda. 'lx-18TORAOE NO SELLING! 2 Cter1ta • organ. ate ctw. 780-1"4. tl'lllet. New 350 ~ 6 6406444 quired. State Ferm on.. aw.,....'"' P«l•nce In r~•rket 15041 Bek• Pttwy-8 nMded to YWlfy let. WllTll .,-Loving mixed btMd dog. 8 VoNo Outd!M. 8--4. -=-=~~~==~-excellent pey and '*"" ..... lleu, II HIM eabtl ..... pi-. ed If lrvlne 7~ phone orders. Hourly. Men 1 women OWi 111 ,_ rnonthe.. meae • .,._, E.x-Belt tanlll, 14..0, 88 --11-IPUI •nta thet Include 10091 of lnt•reated ~ call ' Hourt 6:30pm-9:00pm w/depend. OM I Pfoot Of .......... WJ celent wfth c:ihlldlwt. HM redlo, depth ftndet, hMd. DELIVERY DEPARTMENT i1v1ng aalery edJustment &.t1M242. E.o.e. IMLlftlll Set. 9:00em-1:00pm. F0t ineur tot home cWwry ltwll11*d11 ellhota. 854-1so1 Xln1oond.AAee1..,,..an Mc' anna~ DUlll For further 1ntorma11on. Kennet VelM/Dog e.ttw lnteMlw call Irene lfter of Th. ~ ....._ ...._ _ _._ .____. ~ oet 5 yr °*" at 11 4,HO. PrlWltt perty. LMtn '1 D'llln p I • • • • c • I I I 1111rn1•1T SALES HARDWARE . FIT nr oc Faltomdl w/tretn 5:30pm 142"'5e78. peiptir. Eem ~ .... _., -neut9f'ed, ~•utlful & 142-3408 or 142~Tfll . ~ .. '· 8-8 .. 8 (714)241-2177 ForComput•SenbBu-Count• ..... In FWtall S4ht54S.-8llMI Plf•Hlill mototP/TwtyAMhrt. .. .......... /. ~ lcMnghelme.ciu'et 1ertrwn '10 Spoittllltier e.Hl.&dd8t. STATE FAR. reau In lrvlne. Need ~=-~~t~~dw!: ELECTROHICTAAINEES· GooddrMngr9COtd. 751-41156, 7-11em. UUa....,)..t•fl ~ ...... 11. twin cleell. reder, Lorw\ F\llenon.CA mltu,.. peraon to hendle 128 R0c:n..ter. CM HC .. lery/benefltt I. Sumnw job. 4M-8822 la I ..... ·-... HI .... ftfl A Awl la m 9 C.ll0,000. 875-M18 2711~1 !'°°701 I.SURI.CE phonel.or-tcuatomera. tr8inlng;lmmedtet•---WhMton Peet Control N ..w C 1 El 2 • --IYP9 dwpm, 10·k•y. ~; Ngh tc:hool g;'.d SSH SOfA BED 2 Pink-1 m ~~ER ~~ .:e l=-~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii aw .,....'"· N/81'1\kr pref'd. 281~ ClU./lntauutt ';1..828; us clt.tz.l only: .. /.... AOU8ikdP£M LIVE-IN Good condition. llghl w/2 bird c•o-w/1 .,.. aft cebtn 175 000 ILAAoE 8ELECTlON Of hltl ........ l&IHlt llmTUT 9121 800·252-0538 or PHONEWOAKP/T fnOWI, Gd N4, e.p, tor ~~=•.S70,8ft t>eUlfUI woodtrt etand Muetbetoep~.i3oQ HEW&U8E?>IMW81 __, Cop19y/Colony Cable hU _.1 213·~7.M*F&-12; 5:.'~t.a,noMll!ng. rm I bcf. em Mlery. Iv pm. · $50.142-9838 mo +11928 down &,m--- l...a ""' .. ,..,., an lmmed opening for I No exp nee. Eng ll*lklng. 30 de)'I annual V9eatlon hrt ;_9pm, ~:;:, meo. 007 .5n11. llhctllullU iii I AMEAICAN Ptttlull P\ic>-873-197 4 VOLUME 8AL£8 ID. _ 1 _ motivated. Mlt-dfrec:ted appty 2-59"1, Chllft, I-' cl&Mll*l 8d ·for 1 llttle 9am-1pm. Call M•. RESPONSIBLE Young 161 c:no; fr; ilOO, 1tll pies UKC, lhotl. deuo-SOUTH COAST 24' SERV!Ce I L.EASlNO wrr-_ 11 penon Pceltlonrequlf• 3300W.eo.atHwy. guy.rieoommaodulotol W•tln9em-3pmoreft adutt ..._to ltw on Cok>rTV S125,Sony8eta ct-...Slr•grenddlemp. a.y leunc:tl. Jdt oond, N8 3e70N.QlenyAW9. ~etoapece nrrn hu open-exp. 8kllll In dlctephone SANDWICH SHOP HELPI lt18f'lllon 5pm, M2-5&42. bolt In ~for bolt I/CR 1150, (2) 3'x6' Stein 1160-S175. 646-t210 lllp, loeated 0. Ara tip l:OHO BEACH Ing for MC1etar, with ~ hH:J typing . 11 We went •xi> meture melntenenoe. 22~118 g&aea S360-. 831-0997 Baby Ouc:kt a '*-· 2172 11M. 327 frell'l W9'*9d (No. 0Mrry lldt-405) communle:atlon, typing & nter•t contec1 Glofia him Mon thru' Fri d • If ·"' -Orange, Coeta w... go c ool ed. mutt Hll, c11•wa.11• commuter 8klll1 lor Inter· 714-~~242 EOE $4.25 hr START! Call~ JOu re loolclng for a home, atound to tM l6cM door. M80()/obo, 846-1223. Tr~ Wik:iome ·~~~mo~a~i ;:= u anut am & Wkd•ys 524-e043. Opening• Now Available cla11tfled has n ew s for you. OOLDEN RETRIVER PUP· l&i1 INh TIH OPEN SEVEN DAYS B·lOam ( 714 ) 831 8250 For em co. typing e mutt. Evee&Wkendt52&-7027. PIES. AKC. Sire/Dem fj' m;n Widl ™ lfflOIOLlll :fp:,v~~i~ ltanal S CAR ROUTES MOTOR ROU TE ~P~~·~C:Z: ~'-otf6=~~1 mmedllte opening for I dutlH, Mii euttlclent 1 · lfl£R 846-9731/H eeo-912t/W part time gang«•I otnoe communication tkHlt and ft &250 • 14' Udo, #212, help Mutt be ICQ.lrlt• d•llll•d oriented Earn Extra Cs•h Avallable in Irvine area. M~'; SHITZUS:O.,. montne naw·condltlOn·Ull, with flgvree and know 10 95$-1995 SCHOOL $300 to $600. No collect-ty r,ror-obo. = w/water·•toreg• Pl•t· key by touch Houra .,.. T L.-1--'/T .. For De/Ivery Of Thi• Paper ..__..., ·~·22•1 form. "4M 1 51 Monday thru Frldey rrom tcaaK411 r " JOBS Ing. 3-4 hours a day. Mon. ........... -" eam 10 12pm SSIS POODl.£8-R-PEOPLE ·17 ISLAHDER 38 Loeded ••••• :111 Brend• at (7 14 ) ••1m1m• E N HUNTINGTON BEACH thru Friday afternoon. Sat. Poodle pupe TMQUpa R9C tun19Y.hlngrMl4,del, • a 540-11100 t>lfWMrl 81m .. AR & Sun. m orning. Cati Toy, Min • 1260 up' teMJlnt lhow9r • ._ I w•1t·1 !f!9'r1 """ ~'::'."" -· ·~~:.:::,,,::. :'.:.:.:\ unurv FOUNT Al N VALL EY 642-4333, ask tor Kirk. -..... ---• • ,.,;; •• ...,. "; Ulu.eOUIUO Doreen(714)87i-8375 111\111(.J 1r " ... ** llLll ** ... 2800Hart>or~~ TYPEIETill I PRIZES INDEPENDENT O RANGE COAST 1191 verya..i&eoundoond. I .. Miliil a -. •PUT-Tm 1-IPll Oai·ly Pl.lat BXtbwlR lft. iindi .. ~.9°:e.~~ ........... Bkkpglcomputer exp TRID(' Del e 1 d k N ebony Exoell.nt con-Genetel otc 556-0911 The Chnge Cout Deity l'"\l IV r ay a wee . 0 dltlon rebullt 1970 HOBIE14w/Tt.Rok".lncl llllPI_,,. P1101 11 roo.1ng '°' ••· ...,,.... tltt collecting no soliciting. 330 W. Bay St S&eOO so 4048 !c;,': ~CC::: T:~ Copley Colony Ct bl• perltnCed re:"·· 85 l&IU PillT Mus t have dependable car , Costa Mesa, CA YouOon'tknowwt11tyou'r• S1100. 84&-3130 l/lllon hu lmmedl•t• wpm, mer up •klllt mlAlng II you ll•Yan't rMd opening for a reception· neceHary. n•••P•P9r ...... .,. t k t t d 111111 LIDO 14-Gd cond, ft9W 181 0ut1M to Include bo9Y ·~ a J>IU8 Fua "you.,. ~Ing ror extra rue or s a ion wagon an e1a1t1n.d ~ ___ '""'· C*lt«t>oerd awltchboard, grMtlnol g= 1~:'*'1 1•1·s~lng. ependlng mon.y. or Ilk• insurance .. S1200/0bo. cvatomert. llght typing U• Cnulman to go placea Hke Megle HOBIE 18'-Gd cond Blllngual 1 plut If 842•4321 for Inter-Mountain, Knottt Berry <P '800/0bo 1ntere11ted, call, vlew/ew<>!ntment Farm. Of win Prlz• end C All 84 2 _ 144 4 8 7 3-0lel BMW'80320I. tJM. 5epd, ~9-4242 E.O E lalh Pllet Awardt, Call ut now! W• LUDERS 18 em/fm eaeeett .. aunroof 330 W Bay St hev. NYettl Opefllngt In FIG 28 FT, LOA, compl,.. u ,good condltlonse200 c.ome -Comeatoh come eo.te M .... cA9282e C.M . He or F.v A s k for JoAnne Craney at0<ed, NB dock av911-oeo 786-4377 buy · •n claaSllle<I 842~ Ible, beet off er 752·2564/650-7287 ' DATSUN '75 2802. MW pelnt. ""'· loOb ' Nft8 iiiiiiii;;;;:;;;;;;-I CMW Cut p iati cAILbCXRE~N UY ... EWIREPAIR Quality No --·---· .. •------1 Large Cott• ....... Home. IObt to amall. reuonabtl GLASOOW PAIMTING $2.40 per day That' a ALL you pey 10< 3 llMll, 30 day minimum In the SERVICE DIRECTORY CALL TOOAYll &II FOi Liii Milly 9CIMtlM & the beM Free •t, lk'd 831.~5 Landecapmg Spf1nkler•. lf"t/Ext. 30 yrl lllpel' • of cere. 846-2098. Sod CIMn-upt 20 yra In r.r • 842-6214 L 0 v I N G M 0 TH E R bteatift Semen I area Tony 645-5124 PAINTER NEEDS WORK! BABYSITS In her hOme EXEC SECOWrN0td Pr~ ISHIKAWA LANDSCAPE lnVExt, celllngt, reftn cab. Co9t1 ~ aree. c:.uor deelr• typing M-Sod CIMn·upt. Malnt. :21) 'f'I exp., wOf1( 9UW 648--0786 0< 846-9981 aignmenl• at hOme, pie*· I Sprlnktera . .,c 86G-4t47 Devit Pelntlng M4-3837 Cltaalat I t up/dellwry, 786-3488 DUSTY'S Land8CaP9119WTI QUALITY PAINTING ~ Tll m l UFIUQI Main Serv Wkly/month/ Spec. In old houW & graf- H_.I .. ._ "t 14 'f'I exp. SpeclellDng In doing for 1 time Fr .. •' 241· 1840 nttl r9movel. Beet eny r .......... r ........ elt, own ...... -bid guar wort! 875-8088 lr•n•. Pina 845-986e Delli you ..... at you hew no la~ --· · · time tor. S~ng. tor· . SEE ME LAST !HouMCIMnlng, carpet• & rend•. .uto aervlclng, *' W..1 •. b(ld(WOfi(, I wtll beet ANY Bid. Work upholatery, w1ndowl, etc. .,c. PtMae call Coleen concrete Comp pelloe. quar. 722·7~7 Ktrbys Malnt. 831·5272 Steiner 831· 1484 15 yr• •xper 64M834 SOUTH CITYS PAINTING LORI'S CLEANING SERV ~ BRICKWORK. Smell )obe Relld'l Repaint. Int/Ext. • •2 ••21 ,_. •01 Hornea-eoai.-omc:.·a. Newport, eo.11 Meet. Fr• -'· 9~ • ·•• Ah • Over 10 ~·exp &42..0519 TES Tree trim lrv!M ~· 67S.3175 ---Durnpt\IM C M./N.8 ... --------We'll keep you lhlp ahapel .,.. Jim~·· 842·7208 Brick Concrete Bloctt 8 yrt axpefienoe. rallable, -:-::-=c,..-:-:-~-=--=..,,,.---Cuatom Work Low co.t . F NO INTERIORS •-niti--' "·Waa; own atpP+lel. Fr .. M1 •GEN HOME REPAIRS le/bonded Bob 835-43M I HANGING/STRIPPING -_. -JMn ~2342 ef1 • Petnt Drywell. c.rp.ntry ......... ,..~-· VISA-MC 873-1612 REBLOWN OR PAI ED •IC Oery 846-5277 PTL ........ .,.,. .... et. Block Atao Int/Ext Painting C..ttatten **HANDYMAN•• Cuetom Work Low ooet. Pi.!l""!!!M!fiii!iiiiiii~W----- -lcM2M597 es 1-9295 e 1 wltJoA 1 soN8 Latga °' ~ 1 do " 11111 le/bonded. Bob 83M3M 14lllfaf111-1111 · b~t ---Rm Add R9moOal Kite Pet ~1·5679or 1W meg. STUCCO MASONRY-TILE '1Allplumblnglheet~ _ B•th Tiie ,357'47 Ina la---...,------_:.. Ho Job to email An typee 81 ngxr;;F\eC)elre i I 30yruxp $46-t740 all.at Fr•tst Uc 831·23-4& DRAINSCLEARFroml1& F\Mu1'111dfl9 • Roofing a 1'"""tt~IAm""'"'t""INd'9P-. u-a .. vt .. Nd-.. __.__ Feuotta. OlapoMI. Heet•. Nat•PfOOflno• 831,...tOO C..itnetlta Gwagea Ywd Cl~ ._..... 84 1..ot07 uc.122..eoee l11fat11 " llalWat Jon 14~ *'"' .... * Ptel ~ §UW'll• m;;t;t s;v me u&xEL DOOdru HAuL•NG • cLEA~uP8 CLEAN a exPEm cxtvMffift u+ Word ProoeMlng/Typ+ng. BUILDING CORP Custom 7 OeYI Lowest rat• ~.~~r.::~ Retlat>i. wtdy ave. ~re. 5157·9364 &40. t8~1/Hm Remodeltng & Addltlonl Call Barry, 722-M73 &47·7763, ~4-Hra. 543-9387 (148a.423) ...... ttla .. AIC MOV1NG .. ~ Quid< I C..tul T138044 lnatMU.,/WitMu 5i*itry s;;:;tQ; •20YMl'tlnArM. Ou*"Y metin LO RATES 562-0410 F\epelr·Remod'l·Addttlonl REMOOELINGIR!PAIR& rupontl le lemale n•-•w• Add'~Aemodel 0oor.-.. s.4M980 '-II Typea. Storee--orno..-IMC:h« Aert Juti to -·--~· - -Top Queltty. Low Prtoe. 0 _ H~c Uc'dllna'd * Sept 15. (7 14) 1e2-o3&8 lfMlll --.. Free• Uc. 131-n..s ~Moldlnga-Bey Patomtx>Contt 981-35&4 Pr~ e--. =Co~ 11• ~pl.ee Petlo9 "" .._ .. , eotnt l Mfe · .,. ,, ..... "........ ~w...... ~ dellret Houeeettt~ s McMrt. neut9d ""' ""'' .,. " J _. ltlon UC T 12" ~""" •~ 1 .,""'7 EXPERT CE"""'MIC +m:: #477443 Pail e.eeo -r , meny ref'a 14) ...---._, "" • "'"" __ Emry I Frenc:n ooo;; 638-tm 18181 1 f NEW w~ storeoe l'.*tlnctllle, AfforcSeC:. ::;>ocQ.Aepalf·All••tlona By Norman The Doorman MYll II l(lteflene. beth• 7224783 :at>IMl~P•neHodl..Cc 09k a Ar 8157 .boQA La.......... • I )5 yr1 exp .»rry 842-05f7 I ...:;:,. ::.,~ frte lerfttt ~ am.ii A.model end llMtrkt1 ay hr /or pttct 148 3Na . JlYCd tfid rm ~~~.,_ ____ Cieen Upt•Tree Toootncl ..-n•~ ::.rn·.,~aa.u. =~~ Stl-:t~aul ......... =·::rw-~ PROfw/TRACK RECOAD 1425at:t tM-7401 ~JG fOr he RHldentl•l-Commercl•I AESID/COMM'L/IND 28 Tim In owe' llte '=tot ...... CJ-•• .. Gene SnMOn 142-1537 yr1 Do my own WOf1c Uc foe>Ped/~ ~ IM~ (7t4 200I 1t11bo1 wir.oo. W..,.. ;.::::=::::·~ #278041 AJ "4M128 up,,,_ ...... 7514478 8ummet ~Up .,,.... GAM>CNIHO 17W1M &heur perio:. p;tt;, E~RICIAN Quel. MWk Colleae --""::'•.oqufllty erdllnot. 1tyra. I~ LET THf IUNSHINf IN etc Ho job too em.a. , .. _. l20 tw ~ -·· 1 c:uMornere uc 2*""' 1unef1tne wtrtdOw ~ RMa Mlc:il9Y, ~ 1417112· On19, tn.a7t K.C TAH SDMCl Tllri-Youl ta-4114 Ltd. Cell (714) 1441 Meo 8T CLAIA CONSTRUCT~ LJl'I BlllBIUI fop Trtm Atmove1 Quel 4.A.A. PAINT! Intl &mmei'Clili/iiintel•ltlml eomp.te c.oncn.e Worll ~ atre ..-«Id Serv Uc/IM rr .. tst LOWEIT ~ prtoe 1•ory S3Q • 2..-.Y S40 Rf-a Ra1• 846-4431 wort! s-484360 tee-t213 638 8111 10 8t.ep ..,,,._, 11242'5 c.Hf. Wlndowl lt4-41t4 FU SUCCESSFUL CITIZEN How much will your son or daughter know about business when applying for their fir\t full·time job? Plenty, if he or she hos ever been a newspaper corner Through route experience he or she 1s already a lop oheod of their classmates While they all master ideas, the boy or girl with a newspaper rovte is able to put them to pracltcol use Business? Comers learn the baste learn the bo\te prtnetples from the first day of slorting to deliver newspapers They buy al wholesale, sell ot retail. make collecf1ons, keep their own books, and deal with people face lo face Comers quickly fmd ovl thot 'profit" ond "loss'' ore more fhan textbook terms The benef1h of managing a new\poper route ore on equalton for o fulure wccessfvl citizen A greot nvmber of today's prominent men ond women started their public careeri os new\paper comers And they all vouch thot a newspaper route gives a boy or girl a head stort on the futvre Boy\ ond grrl\ I 0 v"'ors rind old1.r w~o moy bP 1nrerl"Sl"d 1n roulP. wor~ sho11ld 'onto(.! thP. Ooily P1lo1 c1rculo11on deportm1m1 al 6 42 4333 Daily !!!~.ON DE•, 330 WEST BAY ST. P 0 BOX 1560 COSTA MESA, CALIF 92626 ,-----------------, I Y•l, r'f'Y \On/daughter would like 1 1 1nformotion on o Doily Pilot rou... I HIS/HER NAME 1..._ ______ I I ADDRESS ---------1 I ________ ZIP __,_j I PHON _________ AGE_I I PARENT'~ I I SIGNATUR I L----------------~ MORGAN out11tend•r exit S38t5 obo. ketch 4 1' • 50 HP Pent Int HONDA '79 Aocofd 4dr nu dleMI. Alum, ac>ert. 8 pelrlt looltt & NM gr9et. Mlle, Mepe 7, 12850 obo 841.se27 2 heedtlthowert. whMI 1--:::-:-::,,,,.,-,......,.,~---• I• c etoo/o-on • DATSUN '78 8210 OX frldge/frauer . H /C N.-tlrealbrllk•, am/fm er • 1 1 u r e w a 1 e r atereo c.tL, good oond. HF,Of,SSB.KM,LG. ' S1100. 080. C.. Et1c Compee,A/P,wtnd..... 873-1980 or ~58115 121120\J tys 715 KW Onan DATSUN '83 Nl88AN gen . boW/ltem plpt1. Stena 5 dr c:hampeQMI dbl lll•lln... dinghy, red, loeded. ldnt oond IOldld with extraa, 17500. W11 help ftn. documented, COIO'\llee OAC w"500 dn. 722-eolO 9qpf>d. ale tor•.1n Excellent condition. OATS~ 200 8X '12 Location: Merine del Rey. >0t cond, loeded, &7K ml. S87 .500 Neg Prtv81e Mr. gr~ m9t1Mtc. l6500/obo, WwOe (213) 850-4220 ~ 1487 Sebot. ExJt oond, '395. 2 FIAT '71 SP)'dtr Conv, hp JoMeon engine, 1225. reblt, rvne 9f9C, MW top. M&-e:M& muat dtNe to~. 12200 obo 541-1840 Ev ~n '= rigged FlAT 8P10ER '79 '350. • ~113t WM•~. new blk top, g epeed, Iott of f\w\, Lil..... fill BEST Off'EA. ,,.,., .... by Jlift 15, IM-IM 1. •2 lllLllAlll HONDA 'IO PrWdl Ex09ient oond, '4501• good em/1m at~"':; Of .. offw, 769-tCMO eunroof. 12900 obo: 1t19i11 ......... MUST SELU 4974441 11;;.u;: fbe HONOA '84 Aooord LX, UXM1fif.o;t.t3 n& gray, s door. a 'Pd. I Ctr boetd 116 18' m.t CNIM, 111'1\/fm CMI, very w/"""9 SM, R:D.F S20. a..n. 17000. 7~n 808 boxte.131~1 W l lllD'TI Ymf •'I I hpd, ""'·mint oond, Jecqu11 Cuatodlan S1960/0bo, 813-2912. (714)150-.&432 HONDA ACCORD '18 ,. I .. L HATCHBACK-Mint oond. ale, --.0, *2400, eel Sten 833-0070. &-6pm SO F68T ICIP, ;a;;; up . on Newpor1 ltlend ~ IZUZU 'H IMPULSE Bdl. AV811 now. AM.on-TUA80. 15 yr WWT. ldnt •*rate tee-2421, M cond low mt, IMthtr '°"NB DOCK rJ·F:;~~ .. Mwt 10 FT Helgtlt dllelWIOI lellc. Jemee 714/142~711 required 1200/mo 762-2514/880-7297. ' KARMANOHIA '71,gt9W\, a..n. Mii .... good • Ul)lltl tN. oomp19tt nu Ewtta. I 1ff0 obo. 844-eeo1 n1 R aus eau x MAZDA •79 AXt cu.tom• loeded 122 500 as.ooo mt, 5elpd, •. """'· 823 GeMYa. HunttnGt · CMe, nu ttree, nu oMdl ....... ...., a.di' : 13900. 4174914 Mike ~ MC>-4031 ..... '78 21' Tf8Wll Treler Mlf MBZ 'M/'N 8!Cl8\.. PP oontelftted, good 'oon-Cell ....... ,, dlUon. Lott ~ mra MIZ •• U08L ... 000 obo. 84t-1M4 MUIT IE.LL .. "8IC> . .., en. count;y ,,. -tot Mlk• ... "'*' oM tnWtor, Im-~.-al, •no.ato. mecul•t•, IO ml. PP MBZ '71 240 OidEL 133,000 142·103t h6g9/Ten lflt Allo1t: •unroof. Xlnt oond l 1111m Mii MAn ~~ :~1315 'E WWW Yid Ci. rn dr1l R*ihtn. • 11 K ml. "*" oond. I 1100 2nd owner ti:,"' oond, P•t• dyl Ito· 1040, (702)TM-Olll,....... w.lwllnd no.MN MEACibd '11 tA00 HONOA1IOEUTI 4111cf el~--. DELUXI •• ~, low lent ciondmc., U.000 Mt rnl. ~ bll'911toOl<*o Mtnle ~· Cell Douo. 17~ 113,000 t71-7IOI . ' ~ .. IL .. ti• •llmllCI -. .. 1i1 · HAiDTOP -!WUSflO!ll ..,.. • PmltmnCE COMY ..... Utee I ..... w ._ _,.. "°"'1111 :n11 =Nlt"""7 1'.'lt II, "'' V.... ~ .._.. oetpet ..... , ...... =----.r_• ~ .n . . ........... ;Qlll..... ... ....... 11Dm1u.-· ...,.,., IMIW."'91 "*" ......,.=-.. ...,. • 1-•••-1e ... "'" ra oniNie c... -•a '=.!:i.e:'ac': , ...... ~~== .\:-%,o. ,l;J,:.:. ,_.. *W:!F:., • =,........,,.r •. 11. e.i.::::=r: TiNiiO VW '71 1._ = ==~ ~ .._, NIH lbll-1 .. o.i.;0:."f:. Ji6.1'1......,. a.. G1-: ... M.Y1,,_ • ,..,., NML 1iiK....... ,,,;.. Oii ...._ ._ ~ ~ _. .Me rt, fml.. :1Ti .....,_. ..._ c:.m. OMl-C~OtMtliNIC4TIOHI !MltOCIM,...,,.,.,..... =-l.M ........ •~Qr.No .................. ::-.. .._. --.,_ '1f ii• IM OCWtnCN..INIW' lnl ""°"' ....... tD .e.I~ .... T ... ?tHI • LAVI.NOi" ANO Al• ~ ~ c.. Mill ltM-1 C•1-. ,_.. a ,.,;. ... ,_,__....,...oU ufrJ\, llM aru '17.IOO • •• 'fi vw WllWHAUA ....... v. o... ... ,,... 1oc1•TH, 101 w. ,... _...,. R 2, • :r:i-.,,.,_, ..... ...._ ~. c.1t ,.,. •••• ..... .,.~ ,.... · • •• ... .,.... • .... _. • • a• +t•"~·M~.l~"''• ~'Tr;;t---. =s....,......_c.lf. =-:;..._ ....... -. .. .,:_,.; ~::!:!.!::---.. ~ ............. ~ 4"7 .. Qllftt eiq.1.:-ao..:: TI9 _...,,_.It'*'° o.tM9 Attn....... A ATICIN.1'711'"'*811 ..... lw.•-.:= ~C ~---~MIM....,..,0.-J.~MIM- iiUAH ........ OL YW ·•1 jQiiff ""'"==.-,: ..... ,.,..=.~·c..~ ftlUCmta ~ ... '· Tllltln. =~-.. ---~=:=.-~ ...... c.. ............ a.. .. ::z.o:• tll ml, NllY ...._ Ill, •CllJM A.O...... ™t 1M*W .. oon-Mill D•• I IM Ron ....... 4192 l.odl· .-11ec..neya.ti9'C)t.. c:.nv.o---. • IMcll&il OOftef. oond,_,._;:;; ..-.nt. ~!~It ..... duGll9dby.1nll-1dWlll ~eTUPWIT ~~-m7 1~ ... C4IUl'fy *' ..._ ~. ..Vtnl rudl .. .,._Mcl._liw 11,JI0.141-7M1 mllllgl"800090 All/JI. ........ _ .. ~a.tiofOJ. Det'9ne~ ................... ...-. •• 1 .... ,... lllftOf~lioptoff~.._. .... -.-ar....,,..... PiUGIOf 'ff• doOt elr fotKlirt ... 11•...:..or = County Oft AN 21, Thie ....... w ... ~~~ ~ =r-Colla Mw. W ~ ~..,_. Wlderllnttnd ~Drtlftlr.Wft ........ 8W ,,. 7 f _.. IUn t'OOf, Mo-.• *9i 14l-I08I ......... ,._ =-lle~onO...:: ~· NATIONAL. a:,, '#~ T"6. ~ le ~ O:::::-,,.t1•'t:. lt'Tl. fl>....,..: =-9°""' Caelt ,_.to..,_ ... M11M ot lw ._. • .... co.t im.rtor body a ..,._ JUIT OHM l&T ~ OJ ... eo.t 1... ' "-Y. ~ ._. c.. Meed tw: ...,..,.,..,. tt11 ' • ,,__ Dl'M 11700/0e0.1-.0UO. vw .• ~CONY OIMY'*4~7.f,,.21.•. ,,_.,. Alhd1'11tclo .... "'9latMndl•••ttO IN~"""-' ....... ...,,.., .......... 1 •• LOAOIDI Trtp6t ..,...· ,... ~ OJllf99 c... Cfwlilt ...,,..,, Cot· Thie 9l111ment .. _, Ule IOI""*" -~~ oj 1ne......,. fllllMll• bi' "°1'111t tar ... _. leltoff9r lll-41M ' M-117 ~HotJUly 1.f4.21 II. Pof9ti0ft, ~ 14'12 wldlU!eOOUMyC1encotOJ· ~.t0Au91*, , ... , • 119 •• ' , 1... • ' ' IMd'I 11 IT, W•11•-.. = County on June 21. ruaJC tlJ11tL Addendum to the_.,__._. W1tt1 ~~.~II ltw C11J to.....,_ ..,.., cio:'~'!.. MUClllmcE ...... c.::..ne .. _" --.... ._., •• :::.•· .. ,, ....... _... ... __ ,. ___ .,. ... , •m•:~ 11 ''*' MCllUOU8 ...... PmUC ll)TIC( ~~::°'edoft ~~":1':. tt°:: ~'::.,.:;..: .. ~='~ :"" c J. ~om tor,....,..... ........ '°' ...... "' 104I ~~ "9C1TTICM9UH•M Tiiie......-= 1... ' ' ' 'dolfta....._M:RwM hoond~-=,:~~~4::'::=: ..... --. PObCHl YW ... lbeelk •f1, euto, dOlnG~•i .. MAim 8TAW wtththeCountya.t!OfOt-M-tM It \loblle ,atlr, 7117 Dlltrtot. PfO"<'lclinO tor the Dltt~ l09dmln.._ lta0Wfttund9 __ , cttlvU..'t:Lll rune well t1111. PIOlllTNEllll l?ITlllO llle ..... ,,.,._..,. =County Oft .11.N 14, fW1.JC 9IJ1ll ~i 0... Qro¥e, "-olutlon rewl9lng purc:NMng llmUtlOM tor or*1 boc1Ata eNS ...... pwdlille Ht1ll••• Qw.11111 MM70I IAUCE ANO I ALAO doirll ~ • Urw.t 1 Ject& I K f ontw.. Salo A Suwu OflUllNQ CO., 44' I ""'9nolll ...... 117M ~ ntm7 MCnnoul • 18•11 er... ·~· ~ ~:;•bll"*'O "-Cltf• ............ '* ~~---.,. IN NWlet btle ...... .. g::.-::z, ......,. lwll, ~ ~;;. '°"'"'*"' v• = "°' ~1~' I~ um .8TATW CA ma' l>MitOCWMM r1p"='"g91; ffo ,... )tW tNM7. '""':Jr'-./#CLICK •"'="Tfu.-..0:: <>or ..... ~·= 1 """' ~£!":,.!; ..:~..:...-a!:'..!"'=~':!;.,°':':r.;::'!:::~ .. •:.!.;,~&:!!:" ~AUL ~ ~ 1 .. oon-~~ ':J:,,... .. oon-Ml.JC t1na ~ ~mz:10 ~ wttt1""':.'!.!'~a:' .. '::' ~-No 1 '°' ...... oo to tt1e contrtd .-,,.,, AOeWE.c a .. " .n5Sr-MMd byt M ~ by. In lndMdUll clln T ~ cA tn07 __ ,,, • CChMIOtiOll~ oonttNct~ CJ( tflil tJ10C* ... e10f11 flllt Of'l¥lt 67S·•t•• • NcNrc) ~..... Oey" ·~ "_., ~ ~ • = County on ,..,,. n . CMnge Ofder "A" for IU'l'S.00 to~ Ol'der....., .... '° ?T eorper.. 0 ... Thie ••m.lt ... fled n. ~ ... fled ~.~rr "'"ea.ta~·~~ ' ,,,.. :'°"·O: ~~._!Id dllpOM Of epptOllrlMl1ety .. tone Of CIW I ~ ... ,. • Wlttl 1N County a.ti of OJ• tM County OeB Of Or· Thll l>utlneee It COft ~ om _...,...,.....,, Y•d M 2300 "--1tll Aver.. 74, t14, u mnge-eounty on June t•. 1 Coun*Y on.,.,_ 20. ~=~'== dUcMd~~ • P'lol ,,,!."1:1::':. ~Ad~~.!:,.12UM40,el'C!No 2fOfl1UMto,to tM_....... .. Rtre, ,,.. P9fnt, mag IRVINE AUTO 1... 1td 1111 eo. 8001 ,_,. MMll ,., 1, ,... M~.., ---"" tar lddltlonel ~ reaukc tm ~ ~ ~ ...... MW ar., aaoo. CENTER n1llO nmu A -'1 ..... _ 217 n. ~ ... 11..s u 1n . Evit ta 1181 Publllllild 0renoe COMlt PutllllMd OJ9n09 COMlt ve.., -.. ' -• w1tt1 tne County a.ti of OJ -Trlfllc OomrnlllM>n ~· rm .., 11111 , ... 714-951-3144 DeltyPllot.My7, f4,21.2t, Piiot June 30, .My 1, ~~er2'Hobet enge County on June ri of~eblll!~Pettdnallmltlltton."omh m lo10pm ,lloft;tt1u ouu1erty cwtb ~s , _. 1• 1,, 1, 1HI .. _.. • 1HI • ftaJC llOllCt ter .,.,_. ~ 81""1 Md 173 Cent« ltl'tlM WI N.IMllfty, ._,,lo 800-428-7 485 M-1M M-111 ~'.".=.'. H9wportCA ·A¥&, ll?I, ,,,_ Pllttlna Ptontbltlon llong tM ~ oi,n ot CClleOt Aw ftom AllOC*lo .. m 21••· m Int oon d . _,,.,, CA t2tlO PublleMd °' Ooeet 'tenTIOU9 -II IOUttlefty lor 120 '-110,te0. 173-1111 "8JC ll)TIC( 0 J~ • ~"T:· Is 1 ~ ~ Piiot .ivn. 7, -Ml 7 11AM1 wrA,_-r ~=J;'.-Y st~• Town Center Ind P.,_ c.n.. ~. •PRU<HOt• NI.IC NOTICE ftCTmOUl-11 ~~d·Hober 14· ,, ,... ....,.,~ ~~.~ c/°'~~1nO.oopt1on.0roin.nceea.1s,cHANG1NOTHEZOHtHGFAOM • MAST!.RATI.. ...cm.oue .._.. llAlm ITAW Thie Ent.,prlMt eet Plum« to L ., 24.., H•bof '°"'9¥Wd ~:tlf:.~.-~·._ [I0 3 QDO©fil llAMllTA'W Thtfollowlngpef'IOne .. w1111 tneetc::::"C:o1~ "8.JCMQTIC( ltr ... ,IC,~MW.CA st=: conc«nlng 11Qn&1l11t1on II Ille Sunflower Avenue/O~lfllle -' llle lollowlng pereone .,. doing bullnell -°"''-County on June 18 12827 REPORTSmbledon Way lnlerMCtlon dOlnQ bU11neM ... Pour IA ll)Ot'-800 Ealt a.y, = • ftCTmOUe _,...11 ler'bera Attn undQUlet Me" 0.. i NT e". lull• C-1. lelboe t28t1 ..... ..,.,,_.,, .. Plumet It 10. eo.te Cl1y Attcmey "'4TIONAL.. 11111 OoNn-P.I . Dufour lno., ~ PIJtl4lehed OJ ~ llle ...-.. __ Mela, CA 92827 AeQueet for Mttlernent eutnotlly regtl(dlng Fergueon ve City Of Coetl MeiM pon LMle Unit ft Hun oorporetton .... ....,_. '~"' -~-lte loott Oouaifll Yookey Ol1y Menager • 112~. 1 lngtoft 8Md\ Cll?f ffMa t· Thie bullnee• le con· = Piiot""" 1, f,, 21. 21, =T~ ... !~· -"""""' f l IC, ~ FWolut.lon .,,..,,,,,.., ... ., ...... lg ..i.y Fleee*IUon No 16-71 '°' ftre P4ll'IOl•W. JoH h Moo · 11 OUCted ~etlon L "'"""" ... ...._ CA 12827 PUBLIC HEARINGS SUllAAU 'l1DLWllOOf\,I 18112~1P0'1~u~ Juen M2041=PJ.~JJ::~ L 'a L Ud ., 70·1H ~~MeM'=SllDPfT'*I01gencyMd Moll0..11~1Cofporett0n,for =:., •· lugglee '-*· # ••.Huntington.._,. Calf. Thie ttatement WM flleO "8JC NOTICE a<>ClATES 4121 W..-ty T1m1rlall Line. lllanc:M Pf.....-( 1 Rezone., P It:; l ... ~!99'· Hnor Boul9Ylrd, ano Newpot1 Bou.lwwd. Window. M\/fm 92941 ' wtttl the County 0eB ot OJ. PtlOe Ste• • 102 Mirage, CA 82270 I et .......,...,,.., to tmone from C2 to POC CW. Kera 4M-1'741 « · "°**' llloelbed\ 1001 lnVI County on ~ 20, ftC1'1'1CM Miii•.. ~ CA t2MO • ~ Thie buelMH It con· Planning Action PAM91, kif • Anll De\'llopment "8n tor • mbced uee proJet;t '94-1t21(L.Algunt lot!) W S1eWnl 12P ' a.nu 1... MAim eTAW llleW-*'YC«pCl'•UOn oucteo br. • OlfWll Pl"· contlinlng 150 IC*1fl*lta, • 1~oom noi.I. "'° 51,000 tqCWe f9'lt ot oommercilt Ana. Cll?f t2101 • nm11 The toloMno ,,.,._. .. Clllfomlil 1tol • MrlNp epece Thie ~ It con.-PublleMO ~ COMlt 001na~11· Thi• OOfWMJI• ' ..,_..UnOqr.mC ~of the PterwngComrnllllon'1~otP'WvqAc1aonPAMl11'om W...., duetedby.Jolntveritut• ~1~ • """Y 1, , ~ c 1F 1 c · D 1 s. oueted~::O,~ na 1tatement ... tied ~~::=:J::::::t'::f1~tncontunc:ttonwttllttie ~ot JoMc>h ~9' • · T R I I U • Allee Weldon a.cnt.-y with the County a.ti of Or· · 9ouie¥1rd BU IC K Thia ltlllement ... llleO M-170 TOAS/CONTAACTOAS, Thie eta1emeftt ... flied ... County on Jutie 20. Appeel ot n ... PWvllng Commlellon'• .... of ~ ICUon PANS2 lrom wltll ttlil County a.ti of Or· 1MOO 14'"9 A.~ 8'V'd with I'-County a:,:' ot Or 1Me ~ A. Atklneon. tor 1 ll9'tllne .,,.,._ k> ---IN OOl'I~ of 1 two..ar 1ng1 County on June 21, "8.IC NOTICl Founwin v..,, Cellf. t210ii "'09 County on June 12' n1W ~~Into etorage ... localed It 32&4 Colcredo Line 1Me Peclfle Contrect~Ollo-1Me ' Publllhed 0r"'09 C099l D EAL E R ,..,.. '1C1'1'1CM -· trlbutor• Inc . CettfOtftle, ,,.,,.. Delly Piiot June 30 . .My 7, tlOn of -=~om~· C<*ege Pent All0Cla110n. ,...COf_IClel.....,,-..... 19 con8'1\1(;- Publllhed Or1ng1 CoeM llAMl ITATlmMT 1MOO Suite A Hef'bor 8llld PublllheO °' Coelt 14, 21, 1tM IN.....,_,,. Pent lfM --::::'."'.:'--======i \: Piiot Nly 1. f4, 11. 21 • .,J:::::: ~.,. "°Thi~~--::..~.,= ~,~.1une T Nl't 1. M- 1 ... Cit~~~ C::!r ~ ~ ~ ~ic;'1on'°:":. C::u~ TIP ... Piii IN M ·180 LIVING DESIGN, 2M41 ~ed by.. eotp01'9llon • ' M-188 P\BJC NOTICl Olympic Gem. Ayguet 3-tO, 1tee, In St Lout., Ml9'0Uf1 Fot Plf'nPtl9d Hetbor 8M:I., Coet1 MeM. R. £ ~O 8ecntMy --------...._=.:& ORANGE COUNTY •-... Cellf. t282t Tiiie. 1tetement wee flied ·-.,. MftnM· "-.? Pub419Md by tlMI Orange COMt Deily Pllol • • communny ~to the cttll*W ot --lena I"-N0TIC£ Clludll lAe Sievert. 18' w11h ttleCountyOlertl of0r· .. _ ""'~ ftCTmOUt.,_.. tneC1tyofC0111MeN TopM91~~8'd We Otter: '1C'TmOU89UIMll ~t'1~ Ave., Atcadl1, =County on June 27. '1CTJT'°"9....... T~~= .. M205 .My7, 1tM CALLft!TERorMY •New Car Sales llAMllTATUmlf Tlllt butlntee If oon-'11 MAmeTATUmlf doing bUllneM .. : OooO-Pdl.IC NOTICl -W ••ti •Used Car Sales ootn... !..~ penon• .,.. duct.CS by: .,, Ind~ Pub4teheO °'MQe C:: o Thl1 lollcMlnab penone •• ,,... Knowt, 2737 Eat fteTITIOUI --11 ..... ~ ...__ •: Cleudll L Sl.ewt1 Delly Pllo o n g bu i l n •'' I I . COMt HIQ?Wrley Coron• Oe1 -ruques from many ~ lands. Ruby'• wwelflah devoUon to her family and her poaltive outlook on life will be thoroughly miaed She will alwa)'I h.a~ her "little piece of paradt.e'' Memonal RfVl(ft will be held Wedne9day, July 9. 1986, 1:00 P.M. at Paclf1c View Mortuary Chapel, N~port Bee&.. In lJeu of flow~n inen- onaJ oontributionl to The American c.ancer Society. Pad.fie VieW Mortuary. Directors. 644-2700. ..., 11.-a •Servtte l•ISAN PABLO PART· Thie mtem.it ... ,..., 1"9 t July 1· 14· 21• 28• et...r<* .. Al9oct•t•, 3700 M11t. CA 02925' NAm eTAW TOWNE 21aor 71 .. 37-2333 •Leas1na NERSHIP (b>CATALINA Of· Wllh the County Clef1t °'Or M-1n Cempue °'· Ste. 108, New-LH Expr .. 11on'D Art Tne lollQwlfta pereone •• RUBY TOWNE. l'ft1 SEAT PARfNERSHIP 188 enge Col.In"' 27° -·-poft Beech, Ca. 82MO 2737 EMt Co11t H~: dotnO ~ M: • TOYOTA '71 eor. IA-5 •ExceUent Financin& E. 11th S1 ' Coet• Me.a. 19M ., on June ' Pl8JC MQTIC( Wl"l&m G Gefl9ney. 1844 Corone dll Mer, eea.omie R's REAL ESTA Tl SER,. dent of Corona del MUST IELLI S 1000 · ThorNe S. LM, 118 E Publlltled Or•,_ Cout '1CTmOUI ..-... Cellt. 12827 T.R. W-.ct\ 2137 EMt Newport Beedl, Celt!. t2teO 17 llH~ U\ Ontario llftt>ack, xlnt oond. WER c.IH. 12827 ,,,_1 -AlllO Ave., Colt• MMe, 12125 VICE. 2028 Oulll Str.t, Mar. Born September oeo 837 7911 17ttl St Cott• ..... Clllt -...... NAm ITAftlmMT Megwt A Waoner 2321 Coll1 -. Cot del 8tem9 OevelapfMnl, Inc., • • • • 82827 ·• · · =PllolJuly7,14.21,21, Thtlollowtngper90Mlf• AtbututS1..~&..ct,. M•m2$·-9Y· one C1lltornl1, 2026 Quell CA. Attended Chaf- TOYOTA ·ea Tlnlef 2 dr, 5 []3QJJO©OC\ Oe1110 MMookian, 1M e. M-193 Oolna bUl!neM • C111t t2te0 Tl'lll bulll\MI 1, eon-st'"'· N-por1 B• fey Kiah School. and epd, lo ml. wM/blu ernJfm 0 17th Strw, Coet• ...... WESTERN STATES Of. Thi• bul4MH I• con-du c I . d by • 0 I . Clllf t2MO fey Juruor Col- in MINT CONDITION. Clllt. 12827 __ .,. MftTM'r VELOPMENT COMPANY. due1ed by 1 generll pen. Pfo¢Morwtllp Thie butlntee le con-Mamed S 13990/080 64M1M 2t2S Mertlo< ~ Thie buelnen 11 con· rUUU\I ""'~ 457 11111 St.,~ Beedl, nenNp TR Wll9dl Ouc:1ed by' I corpctltlon eJe tuart TOYOTA _,...,.• •p , 7 • CM 9702,N\ ducted by' 1 llmlteo pert,_. '1CTYT10Ua _,...11 Cellf. 12851 Wllllem G ~ Thli llltement wu llled w-.y C Elle. PrMIOenl Towne of Pomona ... """""' v T JVV lt"c> MAm ITA,....,,. W'lllllm PtlMlp Seytor, 457 TN• 1t1temen1 ... l"9d wttn the County Cler1t of o,.I Thie 1t1lement .... Ned and moved to ~ Ctmper ltiell, ale B __ U_IC_K_R_EGAL __ •• _1_2_dr_. 1tiorn. 8. lAe The folowlng per9onl .. 11141 St .. UOune Beedl . .c.llf wtth the County a.ti of Of. Mge County on June 25. With IN County cw-of OJ. mont.. June 18 1934 811\ltrn e-.o ~ • Thie ..........,,. .... Ned 12151 el'09 County on June 23 1eae lnVI County on June 27, • S1.00, 14&-1706 ~· euto, *• .,., pb, pw, with""' County cw-of Or· ~A~ -~AWN a Tiiie bullneu 11 con-1eae , '111117 1eae Ruby 11 aurv1ved by • calll, tit, c:ru6M, xJt MQe County on June 27 LANDSCAPE. 8871 V ducted by en 1nOMck111 '112DI P\lbltlMO Or CoeM '11.tlll her tiusba.nd Stu.art TIWMPM 71 Spftftre. Xlnt ooncl, 13250. oal Mlk• 198e • Cl .. ti I :: Wllliem Seytor Pu«>4llheO OfMge CoM1 Delly Ptlol Jutte~ .My 7 P\I~ °'""" CoeM She WU the mother cones. M\/fm Cll9S., xtnia, 833-0010, 8am-59fn. ~ ~ I~ "ii on , Tiiie ,,,,.,,...,,t ... tied Ollty PMol June 30 • .My 1, 14 21 1tae • . OeilY Piiot .My 7. 14. 21. 21, f 3 hil .. _ ""''- """good, 12.750 080. , P\lblllhed Or Coat wtth the County Cler1t of Or· 14 21 !Ne · · 1"9 ° c ~n. ~n 873-2151 2131436-8732 CAO 88 Cofw9rt. AIOattly enoe MIC:tlMI J.,,,.. L~. enoe County on June 23. M· 174 M 1'° M-1M Ma.mou.r of Anahf?un, ~.a.ale, i-. CA. C&rolyn Tuchd· ·-soutlf COUNTY VOLKSWAGEN ' ISUZU ANO TRYING HARDER TO B£=1 • IALEI • IERVICE •PARTS • LIAllNQ no oll. 608 318' St, ,...,., iia... ( W--'-·d CA NB. 875-nea ,,_.., o ~ e, · '1CTTT'IOUI 9UIMll Allan (Sam) Town« NABERS CADILLAC ''72 Sedan de VIiie. Vlnyt roof, all elec. good rubber. Xlnt oonct. '950 &46-0302 CADILLAC '&4 ConV9rtl~feetOfY, col- leciors, w:':"Ji 20 mpg 122.500. 9. CADILLAC SEVILLE 'IO lmmtae, l1wn on bm, mull_. to ~·· 11500.~5. CAMARO '12 Z21. ult c;ond. Biil w/tan, ' epd, cc. w. fm/CMI. full pwr. lo ml se 100 854-708I WI llY IU.111111 USED CARS & TRUCKS COME IN OR CALL FOR nDllPUIUI. DeULLO lmlll.IT 18211 BEACH BLVD. HUNTINGTON BEACH Ml .... ltMMH1 mn1•11"'ll Auto, A/CJ. P/wlnd0w9, bladl. ILUPl21 ..... A defense~ cancer can be cooked up in yOur kitchen. ..._ 8TAT'llmf1' of San Ju.an, Puerto rne lollowlng pertOM •• Rico She abo was the doing bullr'leM • PNfwr.O ~mo l her o l i-------- Grephlce. 1788 8etleme Pl , ... -.r u---.. -BRYANT eo.t1 Meel. CA 82828 t"'"' IY~mu\U JOE H BR Bruce Bode. 3273 Midi· and Craig Mansour, · YANT. 19111 A11tt . eo.11 MMI CA Zackary and Gregory long tune Coat.a Mesa 92826 T hd · R rendent and World Tom Dug• n. 11 H aac jian. uby was War O Airforce Ve• ~· ":>." T here is evidence that d iet and cancer arc rela ted. Sc >111<: foods may pn H11ot<.: cancer, while others n1ay protect you from it. Food'i related to lo\vcr- ing the risk o f cancer of th<: larynx and esophagu~ all have high amounts of carotene. a form of Vitamin A ~vhich is in cantal o upes, p~aches. b roccoli, spinach, all dark green leafy vegetables, sweet potatoe . carrots, pun1pkin. w inter , quash and ton1atoc~. citrus fruits and hrussds spro uts. Food.1.i that rnay help reduce th<: ri:-,k of ~a."'trointestinal ~1nd respirat< )q trace cancer ,tre cabba~c . hroccoh. hrussds ·prout". kohlrahi. c:auliflowcr Fruits, vegetahlcs, and whole-· grain cereals such a." oatn1eal. bran and \\'heat n1ay hdp I< )"\\'Cr the risk of col( >rectal cancer. Bll'iema. eo.11 ..._., CA an excellent and am· • 92826 b1t1oua homemaker eran, pasaed away Thll t>ueln .. • 11 con· and mother She was July 6, 1986. Beloved ~;!. 'i:. pertnere abo a Girl Scout husband of Comella Thll 111temeri1 wu tiled Leader of the ~ Bryant of c.o.ta Meu. wtth ,,,. County e1er11 of o,. troop for 8 years. as brother of Pauline B = County on June 24. will as President of Barber of Coe\& Mesa. ,,1,_ the Pomona VaUey uncle of Gail :BatbN Publllhed Orange Coelt Girl Scouts She wa of &mungham. A.Ja. Foods high in fats, ~alt -or nitrite-cured food~ like ham. and Dllt; Priot June :JO July 7 an acuve mem~r and bama. Bruce .Bacbtt 14 21 1Ne M-171 fomvr President of of Falla Church, VU'· the Pomona Valley I s 1n1a, and Han• •-II' W\TIC[ Junior Ass11tance Lamme of Garden '~" "" League She enpyed Groove. VlStt.at1on, 'tc:TmOUa ...,..... knitting. needlepoint Tuesday· 12 noon MAm aTATDmfT d f and untll 8 P M Funeral T1'll ,,...,__ __,. •• an ll1e sewing W ---......... --u kn f l!ervlCeS, edneaday, OOlnO bullnell 11 TREIC was we own or u S.A . 2424 Newport l!llYd , the quality of her July 9, 1.00 P M al St• 22, eo.11 MMI CA handywork Upon Pierce Bros Bell 82827 Co d Broadway Mortuary , ..,_, 8 ......... ,, 10• "'--. moVlng to rona el Cos ~·• ._.... "...,.,, M na .. and ta Mesa. Inter t>vry Lene Coet• ~. CA ar in 1....,.. setll· 92827 mg into her "Little menl al Riverside Na- Thi• bueln••• 11 con· piece of paradise" uona.1 Cemetery. Riv· o~ ~.!'11ndlvlduel across from the ~ach. erside, CA In lieu of • fish and Tiiie 111t--.t wu nieo Ruby extended the f I 0 w e rs· fa m 1 I Y with tlMI County Clerk of o,. w elcome mat to nu· pref en donationa to : County on June 24, merou.s foreign V15-The Amencan Cancer '11-•tors from all over the Society Pierce Bros Publlllled Orenge eo..1 world She also took Be I I B r o a d w a y Caten in moderation. Deity Pllol June 30· July 7· the opportunity to ex Mortuary, Dtrectors types of sausages smoked hy tradi- tional n1cthocJs should be 14, 21, 18te pand her cultnnv I.al· 642-9150 B ,~ · M·172 ·-.; C mouerate tn t>nta to include tech-LAWVER consumpnon ( >f alco-"8JC *>TICE Ml.JC NOTIC£ NELLIE L. '1CTTT'IOUI Wll '1CT1T10UI .,_.. LA WVEll hol abo NAllll IT•TUmfT MAim ITAft'mWT Survived by hUlbend A g()(.)cJ nil • ( )f d~ 'C::-~ Th! ~ ~8:! Charles and two •· 1 ~ l'. G .... Doctor t 1610 May-Moon. 7711 c.nter Avenue ten. Mary Smlt.b and thumb l~ CUt dO\.Yf) On tlOMr Clrdl, Founta VII-Huntington 8Hcll CA Dorothy Craw ford '-Y. CA 12708 9Mo47 vi.ttatJon Monda7 tat and don· t he fat. M Rind'" ="°-,o:,:,~:i eu~:::c! = i= 1-9p1n. July 1. 1886. . } v= 121oe 1..,., Vlltey CA 12909 Dilday Broth e n Weig 1t reductton n1a\ ™' buttlneU 19 COf1 Thi• bullnea• I• aon Chapel. Pnvate inter- ' dlleted by 1n lndMduel e1uc:1eo by en lndlYldull I 11 f lower Cancer flSk ()Ur AendeM l!loeteO Wlllllm S AecMr men\ n eu O Thie 1111.,,...,,1 -tMed Thie l1llement ... fltecl flowers, donadan to I?. \!ear stud\ ot near!\ a with ""' County°*" of°' w1tn '"-County Cler1t cf°' t.be Shrlniln' Cri~ -l • • • = County Ofl June 20 r.i: County on June 23 pied Chlldrtn'• ffce-Olillion Anlerican~ Ur10 )\ ered 1 nt:rm 1 ntma pUal.,, LA unit, 3190 h . gh . k . I 1 Publtlhed Orenge COMt lil'ubllehed OfMQe CoMt Geneva St. LA 90020. 1 Cancer rt~ ·~ partlCU ar \' Delly PllOI .June 30, July 7, Delly PllOt June 30, My 7 Dilday Brolh•tt · "· h 19ee 14 )1 1tM M an1ong peopk 4()4J'c, or more M-166 .... 11a S.:~u·~~. 1J!~~ OV<.:rn'eight Nl.IC NOTIC£ PtalC *>TlCE Ina ton • B•ac h . 842-7771 No~\', mon: th.in ever, \\ L' '=:.~.. '~A=:r k k TM lolowtng penone -Tiie lolklwlnf pertOftt .,.. ·now you can coo up ) our<>'-" n OOl"9 bulNM. ~iw oOlnQ bueln4ill .. J • H Loafing 1n Southern call· P.inllna. 11731 a---.10 dCfCl1~<.: 4lO;lin~l Cancer torN&, 3400 1MM Ave . Ln · ~untlngton 1 .. cn l" "209. Nwpt ldl HteO 12&4& No one tan:~ cancer ~lone . Jernee wner Mcv1c-.,. ~ ,.,.,,. 111y1r1. 11n1 107 Colline A.,. Nwpt 1k11 SeclllMfttO Ln H\lfl~ CA UM2 ' ' a.Id\ 12941 t AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY" Thll bu neN 11 con· Th•• bu"neu I• con· oueted by en~ duc1«I by an~ Jim Mc:'ltcnr C«t fvene lllyen Thie 111.,_,t ... Mid TNI tte......,.. -flied Ill Ille County Oler\ ot Or· wlltl the County ca.it cf Or· = Ceunty on June 20 : County on June 20, n mM ,.._,. Publllhed °' .. COl9I ~ OJenge eo.t """ PilOt June 30. July 1 Deily "°1 June '°· July 7 14. )1 1IM 14. ~1 11M I M0 1flt W 1t7 L.:::::::=====~· I ' I - Orange Cout OAJLY PILOT/ Mondtay, Juloj 1, 19M 0 NABERS CADILLAC ~ 2100 H&RIOR ILYD., COST& IES& (11C) IC0-1100 (213) 111-1211 • Best Pnces • Convenient Location • Great Location • Super Service • Courteous & Knowledgeable Sales People 0 STERLING MOTORS WEST Chevrolet e Porache e Audi 441 E. Ceast lwy., lew,.rt leaoll llJ-0100 Highest Quality Sales & Service EARLE IKE 'VOLVO The Best Car Buys in Orange County are at the dealers listed on this page Mo·e:vo ,,, .\lwa\' d huRt: llWl.'Jlllln ,..; Ah'a'' Ji,cuunt pril.t:' HIGH VOLUME DISCOUNT DEALER SALES, LEASING PARTS & SERVICE 28802 Marguerite Parkway • Mission Viejo, CA 92692 (714) 582-2880 (714) 364-1210 A r .., • ~ER 11( ( • LlASIN G • PARTS • BODY SHO P t 9t>(I llMhor Bi n i . l n'ta Me'.i i 14td1·8880 ..I 0 HOUSE OF IMPORTS • Eue of Ownership term• • Leue convenlence-12-72 mo. • Select from 100+ new and pre-owned • Dellv«y In Europe option dl•I Mercedn 714/213 937-2333 S•nt• An• (5) FrMW•Y @ Beach In Bu.n• Park 0 CONNELL CHEVROLET 2121 ...... , lh4., .......... Over 23 Years Servtng Orange County Sales • Servtce • Leasing 546-1200 S,.aaJ Pll'b U.. 541-1411 MONDAY-FRIDAY 8:30 AM -9:00 PM SATURDAY 8:30 AM -8:00 PM SUNDAY 10:00 AM -5:00 PM 0 THEODORE ROBINS FORD o S<){iih C<>tmty~M 1-a.IER [NJ~ • TED 10~ FORD/ISUZU Your full 1ervice Ford & l1usu dealer U.S.A.'s # 1 Thunderbird Retail Dealer Modern Sales Service. Parts. Body, Patnt & Tire Oepls Compeht1ve Rates On l ease & Daily Rentals 0 20IO lar~er llttl., C1st1 leu 142-0010., 140-1211 SADDLEBACK . Sales Leasing Q Service Parts IRVINE AUTO CENTER 1-soo-sa1-3an 714-380-1200 JIM CLICK AUDI/RENAULT/JEEP c ,.. WE 'RE OUT TO BE # 1 ! IRVINE AUTO CENTER 41 Auto Center Dr Irvine 714 951 -3 144 . 800 428-7485 ~A9s~~X!~Af.t $ ''Where Professional Attitude Prevails " 8peclaUzl"9 In European Delivery. Exceli.nt S.lec:Uon of and carefully prepared UMd BMW'• always 1n stock 835-3171 208 W. 1at St., Santa Ana Corner of Broadway & tst St Now Open Sundays QtSTERLING SALES -SERVICE -LIASlll~ -'AITS Overseas Delivery Specialists OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK BMW -ROLLS ROYCE 1540 Jamboree Rd. Newport Beach 640-6444 G> JIM SLEMONS IMPORTS 1301 Ou•ll St. -N•w C•r Loc•llon 1001 Ou•ll St. -R•••I• Dlvl•lon 0 World's Largest Selection of 0 Mercedes Benz """ 833-9300 Stiff -l1nt11 · '•rta · Stnice · lody SMJ EARLE/KE .TOYOTA - • Great Selection • Low Prices • Easy Financing • No Gimmicks • 1 r1c YOLKSWAGEN/ISUZU CALIF'S 1 & LARGEST VOLKSWAGEN DEALER NEED WE SAY MORE? Parts Open M-Sat 8 -5 3CJSat 9 -4 p m Service m-Fri 7 30 -6 p m 11711 BEACH 8LVD HUNTINGTON BEACH 714/ 842-2000 <,f A !llJf IJA PAil~ -Elf A(" PACIFIC OCEAN IY.N Tf tl I WE LEASE ALL MAKES & M CALL US FOR FLEET PRICES Just a Short Drive Awoy ... 9 ' . 33375 Camino Capistrano 493-3375 SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO 831-1375 o COMMONWEALTH VOLKSWAGEN &£.. 'F~Y STORE SINCE ·53· -~ Sale• -Service -Leuing ~ lff ·0110 .. BUICK Laius JAGUAR ISUZU 0 the PROFESSIONAL APPROACH 71 4 -979-2500 2925 Harbor Boulevard •Costa Mesa, CA• G UNIVERSITY OLDSMOBILE HONDA 2880 Harbor Blvd. Co1ta Me.. 540·0713 3 Blocks So. of 405 Fwy. 0 BOB LONGPRE Or;11nge Councys Oldest & ~rgest Ponti« DHfenhlp at leactt llYd I tM Gat'CMn Grow F....-...y f714 n2 .... s1 f71•1 •• .. zsoo We perform 111 Pontiac warranty wortc. ~rdtesa of ~re )'OU origlnalty purchased~, CM. OPD llOWY waaw UNl1L ....... . ••tt BIW. a Garden Gr.-.,,.,,,,. Wettiftl ....... ~ • Sales • Service • Leasing F-1~) to FI'\iD ... EASY to DEAL WITH 2 blks nortb of aal• Aaa Freeway oa &.cb Blvd. 6211 BEACH BLVD. BUENA PARK (714) 521-31 10 (213) 921-8681 0 a .ITIO'JlC?l1 PONTIAC • TllAHS AM • Fll!EBIRO • !>000 STC • PARISICH • l!Offf.Vl l E • CRAM> PRIX • SlJt8W> COfM Rl 18t.E • T 1000 • CAAHO AM Wt Stll bcltttltlt amcg01 PONTIAC FIERO 24'0 Harbor Btwd. Costa Mtu Newport Beach 714/549-4300 a npcJKXl SUBARU SLASHES e PRICES! ~. ON ALL 1986 MODELS UNDER NfY CllClllSTANClS W[Wll NOT BE lH>£RSOl01 ---·-- SUBARU 24'0 Hatbor Btwd. Costa. Mna Newport Beach 714/549-4300 G ORANGE COAST JEEP /RENAULT # 1 /1 Tiii ll11t F1r #1• hi, Sa#s 111 I run · ODln2e. sALEs · -Loa'St • sERv1cE H U"""-•lVD • LEASING , ~ . • ACCESSORIES DEPT 0 t C C8MPPELL NISSAN/~ lfKH • Low Prlc.. • No Glmmidcs • Gr.at Selection • Friendly l"eopl• • bc•ll•nt Service 18835 B.och Boulevard ~ leoch (7t4) 142-7711 (2t3) 592-1463 """ExoetleJl? In Sales Servtce & Leasing V' Orange County's No. 1 No Haaale Oealetll WE HAveMAXEY DISCOUNTSlll (714) 147-1555 18881 8Mdl Blvd., Huntington Sch. .. .. MONDAY, JULY 7, 1986 Coast has safe, sane holid Except for Newport melee. authorities find weekend quieter than past years - "We JU t had our reaular shift. Everybody went to the beach or Palm Sprin15," he said. Even Newport Beach quieted con- siderably after Fnday's unwelcome fireworks. BJ PAUL ARCHIPLEY °' .............. The f ounh of July weekend fizzled oui like a safe and sane sparkler Sunday, with Oranae Coast authorities reportina a quieter than normal holiday, mamd only by the •kinnish bctwcenpollc:canddrunken- We.t Germ.any'• Bom Becker powered= Inn Lend.I lD t 1eu Sanday to claim eecond 9tra1Cbt men'• nn,te. champlonahlp at Whilbledon. 81. Nation Miss Liberty's splashy birthday bash comes to a close./ AS World Marcos's running mate attempts a revolt./ A4 Sports revelers in Newpon Beach Friday. • .. rve been here 27 years, and this has been the most mellow I can remember," said Lt. Oiff McBride of the Costa Mesa Police Department "No stabbinp. no shootinp, no fireworks troubles. Nothing like New· port Beach. "Other than the melee on the Fourth, we've had nothing." said Sat. Gene Senecal. A total of 66 arrests were made between 10 p.m. Friday and 4 a.m. Saturday when 70 police arapplcd with drunlc:en crowds alOllJ a ..0. block~trctch-of 5eashore-Drivc. said' Sawdust Featlval opens Patty Darnall of Laaana Beach alzea up a ceramic piece created by her bua6and l'6r their booth at the Sawdut Festiftl. The fe.tlftl betan ita 20th year ln the arttm• Ja1Jer NelJOn f erauson. · Clwaes included incitina a riot. refusana to dapcne, public drunlc:- enness. assault and bettery on a police officer and resistina arrest. From 4 p.m. Thursday to 8 a.m. Sunday when Newpon oflkially ended its holiday. watch, 244 &rTeSt.s were made, ~~n said. Over last year's ourth ofJul~ a four-day week.e -Newport b pohce recordecf326 arrests, he said. Huntinaton Beach police were no buster than as year, safcf 1.t. ea McErlain. .. Slow and borina." he said about the lastdayoflhewc-ekencl "After the Founb, we took. a dive." fountain Valley, I.quo.a Beach and Irvine lik.ewi1e reported an uneventful holiday weekenct, ..We had a bottJe rocket roof fire that caused about SI 00 damaae," a.id Irvine police Sat. Mike <>&den, "but nothing other than that. ffs bttn a quiet week.end." I l lY.l.l Wl.thrcly quiet. at the beaches, too. Orange Coast beach o.-.r ........ ..,~ ......... colony with a Saturclaf opentnc. It rune tbroUCb Aue. S 1 acroee from the Fe.tlYa of Arte' fJ'OUDU OD LafaJla Canyon Road. Angels are a half ganie out of American League West lead after 8-2 win at Toronto./81 INDEX Advice and Games A9 HB stude~ts rake in scholarships Bulletin Board A3 Business BS-6 Classlfled B7-9 Comics A10 Death Notices 89 Entertainment A 7-8 Opinion A6 Pollce Log A3 Public Notices 89 Sports 81-4 Television A8 Weather A2 By ROBERT BARKER OftlleO.., ......... June graduates at seven high school campuses in the Huntington Beach Union Hiah School District garnered scholarships. awards and 'rants valued. at more than $5 m1lhon. school officials rcponed. The scholarship payoff. at $5.485. 771, 1s believed to be the highest in d1stnct history and 1s up 10.9 percent from last year despite a drop of 280 students. "This is our best year ever ... district Grand Jury ends session wi out baring its t eth 19-member body now has mostly watchdog " role over government The Grand Jury. Its title evokes an 1tnage of power and secrecy, 1mposiha closed-door 1nquines and weighty decis10ns. For most. its functtons seem cloaked an mystery. Those with a passing fam1lianty with the body arc likely to cite its indictment powers when QUIZlCd on the vand jury's duties But. in C'ahfom1a. the 19-member body spends most of its time serving as a aovemment watchdoa -poking into county operations to Set how the machinery 1s working and rec- ommendina improvements. Far from wrappin4 themselves 1n a hroud of ~. JUrors want the public to know what they have found. Before the 1985-86 Orange County Grand Jury left office on July I, It issued a baker's do1en of reports examining. amona other th1nas, medical services at Juvenile Hall and Oranaewood, the treatment of ~ubhc drunks. the function of supcrv1soriat aides and central coun !C:Cunty LISA MAHONEY Fo cus ON THE NEw s Candidates are nominated by Su- penor Coun Judges or by a selection committee They arc interviewed, their back· a.rounds arc investipted, then 19 are selected from a pool offinali ts. In many ways. the 1985-86 Grand Jury was typical of previous ones. Its members were mostly teachers. re- tired business execu\Jves and as- soned other profe ionals who had time to invest 1n the volunteer position. But due at least 1n part to the leadership of foreman Gerald Charlton, this year's arand jury rcpons lacked the sharp teeth of previous ones. Trust~ Linda Moulton said. "Each )Car we (d1stnct students and teachers) outdo ourselves. We do better and better and I'm really proud:' she said. "It reflects strong academic requirements and good teachers and bnght kids ... Students at Edison. Fountain Val- ley. Huntington Beach, Marina, Ocean View. Westminster and Win- tcrsburg high schools received awards ranging from one-year grants to four· year scholarships and academy .ap- pointments that include fuH tuition and expenses. Local organizations and com- panies, including the H\.lntington Beach Chamber of Commerce, local Kiwanis clubs, the Huntington Beach Co. and the distnct Dollars for Scholars program. contributed cash toward the youngsters' higher educa- tion. Fountain Valley H1Jh School. the largest school m the district. brought in $1 .356.545, the highest cotal. Fountain Valley's enrollment of 3,200 students 1s down 100 from last )Car. But the scholarship mone) tops last )ear's total by $257,089. Ed1S<>n High School placed second with S 1.125.828 goina to its seniors Last ear. distnct students earned $4,9 89 and in 1983-84 the ount wasS3.913.000 Moulton said the increases reflect hard work by teachers and other school officials who ·•aggress1vel} pursue" scholarships for the students. "The}'re doing a good JOb at that:· she said Irvine health ·group formed Foundation oversees useof 15Mgrant from hospit~ builder ByPRILSNEIDERMAN °' .. .,.., ........ A new foundation, backed by a S l S million grant. has been established to provide financial aid to health educa- tion and research prosrams m the Irvine community The Irvine Communlly Foun- dauon was set up by the board of directors of the Irvine Medical Center. a new hospital bcma con- structed 1n lrvme. The St 5 million arant was obtained from American Medical lntematJonal. AMI. as P9f1 of its agreement for the rights to bwld the new Irvine hospital. The operauna entity for the hospi- tal includes rcprcsentauves #from People for an Jtv1ne Communi~ Hospital (PICH) •. Irvine Mcd1- cal/Dental Society. UC Irvine. Saddleblck Communaty Collqe Dis.. tnct and the ln·ine area busmen community. "Now that AMI has pnmary re- sponsibility for bwldma the bospitaJ. the Irvme Medical Center Board believed that 11 would be an the best interest of the community to create a separate foundat1on to manqe. in· vest and d1sbu~ the proceeds from (Pleue Ne f'OUl'fDATION/A2) Volunteers sought to clean upharopr Clean Harbor Day. an annual· commun1t) event aimed at beauttfv· ing Newport Harbor. will be hdd aturday The fifth annual C\Cnt. sponsored h) the Newport Harbor .<\rea Chamber of Comm.crce and the Daily Pilot. beg.ins at 8 a.m l he da> will be spent picking up debns at assigned loca\Jons in the harbor and on nearby beaches Interested ind1v1duals, groups and hoat owne~ are encouraged to par- 11c1pate (Pleue eee CLltAJll/A2) ~ ................... It ..... Jurors also conducted eight cnm1- nal invest1pt1ons, four of which resulted 1n indictments They didn't point fingers. they didn't name names. and somettmes. to get the point, 1t was necessary to read between the hne Charlton. a school teacher. former police officer and father of SC\len. said Juat be&lnnlnl Hunclred9 of blcJdlni eathuluta follow 28 official entranta Sunday mornm., atone tbe ~ Ana Rl•er bike trail at the atart of the Race Acrou AMerlca. Tbe race from HantlnCtOn Beac to Atlantic City lo atop blcycle race ln the world. co•ertna 3.107 mUeta. ~UAL ... Bock of Co.ta Meaa. front rtaht, pac the rld. The makeup of the arand Jury changes each July I (Pleue tee GRAND/ A2) \ ,' ·'. I aramilitary group stops aliens at Mexican border , NACO,Ariz.(AP)-Membmofa patamiljwy orpnization stopped a lfOUP of illeMl a.libts near th11 bOrder cown and held them at sunpofot until authorities anived and took ovCT', ofricialt aaid. The comm.ndo-like action early Saturday_ bJ the Alabama-baK(l sroup Civihan MalCncl Aaittancc us condemned by Harold Ezell. western tqiona.I commiuioner for lhc U.S. lmmiaration and Natural- i.zatson Service. .. The only Border Patrol ansels we oecd att on the bill of the U.S. Conlf'SI tryina to ~ immisrataon refonn." Ezell said. • We do not want people out playing military aniels, playina Border Patrol with guns.' Ezell wd the Border Patrol was called at 4 a.m. Saturday. When qents arrived on the scene, Ezell t11d, "they saw all these auys runnmg around in fatiaues and got very nerv~." The aliens wen taken to Naples and deponed. . About 20 members of Civilian Materiel AlsiJtance too~ _pen in the ~iation, stoppina t.be aJiem about tb«e miles north or t.M border the Lochiel VaJJey, about 30 miles cast of Noples. The Arizona Republic said in Sunday's editions. U.S. Anomey Daniel Knaus.\ in Tucson wu contacted by Border Patrol .,ents about the incident but declined to press cbaraes because no ~liens had been hurt. Ezell said • Members or the IJ'OUP have been conduct.ins niahl maneuvcn &Jona the Mexican border for the past week an order to inlenie~t the Oow of cocaine from Meiuco, said J.R. Hagan, the aroup's director of oper- ations for Arizona and Utah. Leaders of the group, which for- merly went by the name of Civihan Military Assistance, have said they have supplied aad and military lta.in- 1na to Nicaraauan rcbdl at a base camp near the C:otta R•ca·Nic:arqua borckr. Tbe Republic quoted a rMmber of the sroup who m'uted to &ive bia name u sayina tbe vehicles~ the ali~a. inchidu1,1 women and children, Mre halted with a 1yslem of booby trips that 9WlctW'ed the tires. Tom Po1ey, head of the 7,000- member paramilitary orpnizatlon, defended the actions ofhi~orpniza .. tjon's members and denied that they pulled aunt on the aliens. "ll'1 the riabt of &.n)' American citizen to uphold the U.S. Constitu- tion," be said in a leleP.bone interview from Decatur. Ala. 'If they cauaht any illepl aliens, they have a riabt to stop them." More than 30 memben or the group have been in the border area over the past two weeks and would continue to operate there, he said. The aroup is oonsiderina be&innina a s1m1lar operation in New Mexico, he -SaicL Nakasone' s party wins majority in lower house, projection shows TOKYO (AP) -Pnme Minister Yasubiro Nakasone's .Uberal Demo- cratic Party bas won at least a simple majonty an the lower house of parliament. according to a computer projection of votes. Japanese news media said Monday. .. . Both Japan Broadcasuna Corp. and Kyodo News Service reported that with about 30 percent of the 63 million votes cast Sunday counted. the LOP was certain of winning 172 seals in the Ho1.1seofRepreaentatives, where it has held power since 1983 through a coalitJon with a small splinter party. Based on computer projections of voting trends that meant the Liberal Ocmocraucs would win at least the 2S7 seats needed for a simple ma- fority in the S 12-seal lower houK, according to Japan Broadcasting. which said similar projections have p'roved reliable in lhe past The reports said the early estimate pve the Japan Socialist Pany 26 seats, the Buddhisl·supported Komeilo or Ocan Government Party IS, and four each for lhe Japan Communist Party and the ~nlrisl Dcmocral1c Socialist Party. The projections were announced shortly after vote counting bepn. COAST FOURTH SAFE AND SANE ••• From Al L1fcauards only made about half a dozen rescues. Longfield said more than 40,000 would be expected on a warm hohday there Al Hunttngton's ctty beach. only 20.000 braved the chill Sunday, said Lt. Steve Davidson. Crowds were larger both Fnday and Saturday. Despite the smaller crowd. life- guards were busier than in Laguna due to np tides. Davidson said "We had a pretty quiet Fourth. The weather wasn't that great It was gloomy. wind)' and cool." he said. "It was prett) mild around here for a Fourth of July weekend." Lifeguards were busy at Hunt- ington State Beach, too, mak.JnJ some 200 rescues Sunday, said lifeguard supervisor Joel Wamasak1. "There arc a lot of np currents. They're very povicrfol and very big." he said. He estimated about 15.000 to 20.000 bcachgoers looked for the sun there. Although lifeguards were kept busy throughout the weekend, Wamasak1 said overall last year was busier. "Last year was hot and beautiful, and there was a bag swen:· he said. Bolsa Chica rerorted about 16,000 stretched out on the sand there. "It was real slow," a dispatcher said. • California Highway Patrol officials reported only one Orange County traffic death, in Cerritos, by Sunday evening. Statewide, 37 people died on Cali- forma roadways in the first 60 hours of the holiday weekend, down from 46 in the same time period lasl year, CHP spokesman Kent Milton said. Nattonw1de. 387 holiday traffic deaths were recorded by 5 p.m. Sunday Coast Colleges' enrollment largesteverforsumrnerterrn Orange Coast College's summer 1986 enrollment 1s the largest 1n the Cost.a Mesa school's 39.year history. campus offic1aJs said. A record 12.112 students have signed up for summer classes. a 6. 9 increase over last summer's record rej.lstrataon of I 1,330. accordang to officials. "Our final enrollment figure should top the 12,200 mark.'' said Wayne H Wolfe, OCC's associate dean of adm1ss1ons and records "Several 'late-stanang' classes wall begin dunng the next two weeks." OCC officials said this summer's "seat count" 1s 8 percent above that reported last summer. meaning an average student 1s enrolling 1n more classes this summer than last. The college reported that 41.5 percent of this summer's students were taking classes at the Costa Mesa campus for this first time this sum- mer, producmg a 10 perccnljump 1n new students. compared to last year. OC<. 1s already acccptmg apph- cat1ons for its fall sembter. which begins Aug. 18 Late-start classes lastmf IS weeks begin Sept. 8. Fal registration beg.ins July 28. Registration permits are available in the OCC Adm1ss1ons Office, which is open from 8 a.m. to 7 p.m. on Mondays through ThUfSf:lays. and from 8 a.m. to 4:10 p.m. Fridays. More information on faJI enrol· lment can be obtained by calling 432·5772. FOUNDATION FORMED ••• From Al AMI for chantable purposes," David Salls. board chairman of the new foundation. said 1n a wntten state- ment Sills as a former Ir. ine Cit}' Coun· c1lman who now serves as an Orange County Supcnor Coun Judge. Other foundation board members include Irvine Mayor David Baker. a co-founder of PICH. Carol Hoffman. past president of PICH. Gary Hunt. a vice president at the Irvine Co. John R. Miltner, vice chancellor at UCl; Gerald 8. Sinyktn, M.O .. vice presi- dent of the Fluor Corp.; and Timothy L. Strader. board chairman of the Legacy Compames. Sills said the foundation will make grants exclusively to support "health. cducauon, chantable, scienufic and cultural needs of the residents of the city of Irvine and the county of Orange, with emphasis on the health needs of the community" ' He added, "The interest of the foundation "' new and innovative programs .will not lessen 1ts concern fo r established institutions, however. The relationship ofa specific program 10 health care issues m the Irvine community will be a determining factor" Sills s~ud grants will not be hm1ted to endowments or funding for ongo- ing programs. He said capital grants for building prOJCClS may be made, but only when the foundation board determmes that such funding is vital to the success of the project. Under the foundation's guidelines, grants will not be made to religious organizations for rchaious purposes. Organizers said groups w1sh1ng to apply for grants can obtain an apphcat1on packet by wnttng to the Irvine Community Foundauon, P.O. Box 17831 , Irvine. CA 92713-7831 JadCe DaYld SUia CLEAN HARBOR DAY NEXT SATURDAY ••• From Al The followrng .zones are targeted for clean-up. Penmsula Pomt to Adams Street, Adams Street to 19th Street, Lado Villaae and Finley tract. Lado Isle, Arches bndse to Back Bay bncSae (Mariners Mile), Back Bay. Balboa Island and the Lillie Island, Balboa Island bndgc to China Cove. watercraft. Volunteers should bnna trash baas. aloves, rake' or neu to pther the debris. After fillinJ the baRS. they may i~:s~E Daily Pilat MABIOfAC• be left on the end of any public or pn vate pier m the area for pick-up. for more anformat1on on part1c1· pallon. call Bruce Chilcoat at 760-8238. Groups and companies mtercstcd in part1c1patang should call Mary Powell al 786-4291 Bay boat ownen arc needed as well. At 8 a.m .. they should be at the Cannery restaurant to pick up trash bap and receive an area assignment for the morning's work. After the debns collection, at about 11 .30 a.m.. voluoteen arc invited back lo the Cannery for hot dop and cold dnnks. An awards ceremony and party for participants wdl be held there follow- 1n1 the dav's clean-up effort. The first 250 participants will receive a commemorative visor. o:!'I=:' .. QuerefttMd ).JO WWI .. ., SI (;oMa ""-CA IMjl .oor• ao~ '*Cott• -c• ,;inn ~--.. 2 ... 11. .,._ ' .oncw.-.... ~ .. ,, t Justcall 642-6086 ~,!Odey " "°"' 00 ftOC ....... .,_ ...,. 0, 530p"' eal~7P"' ane1 rour cooy w Ill ..... *' ~1111"1 1193 Orllf'll' C-1 ~ Compt,,., HQ 111W9 ""'°" .. ,.llON ... Cit ....... 11 .. ot actverl- -· ,. ... 1T19Y 08 ~ .... l"Oul tpe(.l&I 04'! ll'9IOll 04 llOOY'tflll - C' What do you lake about the Daily Pilot? What don't you like? Call the number above and your messqe will be recorded, t.ranJCribed and de- livered to the appropnatc editor. The same 24-beur answcnna aervace may be used to record lenm to the editor on any topic Contnbuton to our Lenm column must 1ndude their name and telephone number for vcnficat1on. Tells us what'• on your mand lUrClly ltlO .... " "°" 00 ftOC '~ ~ c.-, by 7 • " .,.. .,.,,. 10 • "' _, ftN COj)y ... "' ...... '° Clrcua.tton 1 ... ~ ~ <> .... C-ty ....... ~ • w .. SKtes to be fair tHis afternoon U.S. Tempe t:.¥JC .. 1t - -~ '°°""" u ... "'C-'• .. .,. &...-.. • 10 .......... llrOlllfllJ.111. ...... ........ .. ,, .. Le ......... .,. :: AlllefW,N. Y. ~ 71 ....... ,. Calif. Tem,. ~ 11 ~,.,. 11 • =:--.... ....... .. .. ...ONI 70 .. • n --~ t1 ,. ............... p.Jft. ....,,. ... .... 11 .. ..... Qly .. 11 =-=~ .. 11 =v._ •=. ...... 1t .. ~ .. 1• .. ,, • • ...._,. OINN 11 • ..... . .. n .. .. 70 t::.. t1 M T._V-. .. ,, ...... to n a.... " .. 11 .. f.,,... n a ..... "' 9 ,, .... .. .,. to 10 ..... ,. 17 ... .. " ,,... 10I to :':'=. 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AM. ..... .. . =C°o " 11 .......... ,. 11 ...................... _.,.._ ,..,... •• to .. ....... 17 • •"'""" = ........ 11 .. __ _.. .. . .. .,, .........~ n 11 Surf Report GIW,_ n 41 Eztendecl ....... .. 11 Oo•-..o.H.C ti ... ..... 11 ... ...,,,.,_ .. ,. ....._ .. r7 .. .... ~ -:--•• ..... n • '--*""'"~--........ ., ., HoftollAlj to 74 -:r=r---... E:!-11 n • t: ...... IW HOWllOft • 11 ..................... -.. . I ' aw ln411111~all ,, .. ~ ...................... • • .....,.,, I • MW ...._ ...... .. 1t V111¥:C••= ........... ....... ,. 11 -:~ I • MW ~ •• IO ...... ....., ......... ........ n • 0.-.. ~Ulllll ...... GRAND JURY PLAYS WATCHDOG ROLE ••• From Al members of the outaoana srand jury wanted to !~oid spiuina matches with the sub;ocu of their inquiries . "I think the bipest sinaJe tbina we did this year was ~ out of a confrontive mode," wd lhe s-4-year- old fountain Valley resident "We felt by attackinJ problems instead of people. you're more likely to ael things accomolit!1ed," he said. Whether more etfecuve or not, the difference in approach wu evident in the ab9ence of heated rebulla.ls to sbortcominas detailed in the jury reports. There was barely a peep of protest even when the grand Jury obliquely chided supervisors for being rude to the public. Last year, the 1984-85 Grand Jury earned the ire of' county schools Superintendent Robert Petenon by concluding lbal the Department of Education duplicates services city school districts already provide. An angry Peterson called the report an "amateurish bunale" that read "hke a com ic book," • Fifth District Supervisor ThQ.mas Riley reacted in agitated fashion when ttie 1982-83 Grand Jury urged supervisors to stop studr!n& new airport sites and pick one. (They stiU haven't.) · He was also livid when the 1979-80 Grand Jury blasted the board's de- c1s1on to ignore the advice ofstaff and choose a subsequently problem- plaJued vote<ounlinJ. system for the registrar's offic.e. Riley called the report "Just a lot of~onday morning quarterbacking." : The 1985-86 Grlnd Jury didn't take on the perennial -and always controvcraial -topics of' the jail and the airport. • Charlton said the ai~ issue has been "studied lo datb and otrcml no fresh around for inquiry. Juron did look at the jails and decided to monitor the situation, he said. Speatina pnerally, Owtton ob- served that "oftentimes, ju11 our interest got thinas taken care of." One ama of concern tbat Cbartton said jurors wished they had studied was land developmeoL By the time jurors agreed lO undenake the q~ tion of whether roeds. ~ and other ~ublic facilities were keepina pace wtlh commercial and residential development, there was just not enough time to resean::h it, be said. Charlton's view of county aovem- ment after a year of confidential l&Jkl, observation and comparison with other counties ditrcn sipiificantJy from that of ()RVious year's Grand Jury foreman Tbomu Kehoe. Kehoe and a handfuJ of fellow iurors roundly criticized county oper- ations and called for a top-te>-bottom overhaul of a system they viewed as outdated, inefficient and under-or- aanized. But Charlton said the aovemment "is operatinaextremely well consider- ing the size and magnitude of its responsibilities." Spcakina for the jury, Charlton described . new County Adminis- trative Officer Larry Parrish as "a breath of fresh air." Parrish, who wu appointed after the previous Grand Jury left office, has been systematically rcorpnizina county qcnc1es With little fuM or furor. Charlton said his year u JUry foreman was "excitina and challcna- ina and fru1uatina." He doesn't l'llle out the possibility of 1erVint apin. But, lo indicate the heayy, time demands plaocd on juron, Charlton described a plaque he had made for his wife. It reads: "Barbara Charlton. Grand Jury widow oftbe year." Police shoot. kill robbery eupect, arreet Mesa man Polite invesuptina two liq,uor store robberies went to a nei&b- borhood tavern in search of a man arid shol and killed birn when he alle&edly pointed a sun al an officer. autliorities said Saturday. Gary D. Lynch. 42. of Garden Grove djed of a sunshol wound in the chest in the parlcina lot of Mickey's bar in that city, described by LL Stuart fir\kel1tein u a ban&out for Lynch and his prtfriend, who wu arrested. . Carolyn G. Nielson, 32, of Costa Meta, alleaed to have driven a seaway car in the robberies, was booked for investiption of armed robbery and murder, Finkelstein said. She was beina held in lieu of $250,000 bail. Lynch was ·iden.iified by wttneues as the aunman. -. 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