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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1986-07-28 - Orange Coast Pilot, ' ONDAY, JULY 28, 1986 . 4 die as wild su:t;f Pounds coast 2 Orange Coast residents among deaths reported from Point Mugu to Newport By PAUL ~CBIPLEY ... STEVE MARBLE °' .. ...., ......... Towerin1 waves that claimed the lives of two Oranae Coast residenu over the weekend continued to pound south-facina beac~ today u ·an antarctic-born storm whipped I~ and I ~foot surf'. UfesuardJ in Newport Beach alone racuea 27S peoplofrom the powerful surf·durina the weekend aod braced today for a continuation of the frantic pace. "It's been busy, very, very busy," said lifeaua.rd Lt. R.on Johnson today. The liilh surf' claimed the Ufe of Newport Bach resident Jeanne Veenstra, 19 earlySaturdaywbeolhe was Oattenecl by a wave while Wl(tina an the turf off Balboa, said Lt Don Chandler. A friend d~ Veenstra ubore and tried to revive her, accor~ to a police report. Veenstra was identafied as a ~urity officer who recently moved to Ora.nae County from Idaho. Police said they were informed that the woman was a aood swimmer and ~d not been drinking but wu mioverinJ from 1 ~nt motorcycle accident 10 wtlich she suffered bead il\Juriet. . The woman wu taken by para- medict to Hoq Memorial Hospital where she WU pronounced dead a& S:30 a.m., police said: A Hununaton Beach man ideo&i- ified by the U.S. C.OUt Guard u UQpiy IC.tum and two unJdtnti(ied men drowned Sunday while ftlbiai 1t Point Mup St.ate Beach. Tbe three men were standin& on rocks at Muau R.ock wben one or them stepped too clote to the water, 11ccorchn1 to Ventura County Sberiff'a Lt. Mike Oullon. .. A wive slammed ~Alt the man and d,...t him oua." Chillon wd. The ot.ber rwo jumped into the powerful suifto ai4bim and all three ~ lost. he llid. A lherifrt helicopter and under- water 1eam1 uaiJted by the Coast Guard. mneved ooe body Sunday, Oulloo said, The other bodies were recovered arty today wbeo an air 1CUCb of tile ocean wu resumed An unidentified tee~ natty drowned SundaywbeD he wu~ ed ul\CODIC1oumcat Bola Cbica SU1e Bellcb. l&id lifl Ulfds. The yout)a WU , ridin1 a Boosie boad wbre be collided with a surfer, said lifcp&atd Dave Mu.aknlh. H.e WU pulled to shore by lifo. auards where he wa revived af\er Olt)'FD WU ldmin.iilered. Ufquardt made more than 100 reKUCt at Bolsa Cb;ca n 6-&o I-foot waves rolled 10 Sunday. City life- (....._ ... wAVU/A2) Reagan ref uses to negotiate for Beirut hostages Aqel pitcher Don 8at- ton wtna dael O't'er eo.- ton'• Tom 8ea•er, S-0, ln a battle of career SOO- •ame wtnnen. Bl. Cout Irvine recetves a birthday glft./A3 California Report calling for lib- eralized commitment lawa for the homelesa mentally Ill attacked./ A4 Screen actors authorize a atrlke./A4 Na don Rotary lnternatlonal blocked from ousting a Callfornla chapter that admits women.M World Car bomb kills at least 32 people In Christian east Beirut./ AS INDEX Advice and Games Bulletin Board Business Classified Comics Crossword Death Notices Entertainment Opinion Police Log Public Notices Sports T elevlslon Weather Tom Tait A9 A3 A7 87-9 A10 A9 89 86 A6 A3 85,9, 10 B1-5 86 A2 HB captive appeals on videotape for U.S. Intervention r ... m staff ... wire reports W ASHlNGTON -President Re· apn's spokesman reaffirmed today the U.S. policy of rcfu1101 to neao- tiate with terrorists to secure the release of American bostqes. . Reapn's stance on nqobations has been criticiud in a videota~ by former Hontingtbn Beach resident David Jacobsen, one of the four missing Americans in Lebanon, and by Peggy Say, the sister of Terry Anderson, another hostaae.• But Larry Speakes, the White House spokesman, told reporters today, "Our policy on nqotiatton has not cban&ed." Rcapn has Iona l'leld that the Onited States will not make concessions or deals with terronsts holding hostqes. Tile Rn. Lawrence Jenco la embraced by U .8. a.mbueador Richard Burt and Illa wtfe Sanday at the U.8. alrbue ln Frank.fart, Weet Germany. Tbe 51-year-old American prtMt wu held for 19 montb u a ho.m,e In Lebanon before Illa releue Satarday. Jacobsen's son, Eric, also of Hunt- illJlon Beach, said today he's unc.cr· tatn what effect the relca.sc Saturday of the Rev. Lawrence Jenco wiU have on the fate of his father and other American prisoners. "Hopefully, it could be the first step (for the release of aJI Amencan hostages)." Jacobsen saad. ..But at + UCI ~ospital chief led PHIL SIEIDEllAI center's fiscal recovery PEOPLE IN THE NEWS Leon Schwartz' title made permanent. after profit picture, morale pull U-tums In March 1985, Leon Schwaru was handed a hot potato Schwartz. a vice chancellor at UC Irvine. was asked to take the reins of the school's teacbmg hospital, UC! Med1caJ Center in Oianac. The financial picture at the hospital was anything but pretty. In the fiscal year eodinJ. June 1984, the medical center's daily operations budget was $3 million in the red. When Schwartz was asked to step in the following spring. about S 10 million an losses already had accumulated. The previous administrator, Wll- P'ran.k Zlnl ham Gonzalez. had JUSt resigned by muwal agreement with the univer- sity. At the time. a cam pus spokeswoman saad the JOb was "ex- tremely demanding, and (Gonzalez) felt he had done all he could do." Sc hwartz was asked to serve as di rector of Che 493-bed hospital until a permanent successor to Gonzalez could be hired. But as the months slipped by, no permanent replace- ment appeared. There was specu- lation that Schwartz was just holding down the post until a private hospital chai n could be enlisted to take over Police seek charges in auto death By LAURA MERJt Of .. ~ ..... ""' ltv1ne police were expected to ask the Orange County District Attorney to file charges of vehicular man- st.uahter today against Culmaro Urena. Urena, a 23 year-old citizen of Mexico, is suspected of runnina over and k1lhn1 a 9-year-old Irvine boy Fnday. ' management of the medical center. But a funn y thanJ happened on the way to the fiscal d~the l)ospi- tal's profit p1ctuefputred a U-tum. On June 30. 1985 -a few months after Schwartz took over -UCI Medical Center ended ats fiscal year with an operating deficit of $9.6 milhon. And a few weeks ago. the hospital concluded the 1985-86 fiscal year about $750,000 in the black. accordina to Schwartz. The medical center administrator is too modest to take complete credit for the turnaround. Nevertheles'l, UCI Chancellor Jack Pcltason was so pleased with tht work Schwartz was doing on a temporary basis that he recommended the assignment be made permanent. UCI offic1aJs dropped plans to launch a nauonwade search for a new medical center director and on July 18 the UC Board of Regents approved Schwartz's appointment to the post In add1uon to his hospital dull~. Schwartz wall retain his previous JOb as a vice chancellor for adman1s- traltvc and business scrv1~. The dual pos1t1on will cam ham an annual salary of S 116,000. a univer- sity spokesperson said Sch wartz. who hve'I an Newport Beach. has previously held adm1n1s- trat1ve posts wllh the National In- stitutes of Health, the National Sc•· encc Foundation. tht ll.S Office of (Pleue eee BOSPITAL/A2) Computer aids NB campaign vs. teens cruising peninsula By STEVE MARBLE Of .. ~ ....... Wath the aad of a computer, more than a do1cn patrolmt'n ind 1 small whate warning card, Newpon Beach pohce havt' gone to war ap1nst cruising on Balboa Boulevard - a bothenomt' but lamt'· honored trad1t1on in Newpon Beach. Pohcc ii.sued 129 citations dunna the weekend to cruaS<'n and others who ven tured onto the cong~ted peninsula and afTt'~trd ~ven people on charaes rnnaana from drunken dnvang to d10,turb1na the peace. . · Zini leaving Daily Pilot; Tait namecf new editor Jesse Paul Joe R. SuJlano was killed when Urena apparenlly drove onto the aidcwalk on Yale Avenue where Sull1no and three other youths were ridin& their bicycles. Sunano died immediately and bis cousin Giancarlo Lajan. 9, was taken to Westcm Medical Center for ot>- 9ttVat.1on. Utjan wu released Sun- day, a hospital apokesman said. The two other yo\aths did not require The crackdown Fnday and Saturday marked thr ~ond stra1aht weekend pohct have S<'t up roadblocks to cnfo~ the caty'' 2-yt1r-0ld crumna control ordanan~. said Sat. Ron Rodgers. Between 8 p.m and I am., tralfsc was routed off Balboa Boulevard 1t Palm Strttt and directed lhrouah a checkpoint whett dnvers wC're handed tany while wam1na cards. "Wamana you and rour pas.scnacrs arc he~by notified that this vehicle 1s dnvana thro\llh a traffic control point If within ,1, houn th11 vehicle pusc throuah this control point apm. at will const1tutt' a v1ol1t1on " By STEVE MARBLE Of .. ...., ........ Oranae Coast Da1ly Pilot Publisher K.a~n Wmmer announced today that Tom Tait wall replace Frank Zana as editor of the Daily Pilot. Z1m, n1mC'd editor two yean q o, will mum 10 the Ph1l1defph1a area when his wife, Elaine. has been cc:eptcd to mcd1aal 1Chool Z1n1 will take a po iuon with tht Dtl1wart County Daily T1me11, whm he prtviou,ly wa' cmploytd as 1n ed1· tonal wrur1 Tait, presently manaaina edttor of the Daily Pilot. wtll assume his new dutJcs Aug. 1 S. "1 will miss the newspaper and the commun1t(," said Z1n1. "and 1f 1n four yean can oonV1ncc my wife v.-e •hall -as m the worch of OouaJH MacArthur -rtlum "There 1s no fi ner pt.ce to hve and work than Sou them C'~hfom11," he said "I feel very badly 1h1t frank 11 leavani It 1, 1 trur I()( . " said (PleaM ... PILOT/A.2) • f hospital treatment. . Urena wasarraled by ltv1ne pohce and held over the ~kend 1n the Oranse County Jail in heu ofS2S.OOO bail The pa senacrs 1n the car, JorJe E.nnque. 16, and Juan C.rlos Oarc111 27. ~rt beans held u matm11 w1tncssc, All thrtt men fled the acadcnt .ccne Fndav and were cau&ht about (Pleue ... CRAllOU/ A2) As dnvers pau5'<1 to read the card. their hcen~ plate numhcr wa' entered 1n a ponable rompuler set on a cardtablt at the checkpoint If t~ car ~turned to lhc '°uthbound chttkpoan t w1th1n st\ hour. tht computer would alcn patmlmen Unless lhc dnver could provide a "~uonabic·· excuse. a c1tataon Wiii Ued. Howard l::.a!tnbera. one of the patrolmt'n workana the crumna detatl Fndav uad the roadblock did not appear to makt traflir • (Pl ....... camu1 A2l could be the last step." Jacobsen tcheduled a ncwa con~ ferenoe today at Huntu1a10n Beach City Hall 10 spell out his coooerns in full. But he noted that he's always pushed for Prts1dent R.eapn to nqotJate with b11 father's terrorists captOn. Speakes today rejected Say's charge that the U.S. 1<>vemmcnt bas treated the hostageS an Beirut differently from those taken at the U.S. Embassy JMco 1"11• ol apendlng alx montha In chalna In aollta11 contlftMl.,,t. A5 an Iran tn November 1979. She said "nqot1ations were done openly" after the U.S. bost.qn, most o( whom worked for the American govern- ment. were seiZed in Tehran. RefemnJ to the bostaps U\ Uti9- non, sbe wd: "Because these men arc not covernment employees. docs that mean that negotlat1ons arc OK 10 one case and not OK 1n another case?" "No different. .. Speakes said. ID· s1sttna that to comment futheT on other aspects of the case would not win the release of those still beina held. AdmJAastratton officials wd Sun- day they were studymg the scven- minutc Vldeotaped plea bv bostqt (P1eue 119'UAGAJll/ A2) Group • gives up English church CdM parishioners won •t fight refusal to sell old f actltty By PAUL ARCHlPLEY Of ... D.ltp""' ..... An Episcopal congregation that souaht to move a 13th century Engl1c;h village church lo Corona dcl Mar has reluctantly accepted a de- casaon by England's church com- m1ss1oncrs to block the sale. "We're cen.a1nly not aoang to fight that dcc1s1on, ·• conceded the Rev James Hohlscld of St Matthew's by- the-Sea But neither ha'i the con~uon gJven up ltS aoal ofbu1ldtng I Church for its 64 mtmbcr. Juhe Ryan. a member of the delcpt1on that tra,cled to Enaland 1n hopes of sccunng the transfer of the 800-vear-old c;tone church. said mem- bers will look ca~fully at their opuon before dn1<;1ng a new plan ' .. We're disappointed but we're not d1l1Co~agcd ·· Ryan said ·w e Just ~ tha\ a'i an ob\tack Every project has otxtacles · Ryan \&Id the move to block their acqul\1t1on of thc church from the tany fannan1 town of Covenfta1n was contrary 10 the vt'ry teachana~ of the churt:h Tht' ..ale was d1upproved bec.auK the conscn.auve co~reption 1n ( omna dcl Mar had s mtcred from ahe Ep1~opahan c'tab "hment England \ church comm1s 1onen rcportt'dly ft'lrcd cmbarnssina the b1 hopofCahfom11 afthey permitted the C onunuana Epttcopal Churchto acquire ~t Rartholomcw·, Church at fovenham But bccau\C thC' lhurch as $U11>lu1 -the townspeoplt u\C anothC1' church ntarby -1t Wlll hkely be dt'moh,hed .. I thank'"' vcr) sad that men -..ho "Y thty'rt tryina to walk an tht peth of Je1us Chnst ,hould act an uch a manner toward other pc-ople." Ryan 1<1 (Pteue MC &PfOLI8H/ A2) ~ -----~~ ------ r ., l ~Coat DAILY PILOT/ Monday, July 28, 1988 REAG.AN FIRM: NO HOSTAGE DEALS •••. Jacobten, who warned lhat .. our :re1aase will be death.. uless the tReapn administraion nqotiates :with the Shiite Moslem kidnappers. : Richard Murphy, assistant sec-~ ret_ary of state for Middle Eastern affain, said, "We ha.vea1ways said we would be willina to talk. about safety ·and release but would not neaotiate or compromise wilb terrorists. There u no ebanae in that." The Rev. Lawrence Jenoo. who was held bostqe nearly 19 months and freed over the weekend. carried the Jacobsen tape to U.S. officials. Moslem extremists in Lebanon are demanding the release of 17 com- rades held in Kuwaiti prison 1n : PILOT EDITOR ••• l'romA l Wittmer. "But in typical fashion, he has left us in very good bands and has taken the time to ensure there will be a smooth transition." Zini said be asked Ingersoll Pubh- catfons Co., which owns both the Daily Pilot and the Daily Times, for a position in Philadelphia after his wife, a public health nutritionist. was aooefted to medical school there. "I m pleased tba t Karen has seen fit to promote Tom Tait, who is un- ,. usually intelliJ.ent, able and hard- worlcing. He w1U be a real asset to the community," said Zini. Zini, who h:as a master's degree from Penn State, worked as a re- porter, political columnist, copy edi- tor and editorial writer before being hired by the Daily Pilot as editorial page editor 21/2 years ago. He was subsequently promoted to the pos- itions of associate editor and man-~ng editor before being named editor. He earned numerous awards for his editorials, which be continued to write through his promotions. Most recently, he wbn both first and second placchonors in statewide competition from the California Newspapers Pub- lishers Association Tait, a graudate of San Jose State University, became city editor of the Daily Pilot in 1983 and was named managing editor in 1985. Previously he was the managing editor of the Camarillo Daily News. CRUISE CONTROL ... From A l congestion any worse than it 1s on a typical summer evening on the weekend. Despite the large number of citations. only 11 drivers were cited for violating the city's anti-cruising law, said Rodsers. However, police reaped a bonanza of other vtolations and issued citations for such offenses as failure to wear a seat belt, failure to provide proper identification and drinking and driving. Working an area four blocks long and three blocks wide, police are attempting to discourage young people who came to the peninsula only to cruise up and down the boulevard, said Eisenberg. Until now, poljce have tried to downplay the checkpoints so as to discourage the curious from venturing onto the peninsula only to watch the mechanics of the anti-cruising crackdown . .. People seem to be attracted to things like that." said Eisenberg. Balbpa residents have long complained of weekend traffic snarls which police blamed partially on youths who cruise through the hean, of the community's business district. Police have evidence that the throngs sometimes tum violent. On July 4. police were pelte0 by rocks, ice-f~lled bottles and fireworks thrown by youths attending street parties in West Newport. Police and city officials have vowed a crackdown-. · ENGLISH CHURCH ..• From A l "It's not as though we're Satan worshipers, is 1t?" Ryan said villagers over- whelmingly approved the transport of the church rather than see 11 destroyed . "It's been there 800 years. Some of the families have been there almost as lohg," she said. "It's more than just a church. h's a bit of them. "The} had hopes 1t would go on. Now they'll see it bulldozed ... If the sale had bt.-en approved. the congregation would have re- constructed the church on Hehop- trope A venue. making 1t the oldest church of ChristJan worship 1n Lhe United States. But in England, it's just one of dozens of ancient village churches that are no longer 1n use. "It has no particular h1stoncal s1gn1ficance to them." Ryan said. even though archeologjsts rece'ntly di'lcovered the le"8d roof was covered with ancient drawings. "A workman drew pictures of what he saw around him at that time," Ryan said, "including ships at sea. "It's a part of all of us, really. "It's a very low point that things have fallen." Ryan said. HOSPITAL DIRECTOR ... From Al Education and N <\SA He has an econom1n degree from "suhns Hopkins Universlly and 1<; a cen1~ public accountant Dunng a recent mien 1ew 1n his office on the In 1ne campus. Schwartz discussed th~ '1nanc1al recovery of UCIMC. "I guess the leader of the ~hip gets the credit fof finding the port and takes the blame when you miss it," he said "But this was really a team effort. And 11 in'olved luck and 1im1ng. I'd be hard-pressed to son 11 all out.'' \.The med1 · ce nter 1s a former co~t · · sp1tal acquired b> the univers1t) in 1 'Ho. ll 1s-the principal teaching hospital for med ical stu- dents from the ln ine campus Ir also provides care for a large number of patients who lack pnva1e medical insurance. 1nclud1ng in- digents and people who rely on the state and federal medical assistance programs. Medi-Cal and Medicare Lln1vers1ty officials have stated that government reimbursement for indigent and Med1-C'al patients falls short of the cost of treating thec;e people. The result. they say, has been red ink. Actordmg to Schwart1. about 6() percent of lJCTMCs patients last )'ear were indigent and Medi-Cal patients. To offset these losses, several <;lcps were taken. Just before Schwart1 took O\Cr, the medical center cul the equivalent of about 100 full-lime pos1t1ons. la}tng off nur\es. sc<.- rctanes. technic1anc, and other em- pluyces <.)chwart1 himself has o"Vcrc;ccn a rigorous cost-control program. Ea<.h of the Ii vc UC hospitals must report regularly to the regents regarding how expenses compare with the same month during the prev1ou'i year. \ccording to Schwartz. lJC'I boast' the best cost control rec:.ord among these hospital'> keeping the increase °c~A~~E ·Daily Pilat MAIN OFFICE J)O Wett Bay S1 ...,. •• M•;a " u ,. • adcJ("•• Bo• , Ci.ft t '''"-.A,."' ,,.,A C.('6?6 to a modest 2 percent. Another key lo turning around the hospital's finances 1s attracting more patients with private insurance cov- erage, In the past. Schwartz said, phys1c1ans affiliated with UCl's medical school were "less aggressive" in persuading their patients to under- go treatment at UCIMC. But more recently. "College of Medicine faculty (members have) gained more confidence 1n the man- agement of the hospital and are bnngmg more patients to UCI." Schwart1 said. But. he admits the former county hospital may stall have an image problem. The director said a study will be conducted l'..OOn to determine how UCI MC can improve its public appeal fhe hospital also needs funds for renovation and expanded services. particularly 1f111s 10 keep its share of the highly compet1t1 ve Orange Coun- t~ health care market. According to Schwartz, that was une reason un1vers1ty officials con- sidered affiliating with a private ho<;p1tal chain They reasoned tha1 such a corporation might be w1lhng to 1nvcM money to upgrade UCIM( while reaping tax benefits at the -;amc time Bu t ~h" art1 said the idea was dropped when Gov George Deu- kmeJian and the Cali fornia Legis- lature agreed to channel add1t1onal funds to UCI MC and two other former count> hospitals to help them omet opera ling dcfic1 LS The state has earmarked ;,1111 more lund' for renovation of l l( I MC . 1ndud1ng $8 million for a new state- of·the-art 1ntens1vc care unit that 'ihould be completed 1n ahou1 18 month\ l hc\e rnmm1tmen1s boosted mOJ:- ale "It wa'> a rccogn1t1on that the state under,tood ottr problems and was w1lhng to re-invest in the UC medical eJ1.cbanat for lhc release of the four Americarts. Rta&&n. returnjna to the White House Sunday afternoon from his weekend retreatat Camp David. Md., refused to answer reporters' ques- tions about the bostageS. White House spokesman Don Mathes said it was ''tod early" for the White House to react to the tape portions of which have been played on national television. .. We've aot the full seven-minute tape and we're studying it," he said. In the tape, Jacobsen said Reapn was "subservient to the polittcaJ principle that the U.S. will not negollate with terrorists." The hostage asked Amencans to urge tbe admmistration to negotiate. an_d asked Convess to investigate the administra1ion s "quiet diplomacy" policy. He said it would be"'better to have an investigation than to have an inquest." The Islamic Jihad, a shadowy organization thought to be allied with lran'sAyatollah RuhoUah Khomeini, has claimed responsibility for kid- napping Jenco and other Americans. CHARGES ••• From A l an hour later. Sgt. Dick Bowman said they will appear in court today to detennine if police can continue to hold the two men as material witnesses. All three susJ)ecu are citizens of Mexico and poljce fear they will leave the<ilrca if they were released before a court bearinJ. Irvine pohce detennined Saturday that the men had been traveling south on Yale Avenue when Urena re- portedly ran a red light at Bryan A venue. He swerved to avoid oncom- ing traffic and ended up driving about 75 feet on the sidewalk. WAVES ..• guar · ntington Beach said they rescued about 80 people. The number of rescues in Newport Beach was the highest on the Orange Coast. ·."We actually had a light weekend' crowd," Lt. Gordon Reed.said. "And the water was only 63 de"ees, so that kept a lot.of people out.' St11l, about 'Z0.000 tourists squeezed into Newport Sunday. Because of the churning surf. n1Jmerous swimmers and surfers also required first aid for lacerations. dislocations and other minor injuries, Reed said. An offshore wind present through the weekend made the large waves more dangerous as the gusts churned up the water, said Johnson. Officials reported similar problems at Los Angeles County beaches where a million people frolicked. despite overcast skies that l,ing.ered until earl}' afternoon. the A!lsociated Press re- ported. Leon Schwartz ~yslem.'' Schwart/ c;a1d . "That wasn't clear before " The administrator 1s also hoping \.Oters 1n November approve a $400 million state bond issue for educa- tional buildings. He said about S35 m1l11on in that package 1s earmarked for improvements at UC'IMC incl ud- ing a new outpatient facility and new cancer and psychiatric centers. Even though the hospital finished 1985-86 1n the black. Sct>wartz said the finannal problems are not fully resolved. Employee pay raises kicked 1n July I, and medical supply costs continue to nse. When Schwartz accepted the new appointment as director of UCIMC, no length of time was stipulated. While he said he enjoys the challenges of managing the hospital, he also misses some of his campu!t duties, particularl y the graduate accounting classes he used to teach. "After some period of time." Schwartz said. "I wan! to get back to being 'Just' a vice chancellor ... Delly Piiot Dell very la GuerentMd Clff .. l.Oedt 8-'2·~78 bot1"flt A *"•IQl'81 II•~ •l~I COOY''ll"' •98~ O<•"O" c .... P .. 01 ••·"II C.<l"'P•"• N newt 1t0<... ,ttu1trat10t'H1 tt<Mo, • ""•tie• Of acJv•rf t.- f'nt"tl ,.,f*"I ma)' be 'ltD'o0VCfl"('1 .itr•1f'l()Uf ~Pf'C,111 Qftt ,,__ ol COP)'f'l!"I 0Wf\4H J us tcall 642-6086 1.t°"<lay ,, <11, If y<>v ~O not "•"" vou• oap.tr Dy ~ 10r m c•l•r...lno•?pm 4Nl yrX>t l(Ny "' t... .i. ... .,•d s..,oml c••'4 po.te;e le• • ' •'• "''""' (;•'•' '"'. 1Uf'S tU 800 Sv1:1'4C"C" tv •",.. I~ 7\ "' ""'• l)y mail l 7 00 ~tNI' f - What do you hke about the Daily Pilot? What don't you like'> Call the number above and your message will ~ recorded. transcnbed and de- livered to the appropnate editor. T he same 24-hour answering service may ~ used to record letters to the editor on any topic. Contnbutors to our utters column must include their name and telephone number for verification Tells us what's on your mind ~lv":ltY 1od Sv<i<U) II 'f<'\J 00 ""'' fH'IJAVft """'' (.f'>ipy t>1 1 11 rr t.AI ~f1-we ,0 • ll\ ."° fQ4../f (f"·(') .,,-Ill llf' e1t4..,..r.O Clrculetlon Tet.phonea ... ~. t .-1tro-{.ni)'"'Y .. _.. ...,~ Sunny skies sticking around A high preetur• tYt*n over tM ooeen'• tul'feot pueNct moftt air Inland OYfl( Southern Callfornla, brlngfng ttM notmfll MMOt\ .. pettem of cloudy mornlngt follOwed by aunny Qys. Tempwatur .. wer-. ~td to cllm., Tu.day, rMdllng high• of 10 to 76 at tM bMCtlel and 87 to 96 In tM v~ Along ttM Or9n09 Cout It wttl be fair thrqh T but low cloud• during lat• nlaht throuoh mid morning houra. S · l'ltty warmer Tueeday. Hight "l'uttday at tM bMohee 70 to 15. ovs tonight 67 to 82. Hight In tM valt.yt Tuetday 87 to 95. Lowa tonight 58 to 8-4. • rrom Point Conoeotton to tM Mexican Bor«Mr -Inner ~t«•: Ught variable wlnda night 91ld mom!M houra becoming we.t to 10uthweat 10 to 15 knota Tueeclay afternoon. -f'orllend.MlllM 70 ti Porlltnd,Ofe. 17 63 ,.,~ 7t '7 U.S. Temps 19Le~.... 1370 81 5t ~c..., .. •1 92 71 SiL• :: ~ U 7S Sell Laite City M 67 l02 74 San Antonio 101 75 90 71 S.ttle 71 6S 86 10 8clole-71 80 ... A\.~.~, fl"ONTI: "9 ~~~ w11m -co1e1..,.... Showera A11n FlumH Snow OecW.d..,. St1t1e>n11y...., &e 55 lyf-16 • : : TllllP9-8t Ptf909 et 71 ---------------------1 :~ ~~ ~= 1: ~~ Calif. Tempa ::':nardlM :: :; 9, 1t TulM 106 U Sen Qabflel U 17 88 86 WMNnoton,O C. t2 11 Hlall, IOw tor 24 llouA endlrlg at h .m. ten "-71 87 e; tl6 Wldme 106 74 ileller9fteld • 16 8M1a An11 71 U 81 11 Wlllt-8arre 14 M Euretie 12 41 tame CN1 M 16 87 86 ,,,_ M .. SerM Mwt. 10 17 '~ r, Surf Report ~ 5 E 5:_~ ;: ii : ~ LOCATION 11Z1 1MAN PMO ,._... M 62 Y~ Vty IO U 90 17 ~ heoll M OOod ,_.. 811111 to 14 73 53 RMt Jtcty, Ntwpor1 M OOod Aeclwood City 72 17 101 72 40ll\1ttti91,Nllwpon M ~ ~ .. as Smog Report 15 71 t2lld tnel. """°" W fwr telllla II M ~ ~ == ::! ===-.-a ~ t M 72 s.11~ M ltlr ...,..._.. Ta N ee 7S WfMI ~..: 82 ltoCllttotl 14 II ee n .,... dlNollon: '°""' """' 1ow tor l4 "°'" lftCllflO 11t ::.m. 90 " =:!"'9y .. = ~~ H Tides ~ r. !: ....... ,o MllCMhur llwd ..... 424' !71 IOn • TOOAY = 1: ~ ~~.~.~::·u·i;o;.::.2~ • 8-1<1....... 4:02 p.11'1. 4. ................. 71 •1 41-4 :! = 8-!d i;' 11:i1 p.m. u o;;Q.y 75 11 _Lol_Angelel __ Alrport __ ... _ ... _ ... _ .... _ ... _ ... _ .. __ 82 M T\IUOAY l.OnO leldt 1' 12 es 13 Fltll Ngll 6:M a.m. a.o ~ to 61 E ..... ended 92 71 Flrtt tow t:46 a.m. u ~ M N Al. 86 72 8eoond Ngll 4:51 p.m. s.o MollWClelo 82 ea. 10& n 11un .... 1~ a1 7:17 p.m .. ,._ ~::I. ;: : ~ ":. "'r::O::. =-::' ~ 89 ~l T\leldeyelt:01a.m.lllCl .... IQllllllll ,,...... 106 15 Hlgh .. tlMNMMllnlNllPCl"IOllO 90 7:Np,m. ~8Mdt 72 12 Ul)C*10..0vtmlgftlloW91ntftemllMOI 17 ~ M--. Mtll I~ et 1:21 p.m .. ,._ Qntri 14 et 10 low lo.. HlaN In IN ~ In !tie 1: l2 Tueedty II 12: It a.m. lllCI M4t ~ II ,_ 9ot1m1 lot et llllO-IOI IO mtcJ.to.. o-nlQllt loM In 2:21 p.m. ~ ea A IN micMOl IO low IOI Mother-daughter team wins 752-mile aif race to Oregon By PAULARCRIPLEY )f lhl.,.., ......... West Coast women ruled the wind :urrents during the 17th annual Palms to Pinc:s Air Race that pitted 36 :ontcstants from Santa Monica to Bend. Ore. · _ On Sunday, the weary but elated teams were wingina their way home again after a celebration and awards ceremony for the top I 0 finishers. Top honors went to a mother and daughter team from Redondo Beach. Sharon C rawford and her daughter Carol}n pulled the best time in the women-only contest, said spokeswoman Betty Loufck. Orange Coast teams failed lo place among the winners, Loufek said. Evelyn Craik of Irvine a nd partner Jan Morris of Whinier placed 18th, while Irvine rcsidenu Jane Cram and Allison Edwards placed 23rd. she said. Shirley Baker of Irvine and partner Ricci Barton of Arleta flew 31st. "They could n't pedal fast enouah," Loufekjoked. "But they flew well. "Everybody had a tremendously good time," she said of the race that began Friday at Santa Monica Air- port. Teams flew 752 miles -with a layover in Redding-to Bend dunng the handicapped race. "The we.ather was fabulous," Loufek said ... We had no problems at all. "The word from everybody was they had a great time and learned a lot." Other top pilots were second place finishers Dana Taylor and Jane La Mar and third place winners Anna Wong and Carole Lee Todd. all of Redding. Wong and Todd were last year's top finishers. Loufek said. lhe breadsticks alo• are w•th the dough~ Any way you look at it, here's a terrific menu. Favorite Italian entrees. Light or substantial sandwiches. Abundant fresh salad. Hot, soft breadsticks. Our famous fresh pasta. Not only will you love eating it, you'll lo1'e watching it being made. You'U also love our ambianc:e as much as our lunch. Spacious tables. Beautiful greenery. Prompt, friendly service. So for a totally nice Italian lunch, bring your appetite to The Olive Garden. And discov~ Hospitaliano' our u~e fonn of Italian hospitality. I " Open for lunch every day ll 1.m.-4 p.m. Optrt: Sunday-Thunday 11 a.m.-10:30p.m. Friday & Saturday 11 a.m.-11 p.m. 16811 Be-ach Boulevard, just North of Warner Ave., Huntington Beach, 848-1499 '· • ... ' OCC Children's Center gears up Rejitttation bcain• next M6nday for Orange Cout Conesc•1 Ollfdrcn·1 ~ter proaram for the fall ~mestcr. The ptOSnm of'fh'a a comprehensive child development prosram for chil~n of 0CC studenu between the aaes of 6 monlb1 and 6 yean. The center is staffed by certificated teacbcn as isted by suudents enrolled in OCCs Early Childhood Education Prosram. Fees are dependent on arosa family inoome and family size. Reai1tration for retumina pamnu will be held Aua. 4-8, while alanups for new parents will be Aua. 11-1-.a. Call 432·S369 for further information. Kld•' camp 1n Irvine Boys and aifls from 6 to 12 years of age a~ invited to an ovcmi&ht camp at Irvine's Adventure Playifound, I Beechtree Lane, to be held from Friday at 6 p.m. lo Saturday at 8 a.m. Included in the activities wiU be films, activities, a snack and a continental breakfast, and the cost is S l 0. Kids &bould brina closed-toed shoes, warm clothen, a sleepina baa. a pound cover or tent, a flashli&ht, a pillow add toifetnes. Call 786-08S I for details. P08ture enm• ln HB The Southern Califdhtia Chiropractic Infor- mation bureau wiU conduct spinal screening and posture examinations Saturday and Sunday at the HuntiOl'len Center Mall in Huntinaton Beach. The exams will be aiven during the regular mall houn. Call Dr. Gary Heximer at 842-8122 for further information. Dealgn IJou.e sale sef The Orange County chapter of the International Society of lnterior Desianers will bold a Design House trash and treasure sale next Sunday from 8 a.m. to4 p.m. at the Bowers Museum, 2001 N. Main St., Santa Ana. The sale, to benefit Desian House '86, will includedesianer items in a range of artistic styles and colors at discounted pnces. Call 879-7332 for more information. IrvbJe qullten to meet The Flying Gccsc Qullters of Irvine wiJI bold their next meeting . Aug. 4 at the Colorual Bible Church School. 13601 Brownin& Ave. in Tustin. The provam will feature Landa Otto Lipsett, a quilt histonan. The even mg begins with a social lime at 7 p.m. and adm1ss1on as $2 for non-memt?crs. Laguna GOP meetlng set The Laguna Area Republican Assembly wall hold its next general meeting Aug. 5 at 7 p.m. at Ben Brown's Restaurant m South Laguna. Assemblyman Gil Ferguson will speak on "The Poht1cs of Sacramento'' at the event. and also will touch on the 1986 outlook for Republicans m California. Call Olona Elk'ai 49 7-1341 or 857-3657 for details. Rabies clinic announced A neighborhood. low-<:ost ant1-rab1es vacc1- nauon chnic for dogs will be held Aug_ 6 at the Arumal Shelter, 320 Ave. Pico an San Clemente. The anoculatton fee 1s $3 per dog and the clantc will be operated from 7 to 8:30 p.m. Call the Southern Cahfom1a Vetennary Medical Assoc1a; t1on at 523--0980 for add1t1onal mformat1on. An Invitation: Strength shoWnin, out of surf 81 MJCBEu.£ OOLE Of .. Ol9r ........ Fiahtina wh.a& one •~ta.tor called .. bia and beautiful wavesJ. • the Huntinatoo Beach state beach lirCpwdJ bltUed to bana on to their championship position SatUtday dunna the 10th annual U.S. Ufquania' Association Southwest Re- gional Llfcsavin1 Championships. , Llfquards from all over the state matched their strensth and endurance 1n the water and out durina tbe competition at San Oemente city beach. Mitch Kubo of the San Oemente State Lifeauard Department came out on top of perhaps the most arueli~ event, the Amencan Iron Man Competition. He was favored to retain his title a fourth t1me after swimrnin1 300 meters, paddltng the rescue board 300 meters and rowing a dory 300 meters. Mark Keller, a Los An$eles city lifeauard placed second and Chns Young from Huntinaton state beach, third. This was the first year the Arnencan Iron Woman event - a 300-meter swim, a 300- meter rescue board lap and a 400-meter run -was official. K.ara Paae of San aemente city beach placed first, followed by Lee McKinney from the Newport Beach Lifeguard Department and Gina Aubrey, also from San Clemente. Huntington state beach lifeguards Enc Bloom and John O'Rourke won the 3.000- meter dory race. The 4-to-6-foot surf made this event particularly challenging. said Bloom. who tias competed 1n dory races for two years. "The dories were fl1pp101; oars were breaking. It was the most fun I've ever bad," he said. Huntington Beach state guards were also the victors 10 team dories. San Clemente Rob Pattenon and Jon Brick of Lacuna Beach department craah throqll a •••e. ' city squad was second. In the men's Run-Swim-Run competi- tion, Buddy Belsh1e of Newport Beach placed first in the masters d1vis1on for men aged 39 and older. Steve Knauer from Laguna Beach placed third. In women's Run-Swim-Run compeuuon, Eh.z.abeth Kubis from San Clemente city beach won . Other event.s U'lcluded a 3-K beach run, 1,000-meter surf swim, 1,000-meter rescue board race, team surf rescue. 1,000-meter surf slci race, the landhne rescue relay, and a beach flag race. 0.-,,... ........ ., 0..... c....... Herb White jumpe into eurf, above. to run around flag on beach and Fowa off ... dory partner Randy Buck cllmba ln for race•• nezt leg. Attenllon organlUtloh ~ta and tee- retartee· We want to Mtp mah your upcoming ewnt1. meeting•. Mmlnara and lundraleera euc- oeeefut s.nd b'1ef announcementa 1~1ng time, ptace, COit (If any) and 1 phone number tor additional Information 10· Bulletin Boetd. OeHy Piiot, P.O. Box 15e0, Costa Meea, t2e2t. Irvine's portrait marks 15th year Reporta of your club or organlutlon'a ectMttee -Mk• community eervtce pro)ecta or 119ctlon of omc.r. -lhould be dlrec11d to Iha Communtty Newt Editor et the tame addr... Non-retumaR* bleclll Ind Whit• photograpN are wek:ome. Counctl accepts painting by Anne Davis-Johnson depicting city's.diversity Showing ttl e dncrs1ty of th<.· cat> from its agricultural lands to 11-; industrial develop- ments. Johnson has depicted UC Irvine upper Newport Ba) and Old Town, the citv's h1stoncal d1stnct 1n east Irvine The museum's c~h1h11 also includ<.·s photographs. artifacts and newspaper memorabilia drawn from museum and ut) collccuons Incorporated in 1971 the lll~ has grown an population from 20 156 1088711 need\ 10 predict future needs ac(ord1ng 10 a stafT report The coum 11 postponed d1~uss1un on tht• Meadow~ Mobile Home Park un11l 1hc .\ug 12 meeting. pen9ing a mcC'llng between the owner and residents ~ park rcs1dt•nt told the council the;. ma) ask for thC' Cit\·.., hC'lp an nl'got1atang "'1th the ow ner tu hu' the park as did residents of The ( rrcl\ e\ \itoh1lc Home Park ..\ccord· 1ng to one park resident 1mpro,.cmenl\ ha'c not ~cpl pale \.\1th rent 1ncreaS('<; '\ \pokc-;man for then"' ner said although the par~ ha\ not l">el n offered for sak. 11 CQuld draft an urgenq ordinance that would . proh1b11 the remo' al of trees. except on rc'i1dcnt1al property. pending a review of the cit)·~ open space area \1 on1ca Flonan. spealung for The Irvine < o satd. "I would question the necessity of this kind of ordinance at all since the cit:y requires permtts 10 remove trees anyway There 1\ no threat or danger" that The Ir' inc C o ~ould remove trtts without a permit Monday, July 28 By G. JEANETl'E A VENT 0.., NM C.. I I p I ndeftl '\rt1st Anpe Davis-Johnson a tounder of the Irvine H1stoncal So<.1Ct}. gave the Irv me City Council a 24id6 portrait of the ctty for its 15th barthdav • 7.30 p.m., Laguna Bucb DoWDtown Specific Plaa meetlD1. Cit) Council Chambers, SOS Forest Ave Presented last week. t·he oal painting will be on display al the Inane Htstoncal Muse um through Dec 31 alt pan of an exh1b1t on the city's h1stor, said Ralph Rodheam, society pre'i1den1 The painting wall then be hung an ( llv Hall In other action. the (II) ( ouncal agreed to help fund a l '( In inc studv of economic trends 1n Orange Count) Coun- cil members authonzed S5.000 for the tir<;t vear of a four-year project The stud) 1s expected 10 pro,.1de the cw,. w11h detailed anformat1on about changes an cmplo' · ment. business locations, compensation lc,els and local income \Nh1ch the u tv be • \>1a\or Pro Tern Ra:y Catalano said "I don t belie' e the' want to cut trees that arc important 10 lr\lne .. Perhap$ Cit) em- plo\ec\ need direction 10 enforce the old orqanance. hc ..aid The issue was referred bade to 'itafT ~to refine an ordinance or to loo~ at enforcement of the t"\IStang permit procc\s · • 7· 30 p. m . Irvine Tran1portation Commluloo , C 1ty Council Chambers, I 7200 Jamboree Blvd. PoucE Loe Claim filed in lion mauling scheduled for state action By ROBERT HYNDMAN OftMO..,.NMa ... The State Board of Control 1s ~hcduled Aug. 13 to consider a S28 m1ll1on claim b) the family of an El Toro girl who was mauled by a mountain hon m ~round near an Juan Ca pistrano The cl:11m, brought by the parents Jf5-year-old Laura Machelle Small. is "malar to the one denied by the ·ounty July I. It charges that the public should ha ve been warned lboul the danger po'ICd by mountain lions Laura was attacked and mauled by 1 mountain hon March 23 an the Ronald W (asper<; Wilderness Park fhc girl. who 'iufTered multiple skull Newport Beach A buraJar broke into a residence on the 600 block of Namuus A venue and stoic more than S3,000 worth of nightaowns, panties amd prter belt • • • A vandal kicked open the door ot a locked 'tAll in a men's room at thc Balboa Pier and shattered a toilet Damaae was c't1matcd at SSOO • • • E11ht do1en cus wert tossed at a res1dcncC' on the 4600 block of <icashort ThC' esa attack rt,ulted m no actual damaac JU't a cons1derahle cleanup efTon fractures in the attack. continues to recover following six surgenes Joe Radding. deputy e'<ecu11vc officer of the state Board of Control. said he has ~ommended that the three-member panel deny the claim "The denial would not say the claim has not ment; 1t says there are several com~lex issues that would best be adjudicated ma court oflaw." Radding said this week. A plaintiff 1s free to file a lawsuit w1thm six months following the denial of a claim. Mike Madigan, the anvcstt~tor representing the Small family, said he believes the family wall follow through with 1C$-81 action followina the expected dental of the claims The family was expected to meet with • • • A stereo. a box of cassette tapes and a tool box were stolen from a Volkswagen Rabbit parked on the 1100 block of West Balboa Boulevard CoetaYea 4. convertible top wa!> tom oO a Volkswaaen parked at a rt''l1dcncc m the 1900 block of Federal A ve nue O\.Cr the weekend <"'as.~ttc tape\ valued at$ 'O were stolen • • • I\ transient 1s suspected ofhrtak1ng into an a{l8nment at lU5 P3t1fo t their attorne) Fnda:y to discuss the matter. \1ad1gan said Bui bo1h Madigan and the Smalls have said thc:y arc espec1all) frus- trated b) what they say has been a lack of cooperation by local law enforcc- mcn1 agcnc1cs 1n invest1ga11ng th e 1nc1dent A female mountain hon and her cub were raptured an Caspers park Jul > 5 in the same campground where Laura was attacked more than three months earlier But Fish and Game saad the hon that mauled the )Oung girl was trapped and killed m March -;hnnh af\erthe attac~ The pawpnnts ofthnt male hon and other n 1drnrc matched tho<ie found 1n 1hc .m~a where Laura wa<. attacked i.\ve Saturda)-. making h1m<;elf a microwave meal and •.tt'e1hng a ho11k of champaane • • • i.\ Rlaupunkt cao;~11r 'ilereo a tuxedo Jacket and a ca-;..ett<' tape \.Blued at S362 were 'itnlen from u l 97Q Volk waaen Bug parked an thc w uth parkmg lot ofa mo" 1e theater at 68S Sunflower 5-turda) at ahout 7 10 pm • • • Two mC'n were arrc tC'd at l p m <\aturda) an the 1800 block ol Monrovia A venue on chnrgc'i of growma nine manJuana plant<i The uiunu al\o postponed action on a propo\Cd mnratonum on culling c11rus trees hc.'\dU'>(. the nt' alrcadv require-; a permit to remo'c trees .\t an earlier meet mg. u1um ii mcmhc.•r<. a-;ked \tafT 10 LapnaBeacb Police responded to reports Sunday of passengers an a gra) Volkswagen convertible who were shooting at b1cycl1sts with a slingshot 1n the area of Broadwa} and Nonh Coast High- way Officer; were unable to locate the suspec 1 r, • • • An estimated SSOO m Jewell) was reported 'itolen Sunda) from a Magnolia Dn"'c home • • • Huntington Beach .\ 'iu~ix-ct \,\.eanng a shin that ..aid "I Lo"'t' Hollister" allegedl)' stole a Sl3S hlatk Toshiba radio from thl' PX store ~INS .\dams • • • Burglar'> 'ima'\hed a wmdo"' to a blue Merccdec; parked in front of h1ple' ·., '\tore al Main and 'I ork town and <;tole a SI 000 'itereo • • • Thae,ec; brokt into a home in the JQOOO bloc~ of !<.ec,w1d through a rear sliding door and stole a tcle\ 1s1on se t 'aluC'd at $7CX>. . . . Burglar\ \tok two tcle' ts1on sets. a computer and 'tcreo "'Ith a lotal 'alue ofS2. llX"• affer entenng a home 1n tht (l()()(l hi°"~ of Melbourne thnurgh an unlcx~ed kitchen wm- d1w. • • • Thae,ec, hrok:c tnto a green IQ6., green \'olk\~agcn an the Sa\-On parlong lot nn .\dams .\ve nue and \lolc a SI tlO \tereo and tapes • • • Rcsadent" in the 7000 block ot ")unlaght r,a1d S 140 an silver disap- peared wh1k the\ were on vacJitton ..\ car stereo 'alued at SJOO was stolen from a car parked unday on Montcrc-. Dn' c thc v1ct1m told police · • • • Crash kills Tora Marine Cal) Da' 1d ')nyder . .:!O, was ar- rested Saturda) at Maan Beach on susp1c1on of indecent eic.po'iure • • • A Laguna { anyon Road business reponcd a thcfl Sunda) with $300 cao;h taken Firemen quench OC brush blaze 'I O RB~ l fNDi.\ (AP) -i.\ hru'ih fire that ticaan m a plow<'d-under oranac grove humed over an al"l°a of ahout 45 acre-;. ancludmg pan of Chino Halle; \talc Park firefightc" \l\ld The fir<' h<'&;ln ahout ~ ~O p m Sunda) near th<". 'illc ot a hou<.1na de,C'lopment under coMtna:tmn. and wa' e'ttngu1\hed ahout mid· night '81d Oranae < ount\ hi'<' d1\· patcher haron Howell No bu1ldma' wl'rC' thrttlltnrd and no an1un<'' r<'portt•d 'hr 1>.1ul B y ROBERT HYNDMAN Of the OeltJ ,.... ..... .\ 20-~ear-old Manne wa<. killed Saturda) n1g.h1 when ha'i motorcycle ran an to the rear of a car on T rahuco Road near the El Toro Manne< orp' l\1r Statton. thc H1ghwa\ Patrol reported Frank L White. who wao; stationed at El Toro, wa' pronounced dead on amval at WestC'm MC'd1cal ( entcr m ~nia Ana follo"'mg the 10 '\S pm accident said C HP c;pokeo;man ~<'\ m Doughem .\ct·mding 10 reports ~ h1te wa' tra-.chng at an unknown 'ipet'd east on T rabulO near Jcffrt''t Road when h1<; I Q8ti Honda SOO motornde ran into the rear of a sluw-mo .. 1ng car dn' cn b't Va len D T hnmpson 28, .11<.o a Manm stauonrd .11 fl T11ro T hnmp\on rcJ)<'rtcJh "'a' traH·I· 1ng at about 2S mph ltl'>H the nttht <.hm1ldcr because hi\ lt11llaght' and hcadllitht<i -.en· n111 work1na. Doutth<'rt) ..aid \\ h11c .tf)part'nth did not ~ the I llt>t.J \ ht''' < he' elle an the dar~n~' Split personality rapist sentenced l i\N\ \ ~TFR { 4\Pl .:...... A l '--.ear- old man ~ho hlamC'd n attemptt"d murder and two rape-; on a 'iphl prrwnaht~ ,,:.., \('nten(C°d to "42 veal'"\ an pnson famt"'i Rohe'n 'NI of Palmdal<' wa., l'"'t'n thl' ma\lmum ttrm Inda\ t" l.m \1111t'le' C ount\ '\u()('nOf ( C\Urt <. C\mm1"1oner \herman J u'iter 'ho , 11t'd the • \h rr h mor" of the lnmr' ""II I ,an \a\ I\ l"m .om '~Ott \Ahi 1n 1 tmd \Utrm<'nt "I a\ked for lf'S"' h1atn, l help and I didn't tt 1t ~ thh ,, all I \ '" dn .. --------;. --~=-..,. .. --. ~ -~ -.--__ - House·tax . · panel cool to Senate prOposals WASHINGTON (AP) -House tax writers appear ready to send their Senate colleagues back to the drawing board for another try at coming up with a $26 billion list of additional revenue necessary to get negouations moving on a final version of tax.- overhaul legistation. After taking S\Hlday off, the 22 congressional negotiators trying to write the landmark bill were due back today for their seventh day of work on the measure. The immediate problem is how to fashion the legislation so that 1t docs not add to the flood offederal red ink. Saturday the I I-member Senate bargaining group proposed a hst of 14 items that would raise $26 billion over five years. That money would make up a $21 billion deficit in the Scnat~passed version of the lesis- lation and provide an extra $5 billion of tax relief for middle-income tax- payers being sought by House con- ferees. H owe v er . Rep . Dan Rostenkowsk1 , D-111., chairman of the negotiations. said the Senate proposal needs more work. "There are some things on the list that I don't think my colleagues in the conference ... on the House side will agree to," Rostenkowsk1 said Other House conferee-; were more blunt. Rep. Martv Ru!>\O. D-111.. scoffed at one Senate proposal to raise S3 billion by changing tax tahles to hmn the deduction that can be taken for state and local sales taxes ~ 1thout substan- tiation. The Senate bill would repeal the sales-tax deducti on for most people. "It's basicalh an insult to our intelligence." Rmso ~aid. add mg. 'Tm being nice ·· Nicaraguan chief interviewed Preeldent Daniel Ortetia of Nlcancu C poeea in ABC'• New YOrk •tudlo a• '' Momin& America" hoet David llal1man takee bl• p icture. Tran•lator Alejandro Bendana la aeated n.ezt to Orteta. who la echeduled to addrea the United Matton• Tue84ay ln an attempt to force the baiting of U .8 . aid to the Contra guerrillu. Prayers answered in Georgia as downpour eases record drought By the Associated Press More than three inches of rain in Georgia was an answer to prayers for relief from a record drou~ht. and a forecaster says a shift in weather patterns could ease the dry conditions that have cost farmers $1.9 billion. Meanwhile, relief of another kind -1.800 tonsofha} for livestock in South Carolina -left Indiana Sunday. Columbus, Ga .. which had not had rain in 47 days. was hit by a severe thunderstorm with wands exceeding 60 mph Sunday, the day Gov. Joe Frank Harris had set aside for prayers to end the drought. The storm dumped nearly 211? inches of rain on Columbus, knocked out electricity to more than 5.000 homes, and caused minor damage. At nearby Ellerslie, 3.4 inches of rain fell , said National Weather Service meteorologist Jim Helms. About two inches was recorded near downtown Greenville. S.C' .. Sunday, and the same amount fell overnight in Macon. Ga. Ella Fltzgerald strl cken, hospltallzed Court blocks ouster of Rotary club WASHINGTON (AP) -A Su- preme Court justice has refused to let Rotary International oust, even tem- poranly, a California chapter for admitting women. Justtce William H. Rehnquist left intact a ruling that the parent or- ganization must readmit a Rotary chapter in Duarte, Calif .. that was ousted in 1978. Rehnquist's action was taken late Fnday but was not announced until NIAGARA FALLS. N.Y. -Singer Ella Fitzgerald was listed 1n fa ir today conditH?n Sunday after be1n~ admitted to a hospital suffering from congest I\ e A Cahfomia appeals court last heart failure, a hospital offica~l said. F1lZgerald, 68, w~s taken to Niagara Falls March ordered Rotary International Medical Center after becom1.ng 111 Sunday momin$ m her ~otel roo"!l. said to reinstate the Duarte chapter by hospital spokeswoman Annie Chapman. A hospital official. speaking on ·July 24. cond1uon of anonymll}, said Fitzgerald was diagnosed as ha':'ing congest! ve The organization then asked Rehn- heart fa!lure and was expected !O spend several days m the hospital. Congestive qui st to suspend the state court ruling heart failure occurs when the heart had been weakend and can no longer J?Ump until the full Supseme Court has an blood properly. It ~oes not mean the heart has 'itopped, but ~hat its efJ!caency opportunity to consider a formal h~s been l<?wered. Chapman said the hospital would not comment officiall y on appeal by Rotary International. Fitzgerald s cond1t1on on the order ~f doctors. Earlier, she said the problem was Rehnquist has jurisdiction over appar.~ntly heat exhaustion. "She 1s in intens1vl' care and she's doing prett~ such emergency requests in Cali- good. Chapman said. fornia cases. 3mg · Smg ioos Now is lowest. By U.S. Gov't. tes ti ng method. SURGEON GEN ERAL'S WAR NING Smoking By Pregnant Wom en May Res ulr 1n Fetal ln1ury, Premature Birr h. And Low Birt h We1ghr. NOW I Hf l ow~ s J (JI /\LL llH/\Nl)S SOFT PACK IUOdltrf A Mr N TllOI l rnQ ·r.1r 0 3 mq 111r1111n1 av Pill rrqarene by F re mPtt· 1rl State Democrats urge earlier date for 1988 primary By SM A.11oelaCe4 PrHI California Democratic Party leaders recommended the state's 1988 primary election be moved from Ju~ to ~arty March or April to give Cahfom1a a strong role in deciding the next ,ercsidentiaJ candidate. If Callfomia waits until June1 the presidential nominee wiU alrcaay be determined, state pa.rty chairwoman Betty Smith said at a Saturday meeting of Democratic executive board members in Anaheim. Sixteen states arc planning to hold their primaries on "Super Tuesday," March 8, t 988. And another 19 states will have held their primaries by June. In other business, SCcretary ofState March Fong Eu warned that .. Demo- cratic registration has skidded to a 52-ycar low ... a very pitiful 51.2 percent" tn California. That's the lowest per· centagc since 1934, said Eu, who warned the party must mount an qgressive campaign to register voters. "Democrats are going to lose from the top to the botto~ of the ticket." this November, said Eu, who 1s running for re-election. The issue of moving Calif omia 's primary has been debated for several years. Assemblyman Jim Costa, D- Fresno, has offered legislation several times to change the date. California Republican leaders don't side with the Democrats. Safeway OKs merger with New York firm OAKLAND (AP) -Safeway Stores Inc., the nation's largest super- market chain, said it has agreed to a $4 billion merger with a holding company formed by a New York partnership spccializmi in takeovers. Safeway has been trying to fend off a takeover bid from Dart Group Corp. The merger agreement provides for SSJ Holdings Corp., wh1ch was for- med by Kohlberg K.ravis Roberts & Co., to pay $69 a share for up to 45 million shares, or about 73 percent, of Safeway's stock, according to a state- ment released Sunday by Safeway. The deal is subject toa minimum of 41 .56 million shares being sold under the offer. The tender offer would be followed by a me'ler of Safeway and an-SS I subsidiary, m which Safeway's remaining shareholders would re- ceive $61.60 a share and one warrant to purchase common stock in the holding company. Safeway, which operates more than 2,300 supermarkets, said the deal was unanimously approved by its board and is subject to the approval of two- thirds of the holders of Safeway's outstanding stock. Safeway 5aid it has about 61 million shares outstanding. · The Oakland-based chain has been trying to fend off a $64-a-share, or $3.9 billion, bid from the Dart Group. Facilities for nientally ill lacking~ authorities say LOS ANGELES (AP) Authorities say a report calling for liberalized commitment laws .for the homeless mentally ill fails to suggest where they should be placed. "We end up taking people to the hospitals now and doctors say, 'Yes, he's cuckoo, but what about this other guy in this bed already? Who 1s sickest?' and we have to let one of them go," said police Lt. Edward Hocking. The Amencan Psychiatric Associa- tion's Task Force on the Homeless Mentally Ill issued a report Friday that called the plight of such people ··one of the greatest problems of present-day society." It recommended state laws be changed to make it easier to commit homeless people to mental institu- tions. The report said it 1s easiest to make mvolun{flry commitments in Alaska, Texas and Washington. be<:ause people can be held if they are believed unable to provide for themselves in the future. California .and ottier states were urged to adopt a similar standard. "Making 1t easier for us to pick them up won't make 11 easier for Ull. We need places to put them," Hock- ing contended. The Los Angeles County Mental Health Department has estimated that the county leads the nation in the number of homeless people. Actors• unions hold talks ai1ned at averting strike By the A11ociaied Pre11 LOS ANGELES -Armed with strike authonzation, officials of two actors' unions said they hoped they had the leverage to avert a walkout that could stop production of feature films and pnmc-t1me television and cost the industry mil hons of dollars. Negotiations toward a new three-year contract covenng most major movie and prime-time television productions were~ scheduled to resume this afternoon at the offices of the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers in Sherman Oaks. Twin baby dJes after unusual operatlon LOS ANGELES -An endangered twin boy delivered hy Caesarian section died. while his brother who was left in the womh dunng the unusual operation showed signs of improvement, hospital otlic1als said. Daniel Allen Moller, a I-pound, 2-ounce infant, died S.unday momms. two days after he was bom, said Effie Castro, nursing supervisor at Northndge Hospital Medical Center. The child, who was delivered 13 weeks prematurely. had been in extremely critical condition. The cause of death had not been determined. The infant's mother, Patricia Moller. 33. of Valencia, was in stable cond1t1on and comfortable. Castro said. Private servlces set for Vlncente Mlnnelll GLENDALE -Private services will be held for Vincente Minnelh, who directed such movie classics as "Brigadoon." .. An Amencan in Paris" and "Gigi." Minnelli's family requested that no information about services be released. Lillian Lonnon. spokeswoman for Forest Lawn Memorial Park said Sunday. Minnelh, 83, died Friday after he failed to awaken from his usual after- dinner nap, said his wife. Lee. The director had spent the day with his d*aghter singer-actress Liza Minnelli. whose mother was the late Judy Garland. · Westminster toddler attacked by plt bull By tbe A11oclated Pre11 A 18-month-old Westminster boy whose face and neck were mauled by a -------The Pros' Since 1957 uum llSllUCE ~' Non·smoker ~· Rates a1-n.o 441 Old ... wpot't lltvd. ... wpot't aw:t\, Ca. pit bull terrier was in stable condition Sunday, authorities said. Claremont Brown was ''doing JUSt fine" at Children's Hospital of Or- ange County, said nursing supervisor Sharon Bauer. Officials said the boy may require plastic surgery to repair the damage caused by the attack Saturday at the home of a family friend. The boy's mother, Christina Brown, 23, was bitten on her right hand when she fought off the dog. owned by one of the residents of th~ ho"!le where the Browns were staying, pohcc said. Early Bird Dinners · •7 .SO Featuring Prime Rij) or Fresh Fish Complete dinner with choice of Soup or Salad and Dessert 4 to 6 PM 7 D.ly1 • Wt-ek 801 E. Balboa 673-7726 ·' ()qngeCOMtOAILYPK.OT~.N!i-... •.u DeVastation in Beinit:. Just Released -f:rom the J\mericM' OW.1t1Millt . . MEXICO'S F SJ: SILVER . . PROOF COIN Now available for Car bomb blast·kills 32 the fint m,.e anywhere! ,,~ Lebaneee civilian reacaen help a young woman from a b1ll'Dln& balldtng after car bomb exploelon killed 32 people. • BELRUT (AP) ·-A car bomb devastated a densely populated area of Chnttian east Beirut dunnJ mom- ma rush hour \Oday, and police said the blast killed at least 32 people, wounded 140 and trapped othm in blazing buildings. Firefightcn scaled mobile ladders to the upper floors of seven apartment houses set on fire by the explosion and rescued more than 40 people who screamed from baJconies and roof- toPS for belp. Rescuers hunted for at least seven people feared buried in buildings toppled by the blast's concuss100. "My brothers, my 1wo brothers!" screamed Josiane Azar as rcscuen pulled two bo<Ues out oflhe rubble of a clothing shop her brothers owned. Sbe then fainted. Many .Vlctims were charred beyond rec-OJDI t1on. "Tl was a mad scene," said NawaJ Ghattas, an cast Beirut resident. "People screamed. Motorists raced away, honking their horns, and the wail of ambulance sirens was deaf- ening." There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the car bombing, the sixth and deadliest in cast Beirut this year. Public Health Minister Joseph Hashem, a Chnsuan, was in tears when he inspected the damage. "Words are too weak a vehicle to express the adequate condemnation of such a barbanc crime " he said. A huge black cloud of smoke hung over the area after the 8:28 a.m. explosion, which gouged a six-foot- deep crater m Wad1h Nairn street near the Star cmema in Ein Rum- maneh 's Snoubra neighborhood Police said the car. a while Mercedes-Benz parked near the movie theater, had an estimated 440 pounds of TNT. Firefighters brought the names under control several hours after the explosion. Police were unable to say how many people were still trapped inside buildings. Numismatic News of This Century Mexico, for the Arst lime m its long and illustrlOUS tustory, has s1ruck 11s very (1rst legal tender silvet proof com! For collectors and investors ahke this means an early opportu01ty to "lock up" a real num1Smatic first a com with the potential 10 soar in value and impor· lance an the coming years Investors and Collectors Say It's So ... The populanty of Mexico's silver coinage has grown at an astounding pace. Mexico's first L1bertad com - released in 1984 1n ordinary condition with a whoppmg mmlage of 1,000,000 coins -sold out in a malter of weeks And 11 has already increased an value an incred· ible 33~ Will Mexico's first silver proof coin follow in its path'' Many experts believe 11 will! Now you have an opportunity to acqu11e Mexico's Just released first ever proof com at 1he official gov ernment issue pnce With a maximum of only 277,000. 11 may well outperform even the Libertad And scar c11y combined with proven demand drive up values Take heed1 Proof Coins -the .. king" of coinage~ Proof rams are 1tw ultimate achievement in minting and the mo,1 desired by collectors for their beauty and value They are mdMdually SI ruck from special dies 10 produu• a <Otn w11h a brilhan1 m1rrorhke background dnd contrdshng frosted relief design Mexico's firs1 silver proof coin wd!> struck lo commemorate the World Cup '><>< c Pr c hamp10nsh1p hos led by Mexico in 1986 Now you rc:1n he among the first Americans to Remarkably Priced Just $35 Specific.atioN 31-. 33.625 ., ... • '25 ftne lvcY own Mexico's new•JOO Peso proof silver coin 5uperbly struck 1n sterling silver. A Sellout i• Expe.cted -Order Now At Low laue Pricea Mexico's silver COtns are phenomenally popular. Consequently this first, low mintage proof coin is des- tined to bt an instant sellout The official price authc> razed for this advance re)ease as only $35 (even lower when bought 1n quantity). You wiU also receivea Certi· ficate of Authenticity and an attractive display case for each com at no additional co.ti Satisfaction guaran· teed or your money refunded 1mmed1ately. ' CaJI Toll Fra Today 1-800-327-9853 on VISA or Mtil•~rd order• Mexico Mint Set $10 Value -FREE! Mexico's currency regulatlOt'l:S prohibit the export ot us coins but 1hrough special arrangements with the Central Bank of Me1uco, we have made 11 Po$51ble for you to own this mint set PurchaseTs ot MeXJCo's FIRST SIL VER PROOF COIN wiU rec.eave these legal lender coins at no additional charge The set contains seven of Mexico's c1rcula11ng coins in a S.ealed d1wlay case You wiD receive 1, 5, 10, 20, 50, 100 and 200 pe$O denom1nat1<>ns A $10 value yours absolutely free with your order 1f you act now! ------------------------------RUSH·ORDER FORM ------- limited Supplies -Prices G uaranteed for 30 Days Only! Banco de Muico c/o Paramount International Coin Corp. (U.S .A.) 600 Union Road • P.O. Box 1986 f>t.aH indicate payment .Hostage priest reunited with kin, urges release of other Americans Englewood, OH 45322 0 YES, wnd me Mt»uc-n'., 100 P"s" FIRST SIL VER PROOF COIN in quM1llhl'S 1nd1c<1tl'd bf.low (l1m1t 10) Include CerhfKdlf' of Au1twn11111y cind colleclor's d1spi<ly case plus my free Me>UCfJ Un< Se1 al l'lO ddd111onal rosl II nol .,,111.,f1t-d. I m<1y rf'turn my com(s) w11hin 30 ddvs for cin 1mmedkltl' refund 0 St>nd 1 me ( I) s1lvr.r prnot l om <11 JU!>I S35 plus SI 50 ~I method: 0 Enclosed 1s my check or money order m full amounl of $ _____ • 0 0111 my 1 red11 Cdrd 0 VISA 0 Mas1erCard Accounl • Exp Da1e __ _ Signi!ture Prtnl Ndme come back again. that wall be m~ great near the hospital. said the reun\on d!I" dnd hdndlmg Addresc; WIESBADEN. West /otnnan' (AP) -The Rev Lawrence Jenco .spent six months in chains in ~lltaf) confinement and then shared a small room for a year with other Amencan hostages in Lebanon, he told relatives today in a reunion of hugs. kisses and tears. da)' of Joy," Jenco said ~as charged with happiness. "It was a "TeIT) .\nderson as one of you.' vel")' emotional 10 minutes of hugs. 0 Send two 121 '>1l111'r prnnt c omc; di 1uc;1 S69 plus S2 00 p & h 0 Send three (J) '>llwr pmo( <11'0'1 di )Ust SIO'l plusS2 50 p & h 0 S..nd l1v» IS) only itn7 50 poc;1pa1d SAVE MORE! C11y --~--Staie ___ Zip __ _ Jenco called down to Journalists. kisses and a lot of tears.. al the ref~mng i.o ..\ndef'jon's post as chief bcgmnmg of the two-hour reunion. Middle East correspondent of the 'kl1d ..\ndrew Mihelich. a nephew. Associated Press "Don't forget TeIT) r- ·'IM PICCtU~ The 5 J -year-old Roman (atttohc clergyman was freed Saturday after nearly 19 month~ in capt1vny. and 10 of his relauves -three brothers. three sisters, a nephew and three in- laws -flew to West Gennany for a joyful reunion. Jcnco, of Joliet, Ill.. descnbed has captivity lo family members who met him· at the U.S. Air Force Hospital m . Wiesbaden, where he was Oown from Damascus. Syna, where he was taken after be1n$ released in east Lebaaon The 'pnest. speaking 1n a voice choked with emotion, told reporter!> from the Wiesbaden hospital balcony· 'Tm not too sure it's true. it's a dream come true It's great to be back, to be loved again to be back with the family "Jcnco also called for the release of the other Americans "When Terry Anderson Thomas Sutherland and David Jacob~n Anderson. and Da~ ad Jacob~n and Tom Sutherland Th~rc are people waiting for them too " P~ Say. Ande~n·s s1\ter. ar- nved in Cyprus today afler nine da)''> m Syna. where she worked for the release of her brother and the other hostages. Islamic. Jiha a group of .~h111c Moslems. cla1me respons1b1hty for kidnapping fivt! A enc n~.' includ- 1ngJenco. The group has said ~t killed U.S. diplomat Wilham Buckte}. 58. but no body has been found The other rruss1ng -\mcncan~ arc Anderson. 38\ Suther1ana. 55. acung deari of agnculture al the American lln1versn~ of Beirut. and Jacobsen 55. drrector of the uni\ ers1I} hospital JencowasabductedJan 8 IQ851n Beirut. where he din:ctt'd ( a1holll RchefServ1ccs operation<; tha1 ..er" cd both (hnsuans and Moskl'> The relatnes. speaking at a ho1cl Gorbachev weighs response to Reagan's arms control bid MOSCOW (AP) -M1kha1I S Gorbachev said today he is studying President Reagan's letter on arms control and will decide the Kremlin's next step based in part on how much Reagan compromised on his Star Wars program. In a nationally televised speclh delivered in the Pacific port of Vladivostok. the Soviet leader an- nounced he was w1thdraw1r:t' a small number of troops from Afghanistan and also offered to open nego11auons with China on reducing ground force<; m the Far East Gorbachev also said he favors a second summit with Reagan. hut insisted he never promised to hold the meeting. At their first sum mil m Geneva on Nov. 19-2 1, 1he two men agreed 10 meet m the Unned States this year and th~ Soviet Union m 1987 The Soviets have delayed setting a date for the summit. "As far as a new Sov1et-U S summn meeung is concerned I can repeat we favor such a mec11ng," Gorbachev said. "But we resolutel) oppose the interpretation of the alcords reached at the prev1ou!. meeung an Geneva ac; reduced to the prom1\C 10 ha .. t more meetings." . He added. "The main thing on l.l(h1ch we agreed last time with President Reagan and "'hat we c;1gncd I'> the consent to 'itnve for the normalization of relation!. bct"-CCn the USSR and the l 'S \ and for the 1mpro"ement of th~ 1ntt•rnauonal s1tuat1on .. Reagan's letter on arm'> control responded to a June le11er from Gorbachev and ~as dell\ cred m Moscow Saturda) b)' l c; \m- bassador Arthur A Hartman Gorbachev said that 10 analyzing the letter. "To us the most important th mg 1s fir"t of all the ex tent to wh1c h the proposals make 11 poss1~k to reach effccuve JOmt solutions. Vice president takes tour of Jerusalem By Utt A11oclated Pre11 JERUSALEM -Vice President ueorge Bush loured Jcru..alem to<la> v1s1tina a center for new 1mmigrant'I and religious site!. 1n the h1stonr walled Old City Bush. accompanied by Jerusalem Ma) or Tedd) Kollek and hundreds of soldiers and policemen. walked around the alleys of the prt'dommantl) Palestinian-populated area The Old C II) considered hol} by C'hmt1ans. Jc"'' and Moslcms. was captured from Jordan 1n the 1967 Maddie Eac;t war and annexed by Israel the same year Dynamiters blast hole ln Berlin Wall BERLIN -Unidentified att.atkers an \.\~t &rim blasted a hole earl\ today an the Bcrhn Wall ~parat1na the Western ~tor nf the C'll) from the Communist Eut, police u1d A West Berlin police spokcc.man , 'ipcak1na in a telephone interview wt th the -\1soc1atcd Press \aid the hole wac. a llult largt'r than one squart yard The 1pokt\man who spokr on cond111on ht no1 ht• identified said the explo'i1on took plac<' around 2.10 am and hlr" 11u1 W1ndow• ;n several nearby hu1ldinss Jn .. csttgatoM wen-1n:1ng 10 drtcrnllnt' what t~ of e~plo 1vC'' WI' u~d T ht'rt wa' no 1mmcd1atl." da1m nf rtspon~1tnhty for thC' hla,1. "'h1ch apparent!~ cau\Cd no m1um.-, thC' pohtt" spokesman u1d I le dC'< hnC'c1 to 'i8} whl·thC'r '"' e'illgator' h.1d .m\ 'u'pc''" f ·' • 1',u.111>0u11t h to"~'' " " C.ou ( •trJ>! ~ """ U :->A I • OH .. Ml 0.\trt>ulnr .~ tlw &nk ol Mt' .. o 3040 ),(!a\'ing your Against hur-<;er in couch with us today for a home's protec-gJary. Fire. Flood· <lemon'itration of our remarkably cion to your dog ing. And more reliahle Westec ~curiry systems. t' like hetcing And our Because it really is true. Your n ·ef)1hing you Computerize<l <log is man\ heM friend. own he'll turn Central Station. bpt"cially when that man is Our ~l" of·th"·art W3000 ~ • ~th"· ffi h " do\\-11 a free meal .. bed "'Oketo t:alk you throulth pm-hy linking your o ering a ~teak in exc ange 1or A free meal ltJaJllmlna quickly and "a.."11). ~Stec system <.~'t'f)thing you own. -,u rt· to he offeretl hy an~ hurglar to th<.· police. 'uh~tantially IR\ 1,1 <-1, > 9c;1.oiHi \\Orth hi~ ~alt. rt·<luct\ fal~ alarm~. the numtx:r IO'-<· m \C 11 <ZHl we; 1U.? F I \V' hi · PA.-.\J)l\,A(>~IH>""H'il40 ortunate '· v\<::,tt'l' "'4..'tllrtl\ c >n<: pro t·m m most ~)'Stem~. RA'\< Ho \1Ut\C,f-<lll'>J UH ~118 ...-y..,tem\ arc rllOfl' rdiahk . All \~~tCC S"\'items are manu-Rl-1>1.A"ll:>\ (..,I 1 > "'98 HHH · Backed h\ Amt'ri<:a\ numtx:r tactun.:d. tn'tafled. monitored \A' nu' ,o 1 "19 > c;..,.. oc;m · ~j!ii~iili;: \AJ\.TA \1()\,1( .A (!I~) ,-,.. IHOI om: re..,i<lentiaJ ~curit) com-and ~·nicc<l t"xclu~i\'eh·hy \X<><>l>LA'-D 11111..., pan). patented \Xhtcc ')"-tt·m.., \Xc~tec people · · orno 999 ~c; 111 help protect hoth ,·our propt:m That'~ wtw \H· hack WI .,. .. O,...IKr..tt• 1111d \our famih thl'm 100·~. -W1111'10U111151m MGSt ............ "' ···'"• -~-=-----=--~-.--~.......---I ---~' ---~ ------- ... • Council's aCtiOns policed by public and, yes, police It was unusual, it was undignified at times, but it was fascinating for observers to watch the Costa Mesa City Council and th(! police department conduct salary negotiations in public Monday night. The police officers were often loud, rude. abusive. They were also, in the final analysis, victorious, but more because of the popular support for their demands than for the tactics they used to press them. The council members may have been nonplussed by the confrontation, which forced them to react in public to a situation experience has taught them should be discussed in private, but in the end they handled the confrontation well. Many councils would have called the cops out of order for insisting that the contract be hashed out before a fascinated group of taxpaying, voting citizens. A banging gavel would have sent the council on to another agenda item, remanding the salary talks to the private room where the city's paid negotiator might better control the situation. Instead, the public was granted the rare opportunity to watch government in action. What they saw was an official position that seemed to make economic sense getting overrun by fact and public opinion. The police walked away with a 12 percent salary raise, won by appealing to the generally accepted dictum that you get what you pay for. Statistics presented by the police officers, and unrefuted by the City Council. indicate that the city's law enforcement professionals are migrating like swallows to departments with higher salary schedules. Ranking anywhere from 17th to 24th among Orange County police departments, the city faces severe. problems recruiting and keeping high quality police officers. At the same ume, southern Orange County is among the most expensive places in the nation to li~e. A survey by the Daily Pilot last year found that Irvme's police department was the best paid in the nation - higher than New York City or Beverly Hills. Costa Mesa has taken great pride m its development from the sleepy Goat Hill t? the dazzlin~ City of the.Arts. And, as a direct result of ns commercial growth, it h~s enjoyed a level of municipal affluence that has made It the envy of its neighbors. -~ What better way to invest the harvest of the city's policies than in the people who keep the city safe? The City Council couldn't think of one. . . . It is unlikely, human nature being what It is. that we'll get many more of these insider's peeks at civics in action. Too bad. They have the interesting effect of making elected officials deal with the ultimate correct- ness of their decisions, while more subtle considerations are relegated to the secondary status they usuall y deserve. Op1n1ons expressed 1n tt11s space are those ol the Dally Pilot Other views eKpressed on this page are those of their authors and antsts Reader comment 1s invited The Dally Pilot, PO BoK 1560, Costa Mesa. 92626 Phone 642-6086 GOP party chairman 's role should be to heal wounds To the Editor· The article "Rosenberg down. but not oul'' b) Paul .\rch1pley (Dail) Pilot July 2) 1s explosive It appears 10 re' cal a GOP policy position which 4 learl~ sets fo rth a mandate against ~uung leadership HI favor of an "old ho~" ne1"ork ( uunt\ GOP Chairman Tom Fuentes' remarks seem to completely rule out support of gifted bright stars who demonstrate they have met the 'oters test and captured the v1s1on of 1he eleuorate We are a great nation 1inl} because of our willingness to acn·pt the challenge of change. A prolonged status quo will t ause us to wither and become poht1cal eunuchs: unc:ngaging. devoid of vitality and bonng. Mr Fuentes· real •c hallenge is to now heal the GOP party spill oc- casioned by his public remarks by actively demonstrating that Mr. Rosenberg and Mr. Rosenberg's 34 percent Republican voter preference -achieved after only brief I I weeks of campaigning -has great value to the GOP. Mr. Rosenberg must be elevated to the GOP spotlight. The alternative 1s to grow cold in the shadow cast by resentment to change. THOMAS T. TIERNEY Santa Ana Heights Yo ung offic e r wore job well To the Editor .\s J property owner and operator 111 a hu'>1ness in Costa Mesa. I had. th1<. week. the need for the sen ice.-. of a < osta Mesa Police Officer .\Iler coming to my aid and in the lOUr<,e of conversation. th1-; young offi cer casual!> commented that the da~ was warming up and would he hot r nh\i.'f'l"d that his un1fqrm was Jark anJ of the heavy type ot matcnal usuall:-re~erved for winter In response to my 1nqu1ry I learned that Costa Mesa doc'> not have a summer hghtwc1ght uniform Then tom} <.urpnse (but pcrhap'> to no one clc;e) wa~ my c11sco,cry that he wa~ weanng a hullctprnof vc.-.1 He .-.eemed t1nconcemcd ahout weanng th is add1t1onal garment. hut I was "Ho" docs 11 feel'>" I asked. ··1 Daily Pilat F • don't mean the weight. 'ltow doc., 11 feel. you know. emot1onally'? Doc\ 11 hother you'>'· He answered 1n thr ncgatne and that he was used to 11 by now 1-k\ onl) been on the force for a year Wanted to be a cop ever since he wa., a kid. First one in his family. o\11 hi\ siblings are making a lot more monl'\ he said. but he's doing what he l<H l''> to do. Law Enforcement. Later that day, and that night. and ye~. even today. I've been thinking about that youni officer ... and what he does for a ltvmg. He gets up every working morning and straps on a oulletproofvest' A prment to protect him from getting killed' He does that ever; working day• H~ does that 10 protC'C't the citizenry of("osta Mesa THOMAS E CROSSON Balboa Island K•ren Wittmer Pub1t1rmr Frenk lint r cMo• Tom T•lt M .,, .. (1•'1Q l dthJI Don Fenley (.11y Edlto• Tom Clenln N11w1 Edtlo• Cr•lo ttteff Spu•l1 fdllO• ftobfft C en I retl ProduCllOn Dlrect0t ferry Kendle C1rculat1on Manoqer Howerd Mui.rtnary Advert1s1no Olrtieto• Jl'eoa~ ..... ,,. C:lutiflf'd Olrl!(:IClf I If closeted homoseKUallty Is quite common Jn Hol}¥wood. as the.~U ? Hudson story Implies. Jsn 't the same troeof l"NI cs ~ R"61S~ ILL Ei:l\l .... -•.. j~ ... ,,,... ... > . Christmas sale? Someone's bells are a little bit jingled it doesn't seem quite right to have tree ornaments advertised in middle of July It was bound to happen. and I. m one of my more lucid moments. predicted that it would. It dad. I was leafing through a paper the other day, just to see what the competition was up to. and there were two display ads on one page. both for the same large. posh department store. One was one-sixth of a page. and the other was two-thirds of a page. adding up to a total of five-sixths of a page. and both of them advertised Christmas ornaments for sale. Chrt!llmas ornaments I was vel) tared when I went to bed last. so I scanned quickly to the top of the page in order to ascertain that I hadn't slept two or three months away. I hadn't. The date of the publication was July 24. 1986 I Ver) clearly remember wriung. t-wo or three years ago. a column about how the Christmas season seemed to be encroaching upon other holidays, and how it seemed to start earlier each year I noted that when I was a child. at least all of the Thanksgiving leftovers had been copsumed before there was any mention of the Christmas holiday to come. .\s time passed, the Christmas ballyhoo began to appear before Thanksgiving, and finally it started at about the same time as Halloween. I predicted that the time would come when the last sky rocket would fizzle out and the last sparkler burn to a nub on July Founh. and the next day merchants would start with "'Only 180 shopping days left •t1l Chnstmas~ .. The people who wrote these ads knew exactly what they were doing. It wasn't as 1f file s had somehow become scrambled and ads scheduled for late November had been run by accident. because: the copy in one of them said .. Take a holiday from summer and.think ahead to that most special umc of year." " To me. summer is a hohda1 How can vou take a holiday from a holiday? The smaller of the two ad~ wa!i for a Christmas tree ornament made of lead crystal. and it wasn't cheap. As a matter of fact. it was $30. It was apparent!> meant 10 be a one-time thing, because 1t had ' 1986' engraved on 1t. As I read more of the ad. a faint sJ1inmer of understanding besan to insert nself into m) thinking. I learned that the '86 ornament wa~ available. but so were ornaments from '85 and '84. so you could go in BILL HARVEY with a little less than SIOO and start a collection. retroacti vet y. The final conclusion that J came to was that this store had been selling these ornaments since 1984, and that they hadn't been moving too well. This coriclus1on was supponed by the fact that the last two year's models were still available. Probably, there was a staff meeting. and it was concluded that customers weren't getting enough lead-time to plan to buy these baubles. The solution? Obvious. Start peddlin& them m Jul). Regardless of the reasons for this move. 11 had occurred. There II was. right before my very eyes. an ad for Christmas 1n July. As for my pred1c t1on that Christmas huckstenng would start on July S. it's true that this ad appeared on the 24th. and instead of 180 shopping days left unttl Christmas. there are only 160. I'll still stand b) m) prediction however. Wait until next year Bill Harvey Jives ill Hanriagtoa Beacb. Roy a l Family, like fairy t ales , should b e lef t -alon e LO!\iDON -It occurred lo me this morning that I've been over here for thl' ta .. t three or four days. explaining thl' undcrl} ing o;oc1al contracts 1ha1 product." a 2 C.>00-ycar old society that cannot h:.i l-..e a potato. and that somewhow 1n all tht' excitement I neglected to tell you about the Ro) al Famil ~ Which. after all. 1!> thr reason I came. l hat. and to broaden m) apprec1a11on of different cultures And ~o I thought I might pau~ now. with the Duke and Dutchess of York safety cru1s1ng the Azores on thc ro)al )acht Bntannia. and lay out some of the players. not only to help you remember who is who at the next wedding. but to show you that these are real people behind the titles. People with hopes and problems, just like anybody else. ~nd I guess the place to start 1s the queen herself. Her name, of course. 1s Elizabeth II. She is paid a little over tour million pounds a year to be queen. but that's before expenses. f>ne of which, of course, she 1s mamed to. Ph1lhp. the Duke of Edinburgh. Phillip was in the Navy during the war. played polo afterwards, and 1s now according to the Central Office of Information. admiral of the Royal Yacht Squadron and keenl y interested in the welfare of young people and tht' constrvat1on of the environment. Which checks out. You used to 'ice him a lot of p1cturts of him down 1n ~frica. posing with a bunch of nat1 ve~ with distended bellies. and then blowguns and babies. He is paid 200 000 pounds (about S320.000) a year for being ma m ed to the quet'n. For her part. Eltzabeth II 1s eom- mander-in-<:hief of the armed forces. has responsib1lat1es for knighting commoncr1', and spends a lot of time grcctana heads of visiting deligat1o ns. Ph1lhp. by the way. arcets them too. but everybody knows who they want in the picture with them when they go home. The queen was a Junior com mander of Auxihar)' Territonal Ser vices during the wnr, and is interested in thoroughbred horse~ Her fim son IS Prmce ( harl~. the Prince of Wales who. harnng acci- d<'nts. will take over when hi~ mother ' steps down. Charles wa., in the Royal Na\y. where he reached the rank ot com- mander, hut not during the war He cannot he blamed for that. howe"er Sometime~ you've got a war. some· limes you don"t. According to the Central Oflicc of Information. "His Royal H1$hness pursues a programme of fam1liam- at1on with various aspects of public life tn Britain... He is paid the revenues of the estate of the Duchy of Cornwall for that, but I can't find nut what that amounts to He has said publicl~ thnt he eventually intends to be aware of all aspects of that public life. and a~ 1f that weren't enough. Charles al'\o 1\ interested in young people. polo. and e-cology. . Lady D1, on the other hand. 1s interested 1n the disabled. mus1l the problems and development of c hll- dren, and Wales . Among other organ11at1on..,, '>hr 1s the president or a patron of the Royal School for the Blind, the Bnt1sh l)caf Association, Help for the Aged. the Malcolm Sargent Cancer Fund for Children. the National Rubella Council. Btrthnght. thr Bnt1sh Red Cross Youth. and Gloucester'>h1re County Cncket Club Ye'>, I called to ask 1f that might have been GloucesteNh1re Rickets Club. but 1t was correct the way 11 w<is wntten, o;o the woman 1s not onc- d1mens1onal H('r first son. Wilham. as 4 yt'iirs old. and srcond in hne to the throne. behind Chatles. I do not know whut h1'i interest\ are. but he did \how up at the we<.ldrng 1n a sailor su11 Htr ~cond son. lknry. will he 2 vear~ old later 1h1~ summer. and 1~ currently tlurd. behind his brother and father, in line to the throne Fourth in line'' Prince Andrew. the nt'w Oukc of York. who 1" ofT 1n the Azotts on his hon~ymoon Andttw 1s mll in the n:lV}'. and went to war against <\rgcntma m the Falkland lsland'I d1.,pute I k 1s a helicopter pilot, and hie; interc'lts arc flyina. athletics, and hclpin11, th~· youth of the country He is paid .S0.000 pounds a year. in add1t1on to has sata.ry as a navy pilot Sarah Ferguwn. his bndc. grt'w up in ;i prominent polo fa mil) She WC'nt 10 ~t>aetanal ~ honl ~raduatcd la~t PETE DEXTER and moved on quickly to run the London branch of a fine-art publish- ing company Her father. Ronald . 1s known as the .. Galloping MaJor" all over England. and her mother lef\ him. I 0 or 15 years ago. for a polo player from Argentina named HC"ctor Rarrantes. Sarah's interests are skiing. nd1ng horses, tennis. helping the youth of Britain. and learning to fly She says ~he thinks that will give her a better understanding of what Andrew does for a living. Pnncc Edward 1s Andrew's young- er brother. and he is fifth in line, one place in front of his sister Princess Anne. I don't know what his interests arc. but he'd better learn to watch his back . Princess Anne 15 a former .. Sports· woman of the Year" in England. She Jumps horses. and, at 124,800 pounds a year, is th.c !linglc-most-persuas1ve living argument again'lt monarchy, tn the world today. She is interested tn the disabled, and 1s a very bad loSt'r. She has two children. Peter and Zara. who arc ~venth and eighth in hnc of succession. And that. along with Pnnccs'i Margaret ( 121,500 pounds a year) and the queen mother ( 359, I()() yearly), ts pretty much who shows up when they nng the dinner bell fhere 1s 'lomc ~nt1mcnt -evcn in England -for pulling the dram plug on all ol them and cleaning out the tub. Thert" 1s thr feeling that tn a countl) with the kind of t'conom1c problcmc; this one has, 1t 1s oh!>Ccne to maintain an 1dlcdaso;ofpcoplc 1n this !ityk M) own opinion -rnm1na from somebody who has only been here four days, and sick for all of that t'llCC'pt the first c1aht hours -1s that they o ught to lca'e the Royal Family alone Pttt-D~xl~r I• • 1yadlcttd N>lumoJ11. DAN WALTERS Politics and gays have yet to mfr SACRAMENTO -NCWSJ!llpm around the countt)4 have been run· ning a condensed version of Rock Hudson's biopphy, de1ailina his double lift' as a Hollywood lcadina man and a practicing homosexual. Hudson emerges from the bio- sraphy as a rather sad figure, trapped m a living lie he maintained unuJ stricken by AIDS. The most pathetic thing about the Hudson story. however, is ~o\~his own predicament but what it says about the motion picture industry. Homosexuality and other behavior considered out of the mainstream are tolerated within the tight confines of the movieland community, but there is an institutional conspiracy to keep the rest of the world ignorant. While Hollrwood has loosened upa bit .in. its public image -heterosexual hv1ng arrangements sans marriage now arc considered OK -it remains highly protective about most private behav- ior. It's-no wonder that such an affinity has developed between show busi- ness and politics. especially those of California. Politicians and entertainment fig- ures employ squads of public rela- tions uperts to polish up their pub!1c images and keep any adverse matenal from reaching the public. Which raises this most interesting question: If closeted homosexuality is quite common in Holl ywood. as tht' Rock Hudson story implies. isn't the same true of politJcs? It's widely believed that approx- imately I 0 percent of the adult population 1s py. whether secret!) or open!). and 1t s reasonable to assume that a substantial number of Cah- fornia's poht1c1ans are so oriented. although it's not easy to figure out who they are. One of the things that dogged Jerry Brown dunng his two terms as governor. two stabs at the White House and a campaign for the U.S. Senate. was a widely held belief that he was a homosexual. There was never a shred of evidence produced 10 JUStify the belief, but it was something that has banged around California by word of mouth for }ears -enhanced. no doubt, b) the fact that he neveT mamed and the political ties he had with gay nghts groups. Another politician plagued by rumors about his sexual orient.ation 1s New York Congressman Jaclc Kemp, a potential 1988 presidential can- didate. The rumors about Kemp's alleged part1c1pat1on in a homosexual orgy while working in Ronald Re- agan's gubernatonal administration 1n Sacramento two decades are so pervasive that Kemp now addresses them openly. There·s only one openly gay person elected to substantial office in C'~h­ fornia. a San Francisco supervisor Outside of San Francisco and Wc\I Hollywood. a cknowledgtng a homosexual orientation could be poliucal poison One ga> act1v1s1 in Lo!. Angeles. Peter Scott. was readv to run for the state Assembly this year. challenging Democratic floor leader Michael Roos in the primar)'. But Scott dropped out after Democratic leaders, including Assembly Speaker W1ll1e Brown. leaned on him through gay nghts groups. If elected, Scott would have been the Legislature's only openly gay member. There are. however. recur- rent rumors about the sexual orien- tation of several current membe". One man came out of the closet after leaving the Legislature and a few years ago, Democratic As- 'iemblywoman Maxine Wa~ers threatened to reveal the names of secretly gay Republican legislators. lt''i bd1cvcd Wlthin the Legislature that there 1s a clique of gay Re- publican members. and that belief has underlain some C"motional de- bates over such issues as AIDS and homosexual )Ob discriminallon. The sens1t1v1ty that politicians have about being publicly associated with homosexuality, even as heter- osexual advocates of gay n~ts. will be tested in the forthcom10g cam- paign over an anti-AIDS ballot measure 'iponsored oy as,,.oc1atcs of politic al <'l<.t rem1s1 Ly ndon LaRouchc. Man} art" tom ~tween their aversion both to LaRouchc and the repressive ini11011vc and thtm desire not to see'!1 to be apoloiust~ for homo~xuahty Gay nahts act1v1sts, meanwhile. see in the LaRouche 1n1ltative a test or whether C'aliforn13'\ mood rtgardina hom~!iexuahty has shifted from the relative tOlt'rance of the 1970s and early ~ 980s t~ one of host1hty C'ahfom1a 'i poht1ci11ns, both gay and stnught, arc wondt'nna about that, \OO. Which 1s why mony Wlll duck talcmg po•ut1on~ on 1he I .'IRouchc meuur~ Dan WaJl~N ,, • •YDdJc•trd columabl. ' - Baby Boomers reaching. mid-life career cri Older ones jotntng ranks of Forty Plus self-help chapters BJ ROGER GD.LOTT ,, ........... LOS ANOE.LES -Baby 8oomtts often are ~uclin,iqoblessivelytoyoutb,butonccan bold beck tbe clock only so Iona. Al a result, some of tho oJder Boomers -those born durina the pos~Wortd War IJ decadci -have t>eaun tricklina loto the ranks of Fony Plus, a eelf-help orpnization for out-of-work. midd}e.qe euc:utiv~ M UTUAL FUNDS Biby Boomm make up about 3S pen::cnt of the oation•1Woftfoteeofll6.lmiWon,up1Ubltantialty(rom 1976. when they consUtuted about 27 percent of a wortfon:e of9'4.9 aillHon. Tbe oon·profit Fony Plus o~tion bu l 3 chapters in the Urutod States, Canada and EnaJ,and. each opcntina independently. Tbo r111t chapter WU founded in New York in r939. Tbe Los Anaelcs-bated Fony Plus of Southern California was foundea in l 9-46, the tint year of tbe Baby Boom. A..chapter in Oakland wu fonncd in 1969. .. We are just startins to 1ee younaer people comina. .. says Rod Ream, a ~year-old manqemcnt consultant who ls president oftbe Los AnJeles chapter. So far, be says, about a dozen people in lhc1r early 409 or younaer-tbe averqe group member is in the mid-to uppcr-40s -have JOifted the orp.oaz.ation's 200 membm., •b.o swap contacts, ope on praenlina t.h~mtetva to po~tiat employers and adVlCt on bow to wntc n::sumes. Tbeir b&cqroundt are as divene u tbOle •bo prCccded them: A main&elW'ICe supervisor for an idled steel plant. a hosP1ta1 ldmillisttator who lost ~in a corporate takeover, an oil compmiy lawyer left · by the slump 10 that uwSustry. look'~!~~:~!FR~~~.f:e;t~~~.;~~ ones interviewing •9Plicants.'' Sandy MU11, 42, ia one such cue. .. Everytb.ina's cha~na so much I have to look at other alternatives ifl expect to h.ave a politive ru1urc, .. 11)'1 Mills, a fonner rnait.c~· m•n11tt in the a.i.tboe industry, which bu been beset financial ~lema. "rve cb.an&cd jobs before, 1 now it a differen t," Mills said Wednesday. "It's not just a maucrofpiclcina up the pbone1 callioa a few friends and findlna out what &101$ a.re avail•olc." He is finding be must search and teU himself more Ml"*ively to mipk)yen .. be tlpba filildl .......... DOI kAo"1L Olltt of tbOee IRlll ii the~ maintnanco orpnizatioe beaiaaa. Milli bu boe1' -1tb Fony Plu Uc. April ud ii eot.buaiutic about the paiduce and moral .uppon lle"1 recdved;addina, .. It's a lo& beaer-lbm uaa.. •• bomllil ~mythumbl&DdbciJltacared." ~ A.an IWW'orct. 44 diroccOr m Loi Careen for Older Albcria.m, wbjch spetje•iut iA • worken over "· aarees wit.b MillJ. "h's an in1CtelllQlaitu.11ion," the •YL .. rve teea it a 101 in my peen. We were very IUCCUHricatcd IDd W always been promised t.bae yan ~ be ~ wooderful." But they're oot woaderful for~· .. "My husband was in the oil bui,... Need I more? His company went bu.k:rupl," she ays. Turnover of members in Forty Plus is heavy. But that's the whole idea of the poup. otlidlb say. .. Our secret desire," says Ream, .. ii co olfiOt everybody and P' out ofbusiness tomonow. But we boW that's never SolOI to happen.•• • ~h•~m~~,~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ RUFFELL'S UPHOLSTERY HIC. " 0 Du.rty Nelly'1" OPEN FOR LUNCH & DINNER Monday thru Friday 11 AM to 9 PM ARTHRITIS .... Don't let it stop you. Learn how you can llve a fuller, more comfortable and Independent llfe. THE 1986 ARTHRITIS INFORMATION SERIES When: Time: Second Meeting, Tueaday, July 29, 1988 7:00-9:00 P .M. Where: HUMANA WESTMINSTER HOSPITAL 200 Hoapltal Clrcle, Weatmlnater, CA (Bnement C•fet•rl•) The Arthlrltla Information Serie• OHera: • Speclal Preaentatlona By Board Certified Orthopaedic Surgeon• • Information on New & Proven Arthrltla Treatment• • Effect• of Nutrition on Arthrltla • Queatlon & Anawer Dlacuaalona •Free Information a Aetreahmenta Co-Sponsored by: Auoclated Bone & Joint Orthopeedlc Surgical & Medical Group -Humana Haepital W.&bi .... JOHN C. WANIURTOM, II D M>eOT Q. HIMCH, 11.D HO•Jn W. HAWATI, M.D JACIC lllAICMALL., JA • 11.0 . ITIV!N .-. QRUC>ff. M D Call tor R ... rvatlona a Information (714) 898-2554 Div~·._..~'' CM + .. -1 -:: ' I NYSE COMPO SITE TRAN SACTIONS ... IAY'I ILlllM PllOll Market suffers setback NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market suffered a sharp setback Monday in selling attnbuted to rising interest rates. Interest rates rost an the credit markets Monday, sending prices of long-tenn government bonds down about $1 0 for every S 1,000 in face value. Analysts said upward pressure on interest rates last week and Monday arose in large part from uncertainty over demand for fu:ed-income secun- t1es before and during the Treasury's next auction of bonds and notes. Those concerns. 1n tum, helped to weigh down pnces of stock-index futures,. brokers said. As the index futures declined, professionals engaged in the practice known as program trading stepped in to buy the futures and sell correspond- ing "baskets" of stocks that make up the indexes. The Dow Jones average of 30 1ndustnaJs fell 36 14 to 1,773 90. for its seventh largest point loss ever and its biggest since 1t took a record 61 .87- pomt drop on Jul) 7. WHAT AMEX Dio , WHAT NYSE Om NE.W VOAK CAP) Jul, H Advonced Rect1ned ¥~,= Ntw hl9hS New lows AMEX LEADERS NEW YORK (AP) -Sales, 4 P.m. Mondav prl~ and net ctwlnoe of !tit 10 most active American Stock E1tchange luu.s, lra dlng nallonallv at more ~an 11 W.':Lab8 r, l~~t ~ Wickes S'h -V. HornHar 14'1• -'h Ye1tasAlrCP 291h + ~ AM Intl l'h -1 i't FtAullPr n -~ EcnoBa~ g I 'h I ~ Webe<X I ,,., ''e PtillLg 0 s '.It PellCP ' 1 '. 37~ ,.._ COLD QUOTES METALS QuoTES NEW VOAK <AP) Jul. 211 Todli: I NYSE LEADERS ''lil'IWfit '~J 1.-.'MJi NASDAQ SUMMARY qu1l.lz fX.>~1bly thz. pzrfocr, pc.kqt,, o be~ic 1n av:uy mon~ wordrob:t soft, n>1n nzpaJla.nt ell cotlon ~\ 1 Wtth l 19ht.'MZ.i.ght tor~ hrnr'9. v~ntJzd bock, knit!.Qd cu~ ond bot.lorn I thcz. TTI05t pop.; Lor ~Ind brcz.oka.r a;vru t.on novy, na:i ood bnL1 sh ton r111wport t..och '+'t te~\Of'I l"llord.11't/6't'I ~ wa""-'l.QOd vi\ \ogl-KX>i ~ btW , 21Y20HZ7.) poMdam 5l~~th loNI.,... ,8181'°* 9"~ mon tl°\t\1fh lOl.09, ""t.urdoy IOt.o~' ~noon to~ ' ~111~· (Ma~h 21·April 19): What wu lost will be recovered-key it penlltence. perfection of tcchn"lucs and faith. C)'cle cootinuts hi&b, you a.re duo to ICOte .. rousina victory. You'll be provided access to priviJeaed information. TAURUS (April 20.May 20): This can be your power-play day. Lunar, numerical cycles hiabliaht tlminJi charisma. personality, romance. chance to hit financial j~kpot. .,-ake initiative, dance to your own tune. express confidence. · GEMINI (May 21-June 20): You'll complete lona--standina assiJnment. w&ht is abed on area previously dark. Fears, suspicions will be eradicated. Rom&nce_plays outstandina role. You'll be revitalized as creative juices flow. SYDNEY CANCER (June 21-July 22): Spot- liJbt on i>09ularity, added re<lO&JliUon. 01•11 p1oneerina spirit, ability to aet to heart " of matters. You mo aet proverbial ··········-"second chance." Imprint style, display couraie of convictions. Love relationship intensifies. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Decision is reached concemina career, romance. Security lS involved, intuition play5 major role. You'll receive news coocemina basic values, propeny, family member. Former teacher returns to ~ne. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Scpt. 22): Key is to diversify without scatterina forces. Scenario hlahlights populanty, travel, communication, deeper under- standina of philosoph1cal concepts. Give full rein to curiosity, make pertinent inquiries. • LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): See others in realistic li&ht, protect self- intercsts. You could receive news associated with I~ disputca over money. Be sure that you arc represented by qualified individual. SCORPIO (Oct. 23·Nov. 21): Di& deep for information, di~m trends and motives. Rclallonshiparowsstrong, commitment is made, marital ~talus continues to be emphasized. Gam will come through written word. Gemini native plays role. SAGITrARlUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): What appeared to be a .. sure lh1n1" could actuaJly be elusive. Know at, keep options open. You'll receive Jift from individual who previously was indifferent. Important domesllc adjustment 1s part of scenano. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Ja.n. 19): Emphasis on creativity, romance. tendency to permit emotions to shove logic aside. Strive for balance, realize necessity for chanae. Status quo due to be shaken -know it, respond accordinaly. Pisces plays role. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. l 8): Price must be paid, don't attempt to evade responsibilities. You actually gain by facina challenge, abidina by rules. regulations. Long-range prospects arc brighter than you might imagine. Capricorn plays role. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Reach beyond previous limitations. Lunar, numerical cycles hi&hlight progress. completion. wider audience. added recognition. Focus aTso on surprise visits, news concerning individual who means much to you. IP JULY U IS YOUR BIRTHDAY major domesttc adjustment 1s featured this year -could include actual change of residence or manta! status. You arc intuattve, a natural ~cbologist, character analyst, teacher. You arc scns1t1vc of others, will sacnficc for good offamily. You arc drawn to the mantic arts and sciences, including astrology. You have gourmet appetite and possible d1~cst1vc problem. Capncom, Cancer, Aquanus people play important roles in your hfc. November will be memorable for you in 1986. Opposites attracted where nose concerned Men with short noses prefer women with long noses. No, that's not the claim of our Love and War man. None other than the philosopher Schopenhauer so avcrTed. Quick IQ test: These letters -O. A, 8 -arc in a certain order. What do they stand for'? Bri&ht souls will answer they arc the first, second and third most common blood types. Numerous early sc1ent1sts insisted miaratory bards spent their winters on the moon. The fingernails of the Statue of Liberty arc a foot long. Q. Isn't ground glass a deadly poison? A. No, m , 1f it's so pulvcrued the mouth can't detect It, ifs not likely to damqc the innards, doctors say. A few men, lmowing this. have made a carnival hving, chewing up and swallowing light bulbs. "This world would be run by women even more so, if it weren't for 11 PEOPLE L.M. Bo YD wars." writes a client "If combat didn't kill off men, the men would greatly outnumber women, and thus give power to women. Unlike other minorities, women in the minonty tend to take command .. Q. Why are strawbemes called that? A. Early growers not only covered the plants with straw but packed the bemcs in straw. You need a license in most states to fit a horse with shoes, but you don't need a license in any state to fit a man with shoes. A shoe salesman told me that. L.M. Boyd 11 • 1yodlca1ed colamal1t. Jet lag can stop the body's clock I had an aunt who lincerely believed you could die from jet laa. Sbe once traveled from Ohio to Arizona and her life was never the same apin. for the rest of Her existence, her body went to bed at 7 in the evenin1 and raced for the paper and breakfast at 3 a.m. She blames that tinlle trip for puttina an end to her famny life, social interaction, and 1 aeneral breakdown of bcr body clock, which eventually contributed to l\er demise. I have just returned from a va- cation to lndoncsta and am in the process ofhavioa my aunt's birthday declared a lcpl holiday. The woman wu 10 apostle of truth, a prophet in our time, a role model for oracles. J know now that my body will never again respond to a l.inglc command from me. Like Mother Nature, it is not nice to fool it. At Los Anaeles, my body said, "It's 9 p.m.1 Erma, and in another hour, I am 10101 to toddle off into my pre- dozc P.hase just before I enter deep sleep.' I said to my body, "Trust me. If you could just stay awake and cat a six- coune dinner and watch" Jewel of the Nile,' you'll be a bener person for it." Halfway throuab "Jewet of the Nile,'' my body defied me and went to sleep. Four hours later, the lights went on 10 the plane and a steward said, "Breakfast~" My body jerked to attention and said, "What are you tryin.J to pull, Dimbulb? I j ust ate. Besides, you know I sleep in on Sundays." "It's not Sunday, it's Monday. Have a bard roll and shut up." At Sydney, Australia, I awakened iny body and said, "Time to eat breakfast!" "Bua off, I dtd that,'' at whined. With each passina llmc zone, l made my teas walk when they were uleep, closed my eyes when they were wide awake, ate dinner in the a.m. and snapped pictures when I should have been sbowerina. Just when my body bepn adjustina. I came home and reversed the entire process. I have been home several days and live in a new world. I have breakfast with David Letterman, lunch with Dan Rather and dinner with "Good Momina America." I sleep during the soaps and pme shows. I have no friends. My only contaC\ with people is an all-ni&ht supermarket. Experts are just beainnina to take jet ~seriously. They adv1se you not to drink, to cat li&htly, stop off at exotic places to break up the tnp and listen to your body. Personally, I don't have to lmen to Lanauaae like that! My body will be sorry when I'm gone. Bank's story should scareeverys111oker DEAR ANN LANDERS: Keep up your campaign to get people to qutt smoking. J f you save just one person from the ordeal my husband went through it will be wonh it. Hank was a heavy smoker. When we discussed quitting he said it would be impossible because he had smoked nearly 50 years. Then the nightmare began. !=int the husky voice and sore throat, the biopsy (cancer) followed byweek.sofrad1at1on, ra<hcal surgery, chemotherapy, an cmergcocx tracheotomy, then a laryngcctomy. (I never heard has beautiful voice apin.) Months m the hosp1t.al, many more surgencs. the last t.alung bis jaw, teeth, and part of his tongue. He was unable to swallow. We fed htm through a tube. After Hanle suffered horribly for 25 months and nearly became bhnd, the Lord saw fit to take him. He left behind a family emotionally and physically exhausted, and financially drained. You cannot remind your readers too many tames about the dangers of smoking. Don't ever stop. - CANCER VICTIM'S WIFE IN IOWA. DEAR IOWA: I'm 1are I'm beliD· ILLDI to sound llke a broken record,Dat thuk• for U1e opportuity to uy It a1a1J1. My beartfelt coadoleaces to yoa and the famUy and to oSbn- famlly members wbo att destined to Hffer a similar fate. • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: After reading an your column about the lc1d who was womed that his mother was aettina a bat dingy because she talked to herself, I agree with you that talking to oneself as a good way to relieve stress. I have always felt that 1f you can't talk to yourself. who can you talk to? A few years ago while on vacation an Estes National Park my brother A11 UIDEIS walked into the room while I was watchrng the TV and cau&ht me talk.ina to myself. He asked. "Make, are you talking to yourself>" I tcP.lied, .. Yes. Do you mind? Ifs a private conversation." Sain me -IF YOU THINK l'M CRAZY, YOU OUGHT A MEET MY BROTHER. DEAR FRIEND: 'nu.kl for me offer. I b ow eaoap dlqt>ats already. • • • DEAR ·ANN LANDERS: When you were a young girl in Sioux City, Iowa. walk.in& down the street with a boy, I'm sure you remember that he always walked on the outside, nearer the curb, to protect you, I believe, from the ''dangers" of the strut. Today, afthc boy and girl arc under 30, he invariably walks on the inside Why? We had a reason for our tradluon -protection What's the reason for the new twist? I have watched this phenomenon careful!) -an fact. 1t has become an obsession Do )'OU have an cxpla- nauon for this radical change m behavior'> -OVER 50 AND IR- RITATED IN LINCOLN. NEB. DEAR OVER 50: I, too, laave aoticed tbat youa men are aot as wedded to U1l1 ca1tom as tlaey wuc wbeu I w11 1row1D1 ap, bat tbc "noattna" 11 not nearly as wldn prcad as yoa claJm, at least not ID Cblca10. To test yoar theory. I couted yesterday on Mlcbl1an Avenae. Out of %7 coople1, ! 1 ma fer walked closer to tile 1treet. Wby 11 tbe count 10 mucb lower In Llncoh1? Caa aay of you Cornhaekera cnllglltcn me? Arn.old~norawdealforCYAyouths WHITTIER Although Arnold Sctawar1eaeper'1 ~um­ mer film .. Raw Deal • has drawn fewer moviegoers than expected, the body-bu1ld1ng champion won top reviews from a capuvc au- dience of inmates at a California Youth Authonty Camp "He was outrageous,'' one youth said af\cr the actor and former Mr Univcl'$C demon- strated weighthf\1n1 exercises for about 300 Juveniles." As soon as I get out of here I'm aoing to a gym to work out.·• said another. Schwarzenc&Jcr has been speaking to pnson and Youth Authonty voups throughout California smcc 1975. "When you're educaung people about fitnes'I in hfe. these are the people you're going to ltavc out," he said "Theycan'11ooutand buy a book or act a video " LOS ANGELES -Orammy- winn1na ""&er MartlJ11 McCoo will JOtn the cast of the NBC' 508p opera "Day'I of Our Lives'' Fn- day McCoo will play Tamara Pnce. a fncnd of Dr Marlena Brady ( Dddn Rall). who wlll become romantically involved wtth Abe Carver, l?laycd by Jim Reynolds She will jOtn the show on tM dav Arnold 8ohwaneneaer Marlena and Roman Brady ( Drde Hoeett)'ll) repeat their wcddina vows McCoo and her husband. BUI)' Davia Jr., sang wtlh the 5th llarllyn llcCoo Uamcn ion tor nearl) I 0 )'t3~ The aroup won SI~ Gramm)''\ dunna tllat ~od he and Dav1$ alw won a Grammy for their fint inalc. "You Don't Have To~ a Star " She was host of "Solid Gold" for three )Cars and has appeared on the "IBC" special "Motown Returns to the .\polio ... Career shift ( H ICAGO -Jerry Baller. whose I 96Q album "The Iceman Cometh," )Jelded a malhon-scll- ing san&le. now rcturneth in an unfam1T1ar 1ncarna11on -a\ a pohticaan Butler, who won three Gram- mys, had three Billboard Top Ten singles and sold more than 10 m101on albums an the 1960s. stud h1$ campa1an for the Cook Coun- ty Board of Com1ss1oncrs as rooted 1n his long-11me commit- ment to Ct\tl nghts. ·•rvc alwa)'s been 1n\olHd an pohllc'I," Butler said 1n a tele· phone interview from ht\ South Sade beverage d1stnbut1n1 com- pany. la:man Bevcraac ( o. Inc "Mo'lt of my sonas have a pohtacal mean1na. even though the)"re love sonas .. The "naer·sonpntcr. appear- 1na on the ballot a!I Jen) "Ice- man" Butler, rtt'Cavcd 2 l S,2Q2 \IOtc5 1n the March 18 Dcmocrat1C pnmary Ht hH the backing of Mayor Harold Wa1hanaton an the Novcmt>tr aeneral election. Q.1-As South, vulnerable, you hold: •AQ1071 ~ ~1 •AMI TM bidding hu pro«eded: Weet Nortla &Mt Soetlt 1 0 a <;> ru. t What do you bid now? A.-At thlt vulnerability, your partner ahould have a good hand and a respectable tult to act at the three-level In the dJrect teat. Thettfon, ~~hoUJd be thinking slam. Your t~ 1upport ls more than adequate, and your two aces and singleton cllamond are gold Cue-bid four dl~nch Q.3-Both vulnerable, u South you hold: •A874 <;).ltH ¢88 •AU The bidding has procttded: Soa tb Eut NortJa Ea.t l + Obie 2 • Obie ? What action do you take? A.-Where would you like to go? Partner surely has five-card sup- port for hill raise to two clubs, since even If you play four-card majors he will ~wary of the possi- bility that you were employing a prepared club opening. If he has t he right values, you won't fare badly even if trumps arc stacked agalnat you. Pass. Q.3-Neither vulnerable, as South you hold: •sa <:/KQe OAJ102 +QtM The bidding has proceeded: l North Eut 8oeth Weeq l • Pan l 0 Pue l <;> , .. e 2 • Pue 3 • P ... ? What do you bld now'? A.-Don't consider three no trump-.if that's what partner wanted, he would have bid it him· self. Show your heart support by bidding four hearts. Since you did· n't raise hearts immediately, part- ner knows you can't have four of them. Q.4--Both vulnerable, as South you hold: •QJ7 <;>95 0 1Uo&3 +Q.185 The bidding has proceeded· Weet North Eut 8oatJa l • Obie 1 NT 1 What action do you take'> C1111t£s GHEI o ... Sua1 A.-lf partner hu eound vaJues tcrr hll double, your o<pponentl are already over their head.I. The wa,; to tell pa.rt.Mr of tht.l ls to double. lf his action wu based on shape rath· er than high cards, he will move to a safe haven. Q.5-As South. vulnerable, you: hold: •AJ7 QK8 0.1'72 •AQNI The bidding has prooeeded: Soa tJa Wut Nortlt Eut 1• a• Pue Pue 1 What action do you take? A.-lt might seem that you an s ale to double, but la that really eof If you could guarantee the oppo- nents (and your partner) will st.aJ there, fine. But if East has a long suit and runs, you have no gu~ tee you wtlJ defeat him. Take your certain profit and pass. Q.6-Both vulnerable. as South you hold. •AJ98 QLJSU2 OA Ma The bidding has proceeded: 8out~ Weet North Eut l \;> Pu• 2 0 Pua 2 \;> Pu• 3 0 Paa• ? What action do you take? A.-Even if you and your partner use fiv~card m*ra, thls sequence does not guarantee a six-card heart suit. Nevertheless, we don't think you should bid again. ~er'a dJ- amond rebid shows a sub-minimum t wo-over-one respo~ with long diamonds, so we don't think thla hand ls gomg anywhere. Pua. • ·;.-:;.--"· r r r r 1· 1· I' r r 1 •:~: ........ ,I I . I (I I I I AC ROH 1 Conveyances 5 RepUleS 9 AC>Wel' stalk 1• Sustain 15 Other 18 Ann - 17 Hard to find 18 N Carolina town 19 Hell a Washington city 20 Commodity 21 Meal 23 Loud cry 24 Mesne 26 Hence 28 Clly VIP 29 Makes a kllllng 33 Lewis and - 36 Whimper 37 Equal· pref 38 OisgulM 39 Perch •O Valley '1 Greek peak •2 Less '3 Pleats " Collected •6 Beer parlor •7 Fri«ld •8 Mixed up 52 Br.ate 55 Exhibition 57 Jecob'1 eon 58 Dwelling eo Plant part 81 All-equere 82 Oo-r•ml 83 Ot'ett 8' Housing COit 85 01 the mind 6& Darted 87 Stablllz: .. DOWN 1 Antilles 1ndlan 2 Subside 3 Soft hat •GIUMS 5 Complained 8 01 the put 7 S.tuddled 8 Inane 9 Hand tool 10 Wb 1tlek 11 Sklllf\JI 12~dvot .. 13 Of • period 22 Unexpected pleasure 25 Tooth we.rer 27 WMpon 29 Rain source 30 Window part 31 Applied 32 Liiy - 33 Sman 3• BMch rMOrt 35 Early man 38 Jalopy oeme1ertes 39 8r()()6(1 •O Turkeys •2 Unit of ,L thk*MM •3 P.it •5 Plngpong b9t •6 Yeemed 48 Canada - •9 [)ij(e 50 EpltOde 51 Btowt 528'~ 53 Black: pOllf 5' Time of dey 56 ChtcaQo.,._ 59 Com unit \ TBB FAMILY CIRCUS by BU Keane "Better take these cars with you. This is a tow-away zone." MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson "Bringing your own pillow won't get you into this bed!" PEANUTS GARFIELD HOW '5 YOUR COffE( TMI S MORNINCt. OARFIE.L'7? TUMBLEWEEDS DRABBLE ROSE IS ROSE BIG GEORGE by Virgil Partch (VIP) BLOOM COUNTY DENNIS THE MENACE 1,,;~;...M...;..!7..;.;.'Av_t~_7._t.t> ______ _. /../ r _·c;;~j by Hank Ketcham ~ 1·28 S'!4/<iOME WHEr-4 l'M LISTENING TO YOU!' by Charles M. Schulz by Jim Davis SEE? Ii OIDN'i EVE.N CR AC~ THE. PLAiE by Tom K. Ryan WH~ ~I.Se PO C.IS4~ r.AtKAGfS 1-{AV!! A ~­ C:OfUtJAAJ,!S WA~NIN6ON1H!M?' by Kevin Fagan by Pat Brady ' • FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE SHOE JUDGE PARKER WHEN SAM DRIVER DROPS HEATHER WARNER Of:'F AT HOME AFTER MIDNIGHT, SHE IS GREETED BY HER HUSBAND WHO IS C>eVlOUS· LY DRUNK! FUNKY WINKERBEAN ~ KNOW , ~'V€ WU..4> BEEN ACflN6 WEIRD I L£$ ! DOONESBURY ' , by Jim Davis by Lynn Johnston I 1HINK ITS STMtf~. PH1L-~SCCKS SMe.U. UKe PPS1RAt1 I! by Jeff MacNalty by Harold Le Ooux NOW.HOW~ A KISS FOR Y(XJR VICE PRES IN CHARC£ OF PUBLIC RELATIONS9 7 ll by Tom Batluk by Garry Trudeau NOT /.ff All 7HAr5 VERY NICE ()FY(XJ \ ...... ~~ l Soviet skaters perfonrt Exhtbttton raws warm greeting at Olympic Festival HOUSTON (AP) -The U.S. Olympic Festival took on an inter· national flavor for the first time Sunday when Soviet ice dancers "Marina Klimova and SerJdi Ponomarenko skated an exhibitJon perfonnancc at The Summit. On the ice at Sam Houston Col- iseum across town, speedskater Bon- nie Blatr set a Festival record for total medals won with 16 and total aolds with 10 by taking two titles. After the brother-sister team of Wayne and Natalie Seybold of Marian, Ind., won the pai,rs competi- tion, the Sovi~t couple -J 984 Olympic bronze medalists and sec-- ond in the last two World Cham- pionships -were greeted with thun- derous applause. They skated three short progtams, including one utiliz-1Df. capes and a long, thin stick. ·we are in very serious prep- arattons this season," said Klimova, who celebrated her 20th birthday Sunday and was presented with a birthday cake by Natalie Seybold. "It 1s like a big holiday for for us to come to Houston. "We're very touched by the way the public has greeted us. It is very moe." The couple next will tram in Colorado Springs with noted coach Carlo Fassi and his skaters. The exhibition, in which several other Soviet skaters were scheduled to pan1c1pate before they withdrew, is pan of the Accord of Mutual Under- standing and Cooperation in Sport between the U.S., Olympic Commit- tee and the National Olympic Com- mittee of the USSR. Soviet boxers and cyclists also w11l appear here and compete wtth Festival champions later an the competition. Chnstopher Bowman, 19, of Van Nuys won the men's-singles in figure skatmg ID his first competition since a broken leg bone forced him o ut of the (Pleue eee OLYllPIC/85) Mike Sela.eta Martina leads U.S. to victory PRAGUE. Czechoslovakia (AP} -Martina Navratilova gave her hometown fans a victory from the hean Sunda\. and her U.S. team- mates gave her a special gJfi them- selves ID wanning the Federation Cup. "We all did 1t for Mart1Da," said Chns Even Lloyd. who~ 7-:,. 7-6 victory over Helena Sukova staned the Amencan sweep of Czechoslo- vakia an the championship senes. 1 "We dedicate this Federation Cup to her" ' Navrattlova chnched the title with a 7-5. 6-1 victory over Hana Man- dhkova, then helped complete the sweep with a victory in doubles. The 12th Amencan champ1onsh1p in the tournament's 24 years ended three }Cars of tournament cham-pion~h1ps for Czecholovak1a and capped a week of reunton and rem1D1scang for Navratilova. back ID her homeland fo r the first time since she defected 1 n 19 7 5 She i.a1d she won't wait that long to return "I'd like to come back for Chnstmas sometime. or take mx parents to the States for Chnstmas. ' she said "I'd hke to come back onct a year. It won't be the Fed Cup. and 1t won't be the fil"'it time .. The crowds pulled for Navratilova all week, and once she got within one point of victory against Mandhkova, the chc-cr'i got louder and more \U!ta1ned 1 hey ~kcd dunng the closi ng cnemon1e11 , where Navrat1lova gave an impromptu \ptteh ID ( 1ecl'I "I wanted In lell them how i~11l 1t wu for me 10 ~here," she u1d "It c-xcttded m' \Aolldest e'pcctallons " - Smyth. Hiii win 89•"1 In PMMlc 1,000 c.t.....,.,. rw. a. C•rdln•I• C8pture aldh at ..... ht et •Q•n• Of P8dr1L R It'~ not pretty, bUt Ailgels top Red Sox, 3-0 In ragged contest. Sutton outduels - Boston· s Seaver By CllRIS MONAH.AN o.-, .... c.. ' •• The circus in here ID Anaheim, currently at thi Anaheim Convenuon Center, but what 61,SS9 witnessed Sunday at Anaheim Stadium, would have made a tenlfic sideshow. The Angels and Boston Red Sox committed a comedy of errors on the basepaths, havina six runners thrown out between them. which tried to di,tract from what was happening an the center ring. The main attraction was Don Sutton and Tom Seaver. each 300- game winners, squanng off in a battle of eight-hitters, won by the Angels, .l--0. Sutton got some nice relief help from Gary Lucas ( 1111 1Dn1Dgs) and Donnie Moore ( 12/J 1Dn1Dp, carnmg his 10th save.) "Lucas was superb agam and Donnie Moore was Donnie Moore," said Manager Gene Mauch. The win helped the Angel!> push their lead to three games over sccond- placc Texas, which fell to Cleveland. For the record, the Angels had two runners thrown out at second, one at thtrd and one at home. The Red Sox had two runners thrown out at third. plus a player and a manager thrown out of the game. The action began 10 the third when Wally Joyner led off wtth a SIDglc to right. Trying to leg n anto a double. he was thrown out by Dwight Evans ma close play which Joyner argued. "I felt I was safe," said Joyner "It was a close game (0-0) and I told him (second base umpire Mike Rcilly) that he missed the call " ToJJ.1611t'• lame Aq_eh (MeCawU 11-6) at Oakland (AndUJlt 6-l). Time: S:07. · TV: Channel 7 (6 p.m., de- layed). Radio: KMPC (710). Tuesday'spme: Anp:lsat Oak· land, 7:3S p.m. got both Don BaY.lor and Evant lookin& at third strikes. When Rich Gedman took a called strike to mm the count 1-1, Baylor decided be bad seen enough. Shouttni from the dugout. be fim. attracted home plate umpire Jim McClelland•s anention and then his temper. Baylor was tossed from the game and Manager John McNamara followed soon after. To add to the fun, Mauch decided to play the pme under protest when Boston <ltd not announce who Baylor's replacement was. Mauch, who~dmmed that be didn't know the rule, was wrona because the ruJe book says a team doesn't have to announce who it wtll be in the case of a pitcher or de~1 ted hitter (Baylor, in this ca~. . this seemed to shake Seaver's concentration as was demonstrated when be yielded a lead~ffbome run to Bobby Grich in the next half- mmng. "I was on deck (whue the protest dtscuss1on was IOIDI on) and I didn't even concern myself with it," said Gnch. "l figured I'd find out what happpened after the game. "1 tuMeled m y concentration. I was pacmg in the on-deck circle sayini 'Stay up, stay up.' " Gnch stayed up -as did the pncb from Seaver (4-9). "It was a 1-1 (astbaJl," said Gnch. ·'He wanted to get 1t in on me, but it was up and out over the plate." An&el catcher Bob Boone lao:f,!ed out by Boeton counterpart Rich an while 0.., ......... ..,.,.,,..--. ~to 11COre from .econd ID alzth Inning alter buy Pettla had alngled. It was not the last lime the teams would debate eyesight of the umpir- ing crew. In the top of the founh. Sutton (9-7) Gnch put 1t up and out over the c~ntcr-field wall for a 1-0 Angel lead. (Pleue eee ANG&L8/BIS) Dodgers home after wild 13-11 win No help LA tl t c b h t -. 'Tm proud of the team. They never gave up... f 0 r some OU as S U S, OS S Tonlgbt sgame sa1dLosAn~elesManagerTommyl.asorda "The} . • San Francisco tonight San Francisco (LaCoss 9-5) at Dodgers ~;,:-:l~1:~~tt~r~ti~~~.~thrcc-runleadinthe old-timers Embarlung on a stretch of games against National League West opponents. the Los Angeles Dodgers wilJ try to make a move when they open a three-game scnes against the San Francisco Giants at 7:35 tonight. (Hersh1ser 9-7). "We blew too many lead and we made too • Time: 7:35. man> mistakes:· said Chicago Manager Gene Earlier baseball TV: None. M cha•I Radio: KABC (790) 1 ~ · Also invading Dodger Stadium dunng the important homestand will be the Cincinnati Reds and Houston Astros for three games apiece. The Dodgers avoided a three-game sweep at the hands of the Chicago Cubs at Wrigley Field Sunday with a 13-11 victory ID a see-saw, mistake- filled contest. "I've never played in a game wilder than that." said Mike Sc1osc1a, whose two-run single m the ninth was the game-wmnlDg hat an the 34-hit game that went three hours and 44 minutes-longest of the season for the Cubs -and saw 40 players get Tuesday's game: San Francisco al Dodgers, Steve Sax and Reggie Williams doobled 7:35 p.m. leadmg off the ninth a~mst. Frank DiPmo. 1-4 Sax scored on Jeff Hamilton's infield single After an mtenuonal walk loaded the bases, Sciosc1a into action. si ogled. gi vang the Dodgers a 12-1 I lead "The pitchers got beat up Sometimes that happens. They're not perfect ... said Cub third baseman Manny Tnllo. who had a pair of singles himself. The I 3th run scored as Greg Brock grounded out The Dodgers rallied agamst reliever Lee Sm 1th ID the eighth Len Matuszek hit a three-run homer and Mana no Duncan htt a t1e-break1Dg smgle. The two teams scored 11 runs 1n the last two innings. Trailin~ 8-5, the Dodgers had rallied for a 9-8 lead JD the eighth. The Cubs scored threl!-t1mes for a 11-9 lead in the bottom of the eighth. The Dodgers had 21 hits in the game and the Cubs had 13. Pinch-hitter Thad Bosley and Bob Dernier hit RBI smgles ID the bottom of the eighth, givmg Chicago the lead. then Ryne Sandberg added a sacnfice 0) Lemond completes cycling triumph He becomes first American to win Tour de France PARIS(AP)-urcg Lemond. a :!5- year-old C'ahfom1an hecame the fi~t Amenatn to "ID the 73rd four de France Sunda> when the world'~ most famous <.")Chng rare linic,hed in front of checnng throng\ on the Champs Fl}'sec., Lemond took a solid lead into the 23rd and final leg of the grueling race and sprinted to v 1Cton on the France's most glamorou" a-.enuc "It's rcall) been a grea1 Tour for me." Lemond ~1d "C\1111 nght to the end l was afraid and toda) I "a\ a httle nef'OU\ .. He said he made surl' to tr. lo \la\. at the front ol the pack 10 a,01d 3 colhs1on which could force him out ol the race and prevent tht' 1. ICIOI) "Finally, t'VC1)1hing went well,'' he said. "Tonight, I'm happ) .. Lemond's teammate. Bernard Hmault of France finished founh on unda\. and 1n 'iCCond place 01.crall failing.to \A.ID what would ha1.1.• bc.'<."n a record •;i,th Tour de France Bu1 he had promised la\I ~car. when Lt'mond ftn1'ihed <;e('Ond \Aohllc helping team trader Hmault to 1.1l- tol)'. that he would help the .\mencan wan ID IQ86 him one of the fa1.ontes for 1h1c; year'c; event. The ta .. t leg. mer a I SK-mile course from Cosne to Pans. was won by uu1do Bontcmp1 of Ital) at the head ofa large pad. ofndcr-; Joc;cfl1ckens of Bclgu1m finished sernnd and Enc Vanderaerden. also of Belgium. was third Lemond fin1c;hrd 5unda) ·, leg ID 44th place in the middle of a large pack of cycltsl\, all of whom were given the same ttme as Bon1cmp1 - 6 hours. 51 m1nute'iand SS c;econds In C)Chng. \l.ht•n d group finishes together all the l H h<;t\ get the same time. even though time elapc;es before the) all have cro<1~c1 the finish hne On 5unda' all Ii:! cvcl1c;t\ 'it11l m the race fiDl\hed Ofli c 1a-lh ID lhe same time Scarceh a "ed. ago a hitter nvall) seemed to be dc1.elopmg ~tween Lemond and Hinault hoth members of the team \ponc;orcd b) La Vie Claire. but the problems were re- solved. WorklDg together Lemond and Hinault fin1'lhed one-1wo 1n one of the mo\t difficult Alpine legs. leav1Dg all compet1t1on far ~hind Hinault said he wa<, "a man of his word." and would not If) 10 overtake Lemond 1n the final -;rages ol the rale, which began July 4 and trac~ a countcrclockw1'it' cm utt around the COUDtl) U-mond admitted 10 a French tele' mon interv lt'\Ao C\unda) night that there wa" "tension" on the team tx-cau~ of ;he nvall) wtlh H1nault "l thank he wanted 10 win h" '"th Tour de France and l wanted to w 10 b' fil"'it," Ltmond said P'l•e-dme winner Bernard Rlnault of France (apottedjeney) conaratalatea Tour de France winner Ore& Lemond. Lemond'c; compo'i1tt' t1mr for lhc race. over more than 2. 'iOO n'\llc\ of terrain, including long c;pnnl\ acro'i'I 0atlands and rugged cl1mhc. ID the AIJX and Pyrtntts was I 10 hou"' \ 'i m1nute'i and IQ ~ond'I llinaull finished thft'e minute\ and In ~<,· onds back Lemond·, ~-ond-place lint\h la\t ~ear and hie; third placc-1n I QM4 nude ·Premier Jacquec; Chirac and I ~ ~mhas~dor Joe M Rcldgt>r<. con- ~ratulated l emond a\ he rtct1vNi hie; pme., and a band played mencan national anthem ' --.. -----=-----=----~ -"'--'---~ veterans shut out of pension plan By HAL BOCK ~ ......... ----- Hall of Farne second baseman Charhe Gehn nger served as honorary captain for the Amencan League at the All-Star Game on July IS. The tnp from his home m M1ch~n to Houston was all-expense paid. just hke the one he makes to Tampa each spnne to serve on the Hall of Fame Old-timers Committee. That. however, ts the only money Gehnnger receives from baseball. His pension after 19 years ofmaJOr-lcague service 1~ zero At age 83, he and his wife hve on Social Secunty and income denved from his post- baseball career '\\-e get along:· \.1 rs Gchnnger said Baseball 1'i fond of trotung out old heroes and <ihowcac;mg them at ap- propnate e'ent~ "lostalgJa sells, but the re1.enue doe\n't always reach those "ho generate 1t The Gehnnger 'itOI) 1s repeated o'er and O\er Ever) player. Hall of Farner or fnnge perfonner. who left the ~me befort' 194 7 when baseball mstlluted its first pension plan. 1s out of luck Man\ are less fortunate than Gehnngcr · '"we deal with o;everal cases," said Chuck Stevens secretary-treasurer of the Assoc1at1on of Professional Baseball Pla\ers of America, an organ11at1on that has aided mdigent player; for more than 60 years. "One fello" an .\II-Star player from tht' '30\ a 't'I) fam1har name. flat outlived his c;avmgs He was not ehg1ble for an' pension other than a small Social Se'.cunt\ allowance It \A.as m101mal so we su.pplement 1t and let ham live w11h some d1gntt)'" te1. ens' organ1zat1on helps be- tween 40 and 50 pla)ers every month, some on a sustammg basis, others tcmporanl) It 1c; funded by a $30,000 grant from Comm1ss1oner Peter l 'eberroth''i office. pubhc contnbu tion~ and pledges from major and minor leaaue players. matched dollar for dollar b\ ownef"i "It's purth volunt.at) and we ha"e 100 percent player pan1etpauon " C\tcven said The averaac contnb\l- 11on 15 s~s a year for m&jor lcaaut player\ -who average well over S \60.000 10 annual salan" - although man) contnbute more: Minor lcaaue~· gifts average b(tWttn S~ and S7 a vcar There has been no mrome to \te"en,· orp011at1on however, from thc-fqu1tahle Old-t1mef'\ Sen~. a h1&hl) puhhc11cd p~m hrin run 1n C'on1unct1on wuh the com- mt'"''°cr'" <'lffict . • ' . • ' ' Bolnies m.ay be nezt opponent for unbeaten Tyson l'Hm AP dlapa~" GLENS FALLS, N. Y -The co-m manaaer of undefeated heavywe1J}lt Mike Tyson says he's been negotiating with former champion Larry Holmes for a possible non-title bout in November. Bill Cayton said taJks between Holmes and the Tyson camp ov.cr a possible fight were held last week Cayton said Holmes would journey from has home an Easton, Pa., to New York Caty this week to discuss in person the possibility of the fight. .. It would be the biggest opportunity m my la(eume to fiaht Larry Holmes, a man that I admire a great deal," Tyson said Saturday af\er a first-round knockout of Marvis Frazier. "And It would be a i>leasurt for me to give him (Holmes) a defeat." Cayton said Tyson has the poss1b1ht)-of either meeung bag-name boxers such as Holmes and Gen) Cooney, or of entenng 1n an upcoming tournament to unify the heavyweight champ1onsh1p. Trevor Berback. Michael Spinks and Tam Watherspoon now hold separate bcavyweaaht titles. Tyson's co-managers said aft hey decide to seelc big· money fiahts against the "name" fighters. the) could still. seek to challenge the wanner of the unification tournament at a later date. Tyson, 25-0, pummeled Frazier with a barrage of uppercuts Saturday. knocking out the son of former beavywei&}lt cha(11p1on Joe Frazier JUSt 30 seconds into a scheduled IO.round, non-title bout. Although many paid up to $75 to see the shortest fight of Tyson's career. few m the crowd of 5,102 seemed to mind as the Catskill. N.Y .. 20-year-old extended has knockout record to 23. IS an the first round. Quote of the day Mike Schmidt, Ph1lhes' third baseman. about the nonchalance he seems to d1spla)' on the field . "I love baseball I JUSl get more e'c1tcd about a good shot an golf than lhe way I pla) this game.·· Bradley takes playoff, tourney Pat Bradley san~ a 12-foot b1rd1e putt !I on the first pla)off hole to defeat hard- chargmg Japanese veteran Ayako Okamoto Sunda~ an an LPGA tournament an Woodbndge. Ontano. Bradley started the day as if she was about Lo tear the 6,107-yard Board of Trade club apan whe n she birdied live of the first six holes. She fini shed at six-under 66 for a 72-hole total of 276. But she had to sink a b1rd1e on the final hole of regulation play to force the playoff . In the PGA event an Grand Blanc, Mich . Ben Crenahaw, showing he is full)' n~co"cred from anJllness that almost ended has pro golf career. shot a final-round 68 to win with an 18-under- par score of 270 Crcnsha"". who hadn't won since the 1984 Masters. finished one stroke ahead of hard· chargmg J.C. Snead and Dollg Tewell to earn S90.000 and use of an automobile for one )Car. It was the 11th PG A Tour "1ctol) for C rensha"' Bruce Crampton sank an eight-foot putt on the 17th hole to edge out three other pla)ers and "'an the S)racuse Senior Classic The l\ustralian-born Crampton shot a I-under-par 71 final round A\ ~oordw1Jk ~ctherlands. Severiano Ballesteros ot <)pain won the Dutch Open Cham- p1onsh1p for the scrnnd ume exactl~ 10 )'Cars after he sco~d has first mtcmataonal '1ctol) m the same e' ent ThC' Spaniard captured the tournament b) e1gh1 strokes "-&th a 9-under-par 2i I after a final round 4-under 68 Dale Berra waived by Yankees NEW YORK -The New York Yankees on Sunday cut infielder Dale Berra 1n a move designed to make room for returning pitcher Ron Guidi) on the 24- man roster. the club said Berra was placed on waa,ers for the purpose of g1' ang ham his uncond1t1onal release Playtng only occas1onall) Berra was h1tt1ng .231 wtth two homers and I 3 R Bl tn I 08 at-bats. Guidi). a left-handed pitcher 1.:ame off the disabled last Sunda) to start against the Twtns He ""ent on the disabled list Jul) l with a cut bet"-een the tnde\ and middle fingers of has p1tchtng hand Jurora reaume deliberation• NEW YORK -TheJuron ~me USFL's anutrusl sual ap1n11 the NFL. who have considered the case for IS hours sioce last Thursday, re ume dclibe,.taons qain today. When they resume, they wilt be confronted with new documents and transcnpu of testimony requested late Saturday afternoon. Lawyers for both sades arc reviewina each pac<:e of evidence that aoes before .the Jury.The USFl. as seeking S 1.69 billioo in damages, alleging dunni 11 weeks of testimony in the trial mat bepn May 12 that its financial failures. and its failure to obtain a network television contract for its' switch to the fall was the result ofa variety of anti.oompetitive actions by the Nfl.. The NFL contended that the younger league's problems over the past three yeal'1 were of ats own makina and stemmed from overspending and what 1t called an 111-ad\.ased move to the fall. Gomez tops Jalte to win tourney Top-seeded Andrei Gomez used deeE ~ shots and took advantage of Martin JaJte 1 serving troubles to score a 7-5. 6-4 victory Sunday night at the U.S. Pro Tennis Championships at Brookline, Mass. It was Gomez's third tournament win of the year. Bom sets ended me same way. Gomez broke Jaite's service to go ahead, then wrapped up the sets by holding his own serve at love. . Brad GUbert scored a 6-2, 6-2 victory over Mike Leach to successfully defend his title in a tournament in L1vmgston. N.J. The second-seeded Gilbert.. whodidn't lose a set m five matches, used a superb passing game to counter Leach's strong net play. He outscrved Leach, hitting five aces to his opponent's three and getting 65 percent of his first serves in. In the women's singles finals, unseeded Mlcllelle Torres upset top-seeded Betty Na1el1on, 6-4, 6-3, to win the $3,500 first prize .. In the Swedish Open in Bastad, EQllllo Sucbez of Spatn outlasted top-seed Mate WlluderofSweden, 7-6, 4-6. 6-4 to win the title. Sanchez's bi&JeSt career victory snapped Walandcr's 23-match wtnning streak at Bastad's red cla> -the Swede had gone unbeaten on these couns srnce losins to Australian Peter McNamara as a 16-year-old an 1981 . Maryland toughen• drug testing COLLEGE PARK. Md. -The Uni· .-versat> of Mar, land chancellor is expected this week to approve several changes an tended to toughen the school's one-ycar- old program of drug testing for student athletes. Propo~d changes include increasing the number of unannoulte<_d tests for each athlete and altering procedures so thin monitors observe as players provide urine samples "There are thmgs that need to be done." Chancellor John B. Slaughter said last week, whale adding. "I'm not sure yet what those things ought to be .. The program has come under scrutiny since the coca10e-1nduced death of Maryland basketball star Len Baas on June 19. two days after has selection second overall in the National Basketball Association draft by the Boston Celtu:s · Maradona decides soccer match PA.S.\DENA -Diego Maradona of m .\rgentma scored the tying goal tn regu- lation and the final go-ahead point on a penah) i...ac~ as The Amencas beat The Rest of the \\orld 6-5. m an all-star soccer game Sundav at the Rose Bov.1 Regulataon pla) before 57,536 fans ended in a 2-2 drav. "'hen \1aradona. star of .\rgentana's World Cup champ1onsh1p team took a pass from Roberto Cabanas of Paragua) and kicked an the t)tn~ point from the center of the penalt~ ho\ with two minutes to go. Television, radio TELEVISION 6 p m. -BASEBALL: .\ngels at Oakland ldelaH·d). Channel 7. iO p.m -MOTOR SPORTS: Speedway .\menca Chan nel 56. RADIO S p m. -BASEBALL Angels at Oakland, K~IPC ciJO) 7 30 pm. -BASEBALL San Francisco at Dodgers. K.ABC (790) England takes lead in golds Upsets. records. more controversy at Commonwealth EDl~Bl 'RCiH . Swtland I \P) - l p')<'h. controvers1e\ and more rt- cords marked the fourth da; ol the boycott-plagued ( ommon.,..eallh Games Sunda) attended h) Queen Elizabeth 11 her husband Pnnlt' Ph a lip and chcir ~oungcst c;on Pnnlt Fdward On the tralk an the pool and cl..e"' here ( anada .\ U'>tralia and England contanucd 1he1r battle tor the most medal<, \.\-h1k the lucldc<." Bermudans pulled out of the gamt\ on <,aturda), final!) left for home '>tlll unhapp) atJOtning the tx1\.cott h\ 31 nther teams England ovenonk l\u\traha 10 thr gold medal count and drcv. c'en 1n the 0" erall tall) The Eng,lash had 17 gold'> at the end of the da} with Auc;traha and C anada hoth on 15 England and A.umaha \hared the lead an the 0vcrall medal table "-Ith 42 each 10 ahead uf ( anada English decathlon \tar Daley fhomp'ion. c;o often a rnntrn"er\lal figure an the past. cau\Cd a maJor problem for the organ11erc; when he \.&Olated 1nternat1onal rule' h\ \l:ratchanp from hac; "e'it th<' namc of the games' official sponsor durrng thC' tim fi,e c"ents of the decathlon ' Thompson world record holder .ind tv.o·t1mc Olympic champion, apparent!\ wac; protcc;tang against akohul rhc 'ipunc;or the an tern at 1onal ( 11Hnnc'>'> hrewang company, ha<, in 'C''tted S3 m11l1on an to the gamcc; and \aHJ 10 a statement at wao; "\Cl) unhapp}" about the incident "We are not prepared to see our name erased an th as manner " c;aad the statement signed b> the compam ·, director of public affairs. ( hm Dav1d\on Da' 1dson later said the mone' had alrcad} been pledged and that the compan~ would not demand com- pensation 1f Thompc;on erased tht· name · But he added · II \.ou ha' t' d ..,ponsorshap agreement that can he dec;tro)ed an the middle ol a tour· nament. obvaoush 1t'<; not 10 our interests for this to. happen · W11h Thompson due to app<:ar back on the track on Monda) f ne.l1<oh team officials acted quick I\. 1ssu10g a carefully-worded caatement ~}ing the decathlete had agreed to wear h" vest and number an the correct wa) The statement. which madt no mention of the sponsors' name. read "The England team managemen1 ha'> discussed the Question of com- petitors' numbers with Dale.,. Thompson and ha\C' received hi\ ac;surance that the numberc; a\ 1<,surd Rams plan open house Moc;tl ) non·'ilartcr'> will take pan m a Rams' open hou\C practice· ~ramma&e against the t.;an D1e10 C harac" Thursday night at Anaheim Suid1um Adm1\S10n and parkan& IS fret with the flll~ opcnana at 5 30 fam bnn11n&. an empty Kodak film txn wall re<.e1vt A Ram coaches' cap Whale the I I ·on 11 «'r1mmagc tit • 30 li~un·" 10 he dom1natC'd h} non- > \ 'i.rtcr\. man) tront·hne plaHr'> arc e~~·tt"d to play an the 7-on-7 pa'i'img dnll 3l 7 From 6·6.JO p m .. fan'i me> enter the field to panacapate 1n a photo rnntcst with Ram pla)'e~ and coaches available for snapshots The ticket office will ~ open lo \how ava1lahlc ~a~n ~at locataun\. The Ram'i' prt'·\ea~n opcn<'r I\ agaan\l th(' Hou<, ton Ot IC'f<i f utsd.1\ .\ug. Sal \n.1hr1m 'it.1d111111 will .be worn by ham an compet1t1on tomorrov." A.nother controversy. agatn on the trac.k. 10volved the Canadian team, "-h1ch picked up four oft he nine gold medals at stake -Ben Johnson an the I 00-metcr dash, Graeme Fell in l.OOU-meter steeplechase. Mark Mdw> 10 the 110-meter hurdles and L\nn Williams. who led a Canadian I :2 <;weep in the women's 3.000 rn~tcrs <)print coach Charlie Francis thought hie; team should have had a fifth gold in the women's 100 meters Jfter ( anadaan defending champion \ngella Isc;aJenko. formerly Angella Ta}lor finished third behind Eng· land'<, Heather Oakec; and Paula Dunn r ranc1s claimed the two English athlete'i had been allowed to get off to "rolling" stans This was a complete attempt to ..irrange results," he charged. "l\s far as I am concerned 11 was cheating Where do these Bntons suddenl)' get tht1r miracle spnnts from'l I am ahsolutel\ d1s~usted ... In the pool. England's Sarah Hard lastle. the Olympic silver medalist. was JUSt 1.4 seconds outside Tracey W1ck ham's world record as she swam the 400-meter free-;tylc an 4:07 68, the ~econd fastest tamC" in the world this vear Her third medal of the cham- pwn'ih1p'>. 1t ~a'i also a Games record. heaung W1ckham's pre.,,1ous hcst set e1gh1 years ago New Zealand plned its first sw1m- m1ng aold an eight years when Sylvia Hume upsefan Australian tno to win the 100-meter backstroke Canada won the 200-meter hackstroke. • ndy (10!>!> takmg the iold and the Canadians also won the 400-meter freestyle relay Austraha'<, onl) aold m the pool camC' 1n the I 00-metcr frce,tyle. an event at ha\ not Jost s1nre the 1962 Crames Rut defending champion Neil Brook\. on has 24th b1rthda). had lo <;Cltle for <;11\ C"r whtk' mm pn1rull C 1rr~ f a\t1l:1 look thC' Jlold I Randy Smyth (left) and Jim BUI offer each other contrataladona after breesy ride Ol9r ........... .., .... LMUMr from Catallna to Lona Beach ID the Pacific 1,000 catamaran race. Heavy surf plagues race Smyth, Hill post fifth straight win in Pacific I ,000 catamaran event By ALMON LOCK.ABEY DlllJ,... ........... Heavy surf at Doheny State Beach, Dana Pomt, Sunday, made a temporary shambles of the fifth leg of the Pacific 1,000 pro-catamaran maru hon Sunday. Only three teams were able to launch their craft through the six-foot surf on the first try. The six others suffered vanous damages, and a l4-yCE---0ld spectator- helper suffered a broken arm trying to help John Main's crew launch meir boat. The injured boy. was identified as Jason Golding, Lake Arrowhead. He was taken to a San Clemente hospital for treatment. Randy Smyth's 19-foot catamaran was beached temporarily when it lost one rudder in the surf; Larry Harteck ofSanta Barbara lost both his rudders, and.Dave Renaurs boat was completely capsized and lost four mainsail battens as it was washed back ashore. After making hurried repairs with the help of shore crews and extra equipment. all of the boats finally got under way, nearly a half-hour after the scheduled 10 a.m. start. The finish was uneventful Wlth no surprises. Smyth and Jam Hall. Huntington Beach, posted their fifth straight win. taking 4 hours. 48 minutes and 59 seconds to sail the SO males to M1ss1on Bay. The sax th and longest leg was scheduled to~ sailed today. a distance of about 70 males from Mission Bay..t San Diego. to Nev.pon Beach, finishing just west 01 the Balboa Pier. If all goes well. the boats should be finishing about 6 p.m after a 10 a.m. start. Order oflinash an Sunday's race: 1 llendv Smvlh·Jlm Hiii. Huntln9ton a..c", •·sa St, 1 Georoe Oe1B,enco·Mlke ellecktlll Medelro. S·09?6, l Oevt Ktti.r·Jtck EeloelllM Memmotll Leke S 11 SO • Jolln Mein Stevt Keefe. ehellwortll, 5:21 "6, S D••• Rtneuf·O••t twemoto Sv.sn.v, Auitretle, S:2l '1, 6 Rov S..men· Grt11 R1et1ard1on. ~mmotll. S •2 •7, 7 Ltrrv Herttck·Erlc Brinton, S.nte Btrbere S SI •2 I Mlkt e11rl1ltnMn· Jot Welktr. F«t Leud«delt, 6 CM '6, 9 S1tpllen1t Elllott·Tnt<tH Funere ·Olene Rl091, 7:11.20. Totel ttePHd time, llvt ~' Smvlh·Hlll, 2S •9'31, Ott Blenco-e11ec1o.1111. 76:3' 54, SHmen· Rtcnero1on 77~5·30 Htrttek·Brlnton. 27 II 01 Kttltr-Ed9e/'llll. 27 II 41. lltneuHwamoto, 27:35:1 l, Meln·Ketfe, 27:51:31, e11r111en~·W•lke<, 29:50:4'; EMlot1•Funaro-Rkl91. 30-3':20 ,., 8 claN •pon•or Mlbummer Refatta It was billed as the Midsummer Regatta co- sponsored by Newport Harbor Yacht Oub, Balboa Yacht Club and Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club. BYC conducted races for small boats on inside the bay courses, NHYC for one-design boats on the cucle course, and BCYC was to have supervised racing on the fan course. except that there were no entries. On the other courses. at was close racmg under ideal weather conditions. Tberesulu: INSID• CLAHU OEFENDEll·l2 IC enlrles)-1 BIH lAwllom, Voveoe<I ve SABOT A (11)-1 Eric Prout, ave, 2 JOlll Nlc:llots. eve. 3 Erik• Norine, Huntlnoton Hartlour ve, • C11<l1 Kerlale, BVC. SABOT 8 (6)-1 SleoMll Lord, eve. 2 Cr•lo Btnti.v. NHVe SABOT C (5)-1 ll lel Cavan Hadi.v, Batboa IMend VC, end Amy 8t11tltv. NHVe. YC LI00-14 (71-1 Biii McCord, BYC, 1 P•ul Blan.It, eve OUT11DI CLASSIS STAil (6)-1 Clluck Lewsed<ler, NHVC. 2.0ouo Smith. St. Frencl\ SOLING (6)-1 Crl1 Jonet, Voveoers vc. 2. Grtg Purce. NHVC ETCHELLS·22 <161-1. Argvle Ceml>Oell, NHYC. 1 8111 Mt11nlnoer· Oouo JoroenMn, NHVC, J GHIOn Ortlt, ave,' (tie) Don Btver, NHVC. •nd JOlln Wein , Alamlto• aev vc MORC claamplon•hlp end• Fon y-five boats in four divisions showed up on the starting lane at San Diego Yacht Club for the Midget Ocean Racing Club (MORC) International cham- p1onsh1p which ended Fnday. Overall and Division IV Wlnncr was Little Feat. sk1~pcred by Todd Imbler of Menton Harbor Yacht Club . Ohio D1v1s1on winners were: OIVIStON 1-1 CowllOv. Lerrv H•rvw·Otnnls Ouroen Cet:I< tto Beecll YC. 2 Mr VtnoeeM:e, Petttrton·Kostedll, Sen Oi.oc> YC, l Cr- 11. ltov Cundiff, CBVC DIVISION It-I Sllo<t Circuit, Mark Herrls, A~oe VC, 2. Calun L•dV Cl•••lend Lewl1 UCI S.lllno """. l . Stlnorav, P1ut Aw•"· MIHIOn Bev VC DIVISION 111-1 Llnle '· HamP411.lan·8renOY, C•llfornla vc. 2 Bold Fortle\. eummln1·UHm1n. D•na Point YC, 1 Plain Wrep, Alder GllClu'rlan Peclflc Corlntlllen YC. OIVISION IV-I Lillie FMI, Todd lmOter, Menton Herllor Ve. 2 T11umoer, koll Stolnln!l, CYC, J SCllOclo. Trutment. Jim & Bob 8111-v Newport HerllOr VC Randy Smyth and Jlm Hill drl•e 19-foot catamaran uhore durlna Paclflc 1,000. Hillin, 22, wlns Talladega 500 Ori ver becom es youngest to tak e NASCAR even t Thirteen of the 17 cars running prior to that crash were on the lead lap an the heated event Hallan beat Richmond to the finish line by half a car-length. whale Rusty Wallace. dnvmg an relief offlu-ndden Rackr Rudd. took third, Sterhna Marlin fourth and Benny Parsons fifth TALLADEGA. Ala.(AP)-Bobby Hallin Jr. became the ¥Oungest wanner 1n the history of NASCAR stock car racing, survivinc the Talladep 500 Su nday at Alabama International Motor Speedway. Hallan, 22, wrested the lead from Ta m Richmond just eight laps from the end of the 188-lap event and manaacd to hold off Richmond, who had won two ,traaght races and thret of the l8'1l four. to the end Bobby Allison, 48. Halhn's team- mate and the wanner of the Winston 500 here 1n Ma} -1roni~lly bccom- 1ng the oldest dnver to wan a "II I\~( AR event -1an1ted a \ax-car "'relk at the uart of the la4it lap a\ he tned to catch the leaden Wnh Hillan dnv1na has Buick LtSabrt faultles ly to the finish hne on the 2 66-mile, h•lh·ban ked tn· O\ al, l\lh~n 'ilc1ddcd up the t>ankma and ran into Rick Wilson. C'ar\ dn .. rn hy JO( Ruttman. Kyle Petty. r>a' l'} \ll14ion and Jim ~outer also hernm(' 10\0lv('d The race was one of the most competitive in NASCA R history. Wlth 48 lead changes and a record 26 different drivers holding leads. The previous record was 18. set 1n this race in 1975 and tied an the 1982 Southern 500 at Darlington. S.C Terry Labonte was the previous youngest NASCA R wanner. He was one year and eight months older than Hillan as now when he won the Southern 500 in I 980. German Grand Prix to Piquet HOCKENHEIM. West Germany (AP) -Double world champion Nelson Paquet of Brazil, an a W1I· hams-Honda, won a scnsauonal Ger- man Grand Pm Sunday, whale the two Mcl..arens of Alain Prost and Kekc Rosbera lo" second and third place as they ran out of fuel on the la'it lap. Brazahan \yrton 5cnna took ~c· ond. throw&J1J his Lotu,·Renault from side to ''de to pack up the la t drops of fuel as the car stuttered to the flaa. Bntaan's Naaet Man~ll. an the second Walhams. pasS«i Prost's coastana car an the last tum to take third place and ancrca\C ha'i I 9R6 world chamrn0Mh1p 'itAnd1ns.\ kad over the Frenchm3n to <;even points. 51-44 With Sil race'I to go, the title cha~ heated up further. Senna and P1que1 m th ird and fourth. closed 1n on the leaders with 42 and 38 potnts, rc'ipcctl vely Prosl. standana in the cockpit as h1S car roll~ to a halt, ~w Rene Arnoux 10 P84il to take fourth an his L111er· Renault l'hc defend1na champion tned to pu,h has heavy car to the hnc but ahandoocd wnh I 00 yards to ao lie finally was classified sixth. Has Finnish teammate, Rod>era. took fif\h place on diauincc covered when Paquet rroncd the line, despite having ,topp('d on the hark 'itnuaht ' Of .. CoMt DAILY P LOT/Mondey, M'/ N, St. Louis discovering winning formul- Cardinals equal longest victory streak ofseason(stx)bye gingSanDtego,3-2 The power outburst enabled Rick AJuilera, 4-3, to eta m his fourth vtaory an a row. A,uilera allowed e1&ht hits, walked none and struck ou1 two 10 his fant complete pme of the year. two-nin tlnllo, beckina.an ci&b~b1t shutout by lUck rthoden and Don Robinton. u the Pirates ended a fivo- pme .l~ng streak by defeatina San FranctJ(X), Miil S. 1,....' •SW YC.IC •rlllll An..un'A Sitt ~rt • • 1 • °'*"ft,. , . 1. ~f/fty(f 411J Her'IWI• 322 I Gr ....... 11 . , .... .. t. . '. DWUa HaJO.cf w.-. 00•"" •• ... ,, AllJW t ..... 1 ~ .,. .. J ' 1 • 4 I I I 4 0 SS ••11 41 0 I I 3 I I I J I I I 0101 , 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 ..... »-ct ., ..... .. .. ••• , ' . From AP dlspa&cM. ST. LOUIS -Andy Van Slyke, maluna up for a dismal stan of bis own, also kept the St. Louis C..rdinaJs on the upswm.a Sunday. "People arc IW'lina to feel sood about beina CardJnaJs again," Van Slyke said after bis two-run silllle gave St. Louis a J..2 triumph over tbe slump1n1 San Die10 Padres. "Hopeful)y the attitude will continue and cany over throuah the remainder of the year." Van Sl)'ke's hit capped a three-run seventh mnina. boostina his battina averaie to .397 m his last 16 pmes. It also pve the Cards their sixth straight Victory. . "That's something we weren't able to do earlier in the year," St. Louis Mana~er Whitey Herzog said of the Cards comeback from a 2-0 deficit. "It's tough to do when you have your two bag guys (injured Jack Clark and Withe McGee) out. It was a strange game." St. Louis, until awakening to match ats longest winning strealc of the year. was held to four hits through six innings by San Diego right-hander Lance McCullers, 5-S. McCullers. after retinng Terry Pendleton to stan the Cards' sixth, walked p10ch-h1tter Jose Oquendo and surrendered singles to Vince A RICAN LEAGUE Rookie making his mark Orioles' Traber- hits grand slam to key l l-3win From AP dispatches BALTIMORE -When first baseman Eddie Murray was shelved earlier this month with a pulled hamstnng. the Balumore Orioles had to gnn and bear at They arc gnnnmg more than ever now. thanks to the exploits of rookie Jam Traber Hts latest contnbuuon was a grand slam that keyed a nme-run fourth 1nnmg Sunday as the Ori oles routed the Chicago White Sox. 11-3. The homer was Traber's fifth m nane games since being recalled from the minor leagues af\er Murray was sidelined wtth a pulled hamstnng muscle He has 13 runs batted 1n on 11 hits But Traber 1sn·t k1dd1ng himself about permanently replacing Murray. "Everybody knows I'm not going to come up here and take Eddie's place, and I'm the first to admit that," Traber said. "I JUSt want to go outand try to P.roduce ·· Whtie Traber may be unsure of has status after Murray comes off the disabled hst on Fnday, Baltimore Manager Earl Weaver isn•t. "We'll find a spot for him ... no doubt about that." Weaver sctid. The victory, Balumorc's fourth \tratght. completed its first four-game senes sweep of Chicago since 1972. The White Sox have lost seven m a row and 12 of 16 Singles by Larry Sheets and Tom O'Malley, each of whom had three of Baltimore's 16 hits, ignited the nine- run 1nnmg for the Onolcs. Cal Ripken also had three hJts In other Amencan League action: Indians 8, Ran1er1 3: In Arlington. knuckleballer Tom Cand1otti scat- tered nane htts in seven innings and earned his I 0th victory as Cleveland broke a three-game losing streak with the win over Texas. Cand1 ot11. who has lost seven, struck out li "e and didn't walk a batter T e'as staner Edwin ( orrea, 6-9. fanned nane m 41/1 mnmgs. but four walks. three stolen bases and an error contnbuted to his demise. Correa waJked Tony Bemaurd to open the game. and he came around to score on a groundout and Joe C arter"s RBI smgle. which extended (Pleue eee AMERICA.ft {85) HB's Andrews bids for spot on U.S. team Ed Andrews of Huntington Beach will be among the 16 members of the \mencan racquethall team hoping to qualtf) for I 0 t ' S ~pots at the third \\<orld Champ1onsh1ps 10 be held \ug 4-10 1n Orlando Fla Andre"'s. ~Q. a four·tlme national oprn singles champion. will be vymg fo r one of the three men's smgles "P<m on the team. which will be rnmpcting against playen from 25 countnes-1nclud1na Japan, Ger- man}. Great Rnta1n (. anada and ~1e~tCO . Andrews will ~in 1he final 1eam \Clect1on proces~ Wednc~ay. which rnnw•;ts of playoff.; among fellow Amcnc.an team mcmbcn. The ar 11on 1n Orlando wall mcludc both 1earn and 1nd1v1dual llllctt. w11h the \merican\ ha\1n& won the h"t Coleman and Onie Smith that made it 2-1. Padres reliever Crail Ldfcrts aflerward hit Tommy Herr with a pitch to load the beaes wich none out and 1et up Van Slyke'1 winnina hit. It was San Oiqo'sei&hth 1etbaek in ninepmes. Elsewhere in the NatJonal League: Mets$, Brava l: In Atlanta. Cary Carter, Darryl Strawberry and Kevin Mitchell hit consecutive home runs in a five-run third innina that carried New York over tbe Braves. It was the founh time three Mets have homered consecutively in an innina and the first time since a JuJy 20, 1974 game apmst the San Diego Padres. * CUdlMll 2, ....... 2 SAN Dt•GO ST. LOUIS llonter n Martini pf\ Gwvnor1 KAAll WVnt11td Mcltvtd d Garvey lb aocnvc Kenned\I c Nttti.t3b Ro«>erta 2'b McClltno Leffwlao Wallero FlnnrV ph T ..... llDrlllll 2 0 I 0 Colemen If 1 0 0 0 0$mlltlU •O>O Herr2'b 3 0 0 0 VanSIVk d 0 0 0 0 Ford rf l 1 I O Llfllre c 4 1 2 0 HUf'dle lb l O 2 I Knlcelv lb I 0 0 0 Pndltn lb 3 0 0 I Tudor o 4 0 0 0 OQuend oh 3010 SOflp 0000 PPerrvp 0000 Ll>MmPll 1 0 0 0 WorrllA o n lit, r.-. SarebY ...... •irlllll S I 1 0 3 1 1 1 1 0 1 0 2 0 I 2 • 0 0 0 > 0 0 0 l 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 • 0 I 0 2 0 I 0 0 1 o.o 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 • J 7 l Sift Dtew 000 JOO to0-2 St. UUll I08 -JOl(-J Gama Winning ll81 -Van Slvlle (5). E-Bochv. OP-SI LOUii I LOll--San Oleoo I, SI. Louis 10. 28-McCulllrl, McAevno!Os. 8ocllv, Gwvnn. 58-Herr 1111 s-flov""'· Kruk $F-Nettle1. I.. H REA aa SO SlftDleel McCulleo L,S·S 61·3 ' 3 3 s 3 Lefferta l ·l I 0 0 I 0 Weller I 0 0 0 0 0 St. L.eub TudorW.t ·S , ' 2 1 2 3 SoH 1·3 I 0 0 0 I P Perrv 2·3 0 0 0 0 I Worrall S,20 I 0 0 0 0 I HIP-Herr bv Lattari\ Umolres-Home, C Wllllems, First, Wendlnledt, Second. lonln, Third, Crawford T-2.lt A-35,J23. ~ t,1 EzNt 7: At Riverfront tedium, Eric Davis's \wo-out, bues- loaded ain~e in lhe ei&htb capped Cincinnati s latc-innina comeback from a 7-2 deficit and lifted the Reds pest Montreal. 1 Tbc Reds raJhcd apanst the Expo bullpen for four scventh-innina runs and three more in the e.plb. Nick Esasky led off the ei&hth with a homer off f eff Reardon, 6-6, to tie 1he pme. Cincinnati then loaded the bases ~inst Dave Tomlin, and Davis hat a soft liner to left for the decidin& two runs. Pirates 7, Glutt t: In Pattsburah, Sid Bream hit a two-run double and a ~-t GIMtl 0 SAN fRANCJSCO .. fTTHUllOH Gladden ct Qulnona 2'b WCler'lt 1111 MOavlao Gatrelt1 o eerener o MaMnPll Mldndolf c erown 3b COevlsr1 Sollmn lb Brllllv c Urlt>a n Vnotlld ph llul 0 Kulc:Nlr 21> T ..... H rlllll MHlllll • 0 I 0 UWantn " • I I 0 3010 8oMld •111 1 0 0 0 AlmOn If 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 MorrlWI lt> 4 l 4 2 0000 M8fownr1 tOOO 0 0 0 0 RRtvlch r1 2 I 1 0 1 0 0 0 TP9ne c 4 1 0 0 3 0 0 0 81Mt'll lb 3 0 2 • • O 1 O 114111\ard 1b o o o o • 0 I 0 Rav ti> I 0 0 0 3 O 2 0 Rhoden o 2 0 O O • O O O Ollobl1n p I O O O l 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 2 0 2 0 lS e I I TlltWa SarebY ...... JI 1 t 1 SM fraM:Dce ooe ooe ooe-o ~ ooo n1 nx-1 G1me Winning ll81 -8r1am (3) E-C. Davia, C. Brown, u. Wunlngton OP-San Francisco I, Plthburllh I LOB-San FrenclKO 11. PllllbufOll 2. 28-Glad<Mfl, 8ond1 lll-U W1sn1r1111on Hll-Morrl10n (12) $11-MorrllOn (7), ll llevnol01 (10 It' H R ER 88 SO Safi f l'MCbee llul 1..7·6 • 3 1 I I s M. Di vis 2 l 3 2 1 I I Gerralll 2·1 l l 3 0 I 8eranouer 2·3 0 0 0 0 0 .. ~ RllOden W,10-6 6 2·3 6 0 0 3 s 0 RObllOn S,S 2 1 3 2 0 0 0 J WP-M Devis Umolrn-Home, P1lk>M. Finl E11911. S.C· ond Oerllng Tnlrd, llloe>lev T-2 49 A-10,767 Attnl I, PMJlJet l: ln Ptuladd· ph11bNolan Ryan and Aureho Lopez com ined on a two-hitler and Craia Reynolds bit a solo home run as Houston defeated the Phillies. Ryan, 1.1, struck out 10 benen in five 1nninas, then left the pme becaUJC of sbaht tenderness in bis ri&bt elbow. lfe allowed both PtuJa .. dclphia hits and both runs-one was unearned -and he walked two batters. 4 I I I ATl'WWNu SO t I vwtlc 4 I 2 I HU!lbr4' ft 4010 ~-OIWIMlll ""'*"' C>edmerl" CJwnOttllfl Asnmctvll J6 ltt S T ... kwe" ....... • 1 I • 1 I 4 I 0 t 1 ' , 00 , 0. ' 0 0 0 00 I 0 0 0, 0 0 I I 0 0 0000 >I I I I ..... v... - -__ , A._.. -IM •-1 Game WIMlnt RBI -CerlW (111 £-MorellO, A. TllOMU. Oia-Hew Yol"ll 2 Loe-Hew Yorll 11, AllMt• 4. 29-0Vllstre 2. Grlffe¥, ~. 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Hit-< Aevnolds m , G Wllloll Cll ~ 1301 • M 1t•a MIO ....,.. .. , ..... 5 1 2 I S 0 I 2 0000 0 0 0 0 4 0' 0 5 0 0 0 • 1 I 0 0 0 0 0 I 0 I 0 0..1•111 Mllnerd ...... lllfl FraMlO o Oanleltlf E01vl1 rt 8Dla1c erwnno Pl' eu1er1 c 8alllb AowdOlllb EMlkY lb Sllwll u Terrv o Pow« 0 •rlllll Atullera W,-4-l 9 I I I 0 1 4120 ..... •ven w.7·7 i.-1S,.4 s • , 7 0 I 1 1 .. 4 0 I 0 ~ L,10-10 S 9 S S 4 l 0000 Otwlna I 1 0 0 1 I 00 00 Oeclf'llOll 2 0 0 0 0 I •222 M~ I 0 0 0 I I 4 0 I 3 UlnPlt'...-+iome. 8 Wllllam1, FlrSI, Wftl • 0 I 0 SKond. PuNI; Third, Ponclno T-2'3. A-33,331 • 1 I ...... 1 II K Grou L_... I • 3 J 2 S scnatreow 2-3 I 0 I I I TtttulYe 1-3 0 0 S I I Utnl*et ''°"""· Herve¥, Finl, ~ Second, Gr-. Thlt'd, Davia. T-2 14 A-Jl3,1t2 FOlevh WMter ri ll_.dotlo Tomlln11 Ralnellf Wabclllb l(rndlc lb lurkep 0.wt0ftr1 L.aw2b Wrltfll d Nletoc VoumnsP N-mn2b 0000 ..-------------------------------------------------------- l 1 ' 0 4 I I 0 4 I 2 2 2 I 2 2 I 0 0 0 Venabl oh Wlllh o ROM oh llMrphy 0 Perker rt 1 0 0 0 3 1 I 0 1 0 0 0 3 1 I I l t2 2 I 0 0 0 0000 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 I 0 0 JI 7 IJ 1 T.-.. kerelW ...... J) 911. ~ 111 •• __ , QncMMtl ... JOO Clx-9 Game Winning RBI -E Davia (l) E-4talnn. OP-<lnclnnall 1 LO&-MomrMI t , C~ll I 2t-f'OllV, IMll, Nieto 38-it•lnft HR-EMIAV (7) S&-Oanieb 17), Oea1w (6), E. Devis 2 IS.I. Oewaon (IOI S-VoumeM, 0..ler Menffeel Youmans Burke llMrdon L,6-t Tomtln CllldNw1I If' H R •1t 98 SO 6 I 0 I • 2 'l 3 1 • 4 3 I 0 I 'l 'l 1 0 I I I 'l 0 Terrv l l·l 9 S S I I Power 2·3 O O O \ O Wllll1 l 3 'l 2 1 2 R MurllflvW,1-0 1 0 0 0 0 0 Fr1ncoS,16 I I 0 0 I 0 R11rdon oltcllld to 2 1>111er1 In Ille 8111 WP-Vouman1, Tomlin Umolrn-Home, Rennert, Flrsl, Moflteoue. Second, Brocklandlf', Third, Wever T-3-07 A-23.90C ~Yp~~ll~~ FOREIGN CURRENCY OPTIONS CONTROL 6,250,000 JAPANESE YEN FOR AS LITTLE AS $500.00* BY TRADING THE "LIMITED RISK ONLJMVED PROFIT POTENTIAL" OF FOREIGN CURRENCY OPTIONS! CAU..NOW TOU FREE IN CALIFORNIA (714) 852·0436 1·800-225·8561 • PRJCES MAY CHANGE F~OM Tift\E TO TIME (JOhUn• afe ~ 11)1 e~Qf'\· OCC GteC'°""''* ooc.v.mnt awauablft •t ~ c • ._, o .... ,.. __ eeac11 C.A v~&&O ~HARTMARX RACQUET CLUB Los Angeles Area BMW Dealers for tlu! Benefit of tlu! TENNIS. CLASSIC PUR~WOOL 0 Childrrn 's Home Sociery of Califumia In Association with the llPllll Cllll Daily Pilat Vitas Geru/aitis Pat Cash John Fitzgerald Vijay Amritraj R oscoe Tanner (714) 644-6900 August 6-10, 1986 N-THE NEWPORTER RESORT --~3· ITOLLI IMIR80tl TlllMll rJNorelco WP Pl.JI Quo/JI'; ru~r ~~ a . . . I t ' TOURNAMENT PRICES & FORMAT BOX SEAT PACKAGE ' f" t \If f 1tfr le If '" fi\ f' .... 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(J N~ro f 61 e t Mllwe""M INlevts 9·41 n T-*V'• Ge"'" A,...n •' Oelltend, n OetroH et Cleveteno, n • 8otton et ClllceQO. n lle lllmo<t •• T exn, n Toronto e t K•ns.1 City n S.el!le et Mlnnet0le n New York et Mltweuk", n Hattenal LMtue WEST DIYl$10N W L ,.ct Gii HOU61on SS M S5' Sen Fr•nc•teo Clnc1rvw111 S.nOI"° ~ All•nt• S2 46 SJt 2 , 6 ,., I''> . ., 47 ., 490 '7 SI '80 46 S2 4'9 4S S2 ~ • EAST DIVISION N.w Voo Mon tree Prweoetont• St LOUii Cn1<.•110 flo111.c>uron 6' )0 ,, .. .. .. 4• S2 41 S2 )9 S6 SUftdily' I kWH ~ t3 Ctuc:ego t Hou\lon 3 Pll•teoe•P'I•• 2 P1t111>urc111 1 Sen Fr•nc•ICO 0 New YO<k s Allen•• I St Louil l, Sen Oltl>Q 2 Clnclnn•fl 9, Montrtat I Tedlll't CO.mts IS ' 11 21 n 7S ; !>en l'r•nCIKO !LeCoo • SI .ti o.o..r.. 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" C nc1nne•1 •' Sen O•eoo AMERICAN LEAGUE Anoeil' l, Red Sex 0 BOSTON CALIFOtlNIA Barrett 11l 800111 )0 8uc11nr 11) lil1Cf II 8ev>or 01'1 (,renw or OwEvl'I rt Arm•' ct Cieomen' Ou1non1 u Tottlt ab," bi 4 0 I 0 ) 0 0 0 • 0 1 0 ' 0 2 0 2 0 0 0 l 0 0 0 ' 0 1 0 ' 0 7 0 • 0 0 0 ) 0 I 0 RJo,..., rl Jovner lb 0.Cnu lb It Jc~'" dl'I Oown.,,g ·• C,r Cl'I 21> 8oone c Scl'lol•ld" Petli\ Cf l4 0 ' 0 Tot•h Sun by lnnlnvl •IHlllll '0 ' 0 ) 0 1 0 2 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 • I 1 0 4 1 I 1 J ' 1 t • 0 1 0 , 0 2 1 27 1 ' ) 11...... 000 000 000-0 ~ 000 JOO 01•-l Game Wlnn1no RBI -CirocPI 131 OP-Bolton 1 C•"'ornla 1 LOB-B~ton f Celt!Mnt• I 28-8uc1<n..-2. Iii Jones Petti\ O\Jlnone1 8oone 38-00wlll"ll H!il-(;rlcll Pl Sll-Sc.llOll«! I ISi ~1nc•s SF-8oone I.. H fl Ut BB SO ....... SeavU I 4 9 St•wart Cellfwnle Sutton W 9 I Lu< .. 0 MOO•t S 10 S..tton D•IC"8CI lo WP-Seaver • ~ I 0 0 llJOOO 11 l 1 0 0 I !Miiier '" ll'!f! 111" 0 1 0 Umoirtt-Homf! McCtellenc:t Font Y0<;ng S.Cono lhlHv Tnlro Co~ T 7 Sl • 1> t SS9 Jovner 8ur1e1on Cirlcn Oown1110 J•C-\0<' Henc:sr.c• Peltil wurono Jonu OeC1nc~t N•rron- Scl'>Ot•elf1 Mow•1 Boon• Tot9lt Aneel averaen I T'hrwtlfl SIHldeV't Gerne I IAnlNG All R H Hiii 118 S8 11'2 7 I 171 7S SA • tlS n 49 I )76 00 "' 11 7S6 )9 61 9 176 H 46 I l1t •9 ., 2 19} 11 " 1 2S2 ~? ~1 rt 3-06 11 14 ,, 51 4 I) I 260 .0 '7 I 16 u 19 7 770 ,. S8 J 1211 411 ass " Pardon me IUU"ct ,. J" 1~ JU 70 2to S7 77) )l 16" n 16• n lSO 29 7•9 II 246 SI 742 • 131 11 Ill I n n 11\ 447 )t.0 8undey 21 11 July 28 ... ti A's. 507 Ciaftts 11 DMa1n 1 ~ • ... al A's, 7 JS c.ts at DMswa. 1 35 ... al A's, 12 IS r.&anll 11 DMltn. 1 35 A&19.1 ...... Suttle, 1.35 bdaat ~. 735 3 5 • 1 • • •Mclll II St11ti.. I 3!> Red\ •t Dedcen I ~ Alic• at Twins, 5 JS Astros 1t '*'ltr1. 1 35 •Alic* at Twlf\S, S 3S Astros •I DMrtn. 1 35 ... •I fWIM, 10 IS Astros at Oldltn l OS ~tit II Alt*, 1 35 St1ttlt •t ... 7:35 ~•tR.cb(2).23S Sattie al ... I 05 ~ti lids. 1120 10 11 12 13 1• 15 11 Seatut 111 AllClll l OS •Dlclctn •t Reds 11 15 •Twtns at Alie•. 7 JS Dede•• 11 Astros. 5 lS Twins at .... 1 35 eOM1tn at Ast1os. S JS hnns 11 AllC*. 73S -o.dctn 11 Astros. S· 35 ._.,,t~S.3S A's •I ..... 1 JS A'i fl ....... 7.05 eOMltn II Giants. a·os . DMltn •I Giants, 1.05 17 11 20 21 22 21' A\ll AllClll IOS •Doclcen 1t G11n1s l ~ Mets at Docfrtn, SOS 11 .... at Ttpn (2). 'l JS Mets at DMtars. 1 35 ..... at flltfS, 4 JS .... 1t Orioln. 4 lS •All* at Onolet. S 05 [Jpos at DMstn. 7 JS ... •t Onoln, 11 20 Capoa at DMprt. 7.05 Mets at Dede'"· S 20 •Aftclll 11 Onolts 11 OS E Apos at o.dctn I OS ..... II Yankett. 4 JO Plltlties at Dlclc'" 7 lS .... at Yalllee 4 30 PlliltitS at DMrtn. 1 35 C"'•dWICk Lucet Wiii ll'ITCHING Ill' H II SO W·l ERA 0 0 0 0 O·O 0 00 6 l 1 S 0-0 L50 161 '> 14S '9 13' t0-7 2 94 to > 21 11 11 I 0 3 10 151>"> t16 55 IJ I t 1 ' 3 11 ) 1 l6 13 73 ' 1 ) .. ll 24 12 21 I l 3 n S7 '> 40 u 27 2 1 Jll 61 1 S I I 0·0 421 F111le11 McCHklll l'or11er Moo<• Co<bell lilul'lte Sulton Cendel•r•a Tefllh t:n~. 111 24 11 9·1 .. '° n n 10 1 s 1-1 Ho N n-, M4 >Ot sn s2.u UJ MOC)(f 10 Coro.11 • FC)(tler ' S.Yts NATIONAL LEAGUE Ood9Wt ll, Cubs 11 LOS ANGl!LU CHICAGO •brllbl . ) ) ' I 0 1 0 S 1 l I 2 0 l I • 2 2 2 4 1 0 0 s 1 1 l 0 0 0 0 0 I 0 0 6 I ) 1 4 I 2 2 6 I J I 0000 0 0 0 0 •000 0 0 0 0 I 0 l 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 ' 0 0 0 MUPhrv Cf Ot<n•.,. Cf Sndlllll 2b GMlhw\H LeSrrtllll D t eYDl'l 01Pl"O o Our""' lb Morelnc:t rf JOevl1 c Soe1er pr Francon rt Trillo 3b Oun\lon n Lvncll P CiumPe•I D l'ontenot D DMertnr If 8o•lt'v 11 •II r II bl 2 I 2 0 J 0 2 1 • I 0 I 2 ) 1 ' 0 0 0 0 ' 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 • 2 1 ) 4 0 1 2 ' I 2 l 0 I 0 0 1000 3 0 2 I ' l 0 0 1000 1 0 0 0 1000 0 0 0 0 I I I I S.1 1t> Lelldrx Cf lilWDm1Cf MaCllCk 3C> Hemltn3C> StubO• r1 Metun~ H JGonrtr rt lllilunet rl SclOtcle C 8 roek It> Ouncen n APeneo ll•nclllrg o C•t>el• l>fl Howen p Vaten11 Ol'I Her1Pltr pr HQOevttlP Trevino ol'I HO,.etlr T"'111t 4S ll 11 I) Teq b 1' 11 ll 11 Seer• 1111 lfWllnes LM A,,_., 111 001 044-11 Chiu" 00 000 DO-11 Game w 1nnl110 lil8t Sc1otc11 I 11 E i:ontftnot Sc1o•C•• J Gon1ale1 OP-Lo• A-• 7 (l'llceoo I L08 -LO\ Anotlet 13 CrHCellO 4 28-<>• Mellllew' J Oe vl• MetuUei-A W• •••m• JB Muml>flrev HA-Ourl'lem ! 11 Metuuel> 6 S8 -Iii Wltli•m' 111 8roci. 111 Ounc•n 1301 SclO•Cll 121 !>-A Ptne SluC>C>• SF Mo<1tano S.ndbt'•g LftA,,_., A Pena Ve'l<M 8ero Pow•tl Ho,...vcu11 Howell W 4-& CNu .. LvncPI Ciumoer• l'onle"O• Le Sm•I" OtPtno l I 4 Wf>-Forllt !IOI Ume>lrt\-HOn'\f! Secono Helhon A ll 12• '" H II ER Ill SO 2)1•&70 1]00000 27] ) I I J I I 7 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 ~ 1 I 10 ' 4 t 0 0 • I 0 0 I I ) 1 I 1 ' I 0 Oa••d1on F ortt Mc Sl'lerrv Tn,r(I Mer\l'I T-3'4 MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS Amencan LM9Ue !~ 'rtde'f'& Gelnftl 84 T TING 1211 81 bet1)-&oogs, 8otlon. 360. Mell•!llllY New York, 344 Pvcllell MIM•WI• lll lil•C• 80\ton. 331 EHier New Yor" l30 RUNS-A Hender_,, New Yori!., t1 Pu<~•ll Mlt1...WI•. II, Metllnolv N-Yori< 69 8t'll TMon10, 66, Ptlltllo1. Oeto.tano, 66 A8t-<•nteco, Oall.lend, 90. 8eit Toron10, 17 J..,,_, Aneeh, 14/ llerf1e1<1, T01on10, 12, Met 11notv New Vork 71 HtTS-Melllnolv New Yorlt 112 Puc"el' M•nt1e1ate 117 F ... nancler Toronto t31 !Hit Toronlo 12• J....-, .V..•. 1111 liltC• 8ott0fl 121 OOU8LES-Met1l11olv, New York, 33, Alce 8oston. ?9 Booot, llO•ton. 27. R Htndenon New Yo<k 16 llil>ften. 8etllmore 1' Tlil1PLES-8utlef Cievelend. I l'ernender To•onto 1 G W•'"" Chlceoo 6. Owen Seatlle 6. Wltto<t. K•nM• City 6 HOME RUNs-il•rf .. to, To<onlo, H Can~o O•"la"d, 23, PeglierulO, New Vorlt, 73 8•11 Toro11to, 21, Klnom•n, Oakland. 22 LN Parr•1n Oetroll n STOLEN llASES-111 H~ton New Yor~ SI C•r>oe'Ot (lllceoo. 40 Peffh, A/lellt, 2), W \0" Ken111 Cttv 73 Motebv Toronro. 12 ll•vno•d• Sea111e, 21 PITCHING 19 d.clt•ontl-<tem.,,,, 8011on 11 7 1 SO Farr, t<en\H C1tv, 1 1 2 06 lilumu11e11 New Vor~ 11-2 3 lO, ScPlrom C •ve••nd 11 2 ) 94 STIW<EOUTS-C1em en1 8 0\lon lol Mou ' Detroit 1'S McC.t11•. Aft9911, Ul, Higuera Mllweukff llO. Witt, Aneeti, tlo SAllES-AeM. Belllmore, 26, •11>M11t New York., 22, Henlanoe1, OetrOll, lt, Herrl1, Tuu lS, l!I Steniev. lloilon, 14, Henle•, Toronto u HatleMI L.eQue (Tlwwtll P'rldll'f'• ~) llATTI NG (211 el be1'1-8r001c1 MOntreel, 3J7 llaclcmen, '"-York, l3S. Ciwvnn. ~n Dle90. 332. C e row11, ~" Fr•nc•sco llt Oyi.11re, N•w Yori" .331, flalnft. Monlrul, ll I lilUNs-Gwynn, :S.n Ole9o. 63, Have\, Pllll• deionle, 5'. E Oe vl1, Cincinnati, se, Murolw. Attenl•. Y . Scl\mlCll, Plllladell'hle. 5e 111111-Scl>mlCll, Pllltadeloflle, 74. Per1<er Cln· C•M•ll. 11. Ca rtet", New Yortt. 70, G D••lt HOUtlon, 67. llrOOlc\, MonlrMI, 5e HtTs-GwvM, :S.n 01-, 124, Sex, o..e..n. tl01 R•lnet. MontrMI, 116, llau. Hou11on, 110 P•rto.e< Clnclnrietl, lot. OOUllLES-Hevu. Phlledtlplll•, 21. Oun1ton, Cl'lkallO. ts. It. llt 'llnoldl. PllllburQll, 2S. SH , ~ :M1 S1rew11trr11. New York. 1' TfllPLES-:S.muel, Pllli.de!Pl\la. f, COieman SI L0<;ll , 7, McC.... SI LOUii, 7. D11tutre, New Yo•"· 6, MOleno, Atlenl•, 6, llelnet, 111\onlrNI, 6 HOME lilUNs.-Perker, Clnclnnell, 21. Scl'lmlClt, PlllladelDl'lle, 22, G Oavt1. Hou11on, 71. Sl\lbln, Oedeen, It/ MerVlll, ~. IL STOLEN llASES--C.oteman. St Louil, 63 E Devit ClnclMall. SI, liletnM, Mof\lreet 4' Ovnc.eft. o.de9n. lS1 Doren, Houlton 3' PITCHING (f C1Klslon1)-Klflt4d Hou\lon l 1. 2'3, R liloblntott, Clnclnnell, 7·1. 220, Ferriencler, New York, 12-2 713. Oieda, New YOik. 11-2. 2 76, Oerttno. New York, 10-J 219 ST!illKEOUTS-Scofl Houtlot1, 117 YeMnJ:uelll, ~. 147; W.idl, o.Cltien, lit; AHi'. Houlton. 116, z Smllll, Allenl• 111 S.AllES-AHrdon. MontrHI 21 Wo<rtl St LOU''· 19, 0 Smith, Houllon, 17. Le SmltPI Clllceoo 11, C.ouaoe. Sen Dreoo. 16 TENNIS P:.,..tlen Cup (•I Pre-. CJ.~•lrlel P'INAU U""9CI S'9tott l. ~ellll O SlntMt CPlro\ E•e<I Ltovd (U s I a.I Hetene Svkove 1 S 1·6 Merline Na•r•lllova ru SJ oef H•"• Mendlll<ovo, I 5 6 I Ooutllft N•vralltov• P•m Stlrlver IU SJ ~ Men dl1kove SukOv• 6·4. 6 1 CONS.OU.T~ ,INALS 1!1"9alfl ,. SellWt l'"'9n 1 SlntMt .A11ne Hot>ta (8rllainl oaf N•ten•e hereva, 6 J, l·S. Annao.1 Croft (8r1telnl dt'f Larine Sa•CMnllo, 6· 4 6·0 ow.t N•lelle 8vkove·Sveltene P•r~ omen~o !Sov••I union> def H~ Croll 6·2 6 1 U.S.~~ (el 8rMICllM, M H L) Slrllllet , ...... Anc:trH Gomer <Ecuadorl oef Martin Jette (Ar_,tlnel I S 6·• IGome1 wlnt U7 400 Jelle .. 1n1 111 7001 Mlln'• '9umllment (et L.MfteMI, N.J.I NtMt'l SIMlet 'IMI 8red CiltC>ll'I (US l def Miki Luefl (US I 6·2 6·2 IGllDerl win\ $17,000 Leecl'I win' 1' SOOI ,,,_.,, Oeulll9I ,, .... llo0 Gr"" (US )·W•~ll Metur IAullr•h•> def Sammy Glammel.-a·Greo Hotme1 ( U S I s 7. 6·•. ,., w.,._.., SlflllM SemMnel1 8et111 N•oelton (US.) oaf Grace l(lm (US I 6 ) 6· 4 Mletletle Torrts IU S l de1 Ketl'l ... n HMv•IPI IU S ), 6·4 6· t w_.,~,. .... TOlrtt def NeoellO<\, 6·•. •·3, (TorrH WI!\\ tl.SOOI Sweclbll Ooerl tat laatad. Sweclerll SMiies ,.,.. Em• io Sancher (Soelnl oef Mitt w11encw IS .. ldefll. 7·6, •·6 , •• (Senchel wln1 nS,OOlh Misc. CYCLJNG Tour de Fr•~ Urd LIG •nuL TS Ciu•dO llonlemo1 (ltelvl 6 t>oun SI minute\ SS wconcl&, 1 Jow L•eck..,, llleloluml, .. me lime. l E rlC llenoer..,.oen llelolum l, s.me lime, • 8••n•rO Hlnault <Frencel, Hmt time, S Fr•nck Ho111 18eioluml. \amt time 6 Steve a • .,., IC•nedel .. ,,,. lime. I lileol• Simon (l'rencal ume ti,..,. I Nico Emondt <lle4olum) .. ,..,. time, 9 GuldO Ven C•ltl., lll•IO•uml .. ,,,. lime, 10 l'ret1C1t Ce1ta111g 1F'r•nc•> 1eme lime Ot11w Ameri<.-fl. c-Cllen ltlden It Ate• Stlede <Ca nada). 6 Ploun SI mlnu1H , SS MCOllCI• (\eme 11,..,. .. llonteml>il, 4' C.rto Lernoncl. wme tlrne, 56 Jefl Pt...-ce ume llme 13 Ron Kletf9'. u rne time. 10S &otl R041 ... ,,,_ 11,..,. 109 Andrew Hernc>tltn, Mime llme "NAL STANDtNGS 1 Greo Lemond (US), 100 tiour\. lS minute\ It teeOl\Cll , 7 11...-nerd Hln•ult (Frencel, l rrilnute' 10 MC.ondt behind, l Ur\ Z1m,.,.,.menn (Swltr ... lal'ICI) 10 ~ behind, 4 Andrew H•m1>11en IU S I If 14 5 Ci.ude CrlOU.alion lleti>luml 24.36 6 •one" PenMC <Frence l 2S Sf 1 Nlllt ltulllmenn <Swllltrlandl. JO S2 I Alvaro Pl!IO l\Hlnl. XJ-00; t Steven ltOOkt <the Nethe>r tt ll<h), J3•n , 10 Yvon Mac:tlot 1Frencel ll 27 09-~~·ldln n St•v1 huer ICll\ldel S6 m1nutts 1 Meon<lt W>lnd Lemoncl 63 9ob lllOll l '31' bell•l'ICI IO Jeff ll'ltfc• 1 S6 SI. .. Ron Kieft'!, 1 oue no .A•u ~ti.eta <C•"•d•>. 11• '' o.... ... AtMnt OAYIY'J 1.0CICla (........,. heat) • boell ''° -'91'• 10 berrKUlfe. m bonito 1 vtllOwle#. 21 rock COd 11 calico !Miu 716 a.lid ~ l\'laO.et'.. 7 GAIMUon S Wfltle nt11, 7 Nl~T 1.ANOtftO -• tiooe11 113 TCflS al AllC* 1 3~ r...,s11 ...,. 735 -OM1tn at Meh. 4 3S Tlltfitl ... 105 ~ 11 MIU.1120 HA '9umlllMnt <•• GnnCI ~. Mlcl\.l 270 Ben Crtntl'lew 190,000 69-'1 6' " VI JC SnHO 4',000 61·10 ..... DOUll Ttweit, 44,000 70· .. ·61·6' 272 Ed l'IOl'I, lf,000 113 Bobby W•dklni , 1',000 O•vlt Love Ill. lf,000 G-Se.-1. 16, 12S Steve P•t• 16, 125 8rlen Cle•r, 11,571 LM Tre•l"O, 11,571 Wevne Levi 11 511 Jeff Slumen 1 U71 Scolt HOCPI ll.S71 KtnnY Knoa II. 571 Tom Purtrer 11,571 11• vs U• 7,ISO 1,1SO 71SO 11SO 277 67SO 6,2SO V I OeMv Edw•rdt 4,IOO J Im Coto.ri M4ke S<;Ulv•n JOdieMUOd r c c11en 8oC> LOl'lr W•vn• Gradv. .AllClrew Me-•.tOO ""°'''' Hatet1ky 4,IOO Mitt• Hill 4 IOO Bob Ea1twOOO, 4 IOO Vt Garv PIM\, l . t90 Leonard Tt'lomOIOll 3, 190 81Mv Pte<Of l 190 Lon Hl ..... le, l 190 O•v•d Gr•11em 3 190 eruct Lle1111.1. l. 190 Peter Jacob..,,, 3.190 Mlt<• MCCultou1m. 3, 190 Tonv Sill\ l, 190 Hel Sulton. ) 190 O•O Mell 7.0SO 8uddv Garoner 2 .OSO Jl>t' tnma11, 2 .OSO !illCk Cr•mer. 7,050 Steve JOM\ 7 ,OSO 8ob0v C1•moe11 1 OSO JOl'ln C OOll 2 OSO Tom Kiit 2 OSO Oa•t E 1cnet1>1r!lff 1 OSO 111 llence 11talnor, 1,3'6 Howerd Twlllv 1,lU !>coll verolen~ I lU Lennv Wed~ n• I lU 0 A W1•br•rto l lU Roa Curt 1,230 Mille Donald. 1.16" ,., 2t) O•n H•lldorton. 1, 166 0ouo .IOlln'IO", 1. 166 ICeltPI Clterw•ter 1. 166 Anlonto C•da 1.166 Merl< Lvt , I, IOS Tom 8 \'rum. 1, IOS Jtm Simoni, 1, 10S Merk Pielt, 1. IOS Jim Hallet 1 IOS K..,Gr..., 110S Jim lilutledoe t .oss Cireo Twloo•. t,OSS Jim GelltQMr t OSS 8red l'uon 1 OSS Jo!!n Ademt 1 OlO H•rrv h11tor 1,0tS Stu lngrallam , 1,015 ,,.. ,., 6"·6'· 70·'7 69-6' 10-61 6S·•7 10-11 69-61 " 11 10-•1 6.S n 61·61·11· .. 69·61·70·61 11·67·6'·6' 69·'7·69-70 70-'9·66·10 61·61-6111 6161 .. 13 67·69 n 61 11 '9·61·61 10-61 " 10 10-11 6A 11 n 611 69 69·67 69 n 71·61 11 61 71 •S n 10 10 10-6' 69 10·•• 69 70 09-10·6' 10 71·61 II 68 12·69 69 "' 6S·n -n 10 69·67 13· 10 61·10· 11 70 69·61 n 11 61·10·10 11 11 61 6?·71 11 6161 n 61 "' 10 n 11 61 11 69 69 7l 71·69 69 69 17·70 73 61·10·69 11 10 6' 70 69 11 69 11 69 11 61 n 61 61 JO 14 10 66 69 IS 11 69 n"' ,, n 1210 n 61 10·11 11 61 10 n 11 69 .. 1J 69-10 14 69 ,. .• , 7l·69 12·'1 14 10 10 69 73 11 11 "11 n n -61 10 n 69n·n 11 67 11 13·73 70-70 70 74 13 61 ••• ,, 11 6170 7S ,, ... 67-16 67 73·12 13 71·61·1H• 12·67 n ,, 67·13 70 H n 61 7S·70 •• n n 14 10-11 n 1• Otnnl\ Trltler 1 000 61 73 13 14 LPGA teumament (el Weodbf'ldee, °"'9rlal 27• • Pat 8reolev, lSJ, SOO 1) 10 61 "6 AnkoOu mo10 l2.l7S 13 10 69 6' Jll N•ncv Scr•nton. 11.000 10·6A If 69 l!lettv Klno. 21 000 n '1 71 11 C•IPly Mont IJ ~ Cl'lrl\ JOM\On 13 562 ~o••• Jonot 10 l2S S11err1 Tur11er I 21S .Amv Atcotl •.ns Pa1111111110. a.ns 001 c. ... meln, 6 llS Oeoc>•e Meuav • 1~ Afl<e lill11ma11 6 11.4 Mertne N•u ... S,076 Jene Gedda\, S,076 JoAnn• C•rner 5 076 Judv 01e1<lnson 4 _.,. Set1Cl•e P•lrnet 4 '4J Val Sl\lnner 4,016 Jo Ann W••"•m. 4 016 MIUle 8ert.otll 4,016 21) 214 D J 19' J•n SteOl'lt'nton. l .• 13 Atl•ton F 1nne11 3 • 1l Petlv 5'1ftf!en. J,'17 Juli Into.tie• l,411 81rb 8unkow1kv ),411 1'° lle<ll D•nlei, l.OIO 1'1 Stec>l'lellle Ferw10 2 m LY11t1Adem1 2.n1 f>t<lnv Putr 7 ,n 1 Mtrt• Flo.-•• Oolll, 2 nl Amv 8•n•. 1,7'1 Pet Mever1. 2 711 Kln\SNe>men, 1.)10 C•tnv l(r•11er1, J.J10 Katllv WMwortll , )Qt 10136111 67 61 7• 7) n n 11 61 11 11 1) 69 1S·ll 61 69 14 69 10 11 1S 10 6• 11 72 6114 11 77 61 n n 14 70 14 "' 74 68 74 70 "11 1-1 n ll ,, 69 71 II ll 11 n 146174 12 1'111112 11 69 ll 7S It n IS 11 ,. n n 11 10 n n n 11 6e 111) 1l·ll •• " IS·14 n 6t 76-n ,, ., 76·71 1l 11 ,. ,, 11 n 73 71 ,, 7) 75 11 12 1) 7S·•t 71 IS n 14 16 10 n 1• n 11 1l 11 ,. ,. Mlndv Moore, 1.142 0.0 Rlcllerd, 1..142 Oewn Coe, 1.142 HM lller F•rr, l,M, LAAnnC.t..otv, l,U2 Vlelt.I F...-oon, l,U2 Leurlt ltl,..,., 1,141 :S.UV Little. 1,141 ,,. Anne·Merle PeUI, 1,400 Stitri.v Furton9. 1,400 Mary Mullll\11, 1,400 N•nc11 White, 1,400 J•ne Cr•ll•. 1, 190 Dena How• C11encetor 1, Ito m llonnl• L.au.r, 945 Clndll llerlGll:, t4S Le\llt' PH rlOll, 945 Oet>orell McH•fflt', 90 Laur• &•Ullfl. 9'S K•tll¥ ll•lt•, 944 S<isle McA"ltter, h4 291 Mvr• llleckwttoe<, &SI Ll1e Younci 6S 1 Pellv Hevts, 6Sl M Soencer·O.vU!I oSO Lallf'.., Howe, 6SO l.eurl Pettf'M>n, S7S Carolvn Hiii, S2S Robin W•llon, S24 !>enclre SouJICll. 444 J•tMt coi.1 ~ Sulen S.ndon. '6l C•tnv lltllnoldt, "3 •-won otevott n -1•-n-6t 76-73·74-70 73·7'·74·70 73·7S-1'·11 11·7'•7S·71 1s-14-n -n 73·7S·7H4 1S·10-11·n 11-10-1s-n 72·72·1'·76 7t-7H6•76 11-16·10-11 n -n -11.., 14·1S·1S-11 '8·10-11·11 17·71·75-73 73·11·11·14 14·11·11·14 71-76·75-74 n -1•·1'·76 7HS-n ·7' 76·73·17·71 7'·73·75-13 15-14·14·1• n 76·73·76 11·76·74·16 16· 13·7S·7• 1S·13·1S·1.S IS·74·73·76 11 n -7t-n 13 7S·17·1• 73 14-76·16 14 1•·13-11 svracuM S.W O.uk * llruce Cr•molCHI, sJ0,000 207 liloberro De ll1Ct1110, 15. 16" Orville MOOdv. lS,16' Cl'll CPll Rodrl-1 IS, 166 2IOI 8u1Cll 8etrd. I 1"6 81hCatoe< f,1 .. lloo (llerlft I. 16' Ge,... l.llllt'r. 6.SOO Miiier 8•rller. S,7S0 8en Smith, S.7SO Jeo Fr« ... S,OiO Harold Henning, •·°'° 8ob E rlellw<1, 4,090 O•le Douotan. 4,090 Art Sllve\trone 4,090 CP1erte1 Owen• 4.°'° Joe,,,..,..,., l.)00 Al 8el01"1) 3 300 Pttler TllOmton 2.'81 Can Je,.or 1 411 Howle Johnson 1 417 J1m l'urM 2 417 Gn erew...-, 2,417 Pett llrown, 1,411 Oouo Ford, 2,41 Jim llt rber 2,411 8uo. Adami. 1.9'° Q111111on Cir..,, 1 ''° 11111 Jonnt ton, 1,6i0 George Lenning, 1,6'° 8111 C01lln1, 1,650 Mlk.e Felchlcll, 1.6'° 210 111 112 llS ,., WMttend tr.nsactteM I ASllALL Al'llWtuoll '---- 70·6S 11 •• 71-61 61 68 71 68 1)·66 10-61·10 10·10-6' 10-10--61 6'-11 ·69 10 13-67 "'' n n 11 61 71·11·70 61·11-1• 72-67·13 6'·11·n 12·71·61 12·6'-n Tl 10-11 n 12-11 1S 61·72 11 nn IS·67·73 n -7'·61 10-n-n n -10-n 69-7•·72 11·7S-70 n -10-14 Tl·ll-73 16·11-10 10-15·12 1'·11-11 NEW YORK YANKEES-W•l¥ed Oele a.re. lnfltlder Act1¥•teCI lton Ciuldrv. l>llcne< OAKLAND A'S-Wel"l'td ltlellv ~ ..... out· ltetcMr NetlOMI L-.ATLANT .A llllAllES-Pleced Crelg McMurir11. oltcller, on IN lS-deY dls.blOd lltt PvrcPla lld IM contrKl of Cllff Sptcli, l>llC,...., trom Richmond ol Ille lnternettonol Llltut MONTREAL EXPOs--RecallOCI Ton'! Nte10. cetc,...., from tndlenaootls of "'9 Amtrlc.en A nocltlton °"'toned 81ttv M4ore. outfleloet' lo lndlenee>otl• PtTTS8URGH PllilATES-Ptac~ lle!NI 8t'lltard thorlttCM>, on Ille IS·da11 Cll .. blOd tl&I lilecalled Semmv K,,.111• \llOrt\ICM>, from H•w•H of Ille PtclliC Cout L••oue IASl<ITeA&.L NelleMI la&ll .... A&MdellOft NEW YO!ill( KNICl(~ul Ou•ne Kenclell end JOI Geml>fer, center·lorw•rds, Devin Our- ra111 11uerd·lorwerd Tom Nltoo, forward, •nd JH .. PlllttlM G•r11 Meloncon •nd Marlo G•t ver Qu••d• 'OOTeAL..L Ne-..i,..,_.......,. CHICAGO llEARS-Slonod ltlcl'lerd e>.nt, defon1lve ..,d, lo tour one ·ve•r conlrech •nc:t Tim Wrlontmen, tloht end. to two one·YMr conirec11 CINCI NNATI llENGAL5'-Annolif\Ced IM re- ,.,_, of Pet Mclnallv PUnter Slonoc! Ml"• H•.-tleln, def9nilve end OETltOIT LIONS-Slonoc! AIVln Moore, rut1 11lng bacll, to a terlH of ont·Y••r conlrectt INOIA NAPOLIS COL TS-Acoulred Oreo llaltlt' llMOKl<er, on w1lv•rt lrom IN 0...Y• lronc~ Slorled Kerl eetoitchwller oftentJve tllCllle. Marl! Klrllnef, tuerd·llCJllt, Oevt A"'''"'· llnobecll.er end P•f llMCll llol'lt encl Reteu ed OOtd Arlrl, klcl<or, Quinton eett•rd nou ••ckte, Steve lrnnt encl Lenny Teytor, wide rectev...-1, Wood11 Clark end D•n H•m morlhmlclt. del.,,11vo bod!&, Merion Mclntvre, runnl"IJ oao.. koll ltoOln_, •!Id JOlln ltoC>· •''°" olfOMlv• linemen end Joo Smlle11 11uare1 KANSAS CITY CHIEFS--Sillneel L-rCI Griffin, Cloftf!1lve end to a fOllf llffr contrecl MINNE$0TA lllKINGS-Sloneel Cerl Hlllon. llol'll end N(W YOltK JET5'-Si.necl 00\io WIMl•mt. otten•lve IKllte PHILADELPHIA EAGLES-~ EIC>orl Foute• cor,,...l>Kk 10 • one· ... er contract •ncl t<eltll lver1 rvn11l"I) becti to • tour y"r eon1rec1 S.t.N FRANCISCO 4fER$-Welved Alen 1.eff 1111ce ·~lcker -llr)llDIDllUf.WIPUlllll·~----- GNtLS S0"9ALL Cttvef NH.-t ... dl YI LLOW •1aeo.. I.I AO.UH ,_ DMlllfl <"'""' M l L._. .... 11 AllOlfMtl lllew Newport Helofllt Mariner• AllCW\Ofl H..-orV•~ Ntw"'1 He<9'11t Newi>O'l•Ma/11\0f\ • 0 s l 1 ~ 0 I • 4 1 0 SLO-~ITCH SOf'TaALL H"""'""'9ft ... di H-lftd ........ Leeeu- • OMti.t WMI er • Hunlt"flo;I ~,, ) Co,•• Me" 1 '°""''',, Vettey i Cl OM.-. W•ttm1n,,.,. IS lrwlne 4 ... nle An• 1. Lot Alaml!Ot 4 HUflll!IOlon .. Kii 1e Cotle Motv 1) CJ DMt'8ll Or-1' Anal!olm 4 Jlm ltlonUon of ~ Pinta tries to eecape tbe frup of Otant third bueman Chrta Brown durln« .rundown Sunday. •nalet'I 10 bolltfo, n Miid 1>41U. 1 lS Ca lleo 1>41u 1 t\eltbul, 110 ~94. '1 Ku!Oln 646 rock 11111, •t l'lleell•fl. ta ll•lf moon tu wl'llle ""' OAHA WMA•ll' -11 t>oe t• '16 anottt1 "'9 !Miu 610 llon 10 "'meoer• I IMlrre<ude JW roe~ '''" c OMUoft (II' ... )·41 Al\Otflltl•Ylnr Hertior ll- Merl-1 He .. !ll\ N ..... por1 I I ' 1 1 • ' , F ulltffl>ft 10 Mlulon llltlo 1 N•woort all0(11 If. (I Moftte 2 '•roe<! Grove S s...t .._,, • • ----- Del.Mar racing results IUMOAY'I HWl.T1 t• " Q.4trY .. .. .......... , MIT •ACL Ont mlt.. · lrMCI ltrtel (S~) 4" Ut iM ll'lurnHtf• lai.dll ,,. ut Lucl!v llWtt (SlDI*) J.A0 TlrNI 1~ J/S Aa.o rtft, Wine Tt110t. ''-' •t111. Slli. To Shore, J.0, CMVOll No tc:tetc:MI. '1 •xACTA Ci.ti "Id Ml to, 1aCONO llACI. 6 ful1onlt.. Growler S..lldue (N\CC¥reftl Homlnl ~ <Ca1t..-> Nototlttv cva1en.1wi.1 TllM' He llS. .... UO JM ...... i.• AIM r•n. YOlclt OI TM Wlftll, Llnll l h lrhlll. KUl\lo Kllll. ll'rlote 't eo-r. lt\llWllM •-', Jullo H Me • No l<ll'•tdlee n DAILY DOUaLI (2·4) H id alMQ, r...o ••c•. 1 M10ntt Ee&l Tulll> (lledll Horrltofl't Turn !St.-.> Orlao {SOio> Time; l;JI 4/S. Alto rlll' C.• TN Guard, In l'oto, Pollllal Tit'. k.tm e •c:IWNIOe Ser etel'led. F lvlne Snow. IS •XACTA !2·41 H id UUOO P'OUltTI4 llAGa. 6 "'IOfttl. Luci (SOll1) JUD u o .... 400 ,. u o Oanlolll (McCAlrronl Prince 0' Flro (ll'lncav> TlrM· HO. AltO rt11. ArnbotMOOrlel, Cllvwv Cflor9e. Joto s.nt Me, P-Forward, Cut ,r ... ll'WM. Screldleel Y-. Eoenon "'""" llAC•. I 1116 mites on lurf. Tr•ve• <ClmPUll 1'U O ...eo IMO Slv Remark (Fwnonoe1) 10.AO 1.20 !llmltwlnll lPodrOlll 10.60 Time l 0 l /S Alto ren llomldot. Trull\, Sier Formatloft, Weft Releted, OUOol TorfltClo, L'tEmolre, •otr er11t11, Affirmed Nell .... Pow. Sc:ret~. Nurelv, Mr Madia, Hollc;lwo IS IXAC'T A <•·SI oold 13, 111.lO. SOCTH • ACI. SI'» lunono• l ldclr• ($tty-) • 12 '° SM 4.00 ... u o uo Tomocot!IO (PlnaYI Sn one To-(l!lleckl Time l:Ot l/S AIM> ran: To llallte, Pvremldlnt, IN. To .. Won, Tulare -Oold, Cr111tal Cutter, Ar•¥-Md\llOOO, Jaanne1 •-No w:relef\OI RVWNTM llACa One mllO on turt . Corridor Krt ($11'Ytnll 16 4' 1 00 00 Et1ete ($olol 2S60 11.00 lt•IPlttan rrorol uo Time· 1:34 l / S . , AltO ren •et&lna fl1111. Orumet11, l(elltl\, Amtrlc.an Leoton. HO(IOmOnY. Floollne RltMn• kr•tdled N\oullli., C.1118 Tweed, Wfll llOtmor, Swoon. Tr~ ~•er IS •XACTA 12·5) POld Jf7S50 $2 ll'ICK MX (4 2·6·4·t·2l POld 11,11240 to Si wlnnl"ll llck•h (lour l'lorlMI Cerrvov.,. ooOI 1,.,o.3-11 llGMTH •ACI. t 1116 milts SkVWllll• (PltlCn ) 610 N~t•lole't S••r !Toro> Eoldeurui 1~11...-1 Tlme t 40 4/S .Alto ran a.,. Minimum, First Hormtotl, DlegNvlll\erd, Scl'llllar, L•ll Commend, llluo R•ror AKtn\lon. Padua. Prlvnatlc, EncOIUre No scretef>tl NINTH •ACI 1 t 16 l'l'lflH Matt• Cewllon (P1t1Cev l Neulr•t PlaY.,. <McCerronl ~evotu1lonar11 (McH•r11u.) Tlmt' l •? 2/S Ito 400 l OO 480 )20 ao Alto r•!I COid !lied Outtv Fo<got TPle fl•ne. Mell• Nev•lo Peoui. Ollmo>C ll>ngo E,,,_• lt'ICY I' uncl Screla.oc:t ~rll; In Tiie S'v Eoo !luck. Ton'! U eXACTA <•·21 oeld '6100 12 U.TI OOUILI (11 41 0<110 12460 Alltrldence 1' 631 MulUll Hendlt' u 171 U 2 Hollypark • racing results SUNOA Y'S Rl!SUL TS <lr11 et SJ-NIM ..-11emerM l'Meftn91 "llST •ACI . 150 verdl Miu lted Adair (ltuhl Miu Merle l!l'f\eO (Hero T•&tv Orlvor <DldetlCl<\efll Time 11 n 1100 610 )00 4 00 210 260 Alto ren Alhmtnle, llorvl• lleHOrtna llOlere Jet, Peullne l rod11. Tructillrto lluo kt•IC!led H•• To Hu\tle 12 I XACTA lt·l l POIO W .. O SICOttO •ACI. )JO nrcn T .A Advent-(Lec.ktvl 11 IO 1 IO UO Oont Sodtt Me Now <CrH-l 11 60 11 10 Tiie Double E eote IG•rcle) J 60 Time 1U7 AIM> ren E••Y Meo•I•-. Miu J•O•~' DOii. OCvrriDlc Pin. GIQolln J..,nv EHv Go Exlr• True Wlncl No tenlchn u l!XACT" I' 4> D••d un 10 THlllO •ACI l'° n rd1 Tiie LOll ... 11 (Wl\ltt l Juon Sen• Me fCardOH l Mt Mealcen Clleroe <G•rcl•I Time 11 OI ''° l lO UO S10 lOO 210 Alto re11 Go•n SlrH~'" Pr"li90US Pat P•tnteo HOime tm A Live Ont E••• Go Extre Tru. w 1nc:t No 1cra1c11e1 n I XACTA (1·71 peld 17160 '°""™ •ACI lSO verdt SoundMltlonoi (H~ll ltlcn 11 llllu ICreaoen Yuoo llov (Lewlll Tlrne 1140 120 S60 HO •oo no uo AIM> ran Ml•tr•" Kalt Jutte• Uncte 9ob, TeP111>41rH Wr•t111ltr C•M A lllct°'l' &Id ()! A1 ure A Zllf'e lluv No terelCM\ ~•P"TH •Ace. t00 Y•ro, CM GM 8uo (Gercle) Sl'lltofl ltet> <Dlderlck \efll Soul OI An Oldie <PauOnel Time 2033 410 210 2 '° 2IO Jto , '° Alto r•n Mount Herlt•oe ~a Como Oroo.... Ptlt No Kr•ICMt '2 l!XACTA 16·41 oe•O UOtiO SIXTH RACI. )SO nrdt So••tlon Sml111 <Gercle l 440 u o ''° no ''° 2 '° ~rew•I< Wine• (LK"-evl Somoklnoe Wre,,.._ <Dlderlck\efl) Time 113' AIM> r•n SlleM trllll Lun.ov Toe> T,_ Mee• We>n(Wr land L• Vie Et1 lilow. Slorre R8Qutil, LM lrown Hortt, kulrll krattlled Paltd\itno, Lovin Uncle ltOIO, ltovel Een Deel, lo1 lllo ltewerd n IXACTA (6 101 oeld 11) '° HYINTH •ACI . a Yerdt Summlno <TrHtvrel 46 .o 11 jO 7 '° Oii Time Sun...-!LKlleYl 10 .0 4 40 C• Souele 0..t (CrMOll') ) to Tlrno 20.52. AIW r•n Doc For Olamonctt, Hlvl'l COrevlfy, Slntfl lttllOnOI Tl'le IUltt Trio PelnteCI Dew t Clllet ltt&ICltftl • No teretcr.t U IXAC'TA (J 11 N ici 0 1) to llGNTM •AC•. )50 HfCh Sluleclou1 <CerCloiel Dll90!! Llke1* <Werdl Mlct\Olob LedV (CilfCle) TllM 1131 1210 u o 6 20 "'° .... lalO "''° re11 Tltne For llelh. Miu •"9¥ Oo LuCkY C11tt ••r. Silr• To Fite, Doll~ $11ttltv, Kiin ,.n t IOI NO lCl'et~ U IXAC'TA It 11 Pl lcl t 1$1.0 NtllfTM •AC• 400 Y•rd\ 01 \t\l11t Toro <L«lltvl Mllld 0-IG.vcle1 AMIM T-r-tHMll Tl,.,,. JO 16 AttO ran Netlvt Scowl, OM S.nv Cr.or" kte l(lled Soflotor loot t! IXACTA U 0 oelcl MUO n l"tCX MX 11·6·6-l-t-J or 5> Miii ueo JO 10 SJ •lnnino tlctl.i' <llYO Wa.tl c.,.,...._"" '" 15?6' TINTH "-'Cl . HO 11.,d, ~ev...oon IOercl1> ~,,...,., Stne'1'tlne <Cre•-1 L•leton• Ceu <-=ltu9roel Ttme 11 n aooo 12 oo 6• •20 >• ,,. Atw rM1., M!IWO 11111111, Ima ~ ,,,. \IK'I\ Solu!lon, Cletlber•lten MoM, ...,... .Al'Mrl. Sl'rlO AM Jllftt, Tllltti I~ HO W alOW. 0 I XACTA 110 t 1 H ld t l1t .. All~I 6 ... 1 Muru.t He11 StlO 111 ' ANGELS ••• From Bl After Bo~ Boone liaaJed. Dick Schofield lin&led on a fut-and-nan play, but"* thrown out atlOCOCld by Evans. "We challeoacd the btst rilb• fielder in the American Ltaaue " aid Mauch. "Tbey would have' bcco betlet pmblet with two out (anstcad of !!One each time), but l like them to do1L" Alter Gary P~ttis doubled home Boone, ht was thrown out 1tealina third u Ruppen Jones 1truck out. Petti• Grich and Doua OeCincn returned the favor u the~ combined to nail Rey Quinones at thard t.ryina to stretch a double into a triple m the fifth. Pettis had the ball ao over b.11 h~d.and out ofhia &love, but Sunoo didn t have to pay for the miatake. In the bonom half of the sixth. Boone doubled with one out, bu~ with two out, tryina to score on PettiJ smgle, Jam Rice's throw beat him by sill feet The senes of bue-runnina mi.cues was topped off an the ei&)\th. Boston bad Wade ~at ICCOnd (walk) and Rice at fim (sanaJe) with one out. With Mike Gn:enwcll at the plate, rchever Donnie Moore threw a patch that eluded Boone. Boone came up throwina. but while Bogs had decided to stay 1n place, Rice was headed toward him and second base. Boone threw to Joyner, who, when he saw Boas ta.kc off for third, in tum threw to OCCinccs to get Boaas. * ANO•L MOTH -With Ill• llMI of MCond In lht MCOnd !Mine, Dlcll ~ 1111• now stolen 14 •lr•'9111 baMt "'""°"' belne cauent • • ' Syndey's cro•O bfOUOht lht ttv.,...pme 101a1 aHltl Botton 10 1 ... 224, most -for • 111< .... .. ,,.. ..... •I Anaheim Sltdlum, Tha previous !>ell <l ... 0101 was ... Intl bnM• City . ltellevw Tarry ...... cont'-t IO lntlll he Is r..ov to Plldl, but me~ tOfttS-to di...,.. "I tOIO 11\am I WU raeov lo ~ .... ,.,..,. ... id Forster Whan wi. ht boa raadv? "MtllfallV -..... ,.,-" ..... Id Maneow 0.. Me.c:tL ··""vslcalv -10 a.vs from Vftlerdav. or mor• He'I ~ ,.,,_ he can, not Whtll ha wani. to" Pitch« Rlfl R911'1Mk*, ""'° delf'Nd ht ••• • melor ~ ollc:tler befoo'a t>elnt cMmotecl to EdmOnton Tueso.". didn't .no. !Ml S.llKO.V In hit first 1lart for lht Tr-• In 7'h IM!net, Ila •H rodlecl tor lS "'" 9NI nine Mrnecl runa In . 10-7 IOU 10 Tuct«i A1 •llP«led. lht lted So• acilvatao c.nter lltlder Tlfl'f Almas lalt S.fUrdav ano II ••• LA~ T.,...., .ant to ,._,.,,Udlel, llOI Foun· fain Vattr; Hleh Pf0duc1 IC.wt ........ Both Md mtfllloned •s POUIOlv Miii OUI lo makt room for Armu Boeton•e Rey Qutnonee awalta call after being taaecf by Angel thlnl bueman Doq • • Dlllr .......... .., o..tll ........ DeClncee. Qu.lnonee. who wu trylna to atretch a double, wu called out on die play. Or1nge COMt DAtl Y PtLOT~. J4llt 21, 1IM • AMERICAN LEAGUE • • • rroaaa hit hittias ttrea1t '° 11 ~ Car1tt ICok teCOnd and acomt from then law in the iDAiJl,a wbal Tdal Q_r11 ~ Pete O'Brien droppeff a ptCkoff auempt. The lndiam IC06'eid i.D lh8 third on a 1tnalc1 a ltOleo bue and Mel Hall's RBl11nale. and lidded two runt fourth on a doub&c bY Bren Butler. They added one iA the tutb on an RBI linaJe by Julio Franco and two more in the seventh. Vaden t, TwtM 1: At Yankee Stadium, New York·1 Ron Guidry, S-8, cielebrated hit return from the disabled htt by atrikig out nine Minnesota batten in f'ivc snninas, incJudina the first five he faced 10 spark the Y anbet, Dave Ri&hetti, who got has 23rd save, and Aod Scurry, combined to add four more strilceouts in add1lJon to reunna the last 11 Twio, . Oaudell Washington's two-run bomeroffBcrt Blylevcn. 9-10, brok.e a J-1 lJC ID the fifth. The Twins Ud beaten New York on Friday and Saturday, puttioa totttbet comecutive victories for the fim time this month R.yala 5, Ttaen 4: At T1acr Stadium, Steve Balboni singled an Willie Wilson with rwo outs an the top of the ninth innina as Kan~• City's Cy Youna Award wanner Bret Saberbagcn won in has first rehef appearance since 1984. Willie Hernandez, 6-5, walked Wilson with one out. Georac Brett flied out, but Jorge Ona singled Wilson to second and Balboni fol- lowed with bloop to center field, which Chet Lemon dived for. but couldn't catch. Brewers I , Mari.Den 1: M1l- ~ukcc's Tim Leary pitched a ~ven­ hmcr over etght innings, and 8111 Schroeder hit a two-run homer to cap a six-run third inning as the Brewers won 1n Seattle. Leary, 7-10, snapped a personal five-pme loStng streak datm1 back to June 20. A't 1, Bl11e Jays t: In Oakbnd, Alfredo Griffin walked with the bases loaded and two out 1n the 15th inning, bringin~ Jerry Willard home with the run which gave the A ·s their seventh consecu11vc victory * ort.ala 11, ....... CM<Ato ~,.... .,.... .,. ••a• ,,.....,_ ,,,, , • • • l.Mvlf .. 1 J • 2 I I I L¥Md 7 t I I .......... ., , ... .... .... ,.,. 4 I J t T,.._. t• t a a 4 .,,, ....... .,,. •••.• o.w.... .. •• .... ~-.,,, ,,,. ....,, 111) I I 0 I ow.i.u 4 1 I I .• 1. J t I I .,,., T.- • H '"' sc.. ...... ~ ••Jtt-t lellrMr't Ht .. •-It Game WIMlne 1t11 -L.VM no> ~~ D" .. lllmott t. LC»-Clllc:ato I, leltlmore ,, 29 Denwttri', Slwata, LVM, SNIO'I H•-T,..,. m. ""'" ,,, S.--CaftNIOM (41) QIQell OotlOllL,7·11 0.,,,..... '"'" .......... . " ...... Jl-J ' 1 1 ' , J ,_, 7 4 .. J J 1 0 0 0 • • Mc:Gr..., W,7 10 6 l·l 7 2 2 2 ..... ,,,_,,,,,, Unwtr• .._, ~-"ht, M9rr11, S.CCIM, Hendrv; T'l*d, ~ T-7;,M. A-'11.l'J y .... t,..., MIMN•IOTA dW Vo.IC ~c:f GtoatllJb H,_.._ """"'""' Laullll9I' c WaV1tn dh Hatcner II Lmbrdl 2D GatMU 5orneitY" T .... •rti• J 0 0. •• , 0 4 ••• 4 0. 0 , • 0 0 J 0 0 0 , 1 2 1 J. 0. 2 0 0 0 ' 0 0 0 ., .... J 1 ' • 4 1 I 2 ..... J I I I , • I 0 20•• ) 0 0. 1 1 • 0 iota I 0 1 I 0000 ... , H aaa N lO ~ ...... llV1r+'M L,f· 10 I 4 ' MewYwtl <WldNW,S-1 S l I 1 I f kurrv , I 0 0 0 ,, ltlohettt $,%) 2 0 0 • 0 , HI P-WlnfltlO D\I 9 1vte\ltft. WP .,....._, Umolr.,......_, IC.alMf. F'"I, Scoff, Sec· ono ..... mo Tll~d. 8'WJn911 T-2 lf A-l0,312 * • ..,.. s,.,..... KANSAI CITY ~ Wllltallr 2D Collns 11 ~r1 c;,ucodfl Tramt dh O.EvnalD COlel:Jb Lowrvc Lemon Cf 9roelllnt " 9rormPh .. , .... • 1 l • 2 1 I 0 l I I 1 2 0 0 0 10 00 300 1 3 0 0 , ) 0, 1 • 0 0 0 2 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 Major League hitting, pitching statistics LSmlllllf WlllOllCf lrtll )D 0r1 • ., 9al0onl ID l(l119try r1 MOtle\lrl Quirt< c Sunooro c AS.lair U Mcltu pn Prvoru 8 lencln 2D Whll• 2D T.,.._ wr11• s 0 2 0 • 2 l 0 4 2 I 1 s 0 1 0 • 0 J 2 J 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 l 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 I 0 I 1 1 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 , 0 q 0 JI 511 S T .... se..w.,... 27 • 4 4 ~s Otv . -IG 111-S ~ •1• ..... American LU/{Ue (~ .. ,,..,..~) TIAMIATTING Toronto f Yor~ YNnd ton Tt11H 9ailfmort Detroit Mlnnt'lOlt ~ Mllw•Ull.te SM111t Ott111ano l(an .. sCltv Clllcaoo Al It H Hit ltll ~ct ,.., S11 9'3 llS 4'9 271 llse s11 m tn -. 111 l204 4'S 111 90 03 27S 11so 4St 111 11 431 113 3303 43S 174 103 40I 2'S 314' 43S 1st 103 409 264 311 I 4SS 15' 112 426 2'2 m 1 4S7 Ml llO 434 2'2 121' 471 .. " ... ·* 32" ,,. 137 '° 37) 260 m • •n 153 102 .,.. 2s1 l177 443 U. 9' 411 2SS ll02 • no 76 lO 241 llM m 790 71 397 241 tNOtVIOUAL IATTIHG 9oo9• 9111 Malllt191y NY Pucaett Min ltlce 81n Ealler NY Flttther r., Yount Mii 9e11 Tor F9f'nnc:t1 Tor Je...-A"9911 Cartar Cit WardTtx 9alnu Cni Bernzrd Cit 9en!Quez 911 IU!*tn 911 Grifin NY ()ollvle Mii LYM 9 11 9ar1lel0 Tor COillnt Ott Hrl>tll Min MHaH Cit Or•• Kan Lansford 0.k HHltV NY Mut:r•v 8 11 S""h 811 8arrell 81n AOevlt Su Gercl• Tor Griffin 0.1< Oflr~ Tu Franco Cit Trtal>l4 Sff OHi• O.k lttitnOlOll NV Lacv flll Sveum Mil JOfln'°'1 Tor 9r•ll K•n Colft Ott (I 7Ut mere at bets) Al R H HR II~ ~ct 331 60 119 S 4S l60 41) " ,,, " 11 341 414 71 137 :10 SS .331 ,.. S7 121 ' " J31 :m o 101 • ., JJO JCXJ Sl " 2 2• :m l01 • 97 J n 321 311 u 114 n n 320 410 60 131 • 31 :no )11 St 121 21 74 .lll 369 60 "' 16 6S 314 2'S 4'2 91 4 J9 lOI US S3 I 11 13 S9 301 J32 .. 102 I 40 l07 210 26 64 4 II 305 3S7 ~ 109 IS SS lOS '" l3 '° ' 26 l03 231 n n J 31 l03 262 .. 79 ,, so J02 :M>4 " 109 2s n m 266 33 79 I 19 297 J31 " .. 21 4S ,.. 260 •S n 11 ~ m 106 n •1 s 11 m 353 41 ICM 10 40 2'S 117 23 SS ' 2' 294 119 ll IS 11 S2 294 194 2• ~ 10 40 m 380 SS l 11 2 1t m 2'6 43 11 12 ., 2t9 ,,. .. " ) 34 ,.. )44 ., " 2 ,, ,.. J33 4' 9' 12 S2 211 l60 4S 103 4 34 28' 294 47 84 IS ~ 28' 190 11 ~ 2 IS 214 J79 ., 101 11 SJ m 331 SS 9S I ll 211 211 2S " • 17 1IO ,,, 33 64 11 43 279 291 47 ti • '7 278 m 36 11 11 •9 211 Skywalker races to win DEL MAR -Skywalker recorded ar 1mprcss1ve victory Su nday 1n the featured S 106,300 San Diego Handi- cap before 26,637 racing fans. Gtven a finely-Judged nde by JOCke) Laffit Pincay, Jr , Skywalker, despite breaking from the outside of a 1.Mlorsc field , was able to stalk the pacescuers un11l the stretch Jn the last eighth, he accelerated not1ccabl) to draw out and win by slightly more than a length <ikywalkcr. who tamed 121 pounds tn the mile and one-sixteenth event, ran the mile and one-s1xt~nth in 1·41 4/S. four-fifths of a second slower than the track rtcord set by Windy Sands 1n the 196 2 San Dieao Handicap. Nostalaia's Star. retumtn& to ac- tion after a five-month lay-ofT. clo~d stronaJy to be 'l«ond 1n a fine effort, a half-lenath 1n front of Ep1daurus. The latter carved ouut fast fracttonson the lead under 8111 Shoemaker and wn'l almost a lenJth an fron1 of fourth place Bart M1n1mum at the wire SkywaJker. trained hy Mi chael Wh1tt1naham. camtd 1 pmc of S6S.3SO with h" fifth win an dozen career efToru The Kcntucl y-brt'd j()n of Relaunch and Bold Cap11 ve now hu earned SS82.200 As the favontc, Slr.ywtlker paid $6.20. $4 00 and Sl.00 Nostal11a·~ Star, who c.amcd 118 pounds 1ndud- 1n1 JOCkcy Fernando Toro, rctumcd $4 00 and S l 60, wh1lr t:p1daurus. 1n 11 I I l, paid SS 20 10 ~how JecoDv Cle P8raOltv See .t.rrna1 81,, 09wnlrll .,,.... Gentne< Mii Whitt Ken 8runan11<v Min G ll>\Oll Ott MOlt\Su Mulllnlks Tor PgtrulO NY PrewvSu 9rOOI<••" 0.1 Tal>lef Cle 88oni1._ Cl'I OHtdM>tl See Owtn Su JaCllMft~ LSmlln IC.an WMaktr Ott GWell<er Cn1 Gedmn 8"' MO\tOy Tor GHlll Mln LAParlsl'I To McOwell Tt• UC>Snew Tor Law K•n 8oc,,tt Oek Can1ecoOek tncvoll• Tu Smallev Mtn McRHKa~ CQ09tr Mii 8l,,Mln Herl>Oon Ott OwEvnl Bs,, LNParlstl Oet lemon Ott Pnllllps Oak ltendle>ll NY Alla nlon Cle Wll'°'1 Kan 8utltr Cit MOavlsOtk Gull•n c111 ltl""Mll W•oons Bii 8uc11.ner B"' 9ue<:lllt Tt• Hu•ell Clll W1"itftl.,.I Ca netlOtl C Ill O•Evans Oe! Lomt>rdul Mon Savior 8ln ........... Tremm" 0.1 .-wtA11911• T011tson C111 Wlnfleld NY G•oneMln O.Clflcet ... , PlltlOS SH 347 4S 'H 11 lOO " 13 1 193 11 S3 4 J10St•11 m 33 n • 353 " 97 13 313 SO IOS II 711 d 62 IS 113 1' Sf I , .. 41 13 11 31' S3 " 73 313 S7 ICM 19 in 2S .. 1 252 31 "' 4 ™ 11 ~ 2 294 .. 79 13 324 43 ., 0 2Sl ,. .. ' 26S 47 11 S 3SS S. ts 12 1se 34 ., 11 111 2S 7S 1 317 S4 102 14 3S7 S7 9S 21 241 34 64 IS 349 .. 93 13 )43 " 9i 3 24' JS •S I 147 )9 6S s 367 S3 t6 23 3,i .s .. 16 296 31 IS 16 llO IS 47 4 312 29 II 1 216 34 S6 6 191 23 SI 4 334 SI 16 13 J23 SJ 13 22 730 20 S9 3 311 " .. s l3I .. 11 I 103 22 S2 I m so 100 s 331 S7 84 '1 m •1 14 11 J l4 )9 79 '1 l4' •S 17 6 "91160 0 311 43 97 10 211 34 n 13 ,., )1 " I 197 II .. 1 J06 SI 76 7 716 4' 11 16 ,,. l7 " 7 JS7 St 17 17 J14 .. IO 1 340 .. 14 , 241S16111 2SJ 3' 67 l 316 S7 to IS 291 29 71 • JO!l..:W 7l 10 17t~2 43 IS S6 271 ,. 271 19 27S Sl .?1S 21 27S SS 27S S2 214 •S 273 76 27' " 272 s. 2n " 2n 11 ·271 n no 26 269 ., ,., )0 269 » .24t ,, 261 ll '" ., 161 JI 261 SJ 267 60 26' SS 76' 34 266 31 '6S ll 264 ?• 263 IO 20 Sl '6'1 40 761 29 261 S2 160 lO 2St 11 2S9 63 1S7 61 7S7 74 2S7 .. 257 JS 257 7S 25' 30 2S. 77 2S3 34 2S3 34 ?S'l lO 2SI II 251 SS 2SO 31 ?SO 2S 2SO 1' ,., 71 2 .. 47 , .. 1S , .. " 147 )1 >47 lS 747 l1 244 ?I 10 62 20 21 24' 49 'Ml JS 742 AS•lazar K911 M•Yovno 9 11 TllOrntonClt Halclltr Mii' ScMfltN "'"""' Wlllll Tor ltlt>onl "•" OtmPMY 811 w:11te-SOt1 Teit lttVnolOl Sta Oe9f' Mii K1tt1tClll Wvnt9arNY Sonot>ero Kan --A"9911 Fis~ Cll• Sneitlt' 911 K•nQ~nO.i. G TllOrnal Mot 1261054 0 2se )0 61 s m 43 69 u 194 21 45 0 2S1 J9 SI 1 11431 52 9 )S4 l6 81 20 274 29 SI 11 ltl 19 43 0 2.U 1' SA O 2S. )9 5o6 17 112 J3 60 16 113 11 )9 1 261 11 S6 4 2'l l1 SS l 297 31 62 7 240 33 so 6 l4A •2 11 n 1'9 26 31 ,, I• m 30 234 SO 23S t• m a .no 30 130 s. m 13 211 u ns 16 211 " no " 213 19 2J3 2S 210 lO ., 4S 109 ?I '°' 63 'XII; 19 201 TeAM~CHING Mllwtvk" t<an~1 C1v Botton 8elll,._t Oetroll Ntw Yor11, Ttxa1 .... Oetdand CltYtl•nd Cl>IC•OO Toronlo Sealllt Mlnn~\0141 ERA H Ell ff SO SM> SA 311 II• 3S. 320 ~2 1 IS 3 14 IA6 370 214 ~ 1 II 316 144 364 281 610 3 16 l" 113 3n 101 S6I • Jt HM l20 J8,f 361 S4A 6 1'1 4 11 ... ot04 JlO S1I • )0 4 19 111 404 •SJ 619 4 21 U I llll 4'11 306 56 I 6 21 4 37 809 418 3911 S74 l 21 • ll 169 401 JS. 473 • 21 • 40 ass 41s m 46S 3 n 44911 441 m 619 6 7S 4 Ii 1000 464 )56 SJ4 I II s 10 96 1 4IO 301 sn '1 IS tHOtlllOUAL ~ITCHING !t., mer• dKlsleml E1C11norn Tor Farr Ka" Clemens 9,,, HIOU9f'a Mii MW•lllems To Oar win Mii K1119 Ott ~ ... o. ... W1"A"99f1 Huor B111 Hurls Tt • McC•a*• A119eis H9f't1t l>d1 0.t Al91'lell• NY .t.ITOuiar Oa~ MoHls Oet A.smus" NV Houut. Tu P"ec Mot o ... ,e11 MVoun9 Su CendtOll Ctt Tewk1t>rv NY Ntllon C1>1 8 ovd 8sn IP H lfl SO W L EllA 84 S9 24 91 7 l 2 03 79 SI 29 tl 7 I 106 162 105 39 161 17 2 2 so ISl 132 49 130 11 1 2 ,. S4 42 JS ~ 1 2 211 108 'I() 21 66 s 6 113 11 63 40 S6 1 2 2 es 67 S6 19 )8 1 2 2 94 160140 47 l>O f 1 lOl '3 78 23 91 S 4 l OS 6' 73 30 59 4 I ) IS ISi 12' SS t)t 11 ' l 17 S9 62 11 SJ S 4 ) 20 SI SA 74 46 1 4 J 16 SJ 47 71 76 6 7 J lO I~ 142 46 14~ II 6 ))0 I) I 81 S4 9) 12 ' l lO no 84 ., 69 ' s J J 1 49 u II 17 5 6 J 49 lllA I I! )'1 68 6 I ) ~ 11 1l 11 S. 1 lSS 1)9 I)) 67 103 9 ) 57 9Jlll 18 l• 6 3S9 11 19 19 .. s 361 1?9 177 10 10 11 ) 11 OLYMPIC FESTIVAL • • • From Bl U.S. Champ1onsh1ps in Fehruary Bowman had 2.8 factoral placcmcnt'i afier a strong freest yle program an which he placed first with all '>even 1udges ''This was a personal thtng for me to gel back on my feet alter hurting my leg and having several other m1unes:· Bowman 'iald ··1t was important to know that no matter what obstacles I might face rll ~ able to overcome them ·· Jill Trenary. 17 of ( olorado pnngs, won the women's title with a whd final program The I Q85 na- tional Junior champion beat the ·s6 Junior queen. \ind~ Boru of Tanana The Scybolds, who were a disap- pointing third 1n the U S Cham- p1onsh1ps earlier this year, skated a clean, light program. They were first with all seven judges and finished with 1.4 factoral placements "We've tned a new Iona program and have a few more elements we have to put 1n," Natalie said.·· But we don't c~pcct to change anythma. I don't think you can skate an~ tlcucr a1 1h1s time of year " Blair. who won five aold medal'\ last )Car, captured her third and fourth of this compct1t1on when 'lhc won the women's I 000 mettrs and '!kilted -on the Nonh'~ v1ctonou~ 1.000-meter relay 1eam "l really wasn·11ware of the med I\ record until the awards ceremony last n1aht," ~1d Blair. 22. C hampa1an. Ill . who took the 500 and I ,000 race'I on Saiurdly "Then 1 read ahout 1t tn the newspaper"\ tht~ mom1na and aficr I won the fim aold toda~ I wa~ interviewed h, Fc;rN Ry the time thr relay came around I wa\ vcf\. ow1rr I of the record" Spccdskater (1lnna BugaL k1 wun nine gold' and g) mnast Kdh Gar- mon collected IS medals o\crall (1am!>on 1\ <:ompc11ng here B1lh Asmu~ of Lake' 1llc. \if1nn and SC01t Jaffe of Le\lngton \fas!.. won their set0nd gold medals and I '-\ear-old J uhc Kole of Forres I H 111 Md., Kole became the \oungest compt>tttor to cam a gold medal rn Festival sw1mm1ng. She took the 4CX}. meter freest} le The previous )Oungc't winner \aod\ Summer Sander~ of Ro-.c"tlle. who won the 200 intcrm<'d1ate 1nd1"1dual medley on Saturda> Asmus added the 100 frt-c'l >k 10 his 50 free victory. and Jaffe captured the 400 ind1v1dual medic} af\cr wrnn1ng the WO brcaststrokc on Saturday U.S, amateur 147-pound cham· pion Nick kakoum of St l.ou1\ stopped Robtn Montoya. Wc,t Jor- dan, Utah at I 28 of the th ml round 10 h1ahliaht tht" hoxmg MefoJy Wong took the gold mc<.lal 1n the women'\ 7().k1lomt-tc1 lV<.'hng road race Wong, 2S of Davi!> had competed tn prcl1m1nal) round, of the women·s ~pnnl\ until pa'>t m1d- n1ah1 the pre\f10u'i da\ Thrtt rcstivul rt'COrd'> wcte ~t 1n shoouna Na11onal c hamp1o n Ekn \monette of R.dtord, Va e~tah h'>h<'d A mark for men·., a1r pt'>tol wtth S 7Q pc')1nt\ out of()()(> Lance Lu101T of C Cllorodo Spnn~. hit for 380 of , pon1blc 400 point~ 1n the 10-mclcr runnina p,ame t.&rJCl ~hoot n... '"'an11 W1pn nf Ton 8("nn1na. (1l\ ~•a tC'(Md wtth WO pc11nl\ 111 ~rn the wnmrn 'air ntlr 1 Btact< K•n Ht•lonM1n Clancv Tor OJec111on Ken Fle naoan 811 C:Vouno Oel>. .t.nen Cn1 Henke Tor ~ '" °"' c,. es1an1tv 9sn Lao<>•rd IC•" L~Ornot Ker Olxon fln Noevtl Mtl coo.root o.~ Guzman ln C.uldrv NY 8enlo.nt•O Ken 8o«11<:11,tr 811 S.evtr llll MalOll Tt• eann.,,.., c111 hrrttt O.• Correa Tea S•H9f's 8sn Tanan• Ot• ~t>r,,un Ken JNltkro NV C.uDltit Kan ltuoO•k Aleu11or Tor l an1111011 !Ml• K•v Tor Mor11an S.a Sutten A'"'91s JOavll Cl>I Blvlevtn Mo" PNlellro ''' F""er NV 8alles Cle MMoore See Scllutit Cit Wt11manM1I llloie M111 McGreor 811 Petrv Ot! L••rv M I Cowin C" N10otr8ll' P•unk 0.• Smunwri ""'" 8rown es~ ~•aton Ot • WllCO> See POl"luOa M ir Jemes '" ~11•1> Tor LaPom1 Ot• 001'°'1 Cn BW111 Te, LnQtro Oe• 10 67 I 16 107 121 117 .. ,, ICM 106 99 93 108 " SJ 3' ll7 174 SS '4 1)2 1)6 1)8 140 1?1 101 11' 134 '2 91 12S 142 107 121 .. 60 139 11S IOS IOJ 93 91 73 ,. 137 171 l?J IOI 63 " llS 119 126 1)0 101 ,03 .. ,. 116 99 111 110 13' 132 121 135 114 IS I 117 Ill IOS 1 lS I St 167 13116'1 S9 64 Sl St 161 117 IO '4 129 13S 149 ISi 113 Ill 6S 70 119 140 13 6S 91 106 15 ~ ltS 1'7 v n IO 'IO S6 14 60 66 ~ 60 1111'9 "' I\ I 16 Ill 0) 19 \S 69 21 ... s 371 49494 9)71 " 79 11 s ) ,. J9 S. 6 6 J IS 43 SS S 6 l IO n s. 1 6 lll l6 SJ71l91 26 70 1 ) ) 93 31 6011 1 394 IS JI S 1 39S )1 ... 9 )96 41 S7 9 6 l9t S7 101 9 I 4 02 607'9••02 3'43Sl•03 '6 71 I 10 4 03 23 1' 4 I 4 OS 215'44 408 42 10. lJ s • Of JS 49 • I 4 10 395863 416 ,. J3 s , • 17 626191 4 20 n 113 6 • • 2• l'131 3S 42' .. 63 •• .,, ,. 16 s 10 430 43418604 4A 51 4 S 4 3S " 125 ••• 36 10645 44)8 15 119 9 6 449 47 ., 9 6 452 S1 S8 110 4 S6 l4 14 I 1 Ul SI ~ 4 S 4 10 JS 113 9 9 471 635079 411 27 3' • s • 13 21 11 1 ' • 10 SS 14 6 10 0 1 Jl l044H7 77SOJ l4 90 SJ 111 10 I 4 90 JS S6 6 10 • '2 l0374S 496 l6 7S 6 10 • 9' tl 60 S 4 S03 2S 4 4 1 SI 60 60 2 6 s 14 29 '3 I 9 SIS ?S J1 4 4 S 34 11 34 4 6 s 42 ,. 26 0 • s so l I 3S 7 I S SI 2130 44 S70 SS 7S 2 10 S 7 l l7l4J 6 S72 47 0 7 10 Sl4 9l 9S ' o 6 61 18 30 I 10 1 )0 Nadonal League f ThrOlltf\ l'rlde\1'1 Gamft I TIE.t.M aATTIHG New Vor- San Fra 11<•lCo Monlrt•I Clllcaoo .t.llanl• S.n 01990 o.d9tt't Hgy1lon PlllledtlP'11ft Pillll>urg" Clnc1nne1 SI LOY•S .t.I It H Hiil 11111 ~ct JISI 4~ 131 9'1 421 264 l11l 4l6 IS 1 69 l9S 260 lll S l 9o llS IS J76 256 Ill? 401 113 IS J7S 2SS 1111 l7I IOS 17 3S2 2S. 1244 379 172 .. 361 2SJ U47 J7' 117 IO llO 2S1 1141 3'7 I II 7S 35' 2SO 1733 439 IOS t'1 41' 24' )102 4G3 79S 61 371 24 l1J7 197 t()l 11 )64 24 JllS 144 776 33 317 232 INOllllOUAL BATTING 1 IH ., more et b9t\I llrooki Mon llet~men NV Gwvnn SO CBrownV Ovkatre NY Raines Mot> Sa•~· Bau Hin EOavlt C•n OOtfltltllAt ATnome1 Al Have\ p,,, WaN•nQ Hll' ltltt\lldl Ptl Mu11hrv Chi COavls SF Para« Con KHernlldr N v Morttano "" OSmllh Stl W .. ml Oe41eWs kllmlOI Phi Rav Pit Sa ndl>tro Cl'I• G••-SF KnloM NY Slr•wDrY NY Laonard SF w,,n,,. \0 kltt(le~\ WtD\lt r Mon MWlllO" NY M Uf0'1V All ~~~·" GOa v' Min Gar"tr Mtn Ootan Htn • otfl<-t ""' °"", 10" c ,, Fll1-•ld MO#' ,.,.~,,...v ~o It TllOO\tWI \F' Mc•tv'<fs 'I) l r n m P•t OawM>11 Mon e>rwa11. Pt• MIOl!do ~" ~muel '""' ""'*'~' Cr11r Min Wallach Mon ...... ...,v \0 L•t!drtv• ~ AB It H Hiii ltll ~ct 100 .. 101 u ~ lJ7 n1 41 76 O 17 lH 111 6) 174 10 43 l31 1'6 40 ,. 1 )9 lll 7)9 0 ,. \ 1' 331 )SO S7 116 1 JI 331 :169 Sl 110 \ 1' .ns }5' 49 110 u 41 )Of no ~ ., is 37 JOf 29S ll 90 S JS 30S 111 2'1 SS 6 73 304 nJ St 101 1 s2 lOl 709 l1 "1 • l2 )OJ ,.. SJ 90 9 J7 301 711 lO 6~ 7 IS 191 J11 •• •l • s. m Hs ~ 10' n 11 ,,, )U \1 t7 1 40 2'0 )4S 41 100 1 SI 2'0 '01 l'I .. o JJ m llllt u 1 201'0 lH ~ 97 n 14 290 lll l8•• l .. ,.. 172 )'I 101 10 •• ,.. 119 11 ~ 1 IS 216 m lS 11 9 0 114 70 ~ IO I• SJ 2tJ n1 " •s • '' m "' ,. s~ \ ,. n2 171 It M 1 II •1 l1• '' '1 \ 11 2t1 1114 ,, \7 ~ 16 2'0 "' ~ ., 14 'II 211 lll 4) 16 17 \6 ?11 ~ ~ 100 71 67 ,1S )It )7 to I 14 274 .., w .. ~ 14 1tJ lf4 21 \J 4 H 273 Ul U t7 10 41 ,17 101 XI '' ' lt 7'1 714 ll )I I 10 211 ))2 0 tO • )J 711 )Jl .. tO I) .. 110 2'4 .. ,. 11 41 ,.. )\J H .. 14 26f 711 •l 7) 1 11 )6t 116 " 0 6 16 ,,, lJO SI It I M 241 ,.. " .. " 44 "" 111 1~ I) 1 14 1~1 llA 40 I' \1 1t.l ~I I) 1\ I )6 1•1 ,,, ,. 67 • :rt ,., WClark SF V.nSIVkt SIL 8el1Cln Clttnolcls Htn Conctoeon c1n 0..19" Cln TPtt1e Pit 801a1 Cin JOevls Cnl ManMI~ Hate...., Hin Mcc.MStL Gaterr-~ Mlldedr o.-n Ovrtlam en Carl9f' NY Mot rt\Otl Po Coltman SIL Marlllltl so JoRu~ Pr!; Thon Hin Huooaro All 9eftlard Pll e rentv SF JClarl< SIL Fo\19" NV GWll1on Piii GaMllnws Cn1 Mot...OAll Garvtv SO Urlt>t SF Htrr SIL M9rown Pit Jtlll Pnl Mll11tr Ctn Ttmoltln SO HarP9f'Atl ltamlrti All Duftcafl~ Nttllft SO Pnottn StL Bonds Pll 8rodr~ ltoH C•n Law MtJ<I VlrQol A" Htetn StL S.ntana NV 197 )2 so ' m ?6 '° 6 lll 3' 10 1 190 21 .. • 270 )6 " 7 31' 27 11 s 301 :ie n 1 260 21 .. 4 321 3e &l 13 mo 74 ta 1" 26 SO I )70 •• tl • no 19 SS I 100 17 11 s 297 JS 74 10 l07 S6 76 16 )02 1' 14 11 34' SJ IS 0 llO ,, .,. s ll l 20 .,. I 1n II 43 1 27• 26 s. 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"'2D Griffin u C•nMCOtf K'*""dh Lanafrd ID OU8ekr rf w1-...dc "'"""'" ('f OHIM JD Tettleton c MOevl\ •f tf I II T .... ker'9w ....._ ..... Iii s 0 0 0 6 0 0 I • 0, 0 s 0 ' 0 '0 0 0 J 0 0 0 2 I 2 0 4 0 I 0 6 0 I 0 • o a o I 0 1 0 41 I I I T...... ------· 0...... ----·1-1 Two tluf\ wfltoll wlMlne run \CO'ecl Game W•Mt"'ll ltll -Grlfl'tn I j ) E-Tt11191on O,,_T_IO l, 0.kle'lod 2 LO TMOl'!IO t o.tllaftd 11 ~tmallOal 1 171 Gercla Ill K...,.,.,. IJI ~~­ I Marlll'tr """'"""" 1 ,.,,..... M;t v Ekl'INr., c .. r~t l01 0....... • 10 • , ,) c ,,,_. I I l Ian 1 Von Oii...-1 J HOw"" 12·> L••-W I I J " ..... '° 0 0 I 0 l I 7 7 , ~ 0 0 , I 0 0 0 0 I 0 • • • I 0 7 0 I I • D • I 0 I Urnt>+r•\-Hclmt (19" O"CI ~··~ T"tro "'"' )l!ule(ll * Mct(•n T-• 10 •-21 61' . •. . . • • ' - 89 Or-Me Cout DAILY PILOT I Monday, Juty 28, 1986 Ellerbee bypasses CBS for ABC's 'Our World' By 1'1\ED ROTU£NBERG ~, ............ ,.. NEW YORK -Linda Elletbee, best-selhn,a author, talk-show dn:\lit celeb and subject of a network tui of war, will return to being a television news writer and anchor. this time with ABC, the network has an- nounced. and Ellerbee waited until the upm1- tion of NBC't one-month option on her servtces to officially confirm her three-year contract. Accordina to a published report, her annual lary will be $3SO,OOO. EUcrbec's dec1Ston to accept ABC News' offer instead of the "CBS Momina News" co-anchor JOb was widely reported last week, but ABC After a vacauon an C'alifomia, away from agents.. publishers, telephone and interview requests, Ellerbee will Stan work Aua. 11. Her assaanments include co-host of "Our World," ABC's new h1stoncal news program that will compete apinst the top-rated "The Co~by MClllCMUlll lll9l S1IDP .......... , .. l:Jt. a:.-. 1:11, tis, 1us 11 • ' YUCI DCUY SYDlO "Ua"(I) llU, 4tll, 7:31. It.IS MCI MaGSOll mYlsnm I 'W.UTlllr (I) ~>IS. US. I ... 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Show" lb.is faU, and her hlht·hcartcd and quarky "T.G.1.F" ieature on Fridays for .. Good Morn101 Amc:ri· ca." be previously d id "T G.1.F." on NBC's "Today" show. Ellerbee sa.id an al\ interview that discussions were continwng on a possible late-niaht role for an un· specified proanm following "N1Jht· line." Smee leavma NBC last month. Ellerbet' appcan:d on the "Donahue" show. alona with Walter Cronkite, and has been pursued aggressively b> ABC and C BS. "The reason I told CBS I wasn't com1n.1 was that I couldn't do tht' ·ces Momma News' and sttll have time left for my writing," she said. "'Our World' sounds like a better program for me. It's a writer's show." Jill ClaybartJa 8tan u a woman adcllcted to Vallam with Rlcbarc1 lluar In ••t•m Danctn.c .. Fut u I ean·· tomcbt at 9 OD llBC, Cb•nne14. Ellerbee JUSl signed a contract to wnte her second boolc, a work 1n fiction that she wouldn't discuss for reasons of superstition. Her first book, .. And So It Goes," about her JOumahstic experiences, remains o n the best-seller list and is being turned into a m ovie screenplay by Ellerbee herself. "I'm my own producer. so I'm not unfamiliar with how to make stories with pictures," Ellerbee said. h was important to her that ABC's announccmcnt Wednesday include the fact that she will be a wnter for .. O ur World," as well as host. (Herco- host hasn't been announced yet.) "I make that distinction because there arc so many people in television who do not wnte,'• shesa1d. "I wanted people to know it ain't because of my pretty face. I'm not frontmg for somebody clse's words. My vanit) is my wntmg. Good or bad, I'm respon· s1ble." Her sharp, witty c.opy was a 1rademark of her work at NBC. where she was co-anchor of the acclaimed news programs "Weekend" and "Overnight,.. and the undm- mgu1shed "Summer Sunda}'. USA." All of those shows were canceled for low raungs. And no one 1s predicting big numbers for "Our World." MERYL STREEP .JACI NICHOLSON Sex. L-Ove. Marriage. Some people don't know when to quit Heartburn ~ PAIA\IOl'VT PICT! RF :'n· •.. ': ~ ~f"-" .. ._" .................... ·-~ .. : ---' . ...... --~~---:.,.:-, NOW PLAYING 1110 u-SIMfOll .... '" ,,,. .,., ,, ... " .. """•'" ..,,.r...-·· \,Jl'j '>.IN ~1•00 a-;• /)',61 COSlAMUA IOIS$IOll W11.JO -f ,.~,, I ' .. f~.,(h't• .,, 41&1 n,,~ Wll~ITC~ ll IOllC) P,, ,.,. ,,, ... ~it, •rWPOIO 11..Clo """'•• ~ ... ,,,,. 'II 11Vt1 w ""q' "°-... ;.ccuno '°" "RUTHLESSLY FUNNY FARCE." ORANGf COUNTY R.E<ilSTEll, H1d•t1<•/ /111tk1·t1 -NOW PLAYING --· ·-.. ..,._ ....... "' .... _ ....... TCOll, ..... '-'-... , .. T··-r--........ ,, ....... , ... "',,.., ... ,,,. T """,..'°" ••Ot T-.. ~ ... ..__ ... .. . .. ~, T-QA._ ......... _ ...... ~ .... ..... . ... " cotl•.... , ... -THAJfTOlt ,...._ .,,,r..., ._...t 1,,1•• ,,..,........_.i...- "•'" '''' ... 149: "'*' ... -...... ·--·-··· , __ _ _..,_ 'Cross, Arrow' in SC "The Cross And The Arro~ .. -Cross And The Arrow" 1s guided b~ Pageant of La Cnst1an1ta. opening its author, Norman Wnght, motion Aug. 6, depicts the real·hfe story of a picture and teleVlsioo wnter, director young Indian couple, their love for and producer. It is performed 10 three each other and for their sick baby. and acts at 8:30 p.m .. Wednesday through how they become an important pan Saturday, Aug. 6 through 9; and of the quest to colonue ( ahfom1a Wednesday through Fnday, Aug. I 3 during the b1stonc Ponola·Serra Ex-through 15. m La Cnstian11a Bowl. pcd1t1on of 1769 The gates open at 6:30 p.m . and The open-alt' production provides snacks, beverages. cushions and a pageantry of romance royal pomp souvenirs are available beforc curtain and circumstance. Indian rage and time and at intemuss1ons. An op- rit uals. soldiers afoot and on horse-t1onal treat is a complete and catercd back engaged 1n muuny comedy, and dinner served promptly at 7 pm at an imagery that include<, colorful the site by Anderson Family C'atercrs Spanish dancers: Father Serra in-for $6 each . spires cast and audience to ··press on" Ticket pnces arc SI 0 for adults and to the culmmatmg spectacle, a mus1-$5 for children under the age of 12 cal finale spotlighting the baby-"La Special rates are available for groups Cnstianita." o f 10 or more people. and bringing The pageant 1s cntcn.amment with warm Jackets to the sne 1s advised . Disney·likc d1mens1on~ m a oatutal For add1t1onal information about amphitheater of the For!>tcr Ranch in the production. tickets a nd reser· San Clemente. vations, telephone the pageant office ._,_....., ~~-+-......:.A~n~n~u~a~ll~v·~'~h~e....r;..;..~;;..;..;.;'-'=~--'--...;.~....._-4~98~-0880.~·~~~~~~~- aA .. 0 ... MATWAt-MONOAY THAU S A TURDAY IST 2 PERFO RMANCE& (llCl'PT .. 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OUN 1N1 ILUI CfTY OUT Of MMINDS ~ TO lJVI AHO Dtl IN L.A.~ ORANGE '(714) t.JM111/U . l!f 6 (!Mp!!• AUfN.I COMMAHOO "' alWIYT.w lllOMllCIC rlllRIS IUll.l.111'1 DAY 0" ,_,,. Cl.UI 'ARADtll ~1*1 ~ 0.VITOINTTI MfOl.H lUTHUSS "10 .. LI 111 11·>1 ,, •••••. ,, .... , .... ~•• 1n110 MHTl ITllffll" JAQI HKNOlle* HIAlTIUlN Ill I IS l .. Wt l ·JI 1'1U DOUT HHIO * ALllNS (a) I 1>0 41>0 71>0 10110 llAROAIH 1 IT IMOW Ull'tf ~CNIOI HOlllTUKI "l'Af" MOllYA KAUTI KID "All fl (N I I II l•JI lt4J .... 1 .. 11 -TTMIW MOOHKlt JIHIS aUILLll'S DAY Of'"°"' 11 ... 1 o ••• ttu .._ 11oe1 toM CININ TO.. GUN'"' n ,. ,,.. MJ ,,.. ' u BUENA PARK 11!41U I 40IOIL•octl• W ti ilo:n Cl'&'' 11".l.._, ....... , "' I'< IMRIO ISflVll llllW'IMUM OVll.DIM 191 CMlllTINI CS> ll09Nl'T ......... le IAC1C TO KHOOl ,...1ai "X 411 llM.l'tt MACCMO uun IUD ,An If"' NO llftlAT. NO IUIHNDll fNt lo HABRA .. ~~ .. :1r. . . ' .. MMfT .. VftO IUTMUll HCH'U ,., DOWN ANO OUT IN llVUl. Y HILU 111 DOUT JTftlO OUT Of aOUNDS C11 ltU :hU l 1M 7AI .... OCM.aT 1nuo OtNI WIUllllOILOA ""*la HAUHTID HONIYMOON ,,., I .. J1JI l1Ja 7rll .... , ... DOUT snuo llOe lOWI AaOUT LAST NtOHT 11) liM 1'41 .... I II , .. ,. ..,., ... 1'4J .... ,.,,. IAT. l'HVllW 8100 OOUIT ll1110 CMll-T MINHl•tll T UTITAl RUNNING ~ID <•I 1 00 411J 6'2S l oO I01U -.1T 11'1110 UOAL IAGl.H !NI .. ,. ... c1.ua ,ARADtll "'"1 i.ae..u ..... -Wl&.W~ HAUNT ID HOHIYMOON l"I anuaN Of TH• l.MNG DIAD 1W1 ALllNl 1111 COMMAHD0•1 _.,_ MDIH C.C 1, •11111 IUl1Ue'I DAY Off '"""I 2. CLUI 'AaAIHttl,..UI I . VAJM 191 COSU. ... A lftVIMf ~t>.~>Mt.o.~~tro.·o ""C •O&.>,..."""'-~ NOWPlAVING LA HAINIA •OfllAHOE SANTA ANA ~..OS c.-c.n. .. EowlrOt WoodbnOOf AMC I~ 5Quar9 Cl!)' Gll!llf (0• .. 0\8•- 979·41'1 ~·O&M f713t 6tl Ol33 6J.t lSSJ 114, ~o tUA R>UHTAIN \'ALL.IV LAOUHA HILU OfllAHOe OfllAHOE WUT'WMeTlll &htaro1 ~-~ vwie. [dwl'tlt~·~ AMC ()f.,. IQJ 5-Dnw lo EdwlldtCw-.w.e &»1500 lillt .... l&a•11 617 03AO 639 6170 f714t H1·~ ..... 1111.H"D "' ..._ (XJa!IJ ..... J• ______ ..,.. DISMyland .-----.. NOW SHOWING. oUIAllflll PoclllC1A-~lfl8l9M~ •COil& ..... (_,,,...... C4Mlrtt ~· 4~ ••W. •IA-ADA f-Ot I-~ '°'"IC I Gar-. 11~ 41111 ~n 1e11 lllA ltlotwl lteo "'°'° S~"39 a TO.O fdWQrOl~I se• saao •IA MANA ~ 1t11JO AMC fo.IWM ~· f-OI l/•fO r,...., m 69•-0&ll 13CHll90 -----OICAU..l!Qt-- S OUT CW 80U .. U. (It) AT (U 10) (l 00) lfOS 1 tO .. t II ll"RIUUS .uau.Jllt'S DA y CWI' f""t I) AT (t U ) (l JO) I 0 I 00 a tO 11 A90UT LAST "IOMT (It' (12 2S) (2 50) s s 7 0 .. 10 10 CEnTUAY ClnEDOmE 0 6)6 lUl C11.,,...,. • s. .. ~ .... '·· •UTN.._..~ c•u IHOWI AT NIA .. T91 ... '"l AT (U Ol() 01 s u 1 • ., 10 0 4'UPIS I") AT I' 00) ,. 00) 1 00 lo 0 00 I No PHHI In 70MM 001111'1' KARATS llUO II (N) {U 00) (2•U) ••II 1· u .. t 1l• 11 f'O) CJ H ) S 40 70•1010 . ~·""'ru· ,(12U)l2• IOI 7 fS lo t 1 0 -CH 70MM- IUJhC4WCD ICA .. .i> lit' IHOwt AT If I ' 0) C) I 0) I JI I 00 '-t01H ORIVE ·INS :~~~~ STADIUm ~ U' l llQ.11.111!11 1!111 S11fNm llAXNllUM s ova1to•rv• c•• Plus Co·,Hlurt Cht1Ul1tt (A I ... CMlll9Y"s nttr O~T•ousa .-ncTrY• 10) Plu1 OH Beat t•O) Oree:• JonH 11 VA ... C") Plut Co Future Polltf9tl1t I< (PO I l) •UTMUSS"'l~ C-) ~•t Oow11 • Ou• Ill B•••riT Hlll1 (i.) OAIVI ~-s o .. ft I 111 Ml'Y'/'1 )I ..... , tll~""'" 11 ..... IJ '"flu-. NtTM IAll 4 llnes, s7&oor•511 7 days... with prepayment .....,_ P ONLY. No Allll 1M91e. eo...n.a.t. Ot ............ CALL 842-5878 ...... ,.... ...... tine..... 1111 ........ c.111._ lllllll!!!I._.._....... .. ...... ______.._ .. liiiLI eln m.11• •-r. w. n• m-s== at Wii:mtmr r.-,. .,....... .. 1iiiiiiJ IM Lm1a•11n 4lr o•aa. ,,, J;:· WUOEW ....... ~.-..,..,. oac.,,w.;,... .. ~ lli*r-. .-r .. ~_,.,....,. .-. • ,.._..... 11.,.000.Aet.a. Olll.-M.H ~ 112. tllO + .... w.--;:1:--...._ e.iy .0 ..... ,._.W'llo.,._tlllll. ... _........ loM. l•*M. HwpC ldl 142~ OI......, df*'I '91\, n. • W. -·,..,..... . 91', w--.1 .... l 0~.::.c:::~ CMKtCYOUIUD ... ttllOty, •••111. lnlM .... on ..... 1·2004 fAl'fi&iTiALI olded. 0 ,... .... •• -.-- IOOMM:IOlll'M -~-~!.. UNtt1tfAOO... ~ 1" tloC)t oondo m': ... OCiAH vtlW wttt1NotAVll1118 pM .. ._ "11 '21tolmo, ... W. ~tftleld •If ftO foe. Cell ~t"OOAM-t1WAM nw:;::""'.;r~IMdM-HC>Me, ~Wit rm, on1M ..... ~2 lwn&-If-. 2M 21e, den, ~--'-~-.., .... 1IO.-e0t .. Dlft. ---=--.,:,.,..... ..... co.-..., '!~"="--~ 21001/t -...... 900.... bdrm.,..,,.~ .,.... ...-.. -,.., UO ....... OOl"M =--=-::~---aaOMI ..... I b Id t le a o t 24d1 ltl\IOr Perk. .ZIMM lmmlPI ,...._,_.. ••• • ..... -DllADl.IN9I 't ... ~, .. :E "Elealnt'' tut-M!'!J a.....loPtlon ~ .... : ....... PrieM..... M.800.e•1•4M. • .... 111• .................... ..._ ....... ,_ ~~-D ,.,... -.._,, ="''°" ... °'~'!: f:o.1¥-.::t~.. t1A8TINGlra,-Wlmlttt .... ooo. .... ......... .-eil; 1• ..,....,..,. ... ...,. "' ...... ..,Up,,., Pool .,,.;, -· ,,......,... • ...., ,_ -••,... : rn ~~ MO IHO Tl'Mewl, 11_, eq ft I :a °" pe1 2 Olr blll1C ..... = ...... ~· "*'-•,''**'1-. 1~ ... '"° = :~1!!~:":} ;-. _, ....... =-=:: = . .._."" 111t _," 111t -1-;:::==~==·1 ldnn, N lleh, ~ oWn 131-1111 /t4... -· .,_ _.,, t9drm 111ltt *710 ·-···"" ...... 1111*)' ::.., no:.: :: :: t="' CMI ~'-= ~ ':::. r room. .., OOftd., 2 ca-• ... 1. liDi 290, 11A VIie ....... 171-4111 301 A~ 142,.W ... • .. ~ .... -...... _ ""'.......... ,.,.. ... lded e· Ol8SOLVINO PARTNER-Ont ., ....... ,.,., "-.... 6Uii9&: 1 ... 1Wile ,..._,-....... r--=·~ :;.:=,:..;-::.=... =80e~U.:. :=-SHP.,.... ... lnWMd. ~ ... -•• ,., .. : .r,.,..... .... ~ ...... --~· .. iwro:t.o:m ::.:-..:0:-1.:,., ~= 8'1"9ltd 11 tt'9 tip of Udo Aafto'h a ro old Pr1oed for t.t wrow. rno, ?...... ..... y~ ' itp. No peto. 271 Ill m1 :OC-.:' :,'._:,_ .,. =·::--.. ..::= c...f!l llir 1111 $1M.toio." y~ (~~be.ttOOoq E/1ldt locatloft '8R Ui(f~-CAHYC* AllOCedolt .... 7110 2 • ,._.,_ ~ Hlrbof, anew-191.111Y._. .......... lilt flPNrnlumwlot UnMn 2WIA.11100l'*~ . .'2to100r1. ~ """....,asl,,21r • .._. Vwcte o• kl• mtR. 1.-r .... . .,, - ,.. ... -~... ····~·'".IQ ltt u. ~ v .. St11 Y .. p,_,.,.,t Cal ClullfW. 642-5671 for Information & surprisingly low cost. lnO HatbOt end lay loothlWl!yAmam 19' TD, _ l181M. mo ... _ mo. 39clnft, , ....... dooar, , ...-~end IN Hltt>or'o .,,....._Oft¥12te,IOO. lllfm-lf .... (#2)28drm,2be,2100eq lee'YOGt711-S1t1 2 _,~ TOI~. clltMiltw, ..._. ..... QUllTMllOM..,..._ efx,,. cNiw• !Mk· ITM715-wln/ewet t9 t 28t 28e Condo, poof, OW· ft. PfMIW lot w/QI"-FIK>E ltgl ,._. abd, 0..-/lkr 7-.o M11 No.,_ MO-Mii ........ ._...,.,. Ing tNo a ,...,..., lo-celil ... )HM l!Qe. On bMutlM tr-. .,.._ Prof deoor & tum. S'Mla. frplo, tarl09d yd BAYNDQI MR HA. II 1700/rno 11'9 lftWW 2M •Coul1,_,...., .... caitson 11'1 Ne..,orUwlh. llf*' ..,_ 11'1 Nawpor1 l17tM w/"'cln, 2cwgerIMll111 wN1io Condo~2 oar • 2BA upper "'*' .. •vtgr.ele .a -Oneof1M ... beyfront o:.~-· Htlghto. 1117,100. (13)31drm,Sbe,2300eq l 1MO mo ........ *· pooP & • lluftdryleo, 0 nlotloo. • •T'Wllfltdlnelft-1,nl proparUeo wtch ..,,._ Pr IV oecotated 72()..1211 0t 752.7903 ft. EL DORA.DO MOTEL rmmMto. Ac1Pt 1410111 $1111/fftO, 4 No,_. .._. _.,. owr Newport Hert>or end Coniractott ~ 31r, Al l9R •• .,... Prof dtcor I furn. EXEC Condo lbr 2&0 fl N•W*tltch'o tlnt9t I "" , • ..,_., 112 JM~Ml'll,IN;u .. •• ~ Centlf 1"61t, tam rm form din-....-r -H• l196M. ""petty only. • • P ._-" w/..,_ a mew. ~ &im• •You'rw OM\~..- Lot ... of so• of bey Ing. ELEGANT AE· 3 0( 4 BdnN.. 15 btrthe, lg e::;a~1 AM~kd~ ::;. s:eo~~· ~2,:t i:; merely llOO 63M1t1 1748/mo 2br 1'4b• •GounMe k*"- frontag• JC 144-toot MODEL. euetom ~. 2 country kite. f9m. room. PM;....,._,._« 1· bdl i12001m0. 64a.e131 AIJl... townhouMJ greentMltt, •New---•_,.. depth, ihcM.lkt eooommo-frpb. trench ctoort. new min)' xt~ ~· ,,,.. ... .._ lndryrm,• bft..tn& • ._.....-...._ ~.new,...,_,. of roof, cu1tom kltohtn, cond. Ttrmoneootlablt. u:...... ,.= Fnod ,_ 2br J100 oar NEWPOfH CAEIT 20711lutn •Gllled~PfMI approximately t,000 oablnett I tit bfttn CM1k 50081gNt Ad. '42-9282 TiiH<>iirl iRF kldob..icdecorklt..,. corooden Agent,_ 28r T8lMOMT. M2·1I03 .... __.... aqutf'e._., ~ antertafl\tnel\i ctftter. .._.._ .. 70000 ft ...... ...C ottlerl53M111 AGt... 01 11&0:;1mo ·~.,,.._ ..,..... AU.UTIUTIE8INCUJDl.D IV doolaned. &iltlnO 40-Too much to llMI Dont -rwa•-· . eq n ....... ....,,_, · - 'fMI old hOme lo ~ mtoethllontll1•too. Light, ~ HYing. 13.000.000 ,., equity. ....~ ..... II ll•u----W!'MTWlllUTI 1621EDAOOM ~ Dode wtt1 ao-....._ .... • 4llA. twn rm, 38A. den, Wn-.front~ ~-u ,.. • 11--1&28EDAOOMS oommoda'9 t lwgo yedl1 -•r PoOf. L.rg lot. By owner tlal Income ot com· Y~. Furn 29,_ 11A FURHtlHINOI AVAIL ptuo room to lldt tie 13158.000 . ........at4 mercfol Nwpt arta. lllllllml S1200/rno. fn.e3l4 S:--Cauettr1~1Prot1ete .. ,,..._....., 11•n1Mm ...... ..,.... warm•n-::=-~"*" Q 151-41370 A f73.03&4 38A MoMCO --Cst,500 tab Frptc. ~ C99lnol. dbl ffon1 Row ~ •Huooll'ltlcNn u~a 1 na 112l1,...... Lii, .. Ul·Mt1 (213)1N Ol8I !; ger. pool .... No peto. view °' Usie* ~ ....... OW9f10' ,... if_;: 1Bdrm tnJ Bey I Ngltt flahta. 2 + •Padol -n.n l'IDITlllY ~ iin eeew. 1111\St ~27191 0en0taar.2'AkLQrm. ~Ger...- 11 New dWldled homel Entoy B111bo9 M1Q at lt'o k:M)f MAC ARTHUR YIU.AGE f•bulous m1tr o.1lttl *Pool & IMJO'o l'EW 2 & a ldnn, 2 ... M9tled around acr.. °' ftneet. Thlo 2 Bcim, 2~ 4'bdnn =. ~ n:_, tP 1BR. dttn, ~end"""· S1195 ._ 144 40ll •Plulh .. __..IO -. llllloclrly, w. .-, S*U. pm PoOf a .,_ battl condo hM It II. Tie klde peto 53M'91 Ollr balcony, pool, ~ ..,._ w.-.r 38r 29a. 2 cw •><Int locadon ecroee 880. S lllUndry. 2:11>1 Mlnut• from IN bMc:fl. entty, oecuttty ~ AGt... nlo. \IOlybtl. aeouttty. rr•r· new crpto from P9'tt _c_•_•_•_ .. _ ... __ 1162 __ _ =T~1~;=· ~~pr1m9 ...... lliAiij 1111 ==== ~!;13".,~~.:11· •Sotty~AE SEAWll> _.... ..-r&m& ohowtnz.,1_~~ Auoty ... IU&YI• ::We-~ YMlhll.._ SMW.WUOH . ......... <WY111M,111) ,.,., frPc. ltove. patio. 1811sMdatao: OcltM--... ou.....,.... Ml-1111 VILLAGE QnglMI °"'* a.yo ltl1 4 bdrm, 2 battl home.,.... gormigel 110501 975-3883 545-24281174-5130 .,.. dote to bMOh. CLEAN E'llD£ etudlo Choice looatlon on moct.1. frg lot. ~ ~ . I'~ MITAL 1415 lr1dudeo utlldea. ~·~~~ ~;=~"r: '""CMlt •..w.Ja lift 2:':'~~*up ,,.~--.~111 =~1'r.::tf:"°"· ..itinv f« a remodel -2/Ur Win• I vrt; p;;;: dbl varaoe •'°'** ....... • , .. Oon'tW.itl • . . llttJt ... 1Mu1t Aontalo avt' Ceil! St95. Nter .,...,. & Clolln&IMrp28A,dltMf, UVEWHEREYOUHAYE ..,.__. ~ iYowAiR Vitia Atnwio 91s..e12 rano. No pet• 54._2447 lull Au llM cerpe1aand~petto *~"'IP'* _ WOOdlut Condo. Ste SBR fumlehtd Ww/Oryr Undor saoo 3tw ,_ f~ ...... Tiii mTI :..s~rage~Hnpeto. * 1 I 29r, 1 & ze. .,.._ _N..;;;.-u.-1••=1UI=...;; .... =;;;;... gated comm. BMut lek• 2 C., oY.11111181 =ptlokld9w/dl*~ 2bd2t.~rwfO&eJc mo. •Spedol•t~ .. Ill.I •• l n•111 ""·Choice loo. 28A 2BA. .. _. 9gar301'97 Blk from 53M191 .... ... Ind. MIS.500. Agent Pet 8pw1(llna dttn 28dtm, •At..-W F::C.C,.,,. l 1,.,;;;; For Contractor. Try oil bltlno + trto. w/d, c:rpt. ~ 1~9o0 mo 1111 ,,.,. Ccibb 875-2013 1\41e tlll. 11 utt1o pd, •Prtva1e b81con._ or "*'*'· u.t tor L .... s110.ooo. Aot 54e-n3t drapee, bllnda. Hr SC rut+w: .. credit~ lut. IMd 1141 le .. C • fr1Q. ger. Sorry, no~ a.den p.uoe F,..MwttetEvtluatlon. Wll'TWT Plz&.1120·000.831-9053 Cell8111,&48-02t2 . um.&;;;28A1W ••• .... tlrt 1M0Wallece llftl LL lll 1111 Eaetlldt 3 bdnn 2~ beth ,.. IHI Tnhl. Poottt.nM. ~ mle llM ~2731 142-4814 ., llT1 Jue1 lllted ,.; carpet & AttractM alwt 2Br 1Ba. to bef\. Sec. Newland & 28( 2L SC OC: W DELUXE 2 BA E/lldt *3 LIGf*d ..,,. cowta Ull.. ~1 ~ petlo + Talll P•ft.W lndry. gar. dee*. 1 blk to Atlantic S150 780-1337 Met. Downetaln 24 hr 1700/mo d/w trig. 919 i *29wl!Mq pooto I-Story condo. ... to mo< .. For. pfflttt lhow-2bd. 2be.. gated comm ~~~i21S800lmo VtCTOAIAN ~ MC. A/C, .. ut11 'pd, but wtr pd. ~ ldufta. :::;i·:,• s::- mkt. lhope, pertc I ,_. Ing call Rul1y ~ttw w/pool, 1 cer ~ ~ xtt · antique turnlltled 5bd, .-ec 1750/mo . ..._2!82 no pet9, 'I'-. 141 CMMM. *~ .-i taurwrta,2bd,2t.+frs*: 131-12ee • cond,'89,too,7 1'· COHOOBAYFAONT 2'Aba, Jacuzzi/deck .ti --·--1-G.oforHell&Snal~ rNlbte ~ 1n bathe, •• " , : dalelfted tuM. you may be a o • t s 11 p 1 v a I I. · , Nr ne.. Avt 111. ~ "*'Y custom ~ 1t-••• , pey1ngpr10Mthlureoutof S1800/mo.115-Ul2agt lfriM 1144 lalaM ... ~.llOOtmo. APERFECTBU::NO .,...,, I lg patio. bee&lt tit I I ~~~\·? "you~nocrn.chlngtolhe 28R 2BA. pool, eec:unty. lt500mo 841-7500 -_._ P..a S 1251<. 648-4380, rttr. 1 .,.., m;;y p;;c ii Ltg 19r on VlctoM. nr NA TUAE r-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;~~;::~;~~~~~~~=,~WbUU~~~~2 -~1-~~-~~na ~ 26A 18X owr garoge. t trptc:a. 2 pettoa .. AWlll 1/1. YEAAl Y olw\, crpta. dr1)a. etove, cer gw. So of ttwy. 11350/mo. Aot 873-5354 McNelfl Aellty 142-133-4 ~ 141&. No pcita. Wll llT IMl ·INTO SAVINGS The Daily Pilat has a new way to turn your Hidden Treasures into CASH with a $7.60 Classified Ad. ~.60 or$5.60 with prepayment 4 Lines-7 Days-$7.60 No changes in copy or cancellation. Private parties only. No Commercial, Real Estate o r Employment Ads. There is no price limit to what you con advertise . If you nee d to sell your car, boot, couch , high chair or any unused merchandise-call the Daity Pilot Classified staff or use the coup on below 642-5678 ·----·----~--------------------- NAME ADDRESS CITY PHONE STATE AD COPY 4 line mm1mvm . opproximotely 4 words per line ZIP AMT. EN CLOSED c:•rt'le o,,t> VISA or M C Are you o ~ubc;cnber to the Doily Pilot? circle one '900/mo. Avail 8/). ~~ ftil BALBOA ISLAHO. L.-ge 2 Aelldy to 00 990-211'0 D&ar'9131-1281 __ bedroom Apt. and 1 Cute 28ctnn 1...,. "Cot· -..1. I •ii~~\· • ~ btdloom Apt., dote to t9" on VlctOfta. ,... G 1-::We, '=. ~. 0 ref~~i wet•. (118) 7H-l400 Hwpt Btvd. Yard, no pet9 _n...;__ __ • 11001mo. 4e1-e211 ILUlltuaYI seaoimo. M0-2970 *"., II* Around saoo bWfl .,.. 1bd. 11>e. frPc. ll0"9 re1g e:_ = ~ :::: 3et 2aa, 2 cer g1r, btt1no. •bodec:rptd kid bao1c but S700 +llCI 975-3113 prtf'd te50Tmo. AQt. ~ yrd s1050 ,_ n1oe 53M191 Aot teo l1U11 PHlanJa 241.Ql2 ""'""'9iiliiiiitiiiiiiiiW:m;.i9 TnllllT llMlll c...... 3 bdrm home c:tote 1117 ........ • MiiZil N • to 0089rl. Some vtew. ...-•-. HUNTINGTONBEACH NEWLYDEC3BR,38A Nlcepetlo.Frplc,dblger COZV 1Bdrm, 1Bath, 2Br 1'ABo OP. clou1 IMl-89'1 COM Cotteoe. Gwg. yd, a 111 th• goodlto. etove. C81l>et•. ~· townhome. crpt•. 1-------- trp1c. laundry. patio. 2000/mo. Aot 873-5354 W9* to btedl. No peto drpe. paint. ~ • .... .... . 1 1580/mo, 844-499 . MOO/mo. 875-0447 Ing, pV1 1>9t10. • fiii-jiiAiiiiiifilOo.-.w-iiii .... ._ 9e0-6413 CUSTOM 380 2'M5A 2 BLKS TO FUN ZONE I ~ S7Hlmo. oo oy 1BR, deck. 4BR 2'ABA ~ frJ)tc 2jazo.gar.lkytlt•+dtyl ferry! 2bd 1'M>9. ~ pet9. Edna842-oll5 wl oo.11 view. Wall to 2000 eq ft. Av.II 811'. coutal T::.:::' +-MC. gar/patio, iftct,y fee. "50 e..tlldt 28r 1Ba, ~ ::c"utia '!:4..=/mo, s1eoo1mo. 1 yMt !MM. Yrty AvWI 8/15173-4811 ClllMngl. trpc:. gartl08. =-----.· .---__,_....__...,....._ 72()..740e Ocean view, 3BR 3BA. ger. M60/1BR • l550189ct\. "" petk>8 1700 -+ fot, ~=,.~Ifft' ... J .__ ,.___,_ -~ hot tub, wall to bteCt\. ,._...._...._, locMMd IMt, MC 1225. 2 pereona. ----um" ...... -. -..-l2000/mo. "97-4e02 0t ..,.,,,..,_ ... 7 r~. NopeU. ISG-17N Blodl to comm. 2BA and den. 494-4404 Ut1me1 J>e'd. No peto.. btoch. Crpts. ~ Poot & tennts.121001mo. 102 E. Bey A\119, Apt 8. L .. LI~ etove, no pa. IM0-1212 OW1Ylogt PANOAAMIC Ocean vtew. s~~ ,..,on-LAundry tac. d/W:5CM S8001mo. 11'5-0447 1BA extn lrg, fl'J)tc, 2 bit· 17"-" ' 22 9' l.tg 2BA 2BA. nwty ne.. In Ceot. btdo. S 1000.... If ·remodeled lgt nopem, ~. . * 1 •111 • 1111 * Dshwf, frptc:, gar. So of MC. 4"-4188 1C>-epm 28r, 1075/mo. yrty. 22 .,. looklng fOf I ,._ FWl1g dlstt ~ & *""8 PCH Adutt. Pf9f. No · ' Stepe to bwt\.. 645-71 tired hondyman lor Ind No~ ':a 4Nll pats. Non-.,..,., Avtlll ~ ...... 1191 I I El BA fum . 8118 S1275. 87M705 IJ llnat Ht 1kte ttny pvt 1 · · ""'28r=--~1aa,=---o--r-.-. -pool.--+ Condo, no ganiga, Mii no OW· Dutlel lndude: , ___ _..... New 3BA 3~ battl, fl'J)tc, OCM1116de of Pett. No weterlewne,domlnof,.._ -""7• _...., _.., & ..t w . dbl ;er. top ot P9t9 saoo1mo. 53&-e885 PERTH&JSt on ml ... a "*'°' s*Rttna g-. Ptki. S7251mo. the II nt appll 1 ncH. Lv NllM & # on reccwder. Gl'Mt vtewt Pert.ct for Wll rwduce ,_,. °' S35() 190 t15ttl St. l40-G13 s20001mo. Ao1 873-5"4 Nu 28R 114BA condo. prof ::: :::-:a:-~ Inc utk IM&-2652 •W .... MUI YllW 1U dtc:, •Id. elc, gar. Comm 2bd. 2b& PY1 eundeck, lllTllT • Aofrlg, dWla..,., I*""- CdM HNand9. frJ)tc 1785 pool. S1000/mo, .... AYI .-V.t0t, trptc. MP din 2BA 1~A twntwe E/llde Ind. NO PETS 545 4N8 lndudtl utl ... 7eo.o920 now. Chrto 495-3700 rm. Sub-tarr ptttg, pvt ent loo. Pool, garoge. lndry * •BRAHO NEW a9r 211e II:: • 21.._. •• INtk lift S1100 mo 3451-1758 room. 1746/mo. cholCe --. pe1o. Qllf· \IWll Ill ..,. _ uu 2310 Santa Ana oge '800 toe No pee. **IDTW•• KBAY FRONT Cena HJ b .. TSL MGMT M2·1I03 780-1713 °' M2...seot CONDO, 180 deg, moun-2b(f m 1trae Cid All arw. pr1ce1 + ..... taln vtew, end untt. 2 metr ,,..., bMctl s13SO AVllli lllTU1 • •Lml M1'11n* Month7 1Y or yrty · L.t U. et•. den, rv pool S 1750 lmmedlat.,Y. · 1626/mo. 1 BR 1 BA. II 38' 2aa, S2&00 mo "· Help ~.. 759-6640 Ot 875-3371 875-2110 bltlne, lndry rm. nMr 8181212-1733 17U1 ... mDllT llMlll bWfl and lhopa. • -------•Npt Cr•t TwnhOUM Lrg 2BR 28A MWfy dtc: 735 W. 11th St •lllPI" ... ·-· n 1111• 38'+ den, oomm. pool, Patio, yd. lndry rm, ger. TSL MGMT 142-1903 18' tBa, lg bfttna. "0t 2Bdnn 2aa 1 C# ganiga tennl1. aleg8nt dee«. frpl 2 bike to bef\. 11250 mnthfy only MOO,..- ell bltN muet ... ontY 11500 + cMip. 548--9381 M4-4993 Of~ MESA BREEZEI TIUlllT. 1...__ "25 ,_· . DESIGNER. FURNISHED New 1 bd 1676 I 2 bd ,.,...... 1l1llDT llMlll ......... TOWNHOUSE s700. PoOI. ju. no pet. =-BA~Yl=-=-oaeei-....,.lf..,,,.Pn-.nJ--0'-... -) _____ _.._ 48' 3Ba. 2 c=-ganiga. Pool & tennll courte. _ 145-1740 2bd ~ ,.....,.. on •llllT-1l' bMc:fl ... petk>, __. S1295 Mo 873-0IM ~ be119. Apt ~ 18' 1Ba, EMtlkte. 1 car bar S 1200 ... meatiBAU on Sun 7 m "' 10 emf get, pet QI(, ~. ltOYI, 1ILlllllT 111-1111 rnn "11111 123 3ltt\ St Of ell 213 only S800 feo Affrdb4 lull i105& ~ 3 + 28' frplc .. No P9t9 .. ~ 430-7MO tor llPP' TILllllT llMlll br 3b& r: gourlMt ktt Av.ii immed 7204422 Featuring ~ i.nd- •tN8T ANT 4Hll* 53M1t Ag1... IC8P8> aao.. pool/ape. lnrprt..... .. Hew Luxury Condo9. 38' BAYRIDGE280, 28A m co;; a;!& Patto/dec*~ 0.,:0-~ 2~. tip,.,_ dbl gar Condo. b.-view, eecurtty Con9. carport, W/D 1~ """7• N20 Pet«*. 2 ml to bcfl S1115 gait, 1n.cNd as. PGot. Hk up Sm1ll yo rd 28drm H<.Ba 1710 146-1144 °' 842-teee epa. 11495· ~. S79Stmo T22-8294 125 Center St 842-1424 * L-ve 2 Bdrm 1 Bath BIO CANYON! Golt OourM Duplex. Gor9 2178-C V\ew, 3bd. 2'MM. 11700 ~t:ftield MESA P1HES 2t&O HMa P*>entla 1135/mo No mo +w:. Avail lift 7125. '-=-1BA 18a w/gar MIO pei.545-7113 213431·7te3 IPUfmll TOP~~~,._1 38A 28A, 1WOt fllmly ...... Lii "-Bteutlful, dttn lwve 0.-'**84-2447** room.11175/molnctger-3bd, ~~~pool den Apts, petkle, decke, TOTALLY AWESOME dner 1~~ Ln I 575. 1MO 2:-.n S:::tri"° peta.. S740 MW1y ~ 11Pt ----------CLOSE TO BEAC»il ....... 311 w Wll9on 131-5513 28A 18a frOm 1145 S8R UllUY11n P<W1 Shorwl 4bd, 2ba. 1~aa nu 1too1. opeotoue twnhmet 3bd t 1350 Aotnt 14~. EXTRA l.AAG! 1BA APT c.rport1 WlltOf11Qt. ooln 2\+b&. 2 CM gar petloe, Pool. No pett 14715/mo + laundry. 2214 ColltOt wld hkup NO DoOI -~ ~... tltCllft saoo MOur1ty ~11 Ave. cal 142-6210 11300 + MOUrftY 0 .,...m," poo4..wf:lo• 845-tlllO, s.ewe.t1 =.o:it"Q-S + i..t':: Ctdl lleN •M C... ... llM 8utlCllln jlQ.a .,,,.loel -11'3-1734 3br 2be kldl rtt lflOC>9 Eaotbtuft be9uUful S8r aaao 53M191 Aot teo 2~ 111*. ow. etc. WOODLA .. VILLA AllA•TMlllTI C1--6c l'lmt etyte peel w /I a c 91 I a y 1t It w. cmpft kit pvt prtlng cMd • 11500/mo Dy 7'20-0IS3 Come & tlllOY OVt I"*" ~ IOb 0-. CMlot1lble ~ up MOO'• s»-fft1 Ag1 £v(21S~ CIOW lo trttW•Y\ & So Cont""' ... Olll• !lllm lo I SAVE up to $1 3so• • .. 12 ..... ....... '*" .... .. .............. • Month-to·montt\ also 1v11l1ble · Fumss~d/ unlum1shtd ·Fitness centers, 1ennis, s~mm1ng Mode•s ooen ds11y ' I So er v no l)lh Nrwoon 811c11 No 810 ''"'"' Avtnut lt1 l6t I MS-1* ... !AITSLUffl 3bd. 2,,..,. llMCll CeflCH ........ fllO PUS l'\£ASl lllfU W/ .. • elc. w IWft. w. c::twm-...... •Al . LAW\'•• IU Newpor1 Buell So tbd P\.UI erldoted yerd Ing yd. '°"" cln 1"11\, den 1100 I Ill SuHt 64-U21 wltrptc, evekbtt ._'-a&ClllL• 'MS.'llS 111 O<Mrf Cute 18A holM + titg :: ~~ = 1 -OOM '611-'MI MZ·ml • IA 111eC ~t Don 142·9717 EJq)8nltve ~ yT1y hm yord. Wootlldt. SS50/mo Tto-1391or142.0UO 2 -OOal '76 .. 77• ~ afmolt OCMR"Oftt 2ba' 'A I =-:::-~~~~~~~~~;;;~~~~~~~~~~:::::::;;~~~~~~::_ __ _J co.n. .. Com .. 1g11 Come gor more I 1400 •t l~Ta~=·~•;lli;a~·==~;;;;~;~;:l!~~~~";r\.'Y;;;tm~lr'"C~J = buy in elaMlflect 53M 111 Ag1 teo !\,\[4 ..,~ '°'~lln 1 l 81 Otlnge Co.t DAILY PILOT/ M~. Jut)' 21, 18M '" • I . -# I TRIUMPH ·10 IPl1flro Conv. Compt r....s. rbtt eng/trone+ mor-.. MUlt ... to llPPI-*""' 12.00. OI boM ofter. 846-1343 Of Mt-4272 MYl'7t1• Low mii.. rune . greet. 11000 obo. 831-2081 .... rm.-;• #~· tN U.S.A. AfC>TlYMGHMOO TO II( i: 1 •UUI • UltVICa BUICK • 'ARTI • LIUllNQ LARCESl WVENlOflY OH THC WCST'COASl • 1DEALER EU't tan a COLOR U"l•AY .I . , ;, 84~··~000 ' COiiYiftl ·n .... euso • .-0.. <MIL.._... Minored T ..... -obo. tit· itl1 ot UMe07 PONTIAC 'M Fleto, cu.- tom !!pOller. wtlla. *. anrl, a mor.f t?e&O. (714)840-"°88 ~ PONTIAC OAANO PRIX BROUGHAM '81·AU1o, .., • 811'1/tm c:a9, oc. tltt. NII pwr. ...-,,., 2 tone pelnt, w. .... CO\W'I, $4000, Gii .... 8-6pm 933--0070 )(.291. tlOTIC9 Olt!OMI cMrge Of M .00.. '1CTmOUe ..,_.. '1CTmOU8 .,..... NOTICI OP . Ptennoue MJll•M Pv'*'*' Ofenge eo.t ~-..11~~1'·· eo.ta ....... Delly, PIOC Ntr 7, 14. 21 21. STA,,_.,.Gf llYmMca _,. be IMde " llendled by fT*I MAim STAW ~ STATIMIWT AVAIL.AalTY Gf MAim STAT'lmWr Delly PfloC .My 7, 14, 21 . 28. ~· ... _ 108t ••Mm a I I fl OP NOTICE II HEAflY Speciftcatlona •n<I otMr The~ pw90M.,. The folowtng perlON -.,_,AL~ The 'olowltlO per10N -1918 ThornM S ~ 188 E M-191 ue9 OP NemtOUe G IV EN tf'tat u1l1d oontrec:t documenta tN1'J OOlngbu91nW• doing~• Purauant to Section dOlnQ~• M-18l 17thSt.,eo.taMeM.Celf •11•aMMm ~ for Mn1at11ng .. -.0 be~ It IN Of• A A W 0 A 0 PA 0 • COY£ FINANCIAL, 190 8104(«&:. the 1ntWM11 Rev· UVIHO OHION HM 92e27 The foftOwtnQ Po'90M luor. ,,...,., ....,...,,,, floe Of IN City a.tc Of IN CESSIHO. 8&12 Hemllton Newport Cent• Dr.. Suite 91"'9 , nottce te ,_... H1tbot IMS • eo.ti Mell. o..<ltd Manooll._,, 181 L 11ew eblndonecf tM U9ll of tr~etlon Met ..ell City Of eo.te Meu. 8pecM-Ave. •210. Hllnllnoton 190, Newport a..ctl. Celt ~ tf'tlt IN ennuel,. Calif. 82t28 l't&.IC ll>TICE 17th Snet, eo.t1 Mele. tll• ,lctltlou• BualMn otMr---•fn41Ybe,. Gdonlwlllnotbe"**'un-Beectl. Cellf 8264t 82MO pOf1 for the Ase.Al 'If* Cleudll Lee Steven ti' c.m 82t27 .... STA~ N•rn• WATIA MAID qund for the ConettucUon lw the 9ddttlon.i M.00 AIUa Alexender. H28 Br-lndultn.e Inc., Men:h 31 , 1Ne of JAMES L. W Wlllnut A'f'I., Ar~ PIC1TTICMll IU8INIU Tlllt bull,,... la ()()fl· The fo1owtng pw90na -ST~ • 1, 1M11 ,,......., Of tM Tuettn Avenue-1ttf't cNrolllln<*.ldldwletl~ ErMlnl. Huntington BMcti. C.itt0tnl1, 1844 S. Pw .. WAANEA MEMORIAL Celff 81oot T~STAT'llmWT ductldby1llmltldper1ner· doing~-. Or , Owden Otow, OeMr Strwt 8tonft Orlin. wtll be rnenf c.lt. 828'8 mount 8IVO . OowMr. Clllf. SCHOLARSHIPS, 1 pt1¥111 Thia t>ualn"' la con· dol he:::::: ~ .,.. lhlp 0 0 L D L E A f t2MO roc.l¥ld by tM City Of eo.ta Efldl bid IMll t>e INlde on Thia 1>u11ne11 11 con-80240 toundetlOn, 11 evdabll at ducted by· 111 lndMdu.i ~ • fhomM S. lei ENT£APAISU, 1791 ,._.. Thi Rctftl0u9 8WlneN Meee et IN Ofllce of tN atty IN "oPOUI fonn, W... ducted by: en lndlYldu.11 Tiiie t>ualnftl la con· the toundatlon'a pnnc1pe1 of· Claudia L. StlYlt1 (~~R~~=~ Thie 11~1 •M llled j>Of1 BMS., eo.t1 Mela, Heme,...,..,_, to eboW ._ ewti. P. 0 . lo• 1200 (7' P·t ttwougfl P-e proYlclecl In Allie Aleunder ducted by:. corpol'lllon no. for lnlpectlon durlng Thie •t•t-t ... tllld ~IA Su . wltll IN County a.nc Of Of. Cellf 82127 lllld In Or'Wtge Coun1Y on ,., C>rNe>. ea.ta ...,.., tile oontrlGt document•. Thie •tatement •• ftlld Joan a,...,, Preeldent regular l>ullMll hour• trom wtt11 the County c1en1 or Of· San c:,r~ei" t':r~· enoe County on June 27. AMn Otte lmlth. 4808 Apr II a . t8H flLf ~ t2t2a. 1200, untll Ind 11\111 be IOOOmpenled with the County Clettl of Or· Tiii• 1tatemen1 ... fllld 8:00 1.m. to 4:00p.m.by111y enge County on June 21. •· · 19&e Llill-'de Cir. No .• lllcNond H0.~5'0 tho flour of 2:00 p.m., by I oertlflld Of ce.Ner'a enge County on June 27, wltlltheCountyClertlorOf. ctllnnwt\oreqlllltl"wlthln 1888 PvDennlaE.lJ!"'=:!· "1 .. Htlle,T-71'11 J«ome ChMel Kt9M. Auguet 11, 1NI, 11 wNch c:iiedc Of I bid bOnd for~ t848 enge County on June 24, tao days lft« the dltl of "1•1 tney, 114 • PvblllMd Orenge Colet Peul S V D1v11. 464 Proe-12911 Fletc:tler Or., Owden time tf'tey Wltl be ~ ... then 1°" Of the wnount ,,,_ tHI 11111 publlc:atlon Pvblllhed Ofenge CoMt San Clemente,~· 82972 Delly Plk>C July 7, 14. 21, 21, pect, Newpoft leectl, Calif. GrOYI, Cellf. 92940 OUblldy Ind rMd ~ In of the bid. midi peyebte to Pvl>llened Orenge Cout '11BIT The lound1tlon'1 pMdpej Delly P1101My7 ~4 21 21 EllHbeth J yrerl, 1tae t2M3 Miiie Hugill. S5e01 ~ tMCoUncMChembers. ..... IN City of Coet1 MeM. No Deity Piiot July 7, 14, 2t, 28. P\lblllhld Orenge Cout office 11 locetld 11t BaM Of tele ' ' ' ' 1010S W MIClArtmrC-"" ..;;7"°07· M-191 TNI bullneet 11 ~ C>ak1 Ad., Ranc:M. c.iit. Id pr~ 1t1e11 beer IN propo111 111111 be con· 1818 Dally Piiot July 7, 14, 21, 28, AmetlCI Tnm Department. M-183 35, Intl An•. -·· .c due11d 11y , generll pert. 112380 title of thl wottc end the lldereo un .... ICCOmC*'llld M·200 1tle Room too 't4 t MecArthur Thie builnell 11 con· PlllJC fl)TIC[ nenhlc> Thill ~ -oono- Mml of tfle bidder but no by IUCtl cuhler'• chec*. rtllllC fl>TICE M· 183 Boulev11d.' "-Port BMcn. P\llUC fl)TICl ducted by: 1 ~11 pert· A O. Smltll dueled by 1 general C*\Mr· other dl9tlngullNng martte. cull, or bidder'• bOnd Celt1ornl1 82e80. nlflhlp '1CTIT10Ue .,..... Thie 11111emen1 ... !led ltllp •-bid r90lfwd efter the Ho bid"' .. be ooneldeted P\llUC NOTICE The ..,......._. , ... ,,.,_ of 'tcnnoue .u ... u EllMbeef't J CypMrs MAm IT ATDmWT -11 ,..._ Coun"' ....._.. _. ,.._ fhlll ltat..-it wee lled ~ doelrlQ time for un-." II rneot on 1 l>llnk . ACTITIOUl IU ... 11 Ille r~;tk,;; ... -M ot ~IT.Arn.NT Thie ltltement ..._ IMed The...--... ---.. ..,, ,,. ., ,,_.,."" vr Oii1l'I IN reoetpt Of bide lfMll be form fllmlehld by IN City of MAim ITATlllllNT '1CTITIOUl IU ... U Atnere1 NT&SA He6gl CM-The fQl!owtno pertoN we wtt1I the County Clertl of Or· dotng;;;;; ;;;--= County on June 21. wtlll lhl Cow\ty 'bf Or· t.cumld to the bidder ~ Coet1 Meee and II medl In The followlno P90IOn• "' lltAm STA.,..,.,. roY Truet Ofllcir doing bulln.l 11· = Coutjty on June 27• WESTERN STA TU DE· mJ1ot = ~ on .""'9 21 ' ~·It 1t1e11 be tM ec)6e 1ccord1nce with the ~O~~ET AS . The foeowtng l*90fll lie Publlahed Orenge Cout S(ASHORE LAWN l 1 "13114 VElOPMENT COMPANY. Put>lllflld Orenge CCMlll Pul>llhld Ofenge 0... ~~the......._ prCNtelona of the Propoul SOC S doing bulln.a II 0•"" Piiot """ 28 1Ne LANOSCA~. 11871 V"'fll(lel 457 Hiii St ,•--· Beectl, nan..-... """ 7 ,, 21 .... Deity~ ,,,._ 7 14 21 -to•tt111t•bi°d1e,.;;;;;; requlrem«lta IATE XXVlll, 2188 OVATION, 1'731 Frlnlllln -r .,.,,, ' M220 Cir , Huntln;ton Beacll, Pvblllhld Orenge Coeet Ca11f H&&l ._---7 ~...,. ""'' ' ..... 18H ""'7 ' • .-. In proci-tlfM E.ach bidder mull be Wlllte Roed. Suite 255 AYellue, Sult• F. Tuetln. Celif t2M8 Delly Piiot Juty 7, 14, 21. 21, WltlWn Ptllllp SeylOf ~7 tNe 18 lit-20t A -Of Ps.n., Speclel llcenalO u reqult9d by lft. !Ntne, Clllf t2714 Calif 82880 PlllJC fl>TtcE Mk:tlMI ~ L.oewen. 1tH H• St .. UO--8Mctl. Cailf M-t87 ~ Ind lddlttonl to Contrec:tOf Uling• craft Of CorpFNS ~oooege 700Servlee Ron Sc>egg. 4582 Ladt· 987 t V"'fli(/el Cir Hunt· M-185 82951 rueuc NOTIC£ DEA TH No11c1 ~ Oenerll p~ to the Qulltlc:atlon not 1t1own on ·· omla, Mar· haYell lrvlnl. Calif t2714 '1CTITIOU9 .,..... lngton a..cn. Cell! t2148 Thi• t>ull..-e I• con-_.......;....;..;...;;...;.__;,.......;. __ St1nd1rd Speclflcatlona tM Generll PreYlllllng WIQI ~ S~2 Sen Franc:leco. Allred TUl'do, 2571 Of· lltAm STAT'lllbfT lllll l>ullne11 It con· l'tB.JC fl)TlCE ducted by: en lndMdull NOTa Of LIPPOl.JJ mlY be OOtelnld at 1f'to Of. Oetermlnatlonl, mey be ,... l/\OI Avenue, Colt• ....... The lolowing l*'IOfl9 •• ducted by-en lodMdual Wllllem SeylOf ~ I.AL.a LOIS L LIPPOLD. b of the City Engineer 77 quired to pey the W9Q1 rate Alley Bower Apertment• Cellf t2827 001t1Q bulHleM ..: Mlehael Loew.n '1Cnnout .WU Thie 111.et_,t wee lllld On Auguet s tNe 1111-00 ,., DrNe. Cotta Mw. c... of the °''" or clelalftcatlon ~ks 2:::._ ~ ~ ,su"• Tiii• bualn•H II con-LAVENDER ANO AS· Thie IWl-t WU fllld MAim ITAW "'111 the Cow\ty Cl«1I of Or· Lm II 427 StenlOfd '"""' Wlfe, mo~~~·n •po~ fornla upon norw.fun<labtl "'°" dOMly related to".. • • 1 ducted by ~Mr· SOCIA TES. 3405 w with the County Cl«1I of Or-The folloWtnQ perlON .... County on June 23 c.utomle. the tollowlng ~ woman. p -~t of 11100 An Id-lhoWn In the General 0. Thlt bualn•• 11 eon· Alfredturdo MKArthurBlvd .Sen11Ana, 8l'IQI County on June 27, dolng~u. 1848 ecnbld per90nll PfOC*1Y throplSt, 32 year resl· . tennlnatlOnttlftec:tlwlltthe ducted l>y. ~.,part. Thi•,,.,_,, ... ftlld Callf 827~ t848 MICHAEL J. MARION & ,,,.., wlllbeeoldllpubllceuctlon, dent of Newpo rt ...---...,......,,,,,--------. time Of tlle call !of l>ld9 nenhlp with the County Clettl of Of. Danene Aon LIYender, ,,, ... ASSOCIATES. t221 Eut Publlahecl Orenge CCM111 wlttloUt reeeMt .---~ The City Councll Of the t!i R~':~~~ filed enge County on June 27, 2&49 E Elden. Coet• ~ Pvblllhed Orenge Cou1 Oyer Rd .. SulM 220, Sent• DeNy Piiot Jv'Y 7. 14. 21. 21. Vwtoue kitchen IUC)pllea Beach. paS8ed away City of Colt• Meal,_..... with the County c-. f Or 1818 Cliff. 82827 Delly Piiot July 7. 1', 2t, 28. Ana, Calif 82705 1tae end utenllle. booll•. p1c. July 25, 1986. Born"' tile right to reject eny Of all Cou ty Ju 0 27 '11912 Thi• bu1ln111 11 con-1tH Mich ... J Milton, 231 I M-185 tu,..., dec:oratl .... Item•. Ilhn01s ln 1903 She bid• enge n on ne · P\lblltMd Ofenge Cout ducted by en lndhltdull M· 187 Wllllng, La Hlbra, Calif. bedroom fVm1ture men'• d •-1 Th• Contrector 1hell teae "~ Delly Pllol July 7. 14, 21, 28. Dlflene Ulvender 80Mt P\B.IC fl)TIC( Clothlng end ~... was 1 grda uaN""' O.t comply wtth tt1e Pf'o'llllona 1 ttae Thi• atetement wu fllld P\BLIC NOTICE Thi• bualnna 11 con· eportlng end cemplng Spnngf1el uning of Section 1770 to t780 In-Publllhed Orange Cout M·tt4 with lhe County Clerk of Or· ducted by: en lndl>Adull LIGA&. NOTICC equipment. bedding end College and 9C!rved as oiu.1¥1, of the Clllfoml• = Piiot July 7· "· 21· 28· •noe County on June 27. flC11TtOUl IU..... Mldl ... J. Marlon NOTICE IS HEREBY lln1n1, llOUHllOld IP· a nurse With the Unh· Labor Code, the pre11alllng 19 M 189 Pl8JC NOTICE tt8e MAim ITATI..,.,. Thi• etatement WM ftlld GIVEN thlt the ~ pllinc... living room 00 States Navy in rite end ICale of Wlgll • ~ K -1 ,,,_. The followtng pereona ere with the County a.tc of Of· It.,,...• of found "' futnlture. toolt, euto "IP' \!"' ld W II Sh terrnlnld t>y lhl Director of P\BJC NOTICE Put>llllled Or1ng1 Coeet doing~ u : enge County on June 27. pr~ hew beel'I held by pllee. euto pa111, 1ugg1ge11 ... or ar f' the Department of lndu91rlal ~~A~.JI 011~ Piiot July 7, 14, 21, 21, MOOEL STATUS INTER· 1888 the PollceDepartmentofthe end mllQllleneou1 Plf'Orlll was acttve with the Rellltlonl, lt•t• ot Call-PlCTITIOUI .u..... T .... ,~ -~ . tte NATIONAL. 2833 w Cout t'\ra-~ City ol Coetl ...... !or • llouMhOldT ............. "eme .. m_.._ In -. ff'public-an ""'""" and fomla, wNcfl 1r1 flled with lltAm ITA,...,.., .... ,........,,,are M-182 Hwy., Newport e..cfl Calif PvblWllO ~-Y-..._, perlOd In uceea of ninety ,..., ---.... ,._. 'J the City Cieri! of Mid City; Thetolfowln0per90n•ere doi ng bu1 neu II t2fe3 ' OellyPMot.July7, 14,21,H , (tO)dtryS·Boy'atSpd White eotdence wltll Callfornl• republican o rga.nua- llnd 11\111 fOffelt penalt .. doing bulk*9.. TEMESCAL JOINT VEN· P\llJC fl)TICE Chan. Steinberg Cor· ttae Hufty l!llcydl, l!loy'1 1Spd, CMI Code 8ectloN 11187 t I 0 n s sh(' was preecr1bld therein for ~ TRAIL SIGNS. L TO . 407 TURE, 129 WM1 Wiiton pore~. Calltomla, 1'412 M-tM Blue Murray ~ Cniller and INI by IN under receded de th b compliance or tile 11ld 30tf1 Stl"Ol1, "-Port Beectl. Street, Suite 204, Coet1 ,ICTI110U9 IUIMU 8Mc:tl 8t •T weatmlnatlf Blcycle, Glrl • Yellow liO'*' llndlofd 10 d~ P m a 'I Code Cell!. t2M3 ~ Cellfomll t2827 NAMl ITATU9NT Callf 92883 "'8.JC ll)TIC[ Schwinn verslty 10Spd of per.onll pr~""' by her hu sband Earl u..DNfJ.,.•lllY,Cftf L•CeroMm.4tlHardtng w~H ~~· ~~ ~I Thelollowlngperaona111 Thll bullneu la con-l!lleycl•. Boy·• 10Spd the t~ o HOWARO Lippold. formerly, Cawll. CltJ .. c......... St.. Newport 8Mctl Calif 90n ,. • • • doing l>uslneM ... dueilO by. OOfl)Of'allon '1Cnnoul .,..... Gra:t/Rld/Blue Jc Plf\· WILLIAMS upon "9Catlng Prl"'tldmg Judge o{ Pvbllahld Ofwnge CCMlll 9He3 Colt• M•H. Clllfornll p A c I F I c 0 I s . Chuetl Gonllllo. Preeldent ...... ITA~ ~. Aeoer 8lcycle. Olym-lhe,.... propeny Of the lend· Dally Piiot My 28. 28. INe Keith CtrOHlll. '11 •2~ R Oebn.lyn 12t T R I 8 u • Thia llltemtnl ... lllld The folowlng l*'ION ... pie Rahing Aod Ind "-'· lord Ind'"" notice lo ulCI the Los Angel~u- _______ M_2_1_3 H1tdlng St . Newport Beectl, W•t WlllOl'I Street ·Suite TORS/CONTRACTORS, wltf't the County Cler1I of Or· doing~•· $eoyo a.ti VCR Ind Shlf'p 1enant mnpal Court. ty Celll. 82$13 • tMOOSult•A H"1>0f IMS 8l'lgl County on June 2,, (•)SAN fJABLO PART-T.,e Oectl DATED My 17 1848 Clerk of Los Angeles, P\llJC fl)TlC( Janel M T~. 134 er .. =2?*' ....... Cellfomll Fountain v~. Celll 827oS t848 NEASHIP (blCATALINA OE-NOTICE IS FURTHER LAW~ °' nu.a and at one ume Assis- ......... cent IWt. lagun• Beecll. TNI l>u I I PKillc Contractor...Ot• nuar SERT PAA1'NERSHIP tae GIVEN that If no owner IP-a MAt.KOWICH. •1: t.ant County Counsel Dtu itu••• .. Clllf. ta4 t dueted .... • ,n~~ ~-trlt>uton Inc • Callfomll. PM"I Ind prowe hll own-TltOllAI "1.LI, llG... Al-Sh.. lS ~ ...... ved by TNI bualneH I• con-VJ ,,.... ~ • t8800 Sult• A. HlftlOf BM:t • •lhlp of tfle pr~ wlttlln ...._,. '9f llVtMI fJA· .. " .... • • Pvbllc ~"":' .._..... ducted by-• generll 1*1· ~D..._. Fountain Vdl)'. Cellf 82708 -' (T) deye 'olloWWIO the C9'9C, ~ • ..... her 90n . Rod Earl ......... , ner'lhlp • _ _, Tiii• bullneu la con-pub41catton of "* Nottoe. =C.W DfM. --. L Id t Balboa given thet Slllney A Hen-Janet M T •ylof ™' lteternent ... lllld dueled by: • corpOf'ltlon the tltle UW..o "*' ,,... In -..-. CA -Ip po 0 ~ end Olea St<*...._ Thie 1t1tement wu rllld wtth tlle County Cl«1I of Or· R E Llppatd Secretary the finder,"~ be one. Of (TM .,.,.,, and grll1\d.9on. Brian hlretofor. dOlno ~ wtt11 tt1e County c-. of Or· = County on July to. ™'. ataternent wa:e nled 1n ""City Of Coeta ..._, 1n PvblllMd OftnOt Cout Earl Lippold of New- .....__.__ ........ ._.__...____, under the nctft'°"8 "'"' ll1Q4I County on June 24. t with the County Cl«1I of Of. wt11C11 ca. the PfOC*'IY ~ Piiot My 2t, 21 t9&e por t &-ach. and sis,.. 102-Comb•M rlass1c name end •tytl of Struct\Kll 1tt8 Pvl>llehed Or "= enge County on June 27 .,.. be told It publlc Ille-M2 15 tt'f"I Fem Schwaru krnt oullover of worsted Helllth ~S~ TherA • ,,,_ 0 lly Pllo J':lell'IQ921 21 t 1881 • ~ at • time end O•t• to be Do "1'f " ,,. "9., PvblllMd Orenge Cout • t • · ,,,_. ennouncecS nl'r and rothy MOOl"l" ~~~I'll J:~~1 .i~~11:, Cr~, ~ ~\ °!. ~ = Piiot My 7, 14. 21. 28. Auouet 4· 11· t M217 Pvb4llhld Oranoe eo..t ~T£~1/~ NlllC fl>uw. of Illlnou. Prwatt> bedspread tl'lread 01r1•c St•t• 'or Callfoml• did ~ 1 0 :X Piiot July 1• 14• 2 t. 21· fJOUCI Of ACTmOUe eueMU family eervke werf' uons for StZP.'I 8 Hi incl the 14th day Of Jufte. 1Ne, M·182 ruBlJC fl>TIC£ 1t M-taa PvblllMd Orange COM! lltAm STAT'llmJfT held . Pacific Vlf'w by mutual ooneent c111eoNe PtalC fl)TlC( l U lletp Delly Piiot .1u4y 21 19" The followlnO Otf'ION 11'• Mortuary, Dlrecton Send Sl.25 plus '5' tf'teeejd~lndt•· '1C11nOUllU8INlll If I y. M224 dOlftCI~• ... 2700 rnlnat• "*' r91atlonl .. PICTmOUe .,..... ..... STA,...,.,. l'tll.JC fl)TIC( . Mc R 0 a a INT ! Ill .,...4 postage handltnq for per1nen ttlerlln. U.. 8TATlmNT The followlnO per90NI -•-.,. W\TlC( NATIONAL. 11112 OoMn---==i;;::;::::~=-~J:::: nett pattern Seid bulHleM In IN Mute The folowlnO perlON .,.. doing ~ • '1CTmOU8 .,...,, $ ti p I ...._ nu pOt1 lane Unit ••. Hunt· 8"11 wt" be oondllctld by 1NNy doing~" PARTN!,_I lllTAO ~ ITATDmlT tll I.. ,..._., lngton l!leacifl, Cllllf 12648 '--9.._.Cflftl A Hendenon, wt'O .. pey AISA!ALQTAff8ER-SAUC! ANO IAl.AO The folowtng l*IOlll •• ..,....... ACTITIOUe IU...u JOH~ McCullougll. 'AC91te ¥m1I ,..., ... 5..il_. Ind dl9dllf'VI .. llatllliti. VIC!. 202t Quall ,,,..., o.-[SllNO co ..... a dOlno ~. "-• Alu .• ~-.J . MAim ttAW 1t112 0ow'"'1 LMe UtWt ~ , .. ~ .... ,,~.~ end debt. 04 IN ftrm Ind ~~.Cellf t2MO ~.= LaQwMI 9w:lh, A~ AWAY IOAT J .,.. ~ ..... The ~pWIOlll.,.. 1t,HurttJngton9aeafl.Cellt c.m..ery t MollOliy .,',~==:......a..._ :-'r.:,a1mon1e1~10 c:i~ro::!"·~~'o::'!ii c.iit~~e1tt1a.csa..44I ::"~~c.i ~N9w-642-5671 ~~=~ ITOAt. '2t!.,, ~. too1 :t~T'~:=-e>L ~ •. """"'........., '""'*' nottoe .. hereby Street, Newport IHch, s Coelt Hwy., 1.aoun1 Joanne eurcll ••n•ll. 83 t4 s.m. Ml Cenyon Ad w Sle¥ene 1217, lent• ••WIPOl1 ..... OfYen ,,.,., IN underllanld Call! 92980 9aedl. c;..., t2ta1 tl4S 111 w~. Oar· Anaheem. c. nlOt Ana Cllllf t2101 NEW FOA OHL Y 11 96-~ luN colOr Cot• log of C'-1t• patterns book• svpphes crewel cross atitct\ "90d~nt latctl l'lootl, QU•lt•no. ancl rnc)l'9 "'41 not t>e ~bit. hfn Thie bullneel 11 con-Thtl l>ualnMa la Con-den Oro-., Cllllf. '*4 for information Jerome a.an. ~ Tl'lit l>ullMN le ton· ..... 21'00 tNil csey on, !of .,.,., obi--duC1ld by 1 corpor•tton dUcied by .,, lndMdUll Thie buelneal 11 con~ 12911 AetcNr Dr., Glrden fUC*' by tc:*'1 *"""' oatton Incurred by "" ott.-W-'-t e Ola. PreelcMnt NcNrd t<elOI' a... ~ bV' .,, ~ & • I I ~ Celt e2t.t0 ~ McCulouQtl i\ (Mt) (ttlelr) own,,.,,... Of ™' lltatement -fllad Thie ltat9"*1t ... fllad Jo9Me """8erMll SU rpns ng y ff'tlt bu'"*' 11 oon-TMI .,.,.,.,. ...... 1n the name Of the""" """""County°""' Of Of· wl\f't the~ a.tc of Of· Thia .....,..,. .. fl9d dUc1ed by"' lndMdl* w11t1 the County~ of Of· OATt'O -'. C.. ...... _..County on June 27. M01 County on .Mii 14. wttfltMCCM'ltyo.itofOf· low cost. JeromaC l<Nm ltlQlt County on"'-21. Celltoma "* Hrd day Of 19M 1984 MOI County on .My 1, ,... Thia etat•,,,.it -fl9d 10M = m-"'*' ..,,_, """'""County an of Or· ~ ......... ~ ~ eo.t Pvbhhod Orll!OI 0... ~ Or-. oo.e .. Coutlty Ofl Nie 17. ~ °'8nl' ~ LAUIA WHHUI er.,.. ~ Daly PllOt Jutr 1, 1•. 2,, 21. DlllY "'°' Jutr 1. 14, 21.11. Daly Ptlot .1u1y r. t4.11. K. ,... Draltr "°' ~ 1. t4. n n . Oel4't "°' ~ 21. ,... ,... ,... 1... ,,,.., , ... C A A F T I M2J1 M·IM M·184 M·t• -""-blllhld __ air.. C... ~..:M::·~190=.t...::::::::=====:..t. I l . Orlinm co.t DAILY PtLOT/ ~ • .My It, HM 0 NABERS CADILLAC fit 2100 IWllOR ILYI., COSTA IESI (114) 140-1100 (213) 111-1211 •Best Pnces • Convenient Location • Great Location • Super Service • Courteo s & K nowledgesble Sales People os RLING MOTORS WEST Chevr let • Porach• • Audi 441 E. Ce,st hy., 1..,1rt leaoll 113-otOO Highest Quality Sales & Service 0 THEODORE ROBINS FORD U.S.A. 's # 1 Thunderbird Retail Dealer Modern Sales. Ser vice. Parts. Body. Paint & Tire ()epts Compettt1ve Rates On Lease & Daily Rentals 20IO llar~er llY~., 01tt1 1111 . 142-0010" 140-1211 o 5ADDLEBACll Sales Leasing & Service Parts IRVINE AUTO CENTER 1-800-831-3377 714-380-1200 The Best Car Buys in Orange County are at the dealers listed on this page EARLE IKE VOLVO fZ> v Ah.\d\' d hu~t: 1nh·nt.ln .,... Ah'd'" Ji..u,uni priu.·, SAi FC, • ::.ER11l\E-• tA ,1N<• •PAR S •BODY SHO 196l' Harhnr Bini.. ln,ld ~h .• ,d -;14 tdl-KKKl' 0 S<)t1tll(~()llOt)1-@...J M VOLKSWAGEN/ISUZU CALIF'S :: 1 & LARGEST VOLKSWAGEN DEALER NEED WE SAY MORE? Parts Open M-Sat 8 . 5 30 Sat 9 4 p m Service m-Frt 7 30 6 p m 18711 BEACH BLVD HUNTIHOTON BEACH 714/ 842-2000 SEAL ..,0£AC 11 SJIM CLICK AUDI/RENAULT/JEEP ----~\.. 0 ' ,,. WE'RE OUT TO BE # 1 ! IRVINE AUTO CENTER 41 Auto Center Or. Irvine (71 4 951 ·3 144 • 800 428-7485 &~A~ ~~Ye~ ~Af.!G & "Where Professional A tt1tude Prevails" SJMCl•llzlng In Europ .. n Delivery. ExceJ'-nl S...Cllon of N•w and carefully Pf~•r9d UMd BMW'• always In stock 835-3171 208 W. 1st St., Santa Ana Corner of Broadway & 1st St Now Open Sundays GSTERLING SALES -SERVICE -LUSllUi -PAITS 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•tlon 1001 Ou•ll SI. -R•NM Dl~l•lon World's Largest Selection of IT\ Mercedes Benz ~ 833-9300 S.fts · luMIJ · Parts · Sm6cf · 1t4J SM, I . ' 4 t • 18 PACIFIC OCEAN 19 WE LEASE ALL MAKES & MODELS CALL US FOR FLEET PRICES Just a Short Drive Away ... 33375 Camino Capistrano 493-3375 SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO 831 -1375 o COMMONWEAL TH VOLKSWAGEN &]'). 'FAMILY STORE SINCE •53· -~ Sales -Service -Leasino ~ Ml-0110 "A NICE Pl.ACE TO DO BUSNSS" •SALES •SERVICE •WSING OP{Jf .f'IOM (714)8.48·7739 ( 714) 556-1008 9AM • 3PM SAT. 16800 Beach Boulevard Hunltngton Beach, CA 92&47 XTO'rMO HIGH VOLUME DISCOUNT DEALER SALES, LEASING PARTS & SERVICE 28802 Marguerite Parkway • Mission Viejo. CA 92692 (714) 582-2880 (7 14) 364-1210 ~ER ~@U©oo@ BUICK Laius JAGUAR ISUZU che PROFESSIONAL APPROACH e 71 4 -979-2500 2925 Harbor B oulevard • Costa Mesa. CA • . ~ ) .....,; / LAG~U::-; BEACH . \. lAGUN~ NIGUEL \ G UNIVERSITY OLDSMOBILE HONDA 2880 Harbor Blvd. Coate Meaa 540-0713 3 Blocks So of 405 Fwy 0 BOB LONGPRE Orange County s Oldest & Largest Pontiac DHlenhlp ar l.ach B!Yd & the G.uden Grow F~y f714 ft2 .... ll l714J 6a6-ZIOO We perform o1ll Pontiac warranty work, reg.ardleu of wf1•te )'OU orlglNlly purchased 10"' car. OPSll llOWDAY WDIMGI UNTIL ......... 8e•h Blvd.• Galrden Grow rw,. W.atmlnner, C.ltfomta 0 HOUSE OF IMPORTS • Ease ol Ownership terms • Lease convemence-12-72 mo • Select lrom 100 • new and pre-owned • Oeltvery 1n Europe optton dlal Merced•• 714/213 837-2333 Santa Ana (5) FrHway g Beach In Bu9na Park G CONNELL CHEVROLET 2121 •• ,~., llt4., 01st1 .... Over 23 Years Serving Orange County Sales • Service • Leasing S,edal Parts U1t 541-MOG MONDAY-FRIDAY SATURDAY SUNDAY 8:30 AM -9:00 PM 8:30 AM -6:00 PM 10 00 AM -5:00 PM G) TED .JONES FORD/ISUZU Your full service ford & Isuzu dealer • Sales • Service • Leasing f ',\S ) "'Fl .\D ... E4Sr to DEAL li-'ITH 2 bllu north of S•al• Ao• Frt>t>W•) on Beach Bl"d 6211 BEACH BLVD. BUENA PARK (714) 521-3110 (213) 921-8681 0 a marJlOrl PONTIAC • TRANS AM • Flf!(BIRO • !>()()()ST£ • PARISlCNNC • BONN£Yllll • GRANO PRIX • SUNBIRO C()HV[ R TIBl E • ! 1000 • GRANO AM Wt Sell f.lcltt•lt a marJlOrl PONTIAC F•RO 2UO Harbor Blvd. C01t1 Mm Newport Beach 714/549-4300 a marJlOrl SUBARU SLASHES e PRICES! • ON ALL 1986 MODELS ~ R ~ CIRtl*STAHCES WE WU NOT BE UNDERSOLD' ---·--- SUBARU 24IO Hubor Blvd . Coita Meu Ntwpori Beach 714/549-4300 G ORANGE COAST JEEP /RENAULT # 1 /11 Tiit W11t For #1rt lHP Slits For 8 Y11rs · Onin2e. s ALEs -coa'St. sERv1cE H U ..... _ •lVO • LEASING ~ • ACCESSORIES DEPT C) ~ c CAMPBEi I a NISSAN/~ l£AOi • low Prices • No Giml1)id11 • Great S.lec:ti.n • Friendly PNple '• Excellent Service 1883' loeoch 8ou~d HunhniJton fteoch (714) M2-7711 (213) S.2-1463 GMAXJ:Y WWW a:, ...... 11 \\ i / H ll )I If I .. \ v-Excellenoe In Sales Service & Leasing v-orange County's No. 1 No Hassle Oealerll WE HAVE MAXEY OISCOUNTSlll (714) 147-1555 18881 Beach Blvd., Huntington Bch. I RACING COVERAGE MONDAY, JULY 28, 1986 2 Coast residents drown over weekend more 8-foot waves expected to arrive down by a wave whtle wadina near and two unidenllfied men drowned Coronado Street. said police Lt. Don Sunday while fishing at Pt, Maau Chandler. State Beach. The three men were Friends tried to revive Veenstra, sundina on the rocks at Mqu Rock 20, after draaging her to shore. when one of them stood too close to Parameclics also attempted without the water, said Ventura County succeu to revive her after the S:30 Sheriff's Lt. Mike Gullon. BJ PAUL ARCIOPLEY °' .. .., ........ Powerful waves rcachina up to 12 feet pounded south-facinl beaches over the weekend, claimina the lives of two Oranae Coast residents and p~~ptina numerous rescues. Eiaht-foot surf was expecied to Aneel pitcher Don Bat- ton wtna dael OTer ao.- toD '• Tom 8ea•er. 3-0, la a battle of career 300- iame wtnnen. Bl. Coast lrvlne receives a birthday glft./A3 California Screen actors authorize a strlke./M Nation Bishop Tutu scores re- ported U.S. plan to send a apeclal envoy to South Africa./ AS World Six men tunnel to within Inches of mllllons of dollars before getting caught./M Sport& The Dodgers return home to meet the Giants follow- ing a wlld 13-11 win over Chlcago./81 Greg Lemond becomes the first American to wtn the Tour de France cycl- ing race./82 INDEX Advtce and Games Bulletin Board Business Classlfled Comics Crossword Death Notices Entertainment Opinion Police Log Public Notices Sports A9 A3 A7 87-9 A10 A9 89 86 A6 A3 pound the coastline again today and Tuesday u swells from another Southern Hemisphere storm roll onto south-faclna beaches, forecasters said. . The hiah surf took the life ofJeanne Veenstra of Newport Beach early Saturday when she was knocked a.m . accident. Veenstra was taken to ''A wave slammed apjnst the man Hoaa Memorial Hospital Presby-and draaed him out. .. OuU01> said. terian where she was pronounced Tbc other two jumped into the dead. powerful surf to aid him, and all three A Huntinston Beach man, ten-· were lost, he said. tatively identified. as Ukspiy Keum. A sberifrs helicopter and under- The a ... Lawrence Jenco la embraced by U.8. ambueador Rlch•rd Bart and bla wife 8maday at tbe U.S. al.rbue la Pranklmt. W•t Oermaay. Tile Ill-year-old Amertean orte.t wu held for 19 montha u a hoetaee In Lebanon before bla releue Saturday. Board to consider claim on mauling By ROBERT HYNDMAN Of .. Ol9r ........ The state Board of Control 1s scheduled Aug. 1 l to consider a $28 million claim by the family of an El Toro prl who was mauled by a mountain lion in a campground near San Juan Capistrano. Tbe claim, brouaht by the parents ofS-year-old Laura Michelle SmaJI, is similar to the one denied by the county July I. h charges that the public should have been warned about the danaer posed by mountain lions. Small was attacked and mauled by a mountain lion March 23 in the Ronald W. Caspers Wilderness Park. The girl, who suffered multi~le skull fractures in the attack, conunues to recover following six 1uraeries. Colllaion at aea I Coast water ltam, aided by the Coast O uard, retrieved one body Sunday, Gullon said. ~ teareb for the other victims wu 1&1spended for the ni&Jtt, he II.id. All unidentified teen-aatr nearly drowned Sunday when he was knock- ed uncoDJCioul near Bolsa Chica State Beach. Tbe youth WU riding I boolie board when be collided with a IUJ"(er, said lifepard Dave Muskrath. The collision knocked the victim UD<X>nscious. He was pulled to shore by lifquuds where be WU revived after Ollyten WU admin:iJteted. Lifepard1 made more than I 00 rescues at Bobe Chica u 6-to S.-foot waves rolled in \btoushc>Ut Sunday, Muskralh said. Lifesuards were busy at other <>raqe Coast beaches as well. despite smaller crowds because of un-- le&IOUblY cool weather. About 100 reteues were made at (Pl_.. ... WU.D/A2) Freed priest's ·health-called satisfactory The Rev. Jenco flown to W. Germany after 19 months as hostage WIESBADEN, West Germany (AP) - A U.S. Air Force physician la.id Sunday that the Rev. Lawrence Jenco was in satisfactory condition but had signs of heart disease after being held captive for 19 months by Moslem extremists in Lebanon. "We can definitely say he was released because of his poor health," Col. Robert W. Gilmore said. "His Related ator'" on A5. overall medical condition is satisfac- tory, considering bis detention ... his aae of 5 1 and the fact be hasn't slept for three days." Jenco was freed Saturday in eastern Lebanon's Bekaa Valley. Hisaapton, the Shiite Moslem terrorist aroup Islamic Jihad -Islamic Holy War- said in a published statement it was rcleasina the Roman Catholic priest because bis health was detcriorati~ Gilmore, administrator of the Air Force hospital in Wiesbeden, wd initial tests showed Jenco bad "onp>- ing heart di9e&Se," and the pnest would receive more tests over the next few days. Gilmore. who spoke to reporters aboutfivehounafter Jencoarrivedat the hospital, did not elaborate. J enco tokl reporters earlier be was ··oomafine," butcomplainedofbetnc tired. Terry Waite, the An&lican Church envoy who accompanied Jenco from Damucus, Syria, to West Germany, told the news conference the priest received telephone calls at the hospi- tal from Pope John Paul II and the Archbishop of Canterbury, Robert Runcie. .. The pope expressed bis areat pleasure and satisfaction at Jenco's rdeue," Waite said. He p ve no delails of the call from Runae. Earlier Sunday the bearded priest p ve well-wishers a thum•up Stp as be stepped otr a U.S. Alf Force DC9 jet at the Rhem-Main Base near Frankfurt. He was accompanied by Robert Oakley. a State Department anti-terrorism expert. U.S. Ambassador Richard Burt and his wife, Gahl, arceted Je:nco at the airport. One well-wisher carried a placard reading: .. Believe it! Welcome home, Fr. Jenco." A banner buna ~ the control tower read. "Welcome home." "Chlcaao u a w10dy city and I want to feel tbe wind on my face qain." Jenco told reporters. He is a natJve of Joliet, Ill., near OUcqo. He also said, ••Don't fof'ICl the r.i.... ... PIUSST/A2) English church , victim of politics By PAUL ARCBIPLEY OftM0..,"9tMllll An Episcopal congrcgauon that sou&}lt to move a 13th century En&)ish village church to Corona del Mar has reluctantly accepted a de- cision by England's church com- mw1onen to block the sale. "We're certainly not golD& to fiaht that deC1s1on." conceded the Rev. James Hohlscld of SL Matthew's by- the-Sca. But r1e1ther has the congrcgauon pven up its aoaJ of building a church for its 64 memtxrs. Juhe Ryan. a member of the delepuon that traveled to England ID hopes of sccunng the transfer of the 800-year-old stone church building, said members wtll look carefully at their options before dev1s1ng a new plan. Televlston Weather 85, 9, 10 B1-5 86 A2 Joe R.addina, deputy executive officer of the state Board of Control, said he bas recommended that the three-memfter panel deny the claim. "The denial would not say the claim has not merit; it says there art (Pl--... LION/ A2) Dory team• coWde lD the •arf da.rt.DM the Soathwemt Rectonal SlUf LU ... .tnc Cbm- plonahipe S.t1arday ln San Clemente. Herb White, la tJae water left, and partner Randy Buck of the Bantlqton State Beach team placed thlnl la the race. See AS. ··we're d1sappo1nted. but ~·re not discouraged." Ryan said .. We JUSt sec this as an obstacle Every project has obstacles." Ryan said the move to bl~k their (Pl_.. eee ENGLISH/ A2) UCI hospital chief helped medical center to recover Sc wartz named permanent hospit 'administrator. remains vice c ancellor I In March l 98S, Leon Schwartz was banded a hot potato Schwartz. a vice chancellor at UC Irvine, asked to take the reins of the 1ehool'1 teach1na hospital. UCJ Medical Center an Otanic. The financial picture at the hospital wu anything but pretty. In the fllcal year endi11f. June 1914, the medical center'• daily opmattoos b\ldatt was Sl million in the red. When Schwaru was asked to step in the foUowina sprina. about S 10 mil hon 1n tones bad already accumulated. The prfViOUI admini1tra~or. Wil- lliam Oonmlet, had JUSt m1ped by mutual aarcc:m~nt with the univer· 11ty. At tbe time, a cam~u1 spokeswoman u.id the job was • ex- tremely demanding. and (Gonzalez) felt he had done all he could do." Schwartz was asked to serve as du"CCtor of the -49)..bed h01p1tal until a permanent successor to Gonule:z could be hu'td. But 11 the months slJpped by, no permanent rcpl~ ment al)Peattd. Thctt was ~pecu­ lation tha\ Schwartz was JUlt hold1n& down the post until a pnvate ho pital chain could be enlisted to take over manqement of the financ111ly troubkd med.teal center But a funny th1°"4 happened on thr way to the fial disa tcr: the hospi- tal's profit picture pulled a U-tum. On June 30, 1985 - a few months after Schwartz took over -UCJ Medical Center ended its fiscal year with an operatma defiat of S9.6 million. But a few weeks aao the ho pital concluded the 1985-86 fttcal yur about S7S0,000 in the black. according to Schwartz. The medical center 1dminis1rator 1s too modest to take complete crcc:ht for tbe turnaround Nevenhelcss. UCI Cl\anocllor Jack Pcltason was so pleased with the work Schwaru was do1na on a temporary ba'1s that he ~ommendcd the H ianmcnt be made permanent UCJ offiaals dropped plan' to launch a nataonwide search for a new medical center director. and on July 18 the UC Board of Regent approved Schwanz's appomtmcnt to the post PHIL SIEllEllll P10 Plf IN lHf Nt\'f\ In add1tton to his hospital duties. Schwartz wdl hold on to his previous JOb as a vice chancellor for 1dm1n1~ trauve and business services. The dual poStt1on wtll earn him an annual salary of S 116,000. a un1ver- s1ty spokesperson said. Schwartz. who hves ID Newport Beach. has prrv1ously held 1dm1n1s~ tr1t1ve po ts Wlth the National In- stitutes of Health. theN1t1onal Science Foundauon, the U S Offict of Education and NASA Ht ha' an economics dearce fro m Johtu Hopkins Univen1ty and 1~ a ctn1fied pubhc accountant Dunna a rtttnt 1ntcrv1rw 1n ht~ office on tht lrvtne campu,, hwaru (Pleue ... 8CBW ilTZ/ A2) Police use computer to suppress cruising .on Balboa Peninsula 81 PAUL ARCllIPLEY °' ........... Newport Beach pohce put a cnmp 1n the ume-bonored t.rad1uon of cruisma down Balboa Boulevard for the tee0nd weekend 1n a row as they rerouted vehicles offtbe nwn dna- Enforttnl lhe city's crui11n& con- trol ordinance. 1-4 offioen helped divert tcen-qcn off Balboa be~n Palm and Main streets between 8 p m. and I a m Friday and tutday, ~Id Sat Ron Rodacn Between 4,000 and 5,000 motonsts wtrt diverted each niaht throuah a checkpoint when they ~ handed cards that ""8d "WARNING' You and your passcnacn arc hereby notified that this vehtcle 1s dnvi through a tnffic control point. '"lf wnhJn SIX houn this vehicle passes throuab th11 control point ap1n. it v.ill oonstitu~ a viola\Jon of Ncwpon Beach municipal code ~ uon 12.08 13S." Workma an aru four blocb Iona and three blocks W'lde, police were atttmpu"' to d.iscounae youna people who came to tM pcrunsula from cnu11na up and doWft the boulevard. License C>tate numben were ,. corded in a ponable compu 1 would pit out any rct\U1l ide numbers. 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Costa Mm Mtwport Beach 714/549-4300 G> ORANGE COAST JEEP /RENAULT # 1 /11 T/11 W11t for fin J11p S./11 For I Y11rs ~ -~e~~~.J: m~r~~ ~ s4~ • ACCESSORIES DEPT ., -CAMPSEI L f c NISSAN/~ lf}(H • low Price1 • No G1mmid11 • Great S.S.Ction • Friendly Peopl• • bc•ll.nt S.rvk• 18835 &.och 8out.YOfd Huntington 8eoch (714) 142·7711 (213) 592-1463 OMAJCl=Y w a:c..,~•~ II H )IH\\)I .,, .... , .,.... Excellence In Sales Service & Leasing "Orange County's No. 1 No Hassle Dealerll WE HAVE MAXEY OISCOUNTSlll (714) 847-1555 18881 Beach Btvd ., Huntington Bch. MONDAY, JULY 28, 1986 ild s~rf p~updin Coast 2 Coast residents drown over weekend more 8-foot waves expected to arrive down by a wave while wadin1 near Coronado SlttCt. Aid police Lt. Don Chandler. Friends tried to revive Veenstra, 20, afttr dragina her to a.bore. Paramedics also anempted without success to revive her after the S:30 a.m. accident. Veenstra was taken to Hoq Memorial Hospital Presby· , lerian .where she wu pronounced dead. and two unidentified men drowned Sundl}' while fishina al Pt. Maau State Beach. The three men were standina on the rocks at Maau Rock when one of them stood too close to the water, Aid Ventura County Sberitr1 Lt. Mike GuUon. By PAUL ARCBIPLEY °' .. ...., ...... Powerful waves reach.ins up to 12 feet pounded IOUlh·facina beaches over the weekend, claimin& the lives of two Oranae Coast residents and PfOl'."ptina numerou1 rncues. Eiaht-foot surf wa1 ellpected to Shutout Anlel pitcher Don Sat- toD wtu 4al o•er ~ toD'• Tom Sea•er. s-o. ID a battle of career S00- 1ame whmen. Bl. Coast lrylne recetvea a birthday glft./A3 California Screen actors authorize a strike.JM Nation Bishop Tutu scores re- ported U.S. plan to send a special envoy to South Africa./ AS World Six men tunnel to within Inches of mllllona of dollars before getting caught./M Sports The Dodgers return home to meet the Giants follow- ing a wlld 13-11 wtn over Chlcago./81 Greg Lemond becomes the first American to wtn the Tour de France cycl- ing race./82 INDEX Advice and Games Bulletin Board Bualneu Ctaulfled Comics Crossword Death Notices Entertainment Opinion Police log Publlc Notices Sports A9 A3 A7 87-9 A10 A9 89 86 A6 A3 pound the coutlioe apin today and Tuetday u swells from another Southern Hemisphere storm roU onto south-facina beacbea, forecasters said. .. A wave slammed apinlt the man and dnlled bim out," GuUon said. The biab aurftook the life of Jeanne Veenstra of Newport Beach early Saturday when she was knocked A Huntinaton Beach man, ten· tatively ickotified u Ukspiy Keum , The other two jumped into the powerful aurf to aid him, and all three ~lost, be said. A sheriff's helicopter and under· The an. Lawrence Jenco la embraced by U .8 . am..._dor JUch•rcl Bart uad Illa wt£e haday a t die U.8. alftue ID Jl'ranklart. Board to consider claim on mauling By ROBERT HYNDMAN Of ... 0-. ......... The state Board of Control 1s scheduled Aug. 13 to consider a $28 million claim by the family of an El Toro aifl who was mauled by a mountain lion in a camwound near San Juan Capistrano. The claim, brouaht by the parenu of 5-year-old Laura Michelle Small, is similar to the one denied by the county July I. It charges that the public should have been warned about the danaer posed by mountain lions. Small was attacked and mauled by a mountain lion March 23 an the Ronald W. Caspen Wilderness Park. The prl, who suffered multit>le sk.ull fractures in the attack, conunues to recover followina siJt suraeries. Wm~· nae s1-1eu~ld AmerlcaD orteet wu d for 19 montlaa u a laoetaee In Lebuaon before Illa releaae S.tarday. Colliaion at sea water aeam, aided by the Coast Ouatd, retrieved one body Sunday, Oullon ta.id. The tareb for the other victims wu tuspended for the ni&ht.. heuid. AD unideatified teen-aaer nearly drowned Sunday~ he was knock- ed uncontcious near Bolsa Chica State Beach. The youth was ridina a boolie board '#ben be collided with a sw<er, uidlifquard Dave Muskrath. 1be collision knocked the victi m uAConscious. Ke was pulled to shore by lifeauardt where be was mived after OX)'llm wat edmi.DiAered. ufqui.nSJ made more thu 1 oo 1UCUC1 It Bot• Chica U 6-to S.:foot waves tolled in OuouPout Sunday, ~ Mulkrath said. u~ weR busy at other Oranlie Cout beaicbet u well, despite smalJtt crowds because of u.n- seuonably cool weather. About 100 racua weR made_ at (Pl ....... WILD/A2) Freed priest '/ health calle satisfactory The Rev. Jenco flown to W. Germany after 19 months as hostage WIESBADEN, West Germany (AP) - A U.S. Air Force physician said Sunday th.al the Rev. Lawrence Jenco was in sausfactory condition but had siJns of heart diteUC after bein& held captive for 19 months by Moslem extremists in Lebanon. "We can definitely say he wu released because of his poor health," Col. Robert W. Gilmore said. "His Related atorlM on A5. overall medical condition is satisfac- tory, considerina bis detention ... his qe of 5 I and the fact he hasn 'l slept for three days." Jenoo was freed Saturday an eastern Lebanon's Bekaa Valley. Riscapton, the Shiite Moslem te1'rorist group lslarnicJ1had-lslam1c Holy War- said in a published statement it was releasing the Roman Catholic priest because his health was deteriorating. Gilmore, admirustJ'ltor of the Air Force hospital in Wiesbllden. said initial tests a.bowed Jenoo bad ••oop>- ina heart disease... and the pnest would receive more t.esu over the next few days. Gilmore, who spoke to reporters aboutfivebounafter Jenooarnvedal the hospital, did not elaborate. Jenco told reporters earher he was 0'doin& fine," but complained ofbein& tired. Terry Waite, the An&ljcan Church envoy who ac:rompanied Jenco from Damascus, Syria. LO West Germany, told the news conference the priest ~ived telephone calls at the bosp\.- tal from Pope John Paul n and the Archbishop of Cantert>ury, Robert Runcie. ~ "The pope expressed bts areat pleasure and satisfaction at Jenco's release," Waite said. He pve no details of the call from Runae. Earlier Sunday the bearded priest pve weU-wisben a thumbf.up llP as he stepped off a U.S. Air Foroe OC-9 jet at the Rhein-Main Bue near Frankfurt. He was accompanied by Robert Oakley, a State Department anti-lefTOrism e:itpert. U.S. Ambassador Richard Burt and his wife, Gabl. sreeted Jenco at the airport. One weU-wisher carried a placard rcadina: "Believe 1t! Welcome home, Fr. Jenco." A benner huna near the control tower read, ''Welcome home." "Cbicqo is a windy city and I want to i'.el &he wind on my faClC ~n." Jenco told reporters. He is a nauve of Joliet. IU., near Cbica&o. He also said. "Don't foraet the fl't_.. eee PRBST /A2) English church victim of politics By PAUL ARCHJPLEY Ol .. Dlllr .......... An Episcopal congregation that souittt lo move a 13th century English village church to Corona del Mar has reluctantly accepted a de- cision by England's church com- missioners to bloc k the sale. "We're cen.amly not goina 10 fiaht that dec1s1on," conceded the Rev. James Hohlseld of St Matthew's by- lhe-Sca. But neither has the congregauon ajv~n up its goal of building a church for its 64 members Julje Ryan. a membtr of the dtleptton that traveled to England an hopes of secunng the transfer of the 8~year-old stone church_ bu1ldin&. said members Wlll look carefully at their options before dev1s1n1 a new plan. Televlsfon Weather 85,9, 10 81-5 86 A2 Joe R.addina, deputy executive officer of the st.ate Board of Control, said be bas recommended that the three-member panel deny the claim .. "The denial would not say the claim has not meri~ it says there are (Ple&M eee LION/ A2) Doi')' teem• collide In the nrf dartna the Soatlaweat Re&lonal Sarf Llf-nn. Ciam- plonalal1»9 8atUrday In 8en Clemeale. Herb Wblte. In tbe water left, and partner Randy Back of the Banttncton State Beach team placed thlrcl In ~e race. See AS. "We're disappointed. but we're not discouraged." Ryan said "We JUSt sec lh1s as an obstacle Every prOJCCt has obstacles ... Ryan said the move to block. their (Pleue eee ENGLJ8B/ A2) UCI hospital chief helped ' !m edical center to recover Sc wartZ name permanent hospital ta1~:1~~~ ~:~;8~ui1c~ ~e~~:ths d i i t t 1 i h 11-after Schwartz took over -UCI a m n s ra or, rema ns v ce c ance or Medical Center ended its fi1ta1 year with an operatina dcfiett of S9.6 million. But a few weeks qo, the hospital concluded the 1985-86 fiscal year about $750,000 m the black. accordint to Schwartz. Jn Much 1985, U<>n Schwartz was handed a hot potato. Schwartz, a VJce chancellor at UC Irvine, uk.ed to take the re1n1 of the school's' teachina hospital, UCI Medical Center an Oranic. The financial picture at the hos91tal lwas anyth1na but PRtty. In the fiscaJ year endi"f. June 198•. the medical center's daily operations budaet wu Sl million in the red. When Scnwaru lwu asked to siep an the foUowina 1prina. about SIO million in lossea bad already accumulated The pttV'IOUS 1dnuni1tr1tor, Wil- ham Gonzaltt. had JUll rettped by mutual aarccment Wlth the linivcr- • ·-- ally. At the time, a cam~us spokeswoman II.id the job was• ex- U'Cmely dcmandin&. and (Gonzalez) felt he had done alf he could do.•• Schwartz wu uked to serve as director of the 493-bed hosi>ital until a permanent IUCceltor to Oonzalez could be hired. But as the months slipped by, no permanent repllce- ment appeared.. There was pecu· lauon that Schwanz was JUlt holdina down the post until a pnvate hospital chain could be entitled to take over manqement of the financially troubfed medical center. But a funny thin' happened on the way to the fiscal d1sa'ller. the hoiiD1· The medical center admin11tr1tor 11 too modest to take complete credit for the turnaround. Nevenheless. UCI Chancellor Jack Pelt.a'°n was so pleased with the work Schwartz was do1na on a temporary basi that be recommended the assi.anment be made rrmanent. UC offic11l1 dropped plans to launch a nationwide search for a new medical center director. and on July 18 the UC Board of Regents approved Schwa nz·, appointment to the po\t ' PHIL SIEIDEllU P 10Pll IN TH[ Nf ws In add1uon io h1• hospital duties. Schwartz will hold on to his previous JOb as a VJCC chancellor for adminis.- trat1ve and busane s scrvict'I The dual position Wlll cam him an annual salary of S 11 6,000, a univer-suy spokesperson said. Schwartz, who hves m N'ewpon Beach, ha prtv1ously held adm1n1s- trallve posts with the National ln- lhtutes of Health, theNational Science Foundation, lhe U S Office of Education and NASA He has an economics dearee from Johns Hopkins Universtt~ and is a C'trt1ficd public account.ant Dunna a recent 1ntcrvtew in hl'I office on the Irvine campu'I, c;chwan 1 (Pleue ... 8CHW ARtt/ A2) Police use computer to suppress cruising on Balboa Peninsula By PAUL ARCBIPLEY °' .. ...., ......... NcwpoM Beach pohoe put a cnmp an the time-honored trad1t1on of Cl'U1SJn1 down Balboa Boulevard for the aeoond weekend 1n a row as they rerouted vehicles ofTtbe main drq. Enforcina the city's cruisina con- trol ord1nanoe, 14 offiocn helped divert teen..qers ofT Balboa bet...,.een Palm· a'nd Main streets bctv.un 8 p.m. and I am Friday and Saturday, said S,t. Ron Rocl&cn Between 41000 and 5.000 motonm were d1verted each niaht throuah a checkpoint where they wne handed cards that read "WARNING' You and your pa nacn are hereby notified that this vehicle is dnvina throu&h a traffic control posn1 "If wtlhan sill houn this vehicle passes throuah this control point apm. 11 .w1ll constitute a v1olat1on of Newport Beach municipal code sec- tion 12.08.135." Work1na an area four blocks Iona and three blocks wtdc, pohcc were attempuna to d1JCOurqe youna people ,.,.ho came to the peninsula from CNISlf\I up and down the boulevard License plate numbcn ~ re- corded 1n a ponablc compu.tcr that would pit out any ~tum s numbers lf the driver co n·1 provide an acceptable oplana n for be1na on the roed within x-bo'1! hm1t. he was akd OfftCttS issued atatio for cnu (Pleue ... POL &/A2) \ . I OrMge eo.t DAILY PILOT/ MonHy, ~ 28, , ... SWARTZ RANDED BOT POTATO ••• Al -.a aked bow much Credit be couJd f'or the financial tunmound at CJ Medical Center. .. I auaa the lelder of the abip Ft ciedit for Ondlna the port and a the blame when you miu h,. .. be cl ''8\lt this WU realty I tum on. And it involved luck and ilmina. I'd be bard·preaaed to son it out." The medical center ii a fonucr unty hospital ~uited by the )lnivmity in 1976. It 11 t.bc princiJ>411 ~b.ina hospital for mcdjcal stu- dents &Om the Irvine c.ampus. It also provides care for a larae number of patients who lack private medical insurance, includina in- diaents and people who rely on the state and federal medica.l assistance prosrama, Medi-Cal and Medicare. Univenity officials have stated that 1ovemrnent reimburaement for indiaent and Medi-Cal patients falls lhon of the cost of treatina these people. The result., they say, bas been red ank. Accordina to Schwartz, about 60 percent of UCI Medica.l Center's patients last year were indiaent and Medi-Cal patients. To offset these losses several steps were taken. Just before Sc;hwanz took over. the medical center cut the equivalent of about 100 full-time positions, layiDJ off nurses, sec- retaries, technicians and other em - jlloyees. Schwanz himself has overseen a ri•orous cost-control prosram. Each ~fthe five UC hospitals must report regularly to the regents regarding how expcnscs compare with the same month durina the previous year. Aooordina to Schwartz, UCI boasts ihe best cost control record among these hospitals, keeping the increase to a modest 2 percent. Another key to tummg around the hospital's finances 1s attractmg more \)atients with private insurance cov- ..irage, In the past. Schwanz S8ld. • LeonSchwuta physicians affiliated with UCI's medical school were "less aagressivc" in persuadina their patients to under- go treatment at UCJ Medical Center. But more recently, "Collqe of Mcdicme faculty (memben have) gained more confidence in the man· agement of the hospital and are bringing more patients to UCI," Schwartz said. Still, he admits the former county hospital may still have an image problem. The director said a study will be conducted soon to determine how UCI Medical Center can im- prove its public appeal. The hospital also needs funds for renovation and expanded services, particularly ifit is to keep its share of tile lli&hly competitive Orange Coun- ty health care market. Accordina to Schwartz that was one reason university officials con- aidered aft\lialiy with a private boloital daaiD •. Def rcuoned that Id I cotpOl'ltiOD misht be willln& IO invat "'ODCY to UPlf'lde UCI Medi- cal C.01er. WhilO rapinJ w benefit• 11 tbc ea.me ume. But Schwattz II.id the: idea was ~ when Oov. Oeorae Deu- kmeJlln and the Callfomi& Leais.-~t\U"C aareed to channel additional f\inda to lJCt Medical Ceiiter and two other former county hoeeitals to help them omet opentina deficits. The state baa eannarbd stiU more fU.nds for renovation ofUCI Medical Center i.includi04 S8 million for a new "atate-oMbwn antcnsivc: care unit that ahould be completed in about 18 months. These commitments boosted mor- ale. "h was a recopition that the state undentood our problems and was willina to.re-invest in the UC medical ayttem," Schwartz said. "That wasn't clear before." The adminisirator is also hoping voters in November approve a $400 million state bond issue for educa- tional buildings. He said about S3S million in that packqe is earmarked for improvements at UCJ Medical Center, including a new outpatient facility and new cancer and psy- chiatnc centcn. Even thouah the hospital finished l 98S-86 in die black, Schwartz said the financial problems are not fully resolved. Employee pay raises kicked ii\ July t, and medical supply costs continue to rise. When Schwartz aocepted the new appointment as din:ctor of UCI Medical Center, no length of time was stipulated. While be said be eQJoys the cbaJJenaes of managing the hospi- tal, be also misses some ofllis campus dutie1, particularly the graduate ac- countma classes be used to teach. "After some period of time," Schwartz said, .. I want to get back to beina 'just' a vice chancellor." ~: .................................................................... --;: tLION MAULING CLAIM BEFORE BOARD ••• .. FromAl • " several complex issues that would .. best be adJudicated ma coun of law," lladdin• said this week. A plaintiff is free to file a lawsuit within six months following the • denial ofa claim. • Mike Madigan, the mvesu~tor rcprcsentin,g the Small famil y, said he believes the family will follow through with l~l acuon followmg the expected denial of the claims. The family was expected to meet with their attorney on Fnday to discuss the matter, Madigan said. But both Madigan and the Smalls have said they arc especially frus- trated by what they say has been a lack of cooperation by local law enforce- ment agencies in investigating the incident. A female mountain hon and her cub were captured m Caspers park July Sin the same campground Laura Small was attacked more th.an three months earlier. But Fish and Game said the lion that mJuled the young girl was trapped and killed in March, shonly afteTthc: attack. The pawprints of that male li on and other evidence matched those found in the area where Small was attacked. ENGLISH CHURCH VICTIM OF POLITICS ••• From Al acqu1s1t1on of the church from the tmy farm1ng town of Covenham was contrary to the very teachings of the church. The sale was disapproved because the conservative congregation in Corona del Mar had splintered from the Ep1scopahan establishment. England's church comm1ss1oner~ reportedly feared embarrassing the bishop ofCaltfom1a 1fthey pemutted the breakaway Conunumg Episcopal Churchto acquire St. Bartholomew's Church at Covenham. But because the church as surplus -the townspeople use another church nearby -11 wall likely be demolished "I thmk it's very sad that men who say they're ti") mg to walk tn the path of Jesus Chnst should act m such a manner toward other peo ple." Ryan said. "It's not as though we're Satan worshipers, 1s 1t?" R yan said village rs o ver- whelmingly approved the transpon of the church rather than sec 1t destroyed. .. It's been there 800 years. Some of the families have been there almost ai. long," she said. "It's more than JUSt a church. h 's a bit of them. .. They had hopes 1t would go on. Now they'll see 11 bulldozed." If the sale had been approved , the congregation wo uld have re- constructed the church on Heliop- trope A venue, making 1t the oldest church of Christian worship in the United States. But in England. ifs JUSt one of dozens of ancient village churches that are no longer in use. "It has no particular h1stoncal significance to them," Ryan said. even though arcbeologjsts recently discovered the lead roof was covered wi th ancient drawings. "A workman drew pictures of what he saw around him at that time," Ryan said, "including ships at sea. "It's a part of all of us, really. "'It's a very low point that things have fallen," Ryan said. PRIEST IN SATISFACTORY CONDITION ••• From Al three brothers." refemng to the Amencans still held hostage m Leba- non A foun h Amencan also is missing 1n Lebanon but the Islamic Jihad has said 11 killed him last October No bod~ has been fo und Jenco. who wore a black clencal suit and pnest's collar. waved a small Amencan flag as he amved at the hospital. He was to be reunited Monday w11h family members who Women pilots winging way home after race West Coast wo men ruled the wi nd currents this weekend dunng the 17th annual Palms to Pine'> Air Race that pilled 36 contestants from Santa Monica to Bend. Ore O n Sunday. the weary by ela ted teams were winging their way home again afier a celebration and awards ceremony for the top 10 fini shers Top honors went to a mo ther and "'They couldn't pedal fast eno ugh," Lo ufek Joked. "But they flew well. "Everybody had a tremendously good'ume:· she said of the race that began Friday at Santa Monica Air- port. lefi llhno1s Sunday for West Ger- many Asked how fellow hostage Terry Anderson was faring, Jenco replied, "Very fine." Anderson, 38, the chief Middle East correspondent of The Associated Press, was kidnapped in Beirut on March 16, l 98S. two mo nths after Jenco's abduction. Anderson's sister, PCSJY Say, was in Damascus when Synan officials drove Jenco there Saturday from Lebanon. She has been meeting with Synan and Lebanese officials seeking the hostage~· release. Jenco had carried a videotaped message from another American capti ve. David Jacobsen, SS. who cn ticized the Reagan administration and urged at to negotiate with the kidnappers. • daughter team from Redo ndo Beach Sharon Crawford and her daughter Carolyn pulled the best time an the w o men-onl y c ontest. said \pokeswoman Betty Loufck O range Coast teams failed to place among the wmners, Loufek said Teams in Cessnas. Bcechec; and Pipers fl e"' 7S2 m1lec; -with a layover m Redding -to Bend d uring the handicapped race. "The weather was fabulou'i:· Lo ufek said. "We had no problems at all "The word from everybody was they had a great tame and learned a lot .. In Washmgton, administration of- ficials said Sunday they were studying the videotape, but indicated no change m President Reagan's police of rcfusin• to negotiate for the release of rcmainmg American hostages. Jenco spent the night after his release m Damascus. He said before leaving: "I am pleased to be aoing home and want to thank all those who helped bnng about my release, and especially those 1n the Syrian government and the American Embassy in Damascus who ~ceived me so warmly." ' ., Evelyn Cra1k of Irvmc and panncr Jan Mom 'i of Wh1tt1er placed 18th, while Irvine residents Jane Cram and Allison Edwards placed 23rd. she said Sh 1 rley Baker of Irv 1 nc and panner R1cc1 Barton of Arleta flew 31st ~~~~~E Daily Pilat MAIN OFFICE 330 w"' ~, 5, Co<a•• "'""• c• t.A1« 1()11·-9o• '~ C.0.1a IAeu CA 92112~ 0.-ftdlOI 641 5811 .,._ & edtt0t•• 5'12 •J2• Other top pilots were second place finishers Dana Taylor and Jane La Mar and third place winners Anna Wong and Carole Lee Todd. all of Redding. Wong and Todd were last year's top finishers. Loufek said. He added: "I am well and look forward to see1n1 my relatives and friends." o.u, Piiot DeflYery It Quarenteed UO"l<My·F•-0.y ~ YO!J dO -...... 'fOUI -by ~ :JO p "' ca• llllor• 7 o m GooY''9"' •tel <>•"99 ,, p ,bf,..."'Q c-~, N.o -11()1 ... -· •• .,,.. 9()10'. ~.11 .. O' -· .. Justcall 642-6086 l "O r0Ut COC)y • Ill ,,..._.., -· ........ ,.,., Ill 9C1'00...C:..S .. '"""' 9()1( • po>• -of ~'l1'!Cwr• .__ a ~1991 oeod et Gc.911 ...... C• '!I' 1 IU~ ••• 8001 Subk•{'tiO' Dv ca•,. IS l~ l'IO"'""' by -t7 00 "'0""""1 I J What do you lake about the Dady Pilot'> Wh.at don't you lake'> Call the number above and your messqe will be recorded. transcnbed and de- hvcrcd to the appropnate editor. The same 24-hour answcnng service may be used to record lettm to the editor on any topic. Contnbuton to our Letters column must include their namt and telephone number for venfica1ion Tell• us what's on your m ind s.• ... oer .no aunoe, ~ 1<111 Oo ~ -'°"' copy Ill' I • m ca !WO<• •O I t!I -YOU! !CIPY _.. Ill .,.._e<I ' Clrculatlon Telephonff Sunny, comfortable afternoon Sunny llclee and comfottabte tM'\pwatuNe wlH l'W9'd tM new WMk In the OJ.nge eo.rt, the Netlonel w..u. ~ Mid. ~ • Nfgtlt and motntno tow ctouda wtll pert to a hltlt Ind eunny afternoon. wttl'I hlgl'la ranolng from the upper eo. to mid 70.,.... the t>Mc,_ to the upper 'l'Ot Inland. OYemight lowl wtll be In the mid so. to low eoe. Locel gutty~ and~~· wtff btow througl'I the local mountlffw, where hight wlll be In the mid 70. to mid IOI, and owrnlght Iowa In the upper 30t In the Ngher ~ to the mid SOI alee\llMf•. &tlghttv WltfMr ttmperatur•· wtll accompeny guaty afternoon and eY*\lng wtnda In the cteeart. tod.y, Where upper deaert hight wlll bl In the toa and lower deMrt hlgha from 102 to 110. Overnight lows wtll rqe from the upper 50s to upper 70.. ,00 U.S. Tempe ........ '°"" ""°""'. p."I ~ 100 14 ., ti 11 11 • n \'t" F:·.:l ~~ FRONTS ..., ·~ .,.,,.,,_ CVIO ........ Allletly,H. y. a:t ~ ., AINr"6 . 100 .. t2 13 102 to .. M . , .. to to 13 17 .. t3 .. ., ., M 17 18 101 1$ to " to 101 ... ft I& 11 t2 17 100 17 .. to t2 101 ,00 10 .... 12 t7 .. 10 12 14 .. . to 74 IOI 11 • n to ,. t1 .. IOI n .. .. .... ~ .. .. 116 .... " 7' .. ,, •a '°' 71 • 14 10 11 .. M n eo 11 • .. Tl 11 n 106 n 12 14 IOI 71 Sno•••• AM. f ""' .. • ,,,.....,.o _ s1.,...,...,, ....... Calif. Temps 10 11 10 ,, .... " 11 fl .. u u •• ,.. 30 ... 10 POLICE PUT BRAKES ON CRUISERS ••. From Al ing to only 11 drivers over the weekend, Rodgers said. However, police enforcement reaped a bonanza of other violators of the city municipal code, state vehicle code, and state business and pro- fc:s,ions code. Sax dnvcrs were cited for other municipal code violations, SS were cited for state vehicle code moving violations and 46 werc ticketed for non-moving violations. Police issued another l l tickets for business and professions code viol- auons. such as mmors in possession of alcohol, Rodgers said . And seven people were arrested, including five for juvenile misde-- meanor violations. one juvenile for a felony and one adult for drivina under the influence of alcohol. WILD SURF POUNDING ORANGE COAST .•. From Al Newport Beach Sunday where waves from the south reached sets of I 0 and I 2 feet. satd lifeauatd Lt Gordon Recd. ·•we actually had a hght weekend crowd," Recd wd. "And the water was only 63 degrees, so that kept a lot of people out." Reed said hfi uards will rescue Any wayyou look at it, here's a terrific menu. Favorite Italian entrees. Light or substantial sandwiches. Abundant fresh salad. Hot, sott breadsticks. Our famous freshpasta.Notoruywillyou love ea.tin~ it, you'll love watching at bemg made. You'll also love our • anywhere from 200 to SOO swimmers on a busy day in Newpon Beach. Because of the churnina surf, numerous swimmers and surfers also required fint aid for lacerations. dislocations and other minor injuries, Reed said. Huntington City Beach wu modcr- atcl bu with about 2S re9C\lCS and ambiance as much as our lunch. Spacious tables. Beautiful greenery. Prompt, friend} . So fu~ nke Italian lunch, bring your appetite to The Olive Garden. And discoveT Hospitaliano'9 our ~ue fonn ol Italian hospitality. I I prevent.auve actions, said naght supervisor Brent l..apsch1es. "We had pretty big surf, but the water was cold.•· Lapschies said. "The combination keeps people ouL "We're a lot busier when the surf is small and the water's warm.People arc fearless then ... Open fot lunch f'YaY day 11 a.m.-4p.m. Open: Sunday-Th~ 11 a.m.-10-.30 p.m. Fnday "sauiday lla.m.-11 p.m. 16811 Beach Bou.Jevard, just North of Warner A,,-e., Huntington Bead\, 84&-1499 ' 1--- ... 1