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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1988-06-21 - Orange Coast Pilot· . . . ~-·· •. c alee· ol 1·neys may backll~~ ... ·.· .. olicetrac jamming of c .oxphone Calling all~Cd by foe's supporters in congressional race ,. . . . ~: :~ity.Of f~f~_,n9ise foes cash, with.a c.atch '. .. . .. _.. . . .. . . . .. . ,. . ~ . . ' . . . . · IJ JONA'l'llAN ~OLUE • •.. . ... : •. ;-.rroundiq~ ll,.500:teat tbeata. -~ ....... , . ' · a. The cue Mi .tri.veJed to the state ·. -.ne ci.ta.Mcu aci.<".Ounal; in SuPRmC:court and ~ and is ~ ··dola11CS1ioft.~M~tosive"':curmat1l bci¥& bean! ·m Oranae "another $1',7SO to·a·Qlizen's poup 'CouD'>' Supenor Court. lbrouab<>ut .. :..mttlina the . Picific·· AmphiJheatR, • the Mltle, tbe ci1y .bu funded about . .-M .the council' stipplated mat tbe $60,000tocovertheatoUp'acostsand .::. . pup mmt 4rop tbe Fair.BOard from thote of ju attorney ,ltichard Spix. >Ill Jaw;iuit tQ ~ive ~-rnc>ne'Y.' • ·• :Sut '¥·:city and •Ned West ap--~ C~ Cnmaa.ofCOlta ·,..wtoreacb1n'oat~..,.. " Mesa sued. am~ter ~tor meat Yfbicb jncJuded a provision that . '·Ned. West ~lnc. and tie ~ .. the city iioP the payments to the landloi4, the 9n.ftlC COUGty.•Fau -.sidcRts. .The Coac:erDed Citizens .:: ~.over ~JeFl ~tioos of the ati.ckcd t,be propoial' and it fdl • :~~ s.·no&se ordiAanoe ~ the throu&)t .. .-id City·· Ma~ Allan .... rakfcDLS 111. -ye "~~ ~. Roeder .. ·• . , · • · ~tl ~of life "'I! ne~ . Alc:ed with cou.tt costs of rouahly . . -:-... ; . ,:..,, :. . ... .. ... "' \: . t' J( ., J Jultlae~t'•:· .·· a.nShenffBr~ oa•···· . of~thathelled •I •I WMMioath./AI • • ifattoa ; - I ;; CIA'a Costa Rica bUteau chief Indicted In Iran-. Contra arms affair./ Al 8i»orta: • , Detrott'a Thoma · · . doubtful fof Game 7 _...LM .. .191 I • . Bntertatnmmit -., GREG u.usx I ........ _ The sound of enaines rcvvina will fill the air It Disneyland early Wcdnetdlif. BalloOM will fty and peODle wan cheer. . Then~ at 11 :lO. more. tbaD l 00 vin• automobiles will "*' out :or the put and oaco tbe .. .streets. beaded north Oil the beaiuina of a l 2_.)' ~ tbat will take them •·'°° rriilea tbroup l3 at.ates. Ya. fol~ thole dariGa men asid 'M>meD ia their. diivi!'JI machines are ready to IO at at apin. It is time fOr tbe Grat American bee. . The sixth annual runniris of tbe viDCIF car trek featuret tbe kl em~ trtp rS' route ud-... ~ IDOlt divene &dd of (::om. t:.,.'°'; in IM race's c:olodtll . Tbe I 22<ar race Will willd .....,. NonberD Cali- lcnia. Nmda. U1ala, ~ redo,'fr'yom-~·M»- ' IOUri, lllinols, Indiana, Otlio . Pennsylvania, New York bd Connecticut before finisbina in Boston on July 3,just in time f<>T the Fourth of July festivities. Eiaht Oranae Coast residen&.s will 6e amonJ the S 1 Califorrua partkirnts lD the race. There are 2 racen from <>ranee County. Tbe race iJ a one-of+k:ind happenina, I throwbeck to the days wbeo c:ross-<:ountry races we:rc the darina reaation of the upper c1asa. The field is limited co any make of automobile made before 19361 Ind tbe race it broken down into a variety of catciories such u race~ and . the oldest car to finish. Tbc objCCt of the race is not to 1et Wlao can comp&de t.be COUf'IC the falCll. but rather who can come doeest to a pre.do- . ---.. perfect.. l'\UllllQ& .._ taid Missy KYCaa of (Pl1111-Glt&AT/A2) SJSOa day, the residcutupin turned to the city fOT fioanc:ilJ help, but the council tacked on some conditions that must be met before turning over the money. Before si&nina the check. the cit!z.ens'.aroup m~ ..,-ee to drop its suit ap.inst the Fair Board. and the fair Board must also "1'C'e to Jive an additioaal Sl.750 to tbe at.izen'a lfOUp . Retesentatives from both poup& said, -· that those conditions m isht not be meL · "We dilC'USSCld 1hi na them money moatbS I&<>· We can't do it. -Fair Board spokeswoman Jill Uoyd said. .._ ........... __ ___ TM 14.000-.U. 0.-t •·ertma .._ ...._ ai l)le. .., .... _ ......... , ......... ..,. .......... . .. .. to •w .-ded wkb die Jue 1 DrinluY ---· lia111~ eaicl: '"TeD \fiaa to Cluii Coa." •t Sdlumaa llid men ii et .U than lbt outcome ol tbe ....... electioo. wbid9 CoX ii 'rinuaUy UIUled of ~ ia tbe '-YY ~lia. dillria. m • •H• 11111 _, rdw llliut ..... tWwtf. Over- zealous supponen tomedmcs do tbiqs that an embuntllna to • campeian." Schuman said. "We can't drop this becauto it11 happen 111in. We want to 1how that when you try somethina like this, that you 're toina 10 be punished. This is the kind oftbina we don't want to tee any more of. Thit cam1*an wu one of the diniat I've teen in my lift:' Sdauman said in addition to puelll11 pol~ ofticWI to rec- ommend criminal dWlel. the Cox =. ~uld like to pursue civil •• well to recover financial oaes mated 10 die pbone caUL Judge bars mountain lion hunting SAN FRANCISCO (AP) ..:_ Cali- lonail's mountain liODI ~will be Ide from leP! hun~ tbr another yeer as a rnul1 ()( aj• 1 clecision to throw out state r:epiatioel for the ftnt teaSOn on the bi& cau in nearly 20 ~a lawyer said. .. I tee very little chance lbeft will be a bunt ill 1988," Michael Remy; a la~ for the Mountian Lion Preser- vation Foundation. Sierra Oub and other wildlife and enviroamental lfOUpl, taid after the rulinJ. Se Fn.ncitc0 Supenor Coun J\Mtle Lucy McCabe ruled that tbc Stace Fish and Game Comm~n bad not complied with her 1987 order to study the envirotuneqJal im.,.ct of a hununa tcaSOn on tbe populations of mountain lions and deer, the cau• chief prey. Under the commission's regu- lations. bunters would have been allowed to kill up to 190 of the lions. also known u coupra, pumas and eanthen, durina a seuon to bqin Oct. 9. The commiu.ion coUJd appeal McCabe's Nlina or try to comply with the environmental review illUCS cited by the jwdet, then .eek ~val for a l~Useuon. .. They arc meeti• to determine what 1ef!1 options tbe commillion has," said Dwayne Petmoa. ~ man for me state Anotney Oeiler&J's Offace and the fish and Game Commillion. He aaid the com- mission h8ld no comment yet on the jud8e'• decision . · There has been no sport huntina of mountain lions since .1971. TWO HELD IN HUNTINGTON SLAY.ING ••• ·. hoaAl ... . . I U.S. TmnpL =:... : : Calif T • "" .... Yelllcmr • " • empe. • ,, O.....Qllr • "' Bztendecl =. .': : ~~-.............. .... !! ~ " ... ?' .. ,. ff Jt .._.. uo • I .... 11 It ......................... .. ~ ............. . ............... ,...... ... ... • n .....,.. 11 ,., .,.. 11 • • ., ............... • .. ,_ t1 ... .... ..... ,,......, L.-.... . ... :t: ........ o.. ~=~ :::: r, I -.........,~°" * ,. =::.=111 J: :: Surf Report ... -.. .,....... 10011 _... tM r II II .......,Olly 1t 11 LOCA--_. • ~ r..~°" : : .__... .. • ......,=.... .. .. .... ,, ...... • .,. ---11 .. --,......,, ;:: = .,. ..... 14 .... ,.,.,..... • .. ............. 14 .. = . •"' --. 11 ...... • ........... ..... -II • IMIAl<*eo 11 '3 .......... 1..a '* • , 0 ",,,.. • 11 ....... • .. ue-e..... • .. 101 " ,.... .. ,, ....................... ,.... a.a-.. ... ... .. .. "--11 ..... 101 1'0 ......... ., 01 ,__ ., " ..._.. 11 .. ..........,_ ~ • • ...,....,.oc • n ..... '4 • ........ *"..... • .. 1'0U llw"'9 -· : : ---------r;::-°" r. ;: Tide. II 7' L8llGmW II II •.. •" Smod Rennrt "°"'.... n 11 • F": LA~ 10 II .. 1'0 ........ ~......... ............. • tO • • ...-: ''" * _...._ 10t-1t1 -OIMf'9 n • • O ~-.--rw'1#M:• ,........,.... I01 11 101 n '"' .... ._... ,.,. ...,. " ...... 11 11 -11 == ..,.. ........ ,.. ....... " .. ..._.llO .. • ·.... .............. .......... ,.. 11 N ,... ..... AN 11 • .. .,. .......... .....,,......,._....., , .... v.., .. It •,. ....._, n1•v-.--,_ n • • fl1 u.---.~ ., ....... .. .. t1 • &M~~ IMI Y--."'r .. 11 only pencil, paper, atop watch and time-of-day wascb. the naviptor must cakulate the car'a runnina time between checkpoints, detennillina whether the driver should iDcreue or decteale speed to meet the optimal time at each checkpoint Racers Wayne Stanfield of Costa Mesa. a nav1ptor, and his driver, Alan Travis of Phoeni_x, Ariz., know all about perfect timina. They won last year's 3,9~mile race from Disneyland to Florida's Walt Disney World. finishina within an amaz.ina 22 sec:onds of the optimal time for the entire nee. The peir will be racina ill the same vehicle, a 1916 Mitchell roadster that they have raced in three previous Great Race events. Stanfield and Travis have a lot in common with the Los Anaelea taken this year -they want to repeat a1 champions. •1bey want to do it real bMl this year," aaid Wayne Stanfield, Sr., the racer's father and the team mechanic. 1'be car's been so sood to them and they want to show everyone that it'• still sot what it takes." Stlnfaeld •id the races have be&un to take their toll on the 72-year-old vehicle. and said this racie will be the Mi1cbell'1 laat. On a 1elt run two Meb .. the f'Oldste(s timina sears broke, but a dealer came up with some spares. A test run last week showed all systems So· .. If we ~ to Denver, we'll be all right," wd Stanfield. 1bey call us the u41y Ducklina. but we're aoina to come 10 like a swan at the end oftbi1 flCe ... · Another Great Race veteran, Bill Halliday ofNewpon Beach, is hof>!na for his fint victory this year. Halladay and naviptor Mary Travis Of Phoenix. Ariz., will raee a 1919 Gbevrolet '490 Racer, one of the oldest can in the event .. He can't sleep, be'• so excited about it," aaid Halliday'a wife., Cindy, who is bopina to put totether an aO- female team for next year's event Alto racina tbi• year are ~ year's . third place team, Newt Watbetl of Fountain Valleya:ndTyHolmquiltof Million Viejo, who will nee a l 93-4 Packafd. Withers' wife. Omni. will be the driver ofa 1912 Oldsmobile. Other local nc:en include Dick Belveal of Newport Beach, wbo wiU navipce a 1936 Ford Coupe driveD by Mike Green of Mesa, Ariz., and Keftt Wilken of Irvine, who wiU navipte a 1930 Packard Oub Sedan. Tbe nc:en will receive a pla tend- off Wednesday, with Disney charac- ters cbeerina them out of the~· A 1pecial Disney contiQFDt will alto Pl~ the race u it pulls into its fint overn~t atop Wednaday ni&bt in San Luas Obispo. Tbe nice will resume TbW'ld9y momlna and proceed ~ Su FraocilCO to the next o • t atop in Slcramento. The race head into Nevada on Friday. Minister who plotted to bomb clinic sentenced SAN DIEGO (AP) -A federal judae bas aentenced an ouUpoken fundamentalist minister to 21 months in prison for the attemDCed • bombina of a family plannina clin.ic · by anti•bortion protellen. .. I am ,enuinely sorry for what I've done," the Rev. Dorman Owens t~ the judae at Mondays bearina. .. rve tried to n,ht ev~ wrona. Now, for my sake and for the a&ke of my people, I'm awns for men:y and leniency." Both men refwed to waive extra- dition, and McErtain predicted it would probably be aeveral weeks before tbey·re returned to Onnse County. fouod her huabend's body after she was raped and kidoa~ by a masked intruder armed with a knife. Dyson told police her assailant was black but later said it was possible be was white. awoke later and was on her way beck to the master bedroom when she was arabbed and wrestled to tbe floor by 1 man with a nylon stock.ins over his !iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii,iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiii head. .. . ' After a three-week trial, a Superior Court Jury convicted Dixie Dyson of murde!' March 18. Tbe proaecutor in the case araued that Dyson had her husband murdered to collect bis S 12s.ooo life imurance pohcy. Shortly after her husband was found slain in the couple's tri-level condominium, Dyson told pc>liClC she Dyson aaid she and her husband went to bed at IOp.m. theni&btoftbe slayina. She aw'pke when site beard bC1' youna ton ·couahina in another bedroom, and went to comfort the boy and fell uleep on hit bed, Dyson told police. Police aid Dyson told them she She said the man raped her and then forced her to drive to an int.encction in central Huntinason Beach where be jumped out of the car and fled. Sbe found ber hulband's body when she returned home, she said. Dyson, arrested two years after the slay an&, faces 2S years to life in prison. Sentencina is iet for July 29. DISTRICTDROPsAPARTMENT PLANS •• ~ Prom Al dents and studcnu and faculty at Orantc Coast Collqe. •'This property is crimed by all of us and I believe our c:ommwlity'a senti- ment is that it remain u collqe property~ C. £~Hutchins wrote co aty omcials. keep OCC as it is." Scott Williams and Gene Hucc~ r=tina the faculty and II&« at Coast, pthered 2M lilnatures on 1 petition C>PPOSina t.be cleveloPli>ent. Other petitions and obiectiona alto fttt submitted .. 8llCd oa lrowneU'a witbdrawal and tbe public opposition, tbe Coau =E ·llllPllll .. OfMCI ---a., II COlll9...,.; CA ... ..-: """q-. c... .... CA, ... I Mesa City Council voted S-0 to d-muaee the property .. public and ....:.::!"~ " .... ...,.._... Ute. TbC c:hanF mandates any develop- ment on the Pl operty be sneral·use facilities such 11 a hospitaf. cemeteryi part '« other similar ute. Brownel aid. ' Delpite the cbaneC. tje vowed the Co1Jcee district would pulls on to ~wn the land to a rneaue IOW'ce. !"There's all lcmdl of pollibiti1ia ror that land ... (bat) die JIOftins ~ pmtymudl taka•oatofthe raidential pmc." he .... -ncn ~-. ~ M11 °'*""' ' t11110tW ~-«»£ were some flesh wounds. but nobody djed, .. BrQwadl cited other ewnples of collean and universities ~ pn>Pe!\Y to raiM fund1. A~ 1S under construction on Cal State Fullcnon's ~Y. and a butir• out it bein& bUilt on Caadiae C~ proptrty in Fountain Valley, btsaid. - .. Evltybody'a aoina to re-evaluate whet we have," be llicl. ...... we wmt 11>me tolutiom tom die •illtll on. IOO. We know~ tbc pioblem it; M need answers. .. === \. THE P.O.S.H. OFFICE VISIT . . Because your time is valuable, and se,tting away_from ·the office isn~t always possible, wo offer a highly experienced staff that can C011Je to your . . office. ,, .. .. . .. '\ ~ .... At your convenience,.' we will present a comp~hehsive collection of our in-stock suits, spon c~ts and furnishings, or if ypu; pref~r: sampl~ of.made- to-measure clothing and dress shins. · .., I' r • You will~ fit~ed by one ofour master tailors, i'! your.office. and your. . selections will be delivered back to you. .. ' PLEASE CALL FOR AN APPOiN.TMENT ... ' . . AND SEE JUST HOW EASY SHOPPING C;4N BE . • ~nrlemea •, Cfottbw I Alumnl~ing so~t for high school teUJilons Aaumbltof'dwrnaioM~ Mllaaoaaia and ltOUlld ~ ~ .... --CJlllll-b the •mmer. ney iaclldei Ca.ta Jf-.a lfl6Jj J968 Tbe Cc.ta Meli Hielt Scbool dill of 1961 will bold ita 20-~ rw•lilaD Aus. 27 It the HuatillllOft .8elcb lnn. Drw is CMUll to temi4onnal tad tbe COit i.S3S per~ iaadvaaceor $40• ~door. Call DonDa DeCublllia 8eaneU at 546-1698 (« ldditional information. Valnnltr B(fb.1978 Oil drilling plan off Coast .................... CllllirDill llwmt... -. llltJIDl'ld .._.y~a~to ... uptbetlle ol ail drillana ..... Off tail ann. Cout Md U.. "* of SCM0en Celi&.ia to .u.-ro.. a deity i• Notthem c.lifotnia ---A Senate aubcotnmiuee caupt law-mabn off' JUltd when it approved an ameodment to an buerior Department ~IW bill that YtOUld open driUina in ~ber 1919 from the Montetty-$an Luia Obispo county line to the Mexican border. • lnaerior Sccmary DonaJcl Hodel had elated January 1990 for the openina. But the amendment's blcken in the ~ate "'lrrior appropriations subcom,. mit•llidilw~ ....... .UCuprot U MdciJUI d 1125 ailloa ..... Mon· .. c..-.watia..._......._..in lbestan ot ..... Nonbenl cdti.1a. Sc"'81...U •• Hockl 'eilendcd the ......... to Auptt 1989 on lcuc sale 9l ol'dll NonMrn c..Jifomla COUL The ua _, beea KWuled for drillina in Febl•J 1919. a.. week. a H0utt commhaee ac>- pro\fed a .....,. n1endina the mora- torium '° Scolember 1989. Becntt oft.be delay, the ConareuionaJ ~ Oflke ellimat.ed a $125 million lboitfaU in ulicis-led rcvenua. See. James McClure, R·ldaho, aod Sen. Bennett JobftllOn, o.~1 ladina Pl'oPO- neou ol o~ oriuina. reportedly authored the~ to mak.e UP-lhe rneaues br .,.....,, up the driUiftt IC'Wulc Oii Iliac lile 9' oft' SoUthttD California. Both of Calib1lia'11Cn1lon and most of its Houte memben have IOU&ht 10 bbl or atrictly limit driUin1 off tht Califomia Coast, cillftl potmtial environmental pol· lution. Sea. Pete Wilton, R..C~if .. said in a statement that he will .. do cverythina pollible io remove the proposed !qi .. Jation that accelerates leaK sale 9S to 1989 ... A ~esman said Wilson will try to kill the prc>v1S1on Wednesday when the Senate ApproprialionsCommiuce 1s scheduled to take up the matt.tt. Sta. Alan Cranston. D.Calif.. was led unavailable for. commeat, but a ~ laid be bu .... ... leaillatioe IO blr driUiaa iD ....... tl. "WdlOll praa ~ Bill Livi .... said lhe smaac P!lftd"• acuoo came u a S\lf'Prisc to manr ... Everyone wu caulhl otr~ .. be said. Uvinptone said most lawmaktn ..-bo have been involved in dw iMUe believed the matter had beeo setlled wheo HodcJ approved ute~ lbe moralOriwn. TbC Jnterior Department iaued a Sl&to- menl sayina it oppoted tbc subcommiuee action. The pl'OVisioo ~citc&amventl me c:atef'W• ly scheduled ale process,•• a departmeot spoknman said. ... ... Newt Sentlff om....._. ..... lt.WJ. The I Olh reunion of the Univertity ~ Scbool clUI of 1971 J1 olanDed fbr Aus. 27 at lbe DUa Point Raort above Dana Point Harbor o.a Pldftc Cout Hjpway at the San Dieeo fw~ event will ~nar6:30p.m. in theOrud BaJ . Call Darla Forney Frater at 8'9-860' for delaill. 1V•tmla•ter 11'61! J978 From Stonehenge to Balboa, it's summer A 10-year reunion for tbe 1978 uaduatina class of Westminster Hiab School will be Mid July 16 at 6 p.m. at the Coata Mesa Country Oub. Alumni from that class should contact committee chairman David Sparks at 733-9025 or the school directly at 893-1381.. . Anabelm 11'611 l 988 The clau of 19S8 from Anaheim Hiah School will hold its 30th reunion Oct. I at the saddlebeck Inn in Santa AnL Contaet Ronnie Frcclc at 998-4140 eveninas or 119· 7120 weekdays for additional information. , BawtJJome lllgh l 963 A 2Sth reunion fP.r the Hawthorne Hilb School class of l 963 will be held Sept. 17 at the Newport Sheraton. Call Cheryl at Sl9-37ll for more details. Mayfair 11'611 1988 The l 968 araduatina class of Mayfair Hi&h School in Lakewood will hold its 20th reunion July 16 It the Irvine Hilton. Contaet Cheryl Rymer at S39-37ll for details. BUJJtlagton Par~ 1938 The class of 1938 from Huntinoon Part ffi&b School wiU celebrate its&<>lden anniversary Oct. 8 at the Grand Hotel in Anaheim. Classmates wisbina !Unhcr information should call (805) 499-8457. Hoover 111611 1.943 The class of 1943 of Hoover Hilb School in Glendale will hold its 45th reunion <>Ct. 8 and 9 at the Newporter Resort in Newport Beach. Oolf and tenni1 play will be offered in a4dition to dinner and dancina. For furtherinformation, call Virginia Clark Black at 250-3678 or Don Gallup at 8)1-0497. Montebello lllgh l 963 87 llOBERT BYNDMAN Of ............. Today's the day every Druid worth bis white robe and scarlet hood eagerly awaits. The En&lisb 1uy1 who call themselves the Companions of the Most Ancient Order of Druids are proud of their nature- wonhippina herita&e. And in hornqe to their spooky Celtic forefathers. theypther at dawn every year on the first day of summer around that most revered and mysterious of rock formations, Stone- benae, to stqe 1 procession. As they march round the altar st.one while maintainina the requisite somber mood, the Dt\aids salute the risina sun that marts the summer solstice. Here, the arrival of summer involves far less ceremony. Perhaps m01t people are hardly aware that today marks the day when the sun f'QChes its peatest a.nau1at distance from the equator. Nevertheless, summenime observances alonJ the Or- anae Coast have their share of ntual. Consider the donnina of aowns by teen- qcn It this time of year to mart a rite of ~It', the momina migrations to the beach and the regimental tannins practices that follow, the idle wanckrinp in air- conditioned lhoppina malls, the post. lunch daydreamina. the mass ptherinp at local amphitheaters and stadiums. the bKkyard beer-drink.inc and the aimless drivina at niaht with the windows down and the radio on. All these arc modem observances of summer's arrival. And while they have little connection With oblervanocs of old. such summertime practices as the beach bonfire and the backyard barbecue harken back to ancient tam~. Montebello Hiah School's .class of l 963 will bold its 25th anniverury reunion Oct. 22 in the Grand Ballroom of the Irvine Marriott Hotel. Ticket prices arc SSS 1inaJe or SI 10 a couple. Reservations can be made by callina "Great Reunions" at S38-797 t or classmates Tim Rowe at (213) 59"-0068 or Susan Antoyan Franciosa at 968-0188. Any card-arryina Druid can tell you about the Beltane Fires, when the Celtics and other ancient types tbrou&hout Europe would buJld bonfires on Mid· summer Day.and the local citizenry would dance and jump throuab the flames to ward off evil spirits. San wonblpenenjoytheetrand near the Buntmcton Beach Pler o•er the weekend Loan lfl61J 1978 Tbe 10-year reuDion of the 1978 paduatina class of Loara Hilb School in Anaheim will be held this Saturday at the Marion Hold in Newport Beach. Call S39·l73l for details. Calver Clty BlglJ l 978 The 1978 araduatina dus of Culver City Hi&h School will hofd its 10th year reunion July 9 at t&e Airpon ManiotL Call Great Reunions at S38-7971 for further information. t"' . • c ~u NOAR Tuellday, Jane 21 • 6 p.m. Lqw Seid Qt)' Ca •di, council chambers. SOS Forest Ave. • 8 p.m. l'emtala ValleJ QIJ Ca•dl. council chambers, 10200 Slater Ave. 1Vedaellday, JUJJe 22 e 9:)0 Lm. 0ruce C..IJ...,. If e-. ftMn. board barina room. Hall of Adminiltra~ 10 Civic Center Plaza, SUta Ana. • 7 p.m:•....., .__. ...,..,,,_.,,...._ council cbamberi, SOS Forest Ave. The more zealous and enthusiastic partyaoen used to sacrifice an unfriendly neaahbor or an odd animal or two, but that practice was discontinued once cookr beads prevailed. Some creative folks an Wales pve a new twist on the popular bum1n1~whect trick. While everyone else was content to roll blazlng wheels through the fields to ensure a bountiful ~est, the Welsh preferred to send a Oamana cartwheel bumping and bouncina down a tall hill lf the wheel was stm bumlna at IM bonom, an abundant harvest could be cxpec\ed. lf not. well, a forced diet could be expected. Now that's somctJun& to c:omidc:r u yoo flip lM bwJim. dram that beer bottle and wm up the volume on tbc Game of the Wee&. Trial in FV' s future after fortunetelling banned BJ JONATHAN VOLZIE ................ Contendina Fountain Valley .. has done all it can to e~clude fortunetelhn& from the city," a soothsayer filed a federal lawsuit Monday apinst the city in an effort to open up shop across the street from Ci1y Hall. .. In a time wben utroJoay plays a role in decisions in the White ff oUJC, there is. nevertheless, considerable hostility to fortunetellin& in Fountain Valley." araued attorney Barry Fisher. "As (Madonna) Stevens has discovered, every time she seems to approach her objective, she 1hps back as a new impedi- ment is put in her path." The lawsuit aeelts to expand the number of areas open in tbecity to fortuneteUingas well u an unspecified amount of money. Fisher said the monetary amount sought would be less U\an SI million. Stevens applied in December 10 open the tint fortunetellin& business in the city. in a buildina across from City Hall. Althouah the center was within an area zoned ror fortunetellina. • swell of public opposition formed. Raidents of the city compa~ for- tunetelling to satanic acts and witchcraft.. Althouah an invcstiption by the city's police force found no link to fortunetelhn& and crime. residents said the bu$iness would brina problems to the aty. .. It is not innocent. It as satanic withcraft.. It as from the pit of hell" the lawsuit quotes one Huntinaton Beach resident wbo objCCted to the business. .. Billfolds will be stolen from behind closed doors. .. Dan Koppy, a real estate aaient in the buildina Stevens hopes to occupy, sub- mitted a petition with more than 400 Sllf\ltures apinat fortunetdlina. Still, Stevens· application was approved by the Plannina Commission. But the Cit> Council -with only Councilman Fred Voss d1ssentina -enacted an emCIJCncy ordinance ba.nnina i'onunctelJina in any part of the city. City staff proposed rcducina the areas open to fonunctclhog from l\Cl&hborhood· commcrcaal and hishway-commemal to strictly hitbway-commemaJ. The P1anmna Comm1ss1on rcjCctcd that recommendation and voted to aJJow both zones open lo soothsayma. but the Cit) Council in June ~ tM ordinance. apJn with Vosscastmg IMonly ··no" vote. The restricted zonina is schrdulcd to take effect July 8. Bui Fisher said the stnct zonina lS illcpl ulfs Just a tactic: 10 conun~ the exclusion of fortunetclhna in Fountain Valley ... Fisher said. The lawsuit seeks a temporary re-- stra.1na 1\1 Order aplOSt the oew Or'Chnaoce Fisher asked U.S.. District Coun Ju• Spenser Lens to put the injunctJoo Monday, but Spenser denied the motion and set a hearing for JuJy 6 to pve the city time 10 respond to the suit Evm should Stevens lose the battle Jull 6. a full triaJ would be scheduled for a final deasion. the attorney said. Fisher said the lone zone open to Stevens leaves little opponunaty for her to st.an her business. '"That ordtnance .... limits fortunc1dlina to the C • 2 zonc and consisu of ti ve spots on the periphery of the city ... Fisher wd. ..One is entirely occupied by a family rccrcaoon park. one as unavailal* becaUIC 1t conwns an Elks Cub buildina, the third lS a small comer lot with thn:c shops ud th.c fourth and fifth arc a coupe ofblocb of stores.·· Ted Stevens. Madonna's husb&nd. bas repeatedly said that he did not want to sue the city.just move bis wife'1 business from Hemet to Fountain Valley, where the couple now hve with tbetr children. 'Ze r o tolerance' hits OC; .36 c ars seized by o fficers Dove Street. The thief had lucked open a door to enter the office. BlllltlJaCtoa lleacla A puterby aaKS someone fired several sul\lhots. poss.ibly UStn& an automabC "MapC>G. ftom a window of perhaps a white Ford Escort car in the vicinity of Mutdy Park at Nonna Drive IDd Tuutall Lane. The man said that a man and women W'C'rC in the car, one in the front seal and one in the back tcaL The inodcn1 was reported at 12:5& Lm. today. Canada rejects U.S. extradition request }'.· COuaty'1 llnt "*° tokr··-amoua• of dr1lp, under th< "mo ~u,..nilesand 192Mlults...,. ancc ~ ~ in t19e l.'1t0iennce" ~m which al1owl in the sweep that bepn arrests of' IUlpeCted drul cle*n vChidti conlailltnt drval to bt con-Friday on Walnut Street. an area aad buyeft and tlje teizute ~ dcmm fbcatecl whicb bas a reputation for bein& a of can WOl1la more 1Mn S2~000. ..1, • . to t .-... ... , ~for dtup. Santa ADI autborititl said Moodty JOU re~---1.#' ou ... "' ~Y _ Dnjp .tm.ed included 22.6 srams · ~ ~Y tn Santa Ana. you ,. · --.a 'SJ\) s -ms of AlftOlll dMliae MTBaecl la die~-...... brilli M lft." U.S. AUOr"nc'Y 01' ~ne auw "' • .. - met sweep .re a doctor ~ a lloben loiaw aid at a Oty Hal ~ other possessions 1eiz.ed ~ ~ hili Ida M!W news~ t.y...._,U.d\lri aucbrwccp1are IPOIU car ud a 16:~-old.,.r..c Tiie ...... 4'abbed ~ ..... loliMthemoMY,SUIOdtofina.nce ~.:Ltr~ ~ Wll" "1 lllderal audiloritia. w lbewaroactn.p.autboritieuaid. ~ CrOUbi1e. • l'Y'-c:onduc:ted bf mcmbcrt of the Snca ,SiDcc January, Santa ADa bas -,-~ Alla ~ die Drul Enron:em.t eccrued bet~• $300,000 and -Oftlciuulid l6 CM't were ..ued. Adln1aittration aad the . U.S. i:iooo tbtoueb IM federal dnas ... eomeort.wm~O!ll!Y•llDlll ......... omo... &urclaw. • • • A man believed to be in his mid-lOs l'q)Ot1cdly ~ a pune conwn- ina S 100 an catl\ from a car at Thrifty Gas. 19921 Belch Blvd. ' ,• 1'ClaONTO(AP)-Ladenoldlie Officials com~ the 34-para-_.,. .._..ic ~ put lbe sraph document at 5 a.m. and the •'¢j I IDUM on a final 1Ummh leaden met thro-.h the momi• <.i A alq• &oday that o«erect the puttifta the final iouchet on the PODIWI comtriel Of tbe world new communique. cllba ....-but failed to raolve tbe "Since we lut met.•• the leaden e--..ioul ftabt over ..,;cultural eaid. "our economies ha'Ve kept up ...,.... • the .momentum of lfOwth. EmP2Y· TM draft communique. ObCaifted ment has continued to opand, 1nfta- 6-n lmftmit tOUttet. said the leaden tion has been restrained. and ptOIJnS W ~ on a plan that will allow has bttn made toward the conection cndiaor cov.ntries to choose from a of major external imbalances. ..au ot opdom in 'anntina debt .. These encoufalina deVeloP"inCntS Nlief' to nations of sub-Saharan are cause for optJmism but not for Aftica. complac:eocy," the draft aaid. ''To a.• I 5 -9ul • me llJicuftuiil sub&idles · sustain non·Ulfla~ .,owtb will m.. die lcadrri etle1ltially adoDted require a commitment to enhanced !llYC ~ paperina O'Vtr West cooperation. This is a key to credi-~ lacf Japanne resistaoc:e to bility and confidence." ,., 'dat Relun·s PR>OOIAl to The proposal on Third World debt rMrinlle sUblidies by the Year 2000. essentially was a c:ompromi1e put la a larldY self-conarulatory draft forward by Canada that permits ••••••• at the end of the ,14th countries to exerciac aevenl options -.it, tbe leaders said the club of for panting debt relief. They include ridt countries will launch a new ex~ndina the time period for payina leYCD-year cycle of summits swtina off loans, reducin1 interest rates or ia Fnmc:eJuly 14-16 of next year. actually wntina off a ponioo of the WI.-o6 l•der8 au.a•tna tlae Beonomlc Caaada; Raoko Tabmldta. Japaa. Aaaa Snmmlt In Tonato waft M ~ ..... on a Ilaria De lllta, I~ l'taMJ' •:.r-• United boat tou. Proia left are 1111& llaboaey, StatM,andBannelanllolal, W OermanJ. ~mi ts have proven an effective loans. fonma to address the inuet facins the On the farm subsidy question, the Woltd economy. promote new ideas world leaders failed to make any and develop a common tense of movement toward Rcapn's proposal purpoae, .. the draft said. for an end to all farm sublidics by the next century, adoptina instead subsidy question but he said, "I am lanauaae simply instructina their not aosna to give up on thaL" trade neaotiaton to keep workina on the problem. The communique contained no surprises or new brcakthrou&hs ex· President Rcapn, q_uestioncd by c:ept for the Third World debt plan. reporters before the final 1CSSion, acknowlcd&cd that ''there are tome Tbe leaders endorsed the process of differences of opinion" on the cloaer economic cooperatfon which was bqun at the Tokyo summit in 1986, sayina ~ system, which has been championed by Treasury ~ retary James A. Baker Ill, was a key reason that the world was able to avoid a alobal economic downturn followina the shock from last Octo- ber's stock market collapse. Israeli civilians urged t'o help defend West Bank S. Koreans march agalnst u~s. JERUSALEM (AP)-Israelis lbot and wounded two Arab youths today, indudifts a 10-)Ul-old boy who WU shot by a civiban fuina at a stoae- throwiftl mob in the West Bank. hospital officials saad. . Defeme Minister Yitzhak Rabin said alJ lwatlis, not JUSt the army, must defeDd the occ_upicd territocies. and he said he was risht to encou,...e civilians to open fire on Arabs armed with firebombs. Rabin also said that a Jewish farmer found stabbed and . bludaeoned to death Monday should have carried a weapon. Poaic:e blamed Palestinian activists for the alayina. The army confirmed an Israeli civilian was stoned in Nahhas, in the West Bank. It said the man told the military that he fired in the ajr to disperse the attackers. Anny officials said they had no repons ofinjuries as a result of the shootioa. Officials at Ai lttihad'Hospital in Nablus said the boy was shot in the leg. IMJINGAK. SoUth Korea (AP)-rcunifteation of the peninsula. Hundreds of radical students In Seoul, a survey indicated that marched at the border today to anti-U.S. sentiment was srowina demand reunification of North and amona South Koreans and went South Korea and the withdrawal of beyond radical student protesters. American troops. Accordinstothesurvey. 16pen:.ent About 350 students from Seoul's of 2,000 ehgible voters questioned Konkuk University held their peace-said they dislike the United States, fut protest in front of steel barriers compared to 3 percent in 1984. and barbed wire that block a bric!JC As the students protested today, an lead ins to the border with commumst American soldier auarded the bridae. North Korea. and about 20 South Korean pobc:e- "Drive out Yanken who hinder men and soldiers in plainclothes unificaoon!" students shouted as• patrolled nearby. . they marched near the bridge after a The brid&e as the only civilian ceremony at which they prayed for access linking the Koreas. U.S. forces help control the southern side of the Dcmilitariz.cd Zone across from lntj- inpk and roads to the truce site of Panmunjom. which straddJes the border. The students demanded withdrawal of about 42,000 U.S. troops stationed in South Korea under a mutual defense pact to help deter Nonh Korean attacks. The protesters contend the United States enforces partition of the peninsulL They also denounced the blockina June 10 of a planned march to the North Korean border. Mlmponant ~SU~ from Ann .Jiiiian ... ··1 feel good about myself ... "Following my double mastectomy, I de- cided against reconst rucuve surgery. In- stead. I decided to wear Camp/ Amoena breastforms They're unusually hke your own breast ussue They bee~ warm w ith you and they're very pliable. They fee1!1ke a natural extension of FREE CONSULTATION NO OBLIGATION State schools chief rejoins Democr~ts, may run for office yourself My cho1ee Is Amoena APf'UID OllTHOTIC SYSTIMS, LU. breastforms ... I recommend IMJ1 Mt. Lanfl•J St.. Suite I them to any woman who's h.Jd a ,........,. VaH.,, CA tJ7Ge m.Jstectomy." • (714ft6J·771J SACRAMENTO (AP) -State schools chief Bill Honig. who ran for his post as an independent. has rejoined the Democratic Party. fuel- ina speculation that he wants to be nauonal education secretary or gov- ernor. Speculation about has political aspirations was fueled last year when bis quest for additional state educa- tion fundinJ led ham to a verbal slugfcst with Republican Gov. GeofJC Oeukmejian. KIND•llGAllT•N THllU 8TH QllAD• Hooia announced the move Mon-day at a Capitol news conference. He said he rqistercd as a Democrat over a week aao, then delayed the an- nouncement while completina ar- ranaements to serve u a super delqate for Democratic presidential candidate Michael Dukakis at the party's national convention in Atlan· ta July 18-21. The schools chaef said _pan of his. reason for returning to Democratic Party politics is the unraveling of the bipartisan coalition that helped make academic refonn possible in Cali- fornia for three years. Republicans have shown less sympathy recently for the eff on. he added. Honig. who bas become nationally known as a crusader for educational exc:ellencc, has been rqistered as an independent while holdina the ooo- partasan office of superintendent of public instruction. To be effective in work.in• for more education mon~. Honis u1d he now feels he must work within party lines but added that he hopes to maintain open channels of communication with Oeuk.mejiao and avoid open confrontation on a personal level with the aovcmor. Reprdina the possibilities the Outlook bleak for • Haitians after coup POllT·AU·PRINCE. Haiti (AP) -Haitians vttnured hlc:k into die ...... today after • military coup catapulted Lt. Oen. Heeri. rwn~ b9ci to power after bat moatbt UI , civiliu Nie ud ended bopll for democracy. . . Some teleobone eervice ... ,. atored after beina cut Monday. ~ stnet1 Med witb can and DeOoie ID tbe morai• ~ bei111 . ..e.rfy • --the prcvlOUI monuns. • Scatlel'ed sunfire wu beard ua the streett ovemiaht and into tbc da~ but there were no lips of factional fll)tti"'-Soldim have often fired ttieir weapons into the air to. frjpa civilians from the street aanee the co~mpby reestablished militafY rule by decree and Damed bis own s<>vemment Monday just hours after mlyina troopl, who ~ the .. tional palace and J:=Y oul10d President Leslie · t'• four- month-old civilian aovcmmenL The ex-orcsident. a 57·year-old former political icicnce P.fOfenor, was ex~lled with his famlly to the Dominican Republic, which shares the Caribbean island of Hispaniola with Haiti. He i•ued a statement throulh a spokesman sayina be was unbun and would soon speak to reporters. Dom· inican aovemment sources •id Manipt misht travel to Venezuela. where he had been offered pc)litical asylum and lived in exile in the late 1970&. . Monday some citizens and ofl"aciak predicted a bleak future for the Western Hemisphcrc•s poorest coun· try Most busines!es and schools in this capital of a million people were closed. There were no reponed protests in this arid, mountainous country of six million people. "This means the end of democracy. We are s<>ing to have to live under a military dictatonhip, n a bus dri)'er said hours after Nampby expelled Manipt. move opens for his future, Honia aaid he's not sure he would take the national education post even if it 'Mft offered to him and bu made no decisions rqanting a pabematorial campaisn. Asked if his Democratic rq:iSo. tration was a step toward runnina for governor in 1990, Ho.n.ia said: "ft'a a possibility... 1 IAITllllE m1nu SCllllS 16835 Brooktust St., f Ot11tain Valey (714) 963-7831 SlATlR I Assembly ends budget stymie, approves $45 billion propgsal Clll Fii flltm lfm&NI I .. o...t.r ........... SACRAMENTO (AP) -The Assembly's l~y budaet deadlock is over, but there may be more roadblocks abe8d before lawmakers finally p_roduce a 1988-89 state spendiq plan. By a 54-22 vote; the lower house abruptly Called off ........ _..._ ,--.,.,.....__------------"'"'.:"----:------.......... --------------I the battle Monday and approved a$45.1 bilhoo budaet for the filCal year that starts·July 1. Mlillaftllllll111M2 Summer Sale Starts Wea., June 22nd Designer Sportswear & Dcsipcr Dresses - Alben Nipon Richard Warren Gispa Barry Bricken Semplice. etc. I That roll all and a related vote to reject a senate version of the ~ cleared the way foe., a ~ coofcrenc:e committee to try to won out difl'erenca between the two ~Is • Tbe v~ fol doled-cloor caUIUICS by both Democrats ahd ~ns and came only minutes after Assembly members appeared to have decided to wait until today to make another attempt to break the deadlock. ..We want topa11tbi1 ~Ufl~=ble," Aaembly Minority Lader Pat Nolan, said after the Assembly votes. .. We're acceptina the fact that the Democrat.I woo•t bite the bullet on the arts ud we want to tet a bill to the .eve"'°' 11 falt • we am ... At w poi.Dl in ........ di=~blicaM demanded that the Apembly tend its bil beck to commit'« for fwtber cutti ... The lo~r houte's budeCt plan had beea bonled up since June 2. · ""' Annrtnad,._ ... ....._..._tNIW•_, ,.,.,n ill 1il r;_..•d u..., Mid- '"81 ~ wl .......... .. "*"'°""*~ .... ..., ... a -cm .... liumcu1 ...... IOeftd tbedrouPtia .............. 0. tM dwildins Mi•1 lppl Riwr,a ~ boaleNck wr aa.. dale, Mia, Wiii reopened wt.ea billlll "MR freed 60al a arrowed cblilllel, but 1be Coat Guud planned to dOlt the river for up to three days just ftOrth of Memphit bqinninc toniaht to dredte a shallow tection. In Dafton, Ohio, a ~hay hotline". WIS sta111ng today for fannm seekina fodder from as fiar west u Kantu 10 feed their cattle in the face of tbe .,....wiltina df<>Ulht. A similar hot-line went into effect Monday for Iowa fatmen; A Monday cvenina storm in nonh- crn Illinois brouaht the first sianifi- cant moisture to that area in 28 days. depotitina up to a half-inch of rain. Liaht rain also fell in Michipo and lnaiana. .. Any bit ofrain will help, but it's not a ~Utt·all," said Rich Brumer, a National Weather Service meteorolotist in Illinois. .. We need to have 10mcthina like this every three days for the next month before we can say the dtouaht it ended." Thundcntonns movina throuah northwestern Minnesota and eastern Nonb Dakota dumped as much as I. 7 inches of rain in spots early today, but another day of n:cord beat would evaporaie some of that moisture. ); WIM up to 50mplaeu1 pqwerSOIOme 10,000CUllG•m in~ Minn. Wea&berlSVb .......... 111..ou RameY.tOldOllio'•~ ... bu at ies&a ....U..:lbat me •te 11 movma ia&o.1111.cfrial months and thm ii lhilt '9oPe for heavy. Wide-spread rain I008.. Men tbu three doleft reeord-biah tempmtuNa w.e tCPOfted Monday, motlly KIWI Ille dry Midwest. and more ol tbe Mme YtU predicted for today. A ~ Wet Monday a hurricane mipt be just the trick to snap the dry spdl in the Southtut. "Of oourx, we don•t want to sec any hurricanes, .. said Paul Pettit. a weather taVice fom:aster in Mont· aomery, Ala ... But the hurricane and the tropical activity may be the answer to the loq-tenn lack of rainfall and water replenishment that we·~ probably aoina to need ••• Mississi.J)Pi River ba~ freed last weekend from sandbar tic-ups to the north and south or Memphis, Tenn., •in faced an obstacle, the Coast Guard said Monday. A 1,000-foot-lona 1«1ion of the Mis.siuippi six miles north of Memphas has shrunk from 500 feet wide and 15 feet deep to l 70 feet wide and nine feet deep due to the dtouaht. said Cmdr. Michael Donohoe of Coast Guard headquanert in Mcmphjs. .. Undoubtedly there will be a backloa here. We could probably have between 800 and 1,200 baraes arrivina at Memphis over the next 24 to 48 hours." he said Monday. WASHINGTON(AP)-A ..... CIA omcw accuted of~ in an illepl ~ IO .,. dW ~icanpa~ ttbcls 1s lhe latcll ·peno11 ~·in1~nicouMcll.8w· ttncc E. Wallh~s br<NMlmi• a,.. Contra investiption. • Jowph f. Fernanda. the CIA '1 former saation chief in Coa\I IUca. was urned Monday in a five-count indictment c;harains thac be and unidentified co-conspiraion "dec:cit· fully and without lcpl authorization" orpnizcd a priva~ arms IUODIY network for the Cont.rU when·COQ.; srcss banned such aid. Fernandez, S l, who left the ~ late last year after he WIS dilciplined by CIA Director William Wet.&tr, afso is charied with lyins IO hit superiors to conceal the operation. In addition. he is accu~ of obstructing an investiption of the I ran-Conltl affair that was conduaed by the prC$idcntiaJ commi11ion head· ed by former Sen. John Tower, R- Teus. The indictment chafJCS that Fernandez lied to the Tower C-Om- mission last )Car by statina that he did not know for a fact that fired National SccurityCoundlaideOliverL Nonh was involved in aidinc the Contras. Fernanda's attorney. Thom.as Wilson, declined to comment on the chal)tS. saying he needed more time to ~tudy them. Each of the five ctwaes carries a muimum sentence of five years in prison and a $250,000 fine. The indictment shows that Walsh is continuins hisv.andjury investiga- tion even while preparing for the trials of North, former national security adviser John M. Poindexter and anns dealers Albert Hakim and Richard V. Secord. WA»llNOTON (AP)-'1bt 90v- a a r 11 :an the lut lew di)" bu fel=d one of the lafletS in the ftetllll-~------bri...._ prObe to c le ...... . ""'1 ~ wa ... anvcsttpto~ a IOUtu .. maliar with the matter said today. 11lf :aar,et is someone whOIC v~ turned up frequently on coun· authorized wiretap& installed duril!I l.K invcstiption7 said tbc tOUJ"U. apeakina on condition ofanonymity. Sources familiar witb the prObe also said that one of the wiretaps ii a coaversation between former Na~ Sectttary John Lchmap Jr. &Dd bis then .. 1dc Melvyn Paisley. The IOUrttS said the COft'Vcrsatioo. ttcotdcd late last year or early dais year. can be intcrprttcd as beinJ a Ii~ off'by ~hm~n t~at Paisley m1pt be under 1nvest1pt1on. In addition. another win of the probe appears on the VtfJC of coopcr- atina with &ovemment investip&on, said the source. h could not be determined whether the tarset .,..ho is cooperating is a Penta&0n emplo)ce, a consultant or a defense contrxtor. Attorney General Edwin Meese HI ttfl1$(d to say Monday whether Lehman is among those under Orlftg9 C... DAILY PeLOT n• ,_. ... JuRe 21. 19 * M ICfVCiM. ~and aaothct former ~ Scoee. a Na~ omcial in l.eh"'IM Aidt. tdirtd Adm. James A. the~and Naval Warfarc~s .. ~ .. l.:yons, have been implja~. Command Tbuources,speakinaoncondition -.:Stuan Betlia. an cuc:utivc with ohnoaynuty, refuted lo dncribe the 1he Naval Air Syaemt Commalld poAlblC warnina, which investiptot1 M · rA.-otnc:ial J--... ...e caaminine as •f!tential --......... -anne ....-. ..--~·· -·-Shuman. who wortS in tbe eqtl!lip-tion ol justi« an which octumd ment and tuVicc ac;q_uilitiOft .ao. afttr both Lehman and Pai leY had . of the contracu divisaota. insta .. iOll left tbc 90vernment.. · and l<>11Jtks del*tmaL Meanwtule. ~fense . ~retary One source called tbe m•Wr'-Frank C. C.rtl.!CC• 11 rcass111un1 fi~c menu .. a dicey thina,. Peftta&OD offaaa~ under scruuny an .. They baven'l been chaged or the ;ytft~n bribery probe. other indicted and mOll of tbaa ..e civil IOUrut said. • . · .. Th~ sources, who. spok_e only <?n ~thcr sovrce ;aid. "1"Ky ~ condih~ they.not be 1dentafted, said beinaaivcnothcr~it'&~GI 9atfum had si&ncd an order du-ect-this momina.'' •Qf the rass1anments The soul'tlCS The action fOllowed a bijb-level ~ the . atrm.cd emJ>k?)ees were mtttina on Monday at wbidl PCD-tieina ~tafied ~f the decisaon by their t.aaon officials ~Y INdied rapecllvc SCf\.1ccs today. what actions they coWd take in the The fi\e arc: cue. -James Games. the dq)uty awt-Carlucci may alto coasider tant NaV)' steret.ary for acquiSJtion whetbef"rosu,pendc:oeu.ctsWidtabe ma.naacmcnt. compenies involved iD dw ~ -Dr. Victor Cohen, tbe 'dtputy includinasomeofthe~military assistant Air Foroe SCCTC't&t)' in charse supplicn in the couatry. ,.... c:om- ofbu)ina tactical command, control. panics' offices weft .arched last communicauon!I and computer sys-wcelt in purswt al iJticidy oblained terns. insidt contractina inlonnalioll. It n~· ures: Average Inflattontl•ea . . sllghtlylnllay bo y shape1mag1ned .. =.=.ai.i: ... t.~~3 NEW YORK (AP) -The averqc st.in. pc:rccnt in May the SoVetnmcllt II.id Amcrian . man as S..foot-10, 1'12 The avcrqe Amencan Yo<oman today, casina ~of inOatioo and pounds, with a lean build. He wants wants to wear a drns two-to-four indic:atina that the drouaht pllpina to be an inch taller. a pound li&htcr sizes smaller, s&and an inch taller and the Fann Belt has yet to reacb srocei y and more muscular. and thinb a weiab 11 pounds less. She would like store shehes.. pat du! abo':'t the body shape oft.he m'?rc muse-Jn. wavy or cuf'.1y brown The Ma ioaase. less tbu tbc averqe Amencan wf?man. . hair and smooth. tanned skin. pins of o ~ pcrceot io March aAd o' The ave~ Amencan man thinks The av~ Amcnc:an "'oman . · .1 .. 1... • women want a man who's 6 feet, 173 thinks men want a woman who wean percent .10 A~ • WOY.JY amouat to~ · 8 fi __ ... annual nlOat1on rate of •.2 pa"CCDt if pounds and muscular. In fact. they a ~zc dress. stands S.. oot-4 IUIU priccsclimbcdatt.hesamepeccfor 12 want men the way men want them-weighs 118 pou~. ~ thinks they months. the Labor Dcpmt.ment said. selves. S.. I l, 171, mUJC::ular. Men want a woman with a thm, soft body, . . think women like them to have hairy long. wa~. blond hair IJld tanned, food pnces pnc:e;lthl'OICO• Just 0.4 Tampa police urged to find Singleton TAMPA, FlL (APte.;,bout 40 anlfY residents of a Tampa nc~borhood authorities Monday niaht to find elu11vc mutilation rapist Lawrence SinaJcton so they can stop worryina and allow their children to play outside apin. borbood residents who met at a neaahborhood center. Sil\aleton was convicted of rapina a I S-ycar.ald hitchhiker, choppina her arms off with an u and lcav1n1 . her for dead in a ditch southeast of San Francisco in 1978. chests, and the)" re ript. $mOOth wn. .. pmxnt.. '!Om~ WI a -~ ~t So says the Gallup Orpnization's The avcraae American man increase tn April Analysts said the SinaJcton listed his brother'• home in the quiet Forest Hills area as his address two weeks aao to comply with a state law on incomina felon~ but he hasn't been seen there and his brother refuses to 11y where he rally lives. The aray-bcarded, 6()..ycar.ald former merchant seaman, who vcw up in Tampa. spent eiaht ycan of a 14- ycar sentence an a California prison. He completed a year- Iona probation and is now a free man. HiUsbOrou&h County shcritrs Col. Cal Henderson told residents that Sin&Jcton rqistcrcd with authorities and is not required to re-regjstcr every time he moves ··national body imaae survey," which doesn't think much a.bout dress sizes, only area •here the ~ of the was commissioned by, and dncnbcd but apparently speculates a sreat deal dro~1 t .s.ho~ up "Were m ~ in. Amencan Health mapzine. about the body shape of the avCf'lllC rew Pfl?=S 1or vcp:table otl and Now, as for the averaae Amcncan American woman. Hewantsonewsth ma)onoaue. woman: a full rear-end, medium-•idlb bipa. a The bialest price iDcreatc wu for The averqe American woman small-to-medium waist and medium-psoline, up l.7 eerccnt after a I.I wean a sjze 10 ro 12 dress. stands S-sized breasts. He wants an avef11C percent incrcuc tn April Guolinc foot-31h and weiahs 134 pounds. She body type (not thin), soft bodytonc prica. however, are still just 2.9 bas a soft body tone, shon. stn1aht.. (not muxula.r), loq wavy hair and perccut biahcr th.an they •ere a year "I find it bard to believe that none of the police dcpt1tmeots can tell wbete be is. This is totally incredible... said Lester Heitlinaer. amona the neiah-within the state. · · · brown hair, and imperfect. untann~ smooth, tanned skin. aao. Two nuclear weapons to be detonated simultaneously .,.~ ... Pna LAS VEGAS -lbc Ener&Y De~ent plans to detonate two nuclear weapons in the same vertical shaft 11multancously Wednesday momina in a rare expcrim~nt carried out only a few times in 43 yea.rs of nuclear \cstina. The announClCmcnt came Monday as 25 Soviet nuclear lcientists arrived at the secret Nevada Test Site to join ciaht other Sovieu prcperina for a series of joint experiments this summer. The test. tcheduled for 1 Lm., will be conducted in a 7SO.foot vertical abaft drilled in Yucca Flat, about 8S miles nonhwest of Las Vcpa. EncrsY Depanment spokesman Jim Boyer declined to say whether the weapons were placed t~thcr or separated ... That's classified information." he respoodcd. Trial •tam for accued torturer r------------------! c~n:JJ · · I 2 FOR I SPECIAL I ~ .,,, .,,,,... ., ,..,,_ pme Md t9CMe I • NCOfNf of ..... Of ...... '°' FR•EJ I IOP OFFER VALID 4 ~ 10 6p.m MON THAU FRI JI W-------------------•XJ>ir• 6-30-88 ACROSS AIOM ~ NIWPOM Mlt M:WPORT OYllBI BAR .I ml 2100 W. OCEANFRONT NEWPORT BEACH (714) 175-"17 Come Me our NEW CLINIC ADDICTION to AlcohOI, Barb1tfates, Amphetamines, Cocaine, Marijuana, and Tobacco Exper'lelice a ,,.. method tor _.. D tO M t .., tN NEUAO- ElECTRK: STIMVl.A TOA, Wfthout mll9l6rlg work. A ... and •-= c 11 rf";A ~~Dr ..... "Cll1 •r,.....McSDr.?. fw11a.. .. directing tN ft19t 1' I I lrch protect. ~ tNI n*"°d In Eng!Md. ""' aaccw ,...., • rapon.ct lrl the Omni MllQalne. 645:-5114 408 Westmlnister, Newport Beach PHlLADELPHIA -A man accused ofimpmoni~ six women as sex slaves in a basement torture chamber is pailty but an.sane, his attorney says. but the prosecutor in the torturc--murder' trial •rs the man knew what be was ,,__ _ _::;;....:_......:.. ____________________ . .__ ______________________ ,.._ doina. Gary Michael Hcidnit, 4', a self-styled minisicr arid a filWlCia.I whiz. sat unmoved durina opcnina siatemeots Monday. He faca two counts of homicide, six of kidnappina. six of rape aod four of agravatcd usau.IL "'The evidence will show that this defendant committed repeated sadistic and cnalicious ICU caYl&Da the torture and death of two victims <tod) he dMS it methodically and systematically and deliberately c:onca1ed it. a.o assistant district attorney told the Common Picas Courtjuron. .. He kDcw wbat be wu doina. H~ kDew it wu ~and didn't want 10 be di1COvercd." ''D~veloping the Next Generation". GrMnles Ebe Nannies 1 Inc. 1 • u.-.;utle-OUI • FulHJ~ • · • Hi/lhly qulllled, lo!!'!{ and mlhft ,..,.,.,_ . (71~) 361-1480 IN NIN ••• Your ATM card hli winning ways this surnJm'! Ute )OS' ATM ca"d. 1111 you. could win two ways • American ~ 1. WIN $25,000 INSTAN11..Y! -.&ba·scrigbt. )00. might win a fonune li~y ~ asi!.11 ~ATM ard • A~ Slvtnp a any STAR SYSTf.M• locllk» bcr-.een line 6 IDd July S. 1911 during the SfAR SYSIEM• "R:RnJNE TEU.ER SWEEPSTA.JCESnr•.· And. there ft lh>usands ~ oda' pri• 100: Cash Ind anercbaudise piw up ID S4.000,<XX> provided by Sl'AR SYSTEM• ...S 7-f.le\Cft SIDl'CS. 2. PLAY AT AMERICAN AND YOU COULD WIN A PRINCESS CRUISE! U.. ,_. Aimican 24-Hcu Can~ (A'l'.M) Orel or 11'11 STAR SYS'l»d• u CIRRUS e uealber card a American SllV'si "-June I ~ ~ 31 , IM -)QI ll'e u:.n1lically amed ift I ..... for • mwy Prine.al ow 'tar llllO. W ~ don't bM an ATM ant.• mw is .. ti,,. I) ~Y • f6f1 :AlmDia 51¥1• otnce. 'I. Mr • .::, ~· Tlladlr. ·--,..~ Mr • ......,..lllliilO.a*B.W•· mh111 ,boJ ll!IL1' Mt. l8d Mn..~ P-. Hunt· r.:·~~ Mcllunokt. H~-...~ Mr. and Mn. ~,allnloft. Cotta Mesa.boy Mr. Ud Mn.-,:._ 0 . Call, :~=r:n. ~ .,_ __ Colla Ma&,~ . Mr. ...S Mn. Jamll B. Loomas. Westmi .... ,~. Mr. and Mn. Jollil Steven Bra:nau, Fountain V~M Mr. Ud Mn. "°"8N Wall. Hunt-·~ 1~AGllDmAL ... 1.U. Mr. and Mn.~ Oblribjanian, Newport BeaCh. boy . ~·· Mr. and Mrs. Dan.el Andenon. Lake Forat, airl :stx deaths halt lrVine heart valves • Pnm ltaft aM wlN '"'rta Stateund abrold. carboD bileaftet devices that bad peater health risk to 1>91icnt1 tbin An lrvine-baed manufaeturer of A total of 12 val~ malf'uDctiOm become the mechanical valves of aleavina them in place. be lidd. Mr. and Mrs. William Maywa.14, Hatiaaton Beach. boy Mr. and Mrs. Kevin Karamanos. C.osla Mesa. boy heart valves bu S10pped ~ its . ba~ ~n reported. With the FDA. of choice ~ bean 1ul"p0nl in : Jacoblon said that all 12 ma1ftmc. top product after lix deaths were whacb sax ~ult~ an .,. ..... la mt recent yean. ICCOl'dina to indulU')' tiona involved heart val~ IOld linked to lnalfunctiODI. and officials cueJ. pie.like leaflets reauJatinl exeeru. . . . atwo.d. Most of ttie pmtienta with ;. uraed docton to clolely watch pe-the now of bl~ throuab tbi valwl f.dWUdi stopped marketina the implanu received them OYU- Mr. and Mrs.~ Lane, C,9sta Mesa,prl Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey Van Sickle, ' ticnts who already have the devices: broke loole, 111d Walter Sc:l?n SL Di'od~ May 16 and~ manu-becaute the produCU were not apo 1 "W h• not-ied tire bureer.t.. bead of the llCDCY • Sln1a llicturina tbelD IOOll after, the FDA proved for lnarkctina in the Uniled . ~ ~vc 1 • 0~ ~ Ana omc:e. llid. In addition, the ciompany has States until May 1987. Jrviae. lirl • Mi. and Mn. RiclWd White; Irvine, ~ and Mrs. WilliaJD 'Niemasik, Irvine. ·r1 phys1c11n bese nationwide}; iaid l.eS I .. Twelve malfunctions out of recalled an estimated 6,000 unu.ed Tbc Caulty valves were made at Jacobso~, a spoteunaD 1~ Baxter :20,000 is a very small number," valves~bolpitalund plaJ\U in Austin. Tew, aad in Intcmatao~~ . whole Jrvine.bued Jacoblon said. .. But it was disturbina product Sbelbbine. ~ bdween 1983 Ed~ Oi\llllOll muuflctwis the enou,b for us to decide to do the Meanwhile, beaJ1 ~ were and Aupst 1986, by Hema Sc:ieG., 1' mccbarucal heart valves. prudent tbina... •Uf'Fd to watcb coDditiona of thoee tific. • The U.S. FoOd and Drua Adminis-Tbc two di1COntinued models, already implanled with the valves, The com_pany uid it decided to ! tration said about 20,000 of the •Edwards Duromedicl Aonic Bileaftet Scbnesnburwer laid. •stop manufacturiq the valves until Mr. :nf Mn. Mark KnoWlton, New- Beach. airl ~and Mrs. William Morehouse, mechan'ical devices laave been im-!Valve MOdel 3160 and Mitri! 1 Mcdlcal experts told the FDA that ;the cause oft.he malfunCtions can be planted in petients 1!' the United 1Bileaftet Valve Model 9120, are .removina the valves could pose a pinpointed. Hun~ Beach, prl llaJ l1 Mr. and Mrs. Timothy Gavin, Irvine, J::. and Mrs. Raymond Galloway, Huntiqlon Beith, boy New Coast Guard boat towing policy criticized -•1n Mr. arid Mrs.· David Humphrey, Huntinaton BeKh, airl :· Mr. and Mn. Diie Swarts, Irvine, boy 1835 Newport Blvd. 722-8210 181 Westminster Mal U7.a387. OPEN 9-6 DAILY FRI 9-8 640-5800 San Joaquin Hills Road at MacArthur Blvd. odds Just Got Betterl This brand new, 1988 corvette can be ~ui'SI elegantly customized From 103.IFM and 103 ~towtn. ~u · 103 1 Wed, June 22nd tor · Tune Into K-OCIW KLIVW' • · , usten tor theM artlSt9 · · · · WhltneY Houston s;11y Joel Elton JOhn t<,enny LPflOlns Miami Sound weon1ne Sllfy Oc*lll EM•~r unc1a~­S1mon I Gatfllttlcel ~ ...... , .-~·-­.... . ...• -. I ,. ' -·--....... .. •• 111111 ............... . -flldllft ..... fllH•~ ........ , .. , ................. ~~~ 111e -.... T..U.iat eommaecr i• O.-Laas.11. ••• "1. Illa M. L .. 111114f 10D ol Jollaadlfelln~ol ....... '-received 1M DIRCbulilt .... Q>tnplction of lbe tbree- airt.orne coune at the Army • In~ Scbool in Fon Bennina. oa. He is a 1917 anctuaie of Dana Hills HipScllool • • • Pvt. •e111t1 A. ...... IOll ol ~ .,Apinap or Coila Maa. Ml CCMilpleteil one ... tioa unit train-i~ at tie Ann__y · Infantry SChool in Fort Benaina. Ga. .. . .. Nai:~nT.C ........ IOnof Mary · nk of Newpc>n Beach, Ml comDleted his ~ at the Recruit trainina Com in Or· landot Fla. He i1 a 1981 ~uaie of Corona del Mar Hiih ScbOol ••• Air Forte Reserve Airman 111 Clata lln¥111 A. Q I a I puct. daupler of Irene Garac:A:!ilrvine and dauihter of Shirley o( West- minster. has &nduated from buie trainina at Lac"Kland Air Fon:c Bue. Teus. ••• Pvt. M~MI L 0--. IOD of Tbomu G&enn of COit& Mesa. hu r=ved the panchutist t.d,e upon completion of the th~Mck air- borile C0W1C at the Arm_y Infantry Scbool in Fort Bennina. Ga. He is a 1987 ·lf'lduate of Corona del Mar Hiih~hool. • • • Pfc. Marl A. lcnas Jr., son of Matt and Chefyl Scruat of Fountain Valley, has been decomed with the Army Achievement Medal in West Germany.Setugaisanarmorcrew member with the 8th Cavalry. • • • Air National Guard Airman ,.._.. L .AMWI, IOl1 of Mr. and Mrs. F. Leroy Adami of U&una Nifuel, has paduated from 6uic tra.inina at Lackland Air Fon:e ~ Texas. He isa 1987 lflduate of Dana Hills Hiah SchOol and his wife is the former f"anet Mills of Lquna Niauel. • • • • lance Cpl . ....._ J. Ga• son of John Gates of Irvine. recently • pmed for a iix-month deDlcmnent IO the Medi1erranean aboerd the aircraft carrier u~ Dwi&ht o. Eiienhower, ... *-C-... fllC-Miiii. .._ •-.=. ....... ... If _. .. Fort ................... IC ... M. Hillt tiaol ••• •• ,,, ............. of Jerry F...._ ol FOUM&in VIH..eJ. 11M --~10-rail olpri-. .fina in lhe Amly. Fullerfoa ii a commuia&iont equipmet1& ,.... .,._. in Frukf'wi, Waa Gei-muy. . . . -Pvt. leedl. ftllle, 10n of'Katilera Tiale ol Huntinaton lmdl. '-.,_. .... from. wfatdtd wiide home por1ed in N"orfolk. Va. • • • Airman lk9l!e D. ~ IOll of ... ·lbul.'I men'• 'J.8Nrta. Solid ahort!eleeve pocket tees in 100% cotton. ~ng men'• 9hort..,...,. knll 8l*ta. In 90I~ and stripes bY Shah -Charles Home of Irvine. hu ~u­ ated from the Air Fon:e av10nics instrument sy11em1 course at Chanule Air Fon:e Bue, Ill. • • • Pvt. W.T. Lull n·, IOn ofW.T. Loebmann and s~n of Ardell Loebmann of Newport Beach, bu com.,ae,ed t.sic trainina at .Fort _ Leonard Wood. Mo. • • • Air Force Reserve 2nd LL CUt. J. ......., cta•1er of Jessica O&en'n IUFfEU'S UPllLSTEIY llC. ............. ..., ---..----11· ' ...... ftlY.._ ....... ... ............ ., .......... _._ .... ,.. ...................... _ ................................ ...... ,... ... _ .......... ....... ......... 1 ... ,._ .. .. w ...... , 0 2 .-.--.......... .... -·~:; 111 PJNNACll HNmUllOf HdtGll~ oa'..:r.r...:.~=- Siz8s S-XL. ~-$10 . lbung men'•tlil* tope.100% cotton in sizes S-M-L-Xl. Reg. $6. ac;r.· ~ lhii18. SoUd and at~ in 100% cotton. S-XL for boys' sizes 8-20. Orig. $1'4 • Jurilora' crop tope. Choose sotida. stripes or prints. Polyesterlootton and 100CM. cotton. Si.Zes s.M-L. Orig. $14-16 · Junlon' ... w.1111 waw.n t~ By Rio Rita: Razzle Me• in 100% cot- ton. S-M-L. Reg. $12 Glrte' •'*'Md 111111 ..... ~ IClll'n Coulins~ SW!if and Randi .. in coaon. RM. 1or Qlrtl' .._ 7·14. All. 11• $!. • • • ~ Jmll1••eldrta. 0... .... a_...,ol mini skirts. Sizes S-M-L and 3-13. ON. ... ...... ...... ...... 1111111:. aw"°"'~ and etutic wilst ............. CJrll: ... •111 _,. llMi. In .. •• 1GCM conon. Sizes S-XL. Orig. $26 1' 4 W-. ...... Ir .... a Ille Hlllll~ c.ctlit' and more. In cot- .......... 8& ..... 0fl. ... ...... M 111'9 I I! t I•·" 81 nJW .. HolJie• m cotton and .-.-NL-lllir.a. ... M ~~ ..... llilw .... , ...... 1,... ( Safari: 100% cotton. 5-M-l.-XL Orig. $16 • ._.ng men'• 8t*ta. Choose from our variety d short lleew rayon shirts. Sizes S-XL Orig. $24-26 •111•' shorts. Choose from styt~ in 100% cotton '*ill and ramiekotton. Sizes S-M-L Reg. $14-18 .,..._. Aazzle Me' ahorta. Elastic waist stytes in 100% cotton, Sizes S-M·L and 4-1-4. Orig. $14 Junlora' 8hot1a. Comfortable stytes in 100% cotton sheeting. Sizes S-~ and 3-13. Reg. $16 r Juniors' waw.n ahlrtL In prints, solids. stripes. By Judy Knapp: RazzJe Me' and more,; 100% cotton. S.M-L Reg. $18 Junlofa' WOIMft tank~ By Cutting Edge!" Byer, Judy Knapp· and more in 100% cotton. SiZltS 5-M-l. Reg. $1'4 Junlona' ~ ~ Owrsized fuchSta, turquoise, red or btad< in 100% cotton. One size. Reg. $16 Junlora' antch tMk topa. Choose trom long and crop stytes. Cot- ton/Lycra~ Sizes S-M-L Reg. $12. Juniors' t.hion ... tope. Potyesterlcotton snap.front, shirttail Of ~e styles. S-M-L Reg. $12. .,.. men'• c11Uel ...-. tn cotton and pol~. Sizes 2&-38 .... Orig.~40 ... ...... •ledld ala 21•. clea.. frOm a selection~ iltylis . ~ycra· Md~ Silll 8-M-L and 5-13. ()tjg. $22-38 I ,.. ........... , ..... ,_......a..."°"' llr*h twMI ~and men. S4n9 3-13. Orig. SM ... ing perched on edge of parad,.., ......... cal problem Seetoits orily real weakness In current economtc climate Division, :NB locale catering to flnediDers Parties from a slm~ 'NCltef1l bertJecue to themed banquets com- plete with decor and ftoral arra.- mcntscan be youn by simply callinaa full-lel'Vice Cltem". And DOW, the pleasure Of fine di~ fe:lturina a tounnet menu with mtemational wmcs 1e1Ved on bone china and in fine crys1aJ b)' waiten in black·tie attire. allo IS availa~ at Jay's Cat.erinl. a onHCop sbopoiq tervice. Not only that, if you don•1 have enou;b room in your home or office to throw the party._ you can rent a watcrfiont 1ettina riaht on Newport Haitior. . The fine~ division is under the direction ofoeril Muller, who bu established many of the finest re.- taurantl in Southern Califomiai_ in-cl~ Oranae County's Oiez ary and The Ambrosia. Tbil division, says Muller, "is not competition for Jay's caterina but an extension, lef'Vinaa demand that aocs beyond the ICD(Ta1 requirements and ~-.JA\"8/A9) ADJUSTABLE RATE HOME efK:l ·---~ *START RATE •No Neg •To $SOOK •30 year Rate Subject to Change let US show you tON to "CUT THE RED TAPE" and save money too with: "PURCHASE POWER" PYe and Post FVc:hase Loan App-oYals Issued Wlthn 5 Days of Appication. PRO-CRA A-TION COSTS And keeps you, ... your family, and your business from enjoying the kind of future you ALL have a right to enjoy. Join the professlonale and learn ways to: -lower your •• llablllty -Increase your annuat Income -let U.S. help you. Nitre -protect your •111181 $8M financing pa~t signed by American Health Service At the AmerkM lleahll Semee c.r,. annual meetin.a, S. Lewis Meyer, president and chief executive officer, announced that the NewpOn Beach company has completed a financina ~le~ in excaa of SS million wi Phi •Pl Credit C«p. The J*~ consists of new build· int construction financina of the Loi An,eles County-Universl!I of SoUthern California (LACU:sq lrn· aain1 Science Center the financtna of two Philips McdiCit' Systems North America Jae. Gyroscan 1.S Tesla MRI syatema. and the refinancina of the assets of the Harbor-UCLA Female bosses offeJ;ed adv.fc~ BJ ILENE SCllNEIDER ....,,..0c;, $I fl 1 JusrALTERATIDNS c RF r, T f ·~ r tit ~' t H 1 l c 1 r 1 1 • We speclaUze in mens and womens suit atteratlons, and · guarantee the perfect flt.· Gift Certificate GOOO . S 500 IN ALTERATIONS TOW MOS on.t i100d ttwu 6-»el With This M Only Master Talor on PTemises at M Times ~Frt 10 a.m.-7 p.m. S.. 10 a.m -S p.m. COSTA MESA COUm'AROS 631-5787 ~W*lllll8'1.llP'Uh~S. G9ody Mlolc. lllS ~ .... THE .7~YEAR ·SWITCH.- DftaODUCINC nll 7-YIAll P1XD llATI MOltTGACI 'IMAT A'{l'OMATICALLY IWll'am VILLA APARTMENTS 10 A l·YIAll ADJUITML& llATS ... TC.AQl •••ntacd ... I!. • 1 NY~E UP~ ~ Dov."s I OTC UF I ' D""" Minion Pl~~Supply Co. BATH COLLECTION Featuring International Designs by EUer "' ... Elj~r commissioned intemationany famous designers to creat' bath- rooms for today. The~ bath de- signs, like~ one shown above, are now premiering in our~ l'lqLwc by lnttmltJonlly lrllown dn9W1 Mt<Ne4 dt Snis . 32107 Alipaz San Juan Capistrano (Behind Capistrano Plumbtng) (71•) ~13=4511(71•)830-2520 Hours: Mon.-Frt. 9:00 em -4:30 pm room. BOW TO PLD YOUR ESTATE TODAY - • HOW TO A VOID PROBATE • THE TAX REFORM AT or 1986 EXPLAINED • HOW THE REVOCABLE LIVING TRUST WORKS •HOW TO ELIMINATE TAXF.S • HOW TO A VOID THE GIGOLO AND THE noozy •HOW TO AVOID THE JOINT TENANCY TAX TRAP A F1E1 IDll6AI Ptesented by .... W • BAILEY SMI*l*H Attorney at Law Tuesday, June 28th Tuesday, June 28th 3:00 -5:00 7:00. 9:00 Newport Beach Library Community Room 856 San Clemente Drive, Newport Beach IESDVATIOl IEQUllD Call ... (714) 133-U9l AU U.O. •• di99 will ,_ .. • &. 23 ~ ,._,,. ........... ...,,_ ~ w.,_. JIJ•hl-eniA the ... Cr Jirl:; 9rln rt6• ,. We maJre canstracticmloans faster than you can say two-by-f~ Just can. :And. '8t i.ey '° cr.t> JO'l1' bard bal At. Harboe wt'W been~ tbe ground work In oon- SU'UCUon JendiDC tar °'8l' 14 J9l1"I. worklnC dl'l StJ&bern ~orn1a buDdm tbrouOl our n1ft lo&n approval Qlltem. And our ~-lO ,. MD !DON buUder8 off '2le croand means w wort\ put much UIDI bttao JOU? qUllUOD &Dd OW'&DIWR Bo,_ caD Ind ., t.be wmS. And Dep tbal .. Darts ... Harba"ftmk •~tnt&: t~mJQUrbull=nm;..,,, ...... ~~~ ... " --~ .. i+,: Stock market stronger -i: . 141 \2 NEW YORK (AP) -An afternoon 1u,,e of• bJ~ip buyina 1trenatbened the ttock mArbt tt= i Tuesday and pushed the Dow Jona induatriaJ '-1 l"etqe back over the 2,100 level. •' But the market ICIHawed tbroup much of the day, buffeted by oonOictinf evidence on inflation and intereit rates, and Wal Stteet analysu Mid no clear pattern eme,..ed from the late buyina spree. "The market keeps settina mixed aipali. .. said Jack Barbanel, a futures stratesistat Gtuntal Ii Co. in New York. ' The Dow Jones avcrqc finished with a 2S.24-' point pin to 2,109.17. Oainma issues outpaced declines by about a 9-' to-5 ratio on the.New York Stock Exchantt, with t 917 up, S2S down and 482 unchanpd. • 811 Board volume totaled I SS.06 million shares, qainst ll6.7S million in the previous • It leSSlOD. , -_ ~ The NYSE41 composite indik rote 1.33 to , ISJ.29. 1 WHA r NYSE Dio ------ 1 NEW YOttK (AP) JUI\. 21 l ' "'"· 1 dv&::' l~ NEW YOttK (AP) Jun. 21 Golo Quort) ... YONC~-.... :aJ IW ... ,..... T-= . . • 11.-..... ,., ........ ""c... .,. ............ ca....,. 1ur.M1.t1 _. • ,...,.. u• ....... 0-··---....... "'c-.. .---...... '-'·--·~ -.............. ...... -·m ...................... . . ........ ...._ ~---=· ,.,,..,.., .... .,,=: .. _.. ......... ...., ... ~-·'° 1' .......... ... ,....... ... .... v ....... ,_. . ..... ., ............. ~ NASDAQ S u~~~~R r .. i i I .. •• n. .. .. ... traumatic ~ialiltdladlecleadlola c11 w.nenz:: e"*"" .a.a UPGD atOund a ill dpla' in "How .. -z:. CWTent Di'Oducdoft o( p, or.nee touatf1 drama therapy theatrical compuy. Too ~ a tooic for an eveni111.at the tha1er'1 Not entittly, since die boy invoavect doet not dae duri .. dw couneofthe show (thouah we know it's inevitable) and the focus is more oa thoee a&cted by his ailment than on the stricken child him.elf. Rather tban dwell on the boy's deslla'atina condition, Gallaaher tells-in a rouah miJUUR of present- day and ftuhbeck sequences -how bis perents and their two clote friends come to pips (or fail to) with the situatioll. It's a hiply involvina expaienc:e on the second Stqe of SoU1b Cout Repertory, where the play will nan throui)\ Friday only. Director Don Laffoon, who founded Stop.Gap 1 o yean aao 11 a theetrical forum for societal illnesses, has auembled four of Oranae coun- ty's most luminous talenu to ~nt this touchina drama with a twist. The twist, in this case, involves the boy's mother. who moves away bccau11e she simply cannot deal with the emo- tional gony. M tbe play opens, the motheT returns to be with hu son u be unde~ a seriO\IS o~tion -and enjoys a nervously liahtbearted reu- nion with her Awo closest friends - w--'L ~ TCa.'911 ...... -:--· .. tl&J .... 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It's welt accomplished-the threaome teet1e in a bar that opens the Play is a textbook exercise in natural cbaracter relationships. Playina what amounts to a ri~ cameo role as the doomed youna boy is 8-ycar-old Justin Morpn, who exhibits-Went beyond bis yean. Only once does his illness overtake him on staac. but it is a powerful moment Metaphorically speak.iJll. the characters live, or ex.isl, in a house of cards -and this is precisely what set desian.er Victoria Bryao has &sbion- •tlD MSAT (IQ 12:00 l :H S~:1S 7:4110:H ntS .. ...,.,..., 12:11 l :ll (:10 7 :40 1010S-70MM ed u a multi-use backdrop. Terri Gens' meticulously defined liahtina effects brine the episodic play into sharper focus. Despite tbe fact that GallaJhe!"'s play ends abruptly, with bttle an the way of resolution, laffoon's pro,. duction is a gripping experience and the four adult talents are among Oranac County's finest Performances contmue tonight tbroup Friday's closing with an 8:30 p.m. curtain on the Second Stqe of SCR, 655 Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa. Call Stop.Gap at 648--0IJS or SCR at 9.S7-4033 for ticket infor- mation. Celebrity items b'rlng $500, 000 at auction NEW YORK (AP) -EM1 ~· maroon G)'lon underpants, Midslet JKbon's fedora and Bob DJl-01 tlandwnttcn lyrics ~ ._... tht mound of rock 'n' roll ~ia that fttcbed more than S500.000 on tbe auction bloCk. n.c .s-.ce• of Presley's penonal i~ 1ftdudin1 the underpants, an declric razor. hairbrush and black IOCb. went for $605, said Laura Stewart. a spokeswoman for Sodllcby's auction house. A Gibson model J-200 1uitar PresAev used in the late 19SOs and e..ty r960s sold for $27.SOO, the top ·Drice P1icl It S.1urdaft aunion, Stewan•id. Jacktoft'1 autasraphcd fedora .old for$4.12S. Dylan'1 handwrittn ·~ for ... Want You .. went for $8,IOO, a John Lenoon Jrl)' wool uil fetched $3.JOO 1ndoneofl.nnon'sauitar11rapasold for S8,2SO. she said. About 30 bidden and more tti.n 300 sptttators P,thei'ed to~ 2261011 of memorabilia that sold for SS33,477, Stewart said. The T J . Martell Foundation for Leukemia, Cancer and AIDS R~li recraved S 127 .600 o( the proceeds. she said. Starting June 21th ttvu August 8th . Classes held Monday thru Friday~ t~ LaguN Beach H~ Sd'K>oi JO HOUtS OF WTINSNI ~ • SMAU. GllOUPS s • NATIVf TlACHUS • NA'f\MAL Nr•OAOC ,...,Aft LESSONS AV a.:.,11,_... • ....,...,..ell04 •L&muoa www;ww• .__c-,_,......, ~'"--.. ,..,1'0 ta "II .., ... ....... ·---·----.... a-_, -.. ..,. ......,. .... .. .._ ....... •u..-·~--.,.._ aMCf_.... ....IAt ----·~~=---'=' l ~~I ~u ·roN CENTfiE liit11:Ar1l"ur 1! Mar u~•EPs·· :O-•AIPfr< :E .. ·'.: .,..,.,, •• •' B•~ ~I! I I .• ~ s <, c <).I 8 M f' 8 II A·--11•r:~ u~ 't~'I''• JI -~ ... 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II .._..._.. ..... :1••••81 'AP IPt tbC iaflctiolL • •f: . . • $ I ,.. -•-llJri 8 .. bow Pft*CtioD IMuld be uted Tbirty to 40 millc-MmaM .._ ,_ ......... titi w .. ... dntbecuteotlheAIDSvirus. have ~ital~ lterw ii-* .,.,_,__. .. ...., .. ,.., ... • i(-Maeller man and I become comnioialY tnwnatted -... a part· ,... • ••llJ, ... ..._ .._ad we bodl feel prolClCtion is ner ~ hu IClive letiom. but lbe P• ...................... e-~ IOIDwtaeeded. howdo_l tell him? virus can aJio be uannitted when .,...,... .. ..,,,....,. ............ , (Jr .. , J? \hcR is DO Up of infectioa.andJt ishaalto wrtll le ... .. ' .... lllat Dt. Mya-bo~ told me be aJways• possible to connct berpa ve • •11••1 ....._ 11 wm ._, ,.. 1111 a ._.,._ sewtion wbcn an "no~ symptollll ot 10 have the .......... ..._. 11 ....... _. _. OUlblak wcominaOft. I have never first ch.nica;l outbreak_~ a~ tint ......,. a ... 111111t 111•••· It II: C1.1X1ieeced this. Pleue tell m~ how becomma infected. ~ ~ny • .,.. •111 ... c.e.r, P.O. Ba to UiMlle the matter when the time p_cop~ have symptOml ~ ~ unai-11817, llwrell N ... .,..... N.C. COIDll. -DEVASTATED IN 1ngpnor to an outbreak, thius nou ITJlt. (...._ •dne a ..... Mlf- HACKENSACK. NJ. reliabJe indicator. . . . MMr1111il,1•=f'*tmY1l111 wt .. u mASDBYAl'l'Atm>:I_..... Condomsandspermicides(v111naJ ceatl ntln .... ) W1ilxtn,,,_n . ~ (March 2 J-April 19): Relationship is tested: tJait K die end or a ---omll"'!~-!'!!!!~~--­ DCW bcslnnina. ~ oa initiative., ~ ... ':n":i . SYDIEY S1a1a You'll tel to baan or mattcn by 0 beina. direct, in-IAll , novatave. ii•••••• TAU&US(April ~May 20): Follow throuch on huoch. especially if it involves women. Focus on tmployfnent; buic iaucs, bbdlcl. ability to deal sucxiessfully with children. You'll be aSbd to make _p~blic appearance. Acquiesce. GElllNI (May 21-June 20): Diversify, communicate with one who may be overseas. Scenario highliahts penonality, charisma. creativity, style, sex appeal. Love relati~sh1p intensifies. Another Gemini will fiaure _pr:ominen\Jy. remain so until hiJher-up srants permission. Pisces involved • IOOllPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): You'll get backstaP. vicM, you'll be involved with Libra indivjdual, liabt will be shed on area prcviouslf obscured. Scenario ICCents intensity, romance, creativity, chance for financiaJ jackpot. &AGmAIU\JS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Perceive poten- tial, refuse to be dejected by termapnL You recently proved major point, your actions had positive impact, you 'II soon gamer reward as result. Wish will be definitely f lll 61 led. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Stress indepen- dence, courqe of conviction, wiUinancss to assert Views in positive manner-for the rcicord:Socnario hiahli&hts travel. spirituality, idealism, romance. Aquarius plays role. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): You'll rec:eive gift which adds to wardrobe. Many will comment favorably, some will say, .. How appropnate." A forceful woman is on your side-despite skeptical statements. Sagittarian@ picture. · -CANCER (June 21-July 22t. SpotJiabt on property. home, security, family, {WOSpects for future. Check details, be positive concennng legal rights, tax and license requirements. You'll soon be on more solid emotional- financial around. LEO (Jllly 23-Aug. 22): You might be saying. "How did I aet in this squirrel ~." Emnhasis on confusion. chanae of plans, messqes from relatives who make travel proposals and then follow with nonsequitun.. Virgo featured. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Check plumbing. Surprise appearance of one you respect n~itates quick "cleanup. You'll learn more about secret funds. possible tax rebate. Financial status of partner or mate comes to Going onward and yupwar~ VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Domntic arranaemcnt subject to change -family member discusses money, marital status. possibility of chanaina residence. You'll locate article lost, missina or stolen: Taurus plays role. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Emphasize balance. but don't teU :!~ou know. J ndividual who pleads for an$wers actually s obsequious replies. What is hidden wiJl liaht. It wasn't the most oriainaJ thins U JUNE U IS YOUR BIRTHDAY you were I've ever done, but following World separated psychologically or actually from one or both War II. I gave birth to three yuppies. parents at relatively early •· You arc accustomed to Youprobablydidn'thearmuchabout tearina down for ultimate purpose of rcbuildina on more it because 77 m1lhon other people did suitable structure. You sensed your future while still quite the same thins. youna. Current cycle accents romance, creativity, travel, Some compared this national birth ability to be rid of losing proposition. Taurus. Leo. explosion to a pia in the beUy of a Scorpio people play important roles in your life. Auaust . snake because wherever this aener- will be productive, creative for you and will feature ation went, they attracted attention money and love. and crcaJed problems just by their sheer size and numbers. Despite the fact we know they are here, we arc always surprised when they show up for the next phase of their lives. Nessie a more recent legend For example, we were totally unprepared when they went to pde schoof. Forget that there wcren•t enouah classrooms or teachers. The important thin& is wc didn•t even have a cute name for alJ of them. lma1r.inc a aroup that big, and vie So you thought the Loch Ness Scotland. did you? No, sir, if you're anybody had ever heard of it. First didn"'lt know what to caJI them. monster was lqiendary in Old oJdcrthanSS.youwcrcaroundbefore allegedsightingoccurredin 1933. Luckily, someone came up with "I.._ .. Tm" If an animal is still alive I 0 days after it bites somebody, it is not rabid. But waitina it out is no way to make sure, please note. "Baby Boomers.·· Well, you can i~ne Our' shock 12 years later when this army of kids decided to ao to collqc. Surprise, surprise. Oh sure, we could jam them onto campuses and amnac colleliC Houseflies like red, don•t like blue. loans, but what to call them? Vile Researchcn say that. settled on .. BIDDIES": Boomcrs in Q. What state has the most hol- idays? A. Oklahoma with 20. The District of Columbia has the fewest with eight. Q. How come so many new TV shows look &ood as pi IOU. then ao flat after a couple of episodes? A. Am told by those who purport to know that a small aroup of the best writers are commissioned to wort up many of the pilots. 'They move OA to other projects. Les.set talents take over. •1 caun• OOREN ... OMA& 111>-_.alP Bodi wlDerable. South deall. NOUll---- • AQ tt• Q 2 ' Debt Just when we thouaht they were set for a while, they paduated and entered the corporate world in sean:h of housina. automobiles and VCRs. I cannot believe wc aot caU&ht •in without a name for them. Then someone came up with YUPPIE: Youna Urban Professional. And from that came PUPPIE: Poor Urban Profcsaional; OINK.: DOublc In- come-No Kids~ and a host of other cutesics. I think we're OK now. but it's not a time to rest on our laurels. We must could look for a arand llam with five no trump, despite tbe f lct that be blld poor tnmapl, Nodb tcaliled tUl South Ud to haft caoqb COD· troll to mate tbc arud ilUD a via- E111 BlllECI lookahead to the next pbuclDd have a name in p&acc when they~ there. In 2S or JO years, today·1 YlaPPia will 1'09m the earth in ...-ch-of yuppie discounts at the movies and bathrobes with vests. They will have names like Debbie, Derek. Roclt and Fawn. They will constitute the lartest elderly population this country bas ever seen at one time. Call it a hunch, but I don•t think they.II answer when ~ou call them .. senior citizcm." They've always had their own idcnt· ity. Put aside the fact we won't have enouah inedicat ~ or faciltties for them. Let's aet busy with a name. What would you call a poup of 7(). lomethinp who are aiU mUillt pa~ments on a »ycar-<>ld BMW. are ~ina to se• blueries for their biolosical ume clocks 10 they can have children, and who arc waltina around with cellular phone implants so they won't miss a call? Think about il -~---~~----------------- 83 Togeltiel ,_ 180othe----81 .,... po9t •A--' ........... 70 8tuclM twd 71 ...., DOWN 1NA8A ... 2 Guido"• "* a Codd8la 4 Old 5 Frectufe ;=--... lln~of 'Self 10 Fiber ...... 11 "°°"' 12 Nliot Ndwd 13Pool~ ,..,... 21 "- 23 Cedence 24llOlllM • Mr.eo..ird ~~· 31AllM ..... IS"Y.....," ........ ....... .., 37 .... llUK~ 51&ome~ 59-lowt 81 Toelllr ..... M"""*lp. .......... 0 Qtl1'S • A4 ble contnct. 1 Declmw woa tbC opealJll Cbab ... ia ...... Clllllld tM kiDI ol d&em~. tMi cra111d ao d9 1 .,, ....... low cn..p to ...... 2 11 1 war 1A1T •ISJ .,, Q&l1' QQ1t 02 01.1143 ., ••• ,3 •Qf'712 IOUIB • &If 2 QAtlS4l 0 &• •& ,... ......... ..... ... 1: = 10 .. .... ..... ao •• •• 10 ,. ... ... .. ... ... .. N9t mm cbl .. ol dabl. • ..... dldanr cllanlld the lbe .. of' .... . .. -,..,..., .., . .,.. .......... a-~ ...... ., .......... ..................... ,.,,. .:Allallm 'a , .. ,... ...... .. .. .............. .. ., ................... ..... .... ......... ... .. .. " --~-........... __ ·--.---~ ' • , ,. ........... Carda Stranae trlee tO C°"• a putt at three, celebrate. a blrclle on 13 and elgn••• victory while approachtn1 the 18th green. . . . Strange 's tears wash ~w~y frust~B.ti~on U S Open title gtveS Veteran .. It's a day~ f~ Fa~s Day; but tl(rlls for my -Dfl-.--W ~_..-~said. .. But you can't do that. Ifs~ IO me. • • _ dad."Suan,esaid. .. IJustwisbhecoulclbavebeenbere. r ... .,,-.. ~u. n's bappened IO all of us.. You IWt wntma JOUI' fl t 1f t twi .. rvebeenwaitinaalonatimetodothis. This is for l'WM ..,......_._. ,_ 111 4t4..-.JM.»-n acc:quaccspecc:bandyou'reinawbolebeapoftroDble. .. CS IDa_,Or 0Uffiatnen n my dad. I screwed up the •15 Masten. I've been waitinaa Str•nee out 04-SM--2&-M str.,.. In ..S-355-J.U-31-n So he pound it out, aJtho\U bcJeeys by faldo oe Iona time... -F.WO out as-"""2u-35 F.,. In '5H&....,_,5 tb.ne of the last four boles made ibe tat eaier. ltROOKLINE, Mui. (AP)-In the end, there were Win for Curtis Sttanee. . There wae tan of triump_b for winnina the U.S. Open Golf Cbampi<>Dlbip with a four-t.bot; l8-hole playoff victory on Monday over British Open champion Nick Faldo of Enpnd There were tan of mief, 11 well, after accomplisbina .. the ~test thina I've ever done." And, too, the tan came as StJ'lnlie recalled the memory of bis late &atber, a IOlf pro who SWted Cu.nil in the pme and died when me latest American national champion was 14. ~Dgels · bold off Twins MINNEAPOLIS (AP) -For the Aqels to win, Wally Joyner bas to drive in important rum. .. I~ tot to ICOl"e IUYI &om leCOOd and I haven't been doina it," the Ar*ls' ftnt baeman said. . -Re did it Monday niaht -and drove in IUYI &om first and third witb a three-nan bOmer durina a five-run It was perbapl to be expected that Stn.Qle would One oftbe Faldo boPcs came at l?a. wt.ere be pat have to wait an extra day to expcriellce victory. After all, his app1oecb throu&b the areen into fOUlh. He dtipped those who follow the P? bad said StranF was overdue point Altbouah Suaqenevertrailedand wuahead from about 12 feet beyond the cup oo tbe sbck llOpi.aa anm.. to win one of aolf s 8:£1~. the fifth OD, «w 13th WU the obvious tunliDa point," faldo aO\K:bed Oil the pecD. ODCe ducbaa bis fac:il .. It's the sreatest . I've ever done. It's the sreatest Faldo said. bdliDd tbe-Q)"Cf d-bia bands,. fully .wme tUt M mmt feelina in the world. And. 5craqe added in his slow, soft Only a stroke .eperated the playen when they went to make the IJ'ltl to stay alive. He m;..t Vi:qinia drawl, .. it wu one hellova touab day out there... 13, where a two-shot swina-a birdie by Stra._. a boleY 1'bat wu it. ll w over," Strus said. .. I W three Stranae won it with a scramblina round of per 71 at by Faldo -wrapPed it up. in band when I went to dae l 8tb tee. I fipred I had it won The Country Oub in suburban Boston. Faldo bad a 75 in "'That hit me bard. .. FaJdo said. .. It summed up my &baa. the 28th playoff for the American oatiooa1 championship. week." .. You amt c.aJcula•~ if be makes tb.ne, I cu make indudina «> on the beck nine. It built Su.nae's lead to three strokes. five. And I can make five molt of tbe W.. .. be said. Both players pointed lO the 13th hole 11 the tumina .. It was bard not to start t.hinkinayou•veeot it won," .. Tbat•s wily I hit a 2-iroa off'tbe lee." Thomas doubtful .for Forum finale Battered point guard nursing ankle sprain INGLEWOOD (AP)-With bis crutches !!._CUby and I bud4id under bis left eye, Detro1f s battered Isiah Thomas said Monday be was bopina for a miracle that would allow bim to play in the 1eva1th pme of the NBA Fmals. Wearina a Los AnFfa Raiden' T-shirt with the messq.e. .. Real Men Wear B1act." Tbomas said at a news conference be doubced that be could play with bis severely sprained riaht ankle in 1uesday niJbt•s decidina pme of the cham~nsbip senes apinst the Los T ...... ._ o.trolt ., ........ ' 9.m. said, ... baby beiaa born." Thomas' wife, Lynn. pve birtb to a son. Joshua Isiah, last Wed.Deldai niebL Tbe fiftJl pme oftbe series was pla lbUnday niabt. In the Laken' 103-02 Yidory at their Forum home in Sunday's sixth...-. Tbomas bad a career playoffhiab 43 points, a.dudina 17 o.tralt Cwll CJa.U n.17 .... Jalala TIM••• cua play Qeee 7. ~ed if be was bopina for a miracle, the Pistons· star guard said, "yes, yes I am." Asked to name the last miracle be saw, be after be was hurt with 4:3S left ia the third toe •••I•• C-011 P11t....,. ..... (Pl1111-IWA8/112) .............. n.111 ...... . ' La1cers'hopes to repeat rest on home court; agafa But LA still must make worth sometbina. but you've IOt lO mate it worth more than that by comina out here rady to play and make it a real advan~ .. It proved estential in fiDallyi•ina olf Utah in the Western Conmnoe temifiaall IDd ~was crucial in the Western finals apimlt Tbe Laten forgecl the teventh ~ by win.Dina 103-102 Sunday. They trailed 102-99 pins into the final minute. but a jumocr by Byron Scott and two free tbroM Dy Abdld- Jabber with 14 ICIC:ODds left kept Loi All9elel ali¥e. .. We nnt the cba.mpiombip ~ liDd ia cwdertoFt il you•velO( to overcome UU... lib t1ai1." the Pistou' Job Sdcy said. '"We'lbe all rWat. .. 11ainem NBA fiDab bave pc tile~ .. ~ !!I !'!!.!'2 .... ~ :..u:_~-==~ :\P-~----............. ~ ... ...,. ....... w.o: Dr. Wrt d •1 !;:& 111 Sw ........... .. ....... ._.b111l1I• .......... tloa. ....... ..., ,...:1• II ~ b I 11 cif-9• 'dDll ~ ~:. & .......... ftll 11 ._ 14211 • I ...... ,_ ............ ]. ? .. ...... -··· ,... '!.'1 ... ~ '° «> • ._ A rrh11 a bavepjtal~..._il..a comnioDJy traaittld ......... ner who hal Ktive leaia.. but IM virus can Uo be .-itted wben tbefe is no ... of iafDdioa. It ii mo poaible \0 CODUM:I ...... and bave DO cliaical l)"ID= CW IO bave tbe fit1t di.ftic:a.l OU ~first beconuna infected. A maoy ~ have aymptomS IUCb • tiftll· •:n::: to an Outbreak. Wt ii not a ...... ,. ........... _ .. I J _,.. ..... ~la,._IMe ~ ... .,, .. .... Pwltt• ............ " ... ., ........................... . wrlll • ... NS 0 d11 ._. Dr. ....... ,. ........ ....,,.. ........ ,....a. ...... .. a ... 1115 art I) II a It II: a212•• C...W, P.O. Ba re indicator. ........ Tr' p ..... N.C. .,.,... ( ..................... . Condoms and spermic:idea (vaginal aH 1111i< rsll ... 1llf1wt6U nee. ...... , .. , .... ) •• flsll "".-.a A •• (M9rda 2 l·April 19): Relatiombip is tested; ... .. ..... « a---11111111m-~~ ...... --' •ew Nai11nia1. ,_. Oii Tailiative. llillllldty. "hlM:C • ......... -" .... 5.-rv -. Y•'ll 8et &o I lrla I =.-di"::'i~ .... ' novat1ve. TAuaUI (April 20-May 20): Follow~ oa hunch. CIP"'Qa'';Y if it involves women. Focus on tmplo)'ment. buic issues. .,.._ability &o deal suocaafbUy with chiklren. You11 be asUd IO mate pgblic appeara~. Acquielce. GDllNI (May 21-June 20): Divenify, communicaae with one who may be oveneu. Scenario hiabliahts penonality, charisma. creativity, style. sex appeal. Love rdationslup intensifics. Another Gemini will fiaure prominently."' • ... CANCEll (June 21.July 22): Spotliaht on property, home, security, family. ~lS for future. Cleek details. be positive concenuna lepl riahts, tax and license requirements. You'll soon be on more solid emotional· financial around. LEO (July 23-Aua. 22): You mipt be sayina, "How did I .,:t in this squaml cage." EmMasis on confusion. chanac of plans, messqes from reladves who make travel proposals and then follow with nonscquiturs. Virao featured. VIBGO (Aus. 23-Sept. 22): Domestic arra•ment subject to chaqc -family member discusses money, marital status.. possibility of chanaina residence. You'll 1oca1e article los~ missing or stolen. Taurus f:ir role. UBL\ (Sept. 23-0Ct. 22): Eml>hasiz.e nee, but don't tell all you know. Individual who pleads for answers actually seeks obsequious rq>lies. What is hidden will remain IO until haaher·up pants permission. Pisces involved. IOOaPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): You'll act t.cks .. views. you'll be involved with Libra individual, liabt will be slled on area prcvioutl~ oblciared. Scenario accents fnleftlity. romance. creativity, chance for financial jlckpot. IAGIT'l'AIUUS (Nov. 22·Dec. 21): Pm:eive polen· tial, rcfUte to be dejected by tennlpnt. You iuently proved major point, your actions had positive impiact, you'll soon pmer reward as resuJt. Wish will be definitely fulfilled. CAPIUOORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Stress indepen- dence, COUf111t of conviction, willinaness to assert views in positive manner-for the n:conf. Scenario hiahliahts travel, spirituality, idealism, roma~. Aquarius plays role. AQUARIUS (Jan. 2Q..Feb. 18): You'll Rc:eive Jift wbkh adds to wardrobe. Many will comment favorably, JOme will say, "How appropnaae.•• A forceful woman as on yotii side despite skeptical statements. Sllgittarian in picture. PISCES (Feb: 19-March 20): Check plumbina. Surprise appearance of one you respect necessitales quick .. cleanup." You'IJ learn more about secret funds. possible tax rebate. Financial status of partner or maac comes to lipt. U JUNE U IS YOUR BIRTHDAY you were separated psycholoaically or actually from one or both parents at relatively early aaie. You are accustomed to tcann1~own for ultimate purpo1e of rebuildina on more suitable structure. You sensed your future while still qui&e youna. Current cycle accents romance, creativity, travel. ability to be rid of losin& proposition. Taurus, Leo, Scorpio people play important roles in your life. Auaust will be productive, creative for you and will feature money and love. Ne~le a mor~ recent legend So you thoupt the Loch Ness SCotland, did you? No, sir, 1f you're anybody had ever heard of it. First monsler was Jetendary in Old older than SS, you were around before allqed sigbtina occum:d in 1933. lfan animal is still alive 10 days after it bites l<'mebody, it is not rabid. But waitina it out is no way to make sure, please note. Houseflies like red. don't like blue. Researchers say that. Q. What state has the most hol- idays? A. Oklahoma with 20. The District of Columbia has the fewest with eipt. Q. How come so many new TV shows look Sood as pilots, then ID flat af\er a couple of eptsodes? A. Am told by those who purport to know that a small aroup of the best writers are commissioned to wort up many of the pilots. 1bey move Oii &o other projects. ~ talents take over. Going onward and yupward It wasn't the most Of'iainal thin1 I've ever done, but following World War II, I pve birth to three yuppies. You probablydidn'thearmuchabout it because 77 million other people did the same thiria. ' Some compared this national birth explosion to a pia in the belly of a snake because wherever this aener· ation went, they attracted attention and created problems just by their sheer size and numben.. Dcspiae the fact ..-e know they are here, we are always surprised when they show up for the next phatc of their fives. lookalad &Othenat ........... ve a name in ~ When lhey ~ there. In 2S or 30 years, todays~ will roam the eanh in -.:ta of yuppie discounts at the movies and bathrobes with vests. They will have names like Otbbie, Derek. Rock and Fawn. They will constitute tbe larJest For example, we were totally unprepared when they went to lf'ldc school. Forset that there wc1'n•t enough classrooms or teachers. Tbe important thina is we didn't even have a cute name for all of them. Jma~ne a aroup that bia, and we didn t know what to call them. · Luckily, someone came up with "Baby Boomen. •• Well.you can imqineourshock 12 ACW8 years later when this army of kids decided to So to collqe. Surprise, surprise. Oh sure. we could jam them onto camputc1 and amnac colles loans. but what to call them? 1/Je settled on .. BIDDIES .. : Boomen in Debt. 83T~•­•eo ..... Just when we thouaht they were tel for 1 while, they ;r.duated and entered the corporate world in search ofhousina. automobiles and VCRs. I cannot believe we tot caupt aaain without a name for them. Then someone came up with YUPPIE: Youna Urban Profasional. And from that came PUPPIE: Poor Urban PrOfnaional; OINK: Double Jn. come-No Kids; and a host of other cuaesies. I think we're OK now, but it's not a time to rest on our laurels. We must .. • 87 lttlhpoet -~ ............. 10lludllelw'd 71 ..... DOWN 1NAIA¥ltllcle 2 Guido'•"* a Coc*Wll 4 o.f • I~ f =.nfectl I en-. of .... 10,.., ...... 11 "°°"' 12 ..,, Ndwd ,, ftootlltot , ...... 11 Ir-. n crt1 • :n::.... :=:-· 31 Mimi.,.., •-V••WI" • Milir.a .. . ,., ... ., 17P-. elderly population this country haS ever seen at one time. Call it 1 hunch. but I don't think they'll answer when ~ call them "lalior citilleM.." They've always had their own ident· ity. Put aside the &ct we'WOa't have enouah medical care cw kilhiel b' them. let's ,et bulJ witi. I Mme. What would you call a ll'CNP of 70- iolnedlinp wbo aft ldll -~ Pl~tlon 1 »year4d BMW. are ~·na &O ~t bataaies for lheir biololicaJ tame clocks IO they cu have children, and who aft walk.ins around with cellular phone implants so they won't miu a call? Think about it. MUI<~ ., ..... .....,. ._.,... l1TodlW .... ............ .. t .. Ai di • - . . ........ _ C1ll'tl8 Straqe tri• to cou a putt at three, celebrates a birdie on 13 and •llnals Tlctory wlille approachlnl tbe 18th peen. Strange 's tears wash away frustration . BROOKLINE, Mui.(~ -In the end. there were tan for Curtis Scruee. Tbere were tan of triwn .... for winnina the U.S. Open Oolf Cbamlliomhip With I fOur-tbot. l 8-bo1e Playoff' viCtory on Monday over Britilb Open champion Nick Faldo O(Fnp"d There were tan of retie( u -well. after accomplishina ~~test thina I've ever done." And, too, the tcan came as Straqe recalled the memory of bis laie father, I IOlf pro who IW1ed Curtis in the pme and died when the latest American national champion WIS 14'. Angels · bold off ·Twins Joyner gtves club its greatest need, drlves in four runs MINNEAPOLIS (AP) -For the AQF11 to win; Wally Joyacr Im to drive in impor\lftt n.ms. .. rve '°'to 1COte pays tom leCOGd aDd I haven't been doi111 it, .. the Msb' tint bae!Nn said. '. Re did it Moeday •t -ad drove in pays ftoom tint and third with a dlfee.:nan homer duriaa a five-nm .. 1t•1 a day late for Father's DayT but this is for my dad." Straaee said. .. I just wish be could have been here. .. rve been wai · a Iona time to do this. This is for my dad. I~ u'::'&: 'SS Muten; rve been waitinaa Iona time." · It wa perbal)I to be expected that Struee would have to wait an extra day to experience victory. After all, those who follow the P? bad said Strate WIS ovadue to win one of .,&rs B'I Four. "It's thepatest thi~rveeverdone. It's the~test feelina in the WOrld. And. SU.. added in hil slow, soft Vifain.ia drawl. .. it was one bellova touah day out there." Stranee won it with a ICl'alllbtiQI round of par 71 at The Country Oub in suburban Bostoft. Faldo bad a 7S in the 28th p&ayoff'for the American natiooal championshiP. includin& «>on the bllck nine. Bodi players pointed to the 13th bok u the turnina point. AlthouO StraDF never trailed and was ahead fi'om the fifth 00. ~ 13th WU the obvious tumina point," Faldosaid.. Only a stroke teperated the players when they weat to 13, where a two-sbot swina-a birdie by StranF. a bcJeey by Faldo -wrapped it up. -rhat bit me bard." FaJdo said. .. It summed up my week.'' It built &ranee's ad IO three strobs. .. It 'WU hard not to IWt tbinkinayou•vc IOt it won. .. Sttule"aid. "'"'But you can-i do that:1rs ~ io me.·· it's bapp:nod to all of us. You aaan writiJt1 your ~ace spcec:h and you're in a wt.ole beaP of 1l"OUble. .. ~be pound it out, lltbouO bosYI by faldo oa tbree of the last four boles made ibe talk eaa. . One of tbe Faldo boPes ame at 17*. wtme Jae pal his approllCb throuch the peen into roup. He dtq,ped about 12 feet be)'ODd the cup Oil tlae slick llOpiJia ..... faldo croucbed oo the~ once ctuctina bis _. ~the CO¥el" of bis ltmdl, fully a.re dUlt be m• make tbe putt to stay~ He mjw:d 1'bat WU it. It was over ... SU.. Mid. '"I Md duce in bud when I went to tbe l 8tb lee. I lipred I bad ii woe tbeD. .. y OU mrt c:alcu1asias if be makes time, J CU makC five. And I CID make five moll of .die time. .. be said. .._That's wby (hit I ~iron off't)ae lee." Thomas dOubtful . ~ for Forum finale Battered point guard nursing ankle sprain INOLEWOOD (AP) -With his crutches ~ and I banckid under bis left -Detroit's battered Isiah Thomas said Mo~ he was hopina for a miracle that would allow him to play in the aeventb pme of the NBA Fmals. WeaJina a Loa Anedes Raidert' T--shin with the messaae ... Real Men Wear Black," Thomas said at a news~ be doubted that be could play witb bis ICverely sprained riabf ankle in 1uesday aiJbt's decjdiQI pme of the championship ler1eS apinst the Loa Anleles takers. . 1 Asked if be was bopiq for a miracle. the Pistons• star pant said, '"ya. fCS I am." Asked to name the last miracle be saw, be said. ... beby beina born... . Ttiom.as· wife. Lynn. pve bi.rtb to a IOO. Joshua Isiah. last. wii' llilbt. Tbe fifth pmc oftbe series WIS Tbllf'lday nilbt. In the Laters' l 3-02 victory .. ~ forum home in Sunday's iixlb ..._, Thomas bad a career playoffbiab 4'3 poiDU. ~ 17 after he WU hurt with '4:3S left ia the third Loe ... ,, .. ~ ..... ' .... . (1'111• -1_,.M/82) to --.... .. .... ' I ., ..... Lak~i'S' hopes tore~at resto.rJ ·b.ome court again ... . -- .... -.1su111111,._ ALUiNTOWN,;,.., _ H_.... ol •• 1•Mwbeea ....... la10l..dUlb v_, Jbpi'81 Cllder. Wlaere wwaa ... ~ Alliloe ii --b'ea..S for i.U ... NCli\l'ld 9 Sillldafa NASCAR MiUer '°°auto rw:e . .... ~--media matioDI dinc10r ror ~ ~· ~· oomp.ny, said 300 ~~ CODdi1ioa bad come 1n by lase ~ 50. OIHUfl)'tOWD, AIL. remained in criaic:al ur«n today in dw bOlpital's centnl nervous ~ .m.i. MICCll'Cli111 to a ~taJ statement. DMnie JobDIOll, AllilOn 1 brother-in-law, U.Jd ""--.._ ti _...th A ..... ,.....,.;_, bii brocber. Donnie Allison. when &.J . .Vn cu... ea W& men•1er .. llller vililed la.i• Mooday. • ~ equee:ZJOd bit fi'*1." Johnson said ... Ht's NEW YORK -The tua-of-war o¥et • ..,.,...,...,..,.Iii lais toes. He recc>IQized the doctor friend of Miu TYtQn's loyalties took a new turn oun.·.-'l'laedoctouaid he's respondina to treatment so Monday with the heavyweiaht champion •'ve .-a."• little briahter outlook than we had earlier tryina to cut his ties to man.,-Bill Cayton ~Y and Cayton predictina there will be a ietonciliation. A ~ tire llilonJy after the slart of the race T)'IOn, rc--assertina his loyalty to bis wife, actress ~I:.. PoooDo latenatiooal Raceway in Lona Pond Robin Givens. said he would have no further dcalinas .. • '1 Buick iuoa wan. It bounced into the path with Cayton, the New Y ort Post ~ ot MOC"c:r CM' tbal lammed Allison's vehicle on the But Cayton told The Associated Press that he *ivet"a side. Alla bad to be pried out of his car. exP«U to continue to ma~ac Tyson for at least 3'h Alliton wu 1Nated for a concqssion. possible more years and sa.id he hopes to meet with him this illtemal bleedi~ and ~ injuries. week to settle what bas become a soap-opera-like Omvey AJliloo aid Monday bis fa1her had a dispute. ~ lower left •'lea. wllicb was in tracaion. and Tyson, however, blamed Cayton for rumors haurecl ribs. He saia doctors drained fluid from his circulatina about the rift between Tyson and Givens lather's cbest and relieved prasure in bis skull, but said and her mother, Ruth Roper and told· the Post: lime was no further 'build-up of Ouids or internal "I can't tolerate this anymore. Bill Cayton is llleiedin&. throuah as far as I'm concerned. He says I can't fire h.im, · 1"kdoc:toruelluatbateverythinaisnormalasfar but I don't need him." • lais vital sips and internally (are concerned). Cayton, however, sa.id that he has two contracts E~111 is _stabilized, .. said O..vey Allison, 27. who with the unbeaten beavywciJtlt champion. finisfaed fifth lft the rac.:e. . .. Oldbasconuololbisbody. HemoVelhisfingers. and that teems to be normal," the~~ AUison said at tbe boapital after the &mily met with doctors. "He toot a pretty IOQd sbot and he's busaed up pretty bad. lf s eoina to be a ac,.. haul. "The people bcTe were impreued with bow much prosress be made last niabl" Quote of the day . . . IAU = the Hall of Fame shortstop wboJPCDt 2 yearJ with tbe White Sox. declarin& his love for old Comiskey Park in the wake of repons that the Sox were planoina a move to St. Pe1enbwJ,, Fla., or to a new stadium in CbK:aao: 1'his place was built on a dump. One day, I du& up an old blue-and-white coffee cup out at shortstop. They bad to stop ihC pme and come out with a couple of shovels of dart." Knight marries former coach INDIANAPOLIS -Indiana Univer· m sity ·basketball ooach Bob Kni&ht and a former Oklahoma airls' high school coach are married. a c=an confmned. Methodist B Leroy Hodapp, a friend of Kni&bt's, said be onned the ceremony for Karen Vieth Edpr. 41 , and K.ni&ht. 47, at the Indiana lnterchun:h Center on May 23. "There was no attempt to keep it secn:L But Bob wanted to keep it private. without the press. so we did it here in my office," Hodapp said Fnday. "He had just aotten all that attention about the New Mex1co JOb and really didn '1 want to deal with 1t apin." The marriaae is the second for both Edgar and Kn.i&ht. Edpr resianed for personal n:asons in 1987 after c:oachin& the Lomep Hiab School Jirls' basketball team to three Oklahoma state championships. tomep. a JChool of 6S, WOD state titles in 1982;·1983 and 1987. Her teams went undefeated in 1982 and 1987 and won the Oklahoma Tournament of Champions in 1982, whlcb features the state champions from all four classes. Kniabt 1ep9rated from Nancy K.ni&ht. his ...ife of 22 ~ in 1986 and bas rwo sons. lfe bas coached Indiana to three NCAA championships and also coached the U.S. team to an Olympic gold medal in 1984. . - Program to back UNL V sporta LAS VEGAS -A program desi&ned • to support University of Nevada-Las Veps athletics through endowments rather than the turnstiles received a SI million boost Monday. Gamini and TecbnolOI) Inc . a Las Vcps-blsed manufacturer of pmina eqwpmcnt. will donate the S l million to the university's Vision Project. UNLV President Roben Maxson announced. The SI million is the fint of S2S million the university hopes to raise throuah the unique prosram. Interest from the money will ao to provide scholarships for UNLV athletes. Interest from the GTI 11ft 1s earmarked for the Rebel basketball itroaram. Brad Rothermel, director of the UNLV Department of lnterClOllcgiate Alhletic:s, said the proeram'saoal of$2S million would provide $2 million a year in interest and fund scholarships for all 14 sports at the university. The &0&1 oftbe Vision Project 1s to fund tbe student athlete scholarship prOIJ"lm through endowments such as the GTI gift, rather than havina 10 count on revenues acnerated by tbe various spons. HBO I CINEMAX ~88¢· 'iiitl .... IClmC ............. 099 Martin, new GM butt heads New York manqer am, Martill bad Ill his first Jbowdown with new Yankees genera.I manaaer Belt Q9m on Monday. Martin, vowioa not to ute playen who ~ aren't healthy, held catcher Dea Slaapt out of the Yankees lineup ap.inst Quinn's wishes. Slauaht had just been placed back on the roster from the 2 I-day disabled hst and Quinn wanted him in the lineup, Martin said. While dressing for batting practice Monday, Slau&ht told Martin he wasn't ready to play. Martin sent tlte catcher out to run. When Slauaht returned, he told Martin he couJdn 'I cut or tum sharply while rounding the bases ... Veteran driver B*J All.IMe'a conditaon reponedly improved. but he continued to be ti5ted in critK:al condition wi\h . multiple injuries suffem:t :in a first-lap crash in thC • NASCAR Miller .SOO auto raoe. '~The docton tell us that everythina is normal as far as his vital sjans and intemallr (are concerned). Everythina is stabilized." said Alhson's son, Davey, who finished fifth in Sunday's race at Pocono International Raceway in Lona Pond ... The St. Louis Blues have selected veteran team captain Brin S.ttu to be their new bead coach, makina him the younaest coach 1n the league at age 3 I. The Blues also b.avc hired Bob Berry, a veteran head coach in the NHL. to serve as an assistant to Sutter. Sutter becomes the I Sth coach of the team. which entered the league durina the 1967-68 sea.son. He as the seventh Blues· player to t.a~e over the team as head coach . Television, radio TELEVISION 4:30 p.m. -BASEBALL: Chicago Cubs at Philadelphia. WGN. S p.m. -BASEBAU.: Angels at Minnesota, Channel 5. S p.m. -TENNIS: Wimbledon early-round matches. from Wimbledon. Enaland (delayed), HBO. 6 p.m. -PRO BAS~BALL: NBA Champ1onsh1p Series Game 7 -Detroit at Lakers, Channel 2. 6:30 p.m. -BEACH VOLLEYBALL: lntcr- Sorority Tournament, from Santa Monica (taped), ESPN. 7:30 p.m. -WATER SKIING: 1987 World Championships slalom competition, from Ena· land (taped), ESPN. 7:30 p.m. -MEN'S TENNIS: John McEnroe vs. Stefan Edberi. exhibition from lnaJewood (taped), Prime Ticket. 7:30 p.m. -BASEBALL: Atlanta at Dodac'tl. TBS. RADIO Sp. m. -BASEBALL: A nae ts at Minnesota. KMPC(7l0). 6 p.m. -PRO BARETBALL: NBA Champ1onsh1p Scnes Game 1 -Detroit at Lakers, Channel 2. 7:30 p.m . -BASEBAU.: Atlanta at Dodgers. KABC (790). 7:30 p.m. -BASEBALL: Padres at San Francisco, KFMB (760). WEDNESDAY'S TELEVISION 9:30 a.m. -BASEBALL-Chicqo Cubs at Philadelphia. WGN. 10:30 a.m. -BASEBAIJ..: Pittsburah at New York Mets. WOR. WEDNESDAY'S RADIO 10: IS a.m. -BASEBALL: An1tls at Minnesota, KMPC (710). I p.m. -BASEBALL: Padres at San Francisco, KFMB (760). . - Top seeds overpower foes Cash, Lendl, Beckerwhtp lower ranks In straight sets WIMBLEDON, EnsJand (AP) -Defendina cham- pion Pat Cash, top-leeded Ivan LendJ and two-time champion Boris Becker overpowered their first-round OpPOneots Monday at the Wimbledon tennis cbam· paonsbips. Lendl and Becker each 1erved 20 ~ While Ca.sh used a strona ICrVice return to win their matcbca at the AJI £n&land Lawn Tennis Oub. CUh, playina the fmt match on C.eoue Court. defeated 17-ycar-old Todd Woodbridlc of Australia 6-1, 6-1, 6-2. Lendl beat David Felpte ofSritain 6-4, 6-1, 6-3 and Becker defeated John Frawley of Australia 6-3, 6-1 , 6-2. Lendt, runnct-ue at Wimbledon the pa.st two yea.rs,. breezed past Felpte an 84 minutes before early evenina showers caused a one-hour rain delay. • "I just couldn't pick his lerVes up," said Felpte, ranked 362od in the world. ••1 couldn't ~IJWC where they were aoing. I tried everythinJ. but it didn't make any difference. He was just pound.ins them down. .. Cash had only one ace ap.inst Woodbridae. but hjs service returns were deadly. "ljust returned so well today and that set everything up," Cash said. ••The court is pretty 1low, so you have some time to act the ball back.. • Becker, the champion in I 98S and 1986, overcame three break J)Oints in the fuiaJ pme llllinst Frawley and closed out the match with an ace. '1'be way it sWted today, I think 1 should be very •tisfted," said Becker, who Wll uptet io the second round last year 1?)' Peter Dooban. .. It could not att any better than that. Lendl, a natural bueliner who bas never felt comfortable on pus. wu pleated with hit openin1-rouod play ... l lefVCd qui1e weU, which I didn't do in practice, .. said Lend1. who appeartd to be recovered from a ahoulder strain sufl'md durina a quarterfinal loss at the French Open. ••1 didn't have 10 hit many volleys and the few times that I did, they were pretty easy." Other lceded playm advancina to the ICICOnd round were No. 3 Stefan ~ofSW'eden. No. 7 Henri L«onte ofFraDCle, No. 10..Tim ~.)'Otte, No. 11 AndenJarryd of Sweden, No. ll EmiJio Sanchez of Spain and No. IS Amos Mansdorf of Israel The only teeded player to lote on openin1 day was No. 7 Manuela Malccva ofBulpria, who was beaten by Puc:ale Paradis of France 6-4, 6-3. In other women's matches, No. 12 Zina Ganison beat fellow American Wendy White 6-3, 6-1 and No. 14 Katerina Malccva of Bulpria beat Anne Simpkin of Britain 6-1, 6-0. The ahowers and a couple oflona matches backed up the schedule and forced officials to postpone I 0 contests, includina fifth«eded Jimmy Connon' opener ap.inst LeifSbiru of the United States. THOMAS DOUBTFUL ••• Schrader ties for early lead FromBl . quarter. He wa1 injured after passina the ball from the lane to Joe Dumars for a layup and landed awkwardly. Thomas sat out the next 35 seconds but played the l'C$t of the pme. Detroit trajner Mike Abdenour said that didn't ..,..vate the injury. . Dunoa Sunday's pme, which he played with a bruised back. Thomas also suffered a laceration over his left check and a dislocated riaht pinkie and was poked in the ere. Abdenour SIJd. • AJthou&h there is little possibilitl. he wall pfay, Thomas said be badn t considered bis personal disappoint- ment "because I haven't aiven up the idea I miabt be able to play. "l haven•t siven up hope and I haven't ,;ven up prayers:· However, be said. no medical personnel who examined him provided encourqement. "1 was kind of lookina for those people." Thomu said. T·1 haven't found any yet. .. Everyone I've spoken to bas mote or Jess said I'm not aoins to play." He said he planned further treat- ment Monday n.iaht and Tuetday. ..If I can be elfective out on the basketball court, I'm aoina to put on a uniform," he added. "If not. I auesa I'll be on the bench." · Thomas said the only time he tried to put w~t on the ankle "it wasn't very succasful." · Even without himsa>e llid. "I like our basketball team's~bances. We're a strona defensive team and I've said all alona the best defensive team can fiin the series." ·•1 don't think the~·· any doubt that Isiah will be there if be has to wear a cast or not. .. Los Anades C01Ch Pat Riley said. "He'll be ready," suard Mqic Johnson said. .. r hope he plays. Sometimes it's a letdown more for us than for them if he doesn't play." Fountain Valley grad joins three others at top In Cal Amateur PEBBLE BEACH (AP) -Fonner fountain Valley Hiah 1olfer Scott Schrader posted a I-under-per 71 at Cypress Point Monday to share the fmt-rou.nd lead in qualifyina play for \he 77th California State Amateur Golf Championship with David Sutherland of Sacramento, Greg Starkman of Beverly Hills and Larry Salk of Los Anseles. Sutherland, 22, who red-shirted last season at Fresno State while recoverins from a broken wrist. had three birdies and two bo&eys to match the scores P,:OSted by the three Southern Cahfomia players. Bunched at even-per 72 at C)'pretS Point were MmhaU Oleuon of Foster City, Pat Duncan of Rancho Santa Fe, AJy Trompu of Walnut Creek, Sandy McCall of San Fran- cisco, Craia Steinbera of Van Nuys and Bob Blombetl of Alameda. Half of the 2~player field com- peted at SpYilasa Kill. where the low. score oftht~day was a 74. Followina Tuesday•s second round, the field will be cut to the low 64 and ties for the thitd round at Pebble Beach Golf Links. The low 32 qualifaers from the '4ibole m'edal play will advance to match Play Thursday throuah Saturday at Pebble Beach. ~in the American~ • BIM J•Jt I, OrWet t: Dave Slieb pitcbeld bil niotb strai&J!t ~ry. auowm, f'our hill in lix umU.. and Fred McGrifl' bat a two-nan bOmer. S~_. 10-31 pve 91>1IOlohomer10 c.a1 Rikpeo iD the tbiid-me Orioles' fint hit-aDd a nan in the fifth on a walk. liqle, wild pitch and Ripken'1·double. He struck out five and walked four. R1111u1 •· Mulmen.I: Jeff Kunkets one-out RBl double ift lbe bouom of the ninth lifted the bOl1 Jlueers. Kunkel allo bad homered in the eiptb. ~ LeadofJ batter Lany ParriJh Walked and Cecil Espy ra.n for Parrish. Mike Stanley alto waUred and £jpy 1COred one out liter on Kunkel'necoad RBI of tbcpme, makina a winnerofJeft'Runell. 7.(). Ruud.l's start matches the belt in llanlm' history -Jim K.entdid it in 1979. T11en i. y-... l: Tom Brookens' one-out home run in the 10th inniq lifted \be Tipn into firit place in the American 1..eaaue·~ The Yankees Md been in fint place since May 3. But tbe defendina division champion Tp uve woe 10 of their last 13 pmes and moved one..ha1f pme ahead of NewYort; Brookens bit bisfounh home ruo into tbc left-field stands off Cecilio Ouante; 4-3. That pve the victory to Ouillmno Hernandez. S-2. who pitched only one-third of aninnina. ACMetlel I. Brewen'= Pinch bitter Terry Steinbach doubled in the winnina run in the llioth innina. • ....... ....... • ...... QoicSlil9ll lAllilllWll 1 •• ,.... , t • 1 ':'L>I 1 I I I ) t .,__W,._> Jt·l S I 1 J • P-U 11•1 t I t I I .._ .....w,.. ' • J , •• ~L"S I I I t • S urn,. a , .. ,.. Cllirtl; "'"*· Jiflwe. ....... ..,.,....~,.,... A4lll'9 I I t I t J ,....,. ......... ,.. 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OB Llt S&nM 43 2s. .632 S-S Won 1 37 29 .S61 S 7-3 Lost I 36 33 .S2l 71h 6-4 Lost 4 33 3S .48S 10 4-6 Won 2 30 37 .448 12'h S-S Won 2 29 40 .420 14'h 6-4 Won S 26 44 .371 II 1-9 Lost 8 &UT DIVISION 41 26 .612 7-3 40 26 .606 'h 4-6 39 29 .S74 2'h 3-7 36 33 .S22 6 6-4 33 32 .SOI 7 6-4 34 36 ... 16 8'h 6-4 18 SO .26S 23'12 3-7 Won I Lost 2 LOtt l Lost 2 Won 3 Won 2 Lost 3 ~ 6, Minnesota S BoSton 14. Cleveland 1 .. .., •• Selr9 Toronto S, Baltimore 2 Detroit~ New York I (10 innJnp) =s.:u~:i Tex.as 4, ScattJe 3 a ... Awa1 19-12 24-13 22-lS lS-14 17-18 19-IS 19-16 14-19 17-20 13-17 11-21 18-19 IS-17 11-27 20-14 21-12 19-11 21-1 s 21-lS 18-14 23-lS 13-18 16-17 17-lS 16-16 18-20 12-21 6-29 . t.tpt'sG .... "-lell (McCaskill J..S) at Millnaota (Toliver 0-0). S:OS p.m. Boiton (Sellen 0-6) at Clevelud (Rodriauez 0.0), 4:35 p.m. Baltimore (Peru.a 0-2) at Toronto (flinllan 6-4), 4:3S p.m. New York (Leiler 4-3) at Detroit (Morris 6-8), 4:3S p.m. K.uW City (Oubicza 9-S) al Cb~ (Reust 6-2). ':30 p.tn. Oak1aDd (YOUDI ._..)at MilWaube (BoaiO 6-7), S:3S p.m. Seattle (Trout >2) at Tex.u (IC.ilpai l.-S),< S:lS p.m, ..... d•J"•O.... Aaaell •t. Minnesota, 10:1' a.m. OOland at Milwaukee, 11 :JS a.m. BOiton at Cleveland; 4:3S p.m. New Y ort at Detroit, 4:3S p.m. BaJUmote at T0t0n&o, 4:3S_ p.m.. Kansas City at Chic:aeo. 5:30 p.m. Seattle at Texas. 5:35 p.m. ' wal'DMllON W L Pet. Ga Lit ..._ a_. &..,. 38 29 .567 M Woo 4 2().:17 llol2 36 32 .5l9 2¥1 S-S Lola I 20-11 16-21 33 3, .~5 5¥1 7-3 Woa I 16-U 17-lO 33 35 .... , ~ 3-7 Lott l 19-11 1~17 lO 40 .429 ~ M Woe I 22-19 1-21 23 43 .341 14¥1 ).7 Loll 3 10-ll 13-22 &AITDftmON 43 24 .'42 S:5 31 lO ·'" '"' ,.., )6 31 .:SJ7 1 .. 2 14 34 .500 ~ H 32 3S .471 11 ~ 29 37 .4J9 1• SS •. , . .,.. .... D11it I 7 AdlMa 3 ~--~; Alllil ~ lllWY.tl S Oils ,,, ;s 2 ,a , •i 1 im~2. frlwllcitl Loll I Woe l Woe S LOii 2 Woe 1 Loll 3 lJ..11 20-13 l):U IS-IS 16-14 20-17 IS-16 l,._11 19-13 l).ll 16-16 13-ll . ' AMaltlCAN LIAGU• ~ ... ,....... 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Ill -""- A11191a S. ...... 4 :".!:'f a • st 11 , ,..,.: ~ ......... --.n; .......... j,,..,,._.., •r•• •r•tl ,,... ........,. • ttttMISIWJll ltll ............. 1 11 1 J I I t Y-d 4 t t t ----------··: .,,,..._... ,,,, 4 111 0..tt •••• ...... _ ..... t I ' I .,,.,_., a I I t 4 I I tS-..a • I ti ............... , , ........... . .. . , ......... , .. . II II Sclilrl* a 1 t I I ••••n.. •••• .... ..... 0.... ..... _. ....... . ........ ~ ........ -....... m. E-Ct••w. Oii' POI ._ ~ I.~ L .....,_ .. ......................... u:co... .. .._ 01iu•w m. ,.,_ •· ~ m •...,... m. c- m . ._ =· ,.., '"'· . ....... ..J .. • • • .1 I ltlll .,,,1111 ,,., • 1 • • t 1 I 1 t t I t NL old-timers whipAL.8·2 • BUFFALO, ~JAP>. -A sellout of 19,SOO turned out at But• faJo•s new PilOt F'ldd Mo~ · day n.icbt' u Billy Williams'. run~,si.Qlle broke a• tic and the NaticGal ~ beat the American u.ue 1-2 in the National Old Timen ""'bell Onjjc The NL ICOftd m runs in the fifth and final . . for the . ~ pi.t.cber~nsa Williams broke a 2-2 lic• with a lincle that tcored Johnny Lopn.. • •• oe.--... OAvaTSLOOtD (_. .... , _ 6 :>c111~.m.,.. .. 'IOl~.11..,..,, .....,......, s roca 11t11. m a1co ..... m ..., ban. l2 madltrll, 12 ~. • n-. *'"'-· l ... $h9rtl, 2 tT\1111.o "*"- ........ T LA--4 llOeb, n ....-n. 24'...,... ..... "'~ l --. ,....,.,1 .......... ~~2'°*"'- 0A.MA WMAllft -7 ...._ "5 ........ 117 :aau. • llOnlo, ;Jot ,.. """' SQ ~ Celebrate A Special Oecuion! Deliciow Buffet D~ Dancing & Enttitainment Sunset CTW.se of Newport Harbor Wednesday E~ Prepaid ResmNJrions (11_4) 61J .. S24S $30 Pn-Pmon PAVILION QUEEN BALBOA B\.VIUON .00 Mam Snftr. &!boa; CA 92661 TB& ROUSB DEBATB COllTDnJBB ... "What Sets HOU5£ of lllfOR1S A.fmt/rUm tltt! Rat?. '.J --------_...,...__,_ -·---------------------.... .,. ... __ _ ..... ____ _ ---·-·-------------c.-:.: • -"'._ -•-----arra---• UDO-.. -----·-.......... _ .......... ---.----·-------·----_...._._ ... M ~ rr 111 l. •; n r: h .-Jt..J R"-''' V --- Ws 1tn 'I ••• ii LM'l9. •• ,. •an• ., ............. ....... '"'''"· ..... Ot -:f"' .. ~i ....... •HIMHlmm .. .,_ NEAR HOA Hoepltal ... . .. • . . ,, ~· • •• --(L.IMITEO TIME OM. YI) ._,.. 281'. 1'M181., d/W, w/d hkup, er.a ..,, Mlf I ~ ~ llOO+ MOO dip. 141 OllO OUR FAMOUS ES1\·LJNE HAS RETURNEDI Back by popular Mn'wlnc:I. Oltnes-A·LIM Wiii run Friday. S.ur· d.1y and Sunday In IU own classlf1~k>n In rtw Cla~d MS. Since this is • spKlai Offer. we haw• Thunday noon~ and ask~ tor .. ads. This 1s open to .. prNatt pany ~iwrs kK irwtc"-'dlw not owr SSO fprict must ~ llsted In adl .,_, no ~ions wll ~ a<<tP««I M • will run Friday. saturd.ty and Sunday, ltwrt IS. 5-#M minimum at 20C ~r 11ne ••• So your tow c.a DIMes·A·Une lld II cny ... S3.00. DIADUNE: Thursd.ty noon ~: S-ltne minimum • :3 ~ • 20C ~r ll(le • S3 00 • NJ ads •t pr~id by C°"*'Q into ttw 0...,,, f'#ot to pl.Kt 'JOUf' ad or use thf coupon betow • PrlVMt patty ~rchaind•ff orfY adl No com-merc!M ads, ~u; flwostock, prOdUct or plants. • Each .i"" must~ priced'" thf,ad Wtth no It.ms owr sso. MAIL TO: DIMes·A-U.. ~Pb no West ·~ Slrfft. Cost• Mfl,a, CA 92626 OMty Not tiours Monday·frld.ly 8 00 AM to S 00 PM • • • .. • • ;-r .1i t~ 11 1., ·.~ ~ .I· C!. ~f.·. ~ '' • ~ ._ . . er I ::' -·9·.1. : ... ·:1···· • 1 ~ -• • l ~~s -I .. -~ i ,(I ~.~· :~ ,&t-1n < L, C9 ''C g 'C 0 .,, :D -I m %~> zmC m • - 1:1 ~' I ,e19• ,5 -I~ I.·. . f-i.~.. / ~ 1:1!. . r.t'.~ It=' . s-,• :,a 'JI • t> r + • ,l ~'fl_(. r-c: (') >' D>' :I: --m ·· :::> o Q.<D = ~Q.c: ~ m O> • en ·; c. ::s ~ D> 'D> O> ~ :-+ ...... • C»~ go(D "C, -~ ...t. "C '"" ,,,. ...t. 0 _. VI•• . -· c (t.) :::J <I> :::J 0 .... )( . 3 :-+ O> ?- (!) I\) 3:: =>o >· .... . . ""' 3::' .... .. m > 0 .. CJ) • (t.) ~~ ...t.o :T. 0 -0 0 g_· (;, ~ """I I 0 • . I o :JJO .,,oo>mC1> z r-~ om>):>cz<>Qo> ~~~~r-~~~s: .... ~~ c.. ~cCD_ornsi--<:JJoz(i) 0 cmm,,O>oC-<~G'>z ~a~-<~ c .,, o ~ ~ ""C> i 1z I --. . ... -· . . -"." -. ----. . ----'---, . ---. --·---.. . -~ . --.. .. -- . -·-.. -· . ---. ~c,~g~=~~~,..~~ ~-.... rsoil I .. -OIQ~'lli~~=•!zrtJ.:i~ ~-1 •0t.Y~ll-=':.."1:t AC '•'•••:t•!·~· I 1C'lll•li•.J1acl o>•c:e>m -x J:J · -~rim!"m(jC>O~b~ 0 .o-<w r-::Dm<o ·"l>m · N,,NC>OC) zm -. :JJ c 1'!--0::Dii>m:D~O(I) -o; 0 m ~. m r-o .:JJ ._. m c :.... :D -4><c:2m<O~o~z ~ • ~c: .... .,.~c:cs,,~m !..a ~ x onCI> "Tl-<o ~ N> , · _m 8 .... J~~~Z:JJI:~ m ~O~-~~mCl>QI~~-< S' cD :D..... r-~ > 0 Z. Cf>,J! I• _ . ,. > ,,. r-z-c r--<(I)~-· -§· r-c CD~ 0 I ,,Ammom icn>-.... v•Z ... , r--~oY'~~z.z;~r;-0 The Leg8t Oepetlment at the Dally PMol 19 pluud to 8"" nounce a MW MMo9 now .vllll- able to MW bultn111•. We wNI now SEARCH the name tor yoU" at no extra ClfW9e, and aave you the time Md"h trip to the eoun HoUee"' ..... A~ Then, of COUl'M, .... tt'9 Mllrch le completed .... .. your flctttl<M bUelrtlll Mme ltatement Wttti 1M CoUrity Cllftt, publllh once a ..-for fOUr ...... requhd by ...... then ... ycMlr proof Of ...... cation with the ~Clerk. NABS CADWC 1 . I 0 -• DI TD BL&ACllSM by Steve Moore . <> GAMIN AND PATCHES "Very GOOD, PJI That's better than the stars on 'Win, Lose or Draw' could do:" Blttv Martin, •o• 90 by Brad Anderson DEIU08 TD llEJlfACE by Hank Ketcham ~ I; R:J\.ITtCf A~5 AJ2E ALWAYS GETTI~ INll:> HOT WA"TER j SHOE Gone With the Wind l l I Rhett had to admit he missed Scarlett. OAllPIBLD TUllBLBWBBDS ~R '100, uJV: A L.l'L. SQ\1~~11\16- 10 t<U.P1l4!! SlJl\J Off~HEAP! " I know what I'll do," he said. "l '11 buy her a beaqle ~" i f Q ~ by Charles M. Schulz -----· by Jim Davis by Tom K. Ryan JUDGE PARKER P'Uft&Y wlftDRBEAN l.ISiE~ UP , PEOPLE ' ~ MANAGER. MR. Sf(I P~ I HA5 .JUSI INFQRN\ED M€1UA°1 i QJC!. REC.ORDING OF rHE ! HAm 1.. DfNKb.E /MECH IS • 00 m> W lf.I ~ BEc.olVltMG t A S/'N6l-f I ~ ~rr.'.1 ! ~ . . ,____.., ! I ,..._.. ' ~ ~.i:ss:~ by .... Breathed :,, THlltfY MfMI~ I by Addison· BUT IT~ T'""E PU6LlC WHO ALWAYS T.AICES 1...tE 6ATt4 by Jeff MacNetty by Harold Le Doux by Tom Batiuk DOOIUSBOY by Garry Trudeau ':~::--S(C:~~~-4£~s·: -----CMT ll~--- party marks commitment 111111 owr lia m6llllal llD a •Ylll'J Winter storm •cad otdrie Huntinaton BelCll Pier. Some btach M¥e 8'0W8 llCCUMolDed 10 ... tbe landmark ~t Gd eDd oftbe pier dlat tMppied under ..ves. Otbcn ref'ule to let 1Mmldva accept it . ..._wouldcall thele people~ unwillinJ to -~illllLAfta'.U. the Ian. -17 storm wam't1be ftnt time •IOI& Blldl't pier bas beCa lllorteMd by Mother 1983, wwmna waves a.bed •to* f,830-foot .. ripped 250 feet off the end of the structure . .. eameoflhepeoplc wbO lememberwMt the pier was 111 ....... •are nOt about to~ tbemlelws to nature. 'Ille, wana dieir pier beet, and they re doiDa :mc;re than just « Mki• that aomeone should do~ 1"lle poup, ~tely named PIER -People l•l ~ lltCd in Expeditina ~nstruction -~ a fund- .._. Sunday with a party on the pier. Their &Oii 11 to collect SIOO.OOO a.net aoolY it toward the cost ol ret>Wklina the lfaalillsSon BeaCli-landmart. Before Sunday's party, the ~)iad raised SI0,000. They hoped to rai1e another $3,000 to SS,000 with the party on the pier, and they're plmnning more fund-railers. City officials estimate it will cost be~ $4 million and SIO million to rebuild the pier. The CDlineerina study to detamine if the pier can be repaired or ripped doWn and retNilt is costina the city of Huntington Beach $S6,000. Wben the studio arc finished.; Huntinaton Beach will not face the repair or rcbuildin& costs alone. County officials have promised $2SO,OOO in matching funds toward the project. Stale and federal funds also will be available. Those fiaures arc a lot biatf than the SI 00,000 drop in the bucket the citizens' group hopes to raite, but the number of zeros behind the dollar siaP shouldn't diminish the enthusiasm or the importance of what the citizens' group is attempting to accomplish. Y can after the fwid-raisers, when the pier is rebuilt and again becomes intearal to life in Huntiqton Beach, the people who organized and participated in the fund-raisers like the one held Sunday can look at the new pier and rightly say, "That's our pier." Their commitment anct'!ltffort is worth more than $1001000.lthelpsestablishasenseofcommunity-aquality that is too often absent from life in Huntinaton Beach and other Orange Coast communities. True, civic pride and a sense of community won't pay to rebuild the pier. But it dcnionstrates a public resolve, givin& the project a political priority that city, county and state officials can•t neglect. Math scores A federal inquiry into the extent of ignorance about math among young students shouldn't surprise anyone in Kansas. ... Older students are ignorant of math, despite years of concern .... The schools have failed to help the unprepared older students. Remedial training courses clearly have not been provided. ln a few years the statistics about math i&nQrance among students ought to look better. One reason for this statistical improvement will be the fact that today's ignorant older students won't be there anymore. The older ones of today then will be trying to function outside the classrooms. But they'll still be ignorant., because school systems failed to fix the problem and then lied to the student about his graduation qualities. B•ldla..,, (Ko.) Nen Auburn Daill The California Constitution requires that water be put to the most beneficial use possible. But the state water Resources Control Board apparently never hQJ'd of that lCP.1 fine point in view of its ruling that the East Bay Murucipal Utility District (EBM UD) can divert water from the lower American River for Alameda and Contra Costa counties ... The risk of permitting additional diversions from what has been designated a federal and state Wild and Scenic River is all too apparent during the current drought. By further shrinking the river, ·lbe diversion would endanger local drinking supplies, damage a valuable commercial and recreational fishinJ resource and jeopardize recreational qualities for a milhon-population rqion alona the 23-mile American River Parkway. ... Opponents of the EBMUD plan have a p<?wcrful ally in the state Department of Fish and Game which believes the water should be allowed to flow all the way through the American River in order to protect its 40 species of fish . The fish include spawn in.a king salmon that represent l O percent of the king salmon cauabt off the Pacific Coast. . The commuruty must face up to the chance of successful raids by EBMUD and others on the Lower American; itoJlly_ -reinforces the need for a mulfi-pUrpose Auburn Dam. As Assemblyman Tim Leslie, R-Roseville, ri&btlydeclarcs: "The idea that the big urban areas of LA and the Bay Arca can reach out for our pm:ious Ainerican River water points up that we must fight to protect the river and our water supplies. We need a multi-pu~ Auburn Dam.'' s.etamate Uafoa Pilot welcom,,. comments ....,.? ,....., _/ ., School cuts hurtlngCdM Cal1fom1agrowtb can't be turned on, off llke a faucet Hams connect across nation To the Editor: SACRAMENTO -Has the arowth~ntrol movement been con· trolled?. The movement, rooted in the emotional reaction of Californians to rapid physical and social cbanacs occumna in their communities, was sweeping across the state like a late summer brush fin:. ._ In community after community, anti-srowth activists bad either . placed growth-control measures onto. the ballot or forced their local officials to impose restrictions on develop- ment It bad the earmarks of a Prop- osition 13-like political fever that would fundamentally alter lhe st.ate's political orientation. And it was one that cut across the ordinary political division lines, 1uracting con- servatives as well as liberals. Conservative-votin1 Oranac County, the state's third-most popu- lous. emeraed as the decisive bettle- sround of the P<>litical war, pittina the anti-trowthen apin!t developers in a skirmish that drew national media attention. The Oranae County ballot measure would bJve virtually benned de- velopment in ul\iocorporated areas of the county unless ways were found to mitipte traffic conaesnon. But in the final wee.ks before the June 7 vote, development interests dumped about $2 million into a cleverly desianed door-to-door op- position campaian. And when the. votes were counted. the Oranae County growth~ntrol initiative had lost. 11 was a major setback for the growth~otrol movement, but it doesn't mean the war is over. ~ will be more growth-control measures on the November ballot The major battlearound i11 the fall is likely to be Rivenide C.ounty. Thedcvelopmeat~-lud­ ownen, construction companies. real estate bro~ etc. -bU awncoed to the thieat that powtb<ootrol efforts JI'* to their fin&ncial interesta and, given the billions of doUan 1t stake, will spend the minions necas- 1ry to wqe politkal '""· The threat of local JJOWlb-control measures bas bad 1n mtcrestina side effecL Ooe of lhe development aroups, Associated General Contrac- tors, reported last week that de- velopers arc takina out buildina pcrmiu as rapidly as they can to beat any local growth~ntrol cfforu to the punch. The unfortunate ~ about all of this activity is that it mtsses the roal point Growth-control activists are pretendjna that growth is something that can be turned on or off like a water faucet Orantc County, Riverside County and the olher bot IJ'01litb areas arc merely the recipienu of a continuina outflow of people from the central metropolilan areas that is, in tum, a response to the flow of immigranu into the cities from other states and nations. California's population is arowioa at 1n incrMibJe clip. In this decade, it's arown by four million DCC>Ole, representing nearly a quaner of' alftbe population arowth experienced in the United States. A sucx:essful arowth-control movo- ment at the loCa1 level does nothing about that It merely shifts the impact onto a neiahbori,..community, while driving up hOusina prices. These emotional. ahort..si&hted growth~ntrol efforts, however, do terve one purpoee; they illustrate the DAN WALTERS This Saturday 1,400 amateur radio operaton. or .. hams .. will Pool their effons to conduct a nation-wide demonstration of their 1bility to maintain an ernawency commumc. tion network covcrifta the Uni1Cd States and Canada. The exetci.e will be a simulation of the eme,.elK'y communication Detwork coveri.81 the United States and CaDld1. The ex~ise will be a aimulation of pressures that a rapidly powing the eme,.ncy communications population creates in lc:rmsoftraffic, amateurradio~&onc:anrenderin demand for bousina. tcbool crowd-1 disaster lituauon. Twenty mernben ins. etc. of the McDonnell Doualaa As 1 practical matter, we cannot Astronautics Company Radio Oub stop California's population from will set up 1 portable station near Mt. continuina to exptnd. We are not Bald · the A la N tional forest. 1bout to impose the draconian, oJ'e~tina ~th .Jar and ps. police-state controls that would keep generator powered equipment, the people from comina into California local group will attempt to conUICt 11 or prevent people from havina many other amateur stations around babies.Norareweaoinatoshutdown the country as possible durina a 24- the expansion of Califomi1•s econ-hour period. Hiahli&bt of the uerci.e omy th1t draws immi&nnU to the will be the use of an amateur f'ldio state. satellite in maintaining emeqency The issue really ian't groWth, but communications. The utelliie will publi~ pol!cies which deal with its receive and retransmit voice and !\Clltlve SJ~ effects. Clearly, pol-code mess&ICS from the amateur aC)1!'1kers m 19vemot's offioe, the stations across the country. Leaislature and in local aovemmenu Durina an actual emefFOCY sucla have been un~lina to do what's preparedness ptysoff'whenamiteun necessary to bu~d the ~ and-provide what ire often the only schools a~ prov.ide ~ servtces for communications links into a strictn an expandina popula~on. ~Y arc area. Actina in co-operation with tbe paralyzed by ~ lnU·tu. 1nu-cov-Red Cross, civil defen.e, potic::e, and emment spendina mood of the elec-other iuthorities, the bum have torate. ~bown their considerable capabili~ Rather than fi&btina 1 war those in several ICtual disuten, ancludin& who are concerned about the 'effecu IOUtbel"f! California ~uakes and of arowth and the developers wbo the Mexico City eartbQUab. serve arowth should crate 1 coalition T.S.1.:.A!"DEN to persuade califomia voters to Secretary, MDAC Radio Oub loosen the pune strinp and en· oo~ pohcymaten to dO their jobs. Du tr.it.n u a 1yalk.itW .....,,, ,. .s.eru..... , ' TODAY IN HISTORY Is it too late for Mrs~ Bush to counteract thls b.a1ry1ssue? Today is Tuesday, June 21, the 173rddayoft988. There are 193days left in the year. This is the first full day of summer. Today's Hiahliaht in History: Two hundred years qo, on June 21st, 1788, the United States Con· stitution went into effect u Ne-tJ Hampshire became the ninth S11te to ratify it by 1 vote in the lqjslature of 57-46. JICllE HEATIEI On this date: In J 834, Cyrus Hill McCormick received a patent for his rapina m1chine. In 1887, Britain celebrated the IC)ldenjubilft of Queen Victoria. "': In 1943; federal troopt put~ l"ICiat riot in Detroit that dai IOme 30 lives. Jn 1945, Japaw forces Oil Okioau llUTfndaed-...UMW--+• Siites durif!I Wortd War II. In 1948, inventor Dr. Peter Gold- mark of CBS Llboratories demon- stra&ed the first succellful tone. playin&~· In · 1963, Cardinal Giovanni laa-tim Monuni w cbdlla II> lucCeed \be late PoPe Jolla XXID at 1-.1 of the hlMn Caddie aa..m.. nc new pope tool tlle name Paul VI. In 1964. dril .;pas worms MicMel H. ti-w.a. Aaf ea GoOd••• .... la-. I:. a... dm.~u ....... &om IM.... (neir_.. werebmdlb llW.) Jn ''"· MINdlc• ..._ ._.. o11~ ................. .... beame ... Wosttrn ... ... minilwderlYa~tl ... 11 dal ICa 11111. ar .-i'J!Jl-..:J~!!P:I ... D.C. ._., .... ~, Pudf11111 _._.... ., - TUFSDAY, JUNE 21, 1988 . . 25CENIS ow' lovercau Hun~n poltcearrest two suspect@ accotnplcea In sl8yt~ of Dyson· s mate BJ &oBDT JlMKD ............... Two NeW Yon City ma have bcieD arnlled in couectioe widt die 1914 munkr of a H~ Har· bour resident wboee ~ .... alrad been CODvic:ted ia CODMdioa = CIA•aeo.ta Rica bureeu chief Indicted In I~ Contra arma affeJr ./ M World Haitian general declairee hlmMlf preeident ./Al Sporta CurtlaStrange finds the ,...an 18-hole U.S. °'*'playoff ./81 ~defeat Twtnsto run streak to four .181 lridez themyina. Hvntinaton Beach detectives tra•elcd \() New y ork to make the anatl. Dixie Dnon. 44, wu convicted in March of lint-dearee mutder in the ICabbil\I death o(her husband, Md Stuart Karl enters plea Says he· s Innocent of illegal campaign gifts to Gary Hart BJ JONA'l'llAN VOLUB .............. Newport 8aicb video ~ucer Gecqe Stuart Karl Jr. ~ iano-cent m federal coun Monday to cbarp he iUeplly finanaid the campaipl of praidential hopeful Gary Hart and other candida&el. ~ JS, WU indicUd by a federal pud JutY earlier this montb after witneues tatified in secret t.bat Kart induced~ \ocontribuaeto Demo- cratic candidates he supported in 1984 and 1986 and then reimbuned the donors with cash payments. Tbe 12<0UDt indictment aUetcs Karl used tbe proc:edare to elude federal limits 00 political donatiom. The~·~ tpinst Kart are COMplracy. ....._. _.. ceaJment in a matter bd>rea ~ ment qency, matins an illepJ c:«· poraae contribution to a federal candidate., ~ eAceaive con-tributions to a idaae and makiq a contribution in the name or another. (Pleue ... &AJIL/A.2) Dulat Dyson, lO. Sbe ii c:unady a.UU.een~ ., ia~ton, betievi111 odlen Md a band in the pueeome -*11 ..... kept the Cate open ...... week atrated 0eoraie Ira lamb. 26. ud Enriquez Vuquez. 31, _.. ol New York, accordina L&. Ed Mcf.r'1Wi Lllnb WU cJwted witb ~·1 murder in an anat warrant ..... out of West Ora. County Muici- pal Court, McErla1n said. Vasq identified in trial .... mony ~ie l>yton's ao~ .... arrested OD a S 100,000 wdin hllid ch_a,.e in San Dicec>. But police will Ilk the Oraris Cowl Dillrict At10rney"s oniC:e lo fi~ m...., ~ ~ Vuquez. Mc£rtlia -.id. Huntiattoa Beach officen. aloal witll New Y orlc City police, am.a Lamb last Tuesday and Vuquez OD ThUnday. Bod! men refuted to waive extra- ....... 1 ..... -.a.-.... IMurt Kart (w••• ,,_ i.ft) lliawe u.a. DI blet eomt la -ta Aaa wltll lal9 ..... , • ..._Sala•, "9laa Varde=•• utlldac..traftmfl••,.~'••ceatto~of·•"' .. lll•r--pelp caatalMll•• tiara c> eap10J111 Irvine Co. gets out of farming, hires overseer Treasure Farms to manage agricultural operations on ranch A12} AS A3 A&-10 64-t 87 Congress may. speed up offshore oil sales here A11 A7 88 A3 ae 81-3 A2. Pnm llalf ....... ,..,..... California lawmaten wue aneered Monday""' a ::1 to speed~ the ule of Oil · · na leaa otr tbe Ora.nae Cout and ttie rest ofSoutbern California to malle up for a delay in Northern Califor'Dia leali A Senate svhcommi~ causbt lawmaken off auard wbeD it ap. e_roved ID amcaclmeDt to ID Interior Deputmeat speodina bill tbat would opeadrillina in Sei*mber 1989 &om the Monterey.SU Luis Obispo coua- ty line to the Mexican border. Interior Secmary Donald Hodel had slaled Janvary 1990 for tbe open inc. But the amendment's bldm in tbe Senate Interior appropriations subcommittee aid the mcuure would mate up for an anticipated $12S millioa budeet lbort6aD cauted by a m-moatb delay in the aiart of driUina off'Nonbem California. Great ~aCersready again to put vintage cars to test helves plan for Several weeks 190. Hodd extended the moraiorium \o Aupst 1919 on lcalC ale 91 off the NOttJrierD Cali· fornia COUL Tbe area bad been IChedWed for drillina in February 1989. Last week, a Houx c:omnuttee approved a meuure ex1eDdiJll the moratorium to Sc:l*Dlber 1989. Became of tbe delay. tbe Con· aresaional 8'ldst Office estimated a St2S million s6ordiaD in anticipated ---·--~~ ..... .,.. .. ;,.~-. Woman who sees future sues citY----- ....... 21.- nee' drug sweep ars in Santa Ana DISTRICT ••• ...... 1 eoewrt the aand to a revenue IOWCC. °"TMft'1 all kiadlof poaiblities for tM& land ,. .. ~;l:C mniaa chanae preny m.acb m CMat of -t6e raidenUal .. be aid. '"There were IOIDe ce-woundl. bul nobody died. .. Bluwncll cited other examples col)qca and universities develooin& propei:1Y to raise funds. A ~ IM>tel 1s under construction on cal S1ate Fullerton's property and a business park i1 bein& built on Coat Com- munity CoUcae District property in Fountain Vaiky, he said. .. Everybody's aoin& to re-evaluate what we have," he said. "But we want some solutions from the neiahbors, too. We know what the prob&em is; we need answers." mDC>Uftt of dtup. under tbe .. z:uo IOleraDCe.. ~ wbidl allows \ldaida conwruna ct.,. '° be con-fbcated . .. l(you're JC?i~ lO JO out aod buy drup. ~Uy in Santa Ana, you beuer brina but fate," U.S. Attorney Robert Bonner said at a City Hall news conmnco. Tbe tweeJ>, -.dubbed "zero toler· ance·• by federal authoritiet, wu conducted by members of tbe Santa Ana ~ce. the Dnaa Enfoiument Adm1nistration and the U.S. Manha1·1 office. Eiabtjuveniletand l92adults were arrested in \he ~ I.bat bepn FridQ on Wabau1 Street. an .,. which hu a reputation fOr beiQS a aupermaltet for cttuas. Druat teiled Included 22.6 aram• of cocaine and 303.S pams of marijuana. Can and other poaeaiqns seized by authorities durina such sweeps are sold and the money ia uaed \0 finance the war on dnlp. authorities Aid. Since January, Santa Ana bas accruod between · $300,000 and S400,000 throuab the federal drua forfeiture law. Budget deadlock broken SACRAMENT~AP) -The Mr sembly =Y it.I 19-day-old budFt ock Monday and a~ proved a $4S.1 billion state spending plan for the fi!Cal year year that starts July 1. The S4-22 vote and a related vote to reject a Senate venion of the budact cleared the way fOf a two-house conference committee lo try to work out differences between the two bud&et proposals. T&e votes folio~ closed-door caususes by both Democrat.I and Republicans and came only minutes after Assembly members aDi>eared to have decided to wait until t\aetday to make another attempt to break the deadlock. Lawmakersett:,dited several factors for the end of the deadlock. including fatiaue and Senate action desiped 10 make it easier for the Assembly to break its deadlock. "We want to pass this budaet u quickly as possible," Assembly Min- ority Leader Pat Nolan, R-Glendalc. said after the Auembly votes. "We're a~tina the fact that the Democrats won t bite the bullet on the cuts and we want to 1Ct 1 bill to the governor u fast as we can." The lower house's budget plan had been bottled up since June 2. The budaet bill approved by the Assembly contains no abortion-fund- ina restrictions, but abortion oppo- nents succeeded Monday in addina the abortion fun4ina restrictions to a Senate version of the budget KARL PLEADS INNOCENT TO CHARGES ••• Pram Al If convided of all cbaraes. Karl could be sentenced to 36 yean in prison and be fined $930,000, authorities said. Karl and bis attorneys -Peter Kahn, John Vardaman and Brian • Cu1T -refused lO comment after Karl entered his innocent plea~ U.S. District Coun · Mqistnte Ronald W. Rose in Santa Ana. Kahm and Vardaman are based in Washing- ton D.C. Karl was not in custody and spoke in a firm voice u be entered bis plea this mofllina. He was ordered to appear before U.S. Disuict Court Jud&e Alioemarie Stotler Aua. 23. The 1971 araduate of Corona del Mar Hi.ah S'chool. trbo made bis fortune with the Jee Fonda workout videoiape and once described himself u the .. bumble little &UY with the tom tennis shoes," was free on S2S,OOO bail. He also surrendered h is passport as part of 1he bond. Thineen of l<Mt's former em- ployees who were allepily uted u conduiu for the contnbutlons were not clwJled in connection with the incident &ccause oftbeircoo1;>cr1tion with authorities in the investlption. StaartKatl The employees said at least $200,000 was donated lO the Hart campaign and other candidates in 1986. The indktment also ctw&es $38,300 went lO Senate and con- pessional candidates -inclodina the campaign of Oranae County Superior Court Judie David 0 . Carter -and another S 1 S9,000 allqedly went to Han's 1984 cam-t also allegedly .funneled a S2S,000 contribution throach his corpora<ion, K.arl-1.orimar Home Video, to a fund-raiser dubbed "An Evenioa With Barbra Strei.sand and Robin Williams." That event rcponedly benefited candidates Timothy Wirth of Colo- rado, Tom Daschle of South Dakota, Bob E.dpr of Pennsylvania, Patrick Leahy of Vermont and California Sen. Alan Crans&On.. Karl was forced to resign from Lorimar-TeleI>ictures in 1987 follow- in& conOict-of•interest alleptions. At that time, be estimated the ex>m· pany's annual sales were between $80 and SI 00 million. He is now the head of l<Mt-Irvine films, a company he founded with James Irvine, whose anceston founded The Irvine Co. Karl lives with his wife and children in Bi& Canyon. IRVINE CO. LEASES FARM OPERATION ••• Jl'romAl arranaement has been "a tremendous succ:::ess" and is consisient with the company's overall shift from direct management to what McCormick termed ''executive developer ... The shift in Irvine Co. manqe- ment style can be 1CCD in other company operations as well. Last summer, the company's resi- dential development branch, Irvine Pacific, pulled o ut of the construction business. The company now fuoc- lions as an executive developer for residential projects. maintaininaoon- trol of planrung and delian while leaving the actual building to outside contractors. In 1986, the company's Industrial, Research and Development branch merged with its Office Division. a move which cost about 30 employees their jobs. "For the most part we've com- pleted all of the transitions. It's been ongoina for a while," said McCormick. Company officials have repeatedly denied that a slacking development climate in Orange County is the main motivator behind the consolidations. However, the companY. did !aY off about 100 employees earlier this year in an effort to tighten the company's financial belt. WOMAN WHO SEES FUTURE SUES CITY ••• ~Al lems to the city. "It is not innocent. It 1s satanic withcraft. It is from the pit of hell." the lawsuit quotes one Huntington &ach resident who objected to the business. "Billfolds will be stolen from behind closed doon." Dan Hoppy, a real estate agent 1n the building Stevens ho~s to ocicupy. submitted a petition W1th more than 400 si&natures apjnst fortunetelling. Still, Stevens' application was a~ proved by the Plaonina Commission. But the City Council -with only Councilman FrcctVosutisseorio1 enacted an em.ncy ordinance bannina fortunetclhna in any pan of the city. City staff proposed rcducmg the areas open to fortu netell ing from neiahborhoo<kommcrcial and high- way-c.ommcrcial to strictly highway- commercial. The Plannina Commission re- jected that recommendation and voted to allow both zones open to sooth= but the City Council in June the ordinance, &pin with Voss ca.stina the only "no" vote. The restricted zonina is scheduled to take effect July 8. But Fisher said &.be stria ZODiQI aa.illqal... ''It's just a tactic to continue the exclusion of fortunetelling in Foun- BLACK WIDOW ••• hCmAl told police. Police said Dyaon told them she awoke la1er and was on her way beck to Ille ~bedroom when she was pabbed ud wrestJcd to the floor by a man witlt a nylon stoc~ over bis head. She Mid the mu taped her and then lotced ber to drive to H intersection to central Huntinaton Beach where he jumped out oft.be car and fled. She found her bu.net's body when she returned home, sbo said. J>Ysoi!, arrested two ~after the slayma, faces 2S yean \0 life in prilOft. Sentencina is set for Juty 29. tain Valley," Fisher said. City officials did not return tele- phone calls Monday. The lawsuit seeks a temporary restrainina order against the new ordinance. Fisher asked U.S. District Coun Judge Spenser Uttl to grant the i~unction Monday but Spenter de- nied the motion and set a 6earina for July 6 to Jive the city time to refPC>nd to the suit. Even should Stevens lose the battle July~ a full trial would be scheduled for a unal decision1 the attorney said. Fisher pid ~ 10 \0 Stevens leaves httle opponunJty for her to stan her business. "That ordium:e ... limits for- tunetellina to the C-2 zone and consists offive spots on the periphery Of the city," fisher said. "One II enti~ly occu~ by a family ~ reation "9rk, one is unavailitb&e beciute n contains an Elks Oab bUildina. the third is a amall comer lot with three lboPI aad \be fow1h alid fifth are a~ of blocls of atora. .. Ted 5'cvCm. w.donna's busbUd, hat repeetedly,J tatd that be did not wut IO Ille CM city.just move bis wife•• bulinaa from Hemet io foun- tain Valley, where lbe couple D01W liYes ~ah aheir cbiklmi. • d Al U.S. Tani-n C&llf. Tem,_ .a• SUI y-~ HoftlMw • ..... ........ .. :~ .. ... Tld• ,, ...... .. 11 .. ~~ .. • ~ .. • ---...... .. ., ..... tOt 10 ,. .,_.. .. • ?11111 ... • " .. TONY MdlOrlllS .. ff ....,_ .. . ..... 1• • =::i 1:tla.m. ~ • • ic.....Cllly 101 ,. ...., • .. .... ..... MlfM .. • Ulla ... • ..... tOI • ...... 4:'911.A A ... Cfty 11 .. ~ • •c...... .. • ........ .. p.111. """*' • n L.-.. 100 n ~Cllly 74 • ....... • ..... tt ... ...,_. • 17 •11 llNY ... -.. .......... • 74 ,,__ " 11 ...... _,. .... u ..... .,_ .. .. P AIOJ .. .. ~ • • ..,... . .. a&.111. 1.4 ....... • n tt ...,_. ,. • n~ ~.::r. ...... ... .... 11 ,. ._......,, 11 • Ye n tt 11!47•• t.t • =~ ......... ,. • IOSton • 11 ._ .... t1 n .... OltMlll .. .. a n.-*-•&:Aa&.111.w.-.. ....... .. . NswY•Cfty ., ,,..,.,..... 10I ........... . ......, • • t:OljMll. .. .. ~VI. .. 10 Tiie -............. tt:n It.Ill. c..., 11 f1 OlltrJ-. Cfty .. n.....,. 107 • ........ a , .. 11:44 .... 100 ~= ... ~.ac. ., n ~ .. • CllertiMkln, W. Ve. ., . OrWldo 11 .. • ,. .. , ..• .. .. °'*'tel 1t • ~NC. • • Surf Forecut oa.,.-• 11 =t'er.. ., ., ,..,,... tot f1 g~:IMI * 11 11 ........... • .. ,., ..... ....... .... • 101 .. .............. ~ .. 17 =~ tt • ......_.Olly 71 11 ..... ... ... ~a.c. .. .., ':: . ........ ., .. Loe Aftl!!laa City I 11 ~~ .. • :=:-· .. 11 =s:..~ : :: tt IJ ~ • • .. ....... .. 7tW·~ ... • Dslll9-f'I WOftfl .. 1' .. ..,_...__.. I ta OllWtOll " • ... lAMCfty :: 711911 .... 7' ., ....................... e..AN°"'° ft • ~ • • 14 ... Oleoo Ill =Ceullly. OUtloc* ..,_... O.Molrlll tOt 11 -~.A. • ,., ... ~ • ... -cMnga. ow... .. . .......... ,., .... ,,.. II • Miii\ 17 • ...... n tt .... AM 11 • Eztended .. .._ .. . ••r."' N ............. 10 • ,.,.. .. • ........ tOI ....... Clw • .. • 17 • =·=-· • • ....... .. 1911l•C*lpe .. 11 =-·"' "'9b9 .. ............ • 17 ~::s:....------.... Fsll .. . • n ..... ....._ .. • ...................... • n...._ r. .... __ ................ Otw,...o.N,C. •• =-. • • f1 .. 11 ................ a..-HartlOrd •• 11TsMe~ ....... •• ........... o.c. • 10T-n • ...._ .... GREAT RACERS READY AGAIN ••• Prom Al will travel just ahead of the race u ~ of her husband's roed crew. People can do 400 miles of travelina in adayandonlybe20secondsofl'the .. idea.I ume.~: Kucera said her husbend ud Wool~ have been bUJy buildins. strcamhning and runnina \Mir bri&ht yellow vintaae car for more than a ~r. When Woolsey bou41't the car, ·au it was wu a steenna wheel. wheels.. framework and 1n en,jne," she said. Since then, the pair have pumped about $20,000 into makina the f"ord road worthy. Tbe race itself ~ts entrant.I as much as SIS,000 in entry fees. food, lodaina. fuel and supplies. a<XX>rdin& to race sponsors. While there is an enticina pune of S2SO,OOO to think about. most racers simply hope to finish. Kucera and Woolsey are hopiq to llVetllC a heartbreaking 198S Great Race, wberetheir 1931 Pontiac failed in Pitubu!Jh only two days short of the finish hnc. The cause of the car's demise: a broken water pump. "The draw of this event is aetting somethina that old across the coun- try, which takes IUU." said Kucera. Most racen were particiJ)4ltina in a round trip trial run from Disneyland to Hemet on Monday, t.estin.g their vehicles for the sliabtest knocks, pinas and 1queaks. While the function of the driver is obvious. the naviptor's job is per- haps even more difficult. Armed with only pencil. paper, stop watch and time-of-day watch. the naviptor must calculate the car's runnina time between checkpoints, determining whether the driver should incrQIC or decrease speed lO meet the optimal time at each checkpoint. Racers Wayne Stanfidd of Costa Mesa. a naviptor, and his driver, Alan Travis of Phoenix, Ariz., know all about perfect timina. They won last year's 3.920-mile race from Di~Jand;o Aorida's Walt Disney . World, finisbina within an amazina and naviptor Mary Trav11 of 22 seconds of the optimal time for the Phoeni-. Ariz., will race a 1919 entire race. . Chevrolet 490 Racer. one of the Tbe pair will be racina in the same-"' oldest can in the event. vehicle, a 1916 Mitchell roadster that 0 He can't sleep, he's so excited the pair have raced in three previous about it," said Halliday' a wife, Cindy, Great Race events. who is hopiq to put tosethcr an all- Stanfietd and Travis have a lot in female team for next year's event. common with the Los Anaelcs Lakers ·Also racina this year a.re last year'• this year -they want to repeat as third place team, Newt .Withers of champions. Fountain Valley and Tr, Holmquist of .. They want to do it real bad this Mission Viejo, who W1Jl race a 1934 year," said Wayne Stanfield. Sr., the Packard. racer's father and the team mechanic. Withers' wife, Ginni. will be the "The car's been so aood to them and driver ofa 1912 Oldsmobile. they want to show everyone that it's Other local racers include Dick still got what it tt1kcs." Belveal of Newpon Beach, who will Stanfield said the races have bepn navipte a 1936 Ford Coupe driven to take their toll on the 72-year-old by Mike Green of Mesa. Ariz., and vehicle, and said this race will be the Kent Wilken of Irvine. who will Mitchell's last. On a test run two navigate a 1930 Packard Oub Sedan. ~.ks aao. the roadster blew its The racerS will receive • pla IC'ftd-ll~IDI le&f'S, but a dealer came up off Wednesday, with DisnCy cbarac- with some spares. A test run last week ters cheerina them out of the ~ A showed all systems go. special Disgey contineent will also .. If we ~t to Denver, we'll be all precede then0e u it pulls into its first riaht," wd Stanfield. "They call us ovemicht stop Wednesday niaht in the U-1y Duckling. but we're aoina to San Luis Obispo. come in like a swan at the end of this The race will resume Tbunday race." momina and proceed thro~ Su Another Great Race vetenin. Bill Francisco lO the next overn~t stop HallidayofNewport Beach, ishopina in Sacramento. The race will head for his fint victory this year. Halladay into Nevada on Friday. OFFSHORE OIL ••• From Al unav:ailable for comment. but a spokeswoman said he has introduced l~slation to bar drilling in lease sale 91. Wilson press secretary Bill Liv- ingstone said the Senate pencrs action came as a surprite to many. "Everyone was cauaht ofl' pa.rd." be said. Livinptone said most lawmakers who have been involved in the issue believed the matter had been settled when Hodel approved extending the moratorium. The Interior Department issued a statement sayina it oppoted the subcommittee action. The provision "circumvents the carefully scheduled sale procesl,.. • department spokesman said. a.. ... News Senlee e.trtM&e4 te w......,. THE P.0.S.H. • OFFICE VISIT Because your time is valuable, and setting away from the offlce isn't aJwa-ys-possible, we..olkr a mghly..uperienced..staff.tbat can come..to your. offlce. At your convenience, we will present a comprehensive collection of our 'in-stock suit~ sport coats and furnishipgs, or if your prefer, samples of made- to-measure clothing and dress shirts. 1. You will be fitted by one of our master tailors. in your office, •nd your ..elections will be delivered back 10 you. PLEASE C)l.Lt FOR AN ~PPOINTMENX ... AND SEE JlJST HOW EASY SHOPPING CAN BE. • Newpon a.ela. CA JZffO ' .