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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1989-07-03 - Orange Coast Pilotl Pleasure , Pop singer's President boating ~· fan no enjoying L fatalltles ,, Diamond ho I I day decllne». In th~ rough weekend j Children I . at reunion . old before their time -- NATION/A6 COA T/A3 WORLD/A4 MIND&BODY/A8 .. THE ORANGE COAST 25CENTS ·MO DAY, Jl'LY :J .. 1989 Firework explodes in boy's face • ly AA.IX \lllWAMS Of ... o.,iiy ..... SCMf A 17-year-old Costa Mesa boy was in satisfactory oondition Sunday njpt with facial bums suffered when a modified firework exploded in his face, lhe Costa Mesa Police Department reported. Christopher Doyen was airlifted by ~eticopter to UCI Medical Center tn Oranae following the explosion, which occurred around 2 p.m. Sun- day at Doyen's house, located in the 1940 block of Arnold Avenue, police Sat. Tim Holbrook said. Doyen and his brother David, whose 8fC was unreported, apparent· ly emptied the oontcnts of 12 .. Pic- colo Pete" fireworks into a small plastic box, Holbrook said. · c·o\ l <H S'l'OH\ I·:'\\ IHO'\lll<'\'I' County planning . tq open canyons to public access ly LESUE EARNEST Of IN Daly Noc StAlff Located between Laguna Beach and an explosion of planned com- munities in Laguna Hills and Laguna Niauel is a contrastmg com- munity untouched by developers. Suspended as if in a time warp while a frcnz)' of construcuon con· tinucs nearby, Altso and Wood ca- nyons join t<>aether and branch out. provid1n1 a refuge for w1ldltfe and, maybe soon. a haven for humans. The land is spcc1aJ, says everyone who talks about it For starters, at 3,400 acres. AJiso and Wood Ca· nyon Regional Park 1s the second laracst park in tbc county. Its features arc stnkina: sandstone rock formations with caves born of erosion. fields of Mrley which once fed arazina cattJe and marshland no right-minded mallard could mist. California sycamores and coast live oak trees arncc the valley, which Is home to deer, bobcats, coyotes and rattlesnakes. Rich color. both subtle and vivid, is everywhere. Mountain lions -although none have yet been spotted -may also roam . the canyons, accordlna to a perk ranaer. A large part of the land, previous- ly owned by the Mission Viejo Co., was Jiven to the county as part of a propOsal to build the Aliso Viejo bousifl4 development. Some of the homes 1n that tract will overlook the valley. In the works IS a acnttal plan which officials say will transform the area into a h1de-a-wa-y for weary urbeniJeS. But completing the pro- ject could take three )'cars. a reality that nqacd at many involved in the Ammonia leaks from lrvlne firm prOJCCl. So park ranger Bruce Buchman - SU(>ported by a host of county of- ficials from Supervisor Tom Riley to harbor beaches and parks Director Robert Fisher -devised an "in- terim plan." The idea was to find a way to open the patk to hikers. bicycle riders and equestnans who •could enjoy the raw land while coun- ty J.lanncrs were plotting its future. I think there are a lot of people who don't realize the park's here.'' Buchman said. With such a unique slice of nature available to study or just to pze upon, Buchman said, "it would be a shame not to usc"i t." The latest of seven interim proposaJs submitted by Buchman ~.now been Approved by the de· sian division of the county Harbors. Beaches. and Parks Department. Within four to six weeks, accordina some planners. the park could be open to lhe public. Other 9gency approvaJ will be needed later, how- ever. "We're reaJly anxious to provide public access to the park.'' said Kathie Matsuyama, senior land· scape architect for lhe county. "It's just so important to act people out there now to sec what a neat re- source it is. It is just a gem of a park. It is one of the last pristine coastal canyons in Oranac County." If the canyon 1s a Jif\ to the people, lhank-you cards miaht have been sent to Jim Dilley, founder of Lquna Greenbelt, were he still alive, say some Laauna Beach resi· dents. "In lhe early 1970s. Dilley con- vinced lhc county that the way to Doyen t~en evidently lit the pow- der with a m~tch while holdmg his face dangerously close to the box Holbrook said. ' The conte11ts exploded, and Doyen suffered bums across his face. Holbrook said. Do)'tll sufrered second-degree "flash bums," which are quicker and hotter lhan ordinary flames. Flash bums arc caused by explosions, ac- cordin$ to Gina Ginther, a nursing supervisor at UCl Medical Center. Ginther said Doyan's entire face was burned in the accident and needed extensive bandaging. The bums, however, did not spread to his chest or shoulden. she said. In order to airlif\ Doyen to the bum unit at UCI Medical Center. police and paramedics necd~d to transport the boy to an open space large coougb for a helicopter land· ing. Holbrook said. He was taken ,to the playmg field at Rea Commu9ity Center, located at 661 Hamilton St The community center was formerly an elementary school INrd watchen hike thro~h Aflso and Wood ca nyons on a recently sunny after noon. preserve open space was not as little finacrs of green in between develop- ment': but as large contiguous areas, • said Elizabeth Brown. La&una Greenbelt president. The Board of Supervisors endorsed the "arecnt>eh" concept. Brown said. and made it part of the county's long-ranae planmng While still not oHrJoycd about the Ah so V tCJO de' clopment plans, Brown wd she thinks the M1ss1on Viejo Co.'s "compact" development idea 1s a good one. "The form IS. )OU do all )OUr development there and you'll have GOOD MORNING allJo ur OJ)(n space o'er here.'' \he sa1 . Ahso and Wood Canyons Re- aionaJ Park 1s bordcrt'd b) Ahca Parkwa), Coast Htahwi). Moulton Parkwa) and the intersection of La&una Canyon and El T oro roads. Alihoujh officials cautton that there is no open1na date set yet. when lhc keep-out s1ans do come down for the 1ntenm phase, lhe only entry will bie at Alicia Parlcwa}. The fact that there 1s curTCntly no offictal ecce11 to the parklands hasn't stopped off. road vehicles that have l(an't'd the ll'le.-,..PMK/All Wrestlers get -arni up or:i competition ·at OC Festival ly IRIS YOkOI Of ... 0.-, .... k- W1tb arunts. anm•~s. an1un1 of teeth and arabbang of table. some 40 men and "omen of all a C'\. haix~ •nd sizes rompcted 1n the Southern Ca4fom1a Amateur rm Wrc thng Champion hips at the Oran e Coun- t) Fiesta on Sunday af\cmoon Whtie some com~ted for the fi~t time. just to try 1t a they "8 scd through the lie$ll at Fountain Val· le> 's Miles Squart Park. othe" were ~rious. veteran arm wre thna con· tc tant~ who had \Cf'll title under thctr bths and lra'1cled many main to compete In fact. many comhatanti wtrt unckr the tutctw of Ro~n Eaior. ow~r of the W"orld Amattut rm Wrc tlina \ 1ation and Of111n1ttr or the contc". tor ' to tmou about arm ~resthna as 1 lctitimate port that he 1s \r) ina to tet it I IPOl m the 1992 Ol)'mptcs. The contestant a-ad a SIS 41!*7 fee in order to compete for dlll ...., , ond· and third-~ trolillillt. They wcre~stified into"'l0,..,. fercnt ~ciaht ctutes. ra"lina ._ 145-pounds-and-under to 211· pounds .. nd-o"er for mee aftd 12();; and-unckr 1nd 121.;g6.o"'er fof I pl e cuts nt of jetliner aklng off in OC '11'lil Am1d ... d ,,_ A CaDdnental ~jet with l 32 ,.....,_ aboetd avoided a ODWMCID With a amall plane that .... · in &oat of it shortly after .... &om John Wayne Airport. aviMion authorities laid. ...... Aviation AdminiJtration clll&y oftlcer Jack Doyle saJd Con· tiMa&al fliaht 176 came within l 00 llll ol a linale-enaine Bonanza that Md jUlt taken off from an adiaocnt ~ 'lbonly after 3 p.m. rriday. Doy said the piJot of the small .... WU told by air traffic COD· tralln to tum left after takeoff, but u...d twnec1 riabt. Cl'Ollina the ~ 737 jetliner's n~t path. The pilot of the airhncr had to uarn 10 avoid hittina the smaller plane, Doyle said. The Continental fliaht wu bound for Deovs and arrived 12 minu1e1 early without any problem, said Laura Duin1 Continental reterVation su~rvisor an Denver . No injuries were reported. The FM is anvesti&atina the incident. Friday's ~ near collision wu the latest 1nvolvina planes in the Orantc County area. On May 10, an Air New Zealand jumbo jet with 1SO peueqm wu Oyina at 7 ,000 feet about 26 miles off the Oranee County coua when it came within 300 feet of bittina a small plane directly ahead. Two houn later, an American Airlines jetliner 1 S miles northeast of Seal Beach and headed for John Wayne Airport had to tum to avoid colhdina with a Cessna 172. II 0 I I U \ \ 't 111-. D l 1.1.' Independence Day -Tuesday, July 4 •Closed • Federal offices closed • State offices closed • County offices closed ~ • City offices closed, Fountain Valley City Hall also will be do~ Monday Postal dellvery • No delivery . Tr•sh pickup • Trash conected delayed one day rn Costa Mesa, Fountain Valley, Huntington Beach, lrvlne, Laguna Beach and Newport Beach Or•nge County Transit District • Buses wlll run on ~ Sunday schedule D•lly Piiot •~Ivery by 6 a.m. Call 642-4333 by 10 a.m. for delivery problems. 1 • Edltorlal wiff be open 8 a.m. to 5 p.m \I/REST LE RS ,,_Al . mu pony\ail at the ba!e of his neck. • Alber"• lanky build belied his arm ..._.. record -i!t world r wp60aablp1 in the . l·handcd. Ss..Dd-undcr and 16 · d·under dllall. LeeDer, meanwhile, is a four· lme wortcf champion in the left· Mnded liibtweiaht division. 1 ~.who bu been competina lbout tour~ said the unique-... ol the sport is what attracted aim Ind bepl him interested. "It's _...hint dO one else can do,'' he "h\t•a one on one," said Fisher, a l~ ve1eran. 1beit loyalty to the sport bu to be 1111111 OD tM thrill and pratiee of Yi&:lary, liDoc they don't win any ~~moll ofthC contests. "Just ~ .. ~ruid. AM pm, Fisher chimed in., a 111111 mill OG bis face. T....._ for the spon is be.sic: 1....-aad Filher said they simply iD a k>t of um wrest.lina. oompethon lift ~ts. but ·•·wt doan't Deceturily _, improve, biaute arm wrlldiml involves ''lendon ~ tr• mlllde." Al .... Wla'aD chalnP,I .-ee the l...;.:.; to ~ arm wrattina 11 1Ceb.-~ -liule tbinll like aot tookina nay 6-1 your arm ud simply ----·-. ~·· -triC:k to it," &uor :iii!!. .,.., I Ull ·~·" :: ............... ""'~them- selves up before a match, rec· ommended Ed Wucher, 2S, a 301· pound bear of a man from Wildomar, near Lake Elsinore. Wucber is a newcomer to arm wmtlina, havinajust beaun compet· i~ six months aao af\er mcetina &zor at a contest, but bas won four second·plaoc awards and two third· place awards already. Mind over matter is crucial, W ucber said. As an illustration.,1 . be recalled bow a 170.pound man oeat him in one contest. The experu' analysis provtd true durina the elimination heats. The alim fisher felled bl• rint opponent in the blink of an eye. A tanned, two.d--lbouldered bodybuilder.type with mUldes ri(>Plina out of his tiny tank top lost twice 10 men at.toned or smaller in build. The competi10r1 met at a tall wooden table outfitted with '*11 on each end. The two opponents would Shake bands., chalk their competina bands and pip handlet located at the ends of the table with their looee bands ror support. Then, with tense bodln, contorted faces and ID oa:uionaJ poen, the competiton foupt to bri111 the Other's arm dOwil on the appropriate J*S. Sometimes this occurred in leCODdl, other tima, tbe two ~ pied for ecvcral minuta, their feet lbuftl' OG tM pouad and theit bOdies ~cwina the ...,.. llilhtly .. they pUIMd .P.ut it widi much ........ Nacy Town.ead. one ol dac few women IOlftPeti• in daiit own division. stood lci:Ud b' eevenl .. ~le1nake1 find the can1on1 • comfortable haven. PARK ,romAI . hillsides and worried rangers. "Veaetation in that area is damag- ed, not to mention the noise pol- lution and the effects on the wildlife," said Tim Miller, Harbor, Beaches and Parks operations man-aaer ... Four·wheel drive vehicles and motorcycles don't mix well with native plants and trees." Those charaed witb protecting the land say the sooner it is open to the public, the better. "It's actuaJJy easier to operate a perk when it's open," Bucbman said. "You have more eyes in the perk watchi~ for motorcycles and fouMwhcel dnves." Matsuyama said there .will be no orpnized ball fields and other fea· · tures of city parks. "It won't be a manicured urban park like La,una Niguel Park," she said. "This s aoina to be a very natural park, very natural." In Wood Canyon, planners en· vision hikina and equestrian trails, picnic areas, sian p<>sts for self- auided tours, limited ovemi9t campina and nature walks. In Ahso Canyonh there will likely also be a natural istory center and some sort of revenue-pn?ducina facility -per- haps a suble:-to help offset the park's expenses, Matsuyama said. Matsuyama said she does not yet know if dop will be allowed in the canyon when the aeneral plan is complete. However, they will not be Train crushes car; \Noman crltlcally hun 1y AUX WtWAMS Of_C).ily ........ A 7l·year-0ld woman was in criti· cal condition Sunday niaht after a traJn crushed her car as it sat across railroad tracks in Santa Ana, the Santa Ana Police Oepalhment re- ported. Vil'Jinia Comstock of Santa Ana auffered a broken l~ a punctured luna and broken ribs an the accident that O(lCUrred at approximately 4:20 p.m. Sunday, JJ(>lioc Sgt. Joe Esther said. The crash occurred u Comstock was headina east on Fairhaven Av- enue around the 1100 block of the at.reel. Comstock evidently was crossina the railroad tracks at that point when the raitrotd sianals bepn ·fluhina and the arms that block off the street descended, Esther said. . • One sianal arm blocks one lane in one direction, and another arm . blocks th~ opposite lane in the op-::z..--...:;o.-..--........ .;.;...;.~ posite direction. The woman ap- parently could have driven forward, veerina around the arm .in front of her, but did not, Esther said. allowed durina the interim oper· ation and will likely never be allow- ed in wildlife·rich Wood Canyon. "The canyons are wildJifc cor· ridon and wildlife and domestic pets don't mit very well," she said. If they can't please everyone, county planners are at least hoping the canyons wilJ fill a vital need in a county where 1-.od has been snapped up like a favorite descn. And -some residents who watched uneasily as the crumbs disappeared roiabt be aJad to know a picoc of the p~ hu been saved for them. "With all the development hap- penina around the county 1 it's really a significant park," Maller said. "Thiny.four hundred acres is a criti· cal chunk of land." The woman remained in her car as the train approached at approx- imately 30 mph. The train eushed the car about I 00 feet, destroyana the car, Esther said. 1.0111 .IC\ Lotto jackpot goes unclaimed SACRAMENTO (AP) -Nobody won the weekend's SS.3 million "Lotto 6-49" jack~t but two players split the SI.SI million sccond·place prize pool, the California Lottery said Sunday. The winning numbers chosen Sat- urday niaht were 49, 39, 29, 43, 46, 28 and tne bonus number, 1 S. Durina the interim phase, bikers, bicyclists and horseback riden can follow a trail that winds alo~ Aliso Creek 111d then branches off an two directions. One road leads to a tum- beck point just before Ben Brown's restaurant on Coast Highway in South Laauna. Tbe other trails ofY into Wood Canyon, the most dra· matk and 1eeluded of the-two. In all, the trail is approximately 41/J miles Iona. one way. Teen juf!1pS from bulldlng The elusive SS,321 ,220 jackpot will roll over to Wednesday's game. The two second-place tickets, with fi ve numbers J>lus the bonus, are each worth $7SS,419. One was purchased in Lakepon and the other an Lona Beach. While the canyons will be left almost untouched by plannen dur· ina the interim phase, worken are already prepui~ a "seneraJ de- velopment plan' for the future. minutes with her first opponent before she arose the winner of that heaL Wal.kins away victorious, Townsend cradled her arm and ex· claimed, "She's an animal" Towttsend bad never arm-wrcs- tlcd before, but she pve it a shot because "I'm a competitive person." Townsend and her husband C'.asper were bclpina w1th the event as mem· bers of the fountain Valley Chamber of Commesu, which hosted the fiesta. Townsend, wbo said she may have aotten her strenath from her trainana as a competitf ve swimmerl said she supported the inclusion o arm wrestlina u an Olympic sport. ..I'd really like it to 10 to the 1992 Olympics," she said. "It draws a crowd," said Casper Townsend, also a fan of the spon. Another chamber member, Judy Gonzalez, encou,...ed her cleancut, attractive son Chris, 1 S, to enter the conlelt for fun too. The lona..Jeiled Huntincton Beach Hisb School stu· dent, wbo looked like be would be more at home on the beach, the baketbell court or at the mall with other YOUD& 1eeps, obeyed bis mother and won his Ant-ever dimination haL .. I laid, 'Come on and do this,"' the proud mother laid. "He said, •Naw, they're too *·' " ly t~ Deffy Not A Huntinaton Bca~h teen-aaer was in serious condition Sunday ni&ht after he jumped four stories off a Newpon Beach parking structure, Newpon Beach police reported. The I 8·year-old man apparently suffered a broken back and serious internal injuries followina his plunae. which occurred around 3:2S p.m., police Sat. Tim Riley said. The structure is located at Jam- boree Road and Bristol Street be· tween the Downey Savings b4ildin'g and the Marriolt Suites hQtel. Passen.by called pohcc af\er noticina the man standina on top of the structure, lookina as if he were aoina to jump. Officers arrived, and he reportedly told ~ne offi~r that.he "did not want to hvc." Raley said. ..,._ of •· shape or sb.e, arm Wiwtlen have a comradery that ii lipeciaJ, Wucber said. "Yw're ..... at dlat table, u&YoU --------------------tome w ~.. he .... ..., neryw's lieDdly, ..._beads." There were 247 tickets with five numbers1 each wonh $3, l SI , and 12,079 tickets .with four numb.trs. each winnina SSS. There were 218,985 tickets with three numbers. each worth $5. ' Ill l .1.1-:·11'\ HO \H D Pageant performance benefits City of Hope A special performance of the Pageant of the Masters at the Laauna An Festival benefiting the City of Hope will be held at 8:30 p.m. Sunday. The Paaeant of the Masters has re-created areat works Qf art -paintinas and sculptures - for more than SO years usina live models. Tickets arc S 100 for the loge, $50 for the main tier center, $40 for main tier 11de and $25 for the upper terrace. Call (213) 626-4611. ellt. 276 or 308. for more information. Drug-free teens Pathways 10 Discovery will present a free lecture series from 6:30 10 7:20 p.m. on Mondays bcginnina with "Teenage Drug Abuse: How to Check it Out" on July 10 at 18350 Mount-Langley St.; suite 205, Fountain Valley. On July 17, "Adult Children and Their Strug- &le for Intimacy" will be presented. "Personality J>rofile of a Compulsive Overeater" on July 24 and "The Dynamics of Relapse" on July 31. Call 964-2267 for more information. Women's assertive training An eight-part workshop on "Women's As- sertive Trainina and Emotion Management Group" will be held from 7 to 8:30 p.m. bc&in- nnina July 10 at Mariposa Women's Center. -.,77 S. Main St., suite 116. Orange. AS I 0 donation is requested. Call 547-6494 for reservations. Summ~r jobs for youths The Youth Employment Service of the Harbor Arca will help youths and employers match employmenf needs for the Orange County Fair from 9 a.m. 10 4 p.m. July 10 and 11 at the YES booth on the Main Mall of the fairgrounds. Call 642-0474 or stop by the YES Office at 542 W. 19th St.. Costa Mesa. for more information. R~sldentlal landscaping A three-hour workshop 1ha1 focuses on resi dential landsa)pc planting will be presented from 6:30 to 9:30 p.m. July 10 by Orange Coast College's Community Service Office in room I 08 of the Counseling and Admissions Building. The fee is S2 I. Workshop lecturers. David Kull and W. Howard Reynolds. arc licensed landscape architects and officers in an Irvine landscaping firm . Another workshop for men titled "How to Treat a Woman" will be held at the same day and time in room 108 of the Economics Building. The fee is $25. Lecture topics include "How 10 Make Your Love Life Sizzle," "How to Wine and Dme Your Dates with Pizzaz" and "What Women Like and Don't Like." l"o reamer, ao to the Community Service Office in the college's Student Center Building from 9 a.m. to 7 p.m .. Monday through Fnday. or from 8 a.m. to noon on Saturday. To register by phone, usina Visa or Mastemud. catt 432-5880. Free vaccinations TLC Medical Group toaether with the Cringe County Health Care A&ency are providing free polio, diphtheria, tetanus. pertussis, measles. mumps and rubella vaccinations from 8 a.m. to 7 p.m., Monda~ through Saturday until Sept. 30. The vaccinations arc bcina given at two TLC Medical Group locations: 10188 Adams Ave., HuntinJtOn Beach arid I 7900 Brookhurs1 St .• Fountain Valle)'. No appointmont is necessary. However. due to the current demand for these vaccinations. expecially due to the current measles epidemic in :::>ranae County, TLC Medical Group offers these 1mmun1zations on a first come. first snved basis. For more information, call 968-3266 or 963-7796. Court Information h otline A 24-hour recorded telephone coun-infor- mat1on ltnc has been aeated by the West Oranse County Municipal Coun to assist the public tn easily acc:cssana information on traffic school, bail, warrants, pohcc rcpons, blood-alcohol results and not1uilty picas. The information line, which was obtained from DIAL PRO Inc. of Los Anaelcs, will auto- matically transfer the user to a coun deputy clerk if the call is made durina normal business hours. The numbers arc 896-71 r I, 896-7201 or 896-7199. f \ I . t-: '\ D \ H Monday, July 3 • 6:30 p.m. <Mia Meta Ctty c.ucu. council chamben, 77 Fair Drive. Tuesday, July 4 No m«tmp tchedulcd :;H \ '\ n 1101 UI ''' Fan's loyalty.no D~amond in the rough ' ' ly ALIX \lllWAMS Of ftw Olllly Noc SUoll' Mother versus dau&hter, restraint ver- sus hysteria -it is ihursday afternoon hours before sinaer/1onawriter Neil Diamond will Joa on staae at ln&)ewood'1 Forum to kick off a rccord-settina 10 nia,ht homestAnd, and a Newport Beach family is fightina for it1 sanity. The pattern of debate is the same as it is in any housdfold where an otherwise ordinary teenaa~tums into a Diamond-. eyed aroupie. The two ba&&Je about bow much Neil is too much "1eil, how much mon~y for Neil tickets is too much money. They debate whether Neil Diamond 1s the bna,htest star in the musical cosmos. or perhaps the bnghtest star in cosmos. pcnod. Mother versus teen-age daughter, like it's been since the early days of Sinatra. But this time, it's the mother who's the fart. Sally Bender of Ncwpon Beach 1s the biggest Neil Diamond fan that SaJly Bender knows. which is saying plenty, considering 'he has turned everybody she knows into a fellow "Diamondhead" - her husband. children. friends. nieces. nephews. So· the debate between mother and daughter is friendly enough. Daughter Jill, an 18-year-old UC Da vis freshman, is enough of a Diamondhcad to forgive a little excess in her mother. Her mother. 1n fact. denies that her fascination with the husk y-voiced crooner is an obsession. An obsessive, after all, would buv tickets. like, uckets (rows 1-S. please. however many hundreds of dollars they cost) 10 all 10 Forum shows. Bender only has tickets for eight shows (although of course. they arc pnme tickets). And besides. Bender 1s a mature busi- nesswoman. a mother of two. She's no groupie. she says. And she doesn't like ptJeonholcs. especially the ones that D1amondheads are always fit into without their consent. You know, it's that middle-age hou~­ wife thing. That whole tag that writers try to hang on Neil Diamond concen-goers. that they're all 45-year-old suburban women taking a few hours off fr9m soap operas and mid-life cri sis to swoon over that suy with that voice and those side- burns. No, with Bender -who as a matter of policy does not disclose her age - Neilmania simpl~ means peace. Neil 1s no sex god, he s JUSt the proverbial Everyman given the divine gift of song. Sally Bertdet with some of her Nell Dl •mond collectlon. ··Neil 1s JUSt a rqular guy. He's the kind of man you want to take home to dinner. not 10 bed." Bender says. • • • It 1s early afternoon in a prcfabncated Fountam Valley office bu1ld1ng. not far from the monotonous drone of 1he San Diego Freeway. The office is head- quarters for Hobby Shack. the Bender's retail and mail-order hobbies and craf\s chain. Neil is in the office. too. In two spots. actuaJly -about halfway up the wall nellt 10 the door and on the door itself. From the door. Neil stares straiJht ahead, past Benders desk and 1hroUl}l a large window. Neil wears a come-hither look on his face. a black leather jacket and his trademark dark brown sideburns. From wherever you sit in the office. Neil watches you. His eyes follow you like the eyes of the Mona Lisa. Today. Neil watches both mother and daughter, who 1s home from college for the summer. The conversation topic between mother and daughter 1s, of course. Neil Diamond. Bender 1s 1ry1ng to remember the first time she heard him sma. Bender hangs loosely off her desk chair with her left heel up on the seat Jill reclines on a cabinet nearby The first time Bender heard Nell Diamond, Bender's other daughter Am) (now 22) was .a baby. That would make the year about 196 7. Bender reasons. She was driving around Newport Beach doing errands. she recalls. The car" A yellow Buick station wagon. "Tht> Brady-mobile,'' Jill Bender interjects. Well. this certain voice came over 1he AM -radio that day. And what n voice Husky yet tender. Nearly monotone. but expressive and warm. Bender was in love. She waited to hear who thts new voice wa s. and then she heard Neil Sedaka. Or so she thought Bender later corrttted her m1slakc and was thus born a Neil Diamond conven Diamond al 1he ume was h1tung Wlth the sonas .. Cherry. Cherry" and "Solitary Man." Over the next two years. Diamond would record more hits "Kentucky Woman:· "Sweet Carohne" and "Holl) Hol) ... It wasn't Joni before Bender s1an td soing to shows and kamina the ntuals {she never shows up to a concen w1thout a Bic lighter. which any real fan knows to hold up as a torch when Neil s1ng.s "Hearthght"). Bender also staned buying the records. All of them. Now she 1s buying compact discs Through the growing pasSton for the music, Bender's husband Paul ha'i been a ponra11 of pa11cnce. she says Paul Bender. her h1'11 school sweet- heart 1n Columbus, Oh10, has become a April quake centered at Dunes ly LAR9'Y Noa.AN 0-.,,.._,, .. -.. The epicenter of the canhquake 1ha1 rocked Orange Coast cities Apnl 7 was at the mouth of the inlet of the Newport Dunes manna. accordina to revised esti- mates released by Caltech officials. Original reports placed the quake's focal point at 01ff Drive and Irvine Avenue in Newpon Beach. about one mile west of the inlet which leads from the channel between Lower Newport Bay and Upper Newport Bay. The inlet is just nonh of East Coast HlPwa~ and part of Newpon Dunes Marine Services Inc. and Newport Dunes A~tic Park. Caltech also downaradcd its esumate of the eanhqualcc's mqnitudc from 4.6 to 4.$. Marina man11Cr Chris Thomas. who was teated in her tra1ltt office at the time the sharp JOit struck at I :07 p.m .. said the quake rippled the around outside like a wa ve. hftcd a palm tree 1n the air 3nd knocked two men who were working on a boat cname ··on their butts." "I thou&ht 1t was goina to knock the whole trailer down.·· she said When told the quake was centered at the manna. Thomas said, "I know, 1 felt it." Thomas. a veteran of the S. 9 Wh1tt1er quake in 1987, also said the JOit felt much stronger than 4.5 magnitude. Caltech spokesman Bob Finn down- pla)'Cd the significance of the revised estimates as "scientific refinements.'' Finn. a New~rt Beach resident. also said it was m1slead1ng to pinpoint an · earthquake's epicenter at an euc1 lo- cation. such as an intersec11on • Funher the new coordinates mov1na the cpiocntcr from Chff and Irvine to the Newpon Dunes inlet was hardl) a chanae. "That's almost an ms1gn1fican1 amount for an earthquake that occurs 10 miles beneath the surface," he said. Caltech sc"moloa1st Kate Hutton 111d that theorc11call> a cpKentcr doe' occur at a precise point but that '><'l'>molog1cal estimates could be flawed by ai. much as a mi le She added tha1 in1t1al quake es umn1es were based on signals from JUSI a few seismometers, but that the roccnt repon 1s dcn.,,cd by taking an :n erage of 264 signals from lournons throuahout Southern ( alifom1a. Asked 1f residents "' 1ng clo'ic 10 the epicenter should be "'omcd. Hutton said, "An)onc who hvcs 1n Cahforn1a should be concerned about earthquakes,. but I wouldn't pinpoint one area" a, the most hkely target of fulutc 1cmblon . The quake stru< k on the Nrwpon · lnalcwood Fault. JU"' th~ mile!> from the epicenter of the 1933 Long Beach eanhquakc which mca uf'\'d 6.3. killed 115 people and caused an c umatcd $40 m1lhon 1n damaie The <\pnl 7 temblor. maid 1n companson caused only mtnor 11\June!. and shJht $tructural damaac Neil fan too, Bender sayst althouab not a fan on the order of hts wife. Pauf Bendtr will attend one of the 10 Forum shows..: leav1na Bender to ao wilb friends to \be seven other concerts for which she hat uckets. Jn add1t1on, PauJ Bender bu been willing whenever opponunitics for spoa.. tancous Neil p1lanmmaaes have popped up, his wife says. For mstan<X, then:: was the time the couple heard about Net I playina SU) Francisco's Cow Palace. No hes1tat1on. the couple was on a plane There was the umc the couple beard about Nell singing at the inauauration bash for one of Donald Trump's Atla.D.lic City casinos. No hcs1tauon. 1~ couple was oa • plane. ~· Bender says she bas seen Neil Diamond m coocen 25-30 times, and soon that number will approach 40. thanks to his extended Forum sil.. Tbe reason for hC1' devotion Pet beyond Diamond's si.gc presence, wbicll!2 itself is noble. Bender says, contrastina Neil to preenina. posing. boastina super- stars like Diana Ross. -- The true reason she loves Neil i1 hit P.OCtfY., she says. ~Neil h1mself-cJa.ims to be sonpritcr first and a singer second, Bender says. He only took to the microphone because no one else would sms h11 tunes (aJthouah that changed m 1966 once Diamond scored major hits; that same year, the Brooklyn-born songwriter penned the Monkces' only No. I hit. .. I'm a Be- liever .. ). Bender stresses that Neirs lyrics have broad appeal. · Seated beblnd a work--crowded desk. she ruminates before concluding which Neil sona she likes the most ... fyrically, that 1s. Then she decides. "It's called Done Too Soon," she •YI· "In that one. be names all these famous pco(>le. both hv1na and dead, like JICSUI Chnsl and Fanny .Bryce, aod 1inp that 'they all sweated under lhe same sun/and' looked up in wonder at the same moon/and wept when 1t was all done for being done too soon.' Really. it's beauti· ful. h bonds everybody in the univene." Jill Bender. from her c.abinet top, can't hold back from this opportunity to rib her mother. • ''Yeah mom, and we all put on_ our pan ls one leg at a ume," she says in a• bored, breathy voice. Bender, however, is unfazed. Sbe ii wilhna to reach a little. and oelebra1e a' man who has somethin1 special \0 say, or at least a special way of sayina iL She re1unu 10 the man.er of the aforementioned sona. .. .. Just recently, with our kids tll pvwa I've had time to think about bo-my~ of ra1sina kids is all done. h's kind Of 194 that it was over 10 fast,'' BendcT" •YL But Bender. whose kcycbain lpoN a yellow enameled smLley-face, refiuel11Q aei mired an such e~istential cloldra:8s.. Not toda), anyw1y, not with two bot 11ckets to Neil concert No. I. She hedges at tenina how tnudl abo paid for these tickets, altho"'lh abe ~ m1ts they were "m the hundreds of dollars." · But what the beck. she 11)''1. Sho doesn't dnnk., do dru&s or &amble. to Jet Neil be her one vice. "Sure It's e.:pens1veJ but where e1te can )'Ou act two hours or peace m this day and aac?" OC filer visits forbidden area MO COW (AP)-An I I-year-old Saft Juan Capistrano bo) Oy1n1 around tbt world touched down on Sunday io Ku1by•he'. a ctty that fordcnen have been forb1<,1den to enter for more than four decades. Tass reported. Kuibyshev, which lies on the Volp Ri ver about 450 miles southeast of Mo. cow. 11 one of many Soviet cluca cloled 10 foreigners because deftnse-rela~ i• dustries arc located there. ··we would be happy if our visit to your cit)' opened the doors for ill forelaners." the pilot"s father. Oary Alic&-• acna. was quoted as sayina by the Soviet news agency. The elder hrn,cna Is accompany1119 his oni. Tony. aboard lhe Cana 210. lass' ~1d Ku1tJ>'shev hu beea ~ "11nee World War II, when dehw a. du tncs were C\.acuated there .. &om Uiit w, tcm pan of the Soviet Uaioa. _.... wa then under Na11 Ottman ~ uon Truth in lab.eling puts people in place Ute 11 a supermarket. Evnyone has a label and fits in a special catq0ry. The trick is knowina where you btlona. Are~~ou 1 Media Penonahty~ New A,e Guru, or Carwr Couple? hr· hapt )ou•re a White Kni,au. 8th· Way Insider or Trend Setia? How about a Damaee ConuoUef. Late Bk>omcr, Pahmony Lawyer, or --.c- patria\ed H°"'"'1fc:'! Tht list of catcaoncs 11 k> tMri a NeojiOli\an clothes hnc. In the parenthood ~*' alone tbey'rt Laac-li• Moms, Woetlna Mome. SceOnwnM. Sinp Parents, Su~te Mothen.. JCMn\oCw~Y ~ khilor Fatbtti and S«Ond· Famlly Patnattb WhCtl did btint a = and Daddy I" IC> ('Om· Remember Whtft lht llOft ~ h~cnd BundJa of Joy! Now ~~ hi~ Test T.abe llbia. Ml'-1Nobe1 Priie sptffi\ Bank Oeftl-.. ,.,_. tted not to nun• ttieir'Ai:· tranc:. IM"''-Natural lJ alto an opck>n. u 1111 warm water dell\try system for tn· fanta with a aood brca t stroke. Another anc t1n1 label on tht American scene ii lhe oddlcr Achiever who attend\ one of the ehtc1 prc-Haf\ 11'1 ktndcrprtm that tacn arithmarrc from the Dow Jones avcrqes To pa)' the tutti.on the perent mu•t hock their l'I 1n1 s\abfes. TM ~uon who IJ"e us Vup- p1n. the Non-du l\t l O"f ffa1r and the four-spttd hair blo r t\n unkuMd a number of t<X'ial phenotntna. ~ Wi1 Kid En- lNCWlilllW who rctirt at lO as a mincM.,hna cum'*. Another 1 Stiaperwo•an. the mink-clad CNIMet wt.a is futcr lhan a ~ ... Fu ~inc. 8y da~ Ille .~ -t111i1 ••f'ICialou powtr to bold 1 bOlnl IMftU'I tn the pelm on OM hMd. .,. ..... , she dltl\11~ hmlttf 18 • ....... 9P'Ofl aftd ·MKN411'9Yt'I I ........ dinntt from I trrftdJ bliMrilr lllf '" ment blftttr' l\ ..... Md IWO ~ kkncu; . or-• "" Pf°'* O¥tf 05&4' Co.i DAILY N.OTi Mo;nday, Juty 3, 1981 • 'DIE rges ChlneSe soldiers fired cit apartments llUJNO. (AP} -Tbe U.S. Em-of rounds of bullets were fired into ..... MGiMlay that Chinne the Jianauomenwai apartment com· oliiert tar1e1ed A merican pound, came a day after the State 11• apartments when they Department announced the embassy Ire June 6 on a foreia.ncrs' had aiven refuae to two Chinese complex. and said it was dissidents, Fan1 Lizhi and his Wife. ~--· Li Shuxian. move wu likely to worsen A U.S. Embasay report on the tiem between the two oountries. shoot.in&. which charaed pre-medi· ~Y made ien1e by U.S. criticism talion, aid not link it with China's Cbina'a military crackdown on anaer over U.S. protection of Fang 11udent·led pro-democracy and Li. The new protest, in the form of a diplomatic note, challenges for the first time the Chinese account that the aoldiers were responding to sniper fire from within the apart· ment comJ)9und. Radio BeiJina said at the time that one soldier was killed and three injured, and plainclothC$ officers 'who went into the compound brQu&ht out a Chinese man they claimed was the sniper. The U.S. Embassy repor1 said the arrest appeared to be stqed, Jt also said the soldiers fired not only from the around but from a buildina across the street, where they had taken up positions the day before. ~ement The United States filed one • The lbootina. in which hundreds protest shortly after the shooting._ .-. ....... No witnesses reported seeing Chi· nese soldiers hit. A diplomat from another Western country confirmed that some bullets were fired from the opposite build· in' and whizzed over the heads of children who were playina on the floor in the foreianen' apartments. He said the shootiog ap(>Clred in- tended to intimidate foreigners. HUD aide ·report.edly filled shoes · bf secretary • WASHINGTON {AP) -The Jet-t IO Deborah Gore Dean, an aide lbe eecretary of Housing and Urban Development, didn't waste anv words. 4Dear Debbie," it began. .. HELP! .. Paul" · Paul Goulding. a fi nancial con- jultant who wu working on behalf ~ a community orpnization, said he was at the end of his rope that Debor•h Gore Deen 4wy day a few years qo. In his case, the plea did not work. ing Secretary ·Samuel. R. Pierce Jr. In many others, it did. They were then signed by a machine > An examination of Dean's cot-at her command. respC>ndence d uring her years at the Dean. 34, is at the center of ~si~~UD =~ut~~:YhTt,. ~~f~ investigations of influence peddling developen and well-connected Re-~t HUD, where she has been ident· publican c.onsultants. tfi~. as the person who co0:trolled R la · 1 r. f th h dred f milhons of dollars for housing re-e uve Y iew o e un . s o habilitation. Jettera released by HUD were Slgned !!'I Dean. However, accompanying She h~ refused to t~tify ~fory: a documents show that she gave the • congtCSS1onal panel 1ovest1gattng final approval. to many letters over H~D. citing. fler_ c~nsti.tutional right the sianature of her boss, then-hous-against self mcnmtnat1on. BDsh jams. four-day weekend's wort·h of activities in one day KENNEBUNKPORT, Maine (AP) -President ·Bush;. here to relax spent a long day ::sunday in which he jogged, worshipped, played tennis, swam, got carry-out food in his boat, went ocean fishing, played 1olf, then-fished again. .. I'm tired." he said as daylight ended . The 6S-rcar-old president, on the second ful day of an extended hol- iday weekend, made the most of his time to do .. fun stuff.' Bush began his marathan sporting day with a 20.minute j<>J, then at- tended local church services. After- wards, he i>layed tennis, swam. pi- loted bis speed boat to pick up take- out ·seafood. went ocean fishing, played nine holes of golf and cast for striped bass in the Kennebunk River. · At the Cape Arundel golf course. Bush hopped down the bank of the river with J.Olf pro Ken Raynor and spent a futtle half hour fishing from the banks. He had t:au&ht no fish earlier on the ocean either, he said. Asked if he planned any more activities for the evening,~ haggard- looking president said, .. No. I'm tired." ·Although the focus remained on relaxation, aides said Bush was stu-dyin~ briefing materials for next weeks trip to Poland. Hungary and tfie seven-nation economic summit in Paris. . And the vacation White House. like many others in the country. was eagerly awaiting Monday's expected Supreme Court abortion decision. Presidential press secretary Marlin Fitzwater said the White House woutd TCaCt to the decision - whichever way it goes -early 'this afternoon. . · Bush, who supported a woman's right to cho~ an abonion when he first ran for president in 1980, more recently has favored a constitutional amendment to ·outlaw the procedure. Bush began the ditY with a 6:30 a.m. 20.minute jog along back roads near his six-acre estate on a point jutting out into the Atlantic Ocean. Eastern strikes back by _tripling flights I " MIAMI (AP) -&stem Airlines 1111.eUiy tripled 111 number of flights Sunday as part of iu plan to come b9clt aa a leaner, more viable airline, • aooketman said. f.utem increased its daily fli~ts \o llS from 80, servina 49 cities 1tnsae.d of 27. The move was in line nwidt a rebvildina plan the carrier has submitted to the bankruptcy court. , "Everythina is ac>ina as planned F-.c're riaht on tlJ1tl to come back 'JUon1." said Eastern spoke$man Robin Matell, who added that Sun- day's schedule represents about lO percent of what the rebuilt Eastern will become. . By ~ember, Eastern plans to reach its aoaJ of 800 flights a day serving 77 cities, Matell said. The announcement provoked a demonstration by about 300 striking Eastern employees and supporters in San Francisco. "The messaae we've put out is that Eastern is starting to fly again without its unions, trying to give the public the impression the strike is over," said Dennis Hitchcock. a spokesman for Local 1781 of Inter- national Association of Machinists, one of the three unions on strike against the airline. Eastern o~rated 1,040 daily flights to 102 cities and had 30.000 employees before a massive strike of its machinists and pilots unions March 4. Currently, Eastern is operating FOR with about 8,000 employees. includ· in• JOO pilots who did not honor the stnke and lSO new pilots who have been trained since recruiting · began after the strike. Another SSO pilots are in training and a recruiting drive is still under way. Matell said. Air Line Pilots Association spokesman L.D. Willi•ms said East- ern'$ decision to increase its fliahts is unsafe because of the shonage of qualified pilots .. • • • THE NEWEORT REGAITA ·CHALLEN.GE '89! Join us in the kayak race that has something for everyone: . . . Tremendous 'fun . . . . Ghalleaaina competition for. all classes of kayakers, able bodied anCI disabled . · No one was hurt, but most foreianers evacuated the compound later that day. .. There is no doubt. in this em- baisy's opinion, that certafan apart- ments were dehberately targeted by the (anny)," the U.S. Embassy re~ port said. It said one U.S. defense attache's apartment w~s hit by 18 bullets. Ten other U.S. diplomats' apartments also were hit. Chinese auards stationed o·utside the U.S. Embassy, who normally carry only revolvers, were armed Monday with long-barreled auto· matic pistols and wo~ military helmets for the third straight day . The guards appeared in the new aear Saturday, when the embassy held an lndeJ>'.Cndenc.e DaY,,party for Amei<ican residents tn BetJtng. One guard said they would main- tain their ti~ter securit)' through Tuesday, which is Amenca's ln<fe- pendence Day. but refused to ex- plain why. t · \l,lt'OH'\I \ HHlt:t ·s ly The Asaodated P,ress 412 arrested In LA gang sweeps LOS ANGELES -Police arrested 412 people in weekend anti-gang sweeps and wounded two youths early Sunday while breaking up a gang fight, authorities said. Of those arrested, 221 were suspet.ted gang members. Officers of the .. Operation Hammer" task fore~ made the first sweep Friday night and arrested 235 people, including 136 su~pected gang members. The task force was diverted to Memorial Coltscum late Saturday when fights erupted after a concert that drew thousands of people, police said. The concert featured the New Edition, M.C. Hammer, Moe Dee, Tony! Toni! Tone! and performer Patti LaBelle. • · Officer wounded In ambush .attack LONG BEACH -Investigators canvassed the neighborhood where a gunman apparently ambushed a pair of uniformed officers, one of whom was slightly wounded in the incident, police said. The assailant escaped. The gunman apparently filed a false report of a family disturbance and then waited for police to arrive. Several shots were fired at the rear of a police cruiser as Officers Leslie Soto and James Craig res~nded to the call on Baltic A venue at about 3 a.m. Sunday, police Sgt. Bill Snow said. Soto immediately ducked, although one of the f9Unds grazed the top of her head before she was able to speed away, Snow said. Child survives two-story fall LOS ANGELES -13-month-old boy on Sunday was being treated for a bump on his head after surviving a fall from a second-story balcony to. the concrete below, police said. Michael Marin remained in stable condition at Children's Hospital in Hollywood, a nursing supervisor said. Michael's mother, Yolanda Solas. told police she was in the bathroom when an older child opened the door to the balcony of the family apartment. Police said the boy climbed out of his stroller, crawled out onto the balcony. then tumbled to the ground below. '\ \'1'10 '\·\I, HR I t :t ·s l Floodlng continues In Southeas~ . -Thunderstorms packing 90 mph JUSts roared through northern Texas late Sunday. 'Ind rivers continued to nse in Louisiana and Mississippi. The flooding, the aftermath of record rainfall from Tropical Storm Allison. could continue for weeks, meteorolgists said. Dallas fire efficials tteeived reports of two tornadoes touching down. About a dozen mobile homes near Lake Worth were knocked ofl foundations and struck by win~-blown trees. There were no immediate repons of injuries. In Louisiana, at lC'ast 700 homes and numerous roads remained flooded, with scattered storms and showers replacing the unremitting rain of the previous five days. One town got nearly 29 inches of rain in le.s th.an a week. An earthen dam in another rural part of the state was reported near collapse. and most residents near it bad eva~uated. Crowe to leave Joint Cfllefs of Staff WASHINGTON -Adm. William J. Crowe Jr .. chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. said Sunday be plans to retire from the military father than accept President Bush's request to serve another term as the nation's top military leader. Crowe will retire on Sept. 30, at the end of his second t~o­ year term as chairman, he said on NBC-TV's 0 Moet The Press." Crowe also said Sunday that dest>ite the "change afoot" in the Soviet Un.ion, an qreement soon on reducu~1 the two s!l_PCrpowen' long-ran.se nuclear arsenals is ~nlikely. "My own instincts are tnat 1t wilr require protracted negotiations," said Crowe. who has just returned from an I I-day tour of Soviet military facilitiC1 . Flnt black Catholic service held WASHINGTON -The founder of the new African American Calholic Conareption says he will adhere to Catholic tcachinp on issues such as abortion and (>riest celibacy while incorporating African and southern black relijious traditions. The Rev. George A. Stallings celebrated the Jmani Temple's first service on Sunday before about 2,000 people at Howard Uni~mity Law School. S~ said "he created the church because he bclieYn the establish- ment •Catholic ch~h bad failed to meet the spiritual and culturaJ needs of ~ka. Imani means "faith" in Swahili. But Cardinal James A. Hickey of Wuhinaton has condemned Stallings' plans for the new chureh and forbade Stallinas to celebrate mass . . Plane crashes Into homes ANGEL FlRE, N.M. -A small plane crashed into two mobile homes and e1ploded in Oames shortly after takeoff from this resort town Sunday. All four oeoole aboard were burned, one fatally. No one was in the trailers. Colfax Cowity lberifra dispatcher Pat Osterman said. The plane failed to pin altitude after takeoff f10m Anacl Fire Airport . Oseermaii laid all four ~ were able \0 aet out of the plane, but one womab flliU in\O IOme bununa fuel and was killed . nou1 u """ '' M 1-. \ · 1 111 . H H~a M10 ovrrntQflt tolN\ ro S pm POf 8 .... ttll•fl<! qz S'I ..... tow 106 06 IUumon< '1 SI 8Jyt'1e 10'1 74 110'' ... 111·:\ \ 0 ·1·1·:n From Daly Piiot wire services WASHINGTON -Here's how area House· mem- bers were recorded on maJor roll call votes in the week ending June 30 The Senate ~as not in session. The House Fla1 ralln1 By a vote of 411 for and 5 against. members approved·a .. sense of the House" resolution (H Res 186) denouncing the recent U.S. Supreme Coun dec1s1on that ovenumed a Texas law making 11 a cnmc to desecrate the Amencan nag. "Burning the Stars and tnpcs 1s not what our Founding Fathers had 1n mind when the}' guaranteed fr~dom of expression ... said supponer Butler Derrick. D-S.C. Opponent Ted Weiss. D-N.Y .. called nag burning ::repulstv~ and abhor:rent" but not grounds for limittng the poltt1cal expression of even those with whose views we most fundamentally disagree ... Members voung )'CS supported the rcsoluuon. Robert Dornan. R-38 -Yes William Danncmeyer. R-39 -Yes Christopher Cox. R-40 -Yes · Dana Rohrabacher. R-42 -Yes Ron Packard. R-43 -Yes Hate crtme 1tatl1tlc1 By a vote of 368 for and 47 against. the House sent BIRTHS ( .. ,.,"" '""'"' C•I• tutt•• rirtno l....._..u .. 1(11\q It•" lO\A~fl\ l A A"P9" M.ttyw1•e- Monrov1A Montro-lk> Monttrry N"•~t NP ""POfl 9, .-: h O AIU.An(I Onl••K> p...,,. SP"'"J> ,. .. ~ P.not-1 \Mt.1'1"<HWP) \M ""'' l..on a ... ~"'"'° s .... C..01 •• s .... o....,., \.tn "'~'\(0 \.tn Joy UOl~A~ s ........ 1 ... iw. s ...... ''"' 1•n Lui\ Ob••OO \.AnlA .-.AAt•• \""IA Mon-u Stoonon IAh~V-y IOU.ti'<~ Wesrwood YO.,mttf Illy ., St I I Sii 68 SI O S8 96 '' 114 to() 81 64 I) 41 '14 SS 'IS H 116 " l>b SJ 110 It; .. 60 II S4 qJ II() I°' t;8 88 H ,. so '14 S4 14 SI '4 SS 'I() \4 I~ SO '" s' a& s• 14 '" 6' H ,. so ,, " 71 S6 111 SI 11 ., 11 411 11 Ml 81 Sii II J(J llO S8 14 61 II 4. U.S. temps Hi9f'J MlO o..ern.91>1 IOWI 10 S pm "°' AOMene,ft••t ""'°"''""'°" Alt>M')' N t ~·qu.. A-...cown NftM•llO IV>enotq A\rlt'VI .. At!M>I• AllM'il< Coty "'"'"' 1.-......,.f '"'°" l 0U9" lol""JI I··~ ........ o loolt' l o at on ··~pool l tnwnh ~ lull#M> lul l•notor 111 C '1M ICMI< ... ( ,,, .. ,~ ( ht'ff'""" Cn.<~ C •n( •nt'WC' cw.. ... ...,., ( OIOtMIO \1>9\ '""""°'~ s ( <Olun~t CtA OH,.vf"t 0 f'\MO.,.,,.\ Df'ltr.>tf Ouk.Jen fl 1'110 (1-•n• £1~ 106 " 84 bl 88 58 101 61 87 59 89 &S BJ S6 71 61 81 /I 87 l>O 98 If) B6 bl BB IQ B6 H 80 10 8' &• '!() 41 90 46 "' &J q) SI 8S S6 118 6S 8S bS ,. 10 8' Sb 87 l>O 74 Ml 81 1>2 '1 bS 88 62 i~ ~~ 81> 1>6 es bJ 81 S4 t08 71 BJ SS 82 59 to the Senate a bill (HR I 048) requanng the Department of Justice to begjn collecting and publtc1Z1ng data on "hate crimes," those motivated by d1shke of the victim's race. religion. ~xual orientation or ethnic stock. Opposition durtng debate was directed at includtng homosexuals 1n the recordkeep1ng requirement. Law- makers who wanted 10 exclude them complained they could not do so because the bill was betnJ considered under a shortcut procedure 1ha1 proh1b1ted amend- ments. 8111 supponcr Gerry Studds. D-Mass .. said "hate- mott vated cnme 1s intolerable. but until we have accurate sta11s11cs .. we will remain unarmed against it." Opponent Wilham Danncmeyer. R-Fullcnon. said "sexual preference has no business being elevated to the same status ac; race. color. rchg1on or national ongtn ... Members voting yes supported the bill. Doman -No Dannemeyer · No Cox -Yes Rohrabachcr . Y cs Packard -Yes Supercolllde r faadtng 8) a vote of 93 for and 330 against, the House refused to cut fiscal 1990 spcndtng for the planned superconducting Super C"olltder from $200 million to S90 m1llton. The amendment was offered 10 an apptopriat1ons bill (HR 2696) later sent to the Senate. II sought to block OHITl'..\Klt:S Orange eo .. t OAILY PILOT /Monday, July 3, f989 Al ("9<'~ fVMUYtlf' ,,.,~, '""}0 fl"911•11 Fknt Foit S""I" ro" W•"i"" Coood!M>CI OrM'd Juntw-·" C.1.M'Cl •olf>•<I• """' , .... , G••tn '"~ Gt '"'n'"""' o """ c HtHfttbutQ H.-..tlr>tO .... ~.,.,,.. Honc>Vu HOUUb'\ HV'CIY~ Ai. I~• J«h<>" M u J..:h ,,,.,,... ~"" "-·· ..... LI'• -.rtq'OO l.ncoln l·ll ..... O<. lOU'•-lu<M>t• M.t<l>I' M~'°" Mt'dlO<O M""'P'°"•l Mo...., 8".o<n M t<>l•nd·Of'J.-u4 M 'tw4l\Jill,.,. Mph St'""' Mot>1•t Mont90""'ty NA•IW.U N•wO<IHnJ N"N 1at~ City II U 11 .. 74 47 .. "' le 4 1 86 "° " "' I S 1>/ •1 l>S '1 S7 Ill 61 81 48 le 61 9) St 811 "° 'IO Sii 84 .. IJt IS ,. ,, ,, .. , ... I) 74 " 10 SI 60 17 •S 11 •• 90 "' IJt 1>9 10 1>4 106 IJ l!S h 1 90 II() II) •• 86 II 86 11 I I l 11 llS 61 ,4 /I llS /1 llS 10 78 10 8t ,, '° 111 Oti.noo ,.,,.,,,..,., '#Qf•.t ,~, .. ,,_,,.. 1'1t1)0ulQ" Poe'"'"° lll<hmoncl llOM>04<• llo<rwn~• N " lloOIO<d St Lc>uo1 SI'"""""' v I \K>u• f .... ~""'"° .... .,,.. \9ttnqf.-'" \pt"'9f....., M \)"MUH '-~~ ,_ \t "11\Dq Toi.<Jo l~U l uuon '""• ,~,.II") w.-.o \A.l•V'·~t~M tJ ( ""'""" ..... ,, \A/t<f't 'A,_,.. \ w f'\ 9 .. ,.,. Wrtft"!!"P'Jt D_... ,it. 'YA V0iUr'9\l.)w,.. '"™ Tide!!t llt I• 11 66 84 M !II 6S 111 8J 86 "° 90 H 8S 58 I) St. 81 SI 8'1 hS 81 I 84 7S .,, "" 86 ,,,q 1;. ... llJ l>S 8S 1>5 86 ·~ 8• II "" 1• 88 bl '" ,,, 1)9 I J 81 • ' H~ '· 91 ,, K4 lttr ""' 'l 8• M> "' I l 111 Sii 81 H Hf t• 86 H I 10 77 Energy Department plans to ~tart bu1ldtng t~ Super Collider at Waxahachie. Tex. High-speed pan1cle col- hs1ons set up by sc1ent1s1s in the 53-mile-long cm:ular tunnel would be designed to ) 1eld d1c;co' en es about the nature of matter and energy. Sherwood Boelhert. R-N Y .. who supported the lUI. said he feared the prOJCCt would result in "im- poverishing the rest of science to build what could turn out to be an empty unused tunnel... .. Ronald Cole man, D-Tex.. said the issue was whether America would build the colhdcr or "pull back and take second plac.c to the Japanese and the EuroJ>('an!. once again." Members voting yes wanted 10 deny cons1ruc11op money for the Super Colhder Doman -No Dannemeyer · No Cox -No Rohrabachcr -Yes Packard -No Dn1 tetttng • By a vote of 204 for and 212 against. the House rejected an amendment requinng random drug tesuog of federal personnel who administer foreign aid pro- grams. (n part, the measure sought to give urgency a nd the force of law to a State Department plan to begin testing employees for substance abuse. The vote oc- curred as the Ho use sent to the Senate a bill (HR 2655) authorizina about S23 billion in overseas assistance in •• TIOMMy ,,,., ~ ' 1!> • "' ' 1 htt "'9f' tt S2 • ni • 0 S«ond lo-4 2• D m 2 • $econcJ "'O'• 10 33 D m t 3 ,,,,.. ""'' ..-1, tr.,;1..ty .. , ft,.,,. 0 ,,.\ ,, , ""'' f Uf>M"Ut ~ s •6 ,, ~ ~ ~" -1106 pm tn"" moon ,,..,,., ''MJly At ft 0 I • fT'I M"1\ \f"U Iii 8 !>8 0 "°' n t Y'\ •1~"°4'¥' .. , • ')A • '" "'° ,,.,, .., .. 4t, p '" Sm og r t>port '"' Aor Qu..11~ M..,,._nt 0.>Ul<t P'f'O <0 rnodf't;ltr .. , Ql.Jtll•ty tn ~ 0<.....,.. C ovnty ''""' • l'OllVl<lltl( Su.n OMO 1..-1 OI •1 -~.oltt>ful _., ..... I)' on , ..... <O.ltM ~H ...,I" a l'SI t1' fiscal 1990-91 . Gerald Solomon. R-N.Y .. said .. if State Department personnel arc ustng 1lleg.I drugs, we have a right to kbow about 11." Opponent Lawrence Smith. D-Aa., said the Su- preme Coun has ruled Congress can require dnll k:ltiQ& onl_Y of ~orkers 10 dangerous JObs such as pifots aad tram operators Members voting )CS supponed mandatory """-,., lesttng of forct&n aid admin1straton. Doman -Yes Dannemcyer -Y~ CoA -Yes Rohrabacher -Yes Packard -Yes The Assembly SACRAMENTO -Here 1s the 66-3 roll call by ~ which the state A,sembly passed the $49.4 billion bu.diet for the 1989-90 fiscal year Wednesday. ' Dennis Brown. R-58 -Yes Ross Johnson, R-64"-Yes John uwis. R·6 7 -Yes Nolan Fnnclle, R-69 -Yes Gil Ferguson, R-70 -Y~ Dons Allen. R-71 -Ye1 Cun Prin&Je, R-72 -Yes .. SOUTH COAST MEDICAL CENTER Jue 5 Karen and Thomas Linden. Laguna Jue I t Bett} and Harold Olson. In. tnc. OO) Jane 13 Tina and James Baum Huntington Beach. bo}' Oscar-winning director Franklin Schaffner : Beach. boy Carolen and James Sadler. South Laauna. boy JHe. Vicki and Gary Bond. Laguna Niauel. boy K.Jm and Stefan Herkewm .. Laguna Niauel. boy Jue 7 Caroline and Charlie Thompson. Capistrano Beacll, boy Jue t Mary K.ay a nd Greaory Wise. Dana Point, girl JHe It ~thryn and Roe Frost, Laguna N11uel, boy Debra and David Miller. Mission Viejo. boy ~ WOMEN'S HOSPITAL SADDLEBAClt HOSPITAL Jue 17 Heidi Martenc and Anthony Ra) LoMenzo. Costa Mesa. boy SAINT JOSEPH HOSPITAL May U Pona and Tou Vue Xiong. Santa Ana. 11r1 FOUNTAIN VALLEY REGIONAL HOSPITAL May H Patnc1a and Rob Bolltnaer, Foaun- \lin Valley, boy Cynthia and Bruce Campbell. Hunt- inaton ~ach. girl May ti Wendy and Leonard Takahaski. f oun\lln Valley, boy Dianne and uw1s McVay. Costa Meta, boy Beverly Eastvedt and Joel Burdette. Huntinaton Beach. 11rl Mar H Bonnie and Coleman Watkins. Fountain Valley, 1Jrl Pamela and Joseph Valenti. Cos\I Maa. boy MaJ ,. !berry and Howard Mosley, Hunt· inston Beach airl Judith and konald Bruno. Hunt- iftlton Beach. bo) W-eua Oermame and ladheddin Nur, lrvuie. tirl Maf 11 Cynthil and O.ntel Cu.tor, Hunt-= =ho:n~ld Scorallc. Cotta Mela, prl Sbirtey and David Ftnke. Foun&ain Valley, boy Undl and Patrk k McConnell. HuMi"llOD Beach. ~ Petrina Branon end Silvador CandeLlrio. Runtinaton lllcb, boy BOAO IUMOIUAL:"°'"'AJ., ..... Dawn and l:Mne Wf.,,.rw. HunlintlOll ee;:. fr1 ~bia ancl Luce Gilbert. CoilM -k:rif ~J KCuti ZiiiJcr-:JiY M; tiij lAA• Md Olvid Piaanli. Hat· lDllOft te.ch. boy J191 It Mlti• and Ronald laybaa, H--._., ~ ... 0..ill OM1a. "····· >--:. ww .. OU\. lrillll. Michelle and Ronald Pere1. Laguna Hills. girl Jue 14 Mane and Robi:rl Demmond. La~una Hills. OO) J uha and Richard Lowe, Hunt· ington Beach. girl Chnstie and Jeffrc) Irvine. Hunt· 1ng1on Beach. bo) Mona and Magdy Shawk). Foun1a1n Valley, girl JHe IS Becky and Randy K1pphn. El Toro. 'rl ~bra and George Mc.i\dams. Costo Mesa, bOy Shelly and Enc Olson. Co'ita Mesa. girl KJm and Frank uwalsk1. C osla Mesa. girl Gail and C'hnstophcr Proctor, El Toro. boy l'amcla and Donald Hou('hcn. Hunttngton Btach. bo~ Rebecca and Roger L~)ton. Uun1- 1ng1on Beach, girl Jane 1' Ann-Marie and Rnlph \. arratu. Costa Mesa. girl Juae 17 L)'nn and Peter Jutcau. Corona dd Mar. boy Jan and Mark Pick.rel. Ir' me. bo)' JHe 18 Kerry and Dr. Neil Banh. Corona dcl Mar. boy From Daffy Piiot wlr~ servk~s ANTA MONICA. -Acadcm)· award wtnn1ng directo r Franklin J. Schaffner. "'hose 1970 film "Patton" gnmered SC'' en Oscars mclud1ng best motion picture. died Sunda}' morn- ing of cancer. He was 69. Schaffner. whose film career en- compassed more than 40 years, had JUSI completed "Welcome Ho me," for Columbia Pictures: said publicist Michael Roth. The producer and past president of the Directors Guild of America died at home. chaffncr's portfolio included such popular movi~ u "Papillon.'' the 1973 htt starring Steve McQueen and Dustin Hoffman; the 1968 sc1- ene1: fiction film "Planet of the Apes," stamng Charlton Heston and Rodd)' McDo"all; and "The 8o)s from Brazil," <itamng Gregory Peck. His films gamtred 28 Academ} .\"'a rd nom ma lions A ctor B~n W right, w as In 'Th~ Sound of Music' Eng., and studied acuns at the Ro)'al Academy of Dramatic Ans. He began acuna professionally to 1934 10 London's West End thcat'" and came to Hollywood 1n 1946, said his fnend Joe Band1llc. Wright began his U.S. acuna ca- reer 1n radio shows such as "Have Gun. Will Travel" and "Sherlock Holmes." His fi lm credits include "Judge· ment at Nuremberg," the MArlon Brando version of ··Mutiny on the Bount}'." "Witness for the Pros- ecution." "Desert Rats" and "Prince of Pla)crs." Wnfht also dtd '01ce-ovcr work. 1ncludmg D1sney'i. .. IOI Oalma- 11ons" and "The Jungle Book." He had recently completed Disney's soon-to-bcrelc:ised "The Little Mermaid." Amona his 1cle"1S1on credits are several episodes of "The Tw1haht Zone:· "Hogan's Heroes," "Pcrrr. Mason," "Qutnc) .. and "Bonan1a. · Band1lle said John Brlst~r, not~d animation fl/mak~r MINNEAPOLIS -John TylCt Bnster, a filmmaker and arts educator whose an1ma1cd movies won awards at the Cannes Film Festival. died Wcdncsda)' of m m· Melinda anJ Richard Tyler. Irvine. boy .--~~~~~~~-"-~~~~~~~~~~~~~---f Lisa and Del Hovden. Huntington Beach. girl JHt It Pamela and R ichard Brown. lrv1nt'. 1irl re. Juha and Gregory Lon&. Newport Beach. boy J.-eH Cheryl and Samuel 1lvem'lan. New· port Beach. boy Deborah and Victor Hausman1n er. El Toro. boy Laurie and teven C'onc<i. lrvtne. boy Shen and Daniel Bclhna. Co ta Mesa. a.irl Jean and Gary Gra1~cr. n ANNIVERSARY SALE All Plants 20%0// Clemente. boy J ... t1 l~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;;~~~~~~~i__~~ Chri1tinc and Jeffrey Balabiln. San ClemeotCi boy O.rla and Ri(hud Joy«", Fountain Valley, b9,y , .. u Tamara and Jeffrey Ward. Leauna N&auel, afrl Jane and Matthew Brqa. Irvine • tfia ud JiJaa Amacn. El Toro. ~~ . N(WJ)Ort H1yaifi1. OIU A llmouslne seNlce for all of your ~rsonot and ~ofesslonat needs. Cal for r...vattons: (1 ) 1 aJ:; II Jiiiili--Dlftl~~~ ... , ... , 111111111 •• ~:~ 0111un. lnlM. plicattons of AIDS. He was 3~ One of his first films. "Spanish Peanuts," 1s a stOJ>-1Cl1on animated chorus hoe of peanuts dancing 10 a Laun rhythm It hns been shown on HBO. NBC's "Saturd~ N1Jtt1 L1,e" and won the Silver Cup Award at Cannes. Brister, a native of Dover. Ohio. graduated with honors from the Minneapolis College of Art and De- sign in 1973. He was an arti t·in· residence at schools throuJhout the country and la\l~t filmm:sking and animation 1echn1ques. Gary H~ndl~r, tax attorn~y t o stars BEVERLY HILLS -Gary Hen- dler. a tax attome}' who worked for some of the b1gacst mo' 1c stars 1n Hollywood and later became head of Tn-Star Pictures. d1C'd Thu""1a) ol C'an~r He wa~ 50 A spec1alts1 1n en1cna1nmen1 and tax law. his clten1s included Robert Redford. Barbra Streisand. Sally Field, Scan Connery, Goklic Hawa, Michael Camt. Nick Nolte, ElUl!n John and Ella FalZ.leTlld- He JOtned Tri-SW as president and chief opcrauna offiCCT' in 1983, and under his leadership the Oedtl· ma stud io turned out such hi u at "The Natural." starrin1 Redford, and "'Places in the Heart." Jtarrina Miss Field. Ht reslJl)ed at, the studi~s bou two years later to become an ioM• pendent produ~r. a ca.,.Oty in which he continued to work with Tn-Star. Dlr~ctor MlcMI~ Lupo Michele Lupo, who dltCCtcd more than 50 Westerns. adventure filma and comcd1cs. died T UC1day in Rome aner a Iona illness at • 56 Lupo was best known for lus films starnna Italian comedian Bud pencer that tncluded "'An Extraler- rcstnal Shenff' and "They Called Ham Bulldozer ... .·#h!' .;.· ........ !.;,:..:·"!!•-4!·~))~ ..... !·''!' .. ~·~· ....... ~ ... ,.!\!.'-.~ AT Check the Classifieds for Come To The Orange County Fl and · it the ~Piii Ind pend nt Booth details. boat f atalltles down but congestion up .. --------------- below 1,000. The number ot boeu, meanwhile, bas increased from Ins than 6 million to an estimated 17.3 miUion. But not everyone believes the fatality statistics arc a renection of a safer boatina environment. "I dare say the waters arc probably less safe than they were 20 years aao," said Michael Sciulla, vice president of Boat Owners Association of the United Sta&es., which represents 310,000 recreational boat own- ers. "f hear from many boat owners that they arc fcarf ul of drunk boaters, that the)'. arc fearful of boat owners who don't know the rules of the road, and they're fearful because of the increasina conacstion of boats on our waterways." And conaestion. it seems. will onl)I get worse. In 1961, the Coast Guard estimated that there were S.8S million pleasure crtfts in U.S. waters. The estimate for 1988 was 17 .3 million, a thrtefold increase. . "Boa~111 .. is approKhina. ~ S20 bi~on industry," Sc1ulla said. Seventy-five m1lhon Amcncans hop in a boat (at least) once a year. It's become an extraordinarily popular puume over the past few decades.·· The boauna expJosion over the past 2S years may explain another Cout Guard .statistic that stands in stark contrast to the declinina fatality file: the risina number of reported accidents and reported injuries. Reported boatina irtjuries increased from 2, 757 ·in I 98S to 3,476 three -years later. Boating offitials, how- ever, are quick to point out that only about 10 percent of the non-fatal marine accidents arc reported. "When the fiaurcs chanae, it's not easy to tell if there are more or less accidents or better reporting or other factors. It's hard to draw conclusions," said Albert Marmo, assistant chief of the Coast Guard's auxiliary, boatina and consumer affairs division. Even if conaestion is cau · 1 mQrc accidents and irtju~es, most e~perts aarce the steadily dedinina fatality rate 1s 1mj)rcss1ve. . . The first turning point in rccrcauonal maryne safety came ~n 1971 when Congress passed a swcep1n1 safety law that included mandatory federal standards for boat construction. In the J I years before the law was enacted, the annual fatality rate was 19.8 per. I 00,000 boats. Over the next 17 yc;~rs. the average fatality rate was less than 10 per I 00,000 boats. After dipping dramatically in the first five years following e~actment of the federal law, from 20.2 to 9.9 per 100,000 boats, the fatality rate leveled off through the late 1970s. Coast Guard Capt. Bill Griswold, chief of the C~st Guard's auxiliary, boatina and consumer afTa1!'5 division attributes much of the recent decrease to pubhc lwarcneu proarams targeting drunkenness at sea. )\ L L S -r 0 R E S 0 f_) E N U N T I L G P . M . , J U LY 4 t h Nation awaiting aBortion decision 4~ OF LY CLEARANCE . . . D SPECIAL PURCHASES . ·. mrr•&m•-•-eompue our prica and see for )'OUJ"leJf -they ateMOr~rlbu thelcJWaC prKles edvertiaed by Ill)' local, io-stoct rmiler. O.&........ . .. If wilhin 30 dliyl <:I your Home Express purdme, ,_ find any ilem -stock ed- wr1iled elawhae bias. we11 nlund the di~! h's thl( simple. • GREAT BUY-PANASONIC c.,e.e a11, ... Jiiiy 4dt,... wltja Pnss a.k's ftl'y .tr ...... CMKOl'der. Its JO.second record del~ lets you act in the picture too! With high-speed abuuer, 6:1 momlrMCro lens, low li&bl recording. time; lapse and more!'Uses SlandanfVHS cassettes. P\1-400. Camcorder baueries also IV&iJable, $38-$63. Plly •little• $40 • moath. · COMPARE OVRPRJCE '\ WASHINGTON {AP) -The Su- preme Court is poised to give its latest word on abortion riahts, which may take the form of a momentous ruhng or a brief announcement that more time is needed to ponder the fate of legal abortions. The court's 1988-89 term ends today, and the justices must say something about their most closely watched controversy of the J 980.. They arc being asked in a Mis· soun case to reverse the court's l-973 decision lcplizing abortion. Many, including some court em- ployees, had expected the term t~ end Thursday, but scores of part1· sans who had gathered at the court's Capitol Hill building left disap- pointed. "Chinese water torture," is what Molly Yard, prcsideot of the Na- tional Organ1ution for Women. called the anxiety-filled wait. · Three cases in which decisions arc pending stand between the court and It s three-month summer recess. In each, the court must announce a decision or order the case rc-argued~ If it chooseSr the latter course, a new round of arguments would be held in the cou{t term that begins in October. with an- nouncement of a decision likely in 1990. Abottion-ri&hts advocates fear the court will order the Missouri case, called Webster vs. Reproductive Health Services, reargued next term and simultaneously grant review to up to three other abortion disputes pendina before the justices. That likely would be read as a signal that the justices arc con- templating a major retreat from the 1973 rulina 1n Roe vs. Wade, which said women have a constitutional rijht to abortion. The coun has yet to take any ·•ction in the three cases -from Illinois, Ohio and Minnesota -that involve state rqulations malcina abortions harder to act. Roe vs. Wade itself was a case that had to be araued twice before a decision was announced. The court hears arguments in about I SO cases each term, and since 1977 bas held over at least one cue each year for rearaument the followina term. The 1973 rulina said a woman's decilion to have an abortion durina the first three months of prqnancy must be left to her and her doctor. It said states may ~late abortions durina the second tnmcster only to protect the woman's health, and may take steps to protect fetal life in the third trimester. State authority to reaulate abortions after the fint trimester was not made aMc>lute, however. In the past decade, about 1.5 million lepl abortio_ns have ~n performed each year. Mother jalled In deaths of her daughters Parents could pass on hquslng equity ly JOHN CUNNI'' ,, __ NEW YO.RK -First-time home buyers are on a financial treadmill: Unable to afford a 20 percent down payment, they rent instead, payi ng out IO much each month thal httle remain• for savings. So common is 1hc situation that nearly everyone knows someone caua.hl in that l:Jind. Stati1tic1 sctm to document it. Momeownership for households in the 2S-29 age gro up fell lo 36.2 percent in 1988 from 43.J percent 1n 1980. The primary reason for 1his trend. which directly contradicts the dearly held notion that opponunity keeps growing in America. is the inability of renter households to raise cash for· a down payment and closing costs. That conclusion was reached this ll I 'I I \I . I I 'DS month in a study by the Joint Center for Housln& Studies of Harvard Uni- versity, which su~tcd the dis- tribuuon of econom ic opponuni1y in American society was thereby becomina polarized. It wasn't the firs! time that con- clusio n was reached. In fact, U.S. Senate hearings were held thili month on a National Affordable Ho usina Act, .which seeks to break the stalemate in a manner fair to both renters and homeownen. No one proposal is likel y to iet things moving again in 1he lower Iler of housing markets, ahhough it is widely qrced that federal tax incen- ti ves and mortgage subsidi" and outriaht government arants migh1 spur some activity. But in an age in which privatiza- tion attracits considerable a11ention. linle of that attention is dircclcd to a reasonable and intelligent solution that is so private it remains within the family. Simply $lated, the solution is the op~rtunity for those with housing equity. such as parents, to pa•s on thal equity 10 offspring. The Justice' of it Is unassallable. The reason some· current owners have such a large supply of equity 1s 1nnation. 11 is one of the most important reasons. if not the pri- mary reason, why their c hildren can. not afford to buy. The tax system 5tems to approve A portion of equity can be trans· fcrrcd by the owner w11hout tax complications. In fa ct. ,hert could be tax advantages sho uld the o~·ner borrow on a primary rtsiderice 10 finance an offspring's home. The money could be 1n the rorm of a gjll: or cins, or it could be as a loan. In the latter case, the rationalt seems impcrcable: It would help a loved one, it would be a well-secured loan, it would mean a high yield to the le nder. In fact. where 1n the vast universe or 1nves1mcnts would a Lender - call him or her an 1nvC1;tor or saver ir you prefer -find a sounder u~ for long-tcrn1 money? Mcirtgagc money. remember. is lcnl ill JO percent or mort. The t1m1ng may be propitious too. Many parents arc beginning to think of the day when they can retire, and that happy dream is almost Instantly fol!Qwcd by the worrisome topic or re11remenl income. Or1nge Cout OAIL.V PILOT/Monday, July 3, 1989 ' A7 DI Sh. C \1.1.,U \H Financial objectives seminar on July 8> .. • " " .. •• Morning and ai'ternOOn seminar!> on .. Stra~sles To Help Yoa Ae•leve l Voar Flnaaclal Goal•" will br ht'ld at Empire or An1enea Fcdcraf Savinp /,, Banit,·, Fountain Valley office at QU29 Garfield A\t' a1 JO a.m . and 1 p.m. .1 on July 8. ·rhe scminan. v..tll be led b) I-lank SchullhC'.1 or Kcmpt'r financ11I I Ser' lle!t and a financial consultant n:prescn11ng E111p1rc National Sccur1t1es. ·< ·rhe sem1n11.~ art' free. For. resi..·rva11on!> and 1nformat1on, t all 964-2691 . ..llvw to Star1 and SuccCt"d 1n Yo1Jr (]\\II ( onsul11ng Business" is the ·• title or a ~u;~shop being offered thl!t summer b )' Or.1n&t' l~oas1 College's (·o mn1unH) Ser' IC't' Office. Ttie v.ork!>hup l!t sla1ed for 9 am. lo 3 pm. Jul\ 8 1n ()('C's .Science ~ Lcc1urc Hall 102 Rcg1!ttrat1on fee 1!t S3"1 1n advanct··and S44 at the door. • \\'ork!>hOp lc1.lurer Jt·fTrc} Figler 1s a 111a1l-ordcr hus1nt'\S owner. 11c also direct!> a !tUCCe!t'>ful \'Onsult1 ng pral·tiC't' . Topics 1nclu<lt· Hov. 10 grt started. lav.s. cblitS. l1t•ensc!t, ~orking·from }(Jur home. n1arket1 ng }Our pracu ce. and 111urdelinc:o. of consulting. Reg10,ter al tl1t• tollegi.-'!> S1udt'nt Crn1er Budding or al 43~-5880. ··Your ldea!t Cun Make You Rich'. 1-lov. 10 ~larke1 'l'o ur Toy. Game. (..1f\, Cand) and 1\lo,elt~ ln vent1uns" ~111 be from 9 a.m. 10 4 p.m . July 8 111 Roon1 108 ofO<~r ··s Counsc:l1ng and .\d111 t'i~1ons Bu1ld1ng. Registration fee 1s SJ9. Workshop leclurer. Dar} I ( agle. has de\rlopcd and de!>1gned products and par kag1ng ror lfasbro, Pla)\l ool. Casio Ideal To\s and A\On. \\ orkshop top10 1ncludr: "5clltng a1 trade shov.. tr.i.dc pubt1cat1ons and d1recH1nci.. J1cC'ns1ng. protecting ~our idea using cop~nghts and confidential. d1'>1.·lo~urc lorm!>. preparing a cvmpet1t1\'C prestntat1on using pro totypes, graphic d1spla}s and video. preparing a hu~inl'S!o plan. license agr~.fl'll'nts. IO)!> and trl·nd!> and market research. Acuon TR . .\('S v.·111 Ix holdrn~ liem1nars o n "Psycbology ol Selling" at fi.31} tu 9:30 p.n1 . Jul) JO at lfi8_ Langle) A'·C' .. fr,1ne SC'm1nar ror thc- "P syl·hology of Pboenill'. .. v.111 Ix• 0:30 to 4·30 p.m . Jul\ 11 a1 the same ad<lrc:u. For rnorc 1nforma11on. call 161-6460. · John Ehler' v.111 ~peal. un "Using 1\-!all:lmum Entropy Spectral Aaaly1l1 for Trading the Stock aod Commodity Markets" al O p m. July r I. a1 the Foundation for !hl' <itud ~ ot ('}ck·s T1ci>.ct pn..:t'S for the dinner and lecture arc Sl5 ror the public and S:?O ror n1l·n1tx·r\ or the Fnundauon The deadline ror re'i{'r\'al1o n~ i~ Mo nda). Jul} 10. The Fuunda11on i'i located 1n thC' Fluor Da niel Hu1ld1ng at 3333 ~l ichelwn IJnvc. Suite ~!fl Ir' 1n('. Ehlers 1!> th(' author or tht• MES.\ I f\1axunum Entrop} ~p('("lral Analysis) software program. 1-fc 1~ an t'ns,1nt'er spcc1ahzing 1n sys1c-m design and 1nrorma11on theol) l omb1n1ng h1 '1 ll-<:'ht ncal experience. computer pro&fllm- n11 ng l'.\pcnc11cc and signal processing knov.·ledgc alloWs ror a scientific approach to technical analysis. t\lso. he hali ~·nucn on :he thcor)' of cycles . .:)clc~ application for 1rad1nj. and'computcn7ed trading programs. He has bL"t'n a commodit} trader since I 918. ' .•.•. C.ll 'l'OPIC'S Hand-held computers look like calculators and func11onahl)'. The ncwes1 hand hrlds are capable of a much broader ran.Jc: or func- tions. Both Casio, whJCh has an exce"llcnt reputation with its watches 1nd calculators and Sharp. which has a tint' of laptop computen, h.ave ne w unns on the markeL They're." both com p~~it1vel y pnC't'd. In lh<' s-iso to SJOO ranae. and both arc pr0&r3mmablc. Tho ugh Sharp'' Wizard only has Jl KB) 1es of me mory, as opposed to thl· 64 K8)1tcs that Casio's BOSS ~}Stem comes wi th,. II seems 10 ht' gtt11n1 the most ancntion. h rcaturt!t a built-in 200.year calendar 1ha1 traclu imponan1 dalei ~uch as birthdays and anniversaries; a w:hcdulc planner that tracks ap- pointments. and beeps at the ap- propnatt' time~: a telephone dirtt- ton tha1 110~ 600 rntrin; a c.alcu· latOr with a SO.line electronk Lipe and a d1s11al 1.1.·orld time clock that's ,programnu~d wuh tht' 1ime for 200 citi('s throughout the &lobe. Thr unit also feat ures an cl«· tron1c notrbook. It's just thal. thoosh. and not much more. It'• suitable for io111ng dawn notn ind s1oring bncr memos, but it's , far from being a word Prott$$Q"1 The rac1 1hat the uni! has 1 non-.tlndlrd kcyboard makes h cumbcnomc 10 use for much mo~ thln.rtakin& no1cs. II docs ha\'t: tomclhina th11 in- creases functionality consldenbl)'i dowo load capabilltaes. With an ~ tional in1crftce lh11 include ~1$/DOS software, the infOnnation gcncra1ed on Wjurd can be dowa-- loadcd 10 a • Filn acnmtled °" the WiLard can. ror eA1mpk', be: downloaded 1n a Lotus 1-l-3 fo"'°"'t so 1ha1 lhC )' can br: pulled dir'K'll)'" into a sprcad!hcct on the ·PC. Memos. notts and ~lttt C'P be down loaded and finali'ttd on a full functionina word proccuor. Similarly. K hcdulcl cm1ed ln such Pf'Oll'IMS as Bor11nd's idckld: t1n be UP. loaded to the Wizard. Up load and du111'ft lt»d ~lilies minimiu: 1he probtem1 tUt result from poo< lft(IOll capobilltln. Tllo n.tenct or an Nlee can be ~ on 1he hand held, ...i 1111'1!!11..,. need.I 10 be c~ ..., '9ld '·ill .. can be doh<' °" tM PC. Nclt week; Dall trMlfs' Oflicm. .................. crqrr;0 Td .,,-~• """- Or ... co.& DAILY PILOT I Mondey, .My 3, 1988 re youngsters ala before their time tty lkl l'LOlllS ... lld ... ,,_.,.... ORLANDO, Aa. -Fransie Ger- inaer enjoyed himself Monday, but1 at aae 16 be knows he may not make it to the next annual reunion of victims of proteria, the fatal syn-dremc: that turns children old before their time. The shrunken, pinch-flC'Cd South African. one of the 16 known vic- tims' of the condition, praised the reunions in a son, shy voice as he visited Sea World marine park. "I Ft to my see my friends," said Gerinaer, who suffered a series of heart attacks in recent months and had to drop out of school. "It may be tbc last time." Proscria sufferers and their famil- ies from Aracntina, Australia, Can- ada, England, the Netherlands, South Africa and the United States arc enjoying themselves at Sea World, Wah Disney World and a nearby ranch. The reunion for the youns;ters, NhO rlJ\IC in llC from 4 tO 19, n June 23 and lasted through Fri y. ~ J>roacria, with a reported in- cidence of up to I in 8 million binhs, is characterized by what ap- pean to be rapid aaing, dwarfism, beldness and distortion of joints and faces. Most sufferers d ie before they tum 20. The cause is unknown. Gerinacr's journey from Brakpan; South Africa, to California's Dis- Jason •1111on fleftf, 14, •nd •nd P••dl• Snipes, I J, looll at photos d uring a n •n· nu•I reunion of children who h•v• the ,.,. .... ~ rare •ting syndrome know •• progerl• di•••••· 'ourteen other youngsters were prese nt •t th• Orl•ndo, Pia., event. neyland in 1981 and his meeting arants lhe wishes of tcin:inally ill there with three other victims of the children. ,enetic syndrome made the world The number of pro}ena sufTcrcn aware of the syndrome. has remained about f 6 for several Two of~ other three have died, yca1'$, said Bill Sample, lhe former but Mickey Hays, I 7, faocs his plight Philadelphia police officer who with bravado, sa~i~ he's a "touah founded the orpnwnfon. liuJe Texan" who s like anyone else. "About the time we add p ne, we "There's oothina wrona with me," Jose one," said Sample. said the Lonaview, Texas, tee~er. "This reunion is critically import· "I do what I like--fishina. working ant -to the kids, the parents on a race car with my friend .... I ten especially. But to the medical com- school in the eighth grade. Don't munity, too," Sample said. need it." The annual gatherings may The ptberinas have bee~ sponsor-eventually lead to treatment, even cd since t 982 by the Philadelphia-· prevention, if researchers succeed in .._. ,..D'bine Foundation, which isolating the acnetic brcaJcdown that causes the problem. said Ors. Ted Brown and Frank DcBusk, who have been studying progeria for the past eight years. "It has not been possible for any one doctor to see more than one or two of these children at one time anywhere in the world~" said Brown. "Doctor DcBusk and I have been fortunate in having reunions such as this." Brown, a geneticist at Cornell Medical School who began studying progeria in 1974, said he believes it's caused by a cell defect that prevents normal absorption and elimination of a substance called hyaluronic acid from the body. He believes he can prove his theory in about two years. DcBusk, who is with the Univer- sity of Aorida's pediatrics depart- ment, estimated there have been about I 00 cases of progeria in the world since it was firs&. reported in 1866. Some researchers say it ap- pears in one out of 8 million births, others say one in 4 million. Some cases arc not reported. and some are not properly 1dent1fied before the victims die. Some vic- tims' parents deny their children have it, DeBusk said. 'Tm s4re there have to be many others." he said. .Simple steps that can head off heart disease • The heart d isease scourae, though. declinin~ still claims more than 600,000 lives a year. That's roughly 2,000 lives per day, most in the prime of their life, from ages 40 to 6S. We have shoveled pudy amounts of money.on the proble!ll and are currently spending close to $20 million per day in heart disease treatments. For .many. these treatments have Jiule effect on the long-term pr~nos~. It's bccomina obvious that prevention of heart d1sea~ is the answer, but that requires be· havioral chan.es, U n - fortunately, changmg behav· ior is quite difficult and oncn upleasant. Here are some simple suggestions to ease the burden: 1) Know your blood cholesterol level. This single measurement, perhaps even more important than the blood pressure, a predictor of future problems. You have to know w~ere you stand, t.hen keep score. t) Make walking necessary m your daily routine. Resolve, for instance to walk up the stairs to your office, to park your car four blocks a~ay and walk to ~<?r~. Exercise programs. tllat depen.d uP,On willpower onen fail. but 1f n 1s a part of your daily productive life, you have a .good chance of staying with it. 3) Keep apples around both your home and work place Eat at least one a day. This will likely lower the blood cholesterol level, and fill you. up. so that you'll eat less. It is simple to do, but needs to be routinized. ~) Make a list of ten very low fat foods that you actually enjoy. Don't foraet such P.Otential favorites such as corn on the cob, hma beans, baked or boiled potatoes, or tomatoes. Stock up and eat these foods ~ularly. If you don't like carrots or broccoli, don't put them on the hst. For some reason, we think that healthy eating has to be unpleasant. Before each meal, say to yourself, "I am generally satisfied wtth very little food." This psychological stimulant will often reduce your intake of foods. help you to shed a few pounds, and build up your health credits. These little ups, added to a few more prudent behavioral changes, arc likely more valuable to rou than a wllole building stocked full of the latest technologica tools we use to treat \he epidemic of heart disease. J.U.. Wt/tater, at1t.ltor ol "Reverai.1 Bu.rt Dl1u1e" ud "Reve,...-. Dlabetn '' (Waner Boob), 11 tllrector of IM ftltater Wtl.ble11 b11tllllte hi New,,.rt Beact. · Pickirig a pediatrician: Parents urged to Shop around~ ou~ows it. Still. many parents don t understand this and expect the doctor to be able to do something about 1t." Another common complaint. the study found, was the belief that the doctor was not interested m, or willing to discuss. the child's behav- ior. "More than 40 percent of parents d1ssa11sfied with pcd1atncians ex- pressed this complaint," Stewart re- ports. "In other v.ords, a substantial proportion of parents believe doc- tors should be concerned about a child's ps)chosocial development as well as physical health. They want to know if the wal their children arc acting is norma . Yet until recently, ped1a1ncians haven't been well trained in child development." Given what parents seem to want in a doctor and given the current oversupply of pediatricians. ex· peeled to continue into the next century, Stewart predicts that will change. But he emphasizes that parents, too, must become better. more active "shoppers" when select- ing a physician for their children. The study was conducted under the ~uspices of. and with complete fund-ma from, the dcpanment of pedi· atrics and Owen Graduate School of Management1 Vanderbilt Univer· s1ty, Nashville, Tenn. The study results were published in the journal Pediatrics, Vol. 81 , No. 3. Parents may rue college kids' return this, most parents unhappily tolerate a teenqe-Uke relapse (which may include sloppy roomti l.oud music. "cool" speech patterns, lcook.y dress, spiked hair and stranae slcepina habits .. ) Famous psycholoaist Erik Erikson sa~ that you~ adults face two cnticaJ tasks: fi&htina to establish a pcnonal identity, and then to estab- lish an intimate relationship. Doina either or both require commitment, sacrifice and compron1ite. Throu&h the Joud mutic, messy rooms, and day for nie.t time switches, most perents will admit they do see alimmcn of hope from time to time. Glimmers of commit- ment or sacrifice or compromitc ... ~ 1Hmmer, but nonelhdess a n at the end of a tunnel. I suppote just u tbete )'.<>Uni people become certifiably civtlized, they won't be comina home for the summer anymore. Tbi1 lOO lball pus. I hope. Dr ..... ....., ............. -'--"' ...,,,,,,., "' cww ., ...... .we-· ¥Mr,. ..... u,....,..~,,_..w,..,• .... """" ... ...• ..,.,.,.. ,,,,,. .. u.. Mlal. n.o., o/• De"7 ,..,.., r.o . ._ · '"" c:wi. .......... DAILY PILOT/Monday, July 3, 1919 A9 ll0\11 ... 'Do the Ri~ght Thing' puts spotlight on racism 11)1 SOQN AHOlllUN ~.--....... In a summer of comfortable films of nice, 11fc, predictable sequels and formula pictures. alona comes SP,ike Lee's "Do 1he Ri&h1 ThinL' a movie whose whole purpose is 10 make you uncomfort1ble. .., A1 a time when movics invite you 10 climb. aboar~ and be s.wep1 aloil& by_ fevcnsh action and pnccy special effCC1s, "Do 1he Riaht Thin," of'f'ers linle more than people talking.. They a'lue, they rant, lhey spew racial ep1thetJ. they even philosophize from· time to time~ This is no1 a picture that puts its messaae up befort: you in neon letters. It makes you dig for its meaning.. It appeals not so much to the eye, but to the brain. And also the emotions. . In the season of mindless enter- tainment, Lee has made a movie which demands that you think. And not only that. It demands that you feel and furthermore think about what you feel . ' . With ··Do the RiJht Thing," Lee has finally and decisively laid claim 10 that mantle that hi s vocal sup- poners i'n the critical and film com- munities have been trying to drape around him since the ~lcaK of "She's Gotta Have If' in 1986: that of the pre-eminent black filmmaker working in America today. Blackness is everything in Ltt'5 films. He has no desire to make colorblind escapist fare, to sho"'' that he can make those kind5 of films as well as white filmmakers. which is to say indistinguishable from the films made by the be-st white filmmakers. He wants to. and he has. made films ·about blacks, usina predominantly black crews and with an un. mistakably black pcrspcctiVe. "Do, the Right Thing" is set in a tindery, largely black Brooklyn neighborhood, Bcdford-Stuy,·esant. Lee, the film's writer. produ~r. di· rCC'IOT and star. knows the area well. It's where he arcw up. The picUJrc takes place on a single block durina a linaJe day, and that day is the hottnl day of the year. . "Do the Ria.ht Thina" is a collco- 11on or frqments. They seem haphazardly pthercd at first, but ~ken toae~her they present an amaz. 1naly dc~1led and flavorful ponrait or the ne1&hborhood. People are revealed bit by bit, in precise, insi&h tful strokes. Three ~yabout1 spend the day comment- lftl dcsu'ltorily and often hilariously on the pusina scene. The nei&h- borh~ matriarch sits in her apan- ~ent window passing disapproving Judament gn all 5hc secs .. A bclliaerent kid cruises the sidcWalk with his booinbox cranked up full blast. defying anyone 10 tell him to tum it down. With considerable humor and almost no sentimentali· ty Lee captures the rituals, the vi- tality and the unifying sense of place that makes a neighborhood a neiah-borhood. _ . , Much of '"Do the Right Thin&" takes place within the stifling con- fines of Sal's Famous Pizzeria, one of the few white-owned businesses left in the neighborhood. Sal's. a fixture on the stree1 for 25 years. is run by 1he man whose name is on the 51gn over the door (Danny Aiello) and his two son5. Pino (John Tunurro) and Vito (Richard Edson). ~lf·m~de Sal. who buih hi5 shop wtth his own two hands. loves his business and takes pride in the, fact that the people in the neighborhood "grew up on ,my food." But he ·s under growing pressure from his older son Pino to close up shop and move lhe business 10 1he Italian enclave of Bcnsonhurst where the three men live. Pino makes no secret of his loathing for blacks and their neighborhood. Pl••erla own., Sal ID•nny Alelfo .. center) and his 1on1 Vito fRlchard Rd1on. left) and Pino fJohn Turturro) do bu1lne11 In a tense •rooklyn neighborhood fn ••no th4i Right Thing:· a movie by Spike Lee that explores racism In America. shows up each day to sweep the walk 1n front of the s1ore for the ,price of a c~n of beer. And he especially bullies younger brother Vito. in- cessantly and panicularly because of Vito•s growing' friendship wi1h Mookie. of black cullural figures next to photos of ltalian-. .\merican icons like Sinatra and Pa ci no. the animosity he feels toward his cus~ tomers rises to the surface. The racist erilhCIS come fountaining OUl. allo..,.·s none of hi5 characters to be put into easily ~and comfortably) definable catcgones. Sal's concern and affection for 1he people 1n the neighborhood is aenuine and amply documented in the film, yet racism 1s undeniably a pan of his character. which he detests "like a sickness." Pino·s stature in the stOl)I is not If Sa is not a hero, hc·s also not a villain. 'Jn facl. there arc no outright villains as such 1n Lee's 1?ic1ure -or heroes. And 1hafs where the discomfort comes an . Lee Is Mook1e the hero? Al limes 11 seems like it. especially when he plays reluctant concilia1or. trying to cool.off the neiahborhood hothead • • (Giancarlo Elposito) who conceives the idea of boycott1na Sal"s. But at the end he's also the one who, with a.real deliberation, touches olf the race riot that climaxes the picture. Even Pino is not prnentcd u the son of racis1 moru;tcr that you find inhabiting a moralistic screed like the recent "Mississippi Bumina,." In a scene in which Moolde challenan Pino's prejudices by pointina out that all his favorite entertainers and 1pons stars are black, you discover that his p~judicc: is not monolithic. You can KC him stan to think about his attitudrs. and in that 8ct of thinking abQut them e1dsts the possi· bility (a r4=rrlbte one, to be sore) that even his racism could someday fade. In ··Do the Ria.ht ThinL .. almost no one is free of the racist taint. Ltt inscns a montage 1n which charac- ters from a variety of ethnic groups face the camera. one by one, and let fly with their prime slurs ap.inst their least favored race. A Kornn grocer excoriates the Jews. white cops direct their venom at the Puerto Ricans, and so on. What's surprising about this scene is that it's funny -fntentionally so. By sbowina mindless prejudice cut· tina impanially across racial lina, Lee shows how ridiculous racism is. Ultimately. lhou&h, he shows how corrosive and deeply imbcdded in American culture 11 is. To Lee, the mcltina pot is still a myth. Tum up the heat under the pol be .says,_J.nd the human contents don't melt. they inevitably e11:plodc. What's the solution? Lee refuses to say. He ends the picture with two quotes, one from Manin Luther King, the other from Malcolm X. The Kina quote calls violence self- defca1ing. The Malcolm X quote calls ii self-defense and ·"'in- 1elligcncc." The endina is am- biguous. And uncomfortable. Pino is an undisguised. un-large enough 10 turn him into 'he apologetic racist. He's also a bull y. ptct~~·s villain. And Sal is certainly "llnd an equal-opponunity bully at no! its hero. When tempers flare and that. He bullies the shop's black Sal Kes his livelihood th~atencd by deliverjman. Mookie (played .cb<;i,_· _1"w"o"' neighboihood blacks who Lc:e).HCbulltcs the 1,1,·en-meaning angr1Ly11irra1en t0l:i0ycot1-t1[~..,,m;-­ alcoholic o ld man (Ossie Davis) who he-cause he refuses 10 pu1 up pho1os r---:;--;;:;;---;;-:=::--::-=::--::-=::--~::=:==:::=::=:==:::===:::==========~---, 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:30 11:00 '11:30 Lee aims to make people think ------ • llllid9 (llllDn Two Oft 111 ,_ • (ntlNll..nt USA Tldly -' ~- ::::v ..._ -..... -.. _ ... .. ..... CompHed rrom the ~llot'• wire ser· vkH LOS ANGELES -"Do the Riaht Thin.a.·· a Spike Lee film ~leased this weekend. is aimed at making people think about racial rensions and do something about them, its stars said at the West Coast premiere. "I want people to feel the horror 1~ of ,he movir':" l..tt - who produced. wrote and starsAn ·the film -said before Thursday niahrs premiere. "I w1n1 people to know if we don't talk .about the problems and deal wilb them head-on. they're: going to &Ct much worse." He dismissed as "a joke .. some critics' claims that the film, abou1 a racial riot in New York on the hottest day of the year, is so graphic it coukl promole racial unrest. "This film wasn't intended 10 in· cite violence or riots," said Lee. "I want to have people stan a dialogue about race relations.'" Amon.a the stan who turned Out for the premiere at the Directors Guild of America were Eddie Murphy, Debbie Allen. Norm Niaon, Louie Anderson'., Scou Baio. Roben Quillaurite, Tim Reid and · Bea Arthur. · ''Spike put on ctlluloid a problem that e~one knows uists." said 9:;:J AICllo, who plays a white p a owner who employes Lee's llll\ II 11, I l'\f,, Newport Beach .....,. ~ 109. --~ '''·)510 --. .._ ... a.. ltl"'"'9 ... ....., ._,,.JO . ---161 tlCNT ~ JOO ~I c~ o.w M•4JM> , ................... '--C..... jPGl)I 11 41.1)0.flf,a. IOJO l •a I '""°'" llf,J•f.61J,U•f " ~ --..i fl"'Gl)j IOJO. I JO. 4 15, J. 10 •l.o~~...., .i:N-1V .... ,. •1J .. )JO .... ,._ ......, ll'clt ' JO. a. 10 JO l'Oft fttSA,_ l'Ol I Cont~ 41Ml60 .......... fll J,' If Splll• L- character, Mookie, 1s a pizza de- livery man. "He lets the audience resolve it in their own way. People will consider it fair for blacks and whites and other minorities." In "Do the RiJht Thina," violenc4= breaks out when pizzeria owner Sal refuses to hana pictures of black celebrities on his Wall of Fame. which includes photos of Robert De Niro, Sylvester Stallone and Frank Sinatra. • 0 ··-· ··-~··· II frot 11, I If. J •f. 6 If,. •S. " J ---ff'Gl)l 101f, '· •• '· 10 l ........ "---... L.e ~ lr"GI JI II •f, I JO, f If.•. 10 JO MMtoll ,.... ~ ...... .....,,,, w...... ~'"' •ll•JWll , ........ .,,._. -... "-~ "'°' lj tJ•JO, S If. S •f. e JO. 11 l ...,_ ll"Cilll I0-4S, I n 4 JO. 1 JO, 10 JO Aiello said he was .. devastated" by acclaim the film received a1 thi!i year's Cannes Film Festival. "I never imagined that we would ache1ve this kind of noteriety." he said. Ossie Davis. who play5 the friend- ly drunk and pan-time philosopher Da Mayor In the film . chuckled when asked about repercussions from the movie. .. Provoke discussion 1s what Spike meant to do:· he said. Lee said his charac1ers arc not clearly defirled in Ca tegories olgood and bad. "I don't put hats on my charac- ters:· he said Thursday. "People have to think at my films." "My films lei people make up their own minds.' the 32-ycar-old filmmaker said in a separate in1er- view last week. "I do no1 make Hollywood films,'" Ltt continued, "That s the biggesl criticism of this film. lhal 'Spike has not told us what to do. He has not come up with the answer to ract relations. We don'l like this film because there arc no aood guyi and no bad guys in this film . We do n·t know who to root for ... : "But people have just been con· ditioncd to that type of filmmaking for so Io na that wh-cn anything that comes out that's not that. it rt:ally throws a monkey wrench in their program and 1hey don't know what to do." ....,, ... I .,.... ............ 11'#11 ffl ll'GI II fS J. I JO • 10 !\ ,._ .... .,,...,.fl"(llJI ,,,~t.61f.9l0 10-•s Laguna Beach -....110UTMcOAtt~•1'S (- • • • • • • • ... MAYO ... .... "" ... .... ..... .... -.... -Tll "" ... --.... ... fM. 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I. 10 _,_ __ _ lttl-U .. *11--Ml·llM TOWJll c:.an"ltt CIMIMAll Sautl'I C-I ...... riiii!ii!~iii;;;;iii;;;;iiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ,,, ... """ ........... ....., ~ ll •S. llf. 4tf . , JO. 10 l ................ fP'GIJl 11.lf, J'JO, t •S. 1, •1t.lllf J 9-IP'GIJI 11 . l, t , L II ,, ... ""* Y "°" 11. I 11, ) JO, 6, • lO, 10 4f Wl eMn'M COAST l'IMA I st t W ,..,,_., ,,_ t«M>S•• ' 1v...-..-111t 1, J. s, '·' 1 acaA<W lilt I. \OI. tJO-...... llil )Of,, I II J.""*~IJ'G!Jtl,f llo•JO.._.,.. ..... ......... 11(.IO. ,,, Han11 ... -ae.eh NOWPLAYllG E' -ii'-· BF-1F-• --~ 1£S JU ·=-=:i:-.-=--iliil""' ------==-,. ...... •· .~a:;:: ---vz ·- .... -Q ORLANDO, Aa. -Fransic Ger- inaer ef\joyed himself Monday, but at• 16 he knows he may not make • it to the nut anflual reunion of victims of l)l'Oteria, the fatal syn~ drome ~t turns children old before tbCir ti me. ' :rbe shrunken, pinch-faced South African, one of the 16 known vic- tims of the condition, pnailed the reunions in a son. shy voice as he visiaed Sea World marine park. "1 ttt to my see my friends," said Oerinaer, who suffered a series of heart attacks in recent months and had to drop out of school "It ma}' be the last time." ProtCria sufferers and their famil- ies from Araentina. Australia, Can- ada, En&)and, the Netherlands, South Africa and the United States arc enjoyina themselves at Sea World, Walt Disney World and a nearby ranch. Tbe reunion for the you~tcrs, NhO ranae in qe from 4 to 19, n l11nt 23 and lasted through Fri ay. Proseria with. a.. reported in- cidence ot up to I in 8 million births, is characterized by what ap- pears to be rapid aging, dwarfism, baldness and distortion of joints and faces. Most sufferers die before they tum 20. The cause is unknown. Gerinaer's journey from Bralcpan, South Africa, to California's Dis- neyland in 1981 and his meeting there with three other victims of the aenetic syndrome made the world aware of the syndrome. Two of the other three have died, but Micuy Hays, 17, faces his plight with bravado, sa~ins. he's a "tough little Texan" who slake anyone else. "There's nolhiot wrona with fl)C," Jaid the Lonaview, Texas, teenager. "I do what I like -fishing, working on a race car with my friend .... I left tchool in the eighth pde. Don't need iL" The ptnerinp have been sponsor- ed since 1982 by the Pbiladelphia- buld 9-lbine Foundation, which -.... 'iii ( ,. .... Jason •1111on fl•ftJ. 14, and and Peedle Snipes, I J, look et photos during •n •n- nu.91 reunion of chlldren who have the ~ .... .,....... l'•r• aging syndrome know as progerl• di•••••· Fourteen other youngsters were present at the Orlando, Pia .• event. grants the wishes of terminally ill children. ~ The number of progeria sufferers has remained about 16 for several yean. said Bill Sample, the former Philadelphia police officer who founded the orpnization. "About the tune we add one, we lose one,," said Sample. ''This reunion is critically import- ant -to the kids, the parents especially. But to the medical com- munity, too," Sample said. The annual gatherings may eventually• lead to treatment, even prevention, if researchers succeed in 1solatina the atnetic breakdown that causcs the problem, said Ors. Ted Brown and Frank DeBusk, who have been studying progeria for the past eight years. "It has not been possible for any one doctor to sec more than one or two of these children at one time anywhere in the world," said Brown. "Doctor DcBusk and. I have been fortunate in having reunions such as this." Brown. a geneticist at Cornell Medical School who began studying progeria in 1974, said he believes it's caused by a cell defect that prevents normal absorption and elimination of a substance called hyaluronic acid from the body. He believes he can prove his theory in about two years. DcBusk, who is with the Univer- sity of Florida's pediatrics depart- ment,0 estimated there have been about I 00 cases of _proaeria in the world since it was first reported in 1866. Some researchers say it ap- pears in one out of 8 million births. others say one in 4 million. Some cases arc not reported, and some arc not properly identified before the victims die. Some vtc- tims' parents deny their children have it, DcBusk said. 'Tm s4rc there have to be many others.·· he said. Simple steps that. can head off heart disease The hron disease scou11e. thouah declininii still clajms more than 600,000 lives a year. That's roughly 2,000 lives per day, most in the prime of their life, from ages 40 to 65. We have shove!ed eudy amounts of money on the problem and arc currently spending close to $20 million per day in heart disease treatments. For .many, these treatments have little effect on the long-term pr?lnos~. h's becomina obvious that prevention of hean d1sea~ 1s the answer. but that requires be· hav1oral changes. Un-• fonunately, changtng behav- ior is quite difficult and often upleasant. Herc arc some simple suggestions to case the burden: 1) Know your fVood cholesterol level. This single measurement, perhaps cvr;i more important than the blood pressure. a predictor of future problems. You have to know where you stand. then keep score. %) Make wa/kins ne«~ m your daily routine. Resolve, for instance to walk up the stairs to your office. to park your car four blocks a~ay and walk to work. Exercise frograms that depen.d u~n willpower often fail but if'it is a pan o your daily productive hfe. you have a good chance of staying with it. 3) Keep apples around both your home and work place. Eat at least one a day. This will likely lower the blood cholesterol level, and fill' you up so that you'll eat less. It is simple to do. but needs to bC routinized. 4) Make a list of ten very low fat foods that you ac·tually enjoy. Don't foract such P.Otential favorites such as com on the cob. hma beans. baked or boiled potatoes, or tomatoes. Stock up and eat these foods reJularly. If you don't like carrots or broccoli, don't put them on the hst. For some reason. we think that healthy eating has to be unpleasant. Before each meal, say to yourself. "I am generally satisfied with very little food." This psychological stimulant will often reduce your intalce of foods. help you to sned a few pounds, and build up your health credits. These little tips, added to a fcW more prudent behavioral changes, arc likely more valuable to you than a whole building stocked full of the latest technological tools we use to treat &he epidemic of heart disease. Jlllla Wtl&atel', ••tltor o/ "Revenhl1 Hul't Dhu•e" .. , "Bevenlq D1.te1e1" (W•l'Hl' lloob), I• dlrectol' of th Wll&atu WellHu bt1tthlte la Ne"IMrl Be•d. .__.....-'--Eickir:ig a-pediatrician:· Parents urged to .shop around LOS ANGELES -When picking a doctor for their children, most parents don't do as much com- parison shoppina as they do when ;clcctina a microwave oven or a VCR, a recent study shows. More than one-third of the 229 families surveyed considered just one pb'ysician. More than 80 percent relied on a sinale source of infor- mation in mak1na their decision - usually the rccommendauon -0f a nciahbor or fncnd. ··l>arcnts need education about selectina a physician in a deliberate. orpnized wa,." said David Stewart. a professor o marketina at the Uni- versity of Southern California's School of Business Administration. Dr. Stewan cond~ted the study with Gerald Hickson, William Altemeier and James Perrin, all MD's in the pediatrics department at Vanderbilt University. "JnstCld of almost blindly selcct- ina a doctor for their children," Stewart said. "they should seek in- formauon from more sources, in- cluchna other doctors and local medical asS0C1ations. They should visit more than one doctor with a list of questions reflectma their needs and priont1cs, and compare the advantaaes and d1sadvantqcs of different types of doctors -pcd1a- t.ricians versus atneral practittonen venus family ~titaoners. Then they should decide 1f theTe•s a aood match between what they want and what a 11ven doctor is willint and able to provide." Panly as a result of the casual, even haphazard, way many parents ao about selcctin1. doctor f'or their childftn. diS1ati1r.ction ls not un- common. More than 30 percent or the parents surveyed had either lcfi a doctor because they were dis- satisfied or had sen.ously considered leaving. When asked to identify the factors they considered important in selcct- in& tbcir children's doctor. parents were less concerned a&ut cost, con- venience or the doctor's professional qualifications and cxpcnence than they were about human factors. in- cludin& the doctor's communica- tions skills. For almost 80 percent of the parents, whether the doctor involves them 1n decisions about treatment ·was very imponant. Also high on the list of imp6nant factors were whether the doctor returns phone calls quickly (60 percent) and has a warm persQrtality (56 percent). The most frequently cited reason for.dissatisfaction was the belief that a doctor was not adequately man- aaina a specific illness. "This reason for dissatisfaction may arow out of the doctor's failure to communacatc the nature of the problem," Stewart SUFStS. "In pediatncs, a number of common. recurrent problems are incurable. and doctors need to uplam this to parents. "Otitis media, or m1ddJc car infec- tion, is one eumple of a condition that tends to recur. "In )ouna infants, cohc is another common problem. About 20 percent of infants suffer from colic, but in only about I percent of the cases 1s the reason an allcrv to formula. which is comciable. The rest of 'he cases arc prot.bly deve'c:C'ental: after a period of lime. t.by ou~rows 11. Still. many parents don t understand this and expect the doctor to be able to do something about it." Another common com'1faint, the study found, was the belief that the doctor was not interested in, or willma to discuss, the child·s behav- ior. "More than 40 percent of parents dissatisfied with pediatricians ex- pressed this complaint," Stewan fC"' ports. "In other words, a substantial proponion of parents believe doc- tors should be concerned about a child's ps)chosocial development as well as fhys1cal health. They want to know i the war their children arc acITna is norma . Yet unlll ~Lly, ped1atncians haven't been well trained in child development." Given what parents seem to want in a doctor and given the current oversupply of pediatricians, ex- pected to continue into the next century, Stewart predicts that will chanac. But he emphasizes that parents, too, must become better, more active "shoppen" when select· ing a physician for their children. The study was conducted under the auspices of. and with complete fund- ina from, the dcp;artment of pedj. atrics and Owen Graduate School of Manqemcnt, Vanderbilt Univer- sity. Nashville, Tenn. The study rcsuhs were published in the journal Pediatrics. Vol. 81 , No. 3. Pitrents may rue college .kids' return · Some say ifs caused by a lapse of memory, but in any event most parents I know fantasize -at least once in a while -about how nice it will be when their college-age kids come home for summer nestina. (Most of tbc kids who have confided 1n me -sometimes Ions-distance from school -also .look forward to a study-free "kick back" summer at home wilb the folks.) But alas, as with most thinp. played-out fantasies don't always mttt expectations. Tom, who identified himself as a 45-year-old abused parent. explains that "old folks like me get \lsed to ~ce and quiet.•· Tom·s son, a sophomore in col- lqe, arrived home last week. He hasn'' 1otten a job yet and accordina to his dad spends "unreasonable amount.I of time on top of bis bunk wilb an aerial view of his entire wardrobe tcattered about the flooT." Another parent 1ays, .. It's the tele- phone that dnves me crazy. It never llOPI rinaina ... phone calls come in bis laundry at 3 a.m. ··1 always do this, most parents unhappily tolerate that in school," he insists, "that's a teenqe-likc relapse (which may when the machines arc available." include sloppy rooms, loud music, . And the a.irl who called Lisa (Sara "oool" speech paucms, kooky dress. and John's dauahter) at 1:30 a.m. spiked hair and stranae sleepina knew enouah to apol<>&ize, but ex-habits.) plained how difficult it was to reach Famous psycholQlist Erik Erikson Lisa at any other hour. Lisa was not sa~ that YO'!.nt adults face two home yet -she came In at I :4S, cntical tasks: fl&hlina to establish a went to sleep immediately and slept personal identity, and then to estab- likc a baby. Sara and John. however, lish an intimate relationship. Doina at 2 Lm." spent the rest of the niaht with their either or both require commitment. Another perent says She'd be &lad eyes wide open. sacrifice and comprontitc. if it was only phone calls comina in What about work, I asked my son. Throu&h the Joud music, messy at that hour. How does one ~t up and function rooms. and day for n~t rime Her comment struck home for after a Ions. day s ni&)tt. switchct, most J)ll'Cnts will admit me. One niaht last week after a "No prob1em, mom -you don't they do see alimmm. of bol)e from concert, we hQrd banaina pots and know what it's like to Jive in a lime to lime. Glimmen of commit- pans at 3 a.m. in the kitchen. My fraternity house -no one sleeps for mcnt or ucrifJCe or compromile ... husband went down to check on very Iona. You fCl used to it Don't ~ alimmer, but nonetheless a thfop. wof!l. my pades arc OK ... I'm n at tbc end of a tunnel. "Hi," son Peter said, in the pro-worltina ... no problem ... I can tel I suppote just u tbelC youna ceu of prcperina h.imself a three-up." people become certifiably civilized. course meal. •11 aot hunpy. I hope I 1 didn't mean your work, I ex-they WOA't be comina home for the didn't wake you ... want tomcthina plained, with my eyes half closed. summer anymore. to eat'r' Down deep, parents (who re· Tbi1 too aM11 pus. J hope. My, friend Sue complains that member that they were once kids Dr. ,.... ~ .. • ...,.,.... MatbCw. her vilitina student. does tbemtclvcs) know that each new Mtl 1.-Jq ,..,.,,,JI a.r.iil-.,, -.~~-----------------~~-------r~~~~---~~~~~~~~~--......,----------~ aeneration needs to find ways to MM ......... ,_, ,..,_ .. establish its own Identity, to rebel U,.. _.... • i9b. ,,...._ w'111 • ~nst the rulca of the current e11ab-10s,..r( ......-. .. ,., -~· lilhmcnt. """' • ,.... .411111. ft.D,. e/• Unhealthy ways to rebel include .., ,...... r.o. aa. ,,_, CWta 1ex, drup and alcohOI. Realizina MMI.,,.. Ultrafast.. A State-Of-The-Art Weight Loae liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~-ijji~~~-~---~ Supplement Uaed Bl Pl!Ysicians And Hospi- tal• For Tile Uae Of Treating Overweight Patients ' EN'I'F:Ril\INMENT DAILY PILOT/Monday, Juty 3, 1811 ... 'Do the Right Thing' puti·spotlight on racism ly SOlllN A.NOi.UN block durina a 1inJic day, and that ~,...........,. day is the hot1es1 day of the year. Jn a summer of oomfortablc films, ... Do the Ri&ht Thina" is a collec- of nice, Nfe, predictable sequels and 11on of fraamcnts. They seem formula pcturcs. alona comes SJ?ilr.c haphazardly pthcttd at tint, but Lee'~ "Do _!ht _ Riaht Thina, • a taken toae~cr they present an amu· movie whose wtiolc purpose 11 to 1naly detailed and flavorful ponrait make you uncomforublc. . or the nciahborhood. At a time when movies invite you People are revealed bit by bit in to climb aboard and be swept alon1 r,recise, insi&htful strokes. Three by. feverish action and priocy·special .ayabouts spend the day commc11t- cffccts. "Do the Riaht Thing" offers lfll desultorily and oft.en .hilariously little more than people talkina. They on the passina scene. The nei&h- ar,ue, they rant, they spew racial borh~ matriarch _sits i~ her 1pan- ep1thets, they even philosophize ~ent window passinc d1sapprovin1 from time to time. · Judiment on all she sees. A This is not a pictUrc that puts Tts beUlaerent kid cruises the· sidewalk mcss&ae up before you in neon with hi1 .beombox cranked. UP. full letters. 11' makrs you dig for its .blast1 defyina anyone to tell htin to mcanina. It appeals not so much to tum il· down. With considerable the eye, but to the ~in. And· also humor and aJmost no sentimentali- lhe emotions. tyl Lcc captures· the rituals, the vi- In the season of mindless enter-· ta ity and the un ifyi ng sense of place 1ainment. Lee has made a movie that makes a neighborhood a neigh. which demands that you think. And borhood. no1 only that. It demands that you Much of "Do 1he Rig.ht Thine .. feel and furthermore think about takes place within the s1ining con- what you feel. fines of Sal's Famous Pizzeria. one With "Do the Right Thing." Lee of the few white-owned businesses has finally and decisively laid claim len in the neighborhood. Sal's. a to that mantle that his vocal sup-fixture on the street for 25 years, is porters in the critical and film com-run by the man whose name is on munities have been tryina to drape the sign over the door (Danny around him since the ?\'ckase of Aiello) and his two sons, Pino (John "She's Gotta Have It" in 1986: that Tunurro)and Vito(Richard Edson). of the pre~minent black filmmaker Sc:lf·m!de Sal, who built his shop working in America today. with his own two hands, loves his Blackness is everything in Ltt's business and takes pride in the fact films. He has no desire to make that the people in the neighborhood colorbli n<f escapjSt ~f!C.-to show 1ha1 "grew up on my food." he can make thosc'"kinds of films as But he's under growing pressurt: well as white filmmaken, which is to from his older son Pino 10 close up ~Y indistincuishable from the films shop and move the business 10 the made by1be best white filmmakers. Italian enclave of Bcnsonhursl He wants to, and he: has, made films where the lhrcc men live-. Pino about blacks. usina predominantly makes no secret of his loathing for black crews and with an un-blacks and their nc:i&hborhood. mistakably black pcrsp«tive. · which he detests "like a sickness." "Do the Riaht Thing" is SCI in a Pino is an undisguised. un· t1ndery, largely black Brooklyn apologetic racist. He's also a bully. neighborhood, Bcdford·Stuy\•csant. and an equal-opportunity bully at l..tt, the film'1 writer, producer, di-that. He bulliCs the shop's black rector and star, knows the area well. deliveryman. Mookie {played by It's where he crew up. Lee). He bullies the well -meaning The picture lakes place on a single alcoholic old man (Ossie Da vis) who Plaaerl• owner S•I (D•nny Alello, center) end ht1 1on1 Vito (Rlch•rd Rd1on, l•~J •nd Pino (John Turturro) do bu1lne11 In • tense Brookl)'n neighborhood In ··oo the Righi Ttllng, •• • movie by Spike Lee that explores r•clsm In America. ~hows up each day to sweep the walk an fron1 of the store fo r the price of a c~n of beer. And he especially bulhes younger brother V110. in- cessantly and panicularly because of Vi1o·s grov.·1ng friendship with Mook1e. Pino's stature in the story is not large cnouah to 1urn him into the picture's villain. And Sal is certainl y not its 11ero. When tempers narc and Sal ~s ~is livelihood th rca1encd by two ne11hborhood blacks who angrily threaten to_ boycott his stiop hccause he refuses 10 put up photos of black cultural figures next 10 photos of Ital ian-American icons like Sinatra and Pacino. the animosity he feels 1oward his cus- tomers rises to the surface. The racist er1 1hets co me founta1n1ng 001. If Sa is not a hero. he's also not a villain. In fact, there arc no outright \'illa ins as such in Lee's picture -or heroes. And that's where the discomfort comes 1n. Lee T\ l .ISTl,GS allows none of his charactcn to be put into easily (and comfortably) defi nable ca1cgones. Sal's concern and affection for the people 1n 1he neighborhood is genuine and amply documented 1n the film. yet racism 1s undeniably a pan of his character. Is Mookie the hero? . .\t times it see ms like it, especially when he: play.s reluctant conciliator. tryinc to cool off the neighborhood hothead (Giancarlo Esposito) wbO conce;ves the idea of boycott1n1 Sal's. But at the end he's also the one who, with arcat deliberation, touchis oft' the ra<:e: ricit that climaxes thC picture. Even Pino is not presented as the son of rx-ist monster that you find inhabitinc a moralistic screed like the recent ··MiJSiSsippi BuminJ." In a .scene in which Mookie challencft Pine's prejudices by pointina out that all his favorite cnteruincn and spons stars art black, you discover that his prejudice is not monolithic. You can sec him stan to think about his attitudes. and in that act of think.in& about them exis11 the possi· bility (a remote one, to be sure) that even his racism could someday fade . In "Do the Right Thin&." almost no one is free of the racist taint. Lee inserts a montage an which charac- ters from a variety of ethnic sroups face the camera. one by one, and let ny with their prime slun apinst their least favored race. A Korean crocer excoriates the Jews, wh ite • cops direct their venom at the Pueno Ricans, and so on. What's surprisina about this sttnc is that it's funny -intentionally so. By showina mindless prejudice cut· tina imp..-tlal.l y across racial lines. Ltt shows how ridiculous racism is. Ultimately, though, he shows how corr~ive and dccpl¥ imbcdded in Amcncan culture it 1s. To Lee, the meltina pot is 1till a myth. Tum up the heat under the pot he says. and the human contents don't melt. they ine\'itably explode. Whit's the solution? Lee refuses 10 say. He ends the picture with two quotes, one from Manin Luther Kina. the other from Malcolm X. The K..ina quote calls violence 5Clf- defcatina.. The Malcolm X quote calls it self-defense and .. in- telligence.·· The endina is am- biguous. And uncomfonable. Lee aims to make people think 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 • • 10:00 10:30 11:00 --11:30 ..... .... -~ .... Complted from the Piiot's wire ser- vices LOS ANGELES -~·no the Riaht Thina." a s:r·ke Ltt film released this wccken . 1s aimed at making people think about racial tensions and do something about them , its stan said at thc---Wnt-Coast premiere. "I want people to feel the horror al'"'"l~ of the movie;" Ltt - who _produced, wrote and starsAn the film -said bcfo~ Thursday night's premiere. "I want people to know if we don't Wk about the P.fOblems and dca.I with them hcaCl-0n, they're aoina to act m~cb wonc." He dismissed as "a joke" some critics' tlaims. ttiat the film , about a racial riot in New York on the hottest day of the year. is so araphic it coukl promote racial unresL "This film wasn't intended 10 in- cite violence or riots," said Lee. "I want to have people start a dialogue about race relations." Amons the stars who turned oul for the premiere at lhe Directon Guild of America were Eddie Murphy. Debbie: Allen, Norm Nixon. Louie Anderson'. Scott Baio. R.oben Guillaume. Tim Reid and Bea Arthur. "Spike put on ~lluloid a problem that evt!'l'one knows exists," said Dannf Aiello, who plays a white ~ owner who employcs Lee's llO\ II 11 ... 11'\f,., N-port Beach ~ ~ 10t f llllol llVd 61!1·1Sl'O ..__ ___ a.. .......... ......, ._,, . ., ..... ldXIOl'f" ~ 100 ~I c-°"""" ... ~'° , ....... ,._ .... u.~ll'G•JJ 11 4!1 1J0.!11!1.8,IOJ0 J if I alll l"Ol 11,llf,l l !l,61!1,•t!I. " J -ll"(il)j IC JO, I JO, I 1!1. 1, 10 Spike Lee charaCter, Mookie. as a pizza de· livery man. "Ht lets the audience resolve it in their own way. People will consider it fair for blacks and whites and other minorities." In "Do the RiJht Tl)ing." violence ·breaks out when pizzeria owner Sal refuses to hana pictures of black celebrities on his Wall of Fame. which includes photos of Rohe n De Niro, Sylvester Stallone and Frank Sinatt1. 0 ---" • ll'GI I I. I l!I, J•a!I. I 15, I If " 2 -l'Glll 10 II, 1. I. 1, 10 1 ........ ,_. ...... .._~lf'Cilll 11 as. J lD, !I''· e, 10.>0 Aiello s.aid he was "devastated" by acclaim the film received at 1h is year's Can nes Film Festival. "I nc,·er imagined lhat we would acheive this kind of notcr1e1y," he said. Ossie Davis, who plays the friend· ly drunk and part·lime philosopher 0a-Mayor in the fitm-. ehueklcd when asked about n:pcTC'ussions from lhe movie. "Provoke discussion is what Spike meant to do." he said. Lee said his characters are not clearly defined in categories of good and bad. "I don't put hats on my charac- ten." he said Thursday.· "People have 10 think at my films." "M Y' films let ~pie make up their own minds.' the 32-ycar-old filmmaker said in a $Cparate inter- vie w last ""'CCk. "I do not make Hollywood films." Ltt continued. "That s the biggest criticism of this film . I.hat 'Spike has"" not told us what to do. He has no1 come up with the answer to race relations. We don't like this film because there an: no aood guys and no bad auys in this film. We don't t.now who 10 rool for .... ' "But people have just been con- ditioned to that type of filmmaking for so Iona that when anything that comes out 1hat's not that. it really throws a monkey wrench in their program and they don't know what to do." • , .. -0 • • • • • • Al O.U-DINI .., ..... -- lJCNvo 1~'1luiMI SMon" __J!!_Hne llflllMt: .... .. MIO" T .... Con!"dlTIMll IMo*t•l'l "TMDlldPOlll'~ ... :...._. .............. a.." 1917, I.ft ........ ..... •• "l1-,_. .. 11914, Otwnll MicN11 i...n.d. • ,_HIM .,. MAX ...... .. Co,.f"d 1....-'"' "Ollol ......... 11iln 'PG' 0 IMIM" ••l\....... .. 1•. Midllil ~· ?Q..13' JD: TINl'-..!d ~a.. , IC.M Ila IC'TV J!.iS"- , ... ~~llYd .. ~ ........ ~ atJ4J50 ..... ,,... ......., ll'GI !I JO. .. 10 JO ~ ,...,.,.,.. "'°' l e-~ ., ,..,"' .._ .... "" '· .. ,, . CotiaMeu -" C..,.... )101 H.,_ ~..,...c_,,....,., ~JF I• ll'OI 10:1.S. 11..JO. ,, S JO. I. .a.-.·---~ 1011, l)lf, ·~·< ,1.• ~ J ---,,.,., • ~ IO"JO, '• J. 6, ..... • .:r---""l"Qtlf 11 ·41,J,a l!l,IJD. ~~=..::.::~= .:: • -if--;-m: -==--n.=-iF & ........ . • lllE\Q.UTION°""" LUCWM.M Ll11 :m;:· - SOUND S'l'STIM AliiO Jiil SPCAK(llS ~ .\ll ...,_ • IHf!WllD SYSITMS fOlil IHl 11(AA!fC IMfi'MN:O • GIANT W:Q PICl!G.BlltOf!UMLCl..Alm-- • IOIMi fl'ACl.lCTION KWI llllCllD IWSCNWOe • (LfGAHJ THIAJIU, llUJ5H S(Al!NG MO -' • ', , • I I ~ Orliftl9 C0Mt DAILY PtLOT/ Monday, Jufy 3, 1989 PFDPIE Fi sta VIPs take time out to party· About 70,000 people are exp«ted to show up for the six-day Ooanae County Fiesca s~naored by the fountiin Valle}' ~mber of Com-merce at Mile Square Park. The fielca is the seventh such red, white and blue/family fun affair. Music, food, chili cookoff and con- tests are just a few of the events planned alona with carnival rides of all kinds. It will all end Tuesday at 9 p.m. with what is beina called the coun- ty•s laJ'IClt free fireworks show. "l plan to be out here every day," said Dew. Meta. who wears the crown of Miss Fountain Valley. "I'll help with the judaina the baby con- test, the baod contest and a senior kint and queen contest." With Her M~sty were first runner U(> Mariya Gren. who will also act mvolved every day, and friends Kea Elliott and Ca"IY9 Bare .• "We make a lot of money from _ ....... Jae Mutchler end aets1 Colttn. fat feftJ; Mkhael aowe end U se Rlott• wait for entertalflfllent. this event every year," said fiesta director Beta)' Colllu at a small party for VIPs. She and other volun- teers were relaxina a little after a hard day's work about the . fiesta arounds. The money aocs for scholarships and communit¥ events. "Students from three hiah schools and two collqes in this area get the sc holar· ships," said Jue M•telaler, assistant fiesta director. Others there were Marilyn ()e.. ..._, FV c'hamber director. Rocky Carntlaen, chairman of • ticket booths and Rick! Howell. a chamber member and an ex-entertainer, hcadina the stage crew. The party tent was next to the entertainment s~e where Paul Re- vere and the Ratders were to do their thina -hot tunes like "Louie, Louie", and "Stepping Out." Set to open for Revere (Could any group be more appropriate for a patriotic event?) was Paul Casey and his tribute to Elvis. As any chafrman who has ever planned an event knows things don't always 10 smoothly. This \\las one of those times. There was a problem with the sound system ... the Raiders came on two and a half hours after scheduled. And, by that time the openina act had already had to leave to catch a plane. Paul Revere was giving oul good sianals when the group finally came on and they played for an hour an Ken •Hiott, Ceroa,n 118re, Dewn Meta, Miss Pounteln Valley end Marlys Green, first runner·up. a half to the delight of many who · had waited. In the meantime the party bunch had its own set of problems with set up and transportation. But, really do you have to have wine and beer where there arc soft drinks? Arc tablecloths really that important? And, after almost two hours wait the chicken wings. really good meat balls and bread, guests arc ap- preciative. RJaht? In the meantimcl all the lights, sounds and smells ot a carnival were in the background stirring up memories. llOICO'C 01'1 M_..J, J91J I ARIES (March 21-April 19): New moon position highlights S1ructure, desian. home, aecurity. You·u be makina chanaes that some will regard as .. sudden." Go ahead, don't take seriously comments of those who lack imqination. Discussion on gays leaves questions TAURUS (April 2().May 20): You miaht be spreading yourself "too thin." Means meetina demands of qthers would not be constructive. Take care of younelf, indddina diet, exercise, nutrition. Purchase of clothing indicated. Enjoy it! GEMINI (May 21-June 20): New moon position emphasizes chance to rqroup. to renovate. to inaugurate different accountina procedure. Atten- tion centers around facts, fiaures. Basic f>!Oduct will be examined, tested. fix _ tt! CANCER (June 21-July 22): New moon in your s1p hiahliahts chance to redeem, to repin prestiae. You prove capebihties in dramatic fashion. Focus ~lillillllllill• on communicatioh, variety, ability to .. work wonders" with hands. • ....... LEO (July 23-Aua, 22): You learn more about costs, efforts of family member to keep secret. Liaht shed on area previously obscured by innuendos. You'll receive communication from one in position of authority. VD\GO (AUf. 23-Sept. 22): Almost everything you ask for is promised. There will be minor disappointments, delays. Commitments arc made but . financial structure requires strengthening. Be positive concerning legal riabts. Pisccs involved. U IHl A (Sept 23-0ct. 22): Someone "at top" is removed. You'll be dealina with new r'Cf)me. Emphasis on responsibility, ~wer, pressure of deadline. Love relationship commands attention. C..pncorn native plays paramount role. ICORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Some will say, "You proved your wint and did it with aplomb!" New followers aJ;C attracted. Your influence ~orn.uuus (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Stress individuality, creadvaty, style. Member or opposite sex will declare, "You seem to think a Jot of yourself lately!" Answer i1 ~u have riaht to be proud of recent accomplishment. CAPlllCOllN (JJee. 22..Jan. 19): You'll pull together opposmg forocs, '=:t family members. New moon position accents partnership public a~nces. different method of obtainina aoals. AQVAJUUI (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Focus on humor, versatility, basic issues that include care of pets, depc'ndents, emplo~ent You no lonaer will be satisfied witb 11at&aa quo .. Youil be sayina. ·I'm pins to do it my way!' Pllta (Feb. 19-March 20): Thole who critkized will now say, "There was a mctbod to your madftess after all! .. Rebuildtna propam sets under · IF JOLY I• YotJll 8181BDAY This is your power month! You·re rady for f'rab start in new direction, for romance, for imprintina your own ~ You are va.tik, briaht, poucss intellectual curioaity. Gemini, 51i1itwius penou play important ro&es in your life. You make sharp reco~ from recent tett.ck. 'POlllf,111 DEAR ANN LANDERS: Last evening four couples who were havina dinner at our home became involved in a heated discussion about homosexuality. I won't go into the various notions that were expressed, ·but there was a great deal of disagreement and more than a little .ianorancc. Will you please answer the follow- ina q~ions? . {I) What causes homosexuality? (2) ls it possible for a homosexual to become straiaht through psy· chotherapy? (3) Do you believe that most homosexuals would be straight if they had the opportunity to choose? (4) Do you believe that AIDS is a punashment from God? Thanks for serving as our moder- ator in absentia. -L.P. IN MADISON, WIS. DEAR MADISON: (1) No OH bows for certala wlaat c .. aea ....... nallty. For IDUJ years It I ,. 'ti. HO\ D was believed tlaat lllomoaex..Uty wu dae to improper paret1Uq, per· laapa a domiaeerlaa. mot.Iler or a fat.Iler wllio w11 aiseat or rarely .,....., Or a mot.Iler ... wu overly pntecUve ud a.o emodoaall)' la· volve4 wltla Iller .... Or a cold ud lMlffernt lat.Iler ... rejected tile bo~Tlaeae Uteorle1 laave DOW been re ede4. . experts wlaole optalou I re- spect believe tlaat o.'1 1exaallty ls .... ,.. .... by OM of lite followtq factors: lloimouJ, 1enetlc, payclao- loatcal, social, or a comblaatloa of aJf roar. (Z) Moat Htlloritlea say It 11 vlrtaally impo11lble for a laomoaex- ul to become stralpt, evea wltla 1Dte11lve tlaerapy. Some l •Y• may abud• tlaat Ufe style. ud laave latlmate relatto.sll.lpt wldt womea, but dtelr laomoaexul desires are never completely eradicated. (S) I beUeve tlaat becaaae of a.Ile way society views laom"exaat., most woald, lf tlley laad a dtolce, be stralpt. ( 0 I .. Ht believe tlaat AIDS Is a pultlamnt from GM. O.Jy a laomopllobe woeld dtlak tll.l1 way. • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: I have lost my wife. No, she didn't die. She didn't leave home to make a career for herself. She didn't run ofT with another auy. She aot hooked on refunding. Delores is constantly clippina coupons, mailing rebate forms, sav- inJ and filinJ product wrappen and label.,. Nothing can be thrown away in case someday it mi&ht be proof of a purchase. As a result of co.Uecting refunds and coupons, she has piled up enouah food to last for two years. On my fast trip around the house I counted 34 boxes of dry cereal and 27 boles of crack.en. . We can't have company becallse the house is so cluttered. I doubt that Delores makes the minimum waac for all the time she puts in, but, even worse, it has turned her into a minimum wife. What should I do, Ann? I'm ready to send her back to her mother for a refund. -LB., PENNOCK. MINN. DEAR PENN.: Deleres, ne ,..._ ... , ... alwa11 . lnp! ... .,.,. It.as ~over die UM. Ae Is ~ -....lve-eom"111ve. fte woma.a .... ,,., ...... laelp ............ , ,_y, l Mpie Aeptt It . Beau~y aAd · happiness go hand in hand The better lookin& the woman, the happier she is. Indiana University invcstiptors uy their research proves that. What they don't say is which came fint. Docs pretty make for hapPy? Or docs happy make for pretty? Ask the youna ladl at the next desk. If you think she d know. If you th.ink she wouldn•t know, mercy, don•t brina it up. Monday ii the cbef s day off. traditionally, in a Chinese rct- taurant. So if the place opens that day, it's likely less experienced cooks are in charae. The famed French philosopher Jean Jacques Rousseau left each of his five children on the doontep of a foundling home. Killer whales have bad breath, too. Almost as bad u eqlcs'. Are you aware of a current trend to make "home and family" apin life's focal point? It's called "cocoon- ina." A new word, that. Coined by a social analyst with the arrcsuna name of Faith Popcorn. "Cocoon· ina." it's said, will tum up in the new dictionanes. If you put a teaspoonful ofvinepr into every quart of your dO&'• drink· in& water, it'll aet neither f1eu nor lieu. Clients insist it really works. And the doaS don•t mind the wee. Why manqen fail -that, too, bas been studied. At le11&1h. No. I ruaon, according to the experts, hanp on bow they deal with people. Employees, supplien. customen. If they can't handle that smoothly, thetr chanCCI aren •t too aood. evidently. 'Dwt Dirik concrete linina the anaent Roman agueduct1 wu made with Ume. port fat and the milk of ftas. 3 UC/ medical students win Cancer Society grants . Tbree UCI medical studenll were ._.., ---fd~ip .,.nts "' ... AmericU c... Society. NapeU&aH of Irvine. Blair Anat ...... of Newport Beach, rnM ancf Martlp L,_ of Corona del Mar, .....,. ._.. of Irvine, ....,. ~ .. llllrltt D of taauna Hills. ..... a... of U.Una a.ch and MWl11I a..n. of "tor· oaa del Mar. • • • The Dilfteylaad Creativity ~ ...... bliabed to booor .. -~ ...... 'lib idaool ia .., .... ol a.livily ud ans. Hip School. junior creative writina; JH•I•• &•••••, Seal Beach, McAulift'e Middle School, . junior ctanc:e· ~ 8 Je, Lquna Niluel, N~ HWi Junior Hiab Sdiool, J.wof dramai. .A..... Bnek• c.rtlilli. Dana roint. Marco Forster Juiolr Hlela School, junior IC>lo vocal. •11t1 ltt111, foun&ain Valley, Fou111ia V~ H't.=;:· aenior duce; ~ II. Million Viejo, CIDilbuo Val H'ib 9cMol, --.... ..,,. ,.. El :r-' El l'Gnl-ltilll Sc:Mol -s.mcW~~-a..-Nia! MllMa t.-.. HUa. ltilll ... 001. .. •• , ~; 8 rg w n ut. Mfaloa ~ M•• "'-h .. ool, H•lor Uaret .......... l :Ul'I OHi \I Bid process in Huntington smells funny Tbe Huntington Beach City Council last week began the process of awarding Rainbow Disposal Co. a new I 0- ycar contract to collect trash in the city. Rainbow is in the last month of a I 0-year contract and by all accounts has done the job the past decade. But aomethina smells funny and its not the trash. Council members during an out-of-town retreat earlier this year decided they would put contracts and franchises out to bid. In other words, instead of hiring the first operator who walked into City Hall, or continuing with a company simply because it had performed that service· for the city before, the council would advert~ the enterprise and accept bids. Ideally, the city gets the best deal for the right price that way. And price may be the issue. Collecting trash, believe it or not. can be a lucrative business. A businessman can make a buck or two in a city of more than 1851000 people with resitlcntial trash collec- tion rates going up from $7.5 8 to $8.45 per month in July. So what did Huntington Beach do? Did council members look for the best deal for the city? Did the y put the free enterprise system to work? Did they follow their adopted policy and solicit bids? • No, the city put aside the bid procedure and opted to sit down and negotiate only with Rainbow. That is like playing poker with the dealer and refusing to look at your cards. The majority of the council members were swayed by Rainbow's argument that it had invest~ much in its trash business the past 10 years and it coufd be forced out of business if it lost the lucrative city contract. - They argued another operator could submit a .. low- ball" bid, win the contract and then do a lousy JOb picking up trash. It is all a lot of rubbish. Rainbow Disposal is a business like so many others in Orange County. Whether it prospers and if 1t survives 1t not the responsibilty of the City Cou ncir. If Rainbow provides good service at a fair pnce it deserves the contract. And it merits consideration because of its history of performance. In the bid process, the lowest estimate doesn't always win the contract. Companies must be able to prove they can deliver a certain level of service. Rainbow deserves points for service and experience. But it docs not deserve a subsidy. It ~ not entitled to a guarantee and it merits no special treatment. The council should be more concerned with its clients who arc the residents of Huntington Beach . Quii talkang and ask for bids. Oplnlona expr....ct In thla apece are thOM of the Dally Piiot. 0th« vtewa upr....ct on tNa .,. .,. thoM of their authors and art111a Rea<Mrs' oomtMntt.,. lnvtted and may be sent to The Dally PllOt. Po Box 15e0, Colt• M ... t2e2e O I 111 IC \ 0 IC I :' Limit on gifts The state Fair Political Practices commission's ruling that elected officials can accept almost anything under a new law intended to curb gifts lo politicians 1s shocking. but probably technically correct. The loopholes in the law should be closed promptly, as the commission has proposed. The commi&sion's interpretation of a campaign finance initiative, approved by voters in June 1988 as Proposition 73, was not really an endorsement of freebies. The ruling simply spotli&hted and specified some serious weaknesses of the Proposition 73 statute. which reads: .. No elected officeholder shall accept any g.if\ or honorarium for any speech, article or pubhshed work on a subject related to the governmental~ process from any single source which is in excess of S 1.000. in any one calendar year." According to the commission. the language docs not preclude politicians from receiving unlimited gifts as long as they report them on financial-disclosure statements. Strict readinJ. of the statute would restrict the acceptance of money or &Jfts for speeches and writings related to gov- ernmental process -but allow limitless gifts for other reasons. To close the loopholes, A8942, authored by As- semblyman Ted Lempert, D-San Mateo, should be pas~d by the Lqislatun: as rapidly as Possible. On•rd Prn1-Cour#er ORANGf COAST ~-Pilat-· ______ _ ... ~tfff ......... ,..,,. Don Fenlfy Tom Clanin S""' M~r~ R09tr 8'00fT'I OOM.I Mooney 1t09er Catlson Tom i&;dd ,,,, Pupo lob Frltl"\lt C~G~ a.t, ... ..., Judy~tng , .... A.O... ...., ..... , ... ,.., ..,.c... ~, ...... Edttor AsSOCl.tl" Editor Ne~ Editor City Editor fHt~S Ed•tOf' Busr~ss Editor SponJ Ed1t0t Ora.NtJon Director CirculatlOf'\ Mkt Mgr H~ ~rvtty Mgr Cust~r SeMct-Mgr Cou1ral1r Oat• Proceu1ng Mgr. Cr.m Mgr. MIPAcfti. Mgr. ..... w. .... a •••MS.· Lf'911Adtl M• 11111• lite 2 ...... PROPER PROCEDURE FO~ CON511iU'TlONA1~LY PROTECTED FLAG ~URN1N<l PRO'IE5'r 1a'Ke ci\e(1)aut.knt\C mad.e -1n-Korea Amer\can \\a 0 Ht:ADEHS" t 'ORl .. 'tl .. r-~~I(~ l SUCK<?! J.. ' ~---" , .,, '"* ,.,.. . '-~~~ \ -.. V\ \§. v Mond•y. July 3, 1989 All 'I· 0 D \ \ I \ Ill' I OH \ r oday IS Monday, July l . the I 84th da) of 1989 There arc 181 da )' s left in the )'car T <>day's h1&hh&ht in history· On July r. 1863, the three-day C"'1v1I War Battle of Gettysburg, Pa., ended an a maJOr victory for the North a~ ( onfedcrate troops re· 1rtatc<l Some 7,000 men arc bc-- heved 10 have died in the battle. Pre111dent .\braham Lincoln dedi· cated a national cemetery at lbe ba11leficld the following ovcmber., On Lh1s date In 1775, Gen George Washin1ton tool. w mmand of the Cont1nentaJ Arm) at Cambndge. Mass. In 19 50. A mencan and North Kort'an fore~ clashed for the first trme in the Korean War. In 19'6 Israel launched its danng m1c;~1on to rc~ut' about 100 passcn- &ers and Air France crew members being held at Entebbc Airport in Uganda b-. pro-Palcst101an h1- Jackers. In 1986. Prt:~1den1 Reagan pre~1dcd o"er the ~hJ.hllng of the renovated Statue of Liberty. Today's birthdays: Movie director Ken Rus!>ell 1s 62. Jazz musician Pete Fountain is 59 Playwnght Tom Stoppard is 52. Actress Betty Buc.:klcy 1s 42. Former Haitian Prcs1- dent-for-L1fc Jean.Claude Duvalier 1s 38 Singer Laura Branigan is 32. By TH A•HClatd Pn.1 Apology for flag-burning decision - To the Editor. I. as many others, complain about polr11cs and other matters but never write to my con- gressman or the media to express my hkes and dislikes. This 1s the firs1 -lime for me. and I wonder 1f this will appear anywhere. Never· that couple. After World War II. Axis Sally went to Jail at least. The First Amendment was Fonda's basis to get away with 1t. but of cou~ she 1s sorry no~ important, but 1t 1s 1nd1cat1ve of the value some of us -ottier than the Supreme Court -put on the flag of the United States. 1hcless, here goes. , This apotoay to "Jud,e" 1s to let tum know that one of his boys from roop I S5 stiJI believes 1n his teachings. While watchane 1elcv1s1on the other day. I saw a younJ man with a bauble hanging from his ear. It is his nght to wear a bauble. but he was telling me tbat the Supreme Coun has upheld his beltefs as a member of the Revolutionary Com· munist Youth Bngade, and that he has the nght under the First Amendment to spit on. burn and stomp on our nag. He also said, "libeny and JUSt1ce for all 1s a he" and that our type of government is "America uber alles" -JUSt lrke that nut wllh the funny mustache who ~1d. "Oeutchland ubcr allcs." I'm sure you remember World War II. If not look 11 up in the history books 1f that's still allowed. We also allow drug pushers to d o Lheir thing. and the ACLU does not permit our peace officers the nght to do their JOb. An} lond of a loophole as used and based upon the ACLU's under- standing of free speech under the First Amend- ment. I could go on and on hoping that someone will listen and perhaps they will. but I S-1 I have some apologies to make for my Sup~~un. The Supreme Coun justices intt'rpret the law of the land for me. so I want to make 1t easy and comfonablc for them. I apolOJ,lze to: "Judge • Tumblatt, my Boy Scout Master of Troop 155 an Los Angeles. I hope ''Judge" is still his nickname. Anyway, "Judge·· played an 1m- ponant part in the fomung of my understanding of moral respons1b1htics and what I believe an I apol<>&Jze to Ed Busby. my best fnend and buddy wamor. Ed and I first met at Fon Bcnnmg. Ga. We made our first beachhead at Casablanca, French Morrocco. Ed and I fought together clear to Anz10 1n Italy unt1J the hole we were m received a direct mortar hiL Ed bad his head blown ofT. I handed his wife -they were marned just before we shipped out -)Us d<>&t.aas after the war was over. Ed held up our'fla& in the manner 1t was meant to be and paid the prioc. I apol0j.1Zc to those Mannes who proudly raised our flag at lwo J1ma. I apolOIJZC to Lhosc wamon who fouaht in Korea and Vietnam. I apolOIJZC to everyone who believes that our nq and country really means t0me1lu.nJ and thank that its ume to stoi> those who~ dtuina away at the foundauon.s of our life. I aran1 you we do some dumb and tr· responsible thinas. but I will guarant~ you that the founding fathers had no intention of the First Amendment being interpreted the way tt 1s being interpreted b) subversive organ1zat1ons and now even our Supreme Coun. We have irresponsibly allowed Jane Fonda and Tom Hayden to get away wiLh colJaboratang wtth the enemy 1n Vietnam. and on his own turf. too. "We the people" wlll never know how man) American lives were lost or ruined because of He p ve the Scout Oath. "On my honor, I'll do my best for God and my country, etc." an important and real meanina. Ht' also said. and I believe 1t 1s an the Boy Scout book. that when the Amencan Aaa 1s djppcd in a salute or whatever. it should never be aOowcd to touch the ground I think we were taught that an the Army too. In pictures of the C1v1I War. you sec Lhe flag bearer getting shot and another wamor grabs the flaa before 11 hits the ground This may not be The First Amendment was not meant to stop the P1edac of Allqlancc or to be used u a tool to help those who are not mtemtcd iD anyihina of true value. I bchcve m free s~h for all people, but I also believe we should not S)vc awa)' what has bttn p&Jd for with blood. R. BURK£ Newport Beach Government created healt.h-care crisis To the Editor. Your editorial "Controlling Health cue costs before 1t become a crisis;· 1s appropriate. tsi1 it's too late. Health care cost as in a crisis. And the tragedy of Juan Jimenez Collado 1s the evidence. Mr. Jimenez lay scnously Injured from an auto accident in a small lmpenal Valle> hospital that said ll did not have the ability to care for his tnJUncs Nme hospitals from San D1cao to Los An&eles were said to bavc refused Mr. Jimenez as a trans- fer patient. Mr. Jimenez died wa1t- ma for a hospital to accept the transfer request. The delay 1n transfcmna Mr. Jimenez was due to government created red tape. and the 1ovem· mcnt's intentional underfunding of the health care industry's cost to care for the poor. The ~islature and the adminis· trat1on are to blame for the tragic situation Mr. Jimenez was m. not the ho pitals that were contacted. While 1t may be debatable whether Mr. Jimenez would have survived had the transfer taken place 1mmcd1atcly. the fact as Lhat the system that the state has created to provide health c~rc to the poor is a failure. Who would accept a JOb that would cost them SI O out of their own pocket to perform in ewhange for S4 pay? Let me say that ano ther wa} Who would 10 to work for an employer where the employee makes no money and in fact loses $6 an hour of their own money for each hour the) work. Well. that's what happens when a health care provider. such as a hos- pital, cares for an unmsur~d or undermsurcd poor person. The hos· p1tal in this eu.mplc loses S6 for every SI 0 they spend. Many hospi- tals have poor patients that con- stitute as much as 30 percent of their patient load. What 1s worse is th•t the losses arc through ntcts 1ty transferred to the bills of those who can pay. This is a basic reason health and hospital bills arc chmbana. AJI of this means that govern- ment's underpaymg for the health care of the poor ~ults in h1&her health care pnces to those wor~ing people wo can pa) For a while insurance companies v.erc dinaed for the losses gcnt'rated by eovcrnment's intentional under- paying through cost sh1fung Hospi- tal and doctor fees went up and insurance companies paid When the insurance companacs fiaurcd out what was aoing on. the) started capping what they would pay for services. But not until af\cr the working person started to act charged for government under- payina through higher dcducuhles and larger share of costs for health benefits. Hosp1tah and health care providers 1n general cue for people and have a natural affinit_y for want- 1na to help But the choice '°vem- ment has created for them " this· care for the poor patients and IOtc your practices throuah bankruptcy, or don't t.a.ke care or poor pahent.s and lose your government contracu. Mr. Jimenez's auto 1KJCidcnt is unfonunate 1n thst it occurred and that II occurred at this time. Kow· ever. hosp1t.a.ls arc not to blame for what happened -government is. As soon as aovemment.. which nahlfuJly demands that the poot be cared for. swu payina at least the actual pnce that the care COS1 to deliver -not profit, JUst the coat - )Ou wall see health care cxpcntcs st.a.baized for everyone, 1f not come down. You will sec hospit.als-eccept· 1n1 transfers of poor petienu more readily You will sec more doctors and hospitals aoocptina poor pa. t1cnts. You will actually tee the system work111J the way at should, filled with canna people who want to deh\er an cfTttt1vc and aff'Ofdablc health Pm&ram. JIM ORR Administrative Assilcant IO .,scmbJym•n Nolan Frintlle 69tb District Embarrassments column shortsighted To the Editor: I'm saddened b) JOUT news edi- tor's anicle cnlitlcd .. Some Oranac County Conservatives Conttrvina Compe ion .. Tom Clanin writes. ''It's 10meumcs embam ina livi"' in Onnac County. we have Jqis. lators that make even conscrvatavc RepUbhcans cnnac from time to time." In the ncAt paragraph he wrote "In the state A scmbly we have Nolan Fnacllc. who tncd to tnsure that dwarf: in his distnct a<>t pan of the business from lottery talcs." Mr Clan1n's article then vcnn1rcd off to rq on other con~rvat1vcs in the Orange Count~ delcsation I ~ noth1n1 that Mr. C1an1n ~rote conccrn1na me to cau~ him tmbarraumcnt Good papers ruffle our feathers ., ... • ,.., • • om•oE BEDER• ...... a n•fl • ~ I am proud of my efToru to hdp those cou~ mall people who arc al c1t11cn And whale I ~ not have been ucc:ct.1ful in tettine them tncl\Mlcd an Lhe lotttty im· plementat1on bill that au.,.nteed a pcruntqc of the lilt lotttry buli· ncu to m1nontr..arous--T am proud of mak.ina the effort. I am ahO ...,... of lho.e lhort-s&atiued citi11tn• wllo came 10 me wtth Ult PfCJlllOMI eo ha" them udUded m that ...,. lat ion ' I e&n ol\ly llope lhlt Mr. didn't truly mean lti .. •• ,.Ned bY my ecttCl8I. lllllt It ... l don't aoo'cwilt Air lt.. W • .,..,•-ke;a. I fttl IOtr) for him. ' .... 0.-~ DAILY l'ILDT I Mondoy, July 3, 1989 by Bii Keene COUllTU CULTUllE by Moratto a Marotta "Jeffy, I sincerely hope nobody ever hires you as a tanker captain." by Brad Anderson Stretd\ -~~ 7 l'll *""' 'fOll ~tretc.h -~~. DEl'fllflS THE lllltlllACE ·m 1J I - l ' b Hank Ketcham !--'---< i @ "~ 1-3 "Don't look so innocent. I know criminal ,---1----~• -llnlntienont:wheni"".--lt:" ----1-1--'-W&o";HERE-(~~fOR;llS"1JltMlll4 , • PSAlllUTS by Charles M .. Schulz 1-J ARLO AND JANIS . \ FOil BEfTER OR FOR WORSE UXlK .~ '/O.J FIRe aooi ~DAV \tOlZ>'lK ',tIB Fil\3f SfEP I ALL~l,lrr, LUC'< .. llMAT's vour; -excuse 'Tlll5 TIME' AIR60T IN MV EVES ! { JUDGE PARKER ~ L--A:~h 1-_.; I =;;__,_Jo!-~;;:: by Jim Davis ·---------.. • FUlllKT WllllKltlUUtAJlf t,{)() WANT ro ftENT' 'FRIC#J "!HE "IUI~~' AGAll-I ~ ~ ... by Jimmy Johnson NmR AAJ<t If A OOU8t£• by Lynn Johnston by Harold' Le Doux by Tom Batluk 11'& 50RT Of ·~ l'll()llE' ! ., < ..., .... s MONDAY, JULY 3. 1989 Vlola=moves up in ·rotation to stop Angels, 2-1 MINNEAPOtlS (AP) -Fnnk Viola l'flQUCSted Jhc meetina with former teammate Ben 8\ylc vcn, and he Sol what he wanted. Viola pitched a four-hitter and the Minnesota Twins rallied for two ruQLin..Jhe..ei&blh-innina.Sunday to beat the.Caliromia Angels, 2-1 . Viola, 7-8, was not scheduled. to pitch until Tticsday; but asked Man- aaer Tom Kell y tor a cJ:ut.ncc to oppose Blylcvcn. "Ben is a real close friend and to be: abfe 10'10 up againsl him is an honor," Viola said. ··r learned a lot from him while he was here ... Viola struck out seven and did not walk a batter in his fifth complete pmc. Blyleven, traded to Calif'omia in the off-season, made his first appear- ance~ a.gainst the Twins. He out- pitched Viola, workina seven .score- less innina.s on six hits, striking o ut five and walkina one. "I felt after seven inninp that my shoulder was a litlle stiff". Blyleven said. "'!motionally, I was just drained." Blylcven said Viola. "showed how much it meant to him the way he wanted to ball on three days1 rest. He.pitched an outstanding game." Viola retired 27 of the last 29 . bitters. -- ,,,,,,," 11111111 man led off with a double and one out la1er1 Puckett doubled off the wall in ngtn-center for a tic at I. Bob McClure relieved and walkW Kent Hrbek. Willie Fraser replaced McClure and Gaf')' Gaetli singJed home Puckett. Viola's 17-inning scoreless streak ended in the first when Dick Schofield and Johnn)' Ray singled. Devon White sacrificed and Wally Joyner had an RBI grounder. Viola retired 21 of the next 22 ba.uers before Bill Schroeder singled in the eighth inning. • "All in all. that's as consistenl a pme as I can pitch," he said. R ieb Monteleone, 2-1, relieved Blykvcn to stan th~ ei&hlh. Al New- The Angels, who fell I 1h pmcs behind pace-selling Oakland tn 1hc American League West. open a seven-game homestand and four· aame series against the Texas Rangers at Anaheim Stadium 10- night. Mlnne1ot• baserunner Al Newm•n l••P• In •tt•mpt to avoid th• t•g of Angels Ill t11 pl I C•tcher 8111 Schroeder In ttte flfttl lnnlnt1 ot Sunday"• .. .,, •• New••n w•s ulled out. Hall feels right a.t home at Laguna Open lly MARGIE WCK D~""'" Coin .. '"'"'" Costa Mesa resident Dale Keough Hall is no stranger to the Laguna Open beach volleyball tournament, nor lo the spon itself. Volleyball has taken her around the world. but this weekend the world has e•tcndcd no fanher than the Laguna Beach main couns. Tod•t she and her panner Karolyn Kirby will face inda Robertson and Julie Schaar at 9:30 a.m . in the loser's bracket final match. Should they win i1. Hall and Kirby will face Janice Opalinski and Linda Chisom-Carrillo in the championship match at 2 p.m .. wi1h 1he winners grabbing $8 ,250 and 1old com· memorative rinas ..-.·orth close to SI .ODO apiece. Hall said she anticipates a tough malch aaainst Schaar and Robenson. "'It's the third day of play in a row and we haven't played 1hcm that oflen" the former Corona del Mar High star said. '"Every match from Sunday on is always tough." Schaar and Robenson have a d ifferent style or play than Hall and Kirby, Hall said. ·· rhcy are very evenly matched. whereas I do 1hc running around and Karolyn docs all lhe power stuff." Hall said. ··1 also'\lo all the arguing," she added, w11h a laugh. In yesterday's semifinal w1nner°s bracket match apinst Lisa Strand and Judy fkllomo. Hall had a reason to argue. After first being delayed two houn in 1he morninJ. Hall and Kirby played a rugged match against Strand- Bcllomo but lost it on a controvenial call by the referee. ··she just didn't SC(' the touch (by the blocker}" Hall explained. ''The match was getting long and she couldn't sec every angle. There should have been two refs." Hall added that she felt the tOumamcn t overall has not been run as well as others in the past. The delay in the morning maich was caused by the women bcina forced to us.c only one court while the legends competition. playing from 9 a.m. until noon also. occupied 1hree. ··rm kind of disappointed." -Hall summed up. Howell preserves ·Dodgers' win Tudor again forced to leave early in 3-2 1111111.111' 'I Ill Ill 11 ' . " . ' Todltv-Plraln, T:OS 'win over Pittsburgh ,,<-<.,:,:~; ,,,. LOS ANGELES (AP) -Jay How· j:~:=: ~~~· ell is pitchin& 50 well that he may Jv1-<ubl. 11:20 ~~~~\""' lose his vacation. Jvt-CutK, 1:0s "I don'1 forcscc any off days until Jvf-CLIM. 11:20• I the All-Star break. and 1hey"ll come Jylo-+dlti. I I in handy," Howell said Sunda)' after Jyll-AU·St•r G•me h• struck out R.J. Reynolds and •Al ,.,,.,.. on KABS: r1dlo (7t0) 1 On 1 ...... 1.ion, Ch•n""! l 1 Dann Biltlrdello wi1h runnen on -.::o~;:.:;::::;;,..;::;;:;;;;:;..;;..,. __ _ ftrst and second to preserve the Dod.gcn' J-2 victory over Pit· U0.'111. Howell leads major-leaguc re· lievttt with an 0.7~ ~arned run 1virraac in Jl appcara1 .. ~s. He has bttn scored uponJU~t four times this scason. On Sunday, Reynolds fOukd off five • pitches before missina a curveblll. "I coukln'l llCI one by him," How- t ell 11id. "I 1houah1 maybe I nttded \0 c.baftec: ipeed1 in order to act one by him. I rcially didn'1 want throw one 10 hir11." Pluobullll Ma,,..., Jim Leyland utd be Uied the matcbup be'lwecn Reynolds. a pinch hitter. and How-en. "'He has been outst}ndina for us 111 year1 bo1h as a regular and as a pinch hitter.'' Leyland said. "He just threw a nasty pitch on him." Jote Gonzalez drove in all thrtt runs with bis first homer since 1986 and a run-scoring double. Gonia~z. whose ninth-inning sln&le beat the Pirates, 1.0, on Sa1ur- dayr e•tended hls hittin& streak 10 11 pmcs when ht followM Jeff Hamil·· ion's leldofT single in the fillh with his third career hon1er. his first since Sept. 29. 1986. The hit .. ve Los Anacles a 2· I lead. '"It's ont of those thinas whcrr you make one mistake and lose the balllamt," Pirates , \!'tcher Doug Dnibek said. "I didn t do m)' job. Howell came in and dMI his Job." Goftzele1, '' fM 34 since takina over as 1hc tcanir\I t'enter fiekter. doubled in 1 Nn in the sixth. founh and scored on Andy Van Slyke's bloop single to &ivc 1he Pirates 1(-0 lead. Mike Scioscia's passed ball with Glenn Wilson on third allo""t:d Piusburgh 10 score a run in the ninth. John T.udor. making his s«and start sinCt' ofTseaM>n elbow SU"fery, ten after thrC'C 1nn1ngs and 42 pitch· es bcrausc-of shoulder soreness. "ll JUSt huns when I 1hrow a baseball, which unfortunately is "'hat I ha\C to do 10 live," Tudor ~·d. The Los Anacles lcfi-hander threw 42 pitches and allowed two hits. lwo walks and no runs. He left his lirsl start. last Tuesday apinsl San Diego. in the fifth 1nn1ng for lhe sanlC' reason. ··1 d1dn '1 ha,·c an~1h 1ng on lhe ball -all changcup!i.,'' Tudor said. ··11 didn't n1ake a whole lot ofscnr for• me-to go out lhl·rc again for another 1nnina,."' , The Dodgers said 1hat Dr. frank Jobe. 1hc doctor \ll'ho performed lh~ elbow surgery on Tudor last Oct 27. will e11an11nt' Tudor's shoulder toda). "I don't know whal°s "·hat co tell )OU the tru1h." Tudor said. "'I don'1 rea ll( know what's 1oin1 10 happen. We'I 5C'C how 1t feels 1omorrow." Tudor undr rwe.nt both re· rons1rucd.vc--Surac.ry on -his elbow and anhroscopic SUIJCfY on his shoulder and had pins rtmovcd from his ri&ht 1ib1a 1n 1he Oct. 27 opcta1ion. Hall and partner Ktrby have only been playing together a shon time. But Hall has been bumpina and spiking the volleyball for many yean. She moved 10 Corona del Mar at age 13 from Northern California, where she was very involved in track. Then, she made the switch to volleyball. "I wanted to play a team spon." she said. "The timing was perfect. Sina I've been in- volved in the spon. the money and \he following have arown so much." Hall went on to play on the U.S. national volleyball team for a year ( 1981 ) but then let\ for Europe, where she cqmpcted for six ycaB. It was an e•cellent e•pericntt for her. she said. "All of a sudden, you're a star," she said, referring to Europe'1 liffiited e•pcriencc with volleyball. "You feel like you're helping people.. It was a real revival for me 1n volleyball af\er the national team. · "You can really enjoy volleyball apin." Though HaJl's volleyball carttr has been enjoyable and fairly Jona. her future in the JTJO" ,..._ ... '" HA.&J;;a11 Rose affair a blow to an old, dear friend EDITOR'S NOTE -Th< hie R~ Affair is abour mon; th•n • l!"'minent •thleie aua:ht in• shock-• 1n1 investi,ation. It is •bou• the love affair millions of people h•ve wirb .basebllll. Ron Sirak, iui1unt spons edi1or of The Associ•ted Preu.. is one of the millions. • NsctMD tirn ' since he wu • child lf'O"NUw up in Westtm Pennsylv•niA in tht J 950s. lly llOH SIRAK N'...,.._ NEW YORK -It is the pme you fall asleep with at nigh~ in front of the television or Jist.en1na to a radio in a darkened room, aod wake up to in the momill&o scannina the bo• scorn over a bowl of cereal « a cup of coffee. Ba>eball. It is more than Pete Ro,se and pmblin&-It is more than a game. No sport is followed the way · baseball is followed. , ... ' It is -. way of markin& .time, a const1nl in Jives that arc constantly chanaing. I was on the school bus aoing ho me, a JO-year-old boy hanaina out the window with a transistor radio. when Bill M.az.qoski homered in the bottom or the ninth inning IO give the PittsburJ,h Pint.cl an jl'K1'Cdible victof')' ovct the miahty New York Yankees in W seventh p.me of the 1960 w or1d Series. · Nine ycan later, I bad a differen1 radio and was a 'collcJC sophomore marchin& in an ant1~W11r demon· stn.tion.z this time tuninc in the·fint pme 01 the 1969 World Series as the upstan New York Mets took on the Baltimore Orioles. Tom Seaver IOst the pme but lhe Mets won the Series. Ba>ebalL Uke..1n ok1 aona whose-fint 110tcs immediately put you back in hiab school, or hke one of tb<>K si&hts or sounds or smells that transpon you back to your childhood, it ts one of the signposts that millions_of peopk use lO marll the eve nu or thcir1.ivcS. It was a TueMl.ay. October 1975. Ni&ht sames in the World Series were still a relatively new thina,. Tbc pme carved its way into the ni&ht.. finally won in the 1 lth innina when Carlton Fisk. homcttd over the )eft field wall in Boston and pve us the indc.libk imqe of him lcaipina up and down a few titpt from home pl~te, motionina for the t.H to ~y fa ir. A few inninas earlier, after Bernie Carbo hid tied the pme for Boston with a pincb·hit three-run home run, Pete Rose came to bit Jnd said 10 .,.... -... N0/141 Drlbek. s-6. iott for the first 1ime in aint uans tince May t~. The ·Pi,.. ha~ ICOl'ed a 101111 or ei,t.1 NQI ilrt Dllibft's lht '°9:lcs. Tudor had nlade 1..-.-0 r~habili- 1a11on sta rts 1n the minon bcfo~ IJ:joinina the Dodgers 1his, year. -. .. .................................... ......... ~ .................... , .. rnena Willon doubled in 1he ve performance In any sport c:rosa country or 1nek is aoir14 tG be ht1vily involved with a runn'~ prosr1m. So I am not wriliha ttiit for tht athlfte or C'Olett, who atrndy k..ows and believes in what n1an1rc c:1n do fOr his/her PfOPIM. a am writlna this A>r the coectl or adUt$t who it l\Ot sureordoee.'\ --•llebeft<ftllof ClfdiovMOtlar u.crcita even it tlwir ..., is mCM't or al'I expAosJ .. • IF I obic Ml~rt. Y•oeodftOtloolttoo.,_ .... WOftlol~-·1111 ..... .....,. .......... , .......... OM1wtto•ve.-dul'M •aCs•ss' ............. ---- • • -- ................ ._ ._.. la I Cll i I ......._(, lil~Ji-ln• l _., ___ Qi .... _____ ..... ..._,, 11r:e1 ..... =-··· -·""' ...-.... --· ....... DmCO'nlllll -.au11ee'1 •obln Yount •I••• his · a.-,· career hit..• two-run ""91e, In die IV' I T l'~•I• fifth lnnlft9 of Suncl•y•s pm• •t Y•nk•• StHIUM. Yount w•s J for 4 with five 11•1. Yount collects 2,500th hit as Brewers rout Yankees Robin Yount isn't playing to chase baseball Jcaends. Ifs plain old competition that keeps him 1oing. r----~t~IOt-hts"'l~trcarctt-hit-and·drove in fi ve runs as the Milwaukee Brewers pounded the New York Yankees 1~2. Sunday. "It feels good to act 2,500," YOunt said. "But I'm playina for the comprtition of the game. We really nccdcd to wjn today." Yount hOmercd in the fourth inning and go1 his '2,.500t.h hit d~rin& the Brewers' six-run fifth inning with a two-run s1 n~c. The Brewe~ ended a three-game losinf streak with the victory. • It-was special bcinf a Sunday afternoon 11 Yankee Stadium," Yount said.• But I've always tried hard and haven't set any aoals." Yount reached the 2,SOO mark at 33 ycan and 10 months. Ty Cobb was the younpt to l'CL\Ch 2.500 hits at 31 ~ and 1evcn months and Pete Rose. the all · time hit leader, WIS 34. Othtn tO reach 2,500 hits at a younger l&C than Yount are R<>sers Hornsby at 331 Hank Aaron at 33 and four months ind Met Ott at 3J and five months. .Eltewhere in the American Lcuue: A.llll11tcs II, ...... I; In Cleveland, Rickey Henclenon hit thC 31th Jcadoff home run of his career and O.vc Parker homered and drove in four runs. lelldina Storm Divis 1nd Oakland to the victory, Jamie Q.irt aleo bomenld b' the Athletics, who &<>t 15 hits UICI -~ I dl~me S-p. past Minnie Minoso with 809 RBI. Luke Appling leads the White Sox list with 1.116. In the National League: Ea-pot IS, A1tro1 t: Bryn Smith drove in fou r of Montreal's scason-hish 13 runs as the Expos 101 19 hits. to pound Visitin& Ho uston. Smi1h. whose previous hi$h for a game was two RBI, hit a th~·run double tn. Montreal's six-run scoond and an RBI single in thl' Expos' four-run third. Meta 7, Re41 t: Howard Johnson hit his 22nd home run and doubled twice at Ri verfront Stadiun1 as the Mets won for onlr, the second time in six pmes. Sid Fernandez, 6-2, al owed five hits in 7J/1 inuinp'to win his second strai&hl start anl'r five conse~tive no- dccisions. Giut1 41 C.bs S: Kevin Mitchell's two-out. two-run homer off Rick Sutcliffe, 9-6. capped a three-run rally in the ei&hth inning for San Francisco at Candlestick Park. Will Clark sin&lcd to.pull the Giants to within 3-2 and Mitchell hit S.11tcliffe's next pitch over the fenct in risht, improvini his major league-le1ding IOtals to 26 homers and 74 RBI. Braves S,·l Pllllllet 1; Lonnie Smith raised his pverage to".336 with th'rtt hits and John Smoltz pi1ched a five-hiller ror A1lanta at Veterans Stadium. Smollz, l~t pitched his rourth complete game of 1he season. his lh1rd apinst the Phillies. P•llres S, Cardin••• !: Al Busch Stadium. Bruer Hurst pi1ched his fourth complete pme •nd trigered a four-run third innina with onlr his second major· Jeque hit. Hc·entertd the pme for 35. CJ CJ DIYaSr 7-3, won his fifth COftKCUtive decision. John Farrell. '"'· hll IOll eiabt of his lut 10 decisions. Tlrllers 7, Ortelel l : In Baltimore, Mi.kc Heath n.n 7, onee. J .,...,.. 11. v• ... 2 doublea home an unearned run that ana----' a sixth· KTHn' • ..._,....... ...,..,.., ... ..,.... .,........ •rlllll •r•lll •••Ill •••Ill inai.ns&ie•ndl..ouWhitakc:rhita.lhfw..runhomerthat """'d 1111 °"""""d 1111 ........ 1111 .., • ., •••• lifted Detroit. The Orioles.. who hive Jiven up 12 =..• .. If I: =<j : ff f =: : T f: =:: .. : : l: unearned runs. the fewest in the major IC'l&UCS this .,.,.,..... .. • • • 1 c,_.,.. • • 1 • .,...,.d • 11 • ~-1 • i • ~ h' • • fc L)"Wltll Jiit r,fl.":'tll 1111 l'flRo'd \Ill ..,,..Ill 1111 ...ae. loll 1vr the t 1td umc tn our a.amcs and 1he o....,..,. 1 • • • "' 1 11·1 ...,. "' . , 1 1 ~• • • 1 • '"1lth ,;_,. in nine. L-" 1 t 1 • /llllTMllc .1 • • t.t ••"' 1 • • • .....,..11 ,• •' t' .'• .. ......... ........ ' ••• ~" •••• 0..11 ' ......... .... lea 4, 8liae J•Jt 1: Jn Toronto. Dinn)' Heep -c • • 1 1 -....a • • 1 1 ...,..... • 11 , o-c '• • hit Boston's first pinch-home run in more thin tWO -..a 11 11 ~-=--.: ~:::re::, ~J;t ~=M :::i k'!ln, a thra:-rvn shot in the I Ith innin• th1t lifted the -· '•• • ~• '''' ... -..... '''' o-a •111 Sox to their seuon-hi&h fourth ttrai&ht victory. T-H111eft111 • • • • ,._ • .... "' ~ • '" 1 Kevin Romine went 5 for $with two doubles for I.be · ':.!.: ~ ":. • 1 t 1 __.. ._.. w -:I ......... fim fivHit pme of'his career. , :,. . : ::: :::: ~!_Tl,._ ~ ~.::--1~ 1'Mle lea 1', ..,... I: At Comiskey Park. Harold •~••••= ~ 1. LOii •••LI'" .. -.,_ '· ._, t..-&.41 ..._ • &...... ~-.1 .-...11 • L~-t, --....... I. ....,._. C09rllft. ..,.._........, (t). -•net ~iUI,. .vvc an -r runs ...... mo""' into ,. "' • ..:..-. .. .....,. .... c•i . .,.~ ICICODd' olllCC on ~~·· all-time ~ lilt, helpina ~~ ...... ~11$, _...., "''· • 11 • ..-.. • Orea Hibbard Ill llil ftru. malor-&e.ttue Vw:tory. Balnes1 • ,. •• • • • .. ' ' • s wbo allo hit 1 two-nnrdout* and sacrifice fty, moveo ,,,, , s 1 1 , 1 ' • ' 1 ' CJ 'DJ As• t1, ...... l ,,, ... CJ ..... 4, -,,..,. 1 -- 1M t I I 1 I I I t I 1 I • '1'0111, 11111 \k Yankees pull 'hie/den -run' play to unknowingly change final score ''°'" TM Aslodatad Press NEW YORK -Some teams try the ~ hidden-ball trick. The New York Yankees pulled the lijdden-run play -and it worked • ao well even they didn't know they tcored. - A r1re .. fourth-out" call chanaed the final score, but ·not the outcome, as the Yankees beat the Milwaukee Brewen. S-1, Saturday niaht. Everyone ex~t the umpires left thinking the scoreboard was ri tat '4-1 . It wasn't unill after.the pme th1t ctCW c ic( Larry Barnett explained it was wrona. ""1 haven•t seen thtt ~Y in 26 years. I'm ~ust glad I recotnizcd it when I did sec it, .. Bamcu satd. The ballpark that made Ruth, M1ntlc and the pine. tar dispute ramous added another bizarre play to its history. , - Here's what-happened:-Witli one-out in the ei&hth • innina and New York ahead 4-1, the Yankees had.Mike Paaliarulo at third base an4..Bob Geren at tint Manager Dal las Green put on the suicide-squeeze play and both runnen broke on a pitch to Wayne .Tolleson. Tollcson's bunt was cauaht in the 1ir by pitcher Jay Aldrich on the first-base siOc of the mound. Realizing he had an casr double play, Aldrich took his time and tossed the bal to first baseman Greg Brock to end the inning. Pqliarulo, knowin& he had no chance to get back Moody holds off Beard .. 01' Sarac:' Orville Moody took the .zJ lead with an eqle-3 and went on to a two-• stroke victory over Frank Beard in the U.S. Seniors Open Golf Championship Sunday in Ligonier, Pa. The biucst victory of Moody's career since he won another U.S. Open 20 years aao, was secured with a closing round of 70 in muggy, hazy beat at the Laurel Valle)' Golf Club. Jn other golf Sunda)': •Mark McCumbcr and Peter Jacobsen finished in a tie aner 72 hole! and a rain delay and will finish the SI million Western Open in Oak Brook. Ill. with a sudden-death playoff.fod&y . The two came down the stretch tied throuJh the last three holes and decided not to ha.,e the playoff for the top prize of $180,000 until this morning because of darkness. •Tammie Green made her first LPGA victory a bi& one, holding of( Ptt Bradley and Betsy King for a one-shot victory ar the $600,000 du Mauncr Oassic in Montreal, the third of the year's four majors. Green, in her third year on the LPGA Tour. shot a par.72 at the 6,261 ·ylrd Beaconsfield Golf Oub for a four-round total score of 9-under-par 279. •Briton Nick Faldo birdied the last hole in the final round of the $472,000 French Open in Chantilly, France for a I-under-par 69 and a one-stroke victory to retain the title he now has-won four times. QIOl•.OI 111111\\ k • Grtffe1 Sr., Cincinnati Reds outfielder, after hearing that his son, rookie sensation Ken Griffey Jr. of the Seattle Mariners, stood up and clapped duriria a visit to Riverfront Stadium when the elder Griffey delivCrcd a double: "You'd better or you're aroundcd." · Three straight for Flttlpitldl Emerson Fittipaldi ran off 10 his third -.. -:•"'S<""""- strai&ht victor)', capturin& the Oeveland Vr• Grand Pria Indy-ctr l'ICC Su nda)' under a \ . blanket of heat and humidity almost as hot .,as lhe streaking Brazilian. Fittipaldi, ·who now has won four of his last five starts., includina the Indianapolis ~l camcd hi• second triumph in three ,yean on the rouan Burke Llkefront Airport road circuit. · The 42-year-old driver, a two-time Formula One champion, avoided every prob&em on the bumpy 2.41- mile, 12-tum circuit laid out on con<ntc runways and taxiways. He drove his Chevrolet·powcred Penske PCl8 acroas the finish line 16.95 seconds ahead of the Lola-Chevrolet of IC'COod·placc Mario Aodrctti. In other. rocina Sunday: •Robbie Groff led from stl11 to finish in the Oeveland round of the SCCA Super Vee series. Groff, who staned from the pole, led all 24 laps. on the 2.48- m ile, 12-tum roed circuit at Burke L.akefronl Airport, bcatu11 runner-up Jeff Davis by 21.31 seconds. •Geoff Brabham, drivina a Nissan GTP-ZXT erototypc, teamed with Oiip Robinson to wi,n the Camel Continental sports car race at Watkins Olen International. Brabham, the defcndina IMSA Camel OTP tcr:ies champion, ICOrcd his sixth victory in cit.ht races this year. Zane Smith joins Montreal Tbe Montreal Expo1 ·1MC1e the second ~ major addition lO their pitchinc. stiff in less than two months, 1equirina Zinc Smith • from the Atlanta Braves Sunday for thrcc1 rriihor \elautn. Smitb, l·IZ in 17 s&arta this season'Witb the Bravea, will be -primarily In relief, E>pas Gene"I M1nqer Dave Dom&rowbi 11id. Smith his Iott eipt con- NCUtive decilions •nd has the wont won-to. record in · Ille . ~IOO-bimcloodylllelaattWC>pmaUld .,.•re coevi8oed he'I duowi• lhe ball u wicll u be ever baa," ~ tlltl. "He'• pitcbed ...... but be!I ........ lat o( bid -wllll ....... _ lmltll, -.... Ille -wltll I :JM61ifetl----·-... :£S Stqio v-ltld =~~1:1e ~'=-~~ ... c;,.;i'a::r... .. -.=;::;:.~ -··--.. .,.. ~a-'"' ... 1~1 .:.!: =i!u~ :' 1§· 1 ... , ~= ~=: to third, kept runnina tcrOSt the pJatc and toward the duao111 to act bis alove. The B..n~. m~nwhlle, trotted off the field. This is where it gets weird. Barnett, citin& Rule 7.10, said after the pmc th.at Pq.liarulo's run counted, even thou&h he never taacd up. That's beoluse the Brewen never appealed Pi&Jiarulo .leaving early, and because PaaJiarulo sot the plate before the finarout was completed. · ..lt'1 a 'fourth-out' situation," Barnett told startled writers. '"Milwaukee had to throw the b&ll to third blse- for what would be the founh out. Then, they can.choose to make that one the final out and prevent the run from· • scorina. .. But Milwaukee didn'I do that, and it's not's my job to tell tbem. They have to come up with it." • Barnett said he ~inted to the plate and molioned to the press box, ind1catinc the run had scored: But no one exc:ept the other umpires saw the sianal. . ' Aldrich foun·d out he'd been characd with an earned run. Tpllcson discovered he had 6een credited with an RBI. And iri the showen, Tolleson told Lee Guettennan he didn't act a save because Guettcrmitn protected a four-run lead in the ninth inning. not a three-run edge. "It's kind oftoush to lose a save when you get all three ballers out," Guctterman said with a smile. "The next time I ao inl I'm goina to 1sk the umpire what the. score is. Oh wcl , we won." · • I 'I 11 .. • I' TH•: Bl.t:.\('Ht:KS "Crlmlny, Helen, I ciln hear your etomach growllng way over here. Go grab • hot dog and I'll ... vou after the a•me." Razor KO's 'Bonecrusher' FAYETTEVILLE, N.C. -Razor Rud---- dock survived s second-round knockdown .. -~ to beat James "Bonecrushcr'' Smith Sun-P' day, scorin& • seventh-round knockout of ---- the fonner world heavyweia,ht champion. Ruddock, 23, used a left uppercut to send Smith against the ropes and finished the ea-ehamp with a fl urry of punches. Sinith fell face firs1 onto the canV1s and was counted out 1t 2: 18 of the seventh round of the 10-round event 11 the Cumberland County Mem- orial Arena. Ruddock, the Canadian hcavywciJht champion, is 22·1·1 with IS knockouts. Smith, the former World Boxina Association heavywciaht champion, is 19-8-1. Da Sliva takes Tour lead Acacio da Silva of Portupl, wh.o attw ~Pin Luxemboura. arabbcd the ~verall le1d * 1n the 76th Tour de France bicycle race Sunday 1f\er wi1(nina the 84-milc fint stqe throu&ft the Duchy. In Sunday's second staae. a team time trial in the afiernoon, da Silva's Carrera team placed 12th, but he still held on to the overall leader's yellow jersey. The Super U team was the winner of the time trial in 53 min'utcs 48 seconds over the 28'h miles. Dcfendin& champion Pedro Dclpdo of Spain fell far behind after a disastrous we.ek:end of racin&. includ· in& tumina up late for the stan of Saturday's proloaue. The competition, a 2,02~mile race that ends July 23 in Plris., opened wi1h a victory by Eric Breukink of the Netherlands in the prologue. Breukink. howtver, finished far back in the pac.k in the tint lea Sunday and dropped to ninth place by the end of the day. · rn other spons news Sunday: •Th~ NBA teams have bqun nqoti1tions to obtain Denver Nuucts center Wayne Cp9per, ac:cord- ina to Cooper's qent, Chicqo attomey H<"rb Rudoy. Less then 24 houn after Cooper became 1n untt11rict.ed free afrnt at 12:01 a.m. Saturday, "Rudoy rcpo~ "The action's beaun." Rudoy wou~ not nt1me the tams tMt called Cooper. "I've be&un nqotiatins with three team's UNI J think thtrcawilT be two or three more," he 11id. • Socx<r'• world 90vcmlna body wiU d<cid< today wbctba' 10 ~t El Salvidor's f'UIUCSt to move its World Cup qualif)iina pme .,.inst the United States to the Loi Anee~ Colitcum.· If FIFA approves, the pme -.Id lie olay<d Sunday 11 4 p.m., Coliseum offtdeh llkL Tkketl wUI ao on sale this mornina. • Hllmea Benita ICOrCd with one minute ttmt.in- ina at Ooianil, Bruil, 1s Ecuador stunned def'endina daam~ U1111U1r. l..(), in the America Cup, South America'• qUlireftnW IOCClef =:ronship. In the teCODd ~ Claudio~~· 10 minutes into !lie ..-it Jiur to lead 1,. Wo<ld CUp champion """' ..... ~ am.. 1-0. •-C.Utllen -!lie ftnt jockey 10 com-Jllett 1-ort11a _....., nlliat' tllonJuabbml --lie "* Old Vic to YiclGry la tb1 Irish =-~ta Dlt•llli ,..,, • ._ lbLionaer aa Md lriliil ridile •-.... wbo mo-S to -KomlClly -~..:t'y -.... --...... Dm>y,th< llltl .... """"" l:la1>y. --llle--o(h<r m..trJ w1111.-11w Fltlwl..,. Place by 111o '°"""' ... Slto.600 ...... -........ It HollywQod : ....... -··- A group of eight glrl1 fand two parentsf from the Huntington Beach area are head· •d to angland and Scotland this summer to participate In two Lawn Tennis A11ocl•· tlon-.. nctloned junior gra11 court tour- naments. The gtrl1, all Bdl1on High 1tu- dent1, wm compete In th• 1 O·day Scottish Junior Championships In Edinburgh, Scotland and In a six -day tourney near Birmingham, •ngland. The glrls are, from left to right ffront rowJ1 Katie Bea rd, Laura Oleson, Kathy Newmann, Lynne Hall1troum; fback rowJ1 Jull• Neumann, Anne Thlel, Kim Wlllauer, Nikki Turner. Chang could force McEnroe into embarrassing decision WIMBLEDON, England -With John McEnroe and Michael Chang h~ding toward a possible semifinal meeting at Wimbledon, the burning question is: Which would McEnroe drop if he lost, his promise or his pants? After Chang won the French Open last month, McEnroe said he would drop ·his shons on Centre Court if the 17-year-old from Placentia reached the final at Wimbledon- At the time. McEnroe.. had little reason to worry. Although Chang had just become the youngest man to wtn a Grand Slam singles title. he was considered a clay-court phenomenon with little chance of winning on the grass at the All Enaland Club. 8ut Chang has surpnsed the ex- perts by wtnning has first three matches and moving wtthth two vtctories of a possible confrontation with McEnroe. who improved wtth every match last week and appears to be a scnous threat to win his fourth Wimbledon title. So wh.at will McEnroe do tf he plays Chana in the semifinals and loses? "I'm not holdina my breath about dropping my pants yet." McEnroe said Saturday after his straight-set victory over Jim Pugh. "rll · be worried on Friday if he's in the semis." Chang. who rallied from a set down to eliminate Michie! Schapers 1n the thlfd round, isn't concerned about McEnroe's manif«to. ''That's his business. not mine," Chang said. "In a way, maybe it's incentive for me to work. harder. That would be quite a scene. wouldn't it'>" Genin& to the semifinals won't be easy for Chana or McEnroe. who was the target of an anonymous death threat on Saturday. Pohet arc investigating the telephone calls made to the All England Club and 1' national newspaper, which prompt- ed eJttra stcunty for McEnroe's match against Push on Centre Court. McEnroe's neu opponent 1s Aus- tralian John Fiugerald, a doubles spccial1sl who as makina his third CHILCOTT 'rom Bl ball careers as well. Cunis Conway. headed to USC by way of Hawthorne Hiah, hod vir- tually bcC'n a one-man show on the b>tball field quanerback.ing his team to victory. His accomplish- menu on the track speak for thcm- 1elves.. And then there was Coley Con- daek. a junjor from Carpinteria, a httle l·A school up the coest. He came into IM IOO a.nd l ,600 1 \'enuaJ llftlr:nown In Sout.hmt Cali· fornea.; but left Wi1h peopte tnowina bit name and loOltina forward to 1C1Ci"I him nut year. We IMIDPened to be 1ittin1 by &tends olhit who told us that ln IMldiUon IO na.nnina. I :SI 800 and • 4: 10 1,600, he was abo his tc.hool'1 quenetbeck. ae.a.a hiJ tam to two cbampionlhipa andhd ~.$speed in 1.M .,._yard duh. So what doa all this mean? Why aa1 I IAIU111 ID lhia spece to eaplaJn final-16 appearance at Wimbledon. If McEnroe wtns. he would probabl> play founh-secded Mats Wilander an the quarterfinals. _ Wilander. who hasn't dropped a set in his first three matches, plays unseeded Christo Van Rensburg of South Africa in the fourth round. Chang faces an ever rockier road to the semis. First he must get past ei&hth-seeded Tim Mayoue. an ex- cellent grass-coun player who has reached the quarterfinals here five of the past eight years. The surva vor faces the winner of the match be- tween defending champion Stefan Edberg and I 6th-seeded Amos Man- sdorf of Israel. In other half of the men's draw. top-seeded Ivan Lendl and two-ume champion Bons Becker seem to be on a collision course. Lendt. who has won every Grand Slam title except Wimbledon. can reach the semifinals wtthout beating a seeded player. With No. 7 Miloslav Mecir and No. 10 Jimmy Connors ousted an the first week, only big-serv1na Slobodan Zivo- j1novec appears capable of denying Lendl a spot in the final 4. AP>U. ......... e Mlcftael Chang of Placentia h•• 1urprlHd th• experts by capturing hit first three match•• at Wimbledon. how several pro and blue-chippers happen to also run? Do you think it's by chance o r could 1t be they have discovered somcthina that any track coach already knows -runnina can and will improve your performance lcvtl regardless of your sport or your level of compct1t1on. It's time that more o( our high school coaches rec0&0izcd this fact. Instead of concentrat1n1 on dnbbl- ina and 1hooun1 dnlls or swtn&ina a bit t,000times1 da) during the off· season. their athletes would dcnve more benefit from pertic1pat1on en a runnina prosnm, namdy their school's cross country or track pro- gram. Runnina is somcth1na that anyone can do at any time or any place. All you nttd 11 a aood pair of runnina shon. TM athletes who come into their spon refreshed and in aood aerobic shape are aoina to be the ones who perform for you when n counts. Runn.ina alto butlds confidenco which any coach wall tell you 1s a prcrcqoasitc for excellence. By tn· cof{>Oratin.g a regular running !K'hl'd· uk 1nlo your athletes' workouts. >Ou will be bcncfitina ham/her as well as your team·, potenttal for greatness. Better yet -introduce your 3th· letcs to the track coach. HALL ,romlt look short t"lall ~1d ~he Imo t rettn.'d wh1.·n he returned to 1ht U. . but declined 10 hccausc an indoor leaauc had rccentl) started. Now. hO\\C\Cr. Hall sa)s ~he may ~'tan tok1na 1t ,1o~cr. "We're ~ork1na oo a famtl).'' .. he s;iuJ. "l think I'll play a lot mo1c aolf" No matter what happen' down the lane. llall\ husband, Larry. and doualucr Kylie .\nn will be ttnnmly he root1na their fi,orttc '·ollc)ball ph1>c" toony. Orange Co8lt DAILY PILOT/Monday, July 3. 1989 BS IOIC 1111 ICltOllU MAJ0tt LIAGUI STANDtNGS A~LMwe 0.kland A.,...s Ka11se1 C1tv TexH Minnesota Su Ille Chicago Baltimore New York Bo, ton Mllwaukff Toronto Cleveland Detroit Wett Dt'riMef\ W L 49 32 .. 32 •• 35 4A 3S '1 '° 37 43 32 so EHt DIVlslort •• 3• 39 •O 38 39 31 43 37 0 36 '3 31 ,, ~V'' S<ef'lt M•Ml\Olt 2, A,,.... I Mllw•u"" 10, New York t Dt lrOll 1 Belllmor• ) 0.kt.no II Ctevellncs l I'd. -~ .590 .557 .557 S06 .'63 390 Beaton • T0tonto I 111 '"""'V'I (l'l•cevo 1 ICenHl ,,,.,, 3 Sel tlle 11 T ... , DPCI retn TNlv'l G- GB 1 • • • 11 , 17 2 5113 5111 71, • • l 13 Tt•U (Jettcoet • I) et Aftllllh IAOOOll • SI 1lS om M•lweull.ff IH1vu1u 1 71 et New Yori. IE ••eno I 1) 4 30 om lP11cego IROH <ll>e<D 1 SJ 1t Cieveteno Bt•O 4·1 • lS om Dt tro•t tAleuno« 4·11 et llelllmo<e (HOiton ?·SJ OS om Bol ton tSm1tP1\0n 4 61 1t f oronto Cerulli 3·•1 OS om l(anH \ Cltv (Ciul>•CL• I SJ •t 0.kllft<I I Stewert 12·41. 7 OS om Haftonal LHeue W••t Divi sion San Francisco Houston Cincinnati San Diego Dod91rs Atlanta Monlreal New York Chicago St Loul' Plll$burgh Phlladelphla W L ,, 33 C6 JS 42 31 40 42 39 •l 33 47 East Division 45 36 41 36 42 31 39 31 33 '3 28 ., Sunde V'' S<wet Oodltlr1 3 Pil I U>Ul'VPI 2 Anent• 3 Pnilll<Wl>flle l Mo<llrtel 13 HO<JllOf\ 1 New Y0tll. 7 C•nc•nne t 2 Sen Dte90 5 SI 1.0UI\ 1 Sen Francisco 4 Cn1C1GO l TNIV'• G•met Pct. 593 .S68 .525 .488 .488 •13 SS6 S32 S2S S06 CJ• 364 GB 2 2 , 4 9 , IS Pttl\burgPI CR001n\Oll 4·61 11 Dedeer'S IMorve11 5·1). l OS Pm Clncinnetl IRi.o 1 S) et Pn11eoe1orile (HowtM 6·5l 435 om MontrH I ll.1nv11on 4·21 et Atllnle IGlevlne 1·4). 440 om N-York !COM •·5l at Hou'ton ID""•IH 1-31, 5.JS om MAJOll LSAOUll L•ADUS ~ ......... llllrwlll s..11¥'• ~) IA TTIHG C2'l6 el bell~I ~ '°'• n1. ~r• Te.&H, w FreftCo T•••' .334 LeMWCI, OeJUetld JlS. '-• lffw Yon. l14 ltU~f'I, TnH, S4, Mc(ir~ff TOf'OlllO U, Ill ~. Oekl&nd, S2, I JllOM>ll ll•Me• Cltv. so. T e11111on leth,,_• 50 llt81>--5'erra, Te.1.u, '1, Fr1nco, r ..... 60 , CiHtll, Mlnnaote, SS. Leonarel S..ttle SS e Jedtt.On. ltlftMI CltY. 53 HIT$-Puc.llefl. MlnnesOle 109 Slef're THH. IOS. Su . New Ycwll. 10. Ciellegl'le< Cnlcl9o, 103, ~•nco, Teo\, 97 DOUILE5-f>uellel1, MIMeM>te , 71, Slefre Teus. '17, 8o9v,, loston, 21, RM<t , lollOll. 11 L•n•IOfel. 0.11.land, "· Mc:Gr1tt. T Of'OftlO, 11 Pelmell'o, Te11•'· 11 TAtPl.ES-0. WNtt, .,_., t i Sterra Teus, I, eov1n. loslon, 6, P 8redlev, 9•111 mort. 6, RevftOlcll. Seettle. 6 HOME RUNS-0-. MllweuUe, 21 Tel· netOll, 8e11ll'llO'e 19, I Jedl..on Ke nH \ Cllv. 11 McGntt Tofon10, 11, Whlteke< Detro.I, 11 STOLEN BASE~ Heneler.on, O.i..iano "· E,p.,. TuH ,, a ............... ,., s.~ New YQ<'I;' 72 Gulttc11. C"iUllO 11 PITCHINh 17 dlcl•lon•l-Montvomerv l(a • H' Cttv 6·1 t~' I Sl, Swlfldel c .. ve•eno tt>-2 w t n . T Goroon, K•"'" c.1.,. 9·7 111 2'3 ~. "'-'· 1.i, 771, 2.16, Be ... rd Belltrnor1 10-l 76' l n NatteMI Lague I Tlrovtfl ~V's Glmetl BATTING 1136 et Dfl"l-L•r1<rn C1nc.,,ne1 35'. T CiwvM. S.11 D,.go l SI 'N C erlt. Se,. F••nc•KO l39. H JOtlnM>n New Yo,. lOO Ciuetrlt<'o. SI l.OU•l ?96 • RUNS.-R Tnomoson S.n Frenc.•KO SI W Ci.rk Sen Frenc KO SS H Jonnwn New Yor" S4 M••cl'lelt s. .. FrencBco S3 &ones Pil!U>urll" 49 c; Dev" Hot.nton '9 T Ciwvn,. Se" Dt990 49 RBl-M11c,..11, Sen Frenc•sco, 1• w Ciera Sen Frencl\CO 59 H JoMson New V0t1t. S4 O'Netll C1nc1nneli S.C, E Devis. Clnc1nn1t SO Guerrero S• Louil . 50 HtTS.-T Ciwvnn, S.n Otevo. 116 Ltrlt.lft, Cinclnne tt. 103, W Cl•rll., Sen Frenctsco 9', R Atomer, Sen D1990, M , Rllftdllllfl, Decteers, 14. OOUBl.Erwe1i.cn, Montreel. 24. Guer rero, St l.ouls, 73, Reines. MontrH I 21. Bon<!•. Plll\t>urv". 20, Mlt"'911, Sen Francisco. 20. Murrev, o.cieen. 2111. TRIPI.I;~ TllOmPlOn, Sen FrenclKO, •• Rot>erl\ ~" D1wo. 7. Bonilla Plnstx.trvn, 6 HOME RUNS-Mitcl\IU, S.n Frencl.co. 26, H JOnnM>n. New Y0tll., 72 Ci Devis HOVlltfl. 1' S1rew1>e<rv New York 1' E Devis, Clnclnnetl, 15 STOLEN 8ASES-<Olemen St LOU•' D7, YO;;ft(I, Houston. 29. T CiwVM Sen Dlevo. 25, 0 Nl•on Montrtel. 23, R Alor't1r Sen Olevo, 11 Retnet Mo<>trH I II PITCHING (7 oec•sonll-0. ~rtlnll MontrMI. l ·I *"· 159, ReuKl\91. Sen Fre n· Ct\CO, 12·3, .IOO, 2-17, Derwin. Ho...\IOf\ 1-1 n 1 2 Jf, Scott. HoullOf\, ll-4 16S 2 45 Fe<nenoei. New York, 6-2, 150, loo Tew• ffr.nc. Results Silndev of tne llnt two tett of tne TOUt' oe F,..nce cvclitlV rece -e M 2·m•ll 119 fOllOwt<I bv 1 21 4·mlle teem tll'nl trlel t>otn 1nrov11" Luxemt>ourg AMERICAN LEAGUE P'lnt Lie Twins 2, A---'s 1 1 Acecio da Sitve. Portueet l l'IOUr\, 21 ,..., minute\, 36 llCONI' CAl.IP'ORNIA MINNISOTA 2 Soren l.l~t. Det1merti., I llCOl\O' scnofllo" Rev 2b DWnltect Jovner 111 Ownngdh CDevl\11 Scnroectr c Hottmn 311 KAnors rf Teteh •b r II bl lb r II bl oenlno 4 I 1 0 Newmn u • I 1 0 J ROleno Lec.lefc , Frence, I 41 be"'"° 4 o I o l ckmn 2b 4 O 2 O •. Etlet1ne ot Wiide, eetolum, • 40 3 O O O Cievne u 0 O O O s. Se•n Kellv 1rei.ne1, Hme time 4 0 0 I Pucll.tll cf • l 2 I 6 GloveMI Fldanre, ttelv, """' time 3 0 1 0 Hrblll. Cl'1 1 0 0 0 7 Pnll Ande<\Oll, Aultr•ll•, ._,,,. time 3 0 0 0 CiHttl 311 • 0 1 1 • JHn·Peul Ven P~I. Netneritndl, 3 0 1 0 9 u•h tt 4 0 1 0 ume trme 2 O 0 0 Ltrl!.lrt 111 • 0 0 0 9 Feor1<1 Pl'llllPOt, Frence Hme time 3 O O 0 CCe•llM rf • O O 0 10 Aor•e van oer Poe• Netnerteno•. ume l.•udM• c ) 0 0 0 tll'nl 1t 1 4 I T.,.., ll 2 10 2 l 1 Stevtn Roolu, Netr.eritncb . Hml time Scert llY """"9t 12 JH n· Clfuele Cototti Fr ence ume lime Cellfomle 100 000 000-1 13 JoMOfl HMJI, fM'91um Mme tll'nl MlrlnlMfl 000 000 O'Zll-2 U Anelv Hem~tet1. Boulder. COio 1 E-JQvnlf' DP-Celll0tnie I E .. vtn semt 11me LOl -<ehlornl• l M•nftflOte t 21-le<:kmen. IS Clllrtv Mollet France wme rime N-men Pucktll S-DWhllt Hoffmen 1' 81•1 Ir~ Sw1tter•eft<I Hrne time ,.. H " ... 91 so 11 Eric Venoa<-Olfl Benotum Hme ~ """' 8Mevtn 1 6 0 0 1 5 1l. Ovl"OIC)l>e LevelMI France, -Montt11e L 1· I I l 2 2 2 0 I 1.,.,,. McClure 0 0 0 0 I 0 lt St...,e a-. Ceneoe. Mme time FreM< 2·l ? 0 0 0 I 20 Mere S.•Hfll e.te...m -11me MnrllMte OIMr AmertuM, 1·11"lfl. CWlleM ll•oi• W,1-1 ' • I I 0 1 n (;reg LIMo<!d, MIMHPDI••· ADll wme McCklr• 1>1tc~ to I Ofltter 1n '"' ltn Z!'' Umplru -Home wet•t F"'' Even' )I Nete D•M>lrv New Zeei.no. 1·Ei.vtn. Tnlro ~-.... H me ttme T-1 13 A-49 099 - - --~--lt Gernerd Zeoroo.1111. Ausme 7·Elevlfl T G """ """ NA tOHAL LEA UE 6S Jett Pt1rct $en D1eoo, l·Etevtn. Oocteers J, PlraMS 1 """· ume P'ITTSIURGH I.OS ANGii.iS Ill Seen YetH Br•teln 7·Etevtn u me Cenoets 11 11 .. rdtll c 1.ln<121> ltedU\ lb 8on1H• 311 GWll'on rt VenSIVk cf RQunnl u leltlero P< Or1ir C: 8ono•lf Orebelt. o Olslf!W> on Kremer o• HNIOflO lltiltvldU>ll T4Nls 1brllbl .. ,,..,. 11me 4 0 2 0 ACirlttln u 4 0 2 0 124 Deg 0110 L-1tret1. Norwev 1·Eleven l 0 0 0 Rndlllfl 211 l 0 0 0 """ time • 0 0 0 Cilbaon If • O O 0 131 Ron Klelet. e ouioer. ColO l·Eteven • 0 l 0 Murrev ID • O l O Hmt time • 0 0 0 Merl"•' rf • 1 1 O 151. Rov Kn1e11men, 8outoer Coto. 1 • 1 2 O Scloscle c l 0 1 O Ellvet1, .. ,,.,. t me l 0 I 1 Hemllrt 3o 4 I 1 0 lt4. Jen' veo-gv o.rnmerll., 1·Eleven • 0 2 0 Cionrttr ct l 1 1 3 Hme hme 0 0 0 0 Tuel« o 0 O 0 0 1 o o o StvDb' on 1 o o o 1 0 0 0 Wellell'd o I 0 0 0 ' o o o MHtcnr ol'I t o o o I 0 I 0 ltlel'le< D I 0 0 0 o o o o Horton o o o O o O 0 O O JHowt • o O 0 0 O I 0 0 0 U 2 t I T.-it kiri llY ....... )J > 10 ) Sec9lld L .. 1 Suoer U SJ 4 , 2 Pen.M>nk . S4 :IQ, l s-con1u. S4·31. 4 PDM, S4.... S ADR, 54 lf, 6 7-Eieve<l, SU4, 1 lltMO, SS02, I Z· Peugeot 5503, 9 TVM. SS-G6. 10 Het¥ttle 1.e Sub\I SS SI 11 BH SS 34, 12 Cerre<e SS '3 13 HIS10t Stome SS.56 14 H1tecn4 SS SI lS Feo«. S6'()t 16 C"81Hu O'Ax S67S, 11 TMPll>e, S6 21, II Dom .. ·W-menn, 5634 It Celt oe ColomD«< 57 I 1 ""'*1rtfl 000 100 111-l Let A~ 000 Ill OOx-l 70 Pettrnrnlne, 57l1 Ovw.-S~ (Attw ........ Md -... I E-Orel>lk VenStv-• DP-1.o' All991e' 1 1.08-f"llllllurll" I l.O\ Atlglle' t 1 Cle Sltve l noun, 31 m""'"' 41 "'OllO' 1 l.••llOlt 16 HCOnel' ben.no l Leuret1t F ionon Frence 2.37 • Tr.ler"' Mer • Frence 1 •I S Pet.Cele Slmo'I. Frenc1 2 4 • c;..-ero lltue P're , HlO 1 Helnr Imboden Sw11Jtt1and 3112, I Vincent BanHu 302, t Erle 8reua1n11. Netl\¥1eno' l-G:l. 10 Leve Ml 3111 2&-GW!llon 01steteno c;on,.i.1 HR-Gon111er 11 se -Ac;r1H1n 161 Rt<lu' 115> S-Sclo.cte , .. H R IR 91 SO fl'tttYurwfl Orel>lll. 1.,5·6 HHlon .... .,..... • 1 9 1 3 0 l 0 0 1 l 0 11 Oomln•oue Ge~de. Frenct 3 2'. 12 JH n Tuaor l 2 0 0 1 Me"t Wemoen lelelum 321. 13 Klllv 327 1 14 l.tMonO l 21. 1S Venoerea<clefl 3 l l 16 2 JorG Multlr Swll1eneno l 3 I 17 Ciuv Nule<!s l letvlum, 3.14. 11 n..o oe ltoov Nelnerteno' 0 3 36 It Frenl Meeuen, Helllerlench, l 36, 20 7 Gerl·Jen TfleUtlfue, Ntt'*1endi, l.lt w111 ... no w 1 o l • 1 1 1 8elet>er 11 l l I 0 0 Horton 0 0001 JHowtll S IS 1 3 0 0 0 O H0tton oilcneo 10 I o.1ttr In 1i.e .,,, Otlllr Alftlf'kaM, 1·119WM. CtMllefls wP-we11e1eno Pl -Sclo\cl1 Umo•re\-Hom.. Froemmlno Second, DeMut,,, Third, lltlOOll'r T-3 11 A-40 7'9 GOl.t ' Flr\I T1te 71 Hemotlff'. 3 U befllnd, 1' l(llflt. l 4 , 4J l.e11rlt1t<1, 4 0., 4~ ZedroC>ltet. 4-ot, SO Den!tltrv, 4 It. Sl llname m 4J'l, • II~ so.. ti Piere., S 11; lot ltdl~.. S'OI ""'9ftll ..a .• ,_..... ,........_...._, .. ,\II UI ,._ ·-..... ........ . ... .......,. ~ 1/111(/C. •• ,._ .,., u ••..CTA It 1 _.. u1u• ...... .., ~ .... -., .. "°"' •MIL • ..,,,.,..,. .......... ._. ... IOl!t•114• • ... '""" .... ,...,,..! •• _,,..,_, I »• ,_"~ttt.r. ll'IMCft 01 n ... ..,. .... ~ t:. r...:-= .,. :: ~= ..... ,~. ,,. ,..,.11•.a. i .. ..=;-,:,:, ' ":". •• ta • \I IC~ H\t 1,f, . a.v-.. ............ Tne Of'eer Of 1Wt11 $uftdey ef ll'le C......,.. Grenci Prla lndv cer reu. wlln "-""" llO\lfieol • In perenll>ft.lt f!Olnelown or ~Irv, i.,... Of • ce• llPJ c-1e<1 ""'°" out, ff et1v, "-"' • WO" l llCI win_.•, ........ W>ltfd lft Mpfl l 171 Emenon FutlHldl. Ired, ,._.. PC ll ·Chevro!et, to. -..s. 1.0, 131 on 'l Ill MerlO Anctrelll, Nn•rttn, P• I.Ole· , Cnevrotet to. U1 630 ) Ill lobl>v RINI O\Jblm. C>nio l..o6a- C01w0ftn, to U0,100 4 ISJ Teo Fabl, ll•tv. Mercn·Poncne. IO, 111,460 S (4) Rlct< Me9ts, lell.lotlekl, Pet1.-e PC ll·Cnevrolel IO 123,MO • Ct ) kot• Pruett, AoMllll .. , Lole·J UOO, lf, m .110 7 OJ Al Un~ Jr .• AlboJOUll'-. NJiA... l.Oll·OtevrOle t 1t, n o.100 • "'I RIUI 8oe'8'1, l ru ll. Loll· J..oel 7'. • "·"'° • 161 Ar•t 1.vvendV". Tne NetherlllllCb, LOI• ·Co,wor1n. 1t 116.860 10 161 Al Unlit" A!buClutt'Out N.M., Ptl'll\t PC II C"9vrOlet, 71, '16.536 II '13 KtY"' Cogltfl, Pelol Ve<dft, l,.. Mercft Co,worln 11, 119"74 11 11) D•d·e< fl\IVl. llllvlurn. I .. Lo&e· Juao 11 11' o~ IJ 1211 Rooer10 Gut<rtro, (;oiombq, MllCl'I Alie Romeo 16. I 16,050. I• 191 Pencno C.n11< 8rownU>U,..o. tno LOO• Co•wortl'I. 1• 115 240 IS 1211 Jeff Wooo. Wien<,., Ken l,. I.Ole· Ccnwor'"· 7f •on111on t 10,'140 16 1111 Jonn Peul Jr , Well Pelm lffcfl Fie 19'7 I.Ole Colwortn, 69. Sl4,'30 17 1161 Steve S.IMll An.tNlm, 1* Mercn· CotwOf''"· 69 n .025 " Ill M•cPlle! Andrettl. Nertrllll Pe . 1.0ll·CtllvrOMt "· e19Ctr~I. Sl2,02S If 1n 1 8trnnero JO<>l'deln, Mealco, Loi•· Co,wortn SI o"rl>011, S7 ,025 20 1231 Tom Snev1, Per.Ob• Vellev, Af1J , 1914 Mer en 9u•O 4S. Nc1rlcel, 514,025 ,1 1211 Guido Decco. lttlv, 1911 Lole· Co\wortn, 3 I enolne tellure, Sl,620. n 1101 Otrel( Delv lreteno 1.0la·Jl.ldd. ?3, engine lellure, lll,620 23 12s1 Renov 1.ew1,, Hllllborouon. 1..oie- co,wor1" 11 ttectrlce l Sl,620 ,. ( 14) Jll'nll WMYll< 8r•teln, 1911 LOI•· Colwortl'I. 19 _,,,. fellure, S6,62Q, • 25 (20) JO/In J°'""', Cenede, L.Ola·CoswortPI, v.erbo¥. 16,620 2' llSI Fel>t'tllo &ert>eue, lllly, PenV.1 • PC l1·Coswor1n. 10, eltetrlcat 113,620 ' 21 (141 Scott AtcNM>n Selle<Sf\eld, 19 .. l.Oll·C01worl" S, turt>ocher-. 16,'20. 21 I 111 Scott 8revton, Coldwatfl'. Midi. I.Ole C°'wMIPI 0, Orel not •••rl S 13.620 Time of r.ce 132 5'.111 Meroln of vretorv 1' 1'4 MCOftdl C.utlon fleOt "'-. LM<I Cflel'llllt t emonv ? or ven Lep ... oers MJ Anore111 1·26, F1111otldl 11 to IMSA C..... GT nKAt Cat wa.i. co., M.Y.) T"9 O<'oer of flnlSh S.Snoev of tne Continental IMSA C.mel GT _,, ar rea •I WeltUns Glen lnl«neflonll w1111 Ol"IYtn, nome rowns, mell.t ot cer end ~ of lePt ~ed erOU<ICI tne l.3n-mn. roact courw: ..•• l Geoff l rebhat1!. Aust,.tla, end CNP RoolnM>n, Olelwktt.. N.J. Niuen GTP.VCT. ,, leCK, 104 f4t mph. 2 Jim Miii«. O.k~ooa. Ml •• •I'd too Eer1, L•rlm>ur, Cnevv Solce SE", '2. 3 Juen MMvtt F•"91o 11, Aroentlna, .no 0r111.t Olson, lrldMwete<, Conn., Tovot• Group C, t'l 4 Glt .npl..-o Moretti, 11.iv, end Frank' Je!lnsll.I, Wett Gtrmenv, ~ H2C, 91. S Jim Oownlno, Allente, •nel Howard Kell, New Y0t11.. Meuse Aroo JMlt, 16 (Cemel l.igPlfs dlYl'\on Win,,.,$) 6 Tom Hflltl'I, Cnerrv Hiii, N J., •llCI Cltertlt Morven. Conwev. Ark., Bukl< Solce, .. 1 Fr•nk Everett, e.tllvue, Well\., and lton Nel\Ol'I, Honto. POf\llK SPlc:t. 16 I Uli Blefl, Cenede. ano NMll LAutwheir, Sw111cerland, Ferreri Tie&. 14. t Mer'tklo F\nollo, 11.iv, end Davld Lorino, Chocur•. N H • Ferr~ SOlce. a 10 Jen Tlf19(1el, Sweden. end Jim Merlln, ltoc:hltter, N Y., 84.lldl Tlla, 12.. l1 JK-\11119MUVt end $cott ~. C.neoe o..rt COf'Y91t• GTI>, 11 12 C:.0.111 L~ Gnea.. end J.tl Kline. Malibu, PonhK F lreblrel, 7' ll JoM Andretll, lndlelle9ob ....... Wolllll, Frence, Por"°'9 "2, "· U koll SdluOot llftd Lii* ~ Wftl Pwn '"°'· Fie au1ctt s.ice. " lS W1lv T R~. Siii\ Jou, end ltodl.v Mcwen. Artldie, TOVO!e E ..... 0 16 JM ~\ The Ntthtnaftds, Jeeuar XJll·lO. 1'l 11 Fer~ de ~. Frtta, •flcl Jofwl COClltet1, New-1, Ill.I Pontlec Flrftllrel, 2' II Devv J-. COftietld, N V , J-.uer XJR·t , 6 lt IC.en te.riott. Meriel•• Gt . Pontlec Flre-blrel 1 DEEP~t:.\ .. OAYSY•s LOQUltl (.....,.,. -..0) -6 llOeh. 1" tnot«I. "3 bwrecude, 267 bollJIO. S cod. 1 f\eltbut, lO' cetice t>eu, 411 Mind t>eu. 1'7 meckttrel, ~ KUloln, I toll, 25 Dll.ll _.di, 6 ~-Cl. J """"' ''"' Nlwr<MlT LANO.NG -5 l>Oals, 1'3 •noter• m Mtncl t>eu 2 111t11>U1 11 m.Oerel, 12 r~ flMI. JO KUW»n, 21 ,,,...,,llMCI, )IS cet1co oeu, 2 ooe eve. n """''' ""'-12 Clll>IZOl'I, 4S ... oercn aAJaaAU. Mwkwl ..__ CLEVELAND INOIAHS~Ced Tom CMt OIOll o'tcner on '"' 1S-d8Y Cl WbiM llSI ltec.•tttO Roo Nldlol\ 1><tct1« lrom Coloracto S11<1n11• ot tne Pee he Cout 11119U9. TORONTO 81.UE JAYS~ Fret11< W•ll• 0ttcner on 1ne 1S.-0.Y dlMbleCI "'' P\,rct1awo tl\e contrect of Gt'9 My.,._, cetcl\· er. lrom Kno••llll ot tlle Solltl•.,.,, Leeoue ....... LIHUe A Tl.AN TA 91tAVE:l-Treoecs Dion Jemu, outlt1idl< •o ti.e Ctev111no lndlens for OdCllM McDowell, oullllldlf Treded laJW Smllfl, ollcntr, 10 lne Montrut E lllM>I tor WllO Vtlde1 •no Nett Mlncnev 1flcnen. •NI Kevm o..A OUtf~ .. Runvrs Derby :ne J5dt aaaMll Dittuce Ru1>nm Derby will bt ftt8 09 S.ha~y1 Al.II-12 It the "1H"?'ll10fl leecb Pier. Thtl 10.mile nM:e will I 8l 7:)0 L m. . wvd:I will be: aivcu to the top fi\IC fini_&hc_ri 111 ~ calelOfY IOr malt and ~ma" com· petlton. Youth (19 and under) will rtcrivc lwardl for the top 6ve flniWn in the three-. mile and I Y!-mik: runs. Prior 10 Au .. 3, prereaistration will be SS (or S1q wit~ T-IJ;lin). A SIO C1ltry fee for late ttlllMnUon will be lakcn from 6:30~'° 7: IS 1.m. Oil tbe day of the race. Entries will be limitl'd 10 $00 runner1. For further infonnation, pbooc: Huntin&tOll Beach Community Se"rvices at S~.$486. Softb_all .tpurney Southern California Over-The-Line SQftt.ll • i& ecc:epiina ta.mi for 1oum.1,1T1cnts durina its wmmtt titat0n proaram to be playtd in Los Antt~ and OranaC Collnty 1rea1. • The team entry fee is SJJ. All teams are 1uanntecd to piay'at least four pmes in "•ch tournament. All tournaments are finished in oae day and men, wo men, arid co-ed team diviaon1 arc off~. . Fot mote Information, ~II (113) 866-863.5. 642~5678 ------ CLASSIFIED INDEX 642-5678 ..... ~-1111 ClllCK YOUll AD TMl.NtlTDAY ... ___ ... __ _ ........ ·--·-·---... ----.. ~­ _______ ....... _ .......... __ .... _____ .......... ---·-------·-·--· .. ___ ......... ·--___ ... ___ _ _____ ..... .. -...... _, .......... -. -·---........ .. ---------~-·- SJ Neg•'"''fl S• Not" HllVIOUI ..Ulll• IOlVlD ••P40t• 55 Pogmet'll 57 W!l'IOO-p.ii<I se ,.. ..... "'G .. c......., 10 Noun .n4•"9 .,,_ 62 0flm~ .,.,._ .... ...... ... _. '1 Conceoe , ...... •C-'"°""' 6 Hurl • 7 o..ooi I Swr.iio.ecr ' Porlfmy 10 9elt'l9M 11 Or...,.. 11..-io t2V•~ ,,_ 21 PG'flf 23 ffoeto 26 o...-r .. oons ,. .... 29 Auto'*' ... -'°£:'"' ... .. 47 fl.OOC ..... 41 ,., ...... .,_ so we~ ...... !l11t• .. 51 lito '°""' $ 7 If ....... Slo-pltch softball The Souihmt California Sk>-Two-Pi1ch Son. bell AlSOCllHon is acttpdna turns for 1our- namtnts durina its summer season program to be played In Lo' An1eks an<t Orange County areas. . The tum.entry rec is SJ60 and all teams are 1uannkcd to plliy at least thrtt pmet in 9Ch 10umamenl. All townamcnts are finished in one day . .Men's 1eam1, in divisions C. D and Mutc:rs (30 and over). are invited to ~n1er. For more inrormalion, aill (213) 866-868S. West Coast Golf Show The 10th annual West Coas1 Golr Show • re1ums to the Long Beach Convention Center Au• 1 .. 21 . Created by 1olfprofcuion1ls. the: West Coast Golf Show 11 the first major 10Jf show or the Sprina '90 profession1.l 1olf 1e1son. Al the West Coast Golf Show, 1olf pros and ofl'-roune aolf &hop owners v.i.11 tiave lhe opponuni1y 10 preview the 'olf indusiry's la1es1 products. The 1989 show 1s free ror PGA members. PGA appnnticn and off-course ao1r shop ownen. The 1989 West Coast Gofr Show will be the laracst and most comprehensive ever held on the West Coast with 540 exhibit booths show- casina the newnt in 101r equipment, 1<; CHSOries and fashion apparel. . For m<Ke information, phone PRO-GOLP. . . Clnl.S-..-. ,_ ,-· 1 Chapman camp The Bob Boyd Chapman Collqe Basketball Camp will be Mid ·sunday, July 30 throuah Thursday, Aua. J for boys in &rades 7-11. _ ~ camp houn are 9 a.m.-8 p.m....MO'bday throuab Wednesday with an awards ~ony Thursday 11 5 p.m. 10 cooclude the camp. Coach Boyd will be 11 camp every day teM:hin& fundamentals necessary for improve- ment The camp staff ii made upofhith school and collqe coache• ready to help improve a player'• blst.etblll skills. The camp rec is S 175. Basketball camp The ComD1e1e Pia/er Baskc1ball CamP., featurina Jack Haky o the Chicqo Bulls. will be hekJ AUf-7-11 11 Golden West Collqe rm boys and 11r1s. &radn j.11 . The camp wilf bq.in 11 8:30 a.m. and fin ish 114 p.m., e11ccpt for the final day, Friday. Aua. 11, to allow for the closin1 ceremonies. The cost is SI SO for each camper. For more information, phone 895-8JJJ. · .. FRIEND • ''°"' ., . lhc catcher. Fisk. words to th(: rffi:.ct or "11'1 an· honor to play in this ball aamr:· It was an honor to watch that ball aame. I had just come homt front -.ork and v.•as movin& my car 10 1hc other side of the tf\'t't. as New Yorkers have 10 do rach day, when I heiird on the radio that Thurn1an Munson had b«n lo:illrd in a plane crash. That was 1979. August. I lllrkC'd the car and cried. I was no longer a kid. ~·cnl }-IHnc. Bui he was my •. .favorite. New York Yank.«. I don't rvcn ha,•e to pauSC' to 1c:1 1hc dales. times and placrs strai1h1 on thcst C\'C'nts. And thrrc arc dozens mo re cvrnts like thost and millions more people like me. That's what n1akt•fthe Pt·1r Rose Affair special. Wr arc not just talkina about un a 1hlt·1~ caught. up in a sticky in,·cstigatio n. And Y.'C' are not JUS~ 1alk1ng about one of the greats or a sport cau1h1 up 1n a mess. Wr are talking aboul BaSoCba ll and somrlhing bad happening to it. But why dOC'S this gan1 r n1ran so 1nuch to so many? Perhaps because it is pln yt·d vi rtually cvrry day for si~ months. Prrhaps bt.'Caust' it is a g.1n1c a normal-sized person can play -"'"<' can all fantns11C' being in thr major leagues. Perhaps because team loyalurs in some ramilies ha"e been passed down for gl·ncra1ions . And perhaps it is just in thr game i1sclf. It is ~yond tihtr. There is no clock to rnd the play. A game could go on forever, a very· appealing fll.ntas)· for people confronting thrir own monality. It is also rooted in now. Thrre s1rikcs. Thrte outs. Four bases.· Fo ur balls. Nine innings. Nine players. Throw the ball. H it 1hr ball. Catch the ball. Throw· th\• ball a~in. And no sport producrs the drama of baseball. Fo r millions of people, baseball is o ur constant companion. Th\• Pete Rose AITair is about something bild happening 10 ~ very dear frjcnd of ours. · From North Orange County From South Orang~ County 540-1220 496--6800 WIN DINNERFOR2 AT FINDOURflIDDEN CLASSIFIED ADS! CONTEST RULES • .... Ciltllillll 2624 6 @Pi 2624 ~L;c;: 2648 lllWpon@ 2669 VICMlan...., 2722 ioo•.ut11 i'anttd •••1111 1IR, ~encl ow· I 1•-upteOl,cMM ---i;;;-t.o.o. OOMniront &.mll'fPlllT * •Ill&• 2724 _.IM'W ti;; W•lll·ln clo•et htiupe., ... ~ OloM4. 321 ,\YOQ,ij)cjif. tlJ, Apt, ~200/mo 'tr IN, 38R 28A. S3500Jmo yO)' HVNTtHQTON BY THE W CdM ~ Nwpt Honll .,.._ SkwllQll -~ llJ VIEWS! lttto,'AwM.a.iy 11th. lfotl',nopMeNiflr9Qd. '52 21R 11lA, ~ .io. 19'd, .lBR 1148"'· '9 lMng '"' 111-212-7733, 173-3259 SEARVPAAK ProfM/FH/..,..,,2SR/8A ontyst5tmo. 1e2-oe10 ._ .... rOOfl'I, .. atf'I, • Of.ct -occpy.Ca11 Mgr 4ll4-35to NMr Udo vmaoe StuctiO ...,., ,,. -·· pa • .. ,._ • • - •.. 8 letiyl44-22711 V"1on..145-t111app«. -·••• patio ~ new w l tlalcony, lmm•o .... , ••• by, •• -tlo ~ -""I;;;:;:;;====:[~ newt)' ditl:Orltecl pOO( 28R, 1\.\BA w/trftllll yttd. E IOE '"· ftp6c, st0\19, c.P41', "*' A.pl Slnol• employ9d grMt tldll!IR. Book l'IOW to !)en, Imm $550/mo ;; . .,_.,,.,~~ home,12700/mo • No petl. New C.,-pet•. retrio. UPftllh unit In ""·MW DIW, ~ 11n. -' SMOI II In-wt\119,... apwl r~n 152-1351, d¥ """" -..-, · 1790/mo. AdtW AM!ty. Q1.11M cetmfM•, M2'$/mo. 1175/mo, 142·11$0 Niwport lelCh 2669 ::C:. Vrty ~ 1av AMetv9tlonl. "6-1311 780-1077, "9. \I.E. Wt/lhnt 6"ldl·W111 2711' ..... ,... 549·1547 utll lndl.lcNd. 541· 1127 Sunny E'8'de, 2 BA, 1 BA, '*EXCLUSIVE GUARD• 1M1 MC. o.p, 173-1769 --N•llU COM Summer Ren111 1~ §0-;rf .... '!"~ --1 Uporll0ed2BA.r.wat~. E' IOE28Al~&Mul prlyel• gtt9QI' )lerd. •GATEDCOMMUNITY• EANFRONT 3BR 2BA 28R 28AHollMwtthbai)I F9"',P....,2nd1iory.M11r luPntss/Offlce Rtnt 1750/mo. ii40'~- p.ttlnQ, ~ pittlo, ""· epaclol.la, qui.c, Bulll· teoofmo. ,,..., ~ & • Ill""" trplc P•Tlo dlw wld 2 YI•.;, •Y•ll It 000/wtt Bdrm. View. Laundry. 276, Awe, eo... ...... ij~ w. 111li 81. 1725/mo. m. end 9wege. saso. ICl'tOOtlMl-4631 · 3BR 2eA 1100·111-w1got1 c•r ·0.,. s2Mo1m0 StNpt;t. ' • wio.we111To8oh.'410 liiiiiiiii'.ii"1iiiuiitl 7:l,•M.el eYMlnQa f3J~ °' 142-9795 llWLY MllUftl cowM VIEW Frplc, -t YIP ProPi 175-2232 , w/utM. 723--0656 1nyt1me I ~ 1•1111 l40--t3N !Y Ml-Oll1 : •2BR 18A on tM bluff, tw !'SIDE, Lrg 28R, 1\'oBA. 28Rw/gw, ~-Ina. fnccl yd b1r, micro. w1hr/dryr t11 •••-• • _._ lASTSIOE C.M. CMrm«ig Crnr of w .. teliff & !MM MiA•fli"Com;--: ;;;;:;;;;:"" bell, q\ollet, pyt, lndr)' Y•d,Q*,d/w,IUl'lcleck, •lpetlo.&36-4120 1-5PM IWluj)t, 2 eat gat wl•lrl _ • ..._.._..,. 28', herctwood ttr1, ,_ FullMMclbuildlng. 11111111 .. PI .... ~ -.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I hll.up, yd, gW S725 Pet "1*:. •Id htl-up. $995. H7 Vk lorlll •o· ... 1 720 1tor1JD9.Allmllnt~ Sp.c~1 2·3BR (Kime pelnt,ltgbKltyerd .Fnon Otflce&Ret*i Na-cM--.NOw~• j~ 2190 Ok?&4&-12t41142·9MI No'"-t1.t51-7151. H19S1nt.Arw.'1' ... l 735 lnci.Nopeta,&44.0509 WIOCNll"'-°)on Falrwey ltflkr.$500/moS41·9979 ...... 111 PAIMEPAOPt.RTieS :' :.::=~~~,,,,,O:~~l;•o2iieiiAfiitBAiA.,"i.,>iit11oO:.!o~•;;, ... iij0 e·tUoe. Ltg 2BR, balcony, TUILIU .. UIT ~ ~1=~"2 ~: 11~';"~~1 t~tva:! Fem n·tmkt •hr l•rg• IU. 1Mll 1UI l /F 71 ........ ""° llf. MJ D/W, c•bt1, l•undry encl git, MWt)I pnld. 120 ldMt for llnQ6e or couplff ..... , 1111111 &PTI c.r g.arage ,1110tege biMc:ti'. N. B l ·l,&00/mo Nwpt. Bch. Yi9w ~ 181t WESTCLIFF DRIVE G;1C: Win DlnMf For Two! room. No pell $&50/rno. E. 20th St. Small ~· S4J.23l3 *""" IMT ILln• Frplc, wld ll«upi, pool & 1314424 213-592""'970 w/2 "'°'women, 1750 Nwpt acn. Ag! 541-5032 !new' P'i:E,~ 2~ &45-1162 or &50-2311 pie)!. 1750/mo, &42-4792 EXCLUSIVE BEACH INll No pell Now 1N11ng l"I ' ''I utll. 7IO-Of90 9EASTiJi(;;u.: r ~=~~--~~ .. ~;;;;1:~!~-~ll~f~·~·~~~t· : or &48-12 11 TAI IYI E'1ld1 E•ee, COMM UNITY by .ipp1 (7141844-0603 IMIMgl FEM PROF In NB bea II· US.-ftl•IH If 3BR 28A & 18A 18A, Nf,, ,..,....._ Twnttm. l'tfl. 38r 381, 2 >BA 8 u Perf~t lot 1mall buUnul. --&"-130 "z • -·~HARL.A AVE• lllAT LllATllll •Uch gar 11450 Nsmkrl 2 A bay vle\ll! MICrO. YERSAILLE·L•rge 1Bf So. Lagune oc:anlronl 2 tut 2BR 2BA •Pl. Pool, Pirkl MO-MO 1' MC ·-·-· -· • ......: llllloa A 1m•n. ·q\llet compl111. 1BA IBA, lrg patio, pool, 233 !(Ith Pl. 835-0705 dlw, lrplc, 01r & enj~ penthouse in qulel lo-BR. 2 BA !urn. Condo }lcu.zzl, $510mo. A11111 Clll s~OTTI 5'8·279• . S265K 0 /AQI 642 ..... t 2606 tBR , Apll moc1witel)I frlge, OU lnef, clean, up-our PM beech S1675 ca1lon Avall8/1 Nope11. P oot. guard·~•l•d Imm 759-3023 HOTEl So. Artzona. ...,, llfllnd pr1cld. Some leah.WI ca· ilelra. No pell. S595fmo, 'lll'AllO IBR q $1250 TRW reqd, No 1 .. ll!tO 12,250/mo 4K-<I 21 HUNTINGTON H•rbour MARINE ORIENTED OITloe untu, bet, flllt, baNltii.Oi= * lMgl 2 Bf. 1 Be. 1.,., 1Mdt.i celllnoe. bllcony, 1500 MC. 145 E, 18th s t ...._SliBllU A.II maln1enence incl 1mo 1ae &4•·7211 Ag! p~ I F .. Fem ;:ir.>t 10 lhr Ir J BA IPKe 9Ylillbll 5501(1/11 I nwlts. Trlde rot -t.n9W,Cerpor1,pr1Y1t1 OlflQe."Uke""&YetY •14S.5221* ~ •IHISll11E1tr1• -If U llH rt 2.,..BA hou S38C' °' 1200 1qltt. ~ •Clllh.802·112-3770 ,, prtllte "Pool BBQ SORRY~OPETS W&1tN~LlhCNMI0 2t>f,2b1.den.slp18 ... mo ~ H1rbot e•po1ur• 'P • t Io · I 1 3 0 0 I m o iaur' · • lpe. • Laroe 3BR 2BA up1l1ir1 In ll'-lm ' beaeh 3BR. 28A.. yr!y Fr pie, bit. BBQ, Honub 'II utlllOe1. 1.-0-1210 Loe.led on Balboe p.,.~ llln•I• --t 873·2422 •undry. 111 + MC. No 4-Ple N OCC G -•• OALL ll0·0111 11,250/mo. AY•il Mtd· B••Ulllul white wal•r M/F 2S.35 r..,...,., 10 shr 1nao11. can 875-"44. --FURN 1 1 Q lBr l8e pe11. Velma 5•9·2447 1D..o,.(; ~ilencia. "1'&:; Sp~rkUng cle1n, l1rge Juty e«r e...2.3850 L.aguni ...-Complete -.-~.. 7 Unn.. AetlttnQI I vwe-e: . • ... ' G.arden eptl Beaulllully * , .... ''"* I 900 QU191 e'"11 381 CO.I• ; pan.Jn; 11tltC .... N.•·t lndry, BBO, qi only, no *""· 111/1U* · mo. No pets. 546-7983 ian dlCIP•d ground• prvc;y. 1 /wk long• Mff• l'lome. wld S350 Oupl9M-Har lle:elngl MUlll. petl. Yrty IM 1885/mo. Upllalrl. cMc:k, ~!.Peta. lllT •~El Pool & •P•, pltlosldeckl. FrlQ, dl1hw11h•r. stove Misc. Rtnub: 1erms neg. 499·5277 ·'II ulll & dep. c a1 ok Commtrd•I Proptny be IOld. ltlr t:42..-.0 , Br•. (714) 976-8818 124 J1me1 SI. 497.4579 ~ garege °' carporl. incl. No pets 545·•855 Soulh L•k• Tahoe David. &48·2722 anyt ime 27781=========' - p ..... 2607 •EASTSIDE 2Br 1B'iCOI: 2~1.w~ ... ~:~'1e1~:.'ni! 1 Bedr~ $680 •21H•tt00• -Rooms 2706 V1c1tlon Rentals lrom M/F lor 38R c M hOUM~ LARGE YA.RO Appro11 .. ...,,..-._,-......;iiioi•l 'IG9·'rplc,llOYe,,pV1en. 1725/mo. 2Bdrm t i.ea sao5 Frig, dl1hw11he1, sto~• •lllfnllT•IYftl lakefront no me1 To nrOCC.Own phonlllne, 10,000 1<1111 wlhouel. tBA. flfeptlce, "'9w cMc:k, 1r1nc•. 1m1ll y1rd. 554 Joenn 18~:_1~1~~-~~~5I Incl. No pet1 5•S.4855 • .,_. n Piii :~:i:1 1n 9\r:.~~~OS~~1 dog ok. 1"15·SAOO dep ~eched Qafl09 & Lwge 2-CW gar, act'ON from le7Sl rno. 548-1827 TSL MGMT , 642· 1603 Bactlelor S8tS ON TH E BLUF'f'NR H-OAG lDll~T9fr)I RYI ! rent Coldwell S.nker Avail lmrneo 979-6822 110tage unlla. C·2 Zone1 ....... ------""" L':'.!'."'07~07'0• 0'7~~~o •E'StOE 2BR 1BA, beam E'SIOE. MUST SEEi NEW 1 Bedroom $670 Lg I Br, lrplc, gas pd, wal~· by the monlh in park NB Condo nr Ho.g $.450 lull ot1 E 171h & Colla m ""'"· _.., _....,..., ce!Hng1, frl)lc, ger1-ge. 2 lrg 28r 2BI. m•ny •lras. 2Bdrm 1•1.01 $795 In clo1al S725·S750 wlgr•al f•cflltles Sec Baloo:i'!.~~~i 1650 • dep ~.,., ••P· non smkr, Mel l 3 year term. ()ppa,.._., 2904' • 28R, 18Ajcomplel• r• pel'IOM. No pet1 $785 ~ bll·lns. D/W, skyUghl. 2250 Yangu•rd 54-0·9826 Pool, &pa, gar Of carporr dep • 1st mo. 536-8319 au amen./m11d lpooi/jec $2900/mo Agl 175-9700 --! Nrbllhed. 925/mo. 1 )If HOO MC. 650-1791 g1r., $1050. 842·7334 ---------NEWPOAT TERRACE BA lr1 greal hm w/pool, nr :.•:::nn·;:: ~:!.Ts~:~ 64&·7275 Lf.AlllP'Jm Bl•lllllJ•• ; I••••· AYall now ! ""'E'SIDE.-· • , •••• -· ·-' ' tBedroom s7o5 ICOlSuperlor6Al·6&3s. occ P•lec.tlorlemsh.•· Oentront3BRh11$2000 Sh•r• OCEAN FRONT 2.000 lq. ft. c:omn'*'mi llOK+fMonttl • 846-2628 Geotge ,. ' "" aetOll ,.,. 1 ree · 2Bdrm 1'1·8• $815 --· Direct mailt ' • . 2Bt 181, pool, cable Sngl M 2BR. lrplc;, g•r. 151 E 2111 SI ~S.2408 • 2BR 1' ... BA. PlllO, caole dent T)lpe. N·1mkr $325 Oc:nfront 4BR hse 13.000 2BR Cle1n, re19, N/tm~f Dulfdlng In eo.1, MeM W•k~•Plell·Up Ma11..: •Lllll1111ffl• •YIM,1875.Nopeta. No pell $705/mo. 1685 , No Pets $695/mo 1nc ulll. 862·2123 even ..... rfr.atlt•Hlll, MIF No Dfug1. A'llt Renting 11 75' sq. 11. •MBedepollt , Frplc, ;at9QI. No pell. Lse 848-!5137 ftom 11.arn-7pm tr'llne ~.,. • 1. 720·9422 u..-S.ach Se•eiltt Manor Ji75·9805 d1y1. _ _ ltalhn 111_ 14o1 Imm 1650mo. 6"8-0426 S1r1'9hl leaH wloptlort 11.1 lime to. v•c•tton.: 857 1771 790-1713 •lg ciean & q let Mesa man. 2640 5"8•2682 N1wpor1 B••eh. Re1p. Prof f•m 11/amlir shr 1 1° .......... ~! 1229·000 Call 7141540-2255 • or Verde 2BR 2B~. dlw, nu _ •• , ..... l ,ll~d'--1BR $650 Of 2BR $800. BEAUTIFUL, "'8il\;'I targe prof. lem•le, walk to bly tlelullful NB cOf\do clole °' lor W 1 1;;;;;;;;;;----~ •MWV•T N•llLA drapee., encl ;eregct, Indy w °'".. ,..., Oown1t1ir1, 3 clock a townhome tlyle apl naar & beach. $350/mo ~ Roomm•tes \ll•nted 10 beh! All amen11ies, " •• llnwc.,,_. •BACHELOR-Cut• I S795Nope11840-2•95 llfM,DIW,OlkUblnets, lrom oeean a HB pier Fllhlonlliand,2BR2BA, S IOOdepolil 675-8509 2724 w/d, end g•r•, e1C 111·2242 , •• , •••• , w/smatl qulel locl Lodry lac a 960.013011191'"..... ' I I $1050 ~ OCEAN FAONl ... $850/rno.131-1098 Oppc!!l!!llY · ,2908 kllehen lull bllh No *MESA VERDE* pool. Sngt adlt. No pets .,....,.. rp c. no pe ' . .,. .,. -• pani1ng' SIOO .,. Yi •111 2BR tBA. lower, g.1tage. 1895. Curl 11631_1266 Beehelor Apt. 4 bkx:ks 15•·77•2 or 854·7855 Hotm/Moteb 271 8 Newporl Beac:h to share lllTTM .. ! f~ J:;:.~.::.= on10 •LARGE 2BR IBA u I . 1700/rno. No petsl * lrom beach . .IH ull/11181 WTILIFF SU w1 •m 2 Cir houM ~ gartge ••• 111-·n lfus:Mx w/lg ba~ 540-S448W RWiMTllllm p11d,nopetsS500lmo. ~ Oelu•e 2BR, 2,.-\BA. each Wkty rentaltl now ivail Ml251mo 790-3061 ul ~·~~~ c.r gv1g9, 11oso1mO. o.tu1112BR1'AIBA twnhse, Newel' tBR wllormel. dine depolit 995•495• BR own BA.. GREAT FOR $1•0.00 wk & up. 227• B•yrldge cOncxi. NB F&m VILLA RENTALS itt•chec:t girage, w/d ., .. , DJW , oak eaci1na11. ••BEACH CLOSE*• ROOMMATES Frpk;. dbl Nwp1 Blvd, CM 6•&-74•5 to 1hr w1pro1 1em111. TllUll.'f Pl.IT RETA.IL. 135 1q_ rt tor SEJ ,(~ ·. 876-4912 l'look-u~. frpk:, !g. Piiio, quiet loc! Ln dry lac & ZBR &.38R, 1 & 2 B.L gar, Rec arA, pool. No Pt>Oi, g1r1tg9, wld $600 Tl~ •U 18•...-AYlll !min71n-CU--,---,; dic:k,-Cl~uhtit'. new pool. Sngl ltdll, No pets S795 & up. C1ll 09'18 $1125/mo • sec. V"'a"-R-alS 2722 Av•il lmmed 6<'0·6655 •••·1111 on 19th SI 790-8364 LARGE 1ti.tdlo, atepa lo erpt, r.O.Corllld. No S8t5.CurlH631·1266 ••8JO.ll99•• A t onty 175-0068 -. LIUfl ..,,. .- Mech & bl)I. S495c/~ pell. $115/mo. 388 w. Nice 2BR lltium AYlll pp NJ'wporl Beech, QUIET DESIGNER HOME Pool. ...,., ...... , RETAIL STORE 'tOt ...... ~ through daMified plu~acurll)I. •I Bay St, C.M. Joyce 7/t .2135.S1ntiAna Avi Adlllllledld'11hl.o1ut1on UlllATFRlltlrl furnl1h1d hou11 near Jacuui, 2 o.ar.1, vaulted ll*M lsllfl 2.ioo Ml II. popul•r • Abr ,831-414• 7141997·9104 JO ProP· S795fmo . Smin· eom· ::11~Mklofn.worngood ,.... 2BRwlbe1utiful bl)'Yiewt beech. $850 P1f weeti eelt.sk)lllt1$500&S400. fl•'.Y""U•a..,. Wntciln UPP« ert)I Mgmt 71 41751-2787 l>I••' 548-5512. ·-loo 10 yr ty 873·4021 Pr!Ylte p1r1y. &46-5994 AYall immec:t. 531·5253 ._ -->---------+ Corana dtl Mar 2622 3 BR, 2 BA. up.1!111'1, ,,..,.. ----,-.--.-111 .... .-.-..l catpet. dr1pe1 & peint. Only $800/mo, Nr So . .. ... a.. 144-2111 eo..t P\1.21 & o .c . Col- lege 720-8730 Chefmlng 2 Bedroom, 11 iiiic;;;;;:--:;--.;;;;--u;;;;;;;: Bath ll'Ofll Duplex. Fir• 25/mo 1' deP. Mobile piece, 1900/mo. Ag1 home. No pel1. Mature 875-4912 adultl. Oulel. secure. 1991 Newport. 646-8373 cos.. Mesa 262~ SPMktlng clean 2Bdrm mle8tiBllU 1\48e 11'50. All ullll paid. Gar~ ~·~er'.. AP&ITIDTI 942· 1424 142-4905 TheM 1ttr11Ct!Ye ,\pis IN· ~=======-I tur• poot 191, ptiv1t1 5 MINUTES TO BEACH! pellol or dec:k1, g1rege .. LIWll RllTll or carport In .1 beauutulty ~1BR, '560-H25 l1nd1c1p1d .11\llng ..,..2BR. li504725 Sony, tlO pe11. ..,..3BR ltoo 1 Bedroom $660 0111..ir pd. Pool, gar, d/w 29clrm 1'/081 1770 142-5073•850-8()19 2Bdtm 281 twnhM $965 111111111 sn1n .. COST A MESA. Wcutfll!ld Ml-1124 lit u ..... , .. s.u Y.. p,.,.,.,1 CtM Cla11tflt4, 642-5671 ·for information & surprisingly low cost. Switchables P '-cff frMf ml• --· Of''"" ... ~tlD M =~~ II - NEW WORK OR REPAIRS AVAILABLE FOR WIDE 1-Ull '.. VARIETY OF PROJECTS Call Paul • 6"•·9009 RU.I Tllllll Ml IEW !~~·:~-.!~!0 l .... m 8ethrm1·w11drobe·door1 30 yrs O.C. 0\.11~111 Work . LOWERUTIS ~El $2.30 per day Tha!'e A.LL you pay !Of • llM!s, 30 di')' '"'"""um • ~ '"' SERVICE DIRECTORY For mor• lnlorm•Oon CALL rooAYH ASK FOR LOIS OR 10111 ·~. Sefvk:I OlretlOfY Rel)r1Hfll•t1Yes 142-4J21 ftrp• 1 ':'.1.•1n1nQ • ,I, R· ! ''' Ser•'•.f'S .. UITllYCl·RIPUl C1 rp1t c111nlng /Oye Cerpet Saill Save BIQ SS. Below Wholes••• Prices R•slComm Ou1Hly W0tkt 15 yrs a•P. •Hl-0111* ........ ,. .. , .. Honest wage! S1eam, Bonnet Clnlng No hidden charges' 893-1686. -CILUW car phone 111e1. Mnllc• & C\lltom field 1nst1nauon Bes! pric:ft In CA. 110-1110 • ~ •LIYIMUllllS• AYllUILI E11p1 riinc1d ChTld · c ire/ ttou SI k 11 ping Screened to meel your neeo1. St iocsdlbOndeO. •fll-IMIS •lmllMlS • HI ll&Y SllYICI • CllTlll 11$Y&LLS • &F-IU nlCH U..#IHlll ....... 11. 11111•111111 HOME/OFFICE? ••1mc llOILLllOl&lllCY 111-0111 LICENSED DAYCARE Toddlers. Colla Mesa LIC •0939356 Cell ()MAnn 13 1.7058 .----•I 1 CAN FIX !Tt • WOODWORKING Pl•nllng, pruning, lawn m11nl E111bllshed, local r1l1 Con'lm'llR•sld'I 265-0e 19 1• IOf OI Mom w1U Clabyl•I under 3 FV Home Lots of TLC• Cef1 Mee' Assl L1mtt 3 f'uH·llme 8• 1·817• etellel!Oth !l'ltr')I. "r.-\Ctl I. Interior Qioort., "6cti•tCJ Llc,•529H8 557-1484 , o. .... C.,..tOW-. ...... ... ..::._-,.:.... .... ...... -....... 11'0 -·--... - • •PLU MBING •GEN REPAIR ET C M. t-tLIRLEY CRAF"1SMAN 95 1· 1222 11ter •pm 'Ill' JOHN SHANERS 'Ill' ---......__ '* GAR DENING * UllY lllJ OueHl)I plant ear• and E1ec1r1c1 I. ptumcilng . ln11a11111on1. 827-83t2 c•rpentry, painting ale. n-. -un-c &45·11152 -MIS •• • ___ --Fron'Yfd .. 124. ~Kk)lfd•· HANDYMAN SERVICE s 14. Weeding , yard E•I. paint & wood fenc:ff clNn-UJ)I. '64-1013 m~ tpeelllty Fr.,. di. r .. 1. r1111 Ron 722·89"e ' • SUPERfOA Wl~I~ lna1a1111lot1. RemoY•I Walt Rapelr', Prompt, Uc. •5&9215. MMk M2..e842 -..1 .. ,..,, ........ ,., 1'f"1'10o\' , ... _,.'* f\.... '"""I'll"""""..,_,.._......., ... ... h~··,-n•'""lf'll .. , ............... ... AJD8rloen B.cl ' Run your Help Wanted Ad in the Daily Pilot for one week. If you don't fill the position, run a second week FREE! E~ 5530 111,111/ltlTll II you have the courage to call, it could make you 11·11YUllU TURN YOUR SPARE TIME INTO $1 DOLLARS f rlctll 24 HOUR RECORD-F or more in ormation, ING. 991 -2837 Eicperlenceinwrlling, edit- call Maria or Anme, -ff--J-RE ~:~ci.:~r, ~Y:!i :~ &' tate. 1utomotfve and ·· 642-5678. advertising aup~ta. Wttl consld« eicperlence •• ·-~ ._...,..-. _ .--......,. through classified · over degrM. Ability to ._..._ --...--h1ndle v1rlety of job PART TIME Students 13 years & older. Earn $30-$100 per week selling The Orange Coast Daily Pilot If you ca n work 3 hours in the evening we have a job for you with high earnings. ,CALL EARL 49&33ZJ· functions In a fast-paced .,,Ylronment CALL· * NO COLLECTION * Early morning motor routes available Must hal'e dependable vehicle and liability insurance. 7 d•,.. ~r wttk, 2:30 a.-.-5:30 a.m. ABOVE J\ VEBAGE EARNINGS Call 714/642-4333 between 6:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m. (M.f) 6 a.m.-10 a.m . (SAT & SUN) ~REAS AVAILABLE: r Huntington Beaeh Costa Mesa. Fountain Valley., 4 Newport·Beaeh BOATS :11 -'~ :; .. ,. A ft.,. Scl.ool Wo,.l' 11 to 16 Years Old WOIK IYININGS AND SATUIDAY YOU CAN AVRAol PEI WEIK 17500 OR MORE CAUSHARON 714-143-9091 . ....... ssl6 P1r1 time, NIY wbrk AM or PM No eicp neoess- ery flovrly • Bonus 842--4321 Eict 431 or ----- 228. Watt for beep, aslt REST AURA NT for Cfystal or a..... Miii. lllftl NOL IS COIL! Apply~ 'tfe"?o,noet. Biiiard• la beck! e. Part of H B. 841-9385 2~pm. It by Joining stall of new.1'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii upacele blllard/vldeo 11 oenter. We're Metclng 21 Restaurant ~ ~:r~: .. ro llW HIRlll apply SS/hr Why work for fatt food when. you • BARTENDER c.n heY9 more fun with • FOOD SERVEA etc usl 965-2240, Ask for For lnteNlew call Robert or Mike Kltayame Restaurant ------725-0777 fOf eppt After Plllllnll lllll 5pm Clll (213) 489.-1333 Full time Mon-Frll•-------7·30am-4pm, $5 25/Hr e.n.ms No ••P nee. RETAIL SALES. FIT . Adv Apply In parson, Bootts oPPI. Call Mac 842-2779 on Ta~. 729 Farad St.. LAMPS PLUS 7282 Ed· Cotta M .... 548·5525 Inge< St, HB EOE fMotOr RoQtes ULllUlllTUT Sheat90n letwnan Hutton hat °'*'Ing tor bright detalklriented Individual lnter .. ted In cll«tt lllr· Ylcel In the brohn•g• In· ctuatry. Ouallfi.d cen- dldatee aboutd be well or- ganlnd, hew .int oral and written communlca· Uon Miiis and type ac- curately. ()M-yMr ollloe up. Call Dorothy. t57.e500. EOE M/F/H available in W11tmi11ter Hunti11fo1 l11ch Fount1i1 ~1ll1y NO COLLECTING NO SOLICl!ING Deliver.One Day a Week - Must have dependable car and proof of Insurance. a.11842-1444 Ask for Joanne Craney 111.DPlll• ~at 1931 Newport Bl. Coeta MMa. The Antique fmpoflum. 842"'"90 UUll UUll llLllJ '°' Art Gattery. M8ture ~wanted for busy phry. 894-.8393. "' ... ...... . ....... .. LM't flee tt. meklng big = le u cttlng •• ""*' you're onfy wottlna Monday througf'I F~ t to 5. AogrMllW IMrp .,..,., to llmply ... ad ..,.,. In tM belt .... police & fife publl- oettone. c..i Mr, Reed at 7 14-M 1·4365. ------ 0 1 I I I I ~ ,.;am 1m:=-r111 10.12!:.!: ,.,, ll 1JWW P•ftl&&llMB ~-·• bor.: ; 3 COMP If• _. #400, lllle MW, SIS0.00 25h0. Mercury, pylnl1.0 VIP9f', DfM1 CIDfld. M1,111t -1:ii;~~~~~~!I w/tioM ,..,... 1 cuttom 4N-1237 tr.Mer, COYW, mini oon..!:~"'~·~·~00011 .. ~•4~72;·;mt~~"';;;;ll fllll•'lll11M AN PQW91', W , 4 ort. • time or'yiit9~u.:.,~1~!!!! 60f0 wood trMh 'bin· 3 ~ <I I 11 on , I 3 3 0 0 . wdedl (1,.UIOOt~ \ OUlclt And ~--······ .... CH4'¥A,,.ET, o._ trotre••• 3p'H -CAI 7141173-$473 Setvtc..1.,,,,Mlm. Reel Teroa. ~I"°""' ~.. --~ S -10'10 dltion. ~ AM/FM. HOUIS fl.-WMk, At•· ..... Old cNn&. 0 1.... ~I mecn: 1 3•15 al• 60S9 13' Wflaiet pet' por'I, • n Ill -1 I'll CUMUe. Many ea1r .. 1 CHlltYSLI. "t,.'l'MOU'TW .,I lbte. Caal Peo Mc:Malet Jewelry. COll•cllbl••· ble: I unlllllfYt42t· ~ 44" ···~1o. 1ll!i. 401\p Y•m•h•, 1H7 toty0roho411 X\..NT .·~:.·., .... ·i'•~M: Muat ... to~ 11\lt 11111 IMCtl lllYCI Al N.8. """°°"7 f yogurt macti. 724-8682 "" •o•d•d. 14950. Evea con<1uron. Mut1 ••II. • e..nr-. ~ ,... ,.,.,...., bNYllfultulOmObl'e. Celt 142~1 Tll ~•y--1-Uiiiiiilii!;Miili'-l-r~oe~v~~~---a . ppt111ed at t7S..!i2t2 14000 __ ,,.2•7 .... 7 ·•""•''...,. /Mioli• I----------r.-1 I u.t:t:--"lt 11200.Hl-7312. ..,.... cv •M \Nlt l 151 -3171 . 11av 1 " MJ~•~llJ . ..-11----11'--"-~· "" ·-•· -CltRYSL ... 'N For ::.n.. ..... ........ 4 liellell i:id ........ 1*'11er SP1NfT (E....,en) plane 100 liP. LOF\A.:-:Tn'dr Slps/Dodu/Storage ' • 11 1 • • I -· 110-1.01 S17 :ooo 080 NEW Y()At(!fll~ l~~~~~~~~ll,...,,~1~T1~~·~·~· ..... 1-fleld•~~oe,o,...4:1Ck..,.et• ~~.1~.' =: -"Hoo""' .. •···.",:', ... "',""',, . 7022 lli-1111 11~~~~~~~~1Af.::::0 1..,t2fc>N111>• I 'PART TIW HOlllS ..---• 944-5082 m r . ' ... r . n ··1111-1 IM•PQtl (rec--•y \~~I I 1J,IM • A#IWts 6011 122!il080, 982-1170. WI\..\.. SEl.L F"Sl! l7900 --..-. .... .. Rt~on •-- -::,_;;;;-;;;;;:;o;;:;;;:;-·I • · . FIRM 14"4-0121 lrallel' I moorlng-Balboll •I (d1"&tf Sii~l• ~ ....., .,..., -· lllTf/UW.,,. F\ll TM PAY PHILCO REFRIGERATOR HotNc Remodel!na s .... lkydH PetMnaufa 113-5113 Strw<t w "Mts Mo~11 ·~~ uuw. * CHRYSLE PLYMOIJTH ·' ,_ ... ••• -~ 1,.., • 2 dOor, 22 cu ft., g<Md, 8nult.,a, oft-wnlie, tut1 ~GTF 24' LYMAN looks r.::· 37. SIDE TIE et •-t I~ 'l011111Monf11 -,.. .,. .., --. tlle1e..itet\ld "' ..., ·-""' ftoet t I t ·-d Id 20" REESTYLE BIKE ~toot Co toll"' oot. P'•••' I •m I -•---, -, - -M2.ol31 •"••O•llc, fast·p•ced r•, "n ...,.. . MtnQlh l wlndew. Sol ,. __ .. Con •--_....,___ P '"'II'-..... ...,, -1235 722 1922 WOOcl dt>i. d __. di!....,,, UMCI a nry.ier V-1 240 n p In-1--nM>r .... ""''· ~~~~~~~~~I •'"' -.-• .. o.-~· NewpOrt otfloe. "ut to StOOOtWll Pot-1119'. Tiie-' • • It'll~ OOt, M mos. 1700 vstue. for board. 1 ; 500 'obo AY•ll now. Sall onl~ ----· FOAD 'M TAURUS. legal tecrelef)'. Xlnt marketing olllc1 •up-W..,_, dry«, rWIQ, el«· door 71 • 32. 2·56l9 1225. 943-4985. s..$-4•$0 173-4928. O"TSUN 1911 280 ZX T· .,io. tlXll.S NIMJ&I.• 4 door, P/8, PIS. 1.-. - typtst, WP 5.0. &44·9190 pl*Noon ....... ' tw,..• .... &A0M, -12 IOtric .... r~.·-1111'°,,, ~Old Clown Coo•d• Jar•. --; ... ;:;:;;;;;;.;;;;;~ .. ~--... ~;;--l -====~=,.-.~IUP 10 55• ..it. Side Ill. !OP. bc.Mllt'lt COtldillon, ._ ..._ ~ 5400 mUel. BEAllTIFU&.:; ---w --........... a s • •AV"IL.t.BLE FOR IM-U<IC Ille. W•let. el«: tow 1Tlllel, all ••tr•• mu ...... ,._.. AT U817.14S-5031 llm/_..,, NO EXP NEC TV· 171.146-54411 .E. IONI., o~. uper ..... MEDIATE SALE 1970 ••·'1.1-1mo. •••••ta IA995 873-4743 FORO, 'H rwotwMI ~. fllll'IQ & flol1 ratt YW/Woocl Oat , ~ 36' Grand Bank• IWln -· .. -,. Qm __ :=-1-... ~ CROWN VICT~-. -one• WordS1ar typewrltfl"•tand 1· wood &.1:1 ... ,am.&... di-•, fun, .... 1 .... ___ _,,....,,,...., DATSUN ~2 10Z Alpine :illlD• ~· W~:.. ....... · 1 P••I-,..,••. CAii be1Cf'9 12 Noofl fwN&urt 6014 leddef " Ml~ llem•. .. ... _ ., 107' 12100 ~ "u Power, aulo. 11r,---NEWPOR C .... .._ llMll Owner moving ool ot '=:=/T ~ 9014 •·-"· c. I He"fll'POfl.lleec:llRulE.. TB HIS73-3731 RAll•IMlllll 175-11509 •-1• lfla.Olfered~INI'· ~-r_.a ~bo.64&-_t0<_1 ____ , ·~~:·;'"1 Wt-• .;:::•di {IPUMll I lete ~· Fult titM wllh Cs~JT'HMOE~A~~,~~~9 Foott>cwOwttll r9111, PLANE TICKET, 1, way, W..,t11tlllt k.at . Call altar &pm 1111 llm(Tlllf HONDA. 1914 Prelude HUNTINGTON 8EACM t>enefl\#, 1'-'7!ii-1100 0 s . . QUMn.U.•S115.&4G-1733 LAX to Ch:i:· ,11t,, ....... , •• IO. 711·14'92. 11llLll IOOK mil• but XLNT1 -~.~o~,.~.~w=.~o~ •• ~ .. ~.,~.~ CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH SECURrTY OFFICERS TH MA TEMPORARIES Oif'I'"" room lat». 421180 1100 obo day 2·1358, ---~N=l·~l~J~l_l ___ , * IU UY 21' * S-o 0, gall••· pew condlllon. -~..-.. --OU"MTUM s..i-0631 W-i-·i•-bootl II•• nu,metou1 o"le•P<>9· 1 ·~ lb t··• 4 wttld 982-1195 O•rlMd •__..-·7 """ -,,. IUoni •Vail. For lrit91'view g au w ra1s 1 -"'· '"'===-==c--°"'='I WUITlt f llra•lwfleel1, n-l ip-viced. Auto1T1auc. 11• 5 mp, air, cus (28MC1 •2! FORD MUSTANG OT l&UlftJIMOT -cd Me.44,3, No Foo _roM:,;:r.; tulip cllalr-. 21Waddl;.\i Or•••· br•nd MM's 10·-.........,,. lri Tw•1"00~ ""· r•"'11•r arch3. pe1"1/ac:r11n1 S900 OBO t 9 3 0 0 o b o S33"5 1007 bl-k .__ • ·-., 1· i•·--g .,.,,.7"""' • ..... 1 con 1 on. • ,., __ ,, 975.51111115.5191 H·-11~-•-··• ..... ,· __ ::..·.,,, ... ._:"' 114511....... )Tl ' 1ouv MW . Uk· ~ " .. IO '# -good: con<llllon lor dtll)' '"~"~1·~·;~"'~· ·~7~3~-~"~'~''..__1 -• .u~'Ni-~'2'..--1 ~'-'-C,io"5'i:-i.-----1 ..... ...., ........ ... ........... -...... * TIAWIL &lllT * Ing M50. "85--3133 bNCI•. N a. Pd t11~. lr•Yll Call Merk at -*LIKE NEW, 24' HONDA. .... CHRYSLE. 'PLYMOUTH mecul•t• t10,H01on9r rllyiWJ 0 .C. AlrPOrt 1r11, lel•ur•& MATTRESS a·· In tar-S.-c SS~. 497-7370 71&-IO•I or 851-8753, * llllWllL 11' * 1971 TIT"N CL.ASS-A ACCORD SEO"N 1Ml1 8iMcl'I Blvd j_~"~'-~'°~"~·~·~·:·~·~'°~- PROTECTION -ISOUR ROFESSION! M TIE IHllWTlll etMTDLTWIE -* ,..,._* ...... "* raaT111••* IPllllllll TlllHlllT 1.0. YllClllon ••per . lop pay, ~log, quM,i al1e, clUr'I, WILL P"Y CASH IOt ~ days or ...,.,Ing• 140 H.P. OMC. Inboard. MOTORHOME. AulO, 4 cyllndar. •Ir, 842-0IS3l ' ellcellent working en· .llnl condlllon J50 c111 Clllldren'iclot!'lll lnveryl;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.-"'i';;;"'i;;;;;•I open bow. Cu1tol'" Low mn11. Slffpl 5 plb11ll11. (2"Rw g11) vw 1ga1 C.brlolel Con-•JEEPIEAGLE.SAL.E* vlrOri1T1•ri1. lmmedl•I• 5411-2512 good OCW\<I,, Ill:• 0·12. SpofUrig Goods 6065 1ongue lraller. StOted In SI0.500 SM llr1t at S5ff5 vertible. 818Cll . 5-speld, ,., IVU operilng. Tra~ll Ad'llfl-call Oellcl• 965-0414 -g•raga. $1300. 2218 E. Paclhc A"•· HuritlriglOl'I Bead'I "C. AM /FM 11e1eo ,. 1ur11. i:'renk 752-0752 1:11~TIU~~Q~~m~~l~ll~~l~l~l1l!:!!~!~~~~;~1 SKIS 472-7799 Biii Costa Meta, tneri call CH RYSLER/PLYMOUTH catMtte ONL y 5100 llVllCE , maor ... & ttundlti, never (olled:lbtts Roaalgnot S.TS. 180 cm, 759-1104 ot &44-8722 1&111 8Mct! &vd MILES! EX CELLENT VnllTH used 1195. •640-1733• f'f1oll• 3800 rec•rio bind· ll' IDITllUIUI 1142-0631 CONOITIONJ S12.500 on 911 \.WI QUEEN StZE MATTRESS ....... LI ~~~~ ~~~UI~~~::: L::1;~~00o~~~9~:0e 4 \Uhffl Drlvt/meJO H 0 N 0 A Ac c 0 R 0 474•7710 M·f "•m-Spm .IEEP/UILES COUNSELORS a eox OUIL TEO! Old Gk>W'I, cookie Jars; 2 195." 55g.1231 1 ...... l -iiiiiiiiiiliiiiiin-1,..-..,.--...,,,,,,,...;~~~I HATCHBACK 1e82,l'·;:;:::;;::;:::;:;;::=;;;;;j BRAN0°New1 s15s. or1g1na1 'L11111 P«lple" mn.... ELIOTlll Pllln r 86 s2 .5oo. •Ir. AM /FM 1· •. ._ ___,_ .. 300 1r1 et00t1 CALL • 8"40-11733 * dOll• llgn.cl by Cabbage, :;;;o;;;;;;;;;;~· ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;IOurtleld M m. 1980 18' tsuiu rOOP91', 19 • wnl CllMlll ao 000 miles ,__ -~ 7 ••• , ••• _. We navecll•llf!'lglngpo1-1=====~~==I P•tcll 1rll11 C1111~ • ·,,,·,,· dr ,amlfm C•••.S-spd ,·,,.1114 .11178SEVILLE.Goodcon-' llE 11 ' '''"'''"'di Co"oolo 87,_,.-. Ctwfstmas~ no covar. roo l rack S7000 l -~==~~=~-I .IEEP U I on1 operi or •ell-l ~~~-~·;..;;;;;;;;;;,;;,l '"'-;;ij=iii;ii''--1.,,..,,.,;,'~'~'~-0~8~S~5:::,,._;;;;I ditk>fl. VQUOI llrff, wtr1 • motl-.ie1ecl p1opl1 to color T.V .• d!ritno rm Ml,!• WT. llTt (611)564-"160 Alk !or UZll '11121 ...._.,, moon-rool, ,,,.. 3211t C9mltlo CepWlrlnO supel'Vlse 111n10-r1 1n wicket dlnirigllMng rm Computm 6018 WlnOlnnerF...,,Twot SEASWIRl 18 Foot. Vll 1·K·'•'•""··------;l2 Door, 75,000 mHes, 5-lr-'wnlaslori I o.ttery SANJUANCAPISTAANO the ntws9•P9' promo-Ml, 3 Ind llbllt wtc:ll;er 1-:.-;o-~:::.r-:0:::::--:::::n-=:.::::::::..:~~'.:'..:='.'._-I )05 170 ONC. 19115, IOW11 •P••d. A/C, AM /FM J2900. 721-96541 -II !IOflat llttld. wlgll••. wicker bar AT t2MHZ. 5121(, 1650. hovr•. ellceltent con-Anttquts. caiiette, well ""•ln- GuaranlMd lricome of $400 lllf Wttk to st1rt 1lool1, piano. 790-3919 311620MHZ. lMB.11950. dlllon. S9300. 979.0304 Onsk:s 9045 lalned, 12!i00 oeo -19Q Buick Pan""· 141( 'lfwc6ce .moum m9y P~ 8otll wllh mono monitor. ;:;;:;::;:;:;:;:;;;;;:;jFciifcF~;;-;:;:;;t;':~I mlle1. T•ll• over bal OM<I aCtUlll dMllt OM! W"TERBEO complfi!te 727-3311/d 831-tHl5/e FO O 1116S Muelari9 IAU.~2111 ow.I, -wroa 116,!iOO. dua lo lnc•ntlvle wilh Maler I& bedding It ' W lloats 701 4 Lo k1 a run1 greelt 1 --M-.,-0-.---~1'ta'•=:iooso==-I 531-1703 provktlct lo the~ by deslr.cl). twin 111•· Glass AT JH 12 2llZ YU 12· KITE SaHboal wit t r.a. NCOfld owoer, Chircoal Or•y. Black · ""'""'aciOJrlf_ Ott• .,.. P•tloleble,49"rouri<Strio System lrom S12SO arid CoronadtfMlr 6122 trallet gOOd con autom•Uc 9 cyUnder. l••ther Interior. tookl •CADILL.t.C 1917• l)fr• 41 tw'a .n., publl· ~~ell•....,.~ole).& wil~, • ~. 722-6180 1700 'ca!ll46-6042 l4!i00 /0BO pp grNU9ullt4nau.:IUary20 ......... ~I'll C8110fl. Sai. eaclud .. _. · 1· 7•• ow w 11• TV 11\larger !Of ~1-bllnd. 545-6295 av•nlnos & ~"-1 k $t4 -1,. ~ w--..... Wrfngl«a'" ICodl. With potential lor StOOO "Stres•lass" lounge IBM 381 25 Mgi: ~ p1.-stiC boOlc: blndlrig i weelllnds g.,.,,,, gq '"" .......... .......--. · ,,.... ' Pl' -11. Thi• poi· ch•!r, y.tlow ve!Yit, irid paUbla 1 ""b ram, 40 mb builn••• aqulp misc 14' 11111 I •==~=~~~= 721-0700, u... lmm11C1.1l1te Burgundy D'.l.lc J1lon1 11e permenent 100 rnatchlng ouoman Call hd, 2 clrs 1.2 1,44, 18 bit SAT 12_4 SUN ' 9•11 1 W!tn traller T ·BIRO 1967 1111/sulclde MERCEDES 250 1972 .,,_ 199ther. Cu1tom ~. oft91' '" ••Cllllenl op-711-6046 'aYanlngs VGA card, VG" color 2•4 arid MoN 9•5 607 Daito:. t>kll wllh whit• Mil, door1, 111c1t1erit con-c•ll•ttl con<llllon dark Superb condition. l'Rmm •• portut'!llylorgrowlnan<I beforel:30orweeken<11 monllor, mouM, 2400 Blgonla(l~blOcilll<om Yflrygooclcondilion dlllon, sec:rlllc:e $2500. 9'"" '8000 5'8..1921 (2MHL041). PrlYlle rapid 1dv1ncem11t1t. In-mooam. lette1 quality PCH).&73•5761 ss75 0BO 492_785, 142-1256 ~•' parly. 71•-175-7957. SERVICl:S sured van, '11'8gon or MlsctfJantous 60!5 prln1.,. Lotl ol Software. · · W • • It cl a y a , -t IMO-MClll'I II rtQu1red.j "'liiiii'uiiiiiiiS_,'l;~A~ok~l~"O~S3~t50~.~'8~8·~1~4~58~ 18' ·HOBIE C"J ~I th ALJt llTIOO'tfd 9100 .. .,..... 71•·144·4"10 (11•) Ul-lllt LOI• ol DppOrtunlly IOI . UTI UlllfTI trlllet, small boa. 111111 OI Gold ctlrome wwheell, 2 •••LU-"#I grow wltll u1. No••· i a1x•. New, Oak llfllSh Ptts&Animals 6049 Best ort91' * llW * 1cpa,l 14500.975--6130 CAOILLAC11161Coupede -,.._.. -1eri e neceus e ''-'"".;;.;,;;;,_;;.;,_.--. ,new. "'"._1764· ' Vll\1, 1111n1 co11dltlon, MllU.lllJUl ;i'i.1r1~n ry, IN 142-91251142-274 \Paul'bALM"TIONS. Movlr'lg~ .,,.... OVER 2110 loed«I ~u1yl·8'821 12..750. --__. MoYlng Sale! Retrlg, m!K must NII. AKC . male & .,....,. ••-r &1115...,....• To 1eheclule an lnterv1-lurri. rug. 1x.,clM blka, !em. Mu•t take ·both lolts. Gtntr• 7011 H ' llLJllll NEW& USEC ITULMl- -'llllllZlhJ o eaperlenee neoesaary. •rid llrid ou1 your earrilng loyi, 1o ~ Dille•. dog1, 1t501pr. 551-8015 ~ lllL •••y Beautllul condllion, •"- Full or per1 llm1. For lnlo potenUal 780_5450 dy, 760•2850 9 ._1 ... ••U IH _., -bo•rd, lull to;eel. lull & ~!Ion. Mnd Mii-~-"9 1977 lift Bay Boet Dul· equipment. C111 now 1dclres11d stamped OW. IR, •••n H....,aQa!'agalMwhhOut "KC r~ !em, champion lleld el.ctrlc ifl excetlenl First cuh take• envelope to: P.O. Boll ... thegarage -Nll~lteme line. A ltlots. II mo old condition Must Mii CaH MOTIVATED!!( 1141, ONtbotn Ml 48120 (213)477·1.163 In ~. &800. 650·1476 tve !TISQ after 7pm. 538-1510 213'-471-2170 l'UllUC llllta l'UllUC ll)TIC( l'UllUC ll)TIC( PUllllC lllTICE "e11c1u11Yety INIW" 15-40 Jambor• Road ---....... -40,000 Miies. Cn.arcoal. Oiglt.i Oa911. L .. th« ln- tetlorJ T-Topl Sl2,000 Or a-1 Oller. 731·5784. -• "=l!''wn• ·~~a~ PIC~~s '="'afi:y• .. ..:."°:tar.:.·.~:· .. n.t ........ nit n. ,....,.. .,. TM ...... pertona •• The'°"°"""'..,..,...•• TM._....... n.111 ...... .. JTN tollooMf'I,..... 11 ~TN ~-penone.,. ~-----~----~~-~~-~~-~~-~.....--~~---TECM· eD-.Dlll. PRO·. alJIQUND 9Qtj,Hll, •IC'OTT A BIN<UIV, _lllllDMORf lH· F & I PM>OUCTIOf'il9, Ol. AMel"IOZCH COtll-NOATM AMl'-ICAN .' OAAHOICOUNTYHOSf 0 G fNTl,.PRtSH. V, NJI DUC110Me. 1al I 11111 It 111 E: ... 0.. ...... Mii ..._ Awe , C.... \llM)IP•NTAl PLNNNO, 414 CMforNa St U , "¥1· PANY, 414 Graceland, INTIN'M«l/N A I, 2 CO. 1240-P Lotan Aw . 1000 KAnOI Ad • ~ ~ c.... ...._ c.. '"" c. _, ..... 'Jell _, tl7 E. Wllofl, eo.t• Meea. ington 9Mdl. Calif t2"• Leeuna ~. C4illt '*' Mor'*'9 W90CI Dr.. eo.a Meae, ~ tMH leedl. CeM t2M3 ....... l• 90oft. Mt ... ,.,.,. ~ 271 loottAllM..,lletly,2463 c.f, tH27 ~dMlk>locuao,414 . Gary l .. Al'MlrOddl • ..,_ ....,..,"C.lf 12917 ; O.etd K. KM*, 1240-P ScottA*!MctntOetl. 1000 ·----....... ,,_... .. • Coeea ...... l ... eo.ea ..... c.t . ....,.. A•. CoMe MilM; Anlltony JOMptl Stud-CeltfOfnia SI. •4, Hunl· Ot~. L..-leectl. Cery .... d w • 21 lopn Aw . Coste MeM. KNIOI Ad NelllpOf1 e..c:h Q.•iif"SJ • ""'91· C811t ...,., _, Cellf Nt27 !Mt•, 111 E Wll9on. Cotti 111Qlon e..dl, Callf tH-41 C.I. t215t MorMIQ WOod Dr . Ctltf. t2tM Calif tHll ..... TNa bu.... I• CCln• .....-.. 0.ald Ctllf,U. TfMI bu..,... .. COit• ....... Cellf. 9*7 lhll bu1lne11 .. con. Tllll butlnet• •• con· .......... ~ 12117 Tiii• bullMH ,, con· Thi• bUllMN II con· ~ by .,, lftdMduel 11111 ~ Or.. N9wpor1 clucted by; an lndMduet Thll bullneu ~· con· ducted by en lndlvlduel ducted by an irldMduel 'fhte ..,_,_ 1 con· dUc19d by .,. lndMduel dUded by an 11\dMdU.i IF••• 'f m Th• reglllrlMlt com-....,_, Cellf. t2MO Tiie r•t l•tr•nt com· ducted~ en lndMCIWll Ttl• reotttrent com· Tbt t1gl11r1nt com· ducted by; an Tiie reg111r1nt com· Tiit re9111r1nt com· .. '" •••••"' co"'• ~ IO ,,.,,._, bull· nM bUllMM 11 COit-iMnced to tr~t bull-The r19l1tr1n1 com-menced to trenuc1 bull· menctd to trenMci bull-T,._ rttlllr n1 com· menced to trenuct bull-mencecl to traneect ~~..: Wlllll• to .,..... -.... .,.. .,,,_ ttw fictitious duGled by e genertl pert· neu undtt tM llclltloul rMnctd to tr9"NC1 bull· ,,... uncMJ Iha llclltloUI nea under IM flctitloul menced to tJ bull· nees under lhe flcllllout Mii undtf' the liclilruuw ..-.. llctlMOul -...... ,.,_ °' names ,,....., bUlirltlll ntlM Of namee nees .,,,_ the lle1ttlou• buelneas Mme Of narnee ~ name or nemee ne11 Yftd9r fictttloUs bUelneM name Of nM191 bullnell name Of names ;'.'Jllli•lr~..... °' ..._ 11ef11ct ~ on Mey 30, Ttte r99l1trent com• lleted Molle on Merdl 17. bUlirltlll !WM or NllMI listed abolle on Jl.IM 12, lleMd ebow on June t. 1 ... _...... ,.._ or MIMI lialed ~on ,l4*f 1. t91t lilted ebo¥1 on NIA .._.on Mey ,... 1• mencec1 to treneect bUll-ttlt lilted~ on June 2, 1987 1Mt Gwy l . AtnOtorlctl lilted MOiie on June 1, 1Mt o..w K Kelltr Scott Mcintosh ~ .. ,._. Melltile L Scot~ .,.. under u.. flctltloul loon lerkeie)' AnthOny Sllldllto<• RietlWd M Loeuec> Thie 1t1temenl ... llltd Cary NcNrd w..-Ttvs .... ement ..... tfltd Tiiis 1111..-1 ... filed 1 • JfNi1 ... •it w• tlltd Tiiis attlenwnt w .. tlltd buelf'9M '*M or ,..... Thie ltettment wes !Mid Thll 1tetemen1 w .. ftlecl This ttatement wu hied wttn tht County Clertl of Or-Thie lletement .., .. flied with the Counly Clet1I of Or· w1111 the County Cltfk ot o;· tw. .. ~ Cieri! o1 Or· With the Counly Clel'k of Or· Meted above on June 7, 1 .. wtet1 the County Clerk of Or· With the County Cltfk of Of. wttll the county Cieri! of Of· tnGe County on JuM 13, wtth the County Clerk of Or· tnG9 County on June 18, eno-County on June 1 • ~ on ~ 1, ~ COl>llty on Junt 1, llelle BtOfdMll eil'lll County on June 1~. ""9 County on June -21 enQe Counly on June 13, 1919 etige Coun1y on JUM t . 1N9 1989 ,.__. 1M9 Thll lteMmerlt.,.. ..... 1tlt 1tlt 1989 ,oUIOle 1919 ,UJ471 -,_,. , .... wttll tN County Cltfk of Of. fl411071 ,._ r~ PublllMd Orange Coesl '411.. Published Orange Cc>alt Publlthed Oretige, Coast ~ Orenoe Coast PublllMd Orange COMt tnG9 County on June 13, Publllhed °'6n09 Coast Publilhecl Orange Cotti Pubhlhtd Oret)Oe Cout Delly Piiot June 1t, K , July ~ Otenge Coast Delly Pilot June 2e. July s. Deity Pilot June 2e, ~uty 3. ~,..... .NM· 12, 19, ae, Deity Piiot June 12. 19, :HI. 1ttt Delly Piiot June 19, :HI, July Delly Piiot June 12, 19. 2e. Dally PilOI June 111, 2e. July 3. 10, 1989 Delly"'°' June 19. :HS, .My 10. 11. 11119 10. t7, 19111 M 258 NMIY 3 .,... .My 3 1Ne ~ 3. 10, '"' .My 3. ,... j 3, 10. 1989 M-247 3, 10. 1Nt M·2t4 • • • • M 211 . M·213 .PublllNd OrenQe ~ M·248 M-2'1 M·240 M-232 __ .,. W\TICE rtaJC NOTICE 1.--------------•M.~':.-"-19' "·Nit MUC NOTICE PWllC NOTICE PWUC NOTICE _. MUC NOT1CE PmlJC NOT1C( ,._,.,"" "8.IC NOTICE ... ....... ------·· 'ICTITIOUI ....... ,ICTITIOUI ....... ------•'"'•"'--~• • fllCTITIOUI ....... •tcTITIOUI ....... 'ICTmOUI MllMll rNMil"iTA'ftiii'Wr '1C11TIOU9 ....... NAM1 ITAT'lmNT NAMI aTATW....,. 'ICTITIOUe ~ ftaJC .,TIC( ·-ITAW N.Am ITATW•NT NAMl ITA~ The followlng oereons _,. ..,._ ITAftmNT The to11ow1ng ptttonl 111 The folowlnt P9flon9 llt T~I~~. ~e PIC----.. The 1o1ow1ng pettonl trt The following peraont 111 The lollowlng S*90n1 are d9lno bu9'nMI •·-... k.,... The~ pereon1 are doi'IO bullMll at dolnG ~AMS~""""T"'S ... ___ ",,, ~~· -... --doing bUllMU.. doing bullneM" doinO bu•nell.. ·srY SH TER OR! doing bu-...... p,P M ENTERPRISES. (1)lNT • """"" ~ butiMll U.: doing bu.U-. u .... ITA~ AH OOOSHALL CON· (1)TERAA FtRMA VEN· Nt:WPORT MARKETING. lt IN 1 ' ElCPUllENCE CALI· 2644-1 Elden Colts Mell, (b)SANSORD. TAYLOR, IOUACE DYNAMICS ~ MCCABES EXT RAVA· The~ per90nl .. STRUCTION CO , 244 TURES (b)TERRA FIRMA 1M2 Port Aemegete. Hew· = ~:;·~~ewporl FOANIA MAOAZINE, 425 E Callf 92e27 ' BOUDREAU ART & AS· 100 Town Cent., Drive OANZA 32t B•ywood °' ' doing bulir"9a -~OC)e AYenUe. Cofone 1.EASIHG (c)SO. CAL SIG· port Beech, Cellf t2te0 s ~ ...... : l MehW 9ly Alie., ~ 8dch, JMnetl• Horman. 2644-8 SOCIA TU (c)SANFORD ,......,,__ 03M.._L.aguna ~ H4rffOOf1 Beach, Calif 92MO ROIT A CHU. 1100 Ed· def Met Cellf 92125 NATURE PROPERTIES. Gettld A Haacl! 1942 ,..,.__ ynn ' Ctlll 92M1 Elden Colle MeM. C.111 FINANCIAL. 49"4 Grte*end C-t2t77 Cfwllhnt McCabe Flel\)e, ~Alie •307, Huntinglon Atffed ~wey Godlhlll. 18837 8fookllurst SI. Suitt Pott Ram1g11e. N-port ~ ~·~;ee:•wport Wrew Q Walsh, 425 E 9~7 Or , Laguna Beectl, Celil RlcNrd John Ku<tz. ~ B 32e Btywoodc~Li .,..e.:, Newport Beactl, Cellf. 92647 • 244 HeliOtrOC)e Avenue. COf· 301. Founleln Valley, Ctkt Betdl, Cehl 92MO Thi•' bullntll 11 con· Bey Alie., ~ Beech. Thie butlnes• 11 c:on· t2t51 Od,COrOM clel-•· a.en, -"""""' .....,.. Pham, 1100 ld-one dtl M• Ca11f 92125 92708 Th 1 butlneH le con· Calif t2tt1 ducted by en lndlYidull Lori Taytor Boudreau. 4M '9aJllf t2t25 -T~'i t>u11ne11 I• con· 1nga1 Ave .• Huntington TNI' ~ 11 con· Jett Y-galn, 397 E 23rd dueled by en ind1vidull ~~4: ~.;'.~~om ·na 1>ut1n .. 1 Is con-Tiie reg111r1n1 com· Qr1cet1nd Dr . L1gun1 Thll bulffltu 11 con· duel-by'.,, lndiVldull , BNch, c.lf. t2t47 ducted by en lndMduel St . Newport Beech. Calll. Tiie rag11tr1nt com· tt 1 : ducted by: an lndlvtdv11 menctd to trtnNCl bull· BeaCh. Cahl. 92&51 Gucttd by "'lndlvid\.111 Tiie regl1trtnl com· This bOllneu le Cl)ll• Th• teglltrant com· 112960 meneec:t to lr1nsect bu~ menced ~ t:-C11ct1t~ Tiit regl1trant com· ,_ under lht ticttuous Tiiis 1>ullnM1 I• con· Tiit re9l1trant com· menctd to ttansecl blnl· dueled by: an lnOMdual menced to trensact buli· Thi• buslnen 11 con-neu unOet Iba llc11tlou1 ,,... menotd to lransect bull· bUllnMI ntmt Of names ducted by' an lndivldull to lfenNCI bull-""' und..-the lictltious Tll• tegl1trent com-,,... unc:ttr ttie flctlhous dueled l>y. an lndlvWkltl bullnel• name or MmM ~~(,:~I ,,... under the fletltlou• llsled abovt on June t3, Th• reg111r1n1 com· "*' urtder IN 11ctttlou• t>ullntM !).mt Of names mencect to transect bull-bu1inff1 neme or namee The 11gl11r1n1 c om· 11sted1t>owon.June 1. 1989 • 1 on ,.. bullnMI name or n-. 1989 menced 10 treneact bull-~ ..ne °' names fitted lboYe on Junt 9, l9S9 ne11 under the tictlllous fllted .oow on J4Jtt 31. 1984 menctd to lrenMCI bull· Oertld R Huctc Stl9tlanle Mahler lilted abo\19 on June t4, Jeanett• NOfmtn neu under Iha liClltlou1 laeed aboYe on June 1 · 1989 Clwlsllne McC1bt Fltlge bullnns name Of na~ A"red Hookwey Oodetltll nea under tile llctitlou• Tllis 1111emen1 waa tiled wllTllh~•~~.;:S ofl~ 1989 Thie stlletMl'lt w11 filed buslnea name or nemes Rlchettt Kurtl Thia 1t1i.ment wu I~ listed above on June 1, lNt This 11ttement w .. tiled buelnell ntme 0t name• wltll the COunty Cletk or Or· ange COunty on June 13" Andrew Walsh wUll the COunty Clef.k ol Or-lilted tboW on October 5, , Tiiie lllllefNrlt wa• llltd w.th the COunly Clerk or • Helene Pham With the County Cfet1I of Or-lltted above on NIA ange County on June 13, 1989 ' Tiiis. 11...,._,t wu llltd 1nge County on June HI. 1tee ...,. the County Clerk ol Or· etlQ9 County on June 9, Tiits llttement wu fled tnG9 County on May 31, Jell Yeargain 1989 ,42207t w1111 Iha COunly Clerk of Or· 1999 LOfl Teytor Boudreau ... COunly on June '· 1989 will! the County CWtt of Or-1Mt Thi• 1t11ement WU flied '412071 ange County on• June 18 ,U247t Tiiis •tlltmenl WU filed ,,.., f421740 •nee COUnty on June 13, '4MllO w1111 the County Clettc ol Or· Pubtllhtd Orange COlll Publlshtd Orange Coast 1989 ' PubNthed °''nee Cout will! tlle County Clttk or Or· .... ...._._... ,.._ '~t ,...!._ubplllhtdJ Or•1'!_ge28CouJ 1 1 1989 Publllhtd Oretige Coa1t ange County on June 1, Ditty Pilot June 19, 2t, Juty ~a~li ~~t June 19· 26· July ,GM71 Dally PllOI June 211. July 3, 1nee County on June 13, ..,....,...._, ..,.ange ......_ ..,..iy 1101 une •· · u Y '4m77 Dlllly Piiot June 12. 19, 28, 1989 3, 10, 1989 • ' • Publl9htd Orange Coast 10. 11; 1989 1989 ~Plot June 12. 19, K . 3, 10, 1989 Publithtd Otange COMI .July 3. 1Mt . fQCJJ'U M-237 M 235 Deity Pllol June 28, July 3, M·211 ,4Z20IO ~ 3. 1Me M-233 Deity Pilot June 19, 2t, July M·212 Publilhtd Ortnot Coul 10, 17. 11119 l..... Publlshtd Ortngt Cont St-M·218 3. 10. 1989 Delly Pltot June 12. 19. 26. Pt8JC N()TIC( "8.JC N()TlC( M-282 fUllC nuTICE Ditty Pllol June 19, 21. July 11e PmUC NOTICE M·238 "9.IC NOTICE Jul)' 3. 1989 3. 10, 1919 • PmlJC llOTICE M-211 'ICTmOUI MllMN 'icnnoua MISINIH . "8.JC NOTICE 'ecrmou111U ... H M·2•4 IC_, PmlJC NOTlC( fltCTmOUI .,_.. NAM1 ITA-TW•NT NAM1 ITAft•NT M,._ ITATa•NT '1Cm10Ue ..,..... ,.,.._ ITATBmWT "8.IC NO.TIC£ TM IOllowtnfl persons"' The loltowlnt perton1111 '1CnnGUe ..,.... TM loltowlng ptttonl •r• "8JC NOTICE N,._ ITATW•NT '1CTmOUI ....... The tollOwfno P*IOnl wt doing bu.inetltaf doing bu11neN u: MAim ITA~ doino bullMll• The folowtng person•.,. The lollowtng peflOl'IS ,,. MAm ITA.,...NT dOing bullMat... l'ICTmOUI ........ THE GOURMET TOUC~. HAYWARD HOUSE. 917·~ The lollowlnt persona.,. EtlTERTAINMENT CON· flCTITIOU9 ....... ~ buliMM 11 doing !Mlt•ness u Tiie I~ petaont lfe J & 0 PROOUCTIONS, N,._ ITAH•NT 2286 South Ritchey St , Cetnallon Ave , COfona del doing buliMal·•· SULTANTS, 1834 Ntwi>Oft NA• ITATIMINT l>AClflC COAST VALET ME OST ONE INTER· doing ~ u · 2478 Aue De Cennee, Coltl The lollowlng persons are Sente Ana. Calif 92705 Mtt, Clltl 112825 S("Nl()R CARE REFER· Blvd , Cotti Mau, Caltl Tiit lol\owfnt pereona art SERVICES, INC , 20422 N A T I 0 N A L I N • SAVE·U·SELL. 1t13 Mau, Ctlll 92127 doing buslMtl.. 01nlelle Norrie, 2223 BNce H Mcloud. 617'.t RALS. 20902 S. 8foollllurll 92e27 doing bu•neu u : leedl 8tvd Huntington CORPOAATED, 11976 TQI-Bakw St Suite E. Costa G«>rge MldlMI fedeclly, OFFSITE RESOURCES. Pomona. Coll• Mau. Ctlil Cetn111on Alie .• Corona del Suitt • 101. Huntington Marie> Peter Ttmbtllll)I, PARKER PROMOTIONS. 1'Md\, c. ,,.... tdo, IMne. Calif 92711 ....... Calif: 92826 ine Auel)e Clona. CO.II ~IS T.' 0 Cflll '"'1tlvd ' 92e27 Mar, Callt t2e25 8Mc:ft. Cllllf."t2$41 t2311 8WcNMI, Mi.a!On U11-Betb0a •3. ~· PeC* CoMt v .... S. Medatone tn1ernallon11. S1l19uerd ProparttH. Mele. Celli 92127 Balboa. Cell!. 92tt1 Heidi Stegmann. 14651 T.,rell w Mcloud, 111•.; ~ M. 8ufllt, 21ee1 Viejo, Calif 92192 Ctltf 112133 -~ c.Monl6a Inc. a Cellforfllt corpor-Inc., Ctld . 1113 Biii• 8t Jedi Relay, 15072 Lone-oi-Ewtyn Pan. 1585 E l<imbtfley Pt . Tu1tK1. Ct11I C.rMllon Av•. Cofone del Brooethunt •200. Hunt· 1<11en Tembtlllnl, 22311 Brett C P.,ktH. U 11 TNI buelMM ,. con-•ton. 1975 T*<fo. lfVWlt. Suite E. Colt• Meea. Ctlll nal. lfvine. Ctlif 9271• OcMr1 Blvd., Balboa, Calif 9Z680 Mii, Celt! 112125 lnQton e..cn. Celfl. 9264e BlrcNeal. MIHlon Viejo. ~ •3. New.Pon. Cell! ...-. by -a~.uon Calif t2718 . t212e Jl'lll butln ... 11 con· t2M1 Thie t>uliMH .. c:on-Thie buatnffl •• con-Thia buSIMP 1w l:'On· c.iit. t2et2 t~ )M reglatrent com· This bu1ln"1 Is con-Tiiie butlnn1 ts con· ducted by co-perln«s This bu1lne11 11 con· ducted by co-per1ner1 dueled by hueband end wits ducted by. an Individual Thll bullntH le con· Tf\11 bu11nesa Is con· ......., IO ~ bull-dllc:ltd l>y. • corporlllOn dueled by.• COfl)Oflllon Tiie regl1tren1 com· ducted by' en lndMduel The r•o••lttnt com· Th• regl11r1nt com· Th• r•tlllra"t com· duaed by hueband lndwll• ddcitd bl;, 1t1 llldMdutl ,... Yrider l'9 flc:mloul The reglllrant com· Tiie regletttnl com· menced to trtnteet bull· Th• regl1tr1nt c:om · mef'Ced 10 trlnMCt butt-~ 10 1r111~ bus'· ment*I to tranaect bull· Tht r19l1tt1nl com· Tiit r~tetrant com· ....... ,_,. Ot ,_,... menc:td to transact bud-menced to trensact bull-neat un6tr the ftf;llllous menced to ll'IMICt bull· ,,... under lhe ftctlllou• nen under the llc11tlou1 ,_. un6tr the ttettllou• mencecs 10 1r111sac1 bull· menctd to ltanNCI bull· = ebO¥e on ~ '1, .,... undtf Ille ffclihou1 ,,.. Yftd9r tlle lielltlous bull,_. nema Of namtt ness under tlle llctttiou) bul6nMI name or ntmM buttntu name Of ~ bulll'l9la """' oil Mi.met ,,... under the flctttlou• neu under Iha llctH1ou1 bulll'9lll ~ or namee ~ name 01 MtnM lilted M>oYt on M•y 25, b\lllneea name or names list'90 abOYt on August '1, Msltd 1bove on M1rct1 17, tlsted ebo¥e on-'Junt 15, bu9lneA name Of n.,,,._ bueinen name or names "°"" c Hinton, ,.,.. lllled aboW on May 1. 1989 liated abOYe on Mey 7, 1Mt !Mt lllted •bove on NIA 1989 1tff 1tlt ' ,, lltted •bovl on July 1981 lilted •bovl on N/A •t Freemen Rote, CEO Pt991dent G«>rge Fedectly Diani E. Perr ' Denltlte Norri. 8fuce H Mcloud l<attwyn lurka MlllO Tembtlhnl Brltl C. l>ltller Thie .. 11 lWttt .... ll1ed This ... _.., was lt4td This ltalement WM filed Thi• ltttetnenl WH llltd Thll at1temen1 WU llltd This lltlM*lt -· filed Thl9 11e1ement WU filed This •t•t•'*'' -ltltd Thi• .... ..,,.,,, WH llltd Thi• •tfl.,,,..,t WU flied the CCIUMy Cteftl of Or· with Iha Coun(y Cltfk of Or· With the County Clerk of Or· with the County Cle<k Of Or· wllll the County Cletk of Or· wflll the County C*1< of Or-will! tilt County Cltfk ot Or· wttn 1M County Clertl of Or· with Iha County Clerk ol Or· with Ille County Clerk of Or· C-ty on June 1. 1ngt County on June 7. ange County 9'\ JuM 13, enQe County on June 1, ~ County on June 2. enQe County on June 13, 1nge COun1y on June 13. anoe County on June 1e, ange Counly on June 23, 1nge County on June 15. 1Nt 198t 11189 1'8¥ 11189 1989 ,... 1t811 1th ,_,., F411• ,._,4 ,.... ,._.. • 'U2071 r4220IO ,..,.,._ '421111 ~ Publtlhtd Or~ Cotti ll'ublllhtd Or1nge Coall Publllhed OrenQe Coeet Publllhed Of1nge Cout Publtlhtd Orange Coast Publilhtd Ortnge Coe11 Published Orange Cc>all Publlthtd' Orange Cotti Publllhed OrlllQ9 Co111 Pul>lllhtd Orange Cc>all O..V PllOI JuM. 12. 19. 26. Delly Pilot June 19, 26, July Deity .Piiot June 1t, 21. Jlil</ o.lly Pilol June 12. 19. 21, Dally Piiot June 12, 19, 26, Daily Piiot June 19. 26. July 0111y Pilot June 19, 28. July Dally Piiot J9ne 2t, July 3, 0et1y Pilot July 3. 10. 17, 24. Delly Piiot June 28, July 3. ,..., 3. 1Mt 3, 10, 1989 3. 10. 1Nt J\lly 3, 1919 ' July 3. 1919 3. 10, '11119 3, 10. 1989 • 10. 17, 1Mt 198t 10, 17, 1989 l 1 • • M-215 • M·231 M·245 · M·211' M·220 M·2411 M-241 M·2t3 M-2711 M·255 THE BEST BUYS IN ORANGE COUNTY ARE ON THIS PAGE CALL ONE NOWI servtce Parts u~filvY.11Ba & NEW LOCATK>NI SANTA ANA AUTO MALL 1• Auto ... Dr .. IMta AM 1354171 Nftport/55 F,.y. at Edinger ... _..,..,de¥' ~ ......... .fl,~ 8UENA PARK STANTON ... _ ''' 1111 IET , •• DULEISllP IOTICD YOll' Ad WI Come Out Ttwee Tines Per Week for $90 Color Free! .. (114) 142-4111 RI a WIS Rep wl cal you '~ •• • OLDSMOBILE • CADILLAC .ALLEN • OMCTRUCKS m/582·0800 SAN DIEGO FWY -AVERY EXIT LAGUNA NIGUEL IMrtlli 11 11111 P111 1111 "' 111111• 842-4321 CALL ONE OF THESE DEALl!RI FOR THE BEIT BUY ea1M SLEMONS IMPORTS ~ 191 IL I J I • c t r ( ( I • ' .I J I c i c J p • I ( r I r I ' ( c ... i 1 ( I j • • '