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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1990-08-13 - Orange Coast PilotTHE ORANGE COAST 25CENTS GOOD M ORNING! It's Monday, Aua. 13, 1990, a.nd here's what'• happenina: ORANGE OOAST WEATHER: Partially cloudy, clearina in the afternoon. T ... ,., MP/lo,r, 71-ft Yesterday's hi~/low: 69-6S Tomorrow's hiah/low: 72-67 SPORTS: ~lMpeBueMJI: Baltlmen 11, Aas•••. Deqen 7, AU..la I H-HOUll HOrUN• 7'0 .,.,,. Dlf'Oll 642-6086 C'-•·••"'9 ........ N,., ...... INSIDE mE NEWSROOM: Some of you out there have reason to celebrate. Today is the lSth annual International Lcfthanden Day, which celebrates lefthanded- ness and promotes "the needs and interests oflet\ies around the world," aoeordina to the T opek.a. Kan. -based Lcfthanders International ... The organization was formed to dispel superstitions sur- roundina southpaws. LHI also publishes Lcfthander. a mapzine with articles on handedness research and brain latcrality, profiles of famous lefties and how-to articles on crafts, sports and hobbies for southpaws. And act this: The publication is bound on the riaht and opens left. ~ "7Nait111 .. wi1b • ....ol'1. ............... ... ""'11. .. 008- didoal willl ~ "* ~ ..... .., ... , ....... o1 .. ,,,~ rcr'° n :.-l.': .... Oood ....... ol boaila, .,.,.,..., ..... bat• aad yellowtail .......... 8 11 1 lll M I So.• ... to .. wiadl • to •• .,.. trim ~ ... .......... ~.;: ~· ........ 2to i'I:. Low doadl Ud IOcal ~ dmlal ... INDEX 8rld~ 85 Business o 1-3 Classlfled 84-6 Comics 88 CroSS\NOrd 85 EnterUtlnment A6 HoroKope 85 Ann Landers A7 Oplnk>n A6 l'dke Log Al Pubk notices 87 ~ A7 SporU 81-3 TV Hstlngs A6 we.mer A9 TODArSTHOUGHT '"T'M ~st ol II tM ptNCMrJ Mt tM tMn who llw tMlr Cfffds. ·• . Eag. A. Gwst .. MONDAY, AUGUST . New golf era emerges on Newport Coast Two courses set development tone lly .-ATRICK LARKIN D9ll1 ,.... C:.1; ...... NEWPORT BEACH -Like the phoenix of mythol<>aY that rose up from t&e ashes, so to is The lrvine Co.'s Newpon Coast Development risina from the dirt. Included in the 9,()()()..acre project are two championship pubhc aolf courses 1eheduled to open in July 1991, alona with a 33,()()()..aquare- foot clubhouse. But that's not all The Irvine Co. has has planned for the area. Two resort hotels, the Marriott and Hyatt Reaency, have committed to the area, but neither will be open until at least 1993. The area will also be home to more than 400 new custom houses·and 24S townhouses. The project is currently The Irvine Co.'s bigest endeavor. "It's really our premier project at this time because of its location and the time we've spent on it," said Dawn McCormick, a company spokeswoman. "We have several other 11.rae undenakinp. but this is our slpaturc project' The Irvine Co. has had plans to develop the ama for more than 2S years, but the company had to over- come several roadblocks. At one ~int, it was hit with a lawsuit by the Friends of the Irvine Coast, but the suit was settled after tlae company llJ'Ced to scale bllck the project. Gone was an office buildina. and the num ber of housin1 units was ~ duced. Out of 9,000 acres, 7.000, or 7S percent, will be preserved as open space. O Included in the plans arc two golf courses, which, except for the lack of arus. have already been laid out. The fairways have been cut, trees removed and relocated ind greens and bunken have been built or dug. The courses, like the rest of the project, have proven to be an am- bitious undertaking. Problems with the site geology, tree relocation, irription and subter- ranean drainqe have all added to the estimated SS. million price taa -S l.S million .per hoac -that The Irvine Co. will pay to build the courses. Project Ma'na,er Norm Witt sa)'I that the finished product will be well worth the wail .. It's been a real chaJJenae so faJ> because of the complexities of the project," Witt said. "Basically be- cause of seology, storm drainage and landsc;;tPIO&, the costs have been very •xtenuve. .. This ce~nly hasn't been a pic- nic, but ~t finished project will be beautiful.' · Acsthetfci arc key at the courses. Course a¢hitcct Tom Fazio has Vf ntagc Cf ub in Palm Desert and Ed&cwood Country Oub in Lake TaJioe to his' credit. The 6,700.yard Ocean Course will have four holes on the ocean side of Peific Coast f Pleailt see GOU' /a.ctr ,._.., ..., .......... ._ ....... Golfen w• get ••at views of Ille ftadflc Oce.,.. FutLire .!: 1- f re e w~ys not so free Gay Pride gets jeers and cheers at UC/ 8y TONY DODERO D9ll1 ,,_ SlM9 ..,_ IR VINE -Contrary to last year's violence-marred festival in Santa Ana. Orange County Cultural Pride's 1990 Lesbian & Gay Pride Celebration received a warm recep- tion at UCI. Sunday's parade got started at abo.ut 12:45 p.m. atop a hill in Aldrich Park and wound down past the Administration Buildina. where thousands of onlookers cheered the participants. Grand Marshall Robert Gentry, a Laauna Beach City Councilman, headed the parade in a aold Cadillac convenible . ..., .... ,........,..._.,_ Driving in fast lane undergoing big change lly STEPHEN ~EN ~ ....... s.rwi. SACRAMENTO -In Sinpporc. motorists must buy a tax sticker for their windshields before they can dnve into the central business dis- tnct. In Dallas. there's a toll road where scanning devices read numben off a microchip card mounted 10sidc vc- tucles as they speed by. At the end of the month, commuten arc mailed a bill based on the number of times their car has been counted. Several marchers chanted as they passed the onlookers. Marcher shouted. "two, four, six, eiaht -UC Irvine ain't so straight" and "bey. hey, ho, ho - homopbob11's aot to 10" to the deliahted crowd. ,. ldeotog Isn't Ille onfJ ttttne ••par.tine protesters and p•rtlclpanta In the Culttlral ftrlde ftarNe at UCI on s ... .a.y • pollce lr••P order. In Vif'Jinia, a 16-mile toll road is beina built from Dulles Inter- national A1rpon to Lcesbura. Althou&h toll roads arc noth1~ new in the East, this one 1s being butlt by private deyelopen as a profit-mak- 1na operation. Those arc all aJimpscs of the fu. ture for many Cahfomia motonsts. planners say. Computer controls. New restrictions. Special fees and taxes. Maybe even auto and truck reaistratioo fees based on mlles traveled per year. One aroup of about IS men, how- ever, weren't so deliahted by the parade. The aroup. wavina banners, stood in a roped-off area along the route and shouted biblical slogans as · the pande marchers went by. "Repent and read the Bible," Ruben Israel told marchers. Typical morning: Invest S 3 50 million before 7 · lly ,-AUL ARCHll'LEY D9111,....~ ...... COST A MESA -Durina the time many Californians were having a first cup of coffee, slicina btananas into their cereal or rcadina this story in their Orup C.Ut 0.UJ Pile&, Thomas Hayes invested about $3~ million. It would be a typical momjq for the state treasurer, who arrives at his office before 7 a.m. to discuss invest- ment strateay with his staff, then joins them on the phones to tell broken bow to invest millions of dollars in state money. Except thcte da~ Hayes finds himself oq the campeian trail -a new experience for the political nov- ice w6o was appointed to the treuurcr•s office by Oov. Oeol'IC Deukmejian in 1988. He'd rather 6e in Sacrainento handJjna money mat- ten full·time. In a meetina with'thc DeilJ PUet editorial board, Hayes candidly ad- mitted he's no politician. even thoUlh he holds a partisan. elective offtcC. He had to join the Re- publican Party when Deukmejian tabbed him to fill the post. left VllQnt by the death Of ~mocnt Jaee Unruh. M Iona as be bad to chooee, Hayes prcfen beina a Republican, and he thinks the treasurer's office should remain an elective, rather than appointed, post But manaaina financial affairs is what be docs best, and it's his araument why voters should elect bjm to a full term in November over Democratic nominee Kathleen Brown. .i. He claims no interest in hiper office, while many believe Brown wants to UJe the treasurer's Job 11 a steppina s1onc to become tfte third member of her family to live in the aov.ernor's mansio11. Her father is former Oov. Edmund G. "Pat" Brown.i. her brother, former Gov. Jerry Drown. Sbe is a political animal. Hayes arpea. He's a money maJtalCf. Indeed, Haya bouU 10me 1m- pn:uive numben to beck up bis cla.im of financial acumen. His o~ averqcs a U million profit daily on investments. and made a teCOfd $I. 7 blllion in 1989. Under his manqement, the state's Cftdit ratint wu uPlf'ldec! to "AAA" by Moody's Investor Scf. vioe. 1t alrady had top ratinp from Standanl and Poor'• CorpOration and Fitch Investors Senlice, Inc. But Haya tPtDdl much ol his But that aroup's presence did not sec~ to distract onlookers or partici- pants intent on having a &ood time. .. , think it's excellent, .. said ua student Mireya Herrara. who ac- cidcntaJly stumbled upon the parade with her friend Gina Aores. "l liked the theme 'look to the future,' .. Herrara said. (rte ... '" GAY /a.ck ft-.f (PM.,.'" TOU./a.ck ftegel Tight-lipped Marines preparing for move into Middle East fray time on the stump wamin1 voten u well a Sacramento lqjslators that California risks loa1ns ha "AAA" ratinas if l'l rontinues ill new•found love affair with bond issues. Voten approved every bond measure on the June ballot -$5 billion worth -and will be asked Nov. 6 to OK another SS billion in bond laaues. Approvi"' bond measures saddles the atate with increui na debt, ea-•.n ns ill ec..uta lO the lowest lnt.cmt rates and ahrink.ina the pool of dilCfttionary income in the een- eral f\and. .. I'd like 10 tee the voecn ~ ,,.,_ .. NAYIS~ ...... E"-TORO -Military offietals were mum Sunday on how soon local troops wall leave for Saudi Arabia. but runs on buc stores for supplies and word from family mem~n indicated movement is imminent. The U.S. Marine Corps confirmed Saturday that Marines from three bates in California. includina the Marine Corps Air Station here. will join Operation Detcrt Shield to de- fend Saudi Arab11 from a possible Iraqi attack. Tbc dcptoyana troops include elc- menu of the 7th Marine Ex,pedition- ary 8ripdc and the 1st Fottt Ser- vict Support Group in Twentynine Palma. the ht Marine Division from C•mp Pendleton, and the 3rd Marine Alrtraft Wina from El Toro Marine CorDI Air Station. Officials declined to elaborate on that s&.atement Sunday, but a news.- paper quoted unnamtd Manna and their apou as •)'ina the IOktim CJ.~ to lbip out at any moment. ·we·re so ti.y we foqCt •hat day it . "Mid~ s.i.~~ -- at 'h:p Pcd1t• iD ~Saa ~ .. .,.. = .. -..... -·· .. ,... ......... , ·~·· . ... ' ' ~ ._... ....... .... . • ... '" • ..-.A Diego County. "I remember this from Vietnam. t 1ot off the boat and had to be reminded what a weekend was. .. At the TwentyniM Palma bate excha.,._ a duty officer who dcclin. fd to pve her name told The ~ socia.Led Presa theft was a run on descn survival knives, rclisioua tokens like St ChriJtopber medals and Jewish SW1. and on ruon, T- sbins and llnderwear. ··0ur problem it that we·~ nm out of all the health. and comfon items. We've beea bombarded, .. ahe said. "We've b a d, bOcrowed or ltoleo from odael' t.el. .. Marine U ROMld C ~Mio tunted Sunday ti.at~ w imminent for troopt •doaed • the apnwfina bae, wtaida a.a.. 2, 7~ membm ot t.hc 7'11 W.-. Expedjtiouty ..... • ... fll wbat -oace ciM • ._ De-oloymeat JOtDt Tllk ,_.._ "Their aoecilhY ii .......... said. "A cfly or ·so dowll • ..-. you"U realia boW ... ... -!90\'e." ,, ' I • • -: I .: .. I .. ~ • ,. • f ~ • ......... minol'I ... ·tiilat ........ widt ,an ud bottlel? Y-ou caa't. Di.&ftnt coetinp and e.bemkalt make dtem incompatible. Steel a'W(ly • Believe it or not, AmeriOI reey- clel more a&eel than all other ma .. teriala combined - in fact, most steel producu contain at least 2S percent recycled material. The nlost- ~ycled steel it.em? Can. •Unusual deposit law. In Nor- way, a $100 deposjt is addod to tbe price of each new car. It's munded by the next owner. When the final owner takes the car ·to a ac:np yard (for recyclina). he or she also aeu the deposit back. plus a SSO bonus. Other stuff •Old motor oil can be re-refined. • Americans throw out enouah iron and steel to supply all the nation's automakers on a continu- ous basis. Everareen Oil in Newark. Calif .• has developed a process that enables the company to recover about 62 per- cent of the oil it coUccts. So for every 11000 aallons of old motor oil recy- CJed, Evetareen sets about 620 pi- tons of new oil. •About 20 percent of the garbage dumped in landfills annually is yard waste. So if Americans composted our lawn .clippings, branches and leaves -or shredded them and used them for mulch -we could eliminate about one of every five garbage trucks currently needed. Rip It up • What paper is the most recy- cled? Corrugated cardboard, which makes up 'an estimated 40 percent of ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat VOL "'7 NO. 225 Editor's Hotline 642-6086 Y0411 commeuta M>out the Daily Pilot or news bps wil be recorded and glwn directly to Edtor William l.obdll.The same 24-how answering senlioe may be used IO record letters to the editor on any topic. Cof*t>uton IO OUf lenefs ootumn must include thew n.me and llliephone number tor V9rification This is your comml.nity newspaper; we want your involve- ment. Dally Piiot delivery guarantee! H you do not have your paper by 6 am . call before noon and your copy wil be deliwred. Cal before 10 a.m. and we1 get it IO you by noon Our. Customer Service Center, 642~. is open from 6 a m to 5 p.m. weetldeys, until noon on weekends, to au1st you with your circulation needs To make a correction It is the Orllng9 Coast Dally PllO('s pohcy IO promptly oomK:t al errors of substance To repon an error or Telephone numbers Circulation Orange County Advertlalng CJassified Display Edttortal News Sport a News, sports fax Main office Business office Business fax 642-4333 642-5678 642-4321 540-1224 642-4330 646-4170 642-4321 631 -5902 330 W. hy St •.• Colla w-. CA IW27 M .. addt•t·P.O Boll 15il(),Colla ....... CA921128 CCJPY'~ Ho ---.. .....,...,,.. edlotial, ,,_Ol........,,...~11-r .. ~ ~ "''*' pel!Melon ol ~ -5-1110..~-· ec.iaw.a.Clfllofni. (UPS l .. .eoot. ~ br _., SUS I* lour...-1*111d. bJ mml S7 I* lout._. penod The Qninoe C-011i1J P*il It IM*thed bJ P199 Colla Mela Pl.tlltlllllg Inc. A llngle. l9QIOIW lldllon • ~ -mDflllnge • waalL the llfll'q>aj ~ platf It • 3:IO W. Bay SI. C-a M•a P• C:0.1& .._. P~ Inc. It a WllOf1 CMlled tl.tllldlaly o4 P199 Olol.ip PIAllltNn;. Inc. IWleftE.,... P~ & °*" EQQl!i..e Olll09t ~~·· ~ a..NW.Mc911,"6. Howard L Sctvamm Vice President Advertising & Marketing Michael Showell Vice President Circulation Pramod Sh•h Vice President Controller D•vld Holett Vice President Produc:jion Wiiiiam S. Lobdell Vice President and Editor Cheri Freem•n Classified Manager Liu Tanney Pre-Press Manager Henry Knight Press Room Manager l! clarification, call 642-4321 and ask tor the aty desk ~ V• P ....... & Genetti Manlgef George Ar•uz Distribution/ Plant Manager r ~---r-- News of the weird What a motor home COLUMBUS, Ohio -Joe Har- rington is careful where be drives his motor home, because some cities just aren't big enough for the two of them. Harrington drives what he calls the .. world's larscst, most un- usual motor home,•• now on display at the Ohio State Fair. His house, dubbed "Ninth Wonder," is 121/J feet high, 8 feet wide and 46 feet long. Harrington, 60, a former truek driver, spent 17,000 hours in 3112 years building the vehicle, made of pans from fi ve djfTercnt trucks. The motor home has several remarkable amenities, including an 8 x 16 foot porch that folds under the vehicle, seven stereos with 26 speakers, three refrigerators, three television sets and a central heating and air con- ditioning system. The home sleeps fi ve. The Charlotte, N.C .. resident said he 1s careful where he takes his mobile mansion. "Chicago's got too many under- passes," said Harrington. "I took a TV crew out in it one time and when the fi rst bridge came up. they were all screaming for dear life." He said he sits up so high -about 12 feet -that he must consJantly peer at his speedometer because 11 can feel like the home is barely mo van~. Its eight-cylinder, 325 horsepower engine allows "Ninth Wonder" to travel up to 100 mph -at 10 miles to the gallon. Harrington said. J -Br ne A...cutftl Pm• Dr. Jan Vandersloot wtdl Tfff •ny HE IS: .C .. ~ A dermat~loaist in Huntinglon Beach and resident of Newport Beach, where he is known as a champion for neighborhood and environmental causes. He aerves on the boards of the Amigos de Bolsa Chica, Stop Polluting Our Newport, the Orange County Fund for Environmenlll Defense and is vice prcsjdent of the Newport Heights Community Association. PET PROJECT:------ Vandersloot•s pet project is saving wetlands, even the smallest pieces that look like drainage ditches to others. The water-logged sections of land, no matter what their origin, arc environmentally sensitive habitats filled with valuable vegetation, animals and birds. Vandersloot says. FAMILY TOGETHER:---- Vandersloot may have gotten his environment.al awareness from his grandfather, George Harrison Shull, who fought to preserve sand dunes in Vandersloot•s native New Jersey. Vandersloot's own two children, John, 6. and Tiffany. 4, arc already following in their father's earth-conscious footsteps. often accompanying him to visit wetlands areas. Young John even suggested posting a sign at the Avon Street wetlands. -Complied by Irl• Yoko/ EDITOR 'S NOTE: II YOll bow ••mHae wllo domltl be lut•red bJ "Oru1e Coa1t PffP/e" call ,.e Dally Pilot'• City Dut •I 14t-43tJ, or leave • me1n1e oo ,.e Editor'• HotlbJe -14t-4081. Juvenile violence epidemic predicted BOSTON -Poverty. drugs. child abuse and the widespread avail- ability of suns is pushing up the number of teen-agers who arc hkely to kill, a forensi cs psychologist warn- ed Sunday. "We're about to see an epidemic of juvenile violence. such as Amen- cans have never before witnessed, .. said Charles Patrick Ewing, wo has written a book o n 1hc topic caUcd "Kids Who K.ill." "In the past five years, juvenile homicide has increased five times faster than homicides commjtted by adults," Ewing said. "And it's not just murder. Murder is just the awful tip of the icebera, ·· he said at a news conference spon- sored by the University of Buffalo at the American Psychological Associa- tion's annual meeting here. I I L I ------- After falling sharply between 1982 and 1984.z the number of juveniles atTested ror murder and non-negh- ient homicide bepn a sleady rise in 1985. according to figures supplied to Ewing by the Federal Bureau of Investigation. - ,. •• ... •• ' .. 1:. A cruise and dinner In the Balboa Beach Company • 46 Ford WOQdiel And a dinner for two! Plus ten $25. 00 gift certJflcates ' will be awarded! I I I L_ - we have one sale a year. . .so - GET IN HERE!!! v • • -----~ I -- - I I I I In 1989, 2,208 juveniles na- tionwide were arrested on charges of murder or noi'l-ncgligent man- slauahter, 25 percent more than the year before, EwinJ said. In bis study of 225 juvenile killers over the past ten years. Ewing found that more than half the killers come from poor backgrounds, the ma- jority used auns in committing their crime and 25 percent had druas in their system at the time of the killing. Bot Ewina believes that child abuse is most closely linked to later kil~ by teen-qcrs. "J<jda team to be violent and they learn from their role models, es-- fC!C:iaUY their parents." he uid. 'And kids who arc especially brutalized by their parenu ie.m to be tbe most brutal. the mostly likely to kill others." Child abu1e may result in the sort of brain damaae that hurts the child's ability to deal with frus- tration and ii auodat.ed with viol- ence, Ewina said. Richard ~on. a psycholoaist who cha.In the M'lt'ly fonned Na· tionaJ Council of Afncan·American Men, llfeed with Ew1na's outline of I.be c:autet o( youth violence. In Addition, be II.id. church. ICbool and petenU have become a laa imponant inftucnce on some children, while their peers have be-come more amponant. He called on larae corpora1ion1 to ... M>r mentor pt'Olt'IMI tO &Ive iener city childttn aclf~ttcm. ••Many of thttt youths are bottd • dtey I.ck 11im&.alalion. Unemploy- meat l»r b&lck . ye>ulhl is 40 ocr- Gllal. .. Maion taid. _., ,.. ........ ,.,.,,,. Laguna Canyon Is truly a trea ure N o wond~r cltlz~ns and officials ac~ w orking to preserve Its ~auty a • ., Friday morni NlW arid I crawled Wider "'i bubed wi~ hce and ,.. ....., inao .......... CanJOD. Milt sprinkled our f'acel and Ovcrcut abtouded the fidee tot» u we ran from I.be bum of traftJc on tasuna Canyon Ra.cl • HCIMl.illl up a draw, my wife epotced a hUtc haw1t on top a acrawny tree. As we 19Pf'C)eebed, at m~tically flew off. When the trail be- came bordered by den1e chaparral, our pretence flushed out a covey of quail. It wu my fint experience hearina that whfrlina rotor-like 10und of the powerful little birds tak.ina fliabt After runnina tbrouah a pove of oak trees, we hiked to the ridae top and could see three miles in every dim:tion. Not a house in 1i&ht. Nor could we see, or heat, any traffic. There was only nature's sifent tcmin, several criSKl'OSSina trailt and the sweet smell of sqe made damp by the momina dew. The experience made clear to us why Laguna Beach wants to buy Laauna Canyon from The Irvine Co. No small wk: The acreqe involved could be valued 11 biah u $100 million, about three times the city's annual ~bud,et. "But I think we can do it," says Laauna's spirited Mayor Lida Lenney. The land in question flanks both sides of lafUDa Canyon Road beyond the El Toro intersection (tic.dins inland). The "buyina" opportunity will be on Laguna's November 6 ballot. It is estimated to cost an aver&JC Laauna Beach propcny taxpayer more than $1 25 a year, dec:reasma yearly over a 10.year commitment Laauna step~ up as the buyer after polls showed a countywidc purchase {>roposttio n had no chance for success -a required two- thirds Dll\JOnty of county residents wouldn't buy into the plan. "lquna will buy 1t," said Mayor Lcnney, "and we'll let everyone enjoy it as our Jift; our way of uraina all to walk softly on the land . .. But everyone will have to pitch in," quickly adds tfie mayor. So far. that seems to be happeruna. The Hotel Laguna will donate a pcrccntaac of sales to the cause, several donations have already been rccieved and, strange u it may sound. The Irvine Co. has plcdaed SI 0 million and made generous concessions to help "Save the Canyon." If the November vote, which requires a two-thirds majority, fails, The Irvine Co. will build 3,200 homes on the scenic property. "This will be our last chance." said Lcnney. · 0 "Sure, this will be a second chance, but the problem hasn't gone away," says Oran~ County Transporation Commissioner Dana Reed. Good for him. He's talkina about traffic. which everyone bitches about. Yet. last year voten rejcaed a $3.1 billion package that offered specific relief even thouah It would have cost the average family only fi ve dollan a month in increased sales tu. Now another offerin1 on November's ballot ~ves voters a second chance. "It was the low turnout that kjlled it, • stated Rttd, of last year's defeat. Identical to its predecessor. the I 990 Measure M allocates SI .3 billion for freeway improvements; SI billion for local street improvements and almost $800 million for mass transit. "Son of Measure M," as it is being called, also impo~ strict growth controls on local cities. "If they don't slow down develop- ment. they don't get funds for road and street improvements:· declared Recd. a Newport Beach attorney. A ciuzen's oversight committee. chaired by a specifically elt('ted official. will enforce the growth controls. Recd added. 0 On our way home from running and hiking m Laguna Canyon, I told Nikki. "Thal 'Son of a M' is a good deal." We were in the m orning quaam1rc on the 405. At Sand Canyon. around 8 a.m .. traffic was oozing along at 10 mph - or less. "Jf Measure M passes,1' I said. "we won't have these muck-ups in the future." My reasoning w!U twofold: improved traffic flow and t1Jilter growth controls. Those issues: traffic and growth control. plus more dpen space, have dominated local gripe lists for the past two decades. Now Orange County will have two o pponunities to "put its mooey where its mouth 1s ... For about S 125 a year 1n property tax increases, Laguna Beach voters (and other countians throuJh donations) can hopefully "buy" scenic Laguna Canyon. For an average of less than five dollars per month m sales tax increases. all Orange Count1ans can receive SJ. I billion 1n frttway, road and mass transit ·improvements. as well as city-imposed building controls. Stalled on the 405. after an exhilarating morning run 1n Laguna Canyon, Nikki and I agreed to support both measures. Jim Wood'I col•ma ""''Sany• .. hn~y •. II I• l"UJIJaf ,_., 411 p~ce ol Q~ vac•U°""'I Fred Marti.a. wh retsnu ktt We4o~sd•y. SACRAMENTO - A aroup of workers at the City of Hope medical center in Duane won the $43 million jackpot for the weekend California Lottery "Lotto 6-53" aame, a hospital spokesman said Sunday. Seventeen cmployes of the medical rttordl depanment were "quietly celebrating" said Charles Mathews. a hospital spokesman. One ticket from their pool had all six of the winning numbers. "They have to do a lot of accountina wo rk," he said. "The money has to be divided 17 ways, but in different shares because some peo ple bought more tickets than others." Some of the employees doubtleu will quit, he said. "These are people who arc necessary to keep the hospital runnini. We're going to have to replace these people pronto." Mathews said. Bahia Yacht Club founded by BBC •la Newport Bead! The Bahia Yacht O ub ------. was founded in 19S8 by 10 yachtsmen at the Balboa Bay Oub. Later. the club amended the name to Bahia Corinthian so ita initials would ----.-• not conflict with the Balboa Yacht O ub. Don Bus1ey was the first commandant. In 1968, the club metfcd with the Ora.nae Cout Yacht Oub and acquared a lea1e from The Irvine Co. on the Bayside Drive propeny which was rormerly The Richardton'• Yacht Basin. Yachuman Bill Ficker waa the architect for the handsome clubhouse. • la Foutabl Valle1: In 1976, Fountain Val· ley Hiab School scnlor Kelly Strommen won tee0nd plaee in the Americanism Educational ._ __ _ Leaaue'a annual patriotic ll•n coniest for Or-•nee County h~ ecbool scnion. Kelly's tri<entennlal sloPn: "Who Ebe Hu Been Free for 200 Yeanr •la c .. ta Meu: The O.UJ ru.t mowd into new enJar,ed quanm in Ma~h of 1971 •bca die remoclelins of 1M .Wul buUdina at llO West Bay St. wu ~pleted. Tbe ~-bUildilll of 15,997 1quarc rtet bed ftoDtecl oe 11Nri.a sa.; but tM completed remodeled bulkti119. ~ • J2.40I ....,. ... ind'*'d an tnU'IMI oe lay,..-.; Md ... -.. llill ...._ OrangeCoas . I It WM • Mekad dedicated to epottt. U I I ().kilometer race, I =..derby, a eeiebbcwtaood IOW"Dametlt and an alb .. letic event for future lilepards were -..cs acroM the Oranee C.OUt a.it wccbad. 0uy Scob and Heather Killeen wete t.be overall man and woman wiancn mpcctively in the North- wood Patt I ().kiJorndcr run in Irvine on Sunday. There was allO a l·kilomt1tf race for children. About 30 CUb Scouts pthered at the Calvary Chapel in Costa Mesa on Saturday for 101pbox derby raca. The ICOUU even manaaed to Ft aome CUbmuien behind the wheels of their wood and metal vehicles. Ken Budsley and Todd Hanson ltqed their eiahth annual McKfoley Street Shootoqt in Costa Mesa on Saturday. Ten teams participated in the two-on-two basketball tour- nament, won by Brooks .Barnhard and Jeff field. And the Balboa Peninsula was the site of the Newport Beach Junior Lifquards' "Iron Ma n" athletic qualification event. About 125 youths participated. ..., ........... ~ ....... ·-Yount1 racers llne up for th• I ·ldlotweter race Sund•r· Beach scuffle results in stabbing of man ly HOUY J . \II AGNER ~ ..... SUftW.W• NEWPORT BEACH - A man was hospitalized with five stab wounds to his stomach and a skull fracture after an early morning fracas on the beach that police be- lieve was a clash between Asian and Hispanic pngs. As many as 50 youths were in- volved in the melcc. reported to police by an unknown caller. Bustamente Francisco Rico. 19. of Santa Ana. was reponed in stable condition al Western Medical Center in Santa Ana Sunday. A witness told police a small aroup of people had gone to Pirate's Cove at Corona dcl Mar State Beach to go sw1mm10g around 9 p.m. Fnday ni&ht. As the group began 10 leave the beach around 3 a.m . Satur- day, another group estimated at 10 or 15 youths began pelting them with rocks and bottles from a blulT area abo' c the beach. What staned the fight remains unclear. al1hou1h the two groups reponcdly engaged in a shouting match before the altercauon. As Rico was lcaHng the beach. he was assaulted by several members of the other group. which neighbors later descnbcd as about 40 Asian youths. The youths hit Rico re- peatedly, repons said. One of the suspects hit Rico over the head w11h a beer bottle, wit· ncsscs told police. Rico was stabbed with a shanercd beer bottle. police said. The suspects took to their cars and Oed the scene driving eastbound on Ocean Boule' ard. witnesses told pohcc Fnends in Rico's group loaded him into a car and drove him to Coastal Hospital 1'n Santa Ana. Staff there called paramedics. who t09k Rico to Western Medical Center for treatment. Four men injured in motorcycle accidents I)' HOUY J. \II AGNER Dally ,,_ SulJ wrll .. H UNTINGTON BEACH -.\II in all, it wasn't a good w~kt'nd for motorcycles. Four men were hosp1tah1ed afkr two separate accidents involving motorcycles travehng at alleged!) ellccss1ve speeds. Two suspects on one cycle kd a Newport Beach. police officer o n a chase into Huntington &ach before wrcckin& the cycle on a curb on Brookhurst Street. Pohcc officers spotted the suspect ~ running a red light on West Balboa Boulevard. allegedly splitung lanes in t.raffic do1n& 45 mph in a 25 mph zone. The officers followed the motorcycle, which sped up to elude the patrol car. accordmg to a police rcpon. By the lime the suspect reached Brookhurst. he was traveling at speeds up to 100 mph. officers csll· mated. As the suspect neared a red hght at Brookhurst and Hamilton A\ - enue, he tried to slow down and then to turn into a dn"ewa.,. for a Carl's Jr. restaurant He failed to navigate the dnvcwa) and hit the curb instead. p1tch1ng both t.ln"er and ndcr to the s1de- wal~ Ro nald Lee Chaner. JO. of Costa Mesa. was arrested on suspicion of dnvmg under the inOuencc of al- cohol. .o\mong his propeny booked into saft'kecp1ng was $1 . 766.02 he had in his pocket Charter and his passenger. Ke .. 1n C. Knoll. 20. of Huntington Beach. were takl·n by ambulance to UCt medical center Both v.ere treated for abrasions Shonly after noon Sunday two U.S Mannc'i v.ho were allegedly nd1ng motorqclt's at high speeds on Delaware A venue were hospitalized after one nder hit a car and the other laid down his ryclt' "'h1le swerving to a' 01d the crash Thomas A. Kuns. 20. and Robcn L. Lionetti. 20. both based m Tustin. were nding motorcycles northbound on Delaware nt"ar Yorktov.n Avenue at high speeds "'hen a car gomg southbound on Delaware bepn a left tum Pool manager dies of stroke TUSTIN -A woman who collapsed after ~i'H'n¥HAW."' SCflf\I a d rowned m an in the Irvine community pool that she managed djed Saturday aftttnoon. a NEWS spokeswoman at Healthcare Medical Center said. Mary Hatt, 45, suffered a stroke after seeing BRIEFS S4-)car-old Dinh Quan lyina on the bottom of the Villaae Park Recreation Center in Irvine. . Hatt died at. approxim~~tely I p.m. Saturday without ever reaammg consc1C> cu, said Medical Center spokeswoman Irene Presti. She ~ the manager of 1he swimming pool, which 1s opera~ by the V 1llaac Park Homeowners Association. Coast Guard Investigates flare LONG BEAC H -U.S. Coast Guard officers continued a 1CatCb Sunday to follow up on a report of the sjgbtJng of a flare tD the di~tion of C-atahna Island. Officers in ships and helicopters set out on a two-hour search Saturday night after a 10:30 p.m. s1&hting_ off the Los An&eks breakwater of a red flare. said petty officer Steve Dickerson of the Lona Beach station. . ··w e saw a lot of vessels. but nobody firing flares," Dickcnon said, adding the Coast Guard has received no distress calls from that area and that the search is rouune upon s1aht1ng a flare. -From 1WI u4 win ttJM'U Registration begins FOUNTAIN VALLEY -Walk-in rcgis-_ '$~ tnftlon bqins today for fall claSS('S at Coastline 1-..illi1::::::;:~=-""1I Community Collqe. The first da) of 1nstruct1on as ~J Sept. I 0. .,..- More than 1.200 classes at 80 sites along the ~ Orange Coast arc listed in Coastline's FaU 1990 1 ·• t_...,._J Class Schedule. Studt'nts ma> register by ma1l or y • 1n person at the Coasthne College Center. 11460 ~ Warner Ave .• Fountain Valley. Monday through Thursda} 8 am. to 7 p.m. and Fnda) 8 a.m. to 5 p.m No appointment 1s nC"CCSsaf) For mort information, call :!41 -6176. Reservations due TUSTIN -R~rvat1ons arc due toda) for Concern H's "Murder Mystcf) Evenin .. which begins Fnday a1 7:30 p.m. Renowned sleuths will meet at the Beverly Hentage Hotel to discuss motives and evidence over no-host cocktails. C1ucs Wlll be compiled and thconl"S reached over dinner in the Hentagc 8allroom. D:lncina bcgms after the murder 1s solved. Cost 1s $4S, which includes dtnner. dancing and the mystery. Call Eileen Yoclin at 973-0330 or 639-1429. No tickets will be sold at the door. Soviets study alco h olfsm COSTA MESA -Four Soviet high school students and Dr. Maya Ermolova. he.ad of Chemical Toxocol<>s}' at Moscow's Hospi- tal No. 17, the Soviet Union's ma_,or hospital for the treatment of akohohsm a nd chemical dependency, will learn and exchan&c 1nformauon about combattmg drug abu~ Tuesday and Wednesday at Collcac Hospital here. • The Soviets will kick their tour off with a press conference at 10 a.m . Tucsda) While hert. the Soviets Will also meet with local h11h school students. shop at Fashion Island and attend the J>aacant of th<' Masters m Laauna Beach. ' ' ' ' " . . . . Neighbor complains of b t lly dancing H U N T - INOT ON BEACH -O~ viously not the life of the pany, an anarY nei"1- bor called pohce to complain of "yellina, drink- ina and belly dancina" at a lou4 pany in the 21 JOO block of Fleet Lane. The reponina '-'---• p&rty also complained of "scrcamina once ln a whife." When police amvcd to tf) to Quiet the p&rt)', revelers were makinJ so much noise they didn't hear officers knockina on the door and nngina the doorl>ell. -lly,.. Dally Pl,., 0 An unlockt'd bicycle ~•s stolen from 1n front of 1 rn1dcncc on the 1000 blod. of Valcnc'8 S1rtt1. Fountain Valley A bur&lar 11wtd a hok 1hroUJh lhc roof 11 l:>anny's V1\a Marllct. 16040 Harbor Blvd .. cn1cm:t thr business and 1ook wvcral blank monc) orders 0 A ..-oman l'q)Ont'd ~ was bcll\I hu-~ af\rr an acquaintance ttn1 "a mcs~l\Jt'f" wuh an apolOI)'. Oowcn and a lencr ask1nt 10 !!Ct up a mccllOJ with tht' v.oman. 0 A Los Alamitos man l'('l>Ont'd h11 I %S MustaOJ stolen from a carpon at hakcv.'OOd apen~nts. 1027.S i.ter A,c. The man told pohoc he perked his car 1n the ~n and went to visit a fnt'nd. In 1ht' fnend'• apartment, tht' vlt'11m left his kc)'I on a table Boch tnt'ft wen1 to slttp When the vlC\im awoke, 1hr kr)'s. car and Mend W\'rc aonc. C.O.t• Men A 11>oman rcpon~ her hu1blnd hit htt SI ... I SO ~onh of propcn) from thr home Huntington Beach A customtr at Denny's, 18744 Beach Blvd . told the manqemcnt he was craz)' and was 101n1 to stab anothCf customer v. llh I fork Irvine VandaJs spn~-pe.inlt'd lhc dnvcr's si<k of a car parkt'd m tht first blot'\: of Pttm I t 0 8'tralars broke 1nto a air perkt'd 1n tht' 9600 block of lrv1nr C'cnttr Dnvc Lapna Be•ch Two mtn were c1tt'd b} politt for possniion of Ins than one ounct-of marvuana. 0 In tht' 600 bt«lc of C'out Htlhway, a woman ~t'd that w lef\ ~r wallet con1ainm1 S9j 1n a ~ blikct f<M' a rtw m1nutct and when she rttumtd \at~ 1t had btcn llolcn A bronze trUlpturc val\Kd at S 1.800 wtlh h11 Opc1I hand and with a .all lhaktt waa t.ahn ftom the d1 play window cif "' tht' to\lnt or a dometttC dilt)U~. Newpon Rem.eh So.i\h Cout Ar1 C'cn~r. 21J..D 17th 0 ..tl1le "'-wlnl)tnot\ was d1 trkttd A bvfllar brokt 1ntoa ~ 1n the A man ~kd Sl.000 wonh of f\lh-.,~ amomcra ~ ~"'tl or thrtt mu-9200 blotk of Wink'~ C'trdc, nucr· •IC. cqu1~1n ,.... takn fiom hll un· lkiant with in tnimtnts, 11 cl\ttllC\t "Just lnl from lhe fftr '"ird and ftticint W1\!I loc:led 11111'111' IOMtdrM Mftltlt \M bepa- 11, Jan." o ~·~--~;;miiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii A woman m>Of\l'd thrtt )-OU\ iwot>- ably in tbtir lat~ tttnt, ~tied out fmm &M wtndcnirt I a VW 8 and tntd to ~ her bUll b anJ a. 'h< r lwr ~ o I th llftt n r t•J>OO hlevatd nina of 1hc month. 0 A woman reported rett1vtna a three\. enint phone call from an unknown man. The woman toki poh« she had toad her nel&)lbor's cat dHd on htt front lawn around noon Fri~. then rettlvcd a c:alJ 11)'11\I "You're ne•t" around I p..m, Saturday 0 The Hyatt Newponcr, I 107 Jamboree Road. re1)0t'1Cd rcutvin& a bomb U..t II I 2:4S a.m. Saturday. Tbe swide.o.d operator IOkt pollCe be tteelVtd • cd from an unknown m.n with a SouG1er'11 accent who aid, "There'~ bomb oe Ge prcm11et and you're Pnt to blow • • No bomb was found ie a .. m. of dlll hotel. 0 A wou.ld·bt ~ cntmd nwo ...._ an the 200 blodt ~ Wd111r Street.,..... 4 a.m. UHday, tM W wtdMMll .., loot In tht' Ont lnddeat. me .......... micred a bOl'.M &hroullt • a r' 1 • 1 f'tonl door and tried IO ...... I h j m When \ht ratde,e1 ht ........ -... btd and cal~ OQt hit iwm••H'•-. tht IUIPlC1 fttd dow8 .......... hnt cfoof. lt\ tbt __. !e-i I t ._ minvea llw, • WOlllM _... •• bDdroofft pd •• IORl I -.. 9 ..... dM fDoc of Iller ... Alarmlll ,...,-... ~--IOcll .......... ... ....... --..... Ir bag a good Investment for new car buyers "l Wdded completely .waw.s r.ht l'Oad nd bit th~ truck bead-on in bis ilne On ilnpttet the air m, inflated. 1 remem~r fa/11111 into sometbi1t1 -that airbag and seat ~Jt saved my life." -ltH e1'ad vtcdm; Wet~'. 8y CHIP ST ASSEL More and more accident victims will be able to give testimony like this as automatic seatbelts and air- bags, devices that inflate in a frontal and near frontal collision, become common car safety equipment. The combination of belts and bags gives the ultimate protection. • The concept of an air-filled buffer to protect people in crashes was outlined as early as 194 l, and patents for air bags beg.an to be lJSUcd in the 1950s. Now about 3 million 1990 model cars are being equipped with air bags as standard equipment. Completely out of the way and out of sight uoul the} inflate, air bags work with lap and shoulder safety belts to keep occupants from slam- ming into steering wheels. instru- ment panels. windshields and wind- shield frames. Studies ha'e shown that about half of all motor vehicle deaths and seno us injunes occur in front and front-angle crashes. One of the best things about air bags is that the} work automatically. When a frontal crub belirt~ sen- 10n inaiantaneousty measurt crash severity and, if it's severe cmouah, the sensors then sipal irlflators to fill the _, with nitroaen. Tbe baas fill in a fraction of a secol)d and beain deflatina instantly as they aen- tly cushion occupants. The violence of virtually all crashes is over in one-ci~th of a seoond or less. Peak inflalloa of an air baa occun in about one-20th of a SC<lOnd -faster than the blink of an eye. Even as the baa is inflatina, some of its air is beina released to enhance the cushionin1 effect Com- mon sense tells us that, aiveo a choice, we'd rather have o\ir faces and bodies hit something soft and energy.absorbing than the · sharp, protrudfoJ and hard surfaces in a car. Serving as a pillow between occupants and the vehicle's interior, air bags absorb the forces of the "second" collision. Most air bag systems in 1990 model cars are for drivers only. But in the next few years. more and more cars wtll also have air bags for passengers. The track record of air bags in- dicates that they inflate when they're supposed to. Their performance has betn outstanding. Until the late 1980s, air bags were produced in relatively .small numbers, so they were expensive - $800 and up. But now that many TODAY'S DAILY PILOT K-OCEAN LUCKY LICENSE PHOTO WINNER JFJ004 • LICENSE # 2JFJ004 DEADLINE : 12:00 Noon Tomorrow (Saturday and Sunday winn11rs hav11 until noon thfl following Monday to claim th11ir priz11/) WINNERS RECEIVE $25 PLUS A $25 BONUS IF A CURRENT SUBSCRIBER. omCIAL RUI.BS AND HOW ro CLAIM PRIZBS: 1. Adhere Lucky License Bumper Sticker on rear bumper of vehicle as close to the license plate as possible. B• sure bumper Is clean, as the bumper sticker will not stay on a dirty surface. 2. Read the Pilot and listen 10 K-OCEAN dally. The winning license pla.te numbers will be published in the Pilot each day. 3. Winner must claim prize by deadline stated in the ad. 4. Bring state automobile reglstration slfP. to the Lucky llc9nse Coordinator at th• Orange -coast OaffY. Pilot by deadline given. No claims are honored on Saturd.y Of Sunday or holldaya. 5. EmP.loYMI of th• Orange Coast Daily Piiot ... K-OC.an, theit dittiibUtora and the.Ir families at• not eugible. • such 1 number 11 ln9dVet1ently published, It wiM no1 be hOnored. L li~r '·~·~n:. ~ro~· Pt.~·~s , ~,:="~ar1:=-·~a .. ec.t.~CA . 7. ~n:e= !U.,r.:t:! ~-:= .... cr.r.it '"'°'fMl tol pufpOW. Chip St8Kll How to tell whenajob applicant is lying to you BOSTON -People take a spin second longer to he than to tell the truth when asked about themselves, which may help 1dcn11fy dishonest) by job applicants, suggests a study presented Sunda). Questions about illegal drug use and emplo> ment history sho"cd the effect most clearl> when stud} par· ticipan1s answered true-fal se ques- tions on a computer. If further research bears ou1 its promise. the effect ma} be useful m screening applicants fo r jobs in la" enforcement or private securit). or for scc unty clearances. s:i id stud} co-author Michael McDaniel. While 11 could not prove de<.'ep- tion by itself. 11 might signal areas for extra scrutiny 10 background checks. he said. Hr spoke in an interview before prescnung the work at the annual meeting of the American Ps)cho- logical Association. McDaniel. a psychologist who consults on human resources issues. said he did the work independentl> of his employer, Booz-Allen & Ham- ilton Inc. of Bethesda. Md. The same is true for study co-author Howard Timm of th e Defense Per- sonnel Security Research and Education Center 1n Montcre). McDaniel said. Other psychotoiists cautioned that the study was hm1ted by ~l'veral factors, but said ll contributed to an area that needs fu rther research. The expenment involved 198 stu- dents 10 a criminal JUSt1ce class. most of whom hoped to work in law enforcement or secunt} JObs The> completed a 13 1-llem true-false test. wh ich they were told was being evaluated as a tool for screening applicants for sccunty-rela1ed Jobs. They were told to answer the questions as 1f they were taking 11 fo r a JOb they wanted. Later. they were asked to complete 11 again. but this time to answer as honestl} as poss- ible. Confident1aht} was assured. Whenever a part1c1pan1 answered a question d1fTerently the second time from the fi rst time, he was assumed to have been lying the first time. Overall. for honest answers. par- ticipants took an average of 4.03 seconds from the time the question appeared on the screen to the time they punched a key in response. Dishonest answers required an ad- ditional three-fifths of a second. Lying on • the 12 drug use ques- tions, such as whether one had got- ten mto a significant amount of trouble from cocaine use, took 1tn averaae of I . I seconds longer than tcllina the truth. The difference for the 12 employment questions, such as whether one had been fired for poor performance, was .94 second. Smaller differences were observed for other categories of questions on such topics as alcohol use, crime, and posseuina such unlikely virtues as never fCUin• af\VY. McDaniel said he has not yet determined how to analyze the re- 1ults of such a test in a jot>-scttcning situation. Anal~ais would have to account for the fact that people have different averqe reaction times to quest1on1. and that some questions take lonaer to ans~ than othen. he said. Terry MitcbeU1 a Pf)ChOIOlist who bu done similar wort. s.aad the ne• Plpet will "stimulate attention \O an area of retearcb that's very imponanL•• But Mitchell, president of MPORT Ma,..mcnt Solutions in Su DMto IUd·dectption does not always i&kc lonaer than honest tapOMtS. -•1 ,... A#«M~ ,,..,. D•nny McNelll lnst•ll• • st•lrway e••• as 1 -year-old Jeffrey Rosenberg tries to help. No stunts in this house LOS ANGELES -Forget Jum ping ofT buildings. How about falling out of a cnb? Danny Mc Neill knows a lot about both credits include the movies "More American Graffiti" and "Die Laughing" and the TV shoM "Knight Rider" and "The Yellow Rose." The 30..)ear-ol d former stunt man from Montere) has given up faking fi ght' and tal..cn up protecting babies. His bus iness is making peopk'~ homec; safe for th eir newborn children Now he makes latches fo r drawers. locks for toilet scats, gates for sta1rwa)S and safety shields for banisters. McNe11l . who has no children of hts own. says he has learned from others. A muscular man "ho \H'ars h1\ hair in a pon) 1ail and likes 10 rela\ "Ith hobb1ec; li ke kid. b0>.mg and fencing. McNc11J ackn o"lcdgl'S ht' doc<;n't look the part for the JOb. But. he addc;, he lo' c' k1dc;. And he \a) s their paren1' IOH' "hat he docs "All 1he knowledge I ha ve 1s from parents." he said. "When I started. there were no baby-proofing books. There were no gu1dehncs." McNe111's North Holl)\\ood·bascd bus1nl'S'. "-1r Bab} Proofer. opened m 1985. Al1hough he "<10'1 re,cal its )Carl) re"'enues. he S.'\)\ the hu\IOl'''> ha' tu rned a profi t ever) )car <;mcc 1t orx.•11t.•d No" McNeil! 1s making a scnes of videotapes to sho" parents how to baby-proof their homes th em· sch es The tapes " 111 take a child through different ages and sho" the kmd of danger they can get into around the house as the> grow up. McNe1ll says a one-story home can be baby-fitted for as little as SSO. including materials. He says SI 50 to S300 should be enough for most two-story homes. but he's had $5.000 Jobs He ~ot the idea for II while \Hirl..1ng at a hah)- acccssoncs store m Los Angeles 10 suppkment his earnings as a s1un1 man "People were coming 111 and didn't kno" "hat kind of safety Hems to bu) or what 1.1.ould fit t1r ho" to insta ll 11. So I '>lartcd doing rt part·t1mc .. I !llarted build ing a chcntelc:· Ml·Nc11l Sa)' And 1f he misses the glamour of his fo rmer caree r 1n mo' ies. he can be happy knowing his current JOb has brought him some new fans. "Babies really S<'Cm to like me." McNe11l says. "I get along with babies JUSt fine." He got into 11 full -time after IOJunng h1<, !..nee during a fall for the TV 'iho" "V .. I hs othl'r '>tunt -By Tb~ ,h•oclatHI Pr~H Many OC workers want to quit, stay home with kids LOS ANGEL LS -Sc"cnt}-nmc percent of mothcri and 39 percent of fathers 1n Orange and I O'I .\ngclf\ counties "ould quit their JOb\ if the) could to stay homt' "1th 1he1r kids. according to a poll relcao;ed ~unda) The survc). comm1ss1oncd by a Los Angeles nc"spaf)l'r. indicates th at Southern California lam1hcs arc adop11ng a "nc .... reahc;m" aooul thl' hardships fan11ly li fe lan·s when both parents are full-11me "agt' earners. said a social h1,tonan "We've reached a umc "hen "e'rc more reahst1c of what the c·osts arc of full-time cm plo)mcnt for two· earner families:· said Barbara Dafoe Whitehead. "ho 1s a consultant to the Chicago-based Pu blic Poliq .\s- sociat1on. The telephone poll of I ,()(X) fa mil· 1es was conducted b\ Mark Baldassare & Assoc1at~ July I 9-2 l and has a margin of error of J percen t to 5 percent Eighty-seven percent of mothers and '80 percen t of fathers rated fam - ily and children as very imponan1. yet many said 1he) cannot find time to have dinner \\-llh their fam1h es regularly. Fifty-seven percent of fathers and 55 percen1 of mothers also sa id the) feel gu ilty about spending too little time wi th thei r children. Many parents inter' 1ewed b) the newspaper refl ected those stat1st1cs m more personal ways. ''I've cncd on my wa) to work man> ti mes." said Bcnay C'lark of Los Angeles. She said her 21 :-)car- old daughter, Mallof), often cries. chngs 10 her and asks why she has to have a JOb. "Enry day 1s a challenge and a balancing act," said single mothrr Gasoline prices up 10 cents a gallon LOS ANGELES -Ret:.ul sasollne pnces rose more than a dime a gallon in the past three weeks under pressure of tht Iraqi crisis. oil analyst Trilby Lundberg said Sunday. But pnccs ha ve fluctuated r«ently, and could shp as the summer driving season ends. she said. The nationwide Lundberg Survey found the average pncc for all aradcs of aasoline. including taxes. was 127 .94 cents a gallon on Frict~Y, up . I 0.2 cents from July 20. The Lundbera Survey Includes about 13.000 sta11on1. "Remarkably. this is exactly the same amount of price runup as occurred ... 10 the pc nod ro1tow1ng the Alaskan 011 SP,111 disaster." Ms. Lundberg said. "Some of the same cau1C1 arc at work • Prices at self-service nations were 117.22 cents o pllon for rqular leaded. 116.40 for regular unleaded and I 33.S9 for premium unleaded. Full- tcrvicc pncc were 137.63 cents 8 pllon for rcaular lt~dcd. 140.30 ror R&ular unleaded and I H .93 for premium unleaded. Ms. Lundbera said a "hypcnensl\ivc" 011 futures market drove up &hon-term, spot markcl pnces for psoUne and 011 U.S. companies hid to buy p.toline on the inflated pot market because many dome tic refineries cannot meet con umcr ckmand. she 51.ld. •·T~ have been mued out. in many cases. durina lh11 peak summer demand,' 5hc said. "The ttfincB arc more su pttble to what's t..ppcnina in the Middle c:a t now than at any other time." Refiners al50 raised their whoJcsale pricn quickly to prevent panic bu)'lft& that would te.vc tMm unable so fill cu lomcr orders. she Nid. There .,.., a bnaht apot for con umen: Otakn faakd to pass on tbe full cost of wholcsak pnce hakn to their cu tomen. Between Jullei a!'d A"'" 10 their profit marsins shrank by .8 centa • pJlon, Mt, Lund uid. Some spot market price• actually dropped last week. and some 1~11 followtd SUIL -•1 ,... ~,., ,.,..., Linda Sonnonstine of Irvine. Son- nonstine. 42. changed Jobs in order to spend more time with her teen- age son. fifty-one percent of the men inter- viewed said they bel ieve their work interferes with their parental respons1biht1es ellher a lot or some. and 28 percent said they believe their parental respons1b1ht1es are hurting their careers either a lot or some. Thirty-nine percent of the women believe thei r careers arc interfenng w11h reanng their children a 101 or some. and 41 percent believe their parenting duues are hurting their careers. Sixty-four percent of the fathers and 72 percent of the mothers con· lided that they worry about whether they are good parents. -B1 1'k A••odatHI Prns Irvine chamber tests 4-day week By RUSS LOAR a..., ........... w.-.. IRVINE -Scttina a Ocxible ex- ample for local businesses, the Irvine Chamber of Commerce will try out a four-day work week for the chamber's I I-employee staff. The new schedule will k.Jck in Sept. 17 on a 90-day trial basis, with two different shifts of four, 10-hour days. Chamber offices will remain open Monday throuah Friday. hambcr Executive Director Jac- quie Ellis called the plan .. a aood opportunity for the chamber to tct an cumple for other local busi- neucs and show them how it can work." The four-day work week has been teated at a number of Oranae Coun- ty firms indudlna Auor 0.niel Builder's Emporium. Mitsubishi Ekctronics and county aovemment omca. Autime 1upportm NY the four· day work week helps attr'ltt em- ployees who scc 11 as a much.dntrtd perk. The four-day work week la a~ favored by the South Coast Air ~lity Manaacment Distnrt as a ~bit way to reduce tr1f1k conp tlon and aar p0lluuon. • I ' CWol ..... ...., ud ...., ..... Carol an of u.. muma1e ..._ o1 ~ llvea. AU ln tbe name of friend; &roa iDlilts -ud 10 .. lltiy -I.bat bet IOOd mealll lilealdl d6-R!.~,on th& ·kind or lbari• reta .. uummp. tray marriage? ...... aMt o/ 11 die peopk a lftlll may love, he lo¥m hit lover above all JM dW•t DO( IO for wometl. • Jl1111l'Clbll'I ro.ad dlat womea loYed &Mir lov• ud their '*t t'-d about equaUy. doaal if be cauot abeohl&dy couat oa Wi will'• lillllce about 10G1e ~ pru'811ll. NO man It ner = UVtt hit wocnua with ll& vulae · ity if be ii DOI cuetJy ewe who'a lidc the it 00; .. !NY really ~ me juat u I am, uys Ca.rot I can tell her &D)1blna: .. She doeul•t try to~ me or make me into a ditreteftt penoo ... She mpectt my ability to make IOOd cboieet. .. Dr.Linda AlgaZI It's IUldy true that all of tbe needs or a man or a woman caAnot be met tbtoulb any one linale putnenhip. Fn.a. cu provide a&Wllary emo- tioMI ~. i.Dtellectual ltimu- ladoe, mutual UliJtaoce and under- No man it ... to tna1t his womu witb MY pftciCMd aecet Of his IOU! ii he haf even aa iakliQ& that his wife milbt tramlatc hli weak.aetl to bumcw a1 tu. npeaae. Carol Wlltt that the belt put of the ftimsh.ip it~ havi"I to wear I ''mask.'• .. With .~ I can oom- pletdy be mytelf. .. a6c uys. Phi~ wbo ii ••crazy" about bis wife. "1 witb lbe'd put a little more of that kind or eneray into out mar- ~'1'·1 u.o uue that friendship or Ulit nature happens tbrouab 1elf- di1Clolw'e -whicb ia a hallmark of female fricDdlb.ip. (Men ate mOR li~to Ft toeether with "fiiends .. And what woman alive doet not u.pire to have her hutbud be mon:1 atrectioMte, open and inimate with her? l Carol and Betty ate both beter- OlelUaal, mon~oolly married women and while their husbands aren't euctly jealous. the rela- lionahip betMen the women does seem botbenome at times. be S&ya. • a b&dband. Tom, uys that bim1ell withboldina infor- mation from bJa wife becau1e he doesn't trust Beuy not to tell Carol. to y tennis Of aolf Of 10methin1 ra than just to talk.) FrindabJp it ~ but it teems that intimacy betwoe.a &ienda must have jt'a Umit1 where and when it iofrinaa on marital re- sponsibility. .. What a way to live," Tom uya. Whenever we make love, I wonder whet.bet Carol is 90ina to set a repon the neat day." Consider that if' and when a man opens up and makes himtelf vulner- able at all, it is usually only with bis wife or lover. Leonardo da Vinci 11.id: "Reprove a friend WU bet be also meant husband) tn secret. but praiJe him before others." That was aood advice. Phil, cearora butbend) •r that he sUlpeCtS hla wife actually loves" her airlfriend u much u she does him. Their easy sharl!,IC sometimes feels like a breach of 1ntimacy to Tom may be a bit too sensitive but Phil ii riabt. of course. A Uni- venity of MuuchU1ett1 study re- So no wonder he feels betrayed when bis wife reveals bis secrets lo her airlfriends. No man is JOina to be open, intimate, affectionate or co'versa- Dr. ·u.. Alp&l I•. rt:t:; wlit IN Aloil raa11r "' c.,.., *' Mu. Study: Children of divorce risk more illness ly RANDOIJIH I. SCHMID ?11d•1lll .......... W AiHINGTON -Children of divorced or seperated parents run a areater risk of becoming Ul than those who arow up in intact families, a stud)' concludn. Researcher Jane Mauldon of the Un.ivenity of California at Berkeley uid children of broken families run a 3S percent risk of developing health problems over a three-year period. That compares with a 26 · percent risk among all , children. Tonsili,tia, repeated ear infections and pneu- monia acc(>unted for nearly one-third of the reported illnessn, accordina to the study. Other problems included allersies. asthma, chronic skin ?>ndJ~ons. chronic lung problems and urinary 1nfcct1ons. .The problems penist even after the mother bas remarried, the report also noted. The results of the study appear in the August edition of the journal Demographics. published by the Washinaton-based Populatjon Association of America. Mauldon wrote that the "children arc likely to have experienced very significant stress be- cause their livina standards changed dramati- cally." .. They probably also lost many of the rc- souroes that contribute to aood health - a safe, comfortable environment relatively free of en- vironmental hazards and risks of infection. aood food. and constant adult supervision,·· she wrote. With the father 1one and many mothen needina to find work af\er divorce, children have less contact with their parents, Mauldon ob- served. Mothers generally have custody of chil- dren after djvorce. Divorce can reduce the availability of health insurance for some children, although those who a.re in the lowest income group may become eliaible for Medicaid. Mauldon, of the Graduate School of Public Policy at Berkeley. studied 6,000 children's health histories. In families where a divorce occurs_ children averaae 0.13 more illnesses per year after their parents' divorce than before, Mauldon concluded. Not only were children of broken families more likely to develop health problems than ' those in intact families, but the problems also penistcd even when the mother remarried. MauJdon reported · "If post-divorce health problems spring from . emotional difftculties, then we should see more illness in the first year or two after separation, when children are most upset," she reported. However, she found that while tbe risk of health problems is higher than average for chil- dren i~ th~ ~rst four years after a family separauon. 1t ancrcascs even more after that, Mauldon said. Her study was published just days after a Census Bureau study showina that divo~ mothers receive only about 70 percent of the child support payments they arc due. That report said that as of the spring of 1988 there were 9.4 million mothers caring for chil- dren on their own. Only about S9 percent had been awarded child support payments.. the Bureau found. averaaina $2, 710 annualJy. Qve~-the-colld ~ Ji medicine benel'ltl heart patients One November lO, 1919, Olarms.iA came into t.k oftiae. She ... "°' tbe ki.nd oL. patient you were Pad to~ lille WU too tick. Sbe bad alldiom,)'Ollltb~ one of tbe m<* debilit.ati.at d ... there is. Her beal1 m\llde wu ao wait and swoUen abal h j• could DOI pump blood arou.nd. Sbe had been eoina down bill Aadily lince Auaust. 1989, and bid received all tbe usual tberapica, ditit•U• to help •ttenathen the-~ Wac dotes of a Powerful di~. and a few dN&s to dilate the arteries. • s&e WI.I bed ridden, and her lqs were so swoUen with edema that the skin bad broken down in several places. If infection ICl in, it would be dJffi~ult to treat, and she wail in no ab.ape for suraery of any kind. She wei.&bed 246 pounds, most of that from exccu fluid stored all throu&b her body. Coenzyme QIO, an over-tbc- counter nutrient. was added to her therapy. . A few days qo on July 30, she weiahcd 183. She hu lost 63 pounds. most of it fluid. Her Jess have Iona since healed, and there was only a trace of edema. She bad JODC from the bed to full activity and was eJtcrcising da.ily oo an exercise bicycle. This was miraculous, but not unexpected. Rescarohen have been imprencd with Coenzyme QI 0 for YQrs. much of the work bcin& done in Japan where close to 12 milJion people take this supplemenL ~ I <.:oe QIO is nt in every ~n the y, and is essential for the extraction of energy. Animal studies show that a 7S percent reduction in this nutrient in the heart cor- TM relates with lbe near death o( t.be animal. It ii swaent in varioua fonnl in all food, but. and ditCUe wm to deplete bod~ Most of raearcb on QlO bu been with ~ P9- ueot1. When it ii pven to I.bole wbo experieoce l.Qli.na. they cu exem1e lo•r on the treadmill without pain. In a study publithed this ,Year in the Americaa Journal of Cardiolo&Y, 126 petienu JUJJer. ins with c:ardiomyopathy toot about I 00 ma. of Coenzvme Q.l 0 daily for six yean. At t.be belio- nina. they all bid dep1eucd blood levels of C-0mzyme QI 0 that came up u soon as tbetaoY was started. After six monw._ 87 pctQCnt of be petientl ~ UD• proved and many be&d this im- provement for the leasth of the study. The survival rate after tis years was S2 percent which wu remark.able smce patients with cardiomyopalhy rarely Uve longer than two yean. The only tide effeets noted in the study ~ minor itchina in two patients. which is almost unbelievable for a substance with so much power. But then, this substance 11 not a drua. Dr. J.U.. ,,.,Ider I• 1--*r •I lk Wiltder ff'ellaen la- •tlt•R Ill New,.rt ~ Allergies often linked to periodic outbreaks of asthma 1y Dr. JOHN T. CHIU A-a-ca... ,.,.,..., uo About S percent of the na- tion's population suffers from asthma, a number equivalent to half of all residents in this state. Despite its frequency, asthma still eludes definition, although most medical experts agree that the most prominent feature is the presence of an excessively sensitive bronchial tree which channels the air to our lung tissue. While most asthma sufferers do have symptoms of wheezing and shortness of breath, some may experience only coughing. fatigue and/or a, tightness sen- sation in the chest. Recent evidence lends further support to allergy as an import- ant player in causing asthma. A recent report in the journal Chest finds that over 58 percent of the adult asthmatic patients seen at a chest clinic have al- lergies. The author $Uggests that even this surprisingly high number may be an underestimation since many more obvously allergic pa- tients have already been siphoned to a nearby large al- lergic clinic. The so-called "late phase" bronchial reaction after allergen exposure is probably the most important discovery in the 1980s. By cballengjng patients with asthma to inhaled extracts of alleraens such as house dust mites, fungus, plant pollens and pet danders, researchers find that many patients responded to these challenges with two phases of response evidenced by nar- rowing of the broncihal tree. Earlier studies had focused primarily on the "early phase" of the bronchial response noted within 20 minutes after allergen exposure. Although delayed bronchial narrowing occurring several hours after the exposure have been sporadically rcponcd. only recently has this finding led to an entirely new approach to treating asthma. Signaficantly, even though bronchodilator drugs such as beta -a ntag onists and theophylline do reverse the early-phase bronchial..narrowing. they exen little influence on the late-phase response which usually takes place several hours after the allergen exposure. More imponantly, this late- phase effect often lingers for days. rendering the bronchial tJtt vulnerable to iritants such as cold air, tobacco smoke. smog. strong scents and even inert par- ticles such as chalk dust. For- tunately. where the more tra- ditional anti.asthma drugs fail, newer medications such as cromolyn sodium (intal) and conisone aerosols have been found to be effective 1n controll- ing this late-phase reaction. Thus, for those suffering from moderate to severe asthma, cromolyn and conisone aerosols have mostly replaced the beta agonists and theophylline as the maintenance drugs of choice. Even more 1mponantly, these newer drugs can be used on a long-term basis without causing significant side effects. Despite the availability of ever more potent and effective anu- asthma drugs. the asthma death Genital warts highly communicable ly Dr. MlltlE S. ROalOY lp9dlll .... ~ ,_ There arc approximately 20 forms of sexually transmitted diseases (STD) known to phys- icians with a frequency of ap- proximately I 0 million people per year. Among the most com- municable of these disease is HPV infection or warts. During this coming year ap- proximately three million people will have an infection of ·vcr- racae or HPV. This viral illness has been known to increase the chance of a woman developing certain type of cancer. As with most sexually trans- mitted illness, HPV s~reads dur- illJ contact or sexual 1nterooune wtth an infected panner. Cur- rently, there are vcr 60 t~ of HPVs known in medicine. About one-fourth of these can be found on the mucous surfaces of the aenitals. where they can ~use po~s known as wart.a. The virus as the same type u that which is found on other akin 1wfaces such u the feet and bands, u commonly seen in chil- dRn. Condyloma acuminata. or aenital wan.a. will ttnerally ap- pear aome three~ to three months after expoaW"C to an in- fecled individual. lniaally, they may_~~ to be replar wans. beiiiMiftl ... MrialJ bani noduJel m -tbe lower third or the ... or on the 1wf'1a or tbc ·..a1111. :rMY can allo be .,.,-.• die naau ..... ..,. .... ...., pa &be cervia. Of IN ad ... .............. -..... ........... ~ In men, the warts most fre- quently appear on the shaft of the penis or just below the cor- ona. They can also be found in the anal region of homosexual males. Conditions such as · warmth and increased moisture will encourage these wans to arow and they can become mucb larscr and appear cauliflower-Jike. When they reach .th~s s~e they can become more 1mtaung and can cause an annoying odor or discharie. Warts can usually be seen by the naked eye, and can easily be diqnoscd. However. wart virus can also occur on the skin without obvious arowths and can be transmitted when the lesions are quite small. It is possible to find an ,.,. normal Pap smear with the prcs-- encc of wans on the cervix or the upper vqina. This will indicate to the physician that further tcto- tina is needed to evaluate the abnormal Pap Smear and de- termine its cause, 1pccifically if HPV is the etiolOI)'. Generali)' a colpoacope, or maanifyana miCTOICOpe i1 needed by the nnecoJolilt to confirm the pres-ence oOf PV infection within the vtf.~ uceplioDllly impot1a0t tbat putDen or .. Ualtl who 'bave HVP infectiOG be ICCft by dteir ... }liciaa a well, IO that GI ...a taiou or tbe un· ...,.Ped wta can be treated la 1111 _.. or .... MM> are ="~=.~~ ·-===•-':• 101M form of 1 ad tbc ute or acetic acid (vinegar) to make the smaller lesions more visible. A~ proximately 70 percent of part- ners of patients who 'have wans will also be affected by the virus. 1mpcrat1ve that you consult wtth your physician. The earlier you seek help from your physician, the earlier you can aviod some of the comphca- uons of this disease. Although thccre is currentl y no cure for this viral illness. --------------1 numerous treatments are avail- able to reduce the severity and recwrance of the disease. The following methods have been used to treat HPV: L Podophyllin solution or ointment, which is directly a~ plied to the affected area and removed scyeral hours later. 2. Cryotherapy. which is a form of intense cold therapy to physically destroy the affected lesions. 3. Electric therapy. which is another form of destructive method to treat the lesions. 4. l.ucr suracry or elec- trodessica tion to physically re- move the lesions. S. Various topical creams such u five-Ouorouracil, which is ap- plied directly by the physician or patient to the affected area. 6. Various expettimental therapies includina interferon and other qents to affect the immune system to reduce the 1evcri1y of the diteaac. If you suspect that you may have aenital warts or some other form of 1e1ually transmitted dis. ~you should become aware or lho symptom Yoll can do thia by ~rfonniDJ a acniaal ,self- eununauon usma a mirror which wtll help 10 ~ite lhete new symptoms. If you are usure or feel that )'Ou may ha~ 1 problem uch a this. 1t i Nn.mm ll.S&'.111.tt 'IMW'M' II'• .i la11t• group of d1~w'" th.ti W'f'A~n muJ!olit"' ond nNV~ - dC"v;ntab~ thou"1nd• of Amm~n• r.ach >"'•" Wlwn ncummu.-.cul1r dlw.aw ~1111 !Nin rm11Clir fun<Th.im ""' k.., """'-'" C9n't wntf Mwna.tn... can't p&ay Tft'NI"" an t da~ B.atii-Oii n ·1 c-ry MA nv ptt lt'nb !ml' thf. at.hty to w11lt And on~ 1twy·,.. In w~ ttwy·U M\'C'I' ~''t nut t1t lMlit1.....,.,.~......,..l!IMOA ,,,,,,, _,..,._, 1111MOA..-I.~ tt•lrtu M-•lior~~ -•'- "17 5'wilit · ,._. ,._ ~--Nt I I• t~ ,..,,_, •r ,__, MlM ·····---·---...._.."' " ' • 1 f ' rate has been rising since the mid-l 970s. While the exact causes for this rising toll arc still under invcsugation, it is obvious that, at least for now, drup alone ~ve failed to reverse thu tragic trend. Although allergy is not the only factor m asthma, even the detractors in the medical field agree that allergen exposure can tngger severe asthma attacks. Obviously. allergen avoidance 1s the best approach whenever possible. However, when avoidance is impractical or im· possible, a qualified allergist can formulate a plan to make you less allergic to those allergens present in your environment. This can be achieved by fiving you a series of injections with an increasing dose of the allergens identified by skin testing and/or blood tests. The beauty is that this affects both the early and the late-pba.sc allergen reacttons. This type of rcatment, also known as allergen im - unotherapy, often is perceived as beln& too expensive. However, researchers in Minnesoa.a find that those treated by properly trained aUefJY specialists have less absenteeism, fcWCf' hospital- izations and better self-manage- ment skills than others. Even more importantly, there is no significent difference in the treatment costs between the two grou~. (This column deals with com- mon medical 1op1cs, and qu~ uons are answered by medial and denial specialists in the ap- propriate field of expertise. Please forward questions to the Medical Plus Association of Newport Center. c/o the Health Education Foundat.Jon. J60 San Miguel. Suite 206. Newport Beach. CA 92660). Your single so urce for comprehensiv e medical services. The Medical Plaza Associa tion , located next to Fashion Island in Newport Beach , provides the most comprehensive group of physicians and outpatient medical services in Southern California. In one convenient location! Nearly 200 health care professionals arc available to meet your indivtdual health care needs. Physicians arc available in each of the following specialties: AJlcrgy o.rdiokJtY Colofl It h aaJ Su~ry Dmw • 0~1 Spccialtk• f..ar, Nmr It Thraet F.ndocrinolQWY Cuc.rocnu:rolCJKY (GI) CctleRJ It Family l'ncll<c- Cmenl SurserY ~ HandSu'l"T ln~al~IM N«"VroklcY Neurosurgery ObMctrla Onc~ogy le I IC"matolotlY Ophthalmology (C')"r) Onhopc-dic; SuT'ry Pfodlalria l'hyslcal MNlld nc-le Rl-habllltatlon Ptutl< • ~oonflrunl"C' S\UFfY Paye.hi._,,., Pulmonary llhtumatoklo '"'°'1ld< ~"'"' Uto'°IY v.r.ar Su""' For information regarding phyliciari1 and tcrvices,call 7~9000 . -· Uf'a magaaln• visits actor Jack Nkhol1on •t hi• A1p•n, Colo., retre•t. Nkltol1on dl1cu11e1 hi• work, weight, ....._ -,. .._,, ---. un m 1 rtr• women •nd hi• world away from the bright llghu of Hollywood In th• Sep· tember l11ue of LIPE. Michael Bolton winning acclaim with the blue-eyed-soul sound By JUSTIN MITCHEU iaws -•d l'ffwt wNt<~ Michael Bolton's blue-eyed-soul sound is winning "'de acclaim, more than when he "as a hard rocker and the ballad <,ong.,..ntcr behind songs for the likes of Joe Cocker. Laura Branigan. Cher and KJSS, Most Bolton fans kf'low him for two recent ballad·hCa\} album s. The Hunger and Soul Pro' 1der and his reworkings of"Dock of the Ba):· "Georg.aa on My Mind" and the co- writer (with collaborator Diane War- ren) of "How Am I Supposed to Live Without You" and seven other tunes. But before that Bolton "as something of a child prod1g> and a rocker who signed a publishing deal with Epic Records when he "as 15 years old. "My mother had to co-sign the deal:· Bolton said. " he had a real good vv.~e herself. but hack then 11 wasn't so easy for a mother to ptl k up a career. She gets a kick out of what I'm doing now. I havc a song Movie I/stings Newport Beach &ALaOA etNaMA 109 E B~• e .. o ' •< "• How T• M..,• lAtv• to • H• .. o Wlt,..wt o.n..,. ,,.. .. 1 ' IDWA•DS Nl'WrQJn' CJNIMA !(JO N•wpo" Ct nttt Ol!Vf ~H-011.0 I Gftott fPG I )f 1} 4S l JO I II tlJ 10 SO } I"•••-'""ocent t•I I I 4\ I lO \I' A 10 )() J Tlte Tw• J ... e1 1•1 11, llJO. 4111, 1, _, IDWAltDS ISLAND CINIMA I,., • '...,,, '.•"' P<>'1 C~nt~• M O I) 111 I Die HM<f l jl j 1 I 40 l 4 !Cl I ' JO •• J 1 Dwdl T•I•• ,,,, I I JO ' '\ 1 I\ s N•Y)' s .... ,., 1 9 )() ) -AM .. l«t fl l I J l(l I 4\ \I\ I 1fl q 4\ • ,...,.,..,. flll I l )() I I! 111 l(J 4<, s v-. a .... , 11 1Pr.111 ,, ., , • 1~ '•D 8 4S 11 b Tlte ,, • .,__ ll'C.I IJ \ I¥• • •S 1 • 1•, 1 J>y-CttlM l~Gf u . l , •••••• 10 LIDO CJNIMA Nrwpr-'I ''"" 11 N•'"'l""I V•WACJ' 6 7l 8JSO -AM«lc• ,., 11 IO I 'll) A 10 rs J>OtrT TMIAT" /'IOS f r <>•" •"onwA~ All /.1bll .. .,. , ... 7 • )() RUFFELL'S UPHOLSTERY INC. wi.... y-Dell.. c-.., ""-•' I 022 HAllOl ll VO COSTA MfSA-SO-I I S6 on the ne"" Barbra Strc1sand album and she gels a kKk out of 1ha1 .. As a "mer. Holt on began h) -...rn. 1ng material tor the PointL·r S1stas, Larr) Graham and Thl·lma I lous1on among other' But om-c Hran1g.an·., version of ··Ho" .\m I ~uppus1:d 10 L1\t: Without ) ou" "'il'> a h11 1n 1hc earl) 1980.,, Bolton hall cnuugh clout for h1' o"'n record deal T"'o good album<;, including Fool''> Game, got some MT\' and radio exposure for Bolton but he "as looking for a -...1der market "My own (recorded) mus1l wa~ a bit heavier than m) ma.,., apjX'al songs:· said Bolton ..... ho kCl'P~ con producing "hat his fan\ "ant to hear. Bolton, "ho demo<, all h1~ work whether 11·, "'ntlen for h1m'il'll or others "I alwa)~ \I.rote song\ for m~sl'lf and ong1nall ) I nc,er rl•all\ um- s1dercd ""nting lur other peopk hut out of necess1 t\ m\ tinanre\ dictated II I \\3S \.\flt1ng rounlf). R&H. rod and roll for m)s<'lf and oth er people but all ol it \uJdcn the hallads Costa \1f'.,a IDWAJtDS CINCMA C•~Tldt /IC• "• t • '"'" ..,.,,., • .,,,,. ,,. ,,. ,,,. qfQ 41*4 ~ J""91• lootl , \ 1 " • t' , Nevy s ..... 1 . ' ... I ..-ro•teM ("ltd fr ti f I MJ f I 't ' I\ \ t '• I I\ • IS J The 'r•thm•n 111 1' 44, 1 4 ''· , ,,, ,.. •'> l()H • "•tlltten P ' I • I I\ \ •' H 1' aOWA•OJ CIHIMA •• ••tJll)I ~ • ~'1 •"' •~- I M t ~ • HAlt•O• TWIN CIH8MAS ~•> t~ 1 "'" 1 f W hru \,,,,.., 'ill l«tOt ' Duell T•••• f(ti 'I •n I tn ' Vt '+ ,,, Dt• Hatd l 1rr, 1 tt 1 lfl ., , Yourtt 0Wftt u ,,..,, rt , •'\ t \ 4\ ~ 10 ~ 'i Mal.A CIHIMA •,f""""'P'<"' ij • 'ttt 11.t -'' S..C•JC. AIKl\-... IHe tl'C. II ' t j(/ ~ 4 ~ 10 S TOWN CINTldt CIHIMAS \,•lf' "' l'IAIA IS I 4 184 I H •Y)' ..... ,,, 'l •\ l ~ I I "' 'I •\ 1 YOll"9 0-t Id 1P(, I l1 I f( I 4 ' 4 ~ I\ II VI 10 ·~ j llte ,, ......... ,, fl'(J I} I.-I ~ 4 4 ' ~ _,, I~ 4 ~I fll 11 !O l \ I I' A H I ) 'o() IOUT'N COAST ~LAZA ..... ''°"""""'""' HI> '"I I Ak AMerlee (ltl U >tO. lt41, 1111, 1t41, IOlll l.Dt• HM<f 1 Jill 11 I\ 14\ \ I\ 8 10 IO l T'fle Two J ... el jltj I 4 7 10 IOUTH COAST VIUAGI Sunllowo• •I l •+llol s~•• I l"YettJ ·--fltl 11 4S 1 IS 4 4S 1 IS t 4S 1 ,_IOI u . ioM • .,,,. -.... .. -. ,..._ started making a lot of noise. Af\cr th e scrnnd album came out I was reall y di~appointcd with the re~ponse and thought. 'Everybody lo" cs me on lhc ballads. let's see ho" 11 goes· "From the acclaim and response from The Hunger and Dock of the Bay 11 was rcall) oh\ 1ous where my strength 1s, It sold 800,000, then when Soul Pro' 1der came out 1t Oc"' past gol d (S00.000) So I know what the listeners exp«t and I'm still wnting 11. The funn y thing 1s that some of the guys tn the tour band wanted to do stufT w11h more of an edge but when I start to perform that son of matcnal I find n's not where I want to be anymore, I want to hear my voice and U!>C 1t for what it's good for. I don't want 11 to be up against the powl'r of sound and production. Ballads an-more emo· 11onall) pov.erful and thq gi ve me more time to milk e' Cr) word ·· J01tlll Mltcbell coven popular m111Jc for Tbe Rocty Mo11ntala New• lo Deaver. Ill tp(,I I 40 \ 10 10 I Dwllule1 11 4\ I 4\ l 4\ SH Didi TtM)' fPC"' 1 4\ •O \ Huntington Beach •DWA•DS CHAJtT•Jt C•NT .. 1811 w.,.,,,., l'v• "" ()110 I 01\olt !Pu I II ', J }() \ 1 lO 10 J Th• Twe Jelle• 1t1 I 4 I 10 t Alt ""'••tu 1t1 17 Vl I \ IO 8 10 lO • Die H.,<f II 1111 1 "J h 8 )() I 0 • \ 'J>teo.-e<f lttftOCettt 1•• •l IS l •S \IO II I\ 10 4\ Irv inf' THI UHll/ldtSITY CINIMA •I•\ r Mnl>'I\ 01111• fH4 AA• I I Yo11,.. G""o 11 1Pr, 111 I/ IO 1 •S S 1 IS 'I)() J AH AM.nut Il l I l )() 6 8 1S 10 lO l Tite ''•.-.,, ll'GI 11 4S J IS S •S II 10 I\ 4 0-ll'G l4J I] l lO \ I JO 10 \ l"YH--4 I-•"' lllt 17 IS J S 4S II JO 11 11 ''-'""•tt Il l 11 )() I I\ to I\ 114\ 10 SO WOOD••IDGI CIN IMAI Barr•"''° rar~w•y/Cv!v" Orr'llf SS I 06H I Alecto .... flallle ll'C.. I 1J I I lO I 4\ 4 to IS 8 JO 10 JO 2 n.. TW• J ..... 1•1 I • 1 10 ) 0vG T .. e l IGI I I !O I lO l lO \ JO Ole ....... ff l"J l JO 10 IS 4 ~ 0..... fl'Gt tJ 1 4 to 8 10 S ,__.. ..... JGI I I )0 I IS l n S IS ......., ..... flljl l\ •)() Fountain Valley 'OUNTAlllll VM.Ln TWlllll lfoolhuf'll/ldtn9f• n••500 ;::================::;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim;;jj-;;;;;;;;;;;;i I ~ .... IGI II 0 I lO J JO S IS 7. IHS 1 .... T .... IG/ 11 1\ l IS n s. to 15 T-. JHCH OICHOlSOO UTWO THUMBS UP." -SISmiElm 11.. TWOJHHES .. · °'• A INAMC»IT ~ f ••i..-.•,,. .. --• ...,._ . I ·-----·· ·---~--..,..., ,,...._... ll'GI II, 0 IS Laguna Beach --~· 10UrM CDAIT ~ 4U S C0<tJt HlclhWllf •• 7 11 I I 1 Mr~l"!11JO J SJ0.11.IOIS l ""9 TW9 ~M Ill I 4, 7 10 -... ICLlllKJC ..._. .... '* ........ If you're a bud witb Only one real bit -.. to )'Out credit ud a two-,_,. hiatus uftdcr )'OWi belt. bow do you aaeee a comobeck to prove that you\rc more than a ono-hlt wonder? tfyou:rc Modern EnaUlh, lbe answer is almple: play a one-bour let of m0ttly unfllmillar IOftll and 11vo the bi& bit liftlle for lut. This approecb ~ = M""odem ~iab's Wednetday niabt Iii It lbe Houte, but for the Wl'Ol\I reuona. T6e moment the bud tore into lbe bia hit linaJe, "I Melt Witb You," the audience finally emertecl from ill collective coma u4 jumped up to Clance and about, •uaaetdna that the material performed durina the prevtous SS minutes wu &eas than inapirina. Tbe label .. one-bit wonder" is not a flauerina one to place on a bud. but it seems to suit Modem Enalilh all too well. While 10me of the sonp -both old and new -[have inspired moments, the ~orit)'. of the materia,:c falls somewhere between nondacript and awful. 1 nere were ex~tiona, notably "Glasa Houte" and "Beautiful People,' which featured snappy auitar work and catchy, funky bass riffs. The band also roared enthusiastically throuah some early works, includina the raw and wild .. Someone's Callina." However, these briaht spots were more than com-~nsated for by such truly dreadful sonp such as 'Pillow Lips." which happens to be the title track from. the band's latest album. Even the enlllina. pretence of wiry vocalist Robbie Grey couldn't salvage this sappy ballad ("You're the only thina that keel>S me aoin&/Pillow Lips/Pillow Lips"rl!) which certainfy bears one of the clurt?siest titles of any romance sona in recent memory. The vaporous "I Care About You," a semi- briabt. mid-tempo number, seemed 10 fade from mem- ory the moment the last chord stopped ringing. Other - • I llriU-ou&I lDdudld .. u. .• Rich :1'Ullb'Y .. tbe bud .. II• ...... wtUda IOUDdl I ~ lib -~ 0 Soul llrlDDed or IDOi& ot • .,... WMll Oref• voa ........ , JUii Int oa dte bud'• po11 .....,. ~-..,II ....._b he doeaa't bave dte cMpl to C8nJ daia aart o1.-e. !J Flnally. olcoune. tin'• ...... bit ... tbe tnaJy lupired. truly iDllctioul ... t.felt Wida ~ou, "1J oerUPI oae of tbe ft.-1011111 ot tbe .... DUDk aa. 2 Bvea . eWtt yt1t1 after it _. rel1111d. dM ~·ad opdmiltfc lyrica r'Wt'vt .. aome cba••aJADd 1t'1 f .nt1na better all tbe dme") l1ill rial • dliUl IDd true 1 u ill driviaa rbytlun ud catdlr melody. To daeir credit. Modern Enallab eeetn to still etUoY playiaa thiJll '°"' eveo thoueh it it. in many ways. the bend'• ,,.tat J burcleo. ~ Then qaio. oetbaPI Modenl Enlliab'a real burdeoi Wednelday wu the air.din& 40-minute tct performed by:> ~ bud The Jack Rubies. Tbe ftv.man outflt from LOndon i1 one of a bandfuJ of new Britiab bandit> (inchadina the fabulous Stone Rotet and 'Wonder Stuff) ) which combine janaJl?Juitan. aemi-bip bop rbythmsJ and wry. lelf«pfeca IYficl to form a IOUnd and I vision wbkb baa become Britain'• new wave for tbei '90s. Tab for example the aelf-pityint 11tire of "Book1 of Love:" .. , swear to Ood/I won't ctianee the .~ldfl 1 haven't aot the nerve/) never ,et the airl· Leadl pjtariat/vocaliat Ian Wriaht deliven thele lyrics in a subdued srowt reminiacent of a tonod-down &illy Idol,> wbile percuaionht Lawrence Giltnane 6111 the tra-' ditionaJ rock combo 10und with 10me intereltinai rhythmic twista. ~ Wriaht and ~10npriter/1uitarist S.D. Ineson seem to share • eenormina and writina relationabipJ similar to Squeeze 1 Glenn TiUbrook and Cbria Diff'ord, I and that is b'e ~se. Tourina in support of theirl accond album, See The Money In My Smile.'' The Jack Rubies are a band to watch. ' 'Missing' art taken by Nazis starting to reappear in West By MARTIN BAILEY •nd \lllWAM MIWNSHIP ~~s..w........, ... LONDON -The arrival of a mystenous Soviet visitor at the British Museum set off an international hunt for one of the greatest "missin g" art collections acquired by H11ler for his Fuhrer- Muscum. These drawings. once owned by Dutch banker Franz Koenigs, were seized by tht' Nazis and later plundered by Soviet Red Army troops, The missing collection. which could now be worth $92 m1lhon. includes masterpieces by Canaletto. Claude Lorra1n. Cranach, Poussin, Rem- brandt, T1epolo. T1ntorct10, T1t1an and Van Dyck -and no less than 17 by Durer. According to the Dutch government, which 1s 1ry1nJ to track down the drawings. most probably lie hidden in the Soviet Union, "With current pohucal developments. we have real hopes that man) of them ma} emerge over 1he next year," said Albert Elcn. head of the Ne ther- lands art recovery team. The search started in earnest in October 1987, af\er a Soviet visitor called at the British Museum to ask for an "opinion" on a 16th-centuf) drawing of a boy. John Rowlands. head of the museum's prints and drawings department. attnbuted the picture to Ambrosius Holbein and dated it about 151 5 Rowlands explained to the Russian that the Dutch government claimed the Koenigs collection. His v1s11or. who didn't seem unduly di sturbed. readily agreed to leave it at the British Museum "for further study:• Rowlands th en warned him that he'd have ito inform Dutch authorities, The mystery deepened when the identity of the Russian emerged, He ga ve his name as Victor Louis. who 1s known for his close links with the Kremlin. Unul his rece nt retirement. he was pro~ ably the Sovie t Union's be5Hnformed journalist. On Saturday Louis was unwilling to comment on his reported v1s1t to the British Museum. "It is a confusing matter. all rumors and misunderstand- ings," he said. "I would prefer not to be involved," After Elen heard about the Holbein. he 1m· mediately traveled to London and staned legal action to recover 1t "I assume that the drawi ng was shown to the British Museum as a test case to sec if it might be possible to sell the Koenigs works in TV Listings 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 • D • • • • • • • the West," he explained. The Dutch government then decided to launch an international campaign to track down the rest of the collection. Koenip, a German-born businessman livina in the Netherlands, had assembled in the 1920s one of the putest private collections of Old Master drawinas. ~ilh the Depmsion he fa~ fina!K~al rufo, and has works were bouaht by andustnahst D.G, van Beuninaen and presented to the Boymans Museum in Rotterdam. After the Nazi invasion in 1941 , the Rotterdam museum was forced to sell 526 of the Koenias drawinas for Hitler's Fuhrer-Museum. Althouah the works were bou&ht. payment was made in worthless Reichsmark.s. ibc drawinp were shipped to Dresden and then moved for safekeepina to •castle in Weenscnstein. When the Red Army liberated the area in 1945, the Koenias drawinp were still stored in the castle. But then they disappeared, and Dutch requests to East Germany and the Soviet Union for their return met with the response that there was no trace of the mi ssing drawinas. In early 1987 East Germany suddenly returned 34 Koenias drawinp. Then, a few months later, the Dresden museum published a catalogue of 1,555 of its own drawinp which had disappeared durin& the war, h would have been difficult for Dresden to claim looted art works while they were still holdina some of the missina Koenias works. A few months later, the Holbein wa.s brou&ht to the British Museum. The Dutch then started leaal action 10 recover the drawina and. following a '"British court rulina in 1988, it was returned to Rotterdam. When Elen had first come to London to sec the Holbein, he heard about a second Koenigs drawing -an exquisite Hans BaJduna Grien "Virajn and Child" dating from about I 520. The Baldung was on display at the Royal Academy in an exhibiuon of master drawings owned by New York property tycoon Ian Woodner. Further inquiries revealed that Woodner had recently bou&ht it from a European dealer. The Dutch aovemment considered legal action while the Balduna was at the Royal Academy but instead decided on a "aentlemanly request" Wood· ner refused to hand it over, sayina he had bou&ht it in good faith , and he took it back to New York, Dl1U1btlted •Y Serl,,,,. H•w•rd fife"' ~rvlce. 10:00 10:30 11:00 11 :30 Tiil "Oul o4 CommUon'' .... 0 -----...... -... \ • Sii nt auction proml five dates to high bidders The Ii ve auction tel for Sept. 7 really i1 alive! ... 27 real life SUYI and doll• will be up for bid alona with tbeit dreamy date peckQel. And, tbeR it a lot IO be said for lbe lilent auc;iion ... l 0 more hand· some t.chelon and IOOd lookina becbelorettel have planned run ac-tiviliel. (The tilent biddina lrip i1 for the aby bidder.) The buyina ection for lbl1 third annual event will come '•'her at the Newport Belch Marriott at 6 p.m. Proceeds will 10 to Cy1tic Fibrolis Foundation for research, care and treatment cent.en. Tbe up-for-bid people partied Fri- day evenina at the NB Marriott (auction underwriter) and pluged their date peckaats while 11uests en- joyed wine and cheese. Potential bidden checked 'em ouL (Over- heard: "You can tell the men up for bid. They are the real hunks." True!) ' Hiah bidder for Tom Slyman. owner of Newport Communication, will fly to Disney World and then go by boat to the Bahamas for four days. Closer to home, a date with Stanford Freese will take a pl to Disneyl"1'1d for dining. dancing and fireworks; Jay BrummeH will take his date to San Diego, and he hopes the hi&h bidder will be girl friend Lynn. (He's helpin1 her get sponsors 10 pay for her bid. The auys and olls on the block get sponsors for cir date packaaes and bidders can 0 the same ... an for charity's sake.) G~~ are not the. onl y ones arcat t hnana up exocuc tnps and ac- ' vities. Kathie Dunn has rlanned a o-weck ski trip to end al ski trips. nee the snow faJls, she and her date ·u be off to Vail. Colo. then to ackson Hole. Wyo. and finally up orth to Banff in Canada. "I'm kill§ for an intermediate or above kiicr, • said Dunn. addina "but, if hey are not •ood skiiers, I'll teach m. I'm a ski instructor." Emma Webb of Costa Mesa, a olecular biologist and biochemist. Vld• .,.., iJ lookina for ''• man who knows how IO treat a woman" to than= a cruiae (but separate accommo- dations) ~ona the Mexican Riviera. Actress Charlene Howell ("Days of our Lives") plans a day-Iona m)'f- tery event of all-American aood, clean activity that calls for a tall, dark, aood lookina man wi th a sen1e of humor; Nancy Griffin, who has been involved in all three auctions, has amnged for her date to do a parachute jump at Perris. "We expect to have between 850 and 1(000 here for the auction. and we'd ike to double the $75,000 we made last year," said gala chair Max Hoskins. Aspiring actor Mike Rangle. a past bachelor up for bid, will be the auctioneer, and he promises it will be fun."We will have humorous skits for each auction package ... a Broadway production," commented RansJe at the pre-auction pany (chaired by Patti Casas with Rebecca Marriott, Rita Cox, Pegy A van ts and Lauri Han~n assistina.) Double date packages arc offered by firemen Mark Cooper and Jim Servais (Palm Springs) and by Dean- na Frieze and Crystal Hogan (San Francisco and the wine country.) Scott Cameron is looking for a girl interested in history 10 buy his trip to Washington. DC Dana Torres plans a sports package for a tall dark blue-eyed man and Ranelle Urban. sales and marketing for Red Onion, has lined up a seven-day trip to Hawaii. "I bave been wortina oa tmaeemen" ror 11uee MeU" ..w Urblft. Donna M=r~·TWA _. Une 1cew, taid ... flP8flC 22 on .._ today amftlina my crip co Su Fran-cisco and the wine country." You'd like a nice lrip, but lbon of cub? No problemr ne CP Foaa- dation offiC:e, 931-1,93, cu pro¥ied info and forms for eetthw.-~ sponsors. ~The off'ace alto tu. ddlll information. 0 SOCIAL WHIRLWIND: Marie-~ Hohenlohe, da:=of Prince Hohenlohe of Cha · AUIJl'ia. bu been eettinc ttae treatment lince she arrived in New· port lut week to be houte pat of Helen Coffey. (M-A's mom i1 a Hapsbura and she i1 also the niece of Prince Franz Hohenlohe of Austria, lonatime friend or Coffey. Mimi Crosson and Jeanne OeVries hosted a luncheon at Bever- ly Thompson's home in honor of the princess and Coffey1 and to cheer up Thompson who is an a full lea cast for six weeks. · Ann Stem and Leah Petersen hosted Wednesday lunch at the Harbor Club; Carol Washburn. Eileen Timmering and Jim Righeimer did dinner at Club 33 for the visitor, and Christie and· Grant Bcttinaen p ve a dinner with anist Macieck Maga on Saturday at Bia Canyon Country Club. About SO met the ppncess Sunday at a BCCC bruncheon hosted by Coffey. Guests included another honoree Sophie Von Bculow of Munich, dauahter of Baron Eric Von Bculow. Also attending was princess of Romania Joanna Sturdza. now of Los Angeles. The 24-year-old Austrian princess visited school friends in Illinois and Colorado and then to get a aood look at the USA, AmtraJtcd here. She says the country and weather here are beautiful. Those meeting her have returned the compliment to the tall brunette. Deenna Prteae, ery ... 1 H ... n et'NI aenelle UrtNln Brother-in-law needs lesson in responsibility DEAR ANN LANDERS: My hus- band's brother. "Tom," 1s 48, single, a very heavy dnnker. and he always needs to borrow money because: I) He has been sick and unable to work. 2) His car, which he needs to go o JWOrk. broke down and the garage demands cash. 3) The furnace died and has 10 be replaced, etc. 4) He's shon because he loaned a friend money to pay for an oper· ation. We get these calls about every six months. Tom has always lived from pay- check to paycheck, is maxed out on his credit cards. and foolishly allow- ed the bank to take his house back af\er he let it go to hell. Although he's currently unemployed, Tom's a hard worker. very smart and has always. made aood money -about $351000 a year -but he never saves a dime. My husband and I have two youna children, house payments, day-care expenses and other bills. I should tell you, Ann. that Tom has always paid us back, but I'm aettina sick and tired of pullina his fat out of the fin=. My husband says he can't let h11 Ann Landers brother down when he's in trouble. I say Tom needs to learn how to be n=s,P<?nsible for himself. What's your opinion? We need a referee. -Enouah is Enough in St. Paul Dear Salat PHI (wltti emp ... 111 oa tile Sala&): ne fact tllat Tom lul1 1lw111 paJ4 JM back uy1 1ome- ttita1 abo•t Ills tate1rtty; IHtt I acree wttil JM, lte aee4a S. leara &Mt tile most reliable laelpt.1 lulad 11 at U11e eacl of ~ owa sleeve. C.mpromlse wtdl yoer klad, 1n- erH1 •ubud. Acree s. ball Tom n t OH last lime, IHlt oaly II Tom wtU a1ree s. a) 1• te AlcoMUct AMaymeu u4 b) ,.t MtDedalq uWe Ht of Hef'1 paydleck wllla lae 1et1 Ndl S. won. Let lllm now JM will aot rescee ti.Im apla. A841 llteep '"' woN. People In the News DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am a notary public in the state of New Jersey. At one time it was an honor and a pnv1lege to be one. but no longer 1s this true. A arcat many people don't realize that a notary's respons1b1hty ts not 10 attach the "ma&Jc" seal to a document that makes 1t legal. Our JOb 1s to witness the signature at the time of s1aning and to swear that the individual who signed the document is, in fact. that person. We attest 10 the fact that we actually witnessed the signatun= beina signed. Most people come with ~ocu­ ments that already have been signed by them, or worse, b~ someone else. I then am asked to • notarize" these signatures. This Is especially embar- rassina when they happen to be friends. Please advise your readers that the purpose of a notary pubhc IS to witness a sianaturc of a person at the moment of si.Jnana. II is amazing what the pubhc does not know. -Ready to Qu11 1n N J. Dear Re8'r, Net111a1 ..._, "tile ,.blk" w..W 1•.rpriH me. 111 maid 1tertet wttll yM UJ .. , •f talle year. Tlwlll1 fer •rtaa JMn. Jim Servat1, M arie Cooper and Scott 59 and Holding Older love isn 't f or roman ce books I can't ~and in the checkout hne at th<.' markl·t and look at the steamy covers of romance no' d\ w11hou1 being painfull) rem1n1.h:d of my monumental bust a~ a wnter of panting prose Several )cars Jgo pubh\her' were looking for hooks on Matun· Romances This 1s an age tategon where lo·H~r., arl· 'it1ll )Oung enough that the} don't hn-.r to a,i... their ch1ldrcm' pcrml\\1on In ha ' e an afTair Word for \\ord and p.mt for pant. romann· book\ pa\ t•,cccd ingly well '\II )OU havl' to re member art• a few infolhhk rule' bosoms swell. mu'i<.·ks nppk. nostrils quive r. JaW'i dl'nrh. and eyes smolder -and )ou'vc got 11 What could tx• an C'as1er wn' of makin& a hving'l One morning I turned on 'lonll' Golden Oldies music. \tutll. a sheet of paper 1n my l>pc,H1tcr and was ofT to a new caret"r' f 1' l' hours later m) no\CI hadn't budaed. I wa'i cunfronted wnh an impcnetrt1blc 1h1ckrt ot naon111ng questions How can m) s1her-ha1rt'd hem swcc:p the heroine ofT he r ft't't and carry her to his sumptuou'i lair w1thought throwing out h1'i hark'1 He'd end up m troctton -a n(,_ no 1n SCA no, els E'en 1fhe ptckt'd Nancy Mcintyre her up co1 rcctl) kcepina his h3ck -.tnught and putting the weight on his knees. thcrr's a good chance he'd drop her -which complctcl) blows the sedurnon sce nl' When )OU think of the fcat'i lmcrs must perform. they ha\C to be 1n top physical cond1t1on l ook on the cover; of an) roman<.·c book\ The girl 1s alwa~s bent over backwards in a pa-.-.1ona1c Half l'oclM>n embrace that's a real hone crusher. If she ha'i 1.·alc1um drfi· rn:nc)' It could be the rnd ot \Omething beautiful It rpa) be t'll>c111na for )Ouna adul.W 10 smooch in all kinds of uncomfortable pla~s. hkc 1he bucket st'ats of a spons car. or on 1he wet 53nd with the surf c-omina in. but )OU can't C'<P«I readers to believe that ma1urc. scM1blc adult v.ould be that crary Ma~be a few die-hards m1gh1 Ir) a bear· sk.in rug 1n front of the fire. but even 1hal°s stretching 1t o\s I pondered m) predicament. I decided I'd wn1c an honest senior romance and lc1 1hr back ache fall whrre the' ma) I'd lca\e in .i little hea'' breathing and hea' mg bosoms. bu1 nothing that v.ould '"' a pacemaker L1kr an) a'erage rouplc thr lad)' would ha vc a f<.'\\ lo' able wnnklc\, and her man would be fighting a f'la Un(h and re<'Cdtng ha1rhnc &lore the hero could devour lhe heroine \\1th h1<1 eyc'i, he'd ha ve 10 put on his specs. When he <1wt.•p1 her off her feet, 1fd Ix with word... not b1ct'ps. However. lh<.'} 'd tx· the hvchC"St pair of do' rs \\hoc' rr found each other at the Onvers· Rt'-('ducatton ~hool As 500n a~ I sent olT m\ manu- 5<'rtpl. I r«Cl'•ed the fast~"' f'CJCC· 11on lip in history II was stnl by federal E~prcs The. editor ad- v1~ me ( was ne\ tr going to makr 11 l'i a romance wntcr be· cau~ I didn't take ~' St'nousl)' And 1h111 l h1ldl't'n. 1s wh) Barbara C anland. 1he QuCC'n of .Hearts, ha a laf1e ~talc and wca~ diamonds while you~ truly 1s still 'lhopping 1n <1upcrmarkets and wa111n1 in chedout lines. Britisti, Spanish royal families spend vacation together PALMA OE MAJORCA. Balearic Islands - Britain'• Princess Diana and her two youna sons amvcd on lbi1 Mcditemnean island Sunday to join Prinl'C Charles for a brief vacation as 1ucst1 or the panilh royal family. C1wleS. Who hal been ltl)'lnl With fneodS On thC Speni.lh island since Wcdnetday, picked up his family at the airpon In a van driven by Pnnccss ~na. the ckScst dauahtet of Spein'1 Kina Juan Car1os and Quttn Sofia. Abo makina the trip 10 meet the Oi&ht ~re peen's Princess Cn1ciM and Sofia's brolher. ihc former Kina C'ona&antinc of Oreec:e. Thi• i1 the third time In four )an that C"hartn. Diana and Princcs Wilham and Harry kavc IPftlt pen or tMir aummcr hol~ tbe Spenilb royal aummcr rcudcncc. Mari~• . ID 1911. lM 5'19ftiall nd lrititlt Pf':W S*blitMd ~ ~ of 1 biktfti.dld Diana dl~ins iMo IM Med.._ ~neut off the royal ,_.., FonunL • I LOS ANGELES -A new televi11on tcrics is brinaJna Burt Reynotd beck to Southem California, with the actor n=nuna a home In the UPtc:ale Bcl·o\1r Kel~n for S40.000 a month. Reynolds and his wife, actre Loni Anderson. have spent most of the pall year in Florida. •here ReynoldJ has Iona owned a ranch. But the actor. who IOkl hi houte in the Hof mby Hills 1eetlon of Lot Antcla lut year. hu cakc:n a ~·· leatc on new d~ in Bel.,Air he 1WOfts on h11 new show, said Bobbi Ward o( Asher Dinn and AllOCia who ttptttmted him an ftCIO'&ati"I the leatc. · Reynoldt 1 the star 1Dd ce><qcubvc producer of ''Evm1"1 Sbedt. •• wtuch ain thi1 tall. Tbc Ibo bnnp a f0t'1Mf pro footbell pla)Cf ~ to tut bome- IOWD to raite a fanuly. Ms. Ward llid lleyftOkb ~ lble home .-ithoul hia will'• knowledle, but "Whtft ibt •• It. she k>vtd it." n. l 5,00()..jquare-fooc ft.trftithcd hou has •• bedrooml and I I bethroom and sits on a twoc~ 1\ I compound with a tennis court and ~~1mm1na pool NEW YORK -Developer Oonnld Trump claim, he'• malnna a k1lhn1 now that proplc think hr ha, l\O mont"y. "It'• aooo fi r me to ht thou~ht of as poor nJhl now," he uid an ~ Sc]>U'mbt'r 1 uc of Van1t)' Fan map11ne. "You wouldn't believe some of the deal I am makana. I auc I have a pcncMC pcnonahty .... l'~c really_ Cl\JO)'ed the last few ¥reek " Trump Sl)'S he'' not uJ)5Ct al bc1"f dropped from fotbcs map.unc'' 11't of the •orld', nchcst men and blam 1t on a run·1n he had uh tht mqv1ne' late owner, Malcolm Forbc The m lint". •hi h lut put Trump) net rth at Sl.7 bilhon. lowt~ thit tima IO UOO mtlhon 1n pnl. "(I've) bttn e ptttina thi anaek f'tom F •· he uid. "You know •hy1 Mal olm forbn aot thrown out of the Pia.ta by mt• ••. You'll rtld about 1t in m~ new book nd I d1dn'l lhrow him ou' u he didn 1 pa hi bill." Trump al'° ,.,d he 1~ more popular than ever de p1tc IM bad pre ht'1 been gctt1n1 about hit marital ~ and cash probftm . nd that populanty has rubbed off on the two ..,omen mo t onen linked with him: his tra.naed wife. l"ana and h11 alleaed m1 t Matta Map&cs. "he made a lot of Mtcllt&es ••• whtlhcr 1t'1 Mana or Ivana," Trump aid. "Marta ca.n do any mo"ie lbe '*ants to now. 1vana c:an do whatc~cr abe wan •• • OtANGE COAST Pub111Md by Pao-Gr~~. Inc. lelMrt I. , .. , Pf•lidtN & c~I ••ecu41W1 oflic•r Eliot Stein, Jf., cho11mon O..a&d W. Adcox, Jf., generol monoger Walter luffov9ht, 1901-1919, loundong, publisher Editor/al Bicycle sat ety ignored too long I t doesn't take a high-powered survey and a lot of statistics to prove bicycle safety has been negfected too long. All you have to do is read the newspaper or take a drive on any street frequently used by bicyclists. Two Orange Co11t DaJly PUot readers recently called the Editor's Hotline to express their concerns and vent some frustrations on the topic. Their comments reflected the community's concern as well as any survey we've seen. The first caller was disturbed about the number of bicycle riders. especially children, who d o not wear helmets. She lamented tha1 she could not get he r children to wear helmets but liked 1he idea tha t schools in Irvine and Newpon Beach will begin a progr am this year 10 emphasize the safety ad' a ntages of "earing bicycle helme ts. The second caller's conce rn focused o n older bicycle ride rs -the types ~hat all dnvers t>ncoun1er sooner or later. They're not hard to recognize. They seem to think they own the road and that it's the duty of everyont> el se to stay out of their way or not run over them. Parents, schools. police and bicyclists them seh es arc equal parts of this problem a nd the solutio n to putting bicycle safety back o n the right path. Parents sho uld exercise more control to make sure the1r children arc as safe as possible when they take to the streets on two-wheelers. Teen-agers and many pre-tee ns may resist weanng a helmet because it's not "cool." But it's the parents jo b to con "1ncc them that there's nothing cool about "hat happens to a b1qchst's head when he or she 1s mvol\Cd m an accident. Schools are alread) gcanng up to promote b1qclc safet)'. espel'1all) the US<.' of helmets. Perhaps the~ arc in a belier position than parents to get the JOb done 'chool programs ha"e the ad,antage of getting the mcs\Clge to larger groups of )Oungsters in an en' 1ronmen1 where peer pressures ha' e a tremendvus impact. If the) can perc;uadc e nough )Oung ndrr~ 10 begin weanng helmets, 11 could become as much a par1 of the bic)chng look as spandex. Fmall). police should do a better job of enfom.·ment B1cycl1sts must obC) the rules of the road. But. unless more of the v1ola tcrs arl' pulled over and given tickets for their unsafe nding practices. that "'on't happen. A new level of b1C}cle safety awa reness 1s possible th rough the combined efforts of parents. schools and the poli ce. When that happens. the statistics -those showing I 10 Orange <. ount> residents were killed and another 15.000 mJured m b1ql"lc acr1dcn1s duri ng the past 10 )ear., -can be relegated to an acacJcm1c look at the past rathn than used as an 1nd1cator of a growing problem. When Writing to th• Orange Coo st Doily Pilot... Ttie Oronge Coo\t Doily Pilot ,., v•og,..s couPspondrr, r Ir .m ovr readers We •rqvl"\I '""'S I / .,.., • •:> op1 •o .. rro•ely 300 .,.o•d\ A ny correspond•nri> S·•~" 1.r 'l"''r ·"Q"' •I tl• 300 wur ds w II be t1• .n•ed 01 ov• d·s~•13toon os 1 Community Commentary. Guest Commentary ,, Ed1toriol Response (r'"°""V' • ., CCI"" ,..n101 p~ )I" '"S"'v'''' for ssves l)f'rl neni 10 cotoes and 'Ow'1\ olong ",.. O•or ·~,. C ra1 Gv"S' 'ornmen•or es may per10111 to ony put.I c \SJ(' E J 1 r ·; •PSI 1\t'\ J•"' '"'S"'vl"c1 101 rPbvt1ols 10 l"d11orool pos11 oris ol rh,. Oronge Coou Doily Pilot [Pttl"•\ '.1.5.1J1•u J '_, t ,, ti•• r_,vs ;• ,, bod taste will not be prrnled Vl/r '"'\ r:;rn ltn11 I•• l '' lour \ .tiri •\\ nns o rnon1h All ''.>rrPspo11dr.ncc mv\1 be s•Q11Pd 011rJ 111r 1,,11 .. rhtJ wr '"' s w ldrPH 011d •elerihonp nvn1bPr for ver1f1CO'·Or I J'l"H"\ l1>''"'' st,, I 1,,. wl l•"H' <l ''.J rt.r Orange Coa st Doily Pilot, 330 W Bor )1 Crwo M••n { A 92626 A111>11toon le11Prs ro rhr f dolor W1•lers w 11 i 1•·\l1r1n\ l'I" urQ•"l tr.1 roll •hp Dnoly Polo1 (II 71 4 64/ 4321 f,1 352 Doonesbury (O.U) [ HIJVE £VER't()Nf'5 ltrTEf-ITION Plf.ASC" I HAVE AN 4N~tNT TO MA~ TO 1Hc PHU STAFF J I ;...-. I fXYV7 'XIE"S HI /JUI eve ltf.APY' ~ IT.~ SHe's AJIEA MAKIAJ6 Ml1T11R 6QN'1~ POn1 16!.~' CFIUJ· 0 f(JT c /,JC, /IU· • ~I• ClfJ) By Garry Trudeau A5 YOU l<NCXAJ, THE LaJNT/?Y 15 NCNV ENPUR/!6 A COMPL.£7f, 8RtAKJ:UVN CFtl>FICf!la IN alR /.E:fl/OIN6 INST171/TDl5 ASA lr1EM86R. CF '!Ht WWKING CbrlMI 7 ~. I~ HAP A HIOffl ~ 5QJT~ 7Ht oeJSIS ' --- 9fe~ /llNolJM'; f¥MiN· lHF.Rt· f()ll.1US· FaU' ~I IJtNT! IN '92 1 IHA~ 0 0 ~ • Ct '4lm "'K)~- o ~, SI&./ JBlE ~~! • .. ~~ ., ~~ .. "'9t ~u. -~"'~ ~., "'15 ~ ~ .• " f:i01""' ~. trEt G\\J\C61 ~ ~f\\-~\~ Community commentary Huntington Beach City School District's future is not so bleak By JOHN F. SCOTT The plight of the Huntington Beach (it) School District is not as bleak as painted by the th ree le tters in the Piiot's Saturda> Aug. 4 edition. With school board clerttons set for November. and with three vacancies at the di strict office. 1t seems an ideal time to make some crea tive changes. The d1 s1nc1 has had mon: than 11s share of public ancntton during the past several years. all did its leader. Dr. Peters had an unusual talent for gett1n$ nc"'s recogn111on for the district and herself She 1s gifted 111 that regard Thl' Board of Realtors or the Chamber of Commerce has a wonderful opponuntt} to cmplo) someone "'ho could focus the anent ton ol 1hc stale upon Hunttng1on Bcal'h. If the bu\lness commun1t) needs \omeom· to "'rnn' 1ncc us 1ha1 "'c shared rc~pons1b1IJ1) for the quaht) of eduratwn in our local schools .. ·· I hav(' to "'onder \\hrn: 1hq ha\C been and "'hat thq ha'e bl'Cn doing') Thl' future of the Un11cd States and the succcc,s of our na11on·s bu<>iness ant.I 1ndusti-) to compete. as a rl·sult of uur educational problems. ha'> bccn raised \trtuall) C\l'f) da~ 1n th<' paix·rs. <\s a parent ol a child 1n th is !>Choo! district, the strife that I haH' witnessed among the school hoard. admtn1s1rat1on and teachers 1s unconsc1onable. When SUlh a s11uatton continues o'er several ycar'i there is no 4ue<,1ton but 1ha1 11 effects the student\ ad,erscl). Dr Peter\' admtn1stra11on was not ··guilty of excellence·· as some would bcl irw. Thl' feal'htng for Thtnkin_,g program was nothing more than the Socratic Met hod"." al kast 1n the few exa mples of 11 I w11nc:<,sed. The '"Toda)·· show. 1f m> mcmor) ~erves me correctly, was l'cntcred upon one of the middle school~ for the sucleSl> of the s1a0". and not the phantom fead11 ng for Th1nl tng pr°'ram The d1'itnc1 had a rescne of over S2 million when Dr Peter\ 1ook the helm If the figures d1sdoscd during tCalhers· nejl.ot1at1 uns arc lrue. toda) we ha'l' 11p tn Inside Repon rc st'rvc. The fac t ts that the students of Hun11ng1on Beach City School District ha ve always had good scores. This was true before Dr. Peters becam e super- intendent. and probably will be true in the future. The district has many talented teachers and ad- ministrators remaining. There are principals in the district now. and some principals who ha ve leO in recent years. who have enjoyed great success tn person- nel relations. who could tap the wealth of talent that e11asts in our teachers. and get us back to the business of educating children. · The buzz word 1n the business world now 1s empowerment. The first school distnct that ha s the good sense to give thei r teachers the opportunity to make a contnbuuon to the cause of education 1s going to start the reform in education that 1s needed. The first school district that all ows parents to make a contnbu- t1on bc}-ond rubber stamping admin1stra11 vc dcc1s1ons. organ1L1ng cand) sales and in tht case of our dts tnct's Cal1forn1a COMPACT, inviting business people to a luncheon. will set the tone of the reform that 1s needed in ed uca tion. Unfort unatel}-. law precludes using these vaca nt admm1s1ratl\ e positions for input from the business comm unit). teachers or parents. Therefore. other ways must be fo und to give the d1stnct the benefit of the txpenencc of thost" actually doing the tcachina. and to give the teachers the ex perience of the problems of admin1strat1on. Other ways must be found to u11hu the wealth of talent of business persons and parents to provide the district with their cxpencnce and ex pertise in solvi ng the problems of education. The challe n~c of th e new superintendent will be to rmpower the princi- pals so that they can respond to the educati onal needs of their schools. to gain the respect and trust of the teaching staff by competence. fairness and forth· rightness. and to involve parents and business persons 1n the educational process tn roles other than erra nd 00\ \ Joh F. S<'olt 11 • Hu1J.o11oa BHd r~1ld~a1. U.S ~ fears Saddam Hussein's isolation may cause disaster WASHI NCiTON l'.S in- telhgcncc 1~ cunn·rned that Saddam Hussein 1s so 1-;olated 1n Baghdad that he ma) send Iraq's arm) crashing 1n10 Saudi <\rab1a \.\1t hout rcah11ng 1he substantial American m1lttar) a'>sct\ accumulated then· again~t him. According to the ( I A ·s profile of the I raq1 regime. onl) one subordinate was sure enough of hi mself to con' t') had news to the dictator: Gen. Adnan Khairallah. Saddam's defense minister and brother-in-law. But Khairallah was killed tn May, 1989. when his heli- copter crashed under m} stcnous cir- cumstances The quick inJCCllon of lJ.S. warp- lanes into Saudi Arabia. cloSt"ly fol- lowed by U.S. v ound troops to protect the a1rcraf\. Ill believed at the Pcntaaon to have comt to JUSt in time to fo restall Iraq from following up Its conquest of Kuwait. The ques tion is whether Saddam under- stands that. Beware of Baghdad Rep. Stephen Solarz of New York, a senior Democrat on the House Forcian AfTaars Committee, was warned by the State Depenment in the stron1c1t possible tcnns to pass up a weekend trip to Ba&hdad and a pou1blc mcctina with fraqi strona· man Saddam Hussein. Solan' visit to 1hc Mideast had been planned Iona before the cumnt cnsis and 1nd udcd the stop in Baah· dad, where on two previous OC· ca tons he had met with Saddam So. he telephoned the State Depan- mcnt from iro to 1Jk whether 1t would be u1eful to make the visit to Iraq 11 planned in hopes of aainin1 valuable information. Ablolutely not, was the menqe from Deputy Secretary Lawrence Rowland Evans Eaglcburger and Assistant Sccretar) John Kelly. There was no expla- nation f>f why Solarz was told to beware of BaJhdad. Nobody hinted that th91lraq1 capital might be the target of] U.S. bombina. Rather, the adm1nistrat1on may have been try· 1n1 to avoid the comphcattna prob- lem of a conaressman as hostaac. GOP-KK~. polltlcs The unannounced decision by President Bush to campaifn in Lou- i s1 a na aaains' cx-K u Klux KJansman r;>av1d Duke. the Re- publican sta~ l~islator tryina to unseat Democratic Sen. Bennett Johnston. is planned at the White House as a way to sof\cn a civil riahts bill veto. · The rqular Republican (•ndjdatc, State Sen. Ben Baaen. has been liven t\o real l\clp by the White House ~nd fta lmle chance 1n the non-pen.iun cltct1on Oct. 6. Duke, who has bctn denounced 11 a racist by the White House and the Re· publican Nahonal Committee de- spite h1J OOP label. 11 cxpcckd to atl enou&h votca to force a runoff Nov. 6 apnut John1ton. Democra1 Johnston 11 an old friend of Busll1 but the president also t\11 a pohttail motive for cam· paian1n1 111inst Duke. uch an cf· fort may ncuuali1c bl1 problble Robert Novak veto of the new ci vil nahts bill as a "quota bill." placating angry black voters. Senator spectator When Treasury Secretary Nicholas Brady addressed the Na- tional Prrss Club Wednesday, an unusual. uninvited aucst was quietly sc•tcd at a rear table: Sen. Donald Rie&lc. chairman of the Senate Banking Committee and a taraet of the Senate ethics invcst1pt1on stem- ming out of the savings and loan scandaJ. Nobody could recall a previous instance of a st1ndin1 committee chairman showina up for a Pttss Club speech in such unexpected fashion. RicaJc was not mentioned when Brady was introduced, and the secretary did not acknowledge the senator's presence. Rieale'• office could offer us no upllnalion why he was there. Thcrr was JPCCUlltion inside the adminis.. tration that he was ptttent for In,.. tint rebuttal if Brady should men· "tion the 1enator•1 links to the failed Uncoln SAL In fact. the 1ttrct1ry did not mention RlcaJc at all and had Unle to uy about the savinas and loin crisis. .............. ,..,., NnM •n "••tla1t•• DC·t •••' ftthsnsk# I# • ~ Owl DaM¥ ,,,,.,. r:.)-.. Letters Amburgey backer should have been better ldentlff ed To tbe Bdjior: RcantiJ\I the letter you prin oo tlonday, Aua. 6, "Amburet>' viclim of politics.'' It would ~ appropriate that a let1et such M .ritten by 1 Col&& Mesa p1an.n· commissioner, would appiopriaacl identify the ,mtleman u 10 public 1ervant that be it. I think h i1 important to let yo~ laden know euctly who the 1utho i1 io 1nr in1t1DCC where a pubf ICf'Vlnt ll involved. It i1 a well• known fact tblt Mr. Theriot i1 • staunch supporter of the Ambuqeyt (councilman and developer). I look forward to raidfua your follow up insertion property ident• ifyina Mr. Brian Theriot. ELLEN PARK.ER Costa Mesa Someone has to stand up to the illegal aliens To the Editor: Re: Orv Amburiey's stand on illcpl aliens ... somcbody needs to take a stand! Regardless of his "com- parisons" the bottom line is ~Y arc here illcplly. We arc supporting them, payina for their babies to be born (at Hoag. no less) and next, probably will be a requirement for us all to learn Spanish so we can be of further assistance. Already our uu dollars ao for multi-language printing on myriad paperwork. It has to stop somewhere -soon. Note Phil Morcllo's sugestion. ("Amburgey 1s not beatina a dead horse" Aug. 3, 1990) Perhaps the nation of origin should reimburse the USA for the social services that we provide their citizens." Please, Mr. Amburgey, c.arry on. You arc not alone. M. TAYLOR Costa Msa Control states and watch our problems ease To the Editor: Just think how many problems in California could be solved if we could j ust put up border signs read- inJ "Sorry all spaces arc taken. Ad· mission tickets will be issued fo r the year 2001." Owls, squirrels. butterflies and wetlands could be saved. Our hills and watersheds would not dissap- pear. Water shortages could be avoided. Our transp<_>rtation systems mipn catch up with the present population before they are completely over- whelmed. Impossible. maybe -but It may become a neccuity if we do not use some restraint now. DOROTHY M. CLINCH Costa Mesa Two fronts too much f or the A rmy's troops To the Ed itor: As a retired m1htary officer. I suacst that it would be stratcgiCAll) imprudent to commit American troops to a two-front war efTon . that is. apinst Iraq 1n the Middle Ea!lt (Dally Piiot Aug. 3, p.8) concurrent· ly with our war in northern Cali- fornia, where clements of the 7th Division (hght). arc committed to a desperate c.ampaign to wipe out the horrid threat of marijuana plants in Humboldt County (Dally Pilot Aug. 3. p. 10). SAMUEL WRAY Newport Beach We need more Judge Carters To the Editor: Let the ACLU object. More power 10 Judie David Carter. We need more Judge Caners to steer Amcnca back to beina a arcat country. RICHARD ALLEN Costa Mesa Today In history Today i1 Mondty, Aui. 13, the 22Sth da~ of 1990. There arc 140 dafs Jen 1n the year. oday's Hlph&ht In History: On Aua. 13, 1961 the city of Berlin was divided as t.st Germany sealed off the border between the eastern and western tceton. East German police and troopt uted blrbed wire and blrricadcs to block crouina points in ordtr to halt the niah1 of refuaen, Two dayi liter. wort bepn on the ~rlin Wall. On 1h11 date. In ,,_1)21..t. Spanish conqueror Hcm..ao \. onn captured whit 11 now Me~ko Chy from the Aztecs. In I 62•. French Kina Louis the l l1h named Cardinal Richelieu h11 nn1 miniskf. In 17921 French revolution1ri ~ lmpritoncG the royal f'lmlly. -•1 ,.. A.lflrMlN ,,,.. r l '•'''' clo.dr Wtlh IUlttrtd OCEAN REPORT •• ,. , -1 '"""": • • • • • • • c::a.o WNW l'TA 110NARY ,,,_. ® © ~ ~ [U I·.·~ HOI LOW 9«M9lf RAIN T-8'1'0AMS R.IJRRIES TRAVELER'S rn § 0 E!) ~ SNOW ICE aJNNY PT Q.aJOY CL.Cll.OY REPORT lfttlllOOll 11111 ... ... ~IOflllS Caty ... •talllly ti llllltdt11t01111 Ml lout fltf•r 1t1n ill tllt sovttwn STm NAllONAL TODAY ...... -· -It~,. '°' ..,. ... _ ....... ~,. ,.,, ..... • n ..... . " '"' nlgll 3H •m 30 .... 17 • ..... , " . ....... • .. ::r.· • 11 P1rat IOw 7.41 •.m 2 .. 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" It -• n ......... t1 • Clldltlll • II ........ fl • .... ., n s.. n ,. a.... u 11 a n ... n • TODAY'S SUN Sunrise., ...... 6:12 a.m. TODAY'S MOON Moonrise ... ,, 11:56 p.m. Moonset...,.. 1 :49 a.m. .. ...... •• n C' , ... . .. .......Cly ..... " .. ...... • n s.~ " .. ....., ..... t1 n a... • It .... • " '"" ... It .. • .. lit u Sunset.,.",,. 7:41 p.m, .. , ...... 11 t6 ..,... ........... .... --=-. .. • " c,...... ..... a " ... s. ... It II .... 11 51 ::-r.... .. • =-... • a .. ..,... 11 M ....... n u u • a .. ...... 11 • .... ll • ........ " .. ..... • It () ......... 11 u ..... 17 .. ......... f1 .. .... CllJ n ,,. s.i.e... 1J u o,_ a u ..... n u s. .. -. u ff ,.._ 11 ., ::rr!Y 0 • S1 It t6 .... " n Last Otr. Aug, 13 New Moon Aug. 20 1st Otr. Aug.28 ...... ....... , .. ,., :t,. , .... ., ·Tide source: Astronomical Data Services, Colorado Springs, Colo. \Jf(ashlngton Cal/Ing J Chance of Mideast w ·ar ~1ow; it's a long-term crisis WASHINGTON -Experts' best I guesses on the Mideast: Chance of war 1s low. Baghdad •strongman Saddam Hu~scin mi~ his chance to invade Saudia A.-.bta. I Iraqis arc digging in defensively. r That doesn't mean no bloodshed. 1 however. Iraqis may try to disrupt Gulf tanker traffic with mines, even missiles. There's possibility of ai- r tacks by Iraqi-backed terrorists , elsewhere. • U n1ted States 1s tn for a long t haul in the Mideast. The troops . won't be home for Christmas. Some planners now talk about commit- ment tn tt'nns of years. •It wall takt' six months for tht' trade t'mbargo on Iraq to rt'ally bate. Iraq will be able to dilute t'mbargo by fl ying in goods from Libya, one of its few supporters. and smuaf11ng. a polished art form in the region. Impatience 1s what worries U.S. pohcy-makcrs most. Amcnc.an pubhc lakes quick re· r suJts, and fear as that support for 11 costly Mideast presence of U.S. 1, troops and planes will dwmdlc 1f 1 commitment looks open-ended. , And Arab nations may get antsy, 1 propose buying off Saddam by giv- , an1 Iraq a big check and several ;, Kuwaiti islands. ' :.j Doman' s fetus r Despite skepticism of ant1- f abortion activists, key features of the Women's Health Equity Act of 1990 arc expected to clear Conarcss next month as part of a bill reauthorizing the National Institutes of Health. hnc projects through rtgulatory pro- cess. National Coal Assoc1at1on dusts off "we-told-you-so" press release from 1973 and 1979. Coal officials say the price of maintaining U.S. Navy carrier fleets an Mideast should be factored into pnce of imported oil. Weak storm season Hurricane stason. approaching Sept. 15 mid-point, has been maid so far with only two "minimal" hur- ricanes -winds barely over 75 mph -recorded by the Weather Service Forecaster Wilham Gray of Colo- rado State looks for six more hur- ricanes -two of them with winds over 110 mph -and five tropical storms 10 come boiling out of the A1lan11c before season ends No' 30 Even so. that would still make 1990 a light )'car. Classffled secret? At naltonally televised bnefing. Chairman of the Joint Chiefs Gen. Colin Powell named the U.S. ships bein& deployed in the Persian Gulf. Next day, Pentagon press office declined to provide the same names. saying tho~ names were classified secret. "Gen. Powell decided to declassify them at that moment and that m oment has passed." explained a flack. P.S. State Departm ent says 11s status is: "Iraq around the clock:' The bill would fund increased contraceptive and infertility re-Embarrassing mistake search, create a Ct'nter for Women·s The House sees a chance to tweak Health Research within NIH and the Senate by lcavins intact a limit require that wom t'n be part of mljor on the amount of investment 1n- ' clinical studies. come senators may receive. ' .. We're concerned that there's a The Senate casually passed the · hidden aacnda here," says a wary limit -which wulthy Lloyd / lobbyist for the National Right to Bentsen. D-Texas. said would force Life Committee. him out of the Senate -never " NOTE: Abortion OP,poncnt Rep. cxpcctin.1 it to go anywhere. Bob Doman, R-Cahf., tells the But the House may let 11 pass • House he'll be carryina a round an Says Rep. Bill Gray, D-Pa.1 "We actual-size model of a 12-week-0ld would not want to interfere with tht' fetus from now on, "Call it Michelle. worltinp of the upper body:· call it Michael, Come up and ask me That would fo~ senators to about it. I will let you touch it and ctlher make an emblrrauina about- ;: haodle it." he invites collcaaues. face or pray that President Bush . vetoes the campaian refonn bill to which the limit is attached, A bigger bite :. The Bia Apple i1 tttina a biqer ,1 bite out of ovemlaht vislton wtlh ~ new incttt1n in hotel tues. The tax > on a $2()().a-niaht room -a typical ~ charse in a major New York City If hotel -ll SJl ,$0. Energy price hikes LobbyiJtJ for compcona forms of o eftCf'IY tee pun hn1n1 In n s1na 011 I prices. I Natural pa -95~\ U. ,• '' produced -could amponcd tt otl in many wer ta and tNCk Oec~aU:ttry quick to point , out. · '-oPI uncaK over oU martet tpeed Dtftdi• ... pipe- ... Crisis spin-off The measure is still a Iona 1hot. but the surae in pt0line pnccs has ai ven a boo t to a proposal to re- quire that can set 40 m•lcs per pllon wathin 10 yean. The h~·milcate requirement 1s the brainchild of Richard Bryanc... 0- Ncvada. and 17 o ther 1tnaton. n-e- dictably, Detroit oppo1e1 it. en- vironmen\&lms favor it As pan of the con\promltc that allowed lhc Ckan 1r Act to pus in April, Bryan was prom1ted he could brina bis 40-m111 bdl to the ftoor later. He eicta hi1 chance when tbt St.natc comes beck Sept. 10. Slngles spending Women who hvt' alone spend about $569 annually oo entertain· mt'nl, only a hnle more than half the S 1.019 bachelors spend to keep themselves amused, says Amencan Demograptucs magazine, Bomb sniffer London's Gatwick has become the third airport to use the TNA bomb sniffer developed by the Federal A v1a uon Adm1n1strauon. The SI m1l11on Thermal Neutron Analysis dev1ct', which detects plastic explosives. scrt't'ns the lug- gage on all U.S.-bound aarhners. Gatwick authonues also use 11 10 cht'Ck some otht'r flights. The TNA 1s in use at M1am1 and JFK 1n New York. soon to be used at Washington Dulles and 1s undt'r d1scuss1on for Frankfurt. Cold drug cash Colombian druglord Jose Rodn- quez (jacha. killed 1n a shootout with police last ~mber. left a httle legacy -S 10 m1lhon an laundered drug money. The loot 1s frozen in s1~ Swus bank accounts. The United States has proposed that the money be divided among the nations who helped follow the money trail -the U.S .. Colom bia. Swi~rland, Britain, Luxembourg and Austna. Mideast victim Add to the hst of v1cums 1n the Mideast: the ccol<>fY· M1va1ory songbirds have almost vanished from Lebanon because of the fighting. The oncc-nch mannc hfc of the Persian Gulf 1s dyina from polluuon caused by the Tanker War. And tht' invasion of Kuwait ousted the o ne govemmt"nt m the Gulf that was spendma s1an1ficant amounts on ccologmal rt'SCarth and cleanup. Trip to Cuba The Council for lnter-Ameri~n Sccunty, a naht-wma think tank. sponsor! a lottery to pick the date and time Fadel Castro 1s over- thrown. 11e prize: a f rce tnp to post- Castro Cube. .,....,.,.. °"""' ,. • ~ .,....,_DC,_..,..., .. .,..._ ...... •Wl-11«••· .. ""' N.w ~ lw,.. ~ ONll o.u, ,,,,. .. ADVElmSE IT IN THE CLASSIFIEDS 642-5678 15 ,,. ,.,,. 11 H ... • • .... n .. t1 11 ........ n w .... • • ,.. ., • • u ::::-n II tu ... u 11 .... • II " " • u WILIMCly • .. ..._ n " M .. ....... a SI ... .... u :: .,..,, .. .. • 15 ........ . ,. ...,. • ••'9 .. n Wildfires claim 200,0CX> acres; experts say worst yet to come YOSE MITE NATIONAL PARK -Fires caused by lil,ht- ning have burned more than 200,000 acres of drought-parched Catifornia timberland an the last week, and experts said Sunday tht' situation could get "much, much worse:· In Yosemite Natio nal Park. off hm1ts to tounsts since Fnday, the burning acreage from two fires was reported at 15.650. Flames were within two miles of the Mt'rced Grove, a stand of giant sequoias. and also within two miles of the Badger Pass ski area. "There's a dt'grce of peace, fulncss. 1f you arc not caught up an the frantic business of fire· fighting," said kff N1choll\s. JQ, curator of Yoscm1te·s Ansel Adams photo gallery. "This as the way It should be. quiet and peact'ful. without the sound of tour buses," ht' added, grateful for the quite in the park which normally has up to 25.000 toun sts "1s1t1ng on summer weekends "The park should be a rchgious cxpencnct', hke gom1 to Mecca. "But people come here and fi nd the parking 1s worse than in downtown San Francisco." The state's worst fire situation. however, was an Tcmaha Count)' about 200 males north of Yo- semite, whert' two fires not far apart were bumint a total of 124,000 acres. In sequoia Na- tional Forest, about 100 milt's south of Yostm1tc, a fire near lakt' Isabella was bumm1 over 24.000 acres. "The 200.000-acre fi1ure for tbc state lS probably prelly con- scrvauvc, •· Kart'n Tcmll of the California Department of For- estry ioa.id. "What I he~r the ci1- perts saying 1s that this could get to be much, much worse." The largest Tehama County fire. called the Campbell Com- plex. covered 112.000 acres. "It's probably soing to become t w1ce that,·· Chns Parker of the CDF said. "What wt"'re seemg 1s the culmination of four yt'art;' drought." The Campbell firt' was con- sidered only 40 percent con· tained. The Finley Lake fire six males away was burning uncon· trolled O\'Cr 12.000 acres and was expected 10 JOtn the bigger one. Terrill sa1d, ~The Campbell is the most difficult to fight, 1s eating up the most acreage. and 1s in an art'a that hasn•t burned for about 50 years.·· she added. "The Fmle) Lake fire 1s 1ncred1bly smoky:· It was reported Sunda) that the Ftnlcy Lake fire had destrO)Cd 42 structures -13 trailer homes. two houses and 27 outbu1ldmgs -and that a total of 127 struc- tures havt' been consumed by the wildfires smcc Aug. 1 In the town of Foresta at Yuscm11c, 66 structures were burned last wct'k. State Hi&hway 36 1n the fire area. cast or Red Bluff. W!l'I clo«-d Sunday. There were mort' than 11 .000 firefighters on duty around the state on Sunday, most of them batthna the 14 fira listed as major ones. About 2,800 U.S. Army sold1cn have bqun special firefiptina traJn1na. 10 bases in Washington state and Colorado, and should be avadable for duty tn C'ahfom1a and other Western states by m id-week. In 1987. summer wildfires in Cahfom1a burned more than 7 50,000 acres. "Last week. we were sayinf this would be nothlr:iJ like 987 . There was very httJc humidity then," Tcmll wd Sunday ... But 11 also wasn•t the fouftti ~car of drought m the state then. ' L1ahtmna stnkes -almost 24.000 were counted by detection equipment from Aua. 3 throuJh the weekend -att believed to have caused all of the CahfomtA firn. There was very little storm act1v1t)'_ Fnday and Saturday, but fire officials were warned in a Sunday weather bnefing that the threat of lightning could return earl)' tn the week 1n the Yosemite art' a. "When fires act so ~ they v ow at such a rate that it s very hard to stop them. It takes a combination of fire technology and the coopcTBtJon of Mother Nature.·· -By 7'k A6Hdalftl Pm• THE DAILY PILOT'S ULTIMATE FOOTBALL SECTION Will be appearing Thursday Sept. 6th To over 100,000 Readdrs INCLUDES: • Extensive Coverage of all Local Schools •Schedules of Local Games • Coverage of College Games • Raiders & Rams Support Your LoCal Team and Cheer Them on with a bordered message FORONLY'19 Goooooo TEAM! CIF ALL THE WAY GOODLUCX FIOll BVBIYONI AT JORN DOE'S SHOP ACTUAL MESSAGE SIZE DEADLINE FOR YOUR ME&,qAGB IS AVlilfJBf • So call your C1-ified Repneentat.M Today! 642-5878 . \ )>. - • I - ..... c.--E '-will --==U-=llDJt =-... awl Ible.,.....,,.,.~ ...... 0 O(, IM IWO ClOUl'IClt the C.yon a.11 • be mote cbaUealiJll. lt'• ~·--=-.~~ :=-... ~ :i;,, wUI ~ aolfen. Two 1*'-3 bGlll Ge the ClOUl'le allow DO ,.. l:w milaake -the lfCICDI ue "9 _ ..... -.. area in ..,..tioa. .,; tee~ will It.ave the bill UDNCI ieva* tom the deep aulliel 1Mt CUI their WI)' tbrouP the land &Jeoueewk of~ qo. •1 tell you,i1·d _like my IOft to bave ik bell CODClellion on tbe CUyon Cowte," Wiu Mid. .. Fazio wants to piwene • TiillCb of the natural area of the ooune u pOllible. It'• really ="into a unique piece of Tboueb the entire Canyon Course ii on the east aide of Cout Hi&hway, every bole otren a vantqe point of the <>ean at some point. · Tbe r,.cl coune is challen&ina. and fiaureS to host a top-notch pro- fessional tournament tn the near fUture. The 18th peen is even in a natural amphitheater that will lend itMlf to a aa,.e ~· "'We didn't build this course just to ,et a lPumament here," Win said. ··we bftt for the community and for the local aolfer .•• Tba average aolfer miaht find himself more at home on the' Ocean Course. lt's flatter, the lf"CDS seem larger and the penalties for an errant shot won't be as severe. In other words, a golfer might be able to retrieve a bad ball on the Ocean Course. The most pleasin& area to the eye is on the Oc.ean Course on the four boles located across Coast Highway on Pelican Point adjacent to Cameo Sborea. No. 11. a 400-yard. par-4, takes the player from near the high~ way straight toward the ocean. From , there. two straiabt par-3s, rcmi- ,niscent of Cypress Point, follow. Finally the par-S No. 14 brings golfers ·back. . 0 To transport golfers to and from the ocean side, the company will TOLL From A1 And, of course. toll roads. Orange County plans to spend $2 billion for three toll roads. Even though California voters just approved 9 cents per gaJlon in new fuel taxes to be phased in over the next five years, highway planners look to the future with foreboding. The new taxes will generate S 18.5 billion over the next decade, but even then highways of the future will be conacstcd. chuck.holed and smo_g· gy, aays Cad Williams of the Cah- for:nia Department of Transpor- tallon. or CaJtrans. "The S 18.S billion ... is cenainly not as much as we couJd use if we arc to keep pace with population growth and business development in this state." Williams said. CaJtrans officials say four factors arc driving the changes: • Increased congestion. In most urban areas, congestion is spreading at a rate of about 15 percent per year. Jn the past decade, for exam- ple, the Business 80 Freeway m Sacramento has seen an increase from 66.000 vehicles per day to more than 93,000. In 1977. about 12 miles of freeway in Los Angeles were conJCStcd for three hours or longer dunna peak periods. and only in the afternoons. But nearly SO miles of freeway are congested for three hours or longer now, including both momina and afternoon peaks. An Assembly Office of Research report predicted that the average speed on Californta highways will drop from the current 41 mph to 30 mph by the year 2000. • Earthquakes. The Oct. 17 Loma Pricta quake exposed the vulner- ability of California roadways to strona quakes. Most of the loss of life was associated with Cahrans structures. Gov. George Deu- kmejian and the l..eg:islature re- sponded by making seismic safety the No. I pnority of Caltrans. Millions wilJ be spent in the next few years to strengthen highway bridJeS and support structures, leaving fewer dollars to expand the highway sys&cm. • Air pollution. For years. air quality manaacment districts have been missing federal deadlines to reduce pollution. Although pr~ss has been measured. the cffon 1s far ahort of meeting aoals. The federal aovcmment. however, is tcllina dis- tricts to t.bow improvements or lose federal aid. Most districts are tak.ina the waminp seriously and are draft- (q. ~11ons that some motorists view u Draconjan. In the Los An- teles ~ faJ . c.Umplc. motorists face I' pftall1lt 1H' new fcca, proposed ..----,nw ........ c.. ............ a.,out of ... . 6.100-~ OcNft C...... MMI ttte 6. ·Jard c.tron Cowl• within Tiie lrvlne co. •1 ...eve Newport COatt •· v•IG•••nL Tiie Ocw c...t ... ....,. lour ...... Oft .... oc... ..._ of Pedtlc Coast Hl9llw•r fr•111ln9 cu1tom llo•••lt••· Ttl• C•nron Coune Wiii follow die upper plMeau of Newport eo..t. •1- lowlng gotf•n to pier over ttl• r1119ed arroro• of th• .... ,.... tint ........... ··- pected 1n Jutr '"'· burrow under Coast Highway and construct a 24-foot diameter tunnel complete with roman arches. The tunnel is another one of the project's roadblocks. · "It's truly a design challenge," Witt said. "We don't want to disturb the biJhway by ma.Icing an open cut. We simply want to tunnel under it." The next major deadline that the company has to meet is landscaping -9,100 trees and shrubs a~ being imponcd to line both courses' fair- ways. Included in that is the trans- plantation of several native multi- trunked Toyon shrubs. A majonty of the Toyons arc fines for motorists who run errands during rush hours and the possibility that truck travel will be banned on frccways dunng the peak commute. • Declining federal suppon. Time was that the federal government paid most of the cost of building new roads. President Bush's national transportation policy statement re- leased in March warned states to expect to pay an increasing share of highway coSts. The president spcc1fi· caTly called for toll roads. more involvement by the pnvate sector and local tax increases. Both the Reagan and Bush administrations also have been slow to ~lease feder- aJ highway funds in what criucs charge has been a conspiracy to hide the true amount of the natiortlll debt. At the time of Bush's March state- ment, the federal government owed California $33 million m construc- tion funds for previous years. CaJifom1a took a maJOr step toward boosting transportation spending in June when voters ap- proved the fuel lax and two bond issues for rail systems. But even before then, other steps were under way. One of the most Slgnificant 1s Orange County's plan to spend $2 billion on three. publicly owned toll roads. California has only one other toll road -the 17- mile drive on the Monterey Penin· sula. The San Joaquin Hills tollway would connect the John Wayne Air· port area to the M1ss1on VicJo-San Juan Capistrano area via a route through the coastal mountains. The Eastern tollway would extend from the Riverside Freeway near the R1 v- crs1de county border to Irvine. The Foothill tollway would link the East- ern tollway with Interstate S near San Clemente All three arc to be finished by m1d~ecadc. Tolls will be assessed at the rate of about 9 cents per mile, which means the San Joaquin cor- ridor will cost about SI end-t~nd. and the Foothill roadway about twice that. Caltrans , meanwhile. h as interested the private sector in build- ing four major for-profi t transpor- tation systems. AB 680 by As- semblyman Bill Baker. R-DanvilJe. was enacted last year inviting pri- vate companies to .ubmit proposals. Cahrans would donate the ri&ltt-of· way and the private companies would build and operate them for JS years before turnina the projects over to the state. In July, eilbt consortiums proposed projects and winncn arT to be selected by Sept. 1 •. One proposal would be a rail line. usina Japanete magnetic-levitation tccbnol<>&Y, that would run north .. more than 7S yean old and, due to their extensive root systems. the average price to relocate one of the shrubs 1s nearly $30,000. Though most of the trees that have been earmarked for the courses have been purchased, only 10 percent have been relocated to their new homes. .. The biaetl problem facing us is that we have to find vegetation that will grow in the sandy soil," Witt said. ''The trees arc comin' from tree farms. nurseries and literally from people's front yards. We're even importing the grass." Most new courses seed fairways and arecns and wajt for the arass to from Los Angeles International Air- port to the downtown area. It would tunnd under the Hollywood Hills into the San Fernando Valley and then go on to Palmdale. Two projects were proposed for Nonhcm California: a 90-mile toll road from FrTmont to Vacaville. skining Livcrmo~. and an under- ground roadway to replace San Francisco's Embarcadero Viaduct. Two groups are competing to build a North-South toll road in central San Diego County. In Or- an'e County, a tollway would be built from Interstate S near the Anaheim Stadium to Interstate 40S. Another would straddle the Orange and Riverside county boundary. And still ar\other would connect Moorpark and Piru in Ventura County. That isn't to say the toll projects aren't w11hout critics. Senate Presi- dent Pro Tern David Roben1, 0-Los Angeles, calls them "un-Cali- fornian." Roberti added, "There arc certain functions the government is respon- sible for and every time privatiza- tion comes up there should be strong opposition." Others agrtt with Livermore City Councilman Neil Riley that Cah- fomia 1s creating "two classes of drivers: ones who can afford 8 to 10 cents a mile for an unencumbered trip and those that can'\, who will sit on o ur clogged freewa ys." Robert Poole. transportation analyst for the Santa Monica-based Reason Foundation. counters that there's nothing wrong with accom- modating "fat cats in their BMWs" who are willing to pay user fees. To the extent that they draw traf- fic off freeways, everyone has better mobility, he argues, and the faster pace of traffic should reduce air pollution. Planner Kenneth Small's book "Road Work" su&iests rebates to low-income people 1f tinkenng with traditional h1ghway-f unding struc-. turcs causes hardships. A study by the Bay Arca Econ- omic Forum in February drew on the works of a spectrum of social and economic planners to conclude that the impact on low-income people should be minimal. Census data for the San Francisco Bay area showed that reverse com- muters have sianificantly lower in- comes than those who travel with the commuter pack, the retean:hen said. They allO concluded that low- incomc bou1ehokb tend to be usen of transit, and that any effort to reduce conaestion helps transit and van ridm. I Couple says claim that they are unfit Is false HAYES From At more tetttaint," Hayes aaid Thurs- day. "I'm sure they will. I j ust hope they do it early:· Sut wantlna othen about the SANT A ANA -An attorney rep- racatina a coupte that may aoon be in~olved In a coun fl&ht with the aurrop&c mother of their unborn eon Sunday deftied the woman•s daim1 that they would be unfit, uncari111 pucntt. Aa.oncy Olri1uan Van Deuaen laid su~te mother Anna lobn- IOft is ~nt bet claims on falte Chlllll tbal the couple muted to .,.,.. • we inturaace polq for Mr aDd Wed IO make btr Mtppon ,.,.... -time. .. £very ,.yment tblt aho waa due perils of bonded indebcednc:11 it a was peid on time and, In fact. two tidcli~. Kayes ipendt mott of bit major peymentt were made early -~Y bandlin& investments. one two wttks before it was due and He s&id Went tn money matten another one month before it _, wiU be lmporwlt in an inCreuinaJy due. .. Van Deutcn said. vo'-tile world. Haya noted tliat The couple, identified only 11 West v1,.;nia 1&aee Treasurer Jama Mark and Chris becautc of• con· Mancbin, a career Politician with an fldentiality claute in their contraa ad.m.it\cd we.knew in fi~ re-- with Johnaon, ~IO amneect a life aianed 1u1 year followtlll tbc loll ot insurance pohcy for Johnson· S300 million in tnvestmenu. . ~an Oeuten aid JohnlOn hat That will be a common ttory 1nchailed abe intends 10 sue th( where politician• make the financial couple today for .tJrctch of c:ontntt. decision• inatad of profaaional cutlOd)' ancf add.ftionaJ au~ m~ ma~ Ha,a nmed. -•I Of;1 NfflW letTb I vow, but Newport Coast will brina an 2SO acres of sod to do the job. "We're shootina to have every. thina in the ground by March of 1991 ," Witt said. ••The trick for us was to find a sod grower that would be able to provide grass that would grow in the sandy climate and could provide us with the amount that was needed. "We finally found an outfit in Thermal that was able to meet our needs." Most of the se<>loeical work bas been completed, includinc rou,h grading and storm drainaae. One unforeseen obstacle was a slide area that bad to be dut up and replaced. But m01t cballenaina to Irvine Co. en&inem was the dtainqe aystem. Golf couna, whicb are watered every ni~t, produce a tremendous amount of runoff. Enouah. cna_jncen feared, to erode the very clitra that bold the four oceanside holes and the custom homaiaea. What they came up with was a complicated system of larser dra.in pipes at stratqic loaitionL lbe drain pipes ,ct smaller until the outlet pipe controls the amount of ecdi~nt and water to escape. lbe pipes allow the courses to be ldc-- quetely drained, and a proper I amount of sediment and water still acts throuab to replcnisb the beach below. The storm drain system will actu- ally do a better job of Rmoviaa the water than nature provided the area. Also included in the desian is a multi-million dollar irription sys- tem that will be controlled by three computers. "We've built mock-ups of nearly everythina on the course," Witt said. .. With the bunkers, we've tried sev- eral types of sand and finaJly have narrowed it dat.11 to five. We water the traps every day and bit Mlls out of them to find the best material." California airman first U.S. casualty in Middle East crisis LOS ANGELES -A carur mili- tary man from California became the first American casualty in Saudi Arabia on Sunday as a result of an accident during troop preparation in the desert kingdom. the Pentagon said. John Campisi, a U.S. Air Force staff sergeant, died after being hit by a truck on a darkened runway, a Pentagon preliminary investigation indicated. ' Campisi. 30, was an aircraft maf.n- tcnance technician from Covina: He was assigned to Offutt Air Force Base in Nebraska and had been in the military since he was 18, his parents said. Campisi leaves behind a wife and four children, two girls and two boys, his parents said. "The main thin& is that he was a wonderful father," Campisi's mother, Marge Campisi, said in a telephone interview, her voice choked with emotion. "He was in- volved in everything with those kid s -scout leader. reli,ious classes. Campisi's' father. Salvato~ Cam- pisi, described his son as having "the patience of Job." "It will be very hard on those children," the cider Campisi said. John Campisi grew up in West Covina. He attended St. Christopher's School, a Catholic elementary school, and Edgewood Hiett School, a public school. The elder Campisi said his son's favorite spons then were baseball and wrestlina. Campisi is also survived by three brothers and a sister. Two brothcn arc in the U.S. Navy. One is a chief petty officer and another recently enlisted, Campisi's mother said. "One of them J. ust got back last week or he woul have aonc too," she said. Pentacon sources who s~lcc on condition of anonymity said Cam- pisi may have been wearina protec- tive car wear, impedina his ability to hear the oncomina vehicle. -By Th A...ml# P,.... MARINES "'°"' "' . Troops are trained there for delert ground combet in summer heat that ain hit 130 dqrees, Sharp aaid. The besc, with the fnotto, "One Call Oetl h All " can provide ready·to-sa srou;i troopt. air units and auppon GAY ''°"' "' A LoQa Beacb clcmtnwy tchooJ tacher, •"o ~femd to remain anonymous. ·llid althoutb be liked the event. be Would have rather teen it on a main ·~ ralber th.an ''bidden" on the UCI campu1. ~ Wal1"" of Ontario~ .. We'iit ci..._ of &he CJ.S •• " Wiiiia said. "We have \be •.me rijbU 11 anyone '° .-mble. 8'11 be '°'need out tbat "IOlftCtimel you haw to We& what you can tn and WOik from therp. •• Jobn Cu~ of LI Palma liked the idea or bd111 leduded at UCJ . .. , felt kind ~°' .. re any fro,n the Middle East at a glance , Herc, at a aJance, arc the major developments Sunday in the Middle East crisis; SADDAM'S STATEMENT: Saddam Hussein says he is ready to resolve the Persian Gulf crisis if Israel withdraws from the occupied territories and Syria oulls out its troops from lebenon. He says "many will be burned" if war breaks ouL The Iraqi president also demands the withdrawal of U.S. troops from Saudi Arabia and the end to U.N. economic unctions against lraQ. which forocd him to ask his people to be thrifty with meat and clothina. • Israel rejccu Saddam's proposal as "cheap propapnda." Preai- dential spokesman Marlin Fitzwater said the United States "catesori- cally rejects'' the Iraqi propoul. U.S. MILITARY: A U.S. airman dies in Saudi Arabia in a car accident. He is the first American killed in the desert kinp:lom since President Bush ordered the U.S. military d~loymcnt last week. Defense analysts say sending U.S. military forocs to Saudi Arabia will cost an estimated $300 million to $440 million a month. MILIT Al\Y MOVD: Ten thousand Earptian and Moroccan troops arcjoinina the S0.000 U.S. soldicn mov101 into Saudi Arabia. Syria, a nciabbor of Iraq, has also pledaed troops. Turkilh Premier YiJdirim Altbulut aays be will ask Parliament for the power to declare a state of war and send armed fon:es into combat if the crisis worsens. FOREIGNERS IN IRAQ AND KUWAIT: A British citizen is reponedly shot in Kuwait near the Saudi border. and scores of foreiancrs return to their homelands with stories of rapes and killi~ by Iraqi soldiers. Penelope Nabokov, the I ().year.old California &irl who was detoured by the blitzkrieg on her way to visit her mother. fled to freedom Saturday and wu on her way to meet her parents Sunday. An Iraqi •5esman quoted by Bqhdad radio said the authorities have n instructed to "facilitate the travel of the Arabs and foreian reside ts in Kuwait and other cities of southern Iraq." It was not clear whether the spokesman meant forcianen in Kuwait could leave the country. SANCl'IONS: U.S. and allied warships poise to meet Iraqi tankers comina from the Persian G ulf. Red Sea or McditCTT1nean Sea. Iraq is dependent on oil exports to buy food and supplies for iu 17 million people. Secretary of State James Baker saya he doesn't believe nations wiJI ianore the economic aanctions apinst Iraq because "the independence of the industrialized world it at stake." ANTl·U.S. DEMONSTRATIONS: About 10,000 Palestinians demonstrate in a refuaee camp in southern leblnon in auppon of Iraq. Some chant .. Death to America!" A PLO official says SOO youths are voluntccrina to flaht with Iraq apinst a possible American anack. Another pro-Iraqi demonstration is reported in Jordan. ln BanaJadcsh, hundreds ralJy apinsl the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait. -By Th A....aa'*' ,,,..,_ services. Meanwhile, C SB carao carricn weR seen earlier in the week at Nonon Air Force Bue near San 8crnard.lno. The betc n01"11\ally does not station such planes there. A newapeper quoted Marines and their wives u •yi,na the aoldim ~" ready to be airlifted. Nearby raidcntt of mJlh.ary beset also noted stepped.up activity. "There'• a lot of act.ion ~1 1oina on all day and all njpt, .. 1AJC1 Ken- neth C. McFarland a diaabled vet-eran who lives ln ~ city of Twen· tynine Palms. -•r n. A-.eMI# Prwa • ' Working can be a ~ay -at. the beach It may be IWDIDC(time, but tbe livin' doesn't ,et any easier for hilb 1ehool C01Cbel, wbo ofteft must sup- plement their inc:oma with part- time joba. For walk~ a •real job" it oothina out of the onfuwy, of coune. But even tbe tacher-co1eh lookt for ways to keep an edee on the hith cost oflivina on the 0raqe Coul For several coeches, however, the problem of summer employment it nothina more than a day at the beach -literally. Rocky Cia:rdli. tbe boys volleybell coach at Hwuinaton Beach Hilb. and Tom Pettolosi. wbocoecbes tbe boys and airt• volleyball teams at Estancia flilb. help pay bills wort- ina as referees for the Auociation of Volleyball Professionals men's pro beach tour. Water polo coecbel Mau Whit· more (Edison Hiah>. Mike Eich ~ountain Valley Hiah), Tom Denny C.Cntury Hiah by way of Ocean iew) and Duncan MeCullocb (Huntinaton Beach ffiah) also main- tain summer office boun near the sand and surf u lifquards. Gordan Duff. a track and croa country coaCb at Edison is another Hunt- iDf.tOn Beach lifeauanl 'It's a fabulous summer job," said Whitmore', who is a substitute teacher when 1ehool is in session, ,,._ .. '" f AULKNElt/12J T~nnls Strauss among victors NEWPORT BEACH -Third- seeded Courtney Strauss, who will be a senior at Corona del Mar Hiah this faJJ, was amona the victon durina the finals of the Balboa Bay Oub Junior Tennis Oassic at Balboa RacQuet O ub Sunday. Strauu deteated Allison Llaht. the fourth seed 4-6 6-0, 6-4, to capture the airts' I ~nd-under division as a week's competition of tenniJ con- cluded. In the boys' I I-and-under final, it wu 14-year-old Eric Un of Anaheim who emC!'led victorious over Brad Gibson. Lin, who won't tum IS until October rallied for a 4-6, 6-4 6-2 decision over the 18-year-old Gibson. Victorville's Julie Banks con- tinued her dominatina run throuah the sirls' 14-and-under sinales division. Banb, who won her tint three rounds of the tournament, 6-0, 6-0. surrendered three pmes in a sema- final triumph on Saturday. ,In Sun- day's final, Banks was victorious over Debbie Vonusa, 6-2, 6-3. The 12-and-under airls' division featu~ a matchup between the two top seeds. It wu Tracy Keyser outJastina Katie Tierney, 6-3, 7-6. Tierney, however, did claim a victory in the 12-and-under doubles. , In the &iris' 16 doubles, the team of Bee and Beam Amesbutr, twin sisters, downed their opponents. 6-3, 6-2. Jamie Fouret overcame a slow start to defeat Joanna Felton, 1-6, 6-~.~2. to secure the airls' I 8s title. vmer boy.' win:nen in sinsJes included Mike Swaine ( 121). a win- ner over Ben Spriqcr; Richard Shen (14t)J.. who defeated Daniel Roditi; and DOb Nauyen (I 61). who aot past Trenton lthodes. •r ,.. 1"'JJr ru.t ' W~ne Cir._ ....... Illa clult Ill vlc10r7 .tier win. ....... NA tltle ~· ' Neidlinger lifts LA wit'1 ·7-3 triUmph ATLANTA' -Jim Netdlinaer's fint major-lcque victory did not go the way he wanted it to. Neidlinaer. a 25-year-old risht· bander, allowed seven hits in seven inninas Sunday to lead the Los An- aetes Ood&ers past the Atlanta Braves 7-3. · .. I've been in the minor lcqucs for almost seven years." Neidlinaer said. "Everyone dreams about beina in the m~ors. I've been dreaminft about it' since I wu eisht years old. Hubie Brooks his a three-run homer for the Dodsers, who have won four oflheir last five pmes and six of their last seven apinst Atlanta. The Braves have lost nine of their last 11 pmes and I S of their last 18. Neidlinaer (1 -1) was mak.ina bis third m~or-leque start. Schedule AT IAT Mon: Ye'*s 7:35 ON O•CK Tue: Yanks IC 7:35 IN TH• NOL• Wed: Yenks IC 7:35 Al Mmes on KMPC radio (710) • On TV, Ch. 5; ac SoonsC~ ..It was the worst of the three. as far as havina aood stuff is concerned," Neidlinaer said. "When you act a three-run lead, you don't have to make that aood pitch every time. I wu throwina strikes. but not quality ftrikts like the other two times.·· Neidlinaer struck out four and 1'9ew '" DODGIRS/12f Langston ripped by Orioles in 11-6 rout ANAHEIM -Add Rene Gonzales and Jeff McKniaht to the list of players who've already made this a Iona season for Mark Lanpton. l.aniston aot rocked apin and the California Anaels sot routed 11-6 Sunday by the Baltimore Orioles as Gonzales drove in four runs and McKniaht went 4-for-4 and scored four tjmes. Schedule AT I AT Mon: et lreves tbs 4:AO ON o•ac Tue: et Meta (2) • wor 2 IN TH• MOL• Wed: et Meta W ~ AM Nmet on KABC radio (7'0) •On TV, Ch. 1'; ac SoonsCNMel llDONGHAM. AIL -Wayne Grady ftMly ._.. W. ,_..... -. wit1t a >«rote ~ in tile POA Qa•pM a ''s • S dsy, =. advaa• of tile fiUJwa d du'ec ~·w1.o'"C'-~29 ~ ftaithes in bit pro toll career that stariid ill bit bome COUDtl')' of Australia. needed only a dolinl rouad of I-under_,., 1 I to matdl the ~-towaament victory total of hit idol and countryman. Orea Norman. Each bu one. Grady, 33, wbo now resides in Orlando, Fla., won a battle of attrition over tbe 4eep l'OUlb. the water and lbe trees of Shoal Creek. -He eot at least one fortunate bounce otr a pine tree but benefited even more from the varied mitfortunes that llruc:k down ddcnd-ina champion Payne S1eWUt. 43-year.,old Gil Morpn and Fred Couples. Couples wWnd up tee0nd t.bree strokes 'behind Grady's 6-under-par 282. .. .. ~.. . .. Ali were in contention at one time or another. AU blc1ed away oo lhe mucb-maliped layout that Fuzzy Zoeller c:a1led "the hardest damn aolf coune I've ever played in my life." Stewart wu the fini to a<> in the m'clllY. 90-plut depee beat. He hit his third shot into a pond in &Ocit of the 11th peea.. When the ball aot wet. Stewart lost h.is chance to become the first man in SJ years to defend this title. The bell in the water led to a tril>&o-boleY 1, a .. aoowman .. in Pi:rs' putance. Stewart blew to a 79. inef&adina-41 on the back. and tiimbed 10 shots back and tied for eilb1b at 292. ... believed in my bones 1 was eoina to win." be said, sbakina hit head and m&Dllina a weak smile. ''At least I didn't shoot 80." Morpn, a non-practiciftl opM>metrist from Edmond, Okla., wbo shot a 65 on Saturday, at one potnt wu a ainale stroke off' the pace. But he let a tee shot set away to the riabt -far to the riabt -oo tbe par-3 13. He took two more strokes to reach the rock-bard puttina IW'face and took a double boley. Morpn matcbed par 72 and was third at 216. Couples, a hinf-hittina. laid-bllck _.,Y called .. Boom Boom" by his fellow ~ lost a little or his Califonua cool -u weU u tbe lead in the tolf tournament -with the IUina of four comecubve boli:YI bcainnina on the 13th. Three of them came on millCd putts of 3--4 feet; the other after a visit into a bunker. He, too, shot 72. "When I needed it, lhe touch just wasn't tbete," be said. Grady, on the other hand, aot a break when be needed it. On the I Sth, with the issue still very much in doubt. he ~ a ,,.._ ... PGA/a21 'Tm excited and happy, but it's just one pme," said McKniaht. who replaced iajured Ron Kittle at first base. "l've aot to enjoy them when I have the chance." GonzaJcs, who bas replaced the disabkld Bill Ripken at second base. Adllnta ••ve1 lfM»llatop Jeff •-• I,.._.'" ANGILS/12) pe1 ...... to evoN die llNe of Dall11w ... • ....,.,. ... In .................... . ~· _. In Allutta. D••11n ...._ 7·1. 'Dream Team_ 90' ready to take best shot 1bey call themselves the Dream They can hit fint serves with Team ( 19)90, but in reality they're power and accuracy, place tbe tce- nothina but a bunch of reautar auys ond setVe and are abfe to rush the who have a love affair with the pme net succatfully. of tennis. There were two teaaues in Oranae Beainnina Friday and tastina County tbit year at the 4.S.level. ~~ Suncia}',Jhetll be parti~-with four teams in each taaue. the ll an lbe USTNVolvo Tenn11 winners from each k.-a&ue, Los Sectional Championsbipt at Cabllletot and Sunny llills, met in the Cablllerol Sporu ViU• in a district playoffwitb Loi Caballeros Fountain Valley. prevailina. 4-1, for tbe filJ!t to ad· At stake will be the men's and VIJKle to the teetionalt or Southern worritn'1 titles in the 2.S th~ S.O Califomia Cbun~i~ divitioot, with the division in Which Other ate11 wbicb will be~ you play bci1111 baled on tbe ulional raented at Llait level wilJ be San ralina propam. This it a IY*tn in Qieeo. Nonb = Va.tun wbidt a ~Der it rated r .o and a CoWaty, Su . Valley, Su wodd dul pla}'Cf it a 7.0. · Fcmaado Valley ud San&a a..t.t'I Tbc Dream Team plaJI out of tbe County. LOI Caballerol ~Vil ... qd it TM liJl eeamt will be~ one of*-teams &om &.bere to into two .aioal ud eecb *"' wiU mab the teetional DlafC?trl. They = odftr IWO llllU in it1 compete in the ... , clivtlioft. wbicb if ne wtftnen of .. bnctet you ID by the NTRP llMIM they will la oft'lbr tbe fillat to 10 to the have beaun to muter the'* of 4.S aadoeilt la T'9CIOa in~. pow Pd spins and_. beliuina f.d malda coeew of dliee to.._._.. Tlwyllk.vetoud ...._ ....... ...,...._ .. lbGcwort, CM aMttrOl 6 clll8 o/ ............ wiftiUlll""" ............. to".!!} ~ ..... offtwe. • ~~to dfeir °"'a nn't We'" kilMI of 1 CWl)OWf tom " . ' last year when we lost sn the 4.0 sectJonal finals." team captain Mark Wold said. "We bad a lot of char- isma and spontaneity and the team was really pepped up. This year half oflhat team was moved up and we added a few more to make 13. .. We're j ust a bunch ofaverqe au~ that set t•thcr and have • lot of fun playina tennis.. Most ofut have never played t.mnis on a real compc,itivc level before. so it would be a real 'hrill for us if we could make h to the nationals. We'd just lite to see bow we match up with ~ rest of &he nation at our level." The Dmun Team 90 is made up of Tom ADdcrlOft and OU Elcobar from El Toro Bob Seal-a from Buena Park. hul Qodftey, Ken Heneiee, Jeff Rkbmoad, Mike Nuh and 8riu tcau &om Fwn\lin Va~ ley, and Duane Emde, lob Kilner. Brian Mauch. John SchOolet and Wold tom Hunti11110n 8tadl. ne ,..,.. ranee &om 11t l9 to '4 wida IDOi& Uiftt iaeo tbe Ulll'tf ··-=)O's. ........ . ..... . ·.-1 -· .... ~. ........ ._. ..... apprulCT1. ,...,.. ketina manaaen for Mitsubishi. en- pneen for RoclcweU, medical re- cords investiptors, ensincers. tcbool teae:~ salesmen. roofina .contracton and middk mlftllCmeDt at McDonnell Oouatas. The Dream Team 90 bas a bye on Friday and will play two matches on Saturday. "We'll prOO.bly Ute 11 auys be- tween the two matches." Wold said. "One of our IUY' (Mauch) will be on bis bonetmoon. There will be a lot ofttratqy involved in~ when and bow wt play in each s'pol We're aoina to ~t an opponunhy to k>ok at t0me of our ~&I oo fridar, bcaatc of our bye. lllat will help will bde witb our..,.. plu. "for eumple, wt MW OM pay who woukl rather pAay ipinlt~ one who bi&t reel bard uad we Ibo have IOmeOM wfrM>'a I real ftne. player. I woukl•'t want to pAay tlM aecond ~--a .... hard Wtw lf I cu I it. •• .,.. ..... )OUdoD't " ....... ., .. .. up dlil kiad o1 ...... -... ... wc1l liliave a linle dlsMI to tCCMll. ..AJI tcuaallofa.yottMP11 -----------.. ._..,.:.......:----, !lrthbold unanimous wlp_ner • U0WD 1K8 flAilbill& IOCODd ...._. Alltl ... IM ~ ._ ... Clla ... I Oenit•'•DIMAedi ......... ... -LAOUNA ~OUEL -san Oemeote•a Mau :Third ~ 1tfCDl to Tedi a•' M alNtt:?J A}dabold made hi• coldtbeck complete Sundar u •he with s '°°1 and fourtll .._ .-. 10iY .. _ ••-•··•---• awM his way lo victory al lbe SS0,000 L.apna Vinco La hna, Sl.JOQ, ·. Spottaweer Oulic at Salt Creek leecb Palk. Aadioo, tbe two-time U.S. lide nm·.., ... • AR:bbokt. comina otr 1 fourth pMce flnilb at the tbreHilne MaWMa evens rt "'*' ...,_IM .._. Su Clemente PSAA event lutmonth dominaled the lead from Florida's a.die ·K"da: "Neit. .._ =~ .. ._. takioa a· una.ftimous decision. S~ Tour boldl ita tWlda ol 11 .. II • Archbold, 21. hu IWftd dilieently after oompletin.r famcu 5'arftider lbcb re;, the s'°.ooo CrOaldll .,, • ~ and &lClObol ~bilhatioft prosram in May or Oualc neJtt weekeftd. . . t1Us year. He is considered &mOJ\I the world'• most It wu an all-Haw 8MI in tbe ~ natu.rally talented surfers and many bave always Pttdio-division where three-time deliDdi.llla ·_dwnpiC>la ~ *1 success if and when be took a mo~ dedicated Stewa.n of Kailua-K.ona daimed bit tJ.itd ~ictOfY "' the ~b to competitive surfing. season. . "Everythina's been aoina. riiht for me lately," said Stewart topped three memben otthe Kauai Oa11ic Archbold. ··1 want to keep it up and not let myself bodrboard team, H&n")' An~ (-..cl place). Kyle down." Mal..,.o (third place), ind "8od "Browia (fourth place), Archbold colleeted $7 ,000 for first place, an ad-all from Xalabeo-Kallua. • ditional $400 &om the Body Olove Heat winner's prize Stewart's victory allowed bJm to llM:rale bat pool, and $200 for \he Waencrschniu.el Wiener Dude season points rati.np lead ovu te00nd-rated Ben Award for the best wave of the day. Severson of Wabjawa. Hawaii. PGA From81 drive £v to the riabt. The ball was beaded toward the rou&h that had swallowed so many golf balls and gol~ hopes. It hit a towerin.& pine tree deep in the six-inch rouah and bounced back into the fairway. He made par from that point and brought it home, finisbmg with a 6-under-par 282 total, one of only lhrec men to crack the grudging par of Shoal Creek. But it was far from easy. "I'm just flad it's over," Grady said. ··1 don t think I could have gone any further." He was forced to do th.at last year in the British Open. After complet- ing 72 holes in a lie witb Norman and Mark Calcavecchia, he went to a playoff. And he lost. It simply added to the runner-up record that was becoming his trademark. Grady, whose only previous vic- tory in this country came in the 1989 Westchester Classic. turned tha1 image around with an exhibition of sclf-<:ontrol in the run down the stretch. "He didn't do anything fooHsh," said Stewan, who played in the same twosome with the new champion. "He kept his composure." _____ ,._ ___ PAID ADVERTISEMENT Anyone who spent time at the Los Angeles Auto Show last year had a chance to see the forerunner of GM's first mass-produced electric car. In other words. General Motors Is making the commitment to be the first automobile company since the turn of the century to otter an electric car for commuters. Called the Impact, GM's battery-powered prototype Is the first to make Inroads Into the performance range needed to be competitive with gasoline-powered cars. The Impact is a 2,200-pound, 1631nch-long "compact" that holds two people. Think of a Honda CRX. The Impact Is powered by two AC lndllctlon motors that drive the front wheels through a single-ratio planetary transmission. Producing 57 horsepower and a 94 pound-feet of torque combined. Unlike a gasoline-powered engine, the electric motors don't need to be revved to produce their power. as the maximum torque Is available from O to 6.000 rpm. This translates Into lntsant power that catapults the Impact to 60 mph In eight seconds -sports car territory. With Its 32 10V Delco Remy lead-acid batteries In series under the car's central tunnel, the Impact has 42.5 amp- hours capacity at 13.6 kwh. The battery pack weighs 870 pounds. At a constant 55 mph. the Impact can travel 120 miles be1ore It needs another two-hour charge. Two Interesting notes are the Impact's brakes that regenerate energy back to the batteries through the drive motors, and specially designed Goodyear tires. The~lres are developed to run on 65 psi (twice the pressure of normal car tires) and therefore have a rolling resistance of Just .0048, or half that of typical tires. The tires are P-165/65R 14s mounted on forged aluminum 14x4-lnch wheels made specially by Alcoa. Con- structed with glass-fiber unit body technology, the Impact slips thrQugh the air with a drag coefficient of just .19, or nearly half that of today's most aerodynamically efficient cars. The Impact's biggest hurdle will be operating cos\ as It currently needs a $2,500 replacement battery pack every 20,000 miles. With today's battery technology.the Impact would cost nearly twice as much to operate as a gasollne- powered car. • • • A strange note from an Indiana cemetery. Seems that Mrs. Aurora Schuck was so attached to her red 1976 Cadillac Eldorado convertible that when she passed away. she wanted the car to go with her. Her husband decided to grant her wish and purcha~ 14 plots In the local cemetery and constructed a concrete- llned bunker to accommodate the car and casket. With only 42, 700 miles on the Cadillac. the convertible could make It through another lifetime, so to speak. . . . If you're hungry for technology, then Mitsubishi and Dodge have a car that should send you out Into orbit. Called the Mitsubishi 3000GT VR-4 and Dodge Stealth R/T Turbo. these mechanical twins offer every piece of go-fast hardware known to man. Prepare yourself for this list: four-wheel drive, four- wheef steering, four-wheel anti-lock disc brakes, twin turbo- charges, twin lntercoolers for the turbos, electronlcalllly ad)uatab'8 suspension, sound and restrlclton adjustable exhaust system. and on the Mitsubishi, etectronlcally ad- Ju.table front and rear spoilers. Amazing eh? So what does aJI this mean? It means that the Mlwublahl-bullt 3000GT and Stealth are preparing to do battle wtth the Nissan 300 ZX Turbo and Chevrolet Corvette. For an •tlmated $30,000 the Stealth and 3000GT offer a leYef of eophlstlcatlon unmatched by any car In a teature-to- feature contest. With 300 horsepower on tap, the oars are rumored to reach 60 mph In 5.5. seconds and hav'e a top IPMd In exoeaa of 160 mph. tf you atmpty can't fathom the complexity of the top-line moo.ta, then both Dodge and Mltaublahl wlll offer a front- wheel drtve Stealth and 3000GT without the turbos. In various trim, the cars wlll atart at arourid S16,000 and offer a 184 horsepower V-6 (Dodge only) or a 22 horeepower V-6 and varloua combtnattona of the top car'a featurea. So how do you prepare to Mii a car wfth euch a daunting array of technofoglcal wt.zardry? Herbor Mltaubflhl'• presi- dent, Timothy AuJc, M1d the educattonal procea haa llr.dy atarted for hl11taff. "With a car u complex u thll, our ~ have already sterted wfth training tapes and wlll be ~ apeclal day-long aemlnara to help them ep- Pf .a.l• how adwnc.d this Whlde la," Ru6o noted. tn eddttlon, Ralc w.nt on to uy that ft '• their priority to mllk• aure their cuatomera complet•y underltand the velt ~ b9nenftt1 that the 30000T VR-4 •!11 offer. M Alllc , ''ft'• llmpfy an awelOme ear.'' Grady, armed with a 2 ... uotc lead when the day's play s~ quickly expanded it with three birdies and a bojey on the first four boles -a net gain of two. But a bosey from the·ro~ on the ninth and Couples' front SJ<I\ of 34 cut that marain to one. · Consecutive birdies from Couples -a two-putt on the par-S I Ith and a 12-footer on the 12th -and Grady's bogey after he missed the 12th green, shifted the lead into Couples' hands. But the lead was fleeting for Cou- ples, who immediately staned his bogey binge. ANGELS From81 got three ofBalt1more's 16 hits. "He (Langston) wasn't getting ahead of the hitters." Gonzales said. "Because he's Marie Langston, you know he'IJ &et hot I'm aJad WC caught him when he's not on fire." Langston (S-15) lasted only 21f', innings and gave up eight runs on six hits. He bas lost 10 of his last 11 decisions and dropped nine straight at Anaheim Stadium. His earned-run average increased to 4. 79. "He had very good stuff but wasn't able to throw enough brcakina balls for strikes," California Manager Doug Rader said. "It gave them a chance to sit on his fastball. ··we'll confront them and conquer his problems, and help him again be the great pitcher that he is." Langston wasn't available after the game. He'd left the ballpark before the game ended. Baltimore won for only the second ume in seven games to prevent what would've been their first sweep by California since August 1978. John Mitchell (5-4) went 51f> in- nings for the victory. Mark Wil- liamson pitched 31 1 innings for his first 58\-C. 0 ANGEL NOTES -Lefl·llandef Cll4lclr 'INav, lrvlll9 10 D«orne CalHomla'' fin! 20· 9ame winner •Ince N'6all llv11n won n In 1'74. "" rt llrad lllt feadoff baller In 17' of his in lnnlr191. 0< 13 oerctnl ol 11141 lit'N ... Mklrey T~ lfrUCk OUI '"'" more llmet ~ ... few a ieaion tole! ot 12?, w11hln lllrM of .... ~-ti'• 81lllmor• rte0<d of 125 wt In 19'6 .... When CM lllpltt11 ul out Ille 11,..1 ~ lnnln9' of Satvrd1v nl9111·1 u me, It r-ltd Ille 161h lime -119111 01 1nem 1111, , .. IOI! -lie ""' l>N1I relied dvrln9 llb onoolnci 1.3'3·Hmt P1avlnc1 llrHlo. St.ow l"IPNY wenl 7-for-lS In the"""" Hmt lt<'itS a91tns1 Int AnQell .. In his !All flff ''•''' •nd ?O lnnlnc11, L1"91lon ''" l>N1I ripped IOI 41 11111 I nd 29 H ''*' run1. t \3.0S ERA DODGERS From Bl walked none. The only runs he allow- ed scored on Ron Gant's two-run homer 10 the sixth. his 21st this season. "I threw my chanseup more than the other times:· Neidlinger said. "I wasn't quite as sharp as the other two games. The other times I threw quali- ty pitches all the way." Jim Gott. wh o on Saturday got his first save since Sept. 27, 1988. pitch- ed I 1-3 10n1ngs for the save. Tom Glavinc (6-9) lost his third consecutive stan. allowing ~vcn runs and eight hits in four innings. G lavine. winless since July 17, struck out four and walked five. Los Angeles took a 3-0 lead in the first on Eddie Murray's RBI sm&le and Rick Dcmp~y·s two-run double. Murray singled home another run in the fourth and Brooks followed with his 14th home run of the season for a 7-0 lead. "I've been struu.hng off and on. but today I got the ball up and it went out," Brooks said. "We cau&ht LA at a bad time," Atlanta Manqer Bobby Cox said. "They have their best hmina lineup I've seen m years. A lot of them •~ hot right now." Dave Justice hit an RBI sinale in the eighth off Ray Scaraac. 0 oooe•• MOHi -Alleflte i. !flt fll'•I mtlor lt-.ue twn lo low 10 MmM "* ... Mfl Lot A""* It lt-11 .W. IN Al•Sltf w..- ond ._ • ..Wt IN lt•wtt ""-veer -TN DodtW• 1\11¥9 ellOwed ~ """' Of ...., "' ,, of tl'ttlr ••I l4 ""'"-·-1..0I A,.._ Nt tllOwM ,,... NM 111 llt lest to'h """'*--· Jutlo NH Ml llOIN r\IN Ill lllt IMI M¥Wn .. mft. -· OteVtnl ttwft 0 .itc::Nt Ill .... flnl IM!fte -LAMl9 ...... ._. IN *"°"" l..tHw wllfl ,,. If ... . .. • • Spons b~ak After 44 years, elder ..--.... .-....lllllllJ""'~~~ ' Elkins watches on perform at same site WllT-LIN-For.Jd DiMll e -.1.IDIL ••.f'orMIDIDilll -il"911 .... ID ..... ... ..... SatunllJ &o .. • ,., ' • ....... 44 ,.,. ....... be bid Diil •aU.s.~ ..... Hecametoeee IUa-. Mk ... at quarter'** fbr tho ICauu City Qle6. . IU1 UM ,a l r l!ltim bad a di•ppoinUni ~ iD • 19"-mibidoa '°" to the iwm; throWiie two ID~ and ,ettins sacked three Wnel u the CIUe6 p juac 49 net yards ln the ftnt half. Hil ftnt ~ wu in1mlepted and led to a kam to\ICbdown. Hia fifth pass wu picked off at tbe Rams' I S-~line, endina a Kansas City drive tet up by a Jood P\lf\l ~um. ..To throw tbe bell effectively and acxurately you ve to tel your Tee!t "' wo Chiefs beief coach Many Schottenheimer. "M~e didn't have the time to ,et tel.. . Jack Elkins Ud more success in his aPJ)C&l"IJKle on the field in 1946. His Army team from the fran.tfun area defeated a Berlfo·bued unit, 14-12, before abou.1 101000 GJs. "The area all around the stadium had been leveled by bombs but the stadium was int.act," he sa.id. "I don't l"eCOIJllze the town at aU.t" The cider Elkins said he did not srasp the historical significance of the stadium when be played there. It was the site where, 10 years earlier, Jette O~ns had upstaged Adolf Hitler by winnina four Olympic gold medals. "It meant just another football game," he said. "At 20 yea.rs old you really don't grasp the history around you. We~ so busy trying to set Hitler out of our minds and JCt back to normal Jiving." But Jack Elkins, a one-time catcher in the Brooklyn Dodgen organization, did not miss the significance of watchin• his son play an NFL pme in Berlin. "It aets you alJ choked up. It's a great feelial." he said before the pmc. "Mike is the last of six children. To see him be successful, with a ooU~ dcaree and a place in the NFL is very fulfilling.• -· I ~ -. . . · · • · >: 1 " · ,, e BROSTERHOus· TURN-ONS * Dodgers-Braves. TBS, 4:3S p.m. * Giants-Biiis. Channel 7. 6 p.m. * Op Pro surfing, ESPN, 6:30 p.m. ,,. ..... -- Graf secures SOth pfo tltle .. With her 50tb pro sinJ)es title in • • band. Scdli Graf will start on the next SO _,,,,,,- at the U.S. Ooen. Graf won her SOth title Sunday in her final tournament tuneup for the Open, defeating Manuela Malccv~ragnaerc, 6-3, 6-2, in the tour- nament fmal in San Diego for the second strai&ht year. After runnina her match record this year to 4~3. the top-ranked Gm pronounced herself ready for the final Grand Slam event of the year. Jn other tennis Sunday: 8 Stefan Edberg. living up to bis new No. I tennis rankin&. needed f·ust SO m inutes to ~efeat .B~d Gilbert in the final o the ATP Champ1onsh1p an Maton, Ohio. Edberg. the top seed, rolled past GiJbert. 6-1 , 6-1, in a rematch of last year·s final at the Jack Nicklaus Sports Center. Gilbert beat Edberg. 6-i, 2-61 7-6 (7-5), last year. Gilbert was limited to 27 points 1n the two sets. Rudd overcomes shaky start .J,=;. r--.-. ·-· ' . Rjclcy Rudd kept his cool durins a difficult first half and wound up running off with the Budweiser at the Glen NA.SCAR stock c.ar race Sunday at Watkins Glen (N.Y.) Internatio nal. The victory gave the Hendrick Motorsports team, which fields four cars in most Winston Cup events, its first.win of the season. Rudd, ~ho spun out on the I 0th of 90 laps in the 219-msJc race after bumpinJ Geoff Bodine in heavy traffic, also had to make two unscheduled pit stops because of flat tires. In other sports news Sunday: •Thierry Boutscn of Belgium stayed ahead of the bumper-car race behind him and won a wire-to- wire victory in the Hungarian Grand Prill in Buda- pest. Boutscn withstood the pressure of Brazilian Aynon Senna over the last 13 laps to win by less than 20 yards in a record I hour. 49 minutes. 30.597 seconds. 8 The wedding bells arc on hold again for Lakcrs sw Magic Johnson. The former Michigan State basketball star said his wedding. which had been scheduled for Sept. 1, was indefinitely postponed. Johnson is engaged to Earlctha Kelly. 31. of Detroit. "We're still t~ther and everything. but ~·re JUSt going to wait.' Johnson said. • Philippe Tourret of France upset a top field in the men's 110 hurdles to highli.R.ht the fourth inter- national track and field meet in F'ontvieille, Monaco. In winning in 13.28, Tourret defeated some of the top specialists in the hurdles, such as world record-holder Roger IUngdom, who finished fifth in 13:57, and Tony Dees, the top American this year. who was third behind teammate Arthur Blake. Meanwhile, Robeno Hernandez of Cuba broke the stadium record in the 400. finishing in 44.30 seconds to beat Olympic relay gold medalists Danny Everett •nd Butch Reynolds. From ~ Auocl•td Prn1 QUOTE Of THE DAY ~, ......... oe,..pic ...... -..a•l,a s' 1•...-•il ... -.................. fl., ............... ,.. ...... .. FAULKNER do." Ciarclli explained. "I under- stand the yelling. having had a per· spective from the other side. J just don't let it bother me as a referee." "Without volleyball. 1 wouldn't have been able to sec the parts oft.he country I have, having played in the indoor nationals," Pestolesi said. "It's really a pretty nice setup work· 1na out-of-town events. They take care of your airfare. rental car and hotel room as well as gave you per diem." From Bt but has worked with the Hunungton Beach Junior Lifeguard program the past seven summers. "It's definitely better pay than coaching. You actu- aJly get paid for the hours you work." Ciarelli and Pestolesi are both rook.Jes th~ year on the AV P c1rcu1t, having been scheduled for thrtt and two tournaments respectively. Both. however. hope to work mto a heavier assignment load in the years to come. .. They have 2S tournaments and I think I'd eventually like to do about half of them," said Ciarel!!i who has been known to bum an omcial's cars both as a player and a coach. "I think as a rtf, you·rc going to cct yelled at no matter what you Boating Ciarclli. who has worked tour- naments in Cape Cod, Manhattan Beach and will work the upcoming Seattle event, said his new role in the spor1 has been challenging as well as rewarding on and off duty. "I've played with and apinst most of the play~rs and I know nearly all 1hc officials," he said. "Travclina to a tournament is almost like a vacation, because after you do your work, you get to go out and have fun with people you know as friends. I enjoy b.ana.ina out with the other referees. They're really a nice aroup of people." Pestolesi would also like to enjoy the travel aspect of the job, after workina at Manhattan Beach and Seal Beach this year. Pestolesi admits the job requires concentration, but it also has its sh.are of benefits. "I enjoy watching the best players m the world." Pcstolcsi said. ''I've JOt the best scat m the house. even 1fl do have to pay the price once in a while. I'm not just there to pick up a paycheck. although that doesn't hurt either. I enjoy bcina around the game." Bury hllher h u <>nap CN•I Dauy PU.I S,.rt• Wrliu wtoie e.l•.llUI •~n nery MM-a,. Flight of the Swans to Bandit ly ALMON LOCKAUY ~ ................ Bandit, a Swan..46 skippered by Randall Melton of Denver, wu the overall and C1au A winner of the Aiaht of the Swans. a fave-.noc rcp1- ta sailed in the ooean under the auspica of BaJt>OI Yacht Oub. Bandit won four of the five raoes to claim Ute Balboa Yacht Oub Perpetual for the event. The Swan is known as the "Rolls Royce .. o( the production sallbolt industry. They m daianed in aev- mJ sites by suth well-known dc- lipet'I u SP*fkman It Stephens, Ron Holland and Omnan Fren and are built sn Finland. Price ranae of the oewet and laf'IC' boeta it abou1 Sl00.000. 0... A and B were sailed under the Jnternational1 Measurement System (IMS) and Class C (the cruis- ina clua) was 11.ilod under the Pe,.. formance Handicap Racina Aeet (PHRF) handicap rule. CL.AS.S A-l. 91M1t !.._....), It.-. Melloft, Dtlww; I. Te .. Mu CS-.-•>, Mell ~.~YC. a.AU .... , ,.......,. ( ....... 0 ), ...,. Qulvnil, ..._ VC; 1. JMl.u. Al \Avv, Sellttl ..y Yodll ltoclnt CJl.e. Cl.ASS C-t. ......,_ (Sw ..... a l. CIYi. WtttW, ~ YC. In ot.hcr raci~ 8 LONO BEACH -Randy Sm~h. fonnerly o( Huntl~on Beacb and now livina in Florida. waa beck in hi.a borne waten 1att Met 10 win one of the few cata.mann aailina tJtJa be hadn •t previoutly won. • Smyth, with crewman Olen Purcdl. won the 10.f"ICC United Stales Yacht Racina Union (USYRU) Alter Cup, symbolic of tbe national mul1ihull cham- pionship. The event was ailed in Prind&e-18.2 catamarans. Smyth and bit ~w won ai• of the nine noes. aJlowins them to sit out the 10th. Smyt11 has been Amcnca·s top catamaran sailor for over 10 years. Wbile livina in Huntinaton Beach. be won two Tornado aa.. world championships and an Qlympk sil- ver medal in the 19M orympica. Last year, he doeed hia sail mak- ina bull.neu in Huntjnston Beach and moved to F1ori4a to concentrate on bit proftllional um,.. career. P\a:Cint IKOnd i.n \be At&er Cup WU Jay Olwr of Newpon Bach, Smytb'a ~ aewu•n. Crewi• for Ota.r waa hit wia. the fbrmcr Pate Hemcloft. l'bey ate nftbd ftnt on the ftve-bcMat U.S. aeem worbQJ tontd the l99l Olympics iD Spain. ....... For the record MAJORS -Yon "---~ SI.__ Phff1deteht.e sn S1t .. ,,. >''> ., 10'~ 4/0 ,, ~ IJ'1 Ul•ICA•&.a..,_ Gt-. II, M11116 ~-CIUIW 1° IA!lwrt 1n, ..,...d ,,,, 0--.d UH ._. ltU ~· t I I I Co.llW 4 1 t I CMIMM t I t t ...... rt l t t I T--• I I t I ..._.. 4 t t I .._.a I t I t :C::,::"# J I I • ~C 11 t I ~ t t tt IWICl(llf • • • • • 1CAMrt a • • 1 : o.Ma I 1 i t ~-4 I I T-. •llNll T.-• t ftt .............. ....... .. .. _,, c....... .. ---· l!-9-"...-. crv-. ...,_, ~ I, C.-.... I Loe-4ell.._. It. ~ I. ,. Wllllltlif. 0...1•. w.. ,.,..,...,. •er ~v.,... .. •~1111 sr -..-...... -.~ ........ '° ....... IO\llc:NI w ,,.. • .. , 1t -.,,...1,1 JH I c...... ~L.f-IS U ·> t I I > J CIY-c It J t I t h:Hlonl t M D t t 0 > .. ~1("'9111 (11¥ lllc:Montl. ~· 11-. MIOoa; l'lnl, C-; 5-ld, E-T'*tl,-.. 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Anderson won dcspllr gi ving up 10 hits Sunda) as thr Minnrsota :s Twins beat the Toronto Blue Javs at ..,'; thr Sk) Dome. 5-4. · ~llllCAe "-"A Wln 1s a Wln," Anderson said af\er his third complete game. "A five-inning win 1s just as satisfying as a nine-inning win." Anderson won a total of 33 games in the past two seasons. This }car. he's just S-1 S. "For most of the ~ason 11 seemed I didn't give our guys a chance to make the plays behind me.'' Anderson said. "Today I got them to put a lot of balls in play and let the defense do its JOb. • Anderson walked none and struck out four. Jimmy Key (7-6) took the loss. Dan Gladden went 3-for-4 for the Twins. He led off the game with a double. keying a thm=-run lint inning. Fred McGnfT hit has 26th home run in the Toronto fifth. Pat Borden hit a two-run homer in the ninth. his 14th. to cut the lead to one. Anderson then got Glenallcn Hill to ground out to third. Key lasted three annmgs. and gave up five runs on nine hus. Key, who pitched into the Sllllh inning or better tn eight of his last I 0 starts, struck out three and walked none. The Twins got five hats off Key an the first. 1ncludin1 four s1raiaht with two out to lake a J..-0 lead. The Blue Jays pulled to within S-2 o n doubles by Junior Fclill and Tony Fernandez in the s1llth_ However. Fernandez was thrown out trying for a club-recored 16th triple. h cost Toronto a run as Kelly Gruber and Georae Bell followed wilh consecuuve sinaJes. • Adllettcs t , YaMeet I: ln Oakland. Bob Welch sot his 19th victory IS the Athletics Sla)cd perfect in nine pmcs apinst New York this season. The Athletics have outscored the Yankees. 43-6. Oakland has won l l strait.ht in two seasons apinst New York. and the teams Play thrtt times next month at Yankee Stadium. Welch (19-41 leads the ~on an victoncs. H11 previous carcer-tu&h was I 7. done the last two ~•sons. Welch pve up rour hits in 7VJ inninas and Rack Honcycuu Onishcd for his sixth save. Mark Mc:Owan:'s three-run homer capped a four- run flnt 1nnin1 aaainst Mike Win (f #S). • W S.1 7t MartMn t : Many Bamn's tWO:run double broke a n1nth·inn1na tte and 1ent Boston to the victory in the K..inadome, The Red Soa Tad tce0nd-platt Toronto by three .-mes. their bimest eds sincl' July '4. ~ Man~n have lost flve or Ml, all at home. Tim Nlltbnaa _... witb OM out in lhe "'"'"' John Marano ~ ..S ~' doubled o« Malle Jacbon (J-4). Milli Oi9Nwd .. tail llr_ I _pileh WdJii the ..... '-lid llld ....... illa' c.. QM ....... • 1wo-nui-... ,.,~­ G•r1 G••tti of the Twins 1te•l1 second as T~onto•1 Ton1 Fernande• fumbles throw. Tom Bolton (7-1) gave ups" hm in eight inning Ellis Burks hit a two-run s10gle 1n the top of the eighth that put Boston ahead 2-1. but Ken Griffey Jr. kd off the Manners' ei&hth with his I 6lh home run_ • ladlut t , Ttaert •: Tom Cand1ott1 won for the third lime m 12 career decisions apmst ~troll and rookie Alex Cole led Cleveland with thrtt h11s and 1~0 RBI. The Indians have outscort"d the T11ers. 17-11. '" winning the first three meetings of the four-game ~m·s in Cleveland Cand1ou1 ( 12· 7) pve up nine hits and struck o ut seven m 7h 101)11\&S-Doua Jones 101 two ou1s for h1'i list save Jack Morris (9'-t S) lo t for the &a~th ume 1111 ~vcn sl4rts. In the first inmn&. he walked four, threw a wild pitch, madt ln error and bilked ho me a Nn. Alan Trammell wtnt 4-for-S for the Tip" He homcn:d, doubled twioe and drove an thttt Nn • a.18)1 1, Brewen I: Tom Gordon puchcd 1 f\ve-tuucr a.nd Danny Tartabull hit a two-run homer for K.aMa City at Ro~als tad1um. Gordon (8-8) 1s the only membrr of the Ro)'al • oflainal 6\'e•man ro1ation not to m1 a st.an this tcasOn. He bu pitched four complete pmt 1ndud1na two in a ro . TenabuU's I I th homer caoocd a thrtt-nin fourth ...-. Jaame Navarro (3-4). Tanabull ha1 l4 RBI in ll 1~ linot c:omant atr the \1mblcd Ii t July 3t. ,,.,_ ..... Ml•ril .... ,.,_, Umpire John McSherry lceep1 watch •• Shawon Dunston of the Cubs 1te•ll third and Tom CYMaHey of dte ..... ,. ......... throw dwlft9 ftfttt lnnlntl et Site• Sta..._. Big first inning helps Reds restore lead to S 1/2 games Now that the San Francisco Giants have $Otten back mto the Nauo naJ League West race. the Cincinnati Reds are tr) cog 10 push the m out of 11 again. The Reds balled around in the first 1nn1ng Sunda} and Sl·ored four runs a~ the:r ran olT to a 6-4 \ 1ctory over the Giants a1 Rl\erfront Stadium. < 1ncinnau leads the four- game ~·nei,. 2-1. and hac; increased 1t'i lead bacl to S1 -games .. It e'er there \\as a game 1hat the C11ant<; nce1.kd to \.\In. 11's to mor- ro.,.. ... To<ld Be1wngcr of the Reds said. "It's as close to 3 mu,1-win for them ac; )OU can get. The win today b~ us put all ol 1h1.· pressure on them :ind took tht' pressure off us. Toda ~ \.\3S as big a game as any for us this ~a~on ·· Hal Mom s had an RBI srngle '" the first 1nn1ng and added a '>Olo homer 10 the third. f om Browning ( 12-6) wo n for the 10th 11me tn 11 det1'>10n'>. gl\ tng up ei ght hits and thrc.-e walk~ cn (i t,, innings Rand} M}Cf'> got four ouas fo r his 23rd save in 21 opponumllcs "We're OK \,\ 1.··re 51 ! ba1. l :· Giants Manager Roger ( racg said .. To morro\.\ 's a big game. I said whc.-n "l' l'ame 1n here 1hat cf \\{' spli t . .,..c'd be OK. If either dub glll ll\\ept. 1ha1 \.\3S going to make ct tough ·· ~loll C1arrcl1s (9-'>1 made hie; fi r t t:.tan 10 n1nl' da}S for th1.· Ci1anl'>. C1arrelt' who cam1.• .,..11h1n one out of nll-hlllln& the R1.·ds at ( a ndlcs11c l Par\. on Jul) ~9. had mt'>St'J hc-. la't '>l·hcdulcd '>Ian bc.·cau~ of a sore clbo" .. , hc'I llmt I JU'lt got behind t 1n the count) and pron~nkd 10 get pounded ." Garrell <; said "The reall) big JK11n1 "'a" getting bc.-h1nd and ha' mg to come 0'<'r the pla11.· I d r,.i~ I .... a~ not as .-.harp as I ha'c lx."t'n I put the tc.im in a hnk and \.\\' 1.·ouldn 't get oul of cl ·· •Cubs 10, Mets %: Rook.cl' M1kt" Harkl."~ fH C up one run cn t ight inning'> .ind sparked ( 'h1tago·s lour-run se..-ond inning '"th a base'>-loadl·d single aa . hea Stadium Frank Viola < 15· °'> "as h11 hard for the ~cond str.i1gh1 .i prx·arancc ~·' ing up sc' l"n runs and 10 hits in fi,l. 1nntng<; \ wla ha!> lost fo ur ol h1~ last SI\ 0 Aect' 6, Glantt 4 SAN '•ANCllCO .. ," ... ""''•" ' \.••.virt °" ....... ," p ...... Of" 8f'O'O\'"' Ci IN( ... , 1D ¥i• ... , .. MW"'•)O GC•'' .. •"""'•?ti ·~\--\\ c;.,,.t, 0 e., .... O" "~·· . :,., • ' , 0 oaoc • t : 0 I 0 t I 0 ~ 0 I 0 0 I • 11 I • J • ' I ' 0 0 CtflCtNHA ft .., .... f O•• \ f 4i I \ 0 . 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""Cl• 0 ....... , ... qN>,\ .... •ou o "• 11 a T- kr• ... - .., .... • 0 l 0 > •• 0 • 0 . 0 •I I 0 • 0 0 0 ) 0 ' 0 l • ' 0 ) 0 I 0 ' 0 0 0 • 0 0 0 t I O O 00 0 0 •• 0 0 • '0 0. 0. II t • I If\.-Ol:J -t•-t --.... ----· OP .. U\b-,;Q~ I LOl -SU.OVt• '1 ""'°"'"" ' 18 ,,._,, krl... l t<• H..O>e< II C -•0 .. ..-"•-z.. 11 Sl -O\-'"" J ~) \ , ... II' H II •II 10 IO ....... ~ lt\.- decisions and has allowed 18 bits and 13 runs in his last two st.arts. New York. which bas lost sill of its last nane. remained one-half game ahead of second-place Pit- tsburgh. The Cubs nave won 19 of their last 26, including two of three from the Mets over the weekend. Harkey was 2-for-4 and is J J.for-47 this season. a .277 average. He t\as woo four of his last five decisions and is the first C ubs" roobe to win 11 games sinoc Burt Hooto n in 1972. He gave up four hats, struck out four and walked none. • Ca.nlJul• f , Ptram t: Bob Tewksbury patched a six-h11ter and Todd Zcile homered and doubled as SL Louis got a season-hiJh 17 hits for a three.game sweep at Three Rivers Stadium. Tewksbury (7-3) Cllteodcd has shutout weak against Pittsburgh to l 7111 1nnmgs as the Pirates lost 1hc1r fif\h an a row while bemg swept at home for the first lime this season. The Pirates scored in only two of the 27 innings of the scncs. Pmsbur&b. which led New York an the Nauonal League East b) 21n games Tucsda). has lost eight of its last 10 at Thrtt Rivers Stadium after winning 23of1ts first 33 at home. ,. Tom PagnoZZl. Ou1e Smith. Rell Hudler and Milt Thompson had 1hree hits each. They have SO hits 10 their last four games and art 8-3 under new manager Joe Torre . • Expot f. ~mea 3: Dave Martinez homered t" ice and drove an a carttr-b1gh fi ve runs at Olympic Stadium as Montreal won its fif\h stralghL Chns Nabholz (I 00) won his first ma,,or league game. combining wtth Tim Burke on a three-hiller. with Burke getung his 14th sa'e. Jose DcJesus (}-4) gave up fi"e runs and fhe hits tn five 1nn1ng.s for Philadelphia. ~hie-has lost Ii \e straight. • Padrea t, A1trot I: Derck L1ll1qu1st pnched a four-h11tcr and San Diego comple1cd ns best road tnp 1n history b) rouung Houston. The Padres went 9-2 on the tnp and bested the 8-S of a swing 10 .\pnl 1989 San Diego went 9--7 on a tnp in August t 972. Overall. the Padres have won four stra1iht games and 16 of their last 21. l1lhqu1s1 (3-8) walked two and struck out three 1n his first maJOr league complete game. He won for the first ume since bemg traded b) Atlanta on Jul) 12. Bill Gullickson (8-9) took the loss. 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Alelt"•• ?to TC,...,__• x~··, , ~~·•.Jltl C \f0f'W'1\fl 10 """_ .. f~Ot'"" ·-· l ,,,, T- .... ._ .. • 0 I J •tta,,.. ~ o.. ... ,.. '· 1: ~·"~ .. , I CW"'·~',. .. , 1 : 4 0 0 I • 0 0 0 1 t I 0 • 0 0 • 0 0 ~ GW '°"rl c-" . _, ~< oe .. lid\nll N'f-la ·~'" G~•'v'• . _ ... r:,....,. .. -.en 'IC .......... •'It 1 T-se-... ........ 0 lftdlam t, T...,, S C>a'TitOIT ··-"' • 00 0 -··"' 1. l • .,,.,._,. t t i t T•-o J O 1 t F-lo 10 •• _. .... 1000 -C' ) 0 7 0 GWOIO • 0 0 0 0 L-" J ••• -"'· >• •• ) . '. ,_ CLIVWLAMD ...~ .. • 0 0 s 1 J l I 1 • J I 0 I 0 I I 1 O l 0 • 0 • 0 I I l • 0 0 4 I I 0 (OIO <f _ ... . OJ ..... ID M.rto ID _ ... CJ..,,.~ JK OC,. JI> ._,.. ......,.,,.,( c.,-...,. '' JI 111 J .,_ ~ ... - .. , .... • I l J ) • l I t t I ' ... I t 0 1 • 0 0 0 I t 0 0 > l I l • 1 l ' l I I I ,. . ,. . t • '0 I t t I 0.... Ml -tfl-' •••• 1 ••• ••oo ,. ... ~ ...... _. f -Mo'1' \ Dflt--0.t"°"' ' '-" Otio-.e ... •I --· L09-ott<o-• • C-1 ?8-T,_. > ,...,.. ..., ..... _,,,_,, '' r,.,.. _. "' sB-c... 1 1., illil-1• 1 m ·-tJl s .,.,..,,.. SF--1 .. ------· ( ,,..., .,. .... -. 1 0 __ ,..,. I l.09-141-Cl-• ._..... • ta--·-\J \•--• " llB• .. to ~ _.. .. L . l\ -a....... • " ..... so • ' l J1 J C-W If I 11 l I IMDaeee L'''«•-ll W J I ' . ' J)Olft H I --0 -S JI I> 0 I I 0 t ,,_L tS I I IO I t ~ I J I 1 O•l'llC'tl•on L t t • • > ... -·-···-· .. 1-~" I BIC~ ~ >I I "''"*° l J 0 ,-,....,.... I : 0 • • I ,.M-,"9of'41 • • • Ui••w tte114 , C-Ftnt HB_,.,_ ••• ,.,,,,. T H t A -41 UI Pe '"*'"' -LA09L,...IA -T•IAL __ ,_ r,.... .. ........ ~ ft/tvf.,.., r-f t ... _,_ t -... 1• --'-" ..... OelllW1 • 11..-. _. ... c-• l'WO...• ...... . , ,., J lOO 0.""'111-'I I\ 0~ .... t (i ) t I I ......... ti ••• ' ... _., » . . . . ..... .. .. '••I O.o,.,.,. , ........... ... It It ,..,.,.,, l • • • o..t.tte .. I I It co.ti t l ••• °""'" .... .....,..,,. It It ........ •111 ~ ....... _ .. ,_ ... I 1 t t > f I \ J I I J I I ) 1 • ' .. I t t ' .. • • • ) I t • '0 I • t l •• ••• .... -., __ , ....... . .... _. ~ t l 09 ., •• _p .. ) ~' 19-11---Mil .,, ... , t 1111 ·-"•· .,_ en °""""" 1m 1111..... w 0.- ,.._._ T-11' A-tt 7h T_,. *-9"""....,. r,.... ·-T-J~-J4 .. They waited, and waited, but it was all to no avail C'H I AGO -ln what was bchcved to be one of the lon1C1t raan delays an bucball history. the Texas RanacD and the Chic:qo White Soll waited .. and wt.Jtcd •. and waited. 011 ·-!JU • J ' ) , t ) • It J I I ! I I • • • • Thcu pmc Sunday never swud and wu finaUy called 71/J boun af\cr at wu suppoted to bcsJn at l :l~ COT. h .-di be made up u pen of a doubldw.edtt in Texas Fnday nishl. The d«ision to postpoat tbc pme wu in the • band of White So manaecnat. Tie ~ dub hat : \hat po•'tt u.nlil a .. me *"t. and \beD ~ ' tU.e over. , Men \ban 30,000 ticbu weft .,W few dlle eame, U tJ J J H J t t I • but cmly abOu.t 200 fut were left i.n tho ...... were tbt raJDOVl WU &nno\lnced. .. IW TOlllC OAICl..AM> IC-ct '-• llt .. ~ ... ........ -··· -...... c ... -... L~Hllll c;.r ... < E-" ~ ... T-•• ._ ... T- .. ...... • 0 t • •• '0 • 0 •• • • 0 • 4 0 I 0 l l 0 0 t • 0. 1 0 l 0 J 0 I I 1 • 0 • •••• .. '. ' ... L•-·• -· ....... ~cl W'Gwr lt) ..., .... , _,. 5,_...,,. weoun ·-111 • 1 4 1 .,_ lc99ft-... . ..... 4 I J 7 l I 1 I 1 •• 0 J ' • 4 I I J l ••• 4 0 I O 4 l I 0 l I I 0 J ••• -.,_ '" ---1 ~ ••na-• ~ """' 1 Oell-I LO.--,..,.. I 0..-I Hlt~w1A '">~·m~ _y.. ... ....... '° 1"1'#11< L I J 11 > S • C 1 J J04t-JI J t • • • 1 '""'*' l l-J t I J I ~ Ill 1 ' •• ...... t ,_, •••• 0-.. WWCf!W, .. -4 71 ) 4 I -tlU I N 0 I u.,..., ......... ~. ,_.,., _... '--Qeflk-T'*'ti ......,. T-HJ ~lft 0 ...... ,.~·· ••"'-S .. ,... . ..• .... ~->••• J' t t ....... • ••• I I 1 t ~d C I t I J I t t ~,. t I I I l l JJ1.-.1 •••• ' •• ' AC*lt• J ••• . ... ~-... . l llt ........... . .......... , .. ,. Jttl VIII•• tett • 11 • "'""" • ~ • " .,., ,_ ... , ...... _ .... ..... , ...... . ...... , o~ 11 • ~ 1.oa • •· ..... , .............. , .. --.._...~~~ ... . .... ~·M t • t t .. t ..... ....., JW : 1 t J t =.'->' t • : : : : .• ' ... . ...... .. , ..... .. -~ ..................... .... ..... " 11$1.. C.....c~ ..... , ...... ....c-... ,..,. .... ., .. CLASllFIEO INDEX Mt-5671 .... __,... OA1 W CO. MOMIOUTH~CO. ... _ -1111 ........ PU9LICA l IOH DIADllNE Mondey Fri I 30 AM luaeday MOii 130 PM WadMIOIY T-I 30 PM nw.o.y WM no PM F ncs.r Tllurl 130 PM S.ri.wo.y ftl 130 PM ~ f t1531 PM C .. CK YOUll' AO T-.. ""9T DAY Tl'la 0My PllOI atr"'" loo ~ and llCQlfK'J ~ occaoonatty err0t1 do OCCUf ~ •i.n wl*I yout llCI II reed beet! Ind CftKll ~ ad dally Ae9ort .,,°'' ....,.....ttl\' to .. 2·M7t The ~ Nol accapis no liaC>lllty IOI eny etr0t In en ~-IOI wll4Cll ti may ti. rnpon11ble ••°"11 lof the -of lhe SO-KllMl!y °""VCl'«I by the lffOf Credit Cati cWy be ~ l()t , .... 11111 -·1()(1 AA., amc>u111 no1 pat<! wtllWI 30 oeya u r~ Wiii ti. .ul>flcl 10 bul no1 limtled 10-'"*'-Cf1ervee computad at 1·~~ 01 ,,.. unoeoo ~per month ... COllK110n COlll anCI any, .. ~ at10tl'le(t .... ......... ·· Lf .. ' ~ . , • • • • .Mil( .. . . tr \ ............ '• I J ..... I .'"'"' ........ .... ' ' -.. ':. . "• 540-1120 ... llDO .. ..... 11' w!!"..!'!!.~ l •rt Ti:'ao In Ut. •FUii 2 1if1t _.__ .a.a•••••• 24 V•rde, x1'nt oond. '*'*· ldMI tor'°" '::..'°T' ....,.. a ._..,ve, ... .._, ,.,, 2606 •ALAMOANA ~• ~,:;:un11.:?;; flUALI .IOYf nell1t/ .....ooo •· ... '°" ~t:J'...,....=.--dMn, '°" ": _.,..., 1un .. u tr om t t111 I c;;:-roome w/IX'. Dir• 1~~: ;ra.,.. ._. · ==..= :'.:: 1 1700/fftO ~ ""'°"' "" I .HA •1 wld. Hr '-· """ L.arti reo room ' llundry .. ........ hOmt ... ltlOUld M ......... 1040 ......... I@ a I ...... ~---·~" kfton ...... A\4 '"°· room ... to"'°"' Tal~ non·•Moltet. !etpOn-...._.. _ _ 1.,.... •7rwnode61d."""11dl1 .. "4Mlmoneg7U..116 bu..i.1116-t171/mo m-maor ... -teltl ..._...._...._.._ WI....... occupancy POHi bit . y-. 21" 11A / 630 w. WlllOn • lllllll• .... lf"1 to .,_..,. of .-Y m111 ~Ol.-tom hofM on to CNldtlr'l a "'9 o.tl. lt'°41 _.., • 9'0¥9, - --···· -... •• nloe Coela Mw hofM TIMll&bead\.12.100a/f ~ ~Ml hend ColllMtsa 2124 Of Iona ••rm , .... ~ .. 7~~·· , .. _, , ONTH!IAY ~ =' .-'°'· ....aR. S8A hOn'4t ..._,· bMml. relllnet !'SIDE epedOul iiA 2IA U450/mo. 7049 or 12240~ :2-P:!" I IM>f'M. 2\tlA. ..... ta. too fOOft'\ ... _,.,. yWd w/PoOI, epa. offtdlil ped-end~ ,_....dWO'Oci tl'IQd Y'd Ofdnr = -· nn 2 I ORM, 21A. ........ t t,S50 ...... ~ ... afl + :01-::.~-::"& =-o::=-== ~·w~J~ , ............ mm 2607 • ...,... No ... 54f.tlSOtDely .. & =-o:r:.~ ""''" produdnQ cttrue IPflt• pcea1• 2.000 eq r!llr _..., I 1 liMOOM umum ..,.. l1als1 ..... -n ·-• ..,_ ~ PtlY .,.. .,..., EMY pey Mtml & n ~lhop. lelt oP-28R 2~8A Condo•. ~ -on OCHnffOnt prop Lato-11A loft, P•tlo, ••••• -a IMt p1ul S100 dlpoalt on1y •tee>• to t.ch. portunny ror bed & E'llde. Friitc. lndry '* ~t\X'l\."'C'I' Pf\ ll Alfflg. ttcMt, SMOJm0 oowrtry ..nino. 1745 No t:r2~':o~:1-=· to mow 1n. A~ ON!-OF·A-KIND! brMkfMt neer beeutlful up•. mlcrowa..... MC, RE.Al.TORS. • Ind. uttl. Cel 173-tabe P9tl tMM2t2/146-K43 --• now. 0... Atnende I t CHUC'529K & L,9001Z JONES l•k•• end rKreatlon eub~~lno. 111750 & ~ •STEPS t & blildl e•a-• llO CANYOK-28A 28A, 722-1552. .,.... In Lake Shaata up.~-8'M4 2 SBA 2'MSA Twnhl9. F,., o b9V · ... ,._ ootr cour89 gti.d, A/C, -------- 131-12-te Rea: 641-5743 .,.., 1495,000. 2 BA t BA .,...thouel. Gefllgl, peffo, pool. xlnt tBR. "mo 11111. peld. No .... ... comm pool & •P•· NPT 9-etl. ,.,,. to * RffM~n p r I 0 r I t y R e • I I y Frl)IC. Im. ywd, ~get-location S1200/mo. r::! 175-~ yearly, Bright & wnnY 2'JR 1BA, 11850/mo. 780-t792 28~ tum -== :::o 714/544·1211 or ~ge. ihnaft-compmc. C.UOda24'-73e7 · 328~. CMrmlng 1 BR. 1 BA lal.A.1:f 759-3023 1 ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'....l~;i7i;14;;;n;;;30-3-43;;;;;;;;;1;;;;· ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I 1825/mo.+ S.c. dep. 1 YR new 38' faea, 1'111 ft1 I llLJll aft l750/mo S:2~;1 peU c1nal neer Newpo~ MQOt. • 1-cat! Bettle, "2·9602 8115. Modem kit. e!eOMt UPI* ~ 28 R 2BA, -1.i.nc1'. New catp9t. No OCEAHFAONT Npt lleectl ... lmtl ... I .E. Wlf'lted 1625 *II&•• llW* metr Br w/ceth cell.,,_. OCMn from deck, ~Ill 1U pata. StrHI perking. 2BR 18A,~~no ' . . . . All 2BR •t'< mle to Mttd FC>f\ECLOSURES Wanted ... ok. $2700/mo. 723-t70I Sl75 +utile, ~Deelre PatlO & gwage l750/mo 1125/mo. 876-MOI ~ ;::.~· 15~down.Bkre&._1oe.3 Houee.condo'•.unlta. 1!.J.~.w~h:~.·;~·::~ti ... INT.at* qu1etc:oup19. 1 152 Ce11Kevln,l61-CM24 · CNlrmlng bWtl cotteoe. *57 tmo+utll. 29 IUllTWLlllllK SAlhopplngud/loR•t!UEnc.n!~· cergar,w/dhkups,pool, 3 BR, 2¥• BA condo lnc:f ~~~Blctl/ •tyte. E'SIDE1BR.Avehble91t. '4 blk to ocean, wlnt« Prto°'-!~2 Bl'Ml'ftkR, 2 r_-.. 2~ AM 2BR •Bulll 1H3. m •t 1 • twt .... -epe. Many o.luxa fM.. Mstr &lit• w/~ ... -boo ·-· .,........ """'' bay, Im-No peta. $595/rno. $650 r9ntal, tBR tBA. 1at & .,,, """ n-• 10% down. Bkr H9·1oe.3 !Mnt compi.~ny & tur ... St.250/mo. l .... ~ v\9w. O\Mt end mecul•t• cond. 1550. cs.p. 150 E. 21st St. i.t & MC, S775/mo. :c"v-;1 ~:rno2..,;921A ulll. all .,..., 147 one now. unit w/prlv111 dble glf· 173-8925. MS.593• or ~._.294 124 35th St. 850-1851 • • ..,. Newport lflCh 1069 2233 Falrvtew Rotld 9'19· Aasoc:. tennl1, pool, Deluxe furn 2BR wntr, E'SIOE 1.,.ge 2BR t~BA Cute & cozy 2BR tBA -Betw. Wlleori & Avocado JICUUI. Wiik to beadl. 1300 "'· 1tpe bchl F'l>IC. Beaut enc:f ar eetpOrt. w/qui.t prvt patio, UM of lllT llT IUll StrMtl. (acro11 from St.500/mo. 111 -+ MC °'*'beam•. d«k S1075 patio 'indry ~ble hk up' pool In 3 Unit bldg. 3229 PROF reep. F/rmmt nnt· ed. To lhr 3BR 3BA eondo CM/"B. '480 + utll. 8'S.3503 s:,,~e~~ I~~ ri,,O:~ °ri1~~ Tll 6 P.M. ~:. etl~~921 .. ve mo. 811·98&-0352 No s>911. 185o. 850-3-COi Clay St. aat5. l4UI05 to beach. large lot and Housn/Condos For Info. 722-8529 Bayrldge, bMulllul highly Coronl def Mir 2622 Extrt1 large 2BR 2BA, eneJ Exclualve Bluff• lfH. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; yard. Bonua parking -upgraded 2BR 2BA garege, patio, frplc, d/w, Townhomel. L.,.ge 3 BR. w I co mm u n I t y Generll 2102 *IAITllll* lower quiet location 2BR t'ABAw/grNtdecor, no peta. 1825/rno +1st, 2~ BA, large patloe. -========= poola/rKrHtlon area. ' • 3 BR. 2 BA, completely r• 11 •sO 675-7218 MW pllnt, cptl & ewf•. • ... & MC. 1-42-0433 1 1.25().11500 P9f mo. !!' Hlghty upgraded Euy furbllhad. Laroe yard. • · 40914 Irle. Avl 8113. Like new. 837 Amlgot luslnt11/otflce pay .... 21.900 COSTAMESA-3bdtwn. $1.000/mo. Aasocl1ted BAYSHORES Gated, S1350Bkr&40-51&4 Ulllnl,1111 Wey •144--1451 CHUCK & LIZ JONES petlo $1, 150 Realty 873-8114 ~ & playgrnd, 4BR Avalleble lmmedlately. NEWPORT HEIGHT~ 846-5743 LIDO ISLE • 2 bd bay 3 BR tV. BA 2 car nar 4BA, lam rm, avl 9/1 ....... Jll IU 131~1atter12 noon 1 BR ...,.,. ... 751 .... S 000 ' ' • • • " • $2700/mo .... 5 ••0 7 Front deck rear patio · car....,.•· .,. mo. T view• 2 large yard. Weetald•. __ ·.... ...... lndry rm gar $t350 t-fO Mesa Verek 2BR UPS*'. depo11t1. No pet a. HUNTINGTON BEACH · 3 $1.000+ $1.000 dep. S..ullful lg newly remod peta 7&<).17131857•1776 quiet cul-de-.. c, encl l4Ml&4 bd hm. bonus rm. IP•. Rela. 662-2138 2BR 2BA, 2 car gar, w/d, garage. 1895 + MC ·--------------L~Jo~ARK OR . 2 bd 3BR 1BAFREEDOM horM all appla. •Int toe. ~lltlllty 498-1931or 751·9•13 .. nlH&IPTm •Liil lllE* v19w $2800 ' avail 8/15 $950/mo. St500/mo 972 ... 7~ 2BR 2BA. laund rm With MOVE IN SPECIAL 'h OFF Vaulted i'e~'·~:: Waterfront lot on Via Udo LIDO VLG 2 bd. den. lab 11111u1 +$1000 MC dep'BIG CANYON Townhome ~Id, ;aik to ~h0fark tit month rent. Remod'I ~~713 or 857-1776 IHI H!l l /F NOfd. very rare property bay vua $3750 req'd No pets. Ref9f'en· lmmac 2BR 2BA. 2 car 1 opa, mo. 1BR 1BA, MC. partilng . .,,.....-...,-----....,,....,~• LAST CHANCE BIG CANYON . 5 bd, golf oes a must. Respond to ~ got1-C view No pell 675-3338 Nopettp!MM.l-42·~ Ooeenfront cl .. n 1BR 1617 Weetdlff. NB RffM~~ ··t :, ' . •. • P.O Box 1560· Costa ELEGANT BAYFRONT 11 Avall now 310'~ lr1a St. ---bftlnt, gar •. 1 P9fSC>n. 1711/f 11MI/• (408) 625-537• co'"" estete s 10.0oo Ad 1: 151, cto Dally Piiot., S 187~/mo &44 -2418 LAROE 2BR. 2BA & etudy. P&11-w/--a• upper, carpal•. drp1. ___ AG_t _~_1_~_503_·_2 __ •Ull IW, Qttl * Winter Rentals Avallable Mesa. CA 92626 BR 1,~ BA So. of PCH $1400/mo. YllWW 1950/mo Y'1Y &42-3<W3 4001 Birch IA. NB af I002 Possible no money down 3BR. 2BA, cOndo 2 earl rrr>ic. dbl ga~~e~~: yearly •676-2238 2BR. 2BA & patio No petl PElllSBU Agt ~1-5032 ii-------_;-,; r,,"~K=~~~r1-:'o~· W1hrfr•1t• .... 1 ... gar&patlo,$1,200/mo waterfront deck WID.Spaclou12BR 1'ABA Frf~ASl50/Z'..?,:2Mt5t P:; u-mo.-..... ,,. - i • 'iA,. 1.• FORECLOSURES. behind IUlTHI 111·1.0 1 5 min from beach I refrig $2.400/mo twnhrne. Close 10 beach Cl"' ve .,... gr a YIAll.f lllTMJ •-_,,_ In payments? Private In-BAYFRONT 7141&46-7400 "THE COVE" Bay1lda & shopping $950/mo B·lOl. 855--06&5 llYl .. MIHllJIW HllUllL• ~--~-----::•oru'f"'. ~~~~':7~ Comer double lot. R·2. --3BR 2BA. lg family & din·! Drive, 2 BR, 2 BA, pool, 2 900 Sea Lane &44-2611 OUIET 1BR. patio. pool. *2 & 3 Bedroome Full Svc., phonea, mall Hoults/Condos eq ty Condos or SF R Ing rms frplc d/w nice car gar:g;. St ,900/mo Enctoeed garege. Frplc. * Unturnllhed Fax, c:onf. rm .. MOre1atlal ;:=::;:===::;:;:;; REAL ESTATE property 723-4968. hfl)o, lsJ~ 2106 backyard s 1200/mo • 3-9110 STlllO APT, 399 W. Bay St. $685. No •Ck>M 10 beach View offioe. furn/unfurn General 1002 available at 10 to 15% llmESS SAU Skytlt 5 BR. 3 BA. 2 car 879 Arbor St 548-902• • ELEGANTL v APPOINTED Private room with bet~. Pete. 650-1357 •Fr .. llet-CALL TODAYI 759-3400 WlllYllllSIS. ~~!~~e-7:~;~~ .. ~:;,ue 501CetallneNBHts 3BR I garage New paint & 3BR 2BA. newcr?1-:-palnt l t BR pco~do. gated :~·~~~fr~:i.~u~oZ: SUNNY EHtalda 3BR. VIW REITIU Costa Mesa offioe avall. UU II Tllll 3BA, 722-0562 , carp e I Yr I y L se & flooring, garden&f, utfl• ~km to :h sr:5~~~°c; clean, qutet. mlC;o, lrlg: garage, r w/d hook up. Ground noor, 287 aq tt. Fair Call days or ev~s & Corontl dtl Mar 1022 Pnme Newport Heights' '2·400tmo 75&-955• P•~d. t't ~ook~p. nee1~I unfurn. $1800/mo furn no kllchen. Female non w5~J>9~a.~·~:· 111•4112 Im~., ~~1f:=tmo. wkndt Ask tor Margaret, R· 1 Lot w/extsttng 1truc-1 :J 1f!' 1S1 s3 ITf ng. ava d Agt 673-3899 amkr S500/mo 6 73-4388 71._.9•· 7957 Of' Richard or Jessa 2BR 2BA cottage on lure $425 000 460 B Ibo , . mo an TlllllTIEPUOIH SPACIOUS Twnhme--style ' 818-883-9055 850.9900 or 850•1950 buildable 101. Hazel St Senta Ana Av'e 548-3807 a a S 1,025 dep. 548-0290 I Exclutlve Blulls area " 2 Sty Apt nr Fashion =-=-~------ Buck Cyn & ocn vu poss-Ptnlnsula 2107 ' Townhornea Large 3 BR, Costa Mtu 2624 WWI IUI llla.nd. 2BR 2'ABAl frplc, EXEC omoe Sult• nMI Charming, comlortable & Ible $530,000 721· 1118 LARGE Versaill1ea Studio. IUlll IEW I 2'"' BA. large patio• I 1111 uau Aft vary private. a 1145 JW Airport, 4n O Von cozy 3BR• Lh1lng rm -walktobeach,pool &se-1 2 BR, 1 BA New paint. Luxury '1:>Wnhouse. East-$1 ,250-$1 500 per mo •WTllll* Top er .. patt(-llke Ml· 854·77•2 or854-7855 Karman Ave .. NB. FAX. w/flreplace to gather I cur 11 y. s 1 1 7. 0 0 0 carpi Mature •dulll No Side, 3BR 2' ..... BA. 1800 Like new 837 Am1Qot, 1BR $&40 & 2BR S740 lnct Ung eeautlfully main-r~I. eopief. cont rm. around on those COid Costa Mtsa 1024 650·9064 pelS 3 406 Marcus slf. $1575/mo and worth Way "* 644-6458 gas water & garage talMd 2BR or l BR Apll 'IWllAIYILU kltetl, lr .. pnlng & cof- winter nlghtal Large -S895tmo 573.7353 111 &42-8535 2323 Elden No Pets $775 & Up Studio Spac:loua 2 & 3BR • den , .. 1·1ty bldg, furn. mo- backyard on this 2 year YllUIE OIHI TWiii t l•west Prlct4 II Tract ! !CHOICE Furn Exec Un11 1n ~ 4'~A..V ~A=R View Ho~:~1 (7 t•)5•8·785• . wtcarport S595/mo No IOfM with ocean v1ews: to-mo at S350tmo. Con- new home• S 105,000 CHOICE LOCATION 3BR EJ1quisotety remodeled 'Ind Newport Bay Towers, KU',f"lrW\ / ;;A im~~u~;~~ OBO pets Call VELMA on Fairway of Newpon laci Al Quinlan. 833-9550 Better Homes& Garoens 2BA all gar $194K Next OBoc::'ateo 3BR 2 5UA Steps to water• $1400 \/"\\ ·1\~11· 1u \, ·11' 261 .. 986110 722·7806/a I BR •OBLISE Tl All (714)54 .. 2447 BHch Country Club John Denver Realty to SC Plaza 2131598-7251 lu s. attached home mo u111s pd 990·6767 \\ . ~ ~ l 12 1 A, laundry rm. Gated community, 2 car 672-1966 w/lam rm overlooking I qc AL TOR" • Harbor View Homes 3BR. close 10 Shops & buses TllS II Tll PLAOEn oar• w/1tor9ge. fire-Fiil lllT ,. - Eves-679-0007 llllHRS CllSE-llT wide greenbelt ~49 9001 ~ pv1 yd, may take 213 yr Woll aecep1 OC Hou91ng -1H•R" piece, pool, •pa. w/d ~If •lllTI •H3767S 2 nomes 1ef1• Prime E'sldel agt 524-1293 Corona d~I Mar 2122 USTSllE HISE lse May take pet? S 1850 1 S765tmo · •H -hkup1 From S2650/mo ---toe.lion Single family ' LSEtOPT Wall! 10 beach '2BR hou•a frplc gar 2hBR 1~~ .. be•u,Oful,yard Avl nowl Bkr 6•0·56&4 2276 Maple lllO uau Aft No pell (Al Newport "2 ... "_ ... ILlllL ... TE Ameni>ercithe det.chod 3BR 2·~BA ...... · · "'99 ..,......, wa er gar--• TSL MGMT Top arM. park-ffk• Ml c.nter Of & Granville DI') Seanhm ~ Asking $315 ooO Broke 3Br 2Ba beach condo.1 lndry sml yd S 1130/mo dener paid S 1300/mo I "* LIDO ISLE BAYFRONT 832·2232 °' 722-9012 ting BHulllully main· Shown by Appl 14•..-06()3 · '1 sunOeck. pool 2·Car gar , 1st/last • sec Avt 911 &42-7787 Cherm1ng turn 3BR 3BA talned 28R 1BR A 1 ---------1 Exceptionally Wlfl ioc.ted. cso0Tpser111ve OPEN 642-8759 213-456-1939 719 Fernleal 621-31' 1 -home S3500tmofsty lse 11 BR 1 BA In •·Pie• with or P • n-•--• 1 1~a ... 75/mo w11 yr i.... ·.. A I UN or call lor •P· NEAR Npl Hghta 4BR , ' $775 & Up Studio ••-r •-~ ( /18 MO LEASE LAST po1n1men1 548-7001 UllLIE IU•, llTR Etagant Ewoc Twnhse, h 2BA I I em Grundy Alty 6 5-6 •61 patio. carport & lndry lac w/carport $595/mo Townnouee. $900/mo "' • COLD Well BANl(C!RO 320 E 21sl St, C M AKA BALBOA PENINSULA COM renlllease Lg k~~· w/d.· ;~acrou~~7. -•UH ISLE• No ~li&4S9~~~o* Condo, 2BR l'•BA. bue-No pell. 548-7533 ~~~~~:;~ Colina V11ta Court SPECIALIST sundecka. patios. 2BR, pool & spa S 1550/mo "I Lovely 3BR 2,~BA home -~ _ _ __ ~~~· ~~d hook· WINTER RENTAL. 3BR Ampi. gu..t parking U111 1ne Home Sellers~ lllllHS OllSE·llT IU·IOll S 1750/mo 760-6717 utll 673-6403 ' Avail furntunturn 2 Car. 2 BR. 1 BA, ••roe yard All P C~I VE~MA 2BA Oplx. Furn. 2 car gar. & large llQns Incl. lmmed 2 homes leftl Prime E'slde 'LG 3BR 28A house wtgar, -----I garage $3000/mo Avi garage SJ50/mo Some (l 1•\&..tt i••l Stepe to t>eech. Avail ~Mul'on. &42·9347 USTSllE 1210.000 EXCEPTIONALLY sharp Condo • 3 BR, 2''> BA, patio Light & bright wtptaritatlon shutters. top grade carpet Lrg M llr sui te LR wlllreplace -terrlflC' U.-IOIO location Single lamlly Tustln 1090 wtd. refrig, wd firs, pv1 Hunt. Brach 2140 911 Agt 675-4912 pelt ~6-~6:67~!:,eves. ,.~ • -9115. $1360. 145-4127 detached 3BR. 2''>BA. *• llll llYSI • patio deck Tip-top cond 2BR w/garage, carpels.I LIDO ISLE 3BR 3BA. den ------WESTBAY APTS u a.. R.._.,... Aaking $299,000 Broker • S 1900/mo 692·5311 M·F lanced yard. water pd 1 w/wat bar lge llreolaca 2BR 1BA. slngle J•rage, $200 OFF MOVE·INll ..,,,M.. Cl-~ coopera tive OPEN Fixer. Flxtlfl Sellet super -u• y1irw-1•y •1 836-4120 9-SPM : pall? & de'.ck 2 car gar:j 1aundry room, C , Sorry. No Pata ;::::::::;;:;;: SAT/SUN or call lor ap-motivated 5 BR. 2•, BA., -"" "9 " " 2710 Delaware 'E' $745 ageS2300tmo 675-3149 515 Bernard St. S850tmo 1 Bedroom $740 Rooms 2706 polntment 548. 700 1 large yard 1269 900 No New carpet 511 Seaward, _ _ + deposit &46-6273 • 2Bdrm 1'1.Ba $&40 __ .._ ______ _ 320 E 21,1's1. c M AKA of 5 ltwy • 2BR. lrplc garage, $1690 1 LSEtOPT Walk 10 beach I •GREAT LOCATION* 151 E 2111 St 548-2408 EASTBLUFF unfurn. Kite~ Cotlna Vista Coort 4 BR. 2 BA. gated. pool 'I 760·8382 2BR 1BA ground floor, no 3Br 2Ba beach condo. E' d N H .. ---------laundryprlv 5-mlpvten IP• New roof Great , one above. enc gar. aundeck, pool, 2<ar gar 11 e wpt gts .. rea Bachelor $615 trance $350/mo inch.Id" OUYH IElllTS neighborhood $278 000 Sfpan~rrr:,, Vl~~i ~~R :,~B~o $775. 714/970·2223 I 642-8759. 2 t3-•56-1G39 ~BRp;,BA"~~IC72~·~-ss· 1 Bedroom $700 ulll FWI• 780· 1691 2 bdrm Twnhm Many Condo. 2 large BR l 'l BA I ~ach/1h0Pp1ng, $1995· OCEAN VU 3000 al Home OCEAN VIEW VIiia Balboa 0 ' ----2Bdrm 1'/·B• S830 Nr SC Ptu In t>Mutlful lg upgrades $176.000 Agt New Ille. carpel & paint I 541-9600/640-1147 •BR SBA. RV parking · lux furn 2BR 2BA. mllllon •EASTSIDE 1BR Duplex, 131 E 18th St &46-6816 home/furn Shr bath. FULL Mrvloe otflC• In Newport Center. Fashion laland. Answering 1vc onty atao 1vallable. Tll Dl.-nYI AITIS 840-~70 UlllAllAll 1200' upecate, ground floor omc. 19~. c.nter of town. 71413&5-5651. YIEW A WmflL 546-2313 inc E·Z access to s,, 11111 Yltw Mary Blake 969-6586 &42-0493 or 968.9287 Small $595 • MC Frplc. DIN P°"1t 2626 + "-P 556-1737 Yvonne 6 4 2 · 2 8 6 O Full llze washer & dryllf 320 7th St $2250/mo Call SS rec lac $2000/mo 1 1 medium S685 • MC 1 ---w/d, pool, ape, ... 00/mo NII If TIE WHLI S 129 900 FHA Call B J ·I l lOo lt•H llJ YIH I encl pstt0 Min 8 mo IM -- FROM th11 magn1l1cen1 Newport Beach Sea F atre Condominium Surround yourMlf with the 10110 .... 1ng dtatlnctrve leatures - marble entry. light oak flooring In a cook a d•· hghl kltc~n. lwo private muter bedroom suites with baths, fireplace, 3 large tiled balconies 10 enjoy the ocean & bay. guest room swimming pool•. apaa, tennis courts and all within walk Ing dla- tance of the t>each $627.000. 111-1100 IH& YEHE 4 PlEI Agent The Prudent1a114BR d 1 1 2f 1 ..,.,... -Ullll ISL UYflHT No peta 645-723-4 2BR 2BA. den. W/D hie PrN room/bath Newpoft Xlnt cond Ou1e1 area Cal1forn1 e Realty r. r. r rp .....,..,.. lrvlnt 21 44, • I -----up1.rrplc.fenc9dyd,end e.ach Townhome Sep. beaut 3BR owners unn 73 1·3255 prtv corner 101 · new lg pier, 5BR eBA. min 61 •USTSllE* gar. no pet 1850/mo arat• entrance No S529K Bkr 969-1063 c1rpet1ng remodeled •Turtlefocit home 3 BR. 2 mo IN 548•3256 33411·0 Cheltem Way k 1 t ch• n 0 u I • I k 11 ch en p n 111 II e BA. 1mmac Grndr. assoc I Ci.an, 2 BR. 1 BA, up-9 !WI S Mobllt HOIMS s 4 0 0 0 / m 0 d 8 ree pd N•oe yard Lease1 llWNIT OIEST •tetra, laundry fecihllel. 240-18 1 Of 1-3208 non/1mokar 425/mo IEU YHIE For Salt 1100 863-0582 eve 6U-1~ S 1.675/mo 85•· 7502 Large 2.000 1/1 3BR.3BA, no peta $725/mo 269 C Incl utH 548--0723 TWNHM In lushly land-&40· 1388 2 car enetoMd parking 16th PlllCle &44-0452 eve ~Hunt.~!;Jh!!!ld't~--,l26~40!2jr;;:;::7i~=~;;;;;;;~fil R E Exec Suite omc. acaped complex with BAYSIDE Village N B Pool. tenn11 & cloae to 3 BR 1,,., BA TwnhM Hotels/Motets 2718 avall Sec/Recept Mr· pool FrMhly reoone 2 1BR. large tam rm 155 or ~gun' StKh 2148 beach . S 175 0 I mo 11_ II •-ow. Froni yard. Lndry fee. Nr IU WI MTIL VIOH Incl. Newly re- bdrm with patio & al· older) S 18.000 URGENT W&ll Tl TIIE IUCll 2BR 2BA HOUSE Frplc 675-8120 Of' 548-8384 * H • .,-5 * Hunllnnton Harbour mod.i.d Lat•t office lactted ..,.,. w lk t must sell 673-26 14 Enjo Co on del M I • --2BR 1'/•BA. $350 off 111 • Wkly rental• now I Vall • q u I p c. 11 J 111 gar ___ a 01 Y r • •r • garage & carport. BIOcil NewponCrett 3BR2',.,BA month tBdrm S300 off 18951mo.641-1 684Llz $14700 Wk & up 2274 7141752-5181 9 lo 5, P • r k & sch o o 1 s Perteet move-in condition• It• best in this spac1oua to beach S 1350/mo wt ocean view, pool, ten-111 Month Pool spa 3BR 2,ABA lrplc We1bar Nwpt Blvd CM 14&.7445 Mon thru Frl. 673-6900 $142.000 1987 Canyon Crest •2 and luxurious 3BR 2'<tBA 879-2&40 nit spa $1550/mo · • ' · ' · - ' Mobile• 94 Acres• Sol bMuty1 Immediate OC· • &42 3890 cable hook-up No peta. townhouH atyle •Pl Small of1loes from $350 \.l.\llHIHll'l,1 1 many e.11.tras lhal you cupancy poaslt>le Short N k . 2169 • w .. ua11.v111~ Gar9ge.yatd.S1050/mo Roomm1t VI t d grou ...... E 17th st: llf ,..,., .., II•< have to see lhlS home1 Ant or long term 1ea1e Chll· twpon ICh •llWPllT IElllTS Apartmenll &45-122 Nr Beech/Hell "8-9568 ts In e Costa M ... A•k lor Bill RUt TOP<, unt>elleveble price ol dren & pets Ok $2550/mo •EXCLUSIVE GUARD• 2 BR, 2 BA houte Move--ln _ 2724 146-96&3 $157.800 Belter Homes! 1111 IHIST •GATED COMMUNITY* condition! Fene«t yard •NEWPORT HTS AREA. N!WJ)O!! hlCtl 2669 Nt1W luxury condo. pvt ;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Orteans at Tustin/17th 21 & Gardens John Denver • 120-JHO •r llO·IOOO 11111 OAIYll with garage & carpor1 2BR 1'ABA, frplC, encl. Br/Ba. garege, pool, epe, Commtrdll Property BR 2 BA ground rtoor I Really 672-1966 I 2 & 3BR 2BA Apts frplC $1,200/mo AHoclatad garage S765tmo No ., . ITllAllUAPTI micro, w/d, '850/mo 2778 w 10 frplc. priv yard • Evea-679-0007 ~ 4'~&.V wot bar, micro. wshr/dry; Realty, 673-3663 pet• 8•2-5722 ,..,~ Pie ... Iv meg l-44-7115 GL<JR(,I l·.l.KJ:"~ Poot,gar,beautlndscp j .o'M3606S KU'-'Flla .. , hkupa.centralair.2car lrlM11-iu2u1,,., 2 WEEK'S FREE RENT •WITIMATIUPI• 3BRCoataM ... TwnhM. n•ana IF-1 l l\11'\'.\ Steps 10 Ralpht. stores Ac1us1toed.O ·lora 1111~ l'\'1 ..,...,1· 1u \ ·1 1 gar w/xtra storage All D Ix fr le are• 2BR 2BA, low move-In, EXCLUSIVE BEACH Hat averylhlng l NEWPORT BEACH Uia.I 10 \I lllH'-• By Owner $165,000 Nol guy hecO'Tlmat1<1,.101 ot \ V\ . ...._ _. I maintenance Incl SOfry. p $1S85,P '11t920~ . lndry, carl)Ofl $745/mo.j COMMUNITY 1450/mo N-amkr . S/E CO<Mf W•tctlff DI' & brokers 603-356-3351 . 811.,,1'°" RC ALTQA<;,. No pets 644-0509 _ mo 546-5091or775.77 19 2BR 2BA w/beautlful bay 1-49.40 14 Lv ,,_.. lrvlne Ave. High vlllblllty Nwpt Cr•t apeciacular I view & pooll Micro. dl w, --traffic. 1290 eq. rt. THE DAILY PILOT'S ULTIMATE FOOTBALL SECTION Will be. appearing Thursday Sept. 6th To over 100,000 Readers INCLUDES: • Extensive Coverage of all Local Schools • Schedules of Local Games • Coverage of College G ameR • Raiders & Rams Support Your Local Team and Cheer Them on with a bordered message FOR ONLY '19 Goooooo TEAM! CIF ALL THE WAY GOOD LUCK FROM EVE&YONE AT JOHN DOE'S SHOP ACTUAL MESSAGE SIZE DEADLINE FOR YOUR MESSAGE IS AVOUST SO Soc.all your Clauified Repreeeotative Today! 642-5678 oc vw 2BR den d/r WESTFIELD APTS fireplace & garage. EnjOy 3 BR E'llde C.M Mllr BR .._.111 2'ABA '11p w9t bat· vauti Sorry, No pell 1 our pNt t>eech $1850. All wt'r. BA Full ttoute prlv. ==---=---=---- call 2 ·car 'ger Ian ' pool 2Bdrm 1' ·B• $785 maint~ Incl No pell $400/mo Inc ulll 175 aq ft office ~ epe' $1 800 e4s.2i 13 ' 2Bdrm 2Ba $810 •ALSO 18dfm S1490 14&.6991 550 st w~M apece • • _ _ 398 w Wllaon 831-$583 ........ btr•* Balboa 11 2 R tum hM IOf rent. 19th & Pomona. WESTCLIFF CONDO SH5 WESTBAY APARTMENTS I SOARY.-flo PETS. Avl 9/90 Hf bey W/0, S900/mo. l45-0SM r=.·~-:.~ o'~ ~~ $200 OFF MOVE·INI I uu , ..... 1. y•r S495/mo negot ,. LUSE 1to3. 1228 Rutland. NB. f Hturtng pool, •P•. 22-9185 IV meeaege 4800 '"· ..._ tremc. auto-142-1278 ...,.1101, encloMd parking Cd·· ,....___ '"'V'' SELL ~ .._.1 ·-llll* ""--'· n/srnkr. Metr motlW UM 710-8314 $570 .... ~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~ .. ., ' •-tuft• avl 1-irum 2BR 1 Bedroom K55 * 1-* 2BA· pool, • frptc & lndulCrlal 2788 2Bdrm 1'/.Ba 1750 Frig, dllhwUMf, ltow mor.I $650. 21·1199 ~'!!'!l-P!li'!!'!!~---- 125 c.nter St 142· 14241 Incl. No pet1 54&-4155 Corona Del Mar, ON THE 2•800 80 FT. wttront ....... Mnk• rhrough clauified INl.f PUI omc.. •woe ,..., driY9-ln •a..utlful qui.t ..,.,,.] •W•I Ntowpof138A 28A ~:t.~ie 3!~d 2~ ~ door. C.0.. to treewey. Elll<le. Ger. cet>te, patio. Apt• '/f1V 11226/11325. 911173-0421 • • 11171/mo. ALSO, UOO 880 avt. 8.::fl & tBR N9wpott 8'10f• home, · SO " tor 1795/mo IMS No P91a.13t-4M27 11500/mo, lkr 142"3150 COSTA MMe. Need room-Colta M_. &40-9352 IMll to lhare 31A 2BA I 1_, aa../~ DEAR READERS! PLEASE BE ADVISED EFFECI1VE AUGUST 101H TIU! DEADLINE TO Pl.ACE A CLASSIFlED AD FOR SAnJRDAYS WD..L BE 3:00PM ON FRIDAY. YOU MAY STILL PLAeB ADS UNTIL S:OOPM FOR SUNDAY. TIIANKYOU, THE CLASSIFIED DEPARTMENT "°'*· Own room & bath. r ~ .t ~ '450. Avlll 9/ t. &H-6441 173 ·a · w. 11th FEM. prof 28-34 to lht 41A W1tltfront a.tbol llAend houal. t600tmo. en.eeee liMctl. 2131433-094 . ...... ' ~-'S. ~ t I ~" t ' F•ADS ARE FREE Cal: Ml-1111 £~. ' . * t 3018 HELP for lrewln9 "l: parent of 14•yeer-okl . Provide lranaportat on, supervltlon, lhopplno aa-slttance. Moetiy alt.,. noons & 9YM. Lido Ille. Chanle. ee3-7000, Ext 210 Or ev.. at 723-6907 Live-In mature woman needed to care for same. Room & board + email aa11ry. At Lendmark. H 8 . 8'3-6998 meg 5530 $7/tl + COfAt ....... Ory Oleenett, 'IT Deya. No .., req. l31-ee12 * Positions available for Mlf-motivated individuals to operate soliciting crews for the Orange Coast Daily Pilot. If You : * Have An insured van, wagon or large car. * Enioy working part-time in the eve- nings, earning full-time $$$ * Have the ability to motivate Then we haw a job for you. No experience neceuory Full training available. For fvrther information or to schedule an 1nteMe-N. ARJES (March 21-Apnl 19): Ex~nsc account com mands attention. You'll learn where you stand financially. what 10 do about 11. also your earning pot<"nt1al. Scorpio nauvc attracts you. helps resolve money conundrum. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Fundtng becomes available for dccorallon, remodeling, bnnging procedures up to state of the art Focus on diplomacy. family relauo nshtp, designated dm er Libra fiaurcs prominently. Edcie Gonzales, wilner of a flntendo entertain· ment system, sold (40) new subsc~tions for the Daily Pilot for the month of Jooe. Be a part of the wiminc team, be a part of excit· inc PJomotions like this one, and earn EXTRA MOfEY for the SUM· MER. Apply now! Call 714-642-4333 Ask for Carlos ARIES (Marrh ~ 1-..\pnl 20) \rnnl·om· 1n ,1 pu'111on of authont) or po"er should no" turn up trumps anJ mal.c \OU the l.tnd of proposal or ofTl·r >OU \1mph lannot rclu\l' I hl" flJ<it tcv. months ha' e been drmand1ng and l'mn1111n.1lh llf"4.'t 11 ng '-<' \ o u rt' al I\ do deser\C a brrak UPTO •aoo PERMONWI * • fMIECTillS * FArly mominq molor rout. available. MUii haft dependable tramportation and liability in.aura.nee CALL 642-4333 NEWPOBT BEACH, rotnn'ADI V Alll'f, Q.2-As South, vulnerable. you hold: + AQ94 J AQ •AK107'2 The bidding has procttded Wci.t "'lonh Ea_,t South I PaJS 4 ! What acuon do you t•kc~ A.-The mO\t fle:uble action you 1:an take as to double If panner elects to pa\\, you ha"e more than adequate dcfenK; 1( partn~ re· mov~ to four \padc\, )'Ou should male that tn 'omfon. \h~ld North bad fj\.C diamond\, you arc JU~t "ga. mg lo ha\ e to \weat 11 out IRVINE 6 LAGUNA BIAOI Q . ...=.Neithtt vut.ilerabk, -u Soutb you hold: • ll I AKIS I) AK.'3 • Ml Panner opens the biddina with one spade. What do you respond? A.-You have the hip-card ~trenath to leap to three no trump; but not the n&ht shape-that bid is rescvcd for a hand Wlth a 4-3-3-3 pattern-a ruffina value could be all you nttd for slam if you have a 4-4 fit somewhere. Since you have to uart probina. we would bid two dia· monds-two hearts shows a five-- card SUll. Q.5-Both vulnerable, as South you hold: +Q j QJG OAJ •A&.Jm The biddina has proceeded: Soutlt Wat Nortla f.asl I• P.. l • r .. What do you bid now'? A.-Your queen of spades has in· creased tn vafoe, and you should try to paint a picture of your distribu- tion For that reason ~ prder the rcvcr~ btd of two hearts to a jump of three clubs Q.t.-Neitha vulnerable, u South you hold: • K 107 " l(QI AQtl • 1112 The b1dd1n1 has proceeded: So.tit West Nord! f.alt I Paa I -r .. I NT P.. 2 • hll What do you btd now? A.-Your fit for both of panner's suns has improved your hand. Don't let North think you are aivina a mere preference by biddlna three hcans Jump to four hearts to let partner know you have excellent support for has first-bid swt. TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE TAURUS ( ..\pnl 21 ·\la\ 211 1 hl' p.l\I wupk ol month" ha' c bttn emouonall~ J1sturb1ng hut \llU rl'.tlh ha\l· no tame for regrt'I ACROSS 80 AUN*\CH• 6 I An OC>,ect 62 Oot• I T.O.et ~ s l lQlll ~ ISSISTllT lllllEIS A lot of dead "ood ha\ alo;o b<.·l·n lll.,larJnl anJ \OU should nov. be poised read) for the offer lfo" \\hl'fl and v.1th v.hom \OU tra\cl GEMINJ (May 21-June 20): Much that occurs 1s behind closc:d 15 your business alo n.,<'., , • . . • doors.Emphas1s ond1scrct1on clandesttncarrangcmcnt \CCrt'tlo"e GEMINI (~fa, ---J~n<' -11 '\(v.' r(ltl\ld 'h1'uld nnt nnh Define terms check legal nghts and perm s 1 n Av d h 1 ( gladden }our heart ll\t•r hnanual nr hu"m'" mattl'r' hut al\u m.ile copyright infringem ent. i.s 0 s. 01 any tn ° you av.arc that ~uur tn<il1nll\ and hunthl·~ hJ'l' 1'cl'n \pt1H.m a ll Cl ptOfunOO t4 Auto p-1 63 Tiil• 64 Aecotdlflg meoium Two Aalta1ent Manaci-• are needed for Dally Piiot Circulation Depar1ment Early morning hours Out._ Include route de- ll~ and MNlce error re-dellv•ry. S7/Hr + mli.age . C8ll AoWt al 642-4333 tor Interview. e.n.ftt Group lnaufanoe 8eneftt AaMtant to Ac- count Ellec:utlv" R•· Quifee dertcal (WOfd pro-CHllng) and H rvlc• Ill lb. WOttllng wttl'I ln- .urenoe C«11erl end cor-porat• cf6entl, Jotn I benefit & c:onau1t1ng nnn with full benefit• and competl1""9 lal*Y ~ reeume: Bek•, Thomaen A110 . 4940 Cempu1 Drhoa. N9wpof1 BMch. CA 92te0. ..... ..,.,1111.P/1 CANCER (June 21-July 22): You asked for leeway, m ore time. more rcspons1bihty and chance for greater financial reward. These arc all aranted. You·11 be rubbing your hands w11h glee. Get going. check with Capricorn. LEO (July 23-Aua. 22): Sccnano features more rcco1n111on. showmanship. wider audience. You'll be provadrd with confidential information. Spotlight on career. business. nch1C'vemcnt. special arranaement for display. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Scpt. 22): Spotlight on t.·ommun1cat1 on. pub- hshina. romantk approach to mundane problem. Stress o ng.anahty. innovauon, ability to get to heart of matters. What you thou&ht was finished is actually JUSl beginning. UBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Check Tauru5 m~sagc. Sense of direction fcatUR<i. Older woman acts in ccccntnc manner. Matntatn your own emotional balance. Money as safe despite complaints by nervous relative. Follow hunch. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): Diversify. display humor. rt'ahle that lepl affairs need not be comphcatcd. You·n get help from Sqjttarian. Spot11aht o n wardrobe, humor. contacts which could lead to sizable profit. SAGmARIUS (Nov. 22-Dcc. 21 ): Check Scorpio mcssaae. II as necessal')' to renovate. n:vise. to St"nously consider d1rcct1on. motive, locatjon. Focus on pets, health, employment. basic proccdurts. Adhen: to rqulations. CAPlllCORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Read and wnce, cxchanJe ideas, emersc from emotional shelter. Sttnario hiahli&hts Oirtataon. dis- covery. variety, possibility of short trip an volvina relacive. Love relationship heats up. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Attention revolves around family, c.... ....-.. home, completion of nqotiations. Focus on durability, auarantccs. 2 to •~ "" per day quality 11 contrasted to quantity. If diplomatic, harmony wtll ~ M.tonw 1 dl)l9 • ..it restored in work arena. 2 ~.-:n:= ~ o., ~ (Feb. 19-March 20): Keep oe>tions open. On11naJ plan •tonw 1-.. •.,... will be reviJed. Someone beb&.nd teena attempts to manipulate, dominate. You need not be intimidated. AnothcT PlJCCS 11 saandjna Mo.:=='~ by, will lend support. Eoa ~n IF AUO. ll •YOUR llRTBDAY: You were on your own catty. · were ....,.litd &om environment., paten You art stubborn. alon$. No" }OU c.in began 10 mal.c Inn~ tl·tm plan\. \1)me of .... h•l h are ltkel} 10 1ndud<" e'\nt1ng l h.rnit1·\ in lhl· v.orl1ng patt'rn ol \our ltfe. CANCER (June 22-Juh 2'1 Ontr 111 .1 v.h1k hnlltant aspc."l't\ reverse unfa,ourablc tfl'nth -.ind lll'\l'f mo rl' 'o than nov. therefore. whatever \Our Jgc ti r url11m<11.inu·'· 1h1nl onl~ of "ha1 you can accomph<ih b) uip11.1l11tnK on \Olar un14uc crcat1H' ~l.111\ or abtlttu:s. LEO (Jul:-2-i-.\ug 2 H 11 m ;I\ hr t11l worl an<l no plJ\ these days. Howc"cr. 1f )OU rl·all\ v.<1nt to mal..l· your Ille more comfortable and "'4.'Curc then all our t1ml' and cm·rg)' mu'it he devoted to ncY. plan'i. 1dl'J'i and ~ hcmt>'i n:latl'd to long-term l"3rt'er and professional 1nh:rr-;1c, VIRGO ( .\ug 24-Scpt 2 l l f nJO) to th<' full all It k hold' for 'nu now Mars 1n Taurus. <,upponcd ti .. 'inturn \t(lntfic<. that the ltd<' ot fortune IS HI') much IO )'OUr fa\OUr, and ncY. f\'l.tllOMhlp~ or encounters l'Ould C\Cn C'nahll' )OU to tum rt"\'Cnt d1<.appnint(llC'nl\ or failures into resounding 'iUCCC'i\C\ LIBRA (Sept ~4-0...:t 2 'l \1fars in 1 auru' 1nd1rntc' thJt )Our ~putataon for bc.-tng a good 'iport as rcalh hl'1nJ put to tht' tC'•a and ll would seem that partner\ a1 e about to "SCC anoth('r \ltlt' 10 your character -the one "hach n 1n be haf'lh and c' en ruthle'i\ "hen )OU d1M:o,er 1hat you ha'e bet-n r M1nformcd or manipulated 15 Steel 91r0« 16 Compiete 17 Benost9( 1e Sunc:te<.O 19 Brief 20 RuSSla. mountain• 2 I S.fekMC>+nQ 23 ChOOSel 24 ISlam I founder ,,., 26 Stulf 28 Combat 29 A~laltve 33 HIQ'llall It le Tab 3 7 UnOIYided 38..._, .... 39 Orb .ao Prank ., ..... ,. •2~ 4J Stoduno ·~ SerWlO ~ta •6 ~-•o 4 7 Ootechon 48 "'"'* 52 Tae on 55 n-:.o s 7 Ooutite IQenl SI Full-blowft gs Vo.; Qlad? 96 Flower 1nt0tm81 67 Slzec uo DOWN 1 Play ...... 2 T rlQle erOWfl 3 ""' Heep • Ro.red 5 Retute 6 Call on 7J~~ natM e Oic1•t• 9 .,,.,,.. 10 Nol 8Wtty 11 • 12 SC*IWI Pl*'•• 13 Table crumDa 22 ....... 2!1 A"9fY 27 ~ lt~ lO Frutttete 31 Ruin 32 S'*"9fl region 33 J&a~ SCORPIO (Oct ~4 :-.lo' 211 Your dc,ot1on and generosity of ....-....... -"T""-....-.... spmt cannot ~ faulted HoY.t·vcr )OU a~ gotng through a pha~ 1 2 3 e when )OU arc ancltncd to O\Cr-rca't to cn11c1'im 1hcrC'fort'. \Ou must ~-+--+-~~-­ endeavo r to appl) humor and common ~n~ 10 rnmplt'' career or t4 professio nal 1ss~ SAGITfAJUUS (No" 2'-C>cc 11) < 1n um'lt.tnl--CS OC)Ond your 17 contro l Sttm to be forc1n~ you to hrt'ak "llh trad111on and even sever ties you once thought 10 he 1ndcstruc11hlt Howl'vcr . delay final 20 dccmons until after Jupiter chanae, ~•an\ o n tht' 18th. whtn ~much ~-+-+-~~-fll!ll mon: wall come to hJht. 24 CAPRICORN (Ott 22-Jan 20\ The 11mc to -.1gn 1mporunt qrcements and documents 1s now. while bnlltant supcct between Mars and tum ,11nifics that c"cryth1na 1 bovc-board and water- tiabt. So don't listen to an~onc ~ho sttms to u l that )'OU could improve on the de.al or t at )Ou art bean mantt>Ulated AQUAIUUS (Jan. 21-cb. 19) 8ttau$t tum 1n Capncom now 1-:31~+--+-+-- maltcs the best po ibk a p«u to Man. )OU '1mply ha\e to fttl more conrtdcnt about antenstly ptnonal and domc1t1 matten. even • t be thankful that so.much has bttn brouaht out into the open and ~-+-+-- faced W1th honest. objcctmty and fonatu<k.. ._. PllC'ES (Feb 20.Mareh 20) Now you must ~tt I.hat ou have entered one of the m t d«l 1vc prnods of the t'nhtt yar for career and profi onaJ mattcn and thcrcfott evel')' sin&Jc rno~c bas to be wcU tbouabt ~t aod s~manqcd TM ~ult and rewards coukt be qunc en but ti 1 UD 10 \'OU to lake the ir11111uve. t:-lll-+-+-t-- .... ~ trntimental. will•• to tear down b' uJtimatc purpo.te .. ol l"lfkikiit11 Oft more IUiutM st.Naurc. Ta\lnat, l..to, ~ tr AUG. ll YOv" 811'TffDAV: There ts a ~ruiat1ooal uptet •COOICI 4111WN ,._ '*' ilnponaat rola t-n )'OW' Ii~ You11 be let'ISiu~ betWttn Man and tum to add 1 ~111 'parkle to carett or -"' ~ •• , ... la ..... hi Alllil .... ~ IWVI~. You11 l.rlVfl 1n and don't be fNJtnltd or thwarted by othcn' tilde or ytstOft and •HOeTMOIT• nr wzi.11;:&. dcMMlli body im111t durint Aupasl You thoU&ht probionaJ un~ra ~fOfe, the -..hole hot. ""' t~ cha.QICI -W'llill •DIM. Ua """9M1c t an No~~' ;,,,;:.;;:&&;.;ra.;::=tio-.n ... '-------------------o.L"'ill!'!!i!!~-....-.._ ... _ • • ' ' 7 34 Eur~ 35 "'''lO"'llkl 36 Toy 39 Steined '°Bio-UC> 42 UnO«e--t 4J ADC)4.,,...CS 45 Pltl «>etlng U Wr04e 41 Siege lllfe I •t Now so S.ap out SI EdMd out 52 M 9'yte 5o3 CMCfl ,._ $4 .. eftC'Y 5e Aace ttldl SIN!~ 12 13 • , ' $2.44 per day That't ALL you pay for 4 llnee, 30 day mlnfmum In the SERVICE DIRECTORY For more lnlorma11on CALL TOOAYll Ill FOii LOIS Your ~Directory Rec>reeentallve M2·4121 ht. 110 A IAN All Male" & Models Courteous Serv 558-0515 3021·8 Harbor Bl CM * -'IPAIHI * lllSECLWlll Very reHable. In Orange County lor 12 years! Meticulous, hardworking• Call Aiko 733-88 11 •THE HOUSEWIVES• U11Tll llF9ISllll Ouallty with • Personal Make Old Tubs Liit• New Touch Serving NBtCM/ Syr guer. 1..S00.552-TUBS HB/etc Reas 546 2287 Japanese Cleaning Svc Comp1e1e Home & Small 419 t d Business Rehable Har<! $35.00 hr working Call 545 ·0679 960-3941 497~63 work guaranleed RELIABLE Houseclean E•penence References e REMODEL • REPAIRS Very Good P11ce~ Lollie .,,.._,..,.1191 • NEW CONSTRUCTION E.ngllsh l UPE 543 7652 • Unique & Unu&Yal Work •Alteratlona•Comm/Res lltlHTO &YIU 23yra area. lie 968-3564 Regular Housec1un1no Svc Shampoo carpets floors-windows 631 8511 *MAIDYIHI* Doort-Repalr-Alteratlons Cabinets-Panet-Loclt a- S111r9'-0rywll-Pa11os-etc 35 yrs exp Jerry 642-0567 Construc11on & Building B•g A sml Jobs.-Work guar CALL Bruc.e 847 0780 Landscape Lawncare THE lillEEll SCEllE Small Haenotd Remodels Hign quality Old 1asn1on WOfkmanSlllp 30yrs 0 C &42-1770. I CARE l(EN AHOllA II I I WE WILL Daily Pilat ELL UR AR Huntington Beach I Fountain Valley INDEPENDENT ORANGE COAST WEEKLY GUARANTEE! We will sell your car. If after 3 weeks your car isn't sold, we will run your ad for free! NO STRINGS ATTACHED. Just call us to renew your ad. Run 10 words for 3 weeks at $18.50, 55¢ each addrt1onal word. Must be prepaid. A word constitutes anything that has a space between It. For individuals only NAME PHONE~------------ ADDRESS CITY-------------- STATE Z~ CHECK I-~~ AMOUNT ENCL. --- EXPIRATION DATE ----MASTEJtCARD/VISAI~----------~ MESSAGE: \ I I I IU-4121 ,ht.JH , .. ftr .... l TOCHER WllTEI Credentialed for Newpor1 or trviM learning center lo tutor 1n batlC 1k1lls For Info call 644-0422 Trudu 9035 YtTHllUY llSPfTll. ..,Pl_ano_s..,&_Or_g,-m---1978 FORD 1• 15.950 RECEPT/ASSTIKENNEL 6059 1983 CHEVY Cargo Ven CREVIER BMW · · rrr· ·1; lllU&OllllU'll (012023) 110 .. H OIUT&LAllU i925 Hart>or Blvd. C M 111·2• FIT & PIT Alk for J11M $5 775 1980 tveco 754-1033 PIANO. Klmball petite $4.950 630-3030 -------- )(Int OPPo<luntty Chrl1t111n chlropr1C11c ofc In F V looking for e.11p lront- dall Plf'IOll lor FI T pos· ltion Sal11Y DOE Re- IUme required. 848-2950 baby grand. walnut, per-CHEVY ·54 PICl<-UP feel cond, sac $3500 REBUILT Also DX7 Pro Case & A-WITH CAMPER S229S frame 1fane1 perfect SEE 642-0~7 S800 * 875-7871 TOYOTA 1987 4114 blue. 5-speed. Cullom rims & hres AMIFM ca1Mtt1 lootll good, run1 gr .. tf S5.100 251-1663 IHU PllLIH II '11 loaded~ 10431A) '"" Ol&lllL AllU 2925 Harbor Blvd. C M 171-2111 JAGUAR 19M XJ8 Light grey. 1t1owroom guallty. 55.000 m1111. 121.~ 644-8&43 JAGUAR 1989 XJS con- vertible Dorch vray. crMm lntetlor. 18K mllM. 3-38K mile werral'lty Ex- cellent condition ~ moving "'7.600 080 7e.l-1595. 770-5523 llUIA'llP/l•I P/8, llf. AM. cwt wt*4e ~tom c~ ehetl (3'51N) ... ....... ms Hwt10r ..,, c M Ill-I• ,, ........... 1 ... S-19d. pie, *· caa. roof_ (FLURAGE) .... .... ITllB11U S-IPMd. •. tlft, ceu. low mllea.(02712e) UtR n ... ,,. ...... ,IH Hll ....... . ........ 11...a .. 11 1111P•H•1211-4 Whitt All Aeco<Oe ... ., ... ... 11,111 ...... Ul,lll. Prtvat• petty (114)111-1114 (714)141 .... PORSCHE 1972 91 tT. R9- st0f.0, Ilk• new. Call ~ $12,000 M2·2923 PEUGEOT '11114 •Ill WAHi $2175 (4Kt8.AA) Private party. ~-555e Rolle AoyQe 1978 Sliver Spur. E1tc11t1nt Condition, tow mllMge. v..-y clMn, '38.000 080 cell Oen 714/S36-1307 r ~-.. 9fJ1 C••.,_.,. Diii ., co-. ,,... ... "I shoulda brought my kite." MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson "The plumber's bill is for $97.50 plus $3.25 for a salami sandwich that you-know-who ate." NANCY ARLO AND JANIS 04Q YOU K~OW WHAf ~ MA» 00 TV JO&TMID? OVERBOARD EVE~ GET iliE' VR6f TO JIJMP? DRABBLE R08BJSR08E DENMS THE MENACE ~by Hank Ketcham J'UD BASSET ::----~ ~ I I'M 100 YCVN8 TO DO ANVTHIN6. W~i'S ~R EXCUSE~'' by Jerry Scot t by Jimmy Johnson by Chip Dunham by Pat Brady WM4T A LOV!LV 000! \ SHOE A M IARU. I • • ,. ·I i• ·' a JUDGE PARKER .:;...FTER TALKING WITH A BBEY OVER THE PHONE, BUO\INE ANSWER S THE FRONT OOOR TO FIND THE HOMIC IDE DETECTIVES THERE ' COME IN LIEUTENANT BVT 1·v e HAD A LON G , ROUGH DAY / I 'M TIRED AND IN N EED O F SLEEP/ YOU AREN'T HELPING ME BY POPPING IN AT BEDTIME LIKE THIS I ---- FUNKY WINKERBEAN FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE by Lynn Johnston by Jeff MacNelly by Harold le Doux 1 'M SORRY / we WON'T T.-.Ke BUT FIV E MINUTES OF YOUR TIME, MR, BILLINGS ! .JUST A COUPLE OF S HORT QueSTIONS... NO .. , N OT ----WITHOUT SAM RIVER ~Ae!SENT / by Tom Batluk ·=·=-=-_: :: ,.... ........ .., .tty ............................................ -----.,,....,., .. ..,.,.~ I L I P S I T I on-otMd'lolw. . I I I' r I . I • .. o s o I I I I' r . I s•••• I 1 1 r r .f • ••1111, um •·•• ~-==-.;et:~ i'f'~ ~-..-o -_...,