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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1988-05-18 - Orange Coast PilotI WEDNESDAY, MAY 18, 1988 25 CENTS Most Coast scltool buses unsafe Three districts using vehicles that o not meet fuel-tank safety standards By JENNIFER WEBER Ofllleo.llJ ......... At least three school districts aJona the Oranac Coast are usina buses that may not meet federal safety standards for fuel tanks, just like the bus that burst into flames after a collision in Kentucky. The accident in Kentucky killed 27 Sporta Newport Harbor High vol- leyball player Drew Sheward was In a mood to celebrate Tuesday./81 Wor ld Soviets say chemical fac- tory explosion In the Ukraine did not In- volve fuel for a new long- range nuclear mlsslle./81 lndez Advice and Games Bulletin Board Business Classified Comics Entertainment Food Mind & Body Opinion Paparazzi Police log Public Notices Sports Weather Weddings .. A9 A3 A7-8 es-a A10 C8 C1-6 C7 A6 85 A3 85 81-~ A2 85 people Saturday naaht when a pickup ltUck driven the wrong way orf an interstate h1&Jlway slammed into the bus. The Oranee Coast 1s not the only area with aging buses, thou&h; more than half the state's 13,000 public school buses were built before 1977 and do not meet standards put into Concert lawsuit heading to trial ,., Negotiations end after amphitheater rejects noise limits By BOB VAN EYKEN Ofllleo.llJ ..... St.11 Attempts to settle a four-year-old lawsuit over concert noise at Pacific Amph1thea~ broke down Tuesday when amphitheater officials refused to agree to turn down the volume. The suit, filed in 19~ by a aroup of residents from ne1~b<>rhoods ad)&- ccnt to the arena, will now go to tnal. Located at the Oransc County Fa1'1rounds. the arnph1theater is administered by the fair's Board of Directors. Rock concerts at the arena t.his season have included appearances by groups such as Kiss. Anthrax and Y cs. The Beach Boys arc scheduled to appear Saturday at the arena. Residents of two Costa Mesa neighoorhoods filed the suit chariina that noise from concerts at the I 8,5~scat arena violated county standards. The residents also charge that the amphitheater generates exoessive traffic. A settlement conference began last week af\er residents fCJCCled an offer by the state of C.ahfom1a, which owns the amphitheater land. to purch~se those homes plagued by excessive noise. Discussions centered on a proposed plan which would have provided for sound monitorina, fines of up to $9.000 for violations of county noise standards, and the estabbshment of a S 100.000 fund which residents could use to soundproof their homes. Richard Sp1x. attorney for the residents' croup. Concerned Citizens of Costa Mesa, refused to back the proposal. however. unless 1t con- (Pleue eee COPfCltRT I A2) Irvine girl named by Deukmejiart to Board of Education By JONATHAN VOLZU: Of Ille o.llJ""' .... A 16-year-old lrvine prfl'l.llCd m Communjst Cuba was tapped by the 1ovemor Tuesday to play a role in democratic aovcmment throuah an appoin~ment to the state Board of Educallon. 'fbrouahout 10 apJ)lic.ation process ~t~ ~nned nearly ei&ht months. M~. Martinez,.• junior at Santa Ana s Saddleblck Hilb School, auased in countletl interviews ud eaays that she ...., not take tbe petition UahdY becl99C IM knew bOw imporwu it it. .. I wu born in a ClOUDllY Wtiere a lot ot PenonaJ fieedaaal were..r," Mattinei laid ~)'. !>. WiU DOW \bat I Will be Ill I pollbOa to iaftuence to runy PIOPl!f Md~­L.ua affectq IO 11188)' more II overwhehnina,." Martinez said she moved from Cuba with her family when she was 8 years old. She as now a straiaht·A student involved in a few clubs at Saddleback. but said she doesn't have time for IChool politics bccaux of her studies. She said the prospect of elective o~ afttt school doesa 't appeal to her eilhet, even thouah she atjoya history and political 1eience dules.. She boPa to auend StaJlfOni Uni vet"· sity upon ber ltliduatioft ~ atudy one of dloee ftefds'bcb'e entcrtna law ICbOol. Filliq out the application to be.: cocnc the only atudent on the 11· member boud wu a whim. llli Jlid- Ud tom thf l"'deysbedoelbliid ... woWd ever bt ct.ea hlii d9e JOO IP'••-JaYlllS/MI place that year. Since that year, federal law has required school buscls wei&hina more thu five tons to have fuel tanks endoted in cruh·resiswat si«l aiees and fuel lines cannot be made of rubber bosn. The buaes must also be powered by djesel enpnes, which use a fuel less flammable than psolioe. But Crown Coach Co. ealesman Jack Parsons sa1d the buses do not necessarily hive to be d iesel-powered under the federal iuidelines. Older buses were .. arandfathercd" into the to!Jlherstandards and do not have to meet the more recent 1u1ddines. be said. The Oranse Coast districts that have buses built before 1977 include: • Hunttn,ton Beach City ~ District, where 13 of 18 buses ~ built before the 1977 standards ~ in place. Transponation Supervit0r Dorothy Phillips said. Gas tanks on the buses arc protected. she said. but not by stttl cages. All but the Ocei's oldest bus have diesel tnJJnes. • Huntin&ton Beach Union Hiah School Dtstnct. which bas not up-araded any of the 20 buses that ~ built before the higher ~tandards were adopted. The d1SLnct has a total of ).4 buses "I don't nave a reason for (not upsradina> I don't think too mAny distncts arc doing that anyway," said Jimmie Shamt tran~portauon du-ec- tor. • Ocean \ 1e-w 5chool D1stnct. where none of the bu~ arc powered by diesel tuel said .\ss1stan1 Super- intendent Montt-~cMurray. He did not know ho-w man, bu~ thed1stnct had or hu" man,· were built after 1977 • Irvine Unified SciM>Ja O..trict. which has aoout 10 buses bodt before the strictcntandards. Trainina Ditet· tor Stcfarue Root said. AU 6Sbmes, wbteh arc owned by Taylor Bus Service, have been uJ)1111dcd, she sa1d. School officials stress that older buses arc safe. despite fadina to meet cWTCntstandatds. uke most other school districts. Huntm11on Beach C ity cannot afford to replace itsqinj bUJeS. Tbelast bus the district oougbt, in March.. WU a (Pleue eee MAJrY /A2) FV v ote limits soothsaying to highway zone Driver survey Residents protest fortunetelling as 'work against God· By JONA THAN VOUI.E Ol .. IWIJI .... ._ Fonunetcllers wilJ be Limited to b1Jllwa)' commercial areas of Foun- tam Valley because of a unanimous vote b} the Cit) Council that again stymied a woman·s effort to Opt'n a soothsaying business in the city. The panel approved S-0 a mouon by Councilwoman Barbara Brown to reduce the number of zones open to fonunetcllcrs from two to one. but Councilman Fred Voss cast a lone vote against cxtcndmsan cmcrscncy ban on such busin~ for 45 da)'S Fonunctclbna is zoned for nitt&h- oorhood<ommeraal dmncu. C-1. and h1ghway~mmeretal d1stncts. C-2, but Planning Director Chnton Shem>d suggested onfy the latter was swtable ~in my op101on. the fonunetclhna use 1s best situated for the C-2 zone because it's not a neigboorhood teTVICC. •• Sherrod wd. Madonna Ste~ens appbed for a business ltoensc an the C-1 zone directly across from. Cit} H.ll and mcl the ncccssaT) reqwrcments. but the Cit) Council enacted an emcrg- eDC) ban >\pnl 5 on all such busi- nCSSC1 to allo"' ume for further stud} The Planning C omm1ss1on has twice approved the business for a bwldm& across from C1t) Hall on SlatCT A"~ue. but the council ~ twice stopped them ..,..,th the emerg- ency bans. The ne" ban remains m effect until the ne-w zoning ordinances arc 10 p~ce. A motorlat on a Saa ~o Freeway on·ramp at J amboree Road rece!Yee a a.me RrTt:J from the comaty Tnm8por- tatloa Corrldon Aacmcy. Tile qaeettonnatres wllJ be banded oat tb.roaCJa llaJ 2'8 to aeterm.lne coanty drtYIDC paUerna. Tucsda) sc~en residents spoke against fonunetelhng.. companng 1t wtth an ··an ammunttion facto') or a bar ne'\t to a school .. and calling 11 ~work against God ·• ·Tm asking \OU to look to .. our ~ul f~hna as to "' hat 1~ nght and "'rong. .. said James Sanc1er.. "'What '-'Ould 11 Reunion book on hold over gay couple's suit BJ GREG llERll ,. ... Deir ......... Dan Worthinaton 1s still waitina. So is David Engel. So is the cnure Uruvcn1ty Hllh School Oass of'77. What they've bttn wa1tina for since Auaust is a pictu~ book, a paper and plastic memento ofa 10. year hifh school reunion. The publication of the book bi~ on only one photo out of hundmb ICbedulcd for inclusion. Funny t.hina is, they all want the boot published fot different reasons. For Worthinaton. the book -sans that one pboco -wdl provide symbolic vlncbcation from a very sticky mOral and lcp1 situation. For Enal the book -w1tb the photo -would mean • ciVll rilbts • victory. • • Asbtbe0assof'77, well, they Just want their reuAlaa boob. lalt A...-.. the poundwoct wu a.id in lrvtne lw I IMdmailrt civil riahb dcc:ilioG wbeD I COit& Mesa pbotopapby company -\\onhmcton·s - was sued for ft<usina to ·publish the photograph of a p y couple in the University Htgh rrun1on book t Worth1naton satd It was oompan" poh<") not •o publish photographs of sinak'-~' couples Enitl. who wanted a photo 1ndudcd with his male lover. calJed 1t c:h9Crim1ntnon. The court eventually dmdcd in favor ofEn,el and ordered Worth1naton to pubhsh the book with the photo. But Worth1naton appealed thc 1n1unc- uou. aod hi a~ has yoi to reach rourt. Reprcsntatives o(Worthington•s attome}. David Uewdlyn. said the appeal s.bould reach the 4th Dlstnct Coun of Appeal thlS summer Meanwhile. the book mnains unpubhsbcd. .. I $1111 f'ttl that a publisher bas the nabt to oubli.sb what ht sen fit to publish; and t&~s a lot of la• \0 beet that up," W orthinaton said. .. We feel the rcuoo this dcC1 IOft -.u made by the Jud&r at tbc time was tblt eot mouah tbouabt was 1hcn to tbc (PleMe.-a&UNIOlll/A2) bnng 10 our city~ If J was in your pos1t1on. l wouJd not alloW it Iino the ne11.hborhood •· ihe restdenu compa~ for- tunetelling to prosutunoo. pmblina and drug utc. althouah an in-depch backcround check by Police Chief Ehtn Ma1b found .. no reason, from a pohce point of view, to keep for- tunetelling out oftht caty.- Ted Stc,cns attended the bearing but did not peak. He S&td Lattr he kept SJknt on the advia of bis attome) Has attorney d1d not attend the m~ng. but delivered a stinglna letter to the rounol earlier this month ··As set out. all of the obstacle$ the cit) of Fountain Valley has plaad in the ~ay of Mr). S1cvtns· aDDlicauon to tell fonunes in Fountain Valley att unconsutullonal. -Los Ar\ICles It· • tome\ Barry Fisher said 1n a letter to Cit} OffiClals .. The Cll}'S practicle raises morr scnous questions of d1scnminat1on ·· Fisher 1s an expcn m COIUllfuUonal (Pleue eee PALMIST I A2) A IDS bias ou tlawed in Laguna By LANCE IGNON °'_°'""' ....... Chase 1awsldt stirs agoniZing m~morie~ " S~nate pressured to ratify arms treaty before sum~it W ASHINGTO'N (AP) -Tbe White Hou.te and Senate leaders praed t.be chamber today to •P- Pl'Oft tbe u &vtet "~ ll'ml Jreaty withio 1 wcie_k so President ~ can &ake i• Wllb rum for bis .Moscow mtttina with Soviet leader Mikhail S. Oort>icbtv. Tbe Democralic-controUed Senate ~ t0 the lraty a day after II finally opeDed debate on the pact aiped last Dec. 8 by Reapn and Gorbachev. RCIPD leaves oex1 Wodne9day for Jbe swruwt. wbtcb bcains Ma}' 29. • White House Orie( of Staff How- ard BaJc.er told reportcn it would be ;-a major plus" if Lbe Senate ratifies the treaty before the summit. Baker. former Senate ~ority 42nd CD cancllclatea meet tonlgbtln BB The Huntmgtoh Beach Tomorrow moderate growth orpnintion will hold a forum tonight for candidates in OranJe County's 42nd Congressional Otstnct. The program as scheduled to stan a1 7 p.m . at the Strasbaugh bualdan$- l 4860 Gothard Si. The public as anvned. leader, wd he believes ''lhc odds arc bcucr than even" lhe dead.line w\U be met "That's up to the Senate and I boPC my former colleagues an the Sen.ate move forward with speed, bec:aute to be able to Lake the ratification documents to Moscow would be a major plus.." ''Not tak,ina them would be a disappointment -it wouJd not be a disaster -but 11 would be a disap. pointment and might have some effect on I.be Soviets' willingness lO ~ forward to the next treaty," said Baker. Senate MaJonty Leader Roben Byrd, D-W.Va., told reporters, "this t.reaty can be approved by the time the piesident leaves if we deaJ only with those senou~. legitimate amend- ments that ought to be deaJt with on th1s issue " Senate Republican Leader Bob Dole. R-Kan . said, "I do ho~ the prcs1dent will have the treaty when he goes to Moscow ·· But Dole and Byrd both said they expect a numberofamendments to be offered later and they cautioned that the pact could be delayed As debate o~ned Tuesday. Sen Claiborne Pell. D-R.I . cha1rman of the Foreign Relations Comm1llce, urged ha!> colleagu('S to "proceed expeditiously to approve the treaty an ample time" for the summit. Both Dole and Byrd have predicted that when the Senate finally votci, the PICt will be ratified by far m~ than the 67 votes required. Senate Ooor action bad been de- la~for more than a week by two dis teS.. one over bow the United • Sta and the Soviets interpret lhc on-site inspection verification provisions and the other involvi~ wi\etber so-called "futuristic weapons arc banned by the pact Both nations avcc they arc. The Intermediate-range Nuclear Forces treaty requires the chm1nat1on within three ye.an of all missiles with a range of 300 males to 3,400 miles. There were no surprises Tuesday during openina statements. Republican conservatives., includ· 1ng Sens. Jesse Helms of North Carobna and Steven Symms of Idaho, cnt1caed the pact and wd 1t could damage the security of Western Euro~. ··1 bave a hunch that if Ronald Reagan were running for p1W1dent this year instead of being in his last year in office he would be out on the hustings demanding the Senate reject this treaty," Helms contended. The treaty vote will be the first time tMt the Senate has acted on a U.S.· Soviet arms control pact siocic it ratified the 1972 Anti-Ballistic Miss- ile treaty. LAWSUIT STIRS BITTER MEMORIES ••• P'romAl crash that officer!> were onl) doing the job in chasing down Valle. "We're paid and hared to capture cnmmals and tha1's what we were domg." Green $aid. ..We were the only ones involved an this that didn't have a choice." Bur the Walhamsons' attome)., Bruce Schechter. has lashed out at the department's dec1s1on lo pursue Valle so hotly .. Car .theft 1s not such a heinous cnme that the pohce should be chasmg someone at speeds an excess of 80 mph through residential streets." the attorney sa1d ... He wasn't a dangerous felon or killer. He was a gu) wbo stole a car ·· Memtl W1l1Lamson said more 1han money she ho~s the tnal will bnng about a change an the c it) 's pursu11 policy, which she says remains un· changed smce the acC1dent. But win or lose. the trial promises to be painful. she said . .. h's going to be ~el) cmo11onal It's going to make us relive the details of the ac.cident," Williamson said. She said her memory ofber brother bas not faded since 1985. "There's a picture over my parents' fa.repia(% of the three Irids in our family that we gave our mom for Mothers' Day a couple of years before it bap~ned. At first, 1t hun to look at it, but now it's pleasant to look at and remember," she said. "I think of ham most down at the beach surfing That was his pride and JOY· He loved 11 ·· IRVINE GIRL NAMED TO BOARD •.. Prom Al applicalJons file! statCW1de. The first step was an essay that asked what each applicant couJd offer ~board. Martmcz said she stressed her background, whale pointing lO the diversity at Saddleback Hi$b School that would give her broad insight to the needs and attitudes of students across the state "I defirutcl~ hope to gave rcprcscn· tatlon to a wide vanety of students because m)' school has someone from every background and e~er) soc1occonom1c group." she said. After the essays, the number of applicants was reduced to 12. From there, the students gave a speech to Board of Educatton officials in San Franci~o. That narrowed the finalists to six. Further mterv1ews with board of- ficials narrowed the hst to three. and those students traveled to Sacrarnen· to for tnterv1ews v.1th members of the govemor·s stalT. which made the final recommendation 10 Gov. George Deukmejaan. she said If her nom1nat1on as confirmed by the Senate, Martinez will replace Susan Owens of Los Altos. whose term will expire an August She will have a full vote on the board and will receive SI 00 a day during meetings plus ex~nscs. officials said. Maniocz said even though she IMde it throuah the process, she still isn't sure cuctly what her duties on the board will be. "I don't know exactly what kmd of issues are aoina to come up. but I'm &<>in& to tackJe them one at a time." CONCERT LAWSUIT HEADING TO TRIAL ••• From Al tamed a pro~1s1on that would force the amphitheaters management to reduce sound volumes whenever v1olattons occurred ·'They wanted to pa)' a fine when- ever there was a ~ aolauon ... said Spt:\ "What we wanted was sound con· trols. Without that. what good 1s a settlement?" Neil Pap1ano. attorney for Ned West Inc., which o~ratcs the arena, accused Sp1" of standing an the wa)' of a workable wlut1on ··He doesn't want to settle," said Pap1ano "Evef)Onc's agreed to this: Ned West. the ut) of Costa Mesa. and the Orange County Fair Board E' eryone except <;p1" ·· Costa Mt>Sa C It~ .\11ome) Tom Wood said. howc~cr 1hat the Clt) Council had not !J'en final approval to the proposed setlkment. ··The council thought 11 had some ment aod agreed to circulate 11, but ifs not ent1rtl) accura1e to sa} they'd agreed:· said Wood A representative of Concerned Citizens also said the proposed settle- ment was unacceptable. .. That S9,000 fine would just be a slap on the wnst," said Russ MiJlar, one of the residents. ..We'd never accept such an agreement without relief from noi~. Without that. we're nowhere. That's the main issue." The suit will be heard by Supenor Coun Judge Richard J. Beacom beginnina May 31 REUNION BOOK STILL UNPUBLISHED .•. From Al whole issue We were all a little btt surpnsed.·· The whole thing began as a sample class reunion al 1he In inc Hilton Hotel Engel, 27, returned from New York Cur to attend a I 0-year reunion oftus Un1venity High School graduaung class. With him was Enc Underwood. 28, whom Engel was hvmg with at the ume The men were h"·ang together whale appeanng 1n a production of the musical ''La Cage i\ux Foiles·· Engel had paid S85 for a portrait and copy of a reunion book. "We amved and got a good response from all my fnends. and then we went to stand in line for the picture, and they informed me then that only a picture of myself could be an the book.. .. Engel said sbonly atler ~suit was fiJed last September The photoV'pher. an employee of Worthington s Portrait Photoara· phen of Costa Mesa. told EnJCI that 1t was comeaoy poli~ not to include a araduate s "friend' in the memory book., for tbc sake of consistency Wives and husbands were andudcd. Worthinaton said ~ couple bid •aniVl:ld a.ie totbe reunion, and added • that pbotasrapbcrs unpacked their ~~ 11111 Pill MMeMACR ....... Sc Com9 .. C4 ..., ....... 15'0 C:O.. ......_ CA 0;1t2t equipment to shoot the photos. The photographe~ told the men that only Enger\ portrait would appear in the book. but also shot pictures of the men togrther as a counesy 'W onhington said company policy wa<o 1he pnmary reason for the sinale ponrait but he said later that he d1dn'1 want to make the reunion book "a lorum fo r the gay community." He ha'> also acknowled&cd that he does nor ".tnt to publish photographs of ga' touples because he does not appro"e of the gay lifestyle. Fngeland Underwood sued Worth· ang1on's company on the basis that Worthington had violated the state's Unruh Civil Ri&hu Act. which proh1b11s businesses from d1s- cnmmauon1 on the basis of race. color. SC'\ or reh11on. They rctatoed high-profile actavist attorney Gloria Allred to pur1uc their cue. Allred. reached for comment Tues- day an New York City, called the iuue "a ground-brcalonacax," and vowed last )'ear lo "leave Worthioaton's w1 th a memory of their own.·· In addition. reunion bo-cbair- ..,omen Valene Sm1tb aod Beverly Nelson filed declaratJ0111 supportana tht> indusion of the oicture of Engel and Underwood Last October, an Orange County Superior Coun Judie ruled that Wonhington must either include the couple·s photograph or not pubhsh the reunion book But Worthm11on did not give up, and turned the char&e around, say101 that his cavil rights had been violated when the Judge denied him the right to edit the book as he SttS fit. He.said that his six mam competitors do not publish photographs of single-sex couples. Worthington said publicity about his policy has been detrimental to business. He said at least thrte reunion committees catted ham and canceled bu5.lDCSS with him after learning of the policy. "If there arc three who would choose not to do business with me, l suspect there are many more," he said. He said bia leaaJ fees have run about $20.000 thus Tar. But WorthlJllton does not n:pet his policy, ootdoes he plan to chance It. "One of the reasons I aot my own business was to lbat I could run it u I see fit, .. be said • ~ lldt • ., S.11 .,._ ' ecl'llOr ...... 1 011 JIJlltcall 642-8088 • Clnutala• T1t1•11111 ...... ... Perfect weather through week U.S. Tempa. ....,_ 71 63 Calif. Tempe. ·Extended ..... OrlMne t2 • .. Le NewYortt~ .. .. ~ IOw tor 24 hOur't ~ •I 5 • m lowclola-the-4.~0t'I ~y IO .. ~-M se Omehe IO ~ Md mild Frldey llvougll SuMey HlgM AlldlOtlQ9 $4 43 PU1J IS & 7S Ill In the r '°9 IO wound IO, IOM lrOfl'I Attenla 13 51 ..._... .. 71 aa.-...i 70 t2 50IO A-.uc:Oly 17 M =::=r.._ 7• 54 ~· 61 •1 ...-. 71 IO 10 SI f-73 $3 LOI Angelee 10 Ill ~ .. 50 '"°'*"". °"' ., 90 <>-*tend .. 52 Surf Report ao.ton $41 52 ::::rC'Aty 71 52 ,._~ 73 .... 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(AP) -The names of the dead were known less than a day after a fi~ bus crash kalled 27 people, but offic1al confirmation of the deaths "just brought it fresh again" to the victims' families. a minister says. Hearses began removing the bodies Tuesday afternoon from a National Guard armory in Cam>llton, 100 miles northeast of here, that served as a morgue. There was "a lot of grier· ans1de Radcliff First Assembly of God church. where most of the victims' families pthcrcd Tuesday morning to be told that the last of the burned bodies bad been identified, said the Rev. Dan Mattingly, minister of Christian education at the church, wh ich owned the bus. ··Some began 10 break oul an tears and gnef," Mat11ngly said. "They pretty well knew 1t. bul to actual!) hear 11 once and for all. one tame. JOO percent surt on the confirmations. 11 JUSt hit again. It JUSt brought it fresh again in their hearts." The city of Radcliff scheduled ~ memonal service for Thursday eve· ning at a htP.1 school football field. Meanwhile. offers of money and donations of time have poured m for survivors and their families. hospital officials said. Scores of people have called Hu- mana Hosp1tal-Univers1t y of Louisville. 30 males northeast of MANY BUSES UNSAFE •.. homAl 1978 Crown that cost $92,000, Phil- lips said. Even if the money were available, the nation's bus companies could not produce enough vehicles "in five }'cat'S" to replace uJifomia's qjng Hect, Parsons said. And modifying some of the buses would be .. imposs- ible," be added. Still. Assemblyman Richard Katz. D-V an Nuys, bas been pressing for l~slation that would provide SI 00 million from an oil company ~n.alty fund to replace one third of the state's older school buses. Katz. chairman of the Assembly Transportation Committee, said about 8.000 public school buses 10 California face 1he same fire danger as the church bus an Kentucky, w11h chassis built before 1977. "We're playing with a time bomb," said Katz. "The question is not if some kid wall die on the road but when. and the Legislature has not done all it can." TH .Uuclat~ PreH coatrlb•ted to ttls report. PALMIST THWARTED ••• From Al laws as they relate to fonunetclhng. He represented the soothsayers who won a landmark 1985 state Supreme Coun decision gJvmg fortunetellers First Amendment rights and makmg bans on such businesses illepl. After TuC1day's decision, Brown said the counc11 was advised by City Attorney Allan Burns that the C-2 hmitation was within the law. She added. however, that the council did not impose condiuonal-use rcstnc- + lions on fonunetellers because that might show d1scnm1nation. which would be 1llegal. Stevens would not say Tuesday whether he planned lo file suit against the city. but said his wife's effort to become the city's first soothsayer has taken more time, effon -and money -than he bargained for. ''I'd thouiht they'd approve 11. We did everything they asked. ... Stevens said. "lt's1ust a regular business." Radcliff. ofTenng food, babys1tung, and even rooms t0 their homes to famili~ of hospitalized victims, said spok~woman Taylor Rice. Callers wishmg to donate cash arc being referred to one offour funds set up to aid the victims and their familie~. she said. One survivor, 14-year-old David WaJliser, otTered thanks from his bed at Kosair Children's Hospital. ··Thanks 10 all 1he doctors, thanks to all the nurses, thanks to everyone who cares. Thanks for all the love and thanks for all the prayers." he said through has mother. The bus collided head-on Saturday °''ht with a pickup truck bcina dn"en nonh an the southbound lanes of Interstate 71 near Carrollton. The fuel tank on the bus ruptured and burst into flames, authontacs said The bus was returning from a day at an amusement park nonh ofCinc10- nat1. Autopsies showed the 27 died of smoke inhalation. Founecn of the bus nders re- mamed hosp11alized toda)' With bums, 1nclud1ng eight m cnt1caJ cond1t1on. Local. state and federal authon11cs were continuing the an vest1gat1on, but few details of their work were released. Stale Police Capt. NeaJ Brittain u1d investigators believed they kne" how the pickup truck driver. Larr} W Mahoney, came to be dnving on the wrong side of I· 71, but would not elaborate. Mahoney, 34. of Worthville wu charged Monday with 27 counts of murder. Tests showed his blood contained nearly 21/z times the amount of alcohol needed to be declared 1nto:ucated. authorities said. LAGUNA ••• From Al Those who Violate the ordinance wall be hable for up to three times tbc amount of actual damages. attorney fees and other charges levied by a JUdgc. + MEN'S & WOMEN'S SHOES NOW 21% OFF -~ NOW THAU MAY 818T ' Or11nge Coat OAILY PtlOT/Wedneedey, Mey 18, 1MI *Al Newport's top school athletes to be honored The Commodora Oub of the Newport Harbor Ara Otamber of Commerce will prelCDt its 27th auu.aJ athleUc award.a Friday to the top IS ICftior a1hk1es from Newport Ha.lt>or and Cotooa del Mar blab IChools. Marvin Cobb, wbo starred on two national championship footbell teams and two NCAA winnina bueb&ll sqUlds for use. will &ive the keynote add.ma at the 7:30 Lm. breakfast 11 the Newport Beach Marrion Hotel and Tennis O ub. The cost is SIS per person or S 100 for a table. llaervations are mandatory and can be made by callina the chamber at 644-32 l l. IJaJJd concert at owe The Golden West CollCf.e Symphonic Band will prescnt·its spnna concert, 'Music for a Beauuful World," Friday and Saturday an the maanstagc theater of the Huntington Beach coll •.. Gr&nd Jury asked to probe Laguna Beach housing vote By LANCE IONON OftlleOlllfr ......... The Orangc Count) Grand Jury has betn asked 10 in .. c!>Ugate an allegauon that a Lquna Beach ca t) rnunCJlman hed about the numbcr of bedrooms 1n a rental house he owns. Leaders ot a movcment 10 recall the council alleged in their complaint to the Grand Jul)' lhat Councilman Robert Gentf) flip-flopped "'hcn asked how many rooms he rented 1n a house he owns at 944 Sk)hne Dnve. A'> a re-~uh, they believe the two-term councalm.rn should resign. ·'We think whal he has done IS outragcous Damn 11 I don·t hkc people ly1 n& to mi:·· ">Jad Barbara Westbrook. who authorcJ the complaant wnh her husband. Paul ..ind Jad. Hansen The hou'"-' v. htlh Gentry has owned since 1975 otfo 1alh has two bedrooms But a1 wmt· point a· room and bathroom "'crc bu ah 10111 tht• garage "''tbout permits. but apparently betorc C1entr) bought the house. The Westbrook!> allt-ged an earl} Apnl that the prage room was an illegal unn A) such. they wd Gentr) should lune abstained from voting on a recen1 ord1· nance controlhn& illegal unah 1n South Laauna Ahhouab Gcn111 .iy de~nhcd the house as a three ~droom the ~r<tge room was not deemed an illegal unit bt-cau~ n did not ha H a st<1' t' However. 'honh dltn thc \\.e.,1brook ·s complained about ihe room < 11\ Manager Ken Frank said the room v.ould '1olate the state building rndc 1f it "'a' u~d as a bedroom \.\hen asked thJt night 1f thc garage room had bt:1.·n u'K'J tor \leoepang. Gcntr) said no thc hou'>t" "'a' a two bedroom. But 1n an ad' ent'>t"mcnt m 1h1. \fart h 16 ed1t1on of the Pe nn' \Ot' n 1 ht hnu-.e v. as hsted a<, a thrce IX'Jruom c 1t'nt11 said hmlled ad 'IPJtl' p111h1b11ed 11'.ltang th~ house a\ a "l"-O bedroom thrce bath wuh den ·· Rub Brennan no\\ a rt:\1den1 of El Morro T ra1IC'r Park '>31d hC' II\ ed an the room on l"-O •Kt•htun' an 11>1(') and 1986 He said he "'as not '>urc.-1f< ren11"\ kne"' he w&'> It' 1ng there hti"'c.-' er "HC' nc,er 1.am1. tn lht' h"u'(' Rreonnan said About (1C'Oti"' ··Hr jU\I "'' \(' h\ .. The: 1.omplain1 ""'' .. 1,1 "-111 111 lhC' otht"r four mc:mber. of 1he < 11' c 11u1h 11 req uest· 1ng thcm 10 lCll\Uf<" < rt•n11' In Jdd111on to Cu:ntf) the: rt'ld.ll g11111p " 11' 111g to oust Ma)or Dan Kn1nt'' .rnu c 11unl'1lwuman Lida L~OOC:\ ThC' compld1111 '>J'' c n 1111' 'alkgC'd he '1olate'> lour \t:°l 111111' l•l 1hc 11' ·, muntCl· pal codl 1111r •' •I 1,t rry UHC'\ lit) official\ Lo ahtdl tH 1111 t i:ttl''' \landard of mural11\ .. · 0e'>p1lt' ·"hat OlJ\ 1,1111 11111 ~· nn rnorC' than J poltttlJI l'!•u' 11\ '''l't'n rt'lall opponc:nl~ Jlld ( llnl ( 1•,1111: fun rorr- Robert Gentry mJn Jam Lindberg said the JUry will conduct a pre-laminar) '"''C'1>t1gauon to set' if the JllC'gatwn holds ment ·v. e JIV.J\\ Ion~ c11 11 no matter ho"' Ir ' ''"U) 11 -.et·m\ Conductor Paul Banagas wall dU"eCt the pro- pam, which as scheduled for 8 p.m. both evenang.s. Admission 1s $4 with students and children under 12 admitted for SJ. Call 895-8378 for reservations. Star toar .clJedaled , An "evening with the st.an" at Gnffitb Park Observatory 1s scheduled for Thursday. sponsored Supervisors order child-care study by Irvine's Famil) Services Program. . Participants will leave via bus from the Irvine Youth Services Center at 6 pm. and will be &l"Cn a box dtnner. The cost 1s SI S. and further informauon is available from Davd Anderson at 660-3920 Rummage ale at cburcb · The 25th annual rummage sale by St. Andre"' 's Presbytcnan Church will bc held Thursday from 9 Lm. to 7 p.m. and Fnday from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the church. I 5th Street at St. Andrew's Road. Newport Beach. The sale will includc furn1turc. clothing. books. records. toys. sporting goods. 1ewelry and ap- phanccs. All proceeds "''II go to church m1sS1ons Call 646-1535 for dcta1ls. Benent golf tourney The second annual golf tournament and dinner in memory of Bob G1lben and Dick Broe will be held Thunday at I pm. at the Rancho San Joaquin Golf Course in Irvine. The cost for 18 holcs ofgolfand a steak dinner 1s $50. with all procecds to bc donatl·d to programs for abused children Call 494-Q6:!3 for further 1nfor- mat1on. Frtt skin cancer scrcenangs will be g.a vcn on Fnda)s and Monda)S dunng Ma) in conjunction with Nauonal Melanoma 'ikin Cancer Dctcct1on and Prcvenuon Month. The scrttnrngs wtll bc gi .. en at Fulton Medical Group, 201 l Westcliff Dnve, Suite 3, Ne"'port Beach. Appointments ma} he made b~ calling 642-2663. French club awards set The Alliance Francaise de la R1v1era Cahfor- ntenne will hold 1ts annual awards night Fnda) at 8 p.m. in the hall of the Neighborhood C'ongrcgataonal Church. 340 St Ann's DnH, Laguna Beach The winner ofa two-month stud) tnp to France will bc announced. Books will be sold in both French and Eo.alish. Soclal meedng Jn NB The regular mceung of the Orange Coastal Rkiprocity Burean will be held Friday at the Glendalc Federal Savings and Loan building. 100 ~wport Center Dnve. Ncwpon Beach. All unaffihatcs from the Orange Coast area arc invited. Call Aileen Schrader at 673-8455 or Barbara Simmons at 720-8103 for further information • 8 p.m. Foutala Valley City Coa.ncll, council ch.ambers, 10200 Slater Ave. Tbanday, May 19 No meetinas schcdul~ By 808 VAN EYKE!'\ Of ,,,. O.ny "->1 St.II ( Ol}Jlt~ \Upt'f\ 1-.or<, have directed the 'iocaal ~n tCc' \gcnc) w conduct a 'ilud~ of 1hr rnunt' ' lhald care needs but SIOPJ>t-'d 'hon ot appropnaung an) monC'~ lor tht• 1,un c\ ~upc:n l\or C 1add1 VasqucL has \poken -;cvcral time\ an fl'l'ent months ahout thC' counl\ ·,growing need for <:hald care and has \u&gc:\h:d \('\t.'ral remedies. andud1ng !>peual 1onang pro' l'>tOn' It• guaran1ec land for child carc 1.1.·11•cr\ Working mother'> rrpc:)Cnl 1ht' fastest gro"'ang segement of the: <:ount' ., ""orl fon.:c.-according to Vasquo and ligur~ show that most of thl count' ' p-.1pula11on grow th 1i. due to ne"' birth' The '>Uf\.C\ appro,cd Tund,t\ 1\ 10· trnded to pr.oduce a numt,..:r 11f' figures at>out l hald care need~. 1ndudang the numberoffamahes usangd<H lcHc: and 1hc s11c: of those families Longtime Newport community leader 'Vin ' Jorgensen dies \ Vantc:nt ··\in · J()rg_l'n\en. a longumC' pillar of th e "cw pon Beach com mun1t~ and 11-\car hoard mc:mber of Hoag \.iemonal Hmp11.il d1t'd ~onda~ C\ cnang at the hospnal hr \upponed and lo' ed He was 7~ JorgensC'n d1rd 11 f a hean-related a1l- mcnt according 111 hospnal officials and famah mcmbers The -.on of a I >an1sh ~a cap1ain Jorgen..en "'a\ born in San Pedro an IQl4 and earned a dt"grt't' in economics trom Occadcntal College an Los .\ngelt.'s in I llP He moved lo. ""e""~1n fkach in 1946. shonl~ afterre11nng a-; a colond from a SIA· \Car Manne Corps stint · Heo v.cnt 10 "tlrk tor 1hc famah ·., mannc suppl\ bus1ne'>' an \.in Pedro. and later opcne<J a hranl h 1n :-.:e"port &:Kh kn o""n as Balboa Mannc Hard"'arc He sold the compan)' in 1969. but managed the storc until rctanng in 197 4 Jorgeonsen also hclped de' elop the Manncr's \11k business area .\lthou~ he "'as acu'e 10 numerous local hustnc\!>. c hanl~ and 1.ommun1t) organ12auons. ha~ ti~t IO't.' v.as Hoag Memorial Ho~p1 tal Jorgrnscn fOtnt"d the board of d1rC\·tors an !Y"i"i and "'as instrumental tn supporting the ho-.p1tal's gro"th from a small 15-bcd taCth t) to Its prc~nt status as a "urld-rC'no"' ned mC'd1· cal fac111t} "He was as ded1catt•d 111 thc hu<;p1tal and communal} as an.,,one I'-.: C'' a met ... said hospital adm1n1stra1or \.1 1chad 'itepht"ns. "He v.ai;c1' warm canng and enthusaasuc a pt.'f\un as r,e I.'\ Cr met Hi' 'nad '" unc v.e'rc: not going to Ix ablt' to 1ill HC' "'a\ a uniqut' mdl\ 1dual ·· Jorgensen wa\ president ol tht' board from I Q67toI~~1. and "'as also a loundang meomht'r of thl' SS:! (lub. a hospital ph1lanthrop1c organizanon and "'3'> an- ' uhcd "11h 1hc hospital au\1han Jorgensen's "''tc: ot 2M )Cal"\ "ora. said her hue.hand ··rC'all' lo' t:d lt k l'\flt'1.. tall~ hie. \I.Ork "'Ith thr ho<,p11al ··v. hen he wa' ~o all he said ·1 hope I don·1 ha-.e-to qu11 theo board. " she rt'" ailed In 14!<0. J11rgen~n "'as namcd ll thc board ol tf\J\LCe'i ol the Orangc ( 11unl) Perform mg .\n'i ( C'ntcr s.c.·n 1ng a\ l haar- man of thC' ccntcr's commun11y outreach commit tee. He 1s also pa!>! prcs1dl'nt ofthc Rotai"' ( lub of 1'-c:"port-Balboa and the South ( nast \1anne .\ssoc1a11on Jorgen!>fn v.on ~\cral award\ and honor\ mer the )l'ar\. including \Ian 01 the 'l car aw-ard for 19n9 o' the "t'wpon Harbor l hambt'r ol ( ommcr<.·e He also reCC'I \ 1..·d a c;;pint of! 1 fl· a"'ard from ( 11~ ot Hope and "as rc\.1..'nth honored h~ Speat.. l 'p °";c"'pon. a gri up n·cog.nmng o t11C'ns in\oh ed an commun11' .tl II\ 1t1e\ Jorgen'>l·n 'it'n cd a<. Jn elder at St Andre"'·.., Presb\lenan Church .rnd 1s a past pre.,1dcn1 ot thl' chamlx·r·~ Com- mo<lorC''s ( luh H1.· "'3' .1l~n on lhl· hoard ll w 'I Jl'>•l lh I rn nc 'J'lllh thJrJ1..- tert'illl\ 'u h ,, , r , 1 •n 1; .1 nJ l'm nl"' m1.•n1 a\ "'di 3\ the: I)<. 1• .1 t'{Jl1 >not tla' .Jrt• 1ha1 " hl:tn!l u'"" But h<lard n t.'11 tx•r, rt·lui.t·d Ill ;illocatc S 10.00U lnr r '1.Hh a\ hdd bt'rn recommc:ndl·J..., "· "'1Jl \(.·n a.t'' \tJff ln!.tt'ad th.· ""•I I J1rt·l 11..·J Jjlt'Ol' <;lat'l to do the \t1111' "l'h11u1 ,rn, Jdd111onJI funds ··\\e'll ha' : 111 ti1.wre ou1 a w 3' Hl do 11." said John V. l·hh -.cnaur 'tall Jn3l~ SI "'11h VlncentJorgen.en •lf director<. of Sherman Garde-n \ \\hen he "'a<,n ·110' oh ed 1n communll) J(ll' tilt'' Jorgcn'it'n l'OJO' C'd sailing pho- tngraph' and ""'>d"'ort.. In add111on h• hi\ "•fr forgc::nsen 1s 'u · J\t'J O\ thrl't' d.1ughla'> \nn i-...uhkl•n and \1c1n ''"t' """ D:n 1d Paul l\\1 hrPlht"f\ \\,1ht·1 anJ \tJnlt'' and r1gh1 ~randLhtldn n \ mcm<'nal \(.'r l' '' <o1,, ht"tlukd tor 2 \11 rm f nJJ\ JI \t \ndrl.'"' ' Prt'\h\IC'nan < hun h •I '\ ·u. pon Beach 1 hi.' fam1h rl'llUl'''' th .11 J11na1111n\ tX' madt' to tht' Hnag \km1H1al H1""}l11al lfran ln<ot11u1e Ht• w ti tx hunN.I Jl ""'.'a Seniors win rent hike battle By ROBERT BARKER Of_O..,Nellwt A group of Hun11ng1on Beath !>entor c111zcn~, claiming a rent increase would force someo of them out of their apartmrnts and onto the strCt'l!i. ha' e won 1hc1r banle to put a hd on thc propo'K'd hakes Instead of Jacking up pnces S6 to S9 a month at the city-owned Emerald Cove apartments. Ctty Council officials dC'Cidcd to cut the $200.000 operating budget for the 164-unit com pie\ The e\act cuts were not specified. "We'vc won. we·,e "'on." murmured 'illme ~naors as the' kft < 11' ( ount."11 chamber<> \.i onda~ n1gh1 ··1 ha,en't come do"'n ln>m douJ ntne H'l.'. ~nior leader Pat Parl..cr t'IS. said Tuc~a\. 'Tm so happ}:· The apanmrnts lost S '18.000 In I llbt>-l\., and stand to lose another SI 8,000 an l 987-88 v.1thou1 rent incrca~"· cm of- ficials said Parkcr. an AmH truck dn vcr 1 n \\ orld War 11 wh o says she c;uffers from a qru'i. hcan problems and other ailments. s.a1d a ralegor. npe for cutting 15 (tround" marntenan.c. u.htlh "Jlk-...atC'd S2J l!Ull Parkl" ·•ho ra\\ '''J J m nth I If hc-r upC.IJIT\ " 1d111 Jpanml'OI .11~ ..... ,,J lhJ· S8.111 tor w1..urt l\ ' :i o1di.ul11u<. C'\PC"O!it', Jnd addt•d thJI 111111·1 npcn'><-'' also might l'C h'" haph <at) 1lflil1.1h plan 11> 1Pt'"1n1 ~·,rra !><'ntOrs lO a ll'mnllllt'\' \1l fl'\ It'\\ 1..0Sl- sa"mg mcai,un·<. TC'nants re1..cl\ C:ll a • iX'• t·n1 rent increase last 'ear hnn11.1nE:, urn·nt rate!. to S2Q-i for uix1a1T'\ l'OC·tx·.tr "'m ap.in· mt'nts and S 11 ~ ll•r ttnl'-t-...·.t "•rt .tpan- ments ltxatC'd dow O\t.t1f\ The' rnn a"'a\ thl' Jgcnl'' "'-'hat 1t mean' I) tnat wc wn n 1 l'C ahle 10 do the phone' survey that '-'C ti h1.:tn plannm~ Ynu pre11 ~ much have I<' nniract out lor that. "'hach wo uld rt"llU 1 rC' the-e\ tra mone' ·· V. c=hb 5.aad he hcl1C\ ed the ag.enq ""ould ht ahlc to gel thr nc1.~s.a11 informauon by 1..{•lllJltang child Lare pro' tdC'rs and others in the: child um· 1it'ld and asking th1r J\\l\tJnce He \31d infnrma11on collection 'll.Ould ~n w 1th1n 1u.o to tour "'eeks Bathhouse study has officials worried l t I\\ '-l1E:U\1 .\Pl-l>c!>patet.ount~ etlons tu l lo~ g;J\ hathhou!><'s. a new stud) sa\ <. theo fat'lhllc'> '>hould bC' Ust'd as a forum for C'ducaung patron\ about hov. to prc,ent the '>Pr<."ad ot thr dead!~ d15ea~ .\ID\ Th1: 'lud' lunducted O\ ~f't'hers at the l ( L .\ lound that nearly all LhOSt" qur\twnt'd "'l'rr tam1har "-Ith ·preventton m<:thods. )1.'l m.tn) 1:ontanued to en~ tn ~' ual actt' 11' known to p<>St h1g.b to moderate nsl \ of transm1tUQ& lhe dea.dl) aqu1rcd 1mmun( df'fiuenC) S\.ndrome F-unded h' a grant from the Los "-ngeles ( 'Uri\ Bathhou~ O \\.ners <\ssociaoon. th<" stud} found "a d ear 1neons1stenc) c'istcd for somC' mCf'I bc.-fio\.tto their AJDS knowl<."dge and their actual S('Xual bcha\-- 1or ·· "Thie. 1s a pnme opportun11' to cducalt men some of"' horn are pract1c1ng sex an an un~fe v.a' ..aid Dr Gar) R1chwald. an a~<.1stan1 prolC'\'>tlr al the l 'CL.<\ School nf Putilac Hcalth and the pnnCJpaJ author nl tht' o;tud' Puhh \ht'd thl\ "'C'l:k an the Journal nfScx R~\C'arc h tht' '>t ud' "as ba'ie'd on rt·,pnnsc-<. from l 616 mC'n at se.,. en of the coun t,·., 12 hathhousc-s o'cr a six-week rx·r11x1 .\bout half agreed to fill out a three· l'••!-!l quc'ltaonna1re .,.,.h1ch mcludcd 52 L1L1t''l 1•'n ' or. <.uch issue' as age' race. 1nu1mc <ot'\ual tx-ha,1or and reasons for J • ifd'in11. hath h11u~ \lcording 111 1ht· '>Uf"\l') 10 per1..ent of rl "P<'ndcnt~ lc:ll 1n10 thr high n~k catC-gOI) ''' prac-ucing ur-!-afe S('\ -unprotected .mal intcrcoul"'\(' "'1th at least fi\C ma.le sex ranncr. in thc pre' 1ouo; month Those in •" Jl, 3lt'gt'f1 tl'ntkd 10 boC' ~ ounJC'r and less -.1,1, Jtt·d 1han m'"' of the largel) wh1tc n11klk-dass crowd that frequents the "Jthhou~. the 'ilUd\ found \ nutht'r ti I pc-recnt 'i.Ald the) had r.1 : .ipated 1n adl'lllCS th.al expens s.a) :'It ~ leo~\Cr dcgrc-e\ of n slt including anaJ f'll'r,ourv "'11h a condom and protected anJ un protected oral sex. c 11 th" total. Q pcrttnt reported regular \l'\llJI contact IA.1th women. posing a nsk llf 'prc· 1ding the' 1ru\ to heterosexuals the 'I U•h ""d Judge rejects dO,-bite s~it by.ex-county pol1cewoman d1~0' cred that i,omrone had <.tolC'n lb<' SI 500 sterro from h1' l \)s~ Mercedes Benz. which hc kl\ un- locked m his open garage On \und3' evening. a "-Oman unloadin~ ~\ffiC' Items from her car at her "icw port He1ihts home made the m1~tal..e of lca.,.ina her ke)S on the sc~t ~ "-Cnt into her home. and "~n shC' l'C'· turned, her I Q7Q Mazda 6~6 "-•' gone \ ht'! dog can l r1\' 11•mcd ·· Dlct.. ' Oogc, · "'·u ~tokn !r • 1 If\ inc t C'Oll.'r Dn'c and Laleo h 111·-i l>rnC' \ patron ~t the Read) Teller " n~o"' at First Interstate Bank at 1'4:-.\l h Boule' ard and Ed1naier Av- e nu~ \aid a "'om•n foOowed other "'omen at the location. ukina for m1)nt} h<" allegedly told ol.bcn that hrr car hrolC' dO"-'n and that l'lcr bds v.crc hunlf' ~ ... ,....,,, iD dlll 100 bk>ck olllnd S... ........ a~M S:llp.m. ,........,, ... A mu wlto did not have a~ lO atay 90C* moro tb&n S.,000 m casla __ ) fiaurina tcan on her left lq.. I n rulina Tuaday, the Judge ap- proved a lepl find.ina by Coun Commissioner Ronald Bauer. Beuer found that a hamster 1n Oft:eoG and a aku.ak in New York wae declartd productt an tawswts filed in thOIC a.ate. but in both casn the ... defcas .. Mte diseatcS that were pracnt a& the time eacb animal was told. Nocuesoompanbk to Sm.ith'1 C9IC -.:ft found. Ba\ICI" found that io Snutb's case. she was harmed by .. an cmnt di~ ect" by the dQI after it bed been tumed over to police and Md beea ... IU.bjetud to infinite ex· taMI .... ilCtl.. • Mc'>azd d"1 riili1111 disma.d the city 11 a dlll a s t and dimi 1eCI all of Sftlitla'a ...., claims excepc an allcptioe or. . .._.DCll .ansa AdJerhont Oam•aes 10u&ht an the lawsun were unspecified. bu1 a cla.im filed q:amst the city before the civil complaint asked for S l 30.000. The plai.nuff' left the Santa Aoa Pohce Department ear1~ this year after six years on the f orcc. She was a membe.r of a doa-handliq urut when she was attacked by the dot dunna ' trai.ninfcxaate 10 a vaca.nt butld.ina. The dOl W1S seattb.tna for an offictr pla)'iftl the \'Ok of u Wt:ii01'. Smith was in uniform and IMlCOmpanyu11 the dot's WMDer. mitb. wbo bed bocn a dot handler far four )'Cati. claims that tltcre was \00 mucb cmplmis oa ttainO. frci for intaUUoul c:ampetitiom in Eu,. ad ioo link~ in \&Ill of .. minamal hte.. a.ad· bale pobcc ""°"· • • • Someone smuhcd the wmdow of a motor home parkcd near Hoq Mcm- oml Ho pital and ~tole a sl«pmabq and a pillow \\'11\ a 'm1hn1 turtk 1mpnntC'd on 1t FCKllltalD Valley · S2 200 car teT('() and 'JX"lkctr S} lrm ~ ~tokn from an lwzu lmputsr lalc Mondi~ otabt. ~ ca.r parted ll 1ht Ed-. ... nts T in Onema. 16149 Brook.hunt t Hunt:infton Beach .\ 1t1rl "'alkang h mt· lrom ~ h1x• Tue~a' ~•d a <ou<.p<'\I an a <.1her OodsC' ptll..up tru ._ thrt""' a meotal ob,)C'CI 11 hrr at \ orkw"'n "'~C'nuc and Main ~trC'ct Tht' girl -.a id !.he "''' \trucl 1n the \houlJcr and wa'\ tf'f'atC'<l h' theo J~tor • • • • • • .\ man rrponcdl)' enttred a borne In thC 21 ()()() hloc\ Of Brookhunt ~trect and s.iok-a Son) ldt~ision • 'alued at S400 and IJ') St taundt) ba\ket to carry 1t in. Pair arrested after dFGI• allegedly found hi car I Death: penalty addition delays Pentagon budget WASHINGTON (AP) -The Sen- ate tried qain today to untje a legislative knot that has prevented it from passin& a Pentagon budget bill because of an unrelated amendent allowina the death penalty for some drug dealers. "We're trying to worlc out some ty pe of~ment, but we don't have oneyet."saidSenate M~ority Leader Robert Byrd1 D-W.Va.' I don't know when it will De done." Byrd and o ther senators were seeking a compromise that would permit approval o f the bill, which authorizes Pentagon spending of $299.5 billion in the fiscal year beginning Oct. I . The fight involves an amendment that would let dealers con' icted of killing someone to be sentenced to death. Opponents threat~ned a tihbu~ter against the propoS'.al after the~ threat- ened to kill 1t. Sen. Alfon~ D·Amato. R-N.\' .. chief author of the amendment, has refused to remo' e n from the Pen- tagon bill unless be ttieeives as- suranct'S from Democratic leaders that it wilJ be returned to the Senate floor later with the promise of a certain vote. "We've been trying to get a vote on this for years." D'Arnato said Tues- day. Three anu-drug proposals have alrcadr been attached to the bill, including one that would increase the military's involvement in the effort to halt illegal drug trafficking. .. We've got to catch them first, and then we can take c,are of the penalties. This bill. with the changes we've made. would help us catch them. Let us go ahead.·· said Sen. Sam Nunn, 0- Ga .• chairman of the Armed Services Commjuee. The Senate voled easy approval Tuesday of a pair of amendents expressing displeasure with reports that Reagan 1s negotiating Wtlh Pan- ama's militar. ruler, Gen. Manuel Antonio Nonega. Nori~ has been indicted on drug charges in Flonda. Bomb smugglers, Syrian terrorists linked BURLI NGTON. Vt. (>\P) - Three men who smuggled a bomb from Canada into Vermont belong 10 a Syrian tcrronst group that as- sassinated Lebanese President-elect Bashir Gemayel. officials said in asking for maximum sentences. U.S. Attome} George Terwilliger .Ill sa1d Tuesda) he was aware oftbe association within .is hours of the Oct. 23. 1987, arrests. .. We deliberately kept the associa- tion out of our case becauS<' it was not relevant to an) of the charges," TeJWJlliger said. ··we came away from the trial without any possible taint to our case that such premature disclosure might have caused." U.S. District Judge Albert Coffi'in has not set a sentencing date for the three Lebanese-born Canadians. Stark sailors remembered Lt. Michael Reed of Indiana and Petty Offlcera Robert Vaqhan of Virginia and Matthew Limbert of Ohio partici- pate In a ceremony on the USS Stark on Tueeday In Mt•::!:fil, marking one year alnce an Iraqi aircraft fired two Jes at the guided ml.aalle fdgate. Vaughan and Limbert were aboard the ahlp during the attack. Baker hoping for Noriega' s removal I W .\SHJNGTON ( .1.PJ -White House Chief of StafT Howard H Baker Jr. said today he is "reasonably hopeful .. that the U nited States will succeed rn remo' mg Panamanian ruler Manuel .1.nto n1u Nonega from po\\er. has offered to drop drug trafficking charges against Noriega. "The negotiations are under wa)' ... said Ba~er. ··our policy is that Nonega must go and indeed that remains our commitment.·· When asked whether he believed in astrology himself. however. he paused and replied ... I don't guide my life b~ 11. but I won't answer the question the other way because I don't know enough about 1t to say 1s there something to it or not." Of Meese. the president said. "I thank that there's been a wave. and for quite a long time ... in which accusauon or allegation is taken to mean conviction. And there's been too much of that." Baker spoke wnh reponers o ne da)' after President Reagan said at a surpnse news con- fere01:c that he "'111 not strike a deal that would ""'h11cwa<;h anvone·· in Panama. Both the 'pres1dl'nt and his chief of stafT decltnl•d tti J1scusc; reJ)orts that the United States Questions about Noriega and embattled Anomey General Edwin Meese Ill dominated Reagan's meeting with reporters Tuesday. Reagan also said no decisions were made at the White House on the basis of astrological advice to first lady Nancy ~cagan. U.S. used known drug crlmlnals to get guns \\ .1.SHl!\GTO~ 1.1.Pl-The Re- agan admin1strat1on ma} have sanc- tioned and in some ca~s re-crutted con\ 1cted drug traffickt·rs in 1LS secret effon to aid the Nicaraguan Contras, a House subcommllll't'. chief savs. Rep. W1l11am Hugh~s. D-N.J°. who chairs the Hou'ic cnme subcommit- tee. said Tuesda~ the panel has uncovered "a substanttal amount of ev1de-nce .. suggesting tha1 the adm1n- 1strat1on used knm~ n drug criminals to secure guns for the rebels He said there is no proof so far. but that he >A1ll air the issue at public heann~ next month. President Reagan <1a1d Tuesday he kno"'s nothing about the alleged operations The Justice Department has been rocked m recen t weeks by unrest and resignations. Dukakis, Bush win in Oregon PORTLAND. Ore. (AP) -Michael Dulcakis, cont1numg his march toward the Democratic nomination with a lopsided win in the Oregon primary, touted h1msclf as "a candjdatc who can win the presidency." .Democratic ri>.aJ Jesse Jackson. however, warned his rival not to count him out )'tt. Vice President George Bush, who already has a mathematical lock on the Republican nomination. picked up aJI 32 delegates in Oregon. But Bush was gening less attention for wanning another primary than for trailing Dukakis m a scnes of surve~. >\nd Kansas Sen. Bob Dole. who dropped out of the Republic,an race back in March. skimmed off nearly a fifth of the vote in Oregon. It doesn't do Dole any good at this poinL but it points to weakness that could hurt Bush an November. The primary season is now in its final phase. pointing toward the closing contests June 7 in California. New Jerse). New Mexico and Montana. Jackson has vowed to make an all-out effort in CaJ1fomia, which ofTen him a last chance to c-0me out a winner before the Democratic convention in July. He headed to the state while the votes were being counted in Oregon. and .vowed to press on. "The support we're getting from the public is a mandate for change, and we will continue," be told supporters Tuesday night at a Hollywood hotel. "We will not surrender." Dukak.is. who was c,apturing 56 percent of the vote to Jackson's 38 percent in Oregon, issued a victory statement that looked to the coming primary contests - but that also tacitly assumed that he would be the one to face Bush in the fall. A poll by the Los Angeles Times indicated that in California, Dukakis had a 17-point lead over the vice president. von Hemert's Ice balls from space gave water to Earth '' 2nd ANNUAL BOMBE SALE Featuring over thirty styles with over 200 in stock all specially priced for this event. All Bombes are from our direct import prpgrsm ' BAL Tl MORE (AP) -Support is growing among scientists for a controversial theory tha~ aJI the Earth's water -including oceans, lakes and icecaps -originated from blackened snowball comets that even now are falling from space by the millions. Papers presented Tuesday a t the American Geophysical Union meeting here. along with studies reported from Europe and Canada, arc slowly adding scientiftc weight to a concept that once thratened to undermi~ the career of University of Iowa physicist Louis A. Frank. The findings. Frank said Tuesday. are beginning to ease the professional pain he endured after publishing the theory two yea.rs ago. .. No one has yet found data to show the comets don't exist," he said. The support helps. but Frank admitted. "My life would have been easier" if his snowballs-from-space theory had never been published. The Iowa scientist based his theory on data gathered from 1981 to 1986 by the Dynamics Explorer I sateJhte. In pictures taken to study air glow around the Earth, Frank found unexplained boles that appeared to have been punched thro~gh the upper atmosphere. He puzzled over the problem for months., discarding dozens of possible answcn before decidin& the only thing that could make the boles wett l ()()..ton icy comets covered with a black bydrocarl>otl. And he figured they were falling to Earth at the rate of 10 million a year. Libr~ surveillance for Soviet spies asked by FBI • Tax shortfall now may really reach $2 billion into '89 SACRAMENTO (AP) -l.qislat- ive bud&et writen are rea.lry facin& a $2 billion revenue sbon.laU -l 1 billio.n in the current fi9CIJ year and another SI billion in 198S.89, Gov. George Dcukmejian's fl$Cal experts have concluded. "If you're talking aboul a billion dollars (shortfall) in the current year, prudence would demand we talk about a billion dollars in the (next) budget year," Deukmejian Finance Director Jesse Huff said Tuesday. The conclusion by a group named by Dcukmejian to study the surprise shortfall makes it likely that legis- lators and the 4overnor arc going to have to adjust income taxes upward this year to balance the 1988-89 budget. / But Huff. like his boss ~fore him, insisted that any adjustment made in the 1987 tax conformity bill -one of the likely culprits in the shortfall - would not be a tax increase. "Ifs not a tax increase. because what you have is a situation where in my opinion a m1$CalcuJation was made in oonstructinf the (tall con· fonnity) bill," he satd, referring to 1987 leaislation that partiaJlY con- fonned state tax law to tederal statutes. He said st.ate i.ncome taxpayers apparentlX received a $900 million .. windfall • this year. or an unex- pected tall cut. The adjustment, therefore, would be bringing income taxes up to the level they would have ~n had the law not mistakenly cut them for 1987 taxpayers. "The raw numbers are that rev- enues from the income Wt this year arc going to be less than income w last year by maybe $900 millio~. Deuk:mejian has prcrviously said the tax conformity law *UJibt have to be changed, but called any change an "adjustment. .. State praised, prodded on assistance for poor LOS ANGELES (AP)-California has a strong government assistance program for the poor, but a report by a private research group concludes that "some sizable holes remain in the state safety net.'' A nationwide stud) by the Center on Budget and Polic) Priorities, which was released today in Washing- ton says. that single people or child- less couples who are not elderly or disabled are among those who may find themselves w11hout aid. The stud} also conduded: -One in four Aid to Families With Dependent Children families in C~lifom1a does no t receive food stamps. the third highest proportion of all such households not recevmg food stamps among all states. -Only 35 percent of those eligible in C.aJjfomia participate in a federal food and nutrition program for women. infants and children. -The California level for Aid to Families With Dependent Children for a single parent with two children ranks second out of all the states. -California is the only state that adjusts for inflation its Supplemental Security Income for the elderly. -Cahfornia extends its Medicaid program to all chidren under 21 years of age, and its combined Medic,aid and Medically Needy programs arc so strong that it bas not needed to adopt a federa~ act developed to cover poor pregnant women and young children. Willie Brown won't agree to limit speaker's powers SAC'RAMENTO (AP) -As.- sembl) Speaker Withe Brown says he won't agree to reduce his powers Just to placate a group of rebel Democrats and keep his JOb. "I don't think the power of the speakership should be diminished at all ... I certainly would not do ll in the interest of Willie Brown's survival1" the San Francisco Democrat said Tuesday at a Capltol news con- ference. The Gang offive, dissident Demo- crats ~ho have been opposing Brown, are pushing reforms that would greatly reduce the speaker's powers. They want to limit the speaker to six years in the job and delete the spe.aker's power to remove commit- tee ctiairmen and members at will. Brown said he will aJso meet this week with Assemblyman Bill Lan- caster. R-Covina. who is pushing Republican reform ideas that would generaJly shift many of the speaker's powers to the Rules Committee. Brown and some of his supporten met Monday with two of the gang members, Assemblymen Steve Peace of Chula Vista and Gary Condit of Ceres to discuss the reform proposals. Condit and Brown said the 90-minute meeting produced no agreements. but both sides will k.ecp talking. Brown's willingncu to have the meeting to discuss the gang's refonns caused gang members last week to call a temporary ball in their efforts lo oust Brown from the powerful pos.- ition he has held for nearly 71h years. Custom.s confiscates car after finding a pot pipe By Tb~ Associated Preas SAN DIEGO-A San Diego woman's car has been confiscated under the "zero tolerance" policy after U.S. Customs Service asents at a border crossjng found a marijuana wpe in her glove oompanmenL Chery) Caho, 20, said she had driven some friends to Enscnada May I and was returning through the San Ysidro border crossing alone when she was sent to a secondary inspect.ion area. A Customs agent found the pipe in her glove compartment and her l 98S , Chrysler Laser Turbo was seized. Caho told the"San Diego Union she has sent a notarized statement to Customs officials that says the pipe was not hen. But Customs officials said she will have to buy tbe $6,000 car back from them at auction. Se.a•te panel OIU gravel load cover IJUl SACRAMENTO -Siding with rock-dod&ing motorists.. a st.ate Senate c-0mmittee has voted to !_'CCJUire trucken to cover loads of gravel and similar material to cut down on flyulf highway debris. "You ought to be able to drive down the roads of Catiforrua without worrying about dod&ina sand and gravel. .. Assemblyman Richard K.au said T-uesday before the 'transportation Committee voted 7-2 for his leaisJation, AB I 0. The panel has been a stumbling block for such biUs in the pasL fn 1986, the oommittec approved an earlier Katz measure but only aftcrremovin& the oovcriq requirement. Katz, D-Panorama City, said heavy public suppon and the penonal clperience of at least one committee member apparently helped make the difference this time. DocameaJary apart raJ• lleld mnlld SAN FRANCISCO -An appeals court rulina uJ)boldina tax-free export o( documentary films is a victory for free spCecb and (or the maken of movies on nuclear arms.. Nic:anaua•a war and o\ha'CQl'ltroversial sub,Jecu, lawyen for the 61.mma.km claimed. .. This is I arcat victory for the Fint Amendment and obviously tmponant for filmmakers, many of whom have Jost s_ianffic:.an.t amounts of money .. because of expon rtSU'ictions by the U.S. l.nfornwion ~· ilid David Lem.er, sookaman··for the Center for Coutitutioul lliabts. 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Sportswear Men·s Rugby Stm>ed ShortS Regular 14 95 ______ _ Men s Rugby Stnped Anorak & Jaeket Regular 39 95 -----~ Society's trash can't hide under garbage can lid A man's can 1s not his castle, or so the courts have ruled. The U.S. Supreme Court ruled 6-2 on Monday tha~ an individual's right of privacy does not extend to ~he c1:1rb side. Specifically, the high court overturned a Cahfom1a coun ruling against evidence obtained in a trash can. The Supreme Court decision means. charges will .be reinstated in a Laguna Beach drug"eahng case. Pohce allegedly found drug paraphernalia and residue while sifting through a garbage bag outside of Billy Greenwood's home in 1984. On the basis of that discovery. police obtamed a search warrant for Greenwood's home where the} seized marijuana, hashish and cocaine. Greenwood and a woman visiting the home were arrested. But the courts then tossed out the charges like so much stale bread. ruling that police had violated the rights of Greenwood and the woman. The court of appeal cited a state Supreme Court ruling that said residents had an expectation that their garbage would remain private. That court ruhngand now that expectation have been officially o' erturned. if it were ever held. Civil libertanans see danger in the. most recent ruli.nf They warn police will take another piece of the public :> privacy away when they take a peek inside garbage cans. Roving trash patrols would bring Big Brother closer to home. they contend. And so they would if that were the likely result of the ruling. But the chances of that warning becoming reality seem as narrow as the court's ruling, which specified only trash left for removal was subject to search. Cans next to a house may not be inspected The high court essentially based its ruling on the exasting public nature of the curb-side container. Ragp1ckers. neighborhood children and even the trash man himself rouunel~ examines the contents of the can. so it's not very pn,ate. The assault on personal pnvacy by poltce perusals of piles of trash seems minimal at best when weighed against the difficult task of law officers handcuffed by past narrow court rulings and limited resources. If society's scum can be found out m the trash can. let the search begin. Condor chick The news about the hatching at the San Diego Wild Animal Park of the first California condor to be conceived in captivity was received with sattsfaction across the country and beyond. That satisfaction sprang not so much from the solid scientific accomplishment, which illustrated in a tangible way that the species 1s capable of being saved from extinction. as from the knowledge that man cared enough in the first place to carry it out. The condor, wt th its 9-foot wingspan, was once a familiar sight along North America's coastline ... At the beginning of this year, there were only 27 California condors left in the world, 14 in San Diego and 13 in Los Angeles. Since 1980. the federal government, the state of California and pnvate groups such as the San Diego Zoo, the Nauonal Audubon Society and the Los Angeles Zoo have contnbuted more than S20 milhon toward saving the condor from cxtincuon. The hatching of Molloko was a small step in this vast plan. but it was also a milestone of some consequence and a reassunng pointer to uhtmate success. San Diego Union Prison sentences It sentences have messages, it is hard to tell what the nll''>">agc 1s when a man gets a sax-year sentence on first"egrce sc \u:il as~ult under circumstances that can only be described a\ l'\lrcmc The man was accused -and pleaded no contest to-the lir\t Jegrct: charge 1n March and was sentenced last week .... rhi.' \ 1cum was a 6-year-<>ld girl. She was tied up at the 11 rm· of the rape, and was totally at the disposal of the criminal. r here 1r, i.'\ en some evidence that it was not a one-time crime. Tim "as an extreme case. Yet the sentence handed down 1' lc"s than one third of the maximum sentence. True. the mJ\lmum 1s perhaps to be reserved for such cnmes done undl'r threat of a weapon. But to a 6-year-old there's little difference whether there \\3!1 a \\.Capon present or not Knowing the man may be out 1n four years does not tell soc 1ety that first degree rape is being treated with the full vigor of the law Astrology President Reagan is as resilient a politician as there 1s. But w11h onJy about eight months left in has second four- ycar term as president. there may not be enough time for him 10 live down his latest embeiraS.sment. There has been some straight-faced disappointment c~presscd. But many of Reap n's cntics have been chuckling since the disclosure that Nancy Rcqan rcportedJy used astrology to determine the timina of the president's speeches and travel .... We find it odd that Rcapn, a supporter of creationism and prayer in public. ~hoots, is I.ink~ with a practice denounced by some rcliaious dcnom1nauons. ORANGE COAST .., .... _ \ Sl«u Falb (s.D.J ...,,_Lader ,., .. £•tot o..r.., Associett ~ T•a.. NmCMW ...... Llrfalr • .. In other words, the Leittslature 's gen eroelty toward ltaelf le aeven times populaUon growth and nearly twice the expansion of other spen ding.•• (. ciOOb u.J>- ~ 16Jlt>1 ~~\O !t. ~~~-~i~ .6.,,, Legislature should set good example and slash its budget Lawmakershave increased per sonal spending by 220 percent in 10 years SACRAME/'ITO -Go ... George DeukmeJian and state legislators arc. or so the) sa~. looking for ways to economize in light of an unexpected dip 10 state rc\enues. Ta~ receipts for the current fiscal 'iear ma\ be as much as a b11l1on dollars ·under expectations. That would" 1pe out the state's emergenc) rcsene and thus put the state into the hole for the nt'" fiscal) ear that begms Jul~ I It's not a disastrous fiscal cns1s. bu1 it's a !>Cnou~ one that demands senous work b; a ( ap11ol that appears to be preoccupied ""1th Gang of 5 ac11v1t; and other forms of elec11on- year gamesmanship rather than 1he people's business In the spint of the 11mes. we'll ofTer a suggcs11o n on "here to find financial fat to be tnmmed. Right in the <.. ap11ol Itself. the Legtslature's own budget. The 120-mcmber Leg1sla1ure 1s spending monc) on 11self at an in credible rate Ten ;cars ago. during 1hc 1978-79 fiscal year. the Legislature spent S6J 7 million on us own operations. The Leg1slatu~·s proposed budget for 1988-89 1s S200 4 m1lhon. That's a 220 percent increase m I 0 yean. Of course. the population of Cali- fornia has e~panded during that period. But the populauon has in- creased onl) 30 percent. Olher state spending has increased, as well. But the increase 1n general fund state spending has been only 121 percent in ahe past decade. In other words, the Legislature·s generosit) toward 1tsclfis seven times population growth and nearly 1w1ce the expansion of other spending. Wh)" Assembly Speaker Willie Brown and Senate President Pro Tern David Roberti ha ve been in office since 1980 and to consolidate their postt1ons. the~ ha'e greatl) expanded the number of committees. the number of staffers for those committees and the perc;onal staffs and expense ac- counts of members Ne\\ committees and extra stafT members are supposed to reflect add111onal \\Ork to be done. but in the real \\Orld of the Capttol. the; more often are rewards handed out by leg1sla11' e leaders to their supporters and allies. One's relauve importance 10 the Legislature 1s mea.sured by. the power of one's comm111ce assign- ments and the size of one's stafT-the better 10 extract money from spec1al- mterest groups and thereb' secure one's pos111on. If the measure of lcg1slat1 ve effi- c1enq 1s the work. product. clearly that has not 1mpro\ed dunng the past decade. To the contral'). 11 has receded The Legislature is chronic.il- l; incapable of dealing with the state's pressing pubhc-pohcy issues, which is one reason for the proliferation of private 1ni11auves on the ballot. The c~plos1on ofleg1slat1ve spend- ing, far greater .than any yardsuck. parallels the rapid expansion of spending on legislauve campaigns. It. too. has doubled and redoubled durmg the past decade. There 1s reason to believe that California voters would react negat1\ely to this level of leg1 ,lative spendtng -nearly SI . 7 million per mcmbcrofthe Legislature and nearly S 120,000 per bill enacted -1f they had the opportunity to do so. Four )ears ago. tax<rusader Paul DAN WALTERS Gann and some Republican l~s· la tors placed on the ballot a legislative reform inittatl\e that mandated a 30 percent cut in spending and over- hauled internal procedures. It passed handily but was challenged in court by legislative leaders. and most of 11. tncluding the mandatory spendtng cut. was ruled unconstitu11onal. At the ume. lcg1sla11ve spending was about S 120 million. After the coun action. Roberti. the Senate leader, said that the spending cuts would stand because "the vote of the people that accompanied Prop- osition 24 has to be respected." .\slater events 1nd1cated, that was a hollo~ promise because stnce Prop- os1tJon 24 was passed in 1984, legislative spending has increased b)' two-thirds. There's much breast-beating m the Legislature these days about the austerity that the projected revenue drop will fortt, how it may afTect the education of youngsters. health care for the poor and 01her state social programs. If. in fact. some austerity measures are decreed to deal with the problem. the Legislature should. by any con- cept of honor. mclude itself. In fact. given the unheralded and probably unjustifiable ancreascs m legislative spendina that have oc- curred in the past decade, it probably should volunteer to contribute $50 million or more to the budget-cumng efTort. Anybody want to bet that 1t will? Du Walkn h • •TJHIJc•t«I collUIUd•t bJ S.cramt11U.. Using mllltary ln war agalnst drugs won't solve tbe problem serving the inflamed situauon as Kmg Canute did when be placed himself on a chair on the beach and ordered the tides to stop. Sen. Nunn said that an order to attempt to effect such an end. we would need to recall our enurc Navy from whetevcr it was at sea, and to begin immediately constructm158 more AW ACS-and even then we would have no 1uaran- tce of suc;ccss. The Senate tabled the motion, but this year felt it had to act into the act because of political pressures. •• h was Mayor Ed Koch ofNew Yort wbo first used the metaphor, under the umbrella of which the use of tbe maliw-y appean.;plausibte. What he said was that we are .... war" witb \hose countries that permit the pro- duction of druas that poison Ameri-can citllC'nt. ·Well, 1f ~ arc at war with, say, Colombia. Peru and Para-auay. ~ have the riJht to Slop their lhippiq or their airplanes. and IO tcarth. and even to destroy. those ships and planes. :rbat ll lhc one bbenuina thi"J about war: Scrui>b Irr 11C> ~ rcleVanL Bui w lltUicote meta,pbor doai> ., rdint UI ol pnctkaJ problftns.. 0.C Mb ns llalCd ova: the Mitkelld a., 1 commm&11or Who said. .. We will w.n for the lint time an AIM'rican cienhst fty1111 h11 little plant blldc from a ..nmd't fiihil'I in kq W.a it st.ot dcr4fn by lhc Air FotU." n.1 wiU rtinaroduce us '° ra.lhy. And lhal =is thaa ~Jt no ny of 11tMimpanadoeot ... AU weanctoispe.MliMe,..,diMM lftdoi .. ~Mc:.1111 IOlllftYdt tMiriaa ......... = ........... ..,,& .. ......... ~ CDlld ... .......... ol'.llUY.1.., .. the spa~ O«Upicd by .32 ounces of whiskey the stufTthat craclc is made of and you can make a minor metropolis hiah-The cash value of lhose 32 ounces of cocaine tS about SI 00,000. The 9Cllc oftbc problem lS simply too la~ Miss Ruky quo~ a poU that infonns us lhal an estim1ted 90 million Americanti0f Vottn&• have experimenled with drup.-Tbat as a dismayjns f'IQR, the only briatn IMk of which is that the same poll indicaltt tl\IJ 94 ~~nt of those who have clone to arc apinst their cb.iktrea dOina eo. But pven a clian~&e of lhl& tiR. ••do we rally cxpttl our Navy and our Air Fewt't a.nd our inrtntf)' to do about it? And tM most friahlef:lilw b1*1 Of it all i1 tbl• any auc:cai by ifit naitiW)' WIMd bt •n 11 ed a. aa ioaatt ia dlr prtoe ot ~ -... ~ paarance. An 1naax (n I.Mir ~ means "et'Y 11mpty 1n incnmc io en me. A Cmb tbOU&bt. hOMvet forlorn. Antabult makes IOIMOM St .._ pson IO&lkc~ Mi1MIC1eaee come up witb aa equl_.. IW 11N1 ...., nn 11-..,.... ._. ii• lilii ow Uu11 A ~~.Ml1ctm 10 90 ··' A'J.li'.tt• .... .-...r .... _.. Flying in the face of ill fate Another Fnday the 13th has come and gone. Nothing catastrophic ha~ pcoed to any of my friends or family, but I didn't expect it to. I like Friday the 13th. So much so that I invited three of my friends to have lunch with me last Friday. I made a reservation. but somehow it didn't get on the book. It didn't matter -we only had to wait 2S minutes for a table. We decided to have a drink while waiting, but couldn't seem to catch the eye of a waitress. No problem Our table was close to the bar, so I JUSt stepped up, placed the order and brought the drinks back to the table myself. Our lunch was good, even though they were out of two of their best entrces. When the check came I disCO\-ered I had forgotten to transfer m) wallet when I changed purses One of my guests had to bail me out. The whole procedure took a httle longer than we anticipated, but onl ) two of us got parking tickets. A great many people sllll hang on to the old superst1uon thaa Fnday the 13th 1s an unlucky day. Even psycbol· ogists, who are supposed to straighten us out. worry about the number 13. School officials at Pierce College in Woodland Hills arc renumbering all the campus buildings and the psy· cholOJY building from now on will be Building 13. Psychology stafT mem- bers are protesting. They den)' bemg supersuuous. they·rc passing the buck to the students. They think It will..."causc con- fusion and SCallC awny potenual students who will sec a hnk betWttn an unlucky classroom number and an unlucky class grade." The psycho!~ department chairman wants to slup the number 13 altogether in the numbering sequence. Talk about confusion -they do that in some hotels and office build- ings. I stand m the elevator with m) eyes glued to the panel indicatmg floors and sec the light skip from 12 to I 4.1 know it's because the powers that be believe no one wants to rent or reserve anythmg on the supposedly unlucky 13th floor. but it still Jars me to have it a "no-show." In add111on to hotels and office buildings. the number 13 also is excluded from private dinner parties. Hostesses have been known to panic if the 14th guest has to drop out at the last minute. I ha'e fnends who will not make doctor. dental or business appoint- ments on a Friday the 13th. Wedd in~ are rarely scheduled for that date. but maybe more of ahem should be. I would be SUfP.riSCd if any of tile couples contnbuting to the high divorce rate were married on Friday the 13th. If you arc one of these superstJtious people and leery of this date, try to thtnk of the posnive aspects of it. It is easier to get appointments with professionals and SttVic:c men. Fewer cars are on the fl'ttway. fewer sho~ pers in the maJls. And all because superstitious people arc home, either in btd with the covers over their heads or sittina watching the clock, deep breathing and waiting for Satur- day the 14th. Friday the 13th also can be usai as the perfect excuse. If you mess up on a project. you can blame it on the date, even lhouih you would probably pull the same dumb thing on any day. You would think that a Fnday the 13th rolled around quarterly from the reactions to 1t. Not so. In the last five years we have had only six of those "unlucky days." Si" days out of 60 months -that's not too much to put up with, is it~ For those who truly believe this date Is unluclcy, you c.an relax for the mt of the ~ar. Last Friday the 13th was the only one that w1U occur 1n 1988. I have aood news for those of us who believe this rare date is lucky. In 1919 ~ will have two Friday the 1 lths. The first one in Jan~ to ~·u act off to • aood start. lbe second one is in Octobct. I can hardly wail ~ Am fie/II 11w. • i..,.. Nfrllel. I c c Orange CaMt DAILY PILOT/WednM'J~. May 11, 1981 A7 Fluor Daniel is No. 1 engineeringfirmin U.S. Im.proved hardhats presented From Dally Pilot wire reporu Fluor Corp.'s principal subsidiary -Fl•or Dutel lnc. -1s ranked the No. I enamccring and construction company in the United States by ENR (formerly Eng1necring News.- Re«>rd). the industry's leading publi- cation. Fluor Daniel Inc. had the highest value overall of contracts currentl) under construction according to ENR's Top 400 Conuactors 1988 survey. It was the first time since 1976 that a Auor Corp. unit has occupied the No. I spoL Auor Damd was also ranked No. I in construction~ mcnt for the second year 10 a row. Vince K-0ntny, p~sidcnt and ch1cf executive officer of Fluor Daniel l nc., said, "We attribute our success to the combining of Auor Engineers and Daniel fntemat1onal in October 1986 mto a single. stronger cnt1ty. coupled with our five business Stttor market• '"f. approach. ·we have the ab1hty to pvc chcnts worldwide the broadest range of services available from a sin&Jc source in the enganecnng and con- struction industry today and the success of our strategy is reflected m the survcy's results.·· Fluor Daniel was ranked fourth in ENR 's I 987Top 400Contractors and sixth m 1986. Figures included m the survey mdude pnme contrucuon contracts shares of JOmt \Cntures. subcontrach dt"S1gn-c0Mtruct and con~truct1on management cont.ach • • • Ceradyae lee. ha\ .rnnounccd o~r­ atmg results for the fi rs1 quancr I 9M8 For the quaner ended \.1an:h 31 ~ks declined to S6 377 000 from S6 953J()(l a ~ear ago The Cosui Mesa-ba-.cd c:ompan~ tnlUrred a net los) ofSM>!i 000 or 16 t:ents per share. m 1%M lOmparcd ""11h a profit of Sb9 fll.~J. ur ~ tents per \hare, 1n the )amt' prlllr ~car period \.fanagt'mcnt allnbuted the los'.> pnmant~ It > lo"cr \ale'> te,el'> com- pared 10 thl· \c:ar earhrr 1n the com pan~·., dt'lcn~ related product line~ -light'A.:1ght ceramic armor CU'> tom "capom S\ stem pans and caamtt-lu-mctal a!>~mbh~. \.fanagcmc:n1 anuupate!> that the com pan~ "Ill rl·turn to a profitabk operating rate 10..,.anh thC' end ofth1s ~car as a re\ult u1 a n.·rn,ery program "h1ch empha.,11n nt·"" products and marke1ang lll'>t rl"duttton fac1ln~ and produu hnc: rnn\Ol1da11on and managcmt·nt rt•organ11a11on . . . In 'e"' pon Bealh American PacHetter had a net profit of SI 371 000 or Y4 cent!> ~r common share nn n:' t'nue'> ol $4fl YM9 000 tor the thn-e month'> ended \.1arch 31 John \\ Klug prec-')1dcnt and chair· man o1 the: budrd Jnnounlcd Tht'> lompart') to a net pm of S6 I 9 001'1 or 4~ cent'> ~r lOmmon \hare un re' enuc\ ut SI 'l I M'l 000 for tht" h~e pc.-nod n I 4!1" .\!. prn IUU\h <tnnoUOll"d .\men- can Pac:c\Ctt..-r intend\ to ..oltc1t ~harchnldn Jppr<" al to rt"organ1Le 1ntu thrl.'t· '<-·p.u.tte put>l1d' hdd tomp;intt"' d' lollo"" · • .\IT'rnlan Pdn·\<.'ttt·r ra~ re- org.rnt1d.l I •'111 cng.agc in lhl' '>:!' m~ and ln.rn hu-.int'..,, throug.h 1h "holh O" nt·d 'uh,11.11.tl"\ \an C kmrntc ~a' mtt' .inJ I 1;,in .\-,,U1.1.tt111n •rnd ""'" Ct '"Ju,' the mongagr han~tnl! hu\I· n, .,, Pll''><"fllh u•ndullt•d I" \.\ ood- h:J! \lon~~l ( '' • PJlt''l·ttl·r Hnmt•' Im "111 de- 't:lup re~1Jt·nt1al Jnd multtlamtl\ prnJt'd' It" ill ah.o ll" n .tnd mdn.tge ,c-r1011n JP.tr! mt"nl prull'l '' • Pau~·,,·ttc.-r Bu"nt''>' Pr iperttc'> "'ll Jt>,dup ~ummnua1 .rnJ 1ndu\- tri.1' real l"'>tate pru1cll'> \ll"I "'tit be rcta1m·d d' rc.-ntal propt·nic' "hteh "'111 be managed b' Palc'>t"tter Bu.,1- ne'>'> Pro~·rt1t>' NYSE UPs & DowNs ,~ NEW YORK !AP) -The tollowlno hsl sriows the Ntw '(()I'll Stoel\ Excn.noe stocks and war,..nts tnat l'la"• oone uo the mo'1 and down the most Qas.d on percent of Change reoar~s of vOlu~ '°' T~v No securlhn trading oetow S2 are met -IJded Net and oercentaQe chanoes are Ille difference between the Pf'tvious closing oriet and TUH&t\l's 2 pm Pf'lce NEW YORK (APl -The lollowtll9 lisr shOws the OVff • Ille -Countel' stocks and warranh tnat na"t oone uo the most and down the most based on oerctfll of change for T ue\day No securities lrad>ng e>e1ow '1 or 1000 snares are included Nel and otrcen•aoe cllanoes are tf\t d~ence oe•ween tne ore"IOU' ctos•llQ IH'•Ce and Tue~v s u• or t>od once ~ 1 Rovaloe• wt 2 Crescott 3 MedoertGtsr 4 Biotl'lerao ot S Moltculon JI'! 6 Rncs.Pens 3 7 R~sl un I tntolrOtlSvsl 9 PrttdS.v 10 ~MIAir1 II lnte<and 12 MrdnOlag 13 PPlotni.xRe 14 CmDUCk IS LtwlsPalmr 16 POA Eng 11 Stak'eTecll 11 MOKC. t9 LandmkBI\ 10 LtnearFtm 21 Entrontcs 22 JRM Hldg 11 MdwslC<>n' !1oiec1 5 ~hletlnt 26 vt>erte,Co 27 lowSvsl "" L.ast Ol9 Pct. 2 + ., uo l3) ? 11·16 + 1 16 Uo 19 4 2.-.. + 1-Uo ltl I ., + 1 • Uo 1? 2 9 + l • UP 16 1 ,.... + l uo 160 1 • + 1 Up 1t0 14 + I._ Uo l S 3 • + , Uo I 4 3•, + , Uo 14 I ? + • UP 14.3 4 + , UP 14 J a • + i uo lj·* J • + 1-Uo l 6 10~ + 1 • Uo l 3 4 • + , Uo 13.J 2 , + • Uo 113 J • + ~ Uo 1 0 14~ + 1"'9 UP l 7 10' • + 1 I Up 12 3 •>· + , l)p 11' •~ + , Uo 11 1 41. + ., UP 11 6 + "'9 Uo 116 10 + 1 Uo 111 2 , + • Uo 11 1 ? 1 + • Uo 111 DOWNS Name Ust ~ ~- 1 HOH Wair n ? 1 -I ' I ?3'l 67 2 Arnc.OleEgv 2 • -1.t 3 GrenilCoOo J 11 -J 214 C ~Irie 2 a -1-ISO S RkyMIUnd 2 • -1-14 3 6 TacoV~ 3 ., IC 3 7 WnM"<.rOW't 3 , i 14 J I ~~Ins 1~ -1-136 9 IX 3 • -'J 1 J to ceotTc11 3 • -., 1 3 11 PAM Tmw 4 • -~ 13.2 12 FO"UmGo ' 3 -7-16 12.7 13 Summits... 3 • ., -, 12 s 1• "'1"1Pa$~ .~, -" 11 ' 15 "'1"tl.Mrng 2 • 111 1 16 ClllPo,t•I 2 • 11 1 17 Otlz:J;Am 23 • -21' 11 1 }' ~?{~ wtn ~ 141 111 i ~~ 1 _ • i in Elexls P 2' • -110~ nitvSL • • -'> g ldnlkP 11'• - 1 • I Minn 1 _. -I .0 c-.......... ,...,. ........ Ollr ~ ue -JW ,.tKtty Name 1 Lear Pet c" oi ? ..,,PSNH pf ) Na"''' w•C 4 EQuilec:Fn s Be<kev Inc 6 AnCl'lorGlb 7 F 1n(pA 111 ot I Ka ufBdHm 9 Shawlnd 10 EQuifu 11 WellFar Mt 11 Na..,str ptO 13 C.aPw ad1 olA 1' Pa1neWeb< IS MEI Oivrs 16 MexlcoFd 11 F$1Reob plA ti Wln,,.,-,co 19 A1roas 20 CounsTal'dSF 21 Marcaoe 22 Measu•tlll s 23 ReoGvos 1• SoumrkCo 2S unvMICllbO>i 16 Wstn Un•on UPS Lu1 Ch9 Pct. 9 + I ~ uo 23 1 • ~ uo I• 3 2~ + • Uo 10 S 41,.. + :,. Uo I 6 2 + • Uo 6 1 II"-+ l I UP 6 4 1 • + a Uo 63 10~ + . ._ l)p "3 ?I _. + I • Uo 63 27'• + 1"'9 UP 62 lS • + '• uo 6 1 19>• + 1 11 Uo 6 0 22l,, + l • Uo SI lS~ + '• Uo 5 I ,,.. + • Uo S 1 ,., • • uo s' 2, ~ • Uo SJ 2 ., +-• Uo S 3 13 • + ~ Uo S 0 ~ , + • uo '. 2 • + a UP 4 S 29,_. + I • Uo 4 4 6 • -• uo ') 3 • Uo 4 ) 6 ~ • uo • ) 3 ~ Uo • 3 ...... '"''~P" o ... ~ ... co Jol"IJ(b J~""''" ,.,,~ 1 • .0 , ., ,, • 17 ., I~ I • ro-. 11 11. ,, .. ..... , i'. i' .. 2•. ~. T > 1' • • • ' • t' ,, .. r.' l • I l• ,. ' t? .. 7 • ).I ,, • 3~ 10" 2• • ?! • ~ ., 1 i-. ~ • .: u • -·i. , ...... • t •• 1 : '~ '•· a 1 ·~ ... , ._II' ~ M) -• 1! • l4 :I. • ....... . .. 7l' l• ..... l' l' - ,1 i t"' ,, I: • tl, ; s1. 2e • :-ti. ,, • 1,1 " .. ··~ . ll,l\o lit • , Just Graphics ~ 'tR\"J( ISCO (\Pl - In :.n dTon to reduet tht' 120 000 tnJu'>trtal head IOJUnes that Ol l ur edl h )Car. i:.. l> Bullard ( u has r~m' en led the hard hat ;ind built ll to offer more protet lion th;an l·on"cn- uonal model\ Thr 'mall ~us.ahto-base<! lOmpan' introducc.>d the nev. helmet at J 'Mn Frann!>Co trade \ho"' T Ul.~d' \.\ h1k u>n \ t·n11onal hard hats prtm<1n" prttll'Ct ~url..ers from bki""., ll• tht· top of the head. Bullard·, m·"' hat all>O shields thl·m aga10.,11mpal·t on the side front •rnJ rt·ar ot th<' hat the (ttntpan' '"'J ··>, "'''~l·r ''ho'> bending 0\ n "'111 Ix· better protected fwm J falling hammer shov.er ot natl' t'r loO\e cable that \nl.tl ~' 1h,· \1de of his head. - ~1J ld 8ull.1rd president oftbc lourt h-!lt" Ol' r J t ton lam ii y- o..,. neJ 1irm RullarJ crc-Jne-d "1th In' cnl- ing lhl fir,1 ,on,1rult1on hard hat rill \t•:w. ago ..aid th{" nev. 'er\1un lJllld ··~d,rnr· will !>('It fur S4' murc: than fiH· time'> tht· original pncc ot the old dt."'>1gn DOWNS Name Last Ote Pct. I (laD•rCo ? • Off 11. 1 i M1te•Co 1~ -• Off 9 S 3 vtPSNH ;~1E 7 • -;., Off 94 • Wor'O(oro ;s.. -2 OH 1.0 S FtRep ad.pl • • -... Off 7.7 • BestBuy s ,., -"'t Off 7 • 1 E""''"T" 1l -I Off 7.1 I v1PSNH 3 •'>c>IC. 6'1c -1 Off 6 9 9 RB Ind 7 , -Off 6 6 10 A."" lnr J». -• Ott 63 11 Con"wMto 3 ~. -Off 6 3 12 Nacco 11 • - 2 Ott 6.0 13 Cote<:o 2" -• Ott 56 t• Pl'llcoro 61' -._ Ott S 6 'S US Home 2 • -• Off S 6 16 vP')NH 291P' ~; -"9 Off 55 17 TKtl Sv"" IS '1 Off SS II C.IANT G•ouo 191, -l • Ott S• 19 Nt1He•1ge ~ • , -Ott s J 20 D•al'\&Ct 7 --. Off S 1 21 PortK •:O. -• Off S l R CravRKt-771, -• Off • 9 Oxfordl"o 10 • -'l Off 4 7 C.arsP r • 13",. -~ Ott ' 3 2S Mc:O<r-iir• "' 2 ' Ott o&.J 26 M .. ~iLE 2l . -Off 4 3 proudly announces a reception for watercolor arti t TRACY TAYLOR Thanday, May 19, 1988, 6:30 pm ... 9:00 pm at Just Graphics 2854 E. Paci(ic Coast Hwy., Corona Del Mar (714) 720-1850 I otw.N S....uttO. ; ,) l NYSE COMPOS ITE TRA NSACTION\ WEDIE8DAY'8 CLOSING PRIC.8 o.w .............. 0. Ma rket tumbles again NEW YORK (AP) -Stocks stumbled and closed sharpl) lower Wednesday in active lradins. wrenching the Dow Jones average down more than 30 points in a selloff that brpken blamed on investor fear of inflation and nsing interest rates The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials fell 35.32 points to 1,951 .09. It was the lowest closiDJS le vel for the key average since February 9. when II closed at 1.914.46. Decltn1ng issues oulnumbcrcd gains by more than 4-to-I on the New York Stock Exchange. with 1.287 up. 271 down and 418 unchanged. Bag Board volume totaled 209.42 million shares, against 155.0 I mill ion in the previous session. The NYsE·s composite index fell 2.14 to 142.51 WHAT AMEX Om WHAT NYSE Dio NEW YORK (AP) ~y 11 NEW YORK (AP) ~v 11 11· ~'=' lil ¥~= N-high, 1 New lows AMEX LEADERS NYSE LEADER S GoLo QuorE s Dow JoNE S AvERAGE s M ETA LS Quon s NEW YORK IAP> -Fine! Dow Joftea vvw•~Wn· ~ 1~42 ':l 1 1 1 1 . u~r UJ:#t ~ ttp.t 'I Stk f!S..61 :ff 720.Sl , 1 dU• I ••\ ren .1 , UJlls ,5, '5Stk. •. , NASDAQ SUMMAR Y Good news on trade feeds inflation fear NEW YORK (AP) -The dra- matic improvement 10 the nation's trade deficit bolstered the dollar Tuesday but 1t alRJ intmlitied the &loom of pessimists in the S\OCt and &ond markets who ~ti)' have been IOC'ina I lot to wony about in tood ~DOmJ( news.. • The C-ommen'!C Departm.cnt rc- pOned that the trade defaclt &hnnk morctbaft S"'4 billion in Mlf'Cb toS9. 7 billion -tbc &owat monthly short-fall aince Mardi 191S. Tbc aews caaapulled · the dollar hipc:t ... in&lother major~ It JLuuocd IO J\111 under 126 Japenrse ren in w .. y ortt '""" 125 yen cartia ln l..OGdoll Md "* to about I. 71 West oenn.n marts &oin IM iWb. ht afttt I lbon-&i ved rally, stock ~stumped on W1U Streft. Whmi awkn w lht dtficit ...... cc>afinnina tbtti ,,,....... ·'*' °"' udlauon c:ouJd bo rdrilMled by"'°"' tt0n0mtc IJOWtb. The Dow JoMt ...... ol JO indlltlrill ~wbidt w di•bOd beet ewer' .. ....., 08 ~ t tndcibordlll woald t ......,., fell 21.ll pcntl to dale •• I Mate's paralysis p.uzzling . DEAR ANN LANDERS: You arc my o nly ho pe. Please help me. I am dnperate. In September of 1986, my husband and I went bear hunting in Canada. I spotted a dead moose along the road. We stopped and cut the antlers off. I didn't touch them. The next day, I shot a bear. My husband showed me ... llaabaad'• Ulans, bat II• caeaot say for certaia. Dr. Bens eald tbt la order co 1et defllllte aaswua aad to make Hte tlaat tbe •1apoa1 ls cornet, yoar laas:bud 1ll0tfd be aeea by a board-certtfled H•roloetst la a medical cater wlilere tllere b •&MCI lafectiou dl1eaae depertmeat. I.MIDS how to clean 1t. 1 About two weeks after we returned home my husband complained that the balls of his feet were &0in1 numb. A week later he was paralyzed from the waist down. We have been to severaJ hospitals and seen dozens of doctors. They all scratch their heads and say they don't know what it is. They 00 know it's a virus and have stuck a label o n the case. saying 11 1s .. transvtrsc myehus." This means he has an infection of the spinal cord. but no one kno ws what caused it. I have been told that my husband will never walk again. We're trymJ. to find someone who has had this illness. Is it fatal? Did they waJk again'> h's so hard for my husband to be a paraplegic and not know why, or what the outcome will be. I love him so much and I need to know the answers to these qucsuons We have been through a lot together and I refuse to give up. -FORT PIERCE. FLA. ,... Dr. Beus alto said tllat to malle 11re yHr •ubaad readies tile maxi· mam la P'yaJcaJ fuctloaJ.a1 be tboeld be Itta by a pltyt iatrftt. (Piute note tllat tlle wont llere It pby1latrl1t aod aot psycblatrl1t.) 'l'blt speclalltt 11 trained In physical medlclae relaabilitatloa, and will determine IRal sort of procedaret mlpt lselp yoar 11 .. band become more Independent even thoagb para· ple1lc. DEAR FRIEND: I spoke with Dr. Good lock and pleas~ let me bear from yon. I waot lo know bow your basbaad ls getting aJong, and you, too, dear. Life llat dealt you both a low blow. (P .S. Ask your llusband·s doctor about a support group. This can be enormously belpfull Heery Beus, ltead of the RebabllJ· taUon lnttltnte of CbJcago, which I belleve 11 tlae world's finest. He aald that be doubts there Is a connection betwttn lbe moose', the bear aod your Thursday, May It ARIES (March 21 ·Apnl 19): Minor financial dispute will be settled -on------------- home front har· mony 1s restored >\llent1on centers around securi ty, SYDNEY safety. insurance po licies. Serious 0MARR cons1dera11on 1s given concerninglllllllllllllllllllllllllll your rc!>1dence. TAURUS(Apnl 20.May 20): Playwaitanggamc. Dust has yet 10 M:llle Means plans discussed are nol sohd. lndJ\ 1dual who makes promises may lack aulbonty You·11 win b} wa111ng Short tnp nccessaf) lo venfy proposal GEMINI (Ma) 21.June 20): Empham on mo11e). payments. respons1b1ht). deadline Sccnano h1Jlllights added pressure, reputation. intensified relat1onsl11p, chance for financial Jackpot C'apncorn plays featu~ role CANCER (June 21-July 22) You·11 move above and beyond prc" 1ous lim1ta11ons. Moon in your sign highlights 1nit1at1vc. courage. independence. innovauons Circumstances. e'·ents move suddenl) tn )Our favor Exude confidence. LEO (Jul} 23-Aug. 2:!). What 1mt1ally appea~ out· of·the-ordmary will no~ be considered commonplace. Mystery is solved, holes arc punched in antngue. You·11 have access to confidential data. tricks arc exposed. VIRGO (Aug. 23-SepL 22): lntu1uon on targcL family memm IS 'itnttre about rc."UOIOD. dmner m v1tat10n. ('yclc hlgh. you"ll win fncnds and annuence people. What had been a loss will be transformed into malor profit. LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct. 22): Diversity. communicate. advertise, check wardrobe and passport Focus on rcputa1111n tra\\:I populant' '\ uu"ll hnumc morl· ~n'>lll\l' 10 appearance, bod~ image. \ag111Jn.rn 1\ 1n picture SCORPIO (Ck1 23·NO\ 2 I I Be thorough. rl·ad betv.ecn line'>. rcaluc \omcone ··"e~ important .. I\ keen o~rwr '\ ou arc 1n line for promotion. addc-d recogn1t1on and more mone~. LO\.l'. temporanl~ derailed. will soon be on track. SAGITTARIUS (NO\ 22-Dec 211· D1'>l:em reasons. moll\Cs. while re1cct1ng superficial rc'>ponscs Prolt'Ct legal nghts b~ gelling promises in wnttng Emphast!> on commun1ca11on lra,el ... roman11c ideal\ · C.em1n1 1n,olved CAPRICORN (Dec. 2:!-Jan 19): Fam1 h member d1scussc\ budget talk!> about change 1n lik '>i~le Focus also on panncrsh1p. balance pubhc11~ contractual obltgat1ons. A1tcn11on also centc~ around unique nghts and perm1ss1ons. AQUARIUS (Jan. :!0-Fcb. 18)· Dela) 1n commun1ca- 11on should not be regarded as loss Health record mefl'h misplaced -result w 111 be cause tor op11m1'>m Focus also on emplo) ment has1l issues. pc!'> dt'penc.knt'> Pisces 10\0hl·d PISCES ( J-eb. 19-March :!Ol: One who ··pleads 1nn~:enc· lno~s more than apix·ar.. on surtace Be read' for ··rr.:,clation ·· .\11en11on cent.:rs around creat1\.C endea"Or'>. lhange tra,el. 1nten!>1fied loH~ relauonshtp CapnlOrn in p1cturt' IF MAY 19 IS YOUR BIRTHDAY you arc d~nam1c. creatl\e. independent. sensual. and )OU can also be ~If· centered. \itember<i of oppos11e sc' find )Ou appealing. )OU ha'c knack for cnteruun1ng. 'ou could be regarded as ··star allraction .. Leo . .\quanu\ people pfa, important roles 1n 'our life '\ ou are an ong1nal thtnler lUrren1 C\cle highlight'> \.Jr11.:t~. 01rta11on tra,cl. marital '>tatus. There could al'>O be an addiuon to fa mil) Lo' e pla' '> ma1or rok in June ' Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Wedneeday, May 18, 1988 A9 I &:00 I &:30 I 7:00 I 7:30 I &:00 I &:30 l 9:00 j 9 :30 j 10:00 j 10:30 j 11 :00 j 11 :30 : • tJ ..... Cll .... l2 Ill IM ,....,., ,,...._ T Ja111t aN Ole FttN11 n. blllliatt ... ....," I ...... tJ ... ICMM l4ouf t .. (Ill~ D ..... MIC ~ .. Goe Mrell .. w., IJnlO~~ .. ~. .. l°'"fll ...... :T--.-..... I .. e ...,_ -=-A.lcll cl'G It. •• ..... f" ISIW'llll C-1 c....,.. Tai !s-.. I ro.w Cliett Joe :)oft a.en u ..... ..... AIC Eye .. ~ I.._°' I...,. 1,,_ Ill Chm IMctl [NM ~ .... u ,_ u. c ... IUll TIM• ® Cll ..... .... ir--"'""'*" '""'*" Jlie 1114 UM Flt-n. (qullilltf ..... Sell ..... ..... C.• l4ouf '°'""'- 0 u ...... ..... ........ , ..... 1100.000 ... 1::,, Tl-. !WI~ ........... , -· .... CoftMCf'll Is.-""'"' .. fKen l*rt Jn >+unon1 CoMtcf 11 @ ,., ...... ,.. ..... [Wl\ .... 1Gto•tng l4IM ol tblpet· IMt '" Q11na IMcll .._ ...,.."'9 ..... Court lot Or• ,_. II• Clea 111•11 r1111. mnw.·. at.I F-lf lll"AT14 Wofllil ... P•t 2') \2: ••• ...... rcu,..111 IT "9 IAe Sto09 C-,.ny c-t«t m.. ,Aoo. MuQSor .Jl•od ~11 Aft .. , m=-Oiling W....ef ..... ..,.. v ......... '°°' .. ".~ SIM Trek r..-Folt~ I I m "--MKHtl&o\9'1,., WU If! 11.ito"".,,c:e • Amenun Play1>e>UM Tl.ocUd CIA of Ille Gianost • R191 1"'"'1 MlwtHDut ·~ IN W"'1e ~"" -~·ro. ·-ICllll O··-m::. a-. ,.._.of µ..,.dy' Aalon t 111.., U.-IO'Y .. ~lHJet SL El--• ..... TonlQ,.. FottVM S"clw I Em "-"""' Do"' "'-11141 l.M Pra M ,,.. L::rO R '# Sc!\l"'DIK" TIN o .. n Ranoy Tru"'p .. , l1t1o111 ICi.tt Today Brown Sllantu• I ~ F11tte of lnnl't , ... ,... Ed· Ill Pe.-ormance • Am•"'.,, p "''IQ 14• • -· "-•no r O()t o•-"'11 o1 o ... Cwlhn Pal'l1na Alt-Enel" !tie -~·11 '4o-,_.,.. m Dall 0.11 IPefry llllon ~ '4D91r ' ComM TM F\IGC•.,. ...., ol Atlat ....... ..... AK·~ ~. 1t•111n OM A&E I.MM o-outly I Pr•-* le WW r '31 EIOllllllil • "'''°• ViclOll c,...n:,,•• Lnnna 0111oet0u~y Prellld• 10 Wat ..i BAAV Ive 1¥• 8r&11l 1Sl lCicll DI Sd•t ('Ill •• Zt11 1,1o~• O\Miomoo "' ~ ArloroO "'omoeo I Ive Bw Brazil 111 CIN TM 100 Club IT Ilk 1"'-tl'Dlt Ae"'t~Or\ St .... P-Clle4 rtiirN ~llO T "-700 CM1 CNN l.sf'I ~ U...! t-...... -littoMor4.,. Soo"t NewsHtaN Pll6IDCS • NitnHtaN li..&a11 ISIOrtl " "" DIY lo! PIA* Po"in Co,, •• ...nc. °" I.aft Ind llM Tr111111 •G W '.Pof'fo" .. Tw•1t1 -Dana., 4 $11.n1"Q S.non ~~ ... Oa• ...., .. ~~ -·-Hoell .. Sl1n1ty Cw FN I ~ One tlUl~J ..... , 11111D1orW\ Ftlll""' 'NIA Tod 'Sotl.ooi -~,.., ...... ~~-'El llarllo dll VWOllQO -~· Co,..ecl I 2•'" Hu.w1 ~l\ero1 c:ar-., ~--· HBO Isa lo I"' AIMlttMt CoUMI ~ as u.c. ~1; " ... TM p.,, ~··gull ...., .. Sclloel ~ , ... \Al~ ~I Corty ~ ..., ~.... ::-er Hrtdltl•Ur ...., ... Awel' UfE Ad of l-1111 -Ron HOWltdl -c..o,., ' Llcrt J10' ... -. ln¥etl,,,.,,1 AdYl90r-f MAX St!Mn• I~" Hajlpy ('51 -The lou Wit. a • • C-oy .. ,.., P(;.1) 11} •• J•.lOI "'-Pmitv ~lay r lbnsl ~-Str ""' 11 ~ Ei '*"", I Wa t"WI !juroy '.)y 51 >II ..,oll 1111/11 llCK lfilllMt. o.,,,,,. Canl Ot Diil Oa,. o-I* Eo l Sore 0 A .. o UllGll In Cir~ lllllD'*-5.- 1SEL I Sflldft SJ P("p I JI WIW't tN Riwr Alint 8..lct "'=o ~ -OM!d .... ol • ~t 'Ao " ~ ... F Nin !N 1 llf\. hn 6 SH011 l"'lft'f '" "'"• ~·) SIP -• llro1,,.,1 S!Wl'Oh,,Q AtOll Lo.,. 'I !!> • Oo11 R-ca ... _ MDvt. T1llC 2010 1PG Ml -• HOT ~l 1,,. R1-R• "":. ~' ... -rio-.,.., Ou1 n a.,,.,,., Mol!1 USA 1Clnoor1 EIPf-1Airwo1f A/1111 ~ .... .,. ~ •• ACO..••""" Btsse1 :, .... S00"8t ""'~ ,.,,,.,. WGH ~ ol Dollen !>! ..... USA To11. Tw1kQ111 'lol.lo!"""' Lo .. .,,, -.. .... , ""'.> ~ .. Al.u WOA""" a,~"" •on .,,,., ,, ~-:"")Ci "10-t! .. Jo. f._.,,, ~-SllGppong WTBS'l'l'O tasu.Mol ~ >.BA ;::a~·s c o .... #15ft :!' ~ . ·-l)".,, ...... • e ••• ~* -:..•t<'Ot'g -¥·• Tl'4 Bo~nry "".. "' ••• Complete t•Yi91on It.Unga In Sunday'a TV Piiot. By CHARLES GOREN and OMAR SHARIF Both vulnerable. West deals NORTH • 9 6 4 3 KJIS 6 3 +A Q J WEST EAST • K J S • 10 1 -9 3 K J 9 I 1 S 10 4 2 + K 10 I + 9 1 6 S 4 3 2 SOUTH +A Q 12 ~ A Q 10 1 6 4 2 0 A Q + Void The bidding: West Nortll Eas1 I Pan Pass Pass 3 Pass Pass S + Pass Pass Pass Pus Openmg lead: Nine of South 2 4 6 Treat 1h1s as e11her a smgle-dum· my or double-dummy problem. The winning line 1s not easy to spot, no matter which way )OU go about it. In view of South's balancing cue- bid, North's hand revalued to dose to an opcnina bad. But rather than L.M. Bo vo Thinkers 111ayneed 111ore sleep Q 0on·1 people' who v.ork w11h their brains nttd more sl«p than people who do physic-al labor" A. So sleep researchers sttll msa st But history records numerous cllccp- t1ons. Take Thomas Edison He got by on much less slcq> than nwst Energy needs rcplcnasb1na. true. llut rncarchcn thtnk ifs important that damaged attitudn be rcpa1~ b) sl~p·s dreams. If brain v.-ortten slttp more. the)' say. that sleep ma~ be nttckd to mend morale Remember. that clockwise SWtrl on the shell of an eastbound snail as on its south side. Canned goods \heh.es in supcT- markcts ha~·c to be kept e.iurtmd)' clean. So no can ticb when picked up If a can suets e\Cn sJiaf\tly. WI SlJf\&ls lcakqJ!. nd ~ from • can sugests the food th~nf is bed. d.an,erousl) bad. maybe evn deadly bed. One thesaurus offers 17 ..aids for an honat man and 193 for a thad. Fipra. Q . Ho frtQuently doc's a pal"l'- chuae &11 &o wort just rilb•? A. Once tn nC1) l.l00jum_p1.. oa allchuttmalfuf'C'uon attfatal. i:niib• meatio ' , choose a suit h1m!>elf. "'orth -.Orre"(t· ly cue-bad tn return. When South showed a strong hand b) JUmpmg to game. North 1udgcd his hand ment cd -0ac move tov.ard '>lam. and a second cue-bid v.as the obHous choice. Despite his void m that suit, South's hand was clearly worth slam oppos11e partner·~ 1mplted heart support Since he was reluctant to lead a~a} from an honor. \\est ~hose a trump a~ his opening lead E1.en 1f the spade finesse ~ere to succeed, dedarcr saw that he had a sure spade lo~r . To complicate maucrs, West's operurtj bid doomed lhe di.a· mond fines~ Can you spot a way tor South 10 prC\cnt ht~ dov,.ofa.11? \\in the crump tn du mm-.. cash ACROSS 1 Fatmholds 6 Good time 10 Aes1raln 14 Frtat>le 15 ·-Ben Ad hem 16 FINI not~ 17 Bother 18 Composer 20 ChOOSy 22 Btg spoon 23 Relatt\19 24~!00 25 Siege dance 28 Styltshnea 29 Kind of window 30 Cowboy 35 94g weigt\I 38 Center 37 Tsne ot <Sa) 38 Refuse 4 1 Steer 43 er... s need 44 EuropMnS 45 AcademtC 48 Awcraft 50 lsotated 51 Fixers 55 --~ 57 Ms Shor'9 58 Correc1 59 R.itw8y 90 a.t.w Fr e1 ·-.demand 2 3 14 17 , dose 62 lneqv•llty 63 Raoenof'• DOWN 1 BeflaVM 2 Manitoba Indian 3 Sudan mone-,. • Basic nature 5 Particular 6 Underlying 7 $uper10r to 8 St., Stal@ 9 Eaf 10 us m.ssile5 11 W1thSlancl 12 Epithet 13 W ild blUe yonder 19 Murdered 21 B.g ex Pac -in football 24 Sprout 25 BedSINdS 26 °'**up 27 Goff~ unit 28 C.booMS 30 Locked UQ 31 Saaw 32 Bladt Pf« 33 U K r""9f 34 Captures 36 ()ir1t pert 39 Issue 5 7 the-ale ol dubs. d1~ard1ng a spade trom hand. and lead the queen If East CO\.Crs the-club you ruff, return 10 dummv ~nh a trump and discard .mother 'pade on the 1ad of clubs The-.i~e qutt-n of diamonds will thc-n endpla\ \\est \\hen East docsn 't cover. dis.ca.rd another \pade \\ ~t 'A Ins the king and his onl) ..afc return is a club. Discard 1.our queen of spa.des, cash the ace of spades, ~ros~ to a trump and ruff a spade \\hen both de- fender'> follow. )'OU can claim your conLraCt. You IC'l to tbe tab!c witb a trump for anOlher sJ:*k ruJT. and you still hive a trum_p u an entry 10 the cable to take a diamond ditcard o n your established nine of spades. \\ell done-' 40 Docx pW1 ., unguents •9 UK city •2 Ftx on the 51 lndte mmd ••Tide ~ 52 ~Sp ,., Cut S3 ~ •6 Flee .. ~ o.d Greek 5' Abendan regiOtl 58 Oppom'9 of 48 Food io·· 8 9 11 12 13 .. by 811 Keane IN TD BLSACllSR8 by Steve Moore ~ ·:..=-...:=--- "I'd know what Barty's saying if he'd only bark in English." llAIUIADUKE by Brad Anderson "He's just pretending to be intewested ... he doesn't understand 8 wore ;·ou're aaytngl" PEANUTS GARFIELD GAR~IE.l.P. WOOLP YOO KNOW WHAT HAPPENE.P TO MY LOAF r-----Of GARLIC. ME.AV? ( Gordon's batting average slumps when, through a slight misunderstanding, he hol- lows out the end of his bat and fills It with pork. by Charles M. Schulz OH.COME ON 1 I JUMPED FARTHER THA..i THAT! by Tom K. Ryan ~ ~t..Prt1''1f1Wl11'1U.. ~ ~~-1t>~~! GAMIN AND PATCHES WITMOUT ')Q) l CAN'T i RE~™E ~1 6TlZAP6 CL~l#Mj Cc::::=:::===l I ::::........--..1 .. ~-- by Addison ._._. ________________________ ..... • L:.--:iLJ----.....-C::::==:::..... .. ~ FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE by Lynn Johnston NEVl!RGO~ A~SL.ICE ~~~. I l I ' • SHOE DOOIUSBURT by Jeff MacNeUy by Tom Batluk -THE Q.A~S/CAL.. ~f110t.:1- 1Hr& 1ESf R:)Gmo~ G€ffi rrs NAME! FROM IT5 ~BlANCE 10 RODl~'5 '-rnE "THINKER' ! IN FACT I ~DIN 'fJ SCO&.J>TURE "WAS 5AID 70 - HAVE SEEN IN~IRED 8CJ ' .. A FEilOUJ STUDENT Wf.() wq~ "f1'f(ING AN EXAM AT .1'HE ~EONA PAR"flCUt..ARl.4> SU&..~ DPIJ ! by Garry Trudeau · --"'.""'. _______ .__.._ ,..,...._, °""'\\ .J\.,..j -/)'C b.O'.e ... ' HllUt ~ CllU ~~ 'It Jj<r-;J IYI' ~ • ....... 0..,1.~ I . .. ~ .. , .. .. . I \ ,, . 1 "'Ee•:=··-.·-.. ,....... ~··~ ...... .....,_ _,.,,,.,_ -- I • I ( t > J " d l l \ s. n g h b .. s I ti ti Ii " .... SI fi u 0 p 5C 11 T Po • ... j ·. i f . I . -.. P1 M .. • Ol ui Cl 61 de .. w. .. au .. • C?' • IQ h IG Marina stuns top seetl Vi k ings r ally from deficit, b ad call to top Santa Monica Andy Read and his Marina Vikinp found themselves with their backs to the wall Tuesday ni&ht -trailina undefeated and top-ranked Santa Monjca by a 2· I rnat')in in their CIF 4-A volleyball sem ifinals match on the Muina floor. Santa Monie.a ha6' pulled from behind for the second straitht time to take twin 16-14 victories, the latter with the help of a controversial call. But the second·year coach looked his squad straisht in the eyes and p ve them the straight story. "If you let one bad call beat you then you do n't deserve to be in the ~mifinals." Read said he told his Viki ngs. Has team took him at has word and responded, rall)lnl to knock the No. I seed off, 15·1I.14-16, 14-16. 15-12, 15·3, and set up a second straiJht semifinals m atch with de fending c hampion Newport Harbor. "It was a controvcrsiaJ call," said Read, "and the kids said 'no.· "We dtdn't fold an the fourth game. and we JUSt came back and played awesomely an the fifth game." In thl" critical fourth game, the V1kan$5 were in a constant catch·up s1tuauon, tra1hne 8· 7. 9-8 and 10-9 before finaJly tym$ at 10, but they finally put the winnm$dnve together. "Then the kids reahzed 11 was there for the talcang." said Read'. who watched his team bhu Santa Monaca ID the finale. Santa Monaca had not been e:it- te nded to five games all year and was onl) forced 10 go four twice. NEON°EsOAY, MAY 18, 1988 Aatroa' ScoH k••P• uf. ataft reptd•tlon In win over lluce. 112.i Coat •re• prep tenn a teema enjoy perfect day •t CIF. a 0.-, ~ .,._. .., *"ll ._.. Sailors rally by Warriors Sheward's sets put Wood b r idge away in 5-game victory By ROGER CARL....\O'\ OI ""' Oellf Not llAol' \\ hl'n 'ou th111i.. 'l''' PL•rt l IJ1 hor High 'ulk' h;il1 th1nt. L ~hr\ .\\\t'\1>mt J t' , J~t 11n tht \\J\ to the 111k tht' \J ., .irt• l1gh1ar.g Im their l1'l'' I• lht 'lrl'tth and pulling II OUI Tht' L JI. ·r, .tit J•l ng II JnJ \ll .lfl the \ailor' \lter tra '1nl! 11 /!JOI<:' :.11 .111J 1n the \ll'Jm' , •1•1nn .,, \\ • .,!hr1t1~t· High "hac \JJrn "-t'l'h. ~\ < 1 "l'H' undl'lt'Jk'd 111 111~11 'll mt '""rt D:inn' <ilt•nn·, Jt·hnJ ng <II ..l \ champion\ pu1it'd II uUl l lll'\J,1 • nittht to thl· •uni.' •' , •·I) ' I '· ~ I 5-1 I I ). I T h:ii '·" • .iuod onl \Jiu J happ~ Drl ' '>ri ·•JrJ lht· :it>.1rt ulh.1 'JOUI ol lhc aalo~· game. "" e "t'nl out?>1dt' alter go1Dgdown 2-0 and tuld ou~hcs we haven't an) thing 10 lose "e "-t're a"esomc last \l'Jr "'o" "t rl' JUSl tf)ang to go for 11 hl..l' tht• Llkc:r' clnd "e "ant 10 go do" n '" 1ng1ng: ~ht'-..a1J '>urrounded b} a stando ut senior gruup d1dn I go down sv.1n1- 1ng. insll·ad dpph ang tht' knoc~out pum h 111 tht· \\ arraor\ dl·sp1te Ket'fr's gaml'·h1gh '\!1 1..111-. ~ltlng up a '1.'m1tinJI'> ''H>"dO'' n "1th .\.1anna Thur\dJ\ nighl II' J rl·matlh -\tarana ""s HJrhor ''><.m1tinal\ l\X.' <i '"•H ago on tht' "J' to lht ~ .\ t 111" n It H Jrht11 " l ht· hmt 't hnot lJ kn n 'k.11J ha' llr'>t hOlll tor a \lit 1s ( mona J1.;1 \1JI i....n I<: \\ J' t ' l U'>tom.i I\ ..ell J nd lht• \\ etrnur' hJd '"mt· \tanduut pla\ tn>m ktl \m11h Bui 111 lht' end 11 "J'>n t kllh Jnd bl,~ i.., 'om uth <h th(' JOllat' Ill 'IJ\t' 0 11 !ht· '>tnashc'> of i....tt'lt. ~\. ( t> kn ping lht· h.111 an pla' 10 fc'' h 't Jntt I •1. 'ponJ (Please see SAILORS/83) Edison captures marathon triumph over Dana Hills I 1 100~ nt'Jrh three hour'> tu a'complt.,h and 1i lJme ID the hostrle surrounding'> 11 Dana Halls H igh -.-.hert' a pa1.;lt·d m"d 1ook.11 an But as the malth "ore on. Fd1son H igh 'olle,ball math John Herman began 1\.•ehng a lat1k better and a hnlc better because ht· "a-.certaan 1ha11111 ...,.t'nt fi,e has tt·am -..ould "ID ou1 s1 le to Ix dc1c.-rm an rd If lhl' < harger'> "an the coin l11p fhur'>d.i) 'tutmc v.111 ht.' at Fountain \ allt'' Hnman sa1J .. "·e rcalh pta~t·d v.ell and Dana Hill'> .... a., l•U l\landang ·'Mild Herman. "but nghL JI tht• end 111 the match. 11 "as Bnar Hnont· v.ho rc.-Jlh stood out ··r thank that made a difference," said Read ... Our kids were a hnle (Pleue eee ~OS/83) Newport Harbor'• Mike Curet trlea to hit the 6all aroun d the b lock of Woodbridge'• T om Shanklin a nd Keith Boothroyd (2 ) d uring the Sallon CIF 4 -A victo ry. He "as nght H" (\unset ~ague champions pulkd ou1 a 15.5 14-16 11-15 15·6. I 5·2 '1cton. O'-l'r the Dolph1m IO qualal\ for a (IF-4-.\ semifinals sho"do"n -.-.uh '-o 2 ~eded and undl'fc.-ated Lo~ola at a · V.c li:pt ~oing in ham at the end and he r~ix·;.;tedh put lhcm do"n. and ht: had a u1upll' '''hag <.tuffPl<X ks He.-;u\t took lontrnl at thl' end "DJ"'t'n Lann· hJ' dnnt' 11 all 'ear (Please see EDISOJIC /83) Coop saves best for right time His 20-footer with seven seconds left lifts ~akers, 11 1-109- INGLEWOOD (AP) -\.i1chael Cooper p1cked a great lime 10 make the first gam~wmnang shot of has 10. )Car NBA carttr. Cooper's only ba'lket of the game. a Jump shot from near the top oft he key with seven seconds remainm& Tues- day night, gave tbe Los Angeles Lakers a I I I· I 09 "actor) over the Utah Jazz and a 3·2 lead in their NB.\ Western Confercntt playoffscncs. T he sixth game of the best-of-seven semifinal senes will be Th ur1day night at Salt Lake-City. A seventh game, 1f necessal'). would be pla)ed here Saturda) afternoon. "I w~ JUSt gJad to rett1ve the basketball at that time," Cooper said. "This would have to be the b1pest 'ihot for me. It felt good once I let 11 go. I thought it was going in." After Cooper's basket. which put the lakcrsahead 110.109. and a Utah 11meout. James Worthy stqle Marc lavaroni's· inbounds pass. Wonhy was fouled and made one f rce throw with fi ve seconds left. He missed the second shot. however, and Utah had a final chan~ to tic or win. but was unable to get off a shot before ume ran OUJ. Cooper. who scored o nly three points. hit has wanning shot five seconds after Utah had taken a 1~·108 lead on.a basehncJumper by Thurl Batley. who led the Jan with 28 poinls. O n the ensuing possession. Magic Laien v•. Utah (9"t· .. ·Sevtin) L•ll•'5 110. Uren 91 u1an lot, Laken 97 Uran 16. laken 19 Lakers 113. Utan 100 Laken 111. Uleh 109 (Lakers t .. d serifl 3·?> Thuradev-Lakers al Utah, 7 JO o.rr SalurdaV-Ulah al Laken. 12 JO pm (If necHJ4rvl Johnson penetrated the L'tah dt'fensc and then fed the ball to Cooper. \\ho was \\Ide open outside. "I can d('('ide what I want to do an t~at s1tua11on," John&Qn said. "I saw a little opening and went toward' the middle for m~ hoo~. The) all col· lapsed on me and Cooper ...,.as wide open. so I ...,.ent 10 him" .. Thal \\as Coop·., shot. That was has swett spot. I knew 1t was going to be good or a liule short That was the nght spot fpr ham and" he hit 1t. He knc.,., 10 shoot 11 Nobody was on ham "· ~u:t Cooper: "bncc I saw Magar on the mo1.e with the bait I Just went to an open area ·· ihe Jazz made a game of at in the late going despite the absence o( massive center Mart Eaton. who fouled out with 6:0 I rcmainina and • the Lakers ahead 96-94. Los An'geles extended its. lead to 101-97, but the Jazz battled bad~ and took the lea'd three limes aft.er that. Utah went a head twice 1n the final m inute-on a dunk b) Karl M;llonc wnh 4 7 (Pleue eee LAKJtR8/B3) . ~E;ipQ&.-; Paredes . . . . •' . . . proyes ·EJ: survivor li&ht·h1tttt\I ·second baseman Casey C~dcl le was dem oted. Less than two rt-I -ween tater:'hc was ttittn the head by . U S a enz e a , a pitch from. Atlant.a's Kevin Cof- T"\~Ag t 1 i 6 5 in . : fman, , . L.1\..1\.1 e .s n -w But he insis~ It d1dh·1 ,.~ ..... b,as • • ·• ~· He's ·1ust been slwnpma. · LOS ANOE~ (AP) _ Johnl\y-and ente~ Tuesday nlaht's -pme Pllmlcs. the . erospect in the battiq . l 9<>: MontrQl 6>tpos' man9r leque or· flus the best pme 'he's. bid 11n~ pnlDb9n a )'Qr -..o.~bas swviyed the fi1't 'send "' Ho'*5ton 04 Man•r ·.not ma~n.s the 1Cllft'I in JPrina . Buck R~said. ·:HOpefulty. tb'is js traiaiftl an<J. ~ a ~tQ& once he the star!, of ham tomenl blck Ind came Ul>-r • • • •• • .· • bcina the atl4round . player we On :l'U!Hday np\, hC sumvtd his thotaht he would 'be When ~·tailed · firM rq.ulat«UOn ~uel ~m fern,u,;. bim up "~ • do V~~ dri.vi• in thru runt "' ~· ~"'" .... O«Fcroa.n-witb a peir 'of~~~ .... ~ dO V • ~ P91 Moauul ~ u &ht ~ ended a tour-• ~ S"4 "' .fiftt\. Tia\ R&iAcs _... -..lbelk wilb a.6-S ~~~ a.ncf tcomt oa NdlOG sen~ · • over t.M t:oe Aneeta l'.>odlrft: to\ldia ·, ~'*•• lhi IC'Ytndl. · "He ~t IMt dfecttve. .. hrtdes. · · . Nt'a,1 keaic>ll·; 1.2, ~~-..., tisht hits IUd ot V~ *'om ,~~Mt' ··111 i v, nmi~,T1m 911~.-e up raoedinlPC}lllln:~·-~· pmeh h11tCT·-·Prinklin • lt81 '° eoaca~ oa ouaide and 5'-.llc before arujna 11\e ftrial tWO om '"-· tWdolla~MYeaMtd~ b'\i fifthsavt. IO af he dnW t aMiclc. I c:oukt react ValCnl\ldi, )..4, wu taatd fOf" all witll my~... si;111; rvn and tO bits"' •~ca in1unp. .......... caned Ulp ftom am He retired iM ftnt two um in the AA J'CtiMapoha Oft April 21 *ben fifthbdoft Hubie 8roo and nd ' PREP BASEBA LL --~-=--- Lions drop opener to Esperanza , 4 -1 Lallen center Kareem AbduJ-.Jabbar la Nndwtcbed be- tween Utah'• Mark E aton (le ft) and Bobby Ranaen. Wild season comes quic k ly to close w it h Azt ecs ·power 8) ROGER CARLSO'\ Ot-Oelty-Sl8'f 1 hat a\lom .. , \,u·,e giltta h3\C ht•an ...... a\ hor nl' uut T ue\Ja' .11 E\~rJn1a Hitth J'-\\n1rn r'tl'f H•tth ' Lion' v.l'nt d "n w ii ~-I dt•tt·at 1n the "•Id lard game"' (If'· .\ baseball alt1on l\.cn 0stm"'>~1·s \unc.el Ll·ague pov.cr\ \\l'nt 1nll' the lUnleSt v.11h1 Ul mo..i ot 1h,·1r hcan'> aller ha,intt J P...'rt on ot thi: ll'agut , t>amph'n'h1r dl.'nat•d bt'\.au~ 11 a m1~tJke h 1hc.-1r loath and u1mh1nl·J "'llh an 1>flfX'· m·n1 v.h1ch needed nl1 l'\ti;1 Jd,Jn tagc-. 11 prv' cd fatal ·\\'e had <,OM C t'ffi•'t11•n g1>1ng 11• us" 'Mild Oo;tro'''l..1 .. but thl· he.ir· -.-.asn t there I'm Jlra1d 1~ ~.d, h~,; faith an ml" I kn1n\ 11 I \\l'rt• pla in~ for me I v. oulJ tx· ,1., .... r nn nit tx'tJu..e ull1ma1t·h 11 "J' 1rit• "'r• 1001.. the (lhamp1t1n-.1' r• pJlth 1' their back~. ·To ha1.·e ..... orl eJ thrct· month' ,. the fall. t"o months an the till-sea ... 1r v.tth T-Sh1ns tha,J ~d · ·un..et l cagut' Champions' on them. anJ 1hcn ,,,u &ct at and cam 11. onh t1• ha' l 11 t.1~en awa\ b' a dec1s1on .... The\\ estmins1c1 '<'ad1 "a<. guilt~ of unkno...,.1ngh pla' ing an anehg1Nc.- pla~er an the Lion,· tina1 um.ct l eague game dunn~ 1hc l3q annan~ "h1ch cost tMnl the '1cton b' torte-11 Thompson gives in to press-coverage Galarrap sinaled. Santoven1a ~-alkcd and Paitdes hit bis ao-ahcad sinale. .. "My arm ftd1 strO I'm noi a powt'r pttchcr. l han to kft"P the ball on tht ~&net that's b I make ~petch '' V•knrutla saWi T 2 ao tbc thud. \ht E'poa iM t.tn on by Tim Wailllda •nd 9rootl aftd a lO S.to\JCftaa. ~ then hncd a -..e. to ltft that drove in ~.·T"M b.,pu1 ltOrad t'"ce an the fint on walb '° Wallac.b and Brooks al'ld GalafTllll' ~ dou Jnd ultar~1att•. ,, , 1h .. ·m 1nh• Tues- da' ·, "1lJ ,ard ll..'.lnlt' .\hll h p111ed 1...,.0 1h1rd -plal·(' 1eams l 'nlonunatel\ lur "('stmanster 11 '-1.:!l fsperanza """not ~·our run· 111'-lhl m1ll 1hird platt' entn and the -\1tt"t' pla, e-d for~ NII "11h "('SI· m n\tt"T \tane'r R'an t...l~ko and '" h-anning rd it'' er Bnan tub~ I ha'l' '' tal..t m' hat nil tn R'an J....k ,l•.11 .. \did n,tr 1\\\l..1 'He "anted tht hJll JnJ plltheJ "di t...k'>k • 'urrt'ndl'lt'J a two-run ma lht' •ir-.1 1r n1ng. but slrul~ •ul nim· n 1hc 1i""\I fi,t inningsbetore tx·1ng pu kd in 1he "''"' al\er a o ne· •ut tnpk h' f,peran1a 'i....t•\ in \\-ebb ,1n h' l11t1t Plllh Ill l• 11 l 1t-handt•r v.huiillow· lJ IOU! hll'-\\3\ 3N>UI all "CSI· ~ :hit r "'ulJ :TlU\t('r utTens1' el' ,·•11l..1ng :i lt•JJt•t1 home run 1n the ,,·,nnd 1nnin~ w ran 1hc deficat to -I Ru• I 'IX r.1n1a 11--~ • p1tt hang l..t"pt ;~,· L wn' oll-~alanu·J 11J da\ Onh a .,,,l'l-<•ul dourtc O\ &n \.1cndoza in tht• ""'h inning prix!utcd an' no15e .\' ,k lrom thJt the l inns bats ...,.ere .... "'' 1 I ,rx·r.rn1a nt"llt'd but fi,e hits. but "hll'C 'l'rl' ,11 tht t'\lra base 'anet\. J~,11hc l"l'·run homl' run an the firSt n~ ~~ llli;10r-.-h.,und Doug Sand· "'3' rnl,ug.h 10 "t"nd the .\ztccs to ' " 1 0rran,·e on Fnda) ID the fim l 'l°'\'1 anrn paid a pnce for the ,,•1n hnv.ner a<."ebb.~first "'·'' ·11Jn\'ho-.-.ent Hor3 -.-.en1down • 'h "ha1 3ppeared to be a SC\ ere ~ .1·11,1nn~ 1n.1un en route to has snth· .. 111~ tnple :Ang els. Orioles !Z·a m e p ostponed B.\l Tl\i10 RE I .\P) -Tues- Ja, naghf\ o;cheduled p.mc be· t"<'t'n th~ .\ngcl<. and Balt1mort \\'3., pno;tfl(lnC'd because o( ~1n and v.111 bt" made up a" pan of 1 1v.1-n1ght double-header on l hu~~ at 2:0S pm lhc .\ngcl" (14-23) w11l lhrow !\la!..(' \\Ill \ 1-4) ap1Mt the Qr. 1l'I~ 1.5-' I 1 tonigtu at 4 35 The Onole' counttt v.1th 2}-~c~r-old n1h1-handcr Ju.an 8auUN (0.2). - j • . • t r t ' c • ; $ !t~:i::i:.::~:rt :;~;:~~;;;,~-: Scott flpds pressure with hi 19 tce0nd1 lcf\, lcadina abo Dallas ~ t .~ • 1:...I t sponsors P ~~;;a~!·!1~~=~~'°~~;~}.ladin oproauce ln riOllS 011 Pr.-TM Aileedalelt Preta Dallas can wrap up w best-of-seven Western PHILADELPHIA -Temple athletic direclorCbarlae Theokas bit the jackpot in Atlantic City without touchana a slot machine. But his arranaemenl of a casino-sponso~ buketball game between Temple and national cham- pion Kansas in the pmblina mecca has stirred controversy. Win or lose on the court, Temple will beat Kansas financially, with money from a source that Kansas offtcials said carne asa surpme to them. The source also raises red nais an coUcae spons: pmbhng.. Showboat Hotel, Casino & Bowling Center agreed to pay the rental for the 11 ,026-seaa Convention Hall, and wilJ aive Temple an additional S 100,000. according to Don Davidson. vice president of marketing for the casino. Temple also will get about S 150.000 from NBC for a national telecast of the Ott. I 0 game. based on previous contracts. accordma to industry sources. NBC declined to confirm the amount. The package 1s wonh more than $250.000 to Temple. Kansas receives a guarantee in the neigh- borhood ofS 15,000, sources said. Thcokas said he did not understand Frcdenck's concern. ''This 1s a Temple home game. Temple 1s renting the ~me from Atlantic City Convenuon center That's all.· Thcokas said. An NCAA rule hmiun~ casino panic1pa11on 1n an1crcollcg1ate athletics applies only to playoff games. but spokesman Jim Marchiony said that could change Quote of the day Larry Nysc, Amencan University tennis coach. on his reacuon to 102 consecutive matches on the road since the Washington. DC. institution's new tennis fac1llt1es have been under construction for three years: "I like to think of us as the Washington Senators. We haven·1 ~ really left town. we're JUSt on a long. long road trip." UCLA's Barrick gets assistant Paat Landrcaux, who guided El m Camino to three Cahfom1a community college basketball championships, has been named an assistant on the staff of new UCLA basketball coach Jim Barrick, the university announced Tu~a\. Landrcaux, whose El Camano teams \\-ere known (or their fine defense, led the school to a 33-3 record 1h1s past season and its third state 11tle of the J 980s. Dunng his nine )ears at El Camino. Landreau" ·teams had a 278-53 record and won at least 20 games during all nine seasons. The Wamors also topped 30 '1ctones four times and won seven conferem·e title!>. Landreau'< was chosen Caltforn1a communit\. college Coach of the Year twice, and confere nce.Coach of the Year seven times, including the last s1' sea!>Ons Bill Wcttphl has accepted the JOb as head basketball coach at Grand Canyl"n College and 1s e"pected to sign a three-year contract toda). Westphal .+4. replaces his brother. Paul. who led Grand Can\on to a P-o record and the" .\I.\ basketball 11tk 1h1s ·season. Brown repeats at heptathlon LO~ .\~(,£LES -Wend) Brown of m Southern Cal won the Paufic-10 hep- tathlon champ1onsh1p Tuesda)' for the second consccutl\.C vear. and Derck Huff became the first An2ona \.\-1ldcat ever 10 win the confercn,e's decathlo n IJlle Bro~n. who took the heptathlon as a J unior last )ear"' 1th 5.589 potnts, scoec<! 5.665 this time to easily outdistance Kell¥ Peacock ofLCLA. "'"°tallied 5.074. Huff. a Junior at .\nzona "'ho atta1na1h1s personal best of 8.075 earlier this }ear. scored...7.~9 points this week to tini<;h ahead of Mall Zuber of Arizona State. St. Louis Blues fire Martin mang a failure to ach1e' e desired progrCss. , ST LOL I -The St. Louis Blues. ~ fired Jacques Manin on Tuesday and became the 1h1rd N HL team in a week to change coachc ... St. Louis' record an two S('ClSOns under Manin. the team's 14th coach an 21 seasons. was 66-71-23. The Blues \\-On the Noms D1v1S1on championship with a 32-33-15 record dunng Martin's first season and fin19hed 34-38-8 as runners-up 11\ 1987-88. Conference scmifi"aJ in Oame 6 Tbunday ni&ht in Dallas Poor Free-throw shoouna by the Nuaeu down the stretch was the difference. Denver, the NBA's lop shooung team from the hoe t.hts season, miucd 1CVen straight free throws 1n the final seven m10u1es. Rolando Blackman had 18 of his lA points in the second half. Blackman's 18-footjumper pve Dallas a I 06-1 0 2 lead with 40 seconds left. After a pair of free throws b)' DcnHr's Danny Schayes. AautJTC's lona- range basket fro m the ri&ht side made ii 109-104. Ro\ Tarple) added 21 points for the Mavcncks and Sam Perkins had 17. Scha)es had a carccr-hifh 33 points and Alex English got JO for Denver, which was without two key pla~ers Lafa ~enc Lever and Ja} Vincent, the team's second-and third-leading scorers an t~e .Playoffs, missed thl·1r ~cond straight games Wlth anJunes. Oilers, Bruins square off EDMONTON. Alberta -For ~veral years. goaltenders Grant Fuhr and Andy Moog sat 1n the same locker room with the Edmonton Oilers. Tonight, they will be standing at opposttc ends. of the ice as the Edmonton Oilers host the Boston Bruins 1n Game I of the Stanley Cup finals. Although Boston coach Terry O'Reilly kept his staning goaltendang choice a mystery durinf a news conference Tuesday. Moog confirmed followmg prac- tice that he would be staning against his former team. ReJcan Lemelin, whose strong play has carried the Bruins 10 their first Stanley Cup final since 1972. ha<i: \\-On onl) four of :!O career decisions against the Oilers. many coming when he was with the Calpry Flames. In his last two seasons in C~lpry. before he left the Flames and ~ent to the Bruins as a free agent last summer, Lemelin was 1-6 against Edmonton and allowed 29 goals. Orioles' manager aldellned BAL Tl MORE -Manager Frank Robinson. "'ho has 'a ruptured disc in his back, "'a) hospitalized Tuesday for treat- ment for the anJury and will miss the Baltimore Orioles' next four $limes. Elrod Hendricks. the Orioles' bullpen coach. will manage the team until Robinson's expected return Saturda). Robinson. a Hall of Farner "ho took over as the On oles manager six games an to 1h1s season, will rest and recel\ e treatment. which includes being placed in traction. in an unnamed local hospital. ·-rm going in 1001gh1 and get 1h1s thing taken care of ... Roban'iOn said in his office pnor to the Onoles' game Tucsda} r.1ght against the C'ahforn1a i\ngcls Robinson held a clo~d~oor meeung w11h the team before leaving. Hendricks. 47. has been 1n the Onoles orga01za11on for 181 ' }ears as a player and a coach. ·Tm honored that the orga01za11on thought enough of me 10 let me hold the pos111on until Frank 1s abll' 10 come back ... Hendncks said. Television, radio TELEVISION 5 05 p.m . -PRO BAS~ETBALL: NB.\ Eai,tcrn Conference ~mifinal Game 5 - . Chicago at Detron, TBS. 6:05 p.m. -PRO HOCKEY: NHL'Cham- p1onsh1p Series Game I -Boston at Edmonton. ESPN. 7 p.m -PRO BASEBALL. Montreal at Dodgers. Z Channel. 7 p.m. -PRO BASEBALL: New York Mets a1 Padres. WOR. RADIO 4:35 p.m -PRO BASEBALL: Angels at Bah1more. KMPC (7 10). 7 p.m. -PRO BASEBALL: Montreal at Dodgers, KABC (790). 7 p.m. -PRO BASEBALL: New York Mets at San Diego, KFMB (760). THURSDA rs TELEVISION I p.m. -PRO BASEBALL: St. Louis at Chicago, WGN. I p.m. -PRO BASEBALL: New York Mets at Padres, WOR. TBURSDA Y'S RADIO I p.m. -PROBASEBAIL: New York Mets at Padres.. KFMB (760). AT&T ANNOUNCES PUNS TO ADJUST THE UTE PERIODS 01 lmRllATIOllAL • < LONG DISTANCE CALLS On May 13. 1988. AT&T filed a plan with the Federal Commurucations Commission to adjust the lntemauonaJ Long Distance rate periods for the countries listed below by realigning those periods to more closely reftect network usage. H approved, the changes will be effective on June 27, 1988, and will result m shJftinR the hours for peak and off-peak prices. Jhe filifig is designed to assist in distnbullng peak traffic to these countries more uniformly over the-rn>ufs of the day by contracting or extending the duration of the non-discounted Standard rate period anOthe Discount and Economy rate periods to better conf onn to existmg peak traffic patterns. Countrie1 that are not listed below will not be affected bY. this adiustment. Prices re main unchanft4. I NIWHOUR5 COUNTIUIS _, ' Standard Discount Economy Iceland lpm-8pm 7om-lpm 8pm-7om • Bulgort0, Romonta, USSR. Yugoslovt0 lpm-2om 7om-1pm 2om-7om If you have any questions abOut the adjusted price periods to the above countrie . our repRsentatives ~available to assist you. They may be reached by dialing our toll-free number: 1800 874-4000, ext. 152, or by writing~ ATaT International Marketing, Consumer Response Center, Room CJ65, ~12 Mt Kemble Avenue. Morristown, New Jer1ey 07960. ,. On pro clent staff, Astro ace stlllshlnes, tops Pirates. 3-2 Mitt Scott is feclina . pressure. Not from the opposition or umpires cbeckina for scum.us. but from the othn-Houston pitchers. "When everybody's throwina aood lake we are. you want lO Ketp U{> and it's touah to do, .. Scott said after pitching thrtt-hlt ball for seven innings Tuesday nit.ht as the Astros beat the Pituburah Ptratcs J-2. "You don't Wllllt to be tfic low man on the totem pole. You want to 10 out there and do as well as the 1uy before you." he sa.1d. Scott. S.-0. did not allow a hit until Rafael Belliard san$1ed to lead off the sixth. He pve up three hits an ~ven annangs and struck out I 0. raJsing his National le.ague- leading total to 73. "I don't think I've ever been S-Obefore, lalt you can't worry about whether you're S-0 or 0.5. All you worry about is your next stan," Scott said. Juan Agosto pitched I 2-3 innings and Dave Smith got the final out f9r his seventh save. Neither allowed a hit. Loser John Smiley. 3-3. gave up thrtt runs on seven hits ID SIX innings. In other Na11onal League games. Cardinals 3, Cabs 0: Luis Alicea's bad hop. smgJc scored two runs an the I I th 1nningand hfted SL Louis past Chicago. With two outs 1n the I I th. Tom Brunansky, Bob Homer and Ton) Pena hit singles. Alicea and Jose Oquendo followed \\-1th sangJes off Greg Maddux., f>.3. Maddu~ had allowed onl) two hits through 10 annm~. Reliever Scou Terr). 2-1. pitched a perfect 10th annang and Todd Worrell reured the Cubs in order m the 12th for his league-leadmg I Ith save. St. Louis starter John Tudor allowed three hits an nine annangs. Braves I, Reds t: Dale Murph)'. i\ndres Thomas and Gary Roen1cke homered. leading Atlanta past Cmcan- nau. Rick Mahler. 3-4. ga' e up seven hits m 711 innings and improved his career record against the Reds 10 12-2. Mets l, Padres 0: Da\ld (one and Randy Myers teamed to pitch New York's eighth shutout and Keith Hernandez scored on a Wlld pitch 1n the eighth inning as Ne" York beat San Diego Cone. 5.-0. ga'c up SI\ hits an seven innings and strud. o ut 12. matching the National League high this ~car. He left after Dick1c Thon sangJed to lead off the eighth and !\.hers closed "'llh h1tle~s ~hef for his fifth 53\e. Thl' \'1et\ k•ad1ng the maJOl"'S an shutouts. pitched JUSt se' en la~t season. Pblllits 8, Giants 1: "e' an (1ross pitched a s1x-h11ter and Von Ha\ CS got three of Ph1ladelph1a's 15 h11s as the Ph11l1('s beat hos1 5an Franc1c;co Gross. -l-1. "alked fi,e and struclo. out three an his 1h1rd compktc game. In .\mcncan League games: Atblttics 1%, Red Sox 7: Came .. Lansford and \\-alt Weiss had three hits apie« and Marlo. McG"'1rc h11 his 11th homer as '1s111ng Oakland won for the 22nd ume 10 their last 26 games The .\ 's pounded rookies Ste'e Ellswonh and John Traut\\-e1n for 11 runs in the first four innings and ra1~ their road record 10 18-4. Every Oakland staner had at least one hll in a 16-hit attack as the A's won their founh game in a row and improved their overall record to 28-10. best 1n the majors. Winner Stc\.e Ontiveros allowed 12 h11s and five runs in s1' innings. Rick Honeycutt pitched the last three innings for his founh sa' e Mariacn I , Yuktts t : Billy S"'1ft pitched a career best threc-h111er and Ken Phelps and Scott Bradle} * lndlam CHICAGO 6, wtlrte Sox 2 ao.tor-C' c;~, .. ...... .,. (._,,,. c;w ... to P..-11 1(-·-_..,:!D -·~-1 1 I I •• 0 0 •• 0. I t I 0 •• 0 • • 1 l ' • 0 •• J 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 u•vauMO Fr...ce 1D U-ID r_.,., c..-... ct -· ---~" ...... 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I 0.C-I l~ .._ t C"-f ~~ • " ..... tO ' I ' , • I • J • • • • • I I I I I , l#LIL __ _ Kew Tork lleta catelaer aux.:: (left) and Coacla BUI Robtn.on wldl 8.nt bue umphe Fred BrockJ.,w•er aboat carter beiDC called oat at tile plate. homered. The host Yankees committed thrtt throwing errors and the Mariners scored four uncamcd runs off previously unbeaten Richard Dotson. S-1. Swift allowed only two h11s after yielding both New York runs before he recorded an out on Willie Randolph'$ leadofT walk and Don Mattingly's third home run of the season. lndJus I , WlllJtc Sox!: Rich Yett and Doug Jones combined on a s1x-h1ttcr and Andy Allanson hit a tbrtt- run homer m the eighth mning as Cleveland won for the siuh 11me 1n the last seven game-s. Yett 'IC&tlcrcd five hits over 6'1> inninp and Jones earned his s1>.th save. Chicago's runs w~ solo homers by Daryl Boston in the sixth inning and Dan Pasqua in the seventh. Rookie Jack McDowell was the loser despite pitching his first compkte game in the majors. McDowell gave up 10 hats. Raagcn 7, Blat Jays I: Odd1be McDowell walked with the bases loaded to force home the 11e-brcak1ng run in the 14th inning and Scott Fletcher's sacrifi~ ny drove in ""hat pro'ed to be the \\-Inning run. James Steels staned the Rangers' 14th with a double off Mark Eichhorn but tagged up at second on Geno Petralh's long n~ and had 10 stop at third when the ball caromed off the nght-field wall for another double. Tlgtn 8, Br~wcn 4: Rookie Paul Gibson scattered se' en hits m SC\ en innings an his first major-lca.gue st.an and Luis Salazar and Chet Lemon homered as Detroit snapped a three-game losing streak. Gibson was a late replacement for scheduled st.artcr Jeff Robinson. ""ho was scratched because of a stiff neck and a chill) night. The :!8-year-old left-hander, who spent 10 \ear) 1n the minors. allowed three runs -one unearned -while ""alkang one and strilcing out two. 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Gl>e"'' I ) t t l•-0 J I I ... -A0.••1 Irr 0.-1 tit• S•.ttJ -"-~ Fn1 .--· *-MdC-T*d ·-•-n• •-11,,. * TWlM ,, ll9RD s UNIASOfY --SOTA WWlt"d '-'-,., •ro+t Ill Tn -11 ........... ,_., ·~"'" o.ko> ( , ....... ....... . ..... s l,. '"-' . 'J. 1101 _,.., ••11 ''" ~d ,,,.. •Il l ....._,.. llt l • I It 0.-.. t 110 • t 2 t GWM• 1112 • • • • ...,.rt • • • J t t I Ler1llft .. • I J I tt lJ'--< 4110 0-u Jtlt -... I tta ..........H lttt T-Jt I I J T-Jt 6 11 ; 1(-Cllv .. ,. t lt-t ----, . .,_, T-----~-0-_11 .. -.... E~ -1. DI" ~---2 U>a-tl-Cltv s. --11 19-.irt•t c.t!tl. ~. a..ci.-. -Ha-T_,_,, f61. ~ (JI I sa-w1-16'. Fw... IC!. ,,..._ct! • M•n•IO 61.J M I J-l I J 4 l I • • • I I 1 Loyo~a rolls past Laguna in four AU year Iona l..quna BCich High volleyball coach L.aooc Stewart hu bttft pluucd with I lack o( ktllcr lnstinct rrom bis learn and Tuesday , ~l it cauab1 up with them as • \.ujtina Loyola pulled ou1 an 11-15, . I S.9, I S.9, I S.12 victory. • The decis1on tends unbeaten l..oyola into the CIF 4-A semifinals Thursday nifbt •inst Sunset Leaaue champion Edison at a site to be determined today. Sean Stafford bad 25 kalls, Jonathon Cumminp had 14 kills and Matte Wells had 87 assisu for the Artists, but they couldn't put at logether on a oon11stent basis. We we~ ahead in every game and kept letting them off the book. .. sajd 5'.cwart, "which lS what we've been ioing all year Iona. We were Jumpmg iut, but we just couldn't hang on to 11. · !De bi~t factor an the whole match was their bloctuni.. ~Y took us out pf a lot of nm nfTt"n~ . The Artis wett on toJ> all the way in the opener, but i11 I.he followinaseu they saw leads or S-1. 7-1 and 12-10 dlSSjpate into deficits.. They're one ofth09e real emotional teamt., .. said Stewart. •· WMn they 1tt their blockina going, they're real tough to beat. We were real close to crackina them in a couple of pmes. "If we'd have played a little harder. we mwu have aonen them. But we JUSt didn't throw the knockout punch." Despite the loss It wasn't a lost season. St~ saw a silver lining an hjs team's 17-4 n=cord. "I thank we worked real hard to get where we we1 m." he sajd. ··1 don't think we qu11-. ever played our be-st volleyball. We wanted to play It in our last match. but unfortunately we didn't. At times we l1ad four under- classmen on the coun. We'll be read) to roll next year." . ~· ................................................ __ \TIKINGS .•. Prom Bl fresher. II was an amazmg game. I told them before we had all the talent and technique. and that 11 would come down to desire and opponuna- ry. And they answered." • The Vikings arc now 16-3 and get a second shot at Harbor. one of the three to mar their record. Santa Monica exits at 17-1. The fifth game was a piece of beauty for the Vikings. who got 11 all from the play of Duane Cameron. Ron Browning. Steve Guild, Braden Coenen and Dave Buebrin&- "Whatever got across the net dadn 't hit the floor.'' said Read. "We blocked e' el) thangand ~e dug every- thing." Camcrnn led the way wnh 24 kills and 12 stuff blocks. and Browning was credited with 2:! kills and three stuff blocks. Guild came through with seven stuff blocks and Coenen had four cructal kills. Buehnng was in on 65 assists. dug out six and had four stuff blocks The home team hasn't been settled yet for Thursday's semifinals. If the Vikings gain the home coun advan- tage today, Read said it'll be at Huntington Beach Sea View League trio unblemished Rabbitt Hanson key Newport past Redondo Beach Newpon Harbor Hagh'sChns Rab- bitt and Bally Hanson lost onl} two games each in their three singles sets to help ke) the Sailors to a 15-3 v1ctof) over' 1s1tang Redondo Beach in the ftnt round of the CIF 5-..\ playoffs Tucsda} No. 3 singles player Bnan Nguyen also swept his s1ngl~ matches. and the doubles team of Mike and Jamie Hardin earned three wms. Newpon advances 10 second round action Friday against Rolling Hills. In other 5-A matches: Corona del Mar U, Baena $: The Sea Krngs doubles teams of Rob and Scott Atkin. the Sea View League champions. Richard Han and Doug Schulcin. the league runner-up. and Jared Manion and Bob Etebar keyed the wm to advance to a second round match wuh Palos Verdes on Fnday. The CdM singles players. all freshman and sophomores.. had a rougher time, fa1hng to win ap1nst Channel League singles champ junior Kenny Pedroza. Uatvenlty It, Sula Mollica I: Willie Dann backed a perfect day for the Trojans doubles teams Wlth a sweep of has own at No. 2 singles. propelling the Trojans into the quar- terfinals Fnday at 3: 15 p.m. against visiting Santa Barbara. the same team Uni defeated 1n the 1987 5-A finals. The Uni doubles teams included Dave German and Eric Carlson. LAKERS. • • From Bl seconds left to make 1t 107-106, and on BajJey's jumper. In between those baskets, Worthy ·made.a short Jumper with 31 seconds to go to give the Lakers a I 08-10 7 edge. "Hell of a game." Lakcn coach Pal Riley said. "I don't think that we are 'JOing to run into another team that will play that well apinst us. It was a put effon on o ur part. We have a chance to close it on Thunday that we want to take advantaac of." Worthy led the Lakets with 27 points. Br.ron Scott added 24. John- son oontnbutcd 20and had 13 assists., -and Mychal Thompson 18 pointsand 11 rebounds for the l...akcrs. who have hcaten the Jazz in 32 of their last 3S pmes at the Forum. Malone. who had 29 points in each ol tbe fim fool' pm~ of-the lcriesi :finished with 27 Tuesday niaht and ·,,abbcd 16 rebounds. John Stocklon • ~,tied =off record with 2• assists ' ,ud 2l points for Utah. • • Stockton tied the ass1st Marte 1et by John.son -.a.inst Phoenix on May IS, J9'4. ·1'be ·,. rtCOrd doesn't man .a.oythina wbeft you don't ,.i n. .. .Scoc:kton said. "I ..,..t even tircid "'' ~ l wasn't aware I didn't come out · .or tbt pme. This is no limt so be ::urtd:" .. : liiiiiiilllliililil ... iiiiiiiiiiiiiliiili" David Le and Greg Brown and Ste\ e Lappin and Elliot Haycs. In 4-.\ compet1taon· Edboa 1$, Arcadia 3: Da'"e "1oore and Stc'e .\molt each s~ept the11 singles opponents. and Jason Black was inserted into the No. I doubles post with Non Otsu11 and the tandem came up with a sweep to boost the Chargers. the No. I seed from the Sunset. into a second round matchup with Calabasas or Camanllo FoantaiD Vatley II, Bis.hop Amat!: T he Barons' doubles teams of Bnan Winterstein and Colb\ Monta Russell Ye and R)an HaSega.wa. and Kenn Cleland and James No all swt.>pt their o pponents. and No ~ singles pla}er Errol .\kso} was th-: onl} Fountain Valle} singles pla~er tu defeat the Bishop .\mat No I pla)er Fountain Valle} pla~s Long Beach ~!Ison Fnda\ at a site to be d1:- termaned · M~riDa.dl, Glendale 7: The \ 1l - 1ngs' No. I singles pla~er senior Bnan Richardson re' ersed his normal pla)- ang order b} starting at the third spot and won a pair of matches. while t"o of Mannas doubles teams eamc-d s"~PS for the first ro und "'" o'er Glendale. the No I team from the Pacific League Pat Patterson and JefT Mone} teamed at No. I. and Wa)ne Ko1uk1 and Brian Emde combined at No. 2 to power the V1k1ngs m doubl~. Manna. the No 3 team from the Sunset. hosts a second round match Fnda) at 3 15 p.m. against Westlake. the S«ond-sceded team 1n the JO. team bracket. In 3-A compct1tion: La1au Bead1 1$, Cerritos 3: The Anists improved to I 5-6 Wlth the methodical victory. outsconng v1s1t- mgCemtos by an overwhelm ma 54-3 count an singles. Freshman Jon Leach and Junior Aaron Brewer dad not allow a point against them m singles, and the do ubles icam of John Young and Ltt Kirner was impressive. bestina Cer- ritos' best by an 18-3 margin. The v1ctof) sends Laguna Beach into the Stt'Ond round of the 3-.\ playoffs on Ftida)' agajnst Notre Dame ofShennan Oaks. SPREAD THE NEWS WOttc In ttte eYer Upending ti•~ Promotk>n fteldl tf you .. Mtf-mottvated Md .. wetting with ·---· this "'9Y be the oppomnty you've~ nltlng tor. TIW II a GUAAANTEED ltf.;. COME of $400 I* ,... to ltairt with pol9I rtlll WT*9 of up to •1000 .,. .... Alt IMUrild ven, MIQGfi. Pk*· Vp/._.. .. aMUST. 0.-,"94 ....... ., ........ Or.nge Coat DAILY PILOT/Wec:tneeday, May 18, 1988. 83 SAILORS TRIUMPH .•.• f'romBl And rnpond the) dJd u Mike Cum <26 lull~>. Cbn Lee ( 12 k1Jlst. Peter Eastman (a season-hi&h I S Ir.ill~) and Junior Ton) Men1 (me cnucal kills and '<"' l"n stuff blocks) put 11 together lt ~a .. ~h~·"ard the quarteroack. who '>l't mo">t ot thut up "1th 711 AS!>l!>I~ and h(' had lour ">t'n Ile au·'> .and four \lull bind., fora"'h1k 1 dppc:ared Harbor v.a'> on ns "it' out .1\ ~ uodbndge brcc:-zed in the opc-n\"r I '-I 0. helped along wuh !>l''en 1111\llr\"' "hen the \.1110~ attemptt-d tu \t'f\ l . .ind ( rknn ad- mitted 11' hn·n d p111hlnn all )Ca r long Then ,m 11 ~ 'l""run k ad 1n the \C'Cond g.tm(' m.:lted rHv ;i , ... -1" los'> a nd thr \Jtlur' "l rl 1 n th1· rupn But thal ' "hn \he:" a rd & ( 11 dended tu g11 l1u1 '" ng111g jnJ 11 resulted 1n thrn , .. f,d h.t, mal..a\ w el1m10Jll' till' l'J< I I 11,1\l I l'JSUl" was the fituik to a prct> carttr • Woodbrid~ *h1cb hb.-sccn h• · catT) the Warriors tn bnletball a~ \Ollt"'~ NU ~ Has 38 ._11ls \liett devastating-on 1n partit:ular ep11omtzed hJS dom, .. nauon of the pmt" as he ti~ aw from near bat l..coun smashing t l:lall across lhc net and mlo Harbor Ja~n (Jan 1n lhc ball ro". floon the Sailor The third !)('I s.a" the ~1lors movi; out to a I ~-S lt"'ad before ~tthng f~ 15-7 It wa) 11-5 in the founh ~ before St.0 t1hng fur 15-11. and in ttit decider Harbor \1.3) in command( "\.I\ belon: ~ oodbndge too~ its linal 1hru'>t 1. uuang 11 10 14-11 ;; [a">tman·, '>11.kout got the Sa1loc;, JX•.,~'>'>IOn and Lee· .. 1iuk tap too~ 'pau.· '>t"aled 11 < : ... champ11111' al ~ ' ON ··r,1· ~ .. 1 rnl tx-,1 \t't•l·r in h1~n EDIS ... S<.hoo ano "'( nccl.kd 11 ni 1un1gh1 · •.::ud (,knr "' "nt"'Jr..! ·11 "'J' Jll ('\(('p 011.11 j>{ rJ rn Jnu: hul 11 "'J\ normal 101 11111 \\ t11.Jtirhll!l ( I J ~ "ll'' l \(I I 1\ agrt"ed .. I r1l 1 J,·tl 110.,1 "J' '.11 Ix 1 trr than .. ur'> 1.-..1J . ..,hl"JrJ lie~ lht' tx· ... 1,c:•h < >• .angl c •int' I tlJt \\J\ n1 \llfl'I ' Till 'Ufll 'l "J' in, ;:i J\ 1 \ltr11 "h'"l '" . .ii nC1knn,,Jl,g.h11u .... 1n fll"Jl llll "f 11! 1h,11\I t1.i' l \Jiu \ k1t1' n1orl' p•.1< t1"' th::in .ir \1111,· • adn I'<•'< 1 l: n "h1• ,i' it"> 1u'f\ pk::iwJ ' ' ·1, "J h ' uni •' dfTll 1hrr1.;" Jur 'i! .rund : n 1 t"'c: , t ,,... mpr •\<"' H;.ir"or' rt"•utJ l• ,_ • hut < 1 enr \J1.t T u,·'<JJ ·, 1r in ph <.hnu J 1.11unt J' '. ll ' From Bl Jnd "hen the match "d" un the hn~ h\" "J' gt'lltnl.I .. 1rnnger 3nd .. trong~( \'h1k uthl·r, "l'll getting ured · Ed1.,on' numhers 11oere '' p1ral th< ,umbana11,1n 11oh11.h ha-. produi.: d I -• l fl'l I If J ? \tJrl.. Pre,ho had~~ 1..ilb Boone ~ ._,11., anJ ~ o.,tufl hlocl'> l anl(' ~ ~di\ Jll\1 "Klld Er, Turnl·r "'~ ,reJ1tl·.::J "rlh.., ct'>\l'>I'> .; 1 hl m.lrJthon match 'WI\\ m • ,1Jc11u1' Ix l1trl lcd1..,un <Ou Id t'\~ 'lllrl· J p111n1 ,a,1ing thl' d1l t"arl\ :· DJn.i 11111\ "J' plj\ in~ oUl'>Uln~ ng through lhr\"e game'> ..ai;cl Hern Jn hul \\l' 1111:1,ed the\ \lie3 gc11111g J l111h: llrl'O \\ e·, e pnd 111.Jr'K'h c' in !x•1ng rn ~real '>hapc-a "hl·n 11 ~l'I' tiJ lht' fnunh and fif~ it:.ime-. "'< fl nut g.l11ng Ill lo'>C" Newport Barbor senior eetter Drew Sheward, who bad 79 a .. tata Tuesday, celebrate. win o•er Woodbridge. \\ l 1t h.:t•ri 1n thJt 'fk'I h<'l11rt flra1ling · hl .un11nul'd ··t-ul rlill ull\"n I 1h11utthl \lo\" \hO"•'.i .. lut 111 hl·art ·· For th \1 • .int.>rJ.~1unJ "n le 11 ·1t \.\J'> thl· tk't "'!.' H' pla)ed aO 'l'Jr "..aid lkrman ''.\nd It "as tht \uughc!>l mati.:h "'l''t' had all ~eat. But othl'r'> arl' ~aling at this point. I )() .. -: VALVOLINE MOTOR OIL • Limit 12 quorn. • SAE 30, 10w.Jo. lOW -40 ..... ·,;~ '74•1 ,,., .. i 1u IC ... 7 .;' :r-.... ;--3" 49! flAM OIL flLTEJl •Top Quality • l1m1l 2 .. ' 79~ x cAJ/-0~· r lOW-40 T MOTOIOIL J •RAM Ala ALTUS :":.?:;'" 329 "410....n non 1.a SALE PRICES EFFECTIVE THROUGH MAY 22, 1988 HONlST RETURN POLICY If.,_•• ,...t c.....,...i.iy .......... ..,.., -r ••m .,.,.. ""' ,.,..,.. • We I glodl, ·et>'OC• ,, ... ,.,, • .,..., 0 ................ -"'""" .... Fl.USM ·---... UAICISHOO GaMOS ·-.......... ---·---. ........... 6~ PARTS HOT DEALS ACCESSORIES ----- -- ---- . 60 SALE PRICES EF,ECTIVE THRU MAY 22, 1911 Owr ..0 , .............. ,.., -a..l ,..., ,..,, Ol...-y., .... ,..... ,.,. ..... Ill,, • York 6levetand Detroit Boston w 28 19 18 17 16 17 14 2S 23 22 19 20 16 5 L 10 18 18 20 19 23 23 13 14 15 16 11 22 31 WEST DIVISION PeL GB Llt Slnlk 737 7.3 Won 4 .Sl4 8Y1 8-2 Won l .SOO 9 5-S Lost 2 . 4S9 IOYJ 3-7 Lost I .457 IO'h 7-3 Won 3 .425 12 4-6 Won I .378 lJ'h 3-7 Lost 2 EASTDIVJSION .658 5-5 .622 l 1h 6-4 .595 21h 5-5 .543 41h 4-6 .541 41/J 4-6 . 421 9 4-6 .139 19 3-7 Lost Won Won I Lo~t 3 Lost I Lost I Lost 2 Twesday'1 Scores Aqel1 at Baltimore (ppd .. rain) Seattle 6, New York 2 I 1Milwaulttt Toronto &ltimore I :i.c OeJcJand 12, Boston 7 Oevclaod 6. Ch1caao 2 Minnesota 6, Kansas City 5 Detroit 8, Milwaukee 4 Texas 7, Toronto 6. 14 innings Today's Games I• ' .. .. Home Away 10-6 18-4 12-9 7-9 10-10 8-8 7-9 10-11 11-8 S-1 1 7. 9 10-14 6-11 8-12 14-7 12-6 10-8 11 -11 13-8 7-1 1 4-1 3 11· 6 11 -8 12-7 8-'5 7-9 9-1 1 1-18 I c; I· AD,ela (Witt 1-4) at Baltimore (Bautista 0-2). 4:35 p.m. Detroit (Alexander 3-2) at Milwaukee (Higuera 3-2). 11 .35 a.m. Seattle (Campbell 2-S) at New York (Leiter 3-2). 4:30 p.m Oakland (Stewan 8-1) at Boston (Boyd 4-2). 4:35 p.m. :•. • • Jt.. Chicago (Perez 3-0) at Cleveland (Candiom 5-1 ). 4:35 p.m. Texas (Hayward 2-0) at Toronto (Stottlemyre 1-4), 4:35 p.m. Kansas City (Saberhagen 4-4) at Minnesota (A. o\nderson 1-2), 5:05 p.m. Tbunday'1 Games Ancel• at Balumore (2). 2:05 p.m. Kansas City at Minnesota. I 0: 15 a. m. C hicago at Cleveland. 4:35 p.m. w 21 21 19 19 13 11 Nadonal Lague '4 WEST DIVISION L Pct. GB LIO 13 618 5-5 15 583 I 6-4 19 .500 4 5-5 20 48 7 .. 4111 5-5 24 351 91 2 3-7 24 .314 10112 5-5 EAST DIVISION Streak Lost I Won 2 Lost I Lost 2 Lost 2 \\on Home Away 11· 8 10-5 15-7 6-8 9. 9 10-10 11-12 8-8 11-12 2-12 4-14 7-10 Nev. York 11 .694 6-4 NATIONAL L•AGU• ..... l.~S ~IA~ LOS AHOSLl.S ........ ., .... 5111 $H2b 5101 41 1 1 MIOnllrf 4000 S 11 O Gibson If 4 2 ti 4 > 2 0 GIMr'er 311 41 I 0 4 I 2 I N\et'llll 111 4 11 I JOll StllllWcf 3022 40tJ Sdotc.le c 40 10 ) 0 0 0 °"""'Y Pf 0 I 0 0 3f00 0rlfftnM 3000 0000 MHtdVllfl 0000 HMPPh 0000 Vllllftta.o 2 0 1 0 A'*'11 Ph l 0 0 0 er-so 0 0 0 0 Slutlbs Oii I 0 1 l 116116 T..-JSSfS • " ••••• so ~ 11 .. 1on W,1·2 1 1·3 I 5 S I 8urlo.e S,5 2·3 1 0 0 0 u......- Valentl9 L,3·4 1 10 6 ' 6 Crews 2 10 0 0 8K-Heetll<l Umlllrn-Home. Wnl, Flnt, Wllllems, Sec- ond, E"991. Third, RunM. T-2 50 A-34,309 MAJOA LEAGU8 LEADERS AmertcMI L.eque ('f1lrwtll M9M9V'• 0-) BATTI NG ('9 at ba"l-Wlnflelel, New York, .o2, L•n•forel, 0.kl9nd, .;t74; RHandenOn, New York, 353; AOavll, S..tlle, .352; Carter, Cievetencl. .ltS. RUNs-Melllnlllv, N-York, 37, Can..co, 0.klencl. 35, RH9ndenon, New York, 35; Win· Ii.«!, New Yon, J2; Len1forel, O.lllend. 31 R81-Wlnfi.td, ~York, 37, C..nseco. O.k· Mind, 35, Pa11Rarulo, f\tew York. 34, McGwlre. 0.klend. 31, Car1er, Ci.vei.ncl, 30. HITS--Lensforel, 0.lllen<t, 51, Wlnflelcl, New Yorio.. SJ. CM•er. Clev ... nd. 41. RHenoeoon New Yont. 41. G8eM. Torll<llO 47 OOV8L.E~Y • ......,._ 141 Mall•~. New YOf'k 13, GladOen, Mlnnnc>I•, 12, Lemon. Oetr041 11 Sleuvtlt. New York. 12. T•r1•DUI K•nw' Cllv 12 t l>ittsburgh 1 Chicago 25 23 18 18 16 14 15 605 3 5-5 18 500 7 5-5 V..on 1 Lost 4 Lost I Won 2 Won I Won 2 11-3 14-5 6-7 10-9 9. 7 7. 7 14-8 9-10 12-11 8-10 7-12 7-1 4 TRIPLE5-«evnoldS, S..llle. 4, 'Nilson. l(anw• Cllv 4 Fr•nco. Cleveland, 3 Ga.II, TO<'onlo 3 Ga-. Mlnnnola , 3 HOME RUNs--+lrtletl. MIMftOta, 11 Censec:o 0.klal'ld, 10, McGwlre, 0.klencl 10, Caner CleWlencl, t, Wlnfleld, New Yori.., 9 St Louis Montreal Ph1ladelph1a 19 .486 1•,1 7-3 19 .457 8Vz 4-6 21 .400 I 01h 5-5 STOLEN BASES-If~. New YOf'k 31. Pelll•. Oelroll, 20; C.M«o. 0.1<.lencl 13. llJaekM>l'I. Kenwl Cltv. 10, MOMtbv, TorO<llO. 10 ' .. ~, . t· ::. '· .. • J .. I• • I Tuesday's Scores Montreal 6, Doc11u1 5 St. Louis 3. Chicago 0 (I I innings) Atlanta 6. Cincinnati 2 Houston 3. Pittsburgh 2 New York I, San Diego 0 Philadelphia 8, San Francisco I Today's Games Montreal (Dopson 0-1) at Dodgen (Hershiser 6-1 ). 7:05 p.m. St. Louis (Del.eon 3-3) at Chicago (Moyer 2-4), 11 :20 a.m. Ph1ladelph1a (Ruffin 3-3) at San Francisco (K.rukow 2-2). I :05 p.m Atlanta (P.Smath 1-4) at Cincmnau (Robinson 2-3). 4:35 p.m. Pittsburgh (Drabek 4-2) at Houston (Ryan 3-2). 5:}5 p.m Nev. York (0Jeda 3-2) at Sao Di~o CJ.Jones 3-4). 7:05 p.m Tlll•nday s Games Montreal at Dod1us 7:05 p.m . St Louis at Chicago I 05 p.m. "iev. \ ork at San Diego. I 05 p.m Ont~ games c;chl'duled I Chp dollar-sanng couPons llllJPlll I PITCHING (4 deci~ll-Oot\Oll, New Yori< s-o, I 000 3 10, S1ewan, o.111eno, I· 1 "'· 165, Swlnoeu C1eve1enc1. 7-I, 11S, 2 41. Clemenl, l ollon, 6·1, IS7. I 7'. VI•. Minne· lOle, 6· 1 IS7 2 76 STRIKEOUTS-Clemen' Bo•lon. 93. L.ano11on Seanle. IO, Morrll, Oelroll, 60, Vlol• Mln,,.WI•, SS. Hurll, Bollon, ... S.berl'llll)en, K•nWl Cllv ff SAVES-EcktrlieY, Oa1<1ano, 14, Hennem•n Oe•roll. 10. Wlllleml, Tua•, 9, P\ffllc Mii· waukH. I. Henke. TOf'O<llo. 1 Nattenel lAa9'M (Tlveutfl Suftde'f'• G.tnel) BAT TING '" ., bell)-Pelmeiro. Cllica90 35', Bonine PH111>uroh ~s. Guerrw., o.ci.en, .l451 Gaterra11• MonlrH I, 321. Oaw-1, Cllluoo 316 RUNS-8onch P111~r911, 30. Bonin• Pll· llburlll'I, 21, Larkin C1ncrnnel1 V . Clerk S.n Fral>C•KO 16. Glblefl. LM ........,, »; Rall'tft. MontrHt 26, Slrewbenv N-York. 26 R8~0ev". HooslO<l. 36. Boo•.... Pot· IM>Urlll\. 30. Parr1'11. Pnlla~le. 26. !lr-1 Montr .. 1 15. Claf1l S.n FranclM:o 25, O•wM>l'I Cl'licello 2S ~. ~ 2S. HITS-Ur1<1n. C1ncinneh. ff, McGH . SILOUll " llo<l••IO PtlllOUl'lll'I. 41. Pa•me•ro Cl'rieallO, 47, Coleman. StLouh t6 OOtJI LEs-f>•lme•ro Cl'llallO 14, S.oo ClnclnNtl, 12, Bon•llO, PltlSC>urllh 11. OewM>n. Cl'llc"°. 11. Pen01eron. SIL.oul•. 11. How to keep up with your neighbors Your neighbors lead aetive lives. Good news about their weddings, births, business accomplishments and community achievements are found daily in the IAily Pilot and on Thursdays in your special Neighborhood Focus section. Good News Is Shared in the Daly Plot To get good news~about your neighbors delivered to you. call our Circulation ~rtment. (714) 642·4333 . To shatt good news abOut your ~hors. call our Orf Editor {7145 642-4321, en. 361 ' . - """ IOMt CW S·A f'\.AYCWl'I .-.~-­·~ 4, WW*•*"*' ' Westmln'1er 010 ODO .-1 2 1 E ._ .,,,. 200 011 11-4 S 0 Klesko. StUbbt 161 end LOMl; w..tn, S.unden 161 and PY'ftMI. w weem .. L-i<lesko 21t--Men0oH (W), PY'nMI (E ). 39-WellO (E l Hlt..-Klesko (W), Saundlr1 (E ). Cl' ~LA Y0f''5 S·A TUfldll'f'• Wlct Card Sc-. EM>ef'enra 4, Wntmlnster l 'r1Cla'f'I '1nt lllVftd Garnet (J:1S) RolllnlJ Hiil• 110· 111 et El Dorado (22·3) eeverlY Hiii• 11•·•> at Hun1ln11ton 8ffch (11· 71 Pes.Clene ( 12· 10) al Lakewood ( ll·fl Novalet ( 1'·1· 11 11 Servile (It·•> Eweranu (17·11 •• No TOf"r•nc• !11-l l 81"'°9 Amer (lS·ll at COiion (11·S-ll Culver City (15·12) et Noire Oeme (17·9! Hoover !13· I IJ at Simi Vettev (21·S) Rowi.ncs !12· lll et Mllllllan (21·S> Wntlffe (IS• 11) •I CrHlll 11S·I ) Rlvertlcle Polv 111·1) •I Glendale 114·7> Wet I T Of'rence 11S·6) el Los A141mllOl (20-,l LI WllSOn (I l-14) el S.1111 Mol'ttU ( 17•6) El~-(14·9-1) at Olamono Bal 11,_71 1000 0.U (17·7·1) at Quan View (1•·10·1) Lov• 113·91 al Mater Del (20-ll 4-A Tllftdl'('s Wld C.rel Scare FoothlM II Sonor• 3 f'l1de'f't ,.nt ll~ Gemei (l:ISI Arrovo Granoe ( 14· 101 •• Hert 125·0) L.-..r•llllef 112·15) •• Fullerlon 111·71 Co.,.,. 120·Sl e r Hemel (lS·lll Don LullO (19·71 •t Rio ~u (11·6·1) aurr-hs (II· 121 •• Cerrllot 11'·6· I) t1enc1ore I 11·11 al Senta Ana ·( 16·91 NOf'thvlew ( 14· 10· II al llalencl• 11S·6· 1) Redondo 127·2) er LomPOC 113·11·1) Palm SPf•nlJ\ I ll II) al UP141nd (10·6) Canvon 117·11 at WHtern 111·1· I) llenture ( 11·6· 1) R111ne111 (16-1) G•hr 119·S·21 at La H•br• 115·1) Oow~v 112· 12· 1) al South Hilll ( 16·6) F ool,,11• I 16· IOI al J W Norin ( 11-1· 1 I Scl'lurr 111·111 11 H~.,.me Cl6·7·1) An•helm Ill II) al El *undo (21·1) l ·A TueMle'f'• Wlcl Card Scare El Toro 13 Traouco Hiii• 2 l(tnne<fll 1 Artei11 6 Brewlev 11 Onlario 3 Rim ot worlel • El Monie S ,11de'('s F'"J lleuncl Getne• (l:IS) E•••11t•• I 16·9> •I u Ou•n•• 123·0 El Toro 114 l3l 9' Arrovo 11•·11 s.ueu, I 17·1> •• jen1e C••r• I 16·31 El R•ndlo !16 6) 111 8ellflo-(14·1·1) Dana Hiiis II•· 121 •• Montclair 121 • l(~y (16·131 el L.•ll<Jna HlttS 116·11 CC>Ktlelte V•"•v Cl2·11) el Y...ca•~ (11·1> p,~ (1)·6·11 •• S.OdleC>ecll (19·6) C•leO.Ul It 10·11 •• Ca11forn•• 119·4) 0.•"lle (t4· Ill •• Paclhca ( 11·71 l r•wlev 1)·91 •I Ant~ Vallev 1 IS·ll Rim of WOf"ICI (14·11) •• L• Mlr•o• 117-6-1) Tustin It• 9) at ln11ne I 17·11 Ce oon IS·t ) •• Ctnrret ( 11·0 Aooure t 10·9·21 11 Ouarie I 13 II QuerlJ H·ll 112•11 el Ch•no 124· II Hlttl KMeil rankln9s 'INAL Cf~ S·A I El Ool'•Clo, ?2·3, 2 Mater Del. 20-3, 3 MIUll<•n, 21·S, 4 Simi VeMev. 21·5, S Los AlemllO\, 20·6. 6 Servli., 11·•. 1 EllN<anra. 16·1, I COllO<l, 17+ I, f S.nta Monica, 17·6; 10 Diamond ear, 19·7. Ct~ 4-A 1 Harl, 25-0, 2 Redondo, 27·2; l. El $e9ulldo, 20·1, 4 Ul>len<t, 20·•, 5 G•hr. 19·S·2. ' Covina, 20-S. 7 Rio Mela. 19·6· I, I Cerrllos, 11-6·2, 9 Soull'I 111111, 16·•, 10 Vtnlure, 11·6· 1 C" l·A I Le Quinta. 13·4, 2 Cl'llno, 24-1. 3. CallfOf"nle, 1'·4, 4 S.OdleOKI<, lt-6, S. Monldalf, 21·6, 6 Le Mlrede, 17·•·1. 7. El Randlo, 16·•. I Ir-vine, 17·1. t Arlnle, 17·1, 10 Central, 11·4 NHL StaftleY C.. •vefh CHAM.,...... 18•19S ( ........ ._, T ......... ... llolton •• Edmonton, 6M om ~fWIY"• 0.... &oslon el Edmonton, •:OS o.m SW*V'I 0- Edmonlon at llotlOll, US a.m. T...-V, MllY 11 ec1mon1on at 'llot!Oll. •:» a.m. 'TllWM!t'f, -· " llotton •' Edmonton (If MWHMYI. •:OS o.m. SatuNily, MllY. Edmonton el 1o11on <" MCllUf'Y), 4:35 pm. ....... Mlrt. Botton •• Eeln'ICWlton (If lleC:eUWYI, •:OS p.m. .. ~Cf) ~· c:-...-lllCAA ac.,..ra , ..... (at La._.., .,..... ........... i.OMI i.t1t tMlamll *"· A1VMi11 ~ (UCLA), .. ,, 6-11 UWt GAell (Mlllfenll 4lltf Trill\ Laux (UICI. 7 ..... ,: H* Cltfft (Floi Ide) •· Jft*9 R""'*" <UCLA}, H. M i SMuft StaflOrd (F!Ofd'I) dlf. Teri Wtl'I· llnMr (Sfaftfofd), ... ~ .. I. .....,,.,,... ...... lttlt 4ef • .laMe f(ovec»vldl (......,dine), •• ,, ..... GAell ... au--a.-(9r11Nm VOUl\9), 6-2, 6-2; Clolft dllf. MN~ <Teu•l, 7·5, .. 2; Stllftwtl #. K_,.. SNft (Callfornla), .. ~. 1·S.. .,...... ...... .,..... s ..... Sanwr••Allyt.oft c...., (UCLA> ... J-Hotdnn-Mtl ~ =") ... 1. , ... "• tcMll Cff' TWAM ~'Y'Ofll'I AV._. 5·A ""'"" ...,... is. ..._.. a.di a ..... llaoblll (NH) def. 8vrnell. ..... dlf c.lrd, 6·1, def Gr'90f', 6-1; ~(NH)-· 6-t. 6·0, H ; ~ INH) won, 6-l, 6-l. 6·1. ~ M. Hardln·J Harcllft (NH) dll Dllinlty· Cllaften, 7·6, clef Mlt*'·Mawler, .... dlf \l~·A"'6tv, 6-1, WarmlNlon·Slwn (NH) -· 6·4, !0$1, •·6, "'°"• 6-~ ........ ltd (NHI ioat, S-7. 1·6, won, 7·6 • C-tlll MIW lJ. .._ S Slntlea Kettman (CdMI '°'' lo Pedro1a, >·•. def Tur,., •->, def Georvtell, •·l, McCNlllOCk (COM) lost, l·•. won, 6·4. lotl, 2·•; hsllNnw (COM) !oil, 2-6, 1·•. won, •·l . ~ S. Atkln·R. Atkin (CdMI def. Ptlem·er-11, 6·0, def. At.19\nl·Neuven, 6·0, def. Ha•·Sletll<l, •·O; Han·Sdluleln (CdMI won, •·1, 6-1. ,.,, Manlon·Eletlar (CdM) won, 6·1. •·2, •·O. ~ 12. s..... Mlllka ' Slntlea • Prlee IUI lost to Gllandl, 4·6, loal to RC>OerllOll, 3·6, losl lo Frlllaa, I·•; OaM (U) won, •· 1, •·3, 6·3; NllUYen (UI IOll, 1·6. 1-6, 2·6. o.uMtl Germen-CarllOl'I (U) def TUVlll"Al·S4IO, •· 1, def AbraOton-Maklll, 6-2, def. LM·Cl'llell, ,-0, Le-lt'own (UI won. •-o. 6·2, 6·2. LePOln·H•v• IU) won, •·> . .,.3, •·O ~ll"lt ..... sar. e.vertv Hiib ti" Mlr.-Sle 11. Soulll Torrance 7 Patos Verdn 15, Cutwr Cltv 3 c-0et MM 13, euena s N--1 Har1lor IS, lteclondo 3 ltOllnci Hiit 17, S.11 Mal'COI I Unlvenltv 12. Senle Monica ' S.nte 8¥'bera tlve 4·A •tllMll IS, ArcMll J ........ 0 Moor• (E ) def Loustanlall, 6-3, clef L.ewl•. 6· 1, def. Cl'lenci. •-o. ArflOlt <E> won, 6·4, 6-0, 6-2, O..son IE) lot.I, 1·•. 3-6, l ·6 '**"' Otwll·lleck <E l def L.ae-Pri, •·>. def Nlr.Mn-Cllu, •·>. def. H11un1J·Kuo, .. I, G Mool'e·Klrll (El won, 6-2, 7·S. 6·>. Pt\llllPS· Tonells (E) won. •·I, •·O, , ... ,_.. V81rt 16, IMIMe ._, 2 Slntlea Mell IFVI losl to Monlova, >·•· def Mon· tolollOO, 6-0, def. Mii-'. •·o. Aksov (FV) wOt1, 6·3. 6·1, 6·0. Lee (FV) lost, 3·•. won. H . 6·1. ~ Wlntenteln-Mo<ll• IFVl def. Remlfaz·Fallx, •·4. def Woocl·PHCUll, 6·2, def Klm·Marnarlt, •·1; Ye·HaMeaw• IFVI won, •·I, 6·1, 7·5, Cleland-No (FV) won, tlv defaull, 6·4, 6-0 MMN 11,~7 ........ 8ur11• IM) losl IO EllCOS, 5-1. Keualllan, 2-6, Gel. a.hr, 6-2. zo .. (Ml won, 6·4, losl, 1·6 won, 6·>. Rlcl'lardson <Ml won, •·2. IOll, 1-•. won. 6·1 DeuMea l(ozUkl·Emde (Ml def Manlner·Sclvllll>. •-O. cMf Mlct<es·Klm, 6-3, oef Ceo·Toov. 6·2, Pallenon·MoMv (Ml won. 7-S. 7-•. 6-4, Yuen· Roorlcluu tMI tost.r.. 1-6, •·7. 1·• "1n1 lleuM SC... Oen.a Hitt\ ~ L8 Wibon I I, NewtlurY Perl! 1 Fountain v ... v 16, 81ih0o Amel 2 S.Vll• 10. Noealn 2 TllOUMnd <>Ms 14, Aeour• 4 Rlve<llde Poly 14, OlatnOftel S.r • Canvon IS. LelteWOOd 3 Edlill<l IS, ArUdla l Mlulon Vleio 12. Sall G«eonlo 6 Foollllll 15. Charier 0.k 3 El TOf"o 17, S.nla A.,. llallev 1 Marina 11, Glendele 7 Wn1i.1<e l>v• >·A La..-hedl 1S, c;.,.,.. J ........ LMCh (L8) Gel. Soils. 6·0. def. Cllan, •·O, def Wu, 6-0, RuJl\11'19 (Li i won, 6·2. 6· I, •·O, 8rauer (L8 1 WOtl, •·O, •·O, •·O. ~ Klmer·Younci (Lii def. Leoulzamo·Un. •·I. def Solatll·Mendou. ._I, def. K lm·C.alanede, 6-1; Cr..,.._TYU$ (l.81 !Ost, 3.,, won, •·2, 6-3, Wlllle-S<hmldt (l.8 1 loll, H , 2·•, WOii 6-2. ""' ..... kens S.n Marino 11. Oo-v O Hemet 1'. Palm Sorllles 2 Sunl'ov Hlh 1'. KennedV 1 ~ 17, J.W NQrth 0 Notl't Dame, Sllermen 0.1 f . El Ool'.00 t !Notre o.,.,,. wills on ..,,_, 11-m Le9UN e..cr. IS. CerrllOI 3 Woodbrldsle 14. Sonora 4 Petm Sorlfle\ 1', Central 2 Alllemtll'e 12, Geflr ' Indio 12, EN1W811u 6 F u1W10n 11, Own1en 7 Le c~ 11. Le Quinta 1 Los Allamt1ol 17, u.... l .,... ........ DAVEY'S LOCK•• C~ 9-dl) -6 tloets, IXJ ant11n. 2 ,.a!OWlll, 160 bonito, 6 1>arracucta, '7 c::atlclo ties•. 1• Mnct lieu, '5 madllf'el, I calMllOft, .. M:UIP!n. 52 ..... INll'll. l mallo ~ N•WPOln' LANDMO -2 tloel, J4 af'!91W .. 35 sand llau, 132 callCo lleH, I bonito, 4 llallbut, 1 Velowfall, J macMrel, 6 foelt fltll, I IOAolll. 11 ~. ~ • " • ~ H•MMll Ofl "-A~ ••• n.n.Y"s ,.,... ._.. 0-Cltll) Jwd1911 •• ()Mr Oc.-View 9f '°""' Terr~ 1.0t ~ pt SlrnJ V*'t l.OfMIOC •• t\l9N Melt~ .. "· JoMaft .. Oft! .. Saft!• Mar1e E.,_MU al MMM lufrCIUIM at ldholl NOfttl T~ 1t F-'alll V...,, Matw Oii a1 c~ LI WllMn 9f DowfllV v.mura at TilouMlld °"'' Torrwa •I St. l'N Cerrlloa at H.,, NewtlurY ,,.,_ at Senta ..,...,.. 8urtlanll at •lellenl I-A Today'a Wld CM'9 GM* (l:lS) (A) Ullland af aUllldoull <•> s.v-•• Sente .... (C) a.lflow .. at HooW (0) HH Wliloft Ill ~ MoNc.a ,,...., '1nt ......... (JllJ) Seddlltledl al Kemadv A WM Cwd wll1ftW af ~ Hiii ""'"""" •• Mayfer ,,,__ VllleY ef CO¥ll\a Gerdel! Grove at w.tern ......._.,. ., Gllqdlll ClllYOtl at Doll LU90 Soult\ Hiii el Charter Ollk a-Part at C~ V ...... e Wiid Carel wannw · at CulYW CltY C Wiid Card winner et EIMMO- Ollndora at V e1et1c1e Le Habra al Diamond a.r La Quln1a et Tuatln WelnUI ., \Illa Park 0 Wiid Cerd wtnnw al LA Mlradl 2•A ~l"IMV'a 'lrV R911M 9-():IS) Monl9bello et Woodbrldoe Canvon at SI. lernarel Wiid C..rd winner et Mollldalr C..plalr-Vatlev al Le Wna Alemenv at Mlulon Vltto 8r•wttv el Pelm SP'llles Arllnoton at ltlm of Ille World SI A11lllonV al Arroy0 S.UllU' at Noire o.me. Sherman o.A• L~ Hiiis el ~ C.tllol" Senta Fe at ,.,.,.., Stw CP\amlnacle el Alllocle Vll/llrf Keo.er •• cor-Onlarlo at Cet1lral C.Jon el El Monie Oranoe et San Clemenle """ IOMt ,.. ..... """" Qtll 4-A I. ~. 23·2; 2. It ..... !\ lf-6; 1 ,_taln Valltv. 21+1, 4. TholMeftd O.U, 22·7, S. Edison, IH·I; 6. 9-, tt-2-1; 7. St. Paul. 1•·4, I Sf. JoMoll, 11·3. f. Han, 21-4· I; 10 Simi Vatlev, l,_I. Of' >·A l KeMed\I, 21·5; 2 C'"'*'I• \lelr(, :IC>-1, ) L.e MWMI. 12·1; ._ Cllarter 0., 21-l; S. Olemolld aw, :IC>-3. 6. Velenda, ••: 1 Canvon. 16-1·1, I. Covina, 17·4; t. lelflower, 17·4·1; 10. Wntar11, 14·10. Ct~ l·A 1. Arnwo. 11-0-1; 2. WOOCllll'ION. If-•. ). Notre Oeme, 2l·J; t. S.n Cllmente, 11••, S. COf"Qfla, 1'·4; 6. Anlelocle Valev, 15·3·1, 7. El Monte. ll·S; t. Minion Vlalo, 11·7; t. Montdaw, 11-1. 10. Le wna, 11-2-1, .... •Wlfl CON,la•MCI llM,IMALS (llftt-lf·S-) TwMlllY"a lclr9 uun 111, Ulall I09 (Liken lead ..-i... 3·21 Delles 110 Oenver 106 (0 ... , 1HC11 ser1el, l-21 Tlflllllt'•~ Allenla al lkKton, S p.m. (Win ti.d, 2-21 Chlcego at Oetrolr, S p,m. (Detroit ~ Mf"lft, l·I) n.wMl'f'• 0- LMen •I Uleh. 7:l0 P.m. Oenv..-•I OdH, 5 P.m. '"*¥'• ~ 8o\lon •I Allanta, T8A O.troll er Chlea9o. T8A (If -wrvl Satllrdll¥'• 0-Ul•l'I et L.Hen, 12-.30 P.m. (" ~) Oelle1 et Denver. T8A Ill MCHMrv) 5""*'('1 ca- Atten•• 1t lollll<l, 10 •·"'-llf neceuarv) ChicAPo •• Detroit, TIA (If neceuarv) Lahn 111, J&u 10f UTAH (10t) -lavaronl 2·3 2·2 '· Malone 10-21 1·t '11, Eaton 4-1 2·3 10, Hensen 6-14 1·2 IS, St~lon t-1' 7·f 23, Balley 12-20 4-6 21, Rotl'I 0-0 0-0 o. Tolall Q-t2 23-31 !Of. LOI AMG•LH(IH) -A.C.~Mll 2·3 1-2 5, Wortlly 12·20 2·4 71, Abdul·Jal»er S-ll 4·5 14, Jofwl-1 10-11 0-0 20. Scott 10-21 1-2 24. :_. 1·4 l-1 l , M. TllOtnPlon 7·t 4·5 II. ltamol1 0-0 0-0 O.TOlals 47 .. ll-1' 111. SUAIW~ Utall J2 77 If l l-109 Loa A""'91 37 12 71 U -111 T'llrw-POinl llOeb-Scott 3, HMMft 2, Wormy FOl/llld out-Eeton, AIMU-JaOOet. ll~ llOunch-Ulall so (MeloN 1'), Loa ..,..... cs IM. T'llomc>toll lll. AslfUs-utall JD (Stock Ion 24), Loa ... .,...._ 2t (~ la>. Total fouls-utall 21, Los AnM1a 23 Tectwtl-cats-Melone, Los ..,..... lll9al .,.,,... 2. A-17,SOS.. VOLL•YaALL """ ~ ...... a~ l'LAYOflftS 4·A Ollerte11'• Marina def. Santa Monica, 1s-11. 14• 16. 14· 16, 15· 12, 15-1. Newclort Herbor Olf. ~. 10-IS. 15·17, IS-7, 15·11, 15-11. EdlM>n d9f. Dena Hilts, IS·S, 14-16, II-IS, 1H. 15-2 LoYoll dlt L'"""'8 leadl, 11-15, 15-9, lH, IS-17 ... .. AstitcAin time for Laguna's 'Quilters' By VIDA DEAN Of ... Delr ......... "The airls arc fantastic," said Ven Spttaleri ... rve seen the play three umcs." The sentiment voiced by the Laauna Playhouse Foundation board president seemed to express the opinion of tbe more than 400 attend- tnj the benefit performance of "Quilters" Saturday evening at the Laauna Beach theater. And like Spitalcri, many had seen the prize- winnina play several other times. It's JUSt that food. .. The a>rls" arc members of the all- femalc cast of seven who joined the thcatcraocrs for homemade desserts and champaane on the patio follow- ing the musical-drama. Between bites of such things as lemon tone. brownies and and a vanety of cakes made by theater volunteers, guests were full of praise for Karen McBride, Kern Aa1e1 .. Colleea Dua, Trtcla Grlffla, Carolyn Miiier, Liu Picotte and Laara Pry11od•. The ma&nificcnt seven had stitched together the histories of women who crossed the prairies to settle in the West. Proceeds from the benefit will help ........................ lreland-boa:nd cut memben LIM Picotte aacl ka.ren Anaela (top row) wit.la Tricia GrlfflD. Colleen Dmm. Karen llcBrlde, Carolyn Miller and Laa.ra PrysCoda. . finance the cast crossing of the ocean to present the production at Dundalk . Ireland. as the the U S. entr; tn the 23rd annual lntemattonal Communi- ty Festival. The production won state. regional and nauonal categones for this opponunity. ··we should make about $30,000 tonight." said Kathy Harwltz, co- chairman of the benefit with Sa1an JalU'H I . Both women arc on the playhouse board of directors and Hurwitz, under the name Kathy Collins. has performed an numerous community theater plays including one at Laguna last November Twenty-four in tht" rompany wall bt aomg 10 Ireland. according to general manqer Jody J olmstoa DavldlOIL "Also. thett wall be those going to cheer for us.·· (Gary Sbplro could be in the cheering stttton because he won the opportuntt~ pnze ofa tnp to Ireland.) Pnor to 1he production. guests had altcnded a "counlr) celebration" at the ad1accnt Fesuvarof Arts grounds that wa5 filled with balloons and 1hc smoke of barbecue. Tony Roma people cooked up 400 chickens and pounds and pounds of nbs dripping with sauce. With that they served baked potatoes, com on the cob.coleslaw. beans and buns. Country casual was indicated as the Saaan Jahraua and Roma- fllled plate. ature -to most that ~med to mt'an v.estt'm The most!\ denam-<lod group included Beuy and Glenn Tvaball of C'orona del Mar. 1t.hO'le son MarkTtarnbaJI as musical director at the thea1er and Terry and Steve Miller, Amanda and Michael Elam, Jady and Bill Barry, Cooale Mo~lud, actor Royal Duo. Mary Loa Albe r t (den1med and rhinestoned). C.thertne and an1)t1C director Doag Rowe, the Tom Sa.aUey1, Ba rbara and PaaJ West· brook, who presented Ro"'e v.11h a piece of an for "Quilters" which wall be hung an the 1heater. and pla}house board of directors including Pat Kolleada, the treasurer of the group llOOP·llACL&AY The cnpamlenl or Valerie louvcna Koop to Or Lac:blan Maclcay Jr hu ~n annou~ by htt parents. Mr and Mrs. Robert Michael Koop of Corona dcl Mar. A Novembt'r wcdd1n1 1s planned in Corona del Mar The bnde-clcct is a l,nlduatr of Corolla del Mar H1ah School and auended Oran&e (' oas1 Collcgt". She as a real estate qtnt with her family's firm in tht' Ncwpon-Me~ area. Her fiance. \On of Lauchlan Macka' and Be' erl)' Parsons. re- ceived fus bachelor of science deirtt from un and graduated from the Autonomous l nl\ er\lt) of Guadala-,ara Medical School He 1s complet- tn&a fi, e-)ear rcs1denC\ 1n patholOI) at VC'I Medical Center-Long Beach Memonal \.1cd1cal < entl."r v.hert he 1s chief resident FOR.EM.AN-HEARD ~1r and \1r'> ~heldon LtRo' Fo~man of 'e"' pon Beach haH announced thl' eng;igement of their daughter S~dne' F.rnt Foreman to \\ 1lham (um Heard ol Ph1ladt'I· ph1a The hnde-10-bt: 1') a graduate ot 'e"'port Harbor High \chool Da' td'>on ( ollege in Da' 1d~'n I\ ( and (al ~tale Fullenon Her tiance ts the son ol 1\1 r and Mr; C'harle~ Frank Cum of \.1acon. Ga He graduated from Marnn High School. Da' 1dson C'ollege and nov. 1s LAMBIRT H-CHENOWETH ~pnl Cht'no"'eth tormerl) of Costa ~fr-sa and no"' a ~•dent of Truc~ec and John J Lamb1nh of Truckee "'ere mamt'd \1a\ ., 1n ~\ Joacham·s Catholic Church. Costa Mesa ~ reccpuon for ., S guests foUo"'ed in th<' ( ountn Sade Inn. "lewpon Beach The bnde 1s the dauJ}lttr of l\1r and Mrs. Ted C'henoweth ofH1nlUt' She wore a floor-ltngth "'halt satin and taffeta gov.n wuh a ruffied chiffon o"er5ktn. Her s"'ecthcan neckline "'as accented w11h a chiffon Valerie Koop. llano-• Lachlan llacl•y Jr. · · . s1ud }1n1 at Westminster TbcoJ<>s>c;al Stminal} in Ph1ladelph1a. The couple arc pt.nntn& to ID&tl) June 26 1n SL James Ep1.::opal ( hurch. 'ev.pon Beach BUR.R18-TUR.1'ER Melinda Mane Burris of Hunt- ington Beach and Joel Fraokltn TurnerofTurlock plan tomalT) Aua. 20 1n the Fa1f'1ew Communtt} Church C'osta Mesa. Their parents are Max T and Be'erh J Bums of Hunttnl"on Beach and ( laude E and Lorena A Turner ofT urlock. The future bnde ts a graduate of "1anna H1&h School and Cal StaLC an1slau!> "'here her fianct also graduatt'd He 1s an alumnu~ of Red"'ood (It} High School. ruffie and her '-hapel-length veil WAS held b) a headpiece of wb11t sati)l flowers. desa&ned by the bride. Stk earned gardentas. white frecsia and hhes of the 'alle'. Robin J Roscben) was the matmit of honor and Susan Weldon Wiss maid of honor The bndcgroom IS ~ SOD of Or. and Mrs Joseph Narkevitz. He wa' attended b) l..tt Bums as best man and R°'er Spencer. groomsman. Follow10g a honeymoon m Cancun and Cozumel. the oC'Wlyweds will live an Trucktt where she 1s employed by the Trucktt Rl\er Bank and he is w11h the state ofCalafomta. Submit your nuptial news · The Dall> Pt/or 14-anu 10 sh•re .\Our wMdmg or e~menr announamen1 141lh lhe comm unit) "'"make JI ea.f} for you. too! Cat.laertne and Doq Rowe, co-ebal.nnall Kat.lay Barwlts. llaaldan wm Brady (plald ah.I.rt) a t reeepdon with Betty. muatcal cllrector llark and Glenn Turnball. Ju51 fi/J our cop1~ ofouren~men1 and weddmg forms. You can either pick lhem up m our lobb.\ ar JJO "-Ba\ 51 . Costa Mesa.. Monda} rJ1ro«4h . Fnds) from 8 a.m ro .S p. m . or m&1/ .iour l'C'Q&Jnl WJrh a siamped, se/f. addressed envdo~ 10 the Wedd1n1 Dt-parrmenl Dail\ Pi/01. P. 0 . llox 1560 Com .\fcsa 91616 · Wcdd1111 and engagement ne14S JS published on• spa~vailabk basis. WHAT: Pubtlo .-of.,, A1 IOf'9d perce1 of l8nd contanlng llPP(01dmatety a.~ equare r..t. located et 2e05 Weetmtn.ter f'tece, Coete MMa (per map <on Ne In the Ctty a.ti·a offtoe). wNct1 11 ~.Tobeaotdu & WMIMt 11:00 e.m., Flidey, Mey 27, 19U ,.. wn •u• _. .. ""' Aillll 01•1 t I 1 t/I,_....._ ~-0.... .... n,.DrM 0.-Mlla.C• -- NI.IC ll)llC( STARTING A NEW BUSINESS?? .. Ofenge Coast DAILY PILOT I Wedneeday, May 18, 1988 CALL 642-5678 FROM NORTH ORANGE 540-1220 FROM SOUTH ORANGE 496-6800 . ; You can now call the Dally Piiot Claaalfled ~t. on Saturdllr morning from l:OO to 11:30 a.m. to pl809 ~r Su~ end llondiJ eda • ... ... MALUTATI _,,_ llH --'1911 MISC. RINTALS a1••••111rrm ................. ..... ... F•IALI c__,. IA. c..,,.. 1m __ .....,. " .. ~ net ············ .. -... ...._ ... _ .... _ 1m -'--11• ~ '* ... ..._ .............. "" .......0..,. ..... MOUSIS/CONDOS .... ,, .. s... 1.00 -'-,.. ...... J19e ~-· ............. -..................... O..OIC.. .._ im '-, ... .....__ 1111 ........ ...._ ........... .. ..,...ca.. .......... ... C:.-J 11,CJ 0-0f _..._... IUI --rm ............................. ,..,, ..... .._ ........ .... --... --0.-ISTJ APAaYMINTS .... ,.-.. l1a. -···· ............... Jl\4 ftUllF l•IAllOll --... •001 _,_ 1• ....,. __ ,,. .. ..•.... c----~o·• , ____ I-o-.i ... ._,., ... 1140 IOATS , ............. ,.,, •1 '--•tOO _ .... MM :::t...i. 110 ........................ ..., . POii c--· ICD• ., ... _ 162) _.._.. ... 27., .............. . .... ...... -·-•CD• c..--.... 1'11 ..... '°" .... ..._ ............... ... ,. .. U f.,. IGIJ) HlllAU c--.. _ 1'IJ ........ --0.-4111-. .'61tt ......... ..._.,. ,., . -·-11).M c--,..,. Ill. I ., •• II ._. .,. c--... 6114 ....,___. ---,.,. ...... "°' ...__ ., .. ...... 1011 '°'° HOU SIS/CONDOS UlftOYMlllT ---,.., e• ... MU ~ ,.. ....... .,., .,,. .............,.,._... ~ Jab ?lo:J )6Sot -c .... '----. ~-... ~ .... .. ,.. .......... .... .. .. ,__ 1(141 --?IClt -----,.... ._ UJO ..... .... -........ ......... . . ., ~-ow --11(17 ,..__ a.a ~--"" OW' -.. ... -. ... MllC. --OSI , __ 1 I -~ o-.i ,.. ................ •1• ._ IOIO ~·-"'t , ........... 1117 --,.. .......-.-..... .am '--·· ••• = • •• -·-a.I , __ 111• --.. ............... .. ,, IOll ---· ~ ~-,.,. _ ...... ,.,, ...... -.. .. ., s-c-,. ti,.,.. JIJ2 UM'-,.,, ..._..._ .I .. AUTOMOnYI --{--'• 1-..,..._.-..., 11 ).o _.,_ ,.., •••••••• ...... .OIO ---.. ., ,... . s... ..... --11.0 ,...__ ~ 4!011 .__.....,,... .. ., -...... ...... ,,. .... .,.,..,,,.,,. .:.L• ---· ,,.., s-c-,, ... --'-1'1• IBUllCIAI. ,.,. -4!011 -...... ~ -c--I°"' "::.. _,,,.:i ,_,. .o .. --71 .. .,.. -1-M -...... .._,__ -4IOIJ ....... -1-.. ·-• --1110 --...... ,.. =~· c--. • ._ 4!01• , ... '-....... 71'2 -'--i-. c.--. 4!011 --YICI MISC. a.l . .--JI)) -"-,.. -°"' • _ .. _ ...., ~~ _..._ ,,., ,_ MfO --........,./fwt/Alt .., -•z•CNmY --... --JI .. ~ ...... ....,._ -..... ....... )• -~ ?11• _,_ ......, ..., ._ ......... --~ J17'1 ..... a a • •• . om-,..._..,a...,... ..... aa .................. ....... 0..-...... ... CLASSIFIED INDEX 642-5678 PUBLICATION OEAOUNE Mondey ....... Sat 11:30 AM Tueedey. ..... . Mon 5:30 PM Wedneeday .... Tuee 5:30 PM CLASSIAEO OFFICE HOURS T~Servtc. ~ 8·00 AM-5:30 PM S.twdmy 8:00 AM-11:30 AM CHECK YOUR AD THE FIRST DAY The Ody Plk>t strlYes fOf ettlc:•eucy Md ecc:uracy However, OCCUionatty errors do occur. Pteue listen Whet! your ad is reed b** Md ct'9dt your ad dally Report errors Immediately to 642-5678 The Daily Pltot ecx:ept1 no Rablftty for eny trrOf In an edvertlMment fOf wt1'ctl It mey be rnponsible except f0< the COit ot the IPKle ectualty occupied by the enOf. Credit can only be allowed'°' the first lneertlon DIRECTORIES ......... ~ 0r.,..co.i c.. °"'*-""'° PloC .... &I-. TellkllO °'*'-...... _ Thlnday ...... Wed 5·30 PM FROM NORTH ORANGE COUNTY FROM SOUTH ORANGE COUNTY 540-1220 496-6800 Fridey ........... Thu'* 5:30 PM S.turdey .......... Fri 5:30 PM ~ ............ Sat 11:30 AM aumn..Counter Mond9y~ 11:00 AM-5:oo PM 142-5171 ---------- INI bt1tt hr Slit Ctntul 1002 Cost• Nt11 1024 llnpert ludi 1119 lalMI W... 2124 luL .._,. 11411ftf11! .... 1111 lalha Pnianla C..ta •IA 2114 ltaH1/Cea•o1 --------CILLHE Piii Sir 28A 18A Vny. Lrg t:Q Attrw:t n w .. 111de 18R 18X. patiO. trig, dhw, 2"? ----------.--..----"'l..... ;:>Ba dbl Oil dbl ffplc., um IELClllT crtyrd, steps to bch l 2BR 1'1\oBA h• Nice yd. pool. ator. In gated ur•-UUI ... all Ou1et St $188K Large Decorator perfeci JBR .convenient shopping gar $950 Incl grdnt & wtt cmplx. Nr GldnW1tl ..-211 JU flliialll Wcalfield ... IS llaGM ,aro By O""ner 64•-9079 Townhome Premium IOI. S 1100/mo. 67J.-3n3 548-1366 or 848-2389 Warnef. le75. 541-3391 .,.,.,.. 3rd ftool' Apt With tipee- 3 Bedroom plus "-la... -G marble lloors. crown 3BRl1BA Lo tvnorm • lg Beautiful Spanl1h-tlla 2BR 28A CONDO 2~ o:!'A.. ooo21ABA• .. =: t8CUlar ftool' to calltng IPAll .. 11 NEW LIST.II moldings Wrtl sett qu1cldy d pl , .._, ,_.~. · -VIEWS of Newport suite. $ 1"2 900 '"' EG; ;i ~ =' ,. 81 5675 00011 ingrm. pa ho, tr . stepe twn"*9. 2BR 2 ~.court Waharld~. 11'1\ .. patio, mo. C8ll Maureen White Harbof' & the oc:e.n Gw· Large, ettracttw aptl In • BH&G 751-5000 ~p-ElSTSIDE C I OPEN FRIDAY 10_2 10 bch S 13951yrly yard ~ pvt patio. gerega cerport. l1501mo. 180-.5000 °' 758-l549 agaa MQ.Wtty poo4. cw-DMutlful gerden Mttlng. A llllEM9EA ~ 1Wf ~ WHCIAl. ftETWOA COLDWeu.. BANl(C!RC •• • OPEN SAT/SUN 1-5 67S-9250 ()( 786-9353 & pertlmg space $1000 Call CENTVAY 21 BERG. 11)1! la&..V -tom '1nter1or. 's1.001mo. Pooll1pa; garao• or 6 • \ 1 H "· t Rem..Oeled 3BR 1 ·BA 28 HILLSDALE New 3BR -Oen custom mo AYI June 998-343"4 9e2..aetl ~ HI 850-1400 Mk few Bot> carport. Sorry, no pata. t '1 .. 1"' I ne,. gourmet kitchen Mona Ruggieri 760-5000 hm XJt quiet loct Unlurn •CHARMING 1 Bdrm llJW YllJll \t'W1"'\"4°'fl' 1~· \ 11 Vonk• •SEVERAL LOCATIONS ~ ~ • • ~ , .. ao;te-• bdrm suite. for· $3000 mo yrty 2 lO Gar-Quiet Yard RefflQ No . V\ '\.. ,.._., ~. 28drm 28a S800 • -"la Oil>l"\9 ""oak PM· REAMRC net Balboa Is Alty Bkr Peta. S6501mo+ dap. L--:, r:m~2~ REAL.TOA$. Cenu ..... 2112 398 w Wilson 631-5583 E.'lX'-., th.• I II'' IElCHIT 11,180,000 The bog one that did., 1 c;+>• eway • yet' cus•om1:"l: 5BR -4 SBA home J • •• places. pool spa & "' ,,.. fall. used b,.ck na• "' feet for Alfrf'"' • • 1a1n1ng 144-IOH GOVERNMENT ,.. Mf '1uet BreaklHt n(>Ok, I coope<allon 673-8700 2 183 M•....., 6'2·3785 gat ' -------tr pie Owners have ...,... loft, 2Ba, FIP. encl gar, 111·1U ,_ 1 Bedroom le30 IEEO DOW,.,IYlllElfT1 purchased anottier \f'\\ I \. 1.,.-YI I~ \ "I I hlMI E SIDE all new 3Br 1Ba, tennis ct. IP•. pool. LARGE H.B. Condo.,walk Walk to bMC:tt. No pell. 28drm 1Ba $750 S2•9 000 Cun Hert>ens RCALT':JAS • Ptaiuala 2117 yard. patio. dedl, Fr $1400. By Own 638-9751 to beach 2BR 2~BA. $850/mo. 76CM>344 301 Avocado &42-9850 P•CttG to• ~,.,3 ., ,0 ,...,_ u 631-1266 • doors. gardnar -lniat fl44 ~27 .. f'°'· lK93~,S:-*..._....dee 28R 1'.-'BA ------- • • t• e 1 ~i _ --CLOSE TO BNchl 28' S11501mo 650-39&2 • ~ mo * -·--·7 1 Bedfoom 1845 ,,~ 51'l ot•e ·., ~:; ... UCl-E" 18a Yearly no-dogs •E'SIDE CONDO• mr a:cm mr. •Ull ISU• "7:"titi poolS9~S ~ 28dnn 11.4Ba $780 •e ,.1.,e 1)---M-"Oot of Su~ Mega-Parking $1100/mo Avall 08' e 28r 2,~ double 3bf 2ba, lrplc, AC. 2-air w 1 72'f..a1.on2~11 2"1 W Wll90n 631~ • • ., • ... 1SI ' zme R·2 can be 2 UMt 611 548..sa.1• ~ frplc d gerega, yard $1~/mo. 38r 28a trpl:x W/Yiew! _pa_a _______ 1-------- ' • ~ " 1><111 Avt'lf rt ltac~ 11'9 Of single lamlly $25 000 lovely remodel ocnfrt 1\99 ~:n~· poo1 ' S~=· Avaitabla S/1 875-eOH LeUa 918-7~719 •BEAUTIFUL 38R. 2'h8A lee.tllla1• 1•a,f, ~Q-~ • , '" w~ •ds r..,. yrly income Won't Last lonndiv orcouple Some &42:9113att 7pm Woodbridge 2BR 1BA LIOOISLEHoma.L.rg48r axtralarge,$1625. 11111 ............ * BOAT OWNERS• $309 000 Call LIZ or res1rrctions req'd Winter upltrs end unit, many up.'. 38•. lam. rm, din rm, 2 •EXTRA NICE 1BR, lrg te ~·••la Corona del Mir l 022 38R <' , Bath Boat &lip CHUCK JONES only $900/mo 856•3120 E Side Single family home. grades anoc amenltlel. patlol. St to St. $2350 deci!, retrlQ. & 1toraga •IY OWNEA * s3;0 ooo 111•1650-&413 631-1266 or 6'&-5743 __ _ 3BR 1BA Newly re· 1895 673.,e785 /mo. 1yr~•875-6915 le95 * 120-9"& * .... 2 If FARROW REAL ESTATE I ~i~~ . C.naa ,,. •ar 2122 modeled 2 car gar Lg OUSE •BAY & OCEAN VIEW• Nllll-1H4 AFFOll&IU ELIUICI •• r lU ... lQl4C(I ~~,~~~_;'sg1~•.:_: • ..,.. luc• I ~~2'·!~~~1oa.1rp1c, above'\ t>eaut1tu1 China 0 >1• 1"<11ry wl sode lights 2 ·tzr 2bf 2ba 2-car-gw. beaut nlpets (818)7"-M89 E 2 .... 1\.111All near lannil c:ourtl. $1600 Cow 28r 2Ba lg den. gar 111 ............. from S 1 00 v Reti-1 t..., l1nqven1 la• pr)~"''' o ' repo s For curr"n' 1 call 1-800--45 1 74•c. E•• 2239 also ~n everr ng' 1rpics 3 nuoe bdrms. 7 1 patio $1900.159-1552 or (714)548-2482wtlnda. 2 stcwy. 1 gwega. patio, longterm &48-1155. $1150 157J.-1892• Security buldlng. aunkan o ""Q~·•s tam1ty rm wtlg Saa Clta•le 1076 28 R lB.C. Pv1 Bdl lplc HUGE •BR 28A. F Rm S10501mo. 875-4912 Agt FURN°' untum 2er den •SHARPlll• showers. pool, ancld ldd lfWPtlTlf"HTS IUITl 8adt on Mar~ et De-r al«' trite a drPar'I" wy l:vmg rm ..,,11 o I t9 oelhng fff'~I&<'" O vf IQ<*tng commur>1t• r> e>I l bdrm w alk to cvP•,. tblng -Perle<:' srar1,., r rnvestor un • n," $11-4 .900 lH-1100 (,I l ~ I I 1 N "' ~ \I I' I ---'· Sunny ya rd $286 000 . am ' . ' • 2BR 2BA. 2 car encl~ gar1ga1. Ramo •I• r ~ So WeatSC 3Br2Ba cot-hkups Nl smkl pe11 $1295 C ell Tarry 8ert>ef crpt, 2 c:w geir, tennll,nrBloCanyon w • .,.., • ..._.. w · 54$-7558 0 ·, • "-~· ., DonaldPletf 631_1266 .......... grdnr yrd.Nupnt,tndryl 2 car gar. beaut yrd 2BR28Allgtlt/alrycondo. 1M01f,2'M>a.2fl p.pool, /d...,. ..._..1 •unite. 941-8408 or WHY PAY REIT? l • ·~i~\. lage De.an vu potenttal, $11 50/mo 760-9019 751-6190 or 549-9823. balcony c11 to bay. $19751mo'. 4/mnth min $1200/mo. 875-7698 ., ~ ...,1 ~~ lt>os l:'~• frpt beam ce ilings Summer1 furnished 2Br.I RUSTK:REMODPRIVATE $1570 (213)1120-3~22 720-968001'722-7007 FABULOUS .day & night 1~flll1Df ... eit• •e"" _·.:.,..._,:.... S22!~2~?o;** 28a 1900slt,gar,tennls ,2BA.BA.GAR,WIDHKUP 2BR2BA9thflr.Beytront, NEWPORT SHORES vlaw1Upstairs2bf2ba, Large18dnnMllt&ek•& l '°" 2 BACK BAY Nearly pool gated Jasmine ADULTS NO PETS $795 oceenvlawl 12001/t,aec. Crossfrom bch. 38R 2'/t 1~ ~1:o?rar. ~ F~. NEW: ~. • ~land 3000s I 58 38a hou9e Cteetc S2100 720-3178 CLOSE INt 67S-0097 2 car pntng $1500/mo. BA Av A 1 L N 0 w ' room• mo tita, drapal. pelnt, vanity. • a•g1! S26<l 900 r By Owner leataJ1 LOWER COM houM 2br ~ 2BR 2'i't8A 2 Call 8:30-5:30 955-19451 $12951mo 7f0-1108 111 833-e233. 673-1181 Gerega $850 631~272 '"·~; ':3 ' •D "•6-()q-41 619 726-11100 ~eut1tC1d" 2ba. lrg llv rm. gar. yard story QOndo, frplc. 2 car •BAYFRONT. Exclual¥e Nklaty upgreded 38R Fabuk>us deatgnar 2BR 2 BEDROOMS In the ---4 19 Begonia $2200/MO gar. WID, refrlg, patio, lido Panln..ia. Boat dip Lower Duplex. Stepe t 18A w/whlte vault•d e.auuful C... Grer1eda IEWPllT IEllm aera Zll2 • &40-4924 • Community poo11tennta. avt. 2er 2'1tba, frpl, 2 car bch 2 car gar. F/p, patlO wood calllng1. frptc, ~ From $715 gu paid I /. I II. CUlllll FIJEI tcR•--HT lmW s RP BR sma11 pet <>ti HMr ea-oar. poo112500. 673-3313 s 1400 975-4912 Agt dacit, ano• gar. lndry. ocn, •oo Marrlm8c way ' fl Ill/ I I fl I l BR Iott 2 'BA 2 car gar-twlllllrR HA 2 1BA Duplex, n y 0 n I v I c t 0 r I • harbof &. Cataltn• ........ )ult Nit of Herbor • • I ,,J.,, 111,. age large 101 ·s299000 16 Avallabla for Yearly & ocean side of PCH Gar-11150/mo 675-4912 Agt •WTILlff* PartotunfumllhadttouM28R. Stape to bch. $1400 mo. 9n,1911 1" f~ ., l'iur 1 Call L•Z Of Ctiuctc Summ41ft Cont.cl Jett ege, laundry S9501mo Nice 3BR 2BA patio hm 1 gar. lrplc. · Drive by 214~ Femteal & ...,....,..._,,,__...,......_.....,....,_..,,- J ry •31 1266 Jacobs 675-4630 To Avad now 863-1390/dya F....,. 2 car gar $1450-NOO/mo ftnt/llt nlpeta. call Sharyl i 675-8427 2BR 18A $700. 18A 18A 11; /-\~.'I~ ones 0 • or .,,...., · 261-4!092 Of 261-~1 $550 New cri>t drpe 646-57•3 see. dnve by •001 Sea· SPYGLASS. oc:e8rl. bay & WEST.SIDE Drive by •2• v 11ta •'°'Marianna. • • 111/IU. 2.., ,., pek'lt: ate. Nio9 ~ 3" •f Cont "'9l C. I~~~-? shot• Open Daily 12_. clty nightllgtttvtewa Suaru, than c all .. d N &ldeloc.Opan~M-f. •· r larr WIMte lftn 4 Bdrm No Pets AYI 5116 675-49l2 Agt SEA ISLAND. 2br 2'nbe+ nS1~t=.'9n.: 1~~tl CASA DEL MAR APTS . '.!-. --lli-4UO S36001mo 819/340-128• YILUS *HARBOR VIEW HOME den. Almost new. <>Yer-1•7 E. 1atti St. •I --~~iii-iiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiliiiiiiiii •BR 28" ,,., 2 car ...., lo<*• golf cour .. with -·· -• ,_, ..-' OCMI' ' city llght \ltew -HUii REAL ESTATE Cetta •na 2114 IELll CllllS fenced yrd, crnr lot. Gated comm Avail 811 · 2BR. 1BA. pvt atraat, 1 cat 2BA ...._._ wn-,._ '---"' XtrHI 12200/mo. Avl $3500/mo 18e-1500 •. garage. LOOkl out on Big ,...,.._ ·-.-,.,...._, 711. 380--0271 Evea. · · Corona. Yrly rental yerd Small pet oil 2035 llW LEUlll Sptdol1138R +a., 28A S19501mo No Pata. r9fl Wallace s1001mo ~ •••-_ •lmW* Upper Duf*x 1n Balt>oe. req'd P1-Hk for S500 MC. 675..o936 *--"•* 2-5 Bdrm $'900-$5000tmo. SJ*:1ac:ular bay view Cerey Ward, SUnbow ~ 2BR upper In tripl9x Lg. Large 3 Br 2,1\Ba, 2 car Marti. ag1 &42-nos WHhar/Dry•r. rafrlg, alty, Inc 131-2242 airy lharp. Lundry rm, attached 'garage, w/d 38R/28A HARBOR VIEW ~· ~11\97~~/mo. SHARP 28R 18A 0upteit. c • r p o r t . g a r av I . hkupe. frptc, pvt yerda, Home. Community pool. v OC*tn Ilda ot PCt-1. a.r- ***** BRiii IEW 1200 IFF 1ST MONTH'S REHT 801 PAULARINO •1•1U 1111 •ZlllU .... $700/mo. 498-5388 pool & spa. s12501mo $1850/mo i... &45-e<e12 1111111 MITAL age, leundry. $950/mo. "*BRIGHTON SPRINGS• RESERVE ONE NOW! or &43-2541. Newpott 8cf\ w.tar front. Avalt now. 863-1390/dys .-Jlfl Beautiful spacious con-726 W Wltaon St. 5SR. •BA. 4000 "'· bacit Modern 28 R houae. "--t .... ...... • ..... d os 2Br 26a wi den For lnfor Clll 548-7001 bay & clfy lloht• vt.w. re 711~ ~ I MIMI ---- $1050 & 18' 1Ba $695 mocleled $3300 Loe rn a Quiet wet•· , Imo. Jim Supef1orNwpt~.PWI-t MILE TO BEACtt. 28R CALL Ill 1111 ..,...,._,. "''"~~ ... w F ...... , (210)498-4379 tatlon anun.-a, 3br 3ba. 1'h&a btt-N, ._..., anc:l • ;,ot;'ku;'°p;;j~ }K.All mll.LY 2111.R 171 •112 ger. pool, tenM, Ml#\&. gwega. ... "to' ltlOP-OA ~17 wl g•r & opnrs No i*• •llWMIUllM'f* • 11800/molM.17~2332 plno.S125/mo.891-e300 CALL Velma 549-2447 2BR. 1'•8A. t.aAMfy rm. PENINSULA YEARLY TOWMiOME •Clean 2Br 1ea fenced pool, cerJ)Oft w/ator109-*LO 38R 28A upper or 3BR 2'h&A. dbl o-. •lllPI d / W.ik to ltlOpplng & doee IOW9f e>uptex, 1 car gar, to water. t1550/mo yar • gar. w d hkup to bHch. 1115/mo. lrplc, new crpt, $1350ea. WATERFRONT HOMES $750 553-A Victoria (S250 Off 1111 Mo'a "-'t). IMC *963-695821 CALL 548-13e7 NEWPOAT SHORES REALTORS 631-1400 •CIMn 3BR 2BA email . •Na 3BR 2BA home. 2 -........ -~----..,1 ywd Garage WI O hkup, TOWNHOME Car garage. frptc, WIO VERSAILLES 18r PI H 275 Mesa Or :iE Lilla new 2BA. patio, htlup Xlnt loc $1400. greet ioc.tlon. aacurtty, $1200 NO PETS 122-8011 double att.cMd gar. pool, no pell. $125 mo. -------$1125/mo. NEWPOAT HEIGHTS S.ndy f1W7•t• 3 Bedroom. 2 a.th, Cd-WATERFRONT HOMES. •Spac1ou1 38R 2'MlA 2 y......_ 1er 1175/mo 1eQe Pm Big yard, fir• INC. REAL TOAS 11y twnhma 2 cer Pf'I09 ~ , ciuleC loc . plaoe, s 11151mo. MUlt 631-1400 frpk. W/D hlUAS), l1«JO ' :::.. ~·144-721; No 1---- l1ilyPilat • ·• " Own Any? Plan To Buy? ask IOf Pete 751-5000 VERY CLEAN 28A 18A f1LU afll.I Aoenl No,_ 38R 1~BA. garega & House. Eut1ld•. l'Jl.e11 {~~g25 ~:i: St. :c:>ti~ 6" 1-1700 "5MACK. BAY-ouPl.EX1oilliii .... liii•ii .. ...,t.-,~-"!liilill>I .".:R .... ll':~ AllO 28R, 18A. ev ... Mey W..SIOE OCEAN VEW 2 Bedrooms, peeo, no CONDO upatr•i HM 30 S7SOlmo."4-1935 28R 2 SBA C d P•ll. 9 .. 5-577t. 1,.IA. nr 8.\#.Plta. 3BR 28A. lwnlly ""· bullt· ttlO/mO. W/O ht!= S.CI &434, &42-2217 :eo:.=.=.dtpOt. In dllhWHhar' M... ffptc. Avel &/1.1 BAY FAOHT -uiii,iiiiiiiit Woods, 11375 Muet.. E~t HA hcurtty lMIJ ··- EASY, BREEzy CROCHET .. If so , we'd like to hear from you . And , to make it easy we 've come up with a quick-·n- easy quest1 onna1re in Saturday's Real Estate tab. Please look for 1t ... Complete and return it to us so we can deliver a more valuable newspaper to you. Thanks. Daily _ .. forfteta 751-5000 lllai... · II• ;'All1275/mo Aent/L .. Option. 5 MINUTES TO~ o.., = NM ittlX WA ™~HOMES M801fft0. ,.,. ... unit 28A, 28A. trpc:. 2 cw..... OOftdo ...... d/w, W/d, I AEALTON tlM«JO :~o:,:.-.t.r:,~t lrio·~~:= ;rJ:;.~..:.a~· u'riiiiil.-~... •1·-ve.w. eeciurtey ....... .... _____ ......, __________ _., =:·.:=;,,~ Set y ... ,, ... ,.,. ell C11111••· Mt-1671 for information & surprisingly low c t, ~ Ctiemical plant explosion kills three in Ukraine MOSCOW (AP) -A chemtcal fact0ry explosion killed three proplc but did 001 involve fuel for a new Iona-ranae nuclear missile, as the Pentagon claimed, a Forei1n Minis- try spokc-smao said today. Gcnnady I. Geras1mov said 1n a telephone interview that the ex- plos1on occurred at 7: 15 a.m . on Ma) 12 at a chemical factory in Pavlograd, about 500 mtles southwest ol Mos- cow m the Ukraine. Thrtt people at the plant were kllled and five were hospnalazcd with IOJUnes from the explosion. which occurred in a storage area for indus- tnaJ explosives. Gcras1mov said. • Soviet media carried oo repons about the explosion. U.S officials in Washington. speaking on cond1oon of anonymll~. wd Tuesday the e\plos1on shut down the only plant in the So\ 1et Union that makes the main rocket motors for the new S -24 inter- continental ballistic m1ss1k mvolved in the explosion but he said be dtd not know whether the plant produced rocket fuel. Pavlograd, with a P.OPulation of 122.000. is about 30 males cast of the major industrial c it y of Dnepropetrovsk Geras1mov said no evacuation of the area's residents was ordered after t~ explosion. The Pentagon said of the explosion. "Apparcntl). this will delay Soviet solid-propellant m1ss11e programs." But Gcras1mov said the explosion did not cause maJor damage. "It's not catastrophic." he s.aid. The SS-24 1s a larg.c I ().warhead weapon that can be launched from enhcr underground ~110~ or rail cars. The So' 1ets began deploying 1t Just last )'Car on rail car~ Fewer than a dozen are thought to ha\C ~n made o pcrat1onal to date I • The Defense Depanment said 1n a statement Tuesday that the c'plo~1on "destroyed several buildings at a Soviet propellant plant tn Pavlo- grad." Geras1mov said propellant wa~ not The SS-~4 1s one ol two IC BMs in the So\ 1ct arsenal that are mobile. The other 1s the liS-25. which 1s earned on a truck launc~. The l 'n1tcd States has }'et to deploy any mobile long-range nuclear missiles. although the Reagan adm101stration 1s pressmg Congress to develop a rail launcher for the M'\ m1ss1le. A fierce fire burn.a on a Soviet pauenger liner canytnc Comma.nlat Youth Leape member• on a Yiait to J apan. EleYen people died u they alept and dozena of otheta were injured. The ahlp carrlM 295 pauengera and 129 crew. · lraniansattackJapanesetankeringulf By The Associated P ress MANAMA. Bahrain -Three Iranian specdboatf, attacked a Japanese-owned chemical earner in the Strait of Hormuz today. setting 11 ablaJe and forcing llS crew to abandon the vessel. sh1pp1ng source!> said. The 6. 730-ton craft. the Panamaman-flagged .\ce Cllem1. put out a distress signal at 8 a.m . (9 pm POT Monday). according to the gulf-baSC'd shipping execu11ves. who spoke on cond1uon of anonym1t) ... Ma) Day' Ma) Day' We are under anack. \\ e are bemg approached by four gunboats ... radio mon11or~ heard a voice from the Ace Chem1 shou110&-the execull\ es said Onl) three of the gunboats attacked, the execu11 .. es said A sahage tugboat that was 1n the v1cmit}' picked up the seamen and brought the tirt- aboard the earner under control. the) said French to renew dett with Iran PARIS -Premier Michel Rocard said today that France will keep ns word after three French hostag~ J,n lebanon were released and w 111 re-establish d1plomatlt' relations with Iran. Rocard told Foreign M1omer Roland Dumas to begin the process The two countncs Qrokc d1plomauc lies last summer The hostages. held by pro- lran1an h111e Moslems s1m:-c 1985. were freed May 4. Then-Premier Jacques Chirac said on v.elcommg the hosta&es lb.at Iran had 1nterve~cd lo obtain their release and that diplomatic relations were MW 1>9ssi~e. 'The foreign minist.Cr has. b)' my proposat and the decmon of the president. rcce)ved today.instru"Ct10ns to re-establish diplomatic relauons with.the(lsla.mic) Republic of Iran:· Rocard told rcponen after a C"amnet meeting. Iran has ~1d it has influence over Leban~ groups holding '-' C)lern hostages. Sikhs glve up slege at temple .\M RITS.\R.~ India -The last .i6 Sikh extrcl'r11sts holed up in the Golden l t'mple surrendered today and eme-rgt'd w1lh their hands up. endmg a 10-day siege of S1lh1sm's holiest shrine. officials said. Pohct shot· and killed one extremist when ~IC tried to Oee during the surr~Mer. and th~ others committed suicide by swallo "' ingc)anideeapsult's. ""All of them havecom_e out. No terronst 1s inside the complex." said Puruat:i st.a\e police commander K.P.S. Gill. SarabJ~t Singh. adminis- trator of the A.mntsar d1stncL said. "The temple ts in control oftht' S«urity forces ·· >\t least )"7 people. niostl~ S1lh m1lnanls. were k1)lcd dunng the siege of the 4()(}. \ear--0ld Golden Temple. the spintual and m1htal) stronghold of Sikhs waging a campaign of\ 1olence for a 'ieperate S1lh nation 1n Punjab.state Israelis open fire after stoning by Arab youths JERUSALEM tAP) -Hundreds of A.rabs surrounded an Israeli torce 1n theoccup1edWes1 Bank. today and attaclcd th~m with stone!> and slingshots. tl*ie +lrm} $a1d The troops ktlled one Pal~11n1an and w·ounded aJ least four othets m the clash Hospital officials and \\ 1tnesses said nine-people v.erc wounded b} gunfire when Arab )OUthS battled ho'hpreds of soldiers in hehcqpters. arm) 'eh1clc.s and bulldozers in two West Bank villages. F1vf Pales11n1ans were takC'O wnh Ramallah Hospital afler being beaten. ,.,.11nesses said The arm) said the clashes occurred dunng pre-Oa\'" searche'i in the vi llages of i\'Qwe1F1 and Aurura about nine m1lt>S nonh of Ramallah "Afl l~rach force rt'ached the '11- lages and was surroundt>d t>~ hundreds of Arabs. some of whom climbed ncarb\ hills and atta<'k.C'd the force wnh a barrage of stoner. an9 v. 1th slingshots." the arm) statement said. The arm) .said a commander fired rubber bullets. tear ga' and h\ e ammunition to extncatc the force. killing one and wounding four Five .\rabs w.ere also in)ured b) rubber buHea and tc-ar gas. thl: arm) spolesman said Theclaf,hesm the \\-est Bank came on the final da) of the threc-da) Moslem feast of Id el f"1tr. Under- gro und .\rab uprising leaders called for thl' holida) to be onl.' of"'national mourning" for the dcath'i of I 9 I Pales11n1an!> s.incc f>cl 8 Tw.o ls- ra·e1is also ha''-' been lolled in the upristng. Witnc.-sscs said troop\ entered the \ 11lage of .\rura ~bout 4 a.m and t>cgan house-to-house searches. i\bo~t 300 )Ouths gathered out- door:s in the .. 11lage and threw stones at \hf soldiers. S.Korean protesters clash with riot police KWANGJU. South Korea (AP)- Ptotesten c.alled for the overthrow of President Roh Tae-woo and clashed with police today in nationwide demonstrations mourning victims of a 1980 uprising. Police headquarters in ScouJ re· ported that 43.000 students and others J01ned in demonstrations or sit-ins at I 06 places across the nation. The number included 39.000 stu- dents demonstrating at 103 colleges, police said. In Seoul. fierce clashes erupted after riot police hurling tear ps grenades broke up a march in the streets near City Hall. Waves of screaming students charged riot pohcc near Myongdong Cathedral. blocking streets and hurling rocks. bricks and firebombs "Down with the military d1c- tatorsh1p which committed the Kwan&Ju massacre' .. the protesters yelled. "Dn'e out the Roh murder regJme!" Clashes also broke out 1n the provincial cities of Sunchon. Pusan. Chun&Ju and Chon&1u where students and police fought running battles m the strttt!> af\er rallaes marking the eighth annl\ ersal) of the Kwan&Ju uprising Pohcc declined to release an) figures on tnJuncs or arrests. In Kwan&Ju. long hncs of mourners. man) wearing black nb- bons. filed through Mangwoldong Cemetery as prayers were offered at altars beanng p1cturcrnfpeoplc killed in the upns1n~ "Punish Roh Tac-woo. punish (former president) Chun Doo-hwan." some protesters shouted during the ~n ices in the cit) 165 miles south- west of Seoul i\bout 10.000 people. mostly stu- dents. later marched front the cem- ctel') to the plaza in front of the downtown pro .. 1nc1al government office No police were in s1ghr along the route. but police inside the office fired tear gas. scattenng the protesters. When the protesters regrouped. some throwing empt)' cans nt the pohce. one oOiccr used a loudspeaker to apologize for what he called a mistaken finng of tear gas. The rall)' then proettded peacc- full~. swelling at one point to an estimated 50.000 people. with another 20,000 to 30.000 spectators. 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WEONESOAY, MAY 18. 1988 Soup, salads given the light touch ~lfornia prOducts featured in wann-weatfier selections Warmer weathertempttmost of us ouldoonand away from heavy cookina..Appetites chute durina the sprina/summermonths,sivioacoldorclear10upsand colorf'Ul salads speciaJ appc&l. • In keepina with the teaSOn -and today's trend towa.rdsli&hter, morenutritiOUt foods that pleue the eye u welf u the pala1e-bere'sa 1election of dishes that fill the biU in innovative ways. · While offerina fresh, often surprisina ideas and combinations, all are aim pie to pttpaft with minimal kitchen duty and take advantaee of three pafectty competiblc insredienta: crisp, crunchy California ioebera lettuce, delectable California din.a peaches in convenient canned form and three adaptable, premium quality Norwegian cheeses. CWCltEN·LEMON SOUP Z fall cldclre11 breasts, lttued (abotlt 114 ponds> 1 carrot, peeled u4 diced 1 stalk celery, 11Jced 4 cloves garlJc, pressed 1 teaapooa w .. le black peppercorns· I caps cold water 1 cu (11 oUCff) Callforala cll.a1,.ucb Ulva ID jaJce or e:rtra Upt syrap, dralned ud diced "'cap eacb tlaJ.DJy sliced gttD onloas ud cbopped cJla.atro• 14 cap lemon jlllce . z tablespoons cltoppect. freu tinier 1 tablespoon eaclt cltoppect. fretla ml.at 'and grated , lemon peel ' Z teaspoon• lDstl.Dt cltlcten bOaUloa 14 teas~ red pemr flafts, or to tlite S caps ~ded CaJifOf'llla iceberg lettace .1 ~ c:9pa~ted )anber& dleese I < ' Placedlic.kcn, <;afrot, celery, garlic, peppetcoms and w.atcr if)tarae· pdt. 'Bring to a boil; simmer Is minutes. µntikbicbn Is cooked through. ltcmovc chicken. Remove meat from bones; shred and reseTVC. St.rain.broth. discardin' -.>cgetables. Return s~ned broth to Pbt;add remainina ingredients cxctpt ldt4~andd\eese. Simmer S mi nu~. 'Stir in shredded ~ckcn. Ladle soup imo bo'fV's; top with • shredde<l lettuceand arated cheese to serve. Makes 6 servings. -Or 2 tablespoons frcezc-Oncd cilantro. MBXJCAN STIR-FRY SALAD 1 cu <l•oaces> Callfondacllq~ slices la jeiee or atn upt l)'l1lf I cepuueWe4 c,llfonda lceberJ lettace 1 tomate, "1111J lllced •4 cep vqetable oU 4 boeeles1, lklaleu breasts, ctibed (aboat 114 ,....., 1teup1 •• eacll ~powder u4,,........ cem1a 1 cu ( 4 eucet) wllole, roas&ed sreea ~es. cwt la strips ~capcra&MJarllbers~ Drain peaches, reserving liquid for other uses. 1 jar ( 4 onees) routed red peppen, drai.Ded ud cwt la strips Arrange shredded lettuce and tomato slices on 4 plates; set aside. Heat oil in laraie frying pan. Stir in chicken; cook over medium heat until lightly browned. ~ cwpc.ra kentell 14 C'llf dlopped cllutro ! tablespoou dder ytaqar Stir in spices; cook I minute. Stir in chilies, Newport couple's dedication helps others appreciate wine BJ MARGE BITETll DllllJ .... C.11$ , I Wine. just like any living cle- ment, has a life cycle, and anyone who has educated his senses of smell and taste can detect where the wine is on its cycle. Dedicatina themselves to cducat· ina the public on wine appreciation a.re Newport Beach residents. Rick and Diana Boufford. Rick has an imJ)!'CSSive pro- fessional bacqround in both food and wine. At 31 he has ac- complished thinas men twice his IF only dream abouL la 1986 he was awarded the Golden Bacchus Award from the Southern Cali- fornia Restaurant Writcn.. Wine education for Boufford was costly; about S 100,000 be esti- mates. Essential to him and his wife was a six-month study of the European food and wine industry, when the couple toured and tasted their way throusb France, Ger- many, ltaJy&\iustria. Switzerland, Greece and um. Rick's curiosity with food stancd at an early• becaUIC of his father, who pve him 1CUbe equipment and c_ _:>c_ ---WIDellae Waatr&tlO!lfl 8bow lood (left) &Del w ...... iada .. clear ··-M.-y. one firm rule: everythina he cauaht that was edible bad to be med. T&at was when he was 12. .. M¥ oblc:ssion with food and cwiosaty for wine bcpn when I was very youna. I always aae weU and even as a child I enjoyed coolri111- For me it was more than just helping mom in the kitchen. "It was my entertainment and a way that I could entertain others. Our family reunions brouaht tosctber relatives from both New York and C&lifornia... And Rick remembcn his relatives bavina serious discussions and com- parisons on French and California wines. When Boufford was fac:cd with a career choice becomina a chef seemed the only logical one. He worked for three years as a sous chef and part-time wine steward at the Hobbit in 0ra., a noted res- taurant where a hmited number of diners enjoy a nine coune dinner eacbeveni~ Durina thts ti me, Diana srceted suests and helped them with their wine selections. The couple 1cft the Hobbit in 1982 for their educa- tional tour of Europe. Rick was then offered a position as 10mmelier at the Westin South Cout Plaza Hotel. It was durina this time that he developed a wine- trainina proaram for profesaionab and the Le BoufWine School wbcre the CIO~p)c help o~ ~ta~ a:ppreaate and el\J()y wine. Jake or estra Upt •Ynlf loaeaNMbletteMele,.UC.la1e4 ........ 4 ~1lleaPreeda ..... ,uPdJ ....... Z tUlaf I I• allcee atvaJ ab1a•1, llPdJ &ou&M • CaUf....aa 1eetters1eu.ee rafts• ~ Eqll• WW, ddalJIUeeill 1 M ,e,,er, cat la 1tripl Spripef dd•es ... ~forpnlD Hetbed 5'elTJ Vlaipette (Ndfe f.UOW., Drain peaches, retervina I tablespoon liquid for use m vinaigrette; sa vc remaincr for other uses. Place cheese squares on French bread rounds; sprinkle tops with shced almonds. Bake at 350dqrces 2 to 3 minutes until cheese begins to mclL Meanwhile, plaoe lettuce rafts on• plates. Amln,c peach slices, cucumber rounds and red pepper strips on rafts in fan shape. Place a heated checsccrouton on lcttuc:craft;pmish withah1vesand thyme. Dnzzle wtth Hcrl>edSherry Vinaigrette to serve. Makes 4 servings. •o ne head oflcebcrg lettuct cut crosswt1e into 4. 1-mch thick slices. BerW S1M:rrJ Vbaalgrette t tableapoou *"" Yiaqar 1 tablespooa rae"el pead lhplld Zteupeou~ddves 1 tea•••H~1,.Mf"*tltJme• ~ teup11a paled lelDla peel •;. ctlp eadl oll.-e ... •qetUle .. "I Whisk together all ingredienu except oil. Whisk in t>1J 1 n slow, steady suam. Makes :v. cup. *Or 'h teaspoon dried chives and V. teaspoon dnedthymc. PASTA SALAD IN LE'ITUCECUPS 1 ca (llMllea) CaWen1a cUq peadtlaah'a la Jmce or utra upt 1ynp z e9p1 ea twist ,..ia 1 cwpdrakel Callfenia icdler1 ku.ce ,,.,_..N...._.dleae,ceM4(.._tl~C9fe) 1 eaee fl'Old.U. or nnoke4 bm, cet la W. nn,. 1 re4 pepper, 4.iceA ~ ~mu.r::.~· daawe4 LemoM-DUI (ftdfe f.U.W.) I Callfonla k~ leaaee e9fS. Drain peaches, rcservina 1 t.ab\espoon liqwd for use in dressing; save remainder for other uses. Cook past.aaccordina to pack.age directions, unllljust tender; drain and cool. Combine pasta.. peaches, chunked lettuce, cheese. prosautto, red pepper and peas in large bowl. Toss with Lemon-Dill Dressing. Spoon pasta salad into lettuce cups to serve. Mak.es 6 servings. -whole a ves Ii ft.ed from a cored he.ad of iceberg lettuce. roasted red peppers, com. cilantro and reserved peachcs;cook I minute.Stirinvineprandremove from heat. Spoon chick.en mixturre over lettuce on plates.. Top with Jarlsberg cheese to sef'VC. Mak.es 4 servings.. Leme..DWI>reutq 1 "',.... ~ % tablap I 1a Jem4'ajtdee 1 talalcspMa eadlpeadtU..Wwl d1.,e4 frm .w 1 ..... patM lemea peel BOT NOUELOST SALAD Whisk together all inarcdicnts. Cb ill untJI ready to USC. Ma.kcs I cup. 1 cu ( 11 oaces) CaWonda cU.1pead1Uca la Dlaaa ... lllck Boaftord en•lnewlaea t tMl.r LeBoafWlne9claooL .. Ourpls a.re to cxeose others to· the true pleasures of wtnc and at the same time diminilb its intimidat· ina aura,•• be said. The c1utes presented in a casual a~ arc ti mited to 12. and a oertificaae of hooor is pvcn to all wbo attend and pus the optional written cum. Students learn such tbinp u how . to read wine labels and to compare white wiftC lltCI in stamless stttl versus white wine aaed in wood. Classes also provide students tbe opponuruty to tee sbdes of vanous wine rqjons of the wortd and at the same time sample typical wines of those areas. Boulbd's bowtedae combined with his travels enables him 10 relate first-band information to hit students. He said that u wine •tudcnu are able to tee the various soil and weatherconditiom tbcy an able to pin an insiabt about bow a parucurar 'Wine achieved it's cbal'acter. ( ........ &natT/C4) Cooler war due to heat up for summer showdown lkOtt!., ........... SACRAMENTO -Like pn)4~-ia • ,.... ... 0. producen of the comuy't more pGll ... wiae coolen .. ~ tM•wha tOr a ibowdOn -- • r • • ' ' I I I I I I I I I I 1 I I I I I I I I I I I I Cl ~ Ooeet DAILY PILOT/ w.dneedtiy, May 19, 1998 Bake tostada, cut calories ' Benere....mG...._. LIGBT AND SPICY TOSTADA CUPS 1 ~ Mef f1aak •teak ~-l&kt.,...., c:Mdq I 7·111da ONT tor1lllu leepealsa dlffH (l OMCet) Panially freeze beef. Slice across the Sl'lin into thin strips; Kt aside. For tostada cups. spray six I 0- ouncc custard cups with non-stick spray coatina. Brush tonillas li&hlly with warm water to soften. Gently press into cups. Bake in 3.SO- degrcc oven 12 to 1 S minutes or until crisp. Remove from cups; set aside. beat I 'h minutes. Add onion; cook and stir l 'h minutes more or until vesctables arc crisp-tender. Re- move vcaetables from skillet. / 1 tea.,... corutarcla ~ tea.,... ta1taat beef bolllllon sruaht l IDMhlm aeecMlll, cat into Wn •trips (._t I e9p1) . 'lfffJI ...... blu-lllced lDto l -lDcJa lee~1 For sauce. combine salsa, corn- starch and bouillon; set aside. Spray a larsc skillet with non-stick spray coating. Preheat skillet over high bcaL (Never spray a hot skillet with non-stick spray coatina.) Cook and stir zucchini over hilh Add oil to bot skillet. Cook and stir beef, haJf at a time, 2 to 3 minutes or until done. Return all beef to skillet. Stir sauce; add to skillet. Cook and stir until mixture is thickened and bubbly. Cook and stir 2 minutes more. Stir in veg- etable mixture. 1 tablespooa ~oil M•ttard 1rff111 or lett11ee leaves ~ c., 1lare4ded Moaterey Jack Place each tostada cup on top of arcens or lettuce on serving plate. Divide meat mixture among cups~ top with cbcesc. Serve at once. Makes 6 servine~ Here5 to a ·delicious MEMORIAL Start off by enJOymg luscious Honey91kect_brand a '1 him ., the mam course m your meal. Everyone Di. I win love the tender taste and the crunchy glaze vou·n love the convenience because it's spiral sliced and ready-to-eat an .I the 31 St Save some mouthwatenng h~m slices and • ptle them up high 1n a sandwich Per1ect for lunch or a hght dinner d I t Ground ham 1s so versatile an S Use it for ham salad or fancy hors d'oeuvres d 2 d Here's a super an 0 combo Use chopped Honey8ak~brand ham to top off a baked potato d 3rd Soup's on. Our an ham bone is full of flavor. Cook it up. add chunks of ham. then add whatever you hke - spl1t peas. beans. nee. vegetables Now. 1f you"ve finally finished your Honey8aked. brand ham. get another one and start this ••••••• II... brWld ._ .......... or/tr._. .................... ...... TheY .... Center 1222 So.~ 92I04 (II Bii Road) PtlOM (714) 635-2461 ~lllUI :mil E Coat ~ 92625 Phone (n4) 673·9ml dehc1ous process all over again • Hllf "Molt HMtylMI~-b9s (hell H• 1s smoied no less than 30 IMMlrs and s,6rll llcM fOf easy serving) • Plfty Trqa • lltloltwtft SMp""9 • Frealt 8'ft Rent_. IM S..er.. Tvrteys - • fdy Cool!_. llfMclM U.a • 8ift CtrtJficllas B.Tm 24601 R.,..and w.r t2 (Bel TOWlf Plw Nocti.11 a•....., mao Pt10M cm> a1-am • ,.,.II.Ml Tai ...... 12141 (Nat to "--Mlltlt It 6affiltd) Ptlolll (114) 14H575 u .... Sy~Plw 2421 W. Wllltilr BMI. I0631 (1 ..... w." a.di ltwd.) .... (!13)8M-m4 ..... 141111. lldtl (It lltlll) 121167 PllOM (114) •7-11960 -Kl CLIP AND KEEP HANDY IX BEFORE YOU BUY ... PROPOSMON 65, a new California law, requires that you be given warning regarding pouible cancer or reproductive effects for particular consumer products. GET INFORMATION ABOUT ~IBLE WARNINGS REGARDING ••• •CANCER • BIRTH DEFECI'S • AND OTHER REPRODUCTIVE HARM FOR PARTICULAR BRANDS OF CONSUMER PRODUCTS CALL TOL~FREE 1(800) 431-6565 IN CALIFORNIA --This free phone call gets )'OU cleai' and reasonable information about particuJar products BEFORE you buy them. • Not all products Pose risb. • Not all producers are participating in this &et phone service.. • Call if )'OU have a~ abOOt cancer or repr~ harm &om chemicals which rpay be found in consumer~ • We1J Check the brand and~~ produd • We'll j\le )UI cat and reasonable infOrmatiOn aboUt ~ bP.ft you buY them. ~free can ~a Public service~ the ~OOMMVNICmoN~INC.: CALL BEF()RE YOU BU¥ (IJ1(800) 431..65&5 .! I i I J ~ ~ l I I I I I I I Grilled chops elegant, easy This unusual barbecue fare looks elegant and difficult to prepare, but it's really a breeze to cook and serve. Grilled Stuffed Pork Chops Cuatro Verde and Herbcd Grilled Zucchini are a special treat when the family has had its fill of barbecued hot dogs. And cooking outdoors adds a festive atmosphere to a meal. Using lean pork and the "Cuatro Verde" of four greens -spinach. basal. parsley and grttn onions - and a cooking spray. the meaJ is appeuzing and low in cholesterol. GRILLED PORK CHOPS CUATRO VERDE I c•p packed, fresb 1piaacll leaves 1 cap packed, freab basil leaves ~ cap packed, Oat leaf (ltaJlan) parsley 14 cap cllopped green onions (green part only) ~ cap packaged, dry, 1easoned breadcrumbs '4 C9P plala, non-fat yogurt .,. teaspoon pepper 4 pork claopt, cat 114 -lncbes Wck, trimmed of excess fat (abomt 3 pouda) Ne>-stid cootJn1 spray Jn bowl of food processor. com- bine spinach, basil, parsley and green onions. Prattss until coarsely chopped. In small bowl, combine chopped greens. bread crumbs. yogurt and pepper. Set aside. With small, sharp knife, sill sade of each chop opposlle bone to make a deep pocket Fill each with stuffing. Secure pocket with food picks. Spray grill and chops wath cooking spray. Season with salt and pepper. Grill about I 0 minutes per side, 6 inches from source of heat. Makes 4 servings: 315 calorics per serving. HERBED GRILLED ZUcaDNI 4 1mall 1~l. abo•t I badtet ea ell l tea1pooa salt No-stick cooklag spray i tabletpooDI tarra1oa vlaegar I tablespoon chopped. frnll bull ~ teaspoon minced garlic Freskly groucl pepper Wash zucchini; cut in half lengthwtse. Sprinkle cut side with sail. Drain in colander 30 minutes. Rinse. pat zucchini dry with paper towel. Spray cut side and grill with ;ooking spray. Arrange zucchini on gnll. cut-side-down, about 6 inches from source of heat. Grill 5 minutes. Tum. Grill 5 minutes longer. Arrange zucchini on serving plate. Sprinkle with vinegar. basil, garlic and pepper. Mix gently. Serve hot or at room temperature. Makes 4 servins, 45 calones per serving. Safe, Clean Water On Tap Pure or purer than bottled water. Free-ftowifl/l from your kitchen tap. You'll~ run out. You'll llet'er buy bottled water again. A specblcUla.r 9dvance In "'*'" ~. WATER ENTRY S\'Sl'EMS to«a0y puri1a & relrahes ordlnuy tap nlet': • Fliminata hannluJ comamJmnts (ltwd • .wm1num. nltnMa. ~.)found in our __. tupply. • Gets iid ol the fouJ catte a.ad em.IOI chlOirine through our !'pccially ~ hrl. • Dlltr01t and rancM:8 ·~ o1.n ~ and viru9a in~~ o....-.DJ ~ Uhn·Yiolei • .,..,. • And m.kes ........ delft and ~----· ~ C0Mt DAILY PILOT1Wed11•da1. Mey 18, 1988 C3 . Seafood sensational with herbs With tbe American Hean As- sociation recommend1n1 no more than l,100 to 3.300 ma of sodium per day for a healthful hean diet, ifs up to us to look for fllOrc dtvcrsificd wa)'s to navor our fOod • Spices arc one &ood answer because they offer so '!'~h navor yet contain only neah1Jblc amounts of sodium. Fish, which is naturally low in sodium, is a &ood place to beain seasonina creatively. These recipes arc not only low sodium but also microwavable. Flounder With Herbcd Garden V caetablcs calls for a combination of tarraaon. thyme. Selecting fine cheeses that please Amencans love cheese. ha\ ang consumed 23 pounds per person annually. and that number has nscn 44 percent since 1977. This figure 1s growing because of the fine qualit) chee!IC make 10 this countf) Wisconsin alone produces more than 200 \aneues. l)peS and Sl)kS of cheese, so how can you recognize some of them'l Refer to the folio""· 1ng list and you'll learn the d1s- tmct1ve features about c;ome of America's fa"ontes. Brf~ This sof\ cheese comes in several sizes and can be eas1l) 1denufied b) its thin ""h1tc edible crust. or "bloom) nnd.. and cream) anterior. Its mild. d1s- tinct1ve fla,or has sometimes been likened to mushrooms Monarella: A ch~se with Italian hcritase. 11 has a sem1soft. smooth "plastic" bod)' and creamy while color. hs maid. delicate flavor makes 1 t a fa' onte pizza topping. Blue: The sharp, piquant flavor of this cheese 1s produced b) its charactenstlc blue-green mold. The distinctive veins streak a scm1sofl. white intenor. Baby Swiss: Quick) rtt<>gnt7able by its "c) es'' or holes. this 1s slightl) sweeter and more delicate than trad1t1onal Swiss cheese. Both have a pleasing mellow and somewhat nuthke fla, or String: A cousin 10 monarella. both cheeses are made by the trad1t10nal cheese-making method kno"'n as .. pasta filata .. or "spun paste ... The curds of stnni cheese are stretched hke taffy into its carac1enst1c rope form. M•enster: A d1stinct1ve orange exterior 1dt'nt1fies this semisofi cheese. along with a waxy. open texture and creamy white anterior. Qecldar: This versatile cheese can be identified by its firm. smooth bodyandcolor. ranging from nearly white to orange. The length of aging determines the flavor: mild is lged JO to 60 days: medium. 60 to 90 days; sharp, five to seven months; and clltra sharp. nine months to a year. Gnda: This mellow, pale gold chccsc is scmifirm with a C"'8my te:itturt and dchc1ous. shghtly nutt) flavor. Onginally produced only in Holland. Wisconsin chcescmakcrs toda} produce some of the finest gouda m the world. Cold Pack: Made from a blend of all-natural m&redients combined without heat. they come in a vanct}' of flavors such as cheddar. Swiss almond and jalapeno pepper. They are convenient and easy to sptcad, 10 they make perfect pany fare. Allap: One of the hard 1111tina chet$CS. it has a hard panular texture ind lijht yellow rotor. Its ~ piquant flavor makes tt espeaally estecmtd as a Oa\tor accent with man)' food Pre•••••· A chtt:sc with Italian hcritaae. it has1 creamy whitc"°'or andamildtosharporsmotynavor. c.ar. A WiJcon$in Qrialnal. An adventurous cbttscmakcr in Colby, Wi . fint , orodUmt this cousin to C'hcddar. 'the' firm. •n tuturc or this mild '° mellow Chcae makes i1 an ideal snatk tbtae or hot and cold sandwich JnarediCrit. • ' To:rtaive yoor ft"Ce ~ftbc nf'Onnathc MQuidc 10 • and U • 'II Witcoftsin Gheaie9. "~ • llanl~ telf..tclraltd, busiMll size en~ to: Wi1COCt· n Milt Maitetht1 Ibara. C.oa· turner Scriica De.....-cnt A • 337 W. &ehhne Hlpwa • Madisoe.'Wi SJ71 I. ~ . oranaie peel, prlic powder and black pepper -rcminit«nt of the south of Fra~. fhc picn arc placed 1n marprinc that 1s used to sauce tomat~. zutthint. celery and carrots as well as the fish. Tbe minahn& of spicn in the second recipe sugtsts south.of. the·border heritqe with the com· bining of chili powder. prlic pow. der, black pepper and around red pepper. Herc, the spices arc miited first with com kernels. sweet red peppers and zucchini, and micro- waved; then fish fillets arc placed on top, seasoned with mott chili Beef Rib per lb. powder, and C'OOked until fi h flakes. FLOUNDER WITH RE1lBED GARDEN VEGETABLES l i OUCH frat. or freiu uo .... r ., tole fllleu. ddrosc.H U fraa Z tablespooa1 usalted marpr- lne •r btlner Ya tea1pooa tarrasoa leaves, cndff ~ teupooa crated onnce peel ·~ teaspoon ~yme leaves. cn11•ed Coachella each ._..._...... SJ Save .39 per lb. i / . ; ,.._. • ttas:pooa prUc pewder tea ,... croud bta~ pepper ''* c•p ~erry &omatees Cttt ta ulf ..., cap Uilaly 11lced Htt.~I or yellow sqaa&lt ~ cep very thlaly 1liced celery :a, c11p carrot• ln '• 1 t-mcai lengtla1 Cut ea(.h lillet mto pieces mea)unng about 21 ' 1 1~ inches. !>el a!.1de In a I-cup microwave· proof lUp plate marganne. tar- ragon orange pttl th)me garlic (Pleue eee HERBS/C5) ~al Low Price ·" 2itr. Pepsi or Slice Aaorted Varteti" IJmit One Item and One Coupon ht CUstom.r Co\lpon Ettectt .... May 19 tluu May 25, 19U Manichan Instant ~~on 3/SJ 3"4oc ~ Buy 3-Save .77 nm of the Season Fresh Halibut $ 5 Fillet 24 oz. -Ralphs White L__ Kool-Aid Drink pwlb. Safe 1.99 pet lb. Wn-."' ~ gal.·Ralpbs 2/$3 Lite• Lean Ice Milk A.-..ed f1aftlD .. ---a...'" ....... o..c..-.. ~~ .. ,. ~-.C...Mrrlt ... ...., ..... See the Animals of the World! ~~22WTop 21s1 m Scmd~..ac:h )Oaf Buy 2·SaTe .sa Mixes IQiSJ ~ned A.uott9d F1aToa ~l~~e .70 Hickory Smoied arquez Frozen ~~ 4/SJ luy 4-SaTe .56 ~ s3 com er 111!cd .. •. Serf• .99 pet lb. Prices effective May 19 thru ~ay 25, 1988 Chickeng!vena cl;langeofpace · Chicken has becOme a mainstay parmcsan cheese and ftahly lllCB AND VBOBTABLE • .._, '•••II• MIS•! of the American diet. In fact. ~he>pped prlk. The vetetable and ITUPPING ...-.......... I •• h), ..._ : Americans ate almost SI pc>unds of rice mhtture is stuffed into pOctets 1 •••hf 1 •11••••• redft ... _. ...._. ~ chicken per person in l 98S. for the made in bonelat chicken biusts. ,... .a In medium •ucepu. blend ve&-\ cook, findina new, creative ways to then baked until done. 1.-. nte wa• etable recipe IOtl,P mix with water, • serve chicken can be 1 cballenae. "'n, w11W ......... rice brinato1 boil. Sur in WM:OObd rice : Findina unusual side dishes to It's 1 picture perfect all-in-one l ,.-+sp (It w.e) ,,__ and simmer covered 20 minutet or l ~mplement the chicken can be just main dish. Best of all, the whole ~•H•• 1f IM~ eMk.. eM until tender. Stir in spnach, : 1s difficult. A recipe th1t solves meal is stcarnina hot when IC!"Ved ........ *1 . tomato, cheelel and prtic; let i both is Baked Chicken Bn:asts with because it's cooked lOletber -no ~ • ....._ tiMute, ceenelJ aside. • Rice and Vegetable Stuffina ... ind waitina for the chicken or side dish ~ • .,,. Preheat over) to 350 depeet. J the results are fabulous. to finish cookina while the other .-, n, ......., IDe&1U'ella With knife parallel to cuttina • Stan with veaetablc recipe soup sets cold. . dleeM (Mon i .-. .-eel) board, .make deep. 3-incb-lona cut : mix as the seasoning for the rice 14 :.r ... ,.,..... dleeM in center of each chicken b.aJf to I stuffina mixture, then add spinach, BAIRD CBIC&.EN BREASTS l do•• prUc, n.etJ form pocket. Evenly stuff' pocketl ' chopped tomato. mozzarelJa and WITB d1"e4 with nee mixture. ! ~~~==============~========::::::==~~~-==::.:.=.~~.:..:..:._~::.::_-------------------..,...-------------------=:.:.::=:.:.:.. ______ ~-----------, ln li&htlyareasedbUinadilh. arrange cbic\en and bake un- covered, butina oc:cuionally. 40 ! minutes or until done. Sprinkle, if~ desired, with paprika. Makes about • SINGLE UNIT PACKAGE 3-l.BS OR MORE NOT TO EXCEED 22'J(, FAT !· 16-0Z 6/12-0Z Meat Dept. Savings Frozen Food Favorites Spareribs ==~ ~ •1 39 Pizza:=~ Da<ll 12" Sausage Links ===~,,NI .u 99• Vegetables ~~-= ,.oz99• t.ai 1139 114Z ga• Boneless Ham :..WN -L9 11" Cream Pies =--:~~Oll Tasty Dogs ~ ,.oz89• Eggo Waffles == Back Ribs ::o-m> _ ui 99• Grape JuiceMLCHI 1.ai89• Breakfast Sandwich =~~---W ·Klondike Nuggets~ , •. «~21 Red Snapper ::.~ -L9'1" Ice Pops:=: --•WIMR•1• Compare these Low Prices Grocery Specials • \/\.ASIC .............. DID Cid .. 99~ . I Hj Ho Crackers._... ___ ,aaz•1• Yuban Coffee::::·,.._1.a112°9 Laundry Det~:::,.,_.,«•s• Dove Dish Liquid __ aar •1 09 Fabric Softener= aCT'1" Bath Tissue:"==.~YWHITW _UQJ.79- Charcoal :M. ~'2- ---.-«'15' Margarine::,.,-:~ ... 5~ __ 1«21• Puddif!g SnaCkS~'· .. :r•1• ~--Mii '1 1 ' COCa-Cola==-· ~ 7r ( .. STATER BROS. WHITE OR YELLOW DECOR. OR EARTHTONE Paper Towels 1-ROLL Garden Fresh Produce Honeydews YM! ... IWUT Potatoes "IC> ,~~ Onions ~...uTftWM ASSOHiw POTH06, MN&.E ~ WY, Wtm IUT'l'!M. Y, NEfltmM1I N#DtlWWfTA R-g-· BN1111I••• 95"~ 8 . • servanp. : ' . ...................... : . . COOLER... : Jl'romCl mid-19'°'- Fredrikson expects slles to re- main steady, tbouah be won't be surprised if they eitfier falJ or rime by as much as 10 percent. f urlotte is predictina a 2 percent increase in sales, thouab be hasn't ruled out the possibility of a "~or decrease." · Industry observen offer 1CVeral varied reasons to ex~i!{ the cooler market suddenly the most common of which is that the tona-enticipated saturation point has been reached; the annual per- capita consum~tion of wine c:oolen amona .. drinkina..aae .. Americans is I. I pllons and Americans simply may not have a thint for any more {comparable consumption figures include 34.4p1Jons for beer, 2. 7 pllons for table wine and 2.3 gallons for distilled spiriu). Obsttven also note that by their nature -bubbly, sweet. cold - wine coolers compete directly with soft drinks_, blush wines, fruit- flavored wanes and been. After flining with coolen foT the past few years, consumers may be driftina back to their previous bevCflF of choice, such u beer or cola, or movina on to more fuhionable upscale wines, such as white zin- fandcl. Accordina to a raearach direc- tion, market studies have shown that consumen who enter a store intendin& to buy a specific kind of beverage often chlnae their minds when they open thcdoorofthecold box and suddenly arc faced with 1n array of been, wines, coolen and soft drinks. He also noted that the cooler market last year actually remained healthy in major marteu other than California, where sales were down 3 percent That was~ to slow the seament's powth substan- tiallf, however, becaUIC Cali-fom1ains generally account for about 20 percent of all cooler sales.. He s~ulated that cooler sa1es were off in California becaUJC the competition amona cold beveraees is unusually keen here. Bottled waters, varietal wines. soft drinb and beer -ales of Corona beer alone leaped by about S million cues in California -all did wen in the state last year. ... It's more meaninaful when people can 1ee {the vineyard) and taste it( the wine) at the same tune," be said. In lddition to the wine claaea offered throuah Le Bour Wine School, Boufford ~bliahes ID UD• usual consumer auide called, Wine. line. The bi--monthJX JNblication is euy to understand. The purpoee ii to expose people to the many new and excitina upec:tS or wine and food." In each issue. Bouft"onl raia wines and sive reci~ and new wine boob and special reporu are reviewed. Eacll issue alto provides detailed information on a particular type of wine, such u chardonnay. In addition, BoUfbd bu mated a tastina ide' and home bdy Pf'Oll'U!l. ft= lint manual ii a must for ay Wine lcMr. T1ae Wonn-.tion praented ii a ..-.:f Mlince bet•eea a ~..,_, . chciD' . ....... kt~ =:n.--.... l"llOIL .. Dae"t be in a bmy. T• ~ time. It takel 1'11910 ~ ---ltalld .... ... ii ... illoilt, .. 8oUftbril ...... in dlie ... .. Allcl=prtatid-... .. ot die-=··-ii ....... . ..,.. ... ~*11,.•llcMian a.y 4li1nh'-m I ,.. ml ,_..;. fJI Y• _, hd ,_. rilllliill df 1 'J • II die IVlflfil .......... • Or~ COMt DAILY PlLOT~. ~ 18, 1NI C9 Stiad co.nveniencet_o.n the shelf: Canned fruita and veeeiables are often overlooked in salad makina. yet they add so much variety and appetite appeal and are very conve- nient Best of all, they're not subject to seasonality or vanauons in flavor and quality. To illustrate the convenience and variety of thqc pantry staples, Del Monte f(jtchens developed three salad recipes usj~ canned com. areen beans and shced peaches in lisht syrup. Crunchy Garden Salad can be made ahead, and is a comb1nat1on of colorful, crunchy vegetables in a cider vinepr and brown sugar . drts ins. California-style Tou is a lo•·- calorie salad without oil. It's a medley of assorted leafy srttns. sliced peaches, cherry tomatoes and the now populartnoki mushrooms. For the ult1mue in conventcnce. try Easy Tossed SaJad. To on-hand 1nlJ"Cdients. add canned com and sreen beans and your favorite bonled Italian dressana. CRUNCHY GARDEN SALAD 1 cu (17 ~) wMle brwl ~ c., ~, 1llce4 celei'y ~ cep "laJJ dke4 P'e9 ..._ a C9P dtoppe• ,... .,. l'"9 pepper "" n, flrm.Jy ~ bnwa sqar "" np elder viaepr I teaspoon celery aee4 1 teaspooa salt '4 teaspoon t•mertc Dau pepper ~ cap 1Uce4 ndlsltel ( optioaal) Lenace cora,draiaff 1 CU (11 OUCQ) beau,dralaed Combine com beans. celery. cat crea onion and red pepper Combine sugar. 'inegar celer') seed. salt. THE BEST COUPON ~ OFFER IN TOWN! DRA~~~. WE ACCEPT COUPONS FROM OTHER SUPERMARKETS PLUS UNLIMITED DOUBLES RESH HALIBUT STEAKS FILLOS ••• ua. 4.47 ........ IHl .. llOAST I 4-INCH VALUE I 79 TRIMMED BEEf ROUND L& • ..... CUT ... nYlll CALIFORNIA CHICKEN 1 LB P1<G Aloskon SNOW CRAB LEGS & CLAWS LB •• 69 C~ed P .. led OREG-ON BAY SHRIMP Le s." FOl'msteod eon.less Fre$h PORK LOIN ROAST P.ERLETTE GRAPES FIRST OF THE SEASON c 8-0z. Package ltohon Sw-1 FRESH MUSHROOMS .. EA .• 79 RED ONIONS 6-0z h'tro Foney LB .39 MARIANI APRICOTS --( UIWI• IB I • •• ,, ) r CAUAWAY S ... NG WINI 12-ltACll ··-~ 750 ¥l 2. 99 ~ PlA~irEl 2.69 I .S-l1te< Premium Blush ex COLONY WHITT ZINFANDEL I 75-Llte< RARE SCOT SCOTCH .........•• 2.ff ................ 9 ... .59 ( ................. ) r FRESH NAPPA l8.e39 12-0z. Shced Rod1sh•s SHIRAKIKU T AKUWAN 7-0z. Ir.ad M.ol SHIRAKIKU PANKO ....... 25-L•. SACK KOKUHO RICI 300-COUNT " CO SMITIC PUFFS E)(TRA FANCY 8.99 2.29 .ss \,. SM!tNC$i(l0 ••• P()ttTABU 11 Oz Dondfvff HEAD & SHOULDERS SHAMPOO FOi' ~ ex Cots SERGEANT S FLEA COLLAR EA. IY•Y ........... ·~· COMPARTMENT FROZEN .99 DETERGENT 2202 .99 llue lell, 7•0z. Von.ttes l.M 6-0z. Can Vort.t.., HUGHES CAT FOOD ····-· .. ····-· floe • 1 POTATO CHIPS ....................... .. IA9 5.59 II LB. u.1.49 LB 2 .ff 6.99 2.89 1.ff .99 Lumeric and pcppet , mix -al T °" vesctables ~itb drcuina: Co~ and chill several houn.. ~ ~ i5hes to vetetat>les just befoR scrvina. Serve on lenuce--lifted plates. 8 SCrvll'\JS. CA.LIPO&NIA-sTYLE ro8S l cu (11 Miiiea) Ule ,..U.w cU.1 sliced peackl 1 cap eMtl • tliced fl'ed mlldreoms 1 "' dterrJ temat.oa, laalved I nps a1Nl1e4l aa1M .,..._. ... C11p .nee. pea ..._ Tama•~ Dram peaches rescrvina liquid In salad bowl, arrange peaches, mushrooms, tomatoes, salad grttns and grttn onions. Toss with Tarragon D~ing. 4 servinp. •Tarracoa DrHalac Uqaid from peacaies 1 , cap w~te wiae vt.Hcar J tablespooa Dtjoa-style ••· ta rd I clove carUc, cnade4 p teaspooa salt .,._ teaspooa basil ', teaspoon tarragon, cna.mbl .. •, teaspoo.a pepper Thorough!) blend all ingre- d1en1~ EASY ~ED SALAD l cu ( 17 eacn) wlaole kenel cora,draiaed 1 cu (II OUCU) nt Pftll beaas,dntae4 1 cap sliced nc.mber >i. cap cnpped carrots "' cap bottled ltaliu dresalq Len.ce Tomato wedges Combine com. beans. cucumber, carrots and d~mg.: loss to coat. Scne on lettuce-hnt'd plates~ pr- nash "'1th 1omato wedges. 8 ser- vings HERBS ... FromC3 powder and black J>C'pper: place tn the center of a I 0-inch macrowa\'c safe quiche pan or pae plate . . ~rrange 1omatocs around cup. Surround "'ath zucchini. then ctlcl') and finall) carrots. Cover 'With plastic wrap. microwave on highest setting unul vcgrtal>lcs are bartl)" cnsp-tendC"r. about • minutes Remove cup from center. spoon half the hcrt>cd marpriM over vqctables. Arrange fish over vq- etablcs placing thinnest edaes toward the center. Pour rema1nina marpnnc O\er fish. Cover with plasuc wrap. Microwave on ~est scttina until fish flakes v.ith a fort. 3 to 4 minutes. rotating pan after 2 minutes Let st.and for 2 minutes. Serve with steamed noc. af desired. Y 1dd: 2 ponaons. Per portion: 187 mg sodium. 297 calorics. To~ -C'NYelleioaaJ race: Combmc an small saucepan mar- pnnc. t.ana&<>n.' Or&J\IC peel thyme. garlic and black pepper. Heat until melted In a medium skillet comb1nc aJI vcacta~ add halfofthe hcrbcd marprioc and ~ cup bo1hng water. Bnng to a bod over high hea.t: cover and cook until vegetables are almost cnsp-tender. about 4 minules Arrange fish over ve&- et.ablcs. brush With rcmainina berbcd marganne. return to boil. Cover and cook until fish flakes "'nh a fork. aboul 5 mmutcs. FISH FILLETS MEXICA.U It oucea fttU w h9m flna•er or sele fllleh. defrosted lf Ires.ea 1 pacbce < 11 oaca) me.. cera kel"Hla, defroltelll "" C9p Waly lllce4 ~ 'It n, caie,.e4 IWftl r'M .. pepper t.... tea...... ddll ,. ..... .ivWe4 ........... prlk ...... ~teut1•p1ndMec*Jt"• Pild~nll ••"• Cut each fillet into piiia measunng about 2'h x l lh ua· IC9IS: set as1<k. In a lO-anch miaowa .. safe quiche pan or pie plate • together com. zucchini. ~­ pepper. 2 tea.spoons cbili po;o6w, prlic po..-der and bin ad ... peppers.; prcad evenly iD s-a. Cover wilb p&astic wrip; ftlic:IM- "-'I'~ until ~ IR blll9 cnsp-tendcr. Uoiit • mia..:S llilj. rina onoe. ~ film .._. vqctabks p&aaJlia thineat toward the center. SpriakJe with ~masnh'* 'h •llllG• pov..dcr. Cover wtth plubC ~ m1119 wave until f\Sh ft.kes .. a to 4 min• rocaU..·dilla minu La ilUd Iii 2 bcfOre trMftl. Yidd: 2 Pu ponioo· 176 ~ ....... c:alories, ·- JG)rCc> • ·~' ' b 7 I( 9 ... II • u II ... I~ ll' I;' iii ~· 19 10 11 11 11 l .. l ~ it. 17 18 i~ ll' ,, ll ,, iu l' 'i .!J l/I. Until our May 26 special sectien on this year's 43rd annual Costa Mesa Harbor Area lions Club fish Fry, June 2·4 But. there's stl tine . . . to show your community spirit and suppport of this annual charity fund-raiser with an ad in our official program tab sed1on. llllJ"'-Where good news is shared (714) 642-4321 EXT. 250 Display Adv•lllinl Cl ~Cout DAILY PILOT/W.O...say, May 18, 1N8 -Madison Avenue takes trend on road - ·-.............. ftecway huti~ up a cup of' chicken • noodle IOUP an our unckr-tho- 1 can bardly believe it Tho. dashboard miaowavt. MadilOn A venue tvoes who create Ma.kn YoU wonder. What if the words like ~.,.,ee·' and .. mindset" trend.maken reinvent takeout? art tam__perina with my vocabWary What if' sun-dried tomato and qain. They want me to call what l spinach crepes ~ ea. bacoo cat in the car ~mmuter food." aftd ~now ~tun red cheese on an Even the Campbdra Soup fOlb Enalisb muffin? who teem so son of. er, all-Will you be forced to &ive u~ American, aR taltina commuter munchina junk food on the road? foods. A press rdeue from Where cite but in tbe privacy of Campbel rs claims that by the 21st your car can you sneak a sack of century we'll all be toolina down the potato chips without devclopinJ a ----------------------------------------------------....... ------------1 case of the 1uiltics or aettin& ticketed by the cholesterol patrol? ...,. .... ~ .... ABRE TRIM ADVIL ALCON SALINE CVS FRUIT TABS Sate"'"· 1.88 SOLUTION BALSAM & PMTEIN 233 '-Or I Ma.I In -1.00 ~1300 99c!ocE "'-·· ~~T .88 KO TEX COVER GIRL PADS MASCARA 229 189 SEllOR QJIZEllS 10%SMIGS •at.L WIW -- HERSHEY'S CANDY 7lP.c, Our ~utar 3 S9 Our RPQular 2 77 ea Our ~ular 2 19 ea BONUS SIZE 1~ Overn•tes 2• Prol1~ Our Regular 3 13 Our Regular 1 09 N 6 MN1ngs <>rllf\91! or 2• Tal:>4ets o• Caplets 12 ounce ror 20 oz 5hem900 or Cond•l>Onet or lO Ma•1 Proless.onal auorle<I 2 65 oz Marabo\I Rolt muted t>«ry flavor ~11t1"9eyes COMPARE TO n .. at 2 •9 ~a shaoes 3 2 oz Gold6n 111. GOiden ~mond Reg Of' Solnaires ••ute MmldJuice 3 P9(:k •• ~ oz .. .., "-"<>·~ Our Regular 89' I OI •s lros. Coffee 1 pound Reg or A 0 C ---Our~ular 299 PERMASOFT SHADE WATER BABIES CVS ANGl.f SHAMPOO SUNBLOCK SUNBlOCK TOOTH8RUSH •nctudlng .,,,a,. on Ameoc:an A•nt1*. NII .. accom· modallO'\I at S1 Ja"'ft Coun HOtel on London and 1 1sa 4!! 4~. 99¢ ca• lrom Kenning C.r ~tal ..... .-v. lal*IS-1111 6 18 Value Our Ragutar 6 ~ 7 59 Our~829N Twin pectl 90ft medium ca. ..... 15 ounoe 4 ounoe. SPf' •15 or ll30 4 ounce SPF •15 LotlOfl OI firm br1Sftes Ano ThouAnca FREE 7 OUNCE DULCOLAX LAXATIVE 2~CE Our Reg 3 13-3 99 25 T ableta or ~.;.._,.-.... • SupPOS•tories TUMS ANTAOD TABLETS 1~~. <Nr ReouW 1 99 • 75 count ,....., Of &I count extra ~~YI S'l"9fl9'h LUBRHERM LOTION 2sa CONDITIONER JOHNSON'S SWABS 121 Our Regular 1 t9 150 count LADY'S CHOOE s-...... 1.39 ...11'"1 ;::.:., "'""''" -1.00 ..:-'con.39 by CoppettOM 0Ut~208• • BONUS SIZE 2 CL So6ld Of~ -IL-:=-' 81'1tl-.,...,.nt 1 Of 3 ounoe SPF •25 ~m by Copp9r1one ClAJML ClAJRMIST 121 Our Regular 1 99 BONUS SIZE 12 ounc.. ex1ra hold. unscented en.GATE INST ANT SHAVE !f150 I COMPARE TO Auch ()t~ ... .,.. TootNlrulh Vllued at 3 58 MIGHTY MAL TS 88¢ Our Regular 1 38 12 ounc. matted mtllc t.lls FREE CRACKER JACK CALOON FOAM BATH ·139 Our Aegutar 1 It 80NVSSlZE lloz.•t~ LIFESAVERS CAMJY Anyway, what do the hot-shot advertisina folks in Manhattan know about eatina in the car? They ~bly don't even own can and 1t's doubtful they've ever allowed themselves to be seen in a taxi lickina the mustard oft' a com doa. I have, as I'm suR you do. a Iona history of eatina in the car. When the resident toddlcn were fussy around 1 o'clock on summer eve- nings and it was too liaht to put them to bed, we'd pile them in the VW buaand shove ice cream ban in their <.'hubby little fists. When they arcw up, they rc- mem ber -but lots less fondly - drivina to the onhodontist with Mom and her mug of coffee that fell off the slopin& dashboard of the nine-passenger station wqon so often that the blue carpet turned mun1-bean brown. After drivin.a across the country five yearsaaoon a diet of peanuts in the shell, our Toyota still smells like a peanut-butter sandwich. Commuter foods? I wouldn't want to be accused ofbcing as dated as an Edsel. I'd better go on the road -oops -record as supporting the latest course offood history. If we must down commuter foods, here arc some specification!\ for the 1988 Eatmobile. Hello. General Moton. -Mini-fenced corrals m the dashboard to accommodate small. medium and large plastic foam cups and at least one china coffee mug. -Several concave depressions in the gear box top for chill bowls and/or Chinese tea cups. - A microwave m the glove companment. - A Lilliputian icebox (the iceman still cometh). - A pull-out table below the stereo. -A pocket in the driver's side door stocked with maps showing locations of drive-in food stands. - A canvas boat bag with big plastic bags for garbage and little plastic bags for leftovers, damp sponge for wipe-ups. large dry flour sack-like towels. one-handed dental floss. unscented towelettes and some onange blossom air freshener. -Mini vacuum cleaner. - A stiff plastic bib with a deep trough to catch cascading relish and onion rings. -Music by which to eat com- muter foods such as Franz Schubert's "Trout Quintet." Heavy metal is not recommended. -Doughnut tires. shghtly undennflatcd for that smooth· never-spill-a-<irop ride. -Soft, scrubbable bucket seats so the co-owner of the car can't . blame you for getting mustard on the interior. -Sheepskin scatcovers arc a no- no. Think about cracken. Out-of-hand food choices Mc.a.._ News Semce GREAT COMMUTEB FOODS: • • .. Orange eo.t DAILY PILOT/Wedn.eday, May 11. 1998 C7 Better sight for surfers Contact lenses designed for those who catch waves By VERA SIDWA .., .... c. ........ First came contact lenses for im- proving e:res1ght w1lhoul aJassn. Then came contact len~s that trans- form~ brown e)es to baby btues. Then came Sun1acts. tinl~ contact lenses for surfers and others who are active in the sun Suntacts were designed by Dr Wilham L Petersen a 36-ycar-old Dana Point op1ometr1st who has been surfing for 2b )Cars Peterwn first realized 1hc need for something ltke Suntacls v.hen he saw a plea m Surfing Maga11m· from a surfer with poor C)'CSlght ~urftng. • The &J'ttn 11011n 1ht' lenS('s mis out 97 p«ct'nt ot the harmful ultra\ 1olt't rad1at1on and MO J)l'ru nt of the\ 1S1blc light \.\a\dength'> .inording to Petersen The~ "'l.'rl.' r spec1all) dt'- !)lgned for \urf\'f\ "1th mort' lens beneath the l")C'llJ 10 keep them 1n the eye ""htle plunging llC:neath a ""ave But the) can bt· v.urn h\ an~onc who needs protn tion from glare - whether or not lhl k mes are u~ to 1mpro't' e\l''>1gh1 Brut.e \ •ttan a patient o l • PC'terscn s \1nu: I ''-I .rnd pmduc11on director of ')url. r \!agatinl and Powdt'r Maga11m "'Car\ ~untall\ "(I've) done I '-11 h•1urs of -,urling. sta)ing for lour hour\ 1n thl' "iltt'f at ii ume . .),nd I 1, Ol'l t"r lost 1hem H'I • he ~\S . Vogan hj' i.-um them lur j 1l·ar and a ha lt I 11 \urtinj and high· performJnl l v. rnJ -'>urling lil' al\o use~ them 111 l ul J .. v. n glarn in lhl' '"'' slopes It-)!. ltable to suck to the eye. which is a problem when tht'y are 1mmerstd 1n fresh water This converJC'ncc of know!~ "'as all ht' nteded From then on 11 "'as a mattC'r of formulating p1iments and materials After much work. and upon finding the "M"t·rt'l solution" to the unique upun required. Petersen des.i"ed and patented the first pair of saline· soluttoncompatibleSuntacu1n 1986 • The' currentlv can M obtained • uni) 1hrough his oflit.'c. thouJ)\ he 1s • v.o rl..1ng out j distribution deal that v.uuld mai..l' them more w1del)' c1,a1labk Petef"!>t'n alM> ·~ a contributor to a tn 1 l.·alkd .. T hl· Handbook of Surft'r \.1.:d1une " 'o\ nuen as a collabora- 11un of :!tJO health professionals this tir-~1-of-11<>-k1nd h:\t '4111 be a' aalable • a1 'urt \hop\ .ind bookstores b' the l.'nd ol the \Cjf Petcr'.)(.'n v.ear'> ~un1acts h1mst'lf anJ ~~ill \urf\ calling the ~pon "a maJor hfr lorll.' .. h bring'> ml. du!.Cr to naturC' "he !>di ~ Dr. WWlafll Petenen, a Dana Point op- tometrlat, dealgned the tinted Santacta for eurfen like himself. Th~ are rarely loet, and cut down ultraviolet U.Cht and glare. Later on. he rl·ad about Jt'rry LopcL . a "orld-(;hamp1on surfer who .. fried his e~es surfing in tht' tropics.. Jnd had 10 rcson 10 "Weanng dark- llntcd. cumhc-r\<>me goggks while PelC'r~n at tualh began v.orl.. 11n the len!.4.."\ 1n I%~ Jlter he read Jtk1u1 an e\pcrtml·nt v.here se'eral lOOljl 1 lenses "'nl 1mmcr$ed 1n 'af\1ng degree~ot '-lhlll' \olut1on .),n 1ncn:as.e 1n saltntt' "J' 'ho"'n lo makt len~ .. ll '> an unbehe,abk feeling lo u1mbine ~our profession v.1th )'Our lo' e for i.urfi ng · Challenging.taboo against olderwomen/you1:1ger men Mature single women complain that 1here aren't enough men to go around. Some of them get more creative than others and tap into a formerly taboo man pool. It has become quite fashionable for older women to seek younger male partners. And young men often seem quite pleased with themselves when they can maintain the interest of an older. more sophisticated woman. Controversial relationships be- tween older women and younger men have always existed. Napoleon Bonaparte and Shakespeare. for ex- ample. were considerably younger than their wives. George Sand (the 19th century novelist) had long-term roman~ with two )Oungcr men. and Elizabeth Browning was older than her husband. Roben Browning. But t'Ven today. when a maddlt· aged woman dares to take a young lover or chooses to marry a much younger man, eyebrows are ra1~ Cher. a fantaS) role" model to many -and 41 years old -shows off her 23-ycar-old lo"er and e"<plains. ·-rm happier with younger men. the) 're defin1tel) more fun.·· M)' friend Ca th) (who 1s 40 and not a celebrity) agrees w11h Cher "Being with a younger man allows me to stay up on current fashio n and th1nk1ng. I love it "'hen m) niece sa)S I look 'rad ' ... and I know \\-hat she mt"ans ·· IJIDA Aa.ciz1 Cher reponed 1n a "'o men's maga- zine recently· "E \ eryone asked me ho" ""e deal with o ur rela11onsh1p. ~ I asked my boyfriend. He said 'Tell them "'e deal with ltJUSt fine. You're 4:! and rm 23 and rm mad!} in lo'e "1th you and \'OU love me and we ha\e a grea1 life If 01her ~pie ha"e a problem "11h us. 1he)' ha-.e to work 11 out alone · ·· There are defin1tel) s~1al prob- lems for thO\l' "ho dare to challenge the unspoken btlt \el) real cultural taboo against being in an older v.oman/)ounger man rela11onsh1p .. Cultural!) <'H')One 'knov.-s' 1ha1 )oung men must be re~n~ for )Oung women. that )'Outh. not age 1s valuable. that conforming I!) 1m1xm- an1 and that men have to dominate women:· sa} authors Arlene De- rensk1 and Sall) Landsburg in ··The Age Taboo. Older Women. Younger Men Relauonsh1ps ·· (Lillie. Brov.n 1981). Bccaus.e v i lhl')(.' l.Ultural el\~la· lions fam1h tm·nd!io. and C'\ c:n s1ranga\ loo~ v. 11h disdain at coupll"'> who appear age mismatched e'>- pcetalt' v.hl·n 111' thl· v.oman v.h111'> mulh older A.nd the c\tcrnal '>OC1al d1\Comfon can affect thl' couple themsehes In term!> >fkar he "onders "'W hat "'"happen "hC'n \he gets REALL 'r old.'' and ~ht' wonders -y.,111 he still hke me "'hen I gct old .. In 1erms ot guilt she ma~ think "l''e d1sappo1nted m) mother "'ho behc\eS m) ne"' }Ounger man could ne'er pro-.1de for me and prott'CI me the wa) an older man could.'' and he ma) think ··Maybe tht'~ ·re nght and I DO ha\t· a mother complex .. In term' of anx1el\. she qucsuons .. ~. I look \Ill\ ""h him""' ~nd he quC'SllOM .. Do I look hke • kept man"" But in spite of all lht' realistic dtfTi, ullle<. and the unrealistic womes of 1he\e relationships. the' continue to l'\l\l "llh or,urpn!i.mgh good re- sull<:. Older "'omen "ounger mC'n rt'la· twnsh 1 ps arr no1 for t' .. Cf\ bod~. but the autho,..,· b1a\ -and mine -1s 1ha111 ma) be an acceptable and even a desirable choice forcenain kinds of men and women Life 1s alrcad) too difficult to hide behind '4hat ma.,, be an antiquated social taboo · Saving severely premature babies because we can has created a high-tech nightmare This Wttk, the covt'r· story of Newsweek details strides made 1n caring for premature infants. Infants born a full three months earl). weighing only I to 2 pounds. are surviving due to today's advanced technol<>.$)'.. On the cover, the head- line read: Two Years Ago, Saving a Two-Pound Baby Was Remarkable Today, the Miracles Begin At One Pound_ Folks. these are not miracles This 1s technology And unlike miracles. the end result, for both parent and child, ma) be more tt'rrible than if the infant had been allowed to die. The headline should have read: Today We Can Save The Lafe of A One·Pound Baby. But Should We? Have We Gone Too Far? These children are anythin& but normaJ. At one pound. the cars arc no more than skin flaps, the eyes are often fused shut. they have no mechanism to contro l body temperature and their skin 1s so underdeveloped that it hardly forms a barrier to body fl uids. If the expensive. round·lhe-<:lock technical support pulls them through for a few months. th~ arc "bl~ .. with a host of handicaps that will require a hfetime of doctoring and nursing -not parenting. For infants under 2 pounds who survive, mental retardation is the rule. They arc often piqued with seizures. develop hydrocephalus (in- creased water and pressure o n the brain) requiring rq>cated suraeries to implant 5hunu, and underlo other suraical procedures to corrcc1 lhe awesome problems of arrested ~ velopmcnt. A separate branch of medicine specializing in the prolonaed catt of these .. mir1elcs .. is about to form. Tbae luds are not saved to enjoy a oonnal life. They arc CJtperimenu to see to what extent tcchnoloSY can com.,e'mate for abnormality. JULIAN WHITAKER The Medi• and Medicine: A Coiy RelatfODsbip Newsv.«k. a soph1sticat~ JOumal read by millions. did mention that the e'pensc and comphcat1ons of those who survive are sources of con- troversy, but their glowing endorse- ment hardly gives credence to tht" view that we may already have passed the point in this area where tcch- nolog> has t>et·ome more a curse than blcss1 ng. The tone of the rcpon was. 1 f a "one pounder survives. whoopee'" This stan~ 1s typical for most media reports on the medical indus- t ry. Doctors arc always he~. The.Y. simply do no wrong, particularly 1f they arc "high tech... Billions of dollars are S{>Cnt by consumers each year on sophtsucated procedures that are beneficial for many but also make other s1tuat1ons worse. Yet the media invariably glonfy the industry as if their cheerleading will hasten the arrival of a disease-free. deathless sociery. While other forms of human endeavor arc "investigated... the media gush hke a PR firm over modem medicine. One would be a&}\ast tf some lowly reporter ever questioned the wisdom of a b1ghly respected high·tcch doc. even if that wisdom was enlarging the circle of suffcrina. Frankly. I find the medla"s obsequiousness downright satry. Jat WM Cara. Aaywa1? Pa.rt o( t he difficuhy re5U an the belief that anyone who rcal!y cares could never question the efforts of docton lt)"ina to uvc the lives of l ·or • :!-pound prematur\· infants But this pov.erkss to do so and are oftt'n made 1s not the case. 10 feel e"cn more gu11ly. "Ho" can In fac1. the oppos11e ma)' be true }Ou ask us 10 lei your ch aid die', .. Those "ho truh are sens1me and .),ti medical dec1s1ons are left 10 the caring h~el) art'· more able to com-doctor. ~t't the parents bear the prchend the long-term suffenng fi nancial burden of those dec1S1ons t'ngcndered b) these heroic attempts This 1hom) t'th1calassue was no1 e-.en to sa\e ll\CS Because the) care tht'y mentioned tn thC' Nev.sWttk an1cle know the sword of 1echnolog) 1s Instead. "'e "'ere ser .. ~ sentiment. doubkd edged and 1s gelling bigger the feeling that all 1s wonderful 1f and sharper by the mmute. these little t) kes can Just mlCh 4 But what aboul hule baby Jant' who pounds "'e1ghed o nl) I pound. 8 ounces. now ah'e and at home with her adonng. Tiie llu1 Problem grateful parents'> Would you ha"e let Toda). 1here are no guadehnes her die .. For man) baby Janes and re-garc:hng the u~ of this techno log) parents. the ordeal 15 JUSt t>cainntng. That 'ihould ha\e been tht' focus of The Newsweek article chronicled the News"'eek pu~cC' Should tech- the ca~ of baby Joan Lonstean. born nol<>J) be "1thheld from infants that t 5 weeks premature and a veteran of weigh 2 pounds or less" Should four months 10 ihe Georgetown mtenent1on slop v.nh the first Un1,erstt) Hospital intensive can episode of blt~ding 1n the brain'> nursery Shesuffcred~nousblttdm& Should parents ha'C' more control in her brain and extensive tuns 0' erthc d('('1S10n making., ls there too damage. She 1s now al home but ma) much pov.er in the hands of lht' nc' er be able to walk, swallow or even ph)s1c1an "ho~ personal amb1t1ons suck. and ego ma) be dn11ng him or her far Her fa ther said. "There was 3 time bc)ond thc c;1mplc desire to do" hat 1\ when we were afraid she would die best for the infant and the fam11\., No" there are tames when ~e·re Tht'SC suggestion~ 1mpl) 1hat the afraid she'll "' e Without this tech-technol<>g) and the doctor<. U\ing 11 are running amol nol<>g). she would ha\.C d1~ nat· Howe, er. most doctors m1h1s field urall). and \\-t v.ouldn't havt' had to are blind 10 that possibiht) Their ask our;clvt's these questions. Maybe belief is that all problems "'111 ul- that would have been better." timatel) be solv~ b' more aggressne Doctors oa Aacomadc PUot use of technology. ·apparent!) unul Though the an1cle implied that the~ have fiaured out ho"' 10 create an man) proftss1onals had doubts about an1ficial womb JUSt hle momm' ·s the \aluc of intcrvenuon in infants 2 If this 1s the datt"Ctton wCJlre tal.ing. pounds or under. these doubts rarcl) one can sca~I) 1magint' itlt' camagt' alter phys1c1an behavior. It 1s full that wall M left along the road steam ahead for the doctors. Their Newsv.eek should haH done a ----- Discover Our Special Place THE RIGHT CHOICE FOR YOUR RESIDEN- TIAL AND ASSl TED LIVING SERVICES. • Deluxe suites. private and semi-private studios • Transportation to doctors and recreational activities •Warm and canng environment • 24-hour securitv and staff • Assistance with medtcat1ons and hathinit • Walk to shopping areas • We offer care for your loved one v.hile you vacation .A//-Jai/,, Q.,a/it'I Ca~ The Huntington Senior Residence 18851 Florida Ave . Huntinfto n BHeh ('714) 842-7788 --------attitude is that parents.. hke the better JOb. media. should glory in the fight, .--------------'L--------------------------~ grattful for the opportunity to care for the malformed and maladjust~ suc- cesses. In addtuon. parents generally have no voice in the medical dcc1SJons. If. for whatever reason. they want to stop the interventton they arc usually PROMISES to stop drinking toQ much or · quit using drugs DO NOT WORK OUT·TREATMENT, tM new generation of treating alcohol/ drug abuse, DOES WORK ..• Successfully Proftn Program· ... lmprows YoUr Lifestyle ... No Time Off from lbur Job ••. Affordable with No Extra Costs Make a PROMISE~ can keep. CIH us for HELP toc;tay. Frtt COliftdcntlel Assessment FOuntain Wley/Ol•»!C county ~9661119 1-80C).341·3535 ' I ' Oi'MQI Coeet DAILY PtlOT/ Wectnlilday, Mey 18, 1988 'Marietta' ·fine, ftavorful revival 'Sound of Music' bi-tght, polished · Cun-ently in production by lhe FuUmon Clvic Lia.ht Opera Com- pany i "Nau&hty Marietuf' -one of the classics 01' the American musical I.beater-by Victor Herbt'rt and Rita Johnson Young. An exquisite m usJCal scott, 10 tht' form of tradiuonaJ European hght opera with a savory American flavor. interptttcd by a cast of talented mu1ietans guarantees a fine evening's en~inmenl under the direcuon of Jan Du.ndan and musical direc- tor/conductor Todd Helm. 'the story is told ofa young ltahan countess. Marietta D'Altena. a refu- ICC from her home in France. seeking a aew lift m Amenca. narrowly escaping a bitter marriagt' of arrange- ment fallina into a sltirnush over the coveted Lou1s1ana Temtory, the countess finds herself the pursued as well as the pursuer of two handsome icntlemen -leaders on opposite sides. count~n. Richard K.intey, in the role of Captain Richard Warrington, afrect1onally called Captain Dick. ) Kmscy. also nch in quality v0<2l inlerpretalion, never quite captures the imAie of bis character -a-rough. though charming, ranJer-fron· ticrsman. Instead, there 1s a stiff uneasiness that permeates his per· formance. but falls away each time he bursts into sons. Jim Rule is the villainous Etienne Grandet (alias Bras Pique). son of acting governor Grandet and a roauc privateer opportunist tn pursuit of the Louisiana Temtory. Rule is effective tn his portrayal, often elicit- ing soft moans of distaste from his audience as he alternately romanQCS and abuses those closest to him as he works his sinister plans. Grandet's mistress, Adah Le Clercq, 1s wt'll played by Diane King, whose charctenzat1on 1s enhanced by an air of graceful' ulncrab1hty. Tbert WU. admattcdly a llttJe arumblina in this comer when Eliza. beth HoWard's CunaiD Call Oinntt Theater canceled its plans to •• Cole Porter's "Kiss ,Me Kate":,,.{• pmonaJ favorite) and rtplaced It with . yet another venion of "Tht Sound 'of Music.•• There ·~. however, few arumbl- inp about the Roctacn •'1d Ham- mentein musical in its finished form at the Tustut dinner house. No matta' how many wncs you've IOCn the show (and this comer bas sat in on many), iu latest incarnation is de- li&hlfully entcrtainina. lm~ation and eneflY are the key inaredients in ttndcrina an over- familiar wotk fttsh and exciting. Director John Ferola has employed an abundance of both qualities with some beautiful sJide projections (to simulate the Austrian Alps} and an enthusiastic corps ofyouna people in the roles of the Von Trapp children. Molly lttne Minor is v1vac1ous as "naughty" Manetta. Her delicious vocal rednditions -solo and 10 entemble -provide the piece's hiahli&hts. Minor's th1d. Italian ac- cent proves cumbersome in delh-ery of spoken lines. often hindenng clant). Bart) Ramse) 1s outstanding as Pvt. Silas Shck -dancmg. singing and sparkling with chansma. Energiz- mg each time he appears. Ramsey is delightful 1n .. If I Wert" Anybody Else But Me'' wtth Minor and .. The Sweet B}' and B>" wtth Edgar Burgar (as acting governor Grandel). Jim Rule, llolly 11.lnor, Paul Sha.nab&, Richard llln.ey (from left) ln "Naughty Marietta.•• "The Sound of Music." the final R&H collaboration 1n a d1stanguished carttr. traces the larscly true account of a "postulant in a nunnery who becomes governess to an Austrian naval officer's brood of seven chil- dren -and caplur'e$ first the hearts qf the kids. then their fa ther's. Sening the love story against the backdrop of the Nazis' thrust into Austria provides an ominous presence that offsets the often-syrupy plot. Her effcrvt"SCCnce. though at limes cssmtial to tbe v1tal1t) ot an) "'ork. overwhelms her rather subdued Fine ensemble wor~ creates lfery effective performances of such tunes as .. Italian Street Song" and "L1vt' for Toda}.,. Other highlights are Minor's ''Naughty Manetta" and Kinsey's ..I'm Falling in Love With Someone." Minor and Kinse' JOIO 1n a duet for the beautiful "Ah. Sweet Mystery of Life." Commendably smooth choreo- graph) 1s orchestrated by Sha New- man Helm's instrumentalists provide ta teful accompaniment so essential to the successful per- formance of an) musical work. "Naughty Manetta" 1s delightful entertamment for the entire family. Performances continue Thursdays throu&h Saturdays at 8 p.m. and Sunda)s at 2:30 until Ma) 29 in Plummer Auditonltrn. on Chapman A venue at ~mon Street m Fullenon Call 879-1732 for ticket information. Broadway's 'Carrie' most expensive flop in history At the Cuna in Call. Doris Tam bur- n positively glistens as Mana. rad1- atinga bnghtness ofspinl that proves contagjous. There 1s a subm~ elegance and attractivtncss about ht'r that often 1s absent in other ap- proaches to the character. and this helps justify the obligatory allure. NEW YORK (AP) -"Came" didn't capti\;lte the cn11cs or au- diences. but the SS million musical about a troubled teen-ager wtth telekinetic powers ~t ont' kind of record. It closed Sunday after a bnef run. the most eApens1ve nop 1n Broadwa} histOI). "Most of ·c arne· is )USt a typical musical-theater botch.' wrote Frank Rich. the T1mec;' chief drama cntK, and a maJont~ of his colleagues agm.·d A*OA Twa I Wl'.D AT IT~OICM'Utl .,.,AY THE mtt 'MT YI" CR> , ....... lttS ALL STREET' (R} 6 2S IUS 1f "llOOMITRUCK" (..0) u s ~CROlllNG" ~ S: .. li~ "The rev1eY.s "'ere not \Cl) good." said spokesman J 1m Baldassare. "and 1t wasn't 1ust the Ne" York Times." The sho". "h1ch pla)ed fi,e per- ·-::,,w,.. CE11o1Tf1' • • •• • ,.,_ 'S1-4184 ........ ~ .. "'~ .. . . "WHITE •SCHll!r (R) OMO o.1C1 l t •1 ll l 4~S •M'lt-1 .. "BEETLE JUtCE" (Rlllt*R ICIATOll t OO·l00-S00·71IO·t0 4S "THE MILAGRO BEANFIELD WAR" (R) tz•tJt.SOl-l·•tUO ...,...TO_,.., IWP"f'G)ltl "ITAM> A DELMR'" ... ._ "STONIY MONDA r' (R) DCUISM OCMIJOf UMJt.t•ll "COL.ORI" (A)DOTllUQI. S.1~7.Jt.lt:tl BARGAIN DAYS * TUES. AND WED. MRGAJN DAYS TUii I WU> AT IT "'"'1:0 ICllU'lllS "MIDNIGHT CROSSING" .A.. (R)U 'ft DUNAWU K 545100·1000 "SALSA" (l'G)l(mY llOSA 1 OO·U0-1040 "COl.ORS" (A,._.T MAH , ...... IUS FAMtl Y •ARGA• MIOHTI 12.00 TUHIWEOITHURS "ABOVE THE LAW" ~ (R)6 50· tO:tS ''DEAD HEAT" (A) US "SUNSET" (R)I IS "BILOXI BLUES" (PG13) 6 10 10 IS "SHAKE DOWN" (R)SAM HLIOI 61UlOIOJO "SALSA" (PG)tt:aY IOU 100.tto AT aTAMED ICMll• ·-~~~~~:.:,;...---­ "COl.CMI" * (R) ... , lllM1 S.Jt-t•l•l5 ' fonnanccs and 16 previews at the Vtrgmia Theater, was budgeted at S7 million but an extra S I m1ll1on.was spent when the opening date was postponed to alto"' for mort" rt'· hearsals. Dimitn Christy. tn his third con- secutive Curt.am Call role and his first lead, is a staunch, proud Captain Von Trapp, though somewhat humorless even when transformed b) Mana and her music. The show did not have a big ad' ance sale. according to Baldassart". and lost some S500.000 wonh of theater pan) business that wa!> canceled after the reviews came out Lovel}' Ltshe Beau\a1s is an enchanting L1t'sl. the "sixteen going on seventeen" eldest daughter, who sparkles in her danCt' sequence with the h1gh-stcppmg Billy Flanigan. Jo Monteleone as the mother abbess mixes the sagacity of her character witb the vocal powerhouse we've come to expect in the role with her .. Climb Everv Mountain" solo. Until .. Carne's" fast exit. the most expcns1"e flops on Broadway have lost between SS million and S6 million. <;f·A·Ot~M ~ fl:llli~ L'A MIRADA GATEWAY AKfW ~,,,,. c,,, "'-,,, D'l'ilillii, Ml.WOO. ...... ....... 1'Mlll--A WY 1Nt ........ wttONeeun"' ........ ,. ....... DUD NUT• ....... LADY•Wl9l'l,..1a, ........... ~~i&::llZlll:l:l.IV?MlD!"''=x let "*'X Y fll&U 1111 tmt Nlf VI lMINIWKOOl11t , .. ~.rra:: ,, .. ......... .....uor ... , ..... ....... , .... eu.au. CO&Gat111 ............... ..... ,tt1'1 NM ..... ~ ..... UUllA lidl I un "°"" SALM ... hMMl ... •Ut .. .. ., ....... , ....... '" ........., caotllN9.., ......... , ..... ..... ..-OUIOll UMl--....W. ITAle #9 MUV'D"' ... ............. .. --NUT• ........... MOW NI lAW • ... _,.. .... & _ _,, •• •1n1a111111 • .-N NOi I COL• _ . ..,. ... -· ----... ... , .............. Umuutel11t '21ao 21ao •sao 6130 ·~-10:40 ..... , ... m.,.... AMlAlllm ,_ r JACIC'I IACI( ... 1•wa ... 1.-...a11• ..... , ..... TMI W1tOMG GUY "' ltU ..... H .... MS• ... ... ,nmlO ..,. ~ ILUllll'f IWIDOWN• ............. eMT~ IULLlfNOOf • ......... , ...... 1MI ........ ---· ----.. _. ....... ._ .. , .... .._ . ,-..... . ..... -&AW• In supportina peru, Pat Gwmann fits the role oflhe baroooess, Elsa. like a ~II-tailored aJove, but Don Forney fails to elicit the needed comic relief from his assianment as Mu, lhe imprcsano. Pat Hanrahan and Lynn Dove offer ftne contrasting scnti· ments as the household servants, while Dale Jones as tbe Nazi party leader presents a poientially danaer· ous advcr5ary. Most eyes. however, will be on the children. who perform splendidly from Beauvais down to the httlcGretl (a role shared by Erin Ensley and Kristen Tipton). Roundina out the youth continaent are Kevin Loreque. Jennifer Gassman, Kristen Moxon, Ivan Fryman/Matthew Ensley and Leigh Davis/Adrienne Stiefel (the latter four double<ast). Music director Doug Shaffer's fine orchestrations and Greg Hen- richsen 's multiple settings also enrich the production. along with David Wilkinson's chorograpby. A pleasant surprise for "Music" lovers is the ramstorm which dttncbcs Beauvais and Aan1gan at the close of their number. Tht"h11lsofTustin will beahvewtth "The Sound of Music" throu&h Sept. 3, with performances givt'n nightly except Mondays llt varying curtain times at the Curtain Call, 690 El Camioo Real. Call 838-1540 for ticket mformauon. BACKSTAGE -The Way Off Broadway Playhouse brings its lights up apm this weekend with t1m Kelly s comedy "The Soapy Murder Ca~" undt'r the direction of Tony Reverditto .... the show runs Fridays and Saturdays at 8 p.m. through June 5 at the Santa Ana theater. 1058 E. First St .. and reservations att being taken at 547-8997 . 'Friday 13th' hacks its way into top spot HO LLYWOOD (AP) -"Fn day The 13th" was a lucky day for the six sequel 1n the blood-letting movte scncs as 1t earned $8.2 million and first place at the box office last weekend. "Fnda}' the 13th Part VII -The New Blood." opened on Fnday the 13th on nearly 1.800 screens. mak1na impressive caming.s during a nor- mally lackluster timt' of year when students attend proms and get ready for graduation. "This is normally a very bad week." said John Krier of Exhibitor Relations Co. "But Jason still lives," ht said. referring to the much- rcsu.rrectcd hockey-masked killer of the "fnday the 13th" movies. Eaminas fell sharply after the No. I spot, and there were no other new movies in tht' Top I 0. "Colors. .. the gang movie starring Scan Penn a nd Robert Duvall, fell to second place. earning $3.3 milJion. followed br, the ghost movie "BectleJuice, • which sold $3 million in tkkets. "Shakedown." about an under- cover cop exposi04 corrupt col- leaaues. earned Sl million for founb p~cc. followed by the d.anoe-romance movie "Salsa" with S 1.8 million . "Biloxi Blues" was in sixth place with Sl.2 million and "Above The Law" was seventh with S 1.1 million. Roundina out lhe Top 10 was "Moonstruck," S 1.09 million; "The last Emperor," SI.OS million; and "Bloocbpon." $911.000. .. • • • WEDNFSDAY, MAY 18, 1988 25 CENTS MKDy Coast school bUses unsafe Three lstrlcts use o er models wtth unprotected fuel tanks subject to fire BJ JENNIFER WEBER °' ... ..., ....... At least three 1ehool districts alona the Oranac Coast are using buses that may not meet federal safety standards for f ucl tanks, just like the bus thal burst inlo flames after a collision an Sport. Newport Harbor High vol- leyball player Drew Sheward was In a mood to oelebrate Tuesday./81 Lakers pull out close vic- tory over Utah to take series advantage./81 Nation Evldenoe grows for the- ory that snowballs from space brtng water to earth./A3 Index Advtat and Games A9 Bulletin Board A3 Business A 7-8 Classlfled 86-8 Comics A10 Entertainment C8 Food C1-6 Mind & Body C7 OplnJon A6 Paparazzi 85 Police log A3 Pubflc Notices 85, 8 Sports 81--4 Weather A2 Kentucky. The acadeot an K.enrucky killed 27 people Saturday nacht when a ptekup tnd dnvcn the wrona way on an interstate ba&hway slammed into 11. The Orante Coast is not the only area with qana buses. thou&h. mo~ than half the state's 13,000 pubhc AIDS bias in Laguna banned BJ LANCE IGNON °'_..., ....... Ducrimanataon agamst AIDS VlC· tims is now 1llepl in Laguna Beach. The oty became the first in OranJt County to pass an anta-AIDS dis- crima.nauon ordinance Tuesday ni&ht. .. It prcvmts the landlord from saying )OU can't hve here. It prevents the sbopowner from saying you can't shop here.'. said Mayor Pro T cm Robert Gentry. who helped draft the ordinance Wlth members of the city's AIDS Education Task Force. The ord1na~ probabats da~ cnminataon by landlords. employers, medical and dental professionals and pubhc accommodauons. such as res- taurants and hotels. It also apPIJCS to oty services and facahues and prohibits mandatory AIDS testing. .. If 1t (d1scrim1nation) only oc- curred ontt we nttd this ord1nantt.- Gni tf) said The ordlnance passed unana- mou.sl). AIDS d1scnm1nat1on in Laauna. which has OM o( the highest per capita AIDS rates in the country. is more common than most people rcaliu. said M.t~· Hamhn, who has the deadly virus. Hamlan. a case manager for the AIDS Sctv1<X Foun- dation. sa1d he knov.-s of thrtt people who have been dcn1ed hous1ng be- cause the) had the d1scax. OM who was denied employment and count- less othen who have bttn turned away by doctors. He knows only two doctors in Laguna who t~t AIDS patients. the ord1nantt applies not onl) to peop1c Wllh ..iDS but a1so those Wllh AIDS Related Com]91a (ARC) and AIDS Related Status. Both are andtca- uons that so~nt may develop AIDS. People susl)«tcd of having any of the conditions arc also protected. Those who violate the ord1nan« will be habk for up to three umcs the amount of actual damqes.. attornc) fees and other charges levied by a ju<f.lt. Mesa hot pursuit policy on trial in suit over deaths BJ JONA'l'llAN VOLD.JI! °' ............. One of Roy Williamson's surf- boards is in his perents' ..,-.. on 1 rafter ptberina dust. Tbc otber was burned io the sands of Ne-.pon Beach by friends sayiQI eoodb)ie afta be and another damnate ~ killed more than three ya.rs•· William~and ~ DearUlia ~ best friends IDd 1vtcl ......_ Tiltj ~.both 17111dbodt~..-. .. Esuncia H ... $cMel. 0a Dei: I •er 12. t 914. they ditch ... dlllei to bit thewaves:llWM ...... ...__, would ever do-.. .... . After .... ~ w ~··~ the)' dimbed i8IO ~"I cA. ~ __ ,...... .... ,.. Street. hcllai ............. . Plecntia A vea.. school buses ~ built before 19n and do not meet standards put into place th.at year, The Assoc:ialed Preti reported. Sin« that year, ildcral law hu required school buses wdabinl more than ti vc tons to have f'ud tanb cndoscd an crash-testsunt sled QFS and fuel Imes cannot be m8de of rubber hoses The buses m~ also be powcn:d by dacsd cnpnes. wtuch use a fuel that as less flammable than gasoline. But Crown Coach Co. salesman Driver survey Jact Parsons s1ud lbc buses do not have to be~ under the federal JUidelines. Older buses were ..pndfalhemf .. into the ~ st.andanband do not have to meet lhc men recent 1uadelines. be said. The ~ Coast diuncu t.bal have butcS bu1h bcfotc I 9n mctude: • HuntJnston Beach City School Distnct, where 13 of 18 buxs were .~ih before the t9n standards were an place. Transpon.ation Supervisor Dorothy Phillips saad.. Gas taab oo the buses are protected. she said. but A motorl8t OD a San ~ hee••J on-ramp at Jam)Mwoee Road recelftm a tramc ~ from tM comlty TnW1p•- tatloaCorrtclon~11i'"11Mlne wUl be .. ....., oat~ llay to coanty clrtftnC pattaaa. not by steel caacs. AIJ but the fleet's olde$t bus have dtcscl enaincs. •Ocean View School Dtstnct. ~ none of the buses a.re powered by diesel fuel. said Assistant Super- intendent Monte McMurray He did 001 tnov. hoy, man> bwn the dlstnct bad or hoy, man.. were built after 19n · • Irvine Unified School D1stnct. whadl has about 10 buses built before the stncur standards. T raming Duu· tor Stefanie Root said. AJI 65 busn v.b1ch are o""ned b) Taylor Bus Service. have been uperadcd. she said. Lake most other 1ebool districts, Huntanaton Beach City cannot aftord to replace 1 ts l&J "I buses. The last bus the dtstnct boU&ht. in Man:h, was a 1978 Crown that cost $92,000. Phil- lips said Even 1f the money were available. the nataon·s bus oomparues could not produce enoup vehicles .. ,n five )cars .. to replace California's a&ina (Pleue eee MANTI A2) Amphitheater, residents call off noise talks Mesa homeowners to take 4-year-old lawsuit to trial JJ BOB VAN EHEN °' ... ...., ....... Attcmpu to t.ctt~ a four-)car-old lawswt over concen noas.c at Pacific Amphuhcatr"C broke down Tuc'Sday when amphitheater offietals refused to agree to tum down the volume The SUit, filed in 1984 b) a &J"OUP of residents from nc~borboods ad~ cent to the arena. W'lll now go to trial. Located at the Ora!'fl: County Fa1rvounds.. the amphrthcaler " adm1n1stcrcd by the fair's Board of Directors. Rock concerts at the arena this season have included appearances by groups such as K.tss. An.thra.x and Yes. The Beach Boys arc scheduled to appear Saturday at the arena. Residents of two Costa Mesa nelghborhoods filed the suit charpna that no1s.c from concerts at the 18.500-seat arena violated county st.andardl The residents also charar that the amphitheater Jener&lCS exocssave traffic. A s.cnlcment confcrcne"C began last week after residents rejected an offer b> the state ofCahfomia. which owns the amphitheater land. to purchase those homes placued b) exCCSStve nOISC D1scun1o ns centered on a proposed plan which would have ~ eee NOlll&/A2) Whopping decline for tr·ade deficit By MAllTIN CRUTSINGER . W~ HINGTO~-:-4. l'C(Ord level ofexpon saJesp'e the l 'nned States its lo~cst month!\ trade deficit in thrtt 'ean in Marc·h. the government said f uesda) in a ~port that Presi- dent Reagan seized as rhe1oncal ammunition against the trade bill The Commer~ Department ~ ported that the deficit shrank dra- matically in March to $9. 7 t>.lhon. a drop of29 S pcrcmt from the Febru- ary imbalance of S 13.8 b1lhon - statistics which sent thedollarsoanng on world monC) markets The improvement came from a 13 percent surge 1n ~mcncan exp<'lns whach ~to an aU-ume high ofS:!Q billion. as demand for L.S. machin- ery. aircraft. computers and cbcmicals packed up sharp!\ This offset a smaller ns.c 1n 1mpons. v. h1ch chm bed 3 6 pcl"C'Ctlt to S38. 7 billion. ..\month lg<>. the uncxpcctedJy bed Februa1) trade dcfiot sent the dollaT plunging 1n \:aluc and ll"lgercd a tOl- po1nt drop 1n t~ Dow Jones avcnagr of lO 1ndustnal saocks. the fifth-worst loss on record. The March report was aood news for t~ dollar which rose sharpl) ap.1nst olhcr ma1or currencies.. but t~ stock market and bond martet .,ere dec1dcl) less impressed. ~ Dow Jones av-c~ closed down 21.22 points and ded1n1na issues outnumbered advancies by a nearl~ 2-1 mugin on the New York Stock Ellchange. Rapn. fielding ~porters· qu~ uons dunna a bnef appearance Tucs- da) in the White House press room. said the latest report "1s clear eVJdcncc th.at the trade ba1anoc "' (Pleue eee Tll.ADS/ A2) Flghtcondnuesoverban on gays in reunion book Education post goes to Irvine girl, 16 BJ GREG~ ... ..., ...... Dan Wonb1ngion 1s still wai1- ·~ is David Engel. So 1s the cnutt Universat) High School Oassof'77. What they've been waiuna for siaatt Auaust 1s a picture book. • P91ltt and plastic memento of a 1 G- ~ h. school rt'UDIOI\. Tbc publauon of the book b1Q&CS on only one photo out of hundreds ICbedukd for tnet\l$ion. Fun.ny tbuw is, they au want lbc boot puMished for diffeftnt talOU. For w~ the book - .. dlletooepboto-wtll provide .,... vU.dteation from a ¥Cry liiay. MCril lad lc:pJ situation. ~.£11ed.1bc bOot -with phOlo .. -,.,ould mean a cn 11 nghts victory . As forthe Oa s of'77. "Aell. the) just want the1r reunion books. Last Aucust. the groundwork was Wd an lrvtnc for a landmark civil riabts dcaSton when a Costa Mesa phot<JV&J>hY company - Wortlunaton s company -was sued for ttfusana to pubbsh the pbot<>Sr&pb of a py cou.pk an the Uru~'U'Slty High rcuruon book. Worthinaton said it .. '&S com- pany pot~ not to publiSh photo- paphs of sana1e-9C>. cou.ples. ~I. v.'bo wanted a photo inducXd walb his male lo'"U'. called ll dis- criJninabon. ThC COW1 C'-entuaJI decided ID favorofEnad.andORlaed Won!t-inatoo to publish ttie book with the pholo. Bo& Wonhiftaton lt)Pealed I.he inJu.nc:tion. and bis appeal has ) et to reach court. Reprcscntatl\ ~ of Worth1niton's anome~. Da\ld u~eltyn. sat<I the appeal hould n"ach the 4th District Coun of ~ppc.a} this summer. Mcanwhalc.. lhc book remains unpubhsbcd. "There's rcall) bttn nothma bappenina." said Mariam Lle--cUyn. ~tary to her hus- band. who could not be reached (or comment ... They (Wonhiniton'\) att not aoint to publi6h, and the money bas bttft returned. - Worthi~ has u:ntil JuM 13 to filt the appeal afttr rtteivina an u~ carliC'r this month. id ~ta. .\A emplo)'ICIC M "-'onhi1'Clon's.. who asked DOl to be Mkntififd.. fl!I••• -a&Olf'IOll/ A.2) UUMIONBOOK:FIGHT CONTINUES ••• ..... 1 cOafinllod IMt I.be book Md not been ~led. WonhiQll.00 couJd not be ~(or comment. The wtw:iilc thlna bcpn as a simple daa mnuoa at the Irvine Hilton Hotel. Enad. 27. reiUQOd froCn New Yoft Cit¥ to atlmd a I O.:.yt.au"unioo of his Untvcnity Hip Scbool sraduatlfl:J clua. Witb him was Eric Underwood. 28, whom EQtel was liviOJ with at the time. Bo\lt men we~ llVln& t<>sethtr while appearina in a productton of the musical .. la C• Au1 Foiles." EQltl had J)&td SIS for a portrait and ClOPY of 1 reunion book. .. We arrived and got a aood rtsJ)Onse from all rny friends, and then we went to stand in line for the picture, and they infonned me then that only a picture of myself could be an tht book," Enael said shortly after the sun was fried last September. The phot<>v-phcr, an employee of Worthm1ton s Portrait Photogra- phen of Costa Mesa. told EnJtl that it was compan}' pohcv not to include a uaduate's "fnend;' in the memory &ook. for the sake of consistency. Wives and husbands were included. Worthinaton said the couple had amvcd late to the reunion, and added that photographen unpklted their equipment to shoot the photos. The photographers told the men that only Engel's portrait would appear in the book. but also shot pictures of the men t<>sether as a courtesy Worthin1ton said company policy was the primary reason for the sin&)c panrait, but he said lattr that 1'c didn't want to make the reunion book· "a foNm for the P>'.. coi:nmunity." He bas also acknow~ that he docs not want to publish pbotOlf'lphs of py couples because he clocs not approve of the py lifestyle. Ensel and Underwood sued Wonh- inaton's on the besis that Wonh- inpon had violated the statc•s Unruh C1vd RiJhts Act1 which prohibits busmcsses from 01scnminatio':'I. on the basis of rle:le, color. llCl or rcli~1on. They retained high-profile 11Ct1v11t auomcy Gloria Alfred lo pursue their case. Allred, reached for comment Tues- day in New York City. called the issue "a iround-brealt1ng case." and vowed last year to .. leave Wonhinaton's with a memory of their own." In addition. reunion eo<h11r- women Valerie Smith and Beverly NclJOn filed dcdarations w~ the inclusion of the picture of EnFi and UO<kfwood. Last October. an Oranae County Superior Court jud&e Nied that Wonh1qton must eitbcr iachMSe the couple's photosnph or not publish the reunion book. But Wonbinston did not Jive up. and turned the charse around, sayin1 that bis civil riahts had been violated when tile judp denied him the ri&ht to edit the book as he tea fit. He said that his aix main competitors do not publish photoarapbs of sinaJe-scx couples. "That's my option in cditinJ be- cause the book I publish in edit1na is my best work, .. he said. "One of the reasons I aot my own business was so that lcould run it as I see fit." Life may have existed on Mars WASHINGTON (AP) -Ancient nven that once flowed across an Earthljlte Mars may have harbored pnm1t1ve forms of life tt:iat nourished briefly before the red planet turned bitterly cold and dry, SCJcnt1sts say. Steve Squyers. a planetary sc1cnt1st at Cornell Unive~it)'., said that most evidence now 1nd1catt1 that Mars and the Earth were very similar shortly after their formation some '4.5 billion years ago and that conditions that led to the formation of life on Earth may also have ClllStcd on Mars. Squyers was among th~ scientists d!scussi~ plane~ry ~rch at . a meeting Monday of the Amcncan Geophysical Unton. ln an 1ntervlt'W, be said the most likely place for find ma proof of Martian life is soil laid down billions of years ago when water 1s thou&}lt to have flowed freely across the planet. HOT PURSUIT POLICY ON TRIAL •.• From Al from the boys' deaths is scheduled to bqin today m Harbor Court in Newport Beach. Althou&h the amount sought by the families is not specified an the lawsuit, a cla1m filed against the city m 1985 requested S4 million m damqes. -we've been robbed of knowing what Roy would have been hlt.c as an aduh,-sa1d W1lhamson's sister. Mer- ntt Williamson, 26. ··The pursuu was handled very rccltlessly ... the speeds were wc11 out of hand ... Witnesses said dunng Valle's tnal that the speed of the van reached 80 mph durin& the chase. Costa Mesa officials were un- available for comment Tuesday, but police officials after the accident defended the officers -and policies -involved. bipt. Robert Green said after the crash that officers were only doing the JOb in chasinJ down Valle. "We're paid and hired to capture cnminals and that's what we were doang," Gr~n said ··we wert the only ones anvolved an this that didn't have a choice·· But the W1lhamsons· attorney. Bruce Schechter. has lashed out at the department's dec1s1on to pursue Valle so hotl> .. Car theft 1s not such a heinous cnme that the police should be chasing someone at speeds an excess of 80 mph through rcs1dent1al streets.'' the attorney said. "He wasn •t a dangerous felon or k11ler. He was a guy who stole a car." Merritt Williamson said more than money she hopes the trial will bnng about a chanae in the city's pursuit policy. which she sa~ remains un- changed since the aoodcnt. But win or lose, the trial promises to be painful. she said. "It's 1oin1 to be very emotional. It's gom& to make us reHve the detai Is of the accident," Williamson said. She said her memory of her brother has not faded si nee 1985. "There's picture over my parents' fireplace of the three kids in our family that we pve our mom for Mothers' Day a couple ofycan before it happened. At first, it hurt to look at it. but now it's pleasant to look at and remember," she said. -1 think of him most down at the beach surfing. That was has pnde and joy. He loved it." ST ATE POST GOES TO IRVINE GIRL ••• From Al and from the first day she doubted she would ever be chosen from the 200 applications filed stateWlde. The first step was an essa> that asked what each applicant could offer the board. Martanez said she stressed her background. whale poanttng 10 the d1ve~1t} at Saddlebaclt High School that v.ould give her broad 1ns1iht to the needs and attitudes of students across the st.1 te ··r definitely hopt" 10 give represen- tat1on to a wide vanet> of students because m y school has someone from every baclc,grownd and every soc1- econom1c group." she saJd. A.f\er the essavs. the number of applicants was reduced 10 12 From there. the students ga"e a speech to Board of Educatton officials 1n San Francisco. That narrowed the fi nahsts to SI\ Funher 1nten 1e"'s ~1th board of- ficials narrowed the hst 10 three. and those students traveled to Sacramen- to for 1nterv1ews with members of the go vernor's staff. which made the final recommendation 10 Gov. Gcorae DeukmeJian. she said If her nomination 1s confirmed by the Senate. Maninez will rcpla<:c Susan Owens of Los Altos, whose term will expire in August. She wdl have a full vote on the board and Wlll receive SI 00 a day during meetinis plus expenses. officaals said. Manmcz said even thou&}\ she mack it through the process. she still 1so't sure uactly what her duties on the board will be. "I don't know exactly wh.at kind of issues ~ ioing to come up, but I'm aoina to tackle them one at a tJme." NOISE SETTLEMENT TALKS FAIL ••• Jl'rom A l p1'ovided for sound m onitonna. fines of up to $9.000 for v1olauons of county noise standards. and the establishment of a SI 00.000 fund which residents could use to soundproof their homes Richard Spa,, attorney for the residents· group. Concerned C111zens o f Costa Mesa. refused to back the proposal. however. unless 11 con- tained a prov1s1on that would force the amphitheater's management to reduce sound volumes whenever violations occurred. ··They wanted to pay a fine when- ever there was a violation," said Spill. ··what we wanted was sound con- trols. Without that. what good is a settlement?" Neil Papiano. attorney for Ned West Inc .• which operates the arena, accused Spix of st.and in& in the way of MANY BUSES UNSAFE ••. From Al flttt, Parsons said. And mod1fy1ng some of the bu~ would be "1mposs- 1 ble.'. he added Su11, Assemblyman Richard K.au. D-Van Nuys, has been prcss1ni for l~slation that would provide SIOO million from an 011 company penalty fund to replace one third of the state's older school bu~ Katz. chairman of the Assembly Transportation Committee. said about 8.000 public school buses rn California face the same fire danger as the church bus m Kentuc ky. wtth chassis built before 1977. ··we·rc playing Wlth a time bomb:· sa1d Katz. "The question 1s not if some kid will die on the road but when. and the legislature has not do ne all it can.~ a workable solution. "He doesn't want to aettlc." said Papiano. "Everyone's qiud to this: Ned West, the city of Costa Mesa. and the Oranse County Fair Board. Everyone ellcept Spix.. .. Costa Mesa City Attorney Tom Wood said. however, that the City Council had not given final approval to the proposed settlement. "The council thouiht it had some merit and agreed to circulate it. but n's not entirely accurate to say they'd a,rced." said Wood. A representative of Concerned C1t1zens also said the proposed settle- ment was unacceptable. "That $9.000 fine would just be a slap on 'he wnst," said Russ Mi11ar, one of the residents. .. We'd never accJ:pt such an avccmcnt without relief from noise. Without that. we're nowhere. That's the main issue." The suit will be heard by Superior Court Judie Richard J. Beacom bc&innina May 31. NewportleaderVinJorgensen, 74 Vin Joricntcn. 1 lons·time pillar of the Newport Beach community. died Monday evenina at Hoq Memonal Hospital. He was 7 ... JOC)Cnten was active in numerous loca.1 business. charity and commum- ty orpnizations. The 1<>n of a Danish miner. JorJenten was born in San Pedro and moved 10 Newpon Beach shortly aftcT reiirina from the Manne Corps as a colonel followin1 World War ll. He then opened Balboa Marine llMN Off'tC• :a».._911tv ll c:o--C-' ._..._ .. ,.C-..._ CA~ Hardwa~ and another store in San Pedro. Joraenscn served JS ycan on the board of d1rectofl of Hoq Memorial Hospital and was a former chairman. He was also on the board of dittcton of the Oranse County Performlna Arts Center and pest .,..mdcn1 of the Rotary Oub of Newport-Balboa. He was named Man of the Year for 1969 by the Ncwpon HattK>r Chamber of Commen:lC. He alto served as an cider at SL Andrew's Presbyterian Oiu~h and is a pest president of the chamber's Com- modore's Oub. In 9dd1uon to his community act1V1ties. Jo,.rnscn enjoyed sailina. photopaphyand woodwork. Jo~ ts survived by hi1 wife. Nora; lhn:ie dausbiaa. Ano, Kalh~n and Mary: and ooc ton. 0.vid Paul. Plans for memorial Knices have not been announced. o:i.::- ~ ..... tol1-~7· -.. _... .. 1 •))1 ~,-0r,..eo.i~~ .. JU11tcaU 642-8088 laO••tl llll ..... ,,.....,. .,. . -,_,.. --.,, JOp•m..-.1,,. ..... ,.,.., ... ........ ............. ,,... ....... ....,_ .-otilll -., ..,..,_ ,.... .... _, .......... -..iA ....... ,,,,. ...... ....,........, ,., ... ~,.. ...... , .... ...... 10a• .,..,.._, .. ......... C111 ct non Tlf1,eirn11 U.S. T emps " n . .. 71 47 ti IO 11 .. 4t 41 1t 47 12 71 ·~ ft n 11 11 13 .. •i .. a7 7t 51 12 .. 14 Ill IO I) ,, 4t 0 • 12 47 .. 7& 74 52 •1 47 73 M 1t M 13 60 .. 43 '2 '° n S2 7t SI 11 • .. 3' $7 .. t2 IO ., 43 ff • .. 4t 17 '7 ., 51 15 71 to M IO 12 Calif. Temps .......... - Surf For ecaet .o• u u , .. TRADE DEFICIT DECLINES SHARPLY ..• From Al improving as our cconom> continues to grow." Reagan said has veto message lo Congress on the 1,000-page ball ··is currently under rtview" and he expects to issue It .. within a couple of days." "But today's news emphasizes what we have been saying all along. that this is not the time to be imposing rcstncttons on trade or reducing incentives for free open markets or closing JOb opponunmes.'' the presi- dent sa1d. "We want more jobs. not less." ''I'm ready to roll up my sleeves and go to work with the Conarcss once again an craftan& a trade ball t~at wi11 contmue this trend of more JOb creation and greater economic growth," Reagan said. Analysts said some anvcstors arc worried that the export boom will spark another round of inflation an the United States as factones, many alread> operatina at peak capacity, beltn to ra1st pnccs. fndced. the Federal Reserve Board said an another economic report Tuesday that American industry op- erated at an eight-year high of 82. 7 percent of capacity in l\pril, a 0.3 pen::entaJe point rise from March. The high operating rate was solid evidence of the boom in export sa&es, economists said, but they cautioned that the country is approaching a danger zone when ti&ht labor markets begin pushing prices hi&}ler. Un- employment fell to a 14-ycar low of 5.4 percent last month. "You would have to read the trade number as evidence supportinJ. the view that wages and pnces Wlll be firmang up and there wilJ be funher 1nflat1onary pressures later this year.·· said Jerry Jasinowili. chief cconom- 1st of the National Association of Manufacturers. Some analysts said the dramatic improvement in the trade deficit made It all but certain that Conpess would not be able to come up with the two-thirds ~oritics in each house to override the veto. "I thmlt trade 1s now a dead issue polit1ca1ly," said AJlen Sinai, chief economist of the Boston Co. He said the new report showed that the + • f admtn1strat1on's stratcg)' of dnvmg the dollar lm~er back in 1985 had proven successful. although 11 had taken much longer than expected But House Spt"aker Jim Wright. 0- Texas. said the one-month trade improvement 1n March dad not d1m1n1sh the netd for the trade bill on the president's desk. ··wath all these monthl} lluctua- 11on. the trade ddic11 I!> fi ve ttmes as high as it ~as "hen President Reagan came into office and this 1s in- tolerable.'. he said. ·'There were limes last year too when the monthly trade deficit fell and the adm1n1s1ra11on was quick to trumpet this as e' 1dence that the trade problem had gone away," Wnght added. Commerce Secretar) C Wilham Vent) said the repon showed that a ··dec1s1vc improvement 1n the trade balance i" nov. under way ·· He noted that the deficit for the firsl three months of the )Car was 20 percent belov. the high-point for the deficit from Jul~ through September 1987. For 1 he first quarter of 1988. the trade ddicn totaled $36 bilhon. which would translate into an annual shortfall ofS 144 billion. Last year. the merchandise trade deficit hrt a record S 171 .2 b1l11on. Tltat figure is expected to decline by about $20 billion this year. ··Export growth 1s going 10 re main quite strong and will be the major 1nOuence on the economy in 1988," said JeanettcGarcny, scniorcconom- 1st at the Bank of Amenca. She pre-dieted U.S. exports wo uld rise by 14 percent this year. In March. exports rose by $5.4 billion over the February level. Salt1 of Amcncan-manufactured products soared by 23.3 percent. reflecting strong demand for machinery. com- pute r s. aircraft and telc- commun1ca11ons equipment. Farm sales were up as we11 . clamb- ang 5.5 percent to $3.3 billion tn March In add111on . S600 million of the export 1 ncrease reflected sales of gold bullion to Ta1v.an. which has come under hca') pressure to reduce its large trade surplus with the United States The SI 3 balhon nse 1n imports to S 1R 72 billion reflected a small 0.8 percent increase tn imports of manu- fac tu red goods. including passenger car\. ~h1ch rose :!.8 percent to $3.98 b1llton Thi-; gain was offset by a I 5.2 pt"rcent drop 1n oil imports. They fe11 to a daily rate of 6. 7 milhon barrels at a price of S I 5. 70 per barrel. down from imports o f 8 million barrels in February at a pnce of SI 6.42 per barrel. FUTURE DIM ••• From Al the way of Mrs. Stevens' apphcataon to tell fortunes m Fountain Valley are unconstatuttonal." Los Angeles at- tome) Barry Fisher said an a letter to city officials. '"The city's practice raises more scnous questions of d1scnminat1on ... Fisher as an ellpt"rt in const1tut1onal law as they relate to fortunetelling. He represented the soothsayers who won a landmark 1985 state Supreme Court decision &ivin& fortunrtellen First Amendment rights and mak1n1 bans on such businesses allegal. After Tuesday'$ dec1s1on. Brown said the council was adv11Cd by City Attorne\ Allan Bums that the C-2 hm1tat1on was within the law She added. however. that the council did not impose cond1t1onal-usc mlric- t1ons on fortunetellers because that might show d1scnm1nat1on. which would be 1llepl. Stevens would not say Tuesday whether he planned to file suit qainst the city. but sa1d his wife's effort to become the city's first soothsayer has taken more ume. effon -and money -than he bar&incd for. ·Td thou,ht they'd approve 1t. We did everything they asked." Stevens said. "It's Just a rqular business ... \