HomeMy WebLinkAbout1989-03-16 - Orange Coast Pilotes
E TERTAI ME T/A6
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THEORANGECOAST . , . '
says
It bombed
Vian In SD
dy Co
won't wait mark
for lrvlne remove
council produce
COA T/ 3 8 INESS/A7
25CENTS
TH R D Y .; t\1A RCll 16, l 9R91
Swi~dling case clouds d_ouble killings
8V JANCr ZJMMlltMAN o1 ..............
Sevcnl dozen investor' na-
tionWJde alletedly were swindled out
of S 1 million by a NcwPort Beach
coin and precious metals dealet who
remained in critical condition
Wedonday after he and two others
were fired upon in an apparent
Initiative • attacks
Irvine's
rlght$1aw
ey1-.YADAMS or .. ..._,......,
Armed with almost 7,000 signa-
tures. the lrvint Values Coalition
announced Wednesday it bas filed an
initiative with the Clty clerk that
would overturn what the aroup
considers "specaal pnvtleaes" bcina
~led bomotuuals in lrvioe.
'fbe initiative, wtuch the lfOUJ!
wants ~ on next November s
tiellOC would delete all references to sexual orieotatfoo 1n the ltvtne
bum.an riJhts ordinance and requ1re
that . any subsequenl ordinances pert.aanina to sexual oneoaation be
a~ved by popular vote.
'· Mayor AaJ'ln and the council
have taken 1t upon themselves to
cstabhsh special pnvilqcs for a aroue of people based on their behavior,·
said Scott Peotter, cha1rman of the
coaliuon.
· While neither he nor Eleano~ Moore, the coalition's vice-<:hair,
oould name any special privile&n
Jiven to homosexuals by the July
1988 ordinance, they a11ued that the iDClusion of pys p ovides them with
an "elevated s&atus." Peolter and Moore araucd that to
hst homosexuals an the human riahts
orcbnance &JVCS them a minonty
status, hence setUnl 1 precedent for the 1)9SSib1hty of affinmt1ve action
laws favonna pys. Ma}or Lam Alfan denied lb.at
contention. "What these JUys are aJI
about 11 to estabhsh a license to ditcnminate an the city oflrv1ne." he
said. • AaJ:an said 10C1e1y has come a Iona :C:l in the area of human nahts.. ins: .. We doo't want to 10 back to
a time when personal prtjud1ces
dictated where a person could hve or wort ··
cxec&1Uon-style attack., offic1als said.
William D. Kint. 36, remained
under guard it Foun&ain Valley
Rqional Hospital. where be was
taken after Tuesday ni&)lt's shootina at his business, Newport Coin Ex-
chaqe. He was shot numerous times
in the head and chest, police said
KiUcd in the attack was K.ina's ;t..fe.
Renee Ratoon Kin&. 38, of the Onoac
Unexpected guest
Ill Mercede•·••n• 11U In th• debrl1-11rewn dlnlne room
of an Irvine tioftt• Wetllne•·
· da'J .tier ttl4i driver accNen·
tally bac1re4 tier car dlroUttl
ttl4t_ wall. l'arvl1tl Mlrl·
~-ne~1 toN polk• lfl•
mlxecf up th• foot ~·· • sh• badced out of tier drtve-
wq on· ..... Point. "nl• aw
raced bKlcwardt ""'°"8tl
th• wall and Into · Kathi
Sldarlllr1 tlolw• Mfor• c ..... Int to rest. Tow triiili ilitYer
Many llradberry flMlowJ In·
spects the Mercetlles • tie C:::-" to puM ti out of th• f Noon•w•~ln
the ernoon accklent.
~.._,__., ..... ._
Park Acres an:a of Orange, and
customer Oyde Oaus, 45. of Irvine,
Newport BCach Police spokesman
Bob Oakley sa1d.
Officials declined to elaborate on possible motive$ for the attack.
Oakley said it may have been rob-
bery, but invt1tiptors as of Wed.ncs-
day n1aht had not dctemuned
whether aoythina was missina from
C'O\IH,IOH\ l'\\IHO'\lll'\I
the shop at 4533 MacArthur Blvd.
But William Krna apparently had made enemies m a boiler room
operation he conducted out of
another business he owne<!t Precious
Metals Accumulation \.Orp., or
Prcmaco. That operation was under invC$ttption by the Newport Beach
Police Department. U.S. Postal In-
spectors Office and the state attorney
general, Deputy Attorney General
Jerry Smilowitz said. The attorney general's office fittd
civil action against Kina last Septem-
ber. In the complaint, officials ac-
cused King of disappcarina with
precious metals and money from
investors he enticed during a
financial investment pqram on
national televis1on.
• The company's assets were frozen.
The two sides~. rcadyina to returp to court to discuss a report by a ~iver appointed to locate the aaets
of Prcmaco and how much money
was left to pay the alleacd victims of
the scam, which Smilowitz said wu
nil.
.. The money is Aone. It appeared
,...._,..KIWNGS/AJJ
Voss relinquiSfles
mayoral post, will
remain on council
fy JOYCE IOOLOVJCH
Of .. O.,...,.... ......
Fountain Valley Mayor Fred Vo
rclinqu1sbed his mayoral po&t -but nothtscounciJ~t-on Wednesday,
wbilc dccrv1ng what he called self-ri~teous 0ommu.nity opinion and
unfair meda coverqe of his arrest in
January for sohcilins-.x-«t •Santa
• Ana street. ''I dO not expect th1 action will
prop1t1ate the more ri&btcous amona
us, but 1 am not d0tna it for lbem. Voss sa1d at a press confermcc at Ctt~
Hall. ··1amdoins11 bccauK I believe 1t as
in the best interest of my fnends.
fellow council membcn and the aty
of FounlAin Valley."
Voss said he did not plan to rcure
from city poht1cs or the cou.nal.
however.
_!') cannot bdJevc the lnlJonty of
the council. Burnett said the aroup
has pined momentum since then because of publicity from the meet·
i'\oss,. S2).,_~ one of 16 men
ltTHted by ~ta Ana police Jan. 30
during 1 sweep on pro&\ituta and
their customen &Jona Harbor
Boulevard. Police said V Oii pulled
s Cifll> lbe curb and ~ an
undcrcova-poHcewoman 120 in ex-
chanac for a sexual 11CL
Oft Feb. 23. Voss emered a DO
()OllteSt ~ aftd 94$ OC'deled '° pay S76<Hn fines, penalty ~ts
Fr~dVoss people 1n thu community are so
unchJllrit.ablc &nd so unforJJ v•na that
they would not balance 20 )tars of ;:;:;;::;;;;;::;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;
honorable service apin.st one mis-
take and would not allow me to complete my present term on the
council," Vo told reporters.
A FUP of rcs1dcnu who asked for
Voss s rcsia.nation at a March 9 council mccuna were not content
with Voss's resa.a.nauon as mayor.
bOwtVC'T.
.. This 1s not enoulh." said Beverly
Burnett. one of the rcstdents. "We told all the council members that 1s
not an acccp&ablc aJtcmallvc. We
want ham to resign from the council
"H~ has turned thmparound so we
art the mal1oous ones.." she said. .. We arc not the m1nonty tryin& to
punish the man. ... This 1s JU.St a
matterofpnnaple. Our committee 1s
mcctJng Sunda) to dcodc what we
will do next"
The IJ"OUP had th.rcatend at the
council mccuna to launch a rccall
ap1nst Voss 1fhe did not rcs1&0 from
and resutuuon and serve three ycan unsupervlScd probeU.on. . .. One of the maJor rcuons I did not
dispute the vemon of the incident
leaked to the press and I entered a plea
of nolo CODlCndcrc WIS to eut an end
to the &larc. of publicity, . be said.
"HOW'CVCT, It lS now obYlOUS that
some eoeplc arc not sausfied and the
publicity 1$ conllDUJQI."
Voss admitted he made a mistake,
but said be was sufficiently ~asbc:d.
··1 have paid approA1maiely Sl ,000 1n court and attorney fees. .. be aid.
.. My name and~ have been
prominently and frequently di>
played LD the media. The oamaofthe
other people &nested tbat same
t venina never a~red l!' the prel;I.
"I made a mtstake. I ~t the con~uenc:es upon m~lf and 1
apolC¥azc to the people of Fountain
I"--,.. VOSS/ AZI •·rm not denyina that tcxual dis.-
mm1.natioo exists ... somewhere,"
Moore wd ... I JUSt don't ttunk that it
needs to be protected apinst. lrvi.ne
is supposed to be a model commun1ty
for non-di nm1nat1on. ••
Poet1ef said membcn of the coali·
uon were not opposed to human rilhts. He said the aroup only wished
Prices, pickleweed at stake in wetlands Investigator
wins lawsuit
against Gates t0 remove the reference to 1uuaJ R Louann Mumy s:a)'s that the land. oricntauon from the ordinance be-ly ROKllT IARKE inland of the htJhway and utend1na
came bcclute it .et a ~rous °' .. ~ .... .,.. from Beach Boulevard to the nta
pncednt by ddinina a _m1non.ty Gary Oorinan thanks that the Ana River, ~ be sa\ed because
PWP. by thC behavioral cboeocs of its v.-etlands arc disawcanna.. the oz9ne it's a salt manb and an import.ant
manben. . ~)'~ is cktcrioralln& 1¢ man~nd ne1tma place for the nldanacrcd Tbt ordinance ••l)t0b1b1ts da,.. 1sn t dOlf'I a very aoOd, JOb of 1ak1na Beldin& Sava.nnah 5PUT'QW. crimina~ on the baas of race. care of the planet. Mutta)' lS amona a · number of
color. rd1ai0ft, nat~ OOCJft, te" • Huntinaaon Beach ofl'kial can do envtroomen&aUsts -.ho last month
•· tPUal onenia~. ~nta! tbritbiuorec!ifl'e10mcoftbedamaet dedicated a 17-acre wetlands oas1_sin
•&u1. ·~ bil'decap1 ~ 1e1u• a · 12S acrn &Jona thcareaneartbcpropcrty1nqunt1on. De ... ronDed lala Plcifac co.. Hieh•-a) for a wetland · ··~mate Bcld.ina Savanna!' q,a.r-A.-after I 017 Comcil medias tnef'VC be ~lievcs. row "°" ever) mom1na 10 the
pteklc~ttd." she said "There arc
thrtt out the~. and I a\sume that at
least one 1~ a kmalc that'~ anterosted
1nh1m ··
Huntanaton ~ch City Attorney
Gatl Hutton. thouah. has sent a kpl wam1na to offic1afs that chill hopes
of the conscl"\'at1oni ts. he believes
the city ~ouk! be exposed to a
mulum11hon4ollar la'!'su1t 1f 1t
makes the area a "A'Ctlands and deprives lando\\>ncn of the naht to
dcvel p the propcrt).
.\nd Roy 8. Woolsey. a Newport
Beach attome_y who retl)f'CKnts
Daisy Thorpe Ptca~lh, ': Waie land·
owner said the property 1s above sea
le' cl. Ls wet only a few da)'S after 11
rains and1snotaW'Ctlands.
He also claims that two recent
landmark uprcme Cowt dcc1 1ons
ma.kc 1t clear that 1f local aovcm·
menu ~\.ent owncn from dc"clop-
m& their land. thc)"\.e tot to pay forat
The Hununaton Beach C11' oun-
C"-... '" WIT\ANDS/ All
'• dire &ht ..._ ,.... ontinncc •
.. dilcUllCdmapilil_~fOnun. .-......... .-............. -.. ....... .-. ............................ ~ ............................. ..
•4io.1 ....,°' ........ . OCJ Cowil ........ -..... dlil
-•-liwei-.'9P!llMMlldk :=: • .,, ... ....._, MoOft .... Waiter shot to death near· NB restaurant
::1··~d Jldl1d to,........ .... ow ..... .,.w.a ........... ~== :rr.2
Where M llvtd anCl VIOl'ted •
Two male IUIPU'l• m • Toyota Pict• ate Mtn& IOUtht ror the death of ac ~7~~-o1d man. •ho lived on Lido Patt ··Drive aDd wortcd a
..._ • Ddiutc)'1 rauurant on thf
-lllWt His nAfM wu -.nhhek1
ptnd1n1 nouficatron of ttlativc
"We don't hi\( a motive," said
Nrweort 8e h Poli~ pokes.man
BobOakky.
The I a m. hootina cam( 1bou1
K"en hOun after two ~ wcrt
hot to dtath 1nd • third m1ic:alt)
GOOD MORNING
aojurcd durina an appartnt armed
robbery ofa coin and~· metal
dc:alct'lhip on MKAnhur BoUlevard
near John Wa)'M Airpc:>n.
Oak1cy said the inricleftts were not
connected end that 1t was merely
,,.._-SHOOTING/ All
l'\Mc notlta ............ .
SpiOfb, •••••••••••• , •••••••••••••.••. 11 ii.4 N_1LIM:ltlgl................. ......... M
WW.,.., ....................... ,.., ..... Al
hlghschoo
lty •AN SMITHSOH school is a _pouibility. But he added ~,... c:11n • '1 • • that such an action wu unlikely
The Hunti~on Beac:ti Union because all of the district hjp schools Hi&h Scbool nistrict 8oird of have more than 2,000 students,
Trusteea approved a $2. S million cut .. which as considered a laflC number
in its ptOP."am and terv1ca that for a ht&h school. ..
would eliminate more than 26 pos-Other facton 1ffcct1~ ihe distnct ition& budiet included a $700,000 increase
• • .a~ , ......... K :..a in employee frin,e benefits. a doubl-SupenntcnUC'nt.A..e>', empcrsaiu 1ng of insurance costs and a lower-
the acuon wu ll'!J&C~ by ~ la~ than..expectcd cost of living ldjust-
ffiln ~ed dechnnn t~st~Cl.' "mtnt from lfie 51.atc Xemper saiC:i
average daJly attendan~. a Sl.ltlStlC The c:uu come a' year after ooard
the state u~s ~o detemune funding adopted a $10 million bud&et reduc-
for school dastncts. . . tion that district officials hoped
Enrollment bas dec:hned in the would keep the bu•t balanced for
district by .~bo~t I,~ students in the the next five years.
las! year, w~ach ts .~c largest d~p The cuts Will affect public safety we ve ex~nenccd. Kemper said programs, vocational and speaaJ T~esday night. Enrollment ha.s de-education prOJl"lmS and c:lencal and
chned by almost 8,000 students an the technical services.
last I 0 years, he added. Kem per said many of the cu ts ~re
The school district receives $3,217 administrative and would not atreet
per student from the state. the classroom but he added that
Kemper said if the enrollment education would be affected by some
trend continues, closure of a high · prOIJ'lm reductions.
KILLINGS
From Al
(King) took money· to keep it g_oing,"
he said. '"This was a business m
serious trouble with lots of complain-
ing investors ...
Smilowitz, who met King during court hearings, described him as a
pleasant, charming man who was an
elder in his chureh and well·res~ed
in the Community. --
In June. Newport Beach Police and
postal inspectors arrested King on
suspicion of operating as an un-
rcgJstcred telephone seller, a felon y. Sm1lowitz said.
He was arrested, along with eight of
his telemarketing brokers, after doz-ens of investors complained they
were unable to liquidate their con-
tracts with the company.
The investigation is con_tinuing,
GATES
From Al
He was not awarded punitive damag-
es. .
Oakley said. Other state and federal
charges, against King, incJudina mail
and wire fraud , are pending.
Meanwhile. detectives continued
to search for a motive to the attack.
The victims were found by officers
responding to a 911 emergency call
and a sile.nt alarm at the higlMecurity store just south of John Wayne
Airport.
Renee King \\f3S found behind the
counter an 'Oilts• ~Y was an the lobby area·ofthe smaJbusiness. There were numerous witnesses to
the shooting, Oakley said, but their
statements about what happened
were unclear. There appeared to be at
least two and maybe three suspects.
he said earlier.
A rifle, which apparently belonged
to William King. was found on tbe
floor near the store's entrance. But
police said they didn't know whether
~parently did not believe Mr.
Guillory's aJlegations of political
motivations for his criminal pros~
ccution and totally denied him the punative damages he asked for,"
Gate$ said.
KemJ)er •lso said furidint reduc-
tion• b apecial educalion1 • which
tenet the handicapped. wou10 affect
adminiluauon. aot 1nS1ruction.
The distnct will save ~tional
funds th~ restruc:turifta~sc:hedules and pr:opams and by not
replaeina retinna or ~ina in· structon, Kemper iaid.
Ahbou&h the board h~rd strona
statements from cla ified 11t.1.ff.
parents. students and teachers oppos.-
ina various pans of the bud&et·
cutting plan, it unanimously ap-
proved the budget 'reduction.
"I paarantce ¥OU that you cannot
keep the education aevcr up if you continue &o cut the support staff," said Joan Fon, the f'Clional politic.al
activist for the California School
Employees Assoc:iati<>Q:_ •
Fort also promised thaf'grievanccs
would be filed.
Fort and others argued that the staff cuts would increase work loads
the v'ictims exchanged aunfire with
their attackers.. who used a small-
caliber weapon.
Officials said they didn't know .whether the attack was related to the
investment scam.
Prcmaco, founded in 1983. dealt in
contracts for precious metals such as
platinum, gold and silver.
Deputy Atto~ne y General
imilowitz said King was involl:'.ed JJl
a bogus bank financing scheme and a
precious metals storage scam.
He allegedl y enticed investors to
send 20 percent of a purchase price of
metals and a comm ission into
Premaco. Jn tum, King referred them
toa specialty bank that issued loans in
exchange for precious metals posted
as colfateral. Smilowitz said. He
allegedly kept the mone) sent in for
the metals. he said. King also was accused of stealing
and caute sotM aeachtta to be taclt-ana outsack lbeir areu of com-
pc-tcatt. They llid education would
tuft'tt. #
But the trustttS said avoidana the
budiet reduction was imposs1ble.
"Onleu we havt a tarae annwc of
1tudent1; t0me temporary kaehen
will sampJ¥ not be bcrc an the fall.''
board President Jerry Sullivan said.
Board member Bonnie Castrey
said the cuts would not have been n~ifSenateBill 208~aimedat
aiding districts with dec:linina enrol-
lment, had not been vetoed.
Castrey placed part of the blame for
the budect cut of the community's
fatlure to lobby for the bill•1 ..-ae
throuab letter wn11na and said that If the bill had been 11~. the d11trict
would have· received about $3
million.
"It's my fcelina that we would have:
pined more than any other district in
the state .. if the bilJ had passed, said
(.frecious metals he offered to store
f rce for investors who had paid off
their loans to the bank.
"There were many investors who
lost money on this." he said ... It was a
papercompany. lt'ssimpl y usinl new
money to pay off old investors.•
lfsuchaschemecan be kept uplon,g
enough. Sm1lowitz said, a busi -
nessman could catch up on debts. The
dcpu!l said he believes King__tricd to
Ioele antolow prccfOu'SmetilS pnces by investing in futures. but the
market took a downturn and he
miscalculated.
The complaint further alleged that
King stoic money people sent to him
to buy coins.
Accordmg to documents an Harbor
Municipal Court, King's drivers
license was suspended last August
afterlle pleaded no contest to drun\-
en drivina.
attorneys fees.
Gates said the Jury's dec1s1on did
not makcsensc and set a dangerous
precedent.
Thejury found no liability on the
part of Anaheim Police Chief Jimmy
Kennedy, police Investigator Gordon
Blair or the city of Anaheim. whose
attorney's office handled the cnminat
charges against GuiUory.
Guillory said he was prosecuted on
false charges after be went to work for
George Wright. who challenged
Gates for the sheriff-coroner's post.
His attorney, Eric Dobbeneen.
who also represented Orange County,
said the lack of punitive damages
indicated the jury rejected a lot of the
case relating to a vendetta
"Basically. they found apinst the
sheriff and the county in their official
duties," he said. Gates said he will appeal the
decision.
"My major concern about the
verdict is the threat it poses to
effective law enforcement," Gates
said. ''If the verdict is allowed to
stand. it means that any law enforce-
ment officials wilJ be in !eopardy in
l investipting or prosccuttng a vocal
crttic7 because if that individual as not
convicted for any reason. be can tum
around and sue the law enforcement
official."
A Judge threw out three couQts
before th~ tnal got uhder way and
found Guillory innocent of six others,
Gu\llory said. Both side$ claimed v1crory after the
verdict was read following the fi ve-
week tnal.
"I am gratified that the JUI)
WETLANDS
From A l
c1l, working with the Coastal Com-
mission, set machinery in motion in
1986 to zone the property for coastal
conservation, a designation that
would prohibit construction and
ensure wetlands.
But the Planning Commission
backed away from 1mplemcntinJ the
zoning last month after receiving
Hutton's legal warning.
Planning Commissioner Roger
Slates said he supports development
because he's 1n fa vor of people. not
birds.
His colleague, Barry Williams. said
SHOOTING
Guillory's attorney, Meir West-
rcich, said the jury shows that Gates
"is not above the law. I think he was held accountable."
Guillory said he had asked for
S 123.000 as lost wages arising~ ()Ut of
the prosecution .Jtnd $21 ,500 for
) Sttertff •rad Gn"
he doesn't mind what ioes on the · "You tell anl biol0J1st in the P.roperty as lonsas the owner receives country that they re standing on a flat,
'fair value" pric.c. open arta and they can see the Pacific
City Councilman Peter Green ap-Ocean. and they are surrounded by
pealed the Plannfo1 Commission pickleweed and salt grass, and they'll
action and the matter will be dumped tell you thcfre standing in a coastal
in the laps of the City Council on salt marsh,· she said.
Monday. Murray. a professor at the Harbor·
And environmentaJ1sts. who hope UCLA Medical Center, said she did
to pack City Council chambers with her doctorate on salt marsh organiza·
about SOO supporters. are on a tions. "I think I know a little bitabout
collision course with pro-develop-wetlands."
ment forces. And Esther Burkett. a wildlife
Murray. who's spotted the lone biologist for the Calffomia ~part
Belding Savannah spa rrow whistling mcntoffish & Game. said the land 1s
in the pickJewced, claims that people a wetlands, both historically and at
who say the area isn't a wetlands don't the present time.
know what they're talking about. She sajd the department has urged
None of the Jurors would comment
on the verdict. Deliberations began
Frida)'..
Guillory has also sued Gates for
denyi ng him a license to carry a
concealed weapon. There is not trial
date as yet but 1t ma) began in the fall ,
Guillory said. .
city officials in a letter to zone the
property as wetlands.
They're not rcqu1red to. but it
would be in their best interest to do so
because any construction plans
would have to go through en-
vironmental heari ngs from several
agencies. she said
Burkett also noted that 1bout 95
perc~nt of coa tal wetlands has disap-
peared in the swte.
Gorman, the founder and first
president of the Friend of the
Huntington Wetlands, $lid that the
value of wetlands is mcrcasina tx--
cau~ they're becoming so scarce. He
says that the port of t..On1 Beach and
Los Angeles could be a source for
money to buy the land because the
ports have to m1up1e eitpan ion of
The spokesman said the waiter had harbors. The 011Jforn1a Conttrvancy
worked at the restaurant for a little 1150 could a 1st in bankrolhna the
ltftOft, The truateel did not lpptO~t a buclllel-cunina pr_oposal to con-
lolidatc the dismet dec:ilQll With
atnaal tlCCiion1, pc>Mibly re.n,. the
tltetion would become piaru11n,
Kemper 111d. . The consolidation.
•hidl .,. one opuon con~i'ed.
would hive saved the district
$70,000.
Se\ictal people from 1he audience al.So spoke in support of: Huntinaton
&ach Htgh School's Choral Musi
Dcpanmellt, arguina that thC' non-
renewal of temporary music teachers'
one-~r contracts would harm the
muaac prosram.
"If the ans are taken away from u ,
what's left for those of us who want LO
make the ans a profession," said
Kryst.al Thoma . a student attending
Hurttinaton Bcach High School.
Temporary teachers. who sign con-tracts on a year-to-year bu1s, arc
~ia.lly nu~ .. mUSK'
s&nlCUOa rola. Mid DoU1. : Dftlideat-dtcl ol. · thr ·-l>illr
~ucaton Admirustnuon. · Bec:au~ Of the~ rcQuatt to
pay 1~ atttnuoa to mwiic in-• 1trucuon. bOerd rnembn'Cbariaaync + &Ohman called for 1 review proctt.J
that would avoid cumna from ~
vicu or procram1 lhat lhc boird t\a'd I
priontiz.Cd. such as the ans. Kemper spttulated that the tnrol·
lment drop was relaltd to k>w Aftlk> t
birth rates and cc:onom1c f1c1ors. I
New f1m1licsarc unable to move into i
the coastal area because of real estate'
\ alut , he said.
He added that older parenu wnh •
empty nests arc unwilhna to move
out of large housn into smaUcr on"
because or the larac property tu 1
increase that often occur$. . I
Kemper also $aid the board eitpeclS.J
a ~tabiltzauon or reversal of the 1•
dcc:ltnana enrollment trend 1n the
1992-93 sdiool y<ar. I
............ ~'"......, ''•d Vo11 fr'911tt wfttl fellow Pourtuln Va lley City Council
members deorge Scott •nd Laur•nn Coolc.
VOSS
From A 1 ,
Valley fbr any embarrassmmt I may
have caused. but I behc"e l ha"c: been
puni hed," he said
Voss \aid fellow co uncil member' dad not ask him 10 resign as ma)or
but several said afterward lhey sup-
ported Voss' decision.
"While I feel m my heart that with
Fred steppana down as ma)or wall
remove the focu~ from him and allow
this council to concentrate on the task
wc were elected to accomplish I will
not sit in Judament of an)one.
e pccaall) f red. whose remorse 1
already &rtatcr than hrs m1!od~ ' Councilman Jim Pctrikin ~1d.
.. fftflc cmutrs of Fountain Valley
choose to recall Fred Vos , I will then
rMpect the will of the people," he said
Councilman Grorac Scott said he'
re pccted "hi~ fnend·s dec1S1on lClj
stcP. down ."
· Fred made a mistake. but who am
I to Judge. I am only a man." he said
"I wall 'honor whate"er dcc:1 ion he
makes "
The counci l 1s c\pected to elect
Mayor pro tern u urann C'ook H
ma)or nt nC\t T uesda) 's mectina.
From A1
~incidence the two shootings OC·
curred in one night.
of gun. according to the re(X>rt. The
suspect then got back anto the
passenger side of the truck. which left
southbound on Lafayette. more tlan three years but that purchase, he said. · IRVINE prob:>bl) bt more mtcre\"ted 1n afTet:t· employees knew httle about has Chuck Oant. tbe .. currcnt pre 1dent ang tchool poll 1c\ than the city
According to a police repon, the
Delaney's waiter was walking to has
car parked on Lafayette A venue next
to the Cannery restaurant when the
suspect's vehicle stopped next to him.
Witnesses said the truck was travel-
ing the wrong way, southbound on
Lafayette from 31st Street.
The truck is described as a possibly
1976 to 1980 Toyota pickup, possibly
blue, with a white camper shell and
fog lamps. The shell is the type that is
cab height at the front and slopes
upward to the rear. with windows on
the sides. according to Oakley.
The passenger of the truck ap-
proached the victim. said something.
then shot him with an unknown type
Tbe victim was shot once in the
chest. He died at Fountain Valley
Community Hospital.
Rob~ does not appear to be a
moti ve for the shooting. Oakley said.
The truck passenger was described
asa male Hispanic, S feet 8 inches t<15
feet I 0 inches tall. 140 to 170 pounds,
with medium length. bushy hair. He
wore a denim Jacket, a white shirt,
jeans and whne shoes. The only
descripuon available of the truck
dri ver was that he wore a white shirt.
Representatives of Delaney's said
the victim finished his work 1hif\
about 9:30 p.m. Tuesday and left the
restaurant. What he did after that as a
mystery. said a restaurant oftic:1al who requested anonymity.
personal life ucept that he lived of th~orpoi.tation~ sajd the decision From A 1 government.
nearby in Lido Park. by the Pfaf\nan1 Commiuion to hold 11lmost 7.000 s11natures on thC' pcu-
.. Hc was 1 pretty private indi vad -back on me coastal c:onstrvataon tion. the coahtaon ys "We don't want homoseltuality
ual," he said .. lte came to his Job and ~mo.?:jln.,f amounts to "ecooomic black· Even tho~ah the group began a~ a ~f~'lt a1~ ~~r ~~~b.l,c M~~s!'w• did his job. from what we can pthcr .. anJ)c·• sue coaht1on, Poe tter and
in the payroll records, he's single. He said he believes that planoana Moore would lakt to see 1t contmue "I thank they want to become the
. . . . commiss1oenrs really are develop-addressina issue "deahna w11h tru-stii: police -the moraht> pohc:r -"He wisan ind1v1dual who kept has mcnt oriented And uJCd Hutton's ditiooal family values " for the cat)," Av.an ~d. "In m
nose clean. He was dependable, t-•I opinion a a reason to vote tht Moore said that a an on..001n~ th • d 1 1 alwa-showed up 10 work on time:· ~-• opinion. e) re 1 ea oi1ca c•· :t" way they wanted to. political action group. thc) woul 1renust" ...
The spokesman also wd whtlt a ,.---------------------------------------..: number or Delaney's employees f re-
qucnt a r.eatbY bar, the Snua Harbor
on 30th Street. after work. the waiter
was apparently not one of that crowd.
"from what we can tell. he doesn't go
there," be said.
The waiter, who worked both da)S
and naahts. beaan work Tuesday njght
arouna s or 6 p.m., the spokesman
said.
The restaurant's d1nin1 room ('.\l,11.-0H'\I \ I 0 I 11 IC\
By The AssodMed .. f"ffl
Here are the wtnnin& numbers
picked Wednesday ni&ftt for the
California Lottery's twicc·weckly
"Lotto 6-49" pme: S. 7, 26. 32. 42, 46
and the bonus number, 47.
Players who correctly auessed all
six numbers will share a prize pool of
$6.3 million, lottery officials said.
AJI those who picked five numbers
plu1 the bonus number will divide
closes at 10 p.m. on wcckni&hts. but
amona them5elveu pnre paolofS 1.6 the oyster blr conunues to stl'\le food
million: five of siit will •hare unt!l ma~niaht, employ~ work1n1
$8S9,000; four of six will share unul clos•na. heard nothing unu•ual
$781 ,0QO. Three of 11x is worth an .a~r the wa1ter left, the spokesman
automatic SS per wanner. said. . The numbers were chOtCn by Lotto The watter also was not involved \n . . . . 1ny alterc:at1on or problems at work macha':'e. du!"'n~ a 1de\i111on broad· that niaht. tho emS)loyttt reponcd.
Catt on11natan1 in Sacnmento. The Police Depenment requests
The sales from Saturdly niaht to tblt anyone havin1 informauon
Wednesday's drawina ~ S 1,.6 aboUt the lhootin1 cont.at't deUICUwes
milhon. at 644-3717.
arnrtt••" TiillJ,...1811
£S..c._.,..,.
IH i I t ' 1 \ BO \Hi;
Children's ID, safety
program held in Mes~
A child fcty k1l '4111 be given 10 C\Cf)'
younpter ""ho 1\ finicrprintcd I\ a Natioo:il Kit
Pnnt proaram from l f a.m. to6p.m. Saturd:syat the
CrystalCoun hoppin&C~ntcr,Jl33 Bear St .Co\U
Mesa. •
• The event, which 1s ~pon~red b)' the shopping
center and the Orange County &arch and Retocue
1 T~am. wall also include a 4S-m1nu1e \how}n& of a
video on m1 \IOJ children
For further mformar1on call 241-1700. .. , .
··Achieving financial stability
Wa)'~ that individual c:in ttchie'e 'finanrul
stab1lny .~111 ht' d1'l<:u~d at a ~minar at 9 am.
Saturday Jt Oranle Coas! Collcae. Jo Wolfe. an 10\e~tment counselor. v.111 rc~cal
• how in\'C tor can use the 1ock market to rccchc a·
• consistent income.
Call 432-5880 for addauonal anformation.
Impact of dlvorc~ ~xplored
A community education ~minar on the
financial impact~ of divorce ~ill be offcml from 9
a.m. to I p.m 5aturday at Golden West ( ollegc
The cllcu of di\ orce on ta-.es. pension plan'>
and child suppon "''II also be d1 usscd. .. ; r or funher 1nformauon. call 892-771 1.
• . ..
r dy m ¥not wait around
for Irvine Council's decision
lly LISUI EARNEST
Of ... ~ Hot s.Mf
After wcek~o(wa1tinJ for the Irvine Cit)
Councll to dC\'tde whether he w11l be asked
to lead the city he ha,, scn;ed -since 1972.
Asi.1stant C.: ity Manaacr Paul Brady Jr. said
Wcdnt'1day he will make his own dcci~ion
on his future by the end of the week .
Brady said rather than wait on lhc
.council .. he wall we1&h his options and
decide an the coming d3)!> whe1hcr he even
wants the JOb. · Brad) had e\p«ted rt\e council to
decide whether he would be offered the
city's top adm1n1s1rat1ve p<>s1tion folio"'· ingaclo~councal session Tuesday n1 t
Ho"C\Cr, In me Mayor Larry &r•n
announ&d the d~"C1s1on had been post-
poned for l"-O "" ks . Instead. iran took the opponunat) to
expla in the counc11'\dclay and to bla t The
Irvine ( o for what he called us "strona-
arm tactacs m ll)ing t" dictate 11s will to
llus C11y ( ouncil.
"Through the Irvine \\'orld News. the
nc'4 paper that at o"n and control'i. ihc
In anc Co. ha~ sou~hl to order us nboul -
tclhn& us not onl) who mu\t be cho'IC:nthc
nt'<t c11y manaJer, but how "e hould
-stltt:t that cit. manaacr. a~'d 1hc 11metable
we mu,,t adopt," Ayan ~1~
Airan \lid he wanted to t.'kt 1he 14 da\
before the neAt council rncct1ng ·•io
CX P.l orc matter of rnilnaacmcnt
philosophy. and pcc1fic manngrmcn1 i :
ue\ with Mr. Brad)."
The lcadcr.h1p quc!lt1on \urtaced with
Ot} Manager W1lli:tm \\ oollctt Jr:s
forced re ignauon last month aran said
be b d ast.;cd for Woollc1r) rt)1gnauon
because 1t ~as time for a change 1n the Cit)
-and that the ffiO\e '48S not a rc0~11on on
the cit) manacer·s cap;\b•htc · AJran propo\Cd that \\ oollet111C\·C"pt an
advisor) po ation after 1h1: end of hl\ 17-
)ear tenure on Au_g. l and that Brod)
usume the role ol JCting 1.:11~ manager
until Oct. I. "hen a permanent ~Ul.:l.C\Wr
would be announced.
Woollcll acetptcd thl' counl·1r, pm-
Jt1on. but Brad ) mucd a '1Jtl'mcn1\a~1ng.
tn es~nc~\.he wac; antcrc.,tt•ll onl} 1n 1he top
pos1uon. A'I a rt•.,ult ol Br.11.h \ .in-
nouncemcnl. the l'OUll(j. '~u!I IOn:.l'd into
:m earl) dl-Ctsiun r~&ardang 1he cit)
man &t'I' po\111on
Bui a1 l uesda) n1Jh1' meeting. aran
~id SC\c1al t \UC\ "1.kmand rc flc uon:•
before a dcc1 ion can Ix m:idc Those
1c. ues range from the planning m1scakula-
t1on\ 1n the In inc Bu mes Com pie~.
\\h1eh ..\gran called o "maqagcment snafu
of ma1or proix>mon\," to the quc~taon ol
v.hethcr the cit)\ mo\t creall'C tall'
people are being rl>cogmzed and com·
pcn~ted alwrdmg to their taknts
But ( ount1l.,,,oman all) .\one
'hendan. ''ho often reprc~nts the m1n-
ont) in counul 'otl"i '31d thl' dela} 1s 1 rc.,uh vt gian"s rcacuon" to '"hat he
perce1' e ll'i outs1dc prl~\Un'.' .
'"\\'hat ba\ltalh is the pre>hkm is that
the ma)or dtx·sn 1 lilt' to tX' pu hcd anto
malang a d\•us1on \O ht: \\1rn'1 mnk.c a
decision.· 5hendan ~•d "'I ha'e no
quc ti on that Paul Brath ~hould hc the ell'
manager "
\&ran \UttJ \\ edncMJa, hl' hai. no plans
10 (.'ajJ a spd 1al ..c~stun 10 deal "1th the
management que\lllln lx-forc the ne\t
OICCllOj!. Sl hcdult:d \tJrl"h ~8
t-aullrady
But Brad) !laid he will make a dcc1S.1on
abou1 his fuiurc an 1he com in& days.
"I "'ant to tak.e the time to think this •
through and mal.e m~ dccisaon,"' Brady
said "l',e got some things I've got to talk
further .:ib<)ut. and 1f we come to an .
n,grct•mcnt. o be 1t. \nd. 1f nOI, well that's
O"-lOO ..
~String quarte~erform --· _:,ort~ch~~~~~c~~~(hamte9~~~.'c~~~(~~ lrv1·ne-UCI proposal would benefit,homeless
' p.m. Wednesday 01 the Laauna Beach High · hool
aud1tonum. 62~ Park A\C. l..a_Juna Beach.
The program include Quartet in C-Ma1or.
Opus 20 by Ha)dn 'itnng Quanet No. 9 b}
Shostakovich and Quartet an \·Flat Ma1or. Opus
l 05. b} Dvoral ~ T1cket'I arc $18. For more 1nlorma11on call
-494-2822 .
:: Selling your own home
:• A free ~manar e\pla1'ning ho"' 1nd1v1dual~ can
scll 1hcir home., wall be offered at 7 p m Mnrl·h 23 ;'lt
the Ncwporter Rc!IOrt 1107 Jambortc Road
Ne" pon Beach Speake~ from e'l(.10", title and mortga~c
companies '4111 '>Pfak at the "or~ hop C)eaung 1s
limited Call 495-1:? I 0 for further 1ntormauon.
e~ :: Designing sets for t~Jevlslon
-:· "Set De ain for Tclevi~1on" "111 be d1scu~sed at
• a meeting of the Amcm-.1n 'ouC"t) of Interior
:,.. De 1gners at 6:30 p.m. Wcdnl·\day at the Red Lion
Inn 10 Co ta Mc~ Ticket~ arc S:? I for mcm bt'r'i. S:!2. 50 for non-
mcmbe~.
Commercial an1!>1 Dan (1ardncr. who has
~-designed for C 8 I V. "'" use vrdeos and .,lades to
· 1llu~tratc hi\ lecture
• Additwnal 1nformauon ma) bt-obtaaned h)
:· calhng 64 'l-1549 .. .• . · Forum on community concerns
.\ l·ommun1t\ forum fm: 1nd1' 1dual~ in1cn:\tcd
in \haring their ttka<, and rnmems , .. uh pr<>-
k\s10nal<, "ill tx· olkrcd from I p. m to 3 p m
\\ cdnc'>da) at thd hjl tcrC oun cling ( cntcr. 1501
Superior \H' ~ulll' JIO "'l'\\POrl Beach
For mon: inlo1mat1on. lall (~Olll J42-35lS
Outlook on anoth~r dry year
l he ( O\ta \k\ll < on'>ohdatt.•d \\ ater 01\lnct\
ans, .. cr 10 1mpMh'd \.\Jtl'r \\tll lx' npla1ncd at noon
\fan:h 2' .ll thl \\t•.,11n 'iouth \oa\t Pla1a. 666
\nton Hhq ( 11.,ta \k\a
Karl KL·mr St'nl·rnl managl·r "'II d1\lu,c; th1·
clleCI\ ol anotha Jr~ )l'ar an \oulhl'tn ( ahforn1a
fhe program " 11 '\ pre-rcg1'itl'n·d per pcrc;on.
Jnd SI., at the door lh·-.cr' Jt111 n., are req u1rr'd b)
\1onda\ ( ah the< m1.1 \k,.1 C h.1llllx'r of< omnwrw ;u
f1 ·11-1 41X1 tor lurthl'I 111 form.ttann
Chamb er t o host blood drive
By EMILY ADAMS °' ttw o..,, ,_ sun
On rccommcndauon of a s1aff report
c111ng sharp 1ncrc.1">C~ 1n the number of
In me homelc sin m·cd ot as'11stance. the
• Cit) C ounc1I '01ed unanimous!) Tuc!lda>
10 send l < I a propo\al to cn·:ite a
panner\htp bet\\ccn thl· t.ampu'I and thl"
Cit)
fhe cit~ hope to ll'a'>l· land from l CI
for SI a )Car for IO )Car'> to estahhsh IS 10
20 1cmporary modular hou!>ing units
The proposed sate for the nt:" unm l!I the
nonh campus area near Jamboree
Boule .. ard and ( amous Dmc. Ma\or
Larr) gran bcht 'e\ that 1he pro'9mll) to
the un1\CrS1t) cn\1ronnwn1 \.\Ill '"he
(OOdUCl\C to fam1h rl'tO\l'r't .
•· .\ cpllcgc l'n' ironment ..:.. no1 nl'tess-
ariT) a unhC"r\ll\ but a rnllege -"hen:
'IOme lo nd of s~1lls 1r;11n1na takl'\ plJc:e
would prob:ihl) hc .i hd1l 10 tt ta1111h 1n
need." \gran \<ltd
There ha., alMl been J su&&cstwn 1hal
some L < l falUlt} '4 lH1ld be fn1en:'ltcd 1n
stud)tng the \anou., cduca111111~tl ,1nd
psycholog1lal """'' t"\f)l'nt:nccd b\ home-
less 'h1ldren
The propo'Mll "'as lif'll d1 cu.,~d in a
meeting of Agran and l '< I < hanc:cllor
J W. Pcltason 1n Fchruaf) o t1111t•hnc
School chief appointed
fOf 9EeaA-\/iew EJis.trict
I By ROBERT BARKER sm.:ngth and I told him 1odo ht\O\.\ n thing
Ofuwo.-y,,_St.,. He·s a •Mong lc:ider .ind '4111 makt• an impact on the.-d1c;tnct I k'll 1ell \OU llll'
hool d1 tm t ollk1al'I Jppoinled truth. not" hat \OU "'ant IU hl'ar ..
Monte C. l\tcMurra) a\ superintendent ol ~1anus "'Id \1 c\1 urra'. .., .:ner.,et1c . the Ocean Vie" ~hool D1stnct. '>U cecd-· ·~ ... ., ang Dak ((>op.an "'ho dtl'll 1,1,, \\ l-dnc<,-dcmons1ratmg that quaht~ mo~t rtlentl~ da) b' lompll'llnit the 1,,., \ngdes Mar~thon
l\tc 1urrny. 5' ha\ been an j\'11\tnnl In l\k~1urra) ·~ lir\l )l'Jr on lhl' JOh a.,
<iupcnntcndent <i1nlc 11n I in lhl' I lunl· a s1s1ao1 \upcnnicnd"·nt lor tiu .. 1m· .. ., \Cr·
ington Beach \C:h1>ol dl\tm l. '' hllh opcr-ucc.s.. thl' d1s1nll n.'le1Hd a ""ore ol I OCJ
ates k1ndrrgarten through eighth grade pcrr eni 1n the rnd-ol·lhl'·H·.ir .. 1ud11 tH Jn
schools outside firm ... 1 'irtu;ilh· unpren·dt•n1cd
McMurray signed a 1hrCl··~l·ar rnntralt feat. \1arcu' <k!1tl
afan annual saltir) ofS75.-l96 l\1cMurra' Jl'it> ha., lx'l"n J'l'i1't.1n1
l\1cMurra) -.aid \\cJnl' da\ 1ha1 he and · 'iUpl'rtnt(·n&n1 for L'UUl.111on.1l '>t'f\ Ill''
Coogan. "ho was rC&Urdt•d J\ onl' ol thl' l.1~C' 01hcr \l·honl dl\lrKIS. (kl'Jn Vie"
out'llanding cduc:ilor'> 1n Orangr < ount~. ha~ Ocl'n h11 h> pl11rnml·t10~ l'llrollml·nt
hared the ame ph1losoph) and ha'I rlO\l'd '><-'' l'll '' hnol' 111 rl'l'l'nl
"Thcfocus1\onlh1ldrcn\C'1th.id1ma1c ~car<.. It operates. I"' C.lhoul' "''h an
tor 1hc op11mum dcH•lopmt·nt of the enrollment ol abou1 X,4t><I
·lod ·· Mcl\.1urrn\ "11d. Protractrd salar) Ol'@Ot1JtHlll\ "11h
"[, el)th1og Oak stood tor. I 'upport .Jcachcrs ha' l' do~cd the dl\tm t fl'H'nth
Dale's sirongC'\t 1ra11 "a' 1ntcinl\ fhJI'') But a breal.1hrough mJ\ ~ .11 h .. 1ml ,l\
\he mo'il important thing for me. too." 1eachers arc \la1cd to \Olt' '0011una1hrl'l'
Mc \1urra) c;a1d ~car agreement
··t1e'\ a \\Ondl'rtul and '4arm human The d1'trtct ha\ \lined a 1hr('l'-'l'Jr
being." school I ru'1C\: ~he1la \.1a n:u ..aid contrau '41lh 1t da<.sahed emf1'o~ l'l''>
"I told him that ".:·re not loo~ing lor a l\lc\1urra~ rec1H'd h1~ R \ and '\I \
clone (ol ( oogan ) I k\ 1tol 1.kpth and dcgn.'t"s a1 1hc l ni' e~ll' ot I do ho I k
...
has bcl'n ~·t lot rnrr~ ing out the rropoul
In me T l'mrtirnn Hou.,.ng" 11 re~ar'\.h
and c;ubm1t grants tor purchasang modular
units and .1tJm1n1'>tr;i1e 1hc proiram
Ho'4-ever. Aaran !>n1d he would con 1dcr
U~JllCll) luqds lorthl' pro1ec11t nCll''i\;lr).
ftlrough I rH lhc.-lll~ lUITTnth·
pro\ldl''> 10 apanmcnt and t"o llmn-
housc'> tor 1rans1t1onal hou\mg in 01dd1uon
to thl· P1lo1 Hou\1n~ Proeram. "'t>1ch
mJke'I bed,, :n ailahk 26 umes n )car 10 an
11"\ inc hotel for emtrgcnc1t''>
These program~ ha\C 60 beds "'111lahlc
tor use pnmanl) tor lam1l1es Hov.c,cr.
the Cit) c t1ma1c thal 451< Ir\ anc rc:\1tknl\
Med a-.s1\tancc each \l'ar
Monte c. McMurray
l·ompk ll'd hi\ do<'toratc.: \\Orl .11 lhl'
l nl\ nsll\ ol "'ioulhl'rn ( .1htorn1a
~fo rl.'\ldC\ Ill forranl·e "1lh ht\ \\lie.". ~kru.•Je\ a '"'h g.radc""teJl hl'r in the
Torrame l nilicd ~hoot Dt'>tnll Retort•
coming to Octan V 1c'4 1n 19 .. 1. \.1c \1 urn'
\\Or~ed 1n the ln1k"0tld l ntltL·d 'xhool
l>l\tri<.'t a\ a dJ\c,.mom tt•a1..hcr \l(C
prinC1po1I and pnnl1p.1l
In the past l l( I has bclen able to offer
dorm rooms 10 the summer months. but
l.ampu au1honue arc finding il increas-
ing!) d1flicult 10 as un'l!Tc· cit) dorm
room ~ill tX' available. < Jlhng the homeless problem a .. con ·
13nt -.ourcc of hamc." gran said that he
'40uld h~e Lo~ a count) plan for semna
nd of the home le problem altogether.
If 1hen: had been :in canhquakc or other
na1urnl dis.aster. .\grarr s.ud in a later
1nten IC\\, the go,cmmrnt \.\-Ould have
lound adequate hou ing for those who lost
1he1r h1,me '41than a week
" \nd lor them (the homclc s). 1t as an
cart hquak.e ... .\&ran said.
Woman's
body found
In wetlands
Th\" hod,· ol an flc.krl) \\'Oman '4a
found lloa0lln& 1n an anland marsh
arc:i b\ Bol'kt { h1C'a Be ch tatc Park
on \\ cdncN!a\ "
In' cst1gators found no e\ 1dencc of
foul pla) '" the "oman' death. !.ltd Lt Ou.~ 01 on of the Orange Count)
\hrrifi\ r~:partmcnt
fhen: ,., noth111t SU\p1(1ouc; at th1$
pomt Olwn said
OllMr l on Graham. a Bol~ Chica
lk.ll h hfcauard. found the bod) at
11 21 a.m. on the inland 1de of
fl;iCJlic Coast Ht&h'4a' at Warner
.\' cnuc 01 on 1d. h i" 3 m31'-sh area
Jl ttw~ lrom tht• t>t·aC"h
"ih"· ..wa'> tulh dothed and in-
' t'\11gator; lound no \ ·~1bk 1gn$ or
traum• ht• ..aid T ht• "'oman '48~ not cafl)mg an)
11.k1111tica11on Deput' Coroner Col·
ten I: lltngburJh \Cl1d Wcdnesda\ tn·
\t:\llgators too~ hc1 fingerpnnts in an
<.'llort to learn hl'r 1dl'nllt)
\n aulOP'' ,,.a, 'i<"hcduled th1~
mornanc 10 dC"H·rminc the cause of
death
"ihe v.a\dc'ICnbcd a\ about 60 )ears
old ~ k\'l 4 1nthl''!. tall. and v.'t1ghm&
I ~o pc.iund'
\ RcJ < rn\\ hlooJ dme \.\111 tlC held at 1he
:\jl•v.pun llJrbor rca< hamhcrot( ommel'\C' 1470
Jamhorn RoJd. l'k"port lkalh from 10 am. to
2 .i~ pm \lau.h .:?'\
"-rarh 'IO pc"ru:nt ol :ill blood unm a~
'-l'p.1ratl·d into c;omponcnl\, allo" in& one dona11on
m help "' man' a\ four JlUtll'nt' Oonauoa blood ta~c\ <1hout .W minute\ Rcfrc hmcnts \\Ill be
prm 1dcd
Lifeguards search ing ·
for drowning victim Murder trial deliberations continue
By RANDA CARDWELL
To ~'heJulc :an appo1n1men1, ('311 lorn V:ikn·
tane 1644-l\211.
llunt1n1ton Beat:h cat\ hfl·auanh 3n: ~('cp1 na a ' 1gi I torn ~0-H·a r-(lld rt\l<kn 1 ot
McxKo( it)" ho' ana\hcd ;ilkrgoin' R>r:i
\wam wuh friend' an l hill) S~·Jcgrec.·
~~uer • tu1da).
Jum,-., cnnl lud1:d 1h,•ir '"""' ond \Iii' u l
dchlx'rJt101\ \\cdne\da~ "1th11u1 I\ •~htni
a 'crd1l t 1n thl' 1m1l ol a I lunt1ngt11n l\1rk
tc~n-agl'l :\(CU\Cd ol 1n1.:n11un:ill~ 111nn111f
Jo\\n and l.1lltng a "'l'\'P°'' &.11."h
'\l\kl·J '°lu1":nor 1 1>u11 l11dgl· l Ul\( ~1dcna41
to danf\ Jl'.•trll' hut th1· natur\· nt the
llUe'\llOn'i \.\ 3\ 1101 1d1'J'>l'O
Enrht·r. Jch'tN" .lttornn ~.1lph lkn·
(angc\ told JUl\•l' thl· 1~a.,un pfO\('l utor.,
anu'>t·d Ornd.1' nl 'l'<OOd·~kgrl'e rnurdcr
1' lx'l•'U'l' ,,, pul>h11l~ \urrnund1ng 1he
ca~ dUl' Ill pJll Ill th1..· l'\l\ll'Oll' Ill ••
\"ldCOt3{X 111 llW •l\.\ 1c.knl
hbt1at\.'h tnc<l to run K1llelta do11on
tx"cau he "a angl) and drunk He ~1d
all the ~ncl nclds 10 determine to convict
Ornda°'I ol "'--Cond~cgr'\-C murder 1s tha1 he
was doma soml"thing he knc" '43S danger·
nuc; and hle>·thrcatt:n1ng.
No mt't' llllS.'i \<.he duktt
Manne S:llet) <.apt Rill R1chardY>n
\aid thal th ·re ha\ bcl'll no sign of aul
R;imirtr, who tncnJs s.a1d "a' tall·n ou1 to
sea b) rapt~( Obod) \J\\ the \Ouns
min 11rusahn . Rllh.-ird'ion <.aid
,.,.ontan. 1
Ornl•la'I h3d pknt) of time to lr) nnd
"'01d h1uing ..._11lclca. \\ho du~d Sept l.
hut nc,l'r did. the piosc utor charged
1'"rit1"."· J l;11·•·l1 I i
'o mttlmp ~hc(lukd
.. ,\nothrr '1 1tor fmm 1~\ICO. Ju~n
1anucl Lol)("1.0rdcna. 19, op~rentl>
dro\o\n'-"d ~h1le \'41mm1n1 •t Huntinaton
tatc Bea hon ftb. 24. allhouah h1i bod)
h.a not "ct ~t·n tl'CO\crro.
03nn-. ()a, 1J Orncl.i• .. I'> " , harge,1
"1th set•t)nJ-c.kgrl" murJt•1 1111ht lkath 111
CX-bb1c \nn ~1llrkJ . t k 1 ... , "'U'l'IC'\ ll-<l
ol beinadrun~ \\hen the 1n\ tlkrll 'Mun d
Tht \C\ c:n·man. lh e·'4om.in p.md \\Ill
ruurnc dchbtratina th1'l mom101 During
\.\C\hJC-.dl\ \ Jchhe1at1on\, lhl• 1u1' '"Kt'
But lk·put' l>l\lttl I \tlnllll'~ I um
(JC'k.'thah told 1h" p.111d thal <>1nda' .,
1u1lt' ot ..._,1Hhl Jqm•,• munk1 !x'(au'c hl'
OC\C'r 'll'Jll)l:u 1•11 thl· t>1alt'' "hen he \.1
tl.tllcl \IC(> 11110 thl' m1d,tk ol lhl' allc) to
chalkn11· hi\ l'"t'd1n (r<>l'thll\ to J 1uror Orncla' then <le·
Bcntan'L'' h0'4C\l"r ontC"ndcd that
gm\\ 'chicul. r man laughter "htlc under
tht' 111flucnu· ol alcohol 1 th onl) po 1blc
\CrJ1c1 the lu" <'ln tea h because the
Huntington Paik 1dcnt ha, no p~\J us
1rrc 1s fo1 drunken dm 1 n~
•••
l
. ,
.\ clcanin1 c~ tntcnna an at~ tome)·~ office suite at 1401 Dc.nc
trttt potted a uall. h \~·~t and
baJdinJ male run uuo another t·
tome) s offK'C. (rw manutts l11er
the wspen ran out ot the offict' and
drove ofT wnh cnhet sub,j«t '" a
'ttth1tc un W1'" ora• tnm. othina
WH mtntl!I f'rom the Off K , • • • I~>~ male tcsidtnt of the
•800 blOct of River vmuc rtPQfU'd lttlftl I "'9ft en hll j()i Pf0~11ng liourid bit ....... ,. • • • A froot .__ Plltt and Mm:c&s ~ •PF MR tMfft off a 1911 :row~ "' • co.•= ~ 11Mlndlir3100 Of v Drivt. .,,.,.
1Mn~*1CM-.ttoor al iM Poft
Tlwaitt. SE. OM&H._..,, ... band rormt .-_, $l.U1·allt .. lake. ,..,,.. ...... ...
-Pt:pli iOdl \'"~ ...... .... aho aa1te11 fi'oM bdtilld *' a.i1r.
COUMn
\omwnc r:ansackC'd a hom<"" m the
I IOOO block of Mc abe Cln:lc catl~
1 ue~yafttr k1e:k1na 1n a pragcJoor
enuarKc. The culpn& tolt blank
chc le bcf0tt fltt1n1 the roukn t . • • • t:oncns1on tra1kr. o"ncd h the
Lion (1ub of fountain Valle ,
parked en the l <XX.l blocl; of.\\ rd
\Cnue .-'aridalt1cd wmcumc
bCl\\CO fridl\ and 1 UC'<il) •••• mcone u.\00 can of gold and
blick tpn1}pa1nt to J.tmagt' th\
C\tcnor ._ ... n of Fulton hool. ~77
E. llgo ,c •• carty Tucsda morn1ni,
ot bottl~ r II.rt n ·u the hkfuarJ
headquan.ct') at Pat1fk < oa\t ft •
"-~) nll u~c-Stft"Ct • • • 1.\ buttc:r,c.:01<.h•c.:olorcd tru'"k
cra.,hell into a " II on &I C h1~
lrt<"t bct~l'(n hhnatr and I k1I
avcnu anJ knocked do"'n a tn: . • • • TtUcv<") fol\'\'d o~ n a rear ~mdo"
&n the 9900 hlock of Ki ng" < .. 111rnn
Orhcand \u1h.•a b11.~ rc\·n tckv& ·aon
\t't 'alued at S2 ~00. a $SOO VCR.
500m watc.:h ·..-S OanJc"clr' nJ a 200 lca1h ·r J '"kct .
l nin~
ol a hou on Com1so and 1hrr" 1 on Tue~~ • ••• \ < R lrom hi' 'chide 1n fmnt ol the
hOU<;C' ••• ( C\mput(f .. oft~•• • ' I d at
S-l 00 v."' all edl) 1aken h' nn e\·
l'mplO\C'C lmnt a c.:onJuman1um tm
Gum'4ooJ. • • • \1, kinh • d\ e~ rqxmcd on
Jn1iH1\, t \ '11.1dQ Mu.tdk ~hoot 4
Dttrtirld \\e . c.: ff) int("."' ol\pra~
paint. fhC"\ \ll'l'C aim v.hcn rof"-'\
arrived
nt>h
\ n l lem ntc ~ 1dent YiU
boo~t-J for dnv IOI undi(r the ID•
Oucncr af\er bc1na topped at WHley
()m-r and Pac1tic \oa t H1pwa on
Tu~y.
(~U• M~ a
To<>ls 'alucd at $2.495 were st~
from 1 pra* &n the 900 b\ot"k of Jun1~ro l>mc Tuc!lday·bc:tw«n 8
anJ 11 a.m. • • •
\ rn1dcnt ot the 600 bl<d or
H1m11ton Strr~t ~•" u\ina 1 k1ll •w OUt\tt&t ht\ h U Turidly"aftd ....
hr: let\ the lool tor a fcW mi•'*' snrof'(' s&olc 1t :rhe kM 111 val\ied II
*'
...
'
.. Ormnge Coait OAll:Y PILOT/ ThUrtday.,March 18, 1Nt •
~Caller says group set SD van
SAN DIEGO (AP) - A caller with
a Middle Eastern accent told a radio
station Wednesday that a group called Guardian of the Islamic
Revolution was pons1ble for the
born. bint ()fa van driven by the wife
of the USS Vmcenn~· skippec.
Los Angeles radt.o si.ataon KNX
said the pcrson'lnade the claim during
a call to the newsroom Wednesday
morning. The caller claimed to be a
member of the $!:OUQ, which also
claimed responsibility for the crash of
a Pan Am jetliner last )Car at
Lockerbie, Scotland,
Station -officials said the call was
immediately reported to the FBI.
According to KNX. the caller said
the &roup threatened to carry out add1t1onal att~ks apmst Vincennes
skipper Capt. Will C. RoSCrs Ill and
his family. The callcralso said the
bombing wa hnked directly to last
year's downing of an Iranian airliner
by the Vencenn~.
Fred Reapn, an FBI spok.c~man in
Los Angele • confirmed that the
bureau is investigating the call.
"We're looking into it," Reagan
said. He declined to elaborate.
Guardians of the Islamic Revol-
ution 1s an Islamic group that made
persistent claims to internauonal
news organizations that at was re-sponsible for the crash of Pan Am
Flight 10? last Dec. 21. The crash
killed 259 bcople aboard the plane
and 11 on the vound.
A caller tla1min1 to rcptttent the
group also warned on Dec. 30 tha1 if
1he United State did not deport Rn.a
Pahlav1, son of the former Shah of
Iran ... there wtll be another P,rntnt in
the New Year for America.·
The group has previously claimed
responsibility for a July 1987 car
bombina in London that wounded a former Iranian cabinet ministeT.
More rcccntl'>', it threatened lo kill
British officials and a London talk
show host over comments regarding
Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini's call
to kill author Salman Ru hdie.
R<>jters was commandfo& the
Vincennes last July when its Cf'C'W mistook an Iranian jetliner for an
attackint warplane arid shot it down
with 1 m1uik, killina all 290 people
aboard. He and his wife, Sharon, ltave bttn
under protection of Navy security
.,cnts since Friday's bomb1na of th~
family van. She was driv1ng 10 work
alone and escaped unil\}utt<l.
Rogers emerged from seclusion
'Tuesday to take the helm Q(. the
Vincennes as the FBI conu .. uCd its
invest1pt1.on into the bombtng.
Ro.aers auided the ship out of the San Dieao Naval Station for routine,
daylona exercises off the coast, a
Navy spokesman said,
~ Eastern's Shuttle's malfunctiOns fixed;·
rivals m':'st mission to proceed as planned
honor flight HOUSTON (APJ -The 1igh1> Tucsda) whole engineers >1udoed the water as a byproduct reements came back on the 01scovcl) space problem. Ground controllers wcrt e<?n-ag shuttle Wednesday after Mission The crew turned \lie tank back on cerned that without use of 1he third
Control apparentl)' fixed a trouble-Wednesday morning but used. only hydrogen tan.k1 there may not be
some hydrogen tank and told th em one of its two heaters. M1ss1on enough clectncLLy to support a five-
By The Associated Press astronauJ not to worry about con-Control told the crew that early day n1ptt. plus two days for cont-
fi d I b k · d serving enCflY· prt>ssurc readings showed the tank ingenc1~s. . A e era an ruptcy JU ge _ Discovery_ s fi ve astronauts had was working properly. But fli&ht director Chuck Shaw said
Wednesday irant~ .Eastern Anii".'es swnched off unnecessary liJhts and "That's good news to hear," replied Wednesday night that the tank oper-~ temporary rcstratni~g ordeb fo~ing oompu1ers because of concern about Discover) commander M 1chael ated property wuh one heater all day, its competito~ 10 onor . usincss erratic pressure readings from one of . Coats. meaning Discovery is headed for a a~ments wnh the stnkebound three hydrogen tanks aboard the The hydrogen is combined wnh 6:34 a.m. PST landing tame Saturday
earner. . shuttle. The tank. which helps ~ppl)' oxygen in the fuel cells to produce at Edwards Air Force Base. as The order signed by U.S. electne1ty, was taken out of service electricity for shuttle systems. with planned. Bankruptcy Judge Bunon R. Lifland
prevents other aulines from refusing
to transfer Eastern passengers. cargo and baggage. and compels them to
perform pther services set out in basic
agrecme,ts among airlines.
Lifland, who is overseeing East-
ern 's bankruptcy reorganiza tion, set a
March 24 hearing on continuing the
order.
Eastern a'ttorney Bruce Z1ri nsky
said Eastern sought the ruling on the 12th day of a paralyzing walkout b>
Machinist~ pilots and night attend-
ants out or a fear that other airlines
would refuse to honor the agree-
ments.
"There certainly is a lot of con-
fusion at the outset of a case like this.
It was not clear what other carriers
possibly were going to be doing." he
said.
If other airlines refuse to honor the
agreements. ll could prevent passen-
gen from making conneeung flights.
baggage from being transferred at
airports, and cargo from reaching its
final destination. Airlines rel) on the
agreements to reach points that they
do not serve d1rcctl).
Zirinsky also said Eastern would
attempt to negouate with the other airJjnes 10 ensure that the agreements
arc maintained dunng Eas tern's re-
organization.
Peacekeeping
plan endorsed
UN ITED NATIONS (AP) -Of-
ficials of five Central American
nations Wednesday endor5td a plan
10 send U.N. peacekeepers 10 tfic
region to ensure guerrillas don't
launch cross-border raids.
The plan. which needs U.N. ap-
proval. calls for up to I 00 mahtal)
observers to monitor Central Amen-
can border areas in speedboats.
helicopters and alJ-terrain vehicles.
"We approved the docu ment in the
sense that v.e discussed it, and there
arc no disagreements,'' Nicaragua's
deputy foreign minister~ Victor Hugo
Tinoco. said after talks with military
officers and foreign ministry officials
from El Salvador, Honduras. Costa
Rica and Guatemala.
The head of the Honduran del -
egation. Ambassador Robeno Flores
8crmude1, confirmed the agreement
in pnnc1ple had been reached.
Up 10 11,000 Contra rebels who
launch raids into Nicaragua from
bases in Honduras arc the prime
focus of the peacekeeping plan.
Reagan said to have OK' d
pact for helpiog Contras
WASHJNGTON (AP) -PttSl·
dent Reagan in 1985 not only ap-
proved a secret pact to g1' e Honduras
more than S 11 0 million for helping
the Nicaraguan Contras but he also
telephoned Honduras' president
when the Honduran military delayed an ammun1t1on shipment to the
rebels, the Oliver Nonh Jury was told
Wednesday.
Reagan made a note of his call to
Roberto Suazo that said the Hon-duran ''will call his m1l11ary com-
mander to tell him 10 deliver the
ammunition." former national secur-
ity adviser Robert Mcfarlane testi-
fied at the Oliver North trial. The ammunauon then got to the gucr-
nllas
Under ~uesllonang b) defense law-
yers, McFarlancde1a1led how Reagan
1niualed a plan in m1d-Februat) 1985
that resulted 1n Honduras gelling
speeded-up dchvencs of nfles. am-
munition ai\d machines.
Jt was a .. quad pro quo" arrang~
menl that Reagan was advised would
"provide mcentevcs" to the Hon-
durans for helping out.
~You're going lO gave them tens of
millions of dollars to cooperate?"
North lawyer Brendan Sullivan asked
Mcfarlane.
"Yes." the wttness said
.. There 1s nothing d1n y about quid
pro quo 1s there?"
"No."
Later. readtng from a previously
secret memo, Sullivan referred to
"S75 million in economic as-
sistance... He also referred to $35
million in expedited m1htany aid.
The matter was so scns1uve.
Mcfarlane acknowledged under
qucsuoning. that the arrangement
wa d1scu~scd v~rbally by the U.S.
ambassador in Honduras w11h Suazo
and was nol tti ven to him in wnung:
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--,
Westcliff Plaza
through the eyes of a finicky shopper
Diane
High impact dressing from IOdM top dts1gMrS. Slllllng
new looks from our excll!Og cohCbOn of designer
drtSMS, MOlllQ Mlf, sportlwelr end onglNI ecces
soon from h1ndbfgs ID holiefV
Assembly panel OKs March primary
SACRAMENTO -An Auembly committtt voted Wcdnttdly to make
C.alifomia's presidential primal') one of the tarhest in .tM natton. a mo~e
supporten saad ~ould restort the state's clout 1n select.ins Repubhcan and
Democratic nom1n~ By 1 9·1 vote, the elcctiona committee approv~ a bill by Astiembl)'man
Jim Costa O..Fresno which would shift the pres1dcnual pnmary from June t.o
the first Tuesday in March, in ytars evenly divbible by four. • . . .
Manson trarisfe"ed to new prison
CORCORAN -Convicted mass;.murder Charles Manson hu been transferred from San Quentin to a new maximum sccunt_y un11 at Corcoran State Pnson in the San Joaquin Valley, a pnson offic1aJ said Wednesday.
Lt. Evelyn Mazon said Manson perhaps . the most notorious of
California's 78,000convicts, was sent 10Corcoran this week to be houscd.•n the
state's toughest new maximum 5ecunty unit. . "San Quentin is underaoingi majorchan&e 1n rt11ssion. from a mu1mum.
security pnson to a medium-security prison," and Manson is 1mon1 hund~~
of San QUcntm inmald scheduled to be sent to the Corcoran unit,. Wd-1
O>rrcctions Depanment spokesman. '
Unanimous qK of Cheney predicted
WASHINGTON -The Senate Armed Scrv1c6 Committee chamnan
said Wednesday that Rep. l);ck Cheney 1s a person of "honor and intqrity ..
whose nomination as defense secretary will likely win unanimous approval
from the panel when 1t votes today.
"I don't know-of any opposition now." said Sen. illm Nunn. D-Oa. of
President Bush's replacement for John Tower.
Nunn said th e corn mittce will make its decision this morning and report t9
1he full Senate by midday. Senate Majority Leader George Mitchell. O..Mam~.
said a vote 1s likely on Friday.
Runyan wins ldltarod sled race
NOME Alaska -Cheering crowds and a blanng siren '1'eeted Joe Runyan on 'Wednesday when be and 11 dogs pulled into this h1ston c gok1
mining town to claim the 17th annual fd1tarod Trail Sled Dog Race.
It took the Nenana musher slightly more than 11 days to cover the 1.168
miles from Anchorage His wife and baby watched as he v.on SS0.000 of the
$250,000 purse to be shared by the first 20 finishers.
The victory gave Runyan. 40. the "tnple crown" in long-distance doa
mushing. Last year. he won the Alpirod, the more sedate Europtan version of
the ld1tarod, and in I 98S. he won the 1.000-mile Yukon Quest from Whttehorse, Yukon Territory, to Fairbanks.
Fiim colorf zatlon protection urged
WASHINGTON -The Copynght Office on Wednesda) uf&C(S ~ongrC$'$
to consider 'protecting future films from colonzauon. but said 1t would
probably be unco nstitutaonal to extend such protection to ex 1st mg movi~.
The office said It would prefer legislation that would also protect visual
artists, such as sculptors and painters, by giving them "moral rights" 10 bar
unauthorized alteration of their works.
But it said ii could support legislat.ipn applying to film makers alone. In
addition to protecting pans"\ colonzauon. the office also recommended
protecting film makers from technical processes that spttd up or slow down
movies to fit the time frames of teleVJs1on.
ttORl,D HHlt:t ·s ,
Grenades wound seven around palace
AN SA V DOR, El Salvador -Guemllas fired rocket-propelled
grenades at the pre 1dcnt1al palace and an ad)accnt m1htaf) gamson
Wedn esday. wounding a palace guard and sax ca\ 1ham. m the neighborhood
officials wd.
LeOist rebels also attacked a provincrnl capital and vo .... ed to lull elecuon
workers and mayors, try1na to disrupt Sunday"s prcs1dent1al elec11on.
Remark on Israeli-PLO talks clarffled
WASHINGTON -Secrctaf) of State James o\ Baker Ill. clanfying an
earherstatement, said Wcdne~a)' the poss1b1hty ofan br.aeh dialogue with the
Palcsune Liberation Orpn1zat1on wa, difficult to forestt but should not be
"categoncaUy" ruled out under all circumstances
Baker, an tcs11mon) before the Senate Appropriation~ subcommittee on
forc11n operations. did not repudiate remarks he made Tuesday But there was
a clear change m cmpha!t1 .
ln testimony Tuesday befort a House subcommittee. Ba~cr said 1t ma>
some day be necessary for Israel to talk to the PLO to )Cllle the PaJestin11n
problem. remarks that left the 1mprcss1on amona ome that l pohC) on that
issue m1&ht be sh1ft1n1
Famine area death toll nears 5,000
MAPUTO. Mozambique -A famine m nonheasl "101amb1quc h&!t
killed almost 5,000 people th1 )CU , and tens of thousands are ufTenna from
acute food horu&cs made wo~ by a auemlla war, the national news aaencr
AIM rcponed Wednesday Catbohc m1ss1onanes 1old AIM the deaths
occurred in Memba.
RUFFELL'S
UPllOLSTEIY llC • .................. 1m-u .. cem--w.11M
Baakel •• .. rt lock rrit-r Quot~
Barrin@er, Ryan
& Comr>•n>
~lwa~r 'A!D I 752·ilj)
•
..
Mostly cloudy with chance of showers tonight
OH\,f,t fO\'I
.... ii. ,.
ll '1
tl SS
0 11
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tJ •2 JO u ... , s, ..
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Ce.nter opening in Laguna
to help homeless, mentally ill
9y LESUE EARNEST ~.,.....,._ tqff
A multi service center ofTenna
pract1cal help for the homeless and
therapeutic pr0&r3ms for the mental-
ly ill is expected to open 1n Laguna "&ach in about one \\CCk.
put new carpel 1n Wc'"e put new
fumn~ 1n and we're stan1ng to
stock up."
G1lchns1 said the center will be run
similarly to the an Clemente office.
which added a JOb program approx-
1matel} el&ht months ago and 1s
cum:ntly developing a plan to aid the
mentally 111
Orange
Tht" center will 1n1u1Jl} be open
from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday.
Wednesday -and Fnday. but will
expand its hours to Monday th rough
Fnday and Saturday morningsw11hin
a month, Gilchrist said.
Slll~I 10 H lA IV•f:'t
\lout ~ 4J It M.ety\Y S.,•• u 11 Monrovi.i
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t-•pt<ltcl 1t1 lllMltlcl Ot..ng,r COUtlQ' Md I l'\I ol 4111OpKlf'd111 lf>e U NJfli Mta
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The center, to be located at 316 76
Coast HlJhway 1n South LaJuna, will
provide the homeless wtth food,
clothing, transportation and referrals
to other county services It will also
offer an employment program and
therapy session during tl't c day for the
mentally ill.
Although the full prQ&ram 1s not
clcartydefined 'yet, Gilchnst said she
expects there will be about five or six
mentally 111 people using thC' fnc1ht}
during the da} A licensed chn11.~al
social worker has been hi red to
coordinate the program and a psy-
chiatrist will donate 11me once a
week.
Reprdmg the con~m some resi-
dents have expressed 1n the past that
such fac1ht1es can become a magnet
that anracts-hometen m the com-
mun11y from RaS._G1lchnst
s:ud that has not been the case 'in~!nr+.....;..
C lcmcntc. which has bttn open eight Low A.a 125 p., Month.
Awna.PC·C~lble --~--._;;;~:g~~ Software But the center ·will not offer
ovemi&ht lod&Jne for the homeless.
The facility will be the fifth such
branch of Episcopal Service Alliance
IP the county. Other offices arc in
Huntinaton Beach. San Clemente.
Anaheim, and Santa Ana. .. It's bqinning to shape up, .. Ellen
Gilchrist, program director for \he
3,.aauna Beach center, said. "We've
Eplscopal Service Center Alliance
stnes indl\ 1duals. single parC'nts and
fam1hes. G1lchnst said. The Alliance
also runs Anchor Hou~. a family
shelter an ·an \lcmentc. and Manha
House, a shelter . for women 1n
years
"Some of the communtt} arc
concerned about what's going to
happen when you open an office like
this ... G1khns1 said. "I've bttn able
to la} down the rules and that's the
wa) 1t 1s. You're not going 10 ha"c
people Just hanging around and 1n the
neighborhood. We're not bnngina
them in They're already there "
Panel votes to Outlaw poll gLiards
SA.CRA.ME TO (A P) -A. state
~rune commlllce. responding 10 an
Orange Count} incident last No\ em-
ber. \Otcd Wcdncsda) to make 11 a
cnme to post secunt) guards at
polhng places without pcrm1ss1on
from elecuon officials
8) a b1pan1san 4-0 \Ot<'. the
Elccttons Committee approved a bill
b) Sen. Malton Mark . [). n Fran-
cisco, that was introduced after
Republican ~tat1oned secur1'}
auards 1n 20 laracl> Hispanic
precincts 1n the 71nd sscmbl}
Otstnct. The measure now goes to the
Jud1c1ar) ( ommmec
Democrats and H1span1c groups
have Charged that the JUards \\ere
placed at the polbn1 stations 10 scare
awa) H1 pamc vote~. The guards
earned 1gns 1n English and p.1n1sh
warning non~1t11cns not to \.Ole
.\ccordmg to a comm1t1«-anal\c;1\
of the Marks bill. there" ere rcpon·s of
guards entering pollcng places, ..t~king
"otersforproofofc1t1zcn hip. wm1ng
down Ticenc;c platr nurnbe~ and
handling one or t\\O ballot\
Marks has labeled thr mo"c .. pol-
n1cal thuuef):·
The incident has resulted man f.Bl
mve t1ga11on and a federa l court
lawsuit that scd~ 10 o' en urn the
election. in \\hllh Rcp\lbhcan < un
Pringle narrowh dcleatcd Dcm<Xrat
Chn uan Th1cr6ach.
Democrats ha'c also indicatl·d that
the} will ti) to recall Pringle. R-
Garden Gro\ e
·EB E b--
LOl"il KepublKan officials da1m
the guards were hm-d because ol
rumo~ that Democrat might ti') 10
bring in 111~1 'otcrs to 11p thl'
ckc11on to Th1erbach
Marl..s' bill. with some exccptt~nc;.
~ould make 11 a misdemeanor or
fdon) tor a pcr;on "1th a firearm or"!l
pcac·c otlittr or pcl\ ate guard Ill hr
o;1a11onl'd JI a polling pfar\O ""11h<lUL
\Hiilen pcrm1~~1<>n from thl' a11-
p1opna1c elct:11on olliual.
rhc bill. ~BiM. would not co' er la'' cnforrcm~nt olliccr!. conducung 01:
lk1al buc;1nl•o;c; pohlc ollicero; ur
SCl'Unt~ guard\ \\ho "'ere a1 the
polling plan· 10 '011.·. or secunt)
guards who \\l'rl' hired b) the polling
place pwpcrt) O\\ ncr for non-clecuon
purposec;.
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SPECIAL
PUICllASEI .,
..
t~ ~ " t I \\
on Thomas leads fine lSO recital Chief curator 0ut
as LAM revamps 8y Mft<f ltUSS!U
0..., ..... Con1111•0••
Michael Tilson Thomns. Lon An-
~te~bom Principal Musical Direc-
tor of the London Symphony Or-
ch"tra, brought in a record th rce-
minute forty-second ovation from
the enthusiasuc audience Monday
evcning'at'Scgcrstrom Hall.
The cmK:ttt, presented by the
Orange County Ph1lharmon1c So-ciety, included "Flourish with Fire-
works" by contemporary compo~r
Ohver Knussen. The piece. written in
late I \J88. i a two-minute celebrator)
"opener" c pecially for Tilson
Thomas· first season as Princ1pal
Conductor of the London emscmble.
Knussen first met Thomas bac tage
at Thomas' debut with the LSO 18
>Cars agp. •· ymphony in Three Move-ment ," wntten by Igor travan ky in
1945, was performed with sentiment
and excitement b} the orchestra.
Some audience members. however.
m1stakenl ) applauded between the
first and second movements of the
work. LSO musicians -smiled as
Thomas looked nervously from side
to side preparing to continue with the
second movement. 1An attaca was
written into the score by the com-
poser with no pause between the
$CCOnd aad-th.ird-mo._\ICIIlCJ)ts. which
in this case alleviated any further
applause faux P'JS).
Mlctlaet Tiison ThollNls .. bove, In a n earlier perlcinwanc•f
led the London Symphony Orchestra In• rousing concert a t
the Orange County Pe rforming Arts Ce nte r Monda y.
Oddly enough, there was no ap-
plause between movements in the program's second half. It was as if the
word "as passed dunng1nterm1ssion
The final sdmi-o-ri was ir cap11vat·
mg recital of "Symphonic fan-
la uque, Op. 14 .. by Hec tor Berlioz.
T\. l .. ISTl'.\GS ,
8:30 9:00 9:30
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Wotld olln
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Holtyw'd S.nlo1d Portee W0111an
Sq1111• Son
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Wt bller ·WhMl of I II D.nner ~ • •
fonunt 1-Pe111 i..sr ro• r ire 0u~ .. 1rt
MKNt1L1.thrtr PleGQ•. The Eiplortta A Pltd91 Deltnd1ng W11dl!t• t?:
NhsHour Cen'.ufV ol DlscoYery 8re&11
i:'r.'\ NBC ~ ... Th11d Thurlday •11e Anollooo sby Dil!ettnl ChM11 Dew
0.0.te Show or!d OM
El!) Owlglll Thompson Pr11w lh• Lord Pra.M Ille LOfd
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1 he brilliance and mood) characlt'r
which Berlio1 portru)s came
man-clou I> through the ensemble, ly LESUE fMtNEST
wi th percussion. horn ~ood~mds OfdW~,...Ju« nnd stnna sections nJI peak in& 10 one
another mu 1call). M1chad McManus, who w11J
One could fetl the love and pa~sion kavc h1sJob1schW:f curator of the
Berho1 felt for .. M1 Smichson," for Laguna Art Museum in May as a
whom the work wa'I later dedicated re uh ofa dcpartmcntreorgan1za· The symphony was compo~d. ac-11on. says the decision to par1
cording to his me1noirs. whale he wns company was mutual and 1hat he
"suit under the influence ol Gotthc's wi hes the best to the mustum
J>O(!m 'Faust'." ~nd us patron!.
Thomas isan intercstu\gcondu<'tor to ob~l've. He 1 fore' er lifting high .. It's an amk able partina."
on has toes, or \\aving his arms McManus ~id dunnf I P.honc
gracefull) as a swan taking 01Jht. and mtcn 1ew Tuesday. ·· 'd hkc to
was even seen puffing out ha~ cheeks speak up for the La1un1 Art in a cue to the brass during the lkrbo.z M uscum. It's a wonderful ins ti tu·
final movement. cntllled "\\'alt>urg1s . tton ... ,
Night Dream." He was an e penence. "I ha'e only krnd thoughts and
an<l sent the audience to m feet in kind things to U) abOut the
standing ovauon; has reaellon "'as to director, the professional staff ol
humbl) have the ensemble tand and the mu'iCum. the board oftru tees
take part m the glory and the con\tltuenc) at large." be In an after<onccrt rnterv1ew LSO's said "Thefre all included in m)
Principal horn fiugh Seenan. r.mil-d I h them all 1hc mgly admitted inat only Carnegie ~i.~ an wis
Hall. among US venues. 1s a. finer hall
fort he tran mas ion of sound than the Mc Manus. 36. took the
Performing Arts <:r nter. V1olm1st curatorial pas1tion an October
Karen Whitehead agreed . 1987, a year hcforc Charles
The orchestra's 28-day ovcrsea5 Desmarais assumed the d1rec·
tour "111 see them performing 21 tonal lot. The director and
conccrt'i an the U and Ja~~~· The assistant C'urator will share the
("enter dale g;l'"T T1tc;on-T ttl' ... ---ct11cf curatornt nuncS" unttl the
Los Angeles nati ve, a rare opportuna-po it1on vacated b} McMnnus 1s
t) to '1s1t wuh family and fri ends flllcd . said Anne Nale1d. mu~um
followmg the concert. pubhc1st
Tilson Thoma made has London
debut "1th l 0 in 1970. His formal ··The dirl'CtOr will be O\Cr·
training ~n at l S< Jn 1988. M seeing our curatonal department.-
launched the c" World } mphon~. and the da)-to-da} details will be
Amenca·s first and onl) national handled b\ the assistant curator
training orchl'Stra for )O ung mu-Su~n .\ntkrson." ale1d said
s1c1ans He ,., the clc"cn1h principal .r;\s of the moment \\C ha"c
conductor 1n 1hc M4.\ear h1ston of launched a nat1onw1dc ~arch.
the London ')>mphon) Orthcstra.
llO\ II·: l .. ISTl'.\GS
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blJ lllSO
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Co ta ~le a
IDWAROS CINCMA 11MllOt 8'v<l /"411"'• Av~
\4~ )101 Al.In o_, 8 I\ 10 IO
CDWNH>S SOUTH COAST P LAZA J• 10 ""'OI \t Sttdll 1
t •Mt--SIS.8 t040 1~•1 910 J NewY41R ...... •6 A.JO 100
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•IMTeMe
I •• w. U4'
We u~t to take some ti~ 10
find 1he riaht pcrwn."
• Nalcid ~d the new c~ief
curator. who may have a new ta tic
and new duties. will be ofl'crtd a larser salary than the approx-
in1atcl) S2S.OOO McManus MS
paid annually
"l thank Charles' fcchnas on
that arc. m otdtr to genhc.lc\'t! of
professional he want$. he s &'""' to probabl) have to offer a hasher
~lary " Naleid said
McManus who had movtd
from San bicso to take the ~lllQn in Laguna las& lcar, otTc~ an endonemcnt o the
director and his plans.
.. Charles ts going io a good
direction and I'm goana in a ~ d1rcctton." McMaous said. 'I'm
optimistic about my prospects
and I'm optimist about the mu·
seum's orospects.".
McManus, who nas a mastet•s
dcjftt in fine arts from UC SaA
Diego with an emphasis in crittcal
theory and an history. said has
future plans include the possi· b1 lit~ of teaching writing and an
aHl-Southcm--Califomia College
Although he would like to work fo
Cahfom1a. McManus,, who was
born in Clevrland. said he ~ould
be wilhn& to move out of the state
for the nght PoSlt1on.
In any case. Mc Manus said.
thlnfS can only get better. ··r m opt1m1suc by nature," he
said. "Evef)body's really satis-
fied with the way thmgsare going.
It's a partmg of friends.
NMeOa W ONCM'U ~ 9'ld /( W-
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z ~~ .. OIJIMMf~•.1. ro
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Founta in Va lley
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Laguna~ach
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. ' I : 'l' ! I I I i ! I' ' I ' I'
I
-
scar promp s gro
to-pull Chlle fruit off stor~ shelves
8y 809 V IW EYICEN
Of .. ~ .... ...,,
A little color is aonc from 0ral'llC
Coast su~ets, and othen na-
tionwide, at a result ·of two arapes
from Chile that were found to be
poisoned with cyanide. •
l"be furor over: poisoned fruit bas ~had natlOftal and international re-~usaionsl throwina South Ameri-
can fruit P.ttktn out of •Ork aod
maluna Ptuladelphia and losAn,eles
dockwOrken fear for their jobs.
On Monday, after rccelVlnl a lip
from ao anODt,!1\0US caller. the feder-
al Food and lXUI Admmnistration found traces of cyantde an two arapcs from a h1pmcnt imported from
OuJe
That same day, the FDAadv1sedall
IT<Ur>' retailers to remove not onJy
grapes but all Chilean produce from
their shelve pend ma further testing.
The FOA's hst ofl'orb1ddcn fruits
I mcluded red green and black arapcs, plums. peaches, nectarines and
I '
ras~mes, amona orhcrs.
' It's all gone." said Al~n Nakada,
prodocc manaser at the Lu~y super-
market on Harbor Boulevard in
Costa Mtsa. "l Just had to spread
everything out to take up the space."
Out of season tn the U.S , the
rrmoved P.roductsarc 10 season an the
Southern Hemisphere.
Jn recent )cars, fruit cxportina has
become Chile's fastest growina indus-
try, with the U S. its pnncipa)
custom~r.
Nakada said he believed the fears of
cyanide had become O\ erblo~n.
.. Basically, I thmk everybody JUSt
overreacted.'' he said. "The amount
that was found in tho~ irapes wasn't
even cnoU&h to ma.kc )'Ou ack ...
Local grapes, plums and ncctannc
will not be avaalablc for two months.
Nakada s.atd.
''That won't start until may and
June," he said. -.
Grocery chain officials reacted swiftly-to the news from the FDA.
said Jack Brown, pre 1dcnt of Stater
Brothers Markets. wewcrecarryi~hes,l\eewi.nts:
"Wt have a telephonic m~ 1>1um1 and ra1 ,"Mid Leann center that can communicate almost McKenzie, a spOkeawoman at the anstantly with all 100 of our stores." chain's co~rate ofTtee 1n El Monte.
said Brown. "So WC sot the word from "We're wutina to char from the FDA
the FDA at ·4:30 and by 6 p.m. we had tcllina us what to do."
pulled all Chilean produce from our • Alt>truons, R&lphSi ·Alpha Beu shelves. We would ne,·cr do anything and other arocery retadcrs ahvc aha
that would Jeopardize the safety of responded to the fruit ban. OfT.oab
our customers, so we wiU not carry say produce on the shelves was
any produce from Chile untll such destro)ed and that fruit still in boxes
time as we are told by the FDA that it has been sent ba:k to central ware~ is safe." houses to be kept in cold storaac until
Brown ~ld he regretted hav1na to the FDA make~ ats ru\toa.
rtrnove tht produce. mainly because lndtpendcnt markets hav~ also
of \he effect it would have on followed sun. #
producers and others io the Oulcan "We've taken out aJI the lfapcs. fnut industry. nectarines. peaches and plums.," said
"Unfortunately. it's the · PoOrt t bawn Gik.1u, of Acords market an
people who are goang to be hurt Laguna Beach. ''And there's also a
most.'' he said ... A lot of those vancty of pears that comes from
agncultur&I workers have no other Chile. These are all summer fruit so
way Of earning a hv1ng." WC rrobably won't have any mort
Vons markets arc also devoid of unu May or June."
grapes and other Chilean produce for Meanwhile. the FDA was still
the tJme being. confemng late Wednesday on what
"We started with grapes and then long-term action to take,
pulled all the other Chtltan produce spokcs~oman Karen Brown said.
..... ~~----------------------------------llllllltll--------------------McBonnell-B-ouglas donates tur u:tschoa1s-
1 The McDonnell Douglas Foun-
1 dauon hascontnbuted S 15.000 to the
H11nt1naton Be h City School D1s-
l tnct for cduca11on iCm1nars and
studenl counschna services. The money also will be used for
what a "Teaching for Thmking Lab"
and the ''Ps)chomo1or Lab ..
All of these programs arc pan of the
Calafoaua Compact. a tratCI) de-veloped b)' thc Cahfom1a Chamber of
Coryimcrcc. Businc s Roundtablc
Joseplt •o of die ~ ..... County MlnorltJ 8uslne11 Coundl
•nd l'•t Kl'on• •tt•nd •n ••hll»ft at Th• Korean '••tlval In
Octol>er.
Pac Bell's Pat Krone
Wins recognition for
connecting cultures
and tale Department of Education.
Under that umbrella. schools, busi-
ness commun1t1cs and colleges and
un1vers1t1es part1cipatc in promoting
academic and career excellence.
"We are concerned about the state -,
•
of cdu auon in this count I")." ~1d <.
James Dorrenbacher. prc~1dcnt of
McDonnell Oougla pace ) stems
Co "We arc con"•nced tna1 tile earl) )tars 1n a child's de\ elopment :m: the mo l important ..
Fluorto change No. 1
ly DONNA MOONEY Omlly,......._..,.or
Fluor Corp. President ~ he
McC'ra" Jr h s been pcged as the
leading candidate to repla1 e Chur-man ()a, 1d Tappan Jr." hen he steps
down sometime within the next s1' to
18 months. the Irvine-based engi-
neenng and construct1o(l company
has announced. l At an annual barcholdcrs meeting
Tu~y n1gjlrTippan ~id he wilT
work \\Ith tile stafTto develop a 1tmt>
frame for ht re11rtment Two )Cars
ago. at the age or65, he wa prcpanna to rtttrt. but the board of dirtetors
asked him to ll) on through the
comp:m)"~ financial trouble Tap-
pan has "orked for the comfl'ln~
IDct' 1952 .\bo aw-Tuesda)' · meeuna. the I 6
directors voted to double the firm 's
quarterly d1v1dtnd to 4 cents a share.
Under Tappan, the firm was
restructured and a major ponion of
us natural resources division, includ·
ms gold and zinc units, wasjcnisoned
after the company fell into the red.
Auor's net earnings dropped from $27 mtlhon in 1983 to a paltry St
m1lhon the following year. A loss of
$633 million was reported for 198', at
e tune-when both cn11nccrina •nd
constructaon. and natural resources
fell 1n10 a slump. the compaft)' said.
Fluor reported net eanunp of
$21 .6 m1lhon for its first quarter this
}Car.
McC'raw, 54. JOtncd the company
in 1977 as d1 v1sion manqcr and vice
pre 1dcnt of Fluor subsia:iary Daniel
f ,tease SH FUJOtt I M l
When this picture~ .taken, at least
one · mia was still open
,
At Security P.acific, wt:\v: noo,cJ an mtl-rcstm~ ~nornc
non On~ ;.U..a Fridays. propk tl~i t\"I vtSat our bank
nll>f'C dw1 on other day\. /u i itaak of thii observation, w ~\'e
cxtaxkd our h<lun on tht days you nt'\."ll us nk& Wi:'n: now
opcrt fTon19 AM-7 PM on~ anti~
Rut tu>ins open unril 7 PM is unty one ,J( dlr w. " ·~
anadc banking mon-ronvcnatnt.
With our 2-4-.hour ~ tm'icc tine. you QO \\M'llplnc
b.nking tT n l1t01~ d;l)' or 1uttJlt. &'\:au it Ill~ only ~uswm
quc.stmns ~bout yout X""tOllllf, ll l <lll even rr-.u"'tcr turkh ;and
•op p;aytlll'O on (he\:
W\.• .a!K'I tuvc O\'tr 870 Rt.: t !Tdki' 1 M prtl\ ittit~ -4-hour
at'\'C l(l 4-aih
Of counic. to talc aJ\':U~"C of uur c~mkJ houn or <lbuin
mon· inilfTNb(wt un \JUJ 2..._hnor ~ .__..)\'Ill viM one
Of WI brariehd this~ Without ~thcmnc . rigm.
I I
• ..
ly MMT1N attmNIU
,.,.~ ....
W._SHINGTON -The US.
mtrchandist trade (ltfldt narrowed
sharply in January to $9.49 balhon.
tht Jowett 1mbltance 1n 1h""
months. •• a bit dt<:lioc in run umer. import' ome1 a h11her oil bill, the
go"·cmmtnt re-ported "°ednesday.
Tht Commerce Department said
that the imbala~ btt~ttn 1mporu
and upons fell b) t 3. 7 perccn1 from a revised .-Dc:ttmber defk1t of SI0.99
billion ~s the United States posted •
rare 1ridc urplus wi1h. Europe and ~n.~.,.161,. a:~•-,,,.ual Gro• fl'J ~~f;~c~1~~t~~.panr~111oi• 1owcsL r .g .. ff f\,, ffTl"6 l.j .. ,. Tht Bush administration hailed
#c Ti ~ the dcvelopmcot as an encouraain& ml~ •r uggi ~manl~g1•r signofproaress anwh11tllngdownthe• ~ G1 "'~ ....: a ..-1 country's.huge trade deficit. but many
. private economists were far le s
Fountain VaUey's PM a,.., has announced the appointment of E, Nicole en~~~g;~al)'Sts called the Januar) !We as man•r· LTD sales for lhe Los Angele and Oranie ('ounl.Y. a,rea. Ii ho k h h . Tuiile. bas bc'Cn with PM Group since 1976 and has held a vanet~ of po 111ons igurc a one-mont u e '" " at t e)
in SilcS, inclU(iing account exccu1ivc and sales assistant. believe "ill be an -Other'\\ isc drcnl)
TuU)e's new responsibili11es encompass &he marketing of PM Group's outlooJc for U.S. trade prospects this
In 1911, tht u.s; lndr delat
dtdined b> 21 ~n1 to SI 19.76
bilhon as a bOom an elport ulcs
helped prov1~ two-fifth• of \ht yrar's
total economic growth.
But anatyus arc forecaslina that
cxPon saln. despite aan"n1vr mar-
kct-opcruns ttToru on·t~ ~n of 1hc
adm1nistra11on. "''II slow 11nifi-
canaly in 1989 while Amcnca'\
foreign 011 bill tncl'l.-asts. rt'flecting
risina world 011 price .
"The January rcpon It. t 0tnl to be
1hc las1 rcdtJCllon wt get 1n our trade
deficit for. qu1le some time," !aid
Michael faans. head of a Wash1n,1on
forcea11n&· firm. ··our upon boom ran out of ream some lime 110 and
now v.e are Stt1ng 1he e1Tec1 ofhiiber
011 pnces."
Evans prcd1cted 1ha1 the U.S. trade
deficit would ac1uall) incr.:asc to
S 130 b1llton this )'ear, bastd on the
adverse trends. That would be a blow
to the admm1s&rauon. which 1scount·
mg on exporl-led growth to help keep
tN: U .. econom) mo'1ng forward at
a rapid clip. bringing in the go"em-
ment revenues needed 10 lower the
d
"'::.: ~=--=-.-.=:!£ M~•••:~usrr. Lii.i vc Hi01. the 1ration'1 top tradt-omcaal1. au&lfd
statements haahna ~ January ck· cline 1saaenrourq1~ deVtlopmenl.
"The )'C.At is awt•na on a plu
notl'," Mosbacher .said. "Our aim
hould be 10 build on 1hi imprO\l'·
men1 an the months ahead." ·
The ldmuuatrttion has iCiopted a
CULTURES
FromA7
more formal. • Krone also recognizes some Jona·
entrtnehed cultural difference\. In
Meuco fraud 1s a criminal offense,
but in America it's a CIVIi matter.
ForCIJJl·bom businesspeople may
not be accustomed 10 a ''bu)'Cr
beware" philosophy.
The cy tO ~ differences is
1aJking to tach other. he •insisted.
"We f\ave Lo learn to be 1ogether so
th at we can v.ork toaether."
FLUOR
FromA7
Construction Co. He btcame Pf't1i·
dent 1n 1982 and chief e etutive
officer in 198". Last year he btcame
pre 1dcnt of Fluor Corp.
Fluor employs 2.300 in it Irvine
office · and 17.800 an 56 off"tccs
intcm:uionally. LTD products through its network of account exccuuves and independent year.
brokers. She is aJso cnargcd with aU sales planning and foreca ting for L TO ------------------------------llilllllliiilllliilllmilllilimllilliil_lllli ___________ _ products in the LA and Orange County region . · • • • • SteveR.Hootonbasjo1ned W~;h·&co .. a pubhc accountingfirmin Government def1c1t ~1gu~es boost stocks ~~!ti~ai =~~iin~~~tiC: f~~~~hp&bg~.8~~~~r"1l~~~.~~~ ~~~ec~r~ • I ~ I ·~
Hooton was an intcmallonal tax partner with KPMG Peat Marw1t k. where he
directed international practice in Orange County and the Inland Empire. By CHET CURRIER month before. Hooton has served o n the Board of Directors of the Orange County World 1111u11rwaw111.-The data, which \\-Cr~ formerl)
Trade Center Association. reponcd '"two wa)'S, arc no"' posted • • • • NEW YORK~ The go,ern mcn1·s only under a method that eAcludes
' Robert Scou oflrvine recently was promoted to vice president ofLadovile report of a shghtly smaller-than-costs off rcisht and J!lsurancc. •
6 Associates. Scott was previously 1cepi'Bi<rcnt ofa tre~rc"ltevclopment ~C'll'd .. trade dcfic11 for Jan c latest 1gure came m below
company based in Nashville. Tenn. before he joined the Newpon Beach firm. a11 provided the. 1mpelus for a mo l Wall trcct cconom1m' esu-. • • • t moderate advance in the stock mar· mates. prompting some buying b) Ceas&al Commuities Hospital m Santa Ana has named rl1tiH Madtey. ket Wedntsda). trade~
RN, Employee of the Month_ for February. Tht Do"' Jones a"eragc of 30 1 I
Mackey, a resident of Irvine, h~ ~n emplo)cd at Coastal Communiucs indusmals gained 14.29 to 2.320.54 wi~,c~~~~h~~m:r m~r"~o.~"11J1~
for 11 years. he 1s ~urse •i:i lhe hospital s nurs~ry and was selected ~cause of Advancing issues outnumbered de· traders were pleased b) dccltnes in
her pleasant and canng attitude tow?rd the pauents, the company aid. ctines b> about 4 to 3 m nationwide U.S. imports and ex pons. which Employees of the Month receive a .$1 00 bonus and are honored at a tradingofN~w York-Stock Exchange-· _..... · d
reception held al the. ~Ospital. Honorees are selected b~ a panel of &heir co-listed stods. with 798 up. 6 l 5 down mvcstors 1nterprct1..-u as in icahng 3
workers.. and arc c11g1,ble for the Employee of the \ear a""ard given in and 534 unchan~ed. possible coohng-ofT of the economy. be -Bul the mnrket's response was Dcccm r. • • • Volume on e floor of the Big muted b) ""ornes that le'i'> favorable
Sena Sugerman has JOined The Blue Boo~ of Building and onstrucuon Board came to 167.07 m1lhon hares, ne"s might be loomina when the
company as a sales rcprcscn1a1ive. Sugannan will be responsible for account up from 139.97 m1ll1on m the go,cmmcnt issues its rcpon Frida)
scmce and new busi ness development for the Sou1hem 0 1hfom1a ed111on of pre"1ous session. Na11onw1de. con-on the produn· price tndt.'x offini.,hcd
1he Blue Book She will cover the Central Orang~ Count)' area. sohdatcd \Olume in NY E-ltsted ~s for Februal).
· • • • . issues, including trades m tho c Gainers among the blue chips Mary Aldrich was awarded the Mall Boxes Etc. Franchisee of the Year tn stocks on rcgional exchanges and 1n included .\merican Telephone &
the ~Jnited States f~r 1988. Aldrich "-as presented the award at the .\nnual M BE the over-the-counter market. totaled Telegraph. up • at 32'-.. General
National Convenl1on held recentl y aboard the Queen Mary 1~ Long Beach 199.93 mil hon ~hares. Electric. up 11 at -!5 · •: Phi hp Moms.
The MBE Center 1s located 1n Town Center in Laguna 1guel. The C'ommen-e Department re-up '•at 11 b •. and c oca·Cola. up 1•4
Gradco Systems he. of If'\ m; ~a: pr<unoted William Smi)h 10 'ice ported that the nall<?n·s trade ~eficll at 5 L1 1.
president cngmeenng. Smith will oversee engineering for all 4i1v1 ions of narrowed to S9A~Ml1on 1~1rinual) SM(. "h1ch r~e'i,cd a modific<f
Gradco. independent supplier of paper feeders and sorters to copier and prinrer from a revised $1 0.99 b1lhon the •
manufacturers. ·
SECURITY AND SUCCESS!
CELLULAR CAR PHONEs-PAY FOR THEMS£tV£S
NOW -MORE AFFORDABLE THAI DEii BEFORE
From $595 00 • 0 Down • Financing. A.O.C.
No Parments for 90 Dars
5-: !>tuOles over the last '°" yus have pi oven 11\at a c:ellutar car phone acruatty pays
I« itself 1n !he llrsr 4 months (on the average) and goes on ma1ono yous fOI ve¥! You
bme is worth muc:tl more than you tl'lnk Now you can ILm ~cxl.cl~ rravel hme flto
money and success•
s..ty: Wha1 1s the value ot the peace ot mind knowino thar ~ones you love will never
be stranded and can call IOI' help «be called in an emergency ..,_ is ortiJ $25 ps month
That's vtty inexpensive 1nsuance• We 111111111 •yew llclllll _, * J ,_. t• lfll,....,
C•LLULAP. ~. I c.t1M11wun I
WC: -1211 lff .... tMs 14 .
"The Best
Just Got
Better!"
'" c1t.b1Wlo,. of..,,. •U 1101 l1111d ~ '-laMr """"'· t4ll4
-..,._,, of 01" M#lt '"""'~.,.ul
.,..,.., /#•lotu
"""-.,. •lflr•• ,.,,.,,,, Inc~
Frail Or111ed
Breut ol CbJcken.
Petite Fllet and I
Knimplto.ae ball
Lc*lfcr Tall • .. , ... ,,
$11.95 ,,,.~
........ ""'"" ...,,,.,,,... ...,.,. ,......
Orilled Ped• Akt.
hdte1A411MrTIU,
Ortlled ....... ol
C'laicU.."'-'
Se&Uopl .. ..... ,.......,, .. ... .. ~_,,
$16.95 ,_,.,_,,.,...
/tt OtltJiltOll, rnMm~r tc> t~(WI odwr /oftltutk tit/THI tW
/witw'f 1td u •rillMtl VHI I.Wt. Grlll«I LMit of Llltltb. Sttok •Aar
6rMtlo#t'1• or OM Of ow frt11' H'lllfOO' iiiifu /1l,,; ft't1• ~.
fn'iJI $41wtOlf,ftillf /#,,_,._of t OW# Ofll' oWtlrd WUM"'I ....
-~ SMfriotl 0-..0.
11iE BEVERLY HEJijT/GE }-gff.L
•
OTf l'PS .\\D DOM\S
.,
takeoHr btd from a group led b)'
Vincent Tan. a Malys1an investor
picked up I'·• to 3511•.
Ho p1t31 CorJ>. of America rose 'la
to -49JI. 1n-at('ti"\-e-tnrdmg aller th
compan)' 's shareholders appro"cd a
bu\ Out b) a managcmenl Jroup. Sea Cont:uncrs Ltd. pined l 1a to
45 a on top of an 81h-po1n1 Jump
Tue~a)'. when investors learned that
tena AB of Sli'cden has acquired an
8 .. 17 percent interest in the compan}
and ma) seek to gain control of ll.
Mesa Limited Partnership dropped
a to I I "•· The partnership disclosed
plans to reduce its quarterl y pa}out
later this )'Car because of "'eak
nat ural-ps pnc~s.
Sm1thkhne Beckman ffJSC 1 11~ 10 54
after ~•anmg an agreement "'1th a .
M II \"I. '\ l SI-: DID
8nt1 h firm for the de"elopment and
markcung of a new tr~tment for
arthnu~
As measured b) Wal hut As·
--SOC1atcs' jnde~ of more than 5.--000
acuvely tradoosrod the mm1ret
increased $12.37 billion. or 0.42
percent. 1n "'aloe.
The NY E's com po 1te index of all
11s hstcd common stocks gained 74 to
166.67.
tandard & Poor's industrial mde~
rose 2.02 to 342.97, and S&P's 500.
stock composite mdc~ wa up 1.53 al
296.67.
The NASOAQcompos1tc index fo1
the over-the-counter market ad·
vanced .97 to 406.98. At the Ameri·
can Stock fachangc, the market valut
index closed at 331. 79, up 1.26.
M II \ 1· \ 'ti I·.' DID
NEW YORK (AP) Mtr. IS Prev. r>rw · .iH•""~~ l ~
NEW YORK (AP) Mar 15
~t-R~-~--1~ ro1111~ues g~::~w~' 3 f l
GOl .D PHIC 'l·:s
\
Assault rifles
have.no place
·in spo~t hunting
Cahfomia's push to ban the WC of assault rifles ha
surva~ its first major tests. Both the Senate and Assembly
have approved aun control bills and the issue has been moved
to the t.ck burner while lqjslaton will now try to come up
with a bil! that is acceptable to both hou~ and the covernor.
But Just because the sun control ISSlle is on the back
burner doesn't mean the pohtical heaJ should be turned down
· The National Rifle Msociation. despite its admi ion
that there should be ll temporary ban on 1mportin1 assault
nflcs, will fight the California bill with every resource it can
muster. The arauments., both good and bad will also inten ify.
For those who are uneasy with the concept of gun control.
now is a aood time to remember that every state already has
strict rufes on the primary sporting use of fUns. The
classification .. sporting use" as important because 1t has been
the focus of much of the rhetoric against banning assault rifles.
These current gun controls regulate what hunters can and
cannot use in their sport.
For example, in Califomta it is against the law to hunt
birds with a shotgun that has a barrel shorter than 181nches. h
is also illegal to hunt with a shotg\Jn that can hold more than
three strells in the magazine-and ehamber.
So much for the argument that the semiautomatic
shot~ns like the .. Street Sweeper" or the ''Bullpup" are vahd
sporting guns.
The rules for nncs arc a httle less restrictive. The nflc
must have a barrel at least 16 inches long, but there 1s no
restriction on the number of rounds the nfle's clip can hold.
However. how many hunters would go deer hunting w11h
an Uzi carbine or an AK-47?
The ariument that banning the sale of assault rifles would
threaten the sale, ownership or usc of shotguns and nnes for
hunting is pure bunk.
Assault nfles are designed for ftre power. That\
important in a mihta~ usc because the 'olume of bullets in
the air is more imponant than accurac}'. The same thing
cannot be said for hunting.
California's Legisla1ure has the responsibility to mold the
Scnafe and Assembly bills into a piece of leeislat1on that
answers the need to control the sale and possession of assault
rifles. .
The psc for shotguns is already spelled out in hunting
regulation~ and the confusion over how to distingui sh a
hunting riue from an assault rifle could be easily solved by
lif'Jliting hunting rifles to a reasonable aumber of cartridges 1n
t.He clip •nd chamber.
What's reasonable? Certainly not 20 rounds'!
0pWona expreaed In W• epece are thoM of the Daily Pik>f Other
vi.wa expreaed on this peg.a are thole of their authoB and attlata Reede<a' comments ere lrMttd ancr may be tent to The OeHy P110t. P.O. Box 1S&O, ·
~a Meea 92828.
0 ·1 111: H \ 0 IC I '
State budget deficit
Most men wear their black ttcs tp funerals; the other da>
George DcukmeJian wore his to convi nce Californians that
the state IS ·fin the black" and that his reputation for fiscal
prudcooe is ahve and kicking. But the facts won't be reversed
by sartorial stunts. only by some flexibility and real
leadership.
The most senous indictment of DeukmeJian's fiscal
performance ... comes from legislative Analyst Elizabeth
Hill's annual review of the governor's budget. Dcukmejian's
blueprint for the fiscal future.
Accordin& to Hill's analysJs, ... California next year face a S 1.6 billioo .. pp between its avililable revenue and the
spendina required to fund the state's somewhat tattered
services at current levels.
Yet the legislative analyst says the governor has chosen
not to confront the root problem. He's opted instead for a
.. short-term perspective, relyina on one-ume savings.
deferrals of costs to future )ears and hort-term fundina shift~
to achieve (his) goals." ...
Other bud1etcrs ha ve been known to resort to uch ··savings .. as a way out of temporary squeezes caused b> a
faltcnna economy. But Cahfomirs problems arc not
temporary. Even as the economy booms, state aovemment 1s
so constrained by pa t pohcy mistakes and fi5C81 rcstncuon
that 11 can't prov ide essential services. That f roblem won't get
any better next year unless there is an overaJ budact reform to
remove those constraints and a tax increase to bring the state'
resources m hne wtth public needs.
A aovemorwho wants to leave office with a reputation as
a ~rudcnt fiscal manqer needs to take the lead in making that
reform happen Blamina accountants and wcarina a black ue
won't do 'he 'rick.
Fn100 BH
Bilingual education
In a refreshing change from recent tradition. a federa l
court has decided not to tum ilsclfinto a school boaro. Jud c
D Lowell Jen n ha ruJed ap4lst'aC1h ists who wanted to
mandate b11tnaua1 education in the public hool of !
Berkeley.
The activi ts cla.Jmed that Berkeley school cbtldrtn from H1~nicand Qnental famibc 5pcnd too much time study in&
En&1i• and not enou&h time tud>ina their nathc lanau
But 1 the judse pointed out. the tehool sy tcm offers 1
choicebetwetn naU\'C·lanauaaccla sesand intcn ivc traini!'J
m En&11sh. bout two-thirds of the immiirant families prefer
the laucr.
Test tcOl"CS show that Bdkdcy·s minont)·lanau•
students ... re leamina at rates equal to or hia.het than their c:oua~ .. in Olhtf' 1Ctio01 ~ Jeuen obsened. nc falatr immiplnts lam ~-· lite lister the can move into the maiosuam of Amencan JOCiety.
:Jcn1tn'1 Nlil!ll it thus• \'ktOl'Y for educatloUJ u ~tll a:s
lqal commot1 ten~···
No magic
wand to fix
pri ce of car
insu rance
To the Editor:
Wc'\c t>«n hearina about various
propo l to cut the price of auto
insurance ip Caltfomia. Wouldn't it
• be vcat tf the residents of c.Jifomia
could \!Ole to rcd.U<lClhc price offood?
Of nev. house1' Of can? Of television
sets'!
Discovery proves high quality
of county's people, busj ness
s lhe D1c;cover) asuonauts hC'ad
back to canh. lhe hopes of man)'
Orange Count1ans will nde with
lhem.
From Rockwell to Ford Ae ros pace
to UC! to ( ONTEL. among many
others. Orange ( ount)''I ~t and
brightest h;ive 1n"ested their energies
into mai:1ng the huttle's return 10
space a success. That's why, 11 lam.
Monda). I hcadoo to Andrews >\u
force a~ LO board a Wt chancred by NASA and flew to (ape
Canaveral.
About a dozfn members of Con·
grcss. along with administration of-
ficial , foreign diplomats. con-
grc s1onal and N .\SA staff. made the
half-da} tnp down and b3ck
!though we were returned to Wash-
1ng1on fo,r lunch. the NASA-sponsor-
ed excursion wa an cxcep11onal
opportunity to sec first-hand one of
the ke)' areas of our space program
and to evaluate its clTccu,eness.
Upon our am,al, we were bnefcd
on tM launch of Dlscovcl') b) l t
Oen. Forrest McCanncy. dm.'Ctor of
the Kenned)' pace Center. N .\ S \
stafTabo ga'c u.s a techntcal br1efin&
on D1scover)'s pnmaf) m1<>s1on the
deployment of a SI 00-mtlhon C 0""-
TEL satellite to complete a s~stcm
I.hat wtll drnmat1caJI) improve pace
commun1ca11ons.
At the '1ewing area. about thr~-e
and a half miles from the shuttle. we
were JOlned by a number of men and
women from science and industry
who had c>.penments and equipment
on board, as well as the astronaut\'
fa m1he . Safety concern~ heightened
by the 1986 Challenger accident make
this new viewing area the closest one
that 1n)onc not in a bunker or block
house will be allowed to use
Dunna thc hours before the l::iunch.
I talked w 1th <>e"cral npcrtc; w.ho arr
malang u~ ol the c;huttk'~ tremrn-
douscap.ib1l11 1c'i 'vtan} of them ha'e
tics w11h Oranec < ount)
Orange < ount) .\dm1m<>tra1or Larry Pamsh wa-s-thtrt" a~ pal't of 1hc
CONT EL conungeot CO:-. TE l.
v.h1ch has sub tant1al operations 1n
Orange Count\ ov.ns and <tl>CratC'\
the Tra ingand Data Reta) Sa1clluc
~ tern that v.a<i put into place b)
DlscO\CI'). TR\\, v.h1c-h cmplu)\
many.OranaeCo.&.1nt) rcsidcnLS. actu·
ally builds the satclhtc In fact. I
lcam~ that Orange-Countv com-
panies were respe>n 1blc for pcr-
form1na more than S 138 m1l11on in
NA A contrnc:ts 1n fi~o.I >~t<lr 1988
I spoke at length wuh Dr Manuel
A. Navia. of Merck&. Co . one of the
sc1en11 ts who de .. eloped the protein
Cf) tal grc.1v.th c\pcnmcnt the
astronaut~ on thc~huttlc arc lending.
The pharmaccu11cal 1ndustf) 1n Or-
n_ge ( ount) 1 dctpl) interested in
this e\J)(nment, whteh has the potcn·
t1al to help dcH·lop nev. drup to fiaht
A ID cancer. cmphHcma and otf\cr disease\
Or 03, 1d l Blanchard of Ford
Aero paef. v.hov.a\ilt thc launch 1tc
w.1th me had an c pcc1all> keen
interest 1n the Ot\CO\ Cf) shuttlt'
flight If the D1<>CO\c.'I') did not launch
on time. his proj('Ct -thc \ptttacul~u
Hubble telescope that will be taken
into orbit on an UJXOm•ng m1ss1 on -
v.ould be dcla)ed Dr Blanchant·s
anittcty v.os undoubtedly shared b)
the more thrin 500 ~oplc at Ford
Acroc;pm:c "hu form ht: team
He was not to be disappointed.
lbc1t 1wo houn after scheduled hnorr. the: fog broke and the
eountdu" n <:on11nucd to 11 final
seconds I inallv the first v.oman to
announce .a N \ \ \ launch steadtl\
t1d:ed off .. three 1wo-one-1ero" The
huttk ro.arcd m3Je4it1call towar(b
sp:Jcc "tt"am wJ\ l''er)''"hcrc as the
rockC't\ bo1kd J\\a\ the cooling ""-lter
AamC'~ ht lh~ .,l, tor mile a.round
.\sl.. ,10,on<.' "h<l ha w.11ncsscd a
spatt l:tuik:h ~nd \OU "•IL hear that
the sounll anti the ph~ tl':tl trcmbhna
1s <'' <.'n mun: 1mpr~\l"C than the
1ght \ ll'" ~'one.I\ .ifler 1gnttion. the
sound rc..tl huJ u' .and 11 wa . indeed ,
av.c ml'
.\ \oon 3' thl· 1n111al sh k P3 ~.
the cro"d bur t into upplau~ We
kept our t')C on the huttle as 11
re cht"<l tne cr111al ah1tudc of 30.<XX>
feet. -where full "thru t t~ reappltC'd
throug}l 1hc main engines It was clear
th.at C' Cf) One 1n the crowd rt'·
members what hap~ned to 1he
Challenger at th1 point in tt Kent a
hushed s1h;n<'C o~'t again fell o'\er us
· f inalh . tv.o minutes and 1~ ll«·
onds into the fl1a)it. as t.he huttk
tC4ched-OA-.ah1t ude uf l j6.00() l
and traveled at nea.rl) four 11mcs the
speed of )()Und. the soltd rode& boostc~ were ucct\ fully separated
from the cxtcma.I fuel \onk. anuety
aave way to unbndlcd emotion. and
again the crowd burs\ snto exuberant applau~ ·
f"ollov.-1nJ laflof'f. NA. A provided a
tour of theOro1tcr Pt0Ct"SS1n1 fa1..1tit~.
wbcre--the Columbia v.a bcina ~r
v1ced l\nd-at the Vehicle As'>tmbly
8 u1ld1ng. ""'here the Atlant1 had JU t
been atta<:hed to its ntcmal \Ink anJ
boo tm fora launch nc~t month, one
couldn't hdp but be both 1mprcncd
and proud Of the ma 1\ie sc1entjfk
a<'Comph hmcnt this rcpn-!ltnl "c completed our tour b) hc1d1n
home from the b1ge t 'oocretc
run"a> sn the v.orld. v.hcrc pact
huttlcs ha"c '"''ct landed upon theu rctum'I from space. whrre tht' huulc
would ma.le an cmergenq land1n1 in
casc.lnenginefall .and v.herr tht' 747
that cames huttlc ba It from Ed-
wards Air Force Base lands.
The follow1nac'"cn1 "1. back h('rt 1n
Orange tcrunt)'. I had dtnntr wi th
Chang-Lln Tien. C\CCUll\C. vice
chancellor of U I .\ "'orld-re-
now ncd m«hilntcal cnimccr. Or
f 1C'n ts the ~ienttst who 50ht'd the
shuttk\ problem of hrat tran\fcr on
re-cntn w1th ccramt 111 H1~ cn~~1r"~ too v.crc cam~ aloft v.1th D1~0,rn .
It'' a \mall "'orld 1n morr wa" than ont• ~othtng SCf' e\ hctt~r to
rl·mtnJ u'I of that than the t\•
traordman \.1cw of our fragile planet
lamed to us from PICt' -a \lew
made po siblc by tM men and v.omen
ofOrangc Count),tndAmcnca, who
ha\C built tht huttk program.
Cltrl1 Cu 11 lk U.S. ~~t.a-
''' t for tk 411t ~ MUI DI -
lrr~t.
Banking on collected notes?
Interest found in column ideas
mo' ing 1ralli< on the C o la Mc
frccw.1\ -\hot him Ju\t hot him.
f>snche'> 3 l"'ater polo pla)Cr At
L n1vm1t\ High •· hoot in Irvine.
made hcadhnt'\JU~t bcforeChn tma
v.htn he acrnkntall} cut otTht hanJ
v.1th a po"cr \I"· Ht~ band""' later
rttattachl"Ci
Nu\sbaum. quite unc:lcntandahl).
wa.s left q~11oning ht "try t'· 1!.tcn~e follov.1n1 the hootina.
PiMh was out an11 po'"'' c af\cr
h1 a idcnt bu\ u urc a ut th
future.
Both madt h dhne1 1n the Oa.11
Pi1ot rttenlly. and the ocws ·wa n:~h.1n1 u blum compttcd 1n the LM
nscln Marathon. in the wMekhllir
divnion. tic finished the anaehna
rontC1t and allerward ~l;c op-
t111·11sttcall) about the future. PinCtws.
mean'lll'htk. 11 do.,.nri&ht buo)'anL
HIJ rcanachcd hand" hc1hn1 and he
has vowed to ao out for wa~r polo
ftC\I )tar. If your CMtN1e a~t fOf rok
models · ·•hair da *'sktcr Paul ~ ud JncMI Pinchn.
Sounds aood at first. nsht? But 1f
"-C could decide how much we ho uld
pay for consumer aoods ~e wo uld
ha"e an cnttrcly dilrcrent economic
sy tcm in the United States. And It
urel)' wouldn't be based on a com-
pet1t1ve marketplace.
Californians recently tried to cut
the pncc of auto insurance by more
than JO percent with Proposition 103.
But they didn't cut the cost of what
insurance pays for. Guess what hap-
pentd? 11\surafttt-eompen i:cs arc-tn
coun because they feel tbcy arc being
dn ven out of business; consumer
nct1v1sts arc in coun because they
arcn:t happy with the results of Pto{>. 103 the insurance comm1u1oner 1s
hsn.ng more staff Cat an added
Wpa)ers' citpensc of S 18 million):
and legislators (who might hove
resolved the problem }tars .,o) still
arc search1n1 for soluuons.
Obv1ou ly, the pncc of auto 1n-
urancc has nseo io Cahfom1a over
the pa t decade. Our prtm1ums
refltc1 th~-n ~s ofmcd1cal arc.
auto theft. auto repair and lawsuit
c"cnhcles drhers in C..hfomia
benefit from i ftte..cntcrpnsc en·
'1ronment that allows la,..e and small
insurance compa01es to compete.
mart con umcrs can save a lot by
checkina around. ure.plent~of work ties ahead. But
let's rememl>er one 1na: To i eep
insuran~ affordable and available,
"'e need intclliaent, well<raftcd re-
forms. We can't wave a ma&JC wand.
suddenly have lower prices, and
expect C\Ct')lh1n1 to be fine.
Tbc 9u1d. fix approach hasn't
\liOrkcd 1n Cabfomta. Insurers. eon-
umers. bu inn leadtrs and lcsi
latOtS•l~mu t work tascthcrto kttp
auto m urancc aflordablc. Ut's nan now
DAVID H. ROCK.ER Western Insurance tnformatJon
Scrv1cc. Tustin
'Easy answers'
haunt a lifetime
To tht" Editor
I wn 1n\Olved 1n the Operation Re~cuc demonstration al the
Womtn's Medi al 01n1c in Lo
An& I on Feb. 11. Our pe.aceful
blockade wa not intended to deny
ind1 ndua l riabts, but to bn.,_ aware·
ness to th.c communtt) that srncc Jan
2'. 1973. some 25 m11hon lepl
abon.ions ha"c tenn1na.t.ed the hves
of I 0 percent or America's population
-that 1s one tn three binhs.
No one feels lo"c arid compassion
lor a woman with an uncxpcde<j
prqnan ) mo~ th.an the! pre>ltfe
orpn1a11on We a.re not at war
ap1nst indt"tdtal nghts -on the
contra!') -unlike abon1on ad-
\ CK2t~ v.e emphasize that individ-
ual ha"e a njht to unbiued facts. "
Women faana an unc~pccted P!CJ·
nail<'} arc not ahen object1"'c chom
b)' groups ucb as Planned Parent-
hood ln tcad, a rt1on 1 a "prod-
uct -csscnt1al to mectm& lhctt
quarter!> rc"enucs One must quc
t1on 1f they pro"1de a tesiumotc
lOm mumt) scrv1Ct' or arc shrcwdl)
seeking lhctt fonuncs off the vulner-ab1ltt~ of confu5Cd and lroubkd
\\Omen
Prcinant and troubled women
need help. love and suppon -not an
""·aw answer." f or many. the "easy
an\wer" haunts them for the re t of
thC'1r "" fhe pro-hfc community 1 here ~ot
onl) 10 sa"c babies. but to help
"'omen f: cina an extrcmtl)' difficult
time Our aoaJ 1 not to make an ca
buck, but to help. lo"e and \Upport
the "'~ of all md1"idu.als. Women facing an unupectcd prqnancy &re
tncourailcd to pk 't' contact oM of
the pro:life or11.1Hut100 1n ur
community.
I ha\ie )Cl co meet an 1bof11on
ad\(xatc ho 1 motivated by rc-
pon 1biht), love and the riabts Ol'aJJ
pt0pl • sndud.ina babies.:
• . HOFFMAN
Seel Belch
Comments
weJcome
~1
Conveniently located on a 2~-acrt leacMrl and 12 ytan reaching ·crafts,
site at Btach Blvd., between Heil and and offer tole P-inting and floral
Slark, Tht Pavilion Shopping'unttr design worlcsh<>pS. for all s~J levels
has approx. 310,000 square rm of rtuil the workshops include onc:•day-only
sp-« _and is designed as a ont-srop Sarurday classes as wtU as day, evening
sh<>pping «nttr. and <>ptn clams.
Anchottd by the upscale super· Brown is one of • few who reach
store, Von's Pavilion, and a 100,no tole and dKorati~ P-inting usin~ oils
squa.tt foor Target, tht unter is one of as well U-!Cfllics. A talented P-lnttr.
tht largest outdoor shopping centers many of ~ items are for saJt.
in Orangt County. And its contem-Benshoof shares her talents in the
porary grttn and pink outdoor rile floral design clas~s. Her designs,
dftign and vinyl P-stel canopies aWcc-i~luding tole.pa.inted sweauhllts.-Me
it one of tht most colorful. At night, its also included among the unique home
can<>J>ie' backlit with stage lights, tht decor and handcrafted gifts.
unttr truly dese~s to be called 'The Becau~ Brown and Benshoof
Crown Jewel of Beach Boulevard." handcraft much of thtir merchandise.
~wral upbtat. restaurants, such as thqt are able to provide cuscom orders
Mam Callender s, The Soup Ex· for a variety of colors and decors. They
c~ge, Gongs D'lic1ously Olina and also employ a wood cutter and many
Ciro's Grttk Cafe set the thtmt for of their tole P-inted designs are
po~lar clothing, video, jewelry and custom cut.
other specialty shops at the unter. No craft store would be complete
. Crafts R-R Bag without a ~ltetion of craft supplies.
One such specialty shop, Crafts R-R Silk and dritd flowers and accessories,
Bag, is owned by professional craft Accent tole paints, macrame supplies,
teachers, Dene Benshoof and Dadene lace, ribb9n and much more can be
Brown. Tht p&ir each ha~ more than found in the 1,800 ~re-fooc Store.
20 years experience as public school But kttp in' mind, "1ust because the
-
shop is small, it isn't expensive,"
Benshoof said. ''We strive to offer
cutom1zing and uniqueness, at a
(easonable price."
(Crafts R-R Bag is located rwo
doors west of Tuitt. Hours ue
Monday: noon-9. Tuesday-Thursday:
10.9 and Friday & Saturday: 10-7. For
more information call 842-9610.)
Value Oothiers
A year ago, w~en Harwy Brown
and David Rivchin decided to name
rbtlr "tt«hinK srore:;-V-.lae-Oothim;
they took the name: to heart and
Stocked thdr 3.BOO square-foot store
with name brand men's clothing •t true
discount prices.
With sport co.u beginning at
·~.88and suits priced as low as m.~.
"we ha~ everyone beat in Orange
Country," Harwy Brown, store presi·
dent, said. "By offering L.A. garment
district prices, we ha~ become
Orange Cowity'.l.Jargcst. men's dis·
count clothing store." With 3, years of
combined experience and store vice-
presidtnt O.vid Rivchin's importing
and exporting experience; the partners
are at* to provide quality imports as
well as domeStic br.nd names.
The full-lint, which tJJ'getS the
businessman and professional, also
includes slacks, dress shirts and tn
Shorts, extra shorts and big and ull
sizes art a specialty with sizes ranging
from 36 extra short tQ ,_.extra long.
On top of thtir already low prices,
Value Oorhiers offers a multiple
Come
.see
what's new
at
SHOPPING CENTER the Pavilion!
GONG 'S D'LICIOOSLY
CHINA
-Pavilion Shopplnc Center -
(71t) 843-lSOC
Ta ke-Out Specials
One coupon per order. not eood
with eny other offer
Fun Bunny Stum
• tt-•-·4..
cio.ching discount purchase plan, tht
Value Plus Program. An in-store tfilor
shop and a knowledgeable, ex·
pec1enced sales staff are. added
bonuks. ·
Value Ocxhiers is so positive about
its clothing seCtlon and prices, that
"we plan to ha~ five stores in Orange
County in fi~ years." Brown said. The
com,,-ny is right on schedule; •1th
nearly one year under its btlt, they will
soon open another store in Laguna
Hills.
(Value.Ootruers is located betwttn
Targn and Von's Pavilion. Hours are
Monday-Friday: 9:30-9; Saturday:
9:30-6 and Sunday 11·). i:or more
information call 841·3017.)
, Even Fullerton JC' s football coach had a hard time with His own following
I f!ota C•ntrrll is •· f<>rrMr Cit~ After.Publijher Wilier Bu~ loi;al ~r,:· The mechanicchonled. The Dodge~ were b11 news when fought, the total lineage ofEn&hsh
1 Editor. as wcll •s Sports Ed1(or. •l tne arose Wlth a name chaoee ao Dady thtn 111<1.1.' Oh, )OU mean The they first rrivcd 1n Los An,rlrs. Now royally and wh1ch barlcccps 1n town
O.lly Pilot ·Pilot yean later, we kept aotidpetina ' O.spacc!" the old Globt-HcraJd wH-by no scrved1hcdriest martinis. There '
anot.tierktterthat would beain: Dear In time, there was a shift toed1torof means-a metro. but we still found wasn't Lheshgh1edJraceof affection Rodney Oanaerficld i1n 'ttlonc. Fellow Aviator. whauomecaUed .. The world ourwlves delu&cd on pme days with for spons. ""' ..
Any veleran1ourNhs1 worth hi or Then came a 1t1nt at the SAnta Ana famous" T ombt1one Epitaph in An· calls for the score. Returns from lunth hour 1a the
herultcan rela&c toa world of dents y.Rqisler.Oneofthefirstuaipments zona. But tine visit back to Oran~ Theonlytroublesome time frame world of sports arc seldom rosy,
andcrcuestothceao1hatcanmalc'h ca.lkdforav1$ittoM~orA.L Cow1tr~tocrode1hcgbneras wa thclunchhour,bu1onedaywc halt')ionumc . ButwithTayloron the
up -.th Rodney's example ofste~ Plnkiey•scosta Mtsa . an old friend strolJcd up 10 say. "Well. asked Richard Ta lor. ncwssulc copy seons hone line. tbtre wa nevcra
plnaantoanelt\ltorand havm,tbc KnldoffcJtlikc .. Ho ina • unut I bearyou'reoverat theApatat." edilor, 1fhccould ~ndkthccalls. hintofldr tress. Somcthina wasamis .
operatorask, .. Baserntnt?° 1hema~voiccranaoutwith: Weunctcrtined:'Epitaph" for the He nodded ~lately, which should Wesubscqucnll)' ltarnedhe had a Justcan't~t no ~spec!. · . "Well. comes tbC Santa • chap, whosubsequcntJ> pnntcd a ha\.e been the frnl clue, becausr it con istcnt format for every Dod&er One o(the fint introductions to the Banana... social item in his publication. whch sterned, as umc passed, that the callcrt"'Cf) da>. It ~ent somcth1n1
lo. ~s world at the old Costa It was nodiffmnt when ft arrived read. in pen: ..... Now with the pohtcnc was a "billboard .. cover for like: "Hello, )CS. Dodacrs, 54. top or
Meia<Jlobt-Hcrald came when toauume the maftalinaeditor's post Tumbll.one Epitaph." the resistance. He never liked to the fif\h ... Hello, uh huh. that' naht. aomeone01PPtdancn\lel~onto atthcCasaGrande(Ariz.)Oispatch Nowthat'1thcovcf\>icw, but baa.Jc. Dodgers, 5-4, topofthefif\h ... Hello.
tbiscomefsdesk. lt read: Edjtor, in June. 1968. • behind u all one also can pullthreads Ti>lor, a ~ell-aroomcd Stanford you'rccorrect.1t's Dodgers, 5_., top
Globc-Herakl.CostaMcsa.Cahf. First. thecarhadtobe~~. and unravel sportshilantyon one intellectual, had a numbtroflovesin ofthcfif\h ... "
A knerfdlout. It bealn: Dear Mr. Themccbanicaskrd ... NeWintown?" kveloranother. life, which included an uncanny It madeeveryonebapp)'c,ccr• us.
Herald. Thettply: "Yt1, took1j0bw1th the memory for all the naval batt~r Hisundomima> ha~ebetn render-., I I
~ KiFmer-proJ1:i€/e-s-edge ...............
l for Laguna in 10-8 win
•
Laauna Beach H1ah Junior Lee Kirner
came up with an 1mpQnant sweep at No. 2
sin&les to back the trio of "'ins from
sopnomorc Jon Leach as the Artists
earned a hard-fought I ().8 non-ltaaue
boys tennis "1ctory at Estancia High on
Wednesda'f.
Klmer, a Juni or ranked 21 1 an the
Southern Cahfom1a boys 16', moved
from No. 3 to No. 2 s1nJ)e to cam 6-0, 6-0, 6-2 v1ctones. Estancia was also mis ins its
No.2. h • Lquna Coach Bob walton caUed
Kimlf's win 0' er Estancia's No. I , Devin
Bowen, a "pivotal" win. Brent
"'''"''' · Hallock,
Crossett
I/ft Barons
• f
Buschbaum moved from doubles to
sin&Jcs and ~eked two wins H the Artists
toot eiaht of nine points in sin~.
Estancia nearly turned the tide enouah
in doubles, takina seven of the nine sers.
The Ea&les' No. r team of Kevin Currcn-Kcith Brown swept, while the duos of
Jot\o Tang-Timmy Leonard and John
Tsai-David Cheng each took two ofthrtt. Estanica fell to 3-4, while Laauna
improved to 3-0.
In other boys p~ tennis:
Woodbrtct1e IS, Fo9Qlll 5: Despite the
,......_ ... TINNfS/IJt
................... ..,_
Laturut •••dl•1 Jonathon Leach racked .. • trio of V'lctorlft ~•Inst bt•nde.
ly llOGER CARLSON °' .. ~,..SU«
h's called the Orange < ounl> o\11· 1ar 8J,~e1hall < la\\IC and the
coaches.. In me H1gh's tcH~ io..t•1th and SaddlchJ<.~ H11h''i Pat Quinn.
ha~e btco named as c chc for the South and ~onh. but radical
boundary chanae\ for the 24th ed1t1on hu turned the game' format
virtually 1dcways.
Amona the North 1s the entire unset lra&u<.' fEd1..on. f-ountam
Valle), Manna, <Xcan View, Wc!>tminstcr and Hun11ng1on Beach). a
~II al Costa M. csa1 Estancia. L1bcrtyChm11an. ddlcb ck. nta -\na
and Santa na V1tl ey, all which ha\C~ betn trad1t1on.ill) !>ou1h hool .
Also an the North. and v.hict\ has bttn there for 1hc pa t fc" )Car8.. ''
SantaAna-basedMaterOei.aswclla thccn11reGnrdcnC...ro'c Lca1uc
Jo1nin1 the "South" arc Can)on. El Modena. (c;pcran1a. Oran c
Lutheran and Villa Park. v.lu h ha"e ah••a)\ bttn tn 1hr orth
"We decided last month 10 make the than C1." '31d tournament
duttlor Tom Uc of the pon$0nna Co ta 1c K1\\1nts ( lub.
allhou&b pc>n10noftbe I Bren bent Center ha'c hi '°med into
SC\ eraf lttlS:
"The new bOundan arc intended to provtd a lon1-tcrm balance
of power and to p"Ve the Onnac Count) be ctball fan a bc:ncr
opponun1ty to relate to their fa,ontc team and pla)c~ ... conunucd
l«. As a ruuh the ... th," which 1s in rnht), the "Ea 1" has ~S
schools
Tbt" on.h:' vthi b is an rttlit> the "W l." ha "9 hool'>.
In sb«r numbris-USU\I them t rucnt IF enrollment \Moel
fint. and the 198S-89 CIF Blue Book v.hen n f). the . onh'' 49
schools h&"c 71.~SO •tudcnb cnrollc:d . Tht uth's 2S hool ha\~
35.~ll. an almost cuct dupli a11on of the 2-1 ratio.
,..,, ... '"ALL·ITMS/Ut
inascoread~daeclayOfa
schedukd n!IJ!!~. a .
Bud 0.wsorf. Fullerton JC grid coach, kneW he Deeded every poaiblc
edae when be bi'ouiht bis Hornets
down to play Al lrwtn'scbam-
p1onship-boultd Ora nee Coast
Ptrates1n l9S6.Noonewu~
for Dawson's PtCPmt antics over the
color of the pme ball. Fulknon was
fftlease lff CANTKU/1121
Chapman beckons;
,Parse/ or Serven will
most likely succeed
ly ROGER CARLSON
ot--~~t&.ir
Newport Harbor Hiih is in SCIR:h
of a basketba11 coach today foUowinJ
Jcrry DeBu k's decision to step down
after a 12-year tour with the S.ilon.
DcBusk, .lldl.o_.bad.just two lotin&-
seasons wl\ile rccordina an overall
ruord of 1 SS-ll4, has accepted the
poiiti4)n as assistant to Bob Boyd at
Chaeman Colqc and joins the laucr as a fullumc assistant coach. It ic.ves a void at Harbor wbkb
wiD be filkd in all li«lihood by c11.hcr
former head coach and lon&timc
aai tant coach Tim Panel or junior
varsity coach Bob Serven.
.. lt ~asatwd lhlDJ tocometoeips -'th." admitted De Busk. who had at one )ear out 1n 1986 to JOin TanCly
GiJbs at OrallF Coast Collqc as an
U6lSllDl • --.. , was looklna forward to nt.\t
)tar's team. there arc a lot or {>la rs
com1na back. and my son <Crata) will
be a senior
"Bob was named on Wednctday
and ~e d1d some introductory type
th1nas. and he asked me. 'What about
it'r
.. Bob and (have been friends for a
lona ume. I first met rum when
workJng his basketbaJl camp when he
was the head coach at USC. I've
sta)cd m contact and got to kno" ham
a a fncnd.
"He called me thttewecks at<> and
he ~anted '° know 1f he aot the Chapman Job if I would be interested u has a aslant. Afttt ~tlln& with
11. I Just decided I would"
DcBusk's repuaation as a funda-
mentah t with a pp at sqUttZJn&
out all of the available talent has been
well documented. Hu 1980 squad
went 19--7 and •on the Sunset f..ea&uc champlonsh1~ the first such title for ~ml]~ars. His 19lS w:am went 1Y and woo
the Sea Vw:w ~e crown.
\011•\R\ll
..
The' crown jewel of
of Beach ·eouieV8rd
~ .
Conveniently located on a 2~-acre
site at Be.ch Blvd., between Heil and
Stark, The .Pavilion Shopping' Center
has approx. 310,000 squatt fttt of retail
spte£ _and is desigMd as ~e-~
lhOpplng center.
Anchored by the upscale super-
store, Von's Pavilion, and a 100,7)0
square fOQt Target, the Center is one of
the largest outdoor shopping centers
in Orange County. And its contem-
porary grttn and pink outdoor tile
design and vinyl f»Stel canopies make
it one of the most colorful. At night, its
canopies backlit with stage lights, the
Center truly deserves to be called "The
Crown Jewel of Beach Boulevard."
Several upbeat restaurants, such as
Marie Callender's, The Soup Ex-
change. Gongs D'licaously China and
Ciro's Gtttk Cafe set the theme for
f>C¥1lar clothing, video, jewelry and
othu specialty shops at the Center.
. Crafts R·R Bag
One such specialty shop; Crafrs R-R
Bag, is owned by professional craft
teachers, lleM Benshoof and Darlene
Brown. The pair each have more than
20 years experience as public school
teachers and 12 years teachin8 crafts,
and offer tole paintin8 and floral
design worksh0t>5. for all skill levels
the workshops mclude one-day-only
Saturday classes as well as day, evening
and open classes.
Brown is one of a few who teach
tole and decorative painting usin$ oils
as well as acrylics. A talented petnter,
many of her items att fot sale.
Btnshoof shares her talents in the
floral design classes. dicr designs,
including tole-painted sweatshirts, are
also inoluded among the unique home
decor and handcrafted gifts.
Bttau~ Brown and Benshoof
handcraft much of their merchandise,
they are able to provide eustom orders
for a variety of colors and decors. They
also employ a wood cutter a.nd many
of their tole painted designs are
custom cut.
No craft store would be complete
without a selection of craft supplies.
Silk and dried flowers and accesaories.
Accent tole pejnts, macrame supplies,
lace, ribbon and much more can be
found in the 1,800 ~uare-focx store.
Bot kttp in mind, "iusc becau~ the
shop is small; it isn't eicpens1ve,"
Benshoof said. "We Strive to offer
cutomizing and uniqueness, at 1
reasonable price."
(C11fts R-R Bag is located rwo
doors Mst of Target. Hours are
Monday: noon-9, Tuesday-Thursday:
10-9 and Friday & Saturday: 10-7. For
more information call 842-9610.)
Value Oothiers
A year ago, when Harvey Brown
and David RiYChin-deciMd to na~
their clothing store, Value Oothiers,
they took the name to heart and
stocked their ~,800 square-f00t store
with name brand men's clothing at true
discount prices.
With sport coats beginning at
SS9.88 and suits priced as low as $99.~.
"we have eve,Y~ beat in Orange
Country;:. Harvey Brown, stc,re presi-
dent, said. "By offering L.A . garment
district prices, we have become
Orange County's largest men's dis-
count cloching store." With ~~ years of
combiMd expaience and store vice-
pttsident David Rivchin's importing
and exporting experience; the J»rtncrs
are abfe to provide quality imports as
Mil as domeStic brand names.
The full-line, which targets the
businessman and professiOtUl, also
includes slacks, dress shirts and ties.
Shorts, extra sh0rts and big and tall
sizes are a specialty with sitts ranging
from 36 extra short to ~ extra long.
On top' of their al~dy low prices,
Value Oothicrs offers a multiple
---==--~~-·~~~~~ Gome
see
what's new
;
SHOPPING CENTER
at
the-Pavilion!
HOURS:
MOll·S.•
ll·S Lumch S-9 0t .... ,
"' GONG'S D'UCIOOSLY
CHINA
-Pavilion Shopplnc Center -
(714) 843-1804
Take-Out Specials
One coupon per order. not &ood
with any t>ther offer
• ••-·ol.
cloching discount purchase plan, the
Value Plus Program. An in-store tailor
shop and a knowledgeable, ex-
perienced sales staff are added
bonuses.
Value OOlhicrs as so positive about
its clothing section and prices, that
"we plan to have five stores in Orange
Counry in five years." Brown said. The
company is right oo schedule; with
near I y one year under tts belt, they will
soon open another store in Laguna
Hills.
(Value OOlhiers is located betWttn
Target and Von's Pavilion. Hours arc
Monday-Friday: 9:30-9; Saturday:
9:30-6 and Sunday 11-~. for more
information call 841-3017.)
' ,
• r '
Aftii Publisher Wall.tr 8Urro.ul)l1
arosewitba namechantt '° 0.dy Pilot years later, we kept anticlpatina
anotberlctterthat 'WOuld be&in: Dear Rodney Oantrrlicld isn't alone. Fellow Aviator.
Any veieranJOumahst wonh h1sor Then cameast1nt1t the Santa Ana
heualtcanrela&etoaWorldofdents ~.Ofteofthefintlllipmcnts
and creases to the eso that can match . ~Jed for a visit to Mayor A.L.
UP.with Rodncy'seumple of step-. Pinkley'sCosta Mesa Pha~. pinaintoene&cvatorandhavanathe • IGndoffehhke .. Homecomina 'until opera&or~ "BeStmmt?° , t.hema~voi<:franaoutw1th: Justcan't~t no rnpttt. ''Well. comes the Santa · One of the fint introductions to the Bariana.''
touch news world at the old Costa ft was no different when wearri\lcd Mela Olobe~Hera.ld came when to assume lhe m~n&cditor's post
someone01ppcd1nen\lelopconto atthcCuaGrande(Ariz.)Dill)9tcb
this comer's desk. It read: Edator inJunc, 1968.
Olobe-Herild, Costa Mesa. Caht f'mt, the car had to be 1"q>9iiiid.
A Jet&erfellout. It t>ePn: Dear Mr. Themccbanicask.ed, .. Newin town?"
Herald. The reply: .. V cs. tOok a job with the
loCal "~r."The mechan1cchortJed, then •ict.i:·oh, you mean "(he Di ·r• Ce. there was a sbif\ tocd1toror
what some c:a1led "The world
famous" Tombstone Epitaph an A·n-zona. But one vi5it be.ck to Orange
Count~ to erode theabtttr as
an Old strolled up to say. "Well,
I beatyou'reo~crat theApatat."
We undttliMd "Epitaph" for the chap, who subsequent)) printed a
soaal ittrn in hlS publication, whch read. in p&rt:" ... Now with the Tumblcone Epitaph."
Now lbat'1 the overview. but
behind it all one also can pull threads
and unravclspon.shilantyon one
level or another.
0
Laguna Beach H1ah Junior Lee Kirner
came up with an 1mponant sweep at No. 2
sin&les to back the trio of wins from
sopnomorc Jon Leach as the Artists
earned a hard-fought I 0-8 non-leasue
boys tennis victory at Estancia High on
Wednesday.
Buscbbaum moved from doubles to
singles and picked two wins as the Artists toolc: eight of nine points in sinaJes.
Estancia nearly turned the tide enouah
in doubles. takina seven of the nine sets.
The Eules' No. f team of Kevin Curren-Ke1tb Brown swept, while the duos of
John Tang-Timmy Leonard and John
Tsai·Dav1d Chenaeach took two ofthttc. IGmer, a JUnlOr rarnccd 21 t in the
Southern Cahfom1a boys 16s. moved
from No. 3 to No. 2 s1 naJes to cam 6-0, 6:(>,
6-2 victories. Estancia wa~ also missing its
No. 2.
LaJuna Coach Bob Walton called
Kimtr's win over Estancia's No. I, Devin
Bowen. a "pivotal" win. Brent
Esanica fell to 3-4, while Laauna
improved to 3-0.
In other boys PftJ> tennis: . ··'
Wood.brtd1e U, ,...t~ll S: Despite the
f~ 1H TENNIS/Ill
I •
The Dodgers were big news when fought, the t01aJ hneage of EnaJi~h
they first armed in Los Anactes. Now roy1llty and which barkeeps in town
the old Globe-Herald was-byno served thednestmaninis There
means-a metro, but we still found ·.:. wasn't the slighted~ of afTect1on
ourselves deluacd on pmc days With for sports.
calls for the score. Returns from lunch hour an the Theoolytroubl~et1me rm.ml worldofsportsarescldom rosy,
was the lunch hour. 6utontdaywe halC)on times. But wnh Taylor on t~
asked Richard Ta)'lor. newsside COP)' sports phone hne, there WU DC\' Cr a in& KOreSduri.Geday of a
cditor, 1Jhe could handle the ca Us. hint of distrc s. Somethina wuamiss. scheduled nihtpme. He nodded politely, whtchshould We~bscquently l(arncd he ha<t a 0
have been the first clue. becautt It consistent format for every Dodger ' .. Bud Dawson, Fullerton JC pid
Sttmcd.asumepasscd, lhatthe caJtcreveryday, It wcntsomc1h1n1 * coach,kncwhcneededevery possible
politeness was a "billboard" CO\' Cr for like: "Hello, '<es. Dodgers.~. top of edae wncn be bfoU&ht bis Hornets
theres1 tancc. He never liked to the fifth ... Hello. uh huh, that's nght, down lo play Al lrwin'scham-
ha&&le. Dodgers, 5-4. top of the fifth ... Hello, p1onship-boulld Ora nee Coast Taylor, a well-aroomcd Stanford )'Ou 're correct, 1 l's Dodgers. s.-.4, top Pirates in I 9S6. No one was prepared
intellectual, had a numberofloves in of the fifth ... " for Dawson'sprcpmeanticsovcrthe
life, which included an uncanny It made e"ef)'ont-happy e'cer• us. color of thcpmc ball. Fullerton was
memory for all the naval battlese,·er His undoangmay have been render-l~SHCANTllELL/121
Chapman beckons;
Parse/ or Serven will
most likely succeed
ly ROGER CAltLSON
Ol .. ~ ..... SQlft
Newport Harbor High is in search
of a basketball coach today following
Jerry DeBusk's de.casion to saep down
after a 12-ycar tour wtth the Sailors.
DcBusk.. who bad ju t two losing
seasons wn1 e ittororna an ov-mtt
record of 155.-11'4, has accepted the pos1tK>n as usiswn to Bob Boyd at
Chapman Collqc a.nd joins the latter -
&SI f uOtimc ass1stan( coach.
1t leaves a void at Harbor which
win be filled tn an likelihood by citb.er former head coach and k>npime
uaistanl coach Tim Parscl or Junior
varsity coach Bob Serven .
.. It was a ha.rd thing to come to arips
with. .. admitted Dclfusk, Who bad at
one )Ur out an 19 6 to JOIO Tandy
GsUis at Orante Coast Collcae as ln
UIAsWll. •
u1 was lookina forward to next
year's team. there art a lot of {>laytrs oomina back. and my son (Crail) wdl
bea senior .
.. Bob was named on Wednesday
and we did some 1ntroduC1ory type
thanas. and he asked me. 'What about
1tt .
''Bob and I have been friends for a
Iona time. I first met lum when
•olt1na his basketball camp wben he
wa the head coach at OSC. I've
Sta)ed m contact and got to kno" ham
as a fncnd.
"He called me three weeks qo and
he wanted to know if he got the
Chapman Job if I would be interested as his ass1 tanL After 1'ft5thna w-1th
1t. l JUSt decided I woidd." ...., ... ..._ .. '-..,_
Lafuna Beach~• Jonathon Leach rltdled up• trio Of victories....,._ btancta.
H\,IH\11
I Ra/lock, ly ROGER CARLSON
Of .. D.ily ,.... All!'
DeBusk's ~lion as a funda·
mcntahst "1th a IJ'UP at tqU«ZJng out all of the available taltnt haS be-en
v.ell documented. His 1980'squad
w~nt 19-7 and .. on the unset Leque champ1onsh1~ the first such title for ~in 23~rs. -•
ff 15 t 98S •m "--cnt 24-4 a'nd won
the Sea V1CW~uccrown.
; Crossett
I/ft Barons
Fountain Valley H1&h'1 Matt
Hallock went 3 for 4 with a peir of RBli,. includin1 the pme·w1nncr, a tbe Daron1 offcn ame up with a
rally 10 upport 1hc complcte-..mc
effortofstan1n1p1tchcr Don rossctt
m route to dcfcatina Rollin& Hills.
4-3, in an ciaht·1nnin1 non-lcaauc
buebell pme.
Hallock'. ~ho hit a solo homer in
the third to ll\iC the Baro nu 1-0 lead. slnllcd home tc"e bnwter from
tbint buc with no oul\ for~tic mc--wianer. lancasttt had · and
laktn tm>nd "'hen his it wu
miibandled in the outfield aod w
~ mo~ccs to th1fd on a paUtd
ball.
'CroMttt. a ttnior ri&tH·handcr. had a ri&Haiuet thn:>\llh four 1nn1nai, and
i•IR»ved ao l-0 ._,th a four..fail, 10.
llriUo8l e6ln W1th ao canMd Nftl. Rolli .. Hilb rallitd for a );.2 ICld
•• uinnilP, bu• M.n DOdd"s lN • dMible ia IM •vcntla
••• .._ Joha om.et, wtlo Md ....... =--ldlKond •••• mar. Ol'daef .... l fbr 3 • s.rie Clld-2faf4;
It's called the Orange< ou nt) II ta r a. .. L.l·t~ll t la\ 1 and the
coaches, ln1ne Htgh'sSt~e l-..c1th and ddlctiJdl High ' Pat Quinn.
have been named as coache~ for the · uth and "!\orth. but radical
boundary chanaes for the 14th cdmon has turned the pme' format
virtually sideways. .
Amon1 the North is the cn11~ unset ~aauc CEJ 1 .. on. Fountain
Valley, Mani!~ Ottan Vic". Westminster and Hun11ng1on Beach). H well as Co ta Mesa. Estancia. L1bcnyChnstian. ddleback. nta na
and Santa Ana Valley. all which have been tradmon3ll) South schools.
Also in the North. and which ha~ been thctt for the pn~t fc" }car 1s
Santa Ana-based Mater Dei.as\\ell u the entire (,arden Ciro' c Lcaaue.
Jo1nana th'e "South" a~ Can)on. El Modena. Spt'ron1a. Omnac
Lutheran and Villa Park. \\h1cb ha\ic always been an the North
"We decided last month to make the changes," ~1J tournament
director Tom l..tt of the ponsonna C~ta M <'\3 K1"an1'> < lub.
althouah ponsonofthcU I 8rtn "cnts(cntcrha"cMo somcd1nto scvcraf arus;
'"The new boundaries are intended to pro idc-a lona-ttrm oolan~
o( po•u aod to IJ'C the Oranae Count) be etball ran a better
opponunity to relate 10 their fa"ontc teams and plf)ers:· unuoucd
Lc:c. As a resuh the .. South." which ·~ an rt:aht), the "Ea t," has 2S
sche>ol
· The .. North .. which is 1n rcahty thC' ··w t.~ll '49 h I\
In lh«r numbcrl -usil\J the m t rtttn\ (If enrollment 'ihett
fint, and tM 1988·89 C'lF Blue Book when nett r). the . orth'\ '49
school have 11.SSO itudcnts enrolled. 1 he uth • lS school" ha' e 3S,S3l. an alm0$t euct duplication of the 2-1 ratio.
~l•t ... M.&.·STMS/Ut ~~~~
\Ollt\R·\11
..
r
ANN ARBOR, Mich. -Bill Fritder'a ----coechinac1reeutArizona 51atebepneartier , • .,,,..
than he wanted wben Michipn tOld him if ,~ ~
he's totna. IO now -before bis Wolverines -----play tn the NCAA tournament. 1
.. I don't want aomebO<lx from Arizona Staie
coacbina the Micbipn team, Athletic Director Bo
Schembilcbler said Wednetday. "A Michigan man is
SoiQl lO coach Mi~n. tt I
No sooner bad word aotten out that Frieder had
accepted the basketball ooachina
iob at Arizona State, two days
befote \be start of the tournament,
tban Scbena~.bler unou.nced that rslirtaat Sieve F'llher wou&d
llilcl &Iii 7 and 10th-ranked
Wolverines in tllt NCAAs. Mich· ilu.'1 fintpme is Friday in Atlanta IPi* 21-11 Xavier. •
Arizona Slate had contacted
Micbilu IO inqui~ about Frieder
after baskett.11 coach Steve Plt-terson reaianed Feb. .c. Scheinbedalcr said. But be uid Friedcrs announcement
aunDedba.
.. I Ud no fbrewamina at all, .. he uid. "We just
usulMd dUia if u)'tbing would occur, it'd be after the
NCAA toarament h~·ouldn'thavedoneit that way, but
that'• up to bim. '' ·
FriCder, who was The Associated Press Coach of the
Year in 1984-8,, told Ms players of his decision in a series of eam-momina phone calls from Arizona. . ..r think J'm SJ*kiQI for the rest of the team when I
Connecticut opens with win
Forward ctUf ....._ ICOftid IS of bi1 ._....__
23 poinu in the leCOnd halt Jeadina . ·• ~ defendina champion Connecticut to a 67~2 ,..~·.-.
NIT victory over Nonh Cal'Qlina-Charlocte ---W~Clday niabt ~resbman paarcl am. lml* added 16
J><?•ntsfortheflusk.ies, 17-12, who led fromtheoutset, but
withstood a late rally by lhe host •9ers, 17-12, in the first-rou~ pme ... In other NIT openers: Bnce BIUe scored
20 po1nu and Tem BttUM 17 to lead Pm:n State 20.11
to an 89-~3 victory over visiting Munay State, 19-11 . 1i was the Nattany Lions' fint postseason Vlctory in 14 years
. .,. At New York, RMert We...._ bit two free throws
'wtlh t•.~i:ids.togo to preserve St. John's 7().67 victory
over Mass1ssappa ... Doq We.t scored 18 points to lead
VillanovaovervisitinaSt Peter's, 76-S6. The loss was the
. fourtJl straight in an NIT opener for St Petcr•s ... At
Madison, Trftt JacbH scored 22 points and Wisconsin
needed an 18-7second-halfrunand four free throws in the
final 38 seconds to beat New Orleans, 63-61 ... At
Columbus, Perry Carter ICOred 19 points, while Jamaal
Bnwa added a carccr-hiJh 18 points and seven assists as ~ioStateended an cisht-t:ametostnptleilf wiffi a '81 -70
victory over Akron ... AmtlleaJ 8.-er scored 20 points
to lead St. Louis to a surprisingly easy 87·54 victory over
visitiq ~uthem Illinois. The Billikeoa, 24-9, are l >Oat
ho!'le tb~s sea~n ... It• AW..oa sco~ a career-high 24 pomts, ancl~mg 18 on 6-of-9 shoottna from )..point
ranae, a~d Rtehmond tur:ned back ~ld--sbootina Temple,
7().S6. Richmond, avengiJll a 22-pomt loss to lhe Owls in the East Rcsion semifinals of last year's NCAA
tournament, won for the 16th time in its last I 8 pmes and
improved to 21-9. Temple, whkh had appeared in five
straiaht NCAA tourneys before this season, wound up 18-12.
Qt.OTJ:OJ'THJ: D \ \
Reff Griftl.-, a Seattle Seahawb supporter ~ by Owner Ken Beh~'s firing of Mike
MCConnack as the footbaU team s ,eneraJ mana,er:
.. The SeauJe fans arc so upset with Bebrin1 they'll
probebly stan a<>ina to Marincn' games."
uy we•re thocUd," cm9tf LOy Vaustu uicl. .. He never k1
on that ht wu leavaft1." F rieder oflCnld IOC'OKh the Wolverines. Jeeded third
an the SOulhelal Jleljonal, tlui>UO the tournament. But Schmibtthler said be telepbOiiea Frieckr arid told him
Fisher would run the team. ·
frieder compiled a 191-87 record -includint sill
straiaht 2().victory seasons -at Michipn since ta\jna
chal'lt of tho team in 1980. He led the Wolverines to Bil
Ten iltlcs in 198' and 1986.
··1 was toitlly shocked when Bill told me yesterday he
was goina to take the JC?b, .. Fisher said. Schembcchler wd he planned to fly to Atlanta early
today to meet with the Wolverines, who departed
Wednesday afternoon for Friday's pme against Xavier.
He also save the team a ~ talk t>eforc it departed for
Atlanta on Wednesday, auaid Terry Mills said.
A permanent replacement for Friedcr wouldn't be named until after the NCAA championships,
Schembcchlcr said. He refused to speculate a\)out
'2Qdidat~.
Among those mentioned for the job have been
Evansville Coach Jim Crews. Indiana assistant Ron FelJil\I and, ironically, Xavier Coach Pete Gillen.
.. We're g_oina to get as fine a basketball coach hcre'Bs
we can Jet," ScbembcchJer said.
f neder and Schembechler, who was named athletic
director in addition to his head football coachinc duties
last year,1 were not close. Schembcchler had mticiz.cd
Frieder 1or the Wolverines' schedule of unranked and
lesser opponents before the Big Ten season.
But Wednesday, Scbcmbechler said the two had a
good wotldna relationship.
"I never bothered him that much," he said.
NCAA toumey opens today
Billy Tubbs has a new theory. <.
So what if his Oklahoma Sooners, • ranked No. I ror much of the season, ,
stumbled through the Bia Eisht tournament, ----l~ins in .finals to Mi5SOuri? They had nothing to pin by
wrnnana ll anyway.
.. You're talkina about aomelhil\I that revitahm everybody," said Tubbs, whose fourtft.ranked Sooners begin play in the NCAA tournament today. ..We're
playina ap.inst new pcop~. and that geu everyone's
1ttentton."
The new people in this case arc
from East Tennessee State, tour-
nament champion of the Southern
Conference, the No. I 6 seed in the
Southeast Regional to Oklahoma's No. I . The pme, wruch will be
played in Nashville, Tenn., is one of
16 first-round matchupS today as
. colleac basketball's three-week
cbampio.nsbio..fcsti.val-bc&ins-Six-teen more will be played Friday.
Tubbs Most of today's games on the
surface appear one-sided. Three of the four top seeds arc
in action with only second-ranked (Jeorgetown, No. l in
the East, off until Friday. No. I Arizona, banished to Boise, Idaho, from its home in Tucson because of a new policy that keeps teams
off their homecounJ, takes on Robcn MorritiD another
match up of No. I and No. I 6, this one in the West
On the same card at Boise St Mary's plays Ocmson;
Memphis State plays DePaui and No. 15 Nevada-Las
Vegas plays Idaho, which will havetheadvantagcofbeina
the local favorite.
Jn addition 10 the Oklahoma-Eas1 Tennessee pmc, Southeast pmes in Nashville include LaSalle vs.
Louisiana Tech; Virgmia vs. Providence and No. 16
Aorida State qainst Middle Tennessee State, another
underdotplayina near home.
The&st R*onal beains at Greensboro, N.C. with
Kansas State apinst Minnesota· No. 14 West Virgin ia vs .
Tenncsscc; No. 13 Stanford vs. Siena and No. 9 Du.lee vs.
South Carolina State.
IPRllG
SKI CELEI
. ,,.
'ITJ'(1" ,
------
Tm. Photo Wilh
thef.-er~
MUCh 1~25
Tht f.aMr ~ ..... tie ltrOl!inl_
~ F.heon leliftd MarCh
11-"25 fai Noon ID Jjisi ..._ ..
.... ~-..~ort.tue •chi pknn b you I And, wtult •
"1i/_re ..... ...,, muMail ~
rntnc ~The Obfelend
AHelan. OIUlj from 12~ )pt!\
~ ................... ~-~ ~;e:::~..r.~;
.... ~ ...... iw-.. n.. ........
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"""'-C-w--111411ll
Montreal skates past Kin~
()efenseman aril CMllei bad a &Oil ~ and two assists and aoaltcnder Patrift a., •
extended his home unbeaten streak IO 2S
games as the Montreal Canadiens downed
the Los A~les Kinp, S-2, Wednctday niat!t. Chclios set
up JoalS by Mall Nail• and ... Ga19eJ in the KCOnd
Qenod and xored at 4:13 o~ the tl~td for a 4-2-l?d.
Cbclios took a~ from rookie Sce,iu LeMa•, cruised across the Kings' blue line and <lrille<t l '1lp shonhat beat
Los Angeles pltender lte!IJ B~y. For Lc~au, the
American Hockey League s scoTin&. teadtr ~11~ 120
points who was called u_p fror.n Sherbrooke earh~r .•n the
day, it was his first NHL poanL ~Ike M~. with an insurance pl at 9:33 of the third penod, and G•y Carll•••• alao scored for Montreal. MartJ McSerley ,and Dave TaJler scored for Los Angeles. Kin~· star Wa~ Greu.lly was held to an assist on McSorley s first-
'penod pl. He set up McSorley from behjnd the net and
,the bi& win.aer beat Roy through traffic at 18:38 ...
EJsewfiert in the NHL: 'J'Mmas Sten and A.Mrew
·McBala scored two aoals each as Winnipeg topped the
New Yortt Ransers at Madison Square Garden. 6-3 ... In
Edmonton, Steve Yiermaa had, two goals.and set _up four
more includina PHI Mac.Leu• game-winner with I :29
remainina. to lead Detroit to a wild 8-6 victory over th<
Oilers.
Miami turns back Cllppers
Rory Sparrow scored 11 of bis 29 points ---
in the final nine minutes and Kevla Edwards •-'
addtd 20 Wednesdaynight anhnxpansion ,.,~
Miami · Heat defeated the Los Angeles ~-
Oippers: 109-103, for only theit second road victory.
Both triumphs have come at the apcnsc of the Clippers, who dropped an 89-88 decision to the Heat on Dec. 14.
Miami scored its first victory in the NBA that niJht.
endina a I 7-aame losina streak -the longest in leaauc
history to stan a season ... In other NBA sames: Man
Price scored 21 r>ints and Oevcland took advan':lf': of
Mldael Jonlu • early foul trouble to defeat vis1tin1
Chicqo, 11 S-91 ... Karl MaJeee scored 30 points and
Man Ea• pulled down 2S rebounds as Utah built a 22·
point lead over Ponland. then held on to defeat the Trail
Blazers an Salt Lake City, l02-9S ... Maeriee Oteekl
scored 21 points and C'Mrles Bartley connected on a
crucial three-point play whh I :02 left as Philadclph1a
rallied in the second half to defeat New Jersey at the
Spectrum, 100.96 •.. In San Antonio.1...~lllle ~
scored 2S points and blocked 11Ud7 neree shot at the
bu.zzer as the Spun held on to beat Milwaukee. I 10-108 .
.. c.11 M.W. scored 14 of h.is 32 points in the third
quarter and Golden State snapped a th~me losina streak with a 113-100 victory over OaUas 10 Oakland.
AMl9 .,..._hat b" fir~· J:::.~ o& iM ~·~ .............................. ~ -~~'l!!duaOllM •• ·• ~ Milll~~~--illowed direr hits in lour 1n~ · 11v1na him rieln •
ihYIOUI iannw this aprina.. Ilk' -o...• Q 1 n• welMd lwe in Cine iu• fwiaailtl to 10 thc number Of Wllll.tlaii .. .....adered 1n aevea 1nni• Dewson'a 1.wo-
nla ..,_. ll.'ed a thrce-rua fint innina •in1t AMiii ~ WM&. .n. Millea look over an 1he
1i•ili Ud allowed OM n.n in two inninp. Br7• Bane,
p1Sthed 1 acore&eta ninth for the A•I•. Cah(omia o~s · a 1)-pme homauind in Palm Spri1111 on Fridey .•• In Orlando. Al., BMe ........,., two-out double broke a 4-4
tit and ft. er... slammed the door on a nintb.innina
r'llly _aa the Dodam cdsed Minnesota, ,.... With two out •
in the ciahth and the pmc tied, Day.-llulee linll.¢ to rijht~n~offTwins~ltcver JdfReadea. who su~tcd
his 1econct IOM this spnna. Murray then lined a double
.hast inside the fisht-field lme Jo sco~.the winnina run. The Twins put runners on fint and ~d with two out 1n •
the ninth, but Crews aot Rafael DeLliu on an srounde1
to end the pme.
Raiders sign Otis Wiison
former All-Pro linebacker Odt WU..,
left U.llproltic1ed by the Chicqo Bears under * &be new National Football League free •DC'.Y 1~m. has s1aned ~•th the Los----
AQedn Raiden, 1t was announced Wednesday. Wilson.
31 , Played eiaht years with the Bean t 980-87 and was All-
Pro in I 98S, before missina half of 1987 a.nd the entire 1988 season followina knee su~ ... Jn other sports
RWS Wcdnetdly. The Philadelphia Eaatesand Oeveland
Browns both olayoffteams last season, will meet Au,. 6
at London's Wembley Stadium· in the NFL's fourth
stra.i&ht .. American Bowl" aame ... Ebterlaa GoNeev1
and lerpl Grlll .. v of ~-soviet Uruon awe))t to their third pairs title. in four years at the World Fiaure Skating
Championships in Paris but C'Mi• Bowma• kept
Amencan hopes biah in the men's event. Bowman and
Canada's llm Bnwalac burst into contention for the
men's aold medal in a three-way, east-west sudden'death
battJc with Soviet veteran Aluu4r Fadeev ... Canada's
best spnnters would have "&one to (their) araves'' with
the secrel of steroid use if the government had not ordered
an inquiry into the Ba Jolultoe sca.ndal, sprinter Aqella
1 ... Jako said. Speaking with emotion and growina
confiden°" lssajenko gave the inquiry into drugs and
spon.s a &Jimpse of an athJete's world where there JS a
desire to play fair, a compulsion to cheat and a reflell to
cover tt up.
TaUYISK>N
9 e.m. -COLLaGll BASKITBALL: NCAA Tour·
nament flr1t round-Kensu Stelt vs. MlnntM>I•, ESPN.
11:30 e.m -COLLEGE IASKllTBALL: NCAA Tour·
nement flnt round-Arkansas vs. Lovola Mervmount,
Channel 2, ESPN.
1:30 p.m. -COLL.GE BASKETBALL: NCAA Tour· ,,.ment-tlrst roun6-St.·Merv't. ~ C~, &5Pfoit,
' p.m -COi.LiO• BASKIT9ALL: NCAA Tour· n.ment first rouno-wnt Vlrolnle vs. Ttf\MUM, ESPN.
4 p.m. -&OLP.: The Ptevtn CllemSlloftshlP from
Pontt Vedra, Fie. (~yad), USA.
6 p.m. -COLLEN BAIKITBALL: NCAA Tour-
• MIMf'lt first rounct-Vlrolnla vL Providence (MCOnd helf onM, ESPN.
7 P.tn. -COLLllGI BAIKITBALL: NCAA Tour·
Mmtnl fl(st r~llt~Oh vs. Baa Stalt Clolned In
prooress). ESPN.
7;30 p.m -NO SOCCllt: MISL, hlllmort a t
Luet'1, Prime T!Qet.
I P.tn. -HoaSI It.ACING: Santa Anita ret>lavs.
ChaMll S6 (Prime Tlcket, mldnftftl).
9 p m. -AUTO llACING: IMSA G TO comoetlllon
from Miami (t•Pt). ESPH. 10 p.m. -TllNMIS: Meit's tout"n9mt01 from ,..Im
OeMr1 (deleVld), Prime Tldlet.
10:30 P.tn. -COLLaG• BASKaTBALL: NCAA Toµr·
nament first round (lwo eanws. delevecu, ESPN
11:30 P.m -COLLIGI IASK•TBALL: NCAA Tour-• nement first rounct-OtP•UI vl. MemPf!b Stet• (de--
laved), Chennet 2.
RADIO
1°'.30 e.m. -IXHl8ITION IASEBALLl ~' rt. Montr .. 1, KABC (7'0).
~ODGERS,
5·4 Top .f JflesS'!!
••• tx>OGERS
S·4 ' -ror .. ,._. , ...
'• ..
VOLLEYBALL ,,..,,
Senior outsJde hitter Scou $eymour
bad nine kills and four .C.Ccrv~ lftd
junt0r middk ~ Joe COhln
added eiaht kills as the Wanion, 2-0•
in the Pacific Coat L.e.atUe and 3-1
overall, swept tht PCL ma1dl. l S-9,
IS-3, IS-I , from the Hawks. ().2 in leaaue. fn community collqt matches: Oral• c..t S, a.. Bead t; The
Pirates continued their romp tbrouah
the South Cout Conference by bfeez· ina past the visidna Viii• lS-5,
15-4, lS-10. OCC is now 9-l, while
Lo!'C Beach fa1J1 to S-4. Bnan Lewis (16 k.i1l1), Soou Lind-
quist (9 kills, S stuff b&ocks). Al
Vistaunct (8 kills, 4 blocks), Travii
Tumcr (22 assists) and Jason Elder
(l 9 assiJts) aJl contributed to the
victOI)'. Coast rallied from a 7-1 deficit in pme three to close out the match. GeWeWett l,La Venet: Ronnell
Balaaott and Mike Meyers helped
ianate the Rustlers w1Lh their play in
pme three and Golden West rallied
from a 2-0 deficit to hold onto third
place with the 13-lS, 13-lS. 15-ll.
l S-3, I S-8 South Coast Conference
win.GWC1mprovcd to 7-2; La Veme
feU to 7-4. Dou, Panis had 18 kills, Greg
Ryan 6 ~ms and 8 blocks and
Balasott 36 assists. Meyers had 6 kills
in the third pmc.
TENNIS
Froml1
absence of No. I player Rand y Ivey.
who was travchn& to play in a tournament, the Warriors swept
throuah sinaJcs en route to the victory
at home. Led by Alex Suenhardt's swcc:p at
love, Woodbndge. S-2, lost only four pmcs in sin&lcs. Itta•... \'lejo 13, H9!1tl•~
Bed $: A!ldY Stewart maan~1ncd
bis P.CrfCCt 1nd1V1dual record with a dominat1n1 day apinst the Dtabl0$,
but Miss1on V1eJO earned the win to
drop the Oilers to 4-3. Stewan. whose closest victory v.as
a 6-4 verdict, won. 6-0, 6-0. 6-l rn
runnin& his 1nd1V1dual record to 2 J--0.
Jrv\H 12, Ed1tOll I : Cory Beacham
and Yoshi Mon each won three sets to
lead the Vaqueros to the non-lea&uc
win. Irvine improved to 3-3.
BASEBALL
Froml1
Lou Beac~ '74, R1ntta1toa Bue•
4-S: verad Cawbom h11 a two-run
doublo 1n each pme. but the Oilers
were swept in the non-leaauc double-h~der.
tn coll: ~balJ: aefle 6, a.it& Collqe lmae 4:
Bulldoa Scott lkta (2 for 4, triple)
doublea an the w1nnina run with t~o
outs in the I 0th ann1na as R~lands
earned lbc non<onfcrcncc wi n over
lbc ~who fell to 2-13-1.
Ross Cavazos Ymlt 2 for S w1Lh 1
two-nan s1n,&Je an CCl's thrtt·run
second tonuia.
la &be six~ Sarni ~ ,.~
and Lira Ind Ml ttM ill MI piada runner. AAer IWna thtrit she scored
oe J8Dd Mir_llaan's IQ~ bunt
w1bCa 1lw Grim• opted ao ao to first ... l>f lbe out.
Loil Al feH '° 2-l In oahef toftblll:
..... Ott I, Mattu I: Tbtma
Conway homtftd ind Mater Oei ttOitd the pme-wiMant run in the
.1evenUt tnruna on an error 'o trim the vitltana Vikinp.
After M.,fna scottd an unearned runU. tbe fint. Conway slapped a ihot
O'Ver the rieht faeidt(S heidand raced
alwad the baa to «Ott w1mout • ..
25,000-mlle ..-W1m1111y
Gu•deman I EY"Y
P9tfo<mance Slnet-D•yl
,f7570SAl3 m .11
,1H170SA13 ... ,,.
,11$.'705R1' A .13 •
,1951'70SAl4 M.01
P20570SAl4 lt.0)
P21515SAtl 11.11•
PttSIOSRI• I ll.13
P21SIOSA1' 13.11
P1t5IOIA15 SS..tJ
Tiiie MoMtths, 4.J-1. woa 11 in What Suod)' :MotQueda led off With a
si"IJe and IOC* ICICOnd OD a ..-iid
peldl. Amy Molller walked and the
runners lidVIDced on a fielder's
cboict. Wnh lwO ~Tracy Rite's ~Ml m•;ect for an error. aUo.,na the Mnntnt run to score.
Mater Dt1 pitcher Terry KObata
sttuct out 13 and walked two in
IOMina I one-hilltt,
...,... I, OHM View t: Jennifer Bna~ s&ruck out 11 and walked none u she two-hit the Scahawu for
&be com;lttr-tame victory, movin1
Irvine in&o lbt second round of the , ...,.. Hill Toununent with a$
Plrem
P6
Every
Single Oayt
$81.M
In hip tchooJ boy11w1mmiqa:
El Tere M, MartM 11: Scott Wt1ter
~ured tbe 200 and SOO freatylts, while Chuck Kenyon won the 100
bu1terft)' and was out-toucMd for
flnt in ihe 200 individual medlry by Ins than a tent!) ofa second. Manna,
1-l. was only six Points down aft(r
seven events. but El Toro. l·l. donunatcd the final three evenll .
STAT£ Of THf MT
DIAGNOSTIC
EQUIPMENT
W, """ lht ift\I Cll IQ no\l•r loo , 1nO ll'!th
Mluqy
IA J1i11t ICbeol littt ,l"11HMSW: II fire IN. lllrtmil H: Wllile the ~ 1'1. domanated the mttt.
.Marina's 200 medlfy relay ttam Of
Erib ltothJ..,Anne Simmons, Beua
Huilt and uiana Orit-sltn captuttd
the Va~· only ~ill by th-
teconds wtth ~ time of l:S5.48, 10
1«<>nds under the CIF' quahfy1n1
Stlndard. Marina 1s 1-1 ~n community college men's swim-m1QS: a.... Wett '71, ~ Bffdl H: Jeff
WiMS (SO freestyle). Mau Mauser
~backstroke) and Ky Tran
~ststroke) each PoS1ed state qUaJi-
tY•n& marks an the Soiath Cout
Conltrencc victory over tht Vikinp:
195 60HR14
195 SOHR15
205 60HR15
195160VR15
~60VR15
H .03
104.12
1ot.11
134.03
AFTER 50,000 TOUGH MILES
ROADHANDLER RESPONSE
PASSED FEDERAL TESTS
FOR NEW TIRES
~-~ IUllllJ Al• 511 . tctSllll •• ''""'' .,. ,155 IORll
IUlllU u• "115 "'°" I) 11"1114 -"'7$:eoA I) ,..,. .. ..... ,..,'°"., tUl'llA 1111 P11$17$AU , .. ,.,. .. un
I 1' 1"11U .... "K7~14 ,._,, M ii !'105 ?WI I 4
IHMll14 .... l'20t 7"' I~ lft1"1114 Q II ,1111 751115 --14 Mii '11S7SIUS ...... 14 ••• '" *"" Mii l'2:U 7"'1 s
• 4!I
.
•folded •ram1d over 34.., steel belt constru~llon gf 30°, more sttength 1n
the !Jlo\Jloers than Ptt'~aiic•
conventional 1.id1a1s Ewery '*"'" 0.,,. • All·stason t1ac110f1
twe1., Slft9M I .,. .. .....
11.JO
1791
HIT
1412
17tl NII n11 ,. ... ,.. ..
,
............. . .._
...~ ... ,, ......... , ... ~-·, .... _,,
"'.""" .... ,,.,. "*"" ... .._._,,
,., " "''" '
l'lft "" '. nlil1111•1
__ ,
....... a..,.
Q4tf ... .._.,
na
Mff .... .."
"" ,.,., . 1715 .,,,. , s
T1:U~IS n1s..-11
T-mnl'I•
l'°"\&S
11't11.i ,.,.,.s
...JMIS
11\0-IS
LT215 7SR1SC1
LT23S 75Rt5Z
LT235 85R11EI
30d.OOA1SC
IJl9'7'111•
lf11' 1$111 Ii
LTUUSllll ...... ,, :a-.1.,... ..
'2sH.-11 ,,.... ""'' lf'a. ... lt
I 1'111' I
ta.111
THE
ALIGNMENT
·SPECIALISTS
FllOWT EIO !4•
:r
•WHCEI. •
r_, ..... 0.,1
P'ct.
l.Mlen 7l0
Pnoenbc .629
S..tlle Sil
GOiden Sl•lt .56S
Portlilnd .SOI
S.Cramenlo .2'6 a.en .206
MldWtat
Utah .'3S
HOU5ton .548
8:rw.v:' .52• • 500
S.n Antonio .27•
Mlaml .161
•• ,""' Ceftterenc9 Atlefttk Otvtlleft
New York 42 19 .689
PhlladtlPhl• 34 21 .541
Bolton 31 30 .SOI
Wathlftttaft 21 " .459
NewJer~y 23 41 .359
Charlotte 15 47 .242 c...... OMlleft
Detroit " 16 • 733
~ 4' 17 J'JI)
Mlw•uk• 40 20 .6'7
Ati.nta 37 25 .597
Chkaeo 36 25 ~90
11\dia.,a 17 45 .274 ......... .,..k_
Mleml ,.,, °"""' 103 ~ lOI, New Jersev M C~ 115, Chle"° fl UtMI lf1, Port19fld tS
5911 Antonio t 10, Mil••'-*" IOI Golden Sl•tt 113, 091lai 100 TMIY'i Gwnti PtllleclelPfl'-•I New Y Ol'k, 4:30 a .m. lotlon al lnd1.n., 4.30 p.m.
MllW•UICH •t Hou'ton. S.30 p,m s.n Antonio •t Denver. •·30 o.m.
Cll¥totte el Seattle, 7 o.m.
Ali.nit ti S.Cramenio. 7:30 p,m .,,..Y', Gemti o .... , et L•lren, 7:30 o.m
Cnertol,. •I OlllPen. 7·30 11.m.
Wnhl110lon •• New Jenev, 4:30 Pm.
Boston at Detroit, s o.m.
New YOl'k •t ChlceOO, S:lO o.m.
Miami •I Ul•h, 6:30 a m.
Portland ti Phoenix, 6:30 o.m
Atlanta a t GOiden Slate, 7.JO om.
••
51()
1 ein 221h
29'1'1
11"1
11
14
20'-'l 271h
•A
4'h
·~ 9
21"'1
.... , lOt, Cllpfaers 103
MJAN4 -Lono •-11 10· 11 11. TllomPSOn 3·1
O·O 6, s.IUlv 7·10 2-• "· EdWwdS 10-11 0-1
20, Soerrow 12-19 S-.S 29, Gf•v 2·6 4-6 a.
ShHkV 1-1 1·2 3, SYnd'lold 2· 10 1·2 S, Wt.shl1>11· ron 0-1 0-0 O. Hnll1>11s 1·3 2·2 4. Total\: '2·17
2S·l3 109. C~RS -Wolf l·S 3·3 S, Norman l·t
1-2 3, een .. m1n a-21 1-t 23. O.llev 1-11 •-• 2'2. Grant 7· IS 3·4 t7. Wllllttm 3-S 0-0 a, Smlln
4-7 7·t IS, Garrick 3·• 2-3 I. Wlllre 0-0 2-2
2, Kit• 0-1 0-0 0 Totals i.-to 33·.0 103
S«<e ltV ~ Miami 35 2' 2' 11-109
ChPPtt's 2• 2S 28 24-lal 3-POll'lt 90el•-Wlllillms 2. Fouled
oul-TllclmP$0n lt•~ncb-Ml•ml St (S.IU IV
12), Cllppers S7 (8.en .. mln 171 Assists-Miami
27 (Soerrow I), CllPP8f'• 21 (Gren! 71 Tolel
fouls-Miami 32. Clippers 23
NCAA MM'~ TOUf"NlfNIWt
l!AST R•GtONAL 'Im._... 0-(TMllV et~ N.C.)
Kens. Stett, lt-10, VS. Mlnnnol•, 17·11,. 9:07 ..,,,,
Sl9"f«d, 26·6, vi. Slane, 2•·4, 11:37 e.m.
'Nell Vlrolnlt. 2S-4, vi. Tenne''"· 1'-10,
'-"'' p.m. Duke, 74-7, vs. South Carolina Sl•tt, 2S·7,
6:37 p.m. (l',_Y •t ..... ~. IU.) Norltl Ctrollne Stele, to-I . n South C.ro·
line, 1'· 10, 9:07 • m Iowa, n-•. v' ltutoers. 11-12. 11 J7 a.m.
Geor911own, 76-•, "' Princeton. lf· 7 •'07 'l>.m.
Vtndefblll, 11· 13. "' Noire Oeme. 20-1. 6 l7 p.m ~-_..0-,.....,.y •t ~. N.C.)
Sttntotd·Slene winner "' K•ITWI' SI ·M inne·
SOia winner
West V....,_·T"'""-winner "'" Duke· S.C. Stele wlnnet (s.MIV et ~el/tdllfice, R.L)
Georvelown·Prlrlcelon wlll'ltr "" Ven·
cterDlt·Nolrt Dame winner
N.C. s1 ..... s.c.-o1in. w-vi • tow•· ltutws winner ...,......
(..,...y, Mlltdl 24 It .... -~ N.J.) Greenlboro, N C. .-Id round ..,._,,
Pro'lldtnce. It I. MCOnd round winntn CMmr' .. I
~y, Merm IS It •Ht R~ NJ.)
"90lonel Mmlflnel winner•
SOUTH•AST Rl!GtONAL
l'lrst R.und Olll'Mi (T.-V et Neltl¥tle, T-.)
IA Selle, , .... ,. "' Loulsl•nt Tectl. tt-1,
1o:a1 e.m. • Oii~. 21-s. vs East Tenneuee Sl•te.
20-10, 12:37 o m.
Vlrelnl•. 19· 10, "' Providence, 11· 10, S:07 o.m.
Ftorldt Slete, 22·7, "' MIOdte Tennenee Stele, 22·7, 7.37 P.m <"*• at A .. nttl Mlcfll,.n, 2•·7, Y' Xevler Otllo. 71·11, 9:07
•m. Alttlemt, 23·7, v' South AltMme, 22·1.
11:37 e.m North C•rOltN, 27·7, vs Sou1r.ern U , 10-10,
•'111 P.tn. UCLA. 20-'9, Yi low• State, 17·11 6.37 pm
S.C..R.uM ~
(s.tw9Y et MtlMlle, TeM.) OklehDrn9-E.T-.-St winner vs. IA . ~U. Tedi wiflMf
Vlreinla· PrOYldencl9 WW. vs FIOl'lde St •
Middle Tenn. winner (._Y at A ..... )
Mlctll9tl'l·Xevler winner vs AleMme·Soutll
Alabeme wlnnet UC&.A•IOwa St winner v' Nortfi Carolina·
SoutNrn OI' Texas Soultlern ~
S.1•111111 (lW'MlilY1 Mll'dl U at' L..-....n. Ky.)
Nathvllle, TttwJ MCOnd round wlnne" A"8nt• MCOfllf round wlnnt.rs ~ ( SMllNllY, Jll'l!c:ll 2S et Lft""'911, KY.)
lteoiOntt ~flnel wlnnen
MIDWl!ST R•GtONAL
'"' Reuftd Gemes (Tedlv et lndlMe ... 11
LOUl$Yllle, 22·1, VS A~anMs·l.,lllle ltock,
23-7, t:07 a.m
Arq nin , 2•·6, vs Lovole Marvrnounl,
20-10, 11:37 •.m
llllnols, 27·4, vs McNeese Stale, 16· 13, •'07
o.m.
Plt1$burllll, 17·12, V$ la.M Sltl•, a-2. •:J7 p.m, (''*• et Dlill9sl SyrtcuM, 27·7, v• l ueknell, n-1, 1001 a.m.
Ftorlde, 21-11, •s Color9do Stele, 22-t, 12:37 o.m.
Mb_,,l, 27·7, "' Creforlton, 20-10, 5'07 P.tn. Ge«tle Ttcll, 20-11. VI Tens. 2• .... 7'37 p.m.
----
~·~!!'•111
W99' .. eeou&. ............. (.,... ............. ,
Aruona. n·i. "' ...,, Mir'"· aM. um am.
SI MMv'•, IS••, vs ClefN.On, le IO, ll7 o.m. ~·Let VetM, H -7, vs ....,., It-$.
W •m ~· Slti.. 21-10, YS ~aul, 20.,11, 145 •.m ,.,,. •• , ~ Atta.)
OretOf'I St•le, 21 7. v• Evtnt\lllle, 24·S, 1107 a.m. Seton Hall, ,..,, vs SOvlll'!"tsl Missouri
Stele, 21·t, 1:37 om
11\Gltne, 15·7, Yt. Gtor" Me50I\, 20· 10, ''07 p.m.
Teos·EI Peso, t•·t, vs. Loultlene Stele, 20-11. t:U o.m . S....9'MIMI~ (Sttw1teY tt ..... , ._.)
Arllont·Robel't Morrb winner vs. St
Merv's·Clem50n w1nnef'
N\tn'IPnls Sl.·~Ptul wlMtt' vt UNLV·lci.llO
winner
Cs.MIY •t TIKMft, Arb.) Seton H•H·SW Mls\OUl'I St wlnneor v1 Ot·
aeon St.·Evan•vlle w""'8r
UTEP·LSU winner vs ~ne-GIOl'et
Mason •!Mer ........ ,,,.,....., -... 1J et 0.Wtr)
9olse, ldlllle MCOl'd round winners
T\Gon, Atft' MCond round wlnMrs
awa '' f'J CleMWV, Mltdl 1S et O.WWI
lt....,.i temlflMI Willnen
TM• ,_AL flOCM , .. SMfle) s.1•• ~.A .... f /·
EHi memolon vs. West ~
Soulllffst dlemPfon vs Midw"t cllemi>lon
O.t•l•lldllr -··--Semlflnel wlnner1, 6:GI o ,rt.
Naftonal lnvlt•tf9t). Teumamem ,.U '6uNO W~Y'' Saras Conn.c lieut 67, N,.C:_ Cller10tte •2
St. JoM'S 70. Mln lu lPOI 67
Penn SI••• ffv Murrav Stele 13
Vlnenov• 7'.,4t. Pe••• 56
-Otllo State J 1, Mron 70 Wlacon•ln '3. New Or1etfl1 '1
SI. LOU1$ 17, Soul~n llllnoll j4
ltlcnmond 70. Temole 5' TMlv't Games
Kent Sl•lt 20-10, n Miclliffll ~late,
•• O.troit, 4:30 o.m G9orelt Soun.n, t:t-s, •• Al91>1
lnollem, 11· 11, •:3S o.m. UC Stnt• Barbtl•. 21-a. el
11· IO, S:30 o.m 16 lS. Ark_.., State, to-t, et
S:lS PJ'I\.
f>epperdine, 1'·12, el w Meiilco Siete.
21-10, 6:35 om
Stnte °''•· 20-10. 6:3S 1>.rn H•we11, 17·12, el C or~. 1'-11 7·30 om "'* s Geme Boise Sltte, 23-6 •I 0.18'*"8 St•le 16· 12,
S.JO om s
NCAA Women's ToumamW
F•ST ROUND w ....... v-.sc-
Etlt RltleMI
SI JoHoh's 11 Vtndlfb'tl " Le Stlle n, Conneclicut 63
JINMS Madison M. Provldenee l•
West Vlr11IM 66, Weslefn KentUCk... S7
Mldiplt ..........
T emote 90, Holv Crou to
GeOl'o•• 90, Tenn ·C11t1t•nooe• "
Old Oomin.otl "· v.nenove 41 ltu!lllfS M, SOulllefll M1•"UiPO< 73
Mkl'#Ut ..........
Tennessee Tec:tl n South Ct •Ol•ne 73
PurdUe tl. Arhns.1 '3 Oii~ Stete 93, M<tml, Fie '3
IP1nols Sl•lt 100. HOl'lllWftl~n Sltle IA 1'
Weit ........
Bowl<ne Gr~ "· CinclMIJI St Monltne 12, C..I Stale F Ulltt'10ll 67
Wesnlnoton 17. H•••Y ,. l'Wt.O.•l..a$ v ... , '7. Utah Sl
• \01.1 .1-.lH\ll >'•
c"""""'"" ~ "*' SOUTH COAST COHl'H•NCI! Or•noe Coe" c1e1 LOl>ll ee.c11. ts-s, IS·4, 15-10
GPIOen W"I def Le Vll'ne, JJ·IS, 13•1S, IS·ll, IS·3, IS-I.
Hitt\ "'*91 boVI
PACIFK: COAST LEAGUE
Woodbf'klOe def IAOunt Hill$, IS-•. IS·l IS·I
NON·L•AGUE
Ed•son dtf Newl>Oft ~·~. l•-1•. 1•·1', 15'-10, 1S· ll, 1S·5
Merine dtf COl'ON def Mltr, 1S S. 12•1S, IS-10, 14-1,, lS-1
MtSL ,,..._
WL~d.Ga
Bt11<more
Sen DllllO
0.11111
Laun
Kanw• Cltv
Tecoma Woetill1
14 11 ...
It 17 S?I S 1
11 17 .SI• ' 16 It •S7 I
IS II O S I
" 20 .... IS 21 •11 ' w.-... ... Seen
KenMs cnv '· Dellti J TMIV'I 0.me
e.ttlmOl't •• L11en, 7.lS o m FriMV't Glll'Ml Oetles •I Wlclllte, S')S Pm
leltlmof't •t S.n Dieoo, 7lS • m
Kenwt Cllv et Tecor119, 7;JS • m
(,0 I I • .... .....
**-L.IMMM
~
~111, , .... m , ....... s..-..... ....... )
I Hie I Miiier (U) tltl4 JenWI IF>, Jll. ).
l<MfntY (U), '!t .. 1111) ~ (U), Lte <VI
Md MMlford '" '· 0 ,__. ""'9 11'. .... f Ip cot -c•,.. ,_., ~ ' ...... , I ........ (FV), a . I Cr.,..... (,V), 0 , 3.. (liel W... IFVI a.-~ 41,; c:.-, w
(FVI, ..
IH· ' ~, ~ f \ -+
.. ...., UH 11 ti -1 ..,, 11 ....-n. 10 ....... 6 • ., ...... DA~ LOaCa• C .......... -J llOeta, ...... L SS DOftlle, I ....... ti Qla
••• 2 ......... 10 ~-·· 2 ........... . ' ~. lft ~ullllft,
,,..Y'S GWMi I
Slit.tlllt vs. A.-. I.I Pelm StN'll'!n, 1'0$ pm
Ded9Wt n NV N'el' II Port St Lucie, Fie,
10-fl • rn
C-. ~.A_. 0 (.-' Mew, ArtL) .
...Cth+orn•• • 000 000 000-0 ' l CllteH O Cul>\ • )Oo 001 00x-.. 10 I
Will, Abbott (6), Hervey (I) •nd ParrlUI,
Knaoe> 161, Wilson. Goune (S), W111iam1 Ill
end McClellOon.: W--W1llon, H> L-Wlll, 0-1
H•-ClliteOO, Dawson (I)
Los Anoeles
MonnffOlt L .. ry, Munol (61,
It t'l'H (7), Anderson
lteerdon (I I end
W-Muno1, l·O.
010-S 1• I 011 ~ t I
' Ill end SCloscle,
avne (4), C•'"" (7). IAudner, H•r04tr 16)
earoon, 0·2 Sv-Crews
(1)
coeeee
NON·GONf'ERENCE
.... s, °""' c ..... 4 Ctvl\t Q!.'"9 030 100 000 O-• 6 S Redl d• .. 121 -000-lJiDO 1-S 10 •
'"""• Klndr!Kf'I (61, T11orMilf I 101 end
J nson, MerctdO, Kelty 14) and McQueen
-Kellv L-Klncll'lech 28-How•rd (It), Mill
er (It), 8e;o IRI. 38-Beoo CRI
OtMr Scores
Aruonit SI 9, Lone Beacll SI ' 11.an\U SI 7, NOl'lll Cerollne 6
"levada Les V111as 9. Aruona a New Meuco St 2•, w .. om11>11 10
vir11lf'i• Tec11 10, u oeriv 1
WasM111ton SI. 6, USIU s
Hi-" school
NON·Ll!AGUE
'"' Game U•• .a.di Jerdllft 7, H~ Bffdl • Lono &Mell JOtdtn 002 .ell 0-7 11 1
Hvnll1>11lon 8MCll 000 004 O-• • 2
CemobeU end Erickson. Mev$, Fe1K <•1 •nd A11new w-Cemobell L-Mevs. 1·2
2&-C.ewtiorn <H81
•s.ceftd Gema Lent aeedl Jwdln I, Hunt.,._. INCll l Lono it.eel\ J0<0tn on 20?-t I I Hun11no1on Betc11 100 100-l 1 2 Drv~•le. Mtrllnez (S) and Pavtt ~~ Vullcr-ttnmr ~Dew W-.'"b1 •'4eie L-GonnJva 28~1t1mirt1 (LBJ), CeWllOrn CHBI 38-lt•mull CL.BJ) Hlt-Ho!Oe<I (LIJI
'MtUI Vtlev 4, Rellfte H.. J
Roll.Inc> Hills tOO 102 00-3 • 2 Fountain Veltev 001 010 11-• 11 3
Mtrtlnuu, 8reclo, l4l lfld LewiS, Ctou ell
•nd OodO W-Crouett, 2 O L-8reck 28-Docld (FV) HR-HlllOck (FVI
Ullef1y Chrb11tn 17, Cleremen1 (OGI 4
L•bertv Chri,fien 3'2 42-11 10 3
Cleremonl 200 ~ • 3 • II.Idle!' encl Hoi>oall, 0.¥, Tlc>ton m, Tuoe
(41, Dev IS) and Hunllev, Mtrll"ti 121, Huntlev
<SI W-8ucllt1$, 2·0 L --Oev 0-I 21-.Jeme'
(LC) 2, Dev.) (C) 38-BU<Ub !LCI Van DYii•
(LC) Hit-tme\ (LC)
110( KJ \ ·~.
NHL STANDINGS
C.molMI ~ SmvtM OM.sJon w L T Pb GF GA
v-ca1011rv 47 16 9 103 J16 206
x-KJnes J7 29 6 80 347 305
JC·Edmonton 35 30 8 78 305 213
va"'ouver JO 33 8 61 m 220
WIMll>eO 23 37 11 57 270 J13
Norris OMslotl
•-O•tro.1 J2 21 12 76 218 215
SI. Louls 26 33 12 6A 241 251
M innesota 23 32 lS 61 m 251
Chicago 23 36 12 SI 270 299
Toronro 2S '1 6 S6 229 JOI
Wai.s Confer~
P•trlclc Olvblon
x-Wuhlngton 3S 26 10 80 261 221
x-NY Range" JS 29 8 78 283 267
Plll•t>uroh JS 29 7 77 310 JOS
Phlladeti:>hla 32 Jl 7 71 261 20
New Jersev 2• JS 12 60 2•9 291
NV l•landt" 2• •2 5 S3 2J7 296
Adam• Division v-Monlrul 49 11 7 lOS 217 20S
•·Boston 32 26 13 71 2S6 227
BuffalO 32 31 7 71 260 27S
Heriford 32 33 s 69 263 2S3 au.bee 2• " ' S4 23' 309
x-dnclled Ollvofl lleflh, v-<~ II( lltd
cl<v1si0n r.tie W~Y'S Scern
Moi\frNI S, K"'9J !
Wi1111oPt9 '· NV ltencwl 3 Detroit a. EdmOftlO<I 6
TMeY'' Gwnti OIAOK 11 iollO"I, •-2S P m
llulttlo ••..._Hold. OS o.m
SI LOUt• el ~lllhlt US om
Pllt'bl.W'9fl at New JtrMV. U S am Choe"° •• M<nnttOI•, SJS o.m EdrnOntOn et vencouver, JlS o m. ,,_.. ........
Monlrffl •' Wetfl!llOIOll SOS • m,
CW .. hl S, Klftel l
~" ..... LOl Antele' I 0-2
MonlrN I 2 f-j
Casting Club
The Lona Beach C.a1tina Club ~111 hokt its free annual rod bujldlnl cla-. besJnnin, TueJday
and lastin1 for four consecu1ivr Tuesda)'s. The
class is free to students of all a,n, club members
and non-members are welcome. This year .. s rnstruclion'Will ~ven by James Fem~ a Montana Ay Fishina guide and rOd
builder. Classes will bcfin ti 7 p.m . Tuesday 11
1h• Lona Beach Casttna Club clubhouse at R~rcahon Park, East Seventh Avenue and
fcdcra11on Dri ve, Lona Beach.
Al the first class. each stydcot will rC«1ve r comprchcns1,egu1debookkton 0) rod bu11d1ng and 1nformat1on on v.hat 10 pureha~ fort~
class. A video on rod bu1ld1n1 will also be shown.
Al 1he end of the founti 5CSS1on. each student will
have learned 10 completely build a Oy rod from
the bank up.
Fat more 1nforma11on on lhe courK 1n rod
burldmg ptione Jim Fems at 997..()9()5.
Parafympics dinner
The Casa C ohna Foundation of Pomona "''II
' pay tnbute to the athletes of the Vil h.h Games of
the 1>aral)'mp1cs 11 11s sc'enth annual :-Tnl>utc
to('oura¢~bm~fit dLnncr. / The event will be held on T"'~y. March 28,
at the Irvine Hilton Towell.;\ rtttpuon will be held ill 6 30 pm wtth the drnnu to follow at
7 30 Each )car, ( asa Colina foundation honor\
·chsablcd 1ndl\ 1duab for 1he1r accoQ1phshmcn1s.
Proceed\ from the c'<ent will help sup90n Cua
(ohn.1·s 1rad111on of "101 drsabJed children
and adutb througJ\out Southern Cahfomta
mcludrng fftt care for economteall). dis.ad ' an-
la&cd pa11cnt\ 11 Casa Colina ("enters for
Rehab1lita11on and sups><>n for \UCh «>mmunil)
pr<>IJ!lms as ( asa Colma Whcd<:h11r pom
Anita Defran11, 1~0-11me 01) mpte
mcdahst and member of the ln1trn1ttoM1
Ol)mp1c C'ommllttt to the United t<at~ ~•II
make the e'cnma· prncntauonJ 10 medalists rrm the U.S Paral)'mp1 team. 01JC1ts are
e~P«ttd to 1nclu0t Bf\ICe Jenner. 1old medalist
m the 1976 Ol)mp1n. alona ~i1h mcdahsts from
1hc 19 8 Games. Dtnncr 1s $2W pcr pt"nOn. For more mlormatron on rt$C1'\'lllOM. contact Georgia
Ml·Manrl· Casa Colma foundation. a1
S96-77J
Wemen'a ..........,..,., r., ._. "'""' ...._, s.c ..............
Ttrr., Pl\tlM CU.S) dtf. S.ndt'• C«<l'lol'W llleM, •·1, 6·2, ~t Loui. ~~ IU S > Clef. NICOlt PrOV•\ !Ainlftl•t l, 2 6, 6' I 6· I, J~ NovOll\I ((t tCllMIOvtkilll dtf ,._Ille
Ttu11e1 (Frt'ICt), 6•• 6·4 •'"f Simotelfl
<Ctntde) o.t JtMY &Y'I'.-. IAustra .. e l, 7·5. · >·•· 6•4
Rams Boosters Classic
The Rams Booster Club will host the aiuh
annual Celebrity Golf and Tenms Classic: on
MoAday, Mirch 27. It w1llbthekiat the Los(O)Ot.csCountryOub
1n memory of former Rams player Kirk Collins,
who dK'd from ca nett in f 982. TM pte>Cttds
from t~ event w1JI 10 to the American Ca!'"' Society and the Ora• County Trauma Society. ~am• pJayta. ~ -8.Dd.. ~ hmt-
chttr1cadtn will be oo band to mfft the
pan1c:1pen1s. For funhtt details, phone 974-S030.
Glasnost Bowl
Officials 11 Ra)com have a11nounced U,.t
more than 2,SOO travel pa.ckaan wtll be 1va1lablc
for fans ~ho wish to S« the first Glasnost Bowl,
to be plar_cd Sept. 2 •t I>)namo Stadium an
Moscow. The pmc pits the USC qa.uut the
Unr \iCf11\y of llhnois · Rick Ray. Ra)com ch ref c\ttuuve offica. led
a dcfcptron whteh met w111' officials 1n the
So111ct Union last month. Dunn& <hat tnp,
d iatlJ.....COACCrruna hotel rooms meals...uc:l
cntctta1nmcn1 for fan~ from the Un.1ttd talcs
~ere lroncd out. The 2.SOO travel pac~C1 will be splll betWttn the two schools. Dynamo tad1um scats~ppr-ox-
1m11ely S0.000. and a ma.1onty of those scats will
10 to Soviet ett1zcns. Tlus vtill be the first
American football same ever played 1n 1hc U R 11nd it is schedultd to be tclcvistd on ABC.
for more tnform11t1on phone Raycom S~ru
and Ent.crt11nmcn1 1n Charlotte. N (' 11 (704)
331-9~94
Irvine fight card
Unbca1cn Johnny Tapu of Albuq~quc ha•
bttn &ntd to bo 1n the 1etn1-1na1n event on the
March)lfi&h1 r1nt1t the lninie Mamou Hold.
Tapia ... r.o hH an 841 rcrord. IS SC'\ to ao
ap1n\t Raul Castro 1n an c1&ht-roun<kr at 120
pound
A former 1~0-t1mc national Goldtn Glovn
champion, the 22-)ear-old T1p11 has amateur
""'ones over Mte:hael CarbeJal and Hector Lo~z. both "'ell-known pro fiaJttcrs. • Tomas (Tomm)') Pcm ••II top~ Mart"~ 23
propam. nt1una fus talc supcr·wellcrweiaht
trtlC' •1ns1 Ro)'an Hammond 1n a l 2-rounda.
(Ml, S IUO. l Wlhon (ET), h0:2 100 o.Q-1 Tntor (ET). 1.0322. 2 ~•
([Tl. I ... ll. l. HVf'\ (M), I~.
100 llf .. ,.-1 YVliiOll ((T), 1.1$ 1'. 2 DllHll (ET), 1 IU2, l OtVrll• (M), t lt ts.
• "'• ,..._, Et Tero. a •.u
'0 I I H \ I I '=-'
678
REAL1Y WORU>.
NEWPORT BEACH ........ ...,
SELL
•hrou11h ct.n sified
142-1111
TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
1Enot~
S Al1•Clll1 IOfl
10 Ye>nc*
,,_~
!S A MuM
18~
17 E11ciu..w
18 lftl>el
~
20 8oOy '°"''' 22 ,,......ur•
23 Molllfy
2• l ow per90n9
2& T 01"9y
27 Dnnk•"' 30 ~" 34~
3S lt1YMJon
3e Stllndoff
37 "-
3t$f-40C~
41 Cfldt ... fltld
'*"' 42 Vtl•ecl
'3 WorUO
•S Dou~•
4 7 AcquifM
48 ~.n'WMd •• °"' • IWt\f) '° Oivtded 53~
...... lft9f1 ~~ sa~
DOWN
1 l l'We9t
2 Bard ot
3 Eur OC*111
4 AfnC)Nl*rt s ... ,,.,.
I T"' °"OS 7 ,.,.,"'
I To
•=ctov tor lhOrt
10 $ome i.tet1 '' ........ 1t V~ ,, Plnliiel\
1 t Twned. 'M\11•
21 \1.,.-ty
2S '°'!>Mt
"" 1 ..... ~ 21 Oreea PM1t
211dtl 2tlft:~ 30 ,_,,
.,~ .....
32 Sor1;-of 4lowrl
33 ..... s C.netoon
3t lac:MmllllOl'I
60 W1nctl
42l~ .. .. ~,,....,., ... ,, .. ,~
47 • Helto . 10 .. ~
50 "°"°'~ ptoto4 ~ St .......,9oel
,., ~ 1111
5t (•OMd
10 111--.
$2.20 per day
That'• ALL you pay fOf'
4 llnee, 30 day minimum
In ttie
SERVICE
DIRECTORY
INCREASE YOUR REACH
GET IN OUR IMPROVED
n ... a11W ........ "' YIUl9PIHI
For ._.,. lrdotmatlon
CALL TODA't'll
111 .. LOIS ... m
----
(ll".trinQ ',~ , ·
Corw • :,,,: .. ~ . aood• mowra. print their
P.U.C. C.. T number,
limo'• & cl'laUtfeur·a print tn.lr T.C.P. number In all
ldV9f11MtMnte. rr you
h•v. 1 queetlon •bout
the legallt)' of • mov«.
llm6 or cheuffaur. C•U: 1_,,,..,~,.......,...,..,,,.,..,.,...,~,,,.,....-'iiiiiiiiiiii;iiiUiiiiiitijL"
ml•lon. 11.-.558-4151
All Mall• & Models 7 esy.No tnp Chg-Sr disc
llc#039752 2~ yrs exp 111..Ull
FOAMOAE
INFORMATION CALL
(211)UWIH
P1ZZA RUTAUAAHT
Momf~ milt .... at:
unu11a111
(TH)~1-
; l) ,., ...
----~ ...
-·i
I t
I t I
' .
I I ,
I
I t
...... a.a ~ 1He Sedan. 1 '"" Loedecl. Low "*-· owner. 2'1. *· rtdo, •· 5•pd. radJalt, altoya, ...,,. oondltton. Ylnyt p/ltMtlnQ. brlk•. •.
top. Black a Whit•. (1l1T272)
MIOO. M2·2t11 •lmll IW .,..,. A&-.,,, • .,,. 91001--.. --.-,-,.-1-.. --.. , _ ..
Sliver w/bfue leather Stick thlft, t1.tnroor. (t2006l)$11.... Cllllt .. (IJ7M) ....... _ ...... .... .,.. ., .. JI --~ ar.y. ~ ~ (820314) ae,ttt L.oec*tt Noe eer, reduoed
........ r ......
..... .,.. •1-1111
'83 SUBARU OL Hatch-• .llftl. bed!. 51Pd, AJC, AM/FM ,ult l.oeded. Low mllee.
~. S2,aoe> 080. eutomatlc, •1.1nroof ,
845-6728 p/tteerlng, lllf. (MT748) .. , ....
•1.a11
CREVIER
IEll
SILES$
Aft11~0F .... "°"° ... • .. 31• .. (llQm2) '14 3259 ~ (281llOI)
'16 m ~ 0 0016>
-&Me .....
PU1-li1'i9
1500 Auto Matt Dr.
s.nta Ana
55 fwy. at Edlng«
<ltll 7 DAYS
Servtoe Hts. Molt-Fri. 1:00 mn to t:OO pm
,. SA~~Y.IL~&
NEW LOCATlONf
SANTA ANA AUTO MALL
17071 E. lmperlal Hwy.· Yorba Linda. California .
THE BEST BUYS
IN ORANGE COUNTY
ARE ON THIS PAGE
CALL ONE NOWI
o IADDLIBACll
Sales
Leasing
Service
Parts
IAVINE AUTO CENTER
1-800-831-3377 714-380-1200
1500 Auto Mall Dr .. 8enta Ane a5-3171
i •
Newport/55 Fwy. at Edtnger ... °"""' .,., , ..,. ....... ..... ...,1-lpm ~ ... ~.
BUENA
PARK
STANTON
GARO H GAO\/£
PACIFIC
OCEAN
...
..
EDINGER
I . I -~· ~ k~ .l. .. "\_· LAGUNA NIGUEL
lftlitlat. 11 1lil P111 .. ,., ..... ,.
842~121
CALL ONE OF THESE
DEALERS FOR THE BEIT BUY
0 HOUSE of IMPORTS, Inc.
Mn~th•-Benz
e&e2 Mancheet.er Boulcftrd
Buena~
URVIC&213 ot 714 CSDE8 ........,.=;z.
7~ : Where 1.,s anc11-e1meci; ~t.":.t"5!
• Saperlor
&n VOLKSWAGEN@ ~ IN WESTMINSTER ~
1600 Westminster Blvd., Westminster
(71,)891-9378 (213>'30-28'3
G) JIM SLEMONS IMPORTS
•
• l•w fir.CM • ... G1mM1ch
• ''""411y '•ople • f .c
11US .._. ..... •41
• •
...
•lllCll'l1'9\ .. ,'lll ... ---..... ITA1-T "" ........ """°"'.,.
1 Lal
C8lf
\
-~ ..... " . . ' ~ . _..,. .._...,_.
5Prins ii ia the air and oo holiday in the CbriJt.ian year compares 1n i~ widl e.-rSunday. Thiloblcrvance int the core of Christian
&iid1Ud iu1I lMIOI wortdwideua rcnewalo(lifeind hope. Sodi8Dlr• dUaclal'~ whether with family or f'riena. isa celebration.
Here'u menu &Mt it bOth qwek and euy, yet specuiculir to serve.
Ba:ame you can .pm it 1evmt days an advance, Creamy Havani en
Crouae iu 11ar apprlizer. It can be wrappecl and frozen 3 to• days before
Eu1er aftd bUecl f'tOin the frozen state; f:rom f'rceter to oven to table, it
takes onlyebout JO minu&es.
Central tothemcal,ofcoune, i1theentree, and nothing is more simple
todoormorctpeetaeularthan frfth, sprinarackoflamb. ltcooks with ltnle
fuss and ttie•vory fruited brown ricestuffinaaoesintotheovcn ma
casserole the IUt JO minutes of cookina ume.
Theric:edithcanbeauemblcdearlyin the day and because it
combines both fruit and VCfCtables, it's the only accompaniment you'll
need. Just round ofTthe main course with Salad Piquant. and rolls and
butter, if=. For a silken tart.of.white chocolate in a crunchy almond pastry
shell itcre>W'led with a brandied chenj andtoastcd almond Coppln1. It'
the perfect way to complete the meal with flair.
CREAMY HAVARTI
ENCROlJTE
I ,,....~ ... try petty Mells, daawe4
1 ••••• ~., ..........
t •11.,11• In liU...-llerh
1 ('7 ...-.) ,..... ernmy 8aHr11, plaha or wlm dlll, or eqt1al 1l1e la
~Miil~ B•lter
1( .. illdl)fMJple,..
leg, llPdJMA&ea Frm frmter raw veae&abla
Press 2 patty shells toeether, then roll out on lightly floured, cloth to an
8-inchcircle1 brush with muswdandsprinklcwlth herbs. Place cheese 1n
center of circle bringing edges of pastry just over top edge of cheese.
formina tucks. Place in lightly buttered foil pan; brush with beaten cg.
Chill I hour.
Brush apin; then bake in preheated 37 5-degrce oven for 15-20
minutes, or until golden in color. Remove from oven and let cool slight ly
in pan before servina. Or cool and chlll; then reheat before serving. · rve
warm. cut in wedaes with crisp fresh fruit or raw vegetables.
Nete: If wrapped and frozen, do not thaw. Bake in preheated oven 25
to 30 minutes, until golden.
GLAZED RACKS OF LAMB
! r~ckaof lamb,I tolrtbteacll (3'19 to4 poand1 total)
StafflD~
! CtlPI cooke4 browa rtce
1 (1"9C!ff) cu~"'e,draf•ed
l c.,1lkM...,.. alm .. da, toa•~
1C.,~COCM•t
l a, ,....
l (I oaee) cu sliced water cllataars. draJaed
l Ctlp e.Med IJ'ff8 pell
. Glaze:
l (!1.-ce)cure4m~1lefUlla1
• up bloc illvere4 almollda, toa.ated .
! taltlnpMll1 Amaretto UqHar or 'It teaspoon almond extract
Havcbutcher••frcnch" t~cracks so thc meat between nb bone lip
has been removed (approximately 11/i inches). Place lamb on a roasuna
rack to collect excess drippings. Rpast at 325 degree • 25 minutes per
pound, or until meat thermometer. placed in center of muscle. rca•~tcri.
140dearcesFformedium rare, orto the desired doneness
Combineallstuffina inaredients In mixing bowl. Spoon stuffinginto
a li&htly heated casserole. Cover and bake with lamb ror1as1 30 minute~.
or until heated throu&}1. Comb1neredchcrrypic.filhngand li vered
almonds in a small saucepan. Heat until warm.
RemovefromheatandaddAmarcttoliqueuroralmond cxtract.
Ounnalast IS mtnutesofro1sti11i.baStelambw1thchcrry glaze m1 lure
f'9ease Me IASTER/C4f
Glazed buns
traditional
fOrhollday
Easter, alo~ with its ~li,ious
aipificance, alsO it a symbolic
ttminder of briihter my• aheid.
ThiaannuaJ hOliday plbm friends
and family •••her to celebrate IM mum or ..,,.. 1nd fair weather
da~
Here'show=.
to learn the
fats of lite
I J
{ ...
'
r
• .
•
Today's busy coob are tearchina
for colorful. sali~ meals lbit
can be prWared quickly for eotet-tainilla or ~ dbl~ Creative
con&em~ coob Often look to
the ..Gndcirful fooCI .erved at~
try innt u iDll)ira\ion for their IDOlt
sU«CUful dithet.
Noted ror &elb, hiah-qu&lity
inaredicnts and ima&inativc ~ cnta '001, inns otfer *90na1
men• featurina the best of locally
produced foods. The Ashby ban,
J>aris, VL, and The Oovernor'-1 Inn,
Ludlow, Vt., two historic inns
recently named recipients of the
Uncle Ben's Best Inn of the Year
A ward for 1988, offer inspiration to
contemporary COOb lookina for area• diabcs that can be prepared at
home in haJf an tiour or less.
l()Ca1Cd in tiny Paris, V A.,just an
hour's drive from Washington
D.C., the Ashby Inn is a converted
residence built in 1129, with ad-
ditions that predate the Civil War.
Althouah the inn has spectacular
views of the rollina Blue Ridae
foothills, its hean is in its kitchen.
The menu is limited, thouahtful,
and auidcd more by tradition than
trend, with specialties such a beef
ana mushffiom pie, fish stewa an
local game. Great attention is paid
to seasonal foods, and much of the
summer produce and herbs used
are grown in its own gardens.
The Governor's Inn, on the
and butter is browned but •not
burned. Remove rice from heit.
Let stand covered ,S minutes or
until desired consistency.
Stir in sliced romaine. Transfer
sole to platter lined with larae
romaine leaves; driule with
browned butter. Lay lemon slices
over sole; serve aJonpide rice.
Makes 4 servings.
•Note: To substitute 4 small
whole cleaned trout for .sole, in-
crease--cookina time-t~.'.7--minutes
per side.
. From ,.e Gov~nor'1 bul.
BRANDIED PORlt MED-
AUJONS
r-----------s-AViN'Ciii'----------1 11 Bmg.,,.,.coupon ... aeoupontrom.,... .... ._ ... .,._.,....,,......,.~~°""I
good ll 11 ._,....ig HONEYBAKED• .,,_ "'~
L. Oftwnot..-llr•z•r ._........ J ----------------------------
MAM• The Viltagt Center
1222 So 8'ookhuf1t
92804 (It 8111 Rold) ""°"' (714) &35·2461
COlmlA •l MAI
3700 E Colst Hwy 92625
Phone (714) 673-9000
UOIMMl ...... '°"..oi.aenu•IQN,,.IMM.IUCIDP'l:lllM'f-.0 •
UTOIO
24601 R111110nd Way t2
(Bell Towtr "'-ta
North at El TOfO Road) 92930
Ptiollt (714) 131-3822 IUIT_.,. llACM
19069 Btldl 8~. 92841
(Nut to Raltlht Mlftet 1t Glfflftd)
Phone (71•) 148-4575
LAMAllA
~·flteu 2428 w ........, Blwd, 1Kl63l
(1 i.;.t W ti letcll M )
"""'(t1J) 114·111• ...
1-419 N Tu.tin
(It Kit•) 12181
PhoM (71•) 187·-
1Ulllt
13771tt.pOflM~3
Ca.tin Pia# t2e80 "'°"' (714) 731.16
••
httet Homes and Garoent
One taste of this homemade beef
and barley .soup and you'll thipk
you're havina supper at Grand-
ma's, But your m icrowa vc oven lets
you have it ready in about one-third
the time il took her.
MICROWAVE BEEF
AND BARLEY SOUP
1 ~ capt 1Ucd muslarooms
~ cap coarsely cboppe4 onion
~ cap sliced celery
•;, cap wtiter
1 1malJ clove 1ar1tc, mltlced
S4 pond beef stew meat, cat
into ~-la~ cabet
% caps.water
ltdlel•·-~Ajple llkel ,.,....,
nta• .......... .,. llkff '""
part Of Jeff (epdaul)
Remove packet of almonds from
packaac: set aside. Combine water,
I tabfcspoon of the butter and
contents of rice and scasonina
packets in saucepan. Brin& to a ~ii.
Cover tightly and simmer 10
minutes.
. While rice simmers. sprinkle
p(jrlc with salt and pepper. Heat
remaining 2 tablespoons butter in
JO.inch skillet over medium heat.
Add pork to skillet; cook about 5
minutes per side or until cooked
through.
I 8-ouce cu tomato saace
l 7 ~ .... nee cu tomatoes, cat •P
t teaspoou luwt beef bouJlloa
cran.Je• l teaspoon •ne4 basil, craslled
l te11~n Worceite.uJair•
saace
~ teaspoo11 pepper
'n c•p qliCk-CookJD& barley
In a 3-quan microwave-sate
casserole combine mushrooms,
onion. celery, '/• cup water and
garlic. Cook, covered, on 100
percent power(high) 3 to S minute
or until vegetables are tcf\der.
stimng once.
Add beef. 2 cups water, tomato
' Remove rjce from beat Sdr in
han\. Let stand covered until all
water is absorbed. about 5 minutes.
Remove pork With slotted spatula
to serving J>late; keep warm.
Add leek to skinet; cook and stir
until softened, abOut 2 •minutes.
Add apple, cream and brindy.
Bring to a boil; cook and stir until
thickeneo, about 3 minutes. Pour
over pork; serve alonaside rice.
Garnish plate with apple and leek
slices. if desired. Makes 4 servinp.
•Note: To make pork tenderloin
patties, cut pork tenderloin into 4-
ounce portions; flatten across grain
to 1/•-incb thickness.
From ate~ Ju.
sauce, undrained to matoes,
bou11lon granules, basil,
Worcestershire sauce and pepper.
Cook, covered, on hiJh 12 to 16
minutes or until boiling. stimng
lwice;-
Stir in barley. Cook. covered, on
70 percent power (medium~high)
20 to 25 minutes or until meat and
barley arc tender. stirring 3 times.
Makes 4 servings.
Nutrition information per ser-
ving: 235 cal., 21 g pro., 23 g carb., 6
gfat, 76mgchol., 531 mg.sodium.
U.S. RDA: 19 percent v1t. A, 27
perccntvit. C, JO percent thiamine,
18 percent riboflavin, 29 percent
01ae1n, 22 percent iron.
FREE CATALOG OF GOVERNMENT BOOKS
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Free Catalog
P.O. &ox 3 7000
Washington. OC 10013-7000
• Custom Ma(je
Brldll Gowns
Long
Green
oca
Cola
CJ.sic or Din Colet
11 ONna ClllU ,
F~yScott
Bath Tissue
4 Roi ,,..,.
Blue Bonnet
Maraarine .
I Pa.ttl P ;;J,,,,,,
Q-tm
_.79-
_59 ·
.59
Jerseymaid ~ 95 Sour Cream .
1'~C--•
(J2 ~c--1.6')
FreSh L-E-A-N ~
Ground Beef ·'
Doe Not £1falttl ~ F"'
A111·SmPllduct
Fresh E-X-T-R-A L·E·A-N Ground Beef
0-Not £-c /J1' FM
. ~
. Fartner J~lill
Meat
Wieners e
16 o..na P"'*"it (B«/W1mm-l.J9)
u..il 2 P...,. P., P-*1
Stouffer's 119 Macaroni & Chccsc
M'*"-' «M 0-120.-P.....,_
-GROCERY/BAKERY-
9 Purex Laundry 4 49 Detergent ,,_.
1410.-lloa
... Voos Deluxe Mixed Ntts 499
• 110.-c.. -~,~~~ 519 a Sunshine Oy-ster Cnckers 159
• 110-. ...
A Voo.s Trash~ 1 79
• IOc.-t.JJ c-.s-
9 Idahoan h .. 9 ~~h .'t
JIO.-f ....
--~~~ • Kraft Mai'shina1Jows
.... .,Jl....,,.HO.-f ... ~Hearth Cookies
A-tJ v ..... 110.-ai.
. Mr. Pia lJe ~ nc.;,;.,_..
--------FllOZEN---------
OiZQ OD.-DAILY PtLOT/ Thurlday. Merpti 18, 1H9
p ctacular dessert simple te prepare
A stunnina des~t that delicously
exemplifies this idea is Raspberry-
Stuffed Baked Pears.
Busy home cooks will welcome
this deuert into their repertoire.
Want to entertail\, but you're shon ·
on time;? Raspberry-Stuf'Thd Baked
Pears can be prepared in minutes.
On a diet, but still want to serve a
scrumptious dessert? This recipe
has only 22S calories~ serving.
The perfect finale to a specral
dinner, the ~r halves att ovcn-
poached in a bath of 100 percent
natural butter, vanilla bean. sugar
and tanay lemon iest. As wonderful
aromas waft throuf:h your kitchen
you prepare a stnking raspberry
puree to drizzle atop the warm .
sweet pears.
RASPBERRY STUFFED
BAKED PEARS
! Botc pean, peeled, cored and
Hived r vanilla beu, spUt
1 ~ &able"• w !llPf ~ 20 to JO minutes, or until pears arc
S 1~,--' 1 • " ma, leta• tender, but still hold their shape
1e1t well.
l ~ tablelf••• tMltter
1 padqe (lltueea) Hfros&H
f ro1em raspberries, puee41,
1eede4
Z to S tablespMU Hpr
Fre•' er Fro1ea raipberrles
(defrost, lf fro1ea)
Combine pear hal ves, vanilla
bean, I 1h tablespoons sugar, lemon
i.est. bu ttcr and2 tablespoons water
in shallow, greased baking dish.
Bake. uncovered at 350 degrees for
Wtiile pears bake, prepare
raspbtrry sauce by combiama
pureed seeded raspberries with 2
tablespoons sugar. Heat in
saucepan until sli&htly thickened.
Remove and discard bean and
lemon zest from pears. Serve pears
warm with fresh raspberries in
center; top with raspberry puree.
Makes 4 scrvinp ....
Nutritional information per set·
ving: 225 calorics, 4.8' grams fat, 3
grams of fiber.
FRESH BEEF LOIN BONELESS
Meat Dept. Savings
L G 00 Beef "'*l'tf'IOC '138 : iY-l•n rou 9'GllHr"'IClkaCllllCN "' ~ ICJl''IOOIClmlftJlll ..... Ut
; Chicken Franks OM.LMAST~ ,.az&9•
Pork Loin Roast ~ Ul'329
Lunch Meats == ~69•
: Meat Franks WUONS ~99•
; liurkey Drumettes :.:o-m> ui55•
Fresh Clams ~ ~-..=--ui99-
Compare these Low Prices
Frozen Food Favorites
V~·-"""·es ....WIWMTD '1 '' ~&.clLJ'I "oe. MaOll-.._ *OIOa _ •IOCI
Pictsweet Express ltv~• ~9·
Strawberries = 9MJ1 •1"
Tina's Burritos av~TII• .w 29-
Waffles :'~ ,,oz69-
Sunny Delight ~~ , ,>Ol7'1
Breyers Ice Cream =: ..oi•3•
Grocery Special s
5-Ative Citrus Ptitlch OCUD. ~'1•
Pudding Snacks ~.. .~•1•
Challenge BUtter =.o"~::r '21'
Ricotta .Cheese =: tM)I •1 21
M)I '1 ''
~3~
u.c 7~
~ Sirloin,
LB
.,
lA '141
EASJER ,,.,.Cl
Serve .remaining aJazc with lamb and stuffina. Makes 6 to 8 servinp
(2 ribs per person).
SALAD PIQUANT
! '•ad• lttlt&er letwce, waded
udton ~ "It cnmbled Dul•' blae
dlffle
PlttlutDre11U.,-Ligbtfy·combine lettuce and cheese
in salad bowl. Drizzle with dressing
and toss again just before serving.
Makes 8 servings.
•p141uatDres1m1
In a small bowl, whisk 3 table-
spoons white wine vincpr and I
tea5poon Dijo n-style mustard. Stir
in 1/1 teaspoon minced prlic, I
tablespoon chopped parsley~t-tea
spoon minced shallot, -salt and
pepper to taste. Add slowly 'h cup
olive oil. whisking . thoroughly.
Makes about I 1h cups.
WHITE CHOCOLATE
CHERRYTARt
~ cap lteavy cream
8 ouces wklte chocolate,
ebopped
1 teaspooa vanilla extract
11' cap batter
Cnltdy Almond Paltry Sllell
Braadle4 Clterry Topplag
Sliced aataral almoecb, toasted
Bring cream to a boil. Remove
from heat; stir in chocolate. Mix
until smooth. Stir in vanilla ex-
tract. Cool to room temperature. '
Beat butter in electric mixer until
light and fluffy. .
Beat in cooled chocolate tmx-
ture< beating. until light and fluffy.
Spoon mixtureinlocoo~ pasrry
shell. Top with Brandied Chert)
Topping: chill. Sprinkle with ad-
ditional sliced almonds before ser-
ving. Makes I (9-inch) tan.
-Cruelly AJmood
PastrySMU:
~ cap sliced utaral almonds,
toasted
I cap Oour
i tablespoou sagar
f llblet~H fTOttD batter; cat
Into I -ta lespooa pieces
l egyolk
J. tablespoon cold water
1 teaspooa llmoad Htract
Combine almonds, flour, sugar,
butter, egg yolk, water and almond
extract an the bowl of a food
processor. Pulse 5 seconds, then
process continuously until a ball of
dou.&h forms on blades. Wrap and
chilf 20 minutes.
Roll out doua,h and fit into a 9'11·
inch tan or pje pan. Prick with the
tines of a fork. Bake at 375 degrees.
25-30 minute • until aotden brown.
C'ool ~n Wire nrck.
Br ... ledCMnl' r.......r.·
1 cu (U. euees) clterry pit
~~bl'U4ly , ............ .....
'4 sea.,... aa....M umct
Combine cherry pie filhna, bran· dy and sugar.· Heat undl supr
dissolves, approx1matel)' I 0
minutes. Add almond extract and
cool to room temperature.
Hate carving?
Boned lamb is
ideal choice
FATS , ,,_Cl . D .. ~ the Amcncan 1etet1c AlsOcia-
tlon: I. Which llas·morc fat? a. I ounce
of tllrtteY pastrami b. l ounce of
tumy bttast c. J ounce of flank
sieat.
Answer: (a) Dcpendina on the
brand, turkey pastrami can contain
up to 60 percent fat calories. flank
steak is 30 percent fat calories;
turkey btta5t 1s I percent fat
caloncs.
2. Which has more cholesterol? a.
3 ounces beef (lean) b. pongc cake
(1/12 of a I0-1nch cake) c. lemon
mennauc pie (Va of a 9-inch pie).
Answer. (b) Sponge cake has the
hi&hcs\ amount of cholesterol -
I 64 milligrams. Lemon meringue
pie has 98 milligrams, and lean beef
has 77 millivams. 3. Which 1s the lowest m fat? a. 2
strips of bacon b. I slice Ca nadian
bacon c. turkey sausaJC.
Answer: (b) Canadian b.1con has
1 4S percent fat caloncs. Turkey
sa usa.se has about 60 percent ·fat calones, and bacon has 77 percent
fat caJones.
4. Which contains cholesterol? a.
peanul butter b. fish c. vegetable 011.
Answer: (b} Onl> animal prod-
uCls f (i nclud1na fish) contain
cholesterol. Plant product do not.
have cholesterol ( 1.c peanut butter,
vegetable oils).
5. One-half cup of oil has how
many calorics? a. 360 b. 660 c 960.
Answer: (c) A tablespoon of a
typical 011 has 120 calorie • which
adds up to 960 calorics per 'h cu~.
6. Which con tams the most fat . a.
chicken nuggets b. plain baked
potato c. small plain hamburger.
Answer: (a) Chicken nuggets that
arc fried cont.am about S9 percent
fat calories. A plam baked potato 1s
virtually fat-free and a small ham-
-bufger has about 35 percent fal
calorics.
7. Ifa food label SB}'.S the product
is "96 percent fat-free" or ··35
.._,percent lean." then the product can
be considered low-fat. a true b.
false.
Answer: FALSE. The percentage
of fat by wetsht docs not reflect fat
calones. Whol~ mil~ 1 96 percent
fat-free b) weight. but sull has SO
percent fat calonc
8. Which fat lasted below is the
most tu.rated? 1. buHeF-0. lard"
coconut 011 d. palm kernel 011.
Answer: (c) Coconut 011 has the
' most saturated fat -92 percent.
Palm kernel 011 ha!I 86 percent.
butter has 66 percent; lard has 41
percent.
9. Which 1s the lowest in fat and
calones? n. non-dau)' creamer
(hqu1d or po\\der) b evaporated
skim milk.
Answer: (b) Evaporated skim
milk ts "inually frtt of fat and
cholesterol, and much lo""cr in
calones than non-dairy creamer
10. Which is lowc t in fat'l a.
ohves b. mu hrooms c. avocado
An wer:(b)Mushroorn ucnnr-
ly fat-free. Ohvc ha"e 99 percent
fat caloncs; avocado have 88
pcrccnt fat c.alorics.
nucrowavc &o softea it: In a I p
~ roOlt VJ CUJ> waw. 110-
C:OVered. Oft J()() ~· ~t (hr.) for I to 2 m1nu1a or wa11J ~ lft&. Place brown ....., lft •
m1CJOW1vc-:51fc conlainer near the wa1.tr. Htat, uncovered. on htah
until softened. Allow J l/J to Z1h
minucn for YJ pound brown s1111r
and 2 to 3 minu1a for I pound.
You can melt bakina chotolate riaht tn the PISJtr in your mlCl"O-Qve because the chocolate docSn•t
lOlt its.shape. Allow l to 2 minuta
on 100 .pcrtent power (hip) for l
ounce (J square); 1'llto21h minuan
for 2 ounces (2 squares). Becauw
the chocolate won ·1 look melted,
Beef Rib
per lb.
Save 1.40 per lb.
-oo --DOUILI YOUI .-• .. ~
Fryer
lell It wnh a spoon or fork to 1ee if
it't compiletdy toftened.
When buyi.. a produel to
sub1Ututt fOr butttr an bekina.
cboosc a suck product labeled
.. marpnne." Products Jabcltd
"spttad'• are mt~ for tabk use
and are not satisfactory for baking.
SUbldludonl
f(){ sour milk or buttermilk.
substitute an equal amount of soured milk: Combrnc I t1blcsPQQn
lemon juice or vincpr and eno\aah
whole milk to make I cup total. Let
the·mixture stand S minutes before usina.
No self.ri in& flour1 For each
..
cup. 1Ubttituae ~P 111:-PUrpote flOut .. I la bUiftl pow·
der, !h ~n salt and v. teupoon
bW• . for each J ~nee square un· s~ned bUi• choco&a&e, you can subtlitutc 3 tabletpoc)ns un-
swccetened cocoa ~r plu I tablnpoon marpnne or butter. . .....,. ..
When meAJurina oil and honey
or molasses .for a reci~. mea1ure
the oil first. Then use the same cup to mea ure the swcet~er: it will
pour·out ca ily without stickinl to
the cup. ·
To measure V1 cup stick butter or
Star-Kist ChunK
Light Tuna
In 0 11 or Water av. oz. c1n
Save .17 I
baking tips
~ne. cut otr one stidt at the 'h
cup iurk on the ~. U1e the
uriall portaon (not the 1/1 cup) plus
one wfiole stick.
..... ' Transfer paltry by rollina the
putry around the rollm1 pin, then
unronina over the pie plate.
Don't tnm t~ bottom paltry for
a two-<rust pie until after fillin1-
You·11 be sure of havina enou&h
putry &tft to seal well and make a
•pretty~, • I t
Cooldft
When baking bar cookies, line the Pl'! wnh foil <area if necessary)
anc:I pour an b9t&cr. a.a lad t'Ool
the cookiet; Ulen lift out dlie tit. lfa
e.sy to cut neaa pMa. aild .,.. dll
pan (rom knafecuts. To &eat ....
tM slab of cookies hebe CuUUrs 11
taket less fn:e1cr space than c:.noM
uf cut cooll1cs.
5Nt910411 dp • :r o hare a rookina or_ blki"I tip
with CookTa.lk readm: detCnbe
your ~ip on a post caril aftd tend
with _your name and address &O:
CookTalk. Better Homes ~nd Gei'-1 dtns Food Dept., I 716 LOcUIC St.,
Des Moults, fowa SOl36. No tiPI
wiJI be returned. We reserve tM riaht to tdit tips for publicatlOll.
3 lb. bag-Re
Delicious Appl.~
Waahtngton Extr1
Fancy· .. ch b•g
\_ Pillsbury Coronet Sparkle Buy 4-Save up to .44
Drum~ticks .59 Biscuits 4/.88 Towels
Save .30 • 59 HoW'1d C4unty ,..,~ .. td 2 "Y •left FroHn-5 It>. ff9 9uttHmlltt M '00 ct roll Wl\I .. SuPClllff La .. Country Sty .. .,., lb. 1 01. ptlg
Fresh Salmon 4.88
AiaskanHai;bUi sir.· 3.88
F7es1tMat1J.Mah1 4.48
Imperial
Margarine
1
8
4 ltldl
' lb pltg.
Save up to .22 •
Turkey
Breast
Stouffer's Frozen
Entrees 1 1 ' A~tdV.n.tln
• 01. ,0 12 •• ptlt
Save up to .40 •
2 4 oz. -Fresh W stern
~~~~.~read 1 08
Save .36 •
Prtcee effective March 18 thru March 22, 1989
.A
Tasty disties salute nutrition m h
March is National Nutnt1on cup (8 ouncn) or milk; or an S-butler wd lldL Add ..-;
Month -a aood time to take ~tock ounce container of >oeun; or I ~; and star ..., icader. ..,... A
of your ptt10nal diet. Do you even ounces of natural chttsc: or 2 minu1n. $priakJe wiab ROur: llif
know. foruamp&e. how much of an ounces of procc $Cd cheese. unul onion ii coaled. Aitd ~
eantial nutrient such as calcium stirrina consaandy with • Wire
you lhould bt scttina dail)I'? CHEDDAR, BEAN ~~D whisk; coot and stir until miilutt
for aduh1 and ch11drcn, just two PASTA CADUOLl!.i bOilt and thicktns. about )
servings of calcium.rich dairy t me41•m (11 emeet) &ema&ees Lightly buncr a 2Vr-quart casserole; minutes .. Add . 04 cups cheddar
foods, alona with a balan~ diet is 8 eutt• (1*4 c.~> ro&elle 1Ct aside. Coanelr_~hop I tomato chcete: star uaul cbeese ~ •
considered adrquate. Teens and (Corkterew) ,.. .. (ucoMed) (makes abOut I cue,J: .ct Midc. Cut Drain.,.....~ to 1kil~ ekflil
brCastfttding adult women need . i aa•tnpe .. IMIUer rcmainina tomato into thin slices; with beau. chjhcs. salt .... ~
thrtt servinp and brcastfecdina · 14 C9P ~1,.e• oiltea set aside. Cook pasta without salt pepptr afld rescn;ed c~
teens need four. i tibl~ all•,.rpote flour according 10 peckage direction ~ toitutocs. Place m pr,.-..
What's a serving? To begin wuh, i capt milk l until tender but firm . about 9 casee1ole. Cover and bake fM··a
a single portion of either of the 8 CHlllCH (% Hpt) nred4ed JTiinutes. • minulH. A.rranae "!Crved ~-
following casserole rcci~s. Or, one 1urp cH4Wai dleete, dlvl4ed Meanwhile, in a large skillet heat slices over top~ spnnkle with • ==========::~~~=============~~~_:.:=.:.:::~=:.::::..:.::.::.::::2:..=:__:_=.:.::.::.:.:,::2.::;:..::.::..:.:..:.:..~~_J4~~~~~~_.:._--__, mainina 1/4 cup cheddar cbelll. Bake uncovered, until tomatoet
arc h~t. about 10 minutes. Yield: 6
~ ........ '
•sno•MPROAST
PICNIC
PORTION Ul .• 98
~ ........ ..
-SllOW1 PIA SnAK
u.. l.49 FA.Mil Y PACK sun PORTION
LB. . ..... co .. ••DP•••n
POINT
CUT ·La.· 1.17
Swift's 6·0z Chtek90 Kiev Or
CHICKEN CORDON BLEU EA 1.69 FRESH FILLET OF DOVER . SOLE .. Ul.3.39
......
llU'ITlll
l lB PKG
QUARTER STICKS 1.89
Single Roll
HI-ORI TOWELS .59 I lb Pkg Qvorter Sttck'
BLUE BONNET
..
CAKE MIXES
...... llogu 32 Oz
SPAGHETTI SAUCE . .... 1.69
GE ARTICHOKES
IA.
NATURAL
CASING
Jimmy Deon Sou~ & 811tu1t1 Of
SAUSAGE & MUFFINS . .. EA 1.59
1002 aox
6 S lo 7 Oi Au ort.d
LAY'S POTATO CHIPS
(/
1.1•
Ripe
SALAD TOMA TOES
R.d leaf lutter Or
• •• ... • LB .• 69 GREEN LEAF
2 lb Pkg
• .. .... . •• • EA A9 · CELLO CARROTS
Sohd
EA A• FRESH CABBAGE •
--('-~•!!ll~~AL~~·~,~E~B~A~Ll!•~ll~IL)--
---1 4-•ACK Wt ... n ouoU"''' •I • K t aOO O"fl tut • .lb. ,.. ~~~ 1.99
Dudley•
MAGIC COLOR KIT
S·Poch AA • Or 6-Pock C s ~ 0 1
RAY·O·VAC BATTERIES
~ .••
2.M
(n.•A ... Fl'9MY•l8N9)
aAtLl'f'I • B ...... I 19
...... ClllAM I ••• WlllllllY 1'°~ 12" 750ML 9.99
• 6 rock, 12·0t lottles
GUINESS STOUT ........................... M
IO rroof
1.75 LITER GORDON'S VOOKA ......................... 'f .M
..........
Y AMASA 11&111
llllTATIO• ma•
60Z
1 01 Pkg
SHIRAKIKU CHUBA SHllT AKE
77601
TOKVOZUKE
1.49
portions. ~
PAsTA AND CBEDE · C~EROLE WITH aaoccou
I .aces (I •,4 Ctlpl) small ~
1llape(I macanel (w11W)
% &ablnfMM IMllter
1 c., dMappe• .U..l Jar (II
ouca) mariU.ra ·~
UllCe
1 packa1e (11 ouces) frnee
claopped b roccoU, defrotlH
l CU (4 HA.Cet) sliced ~
room1, dralaed
8 .UUI (% ·~) tllredded
mo1urella claeae, dlvide4
"" cap,ated parme ... clteeM,
dlvlde
Preheat oven to 350 dearees.
Li&htly butter a 13 x 9 x 2-inch
balC1ng dish; set aside. Cook pasta
accordtng to package directions
witho ut salt until tender but firm,
about 9 minutes.
Meanwhile. in a large deep skjllet
heat buucr until hot. Add -onion;
cook and stir until tender, about 4
minutes. Sur in spaghcm sau«,
broccoli and mushrooms; simmer
unul sauce 1s hot about 3 mf1utes.
Drain pasta. Add pasta to sauce and
vegetables. saimng until combined.
Place hatfof the pasta mi xture into
prepared bakmg dish: top with I
cup moz zarella and 1/4 cup
parmesan cheese. Repeat with rc-
mainini pasta and clleests. Bake
uncovered, until hot. about 30
minutes. Yield: 6 portions.
Perponion: 354 mgcaJcium ; 41 7
ca lories.
Mak~-ahead
eggs perfect
for holiday
lett~r Homes ar1d Gatdem
This Easte r brunch cntrtt 1s an
overnight success. A~scmble it lhc
night before. then. j~ before
brunch. pu t it in the oven to bake 20
to 25 minutes. Top~d with a nch
wis:s cheese sauce instead of
hollandaise. it's easier 10 fix and
more goofproof th.an the l)'pical
Eggs Benedict.
MAK~AHEAD
EGGS BENEDICT
4 Ea1ll1b melfla11 1pllt aad
toasted
ll llllD 1llcet CuadlaD·style
bacoa
aeu• •,. np mar1arlae or better
·~ C8P aJl·perpeM floU'
1 tulpooll ,.prtka .
~tulf••~Htmes
"' •ftllMIOll pe-,,er ! C1IPI milk
i ca,11udM4 Swill c~
'it C9J •ry wM&e wme
t.; c.p Cf'UM4..' c.raflabt
(aboet 1 C11p kf .... C ....... )
l .. -....,._ marpft.H er .. ,.
ter, melted
In a I). by 9· by 2-inch Mkina
di h arranie muffins. cut side up.
Place 2 bacon shceson each muffin
half. Half ftll a JO.inch skJUct with
water. brina just to boilina. Brak
one CU into a dish. Carefully de cu into water .
R~at with 3 more qp. Sim-
mer. uncovered. 3 minutcS or uatil
just Kt. Remo-Jc qp trt'ilh a lloaed
spoon. Repeat with rcmainenacms.
Platt l Cll on top of each md'in
tack: Kl Uidt.
For sauce. in a medium saua!fan
melt V. cup nwpnne. Stir in flour.
paprika. nutmea and pepper. ~
malk all a& oca. COok ud llir tilJIUI
tbidioncd ..... IMlll!lly. 57$ clMne uDUI --Stir ia . CarffUUY IP>GP IMClir over m n
... COlllbiDC ~ .... I table~ tnafllline; jptjlib
over mufftn iiidlJ. Cover. ·n
ovenisttt. To~ bike. vncoveied, II a J7~FCM8l0to25mi~
or Until beNd 1JuOuP. M I -.;r-.... illblll8tiOliJS
¥ills A5' 4;b 271-"°·' J9 a c
!:l.:'u.s. ~~-· .. ~ ... A. II .. 1 II • c. ,. ..... ............... 11111.w ___ ............ .
..
llJWMDIM ....,,.ea•'
A awd of'dall &o 4'°clurred M Cwt ............. ....
a rtd for cbe 1'89 -=~ ~Hno.t . .
~. W...W.en at lbe AnaMilll
Hilloe were OD tMir fciet 1P11lludi~ Md clMkillil dlun~ at PIO•
-bis Wifi...., ... their hmthc-IOw-.~111 ••ntld,.. ...... rewaled the
~.have a new klllt ui nt" ooaunnued one aueSt at the .C:.aee W lddilllo ... ' Will bead our .....Uacc and he will head &he
.,.. ... (This 9'utbend/wife &alder·
ihip team hu oocumd only lhRe uma before 1n the c:ommiutt's 26
~.) .... at really an honor to be sclecttd
as a anand marsbaJ." said a.Mllln wua. .. , who 1s HH PC chairwoman
until t.J,ay 18. "The men wotk very
hard lo be ch11ble for the position."
A marshal has to have served in
pest perades lO be considtrcd for the honor. ..They-are dccted-by -past
manhals, napt caplains and parade
captains for the past five years,"
"C•Plained Maller. ·~The finest hours of
my life were those I spent as
manhal," said MilleT as he JOtncd 12
olhcrpastarand marshals on thcst.aic
and ~t Prowell have the spothaht.
.. I'm surpnscd and very honored.
With everybody's belP. we wdl have
another steal parade, ' said Prowell.
prn1dcnl o( Amencan Camper
Shells. who has worked 1n ti\C
puadcs.
Other marshal nomin«s were I.e. Stader, who h.as worked an four
perades and was at the ball with wife
JaM, and three-time parade v.orker
Mart Wdst, who was at the ball with
wife Jeyce.
The annual prc-Cbnstmas parade
1s followed by opcn-to-pubhc cruises
throuah the harbor. "We had a very sood year. and uf May the commaucc
txpects to rurn over to the Orange
County Philharmonic Society more
than theS90,000wepvc in '88," said
Williams.
"This ball 1s not a fund-raiser. It
_(J)tJe-sit-¥-turns~on this bOJtfrieni:J.
who's unconcerned about health
DEAR ANN LA DER~ I ha\c
read dozens of lctu:rs an )Our lOl umn
about how unauractl\e o"erweaght
women are and 1f the} v.ant to be
dcsmabJe the) hould get those ugl) pounds off. Jn )OUr sex sun.t), one
llMln Sltd he V.3S turned Ofl bccau~
lu wt had a.;uncd SD much v.c!J.ht
~l he was embarra™'d to be sttn
w1lh her f am a 36-ycar-old. 150-pound
male who wants the world to kn ov.
that I WlJI choose the fat wo~r
the than one any day of the )car
My airtfnend 1s 30 and ~c1ghs 300
MIJ ridi. She 1s voluptuous and !lensu·
ous and radunes scxuaht) I lo"c to
set her cat. and I don't want her to
lose an ounce. •
I bopc this lettcr~uts an end to the
myth that OHNCI t v.omcn arc not
1t1racti\:C to men .• ~Y o;wcct1c as a real
armful. and I v.ouldn't ha'c 1t an)
other w•y . -R K
H GER TOWN. MD DEAR HAGER: Vo.r letter wlll be
a ttal ..,., ror ~uft11 n mo llJ
my ,... ... a946"ce. l•t lkre'• a
Ut<..,. le It SU. fat nno ~ •.
A Mt·peeM wellWI I• toetkltnd
_,...., ebae. nu meut • •• •t Itel fer tcrion me4k al preblems. If
you WIDl yoar RabeD•etq•e btHIY
arouod to 1bare yoar twUlpt years,
pltlJt eaco111•a1e lier io 1et lier
wetg~t •It~ oormal llmlll. • • • DEAR ANN LANDER · I am a
17-ycar-old with a 1o00 future ahead
of me I bol!llht my own car v.hen I
was J 5. am a responsible person, and
I am an love
l'\:C been &Otng 'With th IS IU)' .for
four )Cars, Chri,tm11s Eve u \\llS a
)Car that "Jen;" and l ~ece enpged
He's &ood to me and treats me swell I
IO\>C' ham a lot. but rm a httle uneaS) t>ccaule nobOO) hkc\ Jerry but me
He dropped out ol Sthool and docs
cun trucuon v.ork which he cnJO)S. One <by he hopes to have h1\ o""n
bu sane~
M> mother 18) she hu nothina
apanst Jerry. bal she feels that he
dC>e n't llave much ofa future What
should I do. Ann? Break up with
someone I love JUSt bcausc he's not
the person my mother want~ for a
son-in-law? I w1sh she thouaflt better ofh1m, but it's my hfc and rm ahe one
who hu to hve •1th my dec1SJon
Please hdp mt sort thlS out. -
CONFUSED IN ALABAMA DEAR ALABAMA; YH laaveD't
teld me mlldl •~t Jerry, b•t I laave
a f•lrly &"4 Wea •f wlaat yn are Uke
from you leUer.
Wltere's &M fire, lteHy? W~y dkl 1." 1et t11P1ff at H? Ne matter ltow
'respo111lble" Y• may M, 11 la a.o
yous to mate a Ufetlme c.mmlt·
meat. Mayh JM 8M Jerry ceel4
laave a terrific Ufe a.&edtcr, IMlt io
4qrive '"""" ef IM .,,_...11, io leek ar"'41 8M cem,.re ~ .. wig
ol.Mn It • mitlake.
YH II)' M eM lilts Jerry IMlt J O•.
nil dffW d ve JM ,.ue for
tllHpL CouJftr •Ml lUe wUl be
like wig• mu ..Wy Uka. Y•
affd le •• Mme ..-1e1 Wa.kiq. Give
yHrwlf • break, •irl • 'I""-.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: The
people 1n Charleston. S C.. ~ere
\.Otcd the most pohtc an the nation 1n .-... ___ ___. __ ,__.__ _________________ a poll la.st )cat. Here's how the)
handle unwanted. phone calls from
salespeople.
Unda Walt'•
-~· ....... .......
"ls this a soltc1una phone call., I am so sorry, but ~e don't accept such
calls at our home. Thank )OU for
caJhn'°" f sn t that more c1v1lizcd than
5wurin1 at or hana.ina up on some·
one who 1s tryma 10 make a hvana., -
DANDL
DEAR 0 AND L: Yoe bet. I
recemmn.l lt. • • •
DEAi\ READUS: T'M ..... el CM rwe AIDS tall
--*'-"Ill_., ANN LANDERS
cehl8a el Mardi 14 were swlldlff .............. ,....._AIDStat ................
honor Huntington Harbour re~1-
dcnts who were wmners in the: home
and ~at decorating contest and the
committee members who worked on
the cru1~." said member Dort1
WWlt. "The ball is for fun ... a
cd cbrallon."
And. celebrate the)' did Nearly
cvct)body there seemed to have a
moment an the \pothght or act •
bouquet -award wmncrs, cru1~
committee members. ball committee
members including ball chairwoman
Joane Foote and her awsta.nt r.-1
Greenwald, pa t committee chair-
women. past parade marshals and
pre 1dents of the sc'cn groups com-
pnsana HHPC
Pnor to the bouquct-pas.s1nf.
guests dined at table\ ccntertd wi th
tall arrangements of c.:t)stal. nowcn
and tiny hght The menu aeuina
ra\C'S included hnguani pasta.
c.:hatcaubnand and an unbclaevabl)
wonderful chocolate cake.
There "'as danc1n1 ta Hom"
Savin~ band muo,1c before. dunna
and after dinner and thC' partyina
dtdn't stop there It v.c:nt on an the
W1lhams' suite with champagne
toam continuing for ProwcU
l hls angler~~.......n.Ndthcr vWner&ble. North deaal.
told the truth :~.
Hiltot) • most "nowncd fisher.
man, Izaak Walton. only li'cd to be
90· some say, because he p\e up
fi hang at 83 What d1 tangu1$hcs
Walton from 51ream analers who
came' after ham was has commitment
to the truth. If he said It was 16 inches
long. you could bcheve 1t.
Men arc more su ful than
women at lo 1n1 v.e1aht. Three separ-
ate studies show that Wh) still isn't
clear. thouah
How the hotdOI bun. <1pcc1Cicall).
came to be &_oes ltlCc th1 : At the 1904
t. Louis E'pos1t1on. a Bavanao
vendor's stcamana sausaaes were too hot to handle. He loaned insulaung
wbttcalo"es tobu)Crs The) madeoll
'Atth same. Cleaned him out So he a.c>t
another concc s1ona1re. a baker. to
tum out son roll~ long enough to
protect lingers
The ancient Grttk bi tonan Her-
odotus claimed rouon trttS arew
ltttlc hve http These ntbblcd &ra s ro~ndabout Then died Ltfi notbana
but their v.ool ugc\ts \lrh) 'AC know
Yrhat V."C know about Herodotus
' Q. What's a group ot trois~
A A knot
In 1863. the chief surgeon of the
U National Hean In t1tutc hung
this plaque on his walJ: Let no man
who hope to retain the respect of has
medical brethren dare to operate on
the human heart.
ll O ICO'( 01'1
ay SYDNaY OMARR
1'en41aJ, M8rtla II
AlllES ( \1arch 21-Apnl 19).
R pon rccc1,cd from client or
bu ancs a aatc. ln"'ol-.cs prop-
erty, unty. lona·ran prospect
Put idea on pepcr, 1d .. crt1te and
Q ')
¢I l
•AQJt51
Wf.ST £.U'T
•Jt61 • 181 5
Q I S Q K Q J 10 7 1 <>°Af~J 0 6•
•I 7 4 • K 3
SOlITH
• K Q 3
\J At 4
0 IC QI 10 7
• 10 6
The biddina:
Nortlt FAit
I • 1 Q
3. • .. ·-, ..
Soutll
1 v
3 NT
Wat r ..
P ..
()peninj lead: Eight of \J
We know of • famous intet'na·
tion.aliJt who, when he sat down at
lbc rubber bnd~ table, would an·
oounce to his partner: "Don't &ipal me: I know what to dot'' His edkt
was only baJf in jnt. He was afraid
of wbat his partner au•bt tdl
dcclaml
North-South am"ed at a fairly
routine contract of three no trump.
It was the riabt pme to reach -as
the cards lie, five of either manor
stood no chance after a heart lad.
East's ten of hcaru was allowed
to bold the nnt trict. Anxious to
advbe his partner that bis entry wu
tn the lowtst-rankina tide suit, £ut
returned the jack of Merli aod,
.
wha:l that too .., Pii1iit1ed to wia,
be emphasized hit ~ witb aa
c.xdamatiOil polttr -condnutaa
with the two. West aipalkd vip ·
ously in diamoodJ.
In with the ace of bQrts and with
only fl"e fut tricks in siaht, declarer
had to dtd<k which minor suit to
develop. He decided to take the ct.
fenders' ca.rdina at race value. Since
he had been inf onned that Eat bdd
the kina or clubs, declarer went a f·
tcr the diamond suit. Wesc took his
ace and duuf ully sbif\ed to a d ub,
bUt it wu too little, too late. Dedar·
a rote with the ace of clubl and
cubed out · nine tricks~
speda. one bean four dialDondJ
and one club.
ln tuat1ons of this IOC1 tbt de-
rcnden ahouWn't bother lo lipaJ at
alll Atta winniq the (ll"lt trict witb
the ten, £ut shouJd 'mply coot.lnuc
with the t ina and queen of hearts,
and West hould do nothina to tip
off his diamond holdina. In view of
the overcall. declarer 11 more likdy
to pllKle Eut with lbe ace of ~
moods than the kina of d ubt, arid
JO take the club fmeae. That would
result in a tbret·Lrick tetJ 1
ar._ C... OM.V PILOT/~._. ti. ..
'!Who's gonna be the baby around
here when PJ's finished?"
by Brad Anderson
e6VAIWCULftld
. . .
-
DS1'1'18 TBS llBNAC&
• •
r
by Hank Ketcham --~-__ _
-"I'll be all right as soon as I wipe off this
welcome-home kiss!"
PEAKUTS
'
I
·~.YJIL~~~ERING ~E.~YS TO LEAVE
A ~ ... EXCEPT IF ITSME.""
by Charles M. Schulz
I MUST ADMIT l1M NERVOUS
KNOWIN6 OUR TEACHER 15
SITTING IN t1ER CAR
WATCHING CUit GAME ..
WHOOPS! A WILD PITC~ ~ MA"/8E SME DIDN'T SEE T~AT ..
MA'{8E IT ONLV MADE A
SMALL DENT IN HER CAR ...
GARFIELD by Jim Davia
FOR BETTER OR POil WORD
.
~~HA*. ~GaX>~IQ;"";N
L.&c;S'? NOP1%21\? I ~~c.c
1DC>NT,\
::> ~
nnnrr -w-m--o-IUIBAR
DOOJISUUllY by Garry Trudeau
by Lynn John•ton
•
THE ORANGE COAST
FRIDAY, MARCH I 7, 1989'
Jury deadlocked in Ornelas murder _trial
Tree grows -Jurors ordered to resume delibera·tions
• • 1nmemory
of Balboa
mother
ly JANET ZIMMERMAN
Of IN Olllly NM s...lf
The branches of a newly planted
California S)'camore tree in the
schoolyard of Our Lady Queen of
Angels in NC\:YP<>rt Beach soon will be
ripe for climbina and its leaves will
tum color with the seasons.
ly JAHIT ZIMWIMN,1
Of ... Olllly "91 SC...
A threatened impasse in the
murder triaJ of Danny Ornelas, a
youna man 1CCused of runnina down
a Newpon Beach woman durina a
drunken joy nde, was averted Thurs-
day when a JU<ife ordered jurors to
resume deliberations.
The jury deliberated nearly three
days before foreman Steven Bischke
told thejudgc that panelislS bad httlc
ho_P.e of rcachina a decision. Bischke
said there were ··a few poinu .. nm
undcetded by some Jurors because of
the ICJal wording of instructions and
definauons.
Ornelas.. 19, is on triaJ for second-
. dqrce murder an connection wilh the ~th of Debbie Ann Killdca as she
walked down an alley btbind her
Balboa Peninsula home Sept. I.
Wen-Ora_na.e Coumy--~oT Court J udee Lu11 CaJden&s offered to
read the jury fUrther inttructions or
testimony. The .even-man, flve-
woman panel bas twice asked
Cardenas to clarify points, but the
naturt of their questions was not
released.
Bischke said three ballots were
taken and the last vote was 4-8, but he
did not state whether that was for
conviction or acquittal. In an individ-
ual poll, aJI but one juror said fUrther
deliberations would not help them
reach a decision.
At that pouu.. Juror Donald M.
Hunsicker wd fUrther instructions
miaht be helpful. The judae ordered
the jury to return lhis mornjna to
resume talks.
About two dozen spectaton from bolh fam1hes watched nervously
dun:q-ibe hcanng. Ornelas' mother, Blanca. sobbed silently, but the
defendant ut quietly at the coun1el table. his head restin1 on his fisL
Outside the courtroom, atLOfn91
said they ~uldn't make any pttdac-ti~_addiN. t.bat such n:quesu for more instnktions were common.
.. Riaht Jl(>w, they're bavi"I trouble
maki"I..• decision, .. defense ittorney
RaJ~ Beoca"fey said. "Some mem-
bers feel additional definitions will bcl ... :t.:...ty District Attom~ Tom G~~ said the trial is at ·a very sensitive poinL ..
.. We're &OiQI lO &ive them more
instructions, hopefun~ that will clari·
fy it for them:• Goethals said. •
''They've expr'CSIC(l that there is still ~
bQP.C ~~reach 1 verdict. rm still
opWmltJC.
That wiU be the time to remember
Debbie Killelea, a 37-year-<>ld house-
wife who was run down by a speedina
car last year in an alley near her
Balboa Peninsula home. her husband
said.
The tree, alona with new play-
around equipment and a plaque, were
dedicated in her memory during a
bncf ceremony Thursday morning at
the school where her three childlcn
attend.
Rescue called off for whale
K.illelea's husban~nan, stood nervously near the ue-before
encouraging about onlookers to
live life as Debbie would have, through lhe eyes of a child.
"You can lodk at Debbie's death 1n
two ways; as a peat physical tragedy
or the way I have -as a givina and
lovmgspui1ualJ.1ft to us all. She was a
warm. loving, 11ving person."
A slide, geodesic dome and 1unaJe
gym, along with the plaquc1 were
purchased with SS,000 dona tea to lhe
Killelea Children's Fund. Swinas and
parallel bars were moved from other
areas of the school to make a
complete pla)'lf'ound.
Annie YounaJove, who played
softball with De6b1c Killelea. said she
and thn:e friends orpnized the fund so K.Jllelea'.s daughter and two sons
would have a physical monument by
f Ptease SH KIUELEA/ Al
.._ .....................
11r1M ... ._.. .nMll Ills '°"'• MldNHtl fleftl MMI Je1eptl. et tfte pt••• dYt Ml been clfflatetl In D...._ ........ ,honor.
1y IRIS YOKOt sirx:e it was cont1nuiJll to mo~e °'.,.~,,_Sufi north.
Biologists have called offthe search HowevCT, thun1maJ couJd become
for a aray whale tanaled in gill net. h weiahcd down by debris that ..an
was lait seen ofJ'f 1..a1una Beach caicD on-tho net. wbicb-wu M'&pped
Thursday afternoon, and bioloaist around the tail, Cordaro uid.
. fear the whale may have drowned. The wbalt WU first spotted around noon Tuesday off' Dena Point. two For thn!C days sc1enl1Sts attempted miles from the harbor en~. Tbe
lo free the 9.hale from the net as lhe Lona 8cadt .... Wlualie aacue
..arumaJ migrated north. The whale Unit. a p-oUp of independent
d1sapa)eaml !n the foa Thunday and btololists who coordinate witb the
the rescue team SQl'(hcd the ocean National Marine fisheries Scrvtee.
between Newport Beach and Hwu-were noti~. .
inaton Beach for 10 hours ~fore They tried to cut the net but a
calling ofT1he search about 1 30 p.m. strona cWTCnt and the movemcnll of
The whale could have continued the whale prevenRd suoc:as.. As dusk northward. turned around and swam fell, the rctCUe attempt was po1t-
soutn or drowned poncd.
··1 don't think one poss1bihty ts Wednesday the whale was seen off stron~r than the other f}aht now." l the shores of Llpna lkach. But
said Joe Cordaro, wildJift biol<>&1st apin. b1otosists could not act to the
for 1he Nataonal Marine Fisheries net
Service, which monitors the popu-"The whale was movin4 at a pretty
latton of sea animals. aood clip so they ~ldn t enter the
Time Wlll give sc1enttsts a better water and cut the net." Cordaro uid.
idea. Cordaro said. The animal was last s:i&hled in the Biologists estimate the whale as a late af\emoo.n in Lapna "Bartch.
ub-adult (more than a year old) and The baDIOllsts launcb<d a boat at
1s 30 10 35 feet 1n size. Thunday 5:30 a.m. Tbunday and continued up
morning. Cordaro had said the the coast to Hununaton Beach tn
animal appca~ to be unm1u~ search of the whale. whteb the
lae1ltisU had marked Wttb yellow
buoys. The biolo&ists rode up and
down the coalj ana wentoffshorc .. Ur .. three mffes. Cordaro uid.
All 1ocal ~ ._,"""'-~='
Ctrolt were notified and asked to
cep an eye out for \he WlWC,
Cordaro l&ld.
'"Sometuncl it's like tryint to ftnd a
needle in a haYllaek. •• . COn:Saro's duty'_ is to rccotd t.be
eve111 throujb collect.ion of repons &om Oae tctCUC &cam. l:lis office alto
helps enfon:e marine life protection
&a-..
lftbc retCUC team obtains i section
of the net as a sample. Cordaro's office wil~ µ:y to locale ~ ownCT and
apply disciPlioary QlQSW'CS ICCOl'd-
1naly. ' Bec:aux •hales tay 1 shallow
water and rattly swtm more than five
miles off tllore, lhey most often ~t
caUIJlt in halibut nelS, Cordaro said .
A whale's normal behavior 1s to
move in three shallow dhes. takina
bttat.hs at b.aJf-minule intervals. fol--lo..-ed by one deep dlvc to wb1ch 1t
stays under water three to five
minutes. Cordaro S&Jd. He said he did
not know how Iona a whale can stay
underwater without air. LA man arrested in
Mesa cocaine sale
Driver held
In attempt to
bribe officer
ly 19AUL AltCHt19lEY arreslCd • man bclie\.ed to be his 9y mts YOKOt Ofdle~"""'"""' accomficcLo David Frederick wo1f-Of .. Dlllllr........ 1.
Sofar, 1989basn'tbeenagood year 50~~lf~~ w~A~~~ at Love's , A 32-year-<>ld ~I.Beach man was
for Tom Vcnct1s, and ~rcottcs Wood Pit Barbecue. 3046 Bnstol St.. an:ested on Ma!J>taon of bnbcry
officen are &lad of 11. . after he pve undcrwver officers Tuesday m&ht 1n . Newpon Beach Ht.S tro~bles ~ tD Ja!luary fl 520 000 ror two kaJos of cocaJne, after be allctedly tned to act out of a
when be ,htd a SUllCUt of COC&IM ID Cosia _.Mesa pohce Set. Thomas dru!\ktn dnvtr_'la.rrest by offerina the
Police have no leads, no motives
in NB shooting that left two dead
• Newport s Baek Bay and then Boyaa.na.cs. u was suDOOsed to be the polece ofr«:er drinks and SSOO cash.
couldn't" find 1~ ·DOI•« said. ifbe first ins&allment oT'"a ~·s100 000 Euaieoe laWl'eftCIC Cumo was
aua&case was liter (ound b) two Cub purctwe of 10 kilos Boylan said' • booked at Newport Beach city jail
Scouts. . p-1· .a~ v ~ 2• th followifl& lhe 10:30 p.m. arrest near Thinas turned worse lhJt week '"'cc -enctis. 9 ' set up e Cafe Li<fo on 30th Stttet. He posted
when a drua deal be aUeee<tJy tct up deal for Wolfson, who reputedly S l 0.000 bail and wu ttleued.
Mnt IOUr. prod~ ~phlC fibas. Wolf·
Narcotics invatipton would bke son wu~ an lieU ofSUJJOO bid. Accordma to a polecc report.. Of·
totalkto&MNewponBCachman,but butSupmorCoenJudeJtJoMSnulh fittr Gknn Fis.Illa first spotted
he'1tyiaa&ow1ftrrC01CAMaaD011ee ruw .. -../AlJ ,... ...... /All
fO\IH,IOHl IH\UllJit\'"
ly JANET ZIMMERMAN
Of .. ~ .... Su«
Pohcc had no new leads Thursday
an a shoottna at a Ncwpon Beach
precious metals shop that le1\ tv.o ~pie dead and a third man. accused
of swindlinJ dozens of investors out
of a milhon dollars. 1n cntical
condition.
ln"csupton conunucd lO search for a motne to Tuesday evcmna'1
shOOll"i at the Ncwpon Coin Ex-
change, Newpon Beach Pohce spok~man Bob()aklcy wd.Tbey
have not bttn able to dctemunc
whether anything was taken from the
shop. .
Owner W1ll1am 0 . Kina. 36, was
shot four limes in the head and chest
and remained under auard at Foun-
wn Valley RcsionaJ ltospst.al, Oak-
ley S&Jd. K.Jlled tn tbe attack was bis
wife, Ren«. 38, and his fnend and
-
customer, Oydc Oatts. 4S, of lrvmr
.. We're hos>tna Mr. Kmg wtll be
able to11ve u that tnformauon 1fand
Ytbeo he can do that," Oakley aid.
ldd1na that K.Jng 1s e~pcctC.d to
recover. Kina wu the laflCl of several local,
state Ind federal anvcs~tions. 1n-ct~as\atcc1vil lawsuitaHqinJ hr bt.lk:ed anvC'Slon nationwide in n k>
l)Rcious metals ICbrmts.
"1-.-SHOOTING/ AlJ
Mesa rish1oners triple St. Patrick's Day pleasure
cdebralc me 4lnl uftivcnuy of. its orante trttS.
fint ~ i>llOwed ~a~ to Thri, on b1s fint L Pltnck's 0.y matt Ncvi••s Hth binttct.y aad bis in COiia Mesa. Nevin UJd Masa to 1
43 yan of terVice IO tbt.,..,,.... and cocttfeplion of 140 in Grauel
oomm••ity. Mortuary Chapel on Broedway
80m in 1904 in O&ly. Ireland, Toda)';. IOl1IC 2.500 fam1hes in
Ne-Yia ammitnted to the nated Co1•a' ·Mell nd ~ Beach
SU.ta i• 19l0. . , crowd St. J<*'him's ovcft>iurckncd Scmateea ,.rs laeri, on b11 birth· kililia
day. tie -~to...,, a '*'"' la kt. they stall '* the chu.rch in a imilll · comm.•ity on .,.... ~ moVed into tevmal
IM Onls .._ lliOlltlli *' ._. fint St. Palrick01 W...ielni*IMllDoWiM•y Du..._
......... Calla .... comili1d0f. -. lh•*S..AMAnny•r.,._ ah•11111,a_.._.,,.~ ~--NnhtW..wed•IM
.. 11 tJlh II 81 ~ of chftti ........ locMioll CM1 ONNit
·GOOD MO
...
•
OfengeCoMt DAILY PILOT/ Thuridtt)', Match 18, 1t1t
by BH Keene
"Who's gonna be the.baby around
here when PJ's finished?"
MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson
'Tll be all right as soon as I wipe off this
welcome-home kiss!'"
PEANUTS
-
I
I havt 'two he*~.
wt1ghin9 rfof't ~
looki~ "f their robt~.
·MR.'JJIL~S.ANSWERING Pt04~5'YS TO LEAvt::
A !IE.SS>/.!£. EXCEPT IF ITS NE.."
4 ...
' ·1
J
I
I •
by Chat les M.. Schulz
I MlJST ADMIT l1M NERVOUS
KNOWIN6 OUR TEACHER IS
SITTIN6 IN HE~ ,CAR
WATCHING~ GAME ..
W~OOP5 ~ A WILD PITC~ ~ MAYBE SME DIDN'T SEE T~AT ..
MA'<BE IT ONLV MADE A ,
SMALL DENT IN HER CAR ...
((
GARFIELD -by Jim Davis
DRABBLE
' ..
(t
ARLO AND JAl'flS • .a;
--
)
SHOE by Jeff MacNelly
JUDGE PARKER by Harold Le Ooux
-I by Garry Trudeau