HomeMy WebLinkAbout1989-04-03 - Orange Coast PilotTHE ORANGE COAST
.Luxury
liner gets
face lift ·
dtn-er
ltyKATY~lt °' ................
l.qend has it that a famtly with
unlimited capital in the late 1920s
built and cbrisiened a yacht to trf vel
lakaaod t.ysalona the East Coast.
Tbe luxvry mailer "Hip Spirits,"
made of .. and .,,...., .. 112 'feel
lOQI and 20 feet wide and can bold
149'"..-.n.
And OD a 900d da)', t.bc craft will SCI
up to 10 knOts, or 12 mph.
That same veuel can been seen in
the Newport }tart)or, u~ir\I face
liftl ud restoration by Marinen Mile
Shipyard for Horablower Dinina
Yachts.
"We bouibt her in an auction in
Demaber ror u21,ooot said David
PahlL._ aeaeral manaaer of Homot0wer ... We'll probebly end up
puuina SS00,000 into her by tbe time
M'rt finished. Finl she must be approved.~ the Cout Guard. then sbe·u join Out San Diea<»Oeet and be ready to set sail on May I."
Pahl, ~of Newport. Beach said
he's ncited to accept this cbaJ tenae of
oveneet111 the uansformauon of an
at.ndoned ship into a classic luxury·
liner that will host parties, weddinp,
lwea.kfnu, luncbet and dinners on
the hill.I ICU.
0.-, ,... ....... ., ec..y .._.._
D.vN P .... ,, ..,..,., ....,....r of Horn-r•tlon of th• fleet 's newest a ddition, .. H!gh
blower Dlnlnt Yatdtts, checlu the resto · Spirits," a lu xury cruiser from the 1920s.
•·our pr~ is fine dining made a wise investment. He said afler ano1hcr bo1h an I ')40"
afloat," he said. "All the food 1s purchasing High Spin1s, they sailed s Pahl JOurne~cd through the
prepared by our ebefs on board. and from Ft. Lauderdale throuah the .lrubble while ere">' ml"mber npped
stewed by our crew we've trained Panama Canal to Newp<>n lkach. out clcctncal "'~and old plumbing.
owselves.. We ba-VC-IS boats-ta-°Fhe--YCSxl wrllstay m town onul he's he pomtro to the fin:plan-m the main
tioned ftom Los Anaeles to San read) for her final dest1nat1on 1n n salon
Francisco available for harbor and Diego the last ">'tek of April. "Can you imagine ~meone bu1ld-
dinin1 cruises." "San Diego 1s becoming our classic 1ng a working fireplace on their PahJ said a craft of this design and fleet," he s.aLd ... We have one boat boatP" he a lo.cd ""\lso. notice the
charm could not be built today for that v.as built in 1918 for Charle-\ vent In later )Ca~ ~mcbocl} m·
under SI million and feels bll firm Rtnghng of Rmgl1n1 Br~ Ctrcusand fftlease see YACHT I All
Irvine group
cau bt in failed .·
Haitian coo~
ly JANET ZIMMERMAN Gen. Pros.Per A vnl.
Of 111e o~ ,,_ su"' U.S. officials said loyal oldicrs
Eight pan h1oners from an Irvine apparently rcstued AHil as he was
ctlurch-who were "on a humanitanan bemg~nven .away to be dep<>rted.
m1ss1on to Hatti were unwitttnaJy The humanitanan· grou~len Los
caught in the midst of a faded coup Angeles lntert1at1ona• A upon on
auempi Sunday-b~ rebel-arm fac-ridaymoming and wilsScheduled to
11ons seeking to overturn the aovem-take a two-day tour of the pe>\.erty
mcnt. stricken country before 1>e&inntng a
The: group ">'a confined to tts hotel coastrucll~n prOJcct on a • m_all
in the Haitian capital Pon-au-Pnncc coastal vdlage. said Loomis girl·
where gunfire ttUptCct early Sondaf •friend, Jennifer Walters. a Ncwpon
and continued throuahout the day Beach psrchothcrap1st
said Jim Loomls, who orpnized the Thcpurposcofthc 10-da~ m1ss1on.
trip from the uth Coast Communi-called Love U\ Acuon. w;i to share
t) Chunh wealth an~ ~kills w1th the poor aod to
Jn an overseas telephone interview benefit sp1ntuall). she said. 1x ofth.e
Loom ts said he saw tanks. jeeps and members w:c from Orange C'ounl)-
mirchrnc auos travehns past the and the other t\lio h\e in Los Angeles
Ro)al Ha111an Hotel. which tS about County. • ·
10 m1~ from the palace where the loomasl scheduled lour unda)'
coup attempt took place. was thwarted by the coup The ~
··we'rt doing real well, but· we're year-old real estate broker from Santa-
not really sure what's 101n1 on here," Ana said the) \litll try toda) to travel
l oom1s 1d. "It's hlce we're m the to the fishing v1ll• in Ti R1c~e.
tw1hght zone... about SO miles av.ia).
cw accounts were sketchy, but .. We're planr\1naon lcav1na" Mon-
Loom1!I stud they received cnoua,b day. he said ... We'll check with the
1nforma11on to ~now the Hainan Amcncan Emba~ \ and then send
&O"emment foiled the attempt b)' t~O people to OUI the roads and
rebel _•ml) offtecrs to o~crthrow Lt. ffllfHte lff HAm/A.21
Mesa Veterans Rall may be 'Saved from wrecker's ball ··
lty 909 VAN ffKIN
Of .. Olllr .... ._
The old Costa Mesa Veterans Hall
on 18th Street could Fl a new lease on
Hfe. Or it could be demolished.
The future rtmains fuzzy for the
SI-year-old buildine, desoilc a vote
by the City Counal on 'Feb. 21 to
pure.hue tt from the county and raze
It. '
City Manqer AJlan Roeder and
t0me membm o( the council SI.Id
Friday that 11 wasn't clear what the
city intended to do with the hall To
clanfy the maner, Roeder has asked
the council to djscuss options for the
hall agam at tonig.ht's mccung.
"I ddinttely had the sense that the
mouon was to acquire the hall and
lcar n down." said Counctlwo man
Mari Hornbuckle. ..That's wh)' I
voted apJnst it"
But the motion was made b)
Councilman Ed Gla aow. and
t 0\ f H 'IOH\ I'" A OHDl·.H
Games' sup when_
CM bloodhound
tr~cl<s a suspect
Glasgow said f-nda) that 1hc mam
issue on ht~ m1~had been acquinng
the building fro"m the count). -
··1 ant1c1~tcd we'd bu\ 11 and lool-
at it 10 SCC tf II qu;ihficd as a hmonc:il
monument." said G lasgo"
Glasao\li added, hov.evcr. that be
beltcvcd the bu1ld11\3 would probabl~
e\entually be 1om down.
.. Even 1f It "ere dl'Clared a monu-
ment. I doubt the) 'd ~able to get the
use out of·1t 1hat the \.Ctcrans group
ant1c1pate." hl· );ltd. I don·1 Imo~ 11
)OU could hold man) pvbltt g.atfler 1n~ there It nuP.ht h~'c to & ~
museum or <.oml·tfi1ng
l ount\ otlinal-. had told the cit'
the) planm'lf 10 wll thc hu1IJ1ng and
the land . .i mu' c onic1al\ "3) ">'ould
h~l\c meant ll·rt.iin dc.;truct1on for
lhc building
Some c1\\ ol1il1al alw thml the
old hclll should be· dcmolt hcd. \
rctcnt in Pl'ltton tndKatcd the hall
J1d not m«t eanhqua._c standard
and y.ould cost about $200.000 to
bnng up to code. Roeder told the
council last month he did not be~eve
the cxpcnd11ure was JUSttfied.
But Lu Bisson. a Veterans Hall
hoard member, doc n·t lllltt
-·1cs a h1s1onc.al building.·· he said
'Ifs thl' o nh old public t>uilding tn (. 05 ta 1\1 CS<! ,,
81 on said 1he hall's board of
directors could ra1K the mone) to
bnna the bu1ld1na up to code 1f the~
\li(rt' aJlo-.cd to rvn regular bingo
games. The Cit)' ha no ordananct
pennllling bmgo games. but 11 1s-
prepanng to con 1der one. Roe-der
said.
"The hall has al"'"' bttn self. uppon1ng. .• said Bt son .. Wr ha\.C a
ltttJc money set a 1dc. a tu rail) l."' ith
JU t ren11ng tt out on unday lberc
asn·t enough to th n up the v.a) n
ff'tease Sff HAU. /A.21
. .
Gentle giant says
police job. satisfies
ly JOYCE IOOlOVICH
Of .,. Olllb' ,. SUft
.\t 6 foot 6 tnchcs tall and 2S7
pound • to ta Mesa Poltcc OffiCtt
Denni<> Jefcoat 1s an 1nttm1dallnj
1ght -that 1s. unul he mile .
Then he btcomcsaaentlegllnt. but
ont) to the aood gu)
"l am fair to the people I arrest." he
1d. "But af )OU U) to take me on, l
don "t lo . I prell)' much have rt' pect
amol\8 the cnminal clement.
''These llJ)S know me: rll che._.
the) up and sptt them out tft.hty try to
get me. I tr} to mamtatn that am-.e
because tt allow me to be efTccuvc 1n
.. hat I do " Sat Tam Holbrool,Jcfcoat'ssuper·
'1sor for the past l .S )'Cats. said l\e
lif\: the officer' appearance is
dccc1vin1-.
"He 1 hkc a 1eddy bear. C"-CCPt
.. hen he need to be a \Jltt, ••
Holbrook said "He has a ~ aood
rappon ... th the lrtct people ana t.bc
crook~ It 1s hard to eet ~ at a ~.n .,. a&h a conatant smile on has
Jefc-oat's ~rformance has not IOM
unnotlttd. The Costa Mctt Poli«
Auociallon \oted him~ of tbt Y car for l ~88. and be was awarded
tbt 1987 Southland Corp. Beat Of.
lc:softbt,ear. HowtwrJ....~! is tbt rettnt honor ,,_ dlt vnnet Couty Human
R••ia• CommaSl10t\. Wbida l't1' . . ...f ...... fOr '° rc.eri• m..i ..............
-: ~~.:;_=::.:· g.] delegates getting acquai,:,ted wit~ Antit;>es
I •••olved~ ...................... r . .,,_YOICOI . . -. . t And Iii& l11et1 tridtavor afliecu not. and Rec:reat1oa Di rector Ron Wllidey Md *'-'" Hmrt. WlilovilillllAA..oOIM!m ... 1 .... a lt7ltda1D --!-~--only the communitr of N °'.,.__. .... ,... • " port 8eed! Sister _ City~ "!l?'dcq'1--A~-..,...•!9'~lllilr ..... •
8'.lc:'b-:1KIT"l 1so 1Mtltforuiiiikl. Th1rty·l*O Newport &eac:h IC'Pftltntativcs V{cnddl f 11h arc Jn t!W, deae,.bOlt wllktl will eo111ct .... _...._, Jlj)&l\. arr., vlsitina lltWly adopl.ed sister city Antibcs.. discuss w11h French olf.cials the developmc'm ol Mllillll ~ lllN-•MF Neapon lllCll'• • !
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~~.i!tt::!~~::C.~ =n.f:::;.=:~. or klcos 1bo0r 111e two =::::-~==~~~~ e.c11o,.. .-~:t:' ~-i;t•~frt"".u. Clll!. ..
Cil)' Auociltion ........,,o6C All~delcp\Clarc .. y1nathe1rownelpentct Anribel' nee
1::;:i.:i an introductory
orpniution is dcdqted IO~ . Ma~ Pro Tein Rulhelyn Plummer. Coun· for the l().llay lrip that bepn Satorday, acconfo11 deleptioo to New--ia A-. · .visits 10 and from tht city's cUwoman 'E~clyn. Hart, Ft re q ner Jamci Reed, t~ )otr~ W1yne1 P,Ublicity chairwoman for the . A Ii••~ trip to OUzati ii planned
sister citin of Antibes. France; bo propam cha1rmao·Siim Goldslt1n, Parks. Beaches SilaerCJty AllOCl8ti0n-in Mar~ ICOOfdittre ID "•)W.
Sal\ Lucas. Mexico. and Oku.aki.
··eefore 1 retired 1 ~· a k>1 of
time in Japan," he Ill.id. l wortodfor ftiend who extended· 1he in-Yha1ion, ~ die Rolm'ilM. The New-1le idDI proved IO t.Ntrs • Nwpmt _.joined the national Dart lndustnes ... and was rnpon-Masao Kato. They wtre: surPrited to boil Ro&ary tnd die Okuaki siimific:ut h'atCRlltouuicle the lottrY _.,._ of SllleT Cities lnwr-
siblc. for employee rdations for 1~1 find they bcith llelonacd to Roury· Rawy ~ ror )'OUft& c1Ui)IDd the ~ ._ de· utiaM1i8181&&1')' 1981.
wbolccompany.Dart lndustrieswu s:lubs.'Kato told Fish the city had · people from each City \0 tel IC' veloped. · Pi*llMlllailaUowsa.ocilboruto
an outtrowth ofRcuU Drup and in alWl)'l:'"•antrCI a sister city on the quaa•ted." · , Jn November 19", tbt N~ ..... ldvamaer of fda develop
the mid-'50s they started.to set into West CoaaL · fith $Aid~ fint coupte of~ BelchCilyCouncil Nopled Ob:IMi E' ... b ~~=
plastics. . . . . ""I didn~( cv~n k~oW wlu!:t a sister the Rotarians . sponsored middle as their litlerCi1y. la Soplember 1911, ="'' ia the~ 111 -"'One of our larsest d1v1SiOll1 :3 meanL" F11h u1d. "J camt home school 1tYdent1 and their lelChen to I.he council adoJ)1ed iu leCODd .mer-ward ~ aw die Siller -~n~tur~d ,Tuppawarc in Japan;, ~'tbe Rotary C ub to be visitOkazakidurinat~'summerasa ' city,Antibts.Fryc:e.AboinOctober ~ilief. Mi• 11~-.
Af\c1' my wafe ~ ~~>'· 1~ ~ ill~ lft die propam.. That was test· projccL Then in ,late September. 1988 the .mer city relatio.ulli.p wu ud .....__~ •-'~ _...,_ ~
ofthemanufactunnad1v1tton1nnted. about eietat ~ _ . .,. Wi\h the' ;the students from Obz.aki ·would rcaffirmedWithC8bo$nLUQI. · ~---....W-s...
me ro come over for a c~naie. '" . ' ~Ul'lltnlent of ~ we met Visit Newport Beach aod observe our Fish said the aaociation. took its Tbc: Sis\Cf City ~ orifi~~
Fish-went lo Okaui1u and met his With the ~yor ofOkuata. ll atarto:I schools and activities. cause one step further, and the citY of in 19'6 by former President Dw\pt
Wrong-way driver killed °"'--A-Lapril HiUs man dri-.:inc the
~way oo the o...,.. F,..,..y _was killed Sunday .Ai&ht ia a .heed-on mlfieicw: • driver or tbe oebtr ar
fomia Hi&hway Patrol dispa1cher
•id:: He .. just mined 1evcraJ can"
>efore cruhina: into a Chevrolet
YACHT 'll<Winated in 1980 by Terry MacRae
and Mike Watson in Berkeley. Both
FromAI . . . . ~en ~ i~ the environmental
stalled an air cond.1t1on1na ·~iem. proteCtioa busmest.and would enter·
probably because this yach1 uded in lain Clients on chanered bolts. When
Florida and it gets pttt.1y hot down 1lle owner of the chaner company
there." ~ ~to re.tire. tbc_tWO".mcnbou&h.t
-As he descended the wooden stair-1he business. They expanded to
way,hcpqintcdtotbcprivateheldin include San Diao. N~n Beach
the master-s~ite. lit the t ub J!!lt-·M:fA-t'i Maiida~119andsU 1---,--,;rn'!i'J-""'O<ll tn ftxltftft'1abeled:acc; Fifill!I.':: eF •
and S are seen. ·
· ::bcvet\c: driven bY Won J. Sana, 48.
.>f Pl8ceat.ia. the ~tchcr said.
Phdhpa Wii pronou dCid al thC
ll«nt 11 aboul. p.m.
--I
..
··one set opcraUf the water toinc · Pahl,•sraduatcofUSCandformer
into the tub, one operates the shOwer, Nayy tieutcna-ot, said he's held many
and 1ht one labeled SW is for anyone diffcfen1 positions. includina running
wishing to take a salt-water bath,"' he a service much like Hornblower's.
said. _ ~"I ran a bolt comP1ny on Ma ui for f--'7;;;=:..,,;;;;e=
Rick Cra~~ a mariDC carpcn\Cf for a year. and hid intentions ofbuyina
Mariners Mile Shipyard bulied ~ urm when I met ~thev two
hin1se lf fabrica ting part of the wood-senOcmen, •• Pahl said.
en framework for the ship's side. Pahl said aftermcetina the panocn
"This is the biggcsf job I've had irt two yDrs •· he abandoned the idea
m.y--26-y.cars in the busincssP-Grane-----Of owain& IUsown coa"IPIDY and-~nt ~
said ... One-1hird of my wort wiH go 10 wort .as acneral manager or
on that boat. I've alfcady put in 950 Hombk>wer. •
hours al this point. 1 Jove workinc on He said he loves wMt he's doin1
boats. lt"s different than holl9el and looks forward 10 his next assign-
because of all the 90-dea.ree anales. mcnL• ·
You have lo use a lot or geometry and ... This project is trUl yexciting, but I
lols of 'trig' to figure yo.ur can't a.erp 6u1 be eac11.t.d aboul our
dimCn-sions. -.. newest endeavor," he said. "'It's a
'"I consider this an an , and not that l .OOO-i:-•1111'r, tums0f-tbc--ccntury
many people do it l read recently in a lu1:ury stcemer. we're buiktinJ .wilh
t rad e,n1agazine t hat marine Tnntty lndustncs out of LoUlSll.na.
carpenters make up onl y 2 pcrccnt of We ca)) her 'EAlifomia Hornblower'
thc...work-force." ~ ·• .-..and-shc'll lca-vc New-Orlcan' for Los -
Pahl estimated restoration will take Angeles on AJ?ril 21.
1,200 man-hours to complete. "l'm J>l.!lnn1nc on making the tri p
Hornblower Dining Yachts was myself,' Pahl said. " . '
TRACKERS the doa to follow a tra!1 she said.
. . ·Everyone's 1C<nt is dinemit. like
Fro m A 1 finaerprintl.. ~
more than s2,ooo·.sincc October. TIK: tcent· is ~Md on dlmp.,
HAITI ..
F.-AI
_ rct&am tor the blla nee of the Jl"OUe. '!
They-IM>pjn& IO build ID oftioc
and bedroom for a pmllor and \cKhcr wtM> oow travel to the villas o( Moul
3,000 -· he said. Tie ....... annuafinCOme there is less than SJOO
per family.
Eventually, tM Soasth Cout Com-
munity 011urdt is hOl>ina to ha~ib
own milliOnary livi~ in lbc cburcb,
Loomis said. But for now, vishiaa
Good Samaritans build on IO 1hC
cJ.istina three-room school each year
and eet Americans to sponsor a
child's education and Ii viniexpcntrS.
· Loomis said he and the othcn
. spent the day ·;n Bib&e study and
atltin& to tnpw each other. The best
pirt Of t.hc s1tua~~o_n1 he said, is \bat 1t.ey•ve become·p>00 friends. 1 Bu1 Loomis, who has been tO Haiti
five times before:. said he WU fri&ht,
~ned. '
The Walkers havc:•!tendcd .numer· fogy nilhts. but tKMaAds~tnckin&
ous ou1-o f-statc 1ra1nu11 SCSSIOM on-abifi4r ·il ~ by di) windy · using the bl~hounds for trackinr weak. TM& ii wl:lY, die WaJkerl
Jinc.!.are now 1n Tennessee for such a contW. lk imall'hlwe not been
se_!!11nar.. . . . used as much by IJw enforcement
··we're concerned. It's uonervi~ .. he said. ··1 thint dte_p down we re
acared, Wt on the surfaice we're calm
and know we're safe, but ~is• fear
Qf the uakoown." .
: Accomponyj111 Loomi1...,. Flo~ ... '-,..._ Graves, 33, •Cotta Mcu contl'IC\Or,
Mos! offi cers are a httle skepu~! here as they are back East and in the at first un11l 1he>: ~.the dop work, South.
Dave Walker said. Then they "?nl "I think wc"re:aoinato find they can
to know when they ca n u5C them. be used as successful)?;I jq California The hounds have not ycl been used h I I • h' k · • officiall because they a~ still too as.anyw ere e JC. on t t in !1.s Y · · K go1na to be easy for ~ but 11 s
Polar expedition e.-u.,..-. o . • reo1 -te qent from lrvlne; Jean Wattsy a ~ C.Nfonlla; adbon Co. "Crews •• MOVfnt: pow... nuptK>nist from T1.11tin;~ Kelly
llftM •nd poles at .. 91rvlew ltoad •nd Newport aoutevard In Mann, 26 a financial 5ncr fro"m
COSU ..... nte real wnt wHI "'811e ••Y .for ttN Redondo Be.Ch· Bett of New·
ea:tenston of the Cotta 1Peu Preew., to 19th StrC'et. Port Beach; Melinda~.. , 27, of
young. Janie Walker said. oossa, ~ibic," Dave WalkCr 1a1d. -
who is .1 month.s o.ld, shoul~ be ready Even if the d0& d~'t find i1s ------------------------lo beg.in tracking profcsssonaUy by subject it oftm pt~ investigative
West Covina; and Rtchard Hams. 47,
an indeocnden1 investor from
Luuna Ni•utl.
)uly,and Mo aFew monthsafterthat. leadsthatcanhelpofficers,headded. Teen ser1'ous1y· hurt 1'n she wd. , . Janie Walk.er said she does 00 1 K~ssa w~s called out fo r a couP;k train her hounds to heel because she
!racking scssrons,.but the do& was still thinks it breaks their natural curiosi· w • h '
m the playfu,I puppy stqc and the ty.Theyattrunona_l.S-footleashand · ·estm1nster S oot1ng su~pcct wasn t found, Janie Walker often ttaek in a zia·lll pattern, the
iSa)d. Once the hounds arc rcad_y, they way thc wiod blows scurf onto the
will be used by any Oranae County ~-acy News Servk
law enforcement agency th.al n:qvcsu They can ltlCk ·a trai1 that is more e
Rai1i's airport was doted Sunday
and no call• could be mad< from the
country.
Wallen said she pve tbc American
Embl11y the n1mt1 alMI peuport
numbers of _poup mtmben and
remains COftfidmt tbey will· mum
Bans was in fair condition a1 lhe
UCI Medical Center, aa:ordlna to the
dispatcher. -
home.safely.
.. , have Cirituai beliefs that
what's 1U to happen will
happen.·· said.
.. Evtn iftbey bave to come home, if
this Creates Ut'ltcnea of what'• aoina
oa in Hliti and .C people in the .:i:•:~volved, n.it is worth it.'1
Gnvd · wjfc, V•krie, uid she
talked to htt hutliond by telephone
and suspected be was in l}etter shape
than she wu. "He just loves aJI tha1
adventure , but I'm perfectly happy here... ·. ·
G ra vtt and his wife have been on
x veral missionary excursions to
Mexico, but nothina u involved at
the Haiti lrip, Ille said. The hardett ?
panwucaplaini111tolheirtona.qes ,
7 aod 9. what happened, ahe added.
nis is the third coup in lhc C.ribbeul country in tcu than a year.·
Avril aeiJ:ed piowtr aia months aeo.
thT'h· bloodh und . ·dut'es differ than I.SO houn okl, but t~e fresher. Wcs1minstcrpolioe wcrc askingfor ~ 0 s 1 the more succesaful, she said. the public's help in solvi na a gana-dras11cally from those or German The A.--. --"' com-·...As ·-Len I tcdsh t' h t i n shcphe_rds and other dogs no~ u.tcd from i6"°'A~n j;;JjZ':i ~I rea oo in11 a e ayoun1man
,bY _police. Those d~ do bu11: lanpa.aaes so no one but the trainer :1:fu::Sco'::i~J:~' m~mber Jn ~cry
article and dru& ~ es.. but bl can-talk to them. Frank AreUano, 18, of ~uena Park
hounds are used stnctly in. searches ... H9und1 utually k.ecP their heads was a pancnrr in a c.ar at the :fa~. humans_, the Walke~ uid. down and Wis erect w&en lhcy track intenection o Hoover Street and
Attllano and the dri ver of the ca r
he was in appattndy did not tttpond
in .. ,he riaht 'WIY .. and a scriet of shots
was fired from lhe othtr car, Main
said. The driver, who also was not 1
pna member, was uninjured.
Pair held In purse snatching
W~don l c<?m~tcwilhcachot~r aod brinaina the head up is a sian the Garden Grov.e Boulevard when a
!il all, she said. A bloodhound .. is 1rail has been kllt, Jantc·wa1kcr said. pnJttlated term was yelled from
•JUSt another tool t~l helps. us ou~.. After a suoceuful find. they put their another car about 10:40 p.m. Satur-
. The bl.~hound 1 tndtftl. ab!lity pews on thcM1bjec\'1cbcst to identify day said WestmiMter -Polk:c LL 1s ~n 1n~11nct a~ pert _P!nical. U.C EflOf'I Riclw'd Main.
Wa k~ sa.id. Their lo~ ears help "T'ben ihcaicts the find, she acts to Information about What was yelled
scoop tt'C sceni up to lbeir DOie and Hck 1be ~ lhe ldJ a treat and a _., not immediately available., he ,..!oosc JOWIS' and k>ts of t&ol:lber lol ofpruai.1e." Janie Walker •id uid. · increase the scent, known as scurf: .., ·
, The suspects drove away in a
1ilvers0ver-aray, four4oor Honda Of
Hyundai, which had •1 least the rear
· window tinted. They wcre detcribed
as two Utino males, abou1 11 yan
old, Main said ..
The victim was taken to a hoapiuil
in 0ra.-county.
Aayoae with information lboul
the cw, the Incident or tbe-sutpOCts. is
asked IO call Westmintttt police at
191-3311.
Humansshc450milliontcUrfper ·---zr--------------------------------------------------------IZI 'day from their skin aqd tha1'1 wbal
gets ca~t in the clothu'I and~
Onetfcke ·worth S6 .
•
Ht 1 11 11'\ flO\U1·.
Reception planned
·-·--te A0A0f Ai5~or:yi
efEnsenada race
A re«ption to rccosnaic the h11toty of t~
Entenada yacht race is planned from S to 8 p m.
April 16 at the N~rt Harbor NauticaJ Mutcum.
l 714 W. Balboa Blvd., Newport Beach.
Speden will include yacbtmen Rudy Choy.
Vic Stem, Make ~nc and Bob Hanel. Rcfttshmmts
also will be served and numerous door pnzcs will be
available.
For more 1nformallon. call Doro1hy Bttk at ~JO« or Cathie Nash at 67J..lJ77.
C~l~bratlng county's c~nt~nnlal
A free celebration of Oranee County's centen-
nial will be held at 2 p.m. April IS at the San Juan
Capistrano Regional Library. 31495 El Cammo
Real. .
Jns En~trand. histonan from the Un1\.ers1ty of
San Diego, will discuss the county's era of ranching
and fannina and the formation of its c1ues. In
addition, UCI h1stonan Spencer Olan will examine t~c county's rapid expansion and economic growth
since World War IJ.
Reservation are recommended. For further
information. call 493-17 ~2.
Swimming prQgram In Laguna
A spnng swimming program 5ponsorcd by the C11r of Laguna Beach will be offered Saturdays hffi~Almt .
62) Park Ave.
lns~ruction tor bciinnncrs is at 10:30 am ..
advanced beginners at fl am., parents v.1th bab1e
at 11 :30 a.m. and preschoolers at noon. Cost 1s SI .S.
The Sea Lion advanced swim team will also
practice Monday! Wednesday and Friday even1np
from 5:30 to 6:30, and Master Swim for advonccd
adult swimmers will be available from 6:45 to 7:45
a.m., 4 tQ 5:30 p.m. and 6:30 to 7:30 p.m. Monday,
Wednesday and Friday. Sc4I Lions and Master Swim
are$20cach per month per time slot. Extra times arc
$15 per month. Drop-in swimmingjs available for
children from 12:30 to I :30 p.m. Saturda)s for SO
cents bqmnang priJ I .S.
Participant should arrive prepared to swim
beausc no lockers arc available. Prc-rcg1 trallon 1
strongly recommended. Call 497-33 11 citl. 20 1 for-
add111onal information.
Financial planning for s~n/ors
A forum that explains how seniors an their
fam11\es can prepare for financial and medical ·
problems will be offered from 9 a.m. to noon pnl
15 at FHP' Hospital, 9920 Talbert Ave . Fountain
Valley.
Wilts, long-term care insurance. guideline for
prote<:tJon JO case of ph)sil"al or mental d1sab1lit)
and tips on minimizing lepl fees and estate ta:\es
will be discussed fo r $3 for members and $5 for non-
members.
C'onunental breakfast will be sened from 9 to
9:30. Seating 1s ltmne.d . More information may be
obtained by calling th e FHP Member Sen ices
Department at 964-6229.
Mammography project vo/unte~rs
Approx1matcl) 250 vol unreers arc needed 10
answer ph ones for 1he Amencan Cancer Soc1et) 's
mammogr.iph~ project beginning at 4 p.m .i\pnl 16
and con11numg 10 a.m. to 8 pm. through Apnl 30.
Women who meet certain aac and health
reQu1rement can obtain mammavams for SSO
during the project. These low-dose. ca!)ccr-detcctmg
-ra)s normally cost up to S250.
Women ma) call 772-8.200 to receive infor-
mation packets and make appointment for mam-
mograms.
D~veloplng sales t~chnlqu~s
Wa)s ind1 1duals can deH~lop sale techn1quc:11 wall be ofTel"C'd from 6 to 9:30 pm pnl 17 at Turtle
Rock ommun1l)' Park in Irvine.
Procedure that will be taught mc.:lude .,_,.nt1na rtsum~ and CO\.er lcuers, as "'ell as methods 10
rtach corporate dcc1 ion ma_l(I'\. The instructor,
C)'rdt LIO)d Dore. has more 1han 8 )cars ol
succe sful sales e~periencc.
Further informauon ma) be obtained b) calling
the C1t}' of II"\ inc< ommun1t) Sen ice, Departmen1
at 660-3881.
Monday, .4pril :1
• 6:30 p m. Cotta Mesa CUy Couc:U, {0Uncll
chambers. 77 Fair On'e • ·
• 7 p.m H••t~ Bead CUy Conell.
council chambcri., 2000"Main t
1u~sday, Apri/4
• 7 p.m .. ~Bead PlaulllC CommJ11 ....
council chambers.. S05 fOftSt A.ve
• 7 p.m Ne.,.n 8tedl Pub, Beedle-a ...
Rectta&Me c.m....-..., council chanlbm.. )300
ev.-pon Bl\'d.
~
la}'hc:>use to get second t
8yTOMTnUS o._. .... c... .......
Thf lapna Ptayhoutt, alTnd) the
~t rommuntt} theater in Orantt
County, soon will be arowin, bt&Fr -.ith
the adduion of a S«ond thea1er.
With the impttllS of a SS00,000 chal~nae arant from the Hin) al\d Gl'ICC
Steele Toundauon, Lquna Playhouse
·board members h.a"e set out on a fund·
ralSlnl quest to tum the furmcr ~neral
Tdephone building at Third Street and
Mcrm11d A venue in laJuna Beach into a th~t-Je\.el, 226-Mt fac11Jty to be kno~n as
the Theater Center ·
"The 17,000 SQuare feet of1h1s bu1ldtn&
represents a quantum IC41P forward for the
playhouse and ever) proaram 1t currently
ofTers," rcponed Douatu Ro\\e. art11uc
d1rcqtor for the Laguna Playhouse .. J>ro-
arams will no lonaer be s11fled becautliC of
lack of pace. and will now ha'c lhe
freed om 10 grow ·•
Funhcr momentum fpr the pla)housc·)
fund dnvc has come from 3 $2.S0,000
donation from Carl Brodcnd. and maJor
gJ.fls ofS25,000 from tht cit)·., Fe uval of
the Ans. $1 0.000 from Vern and Cherry
p1talen, S 10.000 from the F11'\t lntcDt:ne
Bank Foundation and other ind1\.1du:il pied&-~ and dooauons. ·
The goal of the c3mpa1an i$ S2 750.000.
wh1ch includes the cost ol reno\.atang the
facilit) to create a theater ~ntcr and 1he
eventual purchase of the bu1ldtnl'. The
pljyfiouS( hope to n reno\.auon as de"'eloped. Ro~tpe>tled a "for leate.' Sip
early as summer, with t e first producuon on the GTE bu11<tJna.
to bt itqe,d 1n mid O\Cmbfr. ,_~...,&ult on three levels, the MW .Theater
fo commemorate Brodenck" dona-<enter, as ptttently enviliOtled, would
11on. the lobb)' ~ allbt' named the Brodenck include a th.-usl siaee-.ith tealina on &h.-ee
Galler;. The building 1tStlf is u )et ides on the upper levtl. aJona with the
unnamed lobby, a loun~ and art pJlery. rthearsal
The La,guna Playhouse at 69 the oldcs1 hall. classroom. drcss1n1 rooms and an
comm unit) theater in Oranae Count) ind office oomplc\. . .
''Programs will no /ong~r ~ stlfl~d b~caus~ of lack of
spac~, and wlll now hav~ tM fr~edom to grow."
Douglas Rowe, art1_st ic director for the Lagu11a Playhouse
one of the old~t 1n the nation. has e~pcnen<.ed a gro" 1na dcmnnii for ue\ets
and has been rorc:c<l to rum m:in) people
~way. accord1n lO R OY..l' r our )Cars :igo.
the pla}hou e added a Nikon\. and
enlnrgcd the lobh> and olliu:s of \\hat rs
no.. l..no" n a~ 1he Moulton Theater.
increasing It~ ~J trng c.rp:ll It) 10 418 atS
-which "rrr ttU.1ckl) sold to ub cribcrs
that fir-.t 'car
"The ongrnal \Cllrnd pha~c of our plan
v.a~ a ~.IW-)(,luarc-foot addition to the
bad. of 1he Moullon Theater. bu1h o'er
the t'at~1ng lot." Rowe said ... fltat would
ha' c hou\Cd a rchcar!Mll hall and a badl)
needed C\pa.tls1on for costume nnd sccocr) storage.·· -
Then. Y..hlle th1~ pha'>l' "a~ being
The first an9 second levels would have a
sccnef) shop, wardrobe and property
storaae area~ additlonal offices and a
green room for the performers.
"The second stage would operate under
an Actor's Eqwty contract," Rowe said.
··)here are man) plays we cannot touch
now, pla) s that demand the full measure of
professional artistry -new plays. classics,
senous drama and high-style comedy. All
this will be possible 1n our new facility.''
The new pla) series will bt' focused on
more contemporal'}, 1ssue-onented works
comphmenung the entertamment-<>rien·
tcd producuons at the Moulton Tbea1er,
according to Rowe.
''The smaller theater will not pla)' commcrcaa! f.avon&es, bttt ~on
'1 ·\KI '\G ·1·u t : GR\ DJ:
new wOt"ts and plays tUI a,:m
tho IC\Or' and \be audieoce aa daty
evaluate the b'""8n 'Pim." he
"Wt'U be doina JO pla~ a ye1r iftllald o(
tht five we o&i now," RoWe cicw11in~c1.~~~
"0ur diet will be nchcr and. u a mull. ow commuruty will be IM>Urisbed hlll dliat
cxpQtUre. Our cbddm1 will be nP9led lO the full ~trumof tbea&rical ~llClt. ••
The p1ayho1.&1e•1 popular Y ouill Theater
prccranf will be 1 Darticular bcneflciaty o(
the ttcond stqe. lt.owe poin1ed out that.
with the new me11tt, the Youth n.ier
wlll expand its performance IChedule to
encompau more than one weekend.
The Youth Theater, under lht direction
of Scott David.son, bas arown over ~
percent in the put three ~ ~th
subscrjption sales at a record l,JOO this
ycar .. Classcs for youna actOrS aJso. wiU be
expanded Wlth the addition of the second
theater.
The Laguna Playhouse has Iona been
one of the m01t recotnized community
theaters in the United States. Jn 1987, its
production of the mttsical "Quilters .. won
first place at the American AuociatiOft of
Community Theaters' biannual festival.
The show then was entered in the
intema\Jonal competition in Ireland and
captured seven awards.
Founded in 1920, the playboutt fe-
located in a two-story bu11din1 on Ocean
A venue duri~ the Oe_l)_ression ... Thc....ncw
ifoillfon Theater WIS COMll'UCtcd in 1969.
Gisabled linkeq to compt1ters, opportunities·
lly PAUL ARCHIPLEY
Of-~ ..... """
To man)' handicapped ind•' 1duah hfc
1s an C\cruciaring and ~ming!~ t'ndks'i
plunge chrough darkne'>"i. The computer
age 1s P.rov1dmg them hght
While computer~ h~ne loni been touted
for opening up new worlds JO cducalJon.
nowhere has 1t been so C\ 1dcnt a! 1n the
expanded oppo'l'unit1cs the~ ·re alTordmg
the hand1cappeu
That fact 1-. being brought homr b~ a
partner h1p of parents. 1eachcrs and bu\1 -
ncs people on the Orange Const 9. ho h51 \. e
formed TA K -Team of •\d,..oca tc' for
pcc1al Kids
The group has opened the TFC U
Computer Centt.'r 111 Fountnin allc)
where the dt!.ablcd ~an learn ..ibou1 Ol'"
_ opportunities. 1n computer'> and ckc-
tron1( th rough equipment dc-mon
trauon . 'cndor d1spla~ s Mid "hand' on"
expcnenccs.
Imagine. for in\tam:c a }Oung man m
""oman 1n the pnme ofl1fc "ho 1 ll<ig1ralh
dLsabk-d. rendered a quodnplcg1c
o longer able to use lheir 11nm. or kg':I.
su h people "ould na1urall) ns~ume their lives v.t!re a good as o' l'r. that lhc~ \\Ould
ha\.e n,othing to contnbvrc to soc1t'l}
l\dvancc in computrr tcthnoloa) :irt
pro\.tng that as umpuon false and rt1n-
forc1ng 1he argument that an 1ndl\ 1dual 1s
limited onl) by his own mind
Take. for e"1mplc the .. Hl·adma tcr
Work&tauon. headgea r Y.Om b\ J d1'Mtblcd
ind1\.1dual that n:plarcs lhc computer
ke)board
t a TECH open hou~ l.i<>t lo\t.'ck.
in tructor Bernie Bro,,..n demon 1rated the
sccmmgl) unl1m1tcd graph• and ""nlln~ cap3b1ltt1e of 1hc cqu1pmen1
U!.1ng Maci ntosh \Olt"'.trc Bro" n
' .shov.ed h.o." ..in rnt1rl' ne" 'lc11er <'om-
plctc \\<Ith an. can be produced b) .t
<1uadriplcg1l' "'ori..mg alone
Broy. n mo' ed the "mou\i.'.. on lhe
n.'Cn b)' h1~ head mo' ~mcnt-;, He
.
Beach closed by sewage
spill may reopen today
.\ h. lf-rn1le trt'tch of l\li o Beach closed
last""( kb) a ~"age !ip1ll 1 \Chcduled to
reopen for ""1mmers toda ... ltfcgu.mJ
S31d
The ~lion ol beach on enhcr 1dc of
hso C rcci.. ~a.s do'"'·d ~edm·wa .. after
I 00.000-a.allon\ of untrc:11cJ ~"a8l' 'Pill· cd into the crcd T hr pollu11on ha
steadily de<:hncd ~H\cc then. 1d Jim
tauOer co-d1ttcto1 of L1fesu:mJ lntcr-
na11onal, \\ h1ch contr.al:t~ "'1th the count)
to patrol the ~ach
•· o ~w1mn11ng • ''in' '-'l'*'! po\h:d
withlll 1.000 leet of eat. h ~•de of the creel..
af\er 1hc pill wmct1mc I ucsd ~ maht. ht' '
~d.
Oranac ( ount) ffeahh lX("3rtmcnt
officlll were not Jva1labk fot comment
·unda), nor ~u there information on
which planl ¥.a\ rt pon 1blc for the lcal..
........ ~ ..... ,,.,_
Robert Klva, 8, of Westmln.ster, tries • porultle ltNlo SfNtdc
computer th•t can b• carried aro.,nd on a wheelcttalr to K'ttOol and
home. Such models are avaHable at the TRCH Computer Cent•f.
1,,·ommanJl-d the u unpLtt1,,•r '"11h • 'ml\ll
puth ol air 1hrou~h a mouthpll'<.·c.
\\ llhtn m1nulc\ hl' had <'Xpt:nmcnied
\\Ith dllkrcnt pttCC\ ul Jr\ lHldJlC\. \llC
and plJc:cnlrnl to pro<lurc a logo an'
gr01ph11,, .trtl\t "ould he Jlroud 111 -.tw"
Bro"n \,lid thC' tk.1dm:t'ih .. ·r p1<ldllt't'd
b\ Pc'"'1ln11 \ ( l)rp 'h<l\\t•d hem l,1r the
lOmpu11,,·r 1ndu"" ha' 1,,0m1,,• 111 1hc cllon
to m.un\lrcam th<' h.md1eapped
"II a \oung 1ci·n ):lrolc h1'> ncd. surfin~.
he m1gh1 1h1n J.. his" hok hie: 1~ 0' er" nh ·
Bn.l" n "1.td .. But he l'Jn bl' producll\ c
.. ll g1,cc; them the fcehng of being
prooucmc lnd uc,cful.. 1 r he onh dra" b3c."' RrO\\ n said I"> I hat
"l.Jle' ~not C\1,,•n a"are th1~ C\1~1\ •·
f hc TL< H lcntcr aims to change that
Robbers tie gu.ards, take
computer parts i'n Irvine
\t k:a\t thr\'l' ma.,i..cJ men m c.-rpov.ertd and llt't.I up t"o pn,ale sccunt'
guarll\ in .1 11t·v. :o-,tur) otlkc bu1ldmg in Ir' inc un Sa1urda} .and m3de olTwith
an umktermincd amount nl offill' and com pu rer equ1pmt'nt. poll~ ~·d
Hoth ttu..i1Jc, "hl' "c:rC' untnJurcJ. man.lil'd to lrt'C them e-; from their
dm·1 lill>t' h1noini' and "all the Ir''"" Police Depanml·n1 J \H'h1. m1.·mlx'r" ot thl· dcpanmcnt's ',pectal Ope1auon4' I 'n11. "h1ch 1s
.1i..m w J -, \\ .\ f team. '4.'Jtl h1-J the licnc' a ( orp bu1ld1n1 .u ~ Park Plata for
thn'c h<lUt~ tollo" in@ thl ~ 10 J m hrcak in hut the \U~JX'('I\ had apparent!)
t&ln·.ill~ e~J~ \g1 Tum l 1t1lc ....atd
T ht.· \Crl!c,int ... ud the inarudcr~ \\ho did nut3ppcara.rmed u~ the ckmem
ol \urprN· to t:id.k 1hc SCl Ull t\ au..ird'. nd tu.• them up The ~u pcct\ then tole
the i&u.ird~ v.. IL.1c-ull1c anJ. u~d 1hem lo rnmmun.11.atc v.h1le unloading
l'qu1pmt.•nt down an t'le' atur
I h1. \\l'iJX'Ct \\ore g1o"c' and "\!f\' dre \Cd 1n blad. fht) alw "ore ma ,
.. f hl'\ v.crcn't hkc f ranl..en tc1n mao,11.\ ... L111k \31<l • fhc~ ""ere L.1 ma k
or n' loll ,·t1.>l ling\ .. ·
L 11tk ... uJ thl' hrcak-1n ,., not rl·UteJ to a rash ol m.cnt robbt'ncs in the tn
wh11,, h ~·ompuh. r 1.h•P' "'ere lolen from manufacturers
Located th space donated by the Fountain
Valle)' School Oistnctat 18685 Santa Yne7 St., Fountain Valle), the center is linked to
the a11onal pecia.l Education lliance.
N EA optrates s•milar centers through-
out the U.S. that were funded by A.pplt:
Com purer.
Joan toddard , pro~t coordinator foe
T ASI>... said tht' TECH Center afTordJ
disabled students and their parents a
chance to learn about, the latest in
computer technolQ&y.
ln--tkhJfl10n1-l~e enter t linked up. to
more than 30 other centers 1n the nauon.
'astl) upandJn' the 1nformauon pool. .. , can send out 1nformat1on on a hnk,
pec1f)tng a patient's needs -SI), for
ex.ample, he has hm1ted arn:> u -and gel
ba k .50 answers." toddard sa.1d
The ctnter 1s sUlfTcd entirely b} parents
of disabled ~oung.stcrs.
'loddard bas I l7·)Cat-01d SOY\ Wtth
cerebral pals> who 1s main trcamcd at
Woodbn<Sic Hijh School in ll"\'tne.
Tro) toddard JUSI lettered 1n band at
the high school, from h1 wheelchair.
Computers.' word proet'lSOrs 1nd pnnt-
er h.a\.c enabled Tro)-to compete
at"adtm1cally w11h other student . his
mother \l.Jd..
"When )OU can put out a product that
looks a gOOd as any in the class, 11's prcll)
c~citingfor meone "'hocan't \\Tiie." .he
said .
V1 11ors to 1he cc.•nter can find out JUSt
hO\\ eAt'llJ08
Beside the Headmaster. there arT '01ce
\) nthcsncrs. e'-pandcd kc,> boards. '1brat-
'"' keyboard, for· the bhnd. and other equipment 1ha1 o~n~ Lht' door to DC\\
oppc>rtun1t1es
··we don't teach them ho" to "nte a
P.rogram or pla' a pmc." toddard ~:ud
'\\ e teach them ho"' lo &'-'t 1010 the
computer··
i\nd out of the darkness
For more information. call the TE: H
{enter 1t %~..() H2
Robber pulls man from
his car, drives away
\ man \oinked a dmcr out of his gra~
H\t\\ topped out~1de a Co ta Mes:> motel
earl' un da) and pcd awa)' pohce said
The ov.ner of the car. James Ho.,..-ard
Bu ford. 45. of Gu<len GroH topped the
car to t31 to a "'oman on the 1dc"alk 1n
tront of the< om fort Ion at ~430 ,!\Nport
Bhd . C.o ta Mesa poh~ Lt :\Ian Kent
<i.11<.J
fhc "'om:m opened the door on tbc
pa nier side of the car and t.alkC'J to
Bu lord at about I:! IS a m . he ~•d. \man
then pulled him out of the 19 ~ four-door
l'U fro m the pa ngcr·~ 1de and JUm~
into the dnv(r·~ at
The ~oman got in and the p~ur dru'
av.a' "-ent \&td.
Bu lord. ~ho 1 hand1 apJ'('d. wn left
1t11n1 on the curb. he ~1d
Teen-~gers are srill t eri-agers
f .,
Ju\l ~( U\t' }OV put,n )OUrlJm( in
\ht" 1rtn a ~ trenche H )ears o.
don't thin ou'rC' h m lrtt. arand-
ma I h<' onl) conwl111on ""uh
J I M..~nt lf'Jndt hlldr<'n, )OU don't
h3''' to '""re a room -or a 1hn 'lm -v.1th them.
Our d u htt"r camped out ufM'kr
the \hO~\:I for four )t'.ID, Htr
mcrn111d trt\ rc4utrcd more water
than 1 \Clll tank I nc,(r helr the
tr.Id\ .\h1nc of3 hair blo~r \faat rm
not remind J ol tho\<' hatl)io..dl)'
v. hen v.< ti d enough \hampoo and
c·ondrlll'n r~ to ftll I -..-ad1111 pc)OI.
........ -......
T hC' ,,nne1p;1I d10'erf'n<:e be1Wft"n
tcXJ&\'' RrtbQk &l"ncrahon ind I~
maM:ramc noodl "htadi of the' ·60l ii
monc). 1 h1HroJHlf~ounptm lo~
lhc tufl. rhc1r Ul'IC to be h(h n
almoi1 '' O\Crpl•mnt u their
Cf'l\ ""for p111a. Nobody w.'lnts to -.e
1 t~ mtttr or Clu\t F.MtWood ln)m~. "" stment blnkiftl IM (U'p()fa&nt la• arc the: utkeb 10 Ponchtt ad a h~tunc tuppl) Of.
Ortoccd
,. 'I
OIWiii C.... DAILY PILOT/ ~. Apfl 1. -
rd World
WASHINGTON (AP) - 1 he 8'atla administration's new plan to
provide debt relief for Thi.rd World
ooua&riN received a ~ booM on
Sunday when it won endorsement from &he world's '-Aana indus--
lrialized countries. ""'""'
The cndonement was contained in
a joint communiqut adopted by the UniledSLates,Ja~n. West Germany,
BriLaift, France1. Canada and Italy. tt was isaued fohowina almost etaht
hours of cloted~r discussions con-
duct.eel by U.S. Tra1ury Secretary
Nicholas Brady and his foreian
counu:rpans.
The U.S. propoMI wu not men·
t1oned by name in the three-l)lle,ioint
tlattment, tlat the ditc1mion of the
chan&n needed in current policy
showed th.at the finance nutlisten ~re in acncral suppon of the
~Is outhncd by Brady m 1
r.farch 10 speech.
"Debt strategy should be
strengthened by placin& ~tcr
emphasis on volunaarydebt relief and
debt aervice reduction in qrttment
with the commemal banks as a
complement to new lendina." the
·castro; GorQachev ·
4 -• • , embrace at airport,.
sta ruaJks ia_Cuba
HAVANA (AP) -Soviet Presi· Jose Marti International Airport and
dent Mikhail S. Gorbachev received a hned a 10..mile route througn_ down.
warm welcome Sunday as he.amved town Havana to the official guest
in Cube for talks with President Fidel house where Gorbachev will stay
ftnace ministm said.
Indy llid tMt he WU ~led with
the enclonement con1a1ned in the
joint aatemllt; yina it w.s un-uaually detailed on whit approecbes now Deed to be taken and very
IPCJClfkoa the need for prompt action
by the intem1tional leodin& •ncies. "The(e wu broad suppon for
strenathenina the debt stratqy alo!'A
the lines of the U.S. proposals,
Brady to&d reponers after the meetina
had ended.
Canadian Finance M1n1ster
Michael Wilson called the new debt
1ua•u 1mpon.Mt-~ ia IOl\liftl the 1even-yar-1GM debt crisis. A 1eilior Treasury-~,LWbO brided repor1en, Yid ......... lbe
conu1uaniquc did not meatioll ll*i-fk JUpPOl't to be provided by odwr
countna. be upect.cd wda an-
nouncements would be made Iller in
the week. The , adtninislratioo is
look.int for countries runnina la,.e trade surpluteS, sucb u Japen, to
offer to suppon the debt reduction
effon by provtdina money for new
loanL
C \ 1.11 0 H '\ I \ H H 11-, I '
Ship captain agrees to stay In area
LONG BEACH - A captain removed from his ship for repohedly
operatana while drun was stay1n1 in t.bc Lona Beach are.a a.s part of an
agreement he made with the ship's qent. Wilhams Diamond and Co., the
ship's •nt. set aside SI 01000 m case the captain, Allen Jones. is chaf"lcd and
fined for operatint the ship while 1ntox.ie1ted, said Coast Ouard Pe1ty Officer
Brad Smith. That 1s the maximum amount that could be levied apinst Jones.
JQnes, 581.. was removed from his ship after the first mate of the Britith·
regjstered, 72G-foot bulk carrier "Century Hope" radioed the Coast Guard
Station in Long Beach soon after the craft departed about 12:30 a.m. Saturday.
saying Jones~ erratically piloting the ship, Smith said.
CJlstro. who has criticized the Soviet during his four-day visit. •
leader's ,new pragmatic brand of :·E~erything is cl.ear in o'Ur friend· Gene Kellv released from 11ospltal commun,asm. ship, an our hearts, an our soul, in our J Castr~ wcarin the n fa i ue ~·· Ciorbich v · · · l::OS-ANGebES Hollywood--l<>Aa-a~•n-qene-KeHy
uni orm t ailias n 1s tra emark c-0mment to i?rensa Lat!na. .the released from the hospital Sunday after a bout with pneumonia.
for. three decades. walked onto the Cllban news agency. upon has am val Kelly bad been admitted to Cedars-Sinai hospital Wednesday under a
ra 1 n -soa~ed ta,rmac . a ~te r at .~he guest house. . . pseudonym. The illness forced the 76-vear.oldentenainertocancela weekend
Gorbachev s llyu~hin 62 Jetliner Now the only thmg le~ is to talk, performance of his one-man show ''Evenin& with Gene Kelly" at the la lan~ed and threw has arms around the and w~ do ~ave something to talk· Mirada Civic Center. Kelly starred :n such films as "An American in Pans,"
Soviet leader. . . about, he sa1d. . and .. Anchors Aweigh," wnh Frank Sinatra. He is probably best known for his It was t~e third . meet~ng of the Formal talks between the Sov1~t charming splash dance-in .. ingin' 1n the Rain" whicti he also co-directed. com muni st c h1efta1ns but .and .Cuban leaders wert' to begin •
Gorbachev's first visit-to Cuba, the today.
Thousands join abortion rights march
Se•rchlng for victims ·
island nation that for nearly 30 YC¥5 Gorbachev and Castro rode to the ~as stood as a. symbol of So".1et I capital standing side by side in an
influence 90 miles off the A onda open, Sov1et-built parade car. They
coast. waved to the cheering. nag-waving
Castro kissed Gorbachev's wife. crowd stacked several deep on both
SAN FRANCISCO-More than 20.0oo people carried sians and chanted
dunng a noisy abortion riahts march that orpnizen called the.laf'IC't pr<>-
cho1cc demonstration ever held 1n the San Fr1nc:1sco Bar. area. Diven ptilled four bodln from• murtcy, r•ln-swoUen river
Sun= where at •••st seven people dlH when • 50-J••r·
old 1• cota.psed n•• Covington, Tenn. AuJhorltles Mid
~ had found • tr.ctor-tr .. ler rig and four c•N which
pluntl4td Into the Hatchl• River on Saturday when a l•re•
chunlr of the two·l•n• U.S. Highway st brldtte fell 25 feet.
Raisa, on both checks before escort· sides of the road.
ing Gorbachev on a review of the Although Castro is known for his
pres1dent1al honor·guard. ability to tum out thousands of
Hundreds of thousands of Cubans peopre i~ this city of 2 million. the
mustered by local neiJhborhood welcome for Gorbachev appeared
committees packed the amval area at genuinely warm.
44 guerrillas
die In Namibia
as truce starts
WINDHOEK. Namibia (AP) -
Territorial police repor\ed killing 44
suerrillasSun48y in widespread figl\t-
mg that shattered a cease-fire and
threatened Namibia"s day.old tran-
sition to independence from South
Africa.
South Africa accused the rebel
South-West Afncan People's Or-
pnization of mfiltratinl from ne1gh-
borin1 Angola, but SWAPO said its
guemllas were defending themselves.
South Africa aveed to give up•
control of Namibta under a U.N.-
monitored process that began SatUT-
day.
Since late Fridf!y, 120 guemllas
and six police officers hade been
killed, territorial police Lt. Kierie du
Rand said Sunday night.
SWAPO president Sam NuJoma
told a news confert'ncA: in Harare,
Zimbabwe, that v.oup officials told
him at least 48 civilians also had been
kHled in the confrontations, and
many others had been wounded. He
said he could neither confirm nor
deny the repons of guerrilla deaths.
Namibian police said there were
more than 30 confrontations between
officers and guemllas during the day
Sunday.
U.N. officials. including Gen.
Daniel Opande of Kenya. deputy
commander of the peacekeeping
troo~. said the soldiers bad neither
parucipated in nor seen the battles.
·Investigation of tanker-captain··
widens; animal rescue quickens
VALDEZ. Alaska (AP) -The
captain of the Exxon Valdezadmitted EP~ il ch1·ef· \ /aldez sp· ,· 11 ~orces dnnlonJ before boarding the tanlceT. n . v 4 11 I t
on the night it rammed a reef. • • '"W~~~~~~fi~?fnvestiptoron the reassessment of Oil dr1l/1ng .
scene of the nation's worst-ever oil •
spill boarded the vessel and asked WASHINGTON (AP) -The Valdez 011 spill 1s {>rompting federal
Capt. Joseph Hazcl9rood what the authonues into a full rt'view of environmental safquards involvma Alaskan
problem was, he ret,t1ed, "f think oil development. the head of the Env1ronmentaJ Protection gency said you·re looking at It.,· according to Sunday.
court documents. . "We've got to do everything that we can to make sure that this doe" not
The document were filed an sup. happen again," said EPA chief William Reilly.
port of an arrest warrant issued for the The reviewoflong-ranae federal policy 1s likely to focus on production and
captain Fndayon state misdemeanor shipment of Alaska'sNorth Slopeoilas~ellaspToposed neweitplorat1on 1n the
charges of o_pcrating a ship while other wddemess areas. Reilly said. He declined to predict the outcome.
under the influence of alcohol, reek· "We are going to take environmental planning completely a pan for every
less endan~enncnt and negligent dis· aspect.of Alaskan oil development and make sure it as soun'Cf and as carefuJ as
charge of 011. we can possibly make it "he sajd,
Hazelwood remained at large Sun-Teams of federal officials are investigating every aspect of the spill, said
day as 1nve!ltigatorscontinued to look Reilly. and will report to the president v. i1hin 30 days.
for the cause of the <ip1ll. which now Really also dismissed claims by executives of the Euon Corp .. whost-ship
covers an area the sizc of Rhode caused thesptll, that environmental damage could have bttn rcduc<..-d 1f(ederal
Island. authorities had approved the use of chemical dispersants more qu!ckly The Coast Guard announ~ that
deliveries of North Slope crude 011
will be allowed to rctum to near nonnal levels once the Exxon Valde7 southwest of the accident site in oncc-
is relieved of its rerhining load, priltane Pnncc Wtlbam Sound.
babl b T sd Sc1en11stsand fishermen brought in pro Y 'Y ue ay ntommg. oil-smeared o tters in everything from
Authont1es cut traffic m half airline dog cages to boxes hurriedly
through Prince William Sound afier hammered together from plywood
the Exxon Valdez ran aground. and chicken wire. A refrigerated
Animal-rescue efforts quickened as trailer truck served as a morgue for
authorities kept ao C><e on a plume of dead otters and birds. oll headed for salmon fishcnes and a ••0t2ches are getting hammered by
national park more than 100 miles oil," said Ocpartment of En-
third mate.
The captain hves tn HuntinJton,
N.Y. Family and fnends of the
captam told pohce they have not
heard from him and do not know
where he is. authontics said.
Police estunated the crowd at about 20,000, whiJc orpnizen of the
··March for Women's Lives" said more than 30,000 people part1ci~ted in the
march throu&h the financial district to City Hall. The march, which was also
expected to attract supp<>rters from Washington and Oreaon. was held in
conjunction with a scheduled Apnl 9 "pro-choice0 raJI) in Washinaton, D.C.
In Los Anicles on Sunda)'. pro-choke activists drew outlines of women's
bodies on the ground and placed red-stained clothes hanacn within each
outline. The Action Alhancc to Keep Aboruon Safe and Legal held their so-
called "bleed-in" for about two hours this aflemoon on the steps an front ofCtt)'
Hall ..r _
'\\TIO'\ \I. HHIJ:1:s
Former anronaut to head NASA .
WASHINGTON -President Bush is ex~tcd to name Na"y Adm
Richard H. Truly to head the National Aeronautics and Space Admmastrauon
admm1stration sources .said Sunda). He would be the first astronau{ to head
the space agency. Truly 1s currently associate administrator for space f11&ht at
NASA.
His nomination was expected to be announced this week, said the officials.
who spoke on the condition of anonym1tr.. He would succeed James Aetcher.
who retired from the post after holding 1\ for JUSt o'er two )can. Truly ha.s
nown twice 10 the pace shuttle ·
Mormon offlclal warns against TV
SALT LAKE CITY -A Mormon Church offiC1lJjoincd the battle aaainst
vtDlcnce and sex tn tele\i.sion. telling church leaders on Sunday th.at the1t 1s an
undeniable hnk betwee~v1sed v1oknct and human bd11v1or In remarks
to the concludma session of the finh 's I 59th annual Gcnn11l Conference, Elder
M Ru sell Ballard urged parent~ to curt.ail and control their ch1ldrtn''
television vJ.Cwma.
"I express my own and this church's disappointment, disaarcement and
evtn outrage wnh telev1s1on that turns our attention and sometimes our
1nclmat1ons mward violence, sdf~scrvana arced. profantt), disrespect for
trad1t1onal value-., sexual prom1scu1ty and deviance.'' Ballard sa1d.
.. Contract settled In steel strike
GADSDEN. Ala. -Steelworkers voted overwhelm1n&J) ·unda> to end
their 2~y-old stnke at a steel plant wht~ dotens of pohoc auardcd apm t 1
flare-up of earlier picket ltne violence that led to t-wo ams1s Raoficatton of the
four-year contract, which was settJed in nc:sott1t1ons at 81m11naham. mnn1
that the Gulf States tecl Co. workers would 10 back to work on the 11 pm.
shift Sunday.
tatc Trooper Lt. Jam Hyatt said "everythma was quiet" at the plant
Saturday ni,ht. Dounsoftl'09prrs were a 1 t1n1Gadsden poli.ct followinaan
outbreak o stnke-rclated violence earher Saturday, he iald. Picket 1ine
kJrm1 hers Wlth clubs and chains dam~ 10 pohcc c..ars.
-------------------------~ vironmental Conservation Com·
missioner Dennis Kelso.
State Pohce ~t. Clifton Smith said
there were indications that Hazel-
wood had contacted an auome)' and
that a surttndcr miaht be worked out.
Alaska officials have said they will
seek Huelwood's extradition. Two-thirds of freed Inmates rearrested
State and ufrolk County pohcc ·
OFF-CAMPUS
DEGREES IN HEALTH ,
CARE MANAGEMENT
Information Meetings
Wednesday
__ .__._,_A,pri l Sth
---~--Pacifica·~....._~
Community Hospital
18192 Delaware Street
Huntington B«xh
2nd Floor
Community Room
An estimated 10.1 million pitons
spilled m the March 24 disaster and
now cover parts of more than 1,000
square miles. Only 3 percent of the oil
has been scooped up.
Exxon fired Hazelwood on Thurs.
day, the day the National Transpor-
tauon Safety Board revealed blood
and urine tests taken about nine
hours after the accident showed he
was under the influence of alcohol. At
the tame of the disaster, the tanker was
under the command of an uncertified
bepn formally took.mg for Hazel-WASHINGTON -Nearly 63 percent oftbc 1nmata«katid from wte
wood on Sunday af\emoon. Smith pnsons art re.arrested for• senous cnme within 3 .Jcars. ICtotdins to 1 JU1tice
said. A me~ left on an answerina Ocpanment study. The depanmenrs Bure.au of Jusllct StallittCS found in
machine at Hazelwood's home wu survey of more than 16.000 men and women released from the pnsons in 1983
not returned. th.at by the end of 1986, about 62. S ~cot of the former inmates had been
Affidavits filed in court said one of rtl~ted for a felor?Y or aenous misdemeanor. that 47 J)Cf'CCn_t had bttn
the first invcstipton to boerd the oonv1cted ofa new cnme and 41 percent had been tent wino pmon or ,ail.
tanker,. state Trooper M1c:h.ael Fox. ~ .-.
asked nuclwood. 42. what the prob-
lem was. The capaaan rephcd, "f think HOHi U HHll 1'
~~--re lookmg It it." the court papers u .s. ambassador' S home shelled
liiiiiiiiii!i~iiiiiiiiiimT------------,. BEIRUT. Lebanon -Sheltf\re h1t Beirut'• airpon Sunday. and rect.o
repona llid the borne of the U.S. ambestedor wu struck dunna fierce duels =~ puen Ud Cbriseian army unita. Poltee NPOfted IJ people
'TlnllldavUt exptoliOns roc:ted Befrut in wtiaf authOiitia Cilkit me
belvielt anillery dud si~ rtncwed ftabt•na in lhe~4--:old civil war·
enap1,c1 Marcb_I. S~ and allied Dnate aunnns more &bu a.ooo roUildl. as a rate of up to I 00 per m11H1tc. on e9lt · nn and the C'bntt11n ~lliiiiiiii!iiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii1 ....... ....._.. of cbe ci_ty~ Oariltin IOldim ltnd Meir with U'mm • boWitzen, firina at leaat l,000 rouRdt on Syrian _JJOlitioM in Moslem west
Beirut; &he ~ntral mounLIJns and eut Lebanon's MM valley 11111• llCCartlay Balck ..,,
GllC Dleco•nt Ce ter
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Millara Sheets, renowned arr·;s·t's
first exhibition Was in Laguna
The lollo"1ng h\t ofOranic < oa\l
rl·al c'ltatt.· 1rnn\for'>. "h1ch 1nC'lud1.•\
the namt.· of 1hc.· hu)l'r addrc'>' and
1hc pnll' paid tor the propert) w;i.,
t.omp1lcd from rnunt) rcc~nd'> and
C'l(ro\\ c.om pan1n b) I lomt:1m ncr'
\1Jrl>.l·t1n11. 'X.-n ll'l''>
From Dally Piiot wlr~ s~rvlces
~1111.ard O"cn \heel\ v.ho _9unng
h1\ long c:arl'Cr a., an ani'>t \\-a~ at onl'
llml' or JOOlher u pa1ntl'f a mural1\I ,
an arc:h11cctural dl·.,.gner .r teacher
and Jn author. d1rd F n<la\ a1 h1\
home on the Mcndcuno rna~t.
_ Sheets. kno"' n e'ipt'nall) a' a
pa1ntrrol land"-•'P'-'"and a thr fathl'r
ol tht• ( al1fornia \\,11c:rlOlor ~hoot. "a" agl' XI •
.. \sa man of man' talent\. Millard
'hl'Cl'> hJ'> 1ntlul'tll'Cd thc .i rt v.orld
tor mer 60 }Car~:· Laguna Lkach
1\-lu\('Um of .\rt D1rcuor Wilham(,
Onon !Mud
heels had bel"n 111 lor ~\cral) car<>.
but as rccentl) a two y('ars ago he
lomplctcd a largi: painted mural for
the f1\lc (enter in Lubbock. fl'\
and continued to cxh1b11 1n one-man
\hO~~
The Pomona-born :in1st um
~·\h1b1tcd a1 thl' Laguna Beath \n
.\'i'>OC tJt1on in ll):!3-at agl' 16 Ile
graduated lrom C hou1nard 'chool ol
-\rt 1n I tJW and rarer 1oincd ·npps
C ollegc 3\ an an prnfes\Or \\here hl'
.ht.•aded the art d\·panml·nt for "0
\cars:.
Ills "orks hang in 4h mu!K.'Um\
na11on"1dl' lk created more th.in
100 murJl"l and mo~rh nnd de 1gnl..'d
about 100 bu1ld1ni'· mclud1na a ···•· ,.,.,
numhcr of Home ~a'.111gs and L<><in .\sso~ra11on butldrn~ and lh(' down·
to" n Pomona Mall fhe ( 1t~ Hall
.\nnC'-!n { {l\ ngdc\ has on~ o( hl'5
murals: ·
hcct'i c.om manded med1umc;
other than \\Jtcrwlor. including
etchings. lithographs and frcscoer,
During World War II ~hects \\3'>
torc1gn corre pondent for Life ma,ga·
11ne 1n India and Burma. I ater. he
"a" a l ~ ~tat~ Dcpanment an
'>Jll:t:tah~t tra H'llng to 1 urke\ and 1he
O\let l 'nion He Jca,cs bchrnd his wife 1'r.:tr)
and four ch1ldrc.n.. \rrangc.mcms.kn a
memorial \C:f\ ICC 1n San Diego arl'
pending.
Franklin Korn, helped
invent tq,uch-tone· phone
fr.tnkhn A ~010. an 1n,entorw1th
Bell Tdephone I ..iboratones \\ho
helped create a n.\11on of direct Ions·
d1 tancc, touch-tone phone dialer'>
died of J..1dnc~ la1lurl' fnda) 1n
C olumbu\, Ohio. at .tgc 83
)l.orn "'J'> Litrel tor of telephone
laboratone'> at the tormcr Wc~1crn
E:kttnc plant 1n ( o!umbu!.. \1o-h1lh
no\\ I\ tN ncd b> ·\ 16.. T ) tc was t:rcdllc<l \\-1th de' eloping J
nat100""1de d1rect-d1al m1htar} tck·
phonl' network during \\.urld \\.ar II.
and "uh the dl•\i:lopmt:nt of touch
tone d13hng
f le also uHn' entl·d tht' rnaJOr
')Wl tl'hing S)\l{'ll1 U'>Cd by tl'kphonl·
compan1e unlll the m11J-J 97lh, "hl'n
cleuronic S\\'ttth1ng ""s tntroduccd .
.;aid Harold I feckt:ndorn of \.\ onh·
1ns1o n. retired cng1nl·crrn~ manager
of 1he Western Ell'Clrtc rlant
Korn reured lrom Bel La~ in I 1fl0
alter 50 ~car' with the t:o mpan).
Tito Dupaya, member
of Philipp1ne Congress
f110 Dura\a a ml·mbcr oi the
Ph1ltpp1nc lt)u~ ol Rcprrsen1alHC'I
and Jlh ol Pn.''>tdcnt ( ora1on
.\qu1no. ·died Saturda\ of a heart
.utad·, 1n ht'> northern home pm' tnlC
ol ( aga-.an. authon11l..., said lie wa\
67
Dupa)a \\3'> en routl' to the
( ag.l} .rn airport to meet J t1'>t1ct:
~cretary ScdR) Ordonc1 when he
compl:11ncd ol chest pains. said
Thelma M accd.i ll ousc
c;pokcspcr'iOn. (. af.i)an 1\ ahout :! I U
nllll'!. north<'ast of Manila.
Dup..i'a 1c. a mcmtx•r of the \truggk
ol the Demul.r;111c F1hpino pan' thl'
mall\ poht1cal group 'upporung
Pn.·srJent quino.
( ompam otliuai.. )<l \ the h'>I ma'
1
ha\l' Jfl crro1 fauor ot 7 ,pc1 1.cn-t
durm~ ..i \t:ar ., 11rne lx'taux· of
spn ulat1on.hu\ 111g and error\
I hl· h\t " puhhshcd tor the I
mlormauonal uw ol our reader\ ,1nd
;, pnlll'l'tCd ti~ l OpH1glll IO ltomc·
O\\ncf'> \lar1>.r11nf \l·r' tll'\
Corona del Mar
\Ir~ \tr'> R1lhJrd \ I xK'.rr ~t1:!t\
< urt land Dm c S '165.0(l(J
'lam) \ Pl'll'r\ I< C r1.'\I < 11dt.·
\I \000
Chark' \.\ R.\m~} Jr )t I l>,'\hh.1
~MO.!)()()
\.fr c \1r., (1l'orgc ruth11l 4-4 I
< 101<.knrod \' ( $490,000 \1 r & \tr. ( h1ch \ \un :!l
Harhor Point SI X 'i.000 •
Ru.hard t \1orton '16 JJ\nttnc
.\\C Sh75 uoo
Mr &. \tr'> John \1 lc,crcu \I
J,l\ffillll' ( rl•Ck l>rt\C."$417.000
\.fr .-.\ "Ir\ Kei th Uurm·tt :! 15
lark spur -\' l' SI I :!5 0110
L>1ana (, arpcl. P< >B h.!' S 150 000
'l.1r & \1r'> Da,1d l Ball. '''
Porr' \ \C SlS60.UCXJ
he lhron I rram· lfll~ \Jn I
.wncll.i r CtJJC.C SMll l,UOO
Ouu~las L \\ ood. I 'i '' \anJt.'J'>tk
Dm e s 7 to.om fhtlma<t .\ f crf", 11 ~" \\ httl' \J1I\
\\ 3 ) Sl>CXJ,000 •
Poor more likely to die fr.om cancer
By lEE SIEGEL
"" SOenc• wm .. , ..
l he \mcn~.111 < aOl.:(r \ouct\ ha
la1k<l \o f)J ) cnoul(h .111l'11t1oll Ill
hahung canu·r Jmong thl' pour. "'hu
arc more ltkeh than other Pl-'Oflk 10
be lolled b) the (l1~aSt· th<' group''>
prl·~1dc111 -.a1tl ')unda)
"fhl' µp 10 CJO('l'r \Ur\l\al ~··
\V.("(n thl' poor .ind more atnucnt
mu'>t ~ bndti.cd. 11 1\ a chalkn~t· tor
1mmcd1atc <0nn:rn and a<.:t1un. · Dr
Htirnld P. rrecman "<lid a1 thc
'10C'1ct) 'i .tnnual li;JllC \\nter..' ~in·
1nnr in Ir' inc
\nothl'I pcn~n ..aid man} urnu~r
pJllcnt ~ufkr rwcdk.,,h h\ c.au'K'
the~ l'\:{CI\ c 1n dcquatc Ju<.c'> of
n rro\I<" p.unk1ll •r\ Jue to culturJI
pr \Ure .. thill label Jll dru ',,, I d
f rt"Cman, c1tin1 Ill 6 Can1.cr
>e1ct\ report, "'11d. • The chnn~l' ol
gctttni C<ln\cr anll O\tnl from 1l 1\
dl\prupon1on<1lel\ futhrr amonl'
poor mencan., rTg.in!lc of rJC('. •
Onl> utx>ut H pcrccntto 40 pcri. ·nt
ol f)Ol)r \mcm: "' ~Ith cancer uf\ I\<' ti\t \Ct1r after d1a1no\I\
i;omp.11\'d '4tlh an n-.era c uf SO
pcru:nl tor 1lw 1.·n11rc populatwn. ""d
frecm.in. d1rct lor of \Uf'ICS)' at
Harlem lloc,p1tJI Center 1n "'c" \ ork
and nn a\\OUJlc prolC or ill < ul ·
umb1a Uni \Cf\lt}
}k ~Id t~C ~X'ICl) """ 'IP'>nWr
---'liP~------
public hea11ng\ on lhl' rrubkm \1,1\
10 1n Atlanta \1a\ I 1n JJc\..<,on
\h\!. \la) .!l m 'c"'ar\. "J \ta,
~~ IO ~t LOU IS, Ju nc t" IO [I Pl\O
l e\U\, June 21 1n \.11.:r.1men10. Junl'
~1 1n Phol'nl\ . .\111 JnJ Juh I J 10
"'""h1ng.ton \t thc final hcanng. the
\~l\.ICl\ \.\Ill l!l\UC a n·port n.'l
ommcnding ho" IC> hclll'r comb.H
cam.er among thl· poor
"The wc1et,,1!1 alknowlcJ~1ng that
thc poor ha'c not ~en a maJor
pwg1am pnunt~ to date," F iceman
~ml.
lie \.11d u~ ol ah;ohol anJ tobacco
a' \\Cll ,\\ in. Jtquatc nutnt1o n ma'
tnlrt:J\C the cancer ris~ among thl·
poor more lhJn other group\
Poor people 10\.u~ their conc<'m.,
on 1\\Ul'' ol J ;n ·to-da) sur"" .ii. not
on prc,cntion ol d1\C3~ ur eH'n ti'>
c.1rl)' ucll'l t1tin ·• hi: ad~kd
I r«nHtn nho t>t.imcd a lad. ol
mcd1lJI m\uranrc 1ncluJ1n 1\,frd1
,.ud
Later durtng the \Cmtnar l>r < •
~traHon I ltll Jr ~1d there JI'\'
1ntrt."t1'i1n1 report that man~ t.mn~r
pal1l'nts 1n pain. c ptt111l" tho v.1th
<hhanctd c.inn·r. arc not iictung
do'>l'' ol up1:u c n::m.:ottc' <ldrqu:uc 10
rcl1e\C th ·ir \uflrnn
( ullurotl .10t1-dru1 prc"ul'l"\ "1n
t1m1datc .. Joctor., into follo"ing tra·
ditmn and prescNhtl\S dh~" that arc ...
too \m,111 and '>hurt·l.t\t111g. \:lid H 111 t.1l.e an 1nl reJ'-1.'d rt\k ot brea<>l l.t1Kc:r
\1.-hodtrt'lhpain-contmldlorls Jt thl· and \hould ht: mo111torcd mun:
l 111,crc,11' ol I e\ai;' \1 D \ndl·~1n lardulh
( Jnll·r ( t.•ntcr 1n Hou.,1on \1.immogram\ U'>UJlh are u\1.-J to •· r hl' 1nadcq11atd\ rdll'' cU p.llrcnl detect brea\I c.:.lnlCt that .tlrcaJ\ hJ\
then tx·come'> a do.. k·\\il\chcr ''all· ~tancd In I Q76, a rad1olog1!l.t in· me 10 l'J@.Cf JnllllpJllOO for lhl' nl'\t' trodUl'Cd a "") Of da\ .. 11\ing
Jo\C "h"h at le.isl "'II tt•'l' '""'c "oml'n\ m.1mmogram image\ h' mod1rnm ot Jdd1twn.1I rd1cl,' ll11l n koldcH'loping1.ancerbascd on1hc
<.aid ··The dod·"3tt:hcr ho\\CH'I "' gcnl.'ral C\lcnt ol dl'n\1t1c\ -arcs-'
in JCOparth ut hc1ng labdC"d .a Jru that sho" up J'> ticint more den<.(
add1d b~ h.., or hl:narc·g1,cl"'I ·· than nor111al t.i11~ l:lrca .. 1 l1\Sue
8cc.·:iu\f man) dl>1.tors f)Crt·c1\l' But tanccr n-.l rnn ht' more
narrntlC\ a'> bad "thn are lrcqucnth prcct\l'I) dcterm1n<'d h) l 3kul.111ng
n-ser.,.cd for pain rd1ct as clo"4.! Ill the (X'rccntage lll the hn:a t Cllnl.iin·
death J S pm 1hlc.'' hl' ~11d . · fhe 11\g dl'n\lt1e!"> \<.11tla\ found b) 'lud)·
patient ma~ therefore um·r for rngmnmmoaramr,of1b6\\0ml'n"h0
\1sn1f1lJnt (X'rtel(h h(lorc the ph~' 1•,cntuall' c.Jc,dopl-d hrca\I can<.ct
1uJn lOn~1der\ him or her tcrmin.11 and 'Ill "ho didn'L
.rnd JU ulics Uc.l' ol n narcottl ·
l 1111 ~1d rno\t medical hool' do J
poor JOh cnun1ng doctors 10 1rc.11
lhrnnll p.un and man> ph~ 1c1an\
p1 C'>(. nbc narrnt1cs too cautmuc.I~ for
rear of grmna m trouble "'1th rcgu·
lat on agcnc.1e\ that 1>ften hd1c' l'
"n,m.otit: U'>(' "bad. no ma11rr \\-hat
lhl• 1ca\on ior their u..c " /
\I t> pc.il>.1ng at the ml.'t't1n~ "a"
\udre) tll:t , an cp1dermol~1.,t 011
1hc nauonal ( 1•nters for D1'>t.':t\t'
Control in -\tlant.1 She ou1hm•cJ .1
nl'"' mcthCl\I ol rntcrprcllnl mammn-gr.un \.-ra~ \ that I\ mort pr~'\ I'< lO
hc:lning d<X'lors 1dcn11f) \\Omro \\ho
\\. oml'n "11h ti JX'rH'lll nr morl' ol
their brta~t' \hO\\lng \kn tile'> "ere
.i ' ttm<" more h~ch to dl'\Clop brea t lJnccr luur \car. later 1han
"omen "'ho had ~l<.'n\lllt.'\ CO\t•nng
le" 1h n ~ pcrll.'nt ot 1hr hrta''' ''w ~~ .
l he cancer \CXtl'\\ l'\.'lOmmcn<l'> .1·
mammogram l'\CI) H'.lr or t"l> tor
"'omrn ag<.-s tu 0. anJ ilnnu31h tor
""onwn SO and old('r hut yo11n1wr
\Hlmcn al~ might grt ;annual mJm·
mogron' ti thq h:t\C h11h per·
Cl'nm l' ol dcn\11te . ~pokcsv.on1an
Joann ·hcllenbach ~•d.
Souttiland ~till faces water supply problems
,
"We hJ\C to 11kt a 1cp bad.'. from
1h1\ 1mmcd1atr rch f lhal J>t'Oplc •re ~ma 1n !IQme part\ oflhe 'it.Jlc "\afd
l 1m kro\c, .spokr\m.an lot thl'
Mctrupoh1.1n Water 01 tn t ot
\outhcm ('4htom1a .. tr v.c look ta lhr looser tenn·
Where 11re v.r ,mng 19 bt at the rnd of
the \umm<r'' he bri&hl p1cturt m:a'
not he that hri&ht "Siro.,.c 1o11d f\(f \V.U ca" Of drt>uJhl ~uMunt1lf rn."\lptllitlOn ID tht nonh•
cm Stem S~\ Ida dunna Mart"h
tunwd around tht "''*'°" at tome of tht rcteno1n tMI More nttr fot
ctd9 \'ff)' to the ~·" duri na t ti( ,um mer.
But mou of the "atcr for the
sublC'qutnt month' of faU and ~'lnttr "saOttd 1n tht ~ sno-· Ptd. i nd dw "'°* l*'k ,, lftnnl(. "l°ht (Vf)'O~ft' inlO M•I )'tat at
whal .we bliw 10 plan for ... said Paul
. cMd' iEliOM 111 "" D.~ ...... an
-.;-14.5 ... "' 1tl ...... ,. .• ,., ••lt't area.;
..... tftCOfttPRllH""' JOO a ttn
and un1n 01l)Q111C'd commun1t1r.,
·· , "t got rnou&h "~lcr \o &ct U'I
thmuah 1he \um mer. but v.1tl\Put lhl'I
'""" pacl "ecouldbcmtoa \hon \1tualt0n · \1 r sa1(.J
.\ Lo\ i\n1dc ~panmrnl of
Watn and Pov.er no"' pack \Ur\C}'
on 1t'> VtllttnhcJ lOO in tht' a tem
~1trra r ulttd 1n ft fortea t that total
runo0 for \pril through . Jl1Cmflcr
"111 he 6 pcr\;cnt of normal. ,
\nJ "~lcr <ontcnt of I~ \no-..
•luch u uall \UJ'Pllft 7> ~cnt ot the t it}·~ water ..... , found 10 ranac
from 1'1 pt"J\'tf\f of normal to 64
pe rcent.
Tht owr \11d '' W111 bu1. m tt .,,,er than uwal from tht MW() to otrttt tht Jhonfall and auuf'fd 1t\
l'\lttomttS of 1n ~ tuppf>
th~ tht iummtt. But Dmni• Welliam OWP t'ftll·
Mer of tht l~ ~ .,cdua • ufltd rarMVftll to .. wtttly" Utt the
1vititlble WMff. "Our rewrvou'\ •re
ltll ~d and °"' -"*" aft rvnn1..a to-...
\• .st •• ... S4
'I) u •• u !>I
H
6S
tO
tO H
I)
S1
SJ • 87 SJ '1 •• 7) • 47 ,,
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)4
1'
JO
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TI
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s• •• ,, ,,
Jl
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~1.
(I
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8t 'S'.
11 60 "' ., 86 bl H I~
711 61
71 !>I
6• ~8
54 :1
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SI ,7
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'l-;c..;;. .. ~ ... ;;;;-;..~·==·==·~·~ ........... .:.·~· .. ::c111i:1111.1U •
· mof( r~port
Surf r e port
UACHAa&A l0$~1t' '"""'• 0 '"9'° ..... , , Otrqo l.OUr'tl,
IAlf1 .....
l • "' } 4 tO , • 10.
s ... _ • .,,,_..... 1~ 10 !
lw .. 411111Wl fl I P • ,._ • ......... c.-, ..... ...
~~t .,..... -.,.......
Tide ~ ·
rooAY .. ' 7 •8•"' 2 t5pm
• 136pm
TWIOAY
Vwal lOw 1:sl•M ft<tl l"Gf\ 1 ~•Ill
S.Cond >ow I 3 I Om
Second lligll 1 51 p "' 5 •
Sun "'" IOdly ... 1 14 p "'· ,,_ luo•ws.ty M 6 J\ <Im M>CI WIS M 1 IS ~ pm ~
Moon W"tf lod.ly •I 4 +s p M , It rrte1 I ''°"'°"V al S I.I a rn llnO \~\ .OC. S S7 pm ~
]
I\
Here' the low-payment, low-
int.erest, no-~ way to increase
~ buying pow r. when YQU
need mon y, don't look any
farther than ·your own front door.
Just give us a call.
I "7•11.,..11
Great American
.~o•-.hlr*:" .
Orange L<>an C nt er {714) 6!3i -112i or ~
Fountain Valley L-Oln ~ (7M) ~ , •
-/'·
)
•
...
P60R QUALITY
ORIGINAL
D E A R
RE A DERS :
Today I am rcc-
ommendtn.& one
of the most useful
books J have read
an a Iona time.
This book was
written to help
people with low
self-esteem ac-
cept 1hemsclves and stop fechna like losers
·~ Dotl4llaS fr .... tl, eaecutlv• director . of the' YW~ con· ......... Herry aublt •nd Vida Dean, fonwer Style editor of tit•
Datty Piiot, on their receiving .. Y's Guy .. and achle veme'nt awards.
These chapter titles w1ll 11ve )QU an idea of what )OU
can expect to 'find between lhewven of "Who Do You
Think You Arc?" by Joel Wells. ·
-Pul Downs: Their Care and Feeding
Celebr:ation of excellence .. _ .
honors 10 dyna__mic women
By KAREN REED
Dally Nat Con'etpCNMfe• It
When.Ylc.KnigllLaprcsentec at Ihur;Sday~ht'
Tribute to Women of Achievement. started listing
adjectives includinJ ''dedicated," .. dauntless."
"dynamic." and "distinguished" in reference to
honoree Vida Dean, he could have been describing an~
o f the I 0 wo men recognized at the seventh annual
event sponsored by the YWCA.
mcnt of Chem1 stry.
" The Jaw category had t~o presenters, Justice
Shella Sonensbine a nd J udge Allcemarie Stotler. who
too turns le ingta eso 1 cir nen an co caguc
(and ho noree) Judge Judilb M. Ryan, ofihe Orange
County upcnor C'ourt
Presenter Floss Scbumac.ber introduced ans
recipient Ruth Dlngofln.mcas"adnvi ngforce in
bringing music and cultural enrichment to Orange
Count)." .
-The Killing Field of Adolescence
-Body Self-Image
-A Woman's Place Is ·
-The Senior Citizen and Self-Esteem
-Sclf-Estct;m for the Widowed and Di vorced
-Dealing with Imposed ExpcctatiGn~
-Positive Steps for Building Self-Esteei:n
"Trying to Jive up to parental and family expccta•
u ons." lt\e author writes, .. has m-adc millions of people
miserable. Too of\en, men and womfh1im! rh~l'fl~IVts Ir\
jobs they hale and they hale themselves for ~laying in
those jobs. They put themselves throush misery and
suffer from boredom as they dutifully follow family
·EUU&ls--beca~they-feel they-m·lKI~. ----
"We all arc programmed to plea.SC tho~ we care
about and those who care about us. But the plain truth 1s
that v.e do not have to do or be what others expect us to be.
Most of us can get closer to our real selves 1f we sort out
and dispose of 1he outda1cd and unrealistic expcctauon~
that other have imposed on us. The more bagga&e v.e arc
able to shed. the morr completely w1ll~-0meour own
person.·· More than 350gathcrcd at the lrvine Hilton and
Towers to pay homage to the women honored for
distinguishing ''themselves in diverse ways and
numerous fields," those wtlo "provide inspiration"
and are ·'role models" to at1.
YWCA board president Arlene Sontag d e sen bed
the honorees in her oJ>C?ning remarks as ··women of
courage, women ofvtsion,.women ofintegrit). ··
In government. ·antaAna Ma) or Dan Young
lauded C'1l) C'oJJnc1h' o m an Patricia McGuJgan for her
integnt). and Pat Krooe. C\lernal affairs manager of
Pacific Bell. shared her adm1rauon forQuynb Kieu.
M D .. rcc1p1ent 1n the mcd1c1necategof). (K1 eu. a
proud mother as y,elJ as a pcd1a1nc1an. brought her
daughters, hcr"thrce l1ttk v.omen" to the stage to
Vlr9tnla McDenwott •nd Judfe Judith M. ltJ•n were honcwed ffH bustne11 •rid law.
Too of\en ~e let v.hat v.e perceive to be our flaws and
inadequac1es lt mtt our potential for fulfillment and
c.onlcntmenl. This book tells us h<iw to free ourselves
. from such nepuve thanking. ~
.\c1or Rod Steiger &aid. '"The most important thin~ is
to be wha1e"er}ou are wtthout shame. It is not a quesuoo
of "hether }OU can be somebody You are somebody ..
There was one man on the pro~m. however.
Son~ presented Harry Babb, president and CEO of
Pacific Mutual Life Insurance Co., with the "Y's Gu )"
award. The presentation will be.made annuall) to a
man of distinction who has demonstrated support for
the YWCA 's effon s.
But that was the end of the.evening. First things
first. Lee Rel.nke-Brlgbt served as emcee for the event.
introducing the presenters, all of wham are as eqwMIY
distinguished as the winners(many-were..past wmners
themselves).
Dr.P egy.Buseu ,seniorminister, Huntington
Beach Church of Religious Science.. presented the
Excellence Award in business to the 1988 event emcee.
Vlr~ McDermott. McDermott, who has now
rctiied from her executive position at Allergan
Pbannaccuticals(because she recommended the
company eliminate her job). declared proudly to the
crowd, "So. rm 48 and I'm retired-What do you
think about that.?" It certainly won.'t be the last we h~ar
ofMcDermott.
hare the m om ent.)
Lauded for herc\rellence in communicat1o ns.
Vida Dean. the former t ) le l'<hlorc>fthc Dall)' P1lo1.
l'loqucntl) expressed how apprcc1auvc she v.as to be
honored along w11h so man) oflhe people she had
written about over the )cars.
YW boar·d membcrEllenSeveronl prcsentcd
the excellence award 1n religion to SisterCarmeo
Saratl. followed b) Bernice Hird's presentation to
Gwe.ncla Watson in tbc.d1stmgwshedcommunit.)
service category. Watson is recognized for coord1·
naungthc Y'scenrenn1al project. a traveTin~displa) on
the founding women ofOrangcCpunt) entitled
"Lcgac) ofC'ouragc." (Pacific Mutual. thanks 10 Harl)'
Bubb. undel"\\ rote that prOJCCt).
The final wo men's <rwarcl,.""orld peace. was
pre~nted by YWC .\board member Lee Steelman to
Lyn H1rris Hicks. Before lea ving the podium. Hicks
reminded the audience. "The true peace is 1n the doing.
in the proccs-. ...
If your bookstore doesn't have ··who Do You Think
· You Arc?" by Joel Wells. send a check or money order for
S7.9.S (plus S 1..0.S for postage and handhna) to: Tho mas
More Press. 20.S W. Monroe t .. 6th Floor: Chicago. 111.
60606. • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: A wblle back yo1 laad a
wonderf1I col1ma. abo1t tile fatlllon iadHtry aad llow
· 4lffic11t it Is to set deceat aarmea ts tut are well·made
ud fit property. TM womu wllo complalae4 1ai4 •k
waa Malia&• IO llitel' oW clodles becaue lk CMWa't fla4
uytlllq aew IMt site wuted t9 ky. rm .. Mr C.rMr.
Wlliln, lf ever, will , ... ,.~elri 1• Ht of style?
T•y we see peefle wearta& fa dealm. ten putt ud
overalls everywllere -evn IO chm. I sec folb • tlle
1tree1 will! Jad&ets t•l"H4 lall41e Mt, bectnrm1 u4 tiff
a rou4 llle£r Mps. Youc ,trls tale over-tlleir fat11er•1
1lllrt1 u4 lllelr ltrolllel''s dorts. Tiiey wear Jeulal t1toet
wldl formals u4 &YID todls widl Ptla dresses.
Wa.&t a.&PMM4 IO looklaf alee? Wiiy d•'t tttu1e
&iris comll ~11' Mir uymore. It seems die messier daey
llok, die belltt tkf lib It. Have t.Uved teo I-a?. -
Q~I,) RAPIDS READER · For education, UCI Chancellor Jack Peltason
extended the prestigious plaque to one of bis own.
Marjorie Cuerlo. Ph.D., chairman ofUCl's Depart-
Mary Godlaeicha1red the $60-per-person e' enl.
assisted b} Rcinke-Bnlht. Jackie Ross, Jady Carter,
JaqaellaeJeasen,Mary Vardeand YWC A e\ecut1\.C
d1rcctorMary Douglas. Rudt Dt~ with pr•••nt•r Ple11 Schu·
macher, 11 • • drlvlnt force for the arts.··
. OEAR GRAND: Don't des~1r. E'erything socs in
cycles. One.of these years v.c1rd will be outand neat Wlll be
in. h can't happen ~n enoua,h as far as I'm concerned.
HHIDf,I
By CHARLES GOREN
and OMAR SHARIF
ANSWERS TO WEEKLY
Bl;lll>GE QUIZ
Q.1-Both vulnerable, as South you
hold:
•K.93 Q AQ I0952 0 7 •AXQ
The biddina has proceeded:
So.ti! Wnt Nortlt East
1 \) Pua 1 NT r ..
f
What do you bid now?
A.-Playin1 in hearts, your hand is
wonh 20 points. Panner should
: have at ..Jcast 6 HCP for his re·
• sponse, and probably at least two
heart• to ajve you an eight-card fit.
1 So bid what you think you can
make-four hearts.
• Q .l-As South, vulnerable, you
, hold:
: •Ql"3 Q 93 OAQ9 •A0 16 j The biddina has proceeded:
, Sotltll Wat Nortll East i; • r.. I Q Pus
'. What do you bid now?
•Klt9 Q N2 0 Alt3 •A01'4
The bidding has proceeded:
So•tll West Nor111 £ul
l • Pass I ., Pau
l NT Pua l T r ..
1
What action do you take?
A.-Witb only J3 HCP, it miJht
seem judicious to pass. However.
the point count doest 't do your
band full justice. Your prime carch
are undervalued and yo1 have excel-
lent intermediates. Jn addition, your
heart frapnent means ~rtner's suit
i1 a potential source ot tricks. Bid
three no trump.
Q.5-As South, vuln~rable, you
hold:
•A6 'V KQ1ts4 AQ.16 •JO
I .. 'ti. BOl D Supersonic .
world tour
tab: 539,000
LONOON (AP) -Author
Wilham F. Buckley Jr. and
fellow vo>a.sers who paid
$39,000 ~r ucke1 lcfl Saturda)
on a supersonic tnp around 1hc
I Does your expense account
_include a·ny psychic income?
world. •
Q What'\ "p,~ch1c income"?
A Job \lll1\fact1on other 1han
monC) and fr1n,se If )OU JUSt lo'c
)Our work. tha l p )Chic tnl·omc .\
nc~ peak 1erm
Buckley 1s leading the 38.343-
milc, 22-day tnp aboard a
Bnush Alrwa.}s Con corde JC.I..
with supersonic hops a her-Hard to h~e a man ~ho pronounce\
nating wnh stopovers in cw ... Becllcbub" correct!). 1\n't 1t?
York: Acapulco, Mexico: n
Lanka; Tahiti: Australia and
o ther points. said airhne
spokesman Ken Cook.
Concordcs have circled lhc
globe before but not u 1n1
supersomc speeds for each leg or
for that distance. Cook said. He
&aid the jet could break more
than a dozen speed records. but
Something I find hard to grasp 1s
1hat a bird can Oy non top throughout
its first fi, e )cars The $001} I.Cm does
that Thereafter, 11's old enough to
male. so f11e'i for c1gh1 months annu~Uy, and island hops for four
months in search of romance. wn of
like a sailor.
he did not name them. "Peo~lc who blu h don·1 get hean
Ounng the trip. Buckley attacks. • ave~ a doctor. who
planned to broadcast his tclc-admits he can't pTO\C 1t.
vision show "Firing Lme" from Cape Town, South Africa. and Q.Can }oudotwo th1ngsa1 onccon
Sydney. Au tralia, Cook said. an ordinal) personal compute~ Cook said that Lorraine A. lnd(cd "Mult11ask1ng" t what
stands till''
.\ The point meteor isn't tandtnJ
still 11·~ com1n1 straight at )Ou
\mong 1hc more dan1erou JObs 1n
Chinn 1s that of tall colfcctor. Report
l'i police now accom~ny thc:m on
thr1r rounds
the same dot patterns u tod:ly's d1cr.
Made befott 3.000 8 .. those. With
oppo~11e tdes adding up to 1t\'en
You·~e heard the robin is the
harbmaer of spnni. But hue )OU
ever heard of some o~r harbinier of
1n)ithtnJ el5e? c1thtt ha'e J. Fine
1t0ord. barb1narr As Jood as fortrun·
nCT, ceru1nl). Could 5ef' c 1 n multiple
mannefl But isn't otherwi5e u!('d, 1
it'> The robin mu t ha'e 1t rqi1terrd
C'unou how many of the people,
v.ho know Rhode Island 1s the
smalle l st.ate. don't lr..now that Otla-
ware is the scoond maJlest. ,
Did I mention more people fall
upstau1 than downstairs.,
A.-Althouah you have a balanced
minimum, this is not the hand for a ..,~rebid of one no tnunp. Make it a
rule never to bypus a four-card
majcw; if you do happen to have a
4--4 fit, it is the l1JOlt nexible con-
tnct of all to handle. Rebid one ....
The biddina has procec4:1ed:
EMI S..111 West Nort.11
•• 0.1 ......
2. f
What action do you ta c.
A.-Partncr doesn't ve mucb,
buf you need little more han lenatb
in one of the red suits compete
Cffecdvely for a putsco , especial-
ly lhlce the tins of cl bl is wdl
locmled behind opener. be way to
Travel Bureau or Miami char-the nerd call 1hat. M1cro~n·s Win.
tercd the JCt and that all 100 dow~ doc 11 with some related
seats for the tour had been sold proaranu. Quarterdeck\ lXskV1cw
out. wnh most passenaen start-does tt with countless unrelated
ma from New York. provams Print lct1crs.1 ~nd phone
The $39.000 ucket pncc _ messaacs. updarc databases. even as
per person, double occupancy, }OU l)J>e 1010 )'our word proc~r.
as they sa)-induded all hotels Pretty nifty. ' .
In unprc:ml-d1totcd crimes of
pa ion. which assa1lan1 deserve
acqumal and which conv1ct1on?
Roman poet Horace might have
found all such innocent by reason or
insanity. He said. "Anter 1 momen·
tary madne ... Tbc Jaw ha been
truaahna v.1th lh1 one 1nce the
beginnini.
Q.' What's the oJdt'st cont1nuou ly
occupied b11 metropolis.,
A Istanbul claims that dm1nction.
lrt clubroom banter between 1 heart
suracon and a anal lawyer, the
suracon uiid, I don't cla1m all )Ou
laW)en a.re crooks. but you mu t
admit )our ~n dottn't make
a.,1, of mm.. La~ said, No,
)OU Ve tot US lbtte. UW)'tn tend to
w1nthotrexcflaners.
Am toad mothef'S..in-law still attn't
any 100 fond ofthat comJ)Ound word
mothtt-in·liw. I 11y still becautt lhc)
werm't any too fOnd or it bKk in !~; rithtt. Thm. a arc>uP of 11me
!IO'."Pl IO find a new *rm. ThC') Q.J-:AI South, vulnerable. you
ltold:
· •13 Q Al'7 ON •AQIJMJ
The biddiaa bu proceeded: .
...... W• N_.. ._ ..........
12• ... l • .... .,
What aCdoa do JOU tab?
.A.-lf ....,... ba a diamond ...
per. three DO trump cou&d be IQ·
clOwn; at worst, It will be on a na-. The way to adviM J*lner
of tM problem ii by bkldlai ...
..... If ....... a cl•moed •opps •
.. Wiii COllvert to *'e DO tnuDp. If Ill_., rtturna to four dubl. JOU
Wll Mft to toea ID tbe tow.I. but
,_ • have done JOUf ,Oto .. to .....
pt putner to pick his er red suit
is to double lpin. Si he hun't
bid, it's .UU for takeou
ind meals as wcll 11 a safari in • Afncl and cruises 10 '.f abi&i, _ ~ Q What the difference between
• Aa.pulco and New Zealand. f 1n ordinary meteor. that streaks
' -· KroM the sky 1nd 1 point meteor that
:L:::-V OMMll , .....
ARID (March 21-April 19t. SGmeth1na 11 bril\I kept hidckn. lnvolvn
work .• prasutt, lona-ttandina finanaal obliption. Older C'1pnrom native will provide kfi. A~I dtfeat will be trantformed into rousana VK"tory.
TAUllVI (April 20-Miy 20):
Study Ariel me z · You11 be ••tt· aeed .. from foor obi· tion. Moon
polttion MUDts cele'C.tion. ro-muc:e, deli'-CmocionaJ ftalftllment.
Speculative venture pays "bis mo~~-~wer: Affirmative. ·OSMINl(Maf 21.June 20): Buta· w. ~ lituauoa will have ··new
.... " ......... -11..ri ltirft Wllb • will be ftllftled -1n *-*k ...... Foa11 on illitielive. aid*"
It aJso .claims 10 have 11ven the orld
the tuhp, table fork ana Turk1 h beth.
sOme of IM oktnt dice ~nown hid =~-:...~~
t
WCMJIMMI , .. ,,_ ....
0UCA00 -NCMb.ias bdPI
I( •• , ...... -=--Mart =._~moo.;~
bowl ol oac bru iaaad to t.ft.a.\en their brtatfllll -..... . ... ...
CC*"'"" cravias for the husk of Oie oet terDel bll opened up a whole new~ for cimaJ makers and tUeR: critics dw1e lblt
iftedy food COm..P9:Jlics are un·
icrupUlously capilall.Zina on I.he c-00-
MIDCf crue. .
Alllolt I II! ycan have pueed SIDCC ta; .a-«aa boom ho-on• • 'led '-• ..:.a_ ,., •• _..__ . -~! • lllU . u7 ICaellu~ MUUl!R luu.K;11u.ftl that JUtl over an ounce of oet bran eaten daily u pan of a low-fat diet ·could help • prevent bean 1ttacks. •
.. We have not rcaUX seen any
Wlc.keruaa •n demand. said Ron Bottre9.t__~._spekesman for Chicaao-
bued \lUUCT Oats Co., the nation's w,m oat miller and producer of oat
. bran cereal. "~t's a mov1na llrget.
You keep addina capacity, but dc-
mend keeps increasinc too." Quaker 1s produana a malbon
pounds of oat bran a month, com-
pared with a million paunds .a year
only two years aco, and plans to
introduce a new oat bran cereal this
sprina, a cold variety to complement i u bot varlet y.
Its Cedar Rap1ds, Iowa, plant 1s -mllini-oartnncdeaJ 24 holiii"I
day, and Quaker is cons1dcnng add-
ir11 producuon lines at its other
plants.
Meanwhile, competitors are 1ump-
ina on the bran wagon this sprini. .i.ocl~ Nabisco Foods Co. of Pani~y. NJ, and St. Louis-based
Ralston Punna Co.
.. W.e don't see it tapering off," said
Nabitc0 spokeswoman Caroline Fee.
.. The nse in papulanty as just
L':!OIDellll. IWoea ... -.. be.
HeanditcUeud~····· ol .,_., ~ IO di'I\,-.... W.t.
Md &o the e<DI OM Ina CU llilp. neither= com..-. rw. .. To t froin 09l braa, ~
don't bave it oae ~and tMl"I
iL It hu to be"" ofa did," fee laid.
The maaic Of oat tllD ll tbat it ii one of the best knowli IOW'teS ol
soluble fiber, wlaicll reduces
cholesterol in the blood -alone with 11 risk ofhean dil II C. Beenl likt
pinto. kidney and navy; jiJyllium, ~
seed &rain; noe bran; Ud fft.itt witb ~m. like apples and ifapdrv.it, are
good sources
"We estima\e about balf a cup of
cooked beans can Iowa cholesterol
by about the ~ amount 11 a bowl
of oat bran," said Bonnie Liebman,
n'1trilton director of lbe Ccn\er for
Science in the Pubhc Interest. "The
bean ~pie don't have the bucks. ..
The industry 1s not as adept at
advenu1na. You don't bear about it. buttbat doesn't mean 11 won't work."
One of the most imponanf studi~
of oat bran found that people with
normal blood cholesterol levels who ~t on a low-fat diet reduced their
cholesterol levels by about 5 percent
But if their diets included 2 ounces of
oat bran or oat meal, the chol~rol
levels dropped 8 percent to 9 percent.·
Dietitian Linda Van Hom. who led
the st°"[; at Nonhwesttm Omvers1ty
Medaca School, said the difference 1s significant. Every J j)crccnt decline in
blood cholesterol fsl>eliev~ to t'C$Ult in a I percent to 2 percent reduction
in hean attack nsk.
Oat bran benefits can be more
dramatic for peoplC'>with hi&h blood
cholesterol, who may see a 13 percent
to 19 percent reduction when on a
low-fat d1et that includes an oat bran
muffin or a bowl of oat bran daily,
To lose weight, you
must burn fat calories
Last Wttk we explored the fa.I lacy of
very low calone dieting. so common-
ly u5Cd in Vte1&ht loss clinics, as a tool
for weiaht loss and we1&ht control.
These regimens make ilic problem
worse; they shut down the body's
enersy production and result in fhe
ye>-)O syndrome: the tendency to
m\'lin more .,et&ht than was lost.
For many, low caloric regimens
freeze che body's fat stores makina
them resistant to-almost every pro-
gram. If you have "been successful"
on a low calone diet reaimen in the put.~urchanocs of succ:css a second
or thard time are much less.
There is a way out of this quagm ire.
but it reqwres some mental flexibili-
t ou wall bavc to diJcard the
ven behef that "calone con-
cquals ••wei&ht control"
lt is not the amount of calories but
tbe type of calories that causes
obesity. The l:>9dY stores fat calories
rapidly and efficiently. but, contrary
to popular belief, docs not efficiently
conven carbohydrate or protean
calories to fat. ·
So, to shorten a lo"land 1ntercstma story, successful wea&ht control has two pnnc1ples: Stop stonng fat. start
bumina fat.
To stop stonna rat. 1mpl) top
e,af1n& fat calones. Be cspcc1all>
d1b,ent al roding labels and
ehm1natma those foods wtth signifi-
cant fat caiones.
A few da)'s aao. I was counseling a
woman who has ~n dieting for )cars
aftd now can't lose no mattcr\\.hat she
does. She tearfully upla1ncd that she always uses "low calonc" s:ilad
drus1na. but 1111 _pm Ho"evcr,
tberc 11 a baa dulcrtncc 10 "low
calone" l&lad dttuina and .. non-fat"
salad dress1na. ~low caloric var-
~Y may be reduced caloncs. but 1he
calones are still pnmanly fat.
This lack oL. undcntuchna u
widespread and as • pf'imary reuon
Dnll a Alcohol Referrala 1-800-322-3363
Monday -F'r1day 8am -1 Opm
Call Toll hee Uld 8ecara ~ad Alcobol Freet The Reaource ~ntcr • Help• a.._. Call Away
f'.-Prof I 'gmel IDlonM'tlall a ltelern1 AnlJ'uoace
TIM' AaOurtt Cenlft' Is. C'OUl1ty·wtdt • Community~ U~t pt'VYtcb CM follow1~ 1CMce
• ~Ille -1 ~ IUUll ~ *" • I» I 1000 G11Ssa '*'• • cnM•:siG 1n.rt11 •........ 100, s t'ta ...... ...
... ·-~ ~ ........ IC*. ........ .....,, ..., / blllld,.,.,, ............. _,_......,, ............... ~
......,~....,,.,..._,,.,. •••was . .....,.. ...........
•
Orenge Coe9t DAILY PILOTIMoftder, ~ 3, ..
ne~ilrilii·W-. McllECtheGll ......... _Jm become .. h)'lllrical,.. .. DiWI
Lieclerlll••. •o ::rt" a !'Ill! cooW.makJnt -1th -mullaa and GOW eeUt 7$,000 a-*
Oil dae East a.a.
...... If we had the produdlOll:s
wt could eell a couple of U Uedmnaft. Whole I ~ty Foodl lac. look~it was fatured i• a New Yn amcle about oet bran in •
Even tboQlh he is -tm--preccdented~ 1uccet1. ... decries ''corporaee peed ,_ ......
and oat-bran ~ that ._. .._
from 40 cenu i.o $2 per= ··cor{>Orate food-~ i.lt advcnu1na oat bran every minute Oii"'"
national television." but mudl olit is ··mi11u1dcd" or "medically ir-
responsible," he said. ...Companies
arc makt~ claims that have no buis in rcalit)'.'
"It doesn't do uybody aAj'-toOO to
Stll people oat bran mufthll with
vams and grams or ounoes and
ounces of fat and lots of calories, and
tell them it's aoina to lower t6eir
cholnterol. ·• said Liedemwt who
lost I 09 pounds and cut his bmood-
cholesterol level in half on a low-
cholestcrol, high-fiber diet.
Consumers also may be lttU1'1
low-quaticf tJr , JCS-Willliiii-
DOUG eoa ..... n watches boxes ot Quaker
Oat Iran c.... off the~ lln• nth•
Queller Oats SKodUCClon plant tn_ Cedar
Rapkla. Quaker now prodfi'C•• a mllllo.n
~und1 of oat bran • Month and .... , have
rl .. n J11 percent durtft9 ttt• rear. •ut .,esttons NY• Men rafted 8bout ttte
health value of th• contpany•1 product.
Aufritht o Arrowhead Mills. a natu-
ral foods company bated in lfemord.
Texas.
Such bran is tncreasinaJy likely to
enter the U.S. market as manu&c-
turcrs rely on more impons to fill the
gap lef\ by a 40 peroent drop in U.S •
oat producuon caused la.r&cly by the
1988 drou&ht. accord1n1 to a study 1n last Apnl's
Journal of the Amencan Medical a lot ol oat bran inside,.. s~ud a lot of bran in them and tho~~ h1ch Liebman, have little Oat bran should contain 25 pm::ent,
to 30 pcrccRl soluble fiber, Aufricht
wd.. Some. foreign oat bran bis
compan)' '"'esuptedconta.ioed.only I 0 percent. By compuison, whole
oats co ntain about 8 percent soluble
fiber
AsS0C1at1on. ·
As httleas 34gramsofoat bran -a
hltle more than an ounce -have
been fou.od to produce · the cholcsterol-lo"'enng etTect in sc1en-
t1fic studies.
But that knowledge may IX' or 11tue
help to consumers facina torrents of
advenisma hype and a Jungle of new
oat-bran products,
"Ju t because the word ·oat bran' is
splashed across the fro nt of the
package, doesn't mean you're getting
ft an take more than a dozen servin~ a da)' of some foods to ~
benefits. And some products arc full of highly saturated fats -lard, beef
tallow. palm 0 11. butter. coconut oiJ
-14-h1cb may dnvc up blood· chole terol levels more 1han the o:it
bran lowers them .
.. Check the label." warns Liebman.
whose Washington-based group pub-
h hed a ltst of oat bran etrcals b)
brand rttently to help consume~
choose between produc~ which have
The group has e .. cn complained to
the Federal Trade Commi 1on~tha1
Quale.er exaueratcd the cholestcrol-
lo"'enng potential of oatmeal tn ad
and label~
The FTC' has "backed off" fl'IU· laung ad"ertmng. but a ta k force of
stale attornt')sgrneral that focuse on
health and nutnt1on 1 tn\e'ltJP,Ung
the complaint. ~1d Bru«' S1l"cr-
glade, kgaJ d1m:tor for the con umer
group. ,,, .
The problem 1s unhkely to cue
"1th sales of oat bran cereals havina
risen 21 S percent over the JJ91l 12
months. and wnh oat bran'°'"' into
t' cryth1ng from pancake mu tu.
animal crackers to potato chips.
Aufncht joked, "Man. you've aot
to 10 out and atl )Our oat bran
paps1 !cs or you're not h.ip:·
Effects of divorce orl kids muSt be weighed :
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By SOftN ANDEltSRN
llllCC ............
Here arc capsule reviews of current motion pictures
plaYlna in this area ·abat weren't hyped durina Oscar
week: • " THE ADVENTURES OF B ARON
MUNCHAVSEN: Terry Gilliam is a filnwist'a IUiasist,
a man who makes movies unlike anyone cltc's. ''J~bbcrwocky," "Time Bandits," 0 8ruil," and now
"Tile Advcnturts ofBaron Munchausen" all have a raw,
almost primitive feel to them that demands your
attention and a wildly imqinative look: that commands
respect. T.he $40-million-plus .. Munchausen" de;·
fantasy locked in mortal combat with soul-num ·
reality, with the baron of the title, a iceendary 18
Century teller of tale tales CEnalisJi state actor John
Neville plays the part) being f'llntasy's champion, and a
smirking bureaucrat (Jonathan Pcycc) being its cbief
opponent. The action careens boisterously from .a
magical city on the moon (ruled by a manic, head!~ Rob~n Williams) tb the bell y of a sea serpent to the
accompaniment of lusty shouts and deafening
p~tcchnics. An astonishing picture from a filmmaker
with unique gifts. (PG) {; •
BILL AND TED'S EX ELI.ENT ADVENTURE: Seet The movie born without a brain! Hear! The word
"dude" spoken around a thousand times. As in.
"Excellent, dude!" And "Wow, dude!" Writhe! Watch it
in the knowledge that this movie aboµt a couple oftime-
traveling teenage halfwits was one of the genuine hits of
the sprin~· of '89 while far ~orthier pictures like "True '
Believer' quiclcly sank with scarcely a ripple. Like, there
is no justice, dude! (PG)
Allen, and Fra~is Coppola. Each mu'• ~~~rk
alttftllha anit fliws arc on d•tPW.1 1n thete nwumovin.
aU of which mT far from the filmmaken' belt wotk.
Allen ·s ptett, .. Oed1e._us W reeks." 11 an u1ended Jewish·
mother j_oke. Mae \/~tel (the woman wbo was the
voiec ofBetty Boop 1n the '30s)doc1 a hilanous tum as
the mother. and Allen pla~s the harried son. ·•Life
Without Zoe," the Coppolaiilm,\s the moa11naubstan·
taal of the lot. It's an ovcrp~uced character s1udy of a
rich New Yot1t 12-year-old (HeaLher McComb) who's
too precocious for words and too shallow to~ believed. Only Scorsese's film. ··ufe Lesson ," has nap and an ~ of danger to it. Nick Nolte gives a supcrcharaed
pttfonnance as an obsnsivc artist tryina to come 10
terms with the breakup of his affair with a much younerr
woman (Rosanna Arquette). The story 1s p(edictable but I
the Nolte character 1s compclJina. which is why this
picture stands head and shoulders abo'le il$ two 1
companion piccis. (PG)
THE RESCUERS: This Disney animated film
about a couple of plucky mice (voices by Bob Newhart
and Eva Gabor) sent to rescue a kidnapped little orphan
girl is good Disney, but not great Disney. The viltamess, a.. carrot-lopped harridan with mean green eyes
(GeraJdioe Page supphed the voice~. 1s a classic Disney
ev1l-quecnstepmothcr figure, shrieking and cackJinaand
easily overshadowing the forces of aood whenov~r she's
on the screen. There are a few giddily effective sbow-
stopping scene,, the best of which stars a frenetic
mustached dragonfly who serves as a sort of Jet-
propcllcd bayou gondolier. Because the two lead
characters are so bland. the picture lacks the ef-
fervescence of a true 01 ney classic (G) THE 'BURBS: A f::'a~ky, seriously unfunny comedy abo.uu.J,roup_o ci hbors (Tom Hanks
Rick Ducommun and Bruce mt who jump through
all kinds of hoops and commit all sorts of property
damase in an effort to find out what the strange,
reclusive family down the street 1s up to. Arc they aliens?
Are they murderers? Are they alien murderers? Director
Joe-Dante ("Explorers." "Gremlins .. ) fills..1he picture
with manic, pointless energy and leaves the actors with·
nothing to do but shriek and break things. In so doing, he
manages to underutilize Hanks, an almost criminal
waste of talent. The story has no shape and makes no
sense, because the first thing any upstanding. law-
abiding suburbanite would do if he suspected his
nei&hbors of ha vi ng killed one ofh1s friends would be to
calf the cops. This Hanks and Co. do not do, because 1f
they did, there would be no reason for them to quite
literally tl'ash the neighborhood. which is the whole
By .. lld...., -eef, lerrNtrd fvolce by Bob l et out In •••rch of• kidnapped glrl In '-Yhe
Newflartl anti .,.nc• fvoke by •v• G•borJ Rescuers:• • Disney fll111.
SKIN DEEP: After "A Fine Mess," "That's Life,"
'BhnODate, anc:f unset,""One no onger expects
anything from Blake Edwards other than fiasco. "Sic.in
'Deep" docs no1 disappoint that e~pcctatjon. This 1s a
completely unnecessary movie. cloning as •l docs the
basic plolJioeofEdwards' earlier"The Man Who Loved
Women." In both, a compulsive "'omanizer's com~
pulsion makes a shambles out of his life. The major
djffercnce between the two pic1ures 1s that "The Man
Who Loved Women" is occasionally hilarious and
.. Skin ~ .. 1s not. Also. in .. The Man Who Loved
Womeh." itsstar, Burt Reynolds. 1s an engaging fellow
despite all his flaws. ''Skin Deep's" star. John Ritter. is
not. (R) •
point of "The 'burbs." (PG-13) ·
CHANCES ARE: Blandness reigns in this corned)'
about a husband reincarnated as a callow law-school
grad (Robert Downey Jr.) who then romances hjs own
widow (Cybill Shepherd). The couple's college-age daughter (Mary tuart Masterson) fafls for her rcC)cled
fathef (not knowing; of course. that the young man is
really her old man). Confusing enough for you? It
apparently is for Ryan O'Neal, who wears a look of
pained incomprehension throughout most of the movie.
He pllfys the departed husband's best buddy. who's been
nursina an unrequited love for his pal's wife/widow for a
decades, a circumstance that adds yet another layer of
confusion to the story. O'NcaJ, Masterson and Shepherd
smile prettily and frown becomingly, but never really
establish them~lves on screen. h's left for Downey to
carry the picture's freight, which he docs, with a winning
innocent eagerness. (PG}
COUSINS: This remake of a 197 5 French comedy
"Cousin. Cousine" means well but it lacks the spark and
lightheartedness of the onginaJ -the very quahties that
made the picture remake bait in the first place. In both
movies, the spouses of two philanderers decide to
'I'\ l .ISTI 'GS
pre(cnd to have an affair themselves to make the
phjJanderers Jealous. One thing leads to anothe11. and
soonihe "goodu·twosomefall deeply in love-and run off
together. In the onginaL they did so with no regrets and
no backward looks. Jn the remake there is a lot of soul-
scarching and longing. hopeless glances (don't worry
though, there's a happy end mg by and by). The members
of the cast. headed by Ted Danson and Isabella
Rossclhni. give careful performances, but everything 1s a
little forced and more than a little cloying. If the ongjnal
was a sollffie. the remake is poundcake. (PG-13)
DEAD BANG: Another cop movie. this one with a
television-series star in the lead. "Dead Bang" possesses
an unexpected abundance of grit and downbeat
mtegnty, which makes 1t stand out in this too-familiar
genre. Director John Frankenhc1mer ("The Man-
churian Candidate," "52 Pickup") has taken "Miami
Vice" glamourpuss Don Johnson and turned him into a
highly credible down-on-hi~luck hero. Johnson plays a
Los Angeles homicide detective who 1s a classic burn-
out case. With a failed marriage. wino stubble, broken
glasses, indifferent hcaJth, and terribl~ hangovers
{beware the movie's oon-to-be-notonous up-chuck
scene) this cop also happens 10 be one dogged
manbunter. The wh~s and wherefores of Johnson's
cross-country search for a white-supremacist cop killer
arc often confusing. thanks to a poorly constructed
SMpt and some gaptnB plot holes. But Johnson's
portrayal. of determination under stress. plus Frank-
enhe1mer's pared-down d1 rec11ngs tylc. save th e da\. (R)
FLETCH LIVES: Chevy_ Chase lazes through the
se_<tucl to a I 985 comedy, ''Fletch." the last movie in
which the star showed any signs oflife on the screen. In
this one, crack newspaper ln,estigat1vc reporter l.M.
Fletcher inherits a crumbling Lowsiana plantation and
is S<>on up to his notepad in half-wit cops, kom ical
''I s:oo I &:~ I 1:00 I 1:30 I a:oo I a:3o I s:oo J s:3o l1o:oo l10:3ol11 :oo l11:3o l
D ~
D
..... Fllh111111. Call
KJansmcn, dim followers of a smam1y television
evangelist, and a couple of beaotiful womrn (one of
them dead). Through it all, a slight, supcnor smirk. ne ver
leaves Chase's face as his character outwtts with
effonless ease the rubes and scoundrels who surround
him. Every plot deve lopment is greeted with a quip, and
usual!)' a weak quip at that. Chase has played this same
type of smug character so many times before-that he
probably can do him iA his sleep. Come to think of it.
1udging by the amount of energy he expended here,
maybe that'sexactl y what hed1d m "Fletch Lives." (PG)
LEAN ON ME: This is the lightly fictionalized story
of Joe Clark. the bullhorn-toting principal whose hea vy.
handed disciplinary style cleaned up a troubled inner-
ci ty school and won the praise.Df Ronald Reagan an the
P.roce s. It's directed b} John A valdscn ("Rocky," both
'Karate Kids") with his usualbombast. which m th1
c~se means that the picture spends its whole length
defining the hero at the top of its lungs. Morgan
Freeman's portrayal of Clark reminds you of Lou
Gossett's turn as the domineeri ng sergeant in .. An
Offrc.er all~ a Gentleman," except lhat this character llas
even less charm than that one. A one-note,. stndent picture. (PG-11}
NEW VORK STORCES: A cinema sampler of works
by three top U.S. directors: Manin Scorsese. Wood>
TROOP BEVERLY HI~: Call this comedy
"Revenge of the Megabucks Nerdettcs." A troop of
Beverly Hills Wilderness Girls (read. Gari Scouts) shake
off theJ~TS and taunts of their commoner compatno\.s
and show the ¥.-orld thal they can ~ traipse through the
woods equipped wtth designer backpacks and bottles of
designer water and not onl} survive but, yes. triumph
too and prove to the world that deep down inside they re
1ust plain kids. Su·u-ure they are. Actually. the kids are
minor characters. The main focus 1s on their troop
leader. played b) Shelley Long -a shopaboltc Beverl)
Hills matron who finds a purpose 1n her hfc (and saves
her mamage in the process) by teaching her young
charges such surv1 val skills as Jewelry appraisal and how
to select the best salon for a facial. It's light. n's shght. 11
pla)'s like the pilot for a sitcom (PG)
UnitedArtis~ts sold for ST· billion
Compfled from l"Hot wlr~ servlcn
LOS ANGELES -The Qintex
G roup's . Amencan entertainment
d1v1 ion has announced its a~u1 s1-
t1on of Los AnJeles-based United
Artists for$ I billion.
On1tcd Ani ts (UA) 1s one of onl)'
seven major film studios and hbrarie
1n the world. wtth a stock of more
than 4,000 thea tncal films, including
unique continuing ~rics such as
"James Bond," "RO<'ky-and .. Pink
Panther" -and recent cadcmy
Award winners including "Rain
Man."
UA also o~ns the world's largest
home video company, which last year
in the United tales alone old more
than 8 million units. In addition to
UA 's slrong domestic distnbutaon
network. the company is a one·third
hareholder in nucd lntcrnat1onal
Pictures (UIP). the world's large.st
d1stnbutor of theatrical films.
The complicated structure of the
deal actual!Y has Quintcx buying
MGM/UA Communic.11on Co., the
owner of Untted Artists. Qantcx is
MUOA CIMMA 70t L &.illOI IMl__ •IS •lJJO ............. .,,,,
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Cotta Me a ·
then reselling the MGM library of 34
films. the MGM name and
trademark. the tclcvisaon pro-
duction subs1d1ary and other a~c;cts
to Trac1 nda, the maJor shareholder of
MGM. for $250 m1lhon.
When added to the cash within L'A
and proposed equ1!)' in vestment of
$75 million in the Q1ntcit Group by
MGM. the net effective cost will be
rcduc.ed by approlimately $400
m1lhon. Fmancma of the ba.lance \\111
come from a comb1 nation of offshore
equity and borrowina,.~.
()pcrauog revenue~ of UA in lhc
current )Car arc fore lll at approx-
imately $5()() rnllhon, Wllh JroSS
opcraungca h OowofSJ SO m1ll1on
The potential comb1nat1on of the
businc of United rt• t and
Q1n1ex Entcruunment. would r ult
1n combined opcratana revenue\ or
more than $600 m11l1on per year
A·~ d1stnbut1on library com· prises 1,000 film produced by nit-
od Art1 ts, l.700~b_y Metro-Goldw)n·
Ma)cr, and 1,300 b)' Warner aro
This library has morr Academ)
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Hun lift11on Beach
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Award-~mnmg films than an> other
hbraI) rn thr world.
The luture revenues aod earninas from the ex1i.t10& film hbrtlf) will ~. ~ubstanttal. we0 bc)'Ond the )'CU
2000. New productfon~ su~h as
"Rainman .. and Quintex' TV mm1·
enc "l onesom~ Dove" ~•II
enhance the value of this n et
The acqu1s1t1cin iJ planned to be
concluded by pt. 30.
The Qintc' Group 1s a multi·
nauonal orpn1i.at1on in the fields of
rcsons and k1surc and media and
entcrta1nmcnL The Group\ n:soru
Qperauon include Mira e Pon
Douglas,and M1ruae Gold oa~t m
ustralta. and the Pnn~' alle resort
m Ha"a11
Media holding~ include the ven
ct work, the largeSl tcle' 1i1on
nct\\-Ofk 1n ustralta., and 1cJe"\•1s1on
tat1on 1n unraha·s five capital
c1t1C\, anJ Q1ntc \ Entertainment
Inc • the large l 1n~pendcnt telc-
v1 ion production and d1stnbut1on
company 1n the United State •
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Atler._
c... ....
M2-41n
A private plane plUftlL'CI into the Newport Baeb Teorua
Cub on Friday killinaa family of'five, narrowly miai.na three
people on the pound and ICDdina aboct wava throuO ·a
COllllDuaity tbat kaows death will r::=jn tom me Wes.
ThC Joa felt by relatives and · of the Camdian
fainil_y who died ia the crub IUl'ely ahotald not be miaimized.
But neitbe{ lhouJd the anKiety, indeed the fear, of
residents o(Newpora Beach. •
Everyday planes &akeoft"from John WayneAirpon. And ~day another c:oWd fall &om the lky.
It ii not trite when thole who fouaht the airport say ··1
told ~u so .. 1 told Y.OU ~t would happen.•• '
They did, and it did.
Jt ia oot a cliche to ay it could have been much wone.
The sma.IJ, twin-enaine plane crashed and e~ploded on
coun No. 4at the tennia.c~ub, at the same~ a tennis pro and twoaauden~ we~~ By some quirk of aerodynamics.
10me hel'OIC twist of the controls or some mirKle, the three
neaped injury, though the plane hit abut 10 feet from one of them.
. . . ~·nd YOfleyed,ja a pua1 "I shot from bcina ,
Across the &rounds, some I SO members in the clubhouse
were unawarc·oftheir ~r brush with death.
The plane might have pitched in that diR:Ction instead of
onto court No. 4.
Or, the plane miaht have been a commercial airliner with
hundreds of ~naers and tons of fuel aboard.
A tragedy miaht have been a diauter.
Newport BeaCh knows it. It waits for i~ not in quivenn1
cowardice, not in paranoid delusion but in the cold, harsh
reality of fact. Gravity, mechanical imperfection, statistics
and human error ensure future tnaedy. A dozen air incidents
in the put I 0 years, prcsaae it. tf undrcds of fliahts a week,
guarantee it ·
Officials aren't unaware of the danacrs. Yet, of-
facialdom'soven obstinacy in.xlectinganotherairpon site in Oranae County bespeaks a certain callousness that can't be iano~. The options arc not many, the alternatives not easy.
But neither is it easy to imagine a smolderina Dover
Shores or a blackened BaJ'30a.
The celebrated·=· n compromise that allowed ex-pansion in return for fli . t and pUlcnaer limits sipalcd more
than an end towun . It was end to the fiaht itself.
Airpon foes who have fouaht fanatically in hopes of
closina the airport rcsigocd t6emsclves to permanently
having an airport as a neipbor. But more needs to be done in makina sure the unwanted neighbor doesn't destroy the
neiahbOrbood. ·
Incompatible neipbors can be tolerated as long as they ~ don't invite themselves into your home. ·
Another airport would ta.kc pressure off John Wayne,
diverting fli&hts and ~ucina the odds of future disaster. It
would not be a aua.rantec of safety. No one can be considered
immune. f9f' eu.mple, Cerritos residents bad no reason to
fear air traft-.C.
But news that the county will select and develop another
airpc;wt site would help cue the fear most Newpon Beach
residents arc feelina right now.
C>pnlone .......... In "* ep9Ce. .. lhcJee. of the Diiiy Pteot. Other
-..eirp1111 IS on WIP119 .. V...of .. author9 encl lrtlets. A11der1'
CQN'MIAa .. lrnwMed ..a-mer be..,. to The o.11y Plot, P.O. Bo• 15'0. Cdeee ..... t2Gt
OlllllC\Olfl'
Telephqne .privacy
h uted to be that to auard qainaa unwanted telephone
calls, you only had to ,et an unfis&.ed number. Sales firms have Iona 1ince pterCed &hat barrier by usina automatic dialins
maetunet, which call every phone in a local CXChaf\IC in
numerical order. But harried cuatamcn wiU soon have a new
dcfente: an electronic auacbment that Jets you know the
phone number of •nsn or machine tryina to call yoe, even while your own ne is still rinaina.
If the number be np to someone you want to nojd, or
if you are ia the mood to~ aU calls ncrpt from famiJyor
clole friends. you cu simiDIY chOole not to answer.
... Pacific Telesis, the. West Cout telephone firm. has
decided to incliidC an option that lets a aastomer 1void
rneaJiftl his own phone number when he makes OU'IOina
calls. Al a CC>f8PUY ~D puts at, "We•re providi111 the
tame riibts IO bOtll Clllet and receiver. 11·1 the same as
~ klioctina oa ~door and punina lheir fineer over
&he peep bole. You dOG't have to <>pm tbC door." nc contest between the pnv.cy-pn>Cec10l'_I and the
privecy-invllden hu become like an arms race. Every ume oe side finds a new weapon, the other dewtos-an even more
advanced-tedmolo&Y to·catdl up. If the phone com panics care
only about immecliine profits, tt.ey can keep 1elW. cvcr-
llicker pmmicka to bodl sides. But if they want loQa-tcrm locJCI will. they shoUld tilt toward privacy.
fte .... H. ..
Arts Couoc il budget cu ts
lllFtMO&•n•• a
;; WAIHINOTON -llle~acioe tJ-1==~~ • .... .... 7 ........
dllr• a ••-IN& 'fm1wbo =411 ........... ud to OOP dlleil •too CIOIDfonable With -T~L~ .f .... _
·-·· not quota_., Wida Cleolsia·~o in a
....... poeftioo, me Democntl(
fNIOrity cu expect IO feel more
ildellle rtaetoriCal beal
• Bua wlailc Gillpictl milht make for more . . political wwWe ID •
llllc ..:::=.:.the im~ of bis new ltatus on President 8Ulb'1 lqis-
lative pis ii aootber question. ne omidaat took office with an a.,..a ror compromite over confron-
~llOIL . °" the ... illUel faci the natioe, &be pritident actno~
that difticuli c:boicet were requ1red
and there were DO tally IOlution1.
"This is the Of lbe offered bud,•• he told ~mocratic con-
.,.aeiooaJ leaden ia bis inausural iddma. • •
Tbe new president decried "a
·certain divisivenea" He said, .. We
--tisve MD the hard
the statements i.n wbicb not each
othm' ideas are cballeneect. but each
others• motives."
It was the k.ind of message of aood will that Houte Republjcao leader
Robert Michel of Illinois couJd
enthusiast.ically applaud.
But it a.bo reffcCted an approach
that woukt set Ginanch's 1ceth on ~iMrlch pref en the clenched fist to
the otrettd hand and his election Qvcr
a moderate supponed by Michel
renccted a scnte among many other
Republicans that chantt was needed.
House Republicans were nearly
evenly divided on the secret ballot to
elect a succeuor 10 Richard Cheney of
Wyomina. who has moved to the Pen~ at secretary of defcn1t.
After the 87 lo 8S vote by which he
defeated Rep. Edward Madipn Qf
Illinois, Ginanch ·~red with
Michel and offered his .hand to the
minority leader who undoubtedly
numbered amona the Republicans
who voted Ip.inst the Georaia con-
~man.
''I thjnk Y,OU will find this IO be I
team efTon, ·said Gi,..nch. .. Ifs not a
conservative activist victory. It is the
.entire Rcpubican team."
.. If this electiod had been a test of
Bob Michel's ~tship I wouldn't
have 1011cn 40 votes," t':i.narich
added. "If Bob-M1Chcl stood up and said this u a test of my lcadenhip, a
vote of confidence in me, he would
have, A, won, and B, I would have
withdrawn."
But the fact was that Ginsrich
rePfC$Cnted a new apprOKh.
He ~t the office as a "nauonaJ
Republican." in a bod)'. that reve~
the sayina, "all politics 1s local ...
As the Republican who &cd the
attacks on Democratic Speaker Jim
Wri&ht. Gingrich stood apan· from
GOP leaders wbo cherished their
abihty to worit out compromiteS wilb When Ronald R-.n root ...
the pany that bas controlled the ill January 1911, to lllMr in • .. ia
House s1nce Gingrich wu 11 yars wbida Repubtic:am could tiillk ..,
o&d. fidea&Jy about a poliliml ..a~ •
But to Ginancb and other increas-rn their favor, t.bcft were .. ,
in&Jy vocal and frustraied younaer publicans ia tk Houle. T'8 _,.
Republicans. the Michel apprbKb that cJec1ed GiQlrida after~ •
"'as one of ICCeptJOJ 1 few crumbs of Republican c::oaVOI OI die ~; from the l:Xmocrauc table, an at-Ho.ate bdd 174 ..u.
utude rcflecuna ac.ccplane:C of min· Wbilc 8ueb ._ · 40 ..... only status. QIT'Jlllll "We tend to say. Oh, p . they're in in the 1911 PftlideatW . ...__.
cha..-thihowcan ........... n·-c00 ...... to Democrau were pid:i"1911P • •1r ·.-_.,,""' ·-...,. tbn:e Ho.e le.all and ,.UM 'ol them t they'll let UJj)l'Ctend •'re aocumbcnts teeti-~let1ioa wre pan of the pme;· Gananch told · -rcponers. "I reprcteot the wu'I of the COUlln& to 'ictory.
party that ll)Jfmc.~lltak:euplbat Thole rtlulb were~~ telld chaUeqc." Republicans look.in& for a new •
Adelina to the frustration of Re-proech.
publicans wu the lack of any propns D " IL ..,..:;i,,. ., d*I
toward improvina their numbers in_ e' "'"'9r .t A rr1 r'nW the Houx.
Whose conscience Should vote represent?
If a legislator dasaarett with ~s
constituents. should Ile do what he
thinks tS rig.bl. or what they think 1s
ri&ht? To most of us. the rifht and wrona
of controversial topics is so clear that
we havc.rroublc belicvi"J that~
on the other aide ~ sinctre. They
must have some secret financial
interest in lbc outcome, or they would
naturaJly follow the path of ri&ht· eousness.
I was brou&ht up on many adminna
talcs of oourqeous lqislators who
defied pressure croups to volt for
wha' was right As a youna person. I
found these stories anspirina.
Therefore I was shocked when,
nearly 2S yean aao. I heard UCI
Chancellor Jack Pcltuon express the
opposite philosophy: That men of
pnnciplc who wiU do what they know
11 ri&ht, rcprdJess of public op1n1on.
shou.ld not bold offtec. It is much
betier and safer to tlcct 'people who
feel that thc1.r Job 1s to represent their
consmutcnts: To vote as the ~pk
who elected them would vote af they
had the chance.
There are i
electorate · . wro
Cllll'Cmt wro
moderate mistak corrccu them .
cases when: the
but it is never
It makes only
and presently It
But indivld detcnn1ned to
foUowtbcirconx· cecanaotcmbly wrona. The lnqui uon was run by
mtn su>eercly de med to save
IOU1s. Kati Man forth tut pro-~ with the aa aim of beft>-
efitina.all.hwnaruty. n&~ Ill
dealt tQ&land lbc ha~iat blow 1n its
I I r 'l I H'
history -loss Qf the American
colonies -bccau~ he was i well·
meanina simpleton.· (Sir James
Frasier's words. not mine.)
"I always vote accord1og to m)'
conscience" sounds so pure and
morally defensible. that the man "'ho
says 1t never stops to think that the
people who elected him have con,..
cienttS too. Who is to represent their
oonsc1cnc:cs? Or don't they count'>
I doubtless bavcn·t nprcs~ this
as "ell ·., Jade Pelt.ason did: I
apolopu for presum1na to put words
in his mouth. I do the best I can.
Wath my upbrinai~ heanna this
philosophy made me bristle. I wanted
to araue with Cbanttllor ~ltaJOn.
but I found no conv1nc1na 111umenL The proper formula seemed to be that
a representative should fol.low the
voten' oontaeoce when they arc
ri&ht. and sboukl follow his own when
he is riab&. Bu& there 11 no way for him
lo tell i.bc ~ cue from the other
' As tune went by I found more and more occasions wbttc Jack's concept
was valid. l was pi1n.icularly 1m-
pressed by 10me former ma)ors ot
Newport Beacb, who made a point of
beans contemtCous of the votcn
who clec1ed • 'fhel teemed IO
rcprd the vot.crs as crazJCS wbo had
shown JUSI one bnd' Oath of sanity -
when they v04Cd b' tbic mayor.
Adnutledly, dected 1e~c:MS ....
hvcs have ~ data avMeble co
them. and are in a position to make a
better-informed judamc.ot thaa thctr
constituents. lncleecf. that as m..cb of
the reason for reprexntative aovnn-
mcn(; 1t wouJd be absurdly wasteful for evcryoM to become 1nfonncd
about all the details. That is wha1
representatives are for. But lbe oon-
fl.icts of conscience I am taJk1na.1bout
are not ck-tads. They arc the btt and
coatroVU'S&ll tllYCS which the public
undentands qwte well One could •Y that the JOb of an
elected n:p~ntative is to vole on
each issue the same way th.It the
people wouJd vote 1f the matter ~
broUabt to a referendum. On the
detail matters.. that means uftana
throuah the facts and finding a ~nsibk and prudent solution. be· cause the voters arc scns1bk and
prudenl Oo the bia pohcy matters. 1t means makl• a strcnuou effort to
find OU.I what ihe ''Olen are tb10k11ta-
Tbis docs not mean m~ly hav1na
an open~ pohcy ofbc1n1 n-ady to
hsten to an)ooe who wants to talk.
Bcnu1t IM oaa who want to taJk are
mainly the 01C11'ho want to amnae
IOmetbll\I for &hcu pnvate benefit.
usually at publte upcase. No, 1t
means ec:th·dy eoina to the peopk for
tbcir views. ll IMUJ COlltaclln& them
Denying the Holocaust is ultimate crt:ielty
ly SOltEN ANOERUN
Mt°"*"t --s-tc. Here arc capsule reviews of current motion pictures
playing in this area Olat weren't hyped during Oscar
week:
THE ADVENTUllES OF BAllON
MUNCHAVSEN: Terry Gilliam is a tanwist's &ntasist,
a man who makes movks unlike anyone elte's.
"Jabbcrwocky," "Time Bandits," "Brazil." and now
"The Adventures of Baron M unchausen" all have a raw,
almost primitive feel to them that demands your
attentiqn and a wildl).' imaginative look that commands
respect. The $40-mtllion-plus "Munchausen" depicts
fantasy locked in mortal combat with soul-numbina
reality. with the baron of the title, a legendary I Ith
Century teller of tale tales (Englislt s• actor John
Neville plays the part) beihg fantasy's champion, and a
smirking bureaucrat (Jonathan Pryce) being its cruef
opponent. The action careens boisterously from a
magical city on the moon {ruled by a manic, headless
Robin Williams) to the belly of a sea serpent to the
acwmpaniment of lusty shouts and deafening
p~technics. An astonishing picture from a filmmaker
With uiJ1ue gifts. (PG)
B AND TED'S EXCELLENT ADVENTURE:
See! The movie born without a brain! Hear! The word
"dude" spoken around a thousand times. As in.
"Excellent, dude!" And "Wow, dude!" Writhe! Watch it
in the knowledge that this movie about a couple of time-
traveling teenage halfwits was one of the genuine hits of
the sprin~ or-89 while far worthier pictures like "'True
Believer' quickly sank with scarcely a ripple. Like. there
is no justice, dude! (PG)
THE 'BURBS: A gimmicky. senously unfunny
comedy a~..._&-grottp of nosy neighborsil'urrr Hank:s.
Rick Ducommun and Bruce Dern) who jump through
all kinds of hoops and commit all sorts of property
damage in an effon to find out what the strange,
reclusive family down the street 1s up to. Are they aliens'?
Arc they murderers? Are they alien murderers? Director
Joe Dante ("'Explorers." "Gremlins") fills the picture
with manic, pointless energy and leaves the actors with
·nothing to do but shnek and break things. In so doing, he
manages to underutilize Hanks. an almost criminal
waste of talent. The story has no shape and makes no
sense, because the first thing any upstanding, law-
abiding suburbanite would do if he suspected his
neighbors of having killed one of his friends would be to
calf the cops. This Hanks and Co. do not do. because if
they did. there would be no reason for them to quite
literally trasti the neighborhood. which is the whole
point of"The 'burbs." (PG-13)
CHANCES ARE: Blandness reigns in this corned)
about a husband reincarnated as a callow law-school
grad (Robert Downey J r.) who then romances his own
widow (Cybill Shepherd). The couple's college-age
daughter (Mar) tuart Masterson) faJls for her recycled
father (not kno wing. of course. that the young man is
really her old man). Confu,sing enough for you? It
apparently 1s for Ryan O'Neal. who wears a look of
pained incomprehension throughout most of the mo' ie.
He plays the departed husband's best buddy, who"s been
nursing an unrequited love for his pats wife/widow for a
decades. a circumstance that adds yet another layer of
confusion to the story. O'Neal, Masterson and Shepherd
smile prettily .a nd frown becomiomv.-bu1 :rrtver really
establish them$elves on screen. It's left for Downey to
carry the picture's freight. which he does. Wlth a winning
1llftocent eagerness. (PG) ·
COUSINS: This remake of a 19.15 French comedy
.. Cousin, Cousine .. means well but it lacks the spark and
lightheartedness of the onginal - the "cry quahties that
made the picture remake bait in the first place. In both
movies. the spouses of two philanderers decide to
1 '\ l ,ISTI '\GS
By .. nd 81'1d Iii leaf, Bernard fvolc• by Bob
Newhart) and m.nca fvolce by l!va GaborJ
pretend to have an affair themselves to make the
philanderers jealous. One thing leads to another. and
soon the "good" twosome fall deeply in love and run off
together. In the onginal they did so Wlth no regrets and
no backward looks. In the remake there 1s a lot 9f soul·
searching and longing, hopeless-glances (don"t worry
though. there's a happy ending by and by) The members
of the cast2 headed by Ted Danson and Isabella
Rossclltni, give careful performances. but everything 1s a
little forced and more than a little cloying. If the onginal
was a souffie. the remake is poundcake. (PG-13)
DEAD BANG: Another cop movie. this one wtth a
telev1s1on-sencs star in the lead. ··Dead Bang" possesse'i
an unexpected abundance of grit and downbeat
integnty. which makes 11 stand out 1n this too-familiar
genre. Director JohR Franltenhe1mer ( .. The Man-
chunan Candidate;· ··52 Pickup .. ) has taken "M1am1
Vice" glamourpuss Don Johnson and turned him into a
h1ghl) credible down-on-hrs-luck hero. Johnson play~ a
Los ~ngeles homicide detective who 1s a classic burn-
oot case. With a failed mamagc. wino stubble. broken
glasses. indifferent health. and temble hangovers
(beware the mov1e·s soon-to-be-notonous up-chutk
scene) this cop also happens to be one dogged
manhunter. The w h) and wherefores of Johnson's
cross-country search for a wh1te·'iupremacist cop killer
are often confusing. thankr; 10 a .poorly constructed
Kript and so e gap1n$ plot oles. Bu t Johnson's
portrayal of dcterminatton under stress. plus Frank-
enhc1mer's pared-down d1reCllf!g styl(. save the day. (R)
FLETCH LIVES: Chevl'_ Chase lazes through the
sequel to a 1985 comedy. "A etch." the last movie in
which the star showed any signs of life o n the screen. In
this one. crack new paper 1nvcstigat1'e reporter l.M.
Aetcher inhents a crumbling Louisiana plantation and
is soon up to his notepad in half-wit cops, kom1cal
..
1
Allen, arid Franc1t Coppo~. Each man's .•f'!'k~k tlttn&lhl and flaws arc on dtil)la_}' in tbeK mirumovtn,
all of which arc far from the filmmakcn' bell •ork.
Allen's piece, .. Oed•l!US Wrecks," lsanc.ilt'ndcdJewilh-
mother ~kc. Mae Questel (the woma~ w~o WJIS the
voice oflktty Boop 1n the '30s) does a hdarious furn as
the mother, and Allen plays the harried 10n. "Life
Without Zoe..·· the Coppc)la film, 1s the mot& 1ntubltan-
t1al of the lot. h's an overproductd characlt'r srudy of a
nch New York Ii-year-old (Heather McComb) who's
too precocious for "'ords and too s'1allow to be belacvcd.
Only Scorsete's film, "l.Jfe LcssoM," has snap and an
e• of danaer to it Nack Nolte 11ve'I a suptrcharaed
performance as an obsessive e.rt1st trying to come to
terms with the breakup ofb11 affair with a much you,.,rr
woman (Rosanna rquette). The story i's predictable but
the Nolte character " compellina. whictt 1s why this
picture stands head and shoulders above ru two
com.,.nion p1eces.f(PG)
THE RESCU!RS: This Disney animated' film
about a couple of plucky mice (vo1c~ by Bob Newhart
and Eva Gabor)$Cnt to rC1Cue a kidnapped little orphan
!lrl 1s good Dtsney, but not great Disney. The v11la1ne s.
a carrot.topped harridan with mean arcen eyes
(Geraldine Page supplied the voice), 1s a classic D1~ey
ev1l-qucenstcpmother figure. shncki ng and cackhna"nd
easily overshadowing the forces of aoOd whenever she's
on the screen. There are a few giddily effective show-
stopping scenes, the best of which stars a frenetic
mustached dragonfl y who serves as a son of Jct-
propelled bayou gondolier. Because the two lead
characters are so bland, the picture lack'I the ef-~e~~ Qf..uruc Disnc) classic.. CG)--
set out In search of• kidnapped 9lrl In .. The
Rescuers, .. • Disney ftlm.
SKfN DEEP: After "A Fine Mess," .. That's Life,"
"Bhnd Date:· and ··sunset," one no longer expects
.anything from Blake Edwards other than fiasco. "Sk1n
Deep" doe not disappoint that e>.pcctauon This 1s a
completely unnecessary mo' 1e. cloning as 11 does the
basic plot line of Edwards' earher ''The Man Who Loved
Women." In both, a compulsl\e womanizer's com-
pulsion makes a shambles out or has life. The maJOr
difference between the two p1ct.urei. 1s that "The Man
Who Loved Women .. 1s occas1onalJy hilarious and
.. lun Deep" is noL Also. in .. The Man Who Loved
Women.·· ns star, Burt Reynolds. 1s an enaaging fe llow
despite all his flaws." kin Dcep·s·· star. John Ritter, i
not (R)
KJansmen, dam followers of a smarmy telev1s1on
evangelist, and a couple of beautiful women (one of
them dead). Through it alt, a sh&ht, superior smirk otver
leaves Chase's face as his character outWJts Wlth
effortless ease the rubes and scoundrels who surround
him. Every plot development is greeted with a quip. and
usuall) a weak quip at that. Chase has played this same
type of smug character so many t imes before that he
probably can do him in bis sleep. Come to think of it.
1udllng by the-amount of energy he expended here.
maybe that's exactly what hed1d in "A etch Lives." (PG> TROOP BEV~RLV HIL~: Call this comedy
'-·Revenge of the Megabucks Ncrdcttcs " A troop of
Beverly li ills Wilderness Girls (read. Girl outs) shake
off the J~rs and taun1s of their commoner compatnots
and show the ~orld that they can so traipse through the
woods equipped w11h designer backpacks and bottles of
de 1gner water and not only ~urv1vc but. ye , tnumph
too and prove to the world that deep down i n~1de they re
JUSt plain kids. Su-u-ure they arc. il\ctually. the kids are
minor characters. The main focus is on their troop
eader,-j)layedOy SheOey Long-=-a shopahohc ~\Cfl~r
LEAN ON ME: This 1s the lightly ficuonalizcd story
of Joe Clark. the bullhorn-toling principal whose heav)·
handed disciplinary style ctcaned'up a troubled inner·
cit) school and won the praise of Ronald Reagan in the
process. It's directed b)' John Av1ldscn ("Rocky," both
"Karate Kids") wnh his usual bombast, which in this
case means that the picture spends its whole length
defl.l'ling the hero at the top of its tun». Morgan
Freeman's portrayal of Clark reminds ou of Lou Gos~tt's turn as the domfneenog sergeant In .. An
Officer and a Gentleman." except I.hat this character has
even less charm than that one A one-note. stndcnt
plClure. (PG-13)
NEW VORk STORIES: A cinema sampler of works
b)' thn-e top lJ . directors: Manio orscsc. Wood)
·Hills matron who find5 a purpose 1n her hfe (and saves
her mamagc in the process) by teachin1' her young
charges uch urv1val skill as Jewelry appraual and how
to select the best salon for a fac1al. Ifs hght. it's sltght. 1t
plays like the pilo t for a sitcom (PG I
United Artists sold for S· 1 billion
Compled from Piiot wire services
LO ANGELES -The Q1 ntex
G roup·s· American entertainment
div1s1on has announced its acqu1s1-
11on of Lo AnJelc~bascd United
Artists for SI b1lhon. •
United Art1'ilS (UA) 1s one of onl y
st\< en maJor film studio'> and libraries
m the world, w11h a stock of more
than 4,000 theatrical films. including
unique continuing sencs such as
"James tlond," ··Rock}'' and "Pink
Panther" ~ and recent Academy
Award wi nners including .. Rain
Man.··
UA also owns 1hc world's largest
home v1dcocompany, which last year
m the Unncd tatcs alone sold more
than 8 million units. In add1t1on to
UA"s strong dome tic d1stnbut1on
network. the company 1s a one-third
hareholder in United International
Picture (U IP). the world' large t
distributor of theatrical film
The complicated structure of the
deal actually has Quintc buy1na
MG M/ Commun1cat1ons C'o .• the
owner of U nited Artists. Omtcx 15
iwpo~l O..ach
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then reselling the MGM hbral') of 34
films, the MG M name and
trademark. the telcv1 ion pro-
ductions subs1d1ary and other :mets
10 T rac1nda, the major shareholder of
MGM, for $250 million.
When added to the cash within U <\
and proposed cqu1ry tn\cstmcn1 of
$75 million 1n the Qintex Group by
MG M. the net effective cost will bc
reduced by approx1ma1ely S400
m1lhon. F1nancmg of the balance" 111
come from a comb1n:1t1on of off'ihorc
equity and borrowinis
Operating ~venues of U 10 the
current year arc forcta t at approx-
1matcl)' S.SOO million. with gro\s
opertH1ng cash now orS I SO m1l11on
fhc potcnual comb1nat1on of the
bus1nencs or United n1m and
Q in1cx Entertainment, would r~ult
1n combined opcrauna revenue of
more than S600 malhon per ~c r
A' d1stnbut1on library com·
pnsc 1.000 films produced by nit·
cd .t\n1sts, I , 109 ~by Metro-Goldwyn-
Mayer. and 1,300 by Warnet Bro
This library hu more Academy
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Award-w1nn1ng films than an} other
library an the world
The future re,enuc and earnings
from the c>.1sun1 film hb~I) will bc
s ubsum11al. wen Pc)ond the year 2000. New prodtacllons such u
.. Rain man" nd Qumtcx' TV m1ni-
cne ''Lone omc Do'e.. will
enhance the "aluc orth1i. OSS('l.
The acqu1 1t1on 1s planned to be
concluded b) Sept 30
The Q1ntex Group 1s a multi·
national orpn11 t1on In the fields or
resorts nd lei urc Md media and
entcn:unmt"nt Tilt Group's resorts
operations include Mirage Port
Douglas and M1rngc Gold Coast 1n
Austr:1ha, and the Pnncc' 1lle reson
tn Haw1111
Media holdrn include the Sc"cn
ctwod.. the largest tclc' 1\1on
network 1n Au,traha. and tcle., mon
srn11ons 1n u 1raha's fi ve e<ap1tal
c111es and Q1ntc~ Entcruunmcnt
In the largest independent tcJc-
v1s1on production and dt\tnbuuon
compan) in the Un11cd ates.
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142-4122
A pri~te ~ plu~ iftlO the Newport Beach Teorti1
Oubon Friday tillanaa family of five, narrowly miuioa three
people oa 1be pound and lendi~ aboc:k wava lbn>ulb .a
coaunwli&y that kllOWI clea1ll will~ ipin &om the skies.
The loll fell by relatives and tiieDdl of the Canadian
fa.riily de> died in ck cf'llb IUl'dy lbould not be minimized.
.8ut neither lhould Che anxiety, indeed the fear. of
relidents of Newport BeaCh:
Everyday planes take oft' from John Wayne Airpon. And
every ~Y ano~ cOuld fall &om the sky.
1t 11 noc trite~ thole who fouaht the airpon say, 0 J
told you so .. l told~ ~t would happen."
They did. and it did. .
h is not a cliche to •Y it could have been much wonc.
The amall, twin-enaine plane crubed and exploded on
court No. 4 at the teMis club, at the tame time a tennis Pro ind
two studen.ts were practicina. By some quirk of aerodynamics, some heroic tWlst of the controls or some miracle, the three cscaped injury. though the ane hi O.Ieetltom one of tkm. ~ ·
· ~ nearby COUrts, .Othc! players served and v0Ueyed1 JUSt
a JJUllD& shot from betng ~tOed.
Across the a.rounds, some J SO memben in the clubhouse
were unaware of their near brush with death.
The plane might have pitched in that direction instead of
onto court No. 4.
Or, the plane might have been a commercial airliner with
hundreds of J>USCDICfS and tons of fuel aboard. ·
A tragedy mi&bt have been a disasler. Newport BeaCh knows it. It waits for it, nor in quivcrina
cowardi«. not in paranoid delusion but in the cold, harsh
reaJity of fact. Gravity, mechanical imperfection, Jtatistics
and human ert&r ensure future tnacdy. A dozen air incidents
in the past 10 years, presage it. t-fundreds of fUahts a week.
auarantec it. •
Officials aren't unaware of the da~. Yet. of·
ficiaktom 's overt obstinacy in se)ecti1fg another airport site in
Oranae County bespeaks a certain callousness that can't be
ignored. The options arc not many, the alternatives not easy.
But neither is it easy to imagine a smoldcrina Dover
Shores or a black.coed Balboa.
The celebrated a~· n compromise-that allowed ex·
panslon in return for fr tand paucnaerlimits sianaled more
than an end to court fi ts. It was end to the fJlht it.self.
Airport foes who have fouabt fanatically in hopes of
closina the airport resianed themselves to permanently
having an airport as a nciahbor. But more needs to be done in
makina sure the ·unwanted nei&hbOr doesn't destroy the
nci&bbOrhood
Incompatible nciahbors can be tolerated as long as they
don't invite themselves into your home.
Another airport would take pressure off John Wayne,
divertina fli&hts and rcducina the odds of future disaster. Lt would not be a auarantec of safety. No one can be considered
immune. For example, Cerritos resi<knts had no reason to
fear air traffic.
But news that the county. wilJ select and develop another
~rt site would help ease the fear most Newport Beach
residents are feelina riabt now. •
OpWone • ...,,..... In ............. Of the Deity PllOt. Other
._.,,.-1111 d ontNaJ»91NthoeeOf "'* arthon~ 1111\sts. A11"' a' ~-.. lnwtted end may be_,. lo Theo.tty Ploc. P.O. Box 15e0.
~ ..... 12e21.
01111 IC \OIC I'
Telephone privacy
It ~scd to be that to guard apinst unwantea te ep one -
calls, you only had tOJClan unlisied number. Sales firms have
Iona 11ncc pterced that barrier by using automatic diaUna
m.Ctuna, which call every phone in a .Jocal e"change in
numcncal order. But harried cust0mcrs will soon have a new
defense: an electronic attachment &hat lets you know the
phone number of an=rson or machine trying to call you.
even while your own ne is still ringing. lf\hc number be to someone you want to avoid, or
if you are in the mood to spore aU calls cuept from famtJy or
clOle friends. you caa aimDtY cboote not to answer.
... Pacific Telesis. the. \Vest Coast telephone firm. has decided to 11.chide an option 1bat lets a customer avoid ~vealina h11 own phone number when he makes oui,oina
calls. As a compkny spotaman puts it, .. We're providina the
Mme npts '° botb caller and receiver. It's the ume as
IOIMOne knocti111 on your door and puttina their fineer over the~ hole. You don't have to open the door."
The contat between the pnvlC)'·protcctors and the
priva_cy-invaden hat become like an arms nice. Every time
oae side finds a new.weapon. the other develops an cv~ more
ldvanced t«hnolOIY to catch up. If t.he phone com 1'9naes care ~Y abOUt im'meclfate profits. thn' can keep sellina ever·
llicker aimmicka '° both sides. But tf they want tona-tcnn eood wm, they should tilt toward privacy. •
ftellMNllN"•
llF&MOILllOTI I G
WMHIMO'l'Otil -nt elevation ol Nlwl OUWida .: ,IO die Houte ·=1-~,.velk.-ny a wida (llltilla IUlll Md leD\ I dllf•• •WIO•...,pruldvtwho = I bi......,..Up ud to GOP ddeil Ill too comlonable with miDori& ....... ~ii notha.• if'* quotabk. wm.~-OeorP. ~ ip a
leadenbip po11tion. lhe DemocTitic ....;ortcy cu expect to feel more
ialeale itletaricat beat. lut w1aile Giapich mi&ht make for
more i~ politic:81 warfate in
Ille Hou. c:taamoer, tbe impect of bis· new stahll on Pra.ident Bush's lqis-
lative pll is another question.
Tbe Dftlidmt took off .cc with an a~ for compromitc ovcrconfron·
&abOO. 0.. the la,.e ll&UCI facin& the nabc>a, the ~Jlt ac~~
that d.ifficwt cboices were reqwred
1nd there were no talY IOlutions.
.. This is the • 'of dJt offered band," he told l>emocr&llC con·
palionaJ leaden in his inaugural
iddrell. \ ~Hepid,"We
, have teen the hard k>oks and heard
the statements in which nOt each
others' ideas arc chaUensed. but' each
olbers' motives."
It was tbc kind of messagr of good
will \hat House Republican ·leader
Robert MK:hel of IJlinois could
enthusiulicalJy aoolaud. But 'it alto refJcCfcd an approach
that would tel Gingrich's teeth on
~i~ prefers tht clenc~ fist lo
the off'"ered tland and his election over
a moderate supl)Of'ted by Michel reflected a sense among many other
Republicans that chanat was needed. Hou1e Republicans were nearly
evenly davided on lbe secret ballot to elect a succnsoT to Richard Cheney of
Wyomin,. who bas moved to the
Pen~on as secretary of defense. After the 87 to SS vote by which he
defeated Rep. Edward Madipn of
lllinot.1 Ginattdt· 'a~1'd with
Michel and offered has hand to the
minority leader who undoubledly
numbered among the Republicans
who voled ap1nst tfle GeOrsia con-
ares man.
··1 thank r,ou wtll find thJS lO be a team effort.· said G1nanch ... It's nou
conscrvallve activist vactory. It is the
entire Repubtcan team ••
"If tJus election bad been a test of
Bob Michel's leadership l •ooldn't
have JOllen 40 votts,". Gincnch added. "If Bob Michel stood up and
said this is a test of my Jcaderstup, a
vote of confidence an me, be would
have, A, won, and B. I would have
withdrawn.·•
But the fact was that Gananch
represented a new approach. He ioU&ht the office as a .. national
Republican." in a body that revetis
the sayina, "all politics is local:·
As the Republican who &ed the
anacks on Democratic Speaker Jim Wri&ht, Gmgrich stood apan from
GOP fcadcrs who cherished _their
ability to work out compromilCS with
the s-ny th.at has controlled the House s1~ G1nanch was 11 years old. ,
But to Ginanch and other i~ angJy vocal and frustralcd youneer
Republicans. the Michel approech
was one or acccpllnJ a few CfWllbs
from the Democratac I.Ible. •n at·
1.Jtudc rcflcct1n& accep1.1ncc of min·
onty status.
"We tend to say. Oh. ~· they're an charge, how can we be nlC:C cnoup to
them that they'll let us .PfCltnd we're
pan of the aamc." Gmanch told
reporters. "I represent the wma of the party that says fiM, ~·11 take up thal
challenac."
Addina to the frustration of R~ publicans was the lack of any pros.reu
toward improvina their numbert in
the House.
When Ronald RCMU td o8kle
in January 191 I, to -1ler in• .. ill
which Republicaal CC*kl t.a ... fedcntJy about a political n=rr 1a1
in their favor, thieft were I~ a.
publ,ica.ns in the Hoalt. Tiie ....,
Ow elected Gilllricb efter.._tJ~ of RqM&blican coatrel o( ac Wlliel;
Houte held 17• teall. 1
Wbde Bvsb was carTYilll 40 -tn lbe I 91& pmidcntilll ..._,
Democtats were'**-IP w•er three HOUie seati1Ad99 ,.._, ol
incumbents 1eeki11 re<lectioll were. coasti~ lO \Kl()()'. f
TbolC results ~ enoush to ..... ---....-
Repubticans lookin& for a new • proecb.
,,_,,, •. 11.cMw:. ,, .. "'*' e' wrMr -1 fte 1 rr rllltatl
Whose conscience should vote represent?
If a leaislator d1saarecs with has .conslllucn~ should 6c ~ what he
thanks 1s na.ht. or what they think as
naht? To most o(us, the right and wrona
of controversial topics 1s so clear that
we have trouble believinJ that people
on the other side arc SJnccre. They
must have some secret financial
interest in the outcome, or they would
naturally follow the path of riabt·
cousncss.
I WIS brouaht upon m.ny admirin1
1.1Jes of courqcous leaisla1ors-who defied pressure 1roups to vote for
what was right. As a young penon, I
found these stories inspiring.
Therefore I was shocked when,
nearly 2S years ago, I heard UCJ
Chancelk>r Jack Pelwon express the
opposite philosophy: That men of
pnnciplc who will do what they know " nsht. rcprdless o( public opinion, should not bold off.cc. It is much
better and safer to elect people who
feel that their Job as to represent their
const1lultnls: To vote as the ~
who elccltd them would vote 1f they
had the CMllCIC.
There arc indeed cues :where the
electoratt as wrong. but it is ~ver
extremely wrona. It makes onl)'
moderatt mis&akes. and prctently at
corrects them . But 1ndivi'dualJ dctennJncd to
follow tbetrconteiencecanao tembly wrona. The lnqwsiuon.was run b)' men sanccrely detemuncd to save
souls. Kart Man let forth his pro--~m wnh the san<'Cte aim of ben·
efitin&.. all_ humanity. Kins~ Ill
dealt fnlland tbe heaviest blow in its
I I 1"11 H'
tustory..1 -loss of 1he mencan
colonies -because he was a wcll-
mt'anina 1mplcton. ( 1r James
Frasier's words. not mine.)
"I alwa ys vote accord1n1 to my
consc1cncc" sounds so pure and
morally defen able. that the man who
says at never stops to than~ that the
people who elected ham hav e cons.-
c1enccs too. Who a to represent their
conSClenccs? Or don•t the)' count.,
I doubtks ha\'en•t expressed tbas
a \\ell as Jack PcltaJOn dad, I
apolOllle for prcsumina to put words
an has mouth I do the best I can.
With my upbnnaina. heanna th 1
philosophy made me bnstlc. I wanted
to araue Wltb Cha~Jlor Peltuon. but I rouod no conv1nana araumcnt.
The proper formula tttmed to be th.al
a n:~1.111ve bould follow the
voters' contcaence when they arc
naf\t, and shouJd follow has o-wn when
ht 1snaht. But t.hcre as no way for him
Lo tell ihe one eate from the olhcr.
As tune wtnt by I found more and
more occasaons whue Jack·s concept
was vahd. I was s-rbcularly am·
pressed by some tormer ma)ors ot
Newpon Beach • .t\o madt a point of
beana contcmJ)Cuous or the voters
Ttho ekaed them. They acemed \0
rep.rd tht vorcrs as tr'llics who had
shO•n just one bnef f1uh ohantt)' -
when mey voced for a.be mayor.
Admittedly, dec1ed ~· .. tives have ~ dall aya..._ to
them, and art an a poslllon to make a
bctttr-i.nformcd Judalnent than tbett
const1tucnts. lndcccf. tha1 i much of
lhe ~n for re~ntaU\<e IOVCrtl·
mcnt; '' would be absurdly wa tef ul for tveryo~ lo be<'omt informed about all 1hc de1.11ls. That 4s whal
reprcsen1.1uvcs arc for. But the con·
fl1cts of con.5Clcncc I am 1.1lk101 about arc not details. They are the b11 and
controversial assucs whach 1A)c pubhc
un«n1.1nds quite well.
One could say that the Job of an
ckc&cd n:prescnwivc i 10 vote on
each issue the same way that the
people woWd votc 1(thc rnatltf wett
broU&ht to a referendum. On tht
detail matters, that mean s1f\11'1 throuah the facts and find1n& a
$CDsatik and prudent solution. be-
cause lht vo\Cn arc sensible and
prudent. On the b11 pohcy matters. at
means makina a strcnuou effort to
find out what~ voters are thinlun&. Tbis docs not man merely hav1na
an open-door pobcy of bc1na ready •o
hmn to anyone who wants to Lalk.
Becau_tc the ones who wanl to I.Ilk •rt
mainJy thcont.t who want to arranac
JOtnethina for then pnvatc benefit,
uiually It .,_ablac UJ)Cl\te. No. u
means actively IO'nt to the people for
tbtir views. lt .nanscontactina them
Denying the Holocaust is ultimate cruelty
•
ly JOYca.mlilm...tWM=tf\o
Of .. ..-........ i:-. ....... -
For yean., m then have beeD
sh,.n& plain whi diapen over tbeit
shoukten to burp their blbics.
· But now a Costa Mesa womu hopes to brina a whole new look to
that dated tradition by crea~ a line of trendy reversible burpcr with
coordinated bibs. ··1 bepn the business about a ~;
ago. I was inspired by my dauahttt•1
pregnancy," said Sandy Binikos. 461 founder of the Babce Burper Co.,
mother of three ..:own children and
grandmother to 6-month-old Evan
CO&hill, the inspiration.
The burper sets. packaged in Jif\
boxes, sell for about $2S. They are
designed in colorful patterns of fancy
pany lace or winsome everyday wear.
The ttems arc 100 percent cotton with
a diaper on one side and terrycloth on
the reverse.
"That is so one side always looks
nice." said Binikos. "The concept
1sn 't new. Diapers over the shoulden
have been around for years. I felt the
need was for something more ~
signer-look than the ugly looking racs
on the shoulders.•• ~inikos is not new to the field of
color and design. For more than JO
years, she was employed by Bullock's
South Com-Plaza att'floral-designer.
It was there the idea for the burpcr set
ongmated as she strolled through the
baby depanment contemplating the
b1nh of her first grandchild .
.. There are always baby needs," she
said. "I wanted a product that would
sell at all times of the year."
Binikos said designing the sets was
the easy part.
"} knew nothing about the manu-
• facturing aniie of the business." she
said. "Where does one begin? I spent
many sleepless nights thin1cing what I
would do in the momins.: ·•
Not one to sit idle, Bimkos began t9
call fabric makers in New York. The~
in tum referred her to local contacts. S..ndJ atnlkos. her grandson Evan Coghlll and daughter
Soon she hired sewing assistants to A .,drea Coghill show off Bab•• aur_per wea;.
make the sets and in June 1988 the
business was launched.
The idea caught on fast. Within Binikossaid the business isa family
four months, Binikos had placed the affair. HeT 21-year-old twin sons have matehi~sets in local children bouti-_ _heJped with the distnburio.n of the
ques and Bullock's South Coast product and her dau~ter, Andrea.
Plaza. In October she quit her design mother of Evan. assist in the market·
job and began working .. full speed inf. end. away" on her new enterprise. 'My husband even baby:sits for us
"One month I opened eight ac-so wt"ca-n get business done." Binikos
counts," she said ... It was very easy. said of her airline-pilot mate.
The product is well-made and being While Binikos talked about her
made in the USA seems to be a plus. new-found business, her grandson sat
.. We have had plenty of reorders. J contently in his mother's lap. The
hooked a large representative from dark-haired baby wore a Babce
California and a represcnt.a1ve on the Burpcr bib, and COlhill bad slung the
East Coast. matchin_g pad over ncr shoulder.
.
.. The line has grown since Evan's
birth.'' said Coghill. "He likes bright colors, hke all bab~ do. Evcryta me
he looks at the mouse design he
laughs."
Binikos sa}S she 1s sti ll surpnsed
where her carctr .@lh.Jlas kd..
··1 had my hands full rai ing twins:·
she said smilng. "So 1f you had told
me 15 years ago t would be working
with babies, l would have said ~ou
were crazy. But this 1s a real JO)'.
especially because I have always
wanted to ha' e my own business ...
aste test for peanut Outter.M&Ms
8y DANlfLJ. WAKIN
.A#edl 11 f ,.,_ ..........
NEWARK. N.J. - First there were
M&Ms, small candy-covered choc-
olate monels. Then peanuts muscled
their way into the popular confection.
Now, you might say. M&Ms ha ve
gqne soft.
Mars Inc. of Hackettstown, which
recently fell to No. 2 in the nation's S8
billion candy market. has be&un
tcstmg peanut buttcT-filled M&.MS.
The nickel-sized, lentil-shaped
sweet was introduced into two un~
identified East Coast cities for test-
marketing. said Mars spokesman•
Hans Fiuczynski. •
Fiuczynski dismisses any com-
parison with a similar prorluct made
by rival Hershey Foods Corp ..
Reese's Pieces, another peanut-butter
filled candy.
"You really ouJht to go and try
them.'' Fiu~nsk1 sniffed. referring
to the Reese s Pieces. "They don't
have chocolate. They're some sort of
peanut butler-flavored fudge."
Since Mars is privately held. he said
End Probate
Woniesfor
Your Family
"'We set up a living trust and now our
children won't have to go through the time
and expense we went 'through when we
had to probate the estate of Bill's parents.
When Bill's parents paued away, they
had a hou.ee and a couple oCbank accounts.
Becaus& they only had a will, the estate had
to go thro~ probate. Everytbing wu ao
difficult and time consu.minr. The probate
took over a year and cost thousands of doJ-
lara.
he would not comment on repons
that 1t has fallen to second place 1n th e
U.S. capdy market.
According to industry figures, the
Hershey, Pa.·bascd company has 20.8
percent of the market to th e 18.5
percent of Mars. long the indu try
leader. Hershey vaulted to No. 4 by its
acquisition in August of the U ..
candy div1s1on of Cadbury
Schweppes Foods.
Fiuczynsk1 conlirmrd that Mars
has recently launched ~vcral other
new products.
When we went to do our will, a friend
recommended an estate planning eeminar
pret1ented by Bezaire Law Offioea. The "at-
torney wae interesting and very informa-
tive. There were so many benefits we
weren't aware of. I'm slad we attended the
aeminar because we found out that we
could not only eave our children thoUNnda
oC doll.an in estate tuff and probate fee1,
but al80 that we could •t up our Mt.ate eo
that cataatrophic medical care COlta WoU.ld
not tAU all our aeeete away.
Reaenaliom .re llClt MCCll''J
IO plcMe come arty.
Wl»n it comee time for our ch.ildnn to
h•Ddle our Htate. everythinc will be in or-w W thea. WPdOn't want our children
to iiillW~•la;i~pain we eu«end wlieft OW' ......... ,.
-~lrittes, GWC awaJt volleyball showdo"'!n
ly ll9CHAllD DUNN
.._. ... Ce:: $1 ....
Franchi1t player Tim Joheton as
hobblina around with a brokee ankle
which hU forced him to miu Golden
West Collqie's 1ut three matches,
ud freshmin 1msatioo. Gres Ryan .,ained his ankle last week to put rum up on the lhelf.
So GWC men's voUeybaJI coech Al Guoarian knows at won't be easy
Wednctday rupt containina the fired-'!P ~ eo.st Pirases u the intra~astrict nvals b9tlk once more
in the South Coast C.Onfertnce race.
The Rustlers, obvJOU$.ly, •~ hurt-
ina. Since Wlnn1n1 seven in a row, GOiden West has dropped two
strai&ht. Losina Jobnton was dev~
tauna. . auys, the ones lhat weren't eh11ble. Orante Coast, on the other hand, is But they're bMk and they're a very s.azzlina. takina an 11-1 conference aood uad." ma.rt into tonjht's mat.ch apanst La The ~rates, tied with LA Pierce V~me. ~only school to defeat the 01·1) for.lint place in the SCC. host
Pirates t~11 sea.son. La Verne's Leopards toni&ht at 1 with OCC 11 22·1 O'-'erall and 46-S is redemption on their minas.
tola.I pmes played. Middle blocker "La Verne is ITS and battling for
Scott Lindquut is pla~ un-third place with Golden West," said ~ously Well and out.lade hatter OCC Coach Bob Wetzel, whose
Bnan Lewis, the state MVP two years Pirates won the state title in 1987. ~1 is beaded for ~other conference · "We've ~ver played on a Monday
M'VPaward,accordinatoGupanan. 'before tJus year and La Verne is the
Gus-rian, who wasn't around only team to beat us.~·
when the Pirates blew the Rustlers Tonaaht also marks the home·
out in their fmt enooun1er, thouf!lt com1na of Charles CUtencse, a cur-
be wu . finished tee1f\J pla_1e11 Like rent player at La Veme a four-year
Lewis and LindquJSt. .. (~C) 1s very. school. He pla)'Cd on Wettel's tatc
very IO()d," he S&J<I. "After two years, chamacC:'ship team two years ago. I thoua:ht 1 was done seeing those M blocker Kun Dumm, a ~
tranlfer from Chapman. hU also
been hot lately for ~ Pirates
"(Dumm) hu been/layi• well for
us, too," Weuel sai . "He1110 to a
four-year school, as w~ll as Brian
Lewas, who's the No. I out11de
hitter" •
The Rust~ 8_., will need a minor
miracle Wednesday naJht to pull off
an u~t s.ance Johnson, a sophomore
outa1dc hitter from Foun1am Valley Hl&h. is out of the hncup. "If I were
coacruoa a player who had a future at
a four-year IChool, I don't thank I'd
take a chance and let him play," said
Wetzel.
"OfTenslvely," said Gaspanan.
··Johnson can hit with anybody at the
four-year level. We've had to do some
th1nas to pack up the lack. and 1f we
do that (Wednesday) we'll have a
chance. ·
"But, offensively, he's the beat JC
player I've seen since J've been
coachana. l think Brian Lewas 1s the
MVP of the conferen~. he's the mott
well-rounded player."
Ryan, an AJl-CIF player at Hunt-
ington Beach H1&h last year, inJured
his ankJe Jut rnday m&ht as the
Rustlen lost to Santa Barb9ra and
will be doubtful for Weanesday.
"We're-a tittle banac<S UiP riaht now:·
said Gaspanan. "So we'reJust hop1na
to work out hard on (today) and
Tuesday and be read).
"I'd say, as far as the conference
race '~s. we're in a little sJump nght now.
' "'
UCI holds
on to nip
~an-:J o~ -~~
Irvine team
wins; Mesa. ,
............... -5-f/tJad falls · i-
The UCI baseball team built a 6-1
lead after two innangs. then had 10
hold on Sunday for a 7-6 victory over
San Jose State 1n a Big West Con-
ference baseball pme at Anteater
Field.
UCI . 11-17-1 overall, 1·2 an the
confercnce1 saJvaged one o_fthe t~rcc
pmes an tne weclccnd sencs apinst
the Spartans. 28-6. 2-1 . who arc
ranked I 5th in the country in the
luest poll by Baseball Amenca.
The Anteaters opened rl'le sconng
wtlh two ~ms an the first as Stacy
Parker led off with a bunt single, took
third on an errant packofTattempt by
losina patcher Donnae Rea , then
scored on a ~cnfice fly by Ed Luna.
lirian Young singled an Al Rooriguez
for the other run.
After San Jose scored once an the
top of the second,, UCJ countered in
ii,s half to score 1our. Chri Gallqo·
sianed it otTwitn a sin&Je. then was-ablc to move to second after beang
cauJht 1n a rundown when the first
baseman's throw hat him in the back.
Mike Goodcasc siniJed Gallc.ao to
third and Jon Berger walked to fill the
bases.
Jon Skaggs followed wath a two-run
base hit to n&ht, Luna added an RBl-
sangleand Roonaueu sacnfLcr Oy for
a five-run cushion.
But the Spartans battled back to
"•than 6-4 wath a run in the saillh and
two more in the scvtnth on &ck-to-
back run-sconng hns by Kevin Tan-
nahill and Jason H•nf which chased
UCI starter Ken Whnworth.
The Anteaters scored what proved
to be the deca 1ve run an the bo11om of
the eighth as Btrger lashed a 1wo-out
double· and scored when Tannahill,
I.fie Spartan catcher, tned 10 pick him
ofTand the throw bounced 1n10 cen1er
field.
\ '\f.I I' 1•1t1\11:"
..., ..... ,.._..,. ..............
Th• Cosu Mesa t J . •nd t J ·J••;·old 9lrl1 soccer t••m Rebecc• Satin kicks: Kristin• Grlpltli frl9htf defendi; nu
INttled for th• AYSO trl-sectlon•I ch•111plon1hlp In a.. T•v•r•• frf9htf duels hH po11e11lon, •nd Amy Holbrook
HalWa Sund•r· fClodlwl•• fr0tn top l•ftlt Costa M•••'• boob b•ll •• teammate Amy Yocket w•tches.
~ngels counting on newcomers to reverse trend
Club has added Rader as manager, as well as W as h ingt on, Blyleven and Parrish
8y KIN P'IT!M ,.,...,...., ....
The C'ahfom1a Angels bc&Jn 19 9
on a 12-tame losina meak. That was
how they finashcd 1988
Doua Rader, Claudell Wasbin11on.
Ben Blyleven and Lance Pamsh.
amon,a others, can't ta.kc any oftl'fc
blame for that sance the)' weren't wath
lhc Ant.els last )'car
But Rader. takina over as the
~m·s maoqer, and the othcT new-
comers an bCina counted on to tum
thinp around
,Jlader. the former Tuas Ranters naatt. was hittd over the 'Winter
•fter Cookie ROJA• was fittd late in
lbe ICMOl'I. Coech MOOK Stubina
p&idcd the tam after Rojas. wbo luld
bttn handed the ~ins when ~ot
Mauch mittd dunr•a camp last IPrina. ... let ..,.
Radtf ideri11 the nucleus of a
m that went 7W7 IUI yar.
As 1tmt1 allftOIC tnditaoul with
the A..._ lhtyappear tohavca IOOd offri* but 1111*1 pitdlina, both
IJftOlll their IUftilll n>UtM>n and 1n the bultpm.
..
The DUJOr development m the
p1tchio1 corpj appears to be the
iostant nsc to the b11 kaaues of Jam
Abbott, the 1987 Sullavan A"ard
winner and 1988 Olym{>•C hero out of
the Uhiversity of Mich1pn.
Abbott, who was born wathout a
naht hand.-wall become the first one--
banded pitcher an the maJors an«
Hu&h Dailey before the tum of the
century. He was 1n1tially tabbed to
start has pro career with the Anacls'
AA club in Midland, Texas. But hi 90-plus mph fast ball, his poise and
has competitiveness have earned ham
a 1ob with the Anacls.
"He's someth1n1 special, and I
don'tJUSt mean his hand!' Rader said
of Abbott.
Abbott W1U be the fil\h tarter.
afforded the opponunat)' because
Ou Petry has been slow to rep1n full
stftnisth after a shoulder anJU') tha ..,,, ..
Of the Cahfor.rua stanen. only
rithl-Uftder Make Watt ttems solid,
and even he's coma"' off a I J.16
teMC>a aa wtuch he hllcf a 4 1 j eamed
nan •vtf'llt·
• O \f 11·, C OIC'I IC
Joanang ham and Abbott an lhe
starting rotation arc Bl)le"en. o~
taancd tn a trade with Minnesota O\.er
lhc wanter: Chuck Fanky and KJrk
Mc(.'askall
The n&ht-handed Blylcvcn "as 1().17 w1tfi a 5.43 ERA for the Twans
la 11eason: Fanle)'. a left-hander. 'tl.1'S"
9-IS with a 4.17 ERA; the nght-
handed McCa kill, bothered b> a
nerve 10,Jury an his nght shoulder. was
8-6 with a 4.31 ERA whale appcanng
an 23 games. Petry. another nght-
handcr, was 3-9 with a 4.38 ERA.
The ngel bullpen, mean whale. will
ap1n depend heavily on Br>an
Har\'C'f'. The AnJcls hope Harvc:~ will
be a&le to come back from
arthro Opac Uf"ICry tO remO\oe bone
chaps from his nght elbow last
ptembcr Gres Minton also wall be
counted on out of the bullpen.
Behind the plate. Lance Pam b,
acquired an a deal wub Ptuladcl~h1a
lu1 October. wall L1J to fill in for Bob
Boone, who wasn t re-s'lncd and
went to the Kansas Caty Royals
Pam,h. 32, CO¥Jd prove to be a
valuabk addataon 1fhe can rqa1n hi~
batting eye aficr a 19 campaign an
which he hat JUSI 215 lowest of ht,-
career
C'ahfomta should he strong of-
fcn 1vcly. helped b) lhe s11ninaoffrec
a1en1 Washington over the \\Inter.
Wash1ng1on, 34. 1 comanp. ofTa )Car
m which h-e hat 308 for the Yank~ .
matching ha career hap,h
Helping pro' 1dc punl h do"'n
through the lineup are first ba~man
Wally Joyner. who hat .295. w1th 13
homers and 85 RBI la~t )tar. out-
fielder( hah Oava . 21 homers and 93
RBI. outfielder-DH Bnan Do"ning.
25 homers and 64 RBI; and utal-
1t)man Johnn)' Ray. who hit a team·
ha&h .106 and drove an 3 runs.
mong tile other dcus1ons Rader
fa'ed th1 spnng v.as at scrond base
On turd•y. lfa rk Mc lcmore v.-ho
lo t the jOb to Ra> after btang
s1dehned Wlth an •nJUf) earl> la t
season. -as opttoned to Edmonton
Outfielder Dante Bachcue, h1ttma
Clltremcl)' ~II thl .pnna. hOWC\Cf,
earned a spot on the Ansel ~tcr.
The An&el• have the mJsforturK of
bt1n1 tn 1he ume d1v1,1on, thC' AL
\'\f.11' '(Ill.DI 11
HOME
TuesdaY-<l'llc.110, 2 OS om
Aot11 S-Cl'llceoo. 7'05 om
Apr11 0-Cl'lleaoo. 1 OS pm
April ·7-S.,,llle, 7'0$ om
Aorll 1-Sffllle 7-05 om
Aorll 9-Sfallle 1-05 Pm
AorH 11>-0•IOand 7 05 pm
•All oarnn on kMPC (710)
West. v.11h the Oakland -'lhlet1c •
who had baseball's be t record last
ear
"They'' e proHn 1hc)'re an out tand1n.a team," Rader said ... But
1f )OU look at the ngcls last a n, 11
was a )tar when \Cry latlk v.cnt nJht,
"l(Oak1and slips a little and thanp
, ....... '"ANGILS/921
Kaplan wins 1 lth
straighrtopa(~uc1. Emotions of tennis coach often come full circle
-in A YS O
• ay MUCELMAU O
Oally,...C_,•+*'*'•
Art'a A YSO soccer teams had thCJr
final pmes on Sunday in the Tri-
&-cuonal Championships in la
Habra wnh maxed results.
The South Irvine Stnken defeated
the Huntangton lkacb/Wcstmtnstcr
Anhalators. and the Costa Mesa 11rls
11-Slar\ lo t to the Manhattan Beach
Hermans.
Earlier Sunday. the Strikers de-
feated the Pasadena All..Stan. 3-l.
quaJaf)•ing them to p~y in the final
round apanst the Anh1lators.
In the final pme, the two teams
held each other off until the second
half when parky Kumor of lrv1~
scorc:d both goals to give the Strikers a ,
2-1 victory. __
Coach John Doidac of South Irvine
said his team's performance rn the
finals waj· "cx_c~Uent," altho'!1_t ~ __ _
the second game the squad was tJrcd.
but stall v.orkina as a tca.m. They're
the be1t aroup I've ever acen. and I've
been coachana nane years."
The tnkcn faced Y.-Orth.Y oppo-
nents, according to Do1d1e.
Pasadena. be Slld, was "the tooahest
team v.c'"e ever faced." and Hunt-
anatoo Beach/Westminster was "no
pu ho er . . a tremendous team."
Doidge said· has team owes its
ucccss 10 the 1nd1v1duaJ pla~rs. who
"ha\e hcan and spint . . I thin.le the
pl:t)ers have apin showed that lhcy
plax as a team and not as o~ player
· It's easy to coach younasicrs who
are cager to learn and cager to please,"
Do1dgt added .. Soccer 1 4ood for
their Vo" th bccauSt it teaches thctn tcamwor~ and self-diSCJplme."
The trikcrs arc an All-tar team
which consists of the best players
from their d1v1s1on.
Three of the tnkcr pla)ers -
Garett tluns. Jeff Jensen. and
Kumor-~ere members of the team.
" tnke Force." wbacb wa.s the South
Inane Lcque winner.
Meanv.h1le. the Costa Mesa
D1V1 aon 3 Girl ~JI· t.ars. •bO had I
achieved a 112-1 record. lost 4-1
against fanhattan Beach in the Tri-
taonaJ Tournament, the highest i
lc"cl of A YSO competJtion in C.ali-
fom1a.
Co ta Mesa htld the Hermans to a
1-1 uc at halft1me. with each team pla~ ang well defcns1vcly. But after the
half. the game took a tum for the
wone for osta M wh icb was
out ored J..-0 th~,u.&...LUJ;;.J'UIL)'--
(o ta Mesa Coach Jim Townsend
descnbcit ht team's performance as
" lcepy" but stre sed that .. they ,
worked Hry bard all season." He said
that this was the farthest any Costa
Mesa l'rls team had ever come in
YSO compttit1on.
Manhattan Stach Coach Jeff Mell-
angtr said has team was "up ap1nst a
tou&}I opponent. Costa MC1a had
C'<CCllCnl pla)ers . . wcll~IS-
'Clphncd ··
Manhattan Beach went on to lost
to Buena Park 10 the finals. 6--0.
The tandout for COJta Mesa was
goalkccpu ndrca 0.va In the first
haJf. he ~as laf"ICI) rcsponsa~ for
holdana the Herma.ns by blOCking
seHral potential pl
lthouah satuficd wath the rason
\h<' felt that coma to other ,.ma her team has yed. Suoda ptt·
formance was I* ...
"-""'*A 1111 ",.,_ The five victories iPCi '6t &atc:•1'I !f'*!•·:,:1;1r?JD1 ·WllM • ..... me 16'11 .bolt, IUI w~ovtrlilTeotiVaJlrhAoi1un1 ,p" ·-·--· C..----.'".':J'.~'° . 5El\1TU-5'ev<F1tll<rhot1'roullll ~ ..-nc1 boik<t by Siu Hillin•. th< Wol..,, .0 .... ........._MIRAGE_ Juli lat· IDkNcr. ~W81 , --. tlid. M mu.cb 1nentioft 10 I.he word 0.ltrim u lie '" MICCleQ apia11 the Fipl.in1 lllini Y1i1 sca.SOfl 1
__..., Ind ......_. "Siie ~ T... bu to die MidlipA bolkctboll team he hM , _.;1111' t11i1~',t.-----fdt Ilk lllo -tbr it ,.,_..: .-..... n beea<X*b~theputfi•e-Gl<nltl<elrdMi<hipninllCOrin&apinll
•
111i11--. · :C.~ ua. You re eetttlllS too far The dlteerofiaterim-tbett'1tha1word with28PQintaandhehl.sljijp<>inu intht-touf1\ll
Ne ... Diayeron mit i.PoA-. .. 1k,vethiscoune liRiumbpme .--COICh Filhtrmd1&0aishl (0..nael 2116) 2Slhon of8ill8i'adlcy'smarkset with Priqcet<H'j!:dill -~mict&erdertM LolAl'lol · . wtlb u.e natioaaJcMmpioftshippme111i.wSetoa Hall ~ Ri<.'ebulbot S9,4~nt from lbc rttkl. irte rntr ~lcled a foar..my...., MCI ~. played exiremcly we llli• ~of the o.aKX>me. . 22-for.J.7 ~rt from 3-poinl 111:nsc-, ~ · ,.. ~ N1•i1cbo-Dillllh Shaft 1our· week. . ' Thcfinal..,ntofthecntirecoHqebukttbaSltrubn .. ·"l jUmpcd on Gten Rite'• \lfl;ck bc10:.C.
·1 1 I M MW• Hilll Cou•tll Tbc: victory Wll tbc ICCOnd for ·ii ID unlikely pl.cc for an inlenm co.ch to be and until toum1men1 ind he's c*rrird me lhis f'ar," Fisher
CWtSUedly. • lnbwr ia &be lliAM Sllore. the Gm 1u11aton il was just as an unlikdy pUice f'ot a Seton Hall Michipn un1er Terty Mil~" said he hat ch;:,r~ hlbaer toot Ille nd oa the fint comiJilia 19S.C in aJ*yofl'. That wu ·aeun IO be. style of play from 1eortr to role player ~u~
day lt)i; three itrom ud rMdc it a inhcrlintfiall~oelbeLPOAtou.r. 1 F'~i~s&1rted48hounbef'orethetouman1ent 1tttak. · . • . wife.lo.win: v~ witb rounds of '"l'k Dinah Sh;orc;wins mcaJ'l a k>t ~ when ITU frieder wu fired by Michipn after "When you fiavc a guy shoot!"& like Glen Ritt
· ~7]..71_-279iowinby6vc:over lO me. The first one came after I Olnell Shor• lapeetq~W.eovcruthChaldcoechatArimnaState -,lhooliftf)'OV~~vejoUrbOdyupfortha1,·".tte-~id ... We've
JoAnne c:anaer-and Tammie GreeTI birdied the lul hole and won in • wlla..w Jlllf 1'*81er .._ • .next acason. Si~ then the Wolve:rirtn)\avc not only not maJM1Y!9 a lot !O ~la ~ week$ und~·.c pl.Ck 11 up .11 notch :'1f~.,=·=·rc11~Tlle ....,(oi:'l'lll~lndi1::i; ---.--.......... IOll but they have j,f.ycd their bnt bostetboll of the: cnrymght.'.' ' . ~ol? ...... .__. __ _,!aL~'l~UfWtt•· ~!ln"t!~mmey~~· .e.. .~ .,...,_ ..,~, l*lt on ,..,. hole. 'stason and thtirbestof1ny rcc:cnfNCAA iourname~t. . · Se~on Hal.I pick¢·1hingt'\1p more 1han one ftotch Jn ~' ....,._._..,. .. ---~ "" ,,_, ... , ...--u.. ,_ ':'i'Tim1n1iscvcrythina"1ndl.Jwnpcdua._t1beriabt , . .J_stm1final'Yu:1oryoverD4ke.· ·· ell.Milm ae.tl ll'Oil by tUc!c,Ja 1982 rm lhe Y Ollie Who ,. ebattCc to· toad bi~ •1f(was 39; I'd be ita<iina by tiine." Fisher siid Sunday. adttina that he will not talk to The Pintes trail1..-d , 26-8 12 m1nu1es intc;>--i~ game
ucl Alice Miller b)' tbe same matJin win the araOO slam now, huh?" seven ri&ht now.' • Mtchipn _ athletic director and football coach Bo and they looked more hke one of P.J. C•rles.1mo s early in 191$._ Inkster •id she will IMY in San "l'm.usina pph.ite shafts on m1 Schcmbech"-r about· the head coachina position u.ntil teams at the New Jersey school when 11 was common for
·. Inkster ~· ked up the wlnner's Dicao and lM Anadtt ~ next two clubs and they arc li&h.ter. I don't hit 'after tbc cJwnpionship pmt. them to be the doormat o( the Big Enst Conference.
dNd of$ 000 while Ca.mer and wecls before tatina tome time oft'. tlte ball hard enoqh with tbcm yet.'' . ..We have not been lucky in the tournament the last "I think we're gc1tin1 rtspcct.and that comes from Oneo won S ,000 each with Betsy Caner, winner of lbc Women's Gt'"t w~ pllYCd with lnks~r lix years. BalJs bcM&nced off 1n11Cad or in. We've 1ot1cn the kids playing unselfishly," Carlcsimosaid. "{krcnsc iJ ~udJody ROltlllhal next 11288. Kemper <>Den It Maa Verde CC in and 8e1b Du.eloa ~lu~ytofinisb 1ucky but the playen have put themtelves in posillon to a bi& pert or our pmc and that is critical for us to be
bSl9,750acla. 1979, had Tour mcx::eMi~ rounds of 1-u.nder, hid four bird1CS and ooc win1tmcs." . successful."
tabler.:wu.ncvcr_introublconlhc-71for1 .214 IOUL_Sbe 1q1aM:dly boltY Sunday. She bad rounds or ~ _ _ -·--
fiaol doy oJUloulh tbc saw her lead throot<nedto...Uorua1tllv:leod<T 72'li8-7~9-:'2M. -D i , k 118' 11. 7 -to lluec1fter 11 holes when bu1couldnc\'el'qui1CllCI0-1 faux "I didn't lool< It the leader boud LakefS edge uuC $, -
.._,.,. llleJJl'·S, 499-yltd 11th. ........ f1nuee. Giit there todly," tbc tlid. "I didn't
....,upblrdielon 16and 11 eo .,_illllilcrniddlcol'my~~in Uveto. tbc~did it for me. I did a,.,-!btl scored 32 points. includina --"='"-'" THJ: Hl.E-\('HERS
·----... M...Q::
_,,,..._ It~
~~it her winnina m1!Jin to five. no mu"1·1and where I COUkln't stop, Fl neyvous and boot~ a coup~ or live 3-point shots, in lcadillJ the Los Aftac)cs >-'
Only five players fimsbed the wben 1 -.nNll **led 'QUet Shots . off the . tee bei. na a httlc 1.a•-to 1 118-111 v1cto'"". over the _-. '1----~;~~ndi::r.par.in~:l~Jbe.lbol..in1o..lhe richL iena.atJvc:. I felt hke I had a 1QQd.J'QWld_Mii;;ukee-Bwcb-on-Suhday. n1Jh:t, at tbc ----1 conditions with exception of rouah behitaa a tree and took a boseY today. forum The Laken led 5~53 at halftime but Scott made
'nd austs on Saturday. Sunday's Qn ihc bok." . . . . . ..Yesterday I sudden!~ rcalim:I three }.point shou and ICOred 14 points in the 1hird
t
Eund was 1pin played in She~ httJc tame in ~tll!'l ll about the 10th hole that 11 was fun quarter as the Laken opened a 90-72 lead with 2:58
mpcr1_ lures in the mff!-90s with no beck Wlth a 20-foot pull for birdtc: on. pllyinc in the lut aroup. ll gives me rcmainina in the Period. Milwaukee outscored Los
nd. No. 2. , . . .. _c;g_nfldcnoc_tbc rest of ~ se-.it0n .. Ana,eJes 11-J durina the rc:st or the Pt'riod.cutti.ng_~he ~d t .. 1--conccntrated on my tempo ... ,, looked likeJub:wu fl1ht1t:'& 11 a feehna ~'"tan com~tc~~-th~ 10 IJ0...83 eiilefinJlhCfiilil quart~. TfieBUCU11ed 1198-98 fc?ciay, .. lnkstcf said followina her htt~ but I knew that ifl ~ IOIDI to ~ycrs. the: Zancsvtlk:. oh10 native with 7:51 remaining on a 3-point shot by Ricky Pinet
· . "I never rally rushed a shot catc~ her. I Md lO make birdte putts. I said. . . and then took their first leld of second l:'alf, 1.01-98. on J ~I played aman 1his week had to keepthe~oo her. That Pat ~ley, a winner here 1n 1986 Jad5ama'• scoond 3-pointer of the penod with 1:13 to
that90tmeaoina. ' wouklbivebcenahttlemorcfun. ind a victor 1n the 1981 Women's play cappinaa 16-2 run. Trailing 10>102with S:15lcft.
t prettycon(i(lcnt and I hit my "I remembcr1~in~1111 t m•t ha'!e Kemper at Mesa Verde CC. carded the l..aken went on a 7--0 run and led 109-105 on Maatc
hns well \Oday. I knew they would a chance but I didn t mate II.! d~ thc:lowroundaf'thedaySunday,a~S, J-...•1 sky hook with 3:53 to play ... In other N.BA
Nve to aiakc a lot of birdies to catch make cnouP money to IO fislu~ to pul her at even i:-r 288 along with .games· J.e O.man Sj:'Ored 23 Potnts and BW t..lmMet ~ . Shc:'H ~a.is week off ~o cc&cbri.tc Amy Benz, Cathy Benz .and Janet added '22 points and 18 rebou~s as Dttroi1 ,1,retched its
.. I think playina with JoAnne he! SOth birthday and do Just ~l. ~· Co~es had made a run al a winning streak toc:i&ht games 1":1th a 11 7·101 victory over
) helped me. She inspired me · Someoae IOkl-me hllppy birthday hiahcr finish when sbe was 4--uodcr the: Cli~-1t lbe Sports A~na Vlaie-J.._ ... scomj
Jlly well and it aot me keyed up to out there ~ lhc:~coune and a~ther lhrouc,h 10 hQtcs but lost four down 22 points off the bench for the lcagur-lead~nc:Pistons, wh.o
!Jiywith her." person said I wU 39 and botd1ra&. l the stretch. · improved tmir record to Sl-17. The 0 1pPcrs saw their j,.,L _______________________________________ JlllO..lllffi.__.~!!!n&Jtreai i!l_!.~rec 2?" end 11 three games . , · \"' •· .J
'!"" •• ~ieUel J~ plrJ:!l& po1nt .1ua~-for,~--1--31h-, ·~{'\ V \
ATTON UCJas-.4teamwin. . • headoutofaauillotinebcforclhc stra1&bl~~·hadtusfi Chc.onsecudct1:c 1tnple:G.o1~blcNand · ···\f._V""· ~· · .~'1 1·~
l'hatmatChclosedichaptcr(ormy bladcdroPJ,. TheUClteamh.asbcen nintfi of li.oc season as ICllO . 1ca cd v1s11ng cw
ro11111 . careerasaCOKh,asUSC.wasthe-linal kindtomc;thouah,forlhavelos1 Jcney;'I06=95 . ":-: BrM Da.ptri)' overpowered a '"Crtpea, you hooked It again ... Maybe It's the
_ to one or two points.,justllkc tOp teim in the nation that UO had some hair this.xason, but my hc:a<l weakened a.rt Pu1* 1.0: score 20 of Ocveland:s .~rst Position of your feet ... '
hehundRdsofhounofdatingthat notdcfal1edduringmy IOyeanat andMCkarcstillintact. 33 points and the Cavahen went on to beat v1st11n1 •-----_,...,,,,.,,.,,---------~
Uc• Boslon, 11 7-100 ..• CMr'"BaRJe1scored 26,.QQint.sJ!nd ~-
.o;----.totbe.nbricrmomcntsora ~ ram veryproudoroursq...a;.. 8 .,.., ........ lli4•l;l<ill_ '"' 1h<76m_-to_ a ios-99. Wom•n's tltl• to Tennessee-~proposal. · Tbevictoryovcrtbel'rojanswa.s wcllaslhcfonnerplayenwhoha,·c · H h h"-M~ Ph I d I h 'iOo. ~ •, •ttbisti'mei'n•.-•tch,o-•chc•n notpi·nec.twithoutsomek>iK.lhad .._.._h UClto . 1 . vlCloryover ouston,w 1c 1..ano1won 1n 1a c~ ta " .,.._ -.,,..,....,1 nauona prominence in l5 ycan .,. o..a....-Wllklu tc0rcd 19 o~h1s ~3 Slartpraying,forfatcandluckto promisedmyte.m.evualyunago intennis.Onearcatbatwcntun-pointS in the second half as Atlanta heal lnd1an!l tn
tervene. During the third set that I would shave mymUSIKhcifwe noticed. butwbichis veryimporUnt Indianapolis, 132~09 ... Dantll Walbt' had 16 points.
tiebreaker, I reassured mySelfthat I beat USC: Aftcrourw:iD, the &earn 's 1oour Pf'Olll.m'sarowthr...was the 10 -bounds ind nine assists in less than thret quarters,
Md kept_.J of my pre--match super-finl courscof actlon was to find a construction of the UCI 1 cnnis kad'fna Washinaton 10 its 13th consecutive home victory,
•titious rituals. razor and make me lite up to my Stadium; plus the fact thauhe top a 12().103 rout or Gokkn Stale ... 1"4riu O..tky's 2().
: Iwouklwcarstrcetclothesto thc bargain.ThinccnrearsorafuzzyHp OrallflCCount)'tcnnisplayCrsarc foot brink shot 11 time e11.pimj lifted Dallas 10 a 98-96 ~ru.~to1enniswearand hit went down thcd1111n with a sweep of now attend in& UCI . v'klory over Miami at R.cunion Arena. ~th one of our pla.ycn for five the hand, but noth,inicou.ld have We i:-ssod a great milestone in
jninutes. tbcnquicktvchanaeback to been s\lr'CCter. 1987, when twotopplaycnin the
1tfcetclothesbct0relhc match · · D .. · county, BrigsofCoronadcl Mar ,taned. To be honest, this year's UCt tennis High and Canlcn Hoffman of Uni-
' Fortunately, my strict regimen team is like watching an Alfm:I venity High, elected to be Anteaters
Paidofl'forourdOublesteam of Mike Hitchcock and Friday the 13th film (finalJythc:JJrt next door realizes Bri19sandTreyorKronem1nn. They festival .Evcrymatchscemsiogo whltahunkyouarc). ~~veandati.ckcd the net down to the wire. COllCbinathc 1989 The addition or these twogrea,1 11u1 berdorbuft'ak>IO win,aivina Anteaters is like 1fY1nsto pull you studc:n14 tbktes ~ved the way for the·
'-:;;;::::::;;;;::;~~;;;;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;;;;;;:;;:;;;;;;;;~;;;11 addition ofNcal Grover (rom Dina Ii~--'!' -~ Hills Hiih this year. OranaicCount y
ft '1 hls1lwaysbccn laden with the top
pbyen in the nation. I feel there is 110 ·I stoppinaourteamifwecankeepttis I Jtcaftakntat bomewitb UCI.
QIOIJIHIHJD\\
P'rd Ttllwr, Minncsola Twins pftcher: ··1·ve
worked 8-t~S. I know what it's like out there in 1hc
real world. I've Wei concrete. l'.C worked in J.C.
Ptnney's s10ekroom. I've delivered packqes for
UPS,durina, Christmls time. J've been a recn:ation
instructor. If anybody apptteiatcs bl9i:bell mort
than me, I'd like 10 mttt him.''
Kings top Canucks In finale
TACOMA. Wash. -Olympic ''cternn ~
Bridgette Gordon scored 16 of-her 27 points •
in the first half. and Tennccsst'(: shut down ,.
Auburn star ViclJ:ic Orr 1n the socond halfu'i ~--
1he Lady Volunteers won thei r scrond na11o nal ""'~rncn'i
charnpionshipin three years whha 76-60 \r1c1orySund•>· TCtlntSscc rallied from an early five-@int dcfiC'il 10
defeat its Sou1bcas1cm ConJc:rcncr .rival for the Krond
time-in th_rce mcelings 1his season, and tt'ic-y scn1 the Lad y
• Tiacn home as the sceond-plaoc finisher fo r 1he scrond
year in a row. ·
Dodgers open In ,c1nclnnatl
1"hc Los Angeles Dodgers waot to get 10
1hc World Scncs again. The Gnc1nna1i Red~
just v.'lnt to gel thert. Their roads 1ow11rd that
· r-nd bci.inl today (Channel 11 a1· 11 a.m.J * '
TUIE IP SPECll~
9 2995
0 I T~1reaboutei&httcamswi1h1 -I legitimate sllot towin the NCAA title. I lnldditiontoUCl,lfcclthltUCLA.
when the National Leaaue Wcsl n v'als ()pen lht scason11
Ri verfront S1adium. No National Le11guc tcan1 hal lQnC'
10 the \\'orid Strir~ two years l.n a ro•· incc tht.Dodacr\
did ii 1n 1977-78 . Tbr Reds v.·e:iT the last 1c-.1n1 10 do 11
MiRKtwlte..,..brokca1tewitb6:24 ~ previously. in l97S-76. Toda). left-hander Duoy ''
left to live the undenLlffed Los An,eb Jaicbea, 2)..8 la11 )'Car, will ti') 10 ~t the Reds in fir.s1
Kinas• 5-'4dec:ision in Vanoouvcr it1 lhe last # • ptacc rorthc first lime since last Apnl 7. He'll be op~
PLUS TAX
4CYL
..... -"-*. ..... llT-Tlf..,_ ••• ,_
• -lllT
I use. Cal, Geo!Jia, Stanfool, LSU
andKentuckyallhaveapeatchlnce
to win the b_ic burrito. The most ~ importantfltctorwillbewhoisthc
healthiest at tbe NCAA 's i.n late M11y.
lldoes not maticrhow &binyyour
I
new Mu:zcratti loots ific isS1ttina In
the lll'lllC with I dead betlct)' •
• One ellStomer 11tf trallSIClll'HI. Prnenl coupon 11 turie ol writt·llP· Ea.pim
..... 31. 1989. -... Qwjotw/llil-........ ...,_ ......
with lf'IY other ser1tee spetial or tolfCMI.
I All I know is that briQlinaan
NCAA till< to UCI lwboen one or
mymajorJOOlsfortllcllsl 10y.af1. ll'
sure isew.citinato hive thltp)
starina mcdif'CC\Jy in the face this c.11 orms 4/Jtln
~-'9R· 0 itb¥">-il-+-.,FU1111}' ... ,.lhlliJ"MYllltbOrand-her
bocb~~in10aportswritin&. Nowf after~a~colvma,
cu't ...... twhytbey-yt
~mefromeetti111intoa jounlllitm-. •
ANGE'-S _,,
90ow Wiiy, we hive a chance-."
* ........ ...,.. .......... _,.., .................................
-I --•a!it' ·:·· ..... ""-" .... ' " •.. =c;..--.. :. 7: '•!i:f.= .: ----· ..... ___ ..... ft ...
&.: -.....
~lar·ICUOR NHLpmeSundayniaht. The byT1• kldlitr (l 2-61a 11 year) of the Dodse~.,. ln 01hcr
Kinp tcllcd ei&ht f'f&Ulars who accounttd fOf 220 pis news Sunday: Olli Mettht&ly will m1.ss the New York
this year, but still ~ 10 even their tePOn 1t'ric1 Y1nkccs' ~nina ~ a1 Minncso~ bc:causc of beck
with V1ncouvcr 11 four vtctories each ... ElteWherc in Che s1»5ms. which have: bo1htrcd blm for the pas1 Wttk . ,
NHL: Jeey ...... ,,...._,,._,.and 0... Gu-r 8et.OjeU.,whotecarcc:rncarlycDdtdlastStptemlx-rina
bad one pl and two atsi111 each u Callary ended the prdtnlna acddcnl. a&recd 10 ·• $3 n11Uion 1;;ontrac1
resular teaton as the leque's lop •cam wiill a .... 2 victory tltcnlion with !he Nev.• York Mets thruu&h th~ 1991
over &tmon10n at the Olympic s.ddlcdome ... lo teaton ... The Philadelphia PhiUic:s s1aned veteran
Winnipea, 9"e ltlletl .::om! 29 aeconds huo the third ou.tflcldcr Dway.e M•,..1 to Jill ou1 1hC': opcnina-dly oeriod lOsive the:Jeu1 l-2 vic1ofy over Minnesota ... In r0$kr of 24 ptiyers ... flairHly St. O.•tt, 1 rl&ht·handcd
Buffak>, capcaill Mk P'ellpt scored twice lO ~r the rtlief ~tthcr who split time la~ rear between the: ~or Sabres to 1 4-2 victC>!Y over Quebec &(td • 1hird-~ ·)cuucsand the minors. :WanC'd ...n h the Minnesota ·rw1n•
finish in the Adams Divit.io!' .. : a., lca4'1'!'G poweto. ••• llat17Gutcnd«ta 9():racc, fut.ir·>:drwinks.Mri1\l as ollY80al brokea leCODd-period bta.nd ....,ea......, ho-d0m1nal.Cd the TranSo111h S00 1t Darlin.ton Raccwa)' Oddeil I key pl witb 37 -left, tiftl111 h10n IOI inSoutbClrolin1.G1n•49. pi<kcduplllc: 281h •ictoryof
W v~-~ visiU.. HatdOr.d ·~·In SL Louil..,...,_ b.is Winsion Cu.o c:an.-cr, dnviJ)MJ\1:t. Old'imObilc: Cutlan a I 4hld1planda•Ulill:t01mdlbc••to•...,l across the finish line l.)L5CO)Dds 1hcld orw ford
vicitory over OielnM\ .•• lllrt9 l a' • ~ iftt.o •fl Tbundemird ofO."~ AIU,. .•. Rookie, ... Wrflltt. emflf~l;Jl WoovenilM:udW 1 'Y~1wmcd KOftd twice tn the: third pcrlod and Wu418lrmtl ltld bM:tll*-•Pi•=.t:•, •~ll,....._.lllail1lthc 1erMhne:Mkkdlwopls1piccctofcldtht_ nl)lqo
Spec:Uwa. ~S ... Pal ud ...... .,_.each Sockcn toa 7.3 M.jor Indoor SOC:ttr Lequc 11.ctot:.~~ ltOl'ed two-soleMI dill'~ Yart 1±1 lefw toa6-4 lhc visitinaLosAnetksl.ucn •. Arizona'sltM !ic1orJ 11 lilld-. -\llldol .,... die N~ Yori! -n1med 111< Eaolman Award. winocr for ....... ltawft ... Pal v...-.. --t-=e: and 1'1 Jted on ~ Player o( 1he Year. wh1k: P.J. ear..... of lllOITlerpt,---"-~to17-4~ic1ory~ver S.-Hall-hooorcdasDiviionlCoodlofthcYQr,
W••JlllO"' .... 'l'NI' -14~ p 41 .... into 1'lle awanlt wett voted on by mcmbm o( t'he Nahoul __ ... ~. 4'J •l<toey o ..... vititi .. ,,__.,._,C'_,, __ ,,.._,
Toronso, liftitls dteJirtuwb ink) lhe playoft'L bc1M bakrdlaQ t01Cb al L.oodilna Tech ror lhe Piii .....
5u111v.,. r.alles for victory
-----·s-OOICll,A ......
l\tlaldlc Di-hi DJo COftfiTm<d .•• lluhlmH~1 -1 ............. riderl.iftl~J h .lrl the Pl'< U1 ...... , .... IC>iml ... dooi_. dnV< ., _
Y"'t -0. to -die SJit0:600 s.. llmlonllllO .,........., l\Uo ..... MS.IAA ....
''''''"''''' lt\ftltt
•
I
A priYlllC plaac pl..._. iato die Newport 8eacli T~is
Cluboe frmy tiltinta furilyOf~ llllTOwJy milli111 ~
peapll • die .,.... and 111icli111 llloct waves thRIUlb I• · cma••llJ IMI UoWi ..... ril come · froai die iiiN . . nc ... ldi by relMiws" and :r:, &be c.a..dian
&iiiily wiOClied ia die Cniil9 Mft:IY liOUkt not bC minimized. .
.. , ilcilMr -.ad dae ~. indeed the fear. of
raidea11 ol Newport IDclt
Every day planes tac off from John Wayne Airport. A.Od
. every CS.y anOdia Coakl faD &om tbc lky.
It is not trite WbcD 0.. wbo foacht tbc airport u y. ·• 1
aorct ~ 1e> .. 1 &old~ ~· WoUld happen,"
They did. and it did. · , . '
It is not a cliche to •Y it coiuJd bave been much wone.
The unall, twin~ plane c:rasbed and exploded ~n
court No. 4 at the ienni1 Club, aa the same time a ie1uus pntarid
two audcnts were pncticiDa. By 1e>me quirt of aerodynamics,
tome btroic twist of the controb or IOIDe miracle. the three
neaped injury. thouab the plane bit abut 10 feet from one of
them. . ~ ~ couru. otber~~.ervcd aDd volJeycd.Just a IJUll"I iliot from tiCina • ---
Acrou thearovnds, some 150members in the clubhouse
were unaware of their oear brush with death.
The plane' mapt have pitched in that direction instead of
onto court No. 4. ·
Or. the plane miaht have been a commercial airliner with
hund~r,•neers and tons of fuel abotrd. , .
A y milht have been a di1111tt. New'POf1 Bcacb knows iL It waits for it. not in quivering
cowardice, not in paranoia delusion but in the cold, banh
reaJ1ty of fact. Gravity. mechanical imoerfection, statistics
and hu~nerror ensure future tntaiedY. A dozen air incidents
in the pu~ 10 yean, prcsqe it. ·lfunil~s of ftiahts a week.
auannteeal
Oft°M:ials aren't unaw~ of thC daD1Crs. Yet. of-
faaaldom •a overt obstinacy in selecting another airport site in Oranlt County bespeaks a certain callousness that can't be
llf'Ored. The options are not many. the alternatives not easy.
Bu ii.bet is.it ~Mine~ smoldccina Dover Shores or a blackened Bal , -
The cdebra=rt compromise !hat allo'Ned cA-pansion in return for · tand paaeneertimitssipaled more
than an end lo COW1 fi ti. It wu end tc> the fllht itself. ·
Airport foes who have-fouabt tanatically in hopes of ~
d~na the. aill>0!1 ~ tlienuelves to permanently
bav1na an au-port u a nei&hbor. But more needs to be done in makjna aure the unwanted nei•t.bor doesn•t destroy the neiabbOrbood. ...
Jncompauble neiabbon can be tolerated as Iona as they
doo•t inviie tbemtdves into ,vur home.
Another~ would take pressure ofT John Wayne,
divenina m1tns and red~ the odds of future disaster. It
would not be a paaranlee of 11~y. No one can be consideicd
imm.me. For eum~ Cerritos resKknts bad no reaJOn to
fear air tiaffic.
But news that the county will .elect and develop another
aj~ aite would help eut the fear most Newport Beach
residents are fcelina .-.ht now.
~~In ............. of ... Ody Plot °"* ._..,.....,on ....... ..,_of_.~ ........ A11_..·
oarNMIM .. iwtllld MCf,..., be_,. 1o 11'e Olly Nol, P .0. loJt 1560, c-. ........
OlllllC\Olfl'
Telephone privacy
It ulCd to be that lo ~ apinsi unwanted telephone
calls, you only Md to ,et an unJisled nwnber. SaAes firms have
..,.. since ptereed that benier by usina automatic diahna ~ which call every phone in a local exchanee in
DU · order. But harried customen wiU soon have a new
defetite: an ckClronic attachment that lets you know the
phoftc number of a~y Of' machine uyina to call you, even wbile your own ne is stiU rinaina.
-l(tbt n"mber to someone you want to avoid. or
ii JO'l lft in I.he mood to~ al calla~ from famil) or clOlt triencls. you cu limDIY~cboolC llOt ao wwer.
... Plciflc Tdeiil. the-tiest ~ ielcpbc)fte firm, has
decided to incliide an oP'ioD tbit lets a customer noad rtvalilll bi1 own~ number when he mates ou1a0ina
Cilia. Al a com~y ~puts it, .. we·re providina the
11me ,_ .. ~-'!bOda caller mcLrecaver. tt•s the same u woDi bolckina on your door Ud ~niDI tbcir finter over lhc ~ IM>le. YOU don•t b.ne IO .. tbe door."
11111 coe• bCo•eea 1k pn!KY.·protecton and the
prj•mq.favaden ._ be'1ome like 10 wms nee. Every &lme
wlide ftildt• --~L tbeotbierde~e•an even more ldvinced i&daDolG&Y 10 c:alCD up. If the ptioftecompanies care
Gab ..,., '•riaeililm11· they cu ~ 1eu ... ~icr.. ., li•mickt 10 Iida. But if theY want lorc-wnn ~ wtlL &hey lllould l t toward priv.cy. ftrllnNC/Vfttrf
Arts Council budget cuts
pnsman. a6ilitf{O wort out compromises with
··1 think lou m il find this to be a the part)' that bas controlled jhc
aeamdfon, ·saidGmanch. "lt'snou House since Ginanch was 11 years
conscrvatavt ac11vast v1ctory. It is the old.
entJre Rcpubtcan team." But to GtnanCh and other ancreu-"lf ~is elttt1on had been a test of u'Cl y vocal and frvstraled youneer
Bob Mac~l's leadership I wouldn't Repu~icus, the Michel approecb
have aouen 40 votes." Ginanch was one of ac«pllnJ a few crumbs
added. "If Bob Michel stood up and· from the DemocratJC table an at· said thas u a test or my leadership, a tatude rcflcct1na acccpl&l\(le 'or min·
vote of confidence 1n me. he wouJd onty stat'-lS. .
have. ~ w~n. and 8, I would have . ..We tend to say. Oh. tee• they're tn
withdrawn. cbarJt how can we be OKlC cnouah lo
But the fact was that Gmanch them thit they'll &et us 1ft1end we're represented 1 new approach. . pan of the pme," Ginaricb told
He 10uabt the off'acee a .. nattonal tcponers. ··1 rcl)ttleftt the win,aoftbe
~ican,.!.' ·~~~uay~ fine. we'll take uplbat
the say1na. "all pohhcs is1oaJ... . c~ ...
As the Repubhcan who kd the. -A4dina to t.bc. frusuatioo of Re-an~ks on Democratic Speaker Jim pubtica~wasthclack:ofanyl)f'OltUS
Wn&hl. Gingnch stood apart from LOWard 1mprov11'1 their numbers ln
GOP leaders who cberishcd their the Houte.
Wflose ~onscience shOuld vote r:epresent7
I •
If a lq;lslator dtSalJttS •11th his
constituents,. should he de what he
thinks tt n&bl. or wha1 they think lS n&bt.,
~o most of us.. the npt aritt wront
of ronttovasiaJ topics tS so dear that
..: have llOUble believu .. tl!i~ people
o.-other sade arc s.anctr!. They rfu.aa 1Dve tome seaet 1 financial
1ntcrnt in the outcome. or tlJt"f would
natW'llly. follow the Pith of naht·
eousness. I I was brou&bt upon man)1adm1nn1 ta~ of courqeous lqJslfil<\rs who
defied pressure aroups -to ·,otc for
what was npl As a yountt:-rson. t found thC'9C storin inspirin . Therefore 1 was shock d when. nearty 2S years aao. l bq,rd UCI
CbanceUor Jack Pel won c \ortSS lhc
opposite phalosoohy: Tba t men of ~pk who wil( do what &,bey know
is riiht.. reprdJes$ of publkl ·-,ptnt0n. ~kl not hold office. 11 much
betttr and safer to elect ptjeple •ho
feel that their )Ob &S to ~tnt their
consmuttnt.s: To vote as tbe ~
who dttled them WO\lld V•)le if they
had thee~.
There an: indeed cues ~he~ the
electorate is wrona. but i( 11 never
cxtmnety •YOna. It ~~ only modcnt£ mistakn, and p~:tently at
c.orrects them . But 1ndivaduals deierm1ned to
follow tbearconttjcncec:an ~" tcm~y -rona. The lnquasitibn .. !If nan by
men sancetdy determi: to save
IOUls. Kati Marx 9Ct fottl lus pro-~ with the sioette ail of ben·
cfi11111 .. all. hu~at). Kint eof1t 111
dealt Eftlland I.ht havial iow an au
history -loss of the Amuican
colonies -because he was a weU·
mcamna 1mpleton. ( tr James
Frasier's words. not mane.)
"I always vote accord•oa to my conscience.. sounds so pure and
morally dcfensable, thal the man 11rho
says at ne\tcr stops to llun.k that the
people who elected him have cons~ caenccs too. Who as to rcprest"nt tbc1r
COOSClCnttS'? Or don't they count"
I doublkss haven't apttSSCd this
as •ell as Jack Pelwon dad. I
apok>sazc for pre.sum ma to put 'NOf"ds
1n ba mouth. I do the bc1t I can.
W1lh my upbnnlJ!'I, heanna lha
plulosophy mack me briJlle. I 'Wanted
to araue 11r1th CbancdJor PdtaJOO.
but I found no convanana arpme:nt.
The PfOl'Cf form"la seemed to be that
a rcpcnmtativc should follow the
\t<>terl • COOICJenCC v. hen they are fllht, and slM>uld foUow has own •~n
he 1s Nht. But tha'c 1a no way for him
lo tell ibe one Cate from the otha.
As tJme went by I found mote aod more oc:caions where Jack's concept
WIS v.Jid. I was P1rtteu&a.rly 1m:
presxcS ~ ionnc:r mayors ol Newport .who made a point ot
beme contem=s of the voecn
•ho dec1ed • They ICl(:'lft(d '° rqard the vokrs as crazies wbo had
showaJllSt OftC bricfftatll ofsaa1ty-
wbea they vot.td for a.tac IDol)'Of •
Adnualedly, deded ae~aee•
lives 1'a"e more data avail8blt ao
ahem, and a~ an a pocatJOo '° mate a
bctler-tnf'onned judameat than lbetr
const1tuents.1Adced: ahal d m~ of
the reason for repttttntal1\te aovem·
mcnt; 11 wouJd be abturdly wa •ef ul
for everyone to beco~ inf0nncd
about all the dcuul That 11 what
representatives arc for. Bui the con·
fl.acts ofconscacn« I am taJluna•boul
arc not dctaJls. They are the bt1 and
controvcnaal ... ., which the pu~te
understands qwte ~11 Ooc could a y that tbe }Ob o( an
elected rcpttKntauvc ll to vott on
each ,,._ the same way lhll the
people W®kS \lote 1f the ,matttt were broU&bt to a rcfcttndum. On ·the
detail matters. th.al means s1ft1na
l.hrouab tbC facts and find•na a
sensible and prudent soluuon. bt·
cau~ the "otm are 9enstbk and
pNdet\L On tbe tJta pollC)' matttrs. ll
means 11\Mq a strmuou effon to
find out •bit the voters are tb1nk.1n
This don not mean mcrtly havma
an open4oor policy of bean.a ready to
lilltn to an)-oat wbo wants to talk
B«:auie the OMS •ho want to talk are
ma.nly the oaa 1"ho want to amoie
IOmtth•na for &heir pnva•e benefit, uwally at l*bllC e~peose. No. at
mtans act• vdy '°'"'to the people for
their vie-s. la awans con1actu~1 lhcm
OenyinQ the ~olocaust is ultimate cr~elty
-
•
. "
•
~ c... DAILY PILOT/ MoncUly, April a ....
91 J0Wa IOGUMCH °' ............
far ymn, motben have been ~n whitediapenover their n IO tM&rp &heir babies. -.i now a Costa Mesa womu
hopes to llriJll a whole new &oot IO
thlit dated 111Mlirion by matins a line
of trendy reversible burper peas with
coordinated bibl. · ··1 bepn the business about a ~r
llO· I was inspired by my dauahlet'1 prepancy," said Sandy Binikos. 46,
fouftder Of the lllbee Burper Co.
mother Qf three p:own childrea and
ndmotber to 6-month-old Evan
· il~ the inspiration .
. ~r sets. pac~ in sift boxes.' ldJ for. about $2S. They are deli&ned in colorful patterns of fancy pe.ny lace or winsome everyday wear.
The Items are I 00 percent cotton with
a diaper on one side anctterrydoth on
the revene . .. That is so one side always JoOb
nice," said Binikos. ··The concept
isn't .new. Diapers over the sboulden
have bee1nround foryean. I fdt the
need was for something more de-
signer-look than the ugly· looking rap
on the shoulders."
Dinikos is not new to the field of
C"OIOT and-desig:n:-Formorntwrt() years, she was employed by Bullock's
South Coast Plaza as a floral designer.
It was there the idea for the burper set
oriainated as she strolled lbroU&h the
baby depanment contemplating the
b1rt:h of her first arandchild.
"There are aJways baby needs;:-she
said. ''I wanted a Jjroduct that would
sell at all times of the year."
Binikos said designmg the sets was
the easy part.
"I knew nothing about the manu-
facturina angle of the business," she
said ... Where does one begin? I spent
many sJeeptess nights thinking what I
would do in tfte momin&"
Not one to sit id.Jc, Binikos began to
call fabric make11 in New York. They
in tum referred her to local contacts.
Soon she hired sewing assistants to
make the sets and in June 1988 the
business wasJauntbed.
0.., .... ~.,Lee f'eyM
Sandf atnlko1, her grandson •van· Coghlll and daughter
An*-C ..... 11 show off .. bee 9urper wear.
The idea c:Juaht on fast. Within"
four months; Binikos had placed the
matching sets in locaJ children bouti-
ques and Bullock's South Coast
Plaza. In October she.quit her design
job and began working "full speed
away" on her new enterprise.
"One month I opened eight ac-
counts," she said. "h was very easy.
The product is well-made and bein&
made in the USA seems to be a Plus.
··we have had plenty of reorders. I
hooked a large representative from
California and a representaive on the
East Coast.
Binikouaid lhC 6usioess1sa amily
afTair.-Her ll-year-old twinsons h,ave
helped with the distnbutiO'n of the
product and her dau&hter, Andrea.
mother of Evan, assist in the market-
inf. end.
'My husband even baby-sits for us
so we can get businet1done," Binikos
said of her airline-pilot mate.
While Binikos wkcd about her
new-found businei'S, herpaodson sat
contently in' his mother's lap. The
dark-haired baby wore a Babcc
Burper bib. and Coghill had slung the
matching pad over her shoulder.
"The ltnc naS'frown since Evan s
binh," said Cotlull. "~ikes bright
colors, like all babies do. Everytime
he looks at the mouse design he
laughs."
Binikos says she 1s suit urprl~
where her career path has led.
.. I had my hands full raising twins."
she said smilng. ''So if you had told
me IS years aio I would be working
with babies, I would have .said you
were crazy. But this is a real JOY.
espcc1ally because r have aJways
wanted to have my own busin~ss.".
raste test for peanut Dutter "M&Ms·
91 DANIEL J . W AIClN
~I , .,._....,
NEWARK, NJ. -First there were
M&Ms, small candy-covered choc-
olate monels. Then peanuts mutcled
their way into the popular confection.
Now, you miaht say, M&Ms have
gone soft.
Mars Inc. of Hackettstown, which
recently fell to No. 2 in the natJon'sS8
billion candy market, has beaun
testing peanut butter-filled M&MS.
The nickel..mcd, lentil-shaped
sweet was introduced into two u.n-
identified East Coast cities for test-
marketioa. sai4 Mars spokesman
Hans Fiuczynsk1:
Fiuczynski dismisses an} com-
parison with a similar product made
by rival Hershey Foods Corp ..
Rccsc's Picc:a, another peanut-butter
filled candy.
"You really ouJht to 10 and try
them," Fiuczinsk1 sniffed, referring
to the Reese 1 Pieces. "They don't
have chocolate. They're some sort of
peanut butter-flavored fudge ...
Since Marsispnvatelyhcld, ~said
End Probate.
Worries for
Yo1it Family
-We eet up a living trust and now OW'
children won't have to go through the time
and expense we went throup when we
had to probate the estate ~Bilra parent&.
When Bilra parenta paued away, they
bad a hou.ae and a couple ol bank account.I.
Becauae they only had a will; the eetat.e had
to IO through proba~. Everythin1 wu 80
difficult and time oonaumm,. The probate
took over a year and coet thouaanda ol dol-
lan.
When we went to do our will, a friend
recommended an eat&&. plannina •minar
prHented by Beaaire Law om~. The ....
tomey wu intereatinc and very intorma-
•tive. lfhere were 80 •any benefit• we
be would not comment on reports
that it has faDen to second place in the
U.S. candy market.
According to industry figures. the
Hershey, Pa.-bascd company has 20.8
percent of the market to tbe 18.S
percent of Mars,_)long the industry
leader. Hershey vjt'Ulted to No. I by its
acquis1t1on in August of the U.S.
candy division of Cadbury
Schweppes Foods.
Fiuciynski confirmed that Mars
has recently launched several other
new products.
Reeea•lllialll .. 8GI •• 'J .,,.._came-9J.
aJll'A!fWA
wenm't aware of. rm si~ we attended the
Mminar beeaue we found out that we
could not onl1 •ve our chUdnn thouanda
~ doUan in •tate ta. and ~--,....
bv.t al8o that we cow.I •t ~our eMate 80
that ca~hic mtNlieaJ can call&a woWd
not tW all our ......... ,. I
7:GO. ~.""'' Wildli llalel (loiila COlll Plila)
"6A-.9All••• a...w.a wta.n it come9 time fOr our childNn to
handle our eetate, ~Ill will be ia •·
der tor &Miio We don'i ftDt OW' chiliren
to .uai.r:. ·-)~D .. nfllred when MU' ....... -1·
..
AIMIBM
2:mPM ·1'm•.;¥86 . ,.., ..... , .... ,._, ... ,.
An '1'n1
-.. --. ---
...
' .
Plr~ates,. G\llC Swait volleyball showdown
lyllCHAllOOUNN • ..UQI. · auys. the ones that weren't ehaiblc. ._,_Clw, u ,.. ' . <>_raneeC~t.ontheot.herband,is But they're bltk and they're a very
Fruchite player Tim John10n is • PrzlillJ, laki~ '!' 11-l conference soC>d squad.'' hobbl&N around witb a broba ankle mart lDIO tonilbt • match -aamst La The Pirates, hcd with LA Pierce
which his (on::ed bim IO mitlOoldnl v~. ~ onfy IChool to defeat 1be 0 l-1) for lint place in the sec. host
West CoUeee'• lut three malChea, Pirates this w.uoa. La V eme 's UoP&nSs toni&ht at 7 wt th and lrahmin ICMIUOD Orea Ryan OCC is 22-1 overall. and 46-S is rtdemption on their minCls. ~ined his ankle last week to put total ~ pJ~yed .. M~ blocker "La Verne is 8-S and blnlina for
b1m upon the shelf. Scott ._~u1111t nd1s plaf~~h· un-third place with Golden West," sud
, COOICtuuwy ~ a outll'-K mer OCC Coach Bob Wetzel whose So G~C men. s v~ley~l coach AJ Brial_\ Lewis. the J&ate MVP two years Pirates won the state title in l 987. ~ ~ tt won .t .be ~Y llO as beaded for ~otber confere.nct · "We've never pliycd on a Monday
ftw... ,!_ •ct COllPi~~na ~ MVP aw¢ ICCOl"dtna to Gupanan. before th ts )'!'U' and La Verne, is the . ~ "'.'•nte out . raK• as WKl Gaspenan, Vt'ho WHD't l(Ound only t.ta.m to~l u.s."
!ntra-dtstntt nvaJl"b9ttk onee mOft whe!' the .Pirates blew the Rustlen Toniaht also marks the home-1n the South Cout ~onference race. out in their fint encoun. ter, thou"" comina of Charles Cutenese a cur-
Tbe Rustlers, obvaoully) are hurt-he was fini.Jbed ~· J>~en Ilk_~ rent player at La Verne . a four-year
ig, Since winoin1 seven fo a row, Lewis and Lindquist.·· OCq is very. school. He played on Wctzel's state GO~n Wt;st has dropped two very aood," he said. ''A r t.wo years. cham.ti':ship team two years ago. stm&bt Lo11ni John10n was devas-l tlloutbt I was done seeing those M · blocker Kurt Dumm a 6-6 t •
UGI RelGJs
on to nip
a.n Jose
The UC'I ba~ball Jtam built a 6-1 lead after two 1nnings, then-had to hold on Sunday for a 7-6 victory oYCr
~n Jose State-trr a BiJ West Con-(erence baseball · pme at Anteater
Field.
UCI. 11 .. 17-l overall. 1-2 an the ·c;onference, sal vaged one of the thri!e
pmes in the weekend series against
the Spartans, 28-6, 2-1. who are
ranked 1.Sth in the country in the
latest poll by Baseball America.
.. The Anteaters opened the scoring
with two runs in the first as Staey
Parker led off with a bunt single, took
third on an errant pickoff attempt by
losing pitcher Donnie Rea. then
~o.red.on a sacrificcJht_by Ed.Luna...
Brian Young sinaJcd in Al Rodriguez
for the other run.
After San-J.osc JCOCCd once in the
top of the second" UCJ countered In
•ts half to score rou.r. Chris GaJlcao
staned It off with a sin&le, fhen was
able to move to second af\er being
c.<aught in a rundown when the first
baseman's throw hit him, in the back.
Mike Goodease s.tngled Gallego· to
third and Jon Berger walked to fill the
bases.
Jon Skaggs followed with a two-run
base hit to nght. Luna added an RBI-·
sinateand Rodriaucz a sacrifice Oy for
. a five-run cushion.
But the S~rtans battled back to within 6-4 w11b a run in the sixth and
two more in the seventh on back-to·
back run-scoring hits by Kevin Tan-
nahill and Jason Hanf which chased
UCI starter Ken Whitwonh. ·
transfer ftOm CbaJN'RID, bu allO ~ hot lately for tbe Pirates.
"(Dumm) bas bleenllayin& well for
us. too," Weuel ui . ''He11 ~ to a
four-year 1ebool, as well u Brian
Lewis, who'• the No. l. outside
hiller."
The Rusllen. M . will oeed a minor
miracle Wcdnetday niaht to pull off
an u~t aiooc Johnson, a sophomore
outside hitter from Fountain Valley
Hi&b. is out of Aht-fincup. "If-I were
coachina a player who bad a future at
a four-year IC.boot I don't think I'd
tile a chance and let h.im play," said
.Wetzel. .. •
·"Offensi_vely,'' said Gasparian.
"Johnson can hit with an'ybody at the
four-year level. We've had to do 59me thinas to pick up the slack. and if we
do that (WCdnnday) we'IJ have a
chantt.
••aui. otftnslvely. he's tM best JC
player I've teen since I've been
c:olduq. I think Brian Lewi1 is the
MVP of the conference, he's the moat
well-rounded player."
Ryan, an All-CIF player at Hunt-
ington Beach H1ah last year, injured
his ankle last Ffiday niabt as the
.R111tJc.a...loJl lb....Santa Barbara and
will be doubtful for Wednetday. "We're a little banged up right now;· said Gaspanan ... So we«rcjus1 hoping
to work out hard on (today) and
Tuesday and be r~y. -
''I'd say, as far as the conference
race 11oes. we're in a little slump f'iaht now."''
ly MIKEL MATIO Oally,...c............ -
Area A YSO soccer teams had their
final games on Sunday in the Tri· 1 Sectional Championships in La
Habra with mixed resulta.
The South Irvine Striken defeated
the Huntinaton Bcacb/Wcttminster
Anh1lators. and the Costa Mesa gjrls
All-Stars lo t 10 the Manhattan Beach
Hermans.
Earlier Sunday, the Strikers de-
feated the Pasadena AJl-Stars, 3-1
'quahfyina them to play in the finai
round ipinst-t~Anhilators.
In the final same. 1M two teams
held each other off until the seoond
half when Sparky Kumor of Irvine
scored both aoals to 11ve the Strikers a 2-1 VlCtOf)'.
Coach John Do1dae ofSouth Irvine
~1d h1s team's ~nee an the finals was "excellent.·· ah ho~ by
· the second game the squad w,s • ti~..' but suit wort1ng as a team. TbeY. tt
the bcstaroup I've. ever attn. and I've
been coach•na nine ycaB." · The Striken factd won.hy opipo.-
ne n ts, accordin1 to Doidae.
Pasa<kna, he satd, wi.s "the touahclt
team we've ever fa«d," and tfunt-
inaton ~ch/Westmutster was ••no
pu~hover· ... a tr'trMndous team.''
Ooidat said his team owes its
success to the 1nd1v1dual pla~-crs. who
"have heart and.sptrtt ..• I think tbc
· pla)cn have apin bowed that they
play as a team and not as one pla~r.
The Antcaten scored what proved
to be the decisive run 1n fhe bottom of
the eijbth as Berger lashed a two-out
doubJe and scored when Tannahill.
t)\e Spartan catcher, tried to pick him
off and the throw bounced into center
field.
.~ .... ,._..., ....... .,.......
111• Costa Mesa I 2· •nd I J-r••r-old girts ioccer t••m R•becu s.tln ktctc1; lfrlstln• Gr ... ttli fr'9fltJ defends; nu
IMClled for the AYSO trl·••ctlon•I ChMftplonshlp fn UI T•v•r•• frtghtJ duets for pos1e1llon, •nd Alfty Holbrooll
H.W• lund•Y• fClodrwl1e frCMll top leftl1 Co... Mesa~1 boob NII •• te•mmat• AmJ Yoclrel w•tches.
"lfs easy to coach younpwers who
are eager to learn and ~er to please."
Do1dac added. "Soccer i 1ood for
their growth bccau.se 11 teacbn them
1eamwork an<tsetf-d1sciphne... ·
The tnlccrs arc an All-tar team
"h1cb conststs of the best players
from their d1v1 ion . •
~ngels counting on newcomers to-reverse trend
Three of the Stoler players -
(,a~ll A.tk.ans. Jeff Jensen, and
K umor -wen-members oft he team,
·· tr1lc Force." \lrh1cb was the South
Irvine Leaaue Wlnner.
Meanwhile. the Costa Meu
l)1\.tS10n 3 Girls All-Stars, who had •
achieved a 12-1 record, lost 4-l
a.ga1nst Manhattan Beach in the Tri-
Sechonal Toumament. t~ l\iahctt i level of .\ YSO compeUllOft in Cab-t
fom1a. · ;
Club has added Rader: as manager, as well as Washington, Blyleven and Parrish
ly KIN NTlltS ,,,,..,..,,....
The Califomia Anscls belln 1989
on a 12,.pme tosina streak. That was
how they finished f988.
Dou.I Rader, Claudell Washinaton.
Bert Slyleven and Lance Pamsh.
amona othen, can't take any of the
blame.for tbat uncc. they weren't wt.th
Jbe Aneels last year.
But Rader. takfot o~er as the
1ie1m's rna.n.,cr. and the other new-
comen AR beina counted on to tum
thiap around.
Rader. the former Texas Raneen ~. wu hired over the winter 1.fter Cookie Rojas was fired late in ~ lmlOll. Cc*b Mooee Stubl111
pidtd the wam after RoJU. •ho had
been haaded ~ reins •Mn Gene Ma..ch retired dunna camp last ~na.wu1et90. ' Radef i•Jteritl the nUdeut of a
that wan 7U7 IMt yar. As ...,. almalt lnditiOUI .-ilh
the A~ lhey.,._,sobavealOOd
Of'h9e but IUll*I pilebi ... botfa llDOlll thciJ ..,,.. ro1alion and in
the bulJPen.
Kaplan wins I 7th
straight to pac~ UC/
The major· ~velopment io the
pitching corps appears to be the
1nswn rise to the bi& lcqud' of Jim
Abbott, the 1987 Sullivan Award
winner and l 988 Olym~ic hero out of
the University of Mich1aan.
Abbott. who was born without a
naht band, Wlll become the first onc-
handed pitcher in the m-.ion since
Hush Dailey before the tum of the century. He was init1aJly t.abbtd to
start h1s ~ carter with the Anacls' AA club in Midland. Teus. But his
9().plus mph fast beJl, his poise and
his coms>etallvcnns have earned him
a job with the An1Cls.
"He's tomethina special. and l
don ·~st mean hts band," Rader said
of A tt.
Abbott will be the fif\h starter.
afforded the e>pp0f1un1l)' because Dan Pt:lry has betn slow to rep1n full
stl'Cftllh after 1 shou&der 11\JUt)' th1
spno1" the Cilifom• 1tat1tt1. o~ty
f'ilht·hander Mike Watt Kerns sohd1 arid ncn he"• com1na off a t ).. Io
__,.. ia wtaicb M had a 4 I~ earned
""''~·
Joining him and Abbott an the
starting rotatJon arc Blylcven. ob-
taincd in a trade. wtlh Minnesota over
the w10ter. Chuck Finley and Kirk
McCaskill.
The n&l'il-handcd Blyleven was
10.17 wtt~ a 5.43 ERA for the Twins
last season: Fmle)'. a left-hander, was
9·15 with a 4.17 ERA: the naht·
handed McCaskill. bothered by a nerve injury m his right sbouldcr. was
8·6 WJth a 4.31 ERA while appearing
an 23 gamc.s. Petry. another l'lght·
handc.r. was J.9 with a 4.38 ERA.
fhc Angel bullpen, meanwhile. will
apin depend heavily on Bryan
Harvc). The Anscls hope Harve)'. will
be able to come back from
arthroscop1 suricry to remove bone
chips from his ri&ht elbow last September. Grea Minton also will be
counted on out of the buUpcn.
Behind 1he plate, Lanct" Pa.msb.
acquired JO a ckal with Ph1ladclphi•'
last October. will t11' 10 fill in for 'Bob Boone. who wHn t re-s.tptd and
went to the Kan.sat City Royals
Pamsh. n. could prove to be •
valuable add1t1on if' he caa ,.,n has
. . ,..,, -. . -
batting eye after a 1988 campaign in
which he hit JUSI .215. lowest of his
CC!T'CCr . ....----
('ahfomta should be strong of-
fcnm·ely. helped by the s1gmngoffrec
agent Washinaton over lhe wihtcr'.
Wa h1naton, 34. 1 comma off a )ear
an which he hit .308 for the Yankees.
matching his carttr h1~.
Helpana provide punch down
through the hncup arc first baseman
W•lly Joyner. who h11 .295. with I 3
-Oomers and 85 RBI last year: out-
fieldcrCh.1h DavisJ.21hom'Crsand93
RBI; outfielder-On Bnan Downing.
25 homers and 64 RBI; and ut1l-
1tyr:nan Johnny Ray. who htt a team-
ht&h .306 and drove in 3 runs
Among the other dcc1 ions Rader
faced th1i spnna wa at second ba .
On Saturday, Mark Mclemore, who
lost the Job to Ray after being
si<khncd with an 1nJur} early tut
season, was optioned to Edmonton.
Outfielder Din~ BiChtnc, hittlf\I
eiuttmcly well this •P'ina. ho-wtvcr.
earned a spot on the Antel roster.
The Anatlt ha~ the misfortune of
bC1na 1n t1'e aame dtvisaon, the Al
\'\f,11' 'C Ill.DI 11·
HOME
Tuesdav-<ttlc.eoo. 2 OS o m.
Aorll S-Ct11ce90, 7:0S om
APfll r-<:n1Ge90. 7 OS 0 m ~11 7-*"''· 1 OS om Aorll t-s..me. 7~S om
AMII ,._Sean•. 1 OS 0 m
APfll ll>-o.lll•nd. 7 OS om
• All ~mes on KMPC (710).
Co ta Mesa held the Hermans to a
1-1 tie at halftime. with each team 1
playing well defcos1vcly. But after the
half. the pmc took a turn for the
wont for Costa Mesa, whicb was ~ out~rro 3-0 the rest of the way. } {om Mesa Coach J1m Towntcnd d nbed his team's performanct u .. lccpy.. but strcued that "tbq I
worked very hard an 9CaSOn." .He laid l tha.t this was the• farthest any C~ta
Mesa &irls team had ever come an
YSO competition.
Manhattan lkach Coach JeffMeU-
ingC'r said hts team was "up apjnst a
toUgh opponent. Cost.a Mesa bad ,
excellent playen . . . well-ch~ c1plinc<l'. ·
Manhattan &.ch went on to '°9c
West, with the Oak.land A.lh.lctic to Buena Park 10 tbc finals, 6-().
ho h d --baJI' -t ..-ord 1 The standout for COMA Meta -.. I w a ._.,.. s vd ·~.. ut aoalkttper Andrea 0.vi&. la tM fifll e~1Thc) '"c proven 1hcy'rc an half. be was tarwefy T'* ~
outstJnd1ng team." Rader ~·d .. Bu, hokl1na the ~erm11nt · Modtina
if )OU loo~ at the Anacls la't ~a'IOn. tt sevctal pottDUAI pls ..
was a }'Car when very httlt' wtnt "Jht. Alth~ MUlfied with thr llllD&.
"ff O.-kland sh~ a httle and th1np ,hC' fth lhat cotneto omer~ . .... her 1tam tm ~. SUoclay s ,....
,,.._ ... lff ANGIU/-t formance ... . ...
-NDW~L tMMW Wbei1 the birdirit tbe 16taa hole,
._ ..... U •• CariM:r~IO•)'~IO
ltANCllO MIRAGE -Juli lat-lnkller. Slit was a&~ •bat was laid
IW ~ lbe feh lite she went fOr u and replied: ·"She jutt· said, •Take it
... :.--... easy oa us. You're artti• too far
--ahead.' , c.No~-=:.C'~:Lrtheme~A~ ··11ovethisooune.1tsuitsmyaamc
:ai 111111 completed a four-4ay sweep ~k.. t played extremely well th11
ol .. ~DiMh Sbore tour-" rM at Millioa Hills Country The victory was the tee0nd for a.It Sadly. Jnksaef in the Dinah Shore, the first
lllbeer toot the lead on the first comi• in 1984 in a playon: That was
. day I»)' lhree "'°"' and made it a in her lint full ycat on tbe LPOA tour.
wire-to-wire ~ wilh rounds of ··ne Dinah Shore wins mean a lot ~7).71-279towia by five over to me. The first OM came after I D1nM Shor• tour,....nt
JoAlme Carner and Tammie Green birdied the last bole and won in a Winner J'* IMster does • a!J~te!S.~-J.: ==~~~! =· =---::. .:~ of'U.U.ae.cbwoabythrce1n l982 rm the only one who bas a chance to told him, 'lfl was 39. rd be leading by
net .(lice Miller by the same · win the panel slam now, huh?" seven riaht now.'
in 1985. marpn Inkster said she will play in San "I'm using araphite $hafts on my
lnbter picked up the winner's Dieao and Los Aneclcs the next two clubs and they are li&hter. I don't hit
Cbcct of SB0.000 while Carner and wceis before &a.kins some time off. the ball bard enough with them yet." Greea won S3.4,000 each with Betsy Carner, winner of the Women's Grc:ea, who played with Inkster ~and JodY Roeenthal nexut 288. Kemper ()pen at Meta Vmle CC in and Beth Daniel on Saturday to finish for~ 19, 750 eacb. f 979. bad four sua:aaive rouacls of ·a-under, bad four birdies and one lnbler was never in trouble on the 71 for a 214 lOlal. She repeatedly boleY Sunday. She had rounds of
final day aJt.houlh sJte saw her lead threatenedlOmakeananattheleader 72=-68-7>69-284.
dwindle to three after 11 holes when but ooukl never quite set over a faux "I didn't look at the leader board ~the per-S, <499-yard II th. pa a& the 6rM wee. out there aoday," she said. "I didn't ~ ap birdies on 16 and 18 to .. , WM in &be middle of' my swins. in have to, the crowd did it for me. I did herwinni~ma~n to five. no man's land where I couldn't stop, set nervous and booked a couple of
ve yen~ a IMl'lhllll llanted 'Quid-lhe>b off tbe tee being a little
urnament under per in near-perfect pate.' I liftl!ed tbelboe into the riabt tentative. I fdt like I had a good round tw:ather conditions with exception of rou&h behina a tree IDd took a botcY today. Mnd susu on Saturday. Sunday's on tlJe hole." "Yesterday I suddenly realized
(Ound was again played in She wasted little time in IC'ltlng it ... bout the 'lOlh hole that it was fun
!Cmperaturcs in the mid-90s with no beck with a 20.foot putt for birdie on playi ng in the last group. It gives me
wind. · No. 2. confidence the rest of the season
: "I concentrated on my tempo "h looked like Juli WJS ftthtina it a feeling I can· compete with these ~y." Inkster said following her little but I knew that ifl was aoina to players." the Zanesville, Ohio native. eory. "I never really rushed a shot catch her, I had to make bi~p\ltts. I said. ·
c;y. I feel I played smart this week had to keep the pressure on her. That Pat Bradley, a winner here in 1986
that aot me aoiQI. would have been a little more fun. and a victor an the 1981 Women's
: "I fe lt prei:!ra confident and I hit my "I remember think.ins I m•t have Kem Per at Mesa Verde CC1 carded
.-OM well tA y. I knew they would a cbance but I didn't make tL I did thelowroundofthedaySunoay,a68,
hVC to make a lot of birdies to catch make en<>ulta money to ao fishina... to put her at even par 288 along with
pie. She'll take this week off <o celebrate Amy Benz, Cathy Benz and Janet
... think playina with JoAnne her SOth birthday and do just that Coles. Coles had made a run at a
) helped me. She inspired me "Someone told me happy birthday higher finish when she was 4-under
well and it got me keyed up to out there on the coune and another thf'ougb 10 holes but lost four down
tb her.'' _ person said I was 39 and boldjng. I the stretch.
~ATTON
fromB1
Clown to one or two points, Just like ~of4atingthal tead t.o the few ~f moments of a ~proposal. .
: Atthastime inamatch,acoachcan
t>nJy s&an ~Yin& for fate and lock to
Jntervcnc. Dvrina the third set tiebreaker1) reassured m yself that I
badkeptauofmypre-matchsupcr-
•ti tious rituals. ·
: I woukt wear street cJothcs to lhc
~ulU; chaJlee to tennis wear and hit
'Nitb one of our pla~for five
ininutes, then qu · chanac tfack to
"1'eetdothesbefcm match
~ ._. .. · Fonuna~y. my stnct repmen Paid off for our doubles team ofM ike
BrillsudTrcvorKronemann. They
stajed ..,essive and attacked the net
lite a bent ofbu ffak> to win, gi vina
UCI a s..t &cam win.
That match doted a chapter for my ·career asa coach, as USC was the final
top team in the nation that UCI bad notdcfeatcd~urinamy lO)Unat u I.
The victory over the Trojans was
not pined without some loss. I had
promi9Cd m y team several yarsa.10
tbat I wouJd shave my mustache if we
beat USC.Afterourwin, the team's
first coul"9C of action was to find a
razorandmakemeliveuptomy
barpin. Thincen years of a fuzzy lip
went down lhe drain with a sweep of
the hand. but nothinacould have
been sweeter.
0
To be honest. this year's UCI tennis
team is like watchinaaa Alfred •
Hitchcock and Friday the 13th film
fes1jvaJ. Every match seems to 10
down to the wire. COICbins the 1989
Anteaters is hke trying to pull you
head out Qf a guillotine before th~
blade drops. The UCI team bas been
kind to me, though, for I have lost
some bairthiueason, but my head
and neck arc stiJI i ntacl
I am ven proud of oursquad, as
well as tbe former players who have
brouaht UCI to oataonal prominence
in tennis. One area that went un-
noticed, but which is very important
toourprosram'sgrowth. was the
coostructton oftl\e UCI Tennis
Stadi.um,.1,plus the fact that the top
Orange Lounty tennis players arc
now attending UCI.
We passed a great milestone in
1987. when twotC?J)playersin the
county, BriaPofCoronadcl Mar ·
High and CMsacn Hoffman ofUni-
vcnity High, elected to be Anteaters
( fi nail y the Jlrl next door realizes .
what a hunk you arc).
_...--. -· .. -----
In '4 coach Fisher, Seton H
unlike~pactici12,ants in title game ,.
· The five v!CtOrits indudcd SaaiuUay"
1).81 v.nory ovn Bil Ten "' aJ lllin<>K on a last • SEATTLE-Slew fillller bu broulbt _,,. rebound t.~ct by SCan Hillin-. tht' Wohcnnts ft
as much at1ention to lht word interim u he _ • ~ success aaa.ift: t the Fightina llhni thi season 1n th
bu 10 the M.chieaa bllketbell team he hit ' meetinas. • been ooacbi for the put five .. mes. Olen Rt« led Michigan in $COnna ap1n1t llhno
The ~book career of interim -theft's that word with 28 Points and he has I S3 pomtt in ~ 1ou~cn amain -COllCfa fisher ends toni&ht (ChanMI 2 at 6) 2S short of Bill Bradley's matk Kt with Princeton an 1.96 ~ lhe national champiOMhip prne ap1n1t SelOn Hall Race bas shot S9.4 pt~nt fmm the: field . 1Mlud1n1
~of the outcome. · 22-for-3~ man. from 3-point ransc:
'. The final pme of the eatire coUeaie t>.sketbell acason . ··1 Jumped on Gl!n R1C'c .s be.~k. before. t
.is an unlikely p&.a for an in&crim coech IO be and until touma~!'U and he's earned ~c th1~ far. Ft'hcr said.
lasueason it was just as an unlikely place fora Seton Hall Mic:hipn center Terry Mills ~1d he haschansd 'team to be. s&yle of play from scorer to role pla}cr bc(au~ o(Race
f'ISber'uaory saarted <48 hours before the tournament treat. .
bepD when Bdf frieder was fired by MIChipn af\cr "When )OU have • guy hooting 1,r,ktl' Glen.~·~ 'aareena to &ake over u lhc bead OOKh 11 Anzona State shoot1n1 you IJ"e }Our body up for that. he Yid 'We '
,next ICllOf\. Since then, the Wol.verincs bave not only DQt matured a l,C!.l in the last weeks and "'7 pu:k 11 up a not
lost but they have ~yed tbea.r best ~skctbell of the eyery night. . . 'Sea.son and their best bf any recent NCAA tournament. --: Seton Hall p~ckcd thing~ up rnorc than one notch 1
"Ti mina is everyth.ina and I jumped in at the right its semifinal victory.o ver Oullt .•
time," fisher said Sunday, adding that he will not talk to The Pirates trailed 26-8 12 m1nu1 c ... int<;> lh~ &a
Micbipn athletic director and footbaJI coach Bo and they looked more hke one of PJ Carle 1mo s eu
Schembechler about the bea<I coaching position until teams at the New Jersey school ~h~n 1t ""'11 common,;
after tbe championship pme. them. to ~ the d~nnat of the 81g Ea\t ( onfcrcnce
.. We have not been luck)' in the tournament the last • I thank we re getting l"C\f>rCl and th:it com~ fro
six yean. Balls bounced off instead of in. We've sotten the kids playing unselfishr) ... Cnrk 1mo ~td "Dtfcn~
lucky but the players have put them9Clves in position to a baa pArt .'?f our•a,amc nnd that ,., cn11 I for u,·to
win 11mes." succcssful.
Lakers edge Bucks, 11 s :.11 7
a,._ Seen acorcd 32 points. including -t.
five 3-point shots, in leadinJ the Los Anaelcs • Laken IO a 111-117 vac1ocy ...oxcr. .lbt_ -' _
Milwaukee Bucks on Sunday night at the ----
Forum. The Lakers led 54-53 at halftime but Scott ma<k
three 3-point shots and scored 14 points in the {bard
quaner as the Lakers opened a. 90-72 lead with U1
'rt.maini'i'r 10 the period. Milwaukee outscored Los
Anatles f -1 duringthcrcstoftheperiod.cutti.ng~helcad
to 90-83 cnterins the final quarter. The Bucks tJed at 98-98
with 7:51 remaming on a 3-point shot by IUdy Pierce
and then took their flrit lead of second half. 101-98, on Jae*-...•, second 3-pointer of the P,Criod with 7: 13 to
play capping a 16-2 run. Trailing I OS-102 with S: IS lef\,
the taken went on a 7-0 run and led 109-IOS on Malle Ja-..'1 sky book with 3:-53 to play ... In other NBA
games: Jee Dnun scored 23 points and BW Lllmker
added 22 points and 18 rebounds a.s Detroit stretched its w1nmn1streaktoei~p.mcswitha 11 7-10 1 victoryover
-,be 01~ at the rts Arena. Vm.Je.J~ scored
'22 points offthe benc for the 1ca&ue-lead1ng Pistons, wb,o
improved their record to 53-1 7. The Clappers saw their
lontCSt winnin& stJ'ellin th.o:e. ~m e.nd at lh.rttgam~ , .. Mk!Mel ,,.._t pl~yin& point guard for the 13th
strai&lfl pme, had has fifth <:;<>n.secutive tnple:d.o~ble and
nint6 of the season as -C'hicqa defeated VISlting New
Jersey, 106-95 ... 8,.. Da~rty overpowered a
weakened R*rt Parld to score 20 ofCkveland's first
33 points and the Cavalien went on to beat visiun,g
Boston 11 7-100 ... CMrles 9artieJ ICOf'Cd 26 points and
Bene{Rawtlas had""l!, lcaafna the J6cn to a 103-W
victory over Houston. which has not ~n 1n Philadelphia
in IS )'cars ..• o......-Wutlat stored 19 of his ~3
points in the sccond half as Atlaot.a beat lndlana an
Indianapolis, 132-109 ... Dandl W&aer had 16 points,
10 rebounds and nine auisu 1n less than three q~arten.
leading Washln&ton-to its 13th consccuuve home victory.
a 120-103 rout of Golden State ... A41nu Outley'• 20-
foot t>.nk shot 11 time expired lif\ed DaJlas· to a 98-96
victory over Miami at Reunion A~na.
.,
\ ''··
"Crlpes, you hooked It again . Maybe It's th
poeltlon of your feet .. .'
• TACOMA.Wah, -Ol)mp1c \Cle.ran
Bndgctte Gordon scored 16 ol her ! point\ •
in the first half. and Tcnn~!Cc \hur down r
Auburn tar V1ck1c Orr 1n the ~rnnd half n\
the Lady Volunteer~ wo n lhdr ~<:ond nat1on31 "'ome
cham_p1onship 1h three ~a" with a 76°60 vrc. tory und
Tennessee rallied lrom an earl)' fi,c.point deficit
defeat its Southeastern Confcrtnc.c "'al fur the scco
tjmc m three meetings 1h1~ sc son, ;md the)' sent the
Tigers home as the serond·placc frnr\hrr for the~
year an a row.
Dodgers open In Cln clr-na
The additJon of these two .,eat
student...atbJeacs Plved the way for the
---------------------------.. addition ofNeaJGrovcrfrom Daoa •
Fn4 Tell•er, Minnesota-Twins Pitcher: "I've
~kcd 8-to-5. I know what it's hkc out there 1n 1be
real world. I've la.Id concrete. I've worked 10 J.C.
Penney's stockroo11n. I've dehvercd peckqcs for
UPS dunn& Christmas time. I've been a recreation
instructor. If anybody appreciates baseball more
than me. I'd like to meet him " .
nlE IP SPECIAL '2995 PLUS TAX
. 4CYL .... -w .... ---··.,.,·-· ..... . -"" O. c.stOIMf per ltansKtion. Presettt coupon et l.lmt of wrrte llP· EqiirtS
lltrdt 31 . 1919 ........... °"'*~ ~ Oftly. Mot .....
wltll "" other serw1 special °' ~. 11•• mm,,.,.
Hills High this year. OranseCounty
has always been laden with the top
players in the nation. I feel there is no
stoppinaourtum if we can keep this
great talentat home with UCI.
0
There are about ciabt teams with a
lqJtimale shot IO win the NC' AA tJtle.
ln addilioA to UCl, I feel that UCLA.
USC, Cal, GeorlJa. Stanford, I.SU
and Kentucky Ill have a pat chance
to win the~ burrito. The moat
iD"ponant factor will be who is the
tieallhielt at the NCAA 'sin late May.
It does not matter how shiny )'OUr
new Mazzeratti looks ifit is SI tti Ill in
tbePl'llt with a dead benery .
Alt I Uc>w is tbat brinaioa an
NCAA title to UCI bu been one of
mymajorplsfortbelast IOycars. It
sure is cxatins to have that pl
ltam.medirCctly i.n the race this
ICUOn.
Kings top Canucks In finale
M ... ~ ..... , .. ,_..broke a lie with 6.24 ~
left to live the undcrsa.affed 1.41 An,des
Kinas a 5-4 dcoslon in Vancouver in the la t ~ •
~lar•ICUOO NHLpme Sunda)' night. Tbe Kiap resaed eipt rep.Ian who accoun9ed for 220 pis
this year, but saatt ~ to even their teason teries
W1th Vancouver at IOu.rvlClOriescach ... Ebcwbe~ 1n the
NHL: JeeJ M.U., ........_ l"levy and 0Mc GU...,
had one pl and two assists each u Calaary ended the
reaular tealOft u the lelaUe's top team wit1' a 4-2 victory
over Edmonton at the Olympic Saddledome ... In
Winnipea. Daft EHen ICOred 29 ICCOnds into the third =IO IJVC: the Jets a )..2 victory over Minnesota ... In
, capuln Mae Pellpe ICOred t'MCC to power the
Sabres to a 4-2 vtct~ over Quebec and a thtrd-place
finish in the Adams OiVlsion •.. a.111 ... '1 power-
pllly ... bfvkc I teCODd-period tie and ~ C.,,...... addea a key pl with l7 leCOftds left. liftint-.o.iOn to a
l-2 vicaory over n•ti.ns Hanford •.. In St. l.ouas. Brta I rn I I Md a.,.; and an llliM to laid the Bluet to a ..._2
vic:Sory over Ifevoit ... ...,. '•Ila tcond into an
emp&y ~ l:ll iato overtime ud. I a I Y=ul'Md beet JI lbcJll at Pihlbwlb defealed Plailadd I t the Specuwn. 6-~ ... Pal...,..&' tr I and....... eacb
ICored two a IO md tM New YOft 1.-.cten to a M ~ aa ~ ~ 0... over the New Yoric au.n ... Piii ,...,_ acored lwicc and .-i..S on .....,.._....._._New MwylOI 7-4 victory over
WMhi._,., •.. _'l'Nf N 04'1 pl 4' 9tCoods into
ovenune p~ O~a 4-,J v1C1ory o~er vilitina
Toron10, lifti• tk bawb in10 the P'a)'Of&.
SulllV., r•llles fqr vlct~
MAJOll LaMU9S ••••• ........ ..... ~ dn"cMllOll CAM I 'J .._... I PblUll"N •• T.,_,.. • "'*''• II, 11'111~9!' ) H Y v..-_.. 4, N Y Melt t
8eil.nlatl 1, SI l.Oll•l 6 ( 10 IM<flt\I
(ltv-.nd I, ClftCllW\tl 0
Ot•rO<t >. ~'Oii 2
(ll!tffO CUOI • ~· • MontrHI S. JaO.'°"• (AAl • Hold!O!I 10 T .. tt S
(lliCatO '"*" •• Soll 1 ~"'· • 0.t.~ 6, SM FrallC:•KO 4
RND llXM191TION KASOM
a ...... 11....-1 , .. ~~· Eomotiton (AAA), 110 C IOiOO 91~1l 17 2
Cali+orrM 000 0 .. 100-I 6 2
Abboll, l urcNVA 17), Y~ tit, Wero '''
a"'CI 0 DA• , AMr-1 '61, MC'Ca\llll, lo--1 •
*9 W , Fra.-r ISi, MCCiure 171. M;n!Oft Ill,
( OUtft (ti ancs p.,, ~. Kl'aPO ('I W-AOOOll
L-McCu.,, HR-Ecfmot1•on l row"
REGULA.R SEASON
AmericM LN9Ue
T ... Y', 0-
8ottOll IC~ II 111 t i Ila l"'10ft
IS<Nnidl l •St,-IH$ •m •
T0tOt1IO (l(tf ll SI 11 !Cl l!Ml CUI Guooc:re 10 It 1\lS a m
M•l#aullff IAllOUSI IJ 71 II C·l<lltncl , f1"'1•noeil ll·l•r, I .)S IHI\
S111111 ll •t>G•'°"' a · 111 •' O.• "'0 IS''""''' 71 11 .. I OS om..
()l\iy °'""ft 1<"90\HG TutMeY't G-.
C~ (lltuU 1J t 1 II AnMft ('NII I) 1'!
lOS pm
Ne.-YOtt. (JOI'" t It •' N-""''°'' IVK>lt 1• 11. s~ om 0t1r0tt (Mom\ IS·lll el hc.u 111own
lrl.i SlS om
<>ntv oamH t.Ctltdutd
National LHeue
TMIY't ~
Dedewl 8"'1'«" 12 • •' C nc.._1 P •O
Wt1 7J It, II OS 1 m
SI LIIV•\ IMAorant s 91 •• Nt.., Yolk
I C:.000.n 11 t I, I HIS o m
S..n Fr1n(.KO tlltuK,_.I 19 Ill a t S..'1 D ~
1sno ... "111 70S om °"' ·~ t.CN<IUltCI ~yr,~ l:"amet
P1lll0uf"ll IWa I< I? 10 11 N'.;)t>trHI 0
l\llan1M1 IS 131, IO"JS • m
Pt11.a<lt'Cln•• Yovm•"t J 61 at Cr11caoo • 1 Sutciftte ll-141, H"?O a m
Alltnlt J L .stnt.111 S · 10, aLliowSJD'I ~Oii
14 It SlS 1t m
SI" Fra"C \CO (Oow"t ll t l at S.Q 0~
(Hi.•\I 11 61, 70S Pm
()N.,. lie"'"' K'*NIH
Cole9e
BIG WEST COHFE,_EHCE
UC! 7, Sift JtM Sta,. t
San JOH SI••• 010 001 m • 13 I UCI 1.0 0C» Oh_.1 11 I
llta Cem~ f61 a".IO T1nt1&n • Wl\.rwortl'I,
'"''"' • 17.1. Mav 191 an<1 ltrotr W-Wt'. l•Ot"lll J 4 L Ilea 6 l Sv-Ma1, I 7~ -Gonre•n SJ). frv" SJ 8erQff IUCI) <>...-S< ... tt Pac.I c ), cs Fu tttll>'I 2 I 10 !Mtn?ll
UC S."1a 6at'l>e1'o S Neveda-l.•• Vt9e\ Slenloro IS USC ~
Ce lorn" S UCLA 4
NHL STANDINGS
( Flnaf)
Campbel Conference SmvtM OIVIJion , w L T Pts GF GA
rC1JtO'ar?" ~ 17 9 l7 754 m x-Kinos •2 31 7 91 376 JJS
•·Edmonton 38 )4 8 8• 32S 306 x·Vancouver 33 39 8 74 2SI 253
Winnipeg 26 42 12 64 JOO 3~ Norris Dlvlwon
y Oe1ro11 )4 l• 11 80 313 316
ll:St LOYIS 33 JS 12 78 27S 285
11·M 1nnesota 27 37 16 70 ?SS 218
it Ch•CaQo 27 •1 11 66 197 335
Toronto 28 46 6 62 2S9 342
Wal.s· Conference
Patrklr Division
v ·Wu h1noton •1 29 10 92 JOS 2S9
11 • P11tst>ur91'1 .0 33 7 87 3•7 3•9
x NY ~anoel"S J7 JS • 82 310 307
x·Pft,1eoerpn1a 36 36 r IO 307 285
New Jtrsev 27 •1 12 66 211 J25
NY Islanders. 28 47 s 61 265 ns
Adams OMslon
v·Monlrtal SJ II 9 llS JIS 211 .
x·Bo"on 37 29 ,. u 289 2S6
it ·Butt110 38 JS 7 13 191 299 11·Hertford J7 3' s 79 299 290
Qvebee 27 " 1 61 269 )42
·~ln<...O o a.ott oerl" v-... 0,.0
01Vtt'911 11111 ~y't S< ... tt
K'"-S Venc~vtr • W ¥ 11tO ), M tvlftOll J
Ce 1rv • !omon•Of' 1 lo1•0tl ), Hamord 1
l ull110 4, 0utoec 1
S• Lou-t • 0t1roo 2
p,11'°"'9'1 6, Pnli•CH<on a ~ (Olk.
N Y l~al'IOln 6 N Y Rt,,_t •
New Jerstv 7, Wt\N'flOfl 4
Ct><aoo • for01110 l 100 SWM\' Cup pqyofK
Of'llSIC* SUNFIMAU .......... ~
Edtr\Ol'•on at K.,_ 7 lO o,.,
~--al Wa~•CI'\ 4 JO em New Ytfk R.....,, e t P tt~Of\ 4JO em
Htrllord 11 IW)nlfH • lO 0 m
l ulf•'9 al &O\tOtl 4 JO om
CMeOO al 0.1roo1, 4.)0 Ol'TI ~ IW'ftOla •t St loult S:JO P"' Va ...,,,., at Ca...,,., 6l0 om
642-5678
s.c.. ,.....
t Va11u1uver, loiaa 11 1Sm1 ) LO\ A,,_.., Rotl'•allt U , I 4S 4 lo. A~,
ROD le .. lDtGrll' 6 44
'Tiw• ~ s Va "to.i•tf', Smvt 1 s..11.,, eouu, '6,
6 V•rw:o.J•tf, h M"9 ) ly A~~. l •'lh), 111 1 LO\ Anfftti LI~ 1 141, I Vt"CO\l~tr.
l rt0•1 11 IS••wv, l•cittffl, 7 lO. • Le;' A~ Kru~v .. I 1' (.YJl;fr, Pran.\«I 131'
Sflol\ or1 ooaO-LO\ A""'" 7·1~·11>-»
vencou•tr 1·7·n-n Power ooav oo·
POl'lwntt'ft-LO. Af!91oft 0 of 4 Vall(OU•tr 0
of I C.0.•H -los Al"Olttt HruOtv, 11 7'•S ltl
\'1011·1• U •H I Vel'CO<l•tr, Mcl .. n. lCH1·l f1M 71 '
• B.\Sk ... I 8\11 ~"'\:..•
NBA 'ST ANOtNGS
Wft..,.,. C. .. r .. a
Pac.lfi< OMllen w l Pct. GI
v-Lalrer' •9 n 6?0 v·Pnoeni• " 26 639 3
Golden Staie . .0 J2 S56 9
~··ti• 39 32 5.49 10
Porlland 33 3' .,~ 16-
Sacramento n •9 310 27
CllPC>er S 17 54 239 J? MidWHt Division
v-Uran .. 27 620
~"" J9 32 549 s
Houston 39 31 549 s
Oallu 33 39 4S8 II ' SanAntomo 19 S2 268 2S
M iami 13 ~ 113 31
Eutem Confertne•
Aftantlc 01111slon
t-N York -.,,--,5 6SJ Y"
Pfl• aMIPh•a •O 31 563 6 1
8osron 37 )4 S21 9 J
W1u riin9ton 34 37 479 12 1
New Jtrstv 24 49 J19 13>
Oij1TOlfe 17 SA 23"9 79 ,
Central OM'lon v·Detro1t SJ 17 7S7
y ·Cleveiand S2 20 712 2
M.twaukte .. 26 629 9
Cfl•CllOO .. 27 620 9 l
At11n11 •l 28 606 10 ,
Indiana 22 •9 JlO 31 1
v-• "'he(! OltvOll berln
S\HldlY't k .,H Lau n I ll M *•u•H 117 -Oe•ro.t 117 ~ 101
P?l•~IOI HOU\IOll 9'
(11••"'141 117 lo$1011 100
C11ocaQO 100 N~ JerMtY 9i
Altanra 132, Ind••"• "" wunonQIOll 120, C:.Ol<I~ ~tett IOJ
DeUH ti M eml 96
TedeV's Gamet
No""""'~~
Lahn 111, luck\ 117
MILWAUKEE -C ''"'''l>G\ • IS 1 11 It
Ktv\l'O"'•ai. 2 S O·O • S"'ma 1 12 I I 11 Humonnet I 4 0 O 2, Moncrllli 1 9 1·3 It.,
MOi.tti. 0 J 0 0 0 Perce ll•19 l•t 19 lloo.<I\
2 l I 1 S Prn~ 4 l l•S II, R C:.tHn 1 l 0 0 • To•a s 44 II 21·l0 117
l At<e"s Ac ~~ ' 11 ' t it w~ I IS ) S It Abel"' Ja t>oa1 • I l · • 10 JON'Wtl
I II 9 9 2' ko1t t I II S S l? McNamara t I
S s 1 COOOft I 1 O·O 1 Camooe I·• O o 1
l'looir ~ t S 0 0 1 l 011 \ 4 I 11 J0-)7 I 8
Score b'I' OUart.r s . M au~H 1• 19 )0 14-117 L•~eo 7S 1' 3' :it-111
l oo.~t ooa•s S. """ S S<otl S P-eru 2 ~ri.i • JOl>"\OI\ Fou..o ovt-xo11 Re
oounch-M ""''""" .. , tcum••w1os ti, l a,..,, '7 IA C C.rH'I IOI Au Slt-M ••u"ff 1• IPres\fy 7 LIU<\ .,, IJOM•on Ill Total
fou ,-w .. •wau~H JI, .Lalltr\ 1S hctinl
ce t-Aoout J•t>oer M twa ''"' au tl•n• coac n HenD•at<
••tend•~-17 sos
Pl1tons 117, Cf!CI09rl 101
DETROIT W..v • ' 1•7 9 Aou ,,, ' I
2 7 10 La "'°"' 10 1, 2 1 n o ..... .,, 10 IS )-) » Tn.,mat •·II l·l t JoMsor. tO '1 1 l 72 Roemen 1·S H s ~, .. .., 1 'o o •. w .,.,,
1 l 0 0 4 E °""ards l • l • t LO<'O 0 · 0 0 0 0 O~l>C> 0·1 00 0 To••t SI n IS 19 117
CLIPPERS -Stn!•n J · 11 l • • NOl'm.t" II '6 S 14, 8 am 6 IS I I 10 Oa Iv I • IS
I I 1 C:.ra•" 1 11 ) l 17 w It 1 7 O·O, •
Gerr1ei. , 7 0 0 • .,.,, •••• ) ~ 0 0 • LOCt• 0 I
O·O 0 Row 0 0 0 G 0 ~ rr•r-•tr 0 I 0 0 0 Te>•a s 41 IS 1' 21 IOI ·
Score bv Qvari.t"t
Ot•IOol • )4 11 1t 11-111
Cto-r\ 1t 74 1• 2~ 10 I
l 00.1\1 9.,. NO"'''" Fov~ ovt-N-
llltlelulMl\-0.ftOtl 6: tLa "'ll>Mf II C1r-s Jt !Be r'f\111 t i A\S s•1-0tll0t't lt !Oumers
lr,omes 11, C OH'\ ll (C:.r•"' 11) Tc.•a
•OoJlt o.••M n CLPC>e's 11 r .... ~ ~raM
A1•...c. ><I .. JOf
COLLEGE MEN
NCAA Tournament
flMAL ,-oult
(at SNttlll
TNav't °""*"'""° Game S.ton l><a )I t "' M ,., N 1t I • IJ pin
COLLEGE WOMEN
NCAA TMlrnarMnt
FINAL l'outl
(al Ta<-, Will!.) l ~Y'• ~'""°sea.
l t""*''" 1' Ao,IOo "" 60
CLASSIFfED INDEX 642-5678
MOM NORTH GRAW CO. ...,_
P'ROll IOUTM GRAW CO. -1111
··: ft
......... ............ -·----.. =-
. -' ... -··-... ,.,... -·-'"'t:' u:: ,.. .ra ..
ClllCll YOUR AD
TMl"'9TOAY ._, __ ..... _ ...
f/l'.Qlll"• ............ --. -·· • ....-~ ..... ...-. .. i-... ::.:.::;.--:. -= :.. ...... ....,. ...:: :::.::.. ~~ ~:.:.: ~ ........ ;:.: : .:-:.-: ;-...--: -------. _. ._ .................... . ....... .................. .....,. .................... ""--......._. _. -., 11191: ... ........... ..._.._ ..........
COLDWC?Ll.
BANK.<?R ~l
~
QMAT ~et tlfM
~~ 29'Y ~ unft· w/2 BA, 1.S 8A
located 01\ • qul•t ..,..,,, rn • ~ comp.a wtpoOI, epa & ..,,,., )
ltt 1111
.
(
• \dllJ.lH\11 >'-•
Ot:t:P St:.\ ..
DAVEY'S LOCKI,_ (Ntwoert ... OI) -l
Mal• l49 UQ4't. Ml b(W'l IO 10 M !IO lieu. IS.
mac ~. I It s<\>IO!n • ..,r, te t •II. 1
.~iweo, 11 ~. • ocroo·
S('H EDI I.ES
p"' F,_tDAY
Frn no Ste•t et UCI 1 P rn
SATUAOAY
Frono S•a1a at UCI 1 pm Ca ll•Cil•:ti
al Cnrl\t COl..ot lr.,one IOovblt nn otf ),
nooo. W•"monl at SOutMrn Ca IQ<n·• Cot
leQe (douoe·hffderJ noon
SUNDAY
Frtsf'O ~ll•t 1t UCI I o"' •
tommunlty c""9
TUESDAY
It ~'"'°' CC ol Go4<1i'" IN"' 2 lO om THUllSDAY
CvPrtu at Orange Coa,1 2 JO
SATURDAY Oron.J11 Coe•• at Ran<llO !Ml••l·•llO noo11
c.~~ llltt• •• S.oo..o.ck ._
Htotl Sd1ool
TODAY
~"1 C01U' I ... 9 "41 -M \\tori .V t.0 I I
l•v ne J 1~
TUESDAY
Suntat lHllUt Octan l/•t"" •• EO·SO"
.) IS We''" .rtlft' •• Hunl noro" 8ea~~ 3 IS Founra · va•ev at Ml!ir ,... l IS
Pac·f < c .. ,, L••llut -WOOOOf .Ooe •• ~111!'\ 31~ ~ •• <~ie ~
l IS. L1111Jf\e H ' a• L.t?u"a llH n l IS Acaoemv l teo...--Amoanaoor e .. P
,,,, el Li~'" Cnr "''" l IS WEDNESDAY
Sta V•t"' LHOUA -Un .. ttttlV a l Nl'W'
oort Harb<•' 3 IS. Tull•n at SIOOtOa~
3 IS, C4>•011• Of Ma' a• C \1anc a ) IS
!oo\.ll-Cwt• l ea11ue -Irv"' •' Dana
H i l I~
A"Otlu\ ltlO I' ,.,..... De •• SI
Pa ut ) IS F,_IDAY
Seo V tw LH{IU41 SaOO e()eC( 11
NewOOrl H•roor l \S Tusl1n 11 Cc.fona di'
Mar J IS [\1en< • et U~,.eri Iv l I~
Surw• I t•v•i• -M•• na •• 0c ..
V l w JI~ •
Pee•'< Col\! l fl9->t -.,..oooi>r OOt •' Cos••,,.,.,.,.. JU, L•owna 8eec11 •'Of•~
l l~
Sou•n Co•'' Lrou..e ''",.. •' El Toro 31~
SATURDAY 5..1,..~1 LPa\lut -Eo' n •' 1Vrt1•
tn-"'\llf I Hw· t 'Cl' ~ Bte n II l:'ovr•a "
Ila '" I A"'Qt ' l .... ..:.# -Ma't• 0. •• ~. ,, -TRACK AND FIELD
Coll..-"*' and women
' SATURDAY
U•a11 S•aPf Ca State Ha•w•rO el UCt
I lO •"' C1'1411>"1'11" Cnrst Coreve ''""• •' c .. '".. ) communltv coh9e m4ft anct womef'I
fllUDAY Or•"~ C..att (;, .01'" .... 11'\f at F H
~-Yl SATURDAY
Of•l'!ll t u• Goide'I Welt Al F"r•\t<O
lltla•\
Hiiltt school bovs
• THUIUOAY
!.ea v ''" E1••"' a at CorOl'a ~
M4;r TttJn ••'l'l'i' If Ht •ikA' ~;
Seoo• t• a• r usi.n l $w!Mtl -WHlm.nSttr et Octet' II l'W
,) Mitlfl•., Hunl."ljl()I' 8tt<PI '· Foun••'I
Va 'lev 11 Eo '°" J
... ·-..... ,.,.
HORSE ff ..\('I'._
•ftc Cot\! -latuna H ... t i Wood•
], l tiOOtO Hft>i al~ ,
South Cot\! Cao \tr•no Va ~v at
Irv re 3
SATU,_DAY
CorOfte o.i Mer lO•\O<'I WOOODrt<IOI ""°""'•..,.. v.t.'eY. Hunhf>OICJn 8tacll, Irvine
M4ttr Ot . Merr11e Ocean Vltw UnMtr•
''"'• Westm11'sltr, Ntwoorl Haroor ••
Aruo • '"• ••'-' S om
Hlilll schOGt 91f'f'
THURSDAY
Se• V ew E i11ricl1 111 C<l(orie 0t
Mar J, Un'"'"''" 11 N-POt• Haroor l $adO•.i>&tk el T i.tl·n 3
Su'l\ft -Octan v.ew al Wtstn·1111\ltr l Hunl·n11•on !lte<.11 II Met re l Ed \O!I
•• f'ou"lta n V• "'· J Pe( !oc COHI -l•O""-H1 \ ., W(IOO ~ <j\jf ) TrtC>UCO Hill\ e • (0\1e Mtw l
.ou•f'I Coa\t • C•o '"a"O Va h ••
Irv n• )
SATVltDAY
Cor.,. e Gel Mer (O ll>I' Woodbrnl\11,,.
~-.. n "•"•• Hu,,1.noton Bt•tr llv•r-t Miler De1, Mer•"• Octan V ew Un •tr
'•v lllnlm rt'e< NtwPOf'I Haroor •' "rcac:.-,,.q-a1 1 ~ o,..
SOFTBAl.L
Col"'
TUESDAY
Crace CC>< tUt Ind·•"• 01 Cnr•t• Cott11t
I• .. ,,. IO<>vbll "'eOtrl 2 o rn
THU,_SDAY ~'""'n C•·• ""• (' tot a• Pe tc Cl>i ~1 om L.tv .... .i. Ot ll
Ir• re 1000.H t>taoer 7 o,,.
SATuttDAY
\o\..'l'i'" Ca 1, ""a COi~ •t C"• st Col 91.1t 1-..,,. c. ... CMt "•~ " on
Communitv colffie
TODAY
L 8H II CC a• Ora"1a \I )
WCOHESDAY
C•itreu II Ote• .as• l " .,,on •' C.C>IOt" ...,,,, I
F,_IDAY
Oret>Qe Cots! el It '''''°'CC 1 C.ol«M<' ~ .. ,, e• SeOO'ttoi '< l
Hiotl school
TODAY
CO\'; Ytw •' ht•PO<• H1•oor J
TUESDAY
H..,,,',,.i.'ori Bu " •' La11...,.a H s l
Y'YOOOD< C:Vt •\ Ir• :"I el Ht<' te.,e P1rr. l
M4itt• 0. •' EO·\Dll ooube "9•0••I > 0<:••" v ....... La H•Dra ) 1~ L•~ ..... 8t.tc~ al El MOO.na J IS •
WEDNESDAY
S.a V '"" l.N~.... C.,r""• 0 .. Mar •\
''•M. <•• Tth •t Pe·~ ) Tinin •' $e~O. ~ l IJ •t•t •v •' r-;•wOO'' HarbQt 3
THURSDAY
N~ tlllUI F..., ta Ila t• •• Ir""~
11 H«•'•H Per• 00.JO't "teat• I l
Tournall'ef'lt -Eo tOt1 ""OOODr•l.fllf'
Y'YIS'"'-"t'tr Hurl "O'f>f' B•a " O<u .,
y '"" •' C•"•~ T r e mt n• FRIDAY
~· V ,,.. LNw ·• T"''"' •' CO'll'\a ·a,. Y.•• l \4toawoa • •• ,..., ... _. He•oor
) (S'e tlC a a ! Uthft'I·'• l TO\,rnem~• -'Ed,.,... ..,OOdtV exit
""'"""''" >t •"' '<l'OI Btet'I 0. t•~ v ,,.. et Cen,011 rou'"'"''"'
SATUltDAY
TOWNrT"lfll E °''"" .,..OOCltl' "" f'lr~l~\I.. H I 11'0" IH t; ()(p ~ II.,.. e l C1n• 1 4: ._.,.,
TENNIS
Cole9e men
TUESDAY
(hr it (Of"flle r ....... •' PQ.l't L omt t ~ U" v S.i-0 eog a l UC! I lO
-
N '"'"V\ G••'lll>OIO Io ..... , ,. >a• Oft~ z......, 01• ll H O
T-1'H
SIVllNTII •ACt I • .. 11"'11
01 • c.,o ~"' \t• •1 >• U O 110 I I -zel , .. J• Pr-C•• Biik• , .. ,...,. 1«12
U IXACTA •• l J "'° 1'1 M U l"ICIC SIX 11 t \ • I • 41 e>e'd ""6.0,.., ... -."9 !'( .......... -... , ~ 15&JO -~71 -/(•t•• ~ ... llOr\ft •
llGHTH aACI I • lftl••
II ft-"C••• r • l • l,. u-.... 0-O.wu H e >• ~·••.,.. Pan•• ~ .. ._, >t•
~RIDAY
l.:. Ma• QI! •• ··•---~· e inoo Mon•~. J W•""""'"" •'
OMl)r ,,_ ~ ~ ~ r.,,..
Biiiy White's Newport
Harbor Sailors seek their -
first Sea View League
baseb•ll win this· week.
WIDNISOAY
(rir \I C •'II h "'t I' Ce L~··" 7 o.m SATUlltOAY
Al>ne Par I a ' ("< t• eot r.1111 10
•"'
Cole9e Werneft
WIDMIS.OAY ,. U(
'"IOA y
.. r •'• ' IJrn ,,,_ t•
>J• • .. •• • "" • 1 0 ..
convnunirv < ..... ,,.,..,,
TUESDAY west •' It ,.,, cie CC o,.,
WEDNESDAY
Q H" \ f' a• ()<a..,,. C \I :
THU4UDAY
Or•"~ C ti •' •Otn\ li1e11<.ria ~.... •• c; .... t i 1
Communirv , ..... wom«1
WEDHUDAY Or f"'9f' ( HI e• R •l'S•O• CC 1
Tl4UIUDAY c.oou el Or• ..,. .., , c .-..,t ,, lltanc• '"
Hlotl 'dlocll bovs
TODAY
Le '" l ·~
. ,
''H •' Ee \O'I l Oue11 .,,.,.,. •' ~rlN l M•a.nPt I \ Ne•PPf' Harl>O',)
Otenvt et LAO~• lt&tl! l Lall""• H t
•• t'llOOdCM'~ )
Warran l
VOLLEY.ALL c..... "*' W•DMllSOAY Lono lea(h Sltlt ., UCI, 7 )0
c~ c-...·"*'
TOOAY
t.averne •• Oranoe Coa&I 7 om
WllOM•SOAY Ounoa Coe" at (;OIOafl wu1, 7 Pm.
F•IOAY. Ml S.n AnlOOlo •• GOIC*I WIS!, 1 om
I
Hlttl sc:Met MYS MSOAY Foo•n ai Estanc,., 64S, Corona Oii
MAr •• U!lt-\•IV • 4$, Tu1M a t New-•
HarbOr, 6 •5. Irvine at El Toro 7 Malet °" •I 111\llOO Amal, 1 WllONllSOAY Ed•Mll'I al HU111tl\lll011 lffCll, 7, Foun111ln
Vaillv al CX..n V.....,, 7, Wutm!Mttl' •t
Merl4\1, 1 Co•1• Met• at WoodbrldM, 1l0, ~ H J •I LAQIM!a 8ffcfl l lO ,_K>AY
Estanc a •' Tuthl'I 7, .....,oort Hw1Mlr at CorOl"a oe< Mar, 1, Footn• ti univenotv,
7 Oc11n Vt-al W"llTllM'-f 7, Hwtt· U!OIO!l S.ach •I Manna, 1 OIMlll at roun1a1n van.., 1, 81\l'IOo Mollt~v a1·
Matar ~·. 1, Dana HIP• 11 Irvine, 7,
Tr&t>«O H \ et (Otta ~ 7
SWllltWING • C.mmuNtv , ..... ,,_. ._ ......,..~
,lllOAY •
C.OIOl'I "''" al E Carntno 2 lO Ora11911 CoHt at llancl"IO Sant.aoo 2 lO
Kith \cMtll b!IVI eftd tlf1I
T\11\C)AY
()(ff!! ..,.,...,, al W"ll'N'l\ltf' l Hl#lt·
•Ott IMc 11 Mar ..._ l Ed SPll al f..,.. .• .,, "• ,, l
WIDMllSDAY E''•~ • 11 cor-°" Mar l Uftt11tt·
, '• 11 ,......,llOfl Herw l $aOOleOac~
., e1T1i•t n l . WOOOl)(IOl)fl at t.ff\11\t 11.-. l;
T rtll<J(I> Hll!I 11 Co\11 MtM )
THUlltSOAY
'"'II~ •' (ap.itr....o Va v, l ll'•IOAY Eo •• Fool J Wftl!'n<Ml4W .,
~,, •• A'lt \Ill •• 3 Ma• Oet ._,., ••
~I JONI a.,., 0 )0
SA TUlltOA Y FOU"'• ~ V•••v yt C!K>'ilra no v.u. ... 11 ~oekoao C ''tOt 10 a m
Hlttl SdtMI t6rti
T"UlltSOA Y
(¥Olla o.-~ F-ta Vll'elf, INone.
Eo lllft. D<M V •w £•'afte,. et Ctf.'
RM•• ~"mt •• ~' Pitre. 1 Pm SATU.OAY
Cor~ 091 Mar F01Jnta1n Vetle'f 1rv111e
t:e \on O<ta~ v .. ..., Et!aric:la at CIF 11 .. ao F na i •• ~t ..,.,. 1 o m
CREW
C~c: ..... men
SATUlltDAY "' ;v, ,, 0r-cou 1 cor..,. a1
L"'° c,, • .,_ ,.....oort eaac"' • •"'
BADMINTON
Hlttl K9'NI
WIONllSOAY
()(Mn "•"' •• FOU"'• Va • , ts
M¥1N •' ...... ,..., "''..-J ts to SOii ac .. ,,..... __ ._,., llic
NIOAY
\l'of\l""tf'Sl.-r at OtM n V .. w, 3 IS
Mar "' el Hu"h"9ton a..<n 3 IS, Edi.or •' Foun•• n Vafltv. 3 \~
•
•
FIF~-From Nonh Orange COWJty
From South Orange County
54()..1220
496-6800
•
TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ACROSS
I Strt~
6 Chml> up
10 NC c0t.in1y
14 btant
15 Sllut up
16 Mak• tntead
58 S1><vce. e o
59 Ex.panse
ISO A Keaton
8 1 Baett talk
62 Juvenile
63 Stood ones
snare
17 Apponioned DOWN 18 Tiie 0.1111
20 St0t.il'I llln I Kind of m.AI
-2 t er.ecedu:i.o 2 Sl\eltet eo
pref 3 Moutlllul
22 APC>flance 4 Too niueh
23 Ro1trum 5 Fl0<ld
25 T OOk a 1oo11 6 Bowspfltt
27 Stal\d up 10 7 S.. -•·
30 Eulogize 8 Bus abbr
31 Obtuse 9 High degree
32 Thrffh 10 Iraqis. • g
33 S1ootie 11 HandWt1t11'9
38 T ambre atyl4t
37 Ant91ope 1~ Turning point
38 Take on 13 Wrapped up
39 lor 14ngr. 19 Frang10I•
out 2 1 Cobl>lef
40 To the point 24 Foo4<111 ~
4 I Adv~ US PffftOenl •2 Bruncti 26 Ftalteoed
'' Instr 1 27 Eight ptal •s SNP !NltlMI 28 Short up
'7 GodMnO 29 Stegt lhows
4& Volant 30 Gard41n 11rn. •9 Contalnet 32 Air p ......
50 ThlS Sp 34 ' Judttn
5' Ob1«>t eompOMr
5 7 <>tt-tne..cutt 35 Put 10 the 37 C1ndef1 of
2 3 5
17
~VIOUS PUZZLE SOl. VlD
the coml<!I sa lnterru~led '° ram t kW'!
4 1 Cat d Q•'™l 43 Sk1rm11Ms
''"' Spioclutl 45 Hutla
~ttf ... coon
'7 Got goong
49 Ham mlheu
5 I 8.a 111.ippott
52 Sharp poinl
53 tn a l>unk
55 Topi*
6e 1ntuna1e
57 City In
o.i1anoma
11 ,, 13
..
Scrap
Savers
NEW LOWER
RATES
r--
-.... .-..... ___.. -------.
ARBORETUM Catwlng 10
tl\e • de9f00 commumty
Ideal for i-5 person firm
tnat ates abOUt 111 WOtk-
ing environment Full ser·
vie• ava•l•bl•·XerO'll
ptlolla tu & conl•enc•
rooms From S330/mo
Can 261 1212
OCATION• LOCATION•
LOCA TIONt Prime ••tail
°'.lllet Approx 950 Sq ft
$1495tmo No triple ,,.t
~~5
EW OFFICE lpPl'OX 260
sq ft Near 17th & lrv1M
S•OO A v11 I now
54iµ332
SIULJ. OFFICE
f(Ul)ADS
ARE FREE
Cal:
141 ... 11
•
FORMOAE.
INFORMATION CALL
{21J) 4lt-llH
•
EWSPA.PER
DELIVER
* 0 *
Eurlt morniov m11lor roul~ tnailabltt • r.'I :¥P
fu'jf h1ne depenclable tehi<'le und linl1i/i1y
('11711
'
m ura n c('.
i dtH" p#'T ttH J..
2:.10 •.m.-3::W a.m.
ER GEE R INGS
h J.!-1 i ltrt"t'r.n h:IJO .P rn ; Ill) p m
h .OI.• J 0 1 111. (~\I & ..... , \)
t \I f l
AR • \~ \ \IL \DU·.:
Huntln•ton Beae,•h
(~osta Mesa._ t~oun•aln ·aue~.
. N~•·port Beaeh .
ir•
PART-TIME HELP WANTED
Deity,....._ --.... __. ,.,. ............. ...-..........
9""aM .......... ~---. ....... -................ . ............................
DAILY PILOT
OFFIC&
tllf C08TA MESA
•
•
"
11 to 16 Yeor• Old
WOik IVININGS
AND SATUIDAY
,
VOU CAN A. VOA.GI PH WUK
. ~
17500
OR MORE
CALL EAll
213-479-3620
AU fUNSP<)lilfATION "°"IOfO
fY AN AOUlT SUf'f•"'SOt
Motor Routes
...
available in
W11tmi•1t1r
Huntiqto1 l11ch
Fou1t1i1 Y1ll1r
NO COLLECTING
NO SOLICITIN
Oehver One Day a WMk -
Must have dependable car ,
and proof of tnturance . ..
A8k for Joanne Cr.-y
Trum 90351 ______ ..
llST MAL ti Tift 8~ Ood~ Ram CNrger (I •• .,. • 8' onco1 MC
a...10.ve •••.gr•tcond
S7l00 $1800 mor• at
dNlefS PP 122·7118
(
---...... , ...... ~-~----4
ORANGE COAST CAR GUIDE
17071 E. lmpenal Hwy. -Yorba Linda. California
l:HE BEST BUYS
IN ORANGE COUNTY
ARE ON THIS PAGE
CALL ONE NOWI
o ·sADDLIBACll
Sales
Leasing
Service
Parts
IRVINE AUTO CENTER
1-800-831-3377 714-380-1200
Huntineton Beach
Chrysler -Plymouth
SAL~~~Mla~o
·SERVICE -PARTS ..
& SA~~Y.Il~BG & 0 NEW LOCATION!
SANTA ANA AUTO MALL
1500 Auto Mell Dr., lent• Ana 835-3171
Newpor1/S5 Fwy. at Edinger a...~ °'*' 1 l!eya $«....ct~ M f 7-IPl'l
BUENA
PARK
STANTON
,..,,, Set hm-3pm
PACIFIC
OCEAN
o COMMONWEAL TH
•NO GIMMICKS
• OLDSMOBILE
• CADILLAC
• OMC TRUCKS
,,./582 -0800
SAN DIEGO FWY AVERY EXIT LAGUNA NIGUEL
lh•rti•• •• Tiii• '"' C1H fir 1111111
842-4321
CALL ONE OF THESE
DEALERS FOR THE BEST BUY
0 HOUSE of IMPORTS, Inc. MercedeS-·-Benz
6862 Ma.nd'ICaltr 0ouk:vard
Out'na ruk
Cl:
""" 8&JlVIC& ~13 or 714/MERCEDESP.=~
---Whric 1·5 and I Glm«t Mon·f'n &·!: 1· S.l S-2 PM
• Saperlo'
'
VOLKSWAGEN ... ~
IN WESTMINSTER ~¥i
Westminster Blvd., Westmlns er
(71,~91·9378 (213>'30-28'3
8 JIM SLEMONS IMPORTS
Mercedes-Benz
1I01 Quell It.
Newpott9Mch
ACUAA
1001 Guell It.
Ne•Port8Mch
--. -~~ ---.--·-
The leoel Depertt'l"ent It tM
Ditty P1k>t .. pJeaMd to an·
~ 1 new Mt'Vic. now av •I·
aW to new businesMt
We ... now SEARCH the
neme fOf Yo" 1t no ••tr• ch1tge.
end MYe Yo" tM t•me end the
trto to the COUft Hou .. in S nt1
An. Then. of courae. ett• the
..-ch ts Com(>le\.ed we wtfl flit
~ fic:t1t10U1 ~ name
1t1t..,.,t with ~ Couflty Clerk, ~ once a .._ tor tour
....... tequifed by 19W Ind "*' ,.. JOI.If ptoot or pubh·
ceeeon ~ ''-County Clef
-"Aw, c'mon, Oeddy. Kida don't take
credit cards for their allowancM."
by Bred Andereon
"His teddy bear, Binky, got 10 dirty, I put It
in the washing machlM and It fett apart."
PBAllUT8
I llJE CMAM6EP ~ OIW,MARCIE ..
MIND. SIR .. LET'S IJ: I ~fT MIM,
NOT GIVE. CMARLtS IT'LL ee AN
T~E OL' &EAN eAlL ACCIOCNT ..
'1-·J
GARPmLD
Ot<A~ A PINKY U11'Lf. MO~t. MOLE.. I HAVl NO PN>eLEM wrfH 'TMA'f
I o
l 0 ]
G
...
.. .,....-..... v··· ···"······ ... -.. .,,. ..
There's a
"1•c.to•ster llM•'·w .
(Jlffybody ~y?
DSN!HS THE llSRACE
by Hank Ketcham
((
J
_j
·~1
'4·3 J
'l THIMK 1iu &TTER PLAY Hire 'N SEEK
WllH FYl!R>O'I£ lOMY: I
by Charles M. Schulz
---
...::---
POR BETTER OR roa WOR8E
THt:fr.E. u.e Pl'C. l
... El-FrNrTO~ rr-
SHOE
JUDOS PAllKER
FURY WIM&&RBSA1'
DOONDBUllY
JUSi HOW 51lJPfD DO
£,()() 1J.4tNK I AM~
by Garry Trudeau
•• ~ .... MHY · fl/WlllN ....
il _..,.,_
by Lynn Jotinston
by Jeff MacNelly ,,
by Tom Batluk