HomeMy WebLinkAbout1989-04-06 - Orange Coast Pilot-
THE'ORANGE COAST
-fJenies.o1;deriag Oct· 3 beating in NB
Light show
ay IRIS YOKOf
and JANET ZIMMERMAN
Of-D.lly ..... s...ff
The ex-husband of John Wayne's
daughter pleaded innocent Wcdncs--
d.ay to charaes he orchestrated the
bcatingofhisex-wifeand hermilhon-
aire boyfriend during a fierce custody
battle over their only child.
Thomas A. Gion1s was arrested at
his Pomona home Tuesday ni&ht by
Newport Beach pohce. The )~year·
old orthopedic surscon is accused of
mstigat1ng the Oct. 3 anack on A1ssa
Wayne and her former boyfriend.
financier Roger Luby, by two hit men.
Gionis was charged with con·
spiracy to commit assault with a
:deadly weapon and trying to in·
umidate a wttncss. He entered his
plea duriraJ an amianment at Harbor
Municipal Court in Newport Beach.
He remained at the Newport Beach
Jail without bltl, but a heanng to
determine the bond amount wa set
for this afternoon.
Oionas hired envatc 1nyest1ga1or
0 . Daniel Gal to 'intimidate" Wayne
and . Luby durina a seven-week
custody bearina. police allege. In·
vestiptors said thc_y have not de-
termined whether Gion1s hired the
men who attacked the cquple or what
his all~ lflStructions were regard·
inf. the intimidation.
'Dr. Gion1s orchestrated this as-
sault," Newport Beach police ~8l.
Mike Jackson said. "He hired Mr. Gal
to do his investiption"' and hire the
men who pcrl'o~ lhe assault"
All the su pects except Gal ha"c
been arrested.
Gionas, weann~a wh11e dress hin
and gray drc~ pants, muled at his
father. sister and another woman a
he entered the courtroom. The)
refused to talk wath reportets.
Defense attornc) B)ron McMillan
said he was outraged by the no-bail
status set by Municipal Court J6dge
Russell Bostrom. G1on1s has a medi·
cal practice. as a California re 1dent
and has no pnor cnmmaJ convac-
taons, he said.
"They got some heresa) balone)
from people who arc m custody
who've dumped on•ham." McM1llan
said, referring to Gioni s' co-defen·
dants. But Che at tomey .said he had no
(Please stt ATTACK/A2t
TIMATAT1tu11dlneln lrvlneproYl .. ":a•1orln1onlMMftDl• .. ''••w.,iiMI AllOftPMtsw.,wllft•n.....,llflttlMw.
f ft\ I IC ' I ft IC \ IC I C IC I \ I I• t'
2 5CENT S
c p In
arrested;
tanker
freed
WORLD/A4
, . ...
;.
..., ..... ~ .. Lee....,_
Pll•r W•Jn• fleftl w• tier a11ut11ar. Abu.
..
Grand Jury may
probe sale ef H B
mu Sh room farm
111 ftOtaUT IAJtKflJ
Of IN D.lly ..... SU«
he Huntmston Bcadi ( 1ty C'oun·
c1l is callin• for an Oran~ County
Grand Jury 10vestapt1on of the c1ty'1·
snafu-piqued .purchase of a mush-
room farm. The cHy urttd in l 98S to ao Lhrou&h a 1hin1 party to buy the land
for SS:S m1H1on ao three phucs. The
purchase of the firsc two pe~ls ~nt
wnhout a hitch But attempts to buy
thi third parcel at an a&f'CC'd upon
pnce fell through. offic1aJs Sllld.
The BE CorP, • "'h1ch bouaht the
property "-'•th th' understaootna u
wou•d sell it to the cat) at ~-upon
pncn, v.ent bankrupt. ctty officials
wd.
The land v.cnt back to Victor Dt
tefano, the lonaume owner of the
property alo~ Golden West trect.
north of Elhs A\cnue l\nd he
reportedly tcppcd up the pnce to
more than the cit qrttd to pa)
Tht call for a Gmod Jur)' 1n\iC-SttP·
tton comes on the heels of quatioos
a.bout how the land •-as apprailed and
rumors of '°me people tum1na 1tlepJ
profits oo the dt-aJ. •·
Ma~or Wes 8anmster uracd the
an vestAption ac a cJoted door meetJna
Monday niaht. ix of the te~n
rouneil mcmben and Ci ty Attorney
Ga.al Hutton q.rttd to sian lbc.ar
names 10 the request. Counctlmao
John Erskine "-'IS not present.
.. I Just want to make sure that it was
an honest, straa&htforward deal from
the very 1nccpt1on and that thett ~
no irrqulant1c • " Bannister said
WcdnC'Sday. "l don·t know of a.ny
allegahtacs But 1f an)onc m1 used a
posmon in any wa). I want to find out
about at.''
The letter. cxpcc1cd Lo so to the
Grand Jul') soon.1sbe1ngprcparcd by
Hutton's offi~.
Ctty offictal bqan explonna buy-
ing the 30.acre mushroom farm land
tn Apnl 19 4 w11h the idea of
· (Please lff PttOK /Alf
Point of g~ur1ion hunt? Ah, that~ s the catch Mercury
over 100;
thousands
hit beach
ly EMILY ADAMS
Of -D.lly ..... SQlff
The fi~h man has poken. And
when the f1\h man peak\. the
arun1on h~tcn.
lf )Ou'vc e\icr \It up ~di put )Our
• bedtime on a cold bcach ~aatina for
an apptarancc oflhc clu\1\lc arun1on
fi h. )OU'll apprccaatc lhc work of
Paul Gtttot). anociatc marine
baolos.ist with the Cahfomia Dcpan·
ment off 1 hand Game.
, ... Grunion att my pec1alty,"
Grqory Y)S. "'I'm the 'one v,,ho tells
the fish when to pawn."
A rtlattvely mall, sardine-hapcd
saltwater fish. the ~nion ~ould
probably have rtmaincdJuSt another
anonymous cold·bloodcd vcnc~tc ~ 1t not for ~1r rather unulUll
sp9Yffti• bebltl L.nvi~ dttper Pacific waters to
lay and frit1hrc their c~ on southern batchei dunna the h1ahcst tick's of scmna and summer. arunion hnc
bccomt more than Just a fish They'\e
btcome a source of free entertain·
ment.
To outsiders, a arunion run can
sound exacdy lake a i)l•ee hunt, but to
a Southern Cahfom11n -or an)One
who has watncsted a beach turn~
suddenly hqutd sil~er with •he 1ccm·
int bodies of tpaMtina fish -
arunion arc just a raJ as the hmc
ihey ka"'c 1n your Mnds.
Watha handy tchtdulc of eJtpc<.:tcd
arunion run produced by Grqot) -
"-'hO ~Id he meel Wtlh arunion
representative 1n •ptembcr in order
to plan their pav.nang ~h~uk -
thc ca unlobscl"\erorscnou!.grun1on
hunter wall haH better luck finding
the 4-10 8·1nch Ii h
But v.-hat do )OU do v.-1th a 1run1on
onct 11'\ cauaht.,
lthouah arunion ha\t" never been
con adcrcd a aourmet treat, man)
pcoplt do cat them ">\ lot of people
clean them. roll them an cornmeal
and f I') 'cm up for breakfast. :fhe' 're
l md ol a br\'.all.isl tish .. Gfl'aOI')
1d
The ~nou~ huntt"r howeHr. are
u uall\ far o utnumbered by the
cunou at an\/ grunion run tually
being able to l'3tch a fi h an )our hand~ and 1n dH·rtcntl). bcina able
to v.atlh a Ii h la) 1n )our hand • ~m\ to be the fa anataon associated
~Ith grunion.
E'an "1ehl-l.auun. a \ISator to
( "'stal (. o"c for the mo t recent
. (PIHH lff GRUNION/A 2f
"
9Y PAUL AJtCHWlEY
ar-~,..k411'
A bl1 tenna. ~ nta Ana heat wa\ie
scorched~ Southland for a second
stra1aht di)' Wcdnesd.a}'. promptina
thousands to flood the Ora.nae Coa1t
shorehnc and other beaches 1ttk.tna
rcl~f.
Many lives .touched by plane crash victims And some of those who couldn't
escape I.he inland hat kept mecbcal
11d workers busy. county offiaal1
reported.
lt was anothc1' tte0rd·tetttna diy in
many areas as iempcraturn toated
put the century mart. "'ent on famll)' ouhnp.
But their h\ts toucMd many an
Camrote, he said. Tony Otis ~nw t~o le1111clry Slorn in the city.
"C'ouJd )OU c~er •mlllM the
number of PCOOtc that Ton~ and Man~n touehtd 'in tMir lhort hf~ ume heuked.
And a the •mt1illr strains of
"Amazina G"" .. «hoed from the ~ore:. W1 the C'athohc Mm. •Rd Ian MT'C -.pcd
1way a many auiftly cried.
Rev. Doftaldl.aint. a •mt1~ ftitftd
from Edmonton who naarricd the
GOOD MORNING
couple. ofTertd his thoutht to the
&roup cart~ 1n the tcrvict.
"We ~now that plants crash, that
ca~ era h •. ~-c unckntand that
machines and people make m1siakn.
Our head tell u ... but our hcan till
1 he and hun :·
Laina told the crowct that o~ &1th
WOIJld .hclp the peook left .,.nd IO
bchC\t that 1~ Oc1s family Wll
happ' ... This famal) b\'cd their hft to
the rU11 ...
o one on the around wa bun
when the plane cnlMd "' a ma• of ff'I• .... •llOltlM.I AJJ
The hi,tl reKhcd 104 deeieet in
nta An11nd 102 in Fvllft1oia. wtaile
an loftl ~ ud Lo&~ die
mm:\11)' topped OUt It 105.
Tbt Loi Anldn 1vac Cmw ..._ of'°' •nerect -9<Mller• ...... for Apri.15 lft Ill 1971, I I
Howenr. unlike T.et411.
tcmperatura ea"1d up lilolll at
t'Olllt. wtdt a h• of I I m Nlil=ftll_,n ae.cta Ud 15 lft "'lf•UllllM
.. ,, wat 'f,.--=· .. "" ...... .. MIAT/Alf
PcJlc:e Log. .•••.•••••••.•••...•••••••. AJ
~ rlCJltkn •.••..••••......•.•• 11..e ~ ...•.•.......•...••...... , .•.. 11-4 ' 4rY. LllttJ9,.. • . • .••...•............ '.. M
. .
HEAT ""-"' tilid GoldoD0 lleed OI tbe ~
"9cla l.il!auarda.
AJI ~~= Oockcd lO Ntw...., and · in the miW
iurf'wbere lbt water tempcratutt was .
• acool 62. Lifenanta made DO rescues. .. Be-
cautc there was no surf, there were no
pl'Qbkms, •• Reed said.
Similar rcpons were issued at
Huntinaton state and cit~chq.
A Huntintton city Ii said
about 20,000 visitors ba ed on the
3.s-mile llNtCb of sand there. No
mcues were rcponcd.
Paul Handorf, a lifeauard at Hunt·
inaton State Beach, said another 2<J.OOO visited that beach. 1•1t was really busy for an April
~r/' be said ... We called everybody
an.
Lifquards reported three minor
rescues in the calm surf, he said. But inlarid. the stifling beat over·
came some seniors, as well as young
people who elayed too hard.
Kathleen Cha of the Orange Coun·
ty Fire Departm'ent said medical aid
calls had risen considerably beJih·
nin& Tuesday 'when they received
about 30 more calls than normal, with
complaints of fainting and
heatstroke.
· Fin! department spokesman Hank
Reymond said the calls contin.,ucd Wednesday, averaging frblt\ 10..20
percent over normal
"A lot of it is kids running around
on playgrounds,'' Reymond said.
They also were receiving a 1arge
number offire calls, he said.
"We're getting a rast\. of kids
playin,a with matches, and people
throwing thcir.apreues ouUht car
window don•t realize how critical the
situation is," he said.
More than 60 county firefijhtcrs
responded to a four-alarm fire in Los
Alamitos on Wednesday where a
commercial building was burning.
Cause of the 9 p.m. fue was
undetermined as two hazardous ma-
terials units investigated the possible
storase of to~ic chemicals in the building, spokeswoman Patti Range
said.
A product caUed Tolulinc. used in making glue, reportedly was stored in
six ~lion drums in a suite in the
l()()..by-200 foot commercial build-
PROBE
FromA1
convertin& 1t to a mobile home park
for mobile home residents displaced
by redevelopment projects. .
In July 1985. the City Council
entered an agreement to buy the
property in three phases for $5.5
million. But the deal turned tricky
when officials at the time claimed Di
Stefano refused u,-deal directly-with
the city, aJlcgedly because of a
grievance in the past. It was at this
time that the SBE Corp. was brought
into the deal. . . . •;
GRUNION
it From A l
grunion run, liked the vunion .. be-·
cause you can taJce them .«Jot of the
water for 20 minutes and play with
them like a dog." · .
While 20 minutes might be a little
long to keep even the hardiest
grunion out of the 1 water. Mchl-
Laituri pointed out t11at arunion arc
more fun than most fish.
"You can't take your goldfish out
9.f the water for 20 roibutes like that." ·~said.
Durins· .,Apri1 and May, when
SR1wningl!'f\lru ~re most heavily
Pobwlatcd, the irunion arc protected··
from huflt1/la. ~peo 1scason on &ru·
nion it lllllt; throµ&h A.uaus'1 with·:
runs'OCCuhing usua.LJy tw1cca month,
on the four days follb'wing. the bifhcst 1jde in a ·progression ·or 10creas1ngly
higher tides:
According to Gregory. grunion
prefer (o rpaY.tn at the ends of beaches •
and tht... ~eavicst activity is usually
rcporto.d'· at Huntinaton Beach or
Cabrillo.Beatti in Los Anaelcs Coun-
ty. At<:a~llo. a s~ial presentation
on arunion i~ give n by park em•
ployecs .. · .
..., .... ,...., ....
A newl~ remodeled house at Ml Sonor• ltCYd In Cosu Meu
sustained 141,000 Ind.,.. ... Wedn•ld•y when• n ... 1,..
1Ntl11t ·frond landed on the roof .tier cont~ct wtth h~gh
tension wires •nd hot winds. .
ins, she said.
The (1IC.itself was brought under
control in about an hour.
The department went on "high
watershed dispatch" Tuesday, a;Situ-
ation in which the number o._ fire
units on calls was increased because
of~ter fire danger.
Besides the high winds that blew in·
off the desert, humidity had dropped
to 12 percent Wednesday momfog.
Should the situation deteriorate
further, the next step would be a red
flag ajen, Rcymond said.
-A-Cast~ Mesa homeowner su ffe-r-ed
doubly Wednesday when his newly
remodeled home at 961 Sonora Road
sustained an estimated $45,000 in damage after a flaming palm frond
landed on the roof. The frond was
ignited when hot winds blew it into
high tension wires, officials said.
Battalion Chief Bill Raymer said they originally were unable to get the
hapless homeowncr's name bec.ause
he had to run off suddenly after
learning another building he owned
was burning. The victim later was
identified as Paul Thoreen.
The heat wave also ran elcctrici!Y
usage up to a new record, Southern
SBE, whose principals are Craig K .
and Sharon B. Etchegoycn. defaulted
on buying the last segment of land
and selling 1t to the Cit} for S 1.8
milJion, city official s said.
When the city went to bu)' the land
from Di Stefano. he said It would cost
$2.2 million, officials said. Officials
said 01 Stefano told them that was
what SBE allegedly still owed him
from past transactions.
The Ci ty CounCll in March 1988
directed Hutton to condemn the land
and claim 11 by eminent domain for
S 1.8 million. Hutton d1dn·1 file for
eminent domain until last October •
California Edison ofiicials reported.
On Tuesday, peak usage Qn the
50.000-square-mile system ruched
12,663 megawatts, spokesman Steve
Nelson said. That all-time high for April was
short-lived, as Wednesday's peak
usage at 4 p.m. reached 14.282
megawans. • • On an averase Apnl da), clcctnciw
usage 1s considerably under I 0,000
megawatts.
But it's still a long way from the all·
time record of 15. 987 mega wans set
OJt-Seo~ 9 8. ~ sard.
··we "ere able to meet the demand
with no problems .. Nelson s~ud.
Students and faculty at Estancia High School might dispute that.
The Costa Mesa campus had t<>
shut down at 11 :50 a.m. Tuesday
because of a power failure.
Classes were back m session
Wednesday -sans air conditioning..
··Everyone came through with fly-
ing colors," a spokeswoman said.
The worst should be over, althoush inland residents might not notice
much relief today.
A cooling trend will begin alonj the
coast. with all areas cooler on Fnday.
and b) tbat ume the land value had
escalated b) about $600.000. officials said.
· A source in Hutton's()fficecJa1med
Wednes4ilY he couldn•t have taken
legal action sooner because the deal was lied up in bankruptcy court.
Cny Adm1n1strator Paul Cook said
that the thtrd"")X!rccl -about nine
acres -ts sought for the relocallon of
mobile home Lcnants. Scores of
mobile homes have been located on
the land thafs.becn acquired. The city
plans to make It a home for about 130
coaches, Cook said
.. • ..... :1!,l:i· ................... c-•v•ri Metll-1.afturl, punlon-hufttlng at Crytt.I Cove, uys
th• ft~ J»rovld9 more fun th•n dog• or goldftah.
'
Portion of
Aliso Beach
st/II closed
Soan1;'1 iempcratuttS and partially doecd beach waten combined to
-., Alaso Beach lifeauard• ~Y
ciaht da~ after more than 100,000 ~RI of raw 1ewqe flowed from a ~creek into the ocean.
Tbedosurc bean M~h 28when1
2,000.foot stretc'b of coastal waters
was restricted after sewage spilled
into Aliso Crttk as a result of 1
damqtd sewer liM. Two days later. all but 500 feet on each side of the
ctUk was reopened.
.. It was crowded earlier in the day and most of the people 1tayed on the
south end of the pier:· lifeauard
Cunis Stewart said Wednesday after-
noon ... It's a bit of work just runnina
around and keeping them out."
However. once swimmers under· stand why the beach is restricted, they
are cqer to com~)'. Stewart $8.id.
. "When you tell them how it ts and
what it was. they're usuaJIX more than
happy to get out of there. '
Mike Wehner, a county water
quality specialist, said ongoing tests
still reveal contamination but that the
beach could open for the weekend. ·
"The sw1mmcrs can &Ct in all but
the 500 feet now." Wehner said.
"Thinas are·improving. If they con·
tinuc to improve, the rcmainin& 500
feet of closure could be open by the
end oflhe week." · .
On Jan . .20J_reputurcd sewer lint
umped about 175 000 gallons olraw
scwaae mto Ahso Creek. A 2,000-foot
stnp of beach was closed after the
spill. Eleven days later, sewage spilled
across the sand at Main Beach when a
construction worker broke a sewer line.
1.0 I I I .IC\
By The Assodated Press
Herc are the winning numbers ~1cked Wednesday night for the California Lotter) ·s twicc-"cekly .. Lotto 6-49" game: 33. 20. 35. 26. I.
24 anti the boous number. 8.
Players who correctly guessed all
six numbers will share a prize pool of
$5.6 m1lhon. lottery officials said.
All those who pickcid fi ve numbers
plus the bonus number will divide
among themselves a pritepool ofS I .S
million; five of six will share
$776.000; four of six will share
$706.000. Three of six 1s v.orth an
automatic SS per winner.
The numbers were chosen by Lotto
machine and ran out in the above order dunng a tclevu1on broadca t
ongrnating in Sacramento. Any series
of the numbel'S chosen would win.
Tbe sales from Saturday night to
Wednesday's drawing ""trc S.14.1
m1lhon.
Man shot ,.
to death
One man wa killed and another
critically wounded 10 a shooting
outs1dc a San Juan Capistrano apart-
ment complex Tuesday night.
1heriff s offic11ls said.
Juan Selura Pastrana. 29, was hot
oacc an iM ~t body. sheriffs 4t1anment esman Lt. Dick Olton 111d. c was found near 1
llairwa,Y litadina to h11 apanmcnt at
~1257 Calle Sari Juan. He died at Mission Community
HOlpilal in Mission VttJO about two
ho.an afttr the IO p.m shootana. he
said.
Timoteo NaJCTS Di37, 30. was in
critical condition at the same ho p1t1J
with aaunshot wound to the fact. The
bullet entered OiaL'sspine and he wa
parually paral)zed. Olson said.
Diaz came to tbc United tate
from Me·uco about two days a&o. he
531d;-
Ocputies discovered the men after
they received a call of shots fired
lnvcst1ptors had no suspects and
had not established 1 motive for the
hoot1na. he said.
Newtrw•d• Thom•• Glonls and AJi u W•1n• In M•J , ....
ATTACK
From Al
evidence the other suspects were
COQPCraring with authorities.
Gionas' preliminary hearing wa_s set
for April 17.
Wayne and her mother, Pilar sat
nervously in the back comer ol the
courtroom durin& the arraignment.
They were there as possible witnesses
for the bail hearing. "I reall y don't-want to comm-'Jlt
right now; I don't tvcn know whlt\'s going on yet," Aissa Wayne said.
Luby could not be reached for
comment. He recently moved ·from
the sprawling estate where thC' attack
took place because of bankruptcy
p roceed i12JS. ~tccttvcs moved 10 on Gionis -
aftcr obtaining Jus finan Clal state·
mcnts and telephone records and
learning he had recently obtained a
passport for himself and his I-year· old daugh1er, Anastasia, Jackson
said.
The phone records show G1onas
made at least four calls to pnvatc
investigator Gal, 32. on the day of the assault, Jackson said.
Gionis hired Gal to Sp) on Wayne.
32, dunng their battle for custody of
AnlUtas1a, which Gion1s cvcntuall)
obtained .
Phone n."C'ords also show G1001s
recently made calls to Greece, where
he has relatives, Jackson said. Deter-
ttves learned through the State [)(.
partment that Gion1 obtamed a
passpon for himself 10 January and
hts daughter last nronth.
"We feared he was maktnaarnnge-
ments to flee the country with his
daughter:· Jackson said.
Tnose pas pons were surrendered
aunng the arraignment.
financial documents show.Jhat .of
the S65.000 Gaonis paJd Gal bctwttn
March and September of 1988,
S.0,000wupaiddunn&thcla t week
uH.uaost and fim week of Sepitm·
ber, Jackson.said.
But Alben Graham Jr .•. the at·
torncy who represented G1onas du;-
mg the custody huring, said the
surve1llan« was s1mpl)' to -gather
evidence that Wayne did not spend
cnou&h tame with the little 11rt.
.. When she djd have CU$tody. the
ch1k1 was warehoused with a maid,"
Graham •Jd ... The purpose of the
surveiUa~ was not to follow her but
to ob.tervc the baby."
The amount of the pa)111cnu
0 1on1s made to Gal ~re not e•·
CCSSIVC, he Slld, because the surve1llancc: was 1lm<>1t constant for
about seven month1. Octailt of the
payment• were 1eat1ficd lo dunna the
custody heanna and should not be used now to inTer mm1nal 1et1vit)',
Graham added
Jackt0n called the a"QrMY's claim
that Gal bimi the two hit men on h11 own "an uuettstina story ...
~·1f I was in bis shOt'l. that's
Pf"Oblbly the llOI')' rd ('Omt Up with,"
he said.
MEMORIAL
From AT
names.
Oet wa 1 former member of the
Royal C1n1d1an Mounted Police who
went into the Jewell) bu inc aftt'r he married. tfc owned two Richardson·
icwelry stores in Clmrosc and one 1n ·
Lloydmin 1cr.
tc1n said he remembered a ume
when the Oc1sc had sc1 up 1 gold·
Detcct1vcs said Luby al50 v.as 1 intended v1cttm in the attack. The52
year-old Lub). an acuve tennis pla)
er. was cvt on the Ach11les· ttndon 1
Lhe anaclc.
"Or. G1onis 1s a suracon. That's
unique coincidence," Jackson said.
Detcct1vcs arc st1ll·sttluna Gal
the last u pect m the case. Hr 1s 1
Europe. possabl> Francc·or Sw1tzcr
land, Jackson said. Pohcc bave ISSucd a warrant for his 8/fCSt and notified
Interpol -the intcrnauonat police
agency-about the case.
Jackson s:ud UaJ fatts charxes
111n1lar to G1onis', but Gal ma)'
choose to provide informauon ·m
exchange for a lesser charges. The o_puon of coopccat11a wub ·
also open 10 two men w o v.ere
arrested OQ susp1c1on of cany1ng out
the assaulC Jackson said
"Everybody's mulling thi s over,"
he said.
The two men arrested on susp1c1on
of assault with a deadly weapon and
cnminal conspiracy were Jeml Lee
Hmtcrprdt, 37. of West Los Angeles and Jeffrey Kt'ndall Bouc), 35. of
1m1 Valle')'. Both arc be1n1 held in
lteu of SI million bail at Orange
County Jail. Hintergardt 1s a former employee
of Gal. according to court records.
Police ha"e yet to disclose the alleged
rclauonsh1p between Bouey and the othcrt~n. Hintergarc)1 and Bou'Cy allegedly
followed Wayne and Luby mto
Luby's garaac at his gated 22nd trcet
estatt' and pointed guns at the pair as
the)' returned from a_m_oming work·
out.
After asking for Luby by name,
Hift tergardt ancgcdly put the gun to
Lub}'T head •nd thrcakned to lull
h11n .. Luby also was...haodcuffed and
his head "'-"IS smashed on the pav~
mcnt before his nght Achillts' tendon
wa~ cut.
Hintcrprdt also allegedly" bound
Wa)'ne'shandJand feet, slammed her
head on tbc &round and said she was messing .. ,..1th the \\'rOng people."
Gal ~J>Onedly was s«n parked on
the street in front of Luby's house on
the momina of the anauJc. Phone rt"Cords also showed Gal called
Htntcrprdt seven times on the day of
the »uult. acrord~ to PO'icc.
Wayne allqed in divortt doce-
ments that G1on11 made death threats
a.p1nst her and was ph)'sically V10lent durina their 16-month mamaac.
Jackson said he had 1nform1noo
that Gt0nis ol&nned to Ott if he l->5t custody Of hi• daulhter. "He loves
thatdau&h&cr," J1tkil>n111d. "HCJUSt
made t0mc m"or m1st.akt1."
Anaswaa 11 now witb G1onis·
parents 10 San Ottao. The criminal ICXUtltaon lboukf .not atf«1 tM
talus of the custody ~ment.
wllich did not berOtorus &Om taking
aht ctu&d out of the country. 1uoroq Graham 11id. •
Wayne hat vi11waon on alt.cmaie
Wftkmd he lddtcl.
d1111n1 promotion m front of thear Mam Street sto~ to he1p ra1 monc)
for the ho p1taJ
Deis, ht tatd, had m1~h1ef an has
t)CS
··He ~• hkc 1 kid all O\C'r ap1n.
having fun and help1111 othc~ ..
Tht rema1ns of the famil) weft'
cremated Monday 1n C'ahfom1a nd
will be sent to ~Jbena. A funeral ~•II
be held Frida) 1n Medicine Hat ,
home to many J)ci relatnc<i. Anyone hunting grunion needs a
fishin& license unJcss they arc under
16 years of lJC· In the spirit of true
sportsmanship, no nets, trapsorothcr
~pji~ncc~ ma~·~~ used to fish . day' run expected to last from 10:45
Grunion mayPl)l~IMtQught b) hand. p.m. to 12:45 a.m. Each uccccding The ne~t .-M1'ornf'Cjhm1on will be n1Jht's run begins approximately 40 ,------------,---------------"-------,..------'-------
Friday 1hrou~~~~l/;it with Fri-minute later . . . . . . . .
Grunion runs . .
. l!iClose~ season ...
'; •1;, • 10:45p.m.·12:45 a.m. ~ 1 ~·· ~ • 11 :ZS p.in.· I :2S a.m. 1y • 12:10a.m.· 2:101.m.
opday l:lOa.m.· 3:10a.m. ~lSaturday lO:IS p.m.-12:45 a.m.
2l'Su->day 10:.0 p.m.-12:40 a.m.
24Monday JJ:lSp.m.-l:ISa.m.
I 25 Tuetday I !:.SO p.m.-l:.SOa.m.
• •• . "''
' '· ,., .• ~ •.I*
10 wtd.r· · · 1;lo.~.m:-J.so p.m.
22 Monday 1&.lO g.m:· 1 l :30 a.m.
23 Tuesday Jl:I p.m.· 1:10a.m.
24Wed.· ll :~Qi~.-l:SOa.m.
25 Th ursday 12'.ta3a.ftt.•'1!45 a m. . .. ··:~ ·., ... .. . .,
Jue ·.~~~~£ ...
5 Moaday .1o~~·r 12:•s a.m.
6Tacsday :l,1:30JS:tlr.· J.30a.m.
7 Wed. .~ 1:20 a.m.· •2:20 a.m.
8 Thunday ... l:l·S 4.m .... l:IS 1.m.
20Tuei. IP:2Qp.1h.-l2:20a.m.
21 Wed. 11~00 p.m.·· 1.00 a.m .
22 Thunday 11:.IOl>JIL-. 1:50'1.m. ~nday
8 Monday
9 Tuesday
23 Friday 1 1:~ •·~·· 2:45 a.m. 11 p.m.· 1 a.m. ·:
I l:.SO p.m.-l:.SO a.m. J91J; ·•• •, •• '·
I 2:4S p.m.-2:45 a.m .• 1 . '4 Tiietdly lOilO p.m.-12:30 a.m. . . .
5 Wcd
6 Thursday
7 Fnday
20Thunday
21 Friday
22 Saturday
23 Sunday ·
II 15p.m.· 1.151.m.
11 :50 p.m.-l:SOa m
I 2.40 1.m .. 2:40 a.m .
11 00 p.m.· I :00 a.m.
I 1:4S p.m.-1:4S am.
12:40 a.m • 2·40 a m.
1.40 1.m.-3:.0 1 m.
Ae&.;
3 Thunday IO:SO p.m.-12:SO 1.m.
4fnday .ll:lOp.m.-UOa.m.
SS.turday 12:10a.m.· l:IOa.m.
6 Sunday 12;.SO a.m.-2;j() a.m.
11 Friday 10:$0 p.m.·12:501.m. 19'Ey ll:40p.m.· 1:401.m. lO y 12:40 a.m.· 2:40 a.a
21 y 1:501.m.· J:JOa.a
wMiil the time of &be apecte4 nan i1 l~:{lpidn_..,.t. tbc date of the ~~ .. isl'boWn. ..
OrMQe COMt DAILY PtLOT /Thuf9daY, April I, .. A8
Medicare optioas
for catastrophic
illness explained
A frtt forum on cawtrophac Medicare cov-~ will be offered by 'the Health Insurance
Counsehnaand Advocacy Progr1m from 1to2 p .m.
Monday at the Laauna Beach Senior CittZens Club, 384' 1..qJon t.
Medicare ro~erage, which tnsurt'S 32 million ,~ clderl) and d1sabled Amen cans aaamst catastrophic illness or 11\{\lry, now provides respite care and
outpatient prcscnpt1on drug covera~
. Call . Juhe Schoen at 639-4962 for more infonnat1on
Famous jockey to speak
Jockey Eddie DC'lahoussa)e, ruler of the horse
that won lhe Belmont Stakes and Preakness in 1988
w11J speak at 7:30 p.m Monda) at the Hunt1n1to~ Beach Oub Hou5e.
Dclahou sa>.c's appearance 1s spansored b)
EQucstnan Trails, Inc. Corral 100. For further
information. call 847-1008.
Sale to benefit Grad Night
A rummaac sale to finance the ~ioratl-nigtn
party at Laguna Beach High School will be bcld from
8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday. A"pril 15 and 8 a.m. to
noon Sunday. Apnt 16 at the Laguna BCacb High
__ _.,_School__parki "l lot.
sarcablc llcms and homemade goods art',
needed for collecuon o n Apnl 14. Workers are
wanted for pick up on April 14, and sales and clean
up oo April IS and Apnl 16.
To donate goods or volunteer for work. call
Paltl Khn1enme1er at 497-3035.
Check Victorian antiques
Antique items from the V1ctorian age will be
discussed at a seminar from 9 to noon Saturday,
Apnl 15 at Golden West College. dmims1ra11o n
136.
Dianne Harman an antJque appraiser.
col umnist and host of .. Let's TaJk Antiques" on
KPZE-M 1190. w11l gJ\C the presentation.
The program foe 1s S 15. Call lht' GWC
Communll) Service department at 891-3991 for
more information.
' -
Car wash helps baseball teams
A car wash to support Newport Harbor High
School's baseball teams will be held from 9 a.m. 10 3
p.m. Saturda)', Apnl 15 at· Manners Elementary
School, 2100 Mariner Dnvc, New{>Ort Beach.
· All washes arc $5. For more information. call
Karen E. Jel'lnings at 646-3953.
Chamber mixer announced,
A monthly m1~er for the Co~taMcsa Chamber
of Commen:e "'II be held at 6 p.m. Wednesda). ~pnl I q at McCormick's landing. 3 1 0 .\_1r-...a)
.\ ve.
Cocktails and hond'ocuvrcs Will be sen ed . and
door pnze will be available There is no Cha-rge Tor
members, non-members pay $5 at the door For
more mformauon. call 650-1490.
, .
L~tlrn to overcome ft!ars
• A seminar that explores hov. 1nd1\ 1du:ils c:in
eltmmate fe::ir and anx1et) from th eir ll\CS will be
offered from 6·30 to 9:30 p.m. Wcdnt'Sday . .\pnl 19
at Orange Coa t Colleae.
Huntington &ach therapist Darlene ;r. Hoff-
man says that when fear control a person's hfc. he or
she often experience feelings of confusion. sctf-
doubl, frustration, anger and helplc ness.
The S20 re11strat1on can be paid m CX C'
Community Service Office m the college' tudcnt
Center 8u1ld1ng, open from 9 a m tu 7 p m. Mondn)
throu&h fnday and from 8 a m. to noon aturdn>
tor further 1nlomlat1on or to make reS<rvat1on~
by Visa or MasterCard. call 432-58 O
Post-divorce options outlined
Method of bandhn& life after separation or
dJ'tOrt:e "''"be offered at 7 pm. Thursdah Apnl 20 at the Newpon Beach Pubhc L1brat') 856 • n
Ocmentc Onvc
A presentation will be&J"cn by Rosalie Kfoury.
a mama.ae..fam1l)' and child theRptSt. The pubhc 1s
inv1tN to lhis free program Call Jackie Headly at
644-31 77 for further 1nformauon.
Fishing d~rby helpers sought
Voluntccn arc sou&ht to help thew city o f
Hunt1n11on Bt-ach with its .. Or F1&htn' Hole lXrb> ..
lrom 9 a. m. to I p.m Fnday. April 21 at C'hns Carr Park 11 Spr1nadalc trctt and Ht'il ..,cnuc <. h1ldren panictpaona an the C\'el'\t arc hand1-
cappcd, and man) art aoina fish1n1 for tht' first time
for 1nfonnat1on or to "I" up" a volunteer, call
u11n Pancnoa of thf ( ommun11y Services Ocpen~n' at 5J6..S486.
f \I I-'\ D \ H
ThuNday. pri/6
o mectinas heduled
Friday. pril 7
o mtttinp tchcidukd
J• O I IC I I 0 f ,
pot I
., 9AN Sl9'"50N .,_,..ea .. ...,.
The Hununaton Beach Plannina <om· mi11Jon ll'H' Homt Drpot homt 1mpro~c
men1 warehouse pcrm1 ton to en J~
J 2.000 square feet of its parking lot (or a
loedina atta, Mspttc obJttt1ons b) rts1-
dents who 1rgucd that the ncwloadjngah:a
would cause noisy trucks to come too near
their homts.
Rcsi~cnts. \\-ho said th<'y planned to
appeal the dcc1s1on to the CH) Council.
contended the discount tore at 69 J 2
Ed1n,ser Ave. alreld) had been v1ola11ng •l
conditional use permit b) unloading
merchandise m tht area and that tht'
comm1Ss1on should not lcgaliLt the prac-
l ~ b) ptrMMttnt the enclosure .
For\hfis haulina aoods from the parkioa
lot into a rear tore cloor ~ cau ana more
noiwpollut1on than tht' main loadmadock
ICtJ\;lllt"S, lht"y said.
Denni Goujhaf'). Home Ocpat. con-
\trucuon managtt. sat4 the cndo ure
would reduce noise and other problems.
But resident~ araut'd that the Home
Depot should never ha'c been pcrm1ttt'd
1n thecommun11y bus1ncs$lone tn the fi~t
place and should not now be allowed 10
expand storage area into the parking lot
Margaret Graham ~1d her home wa
vnlut"d at S60.000 less than th e 1dcnt1cal
house one block away because they .. back
up 10 1he atroc1t}.'0
•
'Tm very concuned that 1he) mitthi
'
take that wh<>le area (tor .aonaac>." said
another resident. Bob I hrall. •
Home Oepat needed approval of a
1onina "arian~c to buJld the cnclo,ure
becau\e it ~ould reduce parkinJ spa<:cs to
100 stalls below the requm.'d minimum.
Despite a mt't'tina bet"°ccn bui.ines~
n'lanqclll.t'nt and 33 rt i<knts at tht" Homt'
Depot on unda). man) neighbors re-
mained opposed to the variance. ··No matter what the good intenuom of
the Home Depat ... because 1t 1s a b1a
bu$incs • there are periodic changes 1n
manaacmen1," said re id-:nc 8eH'rl>
0ross. ..Good faJlh 1s not hkcl) to
continue a fe"' )ears fro m now."
..A lot of retired people who ha\.e
wor._cd all their 11\cs for their homes in
o-, .._~ • .,--......
U~•d grease from a fast-food rest~nt covers part of Newport aoulevard near Hospital Roajt.
Grease sizZles On hot street after
barrel on bac;k_of truck tips over
By l~IS YOKOI
Of_O_,l'-St•tf
Bu )' l\cv.rm Houk,~rJ bn\1ml' a
fl) ing pan o \orh \\ l'dn~la' '' h"·n .:i
drum of grl'J)l' from a la'>t-lood rl 'i.taurant
slo hcd ontothepa,l'ml·nt lca'inllrnotnr·
1sts s1nhng mad 1n llact..cd up 1ra(fo:
The vat ol used gre.1..c h om a l:l\t·fnod
fl)ing m&lhlll(' \pllk<l O\l•r l\\ll \OIJlh·
bound lane\ of '°'iev. port lllHlk\ ard cau\-
ing a 31 !·hou 1 do'IUrl' ol the l.tnl'' J\ worker~· tned to \team 1hc 011 oil 1h1.·
pa\C ment
fhto1l v.a!l tn n S~-l~allun drum lO\l'rl'd
w11h pla 11c and •••Pl' but the drum"''" not secured in the stakebcd ot a I Ql'\11 I Md
trud. tr:l\ chng wu1hoound near llo,p1tal
Rood Bob ()aide) '\cwpon lkach pohn·
\po\..csman \aid.'
\round Ill a m . thl· ttud. dn,w.
\amud t kad )I, an l'mplo)l'l' of Bat..a
< umrnod111c' ol l O'I \ngck'I. hit ht')
brat...I.'.., and lhl.' urum rolll'd 01tl'r. 'p1lhn
thl' oil
Bccau c ol th<' ht'ill tht• vii \(.'CIXd
qu1ckl) into the road 0,11..ll') sa1J, ..\\ a
rl.'!>ult. c11~ and ( ahlurn1a l>t.'ll.lrtm"•nt ot
I ran\portallon "orl..l'f) hau to '>lt.·.1m thl'
oil lrom lhl' ~round. he \Jtd
lkad "J' lllCd tor ta1hng hl ,n·url' tht'
drum. nat..k\ \aid
·11 Hhl' drum> had fxo('n 'l(.'rnrnt '4• 11
v.ouldn'l tall O\Cr, 11 "ouldn't h H '
pilled O:l._k.. 1d
tkad had Ju t pu.: 1.-d up the <Jrum from
a ta t-f0<-.d re llUl':lnt w tnkc to &lr r for
rcqcling. 3l(MJing to Tom Dri)(tlll.
route manager for the com pan'
Baker 1s 11npkmen11ng a nc,,: m11f\·
l'l)iuent "Sll"m th al \'3rnum'I thl· ml from
lf1 tng rylachine~ into tanl c, andJ k.1d h.1d
c\changcd the old drum .u 1hc r1.''>t.1ul".mt
v.1 th 1hc ncv. tiln~ Dn~oll \31d ' Dn\(oll
d1d Olli !..no" the nanw or the rc!ll.1urant
Omrnll ..n1d J lead , .. a .. forn."d 10 '>lam on
hi'> hra~e\ tk'lJU'>e he V.J\ l'UI ttO hv
.1no1hcr mol0t1'>I
Neutron radiation could pre~ent . -
fourth of.prostate cancer d~aths
By LEE SIEGEL
,.,~ ... -
Romb:i rdma tumor"'> "-llh h1gh~ncrg}
neutron\ mstead of -ro,, douhlc\ the
percentage of men wh<1 sun" e certtun
mopcroblc prost tc cancer.. and could
. \a\·c the II\ c of one-fourth ol tho~ now
killed b) the d1sca\t. \l1l'nt11.1 1n ln 1nc
said Wcdnc~a)
If results of the l 'nl\l'Nt) of w u.,hing-
ton 'llUd) ar\' re produu·J . lhl' U\l' uf
nc'utron radiation trl'atmcnt tor prostate
cancer .. cuuld tie a txxm 111 ,, arcM numht'r
or people " ~1d Dr l>canl· J:icqucs ol thc
Hunungton M<-d1c11I Rl·<.eJnh ln!i>t1tutc\
tn P dena
Tbe pro t:itc prO\lucc\ conlllQncnts of
men. Pro,tatc cam t r 1c. the 1h1rd le d1na
cause ot cancer death 1n \nwn~Jn nwn.
after lung and color('('tnl ca~cr \bout
103,000 l \ mt'n \\Ill dC\elOp tht J1\C
lht )car. and 2 SOO "'ho ha'e 1t "'111 Jrc.
accord1n1 to lhe \m1:n1:1n C an(cl \c 1cty.
Nearly t\o\O-lhtrd\ of all pr tlltt' unccrJ
arc ddtttcd before the) \pre2d lrum t~ pand. and u...,..f}-or conH'nllonal \-ra)
iadaauon kc:cpj about 84 peru. nt of tho~
patient ah' cat ka')t h~l' }car, •
But m about !0.000 \mcm·an men rcr
)CJr. pro'llJk c.mccr 1 dctc( teJ alkr 11 ha'
grov. n .tnd 'Prl.'.tll from the gland into
other nc.irl"I' t1\\ul' -!luch 3!1 the re tum,
bladder anJ rx·h 1c mu It'> hut nnt )Ct
through thl' l'llt1re hod' \tan) ot thl'\C
men fo11l'd 10 1ne1\:C. nnu~tl rl·ctal e~am')
recomnwndl.'11 h~ thl' l·anu:1 i.<lC1ct) fo r
men OH'1 ~o ·'' :i ml'J ll ul Jct<'l'lln thl' l:tnccreach Onl' ~oonufthem,un1\c
Rut Dr t 1l'ur~l' I Jramo~ ol thc l 'n1vcr-
1t) ot \\ ,1<.l11n~111n ~ hool of Medicine m
Seattle ').ltd lhl \IUth h\.' fcJ indll3\C\
another 7.000 -Ill'. rl\ onc-quartl.'r ot
1hosc who di\· ('Jlh 'car -uuld ~ '3H"tl
b" n,11sonw 11.k ud11p11on ol neut ron rad1·
at1on a\ the lh.'atml'lll tnr \uch men
"'l'utron\ a"· ell"\: In all) neutral ix r-
t1cll') 1n thC nudCU\. Of ll•ntcr, or an 1(t)m,
I h(~ u c m,,,.,.,c particle 1 "-h1k \.-ra)\
arc a lorm ol t"ktt1omagnct1t' nid1at1on '' 1~ hJht. AQm' of neutron~ attack uncl'.'r
C(llS •1th about 100 tuoc the cncrj) of\-
rl)). Latamon.· ~1d.
The tud) waHonJu, tcJ atthe lJ\i\I and
olhcr 1ns11tu11on It 1n\'ohcd YI men ~hQ~ cane-er \l)rnd bc \ond t~ Ot .a1c.
in the 110(){1 hi .._of Pierpoint Om c. • • •
r I\(' \~'31'\ :JllCr treatment, .,0 pcrlent Ill
tho<.<'-"'ho got nl·u1ron rad1a11on rem:un
ah\C, l"IH' thl' '' percent .,un1,al rail' anwng tho · tr~·.11c d with '\-ra,.,
l he Umtl'<I "itJll'' no" h.1' onl~ lour
neutwn rod1Jt1\)n \ ('ntl"r\ -at <x·.mk thl.'
l n1H·r-.1l\ ot < .llllurn1a' I \1' \n ch;\,
Hou,ll>n '\t I> \n,k1.,.1n < unwr < cnler.
11 nd f l'I m1 ,,1t1onJI \\ 'l'k r:1hH l .:ihona-
tol) n\I t 1de c h 1c-.1g11
8u1 l ar.1nH1tl' "11J th.11 in ,1l'<1u1 fh l'
).ear.. 11 a lollo .... ur '!tlllh l,1nft1 nt\ hl'i finding~ a\ he l'\fl\.'\I' thl' "" lntrnn m.u.:h1nl·\ th.it prodU\l' n\utrnn' \hould
pre d to ahout I 00 ho,p11al' natH10\\ 1dc
<. umplctc nl'ut1on ra,hat1un H\';Uml·nt
lal'lhtic cmt nt1ll1l1n \'al h .11"1out h1ur
time'> the (o\t ot '\-•J' 1.id1,u111n u·ntcr-.
Rut he 'k!1d he ~ 'P~:d' lhl'' "'" prohfcrJtc mlo thl' nJltl'll\0
\ IW\!)1131\
'lxl lU\4.' thl'' \.\ill '3' c mt,n• h' l'' .rnd the
u: t ol ttcJ11n each pw.,tate p.mcnt ,.,
ut SI 0.0 .)(1 u-.mg cllhl'r '\ rJ' or
n(unon ..
Uc: ~·d th3t'\ ~"\::IU\ p.il1Cnt\ fl'\lUH't' U neutron r.1d1auon treatment .. OH'r lour
"t'Ck comparl'd \.\1th J X·r.i~ tf\'atm(nt
ovtr KH·n ~c.: II..,
"'""** '"._ of htr 19 Q Mazda JlJ that was parkC'd 1n her
driveway.
••• 1 h1c'tn 'toll' u l"OUrlt "•IU«I at .\ ")n\ complK't d1\C ~)'Cr and
l<t\h "'1th a total \lluc ot Sl20 wnc
aakcn from u home 1n thC' )0800~
of Coca t H11hw1y somet1~ bci'*ttn
Sunday and T uclldl).
. . . -...... Nipd •oman l<~t h r ant~ ~hat cont11n<'d
IOllle pilC8 •• in a locker at
r~.. r J1mbom:
H•• ....... l e•ell'
A zam12 cw IMO thr P.<Jh~
.............. -ltuiblnd
...... OlW' ......... , ff)••
pu. ~ 11111n111)' phot~
............... •noc on her fitMkt'1f1na ••• aMilbcc
S from the lobby at Ba) point < ondorr11n1um\, 2 72 COl\t 1rclc . • • • BurJ)ar1 i.to~ t"o guns. SS.000 1n
1tv.clry anCj $300 1n old \1h:cr dotlan
lrom a tt1K.lc1Kc 1n the 7000 bl -k of
tarhatu uck
th• irca don't de ne to l\i"e lhi
dumped in Lhetr laps... ident Richard
(1ract id.
The comm1ss1on Cf'na<k ~rveral modi·
licat1ons to the vanancc request. inchadtQI
reduc1na 1hc enclosure from 16.000 to
I 2.000 squar~ feta, rcqlJlirina a · 12-fooa
sound wall at the load1n& dock and otMr
noi'>C-redul uon measures. and rcquinna
1ha1 a knee and gate be crteted 10 keep
tru ks and >JX.-Cdan& cars out oC the ~at
night •
lruck dchvcncs were also restricted to •
bet¥.cn 7 a.m. and 3 p m
·\ motion b Comm1 1oner Victor
l e1p11g lO require I roof on the cnclo,ure
failed.
lag Una
to annex·
c;ar;1ygr=1 "
,te~r-itOJ-;Y-
~ . . .
By LESLIE EARNEST
Of 11W 0Mly l"tlot Staff
\\hat could hav<.> been a showdown
turnl·d into a lo~c-in Wcdncsda> when
count) 00ic1als rc\erst.~ themsd ves and
lpprOH'<l J nnC\31100 Of part, o( l..quna
Camon 1n the Cit) of Laguna Beach.
\t It \farch I meeting. the Local
.\gcnq t-ormauon (omm1 ion had m-
d1l·a1cd 1h31 anne\at1on of 90 acres east of
Laguna ( an)on Rood betw:een El Toro
Road .ind Big Bend v.ould onl) be
nppro,l'd 11 L4 una Beach would com-
pronmc 11' long-held oppo 1tton to tht' San
Jooqu1n Hills tollw-a~
One ol ii\ l.Ondmons au.ached to. the
appro' al required that th~ city adopt a
comdor fee program v. 1th1n the annexa-
uon .m~a on the date of anncxauon. It also
required the uh to colkct the fees lnd
dcpo 11 thcm quancrly with the Tran por-
tnuon <. c,m1dor .\gcncy -"'-. ~ hl'n Laguna fkal h \.ia)Qr Rohen
<.1cnlf\ rtlu~ comm1s .. 1oner gOl\t' cit y
ollk 1ah J month to m essence. d fifn c
thl'lr mmd llo"'e~cr. the Laguna Beach
( 11\ ounl1l \Otcd unanimo us! Tut"sda)'
ag.a1mt '>Upportmg the toll road. c1r en 1f 1t
me.int lo\m& the annc at1on tight.
( an,un n"'\1ilcnt • who strong!) backed
11nne\at1on -m ain I) a a wa) of gett1n&
\('t\Cf\ -had 1:omp1aincd of being held ~e tn:a political t:tn~offbetwttn cit)
and count) ullicial . •
But n "''3 the rt's1dcnt • v.ho ap-
pro 1:hcJ the pothum one b\ one and
d nhcd their o;c"Cf WOC'l>. "-ho e\Cntu-
11\ "On thl' Ja) .
"l$<11h '"k nu."ho"' kel the ~ bcina
bla,kma1kd h\ ~alh other·· ndy•Lucas.
C'.tm<in l\'1;idC"nt. \<ltd ··s13ckma1I i
1lki4f 010 th1 Stale ..
tllt1 ru Jtl·h. the rnmf\ll\\lon 'oced 3-t
in IJ\.llr: o(.anl}l'\3tlon. Oran'gc County
UllN' 1\flr (1addr \'asquer. a member of
the wmm11.'i1on d1 ~nk"d. (. omm1ss1on
( ha1rwoman f' cl) n Han and Orangt'
Count\. ~urxr" 1~r Don Roth. al!IO a
commi,"onct v.crc out of town but their
altc:rnJtl'' \Otcd m fa, or of annc,at1on
· I thin~ th\.' comdor tee'"' oh ed here 1 onuou~ 10 a degree Jnd 1\ certainly not
nCl,'.e\\Jl"'t," \<ltd C um mt s1oner John
k.anci, a· ( ~P~ councilman and one of
the alternate "It look hke It.., up to L-\F o to help
1 he~ rx-ople hel; u Laguna ~ch
v.o n't." addl.'d Oand Boran. another
11lll·r nate
< omm1,\lont1 Jam~ FlorJ ulumatcl)
agrl'Cd
"It .., pcrhaD\ our dut) to hclp them out
111 th1\ 1n'lt2nce ·• he said
\ UQUl.'1 held tight to h1\ prev1ou
ros111on . .,,..~ 1n1 thal lcttcng L.aauna Beach
oil the houlr; v.ould ~ta prl.'C'edcnt for other '°''"" that m1 ht olhl·rw1se pan1c1pate 1n thtlornJorpr gram \alioquciv.a bl a ted
h' nJ\ l UlJl> aft1:t the m~un.i Ir~ ti.XI ~d ~upen1)-0r Vasque/ 1 so
.,mglc-m1ndl'd th.11 he u1n't sec pa•il h1~
Ire '\\U\ .ind put'> Jll'Oplc '>lltma in 1he1rcar~
101 an ·extra half hour in front of people
fl u,h1ng thl·1r t<llktc.. 'he said (1c11tf"\ q uu.kl\ approached the podium
v.hcn II l°x•camr Oh\ IOU which '1.3)' the
\Ott v.a ~01ne, and pra1 ·d 1h~ rom-
rnl'>\1on lor 11' fa1tnl' <. In a .;ho\\ ol 1.oo~)l.'ntt1on <. 1ent~ ..aid ht' would u -
gc.,t to the 1.oun\ 11 that k1: "'h1 h would
hiH· tx·cn C'Olk'I: tcd tor the toll road ~
&Jther\:d 3nd u~J Im othl'r traffiC' 1m-
pruH~lnl'01' ln\ll' J
"\\ c "ant 10 pla~ en the bJllgamr m 1n
C(l~11tahk -....a~:· ~11d (i1:ntl).
I h~ l urri..'nt anm·\ltwn 1s 1mponant to
thl' lll' p;i rth tx"\:'au 111 a teppmg -.1onc
1uv. uu l• gun;i'" I I ot c' entuall) on~~-
10 th\.' plannt-d u'mmun11y of Lquna
l urcl ,
a pohcelilli r. Thca~t occurft'iat
11::. am
I nine
'
..
t In
f ~LOEZ, Alaska (AP) -Thl' tUkff Euon Valdez wa fl'ftld
"These masdcmamon. arc ohuch a
'™llnmadc lbat has..nt\cr ~n CQual-
cd. at least 1n thts coufttry." Jud~
Kenneth Rohl said as Haielwood was
arrai&ned. "He's got to thank about
that. Wt ha\e a manma~ destruc-
uon that has not bten rqualed.
probably, since Hiroshima."
1
1 Wednesday from thl'.reef th:u rip~
its hull and spilll'd mo~ than I 0
million pllons of crude oil, and
Alaska's ·governor asked the Coast
Guard to take over the cleanup from
Exxon.
Elsewhere, the fired captain of the
Exxon Valdez, Joseph H11elwood,
42, surrendered to police on New
York's Long Island nnd a lu.dgc set
bail at$ I million bond or $500,000 in
cash. up from a prosecutor's rec-
.om1J1cndation of $25.000.
He had been sought since Sat\lrday
"on a,. fugitive warrant on . rrlisdc-
, meanor charges of <wcrat1ng the
tanker while drunk. )
Oeanup crews conunucd to skam
mayonnaise-thick oil from f>ri.nce
WHliam Sound, but progttSS was
slow jlnd the oil had Spttad over an
area larger than Delaware. The
animal death toll rose and salmon hatcheri~-s remained cndanaercd.
In Juneau. Alaska Gov. Ste\c Co~r said he a lo.ed \oa5t Guard
Rear Adn1. Edward Nelson Jr. lO take
over the much-maligned and slowl)
'TemRorary
imported rifle
: ban expands
\\.~HINGTON (AP) -Tbc WASHINGTON( P) "-._
Bush administration expanded its of State James A ~)i'J'~
tempora!)' ~an on imparted sel'!li-Wednesday he was encou~ed by ' ! automatic rifles Wedne~y to in-su.sgestfons by Israeli Prime Minbter
cludl' v1rtuallY. all foreign-made Y1tihak Shamir for settling the Arab-
rt:lodcls, expres~mg regret thnt sales of ... lsr:aelLdjsputc.and hoped the) would
s1m1lar Amencan-made wcaJ><?nS form .a.basis .for advancing peace ·n
' could not he suspended by e:e-cuuvr lhe Middle East. · ·
ac11on. • Whik U . and Israeli officials I ht· ~tcp. cnt1c1zed b~ a group of would not sa) what Baker and Shamir R~pubhcan la .... makers who oppose had discussed the prime minister
gu n . rnnuol. \\1denl.'d a ~h~e-~eek said last week he would propose
old import ban to cover .-4 foreig!l-holding c:lcctjons among Palestinian
made uiodels missed miually, said Arabs under Jsarcli control to select
Whi te House pre!.~ sccr~tary Marh11 their leaders for uilks with bis
F11lwa1cr . government.
Fitzwater called lhc action. ~hi.ch Avi Pazncr. the prime minister" ·oo~ effect 1mm~.d1atd). a mid-media adviser. saad Shamir and course lOrrcct1on on the way to
longer-range mea ... un.·'·
nk
~OlftSlina cleanup efTon from f,uon. and Nc.boO LOdlcatl'd h would, althouah he has not formall y
IPefOVcd lht request.
Cowper said the Coast Guard
should be better able to handle
coordm111on and manaacment of the
cleanup than Exxon. whach he said
was too bureaucratic. • "Maybe that's been the problem all
alona. Vou need a military S)Stem to
&Ct thinas done:· the aovernor said.
"W c appreciate the cfTons of Exxon
-wt think they were done in good
faith. But we think there has lo be a
much more disciplined management
structure," ("o" per said at a Capitol
news conference.
Prcsadcnt Bu h earher bad sent a
-Baktt had decided "'n<>1 to sar.
anythin&. not to reveal anyth.i.nJ •
·about Sha1111r's proposals. Pamer did
say that a JOint group of Israeli and .S. offictals-had beeb convened to
discuss the-sussestions·in advance-of
Shamir's meeung today wilh..J>r~i.:
dent Bush.
Meanwhile. Egyptian President
Hosni Mubarak, in an interview with
Cable News Network, said Shamir's
prQposal for elections without the
participation of the Palestine libera-
tton Organization, if-carried through,
"Wlll be a grave mistake. ii will not
solve the problem."
'Baker, after his two-hour meeting
"'1th Shamir. cal ltd thd r talk ·:ven
•
~---~-.....-.... ~ ......... ----·-·---
... ·~ 1 , . • I ·
. ' ,,_ .
tt>am of high·ltvcl offic1als 10 Valck-1
.and dt&cr.min~ that ftckral ma~.·"=~~-·
mtnt of tbt cleanup wasn't ne« sary. LOS .\NGELES _ Ju)tt Kennard, an lndonnian·boni immiarant ""ho
Cowper said Coast Guard manaac-spent htt youth in poverty and rlC'ial ltlfCllUOn was_ coafinMd ~>' ~ 'tilt'
mcnt is different from the plan Bu h commiwon Wedne"11) asthcsccondwomanc,er1ppoentedt01bt(ahr~~n1
rtJCCted. · Supnmc Coun. kcnnard, 47, was appointtd b>. Oov. George Oeldtmt'J1an. Ahhou&h Cowper said he d1dn·t whp campaasncd for the remo' al of the the cou~ 'fir\t \\Oman. Chu:f Ju\tt~I.'
want to 'be "extremely critical .. of Rose Bird, in the !986 clecttons .. pealc.1na bf~~Y to rcf?Or1ers afterward
Exxon, a letter sent to the Coast Kennard described herself as "sensitive to v.omen s.1s.ues. ,
Guard by a state environmental The dauahtcr of a Dutch father and an lndonMJa.Ch1nese mothrr. she 1~
official said Euon had been un-the court's first Justice of AStan descent. She wusconfirmcd on~ 3-0 \Otc of th~
responsive. Commission on Judicial Appomtmena ;sftcr 11 38-minutc heanna that .. Exxon has fa1k.-d to provide ... the · ed · I f 1 d information necessaf) to make M>und consist enurc > o ~a cs.
planning recom mendation) rea;ird-
ing the cleanup of bil and the
pro1ect1pn of resoun:es." wrote L) nn
Kent. chief of. the state 011 and
Hazardou Spill Re ponsc Section
A
Ravens to die to s~ve desert tonolse
SAN BERNA ROI NO-Federal officials plan to s.hoot and poison up lo 1.500 ravens in the Mojave De!ert in an effort to save the dcsc:rt tort()JSC, which
1s a favorite meal of the pn:tlatOI) birds. Animal damage. c~nti:ol offi-eers ~nh
the U.S Department of A.&J'kultur • will kill ravens b} nuectang hard-boiled
eggs with pa1son and plac1n1 tht• egg\ on elevated platforms where the ravens
will find and eat them.
The ravens art killing )Oun* tortoise b) the thousands and contnbuun
to an alarminadechn~ of tortoise populauon_iln the desen. said b10I0&1sts ~ 1111
the U.S. Bureau of Land Mana~ment, theaaenc.-y that dc,elo~ the ra\eo .
control program.
Panel approves gambling com~lsslon ptoducti\'t, useful and vtry fncnJl)." SACRAMENl 0 -Califom1a's vaned pmblLng tndus.trtes -1nc:lud1ng For h1 part. S~r said he had the bilhon~ollar tate lo11cry, ho~ racing and card clubs -~ould all he offered "some ways to solve" prob-lied b d o under a bill appro' d tern• in the Mideast and remarked: contro y one ta1cw1 c gamin& comm1ss1 n . -l'
;> Wednesday by an Assembly committee. The m~asurc, authored b~
"I feel we .Jla"c started a_vso-...Asscmbly.n~1ui._Otd Ao~d. n..Car.son. would abolish t~five-member
serious d1scus51on. Our eon"ersat1on a.lillurua Lollc.r}i. (. o.m m1 ion lhl.' S('vcn-mcmber C3Ti'fom1a Horse Rae in~ wa~ very fnendl} .. -Board and 1he Gaming Rcg.1strat1on v n1t 1n the state attorney general'~ oflkl
There were w1dt'Sprcad ellJ>Ct!.8· •• In their pla<:..: \\Ould be a ne" a~ne> called the Cahf<;>m1a Gaming
ttons before-ham1r's meeting \\Jlh CommlSSion. a fhc·membcr panel composed of &.ubematonal a(>polnlec ..
Baker that the Bush adminis1.ration confirmed b) the n.Kc Jnd sen ing .-.1.aggcred. fhc-)car terms. Flo}d said h"
wQuld tal!I. a tou&h stance toward b,U was nccl-S5ar) m ordt'r lO coordinate pmbhn& rt-gulat1on and reduct' the
I racl. A senior U.S. official, briefing amount of ·poht.Jc~I inOut•nce in the stall.' office\ that current!) o"e~(
repohers at the White House . on B?mbhng;
Tuesda} under rules of anooym11y,
predicted a '"candid" discussion. the
d1plomat1c way of predicting dis-
agreement .
'\ \ 11 0~ ·\I. HHlt:t ·s .
·House OKs uniform poll-closing blll He said the new step should
completely dr~ up the flow of fore1gn -
made l>Cm1auton1.tlll \I.capon~ while
an Jd111101strat1on re\ie" conunues.
f he ung1nal suspension of imports,
dedar~d March 14 b) the T1easul)
SclrctJ1' N1l·holas Brady, who over-
sees thl 'Bureau of Alcohol, ioba(.:co
and F trt'UI ms. covered 80 percent of
thl imports. Wednesday's action wa:.
dl·s1gnl·d to get .it the remaining 20
pcr('en1. huwatcr said.
Gorbachev in Englan9·for rights talks \\ .\<;1-flNG T O'I -The Hou~ on\\ cdncsda' appro'cd a uniform JXill ·
1 clo 1ng time in prc:s~d..-nt1al clccuons to prl'i.ent projt'\.tion of the re ults hour ..
before "ot1ng end in \Omc state
Dropoffs in lurnout on thl· W.:\t ( o:l'>t in lhc finaJ hours of some eJcct1on!>
ha"e been blamed on tch.•\1'i1on nl'l ..... mk prOJC\ uons of the pres1dcn11al
outcome. b~dDn.t\ll polling. 1 he reduced 1urnou1 may ?ISO h3' c afTe tcd tlH
outcome ol some lex al race\. poht1l 1ans ~>. nder the b1I~. poll ~ould clct'K
at 9 p.m. EST, 8 p.m. (ST and.., pm MST In prcs1dent1al election )Car onl~
the switch from da\ hght-sa\ ma 11mc to ~1andard lime 10 the P.a1.1fi umc lOl\I
"'ould be po tponcd '"o ~-..cl.ks Poll there ~ould close at 7 p.m. PDT
LONOON (AP) -ov1et Presi-
dent Mikhail S. Gorbache' arrived
Wednesda) nl&ht from Cuba for a 40.
hour \I 11 that \\Ill mh hard tall.. on
human rights with trad111onul Br111 h
pageantr). /
A Tl Director Stephen Higgins said
thl bureau would trv to idcntif\
additional models th.at are slight
variation" of the banned guns to
make sull thq too are covered b) the
90-da) proh1b111011. But he expected
onl> a small add111on to the Im
Fl)i ng from the sweltering Carib-
bean into frtciin~. British nun al
Heathrow .\1rport. Gorbttl he' and
his wife. Raisa. got a rcd-ca~1
wekomr with a roval milttaf) band
Prime Minister Margaret ThJtl'hcr
welcomed them with a warm smile
after 1hc plane landC'd Jt 11 o in
' . . '
/ ,/
~ • c>se§ are mf.
) 'lJiofet.s ~ 6Cue:
'To shape up forsprii-19
'uv SCCndei ')0u. _,. ...
-·
If Sorin& is here, can revecillna sum~r swimsuits be Jar benlnd? This year. let Slender You• help you with your aMual Spring fix-up
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.\flcr the So ict national anthem
\\d!. played, Gorbache" and Thatcher
"alkrd brisk.Jy under a pinlo. umbrella r3 'lhe honor guard of the Ro) al Air orn "Natural ma,sagc."
<.iorbal hC" jokl•d of the rain
1 hatcher aide' said lhe lwo kaders.
accomp.1n1ed b) their foreign minis-
ters, toaslcd each other at th c SO\ iet
ambassador's residence. "The at-
mosphere was vel) good The were
very pleased to see eac.:h other " sa id
the aide. who ~poke on rnndJt1on he
"'1~ nut 1dcnt1fied.
But thtj also got down to business.
d1scu sing· .\fghanman and southern
Afnca. Bntisfi officials said. On the
Feb. 15 withdrawal of Soviet troops
from Afghanistan. Thatcher told
Gorbachev hl' 'hac1 fuHillcd his
promise bcforl· the '\Orld to <kpnll "
About I 00 ix·ople campa1g.nrn.1 for Jcw1~h rclu<>en1ks demonstrated
pcacefull) at an t'ntranu· to Kens-
ington Palace uardens \\hc1e the
ov1et Emb.1ss\ " house-d .
Gorbach1.:' and Thatcher arrl\td at
another 1.:ntran~e.
• I
.Impeached governor says he'll run again
Pt'LOENIX -Main tH·am Re-
publicans ~en: on 1hc Jefcn'il\C
\\'cdne~a) a her lc1rn1l·r C 10 \' bJn
'1echam 's annoum:cmcnt thl!t he" 111
lr) for a !.t'Wnd t~rm as gO\ cmo1 -------------------.despite bcmg imJ)l'.tched and ou~lcd
pan wa> lhrough his fir t on~ <,l3le
Senate President Robcn l !odane.
mcan\\h1le rcJcc1cd 1c1.:ham'\ l311
for a ncv. 1mpcalhmcn1 tnal. ck.mng
the "-a) for Mecham to take ht\ ca~
to court
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11831 BROOKHURST
SUITE NO. 110
FOUNTAIN VALLEY
One ~cpubhcan \t:ttr Rep Jim H.1ndc~# ~ort a hi d. Jm1band to
th Hou~ noor \\ cdncsd3) IO
mourning tor the k cpubltcan Part).
'"The death \\-I\ la t night ...
Hartdcgen "11U "The hunaJ "ill bt• in
Novrmhcr 1990 " Mt\h.im told a
cheering ralh T ue!oda y n1ah1 that he
\\>Ould "1n lhc uOP pnmal) in 1990
anct would befit h1,. rcplau·mcnt,
Oemocrat1c (JOY. k ose Mofford. m •van M•chat1t the general ell-et1on
INS to rule on visitor with AIDS
J JLLWA r R. Muin -lmm1grauon offioal~ rcfu~ Wednc1da) to
frtc from pnson a Dutth '' 1tor who \a)\ he ha\ .\II) • \3)10g thal allo"inr
him to attend .i lorum on the d1~asc ma&ht endanaer the hc1lth of other' Howc~er.a dcci ton 11; hkcl) tod >on ttansl>aul Vrrhoefs requc\t fora wat \CI
from 1mmianrnon lil"\ dt"n>•n n1tcd talc c-nl.I) to tndl\ 1dual' "1tti
d.m •crou\ ~onwaiou'I J1~3'4.'
Gunshots hit abortion's 'Jane Roe's' hOme
DALLAS-1 hr fino& ot hotaun btast~ 11 the homt• oh v.oman ltn(lw n ~ Jane Roe 1n th<" laml111ar\ ~nun '-'Uc k.-ph1ing nbonion 1 emblemaU<' of a
dangcrou l> 1ntt'n~1l)1n,gh.a1tlc on th •1 \uc,M:t1v1 t\Onboth 1d ~>· orma
McC'Or\Cy, the p.lainttflin koe \ Wade. ~n lo~ta)' in hidinaunllhh~lt'a'C''
for a nattonal pro·d'lou.:t rAll) in Wa h1n ion on unda)', '8id .i Poke ""oman
fu1 thl' 1 c~a~ Aho1 t1011 R1&hl\ .\( tion Lcaau<' 1n >\usiin
Mt·( OfH'> 'id ·nut) w;a\ sh1ddt>d with a ps<"udonym 1n th 0 Ila c.,.,,
tba1 rc~uht-d in the 1973 lJ .. Supreme Court n.ilina on abort1'ln But ~l 'Wii9!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii1 publicly acknowlcda«l her role last )'tar and ha been o~nmn.a u pru<hOIC\' 11 Jane Roe Foundauon. Pohet ,_Kt Wlndows 1n Mt'('ooey $home and car -.en
shattered aubout 4 .CS A,m , TUetda t>t,• three blasts oh .41().plJlt shotaun
HOHi U llHll'I'
·solldarlty, FVernment OK pact
W,\RS.\W. Poland-Solidant) lcMkr Lech WaltY~lcdahtttori1.·~al
with the IOYcmment WC'dnt'Sday to ~ tht independent trade union ancr
a tcvcn·)C8f ban and "'e Poland It first demO('ntlC tl«tions Since World War It. :""
T~ toYctnmt'nt llJ'ced to rn1orc lcial .status to SC>lidant). ~farmer"\·
union Rural Solidanty and the lndtpr'*nt Studcntt ssoc:1auon All had
been blanncd an the mantaJ.la~ <Tad.down. In uchantc. tht Sohda.nl\·letl °"""Uuft ..,_ k> pen1t1petc m June cmioM io 'tM 460-at Jm. -01 ~1. t1'at 1uaranle'e lht Commun111 Piny a.nd ns allaet a 6~ pcr.:cnt ~1)'.
BU& 1 new 4'a°'t.:Cmber ttnale io be crated would be the fin.t tulf\ ~ ....-vedmab&inlbe'*blOc. ·
., ... II. lhrrttoll Sftab oa:
Former ~l"\.\port Beach Poht.e
( h1efJamcs 8 Gla"asd1cd Tucsda)
He was 76
Former collea,gucs 1n the dcpal1-
ment and at Cll) Hall expressro
sorro"' at his pa ing and prai~ for
his service to the commun11y. Glavas stf"cd as C'A-port stop law
enforcement officer' from 1961 to
1977
In a formal announcement. spokes-man Bob Oakk) said the Poh e
Department was "deepl) ddencd ..
h) his death.
Cll) ~tanager Bob W)nn 'Aho
"'orl cd wnh Glavas for ")ear said the chtef had cst.ibl1 hed one oi the
finer police department\ an the 1.ite
"Jam u l3\3S really W3S 3 ·ctuct's
lh1cl 'l ie \\3S \Cl') kno"'ledgeabk on
poltcc \\Or~ ... W) nn said •
ula' as fought hard for the depan-
mcnt's need during the annual
budget dchberataons. Ile said.
"He wa opm1onatcd. but he want-ed the~ t forthc Police Department
He al"'a)S argued for them." w, nn
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• S6 n .a S6 41 10 •
64 4S ,. 74
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.\fier retinng from the Ne"' port
force. Olava~ and his wire. Meh a.
mo\cd to th ~nta Ynez Valle) near
Santa Barbara The couple also main-uuned an apartment 10 cwport
Beach
Glavas bccarne intenm chief 10
'Santa Barbara t"o )Car later. sen mg
dunng 1 period oflabor )trifc on that
pohce force
BcforeJOln1ng the Newport pohcc.
he Ciened 23 )l'ars an the Lo .\ngcl""
Pohce Department. -..here he com-
m3ndcd the 1u\en1le d1v1 ion fo-r 1\
Cali(. te mp
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O!!IMIO lot 64
--..-James Glavas · ·
A native 'ahforn1an. 1la\.as at·
tended Was ington Late and l~~.
cammg a ba helor's degree in plJ'0'1c
admm1stratton I!: • ~ He se"ed in thr lntelh&enct'
Branch of the (oast (1uard dunn&
World War II
Throughout his career he was
actlH' in chant), lraternal and pro-
ks 1onal-org3n11a11on mdudrng Big
Brothers. U nttcd f-und Harbor .\u.-a
Bo)s Club. 8o) ~oul'i, Ma,ons and
Amcncsn Legion
Glavas and h1 i. "'1fe Y.cre 111.;un
ll\ mg in C\\ port fklll'h "'hc11 he
died Tucsda)' of t-:inC'Cr at Hoag Memonal Ho p11.al.
He l sun 1H'J b) ht "1ft. h1 son and daughter-to-la"' Jtlme and K;l\
Gl:l\ a and t\\O grandchtldrcn
.\ memonal sen IL'C 1 slated for 11
.am Monda) al Pacific Vic~ Mem-
orial Park Cl\apel. 3500 Pa alic Vie"' Dmc. C'Aport Bea h V1 1lat1on 1~
trom 4 10 9 p m Sunc.b'
1 he famtl~ n-ques1 ·donauons m
thl' name ol Gla\a be made 10
( h1ldhelp L ~.\, f>.ib3 Indepen-dence 1 \\oodland Hlll I/I 67;
John\Xle~e~,headed ·
state welfare depattrnem
fl:' --.\<?RAMENTO (AP) -John M.
Wedeme er. director of 1hc former
tate DeP,?nmcnt of Soc1al Welfare
from 19 9 to I Q66, died Tuesda. at
age 81 alter a long 1llnes
In 1959, thcn-Oo\. Edmund G.
Bro\\ n appointed Wedemeyer. a for-
mer\\ )Om mg and Washington state
social ~n secs administrator. a~ d1~
rt'Ctor of the state Social Welfatt
Department. ~h1ch has since bttn renamed the [)(partmcnt of Social
Sel"'I •
.\mona has ach1c\cment.s wa J01n-
1ng .... nh the tatc coll~ S)Stcm to c~ate 5e\Cn nc" schoOls of SCX'1aJ
\\Orl
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Two recent '1dco release . both
docu mcntane~. a'rc part1cularl)
worth) of note: 1'lma1i•e" (Waner
Home Video. VHS-Beta, $79.n .
lla&ed PG)
"Imagine" bills Itself as "the defini-
tive film ponraif' of mu s1cian-poet-
pop icon John Lennon. It's too early
to judge this film biograph} as
definitive, but lt 1s cenainly a com-.
prehcn ivc. thoughtful and deepl)
moving ~tudy of the mo t com-pli cated Beatie.
Produced by Da"1d L Wolper and
du-ected b) Andre" oh. the film 1s a
t'Ompllauon of more than 100 inter-
' 1e"'s with Lennon himself, Yol..o
Ono. his first wife. Cynthia. sons
Julian and an.-ihe aunt" ho raised
him. manager Bnan Epstein and
dozens of other lesser characters.
The well-pact'd production
(Wolper and Solt pre\lousl) col-
laborated on "This Is El.,, is") contains
footage of Lennon' early )Cars in
Li' erpool. the Beatles· first i,uccess in
Hamburg, West German). the
group's phenomenal U .. tour the
drags. rttc brcllk·up, life "ith oko,
alternating octween publil: and pri-
vate glimpses of the an1st
Highlights include a combati ve -
and hilarious -exchange bt·t~ecn
John Lennon Is the subject of ··1ma91ne." a moving fllm portrait from D.,,ld L Wolper.
Letlnon ahd cartoonist Al Capp: and a in 1980 but mo.,,es be>ond. showing "Tiie n m Bl•e Line" (HBO Home
poignant paformancc of the song what his music meant to an-entire Video. VHS.Beu, Ut.H ) "Imagine" short!) after Len non generation. The soundtrack. w11h \\-Tote it. nearly three dozen songs. is stunning. Errobol Mohrris: singular dochumcl nd-The film wiseh docs not end _By GeHva Colllns tary a ut t e circumstances t at e
abruptly" tth Lennon ·s a!.sa'>Sination Associated Press Wrl&er to a man being convicted of murder-
-----------------------------. 1ng a Dallas police officer and
... condemned to death is at the vcr)
A•9K:.A~""y
''TuIS YEARS 'BIG'!
The Dream Team,
is an Outrag~.
Ultimately
Endearing
Comedy."
-8otl 'Tllom1,o
A.'\<;(ll lATI'l> Pflt<;.<,
MICHAEL CHRJSl'OPHER PETER STEPHEN KEATON LLOYD BOYLE FURST
The Dream TeallJ
h >ur ~u~" on a field 1rip to n:alir\
IY.it.M l''IUN\'dl\1 -Oltt-1tl'll!U L'Kilfl' .... ll'Wl ZIDL 1lll lti.\~ Tl\~
.._-: tru't\EllR.illl "'";}'U~'dll.001Dlm.l\ '.fil\lDtilGll -P'di!\'il!l .~llUUl<l.\ ' l~Sil~S: ~..!!~-.z::,..•. .O!lt-1mllll l\tHT. ~llJ\lllllm """~~!. _,..":}!!
•·I.-~ -.-a•t ._..,
STARTS TOMORROW
• C()jl()HA * lfVIN( • MISl!Off WJO * SNltA Nu. lBX Eowoioa ,,.. c.'I """' • ~ '-"'••'I'•~ ""'°"".,,,.,,,..._ 1-"""7'
} • 'llC ~" ·~ .ltol<l'X' -wni..
llfA • ll IOIO IJf< ,,_,....Pace lowo>'ll f b ~~ • ~•'f'•Y
T\ l ,ISTI '~S
least harrowin'g in ll!. 1mpllca11ons.
Before you say 1t couldn't happen
to you, read on:
It was Thanksgiving weekend in
1976 when Randall Dale Adams, a
dar laborer with no criminal record. fcl in with Richard Harris, a 16-ycar-
old Juvenile delinqumt, They sptnt
tht day hanain&_o~t.
Adams say~ the) spltt up at 10 p.m.
Hams testified that they ~ere
\ogethcr at midni&ht. whtn Olliccr
Robert Wood djed dunna a rouunc
traffic stop. shot ro death by a· 1un
Hams had stolen.
Hams boasted about kiJhn.J a cop
to fnends, but when he fingered .
Adams for the cnmc, he was believed
What's harrowi ng is the low-key
way in which Mom s rttonstructs the
cnme, offers the tc t1 mon> of wit·
ncsses and conducts interviews with
the principals. Very gradual!) }Ou
rcah1e thar Randall Dale dam~ got
railroaded r>y police and prosecutors
v..11h the be t intenuon in the world.
ll 0 \ 11 : I . I S · 1 I ' f ~'
Nf'"'J>Orl Beach
8A&.90A CINIMA 10t f L..,,,.""" 61S •\10
They knew hC wa1.1uilty: it wH JUtl 1
cue of fitti• tM facts to conform so
that truth. As a rnuh of MorrJS· cnucally
acclaimed elfon. Adams' conviction
was overturned. In December. a Teus saa&e j iidte recommended that Adams rueivt a
new tnal or be set free. On Feb. 24,
Tcu~ refused.
But on March I. the Tex.as Coun of
( n mmal ppeals ordered a new trial
for him. sa)'1ng a w11ncss had bed and
a pro~tutor suppressed evJden"e.
And on March 2l, the Dallas County.
T ~'as. d1stnc1 anome) dropped the
case against Adams.
-By SCOtt WIWa•t
A11ociatd Press WrUer
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,Santa Ana River
flood project.too
serious tq neglect ·
April is Eanhq~ke Preparedness Month in California.
but another tyPC of d1~ter bumped geological faults off the
top of the P':JOnt1es last for Orange County•s congressional
dclegauon this week.
A 100..ycar flood on the Santa Ana Rt\:ercan't com pare
If'! magnitude w1~ the great canhquakc that expcns say will
h!t Southern Cahforn1a sometime in the next 30 years. Bu us d1~sters go, the flood 1s a major league atastrophe and,
unlike the canhquake, most of the loss of life and propen)'
damage the flOQd would cau~ can be prevented 1f the San1a
Ana River Project 1 completed. .
Rep. Chris Cox, R-Newpon Beach, was the first speaker
from Oran~c Co unty to testify on the project during
Wcdnesda} s heanng by the House Appropriations ubcom·
mince on Energy and Water Oe,yclopment. _
Cox said that ev~ry day Congres! leaves this proJect
undone, "w_e put the hvc of more than -J million prople.in
Southern Ca!1fom1a at mk. Unless we act responsibly to
prevent ll, this flood that we know will occur could without
warning, lcill more than 3,000 people." ' .. '
Cox alS<? told the subcommittee that th e econom•c effect
of the flood 1~ e ti mated at $18 billion and would be fe lt not
only across the United tates but by national economies
around the world.
The flood-control project to contain the river. which
presents the most senous flood danger \\<est of the Mississi ppi
River, has been around since 1976 when Congress authon2ed
the cngmeenng and design work. Construction of the proJecl
was authonzed by Congress three years ago and the federal
matching funds have been in two proposed presidential
budgets. However. money for the project ha never been'
appropnated.
The total cost of im provements along the I OO-m1lc length
Oft he Santa Ana River 1s $1 .3 b1lhon. If approved, it would be
the largest public flood-control project in the United States.
Orange Coun1y's share of the cost 1s estimated a1 $240
m1IM-Orf. More than halfof that has been raised and the coun1y
has already spent S 15 millitm on surveys and land purchases
needed to widen the riv'er.
There's n~ way ~round the. fact th· nta Ana R1 er
ProJect is expensive. There's also no way that a responsi bl e
nation can turn'its back on the danger.
Statisticians use the term I 00-year flood because a fl ood
of that magnitude will occur once ever,y I 00 years. The danger
along the Santa Ana-Ri ver, especially the 160-square•mi le
area below Prado Dam. 1s real. It's not a mauer of if the flood
will happen, it's "hen.
It docs not seen unreasonable to ask a Congress that can
come up with the money to ex plore space and shore up the
eeonomies of Third World nations to help prevent such a
d1saster in Southern California.
()ptnlont e:xpreaaed n thit ~ are those of the Dally P110t Other
views exprened on this pege are those of their author• and artists Readers'
com.menta are Invited and may be tent to The Dally Pilot. P O Bo• 1560. Coate M ... 92626
TOD\ l I\ HISTORl
Toda)' 1s'Thursda) Apnl 6. the
Y6th da) of 1989 There arc 269 days
lefi 1n the }Car.
Toda) 's highligh t in h1 tOI')
On Apnl 6, 1909. Amcncan c\·
plorer Robert Edw1ri Peary became
the firs1 pe™>n to lead an cxpcd1t1on
to the Nonh Pole.
On this date.
In 1830, the( hurch of Jt us<.hnst
ol Lauer-Day Saints was organ1Led b)'
Joseph Smith at fa)'clte Ne"' York
In 1862. the 1v1l War Batlle of
h1loh tx..,an as the C onfedcra1e
attacked Union force an Tennessee
In 1892. author and nc"'sca 1cr
Lov.cll Thoma~ v.a\ born an \\ ood-
in,1on. Ohio n 1896, the fin.I .modern Ol)'mp1c
pmcs ~CTe formall)' opened in
Alhcn • Grttee.
In 191 7. Conare appro\ed a
dcdarauon of v.-ar apmst German}
In 1963. &he United 111cs and
Britain 11aned an •11ttmcnt under
which · the Arm:ncans v.ould sell
.. Polans" A-3 nm 1lc to 1hc Bn11i.h
In I 96S. the nited talc
launcht"d lht' "Early Bird" com-
munica11ons satellite.
In I 971, the Russian-born com-
poser Igor Strav1nsk) du~d 1n New
York C it)'.
In 1983. saying rock ·n· roll bands
attracted "the wrong elcmcn1." In·
tenor Secretary James Wall declined
10 invttc the Beach 8o)'s 10 perform in
Washinston at a Fourth of Jul y
cclcbrauon. a dec1s1on he later re·
'crscd.
In 1985. Wilham 1-hrocdcr
became lhe first an1fic1nl hean recipi-
ent to be discharged from the ho p1tal
when he mo\ cd 1n10 an apartment an
1..ou1 ville. K)
-Jn 1987. the Dow Jones 1ndu\1nal
a\CraJe closed abo\C 2.400 for the
first time.
In 19 7. Los ngek Dodgers
UCCUll'·C :\I (ampan1s 1old AB~ 's
"N1Jhthne" that blacks "ma) no1
h.a\C some of the neccss1ucs" to hold
manqcnal JObs an maJor-tcaauc
baseball, one of 'IC\eral C'Omment)
that ended up co una Campana ha
JOb
~ .......
A child's
view of
• ., news1s
lotal expense of outla.wing
abortion not always figured
Moderate pro-lifers had better speak up
There wa~ a hllk war<.' ~tor) from the ( ahfornia l t>gl'ilaturt> -l\\O \\ 111
Mexico 10 somt> of the paper. the be hcarJ lhl\ monlh -that \\Uuld tr)
other day thal deserves Rlorc atten-10 turn the {'lock badr, 10 the good old
tion than the space 11 go\. The SIQI) da)'S when 1hcre \\Crt.' few Ulh
reported that in Melnco. whete ahcrnat1\ cs One, 1.:nrncd by stale
abon1on 1s illegal exce pt 1n pec1al ·en, John Doohllle. R-C 11rus
cases -cnscs. for exam pk. 1n wh1{'h Heights. would enact (,o, George
the pregnnney_1~ the result of rape -Oeukmc11cm's demand for aboh1100 rou~l> 700,000 tlkpl aboawns arc. . oJthestat.eOtliceoU ~·l~ PJa.itning.
performed each year. wtueh provides allout 20 perC'cn1 of
More chilling. according to Mex-funding for public and private famil)·
1co's Socia l security Medical . ln-planning d1n1c~ around the <ttate.
st11utt', those back-alley abortions nrc Of the othc~. both b) talc Sen
now 1hc country's fifth -leading cnu~ cwton Ru sell. R-Glcndalc the first
of death nmong women. Last )ear would make 11 harder for sc.hoolo; to
nearly 70,000 women had lo be: enroll ~tudenlo; 1n sc'<..cd uc-Jl1on
ho pllahLCd because Of abon1on-C~~S or IO 110) cla~\ In wh1Ch there I~
induced comphca11ons Some of the any 'ienou, d1scu~ ion of Al D or
lessons of that. both in personal and other se'uall)' transm111cd J1 ~ase'>
social costs -an ~urdens on hospa-The \ccond \\Ould proh1b1t the
\als. on famahes. on 10d1v1dual hvcs .... school from pro\ 1d1ng an)' counsel-
-arc obvious. but not all. ang to ludcnts other thttn can.-er.
fhc data leave all manner of Jcademu: or \ oca11onal eoun~ltng.
unanswered questions: JUSt as am -or from rckmng a tudcnt 10 an)
portant. gJ\Cn the immense t:uhural other rnunsclor \\1\hout v.;nttcn par·
and economic d11Terences between cntal perm1~1on
this count!) and Mexico. 1t's·hard to lea"'"' aside all lhc nd1 ulouo,
c'<lrapolatc from lhe Me'1can compllcat1ons that Russetr1 bill
numbers an) prcd1c11ons of what would cnusc M.hool and !Cathers -
would happen in this country 1f Is at all nght tod1 U\~ .\ID pohc~ in
abon1on v.crc outlawed. At the MC'<· a go\ ernmcn1 cla ·• Is 11 OK to Lcll n
1can rate. 1here would be more illegal student no• to hit 'Smaller .children
abortions here (roughl) 2.1 malhon a and to help ham understand why he
year) than there arc lcgnl abortions m1gh1 be doing it'~ -1he larger danger
now(roughly 1.5 m1lhona year). no1 a of tho~ bill ought to be ob\lou~
ltkely prospect. Far.it 1hc) den) 1hc right to abon1on
Yct1fonclook atthc trongsh1ftin and then do C\Cr)thing possible to
Mexican nauonal poh{')-toward sup-reduce the chanC'e 1hal "omen. and
porting birth conltol and com part's 11 1ecrf-Jgcr\ an pan1cular. will haH' rin\
to lhcfiopcsandin1cn11onsofthose 1n choice but ab!lt1ncnce or the b.icl
th is country who. lake the go\cmorof allc )
Cahfornaa, not only want to outlaw .\ "eek ugo there wa\ an an-
abon1on., but destroy SC.'( educauon nounccmcnt th.it th( ~c"cun go'·
and publ1cl) ~upponed fam1l)-plan-crnmcnt "a" IJunchanaa new fam1h -
n1ng program as. "'ell. the figure\ planning program 10 rt'dutt high
become a lot more 1nstruet1\C, populat1ongrow1h rate' an eight rural
The be t e tamales available -.ug-state Thecoreofthcpruvam "'II~
ges1 that an the decade before c;c\ education. part1{'ul:irly for tttn-
abon1ons became legal an the n11cd ngc women 430.000 of "horn Bl·
tales. there v.ere 1.5 m1lhon to :! cording 10 the CtH (rnment. had
mallton 11lcgal abort.ions annunU~ -unplanned preanant:1e\ last )Car
con 1derabfy more per capita 1han Ob\lousl~ ·tho 410.(X)() un·
there are lctal ones now The d1f-plaancd prcinanc1es didn't re ult
fcrencc. alrno t ccna1nly, has come from ..C\ l't1uca11on 1n the ~hooh or
from 1ncrca.scd availabaht)' ofalterna-from rcJd) .1' ;ulab1h1~ of contraccp-
11ve b1rth<ontrol lcchnologies and 11\C m ru1ul \1c\I an communities
informauon and cdu at1on upport- or lrom C\ 11 mal h1na11on\of PlanneJ
10g 1he1r use Parenthood The~ iolre all fa ts thar
There arc nov. a1 lc:ist three balls an th~ Mc~1can go,ernmenl 1s tarting
to understand
The same kind of fact~ are readil y
a'a1lnble an C'ahfom1a, dcsp11e the
vigorous attempt of the governor an.d some members of the state
Legi la1ure to 1anore them.
A tuc.!} conducted by the Una\cr-
Sll) of C'ahfom11, for C:\.lmplc. ha
determined that e' cry dollar pent by
Lhc Office of Family PIAnnmg save
ta'<P3).Cf'S $6.60 m AFDC. Medi-Cal.
food stamp. and Joc1al-scrv1cc co t
In addauon. the state's lcgi 1111.,,e
anal)St v.ams. cutung those funds
ma)' JCOpardau the genera.I financ1a_I
stab1ht) of Cahfom1a {'ommunat)
chn1cs and undernunc other pro-Jram~ in Cahfom11 funded b)' lamil)-
plcinning money. pa n1rolart) LhOS<'
dC's1g.ncd to help 1ccnasc~ with
children sta) an school (1hus pro' 1d·
ing. 1ron1call). ~ct another altcrn:lla\ e
lo abortion).
Which bnng the argument ba k to
the troublesome companson with the
numbers for illegal abott1on 1n Mc~1co. Ob' 1ou I). Lhc fewer alterna-
ll\ CS there arc. 1he more abortions
there v.111 be And while it's unh~el)
that abonaon e'er can bc shoved a
dcepl back mto the dar~ proh1b1·
uonasl clo'K't!. as 1t wa in the
gcncrnuons before Roe vs 'Wade.
th t's the darcwon an "h1ch the
fanat1 "ant to push at.
.\ great mnn) moderate pro-lifers
are for tho\C \el') reason • stron&
'lupportcr. of {'Ontracepuon and fam-
11) planning. and as the lcgi l~u' e
battles O\Cr the 1\Suc de,dop. the) 'd
better make Lhemsches heard Per-
fl'Ct pohtacal ut'Ct for the eit-
trcma'lt\. the numbers uqest. v.ould
lca'l' the {'Ounan v.1th more
abort10M than It ha no"'. more
death<.. more unwanted bab1e . and
v.-1th a far greater burden on publ~
and personal resouf'(CS
Ptttr ScltntK Is pollt.k•l dil•r.
McClaklJy 'tw• &rvltt.
less grim
It was only after the fourth phone
call that it dawned on me the airplane
had crashed virtually across the street
from my dauptcr's pttSCbool.
Details were still thin al that point.
Tbe plane had crashed in Eastbluff.
Al first I was told that it had noeed
down..at-a .ihoppi.na-.unier..tNt-laler--
rcports put it at the Newpon Beach
Tennis Club. ·
We had two reporters and two
photographers at the scene but I was
stilr in the dark. Was anyone dead? I
d1dn'l know. Had an~onc on the
ground been hat? I wasn t sure.
l suddenly felt cold and stupid and
bewildered. For a second l visualized
the po 1b1hties. Then I grabbed the
phone. .
The receptionist at <he school
as urcd me everything there.was all
ngbL They'd seen the airplane -
banldna at a 1ckenin1 angle -
plunac toward the around. It disap.
pured from view behind some
hou . th1{'k black cloud then lifted
from Lhc around and everyone under-.
tood what had happened.
The students, anclud1n& my daugh·
tcr. were headinJ o ut to the play-
around at the t.ame but when the
teachers saw what was going on. the
luds w~ pu ncd.. back inside. .
They apparcntJ) dlan~t ice ny.---•
th mg,
The story 'unfolded slowly durin1
the C'OUl'SC of the day. Nobody at tho
tennis club wa hat , though there were
&everal close call The plane -a
Piper Acrosiar -crashed on Court
o 4 and burst an to flames. Whoever
wa aboard was dead. That was clear
from the tan.
Initially rcpons indicated that two
people had died. Then the num~ arew to three Then five. A family
from Canada. aeparcntJy homeward
bound after a v1Stt to Olsnc)land. had
pen shed.
ntbony Dea has wtfc Maril)'1'
and thetr three cbu&hiers -Amandai
10: J1clyn. 7, and K.imbcr1)'. S. A
11ght-kn1t family from Caml"OIC. A&e
ben.a -• Un)' tov.-n I'd never heard of
before.
Later. as I looked over some of the photograph we were consadcrin& fot
the neJtt mommg's paper, 1t seemed
hard to 1mqmc an cnure family 1n
this blackened. tw1s1ed heap of metal.
The v.hole th.Jn& happened in a
handful of seconds at best. And ju5t
hke that, hfe was over.
The details. the names .. the picturq
v.crc stall racmg through 'my mind
"'hen 1 packed up my daughter la-.
that afternoon. I drove past the crasb
site lowly and t.hcn pulled \nto the
pre hool parlina lot. vinually
empt> As usual. I wu runmna la1c.
I d already dcoded not to mcnhon
the pla_nc crash to Kelley. What po 1ble aood would come of discuss-
1na such a th1nlv.1th a >->car-<>ld? ln the car cUe) chatted briefly
about recess and the fact tha.t 10me·
one had pilled chocolate ~dang on
her blanket And Lhcn. as 1f it was the
next item on her agenda. sbe told me
about the plane crash.
"Dad dad )OU li:now a planccruhcd toda y')"
··vcah." l ~1d "Yeah. I heard
that •• "lt era hed." she added.
Concorde crowd sees ·Mexicari men,. ec~onomy dive
I con~1dcrcd cha011na the topic, but
she wasn't throu.&h ~et.
"A tennis ball fut at and at fcU dowa
and crashed.··
"What?"
"A tennis ball hit 1t and tt crashed
hegira tor as~nC'd ~a n~ bul the fireman came and fixed 1t 1nd
One man v.antcd. he \lad. to ao to then 11 flew awa)' It JU t sot up and
'ev. Zt'aland v.anted to ao to K~n)a. .flew awa)," be s~ud, poinung up 10
but d1dn'1 much hke the idea of the ky to and1{'ate where 1t wenL
rndlc plane nd . so v.h> not do. It "It JU t flew awt) and e\eryth1nt
all at on<.'t' on lht onoordc and while v.u Ole. "
at 1t lcam a tank hen: and there'? · A child' \'aew of the ~wt. l
Ont' p.isscnaer 15 ta.,,i~ 1 bttak thoughL lt v.ould ha\e been nitt 1f
trom his total absorn11on m teachi"-e~~t')'thina rully ~as OK. But it ·,... ... •un·L F1"e people were dead. one of Amcn{'an tudcnts •ltebra -he has them not much older thao my "'nucn a tt\tboot that ..teek to \il"9h\CT
O\ cnurp the trad1uonal and m1t-Bu"~ was no RDK 1n t.dbnt bar
dar'Cctcd ~OI) of the. boob m any of lhlt. If sbc bchev(d the·p1ane
1encral u~. his nol surpnilfll that ht . pld:ed i~lf up and fkw awe). tbM
alrnd> had met a fellow pe&ttftltt wu fine an my estnnatiOA.
v.h.o, rct1~ from the rmy. bu not ftcr all. thr • of innocence • rctam! from tM wan. the nem ibOit ~ n at a
hctn& lM Cl'ttptr\I 1lli~o(~. • .... Ml ... ,. ... ,..., ,,.,aiir
can student who r-.d wiih their lipt .-.r. bccau of the ditctcd1"'1 loot«e .,_ __ . __ ;,,,,;;,..._.....,...., ____ _
tcach1na methods.
SOmt ire JUSl -eflJOYI-~~-.. CbtntKlvet;
and v.-c pent tblft houn dol_nt jutt
that. lunctuna on a 200.foot
nume~n. toun• the bit neuaral
hly to which, «I> ,_., •· &he Spemsh ronqu.-don ~t Pav-vtan 1nd Coloflabia ..,. a tht
o~crtaad lftt IO y..,,.._ WIMme
Spm·sAdanlk 8"t 90Uld tikt thr
lrasurt IO Mallrid ID fill tht royal cotren. .
Al dllll pd. a ~undriid ,_,.
PEI II ol II. 11 1'1•t .... M
cwwMeoftj · "* ._, 10 , P 'TM_,._...__..,
... ~. Jllw t.lllr
"*"* ............
Aa 0r8nge Cout DAIL v PILOT I Thutaday, April e. 1989
TB um.Y emcus
by BU Keane COUNTSa CULTUaE by Maratta & Mar8tta
"We learned about the Equal Rights
Amendment today. Can I stay up to
watch Johnny Carson tonight?"
• .,
r . 1
j
l
' •
"t ~ °"' ~ vs bcron ~ ptrfOf~d ~~
¥M~,c. t~r\~1\t~.
ARLO AND JANIS by Jimmy Johnson
MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson DENllflS THE MENACE ....,,J_~....._v_' 4,_.t._..____.._ __ .._ ____ ........... ____ -----------....__..__ ____ ____,
by Hank Ketcham
J
,:_~~i
11~ ~
"That's my number~ I've won the lottery!
Now I've got to find that ticket!" "OuR C,A.~ l>ofSNT HAVE A NEW·CAA SMELL AMY
)/()Af.. 11 AAS AN OLO·flZM-9/al! ~
PEANUTS
l1M SORR't' ABOUT THE
BEAN BALL YESTERDA'1 CHUCK
T WAS AN Au .:1 otNT . 00
"(OU STILL LOVE ME, CHUCK.?
GARFIELD
IT1S HARD TO LOVE
SOMEONE WHO ~ns 'fOO
ON T~E HEAD WITH
A BASEBALL
c ·c·
SCRIB&LE.
SCSl188lf
5CR\89LE ~I I
by Charles M. Schulz
'(OU WE~E CROWOING
TM f Pt..ATE--(Ht1£K..!-
by Jim Davis
by Tom K. Ryan .
NON, IF I KINJ09(
1.acA'f'e P.~WK
~RfS G'.A"1"AU» .•
FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE
JUDGE PARKER
FUNKY WINKERBEAN
CDULDN'"f l PL.EASE 00
setV\EfHING EL.SE IN Pt.ACE:
OF CLIMBING "™E' ROPE ~
DOOJlfESBURY
ANPY, I :.1
SORJrY I
J fM{TU), t ...
: I
•
Ot<N.J , •. <;ou CAN ~
l='IVE HUNDRED LAPS ARDUNO -rnE <::/.JM!
by Garry Trudeau
by Jeff .MacNelly
by Harold L'e Ooux
by Tom Batluk
( -
tancla, Cd~ take riv airy to the llnks today
.. 'C§a /vert, Makf, Joynerpace Eagles ~~~r:in;,."it~ ~~~o,:::,~:fi,~~ Tatches key to Sea Kirlg~' nones
from the help of Art Sch1lhna aud f"'
._ .JION flRGUSON ho""do"n with un~atc:n ('urona del fohn Osborn at Mesa Vt"rde. and By JON fERGUSON
cw-~,_swt ~far te .. c Jloo~anoand Ed Howard at the °'-0 .-y,_.St.,.
,... c. . . Calvert. who took top hono.-, 1n IS ( o-.ta Mc~ Golf Course. • , ,,.en it come to L3taneta High's of Estanc1il's 20 mau.:hc la-.1 <;ea~on. fi . The Taich brolht•rs of ( oron.t del team, lherc may be soml' top-: has takrn mcdali t honor\ 1n \I\ of Io \s 1r a the depth goc • thr ~agle!I Marl h11h weren'uo urc 1hc) wanted aat'I young ,playcn who h1ghh~t I" 9 M t~o Junior 'ars1ty teams arc un· k.. " _,, h the varsity team, but it's dcplh .,,.h1ch m;uchc\ in ..,¥ • with 8~1 and defeated fbt' Gold team roached b to '"'-pam.--u up on t <' cour~ togethrr keynote the program. Jo)nCr. ont' of onl) two stnior • hns Lu 15 I l-0 and Red-lea~ during m~tc.he~ when. 1hc \Cason. but
• .J taking 1wo each. roached by Tim O'Bnm 15 IO--O The ~ow lhc) re a regular 1duo pla)'ang
Jo thrtr sccdnd )Car under co-frc~hmcn Andy Rothman od Red ~hot a program-high 190 31 the "llh the top oppo~na duo
cailiChts and brothers Art and Chud. PauHltn~le hoid do""n the ~ 4 and ( o~ta Mesa course. <;cnior Jell I atch and wphomorc
Peiry, the Ea&Jcs arc ap1n J>Di~ to 5 spot\~ v.h1le senior Chm l o"'ry and ··We'"t' added about three pla\c Jonah fat(h ha' l' cmrrgl.'d as 1he ~~!°l'.e:~~~~t~~o~~~~~~= ~~~~~~d t~~n1~~~ Y\~~d :~~N8,~ 10 our PToVlm this )Car, but we had O!I 1 and 2 S?lfer .on the a K1n~
del Mar. Estancia returned 1" cnure 1nd1"1dual \COrtsrnmpn~ 1hc te m'\ to cul a ft'w for the first time," Perry T,hc 1""0 h;t'c hoH:rcd nruund a 8 . team after finistnna sc ood to 1he Sea scorc ~1d. · eitt )car, ""e plan 10 ha-.r a 3 crag all sca~n and art separatffi
Ki"IS 10 l~ue last )'Car and pas 1ng Tht Eagle~ ha'e shot below 200 in fourth team Wr only rose four b~. about 3 half \lrokc.
them up tn CIF com petition t'n route t•ach maich. including 1"'0 18 sand 11 pla~l'" out of the v.hole program .. 11 JU t "orkcd 001 that the)
tot.fourth place 4ihowtnJ at ~late I 9 on 1he p.ir·I O Meu Vrrdc I crry feel<, the quality undercla s q.uahfird that "3'· aid fir">t-)car
In Ken CaJvcn. ustm Maid and C'ounto < lub courw. "bile shoot in program ha\ benefittcd the 'ars1t) coach Milt' H ~~on, ~ho 1 a istcd Mike Joyner, Art Perry bchevc~ he 191 on· the par-I SS ( O\la Mc-.a c iolf dail) by L~rl) Semi\ 1 he~ ve earned one
has the: best three aotfers in Oran_se Course 199 in 1he fir-,1 hall of J "Wbat 11 does 1s create a lot of ,nd t\AoO, and ~0" 1 "' hkc old C nse)
County. While that would tikclr r.usc homc-and·home match (nine hole) .,1 mtcrclub com~mron .. Pert) said ~tenttcl, 1 don 1 "-ilnt to l hantc 1ne
a challenge from w me. 1hc tno has each tcnm' cou~) ga1ns1 ~unn:-" n}t1me 1herc' a p~act1cc round, ltneup \I. hen "-C'rc "inning. T ey.'!c
aboul 1t business to lead the Hlll ended up 200 bcc""\C of wh"t 1t' hke a real m ten. Our ouy arc m:unuu~ing the Pots s1roh·"-1 e. .... .. d • o 1 • Bemis son tC\C a ophomore,
-"-0 a..9-01cco.ui 1b1s seasao ... 3..0 ~ty_callcdjl -.conn& error use to pressure ur top 4 &u)'s are topped qua II fie~ for the top s1' berths
m the Sea View enterina todaf\ Sin c talons over the ·' inti ifOll ... (Pleue ._. ESf ANCIA/HJ on 1he--~ar'\tty dunng tilt' ~7·hok
qualifying match. Bemis was 1he
medalist b) e11hl hots. but 1apercd
off a httlc in the middle oft)le \t"ason
and 1s JU t tarting to put a 1dt h1
pulling problems and get bad. on
tracl.. Hannon said Just as important a 1he l 11chr
and 8em1§ arc senior John Wtlkrr
who's been m a hnle bit of \lump,
according to Honnon. and 1unt0r
T raC) Du Pr-e The )Oungec I 1erof defend ma ~a
View Lt'aguc champion Ton) Du Pre •
"ho led the ~a King 10 a 17-1 mar._
and. a berth m the IF finals la\t
season Tracv DuPrt 1s dur ba k ne>.t
'"eel after ufTcnng a finger anJury
earl)' in the season
"When-'t\e 1e1 hei. wt'll ~ real
tough," Hannon said .. Wt" nted all
live horse 10 pin\. hard "
It's the depth· ot tho~ fi"t and
JUntor.s tcve Dana and Mark
· vcr on. ""ho current!\ hold down
1hc Nos. S and 6 p<?sl11on.s._ whlch
ma Ke Corona uccrs'lfol ·
• "To havt" fi vr lhat can do a ~ overa~ is very 1mprns1"c: to me."
1d Hannon, an assistant _JOlf pro at
Newp<>rt Bl'ach Coun1ry Club and 1
former aolfer on the PGA tour frcu;n
1971-75 ''Thcy'rt all a real dchaht tu
work with "
Hannon has a background 1nJun1~
golf ins1ruct1on . ha' 1na prcv1o usl)'
du-ecttd the JUnmr golf prQ&ram at
Pmchurs1 Counlf')' Club in North
Carohna.
Tod~ al 3·30'p.m. at the Nev.Port
Beach C'C. the a Kings face the fiist
of t"'o matc hes with lo.ng1imc rival
E tanc1a CdM as g...() O\CraJI and 2--0
in the ~ View League, while:
8tanc1a 1s 9-0. 3--0. Tht Sea Kinp
a .. cragt' 193 strokes for 1he five-man
tcain an·d have e>.cecdcd 200 onl y
once
"What's helped the team 1 we're
vcl") much a four-deep team," Han-
non ..aid. "Many ~hools ma) have a
one and 1wo that pla)' good. I've aot
four kids who on ah) given day can
~ .J!llen 1th only one. to
f PIHte SH CdM/85t
\ 01.1.J: l H \I .I , c ·o1,1.J:fil·: 11 \Sh LI H \I I
GCC mainta ins
share of top spot
in South Coast·
ly RICHARD DUN N
0...,,...,; Cone~
Mi,,ing 70 pcrcl'n~ of }<>Ur ofTcnS<
1s tough enough. but hgh11ngan uph1
battle again 1 a 1cam like Orange
Coest College. \\-htt.h l'I halJn<'l'<
from top to bonom and \1t11n31n fir.•
pb«. makes 11 "-ON'
uolden West ( ollcgd"oach Alben
(1a\panan. ""hO\C men 'i 'ollc' bal
team. h~ lo t three straight. lno"~ ~
m1sma1ch when he sec\ one \nd
Wciine ni ht -.as a nmm3tch
larsel> bccau~ o 1 ca ~nee of Tim Johnson. (,WC'~ tine-OUt')1de hUICI
-.ho's out v.11h a brolcn unit.It'
Being O"erpowcrcd migh1 he a
bcucr way to put 11 [11her "'a:t the
red-hot Pir:ucs brcc1ed 10 a Is. 7
IS.JO. IS-IOs"'ccp1ngofthe Ru\ller'
on G W( 's floor to anuca~· then ·
Sou1h ( 00\t ( qnfcrenlc mart.. lo U-1
and O\crall record to 14-1 _
. . .
o.i., ,,_ ,.-.o .. , l•• ,...,,.. Orange ( oa t. wh1c h will ho'il LA
Pttrc.c: a week lrom I mfa ) ( \pr-11 141 ~ the confcrenc:e 11tle. I'> U-5 1n Orange Coast's Brian Lewis dl9s b•ll whlle
games played. teammate Da n Murray looks on durln"g
South Coast Conference match Wednesd•y
•t Golden West. Pirates swept m•tch.
Middle blocker Kun Dumm, a t>-5
sophomore tran'ifcr from < hJpman P1rat~\ lcJd rl·rnrdcd I' k•I" Jnd t""o und '4..011 L1ndqu"1 plarcd "ell in 1hc
College. rtgJ)lcrcu 14 k11l'i and three \luO bit>\'-' ~oil L 1nJ(tu"1 .ind \I m11.ldk tonight
swffblock while OUl\ldC' hiller Drn1n \! l'ltaunct prU\ llk<l pk Ill) 111 pund1 . \nd our \ellC~ dtd a dl'Cl'nl )Oh
Lrw'is. onr of 1he linrst in ·lhc: ta1c. .sround 1hc net to malt.<"< 1.1<,pJ11an' tonight \o we're m goud haJ)l' r13hl bid 14 k11l ,1\ ()( C 100~ C(lntrnl of \\.Onh ~ound hkr gmpd now Wr're JU'it looking fof'\.\ard 10
the match earl) .ind nl'' r r IO\I I cw1\ "'a n't ''much a la 1l1r a' hr the rc'it ul our l.Onfcrcncc ~Jc,on
i.ntcre t. . ,ould ha .. l' ~<.·n \\c re I l-1 with '>I'< mate he~ 'o pla > · "That's 70 pcm.:nt ot our olkn\C," .. I hr\ pl.1H-d o<>d dl kn« on I ht• Ru'>llcl"\. 8-5 1n tht \( < ;inJ
§.Md va ~nan. 1n refrrcnce rn m1 \·-Bnoin l~wl'l."c ~ml C)( c < 1"'' h floh oat1llng for third pl.ace and Pl.'rh.tp<,
mt John\On. "But I .inc M{)(irc hac, Wt•\11.'1. \\hO'i:C 1'1ralt'\ .11 "·dong ln the limsl pla~ofTspot. ma) not C\oU:ll).
biMll pla)'IOI well. If "e c n lt.ccp reclaim tbc tall· 111k 1hr' "on 111 ht.· loolong IOf'\.\Jrd 10 thr1r final '4.'Hn ~ml 1h1s "'>'· "e'll ~· all n&ht 19. 7. • g.imc 11 John on continue~ 10 ht.· l'M) 'rt JU t Ph> u:all~ too oHr· "I th uu&ht uur 11-u) .. plJ~ L-J re I d1~blcd. ~nng for u . "ell. but the~ ~01 11 ltttk t11C'd 11l 1ht· · fk ma\' !)( the he l ou1 1dc hiller
()(( out.suk h111c:r f);in Murri)'. thirJ same. \\ (' "crrn't .,\ )ltona 4.1\ IO thl' contercn e," Wc11cl \ltd ol who~tartcdlh fintpmt"b) notch1n1 we norrn II-. arc-Bui "'e nc-·d J lo Juhnwn. "He hm h11h and hr'' t~ SCrvKe I es rn route to 3 4--0 win three nd "l' Jtd .... Urt l>umm d1fl&'.uh lO defend I'm JUSt aJad h<'
I OOkl'f, II \Ck
~a\n·1 out 1hcrt• lu111gh1 tic \ got a
fl'JI lulurc c1h(.•ad ol him ··
I 1ndqu1\I tin1\hcd "11h nine l1ll~
un<l Vl'llJun'-·1 . "ho had all liH· ot h1~
kill\ 1n 1hc \C\.Ond g;.im<' to leJd the
Bue\, adde<l t\\.O \lull bloc~ f or the
Ru'itkr\ "'ho ho\\ la 1-plaCt' Mt \an
\n1on1n on f mi.a~ Doug Part1~ lt<J
the "'a' ~llh nint t..1ll'i and t"o ~tulT
hlod\ ~h1fc( ra1' f mb\ < rrt'I R)Jn
\11lt.( \kH·f\ and \foorl' ll"o t..111 ....
l\\O \tUll OIOd\I d1J "'h<.tl LhC\ c:uuld to c11ntnhu l('
Coa'il JU mpe<l :ihcuJ. ~l 1n 1hr
lir<.1 game ht.•htnd 1hc.· \N\ tng nl
Muml\,;\flcr tic a1 lour and ~'rn
f P~ase su VOLLEYI AU/14)
Ref shouldn't have
made call, ·but gi\/e
Robinson credit
Did )Oufc-rl '" 1fan official dcZ1dcd
a great g;ime in the 'II( ·final'> I
thOuJhl 11 shoulJ ha .. r ht-en a "no
can·
It was not mucnofa foul M1lh·
1gan's Ruml'al Robinson w. a 57
percent free 1hro" hooh:r anJ ct hit
both lO dC<'1dt• lhc ~rylC'
lm.111nc \"-O coa( hc!t 1n the final
game-one \1>3\&bOUt fO 0C fired IO
f ebrual) 1988 and the other"'" an
a 1su1nt in March 'tN lf-.ou ~role a
tol) about this happcn1rig noont
"ould bu} I\ -IOC.llnlt
l~\l · Dale Bro"'n "'ho1\mh1i.
t 71h )ear as head lOach thl'rt'. hu'>
St.'Cn '\8 dttlrrent coachc-. in lhc
Southeastern Conference I am no"
·the nlOH h 10 lhc 811 \\(' I
( onfertn(c ~•lh the finna of 8111
lkrT)at nJo~\tatc. '
h~m' ls kr JU\t )C'Sterda) that
(1eorge McQu~rn and I "l're tht nt"'
~ynrt al talc r ulknon and l n .
Therc "-l'rt 1>.ott\t'rc: chc intht' •
kaguc m t Q80. before UN L V JO med
tht' confcreocc in 1982 an<fNew
Mc>.1co tate10 IQ 3.
Theo htr coach~ then "'ere Ed
De Lacy at L (·Santa Barbara, Die._
h chtncrat Pactfi Tr' Winter at
Lona B<:ach tatt'. Rod fudlerat
l 'tah tatt. Bo)dGrantat Fre no
\ta1c anJ Ben; at n Jose tatc
Mo collc&e coaches arc Ytt'll pa1d.
II\ ea aood hfc and )Cl, arc 10 .. cmcd
b) the" in.or-else yndrome. If )OU chratand iet cau&ht. )OU arc fired 1n
man-. c:t'it . and iT'ou lo~con~1stcntl). )OU aru(so firtd
f~aw SH MUUJG71W/M J
Williams spins pne-hltter
•UCl-SoCal Colle9e/M
Ja\on Wilham ... ,1 6-fool· I ~n1nr
nght-handcr "1th J rcpulal1on tor
<,1dearm nnd nct1r·svhmannc dC'
II\ cries. torpcdol'J '\It•" pon Har~1r
Wc:dnc~u .ihNnoon a'\ he kd ht\
l niver-.11~ lt1gh I fOJanc, tcammalc-\
to an O ~ .. ""\ tl'\\. l rasuc hJ\tNll
\IOOf} ~tetTcn \p111in sanskd "-llh on<'
out 1n lhc SC'"cn1h inning to 'lpoil
\\ 1lham ·no-hit hid. hut that "u th<'
C'\lt'nt of Hiirbor'' onc-n\l\C dam ('.
Thl' Tro1an'I 2-1and1n a 1hrct'·"a"
t1C' one game out of fir 1 in thr
bunc hl'd·up ~a \ 1cw. orcJ '"
time\ 1n 1ht fillh tnntn lo brcal 11
UJX'n
\\ 1lltams continued on m the heat,
onl) b«au<,e the ne>·h1t1cr wa ther~ •
tor the 1aling rfht• onganal plan wa
10 30 """ 1nn1ng\. then g1H' way t.o the
bullpen Once ~p1111n brokr 1t up Williams .
"a hftcd 1n dcflcrcntc to the heat ..
ou1 not until he had 1ruck out 11
h.ltte~. f" 1ng him 57 1n 4 l 11 1nn1n1
f or\\ 11l1am ... 2-5 O\.crall tt v.a his
·ond \lra1ght shutout. com1ng on
topola l-Ov1 tor. o"erTu tin
B1111n m11h <2 for ~ wtth three "an., .rn RSI and a run) and ()a,c
01 ·1cr (1 for 3 'Atlh tv.o " H. ) wl.'re
1hc ll'admg h1ncrs for lJna"enit~
~
tl\Cv. her( m the <,ca V1cv. Wrdn<''i·
d:1'
£standa •. Cor9U Hl Mar S: Gabe
fa, ~ hmttC'd lht Sea Kinis to two
h11 o"rr l<lUr tnnina.s anJ o "-run
f Ptu se SH BASEIAU./M )
Jim Thorpe touched llases In
.many Corners, including here
Fr om the sid elines
111 ... tn\'\Ul\ "'l'rt t:tkrn a"ay. bttau\C
hl· had rrpurtt"dh acccptt:d S60 a
month for pla)ini senu-pro b: \CNll
m t1Xl9-IO. m;alm him a 'l>r<>-
IC',mn:i I."
It "'"' a lorlJ. fru\trattn& bauk. but ~ .. <'n .. rar .. aflrrG cc Tho~· HSll
10 C") pre\. C'olk&<'. the \. ICtOr1cs w'trc
rc1n'\tltt'<I Rcpf1ca of hi\ m~dals
" rr JJHI\ to ht\ SC\Cn ch11drcn
\lthoua}l Tho~· name v.-a' fad·
1 n l\)' 1 he I 94()\ uc tor Bun l.anca~tcr
and 1hc mo' 1c:'-maktn helped rt"•"<' 1hr I<' ndar:> t horpe lortht mtmory
book anJ for new en ration . Man~
Ntd ncHr hrud of him pnor 10 1he
ftlm prodmtmn in I ~SO.
It -.." no "n p 10 JXlr1ra) tht arcat
J1m ( ht>tpC a Ulnl11\tCt v.o1fl 11\e\t L.ancu~r. thtn 37. latJortd hard IO
.,:t into t<>p ph) "<.II (onJ111on. T~ had bC'Cn htrtd by tht
mo..e-makm to ~"c I\ an 'l(ht\Of
dUri• the filmu-. bUt hid no contact Willl l.Menlet until one day dunna
-·-...ck~. TMI"• Whal *'took now of • a.c .. up aa I.he .aadium mak.ina Mt-.,..,..... .._..,.nor. O.can •••nr lMK• 1 :. ftrit riew or .. TliiO... o.-lk'H>-~. ~=:u=~'f'=~ °'*' ..... ., ....... beUa....,. ~ ............... He tlllfi ~
liclid. ·-••• ,It. 62
...... ,. 1)' __ a::-.:: ..........
Almost 1wo-thirds of NBA pla) ers think
rofess1onals should be allo~ed to 1hc ~
Plympics, but only 58 ~rcent said they
tNould play if they could, according to a
1iUfVCy by The A sociated Prns.
· The majority of tltosc oppoSt'd to participation said
he Games are better suited to college pla)ers and that
BA players would make a travesty of compet1t1on.
Others said that 1t would disrupt their family Mc. or
hat they doubted NBA owners would let them play.
t FIBA. the international governing body for basket·
II. is expected to vote Friday at Munich. West
ennany, to open Olympic basketball to aJI profes fonal
ycrs bq.innAn$ with the 1992 Games in Barcelona.
• ... would go in a heartbeat.'' said Karl Malone of the
tah Jazz. "rd pay my"Own ticket over the~. It teed me
when the Russians were high-fiv1ng hkc they had
atcn America's best and I knew they hadn't."
A totaJ of 185 players-62. 7 ~rcent-answered yes
hen asked by the AP ifNBA players should be aJlowcd in
e Olympics. One-hundred, or 33.9 ~rctnt. said no: 10
d no answer or no opinion.
Asked if they would . play, 172 players, or 58.3
rcent, said )CS; 114. or 38.6 percent, said no: and the
t, nine players, had no answer or no opinion. ·
Only 139 of 295 NBA pla\.ers contacted by the AP
anucks stun Flames In O'-~
" Paal Reinbart, traded by Calgary to
ncouver before the start of the season, •
orcd at 2:47 of overtime as the Canucks .• '-.:,,
t the Aamcs, 4-3, Wednesday night in
eopenerofthcirSmythe Di vision semifinal series at the
lympic Saddledome. Reinhart fired a shot thro ugh a
ngJe oflegs that hit goaltender Mike Vernon and trickled
· to the net Lo give Vancou ver a 1-0 lead in the best-of·
lcven senes ... In other NHL playoff openers: Mlcltal
f tvooka and Loa Franc:escbetti capitah7ed on
fhildelpb1a giH~aways to score sccond-penod goals J :35
111part as Washington defeated the Flyers. 3-2, in ~ndover, Md .... ln Pittsburah, Pul Coffey scored two
~wer-play goals, including the tie-breaker at 10:21 of1he
~~rd period. as the Penguins downed the Ne" York ~ngcrs. 3-1 ... Ryu Wafter's shorthanded goal early in
c second period sparked the Canadiens to a 6-2 v1ctof)
er Hartfordjn Montreal ... Dave BUT ~ored t"o goals
i.nd Detroit's tight-checking defense held Chi cago to JUSI
said ~cs to both qucsuons. That is 47. l percent.
There are a maximum of JOO players on the active
NBA ros\er at any time - l 2 i>la)ers on each of tht-2$
teams.
E"en 1f those who saJd 1hey wouldn't did not play, a
pool of players remains for a fonnldable team.
·A poten1ial startina fi vc would include Malone and
Philadelphia's Charles Barkley 11 forwards, 1984 Ol)m·
pian Patrick Ewa ng of New York at cch1cr. Magk Johnson
of the Lake rs at point guard and Portland's Clyde Drexler
at hooting guard.
"It's about time for us 10 let to world see what we can
really do," John$0n said. "I definitely would like to pla~.
The Soviets thank they can beat us, but they haven t
beaten our best. All they've done is beai our best collegiate
players. It was \.Cry tough for me to see 1hem lose last
summer."
If the proposal passes Friday. much would have to be
decided between NBA and amateur basketball officials
about how and when the U.S. team would be' chosen.
The problems include having the NBA in playoffs
unlJI late June and the next Olympics in July. The regular
season ends in late April, which could preclude tryouts -
a sore point for some pla)crs in any case.
"If the)' packed me for the team, I'd go, but I'm not
trying out,· said Barkley, a perennial-All-Star now but an
early cut of Coach Bob Knight from the 1984 Olympic
team. •
~
' I
IJ
11 l:t •
..
llob Ojeda of th• Mets tags out St. Louis
baserunner Tony Pena at the plate during
,., .............
ftfttt lnnlnt Wednesday. Pen• ••• try1;19
to score on 1lntl• by Tim Jones.
.~ight shots over the final 28 minutes as the Red Wings
ibCat the visiting Blackhawks, 3-2 ... Jn St. Louis. Brett
!ll•U scored at 11 :55 of overt~me to give the Blues a 4-3 ~ictory over Minnesota ... Buffalo scored four power-
~lay goals in the first two periods and goahc Jacqoes
oatler stopped 29 shots and posted a shutout 1tt his p1~yoff debut as the Sabres defeated the Boston Bruins.
6-0. The Sabres, who scored on three of their first six
·$hots, continued their season-long dominatiorrof Boston.
They finished one spot behind the second-place Bruins in
!the Adams Div1s1on but "ere 5-0-3 in the season series.
Cards spoil Gjeda;s comeba~;
~ (
Ql'OTEOt'THE D.\ ,.
Dr. An old ScJleUer, Boston Celtics ph)'S1c1an,
describing th e team's f rustratini in1ury situation
after the team played a game without Larry Bird.
Kevin Mc Hale. Robert Pansh and Jim Paxson: "We
have a talented injured reserve. We should change
the team colors to black and blue and the symbol to
the red cross.''
Ulooden Award to Elliott . .
Referee school fallurH
Suns edge closer to Lakers
Kevla Jollllson scored 13 of his 32 points --~
in the fourth period and Tom Chmbers had • -t'.
11 of his 30 in the final seven minutes as the r ...
Phoenix Suns beat lhe v1s1tina Utah Jazz, ----
11 4-1 04, Wednesday nigh& .. The victory put Phoenix 3•,1
games behind the first-place Lakers in the Pacific
Division ... Jn the only other NBA game: Regie Theos
scored 20 of his 30 pouns in Lhe first half and Atlanta had
more po11fls after one quarter than Philadelphia had at
halftime as the Hawks-romped, 135-93. at the Omni
TEl.E\ ISIO,-H \BIO
..
Mets pitcher beaten in.first
start since surgery on finger
From The Assodated Press
In their own way. Bob Ojeda and Jose Deleon each
know about comebacks. ,
t. Louis spoiled Ojeda's first •tart since he nearly
severed his ten middle finger as Willie McGee drove in
two runs Wednesday to lead the Cardinals past the New
York Mets, 3-1, at Shea Stadium.
Ojedaalmosucvercd the up of his finger last' Sept. 21
when b.e lost control of hedgcchppcrs while gardenina at
home. The left-hander underwent sax hours of micro-
suracry and spent most of the winter in ~hab1htauon
He pi1ched 6~• 1nninss ~inst St Lows and allo"'ed
six hlls and three runs, two earned.
"I'll tell yo u, the bottom hne 1s I'm thnlled 10 have
; U ni versity of Arizona forward Sun ----p1tchod at all," Ojeda said. "I don't feel ~ood about the
=EUJott was named Wednesday as the winner * 1l:20 • m. _ eAlEE•LAELt~ii.cietl>hl• 11 Cltic•l>O Mets losing but I m happ)' I could just ta e the mound
:Of the 1989 John Wooden Award. which cubs, WGN I'm JUSt so &)ad 10 be here."
:annually recognizes college basketball's top ----1 o.m. -GOLF: The Mesren trom Auou,ta, Ga., The victory snapped the Cardinals' I I ·game lo mg
-:Player. Elliott, who averaged 22 points a game for 1he USA streak in New York and Deleon broke a personal nine-
.Wildcats this season. edged out such other stars as Duke's •:JO o.m. -PRO HOCKEY: St•nfev Cuo Pl•vott v•me. pme skid apinst the Mets. Del.eon, who led the Cards'
auy Ferry, Oklahoma's Stacel Ktn1, Syracuse's Z fh:.':n~1._ OFF-ROAD RACING: Mickev Tl'IOmoson with 13 victones last season, allowed four hats, struck out
nDaJI Do11las and Georgetown s Cllarles Smida for Chamolon,hlo Grand Prix from San 0 1990 Cleoe>. ESPN. three and waJked two-in eight 1nnin15. ~he Wooden Award ... In other sports news Wednesday: S.JO o.m. -BASEBALL: Allen•• •• Hou"on· TBS The nght-handcr was a top prospect for Patt burah in
lke Colten was named Wichita State's new head 7 o.m. -AUTO RACtNG: USAC mld9et·c:ar comoel,.. 1983buthad1hem1sfortuneofp1tch1ngforabadteam.ln
sketbaJI coach. replacing Eddie Fosler, who resigned tlon from Gardena, ESPN. 1985, he finished 2-19 despite p11chin1 many quaht)'
arch 29 to accept the top spot at Vandcrb1h ... James E. 7.JO o.m. -PRO HOCKEY: Slentev Cuo oiav-oitmes. off'-Edmonton al Kings, Prime Ticket ID"" 9 Jany was named to succeed Wayne Daile as com-7:30 o.m. -P'RO BASKETBALL: Porlfend 11 Cllooe"• ''The toughest year of my hfc 1s when I 1051 I iss1oner of the Big Ten Conference ... Gllea E. Miller z Channel. games,'' Deleon said. "But I learned from it and l think
r., who helped bring the first NFL franchise 10 Dallas in t o.m. -HOltSE RACING: Senta Anita r9Plan, 1ha1 uperiencc has made me a better·pi1cher now."
he early 1950s, has died. He was 68. Miller was the Chilnnet 56 (Prime Ticket, lO:JO o.m.> Ojeda allowed no h1tsand struck out three an the first
rigjnal owner of the Dallas Texans' football team that 9.30 •.m. _ •ASEBAL~A~n 11 ClnclMall, KABC three innanp. But McGee, batuna from the naht 1de. tied oved to Baltimore and becamclhe Baltimo~Coltsafter (790). the score 1-J when he led off the fourth with a home run
nc season in Dallas . . . The Houston Oilers and 7 o.m. -BASE•ALL: Chicago 11 Anvets, KMPC into the Cardinals' bullpen in left. .
uarterback Warrea Moo11 have reached an agreement on (710). In other NauonaJ League pmes:
new five-year contract. a television station reported. 7:30 o.m. -PRO HOCK•Y: Stenrev Cui> PlaV-Pairn .f, Gluts S: Jack Clark's sin~e lcc~ed a thrtt-
• I -t s·_._ ... _ Id KRIV T 0th-Edmonton ., Klni!S, KL~C (570). h d Sa D ....... Sa t J k oon s attorney, -= "' .. u.:r1. to -v in 7:30 o.m. _ PRO •ASKET•ALL: Portt.nd 11 Cll~. run t 1r innina as n 1cao U't'lt n ranc1sco a ac
ouston that he an the Oilers hav<' come to an KRTH 1930>. Murphy Stadium. ment in pr1nc1plc on a new contract for Moon. Ed Whitson allowed Pt hats and struck o ut e1sJ11 1n
----------------------...,..------------~-..:......---. 611, innings to pick up the wan for San Dtcao. He left 1n the seventh inn ma after 1iv1na up a two-run homer to Robbie
Thompson.
Mark Divis pitched the final I 'n inrunp to ram t~
save. Terry Kennedy homered in the tttond to put \M
G11n1s ahead 1-0, but 1he Padres ucd 11 1n the second
0 0
..., .... J, ••• o ,...,., t, llut .Hin 1
when Marvell Wynne doubled. went to third on a
grounder and scored on Rand)' Ready's sacnficc ny
San Dtqo took lhe lead 1 n the third with four slraf.&lil
smg1csoffSan Franc-t~ tarter Don Robinson. who toot
the loss. .
Pirates 11 Expos&: Doug Drabek p11chcd a two-htltrr
as Pittsburah ocat Montreal at Ol)mp1c tad1um. ·
Drabei, the Pirates' top winner at 15· 7 last year. hC\d
the Expos to Hubie Brook'sStnsJein 1hcfir5t inninganda
single by Andres ililarraaa an the seventh
Drabek walked t~o and struck out three en route {o
his third career shutout as the Pirates won 1he1r first pmc
oflhe season after losing to Montreal on openingda)._
nlWa n, c.ttt •: M1k.e Schmidt's th~run ho~ capped a sevtn-run fourth 1nn1ni. leading Ph1ladelph1a 10
the victory. :
Schmidt's homcroff rchever JctTP1co was his sccortJ
in as many da)'sand the 5441h ofh1 scatccr It al~ was-tm
18th against the Cubs and SOth in Wnglcy Field. Ron
Jones also homered for 1ht Philhcs. ..:
Schmidt 1s sc"enth on the all-ume home n.an list aM!
1s now chasrna RCUJc Jad.son's totaJ of 563
Bnves a, AJtrM 4: Jeff Blauser put 1lanta ah~\~
w11h a two-run double tn the fourth innma and ~flkl
Perry added a pair of run·.conng double . lead1na Htc
Bra'ves to the victory 1n 1hc Aslrodome.
Blauscr's two-run double chastd starter Bob Kn.rp-~rafter 3¥1 inning.s ~d pve the Bra\ es a S-4 lcad.
In the Amencan Leaauc ·-:-.
Atltlettct 11, Mariffrt l: Wall Wea , v.ho hom~
three times all of last season, homered twice and .Bf'f?
Welch allo~ four hits in e1&h1 1nnanp H the Oakl~n~
romped at home.
Weiss, the 1988 mcncan Leaaue Rookie or JM
Year had homered only three 11mcs in 4 I carter at·bal\
and ftn1 hed pnna tra1nin1 with two hats 1n h1 l~t 21,a\·
~~ .
He went 0 for 3 10 Oakland's opener, then hom~
off Scott Bankhc.ad in the second iind Tom N1cdcnfutt rn
the c1ahth. All five of Wei • home runs have been J)!f'
n&ht-nanders. ....
"-Jalt t 81.e Jays I: Dann)' Tanabull doubled~~
1wo outs in the ninth 1nnin1 and scored on ftat Tab~r·s sin&Je, &IVtn& Kansas It) the \ilCtO[)' al.Royals tadnvp.
Twm ll, Yaaieet t : Wally Backman's 1rijJt
snapped a fif\h-anruna lit and sparted an cieht•run inmn' c:af'P'd by Bnan Harper's thrtt·run homer, kad.iftl
Mannnota 10 the victory in the Mctrodomc ...
0 0 . ..
You'd expect to pay
more for elegant "'"....... .,..,._.~ TIMIOWfO • .,....'"" ... ""' ....... ....... ....... ....... .. ..... ........
AITIQUE SATIN
custom drapery fabric-
ours Is just
OLD PRICE
~ Ii~-~'
•I It OWN ct • t t I -d J t I I WWlllAct • I I: lt~Jt •I I t
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SI t t 11.ltlllMll f I It -u•1 It t I ·~-I I I I ~K w JIWIM llfl I t t t L• Jt > t t t Wlll'IWI a CMIWnll ••••
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Otenge Coeel OAtlY PtlOT/Thurlder • .,_I. ..
treak, then game, 4-3 ltOltf.11<' ''Ill 111, I
~All {APi ~ K' dasap-H(r1h1str did not IJVC up a run an h1' hnal aU about Henh1str. M~)be 100 mudi. mred ~t awa)'. So dad the str"ecair~ritf-~~~&H~~lqular scuon The New \'ork ·:With all 1hc talk. the anicl~ and the flmtty, Ottt Hftlli1wr lo6t t.M aamc.100 et$ and Oakland nicktd him an the W'I· commcrcaal Jou'd think h( wH unhutable,".
--1.bere won't be an)' ariumcnts 1bou1 it SHson, but not much. 8enz1naer sa1 . "He's JUSt a pitcher w11h 1ood ~·na. h 's O'<er," Hcrshaser said Wednn-8en.J1f\&Cr, who had ne\.Cr factd Hcrshiser. . luff. An) puchl."r who &Ch behind 1n 1he cc.iunt
dD.n1aht after hi re<:ord shutou1 tnng ended made at oflktal with a solid s1naJc to n&ht field . 1 going to get h11:·
mJlis first inning of the scuoo. HcrshtSt"r did not ha' e one oflus no~·famous 8cnz1nger's \an&)c c;a01c on 3 2·0 W\lball -,-ht streak itated at 59 and uopped when ·:How To Pilch" h~ts on 8cnllnacr and his below the knees
mc1nnat1's Todd BmLangcr htl an RBI ingk compuLcr mformatton bank wa blank on him. "I hlcc those lo" fa tball$," ikn11ngcr ~1tl wish two outs. Hcrsh1serp'c upasanglc tostan "Tom 8en11ngcr looks ltke a &ood hitter." "I don't think ht' ~new that." •
dEpmc and hurt h1msclf'--1th two throwing Hcrshi\er said. Dodgers Manager Tom Law rda kn~w
~ as the Reds beat Los Anacle • 4-3, at \\hen told that Bcn1mger·~ fi r t name "'a!. Her h1ser's strta~ had to end somt t1mr
RDtrfront 1ad1um. · Todd. not 1 om. HcrshiS<'r lauahcd at himself. "No one can expect him 10 throw like he
-"Those kinds of thanis didn't happen last " c, I know him well," 6e said .. , don't fin1 hcd I l )Car T hat wa<, one an a ltfrttme '
.,.,, .. Hersh1~r u id calm and composed a C\en know who got the RBI that brol.c the Lasordua1d "Ottlp11chcdagoodgamC' lt \\.i .. ~ys. "During the streak. I get Ben1anger out. nrcak." • ~·'" a couple of bad threw to the ba!IC . not to the
.. , l'vc siven up a lot of runs ance then. so I Ben21naer. a hometown pla)er who was batter, that bcat him " ~·t thmkana about 11." acquired from BoMon in the off-~ason. knew The Reds' ltneup, battana 32' hfeume
HOME Joda r ·Cnrcaw. 7-0S pm----
Aorll 7-Seallle, 1 OS P.m
A1>rtl I-Seattle, 7 OS om APrll t-Seatfle, I OS p m
April lc>-Oakland, 7 OS om
Al>rll 11-0akfand, 7 OS p m ~if 12-0allland,. 7 OS Pm
•All oamei on KMPC (710>
~NGELS
FromBt
hts hand oigatnst the lence. I <Jon t
know what we're going to do about 11
fel."
t was the first v1clor) for new ~els manager Doug Rader ant.I the
fi41 loss for Torborg. .
nc Krnga~ed Pt h1tHnd three
nm 1n three mnan~. walked '"o· gruck out three and was the lo-.er.
ififorma had I'\ hit., ofT thrs.e
Fticago patche~
"King wasn't getting 1)1\ fa.,tball
do'A-n," Torborg ~td "He wa<, wal k-
ing pc0ple a ll o"er the place ".
Downing's leadoO homer. the 18th
of ht career. wa\ his fir t Mn c Oct 3,
I Q87, apm t (lcvCland. "'fh 1'ge4
made at 3·0 an the ~cond when
Claudell Washington and Chili Da\ 1s
walked. Parrish h11 an RBI s1ngk and
Ottk holieJd g.rounded into a run-
~Onng double pla)
tcve Rosenberg.. "'ho rchcved
KJhg with two on and no outs 1n the
fourth, left after Wall) Jo)ner and
W:ishington singled w11h t"o ou1-. tn
the ~"cnth Da"1s then homered oil
Bobb> Thigpen
HOC kl"l
WtM A TRIP
FOR TWO
' \· ' THE
\. \. \
-RACES
1apan\t Hcr~h15'Cr, C'lme out 'w1n&1na. ltarry I ark1n opened the b()ttom or the fil':\t wtth a
angle up the middle and a<hanccd ·~hen
I lef'\h1)(.'r m de it wild pickoff throw
~ttr h1ser then muck out Chm l)abo and
l"nc [)a\" befo re Kai Daniels wal~«I on fou r
pitchl'\, 8cn11n&er thr n 'IH'!&lcd and l nrk1n
'>mm.I castl\ ahead of r1Jh1 ftrldcr ~ Mike
M:mhall's throw '
fhe crowd of 20.964, held down h)
temperature\ an the upper 40s. re: Ponded "'1th
a \tand1na o\-at1on for both tlt'r~h1'1er and
BcnL1nger.
I k rsh1 ser retired 10 s1ra1&}\t batter-. un11t
thl• SC' l'Oth when kft fielder K irk C11~n
dropped bo's fl) ball for a two-ba~ l.'rror and l)a' 11, hh a sacnlicc fl) Ray arn1c rehe' td
l-k~h1wr 10 tart the ea&hth
' 35°10 tp 40°10 OFF
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OLD PRICE S6 ~ 99
AWAY
TOdav-<lnclnn.11, 9 3S am ~prll 7-Ati.nta, •;.-0 pm •
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Ae>rtl t-Ati.nta, 11:10 a .m • ,
April 10-S.n Francil(O, 7.lS Pm • j
April 11-San Franc1w:o, 7 35 1t.m •
April 12-San Francisco, 7 >S Pm •
• On TV, Ct'lennel I I
., On TV. Channel • •Al. a.mn on KA9C (7'0)
ICfl
.. ~ ... •> ••!iii'!•) I tl'IU
11&Mn1 .~ .. tM•u ·-" ·•-u •n,.,.u ·~-II •et,...._,. ·•M-1& --··
.~at .e go~ls
help Oilers I • I ., ®"* war-.. ..,...
c-•rv
'>"'9'•
D•y'
I 150 ®"" ~ ~
. (ofery RoedHandle.r
AT
Llghl.trutk sink Kings
I C1l.f WOOD ( \P) -(~ Tik-
kanen nnJ ( r.111 ')1mpson '>C.OrctJ h 7
S«omh apart late an the third period
Wednc~ny n1gh1 to g1"e the 1wo-11nw ~Mending tanlc) (up c:h.impmn
Edh1onton 01lerc. a 4-' '1ctof) on·r·
Chc Lo \ngl.'le\ "'"'' an &he lir:'lt ~me of the ~m)thl' Dt' 1 ton ~m1·
f}lljlls at the I orum
Tikkanen beat Lo\ \ngelcs goaht"
<.Henn Hrah from IU fl'Ct dur1na a
~Jilmble 1n front ol thr Kini-\· net
wnh l S4 rem:uninr ~ampson then
sent a I 5-foot v.mt ~hot pa t fkal) " gto .. e v.1th 2 47 to pla).
fhc tv.o 1001\ "l'rc the only t•\cn-
\l~ngth talh~ of the flmc
· l he 01len and K1ng'i pla> thC'
~to.nd game in the hc\t-ol·'4''cn
~k tonight. alw at the I urum
.... 11kc Kru,heln>'"''· 1,qu1red v.11h
\\'.t)ne (1rell) from thl' 01k" 1n a
. block bu tcr trnde l.a\t ~ug. 9, \('.orcJ n
Po"-Cr·pl3) &OJI 2 .S into thl' thmt
pcnod. on an o 1 1 lrum (1rc1Ll~. 10
JlH~ the Kini\ a l-2 lead
4>1cve Duchc~nc, ~' ond among ·NHL deknscmcn an onn1 dunna
!~ reaular ~awn .hod pulleJ the
KtnJ" into a 2-2 tic h) \Corina "'''h 2 7
k"(ond\ rem1unmg an thl" ~ onJ
pc n od.
1 he team\ traded P''"'cr-pla~ goal\
n , the lint pc;noJ <.:hm Kon to\
scored for Lo niclc JU\I I 01 into
• the pme v.;hen ht tkOtttcJ Bernie
• ltholl,' lona•lap hot Ju 11n\1dc th·
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31.87
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37 94
39 19
$15, 78
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P205 70SRl4 11.03
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P21S&OSR14 13 1t
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185 60HR14
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195 60HR15
205 60HR 15
195 60VR15
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ltustlen wMdln ._.... Wectnesclar'• ·..uh •••
•OR lHt-: Rt-:t ORD
H \.IOIC" • ~
MAJOR L•AGUE STANDfNGS
AfMl1cM LNtUe
West DMMefl w L
Oakland 2 0
Texu 1 0
Antth 1 1
Ch Ice go 1 1
Kenses Cltv 1 I
M lnneso•• 1 1
Seettle 0 2
EHt OiVlsion
Be Ill more 1 0
Cleveland 1 0
New York 1 l
Toronlo l 1
Bos Ion 0 1
Detroit 0 1
Miiwaukee 0 1
WHMsclaY'I kef'ft
M9lh 6, Cl'llca90 2
Pct.
1.000
1.000 .soo .soo .soo .soo
.000
1.000
1.000 ..soo .soo
.000
.000
.000
Bo$Jon at Jlaltlm<>ct. pod, rain Mllweultee II Clev~tlend. P9d , rain
Mlmwsot1 12, New York 2
Kansas Corv 2, Toronto I
Oalli.nd II, s .. rtlt 1
Ontv vamn scl'laduft<I
TadlY'• Gamet
GB .,
1
' 1
1
2
'1 .,
Ctilc:a90 IHilltOH 3·2) 81 Aneall (81¥1evtn
10· 17), 7:0S Pm
N-York Cl.ePolnt IS-13) el Mlnnasore
Clt1wltv I · 161. 10-IS 1 .m MltwaullH (84»1o 7· IS) II Cleveland (BIKll
•·•). IG:3S a.m. s .. 111t !Ce mllbelt 6· IOl 11 Oakland CDevl1 16·7), 12:15 P.m
OtlroU CllOOlnson 13·61 er Tuu Cltnn 12· IH, t'OS o.m
Bolton (8oddldtll' 13· ISi er 81111,,_t
(88Uhlll 6· IS), •·35 om.
Toronto CFl1na11an 13· 13) et KaMH Cllv CS.otrha~ 14· 16), S:35 pm
''*Y'' Games Sffttla at ~. 7:05 o.m '
Clrltland al New Vort, 10 • m.
MllW•UkH et Ottrolt, lO:lS HI\.
9all1mc>f't el Mlnnesor1. s OS P.m losron at Kansai Cllv. S.JS pm
TorOtllO al Ttu•. S:JS pm
ClltClllO et Oekllnd, 7.JS D m
Nanon.I League
..
NATtoNAL LEAGUE
Rech 4, Dod9ert 3
LOS ANGELES CINCINHATI
Rnd11>11?o GnH1nu
Gilllon If
Murrav lo Ma"llal ,,
O~nrf
SM!Ovcf HemltnJO
MIOIYI Ph
MHtcl'lr 30 ScfOKll c
Otmosv c Hlf '111" P
SfffeQe p Andftn Ph
Tltlls
abrllbi allrllbl
3 O O I Lari.in u l I t O
3000 !Mtb030 •1 00
3 I 0 I E Devis ct 3 I l I
' D 0 0 D1nl1ls II 3 0 0 0 2 1 I O l ninor lb • O 2 I
1010 0Ne11 rf 4011
l 0 I 0 Reed t l D D 0
3 D D 0 OHtll' 2b • t 2 0 0 0 0 O 8rown119 P 0 D 0 4---
0 O 0 I Collins Ph 1 0 0 0 2. O O O Cllarllon P D O O O
I D 0 D D•l>C>lt P 0 0 0 0
l I 2 O F renco D 0 D 0 0
0 D 0 0 1 -..0 0
2' l S J Tot1ls
SC.are bv ~ 2'. 7 3
Ltl AnetlH 010 010 010-l
ClndMa" IOI 100 th-4
E-Larlo.111 Hll'Sl'l1~r 2 G t>Mln
OP-CtncfMall 1 LOB-Los A'liltlts '· ClncHI· natl 7 28--0ester S-Brown100 2, L.erktn,
Griffin Sf-Gloi.on EDevl1 MHatchtr IP H 'II Elt II SO
l.MA"""" 2 6 • Htf'll'lllCI' L,0-1 7 • Seer•~ 0 0 D 0
Clncll!Mtl a rown1"9 W, l·O 6 3 ? 2 • 2
c11arrton I 1 3 I 1 1 7 0
D1bOla 0 1 · D 0 0 0
Francos.i .12 3 0 0 0 I I
Dtl>llle PtlChtd IO l 1181111' '" Ille fil'I P9-SciOJ(la
umolru-Home, Qulci.., Finl. DevC1, SK·
ond, Greog, ThtrO, I(~
T-2'S A-20.96'
.w ...............
Cat HINfl Heed ....._ S.C.)
Tlllrd lt--9 ~ Steffi Grat. Wtsl Ge<menv, Off Reolne
lleiel'lrlo'Ye. C11ChOMc>v11t.le, •-o, 6·2
S«W RIUIMI Sllltlts
Lori Mc.Neit, Holnton. def ICertn Sch"'""4'.
Ctndnnall San Franc1Ko
Alllnte
Wt1t OMlltn w
2
2
I
I
I
L Pct.
0 1000
SoYtl'I Aff"1<1 .,_), 7·S, Htttn l(tlffl, Canacta,
Clef. Andfff Ttmttvarl, Hunoerv 7·S, 6-t, Hana
Mandllkove, Au1lrla, Clef Julie Hai.rd, France,
6·•. 6·2; Sandra CKcllinl llaJv. def Shaun Srattord, Ge1n,v1t1t. Fla 6•0 6·7, 6·3, R~•
Zrubakova, C1ec~vakla, def W11trud
Pr®sr. Wut Gtfmanv 3·6, 6-•. 6·2, Amano.
Coetttr, Solltll AfrlCI, def Mtfc:aots Pu,
Ariltntlna, 7·6, 6·4, Lind• Fenenoo. flat'/, def.
Andl'te Hollkova, C1ec~10vakla 6-7, •·•. Lt ll• GB Mnlthl, Soviet Union, def l rtnda S<:hutll 7·6,
6·3, 6·7 I 661 ,
Hou" on
San Oleoo DM9erl
Cl'llc.IOO Montrt1I
Ntw VOf'k
Phli.dt!Phl•
Pit1JOurQh
SI. Louil
D
Eesl OMsiaft
I
1
1 I
1
I
1 · SOO I I S00 1 '
? .333 l''J ? 000 2
.SOD
• SOD
SOD .soo .soo soo
C ..... women
N<*·CON,H&NCI
UCJS,LW-~I
~
Wtlell.el CUCll def Andtnon. 6-1, 6•1, Row
t UCI) def Otloldo. 6·0, 6· t, CadtOI" IUCll def Stiner, 6·1, 6·0, l(orec (UCll def GOt1relt1. 6·• •
6·1, Otto•do (lMl dtf 8trlno, 7·S, 7·6,
Vaccaro (UCI) def l(noll$, 6· I. 6· I
Ooubln nol cont11rtcl
CemmuNtv c ..... men
W"""4lllY'1 k«fl °"utGI awta.1 COM,lalNCI
Clncinnetl •. DM9erl 3 Onfl9t Celst t, alWnldt 0
SI. L.oulS l , New VCN"k 1 ·llMlet s.n Oleoo •. S.n Francl.co 3 Ga«>rlal tOCCI def Dooton, 6-1, 1·•· ltt-
Piltltlur9't 3, Montrul 0 Dilzlf tOCC> def ltoe, t-0, 6·1 Cnoi (OCCI def
PtlltadelPhla 11, Clllca90 • Oav11, •·2, 6•1, Notin (OCC) def. Don'\e, 6·3,
Ati.nt• I. Ho\nlon • 6·2, l.Of'O (OCCI def Ven Hofweeen, 6-1, •·2. Moore IOCCI def o.Rtnro, 6·4, 6·• T .. Y'I Games DMllll9I Dedetrt (l.Mrv 17·11) al Cincinnati CMlll'lltr Gabr1tHltC>olltf' tOCCI def Oav11·Domt, t~l6), t-.35 e.m. 6•3, 6·2, Not111·Moort COCCI Oti Van
St. L.04.lb (Ttf'rv , •• , •• N-Vork (Darhnv Hofw9"ft•deRenro. 6·1,. I Cllol LOl'O COCCI 17•9), 10'.35 aJTI, .._; ,..~" DAa • ' 6 3 Pllllburtll (Smtltv 13·111 er Monrreal (Ptrtr .,., .....,. ....... • ' •
12·1), 10:3S a.m CemmunlfV ~ Wtmeft
PNladllol'lla lOl'ltlv-"'O\ 3·•> er . ChlcMO_QIJA6A, ---~ CON,&UNCI CIUl•us 12·1Sl. 1170 1.m OrlNt C..st a; lllwrtJit.,
Atlanta (Smotll 2·7) I I HOV\ton COnha~ ~
l I· 1'). S:3S p,m, JOM$011 CR) def. Ewing, 6-0, 7·S, Slltrtf'Y
Onfv lllmel Kn.dultd (0) def Oewson, 6-1, 6•0, HISI~ 10) HI
,,,...Y', Gemes ChuDO. 6•1, •·OJ Mclin (0 ) Cltf T-. 6·2,
DMews ., Atlante uo pm 6-0. Cltveiend (01 Clef. Tornt. •·O, 6·0, l •rCll
Pllllbur9'1 al Cllic.90, 11'20 e m. (0) def Mlf'ttM, ~
San FranctKO It Clnelnnatl, •:3S Dm Siallt<V·Ha•11119i (0) Clef Jollnson•OtwMWI,
, Ntw Vorlt 11 Montreal, OS Pm. 6·•, 6·2, McLln·Ewtll9 (01 dtt. M111a11•lo'/O.
St. Loul• et Phlladtlpllla, •·JS Pm 6-0, 6•1, Blfth·CltvWno 101 ct.t. TUPPtf'· San Oleoo at Houston, s JS Pm. Chubb, •·l, 6· I.
. AMaalCAN LEAGUE Htllt ~ MYS ....... 6, Whft9 SOIC 2 S.A Vl&W LIAGUI
CHICAGO CAL1'09lNIA ~ ll, .......,. H"1Mf 1
Gullllnu 1~~~ Ow~dtl attr~~ o.nn (U) Iott t:-:'llMn·Oetlt, s-7, def
Gllllhr Cf 3 o O O Rev 2b ; ~ O O "•bbltl, 6·2, def JKotlit, 6-0. LI (U) Iott, 0-6,
a.Inn rf • 0 t D OWlll!e cf s 0 I 0 e>-•. •·6, r .. (U) !Mt, 3"6, .... -· 6•1
C.iclefn Oh • 0 0 O JoYl'lll' Ill • ~ I O LAIPOln·PrlCt cur'::"Haf'dln•Wer"""'*',
GW11kr 111 • 2 ~ ~ ~~:1srtN ~ 1 ; ~ 6•3, def 8alrd-Scf1Utt1, 6-(1, dlf .._..,_.
Fblt < 4 O I p O I Thofnton, 6-0, Carlton·Mer1ifl CU> WOf\, 6·•. PIMUIN 2100 00 Hoarrl"1~ 34 0 •1 0 •·l , 6·3, ~-NIUY911 (U) _., .... WOii ~:"a • 0 \ l ~s • O 1 o 7-6, 6· I
VOLLEYBAU ,,....,
tht Pinta rolled ofT eiaht in a row to
ND away With lM\'JCtory. uwil had
five kills 1n lhc first pme. while
Dumm and V111aunct added stuff
blocks. OCC held a S-0 advantqe 1n the
second game before GWC closed the
pp to 7-6 on Steve Uchytal's stuff
block. The overpowering play of
L1nd4uist, Murny and setter Jason
Elder. who had two stuff blocks to
make at 10-6 and 12~. heh:>ed 11vc the
Bucs a 13-6 lead before dodgjn1 the
Rustlers' late rall ¥,
Travis Turner and Tony Pnce also
pla)ed well 11 lhc setter Position for
the Bucs.
"We had a pretty good pme plan.
but we didn't gel to use 11 until the
second or third pme." Gaspanan
said. "We just do not bave enough
power to put the ball away with them:
We cao ~Y wuh anybody with who
we have on the coun right now, and
with Johnson back (in about two
weeks), who knows how we can do in
the playoffs (if we get there)?"
Orange Coast broke a 4-4 uc in the
third game by rollini off four straight, then took a I 0-6 lead before the
Rustlers pulled to within two at
12-10. A kill by Lewis capped the
P1('ates' third straight Point to clinch
the game and match . "We pla yed pretty Jood; that's
about it," sa1<l Gasparian. "We've
been a little tentative thelast coupe
NBA
WMlltMlaY'I kertl
Atlante 135, PhfladOIOl'lle 9J
Pnoenlll 11', Utah 104
TMIY'I ~
Portland al ~ 7.JO Pft\.
Welhinlllon 11 Miami, •.JO P m Cl'licago et Otrroit, •.JO D m. '
New YOf'k el MllwaukH, S:lO Pm
Sacramento at San Antonio, S:lO om
Indiana er Oe<lve<. 6.JO P m ~· er S..111•. 7 p m 9osron er GolOtn St111, 7.30 Dm
HIGH SCHOOL
Al-St•te
(Cel·Hillll' ~·~_,. SeltdleMI G41are
MllCntfl 8utltr (Olkwood, No Hollvwoood).
6· s Sr HerOld Miner Unolewoodl. 6· s. Sr • o.Cs.n •Thome• (Taft, woooi.nd Hlh) S·tl,
Sr , Brian CemPlf (Lak-000), 6·•. Sr • Quan·
ttn Youngblood (Et Clfrtlol. 6·•. Sf . S..n
Colltr (Skvll/lt, Olkwood). 6 3, Sr .. Rev ICtltY ISF ltoorden). S·t, Sr . ltfrv Cannon CLA
Cre,pih•wl. 6-I, Sr, Sam Cr_awfat.d...Ll,.A Weil:
thtlllrl, S·I, Sr . Carl lt•v Harrl1 CWesn1noton. Easron), 6·2. Sr. ~ ,.._... <Matar Oel),
•••• Sr.; ldrtl Jonff CP1woena). •·2 Sr Cntle MMIMI (SI '0 thc:tr), 6·2. Sr.
,, ....... r .. c~1vln avrd (St Joseon. Alameda). 6·S. Sr .
Tracv M4/lrrav (Gltl"dOf•l 6·1 Sf • Ken• Ben·
""' CLA Manual Ar1'), •·•. Sr. courr .. Miiier (Torrtv PIMI. Ott ~r), 6·7 Sr . Lu<IOU~
Harris CCltveland, RtMClll. 6·S, Sr • 9rtn
Lotion !El Camino R•••· Woodllnel HIUI}, , ••• Sr Sltlon Oev11 (LA Jorden), 6·•, Sr. Dllon ~ntro !Oomll'IOUttl. 6·3. Sr . Sl'IOfl Tarver (Santa Clara, O•narO), 6·S. Jr, CMMllus
Banas ILA Crenww>. 6·5 Sr. eruct 9owtn
(Frano EC11sonl. •·6, Sr
Ceflten ea o•e.nnon 1.v111111. 6·t . Jr • Ed sro11.s
ISi. Bll'nard), 6·10, St Zan Ma.on ILA
WHIUlellt<). •••• Sr . l'J'ron RUI... (San
hf'nercMo), •·7 Sr . T'l'rOM PNlllPJ (LA FrtmOflt), 6·S, Sr , Ktvln Ftanaoen (T0trtv
Plnt•I. 6•t , Sr
Al·St9te ~· T .. m Enc Mltll (San P1Kual, EKond1do), 6-10, c. ~ .. ,.an, (Mlt1M), 6·10 c1 Chm Foro
!LA Fremont), 6·2, o, JOhMlt M<Wllllems
(Pomona). 6·7, I, l rlan ..-(Verlie luena, San
Jo11), 6·5, I
Plavtt of v .. r Mfft., San Pescuei
""" ~ tlrts ALL·Clf' DWtSION Ill ,Int Ttem "'9'1«, ~ Ht. Yf.All9.
Almtl M<Oen.ee. lr·Olnda S-6 Jr 15.-l
Temmv &lackllurn, Br·Olndl S-1 Jr IU Amv Jlltwaila, L.a Qu1n1a 6-1 Jr 30 2
Tera OavlchOn. Palm OeMr1 6·2 Sr I• 0
Rtntt lr1•. Atascadero 5·7 St UO Lisa Fef'neneltt, St JoMOl'I S•I Sr n,
l(aly McCllnallen. p Otllft 6-2 )f 16 0
$K111 Eulll, Cov!M rl Sr 1' 0
Joanne K.n1411!t, La Sltrrt 5'-10 Sr ti O
fondrff Hottman, Altmanv S· 11 Sr 11 5
trle:la O.wakl, AlaKldaro S•6 St 17 S
Dana Mol\IOYI, St JoStPll S.-6 Sr 10 I JtMY Newsome, It Alatl'llt°' S·I Jr 11 I
Nikki Mln10, L.omPOC 6-• So 10
hM1 C1st1ntda, Alema"V S.-f Sr ll.7
S.C..-T-
L.oulM Ter Hont, TtmlOM s-• -.-_,Alleft, $1 ~¥'' S·t
Hal..., ICramar. San Dime' S-TI Jottt'I Antot\, lrM ·Ol<MI S-10
J Wiiiem•, lrM•OllnOt S--1
"OMmerv Ctlftlon, L.omooc S·•
Lisa "'°'· S.VenM S·t C<act ltlft, $11tl'a Villl S-1 T anva FoH, Foolflll S-10
Krittlf'I Trltt*t, St lucv'I S--1 Otde SamPton, Tr•DuCO S·6
Patrlte l.Uf'llllklnt, Estanci. S·I
....., ..... y..,
Aimee M<Oellltl, lr•·alnda
St.no
Sr. 111 Jr. tJ.I
Fr 114
So IOI
Sr 176
Sr 117
Sr 110
Sr., ...
Sr 111
Jr. 206
So. lU
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Gllllf* •• ---· E-tley, OP-Cl'loe-.o IL c.ilforllia 2.
L.C»-ChlQeo I, Calllornla ' ~Walklt,
Perrltl\, H"-Oownlnll II), CO.vlt (I),
S8-0WNt9 m. W1111'14Mton m. Pwr1111 <,11. SF-hMut •
P H •••MIO a..a.e Kiiie 1.,0-1 3 6 3 3 1 3 "OMllMr• >2·3 • 2 ' 1 • T...__ 11-3 J 1 I 0 t ~
CF-.VW,1·0 'M • 'l ) ~$"1 U ·3 S 0 7 ,.._ ......
""'*''"'••-•••,,.~-~ C41oMY,~lnt, Colllt; 5«• ... ~Mee ....... , .... .,_INI\. ,,_,16. ....... ...
Chi IS)_. H111Nt. 6-1. '9f K.tftYell. H .
Otf Kim, 6-J, 't'I CS) lllt, .... "°"• t·•. H i c..t• ($) ......... 1-t, ... .._
Trlll'I•....,.,.,. ($1 IMI to l.ofte-V•J. .. ,, -PMn'l•SlrnlliMft, 6·1. '9f, ~Hell, .. I;
PMn•Troune "> .....,,.. .._.., ..,,, ...... ,.
toriefl, V11•,._ 1$1 --. K .. , ... 1
c.--... -M. ·--• -Hen CC.J .... " ....... H . '9f, P11r.-... ... 1, .-. ,_.., 6-1; ltetalNlll CCdM) ...,, H. ...... H , .. ,, .... CCMU 1111, ....... ,...; ..... .... A ......... (c:.J .. Cwrell•.,._,
H ... T ................. '9f.TMl•C,_., .. , Mia••• ..... lc.MJ ...... , ... ,. t-2, ~,.._ CC..> ..... 7·S, ........ . .... .. ,
ltOU'I H \CI''-
of mak'hes. and IOlriaht M **Id
blvt won tbc MCOeCI or lbitd ~
but we couldn't pull it off." .....
lllild inq lifted tht Eaaks to t~
In bisb Kbool maacbc&: lca&ue ...;"~-~ ... 1 :l.aA-• ..._ ~,, ............ nae fl\'1 ....... , U.U IKT Ull(;
Chatttr. l)Olilhcd off the count)"s third innia&-Ltn Herman 11 a one· ICC'Orid·mW:.d Oilm whh rtlauve out linp Tor the ~ and took cast at Hunt1naton=Bnch I S-S. I S:8. third on Juon Whitt s hn-and-nan lS-10,uSunset ue y<>pt~. aan<. Cla)'U>f'I Nelson doubled
Scniorhaner Mike led Echton Hmnan home, Scan Nichols walked
with 14 kills and 1.5 di&S. and tf:ae to toed the betn and Bill Gomet
Charstn (7-0 and rank.ea founb an • stroked a two-run dou~ off the
the county} also received u119rk from bottom ohht left field fenitt.
tcn1or Mark 1.amisk.a. Rob Nye hit a sarnfitt fly to scort
With Damn Lance sidelined tcm-Nichols. with Gomez 1.1k1n1 third.
poranly wilb a slf.&ht ankle 1prain. and Gary Burrouabs walked to put
Zamiska filled an and had e&lht kills runners at the cornen with two out.
and seV'Qn ca.as. as wtll u a aood 'hldm I l1M .. 1ek 1: Enk GrO\t paSJin& match. Lance WU abfe lO 'I · h f h return in the final pmc and re-hit a solo nomc Nn 1n t e top o t e
sponded with 1 couple of key kills. seventh 1nn1na to back pitcher Monie
T .. _ o··-I'. II s 2 II J9ncs' two-hatcomplctc-pme VIC:IOI') '"' i ... rs ti to • overa . as the Tiiiers climbed into a tac with Oceaa View S, Fou&abl Valle)' l: '-'-y The Scaha)"ks turned back tbc visit· the Roadrun~rs atop the~ •cw at
ihg Barons, 9-1 s, I S.7. J S-6, I S-13, as 3-1. Tustin 118-6 overall.
junior outside hmers Brandon Hunt· In lbc A!'ICfus Leaaue; er (1 3 kills. 16 digs) and Grq Evans Mater Del l, St. Paal t : The
(IO kiUs. 11 dig$) led tht way. Ocean Monarchs scored all their runs 1n the
View is 3-4 overall. tbird 1nnin1 and w1nni"1 pitcher
Marlaa S, Wettmlll1ter I: Ben Tony Pena made them st.and up on a Bo sc had e1jht kills and two aces"<> steamy day 1n Sant.a fc Spnnp.
lead the V1k1ngs, S-1 , to a IS-41 15-3, In thcSOuth Coast Leaaue:
15-4 victory over the Lions m the Dua Bills 6, l"llte S: The Va-
Sunsct uquc opener. qucros ~Victimized by three runs
Lapa Bea~ 3, Laou BUI• t: in the first mnina by the host The Anists scored a 15-~. I S-10, I S--t Dolphins and before they could tack
Pacific Coast uasue-v1ctory over the on smJlcdagits m the founh. fif\h and
visiting Hawks, upping lheirrtt-0rd to sixth 1nninas Dena Hills had built a
9'-0-ovnatt, S-0 in tnaue-5.0 lt.ad-
Ctl99I
NON·CONf'"llNC.a UCI 10, SeCel C-.. I socat Colltot JOO 110 00)-1 11 5
UCI 011 032 lOll-10 l3 4
Mansfllld, OtJerano (6> ano lernl, H""'·
Parrott c•>. HMCll. (7), Mltv It) anet kw.
ltollel'IOll (I) w-Perrotl, l·O. 1..--Manifle'd
Sv-Mav, 2 28'-ie.esP« tSCC). Andrada
!SCC), Goodc:aM . IUCI). K.oehllr CUCtl
31-0avis CUCI) ...... ~
SIU VIEW UIAGue
T"lflll. 2. SI JI UCll I Tu11tn 001 000 1-7 • l
sadclltl>Klc I 00 000 I>-I 7 0
Jonft end Itron. Arro~ and Patoma
W-Jol'lff, 5·0 L.-Arrovos ?&-Green .HI
C.nflam CSI Hit-Grove (l )
Estancia 6, c-Clal MM >
Corona dtl Mar OQO 000 l-3 ' 2 Es11"'la 006 000 11-6 S 3
Pellon, Goldsleon C•> and C. llf.tNI, Jeve111 •
Nel\on CS), Etv (7) eno GomtL W-Jneoe J·I L-f'ellon 21-Gomtl (E). Nllion IEI
~IMv 1, .... ,...., Hattltr 0
UN\ltflttY 100 160 ()-1 ll 3
NtwPo<t HarOOI' 000 000 0-0 I s
Wtl•m•. Burrer 171 and Ottttr. ~ktr ~ C51. ~ilw<I (1) and StflCltf' W-Willlams, 2•S L-SllUr ?e-M.trlttllNI CU)
AftGllLUS LaAGU&
Matar Del J, St. Pelll 2
Malt< Ot1 003 000 0-l 7 2 St P1U1 100 001 0-7 t 1
PIM end ICkti, Ouda enet Gomet W-Ptna ,
S·O L-Oud• 2B-Car1 (MO) 38-Amtt•u•IA
CSP)
SOUTH COAST L•Acrul
0-""' s, lrWlo , lrvtne 000 111 0-J 10 l Dane HlllS 311 000 a-S S 3
lrtlta, Olllfftt (II. lrtlle (21. OOtror.I CJJ
end Votlmtf. Wl'I ootf, 8arntll (SI, Ken11· 161
ano Kan.a Merlls C6l ·
HIGH SCHOOL STA.NDINGS
SN View LH111Ut
W LT Ga
Se<IOttl>ldl 3 I 0
Tu•r+n 3 1 0 Corona Cltl Mer 7 2 0 I
E11anc.. 7 2 o I
Un.var' IV '1 2 0 I
Newoe>t 1 Har 11or O • D 4 w......,-, kertl
Un1vanll'I' I, N-OOI'• Hart>or o Tu1r.n 7, S.ddtel>lei. I
E"anc,. '· Corona oet ~r l ,,,....,., G-
S.Odlto.c:lo er NewPOrl Hel'OOf'
Tustin et Corona oet Mar E sranc.. at Unlverslly
seuttl c ... , LHeue w I.
El Toro > 1
MIUlon Vll.O l2 I 1r .. 1nt ,
CaP.W-v ... v '1 1
DIN Hills 1 1
San Cttmtnlt 0 • w.-.... .... , sc-
Dana Hiii• S, trvlnt 3 M.sslon Vltto 3, 5-ft Clemtfllt I
El Toro IS. C_,trtl'IO VaMtY 1 'rWW'' GlfMI (k IS) rrvtnt at Et Teto
S.n Cltmtnlt 11 C11011lf1no ValltV
Min ion Vte!O •• Dena Hlh
T GI
0
D
0 I
0
0 0
...... ld9ell ..
SllA V.W LI..,_ ' ......,, ...,.. 111, UllWWsltV .. 200 mtdltv retav-1 ,..._port Heroor,
1;47.96
200 tret-1 '°''' (NH), I "~· , nwt41 (NH), 1.-5265, 3 ltffd CNH), 1:5Stl
200 lndo-1 Mert(J(tl tNH I 2• SJ. 2
MorNll (NH), 1 13.12; 3 ltutfln1 (NHI 2 16 6' so fr-I. Ferrtno10ll (NHI. ,,,,, , Melfi
(Ul, 23.31; 3 Provenl CU), 7• 10
tOO ftv-1 llndtr (U), S7 27, 1 Eu lmond
(NHI, st.23, t 0.shon (NH), S'61 100 tt-1' NiCnOls (NH), '9 S7 1 lallarO
CU), SI to, 3 llttael INH) Sl.2t
SOO frff-l Botrl (NH), '50'4, 2 B nclef
!VI. S·lotS, 3 Jew .. !NH), S07.IO 100 llatll-1 ~k.11 CNHI, st S7 2 P.r>tr
' tUI 1~15. 3 Rull•nl CNHI, 1010 100 ll<M\l-1, McAl•Sltr INHJ, I CD .. 7
CorllllOICI (NHI. I Ot.19, 3 M«ff" (NH) I Cit 21 .OO frH rtla\f'"'-1 Ntwoorl Harbor 3 23 2•
cw-del Mer 112. lstancll " 200 1N<11tY reta.,_t CdM. I 45 OI 200 fr-1 Roelle ICI, 1 Silt. 2 Ht.O IC)
I S6 ... l Grev CCI. 1.S7 "' 200 lftdo-1 MtHeft IEI 7 tOM. 2 Gusreti.on
<Cl1_tll.J3,) Dnimwr1on1 (Cl. 2 tlt · '° free-I Wilson CC), n IS, 2 JohnJOI! ICI.
U IA, 3 Flllltr CC I. 2' 1'
100 ftv-1 McNflf CE I, SI .S 2 Otd.ne Cl SI 1, 3 Camo <El, St.. .
100 fr-I W11ion CCI '9~.+ T..cu1 IC)
' Sl 6', 3 IN<edo IC I S1 11 soo free-I Youno CCI. S-1• 00, 7 C1m11 ('El
S2Sll 3 HOwero CC). SJSt5 100 oack-1 Of\imwt'•Ol'll CCI SIAt 2
ltOCnt (CJ I 0'2 7'; 3 Oeelll'O (CJ I OUI
100 O(H st-1 Joroenion (Ct I Oltl ..:J Tenm~"'' tCI. t OU l Terevon CC>. I lotl '°° lrH rtlav-1 COM, 3.lA .a
Htllt lcMet lilttt
llA Vl&W LIAG\11
NIWl*t Hat1Mr U. ~ 71 200 mtdltv r"8v-l Ne•Pofl Heroor,
20915 200 tr-1 Pao IU), UO 11. 1 ~rtatt
CN'!!1 7".23 ~. ) Chuttl11l1 (NH), 119 JS
NU IM-1 HeftdlrMlft fU) 2.l03S 1 Miit
(t+jti), 2Jl 31. J Tl'IOmtalf (NH ), ?JI ... :so fret-I llOomfoelO (NH), nl , ltllft•fll (NH), nt, l ~rMWI IU), nl
100 nY-1 Vttn•lra INH) 1'09 '7, , Atperl
CUI. I 09 .sJ, 3 Mitt (NHI I IS 13
100 free-I Pec1I CUI. S6 S2 2 ltuff!lll INH ,,
Sf 11 ;). Ptnct (NH), 11M6
S00 frtt-1 BIOOmfttlcl INHI. Sll ~ 1
SCntlltr (U). 6007,) Tl'IOm~ CNHI. 604_M
100 llaek-1 Cl'\ulchol (NH), 112.36 2 Aloe<I
(U). 1 IS 0. 1 l(wn IUI. I It 75 100 bfMsl-1 ~motlell IU), 1 "15 1 Haul
INH I 11'H4, 3 Fellon IU), 1.2• 17 400 trM r ... v-1 NtwPOrt Haroor J 5131
Cer'tM dll Mer 102. lslallde S6 lOO f'l'lffltv rtla v-1 [ 11a11ela, 2 OS 1 200 tree-I" Hetktf' IC).• 11 .. 1. 1 Olivw
tEI. U2l, ) 11~« !El H2t 200 lftc»-1 PlllefMHI ICI. 2 ll 1, 1 Smllh
IEJ 7:39•, l lrow" IEI. 2506 So fr-I Todd IC>. 21 I, 2 ~ldon CE>.
211. l Qu.n1ena IEI 27 ..
100 ttv-1 Noftori CCI IOS0'21 2 •oe111e.m CEI. IOU 3 Stn.111 ICI l.ott
100 rr...-1 Salvino (Cl 5Ut, 2 CNn<la• ICI.
SU. l <N•ntaM (E), .stOO · soo .,_, Srn•lll (C>. HI 1· 1 1 t!omunch IC>. 6CS, J W...,_. (Cl '1100 100 l:lllU-1 SllllOOft C£J. 1106, 1 ll'arrw'°"
<Cl. I lSl 3 Wl'lllOll IC). I 111 100 or .. tl-l H1Ck4t CCI. I IS .. 1 "O(l!Wr
<Cl. 1.1 ... l •1tn\UIMll CEl..t._ 121 16
... l"t rtle-1. COM, •m 1.
\0111\H\ll >'-•
\Ht \Hf~l ''»' ''
Anteaters -out slug
SLC, 10-8
lbe UCI bettblll team raUitd from
deficits of 3-0 and S-3. then had IO
hold on 1n the late staa,cs for a lo.I
victory over Southern Cahfomia
Collt&c Wtdn"'1ay niaht.
The Anteaters had fi\c ptaycn with
mult1ple·h•t garnet, led by Mille Goodcasc who was 3 (or 4 walh thf\le ·
RBI. Courtney Da\1S, ·Jon Skqp,
Freddie Comb~ and Osmar
OcCha\el each chipped 1n w11h t~
hats. . SCC' loaded the bases ID the ntOlh
mninaand scored twice to pull within ·
I 0-8. bur Steve May entered \he
contest to record has second 11\C 1nas
many games by rctlnna the fi'*'Wo
batters. · . . -•-~ In high school~ boys sw1mm1ng:
Newport Hal'Mr 117, Ualverd&y
41: Jay Bons. Richard Famnaton and
Scott Comgold were the standouts for
the 1n the Sea View meet. Bons
doubled. takina 200 free in I :49.34 aod the 500 free in 4~~0.44; Fat"-
nngton dominated the SO free tn
22.62· :ind Comgold pushed team-
mate Bob Mc:.\llister ( f :03.66) with a
1:04.lg:
Corona del Mar llZ, E1taDcla U : Rob W1IM>n was a tnplr-winner for
the Sea Kings, captunni the 50 and
I 00 f recs, as "'ell as hanng an the ihc
medley relay victory.
Jn high school g.arls swimming: •
Corou del Mar let, E1&aacia M:
Sophomore Kate lv1no docked a
CIF quahf>an& ume or S5.89 1n the
100 free and Sheila Hecker doubled
for Corona. gQing 1:16.39 an the 100
brcasl an her.first stan of the )tar lll
the event, as well as a 2: 16.41 1n the
200 free 10 help CdM. Jenntrer
hcldon was E.stanc1a·s only winner.
clocking a 1:10.6 an the 100
backstroke. to high sc hool tennis:
Uainrslly l 1, Newport Harbor 7:
In a key Sea View League matc:bup,
\ tsmng l n1vcr\1ty uuhzed its
strength 1n doubles as Stn1ors Ste\ c
Lappin and Jamie Pnc:e swept, as v.cll
as the No. 2 doubrc team or Eric
Carlson and Make Manin.
Corona del Mar 14, Esta.da 4:
Bolstered b~ 1he doubles ptn) of
senior Bob Etibar and junior Alex
McChntock and co-captains Rob
Atkm and Doug bulcan. the Sea Kings brcc1cd to 1he Sea Vaev. l..e4ague
det1s1on
In high school softbaJJ.
Corou del Mar 3, Estucla 1:
Kellee Coh~n patched a l"-O-hattcr
and singled m the first ~o runs of the
game os 1bc Sea Kmgs prcva1ltd at
Estaneta. Cohen 1n&)cd m tv.o runs
1n the third to JJH CdM a 2-1 lead
Heather Hanes si~aJed tn th.e other
run fonhc Sea Kjn&.\ 1n the 11xth.
U•iwenhy 11 Newport Harbor %:
Catcher Tcmc Hubbard hat a 1""0-run
1nplc to highlight a SC\'en-run firsc
inning as 1hr Trojans romped 10 the
victory at ewP<?rt Nicole hammu
was 2 for 3 v.1th 1 pl.11' o( RBI for
Una\etsaty, 7-5. 2-2. The · alors fell
to 4-4. 2-::Z .
THORPE
From81
!>el K1v11t. \lad, "He was lM
greatest e~rr. He had natural ability
-and that's 11\c d1fTeren~ bct"-Ctn
winning and losma. He did e~tt)-
1hmg-)OU name 1t." · The !\ taled Prt\s named hlm
the ..,.eatrst mcnc:an athlete of thr
halr-ctntuf) m 19SO. In 1977, port
Ma&11mc named him the all-ttmc
pOltest football pal)er Thorpe has
been en hnncd an at lcau 11• hall of
fame
His track and fkld mark' were
remarkable for their time. H1 Ol)m·
pie: d«~thlon pcnorman«-1n 191 2
set a world re ord that held up for 17
..Qw:m• -====~------MVA --)CU\. °".,... ..... C09RWRCS l.C1110-.-Ct1 •'•M ua.-ir• '1611:-TTT.-TMrpe piurcd \il ~is.dill
Fuwton .,...,_ .. --:, Ti ~ 1 , 15'11 arhslc at a track and field m~t •11h
Gold9n w.s1 JOO ooo 0-3 > 1 ~ c-... "*' Lafa)ctlc,lcad1n1to1hcstorythauhc
JacoOt anci Hili«o. Flor" •t'ICI ~~ SOUTH COAST ~••1.NC1 o~~·na coach finally asked, w-Jacoci. • 1 L._,rorn, >-1. 19-P•YM Of.,,.. Coe11 '9f ~ Wnt U 7, IJ-10, .. h • th f i.. C rt I (CW), H.J.,o (F) ,.. .... ,ttf' IGW) IS 10 ere s e re t 0 In~ a l r tcam?''
SIA ":w~uu1 ,.ac.::. :::;: ~:W. Dunn& his )ears with the C&alOn
1111 a ca 1. , .... 1 LHUM hKll"' LaevN Hu11 .• n • is ro Bulldop from 191 S-20, ~l"I~ the
T11thn --.....0 • I IS•l • then i~prnsavr sum or USO per s.g:~-_. ~. •:..,:.;: ~~ (OIMWI .. ~':.':11 I) s IH, pmc. Thorpe ... , •1dcl) ha1kd IS
CanteM, NW!ldoH ISi .-.w'-uer IS> 11-10 ihc prcrmer pbj'tt in Pr0 (ootblJI Htt-C•"•"' ,,,, Oceeft v...., dlf ~'•"' v....,,' •~.is,, nd the 1916 C'anton team 11 con· C... ... Mw J. ..... I IH, IS-I) f ,.,.,. e1a1 Mer ., •1 ...,., s , MwN • _.,,..,._, u,., •l·l . 1t-" si&rcd one o the all·tlmc tttat
E*"'ia • • t-1 , 2 team •
CONn .... Gf....,, Net•-• ~ .eaxt.11 wasn't h1 trOftl"t lfC)n.
Tlloft. W-Cofrln. 1•1• L-...,...,_a but he did play for th( New Vorit ~ea.,.. 11• -,;' :r:_.,~ ,. • Giants. 1nc1nnah Reds and Botcon
~ ...,., 111 • ,_ t > a lnves. He batted .327in6011rftC ~ :::':~~ ~-~ 1~~· ST I.CUI CAllOINAU ••c ...... *1th the Brava. but his lifetime w tt1u1, .. L........... ..... .... ............ Lell?aW91 " ... ,,,,..,.. blttins IV~ .... 2Sl .
-'11 ' l11L OM wnaer doaimenlCd Thoroc*s
sk11ls 1n a number ol ocher~ He
bowled an tht 200a; IDlfcd 1n die ?Os •
Uttllcd It bakctbe~ 18c"*f.; Im·
nas. handbl.11, biJhards and moft. ·
He. alto WOft an 1n~1t
blUroom dalK'C comptlitiOn 'lloifta
tht'W041ep Witl9 lait ..,..,,
How..._ Mls-Ydarilladlc>K
da)'I? Will.~ .. ..-!I a
dollar • ,.. after ..... ~;ant oraidell"'~'""' ol tbc ~ .. f'llilickat ,..... tape, He .... : .......
neta finemtomlkedritllicti•an
1mpruliw lzt•w .m. '* = .. , ........... _
•Mwtopro .... •.c.-• ........
..
Or1nge C0911 IWLV PtLOT IT~ Alwl I. 1MI
UC.\'''·
~T .. ime runni~g out to enter Newport to Ensenada race
TM ~2nd Newpon to Entirriad.9 yldU nice is leu tlaan one month away,Apnt 28tobteuct.
Butd00'1 t~t.1f )ou·lc olannina
fo be a~ of the bas '1cnch1(ada •
dttby, youhavekul.hana ~eek to ·
file yourt'ntry-that is 1(you want to
save money. The entry fee up to and
1ncludut1April 11 isS6S. If you m111 that date. )OU can still
enter up toA~il l ~"but it \\111 cost youanc~traS25.l\JterApnl 18. rorae• at until next year: · Ncwpon Ocean Sa1hngAuoc1a-
t1on (NOSA), which sponsors the
world'slaraest antcrnational yacht ra~. hast few more reminders about
tht ~ .. l>UW race." For intaancx-· ~Entcnada race •S.JOina more commcrcialaieb )'tar. Sponton this
year include FM radio Mabon K·
OcQn.(1011), WcstMarintPi"od·
ucts, Nauuca Cna.utacal SJ)On5wear). Uhra·Oesaans. Mount Gay rum,
Audi of Amt'nca~AST Computers,
and Haaacn-Dan ice cttam.
NOSAhasaJsoannounttd that Walter Cronkite, ret1rtd d1s-
tan1ulsh«I ncwsannounccrandac·
oomphshcd yachtsman, will be crcw-tn.& on thtS year's race and will ~nt
the President of the U.S. and New
York YachtClubtroph1cstotheir
rcspccu ve ~ 1 nncrs.
ESTANCI 14 ' Junior Amateur at Yale.
" "They hav·e all the shots, hit the b;lll
From 81 a long ways, they are finesse iron
cutthtoat out there every day 1 he)' players, and Kenny and Austin arc
watch each other like hawk!. The) shopting for birds on almo1t e"er) play to win." hole," Pell) satd. Calvert and Mak.1 arc scratch handicap golfers. The players also pack up valuable competition expenencc by playing 1n "l think they're both ma101 college
a minimum of ix off-sea.son ind1v1d· prospects," Perry said. "f thmlc the
ual com~tiltons,a team requirement college scouts last?i'eai: thou~t Aus..
of Pell) s. .. 110 was a senior. in~ he,p aycd 1n
Calvert, a first-team all·lc~ ue and national tournaments, he's had lot of
Cronkite hasJ)Ublis~ two best
stllcrs on East Coasuailj n.g. The
£osenada race will, in part, be
preparation for a book on West Coast sailing. '
Jfyou haven'tanendcd one of the
pre-race; semi oars. there are four left:
namcnts, ~e'll have 13 · or 14 kids
ansteJd of one or"two. We go to all the
best competit1o'ns. and they get to~ what n's lake ... Perry said.
Apnt 7 at W1ndj&mmcrs YacbtC:lub.
Marinade! Rey.April 12at Dana
Point YacbtClub;Aprtl 14atCot·
onado Yacht Club.San D1eio.aod April 19at8alboa Yacht Club.
NOSA as n<>tJUSl sending sailors
south of the border. Thctace isaJ~
provtd1na1n opponunity for .\men·
cans to stnd dOnat ion!> to Ensenada
area orphans. Suggested donations
aredottuna. bedding. toweh,
fumnurc. lutcben supplies. house·
hold 1temsand toys.
.A delivery va n to ace.cpl donations
will be parked at the Bahia Con mhuin
Yacht Club 160 I Baystde Dnvc,
Corona del Mar. from Wednesd3),
Apnl J 9, lO I hunday. Apnl 2L
Donations will beae«ptcd 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. each day.
And finally. the Newport Hatbor
Nauucal Muscum .171 4 w. Balboa
Blvd .. will hold a rcc;cphon rccogni1·
ina the nch history of the Ensrnada
race. The rnuseum will have display!.
·ofEnsenadll race memorabilia. . photographs ;tnd other items of
1ntel\"~t.
0
The Ncwpon Beach Jn~thc·Water
Boat 'ho~ gets underway tod ay at
the l.1do Manna Village feaumng
previously owned power and sail-
boats. . .
CdM non said. "They all hnve background' with club pros locally. J·help out wnh
Froml1 ttle1r i·dh penod P.E. class at the
throw out, that put~ u-. in good club." · · hape." Dunng the off-season. Bernt!. won
AgaanSt Estancia. Han non sec\ the Tournament of Champions a1
every stroke a key one. V1c1onn Country Club and lopped .. • the fidd at the Lakewood Jumor It s nO\ only important that ""t: lnv1tat1onul ' Welker qunhfied third have a good day, but that "e havc-for the Queen Mal) Open "h1ch i
enough of a stroke custnon Thal rf we part of the Golden State Tour
went to Mesa Ycr4c (m the ~econd Jeff Tatch finished second a1 the
The uSed boat show will ron1in~
ttlrou&h April 9. follo~Cd by the new
bOan.now'Apnl 12·16.
l he show, now in 1\1 16th year, •s
produced by the Duncan MclntO\h
Co. of Ncwpon Beach. dtnission as
$5 for aduhs . S2 for children 6 to 12 ·
and children under 6 free. A ticket to
the used boat show comes wuh • frre
retum pass to t!'lc new boat show.
how hours are 11 a.m. to6 p.m.
weekdays and IOa.m. to6p.m.
S<iturda}sand unday Free parkina
isovailableoffTusunandAvon
avenues. Newport Beach, with com·
phmentaryshuttlescrvicetolldo •
Marina Vi.Uageevcry 15 minutes.
~non sa 1d "l was told lhey ~ere the big
nvaJ. It "ihould he n very eAcitang •
mat.ch. One of the guys ttlat works in l'
the bag room here plays for Estancia ~
(Scou Davis). These kids know each ..
other so v.ell."
Walters·slJspended
COLUMBIA, Mo. (AP) -Mis·
soun linebacker Ron Walters has ·' _a11~.wu.a.u:i.ui..a.&.Ju...u......_L.J.l"---ex~po~s-u_re_.'_'
1988, was· a medahst at the· CIF Joyner. Hinkle and Rothm~n have
regionals last sea on and won four all won four to six GA Junior
toµmaments dunng the off-season. tou rnismcnts over the paM few of Maka. a first-team alJ league and years
It should have them mid) toda y.
So whtle Corona may have won
league the past few ~asons, a long·
standing Sea View rivalry conttnues. 'and Perry calls the two foes the top
two teams in Orange Courty. In lasr
year's league individual play. CdM
took the top two spot~, but Esta ncia took founh through...l.Oth
"It always hu been (a great rivalry)," Perry said "J\s long as two
teams have been in league, it'f. been
those two fight ing 11 o ut for fast 20
years. J think C.dM has strength 1n it''i
a solid team. Estancia ha!. won about I 0 (league utles) but not one for at
round) and nttded 1t, we would hn"c California Junior .\niateur and tht .
t.b.c..advantaic 1n_hl!okt's in head-t~.Oc.scrLl.u!HOr Classic. Jt)Jlah Tatch
h.:ad compct1t1on on OOi1l ma c cs, won the San Clemente C11y Cham.
~ ~ inddinuel from r ___ illl
spring dnlls following has weekend
arrest for allegedly eAposing himself
and urinating publicly oulSlde his
dormitory. Coach Bob Stull said.
•
second-team all co unty selection in · •
'88. was one of four U.S. players on . "We rcqutre each golfer pla~ m1ni-
1he Junior Amenca's Cu p team and mum of six touma01~nts in the
qualified fo r match play at the lJ.~. !iummer. When we go to tour· least the last five )cars" ·
Hannon ~1d . p1on~h1p and was ~cond a1 the
Hannon feels fortun:u~ 10 have• Landmark 1nv1tat1onal at the La
stepped into a \.Cl) good \ttua11on ,11 Quinta Countl"'\ Club
( orona del Mar. Now comt>s ·the league challenge
··This would be one <;1tua11on '-"ht·rc Both teams nre e'pcncnced and big
I totall} wa s fortunate to \tcp into a ·t'OJTlQCl1t1Qn tough
program where there's 1a~cnt ·· Han· "ffo<lay) will ~ thr htgg) ." Hnn·
. tuU $atd Wednesday that Walters'
attitude will ·determine if he 1s
re1nsuitcd before the end of spring
dnlls on April 22.
EJ
642-5678 OAS_ From Nonh Orange County
From South Orange County
CLASSIFIED JNDEX 642-5678
FftOM NOftTH OftANGI! CO. 540-1220
lftQM. Samii OAAN.G.E..CO---HOO
c":ac:i:a°"" AD T TDAY
. '". ti
' J.. '
' . -..,..
---
.. -
.
~""\ . ft
r . . n
..
..
NEW LOWER
RATES
[-.c3
* NO COLLECTION *
Early m ornins n1otor rout available
Mu t ha Ye dependable ttehicle and liability
7 def /H't' Wttl.
2:36 e.m.•5:30 •.m.
ABOVE A VEBAGE EARNINGS
C II 714 (j '2·4333 betwt'rn 6:00 a.rn.·5:00 p.m. (M·F)
6 .m .. lOa .m.('AT& )
VA ILABLE:
Hanlin.ton Beaeh
o ta Meu, F•••taln Valle ,
A w .. rtlle•e•
..
L
PtB.IC M>TIC£ rta.tC M>TICE
'
I DI·:\ ..... '\O'l 'IC ' "
JamM and wife Kay. Jesus Chnst of Latter
2 grandc h1ldrt-n, Day Samts, Long
Mehoa and NK"holas Br h. CA ln~mwnt
Mr GIOAva.s w rt'· Mound Grove C-em·
ur\.'d C.ipt.iun with ct.ery. Ind pend 11ce. lh~ Lo Ang<'l-N Mo. J>1e.ttr Brothers Poll~ Oep.utm«-nt. B ell Broadway
Ctuef of Police Santa M o rtuary C osta
Barbllra and N<'wporl M ~lorl' (714)
Be h Memonal r-642-91~
vice Monday Apnl 10. TUTrLE -
at 11 00 A .M P 1hc Richard E Tuttle.
View M monal Park p.lSM(l away Apnl 4
CruapC'l, 3MX> PacaflC'l l989 an Pomona Mr
0
V1cw Dnve, Newport Tutti ti Uf'\'llr'ed by
Beach VtS1tauon for hi mother Narda
friends. Sunday 4 001 Tutu Cath ·r Rlch· .P M to 9 00 PM In ~rd w Tuult-. ter
bcu of flowers Cumtly Rhonda. nt-phew5 SU~ do~UOIU '°I w...uc & Ashley Ct\1fdhclp USA. 6463 grandmother Barbar~ l~pm<lancr. Wood· Tuut. aunta & un·
land K1I CA Ill 7, ck-s. S.u and tu~n
p 8 C I f I C V I f W 8utltt, Edwatd and
Mortuary. Outtton Erneat1ne Vac1k.
Kftuwlh & Shlrk-y
Tutlk". Ru. and ~
tie EMtman.. Vasa\a·
Uon w1U be.> h~ld
Thunday and
from -t 00 '° 9 00 at Pactf lc View
Mor~port
VO' wtll tie S.tuiday.
t·OO P.M. at Plc:ifr v~ o.ape1. ....w-
port Beedl', Pkif 6C
Vtew Monu.r,. Di·
retton ...... noo
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The Leg8I Oepenment et the
Ody Pilot II pM8Md lo 81\·
nounoe • ,_ -"'* now •v•ll·
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We will now SEARCH the
name'°' you et no extr• Charge.
end Mve you the time 11\d the
trip 10 the Coun HOllM In Serl!•
AnL Then. of COUI' .. , efler lhe
-cl\ le ~ed -wQI flle. 'f0\11 llctltioln ~ neme
lt8temenl with the CcMlty Clent,
publllll once • w..a t« lour w..a•-.,~t>y lew end
then Ille ~ proof ol publi-
cation ..nth the County C•k b'.
,.._.. 11op t>y to hie YoUI'
lic11t10U• ~ st•ternent ec
the Deily P!t.Leo-1 Oeoart· ment. 330 r Bey, Cost•
Meta. CeJlfOln •· If you cen not
stopt>y. PIMM call ue •t (714) 642 ... 321, Elftenelon
315 °' 3HI end -Wiii meke errengem«tt• lor you to handle
this Pfoc9dure by 1'11811
If you etM>Uld n. .... eoy fur1her
~·Ion•. pleeM ed us end -will ti. mort than gted to uatst
you
Good ~ 1n )'Ollr
,_ butiMUll
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NEW LOCATION!
17071 E. Imperial Hwy.· Yorba Linda. Cahforn1a
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Who ha,n•tdreamcdofthe tropics, summer
islands of Eden lyi narn turquoise water\? In the
romantic French Caribbean, where unusual and
Strange!) lo\ cl) fru11sand flo~ers han1 hea"> on the
trees, the romance c\,tends to fOod and dnnk.
lslandcrs cnJO) rum 1n tall, cool punches. and in
some marvclou\d1sht\u ...,ell. The exotic recipes
that follo w-tropical, rrcnch-influcnced -
pro"1dcgorgcous fare for)our ne~t part).
Rum h3S never gone out of fashion and
probabl> n~er will. but man) cook~ arc unaware of
its scope as an ing.n..•1.hcnt Teamed 'Mth crtal]l of
coconut. ru m make all thed11Tcrenre 10 flavorful
crept."S.cnhanccd with Rum ButtcrSauc;c and frc\h pi neapple. >;)
Crabcs famsarc 1uxunous part) fare -lump
crabmeat with baoon, bread crumbs. green and hot
peppc~. a nd ~ little rum elegantly baked and ~rvcd
in crab\hclls orramclr.1ns.
There' a fine recipe fort ht' t>arbcl:uegnll.100.
trip of pork ure mannated in a rum-ha!IC'd ltqutd
w11h hmesand nippy ingredient ,and&nlled
aJternatmgon \kC\\Cr\ with milngosand hme lf)ouprcferlamb, trybarbcc;ucd Plum-Rum
Riblet\, the meat bru hcd "'uh a rum-hued s~ect
taI1. froll) gJa~c IOrthc la t lt"W mlnutt' ofgnlhng.
The glalc 1sc"ccllelll. and can be uwd for chicken
wings, i1parcnbs. orcockta1I frank\. Buffet or llarbecuc 1ndoor5 or outdoors. formal
ormformal -rum-laccd ~ouc dish~ oOi:r the
ba "forc"<c111ng part) farl'. ~-~=--
RUM CREPES
% caps ( 1 pint) milk
21/t cups an-purpose flour
115-nace can cream of coconut
'!I e11pnm
! eggs, llgbtly bealen
3 egyolks, lightly beaten
\a &.easpooa ground cinnamon
~teaspoon ground or grated nutmeg
'• e11p (''I stick) butter, melted (plus
addltlonal for cooklng crepes)
PIDCllsaU
R•m Butt.er sauce, recipe follows
1 ripe plaeapple, quartered, cored and sliced
Toasted grated coconat, optional
Combine milk. nour. cream of coconut. rum.
eggs, egg yolk-;, cinnamon. nutmeg. 1 j mp melted
butter and salt 1ncontarncrof elcctm food
procc ororbkndl·r C O\erand pnxcs JUSt to
blend TranskrtOOO\\l,co,crandkl tandat
lea t 30mmutcs(orrl.'fn&cf"J te>
Topreparcuepcs 'A cltaoout f teaspoon of
butt en n a 9-or I 0-tnch skillet O\ er moderate
heat L sing 1 rnphattcrfo1 each crepe. p<>ur
bauer tor I c;rcpc mto hot slullct. S\\ 1rl1ng.Locoat
bouomofpan.cool until bottom 1-;goldcn;
carefully turn with n \patulu· rnok about 30
second•dongcr. ln\Cn onto \\3\ papcr-ltncd
plate.
Repeat " 1th rema1nrngt'~pe batter. rebut· _
lenn$ the pan aftcre' cl'\ 2or1 crcpcs and
tacking thl" completed ucpcs "'1th wa' paper
bct'ACCn them (The crepc11can be prcgarcd 1n
ad' ancc plan~d 1n .1 large pla'ittt ba~and
4th matzoh bakery open
for hands-on experience
By CHERYL W?W<ER
o..,,,._,.,,~
With lhl le tl\al· ul Pa<i<iOH'r la~l approachin the < h:ibad ol
Jrv1 hr Jr"'•'>h <en Irr v.o1ll h~t ll~ lourth annual \fod<'I M:i11uh 8.lkt:n
~unda)s thrvugh I hursdti)\ throu~h \pnl 11
Dunns the frcr hourlong se <,ion' P3ntl1pant' of all .1g..:' "''" tx· trcaled to a "'ckoming klturc and '1dt•o film nn 1he hl\IO f) .inti
prc1>3rat1on of the mat1oh tollov.cd b} n hnnd.-...on cooling l'las'
The matt0h or unka\l'nrd hr..:ad ,., ., H!) important p;.irt·ol tlw
Jcv.1 h Pas\O,cr nu.·al. Pre\Cnlx'd in the Bable Cf M'ldu\) 11 rnm-
mtmonitc'> huth the lrl·cdom of the k" •~h ixoplc from hun~l.1sr to the
fg) ptian'> tn 1100 RC. and the h;My e~apt.· b' v.h1ch th:u lrt:l·dom "a'
v.on -~>quid.: that Jc~'> rnul<l no1 v.a1t tor 1hc1r bread ton~ bdnrl'
baking 11
Rahb1 Meir <•1tl1n of< l'ntcr \a~\ allhough mnk1n[t the mat.t0h 1\
c11mplc tht' ritual I nol .
"'The v.holc-prtX:Cll.11um th&: "Qmb1n, tlOn of the 1nlrcd1cn1c. -
v. lc:r "nd Oour -lo lhc rolling out of thr dough (v. h1 ch "punl turl·d
tor umntcrruptcd air no") lo the b.11\1n1 (in a 7S<k.tesrcc -at k.1st -
O\CO tor atx1ut :\0 ~rnnd ) m~t« (omplettd in IM minute
11: he add\ the dough ,., kfl to c,1;snd lonaer bt'forc: b;sl1ng or 11 1
baked lo"'er 1t will begin lo n -and can np longer be u"t'd for
malloh
When the mauoh 1c, made untkr 1m1 n:gulat1<lll\, C111hn point'
out, onl) c.tonc-mtll d flour. '\prmi "•ncr. 'f>'-~1al OH'n .• nd l'as..uHr·
u ·uni\ utcnc,11\ can I)( cmplo)cd 1n "" prc1~r:111un. "T'hat'~ "h) "<'(all our mauoh balr.c:I) a modd' -the \ldl'O "'"
shO\o\ 1hc r~I hmurah (Y>:ll hcd or auarJcJ ) mat1uh bl'inJ made ..
Rc'it:f'lllOn\ tor each \ton an: n:qu1rc:d, Hnurh umcs an he ~hedulcd bet\o\cen Q a m, nd 1 pm. vr bct\.\.ccn 4 :inti 6 p.m. on the
b.lkc:n • osxn da>" for furtht'r 1nlormatmn •nd r ·~" ;atioM r:sll R hh1 Gtthn al 1hc
ccntc:r. lcK tl'd it 4~72 Ro>c:\. Ro.id in lr\1nc, at 786-41000
Artichokes erihance
Chic ~en Cacciatore
_ Trad1t1onal Italian chicken cac-
c1a1orc i combined~ 11h rnarin t :d
artichoke M-:ans m this robu\t
ik1Ur1 dinner. It " perfc:ct '°"f'\!d
•Ith pe\la, a tbcrC I\ I nCfOU\
amount of tomato .sau ~rcattd Tender amcho~c hfan enhance
1hc hahan fla"or of th1\ dt\h, a1ons
-•thprl ~ l ba$1l,orcpnoand
.white wine.
ClllCU: CACQATOAE
Wftll Aln'IO .o&_ES
I t•r•)mr .. '1811HarUdteke
'911'11 , ................ .
~ ......... ,,ff. c:e• .. ................ ,._ ,ore .. •... ... .... ~ .......... ....
'
....... a..,. •• ~)'
Dnun an1 hokt marinade rnto
la,..r skillet. raervina art• hokes.
Add ohve otl and ~l until almost
''"""" Rinte ch1dttn and coat wnh ftour. dd to hot 011 and cook
untd Fldcn on all •idn
Remove front .-n. P~
dnppe• llnd taerVe. Wipe out
.-n aftd recwn I tablespoon. dd
onaon ind ..,_ Md sautc until
acndrr. Return Cbacn to tk1t1e1.
Ota1n \Omltoa.. Nt«Vl"I hquid
for anoilitt mt. Add iomatoes. •
pcppet, tmil,orepno, tie) leafW
wane. at. to. bail1 red«t heal, COYS
Diet :.-..er JO mmuta. uMil
&iclrew ii i1-""*'· Add rrlel'Yld aBd I.al a.
mow ..a UddlOlra Mi ~ kit
THURSDAY, APRIL 6, 1989 .
rcfngcrated or frozen )
At serving time, reheat the Rum Butter
Sauce in larae k1llct. Fold c~pes(thawed if
froLcn) 1nqua11ers. Place foldcdcrepea1nd
pineaple slices in hot sauce Heat O'VW rnockr·
ately low name until thecrcpesand pi~ • •
slice arc heated throuah. Serve warm, spnnldcd
with toasted coconut Makcs20crcpes.
Rum Ba1terS.11ce:(Makesabout Jcups.)
Combine I' ·~upsfirmly packed dark brown
sugar 11cup( I stick) butter. '•cuprum, i..cup
pincappleJu1ceand ''icupwoterrn medium "
saucepan o'er modcl"llte heat Cook. stirrina 3
minutes.orunul sugardissohcs. Thesa~can
be prepared in ad vam:·e. refngcratcd in covered
containcrand reheated at serving time.
CRAB ES F ARCJS
I pound lamp crabmeat
4 slices wblte bread
'" cup fresb parsley 1prl1s, well WHiied aad
dried
ta cup milk
4 slices baeoa,cltopped
'• cup cbopped sba llot or onion
'" green pepptr, seeded aad ml:Dced
t bot pepper, laalved,seeded aid ml.ced
t garlic clove • mlDced
'• cuprum
Saltaad ~r,oplionat
2 tablespoons melted batter
Preheat O\ en to 400 degrees. Ptd. over
rrobmcat, d1 . l·anhng piece of hell orcan1lage.
Place bread '\hccs and parsley spng in container
ofcll't tnc food procc or or blender. Cover and
prtX:'l'S'> to torm crumbs. Remove and reserve 1h ..._
cu pot thccrumb Place remaining crumbs in ~
m.lll OO\\l.add milk Lctstand while prepanng
1cm.11ningmgrcdient .
\autc baron rn mall pan over moderate
hl'•ll until hall-cooled. dd onion. sautc 3
minut~'\ l\dd green and trot peppers and garlic
and \Jute 1 mrnute' longer.or until onion 1~
traMlucent RemoH" pan from heat. cit1nn rum.
thl'n l rabmcat Return pan to heat, cook I
llllOUtl' rongcr. Remove pan from heal. t1r
~oal.:cd brcadt:rumb' in1ocrabmcat. Ta tc and
~·a .. on \\1th ..alt and pepper 1f de ired
01\ 1dc crab 011\ture bct"'cen 12 empty crab
~h1:lh '>Callop\hell 01 ramekin . To rcser"cd 'h
t:upot hreadcrumb "'1th melted buttcr.spnnkle
-..~-+~ rab (Th•~n be-done ahead..n:f aa.era te.
i:m ercd "1th pln\llC v.rap.) Ba~e 10 to IS minut~
m preheated O\en unul topp1n11 golden brown.
~pnn~lc 'A'llh dd1uonal chopped parsley. if .
de,11ed M:i~e\about 6 rvrng .
PORK E BROCHE'M'E
11'1 pound 1>0rk ttnderlolD
·~capr'611l
''.a cap ftts~ty sqaetted llme Jake
3 &abl~ pooas auU1enOc Dijon mH1-r4
lflllease tff MJM/C.,
Mom a.lways knew v.eggies good for you
NE\\ YOR)\. C .\PJ-r a~ ~our 'l'gl·tahln
fhnt's what re'-t\trl h<'r., .aero" the counlr' art!
tdhng u r hl' l' noun .. hing. lo\\-c Jlonc"hxxh
are an important part ol .1 h.1lanced d1l't
The l ~ lkpartnwnt ol \gnu11lurl'
rccomnwnd tlm~c to fi \.C ~f\ '"!.!~ ul H'g-
l'Lablc<i cJch da) 't l'l a natwn.ll d1ctaf\ \unc'
tndu:ale\ that mJn~ adult' .Hl' 1gnunntt th1\
ad\ ICC
f hc . •cond "-ia11un.1I I k.1hh and 'utn-
uon E\am1nJt1on '-lune' "a lonllullcd trom
1976 10 1980 \t\ JnJh\1\ ot th1'> \UPC\ \\J'>
published n:cl'nth 1n tlw \m<:nr.in Journ.11 ol
rubht: l kahh
On the da' ot the \tud'. ~ll pcrn·nt ul thl'
adulJ population bi:t\\cen thl' ate' ot 19 to i 4
du.J not includccHn onl' \Cgctahk tn lhl•ird1ct.
r c\\Cr than 30 JX'rn•nt ate orange. UCl'J'l \l'llO\ ..
or darl gn·cn H'getabk\ ltlcc c.:arro1i; \lfua .. h.
broccoli and collard grccm.
It' important to include 'l'getahk .. in thr
da1I) d1e1 becau~· the) pro' 1ck needed 'It·
amms. libcr and mineral .
&t:i carotene. which 1'\ a tp(ki 11ourl'e of
\ 1tamin \ 1) lound in 'lptnat'h, l'armt .ind
wcc t potat<X'\, itamrn \ hc:lp ma1nu.11n ooll
'1\1on ;rnd It 1s e~ cn11al for tht• proflCr
lunct1on1ng of many hod., ora;in'
\prn:ich contain'\ a \llamin' \ll~h "'
lolaun Jnd B6. < ak1um 1 found 1n w ll.ird
green\ Jnd muu.ird green' \'it.mun< "lound
10 broccoli. ~"Cl't gn~n nd rfd JX"P~~:t \, tlnd
dJrl green lc.1ly H'&Ct hk lt1'c.· l.;;1k jl\d
collard~
( runll'rnu' 'l'~l·tablc\ -Hgl.'1.1hkc, "'th
tour-f)(tJlcd or no' ltl..c kaH'i -pr°' l(k
li~r. '11am1n'> • .rnd m1ncrab l hl'\4' 'c c.·tahk'
1ndudc b1 onul1. C"JUhflo"cr, h1u\'l''' 'iprouh
.amt C'!lb~gl'
One ~nrng of ~e ctahll'~ cQual' 1 lUP
rnol..i:d 11r I/: l up hopped fj\\ h'gctahtc ... or 1
lllp nt kal) ra\\ \CgclJblc\ \\ICh .... kttUCC' (11
\p1n ,H:h
l he l ~ Dci'.·u1ml·n1 of \~multun· ~''
adult' \hould If\ to mdudc c. \: h ul lhl'\t' lh c ''pc' 111 '1.'!l'tahll''i regulail) 1n th "11 dn·r:
-Dar~ green 'c l lahk' hroc,olt
!iptna, h or wllard rrcn,.
-Dl·cp -,dlo" \c etahk,· larrot . \\Into
----------
~JU3'ih or \\\C'l.'t pota toc
-l>n ll<:'an .. andpea :'lphtpca .lc nlll or
· prnto beam.
-'ltJrch~ 'l' c:table' potatoc or corn
-Other \l'jC:table'\ cab e cggplM
mushroom and kttucc
\.\ h1k 1t mifht 001 ~ practical to to •
hl. dot lettuce into ~ our hncf~~ or lunch ba
thl"tl' ar\: l.l\~ "a}' to include more '-CJCtabl
1n -.our dtl't
\1anh n < arncll nt < ampbcll up o.
( •n\UOlCr 'Ulrltton (COIN UUl'
mu nrhing oo lrl'\h l ut up 'cgctable <t
Jrinl>;rng .1 ho\ of 'egetable JUICC. in tcad <Jf
.-.nalklllJ on cand1c . ,
\t thl· ~lad t>ar. limit calone-ladcn uenis M.~ ma)onna1~-ooscd ~I ds. fncd croutonf,
i.:ri:ain\ ~lad drc~ inf.) .lt)d bacon btts. t
lrul'1lerou!i 't'gctables hke broccolt and
lauhflo"<.'r.
T n m·"' 'c etable tn lad' and ur-ft'\i
dishes. 'J1l'!lma. rad1cch10 and bok choy. v.hicb
\H'l'\"Onl ~ lound onl\ in gourmet orclhnte f<>OO
stores: arr no~ nva1I able in upcrmarkctt.
fa ma and rad<l1ehio are delicious in saladl.
and tlol>; 'ho~ makes a nice addition to tir·f~
J1.,hc'I
Camell '>3\\ grc-tn peppers or carrot ,
'~h•~h or~ low m rat. make a good base ti
.. prcads instead of cracJ.;crs., ,
1 hl' t ~. £.Xtpart mcnt of Agnr ulttuT !
ruM1 hl·<l .t 24-pa brochure. ··0 1etal) Gu1 -
lml.'\ lor \mcncan :· This brochun-cxpla1
1 calh ol the recommended 1uidel1ncs.
J
Cheese gives pasta a calcium boost
dieeH
l! ...ea feta9Cdae ....oe.,
eeeke4 aeenlq te ,.ekqe
•Jrec&Miaa
With today's busy lifeatyles.
whit's more welcome than cuy·to-
prepare cheese uu~s for ~rvina
over pasta. They're not only
flavorfial but bea1tbfully rich in
cattjum. Thete-recipes are ttnwly,c----"'----
fitied with a metal wi.. blldC
combine ricotta and l:e:" c~ • yolk. 2 ta ns
t>Ut&cr, pllic; 111.han seuonillli sa~t
and black ~r. Proeftl unul -~11,,00.Jb; set aside. In a medium
Skillet melt ~ma1n1na I tableij)On
butter over medium hcaL Add
zucchini and peas; stir-fry until
zucchini is crisp-tender. about 4
minutes. Stir in cheese mixture;
heat throuah. On a ~rvina plate
J)Our cheese and vqctable sauce
over hot fettuccine. Toss and ~rve
immediately. Yield: 4 ponions, 7
cups. Per portion: 272 ma calcium,
452 calones.
••••l••• cu•• snAK
FAMILY PACK 2 79 BEEF La. • 12-0Z ROUS, l!Nt(S
OR PATIIES
too, since calcium is now bein& Strain tomatoes into a small
linked wtth blood pressure control sauce1>9n. Chop tomatoes; add to
u well as bone beaJlh. aomaao liquid in saucx:pan aJoa& .,... mraway tteds. Simmer, un· · .,.,..., for S minutea. On •
.erviq plate toss 131. cups
mU1111ter chcele wiab llo& liettuc-
c1nc. Top with tomato naia1aR ~
sprinkle with remainins cbeetc.
Yield: 4 portions. Per portion: 470 ma calcium; S67 calones.
FRISH CALIPORNIA CHICKEN
1.89
.. c
LB. .....
nAUAll SAUSAel
REGULAR
OR HOT La.2.29 noz
FROZEN
U.S 0 A Choice
BONELESS STEW BEEF LB 1.ff FRESH "JACIFIC MAHI MAHI FILLETS LB 4.69 Thawed
DANISH STYLE PORK RIBS
F•ISH BROCCOLI-----_,.
TENDER GREEN
LB.
9 NOfthwe't
LB .2 ANJOU PEARS
Sw .. 1 FrHh
WHOLE WATERMELON ... LB •• 29 SWEET CORN
US No I
BROWN ONIONS
LB 2 .79
l8 •••
---1( •• u. r·mu•-). --
1
( •• 1CA ... ••• nun )--
•IYLOll l'UX
SHAM•OO
OR CONDITIONER I 59 .
------15·0Z. •
60 Or 100 Woll
G.E. 2-PACK BUG LIGHT
300 Count
Q . TIP COTTON SWABS
.......... 1."
.1.79
80t.
HIME BANCHA-TEA
Akogoi t<u~1~~h1
HIME SKEWERED CLAMS
JAPA•SI. ....... "' ... .• 79
1.89 2."
aun•"Au. ••lllS 1 .........
"'Aatff'f PACK MILD c.DDAll
'•';'v ,.. CHEESE I 99 ·~···· . "'-•
1 lb Pk09 _
GRlllMASTER CHICKEN FRANKS
I lb Pkg
BAR S SLICED COOKED HAM ·" .. 2."
SOLID WHITI TUNA
15 To 25-Ct.
•••• mACK ..
16-0Z REG
OR LOW SALT 1.89
CARNATION 6.5-0Z. IN WATER
~~..!!;'~·
mil IOUD WHIT!
•• 'IUNA IN WAT!R"
---_cc---I
-~· --YM •n·· ••• ,·-AT •••••• ··•n .... _..... ........ _._.__.,....., ... -.... ...........
...,., ...... ,.. .. _ ............. ....,__,..,_. I A '-"crl ... .. .... ._._ .... .........,. __ ........................ _
_..._,...._.,.,, •• ,,_ > W..._t-••« ... llGO~l•GO
....,._ ........ INo <...,., ........ ,' .,.....,.. ..._ .......... ,'°""_ -·· ...................... ._ .... ~ . ..._......_ . ............ ........ _._ ... ......._ ___ ._ '-· .......,..,, __ -' ..... , .......... "-· '-' ............. • GLAD LOCK ST0,1AGE BAGS ....... 1.79 ~:::!!ii!!iiiiiiii:J
•• • .. •
RUM
fromC1
i prUc clovea, ml.Deed
1 lar1e oalo~. halved and tlllllly
allced
"' teaspoon ult
Fretllly sroud pepper
1 tarse rlpe man10
! llmH
Slice pork into thin crosswise
pieces, against the grain, then halve
each piece lengthwise. Place pork
pieces mto large plastic bag: add
rum, lime juice, mustard, garlic,
onion slices, salt and pepper. Close
bag; turn to distribute marinade
ingredients. Place bag in large bowl:
refrigerate at least 4 hours. or
overnight. Rem ove pork from
mannade, reserving marinade.
Peel mango and cut into chunks.
Thinly sli~ hmcs. Preheat broiler
or prepare barbecue grill. Thread
pork shces, mango and lime on 8
skewers. Place skewers . to be
broiled on aluminum foif·hncd
baking sheet: s~rinkle with on'ion
slices from mannade.
Broil or barbecue skewers IS to
20 minutes. turning and basting
with reserved marinade, or until
glazed and cooked throuJh:Makes
about 8 servings.
Note: Skewers can be assembled
ahead; cover and refrigerate. Bnng
to room temperature before broil·
ing or barbecuing.
PLUM-RUM RIBLETS
% pouds lamb ribleta
• l garUc clove
'i'a teaapooa aaJt
~ teaapooa fre11tJy voud pep-
per
Pl•m·R•m Glaze, recipe mow•
Tnm excess fat from riblets. Peel
and halve garlic; rub over surface of
meat, then season with salt and
pepper. Allow to stand at room
temperature while -hcaung grill.
Prepare barbecue gnlJ, or set gas or
electric grill to medium, foll owmg
manufacturer's directions.
Grill. 6 inches from heat, tumina
several umes. about 50 minutes.
Transfer lamb to carving board.
Cut into individual nblets; bru h
generously wnh Plum-Rum Glaze.
Return to $flit. ·turrung and basuna
several umes with glaze, 10
mmute , or until nchly glazed.
Make 4 appetizer servings.
Pl•m·R•m Gla1e: (Makes about
I 1h cups) Combine one I 6-<>uncc
can purple plums in heavy syrup,
drained (reserve 11>·cup syrup) and
pilled 112 cup syrup, 1/1 cup French
red wioe vinegar. 1/2 cup rum, v. cup
ugar and I cup chopped onion. m
medium saucepan. Bnn& to boil·
inJ. lower heat. Simmer 45 mmut~. Puree m blender or food
processor. Brush onto meat I 0 to
IS minutes before end of cook ma
umc.
Notn: Rec1pe can be doubled
The slue 1s also good on chicken
WlnP. or thighs and sparcnbs. To
avoid bumms. always bru h onto
meal IOto l .S mmu~beforeend of
cookina umc.
Dres sing change
suits asparagus
lefter HcNMI.,,., ~
So timple' So wonderful! T~
Stea~ uparqus liahtl)· with an
easy herbed vinaigrette 1nstad of
hotlaridaise.
• ;"'tfrf" 4"."JM.-I ,.,,..... . t • • ..,. I .
Red
Delicious
Apples .
Ex~• r~ W11shington G~
Auortr.I V .,,., ,io
2.4 Oitr11.t: I -~if
~Vons Mild 234 ~ f ~~~~~ Chee~; .
lJarrr•
-PRODUCE/FLORAL -
Italian 2 L 100 Th~~~:~,,~ ~.
a "'"'"
•
Cook's or Farme:S9 John Ham f 111y <: tll.l4tJ I • SIWJt fir B .. tt l'o#~jf
Chicken·of the· 11)
Sea Albacore-...:
So/;d Wloilf' r MIW 6. l 01mu c "'' P•ltt:i,,, Spnnt w..,..,
Blue Bonnet
Soft Spre~<l
I/' • J """ • ~I .. , .. 1 1, f.1.,~, .,,. nJ
159
Jer eymaid 2 1-400
Ice cream . O ~
A •tM n... .. R
I I J/ G~Sq.urr < .lfton •.
Wilson 99 J~~bo Franks •
P•lt.tir • •
. U.S.D.A. CHOICE
Round Steaks
· or Rumo Roast .
Bottom ROIRtli u.f,,
!•" Thin T rimnwJ-BOnth &ef . . .
I I~
6 Pack · It Shas~a ~de
Beverage
RfX. oT Ort A i10md V 11ntt..s
12 Oz e,..,, LJ.UJ r '*""6 1>ix1u
' /
10·11i Inch
quare Griddle
Wivr I r l ·
12~~-~
----------------------= 101h Inch :fOO N .. '" I Square I Griddle OFF I u.MOWO/lwh l'..;J7
I ~'*•ll.1"' ~ °"''"' y.,., ·-------····---·GROCERY /BAKERY-
GSmucker's f99 ~~~~!~erry jam
-:-M E TD PAR1MENT-
Shcn on' Corned119 Beef Bri ket
l'Wtl C..i 1 •
---=-DELI/DAIRY--
Louis Rich 9 9 !:i~~r..[rank • .
I p,..,..J f>i..Jt IH\Mr/••
Boontv Paper Towe b
IN A.di
· ~mi Cat ;11 lJttcr r .JB4
~ Kt.>t.blcr Pil~ <..na.~ W 1 .~11.t-~
~I :>I • Pin~1l · in Jui l" W e·-·• JMC"''Jo.r.J ~' """c
Pace I .:wl
Picante auce
.99
.9
.59
.79
229
. J 19
__ .}_09 __
.89
249
fl.ti C al I 4Jl b ·
·--SEAFOOD---
1 Allcts 299 U•
u499
}39
119
1 59
}29
133
.39
c•
N t style for sophisticated foods: ba 1 k
~N9wllefWll
ea.ck tie Iona hu been &he
epi&ome of ele&arice. bu& ~ for
.caviar and trullles:; black fooCI has
not had the same cachet. It often was sent back to the kitchen.
Now, with widesPmld use of
black to symbolize luxury or the
avant-prde in fashion, home de-
sign and product packaging~ it is not
surprising that black edmles · are
beina held in hiah esteem, 93ys a
reec?n in the New York Times.
'Black is a fashion statement.,"
says Hank Reinhan, a housewares
buyer for Bloomingdale's. "The
customer reacts positively to black
because it has an up-scale pro-
fessional feel.··
In food , blad.of\en implie a rich
concentration of flavor as well a
soehisttcated color.
'People seem to like food in
unusua& color . and black ha\ tht most drama:· sa)s Len Alhson, the
chef and a co-owner of Huben's in
Manhattan. "Chefs arc doma black
pasta for the visual efTC(:t."
Black nee, black pasta. black
mushrooms, black truffies. black
otives, black beans, and blKk
seaweed known as nori art show1na
up on menus nearly ever') where.
and these products are becoming
more readily available to home
cooks.
There 1~ c .. en black popcorn,
made by Blad: Jewel Popcprn Inc .•
a company in t. Francisvltle.111. It
1s u1tabtc for nibbltna. no doubt,
with a rerun of"C.rcature'from tM
Blad. Lagoon."
On the dinner plat~. thc'~for
blad.cned ( aJun-strle dishes,
"h' h ga'e burnl'd food a good
name. ma) ha\C helped pave the
W8)
Jn other ca'ICS the popularit) of
ethnic cu1 mes ha focused ne"
attention on regional clas 1cs hkc
black bean~. black nee and black
pasta.
Jeremiah To"cr, o" ner of tars
an San Franci~o. may have been
one ot w Jirst tu senr bl1l·k~n
ca kes.
Black-branchih 1son tbem~nuat Fog Cil)' Diner 11YSan FranciKO.
and &lossy black-bean salad is
u atlabfo to cat m or la.kc out t
Donald Sacks 1n 1hc World
Financial Center rn lower Man-
hattan.
imilarly, the increased use of
Chinese fermented black beans as
scas<>ning prob:tbl) has as much to
do with the mtcre l m Asian
ingredients as with color scheme.
At the same umc the uses for old
standbys, caviar and truffles. have
multiplied.
Glittery beads of Ruuaan caviar
pave &he ~ of 1 thick ftllet of Co4Alla al u Bcrnaatin in New
York, and croutons lavished with
~·nt ~k-Oli\C 9-U~ Krom• pan)' swordfistl at Fleur de ys 1n
San Francisco.
Not only arc black-forest mush·
rooms or Chinne black mush-
rooms (the same as shiitake mutb-
rooms)drcssma up the dinner platt.
but there 1s tlie black chanterellc
that iscalJed "trompettcde la mon"
(trumpet of cath). It is perfectly
edible and ddicious. The morbid name add\ a bit of thrill.
CaJuti Chef P..,. Pru-....-m• to11•1 • lllllletful of
cr•yfl1h for fund-raiser.
~ . t T~pchefs
dish out ,
No Gafl)es ... No Gimmicks ... Everybody Wins With Stater Bros. Low, Low Prices
SHOULDER BLADE-CUT
·Pork FRESH
60-0Z
Meat Dept. Savings Frozen Food Favorites
Chicken Franks VOl<Y,_.·
·Cooked Ham ::;::,
Rib Steak :::
Lamb Chops =~~
Boneless Ham ~.,..l,AH
Back Ribs ~0
Dover Sole :.
,MJZ 69' Egg Rolls ~:-.
I~ s299 Lean Cuisine ;·0 ·::i~QU
~s2 19 Pot Pies ~Ofl~ l.5189 Waffles ::::::=::.=~
~ 5179 Orange Juice ~~~~
l.
1229 Grape Juice W(LCK•
l.'329 Belgian Chef Waffles
,JM)/ s111
,o39-
IH)l •1 ss
t>GZ~· ,.oz•1•
• M)J •1 •
Compare these Low Prices Grocery Spec ials
Instant Lunch =
Grape Jelly ~"·
Millers Honey Q.(M• ,.~~'1C '1"
~ Juice :=--:OlallmWIT\U *" ~·
. yogurt ::1:~1\">CN Mir 59-
Margarine ~ ..
"41 •1 • COokies ~i:: .....
~ •1 11 Muffins =-=--
--=_......._ ~~89' · Doritos Chi~ . ....,..
.. ·Ol•1• ~ Mxers .--.
----~~--==--,, .. '113
·~33·
FRESH
LB
CORN Ofl OR REGULAR ·-Oil
48-0Z.
l'i•fc1ii&11iiii•I1 Llf voca os WWJf ,-=-'f M'f _.. fA 9-
Potatoes "."° ....... , .. ,.. ~9'
Gra efruit ~~~.oua· .UMOIA •1••
~ICDUPRIOHTOIE~
.. ~l.MOA~M"'3AE&
B111111'za•
~"~
Carlo Rossi :.:-~ '39'
Old Crow Bouroon , ,.LlfU' •1 o•
Ronrico Rum :_,,_Olll . _ '9'8
Hamm's Beer
best' for
charities
8)' MARCIA DUNN,
~l'rut'llfrll«
PITT 8 RGH -Although res-
Laurant customers remain their top
pnonty, America's premier chefs
arc catcnng more and more to
charities that arc ca pitalizing on the nation's appetite for fancy but
healthy cuisine. -
.. It's a bu of an ego tnp. To be able
to sa\ I had dulncr with seven of the
fine 't chef! ui the United State If
this is what turns )OU on, it's a
pretl) big tnp," said Roben L.
Becker Jr.. board chamnan at
( hlldrcn ·s Hospital Qf Pmsbufih.
The ho p1tal ha anviled 'en
top chefs to d1 h out their best at a
S 1.500-a-pcrson gourmet gaJa m
October Halfthc IOOdmncruckets
alread-.. have b«n fobbled up,
solel) ihrough \\Ord o mouth.
fhe fund-raising_ crowd 1s "get-
ting bored with alway eaung meat
and potatoc ," satd Jean Banchet,
chef and O"-ncr of Le Franca1s in
Wheeling. Ill. near Chjcaao. "The)
don't cat a.arbagi an) more. They
know more and more about food ,
all kind of food. They're more
educated of the palate "
Banchct is one of the chefs
dona ling their talents for Children's
Hospital. the "orld·s leading ped1-
atnc liver transplant center. The
hoc.ip1tal will launch its 1990 centen-
nial celebration "1th the culinary
e~travagan1a.
ta prc,1cw luncheon Monda)',
Banchet ho"ed off the m1lle feu11le
of duck II\ er wtth an1choke. truffle
and toa t brioche he will create in
October ( aJun cook Paul
Prudhomme whipped up his offer-
ing. a cream) uawfish d1 h rved
in bread boats and called Lou1s1ana
~afood fanta~)
1 he menu al future\ a con-
Mlmml.' of "1ld mu broom • &nlled
mannatccJ quail, ahforma garden green . ~dcJkfilJamh.and an apple
de sen "1th k1ln-<ined cherry sauce
ond topped with a ugnr dome.
Gourmet chtf became highly
ou.ght after for these kind of high-
brow fund-raisers in the e3rl> 1980s. accordina to Lawrence For-
gione. chef propnetor of ~n Ameri-
can Place 1n e~ York
"h only came about because of
the notonct) -the star quality -
of chef ," forgione said. "What
~ould be the sense if the chefs who
att hett today had no lnOuencc?
'Wh y bother payina to come to thi
c .. entr
op chef! > tht) are besieged
with rcquc\ts to donate their ser-
V1CC11.
"It' worthwhile doin1 and u·,
goina to ha .. e a lastina effect. That
mone)' is aoi n& to bu) a lot of aood
thinp. That's why we do 1t, .. said
Prudhomme. owner of K-Paurs
Louisiana Kuchen in New Orleans .
.. You cannot •Y yn 10 all of
them." said another pest chef,
Jean-Lou11 Palladin of Jean-Louis
at Watftlllt 1n Washinaton. ''E"~ day of the year,~ ~ld be
doma that and wt cannot bcc•u~
wt hive our Job 10 do " ..,
Whtthrr n's for chanay or for
profit. chefs with any con1e1encc
aft blmdi• Whal ~ want to
Cit wttll .Whit theY lhOulcl ell.
iCcOnl1ns to Ferdinand Mm:.
tn'vf DI ol.Tbc.C ••my lllllatute
of AJMrica. UDder fire are hieh-Calorie., hjp-cholnlerOI f'ooda.
.. lt'l IMJtJUlt the-DA 11 llitJ of
dltcbtfs so waetand ~.-Wei. let's
weil IO • if ~ llliea•e lftOtt ........ led. ............. ii
blki• lk clmat lw 1111 e ... ~,-~......,. .. ,. .......... ...
,.... ill Id fl ~-~· NJJ •""-"'7 I .................
ii
·Frlavor is
easier to
find, use
Sweet and sour. the taste that
made Cantonese cuisine famous.
once required a long list of m&re-
dients to achieve at home. But no1
anymore, th3nl.s to the new. na-
tional, I \ aJlab1ltty of K1kkoman
Sweet & Sour Sauce. Use it to create
these delicious d1shc~ quickl y and
easdy.
Bnghtl~ hued Cantonese weet &
Sour Chicken fcatur~ a hveJy
combination of lender chicken.
mandann orange segment • now
peas. green onions iind peanuts
.\ an appctllcr, Sweet & Sour
Dipped Chk ken Wings couldn't bC
easier or·bctter tasting.
CANTONESE SWEET
AND SOUR CHICKEN
1 wlaole claJcken breast, skinned
and boaed
1 tablespoon cornstarch
I tablespoon na tu rally brewed
_soy IHCe
· I teaspoo11 minced f resb ginger
root
l cu (11 ounces) mandarin
oru1e segmtats
J;, cap bottled sweet and sour
aaace
% tablespoons vegetable oil,
divided
,,., pond fresh snow . peas,
&rimmed
5 1reaa onJoas and tops, cut
--o-DOUILIYOVI
llONITIACI
USDA Inspected_-"'""-~---
Golden Premium
London
Broil
BHf Top Round·per lb.
(Bnt1. Round Stk. lb. 1.19)
Save 1.40 per lb.
dla&oaally ialo lllln slices _ •• _ Iii.~==~~ ltJ cap usalled roa ted peanuts . j DOVU TOUll
clalty food to stapl
~ IMle IUD-dried ~uctl to UIOCaale tbc Color aad appearantt
edd colOt-and nritina flavor 10 of ~ tomatoes with thoilc of •
palM. ..a.da. pizzas and •ucu. ch ah ~pper, dri«I toma&Ocs arc nol Dried tomatoll have beco~ pie). WMn tht tomatoes att'
increait.llly avai1'ble 1n aourmet harveited for dfy ina. they con tam 5 ll'90f Ha. U~nnarktU. Ind C'On-~ttCnUO 1.~COLnatural >UPf.-...-~
SUmtts arc usana them an every-mak1na them wttt and tlavorful. thins from '®Pl and caucrolts to 'fhtst ldCa$ for u!l1 n1 dried ~w. You can use marinated tomatoes a~ pr~\ iJcd br I ember
dncd tomatoes anywhere you Cre\t f·arm' in Sonoma Count}:
would use a mannated anichoke: -OklE.O fOMA TOl ~. <Rl·-
m1nccd dried iomato bits can be con utute in b011tng \\alcr Md
used like bacon bits. drain u package directs): .
, What a~ dried tomatoes! fht> -Ro ) salad dre ~ini: Puree
arc 5impl)' height-of-season, vane-tomato h,aJve wllh fresh garlic, drv
ripened tomat~. cut in half and mu tard and freshly ground pepp<'r.
dehydrated, either in the sun or in a Ml\ wuh ma)onn31~ and thin wuh ba t • shced npc olive) and caper\ 10
deh)drator .\lthouah one m1aht mill. Dnule over cri p grcen'i. · your polato. cq or c:h1d.:cn salad
\
4 Pack-Charmin· ..........
Bath . Tissue
Ralphs It Making Every
Effort to Brfng You ...
Apples Grown
Without Alar!
Save .43 I
Red Delicious
Apples A
Weahlngton Extre Fency WAiiii!!!.~ per lb. • ·
I
Cut chicken into I-inch pu~ccs. I Mom IACI ~!!::!~~~::3 ~~:~in~ncor~rchbo~:sa~~~a~~ Fresh Fryer Drums, 1 Gallon-alptis .:.-
~~~~c;h,1~~~~.~s ~~cu~'"y~~~. Legs, Wings or 7 I ,,~!~~~~r.ioks I 1 .. ,n 7 I
drain mandann oranges. Blend Thighs ~~h'tlti. .-. reserved S) rup with sauce. '5et Limit 4
d aow.n Pr...._.vaev. Pectt • Save 40 • as1 e. · L~~~,!~~-~~~?:.;·~--~!~~.1~1~t•~_:.:=-=..--.:=:_.1_::P~er~C~u~~~0~"'9~':..,__;:,::.:.:,~·.:.:...=....:=~..:=:_1---------__;::.:.::.:...:.:..:....=....:::::;....=;...._...1-______ ..;_;..... __ .;.,_ ____________ ~ Heat I table poon 011 m hot ~ok
or large k1llet over mcd1um-h1gh
heat Add chttken and litar-f ry 2
minute , remoH Heat remaining
011 an sam e pan. dd sno"' peas;
stir-fry J minute. Add green on-
ions; stir-fry 30 t0nds longer
Add chicken, peanuts and s~ect
and sour sauce mt\ture. l OOk and
ur until chicken , vegetable Gnd
peanuts arc coated with ~u c.
Gently tir an mandann orang.cs,
heat through. Mak ~ strv1ngs.
SWEET AND SOUR ,
DIPPED CHICKEN WING
11 ~H Wiql (aboet t ,......,
3 tablespoo111 utmr1Uy brewed
M)' 189Ce " tea.,......_ pew4er
h teal,... ,.,rib
~ "' Mtl)H IWttt ud ... ,
Ntlee
I tablnpoo11 bron • .,ar, ,.ct·
" Disjoint chicken winp. dasard
lips {Of .save for $10Ck). M1~ soy
~u«. onion powderand paprt~a an
laiJe bowl. Add chicken and s11r to ~t well. Arranac piece 'idc b>
sick. on large rack on foil-ltncd
bUina ~cc:a. Bake in •25-<ltaftt oven 25 minuies. Tum pieces over; bake 2S
minu&ci lonacr. Meanwhile. com-
bine s~t and ~ur sauct. bro"-n
IUP' and I ta'*'poon water in
imall saucepan. Heat. stirrina constantly. unul
...., d1tiolvn and \Aue% bca1ns to
bail-Rnnovc from he.at and !ef'VC
wtdl dncken. Makes • to 6 ap-
peliaer ~ ...... -------
• tll11(S CANTONIZZA
1-(II wet) nfrtpn ...
c-:,~ .........
I
Stouffer's Frozen
Entrees 1 ,........ ...... v ........... ,1 ... -..
Sin .40 •
Dakota Farms Natural
Cheese 1 1 L ~-Of
==O&.P"t
Save .40 •
~hff.Punot f-ruit
1
5
,,_,. P-OllW
Of Lite ot P .. ch ........
. " ... '~ Save .26 •
Prices eflectlVe April 6 thna April 12, 1989
Scotch-Brite Kitchen
Scrub-SPQnge ...
By KAREN M. REED
~ ...... COi,. .......
Marcia Wallace, best ~nown for her rok a~ (amt on
the old "Bob Ncwhan how." pla) ed her pan 3\ guest
speaker at Saturda) 's "EsSt·nccol 5pring" fa4>h1on sho" to
pcrfecuon.
flcrcntcrtaan ingthe audience with her c\pe11cnccs
as an adopt I\ c parent to the 14-month..okl child he
fond I)' refers to as "the 11.:rminator:· Wallace 'lk11lfulh
tumC'd the tables from lc' 1t:r to tear as she reminded.th<.·
crowd of the purposcofthec,ent -tora1~ funds fort he
Amcrican CancerSociety(A ).
A breast cancer survivor herself, Walla,·c told 1he •
story of her fiiend who succumbed to the samcda a!>C 111
September-a woman who denied the lump 1n her breast
fora :rear.
"It's a terrif :ring, asolauna d1c;casc." she said of 1 he
affliction which today is diagnosed inone ofcvcf) 10 women. "Listen to your body. Don't ever ignore on) thing
you perceive to be different." I The mood du ting the sixth annual AC fund ra1'1( r
was far from grim, however. as nearl~ 6()()con'" u1I
women crowded into the Jn inc I hlton &. To,,cr, for a
silent auction. luncheon and fashion show
"We wcregoiogto use onl)' two-thirds ofthl·
ballroom." sa id event chairforthe!.Ceond )l'ar Diana
Edmonds, explaining that the silent auc11on tJhk\ were to
fill the final third." But "'e had to move the silent auction
out wtlcn wc sol~ out the lun cheon.··
The silent auction, oppo rtunit} pme 11cl..t..·t<, and $40
luncheon lie ket combined brouAht net procccd<, 10 \Ct.; in
at well over la!>t )Car's total ofSJ0,000, a1.'tor~hn& to
Edmonds.
A.lso ll.1 ~lot arepc t J":rformanc.c \\Al\ Lo!> ngl'h.'\
Ram Joi.ult Johnson, no" an old hi nd at modeling in the
annual fa4>h1on \ho" Wh at he d1d n'.t know. bo"cvrr, WO!.
the plan to present a surpr1'1C 8\\ard 1 n honor ofh1s
fa rewell to Sou thern O th fornin "f 11.Mw he ¥>Ouldn'1
come toda> 11'1 told him." \31<l E-dmond
Johnwn has Jcccptcd a SI l m1ll1on contralt w11h the
\eattlc~aha" k'iand "'"be ka\ ingthearca. much to t he
d1!.appo1ntmcn1 oflhc Or.ingl• ( ount\ .\~ unit
J dmomhcuuldn't rc'"all ho" man) \tg.ncd footballrnr JCf~)'S'ihc'dn:cel\edlrom John on."£vc1111me l call
him . h\:'sdonl' \omctbing \\Onderful for U'i. •
Al o rel"el' 1ngan aworJ wn'IArdlate.RelsLadin,
• honorarvch:urman, for hcrdcd1c.it1on and c;c·rv Lceto the cau~ of~ .ann:1 pre' cnt1on . r ollo\\ ins a lunl"hcon oforit"ntal pa ta ~lad
supreml· of chicken p1 ata and lre .. h lemon nnpoleon. •
fas hion tiow pr<.i Khty ~He tool the mile to prrsent
pn ng fosh1uns from ·cw port Ccntcr/F3.$h1on I lan<i
A~ ha become a trad1t1on the modcli.all are
mcmbcri.uf the t lunt1ngto n Harbour Cancer League. and
indudcd btri Beitner, Barban Cbarlton,Perl Corso, -
l abel Greenwald, Sbell Whitney Grossman, Beverly
Maguire, IAri Planeta, Ro t Reed and Myra Stillman.
Of COUT"\C' .lohnsonest"orted 3 IJd\' Ort"OdO\\ n the
run\\a), a'> did 1hri.-e ot Orange ( ount) 'c; fcarlc s lircli~hh:rs Glenn Seklns,JQ.hn Mancha :ind Rick 8aTtleu
-a11··hun~'·1rom th(' f1rel-o' calendar
~\t' cl') l.1":>h1on c;how \\'Cm\ to end" 1th n \\<Cddmg
gov.n. l t''ll1e took thcopportun1t' to clothe two
nt'\\ l)'\\Cd\·IO·lx· -( anl:cr \<><. •l'I~ swfT memher\
Mells a Rttd and Kirk Wilks-a\ pnde and groom
Ken Hlc~man, longt1mC' 'oluntccrand (.·ommandmg
officcrofopcralloni. lor thl..' l ll'> \ngclc!. Polin·
DcpanmC'nt. C'f\ cd a11 mac;tcrof u:rcllJ,Onies
o~ "'°' ~··· ., .__ ...._
Ardlste Reis udln and ••·Los Angeles Ram Johnnie
Johnson were honored for cancer-prevention efforts.
Of R ·LA 'Dl:R~. \~ u!.ual ,
)Our \anct1moniou hoh(;r-1tun-
thou 3ltltUdC got In tht' W&l) or )OUr
good ..cn..e I rckr to ~our re pon!.e to
thc rl·adet who wac, up~I \\hen he
sa". -.catcd at the ncAt table in a
restaurant. a man v.i thout urms "ho
"Jc; ca11ng w11h his fh·t. \\hen people go 10 a nic(' pla(.c for
dinn r the la t thing the} "ant to sec
1c; c;omc lreak who ht-longs in a
s1tk':>how If that man "'ithout arms
h.td an) con'i1dera11on for others. he
\\OUld not \UOJeO tht"m to 'iuch an unappct111n~ S•JhL l 'nfonunatcl).
h:ind1(.apped people around the na-
tion h3H' been OrBIO"a~hcd b)
blctd1ng h.carts hkc )'OU who ha\.c
made them helie\.C the) are .. Just like
e' cryh<xi> else .. and ''ckorne l'\.Cl) •
"hc.>rc.
It I l'' er~" a sight lit..c that I v.ould
lea' c the rc~taurant -'\ JI { 0
C II \'
Dear A.H .. You are entitled to your
opinion, bot It might interest you to
bow that I recel~ed more tltu e,ooo r
respon u to that columa, and you ancl
a woman ln Brookfield, Wll ., ~ere tbe
only two wbo felt tbat·tbe man did not
bl' long in the,. restaurant. . ,
I bopt you oe\tr becomt baodl·
cap~d. But comt to think of Ir, you
already have a more ~rloH llaodlup
than tbe man lo t.be reataearaot wbo
bad no arms You bave no burl . .. . .
Guest speaker Marcia Wallace and emcee K'n
Hickman cheek with Diana Cdmonds.
f Jre..f oa:es..Glenn .Sulns, John Mancha •nd Ride
Bartlett prepare to model sportswe,ar.
Jeanne Price, Pamela Pa ul and Donna Blue
attended American Cancer Society luncheon.
[)f:. \R i\i'-L ~DJ R~ You ·,c
had \C\eral letter\ in ):Our column
1h~'><.' IJst tcw month<, from women
v.ho ,et txa1 up0b) tlmr hu\bands
I II tdl )OU hov. I ~hed the
probkm '\;1nc out of 10 men "ho
bc'3t thnr .. "•'C'> "ould think tv.1l'\: SPOTl.IGHT
-Newport man to study at Oxford
Princeton University senior 8. on r ursda) at the Four\CC\\On<; Mun. OD ol Newport ttcarh l)1~tnc.t
Price Kerfoot h~s won a Ne"ton-Hotel in l'\lcv.pon Beal h ~l21\wmpnsed-of6~clull\ .
1 a tum holarsh1p for two \'cars of The I 5 honoree\ \\1..'rc c oun ul r\nt1upa11ng BcrgC'>On·., member· -.tud~ at Ralhol College 1n Oxford .\ ppca 1 J u\t ice bell a Prell \hip 10 Rota!) Club President Gene
The scholarship wa" endowed b~ Sooensbioe, ·~o: '>urxnor court ·Cook '•lid. 1 he tall to puoh<. -.en ice
two San Franciscans. Pc tN l Ne\\· Judge 'Franc! 0 P. Bri eno, '6~. Loi 1c; 01w of thl' highest form\ of public
ton and Frank D. Tatum. Jr 1949 A. Cardena , '6g. Manu el A. Ramirez, \t'r' I\ l' \s a \Cf\ ice c luh v.c arc
graduates of Balhol. '74; Judith M. Ryan, '70, W.F. c>.trcnwl> proud to recogn11e th"
The scholarship hns tx-cn 8•' en R)'laarsdam, '64 Robtrl . Todd, ·5 7. out\tandin~ J?Uhhl servant in our
annuall\; since 198 1. Onncholar hip. Jame K. Turner ·5~ Rk bard G. mcmhcr<.h1p ~ ' . . . rt..'<=JP.t ent 1s chosen each )l'ar from Vogl, ·68 and Muniup31 C '~~;' Br~tt Tallman of ( ostJ Mesa .ind
Ca11fom1a candidates who appt\ but Jud&.l' Ro< ell A. ~~ trom. -_Mkhul Richardson "111 _iraduatc
are not awarded n Rhodc., <>cholar· Denni • . Choate. Alan 1 cum laudc o\pnfl 1 from {"al S'tatc
shrp. • McKone, ."°· Ga~~ P. R)an, 7 _ Domingue/ Hills. To Ix' cha.ibk lor
The ~on of Mr anJ \.fr<; Br.ml·h Floyd ff. Schenk, '10 and Oa,·ld C. the .tla<lcm1c honor. a student mu 1
Kerfoot Jr of Ncwpon Beach. Vela quei , 71( h:IH' obtained a ~mdc point a'crag(•
Kerfoot will rclCI\ c a Pnnt:t:ton • • ' of*' ..io. 1 59 on a 4.0 \('"al~ : bachelor's degree in molecular 1 he !'.ewpon \unri<,t• J{utar) C luh • • • b1olog~ 1h1'> )'CU. \\Ith a grade point "ckomc:d tate . Stn. Marian J tnoller ~evllle, the tt:iughtcr of
a'eragc ol l 95 Bergeson, R-"'cwport fkach a' ''' \.1r and Ml'\ Patrick e'illc. was • • • ~"t:ond lemalc mrmN:r at the 1nduc· m1t1all"<l 1nto the national 4-oront' of
Lo:rola La"' hool and the Orange uon rc:rcmon) \\ h1<:h ·~ part ol the K.1ppa 1\lpha 1 lwta .u "1llanova
C ounty Alumni Comm111ec honored Rotal'\ D11>tm t 512 ( ontcrcnc:l' l nl\ rr\1t~ • • •
alumni members of the JUdH.mf) Bcrgc\<>n, anduct1on w;i... ul Compiled by Katy Bourbtr, Emil)
serving in Orange County at a dinner ficiatcd b, pa\t 0 1stn('t (10\. Ward Adami aod Joye·~ 8odlovlrb.
1 ... 11. BOl D
Conversationalists ' gestures prove they're alive
People gc:\turc as they talk for 1wo "I he I J\t !>uppu," hardl~ an~hod~ l uropcun' lo plasttr 1t oil ov er walls
reasons: The lesser. to punctuate ,.,,hat thought 11 wa-. "onh .1 hoot '\ ou can mend cracked ~ ~hell\
the) 're sa} 1ng The grea ter to re· ,0 , H't diplonmt., .n the lJn1tt·J l II I p· I assure thcm<,elve• that thc..,·r·· ~1111 "•l l n · op lane tape. igcon rCl·t crs
.. J .. "> l\/auons \\On thl' 191\8 11an1 Ii~ kl't' d th· t ah'e and "' 1d. The) touch their 0 •1 · lOffi(X'lll lOn. f hl'lr ~ar~ got 4,()Jl chins. clOO\\\. i:ars. knuckles. check':> Clt3llOO'), thl· 111>-pa) \';lfll'I~ picked There'<; a ~1ent1 fic C:%planat1on or
()o sa:rs a ps)cholog.i t. who claim\ up b> the le'6Jll~ immune. Mure than \\h~ a heron Mand\ w mut h of the
also. the convcrsa1100 gesture 1\n't any other rnuntl \ '!> tune on one leg: to rest the: othc:1 one
learned. It fi lls an inherent ncl'd ·1 h >c" bl .1 ~ b'rth d 't l . True. thr Chine'" invcnt•·d Q Wh1r h has b1gacr lips" -th e c"' inu irom ' o i . oo ,., ' ~tatuc ofl ibertv oran1~potamu ., wallpaJ)lr but the) didn't II.now 1t ; When l conardo da V1nc1 p.unteJ w a., JU\l drrnr.Hl\C p.ipc1 . I ooJ. the • tutuc. three feet v.1 l'. "hippo·
---------------------------l1p\ arc onl) two feet "•de
mona C1okkn Jalc Hnd&e JUlnP.
er,, men outnumtxr v.omc:n ttil't'C to
one.
llOHOS(.OPI·:
By SYDNEY O M.ARR
Thur day, April 6
ARI E ( \farch ~ 1 .\p11I 19): :""l:l"" \1oon Jll \our \1gn <.·mphJ\llC\ (olor
c;ho" man\h1p.._..pct'>O~. \! ca.r
,ar\.lng 'lhadl'\ of red and gold. Takc
1n11ia11' l' \tH·sc; onginaht and 'f<JUI'.
o"n '>l\k r am1I\ mcmt>cr tell\ al l.
TAl'Rt!S C \pnl ~l~\I," 1111. \l·
(.l'Ot 011 'open \c:crl'I · lnd1\ldual.
tcmpuranl) confinl«J tJf~, ;ibou1
fa<,h1on d1l'I. numt111n. hod' 11n,1gl'
'\ou'll learn pknt) 11 \OU m;unta111 ..
sen · of humor. (1 cnim1 n:tll'l'
rrlatl.') nw'>\Jg.l •
GEMINI f\fa\ ll -Jun~ ~O) < c>c11>-
crn1c "•th Tauru~ pcr~on. You·11 Ile.'
offered n.nllrat•t or agn:rnwnl H.'ttuir
in}!. rc\l\IOn. rebuilding. re' amping
of pnx.t•durl'\ J here.• 1\ h1dd~n dau~
-looli.. out for 1\ 'K oq'1o al\Cl in
flll'lUIC.
CAN'CF.R <Jurll· ~I Jul) ~~1· l>o
\Oml' <ktnll\.C \\Ori. \ubtk dues an· pr~~nl ~n 1 10 !l(' :anal> 11c.1l
( arn·r 01 rqlulat1on m1gh1 ~· al
sttili..t• \ 1nd1l ll'C mcmhcr 01 opf)()\llc-
sc' play., rnlt: You'll cm~·r1w " ·
llHIOU'o LEO (Juh 11-Aug 2~); Scl'll.mu
ft•awres prtie. rcv.ard. You·111u:hic\C
;o;sl With hdp-Af.-unc ~le ~ tu you.
po<,\1bly t..imah memtx-r f m!'ha\l\
on pcrformanc.c. howman hip 5en·
\U<tli'> 1 aul'\J.,, I 1bra fX•l\on~ pla)
roles VIRGO ( .\ug.. 21-'K·pt. ~21 l>cfinc
term\, pcrfe1.t Jcchniqur\. ·rt ttd of
burdl·n wh11:h actu:ilh hclona.s to
\Omcone at a dl\t:in<.c \top pla)ing
role of c maker. C>11 dt'~P filr
inform ut1on rrg.irding legal
pro~1,1on\
LIBRA (~cpl. 1 l·O~t . .22):
Strcnathcll llC'-with one who"hd 1"-'d
you tn p:m Lo\ c relation hip ''!ong
but not ~1thout thorn\. F.mphu1' on
marital 'talu\, n·pu1a11on, kpl right~
and ~rm"''°n Cancer nall\t 111
pu;tu rc.
SCORPIO (Oct. B·
MONEY SAVING COUPONS
BIG
CHEE ALE
NOW THRU APRIL 16
1.00 lb. off·
our best setllng cheeses. . .
Uncle Walt's· Cheddar. CotbY,, Jarlsberge
smoky, Havarti, Chutter, Hot PePPer: ChOosee
Swtsa. Choose8 Colby (99 % ChOlesterol Free)
--tcHff Plaza
..
_ Ix-lore doing 11 a~11n 1f the "''~
appeared .. lar """>" 1\ dose. You'll would do wtiat I did lcKat~ ml\11ng an1cle. u \OC1auon \h hu.,b:>nd c,ud;cd n1c 1n the jaw • ~ilronr in pa<,t could tx· rev 1H.-d. when I wac, six month\ prl·gnani. I
f mph,,,, on 1dcall\nt, romanll., p1lkcd up a tdhl~ lamp uoJ cr.1ckcd 11
ctlllc.. pnnl'1pk'I \nee. figure' on·r hi\ head. I k 'Al\ \hocked that I
prummc:nth 'AOUld dp \U(. ha thing and \tood there
AGlTTARJUS" 7'.11\. :'!:!-fX·c ... ~ctlle~ I l_ookcd tnm in .the-tj-C-
\ ou II 'a', · \ 1 IJ'll l'H r\ th1na seem ' and \aid. ··) ou "'111 nc' er hit me
to Ix' lalfin 1n pla l·:· You'll rea~h ag;lm •• \ntl he didn't, u11Jcr~t:ind1ng with 1nJ" 1du:il "ho W v.111 cl'lcbratl' our 57th \\cddmg
had lx:c:n ub\tin:atc f><'"'hl) ~lfi.,h . aon1Hr\.ll) n~ ~t month -:\t R\ (
Ph)\ll,11 a.ttrJ(t11,tn '' \lrnng ... umu-· I t W \R" · l.111ng. DEAR MR . .: Apparenlly brain-
CAPRICOR "1 (f>i.~ ll·J,an 191 ln~,ourbo band•it.halamp,..orlled
I am1ll; mcmhc:r <'-'fl'C -.C\ dt•\11t· 111 b\· for you. Fdty·sevtn yur ls a long
.. morel ln~h kmt •• I h".11'~ lint" hut 1t tlmt ud I can't argue with occH .
v.111 IX' ne<c\..an .f111 )OU 111 taJ.c But I don't r~commud your ap-~rc:itrr , h.H\ll' o( \otir f1\\o1l lir .. um . proacb to ot.bt r .
RtlU\C' to he \uhj <:t 111 cmut1<>11:.1 l>I .\I< \NN ·, • ~l>f R Ten
hl&1d.mJil 1 )t.lr\ uao I"·"'' 55 )'l'llr\ old .ind l hJd AQ ARllS Chn 1ll·l l'~-IX)' a h,mJ tlffil' lind1ng UJllh, \O I lied Hro.adcn hon1on\ changi.: pace. ;ihout nn age. I v.ill Ile.' 6 1n two
stn\C for more cnt..:munioa "I> of month~ ·:ind I want to rnntinue to
!)Ullin id ·ao; a"O''> hXU'I on 'tr· work "'ow huv. do I hand It nn
at1hl). humor,. warC'Jll' 'ol d1c-t-:and S<K'ial ~'{Uflt) anJ kdicarr" ''
nutncwn. Rl"l;st1~e mJJ.C\ \urpmc thl.'rc a £1'·n.ih' for not lihng at 6S?
call. <1cn11111 in\ohcd I dun t w1n1 m1t bo~s.c.·, to kno~ m) ••ascE. (f t'I\ 19-M. [.<:h 20)' 1.~ld·· I~ bc\:.lUW th't.-) in\l\t th.u • II
v1dual \\ho .-pp;.ircnll) a.•"e up on cmpln)CC\ kavc or relm: .u b
)OU will r~·turn m \('ll'4ilmn I man-_ I <"'. Ii\ "'l \\I Oki E \'I.,\
ncr \pot light on prnnlOh<m. monc), DEAR I C. \\t t ontartfd thf'
10\.C'ltmcnt, protcmuo ol,.' lu;tl'\lc!> <'t'Dlral . 1.ai ertt, otn~ In
I ho"l: "'hu thought 011 lat kt-d rnlor Baltimore. TM polleapeople "'tre
vt11l retract. ___..--m• 1 <"OOPfrallu. Tbf' told ., ilit
IF APRIL• I. VO tl R BIRTllOA Y follo•lar: ~,·n;ino fcatun: t'\c1tcml'nt ol di\ Tltert I• 10 peeatay for oot applylag
covt'r • nc:v. lovr. on 10. ht) ab1ht) for Soc:lal 8«9rlty btotfU at a,e U . co art to hC:lrt of matte" 'nu ha1tt Jo fact, ti.ert ii an ID<'t1llve oot to.
unu,ual '01c-e. apprcc 1:itmn for ..rt PoT tnry year after a1 f' &'-at )Oii
and mu 1<. ) our Kn~ ol Jram.i 1 -9oo't apply, ou rtt'the a S pertnt
hontd m ra1or o;harpnr You arc lecrea~ la moatlaJ bn flll •lllen
romantic, ~n~1t1\.c, n bl-11: yot1 do aP,PI)'. ·
111dul£l'n1, coukS ha"e •• "ttt tooth" · ~prtia& Mf4kare: If )M art
1 auru Libra. St·orp10 rcnon) r la) stUI •orkJ11 aed are tenrt4 •Mer
•1mporlJnt role\ an )Our h(e. J)unna )'Olr tmployer's !Matt• lu•ruct,
Mn> 'l'riou't domlf ti< .tlJJU\tmcnt you at~d not 1pply fer btMflts. T'lliert oc.~urs. coukl 1mol\t rt\1<.kn l\ •lll btnoptaalt) lf)H•1hllll1ftu niantal -;talU\ Jul y also mc moratti H le .,,,,.
HHIUf,I
TWO roa ONI
IS GOOD I IN
1j CHAM.IS GOREN
and OMAA SHARfF
Neathet vUlnerable. South deals.
ORTH ·
• Q 6 4
Q 7' O AK 6 4 3 • s 41 u.n . ..,.
~,
0 Q11172
•0111,, • l'JJ
IOllTll
• Al2 ~AKQlll911 ~ v ...
A
..
~ llANDOLnt E. SOMO
,, 2 .........
WASHINGTON -Ra ana pncet
are (orcinayouna couples to dt~y one
pen of the Amencan dream -
owninathc1rownltome-even as the
number of availa'blc houSts 1s srow-
1na more that\ twice as fast as the
population. the Census Bureau said
Wednesday.
Over the decade that bepn in 1975,
median prices for a first home rose
I 2S percent. from $27,100 to S61,000
1n 19851 while the averqe income of
mamco couples rent1na their home.
and aged 25 to 29 rose only 80
per«nt. from S 12.JOO to $22.200. 1he
•
bureau reported. Tm'""''· ~nws h<MHi,. ~ F. John Devane) said, 1s that cou
who ulCd to move from rcntint to
o•ni111 in their 20s are now lll)ltly
delayina the trans1uon into their 30S
or later beCause they can no longcr
qualify for monpacs on tt)c homes
they want.
In ·1975 three-fourJhs of married
couplt1 aged 25 to 35 qualified for an 80 percent mortpge, a fi1ure that fell
to less than half by 1985. the study
found.
Over the same penod. the nation's
housing tock grew by 26 percent.
-.h1lc 1he U.S. populauon rose by just
11 percent. the Cen us Bureau re-
ponCd 1n us new anal)sis. ··HouS&na
1n Amerw:a; 198s..a6." --Hclpina absorb tbe growana
numbtr of available homes arc the
trend toward second-home own-
ership and a shnnb&c in averqe
houSthold size. from 1."94 1n 1975 to
2 69 a decade later.
D1vo~ and Stpara11on. up sharply
1n rec,cnt years.1 have turned one
household into two. Devaney ob-
tcrved. "One ID lO homeowner uni ls
1s a ~oman h vina alone." he said.
In 1dd1uon. many elderly Wldows
continue to marntalD their homes a1
the same ume 1ncreas1ng numbers of
)Ouna peopl~ arc postponing mar·
naic.
Silicon Systems expanding .
with sales, plants abroad
By DONNA MOONEY ·
o.-y l'loC lui.!Mu 11910t
Jim Pc1erson and 750 other
Oran.cc ounty folk~are gct11ng fat
on chips and wafer\.
. And 1f they ha ve their wa). the
· whole world will eat them up.
Peterson. vice president of an·
temauonal sales for the h1gh-1cch
firm S1hcon ystems. 1old his
company's success stOI) in the
computer mdustl) Wednesda) at
the Orange Count> World Trade
Center Assoc1a11on's meeting
1hcon de 1gns and manufac·
tu res parts for hard disk dn~c!t aiW
telccommunica11ons s)stems. l1s
goodies can be found 1ns1dc laptop
computer . automated teller ma-
chines. c:rcd11 vcnfica11on S) stems
and Chevrolet Corveucs.
S1hcon )Stems wn~ started in
-1912 by five enimcen who de·
signed integrated c1rcu11s nnd had
them filbncatcd 1n wha1 was 10
become Silicon Valle) In 1981 the
comp?rny opened a dc~1go center
in. Tustin, adding a wafer fobn ·
cation plant there the following
year"durina management changes.
Pe1erson rode the management
wave Into Silicon S}stems, pack·
mg a bachelor's degree 1 n engineer-
ing from Bn&ham \ oung Univcr·
sity. an MBA from New York
nivcrsny and inside knowledge
from his }ears with Rockwell and
General Jn 1rumcnts
Jim Peterson
1hcon needed to expand ,\
second public oJlcnng drew in
cnou&h capital to let the firm go
worldwide, Pe1erson said. In 1985
S1hcon opened a technology center
in ingaport , "h1ch now emplO)\ .
400. The follow1Dg )car the firm
t?egan ajtiint \enture with Roger
Corp.. the 1n1roduct1 on of
Smanflex ) stems
Last )ear the compan-r bought a
~afCr fabrication plant lrom
T&T in ~nta Cruz. the finn's
~ond facility. S1hcon also plans
to open a des1&n ccntcr.rn San Jose.
1ltcon 'ystcms" growth curves
are draped across the firm's annual
report hkc strings of Chns1mas
h_ghts. Revenues have doubled
mce 1984, up to $120.8 mllhon.
ct income grew from S 100.000 during an expahs1on period 1n
1986 10 S 12. 7 mill ion. The com-
pany posted record orders ofS 149
m1lhon for the )ear and the h1&best
backlog ever. at $62 m101on
Earn1 ngs per share l\as grown from
46 cents per share in 1985toS1.6 7.
Last August the firm hit the New
York Stock Exchange hs1.
lnternauonal sales have grown
to 55 percent of total sales
Singapore racked up a $40 m1lhon t.a~ la.st )eat. Jca.dmg, the list of
bu)er Japart pent S20 million
and Europe spent $4.3 m1lhon.
Peterson pinpointed Euro(>C as
the nc\I burgeoning market. ales
are expcc1ed 10 grow to double
d1g11s this )'car and Pcte1'50n pla~s
to tour several s11e there this
month 10 open the firm's next
plant
Despite slower growth revealed
in first ·quarter re ults. Peterson
said he expects Silicon employ·
mcnt 1n Orange Coun1y will grow
up 10 20 percent 1h1s )'Car.
State auc;lit says insurer profits
soar in workers ' compensation ·
lyDOUGWIWS
................ 111,. ..
SAC'RAMENTO-UUt'audllor
generars report sa)s that while < ah·
fom1a employer, pay ome of the
nation's h1ghe I workers' compcnsa·
tton rates, benefits for worker!. lag
bebtnd other states. bu1 in~urcr
profits have soared. \
The 138-paac report. released
Wednesday by the nonpartisan tate
auditor acneral and lxmocrauc lcgn-
lators. was supponcd in pan by Ronald Rinaldi. Rtpubhcan (,o,.
Gcorst DcukmcJ1an ~ director of
rndu1tn.al rcla11on . although R1n.ald1
said he ~a n't prepared to comment
in detail.
1mmed1ately endorsed the rcpon. ma bcneltt 10 ~orkrrs. pa) ment
M Attorneys have often been unfai r-. doctors. adm1nis1ra11ve costs and
I) blamed for ming premium co t . legal costs. increased by onJ) 60
but now the state auditor general 1s percent, from $2 87 b1llton to S4.71
po1nttng the finger where It belongs -b1llton.
on the insurance compan1c\," Rabine The remainder, the audit said. 1s
said. protit~ up from S560 million in 1983
.Assemblyman Bruce Bronzan. 0-to S 1.44 b1llton 1n 1987. And those
Fresno. who re~l!CSted the audit. figure reflect onl y direct profits from dcscnbcd 11s findings as .. tarthng," prt'm1ums, not inHstmcnt profits.
and said the audit exposed as myths which arc often several times greater
the commonl) held views that the than premium profits of insurers.
major problems in workt'rs com-The rcpOrt b) acung auditor gcn-
pen·sa11on arc cAcc "t attorne) fees. eral Kun JObcrg also nott'd that
dubious v.orkcr tnJUI) claims or an while ( ahforn1a·s average weckJ)
citcessne bureaut.Tat1c red 1apc ~lal) of$444 is s"th h1ghrs1 among
althou&h he said 1mprovemt'nt could the 50 talcs. ahfom1a ranks 45th 1n
be made 1n all of those area\ its ma,1111um d1sab1ht~ benefit of
.. urpnsingl), the problem area of S224 p!!r V.l-Cl
lh1 em .arc -not the ~o t of Bronzan said uhfom1a could be
liuga11on. 1ncre:a~'d ire s claim nor raised from 45th 1n benefits to the
lacl of staff 10 administer the pro-national a\cragc without ra1s1ng cm·
gram:· 13ronzan told a nev.s con-plo)er premiums
ft'rcncc present in& the audit He said that contrary to the publu.:
:The Censua Burau report was
~leued JUll • day. afta tbc f cdcraJ
Home Loan Bank Board rcporied
that convtntionaJ mof'1111!C inter"'
rates rose in March to their hiJhest
level s.ince JUlt before the 1987 1tock
market cra1h.
Mo rtgage rates highest since crash
The board saad the nauonal avt'r·
a&t' for COn\entional, s1naJe-f1m1ly
loans 1umoed to 11 .36 J)'rccnt in
early March, up from 11.1 f percent in
early February • While renters arc facing stC't'per
obstacles to own1D& their first home.
the report said tha1 people who
already own a house art more able to bu) a second home.
fl'lease 1H HOUSING/C•J
WASHINGTON (AP) -lntert'lt
rates on JO.year. fixed-rate mortpael
mcrcascd in March to their h1Jhctt level since JUSt before the 1987 stock
markel crash. the ao\emment said
Tuesday.
The Federal Home Loan Bank
Board, the reaulator of savinas ID·
st1tu11ons. said the national •"mac
for conventional. sinaJe-fam1ly loans
Jumped to l l.36 ptrccnl in early
March, up from 11.11 percent in early
.February. lt was the btRhest ratt smce early
October l 987, when the IVef'IF hit
11 42 ~nt JUll before lbc stock
market cruh. lnterat rata bcpa
falhna after the crash u the FedCral
Rcterve Board pumped mone;y into
the economy to aUard apanat a
rcccs11on The bank board said rates for the
most popular type of one-year ~
JUStable-rate monpees. thOIC with
caps on how hi&h the rate can
increase, also rost fast month to 9.7S
percent. up from 9.6 perunt in early
fl'le ... '"MOllTGAM/af
Ueberroth yet to inkEastern deal
By MARCY GORDON Wednesday and cohlmued them unttl unusually broad powen would in-
and RONALD BLUM around 8 p.m. The.' source told The elude a mandate to mediate the bitter ~,.,.... wrtMn sSOCtated Pms that nego1iat1ons labor dispute at Eastern and act the
NEW YORK _ For the second "ould re ume Thursday mom mg 11rhnt' Oyana qaan.
11me in a ~eek. formrr baseball .. They don't ha\C a deal ... the Union and auhne sources bad
commissioner Peter v. Ucberroth source said. "There's still nego-1nd1catcd late Tuesday niaht and
thou&ht he had a deal 10 purchase taat1ons and sttckmg points. It' no1 throuahout Wednesday that a sale to
ustcm Atrhncs onl y to sec the dont... the \Jt'berroth aroup was virtually
a_greement wtth l'cxa 1r Corp. 'The deal had appeared to be cenain. Eastern booked a mcetina
Chairman. Frank l oren10 foll completed Wednesday afternoon, room for 7 p.m . .Wednesday at a
through at the la.st minute when a New York public relauons Manhattan hotel in anticipation of a
A sourc.e fam1hnr with tht ncgo-firm that works with Lorenzo wa possible deal. but later told arrivin&
t1at1ons s:ud the two s1dts reached an told to rcnl a hotci room for a 1 p.m. reporters ther.c was no an-
accord tuesday nt&ht and were set to news conference to announce 11. At nouncement.
make the announcement Wcdncs· 6:35 p.m., the pubhc relations firm Bruce Zirinsky. a bankruptcy at-
day. The source said the deal bej.an to was told ther\! would be no an· tome) represcnttna Eastern, wd an
unravt'I on Wednesday mornin . as nounccmtnt. accord on th.c,sak of the carrier wu
Ueberroth believed Lorenzo was Separately. 1ht U. . bankruptC) .. hkely 1mp11ncnt, .. He didn't name
again changing the terms of the court appointed Wa hmg1on at-the wtor but sourocs have said it was
agreement. tome) Da' 1d hapiro as examiner 1n the eberroth aroup. which made
"Both sides thou&ht they had 1 deal the Eastern bankruptcy reorpniza-and later withdrew a $464 million
but there were ~me suckina points 11on c.asc. ofTt'r for Eastern last week..
1hat kept nt-got1auons con11nuing hap1ro. 60. a partnt'r 1n the firtn Zmnsky told Lifland. who is ovcr-
instead of concluding." 1he sourer D1d:stem hap1ro & Monn, wa seem& Eastcm's Chapter 11 re·
said recommended by u Trustee Harry orpnizauon and must apPn>ve any
Ueberroth. who returned to New Jones and appointed b) U.S sale arnnaemcnt, that !llCflOUI oee<>-
York latt' fucsda) night from hi s BankruptC) Judge Burton Lifland 11at1onsonasalcofEutcmcontin.acd
Cahfom1a homc ... be&an ncgo11auon~ Lifland reccntl) ordered the ap-\i\lcdnesday.
with Lorcn10 at /·JO am· ....... ...-_,po~mlmcn of n amrtn(T, wh~ -• ...-~/c.f
---------. -. . .. ... . -. . . . . .
• . • i . • • .. • • . . . . .
.. -... -. .. .. . ---........... ,. ,. . . .
..
We're Having· ·A
I.~ a
•
•
Our New 18·Month High·Yleld Bonus CD
Is Something To Celebrate ...
g.530/o 1 Q.00%
Annual Interest-Rate Annual Interest Yield
$25,000 minimum
11 s F esta e a Union Federal Savings Ban Our ne ....
S·mootn Cert I ca1e of Deoos1t W1lh a $25 000 m1nunum rot orJv
R1nald1. who 1mon1 other duties
chain the nonprofit S~te C ompensa·
uon Insurance Fund. whtch 1 u~
most of the pohc1cs for h•ah·n l
emplo)m who can't c1 1n~uran«
from pnvatt firms. cauuou ly airccJ
with man)' of the audttor's find1ni
nouns that even h1 fund report'
substanual profit . which are re-
turned to cmplo)cr\. under Calt-
fom11's current ~orkcr\· <.ompen'i.3-
uon rate structure
"The premium tnc:rease to cm· perctp11on of c11crn1vt' ht1131ion
ploy«s appear to be arcatt'r than the dm 1111 up cO\l'I. 85 percent of all
co tofpa)'mcnt toemplo)ees Qu11e (a11fornia v.orkcrs· compensation
clcarl}. based on premium dollar claims a~ nleJ w1thou1 an) d1!1·
alone. tn\urance compan1c art' 1n· putc
crcasinJ their profit subs1an111lly, --------------1
which 1 contrary to v.hat the.' l..eg1<1~
lature ha been told." Bron1an said.
o .. ers a guaranteed hig rate •• I a•X)ws you to earn e"Ver r:'l()(e
Yoo can aiso earn a 25% interest rate bonus on 'f(}Jr entire
accocnl •hen you ··ansfer al east S 10 000 lrom anothe"
The state' laracst prt"att' mucr or
workers' compcn~uon pohc1e~. In·
dustrial lndcmnit)' \o dcchncd 1m~111e comment on the rcpon 8ut Merle Rabine, \)re'-ldcnt or the
Cllifomaa Apphcant5 Anornc)' As~ toriauon. whtdt ~pretenlS ,.orkcn.
1 he aud11 s~ud v.orkers' com_P..t:nsa·
t1on premium~ paid b)" C'altfom1a
emplO}Cf'1 increased b~ 85 percent.
from SJ.JI btlhon to S6. I 5 b1lhon.
from 1983 lhrouah 1987. the final
)~Ir of the study. while cost~. 1nclud·
&.nk of ~ewper•
"•or!.. Pric·r Quote'
Harri11 tcrr. Ryan
& Company
\ltmbtor \-\'0 'If>( 752· j Ii 1
: • p .. A • .. • • .., • • I j .. •• ' • • • • • .. J .... ' • t • ' • • ' ... • ~. ~ .. ,. ~ • ,.\
..
lNTE RN A TIO NA L Co UNTR Y Cu 1s 1 NE
• CHARDONNAYPOACHEDSALMON
'"A Mlrrt P~~lt S."« S14.9S
• SAUTEED VEAL MEDALLIONS
Witll A D11ri R•lff R11i1i" S•~e SJS-'5
• CHICKEN BREAST STRIPS S.•t.W
'" G11rlk A-' fmlt a.Ml, SWwtl 0.. £11
r*"twilll WI" CwllM Alftl
._moc:M# 111.'5
l nancial nst11ut10n
Ano since s year s income tax deao me (Ap<il 7 h)
is right around e comer. :he 8-Mont CD lS also e
perfect place ;o consolidate yoor IRA account
As about our soec1aJ Fiesta CD as wen·· •ts got a
e ight numbefs a hlQ 9 35 annual interest ra e (9 80%
a.'YIUa teres y e J bw room ot $2,000 and shOO
9·mon ter
11 UnfOO Federa Sa ngs Ba Smar money Fes e rates.
UNION
' I D I R A L
----~..._ __ ,..,...,. ............. .,,,.,,,....,~ • u-nns w. 2 llll'IU <altl
..... 253»(~
4mt
.......... 10Mr'DM
•M!o4133
OI Or ... C..DM.YMOTl~,Apftll, ..
ffOUING ,,.C1
The bumau ttponed that ··~M. .. nt"
laousina row''°"' 2.S millioa un1t1 in 1940 to 11.S million in 198S -manana lbc. Uniled Sta\C1 has more ""used housina than the entire hous--lftl s&ock of Caftlda.
But that cateeorY incliidCi M>ml' S 4. million homes that art seasonal or
rccrta11onal residences.. the repon
said.
~ • M 111da1ion of aimtral
ttOIMMIHC wrllbeiftl, and WC support
11111t1elidaUl11nount Of'tt9b 1tous1na. h 11 a bi& chlftlt 1n rettnt )'9rl, ~ylooki111bed to the 195<k,'' llt\la~ ~lid. While the rcpo1 l did not 1ndude f~ &wuonat and reaeat~
housina in 9rlitt years. the S.4
mdlion seasonal and rt'<TC1t1onal
homts coun1N am~ tht" "aca"' in I 98S 11 lipifacanlly hither than the
total of 3.2 m1lhon vacant house 10 19SO.
MORTGAGE
Prom CJ
fd>ruary.
It was tht h1abni ARM rate inct
March 1986, when the •"·~ ~11' 9.~ percent. the bank board \aid.
1 he Fed for a year nov; has bttft
t1&)ltenmgcrcd11 and ~u~hma mtett~I
raap upv.ard an a.o clTon to reitrt1n
economic arowth to hold do" n
1nflatton. Thost' cfToru 1nten 1ficd in February after the government re-
~ thae..wlllJarp"'" lnctalr at Mah IM wt.ot1 .... Ud retall ltvtla
dunntJaaa.ry.
"TM 111Ctean in 1he 9rty Marth
f'llt\ ttflected lht ltfttnl '9ltnll'f in mdil R1Arkt1 cJuri~ fi ,
said Jamn Banh, chit"f ttonom11t r the beak boerd.
T~ peTCtntatt of mort&QtS closed
with ~u11abk ratn declined to SS percent 1n9ifyM1rch,down from S7
percent in Februar), the board re-
ported.
~~,..~ --------
N
..f.llleril 1111 lillll and coaliucs ao bt involved ill ,ery terioul ~
uaaions with a dlifd -"" .._.s1n1 w ... · · ...-.,m "Ealcii
Aittl::! ~tht ;-.at an afternoon buliruplcy htari'4 .'
Asked whee ...-ment wu l~ktl)'.
ht said ic-.. •a .... of days. if DO& sooner."
--
EatWrn n•a aaleftdalias wuon •• MIUU. 11ia Uebci1ada DOUfied lwr ~-~Wed 1drr tMI "tMR Would be a pote11dal ult of IM
aitlint'. polllbr)·&oday." , ..
Eastern hll bten virtually
pounckd 11ncc ill MedusuJU union
•n.'k March' and pdou and .tlial!•
au~ndants walked out 1n Mapport, The airlant filed for proaection froni
rrediton 1n U.S: Bukrup&cy Court
Matth 9. Tc.us Air Chamnan Frank
Lorenio has been tr) 1n1 ro ~II the
carrier for weeks.
Market edges up as economy cools down
Eastern and a I S-membCf commit·
tee repraenl.int umecured crediton or the airline on Tuetdly RIQutlled
postponemn11 of an examiner ap-
pointment for' It ftlt 24 houn.
Lifland then ordtred Jones to explain
in 1 Wedneiday hearina why the
1ppo1ntrnftlt lhould be deferred
In a seperatc coun action, L•nand
approved an aarttment bct-.een at-
tomc)'S for Eas\em and the Machin·
1sas union ~ana areas "here
peaceful p1cke1ina would be allowed
at New York's LaGuard11 Airport
and at Loun lntcmauonat Airport m
Boston. Eastern had asked the JUd~
to restrain union picket1ns on [astern
property.
By CHET C&MllMR ,., ..........
NEW YORK -The stock marl.ct
cclged upward Wednesday as traders
anticipated more evidence soon that
the economy was coohns down.
The ·Dow Jonn averaae of 30
industrials rote 6.6(). to 2,304.80,
recouping Tuesday's 6.60-point lo s.
Advancan1 issues outnumbered de-
clines by more than 5 to 4 in
nationwide. trading of New York
Stock Exchange-listed ·stocks, with
787 up, 6t7 down and 566 un-
changed.
Volume on the floor of the Big
Board came to 165.88 miHion shares.
up from 160.68 inillion io the
previous session. Nationwide, con-
solidated volume in NYSE-listed
issues, including trades 1n those
stocks on regional eitchangcs and in
the over-the...c;ountcr market, totaled
195.89 milhon shares.
Analysts said it was difficult to
discern ho" the market might re-
spond when the Labor Department
issues its monthly report Friday on
the employment situation.
Private forecasts generally call for a
smaller gain in nonfarm payroll
employment than the 289.000 in-
crease reported for February, when
the unemployment rate fell 10 a I 5-
ye.ar low.
Not so long ago, that kmd of news
might have been interpreted as an
emphatic plus for stocks. indica11ng a
slackening of upward pressure on
inflation and interest rates.
Bin latcl} many traders have t>ctun
to worry that the battle to re-strain
1nlla1ion might wind up producmJ a
recession and an accompan)'tnl
slump in corporate profits.
Auto stocks fell after reports Tue!.-
day for the late-March selhna period
showed 1 conunuing slo\\down 1n
domestic car sales. General Motors dropped Ya to 397/a; Ford Motor I 'ta to
f•Ol.D PKl(·t :s
471 :. and C'hl)slcr '•to 241 ••
Gamer among the blue c-h1ps
included Am encan E>.prc "· up 1• at
32/a: lnternattonal Busmr s Ma-
chine , up 11 107'~: Cicars Roebuck.
up aat4411•: DuPont. up 1·.a1104'a.
and Enon, up 14 at 431'•.
ft II \ . I' '\ \ __,I· D I D
NEW YORK (AP) APf S w~o P~ Advonced
V,ec:Hned ncnenoed o•••iuues Ntw hlohs New IOws
ft H \'I' \lit-:' DID
NEW YORK (APl AP< S
Adv~nced
. '
V,tehned ncnan9e0 01111nues Newhlons
'""' New IOWS
S.CMd WOtlCI 90ICI prica WIO~ by TN
Alec c llU "'-·\.lit-:' I .I-: \Dt:Ks ............ 1317~~ ~---. iwno 1364 40 off 12 M ~---flmo lal300,ot!S.US NEW YORK CAP>-S.les. 4 PITI ~ 181e.131350.oft13 2~ Wednesdt.v or Ice 1nd nel chenoe of the 10 ~....,_llxlrlQ 13811M,otfSl47 (T10SI acllvt American Sjock Exchange ,,...... llldne. Ud 40. on s 112 ~sues. tr ad I no netioneflv 111 more lhan s 1 ,_.. .... .,..,_ S3l3 JS lllO Off S3 IS •mt VllUmtL1Steh9.
SMUhllted. omeSt)oe '·f 17 6>• + lt
WY=--&31300,0flUM eusAtrCO ~: 13~ + J~ NY 1314 ao o« S3 ee Amdahl s ~ WY ••-.ci $403 S2 Oii S3 "4 F'rullLoom ' l . + •
... NY~fC*S 11>0tmon1tte1oMWIO S313IO'olf' TorelPell 4 : 2 + '•
-.30 FtAuslPr 1 1 , 89·16 WY ...... NII.one! e.n .. 4 pm WIO S3t3 So, Off .~ITtlChjl 1 , 11 '1 +
'2 '° 1•CC>Pr l , ,t a ~~~rt U· *" +~
Costa Mesa 1919 Man & Woman of the Year Awards
Nominated by the Communrty & Selected by the Chamber ot Commerce-
Harbor Area Residents
The Costa Meu Chamber of..,Commerce lrMtes yoor nominations for its 1989 Man & Woman of the Year awards for
outstanding volunteer 98f"iloe and llldellhlp wi1hin the community. ·
You can nominate• many Costa Mel8 Nlldlnts • )'OlJ like (except past winners) for thts yea(s award
As In the past, criteria for the lllecflon Of the Min & Woman of the Year are
Sponsored by • Long hist()f'f of community seMce
• lnvotvement In 99Vel'al difterent areas of community. WVICe ~~ • Nominees must work and I °' live In Costa Mesa
• Exerted recogc lized leadership
• ~nown by I good portion Of the community
c > t-:.:.ih 0 <C 1 M •
• Variety ~ merit of volunteer (not paid) ~ contributed to the community Independent
Plew corTlSll• and llJbmit ipx nomlndol •by 5 p.m~ay, ApfM l3, 1989 10 the Costa Mesa Chamber of Commerce
in Suite 135 Of Pdic SMlgS Plazl at 1901 Ntiwport BtYd., Mesa. CA 92627 .
P. S. 1989 Min & Woman of the Yw
AWllds Luncheon • June 1st
11:30 Aeolption •Noon Luncheon
$25 • Aid Lion Inn • Costa Mesa
Sincerely.
Ken Fowler. Chairman
1989 Man & Woman of the Year Commtttee
Nomination • Costa Mesa 1989 Man & Woman of the Year
PERSONAL DATA
NOMINEE'S NAME BlRTH~TE I BIRTHP~E
HOME ADORESS CITY ZIPCOOE
~YTIMEPH~E MARTIAL STATUS SPOUSE S NA~[
NUMBER I NAMES OF CHILDREN
EDUCATION
HIGH SCHOOL • NAME & CITY MILITARY• BRANCH f YEARS OF SERVICE f HIGHEST AANI<
COU.EGES • NAMES LOCATIONS, OEGREES
PROFESSIONAL DATA
CURRENT EMPLOYER TITLE
PREVIOUS EMPLOYMENT
MEMBERSHIPS Civic • FraternaJ • Service
YEARS ORGANIZATION Off'ICE I CONTR•BUTIONS
COMMUNITY SERVICE
YIEAM
~· °"111"' T 1¥'*'
NWA climbed l'• to 87'\.
The hst of issues hi1ti03 new 52·
week lo*S was dotted wath Sl!.Ch
closcd..end bond funds as Amcncan
Ca pttal Bond Fund, down ~at 19>1\;
Colonial lntcrn1t1onaJ Hiah Income
fund. down 'ta at 9"t, and Kemper
Hagh Income Fund. down "• a1 11.
'\\,1:11 \Diil'
DO ft 'O't~~ .\ \ t:R \(jf~4'
Zinnslty dechned to tell rcponen
afier the hearina whether Eastem's
parent Teus Air Corp. was negotiat-
101 with the Ucberroth 11oup.
But Mary Jane Barry. head of the
OH l ~ \ 'U DOM'"
'\\'SE ('0,.POSITt: TH\ '\S \c ··1·10'\S
IBM The ~
Prud1nti.1
THE BUSINESS EVENT .
OF THE YEAR IS COMING
TO ORANGE COUNTY!
7 t