HomeMy WebLinkAbout1990-01-15 - Orange Coast PilotBUSINESS/ A8
THE ORANGE COAST
Cuban
ambassador
WORLD/A4
P,YSleXlc
Student ~
draws on
creativity
COA T /A3
25CENTS
MONDAY, JANUARY 15, 1990
~ams' hopes shattered
Loyal Rams fans
bowled over by
team's defeat
By PAUL ARCHIPLEY
Of rtw o..,, ~ St...,
Remember the Lakers of the '60s?
They were always that close to the
prize. but could never get hold of it.
And their fans "died wtth them,
year after )car. Victor) JUSt a basket
or a game a"'a~.
The Rams arc upholding the tra-
d1t1on . The) arc the Lakers of the
'80s. Oh sure. u's 1990 now. but you
get the point Thev're the
bndesma1d. the best man'. the run-
ner-up.
They did ll again Sunda). Took us
to the door. Unfortunate!). the San
Franc1~0 49crs did all the knocking.
Sports fans "ere primed for some-
thing d11Teren1. Ever) bod~ thought
this would be -\GAME. Instead. we
got a c11n1c. courtesy of Joe Montana
and Co.
At Champions. a sports bar in
In inc. the scat~ filled up l'arl) in
ant1c1pat1on of an exc1t1ng match.
Even the <.le' cland and Denver
fans stuck aruund aftl·r their disap-
pointing face-on.
And the\ harbored the same il -
lusions as the ol d-time Rams
rooters.
"I want tn -;ee the Ram~ in thl·
uper Bo"' I t>t·cau\e thn 're m' sec-
ond fa,onte tl·am. all the "'a'· had.
since thC) '"ere in CleH·land:·· Ohio
tra nsplant Keith M1lkr of lrv1nl'
said. "And I figurl' they can't lose."
Right. That "'as the Theme ·o the
.,...,, -....... ~ J .................
Marla Cromwell of lrvlne and her friends Sharon Bott,
Newport Beach, and Gina Johnston, Tustin ffrom left),
begin to lose hope of seeing the Rams In Super Bowl.
Da~
"I think the Rams arc going 10
upset them ... former Denvente War-
ren F1scht.•r of Costa Mesa said. ''I'd
hlc to sec ~umc nc\.\ blood rn there.
and the Ram\ arl· on a roll."
\~ho "ould''l' gul"\!>t'd thn "l'fl'
going to roll o'er"
-\t k1ckofT. Ram'> fans ""ere fel'ling
rnck\ ThC\ didn't hear the death
kndf Hu1 1·1 "a' ,·oming What are
(Please see FANS/ A2J
COVER STOR'\' /MARTIN LUTHER KING .IR.
Irvine rabbi remembers walk
with slain civil rights leader
By 808 VAN EYKEN
Rabbi Bernard King '>hares more
th:in a name '.'1th Or. Mart in Luther
King Jr T~ Newport Bea h rcilg1ou~
leader and the slain c1,1I right'\
leader once took a "'alk together.
more than two decades ago.
The footsteps of that march from
Selma. -\la .. to Montgomcf) are still
heard.
And that. albeit brief. direct in-
volvement with the movement led
by Dr. King has also had a pro-
found. lifelona innuence on Bernard
King.
"I was a student at Union Thco-
l<?Jical Seminary at the time," said
Kina. now rabbi at Temple Shir Ha-
Ma 'Alot. "I remember listenina to
the radio and hearing the ICT'elms of
women and children who were being
holed with fire hoses and attacked
by ~lice dop. Somelhina happened
lnadc me. I heard they were havina
this march and I aot this o~-
"helming kehng that the "'hill'
community c;hould stand together
\\1th the hlack communit). and walk
"llh them ..
King said he had no idea ho"
man) peopk ""ere going to march.
or "'he1her am other "'h lies would
be there to Join the black freedom
marchcr'i.
"I thou'-ht I was going to be the
onl) one.· he said. "I remember
being very gratified that there were
many. man) white people who
joined in."
~
Cort!tta Scott King, In Mr
annual ·'stat~ oft~
dr~am" add,,.ss at
Ebf!n~z~r Baptist Church,
w~,,. Mr husband was
pastor, call«I on Pl'ftltlwrt
Bush to Mlp unify Ameri-
ca. St0ty In World, A4
But there on those Southern
streets in the heyday of the strugJe.
aratification-was overwhelmed by
other, more powerful emotions.
most notably fear. Kina said.
"It's difficult to dacribe how
threatening. how terrifyina it was.··
he said. "There we were. all as-
1embled outside the city. The Na-
tional Guard had -been called out..
ostensibly to protcct u&. But there
were the auardsmen, hurlina
epithets It ua, like 'Nisr loven!'
anJ ·\\ l"ll gl't ~ou later•· \nd ~et
thl''>l' \\t'rl' thl· ix·oplr "ho "'ere
suppo-.ed to be protecting us.
"I rem,·mba a lot of things." he
said .. L.1ttk scenes that suck in mv
mind I remember tn pan1cular an
elder!} black woman who ran om m
front of the marchers and began
dancing and shouting ·r s free' r s
free'.' It was probably the first 11me
an her life that she had been able to
express herself in that way."
There were symbolic messages
that helped mold his concepuon of ·
himself as a Jew and innuenced his
teachinJS as a rabbi, King said.
"An interesting sideline for me. as
a rabbinical student. was when I
noticed that a lot of the black
m archers were wearing the
yarmulke. the Jewish skullcap," he
said. ··At first. I thought they were
all Jews, but then I learned it was
being used as a S) mbol of the Jews'
march from slaver) in Egypt."
Although he ackn owledges that
Jews and blacks have of\en been in
conflict recently. King said he con-
tinues to believe in solidarity be-
tween Jews and African Amencans.
"One powerful thing that we have
in common. of course. is that we a.re
both minority groups. and in many
ways. the most vulnerable minority
groups." he said. •
And there were great, pounding
ironies that were also instructive. he
said.
"I arew up in San Francisc.o
amona other white people, and yet
here I was marching. surrounded by
black people. with bottles and rocks
beiOf lhrown at us by white people
on c1lhct' side. All of a sudden it was
the white people who were threaten-
ina and the black people who were
my protectors and my co~panion.s."
The most th(attrt1na time, Kina
said. was after the maR:h. when the
safety that came with numbers
beP.n to dissipate.
'I remember as many of us were
makina our way t.ck to airports and
bus stations. none of the white cab
Montana leads
49ers to 30-3
win over Rams
By The Associated Prus
The Los -\ngeles Rams. facing an
almost-nav.l<:ss Joe Montana. had
their hopes for a tnp 10 the Super
Bo"' I shauercd as the San Francisco
49ers crushed th em JO-.\ 10 win the
NFC champ1onsh1p
The ~9crs ha\l· a chance at be-
coming thl· li r'.>t repeat Suix·r Ro"' I
San Francisco, Dt!nvt!r to
mt!t!t at Sup~r Bowl XXIV
In Nt!w Orl~ans on Jan.
28. Covt!rag~ In Sports, 81
\\innl·r in a dl-radc.
Montana. who pa\St'd lor 156
}ards 1n a 21-puint c;econd quarter
that brokt· lhl' game open. had a 20-
~Jrd TD p:h\ lll Brent Jonec; and an
tt<-,ardl'r to John Ta ,lur his 'Dth
anJ I ht in pmt\t":hon
I hat hrnl..l' t Ill' rn·ord ol Ill h\
P1tt')burgh·, f err: Hrad 'h"'' and
,,·nt the :"1nl'r' 110 111 ~''" Orleans
"hl·re in '''0 \\l'l'I..' thn "111 he
Ir\ 1ng 111 111a1d1 Jnotha ,t:indard set
h~ Brad,h.I'' and thl' l.,1el'll'r'i "1th
tlw1r fourth "iuix-r Ho" I \lllllf\
1'111,hurgh "·I' thl· IJ't ll'::Snl tn "in
\\\O \\ra1gh1 "iufX'r Ho\\IS. 1n 14"9
anJ llJhU
In Ocn\i:r. the Bron'-"' earrwd
their fourth \hot at thl' <iuper Bowl
,., ...... ,... ..
San 'ranclsco 49ers wide receiver John Tarlor goes ......
between Rams James Washlft9ton (J7J and LeRoy lrvln f471
to haul In • Joe Montana p.11 for a touchdown In the
second quarter Sunday at C.ndlestlck Parle.
with 3 37-2 1 \ICtory O\Cr the heatrnthreet1mes1nrhe-\F('cham-
( Je,eland Bro"'ns. v.hom they've p1onsh1p since 1987
Charity's
backers'
spirits not
dampened
By LESLIE EARNEST -Of_O_,....,._
'\ "ind\ rainstorm did httle to
dampen the spints of more than a
doll·n demonstrators who camped .
in front of tht> Costa Mtsa City Hall
o'er the "'eekcnd to protest the
possible eviction of the county's
largest pnvate poverty relief qcncy.
"Looks like n's going to be colder
tonight than last night ... Jean For-
bath. director of hare Our Selves,
said '\u nda} af\emoon. "But we're
doing fine"
o~. a 20-ycar-old food d1stribu·
lion 1. hanl\ locatc-d at the Rea Com-
mun11' Center. has reccntlv teetered
on the bnnk of closure. ·
At its last meeung. nearly six
months after voting not to renew
SOS's kase at Rea Center. the City
Council reJCCtcd a plan to move the
chant~ to an industrial buildina on
Supenor -\'enue. in part because the
cit} would ha'c had to pay a larwc
portion of the estimated COit of
S I 00.000 to S250.000.
i\lthough SO officials say they
no"' ha' c mone~ to move to another
area. the move would take time and
city officials said last week they ~
ready to begin eviction proceedi ...
.................... --.
11a11M .. ,,....~'°"I..,. Dr. Ma 1111 L....,_ '°"I~ . .._ hM
•1Wot•~• .... lldluence011....._ . ...
The council took action after
ne1&hbors of OS complained their
streets had become filt hy and unu
for their children due to the home-
less people attracted to their west
Cos\I Mesa neaahborbood.
On Saturday. more thM I 000
rallied in suppon of the 'fdrii •·
saaization while about lO people
beTd a counter-dcmonstratioe t.ct-
1ng the council's decision.
dnvcrs would pick us up." he said.
"Only the black dri vers would. The
few who ~ t.dly hun and killed
were durina that ume. after the
march:·
Kina said he only met Manin
Luther Kina Jr. oncx. That was at an
airport. and he did little other than
tell him bo"' much he admired his
spealdna and his lcadenh1p.
He said that leadership continues
to impress him.
"Theft were. of courx. other im-
,,..._ .. KING/AJ)
About I 5 protcstcn vowed to 1illl
and camp ovemiaht on me ~ ~
council chamben unti1 ..._.,
council nieetina,. Twel~ ol .. ....... _ ..
GOOD MORNING
Today'• Thousht
"Thf fOOd M/fhbOr k>Ots
l#yOtd ,..,,,. «cldlnlS .. dis·
nms lnMr ~ tltlt ,,.., II
1Hn ,,...,._ Md, tlWr•fort,.
brotlWn. ,, ,,.,,., UltMr """ .Jt.
luletln lolrd,~••••••••••oo••""" I Al ~ ............................... M
c~ ........................... 11-t
COfttlcS .....•........•...•..........•• 110
Crossword ............................ 88
Ent~ ...................... A7
St & ~ ...................... Al
AIY't ~ .......•....••....•..... A6
Mind & lody ....................... AS
Opinion ............................... A9
~ ............................. A4
Peioplt ....•..........•.•...............• A6
PubUc Notlc~s...................... n Sports................................ 11-7
TV Ustlngs ........................... A7
WeMhtf .............................. A4
)
'
•011~-.Y l'ILOT/ ...... -..,M.-
plans to raze historic LA hotel for o e s -: LOS ANOELl!S (AP) -Doaald Trump '°""
-Solunlay tbal ... ud -will .... Ille ft·t-..rt Ambwldor 1$o1e1. lite of Robert Kmacdy's
·-wl. ~ ....... to boild. -llllloe. bold llJld • com..a.x.
Wilshire district.
11 wu in an Ambe"""°f kitchen oa J une 5, 1961,
that Kennedy, a New Yod: tenator Md Democratic
l)l't'lideatial candidate, wu auusinated by Sirhan
S&than momen11 1ftcr ci.iminc victory in \he Cati·
fornia primary. ~ l'be New Yoik billionaire'i. plan -oouodiOI
6a.aely like a Wen COUl venion of Manbattu'1
Rci:keleUer Center -and cndonementl. by Mayor Tom BradJey ancttwo key city C<Mlncilmen teemed to
!f>'ll doom for Ille onc:e-trand edff>ce.
1 Citizcn1 concerfted about vaniW111 cullW'l1
berirqc had clamored for preservation oftbe bold and
Khoor district officials Wlntcd 10 buy the: 23-acn lite
~Wilshire Boulevard (or a badly needed 1'CW bi.ah
Tbouab it once counliCCl U.S. presidents amons its
aunts. ana its famous COC01.nu1 Grove lliabtclub was
a walerina bole for Hollywood leaends, Ille lobbv .,..
was now the only place lit ror people 10 plher, 1rump
said.
The hot.el site was purchased last September for
$64 million by Wilshire Center Panners. who include
hjsh~al estate developer Robin Power and New York
develo~r and investor Scott Malkin.
'
' .:nool.
f The project wiU prol».bly include a bo&el. offi«
" space, shQPP•n& areas and residentiaJ buildinp, Trump
Trump, whost involveme nt was rumored a mon1h
ago, was announced as the new managin& panner of
what is now Trump Wilshire Associates. l said. Aside from arand IQ}e, the project WU ponrayod
t as only in the earliest stqes of contemplation. He would not estimate the project's cost but
antici pated no proble m in financing ii. Trump revealed his investment in the pt9ject 11 a ~ news conference in tht: East Garden room of the 494-"I'll ~ investing a substantial amount of money
in the project over a period of ye ars," he said. " ... I
think we're going 10 have a very. very easy time getting
( room hotel, which opened in 1921 and cloled a year
~ ago after years of strualina in the declinina Mid·
• c
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n p
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pl
P'
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Bush emphatic on
fair trade, Panama
NEW YOR K -Savoring his SUC·
ccssful first year in office. GcolJe
Bush said the United States '"did
exactly the righ1 thing" in Panama
and pounded on his desk while
insisting that Japan must be
hammed away at until it allows
bencr n1arkc1 access.
The pr1."s.idcn1 took 1ime out from
his. State of 1he Union preparations
for' the l'XC/usive interview with
Business We\'k.
Bush provided a revealin~ glimpse
of White House frustrat ion with
Japan's trade practices, plus holding
fo nh o n a host of fo~ign policy
issues and 1hc domestic economy
and ta.~es.
On the U .S. invasion of Panama.
Bush said: "We did exactly the right
thing. The fact that 92 percent of
Panamanians in a C BS poll sup-
ported the invasion lays 10 rest some
of the ·gunboat diplo macy' worries.
We ha\'C some diplo matic work 10
do in the hemisphere. a nd we'll do
it. Bui mos! of the leaders. even
Not so funny money
those that have morl.' heartburn than
others. know 1ha1 I tried diplomacy
ve ry hard."
Asked about our deficit with
Japan, and ""'hat Y.I.' should do to
reduce tha1 imbalance, he pounded
his desk and heatedly ins1s1ed on
.. fair trade" from Toli )O. ··We've got
to kttp hantml·nng a"·ar for bcncr
market access:· he-said.
··1 am pleased 1ha1 the Japanese
are talking about becoming an in1-
porting country. bul lei's get some
muscle in10 1ha1. I am con"inced
!hat we can con1pt·1e. But we've got
to do more on c-duca11on . on re-
search and dl'\'Clopnll'nl. on lhoost-
ing) sa\·ings. to mak\' oursel"cs mort"
competi1ive. Having said that. I
think it \.1 .. ould Ix· a Vl"f) bad 1hing
if we started dov.·n the road of
restricting invcs1n11."nt in 1h1s coun-
1ry."
Smiling, the prcs1d\'nt :;aid: .. ,
hope (foreign\'rs) don·1 rc-srncl 1he1r
in vestments in our go\·t•rn1ncn1
bonds, which hl.'!p pa~ for this d\'fi ·
cit.''
George Bush
Even though some experts think
!hi.' United State" can reduce dcfcnS<.'
spt·nd1ng b) 20 pt'n.·en1 O\•er se\•eral
\car!.. !ht• prc-s1dc-n1 s1ressed that a
big "pcafc d1\ 1dend" 1s not in the
cards.
"I'd like 10 sec any savings 1ha1 we
can get (ust'dJ 10 reduce the federal
deficit." said Bush. bc."'t.·ause "'that
""'ould bl· 1hc OC!>t thing "'C can do to
guarantt'e a robu~L econon\) 1n th('
future."
r<EOL .. '.lf-B. E
JOl!HJS
>1Cl.ENMC'*' -•
• r t-< .A.I l
fl~Cl"rl Mlf,A,I(
-nl• .. llWllt •d -U70 It W .. Just • McCain a nd Dennis DeConclnl tor t heir
connection with lrvln e·1 f ... ed Uncoln
Savings a nd Loan •nd Its p re aldent.
Charles Me •tlnt· The phony 111111 •re t he
.... of r••I "'°".,, but they fr•m• t h•
pkture1 of DeConclnt and McCain. =---Servk•lln't.-ing
-~ngof_IO_"°ll .. -... ..,._.._ ... ,-
...... TIM ...... •1•ntntt fof • pou-... ,.... ..... ......... s....eon John
PLAN YOUR ESTATE TODAY
•HOW TO AVOID
PROBATE
•HOW To AVOI> 1111.aa•rr
TllMNCYTAX
TRAP
•HOWTO
ELIMINATE TAXES
•HOW.TO AVOI>
THE GIGOLO AND
THEFLOOZV
' ..... •
•
lbt financina. ..
Tbe only specific structure envis.ioned by Tnunp
is a 50,000-tQu.are-foot "Cocoanut Grove Ballroom" to
fill what he sakt was lhc need for a really bia ballroom
in Los An,eles. It woukt be twice the size of~ biaicat
ballroom here. 1
The plan was finnly t.cked by Mayor Bradley,
Councilman Nate Holden, whose district includes the
Ambassador, and Council President John Fenaro.
asked l'Nmp.
TNmp IDd Holden sakt the land wu too cx-
penlive ror a school, e-len if' the Loi Aneelcs Uniried
School Diitric1 IOU&ht 10 acquire it throUab eminent domain ... You Would have the world's most upcns.ive
school," TNmp said.
Trump aid it waa "very unlikely" that any ponion
of the oriaJnal structure would be preserved. Preued on
why that was so, Trump soundly bashed what re-
mained of the Amhassador'a character. The officials characterized the plan as a way to
revitalize the declinina neighborhood a few miles west
of downtown and link the downtown business district
with the Century City complex on the city's W"CSt side.
··t ~lieve it has artat potential. This stretch of
Wilshire Boulevard needs 10 be reborn," said Bradley.
He noted he had asked the developers 10 help find an
ahem.ate site fo r a school in the area.
'"This is not • aood builctiftl to be in if tbeT'c was
an canhquakc. 11 is an· old structure and from the safety
standpoint ... you wouldn't be allowul to build a
build1na, like this today,·· he said.
Holden recalled his opposition to preservationists'
calls and said he stood by that decisio n. "J'm con-
vinced we can build a world-class development here in
Mid·Wilshirc." he added.
""Second of all it's not, according to most, 1he
aesthetic buildin& tha1 really we should have at this site.
h 's so old and so dilapidated and so run down, and ...
it's been Jeakina ... its really in very bad shape."
He said vtnually every world class architect was
vying for the job of designing the new project and he
expected cultural heritage buffs wo uld "love" the
~suit . .. Why did it lake you so long to find LA?" Ferraro
Music industry shows firms
are courting Hispanic market
By McCl•tchy News Se-rvlce
FR ESNO -The Hispanic popu-
lation will soon be the largest min-
ority in California. prompting indus-
tries fronl beer companies lo the
music industry to flin wi1h a new
market.
"Ten years ago Hispanics wcrcn'I
in -now everybody i!> jumping on
the bandwagon," said Jessie Abad.
assistant general counsel for the Re-
cording Industry Association of
America in Washington. D.C.
"The markcl has grown lrl.'men-
dously in the last re"' years:· said
Fernando Beltran, a sales manager
for CBS Records" La1in division.
For the last fe"· years. Hispanics
have made up a larger segmen1 of a
booming na11onal music market.
Hispanics spent S92 n1ilhon on
prl.'recorded music 1n l 986 and SJ04
million 1n 1988. according to record
as.soc1a1ion figures.
In 1986. 1-1ispan1c buyers made up
~ percent of a S4.6 bilhon dollar
market. In 198 7 ihey were 3 percent
ofa S5.6 billlon market. In 1988. the
most recent }Car for which statistics
were a\'ailablc, Hispanics made up
4.9 pcrcen1 ofS6.2 bdhon market of
prcrCTord('d music.
Thos.e figur(' ha\l' nol escaped
record compan~ eAecut1ve~.
On 1hc local ll'''e\. independent
entr\'prl·ncurs l1lo.e Disco . .\z1eca in
S1ock1on rode the trend to regional
distribution networks and multi-
million dollar revenues.
On the na1ional scene, more and
more big name record labels are
setting aside specialized Latin music
divisions.
"A lot of Anglo companies arc
opening Latin divisions." said
Beltran, who has bet"n producing
Latin records for over 11 years.
Stort!s I/kt! Wht!rt!houSt!,
which addt!d Its Latin
St!ctlon 9 months ago,
must wait to St!t! If tht!y
catch on.
Last year was 1he brggest Wes\
Coas1 sales year in the history of
C BS's Latin di vision. Behran said.
CBS and 01her labels have seen
the size of o rders grow and ex-
perienced a dramauc increase 1n
accounts from mainstream record
stores. Stores such as the Where-
house and Mus1cland are beginning
to stock Latin music sections, said
Mike Missile. a n1arketing executive
for BMG records in Los Angeles.
WherehousC hopes bilingual iiis-
panics "'ho come for !ht "ariety of
English n1US.I\' and v1d('OS -will
pick up a Latin compact disc as a
SC<'ond purchase. said WherthouSt'
product manager Ralph Raetz.
Stores like the Wherthouse, which
added its Latin section only nine
months ago, must wait 10 see if they
will catch on and become permanen·t
fixtures, industry sources said .
But La1in records sales may be far
higher 1han anyone imaiines.
Countcrfeilers are a huge portion of
the marke1.
Though Latin music accounts for
a boul 5 percent of the national mar-
ket. n1orc than 50 percent of all
counterfeit tapes confiscated in the
U.S. a rc Latin releases. said Abad.
"'A lot of1imes it makes it difficuh
for the small record label or record
store 10 survive .... It's really frus-
trating." Abad said.
Big labe..·ls feel the pinch 100.
··1 could sell t""·ice as much as I
am now because of the pi ralt's.''
Beltran said.
California has the dubious distinc-
tion of capturing the most con-
1raband tapes in each of the last fi\'C
rears. Seven Los . .\ngeles counter-
feiting operations ""'ere busted 1n
1988. according to the assoc1a1ion.
T hos(' o pera11ons. combined
produced at least 3.5 million
casscncs a year. the association said.
In 1988. 70 pe rcent of counterfeit
1apes seiic-d in the state v•ere dupli-
cations of Laun releaSt's.
Memories may be just memories
S.~N FR-\N('IS('() i.\PJ -l l.S.
Memones Inc.. the con'>or11um
propo!>l.·d 10 re\ 1vc 1hc American
n11cro rh1p 1ndu s tr~ and figh1
JapaneSl.' dominance. fa1k-d to a1-
lrac1 in\'l'Slors and is expeclcd to
fold. according to publish('d repons.
The roopcra1ive ve nture has not
found a nev.• investor since June
whl·n 11 was announced by seven
big-name backers -IBM c·orp.,
Hewleu-Packard Co.. Intel Corp ..
Ad\·anccd Mi cro Devices. National
Semiconductor Co. and LS I Logic .
acfording 10 Saturday·s l'd111ons of
the San Francisco Chronicle.
The New York Times a nd The
Washington Pos1 1n Saturday's
edi11ons quoted sources in the com-
puter ind ustry rcponing the \•en-
ture's likely demise.
The proposal was planned to
challenge Japanest leadership 1n 1he
making of computer memory chips
called l)RAMs, or dynamic random
access memones. often compared to
crude oil in their importance 10
industry.
Leaders Qf the ve nture are ex-
pc:cted to announce the decision al a
news conference Monday at the
company's Santa Clara office.
Sanford L. Kane. president of U.S.
Memories. told the Times he was
frustrated by his failure 10 persuade
compu1er companies to sign up for
the venture.
··one can only bang their head
against the wall for so long. Sooner
or la 1er you get a headache." he told
tht• Times. He refused 10 comment
dire<'tly on 1he reports that the coop-
erative venture was dead.
Spokesmen for ln1el and Ad-
va nttd Micro -Devices 1old the
Chronicle they s1ill suppon the plan.
Observers ci ted by the Chro nicle
said the consortium may si mply
stop actively seeking investors or
announce a res\ructuring plan. But
1hey said these developments are
unlikely.
""It looks like the end,'' said T.J.
Rodgers. chief cxe-cu tive of San Josc-
ba~ Cypress Semiconductor. a
critic of the consonium plan.
The failure would be regarded as
a major setback for advocates of
'.'tlORTGAGE RA TES
Figures as ol Thursday. Jan. 11
collttti,·c action to improve LJ.S.
compe1111 vc ness.
··11·s a true strategic se1back.'' !>aid
Ralph Tho mson, chief executive ol
International Bu siness Catalysts. a
Palo Al1o con!'.u!ling firm that
focuses on 1radc and technology.
U S. Memones 1n June an-
nounced its plan for construc1ion of
a SI billion plant 10 make 1he 4.
megabit DRAM chi ps. paid for by
S500 million in equity fina nci ng
from chip makers and users and
S500 n1illion 1n debt wllh fundra1s-
ing expected to be completed last
year.
By Novem~r. se,·eral major cOT;'i:"'
puter companies -including Sun
Microsystems Inc., Unisys Corp ..
Apple Computer Inc. and Tandy
Corp. -said they would not join as
investon.
Compu1er 1ndus1ry officials lold
the Times that the end of U.S.
Men1ories ""'as dttided Wednesdav
at a meeting in Dallas a nended b~·
the seven companies 1hal signed up
and others considering 1he venlurc.
FIXED• ADJUSTABLE ...... Down ...... L ... -<o ... •. .. ... 1 Down ,_ .. Loc*-4n...,..,. ..... -,,.,1 , ... , '";f' .._ -,.,,.1 , ... ' ,..,., , ... , .......
1st Nallonwlde Bank 9.875 20 2.000 1'7 7.950 20 1.500 .. 2.250 150 Amwkan S•vlno• Bank 10.050 20 2.000 " 1'7 7.950 20 1.500 .. 2.200 1'7 Bank of America 9.875 20 2.375 .. I01 7.750 20 1.500 .. 2.500 1000
Bank of CalifOl'nla 10.125 10 2.000 30 187 9.125 20 1.750 .. 2.750 1000 C•HIOl'nla Fed81'al Bank 10.000 20 2.000 21 1'7 7.950 20 1.500 00 2.250 300
Chue Manhattan 8-nk 10.375 2• 2.000 00 9000 8.500 2• 2.000 00 2.750 9000
G.neral American Flnanclal 9.875 10 2.000 •• I01 •. 500 20 1.500 21 GPM I07 Gi.ndale Federal Banll 10.125 20 2.000 •• 1'7 7.950 20 1.500 00 2.250 150
GrMt Ameflcan Bank 9.875 "" 2.000 •• 187 7.950 20 1.500 •• 2.250 500
HorMftld Bank 10.000 o• 2.000 .. "' 7 .950 20 1.500 .. 2.250 ... _...,. 10.250 2• 2.000 00 1000 8.375 20 2.000 00 2.750 300 MartNrl Bank 9.750 10 1.500 00 187 5.250 20 1.500 :IO BY OWN 1'7 Mor;an Hom. Fundtng 9.125 05 2.000 •• 181 8.500 10 2.000 .. BYDWH 187
N9wpor:1 Flnal'ICial Group 9.750 10 1.500 00 I07 1.050 20 1.500 .. 2.250 500 ~ Mori;ao. 9.875 10 1.000 .. I01 ..... " 0.500 .. GPM 187 "-'--9.750 o• 1.500 .. 117 7.950 20 1.!IOO 00 2.300 500 Old Slone Mor1;ao. 9.875 o• 2.000 00 117 7.625 10 1.000 .. GPM 117
Plldftc Flrlt 1.875 10 2.000 :IO 117 8.!IOO o• 1.750 .. IYOWN 117
~, ..... 1.750 .. 2.000 15 117 7.470 1• 1.000 ,. Gl'M 187 .......... Flnenc:W 10.600 20 1.500 21 ... 5.175 20 1.!IOO 21 GPM ...
---"""*· .... ...... 20 ... .. .. .... ..... 20 1.500 .. 1.000 !IOOO
... Co. ::=..c..-. t .710 .. 2.000 21 ,., ..... 10 1.250 •• ..... ,., _.,_ 1.'71 .. 1.710 .. ,., 1.000 10 1.500 .. Gl'M 117 n.1 ........ 0 ..... ,, 1.171 .. UGO .. ,., 1.375 10 1.500 :IO Gl'M ,., ·---. 10.eoo ,. 2.000 15 ,., 1.260 20 2.000 •• 2.710 000
lmlXN•IMY 10UTM111N c aa..OllNIA ...,..,.,_ 1-f GAMS M ft AYDA•a '!Illa-..... -·-· c tit ,, ,,._ ... ... .. .. --- ---·-· ... , .. , .. , .. .. _ l .71C ,._ _ .... , .. 1.n , ... ·=· 1.111 to.111 ,.,,. . ., .... , .. , .. , .. , ,, 7 .... ......... ••• , .. , .. ·-.... --. .,,. . .., .... , .. , .. 1.n ·-.... .. ,.,
~
THE ORANGE COAST
Cuban
ambassador
WORLD/A4
pySlexlc
student
draws on
, '
creativity
COA T /AJ
25 CENT S
MONDAY, JANUARY 15, 1990
Rams' hopes shattered
Loyal Rams fans
bowled over by
team's defeat
By PAUL ARC.HIPLEY
Of tlw Dally I'-Stan
Remember the Lakers of the '60s?
They were always that clost to the
prize. but could never get hold of it.
And their fans died wit h them,
yea r after year. Victory JUSt a basket
or a game away.
The Rams arc upholding the tra-
dition. The) arc the Lakers of the
'80s. Oh sure. it's 1990 now. but you
ge t the point. They're the
bridcsm'l11d. the bes t man. the run-
ner-up.
They dtd 11 again Sunday. Took us
to the door. ll nfortunatel\. the San
Franc1!><"0 49crs did all the.knocking.
Sports fan s were pnmcd for some-
th!ng different. Everybody thought
this wou ld be 4 GAM E. Instead. we
got a clinic. courtesy of Joe Montana
and Co.
At Champions. a sports bar 1n
Irvine. the seats filled up earl) in
ant1c1pat1on of an C\C1t1ng match.
Eve n the Cle' dand and Dcn\'er
fans stuck aroun d after their dis.ap-
po1n t1ng face-off
And thl'\ harbored thl· same il-
lusions as the old-tune Ramc;
rooters.
"I want to sec thl' Rams in thl·
Super Bowl occau'e thl·) 're m~ '\Cl'-
ond fa,onte team. all the wa\ had.
since the) were in Cle\ eland."~ Ohio
transplant Kl"tt h M11lt"r of lrvtnl'
said. "And I figure they ca n't lose ..
Right. That was thl· Theme 'O the
Delf7 ...._..,.._~~ ............
Marla Cromwell of Irvine and her friends Sharon Bon.
Newport Beach, and Gina Johnston, Tustin ffrom left1,
begin to lo•• hope of seeing the Rams In Super Bowl.
l h~
..I think the Rams an· going to
upset them:· former Dcnvente War-
rcn F1'>chcr of Costa Mesa said. "Td
lih· to !>CC <,omc Ill'\\ blood 1n th"erc.
and thl' R am~ arc on a roll."
~ho "'oul1f\l' ~uessrd thl.'\ "'l'rl·
gmng to roll tH l'r'
Al k1d..ofT. Ram'> tans wcrl' kd1ng
rnck) The) d1dn ·1 hear 1hc death
kndl Hut 1t "a' loming WhJt arr
fPlusr sr e FANS/A2J
CO\IER STORY /MARTIN LUTHER KING .JR.
Irvine rabbi remembers walk
with slain civil rights leader
By BOB V AN EYKEN
Of ow D°"Y l'llot St.if
Rabbi Bernard King shares more
than a name "'Ith Dr Martin Luther
King Jr.
The Newpon Bcarh rcligiou~
leadrr and thl' slain ci' 11 nght'>
leader once took a "alk together.
more than t"o decadrs ago.
The footsteps of that march from
Selma. Ala .. to Montgomcf) are suit
hrard.
And that, albeit bnef. direct in-
volvement with the movement led
by Dr. Kina has also had a pro-
found. lifelong influence on Bernard
J(jng.
"I was a student at Union Theo-
IC?Jical Seminary at the time," said
J(jn&. now rabbi at Temple Shir Ha-
Ma.Alol. "I remember listenina to
the radio and hearina the 1C1e1ms of
women and children who were beina
hosed with fi re bOICS and attacked
by P.llice dop. Somethina happened
in11de me. I heard they~ havina
tbi1 march and I aot this over-
\'helming fi:ehng that the wh11t·
commun1t ~ <,ho uld stand together
\\tth 1hr hlar k rnmmunit). and walk
"1th them:·
Ki ng said he had no idea ho"
many people were going 10 marc-h.
or "hcther an) other whites would
be there to JOi n the black frredom
marchers.
.. I thouf.ht I was going to be the
onl ) one, · he said. "I remember
being very gratified that there were
many. man) white people who
joined in.··
Coretta Scott King, In hf!r
annual ·'state of th#!
dream" address at
E~n•zer S.ptbt CINJrch,
wlwr• Mr husband was
pasttN, call«I on Ptn#df!nt
Bush to Mlp unify AIMrl-
ca. StOty In World, A4
But there o n those Southern
streets in the heyday of the strugle.
aratification was overwhelmed by
other, more powerful emotions,
most notably fear. J(jna said.
"h's difficult to detcribe bow
threatenina, how terrifyina it was."
he said. .. There we were, all as.-
semblcd outside the city. The Na-
tional Guard had been called out,
ostensibly to protect us. But there
were the 1u1rd1men, = epidleU It U1, lilDe 'N ...
and ·w c·ll gl't ~ou later•· .\nd ~ct
thl·~c "'ere the people "ho v.ere
suppo-.ed to be protecting us.
·· 1 rl·member a lot of thing).'. hr
said "Little SCl·ncs that stick in mv
mind. I Fem~mbcr Ill particular an
cldcrl~ black woma n who ran out in
front of the marchers and began
dancing and shouting Ts free' l's
free~· It was probabl> the first time
in her life that she had been able to
express herself in that way ...
There were symbolic messages
that helped mold his conception of
himself as a Jew and influenced his
teachinp as a rabbi, King said.
"An tntercsting sideline for me. as
a rabbinical student, was when I
noticed that a lot of the black
marchers were wearing the
yarmulke. the Jewish slcullcap." he
said. "At first. I thought they were
all Jews. but then I learned 11 was
being u~ as a S) mbol of the Jews'
march from sla"Cr) in Egypt."
Although he acknowledges that
Jews and blacks have often been in
conflict recently. King said he con-
tinues to believe in solidarity be-
tween Jews and African Amencans.
"One powerful thing that we have
in common, of course. is that we arc
both minority groups. and in many
ways, the most vulnerable minority
groups ... he said.
And there were great. pounding
ironies that were also instructive, he
said.
"I arcw up in San Francisco
amona other white people, and yet
here r was marching. surrounded by
blaclc people. with bottJes and rocks
beillJ thrown at us by white people
on either side. All of a sudden it was the whlce people who were threaten-
ina and the black people who were
my protccton and m¥ co~penion_s."
The most theatemna ume. King
said, was after the march. when the
safety that c,ame with numbers
bqan to diuipetc.
"I remember as many of us were
makina our way beck to airports and
bus IC.ations., none of the white cab
Montana leads
49ers to 30-3
win over Rams
By The A ssociat ed Press
The Los .\ngelcs Rams. facing an
almost-flawless Joe Montana. had
their hopes for a tnp to the <;uper
Bowl shattered as lhl' San Frannsco
49crs trushcd them ~0-3 to "In thl'
N F( championship.
Thl' 49ers ha,l· a chance at be-
coming the lir~t repeat <\ufk'r Ro"I
San Francisco, Denver to
meet at Sup~r Bowl XXIV
In New Orleans on Jan.
ZS. Coverage In Sports, B 1
"inner in a dcl·alk.
Montana. who pao;~ed li1r 156
}ards an a 21 -point \l.•cond quancr
1ha1 hruke thl' game open. had a 20-
) ard TD p;.1.,., to Brent Jom·<, and an
I ·\Jfl.kr to John T ·"Im. hts 10th
anJ ~I '>l an pmt~l·a,110
I h<1 l brukl' I hl· I l'l. ord of 1() O\
P1mburgh·., Tnr~ Brad,ha" and
s1·nt thl· '.\mer., 1111 to Ne" Orkan'>.
"hl'fl' 1n t"'o \\l"l"I..' thn "Ill he tr~ 1ng tu match .inotha '>landard '>l't
li~ Rrad\hJ\\ ;.md thl· )ll.'l'krc; \\Ith
tlll·11 fourth ~ur><.·r B11"' I 'tl tor.
P1t1,hurgh \\al. th1: IJ't team tn "'"
t\\ o 'tra1ght ~upn liO\\ Is. an 11.Py
aml 11.l!)U
In lx•n, t'r. thl· Bron\.u., car ned
thl•tr fourth shnt at the uper Bo"I
A# Lii J'1111
San francl1co 49ers wide receiver John Taylor goes h ....
between Rams J•me1 Washlft9ton IJ11 •nd LeRoy trvtn f471
to haul In a Joe Montana pa11 for • touchdown In the
second quarter Sunday at C.ndlestlck Park.
"'1th a _r.21 \lltO~ o'er the-bcatenthrect1ml·s1nthc.\FC'cham-
Ck,,.eland Browns. "horn they've p1onsh1p since I 987
Charity's
backers'
spirits not
dampened
By LESLIE EARNEST
Of t~ Dally ,,_ St_,
<\ "'ind' rainstorm did httle to
dampen the ~pints of more than a
do1cn demonstrators who camped .
1n front of the Costa Mrsa City Hall
0' er the "eekcnd to protest the
possible ev1cuon of the county's
largl"St private poverty rcltef qeocy.
··Looks hl..c 11's going to be colder
tonight than last night.'' Jean For-
bath. director of Share Our Selves,
said ·unda} afternoon. "But we're
doing fine·
OS. a 20-year-old food d1 stribu-
t1on l hant~ located at the Rea Com-
mun1t' Center. has re~ntlv teetered
on thl· bnnk nf closure. ·
<\t m last mecung. nearly s1x
months after vottng not to renew
SO ·~ lease at Rea Center. the City
Council rejected a plan to move the
chant) to an tndustrial buildina on
Supenor .\' cnue. in part because the
ci t) "ould ha' e had to pay a laflC
portion of the estimated <'<* of
SI 00.000 to S2 50.000.
Although SOS officials say they
nov. ha"e mone) to move to another
area. the mo'c would take time and
cit> officials said last week they are
read) to bcgtn eviction proccedhp.
._ ........ ~ ............
......, ......,,. ICllll..,. Dr.•• 1111 ,...,,,_Kint Jr. hM hN
• profolllMI ....... Influence ... .....,
The co uncil took action after
neiihbors of SOS complained their
streets had become filthy and unllfe
for their children due to the home-
less peopk attracted to their west
Costa Mesa neiahborbood.
On Saturday. more than I 000
rallied in support of the idiefl _..
aanization while about lO people
held a coun1cr-<Semonstratk>n Met·
mg the councirs decision. dn•ers would pick us up." he said.
"Only tht black dnven would. The
few who ~ badly hun and killed
were durin& tha1 time. after the
march."
Kina said M only met Manin
Luther Kina Jr. once. That was at an
airport, and he did hnk other than
tdl him bov. much he admired his
spcaldna. and his leadership
He said that leadership continues
to impress him.
.. There were. of course. other im-
,,.._ 1H KING/AJ)
About 15 protesters vowed'° a.t
and camp ovcmiaht on t.M *P! of
ooundl chambcn until tonlllll'•
council ~tins. Twd~ fll .. .,...._ ..
GOOD MORNING
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Oa IJw .... of • Pacific l10rm wMeh droooed .. P to u iAcb of rain
oa pens olibe ~Coat early in
tbt weekend, local lkia continued
to 1eaac wcalber wary residenu
~out lbe day Sunday.
Om1nous mom1na clouds bro~e
dramatically apart by mid-momina
to frame blue skies and sunshine,
but by mid-afternoon a chill wind
whipped throuab the area, acndina
e~ apin skyward. Altbo~ another storm is on the
horizon and predjcted to arrive in
the middle or tbe wee~ forecasten
say the threat of rain will vanish at
least for a couple days.
"It looks aood for Monday and
Tuesday, mostly sunny," said Jerry
Steifer a meteol"olosist with the Na-
tional Weather Service in Los An-
,cles.
Monday's forecast called for
::"~.:r-~-=u::w =: cut (or the after1aQpa with ...
winds at 10 mDll. ~were predic-
ted in lbe m~ SteiF' said tbe tbe Loi Aneeiel
rqioo bu received only I. 72 iDcMI
of rain IO far this year. NOl'lllll
rainfall is $.83 inches, he said. Tbe
season is measured from 1 to June
30.
A series of downpoun and a
substantial snow peck are needed
before fean of water shortaees will
be erased, officials say.
"It's a start." Steiser said of cur-
rent weather patterns. "I wouldn't
say that it's aoina to wipe out the
dro~t by any means, but it will
help.
Toniabt should be dear with lows
in the mid-405, Steiser said. Tues-
day's forccut calls for sunny skies
with incrasina clouds in the after-
noon with hiahs again in the
mid-60!, be said.
.... , fw ,,,.... leftl P .... ~. Lii .... M1ueb ~
Roa, .. nctlo Santa M...,.._; Joe ._ ... ...., DMre
FANS
From Al
Everett was running scared. The
field was a mess. The refs were on
the take.
...... ,.....,, ............ .
J..-""'~ Lii•.,.. N....,, and Scott Moa1o7, PIMentla,
wMdl lft •1i. ... t M tltelr te-II det••M JO IO J.
will continue to dominate through
the Super Bowl," she said.
~iaht. the Rams are out ~h~re
d ying, and these people arc spttttng
on the grave.
Montana's too good, the fans said
The 49crs arc unstoppable. on either
side of the ball.
HBO's shows dominate
cable TV ACE awards
there, three or four typicaJ steps 10
'the dying process? The Rams fans
went through them. Aµin.
First. there was denial.
.. The Rams are going to win be-
cause they're the better team." Jim
Ferguson of Irvine said. "The 49crs
are an over-rated team. Jerry Rice
and John Taylor are on the take a nd
they're not going to do anything
today ...
But by half time, the anaer was
subsidins a nd hope rci&ned su-
preme. Somehow, the Rams would
find a cure for the second half and
save themselves.
.. We will see a miracle with Jim
Everett," Elaine Moreta of Laguna
Niguel predicted. "It's aoing to take
some major ..turnovers, some bad
calls by the i refs. We're thinking
positive here!'
In fact. the only Rams fans not
reaching for the Pepto were. those
who put the proper perspecuve on
the eme.
··1 m e,uttina my money o n 'Less
Fillina,' ' Joe Healy of Irvine said.
Ot was a bad day for Joe. "Tastes
Oreat" won that contest.)
For people like Bevetly Lysyk of
Irvi ne, such talk was pracucall\
blasphemous. A Oeveland native
and fan. she couldn't abide ever
giving up on her team .
.. That's how the Rams fans are -
fickl e," she com~lained ... As long as
the Rams are winning. everything's
wonderful.
LOS ANGELES (AP) -HBO's
"Murderers Amona Us: The Simon
Wiesenthal Story" was named best
movie or miniseries u Home Box
Office dominated cable television's
J Ith annual ACE Awards on Sun-
day. -HBO captured 31 ACE awards,
includina 14 in the live telecast
Sunday and 17 at a dinner Friday. It
was virtually a rerun of its 1989
performance when HBO won 35
award.L
Awards in 26 catesories were
banded out Sunday ni&ht. plus the
G olden Ace Award to CNN for its
coveraae of events in China last
May. On Friday, awards in 56
categories, largely in the crafts, were
presented.
Showtime, A&E and CNN each
received six awards as a record 19
cable networks picked up honors
from the National Academy of
Cable Programmin~
Ferguson's optimism was the
norm. not the exception. The Rams
were 1n total control, the fans said.
Ronnie "Cheap Shot" Lott was
going to get his comeuppance. Mon-
tana was over the hill.
The denial factor held firm. well
into the second period as the 49crs
began to pile up the points.
Then. the next step. Denial turned
to anger. The 49ers were using illepl
equipment. Rams quarterback Jim
But the small continsent of 49cr
fans, they just smiled.
"h 's an absolute machine," for-
mer Bay Arca resident John Murrcll
of Westminster said.
.. The 49crs are the team of the
'80s and arc about to be the team of
the '90s."
Chico native Rosanna Venturini,
now of Irvine, echoed those senti-
ments.
"The 49crs are dominating and ---.................................................. ..
Or take Dine Sheldon of Irvine.
She wore the Rams blue and JOld to
show her loyalty, but admitted a
fondness for Joe Montana. anyway.
"I don't care what team he's on. I
just like him," Sheldon said. "I
never cared what team Joe Namath
played on, either. I j ust liked his
pantyhose commercials."
Midway throuJh the third period,
the Rams' demise was all but as-
sured and the final stase -accep-
tance -set in.
"Well, we've been through th1~
and we're still Cleveland fans."
Apparently. Lysyk didn't see the
hearse pull out of Candlestick Park
with the body. It was the same one
that carried the Browns out of Mik
High Stadium a few hours earlier.
But hey! Maybe Cleveland fan\
have n't grasped the steps one must
take when Death comes calling
They're still in denial.
No matter. They're JUSt as dead a\
the Rams. Again.
Accept 1t.
Gasoline station in FV robbed FV council approves
reorganization of
planning department
Sos the counc il made a mistake. SOS
Dzida said. serves as a model of ho" ,
By The D-'ly ,lot .
Rudy's Union Station at 9020
Edinaer Ave. in l'Quntain Valley was
robbed at gunpoint of an un-
disclosed amount of cash Sunday
night, police reported.
Lt. Mike Hanrahan said one
suspect was described as .a male
Hispanic, approximately 28, 6 feet
tall, wearing a ,,.ay jacket and any
corduroy pants and carrying a hand-
KING
From Al
portant leaders at various stages of
the movement," he said. "But at
that Lime. there was no question that
he was the moving force. His oratory
was something that inspired us in a
way that I don't think we've been
inspired since. His courage was
boundless.
"Even in those early days. he
knew he was a marked man. He
knew that there were those who
wanted him killed. But he didn't let
that stop him. Yes, he was. to some
extent the product of history. But I
cannot think of a finer person to
come forward and assume that man-
tle of history than Dr. Kina."
Kina said havina taken that march
and touched hands with the civiJ
riahts movement p ve him a
messqe that he tries to impart to the
youna people he teaches.
"It made me an activist," be said.
"I've tried to do thinp to make
people aware of the need to become
involved in the lives of our fellow
human beinp. Jewish tradition says
over and over apin that we should
be sensitive to stranaen, sensitive to
the poor and the homeless. because
we have been slaves ourselves."
l .OT'fl-:H \
Two to share
S 10 million prize
lly The Aaodated ,,. ..
It was a Nonhern California
weekend for the lottery jackpot, with
ticket holden in Salinas and Man-
teca splittina the SI 0,326, J S8 top
prize, state officials said Sunday.
A ticket containina all six
numbers in Saturday njJht's Lotto
drawina was sold tn Salinas and
anotbeT was sold in MantecJ. Each
ticket is worth s~. 163,079.
The winni~ numben in the CaJi-fomia Lottery s twice-weekly .. Lono
6-49" pme were: '3S, 6.t 12, 13, 30,
39 and the bonus nWDDer-' ·43.
No OM correc:dy picUd nve of six
wm.i11, 1111mben and die bonus
number. Howewr, 2A9 ticbu c:oalained
five of • triJuW11 a~ each wonh Sl,446.
gun. The second suspect was de-
scribed as a white male. 27. 6-feet
tall and 180 pounds. wearing jeans
and a blue jacket.
No one was hun 1n the robbery.
which was reported at 7:54 p.m.
Hanrahan said.
The men were in a 1978 to 1980
Chevrolet van, dark gray over light
gray. with windows on the side and
rear.
T~sday's Cover Story:
Victor ulpzlg, ~sldent
of U.. Bolsa Chia Con-
~rvancy, looks forward
to U.. 1990s •s tM dec-
ade of tM tHW/ronment.
By HOLLY J . \II AGNER
from A 1 the pnvate sector can provide ser·
vices to deal Wlth societ) 's proh-protesten began a fast at noon Sat-lems, she said.
urday. The goal: to "change the ·Tm here because I think tl1l'
heart's and minds of Costa Mesa Costa Mesa City Council has madl·
and all Orange County," Forbath a very. very wrong move to force the
said. relocation of SOS." she said. As temperatures dipped Sunday
afternoon, the protestors sat bud-Sunday's visitors also included
died in lawn chairs and bundJed Councilwoman Mary Hornbuckl e.
under blankets in an effort to keep the only council member who sup-
enforcement and housing inspec-warm. A smaller group followed a poned the bid to relocate the agenC\
11ons. fading patch of sunlight onto the to Superior Avenue. The dissenting
While interns will continue to aid parking lot. councilmember was also on hand for
Fountain Valle> is reorganmng Its 1n code 1nspcct1ons. a full -time con-Saturday's rally 10 speak to cheenng
Planning and Building Dcpanment trac1 building inspector will be But panicipants Sttmed cheered SOS backers. Hornbuckle has re-
and adding a planner and building added 10 Cit} staff. An hourly con· b) the stead} stream of supponers quested that the council reco nsider
mspcctor to handle an upswing in trart building inspector will be who arrived intermittently through-its pos1t1on on the relocatio n ofSO'i
construction and a revision of 1he chm1natcd . out the da}. beginning at 4 a.m. at tonight"s meeting.. · I I v. hen a group of smgers from St. c1tTyhs genera Pan. d b Those changes will ensure conll-Joachim's Catholic Church appeared As a result of recent pubhr alien
e reorgan1Lat1on. approve y null} of 1nspcc11ons. Schuma said to o ffer musical support. ti on. the organization has ra1!1ell
the City Council last week. will before lea\ 1ng his pos1t1on. He $300.000. Forbath said. enough
include several staff changes in an termed the cit} ·s internship program "'Thcr go t here at 4 but we mone} to buy o ne of two possihk
efTon 10 make the depanment more over the las1 }Car ··a revolvmg v.o uldn t let them sing until 6." locations in a commercial-industnal
efficient. according to a repon. door:· Forbath said area. But it will take at least threl·
The changes come al an aus-F1nall>. a planner will be added to Rabbi Bernard Kmg, a member of months before the chanty coulll
pic1ous lime. since the economic work on long-range planning m the the Costa Mesa Human Relations close escrow and move. she said
develo pment manager, the adminis-c ity. Committee, conducted a 9:30 prayer Forbath would not identify ei ther
trative assistant for housing and Schuma's report sta tes that service Sunday morning. protestors prospective relocation site.
community development and the change!> were necessitated by recent said. Mass was held at the protest
planning and building depanment increases an construction in the city site later in the day. After darkness fell Sunday. For·
d irector recently resigned to take on -notcabh South Park. the Mar· bath discussed her shon -and lon~-
other positions. no11 prOJCCI. a Hyundai dealership In addiuo n. members of the term goals for the center. She sail.I
The building department director, and a new library -a nd by planned Melhodist youth group held their she hopes the organization will
Frank Schuma. has joined Garden revision of the cit y's general plan. Sunda~ school class in front of Ci ty eventually have a home of 11s o" n
Grove's planning department. C-os1 of the reorganization was Hall. orbath said. to observe "re-) and that SOS will be able to stay at
The economic development man-estimated at S 150.786. including ligion in action." the community center until 11 can
ager will be downgraded to com-salaries. benefits. capital expen-Costa Mesa resident Mana move.
munity development analyst. chang-d1tures and operating costs. Pan of Fitzgerald 0-Lida, who amved Sun-"The long-term success would tx·
mg the position from management that cost will be offset b y inspection day afternoon wtth her 4-and 6-that no one ever has to go through
to staff. With that change. direction fees. Schuma said. year-old daughters. said she thouaht this again." she said.
of federal community development r.===================================-----------,
block &rants will move under the
wing of the planning and buildina
department.
In addition, the department will
assign duties handled by five part-
t1me interns to two full -time con-
tract interns. The interns have been
handlina much of the city's code
SEMI -ANNUAL SALE!
U \IC 11' 11 I Ill IC kl,f •. .llC. U\\
Monday, Jan. t 5.
• School11 Closed.
• Tralll collectlon1 Regular pickup schedule.
• Malla No delivery.
• .. nldl Banks closed, with the exception of
Security Pacific.
• City h•ll11 Huntington Beach and Irvine will
be closed. All other munfcipal offices will be open.
• Pederal ornc ... Closed.
• Stet• o111c .. Oosed. • Coune, ofllcesa Closed.
• 0r•ll9• County Transit Dlstrlcta Buses wm run on schedule. • •••11 Open
• •••• c sarll .... Open • ConYenlenca 1toresa Open.
• D.., Pll111 All otrtces open. Delivery by 6
a.m.; c .. 642-4333 by 10 a.m. to report delivery
problems.
Suits
Sportcoats
Trousers
Dress Shirts
SY.5.00 to S 1100.00 from $99.90
S255.00 to 5695.00 fram 18.90
S55.00 to s 175.00 fram S1 t .00
S33.00 to S 100.00 from S 11.00
Sport Shirts
Sweaters
Shoes
Nectcwear
C,e~Oottq
561Newportcenw~
S40.00to
$85.00 to
Sl 10.00 to
S15.00 to
fashion Island. Newport Belch • 6'tO·M10
s 160.00 from s 15.00
S295.00 from S59.00
s2e5.oo from sa.oo
S70.00 from S7 .50
Exhibit to focus
on space shuttle
./ . The Cosaa Mesa Church of Rt'ligjous Science
will present "Future Focus 2000" on Saturday.
Space exhibit shows will be offered at 9 and
10:30 a.m. and 12:30 and 2 p.m. The shows feature
hands-on displays of equipment and models of a
space shu~tle c~kpit, launch assembly, manned
m~cuvenng unns. space movie models, a space
suit and an educational display.
At 7 p.m .. ph )'Sicist and astronaut Dr. Brian
~·lea!)' will give a multimedia present~1on link-
ing science and spirituality.
Cost 1s SI 0 for JU St the Space Ex h1b11. S 15 for
the.c\'ening lc('ture or S20 for both. Events are at
2850 Mesa Verde Dnve. East, No.115. Co~ta
Mesa. For more 1nformat1on. call 754-7399.
Condor preservation discussed
Sea & Sage Audubon membcro; will meet for
a lel·turc on .. California Condor'i: Pa~t. Pre!>l'nl and
Future" at 7:30 p.m. Tuc~da) at Willard Junior
High School. I 34~ R O)) St . Santa ..\na.
( ondor kl·cpcr Pall• I-ems lrom the San
Diego Wild ·\nimal Park will d1'>cuss elforti, to
brl'l'd and pre~n e the ancient <,pn·1c\. \\ h1Lh nov.
e,l(1!.\s uni} 1n l·ap11' 1t~
Fur morl· 1ntormat1on call Dirk l\.u\I at 786-tonx
Rare wines go up for bid
The Bou1~ Kougl· C:if{' 1n Nl'\\port Hcach \\Ill
ha\e an auction ut tinl'. rarl' and out-of-circulation
\\inl'' at 11 a.m. Saturda\ at th<.· rntaurant. JI Ill
Nl·v. Port Hh d . ~cv. port· lka<.·h
The colle<.·11on boasts 1981 lknngcr Pn' atc
Re'><.'rH· ( hartlonna'. 1980 La< rema \'1naa Pinot
No1r anti I <;26 ( ·hatl·au I taut Bnon Paull lac
Prem1a C1rantl < ru 1n magnum' ~ llllal or 250
ca~<.') arc ,1a1etl tor ,,,k 1n lot\ of thrcc 10 12
boll k'>
Tasting tx•g1n' at 9 am H1Jdl'f\ ma~ purlh.1\l'
a paddle lur $20. apphctl to purcha\l">. 1 hl' e' cnt
1ndutll'" thl· ··Bou/\ Butli:t'' ot patc<,. lhl'l'\l''>.
l'rOl\\;\111\ .rnJ llltlll' £ nr lllllrl' 1nf11rm.111nn. lJlf
6., 3-l.!411
French poet discussed
..\rtl'>I and author !\1a<l:inw r ran1.,.,C1!1111 "111
knurl' un I n·nrh poet no' d1\t and pl.1~ 1H1g.ht
kan ( lll'll'au :ll 4 rm "iaturJa\ .11 the 'l'\ enn
Wunlkrman \l uwum. I '.\1a<,<1n .' In inc
C 1 dot v. :" 1111 rod U<. l'd 10 ( 11rte::i u 1 n I 11~..i t1'
Pahlu P1<..J\\ll. l~11lw1 ot hl'f Jaughta Palom;i fhl'
fnenJ,h1p \\Ith ( 11urau la'1l'J until hi\ Jl·nth 111
I 1lo I ( 11lu1·-. kl tu re. "( m tr.111 I l\.nl'"
t 944-I 96J." nplon .. ·<, tht·ir nchange<o dol 11ml·n1rd
1n hcr kttcr~ :ind memone' Oh'l'f\ a1111n'\ on
( 0\ ll'.IU .lrl' tranwtl 1n thc ronll'\I ot thl' l!.Cfll'r·
at10n 111 \lo<.krn' Pahlu PllJ\\O JuJn < 111•,, ~\11J11·
Daarn. \ml·dt·o \111d1gll.rn1 lg(lr ...,,r,1' 111'"' .inti
Enl.. '°1Jt 1l·
Thc kl turl' " 1n llll1JUl1l lh111 1111h .in l ,1 ...
h1t111n l"\plonng thl· .rl·.111 \l· prt>1 l''-'l'' rn dl·1d11p·
nll'nl ul ( 1!101·, JI (\\111 I.. ( 111111 \\ 111 ,111t11g1 .rph
ropll'\ 111 hl'f h11ol,' ·· \n \111'1 ' lournn ·· .11HI
"lntl·rlJll,.. JI J rnqH11111 111111h«l1.111·h 1t t!l111\111v.
hl'f kllUfl'
f <ir m11r1· 1ntnr111.111nn 1.111 thl' 11\11\l'Um ..11
..i .,2.111
Up, up and away for adventurers
IP tnl' v. 111 olkr J hot arr h.lllu11n1ng 1'\lllf,11111
ll\l't 1h1· 1hfl, ol l'kl \tar \.1111rd.1\ thmu11h lhl'
ul~ ·, ( ommun11~ ...,l.,' Ill'' lkp.ir111wnt
l'a1111·1pa111' mu\I hl' .11 ka't IX to 111111 the
aJ11·n1url' \\ ilh thl· \outhnn ( .ll1li1rn1:i U.dl1111n
( 0 ( IW \tl\,11,\l' J111lnll\l'\ .I Ufllqlll' \IP' Pl lhl'
<,un,1·1 .1nJ llH· t'\l lll'llll'nl 11! '11a rrn~ in tht· ,i.,,
Part 1upan1' ~'di rt'll'I' l' li1't ll1g.h1 a •nrfl\ .Ill''
l hl· aJH·n1url' tx·~111' al lknlidd l'.irl.. ~ ...
[)l'l'r\\lH1d \\ l'\I II\ llll'
I w 11\llrl' 1nlo1m,1t1on 1.ill ..,h rd.i ( r•il1' .ii
.5) 1-hn 'h
Fund-raisers have a picnic
l ( I ' < hr Ill l>l'\l'lttpml'nl < ,·nta ''ill h1"1 a
r:ifllt· Jilt.I p1u11t \.1111rd,1' lr11m I I a m to ..i rm
at Tl·Wrnkk P.1ri.. in <Mia \1 ro;a l~OCT'rdo; '''II
hl'lp r,11\l' tunJ, lur nl'" pl.1 )gr11unJ l'ljU1pml·n1
R.1 Ilk Ill kc\\ Jn• ) I 1·a<. h .1 nJ pr11co; 1 nd udl'
LJ'h .1tnp10 "ian I r.1m.1<,u1 t.1111\Jll'd h~ Suntl1ma
fra,l·I .ind .1 u1l01 1de\l<o11n Jonated hi P\
( Jrnt·ra' .rnJ \ppl1.1mn t>ar11np.:inl<i need nnt
a11t·nJ thl' r1rn1<. to "rn t>1eml· 11cket' an: S5
rhl' ll'Olcr. 1'1262 Jamhon°l' Road. 1<. run h\
l '< I\ Dl·partml·nt 111 Pt·d1:itrK'> and the Orang~·
( ount\ Dc:partmrn1 ol FJuca11on The .l()-<;tuJ t·nt
Sl'hool· h~ts Sl'\l'r,11 11pcn1ngs a<, v.ell
For morl' rnforma11on or t1cl..c1' lall
856-8700.
(·:\t.E'.\DAH
Monday, )an. 15
• 6:30 p.m. Costa Mesa City Council, counul
l·hamlx·r... 77 Fair Om e.
Tuesday, Jan. 16
• 6 p.m. Lapaa Bueb City Council, counnl
chambers. 505 Forest A vc.
• 8 p.m. Foatala Valley Clly Co.ncll. council
chambers. I 0200 Slater A' c.
S9 \ '\D 1101.Dl'\G
'ti \ k I "\ C , I 111 C, IC \ U I
Dyslexic student dra~s on creativity
ly IRIS YOKOI
Of ow C>...iy -S1Mf
Nine-year-old Roger Sulwell some-
times has a hard 11me convt'ying in words
what he wanb to say. Reading and
writing can be a fruMra ting challenge at
times.
But the bright, blond bo) has no
trouble at all when 11 comes to draw-
1ngcartoons. Although hindered b) dys-
lexia. Roger has been blessed with a
talent for drav.1ng and has learned to use
his 1n1elligencc and wit to create his own
com1t· stnp'i about \\\O creatures -Spike
and Cork}.
Roger's artistic ~i..11ts ha\l'. already been
rerngn1Ll'd h) h1i, tl·acher., and friends at
Prcnt1n· l);i, ~·hoot 1n Costa Mesa. a
Slhool tor ch.ildren "11h spcnlic language
d1..ah1lit1c\. and hl' hop(''> '>Oml'da~ 10 be
ac; famou\ a\ his idol'> "ho'>C "url..s are
puhll\ht•d Jail~ rn nn"papcr<, :ind <.omic
buol..'>
"I \\ant 10 Ix· 111..l· Jim Oa' 1s (creator
uf ( rartidd) .. K11ga \Jld v.11h a h1g gnn.
R11gl'f. \\ho lt1 l''> 1n ll unt1ng1on Beach
\\1th ht'> pa1 l·n1-.. an oldl·r <,1ster. two
~~~'/'
brother'> Jnd l\10 nephe\\\. '>J1d J H>ung
fril·nJ encuuragl·d h 1 m 10 'tan ,i..etL h 1 ng
a fe" month'> ago. lie al\o "a' huo,cd h'
thl• v.url.. of hi\ olJl'I brother Hill\ v. ho
I\ amsucall~ llll l11wd anti th .,k.\IL J'
v.ell.
.. Bill} ·s conu<. '>lnp, All1!>un. \\3!> 1n the
D•llJ P'llOI ....... 0 .. , l•H ,..,".
Roger Stilwell works on his cartoon ch aracter Spike.
I
'>lhuul nl·\1\p.t1x·1 1..11 Pfl·nllle t>a')
Ruger ';11J ·
.. \1' tl'Jl ht·r 111IJ ml.' I '>huuld tl11 J
llllllll. '>trrp \nJ lu,t1n m\ fncnd. 'Mild
·11 \\t•uld tx· "'" "' hJ\1· \1iur '>tutl 1n thr
nl'\I \p,11)1.' I
fhl' ~11ung h111 • ..111 \\hrp up '>kctchn 1n
m1null''>
"HI." \\J\ wpp11,,•d lo tx-a poreup11w
so I ma1.k h1111 111..t' a turtk w11h \pikes on
his 'hl·ll ·· Ill' n pla1nl'd on J rl'l't'tH
aftl·rn111m "h1k ,tra"ing ht\ <.hara<.ll't
Cori..~
1-11'> l har.11. lt'I -,p1 l..r. "" the othl·r hand
e' oh l'd 11111\1 h" '>l..l·trh ul a gruundh11g
"I lJn11111 J r,11' humans .. Koger \Jtd
firml ~ But .1lll'r ..1 nlllml·nt\ pau\l' hl
aJtlt·d ·1 ,..111 1h111k .ii 11nl· hum.in I 1.Jn
d ra" rl· • .t t,1,t ·
..\ k\\ 'l'lt>ll1h 1,11\ I hl' '>hlJ\\l'd hi\
fin1'>hl·J \11111. -.1 p..11r 111 tlar\.. gl."'"''
ahoH· ''"' ~·"''·J h.1n1.h
f hl' Ill\ l\lhk 111.Jll'
··:-..u. 11 ' .111 '"' 1-.rbk 1..rtl ... Koga ..a1tl
ft1 u..1lh 11\\J"fl"l\t• " thl' \llUng \(U·
dcnt·, '""1hul.1•" H" '>ri:n·h "
spnnl..kd '' th .rJull-'1/l' \111rd'> ll lo.l·
"u11 n1. Ilk 11' 1' ..
'ct. R11gl·r ",,., ,·rl'h 1h\ll.\ll .:ind hJ'>
ha<l prubkm' l..unrng Ill rl·ad JnJ lUm-
pu t,· 11\J 1 h pr nt1km' .1l u 1rtl1 ng to tcarha
( a-...anJr.1 "-"tur.11.." llhnm Rogn h:i'
knm'n , .. , ... t1r,1 1tr.1Jl' .1nJ d1'\lntx·, J\
hi\ "l,1\\•flll' lt.llh~·· 1111h1· \\ht1k \\11rlJ
"Hut ht ' .1 't'f'\ 1.11·.111 \l' right hr:11n
t~ pl' 111 J'1'f ,,.r, "l'IULJl..I\ \,11d
I h.11 ·, 1 pr..d 1tl 1nJ111du.1I-. \\ 11h
IJngu..1!!' dl\.d•rl1l1<'' ,,11d '.1n1' K11\,ll
d11 1.·ll•rt '' l'r 1111,1 1>,1\ \1h1111i lo1..11t·J
lll'.11 lhl I pp1r ''·'P"fl HJ\ 11 .lf'!)l'JI\
"h.11 ,·1 1,,.,, tht't' 111J 111duJI' d"
•
k\ll abo gne-. them h1gher-le"el creative
ahrl 111n Ru' di '>JIJ
\ta n~ d~'>ln1n iHt' extreme!~ bnght
1nLl1' 1dual'> "hu go unto become su~s
lul 1n the liclJ., of drama. computer work.
rnginn·nng. Ul'llll'>lr~ and even wnting .
Rt>~ JI 'kl1d.
··1 hl· great <.reali'C minds are there -
11\ JU'>t l'On'l'~ 1ng 1t that's difficult." she
\:JIJ .. Thl·~ can le:irn. the~ JUSt learn in
,1 J11frrl'lll "a~
.. Kugl·r 1!> a 't'f\ bnght l1 11le boy,"
K(l\JI -.aid "He ha' a good \<>Cabulary.
,·,1.d kn1 1de:.i' I le .1us1 has difficulty
g1.·111ng 11 out I-fr h.:i'> man~ frustrations.
.. , .. ,not 1u'>I turning le11ers around. He
1..no'" "hat he ''JOI'> 111 'WI\ but he can't
pull 1\ llUI .. .
PrenlllL' Da~ ...,lh11ol 1nes to provide
,1udl·nt' eH'r' 11pponun11~ to hone their
1.iknt'> Jnd ~halknge 1he1r minds. Royal
,,11J T hl· "l huol ha\ a computer room to
11.1, h '' mJ proli:s-.ing and employs a
r..111 -11ml· ..1n ll'.1l hcr and experts tn sci-
1 fll l
I 11..l· JO\ J' cragt' ~oungster. Roger
1h111~' 111 ">1.h11ol a\ his ··work." a place
v.IWtl 'thl'' g1,l· U'> 100 much rules."
In h1' trl'l 11ml· at home. he leads a
"mrk ltll' .. E.Jt \\:ttch TV and sleep -
1u'1 11 1..l' c •Jrl.1l'IJ ·· Roger said.
I k \Jld hr l!-l'I'> 1dl·as for his o"'n comic
\It 'I'' 1r11111 pmln'1onal stnps. part1cu-
l.1 rl' ( 1..1rl1cld lom1c hooks and his
b111thl'" ·l!rm tnrng 10 get ideas. because
l I llll 11u1 111 1JrJ, ... he said.
I h1.· ~uung'll'r°'> tasC1na t1on w11h car-
1111111' "l'' 1Jl·nt H1-, e\es get "1der as he
l.,, 111·dh r:.illk'> oil ti1., fa"onte comic
h1111l.. .1nJ l Jrtonn characters
\\ 11hl·nnl' \-mrn. (1roo. Teenage Mu-
tant 'in1:.i Tunk-. -and elt platns their
'>lllrll'\
Hut hl· da1m' hc doesn't realh read
l um1, h< "'"' mu1.h because most· of his
tr ml '' 'fll:nt ,m either school or tele-
' 1'111n ·1 do m' ranoons at school. I
barl I\ J,, m' l :tfltXlns at home because
I \\Jl1.h llK' 'mu1..h T\ ... he explained.
Ruger )Sid h1'> family generally secm1
10 lr l..r h1'> an .... orl ··sill) says they need
"orl.. ·· Ruger said "M~ mom says.
'ThJI' 1rr> goo<l .
"\h tnend l1rl·g said. ·You should do
J hook · I 1hrnl hl's nght. Tht' more you
put 1 l>Ur \tUfl OU!. the more you &et
famuu-. I v.ant to get popular with about
ID.l l<M) po..·oplc ··
Time for public comment changed
at Huntington council meetings
OC marathon
swimmer sets
new record
By ROBERT BARKER
01 .~ o .. tty "'"" h .. "
llunt1ng111n Al-.llh \1.1\11r f11m \ta~.,
h.1, 1n .11111)1.·d thl 1111111.11111 < 11~ <. ounnl
mel·trng' , h.1ng111ii thl' 11nH' tor pt·opk tu
'tl'P up 111 till' lllllfllph11111· and make
puhh, llllllnll'lll' ahoul an\ number ol
topic.' th.it 1hn kd ulmrx·lkd to com-
ml'nt on
Puhhc u1111ml·n t<, nurmall' ha\l' come
.1t thl· 'tan ul thc .., pm mct•t1ng~ l 'nder
M a~,· 'huml· puhhl· hearing') on 5pcc1'ic
anJ u1.,ualh 1mponan1 l'>'>UC.''> will coml' at
th <.' tnp ot thl· agrnda Puhhc commcnt'i
\\ 1111 follu\\
Som<.· nh<il'f\ crs agr<.'l' that tht· agenda
sh u tlk " n<.'l'l''\3 n 1 n ortl1•r w ac-
com pl 1'h .i1·11c.m 1ai..Jn nn \l'ht·dukd ma1 -
1L·1 !>at a dt•1 t·n1 hour I J\l \ll1nda\ tht•rt·
\\l'rl' onh l\\11 puhhl hl·anntt' anti thl'
'>el'on<l on1.· d1dn'1 'tan unlll .1lkr mid·
night
1 \\en1~ -nm' rc'1Jcnl'> 1ro11rx·<l 10 1h1•
podium lx·ture 1hc pubhl hcanng~. ,rx·al..-
ing on a ':met~ uf t0r ir<o r:ing1ng from
11ppo.,111on to P1cf'itdl' \. 11lagc and a goll
rourst· 1n Central Park to the prnhlcm<. of
gelling a business hrcn~ to \t'll 11<11nsct-
11as along Beach Boulr' ard
Hut ,11m1· 11.· ... ,knh d .11111 thJt pu111ng
the JlU~hl t'llllHllt'lll' h1:h1nJ r11hl11 h,·.lr·
Ill&'> I\ ,11\ Jlh 111pl h• 'lllh Ill\'\ tll\1' 111 lhl
puhl1,
.. ( k.1rf\ thl'' \\,1111 111 l..1.Tp lhl' 1x·1•plt
trom hJ' rng .111. l" '·"" 1 l',1tk111 I )\.•b
h•l' < 11111.. 111 thl \.1 \" < 1111 P.111.., t 1111111111
tel' .. , .. , \Jd 1111 thl'lll It > \\11t1p \II ltm ,I\
to 'hut 11u1 thl· 1)1.'npk ·
~fa" '>.lid I mt.I\ th.11 thrn· 111 tour
counl.1' l1ll'l1lh1·r, ,,lflll' ur '" h1111 I Ul'\·
tla\ v.hl'n h" .11ti1•111 nl·d till'< 11' < 11um ii
meeting .11 I 'ii I .1 Ill 111g111g hrm hr
slrl·amlirw 11llTl1t1g'
!\la~'· "ho ,,ml Ill' l hJngl· 111 t11rn1J1
w1\l Ix· t'\!)l'riml·n1.1l. 'a11..l 1h.11 JndP!)l'r'
arr wld 111 1'1-· .11 thl' m1·rt1ng.' "11h their
la"~l'r' anJ , .. 11 ... rtt.1111' .11 -p 111 hut
'>Ollll'\111\l'' ha \l' lo \1'1 m1n1. I h;in t'r ll'
h11ur' tx·for1.· 1h1·11 J~L·nd.1 1t1nu·, up
The <.hangl' "di 1x-rm11 till' l II\ '" !o!t'I
\\Ori.. dnnc un till' 1mport.1n1 111.111rr' hl'
..a1tl It \\llr'I u11Tll'' 111 \Hlf\I 1x11plt-l.in
ah\3\\ mah· 1hc11 puhh<. u1nHlll'l\I\ JI
thc (olluv.1ng f11l'l't1ng. ht· <oJ1J
Formcr Planning C omm1"11rn < h.11r·
man Tom 11\l·ngooJ <.a1J h1• u1nlur1.,
"1th !\ 1a~.., .. Puhh1 h1•a n ng'> 1.,h11u Id u1m<.'
first. Thne·, a ho1 rl·ndou\ L'\pt·n<;{' 111 1h1·
\l.t tl hl \J 1J
L1\1.n~uoJ ~·J th.ti .t pr11hkm Jc·
' •'I'' 'h1. n 1x·11pl1. u\l· thl' puhlil 1orum
1111 .1 ''"" 1 t'i. pr11gr .1 m 1 h.:i t'' n111 up tor
.1l11i•11 th,11 night JnJ 1al..1· J 1111 111 trmc
1 11111.. !hl· k ..1J1.·1 ,,, thl· "a'l' < lur Par\...,
( 1111\l\lflh'\' 1'1ghl 'lf plJn\ t11 hu1fd J
p.u-11 I g.1111 u1ur'r 111 ( l'ntral P.1r l... ~ug
gl'''' 1h .11 11 thl' ,nunul ml'mhl·r. arc
lllllu·r nnl ,1h11ut running I.Ill' thl'\
'1h11ul d .. 1.111 11lt'l11ng' JI l'I 'll pm "and
111 •• 1..,· lhl lll'l "\'\ Jl ........ 1hk to lhl' rx·opk
·111 "·"' tintd .lltl·1 m1dn1gh1 (It\ grt a
l II.II\\ l' IP 1.tll.. I " •• b,urd ..
( 11111.. 'hu,hanJ Jnhn I 1'hrr. \4.llJ rc\I·
1knh U\l' thl' 11nll' -·1111·Jlll:tte thl' uluncil
11n h11\\ till'' k'l'I ..
. 1 hi\ tkllnill'" " IHI! rx·rl'\lrmlo.a II
thl'\ g11 thrnugh \\llh th1-. I \\11ulJn'1 tx·
'urrr "l'J 11 1h1·r1·' 11111 .1 'trong pu'h 111
ll'l .111 lhl· m.1,·11r •·
< 11unnl"um.tn C 1ra1l' \\ 1ndwll '31d a
,111u1111n m1gh1tx·111 "lht·Lluk mel."llng' 1.n
that thl'n"' not \II mJm 1mronant puhhl'
hl·arrng' on thl' <,arnc agc.•nda hr also 'u~e\tl·d that .1 llllll' hmll nl perhaps JO
minull'\ lOUld tx· \Cl aside for public
lumml·n1' at the .. tan of the m~t1ng
\larathnn "" 1mmer Lvnne Cox
nm,t'tJ tht' 1'" ~ Beagk' Channel m South
~nll'lllJ in a good" ill gl'Sturc designed to
pmm11ll' lnl·ndsh1p betw~n Argentina
.lntl < h1k
Tht· \l.1m1to'i r~1denl. whose 1987
""'m Jlru~' the l:kmng Strait won the
pral\l' ol ~01 1e1 President Mikhail S.
C 1orhal hl'' made Saturday·s crossing of
thl' 1 hannl'l llll the southernmost tip of
~11u1h \mcnla rn J hours. 22 minutes.
"1tlh1u1 the aid of a wet suit or
irhul.111 ng l!.fl'3'>l'. Colt entered the 46-
dl•grl'l' \1a1er at ti a.m. at Argentina's
A.i h1:i C nh1ndn na Nav) base. said Argen-
llflL' na'' C mdr. Hector Julius Alvarez.
%<.· all.ghll'd at Put"rto Navarino. Chite,
rn a 'talc 111 near·h~ pothennia. her body
1emrx·ra1un· ha' ing dropped to 94.5
tlegn·l·~ m·ar the t•nd of her swim of more
than four mile\ "~hl' \.\,\, 1n the beginning o(
h'pothl·rm1a. "h1ch we define u 3S
dl·grl'l'' ( l'nt1g.rade (95 dcgrtt Fahrcn·
hc111 ·· ..a1J Prnm Neild of the London ~kdlljl < olkgc.' v.ho monitored lbt
S\\lm
"Rut shr "as O K She was still
cohcrcnt '\he "asn't confusca."
Keeping up with body's clock
l was read111g about natural peaks
and lows of your hod~ dock. and the
lx''it hours to schedule vanous ac-
ll' 111es. I had no 1Jea ho" important
11011"& IS.
For cum pie. I nc' l'T look at the
clock when I'm ha\lng a construe·
11ve argument with my husband.
Now I know wh} we don't get
anywhere. Fighting 1s more pro--
ductn e betwcc:n 8 and 8:30 1n the
morning whc-n you·re refreshed and
ha\C tot.al recall of each other's
1nconsidenate acts. There's nothing
more humiliating than memory
blackout in the middle of a big ~nc
and havins to ask your mate what he
said that UPfCt you.
The ""°"' time to ajvc your hus·
band lcid tidi"@ is half-an-hour
before meals. This is not a
propitious momnt to tell him
radon 111 is ~"' int~ the ba.~·
mcnt. The body 11alt'ady1Uffcrina
lo•. lood supr and huntcr s-ins.
and doesn•t n~ a triple whammy.
Save the gastnc 1ou1p unlit later.
Accordint to our body clock. po~1t1vc th1nk1na pcalcs in the af\tr·
noon. But don't push your luck and
call him on the aotr oounc. .
We spend three quartm of ('Ur li~es ac>•na to doctors. denusts. and
ch1roprac:ton to be probed.. drilled
a nd cr11ck.cd. TM only time to sub-
mit to sud\ tonure ii before noon
when your thtt:Shold of pain is hish·
C'il
The same apphr~ 10 taking collect
calls from ~our kids. Having the h11c
put on )Ou isn·1 as painful in thr
morning.
It's aston1 ihing that you can fl)
through fl\ e time zones and j our
bod' clock ~lilt knows what tame it
1s ~ck home One bonMT)' martini
at an hour you'rt usually aloomily
munching bran Rakes is three time$
as bracing as the same libation at
night .Even wh1ffina a martini oli~
will gi\·e you a bun. Tius it an
excellent way to cut beck on you_r
drink1na. However. ifs citpensi~.
You have to keep chanpftl time
zones. •
T f'Y1 na to balul« the budlret?
Wa.it until late af\rmoon when your
body tcmpc:ntum and brain are
better cquq,ped to capt with the
compksities of deficit If 11 di• J
wondtt if Wnhi._,on kftOWI dlftT
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Gs • 0.-DNLY MOT/ Manfcr • .-..., 11. WIG • • . • ' ,. j --
ns die In Azerbiganl riots
MOICOW (AP) -A.t leatt 2'
people died ln the capiwl or tbc
Aterblija:n ~blic aflei ethnic riot· 14 broU out~ovenli&ht. 1nd dozens more people: were killed or wounded
u the unrest 1prcad acrou the re-
public, official mtdia said Sunday.
Extra internal sccuri1y troops were
flown to the soutl)tm republic to try
to quell the violence, and a military
commander of one bcsiqed area
aillcd for a state of emergency, the
lc:lcvision news proaram ''Stvcn
Days" rtportcd.
A witness in the city of Baku.
when: tht violence began, described
a street awash in blood and said
victims there included two women
tossed from balconies.
It was the bloodiest clash in nearly
two years between Azcrbaijanis and
Armenians, who att locked in a feud
over Nagomo-Karabakh, an enclave
populated mainly by Armenians but
which is con1rollcd by Azerbaijan.
Mosl '!'rmcnians arc Christians:
most AZcrbaijanis arr Shiite
Moslems.
The violence was stt off by news
that an Azerbaijani had been Killed
and another wounded by Armenians
in Azerbaijan's capital, Baku.
Radio Moscow said the inc idents
were announced at a rally Sa1urday
night in Baku"s central square: that
Elsewhere in Eastern Europe .. ,.,,._,.,...
In other events in the: Eastern Bloc on Sunday:
CZECHOSLOVAKIA -About 6.000 people callina for the earliest
possible pullout ofSoviet troops from Czechoslovakia rallied on the eve of
Soviet.Czechoslovak talks on the topic, the state news aaency CTK reported.
The protesters in 1hc: town of Po h.orany reportedly demanded the estimated
70,000 Soviet 1roops in Czechoslovakia leave by Aug. 21 -the 22nd
anniversary of the Soviet-led invasion th.at crushed the Prague Spring
reforms ofthen-Communist Party chief Alexander Dubcek.
EAST BERLIN -East Germany's laf"F.$1 opposi1ion political pany
said that it will open talks on unification Wlth West Germany if it wins
national elections in May. Tens of thousands of East Germans demonstrated
against the Communists in at least fourcilics to ketp up the prtssure o n
Communist Premier Hans Modrow's shaky coalition government. "forty
,·cars ofCommunisl Rule arc Enough" and '"Lies. Corruplion an~ Treason
Marked the Communist State." read lwo of the banners at a rally 1n Eas1
Berlin. Several people: waved Wes! Gt'rman nags.
POLAND -Prime Minister Toshiki Kaifu of Japan 1old 1hc Solidan1 ~
led gov~n:tment t~at Japan .is cons!~ering giving credit guarantees of up io
S850 m1lhon 10 aid Poland s trans111on to a markc1 economy. J apan and
Poland also signed a previously announced agreement under which Japan
will provide a S 150 millio n credit 10 a slabilitiltion fund to back the Po lish
currency, the zlo ty. as it becom·es a con\'ertible currency.
was anended bv abou1 150.000
people. ·
.. Calls were made al th1: rally to
drive the Armenians ou1 of lhl·
ci ty." the Radio Mosco""' corre"spon-
dl'nl rl·portl"d fro1n 1hc Caspi;1n ~a
port of l. 7 million people. " . .\n1ong
the l-ro,,d. anti-Armenian slogans
..,,crl' shouted. and then lhe mos1
tcrn l:llc 1hing of all began -the
PolfOm~"
The official Tass news aacncy said 1' people~ killed in Baku. Radio·
Moscow quoted local lnterior Minis-
try officials as sayi na most victims
were Armenians.
Late Sunday. Tass said the viol·
enct had spread to the Shau-
mya novsk and Khanlar regions of
Azerbaijan, near Naaorno-
Karalxi.kh, and that there wert doz·
ens of dead and wounded from both
na1ionali1ies.
"Seven Days" said thousands of
armed Azerbaijani militants were
massinJ in the two districts and that
Armenians also bearing arms were:
being transported lhcrt;.
The military commander in Shau-
m yanovsk, Maj. Gen. Yu. A.
Kosolapo\'. called for the introduc·
li on of a stale of emergency, "Seven
Da\·s" said .
"f..,,·o helicopters were shot a\ with
a rtillcr~ guns. and a lic.u1cnan1
aboard one v.·as wounded. Highways
and railroads to Na$orno-Karab.ak.h
..,,·ere blocked and shipments of food
and fuel were 1101 reaching 1hc dis-
tnr l. according to Soviet TV.
It said fou r sold11:rs of the Interior
M1n1Slf). "ho arl· responsible IOr
internal secunl). ha\'e disappeared
since Saturda) and thal a fiflh ""as
killed.
Coretta Scott King
calls on Bush to
help unify America
By TM Assodat~d Pr~ss
Martin Luther King Jr. ""'as re+
membered in church services na -
tio nwide Sunday on the eve of what
wo uld have be-en his 61st b1r1hday.
and the slain c1vd rights leader's
widov. called on President Bush 10
help unify . .\merica.
Corella Scon King dch\'crcd hl'r
annual "state of the dream" addrc-ss
al Ebenezer Baptist Church, ""'hcrl·
her husband ..,,·ar. pastor. bcfor(·
abou1 1.000 people. including such
civil nghts leaders ar. the Re vs. Jesse
Jac kson and Joseph Lo"'ef}.
Mrs. K.Jng rencctcd o n thl' dra-
matic social changes of 1989 1n other
parts of the world and her hushand's
philosophy of ci,·il disobedience.
"The ca1aclysm1c changes v.·e havl'
seen in Eastern Europe. 1n ("hina
and in South Africa since last }car
~ve deep roots 1n this very pulp11 ."
she said.
Mn. King. noting tha1 Bu sh ir. 10
deliver his Sune of the ·U nion ad-
dress in a few days. recalled a State
of the Union spet'C'h 1n 1he 196& b~
then-President Johnson.
Johnson "captUr('d the 1mag1na-
tion of 1he American people j us1 h~
Shelters don't meet
needs of homeless
WASHINGTON (AP) -Many
homeless youths Steking help al gov-
emmc:nt-fundcd shehers arc not get-
ting the services they need. es·
pccially job 1ra1n1ng or treatment for
drug or alcohol abuse.
In 1977, Congress expanded a
shelter program for runaways by
adding homeless youngsters. but in·
vestiptors uy the: probiem<J. ell·
pc:ric:nced b y the two groups of\en
require different solutions.
'"Homeless youth in particular
may need longer-teffil sef"V1ccs. such
as education and trainina in job and
living skills;· the repon by the Gen-
eral Accounting Office said.
'"They don't choost to leave home
as runaways do," said Sen . Paul
Simon. D-111.. who released the ~
port Sunday,
"l\1111 .H
5a )tng three httk· -..ord\, •\l/l· 'hall
overcon1c."' ~1 ri.. King said,
" . .\ quarter of a l·en\uf) l:ller .
President Bush has 1he san1'· o p-
portuni1>:· shl· s:ud ··He can help
un 1f} .\mcnca tf hl' -..111 break wfth
thl· past b~ t"nd1ng !he arm~ race and
..,,.ork1ng for prograrns 10 pro\idc
JObs and l·ducattonal opportunities
!Or all ·\ml'n cans.
"If hl' \.\111 a'oid thl• kind of
m1JJtar) ('ntanglen1l'n\~ th:u dl'-
r.tro~l·d (Johns.on'sJ ..,,ar on po' en ~.
he can un1 f~ .-\n1cn ca and ll'ad 1he
..,,.orld 10 a highl'r dcst1n~ ... Mrs.
King said.
J ack Kl·n1p. l 1.S. sccrctar~ of
housing and urban dc,clopn1en t.
prescn1ed ~!rs. Ki ng "'1th a large
photograph of a l 'hincsc student
standing in &·1J1 ng·s T iananmt•n
Square hold ing a ~1gn reading. "\.\ e
Shall Q\ crcun1l'. ··
··The drl'an1 \J,c., on not onl)
here. bu1 through out the -..urld ...
Kemp s•ud.
Mrs. King called on Krng su p-
porter\ 10 carr' on hl·r hu\hand''
dream. ·
••Let's tx· clear 1ha1 1h" future
depi.·nds on us and our determ1na-
1lon to do Goer s "'111:· she said. ··1f
.,. ..............
Corett• Scott King gets a hug trom the Rev. Jesse J•ckson
during the "State or The Dream·· celebration at the
Ebenezer.-Ba ptist Church In Atlanta Sunday.
}OU takl' n111h1 ng l'ilr.e a\\:l~ tn1r11
here tud;1~. (l·t II be a COil\ u,t1on 1h;1t
you can 01akc a dlfl"l·rcoc\·."·
Earlier, Jackson. a fo rmc-r 1 >..·n1 0-
cratic prcs1dcn11al contl·ndc-r and
former King aid('. spok(' to tC"x ule
-..orkers 1n I 11u1'' 1!1l' 1n •·001ral
Gl·org1a fr11111 thl' \ll·p~ 11f lhl· Jl·1-
fcrson ('1)Ul\l\ ( ourihnu'l' \\ 11h1n
sight of an o!d 'la' r :tUl t1 on hlo<·I..
1-1(' urgl·d aH l\orki:r' 1n 'tand ur
ag..nn,1 l!h.'H !"""-'' tur ;1 11' 1ng \\;1gl·
.111d dl'l l'l11 "or\..lnJL r11nd11u1n'
·· \' ll1n~ a' thl' plul' I\ pull,·d and
1hl' l1gh1' arl' out, "'''rl· all lhl· 'an1l'
1n the darl,," .1;11:!."111 -.:11d "Kl·gard-
lc<,~ o l l'olor hunl'l'f hun' ··
In '\:l·1• \ •>r l.. ( 111 ~1.nnr J)a\1d
ll 1n l..1n'. lhl' lir,1 hi~, I.. 11,' hold lhal
u ifi{l'. 111ld ahou\ 4(111 po:upk• at
Jud,.,n \ll·1111Jn,1I ( h1H l h .i houl
King·, ~!ruggll' tor l'qu;il1!\
U.S. troops in Panama detain Cuban
ambassador, two:embassy officials
P . .\NA MA ('l"r\',. Panama IA PI
-U.S. sold1cri. bnell~ detained the
Cuban ambassado r Sunday. offi cials
said. II ..,,.as the <,('cond time he -..·air.
slopped and S(·archcd since th e 1n-
\'as1on to ous1 Gl·n ~·!anue! Antoni o
Noriega.
Also Sunda~. ~fanueJ Solis Palma.
a former president under Noriega .
#aS rcportedh in the Venezuelan
Embassy ""'ai1'ing for word on his
pet1t1on for asylum.
At a roadblock outside the: ("uban
En1ba ssy . U.S. 1roops stopped Am-
bassador Lazaro Mora Sccada and
l\.\'O other embas5v officials. 1he
Cuban consul said.·
"The ambassador was going home
1n a ''·hu:k· -..11h d1plumat1l platl'' ..
said the con ~uL JoSt' Lut<, l\1l·ndet
··The~ 1ook h" pa'~pon and .... oulJ
nol It•\ hint le:i'l' if hl· didn't !l'1
thl·n1 l-hec\.. !thl' gn1up1 ..
~·ll'ndl·1 ..aid hl· .... a, dt•tainl·d at
I :-l S p.nl.
•\ U.S. Emha,i.1 11!Tic1al c1111-
firm,·d rhe report. iind addl'd !httl
the amh.'.ti.-;ador had been r{'ll'a'>cd
b~ -l p.m "It"' hcl·n rC<;tJl \t'll." \a1d
the ollic1al. -..ho "air. rcachl·d h~
telepho ne. t-l e did 1101 elaborate.
On Dec. 28. ~·1ora wa~ stopped 'h~
l l.S. forces and had 10 go with 1hern
10 obtain documents fur anuthl'r
cn1bas~} em plo~Cl' 1ra vchng ..,,ilh
him.
Th{' ( uhan Fniha''~ ha\ g1,l·n
rc1ug1' to :-..'onega·, famil\ Thl· Pan-
an1Jn1an g1l\crnn1ent o( (iu1lll·rn10
Lntl;1ra. 1\ hirh rcplacl·d Nonega
Jf!l·r lhl' 11'.·c ~O 1n'a"un. ha' rt·-
fu.,...d to allo\\ thl' :-Jonega famil) lo
ll·a1l' for l"\1k· 111 tht' [)01m 1n1can
R<·puhl1c.
.\;onl·ga snugh t r('fugl" in the
Vaucan [n1hair.ir.} on (~hns1mas E"'C
anJ i.urrl·nd rrcd 10 11.S. force~ 10
<la ~' 1:111.:r t-l c a"·a1t s trial o n drug
chargl·::i 1n \>!iami.
About 500 (~ubans 1n Panama
s1aged a rall) Sunda) 10 publicilC
th('lr effort~ to ~ck asylun1 in the
l :n11ed States.
')
Boy found In snow dies
LOS ANG"ELES -The ll-ye1r-o~ boy, w!!" ~ Cft'WS found l~il
mornina "•lmost co111plctely covered 1n sno~1 d1~ Sunday after being
hospitalized for severe hypothermia. 1uthon1'° said. ~uben AU~. or Hesperia , died about four hours. after rescuers found him near Bia Pine
Ranger Station followina an all-nis.ht effort by• 100-member ~h team.
Los Anacles County Sheriff's Ocpartment rescue teams we~ ~11p1.1ch~
to the ~1ountain High Ski Resort when Allttd was reported m1ss1n1 by his
church you1h group al 6:30 p.m Saturday.
CHP to carry breath-test devices
LOS ANGELES -California Highway Patrol officcn. will soon be
armed with hand-held breath+tcsting devices 10 help detenn1ne whether a
dri,·er is drunk. The devices. which will enable off!.ccn ~o make roadside
tests of how much alcohol a driver has consumed. will be 1n use lhrougho u1
California b)' March, said C HP Capt. G res Town~nd.
A roadside breath t"st by the CHP. h.o':"'ever, WJll nol ~place t.h~ legally
required blOQd -alcohol tes1 usually adm1n1s1ered a1 a pohce s1a11on .
ttOHl,D 8Hlt:1-·s
31 Injured In LA-Vegas bus accident
LAS VEGAS -A Grc~ hound_ bus en rou1e from Los Angeles to Las
Vegas skidded 1n10 a barrier on rain-slick Interstate 15 early Sun.day and
flipped on10 ns side. inJunng 3 I peopl e. most of them slightly. officials said.
Thl' bus carr\1ng JJ peopll· and the dri ver was abou1 three-bloc~s from lht•
Las Vegas S1.np "'hen the al·cidcn1 cx·currcd around 6 a.m. dunng a heavy
rain. said t-l1~h..,,'a) Patrol Sgt. Bill ~larquardt.
"The drl\Cr .... air. heading nonh and started 10 change lanes. and
apparen1ly JUSt lost 11.·· i\farquarJ1 said.
Hispanics more likely to be robbed
WASHINGTOI"' -Hisparucs ""'ere almost ,..,,.ice as hkely 10 be robbed
as non-Hispanic . .\n1crrcan~. ihl· Jus11c(' lll.·partmcn1 said Sunday. The stud}
sho..,,·ed thcrl· "'ere 11 rohhcnl·i. of l'\l'f) 1.000 H1 span1~s age 12 or old(·r
bl-t\.\'C'l'n l<l79 :ind \1}86. romparcd to a rate ofs1:1. robbcnes per 1.000 non-
His pan1l's.
The slud) said r1 1~pan1ri. alsn "l'fl' rnore likcJ~ 10 ht' \'ICt1mr. of v1o len1
crime during lhc pcnoJ. though the-\1et1m1la1ton rate for this ca1csor:
droppi.•d fron1 44 'ioll'nl l·nme' p,:r 1.lXIO t-hspanics 10 1979 to 29 1n 1Q86.
The stud) said 1hat H1r.panics \.\l'f(' rn orl' likl·ly to he cnml· v1cums than
o ther An1errl·ani. ho:rau..c a\ a group lhl") tendl·d to tx" )O unger. poorer and
niorc ronecntratcd 1n t'l'ntral c111c' Thl'..._. dl·mographu: charar lcnst1cs arl·
ar.scx:1a1i:d w11h high cno1e. 11 ..aid
Astronauts wakened by alarm
SP . .\C.E ('ENTER. t-lnu,1on -The hncf failurl' of a guidance sys tem
coml)(>nl'lll \oundl·J an ararn1 1ha1 "al..ened C'olumbia·s a~tronauts Sunda ~
n1gh1. but a con1put.:r 'hdted to :1 hat·kup uni ! and the Cfl'\.\' ..,,•as told to
go bac·k 10 h1:ll \\'hl'!l lhl' a'tr(111at1!\ "'('fl' "-:Jkl·nl·d at the rt"gular lime lalt·r .
the~ "l.fl' tolJ lhl• prohlrm had gone ....... a~. that the original unit ..,,·as being
put back un hnl·
('olun1bia I'> '-1.hl·duk·cl 10 return tl! Earth '>hortl} b1.:fort· J a.m PST
Fnda~.
'ATIO,AI, 8Rlt:t'S
Catholic leader praises Cristian!
S .\1'1 S.\L\ .\!)()K_ El Sal,ad1>r -.\ Ron1an ("athobc leadl·r on Sunda~
p1.11'>l'J Prl'\ldrnl .\!lrcd<'1 c·n\ttani ·~ eflOn s 10 bnng to JUSllC"C tho~·
rl''l"IOn'>ihll· tnr k1ll111~ \1\ Jl·sutl pr11•'!'. Bul Monsignor G regorio Ro..a
(hall'/ ...,,111 i..al\.1dor'' a11 \1ha r~ h1shnp. !k11d n1u ch more needs IO be dOOl'
10 end lhl' ,,lll· llf \1Q!l·n cl· 1n !he l·uuntr..
"Ii"'> nnl l·no1ugh 1(1 puni'h \Onll' 11 1~-nl'Cl''<;.ar) 10 cumplelcl) re'll>l'
!hl' lrlllTJa to J l·fint· "ho ;irt· fl'alh l'lll'm1~·s uf the peopll· and t·nem1cs of
1h,· n ~11111n." lhl· R.!1r11an c athnli~ ll·adt"r 'k!1d 111 h1i. hom1I~ c·nst1an1
ann11ullll'd ".llurd.1~ lh:l.t ,u1 :iro1~ ,11lr1nl·I ;ind l'tghl other ...old1cr~ are the
pnrTil' 'U'fll't t' in lhl· n1a,...,1l"fl"
Countries OK drug-war plans
~.\."\ T .\ ('HI iz_ liol1' iJ -·rhl· l ln1tl·d State' and thl' cocaini·
pnx.lut·1ng counint·, uf Anli\ 1:i, lolon1h1a and Peru tentat1,el} agr('l·J
!->unJa~ to 11\l'!udl· rnilllar~ unit~ frnn1 each countf)' in a <,tcppcd-up ..,,·ar on
dn1g\. !lov.l·\l'f. Soulh ·\ml·nran lll·l..-gall'' sa1ll 1hc agreemt•nt leave~ nut
an~ languagr thal nitght iirl\:n !h(' duor to d1rl'ct l '.S 1nll·r,ent1 on 1n thl'
tlglu
The\("\\ nf tht' plan v.11 1 hl· kl'PI 'it'cre1 uo11I Prl·~idenl Hur.hand at ll'3\t
1-..0 o f th(' South -\l\ll'flC:1n prc,1dl·nt' 'lgn l\ :11 a d rug ~umn11t Feb. I 5 1n
( nl1in1h1<1 . otT1<·1al' 'klid Prl·,id\'nl ·\Ian (1arl·ia of P('ru ha~ said he ..,,,11
atll·nJ 11111} 1f l \ iroor' arl· v.11hdra .... n fron1 Panama b} then. bul h1\
g1i\rrnm\·nt ..,,d! '-l·nd a rl'Pfl''-l'nta11'l' 1n !IO) l'!l \l'
Soviets to execute U.S. spy
~!C)SC 'O\\: -l "hl' ("omrnun1st Pan\' da1J, Pra\•da said Sunda) 1hat a
So' 1l·1 d1plon1a1 l·1><ll··nan1l·d "Oonald" Who sPied fo r The FBI and Cl . .\ wa~
caugh1. c-on il·~<.i:J and ha<. lx·en !.l'nll'!ll'C'd 10 death In Wash ington. a FRI
pri:ss du1~ officer, (irl'8 Joncr.. said he had nu t·on1m\·nt on 1he Pra\'da stof).
More than 100 aboard ferry drown
L>HAK..\. Rangladl·sh -Divers plunged 1n 10 ch1ll v nver -...·atc:r.; 1oda\
to M>arch fo r more 1han t 00 people feared dead after ihe overloaded fcrr)
t he~ ..,,ere aboarll collided Sunday ""'ith a cargo ''C<;st"I and capsized near
Dhaka. pohcc said.
081Tl \H\
Sunny skies and afternoon winds The At:o.1-W ..... lorec.1 kw rioon, Monoey, ~"Y 15. Laurence Peter,
author of 'The
Peter Principle'
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LOS ANGELES (AP) -Author
Laurence J. Pe1er. whose book ··The
Peter Principle" chronicled bureau-
cratic incompclcncc and explained
w.h Y everything tends 10 go wrong.
died at age 70, his wife said Sunday .
Pc1er, who had suffered from
heart trouble and a stroke and was
1n poor heal\h, died 1n his slCt'p
Friday in his Los Anl('lcs home.
Irene Peter said . Funeral arran1c:-
mcn1s weren't available.
Peter, a psycholoaist and a
professor of cduca1ion. was best-
known for his 1969 book "'The Pc1er
Principle: Why Thinp Always Go
Wrona. .. a work of satire l:Mscd on
his experience with educational and
01her bureaucracies.
The Peter Princip'e an be briefly
stated: "In a h ierarchy every em~
ployec tends to ri1e to his k:vcl of
1ncompe1enc:c."
. What lhi1 means. he wrote, is that
1f )'OU can do your job to your
superior's 111isfactH>n, you will be
promoted. If you fUnction ap-
propriakly in y0ur DeW potidon •
•you AR elJ&ible for promotion apin .
£vn1U1Dy, howe'"· you will be """"°'"" IO I job 1:9" CUftOI do -Ind &htrt )'OU wtU ranain, a I
meddlaomt ud aeliiiktive in-
<omptltnL
lo time, Ptttt IM>led. ._,. poll
telldl IO bt occupied bJ-100
incom-t 10....,. °"' ht dvtia.
•
OrMge COMt DAILY PILOT/~, JMuery 16, 1110 M
ti dtiood fears Include school, d~ath of parent
l'llLO
ca •••• it's time for school.
a ~ is complainina of a tummy~ •in. How can you teU
1f a Clhild•s complaint of illness is
real or tbouah1 up?
Jerry Kasforf, Ph.D., a national
authority on phobia and founder of
PbobiaCare Treatment Centen ex-
plains. .. The illness is never im-
qjnary, whether it is induced by
psycboloaical or physical reasons.
An eumpk is a child that is ex-
periencing stomach aches. The gen-
eral pan.cm is worse on Monday.
with it becoming less during the
week. and non-existent on non-
school days. If this is interfering
with lhe childs' life. such as the child
as IQving school and avoiding other
activities away from ho me; this is
a~ormal."
This child may be experiencing a
school phobia.
School phobia ma) be related to
fean about competence. classmates.
teachers. but mostly a separation
from the parents. This 1s one of
many childhood phobias.
We arc born with fears. Inborn
fears are normal and adaptive and
protect us from the dangers of our
environment. Among our natural
fears are fears of height: cenain
animals and insects such as snakes.
doas. and wasps; thunder: lightning:
dart:ntss· and. most imponan1, 1ep-iuun. aration &Om our caretaker, usually .. Girls tend to be men aware of
the molher, Research bu found the social fears, and boys ~nd to ~ spccifac fears att aencratly con-have more of lhc bodily harm
s1stent from culture to culture, fcan," he continued.
further supportina tbe notion that The roots of childhood fcan arc
inborn fcan exist. inborn sources, experience, observa-
Our fean chanae with time with tional leaminf (observing fearful bc-
different fears startina at different havior in fnends or family and
aies. When a child experiences a imitatina those fears). or imagina-
fcar that is not qc-rclated in a tio n. Some parents increase the im-
situation with no obvious danaer. aginary fears by talk:int about the
the fear is irrational and the child is bogeyman and ghosts.
said to have a phobia. 1'he behaviors that worsen child-
Fears of the preschool and early hood fears are ridicule and shaming.
school years decline in early child-scoldinB and punishment. over.
hood. while new fears emerge. Re-protectio n. and ignoring the child's
gardless of these changes. separation fear.
anxiet) retains its importance as the Behavior that helps prevent child-
predominant fear and underlies two hood fear 1s working with the child
important childhood problems: to develop a strong sense of self.
school phobia. and dealh phobia Children w1th high self-esteem are
(the fear a parent will die). Other less vulnerable to fear than 1hose
common preschool and early school with lower self-esteem.
)car fears arc o f animals. darkness. "Sance }Ounger children are un-
doctors and dentists. he ights, able 10 distinguish between what 1s
monsters. imagi nary creatures. real and 1mag1nary, watching tele-
storms. and water. '1s1on could lead to nightmares:·
"The fears that dcchnc are the states Dr. Kasforf. The television
natural fears. and the new ones are habm should be monitored when
the adult. social-type fears, such as the child is exposed to imaginary
S" ing a speech. or being afraid to Dcreatures.
look bad." explains Dr. Kasforf. -Vanous ways to reduce a child·s
The fears during middle child· fears are reading a nd information,
hoo<l and adolescence are the fear o f relauuon methods. changing the
ph)s1cal in)uf) and concerns about child's wa) of thinking, and in·
social relat1on'ih1ps and competence troducing the 'fearful situations grad·
ually.
Dr. K.asforf explains, "If a cttild IS
afraid of school. the parent could
take the child to school and walk
around. The child will become more
familiar wilh the surroundinp.
Sometimes the child is afraid of the
doctor or dentist, and lhe parent will
trick the child by saying ·we arc
going for a little ride. Instead. the
parent should introduce the child to
the experience. The more familiar or
prepared the child is. the less anxiety
they will have and the less over-
whelming the experience."
Most fears are simply outgrown as
a child ages. H owever. a child may
need professional help if he o r she
seems to be afraid of almost every-
thing. and 1s generally unhappy. Pro-
fessional help may be needed 1f the
fear interferes wuh normal family
act1 v1ties. or social relationships and
schoolwork. Another sign is 1f the
child experiem:es stress-related
physical conduions such as ulcers.
colitis. or asthma. Finally. a child
ma} need help 1f there arc persistent
famil) d1flicult1es that threaten the
ch1ld·s sen~ of ~unt}. such as
drug or alcohol abuM:. or divorce.
It as comforting to know that 100
percent of no rmal childhood fears
are outgrown. However. childhood
fears that extend beyond their as-
sociated age range or fears that anse
an adolescence and continue into
adulthood must bt treated as
phobias. But, tbc improvement in
achlts being treated is high -as to
90 pcrttnt.
NIW WJalt CAJ'>--... lillM ..• r;::.1111 m .tea•ll • ....,... .. d'?aa'1.W.O .... -. Yidlo.-aqd1 ~• ... 1l1•11iia~-1Wcall1Plllli .. w 0 $ ro ....._
0.. ~ Suer MOMCO OP. awuaf8cwnd by ... ill
Amcric:a, iDCludet Martboro rw an. ~ twsscn wt
Matlbofo tipl ·ia IM crowd. Ooc•liioat"y the CWI nice -a buildiJlll in ... all o(tbe windows a.w beta replacecS by~ '°'°" . la 5et1•s made pine Power Drift. ~can pus 8'ldweitar
billboudt..
Philip Moms. tbe makes' o( Marlboro, and Anheuser au.eta..
which maka ludweiter, said that &hey had not authorized 1be UIC
of their brand names or 1oeos. Philip Morri1 said it bad ubd Sep
to recall the pma.
""Suoet Mow:o GP is~ one bis Marlboro ad. .. says Dr.
John W. Richards of the · Collqe of GeotJia. who tw
invcslipted tbe video 111fte ciprc1te ads. .. A cbild ..,.... Super Monaco G P i1 exposed to liaaally
buAdrcds of~ ads durin& the ~ ii he's aood." Ricbar6a
wrote au. moath ia a letlef of comDlaint to the Federal Trade
Commillion. lUchardl is president or Docton Ouaht to Cate. or
DOC. an antHmotins pup.
Mesa can turn its back, but homeless won't go away
You can't miss Helen. I can't mass
Helen. She li ves on a bench on the
comer of Pacific Coast H1ghwa~ an
front of the Studio Cafe -which
happt'nS to tx· on m~ v.a) to "'ork
each morning.
Helen has lt"ed on that bench' for
the past si' month'i or '>O The police
told me that '>he u~d to makl• ha
.. home" o n anotha bench on the
Balboa Pen1n-;ula and that 'ihe had
h«n there fur a t ka\t thrc.>c )l·ar\
She ~m. v. rappt'd 1n a blankl'I.
surrounded b) large plastt t garbage
bags filled. I imagine. with hl'f canh-
ly posseSSIOn!>.
1 suppose that there 1s o ne degree
of \aft-t, for 1h1!> v.oman because she
1'> o;o ob' 1ous and so public. In her
ov.n v.in. <.he as sure!\ a sunl\Or
Rut \he \ll'i o n our comer. :rlmO\l
a .. J <.~ mhol of communal) guilt
Surd) then· ,., !>Oml·thing "'c can
do to ht'lp her and others lake her
~1~ lamil) and I o nn· bought her J
ml·al -"'h1lh 'ihl· rejected t\1 am
uthl'r\ ha' e apparent I~ tncd 10 help
1110. hut '>hl· 1-. too proud. or too \ll I.
or tuo ~ometh111g to accept much
l h1-, "'l'l'k. I l•\t•n made an at·
ll'mpt to ha\e a puhhc outn.'alh
program LontJll lklcn "-tlh nffl·r<; of
assistance. Huv.e,c.>r. 11 she doec.n·1
rl·all> "'ant an> help and 1f she
Lhoo~' nut to go to places or use the
sc:n 1cc:s that arl· a'allable to her.
thne I'> rcall} not much an~one can
u11.
Helen ma) Ix• refusing our help.
but 1here arc thousands of othe~
"'hi) nl'l'd and v.ant help . .\nd ttc.
1mponan1 to remember that not all
111° the homeless are hke Helen
Half of the homeless in O range
C ount) arc l·hddren. a la rge numbt:r
ol the humelc" an· families.
Prnple at u10i:rent ends of thl'
!)<iltt1L·al '>pcl·trum ma) argue ahout
1u!>t hov. mul·h the .. 1wvcrnmen1"
An old drug, L-carnitine,
can give new life to heart -Charmane. a 64-,ear-old v.oman.
was suffering "''th \t.·,erc ronge'>ll'l'
hl·a rt fa1lurl' <;econdan to LJrd111m~opatll\ I h1\ 1c, a fc1rm ol
heart d1'>l'a'>l' an "'h1L·h the htart
muscle JU'il ··g1'l'\ up ... and as '>O
v.eal.ened that 11 no longl·r pump<.
hlood eflic1en11\
When she arri\l·d. c,hl' v.a., alrl·ad'
taking ner,1h1ng u\uall) gt'l'n tor
this cond111o n· d1g1nan. d1uret1l\.
potas~1um. and a urug to drlatl' the
't'IO'S. In '>pill' of largl' dmn of the\C
drugs. she \\a\ h'tlcso;. n1reml'h
c.hon uf hrl·ath and v.a<. all hut
~dnddl•n
fhcre "'ac,n't much to offer th1'
unfortunak· lad'. hut thl'rl· arl' o;oml'
some nutrient~ that do e nhann·
~he rcspondtd rapid I) .\fl er a fl'"
\\l'l'"' on lhl· c,uppkmcnt c,h1: v.a'
out of l)(..'d l'' l'f\ da~ domg hou"t'·
"-Orio. .\fta luur "'l'l'k'> 'ihl· "-l'nl In
the v.l•ddmg ol ha ~uungt''it \On and
<;Ill' .., rnrrcntl~ 1<, going shopping
\\1th hl'f fomtl~ on a rl·gular ba'>1\.
This as d rama11r 1mpro,ement for
\1111w1111l· "'ho hanlh had the
\lrl ng.th 111 gl·I 11ul ol lx·d
I ·lJfl11t1nl' 1-. tUrrl'ntl~ heing
.au' l'rl1'cJ 111 thl' mJtllr ml·diral
JOUfll.tl-. hul ll \\Ill tal.t• \Oml· llml'
lx·lorl' 11 \\Ill hi.· Jlll·pted or ut1l11l·d
IP .tn\ l•\tl'Ot h\ ph\\ll'IJn\ \lnll. II
1-. J ·nJturJI '11h\l,lnll' and not a
prnlnptaon JruK. 11 rould tx·
shunncJ 1ndl·lin11l'I~ h~ ph)'>tc1ans.
In nw<lrrn nwd1l·1nl'. nutntll)nal
,uppkml·n1' l'::lrr\ thl' lo.1"' 01 tkath
rl·g.ir<lll'''i of lx·ndit
Julian Wblta•er. M. D., autbor of
"Re' using llrart Disease." "Re·
'using Diabetes" (Warner BoohJ.
and "Reversin1 Healtb RJ1h." Is
director of tile Wbit•ker We/llleH
lastitale.
muM'le '\trengt h Om· of the<.c ., I · .--------------------------------i
carnattnl'
Wr: ga'e 11 a tr,
L-<"arn1tine v. a\ fir'>t d1~0' ered in
1'105. but 11 "'a'> not un11I 19)Q that
11 "'as found to be ec,se n11al for the
nwtabohsm of fat. the primary
e nerg) source for mu..clc 11ssue. par·
11cularh heart musl·k
It as· rare for peo ple to have a
complete delirtl·nc) of this nutrient
but often an 1nsutliraenq dt''e lops
with age. d1sra'le. or inborn
metabolic error. found mosth in
'cry ) o ung children. ·
Susan Wanter. M. D .. a pedia-
trician who sJ>('c1ah1es in metabolic
abnormaht1es of infants. has pub-
lished results o n L-<"arnitine in 51
children admitted to the hospital
v.1th "failure to thme." often as-
sociated with card1omyopath}. Fo r
man) of these children the cond1t1o n
wo"'Jd have been fa tal, but for the
majority. L-carn1tine supplementa-
tion had miraculo us results. Some of
tbctt kids. now starting school. were
not supposed to live past the age of
two..
James Thomsen. M. D .. from the
U niversity of Wisconsin found that
L-camitine strengthened the heart of
heart patients, reduced their angina,
and significantl)' improved their per-
formance on the treadmill.
Because the supplement increases
the energy extraction from fat. it has
been shown to enhance athletic J>('r-
formance pnmanly by increasing
~cal endurance.
armane?
1 DAY ONLYI
Monday. January 13
HOUDAY INN
BRISTOL PlA1.A
J 1J1 Bristol Plaza
Costa Mesa
Hours: 11-7
• ttundrcds of rurs
• Sizes ~tile thru X·LarQ'
• ~lectlons of 11en's rurs
• r'rce Layaway Plan
• Trade·lnll Accepted
• 11•Jor Credit Cuds
LYON EYE INSTI'I'UTE
MEDICAL GROUP
•'Again. Dr. Lyon . my sinc~TYst thanlc.s for your
ac'll~nt strvic~. •' . . . wuolicitttl parimt Im"-
• Comp~hensive Quality Eye Care
• Laser Diabetic • Glaucoma Therapy 760-3003
• Small-lncision Cataract Implants
• Cosmetic Eyelid Tucb
• Contact Lens Problems?
'
should do. But v. hen 11 comes do\!, n
to rl'al flesh and hl1\ll<l people. poltt1·
t·al d1tfl'rentl''> OHl\l go h~ thl' "'a~
'>tdl'
Single mother' and their chtldrl·n
\hould not Ix· lnrll:d to choo'l' he·
1v.ecn pa~ 1ng their reni and l'allng
Thl·~ Ml' not 1u'>I a collec11on ot
\I.Ord'> Thl'\t' arl· l'>'>Ul''-''h1th mu't
he rJll'd
\.',hat tan 'ou do''
I or 'tJrll'r'> \ < > 'l \ I \hJn· Our
'll·hc-.1 v.tll he do-.c.>d do"'n ii thl'
< 0,1.1 \k-.;1 < II\ < 11unul dol'' nut
rl',on,1der 1t' fl';\lt111n tonight 't \)U
l.ln lJll and rqp'>ta \Our outragl'
\,·u1ru1ng to frJn Forhath thl'
lull·11m,· 'olun1ccr dtrl'Ctor o t \0\
h'er organ1r.111un on 1t°') antt·p<l\c:n' m1'>~1on ha' tx·en in l'\IStcnce for ~(1
~l·a~ :.ind 1<. \upponcd v.11h mo'>ll~
pn,atc tund' lalh month. 2n ono
pt'oplc ha\ l' lx'l'n pm\ 1ded v.11h
food. ,k1th1ng. mutd room' ml·d1 ·
unc and nll'Otlal lJre Other lgl·n-
Ctl''> l annot pms1hl~ take up the
\lad, 1f ~()\ 1f l lo'>t.·d \forl' Pl'opk
"'111 Ix· luru·d out 11n thl' '>lrl'Cl\ 111
ll\l' 3\ ~kkn Jc~'
I he prohkm ul thl' h11md1·" 1n
< lrJngl' C uunt\ v.111 not go J"-J\ h\
ll'dlll'lllg J\ Jal,1hk fl'\llUrlC'> ~h
turning 11ur hJl i.. ... the prohkm' thJt
th\' twmdl'\\ \:lU\4.' the fl'\l oll U'
\\llll't g11 .IV.J\ l'llhl'r
l ntal l'Jlh l II\ tJkl'<. 'unw fl'·
\ptJn\lhal11' 111 l Jrl' lor pc:opll' 1n
11ml'\ ul nl'l'd until thcfl' Jrt· more
'hl'ltt-r'> rJthl·r lhl·n ll'"-l'r and until
m11rc fl''>POl1\lhal1t \ 1<, tal.l·n to
pr11' 1Jl· mor,• .itlorJahk h11u\lng.
th,· p111hkm' 111 tht' huml'll''>'> ~111
n•ll go .t\\;J~
\\l· all 11'tl'nl·d "-Ith great 1ntcrl''>t
111 Prn1dl·n1 Hu'>h tall. atxlut the
thnu\Jnd point'> tit light One ot
them 1c, .ibout to 11.0 out and not
l'nuugh pn1pk \t.'t:m to care
But '>Ornl' do aturda' ·!> ralh at
thl' Kl·a c 11mmun1t\ (enter ·~as
rilled "•th llllll'O'> "'tio are o utraged.
that thl'rl' '>l·l·m, tu he no room for
~·opk 1n OrJngl' tuunt~ v.ho arc
J1i1l'rl·n1 'l1nll. thl·n. 10 braH' Jnd
d,·d1t:.1tl·d \()\ \upponcrs ha'c held
a \1gal Jnd hungl'r \tnke "'hach will
IJ-.t un11I 1un1ght '> ,ounul mre11ng.
I h1•Pl· along \\Ith rnJn~ other.. that
all th t' dlort hJ\ <,om,· pt1<;1t1\e
lmflJ\ t t ill th.: l11Ul1l rl
It, 11111 t1111 l.tll' tnr \t1U to tall thc.>
< "''J \k-.J < 1t\ ( ounul at
~,.l.-,~l\' 11• l'llll1urage them to re·
uin\IJl'f thl'll pm111lin W help ~OS
rl·ltk.all' 1t1 Jn andu\lnal area ( olkc·
11\ch "-l. mJ' ~ Jhk 10 make a
daflerl nu· Hut thl' \all mu<.t ht'
madl' todJ'
Dr. AlfHI 1s • marri•1e ud
familJ tbuapist 1n Corona del Mar.
Sbe 1.elcomes your response. If you
"'isb a repJ.'. please eoclose •
stam/H'(/, self·addreued eavelo~.
Write to Linda Algazi. P•.D.. " o
D•ilt Pilot. P.O. Box 15'6, Coit.a
Mesa ft't'.
Money
to Advertise
1. 2. 3.
•
How to
find it:
How to
use it:
How to
collect it:
Al The OalJy P{lot 7
Independent wt' havt" a
computer prtn tout and
directory ~ ---~
'--
--"1
~ . j . . --:\ . •
..... , \1ariN ----
Our spcc1a1
ro-op 9Cl"'1ce
lsdcsl~
lO help you
~the
slZr of your
ad at lmle or
no addJUonal
cost to you .
Wewtll hdp
you 9Ck'('t wh1C'h ttcrrd to
advcr\181.". !tO you can plan your
that shows which of your
manufactun:n wtll pay you co-
op funds for mc:nlk>ning lhctr
product.a ln your ncwspaptt
adva1ialng. The compulcrtllrld
accrual ldcnuftcauon enabn
you to com~ co-op
refrnbuncmcnt olTcn by all
manufacturer-..
cam~
and create ad
layouts. It s a
simp&c and
~ul
formula for
gc<Ung
maximUmCO·
op support.
package will climlnatt ha.a
and !lpccd up your
mmbur9emcnt by provtdlng
you with tear ~ and
lnw6cf' to be n:tumcd to lhe
manufactu ro-
Co-op Advertising Made Easy
Newspaper Co-op~ plays an CS5Cllual role tn store ~lopmcnt and
growth. We'd likt to make tt C8.5)' b-you to U9C all lhc ro-op morucs due you and
cul out lhc red tape.
Flnd out more about our Co-op Advertlstng. and the 3 steps to tnrn:a&c your
adYcrUsang budgel Just return the attached coupon or call Lome Butler Co-op
Coord&nalor at (714) 642-4321 Ext. 271.
A FTee ~~To Hdp You From
~IWLtPD.ar~
r----------------------------------------------------------------~ I
(]TEU. ME MORE!
Haw your Co-op Rtp calJ me wMh mott 111fom.uon llbout Co-Op ~ ..... I undenl•nJ th•t thla
ltNtCC ta Ifft to Detty Not/tndqarndml .~and u.n •no .-..e.a
NAM1'~--------~--------------~-----ESTABUSHMBH1'~-----------------------------------AIX>RESS------------------------------------------
I I I
I I
' I
I
I I
I I I I TOWN-----------STAft ------IJP---... -: ... -... -_-: ... -.. -~----j
• UC/ foundation kicks o
9y ICAftN M. RHO
Of -.,.., .... Sufi
"Re-energizing, " said Bill
Aclunu, UCI assistant athktic di-
rector in charge of fund-raising.
No, he wasn't talkini abO ut bat·
teries. Rather, he was referring to
supporters of the UCI Athletic
Foundation, many of whom came
together last week at the Bren Events
Center for a "Tip.Off' celebration of
the 1990 fund drive.
.. We need new people and we
want to re-energize the old." said
At kman who hlS been assigned to
head the six-week fund-raising drive
(with a goal of $300,000) to fund
a1hlc11c scholarships.
Ackman cmph.1s1zcd, as did mas-
ter of reremomes for the evening Dr.
Horace Mltcbell, vice chancellor of
student affairs. that not l'one tax
dollar is put toward athletic scholar-
ships. According to both, the UCI
Foundation raises the funds for
'\EftS:tl..\KEHS
thc5c scholarships.
Mitchell explained the foundation
supports 65 of the student athletes
with scholarships. U nder current
regulations, however, UCI could
·fund 160.
"We want the athletic program to
keep pace with the overall growth of
the campus," said Mitchell, remind-
ing current and prospective donors
that UCI has become "world class"
in many academic areas.
The UCI Pep Band greeted guests
in the Koll Room of the center. most
dressed for the basketball game be-
t ween UCI and Long Beach State
which would follow.
As all enjoyed J>?l)COrn and pret-
zels. mini sand"1ches. veggies and
chocolate chip cookies. they also
received a push to 101n one of the I 0
fund-raising teams organized by
Ackman.
Mitchell heads up the university
team. with additional co<aptains
included Gartll FU..t, Jlm ~ps.
S•ua Sidi, DeHvu Deney,
Al'MW Kut .... llurJ ....., Jeff
Merrls, Bnee E.tlleJ, Ikl Die·
aleJ, Rob Halvab, &m• Aebau
(Bill's dad), Wape Dieter, Maute
Cook, Crel1lltoa Miiia, Gres
Mickel ... and Tim Tift.
Joe Rllblao (who also donated the
food spread for the cvenin&) has
received the title of "commiss1oncr"
for the drive. (With such responsi-
bility is it any wonder he was one of
the first S5.000 donors?)
A second focus of the evening (but
no less important) was to honor the
Cl Men's Water Polo team for its
winning year under coach Ted New-
land. Charles Wllaon, representing
State Sea. Jou Seymo.r, and James
Bergeson, representing his mother
State Se11. Marian Berseson, de-
1 i vrred a framed resolution to the
coach and his team. (Bergeson was
also a member of the 1988 Olympic
Water Polo Team. but his college
Realtors urged to aid homeless
By The Auoclated Press
PITTSBL'RGH -.\ctor-ac11""t
Ed Asner calkd on real e<o1a1e agcnl\
rcarnJ in thL· l 'L'rtl'' .. T he Mar~
l 'ler \loore \ho'' ... ··1 ou Cirant"
and .. Bron\ /oo ··
10 u~ their J>O"t'r 10 help the homr-'\I:\\ 'I ORK _ Ncl' elist Salman kss "God help ml· \\hJI I'm reall~ Ru shdie. 1n h1d1ng \Ince thL·
aslo..ing )OU 111 Jo .., "hat (Jcorgt· .\\,llollJh l--homt·1n1 put a pntT on
Bush ha!. aske<l _ that \UU lx'rnml· h" ht·ad. l'ml·rgt·d 1n print \un<la)
one uf the 'thousand· point\ of "11h a re' IL'" ol a nut her redu'>l\ l' "nta\ hoo~ light.'" he !>aid ... Onl) 11\ more like In h" re' tl'"°' of fh oma<o a 1houl>:lnd go0"4.''> to thL· official'> "c·,c elected. a thou..and "ell-r,ndllln\ .. \'indand·· in fhe "Jcv. y'orlo.. r 1mn Aoolo.. Kl'\ IL'\\. K ushdlt' plated boots tu thO'>I: using our ta\ dollars for hulkts in\tcad of hu1ld-<oa1d "4.'t·rt'l) 'urmund1ng the puhli-
ings for our homelc<oc, ·· cation of p, nchnn·, hoolo.. ··ha'> hcen. kt'S foCl' 1i. fldllUlllU\ ..
Asner dclwered the keynote ad-"So he "'ants a pm·atc hfc and no
dress Saturday to about 800 people 'photograph'> and nohod~ 10 know
at the 79th annual hanqucl ~f lhl' · hi\ Imme a<lJrt''' I la d1~ 11 . I can
Greater P1mburgh Hoard ol Re-relate w 1ha1." Ku,htl1r \HOie He
altors 'added part•n thl·11nill) .. hut. likl·. he
Asner. a former national president should tr: 11 "hl·n 1t''> compul'>or~
of the creen .\t tur,· Guild. ap-1m1ead of a free-choice op11on:·
llOHOS('OPI·:·
Monday, Jaa. J5
ARIES (March 21-.\pnl 19): Joh
hm11ations no longer "ill appl)
Unique message from one at a dl\-
lancc 1mpl11:s srccn light. Focus on
health. basic issues. poc;c;1b1ht) ol
journey. You'll also be sa)mg.
"Love 1s here'."
TAURUS (April 20-Ma} 20):
Stress independence. ab1ht)' to get to
heart of matters. Personal
magnetism flares -many will com-
ment. "You dazzle me~" Get started
on new and difTere nt project. Leo
•Fm
IEYDSE Tlllllll
DIUS
Accordmg to the Environmental Protec·
bon ~ncy. 16 percent of car owners
misfuel their cars in the mestlllen belle!
that luded fuel is better for ltlefl qnes
than unleaded fuel. Not only does tt"5
l)facbce contritlute to the deteflOfatJon of
our shared natural enwonment. but 1t can
cost fnlSCUided ras users some money.
Experts lgret that leaded fuel IS not needed
to lubricate the valvts. Mn in older erwnes, Secofdy, wtlie leld was more
tftlctM in peewaltiic """' knoclt than tM llflest lalf.free lddibwes. Uls is no
•11tc..Todl(1.....,_.adli-1Ms .. blttw .. , ... .,.. best
............. lJlllr, llllf coMJmillltes
~ con•llls. ,.., """*"-• C1111.•'9cll111n~ltadld
...... .. .. .. ill Clf'l--tor _ .... ....................
fj ..... ilrflCY ........ ...._ ..... rs..., a..,
J 'a •. MW.•• ._i ~ ................. ~':
............ c. = ............... ........... .... ~ .... __ _.MNllO.WI
•• j(
pla)S paramount role.
GEMINI <Ma' 21-Junc 20)· Fam-
ii) member lUU.ld argue· concerning
ne1:d for more '>pate E:mphaw, on
tt':tl·h1ng . learning. regaining ~enc;(' of
dirL'l llOn .\hil11' tn anal\/C lharat·
t..:r surges to iorl'fron1 · -\4uanan
1n,ohcd.
CANCER (Junl· 21 -Jul) 22 I D1 -
vcr'>1f). g"e full pla' to intellectual
curtO'>ll\ S<.·nst· of humor dom1-
•natc'>. \\.1ns plaudit'> 1..,ome "Ill tom-
menl. '·'>:o U'"-' a11emp11ng to hm11
}Ou"· Rl'latl\ L' mJ~ he planning <;ur-
pn~· \ ISll.
LEO (Jul) 23-\ug. 22): Strcc;, tn·
dependcnrr. Lreall\11~. your o"n
style It " t1ll1l' 111 tear down for
ultimate purpmt· of rebuilding on
more solid <;truuure Poss1b1lil\ of
reloca11on is scnousl) d1scu~c;ed
orp1 0 rcprC\Cnll'd
VIRGO (Aug 23-~pt. 221: C1r-
cumc;1anccc; continue to turn in 'our
fa">r ) ou might be \a}ing. ··1 don't
kno"' 1f I reall) descn.c thec;c
breaks'. .. Take what comes. be grate-
ful Get messagl' acrosc; via written
"ord.
LIBRA (Sept 2 J-Oct. 221.
Changes occur at home. are gener-
ally favorable. Focus on entena1n-
HICIDf;I :
Q.1-Both vulnerable, as South you
hold:
• 1065 CV KJlNJ 0 761 +95
The bidding has proceeded:
Wac No~ Eat South
I+ OM l+ 'l
What action do you take?
A.-You do not have much, but
you should compete with two
hearu. You have a 1ood five-ard
major and there iJ no suarantec, if
you don't bid, that partner's hand is
suitable fo1 further action. And If
the opponenu declare at least you
will have lteered partner to the bat
leld .
Ku,hll1L· "a' forrcd into hiding
las1 )ear after Iran·, late spiritual
kadt·r dt·darl·d h" book. ..The
Sa1an1t Verse'>... hlac;phcrnous to
l!.IJm and put J pmc on his head.
p, nrhon ha' a' 01Jcd in ten'"" s
.inti rhotugraphl'f\ \lllll' the puhli-
lJllllll ol hi'> lir'>I no,d ... V ... 1n
ll/OJ
D.\LL.\~ Jason Bonham,
kaJer of the hand Aonham. ac-
lo..no'' kdgt''> '>onw 111 h1<, music tends
111 '>ound a lot li~t· hie, dad·., old band
-L l'J Zl·ppl'11n
Hut 1ha1·, uni) na1ural. ht• figure'>.
I k ha-. rt·maine<l do'e to Zeppelin
gu11an"lt J1mm~ Page and singer
Rolx'rt Plant \tnl't' lht· 1980 death of
h1'> 1:11hl'f. drummn John Bonham.
·· 1 hl'\ ·re 111.r lam1h ·· Bonham
111kl I ill' Dalla' \turning Nc"s
"ThL·~ ·re l\\O ol the gn·atcc;t gu~c; in
till' \\Orld."
t'
m1:nl. an. muc;ic. ah1ht \ to incrcac;c
1mnme. You v.1n through gentle
pcr<,uas1on. Tauru'> and another
L1hra pla) ma1or mice,.
SCORPIO !Oct. 2:\-No'. 21 I
What appear\ on ~urfacc ma) lack
<.olid underpining~. Scparatc fact
from 1llu~1on. be open-minded
"11hou1 being gullible Wish comes
1ru1: 1n dramatic fashion. Member of
opposite SC\ pla)S role.
SAGITTARIUS (No'. 22-Dec. 21 ):
You'll ha\l' more rc..,pons1h1lit). v.111
he Jcahng "''h powerful ~k.
Lo'c relationshi p intens1fies .• d1·
"•dual. \ersed in thcolog}. 1s intent
on kclunng you . Stress affabilit).
CAPRICORN (Dec 22-Jan. I 9):
~-enano fea tures decision. move-
nll'nt. communication. You'll sa) 10
}Ourself. "At least I am not standing
•4 Q AKMa 0 U'7' •An
The blddi111 bu proceeded:
1a1t 8..c1a Wiit Nortll
t • ' What action do you take?
A.-You bave a three-suited hand
au.itabk for play in any strain except
lp9des. There ii a textbook met.bod
to lhow dUI Und and W CU Mt DO
nuon to consider anythins elte •
Double for takeout.
colors were red and white, instead or
the Anteaters' blue and P.>ld).
"He 's a maniac, • stated
chancrllor emeritus Dr. Dulel
AJdrkll, of Newland, but went on 10
commend the coach's dedication
and skills. "He's an excellent exam·
pie of what can be done" -done
with the funds that support the
athletic scholarshi~. Aldrich's arm
was twisted just sh$htly by Ackman
to join the campaign as honorary
chairman.
Also partici pating in the kickoff
was Mike Heu , who recently fin·
ished his MBA and is assistant
basketball coach. Hess was one of
the student athletes funded' by the
foundation, and stressed the import·
ance of the program. "I really be·
l1e'e 1n what he (Ackman) is .trying
to do."
For information on the UCI Ath-
letic Foundation fu nd drive. contact
SlaHI Brasier, 856-5550.
Salman Rushdie
st ill'.. \\ ha1 had tx·en sourrl' ut
1rr11a11on 1<, remo,cd. You tan talo..L·
grca1er 1.hargc of dl''>lln)
AQUARIUS !Jan 20-Feh I hi
Fre\h conrL·pt~ lcaturt·d concerning
10\ l'~lmL·nt. di\ l\IPll of prol')Crt~
lntcrc'>I 1n ml·taph)'>ical '>UbJCrl\
dominate. 'I ou'll tinJ lo..l'\ anc;"l'rc; 111
books relating 10 arcane ar('a\
Another .\quanan '""oh.cd.
PISCES (Feh 19-~arch 201·
.\nsv.cr regarding dirl·ct1on. north-
east. Whether to teach or learn
both Routine or unonhodo' un-
onhodo,\ b} all m<.·ans' .\II) "
gained from ~roup that prn mu1,I)
represented c;tifT oppos1t1on .
IF JAN. 15 IS YOUR BIRTHDAY:
Current c~de highlights re pon'i1·
b1ht). prL·ssure of deadline. marital
statue, pos'>1hle add111on to famil)
Throughout )Car. )Ou'll be produc-
ing. creating. ridding )Ourself of
thO'>l' "ho mrrel) brood. pont1fi catr.
Beforc Januar) is fin ished. }ou·11
complete major project. assignment.
Lov1.· rcla11onsh1p will be back on
trad . rauruc;. Libra. Scorpio per-
son'> pla) important roles in your
life. September could be )Our most
memorahlc month. featuring money
and love.
three no trump.
Q .S-Both. vulnerable, as South you
bold:
• Q6Sl CV 9152 0 1 • JMl
Partner opens the bidding with a
demand bid of two hearts. What do
you respond?
A.-You do not have the values for
a potitive respc>n.1e of three hearu
and possession of a linaleton ban
you from the weak, fit-showin1
jump to four hearta. So you must
first make a neptive responte of
two no trump.
..., .... ,__.,, ..,_ ..
8111 Adlman with James 8er9e1on (aboveJ; Harf'J, Su.a1n
Stahl with Horace Mltchell, Roberta and Wa1n• Dl~t·r
(below, lettJ; and Vince lloJI•, HollJ Aclullan, Denn1
WUllMl1 •nd M•99le COOll.
L.'9. 80\'D
Digging up average data
S1a11st1c1anc; c;a~ .. thl' a' cragc
farmer .. no" '' .1 52-)car-old "hilt'
mak. Running an :l\t'ragL' on farm-.
crs 1s susix·r1. I thin~. It has been
said thC\ ·re 1lw nw\I d1' erst· 1nd1-
' 1duals ;n an) onl' ocrupa11on
First 1h1ng ;1 bah' giralfr dol'' '" foll on ,,., ht•ad
Our languagl' m:in '' 1n <,l'arrh 111
tht' \llllrlL'\I \L'llll'tll'l' rn Fnglt'h
I >1w'>n·1 "( 1111 .. lllL'fll that dl\l1nr·
11on" Or do \Ou think ··r•" qualific,.,
( UflllU\. I\ II not. thal .. <ohm
thanll··· ind '!JI lhann"' ml'an 1lw
"lml"'
Hov. much an .1n1mal "adJk,
dqxn<l' on ho" tar ofT gr;,1\ 11~
tL'nln '" lq!'> a1L' attached Talo..r :i
dud, J pl'liran a penguin Thl'lr
kg., Jfl' sci tar hallo.. .\ "om an learn\
all aho111 1h1\ v. hl·n \hL· put'> on
high hn·I'>. "hen \he\ npcu1ng
\\hl'll 'hl' p1l~' up hl·r toddler .\n
anJtom) npnt \a)\ a \\tlman
'fk'O(h mud1 ot hl·r hli.· adJU\t1ng 111
l hangr' in thr rel.1t111n<.h1p ht·t\\l'l'n
hL·r ktt' Jnd hn tl'nlcr of gra' II'
I ht' a'crage .\mt·nlan "oman
lo..1'>,l''> -.., men ht·tnrc '>ht· marnn
ILlCJnltng 111 Dr Jn,n· Brother'
Rapid Rcplic~: 'I l''-· '>Ir. ~ou lJn
mate an .\laslo..:in Bro" n "1th a polar
tx-ar to produn· ti:r111l· ompnng. No.
'>1r. I dnn·1 knO\\ "hat u>lor ~ou get
\nail~ Ion' oranges
Q In football. "h~ arc more pl:!)"
t'r\ inJurcd 1n t011L' lklcn<,e than in
man-w-man''
.\. Oppo'>1ng pla~cr\ 1n man-to-
man lend lo nw' c in the <.amt•
dirtl lion In 1onl· •h.l'\ 11ftcn11ml'<.
mo\L' ln oppO'>lll' dHL'l'iron<;. \0 ('Ol-
li'>IOO\ art' murl' '111kn1
\\filer C.i ~ < hntl-rtun :.aid,
"l\•opk gn1l'lall' 4u~1rrcl ht·LJU\l'
I he~ l·a n not a rgul· ··
Dan"h da1r: men Jatc,tamr 'ht·ll,
ol lrl·'>h l'gg' Durrng dndopmrnt ot
lhl· \IJmr1ng ma( l11nl· I underc;tand
II g11l fllt'll~ ml'\\~
r hl' olJ Roman'> or '()ITIL' ol \,llllC
\\lTL' u111.kr 1tw tlllJlll''"un tha1 h11J\
d1dn '1 \Ian 111 mall' nL·r. \l'.lr until
'-It \ .1kn11nt··, Ja,
() In \\hll h \t'.l\on .ire lhL' 11111'1
hurglJnl·'"
~. \\ tnll'r
Sleeping in becomes
an alarming problem
DEi\R R~ .\Df RI\ Remember
the ll'llL'r trorn .. l o\t 1n
Dreamland.'' lht• 1 7-~t·ar-old high
~chool girl "ho"K· motht·r had. to
prac11call) J) 11;\nllll' her out or bed
1n the morning'' .\ surprrs1ng
number of rl·adl•ro; identified with
her Talo..L· a lno~.
DEAR . .\NN I. \NDERS: I can
S) mpa1h11c "-•lh 1ha1 1 7-~ear-old
"ho couldn't gel up in the morning.
I am 29 and ha'c had the problem
all m) life I quit college (actuall} I
Ounked out) bccau~l' I couldn't gel
to classes on time (Not even an 11
o'clock). I also lost two good Johe;
I've seen three ph)sician<; and two
psychologists. No one could find
anything wrong ~1th me.
I've asked fncnd'i to phone and
wake me up. I'd S3) "thanks." and
go nght back to sleep. (When I
finall) got up I didn't remember the
call.) If I set an alarm clock I'd turn
11 of'T and crawl back in bed. I have a good JOb now. but I've been late
se,eral times and am scared to death
that I'll be fired.
I went to a sleep disorder clinic for
help and was told. "Sorry. we deal
only with narcolepsy. sleep apnca
and insomnia." Now I am waiting to
sec if any of your readers can come
up with a solution. -FINGERS
CROSSED TN BEANTOWN
DEAR BEANTOWN: If yoe '"'t
fllHI a Hl•lloa ••••1 tlleae
reapo11aea, please see ... ~, ttlera-
pl•L I detect a petten .t MU·
Ml&ncdv~ kUYMt &Mt Heda &o
be explored. (111 llMfl my flqen
crnaed, too, dear.)
From Lawrence. Kan: Deaf to
alarm clocks? Get a bed vibrator
desianed for the hcarina-impeircd.
h's a .... that aocs under the
mattress or can be attached to the
bed frame. You hook it to an alarm
clock and it will shake you out of
bed. The clod and vibrator ooet Sl~. but at•, worth it. c.r,.. Olrtltl: I have a •~fh~
1oh1tion for that 17-yt.ar-okl who
ba trou.ble .,ni111 Uf ia tile fllOlm..
-Job• Ille Navy. Y•'I be= -• ,.,. .... bf • , .. , ••• _ ••
mtejoil Ola ......... -,.. ..
get up on ~our O\\n.
Stars ands Stripes I Europe)· -\n)'
ont' "ho has trouhk gl·tting up in
tht• morning \hould Join the .\rm~
·\ tough st.·rgeant \\Ill change )'Our
skcp1ng hahns fao;t
Seattle: Tell •ilecp~ head to pot a
Rig Ben alarm dock in a dishpan.
Whl·n the alarm goes off. the rattle
and clang could \\.ake the dead.
Salt Lake City: We raised 11 chil-
dren. .\s the} entered Junior. high
each one recel\ ed an alarm clock
and was told. "You're on your
own." With that many kids you
can't fool around They all grtw up
to be responsible. self-reliant adults.
Men, Artz.: When the alarm clock
failed me I was told by a friend to
get a clock-radio and set the volume
way up. Clock-radios don't wind
down or slop. They blast away until
you damn well get up and face the
day.
Lea Vepa: Maybe that sound
sleeper has a hcanna problem. She
should for.Jet 1bout an alarm clock
and act a flasbin& la&ht dock. Thit it
what the deaf use.
Jat."bePUJe: When our I S-ycar-
old ne~ew came to live with us he
said, "You'll have to Jet me u in
the momina like ~om. I
lhroqh alarm clocks. I told h "f~t that jazz. You're 01· '4C>ta;
own. Sutt cnoup. when be
nobody wu 90i119 to Dlay nune htJJty by himlelf. Nnn The sure WR for
alcepm ii to have a blby. I u
lleep 11'roulb thu"*'91onM. ier ~and fire alamaa. Tkn our wu bon. Nm. I bes lUm ' ....."""I it wvm. No .®'# •illl&td dtil tM I moclla.W ll
lyTOM TITUS
o...., ..... c.. .......
The American dream assumes
nlabU1tarisb proportions in Howard ~·s "Search and Destroy," 1 ·
d hilarious study in avarice that
out for the throats of its
c in its world prem iere at
oast Re pertory.
tw created. a modem-day
Glick. an .. entrepreneur"
ccccds on pure chutzpah,
ca • caz} 'ictory whetting his ap-pc~or the Big Score. And when
11 ~eriahzes. 11 ~arries a fright-
cn1 nee 1ag. posing a heart-stop-
p1 allcnge 10 his in testinal for-
111ude.
U r the bruta lly bri lliant direc-
Dav1d Cham bers. "Search
stro} .. provides an e motional
low the likes of "Glengarrx
oss" or even "The Crucible. •
cen t tn umphs on the SClr
ge. Moral ity takes a back
immediacy in this harrowing
a grasping. glib con man
hrough hfc by the seat of his
in M1r khc1m dTrc11vely
out his character 1n his very
e -a rambling monologu<.'
spi "11h equal portio ns of
bravura and b.~ punctured by the
hlun1 rcpl) from his hs1ener. a tax
o fficial: "You O'-'t' 1he state of
Florida $91.000 ..
Ko rder rl·pt.·atcdl~ sends these
l'mo11onal rontrasts into \erbal
Lomhat a\ his "hero:· ~f 1rkhe1m .
Judges thl· lcgahst1r tlak in hi s
pursuit ol 4u1ck m11l1ons in the
\hJdO\\ ~. :ind ixnlOU\. \\Orld of
nan.:o tll"'> It'<. a frcl' fall into uncer-
1.11n1~ a '>Ugge'>ted h~ tht: pro-
J111.11on\ logo
< harnbcrs· <>upcrb production 1s
MCt\llE LISTl'.\GS
l OWA"OS Nl'W~OlrT (INIMA IQ(> ""•wpo•I
~ .,. f" ... , 4. c '"°
aorn on the 'o""°'" of J"'p ft1 t 1
Glof'y ~I \ 11 R I l t l
~ Alw•J• 1Pf ,, k ki •n 4\
«OWA •os ISL.ANO (UtlflMA ' •• , ... ''·•'"' """~""
,. ·~ I 4f Q
Steel M•9no l••• pr, , / KJ er. 1 v If)
T •n 90 a C•tft II • ' \ w , 4 )
Th • Uttfe Me,.•.W (, J I 4 t-.. 10
• Th • W•r of, .... •o••• lt .. , I .. .. q .._
f n•m•••. A low• Storr P I +. * \ tO A •• ._. to .... ,..,..,.. 1 P(", 1 Vl ] 4\ \ 1 \
\ 4 \ "' WJ A tet
.. t\ I
DtlY ..... Mh l O•h y ... II '
P'OftT TH•ATRI ~I\• •\\ 'fQh'fto,.., l\lt t-.IM'
C.tmlfle Cl•u d•I Qi ' / 4\
•OWA"OS CINIMA CINTI" J 1111 ""'"" t• __ t \ f ,.. ,,.. ,. .. ,,. 'If:/ 4 14
9•-<• To the '"'we l tf'' ,, •, 4 \ A Ill 1 'i
J nt• ltttle Mer ... •ld c ' , '\ H
'"'~'"'•' A tfalrt P1 1 tr '< "' Ski l"atrot ,. , t lr H H t(J HI
I DWAltOS CINIMA ••.•·h Hl'Vrl /A fft f'\ ,.,,..,,. ........
ltOTI\ o n '"'• 'OIH'1h of Ju·t1 Pl 1 If 1
HAlll O R T'WtN CIHIMAI ~ H(.N1 81v1J t ilw f\Qn
,, Jl
T•n90 & C••h f "i ' •, 'I •ti
T'h• W•• of '"• •o••• t \ ~• A • k
Ml:SA CIHIMA .. ,,.,.""'°' 1 8 rJ q,,, \1 A4 A \01\
L•.ttr-e,.fac• Ill , "1 A ~r ti) to«'
TOWN C•NTI" CINIMAS \oul" •II PLo,.
• iH
Tl'te W •r o f th• •ot•t II ~ I t() '-I t() 10
• Ottvl ... Mht D•hr J,.fJ t ' 4< 4 ti 8
'\ •n•,,.I••, A low• Storr 11 t; t \ • t \ ,., A \('.I '. ••09•f' & •• ., • ' q t(1 4•
SOUTH COA.ST ~LAZA 8•·\I • \.,,,~._., \•h J /I I
Glo•r 1• ' II 10 •O " .' ~ -,,.. ,_ of Jvty 1•1 ' 10
• Ste•I M~noll•a 1•C.1 \ I() II 10 kl
UA SOUTH COAJT ~LAZA I \hi W \untlow., Av•
~•o o~••
I ~· "•rfM:• ill \ t \ I /0 q )\ t own 1t 1 • 4\ ~ \0 11 \\
J•trol 1rc..1 \ • O\ 'I 1 O
tl uQtin~lon Hf'af'h
I/
IOW~M>I CHAlrT•lt C•NTWI 191/ w.,,.,., Av•
A• t-OJ~p
I lofn °" tfte ,....,..,. ef JvtJ Il l I 10
1 Ofo<J 1RJ ~ lO II 10 lO
< AIW"JI /l'(•I \ 1 lO 10
• "'• WM of ......... l"I (> ,. I() 10 •\ \~ .... M iu oe11, 1rc-.1 \I\ 1 I\ 'I IS
IOWAltOS HUNTINGTON TWIN 18\• l ~~'" \1
ll•B o.J8A ' Sl!f•I M ....... &.1• !l'GI\ I JO 10
1 n.ir Uttfe M~ f(JI I> llUn I! 10 I\
'isually enhanced by Chris Barrcca's
tiny scenic backdrops. photographed
b) J oel Greenberg, w hich ad d JU"it
enough atmosphere to each scene for
cas> 1den11fication. David Budnes
provides a heart-pounding musical
score. c mplo}cd dunng the man~
SC<.'n1c trans111o ns to maintain thl'
high k'' el of cmo11onal tension.
.\I the hean of this gnpp1ng.
C\ nical exercise 1s \1ark Harehk'<t
siunn1 ng 1nterpret a t 1on of
~t 1r~he1m. a man "ho falls often hut
alwa}s land~ on his feet. Harchk '"
greatl} cntcrta1ning in tht" pla} 's first
act. dodging life·., hullcts wi th alacn-
t~. but his second act pcrformancl'
-"hl'n his lt'clthood. and life. arl·
threatened -1s nothing shon 01
astont'>hing.
Founta in Va lley
,OUHTAIH VALl.-V TW'IN 8rocJ•"•'''t to,.,,,.,
R l'I t \00
' Ladt 10 th• l'ut"We 1 1PC,,1 <, \ I " fJ <l
a,-ernrtn--Se•rdt •rHt 0-.stroY-•t Soutll
Co•H Repertory.
Philip Anghm skillfully enacts the
smooth. graceful yet terrif} in~ "busi-
nessman" "ho provides M1rkheim
"tth ht!. first-class tic ket to tomor-
rn" . .\ngltm"·, character 1s an abrupt
and pcrfl'ctl) dra"n con trast to
Harehk.'>. and the l'-'O mesh w11h
l'l'rtl' bchl'' ah1ht\
Otha la!>t mc.mbcrs appear in a
'Mtl't) of roles. "1th .\nthon~ Fork-
u,h\ h~pt.·rarl1\l' slcaLeball l"ho'I<.·
•.nond al1·upcn1ng monologue 1s a
\urx·rlJll\l' Strl·am of r;catalogical
fur.) l'a'>1h the mo'>t m('morablc
Jarion ~tonroc ho' l·rs 'enomou)h
u' a HJrehl. 1 n three <il'parate
d1<1rJl"tl'n1a11ons. \\htlc .\nn1 l ung
Jnd Dcndnc Ta,lor exude 'anou.,
1.kgrl'C\ of '>Cn~ualll~
Dum ~IJgv.1h\ up.,rall' cocaine
consumer 1s powerful!) rendered .
while Hubcn Baron Kell} presents
Harehk '-'llh an n.aspera11ng road-
block to nchl's 1n a beauttful <1end up
of little ix·ople '-'Ith a smattenng of
authont}. .\rt Kous11k's menacing
muscle man in the drug deal se-
quence '" authornat1' el:r ac-rnmph~hed.
"Search and Dl'StrO\.. launchl·~
the 1990s at S( R '-'Ith a thundenng
nash of n mhal'>. an attent1on-<1c-
manding pia~ about thl· \l·am1cr \ldl'
of toda' '<, .\menra II cont1nul'"
Tuesda)S through f-r1da}S at 8 p.m .
Saturda}S a t ~)I) .ind 8 pm .. Sun-
Ja}S Jt ~.10 and., 10 p.m unttl h•h
15 at the Fourth \tl'p Thl·atcr. 665
TO\\n C cntn Drt'l» ( ll\ta Mesa
Call 957-4033 lor lll ~t:t tnlormat1on
Wynette Highway bows
Ba' It'' .i lll'ilt httk' t11'-'n
DAILY PILOTIMoncMy, ~ 11. _., &'I
1 Wonderful Life'
returns to Laguna
ly CHRISTINE GUSTAFSON
~ ,...,. ,_......,_,.
Sheldon Ham1ck. master of tht' mus11.:al slage a nd famed Broadway
lyricist for a quaner ccntul). sits -loM in his own thoughts -in a
community playhouse on Laguna Canyon Road in Laguna Beach. The
auUlor of numerous smash hm. including "f iddler On The Roof ' and "She
Loves Me." watches as one of his all 11me favorite stones come to life o n
stage.
~llh a n eye for prec~1on and a dcarh defined long-term goal in mind .
Harn1ck notes 1he minor sho n com1ngs o( ht'> mu!.1cal adaptation of Frank
Capra's 1946mo'1e. "It's .\ Wonderful I 1fe ·· "h1ch sLarred J1mm) Stewan .
If Ham1ck's pla) 1s a success 1n this ho mcto"n theater. the T ony
Award/Pulitzer Pnze-wtnning l)netst plans to tal e his show o n the road -
aiming toward Ne" York's Broadwa}
It was 1n 1980 that Sheldon lfarn1rk and thl· late.-Joe Raposo. best
kno"n for his "Scsamt: Street'' tunes ht:gan cullahorat1un on "A V.onderful
Life." Hamiel. had carried this idea "1th him thruugh 't"aN of successful -
stage 'entures. Yet. 11 "as not his mu\ll·al '>UCll'~'>i.·s thai prompted him to
create this 25-song stage production 11 '-'3~ hi\ latlurn
·-r,c lo,l'd Capra's film for ~l'ar<t and ~l'Jr~ .. l'\plaint'd Hamid: .. "In
m} O'-'n I&. r ,e madt man ~ ml\talt.ec, and latlcd 1n man) dm·rnons. l'\t'
ver) mo' ed b~ thl' notion of a man" ho tx·lil'' c., that thl' dt'pth of his failure
i~ so grt•at that hl·\ v.1lhng to ktll h1m<>cll \.\hl·n he lind\ dl''>Pllt' all. that
hfe 1s "onh h' 1ng -"ell. 1t'., an cnormouc, the ml' ..
.\nd this. oi rnur<>e. 1s the prcmt\t' of the Laguna Pia\ housc productio n.
Harn1c k's affection for this da,\tl ~Wf\ ·~ \O great ·that he decided to
mah• few c hangl'S fro m thr ongn1al 'er'>lon though hl' thd altt·r the names
of lead character-. (1l'orgl' and \Ian Railn to f rank and Kath' Funhcr.
Harn1ck changt•d add1t1unal naml''-11-.ing 1h11\l' uf tamll} mt'mht-rs. adding
a \ l'r~ pcr\onal IOUl'h to thl' nla\
\.\'u, l·n togethl·r "1th d1alogul' danll. hl·Jnkl1 '>ong'>. at time., min1-
upt.·rn'>. a ')lmpk ~l'I bc.·ltnahk \IJ&l' Jnd the tJknt' ol card.ull~ chosen
prufl'\\1unal and hx-al al t11r\. th" pnlllul 111111 hJ\ thl· l'Jrmdfk'> ol becoming
a thl·:ttnl·:tl dJ\\ll 1n 11-. <'" n right
.. .\ \.\ undnlul Lite" ran Imm I kl ' through I kl I:. a1trac11ng the
holtdJ} thl·atl·r rro"d .\l'l'ord1n~ to J111.h fohn,ton J>a, idsun pla~ house
gl·naal manager. the \Cr) 1n,1ghtlul 'l't l'ntcrtJin1ng ml·s..age ofth1s musical
-\l't 1n 14~!1-14..1'.i lkdtord f'Jll' l \ \ -""' 'o '-'l'll rece1,t:d tha1 the
thl'Jll'r '>Iliff Jnd lJ\I ahkl' lll'l 11.kll II• l'\tl·nd It\ l'nga11xmt'nt
-·~oml' '•C" 1h1<, a<, J hohda' ''o" .. nh'l'f'l'\ Da' 1d'>on. "anting to
uirrlTI thl\ aront•ous 1dcJ --11 '-':l\n t ''nltl·n ""h that intention ·v.'onder-
tul L 1k· <,pcab <1lx1u1 our JJil} h\l'' h'l'' thJt 1ndulll· tJmil~. fnends and
ta 1th \\ l' kd that th"·~ <,pint 111 fti, l' Jnd hn•thl'rhuod tx·long'> 1n our heans
and mind\. not uni~ during thl' hohJJ\ \\'J'-On hut thruughuut the ~ear ...
··.\ \.\ 11nJl'rtul I 1k" rl··11p1.·n, I.in I" .11 th1.· I .1guna Pla'hl•use and
d11\l'' 1111 f-rh 11 t-or fl''l'f\Jt111n' .ind lll~t·t tn t11rm Jt1<1n nhnnl' ..144-8021
Ill -1 11..l-l •~4 _1
RUFFELL'S
UPHOLSTERY INC.
IW1 Y• .... Ceoms ltrt!
1922 llAllOI l lVI .. ctST& tiU-541-1 m
ALIEN NATION
*The New Arene FOf
,. ACTION Mondey N~h~a ,
J The Lltlle Mer ... akl 1C.1 ,_ ' F< 4 \
,AMILT ,.ou• CINIMA , ti• a• •'qi' '
RFD B.\ 't -\la I .\Pl -< ountr.
\ingl·r r amm} \\ \nl'tll' n·turnl·d tci
lll'r Jduptl·ll hornl'tcm n 1n nunh-
"l'\tl·rn \IJhdm.1 lor thl' dcdi<:at11Hl
ol J h1gh".1~ tx·anng her name
Boltun \:t1J thl' ll·qul·\I to rl·nJml' t----------------_.... _______________ _
'11 I 1()1
Oow,,1own P1 4\ j 4t. \ 4\ ''"' 'f •
till' high"'''~ ''·'' 1n rl'lOg.11111011 ol '.\h \\ \ fll'tll'.\ UllllrlhUtllln\ Ill thl' Tart90 & Cat-h flt I l t \ I \ 4 '-, H Ill" n \~ hl'rl' 'l'' \'r,tl 111 ha rdJtt' l''> •.
t Cfu l.-t-"'•• V •<•tton r f • , flt• \l.1\!1r Htlh Bolton fr1l·nd'> and
IJnHh llll'llllX·r, Jilli '.\!<. \.\ \ Ol'tll'
\\Jllhl'll I hur\J:t\ J\ a <,lrl·il·h of
\IJhamJ 24 ,,J,-ollictall\ namnl
t hl· 1 .1111 nn \\ ~ nl'lll· H 1gh-" a}
"' l' W't••r4 rr, t. 4 q \ 1' \\ 'lll"lll' "ho I I\ l'' 1 n '\ .l'>h-4 SI••• M69"0H•1 rr, t 111 -. ,.,. ' ilk. rrnn hdd J lllnll"rl IJ\I \l'Jr
111 tx·ncfit Rni 1-\J\ "'llhool "'
\\ 'nl'tt\· '·"ti th\· ,101\ othl·r thing
thJt tx·Jr~ hl·r nJml' " a rmrk in her
hu\hanJ·., homl·,to'-'ll of \1aldl·n
I OWA"OS SO UTH COAJT LAGUNA 4 " \ •II "I ht~ " 'o \\11nJt"rfu l.'' said the
4"'·\l':tr-otJ \lngl·r "I JU'>t IO \l' Rl'd
.,. rA•/ t •t 1 ,. ' -" °" U.. ,_ of JW, VI ' 1 • • Tlt• W M of tflt• ••••• •1 \ '() pt 1 ti)
T\' l .. ISTl'.\GS
7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11 :30
u WhMI of Jeof>irdy!O M"tQf Old 1111 Femous 1Murphy o..q.ng Newtlal1 fin 1=:· Newt Pll Sljli
FOftunt :; S1ereo1 :; r-..z 8town Women S1ereo1:;
Ente1111n1Mnt Han1 Copy ALF fin Hogen Family MoVlt· "Blut Btyou" 11990 DramaJ Atf1e woooard Mart0 Ne•• Best of D Tlllllinllt S1ereo1:; tin Stereo\..; Van PeeDies Eh1abeltl A.sniey Premiere tin S1ereo1 ~ Canon tRI
II Clltl1tt in Out of This Movit: •••• "Gandl\1" 11982 B~raonyJ 1Part t 01 21 Ben Newt Chffn Bar Brothen
C.,_l'IN :J WOl1d K1rioslev Canooce Semen Martin het!n Bet -
II ABC Hews ~ Eyton LA. MacGyvt< Live ano Leam
ltln Stereo1 :...
Mov11: "Unspeahblt Acts" t 1990 Drama1 Jill Ctayovr9n
Brad Davis Garv rranlt: Premiere tin Stereo1 :;
Newt Higlllllnt =
n PM Meau1nt Ent T Oll!Qftt MaiorOtd T!tddv Z Mllfptly 8. Ot11a11 w Newtlttl IOoct°' Newt Ptt S....
II LCM Wllo't Ille Newt lntldt Edition Hews Carol aum.tt .._,, to Halt The Blue Cll•O Btmey Mlltf Ftmlly Feud
Comectlon Bou?:; and Fnendt MurOllfs Hos1aoe
llil Currtnt Allir ~.Court MacGY'i9f fin S1e<eo1 .; MoVlt '"Uflsptah blt Acts" 11990 Drama1 J~• Cta~ovr9n :; News I...,._ :; • M'A'S•H Clltftftt A,,. 21 Jump StTttt A. Cnange Alien Nation The Soor.t of News I~ Adtl!t-12
of Heart (In S1eieo1 ·• 9S 11n Stereo) ::
m Cosby Show Movie. •••'1"Ctmtlol''11967 Musu1 Roeria1d Hams Vanes$.l Red<jrave F •anco "e•o I Newt
1
.,,_ Hal tin Steteol
1:J
m MKfW.' ~tllt Y-Nftlfe A Sea~rn~ EJft on !tit Pnu H The Mar1ln '"' S1e<eo1 !Gordon l'M.: Mollllntl
ltt-nr Cont d fRI :J Sun tin S1ereo1 :: Tome Has Come 119&&-651 I WiltlOUI PTootf Ntmet f RI ::;
llD W1'MI of ln1* Edllioll ALF (In ~Family Movie: "l!llut ISlyou" t 1990 Drama1 Atf•e WQOOard "41no Newt 8ttt of
Fortune :; S1ereo1:: eieot:: Vi n PeellleS EllzaDetn As111e1 Premtf!le 1tn StfllflOJ::; I ClrlOll (A)
Im PfMt Ille lord "'-IN Ille lord In Touch Jedi Vlll I OwlQflt Thomc>ton ~ ' !lmoe • MtcHell!\.tlnf Newtflour Al Crwturtt Gttat Ind Fattltr of tt1t LIOl'la LhTenct w .. Show eu.-ssRpl ......,
5"'el Heal'"° Touch Trioute 10 Bina l tMf • P:'&, Muon The Case of ...... lg:', V111 Bob Nt"""1 Mlty Tyltf Sl1Urdly Nlgll1 l.JW Httt1 of Ille Mowl9 °" t11e etaker s Cat Moot9 Hatioll
ME Ptttf WilltMr. I Tliort Edit McClura II Ille llNlrov Utt on Earll Miu Mtrplt (Part 2 OI 21 Pttlf WimMy: t Tliort
AMC Mo.w. "NonN RM" Contd Movie:••• "The Litt Tlmt I Sew Ptrll" (195' Ofama) Movie: u •'1 "Nonnl Rae" (1979 Drama) Sally Field PG
llRAVO Klrov Biiiet ill ltlt SletoiilG 8tautv Cont d Mo¥it: 0•11 "Dlmn of a~" \19&&. Orama) ISoutt..,. Show: A1 Jolson Sletp.leluty
DtS .... "tom tllumtl" Contd Anne of Gtetn G*tt Mo¥it: ••• "The Flemt ll!d Ille Am:lft" IAtecty Go! Oult ·~,.
ESPN Coltat Bttafllll: Moch 11 IW Con1 d --Cal9m Bttatflll· Nevlda-Las Veoas al Fresno Stale Siii Wotld (A) -
FAM 700 CW> HerdcMOt ll!d McConllick Movie: u •, "Atrowtlelcf'' (19SJ) Charlton Heston 700 Club
GALA Dot Vldlt Mo¥it: "El Out Murlo dt Alrtot'' Juhan Soler LUIS Aldas 2• Horn Mo¥it: "El r91 dt JllitcO" Della Magana ClloCOle ,., Mo¥it Confd ... Movie:•• "Aodltt GitwlltV' (1988) PG ::> McMt: •• "ttl't My Girf' (1987) T K Caner PG·13 Klde ill Hml
UFt ···~ lo.. by Dew S--: Few Hft McMt: u "a.tlina Ptlpiclf' (1984) Sandahl Eltrgman 5f*1t1r: Few Hire
MAX McMt: "laaMd IJ" Con1 d lllowlt: u• "N01111 011at FcWtv" (1979) NO ~ A Movie: •"1 "Cold s.tl" (19e7J Brad Davis •••"T'""'"
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Ke~tlng b.l'ames regulators far S&l c:rlsls
lly MATT Y ANaY All•d-• ,.,_ .. _.
WASHINGTON -Lincoln Sav-
ings and Loan executive: Charles H.
Keating Jr. said Sunday that tax-
payers could have been saved half a
trillion dollars in savings and loan
losses if regulators had listened to
the fi ve senators for whom he raised
campaign money.
Keati ng. who is a central figure in
the S&L crisis and an accompanying
congressional ethics scandal involv-
ing the five senators. blamed regu-
lators for the collapse of the irvine
thrift and hundreds of other thrifts.
.. Had they listened to the senators
and had they listened to me. there
wouldn't be mess today." he said on
NBC-TV's "Meet the Press" show.
"'I'm convinced that the cost of this
debacle is going to exceed $500
billion. ... Never ... has so much
misery and economic disaster been
caused by so few men."
Keating defended raisi ng S 1.3
million from associates for political
campaigns and related causes of
Sens. Dennis DeConcini, D-Ariz.:
John McCai n. R-Ariz .: Alan
Cranston. D-Calif.: Donald W.
Riegle Jr.. D-Mich.. and John
Glenn. D-Oh10.
Edwin Gray. a former chairman of
the Federal Home Loan Bank
Board. and federal S&L examiners
told a House committee last fall they
\llt:HI(' ·\ '\ DKE:\.'I
Fabric shops
see resurgence
in home sewing
By JOY ANTHONY
O•lly l'Hot Corr•spondO'nt
Does an) one sllll '>t'~" Ol the 11 fabnr shops that oner graced
the :-..:cwport Beach/( osta Mc'a arl'a IS ~cars ago. onl~ three arc kft
1n :'-Jev.pon Beach and four 1n <'11'>ta Ml·sa. But locill shop owners
sa~ that limes are 1rnpro' 1ng .
.. Peopk arc coming hack to'""' 1ng." tn'>ISIS V. a: ne Greenen.
an ex-coach who U\.\ ns Carole·s Calico Cornn .... 11h h1'> v. 1fe. a former
home economics teal.her "It''> kind ofncit1ng. The .,.,hole business
1s picking up ..
"l'io.,., .,.,e·re '>ce1ng the lad: .,.,ho's got .11! her kid !> out ofthr
house .• rnd '>he·., .,c.,., 1ng for her grandkid<, and for hcr\df .. One
woman he talked to rercntl: 1s returning to hn .,cv.1ng machine after
lc111ng It gather dust for 20 :ears.
"People arr sewing more." agrees kan Muller ot P1ccrmakcrs
( ountr) Store in Costa Mesa "We II\ e in such a high terhnolog:
soc1et). 11·., refreshing 10 s11 down and put a piece offahnc 1n your
hands and '>Ian 10 sc.,., something crcatt,l' ...
There arc al'>o munetal) benefits . .\crnrdmg to< rrrnen. sa' 1ngs
for people .,.,ho '>C"' are much h1ghcr than the~ \H'ft: a fev. }Cars ago
Where the norm u<oed 11) he a SO parent'-'"' 1ng\ on mo<.lcratcl:-
pnccd clot ht'<., SC'-'l'r" ran sa' c 75 percent rw.,., he figure<o.
But on the lov. end of the '>C·ale. 11 still ria:'\ to buy the finished
garment. £q.·r <,1nce the Pac.:ific Rim countne' "neg.an sewing up a
storm:· he s;s1d, peopl e disco' crcd the) co uld tiuy 1rnpons chea per
than the) could make the '>amc garml"nt Wht•n pol)e'ilcr .,.,a., 1n 11s
he: da). people laid dov. n their -.ewmg needles en rnasse.
Pan ofthl' problem for fabric \torc owncr'i 1\ that pol:estl'r I\
hard to sev.. E'en v.1th "'>lrt'lth anc.J ,e.,.,·· cla<.\e'>. man~ pcopll·
figured the effort'> didn't Ju'illf) the re'iult'i.
A.nd not '>urpn'>1ngl). mo~t high ,rhnol'> 1n "iouthl'rn C al1forn1a
stopped offering ~e,~1ng da'iSe\, Cin:ene n said. a!. fcm1n1-;m pcakcd
and sewing seemed passc Meanwhile. the demand for pm ate
instrucuon grew.
"Classes are our mainstay," agrees Moller. one of the 50 owners
of the P1ecemakers curpora11 on. Despite a wholesale d1 v1s10n that
sells goods worldwide. the compan y depend'> on 11s 200 classes for
much of 1ts revenue. Eve ry three months, the schedule changes. and
the store offers nev. qu1lt1ng. dollmaking. cal ligraph) and nel·dle art
courses.
Children as }Oung as 7 d1'>pla) their hand1....,ork 1n the '>tore .. <\
lot ofthc1r parent\ arc crafters ... Moller ex plained ".\nd thl•) want
to learn too. The little ones are rcall~ enJO)ing the tlas'ies."
Thanks to the demand. which she believes 1s occurnng on a
nationwide basis. "there's a renaissance of ski lls that had died ou t
Bobbin lace making 1s one of those. Tailing 1s another:·
"People find their sanll)" when the) learn a craft. sa)S Mane
Kolas1nsk1 . one of the store's other owners. "A man said to me the
other day: 'When I'm doing crafts. a peace co mes over me ·"
The store. which generates o"er $I million in retail re venue in
what used to be a bank building. 1s banking on the fact that people
arc returning to the basics: cooking. sewing and the ans of earl\
America. ·
But like the other fabnc shops iri Costa Me"1. Piecemak.ers had
to diversify to survive. Moller said. Push came to shove eight )Cars
ago, when the co-op members decided to sell gifts. 1n add11111n tn
fabric and pa11erns. "Even the chain <fabric store'\) '>Cll g1fh no....,
she said.
When v1s1tors first walk into Piecemakers . .,., h1ch lookc; ltkc a
siant Marie Callendar's from the outside. they get the feeling that
1t 1s primarily a gift shop. Before they see the yards of co t1on. they
notice quilts for sale. stuffed toys, a candy counter. count~ dres'>CS
plain and decorated sweatshirts. ceramic animals and othtr gift'>.
Upstairs, there's a tea room. cl othes for the larger-s11ed ....,oman .
jewelry. a hair salon. and rooms for the teaching of craft s.
But no Vogue or Butterick patterns can be found. Nor do th e\
see many buttons. Because of the interest in creati ve sewing and ·
crafting. Moller said. almost every inch of the 12 .000-square-foot
building that doesn't offer gifts for sale 1s dedica ted Lo the tools tor
crafting them.
And so 1s the staff. "Sewing is an adventure." sa~s Kola'i1n\k.t
"You go on a Journey that becomes an essential pan of yo ur life ...
Joy .4.Dt/ioay /1 • col•ma/1t llvla1 Jo N~wport B~acb.
GM first U.S. automaker
to invest in E. Europe
beginning 10 1992.
GM Europe President Robert J.
Ea ton and RABA Managing Direc-
tor Ferenc Romvari signed the
protocol Saturday in Budapest
before Hungarian Deputy Pri me
Minister Peter Medgyeny.
Under the tentative agreement.
G M would have a 67 pcn:cnt
interest in the Szcntaottha rd plant
and would be allowed to appoint
management staff. The plant would
create about 880 jobs in the western
Hunprian town, Theis said.
The world's lal)CSt au1omaker
said about 200,000 cnaines would be
turned outCyearly most of which
would be ex for use in OM's
()pet and auxhall ca". The rest
would So into the Opel Kadett
model to be built at the Hunsarian
plant.
Theis said curTent plans call for
only one car-assembly shift and an
annual production of 15,000 ve·
bicla for sale in Hunaary and other
Eatttm European -.natketa .
.. Market condiliona will dictate
whedicr an lddJllouJ tbift l1 re-
qwftd," tic 11id. Last yeat, 0pe1
sold 6.600 can in H~npry.
The orofhable ~ bnmdwl of bolfi OM ad Ford Moe. Co. a.ave bec'n bollllrim& ...... U.S. opemlons ~. ~·Corp.
allo tel:i:i" ~bat dOll DGI ,... ' -......auti11 plln11
were pl"Cl5Ured ~ the RDllOft in a
eair of meetinas m OeConcini's of·
fice in 1987 to Cite their reautation
of Lincoln. "I wanted to be involved in the
process," Kcatinf said Sunday ... h
was particularly important how the
savings and loan industry went. It
you want. to support ~e system, you
have to. 1n my case, It seems to me,
raise funds and support the people."
Since the d isclosures of the cam-
paign gifts and the meeting with
l'Cjulators. the fi ve senators have
tned to disassociate themselves
from Keating, saying they didn't
know at the time the nature of
Lincoln's loans and investments. All
fi ve are now the subject of a Senate
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Ethics Committte inquiry.
Asked Sunday if the meetinp be-
tween the senaton and benk board
officials over Lincoln was unusual,
K.eatina said his problem with t.be
fef,Ulators were more than ordinary.
'It was a problem of takiq down
a savings and loan which was critical
to the economy and employment in
those areas in whk h the senators
served," he said.
Claiming that Lincoln was being
operated in an "unsafe and unsound
manner." the bank board seized
control of it last April, two ycan
after exa miners first recommended
shutting it down.
Regulators now estimate that its
loss of federally insured taxes r,
tbrouah What the IOYerDmftl claims in a suit were fraiadulenl ..... ad
racketeerina invettment ~ ~
will cost tupeycn up lO Sl bWioa.
Keating, in tum, bas sued die
aovcmmcnt. cl,aimil'..'I its takeover of
Lincoln was pert of a vendetta lhat
regulators waaecS apinlt him be-
cause he was operatina Lincoln u an
investment bank rather t.ban u a
traditional home mof'1111C lender.
"It operated profitably until tbe
government confiscated at," he said
Sunday. ''It seems to me that eome-
thing's wrong for the aovemment
that takes away a profitable prop-
erty. There's no loss that's atcer·
tainablc at this point i~ Lincoln."
Assembly Speaker Willie Brown offered a primer the . n day on political arrogance and voter distrust.
Less than six weeks after California imposed a quartcr-
nt emergency sales tax to pay for earthquake relief in the
ravaaed Bay Area. the powerful Democrat proposed making
the tax permanent.
•
In November. the state Legislature voted to raise the
x<ent sales tax by a quarter cent, from Dec. I, I 989, to
Dec. 31. 1990, to pay for the state's costs from the Oct. 17
!8ay ~~ea eanhquakc. The decision met virtually no
,a,pposmon around the state. The consensus was drastic
•:ft1C8Sures were required. That quarter-cent increue is
11xpccted to bring the state $785 millfon over the 13 months.
:: Brown put his calculator to work and the equation
,neans voters should have insisted on more guarantees that
,:she tax was ~nde<'.<1 a .temporary, emergency measure. Brown
flas dollar signs m his eyes but all voters wilt see arc fewer
:~oltars in their wallets.
": T he speake r would make the sales tax increase pcr-
•111anent to pay fo r earthquake safety programs and to avoid
','R_roposed cuts to health and welfare programs outlined in
':(iOv. George Dcukmej ian's spending plan.
\ "There are things you can do to avoid engaging in this
wholesale cut mentality," the San Francisco Democrat said.
"If you tell people we can repair bridges and retrofit
Jhem (for quake safety) or run the risk they will fall down
IJl an earthquake. or bring schools to Field Act standards.
I thin k most people would buy that."
We are not so sure. We can't escape the feelin~ Brown
would tell people about anything to sell them a tax increase.
For 1cars. \Olers ha ve been trying to send a message
that tht• tax tap cannot be opened wider and wider trying
to fill government's bottomless bucket. There are limits to
what programs can be provided and tough decisions are
sometimes prl·ferable to Brown's easy solution of raising
taxes.
Before Brown sel ls the permanent tax increase to his
colleagues. the swtc's voters should be asked if they arc
:buying.
0 fllt·:H \ Ol('l ·:S
~ Stop Sacramento sleaze
B) "'hatcver name - a legal honorarium. as the
tlcfcnc;e contentlc;. or an illegal bribe as federal prosecutorc;
charge -thl' \1gh t of a Sl'nator accepttn$ a SJ.000 check
from untlcrco' er }-Bl agents and stuffing 1t into his pocket
1s fl'' olung.
It ma} be true. as most lawma kers would argue. that
the tx·ha' 1or of this particular stuffer 1s an aberration.
( crtainl) th<.· crude open solic1ta t1on of honoranums and
campaign contnbut1ons an c"tchange for. votes or help on
lcg1slat1on . a\ Jllcgcd b~ prosecution witnesses over the past
few "'eeks. isn't the way mo t lawmakers operate.
But arl' thl· tactics allegedly empl oyed by Sen. Joseph
Monto)a an) more damaging to the democratic process
than those of most of the legislators. who solicit th ousands
in campaign contribuuons to finan ce the quaner-mill1 on-
tlollar re-election campaigns that have become routine in
recent F are;? In part because the issues are more subtle. the
.escala\ing co't of campaigns and the never-cndan~ quest for
munq 1t fo\ll'r\ ma~ endanger democrati c institutions as
"Tnuch a\ thl" more O\Crt actc; that get the attention of federal
_agent-. anti lJ."i. attorneys.
, Acrnrtling to a Los Angeles Tames poll . ""most voters
·hct1c\l' o' l'rwhclmangl> that most legislators ·are fo r sale ."'
..
Moc;t kg1sla tors arc honest and ha rd-working. But they
\.\Ork 1n a eorruft1n$ environme nt that forces them to spend
far too much o their tame and attention raising money and
tonstantl> 1mpo.,cs compromises and accommodations.
The same \ otcrs who believe le~slators are "for sale"
approH~d a "reform" measure an 1988 (co-sponsored.
1ron1 cal l~ enough. b> Montoya) that prohibits public financ-
ing and thus hlocks the onl y genuinely promising way to
break that corrupting system.
Public fin anci ng would not stop a purposefull y d1s-
hone!.t poht1c1an from trading votes for cash. but it would
certain I> make at easier for the honest majority of legislators
to sta} o n the right side o f the line. A lot of voters say they
don't want any of their tax money going to the campaigns
of sleazy politicians. but until there is public financing.
more and more politrcia ns will get the cash· from groups
interested in something other than good government.
fte Frnoo Btt
_,;)R_J\ N-( ·'-(,-0 1\-S r_D_a_ily Pilat
• ,. Nn"f'f' '""' ~-.. ..
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OI{
II• 4'. I tlO! tl.K ...
TO\, r \l'I
t.Jitor
IKI~ rf.'U . \
\•~11r1alr F:tfilor
rO\t u ''" ,,," t.ci1tor
"'Tt.\ t. \li\RHI t:
C.1t) t:ciitor
ROG ER ltl J)( )\1
F'ralurf'I t:dhnr
ROGER l:ARl-"0~
Spor11 Editor
I' ~ TOM BUDD
f.IN"ul•lion Dh'f'etor
TERI PllPO
Clrrulatlnn Mubtln-M•Hll"'
BOR FRANK
Home O..linTy M•n•~rr
Clf A I.ON GOOO
Cu1tomrr S..rvl(f' Mana11rr
PRA*>I> 5HAH
C..t...Rer
RHONDA WEED
O.t• Proc«M1o1 ...... ,
OONNA JACOBSON
Credit Ma..,
H~~ Rt:ICHE~RER(.
Rf't•il S•ln \t.n._.,.,.
<:HERi FREDIA~
Cl-..•ifi,.d M•nllfl"'
Jl 'DY OETIING
IA~•I Advertlain~ Man•get
BECKY S.HENDERSON
Art Director
MARY CARTER
Acl Senieee M .. -stt
ALISSA TADLOCK
Pre-Preti M•HtlU
HENRY KNl(fHT
PreM Room Ma-.pr
LISA TANNEY
Pre-PreM S.pervt.or
PA'nlCK TOOL p,....p,.. S...,-.IMr
SCOTT ootlTHETT
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"CHARACTD wrrNaS? ••• WaL, I DID USED TO KNOW THIS GUY
AT THE aA NAMED ~OllGE 8UM •••• "
Just Cause fails to spur
OC recruiting invasion
Those who 1hough1 the .S. in-
' a\lon of Panama might spark local
intcre!>l in military enlistments were
"'rong. That·~ a revc~l of what
happened in the pa'>I. 1ndicat1vc of
future m1lllal) recru11ing.
There arc reports 1hat Operation
Just CauS<· 1s fueling a renewed
1nterci;1 1n m1htary c:nhs1ments 1n
some parts of the count I). Local
Arm} recruiters say thry·ve heard
currl'nt e'cn1s are helping their Ea\I
Coasl countl'rpart<; fill cnllstmcnt
quota\. Thcre·s some trulh to tho\C
stom·'i. but 11 1.-,n 't working 1hc "'a~
11 ha' 1n thc pa<it
Orange ( ounl> m1lital) recruit-
er\. like rl·c:ru1tcrc, l"•l'n"'hcre. arl·
no lunger prl''>'iurcd for numheri;
regardlc<:.s of tht• quaht~ of rt·cru1t'>
Budgl·l ml'> and the m1htaf) nf the
futurt· arc r hang1ng that. It's tx·com-
1ng mort' rompe1111ve for both tht·
rt·l ruller and recruit.
During the nnt lour \l'ar\. the
r:ink' of ~ I m1lh11n pcopk 1n the
armed forlt'\"-11l tx· reduced -\ttn-
uon "-111 takl' l·arc of stime o l that
rcdm lion. hut higher \tandards for
nc"' recruit\ "Ill at-count for tht•
rl"\t fhl' .\rm' "'111 take 1h1· h1ggc\t
rut \lmpl) lx'.rJU'>l' 11'\ thl' largest
ckmcnt of thc armcd forrc\. hut all
thc hranchc\ arc cutting back
fhl· m1htal) 1s $Citing pick). 11·.-.
nu longrr a rclru1t"'> marh·t Each
branl'h ha\ m o"'n un1qm• rcpu·
tat1on and o pponun1t1r'i. rat h olTer\
lra1n1ng "-Ith n' 1han apphca11on"
anll pm1-mll11ar) rducatwn henefit\
and 11·, loughc:r to gt't 1n. The ach an-
1age for rccru1tcrc, I\ 1he~ arc no"'
morl· ll"cnm1na11ng
One loral rcrru1tt·r ..aid lhc ne"'
S) c,tcm put\ more prC'i'>urc on those
interc\lcd 1n c,1gn1ng up. The~ ha\C.'
to approach enlisting more hke ap-
pl) 1ng for a JOb talher than dropping
1n at the recruiter's offi ce and saying,
.. Herc I am: what have )OU got to
offer"·· Another remands potenual
recru11s of the demands that "ill he
made on them to ··put on the uni-
form and cam tht' ~ncfits:·
Beg1nn1ng this mo nth. all the '>t'r-
' ices ra1St'd tht.•ir m1 n1mum <,tan-
dards. Recruits who are high school
dropouts with equivalence diplomas
arc as much a pan o f the past ac;
recruiters who hyped their branch of
the service and pro mised anything
to make· an l0nl1,lm1·n1 quota
There·.-. nol llouhl lhc .\mrnnan
1n,as1on of PanJma g;l'l' thr mil1-
tar) ·, 1magc .1 hou\t fha1·, t'\-
pce1all) trut· of tlw ·\rm) It' 1magt·
1'> no" a' high. ma) tx· h1ght·r. than
11 ha' tx·cn \lnte tht• 1n' a\1on ot
C1rl·naJa. "h1l h ft'UUlll'f' -.J\ n·-
\Ultt•d 111 J notllt'Jbk fl\t' in l·nll\t-
mcnts
Man)< >range ( 11unt~ \Oulh\ "CH"
S'-'l'Pl up 1n tht• rnli<1tnwn1 tn·nd
after ( 1rcnJJ<1, 11111. hut thJ1·, Jfl-
parl·ntl\ not thc la'il' no"
.\rm\ fl'l rultl'f\ lOntal It'd l.1,1
\\l"l·\.. \a it.I I hn · t.I '>l'l'n h ttk nr nu
1mrca'il' 1n lht: 1111mh<'r of 1nqu1nt·\
\Intl" ( hn..ama\. anJ the· numtx•r Pl
intt•n ll."' Jnd t•nh,tmt·nt\ ''t'fl'
''II"' to ahoul normal Rt•cruitt'r' h1r
thc '\iJ\ ~ \IJ flOl' ( nrp" and \1r
f llft l' had II t t k to '•J\ .ind fl' ti:.·rfl'd
4Ut'\llOO\ "'llh a 1cmotl· ninm·l·l1on
lo Panama or thr nr11ki;11mr 1\\Ut' of
\\CHTi l·n·, ruk' 1n tht' m1htan to
thrir puhhl 1nf11rma11on 11lfoe\
Sgt 1,t ( la\\ ~fo rk ~t·1.1. ell ':11J
abou1 hall thc J)<llt'nt1al .\rm' re -
cruit\ he in11·r' 1cw<; 1n Hun1ington
lkach art· 1ntcrl'\ll'd 1n ll'thn1cal
training .ind lnding in n lulatinn
tx·nctit\ lhl· othl·r hall hl· <.aid
"'ant 'umt• .idH·nturt and tra,l·I
<her in ( osla \k<;a. <;1a IT '\gt
Lan) Ell1ng"'onh \pendc; much of
his 11mt.· explaining rdut·a11on hen·
cfits ~fost "omen '-'hO come to h1\
offae arc 1n1cn.•strd 1n 00upper-k,el ..
1erhn1cal training "hill' the~ arc in
thl· .\rm) ai; "'ell as thc education
benefit" lhC\ can earn Tra\t'I and
Q\ Cr..CaS ass1gnml'O IS. CSp('Clall~ In
Europe and Hawa11. 1ntcrl''il mam
"omen "'ho romr 10 [1l1ng"'onh"i;
offi("l. to talk ahout l'nh\t1ng Mam
people he talk'\ to arc <;tudl'nt'\ at
Orange Coa'it ( o lll·ge. c\pcciall\ the
"omen
Both Arm} rc<ru1trr\ -.aid 1hq
1ntt•n 1l·"' mun: men than '-'Oml·n
and ... 1gn1ficc1ntl) more ml·n than
\\ontt•n t•nd up enhc;11ng
\oml· rccru1ter'i. thin!. )Oung
pcopk in the \1 1d\\C\t and \outh
tcnd 10 rt·act d11Tnentl) 10 th1ngi;
hk.l· <>ix·ra11on Ju\I C Ju'>(· than tho~
ht·rr un thl' \.\ nt C oa\I Onl' ..a1J
potl'nl1JI rnru1t' hac :an· pragmJllt
and mort• 1ntl·rc\teJ in m line'. tra1n-
1ng and tll:ndit\ than patnotl'-m
rtwn therc·, thl' 1n nul·mr ot "'hJt
JX"Upk ~·l· 1n their homl·tn"m \t•,.
nal \rnl\ rerru1tl'f\ think thn hJ\t'
a auug.ht·r ioh than their wun1crp<1n'
for thc '·'' ~ Jlld \lannr ( nrr'
1 hn .lllnhutr that to tht' J\ \ ·~
Jmlif\1J11nl· 'prl"'>l"Oll" hl·rl· Jnd r\11·
mJll' tho'r hr.in, hc' ot thl· arml·J
for, t'' gl·t JI 11111,t h.11 I t tw 11 ll .ii rt'-
l fU11'
II that ml".ln' '-·1'' Jnd \IJnrll'
rn ru1tt·r' hJ\ t" JO l'J\ll'I 111h thn
\\till I Jdmll II
<hid \lll hJd \1 1nJrnl. ,,11t.I th1•
numtx1 111 po1t·1111.ll '\.,1,' rl'l ru11'
hl· IOh"f\ll"\\\ h,\, 11111 IOlfCa\c:d In
ll.lt'lll \\l°Ck\
\l,lflnc 111 R111lt rl I lit l.n didn't
\Ao,1n1 Ill IJI\.. J~IUI lhl· 1nt\"fl"\I\ or
4111'\tll>O\ J\l.t•J h\ thl' \l\UOg rx·opll'
ht· 1nll'f' ll'"' \\ hl·n ,11,krd :illtrnt the
numtx·r 11f kmJln J' t•Pr><><.('d to
mah:' hc 1alk' to, ll1t kc\ c;a1d h1· "a\
m1 1rc 1 n1crc\trd in °1ntcr' I{'" 1 ng
.. 4uJliticd ramlidatl'\00 than pa' 1ng
:i11n1t111n rn an intt'f\ 1('wcr·~ gender
1>11111 tor thl' .\ir force 'iiaffl)g1
I .... 1 ti.inn look\ JI a !)11len11al
rt'UUll0
\ qu.1l11iu1tllln\ JnJ rref1•r\ to
( llUl1\cl high \Chool \c.'OHlr\ ~hl'
n·,ronJl·J In 4ur,1111n<. ahoul lhl·
numtx·r ot 1ntl'r' it'"' and l·nl1<.t·
mt·nt' h\ ..a\lng. "\ m1·11 n('l'd to
talk 111 th1· puhlil 111torm:lllon nffiu~
a1 '-oraon .\ir Fnnt· lia"t' ..
Othl·r n·cru11er' ..aid 1h" numticr
of h11.al t•nhstmrnt' ha'c ht-en Jt'lc1ut
normal 1n Dt.'l'Cmtx·r and l'arl~ Janu-
Jf\
·H ov.c' rr onl' thing ha ... n·1
.-hanged -thl' ll'l'ling m<.'mher<. of
cath hranl h h.lll' lo"ard 1ho..c in
1hc uthl'r hrJnthl''"' fhc .\rm' c;1ill
think\ thl' 'J'' 11tkr" l u'h'
0
dUI}
l he: .\1r r nrll' \Cl'\ ll\c.'ll ·" a h1gh-
ll'l h \Cf\ tl l' and t' en one loo._" at
\l:mnr~ a' \"11111,t\ It\ n1tc to kno"'
'>Orne thangc; don'1 <.'hangc
Don Fenl~y b rt~ D•lly Pilot'•
Auodar~ Editor.
Don't
In Coast
Highway
To the E.ditor:
We havt ~ntly rad of tbe
opposition of some andividuall aad
sroups to tht" construction of bWJd.
1ngs on the ocean side of Pacific
Coast H1ghwa) in the Huntiqton
Beach downtown redevelopment
area. We he11rtlly roncur!
Hun11naton Beach 1s blessed with
the length and height of the COIS1aJ
bluffs below PC'H . and at is a
pleasu~ to dm e 1ha1 stretch of Pelf
and t'nJO} the panorama of the Pa-
cific Ocean and ( atahna Island. The
Cit) has done a fine JOb of Land-
scaping the blufTtop north of d o wn-
town. W hy not continue 1t south-
ward past the pier 10 the beach park
entrance?
Maxwell's and the white condos
on the beach were a mistake: don't
compou nd 1t. Ron Yeo's pier plaza
1" an excellt'nt design. Why not have
11 lead to JUSt the rebuilt pier and to
heath roncess1om built into the
hlufT fare at tht' tower boardwalk
le' d . with a PC H-levt'I lawn on the
roof'
The new apanments condos. and
nc" PC H /M ain hu1ld1ng behind
PC H arc "ell lo<:ated -the) enjoy
lll.can '1cv.~ "1thout walling PCH
off from thl· -.ca Maxwell's could
JU'>t 3'> '-'C'll be.· o n 1he S«ond or third
ll<x1r of the: Main building. Looks
li ke thl' Ut\ ·., '>luck w11h the white
condo'>. bui at least tht") ·~ a couple
of hlock~ nonh of the pier.
r>on·1 "all in PC H PEOPLE must
Ix'. morc important than PROFlT to
a public agenc~ such as tht" city.
\11MI A:"-D c,OROON GLASS
Newpon Beach
TOD·\' ., u1s·1·0H\
Tot.la> 1~ Monday. Jan. I 5. the
I 'ith da~ of 1990. T hl'rc art" 350 days
kit 1n tht· \t·ar Thi!> 1s the Manin
L u1lw1 l\.ing J r hohda~
l odJ~ ·, lllghhght in H1s1or: ·
nn JJn 15 t 929. Cl\ll nghts
lcackr \1an1n I uthcr King Jr was
horn 1n .\tlanta
C }n th1~ lla11·
In I 'i511 lnglan<fs Queen EllLa-
tx·th I "3'1 lrv"'ncd in Westminster
\hOt'\
In I ....... the people of :--it·" Con-
Ol'llll ut JnlJrt'd their 1ndtiXn-
dcnlc T ht• \In\ republic later ~
l 3mt' the: \late of Vermont.
In I t17t1. the lxmOCTallc pan) was
rt'prr<.t·n1ed a~ a do nkt') for the first
11ml' 1n a canoon b} Thomas ast
in "Harper"• W('("kl).".
In 1914. p1an1st a.M...ctatesman
Ignace Padcrewsk1 ~ the first
prcm1l'r of the newl} c~atcd re-
public of Poland
In 1943. work was completed on
1 ht• Pentago n.
In 1%7. the(,reen Ba> Packers of
thr National Football League de·
fl·a trd the Kan!>as <.:11} Ch1efr. of the
.\ ml·ncan Football League 35-10 1n
thr tir<.t Super Bowl
In 197'. Prrs1dcn1 ,."laxon an-
nounced the !>USJ)('nsaon of all U.S.
offcn\l'e action in Nonh Vietnam
In 1976. Sara Jane Moo~ was
sentenced to hfe in pnson for her
attt'mpt lo ~hoot President Ford an
<;an Franni,co
In 19 ... Lisa lcY) and Margaret
&1"man. 1"0 students at Aonda
\late l n1,ers11' an Tallahassee.
"'t·rr murdered · an their soronty
hnu\t' Theodore Bund) was later
ton\'1Ctet.I cif the cnme.
In I tig '· Meyer Lansky, the re-
puted underv.orld patnarch who
nt'' er \Cn ed a maJor p nson term.
died 1n M1am1 Beach. Fla .. at aJte 81.
-By 1'k A•soclalff Pm•
Cranston's dark side finally exposed
Senator has history of being adept money harvester
SAC RAMENTO -.\ recent let-
ter to the San Francisco Chronicle
from a reader hemoaned the "cur-
rent Cranston-bashing" stemming
fro m U.S. Sen. Alan Cranston's
ques11onable e fTons on ~half of
Irvine-based Lincoln Savings and its
owner. Charles Keating.
The collapse o f Lincoln is the
nation's costliest thnfl fa ilure to
date, and may cost laxpayers more
than S2 bi llion. Federal rqulators
have charaed that the S&L w15
misused by Keating to prop up land
developments and other shaky busi-
ness ventures. Kcatina. who
showcr1'<1 campaian checks o n poli-
ticians lavishly, enlisted the aid of
Cranston and four other senaton in
bis dfom to 1tave oft' a federal
replltory cnckdown.
Cranston, who directly and in-
directly ~vcd ntarly $900,000
from Kceti~ sources, has
tern bis popularity amon, Cali-
fornia voten plwnmet., and theft~
ever-IUOQltt callt amona Oemo-
CT1tic Party leaden tblt he not run
for a fifth-acnn re-dection in 1992. CranMOn, however, bas bee1\ stump-ial CaUJOnUa in ae effort to tboft
up WI •llCIMktaiof'lled POiiticai .................... he did
....... ~ or ethblly W'l'O«ll. _.. Mio in ' lill lhll he will run ...
'"1 tlillM Am 0.lllDm ii OM of
d9t IW U.S.: WlllDll 6a., tife. ........ a..ldl ••• ....,.., llid..,... 1t1•c• W 1111 •Hr
I). af\cr all these year\. become
flawed. We must con~1dcr all of lhc
good te11sla1ion he has supponed. all
of lhe aood fights ht' has made
·Tm certainly no t w1lhng to ac-
ccp1 that he as tamashcd. tcmporanh
o r J)('mlancntl}. and I ccruunly hoJ)('
ha s pohtacal career 1s no t finished."'
The letter was \0 gushily pm--
Cranston. 1t might havr brcn wnttcn
by one of his aides.
The key phrase " the o ne that
declares "his character has not sud-
denly. afler all these years. become Rawed .....
That is prte1sely what Cransto n
hopes will bc<:ome the prevailing
p ublic attitude. His pohtic~l career
dates btlck nearly a half-centul')', and
until now, he hu enjoyed con111tent-
ty 1110111 _public credefttials for
chal"llC1er. Cranston wan11 the pet·
ocivcd decades of tood to outweiah
the peteetved moments of llS*d
jud8emena.
lrua is it fteJly ,rue that Cranston was a paf'llOn of DOlitkat virtue for
aJI of thote yan?
· The record indic:aiet otherwitc.
White he hll ewUc>yed an ntmdtd
boftcymooft witfl the :=-:n media .... ha lafJdy . Iii•
.... lide ~ Crw•• ................ ...,.
from ........ din ol Ml c.IS,
wl OM ....... ,.._,k:>
......... oalJ ... 41~w.
iawplr ller'L It'• ..,. &w eocbiaa .-. eru.a. evol*lMooee~w...,......~1-
ant.I one l)f Cahfom1a·s -mo-.1
product" c han C'ilt'r'i of campaign
r hccks. For ncarl) \\\.O dr-cadr'i. until
Pete Walson won a Senate ~at 1n
1982. California's other l ' ~nator
was an inefTec11'e poh11cian Crrorge
M urph~. John Tunnr). or'\ I Hav-
akawa
When aerospace cxecutl\ cs. cor-
porate farml'rs, Ho ll\wood tycoon".
!Ml' angs and loan m0guls. o"r other
mo neyed anterests from Cahfom1a
necdrd help in Washington. thq
went to Cran ston . .\nd as he hd~
them. they helped him w1th big
campatan checks.
The Lincoln c:aJC was not even the
first time Cransto n had helped
somebody from that tndustry. not by
a Iona shot. In 1979. at the behest of
California savinp and I01n ex-
ecutives, Cranston carried lqjt-
i.tion protectint &hem from haVlnl
to ofTer intcrcst·bearina checklna IC·
C'Ounts. to cite but one ex.ample.
While po11urina pubUcly 11 an
o pponent of deftnte tPendiSW.
C ranston carefully exeml*d Cah-
forft.ia.bu.itt weapons syaema. euch
as the 8-l bomber. from hlt afti.. cann. He reau •ed his .,..... ooe-
cktnnatk>e fbr Mid\ ~
a e:J:et I)._ 11 dtc MX ..-...
lmO....belm•• mhlded .,_..-..•Ille po;a111 llhuelf. Tom ..... a w ._ c..Mtwaill wa1s:g1r ..., _.
ao-a UUOM f lj1Mliutlid cobatnftllt. .,. ..... •• I '64
OlftltOft tried to "' """ '° ,........
a snually explicit. h~1y com-
prom1s1ng pho to of a pohtical oppo-
nent Bradt'n said later. "I ccm-
\1dered 11 sltmc ··
These a nd o ther 1nc1dcnt1 ftom
the Cranston put indicate that far
from the temporanly tarnished •ned
that he and has supponcrs poftf'l1
him as beans. C ranston is a cold~
calculatina, money-conscio111 Poli-
tician who helps his friendt ud hurt~ his enemies. Wha1 he ctkt ..
Lincoln wat.n't unu.sual. What's clil-fe~nt 11 that this Ork~ blew up i.a We
fatt.
,,_ .,.,..,,, " • ,, 181111 f
tel ·n
i I ' I
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e master, just ask the Rams ~
while watchina Montana continue to demon-
strate why he is the best quarterback in the
pme.
Montana completed a 49crs playoff record
87 percent of his passes (26 of 30) for 262
SAN FRANCISCO
-Jim Everett may be
en route but in Sun-
day's NFC cham -
pionship pme he wu
relepted to takina
another step in th~
Jeamina process while
watcruna the master -
Joe Montana -per-
form.
• yards and two touchdowns with no inter-
•iiiiiiP-:--. cer.tions. 'The poise Joe Montana shows is amazing
Everett has often
been compared to him this season. He has
been called the heir apparent to his throne.
But on Sunday, he suffered the kind of game
a growina quarterback is prone to endure,
Dynasty
of 49ers
difficult
to break
SAN FRA.NCISC'O -In the after·
math ofSunda' 's de molit1on of the
Rams, it wo uld appear the onl) thing
which will slo w the team of the '80s
fro m becoming the team of the '90s
would be thc retirement o f Joe Mon·
tana.
That, Montana has said. is not
fonhcomingfor a few years. The way
he.,; going. b) the 11me he retires. heir
apparent Ste\e Young could be over
the hill. Mo ntana. in his I I th season.
onl) seem s to gct stronser
It "ould SC'em '\Orne 111 fortune
v.ould befall the 49crs. But then
again. the B.t) .\r('3 dcS<·n·e5 a lift 1n
hard 11mes.
The 1985 Bears T hl' 1986 Giants.
1 nJ unes. bool s. rnnll1c11ng per·
sonalillc'> -th1ng•qu<;1 got 1n thl·
v.a\
this team doesn't sc:.-em 10 be like
those v.anta·bc d ) nasti es. It's work·
manlike. modcM. doesn't wcm to
alto" w1nn1ng to go to its head.
It manufactures' 1c1ones hke an
assembl) line . ..\nd thc man who
leads them 1s no"' rev.nting the post·
season record books etched b) the
Steelers and Teri) Hrad'\haw. the
team" h1ch do minated the 70'> the
"a} the 49ers. ha' l' the 80s..
Montana set lo ur NFl post·sca son
records Sunda) -l\\O of them his
o"n a nd 1 ..... 0 of them (yards gained
and touc hdowns) Rradshaw·s.
Ho w good were the 49ers., Good
enough 10 )Cl a do1c n s1ngle·game
post·sea'>o n team records. Yo u can
mah·1t IJ1f\OUIOclUdl·Rams
punter Dale ita1cher and h1c;..c ,en
punt.-.
While the Rams ma) have bttn
the best tea m against the 49ers this
past c;cason. 11 "o uld appear no team
1s in the ir cahhcr "hen 11 comes to
post·'il'ason pla)
When San Franc1'\CO cmbarrasS<"d
Minneso ta a week ago. people were
searching for ans .... ers of how the
N FL's No. I defense could be so
dominated. or how the Vikings' of-
fense -with its own stock of super-
stars -could be so humbled. Were
cenain Vikings performm• at the
level of their contracts, which several
players believe are too low? No.
The reasons for 1ha1 loss were
1dcnllcal 10 Sunday's demolitio n of
the Rams. This isa team unmatched
in the NFL-especially at playoff
time.
"I think 11 has something to do
with when you play the 49ers. you
better play perfect, or don '1 expect to
win.'· Rams quarterback Jim Everett
(Please see P:ERGUSON/14J
-it's just vinta~ Joe," said San Francisco
Coach George Seifert ... He just keeps getting
better and better.
Everett's o utina wasn't all his fault. to be
sure. He was facing a 49crs defensive unit -
which is overshadowed by the San Francisco
o ffense -playing at its o ptimum level.
Never had the Rams been limited 10 less
than 10 p()ints in an Evere11 start.
His 16-for-36 performance was his third
worst outing of the season. H 1s 141 yards
were a season low. his three interceptions a
season high and only in one other game was
he held without a touchdown pass.
It's a tnbutt· to E'ere11·s past pcrtormance.
and an n cn bigger tnbutc to the 49ers'
defense. "h1ch l cp1 thc pressure on while
Rams wide receivers (three catches between
them) "'ere either unable 10 get free of
corne rbacls Darn I Pollard and Don Cinffin
or interuptc:d b) · ~fet1e'> Ronn1t· Lull and
Tim Md~.H·r
but 38 of his rards 1n the first half.
It was not JUSt a case of Even-u being
pressured . On. several occasions, when he
had .time. his throws were ovenhrown,
underthrown and )USt plain poorly thrown. "We didn't execute well. and they ex-
ecuted great," Everett said. "It's another
thing where we don't have any excuses. the)
played belier than us today.
"It was one of those things "hae I "as
hurried on a lot of passes. but the) "ere
reall)' bringing it. Those guys up lro n1 arc
rcall> good ...
.. , don't .rememlx:r 100 man} pla~s on the
o utside:· E' crl'll ~1d. ··.\gain. the) "ere
"e ll-coached. pla)l'd great. and too~ a lot of
the ~t u IT a"a' frum us that \\C like to do ...
After overthrowing Ellard 1n the end zone
on 1h1rd down and settling for a field goal on
the fi rst dn ve of the game. a fake end around
10 Ron Brown set up a "Ide-open Flipper
Anderson do" n the nght sideline. But Ever-
e11 undenhre"" the ball. and Anderson had to
wa11 long enough 10 allo" Lon 10 come
half"a~ across the fi eld and knock 11 awa).
Had the pass bttn 1hro"n "ell. the Rams
would ha'e enJo~ed a 10-0 lead 1n the first
quarter
"Thcrc "ere a lot of d---paS'\l''> I "a nt
bac~. But 1t''> nut J ) O·)O It's a football
gaine:. and "c didn't pl:l\ .1' guod as v.e
ha' l'
The Rams were shut o ut lhl' "ee~ before
Evere11 became a starter 1n 1986 The o nh
other time the) were held 10 less than I b
points bet .... een then and Sunda) came "hen
Everell was sidelined b) a broken ankle for
the final game in 1987.
The Rams d idn't umw t Iii'"-' JnJ alcord·
ingl). ne ither did E'erl·tt. "h11 1hre" for all "It was J pla~ "here 11 "as a case o f
f Pluse see MONT ANA/B4f
Montana
just Super
over Rams
lly DAVE CARPENTER
~..\N FR..\~CI~( 0 -Somehov..
soml· ":i}. Jex.· \1ontana got better on
'>unda' On a da .. "hen -------
the mudd,· turf at
C a ndlcs11c~ Park
slo .... ed do" n .ind
stained JUSt ahout
C\l'r\Onl' t he
'1FI ·\~to'>t \alu·
a ble Pla\l'r harcf\
d irtied .hi\ unt·
* * * fo rm 1n f)t'rhaps -------
h1\ he'>t p<1'>t'\eao,on performance
(.'\ l'r
Montana engineered a surpnsingl~
sim ple JO-1 'll'to1~ :,,~the an Fran·
Cl~l'Cl .iQcr.-. o' l'r the Rams in the
S F< 111k g;ime b) complc11ng 26 o f
1() pa'Sl''> for 2o2 ~ards and tv.o
IOUl hdo" n pa\\CS .\I read) the hold·
l'r (1f the \'FL'<, hcc,t t;tat1s11cal rating
for hoth th!\ '\ea,on and his career. he
~urpa<.'-1.'d h1'> o"n bnlhant pla~ofT
">tat1'1l1l \"1th thl' club-record -per·
u~nt u1mplet1on rate ior a postseason
game
"It's prett~ tough tu get lxtter than
1ha1:· \lght t•nd Brent Jones said
"tic\ pla~ed great all :ear. but he
'>('ems to plJ ~ e'en greater in the btg
game' ..
The RJm'> "'l'.fe "orr1ed most
about gamc·brcaking recet' ers Jcrr)
Rice and John Ta\lor But 11 was
Jones· 20.~ard 1ouchdo'4n reception
th.it ga'e ·an Francisco a 1.3 lead
and stdrted a 21 ·point second-quar·
ter burst Mo ntana's 18-yard TD
pu tu Ta)lor capped a n 87-~ard
drnc "1th~ ~conds left 1n the half to
pro' 1dc the bark·breaker.
"J()(''s JUSI so grea t at seeing the
o pen man .\II ~ear he's JUSt taken
"'hat thl· Jdt·nse has gJ\ en us.,. Jones
said
·· .\nd he's the master of the 1wo-
m1nutl' dnll 11·s a cool. calm con-
fidence he proJeCI\ in the huddle that
JUSI rubs olT on t'' l.'I) bod} ...
.\dded linebacker M ichael Waite.-.
"ho contnbutcd a team·h1gh ~r
tackles to a superb defensive: N-09-
ing "I JUSt thank God 1 don't h'ave to
pla) against Joe. The things he has
d one and continues to do are JUSt
incredible ..
A.s usual. Montana preferred to
shrug olT praise the wa~ he might a
tac~ler
"The~ "ere ti: ing to take our
underneath game a"a). so the) were
d ropping a lot of peo ple underneath
the Lones:· he said. "We just had to
be a h11le b11 choos) about whe~ we
were throwing the ball.
"Guys were finding holes for you,
and I had plenl) of time to throw the
ball again this week. A lot of the
credit has to go 10 those guys up
front. The) did it again:·
So d id Montana, whose three sec-
ond-quaner TD passes sparked a
41 ·13 pla~olT win o .. er Minnesota a
"eek earlier He 1mpro\'ed in this
game's sernnd quarter
O n the first sconng dnve of the
quaner. he "a5 5-for·5 for 67 yards
o n an 9·)ard dnve march. On the
(Please 1tt 49en/MJ
\\llHU '' 100111\11 CO,llHl,CI tll\\11'10,,lllP
Broncos rip · Browns~ 3 7-21
By BARRY W ILNER
,.,~-
DENVER -This time. t he Den·
,·er Broncos didn't nt'Cd The Dnve
or The Fumble . They had John
Elway.
Elway. in his best playoff per·
formancc. and Sammy Winder, in
his last ho me game. carried the Bron-
cos t>.ck to the Super Bowl on Sun-
day. They beat the Cleveland Browns
37-21 for the AFC championship for
the third time in four yean.
"I'm thriUed to death that I get to
so to bet apin." said EMy, who had
his bnt .. JM of the aeuon and his
bnt ever 1n the playoffs, throwina for
385 yards and thrtt touchdowns and
talitina Denver on scorina drives of
82. IO, 80 and 60 yards. "We're a
betttt team \his time.··
8ener than •he lrownl, cenainly. It doaa•t llMlnet bow tt!ey do i~ me lrwOI aa-ra ._. aevetwt
for &M AR: cM•p6a•~evett it diet .. , •• .,... .....
_11'n., did ' it • '"' Whit ihi Ort.._ 1 .,_._. aa;lnt _.
...... ~ ~-1'1111 .. ,.,
Earnest Byncr's fu mble as he headed
for the tying to uchdown cost
Cleveland a shot at its first Super
Bowl.
This ume, the Broncos needed no
last-second heroics. no lite "pt1ievc.
El"&) made surc: of that.
'1"his time, rm aoina 10 set the bit one." Coach Dan Reeves aid. Ro-
evcs has been to 1even Super Bowta
already, mOft than anyont elte.. tMt
he •• ().2 theft .. Om~• c:oem.
..we·~ loc*hla fol_. '° ID!ll bllc:t. to tbe &aper ..... .. .... ..
C\lft. wtao ... ,.. ia -llr .,... uc1-.1Cowbcwl I .........
i• ._ °"""' -•~w • .-....
Wie J9it * APC -'atlll=--~ .... ---We• IDili ID 8'... . ......
,.
I
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a-.s.e,-~-... e
E' a•h e---m lbe -.. au ..a;; a 1ra'I .,.., __ _
~-;Joi • "Ctpllle"ftft lhoUP Ibey 110 "'-'are a1 !he-· NCAA officials u;c1. .
fa a letter datod laa. 4, the NCAA alltttS 14 ruks
violation• ll*illll lbe prosnm between 1984 apd 1981
ranJ:irc &om cuh eaysnea~ to playen of up to ,$1 SO
to improper recru:it1nc Ulcllcs. •
Friday, !he Andenoo lndependm1,Mail reponed
lhal an unidentified source u.id former asaistaitt head
coach Tom Harper, former quarierbecb CQKh ·Jack·
Crowe and former paduiite assistant coach Steve
Shauahncssy all wen: named in the list of alleaed i'ules
''iolations.
The univcnity will not confinn the identities of
any individuals involved in the cue. 'Crowe now is quancrback.1 coach and offensive
coordinator al Arkansas. Sha~nessy is be9d football
coach at Sou1h Meckknbur& Hiah in Charlotte. Harper
died May 23 in Savannah, Ga., while on a speakinJ trip.
Arkansas athletic director Frank Broyle$ confirmed
Crowe's inclusion in the allega1ions and said he was
convinced Crowe was 001 in viot.tion of any rules.
Shaughness¥ has denied involvemcn1 in any wrona-
doina as claimed by former Oemson offensive lineman
Andrew Walker.
However, if a coach who has moved wi1hin the
NCAA system is found in violation after Sept. I. 1985,
the Committee on Infractions could impose sanctions
thal would limil his effectiveness as a recrui1er or a
coach at the new institution, said Chuck Smrt, an
assistant director of enforcement for the NCAA.
Rangers hit milestone
Brian Ltttch scored at 1:16 of overtime ~
to 've host New York a 4-3 win over
Phifadelphia Sunday night for the Rangers' ' •
I ,OOOth home victory.
Lectch's shot through a screen from the left point
beat Ken Wrcgget and capped a threc-toal Ranger
comeback. It was the first time in 18 games that the
Rangers won after Lra iling in the third period. They had
bttn 0-I 5-2.
The victory gave 1he Rangef'!I a 1,000-715-373 mark
at the two Madison Squart Gardens they have played
'"· The decision, meanwhile. ex1endcd the Flyers'
winless streak to seven games (0-4-3).
Elsewhere in 1he NHL Sunday:
•In Winnipeg. Dave McUwain scored two Boals
and set up .,aul Fenton's winner with 2:04 rtmaining
in the game as the Winnipeg Jets beat the St. Louis
Blues 6-5 despite three goals by Brett Hull.
•In Chicago, Brian Macl.ellan scored four goals
and Sergei Makaro\I got 1he tiebreaker with eight
minutes remaining as the Calgary Flames beat Chicago
6-5 and stopped the Blackhawks' six-game unbeaten
string.
Trail Blazers win, 99-90
EAST R UTHERFORD. N.J. -Clyde ~
Drexler matched his season highs with 36 •
points and 13 rebounds Sunday night as the ,r
Portland Trail Blazers beal New Jersey -'----
99-90 for their eighth conr.ecutive victory over the Nets.
Drexler scored 16 points in the third quarter as
Portland. which has won SC\len of eight games. e1tendcd
a 1 ()..point haH\ime lead. A three-point play by Drc1ler
gave the Trail Blazen in 84-66 advantage with 1:34 left.
their largest margin of the game 10 that point.
Portland, which last lost 10 New Jersey on Dec. 1,
1985, led 90-72 ea rl y in the fourth quarter when the
Nets scored eight conSC"Cutive points to get within JO .
But 1hey werr unable 10 get any closer than cighl the
rest of the way, despi1e holding 1he Trail Blazers to 13
points in the final period.
Purvis Shon, starting for the fourth time in place
of the injured Dennis Hopson. Jed 1he Nets in scoring
for the third straight game with 24 points.
Buck Williams. who played on 1he Nets for eight
years, had 12 points and 13 rebounds in his first game
against New Jersey since he was traded 10 Portland in
the offseason.
New Jersey led 14-6 aftn si1 minutes before
Drexler scored 10 points in a span of 2:47, helping
Portland close the pp to 24-23.
ttlOll 01 1111 II\\
"I think ifs the best we've played all year. We
came toaether:· -J.U Elwaf on the Broncos'
overall dominance of the Browns Sunday in the
American Conferena: football championship game
between the Denver Broncos and Oeveland
Browns.
Comedian Conway cited
NEW YORK -Actor Tim Conway, a
mainstay on the lona-runnina Carol Burnet I ~ ......_
show and the bumbling Ensip Parker on ~
"McHalc's Navy," wu elected 1989 B~
Sport of Turfdom for his part in founding the Don
MacBcth Memorial Jockey Fund.
The MacBeth fund was started in 1987 and named
for the late jockey, who died of cancer in March of th.;at
year. Since lhal IJme, ii has funded physic.al therapy and
medical trulment and provided financial assistance to
jockeys in need.
ConWly, 54, who tot into racina u an ellercisc
rider for his father al old Randall Parle in Cleveland.
is 0ot of tcveral oekbri1ies who have been bonom.t by
1be ·Turf Publk:illS of America. Olhen i9docle """" ~!"" llacUnch and acton Telly Savala~ Jade
"'~--aM ~ F ... ydoc. S.iperSoni~s Eiits watts
n.c-i ................... . or acadnnldw lllllOinted by Ille NCM,-_iiiiiiilOii' tm~ IO_,. pcnahlts aplott b -or 1n indivNlulL However. it could no& ..... tbl
cooch's cmpioymonl, Snsn said.
l If a coadl ""°has...,. inlo hilll --i"I is found in vio&.1ion while at 10 NCAA inlt.itutiaa. tbe
Committee on Infractions can not We action wtaile be
remain1 at the hiah tchool. It could im~ ~
however, if the coach returns to the coJkliate rub at
an NCAA ins1itu1 ion within an undisctoeed period ol
time. .
.. ,, you ao to an NCAA school within a ceruin
number of years, we'd want you and that DCJtt IChool
10 come in before us and we'll talk whether we're aoi~
to apply any restrictions apinst you in that nellt -,a.r.
All three coaches Ra!f1cd Friday_by the.source.Id\
the footl>all proaram without adm1n1strat1vc ICtton.
Harper was moved into an administrative ut.ista~t
position within lhe program a few months before h11
'death, but that apparentJy was to fill an opcnina left by
the retirement of Don Wade.
"If the coaching staff is no longer there, lhat mar,
be a corrccti\le or punitive action, or nothina at all.'
Smn said.
Universily president Max Lennon has ~id he
wouldn'I be surprised 10 S« some of the charges
dropped. Bui if any of the allq,ations involving the
former coaches are found 10 be true. the school still can
be ~nalized. University officials have until March 12 to respond
to the charges. The Committee. on Infractions then. is
expected to review the case at its Apnl 20-22 meeting
in Kansas Cit)'. and 1he university is expected to learn
of any sanctions within two to four weeks following the
meeting.
-GOlf
ftL.1'1-·-·----
11~ .. __
Noah tops West German
Frenchman Yannick Noah defeated
West German Carl-Uwe Steeb 5-7. 6-3. 6-4
to win the me n·s 1itle in the $400,000 New
South Wall's Open tennis championship
Sunday in Sydney. Australia.
II was the l'igh th-scedcd Noah's firs1 \lic1ory in
nearl y two years and came o nly three months after he
considered retiremenl. The matc h took two hours.
Meanwhile, 1he Soviet's Natalia Zvereva. the No.
J I seed. rallied 10 beat Austrian Barbara Paulus 4-6. 6-1.
6-3. in the one-ho ur. 45-minute women·s final.
It was Z\lere\la's seco nd tournament \lictory , both
within a ~·ee k. Last week. she won the Queensland
Open at Brisbane. This is her fourth year on the tour.
Noah and the left-handed Steeb kept the center
coun crowd at White Ci ty enthralled with their see-saw
struggle.
"It could have gone either way:· said Noah. who
rallied from 3-4 to win the last three games and cap a
sensational tournament in which he beat Ivan Lcndl.
the world's top-ra_nked player. in. the qua~erfina\s an~
defending champio n Aaron Knckste1n 1n the semi-
finals.
Noah, 29. praised his new coach. Dennis Ralston,
a former U.S. Davis Cup captain. for "gelling the fire
back"' in his play.
The victory was Noah's first since upseulng Ameri-
can Jimmy Connors at Milan. Italy. in February 1988.
Elsewhere in tennis on Sunday:
• tn Auckland, Nt:w Zealand, American Scott
Da\liS ups.cl top-seeded Andrei Chesnokov o f the So\liet
Union to win the S 175.000 New Zealand Open tennis
championship.
Davis, the eighth seed, rallied for a 4-6. 6--3, 6-3
triumph in lhe 1w1>-hour match.
Louisville tops Florida State
TALLAHASSEE. Fla. -Louisville ~
Coach Denny Crum wasn't ready to get beat •
Sunday. and he certainly wasn'I going to let ,,
Aorida State's Tharon Mayes beal his team. -'----
'"Mayn can beat )'OU by himself," Crum said after
he prevented the Flonda State 1uard £rom even getting
a shot off iri the final minutes.
Louisville scored the last eiaht points to take a
7.J.66 Metro C.Onlerenoe victory Sunday.
.. The bit: thine was "NC didn't iet Mayes take lbc
shots," said Crum, who set up a box .... nd-one defense
in the final minutes to stoP. the Seminoles' star. "The
rest of the auys.. they dido t make it when it counted.
Elsewhere Sunday:
•Center Adam Keefe tcored 30 points and hauicd
SEATTLE -Kina C4unty pr:otee:Uton A dowt1 t S rebounds for Stanford u the Cardinal defeated will deddt dilt week wbefher io eta.use • Washincton Slate 69--49 in a Pacit'ieo.10 Conference
S..nle SuperSo•ict pwd Dale Ellis 'lrilh ' pme. . . . . rcdlell drivfat and drivina while intoa.· _ K.ede, a product of Woodbridat" HiJh 1n lrvi:ne,
K:l...S. · • 1 :G'O Poinll in a fow-minute stretch 10 the tee0nd
l!llio' -siJ. lf.lyilc aid Ellil .. -· .. tbt Canli::J!O.l, l-2) ocored 1 l stBiahl poinu in1ii:Walel1t .....C. iD,1 oGe-car' IC'd*e' dlll~lllr-1lw-• • '1·32 .
AJl.lllr1-pitollied ..... ·-_.., llid. • lilils: • . -·...., , .,I
-·-...,.-·~ ~~ii:c.ill'• ,,, .......... ,1 .....
-. t.. • • -\ •11 clpl1':'T:iC.: ... -....... --.::r:-.11"1 • .. ..;.;1 P' _,._,.
"·~ .................... ---out on the "••VJ' .... In •ntlclp.Mlon of to·
Foreman, 41, Cooney, 33
~~~~«? du~e It ?.~~, ~~~!~~~~ .. .,
""'..,_..Ill',,,., years after he retired and became an evangelist foll o"
ATLANTIC CITY, N.J . -George Foreman will 1ng a loss to Jimmy Young.
get a chance tonight to do something many fighters The bout is being critcizcd in some quarters as
would like 10 do -punch a promoter. shamless burle sque for exploi ting both 1he fi&hte rs an
h. •. the paying pul>lic. Each fighter is guaranteed s r millio Res1 assured the promoter will be punc 1ng bac~. Foreman is the 9-5 fa vorite to win the bout al lh
In a scheduled 10-round bout. the 41 -year-old Con\lention ('enter. where a crowd of 11 .000 is l'. Foreman will meet Gerry Cooney, who promoted two peeled.
of the former hea\lyweight champion's fight s in his Ii is concei vable. however. thai the winner will ear comeback. In a weigh-in Sunday nighi. Foreman came in ai several million dollars more by challenging Mike Tl•so 25311~ pounds while Cooney will fight at 231 . for the championship. which Foreman held in 19 7 -7
The 33-year-old Cooney, also on the comeback While Cooney figures 10 be Foreman's tought
trail. promoted Foreman's fourth-round knockout of test, he has not fouih1 since he was knocked out tn th
Carlos Hernandes at Atlantic City and his second-round fifth round by Michael Spinks on June 15. 19M
knockout of Ladislas Mijangos 31 Fort Myers. Fla .. both Foreman . ...,·hi1c fighting many qucs1ionable opponent
in 1988. ha s had the benefit of comPl"tition. Since beginning hi
Cooney hopes he has Jess !rouble with foreman comeback March 9. 1987. Forcman·s record 1~ 19-wit h 18 knockouts. than he did in his two promotional ventures with the f oreman's career record is 64-2. with 60 knockouts punching preacher. Foreman threatened to pull out of both matches on fight day. Cooney, ~·ho failed in a titl e bid against Larry Hohn;:
··1 don•t k.now if it was him or his pwple," said in 1982. has :1 record of 28-2. ~·it h 24 knockou1s.
Coon~·y. ""'ho still has a promoter's license. "I sure The tight. promoted by Bob Arum 1n assoc1a11u
""ould 1ikl' 10 k.eep in\IOl\led in promoting. It's ni ce 10 with Caesars ,<\tlan11c Cil)'. will be sho~'n on pa~·Pl'
~'a l ch a yo ung kid develop into a champion and as a \'ie""· and closed-circu11 1elc\'1sion.
hun1an being:· II is scheduled to begin between 7:45 p.m. and
11 was to oh1:11n funds for his \IOulh center a1 p.m.
Critics say use a rocking chair,
76-year-old Archie Moore disagrees cri\lc11.cd for p1ck1ng soft touchl·~.
1~1~ con1cback record is 19-0 ..... 1
18 knockouts. but he has vtl to me
an opponent "ho y,•as l'\ICn clo..c 1 By ED SCHUYLER JR.
ATL.4.NTIC CITY. N.J . -Some
people think George Foreman
should be old eno ugh to know better.
. .\rchic Moore. lhe former light
heavyweight c hampion who fough1
profe ssionally for 27 years. isn't one
of them.
Moore will be 1n Foreman·s comer
1on1ght when he fights Gerry Cooney
tn !he 20th bout of his comeback one
~·c-ek bcfor his 42nd binhday. That's
according to the Ring Rcrord Rook.
According to Foreman. he'll be 41.
\\'hatevl'r his age. critics contend
the former hea \lyweigh1 champion
belongs in a rocker. not a ring.
··1 know George is in the vintage of
his life." the 76-year--0ld Moore said
Friday.
"I didn't retire because of age :·
Moore said. ··11 was because the com-
missions lold me I couldn•t !" a
license. I intended to fight un11I was
50 ..
A~ it was. Moore's final fight 1n /us
214-bout career. a three-round
kn ockoo1 victory. came at age 49 in
1962.
Moore. who.dido'\ win the li@J!t
hea \lyweigh1 title until he was .19.
posted a 38-3-2 record, with 25
knockouts. afler his 42nd birthday.
The th ree defeats ~·ere to Rocky
Marciano and Floyd Panrrson in
bids for the heavyweight cham·
pionships and 10 a you ng Muhamad
Ali .
"I knew ~·hen I came back inlo
boxing 1ha1 there ~·ould be many
barriers. but age ~·ouldn't have any-
thing 10 do "'ith it." Fo reman said.
The barriers he's had to contend
with. Foreman said, are boxing poh-
lics and commissions.
"first. they said I shouldn'1 come
back. then they said they wanled to
be sure I had tough opponents:' he
said.
While criticized on one hand for
fighting at all. Foreman also has been
being ranked.
The 33-year-old c ·oonc~ once ":i
a h ~ghl~ rankl·d con1ender. who fa i
ed in a 111le challenge against La rr
Holmes in I 982. but he has nt
fo ught si nce h<' was knocked out h
~1ichael Spinks on June 15. 1987.
Coone} ~hapcs up. ho"·ever. :i
Foren1an 's toughest 1es1 to datc hi.
ca use ofh1 s size and punching po" t'
Forenian dcr1ded to come baci.. 1
I 987 to raise money for his Houstu
youth center. He had re\lred a decad
earlier anJ became an evangelist f11
lo...,•ing a 12-round decisio n l os~ 1
Jimmy 'i'o ung. after which he ":
hospt1ahzed for heat prostration.
Moore ...,.a~ not 1n the corner th
n1gh1. He had left the Foreman cam
after George lost the title on a
eighth-round knockout to ~t uhan
mad Ali in 1974.
··He's an inspiration and really th
only 1eachcr." Foreman said.
Veterans bow and make way
By BOB GREEN
T UCSON -The more seasoned players blinked
first -blinked and backed away -mak.ina. it rt:latively
easy for front-running rookie Robert Gamez to score a
four-shot \lictory in the Tucson Open.
"He just kind of pul it on coast and we couldn't
put any pressure on him," 14-year veteran Jay Haas
said Sunday .
"He's outstanding." Hus said of the 21-ycar-okt
Gamez, who became the firs1 man since Ben Crenshaw
in 1973 to win in his initial siart as a member of lbe
PGA Tour.
"He didn't make any mistakes until the last two
holes. and by then he could certainly afford to do that."
Hus said.
Gamez needed only a final round of 2-under.par 70
on the TPC at Star Pus to ICOre the nanaway lriu,mpb.
II was. mamd only by a double boloY OD tbt &..I
hole. And at that point. it mauercd not al all. He dro\
inlo a fairway bunker, couldn't reach the grecn an
eventually three-pulled. But his lead was so large at th
stage he could have six-putted and it wouldn'1 ha \I
made any difference.
Gamez. who passed up his final year at th
University of Ari~ona to join the pro tour, had a on
stroke lead starting lhe final round. expanded 1h
advantqc to five shots after seven holes and reall
wasn't threatened after that.
Gamez, with brother Randy as his caddy an
pvcnu Tony and Clar11 in the wildly excited pllef}'
friends and former Aritona tCllmmaan. won wtlh a 27
total. 18 shots under par on the rollin& stretch of dese
hia,hland that served as his home course.
The victory was worth S 162.000 from 1he tot
purse of S900,000 to the youna man who made fo
starts as a pro -but not a PGA Tour member -la -.on.
Sailors busy despite rainy weather
hie Willils, AllYC; ic.r.. RiUdon, ~~; Susie Klein, CYCj, Vicky
" NHYC; M... ... ..... SBYR..., Cia .... on Hampiltian
CYC; Carol~. SB~, and lko--. USC ilina T-. ..-
la Ille Ear! Coi1cett Series fOI' L#sss Ila &be winner WU Mlkc """"ti Ille .... aw. tiaulu<IW-Seritl:
MN'T A a l!t.' -=-~ ~ t. ............ teffCJ a. _,.. ........ ....... ~-C~t Tit-· n.a. cRs I L • ... vc. -CIWtll
NH't'C; f . .IOrY T .... I I. 0.,.,.. l...,_., KHV --SOUNG-1,Mef""' '""""· MHYC. IANTAf!Uli :If-I. Qwlt ~ ..... V IHl'fl.OS-1, ll'MI YWW, UCI .._ A11
ll:TC .. l.U-D-1 ... Mela t ea . NHYC.
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. Equipment offered
Youlh teams need.in& equipment •~ ukcd
to contact the Orantt County SporU Hall or
Fame. '
Thanks to a succnsful Hall ot Fame ba"'° qutt. a windfall from the M.;c>r t.e.pe A.U-
Star Game and the Anttls. and proceeda from
the sa.lc of spons memorabilia at the Oranac
County Fair. \be iroup ha• mo=ey spcDcl. Al a rcttnt Rams pme, the County
Spons Hall of Fame presented chec totalina
more than S 16,000 to such orpnizations u the
Yorba Linda Little Lca1ue, Boys and Girls
Club of Cypress, Boys Club of Fullenon, St.
Hedwii's Pony Baseball, All American Gym·
nastit1 Foundation. Canyon Hills Boby Sox.
Lancer Baseball, McKinley Home for Boys.
Robinwood Lallie Lcaaue, Anaheim Pop
Warner, Bolsa Little Lcaaue. Santa Ana
Cardinals and Nonh Oranae County Girls
Club.
Interested groups of any ethnic or religious
background, boys or &iris, should contact the
Orange Count ) Spons Hall of Fame al
832·1113.
In order to receive funds. all organizations
must be able 10 show non·profit status and be
based in Orange County.
Flag football
The Independent Flag Football League as
looking for teams and gia>ers for Its upcoming st·a~on staru ng Feb I
Games "tll take place at the Fountain Valley
Rccrea11on Center. teams must have a mint·
mum of 15 pla~ers 10 rrg1s1cr and players must
IX' at leas1 18 'cars old.
The league will feature seven-man teams and
all pla)c~ arc th gable rcCt'I\ crs Both running
and pass pla~s arc allowed
.\pplica11om are being accepted unttl Jan.
30. For further inform a11on. phone 846·3871.
Benefit racquetball
i;;omc: of the \\tHld'' tine:~• professional and
amatl'ur rat4ul'lball plaH·r~ "'II compete an the
El.tl'lon \\ 1n1cr ( la\\ll ;n '>an ta .\na to hcnctit
.\d\ ant rd Rl',oure<.'S IM r (l\lc.'r Kids.
The four-da' tournamt'nl runs Jan I -:? 1 at
an ta .\na Ra~quc:thall \\ orld and "111 feature
tompe111ors sut h Js < OSIJ ~lcsa resident and
~1\-llml' n::itwn.il t hJmp1on L' nn .\dams. as
"di a\ T on1 Re' l'lod. and Ka' t' K uhfeld
The publtt " '"' 11cd to "::itch lloth pw· fc,satinal and amJtrur matrhn free of chargc
and amateur pla\t'r' arc 1n' lll'd to enter the
rompct1t1on
Entr: fees Ml' S ~~ hu lht• open di\ 1s1on. S:?5
fur the first e'cnt ;ind SI~ for tht" o;econd e'ent
fhc wurnamen1 " 'JrKta<>nt·d b' the (alt-
fornad .\matcur RJu.1ut·1h.1ll .\ssoe1a11on and
all wmp..·1110" mu,1 he < .\R-\ ml'mber\ 10
rum pt'tt'
For funhl'r 1nfurma1111n .. 1n\Jtl Jam ( J r\un
JI '1'2-:!999
UC/ baseball tickets
Scuon pusn arc now avaJlable for lhe 1990
UCI baseball season. l'ovcrina all 3-4 Anteater
home pmts for S3S.
The home opener as schedulc4 for Feb. 3,
when UCI takes on Chapman CoUcic at I p.m.
Tacke" will also be available on pme days for
$4 for adults and S2 for students.
Several nationally·ranked teams will vasu
Anteater Field 1his )Car including USC. JUj.
no1s. Fresno State, Long Beach State, Pep.
pcrdine. Cal State Fullenon, San Jose State,
UNL V and San Di~o State. .
Applications for a season pass att available
thrpugh the UCI Athle1ics 1icket office at
856·6120.
Marriott boxing
L pland's Benn~ Lope1 will meet Bell's
\' 1nrentc Gonzales for the 'acant Cahforn1a
super feathcrne1gh1 111lc on Jan 29. when
bo\lng at the Ir' inc lamo11 begins tis sixth
!>Cason
Lopez (I J-5) as coming off a drama11c "''"
o' c:r .\rmando Baeza on Oct :?6 at the Mar-
rion Baeza had Lopc1 on ha~ back 1n the first
round. but Lopez got on 1he can' as to stop
Baaa an tht' \t't:ond
(1on1alt'~ as 12-5 :ind 1h1s "all be has first 111le
bout
The undercard "1ll tca1urc Valla Park's Make
amo1a, "ho'\ 11on four ~traaght bouts at the
~larnoll Resef\ed \eaung 1s pmrd at SJO. S:?5 and
S~O and Ix· purcha'4.·d through Don Fraser
promo11ons Jt t:!IJl tf'7.4tHP or on tight da)
at the Ir' In<' \lamo11
Baseball clinic
< al 'It.it.: f-ullcra.rn 11111 oma: Jg.ain IX' hosl
10 lhl' ninth .innual Orange l nunt~ Baseball
( nJlht·s C lan11 \f>C:l lJtular on Fc:b 11 at Titan
F1c:ld
FratuH·d .it 1h1s \C:Jr ' d1n1l ara: Da\t· Hall.
ht•ad lllJ.:h :it Rttc.l na,cr'>ll' "ho "111 speak
on ··r c\a' R.iwti.a1r· I rt•d Hoo' a:r. Fullenon a'"~1an1 (O:lt h Jnd lnrma < 111lden \\est head
COJlh on ··I:.dutJllng thr Aa1·· \an Ruhle
lurmt•r m:lJUr lcagua: p111;hl'f .ind currrnt Full·
crwn as~1\tJnl. un ··Pmh1ng" and Laguna
fkach ph~\1l1Jn \\ dl1am Hamson. on "\ 1s·
uah1al1on ..
The cltntt 1\ .pon\t1ra:d h' t 11{J l ola. Con·
'l'rse Jnd C1l1ld ( OJ\I < att•ring .ind 1s tree for
,lll parll< q>Jnl\ h>r mon· 1nturmJ1111n l llnt.1ll Bill Ross at
th,· OrJnl!t' < 11un1' \1hlt·11, l>ircllurs .\s<,OC1a-
tton
OH\'G•: ('0.\ST ·\H•:.\ HIGH S('HOOI. B.\Sk•:TB.\1.1. l.OGS
• denotes leavu• vame S9 M Hon v ~ o
•O ¥a11'' D•
COllOHA DEL MAR I 11-6, 1·01 61 E To•
I* vi.w LHeuel 61 ~vaMa S4 Comr•on 7S Sa Jo"" Bo.cc.
S~ Fe roo•
1'1 Sol"'!10 A r-tt
•9 46 l ,.,, .,
t.8 59 0< Pa" v '"'" 60 SJ Co \or·
61 J O'" 1 ht\'-.. \'e .. · ... U"'"t"
46 JOt" 19 4 t Y,4r ,.~·
6J
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10
411
" 11
H
M Ldi" .... ~a ._. ' S7 MiJ• na
69 MI '""
60 Ja" 1&-H..1~l ""~.,.,.. Bta<"'"' "n...,f'
11 Jar 71 .,, ()<pa-V pw'
13 Surr'f H 1 \
Sl Ceo·\''"•"",, V1' t" 6• Log ,;ne •i·I ' so LO\ AliJ"' II)\
60 r ·'' "
S4 Jr l • ,. E 1 '" • 66 f-"o l e• .,.....,,, .......... ,,~ .. •
51 Fe o 1 ~a· ra· M~P
S7 ""o 9 .,. '1 .rt •11'0" Bea
so so '1
40
SJ
5•
H
HUNTING TOH BEACH 11 ·'· 0· 11 •• t.8
,,. .. ,,, ..
S1 .. .,..,oo<Jor 011e
N(!'AIOO'' H"'0"' •
Saooteoec• • Ja,, 11
Jen I~
J1t" 14
1•" ]6
Jan l
F'eo 7
Feo b
Feo 8
a• r ,\• ,..
at U v>!''\ '• • E ,.O,.,\.•a·
a• Nf'tN0Gf. Ha ... =' , ..
at Saco eoac" ·
U"' ~•,, tv•
&' e ''""'a·
COST A MESA C1· II, 0·1l
Poe l•c (O•U' L•o11 .... .tJ H ,,,,,~o'O" B~ac,.
6S LiJ Qu1n•a
46 Newoor• Ha,rt>or
•1 Sn11•n A"" vo11ev S4 601u C.1 a not
Sl MiJOnOlt4
•l M•U on Vt o
St H '"' ~"'O'O" Bta\. fi t.8 v ,,.
•I f°\'•"< 0
61 N~woo•• Haroo• 47 WOOClb .. ooe·
41 Leg11na B•ac"'
Je n 17-at Laoune H·I ,.
Ja n 19 -O•ange· "Om•
Jan 14 a• TraoV<O H ,.
Ja~ 76-o• Wooaonooe'
Jan Jl-Le11una Beacn' 1nomt 1
Feb 1 L1111un1 H•'I\' !'1ome J
Fto J er Orono•'
Fr o 9 Tr~buco H 11\· C'1ome•
EOISOH ( ll·4, 1·01
IS11n\er LUOvt l
6S E 1 Dorado
9S St Joseo"
61 Oon11 Hill\
SO Mar·ne
61 Sanll Ana
IO E \enhower
61 Como•on
50 Marino
11 Caoosirano Vallev
SS Long BHCh Po•v
SO Cvoren
S7 Irvine
S.t Estancia
44 Min ion Vle10
34 Lono Buch Wli\on
16 Hunlln91011 Beach'
S7 Fountain Vallt v'
Jen 17-Marlna• (llomel
Jan It-Ocean View' l"omel
Jen 16-et Wutm1n\ltr•
86 so so
•9 67
)9
59
85
69
Ml
80 ,.
91
611 SI
31
SS
51 n
64 ..
S9
60
1S
J1
•S .,
3S 10
SJ
Jen 17-11 Hvnllnoton Buen•
Jen Jl-Fountein Vallt v' 1nome1
Fttb 3-at Marina•
Feb 1-11 Ocean V1tw'
F.O t-Wt11m1ns1er ' (nomtl
•STANCIA 110·6, 1-1)
ISH Vtew Ltaouel
S1 Woodb<ldOt 61
60 Lo.re 6S
JI 9 0IM Gral\CM 6t
71 Leoune Hiits 50
6S Ketelle 4 1' Hunllnv•on Stach 12 4 FoothlH '9
S~ Laoune Hills l7
101 Viste S2
62 Lono e .. cn Jorden 44
•S !dl..on S4
1' Lot Alamitos 60
60 Cotta~ .i
" Pelm Soflnes 6S S4 Seddlllllt'k' •
N Unlvenltv• '2
.Hin 17 "'w'*'' HarOO<' ll'tomtl Jett ,,_., Tuttln• '*' t .... I (Of'ON Otl M#Jr'
Jen ~SeOdltblldl· <"°""I Jen. Jl-el Unl...enltv•
,. ... t-et ~· Harbor' ,..._ 6-Tutlln' (llOtnel
.... .-<Of'OM -fMr" (nomt)
NUWTMN VAU.aY CO• It. .. u
(luflMI L9"1'91 ,, ,~ leecll rOOll S)
" ll9etfl(a • n 1-'f• .. ........ ti
ti llTera t6 ......... .. ... LMllO... ,,
, ' AlllillllM " 11 La..... 61
S '"'t' L ea11 ,f
86 ( l)\'d '/IP\h
11 l"00i.1t\. H \
JI 'Ille••• Uf'
SS S•OOIPDtlC'
)] E T '
91 ,."""'""' • 67 E ''a" e
9:> ' '
10 '"' ... .-8t'a ,. 't/'trt \Ol"I
J! r \'
SS C \'a '·~"" ~""' ,,, ,. 4 H \
1~ (, ~"ldil P H~ ""P'
~ 1 JI.I > nr
IC• Eo·""' n va• ~-
Jar 11 o• Qcpan Voe,.,·
Jan 19 Wl'\''"'"''ter · .,o,..,tt
J11r U1 "' r c•unta•n Va ev·
Ja r 11 E <l•\O"" "ome
Ja n l I Ma• oa· nomp
FPO 7 Oc•a" V ew· nome r ftO 1 ~· Wt\',.,•~\t@r•
rPb 9 r "'to r "a •"• f'tOf'T'lt
IAVIHE 19-10. 1·21
!Sou"' Coa\I LH-1
11 VI•'"' DP s,., Tr~o...i< H '
>I ( T '" 17 Un•vtr\ tf
81 Long Buen II ''0"
49 ( ('tnVO" \01" "'-1\
11 P111o\ Verop
.. , M1l~1kl)M
)4 E \o•ro~ltl
\8 woooo• our
60 Sa•11 A"a
61 L A 8.t"" "II 37 Ea \on
•5 Lono Bf'"C" Jo•dan
41 Corono Of' Mer
40 C o•ona or' Ma•
4S E• Toro'
64 Son C f'"'P"1t'
47 (&O•\t<a'>O Va h'
Jan 11-el M 1\\1on V•e>0'
Je n I-Dano H I\' <nome
Ja r H al Et Toro'
Ja n 16-San (lpment•' rno,,.,e l
F eo 7-at Cao,.rrano v allev'
F•b 1-M n oon V>etO' 1'10,.,,1
Frb -&t Oen& Hilts• tl'omel
LAGUNA &EACH ( ll ·l, 1·0)
tPaclhc Cou t L1!1tQue)
0 ~ Ca••• Cnrl,1l11n
73 V1ll11 Par~ 17 Oranot Luthera n
II Ch•no
6S SI Jolll' BOHO S7 Como1on
•1 Brta·OhnOa 14 Armv Navv Carllo.tO
1' Perecte•e
16 Bre1nrt n
64 Otw r1
11 Sen Cttmenlt o s.001eo.c11.
IO Mooro•r"
61 La1>un1 Hllll •
ti Cos•• Mesa•
Jen 11-1 O<e""'
Jen 19-Treouco HIHs• lnomtl
Jen 2-WOOdt>rld9t• (nomel
Jen 76-et LffVl'e HIM\·
Jen Jl-.el Coste Meta•
Fe«> ?--Ore!IM• lhc>mtl
Feo 1-1 Trebuco Hilts' Feb .._., Woodlll'IOM'
'°' •1
5' .,
S)
Sj
" 40 JS .. ..
MARINA ( 10·1. l ·Ol
t.9 (., ,,.,,.
tS M u " v ~ o 1~ CdO .. c
&0 s, •. ,, "'•' ,
S• f -' • t.... ,. p> ~ .,,.. • .. ·'
11 Q~ao o' 4ii~ \t" 9 • ., ... ".:
JJ F • ' ..... . '
h ) ;~
!1 F ' ..
\J Vt1'"'' Of'
H C .. ·~ tl
19 l ··.; B~•t. JJ'<l•'
&8 "'P\'"'•~\lt•'
19 H 1.1M! .,~1QI\ BP4l "'0
Jar 11 a1 EO•son· Jot-I~ f='ou,..ta "" Val,,. ...,O""P
Jor 7o a• Ocear v ew •
J&"" 11 We1'"""' ,..,,e,..· ... ,..(""""e
Jar )1 a' H...,,.. ,.~•o"" B,_" .. ,..
'to l Eo' 1n• ... o~f' rte I Fo1.1""t4 ./a e,· r -e
't"b , 0 flllJ"' "f'iN. ~ -p
MA TEA OEI (It· I, 1·01
I Af>9elu\ LHllOf I
96 I & 0 '""'a
11 "'" ""e 17 H ·"' ""'0'0"' 8e4C,..
10 l ""0 Be.ic" Jo•oa•
a1 ( S1 LOu•\ L "Coll"
69 (, P"lla e HOO••'
18 .,.,p\l(nf'l'f!'
6) Qr pa• V .,.
41 LO"O Beacn Pol•
10 L~·o Be&e" w ''o" o8 r ..,.,,•11 n \lale\'
JI ta Qu•"1lt
1>1 Saco eoac•
]) Pa \aOf\
9S 51 Pau•'
6..t Cao·V"ano VoHev l>J B \"OD ,.,,.....,,.
o7 A••e\ a
66 Octa• V '"
J4n 1Q Sf''"''" ,.,ome1
Jttn 10 ,_,' B \hOO Mon•o ,....,ft,. 'i •
Jan 7&-S• Pau•· 1nome
Jan 71 a• B• ea 01onoe
Jan J 1 at B•\1'100 Am111•
Fet. 7-B Monioomerv• "O,.,.e>
Feo 9 11• Se•111e·
11 F o .r•e•r 'la• ev· 50
9.S Wti\1~ "l\'e' • 51 ~J Sl 'AlJ•er Dr 66 s..1 Ja '1-Huri• ~g•ort B~acn· nomf•
S9 ;e • IQ..-a1 Eo•lon'
'8 J6"' 1tl ""'"1' .,a· "'r.~f' ~ ., ~' ro..,t">•ai ~Va f'r· rioomt
S' .u• 1 Ae\t,.,. "'\'f'. riom•
I) F f'O 8' ~"'"' t1Q"O"' 8fllO( .._.
S8 ~ PC 1 EC \0''
~ S:po., o· Yo" ".
<I
49
't
SAOOLEBACK (12 ·•· 1·11
Sea "~" L taQ ... t ~Q (, p•
aO f ' ••
~J ""0 e-ac,. )0'04"'
b'-~,,!"! ... t!Oa._ •
l.a L ""Q 6,ttC'" Po,..,
\I V 1, Par" ,, s,..,,, .. ,."
)l
\~ -'l,....P' '"
t>i ( U'""'O'ftf',.
ei"' ,.,., .., ,,. Sor ""Q\
·~ ,.. , ..... "o" ._o S_, .... ~ A ..,4
't ~ ,.,. ""O<Jf'l
J "l'a't' Dt
t8 Lao ,•a B•ac ~ '4 E \'a"t a· nome is Co•o"a de Ma"
)",. H a' U,, v~r\ •,•
11
~4
\9
40
J'-'n t9 N'woor• Haroa• • nomt
Jtt" Jia Tus11n• t,,omt
J~r 16 at E\tanc•a' J"" l 1 Corona oe• Ma•· "O"'e •
F ~b 2 Un•ver\•fv' "O"'t
~ f'O 0 a~ Newoor' Hitron,.•
l°l'D 9 a• Tus• n•
UNIVERSITY IS-10. O·ll
Sea v.ew Leaove•
1J L & M •ad&
b' ,,.~ ,..,
&Q l "I\ A·a""' •o\
60 Foo·~
7& ~, f'"10n
80 C:u•e•a•za
~) Sav11Ma
Jl ')an•a Pau•a
"' Ba•''""' IJ B~n •a
SO Savanna
&I Sanl& Ana v ailev
S6 La9una Holl\ :o ; ...,\:.r.•
11
97
16 9 1
7l
I I
61
36
80
t.8
Ml
1• lS ,.
67 E \tanc•e'
Ja n 17-SedOlebac"' !nom•I NEWPORT CHRISTIAN (4·•, I II 16
AcadtlT'• Leo11ue•
41 C o•e,..onl Grdn Grove I
0 Let•.nowet (nr \1 II"
61 P o•eer Bao• s•
S1 l A Lu•"e•an S6 Southees1 Lut"'~"an
l l Pioneer 8aDl•\I
S& El\.nore C'1r \l•O"
40 Roo Honoo
S3 Ht rlla9e• 11 St Mllroarel\'
Jen l~al Lull'leran· 1nomeJ
15
SS
4J
t.J 61
4S
80
13
" 11
Jen 19-L1 0trlv Cnris11an' tiomel
Jan 76-at Htr11110• '"'''''""' Jen ) I-SI Maroarels • 1tiomt)
Feb 7-111 Cel Lu•.,eran'
Fto 6-al Looerlv Chrl\t•an'
H•W~T HAAM>tl (11·6, 0·11
(Ste V1tw Leaove
66 La Qu1n1a
t6 Gltnn
50 (O\la Mtl4
7t VIiie Per\
St Sen (ltmefllt
64 Torrt v Pine' to VISll
r.J San C1trnen11
5-t El Modene
.. LO\ Ami~\
SI Soutll 9tktrslleld
41 De ne Hiii\
61 Cerrito\
63 Foolllltl to Cos11 Mel4
S4 Cor one Clef M ar'
SI Tustin'
Je n 17-1 !\ltnda' Jtnlt-11~·
Jen 2-Unlvtoltv' (nomtl
71 so ..
49
S.2
74 ,,
ao
49 ..
4 ..
11
SS .,
S7
6S
Jen ?.-..Corone Otl Mer' (nomel
'•" 21-1 Tutnn• Fel> 1'-E\1~11' ("°"")
Feb. t-~1llac1t• (llOmel
F.O. t-el Unlvertflv•
Jan 19-<oro"a oe• Mar• 111ome1 Jan 14-al Newoor1 Hart>or'
Jll" 7-at Tu\l·n'
Jan JI E\lancia• ll'IO,,_.I
Feo 7-a• S.ooteoac"•
Feb &-at Corona dtl Mar·
Feo 8-Newoor1 Harbor' ,,.,_,
WESTMINSTER (S·f, 0·11
CSunse• LHOUt l
6 1 1<.e1e1le
49 Servile
11 SI Paul Rnervf!\
49 Sa nla Ana
61 Sunnv Hill\
14 Sen•a B1rb1•11
~ Ctiannt l !\land\ 7S Sa nte AN
34 Do\ Putolos
S• Plul X
61 Mtonolla
6t Cvortn
4' Merine·
SI OcMn V1tw•
Jan 11-11 Foun111n VelltV'
Jen It-el Huntlnv•on e..c11•
Jen 26-EdllO'I' (home)
Jan 17-a l Merine•
Jen 31-11 OcM n V1tw•
Feb 1'-Foun11ln Ve~v· (home)
Ft b 7-Hut1tlno1on 811c11• lhomtl
Ftb t-et Edl\on•
Los Alamitos TOK
The City of Los Alamitos wall sponsor iu
10th annual IOK/SK run on Feb. 24 at the Los
Alamitos Community Center.
The raCC1 bqin at the center and end in
Rossmoor Park. Awards wall be prcKntcd to lhe top male and female finishers.
In addition, there will be compcuuon an a
·SK fun walk and a team run an which two fomil~ members may panacapate.
Entl) fees are SIJ per person for the IOK
and S6 for the fun walk.
For more information. phone (21 J)
430.1073 or (71 4) 827·9010.
Sunkist Invitational
.\lxlt Bale of Somalia and Paula Ivan of
.• Romania an the favontes to break the ciusting
• 1 ndoor mile records at the 3 I st annual Sunk1s1
ln'ltauonal Jan. 19 at the Lo~ Angeles Spons
Ara:na The targets of the S 100,000 World Record ~lak Challenges are Ireland's Eamonn
( oghlan·s J .i9.i8 mark ~t 1n 1983 in the
ml·n·s c:'cnl. and Romania's Doina Mehnte
.i Hi 86 record established in 1988.
Bile rmergcd as one of the world's premier
m1ddle-d1s1anca: runners in 1987 when he won
1hc: I 500 ma:tcr~ at the World Championships
Ill Rdme
h an gained prum1nt'nce in 1987 and has
''un all the 1.500 and mile races she has
cnten:d Last )ummcr she broke the outdoor
male mark running .i 15.61. more than a
sc:rnnd tastt"r than :vlal) Decker Slane) ·s
pr<:' 1ou' marl.. Bile "111 be challenged 1n 1he men's race b~
..\mcn,ans ll''l' Scott. Jeff Atltinson and Joe
FJ llun "hale h an "111 draw suff compc1111on
frum <;H·tlana K11o'a of the Soviet L1naon and
-\ma1Cam Pa111 Sue Plummer, Regina Jaco\»
and Diana Richburg
Boys Mile Run
rhe J 1st ~nnual 'iunk1s1 Track lnv11a11onal '"IJ ,hu" J nc11 t" 1st 1h1s \Car "'•th the Jdd1111in 111 tht' Foot Locker Sa11onal Cham·
p111nsh1p Bu~' \Ille Run. 10 be held Jan 19 at
the L "' -\ngl'le' \pons .\rena
rh.: ril'ld \\Ill b<'. loppc:d b) Somalian nail\ t
..\hrahdm -\dt'n "he' "'II reprcS(nt Fa1rfa:i.
\ .i and \l:irt1n "-e1no of Fork ~'naon M1 htan ..\tadem~. \a l\.t'anu 1\ the '>On of legrnda~
OI~ mpal «hamp1un Kip Kcano
\nothl'r fa,untl' 1\ Bl)an Dame"onh of
.\goura High "ho n:ll'ntl~ complett'd an un-
t.fcfcatcd rm~' ll>Untr. 'cason "•th a convanc-
lllg "'ninth<' K1nnn· "a11onal (ros~ Count!')
( hamp1onsh1p\
Othc:r C. ahtorma tompelllOf\ include Louie
(Ju1ntana of .\rru~u C1rJnde High and Dann~
JordJn c\I \ l'ntl<'
1te191e Jackson w•• tlonored on s.turay
•t Arlaona Sa.ta Untveratty where tits uni-
form number w•• offklally retired.
Players zero in
on arbitration
From The Assodat~ Press
The last da' to fi le for salan arbttrauon 1s toda'
and some luck~ "pla~er ma) end up "'llh more than s2
mtllton.
The arbttrauon process 1s one of the things the
owners v.ould ltke to change an the nev. contract. but
the) 're stuck \\1th 1t for at least another )ear.
The o"ners see arb1trat1on as a can't·losc process
for the pla) ers.
This ~ear. Jose Canseco. Ke\ln "v11tchell. W 111
Clark. Ruben Sierra. Fred ~1cGnff. Walh JO\ner.
Dann} Tanabull. Tc:d H1gua:ra Paul "v1ol1tor. Sha.,..,on
Dunston. ~1 1tch \\ dliams Glenn Da' 1s . .\ndres Gal·
arrap. Da' 1d Cone. Ban: Bonds. Ten: Pendkton and
Benito San uago are among some of the big names
eltg1blc.
Most of the pla} ers "ho file for arbmataon e' entu·
all~ sign before a heanng. sometimes onl) minute-s
be1ore.
Pla)ers like Cone. Santiago and 1erra are gross!\
underpaid compared to thc1r teammates and the} wafl
be looking 10 catch up.
(one. "ho has won 34 games in the last two
seasons for the :'\e" York \frts. made $332.500 1n
1989
Su~rra hat 29 homers and led the ..\.L v.1th 119 RBis
-all for $350.000
~t11chell 1s due a heft, raise. too He hat .t7 homers
"'"h I ~S RBi s and "on ihe ~1\'P a\\ard. The Giants
paid ~l1tchell $535.000
:-.:e" York Yankees tim baseman Don Matt1n11h
hol ds the arb1trl\11on record at $1 9 millton. Several are
certain to subm11 fi gure<:> for more this ~ear
•If this year's Hall of Fame 'ottng 1s an 1nd1ca-
t1on. Ga) lord Pe n: should make 11 tn 1991. Pen: got
3 ~0 'otes. fa lling 13 shon of the necessa~ 333.
The onl: candidate \!,ho figures to get an next ~ear
on hts first :ear oi eltg1b1ht~ as Rod Carev.. who had
3.053 hits for 13th on 1he all·t1me llSl.
Pen:. a 3()().game "inner. thought his chances
"ere hun b) the allegations he thre\I. a spitter But
Ga) lord ne'er hid that late 1n his car~r .. ,, ,, ... , .. , I'll 01 , ... "'
Hoops
Ian Long •nd his Newport
Harbor High teammates •re
at Estancl• Wedne1d•J
night In Sea View League
basketball.
HIGH SCHOOL. BOYS ST AN DINGS
Sunwt LN9U•
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Top 10
Orange County
high school
basketball
1. M•ter Del ft8-tJ
2. Edison ft 2-41
J. •• Toro ft4-JJ
4. Mission Viejo ft 2-SJ
5. C.po V•lley ft t -7J
1. CdM (tt ·61
L Oce•n View (t0-61
9. Tustin (t S·2J
to. Laguna ae.ctt (t2-JJ
l I
t I I I • I I
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I I I
j
--NIW end zone ... ·!..... " ---So\N PaAM::l!CO -Aft« a moolll aad
dllcieney lhis taJOO, com~ jlllt 16 of
l6 '"' 141 ~rds willl ...... illlln:<Pllon• COKb John Robinson summed it. u.yina,
"Our au)'I were ju11 not open ...
"The field WU I ' lilll<"oli-., io Ille
de(ensive blckt could lay *'-, ... wait for
"' t111«ially after tlley IOI a bis lead," Anderson said.
Pbiladdpllia and .... NFC -1noa1 ill New
Jtrtey qai.ras1 the Oiaau -u an excuse for
their lactlustcr otrfonnance.
Robia1an said &.tipc was no factor. add· int .. We just &Ot ovcrwhelmed.,.
Pl~ fWlll aa ...._od, Everett ildOd
-11 Ille SO. F...m-4().yud-line, .... \Cid Andenon alone nw tllt end zone • !!!9PO!I die boll 1.-bim. But 49en W01}'
ttql'&nie Loli. comins halfway ecrou I.be
f1dd. arrived 11 the same tinw-11 lhc pus
I l,000 milla .. Ille rood, Ille Rams finally --·-..... ·Tllo Ramt ~bly had woo ...... ..-on dae Eall O:.S1 to make it 10 the
Nl'C lllle --llleir neiahbon and
-Ille S.. l'nncisco 49cn.
The 49cn eomp&etdy knocbd lhe Rams
out of thet' timinl in tbe J)Uliq pme and
ncu1ralizcd deep lhrau Flipper Andenon
1nd Henry Ellatd.
... Ellard said the Rams' passina pine de-
pends on timin&. and that the Rams~ out
of sync because: of the 49cn.
To put anrthins 'on this pmt other than
the 49trs' ach~vcment would be wrong." he
..aid. arid tipped it away.
The Rams =ioid lllroucJl<>ul lhal lhe reed to New and the Super Bowl ran thftMCb Saa Francili:O. For lht Rams. the
rOld llODDCd there Sunday with a 30-3 loss
10 I.be dC:f'endina NFL champions.
Andetson, who SCI an NFL record with
336 yards on IS catches in the Rims' victory
over New Orleans in November, had only
one rcttption for 14 yards in the title pmc.
Ellard caught two for 18 yards.
"'They took away a lot or stufT we like 10
do." Everett said of the 49ers' <kfen!IC. ··1 fell
we were really rudy to play. but they
covered well. put prcssu~ on me well . When
you play the 49trs, you better play a perfect
game."
··They did a aQOd job with their
linebackers and safcti~ dilnl,ptin& the
routes," Ellard said. '"(L1ncblcker) ke.ena
Turner would come ~p ri&ht on you and
(comerback) Don Griffin would be behind
him."
.. The early part of 1he pmc, we like to get
our rhy1hm and we seemed to have it for
awhile," he said. "Then. 1hey Sttmcd to take
it away from us."
The pme was the only one-sided contest
1n four mec1ings bc1wecn the two NFC West
rivals since last August The Rams won
16-13 in ovenimc in the exhibition opener
in Tokyo and beat the 49crs 13-12 in a
regular-!ICason meeting at Candlestick Park.
San Francisco won JG-21 at Anaheim
Stadium fast month.
The Rams had &otten a 23-yard field pl
on their fint poqnsion and could've aone 1
ahead 10-0 with that touchdown. ~
"The play of the pme was the Ronnie
Loll play on Everctt-t4>Anderson," R~
inson said. '"From there on out. I don't think
we got anythina Qone." The Rams' passina aamc, wh ich had
produced 4,310 yards durina the rqular
season and carried them through two playoff
Jlmtt. spu1tcrtd and failed as they man~
JUS1 8 first-quarter field 1081. Said Anderson, "We've been making tht:
bi& plays all year, but 1hey kepi us out of the
The Rams refused 10 use 1heir time on the
road -1hey clinched a playoff berth at New
Ena.land, then won a wild-card game al
Robinson and some of his player) said the
Rams· failu~ to ~I a 1ouchdown on a pass
to a seemingly wide-open Anderson on Los
Angeles' second se ries of lhe game was
Everett, who 1hrew the ball a liule too bif;»!
and didn't lead Andenon enoua.h. said, ·1
thought we had a touchdown, but Ronnie
came o u1 or center field and made a grca1
Jim Everett. third in the NFL in pass.in.a play."
FERGUSON
From91
said ... That's 1he team they a~. that's
the team thex've been. and that's the
team they will continue to be."
It's questionable whether perfect
would be enough against this team.
Against Minnesota. the 49ers put
together one of the mosl impressive
halves of all time. Minnesota wasn't
even close to prcssuri ng Montana, 10
defending the 49ers' receivers or
stopping a rushing play as San Fran-
cisco averaged 10 yards a play in the
first firs\ 30 minutes.
How coul<fthcy duplicate a per-
formance as devastating?
Well. they nearly did Sunday
against lhe Rams, com ing close
enough to effectively wrap upa game
by halftime for the second straight
\l.'etk in the 1990 Super Bowl race-
and the term is used loosely. Only
this time, it wasn'ta half. It was
primarily a quaner, the second one.
The Rams' defense-which Mon-
1ana s.aid was the toughest his team
had faced all season, althou~ he
ripped it in two games-utilized
three down linemen most of the first
half. Montana ha ndled that.
When the Rams tried the five
linebacker-six back defensive
scheme they used against Philadel-
phia's Randoll Cunningham. Mon-
tana directed a l 4-play touchdown
drive in 1he final three minutes of the
half.
The Rams' .. Eap,le" defense? It was
1hert too, ahhougfi used sparingly.
Montana handled it.
h seemed 1he emergence of John
Taylor had been 1he finishing 1ouch
in di\'ersifying the 49ers· pass of-
fe nse. Then after the 4~rs· com-
monplaCl' founh quaner rally over
the Rams on a December Monday
night in Anaheim. 4~rs offensive
coordinator Mike Holmgnn added a
new twist.
"They've gol three excellen1 tittht
ends and the~'rc usi ng them, .. said
Rams defensive coOrdinator Fritz
Shurmur. ··So now we've isot the
problem ofmuhiple substitutions
and being able 10 ma ke 1hoscadjus1-
ments agains1 their offense. Now you
put that with Joe's ability and the
01her 1ools 1heycan put on the field.
and you·vc go1 a real pro blem ....
.. Afler the last 1ime we played
them. thal's when they've really
come up with the multiple 1igh1 end
look a lot and giving you the problem
of the power running attack as well as
1he fin esse passing game and the
finesse running attack.
"I'm not so sure I've ever seen an
offensive team more complete now
with !hat addi1ional dimension ...
The tight ends had fi ve catches.
including four by Brent Jones. who
had a 20-yard touchdown reception
in the sttond quarter, finding
himself wide open up the middle
after a se<:ondal")' mistake left him
uncovered.
Rams Coach John Robinson
pointed to the lack ofa 49cn of-
fensive play pininJ over 20 yards in
the pme as a positive note for his
defense. Montana was content to
pick away underneath, but Taylor or
Jerry Rice didq't break them
Aftercomp&etin113of16 IOr 252
yards and four touchdowns in the
firstbalfapinst Minneso\I, Mon-tana nailed 18 of21 ap.inst the Rams
for 198 yard.sand two touchdowns in
I.he firsl JO minutes.
RobiMOn called ii u&00c1a per-
formance as he's teen by a 49ers
team. As for offensive and defensive
superiority. it did top the team's win over the: Viti.qs..11..ould be bard to
find fault with either.
The Rams can point to an under-
thrown "911 by Everett in tbe tint
quanerwll<a he bad F!i_.-
Andcnon wide open ua tumina
point. Or I.hey en poinl to the drive
1n tbe waniai JnOaleltts of the fint :=:;-diem down }l.Ja11he iiooo&O(ol' I 4-3.
'11 ••'1111 little. Tbe 49en .n: the beat lt1m by far
on 5-day-offcnsivtly, deknavc-1 aadlll .
y h-~111e1tam, ...,_...,.,lllil_•qusr·
.......,... ...... 1 '14.Now, ·----·--by •FF• s1 ... w11. Tierewillt.e ............... I tJD,
--•-toac-. ' -----· ..,. .. _ ..... -. ..?=~--.--
RMlll q.,.rterbacll Jim •veren •nd 49er1 defender Ronnie •nother .tier Sund•1·1 NPC ch•mplonshlp game. S.n P'r•n-
Lon. who picked off two of th• Rams• P••ses. greet one clsco's JO·J victory sends 49ers to the Super Bowl J•n. 28.
49ers' 30-3 victory completes Seifert's
first run for the Super Bow/'as a rookie
' By ERIC PREWln
SAN FRANCISCO -George S..·ifcrt trotted off the
Candlcs1ick Park field. 1.0.'ith the police escon befitting
a Super Bowl-bound head coach. ha ving greatly fulfiHcd
the CAIX'Ctation!t of 1hc San Fr:inc1sto 49ers· organiza-
tion.
The key to the team's success this season. a founh
NFC championship. might \'Cry welt have ~n the
decision of O\l.'ner Edward J. DcBanolo Jr. 10 elevate
Seifen to the coaching job aflcr Bill Walsh·s rt'liremc-nl
last winier.
"This "'as 1he guy we wanted. He was number one
\l.'llh Eddie and the man Bill Walsh "·anted:· team \'ice
president John McVay said following the 49crs' 30-3
\•ictory over the Rams made Scifen the third coach in
history to take a 1cam to the Super Bo1.0.·I 1n his first full
season.
"lfwe had not named him. he ccnainly would have
wound up as head coach with another team this
season," ~1c Va} said ... Remem ber. he wa s on a plane
headine, for Cleveland when Wl" told him 10 come back ...
Se1fen. a San Francisco nati,·e who was defensive
coordinator before this season. insisted that going to the
Super Bowl as a head coach \l.'as no1 significantly
different than his f«lings in the past.
Interior felt brunt
of the 49ers' might
in NFC title game
ly JON l'ER<iUSON
Ol'_O.., .......
SAN FR.ANOSCO -The 1989 season didn't
bc&in or end the way Duval Love had been hoping. but
in the wake of a frusua1inc day ror 1he Rams Sunday,
Love could point 10 the 1990s as a lime he hopes to
come into· h11 own.
Apiast lhc S.n Francitco 49ers. Love and hit
1eamma1e1 tlons the offensive tine raocd a 1li&htly
difJcralt tcbeme than they Md teen in two previous
-_;hip,. bul in Ille end ~ be could only poinl
to Ille ncellen1 job Ille 4'en c1er.nse did.
"1"hey did I Joe. o( stuati .. oa lbe rif,h1 side where
me aad foctle (SI-.) ..., " IOid Love, a pn>d11<1 of
Foonlaln Valley Hill> aad UCLA.
"They bad' """' ......... """' .............. middlt," L> .. l&i4. "Wlilo1 -,.,.. do -1rY to
...., 10 ii? -ii -ucl tomedma It
-'t Tlloy' ....... --·· lAwe ..a Slo1ier...,. locilll dlo liUl ol'Plm>e Holt
:..~ .. ':".:! ~ i::.. a:.:: .::ief i.e::: IO Rama ~k Jim E.....,., '""1y.
--· :r~pla~ .... P.!~Sla· ia ~·~Hall -·-r· r-v<r\'-•. ..,_ ·-rcame
10...., .......... -y. ucl.:J';' -~ ... ii -
TlliT -Jllll... .... ' -~. Tiiiy ........ .,. .... _,,.,.I ........ .
fll I &1111 --., ...... "' .. ,,, ............... _,
'
"I'm Just glad to tx-a pan of11. JUSI as an assistant
coach I was proud. There ts no spt·c1al fcchng no"'·" he
said.
Seifcn 1.0.·as an ass1stan110 \Valsh for!~ \ears. thn."l'
at S tanford and n1nl' "'Ith the 49crs. ·
"\.\'e still had the s.an1e phllosoph~ under Cieorgl'.
the saml' dl•fCnsl\'l' and offL·ns1vc st,le. If 11 isn't broke.
don't fiA 11. .. fullbaL·k Tom Rathman !.:ud. "(Jn offense.
"'t' took "·ha11he d\.•fen!>C ga"e us. a nd Jex: i\·fon1:1naJust
l';>.ecutcd all )t.'ar."
Corncrback Don G riffin said. "an' 11n1(· thl·re's a
coaching change. somt.· 1h1ngs arc going. to hi.· ddlt·rcnl.
But George did a great JOb smoothing things out. and
1.0.•e're right here where "'t' 1.0.'ant 10 be."
\\'Ith a \'JCtory OVL'r Denver on Jan. 28. the 49ers
would tic 1he Piusburgh S1et·lers· r('{'Ord b) claiming a
fourth Super Bo"'I ti1lc 1n as n1an) tnes. The o nly
rookie head coach to "'In at 1ht· Super Bo"·I wai. the
Baltimore Colts' Don Mclaffert y follo"·ing the 1910
scason.
"Did George gro" in the lob tht~ season'.' No doubt
about 1t." linebacker Michac Walter said. "The 1eam
really has grown, too. The firs1 fe"· "·eeks of the season.
we were a good team. bu1 not a great one by any means.
"We had a Jot or Close g3mt'!> and a IOI Of Injuries.
but we overcame them."
.,.,., •• Low•
coverasc while bringing a linebacker up the middle and
leavinJ Love temporarily witho ut a man to block.
"Sometimes. Pierce . Holt dropped out into cov-
erage. and they wert running a man in on the inside."
Love said ... That's somrthing they wanted to do. They
wanted to put pn:ssutt on us up the middle."
Love's season stlrted with a holdout, setting him
back 11\tr missina trainiftl camp. But he was ready to
juml) in when Tony Slaton's knees suffered from wear
and tear hc8dina into 1he final reaular season pme. He
came on with line pt:rformanccs in the three pmn
prior to Sin Francisco. but Salurday's result left him
shon of the pl.
"We know ~ did our best, and thars all we can
do," Love said. .. We'll just come back next year and be
read IO pla , " Llve, ~missed trainina camp befort this season
while leldina 1 1wo-ycar rontnct. is look.in& forward to aettins bit csrttr bKk in the direction he wanu it to ... ~we ICt Met in traiqfna camp. I'll be ready."
Love mid. .. 11'1 be my siatb ~r. My body's aettina a
Ulllo-= 10 ht ... 10 ~ a Ji11Je hanltr.
... I ....... IO .... '° 1U the tt01Ch a li1tle
__ ...... , ly~-plish,
.U-•-olt111 lllU. rm ol'doi"""
... _...,_IOMPfill-llOlhtrsbolal ., ... _mdalriptolbe ,,.,.,,..,
"I• ........... -hi CUlpud,., i.ct .... .. .. ltap :Al7 ii9pl'O\"e I lot dtll ,..... " ........ ii: to Ila Ill Ille Pio .,,.. and bt my --...... ..,._. . ~~ to~ ... ....,.1inlo...,, olmr
-.... lrJ to .... -an:d btlter."
• ,.
MONTANA
From Bl
indeCis1on on"'' part ... Everett said.
"We had a 1out:hdn"·n. and Ronnie
kind of came ou1 of ccnterfield and
made th(· phi ). Ht"s a grea1 player.
He's 1n the shadO\l.'lt of Montana and
Craig. bu1 the) ha1 i.· a grcal defense.
.. II was a se t-up. It was one of
those things where "'c 1.0.'erc trying to
thro"' them b) st:nding Ro n Brown
on the end aro und. \Ve knew Ronnie
likes to con1e up and tackle on the
end around. and we 1hough1 ""e
could gel on top on him. We had 1he
opportunity. I JU SI didn't put enough
on 1hc ball.''
It was a case of not enough or too
much most of lhe day. After that,
1he 49ers 1ook over, drivin& for
touchdowns o n !hei r next three pos-
sessions. Whether 1he missed pass
would have chanacct the momentum
mauered little by halftime. when 1he
49cn . in esse:nce. had the game put
away.
"We needed that. and we couldn't
se1 ii," Everttt said ... It was frustra1-
1n& to get down there early when you
ha"·e a ch1ncc to pul seven on the.
board ... I don't think those thinp
should demoralizr 1 team for four
quartcn."
Anothtt play which 1urcly caught
the atk'ntion of all Evett:tl doub\en wu his duck 10 the turf under
pt'HIUre late in the third quarter. He
his bttn cri1idttd for losina con-
fidtnc'e in tile pc>ekd 1fter •ks. but
showed that .. sn·1 the cue •n,Y m~ in the latter ,.., or ttut -· Oe!lll-••'°~ 1aCk1e Lany R-.S
-........ widl Ibo ·-· a.I)
-· As ... flow in -e ...... ·• bliod llidt. Everet1 -him -int buc didn't realtie lie· hid 1
49ers
Froml1
second one. he was 2-for-2 for 21
yards following Tim McKyer's inler-
CC{llion. And he cli maxed lhe half by
going 8-for-10 for 85 ya rds on a
clock-beating drive reminiscen1 of
last year's Super Bowl.
.. The Ji,U Y nL·ver slops impressing
me," sa1d veteran linebacker Matt
Millen, who joined the 49ers in Sep-
temlx'r ... Every 1ime I tum around or
tum m~ head. he's doing it again.
What else can you say."
Montana has gone 1wo years and
fi ve postst:ason games wit hout
thro"'ing an intercep1ion. Bui more
imponant to hin1. he hai.a chance for
a fourth Super Bowl championship
in Nev. Ork·ani. on Jan. :?8 agains1
Dcnvt"r.
Hc·ll hiivc high s1andards 10 mcl·t:
his 01.0.R,
"'-"'hen I misscd n1v firs1 or ~cond
pass of 1he. g.an1 e._ 1ha1 li11le pass 1_0
Rogtr (Craig). I said. ·Oh God. no, 1s
it going to be this v«ay?' .. Montana
~id.
··The Rams' defcn!tC \l.'ai. backing
up on u~ and !I) 1ng 10 take a"·ay our
wide rcre1\·l·rs. V.'e brough1 in l\l.O
n1 orc TL'Cl'l\er~ and g:1,·c them more
targcti. to 1.0.0rk against."
\V hik· going I 8-for-21 for I I.JS
)ardi. 1n thi: dcr1s1,e firs! half. Mon·
tana t on1pletL-d passes to st"vcn re-
cei\ l'f'>. JL"rrv Rice and Tom
Rathman each l·augh1 sii.: paSSl..'lt
"'htll' Craig had four rccep1ions to go
1.0.·11h 93 ~arJ s ru~h1ng on :?3 carnes.
"Tht· Ran1s 1.0.trc talkine, all week
-I dl)ubt the} ·rl' talking much
nol.O. ... ("raig ~Id. "\Ve didn't \l.'Orry
about "hat thl') ..aid.
.. l .h1 s 1t·an1 has a lo! of hear!.
\\'hen \ll' c:imt· back from that 17-
PIJsnl dl·fic11 against the Ran1s last
n1on1h. 1ha1 rcall~ helped our ron-
fidcncc. '-"1c kno" ho"' to tum it up
anothtr nolch. f hat's "·hat separates
u<. frun1 01hL·r IL·anl'.> ...
The 4'>L'r!> allto heard a 101 abou1
Ran1s· quarterback J1n1 Eve rt•\\ d11r·
1ng 1hc "L'l'k. hu! lhl') forced him
1n10 onl' ofh1s "or~! games 1h1 s Yl"ar.
l b-IOr-Jb for JU St t 41 yard!> and thrl·e
interce p1ions.
Earl~ tn the ganll'. Ronnie Loll and
i\·lcK\er n1ad e kc\ breakups of long
E\l'rl;tl passes th3t could ha ve pu1
!he Rams up b) 10 po1n1s. McKyer
also had an 1n1por1an1 1n1erception.
"I l·an pla~ thL' gan1c. and lhars the
onl) 1h1ng I \\ant 10 be Judg<.'d on."
said ,\fcK,er. "ho said the sur made
O\Cr his Con1 pla1n1s 1hi s 1.0.C<.'k was
hlO\\ n oul of proportHJn.
"\\"hl·n ti's all s.;11d and donl'. I
made tht· pla)s."
Thl· of1c nst\l' l1nl'. rons1de rcd a
\l.'l"ak point for n1uch of the year. had
anolhl·r uul'.>lilnthng game. Montana
1.0.alt no1 '3l.kt•d once !Or the S(.•cond
s1ra1ght pla~off gan1t·.
"If "'l' 1.0.'0uld ha\l' madr 11 to this
po1n1 and not gone furtht•r. \lot' would
ha,·t lx'L'n kno"'n as a 1eam 1ha1 did
not li\t' up 10 i1s potcn11a1 :· offenst\"l'
tackk· Bubba Pans said. "We had a
lot to pro1c to<la) ...
To rookie c·oach Cicorge Sctfen.
1h:11 "ai. the attitude that got 1hc
tcan1 1n10 the Super Bo"'' again.
..·rhat's "h) "·c've been playing
"'1nn1ng football. because of 1h1s
inner pride 1ha1 collectively runs
lhrough lhe entire club." St-irert s.aid.
blockt·r bc:h1nd him and hunched
0 1L·r bcforL' falhng to 1hc Cand\cst1ck
lurf \l.llh nu one around him.
.. , "·a~ trying 10 look upfield , and
thc r "·ere 1111ng 10 rush 1hree guys:·
E'·erctt said. "I looked upfield and
1hc) had eve~ body covered. Out of
the corncrofm~ eye I sa1.0.·-ldo n't
kno" "'ho i1 "'as coming -so I
1ried 10 look 1h1ngs over. I knew I
"'as going to take 1hc shot. and I
ducked undc:r i1. h was just one of
those pl ays. r m sure it didn't look
,grrat. but trying 10 play la ugh fool-
ball, sometimes thosc things hap-
pen ...
It was one of !hose plays Evercu
would li ke to .forget. II didn't look
great.
In the fo unh q\llner at midfield,
Everetl was standin& with plenty of
time. looking for rectivers all over.
He could find none-tnd thrtw in-
complete. Then he faced prnsurc
and threw incomplele. Then without
pressure, he th~w low and nose
tackle Pete Ku&Jer batted lhe ball
down .
Sttmin&ly bcamin1 with con·
tidcncc all week a nd mentally.
prtpartd 10 face 1he 49t'n, Evetttl
couldn't figure the team's pa--
formancc ou1 afterward.
··1 don't have any answen. Mafbe
you auys can sit down ind tJuak
IOfM up," Everett 11td. "'We '#Crt
up. We wen: ready to play s FOd
ball pmt. They came ill, llley co•·
cm! wtll, lhcy Nsh<d wtl~ llley did
evtryllli,. riab• and we didn't"
While Moatana wn the Gaf1
clwy ...,-on Ille fitld. £-
en wu duty afterward in ...._
......... llil pclioe in all -. 'flit _..,,.... ... a __ _
... ___ i ... tllt .....
·quartll't.ck in R.amt hissory.
. -~
Cleveland safety l'ellx Wright frlghtJ tries to steal ball from Denver·s Steve Sewell.
It took a nine-h'tjur interview, but;
Falcons' post officially to Glanville
-From TM ""ssodated Prrss
SU W.\NEE. G a. -Je m Ci lan \'1lle. who "'on
games and lost ht'> JOb w 1th the H ousto n O ilers. became
rnar h of the Atlanta Falcons on Sunda} w11h a promise
to bnng pndc 1f not ,·1cton cs to a team that finished
la!>t in the N FC West six of the last ~\CO 'cars.
.. I can't 1<'11 )OU ho"· ha pp} I
am to he standing here toda}:·
Gian' tile said a l a news con-
forence. ··11·s 111..t· a dream comr
true. I feel hkr r m co ming home ..
The 4~-}car-old G lanville re·
turns 10 the Falcons afte r having
!>er-.ed as defc ns1' e assista n t for
six seasons begmning 1n I Q77. He
was with lhc Falcons for three o l
the fi,c "'inning seasons in the
ll'am·s 24-,car hl\lon
Gl•nvlll• The t't'ntro' crs1al Ci lan' ilk
t·n11c1ted ~; oppt)Stng coaches for
• allowing his players 10 use illegal tactics. got the JOh
eight da}s after lea\ 1ng the Oilers. a 1cam he 1ook 10
the pla:roffs in car h of the last three seasons.
Gian' Ille. who left tht· O iler!> 1n an cmo 11onal
fare\\dl '-'tlh O'-'ncr Bud Ada ms. fill s the 'aca nc\
c reated \\hen Manon Campbell resigned w 11h fou·r
g;i ml·'> ldt in the I Q89 season.
Falcon~ assistant Jim Hanifan <;('ned as 1ntcnm
rnach for the fin al four games. but he and h1'i assistants
McKyer undoubtedly gone
.\ lot was mad t• this week of the grumbling b) Tim
McK )cr. the .t'>crs <:ornerback who claims he·s unap-
prec iated m San Francisco. He rs -he was suspended
for \\\O gamt:$ 1h1s ~ear after a 1.·onfron1a11on w11h
<. oach G,·orgc: Sc:tfi:rt and will undoubted I} be go nr
aftr r 1he s,·ason. pc:·rhaps even as a Plan B pla)er 1f San
Frannst·o can get no lhmg for hi m
In fact. McK)crs unhappmess dcmons1ra1cs that
n t•n the txs1 o rgan1Lat1o ns can·1 l ct.•p l'' e17onc ha pp)
O-.erall. most 49ers are glad 10 be ~here the) a rc.
"first class ... sa)~ Jim Bun. the fo rmer G iant "ho
Joined the team No'. I. "Eve!") thing here is first cla<;s.
l can ·1 sa} an) thing bad about Ne\\ '\' ork because the}
also ha'e a good o rgan1zat1on . But )Ou can see wh) this
team has wo n thrc,• Super Bo wls.
Still. Mc K}er has compan) for reasons tha t arc
l)pical C\el)"'hcrt·
Lmebacker C harles Hale). for example. 1<. upset
that he·s used pnmanl) m pass rushing s1tuat1ons.
Running back Tl·rrence Flagler. stuck hehind Roger
C raig. wants to go -;omewhcre he can pla) -the pica
of good backups e\er)wherc.
49ers favored by 11 1/2
LAS VEGAS -The San Francisco 49crs climbed
Sunday to 11 112-point fa vontcs to beat the Drnver
Broncos in 1hc Super Bowl, the biggest spread for an
NFL championship game in 20 years.
Las Vegas oddsmakers made the 49ers I 0-poinl
fa\orites as soon as they beat the Rams 30-3 Sunday
for the NFC title. Within two hours. however. so many
bettors placed money on San Francisco that thr line
increased.
Not since Minnesota was picked by 131/z points to
beat Kansas City in the 1970 Super Bowl has one team
been so favored. The Chiefs upset Minnesota 23-7 in
that game.
Denver defeated Cleveland 37-2 1 for thr Amen can
Football Confrrence title carlirr Sunday.
New GM for Dolphins?
Joe Robbie's death could mean a chanac in the
opcntions of the Miami Dolrhins. While Don ~hula
will still have control over al the football operations{
therc·s a aood chance that Robbie's son Tim. who wil
take over the clubf may brin& in a ,eneral manaacr to
take some of the oed from Sbula.
Jn fact. the decline of the Dolphins can be traced
by to the late '70., when two of the lcape's best
pcnonnd men moved Crom Miami to biaFr and better
thinp -Bobby Batbard to take over Ud rebuild tbe
Redlt.ins in 1~78, Qeoqe Youna to take over and
rebuild the Giants in t 9'19.
So white New Y orit and Wuhincton flourished
(and San ~ under Beatb.ard may now fbllow suit).
the Miami diafts didn't.
Tbe eore of lhc. 1912 and t 9M Super Bowl teams
-the "Killer ..... et: .... weft chfted by ........ ad
Youftl. !bull and bit c:urmll __... ...,, a.tie
Wiancr, IOI Dan Marino in 191). But recen~pK••
Mw ... fJOOf -JolaD ~ akt Eric Kueerow. 1'a&. OOIDbbled wida tt.e lom ol ·,_.,
cocxdi•sor Bill AmlfUlrr after me 1913 .... uct you have a 1eem IMt bat tlipped to mediuailf.
\\t·a· told t ht:~ \H·r,· not cand1Jall''> tor < ampbcll"<> JOh
·-rm nltl'>I 1i.1r1una1c th:ll I'm nut coming 10 to
rebuild a football tt·am:· CilJn' ilk ..atd .. I thin!.. that
lht• rt·build1ng \t,Jrtc:d ha t: )t'ar1., bcl(m· I am,t·d '-' e
can put 1ogt•tht•r ~1>meth1ng that thr ,·ntrrc et l} "''II be
pr.uud of.
··w hat "l" "'tll prom1s1: ~ou 1'> 1ha1 nght awa) "'c
\\111 hu\lk. \.\t' "'II chast'. wt· '"II hit. "'C: "'111 bc ,·nthu\la~llt I 1h1n l.. 1ha1 "'e'll put pn dt· 1010 e' Cf) bo<l ~
th:it"s s111ing 10 a w al Thc) 'II Ix· p roud ol ''hat thl') ·11
\\3l<:h. I t an·1 guJrJnll'l' ~ou ,,h,11 tha1\ going to add
up to. bu1 thnt· "ill tx· pndt• 1n lht• nt ~ 1n the prnJuct
\\ l' pu I OU I I hat• ..
Thc F::ikrn1' had a ·'·I ·' rerorll on I ll~9. lu-.1ng 1h,·1r
la'>I St'' t'n µmt•'>. l 11l'~ drt'\\ a franr hl\t'·lcm t ro"'J Ill
7."'42 tor lhl'tr lin.1 k . a J l -24 lo'' 111 thr IX.•1r1u1 Lion'
IHI IX.•t• 24
Gian' tlk -..11J ht· ..1grcl"J 111 uiat h till' tl'am on 1h1.·
hJ'" <tf a h.rn1.hh.1~t' "11h 11" nn K.1n~111 \t '>m11h \r
··\\ c n1."' t•r t.tll..,·J Jbt>ul m1llll"\ '-' t' nn ,·r lal ~cJ ahoul
)t"Jrs:· {ilJn' ilk 'atJ ... It n\'~t·r hcrnmc important ··
l\mtlh \a1d ht• t'\pt'CI\ lo "gn Cilan,rlk to a four-
\l':J r urn 1 ra«t . "'''II ~krm i... I akon<. directM nf pla)cr rx·r<.onnt•I.
'>a1J CilJn' il k )I.Ill tht• 1oh ha~·J o n hi\ da,·lo n"
tnta,11.·" '>honh hcforc h\· k it thl" ()1kr'
·-rd n~·, a 1ntt·n ll'\\t:d a gu~ -\.It m a room Jnd
tJll..l'd -tor n1n,· hour.,:· Ha 1KI.. \Jtd ··.\Ila \\1.0 t ::imr
o ut o f 1h,· room I l..nt'\\ ht• "J' lht• !?U' ··
Browns fans resigned to it
CLE\'EL.\:-.D -( IC\cland Bro""' fan1., n·a\·tcd
with res1gna 110n ~unda) night Jlla 1h,·1r lt'am lo'>t 11-.
1h1rd .. 1ra1gh1 \I ( r hamp1omh1p ganH' 111 1h,· Den' a
Brunrus.
.. W c'rt· d"arpo1ntl'd. all t:a p1ial k ttt·r,. bt•tau'c 11"<;
happened '>0 man ~ 11m,·s" Joe Markl•) of {·in clanJ
~•d fr om a ht•alth club rn .,uhurhan Parma Height\
"ht•rt• \Onlt' 111 t hl' Bro" ns ocra,1on ial h work out
.. I thin!.. the home field ad\:lntagc reall~ '>htl\A.Cd ur
tuda' ... he ,.ml after the Aron cos "'on n -2 1
=·11·s tuugh Bernie ( Ko..an aud1h lc-; a lot J"i,·
aud1bk d all )''ar. If )OU wa tched the g;ime 11 "a' tough
to audrhk "'''h all that no ise:·
.\t th,· t:ampus o f Baldwin-Wallal"e Colkge 1n
Berra. wh('rt• t.tw Bro\\ns ha't' tht•ir d a1h "'Orl..o ul'>.
thl'f(' "ere \C\cral do rml!Of) panics a\ \tujcnt'> watch-
ed the game in groups
.. I was d 1SJppotntcd :· s:itd Moll} Mi<:hcl<.. a
so phom ore from Pa1nes' 1lle. ··1 think 1t "'as a ps~<:ho
log1cal loss. I knc\\ the~ were prepared. but thC) were
JUSI txat hkl· th,· t"o times £Xn, a heat them bcfort• ··
She qucs11oncd whether Kosar. who was pla) 1ng
'-'Ith a rubber band wrapped around ::i sore finger.
should ha'e remained 1n the hne up for the whole game .
.. I do n·1 think th<') should ha'e played Bernie a-;
lo ng as the~ d id hecause his finger "'as messed up:· 'lh,·
said. sugges11ng that 'ubs111ute quarterback Mike Pagel
should ha\ c pla)t'd the middle pan of the game. saving
Kosar for the end.
Marlyn Mongt.·. 20. a J unior from Boston. said she
had de,clo pcd a lo)all~ to the Browns dunng her three
years on campu<;.
.. I really d1dn·t get to be a Browns fan until I $01
to school here 1hrec )ears ago:· she said ... It's exc1t1ng
seeing cvcl)onc in m~ do rm1to l) ge t C'\Clled w11h the
Browns. It huns to sec them lose ...
She said a lot of her classmates were upset b) the
loss. "I think the} pla)ed the best they could. but I ha\e
to agree" that Ko sar should h a' e been bid havt· bc:cn
benched for pan of the game. she said.
.., couldn't believe they were actua lly playing him
for as long as rtrey did:· Ms. Mo nge said. "H is throws
were totally ofT ...
A sccunty guard at a downto wn offi~ building.
who did not havr a radio or telcv1s1on to kttp track o f
the game. knrw things ~re going badl) for the Brown s
late in the game.
··1 don't hear any horns honking." he said. knowing
the quiet streets meant the Browns were losing.
Denver gets pick of litter
If Dallas made a hute mistake by takina Steve
Walsh in the supplemental draft and blowina the No.
I ~k next year (probebly Allbema linebacker Keith
MCC'ants if he comes out of co1.a. and ,eu lellut
permission), crtdit Otnver with the coup of the year.
The Bronc'OI uted their supplemental pick on
Bobby Humphrey, wlao bealmc their ftnt lesitimate
rushana Uuat 1n more than a ckc8de. Thty were able
to eet him becautt of quetliom about bis health -a
fool iqjury sidelined him for mOM of the 1988 teat0n
at Alabuna.
Tbll year. ~ can pict no IUlber than 22nd
(ualm. al courw, it ndel up). H .. Awn~. •ho ~ 1.1, I yasdt b lhe lrOllCO&. ....,.... IMI ftlMll year
m.con. ancf ... yed healthy. he woukl aewr .. " bttn
av8illbre thll low.
•
9y CAltl HIUJARO
... t ........ ,..
DENVER Michael Young
didn•t fit into the Rams' plans for the
1989 season and Sammy W inder
didn't fit into the Drover Bro ncos·
pme pla n, but · they gave the
Oeveland Browns fits Sunday.
For Winder. 1t 1s another shot at a
Super Bowl near 1he close of his
workhorse carttr for the Broncos.
For Young. 1t 1s a n opponunll) to
show Denver fans he ma} be the o ne
to make them forget Steve Watson.
and to play in 1hc onl) other gaml' hr
wanted after thl' Rose Bo wl.
Together. the) helped the Broncos
beat the Browns 37-2 1 for the .\FC
Champio nship and a tnp to the
Super Bowl.
Yo ung linked up \.\Ith John Elw a)
on a 70-)a rd 1ouchdo"n pla) in the
second period to get Denver into a
10-0 kad after the offense sputten.•d
in the opening quaner.
W inder. rdcgated 10 th,· bench
earl) 1n the season after rook1,·
Bobb) H umphrl') broke into th,·
starting lineup. rame m after tht•
H umphre) su'>ta1neJ cracked nbs m
the second period.
He Sl'O rt·J from 7 \ards out w ith
I0:4 I gon1: 1n lht· thmi period for Im
lir<,I \uu<:hdo'\ n. lh,•n ha uled 1n an
El"'a~ pa'>'> in lht· founh quarter anJ
bolled pas1 l\.\O dcfenders for h11.,
AFC
From 81
\\Underful Jub ... Kt•n n '>aid.
II wa'i .,,...,.,., rt·1rihut1o n tor \\1nd-
cr. "'ho lo">t h1-. \tar11ng JOb 10 1he
rool..1c H umphrc~ th t'> '>Cason. Whtk
If umphrt·) ru,hnJ fur 1.151 ) ard">.
\\ tndn had HOO li.·"'c:r
.. , ''u uldn"t mind grn ng 1n10 th,·
ganH·. no mattt•r ''hat the '>1tua11on:·
\\ indcr '><HJ hl'll11 t·hand .. If I get the
\hancl'. 1"11 tn IO mal..c the lx'>t of11 ··
He go t thl" 'han'c "'h,·n
ll umphrt·~ \\l'Ot oul \\llh brut\l'd
rib'> in the ""u11H.I qua rta Ht· madt·
the: bt·\t uf II
.. I ha,t·n·1 lo'I u rnlid\·nn• J ll
~t·ar:· W1nJ\·r '>atd .. Tht'> rs s1mph
<,\lt'Ct. to u>mt· 111 here and pl:i~
toda). T his \.\tn 1o<la) 1s h) far the
"''t"t'lt''>I I hopt· 10 ha'e ..
.\s alwa~'· fl\\a) go t the hl.·s1 o f
(k,danJ ·, d,•lt•n.,,· \\h1th 'ur-
rt·mkrt•J ("I°' potnt\ tn ti\ l\\O !1lJ\ol1
gJ llh"'>
.\nJ h,· hurrwd thl' m.in 11,· 'a1J hr
\\,Jllt\·J tu gt'I. tnrncrbaci.. r ran!..
\l1nn1li«IJ Bo th \.\ 1ndn a nd
\!t1. hJ d \ 11ung tx-.1t \1 1n n1til'I J tor
I! lilt hJ 1 I\\ ll\
"l ntil tht· "h1-.1k blt1"' 1 nrnt
tu tll\\'r m' m.111 ·· \llnn1ftt·IJ 'J ill
··A, ""''" J'> 0111.· pla' '' 1nt•r m'
1 l111ugh I p rlll t""> gon 111 I ht· nn t pl~I\
I ht") Jnn·1 pa' m,· 10 ma!..« l'' al u-
Jttnn,. 1h.~·~ r.i ' nw 111 ut\l't \\tdt•
rnc1\ l'r'>
'\ o ung. "&n\·J awa) lrom thl'
K.tm\ .11., J PIJ n B frt·c Jgl'llt tn
\1.rrt·h. ,.,t .1111.·J J hump tn \lin·
nrlidd al tht• lint• m1d,,a~ through
lht• \l"l OllJ 4u,1 rtt'I f ie \13\ nlll ptd.-
t•d up"' ht·n \11n n1lit·IJ 'ltppt..·d a nd
\I i.I\ 10 lafd\ tx·htnd lht• <kil'O\l'
\lhen ht: t aught tht• '>1.amhlrn~
Fl\\:J ~ ·., P:l" JI !ht• 'II
\ oung dudt•d \l1n n1tidJ ", J r\ 1ng
t.it l..k and '>l1•rt•d ht'> lif\t pl.1,11ll
ll>uthJ n "' n. mJl..1ng 11 111-11
.. I t Jn·1 1m..1gtnl' ha' 1ng J J ,1, 111..t•
tl11,:· '>.ttd \ oung. ''ho had I 2' '.ird'
tin ht\ t\\11 1.'alt ht'\ .. It\ :i d1ca111
cornt• tru\'
\\ ind1.·r·., '4-,ard r\·t·,·r1 111n t .inw
on a -;1 mpk \lant·1n on tA.h11.h \ltn·
nilid d wa"> t\\o <,l\'P' hch1nd
··'i.1mm) JU'I tx·at th,· '"'t·ragt·
J nd Jll I hJd w Jo \\a~ gl't tht• hJll
there ... El"a' ..a1J
.\lkr tht• 0li nJI gun. the Hn1nt1>\
\l \'lll into th1· lt11.·~a room . thl'O rl'-
1 urned to 1 ht' lil'IJ . "a' 1 ng t ht·ir
ht· I met!> and '~1lut1ng the fan, T hn
"l'fC mobhl'J h' photPgraphcr' .1n1t
rcponcrs
··'-'c wan1,·J to g1,c -.o mcth1ng
ha1..~ 10 th,· fan,:· Kt•t·' c\ ...i1d
.\~ 1f the .\I { '-'c't champion,·
dumina11on 1hn>ugh mo'>t u t tht•
g;.imc v..a!>n °1 l'rwugh
Browns quarh·rhar k Rc rnrc Ko..ar
<>lrugglcd again-.11hc '-o I dcfcn~· in
the .\FC
Elwa\. mcan"h1k wa-; <ic n-
'>•11l onai
Coming off h 1~ \.\Of'>! c,c;ison ~1nt:e
ht· was a rool..1c. ht· h11 ~O of lb
passes. led the Bro om s in rushing
with 39 \ards on fi ,t. came~ and "a "'
na med ·the game·, most 'aluable
pla)er. H is scra mbl 1 n~ o ffsC"t
Cle, eland's pass ru~h and his passtng
on the run "'a as -;harp a<> C' er He
dre"' a l q defens" e holding pcnalt~
St>co nd TD 10 pu1 the Broncos ahl•ad
31 -21.
.. I ha\en·1 losl confldenn · all
H~ar." W1 ndt.•r ~1d of his rok as a
bacl..up.
.. T his is s1mpl) sweet . coming 10 Ill
pla) toda~. t•\c O though r m ~Ori)
Bobb\ \\ent down thl' wa' ht· d id
..T his \\ 10 1oda\ IS b\ far tht• S\\l'l'I·
l'')I thJt ha~ ha ppened ·10 nw ··
\ oung said ofTeml\ e n >0rd1 nalor
( han (1a1k~ J nd q uarterbaci.. coath
~lil..c ShanJhan 111IJ him the:\ \.\OUld
Ix luol..ing Im him Junng 1h.t• gamc.
but he "·" 001 tonlidenl 11 \.\OUld
happt·n.
But \.\ht·n l l"'J~ g<•l 1n 1ruuhk .ind
hJd 10 -.trJrnhk ''llh ntnl' m1nutt''
gone 1n lht· llr'I pt"n od. \ llung
l'magnl J\ J \Jk l\ \ahc:
ll\\J~ rulkd uut tu his nght JOJ
p11tht·J J1mn1il'ld Jnd Young h~tulnl
the 1hn1\\ 111 .11 lull -.1n dc '>tt•nng 1111
a pl.1~ that u1H'rt·J 7() ~ard,, .. ,t', '11nh·th1ng ''t' ''orh ·J \t'I\
hJrJ 11n rn p1.1t lllt' .. \ oung ,.11d
.. \\ l' ""I 110 11•lltl'rn\ th:ll l n-.111
lhJI lll'l 'It ,1l11IU\lllll ..
\ •IU lll! \\IHI t J fllt' IO I )\ ll\ 'I
untkr 1h, l'IJn H "'tcm '>:11d ht "' "
!Old t>' I ht· l<Jm' utlcns1 \ l' t'1>at h,·,
th.11 iii,·, d1~l n'1 hl'11t''t' ht• w111tld 1i1
111tu tht:tr pl,111'> 1111 lhc: I 4X11 \l':l\1111
bt0tJU'>l' 11f lhl' u1rp\ 11f rt•ut\1 1'
ht".1JnJ h' ~knn f llJrJ
·1 l..01'\\ If I t J mt' hat• I ''"uld
ha' l' a t ha nee Bui II wasn •t easy .
l..m·"' I wuuld hJH' to knock tevr
'-' a t<.un uut of the lineup. and a 101 of
pt•opk didn't 111..c: that. I did. and I
go1 kttcr\ abo u1 11 lk "-U!> a gu\ I
l·mul.11cJ all 1hmugh high st·hool 1lnd
t ulkgc
··Hopctult) thl\ 'M..'a'>on has won
th1:1r ht·.irh .1 h11k htl trn m.-··
Buth \\ 111Jl 1 .inti \ oung hdd high
p1a1~ lor I h,,I\ ' ,1h tl1t\ 10 fi nd
a·tc:1H"r' in lhl l.1l1. 111 umlus1ng,
hl1111ng Jt'll'll'>l'
..,, h.11 n11 1rt' 1.Jll \ou ">a\ about ll"a~. \ 111111~ ,,11J .. 11, .. , ~ future
h.111ol1.1ntl' qu.11 h"r h.1t i.. l J u n"t taic
ti h,· 111·,,r \'"" .1 '\1qwr H11Y.I o r no t
11.-·, "'"" • .i 1li1 .!1,.11,.,, 111 t'\1.'r pla)
th\° g.tllll
\\!Olk r ''·"· 11111 11lln11ng o n 1hr
1111111'"' '''" pll''l"u' "u1x·r B11,,I
I"""' "' \\ ,l\lll111'lllfl .inJ lltl· 't'\l
\ "' i.. ( 11.1111'
I Ill· '11111 1 t "•' h.1 \ ,. hn· n 101.d h
i-1.,, J.., d 11 .. 1 " 111111d I h" 1\ a
Ill.\\ \\,I ,111d I lh"\\ ll°.1111 .tnd
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• ··•' 'I'• , 1 •I 'llti d dim n ..
l ''·'· .1111 II'' 11 •,.,1' , :•l.1\<'d.tl l
''·' I ·'J ,.11d
Al'L.eter~o
John Elway w atches as Broncos running back Sammy W ind-
e r (21 1 carries for yard ag e against Cleveland Sunday .
·" .1fl rill\ nlkd •n1 l\l r h• '' t Ill' ,q,.
ll'Ul hJ11\l 11 ,tlld hl <'l \ 11 '·'' ,·d .I
lllU• hJ1m11 .1ll">t·11 llllh hr 1dh
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thJI lllll!J .l1·f1f,l\t ha,J.. \l.111.
lt.11 pn '>.Ill! , I l 1"·'' '\ 1111 )!1\1"
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'umt·hmh t' )!••Ill)! '" 1 'inlt '•111.·n
f hl" \I < < ,·n1 .. 11 1 h.1111r"•n
Arcn'n' , .. ul,J h,1\1 ~11;1\' ljll11·1I' .ti' ·1
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But J11\\ll I "'''•'r ,,11111· ,1 I\ t'
ll•JJ1ng l ll\,l.111d ., •.lid' Ill 1.r~ltl
pl.I\\ tn1 lud1·1!-.1 11 ,,11d \1 r:imhk
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thl· third qu.1111 •
l k rnnrwd.-d '' .1 :-\:lrd P·"' t.1
8 11.111 Ar«nn.111 ,,Ji., ht·.11 \\ '11 1"11
I k ndt·r,11n '" h1 lt11 , .. rncr 11! thl
t•nJ /\lilt' l11f ht\ I I'\ l•IJI\ h,h1\\ f\ lhl\
'>l.'.1~••11
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for ,I lll·\.trd 'l••ll' l.1t Ill lllt• [X"rtu\I
[) t' 11' "'I , .I II'' l\ ,\l \.. ,I 11 t' I
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h\ I J\lJ~ .111J \ \IUll!! \Ill! ,,1,1mhl
1ng.. E:h'a~ ltHrnd \ 111tn!! hd11nd ll.111
ford Dl\tlfl 11n till kll '''klin,· lc>r .1
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t• 11t, .111d I 1 \l.11111:1' ~\Md run
111.111, Ii , ~
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tlh Bi ·""'' l\"1111• 1 \"hen rt·arhrng.
111 , 1111.tl '' p 1,, 1111.-1h1 Supl·r Ro\\I
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1111. :l .p1.1r 11. 1 I "'·l' found \ ant-c
l1•hl''•'' !i11 2; ,.trd• 1h1.•n ~ramhkd
tx li•ll 1i11d111 jl l.•h0\110
Elway still too much for Browns
By JOHN MOSSMAN
Ar '-""" \lf-
0 EN VER -An Modell was
wrong.
The Cleveland Browns o~ner
promised that the Drover Broncos
would ne\ er mo"e the ball Q8 yards
apinst his defense the way the) did
to w1n the AFC Championship pme
thrrc >ears aao.
The Browns dcfenK was different
this season. to be sure, but Broncos
quanerback John Elway proved to be
the the same pme-bf'eaker -and
Bmwns· hcan-brcaker -he had
bctn in two ~v1ous tide pmcs.
Elway threw three tQUchdown
1JU.1!CS. diruiina tCOrina drives of 82.
801 80 and 60 yards u the Broncos
dcfealred lhe Browm )7-.21 Sunday
and reached the Super 8owt for the
third time in bar yeen..
••'J'he bWcst thfftl you •• today
was what a pat athlete John EJway
ia, •· Den ver ~ Du Rec"CS •id.
"He made torM unbcliev.bty 1th-
•
ktir pla)s llkia'. runn1n~ .ind thrn\\
mg the hall.
.. He JU!tt ~cep' cnmin~ ur \I Ith
tht•m ..
Elwa) hl'lpcd \take IX.·n' t'I tn .1
I() .. () halftime lead when he ~'Ca Jl('<l
the hliu. rolled to his nght a nd 1hrc~
on the run 40 yards d o wnficld to
Michael Young. Young. who had
slipped behind co m erbad. fran._
M1nn1ficld. beat Minnifield to 1he
end zone for a 70-ynrd ~onng pla)
Elwa) found Youns again on a SJ.
yardcr over Hanford Dixo n 1n the
third quan er. ~mna up his 5-)a rd
scorina toss 10 ught end Orson
Mobk) for a 17-7 advantqe.
Elway. critici7Cld for his problems
1n throw\f\I the touch pa 5«med
panicularl)' pteucd with th.at timi"I
peucrn. "Just another to..ch Pl
he said. smilint.
On the next serits. EIW!\)'
11enmblftt for a 2S-ra.rd pin. 1e1ti"1
up Sammy W inders 7-yard ~"'
run. •
..... ..... , .. 1
TillN---SF-FG Cofer 2'. 7:16. • ,.,.__,_
SF-FG Cot« 3' :M.
SF-FG Cofet 2S, f'.22. ,._...,769.
. .... . I ... .
·-"' Finl oown' t 1t ltVlhff·verdt 10-H ... 179
Peulne I» 263
ltelUl'll Yerd1 10 SI
Come>·AtHnl 1 ... 36-l 27·ll-0
s.cAed·Yereh Loll l·ll l·S
Punlt 7·JI 2-JI
F""'*'·Lo1I 1·0 3·2
Ptf'.iti.t· Yerd1 1-10 4·«1
Time ol Poun.-20:11 lt:a
INOfvtOUAL STATtSTICS
RUSHlf\IG-lbm1, a.ti 1·10, G•rv 1·3.
O.tPlno 1·3. S.n Fr•nct.co, Cr•lo 23·'3,
ltell\men 10-'3, Flffler l ·lt, Molllene 1·4,
H•llder.ot1 1·1, YOOll9 1-(mlnut 1).
PASSING-ltem1, Ever•ll 1'·l6·l ·141. Sen
Fr•nclsco, Mo11lene 26·>0-0-262. Y-1·1·0-6.
RECEIVING-Item•. McG.t 7·53. HolONn
3·26. BeH 2·23, Ellerd 2·11, Andenon 1-14,
Jonnton 1·7 S.n F•encli.co, ltlce 6·5.S. ltelflmlln
6·41. JC>Mt 4·46. Te'f!Or 4·4S, Crete 3-40,
Sllerrerd 2·11, Wil\On 1·7, Wllllem1 1·6.
MISSED FIELD GOAL$-'S.n Frencltco,
Co!er 31
Anwrtc.M c .. .-~ Flneh
8 rencM J7, ar.wm 11
Sc-b'I~ ~ftd 0 0 21 0-21
~ J 1 14 1J-J7
f'nt0U.rt9r
Oen-Fe; Treadwell ?9, 12 S9
Se<end Ou•,,.,
Ot'n-Young 70 pau from Etwev (Trtedwell
11.ICl< I. 9 03
Third Oue.-
c-e rennen 27 PHI lrom Ko1ar ( Bel\r
klCl<I 319
e>.n-MoOiev S PHI from Elwh ITrtedwtll
11.tCll.), 100
o.n-w1noer 1 run (Trteowtll k•Cl<I 1041
Cle--8rt'l1na n 10 o.n lrom KO.If ( llel\r
lt.tCll.) 11 41
C-Menoa 1 run t8enr 11.1<1<1 "S9
"eur1fl Ou•rt9r Oen-Winoer 39 oe11 from Etw•~ (Trt'edwtll
11.1ckl, 17S
Oen-FG Treedwell 3'1, 6 31
Oen-FC. Treadwell ll. 13 00
A-76.~
Cle Den
F tr\I oown\ 14 22
Ru1rtt1·vard\ 1'·66 J9· 120
Pan1ng 190 317
Rtlurn Varos 7 SO
ComP·At1 -tn1 19·U '3 10-36-0
Sacktd YarO\LO\I 4·10 1-1
Punt\ 1·47 5·46
FumOles·Los• l ·O 7·7
Ptnall1ts·Yards 1·55 l·S
Time of Poue\\IO'l 7107 )6 SJ
INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS
RUSHINC.-Clevetano Meck • )6 Kolar
7·22. M•no• 1-S. Mt•t •" 3·4 L•nol'IOrne 1-
<m•nu\ IJ Denver. Elwev S-39 W1noer 71 ·37
Humpnrev 8·73. Sewt'll 4· 17 Brellon I •
PASStNG-Ctt'vt'lano, KOH r 19·U ) 110
Denver, Etwav 70·36·0·31S
RECEt\/ING-Ctevetano, Langl'IOrM 5·11.
Brennan S-51. Steugl\ler 3·36, Meck 1·1, Melt•lf
1·1. Tiiiman I• IS, Manoa l ·I Denver, Jotlnton
1 91 Sew~t 3·SS. Youno 2· 173. Wlnoer 1·39
J1ckson 7·1S. MoOtev 1 22 Hum1>f\rtv 1·71,
Branon 1·7
MISSED FIE LD GOAL!>-None
NFL otav.tfs
WILD·CUD NFC -It-71, Pllll.a.40ftle 1
AFC -Plllsl>urgl\ 76. Hou1ton 73 (Oii
DIVISIONAL ~LA YOf'FS
Af'C Cleveland 34. Buflelo lO
Denver 24. Pill\l>urgl\ n
Nf'C
Sen Frenctsco 41, MlnM\ota I)
Item\ It, New York Gl•nt1 IJ IOI)
CONf'E•ENCE CHU..IONSHl~S
AF'C -Denver 37, Cleveland 11
NFC -S.n Francisco 30, •erm >
SU~Elt M>WL XXIV
~Y,'-11
lat l'Mw OrtNM, CNftMI J. 1 IU'l\.I
SM f'raMk<e n. O..W.
NFC dMtmoiem
1"9-S.n Frenclteo 30. •erm l
l,.._S.n FrenclKo 7t, Cl\ke90 J
1tl7-WH111nolon 17, M1MHOll 10
1"6-N Y Glent\ 17. we1111noton o
ttts-<nic.aoo 74, 11tem1 o
19U-S.n FrenclKo 73. Chtooo o
ltll--WHl\lngton 24. Sa11 Fre nclKo 71
1tl7-Wulllngfon Jl, OeHH 17
ltll-S.n F'renclsco 71. Oelle\ 71
ltlO-Pl\lledetor.le 10, O•llH 7
1979-tlemt 9, Tempe 9•v o
197t-Oatta1 71, lltemt O
19n-OaMH 7l. Minne'°'• 6
197..-Ml11M'°le 24, llterm ll
t97S-Oallu 37, •-1
197-MlnMM>le 14, lltemt 10
lt7l-Mlnnno•• 11. Oella1 10
1tn-Wa\l\"'9ton 2'. Dalla\ l
1911-0 ellu 14, Sen FrenctlGo 3
lf7~0allas 17, Sen Frenclsco 10
l..,.._MlnMM>le 77, ClevN nd 1
1'61-Banlmcw-e J4, ClevNnd 0
1967-C.rMn is.v 71. Daile~ 11
1~r"" eav 34. oa•e• 11
196r:GrMn 8av 23, Clevec.no 12
tKt-C•veta nd 77, llelllmcw-e 0
1963-Clllc;aoo 14. New Yor'k 10
IK2-GrMn Sev 16, New York 7
lMl-GrMn 8ay 37, N-Yori< 0
19'0-PhllecM4«>"1a 11, Gr_, 8ev 13
ltSt-eanlmcw-e 31. N-York 16
ltst-eelllmcw-e 23. N-York 17 (011
lt57-0etror1 S9. Ctevelend 14
It~ Yort. 47, Cl\lcffO lkert 7
1'55-<levNnd 31, ·-I• ltSt-OevNncl 56. O.troll 10
ltU-Oetrolt 17, C•vec.nd 16
ltS7-0etrolt 17, Cltvec.no 1
ltSI__._ 74, CllYNnd 17
1fW-Clr<lelend 30, ·-,. ,,~le 14, --0
19*-f'tllledellltll• 7, Cl'llcffo Cerdlnell O
ltO-Clllc.eoo Cerdlnall 21. Phlleoetl>llle 11
lt4'-Clllcff0 9ffrt 74, Ntw York 14
lt4~1evttand IS. Weltllnoton 14
ltu-GrMn 8ay 14, N-.. York 7
lt4>-<:llk:eoo 41, WaltllnolOll 21
1941-Wetnlnoton 1', Cl\lc.aoo ... ,. 6
1M,l-CP1lcff0 ... r, 31. Pffw York 9
lt40-Chlc.eoo ...,, 73, Walhlnoton o
l~rMll Bav 27, ..... Yor'k 0
I~ YMll 2l, Green Bev 17
1'17-Wlltlllnolon a, Cl\lc-.o ... rt 71
19»-Gt-.. y 21. likltlOll •
1fls-Detrolt 16, ,.._ YoMI 1
I,,._.... Yor11 JO, Clllcaeo 9Nr1 1l
tn>-<lllcaeo her• n. Pffw Yori! 21
NOTE: Li.I lntll.ldft NFL C~M>IP ~ from 1'23 IO "'' A,.C~a
1~11,c~n IM-Clntimetl 21, lllffM 10
"'7-o.twr •· c~ J:> ~n.~20 1o11 .... ,... ~ Jl, Mletnl ,.
"" ~ .s, ""*"" 2' t9l>-LA. ......... ,..,,.. 14
"" MMwnl U. ,.._ Yorll 0 •t-<llldnllefl ft, .., 0-.V 1 ,.,._09llr;-. ..... .., .., 0-.V 77
~t1.Heu1M111l ~,. ........ ~-~·7 "~"'--1>-C _11111111111111 ... ,...,_ 7
"" .............. 0.-.. It ,,,. ""*"" ... ~ " ten ..... f7.~W
"" ...... " ~17 =......,..,r. .........
-I =!'f• fl, O.W 17 ..__ . °" "·a... 7 '""O._~.,.,.. "· ~ a -.......... T "'411-• a. 11, ....... 1 ··=; r. ...... ~------"(et) .... .. '*"' J au...._. .. ~-=-=1 //#.; 0.ldlc a ·•
0.•1111 a •au 0.••'Jtdlllll .. ......... IMf le L.A. lleldln •t4 Ill
AFC0.,.11..-. ltlt .... l11$11Md beet M1.m )1•U Ill AFC ~ .. .....
ltN w.Mi.-1 IOll to N.Y. Olelltl 17-0 In NFCC.......--.
1"' AM!u w 11 1111 10 We"""91on 17·10 In NFC c:Nnwlol..,_.
"" .... IOll IO Sell f'rwlw:o Jo-3 In tne NFC Cllln'WlclMllltl.
•·won"--hwl
MPL *IN c.lesfl
A ,lhl of IM ocutlom wflen two teem• lleve faced MCll ottw tfttN llmft In Ille Mm1 Mll«I
''"" the 1910 Nlll'L·AFL mereer wltll Vffr, teorK llld 110n1t ,_.,,. In CAPS;
• •• • .... MltMlf ( 1971) MIAMI 17, leltlmore 14
BAL TIMOltE I•, M1em1 3
Ml/UN 21, laltlmor• 0, AFC Clleme>lonll\lp Dlltlt ............. ( 1t11)
WASHINGTON 2,, D ... , 20
DALLAS M . Waltllnolon 24
WASHINGTON H, Oellet 3. "IFC Cn.m·
e>lon\NP
DtllWtr n. ~I 19171
Oen...., JO, OAKLAND 1
0..lencl 2,, DENVER 14
OENVElt 20, Olk .. ncl 17, AFC Champk>nll\IP
........ .............. (1971)
Houtlon 24. PITT1aUltGH 1J
Pltl\Our9'1 13. HOUSTON l
P1TTSBUltGH M. Houtlon S, AFC Cl\am·
1>1ofuhl1>
.......... ~1 1'7')
PITTS8UltGH JI, Hou•ton 1
HOUSTON 20, Plltl0ut9'1 17 P1TTS8UltGH ,,, Houlton 13, AFC Cn.m-
e>loMhl1>
Delli• n. "'11U ISlds lltMI
PHILADELPHIA 17, Oallet 10
DALLAS 35. Plll~l>l\le 11
PHILADELPHIA 10, OallH 7, NFC Cl\am·
Plon\l\lp o.ar..... n. SM D6eee ( 1Mll
SAN DIEGO 30, Oakleno 24, OT
OA.t<LANO le. Sen Diego 24
Oakt.no 34, SAN DIEGO 77. AFC Cllam ·
Pionllllp
~ n. N.Y. Je>tl ( lftl)
BUFFALO JI. NY Jtll 0
N Y JETS 33, Butlelo 14
Buffalo JI, N Y JETS 77, AFC h i Round
N.Y. G&Mtt n. P'Mad.lds Clftll
PtllladtlPl\le 24, N Y GIANTS 10
NY Gle nll 20, PHILADELPHIA 10
N Y Gl•nls 77, PHILADELPHIA 21. NFC ht
Round Mleml n. ... y . Jets ( ,,.,,
Miami 0 . N Y JETS 2t
MIAMI 10, N.Y Jiil 19
MIAMI 14, N Y Jell 0, AFC Cl\amPlonVllP
0-W n. S..ftlt I 1"31
SEATTLE 77, Oenvtr 19
OE NVE It le, S.elllt 71
SEATTLE 31 , O.nver 7, .a.FC hf Round
LA. •e..,.. n. S..ftlt ( 1"31
SE A TTLE le. LA. Reldtrl 36
Seelllt 34. '-·"· RAIDERS 21
L A RAIDERS 30, Seallte 14, AFC Cnam·
P•onsl'llP
LA. •16dws n. s.. ... I lfM)
L..A RAIDERS 71, Sellllt 14
SEATTLE 11 LA Reider\ 14
SEATTLE IJ L A ltalden 7. AFC hi Rouno
Miami n. ...., Eftllaftd ( 1"51
NEW ENGLAND 11. Miami lJ
MIAMI 30. New Engleno 77
New Eng1eno 31, MIAMI 14 AFC Cl\am
01on1n10
.... Entlaftdvs. N.Y. Jetl lltlSl
NEW ENGLAND 70. N 'I' Jtl\ 13
N v JETS 16. New Enci1ano 13, C1T
Ntw Engle nd 26, NY JETS 14, AFC h t
Rouno
N.Y. Glel'ltl VL We~ 11"6)
N 'I' C.IANTS 77, Wethington 20
N 'I' Gtenl\ 24, WASHINGTON 14
N 'I' G•.a.NTS 17 We1nlng1on 0 NFC Cna m·
H.UUWI VL ~ 11 .. )
HOUSTON 14 Cltvtlend 11
CLEVELAND 7t, HoustOll 13
Hou11on 7• CLEVELAND 7J AFC h•
Rouno
Heut!WI n. ~ltttOurtfl ( lftfl
HOUSTON 27 P11t\1>urgri 0
Hou\ton 73 PITTSBURGH 16
Ptll\burgn 76, HOUSTON 7J, OT. AF C 111
Rouno San Francllce VL Ram\
( 199'1)
lll1m1 U, SAN F=R.a.NCISCO 11
S.'l Fr1nCl\tO 30, ltemt 11
SAN FRANCISCO 30 Items l, NFC C'1am·
PtonltllO
NOTE Tnt ,,., M1am1 Qoll>l\111\ •no the 1996
New York G11nt1 are 1rie ontv lt'ams t'Vt• to
1weeP a trirH ge me serie\ Tnt 1913 Seellle
Seel\awk' end tnt 199'1 Hou1•on 0.len •rt 1114!
ontv 1ums 10 win 1'1e f1r11 two geme1 eno tow
ff\f' f"lf0
8 r9"Cn·4t.rs wrlet hlstorv
1970 -S.n Frenc•Ko• 19, Otnvtt u
191J -Sen F=r•ncl\Co l6, O.nvt>r• l4
1979 -Ot!rtver lt. San Franchco• 7t
19'7 -Oenvtr • 74. San F ranc•KO 71
l99S -Denver• 17. Sen FranCtKo 16
1918 -Denver 16. San F'ranc1sco• IJ loll
• '1omt team
c~
EHl•WHI SlwlM Geme ltnlen
STANf'~D I A~I -ltKW1 !er .... Ent •ftd West IMml fer ..,. 6Sltl Ent-West SW..
Game, te be ... .,9d 9fl ~y et Slaflfetd
Stadklm.:
EAST
OftWlw 'louarter~c11.1-T 011v R1Ct Noire Oerne
Mlkt 8uCk MalM
Running O.Ckl -.a.ntrtonv TllOmPJOn. Indiana,
HarOIO Grffll, Soull\ Cer011ne , Wl\ltV McFa d·
<Mn, CtemM>n, Ctdrlc Smll'1, F'torlda
WIOt racehrtrs-Srta nnon Sl\ere>e. S.vannal\
<G•) State, Greg McMurirv, Mk nlgen, RICkv
Proehl, Weke Forell, Tonv Mou, Loul111ne
Stele
Tl91\1 tndl-Jacklt Harri\, NE LOUillane,
Dave COionna, Oukt
Otten11vt linemen-Sob Kula, M>ertlgan Stete.
Pet Crowltv. Norlll Cerollna, Tonv Mevberrv,
Welle F'orttt. Jeff Oevlo.ot1. OlllO Slele Romen
Meluu . Pill, Ill" Ander\Oll, towe, lllM Hlltheon.
P\J<O\le
DetMM Otfen1lvt linemen-Greg Merx. Mla,,.I Fie,
Odell He1111lnt. Florida Slalt, ltOC> Burnell
Svracuw . Mike Foa Wttl Virginia
Llnei>ack4"'1-"'-rcv Snow. Mlcllioen St111,
&ernerd Clerk, Mleml, Fie , Ned 8olcar. Notre
Oeme; Ter~ wooo.n. SvracUM. ltOll Goett,
Mlnnno•e. Oerrlon Conner. Jackton Stale
Oefentlve ~ckt-Atonzo He mpton, Piii, JoM
Mangum, Ale~ma, &oobv Heroen. Mleml, Fie ,
Pe! Terrell, Notre Di me, Vlnc;e Suck, Ctnlral
Slate
Ptecet<kker-Ktnl Elmore. TennHwe
WEST
OflMM
Quarttr~Cll -Jonn Fr1H1, ldel'IO. Trov
T e'f!Or, Cellfornle
Running C>eekl -Jotlnnv llalltv, TOH A&I,
J J Ft.nnloen. COloreOO. Jemft Grev, Tuel
Teel\, Ken Clerk, Net>r•lll•
Wide receiver• -Jett Cemc>Oell. COloreoo,
Jolin Jack.otl, Soutl\ern Celtfornla. Tim
Ste•wor111, Wethlnolon State. Tonv Jone\,
Taaat
Tlohl tncb -Mlkt lluKI\, low• Stet•
Cl\arlts ArbuCl<le, UCLA
Offentl¥t line~ -Oerrtn 111\ulleflb\Kg,
COlor.00; Jelle Yovno end Oouo Gt.Mr. Ne·
brHke, Fre11il Cornlll'I. UCLA, Kettl\ Simi , IOwa
Stell, Jo.v Banes, Hou1ton. .,.....
o.t.nslve llnemln -~ Elewol\ltll,
lk'~ Yount, Arltlur Wiiler, Colorado,
Lal« A~. SlltWfd; Otnrlls tt-n,
w..,...on; Tom s. ..... w~ Mi te.
LINOecker1 -Jemft ,,aftds, levtor; ltOO
H~. Slll'ffotd, D1vld ~. c.llfomla, toe 0.'ltl, lt'-'9m YOUN; Otvld .._,_,
~Mato. ~ lleckt -Clwll Oldfllm, °'"°"; c ........ Cofltf, ~ ~; ltOOtrt
llrtldlmon, .. vtof; L.t ·Lo LIN, W"""'9tofl,
"""'" WlllerM, """" "-"· ll'lectlllcMr -JtfWI ...... ArlHM.
1
.. Wlilaa Cl It II
PMmc ....... w L .... ..
Lahn H • .HI Porti.ncs 2S " .... ·~ Ptiotnlx 17 14 .s. 1
S..llle 17 " • SIS • Golden Slatt " ,, .• s 9
QWert 15 " .Ml 10~
S.Cramento • 25 .2a 17
MWwnt~
San Anlonlo 23 9 .719
Utah 23 11 .67• 1
Denver 21 15 .513 4
Dalla• 17 11 .416 71h
Houston 16 19 .457 l 'h
Charlot II 7 25 .21' 16
M lnnuota 1 21 .200 171h
Eastem C•lfeNftC.t
AKantk OM'*' w L ~ct. Ga
Ntw York 2S 10 .714
Boston 21 1, .600 ' Plllladetphfa 19 16 .5'3 6
Washing ion 1• 21 .400 11
New Jersev 11 25 .306 1'1"1
M iam i 7 30 .1" 19
Central OM'*'
Del roll 2S 12 .676
Chicago 23 12 .657 1
Indiana 21 lS .Sil J I/)
Atlanta 18 IS .5'S s
Miiwaukee 19 16 .5'3 s
Cleveland IS II .OS I
Orlando 10 26 278 1•1n
SUftd>IV'• Sc-
Porllend 99. N-Jef.ev to
T .. V's C.-
S.cre~ro er L..Men, 7 Pm
Cn1cego al New York, 10 a,m
M1em1 er Wa\l\inglon, 10 • m
San Antonio al Cleveland, 11.30 • m
0111e1 11 Denver. 1 pm
Golden Slalt 11 Indiana. 4..30 P m
Cllarlolle el Phoenix, 6:30 P.m
Houslon et Sea llle, 7 P.m.
TundltV't Gamet
Cl1artollt at Cllpoen, 7·30 p,m
Goldt'n Slalt al MliwauKH, S 30 pm
Allanla el S1cremen10, 7.30 Pm
Denver el Porllano, 7 lO om
C~scorn
W&ST
Stanforo 69 Wa\lllngton SI 49 SOUTH
Lou1,v1tle 13 F IO«da St 66
EAST
Rhodt' l1l1no 79, C.eorge WHM>gton S9
819 West Conttnnce
c~
Ntw Mn1to Slalt'
Ntvad• Las VtCIU
Utan State
LOllQ 8HC" Stale
UC Santa B•rbara
Cet Steff F ul•t'rton
Pacific
s.n JO\I Stale
Fresno S•alt
UCI
W L s 0 . ' 3 l
) 1
l 1
2 1
1 •
I l ' ) 0 6
Tenitlllt'I Gemel
Overel
W L U I
10 )
9 6
10 3
9 4 • s 9 6
' 9 6 7 1 13
C•t St••t' F ollt'rlon a t Long 8eac11 Sl•lt' 7 lO
UNLV al Frt'lno Stalt'. 9 p m
New Mn•co Sta t• at Long Beecn Stell, 7 lO
UC Se nt• Beroera a1 Ulan Stelt, 6 30 pm
ThundaV'I GAmH UCI a t UNLV, 8 om
Cat Slelt Fullerton a1 Lonci Beach Slate. 7 30 Pm
Ulel\ Ste le e t Peclfk, 7;30 p.m
CommenwMfltl °'*"9t
let Sv..,., A111Jralle l
(race dhtaftcft lfl met.n)
Meot
100-1 L•nloro Cllr1\l1e. England. 10 39 \eC
0~01 2 Tim JeCkson. Au\tratia 10 SJ l Dave
Cta r' Scotland 10 6S • Clart'nce Cellendtr
E ng1a110 10 6'1
200-1, Marcu1 Aoam. Engtan0, 108J 2. JOM
~ecil~ Enotano. 70 99 3. Paut Greene. Austr1tte,
11 0 I • Oa•t' McC 1un1e. Nrw Zeete11d. 71 10
400-l Jhoer1 Stone. Au\ tr alla . 4S 6? 7.
Mark C,arner. Au,1ra1ta. 46 74 J. Anlone ~.,
r.11 Cctna oa .&6 SO 4 Gran• Cltoert New
l•Mano 46 S1
•00-1, ~oe,1.an COt'. E11111eno I m1nu1t.
47 66 st'Conds 1 Br.en Wr11111e Scoll1nd I 41 18
J Mct•'>tw Ve •o England 14146 4 M1kt
8 ••• Canaoe I 4187
J 000-1 Palr1Ck Ca noU. Austrelie 1416' 1
C,nrrv Steines Englend. 1 49 91 ), ten Hemtr
Wete s 1 SO 90 4 COiin Dallon Au\lrel1e 1 SI J7
110 "urdlt'\-1, Hwn•t' Teaoe. Engtend 13 t3
7 On••O Net,on Engteno. 13 96 l. N•w • Welter
Wetu 14 00 4. Jonn Catlguri. Aollralla. 14 13
400 nurdles-1. Kro\ .a.~abull, Eriglend. •9 96
1 Lr•G" Miller. Austra lia, SO l6 J. Jonn Grel\am
Canad•. 6 I OJ 4 Ronan Roo1nson, Au\ Ir a11a.
S14S
l ,000 llHPie<'1H-I, Peter Rennt r. New
Zutand I 7917 1, Alain Boucl\er. Ca nada,
I 33 6S ) S'1aun CretgMon. AU\lrelie, I 33 91 4
S'1aun Wade Ne,. Zeatend. I JS 37
IOk wel~ -I Anor•w Jechno. Au\ Ir atta
40 10 16 1 N1c1t A Hern Au\lrella. 41 31 71 3
Hero•o Van Bee' Holland, '6.)4 90
H1grt 1ume>-I Dellon Gren• England , 7 IHI
4 • ·n<l\t\ 1 SltPntn Cl\epman Eno1eno 1 ·1 ,
l JOhn HOimen. Enol•nd 7·2 > 4, David
.lln~rwn. Au1treha 1 2 >
Long 1ume>-I Oav10 Cutl>efl, Au1trelle. 76 O
1 M•Clleet Morgan Austraha. 15·0 / l C.1tnrov
G1toen Ca nada 7•· 11 '• •. Gerrv Honey
Au\lrella , 14·6 ~
T r.ple 1ump-l, Vernon Samuel\, E nglend,
54·3 • 2. Metl SwHney, Au1tre lle. S1·6 • J.
Craig Oun<an, Scolland, S0-7 ~
Jevtl•n-1, N1cie1 Bevan. Welt\, 249·1 2, John
S1aov11on·Smlll\, Ne"' Ztetend, 24S· II ), Mera
Rober \on, England. 244·2 4 Mike Mal'IOvllcl\
Canada 733 S w-
100-l l(errv Jonn.ot1 Au\lret•e 11 67 1
Carmen Smerl Welti, 11 9S l. S1tor.enle
Dougie\ E"91a nd 11 96 4, Clll\v Fr-n,
Aullralla 11 97
?OC>-1. Sallv Ann Sllort, Welts. 2390 7.
Meret' HOiiand, Au1traha, 74 26 J Frence
Garuu. C•nade. 2' <M 4, llttl\ Pete<1on, Ntw
Zeeland 24 74
eoo--1. Kethy S.mbtll, AuWalla SJIJ 7,
Kvl~ Hlnltan Au"rella. Sl 93 ), C~vl A...,,,
Cene d1 S41S 4, Andrea Wadt. New ZHlano,
S47l
I00-1, Wendv Old, Auttretla. 1-ol 13 7,
Sneron Sltwarl, Au1trell1, 7-0..04 3, Gell Lu~e.
Au11ra11a , 7 04 14 4. Lvnne Meclnlvrt, Scollend,
7044)
l .SOC>-1, Su1v Welll\lim, Autlr•lla . 4'11 IM 7.
Bev N1tP!olton, Enotand, 4 11 07 l. MlclWtle
Saomgertner. Aullrelt., •·1l 7S 4, Ke ren
Hult"''°" Sco11eno. 4:16.n
3 000-1. L11 McCOl9ell, Scolle no, I 4J 14 1.
Angele (l\e lmert, Cenecs., 8·46,«I 3. CarOl\ln
S<:riwelow, Allilr•li•. 1.65..13 4, ,.,,,,. Here.,...,..
Ztelend • 00 19 ~ well<-1. Kerrv Jubv, Au1trell•, 20'17 It
<world record, Old record, 20-.3115, S.ab'I, 19",
Brolbene Au1trella). 7, Ann Peel, Canada. n 11 JS J, .Allton 9aket, Ce lltda. 22;13 It 4,
Lorr•lnt Jechno, AuSlrelle, 22:17.31.
Javelin-I, Sue Howland, Au1trelle, 70:>·1 2,
Kelt F errow, Au~lrelle. 11)·6. 3, Nlcoie
Emb4em. kolland, 1n -l. 4, F•llme Wllflt>rMd,
Engtend. 1n-1
..... _ -'·,,....-.a. ....... U.S.. ,... "11 T
............ ~ ........ a; • .......
•
-
A#t..'1 ........
Super Bowl-bound
Denver Broncm quarterbKll John alway f7J scrambles for
yard .. • durlne aecn4 q.....rer action on way to J7-J1
VlctorJ In American l'ootball Conference championship
ftnal1 over Cleveland Sunday In Denver.
HOC kl\ ·~. ,
NHL
CAMll"aELLCONf'••ENCE
SmVh OMllell
Edmonton
Ca'9erv
WlnnlPeQ
Klnet Vancouver
C'11ca110
Toronto
St LOu•\
M1"n-tsO'a Ot lrO·I
W L T "" Gf' GA 73 U 9 SS tn W
21 IS II Sl 192 160
71 17 S 4' IS2 154
20 10 s 4S ltl 117
13 7S I ~ 13' 167
N~ltDMtlWI
7S 16 • 73 ,, 1
70 19 6
11 11 )
IS 74 6
Sot 113 166
47 201 101
46 167 1S2
4S 153 161
l6 ISS 117
WALES CONFE•INC&
Nt'w Jt'rstv
N v ts1anoer1
NY Renoer• P1!110urg'1
Ph1taOtlp'11e
wuntnoton
Boston
8uffe10
Montreat
Heriford
OueOt<
~. frlO DIYlllWI
W L T n 10
20 71 .. 71
10 71
.. 11
18 74
Adem1 DM\lefl
"" Gf' GA 4 4 Ill 117
4 4A 160 16S
I 4A 149 ISi
l 43 , .. 1'7
7 43 IU 15S
' 40 IS2 167
76 16 )
74 IS 6
73 II 6
71 10 J
SS 161 133
Sot lSS 147
S7 IS? 136
4S 1S7 1S7 n 1l6 ?OJ I 30 ' WndeY't Scwt1
New Yor• Rengt'rs 4, Prilla0t'fprt1a J IOI)
W1nn1i>eg 6 St Loul\ S
Calger. 6 Cn•cego S
Ttnlttltt'1 Geme1 Cn1t ago al Toronto 4 lO pm
Heriford a• 80\lon. 4 JS Pm
Mtnntsota al Monlru t, 4 JS o m
Tllft4MV'l G-Bullato a t Kift91, 1 JS p m
V•ncouvtr •' New York 1\lanoers • lS om New JerHv a t Wasl'11nci1on •JS Pm
Ptl11aoelP'1ia al P1tl\1>urgP1, 4 l S p m
Ouet>ec al Wlnn111t9, S lO pm
CalQarv •' S• LOU••. S 3S o m
D.froit •I E0mon1on. 6:3S 1> m •
ROXI\._ ~~
T•efW.Tepe
Tl\e Ille ot •ne ••Pl for "'' neevvwei9"' ftg'11 l>elwt'fn C.eorgr FMemen and Ge rrv Coonev lo oe l>t'IO tonlgM al Cellar\ Attenll< Cltv N J
Allt'
Wt'lgl'lt
Ht•0'11
llta<n
'"'"' (normall Cl\e11 1e~oanoeo1
81Ct P'
F0tt'erm
WA1\t
Tll19'1
(•II
Nt'C•
W r1\1
F 1\W
An" le
,.,_
•l 7Sl •
6·•
79
41 so
17
·~ .. 31
1t
10
II
11
13 ' I)
(•t A .. ftflc: Cltvl
c.-...
)3
131
6· 7
SI
4•
46
11 ..
3S 14 1
16
19 .,
I
11 ' 10 7
WELTERWEIGHTS -hrone Trice de·
lealtd Kevin Pome>tv 11 rouno unen1mou\
dtctllon Trott , 3S·7, win\ WBA Amtric.a·•
cl\amplon\lllp Pomoev tall\ 10 11 1 I
MIOOLEWEtC.HTS -NIClel Benn 18rll•lnl
oefeelfd 5"noert•!'t w 11111m1, 10-round •Phi
deel\on Benn tmprovtl to 7S· I
SchtcMt T..._,
At ll>t' Attanllt C1tv Convention Cenier.
Alla nllc Cuv NJ George Foremen, HO\aton,
vt Gtrrv Coonev. Hun11nciton. NY . 17, ntevlt\
OoUC1 Ot'W111. Yonlltr\. N 'I' "' Melll\ew Hlllon Ceneda 12 for Htllon's WSO Middlt· wt'lg111 illle
Thur14ey
At lrtt' Ctv1< Audllorlum, San JOH Uriah
Grent, Jematce . vi O•vld Vec!Oer, San JOU!, 17,
tor ll>t' vece nl USBA Ugl\I HHvvwtllll\I !Ille
""*" Al Lancaster. SC . Cedric Ml"90. Brockton.
Men. vs Ed POltard. ller~do1, 17. for ,,,.
vace nl t8F 1111erconllnenlal Ftatl>erwelgl\l'tllte
Jell. 22
Al the Gree1 Wttltrn Forum, tnotewOOd.
Re ul Ptru. Muko. "' Gebv C•nl1e1H. 12. tor
Ptrt1' WBC llenfemwelol\I 1111&. Tomat Pere1,
Sent• Ana . .,, A.rmellOO 1toortoue1, v-1ut1e.
10, lUl>t' ,,,.,,.,, JeA.,.
Al Crow1r" Lal1ur1 Cen1er, Sunderlend,
Enollnd OrlellOO Canl111H. Hou1ton, e 111v
Hardv. Brilaln. lor Cenl11le1 18F 8entemwelilllt
11111
Al Svdntvt Aullralle, Guv W•lert, Au"r•llA.
v\ Yewe O•vlt , Uoencle, tor W•ter~ Com·
monweelll\ LiCJl\I Heevvwtlohl lllle
JM. f1
At New Orl&eni. Frenll. Tete, Houlton, n .
Llnclell HOlmft, O.lroU, 12. for Ille vacanl 18F
Sue>tr Mlddlewe19'11 1111&. .-..
At Trump Ptaie, Attenllc Cltvt N.J .. Jotln
Moll11•. Puerto ltlco, "'· L~ Sueru. 11. tor MollN!'I 18F Junlot L19'1tw.19'11 llflt. ,,_.
Al Oleke, ;.....,, Salo.ht Shinoelll, Jel>ll', "'-
·-Ootlate, Ph!illlfnK. 17, for !flt '18Unl 18 F lnlercontlnenlal Jun!« lant•m'"""t title. ~J Al Trump P\aia, Atlantic Cltv, N.J , H«tor
"Machel" Camectlo, New York, .. , Vlnnv
Pa11en11, Cr-ton, •.1.. 17. for Camact>o'•
WIO JUl'llot Wtlltt....,,t title.
Al Ille Convtnllon Center, Atlenlk CllV. N.J ..
...,,.... Wllllallar. Norto411, Ve.. vs. Frid
'"9ndellon, n. for wttllall«'• 1aF LllM'"""' tttte.
.\I Hlllft Audllarlurn, SOiton. Milla
McCe llum, Jematca, n . $It'll COlllM, lrNnd,
12, for McCalum'• waA MIOdl&wefetll llttt ~' Al lfle I.at v .... HlltOll, Joi' .. ~111. Mblco,
vs Trov'Oorlt'I, Dalla•. 12, tor ~.... taF
'"""' ....... ltfttt .... 11
Al TOii.,., J9MI\, Miki TVMll, c...-111. Ntw
Yori(, n. lulltr OellllMI CIUMul, ONt, lt, ftr T'wMr• ..,. ...... ,, .......
AVlhlM OMlt
(at M t• s l"M)
Meft'l ""' •MMlll ~ M1katf Pernfor1. Sweoen. Clef Sk>boden Zlvo
ilnovk Yugo\lavle. 6·7. 6· I, 6· 1, Ron•IO
Agenor. Haiti. dt'I Rtcnev R-t>e<g, Hou11on,
6·2. 6·4, 3·6. 6· I, Joni\ 8. Svennon, Sweden,
def Tr.omet HOlllltdl, Sweden, 6·7, 7·S. 1·S.
Tomat Carbonell, SPe ln, dtl Cvril Sui.. Czecrio·
slovakle . 6·4. 7·S, 6·3, Keret Novacell., C1acll<>-
itovek1a, Oil Mlc'1at'I Brown, Australia. 6·l 6-1,
7·6, 6·7, Henri Leconte, France, def Frencllco
Roig SPeln, 6 I 4 6. 1·S. 6·4. TOOd Wooobrldge,
Au\lrat e Ot'f M1cri1e1 Scnei>ers Netl\ertanos
4-6, 6·0, 6· ), 6· I Oen GOidie McLean. II• Ot'I
Darren Pall ett Aostrall• .. 6-3. 6·4, 6·4 Eric
WlllOjlred1kv. Fre nce o.i Tim W1lk1M>n
A11\tv1lte, NC , 6·) 1·6 11·31. 6·3. Bruno
Ore1ar, VUOO\lev1e def Tooo Wtlll<en. C1rme1
Ind 6·4. 6· l. •·4. Altunoer Volll.ov Sov1t1
Union clef Jlmmv 8 ro..,n, Ler90, Fla . 6·) 6 l
6 · l. S•mon Vout Au\trahe, <!el Marlon
Laurettdetu Caneoa. •·6. 1·6 11·4J 6·1 6·7
Leoneroo Le•allt Me••co. def Jeremv Bale\
BrUaln, 6·7 "<3·71, 6 I, 6·4. 6·2. Gienn
L•vendecker, Portola Vallev. Cotif . oef T arok
Btnl\ebllt\, France. 6 1. 1-6 (8·61, 6·3, Jordl
ArrtM!. Spe1n def N•clt. Brown Briteln. 4 6. 6·•
6· 1, 6·3, !Ired Orew111. Au11ralla. oet Cf<lrtc
Plotlne, Fr•n<e, 6·7 IS·7J, 6-l , 6·4, S·7. 6 3 w_.., f'tr11 -~ ~ Pattv Ft ndkk Sacramento. de! Ak1m1
Nlsrt1v1 J1e>en, 6·1 6·J. Brenda kl\ulll. Netl\er
land\ def Mar11ne Pewit' Well Germenv. 6-4
6·l An"t Huoer Wt\I C.ermanv. clef Melder
Level, F'rence, 6· I 6 I Betit Relnlleoter.
Ausirla, oet Ronni Rt'tl, M1e m1. 6· l. 6-7,
Katt'r1ne Me ... ve C91 Sul9erla dt'I Lori
McNt'•t Houston, 6 1 6-1 Recl\et McQu11tatt
Aulirette oet Feot<lt• 8ons1gnorl 11a1v 6 I
6 1
Ntw Souttl Wa lts 00tn
(el SVdrlrt, A111lr8'111)
Men'' Slnelet "inet\ Vann•ck Noeri 191 France. del (art·Uwt
Steeo 17) Well Germe nv, S•1, 6·J. 6·4
Mttft's ~ l'lnel1
Pal C11'1 nno Ma•• Krallmann Aull•alta
Oef O•n1e V.uer •no P1t'it>r AIOrlCI\. Soutn
Afr.ca 6 • 7 S w-·, s..,.., ""*' N•'•"a Zvtrt•• <111 Sov1t'I Union del
Baroera Pautu\ I 10) Au''"• 4·6 6·1 6·3 w_., o.uo... f'INtl
Heiena Sukove eno Jane Novo•na I 11
C tt'Cnosto•ek•& Ot'f Lar•ua S.vcN!no.o and
Nata l a Zvtrtva (11 Sov1t1 Union 6-3 1 S
c ..... men
N•n-1 C ..... ClwilT\Plelllftlo\
(et ~aim Dewr1)
~ Semlflnell
Trevor Kront mann·Srtlge Kanro11 IUCll del
8111¥ Baroer·Merk Knowtt'\ IUCLA1 6·3 6 • DellCIM1 , Inell
Bvron 81jlck Kent Staton IUSCt dtf
Kro1>em•nn l(e nro1; 1·6 6· I 6 4
lf90 ATP Teur ~
Jan IS·2t -Au\trallan Ooen
Jen 1'9 -Devi\ CuP I
F t o S -M1tan llalv UOO 000, San Fr en
C•\CO 17SO 000 Gueru1• 8 ra111, \ISO 000
F eo 11 -Tor onto \I 700 000. 8 ruu ets
8t'tg1um. '600 000
F 10 " -P'11tedtl1>n•e \I 000.000 Slul!gart
Wt'\I Germenv 't.000 000
Feb 16 -Mem1>n1s Tenn 17SO,OOO Roi·
terda rn , Nt1'1trle nds, S7SO,OOO
Merc'1 S -tndlen Welt\, Calif. 11.000.000.
L von Fr anct . 'I S0,000
March 16·75 Kev 81\cavne Fta ,, S00.000
Merci\ 76 -Devi\ Cuo 1
April 1 -Orle noo F'la . '2SO 000, Rio de
Jeneiro 8r111t S7S0.000 E\lorlt Portvgal
USO 000
April 9 -TOl<YO, tl.000 000 Barttlon•
SPa•n ,S00,000
Apr It 16 -CePllOwn, South Alric.a. '111 .SOO
NICt Franc• 1760,000 St•Hng, '17S 000
Apr II 73 -Monlt C erlo. Monaco. s 1.000 000
Seoul, Soul'1 KorH, I 165,000
April lO -Meorio. Speln, 1310,000. Munich,
Wl\I G.<menv, 1264 000, S•1111-•. SIS0.000
Mav 1 Hemburg, Wl\I Germenv,
'1,000,000, (l\erlt\lon, s c . sno.ooo
MIJV U Rome, 'I 110.000, U"lag
Yugo11ev1e, '17S,OOO
Mn 71 -DunttO<>rl, Wl\I Germanv.
Sl,S00,000, Sololln• 111tv. 1760,000
Mev 7a·June 10 -Fren<l'I Oe>en
June 11 -London. ,S00,000. ltoimelen
Hollend. US0.000. Florence ll•lv, US0,000
June II -Serl lletv. 1750,000, Sri\ Ion
Enoiend. Sl7S,OOO
June 76· Julv 11 -Wtmbledon
Julv If -GllH d. Sw!t1ertano. US0,000.
NewPorl. It I. Sl7S,OOO
Julv 16 -Slull11Art Wiit c..rmenv, Sf00.000.
W•lftlnolOll, SSS0,000
AUTO•AONe
INOIANAPOLIS MOTOI' SPEEOWAY-
N•med ROOltl C Mclni-tafetv director
IAl88 AlL ...... L.eetw
SAN DIEGO PAOltES-Slened Ronn 1t.-
vnold1, ca1c1>1r, to a ~ 1ee91Je COf'ltrect
Added wemv HerNftde1, lllldltr, end K..,ln
Ger,,.,. flf'tt IMIMmen, 10 Ille «1-ma11 roster
MllCITaAll .................. :Cl••• CLEVELAND CAVAL.1Elll-Ac11Y.,.., Tr•
ltollln\, cantor, from 1111 lnluttd hi.
POOT8All
.......~ ..... L.eetw
ATLANTA FAL.COHs-fttamtd Jwrv Glen·
vtlll head -"·
SAN FltANCISCO MltS-A<ttvaltd Mlc:llMI
Certer, noM lK kli, from llllUrecl "*"'· ~
Tom Holmot, Nftlv, Oii lnluttd ~ MOaC•Y ...................
MOff'TltEAl ~..._~........,,... Jtell• Cleudl .....,Oii, ....... le~..-. .t .. Mlertc.-......., ~
..... ...... ~ _,.C•rutDdloilr.iit ·, ............ .. .__ .......
Dell Ill'.,..,,_, ..... o.wttL...-.•.m.-c...,,...mA
......... lf7 ..
0.. ~ ...... --........ 114 ... .. ~ .....
' l.Ot9fl RoMm, tlUN ~ Allftetr, lll4, ..
UtftUd11wtofl.tl4,tl6 .... Sufi.ti.'"'"' Atwltlfft# Meefl, ......
~GMctMr,114.JN
Oavld P9olllft.t1UN ltoMtt Wrenn, att,fOI Oon111t Hanvmcl. I t0,90I
CNl1 Ptrrv. SIO,Ni
#Mrk Lve, S10,90I a· Ptlll Mlcllltton, IO Tom Sltcllmann. $10,fCll
lrlan Tenn\#l«t, S1 ..'10
,,. .... Jonft, $1,410
loC>GllOw. $7,470
8oO Eellwood, 17,470
Merk WiefM, s7,470
t<elll\ Cleerwal«, '6.390
Tommv Moo<•, SS.349 Wa'IM Gredv, lS,"9
MlcllHI Alttn, S5,3'9
Crelo Stedler. SS.l ..
JOlln Cook. SS,:Mt Rav Stewarl, IS,349
Lerrv Sllvtlre, SS,J.49
Jev DOii e1akt, s.c.oso
Nolan Hent.t , '4.0SO
Mike Hulbert, M,OSO
Pllll St.tkmer. M.OSO
Jeff Slumen. M, OSO
Jonn Adams. '3.2.0
OevtO Cenle>t. '3.240
Kirk TriPlell, "3,2.0
Rlcll. Fehr, U ,7.0
Lennie Ctemtnll. 12,407
Pel Mcgowen, 12.407
Dave Birr. S2 ,407
Morris H11a11kv, '1.401
JC Snead, ,7,407
Bobov Wadkin1, 12,407
8 01> Twav 17,401
Lon Hinkle 17.174
Tf<I Schulz, ,1,03.t
Lenee Ten Brock, 12.03.t
Clark Burroughs. 12 ,()3.1
Pete Joroan. '7.034
Merk Heves '7,03.t
Rav Barr 17,034
Don Pootev '1 034
M1i.t Doneld S 1.9SJ
Jonn lnmen ll.953
Davt Rummell\. 'I 199
Jav Ot'l\lno 'I 999
Jett Harl Sl,199
Slfvt Lamon1agn, \1,199
Bob E1111. '1,136
Brad Brvenl. Sl,836
Emtvn Auortv l l.136
Jerrv Anderson.' I 191 Ktn Gru n l l,791
Herrv Tavlor SI 11>4
Ronn1t' 81•t k. " 746
M••e ~c'1ucnert SI 119
Ot.,t• Arn841t SI 119
Jerrv H•as l I 691
PH Horo•n 111 'I 614
Cta•e11ce Ro•t' '1 6S6
:::--,.:: ......,..,.,_ ......... ,...., ..........
..... 1>-*-.,._,. ......
61·1M1-0-
,....11·1t-'1·11+n-,......,,.,1-
..... 1.-.1-'1•n ·1l-6'-.s-n-n -10-
12...,·11-... ,....,,.,,_
,, ......... 71-
72·'5-•7>-... ,....7S-6'-
'5·71·7)-71-
6t·70-7Ml-
11·'6-7M1-
11 ...... 11-n-... ,......,.,,_ ...... ,..70-
70-71-70-7t-
71· .. ·71-71-
70-6'·75·n -
'7-67·75·71-10-n-n-~ H·n ·ff·n-
73·ff·ff·n-., .... 74.,,_
6'""·n ·1>-10-n-11-10-...... 74.7.,_
70-67· 72· 7.,_
74· .. ·61·7.,_
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61·'7·78·71-
11-11-n -1t-
61·61·1t·n-
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'6·10-n-1..-... 11.10-11-
61·'6·n -1s-·
62·7S·73·7..-·
71• .. ·73·13-:
73·61·73·17-:
73·67·6'·77-:
71 ·'9·7S·7t-:
70·71-74·71-:
13·61·77· .. -:
61·71 ·73·7..-:
71 ·69·12· 1..-:
66·71·1S·7.,_:
67·71·75·14-:
71·69·74·74-: 6'· 70· , •• 7)-:
71·61·1S·7l-;
61·71 ·15·7S-:
69·11·1' 69-:
61·71·14·7..-:
17· .. ·1S·7S-:
61·14·73·7S-:
70-70-77· n-:
.. -61·7t·IS-: ,, .... ,..7.,_:
69·73·77·17-:
69·11-70· 12 ;
61·74·n ·11-:
14·61·15 11-: 10 10 ,. 1..-;
61 73 lS lt-;
66·1l·IJ·7)-;
7 I ·•9·1CH..-;
71 11·11·17-;
10-n 1• 11-;
Men's tournament
(•t Bn\bent, Au1fr ... )
FINAL
• ROdge< Oav11. s I 12 000
Curl\ Strno US '61371
M1kt Herwooo lAl OSI!
"Ttrrv Galt', U S SH
Jon Evans '1S.SS1
Br e otev Hugt>f\ 175 SS1
R K llW80\'1 Jpn ,,~s SS2
Ptltr Lonero
Nobvm 1t\u Vunar• Jpn
Breu ()Qie
IH O .110• Ja pen
Ronan Aaflertv 8• ta•"
E ••ro Otciuc'> Jao"r
JOhn W1twn U S
Jell Meggt'rl U S
M1cnae1 Brao•e• US
K•I Hie Han Burma
~nuuo Mori Jaoan
Oannv M11ov1t. Caneda
T\uvos'1• Yonevam Jpn
T alt"O Tanaka Jaoan
T•ukasa Wataf\aDe, Jaon
Revmond F•o•O US
Louis Brown U S
8rao 8rtwtr u S
Jonn Mo• se U S
Marlin C.alf\ Canada
6'·67 71 ·69
66·64·69 n-:
67·66 69·71-:
71·61·69·66-;
IS 6'·66·10-:
66 67·11-71 :
61·67· 13·61-:
69·13·'3·71-:
10·11 ·61·'9-:
74·61·61·'7-:
6S·67·13 71-:
10 11 64·7.,_;
70 11 ·'9 1~;
61 73·65·74-i
71 ·'9·6t·n -:
77·6'·11·69-:
70-69· 73·69-:
73·69·6'·71-:
11 61·71-n-;
11 ·61·12·73-i 69·11 ·67· ,..,_,
11-71 ·67·7S-l
11 70·17·71-l
7~66·73-10-J 76-64·70· ,..,_,
,, 70·12· 7S--i
n ·70 n n-;
IHO P GA Tour KhedUlt
Ja~ 11 11 Boo HOOt' CrtrV\ltr Ctn\1c
Ou1nl4
Jen 7S 7t PllOt'n .. Coe<>. Scoll,Oele Aro1
I' eo ' • AT I. T Pt'oC>te Bf tel\ Nellon•• Pr
Am PtOOlf Beatn r eo 8· 1 t Haweuan Ooen Honolulu
Ft!> IS II SrtH r\on Lt nmen Hullon OCH!
L• Jolla
F110 11 1S N1uan LO\ Anciettts Oe>en Pac 11
Pell\OOt'\
Marc" I • Doral R¥der Ooen Miami
Marc n 9 11 Honoe C lautc. Cor et Soring
Fta
Mercn IS II Ptavers C'1amp1ons,,IP Pon
Vtdra Fta
Mert'1 21·15 NHile 1n.11a1lon•I Ortanoo l'i
Mercri 19 AP•1t 1 lnaee>enoenl ln\uren<
A gen• Ooen Trtt' wooo•1no1 T ... ,
Apr.I \ 9 Me\ltr\ Augu\11 C.e
.a.0<11 S I Ot00\11 Guar1n1v Cteu l< Ha
t+t\OU,.0 M 1\\
April 11· IS MCI Ht'r••allt' (l&U•C. H•llOI> Hee
tstano. SC
""''' 19·11 l(Marl Greater Gr!!tn,ooro Ooe C.rten\OOro N C
April 16 79 USF&G Clen•c New OrlH nl
Mev l ·6 c; re Bvron NtlM>n Clau1c Irv ...
Tues
Mev 10-13 Memortel, OuOlln, Of>•o
M•v 17 70 Soul'1wltllt<n Bell Coiontet Fo
Wortri, r .. as
Mav 14 11 Btll Sourn A!lanll Ct.nic Merit
ta Ga
Me• 31·June 3 Kemoer OPen Potomec, M.
June 1 10 Ct nlfj Wt1t11rn ()(>en. Oalt. Sroo•
June 14· 11 US OPen Cri.cego
Jvne JI 14 Bu•Ck Ctenic Rve, N 'I'
June 7t Julv l Cenon GrHltr Her !lord Oofo•
Cromw~I Conn
Julv S·I An'1euter·8u\Cn Cleuic W•
tlam~l>urg, Ve
Jl#<v 11· a 8en11 o4 Bo\lon Cieu k . 5ut10t
Men
Julv 19-77 Srlttl'1 Oe>en. Flft , S<:otlend
Jolv 16 19 Buick Open C.rend &lane, Mich
Auo 2· S Feder•! E •Pren SI Jude Ctenlt Memr.,1s. T tnn
Aug 9· 11 PGA Crtamp1on11\lp 8lrmtng'111T ••• Auo ... 19 Tl\t tnltrnellonal, CHllt Roe•
Coto
Auo 13·76 NEC World*"' of Gott. AkrOt ()t>10
Auo 13·76 C1>et1•110011• Cienlc
Aull lO·Sef>t 1 Grtaler MllweullM Ol>t•
Frenll.tln, W•K
"'
s.C>I 6·• He roee't Golt Clank . Coat V•llt>
See>f 13· 16 Ce neotan Ootn, 0.kvlll&, 0n1ar11
See>t 10·73 s c Oe>en. Enc11c;o11, N Y f'v
S.1>1 11·30 Sovll\ern Oe>en, Columbvl:--0~
Oct 4·7 Neblteo Tuu <>Pen. San Antonio
Oct 10-14 LH VtQAI lnvllellonal.
Oc• 17·70 Well Dl1nev World Olclt moClll
Ct•n lc. Lekt Buena Vitia, f'ta
Ocl 2S· 21 Neblsco Cllamolont11l1>, Houlton
Nov 1·4 Atel\I Gt.H F-T-1. Jel>tll
Nov 7· 10 IWIU Keoeiua lnter11111one1. Mau
Hewell
Nov 16· II ltMOO tnv1ta1i-, TllOu~
0.111
Nov 27·2' S.1111 Game, Le Quinta. "°" 1'·Dlc. , J.C. PtMtv Clet.Mc, Laree
Fil.
Die. •-t T..,.,, c~. Wtllfletor
Fla •
DI I-P '' \ ...
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t
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Rltlno, Brown
l)f DOUG TUCQa ,., ........ tbcn:'s no t so much to IP'Qd around at\e-r all
Atlantic Coast
commissioner
says the image
isn't tarnished
and make up after
nose-to-nose duel
DAU.AS -Two ck.at win.ncn brokr lhrouab l.k
NCAA·s storm)'. Mtb convention. One sroup worts 1n ~-pended suites and the other worb o ut in the wc1pt room.
..All ofa sudden. a bill.ion doll.an doesn't Sttm like
so m uch." Corripn said.
Fo r better o r worse. w next few years couki
possibly define the very nature o f bt&-nme coll~
spons. H ow profcuaonaJ? H ow am a teur?
RALEIG H , N.C. ( P) -T he
comm 1s.s1oner of the Atlanuc Coast
Conference SA)S the leagU<"·s image
won't be tam1~ dt"Splle the poss1·
btbl> of ha' mg thrtt of tts et&}\1
teams on pro batjon.
stag<'d tO ~t b1s team fired up ..
L:eft f!IUlterina 1n betw~'! was an army of coaches, athl~1c d1ft'C'tors and admun~trators. including some p~dentS. who ~ready arc plotting their strategy for
the 85lh convcnuo n.
Nobody can say what wiU happen. But th~ who
lean toward the a mateur point of view may count
tht'm selves am o ng the 1990 convention winners. too.
BA TON ROUGE. Lt -The da)
after. there was peace.
··1 wasn't a<.-una.. .. Piuno satd. .. ,
\l.llS mlll) mad. f'm tOO emC>llOn.al to
~ .i iood a tor ..
P1ttno ~1d Bro wn shook. a 6st lo
the tace of one of his playe rs. then 1n
his.
"Yo u could call this the con ventton of the studcnt-athlcte.~ said NC AA Executive Director Dick Schultz.
"I dc:>n t know of an other convention th.at so many
pos1uve things have happened o n behaJf of the student-
athletc."
"T he presidents took a gian t step toward reasscn-
ing their control," said Brinkman
"That was the intent." said commission member
Bernard Sliger of Ftoida State.
"We needed a victory. psychologically. as much as
an}thing elSc:.'' a beam ing UCLA c hancellor C harles
Young said .
North C aro lina Statt''s basketball
program ~as rCC'tntl) hit with t\\O
>ear's probauon. wh1k the NCAA 1s
current!) tn\ t'St1gat1ng Mar) land's
bas~etball program and Clemson\
football program
"I hate that this happened.'' .\('(
comm1ss1ontr Gene Comgan said
"\\ e .ill hall' that this happened .
Docs tt help us'' No Docs ll rutn our
Jmagl''' 7'\u Dot•) 11 change the wa)
tht" Big Trn or ~om· Dam<' l~d
about us'' '-0
··1 ha'e no an1m os11> to v.artl
Dale," Ken1uck> Coach Rick Pluno
said "H e kne\I. tt waSJU5t pan of the
game.··
Counured
L ou1s1 ana
tatc: Coac h
Dak Bro\l,n
"I ho ld no
grutlgc., I I 1 l..l·
R ill R1cl ''i
an aggrl''>'>I' t'
lOJth ..
.. rm not going 10 tolerate any
coach ma~ing a fist 1n one of my
p la,t'rs' fate'> ... Puino said ... Thea..
Daie go1 1n m' fact'. and I wasn't
e\en tail ing to him ··
This ,., not tht' first ttmc the fiery
P 1uno ha) gonl' toe·tO-l<X with
another 1.oa1·h
Without d o ubt. th e Preside nts Comm ission dug m
its heels and pushed through the most sweeping c hanges
since tht'y enacted the "death penalty" in 1985.
Whe the r 11 rem ains intact through two more con,enti~ns and takes affect may be a longshot Bui 1f
so. 11 wlll sho n en the basketball season and spnng
footbaJI practice. collectivel) cost schools m1lhons of
dollars a nd, in theor). give athletes more lime 10 be
students .
··T he Presidents want to e nd the scandals a nd take
contro l.'' added Brinkman ... They k now that 1f the)
don't. there are forces out there. such as Cong.FC'SS. that
are read> to do 1t for them. They're ured of wa1t1ng."
But for the p~nt, in a stanhng turn of previous
NC-\...\ polin. the athletes themseh es reaped a "er·
11able legts la·u,e bonanza .\s a result of vanous
proposals. not all brought b) the comm1ss1on. thc) can
no\\:
··sure. 11"; unfununate But \uu''l'
gol Ill lwl at th..: urt·umstanCl''> o l
\I, hJt'~ hap~nc:J I don't th1nl 11
huns lht' ..\( (\image. as long h \OU
lom1Jc:r thl· other -;chuols that "'l'
hJ\l' 111 thl' k .igue. Tht>) 'rt· lhe n:pu·
1.H1<m ul lhl' ..:onll-rencl' 1n man'
T"'u 1111.·11
"It has hapPt'llt'd onl) twice 1n my
caret'r -ont..: \l.llh John Thompson
f uf ( 1l."orgl'tll"' n I dnd agatn tontlht."
But all that ma ) hide 1he deeper meaning of the
tour-day get-to gether and make 11 nothing more than a ~napshot of h1stol).
'IAhlJ \\t"ll' \U~>
p l>'> t' J 1 1>
ntJllll.llO lhl'lf
1.·t1ol l11'1 11 \.i: Pltlno
Thrl'l' \l'Jr'> .igo \I.hen Plttno v.u
tll.t1.h J l Pm' 1dt'O(C Thompson
•Jllc:J P111n11 J .. pun ~·· and Plttno
tvlJ fhumpwn to ··grO\\ up ··
"The tSSUl' of this con' en11on was not reform:· said
Kansas ,·ice-chancellor CXI Bnnkman .. The 1ssul' \I.as
\\ho's 1n contro1 ··
-Find out. v.h1le being recru1r.:d. what percentage
Of athlett''i graduate from {"Vt'") <;.ChOOI that rt'\TUl\S ~Im
-Ge1 mure federal mone' 1f the\ come trom
nl'cd) bal ~grounds e'en 1f th(,·re alrcad" on lull
'>l:holar-,h1p
"·''" .in'"'a' t urngan·, rl·mJrl>.., ,·amt." 1n Jn
urJ.n n111 ht
\\th'n !'11 111;1 .ind l:\ru"'n n1.hJngeJ
h1.·Jt1·d ""'d' J nd threateneJ l'Jth
I hl , unlr11nt.Jl111n occurrl·d "'11h
..i "'' t ll 111 lhl hJll l,f I ~th-r.inlo.l."J
''' pun-.hl·' \\ere thrown then.
l'lthl'I tlut C:Jth ll.IJ l.'h "3) aSS<'S~d a
l•'thn1-..JI tuul I hal' \l.t."rl' no tct'.hn1-
t.1h 1..1iktl ..,JlurdJ\ night
As hea1ed as this \l.t'ek·s struggles v.ere 0,cr
Proposition 42 and 1he hke. e" en bigger battles m:n lie
ahead. For o ne thing, the comm1~s1on 1s JUSt geiung
\larted. Next II \\ill look a1 cut11ng football scholarship~.
reducing coaching stafTs and trimming back ~n non-
rn enue sport!> a'> \l.Cll.
-Get need-based scholar~h1p aid undt'r Prop-
os1twn 42. "h1t·h pre' 1ousl) \l.Uuld ha\t" denied thl·m
an} hdp at all
111trn ,,.,, "11h fht· :'-.l'"" anJ < lh-
'c:nc:r 111 RJk1gh JI thl· "\( .\.\ ( un·
'l'Ollllll Ill D.1llJ'>
L 'I I ' -i..i.' 1 ' 11.111n , ,, t:r i...,·n l ut ~'
\11.'r .1 ,,urlk ior J lllow hJil
1-..l'ntud,\' Jr1l HrJ'>~O\I. 'h<"l'd
\l.i u11e1.· \\ ill1Jm,,1n. JnJ \\ 1J
llJn'"'" fl'l.l1 1Jh'J \1 11h ;1 llH•·Jrm ll•
th«, tun I 'If 'l h1" J:it i..,,,,11 ,h,11..
l·J B1.i""'' .111J !'\\1th 1t·am' ,11.1,t.1<·J
n~'JI "" • •\.•t -..\tUrl
·1 "J' '•'I' ,,interned wht"n Jo hn
I ht 111p,11r 1ri .... ,1 ll)I ,hool his fist
JI nll 1'1t1nu \JIJ .. , "'3'> not that
1.11111.c'rt11·J .1h<1ut f}Jk ·
-Quit pa)rng their o"'n \\J) from the airport 10
~:hool "'hl·n tht'\ rnml' back from summer 'ac:.at1o n
-Qual11\ mw.:h morl· c:a~tl) to r full schola r\h1~
altt•r plugging J\\l\ for l\l.O )ear<; 3'> an unt·ompcn'>illl'd
.\ r1.'tt•nt '\( \ .\ rqxin fC\t'JkJ
thJt C km,11n hJJ !xt·n acru'>t'd ol
nwrc lhJn .1 doll'n 1llt>gal recru1t1ng
contact!> 1n II'> lootroll program l h,·
T 1gc:r'> a l'>ll \\l"fl' ntl·d for JI." ing plJ' ·
t•rs .l!> mul h J\ SI 5tJ rrnm 1411..i 111
I~ 't>o
\\ 1ll1 J tn\11n \J1J ht' re-grettt"d los-
ing '11, llnl('ll'f hu1 "-l'ntu«k) pla~ers
,, ·r, 1~.11 111 .1t.11~1\1ng mood
In add1t1on. a commlllet' chaired b" .\CC Com-
m1)'>1oner Genl' ( orngan I\ "'orking o ut ·a \Cf"\ suck\
.. COSt-COOtammen(' plan thal \I.Ill hie rene\l.ed
b111erncss O\ er \I. hose ax gels gored.
I m 11111 ~·'1ng t11 1orgt"t all of t h1s:·
Ht .I"''" \..J IJ r hl•\ II '>t"t' \I, hat It'~
· ''all>..-on ··
-(1e1 ~hola~h1p aid for summer school 1'11 "'' IJu·J 1111111 lht• u•ufl .J\
li.t..11\ n1 1~, up thl· "'lu.1hhk " lh
Hi II•\ I .1 :1.•\\ \ll'f1\ tx·hinJ ( lll 'IJ I'
h1 o1lo., .,p lht• J1.,putt' J,-...·,wd 111111'
..1g.11 n'1 t tl f..,1111 Jlld Hr.1''"'' .ind
-.ii J.-d I!'.,· "•.Jt h, \ h 1g1·t hl' r II H I '11k
1111, ' :u1,
.i... ,, •1,·1 1!\,' ~'' tu L l'\lngt0n ·•
.\nother committee chaired h~ ~C .\ .\ senelaf).
treasurer Jud' v.ect \l.tll dt"al "'llh a s11ck1er issue \1111
Who reall~ bt·lon~ in the e'er-1nrrl.'as1ng ranks ol
D1' 1s1on I M an) of the predominantl) black schoqls
and conferences \I, ho so b1t1erl) fought the Prop 42
battle could fi nd 1hcmsehes o n the short end o f 1h1s
11nc too
Thl· prt·\ldl·nts did comprom1'1(.'. to be sure l n'ilt'Jd
of l.'ut11ng lhl· 2 -game basl>..ethall Sc:awn to 25 \I.Ith nu
ncmp11on., ltlr things suc h as prt'-'>ea'>on tuurndml'nl-.
1n .\IJ3b anJ Ha\l.a11. the) got 25 games \I.Ith m ost ut
lhc old l'\l·mp11l>n<> lnstc:ad o l 10-da). no-('ontJtl
'ipnng footb:.atl lhl') gn1 15 da)' \I.Ith ltm1ted contJt l
II a 'K'' l'rl· pun1.,hment \\c:fl' ll'\ 1rJ
b' the: '-l \ \ 11 "nuld nnl he:' .1 li"t
fu r < kmwn 111 hl'.td u 1a1.h Dann'
ForJ
I ''1 '1·1 \ ,It'-\ ppu1 n It'd 1n l>ale
Br '"II \J1J \ldkr "It shtl\I.<; \I.hat
,,1r: 1•1 ~u' hl' ' Ht' \ho~t"d had
'I'll <I h 111.111,h1 p Jnd th.ii'" not caJled
.\nd then !here's lhe matti:r of 1hat S I b1ll1on
1ek\l'i1o n rnntr:.tl l for the men ·s baskt·tball toumamcnl
.\ na'il) fight rnuld be bre"'1ng lxt\\een the ha'l''>
Jnd 1he ha' l'-not., o'er "'ho ge1s hu\I. much. and "'h>
\torl'O\'Cr. \I, ith lhl· basketball season being cul b) thn.:e
gaml·s. lhl' ha,l·~ -the producao; of1he \l.ealth -ma)
not ha' l' a\ mul h a., thl'\ thought Tht") ma~ dcr1de
.. This ..ent a \lgnal that nu unc tan miss:· said l 1
(1c:n Da\ 1J PJlma nf thc l \ \liht:.an .\radem' J
tomm1,s10n nll·mtx-r .. Thl' Pr<.'\llknls l\1mml\'>1on I'>
~tl1ng tht· \tJ1hJ:irds and prnJ1ltng lln the: IS\Ul''> ··
"\\ l"' l' h.JJ < km'>1rn on prohJt11>n
tx·riirt• ·· l 11rr1tt.t n ,,11J "It\ n111 111.,,•
lhl' I\ \l lll\1.'!h111~ OIJOJ Ol'\I. ..
In J •1 \; < km,11n 1u, hit "''th .1
t\''' "'Jr, p1 .. h.1111rn tor -11 '111l-
J 1t11n' th.JI <'1.d1rn·d undc:r tlolh 1111
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"I'd pa' i.1 \l'l' 11." ..aid unc: JJm1nistratl1r ·I J1Jn t "'"''" "tlJt K1, t.. "·I'
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, 1 , • ' .1~.1111'1 1.·untal·t
642-5678 From North Orange County
From South Orange County
540-1220
496-6800
--
H c l •I .. '\. ~.. 1.•
----~ -
~ .... , ' ~
10/4 LlguN~ach 1048 Corona~IMar /l]2 1 (ona~~ 2 1 /4 Newpcrt~ach 2!69 Ntwpon Buch 2'tQ South Coa st Metro jcosu Mna 2624
---------SPECTACULAR VIEW ""w"'a .. , .. ~--10-._0_e_a_c-,.,--6-1•.., 1NEWL f pa1n1eo JBR """' •TOWNHOUSE 1 BR LIH IOllU II• PUI 1
] IS6 I• 1BR & 2BA 1ea oew1y IUIYWlll Custom home JBA family Mangoia 3 BR z BA 2 18A trq 1J•O gol'"9" 2 1BA '""V" .. a,,. "'~ .~ ~BR ,,,,. >tet" .. •uRN SPdC c;~s 3BR •eoec g1tr 1nory ca~
CosuMes.
~"II rm oen $1495000 gar nopels S l JSOmo nc 9ran1.'.'~1:'<'!'>~1 ~00 a'd'' \6•t \ •.,,.11 •• ,.,.,., ;-,. •.-ac~ 0, •• SA : t•,alf' ~·ahos O W no pets S600·$67S urnm •n •SA Sea uon Aeall'y 67J-5354 ,__________ i20 92 •8 640·0900 mo. sec: , 08, Pets s ,, ••... '"ilr. .. :;.. ~ .. ,. ,. -• ..... po.]Q "Pd .) ·e•" s ;;0vr1 645-b60Z ()< 5-40-!>4~
Houses/Condos MR I B c. <• t".1"'-J ~·. "'0 """ ""1' 6 •28ROUPLCCX ou .. \& 111-IHI llWPT llYllU TWll9K •wes·c•• l•t'a : r .oil ~ ., ~ I • ~ud•d' t.,.e ISi nooo uea Lat,.,. '(Wd
Houses/Condos
Gtntral 1002 a.boa lsbnd 2106 38A :l 2BA Eno Umt e•tra iJOSla rs -.O"l.l l. ''""' '<(,•,POP .... E C'···. c:, s I •ully •l'lul'O:JOle I "s"nl ,,:,..,.... s·, c::-·-~---1060 1--------""!""lc1ea" >t 1"00mo Va· lrp1c ~.:>O SQ')Om " r. F. • ..,,,,w ..... -""' _._,, 7 C M , I .,4 " ., J o .-J .. ' '' ,, -1 ~ ' Jt'O 'r Ava1 .mm .. a SJS-8 Bernaro 6-47-7~ BEAUT EXEC CONDO In Prolesaionally aec:orateo osta esa ~ L canl 642-9797 S48·-'"3Ci O• t-·l'• .6Jb '""'"n me w•t" '•~l .... o.i ' ~S9J .... eelo.ClB\S
Windsor Beech. Like 2 Condos Ville Balboa :lB• 2Ba gar t1plc wld l•2"'e""A-~B-.-----... --JBR 'BA HOuc;E F"nColO s. ,.> ... , n J.' .., ·~. I • * fREES & ~ARD•. H1vasu City, AZ. by Lon-towest onces avail lg I lots 01 wood & Ille ' '"' tence yarv q;ir ~
don Bfldna & Lake 3Bt BA $ 172 000 2 BA $1700/mo yrly 67J-5J48 age $825 mo S650 ~ec 1.~·~.i~~~-1aro 2 car <JJ• •Qf' Nl'a• ,..wrn 1...PE 5' • uPE f E, --------,-90-2B• l '>S. twnnoose lrplc, ..-$206 000 9 Cleo Dog Ok 221 1 • ·-... -· s crioo1s $1400 me-JSR lHA fnJ 1..:1•,1, Tustin .I I p11vacy &nope1s S1075 2Be.2~~o:lyr . JO =t ilUT1m 722·7265orJ1.~~;e1 Pomona 642 77-1 ) D 548-91.l t E 6.u> ?8.t!l S•.t '• ~ ".IC'"''..,.,,..' .1 AJ BA ~ rBA Conoo a c 646-7124 g1tege 'O upgia • Hardwood floors• New Balbo• 2 yrs new $189 500 , 07 2BA !BA l1rep1ace 2 car w•~1 ... .t. ·• ·, i.> o J dCuu newt\ ctec: •Ctean quiel 2BA 28A • . lromtop tobOttomJBA .••• ,...... Peninsula £1 WESTSIDE Townnoose 2 -·" G sml
&02-453-2651 anytime 2BA. llttchen fl006l. lrplc ·.AcreWfftclllfCrnr ~.~:~~ ba~psg9~0~: BA oen oMtCe 2 •BA Ll ..... f '< .... c• ""' '"<.!~ '' "'d'"'1 ;;~_a.;'g'56 C1rage g::c~~;.::1; g11r 1Llffl·-'11W· LOOKS BAANDNEW" SBA 3·~sA incl outside 2BA 2BAconoo.2-ca1gar Roomy amen.i ... s '1 ••e510en1o•L•OO'"'"~ mme..i "'' •Bi:i Si95 NO PETS 640.2495
-a-• $329.000 nuestrm pool wtspa. J. Newtyaeco1ated 1011o.10 OareJWar• $1100 mo 894 2918 8 1r o1osonoes,,esv••J• ~ BA t''"' , .. ,.," .,,...,.... •----W " 1•1 22•2 SH VO mo'-...... ~ ,~.,.., ----------1111 ... 111 111-JIU cent remodel $749 500 Roger 818·967 14J2 Hunt. ~ach 21 40 ce11ero1 relt>rf'nc t'" ~n .,. 'N•P' ,.E (,,.. ·.:, ..,uuSE ... 'X.i..a.rt_me __ n_u ____ _ -•, n car gar quiet street re-t>Cll s 1200 mo Mike 01 • • .. I nouse I 5 yr '"llH' E. .. ...
BEAUTIFULLY upgraded 1201 Estelle Ln S48-326.J Quest Ca11 '"" Wt<l't" 11 iBR • BA ~,, •• ~ ~ J.J<"
'E' pll n 011e<look1ng tne 3BA 2Ba w lrplc & gar 3BA 2BA nr beacri L•g 675·62'>6 pri. t .s11. Gr<!'" \ '" ,0 , 't'" '"'
pool and Bac k Bay •Lllll&YFINT• Steps 10 oeach & oay 1u1cn 1rg yO 019 0001 s iSOOm1>eo.sn 9.% BalboaPeninsula 2607 ~ov1-in con01t1on with Large 40x90 lot JBr 2Ba $l390tmoyrly Open Sun Great for lo.•Os & o.!IS Bavtt09e .'BR • bA
neutral cole><s 11aulled Owner needs last sale" 1·4 t826 w Balboa 2BA 2Ba House Oen lrg s1 1~5 mo · S1200 ~~ Conoo ••o•c "'o :::-oo Ocean 'I. '> '" 'st, .J
oelllngs. French doors ONLY S 1 450.000 Agl Blvd 2 t3-'37 ·6250 k1tcl'I new carpets 9ar A"a1 2 1 2 t 3-64S Q8C..1 spa a1· 9ar 5tlC gate no BR ' Bt. ""t' SPaw•t'""
llld ••tra lar,,..Cleckper. ••llAITT! Pres1onward2'9·890J Fuin•sl'leO 2BR '1BA $825mo 1664 Tuslln oe1sS•395 BS4 2s.1 • gate~ ,.,,. -.e,•t a•nl S ..-model h BEACHWAL MO<l!"I :?BP lec1 tor entertaining Ae-Formet ome nr c 0 n a 0 A 11 I n 0 w I A\'e • 759-3031 28a aen Ir pie Jtr w D BA VS HORES C.ule 2BR S••utl<'•S "'"'a -'''ll modeled i..11chen has new Crys1a1 Ct and So Coast * Ull ISlAll * s 1 5 o o 1 mo Ca 11 oen 2811 1rp1c ,..1n I S2 bl.Xl mo .,., • 2 1 .,~9·
Cabinets' 111•. lloorinn Plaza 'BA 3BA lam hm Home for sate on ove<· 2 ·DEN 2Ba 2-car gar gar pool n1 bCl'I S 1400
v " 8 l8·4'6-9J92 lrplc micro w o Ill\ up · S 1400 sec 380·8284 brea~lasl room 1" gate HWFlllT llllTllS and appliances includ11ng Wllh catll cell. lorm DA sized corne< 101 Bay 111ew NEW carpel & arapi><, guaroeo ar ea s.noo mo , l/V 1 S 1400 &
ourclluedanotherhome CallCarolynAou Prue r1moae1 oppor\un1ly 111ew Uppe r JBA _ msir oorm •wig 1m \ up •op st'« J
~g • BR vear1, 2 oioci..s '" ~ili:l'I ~DIC Ouill ins
ga•age ul nc
Sd'' mo 645·5862
•1• 1&YY1fW lBR 18A w garage
S92) mo yrr~ 67S-9650 mlCrowave Owne• nas & FA Lg cul-de-sac lot fr om 2na story E11cellent Almost oceanfront. ocean wllertall streams 0001 ,\I lg 3BR 28A .;onoo ser yrly JoanN• 1311') 4636 I e 11epqo "iem ~42 .,
850
and wanls this sold Calif Ally 673-7677 $7J9000 Call 673-7027 spacious dut>le• Sec & spa S102S 722·• l95 fam•I ) 1m No pe•s Beach HOuse JBR 2BA
TOOAv 111 Pr1Ge inctuae5 729-7262 --rets S17251mo 903-7111 •Delu•e JBA 2 ,9,t, -s9.J990 0, sJ6.2725 -1a1age caroon, r o1~ IOIAIYIPfmHSEl Corona<k1M1r 26}}
the land $484 900 MESA VERDE . Goll On~1 .. ~hMUJun113 BA Upstairs I BA BAY VIEW twnhse on Blurt Frplc 10 l>Cl'I comm 0001 & ien 2BR 2BA E.no Un•I .,, gatl'<l 1SP ,,_ ca rC>f'I trplC
1" .1.. •1 " ,,_.. 4 dbl nar yra d1as1 $ •:'7S LQ spaC•OU\ c;ng• 1il"'' ~ ""' S 1400 mo 63 1· "5J 1 com"' 00<' ' spa S 1 J'>V wa1k 10 CM>acn Avail 2 1 • course custom home woth 2 BA ""'tme 100 block lo-relr1g siove. houses " nm SBA JBA 1 rroics Bet', 0, c ~llf'f>" Ao1s • •,., I II l.ke V ews · "' from bly Great con· Sml pet ~ 646-1264 •BLUFFS u""•ilOe<l 4 BR Prone ,11., ,4,~ ~u, S ' "'0 .,Cl uttl ( ·1:1 "iDf ·1: LI KJ "'S' ranqu 1 cauon Steos to beach 1rm1 01n1no .\ lam ,,,, :i -.,, ' " ,.,_, "SQ 0<'8 l
' .~\.I . r. I"· Elegant bright & fresh Won t IBSI long• PrinCI· a1t1on $850/mo !>4 7 -8938 • E.ASTS•DE 2BA 2BA car oa• s 1600 546-6560 3 BA conoo Plan I S211Ulf I" " • ,., 3 BP 21 .
F.: l l ~11'\:'\' decor, formal dining palS only 121 27th St . HOUSE wtgar Newly re mro• er11r~ Avl 11 ar• L•uO """ m 2BA 1 18A S950 · $SOO
..al ltt\lr1111..e paneled library & Se· NB Agent 675-8,75 Corona~MM 2122 moaetea Frplc inory PAT 10 riome 2Br2Ba pv1 S2 100 mo "60 11J9 BA 2 car att gar trp1c '1 Oflpos11 As~ aoout ou•
eluded courtyard w•ll'I Prudenllel Call! Alty room, gastwate1 pa 60. spa C•ean qu1e1 io.lrit toe BLUFFS c;onoo < 100 SQ 11 pool Carol Owner AQt Se>ee•al •
----pool & sp1 -----•2BA 18A lrplc, yard, 2 Of over $950 !>48-9085 2-car ga1 1 ·sly comm lrt·lvl 28• . Oen 2 , •Ba 646-8311 900 Sea Lane f>.44-2611 .._:.::=,:c:r=,.; 631-1400 $1150000 """ ..... ~~~~1k~1bCsh;;~~~k up •.UYllll• POOi ~r;~~60otc006~11 f1ont ro-oeau1oayv-,.,.,.,...,I&, LARGE. ST UDIO & PATIO
COLDWC?U
BMU<.<?R ~l
-
14<\ll HI HI"' 1111111 llY YllWI •Also room to rent 1n 4BA ShltP JSR 28A g11Clelle< amen $2400 mo . s u -0634 .a BA 3 tBA 60 SllP 6-18 on Ota COM WSl'I• Oryy 1~£,~lf ,",;:· $211,IDD hOUM $550 968-7271 1nG1 S 1295/mo No ~ts Irvine 2144 BLUFFS PATIO HOME mos lse S4 800 mo A11a11ab•• no .. S590 mo ,.. .. ~ Call Pam. Agl 546·5880 JSR 28A, 0004 lrplC high 7S2 8S22 Of 675-4464 Non-smoke• '21 ·9546 *al.TIP-1 months re nt free• 1 2oar1os loc on .... ~h !BA 1BA & llllhe bulll-lns Cel """ ••a•( U• ••YJI._ Mair suite "' lrplc ll111nn * -a• -, .. a-Tl Ollll Rancho San Joaou•n ~ .. 1 $16"'" mo 1 ---• · .,, .. llTa_•_S Beautllully detailed. sucll -n&w .---green.., ... s ""' s 15oo imo Prof M Fl & 01n1ng rm o• 2BA '"Big
_., IS crown moldings. etc 2 BA. den, beamed cell· .. Tit Large 2 BA 2 BA aen ~ar lease 644-6104 w refs Call 67S-0555 Cyn Ou1el re spon
n ...... UU JACOBS RlTY ings, 2 fireplaces loll & Mountain setting sur · view. pool tennis I nismkr $995 644-27'6
_. roufldeO by streams & 5687 lllfFS STUU! 0 0 0 1 s 1 . 9 9 5 / m 0 S I 400 •mmed occuoan-
1 ...... ,... 3 BA. 2'\ BA . .vlme Ent· 111-1111 ~S.-7071 24-hrs 111111 G1rege wlopnr w d cy 644-YllSAIWS On beach ranlastic vu p111 ••71... ... --oodb 1 1 In •he colony sunny J BA Loc.ated on a Wlde iusl'I I stteet lg decl< S 1 800 .. ~ Side locallon Many ae-•Lovely remodeled 28A nkup w urning •Pc " gr_,bett lfl>S 1,.oansive Ntoa• HOIO Hosp•ltil ~ " a , e a , e LOVELY C plan. large lu•I lea lures From charmer 1't8A. lg l1m1ly micro tst · dep 2BA 2 car gar lrplC new 38A 2 ,8,. IM>auty on-Elf'gant rurn1sl'leC 2BR 2 1 3 9 2 8 1 8 , 4 rooms. op1n feeling. $3 lO 000 rm. lrplc sp1nish Illes 1 BA Condominium $ 77S c1pt, lg enc yard assoc eludes 10181 remooei I 2BA conoo ... 08\ ocean 21J 927 .47 7 1 patio ove rlooking OPEN SAT/SUN 1·5 lhulters. many features 408BrtghtonSprings 0001 te nnis & play· .,../biananewll•tchen c.a & c11 ~ •Qllls "e .. I
Not»ez.I pool, location 320 E 21st St. S 1650/mo 760-0436 (Ava1l1ble 11311 grouno S 1.2851mo thedrll ceilings 4 up I S 1600 mo C "" Ra~ Sandcastle Condo xlnlloc
Cloeeto 1eho0fs endmar· Or calf for appointment. 38R 31..,BA $2150 28ATr1-lvlCondo $99S 857-2 167 gradestosu1t lhemil1ton D11111111s 760·!>000 o• 2BR 2BA encloa110.111
ket center. 54S..7001 $lS75 2170 Biscayne Springs $$$ appellte Snort 0, I 720-3999 aoo11.ances ge1 pool.
IH •I ~=~ ~=: $ 1200 (Available Now) LaguN Beach 21 48 long term lease possible RU~ I Jae S 1 350 64S·J525 -<iiiMiiiiiiiliiiiiiiwj•-fllHl• lllmn $ 50 No Pets CALL Velma -Ch1IJren & ""'IS o6' Im-............ 11 18A 1BA 8 549·2447 DRAMA TIC wood & glass ..,.. ..w· I__. Lg 28R metr Miit• wi __ ._ SM lion Alty 673-5354 __ _ With coast llne & ocean med11le occupancy \j'\\ I 1 'l t'I \ lllllfml1. knodc yoor toekS omEJc-• ., .. ,_ ---llll•WTllll ,,._ 2 or J SR new S1750mo Cell \\ .
tre• Incl' Hrdwd tloofs. 111mn 58R 4BA. sngl M. pan· Cul-de-MC lg 2BA 1BA ca1pet. new paint Aeaay .... mut q(' ALT(~<..,.
(lJ.ftpeir) elec> tu delln-Berber erpta. d.slQner 3BR 2BA on extra lg I• Oflmlc: view exec home 10 move in S l800trno .... THE SEVILLE
quent pr~i.e now modllngs. 199ci1f MC & timple lot. Onty ateps lo t6tt 18a ere MP qr1s Immac ulate. garag1, 494-~57 or 497-3629 711-a.er 7... VILL A BA LBOA 18R 2BA 1•,BA "'gar b1t1fls ~. FOf Info ceff A/C. End location w/2 belctl. 4700 1/f lot nicely $4900/mo * 759--8281 yard. laundry $925/mo RENA( I Conao Par1t11I ocn vu fenced yard w pllto 1·7~505 ext H50A car attached crege, • ....-,....._. Pvt __._ 23~ NOl'M 675·8427 Lower 3 -ARCH BAY. 636 ~120 9-5PM C & _..._...,..... .....,..,".. U"RllTW/.. Gua rd gate tnn•s w O ...,
-
... N _..,1 1225.000. c.11 · w/pool & rec rm In.,... '"' mft IY O<lffn ""· pvt t>eeoh, 4 631·67:!1 /H 540-4200 w 2619 Senta Ana L $745 ,_, Liz at 831·12H or $42l900 Chuck & ui3BR 28A. lr plc, gar. 15 19--AW.,tm~St« BR.3 BA CepeCodnome \f\X'l \°'l'fl'j~\ 'II We'll QIW yoo the doWn In 646-5743 Jonea 931• 1288 or $3e00/mo 675-9708 S3.500tmo ~8-928& · uoo ISLE Elegant 1 bd THE v1CTOAIAN exd!Ofor•.,_.of~ ...._57'3 New 38R. 2'1't8A Twntts RE AL~• sundeck Sl,&00 2BR wlg1r new <MIC:Of
WINp. You mike tn. fMt .. tlC ocn vua, tteps to Mair BR tulle w/)ec tub. 2150 CdM JSR low.r S l.650 blttns lnQa Ve! w OtltlO
rnttlly pymll ' we .,,.,. WMS. 2 BA. , BA. herdwd wMI In cloMt. 2 car. patlO. Laguna ... NWPT TWNHM 38R. doek Wtr 00 6315-' 120 9-5PM a~ec. You receive floor, GI'· wtd. no I*• ftp. chooM yow dec:Of 48R 28a "°'* wtvtf/w, MUI al mil s 1.150 ee1 V1Ct011a 1 $73!> ....___..._ Muet 11.500/mo 972-2079 11850/mo &75-3680 2 38R 2'~9A AM amenities 1 tu--·-1111•-bft-IM, frptc. ,. ger. MW C~I. no pe11 CdM 28A """ to bet\ WESTFIELD APTS M¥e o.I credit. !Y! . M LUX. A condo 28Ahw batalde lg l BR. 38A O-dnr.,,... Bert>« c:rpt 11515,mo US-&606 11 950 J200 Off MOVE-INll ~~.h.M ~211cwy.b1Mt ln SELL Jee. WIO, 111*. bl! to w/,_.dee0t.Fn>lc.2cw Actults pr9f, no pets. · SEAVIEW Ou1ro-geted •SEVERAL LOCATIONS 1t07. 3 or 4 BA. 28A. beech/pvt key 113&0. 1er1ge. pool1te nn1s ltttO • utll. ~2-0138 CHARMING 38R, 2BA 3BR hOuM 12.750 28drm t' •Bii $756
FonNI dlnlnO rm. f~ UOOO MC. '31-1192 1300/mo. 540-3071 TowM<>uM. 28r 2ea. dbl Yard. 1pa $1475/mo CdM 38R. lab ocn & btly 28drm 2Ba S7t0
rm. IMng rm. country ... 1 ... -11 , ........ AC .......i Welle to IChOo6I Beat we. U ,250 391 w Wllaon 631-5563
111tchen w/breaklHt throuthdusified N=Y'7~1 b; E'Sldecuwhee. 2 BA. t t:J.' ~-no ·p;t.: '*Otlbortl0od•7e0-83&' p~~~R. ocn1rn1 ---------
nooll. Wood'*'*~ to cJ!Co¥.. 1120o BA. veutt c:.11 . wtd Nlup 11050/mo 770·1950 l'OO .. A.;, .. 9..-., ctodl. 1 BeO<oom ~ ,:::.."'':"':'.,., C1m111ryLall 2110.....,.in.oei1 ~v14~~~7ott 1900 ' h.m. 2aA'~ ~·i4.750 '°' AYOCade>
--....,-. ... • om i22s .., ~ '•~ ;~ i ·llde. lg 3bf. 2be rwtim. •••• rtr• ._ .... ... w.. =.,.... _..;;.; 114 09'. lftllf'IY .,, ... pool, MM.Tai.,,_,_ •~ LAmldlt. iiOo oeo. Lwe t~7m4"4 '"L '*'".!!:. .~ 111 .... ,.... .,.,,... __ _
//'.~· , I '.\ , I ~
16}4
I I" '
•Wllm• .... ..,
•BR small bec«yara. QM
wash~ Clrtef h<>Oli-upt
No pets 645-1631 Af\ 4 ·
OLlllTIAW
IJlllff
Tl'l•ee :lBAs 18A laundry
room clOM to bus &
Sl'IOPS Will acceot oc
Housing $6951mo
2257 & 2268 Maple
TSL MGMT 642·1&03
•Mesa Vwde 2BA 18A,
~ crpts Reoon. kl1dl
& ba Gar •I MW 000..
$735 NO PETS 640·249S
•Clean. qu .. t & speciOul
JBA 2BA. 2 car 08111Q9.
encl patio storege I 1095
NO PHS 640-2495
14211•~ 1 pe<son non-lmkr At
968A W 17th 548-0358
WESTBAY APTS
$200 OFF MOVE-IN!
These attr1ctlYe ~II fM.
IUll pool, spa, l)fivale
patios ()< decks, oar• or c..irport m 1 ~ltully
landscaped seltfng.
So• ry no peta
1 Bedroom 5655
2~rm 2Ba twMal '"5
825 <Anter St M 2· 1•24
12111"1
• ALA MOANA APTS '* 1 & 28A, 18A, O/W.
beautlful pool 8IM, lllrp
rec room & Mtundry rOQfft,
cioM to lhope I buMa
$585-$67Stmo
>30 w Wlleon
1'1l.-J
722·90 t2 or M 2-tl03
Sorry ""° Peta. ----
v LARGE 18A 1515/MO
Pool. tndfy rm, «*1*1.
•t~. ~. "° ...... $350 dep.142-1401 llft I
•WHIR Low Mo..,...ln .........
twnNe, ~ 1'49A, " patio , encl ,., .... 1190/mo U S.,.,. ..
.!
NO
EXPERIENCE
REQUIRED
UPTO $8 /HR
Our Orange ottice is now
preparing ror ns b•goest
year ever We are now ac-
cep11ng apphcauons ror
entry level pos1honS in
srupplng, receiving. ln-
ven1ory control. stoc;k.
sales1adver11s1ng All ...,1th
managem11111 p01en1ia1 II
you are a q1 .. m::h learner, &
li•ed 01 beong turned
away oecause 01 lack ot
e,.perience. call our Pf!•· N-6ml<1 101 new South 1 .. ..,,.... .... .,.,,--..,.,..,,, Customm service. 1yp1ng. sonl'\el dept 939-1233
To manage RN scl'ledullng
In otfice, Monday-Friday
(luH-Umel
MIUMllUt
IM/llUlllMU
GUii Parl-l•me . previous 81l ·
perlence required. medi-
cal bUllog el(p. prelerrea. _ ....
flUllDlDI
Pa•l-Tlme. previous •--
peoence prelefrl!CI but
wt!! train .
Plll&TI llll lllls,.
LYlh,Olli'
Needed !or nome care and
nosp1ta1 rehel. all sn111s
Call Per'sonnel !7 14)
8S1 ·2772 Our sup-
portive supervisory staff
aw1'11ls y0<.1• call EOE
HIRE
throu~h C'lassified
Coast Plaia Condo Emp!oXTnf'nt 5530 l1!1nq, telepnones. busy====== s4ooi mo .. s250 deposit I"""'""-."'"--.---• othce Fo1 appou1tmen1. ir----------1,,_...,....,....,....,....,....,....,. •&SSE•ILY• 556-4990 Sue Ul•I incl Pool & S.pl lusints.s Gro winq Hunt•nqton --
tMlt. Beach 2640
ATnEIUCllll
2BA 18 A , steps lo beach
J7951mo. Call Cnuck at
631-1266 or 646-57•3
ofLUXE ir1·leve1 3BA
2"1BA, 2 l/p, Sl<yl1Te, wld
d'ar, 2•00sl n• Hurir Hrbf
l,1525. 2131860·9513
LARGE lBR 415 19th SI
apt 8 . $640/mo No pets
Call (7t4) 597.7716 /Wrk
).7 t41598-29871Hm
* 1 to 4 Bed1ooms
•untu•nosnea * Ctos.e io be•cri I •Comm'I Spece A~a•I
•Free l1st·CALL TODAY'
YILU REllTILS I
675-4912
WlllllHm
C1ose to everything Av11! Beach onou,trial ons!ru GENERAL Pt1vate post ol-
l t20/9Q Call 432· 1631 Oeportunltl~s 2904 ment manuracturon~ rice near QC A11por1 FIT
NwPI Ben b•and new CASH FLOW compan~ needs hart:!-& PI T. will 11a•n S61Hr.
s1yt1sn custom Deacti nse S&rvlCfl Hogh Trattic retail workon9 1nO•v•Oual 10 do 756·6808
wfview (leeks & all •ccounls with an e.u::1t1ng screen printing, IS· lll'l lfFICl /llOIPT amen•!H!S 723·5005 new auto atlermarket sembly. packag1no &
"lwpt Bch steps to bCn sn•
nice 38A 28A, p1ol M/F
n/smk• Avl 1mmea! $4!>0
• aeo 722·8339
procfucr NO SELLING shopping work At:lvance-
AEOUIAED -Counl ment & pay •nc1eases woll
money -Srarr parl-t1me be available 10 !he r•gnt
or lull-11me Ea1n $3.000 petson. 84 1-366()
per montn on 10 hours pet
week Dynamic Unique
mercnano1s1ng concept
1na1 gene1ares CASH ---
ALL CASH lnves1ment ol
S t2.900 required Call
Mr Catl'!IOn at
1·800-842· 1022 or eve-
!'llngs and weekends call
1-800-626·2724
WUTlll! m111111m Malure p•oless1ona1 m11e S300-S700 e11Ch mac:n1ne
or htma\e n1smkr 10 sht per week P11me to-
28R home w fsunny c•tlons too•/, return of
PahO 2 Biks ID be8C'1 in •nves1men1 GUARAN·
Co1on1 del Mai TEED 1-800·749-8989
hll1Nk2/l/H. ~=====, a.ua 1 .. + ~ ...... 'i"rwnnnrnt
111••n1 ........ w~~~,...!.:!2! l2S·I011 ENJOY t4-15% relurn on
lllUll DllLllll'$
llPTITlll
Now htnng FT IPT pOS·
1t1ons 2• 1-7040, ask for
Ann So Coast Plaia
For sm buS1!'less ottice
E~p w /bOOkkeep1ng
rielplul Must De w1lhng to
learn Hun11ngton Ben
., •• 8<12-2060
'""''" 59.961 -S76.590
:o>0.000 irnmedtate open-
ings for appllc•lion c•ll
1 -708-429-6505 eill J50A
We offer: vacation and holiday
pay plus bonuses.
c.u 979-2900
l.tf"V Beach 2648
COMMANDING VIEW of
coast Lu:turlous Beacl'I
:..;rou street PV1 deck
Wall-wall glau La1ge
!Mng rm Formal dining
1m. No pets. 1Bt:ltm S985 "'°""' deposit 49•-2265
S110Qlmoyeer!y 2Br 18a.i..---,-,,---.=
gar No pets 5<18-5682 _ G.1taq!! tot RMI: 2740
West Newp0r1, 2. 3 & •BR 1111111 WU'fll
Trust Deeds Sl0.000 to SI .000.000 Call Denison
Assoc 673-7311 NOW•
FINISH cAfiPENTER FOR ... MITH
HtFIE f r door•. bays, Doors & Locks Installed Apts from S tOOOtmo !For sportsc;u or: Lido
&4 2-3850 Bkr Island Call 675-7769
TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ACllM>SI ·--' """" 10 Thunder unit
1<1 Eflldaru
15 Tpllzl
16 H_...,, city
17 ·•--OMOI .. .. .....,.
19 v..vy
20 Tltme of~ 21 .,.... ()lit ,,_, .. _
,. """'-27 Topp.
26 u-.d per-an
)1 ...... ,._,
"' Hlrsn ,_ ,.,_
31 '""" ,. ._,,., ,..., .... .. .._
41 ... 9CM'Ctl
42...._.-1 "4-·-.. .__ .. ___ ...... _ .. -.. .._ .. _ .. __
"0.-.
I 3
~ 1<!9'1
59 ,.,.. .. , ID ,_ ..
80 fotnallcat
'"'"" 81 "-"bte
82 Glunony
63 LONjjt fllfl
DOWN
, Cta.r .. ,,__
J Dragon-.......
5 Awti:-done
8 AOdltlonMy
7 Educaf0t ---8 OeYotee: ....
(I 'tourig bird
10 Salklr•" """
" """' 12AI..,_
13 w .. body
21~n~ .•. g. ,.......,. -,._ ..
'""'-21""""""" MSS. 30AipllnlMOI .. -..
32 Awry
3'T.-..
3" JOelle
37£.-~
gralltudl to
3a~Nrlhip
40 Cob or pan
4 181g~ ., __
44 81111ci.ct
48 PrOfufMr'lnol 47 T~olf
.. """" 4t Rae. ~,.
50 Ant Pllll 199'
5 1 £tt'lnlc dance
52 l/enh.ft .....
11 r..-. po1rtt
11 12 13
Money To Loan 2914
•Pln&Tll-FUNos lor Eqully a LIM
Loans S 100.000 plvs
(714) 760-8792
•W1DO~S SSS 4 l Os•
S 10,000 up No c•ed1I V'
No penally Call Denison
Assoc. 673-731 I NOW•
OIEllT UlllS
I/Isa & Mastercard
Qu•rantee<I. Bad creo11.
bankruptcy. OK Fo1
appltc ation call
1-708-429-6505 e111 C50A
\~El
$2.44 per day
That's ALL yO\l pay fa<
~ tines. 30 day rrun1mum
In tn.e
SERVICE
DIRECTORY
For more tnlormalion
C ALL TOOAY!'
ASIC FOR LOIS
Yoo•
Set'Y!Ce' 01rec1ory
Represen1111ve
142-4JZ1
bt.110
mold1ng1/cab1ne1s 1nsU. Lane. 661-49 13
CUSl ftlg lits 8ot116"2·<1519
fl-IWIKmr
1 Cat11ne-ts·waill unlls-doors
w1nOows-decks LIC/tlond
20 yrs e~p 43•-4924 '------IWll,lll.IC2-1lll t Small Remodel & Aodns
8 a1nrmt·wa1d1obe-doors
30 y1s O.C Oualll)' WOl'k .
'l. Up-
grade ~ces. Pnone
Ja.cks. Cua Blanca fans
Am AddlRemd\ 55<1-2610
Uwt1TIS20
26 yr1 Lk:/Bnd Ou1!i1y
Fair 1atn (714) 74•-0123
LHULI VI
Garage/Yd Cll"luPS-lt ...
.... Ml-1112
O uMP AuNs:Ju~ -
Furniture. l1111h . tree
branches. appliances
Cal! Mille 7 dys 6<16-139 1
~ lndiv S. Prop. Part Corp ~ C ALLJACK556-29 1t
Repair. Redwood/Cfldar
POii replace. C.M ./N B
Jim Wny11, 6•'l-720tl
•CUSTOM BUil T. Decks.
P•1lo Cavett Gazebos
F~I. Repair•. Quality
work. Rfll1. Lou 842·7009
YU PllPAUTlll
Dedicated to your T111
Servings 25°1t Fee Break
lo 1s1 Time c11en1. Sa!'I
Jv a" Ananclat. <C!Ml· 1 ISJ
MANLEY GORDON
lnsll'ance Brokers
CSR -COMMERCIAL
Strong general ablllty, able to
control multi-line, multi-<::<>m-
pany commercial desk. Delail
minded, can rate on
Gair/Compare Data Systems,
computer literate, Insurance
ed, sell-starter all +'s for this
position.
CSR -SPECIALIST
To handle Directors & Of-
ficers, Bankers Blanket
Bonds, Professional Errors &
Omissions. Will provide ad-
ditional training 10 well quali-
fied candidate.
CLERICAL -CLAIMS
Bright junior who learns quick·
ly. Computer & claims ex-
posure + 's. Must type 40wpm,
be able 10 follow procedures &
guidelines in1elligently.
All compensation plans in-
clude medical benefits. paid
parking, paid education & 12
flex days. Our growing Cen-
tury City office offers an excit-
ing opportunity for personal
growth. Call Mr. Paul (213)
20l-0222.
•A-1
118-1111
IUAll I DPlllT
U..lllT·11U42
E:tce11en1 qu1hty 11 •eas
ptlCM Re1'5 lied full
Wirf Greg 642-07 44
-LOllPUITIM
Sl2/Hr • MATERIALS
Aelarence1 675-4006
FUIPAllTill
lnt.IE•I. Oual work tnso
Reis Free e11 897·5896
llWI f&iiTill let.1111.
Thorough prep, reas rates
Jlm 6SO·K.IWI 650-5•9<1
RAINBOw Cucle M11nt
Painting tnr E•1 HouM'l &
Apt Qual joP Free 1'51
Sl llC•569897 636-1758
vr•rumu
& W1npaper1n9. Ova1lty
work. FrM Eat. 969-8349
WA'lll'IP-1n11e.11 15
Llc.4'1lle0.
-RllFLW1
Hogn Ouahty -Reas. Rates
Roof Rep111s & Reroolrng
Commercial/RM•denha!
Lie 573688 722-7479
OCEAN VtEW ROOFING
LOCI! Rel61ences
PROF s.nce ·73 Shingles
B1oken? Mls1tng' Fial
•OOl leakl FrM Ell . Lted
l ow Ra1n1 723-5703 Gii
KIT .....
rour ftret IOb.
,_tint Cllf,
,ourtlretl*M
ot1111tled'•
.. 'S
SHITSIRI
m111. lll.l1
P1T F1sh 1on !Siano
... omens Doul+Qu e
6'1•· 1!23
IHUTUY
Q•IOh !C 011 ·
Sf0nladvert•S!fl9 S!ud•O on
l'iunlir>glon Beac:ri Ca ll
Ruuell at 71 •-891-9•17
t•ed1111t1 dresse r
ite<eo Hammona elf!C
0191n. elt 63 1.:;>295
BUY FACTORY DIRECT
ANO SAVE"'
STARTING A NEW BUSIJISS??
, .......... ~81,,,.
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Plait ll)TIC(
ttOTICI TO
COlfl'MCTOlll
CAL.L.9te NMI ...
"OENCV NEWP0 "1'
CR£9T HOMEOWN£AI Al-
SOCIATIO"I
BIO OEADL•NE 31 .iAHU-
illRY \MCI
NOTICE. 1S HEfllEaV
G l'o'Elll THAT THE .t.80\IE
"""~EO AGENCY II AC-
CEPT1NG BIOS FOR PAINT·
1NG fOR THE YEAA lllO.
SPECIFICATtO ... S AMO
.-,li CONTRACT AOREI·
ME ... TS ARE Al/All.Aki AT
THE NEWPO RT Cit1;(8T
"°UEOWNEl'IS .t.ssoet.\·
TION OfflCE
ONLY LICENll!O, IN·
SUAEO CALIFOAHIA COM-Ttll.\CTOAI NEED APP\.'t'
CONTRACTOAS ~
TO 810 SH ALL SftrilD A.
COP'/' OF CAllFOll!NIA
CONTAACTOAI LICl(Nel AN O PA OO F 0,
WOAKERS'S COMPQIAA-
t 10N ANO Ll.\.lllTV
fU .000.000 400~Tll
INIUAANCE WOM. A -PAClll;[T WILL K l&ri',
P\.EAH CONTACT ANO
SEND ~LL COUPl M> l"ACIC.ET TO .
CN&T ..... SOOIATIOH. IOI IN,......,
NIWPOill;T llACH, 0A
tltt:t , 1'lll,HO•t
111-otlO . ........... Or-.~ 09lty "llol ..__, , ....
IJ. ttt0 -
l
. .. .
"Time to get into your bedjamas."
by Brad Anderson
H5
"Keep your eye on his tail. When it starts to
wag. my dad is in sight."
1'ANCY
ARLO AND JA1'1S
TUllBLEWESD8
DllABllLE
..
DE1'1'08 THE MENACE
b~ Hank Ketcham
1111111111\\ .
11
••• ANO l °TH INK PEOPLE WOULU LIKE ~W
BETTER IF IT CJW..E IN DIFFERENT FLAVOR$.'
by Jerry Scott
by Jimmy Johnson
by Tom K. Ryan
by Kevin Fagan
Mae COMES TME
SCMOOl. 905 NOW ..
-. --
GARFIELD
f VE Ai'IMfE.V E"i'EMLL!>
ON MY...£'i'E.llP!> ...
'
FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE
SHOE
JUDGE PARKER
~"IVING Ai SPeNC!!R ,..Af'tMS.
IT'S N ICE TO MEET YOU, KIKI ' PALMER
KIKI MUI.. DOON 11/Tl'TTn---...,,...---.. _ __,i:::i. IS GPteeTeo ,..__ __
WARMLY e v
AeeEv SPENCER '
FUNKY WINKERBEAN
DOONESBURY by Garry Trudeau
~ I-IS
by Jim Davis
AMP WM£N l WA!> THREE.. I
A£MEM9E.R MOM COMtN6 OOT TO
1H£ CHICKfH COO, a.wtNO, •JOMM~JONNY. JO , WMEAE
HAVE. ... ~
by Lynn Johnston
by Jeff MacNelly
by Harold Le Doux
by Tom Batiuk