HomeMy WebLinkAbout1992-05-06 - Orange Coast Pilot.JO
THE NEWPORT BEACH •
l.IWyeps 111'1
111111 lllV8 In
81111111 b>lat
~Prosecution c~es
testimony, documents;
defense argues that
evidence is inconclusive.
By lrts Yotof
MWlllr
SANTA ANA -Testimony
that Dr. Thomas Gionis once an·
grily told a friend be could hire
someone to hurt ex·wif e Aissa
Wayne is among-the solid evi·
dence the orthopedic surgeon
mastemtinded a 1988 attack on
Wayne and her then-boyfriend, a
prosecutor asserted Tuesday.
In his closjng arguments after
two wctk.s of courtroom prcscnta·
don, Deputy District Attorney Jef·
f rcy Robinson also cited other evi·
dence, including telephone
records and checks, which he said
clearly linked Gionis to the as-
sault.
Robinson painted Gionis, 38, as
a violently vengeful man and his
ex-wife, actor John Wayne's
daughter, as a "decent human
being'' who was victimized yet
continued a friendship with her
ex-husband for the sake of their
child.
But defense attorney Broce
Culler insisted the circumstantial
evidence failed to prove Gionis
was behind the Oct. 3 beatings of
Wayne and Newport Beach fman·
cier Roger Luby.
His voice rising and falli ng in
dramatic fashion, Cutler argued .
that no proof bad been presented
about the content of the phone
conversations between Gionis and
bis prf\tate investigator, Oded
Daniel Gal, and that Robinson
hadn't even called the most telling
witnesses ...L Gal and the rwo men
who actually earned out t.bc as-
sault.
Serving the Orange Coast since 1907
Favorite cookiet sold at
Mn. fields Coolciet in South Coast Plaal:
1) chocolate chip, sem~ without nuts
2) chocolate chip, milk chocolate without nuts
3) white chunk with macadamla nuts
·-Sourer. J..e 01MA1
26 cents
Corona del Mar
water line work
spews discord
~ Merchants, city officials ·clash with Laguna
Beach Water District over timing of construction .
By Tony Cox
8usnss Edla
CORONA DEL MAR -
East Coast Highway merchants
were never thnUed with the
idea of sewer and water-line
construction in the area. but
they could at least take solace
in the fact tha1 public officials
and contrac\ors had coordi-
nated the projects to minimize
traffic, noise and parking .woes.
With a recent departure
frop:i that spirit of cooperation,
local merchaoLS are fuming.
and city off lcials arc looking for
ways to enforce an agreement
that called for the water-line
contractor to wprk only at
night.
While the Orange County
Sanitation District, wllich is
doing its sewer work during the
day, has been applauded by
merchants and city officials, the
Laguna Beach Water Distnct
and its contractors aren't as
popular in Corona del Mar.
told what to do, so they're say-
ing 'Go to hell.' "
ln spite of the city agree-
ment, the Water District grant-
ed its general contractor's re-
quest to do some work in the
business district during the day. ,
The contractor, Calfon Con-
struction, 1s worlung during the
day to install drainage-and-
filling devices at five sites in
the business district, and the
company may do day work on
other pans of the project, m·
eluding a major line-connecting
job near Femleaf Avenue and
~road repaving.
Newport Beach officials and
the Corona del Mar Chamber
of Commerce had hoped that
the agreement -which called
for the sewer and water-line
prOJCClS to OOth be completed
by July -would minimize the
impact of construction on busi·
ncsses in the area, wtuch al·
ready had a recession to deal
with.
"He was going to disproYC those
phone calls had a legitimate pur-
pose to them/' Cutler told the
jwy. ..Whal evidence did be put
See GiONIS/111* ,_ J~nne Ruana wu a swirl of red T~ af-
ternoon during the Cinco de Mayo festivities
~~Nat
at the Naguche Sculpture Gardens. The
event wu presented by South Coast Plaza.
"The Water District, their
engineering contractor and
their gencraJ contractor have
been totally uncooperative,"
said Newport Beach Mayor
Phil Sansone. "It's just disgust·
ing. You've got a poor oontrac·
tor with poor supervision.
"They're not used to being
Even before Calton deviated
from the agreement, many mer-
chants in the uq had been
suffering 40 percent to SO per·
cent revenue declines from nor-mar levels. The water-line work
during the day exacerbated an
already bad ituation, mer-
See HIGHW~Y/M
~ Seven-year-old son believed affable
bird protected him from •monsters.'.
8y loMrr'I 8ashedl
SWI Wltlr
R ict Potter aaid it really ru.ftled bis
feathen when be returned home from a
short vacation in Sonora to faod that
someone bad stolen his taltin& yeUOft' nape
parrot named Fred.
Never mind that Fred is worth nearly Sl,000.
Potter said what be and rus family will miss
most is their feathered friend's familiar beak
around their Capella Court home.
"I think we're all going through post
traumatic stress," Potter said. "J find myself
wa.ndcrina outside and looti.na up at the trees
~o though I know he's not there. But one of
the rant parts ol the grieving process is denial."
Potter said bis 7-)af-old son, Zen. was
ck>lat to S-year-old Fred since the bird has .
always slept on a boobhell overlooking the
boy's bed. "My wife told him when be wu a
baby that Fred eats monsten," Potter ~ined.
.. So f'lf'/ 10G has never been afraid of the dark."
ln addition to being Zen's fly-by-night pard.
Potter said. Fred wu alto the t>Qy'a "talk.ins ~
album."
'"He lea.med to mitnic ~ry noise my IOn IDlde
while be WU IJ'OWiaa up/' POttcr Mid. ·~n tf'C
way he talb ii an imitation ol how my ton U9Cd to
•
Miiot~,..
ColtA Meu reaideat lick Potter hun1 seen a
trace Of hit WW. pwroe. Fred, since late April.
talk when ho wu a baby.''
E\ICn now, when Potter's new 9-month-old baby
woaAd start ayina, Fred would join in with 1 wail
identical to the one Zen U9ed to let out When be
wu a dtild. "And I swear it sounds human,"
Potter aa.ld.
So human, that Potter often mistook F~d for
SM PARROT,._,_
Panel dumps Ferguson condom bill
• AIDS groups say a ban on distribution al schools would hurt vulnerable teens.
By Anna Cekola
Stall Wltlr
NEWPORT BEAOl -A bill
proposed by Assemblyman Gil
Fergllson (R-Newpon Beach)
that would have limited the dis-
tnl>ution ol free condoms to stu-
dents at public schools failed to
clear an important legislative
bearing Tuesday.
Despite last-minute compro-
mises. the Assembly Public Safe-
ty Committee deadlocked 3-3 on
the bill, which critics say would
have interfered with AIDS pre·
ventioo and education.
Ferguaon, who opposes "radi·
cal bomoscxual organizations"
handing out free QOOdoms and
'lrs ~to be
tough, but It's a
kind of a bUI that
crosses potttlcal
lines If we can get
them to feel brave
enough tO do that.
-a111r•• ~ ..... ,. ... ill tm 1 dwa
that crosse political lines if we
can get them to feel brave
enough to do that," be said.
The controversial proposal
would have prohibited the free
distnbution of condoms to mi-
nors on or within l,000 feet of
any public school m session.
School di tricts would have been
given the option of adopting the
law. Also, the bill would not
have prohibited the dJStribution or condoms in sex education
classes.
Ferguson said the legislation is
needed to prevent groups like
Act Up, the AJDS Coalition to
Unleash Power, Crom promotina
sexual prorruscu1ty and lulUna
information brochures to students, ~aid his last
hope will be to try and force a vote on the biU by
the entire Assembly.
children into a .. false sense or scamty."
"lt'a goinJ to be tough, but it's a kind of a bill
But the three Ba)' Area Democrats voting
against the bill apparently did not believe any liln·
See BILIAI'* ,_
Newpo family
reaches out to
help mend lives
of riot victims
•
By now, most are familiar
with the heroic efforts of
Newport 8 ach and Costa ~'\Csa
police and firefighters lending ·
their rvices to tM riot-tom ·
area of Los An~ And now,
locals are wor(ing side t>y si<fe
wtlh L.A. residents to clean up
INllt ~
after the dcvasuuon
Today, meet a Newport
Bea h famll ~ho ts organ\zin
a food dnve to further i in
the efiorb so they too ~n do
the r part 1n helping our
neighbots to the north. * tory, JNse Al.
Cl ~SSll 11 n All llf I Hf OA'
•
Locals Only
Pilot People
•m~----------~
A 13-year Newport Beach resident who is an accomplished au-
thor, college instructor and a former film producer-director. Muir,
59, was recently named the 1992 winner of the Highest Effort in
Communications award presented by national fraternity Sigma
Alpha Epsilon. PAGE APIJ -sa&N--· __________ ___._
Muir has written several suspense novels, including "Tides of
War," "Red Star Run" and "The Midnight Admirals," and just
completed a new thriller called "Night of the Fireflies," aboul a
hijacking on the Orient Express, and a comedy screenplay he de-
scribed as "in the Gene Wilder-Woody Allen" genre.
FlllTrlMl.----------
MUlr sold his first book, "American Reich." in 1982, less than
two years after finish.mg creative writing courses at UCJ and Or-
ange Coast College, where he received an Outstanding Writer
Award in 1980.
IECOlll CAllBl---------
Before he became a successful novelist, Muir spent many years
in corporate public relations and was a television news director
and producer-director with PBS, Wolper Productions, Metromedia
and the acclaimed "Undersea World of Jacques Cousteau."
JAaC m: All TMID--------
"I've kind of been a jack of all trades. 1 started off as a n~
recl cameraman and news s tringer for a Seattle television station.
I've "always been active in ~ting ... howcver, I wasn't really pre-
pared to write novels.
"I think I'm a better writer now than when I was 30."
lllAllNG H KNOWLBJll-------
Muir, who became a Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity brQthcr in
1952 at the University of Puget Sound, got his bachelor's degree
from the University of Washington. Six years ago, he went back to
UCLA for his master's degree.
In between wming, he teaches at Irvine Valley College, Santa
Monica College and IS a faculty consultant with the UCLA Ex-
tension Writers' Program.
Police log
Costa Mesa
!>omconc stoic more than $120
wonh or meal from the frcettr or a
home in the 600 block or Capual
Coun fhe burglar apparently used
buckets that were in the resident's
garage 10 haul away hamburger meat.
spare ribs. steak, pork c.hops, bacon.
s.ausage and ham. • A pregnant woman who managed
to yank her purse l'WIY from a
would-be 1tuef while _.ge111ng mto her
car at .i 7-11 LO the 2WO blOck of Pia·
cen11a Avenue last Wedn~y1 ended
up m the hospital with aooominal
~ms 1lic woman. who JS saen months
pregnant, told police she wu fCt\lm-
mg 10 her car after using the pay
phone When a man ran up from be-
lund her and grabbed her purse.
The woman refused to let go
though. and began to scream and
struggle. forcing Lhe tlucf to nee. She
!hen drove to Western Medical Cen-
ter
THE '\ EWPORT B£Al1i • can'A MESA
DailJPllL
VOL.88,NO: 108
,_..,_
~~
~~~
.._, L.-.e w. ~,,,.....
-Br Ir& Yokol
The mug.er qs described u Lati-no, with ba<5 facial acne and a 1atoo
1n the thumb web of bis right hand.
Newport Beach
A bomb threat 10 Harbor Munici-
pal Coun at 4601 Jamboree BIYd. was made at I p.m. Monday from a
Huntington Beach telefhone booth
by a man who called 9--1. The man
said, "I'm going to get CYCn. I placed
a bomb at the oounhouso oo /ambc>-
rec," and then huna up.
No device WU found durin& a ~
lice aearch of the counbouse, whJeh
wu oot evacuated. • A purse c:ootaining a $3,000 dia-
mond and sapphire br¥elet a.od a
$400 Fendi wallet wu ltolen from a ~year-old Anaheim Hills woman
who left her &houldcr bq oo a res-
taurant counter while ahe was oo the
dance Ooor S1tnda_y n.laht at Parter'&
Seafood OriU at 309 Pilm St.
She later round the near-empcy
pune oo a balcony at the restaurant
How to reach us. at
The Pilot
OIOl&.tion
Or.t"P County 6-42-433)
AcMtt1t!ft1
0 'fled 642·5678
Oisp11y 642-4321
Editorial
News 540-1224
Spons 642 4330
News,~ fu 646·41 70
M8'n Offtct
Busineu Office 642-4321 •
8usme• (u 6)1·5902
..... art~ .... Dllr Piiot -----------------------------------------------------
Briefly
F•llJ 1111'11 11111 .._ r. l'llt 11cai111
NEWPORT BEACH -ln an
effort to counter feelings of
belplesmess iti the wake of the Los
Aqeles riots, a Newport Beach
family bu sparked a wideapread
food drive for victims of the
devutatina violence.
"We u a family were talking
about what we could do," said Lisa
Oayton. whose husband,
Weatherford, is bishop of the .
Newport Beach Oturdl of Jesus
Olrist of Latter-day Saints. "It has
been bud lo help (our children)
understand why this happened. This '
is mainly to help, them feel we're
not so helpless.'
On Mooday night. several
Oayton's children took off on their
Rollerblades, banding out 200 fliers
about the food drive throughout
their neighborhood.
"Within a half-hour. we had groc-
eries on our doorstep," Oayton said.
--------
Newport-Harbor High SchOQl,
Ensign, Mariners, Kaiser and·
Newport Heights sclJools are also
collecting food as part of the drive.
Through the efforts of Katie Obe&I, ~ Male·
enzie Glover, Billy Oayton, Eliz.a6eth Clayton
Mac~ ...
and M.E. Oayton, food and other donations
are being gathered to be sent to Los Angeles.
On Saturday. Oayton said, a
church group will pick up the food donations
and head to Los Angeles, where volunteers
will help with the clean-up. The food will be
distributed to the Salvation Anny and the
First AME Olurch in South-Central LA.
Those who'd like to help in the drive, can
drop off non-perishable food items at 1921
Windward Lane in Newport Beach.
Several other local groups arc also collect-
ing donations for those aff cctcd by the riots:
•American Red Croaa. Accepting money
and volunteers. PO Box 11364. Santa Ana
92711. 835-5381.
•Marla~ Clinarda. Accepting money.
non-perishable food and volunteers for
clean-up. 1000 Bison Ave., Newport Beach
926<JO. 640-6010.
• Oraaae Coant)' Community Demopment
CoudL Accepting perishable and
non-perishable food, diapers and personal
hygiene items. 1695 W. MacArthur Blvd.,
C.OSta Mesa. 92626. 540-9293.
• Salvadoa Army. Accepting clothes,
non-perishable food, blankets, towels and
furniture. Drop-off centers, including one at
2126 Harbor Blvd. in Costa Mesa, are open
until 5:30 p.m. Trucks will pick up large
items until 4:30 p.m . Call 758-0414. _,,, ...... Qlrol•
DCC -.. 11., 1111 .... ,t
Ir• -fl••1n11
COST A MESA -Handling hearts, livers,
lungs and brains is often a messy. malodorous
task for students of human anatomy at ·
Orange Coast College -but no more.
A $56,800 grant from the George Hoag
FamJly Foundation will fu'nd what may be the
first community college plastination lab in the
country, a lab where anatomical organs will
be prepared for examination by students
without the use of the noxio us and toxic
formaldehyde.
"You can take these specimens to grade
schools, to high schools, to senior citizen
centers and do education," said Ann Harmer,
an OCC associate prof cssor of biology who
will be director of the new lab. "Ours is the
only community college that will have an
operative plastination lab•that I know."
The plastination process replaces the water
and fat with a plastic polymer. permanently
preserving the specimens. ''They arc flexi'blc.
dry. odorless and easy to handle," Harmer
said. "This is a teaching tool.''
Not even UCI has a plastination lab,
according to Hanner, who said Hoag
Hospital plans to use the lab in conjunction
with community education programs and the
instruction of new physicians in residency.
The college may need to raise an
7sG-. ... 1
Mt,.-.M ..,,...u ..........
12111,.-. ... ......... >:••,... J.I ,,.,...i.,
additional $25,000 before opco.ing the lab
next fall, according to Harmer. The lab will
be used by students in classes nnglng from
human anatomy and physiology to marine
science and zoology.
COSTA MESA -Muggy conditions that
caused scattered sprinkles along the Orange
Coast Tuesday arc expected to continue
today, weather officials said. although it
should be suMy and wann again by the
weekend.
Forecasters with the National Weather
Service said there was a remote chance of
continued sprinkles and thundcrshowen this
afternoon. Highs arc expected to reach the
mid 70s with light winds_of about 10 mph.
By Thursday, the skies arc cxpcctcd to
clear, with temperatures wanning up to the
mid 80s. Afternoon winds are also expected
to pick up to about 18 mph. Moming low
clouds and fog will likely continue through
the week, forecasters said.
CORONA DEL MAR -Funeral services
were held at St. Michael and All Angels •
Episcopal Church for Catie Shaw Peck, an
artist, illustrator, businesswoman and 42-year
Newport Beach resident.
Mrs. Peck, who
produced architectural
models and renderings tor
such developments as
Newport Shores and Big
Canyon, died April 20 at
Newport Convalescent
Center. She was 74.
Born Catherine Dexter Peck
on the family farm in Wisconsin on April 22,
1917. Mrs. Peck earned her bachelor's
degree from the OtiCago Art Institute,
specializing in watercolor. In 1939. she
married fellow graduate Dick Shaw, a
cartoonist and writer who later helped
develop the character of the near-sighted
''Mr. Map."
The couple moved to California to work at
Walt Disney Studios in Burbank and during
World Wu 11. Mn. Pc4 worked at
Lock.heed Aircraft as a technical illustrator
for the parts catalog and production of P-38s.
The couple moved to Balboa Island in
1950, and Mrs. Peck worked on
semi-animated cartoons for the early
television program, "Tele-A-Comics." She
studied watercolor with Rex Brant and Joan
Irving and displayed her work locally.
She divorced in 1957. married Edward
Peck in 1961 and moved to Corona dcl Mar.
After taking architecture clas.scs at Orange
Coast College, she entered a business
partnership with Margo Mack, making
models for real estate developments such as
Newport Shores and a ~home model for
the Mission Viejo Company.
In 1970, brother-in-law Richard Peck
became Mrs. Peck's partner. The firm
changed its name to Peck's Builders Art,
moved to Irvine and concentrated on
rcndcrinp. The finn collaborated with the
Frank Uoyd Wright School of Architecture
on an experimental home in Arizona and
achieved national prominence, nted one of
the top five firms 10 the field.
Mrs. Peck retired in 1980 and returned to
bcr art, which he displayed in various locaJ
galleries. She held a one-person show at the
South Coast GalJcry in 1983 and just last
year won yet another first place at the Costa •
Mesa Gallery.
She is survived by sons Richard, John and
Edward; dau&hten Patricia and C&sey; and
11 grandchildren. The family requests dona-
tions be made to the Sea and Sage Audubon
Society, P.O. Box 25, Santa Ana, 92702.
..... ... MICbclllllif 78,
CO-fmlllld Blhll JICld elm
CORONA DEL MAR' -Alcxnndcr ·
Maclachlan, co-founder of the Bahia
Corinthian Yacht Club• diCd recently at the
Veterans Hospital io SCattle, Wash, hi
family announced. He was 78.
Mr. Maclachlan was born Nov. 14, 1913,
in Ccveland, Ohio, and served in the U.S.
Coast Guard during World War II as a
lieutenant. He attended UCLA, where he
majored in geopbysi~. and was a former
commodore and co-founder of the Bahia
Corinthian Yacht Oub on Bayside Drive in
Corona dcl Mar. He· moved to Bellevue,
Wash .• in 1m and was a real estate ngen1
for Prudential Northwest Realty.
A "private service was held in Port
Townsend, Wash. ·
Survivon are his wife Patricia; sons
Douglu MacLacblan of Bothell and James
Macl..achlan of Cedar Pines, Calif.; daughter
Anne Maclachlan of Redmond~ Wash.; and
grandchildren Shawn MacLachlan of
Newport Beach, Trevor Macl..achlan of
Redmond and Heathe r M clachlan of
Huntington Beach<:'
-·By IM Dally PIJol
Wednesday, May 8, 18112 Q
Only 350 more shopping days until Design House. '93
0 K. back to work. In the last two
columns I atraycd widely from the
normal beat.
I .. O¥CmXDC by lbe eventl in Loe
Aqdea lut week and
for that I make no
apology.
aideliaht stuff on the Newport to
Emenada sailboat race. Instead, 1 related
a phone comenation 1 had with an old
friend, an Africa1i..~.merican, who lives in
one of the devastated oeigbtic>rhoods.
Had l written about the Design House,
I would have noted that you had only
three days left to see it. Now you have
about 3SO until the next one opens and
you can "adapt" some nifty decorating
ideas. At the same time you will help the
Philharmonic Society continue its musical
outreach progJams for school children
throughout Orange C.OUnty.
There wu on-again, off-apin
electricity, no beat, no runrun& water and
no indoor plumbin& ("Well; you go back
out the front door, cross the entry plaza
to the street, ao up the bill a tad, and
you'll fmd some very nice outhouses").
double trailers full of dirt roared up the
steep, narrow road that runs right by the
$3.9 million Design House.
Docents counted the trips -165 of
them all told.
Inside the house, some .00 visitors a
day toured the lavish mansion, tJying to
ignore the roar of the engmes and the
rattle of the windows. The racket
completely overwhelmed the lectures that
were part of the admission package.
T he judging was to select the best
letter from betrothed oouplel telling
why they would ltke to be married on the
Global Wheel ride at the fair this
summer.
Frankly, I cannot imagine why anybody
would want to be married on a Ferris
wheel, but 1 was willing to keep an open
mind. I regret missing the Judging, mainly
because I let down the good people at the
Fair.
But I do apologiz.e to
the people whose events
I wu supposed to attend
but did not. and to the
people who were
expect1na to see
thetn1elve1 in this space
but did not. I will try to
make amends.
For example, Friday I
Design House '92 was a project that
began in a drenching rainsto.nn and ended
in a constant roar of diesel engines.
Despite such an ominous beginning, the
decorator people got all their stuff in
there and the people came ("Decorate it
and they will come?"). OCPS volunteer
Peggy Crosby said they hoped to malce
their goal of 6,000 visitors for the
one-month showing, but they'd sure
appreciate a little boost for the final days
last Saturday and Sunday.
P eggy and I were talking last
Wednesday afternoon when, unknown
to either of us, Los Angeles exploded. She
was telling me hm.-, with just four days to
"We got through the rains and the
earthquake, but the trucks were tough,"
Peggy said. But the good ladies made it,
and they'll be back next year with another
fund raising Design House. "But not one
in a neighborhood that's still under
construction,'' Peggy said.
But I was Jllso anxious to add this
rather strange wedding concept to a
judging career that includes not only the
usual assorted chili cookoffs, but the Miss
Tall Orange County pageant, an Orange
County Crazies audition and the Tommy
Lasorda Celebrity Pasta C.ook Off. On the bad planned to write
C t about the quirky __ o.as __ existence of the Orange
On the Sunday in Jinuary when OCPS
volunteers hefd a party to preview the
work of the interior designers, it rained
harder than just about anybody could
remember.
go, the trucks came. ·
Because of my hair brained almost-trip
to Los Angeles Friday morning, I also
missed being a judge for the Orange
County Fair's Carnival Wedding contest.
Sigh. This could have been the
crowning moment.
• O>unty Philh.annoruc
Society's Design House '92, plus some
There were about 10 of them, Peggy
said. Big, carthshwng diesel trucks with
Fnd M•rlla's columa ruas ettry
Moad•r, Wedaesday aad Friday.
Around Town
,... SBtd it8'11 to Bob van
Eyen, The Pilot, 330 W. &y
St, Cost.I Mes.it, 92627.
Today
Children's benefit
Help benefit the Children's
Hospital of Orange Coonty by
attending the "Home Tour and
Village Affair" on Wednesday
from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at Vil-
lage Crean, 2300 Mesa Or.,
Santa ~ Heights. Participants
will enjoy a gourmet luncheon,
tour four ~ homes, and
choose from items on sale at the
event boutique and the Cinder-
ella Guild bakery. Tlckets S45.
Speak Up Newport -
· Meet~ candidates for the
45th Con~essional distrkt, the
70th Assembly District and the
Harbor Municipal Court
judgeship at today's meeting cl
Speak Up Newport. beginning at
S:30 p.m. at the Villa Nova
restaurant, 3131 W. Coast Hwy.
Summer getaways -
OiscoYer aJI the summer get·
away possibilities at a special
program on Wednesday offered
at 7 p.m. May 6 at the Mariners
Branch Library, 2005 Dover Or.,
Newport Beach. The topics will
indude weekend trips. four day
~.~Bed and Break-
fast inns. The program is free.
Call Jackie Headly at 644· 3181 .
Peter Pan --Newport
Elementary School will present
the play "Peter Pan" at 7 p.m.
May 6 and 7. Admission is free.
Business breakfast -
The first in a series of "How to
Keep Up with Business
Information" breakfasts will be
held at the Newport Center
Public Library, 856 San
C1emente Or., Newport Beach
from 7: 30 to 9 a.m. May 6. The
topics indude importing and
exporting, investors, and an
introduction to the business
information resources offered by
the library. Two other breakfasts
will be held on Tuesday, May
12 and Thursday, May 21 at the
same time. Space is limited. To
register, call 644-3188.
Financial workshop -
A free financial workshop for
women is scheduled for 5:30
p.m. May 6 at the Newport
Beach Library, 856 San
C1emente Drive. T<>eics at the 1
1/2-hour seminar Wiii include
how to select a conservative
stock, how to set up a living
trust and how to increase
income in a low interest rate
environmenL Call 955-7550.
Thursday, May 7
Senior fair -The Costa
Mesa Senior Citizens Club will
host a "Senior Fun and
Resource Fait' from 1 to 3:30
p.m. at the neighborhood
Community Center, 1845 Park
Ave., Costa Mesa. For more
information, call 548-2898.
!!!9!'~8!~ .... 300 ~ c...... 0.-60 01.a
I a.-lneHor-'111112. 2 30. S, 7 30. 10
'2 ,,. ,..,_ ~ 1 4 JO, 1, 9 30
3 ..._ s-.ta (11) 12 30, 3, s 30. e. 10 20
IDWAllOS IS&.AHO QHIMA fo.i-blond, Noow "°" c..-MQ.121 e
I 11ee1c """'ttct (IU 11 30, ?, 4 30, 7. 9 JO
2 Cutt! ....... l"G· 131 3 30. 7 ~Mr c-11'
""""~ I IS, 5 30 9 4S
City lllkl ........
pw.11111 for board
COST A MESA -City
Council members are seek·
ing applications from physi·
cally disabled people who
would like to serve on the
newly-created Building,
Housing and Fire Codes
Board of Appeals.
The new appeals board
was recently expanded to
handle appeals involving ac·
ccss for the physically dis-
abled. Its purpose will be to
assist the City Council and
city departments in prcsid·
ing over appeals relating to
building, housing, fire -codes
and handicap access.
Physically disabled people
who arc interested in serv-
ing on the board should sub-
mit a resume and a letter of
interest to the city man-
ager's office, n Fair Drive,
Costa Mesa, 92626. For in-
formation, caJI 754-5273.
Slmply the world's finest coffee --
•"' ""
••
J .. .._ rGI 12. 2. 4, 6 .•• 10 .. be fG' 7 lO I ,.... l'G-131 S 4S, I. 10 IS
4 ,..._ r'O·l3112 JO, 2 4S, s. 1 JO. 9 30
S lt2 ~ 12 15, 2<tO, 4 4S, 7, 9 15
1 ._..__ (l'Gt 6 30. 8 JO. 10 IS
l a-le huitlnd (') s 30. 8. 10 30
2 n.,..,., ~ 4 45, 7 30, 10 IS
3 A......,_0..c-1 4 4S, 7. 915
6 .,_ ...... c:-t (PG 13) 12. 2, 8 n-.e'
..... P'GI I 45. s.•s. 9 •S
4 Felica lf'G. ll) 4 45, 1, 9 IS
IDWAllOS CJHUM Holt-81.dJAclomt ,._.,. 546·
3102 .c.
4 Md1Mt¥www~630!830, 1020
SOUnt COAST f'\AZA ~ 546 2711
·, ,_... ,._, fG.131 II l>· I 30, l JO. s JO. 7 JO. 9 JO lt2 l'I S 4S 8. 10 IS I 0tr .. Jer (rG.IJ) 4 •S. 7 JO, 10 IS
1 ....... ,,.,., (PG 13) s 1 '
UDO CIHIMA "'"'-' BM °' ,..__, Volo;.
673 e.350
HMtlOll TW1" QNtMAS Hatbor ll¥d If W°itoft
~6)1 3501
I $pllt ~ ~6 8, 10 3 ~....._.(t!S30 9.1020
IOUTM COAST VIUMM s.dow. at "'"'°' 540
0594 0tr .t,.,., i!"G-1314 ~. 7 JO, 10 IS 1 White Sond• !1tl • 4S. 1 9 IS
Clltl Miii MISA CINIMA ~ Bvd /19111 Si 646-S01S
n.. MHk'-MOft ll"G-ll) 6. 10 JO M-9f
Ne. (I! 8
I Ottielle (NM S 4S a9'M the h4 "-"
(l) 1 30. 10 lllWMOS CIHtMA aNTR '2701 Hort.or etvd I
MotoVerde C-979-4141 TOWN CINTtJI CINIMAS ~ C-l'lozo 7SI·
4184
2 n..,..,,...,,. fG Ill S 30 9. 10 20
l ~lw10-. ~I s 1 9 I ,_ 9f the C-9 l"G·IJI 5 45, 9 4S n..
.,_
Compare Our Sale Prices!
~/J
mfj C:Ol 'RIS'rr-\~·t Lois De Poortere
& More!
The Largest Selection on the West Coast
Satisfaction Guaranteed
Hart's~i:
Rugs & Carpets
714/955-0435
1000 Bristol Street
Newport Beach
Bringing lhe .. World Closer
To· You Everldav.
We're proud to represent our preferred suwflers with these ...
(/t¥A~ {/~
one Dav -Fun Dav!
Mexico Cnalse
Fr00t <>Ny $79 ,._m.c cutr.tt( & N'G ~ ~
~~~=lo'-
& C«dkn'"" Pit-. Cll Faro.ll .... ,,"'~·~ D.Jubllee __DsTARLITE ~R UI ES IC1Wllh'4I -----····
Join
Carla
Beachcomber
echs.s & Sia tom •()alas•
••1•11 ... Cll ..... , ......
t L 1\\, 1 ,
'
cn11se Al•ka
and Savel
$650 to $1400
perp«Son
ON SALEN•
....... >'11-...... _ .... , ......
•
Business ?
Daily Pilot Economic Index
J ust when Newport Beach and Costa
Mesa restaurateurs appeared to be
perched .on a steadily upward sales
trend. they were dealt a few setbacks to
make their rccession·fighting efforts even
more difficult.
First, heavy rains in Febnwy and March
kept diners at home. Then, as the weather
turned warm and sunny, riots in Los Angeles
kept people glued to their television sets.
The implications of the riots for local
restaurants extend much further, as tourism
experts predict that the violence will scare
away many potential visitors to Southern
California.
of the ycar1 they aren't
gettina thear hopes too
high.
"It's getting better,
but it's never going to be
Like it was in the
mid.SOS, n said one
restaurant manager.
Another respondent
agreed, saying he
believes the era of excess
is gone forever.
......... EdMor Tmy C.OX. •• 642-4321, at. . .
Business hrief s
COSTA MP.SA -South Coast
Stat.iooen. a coamercia1 office
supply compaay baled here, bas
acquired tho commercial
operations of Palm Stadooen, a
35-ycar-old busiDeu io Fullerton.
wl~olouri91ca
pclOP.le, ~· SIOln said.
Art him. tbe owner of Palm
Statioaen, dedded to seU b.1a
,,. .... IDd retire.
C111 .. 1111C.
•1111•1
NOR111 COSTA MESA -
CMeWare Inc.. an e.xpanding
maker of a software engineerin
products. bu moved from H
Gateway to larger quarten in t
Irvine Spectrum.
Despite the new problems and the ongoing
recession, respondents to The Daily Pilot's
monthly survey of local restaurateurs in
March managed to break even. on average,
with their March 1991 sales pace. Breaking
even isn't normally good news, especially
when the point of reference is a
recession-marred month. But Easter Sunday
and the accompanying spring-break week -
one of the best times of the year for
restaurants -fell in March last year,
buoying that month's sales.
· "I don't think we'll
ever see the figures we
did two or three years
ago.'' said Danny
Marcheano, owner of
The Arches in Newport
Beach. "I'Ve adjusted to
make my restaurant
profitable at the current
sales level I feel very
comf ortablc that if all
• Represents last year's perfo~nce. A score above
100 refleds an im~ement over the same month the
previous~, While a score below 100 indicates a
decline. Scoring is based on sales of local restaurateurs
who are surveyed regularly for this feature.
South Cout Stationen officlala
expect the acquisition. wb.kb wu
effective May 1, to expand the •
oompany'a reach into North ·
Orange County and generate a 30
percent increase in sales. The
transaction will fuel South Cout
Stationen' growth at a time when
many smaJI oftic:c supply
companies are strutflin& to
overcome the recesslOD and
increased competition from major
chains.
Under terms of the acquisition,
South Coast Stationers gained all
of Palm Stationers' commercial
inventory, its telephone numbers.
its commercial customer base and
seven key employees. including its
president, Ron Koscielak.. The
former Palm Stationers president
will oversee the ahifting of Palm's
employees and aistomer accounts
to South Coast Stationers.
With the move, which wu
effectiYe Monday, CaseWare
doubled the size of its quarten,
about 11,000 square feet, and
picked up an option to apand
another S,000 square feet in its
new building. All of the oompan
23 employees stayed with
CaseWare after the D>OYC,
including one oommuter from
Redondo Beach who now plans
buy a home in South Orange
County. my figures stay at April levels, which wasn't
good, we'll live well here."
While the survey respondents are generally
optimistic about the economy, they added
that repercussions from the Los Angeles riots
could complicate the local comeback.
restaurant owner. "We got a real setback
with this thing. t•m just depressed about iL
Tourism will be hurt. Maybe people will
forget."
Ot..seWare had subleased its
facilities in C.OSta Mesa from
Satellite Technology Inc., in a
Highland Avenue building own
by CJ. Segerstrom &. Sons.
While local restaurant owners and
managers are optimistic that their sales will
improve gradually in the last three quarters
The March index score fQr restaurants:
100. .
"I'm very disappointed," said one
HIGIMAY ,
From A1
chants said.
''Last week, they were blocking businesses and
streets from Orchid to Poppy," said Cindy Larson,
manager of Allan Adler Silversmiths. "There had
been a cooperative effort. Then at the very last, it
seemed like they didn't care about us."
John Blom, owner of John Blo m Custom Pho-
tography, agr~ed:
"They 'llad all the parking blocked off and a
trench dug in front of the driveways. When they
work .here, they don't make any provision for peo-
ple to get into the driveways and through the in-
tersections. They just block the whole thing off."
It's still unclear to local business owners how
the water·line work has been allowed to be done
during the day, said Royal Radtke, president of
the Corona del Mar Chamber of Commerce and
manager of the Bank of America 'branch on East
Coast Highway. He said he hopes the city is able
to rectify the situation.
But Jim Nestor, district engineer with the La-
guna Beach Water District. said the city agree-
ment is not binding. He said bis agency granted
the contractor's request to do some work during
the day because CaJfon officials didn"t want to
shift the schedules of their crews, and they be-
lieved it wouldn't be as safe to work at night.
"The city may g.ive a different answer, but to us,
the agreement was more public relations than any-
thing," Nestor said. "It's difficult to make every-
body happy. We're JUSt trymg ~o get out of there
as soon as we can."
City officials did. in fact, interpret the agree-
ment differently. Sansone said that as far as he's
concerned, the City Council resolution regarding
the water·line work is binding. He said he believes
the contractors have no authority to do any more
work in the business' district during the day, and
he plans to discuss possible enforcement measures
with city legal officials.
But the city's public works director, Ben Nolan,
pointed out some potential difficulties in enforcing
the agreement. The city was not the contracting
agent fo r either the sewer work or the water·line
work, be said, and both projects -being on a
state highwa)t -are being done under permit
from CaJtrans.
"It's been a real problem for the city and it's
been a real problem for the businesses in Corona
del Mar," Nolan said. "When it happens so quick·
ly and without notice, it's hard to deal with."
Another problem has already surfaced io ~
rona del Mar. Sansone said that about six weeks
ago, city officials were informed that Southern
California Gas Co. plans to replace a gas line
along Pacific-Co"ast HighWay. He sa.id that by rout·
ing part of the line off East Coast Highway - one
of three options being proposed -the-gas~line
projeot may be less disruptive than the current
construction. In any case, he said he is frustrated
that the gas·linc work could not have been done
at the same time as the other projects.
"I don't know where the gas company's been,"
Sansone said. "Certainly, they've driven Coast
Highway in the last six months and they've seen
that there's construction."
Neither Calfon officials nor a representative
from the Laguna Beach Water District's engineer-,
ing contractor, James Montgomery Consulting En-
gineers, could be reached for comment on Tues·
day.
GOING OUT OF BUSINESS IN 12 DAYS! ,.
I
We are forced to close our doors by May 17th
Everything MUST GO! Entire inventory up for grabs!
UPTO
Orange County's premier rug dealer has to
vacate the premises. Their mutti-mlllion dollar
inventory must be liquidated!
Every tribal piece MUST GO!
Every antique Persian MUST GO/
Every rug In stock must be ucrtflced to Mii
at these ~LOW-WHOLESALE PRICES.
AJI rugs are 100% handwoven wool and silk
in hundreds of designs. colors and sizes!
Hurry for best selection!
EiiROrtAN
RUG GALLERY
3127 E. Coat Hwy I CatOna del Mir
(1*\ .... Aabenloft'• 'StudlO O*)
~-----~------j800}_63~~~~4_L&!_~ ' 8flNG THESE COUPONS WITH vou a TAKE ADOmONAL D11COUNT1,,. -• u. , , 1 r.--------~r.--------~r.~~-~-I
t i II II 11
I I II II I I
I I I I I I
f l 11 II I I
Ll!-= .::.-=---=--= =--=-!J_l!-=--= =--=---~ ~~!J-~~ =-~ -=-= ~!J_J
U.
-~ Too.r Co.r
Appointment calendar
Today
Personnel law -The
Merchants and manufacturers
Association will present a one-day
seminar on basic personnel law
from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the Balboa
Bay Club, 1221 W. Cost Highway.
For information, call 558· 1 >so.
Commercial office supplies
made up about 80 percent of Palm
Stationers• business.
Peter Sloan, owner of South
<:.<wt Stationers. said he believed
his 2J.year-old oompany bad
flourished and would continue to
flourish because of its personal
service and competitive prices.
"In an industry where it is
increasingly oommon for
warehouse clerks to not 1cnow
their products, our customen
appreciate the depth of cxperieocc
Case.Ware was founded in 19
by Sol Zcdlter and Fred Cox, bo
formerly of Emulex Corp. Zcdn
and OJit. who remain sole owne
of Case Ware. have built the
company to the point where it
generates between S3 million ~
S4 million in annual sales.
CaseWare develops and markets
Case Ware/CM, a product that
manages the software devclopme
process.
The company is now located at
108 Paciflca in Irvine.
For R eserva tions
Call 675-8973
-IJJ To..,
u s for a s pecial dinner men
on Mother's D ay and
receive complimentary
champagne
for a ll la dies.
Lunch 11:30-2:30 Tues. thru Fri. Dinner 5:00-10:00 Tues. thru Sun.
3421 Via Lido + Free Parking in Via Lido Plaza + Newport Beach
The .truth about
funeral prices in the
greater South Q)ast area. .
A t Harbor Lawn, people are important. We believe
that every family desetves a personalized final tribute.
Here, only the family selects the type of service they
want and the price to be paid.
We will arrange for direct cremation,
inch.x:ling mortuary care ftom ................................. .
9r choose from other type of services from. ......... . .
~l<.e~ i:>ric:C!Cl ftc>m. ................................................. .
. -.
Serving all faiths • Under new ownership
$540
$985
$285
24 Hour Services • 1625 O~ler Avenue • COlt3 Mesa • 540-5554
\ •
(OI
s
--------I ,3
ociety ~ .1
bpari•cing the . Art ol Dining ,
F owteeo pieces of simr and
fM glaues faced each of the
420 di.Den seated Suuday evenioa in the Four Seasons Hotel
for Art of Dining V.
Four houn later, the table
service bad been put to &ood use
u dinen went from tuna and
shrimp aalad, through black sea
111111 -
bass with curry
broth., risotto
with zucchini
blossom and
sage. wild
pheasant
consomme with
truffles, poached
hen with
artichoke strudel
and juniper
vcn.ison with
celery and
parsnip and, last Society but not least,
dessert.
Hunger was
long gone, but when the banana
creme brulee with chocolate sorbet
was set down, it was forget the
diet and go for it.
"The dessert was my favorite,
.until they said it bad 1,000
calorics. I think it did, but it was
great," commented Jim C~
wrth wife Bar~ra. (They sat with
two other Barbaras -Bar~a
"""• wil)l husband Ben and Birbara Adams with Bill.)
"You can forget cholesterol. ..
rcc1 wine is the Roto-Rootcr for
the blood," promised Michael
Mondavi, master of ceremonies
for the Newport Harbor Art
Museum fundraiser.
-Everybody bad their own
method of making it through the
~8 extravapnn. I sam Goldstein, who started Art
of Dining and was involved in all
five dinners as chair, claims that
getting up from the table, going on
stage and table bopping helped
him.
Jerry Harrington said he goes
for a light breakfast and no lunch
preparing for the SC'-'Cn-coursc
meal.
Judy Hemley had consumed
only a bot dog before coming to
the dinner. (She and Rogue arc
moving to the Washington, D . .s;:,,
area next month.)
J'he event, though black tie in
dress, was casual in spirit, and
between courses a live auction was
conducted by Ed Griffin. It went
very well.
At $~ per ticket and with the
auction ,"Wc sho uld realize
between $175,000 and $190,000,"
said Goldstein, at the affair with
wife hm, son Geoffrey and
daughter Serena.
Others being served the cuUnary
creations or chefs from Los
Angeles to New York City
coordinated by Joachim Splichal of
Patina La included co-chair Anwu
Soliman, NHAM board prez Joan
BeaJI, director Michffl Botwinick,
Susan Porter and husband Frank
Caput, Pat and Carl Neisser,
Marilyn and Richard Hausman,
A.lex and S.r~a Bowie, who were
gearing up for another gourmet
dinner in the dc~rt on
Wednesday.
Also there were Mar~ Crutcher,
Joyce and Greg Griffith, Bedcy
..
Those at dinner included, from left, Bill Speu, J~n BeaH, Anwar Soliman and Sam Goldste1n.
Also attending were, from left, Frank Caput with
wife Susan Porter and Judy and Rogue Hemley.
Send us your
anniversary news
Sitver, gold or diamond -
milestone wedding
anniversaries are speaal. The
Daily Pilot will publish your
anniversary news, (25th,
3Sth, SOth and 7Sth) on a
space-available basiS.
Send a wntten account to
our Wedding Department,
The Pilot, P.O . Box 1560,
Costa Mesa, 92626. Tnclude
a photo 'of the couple if
desired.
For more information, call
642-4321, extension 350.
...
Above: Michel
Pieton, left, with
Joachim Splichal of
Patina La, who
coordinated the
event held at the
Four Seasons Hotel
left: Isabel and
Michael Mondavi,
who served as
master of
ceremonies for the
Newport Harbor Art
Museum fundraiser.
Photos by Jim Dean
Joyce Griffith, at right, enjoys
one of the dishes servea during
the seven-course meal at the Art
·of Dining V Sunday evening.
•
Wednesday, May ti, 18112 M 11)
Society Editor Vtcla Dean, 642 321
FREE MAKEOVER
·and
·Gift with -Purchase
Thursday, May 7 & Friday, May 8
Drop .by from 9 to 5 or call for an
appointment. A Korff consultant will be
on hand to introduce a new prodtJct
ANTI-AGE SPECIAL
with Retinol and Tonaxil ®
Purchase any item from the Anti:.Age Special
line and receive a free mascara or lipstick .
Treat yourself to a complimentary
make-over and learn w hy ....
Safe cosmetics
are bought in Pharmacies .
KORFF
Special Cosmehcs for Pharmaae-:.
Mariners Pharmacy
(714) 645-7200
320 Superio r, Suite 120
Newport Beach, (Near Hoag Hospital)
CDnroy'J makes Mothers Day a week
to remember and Will~m Spear (of sponsoring
Coca Cola) Pat and Dick Allen,
Joe and Ann Blake Wheelodc.
Mary DeU Barkouras, escorted by
son Todd and seated with Sue and
Bill Cross, Juliane Higgjtt and
Sherri ahd Chris Diatynas.
RUFFELL'S
UPIOLSTEIY llC. ... ,.. .... e.r.. ....
ltll -aw., CllTA IDA-Ml-l IY
For the relationship of a lifetime ...
send Conroy's long lasting Dowers.
MOTHER'S DAY SlN)AY 8RlJt.JCH !
Enfoy a Latin~ Day ~695 CS'I crray of~ SoUth Amer1a:s1
favorites from omelettws to Buenos ~
Aires dtrus apple ICllad bcr. WI" Coupon
HAPPY HOUR EVERY NITE
5~7:30pm
95cNo\jf»HUs s l95Noog:rlui
,... ....... ... ...... , ......... .... 01•.a• ... . .. Back Bay Court
3601 Jamboree at Brlatol
Newport Bach
TO SEND A GIFr
BY PHONE
252-0222
~ EB
lTJ
'
I I
I
Al Wednesday May a. 1m
Back Page
By Russ Loar
Stlll Wllll'
COST A MESA -C.Ongrcssional candi-
date Peter Buffa fired another shot across
the bow of Rep. Dana Rohrabacher's op-
posing campaign Tuesday, 8QCUSing the
Huntington Beach congressman of shut-
ting out reporters from an upcoming cable
television debate.
"Basically, what we have now is a re-
peat of the three candidate forums that
we've bad," Buffa said. ..1 was disap-
pointed that the public will not haYC a
chance to hear us respond to what some
knowledgeable people in the press want to
know ab;out our stances on important is·
sues."
Buff a, a Costa Mesa city councilman, is
runniQg against Rohrabachcr and Hun-
tington Beach City Councilman Peter
Green ln tbe Republican primary for rep-
resentation of the new 45th C.Ongrcssional
District. The new district includes Hun-
tinaton Beach and parll of Costa Mesa
aad Newport Bericb.
The debate. to be a1rcd May 24 oo Par-
.,a.i Cable, was Ofiaioally intended to
gj¥c the candidatel time for opening and dosina statements, with the bulk of the
time spent oa a question-and-answer ses-
sion with a panel of journalists.
Rohrabacbcr bu Iona been critical of
the qucatioa~and-answer fonnat of most
candidate forums, saying be prefen the
Unooln-Douglas debate style where politi-
cal opponents respond to each other's
comments.
"Dana wants to talk about the iuues
widl lbe other 1'11' in a bead-to-head ap-
proach," said Ocnc Fcrpsoa. R~
hrabacher's campa.ip manaacr. '"Dana
answers questions from journalists all day,
he just wants to present his views unfil-
tered (for the cable television audience)."
Rohrabacber was unavailable for com-
ment.
ccpted Rohrablcher11 conditions. Bu
Nub said he inliated that the debate for
mat be lea ltlUCtUred lhan Rohrabache
wmted. Robrabac:ber asked that 1
time limits be Wied for comments and re
buttals, aocordina to Nub. "I wanted
more open discussion where candidat
would speak among themselves," he said,
Rohrabacher's campaign manager con-
firmed that he refused to take part in a
May 9 candidate debate unless plans to
include questions from reporters were
dropped.
GIONIS
From A1
on to disprove any of that? None. Do you
have reasonat>lt-doubt ?"
The JUry is expected to receive instructions
and begin deliberations after final rebuttal by
Robinson today. f
Nearly four years ago, two armed men fol-
lowed Wayne and Luby into the garage of
Luby's gated 22nd Street home as the couple
returned from a morning workout. The men
handcuffed the couple, smashed their faces
into the concrete flPor. pistol-wh.ippcd Luby
and tried to slice his Achilles tendon.
Gionis and Wayne were embroiled in a bit;
ter custody battle over their daughter at the'"
time. Prosecutors allege Gionis paid Gal
about $40.000 to hire the two thugs.
But the defense argues that Gionis was
winning the custody case and therefore had
no reason to order such an attack, wbHe
Luby's debts and legal woes set him up as a
prime target for an assault by others.
Oionis' first trial on charges of conspiracy
and assault ended in a hung jury in D~m
bcr 1990.
Robinson contends telephone records that
show a flurry of calls between Gal and Gio-
nis around the time of the attack and large
payments Gionis made to Gal prove the ~
tor's involvement.
Over the last two weeks, Bob C.Omley, a
friend of Gal's, also reluctantly testified for
the prosecution that he overheard Gal and
the two hit men plan an attaclc on someone
involved in a child custody case.
Robinson said he did not call Gal or the
hit men to the stand in the second trial be-
cause he didn't want to be forced to make
any deals with the three men, who were all . .
Bil
From Al
11ations ~hould be placed on con-
dom distribution. Ferguson said.
referring to the Democrats as "the
!.3.Jtle three who represent Sodom
and Gomorrah." (Orange County
Democrat Tom Umberg was
among the three voting in favor of
the bill.)
angc County. who in recent
months passed out condoms and
information pamphlets a t
Newport-Harbor and Estancia
high schools, have also been criti-
cal of the bill.
Ains activists with Act Up/Or-
Fantasy 5/Decco
If 1t had become law, activists
say, 1t would have been "tanta-
mount to condoning the deaths of
thousands of teen-agers" since
they're among the fastest growing
risk iJ'OU~ for HN_infcction.
Bob Nash, an independent producer
putting the deb,te together for Paragon
Cable, said be preferred the original for-
mat.
The fant cablecast of the debate ~
~heduled for 1 p.m. Sunday, May 2A, on
Owmel 40, which can be viewed in Hun·
tington ~cb. Fountain VaUey and a lim-
ited 1cetion of Costa Mesa. Both Nash and Buffa relented and ac-
criminally charged in the case, and because
he didn't want a conviction "on the word of
a bunch of thugs and .aiminals."
But Cutler insisted the prosecution failed
its burden of proof by not having the three
testify and called the case "a tortured view-
ing of otherwise innocent evidence."
0..tler contended the phone and financial
records didn't show illegal activity since Gal
was hired legitimately during the custody bat-
tle to conduct surveillance on Wayne to gath·
er proof that she was an unfit mother.
0..tler also characterized Gionis as a hard-
working, aff ectionatc man who had a deep
love, not an Obsession, for his daughter and
worried that h.is frivolous ex-wife was ne-
glecting the child.
Neither Wayne, Luby nor 'i>olicc investiga·
tors even mentioned Gionis as a suspect at
first, O..tler furtlter argued.
PARROT
From A1
his wife. ,,
"Many times I would come
running downstain because I
would think my wife was
calling, 'Rick, Rick, Rick,' only
to find out it was the damn
bird," Potter recalled with a..
laugh. "My wife's always yelling
at me, so so was he." •
Potter said Fred also liked to
say "Ouch" every now and
again since that's what people
would say when be bit them.
But Potter said Fred was a
friendly bird who liked people
-possibly too much.
Fred was last seen by a
housekeeper April 26 in . •
Potter's backyard.
Since the backyard is
surrQunded by a brick fence
and since Fred's winp arc
clipped, Potter said the bird
could not have wandered off.
Neither did Potter see any
evidence that would lead him
to blame Fred's disappearance
on a "cat burglar."
"Cats arc usually pretty
meM)'," Potter said. "And
Fred's feathers arc bright green
so they wouldn't be hard tO'
track.''
Potter said his wife and son
have "been searching and
searching." passing out fliers.
He described Fred as an
average looking bright green
parrot with a yellow spot on
the back of his bead and a
hooked beak and a very big
vocabulary.
Potter asks that anyone who
has seen or beard call him at
2.41-7616.
Fantasy S
Tuesdyfrtday, April 10 drawing
3. 14, 24, 32, 38
Oecco
• Hearts .. Ace • Oubs .... Queen 0
I
• Diamonds . 8 • Spades ..... 6
We have
designs on you
ro fill the decor.1t11.e hard-
ware Oftds & e~r1om ·01
every client No matter what
style or t11nt' penod the 1ob
requ1r~. we h.we the hne)t
qu.ility door atb1Mt, furniture,
arch1tKtural & b.Jrh ~re
& ftllturt" to off~ And, YoU'll
~ plea'>t'd 10 find that your
need'> .irt> met correctly ~
cau!>t! our~ '>(>lect1on 1s
b.x:ked by l generauon~ of dec-
or at1ve hardware e>.pen~e
2133 Laguna Canyon Road
Laguna Beach CA 92651
(71 4) 494-2264
..
r
0
•
• •
..
ports
LBDlur
.• IBIY
'l/UBliliBr .
~ Corona del Mar, Newport
athletes go through paces
at Sea View track prelims.
BY Rlchant Dunn
SCIDltl Wlllf
IRVINE -Steve LcSieur doesn't
get much of a lei.ck out of running.
but something special happened
Tuesday afternoon in the Sea View
League track preliminaries.
"I've n~r been in a race where
I had to qualify," said LcSieur, Co-
rona del Mar High's top distance
runner who finished fint in his
1600-mcter heat at Irvine Hjgh.
lunging across the line in time to
nip Saddleback's Johnny Ochoa and
Woodbridge'• David Blum.
LcSieur, who experienced knee
problem because of rapid growth~
throughout most of his career under
C.dM Coach Bill Sumner, was a N
runner last spring as a junior. "I
was just tenible," LcSicur said.
----Cfl' dlltlHCI ..
•
So
last au-
tumn
w be n
LeSieur
sprouted
t 0 6-
foot-2 -
be was
about s-
4 as a
fresh-
man -
some of
his com-
petitors
won-
d er c d .._ ________ w be re
be came
from. After all, the unheard-of Le-
Sieur fmished second in the Sea
View cross country f mals (IS min·
utes. 20 seconds) behind Ochoa and
was 10th OYCrall in the State Divi-
sion Ill championships in Fresno .
.. Some people sa.id that rd been
on steroids,'• said LcSieur, who's
beaded for Princeton to run aoss
~untry next fall. "Everybody knew
(CdM teammates) Mike Bradford
and Aaron Mcl..endon because they
ran last year. But Sky Peterka of
Newport Harbor said that one guy
on his team thought I was on ste-
roids, wb.ich is crazy. Some of the
guys at Harbor asked where I came
from because I was 6-2 now.''
Accordina to Sumner, good old·
f uhioned hard work elevated Le-
$ieur into one of Orange County's
best.
"My fint cross country race u a ·
junior I ran like 22 minutes," Le-
Sicur said. "I talked to m}'. parents
last year and asked them ii I could
have a new pair of runnina shoes.
See TRACK AND FIELD,tll
Eagles'
s·earch
begins
...., Basketball vacancy
may include on-campus
position, says Blanton.
COSTA
MBM -El·
1 tanda Hiab'•
lea.rcb for a
replacement
for the depart·
ina 1lJn O 'Bri-en. wbo hu left bit pott u
bubtball coach for an ...
lipment at Onnae c.out
Collep. baa bepn.
All lntcrelted candidates
are eeccM1rilpd to ...,.
their applk:Mlam to Priad· p.a PnU: la611iDo.
Atlaleek DtredOr Bd Blan·
toD ........ " • =tlal teedUna polidae ~
but tMl k wlll not " .......
..... .... the -of M.,. A ............ ftlcb WU
...... ~.,
May 6, 1992
The Newport Beach/Costa Mesa Daily Pilot
Sports Editor Roaer Carlson .•.• 642-4330 at.387
Char1ie Brande·volleybaJV83
Classifie<VB4
Youttv'B6
ShaAN~Nat
Trabuco Hills' Tom Fill slides in at third through Estancia's Victor Ramirez r h his second theft of the seventh inning in Tuesday's PCL baseball.game.
Eagles'· bats still silent in 5-·1 setback
...,. Trabuco Hills capitalizes against four, winner AJ .. Qeveland.
luckJess Wilson in Pacific Coast League tiff.
It wasn't, however, that the Eagles djd not have their
chances.
They left three stranded in the second inning and
two more in the sixth -wastin& the benefit of four
free passes in those two sequences.
thought the Mustangs were on their way to putting the
game out of sight, sending nine players to the plate in
the fifth, scoring three times and leaving three strand-
ed.
By Roger Cll1son
Sports £dlor
COSTA MESA -Estancia High's of-
fensive woes continued in a downward
spiral Tuesday afternoon as Pacific Coast
League leader Trabuco Hills broke out
of a 1-1 tic through four· innfogs with a
three-run burst in the fifth and went on
to a S-1 baseball victory on the loser's di-
amond.
The only legitimate fireworks for the Eagles came in
the fourth inning when Victor Ramirez and Richard
Buday put tQgcthcr back-to-back singles. .and Jay Rich-
ardson loaded the bases with a no-out walk.
Wilson was the hard-luck victim after retiring the
first two batters. 1\vo straight infield singles and an
error loaded the bases before Dario Salz singled to left
for an RBI to snap the tic.
Wilson, who struck out eight, walked JUSt one -and
it came at the wrong moment with Jason Teno the re·
cipient of the RBI free pass, and then cleanup hitter
Brad Cervantes hit a slow roller that wasn't picked up
on until too late, for the third infield blow of the in-
ning.
It was but another in a series of offensive frustra-
tions for Estancia; which entered the game with·just
four runs in the previous 26 innings. What was to lrln·
spire would do nothing to bolster a sagging ship, which
is now floundering at s.6 in league play (~11 overall)
in a continuing struggle for at best a third place finish
in league next week.
Ramirez, the only bright spot offensivciy with a ster-
ling .436 batting average entering the game to complc·
mcnt a superior defensive posture, singled up the mid·
die to get it started. Then Buday followed with his one-
baggcr to right.
Matt Johncr went down swinging, but before he did
a run scor~d on a wild pitch to even the game at l·l. .
Kyle Wilson came to the plate in hopes of helping
himself, and bis Oy ball to center appeared to have the
makinp of a one-run edge. But ·Trabuco Hills out-
fielder Tom Fill threw a perfect peg to catchtr T. J.
Alvarez six feet up the line and Buday was cut down
with plenty of room to spare.
"You know," said Estancia co-coach Paul Troxel,
''Kyle has just patched his butt off chis year He·s lost a
one-hitter, he's lost a two-hitter, he lost a 3-1 decision
last week and he went 10 innings again.c;t Laguna Hills
with no dcctSion .
"When you're talking hard-luck, he's It. ·We're JU t
not bitting behind him at all. Thank god he's such a
composed and mature IOd. He refuses to lcr 1t bother
him. He'll be better off down the road because of it." -~ The light-hitting Eagles collected just four singles off
t'rabuco Hills starter Brent Kaull and his relief after Before the Eagles could give that turnabout much See EAGLES,.i
). .... ·Mesa gets some shots, :but too many blanks, 10-2
~Laguna Hills has too much
for Mustangs, pushes them
deeper into Pacific Coast cellar.
By Dennis Brostemous
Spm1a WIW
LAGUNA HlU..S
. Costa Mesa High made
il interesting for about
three innings Tuesday
against Pacific Coast
League baseball rival La-
guna Hills.
But the host Hawks notcltcd nine runs
in the third and fourth inninp combined
and cruised to a 10-2 victory.
After yielding a run in the bottom of
tbc first, C.OSta Mesa {6-16, 2-10) scored
twice in the third. But despite taking the
lead, Mustangs Coach Tim Green felt
frustrated his team didn't get more out
of the inning.
"We should have had a lot more,"
said Green. "We hit some shots at peo-
ple and didn't. have a lot of luck." .
The rally started when starting pitcher
Tyler Scofield reached on an error and
srolc second. Jason Amordc laced a sin-
gle to center to move Scofield to third
and Jeff Nicbling was rut by a pitch to
fill the bases.
Luis Vasquez hit a hard grounder that
caromed off the shortstop's glove into
shallow left-center for an error, bringing
in the Mustangs' two runs. Mike Meyer
was rut by a pitch to re-load the bases.
Then came the frustration.
With Brett Nista relieving starting
pitcher Jamie Miller on the mound,
catcher Matt Jaglowsk.i rifled a shot that
seemed destined for center field. But
Nista threw up his glove to knock the
ball down, then scrambled to pick it up,
throwing to the plate in time to get the
Corcc play.
The last chance to add to build on the
lead disappeared when the next batter
was called out on strikes.
"The way things worked out just typi· -
fies our season." said Green, who tossed
a bat in disgust when the mnmg ended.
Laguna Hills (13-6, 7-3) made the
Mustangs pay right away when desig-
nated hitter Dave Cosgrove stroked a
three-run homer in the bottom of the
same inning.
The Hawks, now solidly entrenched an
second place m the PCL, sent 11 batters
to the plate in the fourth to put the
game out of reach, scoring six runs on
seven ruts and a hrt batsmen.
"I thought Tyler hadn't patched all
that badJy until that six-run inrung," saad
Green, who indicated that Matt Harber
would be his starter Friday when the
See MUSTANGS,_
MEN'S CORD
SllOll~ ••••..•.•••.•.•
Sizes S-M-L-XL • 5 Colors
MEN'S COLOIFUL
JAMS/TIUNKS .....
S-M-L-XL -GREAT PRINTS
'5.•
'1!'
Choose 2 one of equal value
FR-E
SHAPE -UP · OFFER
GOOD
FOR
SHORTS
JAMS
NEWPORT
A Full Service Health Club
631-3623
. TRUNKS
OM:.Y
... 8IMCtWI ~ l.oall!d in WESTUIFf PlA2A
17th Street at INine Ave., ~ • BY H & Sav-On ..
.: ..
--------~ ------------------------------------------------------- ----- -------------- ---------------------------------
Marc~ l'ilot
CdM's Chris Hong (left), Newport Harbor's Jennifer Glueck qualified for Sea View Finals on Fri-
day. Hong ,went 2~.5 in the 200 meters; Glueck sailed to a 1 :02.~ in the 400 meters prelims.
TRACK ANO HELD:
From 81
the 110 high hurdles (18.0)· while Peterka and
Jared Overton (4:31 in the 1600) extended their
season.
and they said, 'If we're going to, then you've got
to be serious about it.• I had good grades and I
wanted to go to college, but I also needed to com-
pete in a sport to help get into a ,good college, so
For the giris, Harbor's Misty May, Tracy Teal
and Lindsey Curtis both qualified in two evopts.
May advan~d in the 100 (13.1) and 200 (26.9),
Teal in the 100 low hurdles (17.81) and 300 low
hurdles (50.6) and Curtis in the 100 (12.8) and 300
low hurdles (47.3). I got serious." ·
LeSieur certainly got serio us on Tuesday, run-
ning 4:31.19 in the 1,600 and getting a little re-
venge from last fall's runner-up finish to Ochoa in
cross country. He had Blum and Peterka to worry
Other Sailors qualifying for Friday's final in-
cluded Lorien Oeavinger (5:27.6 in the 1600), Jen-
nifer Glueck (1:02.6 in · the 400), Owen Twist
(5:25.5 in the 1600), Lindsay Malloy (11.6 in the
100 hurd les) and Mady Oayton (50.5 in the 300
hurdles).
. about in this race, as well.
In adclition to LeSieur, CdM qualified McLen-
don in the 800 (2:01.3) and Chris Hong in the 200
(24.5) for Friday's league finals at Irvine. Field
events begin at 4:30 p.m., running cvcn~s at 5.
CdM sophomore Jason Boyce aJso ..qualified in
the 100 (11.0) and 200 (22.6). For Newport Har-
tx>r, Mike Gear qualified i~ the 200 (23,0) and 400
(52.5) while Dylan Guggertmos (2:00.~) and Mike
Peilcert (2:01.9) advanced in the 800.
For CdM'i girls, Brooke Meck qualified in the
1600 (5:16.69) and 800 (2:27), Heather Bray in the
1600 (5:22.5) and 800 (2:~.2), Mollie Flint in the
800 (2:25.9) and 200 (27.3) and Megan Upham in
the 200 (27.7) and 400 (1:00.3).
Also for the Sailors, Matt EimerS qualified in
Individual qualifiers for the Sea Kings included
Tracy Oark (5:23 in the i600), Jennifer Stroffe
(17.8 in the 100 hurdles) and Charlytln Grubbs
(18.6 in the 100 hurdles).
SNurla ~. Plat
Trabuco Hills Tom Fill is safe at second on theft attempt as EaglH' Andre Alvarez awaits throw. ·
MUSTANGS~
From 81
two teams rematch io C.OSta Mesa.
la9uM .... 10, c-.. .....
COSTA-. ... , .....
3 0 1 0
4 0 0 1 . 3 0 0 0
3 0 1 0
3 0 0 0
0 0 0 0
2 0 0 0
1 0 0 0
20 00
1 0 1 0
3 1 1 0
0000
3 1 1 0
UGIMA-.U .., .....
Silllson, cf 3 1 1 0 lilsia.2tl 3210
Pinon. .. 3 2 1 1
........ 1b3121 Jollnloft. 1b 0 0 0 0
ColgnM, dll 2 1 1 3 ...,,p 0000
Vin Dim. ell 1 0 0 0 0Mo,3b 3131
lklllll. 3b 1 0 0 0
Giel\ If 3 11 1 Glntal. If 1 0 0 0 KoecUc. • 4 0 1 2 ~c 3 12' e.dllllt, c 1 0 0 0
T..... 21 2 6 1 T..... 1110 13 10 ...............
C.... ._. OOI 000 0 -I ......... toa eoo •-to
E-Colll Mlle 2. L.11111111 ... a. Dr-Colea Miil 1, L.-... 1 LOl-C:O. ....... ,..
..,. ... l a-'1-:-.... -i:Ci' 90 c.... ...
SCGMH. 04 ~ 12 10 t 1 I
.......... N1002 1 -."-1.':1 5~ 5 2 0 0 t
..... ~00001
Baseball standings
... vt..LHI•
~ °"""' WLT WLT ltd! 10 1 0 14 6 0
Slddllbldl • 3 0 15 8 0 c.I S I 0 11 I 0 ~ 510 • 10 _.........., a 1 1 110 1
WoodMtdge 1 I -1 I 12 I T ...... e-..(llte)
SlllcMd ••• :C" .....
TlltlltCC--:~::::~~·
0.-.. _ltTUllM ~-...... l'11air1 Cwt LH •• a...-0...-
• L .. L
T-..:0... 10 2 13 I U.-ltlt 1 3 1S • L~letdl ' I t I 13 .......... 58 11t
Cdly 47 811 c.--. 210 116 ,.. ... ,, ......
i.-•1010-... ... . , ............. t
l.llllN ..... 12. c-..y 10 jl2 ~ T__.. .... fat l)
~··C.-.y llltlllr• -cait•J
EAGLES:
From 81
Oevcland set Estancia dOwn the
last three frames to get the victory
with just the sixth-inning "upris·
ing" -two runners aboard -
causing any son of rcstJeuness on
the Trabuco bench .
T ............. 11111l•t
TWMUCO UTAW .,..... .., .....
32 o o Hemlfldlz. 2U 0 1 O 4011 Sne.U 4000
2011 KinO.• 1000 1000 ....... 0000 s 0 1 1 ~-·2 11 0
S11 0 ...... 1011 10 11 ,...,. 000
f 0 0 O fllluku.ct I 0 1
0000 -...11 aooo stio .... ,. 1000
1110 ....... 100: A. ..... ,,,
T..... f7 5 1 4 T9lllt t1 2 I .
T ...... rl::"""ltreei t -8
•1111H1 -Ml e-t
f-Elmill t °'-r,... 1. &.m-"*-t t. ~ 1• a -TJ -r 11-1 w-.no
'hllu111111ia 1(1111 4
3
Bf11t!Uy
------------
Mustangs, Eagles $parkle
at PCl track prelims ·
MISSION VIEJO -Com Mc.a mad ·-..-~
&tw:il hiab ICbools qualified MWnl "i. nnmen for the Pacific Cout Letpe ,.
tnck aad field 6nall after ~ ---:
preliminaries at Tnbuco HiUs.
For tbe boys, a.ta Mela's Willy Nooeaa ad-
vanced to Friday's finals in three e¥eD11. tbe 400
meten (53.2) and both hurdles, ioina 16.3 in the
110 highs and 42.2 in the 300 illtennediatea. Jaime
Solis also qualified in the 800 (2;05.l) and '400
(54.1) for the Mustangs. ·
Individually for the Mustangs. Olria Manning
qualified in the 110 high hurdles (17.1). Bltancil'a
qualified John Ordaz (100 and 200), Manny Solis
(200) and Cody Oiarlie (100).
Fffilays eagueTanals, i1so at Trabua> lliili.
begin at 4 p.m. with field events. RuMin& evcnts
start at 5.
For the girls, Costa Mesa's ·Gigi Sunnoo and
Mina Tsukada qualified in both hurdle races, Sur·
mon going 15.6 in the 100 and 49.7 in the 300
while Tsukada went 17. 7 and 52.8, respectively.
Estancia, a contender for the girls title; bad
ttiree athletes qualify in two events and Lauren
Weaver in three. Sprinters Tracie Mam and Re-
becca Satin both qualified in the 100 and 200
while Liz Romero advanced in the 400 meters and
300 low hurdles. Weaver qualified in the 400 and
both hurdles.
Sin&Je event 'qualifiers for Estancia were Jolene
Schocnen (300 low hurdles) and Stephanie Hickey
(..100 low hurdles).
Esta ncia rips Ce ntury, f0-2
SANT A ANA -The Estancia High
girls softball team lashed out 13 hits, ~
six for extra bases, to pound host Ccn-~ ---tury, 10-2, in Pacific Coast League ac-
tion.
Leab Braatz hit a pair of home runs, giving her
seven this season, and winning pitcher Raena Ya-
nigasawa added a solo shot to pace the Eagles,
who improved to 5-2 in -the PCT.. 7-10 overaU.
Leading 4-1 in the fifth. Braatz and Y anigasawa
clubbed back-to-back homers, Braatz's a three-run
shot, to give the Eagles some breathing room.
Braatz added her second homer of the game in
the top of the seventh to complete the scoring.
Tasha Gilrnocr added a pair of doubles to the
Eagles' attack. Yanigasawa is now hitting .511 (24
for 47), while Braatz is at an even .500 (25 for 50).
~--10, c.ntury a ESlanCia 301 041 1-10 13 0 en.y 001 001 o-2 a J
YlfliO:a$awl. lk'ul1 (7) Ind Nielsen; Robles Ind 8-up. W-Y~
3-5. l -Robles 28-GilrnaR (E) 2. Yllllpslwa (E). HR-lk'uli (E) 2. Yft. gasawa (E).
Mustangs belt Artists
COSTA MESA -The host Costa
Mesa High softball broke op_cn a 5-4 ~
Quintana, Anthony stline
MISSION VIEJO -Estancia ---· Hilb'• Brenda Quintana and Krissi ~ Aalbony each qualified for the finals __ _
in two events Tuaday at the Pacific
a.at I.ague girls swim preliml at Trabuco Hilla.
Quintana had leCIODd-place efforts in the .50 and
100 freestyles. while Anthony barely qualified by fiailb.ina eipth in the same two events.
Por C.osta Mesa, Jenny Horalek qualified in the
indMdual medl~butterfty, and Jill Myen advanced in the · · and 500 free. 1
The PCL boys prelims are today at Trabuco 1
Hilla, with-the c:o..cd finals. at-the same site-Eriday--!-
The list of qualifiers, by event,· from Estancia
and C.osta Mesa for Frid-ts finals. PC&.•11111•• ( .. T...._. .........
208 he-Shnon .......... (E), 2:2U. algllll ~ I
200 IM-Annl Vale!le (CM), 2:50.1, fWI pta, Jenl1y Hot* {CM).
2:51.0. .....
50 he-Bllnda ~ (E). 28.7. lecond pllct; Klts$I Arlhotrt (E). 30.0. algllll plact.
100 ly-.-,Y Horlllk (CM). t:l~.3.
100 frM-llt'Mda Qun1ana (E), 57.7; Knsai At:fltorty (E). l:OU, li;l'llh ...
500 ·-· Myers (CM). 6:34.7, ....,, plact; Klltly Brin (E), 6:44.1.~p&lct.
100 blcll-Jtmy Pldlrlon (E). 1 : 1 S.1 ~ llftll plact; Jll Mywi (OM). ! 1 : 19. 1, llldfl pDct; Wlllnly Pleptr (E), 1 :21.;,, eiglllfl pllct. I
·sea Ki ngs breeze in three
TUSTIN -Corona del Mar's Sea • 1
Kings kept a grip on second place in • ~·
the Sea View League YOlleyball race, ,. ---pushing aside host Tustin 16-14, 15-8,
15-11 Tuesday, to improve to 9--6 ovcraU, 7"'2 io
league play, one victory off Newport Harbor's
league-leading pace.
. Coach Joey Fuschetti inserted Preston Smead at•
middle blocker in the early going and for t while,
the "chemistry" Fuschetti was looking for wasn't
coming together, although the Sea Kings still man-
aged the 16-14 edge.
Smead, a 6-foot-6 junior, had four solo blocu·
and frve kills, and Doug Hesse chipped id' with 25· •
kills as Corona pre~ for its critical match with.
University Friday mght 'at the CdM gym.
Sailors run past Sadd leback
SANTA ANA -Newport Harbor's
No. I-ranked Sailors (14-1, 8-1) • 4(. ,·
squashed host Saddlcback in Sea View ,.
League volleyball, besting the Road-
runners by a 15-1, 7-15, 15-2, 15-10 margin. _
The Sailors, wi\hout 6-foot-7 Frank Griffo foi: ~
the second straight match because of tendinitis in J
bis knee, received the usual from setter Russell ·
Gan, who was at the core of success. Justin Melo·
tee was credjted with 13 kills in the matcb. i
game with eight runs in the fifth inning
en route to a 15-8 Pacific .Coast ------Costa Mesa falls 13 5
League softball victory over Laguna Beach Tues· I -
sjay. · ~GUNA HlUS -Despite the cf-___ ,...,
Amy Marino led the Mustangs' 10-hit attack forts of the doubles team of Nhat • • .,
with a solo home run and three RBI. Deanna Tfan-Steve Tehrani, the Costa Mesa _,,,-'
Centurioni (2 for 3 with three RBI), Sam Snyder High boys tennis team came up short, ~
(a two-run single) and Heather Moore (2 for 5 13-5, in a Pacific Coast League match at Laguna ~
with three RBI) also wielded big bats_ for the win-Hills Tuesday. •
ncrs (5-11 overaU, 2-5 in the PCI...) Tran-Tehrani won two of three matches, losing '
1.1pa BNch c..e. .._ 1-. LlleUM ~1: 4_ 8 5 2 only 4-6 in the other, to pace the Mustangs. 6-12
CostJ Mesi 031 281 11-1s 10 • · overall, 2-6 in the PCL.
Sllnemelw nl Schesdedet; Ospina Ind CenUtonl. W-OspN. S-11 . U.-... ta. C.... ..... a
l-Stnmellr. 28-Cle!Ancl (LB), CentullOni (CM). HR -Mno (CM). llJ1C1111 RtQala (CM) dtf. Yim. M . loll to M:nhll. 1-6, 1o1t to IW· h ~ h h tn1R. U ; It~ (CM) lolC. 2-6. 1-6. M . M HM9n (CM) 1o1t. 3-8. 1· Sc roy spins ourt no-itter '·:! ...... e. ~ <CMl 1o11., ~ u. iost '°a."
COSTA MESA -Calvary Cbabl ,..,Slllw, HJ.a~· -HI. 6-3;'T,..Tetrn (CM) IOst. 4-6, Wllft. 7-4, • W ; V.Cllllrn (\ARJ loll. -t. 4-6. won. 6-2. High pitcher Kim Schroy tossed er ~ 1 tourth no-ruuer of the season, silencing Eagles' m 1·xed doubles. rol I ~ visiting La Sierra, 20--0, in an Az-J
rowhead League softball game shortened to five CCST A MESA _ Estancia Higb's . "'
inninp by the mercy rule. badminton team took the Pacific Coast • 11
Schroy was also a standout at the plate for Cal-League finals apart in mixed doubles ,,,,,-:J
vary (12-7, 7-0), driving in five runs with a single, Tuesday, sweeping the first three plac-"O double and homer. Her double came with the , .., . . es. J
bases loaded during a nine-run second inrung. Chau Nguyen and Doan Nguyen captured the. ,
Sara Younger was 2 for 4 with four RBI. league championship, beating out teammates Unh!Q
The Eagles return to action on Friday against Doan an~ Concha Gill for the bonon. Both teams
LaVeme Lutheran at TcWinkle Parle in Costa qualify for the ClF lndMdual Ownpionshlps a • .,
Mesa, starting at 3. Cypress College, beginning May IS. . '"
C...., ~IO, a.. ....,.. Aonlln., 0 The alternate doubles team for the ClF In la Sllnl~ 000 00-0 0 6
CMwy Chapel 291 ax-20 10 2 dividuals will also come from Estancia, in the form '*'-1nC1 ~ Sdlv, n1 YOUCWIF W-Sctwor. 12..._ L-Wllnoll. 2-t of Danh Nguyen and Esther Viramontes, who fin-
28-Fn (CC). YCUllW(CC). Scllor ICC~ 31-F• tcC). HR-SclwoJ (CC) ished third at the league finals.
Servtta'I 81111111
r1118111 llOllllan
include faculty rnembers1 a booat·
en dub repreaentadve and a t>u..
ketball team member, Will ~nee
the inteninM, Which are tenta-
tMty ICheduled It the end or the
month. · ·
Today's television-radio
TILl\'ISION ..
10 a.m.-lftc'l ()pee. mPN. ........
11:10 a.tll.-A.lcrc»Olbl, WON.
S:lO p.m.-ESPN.
7:30 p.a -Y ........ An,ela. SC. ..... v....,....
4:30 p.m.-Oold Qown. ESPN.
8 p.m.-Ftam Amda\, Tellll, PT. .... .. , ..
6 p.m.-SoiUctJuz.1NT.
Otdill
~ .P·.•:-:-World~· Mklftllbt-Wodd , PT. c.-. ..... 7 p.m.-S..er Bowl, PT. --.... 9:30 p.m. -HollJput. Ch. 56. ....,
10:30 p.m.-MD.. ::r::' SC.
11:30 a.m.-~VeJ•rdc, ESPN.
2 l..lft.-llaliatl ~ PT.
MDI() .......
4:30 p.m.-podeeftoPhl, KABC (790).
4:30 p.a. -$0.MoDtrul, IC.FMB (760).
7;30 p.-.-YMb-AIWtla. KMl'C (710).
nccu sc;i
Local schedule
VICMW 1 00000
..,_,....~...,Sc= (!Ir...,, .. -"' ....... ffilll.,, u.-••o..ta -....... , .......
L.-~•CM!rr
c ...... w •... ,. .. ......... .... 5
2
1 4 S I O 1 0 I :. ..We hope to act a coach ab91rd
before tho end <:A the tchOOl year,"
said Blanton. T-1
t 'I ••
WP-ic.11
T-H7. ...
'
U.S. Olympi~ns .make only
local appearance May 1 7 f"'
UC Irvine hosts O lympians, Japanese men :--s unday, May 17 will mark the only Orat'lp
O>unty appcaraocc of our 1992 Olympic
men's wllc)'ball team.
Their World Leaauc matc:b with tbe Japanese
tt*D will start at 7 p.m. at UC IMnc'1 8~
Events ~ntcr.
The USA team will fcatu~
Newport Beach product Steve
llminoos, wbcrhu returned to
the team after a succeaful
prolca.siooal career playing in
Italy. This is an attempt for
Sceve and our USA team to win
I lhird a:msecutivc Olympic gold
medal
Steve started playing as-a
jWlior at Ncwpon Harbor High
School. He was on the first
volleyball team that I ever
c:oached and wu, buicaJly, a
great basketball player that J
talked into playing for the junior
Volleyball
vanity volleypllll team that I was coaching.
He initially enjoyed the hitting and the blocking
aspects of the game while diving and passing were
his least f avoritcs. (I think that his preferences
have not changed.)
I bad known Steve before 1976 when I began
my volleyball career because of his clo,,c
friendships with the Killian and Fllll1l$0n families,
who arc good f ricnds of mine. Two of Steve's
closest f ricnds arc still Doug Killian and Mike
Flam.son. t'
Ftamson owns a popular sports "establishment"
iA Corona dcl Mar called The Place. When Steve
is in town. be is always "uick to ltop in and sec
hil friend Mike.
'There is great sports memorabilia on the walls
ol The Place and the major display is of Timmons•
jersey from the 1984 Olympic championship game
in Los Angeles.
I often atop in to talk volleyball and enjoy a
"Flam Burger" with the boys.
Another Newport Beach player who is making
bis presence felt on our World League team is
Nick Becker. Nick attended Mater Dei and played
voUeyball there. He attended USC where he
"walked on" the volteybaU team.
His tremendous passing ability plus the fact that
he grtw to 6-foot-5. earned him a starting role on uses 1990 national championship team and the
1991 runner-up.
After graduation, Nick tried o ut for the national
team in San Diego and caught the eye of Coach
Fred Sturm with his great ball control. He has
played with the team for nearly a year and seems
to have a good chance to be the No. 3 "swing"
hitter on our 1992 Olympic team.
The World League is comprised of the top 12
men's national teams. There arc three leagues of
four teams that each play a round robin schedule
with playoffs after the Barcelona Olympics.
The prize money for this league is $3 million.
Don't miss the USA's only Orange County
appearance May 19 at 7 p.m. at the Bren ~ntcr.
Chrl.le BraaM11 1011q1Ntll colama •ppun la
tbe Dal.Ir Pilot e~ WedM.SO.r.
r,· ( I
.. '
. I , ,1
M ichael Seaert>lom of Newport Beach was
in atteodaoce reccnUy at the United
States Sailing AllOci.atioa's spr:' mcct-m,. beld Ma.rcb 18-22 at the tudiuoo ~I in
Fort Worth.
He is ilM>lw.d in the Pacific Coull Inte~·
legjate YICbt Racina Astodalioo (PCIYRA) in
which be is a pall prcaideot, aod is on the Board
of Trusteu of the USC sailing team.
Se~tblom ls the Youth representative to U.S. Sailini'• '42--member Board of Directors.
In addition to his position on the board, Segcr-
blom represents youth sailors ~n the Inshore Com-
mittee and is a member of the Budget Committee.
He is also involved in officiating the sport as a
U.S. Sailing judge.
A member of Alamitos Bay Yacht Cub and
Loog 8cacb Yacht Cub, Seccrblom is an avid
one-design sailor and bas distinguished himself by
winning the 1986 Snipe North Americans and the
1987 Snipe Circuit, and by fmish.i.ng second at the
1984 470 NatiooalJ a.od faftb at the 1984 470
Olympic Trials.
Segerblom, who graduated from the Ultlvcnity
of Southern California's Business School in 1986,
is presently the President of Performance Sailing
lnternatiooaJ.
A ooUegc All-America in 1985, Segcrblom is
now a.ffiliated with the Snipe, Schock 35 and
UIDB 70 Oass associations.
U.S. Sailing is the national governing body for
the sport of sailing. -By th ~ Pilot
Mater Dei swim mers d rown Bishop Amat
IRVINE -The Mater Dci
High swim teams tuned up for the
Angelus League prelims and finals
this week with convincing victories
over Bishop A.mat Tuesday at Uni-
versity High.
The meet was rescheduled after
being postponed last week.
The Mater Dci boys outscored
the Lancers, 111-22, winning every
event id the process. Senior Ger-
ald Yap was a double winner in
the 200 freestyle and the breast-
stroke, along with leading off the
victorious 4x100 free relay team.
Another senior, Adrian Monte-
ro, came home a winner in the SO
free, clocking a personal best 26.35
in the process.
The Mater Dei girls rolled to a
127-39 victory, capturing all but
one cvenL Senior Jennifer Santoro
won the 200 freestyle in a
personal-best effort of 2:22.87.
90Y8 ..... Delttt,...,. ..... 22
200 "*"" ni&ly-1 . ..., Del (MarWo ...... lillenberg. Bn>yles), 2:08.71.
200 fret -1. YIP (M)), 2:15.35; 2. Belslt (MO).
2:26 28: 3 Ftlllglllll (M)). 2:S6.40.
200 N -1. ll4.nhallr {M)), 2:35.26; 2. Mays
(MO). 2.36.01; 3. Fflzilr (BA). 2 46.41.
50 fret-1. Mon1ro IMO). 26.35, 2. Kast {MO).
26.36. 3. SIMs (N>). 26.SO.
100 fly-1. Miyw (M)). 1 :00 9S; 2 Bellsll (M)). 1 :21.16; no 11*11.
t 00 fret -1 Themas {MO), 5 7 20; 2. ....
(MO), t 111.97; 3. Ffazllr (BA), 1 '05.SO. soo hl-1. Gr....-..rg (M)). 6'00.38, 2. IQr1ald
(MO), 6' 11..25; ftO 11*11. . 21'.lo Irle '*l-1. ... Del (Tlona, 5'Ms.
..... ~. 1 ;46.46.
t 00 ba-t. Wla*lboS (M)). Ul6 7'1; 2.
8'dtllllr (MJ). 1:13.46, 3. so. (BA). 1:14.37
100 tnast-t. Yap (M)), 1:20 30, 2. Monlro
{MO). 1 :22.77. Ill '*1t.
400 .... Nly-1. ..., °" (Yap, ICirlillld. YI-
..... lllnblllf). 4 1& rT
f-S· ~ Dll. 10WS a..a ..._.,..,n,..,..,.....
200 mlCllly --1 . ..., Del (SallllfQ, ...... QUno. MellsSll QiMg. Wbon). 2:10JIO.
200 q -1 S...U~2'22.87: 2. Gird (MD), 223.77. 3. lncn ). .50. . 200 .. -1. a.. . 2:33.72; 2. Gregory
(MO), uus. 3. Amil • 2:51~. . SO N -1. Rhodls {MO). 2&.81. 2. M'5low
(MO). 32.&4; 3. cn:in~ (BA). 33· .70. 100 ty-1. Wison . 1: 11.58; 2. Mlclllll
(MO). Ul.20: 3. Sn111Z • 1:24.24.
100 ht-1 Kaing • 1:0753; 2. .....
(MO), 1:10.76; 3. F'llnllldlz .• 1:15.00. . 500 ir.-1. C....!). 8:33.39: 2. Simi (M)).
653.07, 3 DIMwlno • 7:14.47
200 ll'M 1111y-1. Del (GW. !Vlodll, ~
Wison). 1:S4 71
100 ba-1 Mllssa ~ I 1.1U2, 2. Slndlll (BA), 1 :20.54; 3. liUiss • 1 :22.86
100 lnlll-1. ... Cllilno • 1 :2!U7. 2.
Kiil (IQ, 1 :20.60: 1 l.aldll1 (Ill>). 1 :22..38. 400 Irie --1 . ..., Del tn:era. sn. Juns. l<Nllnal. 4:3U4.
F-S ..., Dll. 119-27
The ....... Oepa•••• ... Noe .. ......... ""'°"'* .... .... ....... "°' by to .. '°"' ....,... bl•..,_ II I l•iC M .. Plot Liii' now• %h9to1WWbl¥11111
W. .. MW llNtCH .. NfM tDr '°" • no --ru·· ... ,.. .. ... ... .. to .. Court
HmMln ... AM. ........
..... _... II OORJIEl d .. we .. '°"' ··=· ........ ,.... I I Nrtl wllt .. C..., a.ti. ...................... ........ .., .......... ~ ..-ae,.ar a • .-c...,~
~-w.. .... eo.. Mw. c ... ma • '°" ., not ._. by, ,..._. _. ..-• (714) Ml-•ISU,
'[ I uluut S11 Olt '11 ... .. .. .................. '°" • ..,.. Wllpreudn'rfNL • '°" ....... ... .,,,, -.....
• llllA' ,..... Oii ........ ..
• ........ -to ...... '°"" Good LYdl In .,.. ,_.,.,., .
• •
JDUIW WM: llOTICll W llOTICll
.:ai -..... '" TOlmlLN ..........
llll-tt4YtltMel .........
•• Ilk ~ c::..-TOt 11. =._ ........ ~ C.... ..._ .,_ Nit 1-...... =,.... ..... .,. Plot .. ti. ..... -.. ..,. ,,. .......... ...
ifOON · CMIMTWOP ........ 1• R • W.t• Atlrt n. a Milf I, ti, 1• F • I ....... .._,.,,
..,,,..,,..... -~---W111 ·::1::-.......... ,. W.141 ........ I • t II -TM ,.t"9"',., --
On 0.0.1~ M. 1811 , •-••CM. "-..CIOT'f'W --.. -no ~n .• ..-,... M ,..... ::-= • 111 Am1go9, Hewpott •t•u.o.c.1-,_ '"'-,.... ••...,... -tW7te WIOTICI w..-a"• 111e ........ .., ...., ._
leecfl,CeMoma,,1Nprop. .......... m9tllllll ~~~ R1•1 I R •i • II I -~ -' :...-: ~ ~.=~~ENCY Nobi'=--to ~-181 eo•...,...!:"Lw~ • •b•H-a':.a••-•a • 1111 -""~ Olli ....,... .. .=_ ....... .::::.= WU Mll9d J'Ul9l*'lt to creditor Of the ......... " , __ ONe =.. . -• I I I Al-El • I IPI .... ~ ~ OJIL TNI -...... HMlltl Md SlflliCy Code named:..., 1'llt e-U laa•H ~d ..,. ..._ Tiie '* '• .,.,_.. 11 I mnl Tiie ,......_ ,._,. ~LAMI" TALll, 1144 ~ ..... tm _. .. ONllW·a.-ti
S.Ctton 11471/11411 by .. teebc>Uttobemec»f11 79LMJ4.tl) Jt., IO """"'***d LW. .. .._....,... .. : The al*'°"9 ndO!!IUlnlie• ......, Me.. Col9 .._,.... c... ...... 0....~M-~ the Newport 9Mct\ Polee the HHte dHcrlbect TO: ThomM J. TCllMe. &..laUN ._ Cllr. -alUGHTON ,AIRMONT .. , doha1 L II: C1MLN1P DMICE fHl1R. c.11. _, Clll. ,_ ~ below. m.t E. COllll Highwiey Hilct Lee--. eo Hum. Al80CIATU, _, '°'* HI . A L-AM RICAN NATIONAL. 1100 .,_a ......... AM~ T1lll M11ln111 II oono-.Wt•
TM Pf'Ol*1Y wu ..ezed n.e nemee end bUtlneM Spece zoe. COronia D.i ~~ =.• &.aeune ~ ~ 0011111 M--. ~~ •-~ *'°'i.....!!..."PO't ... 4$, !.....!•~ ~· .,...W-=''*• ................... ~ wtlh r.epect to lllleQed Yb llddl11111 of the...._ we: Mer1~CA li2tl25i Thomee J • ._ ..,_, -· -_,_, .. ,,..._ _ C.W. _, --· -· Tiie C•> eo. CoeM MW ~ ..... leUon(1) of leollon(1) EBRAHIM OTMISHI AND TOMe, 3 ~ ~ ~ ._. It., Im M Unllted, llO ~ Ina. C4MCa ...... c.llf, C IC a.o.uM, ~ Cell-Monte C. ..... ., ... __. ..... ...,._ .. a -e. 11, • 11358 of the HMlth .net NOSRAT NOURI FATEMI, a.ch, CA i lltYM _._ Ol1wie. ~ COllll o.tw., COllle ._.., .... • _., aG0 Itch It #1Cll, ....... -.,, 0... ..... = ..... .. .. ... • - '
S•f•ty Code. You •r• 1541 Adllfl'W AYMU9 41e, Albert ar.w.. 110 Udo ~1 • Celt. tilW Celt.... ~ etioer lohool Of <>r-:~~r" BHch. cant. a.If._, -......, ...,. 1
.... hereby noclfted "* the eo.ia ...... ca. 92929 P81t! o.tw.. ' -=..... Th • buelneee .. ~ AB Group, NO lcMAh ~ COUMy, ~ • Thi• IM*MM .. OOftoo .... en: .. 11.· t-.... 1.
Dlltrtcl Anom.y '11 Orenge The locdOn 1n Cellll)rnle PQft 8eecf\ CA di.Idled by. a ...... '*"' OoMI ~ Co.ta ......_ " DrM. Ulle n-Mr Thia bullneee It con-_.... by. flUllllnd _. ~ ,_.. ... IC ·-
County hM INll*d ~ of the ct"9f 9QCUIM ofl'°9 NOTICE IS 'HEAl!BY nnNp c.lf. -~ ca. Mee&, Celr. eluded by. a eotPOi*"' ... TNI ......._ -tltd n.LJl..L 'I,._ CMdlng1 to forfeit th• of the Mflet 1e; SAME AS GIVEN that Cun:l-TUmef 111• regletr111t(1) COftt. n.te bu.anMa le con-eaw The regi.trent(•) com-The regletrant(e) .-.. "9 o.ny a.tt '11 Ri•ni abov.c!MCl'lbed~ A80VE ~· • ~. "*"*' '° lr'INaCt ..... ~ by. .......... Thi• buelnffe .. con-rwad lo hneeCt ...... rwad lo ............ ar.,.. Courtly Oft .. 14 ~ c1~d• Sect~ 0::., ~ thene:'.: ::me • ~ ~ B:n... ~N~~ ~egle1rent(•) com-~ ~,:,::f(:)etlol~ =.::-H~•~ =n::-~"o: 1
-.... ,.·
8 :!,: 11 "'r9 1141&.4. lldchlaM ~ by the c.tM\ tl71 PM!My ~ litlO\l9 on: Aotl 1, 1112 ~ lo 1r...a ~ nw'°9d lo ....... tMlo-abolle on: ....,..., 14, abolle on: Allfl 1, 1• • t ' hed -~ Tiie , ... le ,.,_.
You .,. lnltruc:t9d tt\9t If .... wftNn ttvw v--i. bllehome, Decel No. Heidi LM .._. neee under h ~ ,.... unclW ttle ~ 1117 PllMole T...,._ .__,.... .,. **'I ....... •: you 6Mlte to conteet the fore the dm IUCh lat wu AAWHIO, Serlel Noa. Thie ~ W lled Bl.a,,,._ N8me(1) ...... BuelneM NalM(li) ...S Aof Q. ~. ,.,..... ~ IRI ,_.. w 9ec1 C.... Mw o.ly "°4 CINDV"t' IDT I. • 1 .. lorfeltLn of this Pf'OP«1YJ ..,,. °' dlllWr9d '° the S50151U Md 850151)(. ~ wllh lhe COWlly Clertt '11 abolle on: 1• abcM on: Men:h tt..197~•~· . Clef'it wtf\ h County c:i-tr el Apfl a , M1¥ e. 11. 20, TueUn Avenue. Coit•
J)UrlU9IJI to Health eno buyer .. : NON£ c:.i.d .. S BolMr In Udo Dr-. Co&ny en Aiwtl 10, ~ John H. Bo¥elrd. ,..,.,._ T111a ......,... was Med Orm1ge ~ on Aprtl 14 t• ~· llla7
Sa::l Cod• S.~tlon ni. IWM9~ ~ Pn.. 710 Udo , .. -lNe I It ........ tied Ofllcef .... County Clertt "(11 tlta • ..,. ;asii,;; ~ ""'°"· ~·:m ~~ =o-:-:'.:,Q8f'r'::J ~~Beech. Publllhed~= ~~on~ J:~~"-: ?'•igeCcu11yonAiwtl10, Publehed ,..,.. MUCllOTICI :....,"=_, C..
intarMI In the property. SEON KYUHO KONO. 1548 Thie ....... In the amcxn Cou Meea Deity PlloC 27, 1112 Dr-. County on Aprl 10, ,..,... C09ta MMe~ .. --:::: ........ " ..... um..d .....
You mUlt ftle thlt.c:lalm (n Adame Avenue •E. ea.ta"' 15,112.81. end ,... Apfl 22 21 ... _ 8 ,. ,. .... 1"2 PubleMd Hewpor1 fJwtl.. _, -1 .. n.. A"9f1Ue, the ~ Court of the M-. CA m Mntl 1N Vll1ue of *>rege 11182 • • -1 • "' Publlhed ~ fJwt1.. FUJUJ Costa M... Dally Piiot Aiwtl 21, M9'f I. 1S, IO, a.1t.111 --C.-..... Cell. m27
County of Orange wl!Nn The ....u to be IOld .,. of lhe mobleflome from co.w Meea Oely Piiot PublllNd Newport Bwfl.. ... -1112 Ital • • nl Thi• '41elneee le ~
thirty (30) days Of the first clffalbed In gener.i u : September 1, 1111, W·149 Apfl 22. 21 ...... 1 13 Coita Mffe Dally Piiot ......,. 22. 21, Mey I. 13, W·11'0 The ""°"*18 pereone dueled by.•.,,.,.. s-t.
pttb11cat1on ot lhl• Notice, ~ Se1on end .,. ~ thtouGh Aptt 10. 11t2.. Thia PUIUC --• -1 • • Aprt 22 29 May e 13 1112 .. dOtrll bu11Mee,... Mt1Np unleu you rece!Ye ICtuel emed et: 1548 Adami Av-amount lndudee dtllfy dam-RVl"'5 1112 19112 • ' • 1 W-148 l'UIUC IOTICI TftUCK Cl.01lttNO it102 Th• ~trant(•) com--
notice. (Pt-UH Sup. 9nlJe IE, COlte M .... CA agM Md utlMy cn.rg.. ............ T-401 W·151 .... _ -nlCI " 1111 tmp•I• Ln.. Huntington nw1Ced ............. r10f Couf1 Number 87-* 92828 The dalty l'«1tll ,.. 11 .._... .,._ .... ---~ -rer1• Bwh, aelf ll2t4I tW unclW h ~
48.) You muet NtVI en en-Th• bualnesa name used 121.ee.111 -,._ -1 -9uelrt111 -. Jeffrey Alien Pllfombo ....,,... Name(•) llled dofMd copy of the clalm by the Ml.let at that loc8-DEMAND IS HEREBY lts:ts•1nt Clea tOIHll PUIUC NOTICI ,....,., 8tah••RI 21102 tmpa1e LA. ~ ebo¥9 on: Aprl 1, tlta
on the Dl1trlct Attorney of tlon ta· MONA USA HAIR MADE thel YoU pey 1N TM Folowlng Plf90na 9uelRIH .... The ~19 per90ne ton 9Mct\ calf 12141 CVr'lllie Gayle Newtdr1t Or1ng1 County (Alln: STUDIO eum of 15. 182.17 to the un-.,. doing buMlelle u : ......... Plolltlelll ........... .,.. dolna ~ M: Thi• bu~t""i 11 con. TfW .... ,.,,. w tied Vickie L Hix, Deputy Di. The entlclpelad dall of c:terelgned, who le aJttiO. MARKETING BROKERS llullnlll..... •uelne• llw The Followllig pei"IOM C K ftAIA INTl!ANA-ducted by. en lndMdual wlh 1N County OIWtl of
lrlc:t Attorney) et 700 CMc lh• bulk .. le MAY 22, rUed to NCetYe .. eame. ~M~ REAL ES---........ ,.. ·="' .,. dolna buelf-. •: TIONAL. 3900 Birch It. Th• regletrent(I) coin-Dr-. COUMy Oft Aprl to, Center DT1Y'I WISI, Santa 1992 at the ofllce of Sit.. UNLESS llilS Cl.AIM IS • -1 Aquertue Of., .... Folowt11g pereone The F S*'IOfll AEALn'" TAX SEIMCES, 1105, Newport BHch mencad lo tn1n1aCt tM1o-1112
Ana, CA 92701 wlttlln tan VER SERVICE ESCROW PAID BY APRIL 2t, 1tea, Huntington.. a..ctl, Cdf • .,.. ~ buelnMe •: are doing boM'991 u : 3481 AGl.wU DIM. Hwi-Clllf. t2tlO ' neea under 1N ~ PUTeOa
(10) d1y. of tt\1 ftHng of CORP.. 12112 ~ TliE MOBll..EHOME wtU. ~· Mlctlael AB~ ON CARLSBAD Pereonal RequNt Video llnglon e...cti, Celt. '2849 C K Chao-USA. ~ .. Cell-1ue1MN Neme{i) w.cr PubllMd Newport ~ tM clllm In the Superior St. •200. Garden Grove, BE ADVERTISED FOA .~1 ,._-. .. ,... Cowtwrf, ,.. __ .e!S• 950 South Taolna s.Mce, 819 Ocean-Alen MlctiMI Coul1wmy, bn1I. 3900 lllrch It. 1'105, ab011e Of'!! Aiwt11S. 1112 Coate ..... n... --. ec-t/Clvfl OMslon. CA t:l.&42 SALE AHO SOlD BY AlJC. -....,._,_ ..... Hunctng. ..._ ....... ea.ta ...... hid Di .. Huntington Bwh, 3481 ~ Dr., Hwi-=Ort BHch, C•llf Jeff Palombo __ ., .. _..
The llllure to tlmely rile Thl1 bulk llllrll lubjed TIOH AT 10:00 A.M .. ON ton 8Mc:h. Calf. l2MI Clllf. 12128 CA 92&48 ~Beach, Cllf. t2l4fl ' TNe .......... wM Med Apt 22. 21, Msy I. 18,
and MCUfl 1 verified clalm to Callfomla Uniform Com-MAY 21, 1112. AT 3 80lJ. Steven Dweyne Lund, AB Group, 950 South Johennn COmenl Botto Sheron M. eoumny 3481 Thia buihwu It ~ Wtlh h ColMlly a.ti of 1112
stating an lntlfllt In the merclel Cod• Section VAR, IN LIDO MC> H17038 Blueweter LAne, COllll DIM, ea.ta Meea. houwer, MlchH I Boat-~ Dr,. ~ ductedby:a~lllol• OrMgeCouNyonAiwtl t4 W·153
property In tne Superior 11108.2 BILEHOME PARK, 710 untlngton Beach. Calf. CelW.12128 hou'#lf, 819 OcMnhllt Dr .. e..ct\, Calf.12t48 The regl1tran (a) com-tm '
Cour1 wlll rffUll In the 11 '° IUbject.. the name UDO PARK DRIVE. NEW· 9284T .. I I AB Umlted, 950 South Huntington BHch, CA Thi•. butlMM la c~ "*'* lo nneact tMlo-pau1• SELL
Pfopel1y being declared or end addrNI of the per.an PORT BEACH. CAUfOA. "1 bu1lneH 11 con-Co.I DIM. COila ...... 92&48 ducted by: hUebend Md MM undlf the ~ ordered lorllh 10 the Stall wt1ti whom clalma may be NIA. cldad by: • gener'lll pen. C.elf. 12128 Thi• t>u11n .. 1 11 c~ _... Buelnen Name(t) ~ Putlbhed NNport fJwtl.. ol Cellfomla and dlltrit> fli.d 11 SILVER SER\llCE DATED: Apftl 10, 1882 ntr9hlp. 11111 bu1lna1 11 c~ ducted by. oo-pattnen llle regl1trent(e) corn-1eboW on: NIA C09tl M ... Daly Piiot Y.Ol.X Used vehk:le IJtad pursuant to lhe Pfov1--ESCROW CORP.. 12912 a WAN a ON AND 111• regl1trenl(1) coin-ducted by: e aer-111 J*1-The regl1trent(1) corn-menced lo tr...a ~ Roy G. ~ ,.._ Aprl 21, Mey 8, 13, 20, th ..... ...t. classffla.f
llonl ol Healttl Ind Safety ~ St. #200 PO D0WDAU. .,, UNGA nw1Ced to trenMd ~ l*llhlp menced to nnuct tMlo-,_. unclW IN Ac:WcK.ajdant 1112 "•""'V'• ~''"" · _ neee under h Fldlloul 111• reglatreot(e) coin-M9!.. undlf the f1c1ftloul Bualneu Name(•) ~ Thia .....,,..,. ... lled W·118 M2-H78
330 West Bay Street Costa Mesa, CA, 92827
Houses/Condo
For Sale
COSTA Ml-.SA .!1:!4 NF.WPOHT cos·1 A Mt-sA :.?•;:.!.} Ill; N ·1 I'.\ I , I < I :\ Nt.Wl'OHT \ \I \ I I• I'.\. 10 \.I \I._, Jot I: I ._,I ~. I "·, \:\\.<II '.'\I I -.1t \.I
~ ........
2BR 2~8a townhome , I Encl gar W/O hkup g•ted community wt • .... W11 fenced yd. 8800. 1.0 .•nA W POOi. tn• 4Br 38a Bluff• lg •Lee C.. Cetlitu phone entry syst9m. 4BR, 2~Ba. SWMplng E. Wbon . ..a.t4H Ow. patio, lriCSry, 1Wnhff, avt lmmed: on the llMCh. Weekly Town home w /alllP"-------MAVll A nAt (f"aiu19
BEACH :.?ttrn BL1\I 11 :•. 10 Hl-.A<"ll ~hh!I Ii I \.I \I ._, •. " ._,II \Ii I · 1
~~ .: ~. , . I 11·1 I >11 I " ' I• I. ., .. ,.
CloH to 1hopplng view of mtne/city Ila, ~ crpea/~, et<N9. Furn $2000/Unfurn & month~ !•ntale. amenltSM. L.ndty f9o, OMll to ~ No ...,_ tO
(71 4)645-8122 Dye or grndr, pool, lannl1. 2bt =?~ ce,: ~9483 Of 1•1 Mel 11100 mtnly. 7234171 7 ... ~ uerctae .,..., lg .--~ get~ re... w114r ·~ ownet", llttn Mclf'8 ~7~~da~·~:ipm =·!, :'.::~oo cpt, D/W, •to;age. Avail. Now. t..ge 1BR BLUFFS Hr 2"'8•, C49I .... "'"' ...... = ,emel!e"'pm'd. Liii ue do .. for~
Beat euh otflf tak ... •Oulet 2BR private . $750 No P.t 14().2405 ~I~ Up. d9ho 1300 eq ft. kw flW· Pvt "*'· ~ 29A. el Avt ~ ~1~ eour.... .,._ ....
R2 bayfrt/deeded bctl, aml yard • SS7S/mo' VIiia B81boal 2BR 1BA, lndk rm. Nr :! ~-S75'~'. :~=·87~· ::"$1:X,~~-=: Single mom w/1 cN1d =::•.:!:~~ ... II.,,. ....
Hl\1 HC I :\
1'1-:NINSll l ,\ 11107
pier· Onr/Bl(r 499-20e8 11t, las1 +'NC. • ~~.BR ~r:,;; ~':~:~11 -~ 213-592·2.214 NEED TO MOVE FROM .., oryr:n?C!. 875-7003 need.a r.pon '"""""· ~,,,......;..,. To Al ......
548-9524 Of 548-0931 Incl. Flreplec., $1250/ O.C. houelng $875 THE BEACH? Chectt •L MORRO w .. kJy ~1~~ .... CMI lwnhl ~· ~lnlmal prodUctatnvea .. • II..........,•
1800 Vlola • duplex mo. Agt 87e-48ta U87 wu out OeJcwoode Sum-eumrnet rental. sa..pe -+ ~. • .._ ew a reed NllllT·
28R 2BA, dlahwaaher, r=======:::;j CENTAUR MGMT t•R. mirrored Waite/ martlme Speciale. 5 penona. Can (114) "*".('30) tea NEW HOMES!! dl•poNI, W/D, frpk;. w·aa&JSI 942.2288 or 931-2725 :::-1:-!~!: ... ~ Apt9. trom onty ss1e. 491M1740t17'().ee2,4 v ... .;::!!'1• • ~°'=•~T:-::
BUILDER'S gar. deck. cuatom wt""'1 'fwnl... 2 BR 2 BA • ....,. 2BR e? ... tn Short twm. F~ -.-Ml S8.31 to 1461 E bultt, $975. 842·1311 2Br 1 ~Ba. new car-_,.,, fum n..-dalty N ._...__ ..... ~ T·--,. .. ~al 1BA 1750. Comptetety . ..,_., .. *M) 7l0 •7eal/f Cell .. t....... ......,.. .. _..., -'•"""" CLOSE.OUT! h P.~ pool. S960 refurb new --· Sony, no pete. EOH 1'!"1_' Sff''. •1•1 .. 1..._· 82980 t ru ......... 1728 eeo. · -,....._, Newport Beech South 008 .. ,,..._. Only 1 Left!! f~d Ln. 827-5107 or drapH, paint etc. ..._., t~ clttt. NB. A.gt 541-60321~~=====::! I I t '--I ,._
3BR, over 2300 aq. ft. 31o-5"°"'770 X 205 Oul.c E.Sfde locatlon. •UDRM sw-'-Newport Beach Nofth 8 hr N • w po' I l'OR ..... PAY PMONU '°'
Builder Wiii cooper•t• AVAIL NOW. 28' 18a, _______ _, ::.~a..°':: ::. . IDRll :::::..... ..... "°' M•l•hl• •P•Clou• 1000 eq ... • ~ •••• ~oulble
w/ftnanclng. yerd. 2-cer gar, hk 147 E. 18th St. •1 .-VVJI( Smalt~ 1BR. !~.Be~!:!:. . Vlffaga nr Udo Jazz t 1.100,..;:...,..., ... ~ .. ~ROCMN11 •OUllD : Oerman
I I •I ·, 11 · • • ,
l~.!'00 up1. 829 lndlanapolle. F1'19, dehwatlr, et~ 1 blk to BMchl 1 car 1 , .. ..,_ W...,.../D Club. Very '*-· Of• .. ,_ Sh9pwd, Oto.r ...._ 0~ 8•....-un 1-S S950. Bier. ~700 3JSR 3 Ba. epacioua 2· Incl. No P9la 545-4855 parking utlle Incl noe, garage, · flee, ealon, etudlo, IMllldc a. T ... .__..: Apartments
For Rent 2113 Y•I'-,.d etory, new cerpal/ -._, • • M~ 30--40 • ..----942~ paint, N. Coate M ... •KWPI """'8 Small _,mo. 546-9100 N/emkr. S&25 + ~ store.?.._....._ --~ln-
NEWl'OHT
HEl\Clt tOli'I
0-.r ........ "'911
38( + den, 2~ Ba,
pool, r.mod thruo"'.
S445k By Owner 7~
1300 Of 931-8790 Nt-.\\ l'I II\ I
l950 Apt 540-1151 1BR, Ideal for 1 per· w. Nwpt 9tepe to bch, utle. Avt lmmecll CaJI Cal Rob F. 432..a63 HatllSugartoof .... flli
A"'•otfwe..1 ....... at.. :::r;.ar.::J;JjOO r::o:/iea. D';, frplc. Tom .... 7781' Hufttlft81eft ...... :';.~ae!::*:ai::
LAGUNA CHAIUID ·oeted t•lt wtth pn.. 28' frple 1 b'k beec1:ti HM m.:~2.~1*1Y •UDO Cozy, qYMit 48' ~~:a= Mel ._ men. ,...._
Downtown. Secluded val* patio. M25/mo. 2 'en tO be 1• hae. LQe pdo, nr bch --141 -Olll ... 1018
1 Br beech cott•g• Room wtth view ptt)f. 548-9081 y y, ~ • M/F 23-38 n/a.Ptlt otl ~-"T· __.
Ideal for 1 Of 2 quiet woman with refe. E'SIDE 18R. _.... ...-. 2opnr18 2·1,.,.rtt ~oL~· 1435+utll. 723-1882 o~IUTTD ,,_..,....., _.. • Q _,... -.t $1. --, '9C lillUU male, ~ ~-~·"V ... ulta .• 1075. ra•t loc. '500/mo Avalt 8/1. No peea. LUUIU COM etw ~ ZBa t1M. d9y Apr1 4~ or 49&-11M ~ Incl utJI. n/e. 75~2 S585/mo. MIO dep. 28R ApMrnent, -..oRT UY -Upd'e & l)tfv8le. beet 4001 IOOO, llOO IUf QlllM ~ a:.~
Studio 5 min to ocean 150 E. 21St St. 2 y,. New, A1..o.~ 0Ut ~ roome k>c. $450. M/F. Aval Sq. Pit.~ erctt 8t. Heep k-s» OW WOftd .... 111....., "-ee c91
I.I\( i II NI\
Hl·:1\C 'll • 1 I'< ((111(1:\;I\
lll-.1. l\11\H !I,!!
IU· I\( It ! I 1,•1 I h \\I I "•I :
7 ~new, dean,.,,.: 849 5e:M Of 54• 4294 ~~~:.:..II C.. tnctude ~ & mk:ro. now. Mlrt111M87-2113 Npt 8ch 841..a32~ ::::" ~-= 711.-.Z.
Cloul, hug• balcony., •.• ,.,. llACK UY NOWll 71. eeo.a10 =·~~~ ~k~~ .,._.. LOCAtiiii eound hOUHhold
$850. 840 5184 Bkr 2BR 1BA em beck --• .......... FIND New bldge, rM:lwele-Pf'Oduda. Not .,.. i\C"H l·.Mil-. t 1 :!~>
a.ACR•RANCH
'2990, '500 dn, $75/
mo. Owner wlll n-
~-(806)947~
Sten To Sand (()S'IA Ml-SI\ :!t.·!I
Y"f, gu w/d hk-up. N~-leland28R !.-!-'front. more. Locllled ctoee hM. ao.eflia, rolklp ..,._ In .,,..... eom. No pet•. s1351mo _.... •u"·~ MIW to baach/alrpott. door•. Aleo .,,. .. , ~ Pl1ced l' lllGllT9 • Luitu
145-1131 aft 3pm ~~=-= .= ~=~Ir .. =~: an apartment front ehownne. OtMI ..... --··= ~~~ '=
OllT OF STl\TI:
ftAifLY 1 BR-38R nr
bct'll 2-' car pattttng. .. 7&-11700hn0
VIiia Rentals
875-4912
*'°" In ~I ~= VW'Y. m..100 • onty. eat through classified :;: ~ ,,.._-=:,1"'nt,.,.. •t.._ ~ tor 11100 oao •
**AeellltJt'l'w 1BR USA, gu W9hr1r::::::::::::::~:;:::;::;;:::~~====::::::::~:::::::::::::~::::::::::~:::::Cal::12:S:::·:··:::::::a PHOl'l<HTY I '•~•H
MOVINQTO
LAI VEQAI?
.,...,.. ... ......... ctryr hkup, emal bedc.·
......... 1ard Ho P9ta t&85
.. POO.,!i.!~..:aJU~ = 1 _._ t•• • 18R Newpott twnhee • .-.-_...._.. _.
~·
Tired ol the high
coat of llvlng? 2 bed-
room, 1 beth home
on • taro-. w8119d corner lot au.,...
Loo•llonl Com.
pletely renov•ledl
RV parking Only
$"75,000 Call Bin or
Heten today •t (702)
:Je9.9242 for lnfor.
metlon.
1
........ ,.,..u . ,,,o.e.~1831 d3Pm SERVICE DIRECTORY In emell, ~., com-M•~ua • .,....... eettlf\Q. Getec:t, pl•• w/prtv 0., a com---------.;;...;..;~;;;.;.;.;;;,,_ ectMtlea.. Aak
munlty pool. Juet • p _.. lettl II S I .,.. .....
•hort bike ride to 8lll• ~ ........ lp1ol•I Ea beachl tat Ume of· With OoMn • ~ 2 & 38R Townhomea ra. II llw .... .......... ••
1
c.. ~1r::: :,~ =· ~ivo 2~ 2
: -=Oood~Jloc~, ·~·r·~7~-~"P.:~~~~~~:------~-.... :.:~-=~':':•:.~-==~-=:.:---===:.~•:•:•:-:•:. __ :::_J to mo. TRW, no f.... P.ta. at .. t07 NIW
........ .,." 28R 28a. pvt garage, ..
•t•R vw.w. Brand ........ v... .... #Hh•r/dryet, OOOd Service
Director)' Dnew, 142 VIiia Po6nt 28RE ....:..~--;-Coeta Mw toe.don. r. 11285/mo. The PN-•-· . 880. ...,....,. a .... 1•11 ..,... of Ca. AMlty, Noe at ., ...,, .,,....,.....1
...... 7 ... .,...
•U.Pe111ll•u18•
1 6 Z8R Untta from
;.,,11.\l"<11tl
Ill-. \I II •1,1,•1
:'.I"\\ I 'I Ill I
Ill /\, 11 •1,1o•1 Houses/Condos
, For Rent
seoo w/t!M. IM bctl. r-~-----....-;,,;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::; b8Y vtiew, e1aeoao 7t0 LIM Pwtl Dr.
lptng ~ ttwu 111&
( ( I If I I '\i \
Ill I \I \II • t • •
2BR 28.A. 2-cet (1111',
•paclow grouncl9, 2
poote, f/p 811 IS(>;'mo
IUllT ..... MllTM.8 ... --9'42-11o47 °" -.y..... ...... 3Bdtm 2"'8a lwnht'M , .. m dueJo OGbge. ,. ata Ovn golf cour.e
dOne, 2Br 1 Ba. pr, AC, vwl Tannla, pool spa.
frplc. 11300. 141114: dt 11800/mo. 94CM2'74 t8a. ger. redone, S1250.
170I ... : 29r 1a.. pt. ........ ....
trptc, cse.n. •1ns. Ho TeMtheftle 819P9 to
pllla. ~1 NWpt Cntr. 2Br t Ila,
N..-38R 2\t8A wtth 2· 11150 Bkr 940 Ml•
car gar, Z ~ W9C Oii TM• WATIDI
.,__ 2100 .eq n. Avan aer oondo ... esen.
now 12,000/mo .... 1"'48a. fp, ~"<* ger.
1224"' a2·2000 .. -$2.200/mO ~
for PJ. ~ D1lt9d IM
t ell your home aaA hou~eomm
through ctaulfled. ~a epe. -•· ...... .,. t1150 ... 8200
iiiijilll
642-5678
•
•· I. a llcll!Dom .,..,.,,..-.
1111111u11. wt•,"*'" ....
....._..,.,., l'IDD .... , 0919111 •9MI
oma99 ............. .
malt ........ lncltuded.
by, "° ,,..
Mf'nt•.m...,..
1"I Nl\WOIT ....... (IQ\T aR AVMJQ ,..., ..
,_,,AY #AITWftl at• CM¥ON .....
INCRIAll YOUR
· RIACH
THllOUGll
OURllW
•HOVID LOWIRRATD
\ o I o 1 I '. I I .• o • I I I I II , , I I . ' I " I \ . , I '', 1 I I I ,
' •4 I I I ·' I I I \ \ . I 11 I '
\Id 11111 •ii •.I
! , I ' I I I . I • I "~
. ' . ' ...
BI< ~ ( I t-S i.ot.o
S( 1111111 -... A
)'\"iHl I ll•l'\ l"i.'
S( t111t1I :-.. /!...
I'.\~ 11\l l 1111'\ Ill I.!
St tf( >Ol.S &
l~Slltl l ll<l:'li 11!1 !
Classes Start June ts at The Marketplace in Irvine (across from UCI)
aat111 are taught by local professionals with expertise In their respective
area. Cluses are held days and evenings, Monday -Saturday.
lecc ckmee: Fun • lntefetttng •Non Credit • No Testa • No Gfode•I
Clo# OftMt>(p lncludtl:
• Mec:lntlo9MBM 8Ulc Computing
• S~ Design & Use
• CompuMr Ald9d OMign
•RMI Eatal•
• How to Start a Business
• How to Write your own Uvlng Trust
• ltlcome, AettfenMnt & e.t.te Planning
• E.,..-ythlng you alweyl wanted to
know about modetlng
•Youth Modeling
·~ ....... • anterior OesJgn •German
•Spanish
• WOfd Processing
• Desktop Publlahlng
• Mlcroaoft Windows
---------,
For a free Schedule of Classes, 1
clip and send this coupon to:
ICC Community Educatton
University Tower, 4th Floor
4199 campus Drive
Irvine, CA 92715
• F'9ftd\
• $9\ t..Mguag9
I Name: ________ _ • Kotean
• Ballet
• Oii Painting • Drewing
• Outtw • Altlok>gf •Teacher Training
• FuhlOn
• ONllng wtth Co-d9J)end9ney
• ConvnunicatJng with T""' • Nn.nt tJood9 fOr Health
•SAT, ORE, CBEST Prepltatlon
F• Ad Action UPTO Cal a .... •eoo AD-VID
'42-5671 -r ~ PER MONTH • •
1'· =
. * •m1a:1• • ! • Early morning motor ~1 routes .available. Deliver
5 ~ Monday thru Saturday.
J •· ·'Must have
Ii dependable transportation
and liability . insurance.
CALL 2-43 3 •
COSTA ME&\ NEWPORT BfMli
'
Seevourcar
make racks!
Need to sell your cor? Do tt the 005'{ Wrrf ! Run your
auto ad for l 0 ckJys in the Doily Pilotjlrxiependent. ~it
W 't sell, we'D run it for 5 rme cklys, FREE!*
Col Cklssified for details.
iiiijiliL
6142-5678
t\T\ I lql I •, •.
( I ' .......... ,, ..... '' . ,, I
HAS BRIDGE DEVELOPED?
Both vulnerable. North dula. NORTH
+K4 7 542
K Q J 10
+A Q 10 7
EAST WEST
•986 3 Q 73
¢A8542
+64
• Q J 10 2
7 KQ988
. 7
+K6 3
SOUTH
+A7 5 '°A J 10
" 9 6 3 +J982
The bidding:
North Eut
1 0 1 Y'
2NT P ... p... P ...
South W•t
INT P ...
SNT P ...
Opening lead: s~en of 'V
We have frequently arsued that,
while biddins bu made hup atndes
since the Golden Age of bridce more
than SO yean ago, tha ia not true of
play. In &\.IPPOrt. or our a.rcumenl, we
submit this hand.
The North-South hands were 1el
u a problem m TM Bn~ ff'Orld
t.ck in HM2. More than half the
entries aubmitted found tbe win.nine
line.
Modem bidders ~nd to uae 15·17
point.a u the ranee for a one·no-
ttump openini b;d, IO that would~
the choice with the North band.
Over a one-diamond o~inc bid.
moat Eut players would double to
bring both major su1ta mto the pie·
ture, but that ahoukt not alter
South'• forward-going respome of
one no trump.
On the opening Jud of a heart.
fetching the queen from Eut.
1hould declarer bold up? No, be-
caute a apade ahift might prove fa.
taJ. After winning t:M ace or hurt.a.
which minoT auit. ahould declareT
t.ckJe fint?
If Eaat holda both the ace of dia·
monda and Iring of cluba. the de·
(enden will prevail no matter what
declarer does, collecti.nc three bean
tricb and two in the minors. There-
fore, West. muat bold one of the key
carda for the contract to aucceed.
If West holds the kine of cluba.
declarer get.a home no m&ttel' whlcb
minor ia tackled tint. The crudal
aituation ia whue West bu the .ce
of cliamonda and Eaat the kiDc of
cluba. lf ~r roes aft.er dia·
moods 6.rat.. West can wui the ace
and return a bttrt, and declarer'•
last heart tiopper ia forced OOl be·
fore the cluba are wt up.
CorNCt technique is to tack.le
cJub9 first by nm.nine the nine, re-peat.inc the fineaae if it wins. A).
t.houih it loees. the defenden'
communiaitiom are &battered and.
when West wina the ace of dia·
moods. Eut bu no entry, eo declar-
u'a contnct ia NCUre.
TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ACROU
...
.. MOiie~
l1s..ed
63~
5'8olk9 .......
-.O)
M Inc. In
ML
11 c.-d .....
-~
I
M Wedneeday May a. 1892
Youth
• in itc e
Costa Me sa High School, 2650 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa, CA 92626
Capital Punishment: Friend or Foe
by Clay Stockton . . . ·IQ ftlJI . b.Y .~hris AncJam . . ll'ft How much docs a punishment for the pain they - -·--To nnc1ent c1v1hza-tern). makmg a mockery of JUS-
pound ofhamburgercost in these have caused. tions suc h as Egypt, Babylon tice.
inflated times? In my own One needs to possess a and Rome, capital punishment Furthennorc, what parades
household, a 16-ounce cache of certain measure of faith in the was common even for minor as humanitarianism often de-
Moran's Grade A ground beef American justice system. 0th-~ offenses. It can well be argued velops into public indifference
runs about $1.89. My mother erwise, no verdict is safe, and / '··. , thatthesc were well-disciplined in dealing with criminals.
tells me that filct mignon can you, as taxpayers. pick up the / ' societies which contributed FinaJJy,theeconomyofthe
break the bank at nearly $6 per 1ab forr (>Ointless appeal after ~STI~ muchtothcprogrcssofthcworld situation is often overlooked. It
pound. In Japan, high-level appeal afterappeaJ. On theother LJ~ ~~ at large. is much less costly to execute
executives will pay up to $200 hand, however, who can hon-lntheprcsenteraespccially thc.criminalsthankeepthemfor
"' for a fine steak in a gourmet estly say they believe our jus-,.. in the Western Hemisphere, the years at the expense of the sqate.
restaurant. tice system is flawless? Who ll death penalty. when it is en-Which would you prefer?
Take one average Ameri-woufctwillinglytrustthemselves ~ forced, is nom1ally for homi-Woutdyouprefer$30,000aycar
can convict. The average in the hands of a judge and jury ·& cide or treason. pampering a convicted mur-
American convict weighs, shall of ones' peers, on trial forcrimes ~ The fear of death is a deter-derer, or would you rather flip a
we say, a generous I 70 pounds. he did not commit? My point is, ~ rent influence within us all. But $200,000 electric bill to put him
My l 0-year-old brother can tell no one in their proper mind can l such deterrence is'notonly based in the chair? In many cases. the
you that even if the American say that we, as human s, can be ~ on fear, but a moral influence criminal would rather die any-
convict in question were made flawless. No one can state that '--that can instill disg ust and even way (Gilmore in Utah was one) .
.l of fine Japanese beef, he (or a jury will render the correct horror for such heinous crimes rather than languish in prison,
she) would only be worth verdit.:t every time . And should in the general public. Even from often in fear of his life. So the
$34,000. He can also tell you ajury err, just once, then we. as biblical times we were taught . death penalty in this circum-
that $34,000 is quite considera-a whole, are guilty of the mur-that retribution, nOlrevenge, was stance is more merciful.
bly less than the years of legal derofan individual. Theirblocxi a way of life. Man should die. All these arguments aside,
fees, footed by the taxpayers, is on our hands. for the <.:rime of murder, and it seems imperative that the
that it requires to take a man's True. murderers cause flip !he W.!t-h on ~~ ~ only hi s execution would sat-justice system in the United
life through capital punishment. incredible grief and anguish to isfy society. "An eye fo r an eye. States must be overhauled if the
Or rather, he could tell you. but the loved ones of their vic tims, and a tooth for a tooth" was a death penalty is to be fairly
little Mike has n't learned to anxiety to the community which philosophy that diminshed the administered. It is a rravesty to
count high enough yet. th ey defile, and a general feel-incidence of lynching and the keep convicted felons such as
Hopefully,dearreader,you ing of dismay among all who 1 danger of people exercising a therccentlyexccutedHarrisand
arc a bit repulsed by the notion learn of their deed. Revenge is vigilante t pe of law. Chessman (not convicted of
of human lives being though t of a natural instinct. But aren't we Funhennore, since the life murder) for as long as 14 years
in a dollars-and-cents manner. more than beasts of instinct, of a convicted murderer is less on Death Row . Repeated stays
Hopefully, you are disgusted by animals ruled by creature crav-than that of the state on the of execution can be more cruel
a para I lei between men and beef. in gs? Are we not men and whole, the state has the right to --and inhumane treatment than
Yet, haven't innumerable men women, in control of ourselves, protect the greater value. the actual taking of a life.
and women come to an end in a yet imperfect, able to reason and The moral lawabiding citi -In the -British couns of
manner far more gruesome than judge, yet not withou t error. zen deserves protection from yesteryear. murderers' trials
th at of a fann steer? Steer~ are The beauty of humanity is • dangeruus criminals who regard rarely lasted more than a month
simply shot, unaware of their th at none of us is blameleS.S or human life cheaply. Ironically. and convicted murderers were
fate. We choose to electrocute perfect, and that we can find it in • it is the view of most politicians hanged ortheoffencilngappend-
or asphyxiate our fellow men, our~elvcs to bear with each thattoday·~cu rrentpoliceforce, agewasswiftlyremovcdshonly
who are fully aware of the date other. Many people who kill are especially in the Los Angeles afterwards, even in cases of rape . • of th eir demise, cou nting hours cold and remorseless, defiant of area. cannot protect its citizens It is more than a coincidence
until they reach their I 5 minutes society, and incorrigible. Many, • from the wrath and destruction that the per capita rate for mur-
in the spotlight, as the center of no doubt, feel sorrow, and grieve of murderers, rapists, and Jef-der in Britain at that time was
a media event. for their victims. frey Dahmer wanna-be's. the lowest by far in the world,
I am not arguing fo r :he But all are fellow men and ' We must ensure that they and the police did not even have
sainthood of any of those con-women, with families and loved · do not repeat their crimes and to carry firearms or riot gear for
demned to death by our justice ones. Can anyone give the right • leave them free to pass on their many years!
system, since currently the only to take another human life? No. hereditary traits to their off-The death penalty really
crime one many commit which These people will be punished • spring. Life imprisonment for a can be a deterrent, but justice
incurs capital punishment is for thei r iniquities. But can we capital crime is no alternative, must be swift and sure. The
murder. These men and women. take the chance of killing in no-as it can often be convened to ancient maxim holds uue.
if they arc truly guilty of this cents, who may be acquitted the 'q! ~ '3\X.ll.t~HA*-" u, early parole (too often the nonn • "Justice delayed is in fact jus-
atrocity, deserve tremendous next day? in the United Stares coun sys-tice denied."
LA Become~ City of ~alien AngelS
Wi th a dea th toll of 51, a
damage estimation of $550
million dollars and a ciry of
shattered hopes. war-tom Los
Angeles is finally getting back
on its feet. After four straight
days of pillaging, rem1niscent
of the Watts Riots, the city's at-
tempts to clean up its act have
finally manifested themselves
in a positive way.
Together with the help of
the National Guard and the in-
stigation of dusk·to-dnwn
curfews, Los Angeles has once
again taken control over its citi-
zens. Now that the level of
emotion has been allayed, the
curfews have been lifted in.both
Los Angeles and surrounding
ciues. Trucklo ds of looted
goods have been recovered and
store owners arc now working
to put their businesses back in
order. As the accumulated darn-
14e i tallied. insurance compa-
nies reflect on and plan way to
' .
by Angela Robinson
get out of the unexpected pre-
dicament.
Los Angeles was trans-
formed from an area of ethnic
diversity and culture ro a war
ground. Looting and fires have
engulfed ncighborhocxis, leav-
ing homeowners and business
people in complete f car. The
black community wanted one
verdict and one verdict only.
Either the four policemen were
to be proven guilty or the city
would pay the price.
The decision of not guilty
did indeed spark the chaos that
would remind many of the Watts
riotc;. h is said that people can-
not exprc~~ their opinion ,
Manin Luther King Jr. had
hoped. in n peaceful wny.
Rather. black protested by de·
troying their own communi-
tic . They now had an excuse to
get back at whites or those in a
hiahcr economic bracket. Fru •
trataon Iona pent up were un·
leashed in a violent way.
' ..
This type of behavior can
only be expected to set race
relations a step back. The gap
between blacks and whites were
blown open as innocent people
were seen beaten to near-death
because of omething they
played no direct role in. Per-
haps justice was not in its ideal
late, but two wronas do not
make a right. Trying to make a
stacement about an unjust vio-
lent act by creating yet another
one displays ignorance ~d im-
maturity.
As oftcm occur , a few
people made an impact upon chc
mind set of many. They dis ..
played a ide to them 1ha1 could
be called none other than sav-
age. This $1 billion mistake
will last more than the five day
pan in which it occumd, bul
will leave itself' in Americ's
hiscoryandtheoudookofpcoplc
all over the world.