HomeMy WebLinkAbout1984-08-22 - Orange Coast PilotHIGH83 LOWlt CDllT IDITlll
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WEDNESDAY. AUGUST 22, 1984 ORANGE COUNTY CALIFORNIA 25 CENTS
Coast
Financier J. David Oornl-
nelll lled when he said he
could pay back Investors,
an attorney says./ A3
Orange County League of
Cities goes on record
opposing Jarvis IV·! A3
(•:·:·:·:·;~::·~:·:·~::·:-:·~::::·:~~~~:~:~»;!:~=--:~!:::
Calif om la
A Calif ornla poll shows
many folks just don't like
labor unions./ A4 ·
Coastal Commission of-
flclals oppose rullng boot-
ing them from federal
hearings./ AS
Nation
Geraldine Ferraro re-
turns from press con-
ferenc~e to find her press
secretary has quit./ M
World
South Africans urge
boycott of mixed race
vote./M
John Belushi drug figure
continues to fight extra-
dition from Canada./ A4
Home
Strategic furnishing and
fiber glass celling panels
combat 'high tech' noise
In family rooms./81
A new pool alarm emits
an 85-declbel signal If a
chlld or pet falls Into the
water./81
Do terms of endearment
from strangers upset
you? Ann Landers puts
them In a new per-
spectlve./82
Food '
Popcorn connoisseurs
rr kerne1sof knowl-
edge about the orlglnal
snack food ./C1
A twist for cock tall parties
Is serving colorful mod-
ern mixers -liqueurs
and fruit julce./C1
Sporta
The Angela skid reaches
seven straight losses
after another loss In New
York, 8-2./D1
East Germany and the
Soviet Union continue to
dominate the Friendship
Games, breaking four
world records In the pro-
cess./D2
Entertainment
A Broadway understudy
becomes a television star
nextseasonlnthere-
vamped series "Three's a
Crowd."/83
Bualneu
Health Insurance for pets
Is becoming popular ./88
INDEX
Births
Bridge
Bulletln Board
Bullneaa
California Newt
Clullfled
Comlct
Crouword
Death Notlcel
Food
Help YourMH
Home
HOtOICQpe
In tM S«vk:e
Ann Landetl
Mutual Funds
Netlonal Newt
OplnJon
Peparml
PoHce Log
Public Notieel
Spc>!tt
Stoetc Mart<et1
TlltVlalon
ThMtert
Wt1thtt
Wortd NtWI
\
A7
85
A3
86-7
A4
06-8
85
08
09
C't-8
82
81·2
07
A7
82
811
A4
A8
81
A3
05-6
01 ..
8
83
83-4
A2
A4
AIDS kills gay acti·vist
-----~-
Ex-La una Beach arts commissioner
succumbs after lengthy hospital stay
By DAVID BISHOP
Olillf .... C:.rt IJ I fl I
AIDS claimed the life of Laauna Beach civi<: activist Henry Hampton
Monday.
Hampton, 43. was a "pioneer in
. .
Jen itizing people In Oran~ County
to gays and lcsb1aos;• said La1una
Beach City Councilman Robert Gen-
try, himselfa gay activist.
Hampton battled the debilhati a
effect~ of Acqui~d Immune Dcfi-
C'lcncy Syndrome, which primanly
affects pys, for n rly two years both
in and out of the hospital. accordina
to friends.
Hampton, a ~ven-year-rc idcnt of
Laguna Beach, wa1 a professor of
bioloSY and logy at Fullerton
College. He was born in Glendale.
Hampton was chairman of Laguna
Beach's City Aru Commi sioo in
1982 before resigning due to his
dedinin health. He also was ctiveas
a 'Volunteer in the annual P nt of
the Masters. panicipaung u a cast
member in the Uve re...creat1on of
'"The Last Supper."
Hampton also helped found
Lacuna Outreach, an orpmzation
that provides edu tion about
pysand lesbians and promotes their
rights.
.. h' always extremely sad to lose
.
someone beatusc of AIDS ... Genii)
1d.
en meonc ~ like
someone who's a leader. ifs bard A1
least his uffenng 11s ovu, that's the.
good rt of it." (;cnt~ cl.
Gen tty I led 11 a ... ditrwult di
ll worts vr:ry slow'ly."' and ht called
·for more med I rncarch lOWlf'd a
cure and treatment for lhe malady
(Pleue Me AJD8/A2)
NB restaurant
-wins approval
by coast panel
Newport Heights residents shot down
· by commission over height of buJldln
BJ &.ABEN E . ~IN °' .. ...., ........
The Caltfomia C.oastaJ Com-
mission approved a JS-foot-tall re$-
taurant and office complex Tuesday
despite objections from about 30
Newport Beach homeowners ... ho
claim the project would block their
harbor view.
1 The plans · to build a seafood
restaurant., called John Dominis. and
an office building on the site of the
Rosan shipyard on Mariner's Mile
along Paafic Co t Highway had
already received the unanimous ap-
proval of the Newport Beach City
Council and Plannsn1 Commission
with no opposition from home-
owners..
a prnent.ation to the aaociauon"s
board about lbe project.
Don Williams, a high school
teacher and ewport ffei&bts rcsa-
dcnt. said most of tbe nci&hbon were
primarily conc:emcd about the Of
the harbor view from Cliff Drive
Part, where people ptbcr lo wat.cb
boat parades and sunseu over tbe
water. . . . He admitted that a lack of com-
munication within the Newport
Heipts association rnay ha'Ve been to
blame for. the residents' late respon1e.
Williams said be only found out
about the restaurant proposal wbeo a
real estate qent found die couldn't
try to seU a home by sayina it had a
harbor VlCW.
A lf'OUP of about 150 angry
residents met laie last 'Weck ..-ith Mayor Evelyn Han. wbo said she did
not know of any opposition to the
project ... hen she voted for it and said
But residents of the Ncwpon
HeighlS area said they were unaware
of~ plans until about a month aao
e¥en though city officials contacted
the N~n Hei&hts Homeowners' ....,,...,....._,,~...-Association and t&c developer made (Pleue Me JlATAUllA1'1' I A.2)
Aaupertout
Olympic cyclUta Rory O'ReWy (left) and
Mark Gorski -wea.rtna the &old medal he
won -rat.e their &laua In a tout durin&
a party held In their honor by SaperBo41es
amnuJam In Coeta Mesa Tueeday. Both
cycu.ta are memben of the om and
trained there, u did Olymplam from other
coantrlee.
Newportboat ard owner
facing pollution hearing
By KAREN E. KLEIN °' ... ~,... .....
A Newport Harbor boat yard
owner bas been accused of violahn&
state regulations requinng him to
aostall ~llution control measures, a
supervtsing enJinecr for the st.ate
Resional Water Quality Board said
today.
Pete Stewart. owner of the South
Coast Boat Yard Inc. on the Rhine
Channel tn Newpe>rt Beach, has not
fully complied with plans he sub-
miued to the board foreontrolling the
paint residue be scrapes off boats,
eoJinecr Jim Bennett charged.
A hearing on the charges is sched-
uled for Sept 14 before the St.ate
Regional Water Quality Control
Board in Riverside.
Bennett said the 14 boat yards
operating in the harbor are reqwrcd
to take steps to prevent toxic
substances from entcnng the watcr.
State testing this sprin' showed
that Newport Harbor CODlalDS I high
Cranston in county
stumping for De ms
in Congress races
Ex-candidate praises
Ferraro·s handling
of flnancJal Issue
By JEFF ADLER
Ofllw!WlfNilt-
----
Democratic vice presidential can-
didate Geraldine Ferraro has handled
the furor over her family finances
"superbly," Democratic U.S. Sen.
Alan Cranston said today, but he
faulted Ferraro for allowina the iuue
to come up in the first place.
said he hopes all questions conccm-
ang Ferraro's finances now can be put
to rest. ending what he termed has
been a diversion from the real
campaign issues: the economy. war
and peace, the envtronment and
justice. ·
Cr2nston told repon.cruttendang a
momma news conference at Orange
County Democratic Pany head-
quarters an Santa Ana that he thou&ht
fcl'Tlto was "coot and calm"
throughout a lensthy news con-
ftttnct" Tuesday concemina her
finances and those of her husband,
New York ~al estate broker John
Zaccaro.
concentration of canccr<aus1ng
PCBs and elevated levels of zinc.
copper and Un, Bennett said.
"We are concerned about pollution
in the harbor so we're emphasizing
cverythana, but we're not trying to
victimize anyone," Bennett said.
"We don't know for sure whether he's
(Stewart)actuallyconlributina to that
pollution or not ...
Samples taken of residue found
near the South Coast Boat Yard ~ere
(Pleue eee DOA'r/Aa) -"LilWrence D. GU.On
Bullet
Train
sets 114
tiips ally;
The proposed California hi&h
peed train system, modeled after me
Japa.nCR Shinkansen Bullet Train
...ould offer 114 trips daily betwceD
Los Anicles and San Diego, witti Oranae County stops in Irvine, Santa
Ana and Anaheim, accorchng to •
preliminary timetable released bY
Ammcao High Speed Rail Corp.
which plans to build the hnc.
Construction of the rail line i$
expected to beain oe.xt }ear, wiib
tentative completion and start oJ
(Ple&M..,. SPEltDT I A.2)
... .......... -.~ ...... Campa.i~ina in Oran~ County for
Democratic confrcss1onal can·
didates, California s senior senator
But Cranston was critical that the
(Pleue tee C~STON/ A2) Sen. Alan Cranston (left) with new county Democratic party chairman Brace Sumoer.
Alleged c·ounty narcotics empire crumbling
13 people reportedly involved In cocaine
•
St~VE
Ma11u
NEWS BACKCROUND
•
12•*<>range Cont DAILY PILOT/Weon , Auguat 2.2. 1984 .
Airport expansio plan delayed
A deadline exten ion rcque•ted b~
the city of Newpon Beach on~ S 190. 6
nullionexpans1on pt.an for John
Wa)nc A1rpon Y.a appro\'cd th1
mom1n1_ by thrtt members of the
Oranse Count) Boud ot upcl"\ asurs
Board Chamnan Harricu Wittier
and Supcr\'1M>r Dru~ Ne~tan<k did
not attend the meeting. They art' in
Dallas at the Republiain Pan)'i
National Convcnuon.
.Supervisor Thomu Riley as.kcd
CoNTINU lO SroR1Es
------~
the boord to •PPM\ e I tWO-\\'ttk
ex ten ion on the dcadhnt for f'C(!Civ-
1ng v. riuen com menu on the rtport
so the C1') would tuave more ume to
pthcr tc~t1mon) and opmioni from
cxpcm on the plan. SupcrvtM)r
Roat'r tanton and Bruce Clark
aartcd.
Ken Dclino, Newport's a~ 1sl4nt
C'il) man&Jer, ~td he asked the board
for the additional two v.ttls so the
cit) could better prtpart us wriUC'n
'BOATYARD POLLUTION •..
Prom Al
-r
beina anal)'""lCd this week to s'tt~tomment on the-charses this morn·
whether polluuon levels near the boat 1ni.
yard arc hi&her than else\\< here in tht: But Bennen said while Stewan ma)
harbor. Bennett ~td . have taken some steps to compl)' w1th
Stewart could not be reached for the polluuon-control plan. he ha~ not
SPEEDY TRAIN PLAN ...
P'romAl
SUVtCe In J 988.
The draft timetable shows 114
trams, including 12 express traam,
operatina each da) betv.-ccn 6 a.m.
and m1d~t. The company ~1d the
tot.al train males da1I)' ( 14,000) 1s the
equivalent of more than half th e
distance around the world at the
equator.
The prclimanar') draft ttmetable
--.vu prepared to glve travel packagers
and future riders an idea of the
Jrequency of departures and length of
travel between vanous stations. ac-
cordina to Lawrence D Gilson.
president of AHSRC
The schedule is to be refined before
at is submitted to the vanous gov-
emmental agencies conducting en-
vi ronmental and other re" 1ews.
The prehmtnar') umetable 10-
cludes six exprcs~ trams m each
direction. completing the tnp be-
t-ween downtown San Diego and
downtown Los Angeles in 59
minutes. Coach fare for the down-
town San D1ego to downtown LA tnp
wlll be S 18.30 ( 1982 dollars). Service
between downtown LA and LAX will
be 17 minutes and will cost $5.65.
Stations are planned for LAX,
downtown Los Angeles at U naon
Station. Norwalk. Anaheim. Santa
Ana, (["\ ine, Oceanside, La Jolla and
downtown San Otego (Santa Fe
depot)
nd gn&ph1c cumm~m~ on l 1c Pllan.
Jean Wan, 1 NewJ)Ott Btich rui·
dent nd founder of community
anion up called top Polluu
Our Nev.wrt, testified t this morn-in1·1 mtttina an suppon of lhe cit)•
rtQUC t,
The txtension of tti\! comment
deadline from Au1. 27 to Stpt l 1 also
mean~ that the date of the decision on
thepropo I will bemo"·ed back from Oct. j to Oct. 17 •
fully comphed.
"We had problems wtth his boat
yard trying to get pollution control
measures installed 1n February,"
Bennett said. "We had to go to the
(District Attorney's office) to get him
to submit a pollutlon<ontrol pro-
gram"
S&Dce South Coa~t's pollution·
control plan was submitted, Bennett
)41d inspectors have made checks on
the boat yard and have not found the
controb 1n place.
·•We've g1vC'n stveral warnings and
made several aospecttons and now we
feel we have to escalate the penalties,"
he said.
Stewart was supposed to keep a
plastic sheet under his work area so
that the paint chips would be cau&ht
and could be disposed of properly
Bennett wd. He was aJso supposed to
mstalJ a set of curbs to redirect water
that was washed down from the yard
would not dump into the harbor.
"He's come a ways to meet tho~
requirements, but not far enough,''
Bennett said.
CRANSTON CAMPAIGNS IN COUNTY •..
From Al
issue arose at all
"I would regret that adequate
thought was not given at the out~l I
regret it came up." he said
However, Cranston said he be-
lieved the issue might tum to Ferraro
and Democrauc prcs1dent1aJ nomi-
nee Walter Mondale's favor
"rt may develop sympathy for
GeraJdine." the senator added
He also said he thinks Democrats
can take the White House from
Ronald Reagan this November .. ii
they handle the issues of our time. an
a very efficient way "
The Mondale-Ferraro 11cket must
offer "creatt ve and construrt1' t
altemauves" co the GOP. said
Cranston, who acknowledged that
Democrats enter the fall campaign a)
underdogs.
Among the issues Democrats must
ham mer on 1s the econ om). Cranston
said. Republicans are entitled to
some credit for cuttang mflatton, but
deficits arc sky high. banks and other
financial 1nst1tut1ons are tn a precan-
ou~ s11uat1on and unemployment sull
ho' e~ above the leH·ls 11 was at when
Reagan took office
"Reagan 1s not 1n a sohd pos1t1on
on the econom)' " C ranston said.
adding that no matter who ts elected
president, he e'pectc; a ta>. mcrease
next \ear
Qul"st1oned about h1 .. own poltt1cal
future l ranston. who made an
abonl\·l" run for the Democratic
pres1den11al nom10at1on this year,
..aid he plans to \eek re-election to his
~nate seat m 1v.o years. but will not
make another run !or the prcsadenC)
( ranston named former Senate
MaJOfll} Leader Howard Baker, Vice
Pres1den1 George Bush, TransPor-
talion ~rctary Ehz.abeth Dole, her
husband, Kansas Sen. Roben Dole
and New York Rep Jack Kemp as
like!)' presidential candidates for
1988 af Reagan is re-elected to a
second and final term.
Besides his v1s11 to Democratic
headquaners today, Cranston is to
appear at fund raisers for Democrat
Carol Ann Bradford . challenging
incumbent Rep. Roben Badham tn
the 40th Congressional Dtstnct, and
Democrat May Lou Brophy, vymg
for the congressional seat held by
mcumbent Dan Lungren in the
sprawling 42nd Congressional Dis-
mct. He also as scheduled to speak to
both the Santa Ana Chamber of
Commerce and the Dcmocrat1c
Foundation of Orange County an
organiiation of major part)' donors in
the area
AIDS CLAIMS LB ACTIVIST ...
Jl'romAl
which weakens the bod) 's immune
system leaving 1t "ulnerable to dis-
ease.
The Rev. Barbara Mudge. as'\1stant
pastor at St. Mar; ·s Ep1!>copal
Church. said Hampton was .. some-
one people just responded to. he was
full of love."
Hampton was also ac11ve in
Laguna Beach politics and he also
~orkcd close!\ v.nh the Laguna
Beach Police Depanment m setting
up a walk-along program to help
improve the relauons between the
local ga)' communtt} and the pohce
depanment
A full requiem Mass for Hampton
will be held Thu~)'. 6 p.m., at St.
Mary's Episcopal Church, 428 Park
Ave. m Laguna Beach
Hampton 1s sun '"ed b) his father.
Noble D. Hampton of Laguna Hills.
and a sister, Helene Ca mpbell of
S)lmar.
Donations are asked to be made m
Hampton's name to Save the
Redwoods. for the organization's
scedhng planung program. 114
Sansome St., San Francisco, CA
94104
COCAINE EMPIRE CRUMBLING .••
From Al
On numerous occasion ... agents
followed Moblc) or has underlinings
when they allegedl~ 'Were dispatched
to a safe house an Garden (1roH'
where d1v1ded packages of cocaine
were stored
.\ transcript of the clandestam·
undercover work depicts Moble' as a
powerful businessman whose biggest
headache was disposing of the hun-
dreds of thousands of dollar'\ hl'
allegedly made month!~ ofT cocaine
The drug mone~ rcpurtedh \!oar,
funneled into do1ens of sa' mgs
accounts, tucked into valuable water-
front property and ski resort land or
used to bu) Mercedes Ben1e!t and
BMWs that M oble~ assenedl) picked
up b) the half dozen during trap'\ to
Germany.
One underc<l"cr agent \I.ho '\a1d 1t
was 1mperat1ve his name not he used.
described Moble) as a bright am-
bitious )Oung man who Po'>Se\c;cd
tremendous business acumen and a
ctnam charisma
Just Call
. 642-6086
Dally Piiot
OeUwery
I• QuatantHd
"He ne"er v.-ent out al night unless
1t \I.as business. He didn't eo dnnking
or dancing. I don't even think he used
coke himself.'' said the agent. who
da1ms Moble} was preparing to
parla... his drug fortunes mto leg.it-
1matc businesses at the tame of the
raid
.\nother person clo'\e to the tn-
\ C)llga11on. however. described
Moblc' as a "depraved man" who
thought nothing of setthng deltquent
account!t with a beatmg In one taped
con,crsataon. Moble) reportedly
threated to ha\e Tang kidnapped and
held pmoner unul he agreed to pay
nfT hi\ debts
In another conversation. Mobley
alleged!~ refers to ht~ attorney wtth a
racial slur and sugests the man
should be killed.
One man who FBI agents allege did
bustne'>" wtth .Mobley, did end up
dead Barclay Hodges. brother of
former Westminster Councilman Gtl
Hodges was shot and killed in a bar at
John \\ a) ne A.1rpon nearly tv.-o years
ago
\t thl" ttmc of has death, Hodges
owed Mobley a large sum of money.
an FBI transcipt states The man
charged with the shooung, who
happened to be Hodges' cousm,
disappeared after bail was posted for
him
Mobley's nsc an the drug business
was directl} tied to hts mamage.
investigators said. His wife 1s the
daughter of Herb1to Machado-Velas-
quez, a 50-year-old Colombia native
who is one of the fu&Jtives in the
cocaine case.
Machado-Velasquez alltgedly
helped arranJe to funnel cocaine from
South Amenca to the United States
and eventually to Mobley. th e U.S.
Attorney's Office charges.
The Colombian and has two sons
eluded lawmen dunnJ the raid and
repanedl) now are laving m their
native land. Machado-Velasquez re-
ponedly has not contacted govern-
ment authorities despite the fact that
hts w1fr-\\<BS arrested an the sweep and
IS J&aled "Hi'\ \loafe's sull 1n custody but
we've still never heard from the gu),"
!taad Kuray.
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Tell as •llat't on your mind.
OAANGE COAST
Daily Pilat
Circulation 1141142....tm
Cla111fted edvertl•l"9 714/M2·M11
All other d•par1ment9 142-4321
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•nd yO\lf COPY • .,.. dt'" .. fl(J
H. L. Schwartz Ill
Pubhsher
~i?'C HIN Ofty COiltl Ai!>li'""'O ~ Na
'"'"' tl010!$ lllullrll~ t0tor ..,.11~ or U-'• <N••a lie ,,.,., lie •ICW-94 wt!llolll ~I P9'
•
RoHmary Churchman
Cor troller
Stephen F. Cerezo
ProduC11on
MnnagP.r
Donald L . WUtfam8
rrculallon
Manager
'
ti COOV''O'll -
VOL. n, NO. 235
....
Low clouds will creep inland
Extended
Temps
"' .... " 52 '° 70 ... 16 81 61 .. ..
90 6t
100 76 71 51
.. 71
71 43 '° 17 n eo n se
71 S4 13 46
... 72 .....
83 ...
12 u
u 11 to 70 .. 72 11 13
71 '° 103 ,,
90 62 ,, 71
.. 11
u " 100 .,
11 M
71 54 17 11
7' A
12 " 15 60
fWIO ff II
~id ..,
.. ti!**' .. ...
•1 lCllllll to 71
II P•I• TaMPf 11 70
a.II LAii• Olly ., • =Antonio .. Jt
'*'° 90 71 ..,.,,..,... • .. ... ""*'," tO " .,. .. .,.. 1' a .... II 17 ..,.:r.:l ., ,, lloll~ .. 11
tpoll-.. ..
~~ ,. IO
T~ ... .. ,_ .. • TwaM .. 74
w~ IO a
WIONIA " 74 wa_._• 71 :1 Wllmll'IOIOl'l.0. 71
Tide•
TOOAY leoondio. 12.11 a>,m. ,.
'-'Cl higll 12tpm 17
TMUQDAY
Flftt '°"" 202em o:r
=~~~ 1:4l._m ..
1~1p.m 2t
SeeoMlllQll 123 pm 12
Sun .... 1od1; 11 1" p "'• ,_
T'hwlay 11 • 20 • Ill lftd -I09WI It 131 p"" MOOl'I Mt11oo.y al 4)1 p111 , ,_
Thurldl)l 112.30 • m. Md -llOAI" et
l ;31pm.
Costa Mesa now officially
known as 'CityoftheArts'
Council approves changing of the motto the Pacilic A.mph1tbeatre.
"We arc the cultural center of
Southern California," said Nate
Reade, director of Costa Mesa's
Chamber of Commerce.
.to reflect city's cultural advancement
By TONY SAAVEDRA
Of Ille DeffJ ...... tun
Old timers remember Costa Mesa
as Goat Hill. but you can call it "Hub
of the Harbor Area" or better yet,
"Cat}' of the Arts."
The town once known for ltS lafiC
population of m1lking goats and later
for its proximity to the beach has
agam changed its image. The city now
wants to be recognized as a mecca of
music and the performing arts.
At the urging of the Costa Mesa
Chamber of Commerce, the City
Council adopted ''City of the Arts" as
the town's official slogan Monday.
The motto will be added to city
stationery and will repla~ the 31-
year-old slogan "Hub of the Harbor
Area."
The "Hu b" phrase, however will
remain on the official city seal, saving
roughly $20. 700 in expenses to erase
the old motto from bro111e plaques OD
public buildinp around town.
Additionally, Mayor Donn Hall
joked that Costa Mesa's arts~ slogan
may not be appropria1e for Clty seals
placed on the doon of municipal
trash trucks and other official ve-
hicles.
"There's no reason we can't be
'Hub of the Harbor' and 'City of the
Arts,' " said Councilwoman Nonna
Hertzog.
Costa Mesa's official emblem and
its "Hub" motto were created tn I 9S3
when the city was primarily known
for 11s boatmaking and for being near
Newport Beach.
But the shadow on Costa Mesa is
growing shoner with the arrival this
fall of the South Coast Symphony
Orchestra and the construction of the
Orange County Performina Arts
Center in a city that already boasts the
South Coast Repertory theater and
Reade's claim is taken with a few
grains of salt by officials from nearby
cities that also pride themselves for
their cultural bigbliahts, such as
Laguna Beach, which has the county's
oldest art museum and is home to the
famed Pageant of the Masters show.
"(Costa Mesa) may have more
performing arts buildings, but our
pageant is over 50yearsold," said Jim
Lyon, executive director of the
Laguna Beach Chamber of Com-
merce.
Sull, Costa Mesa's enthus1asttc
moniker, "City of the Arts.," may help
tt shed the infcrionty complex born
from being best known as the c1ty
near Newport Beach. "Hub of the
Harbor Area," which is rarely used,
has done little to diffuse the memory
of Costa Mesa's four-legged past.
"It's about tame we we're called
something other than Goat Hill," said
Reade.
LB' s Gabriels to stand trial
on charge he offered tot a pill
Laeuna Beach civic act1v1st John
Gabnels must stand tnal on charJeS
he offered a pill containing
phenobarb1tol to a 3-year-old, a
municipal Judge ruJed Tuesday.
South Orange County Municipal
Court Judge Richard Hamilton or-
dered Gabriels to appear in Superior
Coun on Sept. 4 on the single felony
count and refused to lower bail forthe
60-year-old former city council can-
didate. A physician who ellamined
Gabriels af\er the hearina said he is
"in danger of having a stroke."
Gabnets· bail was set at $5,000
following his arrest on Au,. I 0 for the
mcadent which occurred at Main
Beach Park on July 31 . At the ume he
was free on his own recognizance
following a previous arrest that he
allegedly harbored juvemles in his
home.
Gabnels was 101tiall}' arrested on
Apnl 11 for allegcdl}' harborina
Juveniles and Jiving them QuaaJudes.
He had posted cash bail ofS I 0,000 for
that charge.
Gabnels' attorney told the court
that was Gabricls' "enure savings"
and that he bad DO more money for
ball. Gabriels has been in the county
jad m Santa Ana since his most recent
arrest.
After the hearing. Dr. Eugene
AthertQ.D ofJ...aauna Beach asked that
he be allowed to examine Gabriels,
who he said appeared "very de-
pressed and m need of medical
naucntion."
l Aft~r f Vins Gabriels a cu~ry
exammauon an the courtroom JUT)'
chambersDr. Athenon said Oabriels
was aettina only two hours of sleep a
night, was havina difficulty breathina
and is receivina no medical treat-
ment.
"He as in danger of havina a
stroke."
Judge Hamilton said be would not
reduce the bail and ordered the
medical examination team at o~nae
County Jail to eumine Gabriels.
Jn testimony Jiven Tuesd.ay1 Cindy
Ann Travis of Mission VieJo said
Gabriels offered her 3-year-old son
Timothy a pill she later identified as a
phenobarb1tol. Travis said she stood
tn hne at a water fountain and saw
Gabriels stand1na nearby with
another man and a youth. She said
she saw Gabriels take a pill from a
brown prescnpt1on bottle and give at
to the youth. Travis said her M>n then
ran up to Gabriels and asked him
what the piJJ was and ifhe could have
one.
According to Travis Gabnels re-
plied, "it's a mint candy, do you want
one?" and held 1t 1n an outstretched
palm.
"How dare you offer medicine as
candy when it is not," Travis de-
manded, and Gabnels alleac<Uy rc-
pl ied, "you're ngbt, it's a
phenobarb11ol," and be put It back tn
the bottle and walked away.
. 1,'ravis-immediat~ly reported the
tnc1dent to Laguna Beach police. She
said she could not remember how to
pronounce the name of the pill that
Gabnels allegedly ofTered her son.
Police invcstipton visited her on
at least five occasions to show her
samplesofdruas beforeT~vis finally
recognized a phenobarbitol as the
type Gabriels had allqedly offered.
136 pets crammed into trailer
Numerous sick and underfed pets
v..erc under vetennarycarc this morn-
ing after more than 130 animals were
found mside a motor home and
tnuler st9_pped by a Irvine pohcc
officer, officials said.
Approx1matel)' l 13 cats, 16 dop improper care of animals, said lrv1oe
and seven rabbits were imp0unded p0lioe dispatcher Vir1.tn1a PowerL
Tuesday in the vehicles driven by The citation is a misdemeanor and
Nancy Jane Elli,, 39, of lndiana, Ellis was not arrested.
according to police and animal hospi-Four doctors arc treatina the
tal officials. Ellis was cited for alleged animals, Zarrilli said.
-l'J·l--1-------------....:----!
RESTAURANT GETS APPROVAL •••
From Al
she felt the restaurant was a "good
compromist'' for development in the
area
The projeet incorporates a SO-foot
v1ew <omdor to allow a vacw of the
harbor, albeit 1 narrow one. and adds
a public walkway alona the water
where there is now no public acces .
Coastal Commission member Don
McGuinnc , who did not 11ttnd
Tucsdly'1 mtttang but wa bncfed on
it by his :altcmate, 11id the proJet\ was
approved ically bccautit it met the
JUtdelinu oft he Coastal Act and w11
recommended for 1pprov1l by the
~ and Qwutal Comm.i.ss on staff.
.. , got a ·number of lcncn from
New n Hc1&hts mu.lrnls oppo 1na
the project." Mc ,uinn 1d~ "But
1t M:tmcd hkc It had • high k\itl ol ,
support from the agencies th•• had
reVlewed it previously."
Willia.ms said about 30 Newport
Hei&hts res1denu altendcd the
Coa i.I Comma ion mceuna in
Marina dcl Rey and wailed m<Kt of
the day to &ivc 1 1 S·minu&e pm.en-
i.tion on lhtir reasons for alkln• th.at
the project not be approved. ....
"I never'." even J()t to peak."
Williams said. "We lost really bae5."
The proJcci met Coastal Com-
mi111on 1u1delin a couple or wee o. Wi0lam1 said. and the com·
ma ion felt they had 10 1 rove ll
b«iu~ two otfitt, s.irn1 r projccu
had been approvC'd (or the m area
up to t~o ynn. 1 o.
"The> didn't want to contmch t
•
.
themselves by approvina the two
other projects that would block the
view anyway and then denvina thtt one, .. he said. ·
Williams id be is till bmer
bCCau he feels the city should have
been protected the part 'View whether
residents appeared at heannp to
object to the projc.c"t.
"I remem~r three years aao wh n
someone ant.ed to put up a JS.foot
buildina riaht actOU the streei (from
the Rosan propcnyl:~d we J)ICUd the council cham " Willlam1
said. "They hould have known that
1rtHcrc "' U!=h ~n ou"1)' then an
no rcspon~ thll llme that weren't
re of it." he said. •• ' mconc
should have rrmcmbcrtd "
f
Pacific Cllorale
issues final call
T.ravel .emfaar 11ebeduled
. World f ravel In titute. 620 N. Main St., Santa Ana, · wall conduct a free Tra\lel Industry $Cminar on Thursday It 7 p.m.
For more information and reservations call 835-8111. •
Art Uhlbltloa •tiuta Saturday
TLK Gallery, 611 Anton Blvd., Suite 120 Costa Mesa;Wll~ prcsen~ ·~exhibition .. Up and Coming;' tiy six
youna 1n1sts be&innma Saturday and extending through Sept. 22. ,.
The exhibition will include works of contemporary
sculpture, painrioas. drawinas and photoaraphy by Mary
Ann Blake. Karen Fuson, Brett Guitar Hofer Megan Han
Jones, Donald Ryan and Jamci Switzer. '
The gallery 11 open Tuesday through Saturday, from
11 a.m. to S p.m. For further information, contact Phyllis
1. Lutjean1 at S4S-ARTS.
Weltbt ~mlaar sclJedaled
Dr. Bobbe L Sommer, author of ··~ave Your Fat Behind .. and .. Never Ask a Cactus for a Helping Hand,"
will conduct a seminar on Wednesday, Aua. 29, from 7:30
to 9 p.m., at 31S8 Redhill Ave., Co ta Mesa 1
A socciAll\t in wei&ht manaaement, Dr. Sommer will
discuss how to obtain, maintain and sustain ideal wci&ht.
· For more information, ca.11966-1818.
Stroke analy•I• te.t ofl er!Jd
Health Resource Center, 7422 Mountjoy Drive,
Huntinaton Beach, will c-0nduct an open house and pre-
condition stroke analysis testina on Thursday, Aua. 30,
from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
The testina is particularly targeted toward people
with a family history of stroke or heart disease, hi&h blood
pressure, cijabe1es, hi&h cholesterol levels, and those lbho
smoke.
No appointment is necessary. For more information,
call 841-2803.
United Way council to meet
The first orpnizational meeting of United Way's
Regional Council in the West County area will be held
Thursday, Aug. 30, at 7:30 a.m., at 81 00 Garden Grove
Blvd., Garden Grove.
As a result of the recent formation of the county-wide
United Way, localized councils are beina established to
insure that local community needs are met. All concerned
West Oranse County residents are invited to attend. For
more mformation, call 634-22S2.
Inventor'• Work•bop to meet
The International Inventor's Workshop will meet
Tuesday, Sept. 4, at 7 p.m. on the second floor of the
Glendale Federal Savinas Bldg., 24221 Calle de La Louisa,
El Toro.
This is a closed mectina for members only. For more
information, call 661-0184.
-.
Reluctant goose _
Jack Riordan, 8 , caatiouly often a piece . ·
of bread tO a relactant aooee at Jnlne••
J I
eception t
for Bradford
A ttetpuon hon9JlQ& 40lh Co~ ~
candadatt Ctrol Ann Bradford is plaru\ed for Wednentllr
nilbt at the N~ 8eac:h home of Dr. and Mn. J-..
Y. Watt U.S. Sen. Alan on. D-Ollifomia. •
endoned Bradford ~eral months aao, wUJ atteod'IM
wine and hon d'ocuvres funckaascr tbat beaias at 6 P.l\l
Bradford, a Democrat. is runruna .pinstltep Robef'l
Badham, R~ewpon lach . • • • Ciin1ton iliO atltfid a-==~on~~ea~y aw
Democrat Mary Lou Brop~y at I: 'p.m. at tht OOlde:n
Sa II Ho~l. 62SS E. Pacific Coast Hwy. CrUslon JllilJ
end0ne Bf!>Phy. Who a runruna :(or lbc 'lad ~lfCSltonaJ stnct .nst Rep Dan wnpm. ll-~ Beach. The reception as bcin& ponsortd by lhe.Bropbyfof C.onsres upponen • • • Another Brophy ll'CCCptton :is schcdWtd for A .... 26·a1 :8 p.m. at the Long Beacl1 home of Trude and Fttd OabOr. u. Gov. Leo T. McCanh> will speak on bchalf'of Broplly
at lbe event. ••• MCCarthy and Seri. Ted Kennedy. ~Masuchuiidi ,
have also added their endorscmcnu 10 canclid9te
Bradford. as has Steve Wozniak, the inventor of the Alfi*
Ciomputer. Wozniak made a SU)CIO contnlfuuon 10
Bradford campaign. Earlier lb1s month, the politica:I
action arm of the American Nunn' Anociation pracnaed
Bradford with a S l ,000 check for her camp&JP. ••• Newport Bca~h Ocmocrau are bosuag a batbCdie
Sunday at the home of Joanne and John Canon, 2!21
Settint Sun Ori\le. Corona del Mar. Ro)· Warner, wbo
helped wtjte the Oc~ocratic platform this tear, and Judie
Bruce Sumner, chauman of the Orange County De:MO-
cratic Party, are honored IUC5ts. For information call~
Canons at ~167.
OC League of Cities
joins foes of Jarvis'
~ 'The OranF County Leacuc of Cities voted last
to join the c.Iiforuia Chamber of Com.mc:tce.
California Taxpayen Aslocia1ion, the SUllt Pamm-
Teacben Associat.aon and the~ of Califomia Ci!fs
in opposioa the Jarvis IV initiabve 011 the ovcn1tii:r
t.llot.
The 26<ity orpnization voted to oppose iax-slastiln.a
Jarvis JV, wbicb will appear on the ballot as Proposition
36, because it .. would place cities and counties uodet'tbe
fiscal '=:•i:te aovernment," accordiDa to . the county · on•s executive director Robert l>u.iXk.
The ballot ure, which would provide tax n:fuDds
to propeny owners. ii destancd to cJOR loopbales in lbe
landmark tu<utting initiative Proposition 13, aocontina
to tu-foe Howard Jarvis, author of both measum.
The Oransc C-0unty Leaiue of Cities is a volunllt')',
non-profit orpni.zation composed of ~&tativcs
from all 26 aty aovernmenu in ~ unty. h is
affiliate with the Lea&uc of Califonua Cities, Tt1iich
!'CPretents city icccruu OD both tt:alOnal a.ad~
lS$ue5.
HB 's fortune brighter
in law suit by gypsies
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Tbc city of Huntil· aauni
Beach will not have to pay S 1 S,000 10 attomq· fees to a
'Em~~ema Update• set
--~~~ Richard Frankenstein, M.D., pulmono ogist, will
present an "Emf.hysema Update" at San Clemente
General Hospita , 6S4 Camino de Los Mares, on
Thursday Aug. 30, from 3 to 4 p.m.
• IYP.SY motbtt and dauaht.tt ~ho suid the cit) to~ its
bari on fortune tellinf. &Ju<!&e ruled.
U.S. District Judge Manuel Real~ with dei)iuy
city attome)' Ted Endra that Hu.oti~o.a Beach bacnlf\td
its ban not 10 reaction to the women s soit, but be<:aute a
render as repayment to inv'CSiOrs who Oominclli to suiTen er access to~a•onr--..... ·te coun ~~
Dominelli unable to repay
millions lost by investors
SAN DIEGO (AP) -J. David
Dominelli, who hopes to win release
from Jail on a federal contempt
citation, Ii~ earlier this year when be
said he could repay millions of dollars
to investors m bis bankrupl money-
trading firm, a lawyer says.
sunk $60 million into his failed La company assets and documents in his Barry Fisher, who represented Dorothy Merino and
The free program in the conference room is designed
for people with chronic obstructive tuna disease such as
chronic bronchitis, asthma and emphysema. It will
outline new medical advances and research.
Jolla firm, J. David&. Co. possession. herdauabter, Cathy, said Monday he would appeal Re.J's
Dominelli is charged in a federal Gilbert Athay, a Salt Lake City rulina.
indictment with two counts of attomeyreerescntingDominelli,said The women, who have been tcJlina fonunel jJl
bankruptcy fraud, two counts of his client has cooperated .. as full y as Redondo Beach, sued Hwitington ~earlier this Yr-Y·
criminal contempt and one count of what I'll let bun." But before their suit was tried, the city repealed its bU on
Refreshments will be served and free parklna is
available. for more information, call Jenny Kniptt at
661-443S or co-sponsor American Lung Associauon of
Oranac County at 83S-LUNG.
The disclosure from Frcdenck
Wirtz, a lawyer for bankruptcy trustee
Louis MeUger, came Tuesday durina
a federal court hearing. in which
defense attorneys hoped Dominelli's
perjury related to the failure of the "It's the position of Mr. DomineUi the bast of the Azusa decision.
company. (that) he is in complete compliance Still to be determined is where in the city fonune
Wirtz said Dominelli has aiven concemina disclosure of the court telhn& wiU bt permitted. Tb.at could take another 10
banxruptcy trustee Louis Metzger all order. It's our position that there's months. Endres said.
documents related to the bankrupt nothina more we can do," Athay said ------------------•
CALENDAR
--
\Vednesday,Aag.22
• 9:30 a.m., Oran1e Couty Board of Sapervisort,
Hall of Administration, I 0 Civic Center Plaza, Santa Ana.
• 7 p.m., Lapu Beac• PJ1nntn1 Comh1lon, City
Council Chambers, SOS Forest Ave.
~ • 7:JOP..m., Foutaba Valley PlamllJl& Comml11Joo,
City Council Chambers, l 0200 Slater Ave.
PoucE Loe
, cooperation would earn a dismissal of
the contempt charie.
U.S. Diurict Judge J. Lawrence
lrvin1 ~id he would take the case
under advisement and render a
decision sometime today.
Also scheduled for today was a
hearina to reduce Oominelli's SS
million bail on charaes filed after the
collapse of the firm.
Wirtz told the court that except for
an office building. racing cars and
about $3 million in liquidated assets,
Oominelli has nothing else to sur-
firm. He also said Dominelli told the Tuesday. .
trustee that the amount invested in J. Wirtz said Dominefli lied when be.
David was about $60 million. not told Metzger that he could return
f~ ranjing betwu.n-Sl 12.8 millions inJ. David assets. Oom1nelli
million and $12" lfiilfion, as reported wrote to investon in Apnl that he
for several months. would return their investments. then
Dominelli, 43, bas been jailed since left California for tht island of
April 28 in the Metropolitan Correc:-Monserrat despite a coun orderina
tional Center in downtown San him to stay in the state. Hfs passport
Diqo. He oriainally was found in has since been confiscated.
contempt of court by IrvinJ for · .. Those statements were based on
refusina to aid investiptors try1na to the belief that a large loan would be
locate funds missing from the firm. obtained to repa) (investors)," Wirtz
Irving specifically had ordered said.
OC man acquitted of murder ...
An Anaheim man ~Cound-mnoctnt of.the 97S
slayina of an ice cream seller after the defense claimed
police made up his confession.
Willie Vernon Williams. 30, was acqwncd Tuaday
tn Orange County Supenor Court.
TYto Santa Ana pohcc investiptors u:stifed t
Williams admitted dnvma the sctaway car vrhen Gcorsie
Horace Denholm, 62, of Santa Ana was trilled Sept. 14 197S. '
Williams allqedly made a confession in Auaust 1982.
but wasn't arrested until last November.
.
Huntington woman held East 18th Street home by a man
described as Hispanic, S-3. I SO
pounds. in his lare 20s. • • • An AM/FM radi<><as&ettc pla)er
and tapes, \i.Orth SS90, were reported
stolen Tuesday from a vehicle parked
at Oranic Coast Coll A pair of
needle nose pliers YiCTC ound on one
• • • A teleCboned bomb threat C'VK'U· ated a arac crowd from Baxter's
Restaurant. S 180 Birch St.. Tuetday
ni&ht but a pohce search turned up no
e'plosivt devices. in bank_ holdup· attempt
A woman who reportedly scrawled
a holdup note on a bank depos.it slip,
was arrested Tuesday in Huntinaton
Beach after allqedly informif\I a
teller, "J think I'm JOIQI to rob you.''
Susan A. Memtt, 20, of Hunt-
inaton Beach was amsted inside Fint
lntentate Bank at the intersection of
Beach Boulevard and Adams Avenue
after the 3:2S p.m. incident, police
Said.
Merritt was booked on suspicion of
attempted bank robbery and 1s beina
held on S2S,OOO bail.
Acxordina to police, the woman
wrote .. I want St,SOO" on the beck of
a dcposh slip which she handed a
-...
A $300 sterto was stolen from a areen t9S7 Chevrolet pickup truck
parked on the 17~ block of Grttn.
t.
1"1.ae
A 1980 Porsche was reJ>Oned tolcn
Wednesday from the l 7800 block of
Can~11&ht Road. The I ~ e ti·
mated at $9,000. ••• Someone rcmo'fcd a 'thdow
screen '~ .. ~~anzc a home Tuesday on the tock of Lotthavcn
Citele. The lo included mototc)clc
aJoves and helmets tlh $280 • • • Jewelry of undctemuncd "'llue .-u
reported stolen from an a,panmcnt on
the 1700 block of Jordan A'fenuc
unday. ·
,teller. When the teller questioned the
note, the woman allegedly uttered her
"stiinge" demand. police said.
"It is kind of a stranae thina to say,"
•arced Lt. Jim Walker. who pecu-
lated that the woman mi&ht ha\le
been nel'\'ous or ju.st misspoke to the
teller.
.,
day that someone stole her black 12·
pttd Murray bicycle from outside a
fast food outlea. The lo wu betWC'Cn
SSO and $200. • • • ~ man pt0v1d~ false 1dcntHi-
cation in rcnhJ\4 home video equip-
ment from lmnc Camera, 1~3S
Jcffrt) Road. TM man faaJed to
return $700 wonh of equipment,
pohctsjid.
•
of the scats. ·,
• • • An Anaheim man told poficc h11
SuzukJ boat motor was 5tolen frQm
the p1nd rif\ Yacht parkifta lot, 2830
West Coast Hwy .. over the wukend
The lo 9t'IS placed at S 1,500. • • • A Seattle man sta}ina at the
Ba> Club found his room had been
buratarized Sunday and SlS,S7S
worth of je"'cl.ry and camera eqwp-
mcnt v.-as stolen. • • • A screen was pried open Tuesday at
a home on the 4400 bloek of Cbannel
Place and a pair of Walkman head-
phones, valued at $100. weR tolen .
Huntin~on plant fire
quelledOy sprinklers:
•
~ . •
.
A• Orange Co S1 DAILY PILOT/Wed
Ferraro impresses press,
but faces new headache .
he puts financial flap behlnd her, ust
tn time to hear that her press secretary quits
WASHINGTON (AP) -Hours
after her commandins. marathon
performance fieldina questions about
family finances. Geraldine A. Ferraro
returns to the campaian trail only to
face a new problem -the surprise
rcsifnarion of pi:css fieerctary P tricia
Bano.
Near the end of her nearl) t\\ o-hour
news conference on fin nee Ferraro.
the Democratic v1cc presidential
nominee, looked out at the 38
television cameras and mort than
J SO reporters and expressed the hope
Tuesday that .. Gerry will be off the
grill."
.. We'll ~ct this all oµt and then we'll
move out ' to talk about issues rather
than finaru:.cs in new campaign stops
~nning with a speech to a teachers
union here today. she said. t .
But Tuesday night , her
spokeswoman, Bano. 52, told The
Associated Press: "I QUll this eve-
ning.••
She said she quit in a dispute with
campaign man""' John Sas o over
delay) in hirina a sistants to help h r
and because of the confusion th:it
~ulted from a lack of •taff help.
"I'm goina out in $0rrow. not in
anier," she emph sized. "I ha\e
trtrnendou regard f'Of Ffff'&ro I
think she's a tremendous candidate
and I'd like to be part of the tc.lm, but
l ju t wasn't able to operate at the
level that I wanted to."
She told Sasso of her decision
Tuesday night and planned to advi
Ferraro by note today.
Bob Beckel. campaign manager for
Democratic standard·bearer Waltet
Mondale. minimized the impact of
Bario's move "Pat~s ecis1on to leave
the campaign is ~pc nal one. This
campa11n 1s not a ing rise or f~ll dn anr one penon... going to nse or
fal on the jssues and that's where I
think Geraldine Ferraro took this
race today," Beckel told ABC·TV·s
.. Ni&hthne."
At a Queens, NY .. news con·
Cf nee, Fcmro had pointed 10 her
rel of"morc financial d1sclo urcs
thanyourccchcd from ny candid tc
1n the hi 100 of the United ~tatcsand
from any other $pou .. nd raued
they J&j pcl any notion her family had
" o~thing to hide."
lndrtd, Ferraro had ()me reason to
ho~ that her cahn and assun."d
re pon5es to J!2inted and sometimes
lloM1lc questions miifit havo finally
put to rest many of the financial
qu stion that have hadowcd her for
tWOWetkS.
She never flinched. and, havina
promised to take all que t1on.,
outlasti'd two television networks
which decided they had seen cnouah
and $topped broadcasting the event
before she left
Her performance provoked an
unusual response from the reporters
present: they booed or hooted down
two of their colleague who the)' fell
\l.CTC rudely interruptina Ferraro's answe~. At the end. some television
cameramen dropped their normal
noncommital posture to applaud her.
Patricia Barto
And the early reviews from some
_political commentators were
favorable.
But Democratic campaign sou~s.
. who would not allow use of their
names, said Bario's departure reflect·
ed a ~ider problem in Ferraro·s
campaign staff.
OOOH!
Mixed race vote
boycott pushed
in South Africa
•
I
CAPE TOWN, South Africa (AP)
-South_Afri.ca. todJfY 1'etd its first
election for a non·wfute chamber of
Parliament, but opponents appealed
for a b<>~cott to protest the white
minonty s continued pohtical domi·
nation.
About 907,000 voters of mixed race
-were eligible to cast ballots today.
Boycott organizers predicted a low
turnout of ab<>ut IS percent that they
said would discredit the new tbrec-
chamber Parliament, which will ex·
elude blacks entirely and continue to
be controlled by whites.
Jn Johannesburg, groups urJing. a
b<>ycott said six more of their mem·
hers were detained by police, raising
the two-day total ofarrcsts to 41.
-WESTCLIFF SHOES
' 1052 IRVIVE AVE• CORNER OF 17th STREET
WESTCLIFF PLAZA -NEWPORT BEACH
SALE PRICES
EFRCTIVE
Dll'Uay,Alg.23~
11:00 A.I.
ALL SALES
FINAL
FOR MEN
Remaining Stock Florshelme
and other fine quality dress
and casual shoes. Plus new
holiday slippers
All Reduced
503 -~~E
lAST 3 DAYS
STORE IOUIS
10:00 'til 6:00
ALL SAtES
FINAL
THURSDAY
FRIDAY
SATURDAY
AUG. 23-24-25
AND MORE
FOR CHILDREN
Remaining Stock
Origlnally '16 to •33
Sale 481-881
FIXTURES
Interior Display Units
Benches, Shefvtng, Etc •
PRICED TO SELL
REGUlAR
PRICES
FOR WOMEN
Remaining Stock famous
name brand dress & casual
s hoes. Sacrifice prices p lus
new holiday allpp re
All Reduced
503 •• MORE
WESTCLIFF SHOES
WESTCLIFF PLAZA NEWPORT IEACH
•
At Rhodes University in
Grahamstown, witnesses said police
arrested 18 students, including the
president of the Student Rcpresenta·
tiveCounciJ, who had gathered witha
single placard to protest the elections.
Louis le Grange, the minister of law
and order, issued a statement saying
the arrcsu were made because of the
"revolutionary climate and situation
of unrest m certain parts of the
country."
Leaders of the Labor Party, ex·
pccted to win most of the 80 scats at
stake today. predicted a 40 percent
turnout. Government sources have
said they would be satisfied with as
litlle as a 20 percent turnout.
Another election next week will
pick a ~scat chamber for the
850,000 South Africans of Indian
descent.
But a third legislative chamber for
whites wtll retain an effccttve veto
over the actions of the two non-white
chambers and could govern even if
the others walk out.
South Africa's 22 million blacks
will remain without the right to vote,
own land or move about (reely.
Opponents of the election say the
new system entrenches white-min·
ority rule, known as apartheid, by
enlisting the support of the Indian
and m1xed-racc communities against
the blacks without actually giving
them full rights.
Conservatives have accused Prime
Minister Pieter W. Botha's govcm-
tlini ou~interests of the
country's S million whites.
In western Cape Province, home to
many of South Afria's 2.7 million
"coloreds" -as peoJ>le of mixed race
arc officially class1fied -voting
appeared slow when booths opened at
7 a.m. It also was slow in townsh1ps
around Johannesburg.
-~GV~
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EVERYWHERE!
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FOR SLIDING .PATIO DOORS
FOR BROCHURE ANO
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CALL
1-IOCM4DOORS
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----
Man who loses his faJDily
in flash flood kills hlniself
...
By abe Atsodafed Pres
HI PROCK. .M.-Hours f\erl rninghi wife. thrccc:lhildrenand th
chtldren·s arnndmother had bctn 'killod in a n,Sh n~. ' man .went hom~,
"locked the door .. and fat.Ill!)' hot himself. Nay-.io pohce ~1d. Poltce Jl. Alyas Ktt · id Darrell Souc, who lived on the Nav1Jo Reservation, wa tayma with
relatives af\cr learning of the deaths and asked them to take tum home so he
could change clothes about 7 a.m. t ucsday. Soue'• family was killed Mon~y
when their car W8!'1 caught by a flash flood 1n a auJly tn northwest New Mexaco,
Kee said. The couplc·s 3-wcek-<>ld son. 8randon Soue; ~ fou.nd on the cdae
oflht-"wa h after the accident and wu doing fln.e, K.ce.said. TheJnflnt bu bcCri
placed with relatives.
Cnu.e sl1lp blue probed
· MIAMI -An investigation into a cruise ship lin.e·~ second m~or fire in
si:1t months, a moky blazc_lhat killed two people and tnJu~ 31 othen, could
lead to &tronger mafitime safety rules a Coast Guard official aays ... lfa too
early to say" if Scandinavian World Cruises was a~ fault an the latest bJ~.
which came at the end of a daylona gambling tnp, Coast Guard Lt. Jim
Simpson Simpson said Tuesday. The bodies of a 24*yea_r-old music tea~ber
from Greenac:rts City escortinJ children on~ chu~b ou~ina. and a Jamaican
crewman who identity was withheld pend1ng notification ofrelataves, were
fout'd on 'the vessel shortly after l p.m. Tuesday, officials said ·
RefJzJery bla•t till• two ·
FRE~DOM Pa -Three men moving an empty storaae tank in an
unused art.a of an Ashland Petroleum Co. refinery e~den~y trigercd a
powerful explosion that killed two of them and left the third cnt1cally burned
today, a company spokesman said. The exact cause of the bias~ at ~he J 05·year·
old plant will probably not be known for several days, said Jim Bu~er. a
spokesman for the Ashland, Ky., based company. He saad no damage csumate
was available. Welding cqu1pmcnt was found at the site, but Butler ref~scd to
speculate on whether sparlc.s from a torch might have set off the e.xploston.
5.2 quake In Idaho
CHALLIS. Idaho -An earthquake strong enough to wake sleeping
residents. struck central and southwestern Idaho today, but there were no
reports of damage or injuries, authorities said. The quake suuck at ~bout 3:52
a.m, said Custer County sheriffs dispatcher Diane Leaton, who satd she bad
received several calls. The quake registered .S.2 on the Richter scale of sround
motion, said Russ Needham, a geophysicist with the U.S. Gcoloaical Survey
Earthquake lnfo~tio.nCcntcdn Golden, Colo.
Viet vet heads VFW
CHICAGO-A third~generat100 soldier becomes the new commander of
the Veteran of Foreign Wars this week, marking the first time a Vietnam
veteran has been chosen to lead the 2-milhon-member orpnization. Bill~ Ray
Cameron, 40, will begin his duties Friday with a promise that the post will not
affect his advocacy o1'issues with particular imponance to Vietnam veterans.
"We·vc got to continue to tell the public and the government that these
(Vietnam) veterans need to be respected," Cameron said in an interview
Tuesday. "It's an amazing thing about Americans, we tend to get very
complacent. .
Violent conrict eluifes capture
POINT Of THE MOUNTAIN, Utah -Officers scoured an isolated,
swampy area today for the last and "most violent" of three inmates who
shpped out of Utah State Pnson dressed in civilian clothes, authorities said.
With flashhghts guiding the way, •uards waded through swamps and thick
underbrush through the night looking for convicted murderer Wesley Allen
Tuttle. said Deputy Warden Dave Franchina. Guards aided by ®IS bad
already captured two inmates without incident. Darrell Euacne lf""ra.dy and
Walter Wood were fg11nd less than 12 hours after they escaped Tuesday
mom in~ by pry1ng open three doors and walking out of the prisorl's front door
dressed 1n civilian clothes. Francbina said.
Happy anniversary, HawaH
;r HONOLULU -Letters stilJ show up occasionally stamped "foreign
mail" and some tourists are heard to talk about "going back to the states," but
none of that dulled the ghmmer of Hawaii's 25th anniversary of statehood.
Poht1c1ans and JUSt plain people enjoyed a state holiday Tuesday to mark the
signing on Aug. 21, 1959. by"Prcs1dent Dwight D. Eisenhower of an executive
order declaring Hawaii the nation's 50th state.
Snyder recall try a flop
LOSANGELES-CityCouncilmanArthurSnyder
handily retained his seat as 61 percent of the eastside
voters who turned out in unusually stron' numbers
rejected an attempt to recall the 17-year council member.
Declaring victory to supporters at a Hijhland Park party
late Tuesday, Snyder: S l , said the clectton result in the 7'4
percent Hisparuc district was a denunciation of the
campa1gn of his main opponent and rccatl organizer,
Steve Rodriguez. "I think this shows that Steve
Rodriguez is bankrupt as a candidate/' said Snyder,
adding "this kind of a slimeball campei&n that be ran ii
not acceptable to the people." With nearly half of the
district's 54,000 rqistered Yoters going to the polls SNYDER
Tuesday, 10, 172 or 39 percent. favored recalling him, while l 6, 123 voters or 61
percent opposed the recall.
Poll show• un1on• unpopular
SAN FRANClSCO -Californians' view of labor unions is tak.ina a tum
for the worse, as a growing number believe unions do more harm than aood.
accordina to a California Poll released today. Almost half of the Californians
survcyed(4S percent) said unionsdomoreaood than harm. But44pcrcentsaid
unions do more harm than good, up sharply from 27 percent who felt the same
in a 1977 poll. Amona the neptavc aspects.pollsters found 77 percent believe
labor leaders abuse their power; 74 percent felt some U.S. companies have lost
thetr competitive edge because of waic and benefit demands made by unions;
and 60 percent said union leaders fail to keep 1n touch with their members.
Navy toughens dreu code
SAN Of EGO-Multicolored hair, nose rings and even beards on oflicen
are taboo under a new set of Navy &roomina rule~. which official• aay arc both
·•reasonable .. and •·enforceable ... The new rules, embedded in the current Code
of Navy regulations, take effect immediately and will help "ensure that the
appearance of naval personnel contributes to a favorable military imaae,"
according to a report quoted in today's San Dieao Un1on. The Navy report
noted that there is a "secmina dichotomy" in rcaul.ations permittina one kind
of grooming for men and another for women, but said it was based on cultural
differences between the sexes.
WORLD
~----------
Trlpoll llghtl.n6 ~1• 98
TRIPOLTt Lebanon -Artillery duels between rival Mo tell) militia
rocked residential nei&hborhoods ii\ this S)'!ian~ntrollcd city. tOday u a
cease-fire collapsed ana police railtd the three-day casualty toll to at lea t 96
dead and 260 wounded. Police said a sin&Je mortar shell m Tripoli' TaJ public
square today killed five civilians and that 12 t>odi were retrieved from
bu1ldinas bombed out in fi&)\tina Monday and Tue.day.
Bela.Ill fllare fJ61Jt. eztndltloa
TORONTO-Cathy Evelyn mi&h cannot be eutadited to California to
fatt a charac of second-dqrec murder in the death of cornedian John Belushi
beau<Je he ha been charged with the wrona ofTea~, •YI dtftntt lawyer Brian
Greenspan. Grctn$pan and Crown Attorney An Coominswamy clasbtd
Tuesday durinJ an extradition htarin1 over whether the charse. one of l•
agaanst mi th. 37, make her cli11blc to be acnt to the U .. for tnal.
Reagan ~n starring
role in Texas show
Renomination of
nation· s leadtn man
expected tonight
that will introduce him Thursday
niJhl. CBS and AB have not wd
whether they will ir the film.
••The declSion to how the Re n
film was not made ~--ausc there wat
new in it, but rather because of the DALLAS (AP)-Ronald R~gan, popular interest that has buih up
dominating the opcnina scenes of the during the _past week." aa d Tom
Republican National Convention Brok.aw, NBC anchorman for the
from far offstage, moves into the convention. The networks didn't P.Qtli~t today as the lead.in~ man of broadca&t a film abOut Walter F.
the conscrvattvc revolution he Mondale at the Oemocratk National
wrou&ht in 1980 and is determined to Convention last month, and Dem~
preserve. for four more years. cratic, leaders have asked the
· Jn a single unconteste4.ca}t of the networks to pa sup the Reapn film.
roll of the state tonight, "keapn and Other s~kcn toni&ht .Included
his viee president, Ocorae Bu h, will Sen. Pete Domenici of fiJcw Mexico,
be renominated for a S«Ond four-chairman of the Senate Budaet Com-
ycartenn by dcleptei who heard him mince, and Sen. John Tower of
acclaimed Tuesday night as "a presi-Texas. But the principal address was
dent who doesn't apologize for reserved for the man once known as
America." Mr. Conservative, Sen. Barry Oold-
A I 0-Story hi&h Amcncan flag and water of Arizona, whose presidential ~housands of fed, white and blue campaign in 1964 pvc Reagan his
'balloons were 1n place for a rally to I fi"t natiol'al exposure in a political IJ"CCl the president and Bush at their role.
hotel late in the afternoon after the The pressure to streamline the
president arrives from Washington. convention program led to the un-
White Hoose spokesman Larry precedented step of recording the
Speakes said Reagan had no plans to votes for the presidential and vice
appear at the convention hall before presidential nominees in a sinJle call
his acceptance speech Thursday of the roll of the states. •
ni&ht. But Nancy Reagan was on To coincide with the arrival in
tonight's program, scheduled to ad-town of the president. a i tar-studded
dress the delcsates after a filmed convention program also included
tribute to her. actor Charlton Heston to lead the
• NBC announced that it will broad-Pledge of Allegiance and Wayne
cast a filmed tribute to the president Newton to sing the Nauonal Anthem.
OOOH!
LA
\,.
J
1lcm't Tie
up yOWt
ff{ ____
... and still earn a bundle/
with NEWPORT BALBOA SAVINGS'
MONEY MARKET SAVINGS ACCOUNT
lo 5 0/ COMPOUNDID
e /0 DAILY
Free Checking -3 Checks per month with
$2,500 average monthly balance*
Unlimited Personal or A TM Withdrawals
Insured by FSLIC to $100,000.
'* AliPAoe MOftTfll.V ~ ~ • Ollf --.TPDT MVBIT9 TO IWOULAl'I C~ l Off 1...-.
Wl8TCUPP pt.AU
~o;.LV I
DINEWPOKr
BALBOA
Savinss
COROMAdtlMAA
IAVINEAVENU ATWESTCUFPDIWE
NEWPORT KACH, CALIFORNIA t.2983
{7'•) 145·.SOS
3021 EAST COAST H.GHWAY
CORONA dtl MAA.~ ORtM
{71•) 175.tOIO
s
Da'rid Turner, GOP deletate from Tennwee, dre11e• for tbe ~
LOS A OELES (AP) -Ute
CoasUJ ComnutlaOn ot6clal1 ._.vc
protested beina 'bamd Crom fcdtftl
sonmmcnt lbean!'P .t.ett wn-
neaea cntical of iOahfora11'1 eaiSi
rnanaacment proparn ·ai'howe A fcdcral ·spMcSman. ftr,
•>"the ooly reason die It.ate~ were cxduded Wl1 to mAblt .nt-
oesscs 10 testify without ii1Ju1'itl0n.
but that because of the te ~
that pc>licy wasdlanted U> allow state ~ntauvcs to be present sf the
WI tnesteS IO request.
The fcderaJ Office of Ocean and •
Coastal Resource Managemcnl
Kur previously barred Slate coastal
officials from simnc in on in1a'VleWS
with people Who have businea befi
the California C'OD'lmission. spok
men id Tuesday.
The interYICWI are pan of a
ev&Juation process the federal 19'·
ernment conduru eaeh year to dc-
tenninc whether sta1es arcadeQuate1)
protecting coastal resources *nd
should continue to ttetive federal funds and rtgulatory authorit) over
such activitiet as offshore 011 uplo-
ration.
The Rev. Jerry Falwell, head of the While the party awaited iu leader. and prosperous durina the Rcapn
Moral M.,;onty, will deliver the c<;>~ventioo spe~ken trumpeted thetr years.
The California Coastal C<im·
mission's bUdFI for the current year
ii SS. t million, of which 20 percent as.
federal funds. benediction. v1s1on of a nation own confident
ALJlllA IETl \ aVUYDAY PIUCa
COLONY 3llt. '5.89 \ W . Emtr*. lluby tr !"id CU*
JACQUES BONET .
'2.88 1 2.79 '2.79 '2.89 '2.99 Eltra Dry. ""' er~ ·111ca 750 ..
PAUL MASSON 3 llr. 18.81 1 8.29 •e.29 1 5.99 Cl'lallh, IUritle, 11m· If Burturidy
1 3.14 '3.14 1 3.49 '3.45 '3.29
INGLENOOK '5.89 15.89 '5.79 '6.99 C~dls lllill. llm.' «llillpMy_3 Ltr.
Brul 750 ... '3.59 '3.59 .2.99 NA
ALMADEN •1::._~.:. ~· 1 3.79 '3.69 .29 '3.68 ..... ~· C.W..a.11 1Hlr
'19.25 '17.99 '17 .29 '18.99 1 16.98
1 5.99 '5.89 15.89 '5.49
1 10.38 19.89 ~2 .1
--H•. ..... 3Ur.-..... ,l•-CRIBARI Hit. 1 4.59 '4.19 14.09 '5.19 NA V-111t lliala, CMbh. ~se· " 8lqvndy
LOUIS MARTINI 1 5.45 '5.45 15.19 '4.99 NA '5.48
KORBEL SPARKLING WINE '9.76 NA NA NA lrvt ., Exira Dry 750 ml
CHATEAU STE. MICHELLE 3.78 1 4.29 '4.09 NA •tllftlsbtft Rlsslag 1913 750""
COOKS SPARKLING WINE 1 3.98 1 3.98 NA NA NA 1 3.68 750"" I 15.45 1 5.39 1 5.15 -'5.05 1 5.55 NA ....--
HENRY WEINHARD 1 5.85 1 5.99 12 'ack. 12 ez. M It Bettles
1 5.75 1 5.89 18.15 NA
1 4.29 . NA 1 3.89 1 1 4.15 1 4.1 9 .
•10.991 ·~·9!_
1
1 11.19
1
1 1 1.99 '10. 79 1.75 Ltr. --
1 10.89 1 10.89 1 10.89 10.98 1.75 llr.
CROWN ROYAL '15.32 '15.32 1 14.59 1 14.39 1 1 7.49 CAMAllAN • IO f'rOof
CHIVAS REGAL
SCOTCH 12 Yr.<*. II "9of 750 ml
1.75 llr.
AMlRETTODISARONNO 1 14.69 1 12.18 '13.99 1 13.89 1 13.99 7501111
VONS RALPHS LUCKYS Ol!MCO ALPHA llTA LIQUOR BARii HAS LQW& TOTAL TOTAL TOTAL TOTAL TOTAL
EVERYDAY MICD • '194.80 '184.22 •115.31 '180.84 1170.88 DD LOW& SMCW.S.
C•CIC .,.,. SAVINGS WITH
UQUOll 8ARll'S EVBIYDAY
LOWMICD!
YOUR TOTAL SAVINO$ OVER
SUPaMAMET MICE.
....
ood, hoU.sing costs
push inflation to~%
A nnual rate still 4 perctnt for the 1rs1 vcn months of House pokesman. "The recovery ~~ the year. rem ms steady nd on ooursc." below ovemment That compar« with a rate of 3.8 Meanwhile, the Commerce De· percent for all of la t ~car -the Qt t panmcnt rcponed today that orders rediCtiOnS f Or , 84 performance in cc 1972. The annual to fact one for "big ticket" durable
rate so far is al o lower than the 4.4 aoodsrose 2.2 percent in July, makina
WASHINGTON (AP) -Food percent rate the Reasan adminis· up moat of the ·previou1 month's
prices roSt at the fastest pace in five tration has P.i-edictC'd for all of 1984. dechne.
months m July and housina costs also So today neM wa likely to be Durable &oods orders, a key in-
raed upward, sushing overall con-welcomed in Dallas, where the Re--dicator of future factory production,
Rm'!er prices .3 percent hi&bcr publicans arc meetina to renominate have been very erratic in recent
despite declinin& psoline and fuel oil President Reagan to run for a scrond months with a 6.5 percent April
co t , the government said today. term amid continuinJ indications the decline followed by a 4 percent May
Still, the July increase in the economy is still arowang briskly while increase and then a 3 percent June
Consumer Price Index was only inflation remains relatively low. setback. "T"
SliJhtly 111gber than the 0.2 percent "This shows that the economy €ommentang on the inflation re-
ptns of May and June, and it left continues to grow with low infla-Port, Donald Ratajczak. director of
. inflation runnina at an annual rate of tion," said Peter Roussel, a White the Economic Forecastina Project at !.;:;=========;;;;;;;=============oi Georgia State University, said both
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food and housing prices could con-
tinue risina at their faster paces,
pu~hina overall inflation upward,
too. .
"lt looks like the low point of the
inflation cycle has been reached," he
· id, with annual rates in the ranae of
S percent to 6 percent likely for the
next )'ear or two.
labor costs in particular are rising,
he said, as employers hire back the
last of the skilled workers laid off
during the recession and beain bid-
ding up wqes in order to keep
workers from l~ving for other jobs.
Food prices had inched upward 0. I
pm:ent 1be previous month.
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BUl K.a.cmater.leftandJohn Wooten, rtiht, awalt judge'• dec .. lon outalde courtroom.
Judge rules two strong men
• shouldn 'tfigh t Gverthe title
BOSTON (AP)-A judge brought U.S. District Judge Joseph Tauro's · Auburn, Ali., who cari bench press
the full strcnath oftbe lepl system to ruling Tuesday came in the case of 661 pounds.
bear in a dispute between two men John Wooten, a 6-foot-I , 240-P.Ound "The titJe is just descriptive and
who each claim to be the world's judo expert from Revere who lakes to doesn't C8ITY a secondary meanina,"
strongest man, saying the law pre-pull trains and Bill Kazmaier, a 6-Tauro said Tuesday after 4S minutes
vents either from ca in the title. foot-3. 320..pound weithtlifter from of weighty arauments by attorneys for i--_;.;..;:::::======~=============::;----.., both musclemen.
OOOH!
LA
PIT I TE
Kazmaier had filed suit seek.in& to
halt Wooten's claim at being the
world's strongest.
Wooten bas been caUina himself
that since 1977, pulling freight tmns,
buses and planes with a rope wrapped
around bis neck to back his claim.
Another of Wooten's favorite
stunts is to lie on a bed of nails while
friends run motorcycles over him or
pile concrete blocks on bis chest and
smash them with sledgehammers.
Such stunts have earned Wooten
network television appearances on
shows like "That's Incredible." It also
won ham a paid spot on a local car
comme,rcial that features him liftina
the rear end of a car.
But Kazmaier, a weightlifter with a
60-inchcbestand 22-inch biceps, says
he's the strongest and calls Wooten a
"trickster."
K.azmaier submitted evidence that
he holds several records with the U.S.
Powerlifting Federation -including
a 887-pound deadlift and 661-pound
bench press.
Kazmaier asked the court to stop
Wooten's claims, saying they cost
ham endorsem~nts and embarrassed
ham "an the weight community.''
"To let anyone who has no lcalt-
1mate claim use the title 'the worfd's
strongest man' is a contravention of
ourtaw;· K::azmattrsanomey, Arten
Johnson, argued in court.
Johnson told Tauro bis client could
easily beat Wooten, or anyone else, in
a contest of strength.
But Marie Lefton, anorney fo r the
ad firm that made Wooten's car
commercial, argued that no one could
lay claim to exclusive use of the title.
"You can't trademark the name
'stronaman' any more than you could
the term 'grocery store,'" she said.
"This is a legal issue and lepl issues
arc mv event.'' he said .
)
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10UNT A.INV ALLEY OOMMUNlTY HOSPITAL
Jgly ti
Nancy a~d Michael Neil, Huntinaton Beach, aar)
J1l1H
wAnn and Peter Friese, Costa
Mt$1, boy
Barban and John Hunt, Costa Mesa,
Jirl JwlyU
Patrice and James Fortune, Hunt·
inJton Beach, twins, f' rl and boy
July I
Oeborab Smith, Costa Mesa, boy
Shcrree and Bruce Bowden, Hunt-
ioaton Beach, boy
JuJJ ao
Michon and Bradley Conners, Hunt-
inJton Beach, boy
Elizabeth and Scott Nomura, Hunt-
inaton Beach, boy.
_ Jtity u
Julie and Robert McSherlcy, Hunt-
inaton Beach, airl
Lynda and Clrlos Sona, Fountain
Valley, boy
Carol and Joseph Krupansk:y, FouJl-
tain Valley .. boy
Busbra and Saahir Aslam, Costa Mesa, airl
Aa1ast 1
Mai Thi Tran and Son Phu Do, Costa
Mesa, airl
Constance and Garry Troxell, Hunt-
ington Beach, boy
Tnsnawati and Hendrikus Lukman,
Costa Mesa, boy
Kelly and Ronald Clark, Huntington
Beach, airl
Augast i
BozenaandAnte Kvesic, Huntington
Beach, girl
.taps& s
Catherine and Robert Maurer, Hunt-
ington Beach, boy
Karen and Daniel Vadase, Hunt-
ington Beach, girl
Jeong and Seung Kim, Fountain
Valley, boy
Chrisune and Mamerto Raguindin,
Fountain Valley, boy
A.U&Ult'
Huona Thi Hoana and Paul Cho.
Fountain Valley, boy
A11at6
Lana and Arthur Elliou. Costa Mesa, . I f heryl and Stephen Witham, foun·
tain Valley, 11rl
A1111t t
Marpret and Stephen D vidson.
Huntington Beach, boy
A•p1t '1
Maria and Terry Richce, fountain
Valley, boy ·
Molly and Kenneth Cox, Huntington
Beach, boy
-Adrienne Dombrosky, fountain Val· ley, boy
HOAG MEMORIAL HOSPITAL .
Jiiiy ia
Mr. and Mrs. 0-clle Homer, Hunt-
ington Beach, boy
Mr. and Mrs. Dana Kasdan. Irvine,
boy
Mr. and Mrs. Craig Maurer, Newport
Beach, boy
Joly 30
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Ehlcen, Cost.a
Mesa, girl
Mr. and Mrs. James Palmer, Irvine,
boy
Mr. and Mrs. Jose Castaneda, Cost.a
Mesa, boy .
Mr. and Mrs. Ignacio Felix, Laguna
Beach, boy
Jilly 31
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Grant, Newport
Beach, girl
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Walley, Irvine,
boy
August%
Mr. and Mrs. Carig Fortevillc-
Dunlap, Newport Beach, girl
WESTERN MEDICAL CENTER
SANTAANA
August t ·
Susan and Michael Bach, Huntington
Beach.boy
August lO
Sally and Richard Salter Jr., Irvine,
girl
August 1%
Patricia and Timothy Szto. Fountain
Valley, boy
Newport's Bartolic
ends ROTC course
Cadet ADtbony E. ·Bartollc, son of
Alben and Dora Bartolic of Newport
Beach, has received practical work in
military leadership at the Army
ROTC advanced camp in Fon Lewis,
Wash. Bartolic is an ROTC cadet and
student at UCLA. • • • Army Pvt. EUiabetb J. King,
daughter of Elizabeth King of Laguna
Niguel, has graduated from the Army
power generation equipment repair
course at Fort Belvoir, Va. • • • Airman 1st Class Mlllard J.J.
Reserve Airman Kelly M. O'Brien,
daughter of Sharoyn and retired
Manne Corps Capt. Thomas O'Brien
of Irvine, has been assigned to
Chanute Air Force Base, Ill., after
completing Air Force basic training at
Lackland Air Force Base, Texas.
O'Brien is a 1982 graduate of Orange
Coast College. • • • Airman WUliam M. McAdama.Jr.,
°"" .... ,......, llMlll ~
Rtght-thla way ·
Laguna Beach W.h School coeda Marcy Persona, 16, and
Kel'l'J MadHD, 14. recentlr let pu•tn~ motoristll oD Cout
m,hway know the 1tehool • pep sqaa wu hoetiJl&. a car
wUh. C&r dirty? It'• too late DOW.
Saddleback courses
tailored for women
While women in the United States
are.. takiug a larger role irr politics,
economics and the work foTcc,
Saddleback Community College
South is actively making strides
toward the future unveiling of a new
Women's Studies Program.
New courses have been added for
the fall semester beginning Aug. 27,
includinf "Introduction to Women's
Studies,' "The Feminine Life Cycle"
and .. Women's Health Issues."
More than 60 percent of Saddle-
back students arc women. according
to Ann Clasby, a psychology instruc-
tor in charge of the Women's Studies
program at Saddleback.
Clasby added that the program is
designed to cover a wide range of
interests and viewpoints and is open
to all members of the community,
including men.
··we have tried to create a program
to meet the needs and intercsu of
both the young and more mature
women in this community," Clasby
said ... For this reason we a~ offerin~
courses like 'Women and Education,
designed to reorient the returning
students to the academic environ-
ment and 'Women and Careers,' for
both young and mature women to
evaluate their career opuons."
Other courses include "Women in
Art." "Image of Women an Litera-
A7
Degree in biology
for NB' s Milligan
Oebonlb H. M11lipn of Newport Karen Patrice Blau of Hunu~ Beaeh has araduated with honon Beach bu been awarded • .,.
from Occidental Coll in Los Senior Scholarlhip &Om lbe f.dd&"~
Anseles, rccei"in&•'bachelor's of ans tionlJ Granu and Loam Comm• •
dearee in biology. ofthe Delta Gamma FnlmUty.
Her career ioal is to become a Blau, a-senior at the Univenuyd
medical doctor. · Southern Cahfomia majocina th
Se"eraJ Ora~ ·coast sttident1 joumali$m an.d poliucaJ ICicncic. Is -~include.don.thel934Pt ident' c or~ collqic Knion.AlOlit~-~.....J~..i
Honors List. released nuntly by Cal nationwiae to receive the tCbOlar Poly.~n Luis Obispo, ship. Selection is made on the bali IM
$Chotastic ac.hievemeni. c:ontribu•
hons to collqiate chaP'Cf, camP"J The students on the list ea.med
&rack averqcs placing them among
the top lS percent of the university•s
undergraduates during th.(ee quarters
of the 1983-84 academic year. Only
those enrolled in 12 or more uruts of
atudy are eliaible for the President's
Honors List.
local students are: Kirk Dominic,
Diane Keddy, La~n 8. Landcsman
of Hun,ington }\each; John P. Traut·
rnannandl..auraA. Moloney, Laguna
Hills; Kim A. Kinzie, Newport
Beach; Eric L Anderson and James E.
Geories of Mission Viejo; Dawn M.
A®ms, Fountain Valley and Thomas
0 . 'Holst, Irvine. • • •
Five Corona del Mar students were
among the undergraduates on Cal
State Fullerton's spring semester
Dean's Honor List. They were Brian
Richard Austin, Cbristof A. Ballin.
Stephen Mark Lasor, Jami Ann
Leabow and Michael Shawn
McClure ..
and community. • • •
RCJistration for children cnterina
kindctprten thi' fall tw beaun in lhc
Newport-Mesa Unified Sc:&o0l ~
triet.
Parents are required to hrina proof ~f the c~ild) qc and of State-req u~
1mmunwauons. •
AU other new students, eUCJ)I
those attending fbck Bay HiP,
School. may bqjn rqistcrins Aua.
20. Rcaistration for the hi&b school
begins Aua. 27.
Parents are asked to make ~
appointment for rt«lstration by cal ..
ina the individUal schools. • • • • •
Dr. Bonnie L R..,.s and Diue
Bullock were ~1Ze named usi. ..
tant deans at back Co"* South in Mission Viejo.
Rop:n is the new head of the~
ofLcamina Resources. while BUUocl
will bead the Division of HdJth
Sciences and Hum.an Services..
The ]>rogram's purpose is "to
examine the role of women in our
society both from a histonc and
contemporary perspective, to begin
to 5tudy the role of women in this and
other cultures, and to recognize the
contributions of women mart.. litera-
ture and science and much more,"
Oasby said.
ture," "Women Authors." "Women t-.. .;:; .-.-.=.= .. =.= .. ~--...i-...-..-.-----------..---~ m Contemporary Society,'' ''History
of Women in America," "Biology of
Women'' and "Decisions and Out-
comes." .
Registration for all courses con-
unues through Sept. 7. For infor-
mation caJJ 831-4555 or 495-1000.
FREE PRE-CONDITION ~
STROKE ANALYSIS
CLINIC
Cover n, son of Millard and Jeanne
Cover of San Oemente, has gradu-
ated from the Air Force electronic
computer and switching systems
course at Sheppard Air Force Base,
Texas.
son of William and JoDc McAdams
of Huntington Beach, has completed
basic"'iraining at Lackland Air Force
Base, Texas. McAdams, a 1977
graduate of Marina High School in
Huntington Beach, will receive
specialized instruction in command
control systems operations at
Hurlbun Field, Aa. .-----~===================:"!
• • • Army l>vt. Tony L Rivas, son of
Jess J. Rivas of Huntington Beach,
has comprued orrc station unit ttai!1-
ing at the AnnJ Infantry School m
Fort Benning, Ga. • • • Pvt. Karl. L. Kelly, son of Lawrence
E. Kelly of Laguna Niguel, ~as
completed an Anny food service
specialist course at Fort Jackson, S.C. •••
• • •
Air National Guard Ainnan James
Boelhoawer, son of Johannes C.
Boclhouwet of Newport-Beach, has
been assigned to Sheppard Air Force
Base Texas, after completing basic
training at Lackland Air Force Base,
Texas. Boelhouwer, a 1979 graduate
of Newport Harbor High School, will
receive specialized instruction in the
communications-electronics field.
JUST aa~ FOR A
MJLl::ION DOLLAR SMILE
88¢ at time
of sitting for
an 8x10 portrait
of your child.
• Bx 10 portrait. Reg. $8
• Many portrait packages
available
• Select from a variety of
poses and backgrounds.
• $1 for two or more children
• One special per child from
original order Special prices
not appltcable to reorders
• Age limit 12 years.
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E.
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•
\
Resident raps City Hall
for high-handed attitude
To the Editor
The pubhc 1s easily led b11t not
fooltd all of the ttme. Jn this arucle
"Residents Will Get a Chance to
Sound Off on Cit~ Issues" (Daily
Pilot Augl!Sl 9) 1t 1s presented.
apparently by the knowledgeable at
CJty Halt Costa Mesa, Jn such a wa} as
to appear that we are getting a break
but the truth of the matter 1s that wi:
have gouen wise as to what's foing on
at 77 Fair Drive.
A coahuon of eight homeowners'
grou~ have become so enraged b)
the antics of the City Council and ,.,.,,....,th<>•'"'"" thi>, "'""''' 'HP mnr!'
thanjUSt a httk womed as to what is
gomg on in our minds and so City
Manager Fred So1"$1bal has directed
his assistant, Allan Roeder. to once
again tnterview, hoping to win us
back to their slde. Apparently Roeder
1s running true to form; he recognizes
that the city has only three sides -
north. east and west. and probably
figures we on the south don't count.
Well, let them do what they want to
ease the pain of worry. AIJ should be
replaced by computer.
WARREN G. ALTHOFF
Costa Mesa
Unlittered streets envied
To the Editor:
Helen Ballard's letter (Dail) Pilot.
August 14) regarding beach cleanup
prompts me also to ask. "WHY."
l. too have traveled in Switzerland
and other European cities and was
impressed with the cleanliness of the
unhttered streets.
The Swiss have a motto: .. As I am.
so 1s my country."
Enough.said.
AIMEE MC KJNNON
Corona del Mar
Why waste view on offices?
To the Editor:
I am so angry that I don't know 1f I
can express myself.
I would like to understand why Mr.
Andy Anderson should erect an office
building on our beautiful bay ... Why
DQt co~dos or apartments that people
can enjoy?
It seems such a waste.
Office buildings, banks'>??'' I JUSt
cannot believe the waste ... otlices and
banks arc empty at night where
people could be enjo) ing such a
beautiful view.
Would Mr. Anderson make more
money with otlices than homes?
Forget the people on Cliff Drive.
They knew there was develt>pment
coming.
I know this 1s a wasted effort. You
might say an "exercise in futility." I
would like to know Mr. Anderson's
MO. Why waste that property that
could give so much joy? We have
enough office buildings and banks on
our bay.
N.POST
' Newport Beach
GOP's New Deal
aims to curtail
personal freedom
DALLAS -The Republican Pan}
has a deal for you. Its dominant right
wing. especially the New R ight. 1s
bristling with ideas, some o( them
hardly conservauve at all It is. they
say, the beginning of a new era of
economtc freedom But what vou
don't pay an taxes. )OU will. in
personal freedom.
You don't have to look any further
than Rep. Newt Gingrich (R-Ga.) 10
see the bargain the Republican New
Right 1s ofTenng. Gingrich 1s the verv
personification of the GOP's New
Right. He has Just published a book.
"Window of Opportunity," which 1s
part political manifesto and part
technoloeical blueprint for the future Bf the time Gingrich gets throu~
wtth outer space, for instance, it will
lb an outpost of the American free-
~cerprise system -and we will all,
he assures us, be better off as a result.
The layman reader (that's me.
~lk.s) is impressed. This is not the
t~me of a nat-eanh conservative
whose idea of an economic program
i'f lo lower taxes. abohsh welfare and
blast the commies to kingdom come. f\ JS, instead, a thoughtful -even
Onng -program for the future and
i'bere is not much in 1t that Gar) Hart
bra lot of Yuppies would argue with.
' Yet its premise of virtually unbn-
dled economic freedom is con-
ttadicted by a social program that 1s
wpress1ve. Gingrich, hke others on '4 New Right and like Ronald
Reagan himself. believes in school
OfSyer. denounces homosnual
fltbts, thinks abortion ought to be
outlawed and has nothing but con-
{empt for the ERA. All this is
proclaimed in the name of values. but
matte polittcs 1s at work as well.
1ic Star Wars economiC program
need the support of pt>ople "ho
eould not ca~ less about outer space Oaf care very much about school
·-p~er.
The same hold~ for homosexual
: lrigblS. "h is one 1h1na to proclaim
! ,traditional value&, but homoscxuahty
: is a tt.ality for millions of people -
• many of whom hold value just a ..
, cradiuonal as heterosexuals -and
who exercised about the ~me choice
•
ORANGE COAST
1~D1ilJ Pilat
-
\ ..
RICHARD
COHEN
an choosin$ their sexual orientation as
the maJonty did in choosing theirs.
To say. as the Rev. Jerry Falwell has
in his mailings. that homosexuals
should not teach in the schools
merely because they are homosex-
uals. comes down to nothing more
than a loss of civil liberties based on
who you are. The same holds for the
conservative position. upheld recent·
ly by the courts. that homosexuals can
be booted out of the armed services
-not for making a pass at their
sergeant. but simply for being
homosexuals.
Similarly, the attempt to have the
government mandate prayer for
school children is yet another attempt
by the majority to impose its values
and even its reli$ion on a minority. In
the scheme of things. it is not the same
as abolishing the freedom to choose
abortion or to be what you are -
homosexual -but neither is it a
recognition of the right to be different.
There are some. maybe many. on
the New Ri~ht who hold tenaciously
to their social agenda and you argue
with them at your peril. But there are
shll others who extol the social
agenda as a sop to their conservative
constituency. In this, they are like the
Southern populists of old who
swathed their radical economic
message an reactionary racism.
Always, it poisoned 1he1r movement
and confined It to a geographic
region
For the moment, th<' avuncularly
inept figure of Ronald Reagan unifies
the GOP But G ingrich and his
colleaeues an Buck Rogers con-
servausm have none of Reagan's
twinkle in the eye. There is nothing an
either their writings or rhetoric thal
suggests a Reaganesque proclivity to
sleep off an 1deolog1cal drunk with a
good afternoon nap
They want to give America some-
thing -economic prosperity But
they also want to take somcthina
away -peN.onal freedom. The
pro&ram 1s packaged as M>methmg
new. but it's not It's the same old
bargain with the devil You lose by
winning.
ltlcbard Cob~a /1 • syndic.led
C'Olumnl•I.
H. l . Schwartz Ill
r.~t>fMm
Frank Zlnl
lw!itllllQiflQ [O•ll)I
Tom Taft
Oly EC!~Of
Craig Sheff
SOOfll CO•tCll
-........,.__,, _____ ----
.,
.
• ·rhe VA· draft rePQrt to the Wnltc House mak two things clear: Tl1
problemof~Rlngv t ls one that won 'tgoaway. andltssolutlon will cost plenty. • t'
JACK AKDltR&ON
colnmnlat
I
ANN
WEUS
•
Never
getting
around
to it
By ANN WELLS
-What happen s when two
procrastinators marry? Nothing -
they never get around to tl And the
longer they are married the longer the
list of things they never get around to
doing.
Procrasunators spend a lot of time
discussing what has to be done, when
to do it, how to do it and who's going
to do it
And they make lists.
I admit I am a procrastinator and
can prove it by the lists I make. Some
of them are lengthy, some are sbon.
Nothing is left out. I cover everything
l should do, want to do and wilf never
do. I even make a list of my lists.
You cannot quahfy1 as a
procrastjnator if you do not make lists
of .. Things to Do." This is not just my
opinion. Edwin C. Bliss) whq has
written two books and made four
cassette tapes on procrastination,
strongly advocates list-making.
I'm reacting one ofhll books, Doing
It Now, a 12-step Program for Curina
Procrastination and Achieving Your
Goals. I knew this book was for me
when I read as far as page 14 and Step
One ... "before you go any further, I'd
like you to put the book aside for a few
minutes and make four lists ... "
The lists were for all things, large
and small, that you have been putting
off (l) in your place of work, (2) in
your house and yard, (3) in the field of
personal relationships, ( 4) doing for
yourself -art classes, exercise
-classes, whatever you said you would
do just for yourself -one of these
days.
1 promptly put the book aside and
began making my lists. It was an
education and, in some ways, reassur·
ing. According to lists (I) and (2), oo
matter how long I live there will
always be something for me to do -
killing time is not going to be a
problem _ _
Dangerous country for adultery
List (3), the field of personal
relationships. also turned up a fringe
benefit. Just reading it over gave me
the plot for a book that has to be a
best-seller. It will be snapped up by
some studio 1f they can just gel it past
the censors.
List (4). things to do for myself, is
partially covered by list (3). The other
items do not include an or exercise
classes -this is supposed to be a list
of what l want to do, not what I think
I should do. I've already bad my cars
pierced and mastered my word pro-
cessor, so there isn't much left.
In Albania. the husband of an
unfaithful wife had the legal right to
shoot both the wife and her lover.
Until recent years, this was true. A
little ritual went along with it: The
family of the husband provided the
bullets.
Q. Which state has the strongest
environmental laws?
A. Mmnesota. Then come Cali-
fornia, New Jef'SC')'. Massachusetts
and Oregon.
No record exists to prove that
euher Jesse James or his brother
Frank, contrary to widespread belief.
ever gave a penny to the poor.
Ninety percent of the elderly in
Florida were born outside the state.
Q. Is 1t true that I could be sent to
jail in New York, if I served my 18·
year-old daughter a glass of cham-
pagne'!
A. No, but if you served her 18-
ycar-old bQyfriend, you could. Three
months in jail and $500. Lot of states
have laws like that.
Bee venom is pure protein. That's
why people meat tenderizer on stings.
The papaya enzyme in it breaks down
protein.
Lowest natural temperature ever
recorded near the South Pole was
minus 126.9 degrees F. in 1960. Near
the North Pole, minus 96 degrees F. in
1964.
Eskimos have more than I 00 words
for ice.
O. In police talk, what's a "moon-
er"?
A. "A mentally disturbed person
who is activated during a full moon."
Whether such there be remains a
matter of conjecture. true. But this
definition of a ''moon er .. is printed in
an official publication of the New
York City Police Department.
The song of the male humpback
whale is a matin~ song. Every male in
a given area smgs the same song
during lhc season. But the songs
change each year.
In the MC'xican state of Hidalgo,
Indians want to dte with no wealth at
aJI. If they leave any possessions that
require the work of others, they
believe, they'll have to work in the
next world to pay for that labor.
L.M. Boyd 11 • 1yadlcat~
col11mal1t.
1 fou'nd these lists a few days ago.
They were on my desk, buried under
the order blank for Olympic tickets. I
remember that Step One in the 12-
step Program in the book was making
the four lists, but I can't tell you what
Step Two is. I haven't finished the
book that I put aside for a few minutes
per the author's request.
I did add one more item to the list
of things to do for myself; ••finish
reading the book." That's something 1
truly want to do-one of these days.
Columal11 Ann Well• Jlve1 bl
LafDlla Niguel.
VA health pla~ could cost Reagan
Approval of expensive proposal would In addition to veterans' medical
services, the report estimates that by
1990. anywhere from $5 biJlion to $8 belie stand against tax increases JACK billion a year will be needed to meet
WASHINGTON -The White
House 1s silting uncomfortably on an
ambitious Veterans Administration
proposal for future health care of the
nation's growing number of older
veterans. The costly plan ts some-
thmg the Reagan administration
would rather not deal with before
Election Day.
The reason 1s simple: If President
Reagan docsn·t endorse the multi-
billion-dollar proposal, he ri~ks of·
fending more than 28 million vet·
crans who may need VA medical care
as they retirt and lose their employee
health-insurance plans.
But 1f the president accept\ the
V A's fearfully ex.pens1vc propo 1 to stan spcndina now for future nccds. n
will make his st.and against 1.u
rncrca~s even less bchcvable than ii
already.IS.
The VA, whose militant con ti·
tucncy and bipartign clout on
Capitol Hill have made it vinuall)'
untouchable among federal .,cnc1e
has timed its prop(> I hrcwdly. No
candidate for Congrcu or the White
Hou e is likt'ly to n!lk being Sttn u
puttina mere dollan abo"'e the wcl· tare ormeran~llnd thrir fiumhn.
But the VA's drafi report to the
White Hou makes '"''O thin clear:
f'hc problem of agjni \'ClS ii one that
won't 10 awa y. and its soluuon will
c ' plenty. 1y 1 1atc Donald·
pension payments, plus SI 0.4 billion
Goldberg has obtamed a copy of the A for other compensation.
closely held drat\, titled .. CannJ for 110(1$011 INDEXING THE DELEGATES:
the Older Veteran: A Shared Vision If you've been wondering how re-
for 1he Future." porters at the Republican National
"Americans are growing older," the Convention have mana&ed to act just
report points out, "but. vcierans are tween 1990 and 2000." the nght female delegate to comment
growina older faster than the general The v A report lists several targeted on a particular issue or event, it
population. ... In this decade, 4.2 areas or "strategies" that will require wasn't blind luck. The Republicans
milhon veterans will pass the age 65 sizable expansion over the next few decided to use their female resources
milestone .... By the year 2000, 63 years. Amona the most import.ant: to advantage. So they put their
percent of all American males over 65 _ .. The aoal of the hospital computer to work.
will be veterans. Under current strategy is 10 provide sufficient ca-Ench woman delegate's personal
eligibility rules, this means that by pacity 10 VA ho pit.als to assure and professional background was fed
2000 two out of every three elderly availability and acceuibility or into the computer. and the catca,ories
males in the United States will be needed inpatient acute care sct'Vlccs were cro s-inde~ed. So when a re-
eli&ible forV A health care 1fthryclcct to all eJiirible older veteran"" the porter wanted to 1ntervu:w, 51y, a to use it." .. ... d report states. New cons1n.1ction and m1 dlNged black schoolteachtt or
Theciost of VA medjcal proaramsis service to .. undcrscrvcd areas" will an unmarried Hispanic: busi·
already more than $9 blllion a year If ine~ase bed capacity bY at lca~t 27 nesswoman. thcromputcrdid a quick
the youngest World War JI veterans percent by che year 2000. starch and identified the best can.-
and ttio$C who served 10 Korea and _ "The ambulatory cart straltgy didate for media attc11tion.
Vietnam are to be Jivcn the same has 1 goal of providing ... non· CONFIDENTIAL FILE: The tc~cl of c~rc that older vets arc now inuuutionaJ cap.'\City d«igncd to latest country to try its hand at
&ettip_a. the cost increase will be provide cuential h~Hh and up. ml"dialing an end to the lr:aqi·lranian
sian•ficant. port1vcscrviccstoeliaiblc veteransof war i~ the tiny, 011-nch Unlted Arab
"The maanstudc of the increase will all aac , cmphasi1ina a full array of Emirate .ju t aero the Pc ian Gulf dc~nd on factors who~ impact can health care services dC$t&ncd to from Iran.
only be estimated, but rt ,will ap-detteasc the need for hospital unt• Though the UAE had no wxess in
proach an mcrca)C of $6 billion (a ment to the maximum eJ1tcnt consi • a imilar efTon in the past, tat~
year) from I 98S levels al ii.I peak in tent with hi&h quality care." Department sources.~>' Tehran. hu
2000.'..:..thc...don .rcpoa \\'&tnS. "ln--·-:rhe e tendfd re arat ,.: _been mort J>UY Uus t.unc..
1dd11ion. prov1 ion for the fadh1ie goal call fora2SO~rocnttncrc.ase by Thcre'sa targdrantanrommuptty in
neccsury to meet the needs of the 2010in thcc:apacit)ofnursinghomc: thrV E.andthcreare~ntune>0td
otder ,·etc ran "'ill ttqu1re II\ c ti· open ltd or suppof1cd by the VA, plu Indio links.
mattd S6.6 btlhon in~estmcnt Above expansion of home care provam Jack Aodtrio11 11 • •yadkalH
t·urRnt COUlmitm nt pnmarily bt-and day hcalth"",rc srn ire5• ciohuruu t.
-
COAST
llllJ Pilll WEONESDAV AUG ST 22. 1984 I,..... ______ _;_ ________________________________________ _,.~~----~,,,,,,,,
Medlcal bllla tor
peta can be $500.
olnaurancela
gaining favor. 88.
'ThrH'• • Crowd'
nowtMI...,
CiMlorette'a moved
from Broltdw.,. 81.
Ceilingpanelscombat 'tech 'noise
P laceme·nts h elp stereo,
computer, VCR t o co-exist
With the proliferation of computers, VCRs. stereos
and other electronic equipment. many families are
discoveringthathightechcan be noisy. ·
And as they begin to design media rooms and
"entertainment centers" to house au this new equipment,
homeowners are becomingas interested in controlling that
unwanted noise as they are in optimizing the sound of their
stereos.
Sound can be transmitted in two ways: through the air
or through the house's very structure. That would bC the
Here·'s how
Installing a fibe r glass suspended ceiling is easy when
you follow these five steps:
No. 1.: Select a new ceiling height below beams and
air ducts and above window and door frames. Add an
inch to the chosen height to allow for the width of the
perimeter angle strip. Draw a line around the room to
mark the height
No.!.: Nail the edge of the angle strip even with the
line, using ordinary t 1h-inch nails. The angle strip forms
a ledge around the walls to support the main tees and
perimeter ceiling panels.
No. 3.: Hang the suspension wires every four feet
a1ong the ceiling. These wi~ will suspend the main tees
from existing ceiling.
No. 4.: After installing the main tees, insert the cr.oss
tees into the main tee slots provided. The main cross tees
form the grid that supports the lay-in panels.
No. 5: Finally, simply lay the panels into the grid,
starting at the room's perimeter and working in. To bring
out the cei ling's rCaJ beauty, give the panels a quick
cleaning. Fiber glass panels can be wiped with a damp
cloth.
difference between hearing the high-pitched 'blceJ>'' ofa
video pmc and hearing-as well a f~ling-the base line
ofasongorsytnphony on the terco.
Methods for reducing sound transmission vary
according to whether the problem is "airborne" or
"structure-borne" (or both). A1rbome sound from outside,
· forexample,can be reduced by increasing the number of
window panes, or putting in storm windows. (A recent
New York Timesarticle notes that sound insulation often provides thennalinsulation as well.)
Structure-borne sounds are reduced by overall tight
construction, increased levels ofinsulation or additional
"layers'' of wallboard-in other words, creatinaa cushion
of air or of some nonporous material. ·
Noise generated by machines, however, js btst
reduced by installing sound-absorbent materials such as
carpeting or scatter rugs, wall hangings9rdrapes, and
upholstered furniture. The~ prevent sound from bounc-
ing off surfaces.
According to acoustical experts, what is required 1s a
balance of reflective surfaces, hke hardwood floors, and
soft, nonporous ones. Without this baJance in your media
or entertainment rooms, for example, you may very well
s1~nificantly minimize the clacking of the computer
pn nter -but also deaden the sound of your stereo.
This is why these furnishings must be plated
strategically. Audio consultants suggest that this place-
ment take into account room shape and loudspeaker
needs, if you are looking for the optimal sound from your
stereo system.
Homeowners search mg for an inexpensive but
effective solution to the high-tech noise problem arc
finding that in addition to sound·absorbing furnishings.
fiberglassccilingpanelscontribute to an acoustically
sound room.
These panels arc installed into a network of
interlocking metal channels suspended by wires as close as
two inches from theex1stingcciling, forming a system that
absorbs up to 70 percent of the vibrations that strike the
panel surfaces. Together with other sound absorbent
materials, the result isa quieter room with improved
acoustics.
"With the trend toward home electronics and
entertainment cent~ we're finding a great deal of interest
in the acoustical bcnents of our products," says Glenn
Alarm makes pool safer
The accidental drowning Of a young Costa
MeM girt In June In her famlty'a IWtmmlng poof la
the most recent examp4e of how theee tragic
ilccldents occurdurtng a momentary I~ In
IUPetvlsk>n.
ResklentfaJ drownings rank as the No. 4 cause
of accidental death among children. About 290
youngsters under S..yeare-old drowned fn s>oo.ta and
24 children under age five drowned in ~as during
1981. Two out of ttiree of ttiele victim• were under
three years of age.
Contum« product and health authOrttles
ltr ... that such statJstica could eilSflY be redt.ICed if
homeoWnef's followed a comprehensive Mfety
program: Install a ~ between the horn. and
pOot, provide sWfm ~-~tructlon at the eartlest
potlibli age, use a alarm -an mportant new
product deslnged to help guard against drownings
of young children. and, above all, heighten parental
vtgllance.
T,he Remington Poot Alarm, the only alarm
avaUable nationwide, sound• a piercing 85--declbel
PAPARAZZI
------------
slgnaJ when a Child °' pet falls into an unguarded
ewtmmlng poot An remote recelYer -avaHabte
'With the deluxe ($120) model of the floating saucer
-sounds the same loud ~naJ aa the poot unit
lnskle the home ••. wherever parents are, they'll be
alerted.
The alarm also has an adjustable sensitivity
feature enabtlng owners to adjust the alarm to the
weight of the child (10 ~nds or more) to be
protected.
Additional features of thls batt.._.-y-operated,
maintenance-free system are that the alarm takes
J\.lft minutes to ~ble and can be reset after five
minutes yet cannot be set off by rain. Poolside
anchoring by hook• mlnlmizee false alarms due to
Wfnd .
Noting that the peak times for drowning are the
hours of 4 and 5 p.m., the U.S. Consumer Product
Safety Commission urges parents to keep toys and
other objects that might attract children out of the
water when the pool ls not being used.
Placido Domtnao accepta pra!ae of Elaine Redfield, Kit and Stephen Toth.
Strategic furniahlng and fiber glua
Osbom,marketingcomm~nicationsmanagerfor<>wens
ComingFiberglasCorp.'slnteriorProducts()perating
Division.
Suspended ceihng systems arc designed specifically
for do-it-yourselfers, and are therefore very easy to install.
Remodeling expert Bob Vila, host ofPBS television's
"This Old House," sa~s that once you've decided how high
you want youroewce1ling. the rest is simply a matter of a
few hours• work. .. .. Fiber glass ceiling panels arc li'1> t weight. tlexi ble and
easy to cut. You won't need a~al toofs,just a 1 straight-edge, a good cutting , hammer and nails.
-.!.'Typical installation costs for an avcra,ge I 0 ll J 2·foot room. includin11rid and panels. should only be about $100."
WATCH OUT FOR RAYS
Hot weather de------------------
creases the appetite
and makes getting
sufficient nutnent.s
more difficult, ac-
cording to the Cah-
fom1a D1etet1c As--
soc1auon.
PILAR
WAYNE
"When summerll•••••••••••
temperatures climb
above 85 degrees. your body bums extra calones and
nutnent.s to keep cool." says Sharon Long. CDA
president.
"To replace lost nutncntsand keep your body feeling
hght,eat light summer meals making sure each of the four
food groups is fully represented."
Try stuffina an artichoke heart \\-1th Cahfomia baby
bay shrimp. With a tangy vinaigrette dressing and a slice
of toasted sourdoujh bread, you ~t three oftbe foUTfood
groups necessary to good health and weU being.
Complete the picture with fresh strawbcmes and
grapes with Monterey Jack cheese for dessert and you
have a delightful sample of the four food groups to get you
lightly through a warm summer evening.
That same old sun that ripen fruit so wonderfully is
devilish to you.
Excessive sun is probably the most damaging thing
to your skin. Too much un will dry the top layers of YOL\r
skin -etch fine lines and wrinkles. cause your-
complexion to to pot and change color 'fo''a)' before itS
time, and as doctors say again and again. cause cancer.
Too much sun will at1ack: the supportive tissue that
holds up the skin and the elastic tissue that kttpS it in
shape. When this tissue is damaged. it litcrally fraa,ment.s4
allowing the stretching and sagging that result 1n those
dreadful wrinkles.
Even artificial sunli&ht is damaging; sun lamJ>A
release shortwave ultraviolet 8 (UVB) r&)'5 that ~
supportive tissue.
You don't have to hide insidetocscapctbedamagia.g
rays. Cosmetic manufactwcrcs incorporate SUD screens
into a number of skin products. indudina facia.I makeup.
Particularly during sumer months. be swe to ask if the
cosmetics you·~ buying provide this protection, ia·
d&catcd bl. lhc sun protccthc.factor:~SPE) The bi&J>cr the __ ;_j
SPF num"'ber, the more complete the sun shield 1s.
Pilar Wayne is a resident of Newport Bach and the
author of "Pilar Wa_>ne's Favorite and Fabulous
Recipes." Send questions to Pilar Wayne. c/o Daily Pilot.
P 0 . Box I 560. Cosw Mesa 92626.
Dllllr ........ -,-.-.
Esther Williama Anthony Mewl~ &Del mother meet Nile. Gates.
Opera Star's reception grand, too
Placido Domingo brings
Hollywood fiiends to--=p:;_.a _rt_y_
What more appropriate
fund-raisina vehicle could
Open Pacific choose than to
have an cvcnina with Placido
Oomla o?.
But fcstivit1es began earlier wun a cocktail party,
al oat the hotel, where recorded music by the ... ersatiJe
opera singer putthe auc ts in a conccn mood as they
vi,itcd petite buffets of tempura, fcttucincand mini rare
roa t beef sandwiches.
The mood seemed contagious as man) tested Lhcir
ow n vokc on th bu trip to the concert. Words of
prai~ echoed on the tnp back.
As Domingo arrived "ith hi w1fc Mar&a and
parent .Mr.and Mrs Placld0Domla10.thea mblcd
. . • . guests broke into spont•ncou applause and chttrs. The The 0!1"~1zat1on, dcd1· apprcca&tt\c gesture wa rcrcatcd forsoprunoJ1lla
ottcd to bnn1m1ara~d.open Mlcaan-Jo,asoe, a pccial aucst ani tat the conC'tn
to Oran e~ounty, did Ju tthat nnd co-, tar with Domingo in the soon-to-be-rck d
tul'day night. Members filled • movie, "Bizet' . Carmen.··
a bind: oflogc atsatthc 1 JOtnioi the 200 member and u t of Opera
Pacific mphitheatrcforthc Pa itic wcrcAatltM.y twle71ndh1smothcr; lh r
renowned tenor• conccn. nd Wllllam1, ompan1ed b> FrancUca Dul to nd
then dJOUmedtoacham-J 1~Matn, o 'cdutttorforthC H on rand
pagnc rteeption in hi~ honor Opera. \\ho h d condu tcd thr P 1fic ) mphony
t.-..L.-:-............ ~~ thcWestmSouth Coa't Pl z Orch tnaattheconccn.1 h1 tioll}woodentou
Hotel. thcrCd at a 'IX tall bl "here Domin o l fora few
,,...,
-OOOH!
IAPITTITE
BOULANGERIE.
--w atefi· French bread rise
before your eyes. Breathe
deep the aromas of chocolate
croissants, honeywheat,
~sourdough, and much more.
Most of all, savor the taste of
bread baked hot and fre h all
day long at your neighborhood
bakery, La Petite BoulruJgerie,...
r FREE BAGUETTE i
I
I Bring in this coupon for a free French baguette 1
1 ( 18 inch) with purchase of any regular loc.µ of I our hrt"ads. Limit one per customer. Offer ends I I Mon .. ~pt. 10, 1984 I
: If&JlanPerie : I ~~ I ! GRAND OPENING !
I Fountain Valley Center I
I South or T rt and Brookhurst I
I 18122 Brookhurst Street. Fountain Valley. CA I
I < 714) Hfl4-6926 I
I ' >r>en ct.lllY for your 1 umrt nu•m •· I
,,__.
L ~1 .., r, J, Ii.ow • ,_... .. 1 ----_______________ ... ___ .,
Trucker on road to revenge
0 RAl"N LANDER : M> hus-
band i kind. rons1deratc person -
apcrfe tgentlcman-unulhegcts
bt'hand the wheel.Then he becomes a
hateful. fri1htemn' mon"ter. He dri\· e a tanker for a living.
He ha told me many lime that
one of the\l' day he 1s gotnf to get
even with all those "idiots' out there
and kill ~omebody. I realize that
people do stupid thin&S. but l don't
bchcH' an)·one desen c to be ground
up hke hamburger under the wheels
of a trud.Just because he dad
something dumb.
· I was hod•ed to learn that some of
my hu band's colleagues are of the
samcm1nd. They. too. hesa)~ arc
waiuna fora chance to .. get" some
JaC'kass who hasga\Cn them a hard
time
Last "eek. m) hu'lband chased a
small truck with every intention of
smashing an to it beca\Jsc the driver
was guilt) of a traffic\ 1olat1on M>
husband got a 'peed' ng ticket before
he caught the small truck. Thank
God.
I beg of you small-truck dn vers.
don't challenge the bag boys. Let them
Beth Otterbein
A11
LANDERS
havcthe1rwa> rven if&heyare
wrona It could mean yourltfe. -NO
NAME IN CALIFORNIA
DEAR NO NAME: A sbocktn1
letter, ba& tbankt for wrl&la1 lt. ••• DEARANNLANDERS Thisis
for the parents of our teen-agers·
friends. Sometimes they make thinas
a httle rou.a.h on us.
. Thanks Tor letting your tecn-aaer
stay out all night.
Thanks forwnting phony excuses
when your kids cut school.
Thanks for handing your
son/daughter$20to ha ve fun wath
Saturday mght
Thanks for ~M+ng your teen-agers
smoke pot in your home.
Thanks for letting your teen-agers
OTTERBEIN-NEWBRO
Our Lady Queen of Angels Cath-
ohc Church in Newport Beach was
the setting for the July 14 wcd6ing of
Beth Louise Newbro and Jordan
Keath Otterbem.
The bride 1s the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. David G. Newbro of
Newport Beach. She wore a white salk
oraanza gown with a French lace
bodice designed by Eve of M'Lady.
Her husband is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Keith W. Otterbein, also of
Newport Beach. Kan BJordlund and
Murray Walson were the couple's
bridal attendants.
A recepuon at the Pacific Oub m
Newport Beach was attended by 325
guests. After a wedding trip to Kona.
Hawaii. the couple are residents of
Newport Beach. She as a r\ursmg
student at Cal State Long Beach. and
he is an agency director at Home Life
Financial.
YouRSELF
drive without ltccnscor an urancc.
Th nk forbu)in liquorfor)our
teen· rs' ~nies.
Thank for lcttina you a tcen·a1ers'
friend rome and 10 at all hours of the
niaht-noqucstaons asked I am proud to be called ••the
mai&htcst parentalivc:· My children
rebcf againstthc di cipline but omc-
day they will appreciate it.
1 hey arc tcarnin1 hone l). re pcct,
and that they have to work for what
thc~want.-SUPER TRAIGHl
IN OAKLAND
DEAR STRAIGHT: I can bear
tboae sel•~rt tll1ppln1 aJI acro11 tbe
country aod lD Puerto Rico, a• well H
doien1 of ct«n la Canada. Y oar letter
ls going ap on lots of refrtgeratort
today. Thanks for wrttJn1 it.
DEAR ANN LANbERS· I am a
12-year-old bo) Last week m> dad
came home with all your booklets and
said, "I want you to read these.
especially the ones about drugs and
sex "I told ham, "Thanks, I know
enough alrcad)." He put the booklets
on the table. When he wasn't lookmg r took them to my room and read
them all
BARRETT-SPRINGER
Barbara Spranger and Brad Barrett,
both of Newport Beach, exchanged
wedding vows an the Los Angeles
Marriott Hotel Aug. 19.
The bndc wore a white floor-length
gown with ruffics at the neckLine and
on the puffed sleeves. and a satm belt.
Her bndal attendants were Barbara
Wilson, Carolyn Homa and Jennifer
Sloan. She is the daughter of Paul and
Trena Spnnger of Culver City.
The bridegroom is the son of Helen
Barrett of Miami, Fla. Marc Barrett.
Dean Barrett and Gary Spnngcr were
his attendants.
A reception also at the Los Angeles
Marriott following the ceremony was
attended by 200 guests
The couple will make their home 10
Newport Beach. She as a public
relations representative for National
Education Corp. and he is the owner
ofE. Gads Saloon in Newport Beach.
I want you to know the)' helped t
undc"tand a lot of thin better. It like you were t11lkin to me. What)
have wriuen i aoina to makea bi1
difkrcncc in mylife.-BA Y ARE.
FAN DEAR B.A.: J'm Siad yoa wrot .
And to all yoa )'Ollll readtn oat
there, If your pa~r dot11't offer tb
booklets at tlle foot of tile co lama,
wrltetoroeatP.0 .Box UHi,
Clllca10, JU. toll I. I'll nod tlle
booklet titltt aad prlce1. Pleate
enclose 1 self ·1ddre11ed, it.amped
envelope. • • •
DEARANN: lam67ycarsoldai
navevcrylittlehatr Yetmybatber
charges me as much for a haircut as
guy who has!l bushy mop an~ spcn•
three ti mesas Iona an the chaar. lstt:
fair'? I've been burned up about thts
for )'Cars. Please answer. -OSCAI
IN GALVESTON DEAR OSCAR: I consulted tbrff
barben ud tbey all uJd barl>ett
must bave a standard fee for balrcc
Tbey aren't 1ellln1 a product -tlle
are selllnc services. Sounds reason
able tome.
..
Barbara Barrett
'5;:~;0N.
REA DING Hyperactivity aided by diet
by
MADAME MA RIA
TAROT CARD READINGS
he (·an tell ~our pabt,
pre&ent and future. Lo' e,
marriage and business.
Are ~ ou bil·k or in trouble?
Regardlesb of ~hat )OUr
problem!> art•, ~he C'a n help
)OU. ~
WORLD RENOWNED
870 W. 19th St.
1
I
I
I
Costa Mesa, CA. \
650-723 1 I -------------~
The contro\.ers) goes on Man)
mothers ~ant to kno" ~hether
proper dtt>t t\ the anc;wer to the
problem of hyperactavity All the
medical votes aren't in. Some doctors
stall doubt "hether or not diets free
from add1t1vcs are sufficient to con-
trol such patients without the benefit
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SEPTEMBER 4. 1984
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_el
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REU8EN1 E. LEE-
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Jfe're Rockin the Boat
GOOD FOR ONE WELL DRINK
FOR 50~ WITH THIS AD
E1piree 9/16/84
DEXTER
Tue .-at. from 9:00 P. t
Ea t Coa"t Iligh~a ·
~c\\'.porl Beach
•
675-5790
.. .
of drugs. But man} mothers arc
con\ meed thal such diets are effec-
ll\.C • • • DEAR DR. STEINCROHN:
Ha\.ing a child who was vef) hyper-
actavc, who was given Ritalin for a
long pcnod of tame and who has now
been on an additive-free diet for a
year and a half. without any medi-
cation and 1s a top student. 1 would
like to take the opportunity to speak
out against the assumption that
medication as 1he only cure for these
children.
The most important thing to
understand as that there is no half-~!' Any mother who thmks. ··oh,
JUSt this Tiftrc "bit won't hurr is
kidding herself and poisoning the
child. The first few times that a person
shops for additive-free foods are very
apt to be frustrating, but you soon get
to know the brands that are safe.
Just a note: Most foods that do not
have artificial colors. artificial
flavors. and prescrvatJvcs arc more
expensive than the other ones -and
preservatives in manr ready-made
cereals arc dynamite. Our doctor
suggested that we start out wath
homemade bread, peanut butter and
Seven-up and branch out from there.
Today our son cats a vaned, well-
balanced diet, including hot dogs
candy bars, cereals and such that
seem to most kids to be the treats they
want. He is an cxecllcnt student. We
can trust him when he as not with us to
be careful of his diet. He knows what
the wrong foods can do to him. (The
reaction to some artificial invedaents
lasts up to 72 hours.) Just sign me,
CONCERNED MOTHER. • • •
Ha ving read the followin4 note, at's
less hkel) you will "give up· on your
fncnds who arc critacall) ill: • • • DEAR DR. STEINCROH Ni In
response to your recent column about
the man with cancer whose fnends
dropped him, we have had a similar
PETER
StEllCROHI
experience When our 15-year-o
daughter was diagnosed with chron
leukemia. the doctor gave us the be
advice ever "Don't tell people abo1
It."
She lived a faarl} normal Life f<
three years. then had a bone-marro
transplant. While she was in tt
hosp1tal(05 ttays) her fnend's'vtsne•
phoned and wrote her. When st-
came home her fncnds dropped he
This was almost worse for her tha
her illness. Nobody came to v1s1t. Th
phone never ran~ for her. I'm almo!
conv1nced she died of a broken heat
instead of cancer.
Incidentally. she was quite act1v1
could dri vc a car and was fcchng faJrl
well until a week before she die<
Also, she looked fashionably tb1r
wore cute clothes and a scarf aron
her dear bald head -the hair wa
beainning to grow back. I'll never b
abfe to forgive her fair-weathc
friends, but her family of sisters an•
brothers came through wath flym
colors. Signed. A MOTHER. • • • DEAR DR. STEINCROHN: rn
only in mycarlr. 20s and am losin1 m
hair. ls it possible that thas might b
due to the fact that I wear a "hard bat'
while on my JOb as a constructio1
worker? MR. T.
DEAR MR. T.: Examine the head
of several of your co-workers anc
you'll find many with productiv•
scalps -an other words. with ful
head ofhaar. Better take r,our problen
to a dermatologist. but 111.ucss (onl:
guess) that your condition 1s what w1
call pattern alopec1a -usually 1
hereditary type of hair loss.
* * * * *DAILY STAGE ENTERTAINMENT*** • *
Th• Modernalr•• with Paula Kenv, Jr.
ADMISSION SHOW HOURS
Adults '4.75 MOOday-Th\JISdiy_ ! r1·11 ..
Senior C1tll91S (60 & over) l lll Moo ·Th.n f1 y ! rl· 11 N
CMdltr1 (6·16 yTS) U IO Saturday It .... 11 Pl
Children u 6 yrs ) Fll EE Sunday It ..... ..
AIR CONDITIONED COM {',..~'-(,,,;, ----,-E/M CONVEN T I O N CENTER
ACAO FROM DI N YI.ANO eoo w KAT ELLA . FOR INFO CALI. 714 ..... 900
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' • • 0.-Cout DAii. Y PILOl/W.-., . .._ zt 1llM .. -
., Understudy.;>n way to stardom?
Mary Cadorette uses Broadway musical role
as sprln ard to 'Three'sa Crowd' on TV
'"thtn two days later they caUed and
asked how much noute I hid 10 Ji\le
'42nd Street.' Two hours later t~
called apin and told me 10 ma'lc:C
plane rnetv1tions 10 Los Anatles. I
couldn't &tt my husblnd on the
phone and I jufit ~ •round the
apanment 11rina. Oh my God.' Mr. cats Sam and FredJl.1St looked at me. •
mt ... she •fl. "I cao empathize w.-11b
htr. t was an undentudy and I
watched two actteSltl come 1n 1s
ttplactmenu Jn 1ro~1 qnled.'•
lly JERRY BUClt
., , ......... 9"""
LOS ANOELES -Acu·•ss Mary
C&dorctte hat reason to remember the famous line.from ··•2nd Street "
"You're aoina out there an unkoo~n
but )'ou•re comina back a star."
She wu the undcntud~~thc lead . role of unknown actrtss Sawyer
(who's pulled out of the chorus to fill
tn for the 1Hin.a1tar on openii'l,f niJht)
and played the role 70 times durina
l'h yars with the Br01dwa)' show based on the 1933 movie musical. '
Cadorette hasn't become a star yet
but she ma)' with her first.ever
television role In the revamped
version of ABC's .. Three's Com·
pany/' now called "Three's a
Crowd."
Cadorette (as Vick,Y Bradford} be·
comes the new Jove interest of John
Ritter (Jack Tripper) in the comedy
series. they move into an apanment
O\ler Ritter's new bistro, and her
father, who can't tolerate Jack, be-
comes their landlord and the. crowd.
Viewers first met Miss Cadorttte in
May in an episode which shows the
two ofthemgcttina together. She's an
airline stewardess and they become
entan&)ed durina a bit of air turbu·
Blowing
their own
horns for
country
By JOE EDWAJl!lS _
• 11111 ........... ,...,
NASHVILLE -Trumpet<r Al
Hirt and Saxophonist Ace Cannon,
vinuosos at cou.ina blue-ribbon
music from their horns. new in the
same commercial airliner Last spring
and met for the first time when they
claimed their bauage.
Hirt is 61 and Clnnon is SO, but the
two had never met or performed
together durina their illustrious Cl·
reen until they bumped into each
other while acttina their suitcases at
the Nashville airport last March.
They had a common mission: to
record a his1oric duct album of
country music classics.
For two days. they recorded the
album, "All·T1mc Country Greats,"
which was released in July and now is
being sold by television marketing
('"dial I Vo800.'").
Included on the album arc country
musice\lergrecns like "Always on My
Mind," .. Rhinestone Cowboy," "I
Cln't Stop Loving You," "Make the
World Go Away," "Rocky Top,"
"Rose-Garden," "Everything Is
Beautiful," "Forthe Good Times"
aod "Help Mc M.;ake It Through the
Night'" • ·-
ft cOuld bccom"e a collector's item
•--~-,two of the I lnited.StatcL.pr.emier
instrumentalists playina some of the
best·known standards of their era -
and recording together for the first
time.
They knew each other would be on
the plane, but Hin was seated in the
back and Cannon was in the front so
they flew into Nashville without
meetina.
"We got to the baggqe check and
my wife said, 'You idiot, there he is,"'
Cannon recaued, chuckling.
Cannon bad sold two million
albums through television ads since
1981, and producer Mtrk Mathis
figured combinina Hin and Cannon
on another album would be equally
RUFFELL'S
UPHOLSTERY, lllC.
f« Tbl Int Of Y• lie im tlUICI kllD .. cona 1EA -541-1151
•
lenct aod end up in the plane's
restroom. The facelift for the openina of the
eiahth full season will see only Ritter
retumlna from \he ori&inal C'l.Sl. The
old perf'ormcn will bow out in a one-
hour openina special that sets up the new sitU1tion.
Joyce DeWitt Was the only other
member of the ori&inal cut. Norman
Fell and Audra Lindley lei\ in 1979 in
a spinofT series called "The RC>pCrS." Suzanne Som en left two years llte1' in
a dispute over money.
Until "Three'sa Crowd," Cadoret·
te had never been before a· camera
eitcept to do commercials and dan«
in a film .
Her husband, ldven1s1n1 man
Michael Eisen, came home between
phone calls. When he heard about the
first ca.JI he sat down in his ~t
for an hour. Elsen quit his job in New
York and now works here with
several clients. He also advises her on
her career.
She recalls the lint time the wu
called out of the chorus to star in
'142nd Street." She says: ••t put the hat
on my head and looked in the minor.
I almost felt like I was outside of
myself. Being an uo,dtntudy is bil~
tcnw~t. You're the star one niaht
and the next niaht you're back 1n th~
chorus. l loved the pan and was
attached to it. ,
Cadorette, who't-S..foot·6, has liaht
brown eyes and dark blonde hair, say5
she identifies with Pcgy Sawyer.
he was bom in Eas1 Hanford,
Conn., ind by the time ibe wu 1 s.be
WIS commu11na to New York for
dancina lessont. She won the Mj s
Dance America Plpnt when lhe WIS 16. In 197) she WIS Miu
Connecticut in the Miss America
Pqcant. She danced with the USOio
the Mcdittnanean in 1976 Ind then
returned to the University of Con·
nect1cut to set her dqrec in 1979.
A month 11\er IJMluation she
Landed a role in "Damct at Set" in a
Florida dinnerthclter. She went from
lhlt directly into "•2nd Street."
where Gower Champion selected her
as the undcntudy.
Cadorttte said the new version of
the TV show would thow a "tender
aqd romantic side"' of Jack_Tripper,
which had not been displayed before-.
.. I had been in '42nd Street' for l'h
yean and was lookln_a for a chanae,"
she says ... I was think1na1 soap open,
which I could do in New York. I never
even thoua,ht of movina taCalifomia.
But I'm really not right for soaP.
operas. I'm loo clean-cut. I wasn t
vampy enouf.h, and I was too young
to be a siren. ' "Pcgy's story is parallel to mine,"
she says. "She just wanted to be in a
Broadway show:•'
'"The writers and producers felt
they had exhausted all the storx
possibilities under the old concept,•
she says. "A JUY livina with with two
girls 11 no lonaer controversial or
novel. I think one of the big reasons
people tuned in was because of John's
comedy. They always knew there Was
&0in1 to be one areat moment."
lllary C&dorette 11ew company for John llltter.
When the audition for ··Three's a
Crowd' came up she did it -and
forgot about it. A week later she was
called back 10 audition on tape.
"I foraot about it again," she says.
Cadorette says she hasn't talked to
any of the former stars who were
dropped from the show.
"Joyce DeWitt was very n~ to
"Three's Company," li;ke all com·
cdyshowslast year, had shpped in the
ralinp. The one-time top-rated show
--BDB())OQll
19 i&tCAN NAnoHAL.
CCJfMNTIC* I~==---aoc: VAN oncE llOlllE •**"' ''Gloril" (1te0) Genii Aow-:a>"'..::'-.=r"bft\liml 11£
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1-ICIUR . ·-YlllOH ClMATOR. _,_
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I IMB. al FOl!IUNE
PlfllGf-llCME Al Hirt (lett) .AceC&nnon blow ap a 1torm. **~''Thi Udy P'YS ow· {11521 """'°"""'---· attractive. playing in these huge coliseums." (O)llCME
The country styling is nothing new But Hirt said the worry was ** "Time w ..... (1M2) Btn Mur·
to the gray·haired Cannon, who has unfounded. ptiy,Kfli'lllBropfty.
been play1n1 country music for the "I knew he was my k.ind of man. -7:11-
past few years. In 1977, he was I've played those beer joints, too." (f)MlWI
·nominated for a Grammy Award for. Cannon, who got the nickname Cl> AOlllTNtWWTOJBI:
bis instrumental version of the coun· "Ace" as a football player, says he THE.MAKNJOF AIAGA
try song "Blue Eyes Crying in the tries 10 play his sa.x "right from the '8CIEDAYAf:;;.
Rain," which was popularized vocal· heart." m PEOPl.FIOOlln'
ly by Willie Nelson. "I play a sona from !he hean as !l fD WILD, WIDWOALDOf
In his 2S·ycar career,. he has sinacr would singjt," he said ... I've MIW.S
recorded more than SO albums, been told the sax is the sexiest, most CZ)ll'JYIE
bcgi.nning with "Tuff Sax" and cover· melodic instrument... •• •"' "Tht Suspect" (1"451
ing the genres of pop., country, rock 'n' As for Hin, he sees the sax and ChltltllalgMOn, BaRllnll.
rolLand easy Jistcnina.-Jii$.....biggesL-..Uumpct.as similat.inslJ:Uments. -~=="' -"'°=..---
solo number was "1\iff'' in 1961 "They're lead inscruments; you can 8 III Qll088AOADI
which sold mort than a million get Oightyor pretty and quiet. I like to D alltEFACTIOfLff
oopies. express feeling-to think of the lyric =~THE~,hOIJY'
The bearded, bulky Hirt is best and express it." DJOKER'IWlD
known for his jazz sounds on hits like Bolh cited similar reasons for their • Bff'ERTAIMNTTONQHT
"Java," "Cot1on Candy" and "Sugar gifi of music. e lllOYIE
-1:1'-
i =ntAOWH THE IOTH OBmln' 'MTH al. YO'tEAI _.,._
BllCME ~·Ill "&caps" 11171) ~
Georgl. A#IJ Sc:fw-.
()) 11: TAC DDUOH
l!J P£OPIES COUl!I QI fllDWM l lllARTWI LNJGH.11
lll>mRClUNN ---·-···-" IEl\lll OF THESAINT II! DlllN! WAllWICI< II coc:ERT ----
~ = § WHEEL OF FDRT\ltE m llCUBllUPf"8YAAS CIJ llOlllE • * "H.0.T.S.f' 11971) SuMn kiglr,
'""loodon.
-10:1&-Lips." For 22 years, he ran a famous Hirt, who still li\ICS in New Or· ***~ "MlcAr1tu" lhrt 2 o1 2)
nightclub in New. Orleans until leas· leans! attribut~ his abil}ty to "luck, (11~ PKll, Dlf'IO'littlhy.
ing it to oth'ers 1n May 1983 after pracuce, a desire to play and good !OU\AN~THE:VIDKI ~~ TtWI M#I ~ "°"'9''
business fell off. teachers." . COIC&n 1"'4)Wllem PcMtl,MyrnaLOf.
BBB())llla!IB-llA~Y~
MJWM l MNl'Tlf'I L.ALaMN
lHE&iSW
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•
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Cannon, who lives in Longview, Said Cannon; "My dad was a (H)..alllPEMOt-.fOUll' -~
Texas. said he was apprehensive musician, so a lot of mine was God· Til.EITOAEI mlNDEPBm(TNEWS
I =.a' LA lODi\Y t '-C.'' (t913) ACID LOWI, ~
aboutdoinaan album with Hin. given talent. I staned pla~ina 'The (l)YOYIE • ....,, ... * * *"' "1llt Ilg Cculttf' (P1112 c1' ~ ,_ ......, -""""' .. ----"Al had a biucr name," he said.· Beer Barrel Polka.' It wasn t perfect, t• "Thi S~ CNrnblr" 111131 !I)M"A"l'H
"I'd had success with thC5C albums., but you knew the tune. I remember .MicMllDouglla.twHolbrooll. OWIUl'llCICNIATI
but I was scared to death. I'd been practiciniaftcrschoolwhilctheother -1:15-Q!IFAt&YFB.0 -BllOlllE ~-** "'Gtnl 8'll(' UM1) &tW
playing bc~r joints and he had been kids were playin& ball." (!)lWl.JOHT-ZOHE -11._ *** "Tomorrow II~·' 111461 atudtttl Colb«t. Dl""lotl '#lltl. Rnlllrl. LarTY a. Scotl. ~
, NEWPORT BEACH •
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, MISSION VIEIO •
3-Piece
Fish Dinner
OnJy&2.99
Tifft younelf to our 3·P'iece Flsh D1nntr. thrtt big. cttspy
fish fiHtts. ~ fryes. f~ colt' slilw and two crunctiy ~
Sped.I price good fot a irrited time only.
Spedal: utr• nHets. 50( •piec:t. Now. you can edd 6tra fish fillet&
to your meel *. tl'lis very ll)ed&I price! Good when you buy any adult
meei. lot a hmited time only. Umit 4 fillets w mffl.
(;oo4 ~ 91: par11Clj)1'11"9 ~-
Not v.ild •ill'I mny otl'!e1 coupon fl! d!tcou111
LONGJOHN SllVEl(S.
SEAFOOO SHOPPES
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Suppor ting Cast' well supported
an friend lb toUtll) hone t wilh
ch other nd sllll ret in their
fnc:nd hip?
A hll rious u inin tion of this
qu non i ofTertd in the current
Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse pro-
duction of Geol'le Furth's t\\o-act
~omc<h' "The Supponina Cast," in
• ~hich a woman writes a novel
containing charactC:l"5 5trikingly simi·
' lar to four bf her friends -Admirably attuned to her leading
role as the first·ttme oovcli t Ellen is
Comnc William , a frequent per·
fonner In Oranac County community
theater Williams very skillfully acts
and dresses the pan of the chic
Mahbu housewife ~ho is equally
unrutlled by land\lid , c rthquake
and her friend ' n r nd paranoia.
A tde rom kecpin her calm while
her friends nd hc1 environment arc
rn total chao , W1lh nu meets the:
challenger of convincm her fncnd:.
that their roles a members of
socict)"'s '.' upportina c t," as
portra)ed m the book, arc both
nece -.ary and heroic.
lmaginat1vcl> shaping Ellen) en··
'ironment 1s the pl y's director and
set designer. Stan WI sic 0-}C r
pfayl'iou'>e veteran. Wla ick's des1an
manage to put la)'er upon la)"er -
beach, patio, living room and kitchen
-in a small, )Ct realistically pres·
ented area. Adding to the beach effect
at the side and front of the 5tage is the
taped sound of the surf as the play
begins.
tie dins thC' supponin ca t in the Shoulaerus Flomc. the c nh mother
hov. 1s Ellen's friend M e, a comic v.ho giv II for her hu band 11nd
dehghl pl )ed ~ Helene Bri . children. Shoulders' wmy one lin r •
B1i makes·max1mum use of body in a delightful J'('xas dnt"-I, rev. II
lanau ge and thu\ 1s nblc to y as tame5 ano effccthely dthvcrcd.
much with her vanl'ty of facial All of the cut member seem to
cpxress1ons and bod)' po turina H hD\C much fun delivering their
she is v. ith her line . pr tfalls nd pun~·h Imes as the
Kell> Sand pla) s Ellen's audience docs watchin them.
hypochondriac friend Sally 10 ncu-Fmal ~rformances of ''The Sup·
rouc perfection a ~he keep all the ponina Ca t" will be given Frida>
others 1n a state of uproar wuh her and Saturday 11 8:30 p.m. at the
demandll> for attention. playhouse. 661 H m1lton St., Costa Mesa The S:llurda) pcrfounanc.chu
Ted KnorrasAmold, theonl) male been desianatcd "Mayor's Night" as
in the 1roup, comicall)· plays another the theater honors Mayor Donn Hall
sortof"craz>," leavingdetailcd11otes on the occasion of it !OOth pro.
for the maid on how to put on the ductton.
bedsheets. etc. A life member of A buffet at 7_p.m. will pr«ede this
CMCP, Knorr has part1c1pated in performance. Re crvatio ns and in·
many of us productions. ..._ formation are availablew at 650-5369
Completing the cast 1s Vickt weekdays from lOa .m. to 4 p.m.
·Jamie Lee Curtis Off t h e horror trip
., ...........
Jamie Lee Curtl• ha• kicked the horror movie bablt.
By BOB THOMAS
4•_..... "'-Wtlter
LOS ANGELE No mort
screams. No mort temfied e)'es.
Jamie Lee Cunis has kicked the
horror-movie habit and is breezing
alO!lJ with a new career as a modem.
unfnghtened young woman.
You remember Jamie. She thnlled
you tn "Halloween " She chilled you
tn "Terror Train," not to mention
"Halloween ll," "Prom Ni$bt" and
others she'd rather not mention.
She changed her act tn "Tradmg
Places,•• as the happy hooker Opheha.
In the current "Grandview, U.S.A.''
she presents a totally new Jamie Lee
Curtis, assured and self-reliant, a no-
nonsensc operator of a demohtton
derby stadium 1n an Illinois hamlet.
With mannish hairdo and minimal
makeup, she is ne vertheless appcaJ.
ingly feminine. auracting the devo-
"tion of a lovesick htlth school student
(C. Thomas HoweTI) and her wild·
man driver (Patnck Swayze).
Cunis 1s now stamng with John
Travolta m "Perfect." On a day off
from shooting she lunched on a small
dish of pasta at her favonte Italian
restaurant on Melrose A venue.
"Carbohydrates," she explained. "I
bum 1t off while working in the
afternoon. Fordmner I have the same
thing every night: Caesar salad.
"J have to look JUSt right for this
picture. A big meal would show. I play
a swimmer who qualified for the
Olympics m 1980 but was unable to
go because of the boycotL Now it's
1984 and she comes in third m the
trials. but onl)' the first two make the
team. She becomes an aerobics
teacher rm 1n a leotard 98 percent of
the ttme. and my ego won't allow me
to look bad."
That discipline comes naturally.
She 1s. of course. the second daughter
of Janet Leigh and Tony Curtis,
Hollywood's lovebirds of the 1950s.
Jamie's birth in l 959 was widely
recorded. hence she will never be able
to he about her age -"I never would
anywa y."
Her parents divorced when Jamie
was 311. and she and sister Kelly were
raised by Janet and her second
husband, stockbroker Roben Brandt.
After a half-year at her mother's
school. University of the Pacific.
Jamie decided to plunge mto the
family profession. She starred m
"Death ofa Centerfold: The Dorothy
Stratten Story" and other TV movies,
then "Halloween" set her on the
horror trail. Her superlative scream·
ing made her the Fay Wray of the
1980s.
"'Halloween' was the most suc-
cessful and the best; it was downhill
after that," she observed. "The films
that followed were filled with viol·
ence, go'!? blood. heads being
chofped on. " have no regretssr Beingat the top
of a film genre is an accomplishment.
There 1s a very big audience for the
horror film, and if they can be
attracted to that kind of movie,
maybe they will go to see me in some
other kinds. too. •
"I did 'Halloween 11' out of loyalty
to (producer) Debra Hill and (direc·
tor} John Carpenter. It seemed like a
fitting end to my horror career. I do
wish the) hadn't made ll or ·Hal-
loween Jll.' Instead ofbemg a classic
film . one of the 10 best m its fi eld.
'Halloween' 1s thrown m with thin~!>
like 'Friday the 13th.'"
Asa maucr ofpersonal taste. Jamu:
doesn't hke scary movies. "I couldn't
watch 'Indiana Jones and the Temple
of Doom.' "she adm1ued.
•oon •t you dare ••• •
Young Tim Tltua· pondera ht.a father'• 1111aeetton aboa
what to do with a plate of cottaie cbeeee u Marcia Bertbol
watchea him Warily ln tb1a aeene from the lrTln•
Community Theater comedy "Crltlc'a Cbolce... Flnli
i)erformancea will !4:,tl•en Friday and Saturday at8 p.m . b
Turtle Rock Comm ty Park with ~ormadon aYallablea
867-6496.
New Eastwood movie
bonanza in first ·week
HOLLYWOOD (AP) -Clint
Eastwood's "cop on the edge" blew
away communist invaders and phan·
tom chasers as "Tightrope" debuted
at the natJon's theaters with a week·
end gro s of $9. l m1lht>n , nearly
double that of its closest competitors.
"Red Dawn," the box office leader
after its debut the previous week, was
tied with summer veteran
"Ghostbusters" wa) behind East·
wood's to ugh New 0. rleans detective ~tory at $5.3 million
"The Woman in Red" may rate a
'10' in Gene Wilder's view, but
a udiences rated her No. 7 With their
dollars. TheOnon releaseopenedJUSt
behind "The Karate Kid" at $3. l
million.
Herc is a list of the top scvc
gro sing films last weekend, wit
distributor, weekend gross, total gro!
and number of weeks in release:
"Tightrope," Warner Bros., $9.
million, first wtek.
"Red Dawn," MGMUA $5.
million, $18.5 million, two wc'eks.
"Ghost busters," Columbia, SS.
million. S 171 .6 mtllion, 11 weeks.
"Purple Ram," Warner Bros .• S
m1lhon, $34.3 million, four weeks.
"Revenge of the Nerds," Fox.. $3.
million, $18..4 million. five weeks.
"The Karate Kid," Columbia. SJ ·
milhon, $59.S million, nane weeks.
"The Woman in Red," Orion, $3.
million, first week.
Theater~s a fever in Nedda Logan's b~oo(j
lllU _,..;f .. ..,.
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1000 ..... 1 00
"ft£ WOMAN
Mam'' (K·ll)
ll .J(. 2 lll 4 lll. 'JO .. 0.
"E DAWN" (PG-13)
"DOll\' $1(11(0 11 lO l 00 SJO 100 10 JO
By MICHAEL KUCHWARA
UDr-WrtW
lllMM "-'1>.,. II uur·o
NEW YORK -Nedda Harrigan
Logan's theatncal connecti ons are
impeccable.
Edward Hamgan. one•half of the
fabled stage team known as Hamgan
and Hart. was her father. Her first
husband, who died in 1940. was actor
Walter Connolly. Her sttond 1s
Joshua Lopn. the director and
producer who had a hand in "Annie
Get Your Gun," "South Pacific" and
"Mister Roberts," among other htts.
OMll5l
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II RED'' (PG-13)
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11 .. 1"4 1•00 lt ........ Moll
lt Mwt .. At """'''"'
~IDENG( Of
M IODS" C-)
17'111 7 IS 41S i!S I •> 10 IS
"BUClMOO BMZN" (PG) •s s is , , 10
"DMAMscArE" (f"G. u )
11 IO 1 JO 'JO 6 lO e 4S lO 0
"ml DAWN" (f"G-13)
"IXlll' sn•o 17.lO JOO~)() 100 IOlO
"MfU Wt" <•>
11 IXlll' sn•o 100 JJD. ue uo 10•}
"StlIM" (PG)
100 llO ,00 llO 1100
"M LAST STAlflliHTO" (PC:)
' 17 IO. H~ I'S "STU TRO I : M
SEMCH FOii srotl" (PG)
JO 64S IO•S
*PACIFIC DRIVE·IN THEATRES*
* CINE·fl SOUN01 At these symbols grnt sound drrect to your AM car *
redro. If no redro Wtth acceuory position. br1n1 your own AM portable.
ALL OPEN 7:30 Start Dusk Child,enl.Jnd..12 ALWAYS FREE
ANAHEIM ~
ORANGE ~
11141 11t tHI .,.....,,,.
ftM•y II At lt!!O"' St
0 141 1)1 tltl 011•• S.ni. , .. f.,,, I tlott WI
* * SU,EA SWAP MEE.TS hlfY SAT. I S.n•, • •
1110 ... IA-.t 1u JPM '"' lnlm .... hDft 1114 U4 ust
r
Fountain Valley
.. TIQtllOP(.. <•)
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MISSION , ::.:·:::.
U14't1J O•SISO h:y I &rt,.•t
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I'\~ lilATIAlU PAIT r (P'S)
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And she herself was an actress who
gave up the greasepaint only after
marrying Logan. -
But these day!> $he has what she
calls her current "loves," two projects
that occup)' most of her ttme Nat-
urally, they concern the theater. The>
arc the Actors' Fund of America. the
world's oldest theatrical chanty,
which she now heads. and "Hamgan
and Han." a musical based on the
pannersh1p of Hamgan and Tony
Hart.
"Somebod) once said that Tony
Han could play any pan that Har-
rigan could wnte for him," said Mrs.
Loean. sittin~ in her 24th-floor office
high above Times Square and talking
about the two men who were super·
stars dunng the 1870s and 1880s.
"Hamgan and Han," which con·
tains original songs by her father as
well as new material by Michael
Stewart, Max Showalter and Peter
Walker..Jlad a fiv~cck shakedown
run this summer in C hester, Conn.
Mrs. Logan served as production
consultant for the show. which was
produced by the people who run the
Goodspeed Opera House, and attend~
ed each performance. Local re views
were encouraging, and a Broadway
run 1s a possibility.
Harrigan had heart trouble and
retired early from the theater. Mrs.
Logan, the liut of IO children, never
saw her father, who djed in 1911 , on
stage.
"I was very young when he died."
said Mrs. Logan, weanng a wide·
bnmmed straw hat decorated wath a
yellow ribbon and dried flowe~. a
spntely v1s1on of summer.
"My mother-daughter of David
Braham, a wel1·known conductor of
his day -was married when she was
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16. I wasn't born until her early 40s. I
was-not expected," she+.lughed.
What she does remember about her
father 1s a kmdl)' man and his homey
family touches.
"He had a pompadour," she says.
"When he was older, it was gray and it
went all the way back over his bald
spot. It was very fine. He used to let
me braid it. At times, he had about six
little braids standing up this high. His
pauencc was enormous."
But if she didn't see her father on
stage. Mrs. Logan remembers him
perfonnmg at home.
"On Sunday nights, we'd always be
around the piano and he'd sing, even
in a bathrobe wh~n he wasquitesick,''
she said. But sbe didn't realize
Hanigan was a star until after he died.
"He was Just Poppa. l didn't know
really until I got on the stage myself,"
Mrs. ~n said. "We had such a
normal life." .
But for most actors of those times,
life was much harder. It was an era of
social discrimination.
"Theatrical people were not ac·
cepted at all," she said. "The public
charities in New York wou1dl\'t
accept theatrical people and the
orphan asylums wouldn't accept chil·
dren of the theater."
That's why her father, along with
P.T. Barnum, Edwm Booth. Joseph
Jefferson and others, had helped form
the Actors' Fund of America in 1882.
It's a cause Mrs. Logan till cham·
pion~ passionately. ..._
She was like her father 1n other
way,, too. Deciding not to go back to
-boardin1 school, llhe followed him
into show business. lt was not
decision-that pleaseoner mother.
"I didn't know her tenibly we
She was rather distant," Mrs. Loll
recalled "When l told h4r that
wanted to go on the stage, she sai
'Oh, you must *o to school. You mu
be cultivated."
But the detcnnined daughter r
fused, and plunged ahead with
career on stage, even with no actir
lessons.
"There were no schools then. 81
you see. there were a lot of stoc
companies. You learned an awfuJ 11
in stock. I played stock every year an
learned by just doing," she said.
It broullht her to Broadway in 191
in "A Woman of No lmportanc~
and in the 1930s to Hollywood. whe1
she appeared in such films as "Than
You, Mr. Moto" and "Devil
Island." Her show business care.
ended after she mamed ~n. b•
she didn't give up the Actors Fund
Today Mrs. Logan who w1
named president in 1980, is in chlfi
ofan O!J~mization that spends near!
$2 milhon each year helping need
people in the cntenamment industr
It g.ives all types of assistance, froi
paying doctor and dental bills 1
providing nursing home care.
"Night of 100 Stars." the cclebrit~
laden extravaganza produced tw
years ago by Alexander Cohen, heli
ed raise money for a nursina facilit1
next to the fund's retirement home f
Englewood.. N.J. But mo" of its fund
comes from private donations an
benefit perform.anccs or Broadwa
shows. '
Enter a YJc>rtd
beyond your wildest imagination
wryere anY.!hing can happen.
.... 819
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THE
FAMILY
CIRCUS
"Didn't our forefathers have any famous old
amusements we could go on?"
.
'
by Gus Arrlola
ezz
BIG GEORGE by Virgil Partch (VIP)
_i[ :rr r
"Oops. I slipped!"
MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson DENNIS THE MENACE
.. , can always tell when we're getting close
to the Ice cream shop!"
MOON MULLINS
PEI\ UT
HE!tE'S TME WORLD
FAMOUS SUR6EON OM ·
MIS WA"< TO ™E
OPERATING ROOM ...
T MBl.-E EEDS
H 11 A:)t..l-1
1 cooL.P. usa
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..... ._..~.,..-..... Hank Ketcham
DO 'f'OU THINK
DIET IS IMP~ANT
AFTER SOR6ERV?
J
f i ~ l
·eov1 T~ A RELIEF ~'
~ • •
by Ferd & Tom Johnson
by Charles M. Schulz
A850U1TELY!AFT'ER EVEl{Y
OPERATION, I MAVE A
CMOCOLATE SUNDAE !
by Tom K. Ryan
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Opening I ad: King of 4 .
The lucky player gues e right.
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t.\ORAL.E. '* -me. "ll2tX6 ...
BRABBLE
FOR BE'ITER,OR FOR WORSE
BUT\Hej~1"11NE!
'/OOCAN~"ffif'.OW OJI MY 51lJFfUJrltiOUT
P$K!NG ME. ARST I
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FUNKY WINKERBEAN
DR.SMOCK
ANP NOW !"He FUN PAR!" OF "rHe MBAL-! -rHe O&..' FOR'fuNe
COOKIB e>l1" !
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CHAIW
Gote
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by Lynn Johnston
\ DID L..OOK PF'mR
THEM! I~
1Fe1.DIDN .,-l '?' Wh"/--~
~Y George Lemont
by Pat Brady
by Harold Le Doux
..
•
wens to manage
estaraunts at Plaza
Crate Owto• has been named director of restaurants at Tbe WestlD Soutla
t Plau. The selection by was by Robert Jordu. the hotel's director offood
beverqe. Owens has been with Westin since 1978, and was most recently
manqer ofTbe Summit at Tlae Wettbt Reu.11~ Center in Detroit. ln
t new post, he will be mponsible for operattoos of Alfredo's, The Orange
rove restaurant, 24-hour room service and the pool snack bar. .. · ... . .. • ... Jay F. Joluaaoa has been named vice president for Don B•ckley and
~ll04:t:atet, a nationwide executive search and recruiting firm specializing in· salts and management professionals in data processing, office automation . '
OWENS um JOBSON COLSON
telecommunicatJons and software. The firm's new office at 1300 Dove St.,
Suite 100, in Newport Beach is the first California location for the company.
J-Obnson has more than 14 years of experience in the office automation field. • • • Suaue M. Colson bas been promoted to account coordinator for Cox &
)Jar9 Adverdalq Co. of Newport Beach. Colson previously served as
promotional assistant with Rosa Advert111D1 in Detroit, Mich. m her new post,
the Newport Beach resident will assist account executives on several accounts,
including Cltadoa Ballden, VW.1 SavlD11 and Lou Aaaoctatioa, Tiie Mega
Groap, lac. and C. ltola Dt1UaJ Prodactt, I.De. • • • Brio ReJd as the new manaaer of investor relations for Tbe Conaentoae
Corp. of Irvine; which specializes in the commercial/industrial sector of the
real estate industry. Reid will represent builders and developers before various
investor groups. He was formerly a project manager with PllU Foar Twelve Inc.
of lrvme. • • • • Marc Groce is a new sales associate with the real c$tate firm of RE/MAX
of Butbapn Bea~ I.De. Groce was formerly with the east Huntington Beac
office of Coldwell Buker. He is a member of the Bntba&10a Beacll/Fou
Valley Board of Realton, the CaWonala AaaoclaUon of Realton and the
National Association of Realtors. RE/MAX of Huntinaton Beach is an
indpendcnt member broker of RE/MAX lnternatloaaJ. • • • Mlcrodata Corp.11 MlOOO intelligent workstation and its fifth-generation
Natural Language processor will be featured at INFO '84 in New York City
Oct. 1-4. The MIOOO combines Microdata's data base management system
with office automation functions that run simultaneously. The language
processor makes business information access1blc to all who can read and write. • • • Leoae & Leoae Ltd., Marketlq ud CommuJcadou of Laguna HiJls has
aded three projects to its client list. The Zoological Society of San Diego bas
~lected the firm to develop markcuog plans for summer educational programs
at the San Diego Zoo and San Diego Wild Animal Park; Merrit A11oclate1 of
Phoenix, Ariz. has chosen the firm for develop direct mail collateral for one of
its clients; and the Bally Corp. has hired Leone to plan and implement a media
and promotion program for Its new line of video games.
• • • • • Job F. Vitro has joined Cocltrue Chase, UvtnptoD & Co. of NeW{><>n
Beach as art director and Aa1ela Watermu is the firm•s newest copywntcr.
Vitro, formerly senior art director for Fnnklla & Alaocl•te• of San D1eao. will
be responsible for art direction on various consumer accounts, includinJ Carl'•
Jr., the lrvlDe Co. and Birtcher Paclftc. Waterman's responsibilities include
copy development for tbe same accounts. She previously served as copywnter
for Laac, Warlord, Stone Advert.111D1 of Newport Beach. • • • Newpon Beach-based KIDJ Advertl11D1 Ir Pllbllc Relatloaa has opcntda ~office in Santa-€1ara. The Sal'IU'Oara office Is ilie third branch for the
company, which specializes in residential and commercial real estate
marketing. It opened a branch in Phoenix. Ariz. earlier this year.
• • • • • Newpor1 Componenta lac., an mtemauonal distnbutor of mtegrated
: arcu1ts and conductors, bas hired JobD Hockiu for the ewly created post of
director of marketing and sales. Increased sales and rapid growth arc cited as
reesons for creating the new post. Hockins was previously corporate director of
marketing for Mlcroaeml Corp. of Santa Ana. ,. . . . .
:. ,
4 MSI Data Corp. of Costa Mesa has appointed C1aarlea S. Stnad president
r' an<i chief executive office and named him to the board of directors of the firm .
,. Strauch succeeds MSI co-founder WlllJam J. Bowers, who will remain as
chairman of the board. Strauch brings 27 years eltpcrience an general
management and 10 years in computer and electronics company management
to his new post. He is also former president of Memorex, chairman and
president of Mapuon Compaten Systems and chairman of Computers
: IDtenaatloaal, lac. MSI manufactures P<>rtable data collection systems.
•
COMPLETE NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS, 88
Phone company'• fast track
A $5.4 mllllon d.laltal ca1l routtni ayatem
tbat wU1eeJ'Te16.000 Coeta Meu hmnea
and baa-in-euea later ilili year undergoea a
teat conducted by Paclflc Bell communlca-
tions teehniclan Martin l'fuN. The new
aystem -for thotte with 548 an 6'6
telephone-preftea -~allow cutomen
to add custom cautna feature. and enable
computer UHn wltll thotte preft.aea to
tranafer data at much faster speed.a.
Takethe
money
now, if
you can
By RALPH SC01T
Inflation is crcatinJ more and moll
SO percent bracket taitpayers even
year. Since the schedule by which we
pay federal income tax is not indclted
to adjust for inflation, it's increasina·
ly easier to be a SO percent bracket
wpayer.
Tupayers who will be in the
maximum tax bracket for years to
come should not sell propeny on an
RALPH
Scon
installment sale m an ancmpt to save
income tues. If you·~ already in the so percent bracket, adding a aain
from a aale will not create any more
tax on that sale than if ~ou take the
proceeds over a period of yean.
For eumple: I am selling a piC(IC of
property which I've owned for more
than a year on whlch-l!~ntillcd to
Iona-term capital pin and which has
a total profit on the sale ofSI00,000.1
am in the SO percent bracket and since
rm entitled to long-term pin treat-
ment, I will pay $20,000 of tax on the
gain. If I~m going to be in the SO
percent bracket for yean to come, I
would ultimately pay S2Q,OOO even if
I took the proceeds over a number of
years.
If I'm _10101 to pay the same
amount of tax under an installment
sale as on a cash sale, I should
consider the benefits of havina all my
cash now .
There may be other reasons for
consenting to an installment sale.
Perhaps I'm gettina a more favorable
sellina price, a better rate of interest
than I can get elsewhere, or perfectina
a sale that miaht otherwise not ao
throuah. Even if I'm not in the maximum
bracket, there may be tax or invest-
ment reasons for structuring a cash
sale versus an installment sale.
Seek professional assistance when
n~otiatillJ sales terms on trans.-
actJons with significant a.moJlDU of
money.
7' a.Jpb Scott I• • certJJJed pobllc
accoutot pnctlcbJ6 la Ne.,,ort Bu ct.
Animal owners o_pt for insµ.rance
WASHINGTON (AP) -Medical
bills for a sack or injured animal can
climb quickly, so many Americans
have begun buyinJ their pets health
insurance protection just like they
have for themselves.
From Cahfom1a to New York to
Texas to MIDnesota, pet insurance
plans have gone into operation,
industry officials report, with several
carving out a substantial business for
themselves.
Veterinary Pct Insurance of Gar-
den Grove, for example, insures some
38,000 cats and do~ in California
and is seeking to expahd
money, Stupine pointed out that
many people can stiJl afford to pay
such sums from savings or can act
loans -unlike the huac costs human
medical care can sometimes aenerate.
: .............................................................................................. ...
An official of Animal Health In-
surance Agency of Mt. Kisco, N.Y.,
says sales are in the "thousands" and
the firm has applied for permission to
That, he said, ts why be is takina a
wait-and-see attitude. He said there
have been pet insurance plans offered
in the past that failed. iMoliitor your computer write-offs ..
(EDITOR ·s NOTE: This 1s the
fourth part of a six-part series on the
consequences to taxpayers of the new
ta~ le,islation passed into law on July
18.)
One prospect that appears a cer-
ta1Dty m an era of economic uncer-
tainties as that the next Congress and
the Con~ess after that -and on and
on -wall waste horrendous amounts
of tame amendma the tax law this
Congress put on the books ID July.
The new law 1s so geared to special
interests that an many phases the ~ aeneral interest is utterly overlooked.
~ It's so complex that it becomes ~ mean1ngl~ss in other se-et1ons. It's a
• monstrosity an an area where
• "monstrosity" has a s1gn1ficance all
' its own.
:; For instance. the '84 law puts dollar
•• limits on the investment credit and
•: annual deprcciauon.dedu.ction for •: cars -even 1f you use your car I 00
•: percent for business No ma.\\er how
much you use your car for bus1Dess,
: your investment credit cannot exceed
... Sl,000-and that's true even if the
• car costs S 16,000. $20,000 or $40,000. ~ And no matter what your u.se or cost.
your depredation wnte-otT cannot
exceed $4,000 the first year and
$6,000 io each year after that, accord-
: 101 to Prenuce-Hall.
.. Say you pay $24,000 for a new car : and use it l 00 percent for business. t Befotc 1be new Jaw, you claimed an
• investment credit equal to 6 percent
o(your cost ($I, 440). And you wrote
otryour full cost (less one half o'f your
invC$lmcnt crcdic) over three )cars. If rou . were in the SO percent tax
btlCkc~ your total savinp over three
years came to S 13,0 0. .
Unckr the new law, your 1nve t-
.. mcnt credit is hmiced to S 1,000 and
your depreciation deductions over
the lint three years cannot e ceed 'I 1'6;000 Total threc·ycar tu savin
an the SO ptttcnt bracket ~ $9,000.
• ~ou can write off another $6.000 in
~---.... hdounhycarandthcrtmainina{O r
in the fiRh . You do act the full wrnc--
off but you must wan longer.
But the extra investment cred11 as
lost forever. And if you use your car
for personal as well as bus1Dess
reasons, your deductions may be a lot
less. If you use this car 60 percent for
business. your investment credit can-
not exceed $600.
NEW STRATEGY: These dollar
limits apply only to cars placed in
service after June 18, 1984. The law
does not affect the car you arc
currently us1Dg 1f It was acquired
before then. You thus would be wiser
makinc do with your present car than
sellina at and buyina another.
Example: Stephens bou&ht a car an
1983 at a cost of $30,000 tltat he u!Cs
I 00 percent for business. He sells the
car ID July 1984 and buys a new one
for $40,000. Result: He acts no
depreciation deduction in his old car
for '84 (depreciation isn't allowed 1n
the year of sale). And has depreciation
deduction on his new car 1s hm1ted to
)4,UUV 1u1 b4, the first year of
ownership. That's a mere $4,000
write-off on a $40,000 car.
Stephens' move: Stick with his
1983 car. New result: He continues to
write off the full cost of his car over
three )'Cits, Jivmg him a 1984
depreciation deduction of SI I ,OS8.
That's more than twice what he
would act with a new $40,000 car.
The touah new rules for cars also
apply to other assets: plane , boats.
trucks. personal computers. What'• at
.We as that key talt breaks arc lo t if.
you don't use the computer. say, more
than SO percent for busane' . If you
u your computer for business SO
percent or le s of the time. you
recover the depreciable partofitHO t
over 12 instead of five ~caD.
What is business use. Tricky rules!
If you. an employee, use your own
computer at home for bu incs it
counts toward the more·than-50-
pcrcent test only if )Our cmplo)cr
specific llY. requires our home use •
1_uppow Racllrl rcrn uses her
$4.000 computer 40 ~rctnl or the
SYLVIA
PORTER
and lets Ward use it at home. He uses I -it only 40 percent of the time for
business. His company treats the
value of the personal use of the
computer as com~nsation and in-
cludes it on Wards W-2 Fonn. But
caution: The more-than-SO-percent
business-use test must be met every
year you use the computer. The first
year 1t isn't met, you flunk the test.
And your deduCtJons in succeeding
years are lost as well.
tame for business, 3S percent of the
tame for analyzina her 1Dvcstmcn1s
and lets her kids use it for the rest of
the tame for video f3mes. She gets no
investment credit or fast ~eprcc1at1on.
Green's dnttt bus1Dess use masses
the SO ~rcent mark and her annual
wnte-offis a puny $2SO Had she used
the computer entirely for business,
she could claim an immediate $4,000
deduction.
Suppose, thouah. that mstcad of
buym'-his own computer, Daniel
Ward s company buys the computer
You must keep a contemporaneous
· diary that shows you use the com-
puter more than SO percent of the
tame for business.
TAX TIP l: Use your computer to
keep track of your business use.
That's a busane s use in and of itself.
TAX TIP2: Aswnhcars, if you find
you're falling behind as year-end
nears, use your computer ONLY for
business. There are bia tax dollars at
stake here. Meet that morc-than-SO-
perccnt test.
Pharmaceuticals Inc.
may buy its own stock
NMS Pharmaceuticals Inc. in New·
port Be ch has announced that it may
elect to buy up to SSOO 000 of us
common stock on the OTC market
from time to time at prevailina prices.
The source of funds wall be denved
from income eamrd on investment
b) the company. The hare will be
held as treasury tock by the company
and may be used for corporate
purpo asucha satisfymaexmiscof
option undrr the tock option pl n
or for future acqui iuons.
Th n nult'd th t ~
rcn1 hook value 1 about$ l.4S hart~
comp red with tht CU!Ttt1l market
pncc ot abuul U .oH • hare. NMS
has about S.8 million shares of
common stock outstanding.
NMS in cnaaaed in dcvtlop1na.
manufacturina and markctina im·
munodiaano tac te t kit used by
ho pitat and laboratori . Its most re cnt product release ts Nimbus. a
te t for prcanancy, th re ults of
which · are read visually by a color
chance within sill minutea and can
detect ~rt nancy seven days after
COftC'CJ)hOn,
1mbus utilizes the v :o I tc t
Tetiinot hiffi involves com·
brnauon of monoclonal and pol)'·
clonal antibod1e
-SCll policies in more than 20 states.
And an the last silt months, Virginia
officials have approved the sate of
msurance policies by the Pet Protec-
tJOO...Pla.n. of Dallas, Texas, says Dr .
Gary A. IUrtas, a Burke, Va., veterin-
arian.
Hospital costs can easily be as
much as $50 a day and bills for an
mjured animal that needs onhopedic
work can top SSOO, explained Banas,
and it's protection from these high
costs that pet owners are seck1Da.
The idea isn't to avoid routine
health care costs, he explained, and
abuse and neatect are generally not
included in the insurance protecuon.
But the policies can help families
overcome unexpected u~nscs as-
sociated with illness or injuries to
their animals.
.. When a SSOO to $800 veterinarian
ball comes in it can create economic
hardship, and unfortunately some-
times it's the pct that loses out,"
explained Jo Scheuer of Veterinary
Pet Insurance.
A aroup of Pennsylvania veterin-
arians has formed a committee to
look at the plans and the experience of
the arowina nutnbcr of insurance
plans in other states .
"We're anxiously awaitina to see if
it will ~ork," 111d Barry Stup1ne,
director of the veterinary hospital at
the University of Pennsylvania.
While SSOO to $800 is a lot of
But, Stupine added, one reason for
the plans 1s 04not having to put the
animal to sleep when you don't have
the funds to pay for medical care."
Under most plans customen pay
the veterinarian and aet a refund from
the insurance company, althouah
Henderson and Scheuer said their
plans also can arrange to have
payment made directly to the veterin-
anan or clinic if the doctor aarees to
that.
Both said their sales breakdown is
abou& 80 percent dop and 20 pen::ent
cats.
Rates for all of the plans vary
dependioa on the age of the animal
involved and the amouJllof coveraac
soµ&bl. Most plane exclude routine
shots and other preventive care,
althouah the Minnesota proaram
does olrer an additional contract to
include such eums, tests and vaoci-
nations.
At New York's Animal Health
Insurance Aacncy, which says it has
sold several thousand plans, aald the
one basic p!an cost.a $69 per year and
ofl'en S 11000 of insurance J>t1'. incl·
dent, witn a S 15 deductible.
Garden Grove's Veterinary Pet
Insurance, with 38,000 customers,
offers an accident-only plan for S 19
and major medical -illnm and a~ident -at rates of S39-to-S99~·
ytar dependina on the aae of' tho pet.
Thcar deductible is $20.
Irvine apartment financing OK d
..
Cnic:orp Re 1 Estate Inc. and the
Irvine Co. have rtached aarecment
on a _pr~m to finance construction
of 2 200 apanment uniu in the City of
Irvine.
A S 1 ()().;m111ion lctt~r of credit has
btcn i ued by Citicorp Real Estate to
provide for the i uancc of bonds for
the con truction.
Cmcorp Capital Markets Group is
lead underwriter for lhC bond Both
mu a u ic.'hanet of cw Yo~ •
Std iti rp Inc.
Theapenment 1 whaeh a~tuttcnt·
I} un~er c:onstrucuon, arc n of 1hc
City of Irvine's apanment ~m.
Th1ny percent of. the \lniu qualify
under fedtral and municipal auide-
hnes as .. affordable" housina·uniu.
The one•t two-and thReobcdroom apanmcnu are aroupcd in compleAes
or lQ0.300 units throu,hout tlw City oflrvanc.
Contractor of 1he consuucdon 11
Irvine Pac:afi~ DC clo ment C'o., 1
d1 i ion of the Ir inc o
I
..
#
Do prope~ values go up or down?
NEW YORK (AP) -Whether thl'
discu ·on i boul Inv tmcnu or
tn helter or nl'w la lqi lauon, the
theory nd practitt o( dtprcc1ation IS
bound to arise when rtal estate 1s
dilCU Kd,
Why houldn't it, when the theory
says real a Kll dcpruiatc while the
practice shows that oftl'n they ap-
pru iate? Which is to say, a piece of
propcny allcF.<f to be wasuna away
may be ste d1ly growina in value.
In theory, all pb)' I I I
bu ines , land c «ptcd, re ad lo
lose aluc o~cr time u ofu
or r d tear, nd mu t
rtpl ccd 1f thc bu ines 1110 continue
eamina income nd pay1n ancomc
ta c.
But theory end proctttt. like plums
and prunl's, arc dtOcrcnt thin
A $100,000 income prol)t"ny with a
depl"l'ciablc life of 18 ycan for an come
tall purposes. for cnmplc, maaht
actually live tona beyond th t umc
and still produtt income. even if the
income is somewhat reduced by
dttcn uon 1 ~the &a ~ n takcdcduc-
Nevttthelw, thcownercandttluci dons on n mount bi may far
on hi or her nnual income uu; ~xettd his ua1 in\estmcnMn the
return one.-cighlCICnth the Jue oflhc propmy.
tructurc. Assumana tht siru turt. ··As mult of lhe £
minus l nd, was bouaht for SS0.000, proptrt) owner ma)'
the deduction can amount to S4,444 a pttclauon ckduchons fi in cxcn of
) r. the tuaJ dcchne in economic value
A ts really do waste av.ay in or the property, a ta& shcha 1s
man) bus1ne sn, and in some in· cma&cd.' ~mold C'.\plains
!nancci a business can be made Another major factor enten the
obsolete in a few ye-an by tcchnoloci· picture: The owner may ha'c paid
atl advance . Many of the electronic onl) 5 pcrccnt down on lhe 11ructure.
andu tries, including c:omputtn, art borrowang the mt. But the de·
in this situation. · preciation is claimed by tbc taxpa)er
It can happen 1n real ~tale too, but on the is of 100 ~rccnt cash
$233 nlillion AF missile
contractgiven to Rockwell
leu oRen, which makts it whtt '°me ownership. ·
consider to be the ideal tait shelter. lhat an produce a situation.
Alvin L. Arnold, a1nbe~~r -4l&~f~Thi:hee---·W.ref(wc:-in--wtrit'trlhe'"-mmulhu--.r------:
Real Estate Investor's Handbook. deductio~ can be alm<m a largt as
published by Warren. Gorham il the tupaycr·, total inv tmcaL
Lamont, summariies the duality that Whc:n the structure is sold. the
make a tall helter out of real l'State deprrciatton dcducttons must an er-
deprcciation. feet be repaid. But the owner has bad An approitimately $233 million
conl!'ICl for the .fim phase of pro-
ductton work on the U.S. Air Force
Peacekctper missile auidanee and
control srtem has been awarded to
Rockwel International Corpor-
auon's Autonelics Strategic Systems
Division at Anaheim.
The contract calls for the pro-
duction of auidance and control
systems and associated equipment
and services to support the 21
Peacekccpcr missiles authonzcd for
production by Conarcss in the fisal
year 1984 defense budget. f.quipment
deliveries will be made from March I QR~ thmugh April 1987
MUTU AL FUNDS
UPs ANO DowNs
Pl•ft• ••I •f t•"•f
r« 1riN .\d
ACTIOS CtU
/l OAILT rt 01'
A.0-YdCMI
t4lol'11
I
Tbc Anahc1m-b sed division, part
of Rockwell'~ Defense Electronics
Opttations. is responsible for the
integration of lhe Peacckecper guid-
ance and control system. The
division aJso builds the Pcacekeeper
missile electronics and computer
assembly, which contains most of the
t'uidance and control electronics.
including tbe onboard c·omputer
Tbc guidance and control system
controls and monitors misSJle per-
formance from prclaunch power ap-
plication on the a.round through the
inflight deployment of all re-entry
vehicles toward their assisned targets.
In theory, he says, the deduction the use of that money for the n>lltt
compensates the taxpayer for the period of owner1hip. dep~iation of .. wasting assets." In Moreover. inttrest on the money
practice, the decline in asset value is borrowed to complete the purchase is
at a much slower rate than that tait-dcduct1ble as a business expense.
anigncd to the asset. And if the property 1s like many
In theory. he continue , the dcduc-ol.hen today 1t will increase rather t1on anticipates the taxpayer w1U st"t than decrease in value.
up a rl'placement reserve to renew thl' All this lS perfectly legal. and many
assets. In practice, depreciation contend it is also socially desirable in
creates untaxed cash flow that can be the sense that both businesses and
used for purposes other than renew-people must have a home and that
ing assets. real estate investors spend the money
In theory, depreciation allows the and take the risk to provide it for
taxpayer to recoup rus cash invest-them.
mcnt through tax deductions. In But the situation also makes lhe
concept and practice of depreciation
one of the most difficuJt matters to
explain to non-investors ...
... even if it is almost inst.anti)'
araspcd by thOIC who own or plan to
buy real estate.
WUTilll50U'Tff COASTPLUA HOTU. COST A "4ESA
o.£SSV f'Ottl
0\1£1121 ~~~, ~ .. USIC. ~~~~~
71~ H7 .. IU
•AtO...
~ ~ ... _ ...
ORANGE COUNTY
CA TltOUC ALUMNI CLUB
FRIDA\', AUGUST 24
\'OUNG SINGLES DANCE
Close encounter?
Xworker at Oblo Poly corp. of C&rrolltoa, OblO, appean to•
be encued lD a MCtton of blown polyoleQa film. Med la mchprod1lct.aanpermuket~and llDers. Tbeplaat.-..;
a Goodyear nlmdl&ry -prodacea en~ film eacJa ~
to circle the !:artb more than 66 tlmea ln a foot-wide .trip.·
Classified
1,000 -$2,600
2,500 -$10,000
10,000 -$50,000
50,000 +
PAYS 12.5%
P~YS 12.75o/c
PAYS 13.00o/c
PAYS 13.5~
Terms 3-12 Months, Interest Paid Monthly
Community Thiqft. Loan
2750 Harbor Blvd.,
M a, CA 714-957-~13
I •
The Ultimate·
Experience
Experience the excitement of finding just what you 're
looking for-in classified. It's the ultimate!
Daily Pilat
'\ phone 642-5678 r
...
On
the ,
•
\.
-
Dow JoNES AvERA r.Es
I WHAT NYSE Dio
- ---
NY SE LEADERS
I --
UPs AND DowN s
WHAT AMcx Orn
NEW YORK IAP) Aug. 2'2 Prev.
l 4
AMEX LEADERS
NASDAQ SUMMARY
GoLo QuoTES
M ETALS Quorcs
That's an apt description of both business and
business people along the Orange Coast. To keep track of
where companies ar going and which peopl ar helpin
themgetther .ju twat n·creditLtne·-verydayinthe
Business section of your new Daily lilat ~
• !!Cl
111111 WEONESOAY, AUGUST 22 1984
Chefa from f•mou1
re1taur•nt1 offer
calorle-reduced
recipe•. P.a• C4
Let'~ have ~n '80s cocktail party
:roast with moder.n mixer~--~~-~~
liqueurs and fruit juices
Notsincc the Roarin'Twenticshasthere been
such enthusiasm for the cocktail party. And, ifs no
wonder since today's party,.gi ver is looking for
maximum impact with minimum fuss.
All it takes is a little ingenuity to tum this
traditional social ritual into an '80sevent. Cocktails
take on a new twist with ·combinations ofliqueurs
and fruit juices, resulting in exotic flavorsandjewel-
likecolors.
The imaginative array of cocktails should be
complemented with equally innovative appetizers.
Variety and contrasting color and texture with the
accent on light ingredients are the key to pleasing the
sophisticated palate.
Herc are some tips for colorful, bite-sized
mor$cls that please.
•Try sesame seed breadsticks for crunchy
goodness, endive with softened cream cheese or
cherry tomatoes stuffed with a crab meat mixture.
• Present several cheeses surrounded by fresh
grapes on an attrac tive tray.
•Steam tiny new potatoes. Take a small slice off
the bottom so they will stand and a small slice off the
topandcoverwitbcavi'ar.
•Spread minced chicken on cucumber slices
and garnish with pimiento for color.
• StufTfresh white mushroom caps with red
caviar and a little sour cream. Serve cold, saving the
stems for later use.
• Enhance chicken liver pate with chopped
onions and some hot sauce for a hearty option.
SASSY LADY
4 ouncn orang" jalce
t ounces 11apefraJt Ju.lee
1 ounce melon llqftllr
~. ounce areaadlDe
Ice
Combine all ingredients. Pou rover ice in a tall
glass. Yield: I serving.
CITRUS SUNDOWNER
• ounces orange jalce
~ once cocoDat amaretto
1 ounce wbJte creme de cacao
Ice
C1ab soda
Combine orange juice. coconut amaretto and
creme de cacao; pour over ice ina tall glass. Top with a
splash of club soda. Garnish with orange wedge, if
desired. Yield: 1 serving.
STRAWBERRY FLIP
• fresh strawberries
4 ounces orange juice ,
1 euce bottled ..... m.b
t tablespoon saperftae np.r
t lee cabet
Stnwberrles for pralA. opUmal
ln con tamer of electric blender combine all
ingredients. Cover. Blend. Serve in a tall glass. If
desired. rimglas.swithsupcrfinesuprandgamish with
a fresh strawberry. Yield: t serving.
EMERALD BO?fT01'
1 ounce meloa liq1lftl'
1 oaace blae ca:racu or triple see ·
5 oa.DCH oraqe Jalce
tor S Ice cabes
lncontainerofclcct.ncblendercombincall
ingredients. Cover. Blend. Serve in a tall glass. Garnish
with melon balls., if desired. Yield: I serving.
SA1'GRIA PU1'CB
1 bottle (I caps) ebb~ dlilled
~ cap onaae )alee, ewe.&
~ cap trlf!le see
1 orange, sliced
Ice
In a large pitcher or punch bowt combine all
ingredients. Serve with ice Yield: 8 servings..
Popcorn pops up tlirough history
Summer fruit
treats peachy
It's hard to imagine a summer season without the
enjoyment of peach pie or ice cream. With a bumper
crop this year, it's time to take advantage of the
reasonable prices on this quality fruit.
• 0 -igi } --k-,--d--deerskin bag filled wtth popped com to f na SOaC 100 the first Thanksgiving feast at Plymouth.
1 i t f fl Later. colonial housewives served pop-n var e y 0 a vors com with milk and hone)'. creating the
first puffed grain breakfast cereal.
LANCASTER, Pa. (AP) -Popcorn History provides the evidence. said
lovers know the snack is perfect with John, that popcorn 1s the "original snack ""j:::=;:::;~=====~;:;~ movies, family reunions and ball pmcs. food."
They believe it to be as Amencan as There's more to the Delagranees' ~~~~~~i~~i~lii the flag, apple pie and Uncle Miluc. popcorn business than one might think
But according to John and Kay -31 flavors more, to be exact. At the ..__.._
Delagrange, popcorn lovers and owners Buttcrcom Overland Stage Co., cus-
ofThc Buttcrcom Overland Stage Co. at tomcrs can buy chocolate fudge.
LancastcrOutletCity, there are probably barbecue, taco and root beer-flavored
a few kernels of knowledge that even the popcorn. There arc other flavors.. too -
passionate connoisseur has yet to learn. banana, grape, watermelon, peanut but-
For example, the popular snack food is tcr, pina colada and p1stach10.
believed to have been discovered by And for those with adventurous
primitive people when a wild grain of palates, the Delagranges boast bubble
com was exposed to heat. Indians gum, apple cinnamon, praline and
popped the com on heated rocks and hot shrimp cocktail-flavored popcorn.
sand. Later, archeology expeditions un-The couple have been in the popcorn
covered pottery utensils for popping business for five years, selling it at local
com in Mexico, Central America, Peru, fairs and festivals. They had talked about
New Mexico, the West Indies and the locating the business m a permanent
Great Lakes rea,ton. place. and decided this would be the year
Indian tribes throughout the Amencas to do it.
were introduced to popcorn by the time Kay Delagrange manages the business
the white man amved m the New World. and John, art director at Packing
Once in Mexico, Cortes reported seeing a Corporation of Amenca. designed and
"strange flower that grew on the end of a built the popcorn "shop" and the two-
stalk" ~hich ~peel when cooked in thirds-scale model of a Concord coach
fire. H~ that 1t was used nonmtyas that housttthe popcorn popper
food but as decoration for necklaces. The Wells Fargo ""agon replica has
ceremonial headdre ses asid statues to become as much a conversation piece as
the gods. the 31 flavors of popcorn
Columbus saw the corn worn in John spent nearly 500 hours and
corsages by the West Indians. and earl)' Sl.OOOon the creation of the stagecoach
French explorers in the Great Lakes several ycarsqo. After it was completed.
region found that the Indians used a friend suggested that John put a
popcorn in soup. popcorn popper m the coach and use at to
A brother of an Iroquois chief took a help sell the snack.
VEGETARIAN: TOBE OR NOT TOBE?
In shoppin1 for peaches, look for those that arc ripe
or nearly npc. Sians of ripeness is a background color
that is creamy yellow and a feel that is firm or ever so
slightly soft. A void peaches that are green or hard (they
are underripc) or soft and reddish-brown (ovempe).
Green hard peaches will not ripen while standing and
reddish-brown sof\ peaches, unless used quickly, can
deteriora&e.ovemifht. ., Alft ~II.A. of .. u.. tllCtOf'I.
Ptachn for pie can be 1H1htly firmer than those n a' ,..._ Meny P90I* ctll themMtvea 'Yegeterlana;
eatcnoutofhandorforicecream. Aa • reeutt of 8" thoee health._. about IOfMMtlllhendchk:teenbutnomeat,otheraonly
CE CREAM fMlll. ... ,you bMf'I toying wtlh ...... Of P'9 mill llfd eoga; but the pure vegetarlen, or YegM.
PEACH I ~--. llf at .... 1-*'Q men In 1hat .... no .... prodUcta.
•
1P sagar dlt'9cl0n? • A ,~ dtet cen IOfW many probleml In
: :':,'.".:::-'con 1tarclt lbere.,.edvM\llCfelW)Q.llmOWwMt,OU.,. the~ diet. It II uwaMy kMer 1ft calOrlea.
~ ct1p t11llt con synp doing. ,..... _... lhow ~ ~ ~1111 .... •turated lat, prc>ttiln, IOdlum
i ea•. 1U11tt11 beatea Act49n-. who do not Mt anlmlll foodl uc.pt tot hormoMe and pe9tk:idel from mMt ..... nltrtt.
i ct1p1 ftHly CHpped pHle4 peaclte1 dlllry ptOductl Ind .... MW a..,_ lftddeflce of from and rMat, #Ki containt more dte\ary f ber. It
1 ct1p lteavJ cream fatll __. dl11111, ~ lliMt ott•~..-twe .._..,_,food costaand mllk• me.I ~rat on
1 table1peo11 Jtm• J1lce dl11•11 thM doel the gener• popU1811on. We cl•• Md Mnpilt In generll. -~1 tn.,..•Dtll•-. doft•tllMWttownwchoftblalMue:toehelt.tollll.clM. nutnttonal • 1Jt!JY ot a tanan diet
In 2-quart u pan t1r to ether uaar and com Olf'taln Mpeetl of It, or tMlr ebltlneooe from depend• on hOw many foods re lwitffaia. A
(Pleue'" D&88&RT8/C3) lmOklng Md .tcohot, or, proMbfy, • comt>lnltton facto anan d* u t on m I PfOdUC •
t . '
-
• ...
•
"
Fish for c~mpliments
fh 'e l c.1' (.l( Cl() '{n r 0 I IS
" 1 first 10 cJ CJ•rl rr r 11.:.'Cl n 1111~
t('lc.i S1ates n SOrT µ ?O years
5 Pe r> are co s 0 1 'he rea rn wn Ch
as ega ·ender w be h1qh y pr1zeo
by otlectors
6 Tre coins are works of art The 1983
silver dollar coin was designed by Ehz
abeth Jones chief engraver at the
Mint The front of the com shows a dramatic
depiction of the classic Greek discus throw
er The 1984 silver dollAr coin was designed
by Rober' Graham a Los Angeies sculf)tor
The Iron: of the coin bears a representat bn 01
t e Gateway to the Olvmn c Col seum The
•
Citrus juice adds
zest; poaching
retains moisture
Ho\\ever it's prepared. fish
should appeal to the whole family.
lt is already a favorite of the health
conscious set and those who seek
whole ome, satisfying food with
few calories.
And b)' using citrus juice. lt can
be presented in wa>s that please
even very young children who can
benefit from less meat and less fat in
.-their tCl.
Poaching is probably the finest
cooking mcthOd for rctaininJ the
aroma and fla vor of fish . liquid,
keeps the meat moist and succulent
and, once poached, the fish can be
served with a sauce or cooled and
mixed 10 a salad.
In Fish Fillets a la Grapefruit,
tender fillets are ,ently poached 10 a
broth of zesty grapefruit Juice along
with mushrooms, onions and
bright green parsley. Topped wtth a
tempting sauce made from the
broth, the fillets are garnished with
piquant grapefrull sections.
To make this dish a meal, serve it
with a salad topped with calorie-
conscious Green Goddess Dress..
ing. Combine cottage cheese and
grapefruit juice, perked with prlic,
parsley and hot pepper sauce for
nutrittous and delicious eating.
Then think smooth, sweet and
cool for the dessert and dip into the
freezer container for Grapefruit
Sorbet, a treat that relies on natural
grapefruit juice for a delectable
flavorful and refreshing dessert.
\
The b' secret in m king meat
that are nuuri hing and h lthful
that the fl m1ty will weloome is to
make h in redient count -in
robust fl vor and zestful taste that
tisfics the taitebuda completely.
FISH FILLETS A LA
GRAPEFRUIT
t tabletpooat batter or marpr·
lDe, divided 'I• cup cbopped onion
1 poand leu whJte flab f llleta•
1.4 '"°and allced f reab maab·
rooms, or 1 cu ( • oa.ncea) 1Uced
·11la1broom1,draille4
.,, tea1poon 1alt
~ teaspoon -pepper
1 cop grapef n.lt JG.Ice
'.iC cap cbopped panley
1 tabletpoon noar
1 clalckea boaWon cabe
Florid• arapef ruJt •~tlODI
In large skillet, melt l tablespoon
batter, add onion, cook untit ten-
der. Place fillets over onion,
sprinkle with mushrooms, salt and
peP.per. Add &rapefruit juice to
slullet, bring to boiling. Reduccs
heat~ cover, simmer 10 minutes.
Add parsley, cook 5 minutes longer.
Remove fish to heated servina
platter. reserve 11;, cups cookiDJ
liquid in skillet.
In small saucepan melt remain-
ing I tablespoon butter; stir in flour
and cook until bubbly. Add re-
served cooking liquid and bouillon
cube; stir until mixture thickens
and boils and bouillon cube is
dissolved. Pour sauce over fish and
garnish with· grapefruit section~
Yield; 4 setnngs; about 210 calories
per serving.
•use flounder, haddock, sole or
other Jean fish.
v -
--------------· I 75c IWl~UMn COUPC* Offtfl W'lflu nrrauDI • .. I
NOT 0000 OH 2-0Z. SIZE
, . 'i~ I Hurry and Save 75c on Instant or I
....... .i-:. · ~ ~~·~. · I Freeze· Dried Sanko: I
,,. •• ' 5(;018505 ._.,. ...... _ · 1 0 , ''"'"""" .... ..:::t:."" .... II=-=....... •. I
" .. ,...., I:'( .. .......,,.'°""'"' .. _ ..... 15 =::r~--~,:u,,.::.was I ··-·-·· I •·· _ .................... ~-Gf(....... I _., __ ...,_., .......... .__.,""""' l""'il'll<cyC I""_...,.....,.,,...._ va.llOf"YI .,---
..CofOU"J "'"'°'-., GK Call ..... 1/20' IAd ID
I Gr1e<a1r..CorD0<1110'1'°°loo IQ3 ~11.IOll02
43000 s2215 GENEw.FOOoac~.-c>MrtOM 75c I --------------1 -MAlL·•N CEl?flflCATE I
I ~!)=kO~c~~~~~~~*So~:~nt~ I
I Sor.lea" When vou send 1n It.& comf:)lefed cert1hcote 010nQ with two(2)So~ l~t Of Freel9-0fted I p<oofs of ourchOse • ov Octo~ 11, 1tU .
Mo• to Coupon Refund Offer Geneiot Rxxn CorPOfOllOO. PO Box 3751 l<onkokee. IL 60902
I ::.. I I City State lip I 9~ .:w~
H lets you
be your best. I PleoM allow~,_,'°' P'OC.u.nQ Of'-'"°'°~ PIQhO'eo 1o..eo or ,..trected by lCrw Ce!lofeo!9 must oc:c~ I ~t <>n. leluncl per 19QU9Sf ~ orty It\ US A. llu9!1o lllco and US Gov I nlOlotooni .• ,.... .. ~ .... .._ .... .._ ........... ,. ................. ~c.-.. ..,._... OotM9f ll, ..... --------------
9 These magnificent coins are · proof"
quahty, the highest grade of coin
Specially prepared dies and plan·
./ chats used in hrgh·pressure multiple striking
7 ' produce a brilliant. mrrror·hke field with con·
~ trasting satin rehef 1n bold. sharp detail The ~~=;;;~~~:?~ result· a gem·like corn of extraordinary beauty
1984 gold 1en dollar coin was designed by
John Mercant1 a member of the US Mint
engraving statf developed from a concept
created by James Peed an artist at the Mint
The coin captures the penetrating scene
of the Olympic Torch bearers in delicate.
sharp detail
7 The 1984 Olympic commemorative
coins are handsomely packaged and
protected There could be no greater
thoughtfulness for special gifts than an Olym·
pie commemorative coin . They are a
memento of a great event and will become a
p0SS0ss1on of last ng value Most importantly,
they may serve as an tnsp1rat1on not every·
one can be an Olympic champion, but with
sutt1c1ent opponunit1es we can all achieve
our personal goals .
8 The cost is minimal For only $32 you
can buy a U S proof commemorative
srlv r coin that will help our U S Olym·
pie team compete in the Games
10 All sales will include an Olympic con·
tnbut1on of $50 tor each gold coin
and $1 0 for each silver coin sold _ 11 Each set includes an ott1c1al message
of vahdat1on signed by the Director
of the Mint describing all you might wish
to know about your prized acqu1s1tion
12 It is easy to buy the coins Wt°'rle you
are thinking about the Olympics. -
and how you are helping those
young gifted athletes by gMng the coins to
others-REWARD YOURSELF. with a set of
yeur own-you deserve 1t'
Coins can be purchased through your
roe al post off ice and at part1c1pat1ng banks
and coin dealers across the country Or. write
to US Mint, Olympic Corn Program. P.O
Box 6766. San Francisco CA 94101
' SUPPORT THE HOME TEAM. ~ • '""-" ~C>Ol'IMO~
-~·
GREEN OODD DR n
~ cup cotta1 cll s 1ablespoo111 snpefntt J•l
1 clove aarllc. crubed
I tablespoons cbopped par1J
'.4 te111M>9D salt ~ IHlpooD liquid bot pef
uace
Jn container of electric ble1
combine all inaredienta. Cc
process at hi&h speed until 1mo
Servt over oran1e and cucun
slices. Yield: >f> cup dreasing; a1
14 caloric per tablespoon.
GRAPEF.RUIT SORBET
J cap 111ar
I envelopes aaOavored 11Ja1
I cap1 srapef nalt Jalce1 dJvh
Jn a large bowl combine s1
and gelatin. Heat 2 cups srai>d
juice to boihn~ Add to 1cl
mixture and star until gelatit
completely dissolved. Stir in
maining 4 cups Juice. Cool. F
into tee cube trays or a 9 x 13-i
metal pan. Cover. Freeze. When almost frozen, gcrape
a lar:ge, chilled, mixin& bowl; 1
until smooth but still frozen.
turn mi.>.ture to pan; cover, fn
until almost frozen. Beat a1
Spoon into ~n, cover and fn
until firm. Yield: 8 to 10 scrvi~
Reduced-calori1
reclpes wanted
Diet-concious cooks are invi
to enter low-calorie-, nutritic
recipes and help fund the Child re
Hospitals of Orange and Los i
geles counties while doing so. 1
entire entry fee will go to the facil:
Sponsored by the Diet Cem
the contest is designed to ma
dieting more interestini.
Categories include he
d'oeuvres and dips, salads a
dressings, main course entrecs/o
pot dishes, and desserts, with pri
to be awarded in each. Pri
10clude a microwave oven, a res
sports vacation for two and &•
card health club memberships.
Rules and entry forms are ava
able at any Diet Center. En
deadline is Sept. 30.
HAMBURGERS NEVER
... tasted so good ..........
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Try ralsln 'cheeSecake_fla
Incll'ridaal. llal8ln Cbee.ecake Tan.
Melons overflow
produce displays
In the midst of a long, hot use it for a centerpiece, for it will
You'd lake to 1trvc methina
scrumpuous. • .hke nch creamy
cheesecake. But you don't want to
deal wtth the me55: lhe pnnapan to
make it. the Stiver nd dishe5 to
serve it. This Is e pecially true when y9u'!'C pla ning a tailgate feast or
p1cn1e fare.
A healthy revision to the
cheesecake tradition easily solves
the dilemma. Raisin Chccsccake
Tans are individual servings of
raisin studded cheesecake. En~d
m a liaht pastry cru t. Uus rectpc
boast the tana orCahfomaa orange
and le upr than a tandara
chcesteakc rcope.
RAISIN CHEESECAKE 1' ARTS
Pu&ry for !-a.ta t·ladl ple
l pacu1e (I ouct1) cru.m
dlttte, 1of&eaed
~np1,ar
1A "'' 1Utr or maraanae, IOfteaed
1ea
su~m~r. many varieties of fresh never ripen in your home. They arc ~
fruit vie for the produce shopper's a fair source of Vitamm C and are ~ f') .. HONEYBJ\KED attention. Soft fruits, including low in calories. a
Roll out pastl') about inch
thick on floured surface Cut 12 4'h-
mch round • reroll1~ scraJ)6
needed; fit into 12 .. u..ch muffin
tm cups. Pnck generously wuh a
fork.Bake m 40Cktegrec oven about
IS minutes, Ul)til goJden. Cool.
In larte bo combine •• supr. butau ta JUllCC.
salt! beat wnh dec:tric
blc d 1horoUlhJy Mlx i9 fmllilllliiM. ~n into~ pmCry
d1vid1111 equally. ·aue 1ia J 1-
dqrec ovm aboUt 20 miaUW-1
fi Iii na is JUlt aet. Cool
Brush with PIC'ltlVel. Tana_.
be covered aod ~ Ill" veral days. For ptaUC9 and OU$-1nas wrap tartJand ~in·~
or insulated container. Mau. I
dozen tarts.
ws· u IQUU:Y DlUCIOUS
And so easy to sene Because it comes
full-c d and prral--heed. So pany-
llm dmner-time or anyume that onrr
the be$t "ill do. mike it Honcy8aked
br nd ham. And.>ou·,e got it made.
ITS ONE GU.AT HAM
• Smoked Baked for JO Hours
• Hone) cl Spice Glazed
• ~pir1l· Sliced for Servin& Ease •
•Whole HalfHam •·Nat~ideShipp1q
• G1f1 Cen1ficate •Piny Trays
ANAHllM· The VlllAp CCl'llcf.1222 S
Brookhlml (ll Ball M) • <11~·2461 CoaoM DU MAI· 3700 £. ff")
(714) 67) 9000 •
ll T090· lcD Tower Plan Noni.. 24601
bymand W11Y • 2 (II El TC!fO ltd.) • ,( 71 •) IJ'7·lm HUNnNGTON llACJl~9069 ae.a. lhcl.(•
Glt'ftdd nns eoAalph&) • (71~!4:;1S75
OIANU • 14 It N Tliutil (II )
• (7141991"960
ONE TASTE IS ALL rr TAiCESI
-----Cot»i!richc Ci 19'4 lioM3' ~ Ham. I.e. gra~. peaches. plums, ncelariocs, The casaba is a winter-variety
chemcs and strawberries flood the melon with a &lobular shape, point-
markets at very reasonable prices. cd at the stem end. The nnd is 1===:;::===;:::=:;::==============:;::=================~===~='.:ii:. Tropical items that liven up the chartreuse-yellow with rigid fur-
d~partment include bananas, rowed rind and no nettina. Flesh is
pmeapples, papayas and mangoes. creamy white and juicy. It averages
Your summer fruit selection has between four to seven pounds.
never been. bet~, and there arc One of the finest eatinJ melons ii
many barpin pnces to be had. the crenshaw, a hybnd variety.
However, if you ask most shop-Large in size, from five to seven
pen which fruit is the ultimate pounds, the CTCnshaw is round at
summer treat, you might find that the base and comes to a point at the
melons top the list. It's their many stem end. The rind is gold and
vlJ'.ieties that truly satisfy summer green, sliahtly ribbed and without
fri.ut lovers. They arc low m calories netting. The meat is a bright salmon
for weight watchers, and high in color, thick, juicy and very good
various nutrients and vitamins for when ripe.
the health conscious. The Santa aaus or Christmas
As melon displays vinually over-melon looks like a small water-
(low consumers could become melon but has flesh like a honey-confused as to which melon to buy. dew. The Persian melon looks like a
There are some new varieties large flattened cantaloupe but has
avail~ble, as well as some old yellow skin and_ ne~tinJ and pink
favontcs. · meat. Average stze ts sax to seven
Cantaloupes have become one of pounds. Fragrance is usually the
the nation's top varieties. Featuring best indicator of ripeness.
a netted texture and a slightly Canary melons are bright yellow
&olden or light greenish-aray back-in color. They feat)lrc a smooth rind
ground color. When cut open they that should be firm , but not hard.
reveal a bright orange colored flesh Their light color flesli has a delicate,
that is appcalina in fruit salads or sweet ffavor that should be a real
alonpide a breakfast menu. people pleaser.
Nutritionally, cantaloupes arc last, but certainly not least is that
--n:al-winncrs. Theyprovide-only 20 eve1-popularp_icnlchem, ffiewater-
calories per 3'12 ounces of edible melon. With Aorida leading in U.S.
portion, or 68 calorics per pound of production, good amounts of
edible Portion, a dieter's delight watermelon are harvested in Texas,
Good amounts of calcium, pho,. Alabama. California, Georgia, .Jn.
porous, iron, potassium, maa-diana and South Carolina.
ncsium and Vitamins A and C are Watermelon features lots of Vit-
also found in th'em. amin A, and an average size wedge
It's hard to judge a ripe can-contains 11 S calories.
taloupe. They must be harvested The essential factors of water-
ripe, for they will not pin sweetncss melon quality arc maturity and
after beina picked. No trace of stem size. The larger melons have more
should remain attached to the edible flesh. proportionately, than
melon, but don'ttry to feel for a soft the 'Smaller ones. If you are a
stem end. After several curious watermelon "thumper," forget it.
customers have Poked their fingers Thumpin1 will get you nowhere.
in the stem end. it will become soft Color ts the best key to ripeness in
rcprdless of ripene5s. You should watermelons. A yellowish under-
let the cantaloupe "rest" for a sidc,regardlcssofrichJtCCncolorof
couple of days at room tempc:rature the rest of the melon, as a 1ood sign
to muimize softness and Juiciness of ripeness. Surface should appear
of the flesh. Sweetness will not dull, rather than shiny and shape increase. should be symmetrical.
Another popular melon is the Cut watermelons should display
honeydew, which changes color as good, crisp, red flesh. They should
it matures. Rind is creamy yellow not be mealy or water-soaked.
when at the peak of flavor and A void "white heart" in water-
sweetncss. Flesh is a delicate green melons, a hard, white streak run-
and very juicy. Large size (5 to 7 ning lcngthwise through the melon.
pounds) honeydews arc better in In fully mature watermelons seeds
flavor than smaller ones. arc usually brown or black.
· .. Best indications of ripeness arc a Most retailers charge slightly
pleasing aroma and a sli&hty oily more for cut watermelons, but it is
feel to the rind. Completely avoid worth it. ln this way. you can see the
honeydews with arcenish-white ex-maturity of the melon, the only sure.
teriors, unless you arc plannina to wayofselcctin&agood watermelon.
DESSE RTS PEACHY •••
/
From Cl
starch. Gradually stir in milk and
com syrup until smooth. Stirring
constantly, brina to boil over me-
dium beat and boil I minute. Stir
about 1 cup of the hot com starch
mixture into the beaten egg until
blended, then add eaa mixture to
the hot mixture in the saucepan.
Pour into large bowl. Cover
surface with waxed paper or plastic
wrap. Refrigerate I to 2 hours or
until chilled. Stir in peachc . cream,
lemon juice and vanilla. Freeze in
2-.quan electnc or hand crank
f'reCzer follo'Ain& manufacturer's
du~t1ons. Makes 2 quarts.
To make in l..quan freezer, use 6
tabl poons 1uaar and 3 iable·
poons com s)'rup, halve all other
inaredient .
PEACH LATTICE Pl
l reclpe dotble era I paatry
~ c1p1qar
l &abh pooll COl'll l&artla
.,_ t ...... ~ ..
5.. Clpt ~lfd plUH 1U
peacMI (AMII tt
J '4!Hpooa lemH J1Jce 1=-~--'·~ .... ~~••--••14••• con ell marprJJa! Unc 9·1nch pie plate with one-
hall pastry rolled to 'A-inch thick-
ness, allowing I-incl\ overhana; In
larac bowl sur together suaar. com
starch and salt. Toss with ~ch
slices and lemon juice until· well
coated. Tum into pie plate. Dot
with marprine.
Roll rcmainin& pastry into 12-
inch circle. Cut into 10 1/J-inch strips
with pastry wheel or knife. Place 5
of the stnp' over fillin~ Weave
lattice crust with rcmainin& strips
by foldin& back alternate trips a
each cross strip is added. Fold
trimmed cdgt of lower cru t over
ends of strips; seal and nute.
Bake in •25~ oven .0 lo SO
minutes or unul bubbly and cru t is
brown. Makes I -inch pie.
Fresh, meaty turk~ parts.
.l~
TURKft
EST..
CHICKEN=
Fresh poultry tastes better
than frozen poultry This
simple fact makes Foster
Farms, Fresh Chicken
the most popular
fresh chicken 1n
the West.
We don't treat our
turkey any d iffer-
ently We don't use
hormones . We don't
use preservatives. We ship
them fresh from our farms
every day.
All of which makes them ·
plump, meaty, and delicious.
Chicken or turkey, both
fresh from Foster Farms.
Try our fresh turkey, available
1n your favorite pieces, right
next to our fresh chicken.
..
5005 40
I'
...
0 ' ' { ' 4 I (. G ... cw $( q 0 $ 2 2 2 id I as 3
Renowned chefs s h owcas
calorie-trimmed r e cip es·
Tender Zucchini
• ITALIAN SQUASH ..................... LB •• 39
The hcf • how • a pccial n ve from 75 to 43S tori per
group of lorie·reduocd recipei. ervmg an comtJ n on to tra-c~ated b) chcfl from 12 famous dnional ve ions of the me di •
re taurant • was formally prestnted he .
at a prcmil'r howina at the New Th howca recipe , ere tcd
York Restaurant School. exclu ivcly for wect "N Low,
Spccialtic ranged from a savory reflect the growing tr nd of wh_ite
Osso Buco from New York's 21 tablecloth restaurants to emphasize
Club and a Strawberry Sorbet from healthful and nutritious menus in
Cafe Moustache in Hou,.tOn to a re ponsc to consumers' requests for
creamy Irish Coffee Mousse from foods low in caloric , fat. sodium
Carnegie's in Alexandria. VA, and cholesterol.
across the Potomac River from the At the New York howing. one of
nation's capital~------..-· the most colorful, yet healthful
By usina these chefs' recipes, you desserts wa a s~tacular Sabayon
LARGE
PEACHES
FRISH, SWln CALl•-IA
c
L&
~~ . ~~ ... ZIALAllD KIWI .... T ............................................... 3 FOtt I PICKLING CUCUMBERS ......... LB .39 •I I
ICOllALA·:
KIM CHll
12·0IJNCE I 59 80'ilU e
MITAKI MUelCllA
U!llJl'Y nA
10.58-0UNCE 69 PACK.AGE e
Gollo. S.OZ.
• PEPPERONI STIX ........... l.a9
Pkmo. 2·Lb. Pkg.
1-lh. Pkg .. Reg. or Chefte
HORMEL WRANGLERS . 2.a9
16-0z .• Hot Of" Miid
ANAHIJM
COHVINTION tlNna
wtD. ""'· J THIU
LOS ANOILU
SflCNITS AllNA
THUllL SIPT. 13
THttU
JFC Tomoshlrogo. 16-0z. Pkg. DynQ$f}' Siie.ci. 8-0z.
SOMEN·NOODLES ............ A9 BAMBOO SHOOTS ........ A9
,JFC. 1.•·0z. 8ox Kikllomon M.nml, 10-0z. ltl.
LON ~T RICOTTA ......... l .M lA MEXICANA SALSA . 1.a9 TUES., SEPT. 11 SUN. SEl'f. U GINSE'4G TEA ............... a.19 SOUP BASE ................. M
WILSON
SLICID llACON
p~~!cE aA. I. 5 9
BONILISS
CLOD ROAST
C~j~K L& 1.89
CHUCK
STEAK
BLADI CUT BDf, LIMIT 4
COUNIRY PRIDI
FRYIRDRUMS
FAMILY PACK
GRADE A" 89 SOUTHERN CHICKEN &a. •
FUEa THIGHS .... U. .M
BOlllLISS
fAMILY STIAKS
c::~ UL 1.99
Pork Sousoge 12-0z Pkg Pon Reody. Frozen Smoked, 8Hf °' Poliah
HORMEL MIDGET LINKS. EA 1.39 IDAHO RAINBOW TllOUT ....................................................... LB .98 HILLSHIRE SAUSAGE ............. LB 2.29
SCOTT IOWIU
JUMIO
ROLL
ASSORTED
LIMfT 2 .57
GLOBE A-I -,.~..,~,, ~\SPAGHEnl ID 16-0Z. PACKAGI
llAGU
SAUCI
TRA~IT~AL I 69 ~ GAROEN STYLE •
c
llAZOLA
COllll OIL
~fe IA9
24 Ot White 0< Wheot Round Top or Sandwich 11.0z log Pototo 12-0z Cons. Alstd & Mounto•n Dew 6.S.OZ .• Assort.cl '1A>r1ettes
HUGHES PREMIUM BREAD .59 LAYS OR RUFFLES CHIPS ...... 1.79 6-PACK PEPSI COLA .................. 1.69 FRISKIES CAT FOOD ............. 1 .ot •1
RIUNlft •IAllCO
O•UM .. USCO
750 Ml . 86 Proof
HITER 5 99 BOTTLE •
BOMBAY GIN. ... . .. ..... 8 .99
750-MI . JOH
CUERVO TEQUILA GOLD ...... 1 .99
l.'11..uTD ,... ..... . ........
STRAIGHT 8 99 WHISKEY e
GILLlnl'S MISS AMERICA SWEEPSTAKES Dl1'AILS AT HUGHES
Sll.IClllllCI MAM•OO .. co1 .. no•••
• IS·OZ. 2 29 ~RIUIES •
I Or. Moi•h.irt&lng IQdy Shampoo
BARE ELEGANCE .. .......... ..2.19
l.S-Ot. ~.orted
DRY IDEA ROLL-ON DEODORANT-...
............ n
DICTIOllAllY ~"1 ~~~2 69 ••• ~· ... 2 -• • ;IJlf -...
•·Ot it.g or G.ntle'"1 '''"""
AAPRI FACIAL SCRUB ................ 1.11
............... 1.79
--
I DOWNYl'LAKI
"'. IUMllO WAl'l'US
EC~:P~K I 09 IUTTERMILK •
6-0z ., AllOl'Md
JENO'S PIZZA ROLLS .............. I. la
8-0z . loYcwiort Cream '"Ht «
RICH'S CHOC. ECLAIRS ........... 1.29
10 10 to 10 IS Oz Alt0rted
TOTINO'S PARTY PIZZA .......... 1.29
'-t R1 fl, """'° 9 Inch
DEEP DISH PIE SHELLS ........... l.M
LO .. Y._ TOTAi. .... .au
•• ....,. ... ,1111 .._ ~ .......... .... _..,,......, .. -... . ..... -......... -. .._-
' Co.IPOft <~-w+tim •01Hd 1M vOtv9 Of ~ii..,. purthelfocl not ea~ed
, .. P'I .. ~· not ~· :J ~" "'°"'°' and" .., ,.,..~
llClf ecc..,,... 4 o.,t, ""'°""'«""* 1 fil 11 00 OI i.tt <Of' ~ !.biblf!d S ... liru
1;on .. If-• °" mon..fonllf .. 1 COllPO" ,,. tfd bt-!Ow • V•lw oi rt.. ,,_ °" ,.
r•toit.r • ~ •1 .. miNd I• -_...., ptlt• :7 rf ... do "Of 1~ lh4' 119m NNKd'-d -·---:,":"':.:::~ .. ~.!'.: ::::-, -en'-' ler1 ~ -•114 lulK !lite 9" Item fl ~.oi-¥ofve t liQUOi UI _ .. ___ ,,,,. -... .,.., a ~ -1\lde4 t &utli«• 1e 1Jm11t ~on .-'ti mupen IO Offw 9004
Aue 2:1 llwv Allt " ,... " ,,... fl/I Vflllfft!W DoVele ~ OIMt-. "°' 0((...., .. .,-•umnN•c••• .. ., ... ,l_ .. .,.. ·-···
l
aux Fruits Fra1 from Mn Mai oi
Lo Angeles.
Jt1 atriumphantcombin ti
fre h frui&s -ra pbcrric • 111
berrief, kiwifruit and oran
bathed in a ilky raspberry sac
capped with a aoldcn saba]
aoccntcd with orange liqueur.
Created as a calone-trimo
dessert for health-conscious Am
cans. it is the inspiration of
Maison Exccu1ivc Chef Joel Go
de Bourgonnicr.
SABAVON :AUX"FRUITS FRA
. (Ma Mabon, Los Aa1ele1)
111to1t ouce packa&• fro
aHweeteaed ra1p•errl
daawe4•
7 packet•(! 1/• teas~>Jl"
lated sugar 1ab1dtate, dlVld
~ cap evaporated lklma
milk
4euyolkt
4 tablespooa1 sa1ar, divided
Ya cap oraaae llq1ear
! tea1poo111 lemoa jalce
1" piDt f retb rA•pbei'rlea Ille•
! caps quartered f resb 1tra
berries
4 fdwlf ralt, peeled and sliced
! meclJum oraage1, peeled •
sectioned
In blender, puree raspberries a
.4 ~ckets sugar substitute. Stra
chill. In shallow pan, fm
evaporated skimmed milk JS to
minutes or until ice crystals fom
Meanwhile in double boiler 0 1
simmering water, combine t
· yolks, 3 packets sugar substitute
tablespoons sugar and ora1
liqueur, beat and beat ur
thickened; cool.
Preheat broiler. With chill
bowl and beaters, beat skimm
milk until stiff, addina lemon ju
and 2 tablespoons sugar. Fold it cu yolk mixture. Pour: ir
flameproof 8-inch square pi
Plaoc 4 inches beneath broiler f 5
30 seconds or untiJ·golden browt
Layer 6 chilled dessert dist
with rasp~rrics and fresh fn
Top each with raspberry uuce a
sabayon. Makes 6 servings. },
pro XI mate calorics per serving: 2:
·•A 10-ounce package fro24
sweetened raspberries and 1 pacl
sugar substitute may be used 1
stead of the unsweetened raspb
rics and 4 packets of sua
substitute.
CHOCOLATE DELIGHT
(Jean-Pierre Rettaaraat Franca
WH bl.naton, D.C.)
S tableapoou unreeteD
cocoa
1 teaspoon lllltaat coffee powd
l eavelope aaflavored 1elad.D
• pec:teta (1 1.4 -·~> lfU lated Hgar t a.bttihlte
¥1 cup Hlar
. !eggyolkl
1 1" caps skimmed mUk
! tablespoons ram
% table1poom maraarlne
tegg whlae,
Orange sectloa1
In saucepan. mix cocoa. coffi
gelatin, sugar substitute and suga
In bow~ beat cg yolks, milk a1
rum; sttr into dry mixture. C0t
and stir until shghtly thickenc
remove from heat. Sur in ma111
inc; cool about 20 minutes.
In another bowl, beat cg whit
until stiff. Fold into chocola
mixture. Pour into scrvina dishes
in a 4-cup mold; chill about 4 hoti
or until firm. To unmold, run kn1
around edge and shake genti
Unmoldontoservingdish. Garni
with orange sections. Makes 6 1
cup servings. Calories per scrvir
About 155.
To receive a collection ofcalor.
reduced recipes, along with "
money-saving coupons for t
. purchase of Sweet 'N Low, send .
to Chefs' Showcase, 60 Rusbi
A ve:.t Dept CM, Brooklyn, 1'
I /2u5.
Callfornla
res'taurant
featured
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Sail through summer
wit~ refreshing salads.
ii lhrough ummer wnh cool, • tea poon I mon J c
rcfrc hing ;Tnd • Chicken l d rn z table1poo 1 vinegar
om to 'Bo t and Whitecap I tablespoon yellow 1ta~
Melon Boat mnke it 'i· Prepare 1 tea pooa eaeb salt ud 1upr
them ahead .and avoid any rough % teaapooa basil leaves
seas at mealumc. •;, te11poon~per
Chicken Salad in Tomato Boats Ya cap chop onion
tastes as tempting as it looks. Your 1clove1arl c, mlaced
family or Juests will delight in these 8 lemon wedaea
rosy, red tomatoes stuffed with lf pitted black ollvet
chicktn, cheese and chop~ veg-Cook bacon un\il cri ip, ving 2
etablcs.Ali&ht dressing. p1ced with tablespoon$ drippings. Cut Vi-inch
basil, onion, garlic and sunny lice off top of each tomato.
yellow mustard, livens \he pace. Remove core and chop enough
You can make the boats ahead slices to make 1 cup. Hollow out
and assemble just before serving. tomatoes, leaving Y•-inch hell .
Simply sprinkle with crumbled Reserve pulp for Gaipacho (recipe
bacon and fly tht' sails of lemon follows). Sprinkle shells with salt;
wedges and black olives. Serve for chill. Combine chicken, choppicd
Jundt or dinner with rolls, relish tomatoes, mushrooms, cheese and
tray, herbct and cookiei for des-green pepper; chill.
sert. . In a small saucepan whisk Whlt~p Melon Boa~ tran~-together oil, egg, lemon juice,
fonn as1mplecold supperrntoa fair .. vinegar, mustard, salt,.sugar. basil,
wea\her ~vent. Prepare the night pepper and reserved bacon drip-
bcfore or m \be evly part of the day. piDgl!. Add onion and garlic. Bring
Garnish each quarter melon with to a ooil, slirring constantly. Cook l
sail of cantaloupe balls and serve minute. Remove from heal~ cool.
with cold ham, croissants and Pour over salad; mix. Sp<?On into
frosted layer cake. tomato sheUs. Sprinkle wtth bacon
Note: Pulp removed from pieces. Alternate each lemon wedge
tomato boats can be used to make with 2 olives on 8 food picks. Insert
Easy Day Gazpacho. Serve with in .. boats." 8 servings.
nd Chill until gelatin is thickened
10 the consistency or unbeaten
whue. Whip gelatin into cream
cheese mix\ure.
Set aside 16 to 24 melon ball ;
fold remainder of melon ball into
gelattn mixture. Spoon into can·
taloupe 1hell$. Chill until set, about
4 houB or overnight. Cut each
cantaloupe shell in half. Garnish
each with-two or thr« melon ball5
on a wooden pick. 8 scrvmgs.
EASY DAY GAZPACHO
114 etp ~ft bread cnmbs
l tablespooa red wlne vhaepr
Garlic pewder
1 tabletpooa olive oU
I~ caps tomato, peeled, seeded
and flaely noppecl
~ cap cacanlber, peeled, 1eedtd
and finely daop~
¥.cap sreen pepper, seeded ud
fmely cllo~
"11 cap water
1 tablespoon Worceatenhlre
~ teas~ parsley flakes
Ya teaspoon salt
'4 teaspooa grood oregano
'4 teaspooa b11U leaves
Combine bread crumbs, vinegar,
garlic powder and oil in small bowl
. and mix vigorously with a fork,
sandwich, dessert and cold
beverage for another meal. -fonnfog a smooth paste; set aside.
WHITECAP MELON BOATS Blend or process l 'h cups of
! medium-size cantaloapea chopped tomatoes until smooth.
CHICKEN SALAD IN TOMATO
BOATS
l package (I once) cream Combine with remaining ingre-
cbeeae, softeaed dicnts in a large bowl; blend in
~ cap dairy soar cream bread mixture. Cover and chill until
"
0ranoecoa.tDAILYPILOT~ ~22 1984
3 1Uce1 baeon, cat btto Ya-lncla
pieces
8 lar1e tomatoes
Salt
l tablespooa DIJoa mutarcl serving time. 4 servings.
I package (3 oaace) lemoa :=:=:==:::::=:::::;=::=~;;;jjji;~;;i;;;;;;;;;~;;~;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ flavored gelatla
! tar1e wbole cbfoken breasts,
cooked aDd Cllt Into Ya-lncb
cabes (31.4 capt)
~ cap 11lced f resb m111broom1
1 cap 1bredded Cheddar cbeese
~ cap cbopped sreen pepper
Dres1lag:
~cap oil
leg
1 cap bolling water
6 lcecabes
8 woodea pleb ( 4-lncb)
1tewen
Cut cantaloupe in half, discard-
ing seeds. Hollow out with melon
ball cutter; draan. Beat together
cream cheese, sour cream and
mustard. Di'50lve gelatin in boiling
water. Stir in ice cubes until melted
ViIJ.aiftrette varied
with fruity flavor
Vinegar is widely accep!ed ~s a
kitchen workhorse, used m ptck-
lina. preserving and tenderizing. _It
is also one of the inaredtents m
another popular kitcfien class1~.
vinaigrette salad drcss1f}g. . Van-
ations on vinegar and vmatgrette
have proven to be the difference
between adequate dining and spec-
tacular cui inc.
The name .. vinegar .. comes from
the French tenn for sour wine. By
addina a French liqueur l<? vinegar,
Black Ra pberry Vinegar 1s created
and can be used in a score of
favorite di hes.
The mere addition of the liqueur
to white wine vinepr produces a
fruity overtone that is higl)ly sought
after in expensive storc·bought
concoctions. Y ct, Black Raspberry
Vinegar costs 75 percent less than
commercial brands.
And, as an extra bonus, it's made
with only two ingredients. If you
can measure, you can ma.kc this
delicate vinegar.
BLACK RASPBERRY
VINEGAR: In 2-cup &lass or plastic c~ntainer with ti~t·fitt!na Ii~ com-
bine l 'lz cups wnile wane vinegar
and 1h cup black raspberry liqueur
from France. Cover and tore at
room temperature. Makes l pint.
Note: To vary flavor. add 1 clove
garlic, peeled, l dried red chile
pepper (remove after 3 hours), 1h
teaspoon black peppercorns or l
strip orange peel (V2 x 3 inches) with
whtte portion removed.
This treat not too s-weet
A not too swttt offi rin
RONEY CAKE
i caps all·p1rpo e nov
I &ta · poo11 baklDI powd r
\t t upoo1 bald•& soda
\t tea1pooa 111l
YI & a1poo1 croud aatm I
• · tea pooa 1roand t'luamo
1 &eatpooa lfHDd clOY I
• tea1pooa 1ro nd 11a r
~cop ••1ar
cop ltonty
') cuP, n1etabl--=ol=l--=-~; c•P ur DI br wed coffee (1&
roem t mpera&ar )
..
1s•
...... ,. .•
Coastal Frozen Juice a.oz Can •Appta.12-oz Can Atpe And Ready To Ut
...... ... ..,,...
$ c AddToYour~.l'ISai.d ~1 69 3 ... I
!--~ -/11 l~~~
C .........
Honey~~ ·~Mell
.!2 ~2-
The~
Ploot '1~
99 £999 $ -
DOl•••••Csp•~
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l\U"·~ Ilea k .. c:ao:
:'f.•1"
• Yellow °"'ons "'29•
•Celery --•--39'
•Fresh S.s11,_, -a79•
•Gr Onions•·--,, ..
•Fresh Umes ·:;:..12 •• '1"
.. rtlell &
Pean
....
""• -OcM!r~ 29'
• Carrot ~ 2 :". •9'
CIO Rai$1ft6 • -·~ ~Q.
DO Red Rao Shes • _.... '1"
4S# '@ff+ ¥$ e ' 2 ' g 4 ; ' Pi ' p PU p 2 a 5 6 3 A
t
lll'IC ICU lolll« '91.-90"CUSS 429 1'tew York Steaks la
IAa[ ltl!'!C rr-aar S'f£W Oii J89
Boneless Chuck Roasts 1 a
II J98
]98
]98
~•f Kl"IC " r r •r G Rump or Round Roasts LD
~~· JOlllO-f'll..L• (1)()1(£1)
' ~ntu Cut Ham Slk:es ••
' ~ l(JT 8",Tro-~ ()II ntOI J 59
1 Boneless Turkey ,,
!/CM PtlG llU vlllltfT~-JI""'' O(Mt J69 Sausage Rolls [II
'" , ( '"'T(JI A[)...()lllC 09 -2 39 WU.on'• 8oneJels Ham ta
lA J49
SEAFOOD m
la 198
,. 2"
~ .99
7.99
6.99
2.00
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.JERSEYJIAJD
OLD FASHION
ICEmNll
IWl'OAUOrl
CTM
259
GROCERY
I~ 1)(.-.cr llOn 1'.-ICO' A"'ID
Kntft Salad Dressing
,, 1(Jflil("f AC':.,,
Mazola Com Oil
143
162
"~ 2az 411' llJ ... I C ~-, •f W A• :JW f
Crisco Shortening
' ...... t ,
Minute Rice
Deluxe Mac & Cheese
•nr~t ! •
Ralat.on Com Chex
Pl,.l~ M ,,RD('°"' ._,. I •
Wiid Bird Seed
~ OU"o r IA IA~•
Coast Bar Soap
• OU" l!OU.-4"°"'1
Splllmate Piper Towel m
1 19
120
J86
J 13
.53
. 69
rt
'""" t ""'" tllCXl "1f. La 10.l "'°"" J99 Mon~ Jack C"*-ta
lOl ~ M(J( "ICAl1AUOll'TIZ)1" Oscar ~er Sliced Meats
I OI .I """",.gc I 41 U91 119
Precious Mozzardla ~
l o.J"tl U.l'ltll'I •U> Oii WI 59
Vons Avocado Dips •
16UU"l(,t '"'-'K' o...u.
Ecktlch Beel Franks 169
t60l"<C ~ l.M VlG! 11\'U J 79 Hoff y Dinner Franks
' Oil'tCE. l'l'.UllGC Mll.D f\AVll vons SllCCd Swiss O*-M
II DAIRY
• • Kilud.Mn Y08urtt
J79
2 19
II
.49
IJIOtra~I 2" Ja te)mlkt Orange Jufce
""9iTNfOTCNt tHOM .... ......, ' .,,lfltU ..
WESSON
SALAD OIL
48-00NCE eonu:
SCHAEFER 279 BEER
12·PAO<. 12-0UNCE CANS
REO<Jl.AR OR LICHT
BWE BONNET 69 ~~.
'Sl10<S
GROCERY D
259 •cuaeomL Wesson Salad on
""°"'II 120Ul'UCAM-ASST ~ J 69 Hansen's Soda
6)0U"<l' "'AffillTED 85 S & W Artichoke Hearts e
XlCJIOCl. CMISTD 99 Plantets Cheese S.lls •
.. ()OlollC[ CA"'
Vons Tomato Juice
16()(JIQ JAJl-1(11C)tTS
Boysenberry Topping
FROZEN
H.A e...c.
'Vons CDb Com
.76
1 1s
J69
J 13
1"
11
J09
a:;~~ Fried Chicken 4 99
11()tKt (A .. -llfll{J All QI' -39 Yon• Lemonade •
e(ltr'C'.[ .._-«Ul(I'! U"
Microwave Pana
289
129
111\0-""C! nteX:QllOU 00:: 169 s.... Lee 8af\lf\a Caw
J19 '1~ TNesweet ~ Jul
269
DAIRY II
DltlQold Whipped &rtter J 15
MUNTINOTOM M ACH
.... Attem.
.99
COI TAMIU IAN <IUAN OA,llfUlfO t•I· '1 lfHilfMOt · AN t c .... ,,,. c..,,,,,_ • Def o
Make s o me sh
brc d. A nch, en pp tf) treat, th
aria.in of hortbrcad goc back
cen1urie berore the introduction of
chemical raising agen1S. American favorite Today, shonbre d i still one type of we t thnt re i t compcu-
uon from pack c miae nd the
mus production of mult1plc
bakeries.
A 19th century En lish writerand
clergyman. the Re • S)dne) Smith.
once cried, .. What would the 'AOrld
do without tea?"
Undoubtedly a valid question to
any Engli hman but to most Ameri·
cam, more important are the
bread?_t cakes and "~eeb" that
crompany an afternoon tea or
coffee br~k.
One old British favorite, popular
in this country as well, is short·
This Americanized vef'\ion fca·
tures rolled oats and almost every·
one's favorite fruit -fre$h, juicy
peaches from California. Spooned
over the top of the " hort" cookie
wedge , ripe C lifomia peaches
make a soft textural contrast to the
crisp bite of the shortbread. Far an
added trea , dollop with sweetened
WINNER
GRAND OPENING
PAl.M SPRINGS 2315 TAHQOltz.McCALWM WAY
CU>ROX
UQUJD
BLEACH
l»C:lU'U
:89
CHEER
DETERGENT J69
49·0UNCE BOX
UQUOR fJ
1 ?t-UIU ICll'1\.t.
Gordon's Gin
17) uru tomL
Bleck & White Scotch
9"
1299
t ) lTll '"'°4[. REI> ll06£, t«TY ~ ()It 2 4 9
Gallo Chablis Blanc
I 'J I It ac;J!"T\l 91 !J'I>
. _Seagntm's 7 Crown
I )~l ITU llOl'TU
Ancient Age Bourbon
299
1099
999
I lHU llOl'TU. IM"<F Oii 2" lfliltnOOt< Navalle Chablis
lmlTUaornl
c..nacslan Mlst
,
9"
3a9
'131 Q ;t•> •1• CA Ill
)'°'-'«>MO 99 White Rose Pbtatoes IM:I .
Dfl.JCJ'l1:°'l'\Jto'OllS 4 ~100 Large Eggplant
KA,....._..11 GllO*~ .
lA .69 Large Pllpeyu
WJ\Or~ 6 ~100 lMge Betl Ptppen
WJIO,~ 4 ~100 Cucumbers
O(IACN"O.F "llX U. A 3 ~100 Large Avocados
HCW"fOf:Yw ~u:itc. LA '!)
la .39 Crenshaw Melons
Ul'ID IO P'l:Jll I 00
LA .49 Italian Squash
2"
6 2 3 5
..
thread
whipped cream or v mlla i
cream.
OATMEAL SHORTBREAD WIT PEA CHE
• tabltspoom b1tt r
t cablnpooa• 1a1ar ~ tea1~ lemoa peel, grated
~ teaspoon v1q1lla
1.4 teaspoon salt
~cup fiollf
\i cup rolled oatt
S f re1b CaUfomla peacbff,
1llc cl.
l cableapoon ltmon Ju.Jee
Cream butter with '4 cablespoons
~upr until light. Beat in lemon peel,
vanilla, salt, flour and oat~just until
combined. Pat dough out evenly
into 7-inch round on ungreased
baking sheet. Indent edge of round
with finger to make a scalloped
effect.
Cut shortbread into 6 wedges but
do not separate. Sprinkle with ' 1
tables~n of remaining sugar
Bake in 32S-Oearee oven 25 to 30
minutes, until golden at edges.
Meanwhil~. combine peaches
with lemon Juice and remaining I
tablespoon sugar. Cool shortbread
on pan S minutes. Recut mark.inp
o that shortbread may be separated
into 6 servings. Spoon peach mix-
ture over shortbread wedges. SCrve
with whipped cream or ioe cream, if
desired. 6 servings.
Cooking
wit h class
Non-meat t ow-fat main dishes,
naturally sweetened desserts and
whole grain breakfast foods will be
demonstrated and sampled durina
a five-week seminar, a community
service of the Newport Harbor
Seventh-day Adventist Qlurch.
Conducted by Health Educator
Brenda Sacher, the vegetarian
cooking and nutrition program will
be pre5ented Tuesdays at 7 p.m. in
the church's Family Fellowship
Center, 271 Avocado St., Costa
Mesa.
Audio-visual presentations on
health topics and nutrition lectures
will also be.featured. For additional
infonnation call 857-5395 or
645-2082. • • • Fassero's International, 2919 E.
Coast Highway, Corona del Mar, is
presenting a Phyllo Dough Work-
shop at 6:30 p.m. Aug. 28. The class
will participate in making dishes
using phyllo dou&h. C?ost is $25. For
reservauons and information, c.all
673-2343. • • • All of the latest in kitchen desian and accessories will be on view
alona with hundreds of other prod-
ucts at the 30th annual Southern
California Home and Garden
Show, continuinf through Sunday
al ..the· AoahClm Convention
Center.
Also available will be hard·to-
find cooking spices and unusual
flavors of extracts, and flll aJTay of
foods to sample .
Food safety
bdoklets free
Since opening the Meat and
Poultry Hotline two years aso, the
Food Safety and Inspection Service
has discovered consumers are con-
fused about how to handle these
perishable items to avoid food
poisoning situations.
From the myriad questions, a
pattern ofinqulrics bas emerged, so
the agency decided to meet oon-
sumer needs by publishing of two
free booklets: "The Safe Food Book
-Your Kitchen Guide" and
0 Talking About Turkey: How to
Buy, Store, Thaw, Stuff and Prepare
Your Holiday Bird."
"The Safe Food Book," a 32-pa,J.e
kitchen reference with cartoon il-
lustrations, gives consumers the
latest infonnation on: I) how food
spoils, 2) how food poisoning
bacteria work, 3) kitchen sani·
tation, 4) s~ial care for foods that
need special attention, such as
hamburger, ham. poultry and suf-
fin1. caas and caa-rich foods,
marinades and mayonnaise.
0 Talking About Turkey" takes
the reader step-by-step from select-
ing a bird to preparina and storing
leftovers. There also arc recipes to
round out the holiday meal.
To order, write to Consumer
Information Center, Pueblo, Colo .
81009. Oehvcry takes about six
weeks.
Rice ealad enriched
California turkey breast and ham
add rich flavor to Rice Pilaf Salad.
Cook 1/2 cup wild rice and Vi cup
Iona &rain rice accordina to packaac
d1m:t1ons. Sau~ 4 sliced ~arcen
onions, 'h pound liocd mushrooms
and Y• teaSpoon salt in 2 table...
poons oil until tender,
Pttpatt dras1n1 of 'I• cup fed wine VJl\qar, 2 table pooos salad
011, 2 teaspoons prepattd mustard,
1 v. tca~poons upr, VJ teaspoon
thyme, 'I• tea poon pe r aod l
teaspoon salt. •
To wnh both nccs, VJ pound
each cooked Whuc turkey meat and
turkey Nim. tom into hrcd , VJ
pound halved and Kedcd &rapes
and 'h cup h\Crcd blanchrd
lmoncl . "c m shed wt th npc
vocado hcc . " c 4 to .
Or
Get hooked on best method of preserving fis
By DOROTHY WENCK ruck to d~ for about on hour an a ato1 nd used within '2 we ks. For en~ &0 crumble. Wben ..... ,,,q,,,.... I h b I I . h .~.t "'· ~ 11M1rv uc c11 ....,. ...,,... coo:t s a y, rcczy p ce. A tan ongcr storag • It ou1d udro1cn. 11 wi be somewhat ru-~1 ~-1 shiny skin forms on the urface. For jerky, fish as cut 1n10 · tnp can be :torcd in airtJa,ht jan 1• a
Wh n there a.re succes ful fisher. After the hour of c1ryin the fi h bout 112 inch thiCk nd 2 inch cool place
men in the fi mily, one of the chunk arc smoktd in a mokcr for wide, nd an)' desired length. nus same method can be med &o
freQucnt problems i1 wh t to do 10 to 14 houn ta temperature (Fillets liccmorecasil)iffrozenfor make Jerky from beef or vm1tOG. with the. large catch. between 130 depec nnd 150 day or two first nd "ill be more R.tmove all fat from meal bdole
Frccz.ina 11 one answer; but it's degrees. Some moisture remains in tender if cut acr the craan.) cuum1 n into stn,ps. Mannale
not the best one for some species the smoked fish so it n~ to be The stnp arc marinated in the nplf~ r24 oursaoddr)'fora
particularly albacore, which de: wrapped and tored in the refriger-ttfri&crator for about 8 to 12 hours 24 houn.
velops a strong, fishy odor and r--------------------.:...-----------------:----------......... -...,...~~----------r"'!"' flavor when frozen.
Other preservation methods in·
elude cannina. pick.ling. smoking or
dryina. Each has its advanta1es and ''iilSJ~iiiiiiif:ijjjijijiiiiiiijijjijjj!iijjijiiiiiiiiiiiiiJiiiiiiiiiiiiliiinliii disadvantages. All take time and I ,
considerable effon, but the payoff is
hi&h in terms of having &ood·tO-cat food.
Freezina probably is the simplest
and safest method, but you do need
to have frceZer storage space. Can·
nir:ia. on the other hand, 1s the most
difficult and also the most risky,
from the standpoint of its potential
for causing botulism poisoning. if
not done properly.
For best flavor and quality, keep
fish cold. and clean and preserve 1t
as soon as possible after it's cauaht.
Frffl1ns: Oean, wash and drain
fish well. Pat dry with paper towel.
Small fish can be frozen whole; cut
large fish into steaks, fillets, or
boned strips.
To prevent darkening and ran·
cidity 1n fatty fish1 such as tuna and
salmon, dip fish m a mixture of 2
tablespoons ascod>ic acid and 1
quart water for 20 seconds. Or coat
fish with bland vegetable oil (cot·
tonseed or com oil).
Package in meal·size ponions
usin& moisture-vapor proof freezer
paper, foil, or plasuc. Separate
pieces with two layers of foil, wax
paper or plastic. Freeze quickly and
store at 0 degrees or lower. The
lower the temperature the longer
the storage life of the frozen fish.
CunJ.n1: Because fish is non-
acidic, it must be canned in a
pressure canner; and usins the
proper processing umc is crucial.
Depending on the method (raw,
brine pack or precooked), the
Proccs5UlJ time for {>ints or smaller
(larger sue eontamers arc not
recommended) is l hour and 50
minutes to 2 hours at 10 pounds
pressure (240 devees). This lengthy
processing time is needed to be sure
that bobulism spores are destroyed.
Proper canning equipment also is
crucial. The gauge on the pressure
canner, for example, should be
tested for accuracy, and the rubber
pskct needs to be perfect so that no
steam escapes from the edges of the
cover when it's in place. Don't take
chances using old, untested equip. 128·0Z 18-0Z
mentl ,.._ __ ..;::::.-:::::::;;;;..-------------~ ~---------------------~~~ The methods for canning fish at --------------------
home arc too involved to cx{>lain
here. lf you would like to receive a
copy of directions that have been
developed by food technologists of
UC Cooperative Extension -and
art known to be safe if followed
precisely -send a stamped, self·
addmsed. lcgat.size envelope to:
Home Advisor, Cooperative Ex-
tension, 1000 S. Harbor Blvd.,
Anaheim, CA 92805. Ask for "Can-
ning Fish."
Plcklln1: This is an ancient and ::l method for preserving fresh
W-ISk
Liquid
-..-
Ood. While only a few species
arc preserved commercially by
pick.lina, almost any type of seafood
may be pic_kled at home. F1sh 1s not 1'-------..;;a~;.;&..;.i..-.....,.:;..-. ..
cooked before pickling.
Raw fish is soaked in strong bnne
in the refrigerator until the salt
penetrates the fish (3 to 7 days).
Then it is rinsed and added to a
pickling sOrution that has sufficient
vincpr (no less than l part vinegar
to 1 pan water) to preserve the fish,
along with desired spices and
flavorings. Pickled fish must be
stored in the refrigerator.
If you would like to receive safe,
tested recipes for pickling seafood,
send a stamped, self·addrcssed
envelope to the address above and
request "Pickled Seafood."
SmoklD1 or drying: This is an
easy, economical way to preserve
large fish, such as shark. Smoked
shark. makes a delicious hors
d'oeuvre; shark jerky is a good
snack and a fine trail food for
backpacking. Most kinds offish can
be preserved this way; frozen fish
can be used too.
For smoking, boneless fillets arc
cut into chunks or strips about 11/z
inches thick and 2 inches wide. The
pieces art soaked ovemi&ht in a
sugar·salt bring (2 cups dark brown
supr, '{3 cup salt, 2 quans water);
then rinsed well and placed on a
Dreu up side dish
with mushrooms
MUSHROOM RICE
l car wild rice ¥. o a 1/4-poand 1tlck butter
1 amaJJ (1 to t-ouc~•) onion,
flDely ~opped (t to 4 table. ,
1poou)
1l oma«t manroom1. 1llced
Cook wild rice accordin& to
package directions .or your !)WD
favoritcmethod;d.rain. Ina 10-anch
killet over hi&h heat, melt butter;
atir in onion and mushrooms~
reduce heat to medium and cook,
1tirrin1 often. until lightly browned
-about 10 minutes. Add ric and
toss toacther. Bcfo~ scrvi~ reheat
over hot water or 10 a microwave
oven. Makes 8 servinp.
Meat Dept. Savings
Wieners ~:~?r3 ...
Chili Salsa =0E
Rainbow Trout
Perch Fi I lets ~~~=0
Alaskan Cod ;i:r~llD
"' ..
Compare these Low Prices
Applesauce ~ft:~0•
Apple Juice ~"'
Kool-Aid Y~ttv~:NfD
Potato Buds ~'"
Deviled Ham ~llWOOO
Chunky Chicken ~
_Taco Sauce LNDTlll D
Hormel Chili N~=~:o"°'
Hormel Chili S!::""0
'
.. oi s1.39
Frozen Food Favorites
Tater Tots ORE•O•
Egg Roi ls ~~~~ ..
Mac & Cheese .. 'TO-.
Pizza Roi ls !t;;;-ACf .. '
Jenos Pizza !'J~~:.\
Sh 1 AAo;A o; nmp :~~("°(~
C k l'(PPEP OGl ••PMr, a e LfMO><
cocoo;ur
Lemonade su ..... s,
Grocery Specials
MJB Rice Mix ·"
Grape Jam ~ ... ~•l" 8::~~t •DE on
Stater Bros. Prewash
Margarine ~E:~~~l·
Oreo Cookies
Dill Halves ~h~~·:
Raisins ~;-o'::~
Napkins ~;.~:~
Snack Crackers -::·:,.s.i'f,"
MJ B Coffee "\,.".
l10l ggc
Garden Fresh Produce
Cantaloupes =~~--t
Peaches ~~~~
Grapes ~~CIOJI
~~~
Fieus
Ben Junina
SWEET JUICY um.E ROCK
~91,
Sc t h "°"""'' 0 c :~~"l"
Bartlett
Pean w la
t '"Ltf(l'I sg_69
Seag rams Gin l···· oa •.
Gal lo Wine .. ~a
..... , s1 0.69
'L!£A SS.99
H!Tlt S3.99 .
REGUt.AR OR LIGHT Can
Coors if::•
Beer ~99 93.99 • 1~
12112-0Z
DiMifJY& 7111LLDAR ...
w-RE$lRVE T"i RIGHT TO L.IMIT OA A9'\J8E
Al.ES TO OOMMtRCIAL OEAURS OA WHOlE...c;AURS
\O\ERTI. ED ITEM
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• 84-0Z.
BOX
EA.
FREE
CIDROX BLEACH
LB.
I --SAVE
SKAGGS~,~
I ALPHA BETA
LARGE AA EGGS
LR
BLADE CUT -
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•LIMIT 4
•
Wll.SON
BACON
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CCOLA,
DIET RITE,
SUGAR FREE
RC 100
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Daily ' at WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 22 11111' ID
Lewi• ••r• h•1Rl•n• to
...........
of the lrleh
tncol ..... In Swltzerland
track meet. D2. loot~
Yanks having a ball
They' r e a lso hitting tt welt
~s Angels dis cover in loss
NEW YORK (AP)-The New York Yankeei are no
longer the Bronx Bombers, an awesome but immobile
home·run-hitting machine once characterized by 1u
detractors as boring. And those same critics miiht think even l~s of the current crop of pinstri~rs. ·
But Manager Y<>ii Berra, who was a part oftbe.1961
team that hit a maJor-lcagt.ie-record 240 home runs.
couldn't care less. He sits back these days and watches a
~eveloping team spray line drives from foul line to foul hnc .
.. We're really hitting the ball," Berra said Tuesday
ni&!tt 4.ftc~ the Yankees routed the Angels 8-2 to extend
the1rwinmngstrea1c to four games and move into a tic with
Baltimore for third place in the American League East.
•• ~nd. it seems like when we get good hitting, we get good
pitching."
That was the case Tuesday night when the Yankees
s.m~c_ked 14 hits wbil~ winning pitcher Phil Niekro was hmn1ng the Angels to JUst five over seven innings.
"It's great to see how well this team bas been playing. ..
said Niekro, who improved his record to 15-7. "I was
having a bad stretch when I was giving up some borne runs
and the team wasn't going well. But. now I know I have a
good chance to be working with some runs."
Indeed. The Yankees have scored 33 in the last four games on 54 hits, the majority hard-hit line anves.
upnsing with his first major-league homer.
The Yankees;; who banged out 14 hits, took a 3-0 lead
with three unearned runs in the third inning, Butcb
Wynepr staned the uprising by lifting a fly deep to righ1-
centerthat right fielder Juan Beniquez dropped after a looa
run for an error.
''Now rve got only 499 to go." said Meacham, who~
three hits also included a ru1MCOring single when the
Yankees scored five times in the sixth.
Willie Randolph. who bad three RBis. keyed the
inning Wlth a two-run. bases-loaded sin&le. Don Matti.naJy
also drove in a run when the Yankees ripped six
consecutive hits.
.Romanick, a 23-~-old rookie wbo fell to l 0-11, said
he didn. t throw much differently than he. had May 20 in a , three-hn shutout of the Yankees. He was m awe ofNickro,
a 45-ycar-old knuckleballer who smanly mixed sliders and f~balls with hisspecialty in collectin1the283rd victory or;
his career.
"Sometimes I hit the inside pitch this way," said Mike
Pagliarulo, motioning with his right hand, "and some-times I hit the outside pitch that way."
That, in a nutshell, is the Yank~ story these days.
The Angels, meanwhile, wiU again try to tum thinP.
around tonight against the Yankees as Jim Slaton ( 4-6) will
go up against the Yankees' Ray Fontenot ( ~ 7) in a game to ------..J be televised by KTLA, Channel S.
baaerunner Mike P•du--'o di•-to» ~o-Pagliarulo rotd three hits, including a third-inning.
"He can beat you on one leg because his bun is
big, .. Romanick said. ·
The Jo.ss was the seventh straight for the A.ngelS; wb •
scored on a sixth-inning RBI double .by Doug DcCin .. ,, .. -
and an eighth-inning RBI single by Fred Lynn off Yankee"/ -
~el catcher Bob Boone receives throw
from rlg~t field a bit _late u Yankee. -.auu'" • -....., •... run-scoring double that accounted for the first run off loser one of etcbt New York ran• Tuesday. Ron Romanick. Bobby Meacham capped the three-run
reliever Bob Shirley.
.. They were much more aggressive than we were"'• -
Romanick said . .::Thcy took the p.me away from us.•• ' ·-· ----. .
Rams Angels could use Sutton down the stretch
• waive
seven
Nobody came in on tile noon
balloon from Saskatoon and asked
me, but... ·
•The Don Sutton deal might not
guarantee the Angels a pennant but it
certainly couldn't do any harm.
• lftbe Beloved Cubs make it to the
National League playoffs. the con·
frontation with ABC over lights at
Wrigley Field in Chicago will be a
classic. Asofnow, the Cubs arc giving
ABC the old Spanish phrase, "El
pufTo lobe'' ... which means blow it
out your ear.
•The Los Angeles J(jngs recently
cleaned house when General Man.:
ager Rogie Vachon put down his cigar
and picked up the broom and swept
out 21 players ... The only thing
wrong with the move was that it was
at least I 0 years too late.
team will be called the Wets.
•We don't have Howard to kick
around anymore ... and it is
wonderful.
•One wonders why Angel short-
stop Dickie Schofield, son ofDucky,
has not been nicknamed "DucklillJ-"
•When Angel Reggie Jackson hits
home run No. SOO, he will send the
bat to Cooperstown ... C.O.D.
•Bobby Unser says the best thing
., CUftT SEEDEN °' ... ..., ........
•The rule says pitchers can't put a
"foreign substance" on the ball, but
what if they used a substance made in
the USA? about engine additives is that the
engine doesn't know it is there. The Rams_ on Tt.ieiday waived
teven p1,ayera and put three m(>re
on the Injured reaerve llst In Of'der
to pve thefr rotter to 60 players. •Ofthe plan to put radios in the
helmets of the Atlanta Falcons quar-
terbacks to erase distraction from
crowd noise, Rams QB Vince Fer-
ragamo says, .. I would listen to soap
operas."
• lfManager Dick Williams is
really lost for I Odays on a suspension.
the Padres will win the National
League West for sure.
•Asked ifthe Olympic equestrian
events at Santa Am ta stimulated local
business, Arcadia restaurant owner
Murph Stumiolo replied. "only for
the au y sellina oats."
Gone are free agent guard
Broderick Thompeon out of Kan-
&89; running back Lawrence "9id,
a free agent from Michigan; safefy
Scott B~s. a free ~t from
L~ e.ach State; Mde reoeiver
AJCky Martin. a free agent from
NeW Mexlco; free agent nose
tackle Tony Deluca out Of Rhode
~;;.;guacd.....tom Taylor from
GiOtgia Tech and 1m round draft
•Sports promos on network TV -
theoncshypingupcominaevents-
arc written by teenage chcerlcadcn.
•If evertherc is a professional
water polo league. the New York
•Now which is more overrated ...
Jimmy the Greek. Don Shula or
. C>ICk MO Blas. a flneback« from llllnOta.
iThe Rama ~ quarterback SCOtt nn.,.Y, out of use, on the
tnjUred teNr'Ve Hat (~ ...... ) aJono Wltb ftfth round draft pk* Hal
s~ (ankha Injury) and tadc.le
Den McOuaJd. •free ~t from
Nev ... LaaVegat.
:rtte Rama and San Ol9gO cnaroera close out the pr111uon
irhursday nlgtit at Anaheim
Stadium in a 7 o'Clock conteet. S.V.al Aamt .,.. nutting In· )urtea, lnofudlng Devld Hltl (knee),
Irv Pankey (calf •train), Barry Redden (shQulder)t Otis Gr.nt
(sh<>Ulder) and quarterbii:k Vince
t:erraQ8J!lO (finger contulk>n). AU a,.. lteted as probabtea, however.
Harris
loss stuns
Steelers__.
PITTSBURGH (AP) -The Pit-
Mike Manhall of the DoctCen •lldea
awkwardly Into home plate to 1eore run
., ..........
on aacrlflce fly by teammate Steve Yeacer duriDC ftrat Inning of Tuesday'• game.
tsbur2h Steelers without Terry Brad-
shawlf Difficult to imagine. Without
Franco Harris? You must be joking.
"But this is a business. You've got
to remember that. This is a business1"
veteran center Mike Webster said
Tuesday, the day after the Steelers
shocked the National Football
Leaaue by releasing the 34-year-old
l:larris because of a contract dispute.·
Ali, Molmes_tanglein court
I-lei:lvyweights are at odds ---involvingrtghts to bout -------Harris, whose iqstantly re-
cognizable first name made him a PHlLADELPHlA (AP) --Larry Holmes. the Inter·
household word amona American national Box.ina Federation champion, and Muhammad
foo tball fans, is just 363 yards short of Ali, former kin& of the heavyweights, met in a federal
breakina Jim Brown's NFL career coun room Tuesday in a lepl battle involving rights to a
rushina record. The Steelers featured multi·million~ollar fight between Holmes and Geme
a full color drawing· of him on the Coetzce, the World Boxing Association title-holder.
coverofthcir 1984 media guide. Ali and Holmes ignored the other, although they sat
But if he is indeed to break the 15 fee t apart, as opposing lawyers questioned witnesses
record, it almost assuredly will be m before U.S. District Judge Daniel Huyett 3r<i over whether
another uniform. The Steelers, cs~ an 11\)unction should be granted to a firm headed by Ah
~dally Coach Chuck Noll , arc not that claims "first refusal rights" to a Holmes<'octzct
known for giving second chances to match that boxing insiders claim could aro s more than
former players -and Ham!i i$ now a $2S mil hon.
fom1er Steder. T he in.Ju nction is SOUfht by Champion pons
"I'm shocked. I really am," said Management (CS M) ofVifJ,irua Beach, Va., of which <\his
fullback Frank Pollaro, Hams• heir ooar<i chajnnan and attorney Rich. ro Hinchfcld is
apparent. "I never thought anyth1na pre 1dent.
like lllis would, happen. I thought Ali' not e~pccted to testify.
Franco wouJd come in and get in Hirschfeld testified lhat la t Oct. 20. at a m ttna m
shape an<i we would have anolhcr , Easton Pa .• Holme 1 cd an aarecmcnt and accepted 1
battle.'' SSO,OOOc'h«k.§ivina M90da)' tocqualor urpa an)
Brad haw' retirement le s than a other promote r offer for a match with Coctrcc. ~ho 1
month NO bccau of an rm Jn.JUI) from South Afnca.
and Harris' dcpanurc bring ~tcarly Bahar Muhammad, a Ncwuk, N.J.. fight
into focus the f'ed1cal transformauon matchmaker. ~id he wa pre nt in Holme\' oflke whtn
th S1ttlcn· ro tcr ha undcrgon~ in a the aarecmcnt wa~ 1aned.
r' pan Holmes had been appr hcd la~t On-ember_ by 1 new
(Pleue .... 11.A•RIS/Dt) wiaruz.ation wn a JPD S rt and offert-d Sil.
' ' I •
million to fight Coetzee in Las Vegas. but financing fell
through.
Hirshfeld sought the injunction to prevent any other
effort to sign the m.atch, either through promoter Don King
or others. without ~ettin• the riAht of first refusal. be said.
At th~ Oct. 20 mectm,g. Hirshfeld said, Holmes also
agreed to become ro-chairm.an of CSM and an active
part1c1pant in1 arran,ing fights, for an annual fee of
$110,000. It 1s Holmes' posiuon that the $50,000. which hasn't
been returned. and the $110,000 he got later for CSM and
which was returned, were for his pan1cipauon tn the
rompany -and that he didn't know.that he was signing
away ngl\ts to a Holmes-Coetztt tight
Hirshfcld disputed this.
"I told uury 1fhe wanted to brina in an attorney tt\at
he hould do it. but he said be didn't need an attorney. that
he had ht financ11lad"i rpre~ nt."Hirschfcld id. ··we
went over it (the agreement) paragraph by paf'l&J'lph. lt
was rtad aloud in its c1u1rety, and read lowly •.. and then
he signed 1t. and 1t was wtlnc1.Sed.
··1 told him 1fhe ren ~ti on the contract I would s1 p
him from fiJhtina C0tuec. ' Ed., in Rome, a Phil detphia 1 W) r representina
Holme , said hi client's "crston of events 1s different, and
that tht ~mcnt wa conceived m fraud.
"Would )Ou say that Larry Holmn i ly1nar skcd
Rome. A
Hirshfold replied. ..I'd rather not ~> that. I'm
pcrfi tly retd)'. willina and abl~ to take 1 pol gnph
euminauon. and ttpulat th t it be admitted into
cviJcncc. and11'0JX' t rT) 'tltOUld ao that. too."
Bun
TUCKER
SPORTS COLUMNIST
avocado dip?
•The Michael Jackson concerts are
being documented by NFL films •..
more action than some of the games.
•Cincinnati Man..-Pete Rose ·
will be dismayed when be oomn \0
the ball park on those days when be is
the only guy who feels like playinJ.
•Angels sufferers can rationaltZC
. iftbemiUionaireson the teamcao·
beat outtbe linle Minnesota Twins;
they don 'tdeserve \0 win.
•When you understand what OJ.
Simpsonsays,heisa verylOO(i "li.
football commentator. •
• ln a crowded room. the sporu ...
•nt is the guy with his band in his • . 11io client's pockeL • •
•If you are ha vin.a trouble get · •
service from the phone company, it
because of the rush to get to the '
bookies' phones in before the start at football season. • ..
•A born loser is the girl on the •
DatingGamesbowwithJackYou •
blood and Nolan CromVol'CU an~ Bill Bain. / -
. . Exposstrikeearly, ·
but it's to no avail-·
Fernando survives
early jitter s, and
Dodgers h old on
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Montreal
Expos ManaJer Bill Vinion says the
secret to beating Los Angeles Dodgers
ltft-hander Fernando Valenzuela is
to get to him before he gets rolling.
"You gotta get to him early bccaust
be gets tougher as the game goes
alofl$." Virdon said. and the Expos
did JUSt that, jumping ahead with
three runs in the first inning. But. the
Dodgers' offense came alive.
matchin• the Expos' with a thrtt-run
outburst in the bottom oftbe first and
went on to a 4-3 victory at Dodger
Stadium on Tuesday nighL
The loss snapped the Expos' six-
game winning streak. the Dodgers·
three-game losing streak and
Valenzuela's personal three-game
losing streak.
The victory was only the second in
his last eight decisions and broke a
drought that had seen Valenzuela go
winless since July 25.
Overall. the $1 .1 million left.
hander is 10-14, but he has received
little support from his teammates.
wbo have been shut out or scored just
one run in 11 of his stans.
But Valenzuela refuses to point
fingers.
"They·~ trying the best that they
ran," he said. "'They'tt playins bard.
And an I can do 1s go out and pitch the
best that I can."
The Dodgers benefited from some
fonunate boun~ of the ball ita the ..
first inning and from Valenzuela's '"
pickoff of speedy 1111m Raincss in the
eighth inning. •
Rames. who had stolen his 52nd.
base tn the first mnmg. singled to tead
off the eighth, but he was erased as the
potenual tying run when Valenzuela
caught htm bre:tkmg for second base.
··fle's so good." Valenzuela said of
Rames. "but it seems I've been
fortunate keeping him close to first
base "
Montreal took its 3-0 lead in ~
first when Rames singled and stole
second, Dcrrcl Thomas walked and
Andre Dawson followed with a triple
down the right field hne.
Monday Night Football
will go on Without ~osell
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Dedanng that he got what he wanted..
ABC sportscaster Howard Cosen again said Tuesday he is ~ttins out of
Monday Ntght Football's broadcasting booth after 14 )cars to assume
other network ports assignments.
"h's the end of the chapter,·· Coscll told tht: l.o niclcs Times
from his ummer home 10 W~thampton, N.Y., "here be ha been
V11cationina intt the Ol)'mp1c: Gam .
The ronlro\iCC"Siat Co n. ho became a ttlcbratcd telcvi ion
pc n '">on th~ trcn th of Monda) 1ght Football's popularit}, bad
t.inttd carlitt that he "a unhappy with the I n&.-IUnmni formal ·
The tiami H ratd quoted In Brod . y. an A -po man, u
ym that Cosen one month qo •~kcd Jam pence, '1ct pre ident for
port to be rclicvtd of hi football duti .
Co II "'a d nb(od a hcina "bo~·· with the footbatt
a 1gnmcnt, tired of tra,chn and unh pp wuh the elcvatum of
fonner patt tars into th b dca t booth without hen fit of pnor
C.\pertenC'C. •-
He criticittd t kv1gon football a .. , komt ••
dominated b)' c\-athlclc
·~~~~~~~~~~~~._,.,.~-·~~~~---~--_____ .._. ____ ~ __ _....._ .................... ~ .... --.... ..-................................................................................. lmllll ... --..... ..
'Carl' b ·ecom.es
fastest· published
book. in history
Carl! The Story of an mencan lkro.
ha bcoome the fastc.,l produced and « ~
pubh hcd book C\ er.
The l~page papcrbed: biograph) of 1
Ol)mpic: superstar Carl Lewis. released by Bantam
Books Inc and wnttcn by sportswnter John Devane),
was produced an 41 hours and 55 mmutt$, hattcnna
I.he previous Gumnc~ Book of World RC'C"Ord$ listing
of 46111 hou~ for the fastest umc in which a book has
b«n_pubhshed by 4 hours and 35 minutes.
The li~t fln1shed cop) of Carl' was bound at the
W.F. Hall Pnnt1ng Com pan) in Chicago le s than two
days after the receipt of thc booL:'s tt'.':\l.
Thc old record wasc.,tabh.,hed b, Bantam in 19~0
for Miracle On I~. an .. in,tant bool" wnttcn b~ the
.,taff of tht: 'Ve'4 l 'orJ. Time~ recounting the L ';
Ol)mp1c hocke~ team's gold-medal tnumph.
The first copies of the 175.000 1n1tial pnnt run of
Carl'. pnced al $2 95. 1s C'llpcrtcd 10 go on \ale in maJor
Amencan c1t1cs Thursday -one da'.-ahl·ad of
\<:hedule
The first full-length biograph) in book form of th e
23-)ear-old Ol)mp1c star. Carl' rccounte!> Lc\\i~·
succ:C"ssfol quesi to equal the 1936 ach1c,emcn1 of Jes~
Olw\ens b~ \\1nn1ng four gold medals 1n the long 1ump.
IOO-meter dash, the 200-meter dash and lhc ~ ' I 00
rcla ) in the Los .\ngeles dunng lhc .:!~rd Ol)mp1ad
Quote of the day
NoboyukJ 81to. coach of the 280-pound
Japanese judo champion Yasuhlro Yamashita.
undefeated In 194 bOUtsatnce1977 as he went Into
the OlymptCS, asked what It would take to stop
Yamaahtta: "A nutlear war."
Padres pad l ead to 10 games
GraJg Nettles and Tony Gwynn each •
collected three hits and drove in two runs
lo lead San Diego past the New York Mets,
7-4. Tuesday mghl. Tim Lollar, I 0-10, went
51'1 innings for the victory. wh1lh boosted San D1ego·s
lead in the National League West to 10 games over
Atlanta. Craig Leffert1 pitched 31/l innings before Rieb
Go11age recorded the final out for his 24th save .. In
other NL acuon. Jody Davia drove in four runs Wlth a
homer and a single and Gary Mattbew1 also homered,
powenng the first-place Chicaeo
Cubs to their founh straight
'1ctory. an 11 -5 decision over
Houston. Dellllls &kersley, 7-7.
was the wanner. while Mike Scott,
5-11. suffered the loss ... Marvell
Wynne slapped a bases-loaded
single with one out in the ninth
inning to give Pittsburgh a 5-4
victory over Atlanta ... Wayne
Kreocblckl s1 ngJed home the go-
ahead run in the bottom of the
seventh and Eddie Milner fol-
lowed wnh a two-run homer sending Cmcmnat1 to a
4-1 victory over St. Louis. Joe Price, 6-9. and Ted
Power stopped the Cardinals on seven hits to snap the
Reds' three-game losing streak . Pmch-h1tter Sixto
Letcano delivered a pair of run-sconng sm~les dunng a
10-run. eighth-inning rail)' that ga\e Philadelphia a
12-5 victory over San Francisco. The Phillies. winners
of four straight, lashed out I 0 hits off three San
Francisco pitchers in wipmg out a 3-2 deficit.
Rice hits 299th bomer'in root
Jim RI behC'd h1 299th 1: rttr •
homer and drove 1n four runs whale pitcher
Roger Cl meaafanned 15 b tter~. the most
1rikeuut by u Bo ton p11cher in 23 )'C'lr.,
the Red Sox cru$hed Kansas al) Tuesda)' night
11-1. Clemens' slnkeouts weiT the most for a Red So~
hurler in~ Blll Men aettl' fanned 17 Wa5hin ton
battcr1 '" 1961 > r .•• Else" here an the Amencan League. JerrY Wlllanldnlkd a two.out, two-run homer
in the ninth inni to hn Clc\cland to its seventh
tra1&ht win, 3·1 over Toronto.
With two out m the ninth, Geuae
Vakovlcb lnplrd to right-center
and on an 0-1 p1tc:h. Willard
connected for his ninth homer of
tht season . . . Lance Parrl1b'1
tttmendous grand .. tam was one
of thrtt 1Xtro1t home~ and right·
h nder Milt Wilcox notched a
C'aret'r-h1gh 14th victory as the
Tigers dnllcd Oakland. 12-6.
Darrell Evans added a 1hree-run
Rice hot and Larry Herndoo had a
~olo blast for the Tigers, who rout~ the A's 14-1 Mond~. Jack Percoatecnded a J..for-30slumpw1th
three doubles and dro\e in two Seattle rum. as the
Manne~ beat Baltimore. 4-3 . Pinch hitter Alan
Banalster singled home Larry Parrlab from '>et:Ond
base with two outs in the bottom of the 10th inning,
~1v1ng Texas a 4-3 victory O\Cr Chicago . 1hc
Minnesota at Milwaukee game "'as rained out
Raiders• roster trimmed to 60
EL SEGL.NDO -The Los Angele~ [i]
Ra1dcrs a~ked wa1' ers on nine pla)ers and •II• placed one on inj ured rescn:e Tuesda} to
reach the NFL-mandated 60-man roster
hm11
Among those cut lw\t:rc six-year NFL veteran
quarterback Jerry Golsteyn, three-year backup of-
fens1 ve lineman Ed Muran~ky and former Kansas Cuy
veteran running back James Hadnot
Also cut were offensive linemen Clint Berry and
George N1ualiku. wide rece1\Cr Gerald Bradle}. ugJn
end Kent Jordan. defensive lineman Jeff Chaffin and
linebacker larT) McCo).
Wide receiver JeffS1mmons, former Uni verstt) ol
Southern California star. was placed on tnJured reserve
wnh a knee sprain ·
The Raiders and all other NFL teams mu~t trim
rosters funher to 49 players on Monday.
Historic day in Little League
WILLIAMSPORT. Pa. -A h1stonc ·ii' at-bat by a girl highlighted the first da} of
play at the Little League World Scnes.
Victoria Roche, 12. on Tuesda) be-
1..ame the first girl to pan1c1pate tn the tournament's 37-
}Car history when she pinch hit in the fifth inning (see
photo, below).
Roche. a reserve outfielder for the team from
Brussels. Belgium, got a noisy ovallon from a Lamade
Stadium crowd of 8.000 when she stepped into the
batter's box.
She walked on a 3-2 count. took third on a two-out
double by Tsuney Tamagawa. but was left stranded
when Mike Appleton grounded out
After she batted. Roche. whose brother also 1s a
re~rve outfielder, stayed tn the game to pla} center
field but got no fieldmg chances
Girls have pla}ed Little League baseball ~ince 1974
but none had ever advanced into the single-eliminauon
tournament, which features teams from around the
"-Orld. The senes began 1n 194 7
Belgium lost the game 1-0 to C oqu1tlam Bn11sh
<.olumbia. which advances 10 meet the \\ mner of
today's game between Seoul. liouth Korea. and Panama
City, Panama.
McEnroe atunnecl by Amrltraj
M ON. Ohio -To~ed John ~ Md!nroc. suflcnng onl) ha \'Ond los of
the )CU, wn~ upset. 6..7, b.:"2, 6·3,l>y \'Cteran
Vija)' AmntraJ Tui:$da~ an the fim round
<>f the A '°"'atton of Tenni Profession I 1'our-
namen1.
• .. , ou li.:no"' )OU'rt 01n lo play some bad
matche :· McEnroe. ~9-2 th1 ~cnr, id. "Mentally, I
did not ha~e the nght t11tudc.-. The key 'hin& here: i• to team. You b()uld learn by )'our m1r.1akc "
..lt brought back mcmoriei
of when I wa 19 year'$ old ,
playani Rod Laver at the U ·.
Open to 1973." said the unSttded
Amritraj, a native of India.
'1 After 11 ·~cars. there's still a
httle bit lef\. f thoughJ I served
tremtndous,ly. I also returned hi
&erve well, whicn J rarely do. t
thin~ he was a little urpriscd. He
played a tremendous tie·btuker
10 th~first set. Bu1aftcrth11. lju t
McEnroe put the first -.et behind me."
McEnroe's onl) othc:r loss thi year was to Ivan
Lendt in the French Open. .
Sooners to be aired on KLAC
The Fountain Valley-based s
Englebrecht Company has announced 1t II
has -;ccurcd \he radio broadcasting ri&.hts to • •
Oklahoma Sooner football games (or the _
1984 se~n.
Los Angel~ radio station KLAC (570-AM) will
feature all Oklahoma games live (except for Sept 29) to
all of the Southland
The schedule opens with Stanford on Sept 8,
followed by Pittsburgh (Sept 15), Baylor (Sept 22),
Kansas State (Sept. 29). Texas (Oct. 13). Iowa State
(Oct. 20). Kansas (Oct. 27), M1ssoun (Nov. 3).
Colorado (Nov. 10), Nebraska (Nov. 17) and Okla-
homa State (Nov. 24).
Friends recall Tommy Aaron
MOBJLE, Ala. -Former Atlanta •
Braves baseball player and coach Tommie
Aaron was buned in his hometown
Tuesday with fnends rcmembcnng how he
emerged from his big brother's shadow.
Aaron, 45, who died of leukemia last Thursday.
was buried in Mobile.
He was the brother of baseball great Hank Aaron,
and together they hit more homers than any other
brother combination in the big leagues.
Braves owner Ted Turner and other Braves
officials joined the Aaron family for a funeral mass at
the Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception.
Braves Manager Joe Torre said Aaron "always
played hard and always had to hve down the
comparison to his big brother He had to develop his
own personality. and he dtd."
"We will miss him more than almost anybody we
could have lost," said Braves General Manager John
Mullen. "If there was ever an organtzat1onal person.
Tommie was tl. Atlanta-Fulton County Stadium will be
kind of lonesome. There is no way we will forget this
man or replace him:•
Television, radio
TEL£Vt8tON
5 p.m. -BA8E8AU.: Angels at New York
Yankees, Channel 5. '
RAOfO
1 p.m. -BASEBALL: Montreal at Dodgers,
KABC(790). .
5 p.m. -BASEBALL: Angela at New Yorl<
Yankees, KMPC (710).
East German,
Soviet medal
Count riSing
Swimming. cycling marks
set at Friendship Games
MO OW (AP) -East Germany an~ the ~~aet
Union tightened their tranaJchold on the Fnendship 84
Games here 1 uesday aaain sharina all ~u~ one of the day'•
victories between them end otabl.1shmll. four world
record' -two 1n sw1m1n1n1 and two 1n c~cl1ni.
In addition, one European swimming record w1s
betttrcd by an East German. f · One swimming \\Orld rc\;ord each went to the Sovie'
and the East German team while Sovf' t cycltJts bcuettd
two world marks. .
A total of nine ~wimmers po tcd times that would
have won them medals at Los Aniclcs as the East-bloc
sports powersenJoyed their most succesc;ful day an the PQ9l
a~ well as at t]lc Krylatskoye Cycling Oval.
Sergei Z.ibolotnov snatched the 200.metcr backstroke
world mark from American Ol~mp1c champion Rick
Carey. clocking 1 ·58.4 I seconds. Carey's previous record
was I :58.86. H1~ time would have ai.sured Zabolotnov a gold
medal at the Olympics, had the Soviet Union and its allies
not boycotted the Los Angeles game!>. Carey's winnina
time at t.os Angeles was 2:00.23.
Vladimir Shemetov. who placed second behind
Zabolotnov 1n I 59 54 Also was better than Carey was at
the Olympics.
The second swimming world record was set by the
East German women's 400-meter freestyle relay team in
the event final.
Kristin Otto, Karin Konig. Heike Fnednch and Birgit
Meineke won in 3:42.41 , Bettering their old mark of
3:42. 71 set in the 1980 Moscow Olympics in the same pool.
The Soviet Union c.ame second in Tuesday's race,
clocking 3:44.3 I, A time mne one-hundredths of a second
faster than the Dutch team which won a silver medal at Los
Angeles. -
Astnd Strauss of East Germany bettered her own
European · record in the women's 400-meter freestyle,
stopping the clock after 4:07 .66. Her old mark was 4:08.07
Her ume was outside Amencan Tiffany Cohen's wrnrung
Olympic time of 4:07. I 0, But 11 would have gJven her the
silver medal.
Irma Laricheva of the Soviet Union clocked 4:09. 70
and also stayed within the 4: 10.27 that won Bntain'sSarah
Hardcastle the silver at Los Angeles.
In the women's 100-meter backstroke Ina Kleber of
East Germany posted the second fastest ume ever
recorded, v.1nning the final m I :00.99. This 1s more than
1.5 seconds faster than the I :02.55 that netted American
Theresa Andrews the Los Angelts gold medal.
Kleber's teammate Knsttn Otto came second 1n the
Moscow final m 1 ·02 02, also faster than Andrews' gold
medal ume.
In the men's 100-meter freestyle, Sergei Sm1ryagm
won in 50.26 seconds, a ume that would have just given
ham a bronze at the Summer Olympics.
County honors Ue berroth
Peter V. Ueberroth has been named Orange County
Sportsman· of the Year b} the Orange Count) Sports
Celebnt1es and will be honored b) that group at their 14th
annual banquet on Tuesday, Nov. 13 at the Saddleback
Inn tn Santa Ana.
Ueberroth held the post as president of the Los
Angeles Olympic Organmng Committee and will assume
his newly-appointed position as comm1ss1oncr of baseball
on Oct. I .
His contnbut1ons to the recently-completed XXIllrd
Olympiad earned him the honor.
Lewis tops medal-winning field in -Switzerland
Carl Lewt.
Foreign
skippers
dominate
Special to the Dally Pilot
\.\"' DIEGO -Onl} tlw\o t \
sailor-; -neither from Southern
California -scored among the firn
fi H in 1he Internatio nal Yacht Rac-
ing Union Youth Champ1onsh1p
which concluded a l<J..day run here
Tuesday
T hC' event v.a-. hoc;tcd bv \an Diego
Yacht ( lub
f on:1gn sailor\ dominated the
event which drev. 18 sailors 1n the
single-handed Laser Class and 16
teams in the double-handC'd La\Cr 11
Clas~
Mar~ Eldred of \11am1. fla was the
onl y U S skipper to place in lh c La<ter
Cla'i<>. finishing founh The-team of
John Lovell and Sid Charbonnet of
New Orleans placed founh 1n the
La5er II class
W1nntr in La~rs \.\as Stu.an Ch1ld-
erly of Ena)and and the Laser II
winner was the team of Sttfan Scpr
and Bruno Zeltner of Sw1t.terland.
Lt&ht wmd'> and dnTZle off Point
Loma made ~low eoin& for the '-'Ulor'
all week Iona
The \ummary of result\'
LASER -I Stuan Ch1lderly.
Enitand: 2 G1anluca Grisoli. Italy; 3.
Hank I ammen~. Canada. 4 Mark
Eldred. Miami . na S Hcnl Jan
Maa\. Holland
l StR II -I Stefan ~-pr-Bruno
Zellntr, w1t1erland . 2 f)(>nn1i
Jones-Damian Coe. \u~tra lia. 3
Da" idc Cru1bt'hni Sabio SC'rronc.
lull) .4. John I 0" l'll Std t harllonnr1.
New OrlC'an\, 5. Ju'"" PnhJa \ nit ..
Pt-trc Lt~ldncn, Finland
Sprinter reportedly will receive $25,000
fo r bis appear a n ce in 1 00-met er dash
LURICH . Swlllcrland (AP) -
Amencan spnnter Carl l.cWls, his
golden prestige restored after a 300-
meier upset 1n London. 1s the top and
most expensive attraction of an
10ternat1onal track and field meet
here entered by nine Los Angeles
gold medal winner~ and 21 other
athletes who made the podium to take
Olympic silver or bronze.
Lewis, who won fouqtold medals at
the Los Angles Olympics earlier this
month. was due to recei ve more than
S25 000 for competing in the 100-
meter event on the record-breaking
trac k ofZunch's Lcwgrund stadium
tontght. one organizer, who asked not
to be quoted by name reponed
"He 1s the most expensive com-
petitor 1n the meeting but also as the
top star." the official said Tuesda\
Lewis. who won the I 00-meter race
in Budapest Monday. talo..ing 1mmed1-
ate revenge for the flop over the
longer and unusual distance in Lon-
don. faces a world ehte or sprinters at
Le1.11grund.
He will face teammates Calvin
Smith. Mel Lattany and Sam Graddy.
Canada's Ben Johnson. Cubans Os-
valdo Lara and Leonardo Penalver
and Poland's Marian Worontn
,,,., .....
Flret girl .
Vlcton a Rocbe from Bra.el•, BeJthun became tbe flnt
Ont glrl c•er to appear lD a Llttl Lea.Ca World Sena.
"
Smith, who missed the individual
Olympic race, won a gold in the 400-
meter relay in Los Angeles. He is the
world record holder m 9.93 seconds.
Moravc1kova and Tatiana Kocem-
bova, East Germany's Sabine Paetz in
the-lQO-meters hurdles and Cuban
high jumper Silvia Costa.
Koch was expected to challenge
Valerie Brisco-Hooks and Florence
Gnffith, the Amencans who won gold
and silvertn the 200.meter race at Los
Angeles respectively.
which might produce world records.
Moroccan Said Aou1ta, who won
the-5,()()().meter race at Los Angeles,
w1ll lr)'. to set a new world mark over
the mile. Graddy and Johnson won silver
and bronze respectively in the Olym-
pic final.
Woronm 1s one of the entnes here
whose hopes for an Olympic medal
v.ere foiled by the Soviet-led boycott.
Other athletes from the boycotting
nations are scelcing a confrontation
with the reigning Olympic cham-
pions.
Goehr faces Olympic champion
Evelyn Ashford in the 100-meter
dash, also entered by silver medallist
Alice Brown.
Olympic champion Sebasuan Coe
of Bntain. who is considenng the
posstbilityofentering the U.S. Indoor
circuit. 1s after the 1,500.meter re-
cord.
Lewis. who 1s on a five-nation
European tour, said on his amval
here that he would think of world
records next year. after overcoming
psychological exhaustion of equalli ng
the record of four golds set by Jesst
Owens 1n the 1936 Berlin games.
They include East German
spnnters Marlies Goehr and Marita
Koch. shot put world record-holder
Udo Beyer also of East Germany,
Czechoslovak 400-meter runners
Jarmlla Kratoch\ tlova. Zuzana
In the men's 200-meters, silver
medallist K.jrk Baptiste. who defeated
Lewis in the 300 meters at Crystal
Palace last Saturday, faces Smith and
veteran Jamaican Don Quame.
The meet features 20 events -13
for men and 7 for women -some or
Organizers expected a full-house of
25.000 for the meet, which wilt be
telecast hve by 18 networks.
Seattle cuts Jim Youngb1ood
Place-kicker Ricardo Ts put -
on Viking injured-r eserve list
From AP dlspatebes
Jim Youngblood, a 12-}ear veteran linebacker, was
released by the Seattle Scahawks as Nauonal Football
League clubs were forced to meet the Tuesday deadline
and cul lls roster to 60 players.
The teams must reach the final 49-player hm1t by next
Tuesday.
Youngblood. who played with the Rams through last
season. was signed last March as a free agents by the
Seahawh.
Jn his 11 seasons w11h the Rams, h~ played five
seasons under second-year Seahawks' head Coach Chuck
Knox.
In releasing Youngblood, who came into the NFL
from Tennessee Tech and played in 147 regular-season
pmes. Knox elected to JO with Shelton Robinson, a thl'tt*
year veteran. at inside linebacker
The Scahawks also have cut wide receiver Freddie
Brown. who spent the entire 1983 season on the an~urcd
reserve list after sufTerina an ankle anjury dunng tramina
camp.
Former Nebraska All·Amcncan running back 1arvis
Redwine was among four players cut by the Minnesota
V1k1015, who also placed veteran place-kicker Benny
Ricardo. a Co ta Mesa High product. on the injuttd
reserve Im.
Redwine. 27. bas been in the NFL for three ~son ,
butonJyhadacarccrtotalof70yard ru hin&in 17carries.
Ricardo had been competing with newly-acquired Jan
tencrud and Rick Danmt1er for tbe kickinajob.
Also cut were running back Rick Bell, defensive back
0 na Noel and free agent linebacker ln'llync Rohen
After rcle11ing running back Franco Harris Monday.
dit Piu,burah Sttclet$ conunucd their youth movement.
They have traded or rclea~d lJ veterans since trainina
t1m1> opened. -
Wide rtceiverGrq Hawthorne wa traded to the New
·naJand Patriots on Tuesday for an undiscloKd draft
choice.
The teclm atso rclca~ third· r ti&ht end John
Rod and plattd defen 1vc end Bo Koh~ hampered
by a nee inJury. on the phys1 lly unabl 'o perform It t.
Kohn 1s not eh11blc to come off the hst until 0<'1. 8.
Linebacker Stan Bianka a uircd by Dctl\'et from the
t • York Jct~ f\er ta 1 n. wa cut b the Broncos.
along wit h nose tackle George Small. a free agent.
Defensive end Rob Swanke was placed on the injured
reserve list.
The Atlanta Falcons cut seven-year veteran center
Mark Slat.or whale placin~ rookie defensive back Stan Gay
on the tnJUrcd reserve hst They returned running back
Eddie M~ of the U.S. Naval Academy to the military
reserve while cutting seven othe~ to reach the 60-man
limit.
The Ph1ladelph1a Ea~les cu' nine free agents along
with sixth-round draft pick Scofl Raridon a 6-3 288-
pound offensive tackle. Raridon twice walked out of ~mp.
The Green Bay Packers waived veteran defensive end
Byron Braggs and placed guard uotis Harris on /hr
reserve-failed physical list. Hams is eligible to be
reactivated on Oct 8.
Owners to decide
future of USFL
CHICAGO (AP) -The future of the Untted
States Football League 1ocs on the line today and
Thursday ~hen the two-year-old league's owncri
meet to decade whether to 1wnch from 1 spring to a ~ll schedule.
In what promi~ to be a turbulent meet.ma in 1
leaauc where 18 owners have often been known to
hold 18 djffcrcnt v~c~int$ on a &iven i ue, there
a pP,C&tS to l)c a ~IUOnty In fav<?r of di pen int with
1pn ng football in favor of taking on the National
Football l.Ciauc head-on tn the fall.
Most Jeaaue sourtts cm to think that mott
hkcly 'o happen in 1986 or 1987 than 198S perhaps
with a tran itiona1 scaton in w11ich whkh the lcaauc
would play a split schedule -halfm the spnna. half
in the tall -rather than taYilll idle a year
But nothina is really set. •
.. The Democrats may be more unitrd than the
U FL at this eoin1;• 11 Myles Tanenbaum of the
league-champion Ph1lad lphia Stars. one of 1ix
rcma1nin1 onsinat USFL ownen and 1 firm
&d\C>C.SIC o( PrlnJ foothill
USfl. owners may also h '" to deal 1th the consolidation of a teaaue ahat n tn I 3 \\Ith 12
tcamsandcxpandcdtoat J)ftlent I for 1 ~.
..
-
Bu uE nN BoARo
Oft-Road ncbJ6 · _.Ji..
Th•• 1urday, w Lot AnicJcs eounr:' F rsrounds will be she 1 tc of the Off-R
Champ1onsh p Gran Prix.
With five cw com~hllJ. off.,.oad fans will
be able t0 see Grand 'adonal Thunder :trucu1 BUIPICk Volbwqcr upcr 1600s, Unlimnco
an&le seatm, OdYI )'I and Tbrtt>-whttlcn battle \hear way around thr: S/8th·m1le course.
Tkktts for tbe event are available at Super· ahops&... 1 tcktuon or at the Fa1l'Jl'Ound1 on race
day. rrices for tickets are: Box eeats, SU;
reserved acata, S 1 J; and aenr:rsl adm1u1on. SI 2. Oenr:ral admluaon for practice and quahf'y1n1 are abo available for SS. Children I 2 and Wlder
art dmittr:dfor halfpn~_.....__._
For more 1nformat1on, phone (ll 3) 717-3497 or (714) 76().0169.
Watem 500 aato nee .
Semor Olympl~ aac.t
The 15th 1nn1&1l Senior Olympics track and
field meet .will be held Saturday and Sunday.
Sept 8·9 at Oranae Coast Cotlqe.
The b1gest champ1onsh19 points battle 1n the
recent hastory of Winston <:up Grand National
stock car racina 11 ellpccttd to produ« a ttrord
crowd for the .eason~ndina WC$tcm 500 at
R1ven1de lntemattonal Rlctwly.
Tickets fortheNov.18 ra« havulteadyeonc
on sale and raceway off'tcials are exptttin1 brisk
sales, spurred on by the fact that the race wall
probably decide the Winston Cup title for the
fourth strai&ht )Car.
Events will run daily from 8 a.m.-4 p.m.
Tickets. aood for both days of competition.
are on sale at OCC's community services offitt
and at the Co ta Mesa Chamber ofCommerte.
They will also be available ll the ptc. Tickets a~ pr1ctd at $2 for adults and SI for children.
Men'' runnina events include the 100, 200l
400.:J.iSOO, 3,000-mctcr steeplechase, S,000 ana 10,uw-meter walks, 110 and 400 hurdles and
400 and 1,600 relays.
The Darrell Waltnp and Bobby Allison, who
have dueled for the champ1onsh1p the last tbrtt
years, still fiaure 1n the 1984 points battle, but
they are not the only contenders.
Joinina the two former Winston Cup ch.am·
pions arc Dale Earnhardt, the points leader after
20 of the 30 scbedul~ races; Tc!!)' La~nt.e, winner of the Budwe1stcr 400 at R1vers1de 1n
June; 8111 Elhott, last yc:ar'a Winston WC1tcm
SOO winner, and Harry GanL
Women's field events include the discus,
javelin, biah Jump1. shot put and triple jump_.
Track events 1ncluac I 00, 200. 800, I ,SOO, S,000
and 10,000-metcr runa, S,000 and 10,000.mctcr
walks. For more information, phone 432·SS27. For further information, phone 6SJ.. I I 6 l. -
Who needs luck of Irish?
Not Gerry Faust,
who has a quick
and big' 84 squad
SOUTH BEND, Ind. (AP) -
Gerry Faust is well aware this 1s the
pivotal year of his career as Notre
Dame's head football coach but be
says he's optimistic and at ease.
Faust heads into the fourth year of
his five-ycarcontractand if he doesn't
produce the type of winner necessary
at Notre Dame, there mi&}tt not be a
fifth year. A S-6 6-5 or even a 7-4
record simply wift not be accepted.
"I don't think that will be the
situation, rm optimisuc," said Faust.
"We're over the hump, we're rolling.
We've built tbe foundation, now we
have to build the buildina."
In three ye.an under Faust, who had
a &littcrina 174-12-2 record in 18
years at Cincinnati•s Moeller Hi&h
School, the Irish are l 8-1 S-1. In 1981
he was 5-6 for the first losing record at
Notre Dame in nearly two decades.
In 1982 the Irish were 6+1 and last
year they went 7.5 includina a 19-18
triumph over Boston Colleac in the
Liberty Bowl, a game which Faust
now looks at as the tumina point in
his Notre Dame coaching career.
•• 'm_excitcd, I'm optimistic, l'm at
ease, probably more at case than at
anytime in the other three seasons,"
said Faust. "I always look forward to
another season but this year more
than ever. We're where we want to be. rn be back for a fifth year."
One reason for Faust's optimism is
the fact this will be the first season in
which all of his players are his own
recruits.
"It's my team, our first opportuni1X
to coach the people we recruited, '
said FausL "I feel more oomfortable
telling a kid to do this or that without
hurting anyone's feelings. It's not like
criticizinJ a kid I dido 't recruit."
The Irish of 1984 wiJl be big and
strong as usual with added speed and
quickness.
"The team is in excellent physical
condition, the best in four years
strengthwise and runningwisc." said
Faust. "Quickness, strength and at-
titude are the most important factors
but the key to the season will be senior
leadership. It's a &ood team, but 1t will
be up to them to pay the price each
week."
Notre Dame will be led by
sophomore quarterback Steve
Bcucr1cin, Junior tailback Allen
Pinckctt and an offensive line so huJe
it equals some professional teams in
size.
"We have confidence, we're a
senior team;'-sa1d Faust. "Two years
ago we had a senior team and we were
rolling until (quarterback) Blair Kiel
got hurt. We've worked bard, we have
a aood staff and barring injuries. we
Wolverines facing
one tough schedule
But don't think
that frightens
Bo Schembechler
fact that Harbauah. a 6-3, 202-pound
junior, threw onfy five passes all last
year, completing two for 26 yards.
HarbaU&h comes from a football
family. His father, Jack, was de-
fensive coordinator at Stanford and
Chris became a prep whiz around
ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) -Palo Alto before dad moved on to
Michipn Coach Bo Schembcchlcr become bead coach at Western Mich·
beads into one of the Wolverines' ipn University.
toughest schedules in years with a "Harbaugh is tough and com-
rebuilt offensive tine and a green pctitive," Schcmbechler said. "he
quarterback. knows what it is to compete. He'll
But, is he worried? Not at all, to handle the pressure."
heat him talk. The fact remains, however, that
"We play some nice teams," Schcmbcchler and his staff may well
Schembecbler said recently. "I think have to do their best job ever of
it's aoing to be a fun season." coachin~
Fun? He calls playina Miami, The offensive line will be ~sbuf·
Washington, Iowa, llbnois and Ohio fled, moving guard Art Balourdos
State fun. (6-3, 250) from guard to center.
should have a good season even with
a tough road schedule." .
The tough road schedule includes
pmes at Michigan State, Missouri,
Louisiana State and Southern Cal.
Faust believes the Irish can over-
come the schedule which also in-
cludes national champion Miami of
Florida and Penn State.
"We're not going to be sky hi~ for
eleven games, that's impos1tblc,"
said Faust. "But if we play crrorlcss
ball, good, sound football, that can
carry us through. This is the most
talent we've had since I came here.·•
The coaching also figures to be
better if for no other reason than
Faust's on-the--job experience.
"I think I've arown in the job and I
hope I've become a better football
coach," said Faust ... Anybody, in any
position. grows. But it doesn't mean
anything until January the First"
A bit hopeful? Maybe. The lruh
have not.been to a ma,Jor bowl under
Faust and their Liberty Bowl trip last
season came under embarrassing
circumstances when they. tried to
back out after an unexpected loss to
Air Force.
No\\! the Irish arc using the Liberty
Bowl as a stepping stone for the
upcomin& season.
"In 1 Oofour l S losses, we have lost
by .one touchdown.or less. and mou
have come in the founh quarter,"
said Faust.
bli.matJoaal ~ toarne7
More 1han 100 ~tnn from tbroupout lht ortd have been rtttaved or the $22 000
tubbics Pro mtctnal'ional surfi tournamem,
att for Pl 1S.3011 Lowct Treslb,J soum ot
nOcmcntc ~event •ill bqin with the four-4ay triab an 'A1ucb 28 mun c'cnt quahficn willcmcr)e from
the 16S.man ftcld The quah(acn and four wild
card seed will meet lbc world'• top 16 pros Se
29-30
Amona those sc~uled 10 compete are 0?1Y erownedwortdchamptonTomCartolJandfour·
umc world champ Mark Richards or Austraha.
For addiuonal anfommioo on the tour-nament, phone(619>•)4.:J026. .,..,---=•
lfantllo.a bCMt n¢1J6
The tee0nd Chalfant Pms 100.Mik Mara-thon Boat Races will be held Sept I S-16 at
Crowley LAU, JO males nonh of81sbop.
The cnduran« event will future top dn' ers
from around the nation compel.inc for U ,000 m
prize V\Ooey io two marathons
Time lrials for the race, 1ancuoncd by the
Amcncan Power Boat Auocia11on (APBA) will
be Saturday. ~t. I .S, from I 0 a.m. to 4 p.m. ll
Cl'O\tfley lake. foUowina the tnals, the boats will
be (l9tadtd down Main Street 10 Bishop
bcainnina at 6 p.m. On Sunday, Sept. 16, boatS in the professional
outboard division will take to the waiera at 11
a.m. for the stan of the fant of two JOO.mile
marathon racts. For further information., phone (6 l 9)
87)..840.S.
-Oetry Faust hopee to lead Notre Dame to
lta bal MUOD alnce the former Moeller
PacllJc Soatlnrmt telU1U
Rc11111 U ()pto dw1qriOn Junmy O>D-
oors Will make b -oflly Los '-ftltks~ of lhc year aubt rac Southwa1 T crullS
Scot 1-16,atthc Los ltsT Ccater
11 lJCLA
Jo1n1na Connon in the h'luldor S25S;OOO
in un&Jc$ ud doU ~monq will bt 411>f the top men's playen 10 the world
0.>'tlme 1t:Suon1 at lbc ~ J\Qldn Tnuu.s
Center begin at noon "4onday tluOup Friday
And 1 pm. on turda . E~emq lttllOftl will
tqin at 7.30 pm. Tuesday lhrtiu&h Satutday .,.,th the tinali sla~ for 4 p.m on Sunday, Sept.
16.
Tickets are now on Ale at all aiea Tidetron
and Tackttma tcr &ocauoiu and at the UCL\
bo1 office. Tiekct prices stan at S3 for ttnCf'll
...Smi 100 atinaandSIHod011t•ts. Season box scat pactaaies are a1t0 aV11lab&e. For more information, phone (213) 46)..2312
or (213) 467.0397.
Huskers appear
explosive as ever
Rozier, Gill gone,
~ut Tom Osborne -
expects big things
runs. But I CJtpcct we'll have mon;.Ofa
4-or S.yard..per-play team."
The 1983 offense churned out n
averqc ofS2 points and S46 )-anli per
p.me. The team finished with a 1.z:.:1
record., losing only to Miami, 31 !JO,
in the Oran,c Bowl pme that pve LINCOLN, Neb. (AP)-Heisma.n the Hurricanes the national c.bml·
Trophy winner Mike Roner is gone. pionship and dropped Nebraska to So..-~ Tflashy GAllil·IArncdnca quark· No. 2.
tea....._.. umer an wing_ba.cK Fifth-) tar senior Cl'L& Suodb&a.
lrvina Fryar. And auard Dean o ·i1· nd d th Steinkuhler, winner of the Outland 1 s u crstu Y e past two
and Lombardi trophies. no longer seasons. takes over at quantrbilck
will anchor the offensive hne. this fall.
8 U -· f N b ka fi Osborne admitted that Sundbera's ut ruverstty 0 c ras oot-cxpericnccislimited.tddin~ .. ldon't ba,l Coach Tom Osborne praises the talent he has assembled for the 1984 feel quarterback is the wh ansv.I&. ~ason - a team that is heir to one of How \\ell a quarterback p1a)'s often
the most explosive team in colleae dcl>(nds ~n ~ow good the people arc
football hi~tory, the Comhuskers of • a~nd hJamffS th 5 9 1tw'\ d 1983. ~ntor e . m1 , a -., '7V-poun "l wouldn'tconcedetoan~ofthosc Veteran Clay Miller (6-4, 258) will
people," Schembechler said. "We play strong tackle and Hammers..
always 10 in thinkina we're goina to tein's brother, Mark. (6-4, 262) will
win and this year will be no different." start at quick tackle.
The Wolverines finished No. 8 in The receiving corps 1s solid with
the final 1983 Associated Press poll veterans Vince Bean, Sim Nelson,
after to inJ a 9· 7 heartbreaker to Eric K.attus, Triando Markray and
Auburn on the last play of the Suser Gilvani Johnson au retumina.
Bowl pme. Gone from that team, Schembechltr also will look at Paul
however, are AU-American offensive • Jokisch (6-8, 240), a prep All·Arntri·
tackleStefan Humphrics,centcrTom '-Un split end in high school who is
Dixon ahd veteran quarterback Steve &iving collCJC football a try ~or the
Smith. first tame after two seasons with the
Big, rugged group
of head=Dreakers
Osborne and the Huskers have a pccdstcr. will take Roz1~r s place at J.
host of news faces on offense to back_ Smith rushed 78 times for •39
replace Rozier. Fl)er, Gill and yards and fhe touchd~s l _ t year.
Ste1nkuhler. all v..bo arc play1ni tn the He also was founb natJonally lA punt
professional leagues. returns "'1th a 13.9-)ard avcrqe.
··consisleDC)'. on offmse Wlll ~ Tom Rathman ruts tn for Jradu·
c\Cn more cnttcal than ia-1 )Car. atcd fullback Mart ScheUen., and
Osborne saul .. La t )'CIT we could hane S anson is scheduled to take
Schembechler has shuffled bodies Wolverines' basketball team.
and feels comfortable with his rebuilt Gerald White (6-J 205) and DCC<Sy
offensive hne. Michipn always has Thomas Wilchcr(6-0, I SS) will be the
plenty of tacklea and tailbac after top two tailbacks unless Rick Rogers
all. (~2. 216) can pull his arades up;' Bob
Even at quarterback, where Jim 1Pcr1')'man (6-2; 22S) and Eddie Oar·
Harbaujh is the heir appa~nt, the rett (6-2, 220) lead a bis corps of
coach feels comfortable, despite the fullbacks.
(
Auburn in quest
for even higher ----national honors
' I 1
make 1 few mistakes and then Fryar·s pot at."'inaback.
somebody would ao. 60 }arch for a In the line. OSbome has a table of
touchdown. Thi )'tar. I think we'll horses headed by 6-6. 260-p0und ~till be able to score on a few Iona senior Mark Traynowicz.
Trump denies Generals
plan move to New York
, . .
..
Ofangct Coast DAILY PILOT/Wedn y, August 22. 1 a.
Bleacher Bums are doubling thei.r fun in Chicago
Wri,glc) "Vin~ 1s Bill Vc«k, former
scball owner who ot i.aned s a
,·cndor t the b:lllpa .
They' re not only getting a sun. tan,
they're seeing a pennant race, too
CHIC~GO (AP> -The> arc
hicaio'\ ans\licr• to "Animsal
Hou5e," a loose-knit fraternity of
beer, ba~b311 and sun won.htppcrs.
· -Their antks 1n p1ml a loni-run·
nina hit play durina the l 970 and
prompted Chicago Cubs mana,ge-
ment to put a shor1 fence aero s the
· outfield wall. --·---·1 hey an-tht Bleacher Bu mt of
Wngley Field, and thi year their
heroes aiT batlling for the Nation I
league East crown:
..
.. ...
,. .-.. t!; , __
The Bums are 1n a part) mood,
'I, FOR THE RE CORD
-------------=-----
~ t I
'If "
MAJOR LEAGUE STANDINGS
Americ.an LNvue
Mlnnaoll ..... Kans.ea Cltv
Clllcaoo
Oakland
S..lllt
Tues
Detroit
Toronlo
S.lllmort
NtwYOf'k
Boslon
Cttvelend
MllwtukM
WIST DIVISION
W L ~ct. Ga
'5 SI .521 61 64 ... ~
61 " ... 5 60 64 .414 511'2
60 ,7 472 7
S7 70 '49 10
SS 11 '11 11~
EAST OIVISIOH
'3 '4
10 ~
6' S9
6' St
6S 61
5' 70 S2 .,,
·~ 5'S 11'"> S2t 16
S2t 16 516 m,
~ 26.,
•It 29 ,
Tuet49Y'a ~ New York I, AMiii 2 C ........ nd 3, TOf'onlo I
Boston 11. Kanws City I
S..tllt 4, Balll!TQ't 3
Oelroll 12, OaAland 6
Ttltal '· Chicago 3 ( 10 lnni119,)
Minnesota al MllwaukM, PPd. ra in
TedlY'a Gemft .,..... (S&.lton 4-'l •I Ntw York
<Fontenot 6'-7l, <n> _
Cleveland IBIYltvtn 13-5) •I Toronlo
(Ctancy IC>-12), (n)
Kanus Cltv (Wiiis l-2> at Boston (Hurst
11-7), {n)
Oakland (KrutOtl' 1·9) •I Oelroll
(ktneUtf' 6·1), (n)
S..ltlt (Moore S· 121 •I S.ll1mort
(McGreoor 14-11), (n)
Minnesota (Smlllllon 12·9 end Scnrom
4•6) al MllwtukM (Celdwetr 6· 10 tnd
lalarXO 0-0), 2, (l·n)
Chtcego (Hovt 10-131 t i Tt1111 !Darwin ,.,,,In)
T1Wrs41ty'a G•ll'Mti
Oevel•nd •I Toronto Mlnneso•• al MnwaUkM
N•ftonal LN~
WEST DfVlstON
W L ~ct. Ga
Sen Ole9o 73 SI Sit
Allanll 64 62 SOI 10
Houilon '3 64 •N II ,
Oedew1 " 64 m 12 Cincinnati S3 73 •21 21
~ FrancliGO 47 7' 311 2S ,
ClltctDO
NewYOl"k
·'""'~ .. MonlrMI
SI. Louis Pill Iburg II
EAST DIVISION
74 Sl
61 SS
67 5'
'2 " 62 62
SJ 73
Tuesdt'l'S ~ ..
S91
SSJ S
~s 6
504 11 soo llYa
421 21 ,
DedlWs 4, MonlrUI l
ClllUDO 11, Hou,100 S
PillUIUFOll 5, Allanl1 4
Cll'ICIMlll 4, SI Lou11 I
S.n Oleeo 7, New York ' Ptllla0elllfll1 12, S.n F rancliGO S
TedlY'• Games
Monlrul (Lu 15•11 al ~ IHonev·
cull 10-7)
Pllfl~ (Koosman 13 IOT IT Sen
Francisco (Laahv 6·11)
Hou,lon {Rvan 10·7) er Cllkaoo
IRutnvan 3·11
All•nla IPavM 0 0) at Pltl,OUrgll
IMcWllnams 7·91, In> SI Loula (Andul•• 16· ll) ., C1ncl~ll
(Solo 13-61, <n>
New York !Gooden 11 l l er S.n Olel>O (Hawkin$ 7·1), (n)
Tllunclt'I'• Games Sr. Louta at Houaton, In>
AMERICAN LEAGUE
YankM$ I, Aneefs 2
CAUFottNIA NEW YORI(
IMntciul rf
Sconort lb
OMl ie< lb
Lvnn cf
O.Cnc•Jb OO#ningtf
ReJksn dh
GrlCn 2b
SCllOf11d n
MC8rnol'I Boone c
Tflh
llbrllbl abrllbi
' 0 0 0 Rndlpf\ 2b 4 1 I 3
2010 Mechmn S232
I 0 0 0 Mtnotv lb 4 0 2 I
3 2 2 0 Winfield rl 3 0 2 0
' 0 2 1 8-vlor dll S 0 0 I
' 0 2 1 Grlltt'I' If 4 I I 0
4 O 0 0 Oavtll If 0 0 O O
3 O O O Wvneoer c 4 2 2 0
3 0 I 0 Poirulo 3b • 2 l I
1 0 0 0 OMortn cf 4 0 0 0
' 0 0 0 ll 2 I 1 Tmh
Sctre bV 1Mif191
37 I 14 I
C.llfemla 000 001 010-2
New Ywtr OOJ 005 OOlC-I
Game Wlnnlno RBI Pe11lleruro (2)
E-Benlquez DP-N-York 2
LOB-Callfornla 1 New York 10
2B-Oownino Paoliaruro. D.Clr'ICe\
HR-Meacham 11 l SF-RandolPh
IP H R ER ea 50
Celif«'nla
Romanek L 10 II S 1 l 10 7
Corbett 27 l • 1
New van.
N1ekro w lS 1 1 S l 4
Slurlev 2 l 0 ')
T-217 A-18 960
NATIONAL LEAGUE
o.ct91rs 4, Exoos J
MONTltlEAL LOS ANGELES
Ra•nescf
TllOmatU
Oaw•Ofl rl
GCarrer c or .. n n lb
wanecnJb
Wol\lfrdlf
Flvnn 2b
Scnrzdr o
Jamt10
Tetali
abrllbl abrllbl
3130 S••2b 4000
lltO Anci.Wlu 3100.
4 I 2 2 Guttre< r1 l I I 0
) 0 0 I olmtung rt 0 0 O 0
' 0 0 0 MarM\h If ' 2 3 I
4 0 0 0 Ml<lnOo ct 3 0 1 2
3 O 0 0 Land• w cl I 0 0 O
3000 YH11erc 1001
3 0 0 0 Scl0$C•a c 1 0 0 0
O O O 0 Brock lb 3 O O o
Rivera 3b l o o O
Vatenzla 11 3 0 1 0
JO l 6 l Taottla 30 4 7 4
Scare bY lnnln95
~-JOO 000 000-l lft A"91Mt >01 OOt OOx-4
Game Wlnnl119 lltBt -Matdonade> CSI
E-Otw•Ofl OP-lo• Angeles I
L08-MontrUI 3, LO$ Angeles S
28'-MtldontdO, Raines, Mersllelt JB-0.wM>n SO-Raines 1571
SF~Carlff', YH11tr f~ HllHH$0
Mtmr ...
Schlldr L,6•4 1 H 1 • ' 1 2 J•lfte1 7JO 0 0 0 0
L•A,_.. Valenzla W, 10· 14 f 6 l l 2 4
HIP-A~ Cbv ~lltoet)
T-2 16 A-U. lft
saunily drt sed for hot dA)', lappang
up beer from p-Jpcr cups nu
clutching $3 tic1'cts for the 3,300
baclde•s eats "1 think they're mar\clou\, ·r hC'y'rc
the heart and soul of baseball," said
Cub'\ announcer Harry Caray ... You
call them bum , but they're not bums.
they're college students. thcy'l't' d~~
tors and lawym"
Caray kno~ the terrain well . He
d~ hi~ play~by·pla> direct trom the
bleachers once or tw1ce a season .
Another celebrity out beyond tht
DOUBLES. LAParrt$1'1, Teus, u.
OwEva111, Botton, JO, Melh"9"1', New
York JO. 88ell, TtxH, 2', Garcia, Tor·
onto, 29
TRIPLES M6MC>y, ToronJo, 13. Comna,
TOt'onto, 12; KG•bM>n. Ottro•t. '· UPWW,
Toronto. 9; Owen. S..llte. I
HOME RUNS· Armas. 8oalOll. )4, Klno·
man, Oakland. 30, LNParrl•ll, OttroU, 2'.
Kittle, Cllie.eoo. 2', Thornton, Cleveland, 26.
STOl.EN BASES RHandeoon, Oakland,
49, Pelll,, Calllornla "· Conln•. Torooto,
41; Buller, Cltvtland. 39. Garcia. Toronto.
34.
PITCHING ( 11 d«.lsiona) Leal, TOf'onto,
12·3, 3 .,, Btvltven. Cleveland. 13-5. 3 19;
Petrv. OttroU, lS-6. 3l5, Stitt>, Toroolo,
~1-S. 2S 1. Barolas. S..tt'41, 9·4, 3.73 STRIKEOUTS Witt, Alltllli, IU1
Lell0$100, se.11i., 151, Stieb, TMonto, 131,
HOUllh. Texu, 132; NM!kro. New York, 123.
SAVES Qulaenberrv. K•Mt• Cltv, 3.);
Caudill. Oakland, 27; Hetnandez. Oelroot,
26, ROtvls, M1nneM1ta, 2•. Flnoers. Mii•
waul<M, 23
N1ttonal LHW.
BATTING (305 ., bel•): Gwvnn. S.n
Oia90 .361, S.ndt>ero. Clll<•oo. 321. Cru1,
HOU$lon, .116; Leonard, S.n Franclsai,
JOI. Ray. Pllllbu<gh, 301
RUNS Stndbero, Cllieago, '1; Wteoim,
Sen Ooeoo. U , Samuel. Phn.a.tPllta, 12.
Mtt1n.w1 Clliceoo, 11, Gwvnn. S.n Oleoo,
19.
RBt· GCartar, Montrul, •. JO.vis,
Clllca9o, 12; Schmidt Philaelelohlt, 79, Ctv
Cl\lcffo, 71. Ourtltm. Chlctoo, 14,
Mun\c)f\reY. Houslon, 74, MurPhv, All•nla,
74
HITS Gwvnn, San D'-00. 175; S.ndbtt"t,
Chlctoo. 162; S.'""91, PlllladelPllla, 15', Cruz, Houslon, 1.,, Wvnne, P1t1.tlur011. 1'1
DOUBLES Samuel. Pll•ladtloflft, 2t,
S.ndtlero, c111cego, 2t. Hubbard, Atlanta,
27. Ralntl. Monlrw•I, 77, Ourt\am. Cllktoo.
26, Hlndrk:k, SILOUi$, 26
TRIPLES· Sandberg, Cnlc•oo. 16,
Samuel, Philada~I• IS, Cruz, Houston,
11, Doren. Hou•lon, 11, CRtvnolda, Hous-
ton, 9; C.wvnn, S.n Dlaoo. 9; McGee.
StLoull, f.
HOME RUNS Mur1>1111, Atlanta, 2t;
SCllmldt, PhllacMtpllla, 2S, GC•rltr, Mofl·
rrea1, 24. Cev. Chicago, 21, MlrWI.
Oecleen, ».
STOLEN BASES Samuel, Phlladelpllla,
S7. Wloofns, S.n Ole9o. 53, Rtll'lft, Mt>n·
treat, 52; Redus Cincinnati. 44, MWllM>n.
New YOf'k, ll
PITCHING (11 dtdsloM): Sutd1Ht, Cnl
cago, 11·1, 32', D•r1lnll. New Yort., 11·5.
3 61, PPertz. Atlanta, 11 • S, J 76. Trout
Cll<a!IO. 11·5. l..57, Soto, Cincinnati 13·6
l.25.
STRIKEOUTS Gooden. New York 1'3,
Vtlen1uela, Oed9en, ltl; Rv•" Hc>uilon,
152. Soro c1nc1nnetl, 1J9, C.ritoo, Ph1l•de4·
""''· 135. SAVES-Suiter SILOU1$, lJ, Holland,
?tlll•detl>fl••· 71, Orosco, New York, 27,
LeStnilh, Chiceoo, 26, ~"°'• San 0.-,o,
?•
ATP toum1mem
c.f Mason, Ohio)
F Int Reuftd Slntles
VJiav Amrllral (India ) def John
McEnroe (U SJ. 6·7, 6·2. 6-3, Sllehtr
Pmtu ClirH I) def Aaron Krkk•laln
{US ), 7-6. 6-1, Mah Wit.ender (Sweden)
def Frit1 Buellntno IU S ), 6· l, 6-2, Andv
KOlllOert (US ) dtf Brad Drewett (Austral·
1a ), 6·3, •·6, 7·6. John Lloyd {Gr"'
Brittin) def Slo ZtvolonviC (Swlt11rtand).
6·4, 6·2. Martv Oavh (U.S) def S.ndv
Mayff' {U.S ), 1·6, ,.2, 6·3, Ptltr Ftemlll9
(US.) def Per H~IQU1tl (Sweden). 6 ·2,
6·4, Oen Cauldv (U.S l def Terrv Moor
(U.S ). 6·1, 6-2. Gulllermo VUu (Argentina)
def Tom GUii ksOn IU S ) 7-6. ,.7 7 '
Women'i toum11'Mftf
(at MtntrMI)
Ftnt Revlld ~
Grtct Kim IU S l def Robin While
IU s ), 1-6, 6-3 6·3 Carina Kariuon
!Swedenl def Sue Barker Britain), 3·6
s.cenci llleund $lfttle$
Ct•r•' Everl Llovd IU.S I de! StndY
COlhM (U S). 6·0, 6 1, Alvcia Moulton
U.S I Clef Hana Mendl1ti.ova (Cztcho"o·
vat.la), 7·5, o-6. 7·5, Celller.ne Tanvier
(Fr•nce) def Tone Sclltuer l.arMtl IOtn·
mark), 1·6, 6·•. 6·3, Helene Ptlltlltr
<C•nad•I def Ehebetn S.vff's CAuslratla ),
'°2, 6·2, Gretcl'ten Ruth IU.S) def Jennv
Ktllcll (U.S ), 7-S, 6·3, Betton• 9uno• (Wesl
Germanv>. 7·6, 7·6. Terrv PllelPt (US)
def SvM• Hanlka 1w111 Germanvl 6 1, 6-•
0..0 Ml ftilllng
NEW~T LANOING (Ntw~rt
e.tdll -69 •no..,., ~ bo<11to. lS btu. 31
barracuda 21 v~wra~ 135 built! tuna 506
mackerel
DAVEY'S LOCKE.It (,.._pert lhadl)
-192 •nollr• 109 bonito '4 vellowl•"· Sf
ca oeo bau. 1' rock liSh, lS sand be"· 5'0
mackeftt s KulP•n. 7 SllMPSl\etd, 32 buliet
tuna
This wMlc'i trout •n"
LOS ANGliLIU -Bououet Canvoo
Crftl< SAN aERNARDINO -Big 8H1 Ltkl,
Green V111tv Lelle, Greoorv Lake, Santa
.l\na River. S.nte Ant River (toutn fotk)
l(EJlN -Kern ltrver Ike• Powt!'·
house to Democrat Dem, KRJ PowffllOUse
to Lake twbefta),
TUL.Mll -Kllfn River (Fairview O.m
to I( R3 PowtrllOUloe, Johnaondalt 8rl$ lo
Ftlrvlew Dam), Tule Riv« (~th fork Of
main forll.l
MAOllltA -S.n JOMUlll RIYtf lmlddlt
fork), Sta~wtalN!' Lalle
INVO -ltltllf Cr.-, 119 PIM Creek.
litllOP Crtelt (lower. middle, south end lnta~t Ill, lndt~f Cttfk, ~ Pklt
C.reek, ltocl\ Crftk Lake, South L•I!•,
TabOoH Crwtl, Tilltmllla Cr••. Twttlt
CrklL
MONO -It dffl:IOrl lttuinolf, 8utll •
tvt Creek. Ceflv1(1 Ct•. COl!wkl ~e, OIM.mtn Cl'ftk. EIW• Lake, <HofM
• L.ake, Glen Cree«.. Ci..-LI •· G<anl l.llU,
c;reen ''""-JUlle L-.e. L .. Vlftlftt er-.. \.." VlllltlO Creek (Mkl!ll fOl"lriJ, Utrle
We ., Rlur. l4lfld\o ._.., t . Mamie 1..1 e,
Ma~ C,.._, MMY La ... McC"
C,..., Mll c,...., °"""' li'lw lhntall
'""'"" t!ld ••• ), •OO!Man ,, ... , ltoa Cr• CPar C.mo IO Tom'•
"'-'•· Tom'• Pi.a '""1r•m lo ltoc:
,..... Ll!ltl. l\11!1 '"""· Crtell, ~ Lau, .tn Cr
Jltver La ... , S•lllOt' Cr ., TION Llkt,
Trumlll.lll I.au, T LA ft , I
!UPMr tllf IOWetl, Twm l.akn ~.
Vlrtlnla CreD IUllNr.,., ~l . v lftle l..... (...... tl'ld IO•nO, W• ., ltlvw
IChru F'lat CtfTIOtM'OUllO IO IO•ft of W fl.
l •••111 AA.M«Jws Camllfteund 10 senora
.. l n'uh1s is .&ml WI) to pend an
1flemoon... id a m1lin Veeck,
hari ~rand 1he sun on frequent
af K'fnoons w~1r1ng only a un hat
and hon .
E\'tn wilh his ctlcbril) t.atu~.
Vett-i~ hardl)' motT ttcoa,n1zable
than ~me of the other regulars.
One young man show~ up in a blue
nd red cape and ~horu. oulfil wilh a
T-shin that reads "Ultra Fan."
Another ~an. only \born and an
automobile hccn~ =pl.ale, rttd1n1
"GO cuas;· strapped to his back. A
young. attractive woman in a d1'\Co
dre!iis docs a htllc dance each time the
C ub<s do well.
NFL PA•HHon
NATIONAL CONflEllENCE
New Orletn•
ltam Allanlt
S.n Franclaco
Detroit
Tarrw>t Bev
Greene..,,
MlnneM>la CllleeQO
w"' W L T
3 0 0
I 2 0 1 2 0
I 1 0 ~al
l"d. Pfl l"A
1 000 " 60 3J) 47 ,2
333 79 19 .333 .. 66
2 I 0 .647 S8 S4
2 2 o .soo n 120
I 2 0 .33351 '8
1 2 0 ..l33S."
0 3 0 .000 31 61
Eut
Danas 2 1 0 667 6S so
NY Gltnh 2 1 0 '67 • 60
SI. LOU1$ 2 I 0 667 40 37
Ptll .. dell>ll•• I 2 0 3J3 62 '7
Wa$hlnolon I 2 O ll3 '3 6S
AMERICAN CONFERENCE
Sealllt
o.nver
Sal\Oiaoo
ltaldtn Kanu,Cllv
PO!atlurgl!
Cincinnati
C,....nd
Houston
Wast
4 0 0 1000 90 3"
210647653'
21066765'9
120.333 ~'2
I 2 0 .333 ,1 61
Central 3 0 0
2 1 0
I 2 0
I 2 01
Eut
1000 71 41
W 5' 4S .333 31 n .333 n 11
Mleml
Buffalo
tnd••n•POll•
New Enoltnd
NV Jeta
1 o o 1000 n J3
1 2 0 .33331 37
1 2 0 .Jl3 29 75
1 2 0 .l33" 90 o 3 o .ooo 46 n
Tllvnd9Y'• Games San Oleeo at Rama. {n)
Cl8Vtland ti Plllladelllfllt , {l'I) Fr1daY'I
~ NY Jell et ltldtn, (n)
Denver et Allant1, (n)
Oetroll at Cincinnati, lnl
K•nw• Cllv •I New Enoland, (n)
Miami al Tampa Bay, (n}
Mlnllf$0ta •I Sr Loul•, (nl
S.allta ti S.n Francisco, <n>
Stturdll'l'a a.mes
wasnlnoron at New °''""' tndtanePOll' al Gr-1 8.v, (n)
P1thbul'Ofl ti NY GltnlJ Cnl
HOUSICHI II 0.Ku, (n)
~V'• Game Cnoeaoo va Buffalo er tnd1anaP01ia
COMMUNITY COLLEGE
Miss.Jon Confef'enu
Ptt1ESEA50N POLL .
IAa ~ lrt aonterenu ~0.)
~es. TMtn Ph
1 Saddlebacll 60
2. Sen Ole9o Mesa 57
3 Cllrul ~
' Soutllwfllffn 41
S Rivf!'alde CC 37
6 O!'•l'Dt Cot•I 32
7 S.nl• Ana 26
I Pttorntr 16
9 S.n Dieoo CC
Los Alamltos
TUESDAY'S 1'ESULTS
Urd ef 54-nltrtlt Nl'lleH mHflne}
flUUT It.ACE. One milt pee-. Finl Outcast (Wiiiams) 26 40 UO 5 00
Tlmtlfts so.ru (Pierce> 5.20 4 00
Merell Ster IF ~rtf'I) UO
Atw raced Anchor Bev, Wero Drive.
Siar Act, The CtndlCS.te, Levti Devit. C~nvl Star
Time 2'04 3 s
il EXACTA 16·1) 09id Sl7190
SECOND llllACE. One mllt ~
Shine Ahead (F ~renl 30 IO I 20 3 IO
Jet F~ Bravo (Kuetlltrl 6.IO '20
Miu Roa.o Drive (Tremblay) 3 40
AIM> raced Seiecttd, Hedlte. Suotr
Pride, Mounrtln Bvrd. RoVtt Slier.
Time. 202 115.
$) EXACTA (3·2) Ptld S19000
THNtO ltACE. Ont mite 11ac1
Speclal'Ptler (AnderM>n) UO 00 210
Werm W!Ws (Plano) UO HO
CuMC (llolltllfll) 2'0
AIM> raced· Counttts Royete, 5cr1J91~.
Don Reoal, Mlcllttf John, HHI Blalt, Mulll
Berrv
Time. 1:59 2/S
il EXACT A (2-1) Ptld S41 70.
flOUlt.TH RACE. One mile pace
Wl"90UI CSllOl'IJ 6 IO HO 220
Ktno Como IAnci.t1on1 2 40 2 10
S.n Joaquin C Pierce) 2 20
AIM> raced GVOSY Patrlerct'I. Sudden M.ove, Cloudbuattr, Howov Spark,
Time 2.-tn 4/S
~ll'TH RACI!. One mrle oace
lum~ Car IRttclll0t:dl 7 IO 4 IO J IO
Tarooelt <Kut!>ltfl 3 60 l 40
NICkv o ere.o (Plefc.) s.oo
AISO raced Rovtl Hunter, Refty, Gtm-
bral, FlamtCTfll, S.brt Oancet, Foiled
Time 2 O.f 215
'3 aXACTA (6·•> paid UJ.30
MXTH lACIE. One mile lf'OI
Martina 'Pride <J Sfv'nl J3 20 13 20 9 00
!.lff loWI IPHl<cel 7 40 4 00 Proofltcv (Lltf\thlll) 4.20
AIM> rec.cl S.Ov, Star Hil G .. lttude,
Katemoun Time; 202 u IXACTA <s-;u Hid M)UO
s•v•NTH RAC•. One mtle oeu
CUI It Out (ltc>Hf\) 3 40 a.40 J 40 O.ntv (F. Stlerrenl 1210 I 20
Elllr• (McCertv) 4 20
AllO ractO Timber CrHk, Golden Al·
fair, GI GI ltoekt1, TOUC111 MlrKll, Matrix,
Sabrina Laoacv
Time J;(Q US
U IXACTA 11·11 oald SJ4IO,
llGHTH RACI. One tnlle Pact. Reoref M.t NOi lltciltY) 1' IO SAO 3 40
Va~n (Oet.omefl J40 .260
HI"'*' To Win (Planol 3 40 AIM> r tad. l.ri 11 To ,,,,. , E fNf' tld
CJ.111119, Mon'-tey lll'rtlrlf, $tick, SQvlre
Lene Glitto Time. ,-Ql 21!1
il •XACTA tMl PliCJ '6HO
NINTH RACI. Ot-. mllt trot
Como Star CU9ftltllll • AO 3 It , .0
" k L*' '"· $tittr1nl HO lOO C""1M MOOM (Dft.-ner J t.IO
AIM rtetd NOiiie Arnette. CK'• HontY, .SClfCltl tn1wea1, llletn.
TllTlf 200 J/5 U UCACTA C6'-I> Mio JS..30
IJ f"KK lfX (4·,·5 1•1•'1 Ptld tl;S)f
•111'>· 10 ... tnnltll JO•'• (Ihle hOrUtt) ~MOf 111.:mn
T'INTM ltACI. 0.. mile NC•
True lr C fSletfh) 1600 UO 6 ... !o:"G.,~,:~,·· .,'""' 1~
AIM rao.s t-fl ~ew, MTwe;n
tar, 0.!rtvt, $tv Otfllt, "°'1Y £•0fHS,
IS \AO tim. t1'1 llS
U AJtACTA .~·41 Mid l
.. \\hen u oomcs co nty Cubs. I am
the-uham le cnthu t -the ul·
tim tcopumm," Ld U1tr11 fin, Who
hold' up o ne of pla rds, one
letting hi fellow Ric chcr Bums
lnowwhat the Cubs' m1111c number 1\
for chnchan 1 d1v1 ion title.
In ~rty Augu · 1, he una5hamcdh
held up the number"' 8." •
l1li:c-tht" trur upcrhero, Ultra Fan
at first refused to d1vul~ h1~ 1dcn11ty.
But he later dmmcd to being Mike
lrwm, 23. a st.andup comic.
Durina games. left.field Bleacher
Bumi ~di in11uhmg cheers at ri t·
field 8um.s1 and ",cc versa. he
bkacher dwcller6 ~omct1mes hower
the outfield with beer cups to how
their di ptea~ure. Once thh ~~n.
they even to ~d back onto the field a
1914 PGA Tour
ltli.MAIHINO SCH•OULI!
Auo 23·2' -World s.r1es of Golf
Auo 30·SePI. 2-8.C. 0oao
s.01 ,., -Bo•ton Clinic
Secil 13· 16 -Greater Milwaul\M Ooao
Secil 1t·23 -Lu Vevea Pro•C ... brtlv
Clautc
s.01 27·30 -LaJet CJuslc
Ocl 4·7 -Tt•H Ooan ,
Ocl 11· 14 -Southern Ooao
Oct 11·11 -W•tt DllMV World Golf
Ctaulc
Oct U-21 -Pensecota Oc>en
Nov. 1·• -USA vs Japan Ttam Matdlet
TBA -THm lnvllallonal and JC Pen·
ntv ClaUIC
1tt4 LPGA Tour
lllaMAINING SCHEDULE
Auo 23·2' -Ottlver Clanlc
SaPI 1·3 -Rall Ctlllrllv Ct.au< ISIWl119·
field, t•.>
Sell!. 7-t -Pwrtano CnamP1on,11<P
Sellt 13· 16 -S.teco O.nlc <S..tutl
Seot. 20·13 -lnamorl Clanlc {S.n
Otego)
Seot 2t·30 -San JOM 0.UIC
TBA -GOid Pultt!' Award ,,._..,off ILis v .... ,. USA·Jel>tn Team 'Cllampion$.111P
(Ja09n); Japan Claulc Mixed THm
Clank {L.aroo, Ft.a.I
Tuesdllv'i tranr.acfton'
us••ALL
Amerkln lAHU4t
CLEVELAND INOIANS-Ctltld UP Jun-
ior Noooa, lnft411der lrom Buffalo of 111e
Eattff'n L .. oue
Ntllenal L....,.
SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS-Placta
Steve Nicosia, catcher on Ille 15·d..,,
dl .. l>led Utr, C.hld uP Randv Gomet,
ca teller. from Pneonlx ot Ille PactftC Co111 L•aoue aASKETaALL
Halle!* .. Ill ..... Auadtften
DETROIT PISTONS-Signed Grao Jone~
to a mulli·yttr conlr•cl
INOIANA PACERS-Sloned Otv1n Our·
rant. forward. to • l'Tl4.llll·YHr contract
POOT8ALL
NetleMI Faetbal L.'""9
ATLANTA FALCONs-Placeo Stan
Gav. deffflSIVt beck. on Ille lnlurld rtwrvt
fist Cul TOdd H«n•nde1 and Eddie "Nvtn, running btcka, Jta. Well, PUnter
8ob Lane. quarterback, Mark Slttor.
Ctf'lttr. Mike Slmela, def9nalve ltckla, John
T..,,tor, linebacker, cawv SmUll, tackle,
and Tom Tutson, Clfftnalvt btCk
CHIColGO BEARS-Watvld Wall Wll-
Uama, cornerbaclL, KtMn Atkins. Neklta ~on. t!rte Kelfh-and GeorR ltt-
vnolda, Puntara, Cllrl1 Jenwn and Svtvflttr
May, wldf rtcttveo, Wlllle Hoo1n, df-
fen11v1 t>ack, Vince Al>Ooll, kicker, and Bob
Auoutl, quarterback
DETROIT LIONs-ffeacqulrld Terry
Ttvtolo, llnebtckar, from lht Mltml
OolPllln• to comlllett pas! conslderallom
Waived Mike Dawson. dtfenslYe IKkte,
Horace Kine, runn•no bad, end Cllf'll
R-ldo, tlnel>a<:lllr
DENVER IROHCOS-Welvld Cie«Ot
Smtl, note ttekta and Stan 8111\kt,
lnt«llCker. Placed AOO Sw•Mt, ~.,.
and, oo Ille lnlured reserve 1111
GREEN BAY PACKERS-Waived
8'tl'Oll BrtOOI. dffalllive end. Placed Laotla
H•rrl•, vuard, on Ille r9'efW'falltd llfl'/$1·
cal n1t. Pieced LIMV T•vtor, wide , ....
OllVllf, on 11\t lniured r..er'llt 1111.
KANSAS CITY CHIEF~ld Dave
Ktuo, Bnet>tdltr. on It'll PllYllctl'v U'lablt to
P9f'form 1111. Pleca<I Rufua Stevens, wide
reclver, and t<en Tllomaa, runnint bltdl, on
ll'te lnillf'ed reserve llat.
LOS ANGELES RAIDERS-Cut Jerrv
Golatevn, quartert>aek, Ed Muramkv.
C.eoroe Ntualiku, and Cllnl Berrv. offen1lvt
linemen, Jt,,,.. Hadnot. l'UMino btctt,
Gt!'ald Bradtev. wide receiver. Ktf'll Jor·
den, 00111 and Jtff Chaffin, dffensive
ltneman, and Larrv McCov. llntblc:ker.
Placed Jett Simmons, wide rtc:elver, on lht
lnlurld reserve 1111.
LOS ANGELES RAMS-Ptac:ld Hal
SltPhen1, defenslv• end, Scott Tln"9v,
quarterback, end Oen McQueld, ltckta, on
Illa tnfured rewrve tlaf. Cul MOii Bies,
tlnebeckar. Broderick TllomoM>n •nd Tom
Tevlor, gu•rda, Sc:oll evera, yfetv. Lew·
renc.e Reid, running back, RIQkv Marlin,
wide rt«lver, and Tooy Oeluc.a. nose
tackle
NEW YORK JETS-W1l11ed Jeff Davit,
kicker, and 8'etl Wrl;nt, ounter.
MIAMI OOLPHINS-WalYld Wntlam
0.vana, nosa la<kta, and David NalM>n,
r1U1nino back Placed Bob Kuecnenotrg
tuard, on Ille lniured r ... rve llat.
MINNESOTA VIKINGs-f"ltced Bennv
RlcerdO, tr.lcker, on tlle lnlurtcl ,,..,.., li•t
Cul R lcll 8tiland Jar v la Redwine. runnlno
Dacka, Dalla Noel, ~111 Mck, "'°
OweYnt ROO.rts, lineMC.ker,
PHILADELPHIA EAGLES-Cut ~ott
Raridon, ltCkle, JllTI AsmtA, klcUr, Jt~
JacOl>s. runnmt l>tck, Tom ltlld , tkllll
tnd, Todd JamlM>n, kic.k returner, Tom
o.erv. w.1e1v, Tom Heutl ano K•tn
Woettal, nntoaekers, Skip Hamlflon. nose
tackle. •nd Tom McComeuollev. wide
recr•er.
PtTTSIUlGH $TEELERS-Tradff Greo Hawthorne, wide receiver, lo Ille New
E n;ftnd Petr IOI I for Ill uncliw:IOMCI drtll
c:noka Welved JOM ltOdvtra. ll#tll tlld
Placed 8ot> Kohn, dwl•n•lv• Ind, on tilt
llflyatcauv unable lo P«form ••t ST LOUIS C~ltOINAL5'"-Plac:td 8~
Whitaker, defensive back, Roel Clllrll,
tlneblckar, •f\d JOflft Welker, runnlno Dack,
Of! lhl lnlured r9"1've Ual. Cul Peul Ont•.
Uneba<ker, Ed RllOM, defensive end,
Hewrlll Ol•Oft •nd Oeotot T1\ll0r, rUMlllO
bactta. and Mike Y•llt9'1 end Cllrta ltblnl,
centers.
$AN DIEGO CHAltC.Elll~e!Md
JoM T "'"". defen11ve IMKk, from the
Mlnnesora Vlktno\ and r-..lved a ro•ltr
•• tmOllOll '°' film WAS..INGTON ltEOSl(INS-Wtf11ed
L.ou1110 la< trY •net VIC Vll!fl, fletftl1lwe
btCU, G4ff ~"• tMbed!«, $le.ye 111• ~."'Ide r.-.iv.r, J•v Ptnnlson, otfeniln
llMmltll ·~ Jiff ""''"' HOC)(IY
Na"91111Hea..,~
CHICAGO 11..ACIC HAWK"°" lid
0ta'f1'., IOt*trd 10 e mull! T COl'ltrKI
VANCOUVElt CANVCKS-SIQned N
no. Cit' """"· 10 • multf lrec1 •
WASHINO TON 'APITAL5-'S OMO
Cir Mfnt N oho!\ def mt
COlLIGE
CHICAGO STAT ·mu wee •ttr•
rOll t llllef le dlr eUOf.
OELAWAR·E--Na1Nld a1,.1;c K1ot,
IOHA-H med Stave k1, Cart tuo9ef•
t v, f'IUI Kra Ull•llilf, Plftt illaw end O.W
LAtlftly •U tttf'll I CN\
VAL -~ IM r•JJGntl ot RMlln G Jn wom.n • ft tv eno lrlckll.} =-=--~~~~----~ ~------=-: ~-----=IKIOIM ~ ~~~~
'-
'
home run ball hat b) n oppo 1t1on
ttcr.
··rhrow" ~k 1br<>~ 11
"ro~l.1 h d urged.
Beth Nev.Cit rtmcmbcr nothcr
memorable day 1n the bl chers.
··1 ttmcmber the gnmC' when not
one fan but several fons iot .. o drun\;
thry fell out of the itand into the
outfield."' sn1d Newell, 29 .. It was
quite an honortohavebttn there that
day beC".&USt i.honly afterward they
put up that basket And the ba~kc1
wasn't to make Jt harder lo hit home
run bul to keep the fan' from f allina
out of the !ilands."
1 he baskcl is a shon wire fenc~
protruding from the hlcachcr wall,
placed there in the early 1970s.
"l here were 30 to 50 hard"<:ore
Bumi 1hen,·• 1d Ne\\-cll. who \\ 1
14-ycar-old "'left-field" Bum in 1969,
"'They wore ~llow rd hat d
went for panyin -mott th n the
n1c:·
She learned from 1969, the rear the
Cub ltd the National l.ngue into th
hul of Augu'l only• to blow the
~nnant to the New York Mets, not lo
be too lo)'al to a bucball team.
"The CubS broke my hean in
1969," aaid Ne\\ell.
.. People arc asking rnc if the Cubs
att aoing to fold like in '69. but I teU
them '69 was '69 and '84 is '84," said
Ron Wickers. 42. They 1lso ask him why he'~ oot a
fan Qf the croMtown While Sox
baS('ball team. Answen Wickers·
"YOu can't have two wi\les."
Jets Gastineau,
O'Briengoon trial
io a ~uth Streci Scapon restaurant,
suffered broken noses and other
injuries.
Players facing
assault complaint
in disco incident
NEW YORK (AP) -New York
Jets football players Mark Gastineau
and Ken O'Brien went on trial
Tuesday m Manhattan Cnminal
Coun, accused of .. senseless. un·
provoked and brutal assaults" on
thr~ men at the Studio 54 disco.
Gastineau. 27. adefensaveend, and
O'Brien, 23, a quarterb3ck, arc each
charged wnh six m1sdemeanorcounts
of assaulting Peter Fernandez and
Charles McGioley, both of New
Jersey, and John Benson of Man-
hattan during the early morning
hours of last Sept. 30.
Assistant District Attorney Jeffrey
Schlanger said the brawl started tn the
dtsco after the 6-5, 275-pound
Ga~tineau lost an arm wrestltng bet to
a smaller man. Studio 54 b3rteoder
Scott Baird.
Schlanger said Gastineau, ''his ego
harmed, ~n banging on 1he bar for
a rematch,' and in the meantime a
member of his party collided with
McGinley. 30, of Union City. NJ.
From the melee that followed,
Fernandez. 19, a high sch~ student
from Jersey City who knew
McGmley, and Benson. 21. a waiter
KICKOFF. • • FromD3
Schlanger said Gastineau knocked
McGmley to the floor and he and
O'Bnen, 6-41 210 pounds, repeatedly
kicked McGmley until be was able to
get to his f cet and nee.
The prosecutor said the two chased
McOinley down the St~t while
yelling and banging on the hood• of cars. McGinlcy managed to elude
them. The defendants fa<% UP. to one year
in jail and a St ,000 fine if convicted.
Gastmeau's wtfe Lasa was in the
courtroom with their 21-month-old
daughter Bntanny for a while. But the
child eventually vew restless and
noisy and Judge Alan Manus asked
Mrs. Oasttneau to take the prl
outside.
Gastmcau's lawyer. Peter Mor·
nson, said the defendants actualty
had gone to break up a fight and had
hit nobody .. "Mark Gastineau played
no pan in Lt, bu1 be was seen there and he gets blamed for it, .. Morrison said
Roben Simels. O'Brien's attorney,
said, "This 1s not a case about three
assaults; it's a case about deception,
distortion and greed."
He explained that the alleged
victims were preparina to sue
Gastineau and O'Brien for large sums
of money, .. and that's really the
motivation for why these two people
are m this courtroom.'' Simels said.
the posUlon. ground·orientedWllh~•tur·
''It's a bruited back or shoulder mg Jc,.tnk>t Nffblck Bo Jec:bon. tt
or whatever." Dye aaid. ''Pat alto ptta the....,. .,.. won the
played yeeterday (Monday). "Hla i 1983 national chMiplOnettlp
atatua depends on hOW he feele the = • ~ that thought It rest of the week. '*'9 . .,_ _..,. ... t1·1
"We can't exactly ftgUre oot a Y99I'. •· bUt MWnl ~No.
what's wrong.At first, we thought 11 1-ranked Neblalika. 31-30, In .,,
was a broken cotlart>One DecalM eXdtlng ar.,.. 8oWI thiller, wt1le
theX-rayasnowed What f*ed like Auburn.., unlmpr1111ve In IMd-
a hairline fracture, but It turned out Ing M~an, ~7, In the sugar
to be from an old Injury. Whatever Bowl.
~it..hul1&-*'-br.alhlng a ltttte "I'd be ... than hOMlt" I uk1
bit. thll garM dotlln't fM9n • ~t
Washington. • JunlOr, Played dee! to ua .. DY.e Mid "I Undlr-
aparlngly In ntnegem. the IMt two ltand the p(,ee. and tM ~ind
years and 11 the frontrunner to 811 that. but at the ..,. time I ,_.
replace Randy Cempbel, who deep doWn tl\at n we Md ~
didn't have ea fT?uch raw talent u Miami last y.-we'd heW Net a
any of this year• candldatet but Chance 10 wen the OlfM: rarefy made a mfst9ke. eompetlng
with Washington tor the right to "E~ "we beet Miami(~
direct Auburn'• Wishbone attack night). that doeen't· m.t ..
are eenlor Mfk:e Mann, who hu thOUld hllVe won the n .. CQll
even leSa varalty experience, and ~ lilt~-tt'• a MW
redthlrt treahman Jeff BU~, whO Y"f 1 they've got a MW 008Cfl. a lot
has none at en. ot th~ .. dlfterwlrt. lalt ,_,II
"They've au IOOked good," Dye gone. 1 m not OOk'G to worry~
aaJd. "In thr .. fulHcaJe geme h. We'N )Ult try to be bet* ti*
acrlmmaget theY hawn't turned yMr.
the ball over but thtM times .,,d "You can MY we got rOOUd aut
they've thrown the ball qutte w.tt. of the national chainplonlhlp, you
I'm not ..,.. who wm ttart ~t can RY._._~ wwwt to.ay,
now, but I'm exctted ,...,d._. of bUt tf we hed beaten Teua (a» 7
Who 081• on the tlefd." 1011 In the l8CDnd oan... of the
The contest hat been billed u MUOn)we'dhawwonthen.dOnal
Miami'• pro--styte pasa!ng game, charriplonshtp. Bu1 • Cln get .. lot
led by sophomore quarterbllOk of Ntllfectlon from thla OMMI -lf
Bernie Kosar. ~•Inst Auburn'• we wtn tt."
HARRIS LOSS .•.
FromDl
In 1983. the Steelers had 11
remaining veterans from all four or
their Super Bowl championship
teams. Now. they have JUSI five:
linebacker Jack Lamben. wide tc·
cciver John Stallwonh, offens1\'e
tac.kle Larry Brown. safety Donnie
Shell and Web'iler.
Since train1na camp opened, the
Steelcr -cnucm:d only two years
ago for retainin1 too man>· aaing
Super Bowl veterans -have traded
or relt,ascd 11 veteran,.
"h's ~ally hard to reflect on the
past when you h:we a current situ·
ation,"Wcbstcrsaid. "It will be ea fer
to do after it's all over. But nothina
hould surprise you in this businc ,
because they have to make dcc11ions
on people they have here now Bul
when you get older, these decisions
htt closer to home than they did when
you were younger."
Steelers Coach Chuck Noll, in-
volved in roster deos1ons Tucsda).
wd he had "nolhina to sa~.abou.t
the Harris situation.
But Jim Brown, the fonner
Oeveland Browns' runmni bad.
whose rushing record Harris u chaSo-
in&. told lhe Pittsburah Post-Gueue
that Harri' made a senous mistake
when he failed to report to trainina
camp July 20, lhen conunued to hold
out.
"I don't think your wanin4 years is th~ ti!?le not to ~o to camp, ' Brown
said. At a ceruun age, you nttd all
lhat work ,.,"
Chinese gymnast blastsjudglng .
PF.KING ( P>-Li Nina. China'
Ol)mpic a~mnastic:s star, $lid Tuet-
da) t~at "Ndjudgina'' and failure to
do ht best cost ham a fourth gold
medal in Los gel a cbe bc.M all·
round I) mna t.
In their fit'il mec11na with the pn:
1ncc n:turn1ng home to an cAuhCrant
Late -.cloomc. China' Olympic tars
praised Amcncan 11111rmth ind poke
ofantf 1patcd c;uh rt•'tnf . .. The) sa)' 4,000 yu1n ($I, 700) or
more," 1d we11hth(hng &old
medalist Wu hudc. recruited for the
~pon when 1 coach Potltd him
pl >tn8 in the trttl. ··ror urc l'U be "ell taken c·uc <1f n0¥1," wu,,.,d
skl'd th<' 11" of h1
....
Nma, sia.nina 1ut911Jphs for media
fans in between queslions. said: "l
hould act as much as lhcy live me:·
lkcd to ciompe~ himtclf witb
mcrican track star Carl UWis cx~cd to cam S 1 million this )ftr
aftcrwdnf fourf.>lds. Uttplicd with
1 mile: " didn t win as many aold
medals. I cannot get as much cash."
Btrorc the: pmcs the 11blctcs -offioall~ s1udcnuoramatcun-1&1d
they ~t 1tt S l ,.SOO wonh of
ttlevi1ion ttU. \ape rtCOttltn and
other pnin 1r the_y won China's fil"it
Ol)'mpic mtdals. Then finlJ \Ill)' wa
tSaolds,t:flhuU cnnd n1nebr0nr.c.
U won lhc btoue ...... in the men' all·round C\en1 behind J1P1n'1
Koj1 Gushtat n.
\
r
Orange coat DAIL
MUC NOTICE ~~ ~~ ~~ ~~ w~ ~~ ~~
lt·UtW ~.,._II ftC111'10Ua IUllMIU '1CTITIOUC 9UW:U •--• e --,~:;:::=r-Jt-.~==;1;·=· ncrmou........... NAMllTATIMUtr NMm•TAT....,., NMM•TATWT ,,,_..,_.!U!INI.. 11em........... ... I ,.. llCllW¥1H-"•>.oou.t MAmlTATCMtNT ThefollowlngP9ftonuiw ......._ MAm8TATW' U.8'1TP I ...X:10ff!ICI ~,.._.,..,__,, "10fCMll ~
TM tolld-1no '*"°'11.,. OOlng bUfllntlit . ".,. ~ petlOll Iii "ftle 1~!,'0 Ptr-wn It The toe~ ~ Thi~ PlttQnl.,. NOTICE II Hl!AHY Tlllt ..... ,._...,. ..tri •'Fiii dOlna~M POAT BEAUTY UPPl.Y dCllng l 41 doinoibU--N dolnab.lllNUaa: doingl:MIMllM ~ lflM ... '°'°"4na ............ .. ........... Ht"WPORt EQUIPMCNT 3130W.Btlboa8tvd N • Mlr..P 6 RVI 3411M· "PINKSMOK 3l221Eut PA"OOUCJtVE OFFlCE N HIM IHTEAPRISU.,.....,..,. ...... ~ , c COi. Mrowa AwfE a ..
\.EASll'KI COMPANY. 805 !)Ori 8ueh,Ce11t 92663-~0, t262t ay, o.ana Point. ~ :Or,LAIOWla ~. CONSUUINO &2i81i~ IHC ~UC.a,~ NlldlOrlNofllcM ....... '700 .,. ........... Qda. UNDAMAMAIGGS
City Plf1'wt;-Wll91, uti. Pclft Pharmac;y call-M I.Me, Costa M..._ c.llf &Ml V*'/ c.lt. tt111 ... IMl'llO!llid to bl .... 8e111ea Ml,·~ ta?0t tor a__. ti .... 1000, OftnQe, CA. t2G4e lornlo 8130 {V e'aib elelOlm "'9(cie, 9 Mira UHnn l.ynn loane. 9M%6 In Hiii\ ent«p-~ at hO.. .. !leceloll to bl ,,.,,.. ~ C..0.21CM .... A,,,..,..
Milan M Dollal, 18~ 1 ftlVd .• ~t 841tC1t c;Jf l.af Olu an Clemeota, S l22 I Eut N,. Or .. L9QUna Linda 0 Reiiiman, tit· o.t.Mn. •046' La C.a. Mid In Cht Qly ot *-Pon 8anq AM AW • C... OADU TO 1t40W CA~
T rtdewlnd• we. ~t H&63 • . Oallt 02072 Nial*. c.11r 12.tlfT k1'MW i..ane. Com M-.., f!OU!llaln VJM/, call ft10I 8aldl on T~. .. ... ....... CA .. , '°" Q4ANQE cw MME l~Wl!llft 8-cti, CA. t26t!O Thi• bu•lneu i. COl'I• Tnta b~tlneu la GOn• t1111 bu1tnen COi\• Cllhl.,92620 Ooyd L lletll, ,.,.....,.. OW/°' ,_,..,..,_. 11M T... llilll' _. 111 Gort-(lec. IOMJ
Dotochy 0 Oost.i, 1821 Guctedbr;teOfPOtltlOli ~1::~;"~=ual ~le~noMdl,ial Tiu. bvtlna1 ,. con-Tni. IUNIMn4 ... fled fOAMEMR"Of' CluC*lly,M ..... $1• l.JtGAIMM:AiOGSW T1~nO. l:ane, ~t'WPO'I William H W.gnet Pr..i. Tn Uiltment wot llllt ltatilmetlt wu m.d cluQld bV an lodMd~ With UW Counl)I a.t\ Of Or· THE CITY COUNCIL ~ f""1 C.-0 llld e ,..._. 1Pi 11* ciowtl.._ __
&Noh. CA t2Ce0 ~t • wt "the Coun C1ert; "" 0 Linda 0 IA.itman anoe Count on ~ H, DISTRICT 2 Vote for Ona TIM •••!Nllt ... lied '°' ... ...., ......... Thf• bualn"' I• con• TYi atitement wu ~ 1 ty "' r• ll'I the County°** of Or· Thia lt•terlWl'll fiHld 1914 ~ ~ -4a111w Coylilly ~or Or· "°'* to ~ Mt ,.....
ducted by • oener al 11o11h IM County Cletk oi Or· f'J: COYntr on August 2• 191: CoUnty on Auguat 2. wtU1 IM COl.lflty Cleft( of Ot· ,.~ · llnt:utnbMtl *'Cle OountJ an AUOUI* t. lrom LllC>A MANE NGGl11M..,tM
Pllnetsl'llP. • ange Coutlly on July 20, '2120e1 ,_ 111119 County on Jliy 30. P\ibllttted Of.not Colltt DeWS A Goff 1114 IOl&MOA MAM AllM>.
Mllatl M ~tel, Partner 198.4 P\.il:IU&Nid Or Cout p bllsn.d OrltlQe Cout 1"4 o.lty Aloi AUQUlt 1, 8, 1$, C~) ,__ IT ti tEM8'f ON>!JWD Thie ··1•tt1M11t Wat tiled nit• :'r u GUIHI. '211721 2'2. 1ee. V""-1 Aoum P\lbl!IMd o,.,.. c:o.M .,.. ............... ••ad In
llh 11"1 County Clelk Of Of· Publl~ Oronge Coeat ~~e7.'°' ~tt ' 16• 22• ~~t~ Autul1 • t$, 22• P\ibll&hed Orano-CQlat W· tto _ ~P&lbllc Educator) o.1ty Pt1oC Augue122.29 1119 ""'* alouuid _..,
enge County on July 20. OIJly Piiot Augu.e 1 • 15 , W·190 • w, tn ~ly .. ~August 1, .. 1~. DISTRIC'U MOie for a.. Sttr>ttntbet 6, 12.. ..... bekw'9 -court In o.p.i. ,.... 22, tNA • • • ,. ..... ,..... • "8JC NOTtCE ~.R. ~ W·211 ment No '3 • 70t CMc
1'2110ll W·1M (~) C11nHr Ort"9 ~ 8*"6
Pub111tled Otll'Qe Coat ACTmOUI IUIWM OIGT'RJCT 7 Vote for OM PWlJC MJ'DC[ • AN. c.110n1iia.. on ~
IWlf Pt10t Augutra. 1~. 22. rtllUC NOTICE •IDI •c ... TICE MAm nAwt JOhl\ c. ~ :ir. '* rr.1'114.• 9:fl lfc:fOGll !9. 1984 flCTITIOU• IUINll r:IC'nTIOUI 9U .... I ... -.. """ 1lle COloWlng penons we (lncumbeftt) ...... .. A.JM., Md 8*' .0 .._.
W•te7 flC'fmOUllUllNll8 NAM18TATIMIUfT NAMWIT~,.._NT RCTITIOUl.0-!I dolnabl.lllnw.. WAHDAE.NURS<>N • ....._,. lhOw«**.MMy._._., ,..~....,.--.;._-.;;...,,;;.,. NA• ITA ftM&NT The fOllO'IW!ng pereon ft T .... 10ll0wlng l*'tOf1'o Ire MAim ITATa•NT WiNO ENEAGY llMl'r((), City Cletti ... ._ Wf'1 lllid peilllliQr1 b' ~ ' ~ rtaJC MOTICE the lotlowing per1an1 Ill"• dome but!,..... dOino butlnw aa: Tht iottowtno P«'IOn 11 308 Ord'lld AV9., CorON cs.a city°' ~ ,,.._., .M ot '*"' ~ not 1ri. --~~....,..-----doing ~.in.et a · AAAMAN ANSWEFUNQ nfE 8ELMONT OROVP. dol bullnMe.. Mii. Ce1if t2m leeof1, c.ltfot• ,.._.... grMWCi.
FICtmOU89UIMll ALYoe·s. WICKER SERVICE. 2991 Gr.ct Ln .• INC., 23121 Vtordugo Ortve. BngO N ... M I c I T~ W.-,.Y t<Nup, DNd.August 11. l914 Ho .A.ot220M IT 18 FUAnie1' Ofdereel
NA•ITATU•NT BA s I( Et g AN 0 CO.teM .. Calif 92020 Sult• 105. Legun• Hiiia, ENTEA~flltSES 1ea2•,.. 3080rchidAve.;c.oron.dlt vblllf'leel ·oreno-1 Coest In.,,. Superior CcM1 of thll •copy Olf N orcMl' tol-----.,.-.-m;._ __
ni. fotlOWlno C*IOtl It FURNITU~. 884 w. 19th Matvln Gregg ~-""'" C•lll. 92153 ~ Blvd •2~ ~ M•. Callf. 92825 'Y Piol AUoWt '7, 22, H siate ol Celfomle. b .now C*IM bl publlt'9d kt ~ clolngbWlneuu· St. Cott• Me11, C•llf. HO El Eacudera. Pat,.,; TheBelmontGroup,tne , pOftBeck:tl ~111820&3 DIAM Maty K~. 30l 19&4 t11eCountyofOftnae tfMOl'..,_C:O.o.tyPlaC. .... ..._-.-..,..._.....,_...-__ _ c e >co s TA M E s A 92027 ~o•. ca111. 828e2 New York, •o-t4 Otet Ave., Phi Ill ·,., M archtanl Of'chld Aw • Corona oet fW·10f ~onlllp oe u,. a ~ '°' ..,_,.. ll01'ICm Gfl TAAVELODGE (b)COSTA Atyc;e J JllCkaon.L.atnb. This bu11ne .. 11 con· Haupp•uge, New York 18221,.. ~t Blvd 1243• M•r, c._r1t, 92925 Pel'ton and Estate of JOHN ~. pul:lfWled illl:ltm tMUlll •
MESA/NEWPORT 8EAC .. , l8t4 W. 19th St. Costa Oucted by. an tndlYldull 11788 Newport 8eectl Celli • This t1u11,,._. 19 eon· "8JC ll)llCE M. 8ER£SFORD, Con· county et IWI OtlC» a... __
TRAVELOOOE. 1051 ·New· Mela. C•llf. 9282? M Gtegg l(arman Thi• bualn•aa I• oon-Thlt bl11fnen Is con dueled by:. general pett• ...,.. lot four ~hoe .... r"
Por1 81vd .. Costa MH•. Oen I.. Lamb, 81M w. 19th Tnl• l\atement WU filed ducted by;. COfporat~. ducted ..... an lndMduel • n«lfllp •Ml1?1 NOTICE IS HEAE8Y ~tottledt11of~ ,,..,. ·~ ~ Cellf 92827 St.. Co•t• M.... Callf with tM County Cletlc ol Of. Jamee p Tito, P*)tftlnt Pnlm .. A Mlltdllanl Tl\Qm .. w l<Mup e.c>nca"" GIVEN u.. aubflel 1IO ccn--Niii
Mike Shu·Chlh L~. 1951 92827 In(!• County on August 2. This statement WH filed Thia ~tai~t •• flied Thi• •t•ternent .... fifed APPUCAnoeit f\fmatl«\ uy the~.,,,. ldAUguli t , 1114 .J:.:::.· .. :r. Newl>Ort Blvd , Cotti ~. Thia bu1tnea1 11 con~ 1884 Jtlth the County Clef'lc of Of. with tl'le County Clerk of Of. With tM County Cl91t of Or· TO MU. tied~ eourt, Oft Sep-Judfl ol' Jtfta To altlelt-. uuact ....
cam. 82827 ducted by: an tl'ldlvidUfll F~ anoe County on Juty 17, eng• County on July 31 tnoe COuoty on July 31, ALCOHOUC ..,,.,., 12. 1..,., ., too ~ eowt Md 11 11 -.a
Thi• bulln... II ton-Atyc;e J. Jacllaon·L9Mb PubllSMd Ot~ Coast 1984 '984 • 1914 ·~ A M or tw..ner """*' -,.,..... '-...... -duc:ted by• en lnclMdual • Thia ltltement WU llled Dally Pllol Aug~t •• 16, 22. Fn0710 ~ '251"7 To Whom lltne llllolilN by .... JOHN -•••If I .. ..... bl.::=...~
Mike Un with the County Clerk. of Of. 29, 198A Putllllhed Orange CoHt Publllhed Of Coast Publllhed Ofe1'198 Coe.It It May eonc.n c. 8£AESFOAO, Con• ,........_,CA..,... Md/-::::; ot
Thlt 1tatement w" filed ange County on August $, W-170 D11ly PUot Augu91 8, 15, 22, DlllY Pilot Auou:T. 15 22 Dally Pilot Auguat a,. ~s. 22. WONG, SUI S W. & WIHQ 181'VW10f Of the pereon end PUblllNd 0nnoe COMt ltl9 .. ~ aNCf
wtththeCountyClei'kofOr· 1984 29.1984 29 leU ' ' '294 1984 S. are apptylng t.o the 0.. eatH• ot JO .. N M. OlillyPllotAuOl»t 5,22,zt, JEROME THOIMI
anoe County on Auov•t 2, '2l21tl . W-1a1 • w.17~ w.173 ~ent of Atconottc BERESFORO. ConaarYtt-. Septemw 4, 1994 .,:,UNZll!
18M Publllhed Oranoe COalt • ~~?' 10". wlll ... st ptiva1e ... to tM W-201 A ._ ~ . .i..s
Fmoto Dally Piiot Augutt 8, t5, 22, PtlU.IC NOTICE PWLIC ftOTlC[ 41 higtlaat and best net bidder -., ~ MN(.I; .a· In
Putllllhed Orange Coast 29, 1984 w 17 FICTITIOUS BUIJNEll -PtB.JC NOTICE "8.lC NOTICE ON :"'~EEA on the twlM end eondlUCn9 ...__ ~ d Or·
Otlty Piiot Augu1t 8. 16, 22, • 0 NAME ITATHRNT K·1-,_........,.. .. •u•-•• (Pu• '"-t Pl) ti.r .. ttet mentlOn.cl, alt "8JC ll)JIC( Cola'lty,..._.... 29. 1984 MOTICIOfl ,...,.,._.__ ITAT!mNTOfl .,,..., l1Qflt. t111e, end In..,.. of 8tAKE.Jlllllle#-
W·181 Ml.ICNOTIC£ olThe.,,.!~ng person 11 DEAntOFMUMEL NAMe8TATEMINT WNDONMINT OF UM toeahk:oflollCl:>eMIQW JOHN M BERESFORD flCmllOUl•HI• -,-. d ng ...... ,,,. .. a1· The followlng peraon 11 ct= at· 18120 Sfo<*hu,_' St., CoftMmitM in the ,..j ~STAT "T • -~ ,,_.. --... -.,-.,-c-..... -TI-C_E__ FIC'm'tOUI eulMH 'PKM FINANCIAL, 5190 J~= ~ doing bullneu U; FICTITIOUI •u••NHI no. Fount8k\ v~. CA ciroperty lOcated "' ui. The kllowing,,.,..... of..::-·,;:: r:
r-WK. nu MAME ITATWMENT Campu• Drive, Sult• 8, SOUTH COAST ART NA.Ml 92708 .. CoUnty of Sam• CNz. Slal9 doing bu11nW .. ; I c I •
FJCTITIOUllUIMU dolT:;: .. !~~upereon.· ~ Newpot1p _._..8eaci'll( .Cellf,92e90 E~'l::::'~ CENTER. 283 EMt 8eYeos The tollowlng perton1 ~Orangeeo.t ofClllfomla. deac:ril>ed, • INlilOV~TIVE fl.OCR._ --Tr*"-~ M,ull l'f • .,,...,_ at.,.... enneth Mc.t.uley, ' '9enth St .• eo.ta Mee&. CA. h...,. abandoned tM uae of Deily Pilot Auguat 22. follows: MAINTENANCE. 2450 ...... ---
The ._..-'TATIMeNT R J INTERNATIONAL, !!!.._ GCa~111ot9a2 ... .,,ttewport -~It!'!_ helconrs.tbel'8l_.J.'d«t ~· 92827 the f"lctltloua Buelneae 191A Srtueted In h eounty of Port BMt. •2. COlfa ...... ~~ ! ......... ~
do4nQ ;:;;;;;:: ~ are = au-:;:treet, SUl19 190, -''• ., vvv --..,.., • .__. ...,...,... Ada'IWto Alicandro, 8591 NaiM: PINK SMOKE, 27324 W-210 Santa Cl'\a, State of C... c.111 l2W __,........., "'~,"-'
CLUBST.TROPez,288$ R~ ~~tfJ=. Ttua b~•lneas 1• COO·=-~~.;~ OtantSt.,Chlno.CA.01710 Camino Capistrano 1137, __ .,.llllftTIH' fornla,dete:rlbed.•follQiala Theodor• Jack OUfon A=-:::.r.~
EutCoutHIQhWtW,Coton• 2850Vlaa&~ .. Newport d~~~9n~ndMdual lhe will OI' eetate of· MU~ Thia bulln.H I• Con· ~Ntguel.Callf 92m ... ~ ""'~ A Part OI .. Rodeo Hike. 2'50.......,., etvd. 12. 1114 .. t:ao A..M; ln
clel Mii, CA. t2e2s Beech, Callf. 82&90 This •t•t~t WM flied REL JANE CUNNINGHAM d~=~:n,,.:=:i· Name ,.,'!1,1:':! .= OR.+MQIE COuwrv ==c;;::.::? 0: :fG1Cost• ...... Celtf. Olpl. No. a .. ?DO
Chrtate U. Atcher, 2886 Thia buslneaa 11 con-wjth the County Clerk of Of. A p«ltton nu ~ tiled Tht• etaterMnt "' filed flled In <>reno-County on lunNOR CCMMT 40 foot wi4I .... WlbW 8. Ee*\ 0.. Hite 2.450 c.m. DIM w.t. MWa
Eat Cout H'G:al• Cof()(le ducted by: an lndMdual ange County on Jut)' 27, ~ CAROi. JANE WESER wltll tM County Cl9rtt of ()r. Maircl'I 21 188A FlLE NO 7IO Ctwlo C-. Dr. W• Hugus MUtford".,._ ~ ~ 9t¥d #2 • eo.ta Ana. CA tt702. ,. clel~:W~~. Fcnekar, ON ~::':.Ii.1::': wu flied 1884 F211917 of~~~~= engeCountyonAug.e, 1o1M f241507 • • P=--IOner~t=AIS otiw.: •t • ..ion "°"' Mw.c.111. 12t27 • .:..:.~ ~=
Wandering Riii, lrvlne, CA. wlthtMCountyC19rkofOr· Publlal'led Ofange Coeat Ing that CAROL JANE Publllhed Ofange"= 31~;~~i, S= ~t: DOUGLAS f:lc:ttt:'f~:' oi:~~c;on. litlOUld __ ..,_.alllhe
82715 ange County on August 9, Dally Piiot Aug\111 8, 15. 22. WEBER MANN be ap· Dally Piiot AugUlt a. 15 22 N~uel c.itr 929n' S. MORFUS ~~ Bn=con ,.. -• ,Y Ted D Hike heettngend ..... ,,_= Thia bu11n... le eon-f884 29 1984 pointed .. peraonll rep-29 19 • • • • • c ... No. 0.207280 "'..,.. • • -• •0 Tllia • tied tlOI-. 0t .. -duc:ted by: eUmlted !*ti*· F212511 ' W 172 reeent1t1Yetoedmlnf1terthe ' 8A Urton David Sather, IUWO .. (,AIM.Y LAW) Nelle O. ton by Oeed ~a:* Or UC.. well 0. oowt
lhlp. Publlahad Ofange Cout • •late of tM decedent. The W·185 23701 M#1tW Or., Laguna '9cmcat Y• ._.Min dated No\lembet 7, 1904, wfttl1'19~ .. ~ .,.: K 1'19 ,.,....,., Your ......
Christ• u. Aac:her Dally Piiot August f5, 22. 29, DIKll •c MnJICE 1)811tlon ~II llUfflOrit) Pta.JC MOTICE Nlgvel, Calif 92877 ...... n..cowt.-,-.... and recorded In theofftoe °' = on SIClelftllr l>Ot~· br Thia ttat..,,..,t wu flied Septemb« 4, tfl8A '"uuu nu to actminflter tti. 81ttte Thi• buslneee wee eon-....,._. ,.. ........ ,... the County Raeofder Of a.Id PJl'49 ~-~ •
""1th tM Couoty Cleric of Of. w.198 und« tM lndepand«tt Ad· *>TICE ct= ducted by• o-n«al partner· M11t9 .... ...._ ,_ ,.. County ct Sal'lta CNI, In PubllMd Or ColM If YOU AAE A Cf11BQOR
11'Qe County on Augu1t 8, flCTITIOUI BU ... U ministration of &t.-Ac1. TRU•TEE'I IAJ..E lhlp IPOf'd ......• -..-... VOiume 157 of Oaecla, page Plot MI08 I. 15.. 0t a COflDlt091lt ~ of
188A 8UDt •c MnlfCE ~AME1o11ow1'!.A~NT • .,. A hewing on the petition LMft Mo. DUNCAN Tlllt ttatement WU flied lfte ...... lllDR ...... 3e7. DHrt No rt I\ 'f Oely... ~ 1, 1N Cl* I II,,. ....... '212117 n1Uu nu ',.., ... ,..._. ..... will be held on Sept 6 1984 T.a. Mo. ~UJW with tl'le County Cler1c of Or· tf you wllfl to..-the 9lf. 6egl'eae. 30 mlnutel &at 22• 1 w 151 ~ Wiit! • __, ~ Published~ Coast '1C1TTIOUl8U ... Ell d~~c'U~~TiT:SLCLIM-at9:30AMtn~.'N0.31t UNITCODel. =County on Augult 2. W;e ot tn attorney In Ulll r+-:f :'::-n'-~ ' .,,...... tt to ... ,...._, ~~~lot August • 15. 22· Tt!Af:' STA~.: II ITED IV. SLC LIMITED V, ~~ari27~. W•t, A~,..WU Pubklhed Of'ln08 COM! :-~ ~your do.:. ~ e..t :: to a ==~ t' =
W 189 dol~ bWll~ SLC LIMITED VI, SLC UM· IF YOU OBJECT to the d"t.. a......i..ted Tnm Deity Pilot Augu91 t, 15. 22, ten r89ponM If MY mey be ltatlon distant 203.4 filet "8JC llJTIC[ "°"' .. Me of • i. --------·-D B HOME. MAIN llEDVll,BAOOKHURSTIN· ...,antlnnotthepetltlon,.,.,., u,...::,''t~tol"I I dee 29, 191M llledonttme ' • from tti. South.,..tertr ...,.0011'9,.M---.... BlllDl&C MnJIC[ a VESTMENT ASSOCIATES, •. ... .~ un..... ... owng • W·178 • bOUndar)'of.-S~~ NOTICE OP' 700 ... ~ __ ... ..._uuu __ nu ____ TENENCE SERVICE, 20842 NEWPORT INVESTMENT thoUld .i1h« 9f>P8ll at the ec:tll>ed deed of mm WILi. AvtaOIUatad he eido de>-~to Neillle D ~on. DEA TB OF ln ~of C • ~
lllCTITIOU•..,...•• ~~~lfLt~:'Ungton ASSOCIATES. "25 Jam-~·~":.>::i:: ~~TH"'eT~':t~A~~ Nll.ICll>llCE ~trl~-= tMnceNor1tt41C,.....so JOYCEGEESMJTB ~ ............
NAME ITATUIENT David Kenneth Cant, = c::•:~ewport tlons with the court before FOR CASH AND/OA THE ,...,. deencta • IMftM .. Ud. =:a e:::·oc:.:: '0J AND OF PE'l1T10N not .._. ptlor '° ...,,
Thefollowlngpenona1te 20642FatneworthLn .• Hunt· Lor~n ~tlon can. the l\Mrlng. YtM llPCIM'· CASHIERS OA CEATIFTED .NOTICE°' l'ls;ond9defttfedel0._ «Mgr .... 17 rnlnutte W• TOADMJNISTE1l monlh91rom .. dll'9-IW dolno~al,,...as; 0 lng1one.actl.Callf.9264& fornle 4425 Jam'bot .. 90Cemaybelnper.onor~ CHECKS SPECIFIED IN TRUaTH'alALa U. a. ~ ... 11000feettott!!lmicldleof '-'1QftOIGe~a!°: FIRST C"401CE, 1 0 l1tt1 buelne11 11 con-Roed ~ Beectl Calif your attorney. CIVIL CODE SECTION T.a. Mo. CWR .._ ....... Mid 40 IOOI Aoed 91\d ESTATE NO. YOU ~AV EXi!Mfur cri.
McFedden Plaoe, Newport ducted by: en lndtVlduat 9266C) ' tFYOU ARE A CREDITOR 2924h(peyal>lutthettmeot ..ottTANT NOTICE TO •lf ,_WWI .. ..eer .. thence along the Midd19 of A 1UU7 tie Upt llytbe cwt...tlr.'
a.dl,Callf. 82883 David l(enneth Cent Thia bu11ne11 11 con· or• contingent creditor ot 1818 In ltlWflJI money of the PAOtl'EtTYOWMR ...._ofen.nor.r111t111e MlclRoedSouth4tdegfW. To all beira .,.. a f*'aOll llMI • In
S Patrlc:kt !!:_ ~~YM~ This 1t1tement wu flied ducted by: a corporation tM ~ ... yout"-must Ne United Stet81J all right, title YOU ARE tN DEFAULT ~ !!!!:""" de~ 30 mlnutee Weet 5500 filet "'---~.....i-""-__.a: • ......: tM ~.._ .,_,..,.. anta ta.-. ..,.,.,e with the County Clei'k of Or· I( V'-p -• ycur c1 .. m .. ,t., ,,. court or and lnter.t convey9d to NOER DEED OF TRUST ,.._......,. M -. ,_ .no~ ..a-~ ...._... .._ ~~_.....-~ ..... "' ~ .,. --ar ~ Cellf 82827 Cou"' J ty 2'" JameeF. ern, ..,. r_. preeent It t.o tM par'IOnlll __ .. .._... by It ._...__ U A • ............... _,_,be to the.-"' ....,..wig. and tin_..t -..a• ~ ~ upol\ ._...,. c . e d ange n., on u v, dent ..... now ,,_, u ...... DATED 4/111711 UNLESS..... • 8l1C9Ptlng a..,.., th«eof 20 con--.-~ ~-·-_ ........ llve rue• Her Ing, t984 Thi• ttll8fM!lt was flied repreeentitlvtt aPClolnted ~ Mid Deed ol' TNlt In tM YOU TAKE ACTION TO •time. Mt 1n width llAonO the ton of JOYCE GEE tomllf ""' lhe -or 12432 Loraleen, Garden f2.S14C2 th 'he Coulfty Clet1l 01 0 • the court within lour monthl prop«ty h81'elnafter d•· PROTECT YOUR PROP· 11 U8ted .._. ~ Nor1hweet_.., boundary for SMITH _.__ JOYCE adr9*liJlbalar, .,.. .. ~ Grove, Cellf. 928.41 Published orange Coast w• • r from .the date of first i. ecnbed: 8 SOLD AT A et conaeto de•....,.... _,, aPubllc'4oed , ._ the oourt wfttl ClfOClll fl;tiJI•
Thia bu1tne11 la con· Dally Piiot Augl4t 1. 8. 15, =County on July 20• 1Uenceof1etter1uprovlded TRUSTOA: MELVIN A. ~~11_~M~~Li IF YOU 8ft ..._ eeunto, deieft9 =-=:~~ G . SMITH, aka Ylc9.•wrtNn~M.llt·
ducted by: • general part· i2. 1984 FtS1• In Section 700 of tlle DUNCAN, POLA M. DUN· NEED AN EXPLANATION .,..,.... lnmectt.lemett-., The Pfoperty II commonly J 0 y CE ELLEN "'ll tMI you ...,. __..
narahlp W-182 Pubilshed Oran COMI Probate Code of Callfomia, CAN OF THE NATURE OF THE de Ht• lftenere, 911 known 91\d ,...._,to a; SMITH and l'IOUS notlCe ol the fllrig Gt ft.
Pattlct<A.Kettnedy 1111D1IClll'llTIC£ DaltyPltotA ust~ 8 15, Thallmerorflltngc:lalmswllt BENEFICIARY:OHANILK. PROCEEDING AGAINST 1-.i...e. eecrfta,_jil MJ 3t021l"A\l911"8 ~ ""'°'Y~llCIPitaa-OI Thia 1tatement was flied l"VUI. nu 22 1884 ug • • not expire pl1or to fOOf MARFA TIA, AMIT A D. YOU YOU SHOULD CON· ...,._ ....... w ~ a.a Cna. Ce61foml& who may be otherw• ........ ot of .. .,..
with the County Cl9r1c of Of· F.,_...IOUI .... ._.11 • W·l5e months from the d1te of the MARFA TIA, MANOJ C. TACT A LAWVER ..._... == The ... ta&lbjllet to cur· interested &n the will -.onoooun•--llld z County on August
6
' ·A-8TAliiiE'NT ~=~=NE the ~:~~A . NIN A M. On w~. hpt~ ="=--::::'~ rem ,_, cowwnta. GOn-andlOI estate: :.s::o ... -:=:
'2521• Tht followtnn perwon 11 D11n1 •c unnCE tile 1c-t by the court :JO\I ...,,,CORDED F•""'·a~ 17 bar 12. t88A, •t 10:00 A.M.. COftC8f'll:fo .t:! dltlone. restr1ct1one. ,.... . A petiaon has been .,... .... ,._," ··• niuu nu ""' · "~ ..,._, • CAL-WESTERN RE· va,lonl,rlghta,rlghtaotwsy. _,. b WALTER --• --~ Put>lllhed Oranoe COalt doing buslnea as .,.. a peraon In~ In 198 t .. Instr No. $35e7 In CONVEYANCE CORPOR· ~ !',...... . • ....,..ti o4 rwcord and flllC'U y -·-~
Dally Piiot Augul1 8. t5, 22. A & J AUTO BODY & FICTITIOUS llUllNEll the eatate, you mey Mtve Book 13964 ciege 1 of Of. ATION A Calllomla oorpor. ,....,. ... WllNn •.,. of otfler IMtWI • be JOHN KIPP in the Su· ard AMr
29.1984 PAINT, 809 E 4th SlrMt. NAME STATEMENT upontheexec:utororedmln-llclalRec:ormtntti.offloeof atlon 'u duty ac>P<linted IMdMelMllN9....,... prOYedbyU'le~ IP' .-nnrCourtofn-.. -.,...,CAtrnl W·175 Sant• Ana. Calif. 82701 The followlng peraon 11 lstratOf, or upon the •t· the Recorder of Orange Tmat Ila eened • ~,.... :;;:;-""'~"" ~Or-. C09ilil
Montc:eca.1aun.Ga111rdo. dolngbullMleu: , ----to Deed of TN9t r«:«ded mattW1oftl1le.ttle~ .... uu1Ity requesluflf~21, ~ 1' Hr 108. ... ~ -OOEel'fP~CKAGING. 720 edrnlnlstrator. end nte With Mid dMd of trwt ~ Aprll 20 1979 .. lnat No .... COWi.,.., --• ....... la to be lolcl In Ila--; •• -.. (. that w ALTER JOHN 28, 1984 rw., • --0--<"'1tl LY Pl LOT Mesa. Celtf. 92628 N. Velley St•. M, Anat*m, the court with proof ot ear· act1bel the followfng: 2s..88 ,;. ~ 13113 p.g.; "*" contlalnlnt ..,..'°.,.. condition with wMt.ewr .-KIPP ~ appointed as s "" Thia buetne.. 11 con· Cellf 9280t vice. a written requaat stat· Lot 1 ol Tract No 3239 In 7« Of Offlelel ~ci. ln ., other ordef'I OMOfllnllll "F "'ST ducted by: an rncs. tvlduel SUNn L Grafflo, 95&5 Ing that you deelre apecial the City of Cotta Mele. the offloe or lhe County Re-dfYl•lon •• .,.,.,,,, =:"~ :'ors~ penonaJ "!P~'*·
"" Monica Gellardo Cu1ne1 Ave.. Downey. notice of tM filing of an In· County ot <>range State ot cor'*'9 ot Ofanoe eoumy •IMHINI IUPtMfl. ~!tlld . t"8lr rights If any to~ ti~ to administer the DEAT H N onc~s RESULT" This statement wu tried Cellt 90240 ventoryandepprelMm«ltol Callfomte. • per' mac> ,. St•teofCalltomla....cuted ~. dlld .....,.,n. • from the~atl>f or tM est.ate ol JOYCE GEE
wllh tM County Cler1t ot Of· . Thia bullneH Is con· •tate asset• °'of the petls COl'ded 1n Book 97, P• 23. by THOMAS v. CHEON. An IOf"MJ ..... ..... end eons.vat•'• eetai. tor eny SMITH aka JOYCE DOBEaTY SERVICE anoe County on Augu1110, dueted by an tndlVlduel tlonsorecoounumentloned Mlacl. Macie. In tti. office of Unmamecs Men end PA· woftotherr• .. h• IUflMt damaoenotcllecloeedbyttle G SM• ITH k PAUL ANTHONY
DIRECTORY 111&4 Susan L. Grafflo In Section 1200end1200.5 ot tM County Recorder of Mid TRICIA A. SISSON An Un-........ b1 Ille oewt. T1lie Of'9ror' ,,,_._ ol the · ' a a OOHERTY ..... ~ ,2527,.. Thi• 1t1temenl WU flied tM Calltornl• Probate Code. County. merrled Women will SELL 5: .......... .,...... ... . ~ ....... J 0 y c E ELLEN , .---.. ·or Result Publlahed Ofange COalt WlththeCountyClert!olOf· RollertY.Futlerton YOU ARE IN DEFAULT AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO of.....,.,~.-~ Conwvat~ ~ SMITH(u:ndertheln· away Monday Service Call Dally Piiot August f5, 22, 29. ange County on July 28, m NorUI AITMftlMd UNDER A DEED OF TRUST HIGHEST BIDDER FOR et ' coert HthMlled the CONetVatee'• .... ,. de d t Adtn1 • -Augus\ 20, 1984 at
Secitembef4.19&.-1984 AM.8an~R01 DATED 2121181. UNLESS CASH (peyatlle at time of .-0011•• IMf .. ,. f\'omllllel>My,wthougft ~ ofen~-:rus bomewithbiaWnily. 642-56 78 W·1&8 F2S1411 CA llM01 YOU TAKE ACTION TO .... In lawful money of the...... It may lattt &a dtlecMled trauoo ~-tes Act). A resident of c.o.t.a ________ __. ________ ..... Pubtllhed Orange Coast PubttlMd Orange CoHt PROTECT YOUR PAOP· United Stetee) et tM Nor1h DMed:.-1, 1.a that ttwConM1oqtor lflollld 1be ~tilion is le't for ~--Survived b
Dally Piiot August 1, 8. 15, Daily Piiot EATY, IT MAY BE SOLO AT front entrance to the COuoty &.ft A. MlANCH, Cltftl Mv. known of o.n.ge nae bearing in Dept. No 3 nu:aA. "I
22. 1984 Augult 15, 16, 22. 198.4 A PUBLIC SALE. IF YOU CourthouH 700 Civic •r: llNANCY QlltANT, dlscoWred.., the Ofteron' at 7000 , C.en Dr wife Violet; aon.s.
W·181 WT'hl99 NEED AN EXPLANATION C.Ot• Ortve. • West. Sent.• ~ lnepeetton. All o8lrs muet at SanVlC \er r;._' John Michael of
------------------OF THE NATURE OF THE Ana. caitf. 911 r1gtrt, title and lnc:iude the Ofleror'1 ec-West, ta Ana, '-"' Santa Ana: 1bamas PllllC NOTICE Pl8JC NOTICE PROCEEDING AGAINST lntereet conveyed to and ::tr':e::"'a •D knowwdgemeut t11et tMiy 92701 on September 5, ,,.. n-of c.c.ta Mesa· __ ....._..._ _____ ---------YOU, YOU SHOULD CON· now held t., It under Mid WllCttier CA.-Mv.Mttharrtieeilfednot,._ 1984 at 9:30 A.M ru.n:::n, ,
flCTITIOUl IUIMEU NOTICE CW TACT A LAWYER. o..ctofTruetlntheproperty Publ~ Or.n~ Coast !led ucion wiy ,...._.. IF YOU OBJIX:r to daughters, Cberyl
NME ITATDIENT DEATH M 224 Miner St.. CO.te situated In said County end ftaau Pllol ,.,...,_. 1 a. 15 tattons by tM ~. . Ann of Santa Ana:
The lo41oWtng ~ i. JOYCE QR SMITH Mesa. CA. State deac:rtbed ea; .,_, --v-' ' or U'9 Conaarva1or'a egent, the granting of the C thia Ann J)obtt
doing bullneae u: AND Of' NTITION "(II a street eddrMI or PARCEl1: AH that portion 22• 1* w 1sa wttt1 ~to the ooncltton petition., you should yn -
(1)ATS ANANCIAl SER· TO A.DMINtSTER common dfflgnatlon of of Lot 1 of Tr.ct Ho. 9484. In • ot the property. Al'f'f oft• either appear at tbe ty, of ~ Mesa;
VICES (2)CHILD SAFE HTATINO.A1~ prC)C*tylllhown~.no the City of Cotta Meu, rtaJC NOTIC£ submitted mult lldlde en ................... and state vnu brothers Daniel
(3)00UBLE DOLLAR, 2428 To alt heirs, bel'8nci.n... werranty It glYen at to tti County of Ofwlae, State of upreea dodlntlon tfl9t tM ~~ . ,,...:-Doherty of New Jet·
Newport Blvd eo.ta Mell eredltore end contingent completeneu or correct· Cellfornta. u aliown on a OlltAMOE COUNTY puf'CtlaaellwfthoutWSl"anty ob)E!C1lOnS or file wnt-Phlli n...~ f
C.11(. 92827 ' ' creditors of JOYCE GEE nesa)." The beneficiary mep recorded In Book 41&, ~Al COURT of ll'l'f kJnd •to. (I.) tN oon-ten objections with the SteY • P ~ .. , 0
Se.I R. Talealore. 1754 SMITH. aka JOYCE G. und« said Deed of TNlt, by Peges 43, "end 45 of Mt. HAMOtt JUCtCtAl dltton of the~ OI ti. court before the bear-Massachuetta. Mr.
low• St.. eo.t• Meea. Calif. SMITH. ate• JOYCE ELLEN reuon of. breed\ or def.,,t oelfeneou1 Mape. rec:orm o4 Dt9TNCT imp(OVtiment.; (b) appll-• Doherty .... bOm
82626 SMITH and penona who In tM obllgltlon. MCUred uld ~ M Unit Ptalnttlf· WESTERN cable iontng; or (c) per· tng. Your appearanC'e and raiad in Cam·
Thi• business I• con· may be otherwtea lnttteeted !hereby. htlreto.fore •X· 4 on• plen r• SURElY COMPANY rnltted ~of ttle property. may be in penon or by b ·..t... Mas H ducted by.,, ll'ldMdual In tM will and/Of Mtate: ecuted end dellYel'ed to the COl'ded In Book 12457, P11g9 Oetandant. TIMOTHY J Bid• OI o8lrs .,. In~ your attorney rt.. •• e, '· e s11 R. ta1e11ore A petition nu~ 111ec1 underligned a wrmen Dec> ~5otOfflclalf9COfmofMld HAWKINS b thlaproperty, lnlJSt blln IF YOU ARE A graduated from Thia stllement wu ft.led by WALTER JOHN KIPP tn lat•ttori of Oefeutt end 0.. c:ountyandadeflnedtnthet CU. No. 82135 wntllig ~ Wiii be rtieaMd Harvard University
with tti. County Clet1t of Or· u,. Superior Court of Or· mend tor S•. and Wf1tten cetteln Oeotatatlon of eo.,. Wletla et the Olf1lce of HurWtU. CREDITOR or a cont-1957 Mr n,.,),,..,.-,
ange County on July 28, ange County ,..queetlng that notice of breech and°' etec-nanta. Condltlona end Re-NOncll V• ""'" Min Remer' & OMncanro. •ts ingent creditor of the · ........ _. •> wu
1994 WAI. TER JOHN KIPP be ap-llon to cau• the under· ltr'lc:tlona • more pertjcu· '1111e-'...., ~ torNY'I tor ConMrvator, et deceued vnu mus\ ~ currently empl"Yed
'211_, pointed u personal reps ligned to ... Mid PIOCl«'tY ler1y deeeribld In Exhibit A ........ ,_ trllhMt ,._ MO Newport Cant• Ortve. '." ~-. by Hughes A1i'craft
Publllhed Orenge Cout raaentatlvtt to edmlnllttor the lo satisfy uld obligetlonl, attached hel9to end mede '*"' ~ _.... ,.. ,.. SUlte. 1555, Newport e..etl, your claim wt th the Com pa n y a I a
D•llY Pilot August 1, 8. 15. ••t•t• of JOYCE GEE and therM=~~i !*thereof. epoftdwteNn .......... Celf0tnl.lt2el0,0f1Ntybe court or present it to h .caJ eftcri-
22 1984 SMITH:' 1ka JOYCE G llgned catJ 0 1lle street eddren and ehe lftfonMtfililt ...... flied wit!\ the *" °' Mid Ure personal ttpreeen· c enu -~-r . W-157 SMITH.-· JOYCE ELI.EN brHC:handof8*:fton~be other common dealg4i1tlon, tfyouwtafltoeeektheeds &ipel'lorecurt.or~ \AU . tedbythe Funeral arrallge·
SMITH (Under the lndeCMn· r.cotded Auguet23. 1 • tt any, of the r.., property ~ of en attorney In thll to Dwight J. Grtffttl'I. Eaq .• of ve appom men ts by the Nep.
--111-11>1-l_C_un_T_ICE ___ dent Adrnlnlltratlon of &-tnatr. No. 83s3&8370 of Of· de1crlbed ebove 11 mett•. you ll'lould do ao H11rwttz. Remer & court within four tune Societ
... ~ nu ~tee Act). The petition la aet flc:llal Recorm In the ~ ot purported to be. t030 S.-promptly eo thet your wt'lt-DIV\nclenZO, par90l'Wt.lly, any months from the date Y •
-------.,-.-,_-.... -.,-IOf Meting In Dee>t. No. 3 at the Aecof<Mf of range brece Ortve. Coet• Mee&. ten~ If any, mer~ ttme after publcetion Of tNe of first m.ua.nce of lel· '"""'"""' _,...._ 700 CMc Canter Dr .• Weet. County; Celffomta 92729 • filed on um.. nob and befOltl confirm. . . NAiii ITATIMINT Santa. Ana. CA 92701 Said.... IM_made. but 1lle undeulg11ed Trust• AvtSOI U.tM hli lido c»-tng eaid..... ten U provided ll\ 5«-
T .... IG!lowfnO ~eona are Septemt>w 5. 198.4 at o·30 witllOut •covenant or wet· <lllclalmswiytta.bllltyfOf .-iy l'Mtldede El t"l>UIN. p1ec1e 'The prOC*tY wtt be eold uon 100 of the Probate
dOlno bullnesa aa. AM renty.~orlrnplled. r• lnconectneea of the ltreet deddlr oontn \Jd. llrl w-on the~ tenna: FOf Cod of Cabforni
RIVIERA APARTMENTS.. • IF YOU 09.IECT to the genflng tltle pc I JUIOfi. OI' edd~ end other common diend9. menoe quo \Jd .• " cul\ °' pert '*" WCI pert Th e . f ,.,,..a.:
l04 E"t Leatra Lane. gr9ntlng of tM petition. you entumbrlllQel. to ~ the deelQNtlon. If any, ltlOWn ~ dentro da 30 d cndl1, l"8 liWme of alCtl e tune or ...........
AnaMlm, Calif 92902 lhOuld either eppea-et the remain!~ prlnclpel aum ot ..... LN ta tnfof"l'nadon que cndlt to bl ~ to c1aJms wall not ex:pare
A and M Ptopertlaa. heer1ngandttetayou= lhe not 1) ..and by a9'd SaldaaleWlllbemade,~I 1111"9· 1t19 \.l'ldei1911id end to tM .,..,c,..., CO fou.t months
15415 Chemtcal Lane, Hunt• tloN or f11e wrtttett ob deed of NII, wtlh lnlereel without CO*\anl 01 wet· II you Wilt\ to ae01c the ad-Orlngil County S"4*i0r r.:.::. ol..-da f ol..-
lnoton Betch. Cati!. 92'-49 tlon1 with tho c:ourt t aa 111 Mid note CltOVided. ad-ran~~ 0t lmCllled. ,.. VIC8 of an enorn.y tn tNa CcM't. Afr/ blda aubmltt-6 u""" UK" te 0 ~
Thie bu11neaa ta con· t.,. heerlng. Your ~-vancee. If 911y, under the oar title. pouiulon. 06 matter, you "'°'*' ~ ao i..1>y ·tnulJl be eecom--bearing nobce a.hove. d~ed by • generel pert• ~may be tn penon or by 1.-m• Of .. Id Otied of 'Nit. encvm •~. tncludtf!g prompity ao thet )IOI.If wrtt• panled by 10"9 of ,,... YOU MAY EXAM·
ner,t.iJ'D•U9" ycw~g~EACREOITOA ~~~~~ ~f=-endend~ ::,~v::llwiy,maybe ~~,::::c:~:tn~ 1NE the file ~pt by
Thi• atateiMnt wu filed °' a contingent or.cfttor ot trusi. crated by uld Otied Witt or..., -., ..acs Oeed St uatecs o.. llOl!d1• • batenoe to be p.td or the court. U you are
with thtl County Cler1t of Or-the dec.aed, you must file of Tniat. Of Tnist. to l>Sl ~ OQn9ajo da un ~ en prOYld9d for upon WtN .i>-lnt.crest.ed tn the 9' ~ County on July 29. your claim with tM ooun or Said Nie wlll be Mid on pr1~ eumt oil h nota<•1 eete .unto,~ 11..io OIPtable to the undenlOnld &ate, ygu mtY lrl'Ye
preMl'\t 11 to the ~ ~. 8-tMlbet 7. '*· 8'C:WtieS by Mid OtieCI Of 1nmed1atamente. oe eata ~ tM Orenge CoYncy &ts ~ ... -tOI' '1114'0 ,........tat!Veaippotnted by 111:3o P.M, tn the lobby to Ttuat to111tl·MS,7M 06""'1 men•t•, •11 101pu .. t• '*'°' Ccurt IAPOlloafl"""-' upon ll!C' e)(A!C)U or
Publllhed Orange eo.a tMcoun within tout monthl the Wldlno tocatad st eo1 tnt...i ~ "°"' $ec>-..att•. 11gy...,..puecte 1.on end ~ of 1UOt1 admiriistrator. or upm
Dally PllOI Auguat 1, .. 15, ff'O(n the date Of f1nl ... Sou.th lAollM SIT .... Orange. ~ 1. tte3 et 10 87$,. w l'eQIMnlde a~ .. T---. f'IMI. QperWtlng the •U«ne)' (or ~
22. 1H4 ~Oflottnaprovloed CA. t2tll per «WIUm. ptOVldld In 1·TOTHE~:A and malnlen.nce 91C&*W. tor adminis
W•l&a In lectton 700 of lht At tM time Of,,.. lnftr.I Mid noe.<•> S*I• C09t• and ctvt~tt'llilbWr\tled end~ on~~ andor f~'-wtth
--------Ptot>ate Codt Of Clll#omle P'!bticlttion of tflia not • eny edwi1oa1 ol' 11.250.80 ~ ttte •t•tt ~ yOU. • llOCIPteble to Ult OfterOf "·-• UC' PtBJC NOTICE The time tor filing c:1a1m1 wtn I.tie tot# Wf'IOl.ll\t Of the ~ wtth In.._.... you Wllfl to cleMnd tNI law-et.i be prCll'Cecl .. oe the the court '11.'i\h proof of
-------·--not expn prior to tour peld beltnc4 ot tM OC11o The~lln«leraiald • \'Oii fncltt • ...ttfWI • datt of recontttklo ol' the rv , a wnt n re-
ACTIT10Ut IU ... U mont.hl from tt1e date of me gatlOC'I teOUl'ed b1 "-a~ Died of TIVlt heNeOfote U • deyt llfter VIie N'IVnOM II con~anc.. Aaloctated ~9'atantr that you KAMI ITATUllNT l\e9t1nO nofloe ebov9 deieorlbOd dMCI of !Nit. and eo.i..S and dallWltid to tM on you.... . tNt wirow~oomit1•ice.... -• The IO!lo'Mno.,.,.,,,... TOO MAY EXAMINE Che aetlM&*f coau. ~ ...... !lid. wf'ltttrl Dao-~• M• reapoNe to lhll bl bOm9 by .. Con-spl'Cial ~of
doing buelne1us. ftlU.tl!Pt ~ h coun. If l'OU aM ~aocea II I 1U20 41• let9ttoft or defeutt end 0.. W.. oomc*1n1 UNaaa you MitWtOt _,.. aa Oflllrcw In the filina of an &nvell· CONTINENT~t.: OIL TOO\: 1te Int.,..._, k\ Che ... ._ The ~t*': mMd .. a.;~• ..mtln do, "°"' _,.... ... be Sidi fNftMf .. 19 ~ cory and apprabemet\t ::t~~;.sa:.::: =~ -.:=::.': ~-.icna~ :t::a°!.Df:"'~llid plllft1 =of.,: ::O...=e~--O.:: ot .. ta or of
C.llf 92&27 upon tN aOOf~ tor the h • ~ bl *..,_, ., otlll'I «*lleCI Mid Hottol or! 0.. .,,._ a ti dg I ,..,,, ~ ~ ..... ~ the petilianl Gr tic-
T rent ~Allan 811en11n~ ecu1cwarl<lmlMtrator,ana [7~4) 1~~1~ tNt~e.oi.ontoWto youfol'h......,_...NI-' Thlw.tdell••on.o,..,,._ l'OWltl mrntiont'd U\
158.t Aiv.r.tde P'90e Cotta flle Vlttt\ the eourt With ptOOf '2 IM-, I bl fllCOfdtO ~ IN 0011MY In IM ~t. wtlldt h fll'lt to rtlaCt .-rand II Section 1200 and 1200 5
M..a. Cellf t2~1 Of ..W.. e wtlt*\ ~ ..... .,.._. IN ,.., c>tOPer1Y Ila ~ nUt In Qiliiillt&'lltl\1 biOt prfOf IO anlfy OI mt ·
Mnltt• .. ...,,..,, = th•t•JOU c1e111e o...s ,..._l.1114 loCattO .....-• .-1111of~or oroetconllmq!M.... of th California
lU-4 Rtvtralde ~. Coata ftOtiea the ftlinO ot AMEAtCAN TITl.I! COM· Olk:Mauitt U, 114 Pf°""'Y Of OJf"8f nllll ,... OettO ~II,,... Probl
tHaa C.llf t2U7 11n tnftrr.QfY end_. ..... PAHY T CAL•W!llUAH fill· ~li\"'9........-4 JOmC .. .-.cs BM• toll
Tf\ll bualnen con• "*1t ot •W• n1t11 or ot "MIO ruetee. COHVEYAHC£ Oiied AUOUll a. ltl4 ec...-or oC a. t 8 --.... -docted bY: ., lndMd<AM ,,. petltlol\t °' 9"1CM1'1 bV T 0 a.EAVJCE OOM· CORPORATION IT'EJllt4lH c IT!W~ ~ ~ btMt or IH 1 roo ... 1n.
LIM J ~ • tM!fttioned In Don t200 PNIY, l!Qlnt 1 24.2$ CMWlo 4911 lltio 9cM Juc9t oC H ~ M ...... d ltftl
'llllt ttattmtnl lll!ld end l200~ 1he omla to. 1 Pltd*O, 8u8e t30 MuniiCfPlil Court 0 .. ..,.. RHda Gil lk1dl,
w\111 tNt County etef'll of Of-. ProM1e fiO •tarV l4MM t D;eoo CA U 10t M>e1llU 90T1WI Hurwltl fl!Mltt· & CA nae ColJfl on JUty "· L4 ........ 1 ,... ........ "' nt-51<41 ._ ...... ••••n•• ~ .J•11J)-· ··u 19a.. -tllfMk=-J.:---•"" "-_.._8W"l*Jlll•~ ..,_,,,I I CA... ~ --.-flBMG .. "*'* CA 171.c} ?'00 ,,..... ... ()ftloef (ti.,.,.... hhlltatu OrHI
P\I "'*' owe J.!"C:' It o.l!'t ~ ~ °'*"' OoM1 PbtlleMd °'8"09 Coat C.Ht Dall Pilat ~ ~ '• ~ rW:Ptt.4-=:.~, ~:'·" ..,_..,,_~~ n .n . A t H.ll.~."
W·lS3 WTl\al W· 'ft I.
J ' r
•
HMmOllLAft. MT.OUYE
Mortuary • Cemetary
Crematory
1625 G1.._ Avt.
Costa Meea 54C).5554 -
•
1
'1CT1TIOU8 __,._ ..
NAm STAT'Dmff The lollowtng pet'IOfW .,.
~~ .. : GABLE CONSTRUCTION,
24572 Hwt>or View, IC,
O.W Point, CA 92e29
J<9nneth Edwin Gable.
2M72 Harbor View. I C, Der\9 Point, CA 92929
~ bullnMt I• con· by: lln lndMdUll
Kenneth Edwin Gable
Thia ttatement wa flied
¥11th the County Clenc of Of. = County on Augu.t 13,
'211740
"'bllthed Orange co.t
Delly Piiot August 22, 29
Septemt>w 5. 12, 1914
W-209
"8JC NOTICE
MOC NOTIC£
' THE DAILY PILOT
CL IFI 0 OFFICE HO
Telephone ervice:
Monday-Friday
8:00 A.M.·5:30 P . I.
Bu ines Counter:
\lon(lay-Fri<lay
8:00 A .M.-5:30 P.i\it.
DEAD LI
Pt'HLIC \TIO~
\lond1H Sat. Tut·-.do·~ \Ion.
" t•cint•-.da' Tut>~. 'l'hur~d a~ . \\ t>d .
Frid a~ Thurr..
Suturdn~ f-rida~
Sunda ' · fri. •
WIST IEWPOIT SIH,000
Owner's 3 Br unit plus 3 Br income
unit -both on the sand witli spec-
tacular views of surf, sails and
sunsets. New paint, carpets, drapes,
4 car gar~e and excellent financ-
ing!
r
e e a \t 24 MC% a a: su vcn •
642-5678
GE 1s9-9100 -------·' • ·t • "r. •:; • .,•J, --
I ..
Offlet lntab 1914 Lnt I fnd 3004 Lett I f..U 30M ltlr Wut.. SIOO ltlt Wut.. Siii m•tM SI lltlr lfut.. 5101 lltlp Wut.. SI ti• lelt W..W
flUIUYIOlllm fOlJNDADS LOST·~EW~.small H~~ ~=~m~ New. =~~r 11111&.FIMT.. FaJ./mlPIY a-.. ftFuhlon ltland dec:lawed neut. Aby91nlan students Flt & Pit temp opening.~ freight company ha• energeUc c:at-eW Ottented PUT/Tm-now hlttng. Dlhwy drfv. m.tor & EJCMrtor .,....
<rOoMn V1eW1 Cat, tan w/bllc ticked fir, help CUhlef1, tlcht BUkl .. _... / entry level po1ltlona = ~ ~~lty.,,~ Opportunlt'-8Valla* ~ lfl004/lltel P«IOM. able. Pei11•..,l U .....
'!'HE EXECUTIVE OFFICE ARE fREE bllc tip on tell, whit• on tlkera, pft( attencs.nt1, n ,.,._n1 Pt helo opeAlnQ 1n our Lllguna ,,_, --wtth the LOS ANGELES ..._.,, ~~ 1000 N ~Uon. Must ....,.aoc.f 110NewportCent9fDr chin, requlr .. medl· etc.Applylnper90n~F wanted. CaH 806 Hlllloffloeforaful~tlme talpractlce,4 ctayweek, TIMES ctrcu&atlon 0.-Coat~ . .,.~-' 'drMngrec::crd.751·f15e
Suite 200 C I• catlon. 87S.1459 btwn 2-6:30pm at 1760 87S.9191 cMlftc:al poeltlon In °"' full benefltl, lalery open. panmen1 1n our ooor to Ht ttlJ 3 , p uh Monrovia Av., Ste C2, BEAUTY AIR dieipt.
4
93-
9311
dOOf ~ ..... al .... L'fm LIUL ... JllT • ••J-Nll toe C.M. For Info call btwn • ••--:>uti..: Preparation of --•• '•Tl•llmll program. Guaranteed Eapr'd im.tot ~ ~IT......_ lrom ,~ .. -; URbX Rolf G 2-5:30pm Me-39&5. A.lie _..,...,., daily CMt1 receipt• '°' -·~ ..... hour'ly nee '*-con-Hon ;.,w•
Office apeoe fcw ...... ~~~~~~~~ c.11· LIZ Aelnderl. 1 '°'Debi. • UlllTllT cash applcatklne Front office. L:luna '"'-ion. Houra: 4pm to ~~=-:::r· ~·-°""· ~!t~·.ry850V~•o•. F~ Found; Butt dog. ,,,., IMPORTANTI ••&ITUll• ~~t~SalonDrNB l(nowledgeofbalcbook· ~ ~ o!" L. ·~ 9p~Tr~ng la nee star ~ 1.~ ... ""'' ..... ft • --found In CMona del Mat ~ morning breekf ......... _ • ~· .... keepmg CRT & acktlno _,.. r ong pt.., ... ......, .-..,...,11a1 to ~ 8w:h. SC&-3133 ~
standing, •Ingle 1tory &40-788.4 828-8254 1s••1t1/lllEU " 5 ltya/....... -In ···,r-.•·· machine Mlpful We.,.. Beech ofe (213)697-3839 Mm l300 plua per..... ot8I -.. building. lmmed. Oc· ' · '"' ' vua.=· 1~27 ... --JOI wllllng to train.· F« Info OEHTAL RECEPTIONIST F« an Int_...,, eel: llllDll
cupancy. UOO mo FOUND Doberman Outc:allONLY83S.9199 ==Bal~~ ltenlrtn ........ caJIJulle(714)859-0218 ANOASSISTANT 957·2381eoct.1204 tor....iholtl .... be .~--
97µ919 Pincher Newpor1 Stio<M. TOP$$$ • .............. I• a 6 Experience neceuary ,,...lnl!PPM'•a.Abll--~&sy..._,.
Small omce tpaee. 2t5 pluu ducrlb• Fen\9lelpret Modeband -trULIUUTaR-tr Appty In pereon: Newport -~H n()..&275 ISWll& WI tytocomft'U1k:ale~ ~Store. s.no,,._ ~. NB. S150/mo t!S0-2915 Elc:of11 (21l) 866-1984 Pactflc Boata 2200 West :>r uper Wdes. lull & pert PW1 time AM'a ltW't • tNefy, good Olg91il.Z9lfol• ...,,. to P.0 ac. 4374
840-5557: 840--3878 FOUND. dog blk, mix p aal SUCI UI tntmn P8dftc Coat Hwy N Bdl ~· ~~7 .. ,.1P58Y Call DOOOENT ~ TTREATMENT S3.50 pftr. Cel·~70 .alla.. Pubk '*tlona ~ 8-:f!l 12ta .-o.m Shep *'t UM Temp thN S.,t. To WOf1it • • rw:ie,...., ..._ n.,..NA OR. mmure. exptr. hillPfUl. siop by C. .... dal Newhope, F v 775-1~· ltnim 3014 grill, cuh reglst• & ptep lllTWlllEl/F•tl• non·amok•. w/dental 1W So Coelt Hwy, lllm
l .. t
-1. -&I cook. Appty In per9on. 2200 W. w•ir-knowtedge&exper .. ~ lfRl.U lfFm Laguna Beectl tor epp. PART MEONLY
-..iP9""'1ipiil.u!i-.-..-••--w.-FOUND: Fawn colored 141-IOOO It 121 Padflc Cit Hwy. NB ~••-MSSlng diplomatic:....._ for Newpor1 Beectl de-EOE M/F 'pPIY: SAH CLEM£Nte CM/NB 17th' NeWj)Ot1 ~hl~ua~lofSAAve *IRIEITAL IP&* Mon.Frt9!n..4pm BOOK KEEPER Watlted E.llperienced In Retail ~-::. t.f"()(tgol~tf:; =rr· Muat nt. Pf~ INN.' No phOM c..11•
Newer 1000-2200 1q "· 0~8e,.233~t • CM 11 l!WNIT IUCI fOf 81cf\ltectural design Colleetiont For s0phl1tlc•ted r• ~1 Z:OO· 1~9t •IRI HKI ptwe.
2900 DEL PRESl-
ampte pkg, a/c, 876-8900 Manage and Ac· ICOmlEO.OLDI firm PIT. E.llperlenc• habilltatlv• Newport AIRAiPanduro:l9Y exp r:cw ectNe lamly. 2Prn to 1.DENTE ______ _..._
PRIME LOCATION A9-FOUND: Male mene/wht ~.Operl7days HOSPITALEXPER.PREF. teq 71~179l ~t opportunity to Be•ch pr•ct lte w/ IBM/PRC a plus 7pm~o...ig.
Pf'OX. 850 aq.tt. BulY Aust Shep mix & a ma blk t0em-12am. 493 N Old Good written and vert>al c.tbldeSaw & Tool Gf'llld. man.ge co11ectJon cs. 644-6611 675-Q15 · coolllno. ~ aome ••-•-
Coeta Meu ahopp'g ctr Tefrie, rablee tag 5473. Newport Bl Acc.s e. communication sklll1. pettment with a 11ioc.• cHld Mllpel~ EJq>er -·~ c a 11 6 4 2 . 9 4 0 0 . 6«-3658 Frontage Rd at 15th St Good salary and t>enents ~G.RE~~ei:.,~:,~~~ ful eotnpW'ly In the New-.... c.. rel'L ...... 2052 .,;, ...
10.12noon ex 2..-pm FOUND: Pan Collle mix, South 2 ~· Mr Fehr &40-8950 (714)834-7251 J)Of1 8eact'I ..._ ~ lllEllL .,,_ 75-3IU ..._,. M\QIMI ptt.
•CdMdluultea.AC,ampl coftM c:olOf'/blk, male. (714)~7204! ADMINASST/SecTY ~abllltye Opening, Diii Mar--. for Pt.time, kte tyi)ing ~. ~.~~ prkg from s
225 2855
E About 1 yr old. Ween 2 Laguna Nlgoel OUllD mUlt. tutt-ttme dOn'.-a. !Iv. phones. M-W-Fft 1~ 18 ~Ill.El _.,__ •--.._.. eoUt Hwy. 87~900 1ag1 ~897 laliatn~,. 4014 Pro1...ional appearance, Mature c&lhler neededfull out. Exoeriellced only. p/hr Cal TUM OJ Tlu. PIT Hrt fla. &45-'553 =~ ~t~ ------..,.-,,.~ FOUND·RING(fi(1Tea) TEACH -good typing & phone time, 40 hr p/wk ContactRogerSimonwl ~~..:.~~.general _83_1_-4483 ______ 1---~----munlty Somelu102t1r. l9JICtlltah OQJ 17th/Newport Blvd Ca!J E ARENTS a k 111 1 DI v er 1 e 848--0988 Sportl CMi.1 at ,.....,_,_,nng, cklthal nturanee Pt1otie Worll-No "'•
§plRffiJXL READINGS to Identity 54s.o227 Ex1ra lnoorne. Lwner's responslbllltl... Salary Child milt halt t.m t (714)553-«M1 care & It• oooltlng Call lnnl! _ MllnGI $4 plhrlt>onwa ~!r.!~~~~. P~~.~~:,'!~i World Kat., &81·1433 negot Send raume to. 3 pg, 0 8wt>era. Mon-fn 2~ ~.11o .,......_ 646-175e .ttday9"-.. ,,_ ' -
Ad.Ytca In ..AtLMattn & FOUND-WhL 1wn long Monarcl'I Bay f'ta:ra. St• car9 for 1 yr gilt, mom eoe (619>753--0339 M a t u r • p • r s o n .-~ cw ..,.. Pftor
CounMllng. 1815 So. El haired ipad• cat tat 710 l6g''NIQ02en 830--1·30. ~ 1 tv •tW w/aca.nt• oft1ce llklls. J ..-.t1911pfuUiutnor,.. Cam~·:e:'e2~~1em 83i-3317 . Orrrtultin 4111 AD~IN/SEC Tuatln ~s_>G~ I~ ~~ l(efOX SMOO Of l<otl• 100 ~~'-ec-G"'Nr.D ..
1,'~c·.,_, ,.,... ~ =.-:i =--
--,,,.....,...------LOST 8/15wht Persian cat Rt""rn:~or uJe or 30/tvl Wk $7.50/hr. Call for IUnbattllng, backyatd Opefatex, •IP«· pref cura1• typing. word pro-~ ~ urr"""" ....,.... l'mll.. mandatory. (Mileage *vi8i>lrltual Pl)'Chlc, Ad· 'Boris' In Top of the JVptnt .252unlt Mlke10.11em73o.02.22 pool. S100. p /wk Busy lrvlne copy lhop oeulng,"*"°"1ellorl». '!!Ing,_!_!!!..:!!!*~• lntervl..tn.g for Jr peld}Entrytewi1Po8ftl0n
IOf' & Catd Reader* Wexld, Zll Dr In LIG Bdl condo pJt,rudyto record &42-2294 daya/eve need• bright, ttexlble, Abfllty to write gram-,~ ... ,.......~. wtm Pro/Jr Prognim Olrec1cw. 81 le pltw .ttn ooc>d Put. preeent & future. 49~711 REWAR01 map 11t phaM Const ~tic derk $450 matlcaly w/xJnt ..-oood telephone man-Applicant• mu1t be benllffts. ApplcmlON
87S.2495 °' 831..a9&4 loen arranged 752·5282 OILT llTll mo plu• benelltl ~.._. ....... ,.., --=:-'...:J!. nertamt Type 80 wpT1 •Mrgetlc. ·ory.::z~ c:epted d;.i .. t::tOn.fri L 0 ST 8 1 19 Fem 75 -048 .,....,..,_...,"' -...,., and ablity to twd ---'
... , ,.... Keeshond. vie: of Tustin I Want.O.flnancl&I backing lllTI IYllLllU CIRCUUTIOI 2 1 sing req'd Non-amok•. let1 .. 30 t'to.11 °"':::. -=cep1-;;-ar5"4 thru btwn
1~ 8l ~ Avon type mr 3inOfiY 22nd &42.0140 for small buslness·no In Laguna BMch. Muat be :;ourit• ~ pert•tlfne, tart lmmed S140Ch to Cel Mary Baugtman N 8 1112/14. Expet1eneed Sf\oru Communrty
found 8113 .,._,. Hrbf' rlslt 714> 773-l814 over 18 YMf'I old, hav. lllllEl·P /T ful~tlme GARY"S DELI start,re't'leW "' 90 days. &4o-o218 .-. nd --.. ,..~-sAuoc...
3385
"' Niguel ,.._.. ,._,.... • LOST lrg male Golden Ret. d 752•5401 Jtlnt benefit.-__ , .....,, .....,,,_. f\ores Or.. Lquna ~• & ldent ~719 10 yr old In the W•tcllft Mtrtfl,!11
1
ependable car Wiii The Dally Pilot ha lmmed EXECUTIVE ROW INC GEN'L OFFICE. Fndayl Burt Campbell. t 171 Nlgl.l9l No ~ Clllll
FOUND: 9119 Fem. Dog. area. REWARD&4~973 f.D. a 4021 ~= ~tee;tp;:r ~lngfMWMkendMdl• COUNTER Perton . 3901MacArthur•211 onty. t to 5 Ll19 ~ Jam~ Ad. NB .... ~--------
KH1hound, grey/blk, LOST. Whit• Cockatlel. We ,..., ..... 1~ mort· . month Call e.42..-333 r c m•n•g•r•. ult Bindery, Detlvery. for Newport Be8cl'l(752·7491) and phoneS 9e0-245G Vic. IMne & 20th St c M ,,_, ...,,_, "' h•v• a van. station eetab pnnt lhop In S A for Interview 845-VIC Fa!MeW & Baker, gagea.. Call Nevco Oil 1oam.-5pm. wagon ex pidtup. Cal1 Must have neat ~-~,,.,.,...,=-=,,__...,,..,,....,...-~_,...
2705 a" 6 C.M Rewvd 546-4714 (714) 8-4&.1122 llUIE COAST &42~ Asa '°' Mr anoe & v9lid CA drtY9ra ~E INSTRUCTOR Flll&Y ···LY PILIT Emsley. llcenM. 558-8373 S 12 50 hr will treln '"' menne ..... oftic». -----------.-i111. I ... 850-0302 Good telephone ~ 1 I CWTS PUPll in_ ... ...__ enc•. typing 1kllls ,
SYDIEY
01ARR
. OLE1••• To Mnd-mak• very U· r..-. _.. 645--5570 .._,..SWERING SERVICE -ctuarve oonec:tabte & gift Experlenc.d full time. --------
telephone operator1, Busy~~ items.. Beautlful bear• appty In pereon Vlsaen Groc::sy Merd\andlMn
Varloul ehifta. 362 3rd St ::nc: fun time clertc balk>OnS, Chnstmas ~ AottstJ.. 101 w Uncotn Appt'Ox. 20 Mf1Y hourW
aulte C Laguna e..ch typlat Dutlel will lndud• Mallona and omements.. Anaheim W9ekdays.. Cer ..__.
1 ... PPLIANC E TECHS computer entry. tight Flt Mon-Frt S.!SC>f'n $4/Hr FllUl TUllEI ery. ldeel '°' oonege ttu-
needed. Must have own typff'lg, tiling. Mc to a1art 54S-52n 4 days 1 ...i. ICWM drtv· ::: ,!! ; :::,':" ~
trucll and tools Top pay Experle11ce pt9'erred DELIVERY LA TIMES ing reqund 645-0093 541.0718
643-2830 Call Mr. Durbin 553-1133 To hornet In Newport nu (213)877 • 1138
...._ -""· A •• ASSISTANT TO EVERY· :: Beach 3 .30am-8 am aair ,.a .. -.y, lplt '"" ONE Dynamic small ... LERK TYPIST Imm PfT $800 p/mo. 5.48-8441 8*UPll .-& IALD ARID (March 21 ·April 19): TransactJon w1Jt be completed Ke\ i!. ad~lslng agency ..-. posltlOO avail. Xlnt phone ·~AL ·--&IT -Full or p•rHNM Exi> mtg Manne ~IC*! only
to know when to §Ct "offstage." Position 1s powerful, you'll influence experienced secretary tkllla. SO wpm typing req _., -· mandatory Pey com-Fu&-tirne Mon--Fn XJnt
others and many 'important" people will be drawn to you. h 1s likely Full time position. o.: Hrs a.12 PM M-F Selary NEWPORT BEACH men1urat• w/ablllty. benefits Ce1 1or ISl9t
you will win a legal batlle cooccming land or real estate. sired tklllt lndude. High neg Call Beth ~744 Are ~ loOklng lex a Located c M 54~942 BASIN MARINE. INC
TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Stress tndepcndencc, wtlhngness to r-'ougyi excet~~rtyl· ~"° • painter ' Neeo • ~w':4': ro:= ,._'°'Jule 173-0:MO
pioneer a project. Confusion eitists m connection with a "speaal ng. gotng_._._ · nouse1t~? NM<! • 1ng fex a fr1endty mature Ful time ac.iaed RH 1or --IWTPlY
rclationstup." Strive to get to bear1 of matters -refuse to accept WOtd ptocea4ng. 'die· bab)'~lller NHO 1 enthu11aat1c. ••· busy Ne~n Beach~ good loc*lng guys &
Leo
_.,, · fi · 1 ttphone. Top pey & ex-bf~ Fill those neeos perle11ced assi1tan1 10 ptutic: ~ with OR vir1a llllftO are motNated
evasive responses. , ~uanus persons l&Ul'C prominent)· Cell9nlnd_J •. ~..!.~ t~1r10fl• &t through c1ass1t1ee1 join OUf teem Non· upenence 111 ~ing and neet .,.... "8¥9 own
II ·1· • reM1me to QUANTUM -----smotter. Mo4-o515 ICl\lbbing rftt0u9 cw to Cleil'4f ~
let 01 Help Y M
Sen V •• Prtt•rtrl
The Oliy Not off tn JGU Uis euct tin ad
on tu "rr.cbse Pact" •-ends fir jmt
'25 per day. ot 2 days far '4S.
Subn1t 1 pich1t. or we1 photocnph it tor
you at a miWnal chatce.
GEMINI (May 21·June 20): You'll have success in deahn° with a , .......... ....,.., ... 642-5678 & P I
Cancernative. Focus on ~yments, co ect1ons, ab1 uy to locate needed PO eox 8708-434. New· -• ic p n • c • • 1 a r y CU11111nea "°"' tam-1ptn
material and to utilize 1t Prestige swmas upwards -you'll make port e..cn. 928sa.1708 644-1240 Mon-F1' eso-1015 00~~~~~rt~~~~,n~M~wL CIRCL KMARwrTS =~====~===~~~=============
CANCER (June 21 -Jwy 22}. Elements of timillJ, luck nde with =~r CM E • M
you.. Ge'!11ni nauve wdl pro~ to be. v~ua.ble all) Open lines. of hOme Pft. 64~235",
commun1catJon, check vanous S0C1al invu.auoM. keep options opcnA ~,..,ur=-o=--------
wberc travel 1s concerned. Excellent for purchase of wearing apparel. 111YD/FIU Tllll
LEO {July 23·Aug. 22). Someone may be hidio& somelhtng from To d 11 tt k
you. Be aware, alert and look behind scenes for answers. Check sourtt euto ~ t: L•f"to ~
matcnal, rcahlC that some rcvt ions arc necessary. You'll ha"e from Laguna · Hlguel
OPPorlunity to COn'CCt errors, to rebuild on a more solid base. SNppng, rev'ng expe;
VIRGO (Aua. 23-Sept. 22): Gain tnd1cated throu&h communtca-l*Pful MUSI tieve xtnt
uon, writin,&. personal appearances. Romance Oouri.shcs. wish comes drive recotd' t. at lraMt
lt\le and cmttvc capabilities arc emphastZcd. Gemini, Sqiu.anus and :,[~r;!°.:. start.
another Virao fllUre prominently. tress confidence, opum1sm. LIBRA (Sep\. 23-0c:t 22): Pleasant surprise due 1n form of pft. Babyiltter wented·m~
token of affection. Family memtx-r makes major conce too. =·~~~ Professional superior applauds efforts, andicatcS promotion is on tor ~ 'I' 1125 .~
boriwn. Strcfl diplomacy and do remember annivcrsarin. Taurus English •PHklriOA•• play~ role. 1'1'3--~ RPIO(Ocl 23·Nov. 21 ): G•ve loaic"equal time." TcndenC') is a.n~....,lng------
to IC'\ 00 impultc, lO make statements before )'OU have proof. Know it. FILL n
cautious and realize that .. pcctal person .. d have )OUr best
mt.crcsl.S at hcan. Pi5"1 plays 1Jnificant role. TILW AGl'M'ARJU (No"·· 22·Dcc. 21). You ukcd for opportun1ty to ElllOIOM==tyfOr
ten theories-now )'OU have 1t a.nd rundina coutd be made 1va1Lablc. en P9"IO" '° Accental10on1ntcnsific:drclationsb1p, Ion -1crmcomm1tmcnl You·u wen• -.Nwport
be deahn1 wilh older lnd1vidUil who•··~ ~nd benefit ofcxpenencc. • M e..:::e.!: 1JW
CAPRICOl\N(Ott. 22-Jan. 19): Individual from)uut~ .t makes .. ,.,..,.canhlMl-ldlr'8....,. rea~r1ncc and can 1 tually aid 1n rcsolvina di cmma. Ulnar ~..._°'
cm adi on lepJ affairs. ~cnbips. mant.al uatu You'll pin ~ a '-cleft .a4 cd rccoan1tton, proJ t wlll be compl tcd and r '1tw1 wdl be upeneia vand 1ec:I. typing~ to .,
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-fcb. 18): What had bttn 1 tOad lr:: could °' ti.cntna.OooCI end
now me 1 lCJt,.pina-stonc-to p lndavklu.al ho wu communlCatlOnlldl ..
nd11Ttrcn11s now d finnd 1nttrcsted and you'll soon be aw re of al mencr. ory bOlllMI
1 andepel'dtn , o nah1y, C1t\U,1t), .oilliftl.D 10 uikc a 11111.-yanct
hance on our O'fl'n caltnll. inst1nns. Cont 1DEMA
P (Feb. I ·March 20 : Foelo 'throuah on huncll Ro l'\(C f2 13
om ' -ate bCiD&.JPUlkd m d1 rent cfoteuon and emotions
ma) cloudtnJ I . nt)~ovn ant f tn m iClf.
m realile 1h11 hat "c to offtr' I
'
Calf (71 4) 494·9233 fOf moft info
Daily Pilot ·
PUT 111 FICI LElll
....
f .-. ..
District Managers
If :rov ~ wofl~ ,.,,,,., young bol'\ &
v·rn ond dnl. rob\ Cl•t "°' .°' you
c°"''°"' o CO"ft' on dlt nt!"""P<>p«'' ctrculo
ftOf' + ... Id Thn I\ Cl U"'q~ po\•f!O'I W1ftl
doay chof~ & r~rd\
Ollr ~"""91 Ol't om~ ApplKCl>'!t\
"""' ho..e a ._, ''o'-•090" 0< •ruck
Wt oH~ ar1 eace"""' \Glory w.rti o boNI\
plan ond go. otlowanc:t Wt t,o.,. Oii
n~ ~Ill p\oJ'I tt.a1 onclvdru hosp<
fOliz er!'°" ln$11f on< t l1btofol •OC a!oOI' Of'ld
holiday\
C "'V\I ~ a ~t• t M
wctntfuf cmcf bt wt !o WO l\ord f
you TOV ~ fhe ~
~~~·
the ailyPil
330 w. Bay
Costa M u. CA 92626
\
IRIESlllO
Certified or exper
11pm-7am full °' part time. Meaa Verde Conv
Hoec>.. ee 1 C.Oter SI Costa M_. 548-5585
To ~ yOUf meeuoe
'befOJe the
reeding pt1blic,
phone
Dally Piiot
Classified. 642-5e78
Newspaper
KIDS-EARN GREAT TRIPS AND PRIZES!
AGES 11-14
EARN lJ> TO $75.00 PER WEEK
Wr now hnt I~ *"'~ tor ~ t• bu•m to i.ecurt rtadm kw lhe 0.&111' CMst
Oi~y Potot O\i1 crew\ \llft at 3 30 p " and
WOtk until 8 30 pm Me\dlys On Slturdap. we
·wor\ a ltw mort hours You d e1rn 111any trips
, alld pr11es aionc 1tttl1 urnu11 your own money ,
tllfrt 11 no Otli•tl'llll or colleetlOll 111volvtd
U 1611 m 1111emted please call Mt [a•I
(714) 548-7058
TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ACROSS
1 leg co"""l'l9
S Mel1gnt1y
10 Instrument
"Blame
1 !> Appt'ehffiSMl
16 Organ 11op
17 MIT df19rec
hOIOer
20 Asian 1es11va1
21 POSM!SS•ve
22 SmaJlef
23 Papal name
24 Lament
25 01sun1on
28 Urg1>nt
32 Fial
33 Ad11;c1>nt
34 Coohdgf'
35 Bano1coo1t
36 Voca1tzt1
3 7 Aria s1119P•
311 lrasc1b11tty
311 Kmd 01 tag
40 Radar s ~'"
41 GrOIMQue
hgu•I'
43 Botch
H R1'd shad ..
45 1ndefm11e
amount
46 1< 1110 01 pray
t ,
49 Greet<
l)fomenade
!>() Mo:slem ruler
S3 Unplanned
56 Antler part
57 VKall'
!>8Ste
!>9 Wcxd or regrf'I
60 OvPrl1lled
fil Rhythm
DOWN
1 Mull1ludt:
7 Former
3 Garmenl M"I
4 0101e<:1 suit
S Cmply SPllC.f'
6 Urns ktn
l Hf'GIOrS
6 Hoc~ey great
Bobby
'.I MOSI pow<lf'ry
10 Abo<lP.S
11 CoarSfl h1111
lab11ca
1;> Memory
I;! Squint re Uproar
rci Nurn511.,1fed
2:l Fas1ene1s.
74 0.~5~
;>~ 811 01 t.oily
26 Santa CA
77 M1san111r , ,.
•
PREVIOUS
PUZZLE SOL YEO
28 Set
29 Cake toppmo
30 N OI USNA
31 Angryl~
33 Neill to Peru
36 Watch pans
37 Compleled
39 Mull
40 S•noer vma -
•? Thaha and
43 Shod
45 Bang in
4& Eiglll pref
47 Foot part
48 Labhealtr
49 Begone•
50 Farm unit
51 Doltng
52 Dtll plant
54 Briny
55 Wheel part
10 11 12
18
MM a as 'G ' a
--2
13
'
' -
I BILL YATES
VW-PORSCHE
I a3'7'.~8Jo'o ·~):~s I I
NABERS
CADILLAC
LARGEST SELECTION
Of lat• model, low mllMge c.cs1n .. 1n Souttt.m
Callfomlal See us today!
140-1110 2eoo Harbor Blvd. COSTA MESA
C'nr•ltt HU '72 m aooa oona
$1500 motnlng1 only
5-48-9490
'82 Z28 Lo mf, Mop, all
power, <4apd Ctta/~/
vebK Sto.aoo 552·5"4
ITADlllM
•OllTIAC
H T ~ Jl I lJ 1\..1
..
HIQH83 LOWU COUii 10111111
-
WEDNESDAY. AUGUST 22, 1984 ORANGE COUNTY . C A LIFORN IA -25 CENTS
~oa•t
Financier J. David Doml-
nelll lled when he said he
could pay back Investors,
an attorney says./ A3
Orange County League of
Cities goes on record
opposing Jarvis IV./ A3
California
A California poll shows
many folks Just don't like
labor unions./ A4
Coastal Commission of-
flclals oppose rullng boot-
ing them from federal
hearings./ A5
Nation
Geraldine Ferraro re-
turns from press con-
ference to find her press
secretary has quit./ A4
World
South Africans urge
boycott of mixed race
vote./A4
John Belushi drug figure
continues to fight extra-
dition from Canada./ A4
Home
Strategic furnishing and
fiber glass celling panels
combat 'high tech' noise
In family rooms./81
A new pool alarm emits
an 85-declbel slgnal If a
child or pet falls Into the
water./81
Do terms of endearment
from strangers upset
you'l Ann Landers puts
them In a new per-
apectlve./82
FOod
130 pets· crammed in RV
!_!_ 3 cats, 16 dogs and seven rabbits
confiscat ed tn Indiana woma n · s trailer
Numerous sick and underfed pets
weTC under veterinary care this morn-
ing after more than 130 animals were
found inside a motor home and
trailer stopped by a Irvine police
officer, officials wd.
Approximately 113 cats. 16 dogs
Aaupertout
and seven rabbits were impounded
Tuesday in the vehicles drh en by
Nancy Jane EJlis, 39, of Indiana.
according to poli~ and animal hospi-
tal official . Ellis was cited for alleged
improper care of animals, said Irvine
police disJ)9tcher Virginia Powers.
1 he citation 1s a misdemeanor and
Ellis wa not»TCStcd.
Ellis was scheduled to meet wtth
police and animal control officials at
• 11 this momina to discuss the
incident, accordina to Dr. Lawrence
Zarrilli of the Woodbrid&e Ho pital
for Animals and Birds in Irvine where
many of the animals were taken for
treatment.
Four doctors are treating the
animals. Zarrilli said, add in& many of
OlJDiplc cycU.ti Rory 01ReWy (left) and
Mark Gorakl -weartna the told medal he
WOJl -nJae their &laue8 ln a tout da.rlnC
a~ held ln their honor by Super Bod.lee
gymnutam ln Coeta Mesa Tue9d.ay. Both
cycllat. are memben of the om and
tralned there, u did Olympian• fiom other
coantrlee.
the pets were in poorcond1uon. Some
of them, cspeaally the cats, were
"very ill'' and had been kept an
cramped quarten., he said.
Irvine Sgt. Pat Rodscrs uid the
animals were discovered when an
officer •• melted a bad odor" w htlc
patrolling alona Culver Drive around
9.30a.m.
He spotted the motor home and
stopped it at Walnut Avenue.
The animal~ were found inside
P~rking meterS
at Mile Square
·placed on hold
FV counctl members
to view other options
iiif und ratstng plan-
Fountam Valley Cny Cdunctl
members say they want to study olhct
options for raisma funds at the city's
Mile Square Park Recreation Center
before decidio' whether to mstall
parking meters an place of the current
"honor" fee system
In particular. council members
said Tuesday the} want to know bow
much It would cost to build a fence
around outdoor basketball, racquet·
ball and volleyball court.and to charae
for use of these facihtlcs. Currently.
these courts can be used f'rec of ch.ar&e
unless users want to reserve a court or
have mghtume h&hts turned on.
Last year. the council initiated
parking fees as a way to offset some of
the ~ts of operatina the popular
recreat1on complex, located on
Brookhurst Street at Heil Avenue.
Motorists parking al the center ban
been required to purchase a SO-c:ent
ticket from a dispenser at the lot each
day they visit. Vehicles that do not
displ2} tickets may rcc.che citations.
The council is examining otbcr'
parkin& fee options because of public
complaints about the ticket system
and maintenance problems wtth I.he
dispenser. One alternative under
consideration 1s installation of put...:..-----'
tnl mC'teTS.
At Tuesday's meeting. Councilman
Ben Niel~ pointed to the outdoor
court users as .. people who are not
paying their fair share•• of recreation
center expm.ses because coun u.se 1s
1encrally f'rec.
He asked the city staff to determine
the cost of fencing these couns and to
estimate how much revenue could be
produced by cb.argina for their use.
City Rcc:rcauon Man.ager Bob
Cook wd the report will probably be
ercstnled lo the council in late
September or early October. In the
meantime, he said, the current tick.et
dispenser will mnain•in use at the
rec:reation center lot.
~~~~~~"c:i~~n=r~ Gay activist in Laguna dies
=~~~:::~t.}~910rlglnal after Ion battle with AIDS
Jst for oocktall parties_..__
Bullet
~rain
sets 114
trips daily
Is serving colorful mod-
ern mixers -liqueurs
and fruit Julce./C1
Sports
The Angels skid reaches
seven straight losses
after another loss In New
York, 8-2./01
East Germany and the
Soviet Union continue to
dominate the Friendship
Games, breaking four
world records In the pro-
cess./02
Entertainment
A Broadway understudy
becomes a television star
nextseasonlnthere-
vamped series "Three's a
Crowd."/83
Bualneu
Health Insurance for pets
la becoming popular./88
INDEX
Birth a
Bridge
Bulletin Board
Bu8'MU
California New1
Ouslfled
Comlcl
Crouword
Death Notices
FOOd
Help Vouraelf
Home '-Horoscope
In the Service
Ann Land«•
Mutual Fund•
MaUonel Newa
Opinion
Paperaul
Ponce Log
PubllC Notlcet
Sportt
StOcie Marketa
T•vt Ion
Theater• WHther
WorJCfNewa
By DA V1D BISHOP o..., .... c:..,.., ... , ..
AIDS claimed the life of Laguna
Beach civic activist Henry Hampton
Monday.
Hampton, 43, was a "pioneer 1n
sensitizing people in OranJe County
to gays and lesbians," said Laguna
Beach City Counctlman Robert Gen-
try, himself a gay acuv1st.
Hampton battled the deb1htatJng
effects of Acquired Immune Defi-
ciency Syndrome. which primarily
affects aays, for nearly two years both
in and out of the hospital, accordin&
to friends.
Hampton, a seven-year-resident of
Laguna Beach. was a professor of
biology and ecology at Fullerton
College. He was born in Glendale.
Hampton was chamnan of Laguna
Beach's Ctty Arts Comm1ssion in
1982 before resigning due to his
declinina health. He also was acuve as
a volunteer in the annual Pageant of
the Masters. panic1pating as a cast
Cranston in county
stumping for Dems
in Congress races
Ex-=candidate pra ises
Ferraro's handling
of financial Issu e
By JEFF ADLER
Ofllleo.IJ"91 .....
Democratic vice prcsidenual can-
didate GeraJdme Ferraro has handled
the furor over her family finan~
"superbly," Dcmocrallc U.S Sen.
Alan Cranston said today. but he
faulted Ferraro for allowang the issue
to come up an the first place.
Campaignina an Orange County for
Democratic con,ress1onal can-
didates. California s senior senator
said he hopes all questions concern-
ing Ferraro's finances now can be put
to rest. endana what he termed has
been a diversion from the real
campaign issues: the economy, war
and peace. the environment and
JUStlCe
Cranston told reporters attending a
morning news conference at Orange
County Dcmocrauc Party head-
quarters 1n Santa Ana that he thought
Ferraro was "cool and calm"
throughout a Jcnathy news. £OO·
fercnce Tuesday concerning her
finances and those of her husband.
New York real estate broker John
Zaccaro. .
But Cranston was crifical that the
(Pleue tee CllANSTON/A2)
member in the hve re-creation of
"The Last Supper."
Hampton also helped found
Laguna Outreach. an organization
that provides education about
gaysand lesbians and promotes their
rights.
"It's alwa>s extreme!) sad to lose
someone because of 4-IDS." Gentry
said
"When someone passes hke this.
someone who's a leader. it's hard. At
(Pleue eee AIDS/ A2) Lawrence D. GU.On
The proposed--C-ahforma hi&h-
speed tram S)Stem. modeled afkr tlic
Japanese Shink.anscn BuUet Train,
would offer 114 tnps daily between
Los Ancclcs and San Diego. with 0ranae County stops in Irvine. Santa
Ana and Anaheim, accordin& to 1
prelimi~ry timetable released by
American High Speed Ratl Corp.,
v.btch plans to bwJd the hne
Construction of the rail line is
expected to begin nc:u year. with
tentative completion and 1tan of
(Pleue eee SPEEDY/ A2)
o.a, ... ,....._ ................
Sen. Alan Cranaton (left) with new atate Democradc party chalrman Bruce Sumner.
Alleged c~unty narcotics empire crumbling
13 people reportedly involved tn cocaine
deals with Hunttn on suspect plead _u_t_,,_lt_y_
witc. ha \lSter and a San Juan
C1p1 tran~ man who pkadcd 1u1h)
to laundcnf\I money for the roca1nC'
enterprise. 11 face pmon term' of
fi,c to e1a,ht "ca"
nothCr in the t of lharadcl"\ to
pie d 1u1h} wa Ronald "lurbo··
Tana. a H· 'QT-old from Corona dcl
tar v.ho criucall> undcd
when an 1181 n1 fired a otaun at
STEVE
MARI LI
NEWS BACKGROUND him. 1 i ~portl-dl had pullC'd out a
,.. apon and aimed 1t at •PP h1na
lawmen. The ot un bla t hit T1 in J hn Kura\, an 1 tant lJ S
the ch t. . anomc,, ~•d he C\p('(t\ aJd111 1
rcputN dru d at r v.ho Cf\JO)ed 1u11t~ pt-a from otht"T u P«t an the
the t hfc but alk cdh o•'Cd asc. It 1ei mort than po 1htc, he
M N y mort' than 100,ooO 1n drua :isrttd. that Mot\! ' rould he the la '
d bt , Tana no 1 paral)7N from the one t nd1n "'hen tht pt 11 tn I
:\houl n do" n. Uc cntrttd his~uilt datr amH·~
p.!C'A from h~ bed l J aunt.am ~al ' W bcthcr di not he opa to
C"ommun1t) Hoo;p11al "'"h h1o; male a deal "'th thc f<'dcr t
~rt'nt' nd puomc at h1\ ~•de __ m_c_ni. pm!'C<'utor' \aid th<'
l
--r.
' "
i .
1Q
LB' s Gabri els to stand trial
~Una b cn1c actl\1st John
Gabncls must tand tnal on ch
he offcttd a pill containm
phcnobarbnol to a ·)'car-old, a
munic1palJud&e rulrd Tucsda).
South Orange County Municipal
Court Judge Richard Hamilton or-
dered Gabm:l to appear in Supcnor
Court on Sept. 4 on the !>ingJe felony
count and refused to lower bail for the
60-year-old fo mter cit) councll can-
didate. A physician who examined
Gabriels after the heanng ~1d he is
"in danJer of havma a stroke."
Oabnels' bail was set at $5,000
followina his arrest on Aug. I 0 for the
~ent whi ch occurred at Main
h Park on July 31. At the time he
't_"~S free on his own rcco1n11ance
'fbUowin& a previous arrest that he
&lle&edl> harbored ju' enilrs in his
home.
• Gabnels was i01t1all ) arrested on
CoNTINUECJ STORIES
.._ -----=---=
April l l for all edl hatbon
JU\Cnilcsandgi 1n &h mQu lud
He bad post~ cash I ofS I 0,000 for
that charge.
Gabriels' auomer, told the coun
that \\-as Gabriels' entire savings ..
and that he had no more money for
bail. {iabnet:. has been an the county
1a1l m an ta Ana since his most recent
arrest.
After the hearing. Dr. Euaene
Atherton of Laguna Beach asked that
he be allowed to examine Gabriel~.
who he <>atd appeared .. very de--
pressed and 1n n~d of medical
attention."
Af\~r fvang Gabriels a cur .ory
exammat1on m t~ courtroom JUry
chambersDr Atherton ~d Gabriels
was getting Onl) two hours of lcep a
01&,ht. was havmg difficulty biuth1n1
and is rece1~ing no medical treat-
ment. ·
r
••ttc is m danger of Raving
trokc."
Ju H malton said he would not
reduce the ba il and ordered the
medical examination team at Oran e
Count)' Jail to examine Oabrieb.
In te t1monyJiven Tuesday, C10dy
Ann Tntvis of Mission V1eJO said
Gabriels offered her 3-year-old son
Timothy a pill she later identified as a
phcnobarb1tol. Travis said she stood
in line at a water fountain and saw
Gabriel standina nearby with
another man and a youth. She said
she saw' Gabriels take a pill from a
brown prescnpuon bottle and give it
to the youth. Travis said her son then
ran up to Gabriels and asked him
what the pill was and if'he could have
one.
According to Travis, Gabnels re-
plied, "u's a mint candy. do you want
one?"
SPEEDY TRAIN PLAN ••.
l"romAl
service m 198ts.
The draft umetable sho"'~ 114
trains, including 12 el\press 1rams.
operating each da) between 6 am.
and midnight. The company said the
total train miles dall) ( 14.000) 1s the
c:quivalent of more than half the
distance around the world at the
equator.
The prehmtnar) draft timetable
was prepared to give tra~cl packagers
and future riders an idea of the
frequency of departures and length of
travel between vanous stauons, ac-
cording to Lawrence D Gilson,
p~s1dent of AHSRC
The schedule 1s to be refined befo re
it is submitted to thC' vanous gov-
ernment.al agencies conducttng en-
' 1ronmental and other reviews.
The preliminary timetable in-
cludes six ellpress trains in each
d1rect1on, completing the tnp be-
twt>en downtown San Diego and
downtown Los Angeles in 59
minutes. Coach fare for the down-
town San Otego to downtown LA tnp
will be S 18.30 ( 1982 dollars). Service
between downtown LA and LAX will
be 17 minutes and wall cost $5.65.
Stauons are planned for LAX,
do\\ntown Los· Angeles at Uruon
Station Norwalk, Anaheim, Santa
Ana. In me. Oceanside, La Jolla and
do~ntown San Diego (Santa Fe
depot)
I he all-electnc tram will nde on
welded rails, cushioned with rubber,
which the company says will provide
a smoother, quieter ride.
The 130-mlle, $3.1 billJon project is
modeled after the Ja{>anese
Shinkansen Bullet Train, with has
carried more than 2 billion passcnaers
over a 20-year period without a
passenger fatali ty and with a 99
percent on-time record.
The city oflrvine has not expressed
opposition to the proposed rail line,
but some Irvine residents arc sup-
portina a lawsuit filed by Tustin, San
D1eio and other cit1es that want to
block the rail project because of
envtronmental concerns.
CRANSTON CAMPAIGNS IN COUNTY •••
From Al
1ssue arose at-alt -
"l would regret that adequate
thought was not given at the outset l
regret u came up, .. he said
However, <.. ranston said he be-
lieved the issue might tum to Ferraro
and Democratic presidential nomi-
nee Walter Mondale's favor.
'"It may develop sympathy for
Geraldine ... the senator added.
He also said he thinks Democrats
can take the Whue House from
Ronald Reagan this November ··1f
they handle the issues ofour time. in
a very efficient way"
The Mondale-Ferraro t1d.e1 must
offer '"creatl\ e and construct1\e
altemattves"' to the GOP. said
Cranston. who ad:nowlcdged that
Democrats enter the fall campaign as
underdogs.
Among the issues Democrats must
hammer on as theeconom), Cranston
said Republicans are entitled to
some credit for cutting inflation, but
defictts are sky high, banks and other
financial institutions are in a precan -
ous slluauon and unemployment stall
hovers above the levels u was at when
Reagan took office.
'"Reagan is not in a sohd position
on the economy," Cranston said,
adding that no matter who as elected
president. he expects a tax increase
next year.
Questioned about has own pohucal
future, Cranston. who made an
abortive run for the Democratic
presadenttal nomination this )Car.
said he plans to seek re-election to his
Senate seat m two years. but wtll not
makunoth~ run for the yres1dc11c).
Cranston named former Senate
Majority Leader Howard Baker. Vice
President George Bush. Transpor-
• tauon-Secretary Elizabeth Dole, her
husband, Kansas Sen. Robert Dole
and New York Rep. Jack Kemp as
likely r rcsidential candidates for
1988 i Reagan is re-elected to a
second and final term.
Besides his visit to Democratic
headquarters today, Cranston is to
appear at fund raisers for Democrat
Carol Ann Bradford, challenging
incumbent Rep. Robert Badham in
the 40tb Congressional District, and
Democrat May Lou Brophy, vying
for the congressional seat held by
incumbent Dan Lungren 10 the
sprawling 42nd Congressional Dis-
tnct.
He also 1s scheduled to speak to
both the Santa Ana Chamber of
Commerce and tht Dc.mocrauc
Foundation of Orange County, an
orpn1zat1on of major party donors in
the area.
AIDS CLAIMS LB ACTIVIST ••.
From Al
least hts suffering ts o"er. that"s the
good part of 1t," Gentry said.
Gentry called It a "'difficult disease.
it works very slowly," and he called
for more medical research toward a
cure ~d treatment for the malad)
which weakens the body"s immune
system leaving 11 vulnerable to dis-
ease.
The Rev Barbara Mudge. assistant
pastor at St Mary·s Epa~opal
Church. said Hampton wao; "some-
one people jUSt responded to. he was
full of love."
Hampton "'as also active in
Laguna Beach politics and he also
worked close!} with the Laguna
Beaeh-Police Department 10 setting
up a walk-along program to help
improve the relations between the
local ga) community and the pohce
department.
A full requiem Mass for Hampton
will be held Thursday, 6 p.m .. at St
Mary's Episcopal Church, 428 Park
Ave. m Laguna Beach.
Hampton is survived by his father,
Noble D. Hampton of Laguna Hills,
and a sister, H~ene Campbell of
Syl mar.
Donations are asked to be made in
Hampton's name to Save the
Redwoods, for the organization's
seedling planting program, 114
Sansome St.. San Francisco, CA
94104
COCAINE EMPIRE CRUMBLING •••
From Al
On numerous occasions, agents
followed Moble}' or his underhnsngs
when they allegedly were dispatched
to a safe house 1n Garden Grove
where d1v1ded packages of cocaine
were stored.
· A transcnpt of the clandestine
undercover work depicts Mobley as a
powerful businessman whose biggest
-headache was d1spos1ng of the hun-
d reds of thousand~ of dollars he
allegedly made month I> off cocaine
The drug mone) reported!} wa<;
funneled into dozens of sa' ings
accounts, tucked into "aluahlc "'ater-
front property and sl1 resort land or
vscd to buy Mercedes Benzes and
BMWs that Moble\ asserted!} p1cled
up b) the half do1en during trips to
Germany.
One underco,er agent who said 1t
was 1mperat1ve his name not be used
; descnbed Moble) a1o a hngh1. am-
bittous young man who po<,<.c'>!.ed
.tremendous bu<,sncss acumen and a
certain chan<oma
~·Just Call
642-6086
Delly Piiot
Delivery
It Ou•r•nteed
.. He ne'er \\t>nt out at night unless
II \\as business He didn't eo dnnking
or dancing J don"t even think he used
coke himself."" said the agent. who
claims Moble) was prepanng to
parla) his drug fortunes into leg1t-
1mate businesses at the ume of the
raid.
Another person close to the 1n-
vest1gauon. ho"'ever, described
Mobley as a "'depraved man"' who
thought nothing of settling deliquent
accounts with a beating. In one taped
con\ ersat1on, Mobley reportedly
threated to have Ting kidnapped and
held prisoner until he agreed to pay
off his debts
In another conver~llon, Mobley
alleged!> refers to his attome) wuh a
racial slur and suggests the man
should be lolled
One man who FBI agents alle&e dtd
business with Moble) did end up
dead. Barcia) Hodges. brother of
former Westminster Councilman Gil
Hodges. \\SS shot and killed ma bar at
John Wa ) ne .\1rport ncarl) two years
ago
.\t 1hc time of his death. Hod&es
owed Mobley a large sum of money,
an FBI transcipt states. The man
charged with tbe shooting. who
happened to be Hodges' cousin,
disappeared after bail was posted for
him.
Mobley"s rise in the drug business
was directly tied to his marriage,
investip tors said. His wife is the
daughter of Herbito Machado-Velas-
quez, a 50-ycar-old Colombia native
who is one of the fugitives in the
cocaine case.
Machado-Velasquez allegedly
helped arranJe to funnel cocai ne from
South Amen ca to the United States
and eventually to Mobley, the U.S.
Attorney's Office charges.
The Colombian and his two sons
eluded lawmen durin$ the raid and
reportedly now arc hving in their
native land. Machado-Velasquez re-
portedly has not contacted govern-
ment authorities despite the fact that
his wife was arrested in the sweep and
ISJ811cd
"Hts wife's strll 1n custody but
we"ve sttll never heard from the guy.··
said Kuray.
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VOL. 77, NO. 235
..
2
Lew clouds will creep inland
Coaatal
Extended
Tempe
The fountain of youth
" 11 Tides
• 13 . .. " .. tO 11 at 10 17 .. .. 11
IO 11 . .. tO 71
11 a
" &1 11 ....
.. 17 . ..
16 IO .. .. .. . .. ,.
IO II
.. 1• 11 .. ,. ..
IO JO TOOAY
M 12 1eoonc1 low 12 11 p ~ I t n a ~t"Ofl Utpm 17 71 IO 103 tt
IO U 11 11 .. 1t
71 ..
100 tt
'"""10AY
2'02 a.m
l•Sa.l'I\ 1"07 p.m
7.»p'"
02 u
2 1
IJ
1: :: lull ... , today 91 J U ptn, ,.... 1
11 n.urect.,atl20 a 111 and .......... 11 731p111 71 :: MOOll .... toelay at a1t p.111., ,._ g 80 Tllurad«)' • 2.ao' "'·and-. aoMI • 1'37 PM
Paul Burke (left) and h!a brother Juon
may only be 3 and 5 yean old, reapectt.-e-
ly, but they already know bow to cool off
on a bot day. The two YOt&Di•ten are
emoyin.t tbe apray from tbe fOUDtal.n at
llfle 8qaare Park ID FOUDtal.n Valley.
Costa Mesa now officially
known as 'CityoftheArts'
Council approves changing of the motto
to reflect city's cultural advancement
By TONY SAAVEDRA
Of"" 0.11) Not .....
Old timers remember Costa Mc
as Goat Hill, but you can call it "Hub
of the Harbor Ara" or better yet,
"City of the Arts."
The town once known for its J.ar&e
population ofmilkina 1oats and later
fo r lts proll:imity to the beach has
aaain ctt.n1ed tts im11C. The city now
wants to be rccoanizcd as a mecca of
music and the perfonnin& arts,
joked that Cost&. Mesa's artsy alopn
may not be appropriate for clty seals
placed on the doors of municipal
trash trucks and other official ve·
hicles.
"There's no reason we can't be
'Hub of the Harbor' and 'City of the
Arts,' .. said Councilwoman Norma
Hemoa.
Costa Mesa's official emblem and
its "Hub" motto were created in I 9S3
when the city was primarily known
for its boatmaking.
"We arc the cultural oenter of
Southern California." said Nate
Reade1 director of Costa Mesa's
Chamoer of Commerce.
Reade's claim is taken with a few
arains of sal't by officials from nearby
cities that also pride themselves for
thcjr cultural hiJl:'.liahts, such as
Laauna Beach, which has the county's
oldest an museum and is home to lhe
famed Paacant of the Masters lhow.
"(Costa Mesa) may have moro
penormina arts buildinas. but our
paaca.nt is over SOycaraold," aaidJim
Lyon, executive director of the
t..aauna Beach Chamber.
At the urainJ of the Costa Mesa
Chamber of Commerce, the City
Council adopted .. Cl\y of the Arts" as
the town's official ,Jopn Monday.
The motto will be added to city
stationery i nd w1ll rrplacc the 31-
)cat-old lopn "Hub of the Harbor
Arca."
Southland to be hazy, muggy a1aln
The "Hub" phrase. however, will
remain on the official city seal, savina
rouahly S20. 700 in open to erase
the old motto from bt.OJUCplaqutS on
puhhc bualdinas around town.
ddillonall May r 0onrt H1ltl
Southern Calafom1a will be hazy,
mugy, driuly and cloudy at variou
times throuah Thursday, th Na·
tional Weather Strvice saya. Oranac County wdl reach hl&hs in
lhc low-to mid-80s, with late nifbt
and early mom Ina low cloud ~vlna
way"to huy un hint. tow tonight
will be near 70,
The bHch ilt
thro\llh mid·momi~ but eventually
the mercury will rise 1nto the mid· to
upptt 70s. Lows will be 62 to 75.
The valleys will have hiahs of II to
94, with patchy clouds throuah mid·
momi~ fbllowed by fair 1k . o~cm· t LOWI will be.in the mid· to
upper .
Vtm!'lrJli&h cloud.s ·11 hadc lbc
mounuun arcu
a
)
I
HIGH83 LOW89 f IRIT 1111101
_ WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 22, 1984 OHANGE CO~N ·r Y CAL HORN-IA -25 CENTS
e unac1
oses e
IS
Coaat
Flnancrer J . David Doml-
nelll lied when he said he
could pay back Investors,
an attorney says./ A3
Orange County League of
Cities goes on record
opposing Jarvis IV .I A3
California
A California poll shows
many folks Just don't like
labor unions./ A4
Coastal Commission of-
f lclals oppose ruling boot-
ing them from federal
hearings./ AS
Nation
Geraldine Ferraro re-
turns from press con-
ference to find her press
secretary has quit./ A4
World ·
South Africans urge
boycott of m ixed race
vote./A4
John Belushi drug figure ..
.cQntlnues to fight extra-
ditJoh from Canada./ A4
Home
Strategic furnishing and
fiber glass ceiling panels
combat 'high tech' noise
In family rooms./81
A new poolalarmemlt
an 85-declbel signal If a
child or pet falls Into the
water./81
Food
Popcorn connoisseurs
offer kernels of knowl-
edge about the orlglnal
snack food./C1
A twist for cocktail parties
ls serving colorful mod-
ern mixers -liqueurs
and fruit Julce./C1
Sports
The Angels skid reaches
seven straight losses
after another loss In New
York, 8-2./D1
East Germany and the
Soviet Union continue to
dominate the Friendship
Games, breaking four
world records In the pro-
cess./D2
Entertainment
A Broadway understudy
becomes a television star
nextseason lnthere-
vamped series "Three's a
Crowd."/83
INDEX
Births
Bridge
Bulletin Board
Bualness
Callfornla Newt
Clauifled
Com lea
Crossword
Death Notices
Food
Help Youraelf
Home
Horoecope
In the Ser1tce
Ann a.;.ndera
Mutual Funds
National Newa
Opinion
P•paruzl
Police log
Public Notlcea
Sport a
A7
85
A3
86-7
A4
06-8
85
08
09
C1-8
82
8 1-2
07
A7
82
8 11
A4
A8
81
A3
05-8
01-...
88
83
83-4
A2
Stock Marketa
TeleVt Ion
Theater a
Weather
WOddmw. -=-----...-..~A4
A auper toast-·
Olympic cyclt.ta Rory O'Reilly (left) and
Mark Gonkl -weartna the 1old medal he
won -i'alae their atauee in a tout durt.n&
a~ held in thelr honor by SuperBodlea
om.nulum in Coeta Ilea& Tue9day. Both
cycllata are members of the om and
tnlned there, u did Olympian• from other
countdea~
'Animal House' on wheels
detained by Irvine police
113 cats, 16 dogs and seven rabbits
confiscated in Indiana woman· s trailer
Numerous sick and underfed pets
were under veterinary care this morn-
ing after more than 130 animals were
found inside a motor home and
trailer stop ped by a Irvine police
officer, officials satd.
Approximately l l 3 cats, 16 dogs
and seven rabbits were impounded
Tuesday in the vehicles driven by
Nancy Jane Ellis, 39, of Indiana,
according to police and animal bospi-
tal officials. Ellis was.cited for alleeed
improper care of animals, said Irvine
police dispatcher Vif'&inia Powers.
The citation is a misdemeanor and
Ellis was not arrested.
EUis was scheduled to meet with
police and animal control officials at
l l this morning to discuss the
incident, according to Dr. Lawrence
Zarrilli of the Woodbridge Hospital
for Animals and Birds in Irvine where
many of the animals were taken for
treatment
Four doctors are treating the
animals, Zarrilli said, adding many of
the pets were in poor condition. Some
of them, especially the cats, were
.. very ill" and bad been kept in
cramped quarters., he said.
Irvine s,t. Pat Rodgers said the
animals were discovered when an
officer "smelled a bad odor" while
patrolling along Culver Drive around
9:30a.m ..
He spotted the motor home and
stopped it at Walnut A venue.
Pioneer to·gay movement succumbs
after t wo year battle with illness
By DAVID BISHOP Beach's City Arts Commission ia
Dti17,....c.n .. ,, •• 11 1982 before resiJDing due to hi1
AIDS claimed the life of Laguna decliningbealtb. HewasaJsoactivea
Beach civic activist Henry Hampton a volunteer in the annual Paiean1 of
on Monday. the Masten, participating as a. cast
Hampton, 43, was a "pionttr in member in the Uve re-creation of
sensitizmg people in Oran~ County "The last Supper."
10 gays and lesbians," satd Laguna Hampton also helped found
Beach City Councilman Roben Oen-Laguna Outreach, an organization
try, himself a gay activist. that provides education about
Hampton &ttled the debilitating gaysand lesbians and promotes their
effects of Acquired Immune Dcfi· rights.
ciency Syndrome, which primanly "h's always extremely sad to lose ~ects gays, for nearly two years both ~:i"d.eone because of AIDS," Gentry
an and out of the hospital. according ~ to friends. "When someone passes like this,
Hampton, a seven-year-resident of someo!'e who'~ a tc:ader. 'it's hat;d-Al
Laguna Beach, was a professor of least his sun:ef!nc ts over._ that s the
biOlogy and ecology at Fullerton good part of tt, '.Ge~try said. .
College. He was born in Glendale. Gentry called it a d1fficult d1seuc,
Hamoton waschailmairoft:aguna -_ (Pleue eee AID8/A2)
NB restaurant
wins approval
by coast panel
Newport Heights residents s hot down
_by. commission over height of building
By KAREN E. KLEIN
Ofe.DlllJ ........
The California Coastal Com-
mission apl>fOved a 35-foot-tall res-
taurant and offi~ complex Tuesday
despite objections from about 30
Newport Beach homeowners who
claim the project would block their
harbor view.
•The plans to build a seafood
restaurant, called John Dominis, and
an office buiJding on me site of,be
Rosan shipyard on Mariner's Mile
along Pacific Coast Highway had
already received the unanimous ap-
provaf of the Newport Beach City
Council and Planrung Commission
with no opposition from home-
owners.
But residents of the Newport
Hei&hts area said they were unaware
of tfie plans until about a month ago
even though city officials cootacted
the Newport Heights Homeowners'
Association and the developer ma.de
a presentation to the association's
board about the project.
Don Williams, a high school
teacher and Newport &ights resi-
dent, said most oflhe neighbors were
prunarily concerned about the loss of
the hart>or view from Oitr Ori...-e Park.. where people gather to watch
boal para.des and sunsets over the
water.
He admined that a lack of com-
munication within the Newpon
He1ghtS a~at1on may have been to
blame for the residents' late response.
Williams sa.td he only found out
about the restaurant proposal when a rcaLC.S.WC. agent found .she oouldo't
try to sell a home by saying it had a
harbor view.
A group of about I SO angry
residents met late last week with
Mayor Evelyn Hart. who said she did
not know of any opposition to the
project when she voted for it and said
she feh the restaurant was a .. good
compromise" for development in the
area.
The project incorporates a 50-foot
view corridor to allow a view of the
harbor, albeit a narrow one. and adds
a public walkway along the water
where there is now no public access.
C oastaJ Commission member Don
McGuinness, wbo did not attend
(Please .ee RESTAURAllfT / A2)
Laguna's
Gabri els
faces trial
over pill
Plans show 114 swift trips
daily on LA-SD Bullet Train
Laeuna Beach civic activist John
Gabnels must stand trial on charJes '
he offered a pill containing
pbenobarbitol to a 3-ycar-old, a
municipal judge ruled Tuesday.
South Orange County Municipal
Court Judge Richard Hamilton or-
dered Gabriels to appear in Superior
Court on Sept. 4 on the single felony
count and refused to lower bail for the
60-year-old former city council can-
didat~. A physician who examined
Gabnels aft.er the bearina said be is
(Pleaee eee OABRIELS/ A2) Lawrence D. GU.On
Preliminary high speed timetable shows
many stops in Orange County for trains
The proposed California high
speed train system, modeled after the
Japanese Shinkansen Bullet Tram,
would offer l 14 trips daily between
Los Angeles and San Diego, with
Orange County stops in Irvine. Santa
Ana and Anaheim, accorditrg lo a
preliminary timetable released by
American High Speed Rail Corp ..
which plans to build the line.
Construction of the rail line is
expected \o begin next year. Wlth
tentative completion and start of
service in l 988.
The draft timetable shows 114
trains, including 12 express trams.
operating each day between 6 a m
and midnight. The company said the
total train miles daily ( 14.000) 1s the
equivalent of more than half the
distance around the world at the
equator.
The preliminary draft timetable
wa$ preparro to give travel packagers
and future nders an idea of the
frequency of departures and length of
travel between v,.nous stations. ac-
cording to Lawrence 0 . Gilson.
prn1dent of AHSRC.
The schedule is to be refined before
-
ll 1s submitted to the vanous gov-
ernmental agencies conducting en-
vironmental and other reviews.
The preliminary timetable in-
cludes s1\ express trams m each
d1rcct1on. completm& the tnp bc-
tw~n downtown San Diego and
dov.ntown Los Angeles in 59
mtnutes Coach fare for the down-
town San Diego to downtown LA trip
will be S 18.30 ( 1982 dollars). ~itt
between downtown LA and LAX will
be 11 minutes and wlll cost $5.65
Stations arc planned for LAX .
do~ntown Los Angeles at Union
Station. Norwalk. Anaheim, Santi
.\na.'ln-1ne. Oceanside.. La Jolla and
downtown San Diego (Santa Fe
(Pleue eee SPltt DY I A.2)
Alleged county n~rcotics empire crumbling
13 people reportedly f nvolved f n cocaf ne
deals with Hu.ntlngton suspect pleadliTffY
Three months ago, a youna Hunt·
inaton Beach man emeried as the
central fiaurc in a far-O una coc.inc
operation that allcac<Uy smugkd
more than 1 ton of the white powder
into Ort!\Be County.
Alan Charles Mobley and ht wife
Alcyda were on vacation in Mhico
last May I I when narcotics offict'rs
smashed what they claimed wa a
thrivinadn.igbusinc s that rcponcdly
had earned the 24-ycar-old u·
traordinary wulth nd Po r in onl)
a few shon ye.en. _
lfl 1 1inglc day, lawmen in Onnac-
Counl)' .. Loi Anarlcs. M1am• and
Ne Jcrscy SY. pt throu&h fl tuon·
able neighborhood and arrc~tcd th
..
men and women who purportedly
were doina bu inc for and with
Moble~.
Mot>lcy him lflcam cd of the drua
bu t while rcad1na the Lo Anacte
Tim on a plane ride ck from ·
Pueno Vallarta sc~rral days later.
Federal agents also were on the
plane. ated dirt tly bchand Mobley
and has wtfe.
-Both Mobley and his wife were
arttucd after the Jet landed at Los
A~clC$ lntcmauonal Aifl>Ort.
mce th.at umc. I l or Moblcy's
I cd drua runnen. flunkie\ anCf key
.AW$tanti; .ha\'c pleaded 1u1h to
\anou f. ·ral drua \tolations. In-
cluded in that number arc ohkfs
wife. his sister and a " n Juan
cacistrano man who _pl dcd guilt}
to aundcrina money for tht' coca.inc
enterpn All face pn n term of
fivcto eight cal"
Anolhcr in th ca~t of characters to
plead guilty was Rona.Id .. Turbo··
Tina. a JS-year-old from Corona dtt
Mar who wa cnticaUy wounded
when an FBI as nt fired a 'hQtaun at
him. Tina rcponcdl)' had pulled out a
weapon and aimed •t at approachin.a
lawmen. The ho'8un bl11t hit Ti in
the ch t.
A reputed drua dealer who cruoycd
the f1 l hfl but 11lcgcdly OY.W
Mobley morc than S t00.000 in drua
debts. Tina now is peral)'?Cd from the
~I rsdnwn. He entered hi$guilt
pica from hi1 bod.at Faunwn Va.
Community Ho pita! wnh h1
parents a~d attom ~· ·~ ·, '1dt'.
STEVE
MARBLE
NEWS BA CKGROUND
John Kuray. an as\1stant lJ.
auomey. said be expects add1t1onal
1u1lt} pitas from ott\tr\U pect in tht
case. It is more than po 1blc. ht
agreed, that Mobley could be lhc La t
one tand1na ~hen the Sept. It tnal
dateatriv ,
Wbc.th.cr or oot he. op to miIC
lfll\.e 1 deal with the fcdcr.I gi.l\.tm-
m nL pro uto~ ~1d th e pttt
Mobley to take a hard fall. He faces a
ma,imum lifo-in-prison ~ntena:.
Mobley's attorne}. James Riddel
ofSanta Ana. could not be rt'achcd to
comment on what be chent cxpte1s to
do.
Four people r.haflcd in the allcged
cocaine rina remain fugitives and
reportedly arc hidina out in their
nathe Colombia. Aside from on-
etime New Jersey re 1dcn1 Octavc'iuo
Gn le . theothcrth.rttattallrclatcd
to 1oblcy by ma~.
The ~ a,ga1ns.t Mobl } and th
othc~ is based laraely of taped
telephone con~crsation a attcr-
i of drua bum un !Ian~
worl rondu tcd bv nt who t
out 1dc the four·un1t u •P1n-
mcnt bu1lJ1n •h.ctc · li\'td
nd aTI fdh 1a tiu 1
(Pl coc -
. '
,.
t
·valley puts meters on hold
Fountain V lie) Cit) ouncil
members say the)" nt to tud) other
options for ra1 ans funds at the city's
Mile Squan-Park: Recreation Center
before d«idan' 'ol.hether to install
r erkina meters in pl t'C of the cuncnt
1honor" f« S) tem.
• In partic:ular, council member~
~id Tue day they want to know how
• much it would cost to build a fence
a~o1.md outdoor ba. ketball. racquct-
''bill and volleyball court and to charge
for use of these facilities. Cumntl)
' •. • r:-:-:-' CONTINUED STOR IES -... --~ --
thest" courts can be used fret ot chn c:
unlc use~ want to rcse"e court or
Ii \e nighttime h&ht turned on
Last )tar, the counetl an1t1ated.
parking foes &'i a wa) to ofT~t some ot
the costs of opc:rnt1ng t c popular
rttrcation complex, I ated on
BrooL.hu~t Street at Heil AH·nue.
Motonst'i parkang t the center haH'
been required to purchaR a 50-cent
ticket from a di~pcnser at the lot each
da) they v1s1t. Vehicle tha~ do not
display tickets ma) ttce1ve citations.
'GABRIELS FACES TRIAL ...
From Al . , I·io danJer of hanna a stroke" ~ Gabnels' bail \I.IS set at S5.000
followina his arrest on Aug I 0 for the
incident which occurred at Main ~ach Pari.. on Jul) 31 . .\t the time he
Was free on his own re1.:ognizann·
~llow1ng a pre\ tOU'> arrest that he ~allegedly harbored JU\Cntles in his
'home
Gabncls v.as 1n111alh arrested on
April 11 for allegedh harbonng
Jµveniles and gt\ mg them Quaaludes
He had posted cash baa I ofS I 0.000 for
\bat charge.
• r "· Gabriels" attorne) told the court
~at was Gabnels' ··entire sa\ mgs"
and that he had no more mone) for
bail. Gabnels has been 1n the count)
•jMI in Santa Ana smce his most recent
arrest.
•: After the heanng. Dr Eugene
Atherton of Laguna Beach asked that
he be allowed to e>.am1ne Gabnels.
who he said appeared "\Cl) ae-
pre~sed and in need ol med1l:al
attention··
.\fter ~'mg Gabnel4> a cu~ol)
e\ammat1on 1n the courtroom JU~
chambersDr .\therton said Gabraels
,.,,as getting onl~ two houN> of sl~p a
night. wa~ ha' mg difficult) breathing
and 1s rccel\ ang no medical treat·
ment ··He 1'> an danger of ha\ mg a
s1roke ··
Judge Hamilton !>atd he would nol
reduce 1he bail and ordered the
medical e\am1natton team at Orange
Count) Jail to examine Gabnels.
In testimony given Tuesday, Cind)
Ann Travis of M1ss1on VtCJO said
Gabnels offered her 3-year-old son
Timothy a pill she later identified as a
phenobarbatol. Tra\ 1s said she stood
an litre at a water fount.au\ and sa"'
Gabnels standing nearb) with
another man and a youth She said
she saw Gabnels take a pall from a
· AIDS CLAIMS LB ACTIVIST ..•
From Al
it wo_tks ~owl}.': and he called
for more medical research toward a
cure and treatmen1 for the malad)
which weakens the body's immune
system leaving It vulnerable to dts·
~se. The Re ... Barbara Mudge, assistant
pastor at St Mary's Episcopal
Church, said Hampton was "some-
one people ~ust responded to, he was
full of love. ·
Hampton was also actr-.c rn
Laguna Beach polH1cs and, he also
worked closet) wtth the Laguna
Beach Pohce Department in semng
up a walk-along program to help
ampro.,.e the relations between the
local ga} community and the pohce
depanmcnt
A full requiem Mass for Hampton
will be held Thursday. 6 p.m ., at St.
Mal) 's Episcopal Church. 428 Park
he council 1 e.x m1n1ng other
p:arkrng f; options use of publil
complaints bout the ticket s tem
and maintenance problems "-ith the
dispenser. One altemati\e under
ron iderntion 1s an:.allation of park·
tn meters.
At T~esda)·~ mc:ctina. Councilman
Btn Nielsen pointtd to the outdoor
coun user\ as "people who are not
payin& their fair share .. of recreation
cepter expense because coun uc;c is
generally free.
brown prescrtptlOO bottle and llVC It
10 1he )OU th . Travis said her son then
ran up 10 Gabnels and asked him
what the pill was and if he could have
one.
According to Travis. Gabnels re-
plied. "tt's a mint candy. do you want
one?" and held it an an outstretched
palm
··How dare you offer medicine as
candy when It is not." TravlS de-
manded. and Gabriels alleged!)' re·
plted. ..you·rc right, it's a
phenobarbllol," and he put 1t back in
the bottle and walked away.
Travis immediately reported the
incident to Laguna Beach police. She
said she could not remember how to
pronounce the name of the pill that
Gabnels allegedly offered her son.
Police 1nvest1gators visited her on
at least five occasions to show her
samples of drugs before Travis finally
recognized a phenobarbllol as the
type Gabnels had allegedly offered.
Ave. an Laguna Beach
Hampton 1s sun.1ved by his father,
Noble D Hampton of Laguna H11ls,
and a sister Helene Campbell of
S)lmar.
Donattons are asked to be made in
Hampton's name to Save-The-
Redwoods. for the organization ·s
seedling planting program, 114
Sansome St., San Francisco, CA
94104.
. RESTAURANT GETS APPROVAL •..
' FromAl
-.hesday's meeting but was bnefed on
1t by his aherna1e,"Sa1d the project was
approved basically because 1t met the
iu1dehnes of the Coastal .\ct and was
recommended for appro\ al b} the
city and Coastal Comm1ss1on staff.
"I got a number of letters from
Newport Heights residents opposing
the project." McGu1nness said "But
tt seemed like 1l had a high le\ cl of
suppon from· the agencies that had
re .. 1ewed at pre.,.1ousl) ..
W1lhams said aboul 30 "'ewpon
Heights residents attended the
Coastal Comm1ss1on meeting 1n
Manna del Re) and wailed most of
the da) to give a 15-mmute presen·
talion on their reasons for asking that
the project not be approved.
··1 ne\cr even got to speat...."
Wal hams said ··we lost reall) bad"
The project met ( oastal Com-
m1ss1on guidelines a couple ot weeks
ago Walltams said. and the com-
m1ss1on tell the) had to approve at
because two other. s1m1lar projects
had been approved for the same area
up to two years ago.
"They didn't want to contradtct
themselves b) approving the two
other prOJeCts that would block the
-.aew an}way and then denying this
one:· he sa1(i
SPEEDY TRAIN PLAN ...
\\i 1 lhams said he 1s still bitter
because he feels the cit) should have
been protected the park view whether
rCS!dents appeared-M heanngs to
ob1cct to the project. ..From Al
depot)
The all-electric train will ride on
• welded rails. cushioned with rubber
Which the company says will provide
a smoother quieter rade
The 130-mtle. SJ. I btlhon project 1s
modeled after the Japanese
Shinkansen Bullet Train. "1th has
earned more than 2 btllton passengers
o" er a 20-)Car pcraud w11hou1 a
passenger fatality and \.\ llh a 99
percent on-tame record
The city ofln. me has not expre~sed
oppos1t1on to the proposed rail ltne
but some Irvine residents are sup·
porting a lawsuit filed b\ Tustin. San
Diego and other caues that want to
block the rail project bct·ause of
en' 1ronmental concern.,
"I remember three years ago when
someone wanted to put up a 35-foot
bu1ld1ng nght across the street (from
the Rosan property) and we packed
the council chambers," Williams
said "The} should have known that
1f there was such an outcry then and
no response this lime that we weren't
aware of tt." he said. "Someone
should ha\e remembered."
r.'COCAINE EMPIRE CRUMBLING .•.
• FromAl
On numerous occasion'> agent'>
followed Moble) or his underlinings
when they allegedly wcrt dispatched
to a safe house in C1arden Gro\e
where d1v1ded package'> of cocaine
were stored
A transctpl of the clades11nc under-
cover work depicts Moble> as a
powerful businessman whose biggest
.headache was d1spo'i1ng of the hun-
dreds of thousands of dollar<; he
allegedl> made monthl} off cm.a1ne
sales
The drug moon reported!~ v.a<.
funneled into do1cno; of \a vang<,
accounts, tucked an to' aluabk water-
front propcrt) and <.k1 re<,ort land or
µsed to bu\> Mercede'i Denies and
BMWs that Moblc' ao;<,ertedh picked
up b} the half don·n dunng 1nps 10
German).
One underco,er agt·nt v.ho \atd 11
• was 1mperat1\e ht<; name nol be u!.ed .
<kscnbed Mable' a<; a bnght am-
b1t1ous young man "ho possessed
tremendous busines'> acuml·n and a
certain charisma
"He nc\cr \.\COi out al n1gh1 unlc<,\
ll was business He didn't go dnnt...ing
or dancing. I don't e\en th1nt... he used
coke himself" '>aad the agent . who
claim., \.fobley v.3\ prcpanng to
parlay his drug tonune<, into legtt·
imate busme'iscs at the 11me of lhc
raad
Another pcrwn clo<.e 10 tht• 1n-
\est1gat1on. howe-.er de~crabt•d
Mobley as a "depraved man·· who
thought nothing of settling dcltqUl'nl
accounts with a beating In one taped
conversation. Moble} reported!}
threated to ha\c Tang kidnapped and
held pnsoner unul he agreed to pa)
off his debts
In another con,ersa11on. Moblc'
alleged!) refers lo hts attorne) 1Aillh a
racial slur and suggesls the man
<>hould be killed
One man who FBI agents allege dad
business wtdt Moble}. did rnd up
dead Barcia) Hodges. brother al
former Wcstmms1er Councilman Gil
Hodges. wa<. r,hot and killed in a bar at
John \\ 3' ne .\1rpon nearl) tv.o )ear<.
ago
.\1 the time of h1\ dea1h . Hodge\
owed \1 oblc} a large sum of money,
an FRI transcapt states. The man
charged v.1th the shooting. who
happened to be Hodges' cousin.
d1'>appcared af1er ball was posted for
him
Mable) 's nse 1n the drug business
was darectl) tied to his marriage,
1n,est1gators said. His wife 1s the
daughter of Herb1to Machado-Velas-
quez. a 50-year-old Colombia native
who 1s one of the fugitives in the
cocaine case
Machad o· V clasquez allegedly
helped arran~e to funnel cocaine from
~outh America to 1he United States
and eventual!} ·to Mobley. the US.
.\ttorne) ·s Office charges.
The Colombian and his two sons
eluded lawmen during the raid and
reportedl) nov. are hv1ng in their
nau-.e land Machado-Velasquez re-
portcdh has not contacted govern-
ment authonues despite the fact that
ht~ wife was arrested in the sweep and
1s Jailed
"His wire·., still an custody but
wr· .. e sttll ne,er heard from the guy,''
\atd Kura).
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330 WHI r $1 Costa QA ~!JI. •l»f>M 80> 15e() Colla Mftll CA 9?626
VOL. n, HO. 2"
'
LoW clouds will creep inland
Coastal
Extended c~ ClncilMall ~-COll.on!i..s c CoVfttM.e.Ofl
Concotd.N H o..a.F1 woru.
Oeyton oan-..· o....._
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IO 59 ~onolUl\I 100 75 Houston
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78 43 JICklOn\lllle to f7 Ju-77 eo Kanaa Ctty n 55 wV-eu
71 54~ ~fllodl 13 o J6' 14 12 .. 14 LUl>bodl
13 .. ~ 7t 49 MWN 8Mdl ..
The f ountaln of youth
II 14 Ml)ll-81 PM II 14 Natlt'<lll IO 58New~ 17 12 '-YOtll ... 51 NortOll, VI 71 47 ~City
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17 75
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Tides
TOOAY a.condlow 12.11 Piii tt hcolldllllJll 121pm 17
THURaOAY F"ntioow t-Of a.111 02 =~:r-'"•"' II 107pm u
8-ldhlgll 7 Up.111 12
Sun .... tod.,. at
0
7 S2 p Ill. ,,...
Tllurld91 at 6.20 e m .-cl .... ...-i It 711 Pl!\. .,._ Wll tod9)' It 4 st p Ill , ,,_.
Thurlday et 2:30 a.m MO eetl 90M1 el ll7p.111.
.a 1·2
2·3 24
1
2-3 ,
14
Paul Burke (left) and hb brother Juon
may only be 3 and 8 yea.re old, respective·
ly, but they already know bow to cool off
on a bot day. The two yoa.ncetera are
eiUoytnc the •pray from the foa.ntahl at
llfie Sqaar~t!rk. ln Fountain Valley.
·Costa Mesa now officially
known as 'City of the Arts'
Council approves changing of the motto
to reflect ctt? s cultural advancement
for its boatmakmg
"We are the cultural center of
Southern California," sajd Nate
Reade, director of Costa Mesa's
Chamber of Commerce.
By TONY SAAVEDRA
Of IN o.lt• ~lot lttft
Old timers remember Costa Mesa
as Goat Hill. but you can call it "Hub
of tht Harbor Area" or better yet.
"City of the Art ,"
The town once known for iu lar&e
papulation of milkina aoats and later
for it pro~1mtty to the beach has
apin chan&ed 1u image. The city now
wants to be rccoanized as a mecca of
mu ic and the performing ans.
t the uriin1 of the Costa Mesa
hamber of Commerce. the City
Council adopted ''City of the Arts'' a
the town' offic al lo n Monday.
The fTlOtto "''" be added to city stationery· and will replace 1he ll·
year-old logan .. Hub of the Harbor
Arca:·
The "Huh" Jlhra~c. hO\\C\'Cf. \\lU
main on th~ o 1caal city al, sav1n
roughly 20.700 in e:<pcn<e to tra
the old motto from bron1c pl ques on
public build in 'around town
Add1t1on lly. Mayor Donn Hall
{
-------
joked that Costa Mesa's arts¥ slogan
may not be appropriate for city seals
placed on the doors of municipal
trash trucks and other official ve-
hicles.
"There's no reason we can't be
'Hub of the Harbor' and 'City of the
Art ,' " said Councilwoman Norma
Herttoa. Co ta Mcq's oflicial C'mblc:m and
its .. Hub" motto were created in l 9.S3
\I.hen the city was primanly known
Reade's claim is taJcen with a few
arains of salt by officials from nearby
cities that also pride them Ives for
their cultural highlights, ucb as
Laauna Beach, which has the county's
ol<fe tart museum and is home to the
famed P cant of the Masters show.
"(Co ta Mc ) may have .more
perf'ormin& aru build.mp. but our
paacant is over S<tycars old." said Jim
Lyon, eitccutive director of the
Llauna Beach Chamber.
Southland to be hazy, muggy agaJn~
Southern Cahfomia will be hazy, throuah mid·momin ... butcvenlually
mu y, driuly.and cloudy at various the mercury wiJI rise into the mid· to
times through Thunday, the Na· upper 70s. Lows will be 62 to 75.
tional Weather rvicc says. The valley will have hi&hs of88 ~o
Oran G' nt will retch h1 in 9•. With patchy ciouds thf'9Ulh mad·
the low-to mid· Os, with late ntfht mornina. followed by fair kics.
an carry momma low clouds ajv1n1 Ovcmi&ht lows will be an the mid· to
"ay to ha1 un .hine. lows tonight upper 60i .
Yrall be near 70 • Variabl<" high clouds will 1hade the
The beache\ will he ovcrt'I 1 • mountain area •
I ,
l