HomeMy WebLinkAbout1984-09-05 - Orange Coast Pilot•
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WEONESDAV. SEPTI MBF.R •,, 1984 ORANGE COUNTY CALIFORNIA 2~ Cf N1<-.
l .O·S Co$ta MesanS yell ~g~iet!'
. r -.;1:...-;8~,0A"";;O;:-:O~.c-:h~e-e_r_a_m-.P-. :::.,h_.1_t..,,..h_e_a_t_e;._r_c_o..:,.n_c........,.e_r....,..t.....:-_ '¥.hllc Cit)' lnwmakers there were \IOI un Ctl) noise la dunng l 0
accepting an m vuauon b) a munl 1· um mer rock concert aS neighbors COffip}ain abOUt IlOiSe pa.I court JUdge to pantc1pntc in o Frnnkhn has In te d requested that ~und study \\1th amphitheater both pan1es ti) one more 1Um to
By TONY SM VEDRA Costa ~ Mesa re$1dcn1 within
OUIM q,or NM Ii.ft • ~llmatcd 1.5-milC radtU~ Of
· A ~eked house at the 18~.scal outdoor arena wr~ not
Pacific Amphitheatre cheered the precTat1\e. r
raucous soundi. of the Pretender) Somt> 103 noise complarnts kept mu~cal group 1 uesoay.A Ho~e,er. th~ ~elephoncs rinJing at ~lly Hall
Coast
Airplane landings and .
·takeoffs are compared to
a game of Russian roulet-
te by one city official./ A3
Interior Secretary Wiiiiam
Clark ~ows to move
ahead with off shore oil
leases./A3
Callfoml~
Los Angeles supervisors
oppose Jarvis Initiative.
/A4
owner Ned-We t, Inc. . \O d cb of ht1gauon nd reach o
Two misdemeanor case an 1 u'ucc o ut of court. He said the mutual
cd-Wc t, including charges agam t ound tudy would h Ip set lhc
comJ)3n) office~. "ere postpont>d uound rules fo• a lu11on to the
list v.Cclc oylforoor1vTun1c1pal Coun DOISC J1 pule '
Jude ~lin\ S. Franklin unul Sept. .. It. haratodci n•1t11na"henboth
28. The com~n) 1s cha~d wtth Sldes re hstt>n1 to paratc dc}ta:• '" . ..
Mesa candidate . .
Soffer.arrested . . .
at council meet
Char ed in vehicle
storage Incident.
released on bail ---
By TONY SAAVEDRA
Of .. 0.-, .......
Border patrol gets boost
rn manP-ower./ A~4~----+-i---------'----------
'Costa Mesa Cuy Council candidate ~---..,....;~---t-'wu..iu· ~:5'U~..Sid Soffer, .S2. ~ · arrested Tuesday night forviolattnga
city ordinance that rtgul tes stonng Nation
Teachers strike In seven
states affects 128,000
students./ A4
Mondale would ask Sov-
1 t leaders to freeze arms
ace./ A~
Reagan says the nation Is
In the midst of rebirth.
/AS
World
• :ryphoon Ike heading for
Vietnam./ A4
Three killed In rioting
against military In Chile.
/Alt "'
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Home
Take your cue from the
wallpapEJt when you
beautify a room by re-. ·
decorating. /81
South Coast Plaza will be
the temporary home for
the Laguna Beach Mu-
seunf"of Art.781
FOOd
Dellclous lunch box treats
and afterschool pick-me-
ups help school students
keep up their energy and
entt\uslasm./C1
An,nstructor promotes
communication and
understanding of the Chi-
nese culture through Its
oulslne./C1
buts this weekend./01
The Angel&recover from
three-run homer In the
bottom of the ninth Inning
In Cleveland to pull out
12-lnnlng wln./01
Business
Spending on new con-
stll4Jctlon· In July cllmbed ..
slightly, reversing a de-
cline In June./ A7
INDEX
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vehicles on private propcrt). ·
A police ~kcmnan. read from
an incomplete arrnt report this
morning. said Soffer was taken into
custod)'. around 10:30 p.m. at the City
Council chambers afier a counctl
m~eting adjourned.
End of a successful mission
The apace ahattle Dlaco•ery touch~ down
on Ro&era Dry Lake today u lb maiden •oyage of 2 1h million milea end.a. Storiea
anti more plcturea on Pqe 86. . ·
. City code enforcement officer
Sandt Ro~ made tht>1 arrest. with
police officen. prcscnt. according to
· authorities. Ro~ was unavailable for
comment toda~. (Pl~ 8ee CAJmmATE/ A2) .SldSofter
·Snafu
q·uiets
~aguna
phones
By DAVID BISHOP
o.111 ..... c-......... .
Laguna Beach went witho ut tele-
phones for a while Tuesday when a
new S 15 million computcnzed tele-
-~ ..SWJtchlng unit went on
blink only weeks after beina installed.
All General T lephone customers
with a 494 or 497 c"changc -about
13,500 of them -were unable to
make or receive calls Tuesday be-
tween noon and 12:26 p.m.
The telephone blackout also caused
a frustrating half-hour in the Laguna
Beach Pohcc Department.
"The first thing the chief said was
'call the phone company and find out
wha~ gomg on: " said gt Greg
Bartz.
Torrid
weath@F
won't
go away
Beaches jammed
as Coast caught
In heat wave
Pa~_!!l ~eighs possible uses
_Of closed EaStbluff School
Private school. History Foundatt9n site
·among su estfons of citizens· committee
By KAREN E. KLEIN
.Of tM De11r Not It.tr•
decided not to sell t~ t"o school
sjtcs. but to lease them and tecp them
for future use in ca~ of population
shifts within the arc
pate of proposal tor the propcn).
T.,o proposals "t'TC presented for
the Eastbluff propcny. at 2627 Va ta
del Oro tn e'llOport Beach,
Hombuclle said.
One was from Pegasus. a pri,•ate
school for mentally gifted younp1ers.
The Pegasus ~hool "'ould run fun
time and then offer supplemt>nw
Proirams after school and in \,he
ev :nines for the communal).
Hornbuckle said.
Proposals fora pri"ate ~hoot and a
Natural History Foundation head-
quarters were presented Tuesday at a
public hearina held in Newpon Beach
to decide the future of the EastblufT
Elementary School sue.
EaslblufT and Adams schoors "ere
,AHl.LL-------c~osro-+n •he-spring~ to-dttttnina
enrollment in the Newport-Me
Unified School District.
The leasing of school ttes has
proved a controvers1al uridertakina
m past )ears as mort schools in the
district arc dosed. A plan to lease the
Corona d~I Mar Elementary School
s1•eJ.O a ~ni\e~4
Southern Califomta a fe.-)Cars ago
sparked an&J') reaction from re idents
in the neighborhood near the school.
The 'ICCOnd proposal was from the
aturaJ Histo Foundation of Or-
ange ounf), " -.c hi$1Ut11ues 1n
Rea Ccn~. and in offit"n and
warehouses around the count). "It was freaky." said Bartz. the
watch commander when the phone
blackout occurred. ..Everything I
wanted to do depended on tht>
phone.··
&rtz used police radios to dispatch
CVef) available unit tO patrol the
streets. including fire trucks and
municipal service vehicles. Even Cit)'
busdnvers ~ere instructed to stop for
anyone who appeared to be m need of
(Pleue 8ee PHONES/ A2)
Mar} Hombud.lc. chainnan of a
citizens· ad' isof) comm1tt~ formed
10 make a· recommendation on the
fu ture use of the Eastbluff and Adams
clement.al') schools. said the cit\ of
'e"-port Beach may be interested in
becomina the prime tenant of the
EastblufTpropcrty much as the city of
Costa Mesa lea~ propcrt\' at the
closed Rea School. ·
The Newport-Mesa dmnct has
Hornbuckle said the nine-mem~r
committee he heads v.111 take public
Jeslimon) and hear proposal for tht>
l"-O sites and then make a recommen-
daoon to the board after mttting on
.\ug. 11. The committee IS mandated
b) the state lqjslature, she said.
Hornbuckle said Tuesda\ 's heanng netted .~ disappointina turnout of
local residents but an 1nteresung
The foundation v.ould like to ~
consolidate its facilities at the East··
bluff s.ite. the ·&~lopmcnt coordi-
nator told the committee. It Y.Ould
probably not use the entirt butld1n&i
Hombuck.k ·said, and would be
wtllini to share space v. ith another
group. .
Councilv.oman .Jackie · He.alb.er
(Pleue eee SCHOOL/ A2)
Colleges wonder
w hei:e haV-e
the students gone
\Jminl\trator; at local lOmmuA1 ·
t' rnilctl.'' ha' en 't tut the panic
button ~~t. but )Ou can bet ifs not lir
from their lingcrt1p<.
Local collcgl.'~ are open tor tall
da,sc<.. hut <.tud<"nl\ h3H' no1. l'l"·
turned in numtx·r., t"qua! to i'll''
,
P11L.
SIEIDEllAI
•
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INVESTIGATED INHB. i•
" JUSl a matter ot minutes ftcr the moouog••
The V1ct1Ql<!: wa treated by pa.ra-
mcdacs nG rushed to the tiosp1tal
here he wa pronounced de d t
1:56 m today. W Iker id pohcc 11rc planning to
antcn•icw lhe v1com·s w1fe..An1ta, 25,
d frienJ and acquaintances to try
to estabh h Tl motive. Ford hu no record of com1n I
ctiv1ty with loc 1 police. accordm
to W Iker Results of an utopsy arc
pend1na.
MONDALE SAYS REAGAN 'UNCARING' ••• -
rromA.1
Alan Cranston ore hfom1a. Han, who spent fhe months at-
tackina Mond le as the leader of the
old Democratic pohuc , prai1ed him
aenerousJy at an 11rpon rally 1n Cong
Beach. .
• ::waiter .. Mondale has coura c,"
said Hart. v. ho Planned a. dJy of
campaipung for thC ticket in central
California Tuesda).
Earhcr, befo~ about S,000 chcer-
ina supporters an Memll, Wis .. (pop
9,S02) Mondale recalled that the late
radio commentator H.V. Kalten-
born. a nat1 ve of Merrill, had reported
Harry S. Truman ·s defeat premature-
ly in the 1948 presidential election.
"l roved H. V. Kaltenbom." said
MondAle, .. but he wa wron1. These
pundits that SI) we arc 1oin to lose,
they att wrona. The pcop c know
~hat' aoina on and we are ao1ng to
win it." •
Mondale an~ Ferraro·s camPJ•an day was marred by low turnout for a
Labor Day parade irrNc.w York, nd
by a late arrival and a faull> micro:
phone in Lona Beach,
There, \,he. crowd of about 4,000
waited four hou~ for the two can-
didates to arrive. As Mondale spoke,
his microphone went out intcr-
mittentJy, and a listener in the
audience fell ill and required emera-
ency medical treatment.
In New York; Mondale and Fer-
raro mucht<t at the he d of the
parade, but a rrlathe handful of early
nSCfS turned out at 9 a m. to watch the
Dcnioeratic tick.ct .mat(b together
down F.lfth Avenue.
Campaian aides wd the parade
was teft on tlle schedule despite the
likehhOOd of a sm~I crowd w thai
Mondafe•scoresuppOtiin 1he North·
est and amona union mem~r$ would
be cmphasucd on the ·trnd1tion I
kickoff day for the fall campaign.
It was a different tory in Wiscon-
sin, where cheerinJ and · clap,p1ng
re 1dents of Monill hned Main Street
five deep as Mondale and Ferraro
rode by in an open l 958 Ford Fairlanc
convertible under sunny skies.
65,000 AT REAGAN RALLY ...
FrOmAl
motorcade alona Euclid Street. "One o( our men in a helicopter about 13 m1lhon members, has
The pre ident ten the county estimated 80.000 to l00,000 people, enaorsed Mondllle.
Monday afternoon 'from the Marine and somebody on the around said "h's hard tor me to understand Corps Air Base in El :roro, boutid for S0,000 to 60,000 so I auess I'll say how someone in his posnion cou1d be
a second Labor Day rally in No1'1hcm there "'ere S0,000 to I 00.000 people as unknowinJ as be seemed to be California. therr:• Miller said. about the nauonal emplOY!f1ent situ-
, Beo Nielsen, a Fountain Valley cit) Fountain Valley s,t. Larry ation," the president said. Reagan
councilman who is alM> active in Griswold said only one minor traffic added, "He (Donahue) might hke to
Republican politics, said Monday's accident· occurred on the major know that there arc more ~ople
&athetina at Mile Square was one of streets surroundina the rally. employed today than ever an the
_ _,_the ~st liucal rallies~ver helsf in lhm_was heav traffic nation s history.'' ~-· __ Oranae County. C!..!..!.-.J.c:iJolllnwiesll.!.lt1ouo_n durina the momlng hours Totil empJoyment ft a rccor<t
••1 think it was one of the most as people arrived for the rally, 105.7 million in June. but foll off to
spectaeulardays in Fountain Valley's Griswold said the streets ~ere back to IOS.4 m1U1on in July.
history," Nielsen said. "I think ll normal trafficlevelsjustan hour after Buun Associated Pre rcpon said
went super. lt was unfortunate. the rally concl uded. the president did not mention that the
thouah, that there were a few tninor "They got out a lot quicker than unemployment rate is 7.S percent,
snap in aettina pe<!ple in." they got in," Grisw.ol.d said ... r don't just 0 of a point lower than the 7.6
He said Monaa,x's crowd exceeded have any explanation for ll." percent rate Reagan denounced as a
-the 30,000 who pthered to hear At the raJly, Rcapn offered an .. depression" when he launched hrs
fonner President GeGald Ford speak upbeat message, pledging continued 1980 campaign.
at Mile Square in 1976. Reaaan spoke peace and prospenty 1fbe 1sclected to Donahue and other AFL-CIO of-
at Mile Square to a smaller audience a second term. He did not mention ficials argue that, tot.al employment
when he was campai1J11n1 for the his opponent, fonner Vice Pl'C'Sident numbers notwithstanding. workers
presidency m 1980. Walter Mondale. by name, but a.raued are worse off than they were four
''I'd love to sec this become a that the st.ate of the nation has years ago because of the loss of well-
trad1tron.'' Nielsen said. "You know. improved smce lhe Carter-Mon<Sale paying Jobs in heavy manufacturing
the Democrats can have their cam· administrauon ended almost four dunng the Ions recession of 1981-82.
patan kickoff in "lev. York with the ycars'ago. · . · And they note that the roster of
Labor Day Parade. and the Re-"Today," the prnidenuaid. ""of all unemployed totaled 8.5 million m
publicans can have their kickoff rally the major industrial nations of th.c July, compared to 7.8 minion m
m·Fountam Valley." v.orld. America ha) the stron~I Reaaan's first month in office.
In 1980. OranJe County "otcrs economic growth: one of the low~t In his speech: the president also
pve the Reaaan the laricst maJOnty inflation rat.es -only one-third of responded to Donohue's criticism by
of any county in the nauon: 'what it was four years ago, the fastest a km&, "When he accused me of
No major inc1dcnts marred Mon-rate of/ob creation -61'2 mil hon JObs ptouina to destroy the unions -doc~
day's rally accordma to police and in the asl 19 months; and the largest he know I'm the only one ever to hold
fire officials · increase in real. after-tax per onal thi' office who is a lifetime member of
Orange County and Fountain Val-income since 1973." ~ an AFUJO umon'> r was si"' times
tey firefighters l(eated two people He accused a high-ranking AFL-president of my union and led it_ in the
with angina attacks and another wuh CIO leader of"d1stonin1 the facts" in first stnkc it ever called ...
a cut finger 'The three victims all charg.sng that Reapo's t.aA poh.c:ies Reagan was refemna to h1s days as
required hospual treatment. Seven-are tfendic1al to the nch and that · a Hollywood acto!J_ when he headed
teen cases of beat exhaustion were unemployement is growrna worse. the Screen Actors vutld.
reported but they required 9nly first Al though Reagan did not identJfy At the Mlle 59uarc rafly. the
aid at the park. the labor leader by name, deputy president also outlined "four grear
OranJ.e County Shcntrs Lt W1I-prc~s secretary Pete Roussel said goals 10 build our tomorrow." ·
ham Maller said he was not aware of Rea.pn had added the attack to his These included sustained econ-
any arrests made in connecuon with speech after sceana Af'L.CIO sec-omic growth without inflation, as-
the rally. But· he said some of his retary-treasurer Thomas R Donahue surance that the nation -will remain
-deput~e5ttmated ~hc--erowd-tO"* intervtewed-.."i>n the C-5pan cabfe-:!f-Or6vtf pr pared. fer pea(;(!," and
cvtn larger than the president an-televu1on network over the weekend . commitments to · "rich 1rad1t10oal
nounced The labor federation. which claims values" and to charting new frontiers.
SUPERVISORS RAPPED IN STUDY •••
From Al
public heannss arc not open forums.
but rather legal formalities which do
not influence policy."
•Vote5 are Kldom explained.
"C1uzens auendma board mecuna.s
for the first tnTJe arc astounded at the
speed with which agenda nems arc
decided"
•Supervisors react emouonally to
testimony rather than listening al'ld
we1gh1na the evidence "Speakers
who expre\s view~ shared b) the
supervisors. or those with whom they
can adenufy arc commended and
question Speaker• who are con-
~1dered opponent~ arc cross·citam-
ined or lectured by uper\'1sors."
However. super.visors hold quite a
different view of both the n:pon and
how they are perce1 \'ed b) the public.
''They made their statement. I
vigorously d1saarcc w11h rt ," \aid
Supervisor B'ruce Nestande. ··s1am-
mm1 ll (the public heanna process)
the way0 thcy did was a gross misdeed
to educatrng the public"
uperv1sor R<>&tr Stan10n labeled
Just Call
642-6086
• Oslly Piiot
D•flv•ry ·
11 Quarantffd
the report "otssumpuons'" that were not be camcd on the consent calen-
uosubstanua1cd by any scientific dar.
means "I sent them a letter askina _ •That rules regarding public hear-
about their met~.odolo~. but they ings should be widely available and
ne\'er responded. he said. rouunely enforred The 1v.o board memben also
indicated they feel they arc respon-•That 50 percent of all board
s1ve to the pubhc and said their office meeunas should be held at n11ht 10
doors always arc open to consu-allow areater part1etpauon by the
tuents work1na public. Also. agendas should
In recommending that the board be posted for public inspection at all
adopt more than nine major chances public libraries and city halls around
1n the pubhc hearina process. the county Podolalc urged supervawrs to give •Thal the board should establt~h a . . ,.. .
opportunll) to make their pitch"
without bemg mterrupted "We can
onl) suggest change 1f the) want
effective citizen panic1pauon," she
~id
Amon& changes \u&&e~1ed 1n the
luaue report arc:
•That cntena 'hould be developed
for selectin1 items to be placed on the
con~nt calendar, which an tum
\hould be published to keep the
public informed Cenam budgct
items and mailer\ of pohc) 'hould
penod at the begmning of each
meeuna to allow any member of Jhe
public to address the board on an)
matter.
•That those who wish to speak at a
puehc h~nna be permitted to phone
an their names to the clerk of the
board befofe a meetina and that s11n-
up cards would be available a1 tt\.c
tame of the mcctina to preclude
havina to stand in line at micro-
phones. Names would be called m the
order in which they were re~c1ved .
What do you llke about the Dall)' Pilot? Wbal do.o'l )"OI Uke? Call tbe
number at left and your mf'11a1f' will be recorded, tranacrlbed and delivered
to t,bt appropriate editor. ·
Tbt ta mt 24-bour an1wtrl111 service may be ued to record lt tttra to tbe
f'dltor on any topic. Contributors to our 1.AtUra colomn mast Include tbetr
oamt anctteltpbone number for verlflcatlon:"No circulation rails, pltase.
Tfll u1 what's on your mind.
COAST
Daily Pilat
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TEEN DROWNS AT CRYSTAL COVE •••
From Al
visor for the state beaches, said rescue
workers were notified around 6:30
p.m. that a swimmer hid been pulled
from the water.
Roggcnbuck said Cady was ap-
parently swimming with a friend, I 9-
ycar-old Roy Brown of Riverside,
-and was returnma to the shore when
he began to founder. The lifeguard
statiott s had closed about 30 minutes
earlier at the beach between C.Orona
del Mar and l.:aguna Beach. Anauto~y is pending to detci:mine
the exab cause of death. No iurther
information was ava1fable this morn-
ing. •
Higb temperatures ranacd into the
905;
Early morning low clouds Wedn • day will give way to clear skies at area
beaches, where hiahs will hover
around the 80s. Sunny skies are
forecast inland, with hiahs in the low
to m1d-90s.
Scattered afternoon and evening
llnnrdcnhowen will nit the moun-
t.ams and deserts. Mountain highs
Wednesday wall reach 88 after over·
night lows from 4S to 6S. In the
deserts, highs will reach into the I OOs.
Tiny waves, wuh water
temperatures of 70 dcaress, were also
reponcd this momin.a;· prompttna
one lifeguard to say, "It·s like bath·
Life-guards alona other Oranae
Coast beaches reported the weekend wu otherwise calm, and that in-
cluded the I-to 3-foot waves that
frustrated holiday surfe~.
• water out there."
About 275,900 bathen; v:i 1tcd Or-
ange Coast beaches on Labor Day.
ARSON SUSPECTED IN NB ••• From Al · ·
Stephens. It took 20 fireftil\ters about
IS minutes to control the blaze.
Newport Beach Fire Depanmcnt
Paramedic Paul Schneider strained
his neck while fighting the blaze and
wa~ treated at Hoas Memonal Hospi-
tal. in Newport Bciach, for the irvury,
Stephens safd . He was .. later released
in ~usfacton: cond1J-1on
A renter, Larry Backus, 43, was -
laving in the home when the fire
staned. He left the home just mo-
ments before the fire was discovered
by a 1ghbor. Stephens said.
The blaze apparently began at two
or possibly three different poants in
the home, Stephens said. One fire
broke out 1n a utility room attached to
the kitchen and a second one st.aned
an the aara1e. on the other side of the
hou~.
"This is definitely not an accident.ii
fire. from everything we've seen M> •.
far." Stephens said. "There was
nothana an either area that would have
caused a fire -no electrical wirina, no gasoline ..
This fire was unrelated to 1 recent
'blate on Dorothy Lane. a fire depatt-
ment spokeswoman said. The eatlier
fire may have been ca~scd by ~-
OBITUARIES
I,. ---~~ ------
Clara§J>auldtne
memorial service
set Wednesday
'
The visitor breakdown Monday for
area beaches was: Huntington State,
36..000:..... Huntmaton City, 45.000:
BOlsT'Cbica, 42,600; Crystal Cove,
12,300; Newpon-Corona I 00 000;
and 40,000 .Uauna.
Only abOut • .00 boats .off Los
Angele5 and Orange counties needed
help during the three-day holiday, the
Coast Guard said.
On the roadways. there were nine
traffic deaths in Los Angeles County
in the first 60 hours of. e .holiday
weekend, according to atcd
Press repons. ·
Drunken dnvingarrcsts for the two
counties totaled 519. about J percent
ahe.ad of the total for the same penod
last year. the highway patrol said.
Locally, pohcc·rcported about 45
arrests for drunken driving.
...... ,_.....,...._. hlMlf
·,.~..,.attack a ltlaM.f.rmn abo~• and beldw llODd&J
lD Newport 81acb. . ••
I '
•
CDlll 1111111 .
- -
WEDNESDAY, SEPTf MBER 'l, 1984 ORAN GE COUNl V. CALIFORNIA 2~ CENT.._,
"103 Costa Mesans yell '9tftiet!'
18.000 cheer amphitheater concert
as netghbors complain about noise
By TONY SAAVEDRA Co ta Mesa re ident within an
OUlleO ,... It.ft estimated l.S·m1IC radujs Of the
A pack«! hou at the I .000-~1 , ootd.~r arena ~re not so ap-
Pac1fic Amph1tbcatrc cheered the prec1at1ve. .
raucous '°und ef the Pretende~ Some 103 nQI complaint kepi
musical · group . T uC$d • However. . the tel(phones nngmg at It) Hall . -.
Airplane landings and
takeoffs are compared to
a game of Russian roulet-'
· te by one city offlcf al./ A3
lnte~lor Secretary Wllllam
Clark vows to move
ahead with' off shore oll
leases./A3
California
Los Angeles supervisor~·,
oppose Jarvis Initiative. ·
/A4
Border patrol gets boost
In manpower./ A4
Nation
Teachers strike In seven
states affects 128,000
students./ A4
Mondale would ask Sov-
• let leaders to freeze arms
race./ AS ·
' ~
Mesa candidate
So ff er··arrested
at council meet
:.
Char ed in vehicle
storage Incident.
releasea on ball
By TONY SAAVEDRA
Of 0.-, .........
----
Costa Mesa Cu) Council nd1date
and local pdOy Sid Softer • .S2.
arrested Tuesda) night for v 1olnung a
city ordinance that regulates stonn
vehicles on private property.
A pohce spokesman. reading from
an incomplete arrest report this
morning. ~id Soffer wa uaken into
custodpround 10:30 p.m.at the Cit)'.
Council chambers after a council
meeting adjourned.
Reagan says the nation Is
In the midst of rebirth.
/AS
End of a succeuful mission
The apace ehuttle Dl.mcovery touches down
on RQCen Dry Lake today u lta maiden voyaie of 2 1h million miles enda. Stories
and more plcturea on Paae 85.
City code enforcemenl officer-
Sand1 Rose made the arrest. with
pohce .otlkers p~nt according to
authorities. Rose w~ unava1laotc for
comment today.
(Pleue lee CAMDIDAU/ A2) 8ld8offer
World
Typhoon Ike heading for
Vietnam./ A4
Three killed In rioting
agains mll'terY In Chile.
/A4
Home
Take your cue from t he
wallpaper when you
be~utlfy a rbom by re-
decorating. /81
South Coast Plaza will be
the temporary home for. · :
the Laguna Beach Mu-
seum of Art./81 ·1
Food
Oellclous lunch box treats
and afterschoo1 pick-me-
ups help school students
keep up their energy and
enthuslasm'./C1
An Instructor promotes
communication and ·
understanding of the Chi-
nese culture through its
culslne./C1
Sports
Ar hi h school football
snafu
quiets
Laguna·
p-hones
By DAVID BISHOP
Oe11,,...eonup1 -.,, ·
... Laguna Beach went without tele-
phones for a while Tuc\day when a
new S 15 million computemed tele-
phone switching· unit went on the
bhnk only weeks after beina installed.
All General Telephone customers
with a 494 or 497 exchanac -about
13.500 of them -were unable to
make or receive calls Tuesda> be-
tween noon and 12:26 p.m.
The telephone blackout also cau<,ed
a frustrating half-hour in the Laauna
Beach Pohce Department. -
"The first thing the chief said was
'call the phone company and find out
what's gomg on · " said Sgt Grca
Bartz.·
Torrid
"h was freak)." said Bartz. the
watch commander v.hen the phone
blackout occurred. "Everything I
wanted to do depended on the
phone."
Banz used police radios to dispatch
e'ery available unit to patrol the
streets. includina fire trucks and
municipal service vehicles. Even cit)'
bus dnvers \\ere instructed to stop for
anyone who appeared to be in need of
(Pleue 1ee PHONES/ A2)
Panel w~ighs·possible uses--
of cl~sed Ea~tbluff School
,...,,... ____ .......,,,.,__......,..,,_...__, __ ~-'~__,~-----.-------~-----.....:---Pn va te school. History Foundation site
amon~ suggestions of citfzens··commlttee
By KAREN E KLEIN -'=--°' U.. Oel!J Het ,.,.
Proposa~ for a pn vate o,chool and a
Natural H111tor;• Foundation head-
quarters were presented Tuesday at a pubhch~nnghcld 1n Newport Beach
to dc!dde the future of the Eastbturr
Elementary School s11c.
Ea tblufT and Adam11 o;c:hools were
closed in the sprina due to declining
enrollment in the Newpon-Mcsa
Unified School Distnct.
Mar) Hornbuckle, chairman of a
citizen • advisory fommitttt formed
to make a recommendation on the
fuCurt' uscoflhe Eastbluff and Adams
elementary "Chools, said the Cit> of
Newport Beach may be 1nternted m
bccominJ the pnme tenant of the
EastblufTpropcrt) much as the cit) of
Costa Mesa leasn propcrt) at the
closed Rea School.
The Newpon-Mesa distnct has
dec1dcd not to sell the tv.o 5ehool
sites. but to lea~ them and keep them
for future use in case of population
'Shifts within the area.
The leasing of ~hool sH~ has
pro' cd a contro,ersial undcnakana
in past years iu more school$ m the
di~trict arc cl01Cd. A plan to le11~ the
Corona dcl Mar Elcmentar) School
SJte to a branch of the Uni"ersJl} of
Southern California a fe"' )cars qo
sparked anp) reaction from m1dcnts
m the neighborhood near the ~hool.
Hornbuckle said the nme-mcmbcr
commmec he heads w11J take pubhc
tcstimon) and hear proposal for the
·t\\O SJt~and then make a rte0mmen-
dation to the board after meeting on
.\ug. ll . The committee 1-. mandatt'd
b) the state Legislature. e said.
Hornbuckle said Tucsda~ 's hcanng
netted a disappoin11n1 turnout of
local residents but an 1n1ercs11ng
:pate of propouls orihe PTQpcttl.
T"o proposals ~rep nted foi:
tM Eastblutf propcn). at 2627 Vasa
del Oro 1n 'e,,,;port Beach.
Hombudle said.
One was from PCJ.!l u a pm ate
school for menu.II) gifted ~ouoptcrs.
The Peps us school would run full
umc and then offer supplemental
programs after schoor-and 1n the
e'eninas for the . communit>t
Hornbuckle said.
The Sttond prooovl v.as from tbe
aturaJ Histor) f:oundation of Or·
anac Count\. 9.hich has facilities in
Ra Center. and in offices and
warehouses around the count).
The foundation v."Ould hle to
consolidate its facilities at the ~
bluff ne. the development coordi·
nator told l)le commm~. It •""Ould
probabl) not use the enurc bu1ldin1;
Hombuckk said. and would be
11J.iJhn1 to shart' space v.ith another · aroup.
Councilwoman Jackie Heather
(Pleue eee SCBOOL{ A2) ...
.
Colleges wOnder
where ave all
'•
)
teams geartng up for de-
buts this weekend./D1
The Angels recover from
three-run homer In the
bottom of the ninth Inning
In Cleveland to pull out
12-IMlng win./D1
. won't the students gon __________ e _
Spending on new con-
struction In July climbed
slightly. reversing a de-
cline In June.I A7
~~---e4
A3
A7 A• 04·8
84 oe ee
C1·8
81·2
05
8 2
A7
A• AG
81
A3 ee
01-3
A8
82
83 A2
A4
oaway
t
~Jm1n1\tra1or:.. 111 l<Xal 1ommu1t1·
t\ collcy.o .. h~n.cn·L htt the pa.rue
buuon )d. but )OU (.'In l 111°'> n~lfar
rom hl'1r tingcnip' :'\
l ocal oil~ art' open tor f; II
clu . "hut \tudt'nl\ ha' c not re·
._,..-~-------llITT! d tn numtx·r. equal hl P3't
' I
PiiL
IEIDEllWI
Focus ON THE NEws
-1' ..,
Al
w
0 ..
-
tl f(
at
at
w
pt
tr .
t}
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If
8' ol
d fi
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:
'Cat lady' pleads innocen t
. prt'tnnl con crcnce s n 5Ct
far Ck\. I, and JU tn been
ttntamcl) hcdu for Oct ~. l
the prc·tnal confeten~~ Ellt ' Pl· Jome~ and r prcscn\atht of lbt'
0 ~ Count) D1stnc-t ttome)'1
office ill d1scuu the c se nd could
C'h a resolulion Wllhout to
s the le I matters mo\cd lO" rd 1rial •
a resoluuon, Irvine nunat 6Cn ice~ . Mc0on3ld SA1d Elli h s a kcd for
official id 11\fY h 'e be-gun luo~i~ her pets b;sck nd 1 no ma pos1t1on
for fost~r families to re Tor om!'.' of to care for them Ttt woman re·
Ellis' ~t tcmPQtarily. 11>9t'lr'dly has. found a Job end a place to
.
Eth ' attofne), C. Tho mu li,·c 1n the ar a. • .'
McDon' Id. ente~d the: pica b} tcle· Tht woman' pct) Wtre 11cd b)
phone 1n a Harbor Municpal Court lrnne animal "rv1ce1 \\Orkcrs 1wq
ami1nmcnl bcfo~ J®ge Russell \\CC._ a o after a s1ron odor comina
Bostrom:-The plea was entered from her motorhome. parted in a
shortl) fter Bo trom issued a SI \000 local lot, wa repontd Inside were
bench w-arrant for Elhs' arre t btcauM"
Carl Paaano. the city's enimat ~rv1ccs supervisor. sA1d Elhs' bill for
the animal Cfrc eJtcccds $6.000 and is
climbinJ daily.
neither she nor her attomc) appeared
al the momma arrai&nment
L)nn Hanley, a clerk for the JU~.
said the arrest warrant \\-"ls stopped
after the telephone arraignment was
completed wnh auomcv .l\1cDonald.
In an intt" 1ew. McoOnald ~dthc
warrant resulted from a communica·
~io.n~ rnt"up.
}h anorne) ~1d telephone ar-
raign enu arc permmed in Harbol'
Coun and that he left 'A-orJ wnh court
reprtst"ntat1 ves last Fnda} to arrange
one for Elin. By mmakc, the mes!.:l&e
did not reach Bostrom's counroom.
McDonald sa1a, and the warrant was
1ssuc<h He said Elhs was not leg.ill)
required to appear in coun after the
telephone am1gnment was set up.
He.u1d the cit) 1 lookt~ for foster
fam1lie who would be \f1U1n1 to calt
for some of the pets temporanlY:
Jewel ~urglar~ get $60,000 Jiaul
bout $60,000 worth of JCwelr\ ejactly what the} \\anted and where
was stolen Tuesda) n11ht from a~o ljnd it. police said
Newpon lkach hom~ m what pohce There was no ransaclona of lhe
_said a~•md to be .a profess1o~al home. The Jewel') was neatly rc-burgla~ JOb · . • moved from a jewelry box on a
The Jewels '"'ere taken from the bedroom dresser. The more ex. .~aster bedroom of a home on t~e pensive i\Cms were taken and less
_7()() block of Vma . Umbrosa . an expenmc piece!> lefi behind. the
EastbluffTuesday even1na. accord1n1 report said.
to police reports · The ru1dcnts of the home were The tlueves were c'reful to leave
pl&) ing bridge at a local club when few clues and even went to the trouble
their front door knob was twisted of replacing the drawers of the Jewelry
open w11h a pair of ,.,se gnp pilers. the box in the right order.
repon said · Police said .an investrpuon into
Th,. hurglar'I appc."arc~ to know the theft 1s continuing
C~DiDATE ARRESTED IN MESA ...
From A l
The police spokesman. who con·
firmed that citations are usually
1 ued in such 1nst.ance , could not
eitplain wh> Soffer "as taken into
custody.
Soffer was released from the city
JaU ~fter posting SI 00 bail Police
could not provide mo~ anformat1on
on the arrest by pr~sume toda~.
Enforcement officers appattnlly
waned for Soffer, who 1s well known
for his attendance at council mectinas
and for hts outs1)01tenness.
While the council met moment.ari-
ly behind closed doors earlier in the
C\cen1ng. Soffer heldcourt in a corner
of the chambers, speak.ins to a small
eroup of residents on his solution to
the cit~ 's noise battle with the Pacific
Amphitheatre. Soffer advocates
charging tac amphitheater's owners
with d1sturbmg the peace, a lav.:
recognized thro\}ghout the state, 10-
stead of using the c1t>'s noi~ ordi-
nance.
Soffer has also starred a flap over
whether rhc ~y d1spla)··
mg the Amencan flag dunng evenmg
hours.
He 1s one of 11 candidates vyina in
November for the three open stats on
the Costa Mesa Ctty Council.
SCHOOL PROPOSALS •••
l'romAl
also lest1flfli at the heanng~n -behalf
of the Cit} of Newport Beach. At its
next cou~nng. ?'llewport Beach
will probably consider becoming the
school site's prime tenant. Heather
said.
The my of Costll" Mesa has a
similar position at Rea Commun1t>
Center. which 1t subleases to various
~1al serv1ceandconfmun1ty groups
A s1m1lar heanng to collect pubhc
testimony from residents who hve
near the cfoseoAdams School sne 1s
scheduled for Thursday in the mult1-
pu.rpose room at the school. I 8SO
Clubhouse Road. in Costa Mesa. The
heanng. which 1s open to the public.
begins at 7 p.m.
CONCERT DRAWS 103 COMPLAINTS •..
From Al
)Car-old factltt) on the state-av. ned count) f:urground~
The action look place afterattome~
Wood conferred with council mem-
bers dun ng a closed-door session that
lasted about an hour.
._ Ma) or Donn Half stressed the cit}
"as not abandoning its demands that
the amphitheater "s61ve the norse
problems to the samfac11on of the
communttv." ·
Hall also referred to a secret stale&>
that the city is taking to force the hand
of Ned-West. Although keeping the
details of that strateg) hidden, the
mayor said the mutual sound stud)
would not alter the secret µme plan
"I think v.e need to indicate to the
judge we're w1lhng. more than w11l-
inJ. to pan1c1pate w1th Chim)." he
said. "Behe ... e me, the strateg} that "e
are pursuing 1s procecdmg exactly as
planned,"
How.e'er t"o resident!> at Tues-da\ 's meeting said thev found ll hard
to believe Hall The\ maintained that
enough sound studies ha\e been
conducted to prove there 1s a loud.
bothersome noise problem
Co1ncidentall~. the unn) strains of
the Pretenders music. spilling from
the amphitheater into the communi-
ty. placed an accent mark on their
complaints.
"Tonight's decibel level is ungod-
ly:· said John Gardner. "ice presi-
dent of the Concerned C'1t1zens of.
_Cost.a Mesa. a 300-member. group
that filed suit against the
amphitheater earlier this )Car.
''I'm a little bit pe'is1m1st1c about
JUd1c1al relief"· Gardner ~•d
'\grccing was resident Jim Aynes.
'The noise tonight is louder than I've
e .. er heard 1L It seems the more ume
g~s on the worse the noise gets . I
think )Ou should be more in an
advcrsaf) posnion rather than a
negouaung posnion ...
Cit~ Manager Fred Sorsabal said
this morning that Aynes was n~ht
about the music being loud. nottng
that I 03 contD1a111Js were received
Tuesday from-as far south as 21st
Street and as far north as Paularino
Avenue.
.. Normall} you get 20 or 30
(complaints ).'' said Sorsabal. He
added the c1ty·s accoust1cal engineer-
ing consulfant. Gord'on Bricken.
monitored the noise Tuesda}.
Although the data "as not 1n.
Sorsabal predicted 1t would be well
over the 55-decibel limit stl at the
propen} hnc.
PHONES SILENCED IN LAGUNA ..•
From Al
assistance
"We could haH' had a maJOr tire
and ll wouldn't c .. en ha .. c heen
reported ·· Hartt said .. It sho"s how
much ~ ou Ul'pl.'nd un the phones.··
No o.,enous 1nc1dents were rcpcncd
Junng thl' tl'lephom· blad..out Ban1
\31d
was re'itorcd at l !. ~" p m Roberson Although the new swttching unit is
said. faS\cr. more efficient and provides
The hrand new '>tale-of-the-an. more services. Roberson said. out-
d1g1tal computer ~~stem" was put taaes are.not uncommon with elec-
into o~rauon 1n l...Jguna Beach Aug. tronic switches. "The good news 1s
17 and handk' an a' cragc of 272.000 that the. computer comes right back
call' pt:r da' up. This was an unusual!} lo~
· h v.a, ·1 '>nltwarc problem:· said delay"
W\11 W•N< ~· NQA.l US 0.01 OI ~U
Tempera~rea
"' Le • Cl ., 61 ., 63
·~ ,, n eo
14 .. .. " ----------~~ ::·Tldea ee ... t5 U TOOAV M 56 S.C:oncl~ IOlpm• 27
10t IS Ian l'rlnCltC.o H 90
15 .. --~'" .. 18 t7 61 St Sti Mt,.. IO :><! .. u 9Hn .. · TOM
14 67 Siii~ IS GO
77 6t Sioli• ~-12 u rt 41 Sook.,. .. to to $1 Sy.-_, IO
78 17 TOC*t 87 60
" et TllC90tl •• 17 1l 71 ~ T~ N Q t1 74 WttNllOloft 74 M
.. 70 Wletlll• " 14 17 U Wiltc ... hn el IO
87 77 W~Otl. 70 OJ
M 47 Stcond ""'" 1 51 pm I I 83 '7 17 10 THU9'aDAY
., .. '~• tow 2 20 • "'
SURF REPORT
71 63 '•tet lllQll 8 57e m ·--------
76 6.9 s.c:clnd IOw 1 5o4 p m 75 47 Seeond l1lQl't 7 51 pm
73 41 73 61 8un Ml• today t1 7.14 pl'f', n..
67 41 Tlluf9day 11 8·30 I m end Mii t0lln II er es 1 12 p.m.
70 50 Moon r!Me lod1y at 5 00 p m • MCI II
44 45 161 am Tllunday ind n... 9Qlln et to Q U2pm
CONTINUED STOR IES
a&ZI 1·2
1
I
1
I
1·2
1·2
Swell Olf9'tl0ft. IOUlh*•t
CONOtTIOM
poof
llif
ftJr
1111
II# ,.,, , ..
COLLEGE ENROLLMENT TUMBLES •••
From Al .----...
•Local hsah schools arc producing
smaller araduatmg classes -and
thus fewer potential college students.
The Coast Distnct. which includes
nl111'19.n.Jkikb~I Beacn..foun·
tam Valley. CosurMesa and Ncwpon
Beach, has had a marked decline in its
you\h population. In re.cent years.
many element.ary schools have ~en
closed because of declining enrol·
lment • .and a ripple effect 1s beainnsng
to hit con'lmunity colleges.
One reason Saddleback's enrol-
lment dip has not been so severe is
that its campuses draw from south
Orange County communities thal llf'C
sttll growinJ.
•The Coast District colleges.
which have trad1uonally begun their
fall terms in September. this year
opened for classes Aug. 20. 'The
change 1s to help their calendars hne
up with thoSc! of the state's four-}ear
unive~iues and make mid-year
transfers for students easier
But the e-._rly stan ma) have been
inconvenient for students with ~um
mer jobs lasting through September
and forthose taking late vacations. ln
addition. young parents who must
care fc~.r elcmentaf) age children ma}
not have been able to enroll before
their youngsters returned to classes
this month.
To accommodate people with such
schedule problems. the Coast colle~es
arc offering hundreds of late-starting
classes begJnning Monday. Students
wall attend class about 30-minutes a
week longer than those who enrolled
last month, but all students will finish
before Chnstmas.
College officials are h~ping heavy
regJstration in the late classes will
Delly Piiot
Dell very
la Guarenteed
., -' , • 1~
r.o• Nl•t )°"' PAPI' ttr ~JO P '!1 Cl tw!O!t 7 P..,
pump up the scmester·s &loom>
enrollment fiaures •
The problem 1s not confined to
Orange County. however.
"It is a senous issue, and 1t 1s a
st.atewide one.ff said Dave "Brownell.
acting chancellor of the Coast Dis-
trict. .
Brownell auended a mectina last
week with chancellors from other
multi-campus California community
college districts and said he heard
similar distressing reports about fall
attendance.
What worries the collcac officials is
thefundinrformula approved earlier
\,his year by state legislators. Because
of the confusion over tuition, the
lawmakers deqd~d not to consider 1983-84 attendance in funding col-
leges .for. the current school year.
Instead, the 1982-83 fiaurcs ""ere
used as the autde.
Under the new law. funding for
future years will be revised according
to attendance durina the 1984-85
term. If a college has a significant
decline m attendance thts year. iL~ill
rece1 ve less money next )'Car accord·
ing to this formula.
But college officials contend that
man> costs remain stable or increase
even when attendanct drops. For
inst.ance, energy costs to liiht and
cool campus buildings of\en rise and
so do the salaries of teachers and
other employees.
The Coast Distna!i Brownell said
employee salaries and frinie benefits
account for 80 percent of the ex pen·
d1tures in his budget. leavina little
room for flexibility 1f the state cuts
funding. If this year's Coast Distnct
attendance drops IS to 20 percent
below the 1982-83 figures, it could
mean the loss of millions from the
district's $90 mslhon budaet.
Co1lcge officials cauuon that it'sfar
IOO cel?ly 10 pamc. LocaHy;-fttom-
attendance figures won't be known
until the end of regsstrauon for the
late-sUfnina classes And statewide,
about half of the 106 community
colleges haven't even started their faJI
semesters yet.
But because the early trend may
hold true, college officials arc already
talking about pressing legislators for 'thange~ in the fundin& formula,
either by disregarding this year's
enrollment declines or by imposina
funding cuts on a gradual ba\is.
Fred Klass, director of ~1lauon
and communications for California
Community Colleges Chancellor
Gerald Hayward, said his office
should have solid attendance figures
an hand when state legislators return
to Sacramento in December. But
Klass said success tn chanaina the
college funding fonnula may de~nd
on Gov. George Deukmejaan's
opinion on the matter.
DcukmcJ1an was the one who
waged a long, bmer but ultimately
successful battle to beg;Jn charaina
tuitton at community colleges. Klass
said the governor · has aiven no
indication how he feels about chana·
ing the funding formula.
The Coast District's Brownell ob-
se_rved, "Our challenge will be to
denromtratc-to the Leaislature that
we do have a problem and that fresh
and creative thinking is n~ed at all
levels."
ORANGE COAST . Circulation 71•1842~
Daily Pilat CIH•lfled ldvertlelng 71•1M2·5171
All other department• 842-4321
MAIN OFFICE
U ..... , &1 St CctlA ... f'W CA
>) OO•t \ Bo• 1!.50 Col•a ... t'M CA 9~6
eno '°"" c~, .. tlf °" ~·•a
S.a!U'~lr lt\,l S .. •.Ol 7 I '°" oo no• •.ot> ·• ' ~o,.7 e m Cl!I O.'"'~
H. L. Schw.,tz Ill
Publisher
Ccoo.t'O"' 1963 011 "(. .. Co.i• Pu~ ~n, llio
,.~,.,. ttOl'oes. ~·ra1~ eotoril ma1111 or eo,..•v
l"e!lll ~tdl .,,., De •ttwOOl.cfoll .,;trQj• fC«4 !»' l!!rl~ C' Copy<.gf't _,
10 . "'·*"° yt>.I C(~ ...
tot C• '
Clrculatlon
TelepbonH
""'' Or11>1141Gci n•r
"'"' .. l-Q»
Ro1emary Churchman
Cor 1roller
Stephen F. Carazo
Production
Manager
Don•ld L. Wlllf •m•
,circulot1on
Manager VOL. n , HO. 249 Roher~on \\ho ,1dded that tech· Roberson su~ested that a meetina
nic1an'> .ire \till fine-tuning the sys-with Cit} officials be arranged tor~;=;~:===:;::===============~;;;::::;:::;;;;:;::;;;:;;;;;;;~;:::;~;:;::::::=~=::;;~:;::::= ~-----------,f::';:."';;.=;:t'-':::::nf.::~::-::-:~~=n-,f:.,.-iP,;"=~"--~1~~·m~i:;-:;-k"'":":r-:;;-:";7:-;:--:-;-:--;i;-;;;-'.~;:;;-;:~.--~c~o~o~rd~1~na~t~c~pro~cc;,.;.;d;u~re~s~1~n~th~e~e~v~~~n~t~o~f
t' a nc"s 1'> t at C\'eryone
v.1th a l aguna Beach exchange lost Police dcpanment officials said
tOUl h w rth the v.orld," ~1d Rob-the) were unable to determine from ~rc;cin t:ight) -nine cu~tomcrs called the telephone com pan} information
to rnmplain about 1he outt.aae after about hov. long the outage was
phone -.er" 11;e '-'3~ restored. he said. expected to last.
HOT WEATHER CONTINUES •••
From A l
f{on John~nn nf tht' m1tnnc ~feh
d1' 1s1on.
"It's a mcd1um-b1g uowd t'\-
pcciall) with the "' hools back 11n ~!>s1on and dunng the middle of tbc
week." Johnson \aid
But beaches also ha\C hccn exccp-
tmnall)' quu:1. hc added. smcc the
ocean hu been calm and npudes are
at a m1n1mum.
Earl} toda\ 1t wu alrcadv 78 dcgre~ on the bc11ch. John .. on "aid .
There. wen· three rescue~ rcpont'd
along Hununaton cit~ bt'ache~ Tue.,.
da) amona thecrov.d of about 20.000.
~rd Ste\c Da' 1dson, a manne safel\
ofTict'r ·
The rclord high temperatures set
T uc~u contnbutrd to peak eltl·
tnl'al demanas and incrca~d fin:
danger throu~out 1he rount)
E:ltttr1c I demand re ched a new
h11h amo the :\ mtlhon cu,tome~
SCr\cd by outhern California f.d1.JOn
Just Call .
642-6086
t o t111111 H1;11ur'" the north to ln inc
in thl· south accord1n1 to Jim
Kcnntd' ld1,on'\ Costa Mesa area
managt-r.
P<.'ak demand 'i)\tem-w1de htl
l·U91 milhon k1lowat1\ at 3 p,m.
Tucsda). Kennedy '8id. In Orange
County., peak power was esumated at
2.614 million kilowatts.
The pre' IOUS h1Jh for eltctrical
u\age w~re set on Au 29. he \aid.
DcspllC' mmc power outaae\ rn
F ulkrton and ,.~nta Ana. Kenned\
o;a1d. the u11lny company was able to
keep up "•th the demand. mainly
cau,.ed b' h11h use ofa1rcond1t1oncr .
:\bout 21 transfonners in the central
count) had to be rr.placcd Tuc5d•>
and earl} toda). he ~1d, and nothcr
40 IA"'trc burned out and had to br 0 rcpla«d.
.. Wt' hk<' tn asl ~ople 10 St't their
air oondmonins no lo1Acr than 78
degttes:· Kenned) 1d •• nd we ~llll
cnwur.i~c ~uptc lO il"C lnc1r a.p-
pliances the afternoon off. especially
dunna that hottC$t part of the day in
the late after.ooon."
The hot weather. beside taxina
power supplies and making everyone
uncomfortable. has increased fire
· danier to a problem naae. accordina
to Pat Antnm. Oranac County Fire
Dcpanment spokesman.
The depanmcnt i!'i encoura1m1 the
public to stay out ofarcas closed due
to fi~ danger and to bt cltra careful
1n c~mPJl'Ounds. Antnm said.
"The brush is extremely dry at tt\11
point and wtth the heat we have 1
d«rtaSt in dlic1cncy in our tire·
fi,tlter5 1f they have to fiaht a major
fire:· he said. ,
~bout the onf Y, briiht pot. for
rirrfi&htcrs. 1~ that the heat has not
bc:tn accompanied b)' nta na
winds. he Uld. ••ff we had the winds
we'd ttally bt' 10 bad shape." he 1d,
\\ h11 d~ ~ou like bout lhf Daily Pllot'! \\bat don'1 )011 llllt? Call 1
numbtral h•fi 11>d your mt1Hlt "'"' b t<'Ordcd, lranscr•btd and drllvertd
10 1t1 •ppropri•lt Sor.
Tb• amt U· ur n w ring u~rvlt't m•)' bt used to record lelltn to lb•
rdllor on any l1>plr. f.ontrlbuton to our IA-ttt.n <'Olumn mu1t Incl de th Ir
n1mt-and ttltpbone umb r for \itrlfkatfon o clrcul1t1011 c:11l1, pica r..
Tell u1 "ha1'1 no your mh1d . -• •
THE TALK ABOUT TOWN IS ... ,_
"One of Orange County's finest fisn houses. Very impressive wine list a11
fairty priced." · '
• Htrb ~us, The ~ gi1ter
Res11ur•nt Crlttc ~'Provides friendly se rvice, excellent food and comfortable atmosphere."
· Scott Wessa, The Bun~tormtr
Restaur•nt Cr111e
\.\.Shark 1nd salmon, both generous portions were cooked to tnat moment of
perfection."
Norm St•nlty, ~1ly P1lo1
'/' , lte~t~ur1nt Critic
"The dinner portion of fresh seaba;;· was perfectly cooked, moist and
succulent."
"Lo bster tail was remarkably tender and fl avorful." .
Herb Slut, Aero.a the T1bl Res11ur1nt Critic
Joel C. Don, D11ly Pilot . · R ~ur1n1 Critic
"The lobster is exquisitely J)repared ... cooked over mesquite wood ... it
is a gourmet feast fit for royalty. 11 P IY Huffman. Alrpor1 Builne, JourNI
· ' Rc...,ur1n1 Critic
"McCormick's l anding should be on everyone's list of preferred dining
locations. It is one of tho$e places that should be visited on a regular basis to
savor the variety of food on the men_u ... my rati08::iUPe(iQ(,"
M1c.luel Hunt, Whit's Hip n n1
• Re~taurant Critic
• Winner of SOuthetn California Re1taurant Writera Auoclationa
Iv er t ward
3180 AIRWAY, CO TA ME A
ON THE JOHN WAYNE AIRPORT RUNWAY • 546-9880
•
6 uLtE TIN BoARo
·~ ---- --=-------=------.
Play Therapy
Wo rkshop set -
Btginmng turd a> And for t~o succcs 1ve Satur"day1 there will· be a Pia>· Therap> Workshop for children from
noon to 2 p.rn. at the Parvin Centt>r for Developmental
Health at l s91 WcstcltfT Dnve. Suite 318, in the California
lst Ban~ 8u1ldinJ tn Newp0n Stach.
Through act ma out and movement. childrrn five and
up can remove the developmental blocks created by .u1~~sowf cd d~velopmcmal !.taao and conflicts 1n each ,.,..co their ufe.
Resrrvations are necessary and the seminar is
onaC?tnl so that pa111c1pants can stan any week and still
receive value. The a~mm1on as S2S per child for each workshop. For more information, call 645-6674.
Free workshop on divorce set
Frances Johan~n. financial ad\lsor w 1U present a
free workshop on .. Financial Planning During and After
the Divorce" at the \\omen's Op~nuniues Center. CC'
Irvine. 281 I Main St In tne on Frida)'. Pl 14. from I to
3p.m. The "orkshop will assist women wuh planning th~ finan~ial issues 1n their Ii\ es. There will be d1scuss1on.
quesuons and answers. For more mformauon. call
856-7128.
Bowers elates celebration
Bowers Museum. :!002 I\ Main St.. Santa Ana will
present its third annual La Jamaica celebration on
Sunday. Sept. I 6. from I I a.m. to 6 p.m. •
Music. dancing. traditional crafts and great food will
be fe~tured alonf with an cxh1bnion of contemporat)
paintings by Mexican master an1sts --
Adm1ss1on 1s SI for adults and 50 cents for children
for a full day of Mexican cultural events for all For more
1o.f<t11nauon1;at1 972-1900
Smoking clinic in Newport
The next Stop Smoking Clinic. sponsored b) the
Amen~an Cancer Soc1et). wall beain Monda). Sept 17. at
4030 Birch St .. Suite I 0 I. Newp0n Beach. The clJtsses "''" be held Monday and Thursda)' evenings. from 7 to 8:30
Funeral set
Thursday for
Emily Davis
Funeral ~f' 1cc~ "111 ~conducted
Thur!>da) for Emil~ \1 Da' 1s of
Costa ~1esa. "ho died Frida' a1
Be\.erl) Manor after a tong illness
She "as 86. 1 Mrs. Da,1 "ho "as born in Rice
Lake. Wis .. had ln.ed in Costa Mesa
for the past 2'"' 'ears 5he had been a
clerk at the Et 'r oro .\1r Statton and
was a memberofCos1a Me~a·s Senior
C'1t1zens' Club
She 1s sun 1 ved b) two sons -
Roger Da\.tS of Plano. Texas. and
Patnck Da" is of Prior Lake, Minn -
and three daughters -Maritn Bishop
of Costa Mesa. Jacqueline
Chnslet'tsetl ~ Vat~e" 1\4-t>on~
Rudolph of Rock' tile · Md .\lso
.SUf"\-1\. mg are 29 J.randch1ldrcn and
five ~at-grandchildren
Sef"\-1cesareschedulcd for9:30a.m.
al St John the Bapmt Catholic
Church in Costa Mesa Pm ate inter-
Olympic souvenir d~alei-s
still seeing lots ofgreen
• FromtM~P,...
Some Southern Callfornfan1
hav -QMn
blues, bu1 three maker• of Olym-
pie pins. ftage and bannera hav.
the green -• tn money,
Thr• week• after the end of
1he Summer Gamet, demand for
souvenlri remain• atrong, the
doesn't ewn mu• plna.
Preekfent u.c>n van der Wyk
aald the nrm, which m~es Otym-
ptc 1beMet1 Md tffoe, order
some ptna tor pubMC sale. but
.sold out and won't buy anymore.
Meado l rk
plane traffic
like Russian
roul~~e game
.
Charities giveri
torch run funds
From tbe Assoclatd Press "
More than SIU 9 m1lhon has occn distributed to tbc
benefic1a,-1e!I of the I 984 01~ mp1c Torch Rela}. the U>~
..\n&C'le Ol~mp1c Orpnwns Committee announeed
Tucsda' The Fam1l} 'i MC..\' S~c1al Ol~mp1cs. the Bo>s
Clubs of .\mC'nca and the Girts Clubs of Amenca "ere ahe
principal. benetic1anes of the 82-da). cross-count I') rela) ..
and rece1,ed ~of the funds ra1!1cd. the L".OOC
said ·
Ttr?'-rrma1nmg lund' wrtt k ~1'1r1but(°(j to elhtt
chan~1es specified b~ rtla) sponsors and the maJor
benthc1ane!I of the pr ram Imo t on -halfoflhc T-orch
Rela\ fund!> "'II remain in Southern tahfom1a
p.m . throuih Sept 27. ,
The Society requests a$ I 0 donation Pre-registrauon
1s required and can be completed bv calhn~ 752-8600
ment will folio"'
----------· firms say. "Our phones are ltlll ringing
•·Th11 pin thin~ ls driving ua
crazy," he taid . • We're thinking
of hiring 1 few more peo~ just to
handle the phones."
Pageentry 11 printing about
1,000 "9gl and banner• per
Week. doWn from 3,000 to 4,000
during the Games. he aald.
The national brt>akdown of torch rela\ fund!. as
announced b) tht> L..\OOC. 1s as follo~s: YMC.\.
S3.i>9.i, ... IJA6. Bo~!> Clubs S2,83 423.83. Girls Clu~. s Q9,914 I"'. SP«Jlll Ol~m{>IC'S, s~.31 7.995.25. other
chanuc, and undeMgnated funds. S.i"""0.306.9". interest
St>2Q.484 00 • Correction
CALENDAR
Off the hooks," aald Maureen
Matteson of Ooh La La Inc., the
City of Commerce 11«*\Me for·
Olympic pint.
A ~Ing lot aale thla la.bOr
Day holiday drew a packed crowd
to AAA Aag and Banner Manu-
ThC' grand total wu ·s 10,950.567.68
l nte~'' and other fund' will be d1stnbuted to the
pnnc1pal hcnctic 1an"' of the program. 11 ~as announced.
The total tor \ou1hern Caltfom1a 1 S4.34i,367.04.
W'ednesday,Sept.5
Peat. MaN1d .. \htchell and Com-
pan). which hosted a .,~ech b)' Rep.
Jack Kemp, R-Ne"' '\ ork. to the
tahfom1a lnde~ndent Producers
:4-ssoc1ation. wa'> 1n~correctly 1dent-
1fied in Saturday·., Dail)' ,Pilot as a
local brokerage company Actually.
Peat, Marwick. \.11tchell and Com-
pany with an office tn Ne"' port Beach
1s one of the natmn ' "b1 e1 ht"
"We're ttlll producing pine and
trying to get them ln10 retell
atorea," the aald, adding that
some retailers think demand wlU
continue through Christmas.
• facturlng Co. In Wea\ Los An-
gelee fbr bargains on everything
from T-shirts to banners -and
Of COUrM, pine. .
"lonF altc:r the 1984 01) mp1c Games are JUSt
mC"mont''> tht>T orch Reta) w11lcontinue toh,C'bttauscof
the }Ol!th 'port' program that 1l will gC'neT"lte," said
LA.00< Pre,1den1 Pl·tl"r V Uebcrro1h . "We hope the
bendic1an\•\ "111 do C'\Cf') thing po<,s1ble to ma,imtzC'
the\e fund<,'(' that\ h dJren v. ill .,.t1lt ht' lxnefiltlng into the
~I t ( cnluf'\ •·
• 7 p m . Oruae County Water Dl1trlct Board of
Directors. 01stnct Headquarters. l 0500 Ellis Ave .•
Fountain VaHcy.
• 7:30 .m .. Coa1t Commun.lty Colleae Dl1 trtct
Chambers. 11391 Ac~c1a Parkway.r
~ PoucE Loe
foot-t1fg_h 1tac1<1 of mell from
pin-seeker• come dally to
Pa eantr ·World Inc. of
Pasadena, and 1he company ..
"'1 wu fantastic," said Pr~
dent Howard Furst. "We had
h her-volume da than at ny
h3throom
Thl· t 984 r or\ h RC'la~ began in '\ew "t ork C'lly on
~ta' )'I and endC"d, l dn\., later at the O~ntnt; t eremonie~
• • •
• • • ~olic~ capture suspect
in Irvine liit-ruli crasli
\\ 1res to a 1966 Oldsmob1k parled in
the lot at Golden West Colic e. • • • .\ recrcauon 'eh1clc \\as broken
into in a storaae ~ard at 715:? C\atum
Dme and stole a gun ~alued at S50. .. ·-~-... .\ woman wa taken into eu tod'
tor allc&edl) shoplifuna S66 1n m1 •.
cellaneous clothina from the J.C.
Penne\ \tore at 7777 Edinger "c.-
.\ \to(l \1gn and P<''t \\('r't rt'poncd-
h upro ted •rom an in1e~ctton at
Wtl\On "'r ,•t and ( 30\ on Dr!\ t'
around : ·I am lut'\(1:1\ \''It·
ne-1~ ~ 'h'-" ~"' thrt'(' ad,,k "'en1 oo'' ~aming the· '-0 sign • • • S.'00 tool Ix'' wa rt'portt"d stOIC"n
from a garage in thC" 400 block ot Ha'
\maroon I(). peed Rak1gh bicycle
"a' '1olch Tucsda) tram a 'hopp1n1 •t"Oter at 14330 Cuher Dml." The
lo v, \\3\ e umat~ ~t"C't'n ,0 nd
~~00 ....
\ re:.1dent of lX-C"r Spnng tolC:i
police: omt'one bro~t' into h" ga
~tonda~ momma and 'tok tool
"onh S400.
Irvine police have. arrested a Santa
Ana man who alleaedly fled from the
scene ofa local uuury traffic accident
in which he was involved.
Police said the accident occurred at
about I a m. Saturday when a
motorcycle dnvcn by Patricia J.
Thoma . 23. of Hunt1naton Beach
I
Lapila Beach .
Polict art scarchin_t for a v.h1te
male 1uspect an h11 20., v.canna a ycllo~ T-sh1n, '*ho reponcdl) was
brand1 hlnJ 1 club u a weapon earl)
th11 mom1n1 in the 300 block of
uth Cbast H1Jhwav. . . ' Golf equipment onh S6SO was
"poncd 11olcn from a car parked ln
the I~ block or South Coa t
Hi&)\ 'IY late Tuesday n aht. • • • M1 nan~9u1 •tcm1 onh •n esu·
mated S 1,000 v.trc rtponcd 1tolcn
from a vehicle parked ln the 600 block
of uth Coast Hi&h"i> Tucsd >
m&ht. • •• 1n&on umbcri. 22. and
-
was struck by a dark-colored, larac
sedan as she turned throuah the
intersection of Red Hill Avenue and
Main Street. The driver of the car
fled, valice said.
Usina information provided by
witnesses. Irvine offficcrt found the
car and driver m Santa Ana at about
--
6: IS a m aturda)' Juan Bermudez.
18. "-1\ arrc ted on susp1c1on of
felony hit and run and wu· placed
Orange Count~ J11I. pchce u1d
" The motorqde dnvcr. Thomas. 1
bCina treated for a broken ja" and
facial cuts received 1n the ac:ciden1, ...
• l • Bural•~ stoic >900 1n toots and SSSO tn \now kis from a res1denct 1n
~ 60001>tocl of Lauttlhurst. ,_ .. Thic"e~ \tole 125 from a cash 'If:
at the Union 76 !>tr' tct' tation. 6502
Ed1naer \C • • • Intrude~ \hp~d into a a tts1den.:c
1n the 5000 blocl of Heil ~Hnue
through an unlocled ~room ""'n·
dow and took $31 0 1n Je"Clf\ • • • • meonc Jimmied a \\1nd~ at the
rear of an apanment 1n the OOOblCKI.:
of Kona Om e and "ole a v.'lllet
con1.ain1 a S 100 b II
..
. -"'
trC'Ct bet\\ecn ~ a m ttnl1 ' '0 pm Tu~~a). The aaragt" door "a' cl11~d
and there "err no .. 1gns OI llir\ c·d
C'nll'). • • • An aswr:tment \)f P<)llt'd pl:lnt.,
~C'rt broken earh l uC"~a~ morning
at a hl)mt' 1n th<' .'00 hhxk of B3\
trttt 1i1.h1le resident' \kpt \n C\ti·
mated StOO 1i1.orth ol ponC'n "a'
brokt>n hctv.«n 10 ~O p.m Monda)
and 7· '0 a m T uc~a' 1 he rt\1dcnh
5aid tht'~ didn't hear n~thm,g
ll"Ylne
• • • ..\ r~1dC'nt the I 00 hlod; of
faplande f'\"ported T uC"'-<11) that
someont' broke into h1\ car. p r~ed in
a ~a ,rt and stole' \lt'T<.'O equipment
"on 350 • • • Thco"'nerof )111'' ran nub. a \hop
at 1790 Sk~p,:ark Rl vd . told pclice
ht "' hclp1n a cu 1omer '" the bac~ "'hen ~meone !.tok the stott'&
rcce1pa nd ht'r pc onal mone) from
drawer The tos 'I'-esumatcd '
$4 000
•
'
..
II
I
r
I
)
is
9
n
b t
l)
•
t
f ' a
I
' ~
t
t
I
' (
I •
J
I ~ •
..
affect me 128,0.00students robbed ·of 195,004
I .
toe.JD)' s 7.15011udcntutaycd home. In kod:ford. th state' ftttOnd·
The di met included Ne" stlc. la1gest d1stnct, a tn._c that has idled B> The A~soclate!d Pr~ll
South F:a)tUe and Tulpchocktn. J~.SOO students continued Tucsda\ Cl E\'l:'.LA 'J) _ 1 wo well...ir d· men "ho •'knew what the}· "
By Tlle .Asaocla~ Pf' 1 \\hale the school board considered a
J propo~al from the. 1.836 tnling
Tc 'hers in Sin Ff.nc1sco nd tcacher1. •
Indiana chose tc11.tboo'-s o'er packet In Ch1ca10. melhataon eflbns rnn-~1gns, but a new walkout began in unucd l uesda) wh1k t~e cit}· ..
llHno1s toda) a~ more than 8.900 24. 700 teacher\ rep0rteJ tor 11u.·p·
educator were on strike in \C\len arauon scs-.1ons 1 ht') ha,~·a~t'cd to
\tales. aficchna about 128.000 stu-work until No'· I, <lcspnc-thl·
• den1' Cll.pirauon of the old contract. lhl'
Mt'anwhile. ·at lca~t I l !>C'hool~ 1n catv' 400 000 students "'ere to ·~·port
New Je~y dad not open as scheduled for· classc' todar.
"alkout by S6 tciachcr~ in Rhode "hilc the school bo:ud con ide..00 i dorna" robbcJ 1 Wcllll Fargocouner otS 195,000as he" ht'elcd,tht lootthro
1,1and's 960· tudent E\ctcr·Wt"St propo I from the I ,U6 s1r1k1na an undi:rground p;maae"av from 1 ho\pltal to a ban~ bran~h 1n th~ basem'
Cir('('nw1ch d1smct cntrred ats Ii Oh teacher authoriMc ~uud. Witnes~c • id the t"o mi:n drcsst'd m businc -. su1tS1, c n d~y tOday. upcorior C'oun JuJac In Chicago. m~d1ation cffons con-throush 1 door at the c le.' eland Clinic.that can onl) be opened b) ~unchan ~Jected the statt education com· • unued iucsday wlfile 1hc ritr's a s~·dal code known b) omc cmplo~ecs. The holdup oc~urn:d I Ut'
rt11'isioncr's request Tut'~dA) to force 24.700 \eacht'r rcportel.! fot prep-moming , the mcs'it.nl'er w~-. pushana a cart. t~rouah an undc:raro1
the · choo~ Commm~ to pa) a 1 aratson ~uion, The) have aiµ-ttd to n•s ge-...ay to an Am_criTru~l c 0, bran<:h 1n the ba ~ment.
toda) bccau!i<' asbcstosremoval work In Poplar Ciro' c. 1n northern
had not been completed. the state'\ llhno1s.classe began for966studcnh
education department 5a1d. T ueMia}. a da) after .S8 teai.:hcr\ 'oted
percent wa&c; mcrc3se reached under work unul Nov. 1. desprtt' the ~
arbitration la)t )Car. expiration of the old contract. fhc
One of the latest stnkcs bt!gan in to accept a chool board offer . ubur~n East St Louis. Ill .. \\<hen Teacher in Grand Raprd!>. Mich •
about 140 teache~ at the Bethalto struck Tue~da,. then tailed to real'h a
"hool system failed to show up for contract agrceml'nl during lour hours
work this mornina because of a of bargaining that brole ofl 11>da)
contract dispute, Superintendent Supennttndent Robert J. fcrrara
Don .Simpson said Classes for the said classes for :\4,000 students "ould
district's 3,000 students were be held despite the "'~llout h) 1.800
canceled. -.teachers No ne" talks wcr~ '>Chcd-
An 8-da)-old strike in Selma. Ind uled. .
ended tl'las morning when 85 teacher':I .\ o,tnlc b\ ~00 t<.·al·hcr\ an lhl'
nt the Labert)·Pe~ School Corp 4 300-studl."nt fal·anaha dmnd 111
returned to classrooms after appro' -Michigan t"ndcd Tul''lo<la}. but '1nl<'~
in~ a new contract. The pact included b) 650 teacher'.> continued an c1ght
nuses of 3 percent. 7 percent and 8 other school d1!itnctl> \en 1ng mon·
percent. over the life of the 3-'+ear than 15.000 '>tudents.
contract, said Steve Stewart, ·the . In >I.le ..... Jerse'. ~30 member\ of the:
teachers' chief negotiator. The dis-C\omcrv1l1e ·Federated Teachcrl> \~
trict's 1,400 student$. had been taught wc1auon struck T ue!lda~ an a d1!ipUll'
b> -substitute teachers during the "over wages and bcnl'fih t .... o Ja>"
sink( _ before classes for the ~<JOO ':ltudl·nt~
A settlement Tuesday JUSt 15111 were to &gm. a union offiual said
hours before the start of 'the school In add1t1on to the I I Ne ..... Jcr,<.''
year in San Francisco averted a stnke schools ~that did not open toda)
b~ 3,800 teachers. aJlowmgclasses for because of the a!ib\!stos problems.
6tOOO students toda)'. eight schools ..... ere a ..... aaung final
In Washinaton tate. the l77 city's400,000 tudent "'<'rt to 1epart
1eacher.1.at Longview approH~d a nc\\ for das e toda~.
contract to end a tnke that bcpn In Poplar Gro,e. in northern
1 hu"da). The 'ote mean tha1 lllinoi .classe bcpn for966 studenb cl~~ for the district·~ 7, I 00 stu· Tuesday. a Jay aflerSS tcachcrs voted d~nts "ould begin in two day • said to accept a school board offer.
Lone,iew Education $S0('1at1on Teachen. 1n Grand Rapids. Mrch ..
Prei.adent Re~ Davi\. struck Tue'May, then failed to reach a
In Louisiana. fewer than 100 ol contract grcement dutins four hours
6.200 student in St John the Bapti t of baraainina that broke off toda}.
Pansh attended Jhe ~tart of clusc Superintendent Robert J ... Fcmra
Tuesda) as ~ome 350 tcachm. rt· \lid clas~s for 34.000 st4dcnis·would
matnt'd on strike. ~1d .f'e~sc S~rs. be held despite th~ walkout by I .800
c\ccutl\ e director of the Louisiana teachers. No new talks were sched-
\'.>\0<:1at1on of Educators. About 700 uled.
cmplo~ees .!>truck a week ago over A stnl..c b) 200 teachers 10 the
demands lor a raise and union 4.300.student Escanaba district 1n
rl'cognation. ,..._ Michigan ended Tuesday.
Black parents boycott
Mount Vernon. schools
Edwards' wife. Rosvln. said, "We
want children to have role models .•
Karen Watts-Cave. coordinator of
UAW reaches accord with GM and Ford
DETROIT -Thi.' Unitl·d ..\\flO Worke~ union ~a\ reached trnui·
acconb on l(){'al i ue at 43 of 235 bargaanang u~11s at Genernl Motor:. C'c
and Ford Motor Co .. ;ind both sides -.oiccd 0~1m1sm that national agrecm,
could he reached "-llhout a ~tnke. The unaot\ 1 uesda> "1nnoun\;cd that t~
"-Crt tentatl\C aarecmcnts at 31 of the u.naon·,.. 1'47 tmW''"nf unit at GM
Ford. -.hc:rt thc-un,on rcprc cnts. 115.000 wor~ers. I. loca aa.rctmcnts
been rcat"hcd at a&..barpm1n& unit~ a~·of Tuesda). Contracb "'1th the UA V
both automaker np1rc ept. 14
Army react•vates Green-Beret.unit
FORT LEWIS. Wa~h -The A~my has reacuvated i~s lim ~.'retn B
unn !ii nee 1hc Vietnam War. a) mg that " o\lel t'-pan~1on1 m I\ ma~
special forces train inf. more important than ever "Once apan tlm nallon Ii
itself an need of vou. · MaJ .. Gcn. Lerov N ~uddath. commander of I Spe O~ra1ions Com.mand at Fon Bragg NC said at a cercmon) fuesda) at f
LcM~. where the unit y,1ll tra1n.
Vanderbilt son, companion fe~red dead
NEW YORK -Search efTom forthe son of racehorse owner and brec
Alfred C... Vanderbilt and ha'I companion -both c~pert mountain ch.mber
have been hampered by heavy snow on Mount Robson an Bnush Colum
Nicholas Vanderbilt. 25. of Austin. 'f.eus. and Franca Clenh.111. 29 Berkele~. ( ahf.. were last seen Aus. 22. one da} after the} be~n their: ascc~
Mount Robson in western Canada. according 10 Vanderbilt'> fam1I} an •
York The) "'ere repancd massing Aug . .:?5 l.;4\der the 6 percent pay hike inspections on removal work and
contained an the new contract. the top may not have opc:ned. Staie Educa-
ma,.1mum San 'franc1sco teache(s uon Ocpartmentspakes ..... oman L-.nn
salary will go from $31.800 to Price said. She could not dt'term1ne
$32. 708 The average teacher will the status of another 12 school'> that
y,.ork 20 minutes more each da) and had been awaiting final apprchal for
three days lo nger. remo' al of the cant:er-causa n~
\10LNTVERNON N.Y (AP)-
\ black bo}~Ott of Mount Vernon
public-'ichools. aimed at forcing the
haring ol more blade teachers and
administrators. began today as about
thrcl' dozen ch ildren showed up at
on(' of four '"alternata\.C" scKool'>
theboycott'sa11ernativeschoo1s.sa1d Man kills wife with a.-in front of son about 100 volunteers intend to keep ..-
Elsewhere. stnkes ..... ere being con-substance.
ducted 1n M1ch1gan. New York. New In "lew York, freshman ':ltudents
Jerse) Penns~ I\. anaa. Louisiana and ..... ere asked to shoYr up for orientation
Rhode Island today at St. John's PrcparatOI)
Jlhnoa'i had the largest number of School m Q1,.1ccns despite J y,.alkout
teachers refusing to work -5.286 b} 104 lay teachers 1ha1 began
people serving more than 60.800 Tuescla} h left onlv eight relag1ou'>
'>IUdents an nine d1stncts In suburban teachers on staff at" 1hc 2 JOO-pupil
Chicago. 110 teachers an the Kildeer-Catholic ~hool. al.cording tu H•m)
Countr.sade School District 96 Kranepool. president of thl· La>
walked ofT their Jobs Tuesday. dis--Faculty Assoc1at1on
rupungdassesfor l.800studentswho Regular classes at ~t John\ an:
had attended two full days last week. scheduled to began Monda~.
In Rockfotd, the state's second-More than 440 stnkang tcachcr'i 1n
largest d1stnct. a stnke that has idled three Penns}lvan1a school dastmt<.
29.500 students continued Tuesda> planned to walk pKket lanes again
Paruc1pa11ng parents planned to
keC'p their children home for the da}
or hrang their children to the church-
run Grace Leaming Center or three
other church centers to protest the
fact tha1 nearl} three-quartcrl> of
Mount Vernon's students are black
but most teachers and administrators
arc .,.,hill'
.. 1 he popula11on an Mount Vernon
1$ bla(k and the schooli:. arc run b-.
( auca!itans." !>aid Yuhanna Edward~.
who!>e 8-)'car·old daughter was ~lay
ing home today ··The i:.chool sy~tem
1~ run well. but there a'i no s~mpath)
to hmng black people··
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O ver S5.S Billion in A' to.• More rhan llO offi< throu14hout Californ1.1
J
the so-called "freedom schools" open
"as Iona as ll takes."
··we arc looking for a public
promise." of more blacl teachers and
administrators. she said.
Volunteers include retired
teachers. who submitted old le!ison
plans~ parents and chuTch workers.
Ms. Watts-Ca'e said. Margaret Jackson was ..ending her
I '.!·year-old son. Lance. 10 the altema·
11ve school because "hl· needs educa-
tion w11h black people "
\NN ARBOR, ~Heh . -A man "never sho ..... ed an} emouon" afte1
hacked his "'IC wuh an a' an front of their l~-year-old sonf'then fatal!} sir
the screamins woman a~an before two stunned paltce officers COlfld re
auth'ontaes said. Township pahce Sgt. .\nthon} La1arsk1 said he and has pan
y, 1tnesscd the attack on Virginia Abrahams as the} am' ed at the sc
Tuesda,Y nag,ht. "I got out of m) car and t.he ,·1ct1m was lying on the grou
screaming, blood was st.reaming do"'n her face and the suspect wa':I stanc
O\ er hcrw11h th•~ y,.edge," Latar..k1 ..aad. ··He raised this "ood ax O\cr hash
and hit her ... she was turning awa} and that's wh) at hit ht·r an the nght rea
the head." The woman was pronounced dead arthe scene.
i CALIFORNIA Mrs. Jack!lon said i.he would send
him to the alternata\.e school for at
least this week. but added. ··He need~ Supervisors oppose Jarvis initiative has educauon Has ecjucauon is what
I'm fighting for"
Lance ~1d he y,.as unhapp) about
not going to public school
"We need an education af ..... e want
to be something when ..... e gro.,.,. up:·
he said
The leader of thl' bO\COll Ste\ en
Horton of the group \Oil~ of thl'
Ell'ctorate. said Tuc!i<ia) 11 ..... ould not
matter ho"' man) th1ldren sta~ out ol
class toda\ becauSl' both the black
and whatc ·comm unit) kno.,., .. things
ha\t: to chan~e:·
.. The officials of the schoob here
have s~s1emat1call } and h1stonlall~
<ihut blatks ou1:· Honon 'Said. "We
hope toi:.ho"' thl' cummunll) ''fed up
w11h the "'a}' things are··
OI the d1str1ct''i 10.000 students 71
percent are black Among ihe .facult~.
133 of 700 teachers and eight of 44
administrators are black.
School Superintendent Dr. Wi l-
ham Prattella said Honon's groacp
had broken off negotaauons with tlie
district although the d1stnct had
offered several proposals. He would
not detail tho~ propasals.
LO l\NGELES -In a rare agreement between rnnscrvatavc!>
lab\!ral~. the count} Boaud of upen 1sors voted 5-0 to oppose Propas1t1on
the tax-cuttani 1nat1atr' con the November ballot. Board members claimed
anitaa11vc y,h1ch "'hackcd b} tu crusader Howard Jan 1s would reduce le
government control b~ forcing 11 to rel) mon: hca\ 1ly ·On <;tatc fut
Propo~auon J6 .... ould refund an csumated $1 7 billion in propcn) 1a
stal\:"' ldt· and mah· 11 harder lor local go' ernments 10 create new fee'i
scntces.
Wrong baby brings $29,299 settlement
\.\' FR.\~( I~( 0 -Theda} after Dee .\nn Pianka 18. g;ive birth t
'ion ~hc a<,~cd the ho<,p11al staff wh) her babfs personalat} ~emed to h
changed .\ft<.•r twel'e hours o[nursang.. cuddling and holding the ne.,., born.
d1'><'0' ercd 11 wa., the "rong bab~ and that her son. C hn!itopher had hel'n ~
homl· \\llh :rnotht•r couple Tht" San Franosco woman was awarded a S29
~ttkment. her attorne) ( onrad ( orbcn. ~•d Tucsda}
Border patrol manpower boosted
S..\N YSIDRO -lmm1grauon official!. say U.S. Border Patrol moral
on 1 hl' ri'>l.' an the wake of the announcement that its staff 1s recea\ ang a
percent boost an manpower Alan Eliason. chief patrol agen t for the Chula V
Sector of the Border Patrol. Tue')da) announced the add1t1on of 436 pa
agent!> an the 'iouthwe,t neXl year. an a'l(1on he hopes wall result an more am
of those who aoss illegally an to the llniled States. Officials sa\ h<Nf of th
who If) .trc able to lOmplcte the JOUmc}.
bu·;~::;: as~~a~~~~,oh!~} t31~~~~~·r~ay Area gay bathhouses facing shutdo115
Prattella said. ~ ~AN FR .\N( I')( O ( A.P)-Some 60 ph)s1c1ans from the Pac a fie Med
Black parents "ho brought their Center arl' 1>tlltton1ng Mayor Dianne Feinstein to shut down San Franc1sc
1..h1ldrcn to the pubht Washington gay bathhousel> an order to slow the spread of .\IDS. The doctors inch
Elementary School. down the block spec1ahsts an cancer research; '>i>-dcpanmcnt chiefs and ome !lem1-reti
from Grace Learning ~enter. said the ph~~acaan~ . .\Jl)I) -acquired immune delic1en9 S)ndrome -destro)s
boycott was disorganized and the} body's immunes) stem and often ends in death. The bathhouse'I art.• a\socaa
feared repercus<iaons 1ftheir children .... uh multiple. indi~nmanate \e>.ual contact were absent
"I don't thank the boycott 1s the ans~cr .. sa1<l -\hce Br.ant. "The LA celebrates 203rd birthday
bo)co11 ,.., onl~ hurung thr kids:·
Vandals
make lake
of s rup
PHOE NI\ VILLI.!. Pa. <At'} -
\\orkrnen ~1th SUC'llOn hO'iC'i toda~
~gan dcanmg·up a .iQO.C)()()..gallnn
··talc of com '>) rup"' uc.ited .,., hen
'andals emptied 28 tank ca~ at a
railroad s1din1-
The focu of today's cleanup w:i~
the 'l~rup that .,pilled ant<! a lot
OC10n&tng IO T'hOCnl ilccl ( 0., S:J.td.
Thomas Flf.lnag.on, prci.adcnt of
Amencan Sweetener Inc. of Fra1cr.
The ~st has been dammed up
hct~cen railroad racks and will be
cleaned up in the next t"o day.s. he
~aad.
Phocn1x,1llC' pahcc Sg1 Raymond
Mattis ~id he had the names ot
~veral suspect$, but · a pohcc
pakc~woman ~id today there ha\c
hcen no arre'il<i ancc the "andalism
wa'I rrponcd Monda\ night.
'"h was a ma '11\C ·spill. JU'it hkc a
lakt' of torn S)rup.' Slld Joseph
Moore. foreman nf the Phoenix' 1lle
Fnend hip t 1~ J:ompan\. ·
Michelle Anutacao, a' pohC'C dis·
patcher \!oho wa'I on dut\ 14'hen thc
pill WH reponrd at 1hc site 15 mile~
wr t of Ph1ladclplua. ad It took
tibout 10 minute to o~n ca h ol th~
28 \Al\C'
She aid the c umutltJ 'aluc of 1hr
f\tlled yrup. O\A.nrd _hy Amcnt':in
~"ettcncr • wa SSOO.CXX>
J&J pall "ice -and uprltcs of
Norn to~n. "hKh was h1ndlin1 the
1n111al ('lc:tnup, wa!i pumping lh('
)NP froni th,c: tctl pl11n1 101 into
true I..•
flan gnn g1d he wn t'' aluaun
hal.!\Jrom o1ht'r (Omp.1n1cc, to per·
form the "''t ol thc opcrntton. "h11.h
he sard "ould l'I(' m lool\ or 1 hu1 • d •
I OS.\ \i(,f.LLS < .\P) -.\bout the onl~ present gaveo lo' ·\ngde1, or
20lrd banhday was a rl'cord high I 00 degrees downtown, t} mg a 1955 rec
for the date ( onspal uously ab)ent Tuesday were the firework~. gi1rnt b1nh1
lake and other fcc..11' 1ucs that accompanied the city's 200th btrthda). Ma
Tom Bradley did ;.m;ept an Official Olympic Quilt made h\ nine rc\ident
the downtown Anaelus Plaza housing development.
WOR LD ~~--~~--. -
Soviet deputy ·premier dead
l:ffRLl "l -Leonid A Kostando'. a deput~ ~o,1et prenmr died•
lieaffiltla~k tQday wh1k \lhlttng Elm Germans . the oflicaal last C1erman n
agent") .\DN aid k..osta.ndo .. ~ 68. one of 10 o .. 1et dcput)' pnme m1n1ners.
a member of the ~\ICI Communi\t Part) Central Comm1tll-c. had been c
tour of Ea\t German)' after IC'ading the Soviet delegation to the annual Lc11
trade t:ur dunng the ..... cekcnd. thc-agcnq ~id in a dispatch from Berlin.
Typhoon Ike heads for Vietnam
8 \ "IGKOK Thailand -Typhoon Ike, which" killed more than
~-0plund-01d 1.1.1dc prt'edd mqc-tn the PhihppiTTC"S. swmedO\'CTthr ( hlr
1-.land of Haman toda), the Thai Mcteoroloaical Ocpanmcnt \aid. ·
dcpanment ~aid the lyphoon was expected 10 hit Vietnam'scnpllal of Hano
Thursdav. the department 'aid. The typhoon "as mID1na north"cst fr
lfain:in into tht' (1ulf of Ton km at 15 mph. and the storm., center wu pac~
winds up to JOO mph .....
Three killed ln Chile demonstration
c; \NTlACiO . Chile -The govl'rnnacnt t"Oforccd a curfew todny an
capital ond dosed four uni vel'\1t1t''I aftC"r a Frc:1Kh pnc t. one of has I
pumh1oncr., and b 14·)icor-old ho~ were lulled m violent demonstrati
agninst military rule. More than 50 people were injured and 270 were arrc!
by not pohi;e 1 ucwa\ in the fir t oft\\O Ja)s of pli.lnflcd demon tratlon~.
most wade prcad anti'· o'crnmcnt proir"" an Chile in !.1'\ month
Soviet leader appears at ceremony
MOSCOW -S<1' 1et 1, ackr Kon'ltant1n U. Chtrnen~o t~y appcare•
b Kremlin ccrcmon} honoong thr\:C Co\mon:iuts the official \Crnm
mt>d1a s:iad . The 72-)car-old pre 1dcnt had been ab~nt lrom public: vie" 'St
Jul). prompung r.ccul 11un ubout h1'I health. R d10 Mo o~ and the n u~cnq h'IC.. 1d (. hcrnl'n~o 81'C medals m co monaut~ S\ctlana 'ih~a \l:id1m1rD1banibc~o\11ndl m nlkinhonorolth 1rSo)u1T·12m1 o
Jul).
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HI GO ( P) -Prt'$1dcnt Re: ~n 1d tod ) th t # men •
• "hcd m uc heydn)" 1 p in nd
thllt th'" n tron 1i. in the mad t of n
rebirth of th tr dnional value\ he
Iona ha a 'tx'Btcd
In rem.irk$ toe conference on the
fu\urc spon orcd by the Economic
Club of Chicago, Rea$8n made no
• mention of the religion mue he
~ought to put to rest 1 ue$da) ..
He concentrated in~tead1 on /1
"bounty of new opportunities" in
space and tcchnlogy and called for
"doing better" 1n tryina to overcome raw.m and bigotry.
And he lauded what he said is a
I
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1"
If\ t !
,..__
.,..
Mixing .religion
with politics ·
misleads public
\\ .\.~Hl~GTO~ -This summer
I read Gore Vidal's .. Lineoln .. ._
more of an es~a\. realh. than a novel.
Vidal stacls · to the facts about
.\brabam · Lincoln. rncorporatang
actual dialo1ue taken from hastonc
journals to create a Lincoln "ho.
Republican though he \\as. "ould
have been booted out of the GOP
convention. B) Ronald Reagan's
SU1ndards, Honest .\be was insut1i-
c1ently religious.
In fact. Lincoln had an a'.ers100 to
even mentioning the Almtght} an his
s~echesand when on occasion he dad
so. members of his Cabinet -some
of whom were deep!) religious -
were both stunned and grateful
I am hard!> a Lincoln scholar and '° I can not tell you 1f Ltncoln was a rc~gious ske{>t•c or whether he held to
ththow.qua1nt view that.religion as a
deeply personal matter. much too
serious and consequential to be
abl.ajed for pohllcal reasons He ~opuzed. after all, that both the
SOuth and the North thought the) had
Goo on their side and that the Bible
itself was used b:. both abohuon1sts
and. sla,eholders to JUStaf> their
confl1cung posmons.
Contrast Lincoln \\Ith the current
occupant of the Whne House. RonaJd
Reagan. Here is a man "ho punctu-
ates man> of his speeches wnh
references to the dem "ho has
reduced ham to the levefof a Cabinet
officer. made ham a cheerleader for
the GOP and considers Him a
contributor to his re-elec11on effort.
In the person of Sen. Paul Laxalt. the
pre ident has appealed to fundamen-
talist ministers to aid his campaign.
even thoUih he must kno"' that 1fthe
ministers got their wa> La).alt's state
of Nevada. best known for gambling
and d1,orce. v.ould re' ert to desert.
I don't kno\\ what Lincoln would
ha'c thought of all this. I guess he
v.ould ha'e been appalled But the
h1stoncal eitample of Lincoln sug-
gests that a pohucal leader's rehg1os1-
l\. espcc1allv one worn on the slee' e.
tells )OU absolute!) nothing about
htm. Lincoln for instance was clear-
1} loath to in"oke the dell) and
almost ne'er went to church ) et he
"as not onl' a great president but a
great man
On the other hand. J1mm\ Carter
whose rchg1ous comm1tmen1 was
abiolute was hardl:r a great president
and JUSt an ordinal) man. It hardl)
mattered to most people that Carter
was a ~ood Chnst1an when at the
same time the only thing zooming
toward hea' en was the prime rate In
suc'b straits, the) would ha'e
preferred Richard Nixon - a man
·wht>~ God as pragmatism. .
"the pomt 1s tha~ a person·s re·
hgiOUS commitment tells )'OU almost
L.M. Bovo
nothing abot.lt that person In fact
when at comes to \afeguarding Cl\ 11
liberties and ensunng progress!\ tt and
fair social polac1es. I would rather take
my chances with your average atheist
than. sa:r. the Rev Jem Falwell I
grant you he 1s religious. But 'SO. too as
the. Ayatollah. lt hardh matters 10 a
poor, devout!) Chnstian .\mencan
that the president -v.ho has made tus
hfe harder is also de,outh Chnsua-n
-or sa)s he as Religion is not "'hat
counts, polu1cs JS.
What's true for Reagan 1' true lor
all pol1t1c1ans. It hardl) matters to me
that Walter Mondale o;eems no" to
attend church wllh a 'engeanlc and
that Geraldine Ferraro doe~ the \ame.
.\nd ~e"' \ ork Gov Mano C uomo 1s
no more or no less nght m has poliucal
positions because he 1s a de\ out man.
There are othe~ who take contrar.
pos1t1ons on. \a) la~1tal pun1shmcn·1
and abortion who are equall~ de' out.
What matters -thC' onl> 1hins that
matters -are the political po\1t1nn<.
the\ take .\s the' sa\ 1n the -\rm'
the; can pra) on 1he1r· own tlml'. ·
But 1f )OU can read the mind of 1he
long-dead Lincoln. he recognized that
rehg1on can have a singular poliucal
impact.. ft can divide.
Lincoln was intent on un1tica11on
but tha1 should be the goal of all
pres1de!lts. When Reagan appeals tl1
rehi1on. he cues the one thing that
d1v1des us -that mall.l's us not
.\mencans. not e' l'n Republican\
and Democrats. but belie.' e-r!i in th1~
or that religion or ~ect It ~parate'>
belie' ers from non-behe' ers. Chnc;-
t1ans from Jews. the b0rn-once from
the born·t"ace and )Uggcsts 1ha1
some sort of religious consen\u\ lan
be reached at the poll~ - a sheer
1mposs1b1ltt~ 1n a mulu-cthn1c.
mult1-rehg1ous nat10n
The president charges ahl·ad an~
"a~ inJecllng religion "here 11 d0t''>
not belon~. excluding "hen he \hould
be 1nclud1ng. He has mad~ the pan~
of Lincoln into one that's in·
hospitable 10 lhe \Cr\ essence of
Lincoln himself. 1urn1'ng the dc1t\
into a part} hack That 1s the ult1ma1e
conceit. Ronald Reagan ma\ or ma)
not be a Chnst1an. but "hen 11 comes
to hum1lm this much 1~ lCrta1n H'{' 1s
no Lincoln
Ricbsrd Cobea Is a SJ ndleated
columnise.
Canaries really
*amed for dogs
\Y1ld dogs roamed those .\tlanuc
t)"'"ds. so "hen the chief of
\.U.untanaa \ailed up lo ~cc said
l4110es he promptl) named the bag
island "(anana" 1n alllmon to them.
( tntunes later. bird'> frum there ''ere
named 1n an lllu .. 1on to island name
i.,Q \OU see. tananes were named alter d\J~ ..
--'-'*i.4>rm.•~ llP·I nel.1..1,fld~f -
'Thl' Californian \1onllrt'\ .\i.Jgu-;1
I i.tt1 -wa~ pnn1ed on c1gare11e
riJX'r a,. ..
In .\rhngton Ill . -.1udent'> can be
ri{led lrom S5 to S~<X.l 1<1r .. kipping
~chnool
')nu can l'numerau.· tht sland'> in
1hi.· Philippines tf~ou can count up 10
7.;.!\)0
~
Q ll\ougoonemile1nonem1nute. ~I.I ~econds. how fast must you go a
~ccond mile to a\erage 60 mph for the
t•nt1rc trip'1
\ ' MX> mph
<) \\hat do hu11cr01e'
ullla' 1nlc1 that we can't~""
A Esther It's the onh one an which
there 1s no mention ofC;od. anc1den-
tall}
The dtflerence between Don
\.fered1th. Fran!>. Gafford and Ho"ard
Cosell as sportscasters. goes like this:
\.1ered1th thro"'s v.h1ppcd cream on
the manure pile Gafford thrO\\.S
manure "'here it belongs -on the
manure pile. Cosell thro"'s manun.:-on th~~h11'P'd-creom J11.I~.
To an) whites who proclaim ''1th
pnde that their ancestors came O\Cr
on the Mayflov.er, please report that a
'lhtpload of '20 black!> showed up at
Jamestown. -Va .. a vear before thl'
Mayflower P1lgn mo; landed in 'ie\I.
England
\ <lornchod > 11111 nd uu I I um ho
.\ \\ 1ng marl..' 10 1dent1f~ male\ war. ~"'ahol~ for .. d111.~I ••
.1od female., Pc1al murk\ to 1dent1I~-
• ~,e,1alpollen\ r Halftheumtx'rlUt"orld"lliC \llll
' 1!> burned for heat
() \\ hach book ot ·in" Old Tr~1a-
rncnt ~u m1~\lng troni th Dead ea L \1. Bo•d I• •
..croll\" c-olumallt. ·
SJ nd/tl lrd
ORANGE COAST H. L. 8chwert1 Ill
Daily PilDI i. ""' l!'lt• I
''•nk Zlnl
'•'• AQ !'\Q (QI
cr,1g lh•ff
PO'I• f.Cl I
o .• , ....... G'OYP lr"l•CIQO II\( ,,,.~
~~ ,;tR,(P/_
Ed Me.tse's Qu~tianatie
f inanc.ial deruinqs should warrant an inve5t1ga.tion.
Uj a special pr05ec~r .
The a~nce cf nnpro pri~~ dcarfy maKes him
unfit to be atwrney
general of the
United Statt.s
From first to last,
the Games brought
lumps to the thrOat
r IH 01~ mp11;S ended JU~l 1n time.
\nothcr t\\-0 d&\S and f WOUid h&\e
hcl·n ~tmken ~llh a pulled grom
ffiU\l le (~e~. \\'Omen ha\IC &roan~.
wol '>hin \plants and terminal dc:-
h,drauon
"' c al\\'aH had a natural talent for
"-l·<:pana 1n ~motional \1tuat10M l'm
not 1alk1ng about funeral~. wedding"
and d1' orces I'm talking about the
"gh1 ot our nag and the \ound of the
~l:tr 'panaled Banner. That combina·
11on. "'en ru a Dodger or \ngel hall
ame <where the reud1t1on of our
national anthem 1s. at tamt~. barcl\
recoan11ahlel bnnas on tht \n1ffie) ·
The first tear wa\ shed when the
01) mp1e torch passcd 1he inter·
\Cctton C'lost to our hou~. Pacific
Cout H1gh"a' and C. rov.n Valle'
Parkv.a} The unashamed!) p:unotal"
cro"d chrcr1n1 the runner brousht a
lump to m> throat Mtcf"ard. r "'I
rrltc\;td II' aood to get lumps ond
tC":it out of the ~) ~tem earl) an the
prm~cdinas
Then \amc the spectacle of the
opcnana rrrl'mon1c~ The re\pon1o~ or
the \rowd to each count') ond 1t'
rl'prc cntnt1' ~' \.\ould \\Rrm the h~·urt
of a pol.tr twor OK I iol<l m)\C'lt, th1"
1u unlc-1n·a·lifct1mr opcru.~nt't'. I'm
tnt11IC'\l tn chokt up a httlC'. Nov. bn
__ ....._
Lincoln.~. would have a n bootedoutoftheGOPconventton. By
Ronald Reilgan · standards, Honest Abe was Insufficiently relJglous .
w uh the games.
I
I
The sight of our athletes v.hen t~e>
won ·a gold medal -standing \\.1th
1he11 hand ov.tr 1he11 hearts-. pride
und JOY (and an \X'Cas1onal tear) on
their face . watching our flag being
r:used and listening to our nauonal
anthem. did me in every ttmc
ANN
WELLS
J
I cncd when one of our athlete!> JU St
bartl)" missed gettm& 1 medal and
when< the)' ,howcd a clo~-up of the control bv Jhc:n -until the camera
proud faces of the .families of th' panned qround end showed that mix
athletes. of faces from the different countries.
I puddled up again when the The camaradenc was even more
part act pants from different l'ountncs c' 1dent Wher\ an Irishman shakes
'ihook hands or hugged and embraced hand'\ with an En&hshmnn and puts
each other. When the Asian\ ~>"'ed h1sann around h1uhouldcrs. you can
Jrac1ou\I) to 1hc1r opponents. the ~lievc 1n brothcrlines -and mir-
JUdges and the audience. I blinked acles.
back more tears. ,\s nearl) as I can calculate, I lo t 2
Through rcd·nmmcd e~e~ I watch-I /4 quart!I of te:lrs and u~d up. four
cd the ob" 1ou\ dehJbt of the coaches bo~cs of l15 ue'i Whippina back and
and other team membc"' when one of fonh throuah the kitchen. I made
their aroup did well. and the comton: more water stops than marathon
1nueiturc when one did not do well. racer. Joan Benoit. M> fluid output
!\nd v. ho could watch w 1&hout m1atit \IC been le shad we not won
sp11hn1 over. G1bnel1 ndcrson-s9 man) &olds
htt'Mi 1uiqenn1 into the Coh5eum • Do ~ou rc1li1e how min) times in
1n a 'ahan1 cffon t<l finish the 1ht last 1~ \\CCU our 011 \\'11 l'ltKd
marathon., Or Naroh Fairhall. the and thotar panaJcd Banner played?
parapleau: archer1 And the recovered When the commentator ta'c the total
,ancer pauent, Jeff 8l1tn1ck. rccc1•e core of aold medal for mcrka.
his aold medal for Greco-Roman \he)' W<'l"C .pl&) 1n. a the nauonal
wrcsthnf anthem in the back round. and Iv.a
I d1dn 1 Cf") 11 the tirt"11<lrk!i durtnJ blow1na m) no~ -qa1n. I C'ould
tht cloiiin1 rcremonics. or \\hen thl! have m1\\N couple. but I 1h1nk he
pJC'c~h1p came 10om1na 1n. I didn't said 83.
i.;I) \\hen 1he hrta~danccrt did v.hnt· Co/amn/11 ADD Wt/I• lh 1 to
C\ er the~ did I had m)' elf under U,Vna ri1ut/. l •
RIC HA D COH&IC columnllt . .
JACK
AMDERSON
Vesco
kidnap
.SCheiile
halted
Government wary
of what fugitive
could reveal ---..-----
.
Jul Aadtrun I• • •> dlc•IC'd
to/flruUf
'
Si
t •.
------______________________ ,~ ... ---...~~ ....... ----...---...--::"-------------------,------r
9
...
t OAJLV PllOT
COMPLETE NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTION
-.N e:w cons~ru<;tion spending edges up
Increase reverses last montl)'s drop,
but still below robus t earlier market
WASHINGTON (AP) -Spend·
ina on new conmuct1on edaed up O. 7
percent in July, rcversina a decline of
the previous month. the government
reported today.
Tbe Commerce Oepanment said
that total construction s~ndina rose
to a seasonally adjusicd annual rate of
Sl t l.4 billion in July follo-.ina a
decline of.0.S ~ent jn June .•
. .
The mca1er increase. however, was
far below I.he robust hikes of more
than 6 percent turned in durina the
first two monlhs of the year. An•lysts have &aid the coostruct1on industry
has been hurt by risina interest ratt•
with the weakness in recent months
symptomatic of a · slowina of the
overall econom)'.
Construction · of .sioatc-famit> t...... • •
. homes was down tor the second
straight month, falling 1.9 percent
from the June rate. ·
Spendma on apanmcnt butl<1inas
rose, ho-.cver. ch mbina 7.8 percent
after droppina 3.3 percent in June ..
Non-residential 8rivate construc-
tion was up uliiht .8perccntinJul)
to $77.4 million. calculated annually.
after fallini 2 percent the month before. The increase included pins in
industnal. office and other com-
mercial building.'
Public construction was do..'.n I
percent to an annuahzed total ofS~1
million following an inctt sc of 3 6
percent in Junt. ~ te and local
con trucuon remained essentially
unchanged but federal construct19n
decJined 9 pe~tnt. .
The total con trucuon fi urc v.as
up 14 4 percent from a )Cat' ago.
OurinJ the fint seven·month~ of the
)Car. S161.9 bilhon of nev. constnit:-
tion v.as put an place. a 20 peretl')t
increase o\Cr construction spending
for the fi 1'$t even months of l 983. . ..
• ' I
High-tech firms on growth fas t track in California
~ . . .
Cahfom1a's economy is cx'ccl-
leratinJ its shift to high-technology
activiucs according to a report in the
September issue of California Busi-
ness Magazine. · '
Jn its fifth-annual rankinJ of the
state's fastest arowina smaller com-
panies, hiah-tech firms arc more
numerous than ever -taki ng 62 out
of 100 positions. Of these, S2 com·
pan1ei focused their activities on
computer and..speciAlty products.
Meanwhile. traditional industries
slipped in the rankinas with only 20
finns among the hiah growth corpor-
ations -down from 33 last year.
The financial sector rebounded
somewhat on this year's lisi with nine
companies ranlced -up from six last
year.
The rankinas. which include com-
panies with 1983 revenues oflcss than
$300 million, arc based on net income
raowth in 1981 ·83.
Microventure plans
new Irvine office
Microvcnture. one of the nat1on's
leadana developers of microcomputer
software for the rcaJ estate trades, has
announced its move to larger offices
at 17782 Cowen, Irvine. _
In moving to Irvine from its former
offices at 21 11 Business Center Dr.,
Irvine. M1crovcnture more than
doubled 1ta available sq'uare footage
to over 16,000 square feet. The move
allows a consolidation under one roof
of all Microventure. operations, in-
cluding final product assembly and
shipping.
According to Ca1Jforn1a Business,
the state's I 0 fastest growing smaller
corporations are as follows:
Net Income:
Comfany Headquaners Ac1ivit> 1981-8
Percent Increase I. Siliconix Santa
Clara Electronic Products 6.839 per-
cent 2. Cipher Data .
Products San Diego Computer
Products 6. 781 percent 3. San Fran-
cisco
Bancorp San Francisco Thrift &.
Loan 6.355 percent 4 Chcm,Tromcs
El Cajon Jc-1 Engine Component<;
2.624 percent 5. Ashton, Tate Culver
City Computer Software 2.578 per-
cent 6. Homestead
Financial Burltngame Savinas &
Loan 2.540 percent 7. Home Health
Care of Amer. Santa Ana Mechcal
Services 2.506 percent 8. Act1v1S1on Mountain View Video Game Soft-
ware 2,478 percent 9. Adac
Labora1ones Sunnyvale Medical
u1<>anost1cs 2.085 percent 10. Con-
vergent ·
Technologies Santa Clara Com-
puter Systems I 818 percent •
Impact Images moves t o Santa Ana
Impact _lmaJeS. Inc .. of Newpon providing_ new town 1nformauon
Beach, an mtenor design firm special-center dcs1ans.
izina in ~s office and information
centers for the home boildmg indus-
try, has relocated to 170 I E. Edinger
Ave. Suite A3. Santa Ana.
I#
According to president. Roger
Holloway, the two-year old company
has become a national leader in
l ~PS AND DowNs
NEW YORK CAP) -The following flsl •hows lht Over-the·Counttr stocks end werrants thet have gone U9 on
"
A
· 1983
l
• New Condo Fourplex
• Exclusive Anaheim Community
• Fully &..osed, Premium Ram
• S.Cure, Gated Community
• Hardly BelievGble Finandng
DIRECT PURCHASI FROM PRINCIPAL
(714) 57-0931 (9·5 Weekdays)
• ~-·114/972-1270 .•. • I
SALES & LEASING ALL MAKES
one
. 1§T Open your account today. Call th toll-free Financial Line now: 1-80Q-272-9000 . .
90DAYTERM 6MONTHTERM
IZ.51%_ II -BJ~ IZ.15%· IZ.0&"
• • """"' \ iftd • C b te
On
,the
, •
t ,
That'sanaptde cription.Ofboth bu in
bu il1 p opl along th Orang Coast. Tok
wh r ompani ar going nd hich p opl
hem t th r .Ju t wat h ·er dtt J.,in · v
Bu lonofyourn w DailJ Piliit
-
t -
I WHAT NYSE Orn ~~~ -~-~-~~=c-~-----
, NYSE lcADERS
l--~~ ----- -. . .
NEW YORI< tAPl -T,,. followlno Hsi shows the New York Stock· Excn."9• :.ate)Qs elld werrants rn.t nav& oone up the most Jnd oown rne most be"4 on percent of cNnO-rt9ardlen of volume for WtdMsday. No ~urlllH tradino bek>w 12 are Ind·
·vded. NII and e>ercentaot CtlaMfl •reJhe dl.,.,enc• between the orevl0u$ clcn nv
price alld Wtdn~'l ? p.m. Ptk•.
Na mt_ Last Ch<! Pct
l ~0~~~7Jpf •1:: s~ H~ la 8 S tn1 rfsl Ol't ~ UP 7 . • 5 AMF Inc I ~ 1 Up
;
A~.0.---1.Sk ~-~O
Owenslll · •~,,,_ + 2'~" D Trlco '• D Boise Cased • '• t UP O ~•r1Pir 3 ~ Uo l In(,. An'I st.-e • D j ac.fRn Pl '°' ~ H0 omeOePOt 16 ~ UP
C>neida 19'-'lt Uo
Am8dctl 'ill 2~ Uo
In.Air pfC 1 -p ~SHVF I/• ~t Up
anlrvPrici. ~''2 + Ye 8 p
A Inc dof 14 VJ P ~P'Ji. 2 50Pr 1 l'll + ~ ~D
APCO ~ 2 "• + ,h Uo mdrefnl I UP evcoOS lh-:. t l Uo • Zaoale Co ~ + 'ti Uo S Cenvilllnv 20~ + ~ UP DOWNS Na Me
j lt!llHarv wt MlulonlM Apold Mag
• IUlnl Co 5 CCX Corp 6 Manhall~OI 7 CnPw 2.23or
'
HRTtnd n Mc1.ean wt Marafllz l Intl Harv
12 Southland t3 RunT09S t• tn11,...rv ofO IJ,~, II R0111nCom o Cook Unit 20 lnspirlhc; 21 MarkClrl
n Ramadl Inn~ Tacom oat MeHO sh n 1 Unit lllum
Las!• _c'i.
10:\li -I 10 -... 17~ -1~
6 -"'> 161.0 -I m9~= ~ -~ -~-
29\'i -'. 16 -
2•1• -h 19 -I ,~-::. 1 ~ m .. -2''• -"' t"' -~ 1 ~·....:.. ~ -~ ·~-'• 2li -11tt
12 ---
WHAT AMEX DID
------=---~ -_-__ - -
NEW YORI< (AP) Seo . S
: AM EX LEADERS I ' tt • • • • •
GoLo QuoTES
'"~----==---~ =-~ -----
METALS Quo H s
L--=----=----=-~ --
a11d
ptrack of
r h lpin
ryday in th
,
• ·' •
aepe~t patt.e·rns
from wal·l·towall
Accessories sustain
. theme and create
mood ot daily llvln
SuccCssful decorating takes rilore
th•n 1)8nache and a Jplash of color
here and th . The key is coord1·
nation. pullitl,g all clements together
harmoniously.
That's part of the dccoratin&
philosophy of Sandy Santmier, vice
president of crea1ive services and
national decorating consultant for
Wallpapers to Go. . yo\Jrperspflalityand 1hc wa> )Ou lrvc.
Decorating begins by doing some ·A~ you 'Conserva11vc, or a llt1le
cartful planning ·and getting the . flamboyant? Is your home fOrmal or
answers to a few IX'nincnt questions contemporary? Do you "'tntcrtain
from specialists at the chain's 83 freqµcntly? Art there children 11
store5 (Jiat rtttn1ly added bath sho'1'$. homo? . .
kitchen cQOrcJina1es , and window , All these questions shoukl prq:vo~e
fashions. thought and hcJp focus on wha1·w1ll.
Sant1]11er suggests factol'l 10· be make you most comfort.ible and be
ctfhsidcrcd include 1hc si1c and plan most compatible with your da)'·IO-.
o{Jour hon\c or room. the amount dar, routine. ·
an style of your furnishings. your t may be . helpful lo look al
personal preferences and your hfc· phot~phs. study home and garden
I magazines or visit model homes. Tt\e stye. . h 'I Yourdccoratin& plan ~hould reflect more you~-t e..rnoretena1n you I be of your preferences. .
Most peopte have a1 least one item
to plan around. s<>mcthing they don'1
want to change. orcan'1. II may be 1he floo~ ~ver1ng or a special p.ete of
furniture. T~at's the stanin' point. h"e says1 to
JWJlJn& y.our coouhnated decorating
plan together. Then you begin addina
the new clements one by one. l>eJin·
(ling with wallpaper, which provides
the design theme for the room.
When you're choosing wallcovcr·
in •• Santmier advises you keep in
mind some simple pointers:
·•Color has a tremendous impact
on how a room is perceived. A large.
· sec·through design in a light color will
open up a room and make n seem · . . n:ovcr
'---,----~1-dO'e'C'si,1n in a dark color makes an
oversized romn appear coLier and
more invitina.
•Vertical designs heighten a room:
horiz~ntal patterns widen.it
•
lllly,. WfONESO~Y SE
•
EMBER 884
..
•
If you'hll•• the
, • clrcua thl• yeer, b . try the excitement '
·-1 · · In 'Bern um•. 83 •.
Create a romantic aura with the dellcateJr, collection. Pror...tonai ._1a11• ue
linked floral pattern• or the "Tea Hoaae • a•allable to help coordinate yov P**'°'1-
•TYro or. three. coord1nJllD.J.
wallcovenngs usea together add
interest, particularly in a room that
doesn't . have any d1sungu1sh1ng
architectural feature$ to emphasize.
Molding and bord'crs add detail to a
room and catch the eye.
\llh.t.n_yoU.:.C.c.. coocdinatina
wallpaper, 1h1nk in terms of different
dimensions, Santmier advises.
Try a large pattern and a mini.print
together, ror example. lt's also effec,.
tive to lie livin& areas together by
using coordinated waJlcovcrin& in
ad,ia«nt Toc>ms. .such-t1 lhc be:dtoom
and bath. ,
1r yQu'.tt unsure about dolna the ~.
coordtnatrng .yourself. take a look at
the · destjO ··collect1ons.. at
Wallpapers 10 Go. EsKntdllv.collec·
(Pl--1' ALL/82)
-EXPERIMENTING WARMS UP
Energy·saving ideas in 12 rooms systems work best.
Even as the landscapina was beina
finished at Impact 2000, the Amcri·
can Gas Association opened ;is
demonstration and eJtpe:rimcnt home
in Cleveland. The unique build.in&
has a t~tory, five.room central
core with two one--story wings dcdi·
cated to e•perimcnts on tht' lltcst in
heatina., coolin& and cooking ·~
·pJianccs.
The Solara II home an Tampa. fla...
1s the wort of independent bwldcn
Frank and Bcmard Arenas. They
have open~ the thl"tf:·bcdroom,
thrtt-bath home to the PQbhc 10
..demonstnte the late:St twist In h.P..
tech sunbelt chic: a centrally air·
conditioned home not booked up \0 a
public ullht}.
at World's Fa~r epitomize test houses
Ele&ance la maklnll a hlC comeback ID home decorating.
Theoe lyrical -llcoffriDC• -ID two olzea or pattern -
· and accent ttemaare from the ''J.G. Hook'' collection. . .
PAPARAZZI
Experimental and de~onstrat1on
homes arc going up all over America
in moves by utilities. energy labora·
tories. the federal En~y Department
and indCpcndent inventors to find the
,best way to keep a home snug and
warm in the wink:r and air) and cool
in I~ summer.
Most of lhc cxpcnmentets arc
looking for the best new systems.
reports an anicle in this month"s issue
of Popular Mechanics magazine. and
some say 1hc.y already ha\.c found the
best. Many of those responsible for
the nation's energy shOw houses ar~·
also keeping their eyes on the bot1om
line.
lmoacl 20CN). an C)ilraord1na~
e1ght·room glass and "'·ood bilcvcl
home completed in Brooklin~. Mass ..
this spring. is bein1 used by &ston
Edison for one ycar(o atmonstratc 10
the public the latest 1n home energy
technologies.
The supennsula1ed west wall of the
house 1s built into a hill. while the
sou1h side rccti\CS ample sunlighl
and features an earthent1lcd
sunroom. The roof 1s CO\'Crcd with
wlar collcc1ors and ....pho,«>volta1c
arrays. and a compu1cr roon1 1n 1he
basc'mentmoiftfOl'S erffi'i)Tusc. ~
. Whoever buys Impact 2000 will
have 10 agrtt 10 allow Edison to
conllnue moni1on'ng lhc building for.
one year as pan of a study aimed at
finding out which .hQ!!'!C energy
In Denver. the Solar Encray Re·
search Institute has designated stv·
cral dozen existing solar houses to be
outfitted with senson and computers.
The equipment is programmed to
calculate the vaJuc of pamvc and
actjve solar devices.
The World·s Fair 1n Ntw Orleans
features a-lhrtt·lcvel, . 12-room
.. Ene'JY Saving Housc·Dcs11n·
Home' tha~ dazzles hundreds of
visitors each week wilh demon·
strations of solar energy de\' ICC'S and
energy-saving construction fea1u~
Solara 11 uses pass1\l;t solar des1p
to llmit elcctnCll)' consumption t.o
300 kilowatt-how'$ a month. ti
elcctnc1ly i5 supplied by-6('vm pbo«>-
\Oltaic arrays and a backop Df'ODI
fired atnerator. 0ccJ>-(')cle bal'icne5
store energy a1 night and on cloudy
day1sotha1 thcaenera.torrarelyhas to
run.
·•J.n.onc.~nv solatcncq,y.basbccn
with us since the carllCSI houses. ..
Bos1on Edison cneray servitts expcn
Paul Shea teld Popular Mechanics.
..Bui we're looltin& ahead 10 the next
century. and we want to set where
teeboology fits into the p1cturt." . .
. -. ' . l -~~..:.. -..,""'"""' .. ,.,. ....
"ft'le-wtJiil dlilbltafor mldealllatSOuth C..Ut Plaza wereiJo A'n'll Roberta, Loualid Dick Newquiat, Renee Segentrom, Kelly Givens, Nancy and AndrewCarlsofl. --. .
Mesaplqzapitching ~n a·smuseum 's home base
rLaguna Beach exhibits move
to marketplace melting pot
By ANN CONWAY
...., ..... Ceu11~1P·•MI
The Laguna Beach Mu~um of An 1s movina to
South Coal! Plaza.
The ttasons arc practical (the Laguna site will
undc~o major rcmodelin1 and expansion),
philanthropic (Plaza owners C.J. Sqerslrom and Sons
donated the 3,000squarcfet:t1and far·ttachina-for
the first lime in thccounty, a museum moves. to the
meltinapo1 oftbc mprketplacc. !
··enn1in1 the Uauna BcactLAn Museum to the
plaza will ~vc unp.irallclcd pubtlcaccess(30.000
persons visit the Costa Mesa mall daily) to fine an." said
Reary Seaefttrem at the 1roundbrcaking. "It 1s our
honor to be .telC(tcd as an c11;h1Nt area for the county's
oldest art 1nstitut1on." ·
(The actual mo"c: tak placein October and the
current plan istoT"r"matn for one year). '
Mu5t:Un'I bolrd president Jack lJakletler opened
the museum's "com1n1out" celcbrattOn with kudos to
llaro l1m111 plat.1 lcas1n1dircctor, whoa Iona with ••
. ' I
•
Bobbi and Jack Llat.1--t wllll llarea
leman at •comt.nc ow.t' celebradon.
museum director Or. WUllam Ott" work1..'dd11taentl)
to select an oppC>nunt 111c ncitt to a m~or mall enttan~.
L1nklc11cr1lso thanktdJlm Haw .... plaza
acncrnl man11Atr.and Betty ~Ot ,txccut1\"~d1rcc10roJ 1
I
• .,
' thcOran ount) liu~1n« <..ommtttttfoT~hq n .
bfi11nator of 1hc idea to mo\'t: the museum to the plata
Olton 1n · nncdthcpthmnaofthcmu um·s
• 1mme<hate olans for mall t."<h1bn.i: ch1ldrtn's ah.in tM
• . .
Carousel Court 1rca in September (producu of the
n'J.USC~m 'seducational proarams) and cataloaued
b.'lnblt.s 1ncludina ''J"rt1st.s Qui.1ts" 1n Octo~ a.nd
California 1mpression1sts1n DettmbC'r.
Applauchng the 1nno1,rattvc.1fltfllporary. haven
and cnjoyina fine wines and dinnc:rdo113.1ed by P1rct'1
ru1auran1 twilh o-.-.. ncrGf.Q.rse Muser tbc gracious
hosl) wcrt Bobbi UH.letter, kttJ and JM• PaRet.
(board vice presidcnJ). Dfaae Ol&oa, Marla Bini. R•*
and Jodi Bo ... Juel COl1wrlP~ Cbrl-and Jim
C.-..1 aod TM Pa1l1H.
• Also at1cnd1n1 wctt J•An Rebert•. P•t1y
Tartq:U., Gall and Dr. Roa Wate.n, Nick-and 8arMra •
1WllUam.,Ge• Dlttilbe1'C~r. LfflHand Dr. llicUN
....... (ownmofthc county"s most (~tenst\'~
2f1\'ltc fine ancontt•uon\. Btrmu tsmuand M••,. :
Egu.plaum1rkc11n1d1rcc:tQt. -•
• L
NueyCa-rli•(avolun"l«T)•lllsu' 15(thc •
muSt.um' temponry location andl"OOt'<ftnate a mQOr •
runcf..Qi1Wfon=Noot. 31t11hc Plan J~I eou·n . •
Ar<*ltectd'-ud7lalrha>ed!mao<d1ht1r •
KO forla}U'IOUI •ht plaza111lcryand pn>J«:I •
nhn tor1slell Glv ofEquMion • • " Paparau11 ro11td b
Dean.
Da1l.\ Pilot t)'~EduorVKla!
I
•
I
1 -
:
•
I • • •
' OrangoCout DAILY PILOTIWoclnoodOy, Sopttmti.f05, 19a. • • -
Correction n~t cracks spea~er-'~osfide11-ce
DEARANNAL DERS•Mayl
51) 1 word tothostwhofecl they must
COl'ttC't 1be.in1spronuna1tions of. ..otb 'rs1Do1tpn~ and..uaaht*
. ,,_tt1C:CN.~bifakul&.s~vo.u heard =mctl~illlOtLbad~tfo;r·---1 hadoneofthose know-11..all
con'f('tion nuts interrupt me dunna 1
presentation. HtJUStyclledou1 the
worftand it threw mecompletelyoff' •
balance-. Actually, I knew thecorttet
pronunciation but erttd due toner-
_:_.,.._ANN
WDEIS
vousness. . '~-
_i s14mbjed throuah the resto(my
talk. my confidence shattered.and
bavcnotopened upmymouth in
publ1cs1nct. -SHAME'D INTO
SILENCE
DEAR ~J.S.: You dlda'.IJ1~ '°"
advkebat r Up~D to Pve a llttle
lylqueuL
-nctD'(let lbatc1od def lit you.
Ac.cepJ every oppor_lJlalf)' to 1peatl bl
pabllc ud practice, 'practice, pnc-
tlcel Tan lll.lt disaster lalo a rrt·
umpll, ud wben you •ee the tenow
wbo embarra11ecl you, tblnk of hlin as
•• rrtend.
• • • DEARANN LANDERS. lam
1tttinam1rr1td soon and m) father is
P1Ytnifor1heweddiri1o-Weh1ve,
1lwaysao11c'n'"alon1well. b\lt one ·
su~ttt bas been lhesourct,oftrou~c.
1n now1t1scomina1oahcad.Hc
d notwantmctoinviteanyblack
people to my wcddina.
I work with both black and while
and would feel awful lea vine some of
mycollequcsout. Please advise
!OOnen. -CONFUSED IN THE MID\\fEST -f
DEAR C.M.: lavlte wbomevcr yo-.
r.lea1e. Jt'• yoar weddln&. Jf your
a tiler refu1e1 to pay tor it, laave a
simple ceremoay hi the h:o,me or a
friend. Serve ltmonade and cookies
D AL1RED HITCHCOCK PlefJfTI . ·--0 . Cf) AOW'AH&MARnN'ILAUO~ ·mVOYE .
++Yi "ttorntl's JitSt" (1970) Roell
Huclton, S.l)IO F1t11onl,
111 UWE, AilEllCAH ITYLE
tllOAOWMIVWIS
CBJ--12:50-
* •Yi "~!«: Advtntures 1ri Thi Fortlk!Oln Zone" (1H3) Pet•
StrlUM. M~ Rlngwlkl.
-1:00-·-** "Thi lut OI Thi~-
or wll.atever you ud your fll11e, cu
affori. Vo11r ln1e1rltf l• more lm·
P!_.rflnt tbaD ~ ~DCJ :~~-~Ill·
DEMANNtANDEl!S: I arow_110
in a family ruled bya,tynnn1cal
father. None of us brothers or sisters
arc close. which iSJUStas well. We
~ nevc-raotalon1 when we we~
arow1n1 up. Tllere never was open
warfare.Just indifTtrence.
Our father died scvetal yr a rs aao
•· and mother is 91 years old. She has
been in a nursing home for quite some
' 1ime. My husband and l areron·
cemcd becausr mother has not made
an)' plans for her funeral. All she says
1s. "Everything will work out in due
time."
IB" (1969)"George Hlmillon, l(fl'Yirt. =Ofl.A. TODAY W MOYIE **•'A "PmMt POinl"' (1962) Sld-t-nay P<nr,"!obby om:-...
Ill MOYIE ++\.\"Bid; Gold" (11147) "nH1ony
Oum. Klthlrlnl OMl~ll
Cl:)MOYIE . + "HOney" i 11182) Clio Goldsm1tll,
F•nando Rt)'
CO) BOTTOMS UP
lZJ MOYIE
t "Pl'ivlle School" ( 19831 Pl'loebe
C.1es, Betsy Ruuell.
-1:05-
[$)MOYIE
fhc r1:.-1problem1smybrothcn
and sisters.. They.refu ~1Jtdown •""ith uf'arRldfscu 11thei1ha11er. Wtare
of raid theyha ... eno'fdea what funerals
't-ost ,Mae.days, (tpeeially when there
is no 1n urance tpcqver the tran,spor-
tation charges forc1rry1na the bOdy
600 n1iles. (Mother wants 10 be bunc~
nex.11ofather.)
Wt fear there will btgrossovcr-
spcndinaand we will.be asked to
come up with OUf shaft:, whi~h ~ , won~ bcabl¢.toafTotd.. Noneofus1s
weltofT.Onc1lstcr1nd I are figlltLng
to stiy olf y.•clfare.
lsthetf anyway to solve this
problem and keep the peace?-
NERVOUS IN NEBRASKA
OE.A A "'JFR: Sine• no ODC lD lbe
family .,emt laterttted ll Dlt.ul111
for uevut tUt It lDev!tUl1.J..
nlf0111hl1'ffl"-dddolt
Wbn tbetlmfcoml1. t,11 )'bflr
brot..,, ud 1&tten youUveaavtd
· t~iemalotofworkud worry, tbttae
arra11r.;ment1 llave beta made I.Id
tbe pr ce 11 affordable for oae ud aU.
They 11lould be 1ra1eful.
•••
. ..\nn Landers discussn rttn...,b
dn'nkin1..:.. irsmy;hs. its ttalities.
.Learn the facts by rraditJJ "Booze ind You-For Tecn-A,ers Only," by
Ann Landers. Sc.nd..Wccntsand 1
Jons. seltaddrrsScd, stamped
cnvelopctoAnn L.anderi, P.O. Box
11995. Chic110. IJl.6061 /,
t *'Ii "V*t Girt" (1943) NiColu
Cege. Deborah ForfllTlll'I.
-1:30-
D HEAL. Tit REl.D
I IMTAN AT XENON
ROWAN & MARTll'S ~
These cocirdlnated dealtn• from Raymond
Watte'• whtmalcal ••oear Klch'' collection
create a playful mood in thla children'•
bathroom. Wallpapen to Go •tore.a now
:c
"' feature a complete anay or wallcoT~, ~'
related decoratln& element.a and ao· ·t
ceuorlea. an utell9l"'9'e bath •hop, plu :
profeaelonal apeclalt.ta to ad nae you.
_..,_
IJ Cil C88 NEWS -.WATCH
8 11!l NEWS ' Cl))MOYIE
-12:00-
11 Cll MOYIE
'* "~ ttl: SMson OI The
Wilch" (1982) Tom "tluns, Stacey
Nfllkin: WALL COVERINGS COORDINATED •••
PALM READING
TAROT CARD READER
AND ADVISOR
MADAME MARIA
Mor,o .,;,,1 iell you !he po~ presen1
and !v1ure and give you odv•Ce on
lo~e. tmo•• •Oge and business
650·723 1
870 W. 19th ST.
READINGS $3.00
WITH THIS AD
+t'lt "Thi Big land" !19571 Alan
Udd, VWgirN Miya.
OTWUlKTZOHE
_,,._
lttJ THE EVEfl.Y BAOTMEAS
RB.llOHCOHCEJIT
lllNEWS ->30-
rCJ MOYIE
Q E'tEON HOU.YWOOO
(1)-NEWS
t!ll MOYIE
• t + ''F .. OI Tiii Roman Ernpir_e"
I Part 2 ol 211.1~\ SoprH1 Lortn. Sit-
* + + "Poplyl' !1980! Robin Wjl·
Iiams, Sl'l8llwy Ouv1A
, %JMOVIE "*' '°"'· -t2:20-
8) H80 COMtlO A TTRACT10NS _,,._
••• * "TM Tm Otu:Tl'· (1979)
DIW:I Bennett. Angell Winkler
-2:4$ ...
Sl MOYIE a a LA TE NIGHT WITH DAVK>
lmetMAH ** "LOl'fl Trap" (1976) ~M)fll Rich· monci. Roblrl ~with
BEGIN YOUR TRAVEL
~~CAREER
SEPTEMBER 4. 1984
E\•erything \' ou ~eed
Including
Computer Trainin~
CALL TODAY
(714) 835-8111
620 No. M•ln St .. S.ru• Ane
!"11l:ll\hl'illl\ T"ll~l~•l'-<1. 1,,..1
RUFFELL'S
UPHOLSTERY, lllC.
FD! The Rtsl Of YN Lilt
1922 HARBOfl 81.YD .. COSTA #fSA -SU·llS6
LASER BEAM
FOOT SURGERY
The lacest advancement 1n Laser
technology now beJ.fg used ror
the correcuon or fbot disorders
In the doctor's office.
CALl fOll FR!f CONSULJAllON
From Bl
uons arc variauons of design themes thC wallcovering. Or1 n a lighter color.
repeated on wallcoverings. fabric aTld give a room an airy. light f~l1ng. On
other de<"orating accessonts. Collcc· the other hand. 1n a large room.
t1ons simplify the coord1na11on pro-drapcnrs in a darkel'·color crca1e a
cess. more intimate environment.
-lf)ou'rc UsiOg furniture of,arious ff the windows are too small in
st)'les 10 the same room. create a propon1on to the room size, carry the
"color shell .. by papering the ceiling draperies onto-the walls on either
and 1,1,·alls in 1he san1c color as the side. Panicularlr in a small room, the
carpeting and painting the trim the more natural hght. the larger and
same color. The shell provides a more spacious the room appears. un1fyin~ cfcment to blend d1vtrse For a. large. spacious cfTcc-t, keep
fum1sh1ngs. draperies open. u~ mini~blin.ds, or.
Once you've determined your dee-1he slcelc .. con1c mporary venica\
orating concept. 11 should be reflected draperies that can be cOm~hnely
in ·all your cfioices. ff !he theme IS OpC"ned Or Closed for pfivaC).
romantic and noral, s1c"ivc for round-Wooden blinds arc anractive and
ed curves and soft acccn1s. Jf. .. your create an infermal. natural cnviron-
theme LS rich and luxurious. then men1 in a den. for example. They're
smooth. shi ~)' surfaces and deep. handsomea1:1dhavebecomccx1reme·
more in1ensecolorssOOuld dominate. Jy popular LO a range of dark and light
With wallcovcring selected. you ...,·oods.
might lhin"k next about molding as a Next. Santmier explai.as. you'll
blending clement to separate two ~t to consider ·repc-atinf4 the
coordinated wallcovcringpattems. or Wa11covcring dcsi~n in matching or
to frame areas ofa wall that has been coordinated fabric for upholstery,
papered. •. pillo"''S. bedspreads -wnd Olhei ac-
Thc ne\.\·cst molding is identical in cents. RepcatinJ the deiign increases
appearance to solid oak or walnut. but the decorating impact and generally
C M P di C is actually a thin layer of genuine helps open up a room and expand it. OStl esa 0 atry fOUp wood bonded to polyvinyl. 11's light. Fabnc io a conlrastmg shade
'AMILY '00T SPECIALISTS nexible and easy to work wilh. tnhances a large room.
1 soo Adams Avt Suitt 203 Window fashions make a· ·major Remember. the heavier the fabric.
(Haroor ~· ,..,.,..,,.,,, impact on a room's overall appear-the more wei~ht it adds to the room. A
DINNER SPECIALS 1 =====5=46=·=8=2=4=2====~La_n_ce_._D_r_•_oe_r_ie_s_in..:._th_•_•_•m_•.:.P_'_"_"_n_•_•_, large room with a high ~ilingcan take I· more weiRht, heavier textures and
darker colOrs than a small room with
a,low ceLtin.g.
Don't fofJet the possibilities for·
paint. For tnm, paint should repeat a
color in the ~wallcovering. usually lhe
liahttst tint. Or. paint c.an be used for
dramatic impact. You might.)Vant to
paint one Wall ofa room for variation
aod.tn1phasi$'. .
Bringing the picture together with:·
dccoratinf accents completes tbc'
coordination process an~ brings 1he
total decorat1na plan into focus,
Santmier say$. .
1-he small accessories, such p,.
vases. silk. flowers, ceiamic objects.
towels, shower curtains. pretty bottles
and vanity i1ems for the bath and
colorful kitchen linens, should
provide continuity and repeat 1he
theme of the room without domi-
nating it.
A few well chosen items add
emphasis through their repclition o(;
color, form and line. Keep in mind
the need to maintain balance-so th ·
scale and patterns of design' accents
arc in proper perspective to the size of
the room.
"You'll find the more involved you 1
become in your decorating project.
the more excited you'll be," Santmier
says. "It's simply a matter of dc-
tcnnining what you want the room to
cxprtss and how you want it to feel ."
Teriyaki Steak BEE
-~-o-m ____ J_o_n_e_s_b_e_l_ts-1
Two pieces ot tender' Slrlo1n, maflnated and" dellca1ely grilled .
Served with homemade soup, cnsp green salad chotee
of potato. ter1Y11k1 sauce. dinner roll. and dessert1 -. .
I
• SERVED WEDNESDAYS 3 TO 10 P,M.
SERVED
THURSDAYS
3,TO 10 P.M.
Del~ious Top Sirloin Steak. served With home-
made soup, crisp green salad. choice of
potato, dinner roll, and dessert!
" . •
RI 1ted um•
. . ,onlY at pa
' = FrMbN't oot newa abou1 our
NEW. LARGER SHRIMP-and
• genenJUI otftr 10 oo wi11'1 Ill
Just IOf lrying our new &·Piece
Shrimp Dinner, you·11 get lwo
eirtr1 ptecn of our new, WOif
llhrlmp-lbsotutely FREEi
..
'
3085 Herbor Blvd. In Coal• Man
Uuat aoulh of Son Diogo Freeway,
llCl'ON from Fadco)
Drlva·Thru Servlc4I Av.Hable
..
'Radio' hit ta· CM~
Singer-sex symbol
to perform Thursday
·at a m hf th eater
By CHRIS CRAWFORD
D.atrl"llMC~t
British pop~s1ar To1n Jones will
make his premiert visit to Oranae
Countv as he brinas his current
summCrtour to Pacific Amphitheatre
Thursday cvcnihg.
Bes! known for a su:1ng of hit
singles from the late '60s and early
"70s -"It's Not Unusual." "De·
lilah," "She's a Lady." .. Love Mc
Tonight" and others -1he singer·
.srx symbol from Wales ha • in morc-
rtecnt limes. cxpan~ his middle-of-
thc·road pop• repertoire lo include
more cpuntry-flavored tunes.
"The problem I a\wayi have is Lhat
I like sina1ng w m1ny d1ffc:rcnl kinds
of .songs." he said 1n a r«ent
interview. "so it's hard 10 know whit
direction to take whe-n I 10 into the
rt<'Ording studio. ·
"When I'm on 1a.gc. I andoall 1he
ki Ads of-sonp 1 likc-rock 'n' roll.
rh)thm and blues. countryo.Y.eStcrn .•
standards. some b11 ballads -bu1
when I rcrord. I can't really'do an
album like that, a mi!ihmash of sonas.
bc<:au.se: an album needs 10 have a
theme." "·
Jones' decision for hilalbuJfls from
"RescuCMc' in 1979 throuah last
year's "Don't Ut Our Dreams Die
Youna," has been to take a-country
approach.
/· .. , alw1ys like to n:cord \,ht belt
ma1cr1al D\'lllable.--he cx~a1ned,
"and lately the ~ner son that h•"e
been rom1na m2 v.·a, ha\.1: n or a
COUAtl) na.turt'
r·--~-~
' .
~Jones' newest album, coming oi>i
Sept. 15. is also country-flavored.
Entitled "Tom Jones on the Radio."
this release--seys the singer. '-"ism ore of
a country-pop, or a country cross-
over album." •
Jones' .newest album includes his
currenl single, "All the Love Ison the
Radio." issued two weeks a~o,_
The entertainer's show 1n Costa
Mesa will bca blend ofearlieitiitsand
current material. "Toward the end of
the year. I 1ake nOte of what songs arc
-pOP.ular ... ht explained, ··and then I
build my new act for the followina
year. I t.ry 10 keep current, to inject
new stuff in all the 1imc."
"You know, l'.m really excited. I've
heard cood rcPons about Pacific
Amphitheatre, and I know lhey"re
putting some aood acts in there. I'm
really glad this facility is available."
After nearly two decades ofapptar-
ances. there can't be too many places
len where the energetic Welshman
hasn't pcrfonncd. His yearly schedule
of about nine months on t~e road
includes three times a )caf at Like
Tahoe 11nd Atlantic ity. four limes A
)'Cat' in Las Vegas. plus numerous
appcanincts across the Unucd States
and Europe:_
Wt September. dunna his British
tour. Jones says he finally had time to
vis11 h15 homeland for the first time 1n
10 years. "I threw 1 party for all my
rtlatl\'eS. and wt had a count there
wert 88 COl.lllns. 11nd ,I SO rcla1ivcs
altoacthcr!" he said with a b11 leuJh. ·
Now. when he's not on !he ro1d.
Jonc1m1kts his homt with h1• w1ft 1n
Btl Air .. He has one grown M>n. who j
travcl5 wnh him and haildlts liahtioa
for Jones' shows. And the 44-ycar-old
Cnt<crta1n~ II lllO the proud Jtand·
fithtl' ora 1-c~r-old in LosAnaelcs._,
r --
-
IN TERMISSION
--------~~-
. ~
...
• '
Crafi Fle~a. Katby F~do ln ••Ba.mum."
l _~EVIEW ___ ~~
CALLBOARD -.\ud111ons for the . Rock t rio che ered i n Mesa
Orange County prem1ett of the
scnous corned> .. fo Grandmother's
House We Go" will be held Monda>
at 7:30 p.m. at the Westminster
Communlly Theater, 7272 Maple St .
Westminster .... d1rcctor Larry Slake
1s seeking a cast of t\\O men and six
S) l\1a Porter ad\'tses on· finance.
By CHRI . CRAWFORD
o.u, '110t C•n "'IMM!tl
Crosb). Stills. and ·1'.ash follower~
have got to be among tht· most
devoted and enthus1ast1c rock tanr.
around, /udging b~ Monda) night's
near~ sci out crowd at tht! Pacific
Amphitheatre.
Indeed, it seems to be a mutual lo' e
rt"nd1uon of"Wtnd on l~ W8ter."
Fifteen }tars down the road. CS '
ha'e pro .. ed once again that their
pitch-perfect harmon·1cs. which have
become their musical trademar~. arc
s11l1 the1r fone.
Their skillful blending on ··Don't
Tum Your Ba k ori Love,4
' "Black-
bird," and "You Don't Ha\e to Tn."
reflected \hear intriatc 1annomzing
at u best. often w1thowt a.ny in-
strumental backup.
ln the forword to Crosby, Sulls. and
Nash. a 1984 bsoaraph) by Da" 1d
Zimmer. Nash stated: ··w e would
like 10 thank that our q:iu51c .. ill
endure. that v.e hne added somc-
·thing to th_e una"erse.~
Mondav nijht's audience seemed
to an v.C"ran empbitic .. Yes~" r:
.,.
etlfA IE' S•6 l101 tf1111ds Conema
ll T~ Sil 5880
tiwlldS SaodttbKk
OUllGC m 3911
UA City Ctnltr
SAIClA ANA S.O l.U
Ed•uds Br.slot
Ann Landers he lps "1th domest ic pro·.
blems and Sunda) s You Your Money
section focuses on area business
trends and opportunities
Daily Pilat affair bctv.een an1sts and audience as
the rock trio enthus1ast1call) offered
their ht&hly compaubk harmonmng
to listeners who offered. 1n return.
standina ovations after almost C\Cr)
song .
CSN's w1despread populant) since ... DREAMSCAPE' IS their debut album in 1969 (entitled NIC!ft SURPRISE s1mpl) "Crosb)'. Sulls. and '\a!ih"J. 1~
· UIODI caovc ~JGoo1 wurwcsrCI 8 .. 1393• based on surpns1ngl~ sparse output ' , OF ..U£ SUMMER." Follov.1n~he debut album, th'"'. 'fta•ds Vtts!Otoc~ [d•ards C.rc111 Ntst I n '"
For Cllllifled Ad
ACTION
Call A OAtU f't&.OT
AD-'1SOI
MZ·H11
Theater's a ·drag
for Robert Morse
••• ---·-recorded -~a Vu""-f-\,1bum of lhe ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~· Year in 1970)alongv.1th ~e11Young By JACKIE DYMA1'
"PlM.E RAif' (R)
100 HQ S•1I~1170
"Tt£ WOMAN IN R£D"
(PG-13) 11 JO 1 r.. .,~ 6 lO • 10 l(J 2li
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~--• oour s11•0 I 00 Ir.. HC. I l~ lij J
1114 tt4 UOO Lf Mo<, .. ,.,
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'DR£AMSCArE" (PG·ll) '
.1 \ l) o~ u~ 1 • 10 •
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J 10
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I~ >1' HQ
"BOlERO"
-" II M»TICO "Ill ,, ~l(l!l.y
--\ • 1'~ IOCiO
"BOURO"
110 OHl IHll • 1 N WllltlO ~ OOllY St(ll(
12 )I) 3CO UO 100 10.lO
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121· 40 ••
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* CINE-Fl SOUNOI At these svmboll gr11t sound dir1tt to your AM ur * radio. If no r•dio ~th •eceaory pos1t1on, brint your own AM port1bl1.
ALL OPEN 6:45 Start Dusk Ch1ldrenUnd.r 12 ALWAYS FREE
: ~
HIWAY39 (!] * "Im <JAMI" (rG. ll) rtus "fll MJMM II ID" (K.U)
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11141til·l .. 1tS0 r...,' l•ffk~ .... s
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MISSION <~';.~-::.:.
"f"URM RAif" (R) * t714141l 414'1SO '"'a C.t llttnt
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f r ... Five ·String banJo·o·o·os.
Four·whee/·drlves,
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Two -wheer bikes. d·~-
And apartments In the cltY·Y· Y·y/
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Cl•nlfi.dAdt .
PhOnt Ml 5671
.. ..
l
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Enter a wor1d beyond But then It ""asn't unul 1977 that 1he
trio offered their fans "CSN." and
another fhe .. ears before their "Da,.
ltght Again·,. (a platinum album 1n
1982)
L05 A '1.;GELE -Roben Morse
can t begin to count the number of
ttmes he's put on high heels' a.nd false
Yet as the tno'<i spokesman
Graham Nash explained rccen1h .
"We''e tak~ great care 1ha1 "e·,·e ----~++-:made music onh \\hen '"~can stand
each other. Each album has been a
laboroflo .. e ...
your wildest
1magmation
where Lnyjhing
can happen.
•
e\clashe!> ·
. though he dons respect~blt male
garb for his pm ate ltfe. Morse has an
alter ego named Daphne "ho struts
her st uffin a blond '-'1& and drell m
1he musical "Sugar."'
The current Loe; Angeles Civic
Light Opera production at the
Doroth) Chandler Pa' 1hon co-stars
Joe Namath fhe onetime lootball
s1ar also dons lud1crou!> temale ature
as one of No musicians "ho JOm an
all-airl band while hiding from
1:• ... c....,c ...... •r•\........,,..........,_..,..,1111..,......._
.\nd ltsten1ng to their etTom Mon-
da) e\Cntng unde~ored that point
as the} JOume)ed mus1calh from
.. Da~hght .\gain .. songs and Stephen
Stills' ··stranger .. back to sclcct1ons
fro m earlier in their asS0(1at1on .
Pamcularl} etTecuve aloni the v.a}
\\3!> Nash's voice and piano solo
sanrters. . l the plot sounds familiar. ifs
because "Supr" is based on the htt .... ,.....,.._~ (~.,,.,,. •• "v-.........., •
..
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~
~ .
s
Jack Lemmon:Ton) Curtis movie,
"Some Like h Ho1:· _ _, • ,
"l was the o~nal 'T ootsie,"'
Mosv purrs, sliflpina uno his
Daphne persona. "I tauabt Dustan
Hoffman evCf)'lhina h.e knows."
When the play ran on Broadway in
t 972, Morse ~ived a Tony Award
nomination. Ton) Roberts co-
starred. .
Morse and 'amath only had fhe
da)s of rehearsal t~er. "He came
and he lme evCT) line. There was
ne"er a problem " Morse said of his
current co-star
Namath tov.en o" er Morse. add mg
to the corned) onstage ... He's about 9
foot 3;· Morse said. ""He's an Ama-
zon -the laraest lad)' I've ever seen."
The actor. 9.ho was recently fea-
tured in episodes of TV's "Fall Guf'
and "The Dukes ofHazz.ard,'' admit
that at 53 the broad pb~sical comedy
of "Supr .. tsn't as cas) as ._hen br
f>rsl pla\ed the role.
"Now Jt takes a httle more out of
) ou -che h1gh heels. the cramps m
the less." he said co) I).
Morst'. "1nnttofa Ton) A\\1U'd for
.. Ho\\ to Succccd in 8 uSJOC$StS
Wnhout Really Tl)ing; •• said he
moved to Loe. A°'eles t\\O years aao
"to v.ork in television. motion pic-
tures. la\\nS. gardening. "hatever I
can do~ ·
s Daphne. Mone clowns around
the stage. at one point executing a
hslanous ~ndup of a balle'rina per-• ,
formin1 as the d\ mg s"an. But he
said he wasn't difficult to transform
himself 1010 a "oman
"I tn to be s"eet and loveh. that's
all I can tell ) OU ... JOked Morie. once
a.pm shppinainto Daphne. "\l.'hcn I
staned the role I was ruce. 'lo"" I'm a
little matronl)_.:_
,.
...
(
.. ..
• 4 ..
0 . ..
1 .. .. . . . .. .. . . . ;.. . ·. . . -.
'
GA~FIELP. PO VOO ~ OW MOW
Sill" YOU LOOK CARRYINC:t TMAT ~TOPlrJ P.LJ&.,ER CMICKEN
AROONCi' AL.L. TME 11ME?
r---"' .,.-..._...
T H E
FJ\.'11Ll'.
CIRCUS
by Bil Keane
"Miss M££1fucsf1 got 4eft back. She's still
ilt .-a._ room as last year."
MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson
"Mind If I switch this to something more
interestlrg t~an the dogcatchPr e ectior?
~00~ ~l'LLl~S
EUDORA, IS IT 7 WELL
IF VOU NEED ANV ~ELP,
EVOORA. l1M Rl6MT HE~E
Tl''1Bl~Eft'EEDS
,,
I TOOK ALL br: TMESE
CLAS SE 5 LAST YEAR SO
I KNOW ALL ntE ANSWERS
1FIFIF
I
BIG GEORGE
by Jim Davis
UM•OM, F'ELlA.
NOW VOO PIO ti.
YOU N\A rJf. !>TP.ETC~ MA9
by Virgil Partch (VIP)
(.,.?!! A
~ a
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~ j
(>'
co I
~ ~~ ~
iii~~
"Hey, Slim . you got visitors."
DE~~IS THE .llE'\J\CE . .
Hank Ketcham
~ L "' •
••• \ I• } •
~ I WOO.t~H 6t SCARED Of 1HUNUER F 1 U)JLO
KEEP MY MINO ~F ¥.Y 'THOl.tSHTS '
by Ferd & Tom Johnson
JUST DO WHAT I DO
EUDORA, AND 't'OU1LL
6ET ALON6 GREAT I
by Charles M . Schulz
.. by Tom K Ryan
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.~on BETTER OR FOR WORSE
OJ..>! WHEN
f\RE. '{a..J
bONNABE
FINISHED,
MOM ?
l
•'UNKY WINKERBEA~
.
tnJI hnn r. tlwn h•nif lo~ from
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lhf',COunlt\ U"i' thf fo1&r·dfll
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i>ul Brid1•.'" will t.t-1rla .~
1trat•1i•1 ~nd tattlett er th
p•c•d action 11mt that pro\'lt
eur4' ror un•ncUn1 rubtHn ...
<•P) i.nd 11.75 t• "Gortn
Ueal," P .O. Box 811 . Palmyr'.
Oli065.., \{ak• C"huli p1~1I
'rw1pa1>4"rbook•
by Jeff Mac
by Lynn Johf
THIS IS ASS"
RS I C.F
STF\N
by Tom B
by George L
•
Dear Ms. Meyer:
HOSI·: IS ROSI·:
J
FANTASTIC, AUNT eE'TH •.. ANO
YOU WON'T eELIEVE THIS' MISS
SPENCEA GAVE ME A CHECK
FOR t 150 TO euY A GOOD
61KE1
Yes. But the man she·s wi
has to take it!
by ~at a
GIDD'IUP !
•
•
I
EDWARDSAIRFOR EBASE-
Spacc shunle Disco\el) glided to a
picture-perfect dawn landini on a ~esert la~et?cd t~ay, returning from
a 2.5 m1ll1on-mile maiden voya~e
that restored confidence in Americas space tranSPortation system.
. Com'!lander Henry Hansfield and
pilot Michael Coats guided the 102.
ton space plane through ~parklina
clear skies to a touchdown at IO
minute) after sunrise, 6:38 a.m. PDT.
"Welcome home," Mis~ion Con-
trol i,Old the crew as the shuttle rolled'
to a top on the hard-packed sand.
Tbe sun ghstened bnlhantly off1hc
craft as it completed final man'eu"f'ers
and zeroed m o~ the landing stnp
01~0\ieC): aM its Crt\\ of five men
and one woman v.erc back home after
a six-day m1mon marked by ex-
traordinary success aespite bouts
with a stubborn chunk of ice and a
final-hours oxygen leak. Theirs was
the 12th 01ght of a space shuttle. the
10th to land here.
The third and newest shuttle was
over the Indian Ocean on Its 97th
orbit when Hartsfield and Coats
triggered ats b1uets for :?1h minutes to
drop the spaceship out of orbit and
mto an hourlong dive through the
atmosphere into this MoJave Desert
air base. . "\
The" v.eather was ex<:.cllent for
landing, with v151bihty of 100 miles.
Scauered hghtnma storms hat the
mountains abqut 40 miles north of
the base two hours before landing.
time, but the weather posed no threat
tQ t-he shuttle. said NASA
spokeswoman Nann. Lovato
Mission Control wakened the
astronauts 96 minutes C11rty-10day
wflen it detected a leak ma set of tanks
that suppl} oxygen for the cabin
pressure and pov.er-producing fuel
cells. ,,.
Hartsfield switched to a backup
system and initiated a trouble-shoot·
ing procedure that isolated the leak to
a pressure control system. Tbe system
was shut off and the leak stopped.
NASA officials emphasLZed the prob-
lem posed "no hazard" to the crew or
the shuttle and that there was enough
oxygen on board for Discovery to st~>
in orbit an extra t\\O da)s 1f necessat}.
01SCO\ery's SIX·person crew comes
home with an empty carg6 bay.
graph1c evidence of its success in
launch19g a record three communica:
hons satelhtes on a sin&)e flight.
NASA reported all three satellites
had reached the high otb1ts necessary
for operation and they would soon
begin earning money for their owners:
Amencan Telephone & Telegraph.
Satellite Business Systems and
Hughes Commurucations Services
Inc. The companies paid the space
agency a total of $3 7 million .for the
delivery service.
Discovery's satellite deploymt"nts
were the fir t for commercud cus-
tomers since I st February when t"'o
commun1cat1on paylo d "'cnt into
uscleS) orbits because their booster
rock.et nozzles faT1ed after ucce sfuh
launches from the shuttle Challenger, , .
Those failures caused NASA's cus-
tomers ome concern. ra1 d their
insurance rates and resulted m one
~telnte launch being dela~ed. That.
plus thrte po tponcments O\er two
months of Discovery's debut flight.
had put the shuttle's reputation as an
orbital earner in quesuon.
T"'o of the ~tellltes released b)
D1scovel)'s ett\\ were equipped with
' the ume ty~ of bOostcr rockets as
those that failed in February. demon-
.stratina the nozzle problem has been
resol' ed and gh ing confidence to th·e
many shuttle ~elltte customers who •
pla.n to use that s)stem.
Shuule 01aht director.Randy Stone
said there had bttn a dip in morale
aficr the February failures and the
success of the current flight .. affects
the confidence of everbody m the
program"
With Discovery joining Colu'T'bia
and Challenger m the fleet, the stluttle
•system as about to be put to the tclst on
its committment to on-time
launches. The launch rate will be one-
a-month for the next IS months, with
16 fligh ts planned m 1986. Challenser
1s next up on Oct. I, with Discovery
set for tts second flight on Nov. 2.
Asked to evaluate the newest
shuttle. another 01gbt director. John
Cox. said Tuesday: "If. you can
discount the ice. I think everything
else has been absolutely perfect."
He ref erred to a large block of ice
that formed at t\\O waste water ouflets
on the hull of Jhe ship, causing some
worry that 1t might damage Dis-
covery's tail section when it fell off
dunng re-entry through the at-
mosphere. Hartsfield used the ship's
SO-foot mechanical arm to knock the
chunk away on Tuesday.
The two other pr:ime obJect1ves of
the mission -testing a I ()..story-tall
solar sail for stab1hty and manufac-
tunng test quantities of a pure drug -
also were successful.
The solar sail was extended and
retracted repeatedly by Judy Resnik.
the second American woman to 0) in
space. It 1s a forerunner of a device
that may harness the sun's energ) to
provide po""er for future ~pace sta-
tions.
Industry engineer Charles Walker
had some problems wtth the equip-
ment he used to produce the pubhcl~
unidentified druJ. but NASA said he
was returning with 83 percent of the
material he had hoped to get. The
product. a hormone denved from
protein. will be tested on animllls and
humans. ·
The Qther crew members arc Steve
Hawley and Richard Mullane. who
were responsible for the satellites
Launches.
com communlcation aatelllt
"" t DAILY PILOT •
1scovery·
CAPE C NA VERAL. -AtL"
Ol)' leak di$COVCrtd aboard
lhe spa e huttle early toela). boun.
befor.c Oi5:00lie') · to return to
Eanh. and die~ wa enc4 to
\\"Ori; on lhe prob mi. fii,ght con· trolkrs id.
ASA 'offi.etals emphasized that
lhc 1tuat10n poScd "no haiard" to
lh crew r the dlutllc.
• Fliaht d1n:aor Lee Brisc~ asked for a tracking tellite o be broupl on line. il" ing Mission Control more
contact wnh the ship iO expcns could
monitor the 1tuation more closely.
Mission Control told Shuttle com-
mander Henr) W. Hansficld that 11
su~ed there "' s a leak 1n a 'Set of
tanks· that provide oxygen for the
· cabm and the po'Aer-producmg fuel
cells, and that he should switch to a
backup set.
Ox> gen u bad bttn recorded aa
40 pounds an hour, about four times
normal for a sleep period, Mis ion
Control said. Han.sfieldTeponedthat
when ··the crew raised t~ cabin..
pressure before goms to bed. he had
noticed some particles in the C81JO
b::y m th'" 'icinity of the cnnen
tanks..
Mis!)ion Control said th1) tended to
·confirm there was a lea1t.
The wakeup call v.-cnt up to the ship
90 minutes early -tht second
momma in a row the) had been
roused earl) to troubleshoot a prob-
lem.
The oityaen problem cropped up
several hours after the astronauts had
-'USCd the shuttle's giant robot arm to
brush a bothCf50me block of iCe off
the side of the sbunle.
Commander Henry Bart.afield Jr •• Judith ·aeanlk prepare for landlna. "It worked like a charm:·
Hartsfield said Tuesday after he
ginaerly auidcd the end of tbe ship's
5();.foot crane over the acc.
Shuttle greeter~icamp . out in desert
EDWARDS AIR FORCE BASE Louto
(AP) -Thousands of space shuttle But clouds of dust rose on the east
fans camped m the Mojave Desert shore of the lakebcd as thousands of
like an "ovem1~t picnic" in order to people streamed m for the landing.
be on hand as Discovery landed toda~ Many others had camped overnight
after its maiden flight into space .. lt'seimting to see almosta tailgate
"I'm Just absolutely fascinated b) party at the east shore.'' said NASA
11. It makes the hair stand up on the spokesman CJ. Fennck. -There arc
back of my head.'' said Norm Rech of people sleepmgm bags in.front of on
Long Beach. who watched the landing top ofand m their vehicles. It'~ hJ..e an
just after: sunrise w1~h his 8-y~ ovcrn1ah1 picnic."
son, Brandon. Air Force Master Sgt. Gen)
About 10.000 people watched the Ditchfield described the scene as
landing on the dr:> desert lakebed "Just one· camper and trailer after
sti;ir.-far fewer than the nearl) half· another .... They ha\le concessionaires
mil ion who watched the shuttle out there selling everything from
Columbia land on July 4, 1982. motonzed space shuttle models to
"It certainly 1s a lighter crowd for hats with ·lights going around on
us." said NASA spokeswoman Nancy them."
Before D1sco~er:> · touchdown.
astronaut John Young; a 'eteran oT
two fl1&hts on Columbia. performed
touch-and-go landings on the lakebcd
tn a )Ct as . he cht"Ckcd \\eather
cond1t1ons .
.\ fev. minutes before the land1nl: a
double sonic boom npped aCTOS$ the
descn as Discover; Oe\\ an from the
west. The ship then made a but·
tonhoo tum to the north and looped
around until it "as pointing south
beforcdroppingsharpl) to an altitude
of :?.000 feet.
The craft then abded down 10 a
smooth landing. kicking up clouds of
dust in its wake.
.\Jr Force securit)" police cars aod
rough!~ tv.o dozen \Chicles m rhe
\hut tie f'CCO\ Cr) COOVO)' raced afttt
D1SCO'>'Cf) as helicopters new to~'U'd
it and the T-38 chase plane roe.red
O\erhcad.
The tempenture was a maid 70
degrees .. hen the shuttle landed. but
"-as headed for a h1&h vcr 100
degrec'S.
.. M) \\lfe and daughter didn't
come. because ifs too hoL.. said
Ward Cumbie of Laguna Hdls. add-
ing that he and bis son came to see the
landina because the) never tire of
·'the thrill of sttina .somethina up . and come back.'' . ·
Even A A's Lo~"ato, a vereran of,
several landinss. said, .. Each huttk
landing is as e:\citina as the bM ~forc.·to me.''
Engineers vow iCe problem
wop 't.h _amper future flights
By PAUL RECER
l#Mr...-......,
., .... .,. 11 LOq cryatala of tee form on two YeDta on tbe outalde of e
shuttle Dlllco•ery."UmltiDC oftbe craft'• t9llet.
r ..
,
..
• 0
0r1noo Coo.I DAil V Pll"DTIWednoolloy, S.01...,.,.r &, 198-4
" l
-'
•
I
Dl~TH NOTICES MUCNOTICE 1'18.IC llOTICt 1'18.IC llOllCE 1'18.IC NOTlCE Pia.IC NO llCE Pl8.IC NOllCE
-
l'W-118
mTITIOUI ........ 111Cnnou1 It.I..... "°'moue IVMllll MTmOU9 tullHI NOTtCt llMTINO llC)I l'1C'l'ft10Ull ......... .. ~
NAm IT&TIWt(T ITf TI T ITATl.mHT TAT .... .......--ITI
-';f;r--::-:'.:::S"!l!;'!1_!N a...-w.':' ;::::::::~ ~ ~=~•• ~~-~=:w. .. u:"=::~"': ~~ II ~-===at RICliARD FRANK ._ .. , wven er . ~'° INSUftAHC« co.. CANYON MORTilAOI 11.Jll.0.HG 1t REGENCY ~~y HANOI 0, lQIRlfY •OOK lbt lMM Ufllfttio lcflOOI fOUOH 0, CLASS HO'm.A~1·1~ of
Sli.E':LTON, both t:hildrfln Servlc•a. S301 f'torlbrClldt,. CO.te COMPAN"f, tiOal a..niwk PLAZA, 1176 MMll ltrtel. HA.WAil, ~ ~ ""-• 4AL.U, IH'l'MMY W\IJ~ Olll,,.-of Onnge ~· HOU91:Ct.IAHtHG, 421\lo 1'111\9 .. --......... tot
Ma)' 21, 1927 will !» 'nlund•)', ....._ IKH . Cir SW. !·2, VWl9,. CA IA.. !MM. CA 92114 HUnllngton IMCI\, C1llf l!ONAL PffOOUCT1, 24.U CMbnla, wt1,...,.. ~ .cotOM .. M#, tMI IWI ..._..,,...
0;. I l ~tembt I 1984 1Dtl'Tq.il309 117 ,,..H ~ 117112146 ~/We ...... ""' CA «f tl6dl llP 10 1011() A..M., t.lfft2aS: 1n.00unt1f//10rtnt' •wv ~pt. . ......... Mr • h ,.... ~ COIMI....... f, £..""'°"·~·Pl ....... ,..,., ., ~Col lll•n M•t1tl4 -....... ft707 ~. ~ I.Sit! clly of Oo,,n. M. JaMllJCOJ,. lnJl'll .. "•~":..°'-~~c:
Mf...Sbeltonti. ll \'"-., -\ t e-CA~· - -Ulion'~,""Ceilf• M--. 9271-41 10212 ~ ltJ Hunt· ~Hi '>'• 242:2 ie9*""'11, 1 ..... •t ~ •21 ........,,._, CotOnt olM"" ·-:::: ... on U.I~ bland for ,E ltt!rma.n-'!;i•m•~n . Till Nl.n•,. 11 .-COfl· tta2t .:...MlcflMLA. ....._.tlW taa..a.di.... ..._ .. ...,_~"101' flrM"MIO tlliOI ~ Wllli~ UMlr, Cdf'IH OMICtd. -13~··'-.....-.:..1---1 Yuntral S•rvlc: tdt;y'.en~ Thlt CK.tllMN 11 -con-O.,,.,.,..Kll,ColclJileM.OA 'Klli"""ldiil"' 11 con. &.iendr•.......,.ry, 2422 tk:fv OC*)M Md,....'°' TMI CNll,, ... 11 con-Hot*l•'*M¥...._*'1 • -''"~ All Rua~ Ot.lclld bV MlnOMdl.lll NIH " duetlflty ltl#!dfv!OWll AAH• ..,.,.Ant.CAH107 ,.INT...,._ "' XlftOI( aoo ~ tiy•an ln4l¥lcNll 11'19 ~ .... _ ....... ln prinp. Lu O\a!P,f'l, Burb&nk. In· . Ttllt ............ , -fllld ,rant !. l#ton TIM& Otltll'IMS -"""'" (lien,,..,,,,. ~ Tfllt bu61""" 11 con· {Of .,...., Donne M. Jwtll:Wu» PIW•M ..... to .,...
Veau and New York.. tnmtnt * priv•~ • .m. Ullt County Qer1t or Or· Tilll tllllllltMnl ._. lllllCI duce.cf by·,. tlftwtea pen!W· Tbll •l•ternenl .... ,.., ~"' by HulblNll .,.,. COPIEAIOUPl.ICATOfll Ttllt •1•1"'*11 ,,, .. tlltd ant MM blddW. ~. 10 He WU LIM! owner of Fan.\lly requeall .... County en ~ at. wflh NCoultty a.rtt 4lf Or~ ftp Wll" WCounty ci.tll °'°'" .. ,. . W1TH FINISHI!" INCLU().; WllP\_JJ19 COl.ln!Y c..,. oi Of. oontlrtnellOfl ol Mild U•
th. Sliow OF.. donation• to the 1114 ,.,.., MO' County on AuQlUll 30. PHiip H MeHlmll •"Cll eo...rtiy on~~ n. 8'1andra ,_. -1HO OPTK>N TO ar1g9 County on AuQUtt 23, Pttiot ~.on at att• •M ~ IN4 lhll tl•llmtnl .,. Ned 1114 Thie ... .._..I w• fllild PURCHASe CREOIT Ac-ttM 14th O~ of ~bet,
Women• S,,.ci•lty Bat.low HOlpatal..2000 ~o...,...c-· nwm w11tt 1Meounty Qlrtl olOr· nut• wlthtneCOWltyC..•ol Or· CURAL lid ~tlatle #Id rmne tN4. • in.oMceOf JflfT* Shops in Calif and Stadium Way, Los D1fr Not Al9llt tt. :zt PUCllilhlO Oranoe CoaM MQlll County on Augu,110. ~ Ofll'IO' COWi -. Coun!Y on~' 21, ~ Ind bid '°""' l'l.lblliW!ltd OrWIQI coat At.IMI. Jt .. 4t1°"'8Y •t Ne...a Mr SMl\OI\ ..... .-ie.. CA 90026. s.ot9T• &. 11: ttl4 0.itv Piiot ~-s. 11, 1"4 g.ity P#al Auou11 n . '4P+ 1914 • L INIV bl obi~ et "" ot-Oil~ p1101 Auouet 29. s.-I.II•, ~2 vi. ODiPl'\C>. """'"•· ,..__ ~ ... ~... W·20I It. te, IM4 m4l3I l.mbw a. It! 11, 1114 ...... flee of Fi.o.1 ~ ..... temlMr ,, 12. II. 1N"41 PM Bleetl. CA 121 ~ lfeduatcd from \>.1"11n-O'HARA. W.143 Pubtlatl9d °'MOil Cout • ~-ZH Pub418Md Orantt CO..t vtcM, H-41 Mtoti AVllWe, W·2t7 qounty Of Orange. ,,_. Of -'btoo~ Academy of p EAR t;. • HOLL y Ollw>Ptlot.s.cii.nw 5, 12, o.1ty Piiot SIPternti.r·s, tt. JMDe. c.itat"'-' IPtloM: ~ .. IN rtoJlt, tltle
A.n ln Bloomfleold O'HARA. 10 yu.t "8.tC NQTlC( PtaJC ll)TJCE tf,2t, 1114 W-241 PlB.IC M)nt( 19, 21, 1"4 W·n:» 11~~·~ tn. willCE :"'.,~~:==
Rllla, llL and abo retident of t.aaun. l'tCTITJOUI .,. .... , '9ennout au ... u •tennoua •u•Nla nori1 10 r9fKl ieny °" e11 ~ Plllt.IC nu ft1Y ettu111c:1 In tn. City Of
Ohio SLate UD.iver-Beach, ~ 1wa7 TN~·=.,. UM1 tTATl•NT P\ll.fC NQT)C( NAiii STA~ "8JC fllOTtCE °" 10 WllYI My .,,..._,..,ltlM ftCT"10Ul llUIMll ai'dln Otow, Couflty ot ~ly.Surv1vedbylav-August 31. 1984. OO*'lltll*'WI•. TlllfoOllowWlePll'90n9... .TM lolOwlng pnon. ::.~ln9"Y~Of ...-.aTAflMINT ~'8:.:=:::
i.na wile Warw:t.., '°"· Survived by her two c 0 "0 NA D 0 IN-~ ~ ~ ,tclTTIOUt .u..... ~ ~ •. 'KmT'tOUl llUI••• 1A\11Ne: UNIFIED 1111 ... ~.-, .. ~ • I, t<>-w+t: ~ank, :.:s~lea; ions Walter H. =~::,,,A~ abuR~~IR ~N~1~/r~cr. Tll9"=A="• l~P~Y ~~~U~U C~: fhl~~A:!:,'!'.,. SCHOOLOl6TRICT ~FIO'Lf:Sco8Pi111TKi8 An undlvldff 32.IO'llJ
S Nn, n • O'Hara. Md Charles c.itf. t2tlO l'RE-EXAM CONSULT· dOino bulfntM .. ; SIONS'i'INTIRIOFIS, 1t30 dOlna ~ .. : ~~~-CO<~ 3011 Klondlk• Av.,,u.: tr':r':!~~::.~~ tcy, faU¥!r, JIYank V.O'Kata, ten grand-'MICnMI J 8itlln, 1303 ANTI, 11121 M1t9noll•, FlfANCIA HAIR CAJ\f PW#lnOA'll ,Coeta,...., cw AOB. A GENERAL f\IDiihlcl °'-Cof;l1 Cotl•MeM,c.llt.IMM $5 peo9f& 11 M ... w .. sJep-moth•r hiklte fOW' ...... AYOCIHO&.ilte220, ~ ~ 203·!1..~UflWIO'On CENTER. I011 Mo Fec14«'1, Cllllf 1262t PARTNl1\9HlP, 291() Air· Clrole W•tmfll'I KM!lr, '. M• AeC.ora. Wahru fa he ( c n, 8lld'I Cllt t2tl0 ,CAl'"9 W•tmlnltlr,CA.ttm JoM .. wooct .. 1130 way A ....... 8\02. Cott• ~~,A.er*' 11. SIP-3011 Klondl•• Avl,,UI, Or .... ~ la . .,o:; t~n· 1randchlldren. Fla· Mich..11.. Cargh, 1303 1e• Young, 1t121 Judy,Arwi Frtnel1, 7Nt PeutwtnoA....,,CoMfMttll. M9M.CAt2821 em • w 232 COtlli"4M&,Cal".t282e mor• com~ known " • m<>t •ln· neral were A¥0Mdo&1n1UCJ, HewpOt1 Meonolllk&ult•:tO:S.-8,Hunt· L9hllh Pl'°'; W11tmlMI•. Calif. 12Ut , ~ Oevld w. Berhn•rllll, • Tnr1 butlMM t• con· .1321 , H• lttMt. O•~
l•w T•cla Doll•. held ~y •t the 8"t;tl,CMll'.t2MO lnQlon8Hef\CA9214t CA.0"2683 TIMI INel,,... It con· HIUApecfltT,.U,EIToto, duetedby:1111lncl~ 'OrOYI CA ' Donations maii be O' L lM OllNrWt ~.A T1'111 ~ Ct C<>n" Thia bu11t1111 11 CO!'I• ~ btL~ lndMclu.ll CA 12930 • Pt8JC M)TICE Cerole w. K_.... o<' .. c.11In1ew-• · Conner •suna. Cllltfvtl'lll Corporlflon. 4\0 duct•d b'J' •n unln· ouetldtiy::An~ Johnl.,.,..oocH Steven 9-Merdl. 21201 Tllll ttetemwrt.,... filed Termt ot the UnlW :* to C~OC. ~ H 11 ls Mort uar l' ;t1tt. "-POf1 a.a. .... c.lil. cor~r•t• ••4oc1e11on .Ndy Mrt F~IOCI• • Tlll1 ~t wu nlld c11m1n110 Arroyo Sec:e. • IC t:QN 11111n the eout11y Qllk 04' Ot· t•~ 00!\llrmetlon of
tenl Hoepnal of Chapel Interment at 1298.1 : ' . otMf t'*1 • f*1'*9f\lp l"I• tt.,llftlifl, wu fllecl With It. COUnry Cfer6' of.Of· l:flgwna ""''· CA D2653 NOTICI °' tltlOI Cou"IY on Augutl 2.1~ Ot l*1 cuh end NI· Ihle County. Padflc tbl-M~nta1n View RoOlrJ soco. 4$~ w. Diet.: 'r'oung •1lh the Counl)' C1rtr••ot Or· =County Dn At.91tt 23, MIGhMI FedW&.t 2980 Alf· Du.TH°' 1914 • ~by notl ...
Vlew Mortuary, Di· c em et a r y In :::::-~:.a::. "'"~·~-:b:'-.. of~ =Count)' on A~ 30, 1 Fam. ~~A10-4i, IMMI, Ao~:;~ Pub ... f'leci 0r-. "= ed ~~0:-~":
recton&f4·2700 Altadena., C•. Men p•.._ 4SIO W. lngi""CountyonA1.1gut12I, '2M241 ~ Ofang1'Cout Ttwe Dual"*-• 11 con. AHOOl1NTITION Da11y"PMotAuOut12f,Sep-SSOOOO 10 be o.-H~LL Q 'Conner L 4 guna MKAttflUr 8IYd Sult• 100, 1H4 • Pu~ Or911g1 CoMt Oallw Pllo1 Auou.11 2t, hf>-. d~ed by A p.,....111 PM· TO ADMIHllTIR timber 5, 12, ll. 19'4 ild wttri bid,
LE ROV CHAEl Ii lb M tuary Cl:irec:t· NIWDOtt SMcil, ClllH, 12ee0 ..... , .. Dally Pllol Sep11mber s. ·12, limber 5, 11. ll,' 1184 neratllp llTATI' NO. A·1MMO W-222 Btcti or 6fl.li IO blln ,,,..11.
• • I or AlblnN1nlll,5.1tAfchef' Publlahed Orange Coat 19,26, 1984•. W-228 DevldW.8'tnl'lerdl TOellhllrt, ~ Md wilt bl r9GIMd .,
HUMMELL. beloved ing. Mji-4300 St., Anehelm. Callt.121CM (Mlty Pllol Slp11mb9r '· 12, W·237 Ttlll •1etement. ~ .. llled CtedltOfl end eonllnQ9nt afOf9Mld °"'°' ...
fathe-r of Robert ••rt H•t1ton, 1303 ti, 26, tlM PtBJC IC)llC[ wl1h h CowttlyC*I! of Or-etedllor., Ind. pll'tOl'lt whO l'llt' n. l1t9t :% Rummell of Corona AVOC.OOSl.fta 220, NewpOrt W·239 PlBJC NOTICE -. County Ott Augull 30. may be 01ti1rw1 .. 1nt.,..lecl PlBLIC NOTICE '"rion• '*~ 9'ld i:or.
Buch, Cell!. lateO 111m1 c ~r ,ICTITIOUI IU9fNl.ll 1964 . In the WIN and fat ut111 of: .,. of .... del Mar. and Betty Mitt Conulman, 1303 n.iu..I ""'ICE FICTITIOUllUllNEll -·· f2M2Z7 AGNES CAROLINE VAN ~~°'."'""v -~ ...... , .. ...;_ ,,_ --.. Gta.e Full oi;:Mosu.I 220 ~ NAMI ITATIMlNT N ATil'Nllfl Putliltled 0t-Coal! ,,__ ,._ -·, .,. .,.. "' ~ "'·-r 0~.__. b.....,_ten McCORMICK ~. c.!M. :aeea ,ICTI'houa ..,....... The lolloWI""' j)lr90nl lrl TM folloWlng Plt'tofl r. o~ f'llol s.ci:': $ 12 WYK.... COUMC ... °''"'cm°' "9llt ltM •
IUllU survtv.,._, y MORTUARY John Ad.,,,. 5100 8Wdt ,.._tTAT!Mltfl . .., dolOclbullMN'n; 1l2t 118-41 . , A Ion nu~ tired COIT.A MEIA ANO THt llNDAKAAP'MAH grandchildren and • ~ ---. --~. -·---•• Odng ~ •: M~DICAL DEVICE TECH· ... • w ..... ," .. ~~-~"""eou!!'""" .. -~-c 0. T. .. • • • • • • Admlt'llW•lot °' tM ~ 1795 Laguna Canyon ,..,._.,...., __., ..,_, ~ --·· EARMARK BOOKS.1850 NtcALASSOCIATES 15?111 ._._...,,. .1 1 ..,.. llol'MurreyKwptl'l#l ....-le-1\ great-grand-~oad 92600 d bllalr""8U: WWnet A\IWllJtl, Founlaln 8rOO!fmJ,.l 81 &.Ill •. 20l angeCounlyr~lngJhllt D£VllQHlaNT ~OINCY, • • '
Chlldr... S.'v.,... l•Q""' ··-·· Co Thi• butlMtl l• con· -a,.~! .. :''!?S __ PECTS, v .. ley. c.Jff, 92708 •-'-• ,: __ ·-' ·-te net O.vld Nor~ ... cm 'OP' COIT.A ......... ~of NICI u•• '""' ----' .. _._ .... ,._,......, OlnQef"Cox. 1S15SO.Mo-Wft.41..,_.,er,_,. .---. N0 _ ... --•• '00-CALllOftNIA, ON THl ,,..,,_ L ~;;~';;• t': ·Thurtday IOAJ¥1 at 92551 ~ ~. ---..-.--hecti.CAt2800 .i. .... ~ Lii Vegea ...... Thoma v. ~.-Ve :u ,...,..1.u..;'to';;~.1he "'°'°'IDAllTAlllNO-Of!'IW et Law, a;;;,. CA
the' &Ju Bergeron •IM•9-4115 MlmMIC#glll M#tl P. BrCl'#l"'lll, 2318 vld• '89i<M (Sttte 0. In· ::;11~oni. lrvn•,. lllf, f~~:.~=· .sl•l•oflhl~t TIMI MINT TO THI ftl~ o,~ •
Chapel -427 E. 17th Thi• 1111emen1 wu tlllcl ~ ~ a.ch, eor •tlon: Nevld• T"l• butlnfft tt <:on· TM lol!Owiftg '*'°"' .,, pllltJ:9n reqUMt1 e111horlfY 0D£0Y<1LT.,...M"'••""• "•'°"• = s t (:-l a wltt\ Ille Counly Clerk °'Or· -Tl'ffs bUalrlftl I• con-ductld by: .,, lndlvlduel doing buelnMI M: 10 oldmlnleter IM Ml•tl • • M~intetfue:l Gooo HARBOR LAWN· =County Oft A~ 23, ~': ::.:..n::..:u;al O(lrt-ducied by: •.COlfK>f•llon Ttlomn v l(Mlly CijARlES M, DABNEY under" 11'11 lndependlnt Ad· ::Lo:o-r .:,o"~ 11, 1
MT.OLIVE Mlftr.P "'own.I GlngerCo Th11 a11ttMNnt •U "*' ASSOCIATEI 1eo1 mlo!ltretlonofEalll .. Act. ••o•o••'• •••• ,, •• Shepherd c.emetary Mortua"' • Cemetary . ""741 • Thie ttetemet11 •u llllcl wtth tM Coun ... Cl#ll of Cl'~ M OYla Coe ' ,._ A Miring on tl'le pet!Uon · unde fhedirection of ., Putlllll'lld Orar1g9 C.O.. Thlt •~' w• fllld wllhtheCountyC1er•o10t· '1 onr ' t• Mell, .... wth be Mid on &.ptember De Cl A llli AT I 0 "f----------. Crematory ~ l'tlot _.,...,,11 n. Slip. wltti Uie COunty c:Mttk of Or-eng1 Coun ... on A"" at 30 er1g1 County on Augutt 21, IU27 19 198-4' 9:30 AM In P1"1MNIHO THIMTO mlDI.,. 11Ql1C[ Baltz: Bergeron Srmth 1625 Glsler Alie. t;;;:b.,. 5 12.1'8 1Kt •no-County on Augutl tO. 198.4 ,, -·U ' 191-41 Qnaf'" M. Debn.y, 100! ~I No ·~ .i 100' CMc: NOTICE IS' HEREBY 1--C~==-'-'::.::=---
Tuth ill Wesicliff CostaMeu5-410·555'C ' . w-22111&4 f254.dl' Putlllf'led n..-....."=-vr.,.J!?t.Newpot'tewn.cAc.nt• Di-I'll Wlet, Sant• OIVENlhetlhe<:ftyCoul'ICI NO'nCITO
Cha I 646-9371 nl2IMI Pl.l'bllanld Or~ Cout _,_..,... "'-1 Ane.CA12702 of ir.. City of Co91• M8M CMDrTORIOP ~ • Pubbhed Orwioe eo.t Dall)' Piiot September 5. 12, OallW Ptlol ~ 2t, Sep. Tl'tlt bvtlnMt ' 11 con-IF YOU oa.iECT to 11'1e #Id IM Cot!• MeM ~ IUUC: TlllANlfl'.9'
EHRLJCll PIERCE BROTHERS PlBJC HOncE Dally Pilot ~ 22. 21 19, 2e. 1984 limber 5• 12• '· 1964w 218 ductc-~ .. ""Man .!.'!"-IYld~I grr.nUng of tn. petition, )'OU deV'llopm#lt Aganeyc . City of (Sece. 6101-6107 u.c.c.1 MARJORIE CAPE flClmOUl.UltNl.M S111t1mblr S, 12. 1164 w.245 • ·-·...., 9hOl.llcl llln.t IPPW et !!'Ill Coit• M•••· •Ulornl• Notice 11 '*lbY gt-...n to
EHRLICH, beloved BE~:..~~~AY ..... ITATDIDT w-fltBJC N0TtC£ P\BUC MlTta: wi!i":,.'~"';"ci!:-0,~ ~-:.":.~==::~~~on~~~ :::-J',~~
mother of W1U1am K . 110 Broadw•y oJ:: = pertOM.,.. l"\llltC NOTICE FtCTITIQUI .ua...:at ;t: CcMttJ on Augult 30, Ilona with the court Rlfat• 10M, fl e:30 P.M. tn f......,_. l""11 ti Pil• .-o.~
Ehrlich of Loomia. Cosla Mesa G.l .M. SYST~S. 21551 ,ICmtoUllUltNElt NAMllTA'RMl!NT 1 -,"'2s.uu ,.,. o..rlng. Y0\11'-tippoMI'"• ~=~~ l*'IOf'llllproptJrty'*""'-
Califomia; Hubert W. 642-9150 ~Str..,11193,Hunt-•termoutaullNlll MAMllTATIMENT lhelolloW\ngperiOn1we Publllhld Ofll'IQI eo..11nOem1ybllnper1onorby c.IHcwnll I~ 10 CO!\-deecr1be0.
Ehrlich of Quartz ~:~a=. 1~, rt!:="':=!':'.,, ~ = ~· 111 d~~::~UCTK>N, ~Pilot Slot.-t1ber"5, 12:, "°:f :~A~ A CREDITOR .,. t,,. 9')0r0VW.and ~ TM w:·~~ = H 111, Ca Ii f 0 rn I a : NtowlMd Slrlll 111'3, Hunt· 6olng tMnlrMlita •: USP GRAPHICS & LITHO-24572 H..oor Vllw', •C. . • lla.t Of I contlngenl: Cf9dllcw ol tlon ot lhe propoMcl FlJ9I tMllwor(t) ••: Nlwport Kamma E. Larter of BAL T2 BERGERON lngton BM;h, Clll1 9264e p c COIL WINDING, GA A pH y ' 18251 w DINI Point, CA 12629 W-23e ttle o-u.cl. )'OU muet Ille Amendment 10 U1e Re-edflC lnvllitmenta. Inc., •
Q H'll c-•· SMITH A TUTHILL RobM<:Natr,•leTr"*" l7l>O ·p• ~port Circle, 0M2<70o<,,mo1, •B. lrvlnti. CA Kenn•th Edwin Gibl•, )'OUrcialmW'lthtlMloourt.Of ~tPllnl0tCo911 corpoftillOtl,-41510 uartz 1 • ii.II · WESTCLIFF CHAPEL Plll.JC NOTICE prMent 1t ta thll perlOMI M ... Redl•eloprnltlt Pro-Drf"ll.SUH411,....._
'orru·a and Vlrcnnl.,, L . $ onvti, eo.11 Meu. C11!1 S1111e Ane, CA 12705 Jarem" A""''' 22358 24572 HwbOJ View, •C. •--···-_, .. by ..,.. Ar• No, 2 ~ thl , ,. ·-.. --427 E 171h t 92e21 Pt1yt11 Emily CuMO. 210-4I , • Oen• Point. cA 92829 ...... -.. u.-.. ,..... ..... El).rlich oC TuJWtga, Co11a Mesa TIWI bualn111 11 (:On· S•nt• A.ne A"ll., Co111 Mlfl(;Of ..... • MIUIOn Vle}O, CA Thlt bU1ln"t 11 con-T4A31 the~ wltl'lln four rnonlrie propoeed Nl09tl'YI o.der· Tiii locetlon Jn Cdlomll
California, SI.Ster of, &16-9371 ducted by: I O'f*~ pwt. M-. CA 92621 ducted by! .,, IMMOual MOTICI °' from the d•t• of Int II-•tlon perllllnlnQ lh#e!O, Tiii tM ct"9t -..cull'YI oflk» iwrtn!P lf'I•• bu11,,... 11 con-Tt1i1 t>ualn••• 11 con· Kenneth Ed'Mn G•bll TitUITEf'I IALt: tuance ol 1etter1 u prO'lldecl PYrPGM of Iii• propoM(I PJlnd!* ~ offtol Gurnee Cape of Mil· Rob McNelr . di.ICl9d by: 111 W'ldMdu.. ducted by· An lndlvldual This stet-1t w .. lllld T.I . No. CWR 400008 In Section 700 ol lhl ll'Mfldtnenl It lo ••!Md lfll tM lntlnded 1r#llflror 11:
waukee •. Wisconsin Tfllt lllt"'*11 WU Ned ~· &'nly CuMO Wtmy Anwyt with '""County Ci.it °'Or· IWORTANT NO TIC( TO PrOO.le Code of c.lltatnll. d\.lf•llon of 1119 Plll'I from .. .oowe.
and Wellini1= Cape PACIFIC VIEW ....... ,---····Dirk of Or· •1•1"'*1t WIS fhd Thll 11111!'1'111'11 WU tllld #108 ""'-~, -··--''· "'°""" o~ The lll'M for Nlng cillml .... ""'lo lorty·M.,.... #ldto "'OChlt buMrlMI MIMI aba.. f Milw. k ' MEMORIAL PARK ;;:;;. 'C'ot.,"';;;'on Augut1 23, wllh lhe Coun!y Cllrk o1 Or· 1'1tti the CO\.lrlty Ci.rtl of Cl"· 1964 .......,,,, un -.-· YOU ARE IN DE.FA.ULT rw>t upif• prior to lour vpdell IM Plen IO t9'lec:I Midi" .... Uled by 1118
0 wau ' Cemetary • Mor1uary ll!4 Inge County on Augulll 2, 11r1911 Couruy Oil Augutt 30, f2U740 UNDER A DEED OF TRUST, montht from lhl d11e of lhe oertlln cflanold tondltlonl. Mndld tl-Mror wlll'lln
Marion Bfthn of La Chapel • Cremalory . F2$1141 198• . 1984 --.. ~ Publlaf'lecl Or81\{11 Coal DATED tl/11171. UNLESS tllarlng notlcl '°°"'· TM purl)OM or= ilr•,...,.. IUI ~ IO , ...
Crcue, Wi9oonsin and 500 Pocollc vo·-· o.... Pubtlll'led °' .... eo.11 F251M ,.._ -D.lot A ....... t 22 2f YOU TAKE ACTION TO YOU MAY EXAMINE lhl publlc~ II lo . ltnown IO the lnteno.d
E h W f "" Publlatieo Orangt1 C0..1 r' ··-· ' PROTECT YOUR PROP· fffe kept by the c:oun. " you 1. TM lnttiel Stucty end r~ #9: none. st er are 0 Newport Beach O.ltyPllol.'Augulll'l,Sep· PubtlsheclOrlOQC!Co .. t DlilyPllotS.,:.temblr512 S..,tem1>er 5.1z.-1984 ERTYITMAYBESOLOATA1r••ger1onlnt«•tldln Nege11Ye0ec:l.#1tlonrlndlng TM,...,.,..•)and~
Pugeot Sound. Wash? •6-414·2700 ll!Tlblr !, 12· 19· '984W·22:! =~~~I 'f:'J' 19 28. 1HC • • W-2:09 PUBLIC SALE. IF \'Ou 1hll 111•1•, you D't8Y ..... IMI IN propoMd Amend-of tM lntlndlcl
ington; one sister-in· a W-21 1 W·238 NEED AN EXPLANATION upon lhe •xec.utor or ldmln-ment wt~ not n ..... ltly Ilg-,..,,...,,...) #« Pltrlclt c.
I aw , K .a mm a e "-Et.IC NOTIC£ PUBllC NOTICE OF THE NATURE Of THE ltlr1tor. or usJDn lhl •I· nltl<:enl ett.<:1 on the ~ 72-418 ~ ·~:_::..:.__::::.:~~.:_i_:=======-J --;;;:;~;;;;:;;~;;;;;-1--PUiiiiCimiCi:--1 Pl.el.IC fiOTIC[ PROCEEDING AOl\INST latn.y IOI' 1he •ueutor or vlronment , , Hunttngton 8MCft. -FICTJ'TM)UI MIS.Niii PlB..IC NOTICE K-1*1 YOU, YOU SHOULD CON· edmlnillr•I«, Ind NI wllll 2. The proe>OMd Flrtt t2Me, Jo11 B, ~.
NAME ITATlMf.NT H·t-4112::1 NOTICI. M TA.Cl A LAWYER. tt"ie court wtth proof of '9r· Amendment to the R•· tll72 S•llw•tll" Clrcl•, llWll IQllowjng 0--1 •r• FICTI'.TKMJI •USfMf.I• NOTICE Of TilUITel'I IAL.l On Wedneectey. Sep1em-' • wrlllln ~1 1111· d•v1lopmen1 Pl•n IUb· untlngton B••eh, CA,
dOlng bualnnlU' NAME STATIEIKNT TftU•TflE'S •ALE T.I. No.-410M bet" 12. 1984, ., 10:00A.M.. !Mt )'OU Mair•~ mltlecl bytMAglnCY. wdW., 7251 ~
PS ENTERPRISES, 1922 ThlllollowlngperlOfllet• T.l .No.,_zsin IMPOPITANTNOTICllTO CAL-WESTERN RE· loeoftn.~ot ... in.. OIMJ ~I• to ·ba 'HwrtJnglon 8Mct\,
E Edlnger A-... , SMte Ana, doing bullneta •• IMPORTANT NOTICl TO "'°""" 0_,... CONVEYANCE CORPOR· IOt)'and --~ 01 ~ -'IN IOtftt pub-ttM1 Cllll.91705 ASPEN WE ST DE· .'910PEflTYOWNlfl VOU ARE IN DEFAULT ATK>N,ACllllOffll•C6'pOf· tltlMMlsatoflMl)all-llcltMftngonthlpr~ TMt tM property plf1'--,
K-1 H S110111k 20 12:2 v E L 0 p E Rs . 2 4 2' I 'IOU ARE IN DEFAULT UNDER ... DEED OF TRUST, •tlon .. duly appoln1ecl lonl Of KCOU!'tll l'l'lll'ltionld Ar1t A/Tlll'ldl'r'lenl to ,,,. ~ I Mfllo " o..c:tlbed It!
Vine o..1v9. Sllnll An •. CeMI Ankwton °'' El lOl'O, CA UNDER A DEED OF TRUST, DATED 813183. UNLESS TNllMI under 9"d··ptl'r8Uei'lt' In Section 1200Incl1200.5 ol ~ Pl•n lncll.lde: •n•r•l ••; •qulpmenl,
92707 92630 DATED 9115180 UNLESS YOU TAKE ACTION TO to Deld of Trust recordld MCll"omleProbtteCode. J . Thi Rlpofl lo aty endtrlldllnamaof• R8l\dolptl S Pruner 235 TALKING SIGHS, 24221 Y-OU TA!<E ACTION TO PROTECT YOUR PROP· Aprt 20, 1979, .. Intl. No. n1n O'c-n.ll. 1U1 I . Coundt on.....tM propc!Md
w Oreng1wood .i.ve .. Anker1on Dt El TOl'o, CA PROTECT YOUR PROP· ER'TY IT MAY BE ljOLOAT A 2.sce'I, In book 13113, P1Q9 owtfl t1 .. lult11IO, IMI• ~t1~I10 IM~
Anahcllm CaNI 92:&02 92830 . ERTYITMAYBESOLDATA PUBLIC SALE. IF YOU 744, ol Olllcial Recotdt In CAtz70I . d1v1Jopm1nt Pl•n tUb·
Tf'lil ~uMn••• 11 con·• Sle•e trwln 24221 llUBLIC SALE IF YOU NEED AN EXPLANATION 1tie oflloa of lhe C04.!nly f:te-PubH.n.d Orange Co11t mlllfld by !hi Agency, In·"'"""'"'
duct9d by: joint vernure , Anller1on Of El faro, CA NEED AN EXPLANATION OF THE NATURE Of THE corderl ol Ol"enge Count)'. 1y Pllo1 Sepl.-t1ber 4, 5, duding but l'ICll llmlted lo:
KarlH Slannlk 92630 OF THE NATURE OF. THE l>ROCEEOING o\OAINST St1t1ofCalltornll,1•ec\.lled 11, 198A l•)Tl'9rl90!1endr«r
Thlt 11e1emen1 WU nlld Monlea M lr...in 24221 PROCEEDING AGAINST. YOU. YOU SHOULD CON· by THOMAS v. CHEOH, An Tw-1811 ommend•tlon of "" ~
wllhlMCountyCllrkofOI"· Anlter10I'\ °' EL Toro. CA YOU. YOU SHOULD CON-TACT A LAWYER. Unmenled Men lnCI PA· ,.ngCommluk>noflMQ'Y
ang1 Counl)' on Augutt 23, 92e30 TACT A LAWYER On WeclnMdl"f. Septem· TRICIA A. SISSON, An un. Pll!l.IC NOTICE of Coit• M•M . ot1 ll'ltl
1994 Tnl1 bu1lness 1s con-On Septemt>8f 2e. 11&4, ber 26, 1984, 11 10:00 A.M .. m•rrlld wom•n WILL SELL. · Pf090led F1'al AmencllTllftL
F2Sl143 ductld by· • l!Ysband lltld et 10:00 A.M . IMPERIAL GUILD ADMINISTRATION AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO NOTIC( Of" PUlt.JC lbl TIMI IUfTVTl#'y of Pu~ Ofll'IQI COU1 Wife CORPORATION OF AMERI-CORP., A CALIFORNIA HIGHEST BIOOE~ FOR tA&.a Of 00001 COMYl!atlon with r-6denltpirt;,;.;y_
Diiiy Piiot Augutl 2t Seo-Monk:aM Irwin CA .•• duty eppolnl•d CORPORATION,u~ap.. CA9H ~II llml of fOIATlll'YUlM ltlCI communtty ~
tember 5 12 19 198' Thlt lllilti'Mnl Wll lll•d Tru•t-~ •nd PIJl"lllU.-.1 Polflled lrUllMI ~ aod Nie In le;wtul monwt of lhe TO WHOM IT MAY CON· lion• r•a•rdlng '"•1£&""""' ' ' ' W-223 with ltie Coon1y Clerk of Or· 10 OMd of Trutt 1eoordld OOfllillllll to OMd o1 Tru1t United Stet•) et the Nortl'I CERN· 1 propoMd Flrtt Amendment,
ange Count~ on Augus1 r. SIPtemt>er 25. 11&0, u lnll. recorded AUGUST 5, 1983, tront entrMC* LO tl'le County NaUc.11 MfebY glVll'I thsl" 2. All lllldence end 1981~ f'ta.IC filOTIC[ 1 .. 4 No 35625, In book 13751, • ln11. No 83-340461. of Cour11'1ou11 700 Civle on SeplemblJ 1. 1114 el ITiOf'ly tor end IQolinl1 itl9 1-----~----1 FH2219 page 365. of Otlt<:lll Re-C>mciel Rec.otdl In 1118 otllce Cenllr 0rt-...' W•1. Sanlli !he hour of 10·00 AM of Uk! ldOplkJn ot tM propoMcl
'tCTTTIOU8 IUllNEIS Publlsf'lecl Ol"•noe Cou1 eord1 In the olllcl .01 the of lhe County Rec:ordlra ol Ana, Clllf. all 11gtll, tltlll end d•t• et 5422 Ocffnv• Flnt An'llt'ldmlftl 10 IN A9--
NA.Mt: ITATEMt:NT 0.ltyPllot >.ugust22 29 CountyRecord1r1o!Oreng1 O.•no-County, St11• ol 1n1ef"1 con'l9)'ed to Incl OfMi Huntington BHch ~tP11n,
The ldllowlng l)lrtonl 1r1 SepUtmbttr 5. 12. 198• County, St1te ol Cllllfornle. Celllornle, ea1cul1d by l'IOW Mid by It under Mid C~ tM u~ At tM abOVe Sllled day,
dOing IM.Ill,_. U: W·:l07 e~eeul•d by C. S.(RR STEVEN C FOSTE.A, A Deed ofTf\IS1 ln!Mp!'()plrly wlll Ml et puttk ~tor IKtur, •nCI ~ ltl'Y Md Ml
F M MEDIA MARKETING, FLETCHER AHO LUCY ANN SINGLE MAN, Will SELL lltueted in Nici Cou,,ty end cuh tn 1e1J1M ll'IOMy of tf11 P«IOM /\eYlng ltl'Y obi*>.-f0~~~-1
200 N. Tuttin A-... .. Miit• 21. rt&JC NQTfe[ FLETCHER, HUSBAND AND -'T PUBLIC AUCTION TO Stile dleC'tlbad .. ! Unlt9d 5111.._ UM lnlatal llGN to 1f'le Pi"OC>Olld Fhl
Sant• Ane. Clllf. 12105 WIFE, Will SELL AT PUB-HIGHEST BIDDER FOR PARCEL t: All 1tllt p()f11on iler1ln11t1r dtecrlb•d. AmMdfMl\t to trie Re· lM!n.. Vin Wegoner. FlCTITIOU• BUllMt:SI LIC AUCTION TO HIGHEST CASH (P•Y•ble at lime ol of LOI I of Tract No. 9464, In be1on9lng 10 Of d4ipotlled ~t Plan Of IO 1M
211111 Tutt In Ave.. Cott• MAMI 8TATIME:HT BIDDER FOR £.ASH (P-9)'" Nie 111 Lflwful money ol lhe the City of Cott• MW, wllh, lht under.iontcl by 1"9 "'°""':Y of My of 1119 prtoJ Mw, CllH. 12127 The..loMowlng P«IO'll Ire Ible 11 I~ ol je1e"'fn ~Ill Unll9d St1tn) 1t tM Wort" COunty of Ofenge, Slete of Plf"llOn& IMlir'llnaft• nMlld P'« I tdtl191 Mltl r..-ot to
H1t1M K. Rlub, 1100 ~ Wlfntitl u money al 1f'll Unll9d Steletl from en1rll!OI to the COunty calltomll. u ~ on , •I 5422 ~ OrlYe to ll.IOil AlnlnOmll'll, may llP" K1t1wood Pl., Fvllll10n. HAWA IIAN RAINSOW , at thl North Iron! entraoce Courlhou11 . 700 Clvl<: l'l'llP recotcted In Book 4141, Mtllf't the 11en ttMtraon' 10t (leer baforl lhe Clly ~
Calif. 12831 37.0-A E•tt 17th StrMt, 10 IM Cou11ty CourthouM. Cer11er Orlva Wul, Sen1• PIQll 43. •4 encl 45 o1 Ml• •lor9Q911'1d Muling end thl Rld•v.lopm•nt
Thi• bUlll"I••• 11 con-Coll• M .... CAl2627 100 Civic Cenllr Drl"tit W•t. An•. C.!llornla 1111 right, llllti ~ M1191, recol'dl ot Salcl QOOdl .,. Mina "9ld Ao-ncY encl tnowc..,.wPty ~led by: • O'f* .. part. Uly Choo, 10538 El M•n· Saflll Anll. CMll .. rig"'· Incl ln11f911 «:on....yed TO Nkl COunty, ShoW'n .. Unit on the tce0Utl1 Of ~ 1M prGpOlled ... -..... -...... 1 illr'lhlp uno A'#ltlOI, Founlllln Val· 111 .. Incl lnterRI eonV9)'tlCI ll"lCI now held by II under 4 on. oondomlnlum pl#!,. BIQl!ed.. Saki OOCdt.,.. a.. mtnl 10 the Red .. aloptl'lllU
Tttom.IV•nWlgOIW t.y.CA92708 10lnclt"IOllfMidtlyllunc19t Mk! OMd of Trull In'"' cordldtnlook12457,P9Ql 11Cf1bed•onebutltlol. Pl#'lthoUldnotbledot:lled. lntll'ldldTr ........ TNt st1ternen1 ,,, .. Neel DlllY Ho. 9393 Cobbler uld 0-0 ol lru1t In the propert7 111ue1ed In Mid 15 of Qflleilll JllC'Of"cla of Nici The amounl dul on MIO At #'rf llme l'ICll 111• ll'len Publlthed OrllnQI! CoaM ..
W'llhtMCountyCl#ttotOr· Ro•d, W•tlmlns11r,· CA property .. luetld In Nld County•ndS111 .. de1CJlbld <:eunty·and•d.nnldlnthll W1kltlt II Sl,4zt,10, TM 1119 ~ •forllald M' lor Pt1o1 lapt«n• w I,
•noe County on Augutt 23, 92913 ..... County •nd State deecrlbed ••: I.OT 1 OF TFIACT NO. <:91'1#1'1 Oleler1tlon at eoo..-ieuct6on '#ill be mede for IM n..rltlg • .,,., Plr9on objlel-1tfl.4
1964 Thlt bl.lllnes1 II con· u 3118. AS SHOWN ON A,,.,...., Condlllonl and Re--P!Jt90MO\' .. tllfytnglhellln Ing 10 IM pN)90Md Flr9I
'211741 ducttd by An lndlVl<lu•t Lot 80 ot Trlci No 1154, MAP THEREOF RECOROEO •llletk>M .. mor• ptnk»-°' the ur•Mgned otl MIO Amend!Nnl to 11'11 .... P~ Or11"'91 CoMl 0..,. Ho ln lheClly of Cot11 M ... , U IN BOO!< 145, PMiES 4• 11t1y dMcrltted 11'1 E;rhltlit A IDIQOl'lal.fH'OC*tf tot._..,. ~lf'\l!I mjll)' Nein 1---------'-
D•lly P!kJ1 Auguat :zt, ~ Ttllt •~11mt1n1 wu tiled per Map 1e<:0tdld In BQOll A N.0 4 5. o f" M t&.r •nlChld Weto •nd" medl tiint 01 1,,. 111m m1ntlonltl, wrltlnll wtll'I thl City Clerk • PlBLIC NOTICE
llml;* 5, 12. 11, 1184 wttn 11'1• COunty Clefk ol Or· 37 PllQfll 11 and 12.~ CE~NEOUS MAPS , RE· plrl her90f, 1CIQ91Mr wllh IM co.rt ol .. .,..,,.,..t of NI Of Mr obl'1-~~==="'-=--. W·224 enoe County Of\ Augu11 30. e .. l.nlOUt Mtpt, In the Qj. co-..oeo OF SAID ORANGE Tri. It,.. lldOreel Md ... .. \! ~ to the prGpOlled ,tcmtoUI ...........
118.4 . !lee ol the County Recotder COUNTY ' . flm ~ 10 the~
I
f
•
'
~-
,
' ' ' '
...!, .
..
., ,
PilllwEDN
Chocol•I• truta
goben..-ln•
Uff.Y the no-b•k•·
methOd. Page C4.
_.,.B,,_ack:..to-sch~oJ .snacks to-pack
utritious·noontime goodies perfect
for aft~rschool pick-me-ups, too
~
Children greet the new chool year with higtranticipation and
undlcsscncrgy. Help them keep up the1renerg~ and·cnthu ia m with
hese delicious lunch box treats and afterschool p1ck-nie-ups.
And tuck a few away for Mom and Dad. You don't have to be in
hoot to need and enjoy nUJritious noontime goodies or a mid-
afternoo1unack. Trouble is. thesctreatsaresogood.1hcymay not last
past your morning coffee break. ·
Potassium-rich bananas arc the Oavorand texture ccrct oft he
foll wing recipes. The) add an c~tra measure of nutrition to tradnional
• chocolatechipcopkiesand nutt) jam muffins. · •
. For an after-school pepper-upper. frozen p_ops and shakes rcall}
hit the pot. Make homework easier to bear" ith nutritious Peanut
Butter Banana Pops or Frosty Yogurt Sl}ake. made with frozen cxtra-
npe bananas. ·
BANANA CHOCOLATE CHIP COOKIES
3 large, extra-ri~ bananas, peeled
3 cup packed brown sugar
·~ cup granulated sugar·
·~ c-.p baUel', softened
Z eggs
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
2 ~., cops all-purpose flour
2 ·~ teaspoons baking powder
1 teaspoon baking soda
111 teaspoons ground cinnamon
·~ teaspoon salt. ·
i •., cups cbocolate cbJps.
I cap chopped walnats
Slice bananas into blender. Whir until pureeiH I 1hcups) Cream
sugars and butter until light and OufT)'. Beat in bananas. eggs and van ill.a.
omb111ed1 y rngied1e11ts. _
Beat into banana mixture until blended. Sur 1n chocolate chips and
nuts. Spoon by heaping tablespoon onto greased cookie sheets. Bake in ,
375-degree oven 12 to 15 minutes. Remove to wire racks to cool. Makes 4.
dozen cookies.
NUTTY JAM MUFFINS
2 large, extra-ripe bananas, peeled
1 cup ground walnuts
11 • caps sugar
'• cup butter, softened
1 egg
23• cups all-purpose flour
2 teaspoons ~aJdng powder I
111 te~spoons ground cinnamon ~ teas'poon gound nutmeg
1 • teaspoon salt 1 small. ripe banana, pejled, ma bed
3 tablespoons raspberry jam
Have ready 18 muffin pan cups with cupcake liners. Slice extra-ripe
bananas in to blender. Whir until pureed (I cup). Comb.me • ·cup walnuts
~ith 11• cup sugar. Beat remain1n1bananaandqg. Combine dry
ingredients. Beat into banana mixture unul well mixed. Combine mashed
banana with ra pberry jam.
For each muffin . spoon ~bout I tablespoon dough into walnut-sugar
mixture to coat. Drop mto line muffin cups. SPo<>n about I teaspoon jam
mixture into center. Drop I more tablespoon dough in walnut mixture
and coat well Drop aver Jam mixture. Bake in 400-degree"oven 15 to 20
• minutes. Serve warm or cool. Makes 18 muffins.
...
BANANA CRUNCH COOKIES
2 large, extra-ripe bananas, peeled
I cup packed brown 1 gar
1'2 cup granalated sugar
•., cup butter, softened
1 egg
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
1 cup all-purpose flour
I C\tP oatmeal
l cup wbeat"germ
I teaspoon baking powder
1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
• 2 tea poon salt
1 cup raisins -
•., cap ciao~ peuats
Slice bananas mtCJbltndti-. \ h1runt11 pure d(l cup). Cream n
and butterunul hghtand fluff). Beat in bananas, cg and vandla until
blended. Combine df) mgred1ent5. Beat an to nana muture unuJ
blended .. tirinraismsandpeanuts.Dropb) ta poonontogrcascd h('Ct
J inchesapan. Bake in 350-degreco\cn 20to2S mi nut~ Remo,et0\\11'C
rad;.;tocool Mak 3d0l~ncooldc . ...
• · FROSTYYOGURTSllAKE
·2 medum, eztra-rlpe frozen. peeled ban•n••
1 carton (8 ou.ncea) ,..Pt>en'J Yoiart•
Pleine eee SMACKS/C4J
ltu~al un_derstanding promoted through food
Kids' diet seiious buslness
t 1'
Chinese classes:
History, cuisine
mixed thoroughly
...,,.,....--
By BEA ANDERSON
Of llM Oellr ..... Sid
A funn) thing happened on Ma~
Tai Wynston's way to registering
for some cooking classes at the
Fountain Valle~ Recreation De-
partment.
'ihe became an in tructor.
Wanung to e'pand her repertoire
to mcl ude TtaTian anil fciiCan
cui inc. the Fountain Valle)
mother said the cooking ries also
., .
.... ,... ,.... ., .... ,.,,..
Four Color Butterfly Ve&etable Platter created by May Tai
Wynaton (aboft). She &lao arran&ed the elc&ant pre.en·
tatlon of b.rlmp Slew Mal (left) . •
.
hl'~ nuthl'nt1r d1,he'
,
---
•
"
COlta Mesa-Newport Ancf Vlrgfnle
•
•
,
rorc I n re n crator 1.tp to ~ed~s
Makes about 4 cup or about S (8
fluid oun~) containers.
Note: For case in extract1n Juice.
heat grapes, slightly; then crush.
using a potato masher or food mill.
SPICEt> GRAPE BUTTER
i cups prepared fruit (about. 2
• poundi fully r1pe Concord
frapes)
• teaspoon cinnamon
• ~ teaipoon doves
4 cup1 (1 a, pound) sugar .
1 poacb liquid rruh pectla
Thorouahly crush about 2
paunds Concord· araph. force
crushed fruit through a food mill or
press throuah a sieve. Measure ~
cups into large bo\\,:I or pan. Stir ur
SPl~S. • ~
Thorought\ mixsuaar into fruit:
let sta~ t 6~ minutes. Stir fruit ~tin into fruit. Continue stimna J
minutes. (A fe~ suaar crystals "'ill
remain.) Ladle qui>kly into scalded
containers. Cover at once with tight
lids.
Let stand at room temperature 24
hours; then store in (rcczer. Small
amounts ma> be covered and
stored ifldefpgerator up to 3 weeks.
Makes abodt 41/~ cups or about 6 (8
•fluid ounce) containers.
..
Vegetable Stir-fry a m eal in itse lf
L • -
·Oriental-style
cooking retains
natural crispness
All of us in the U mted States are
lucky to have gardens of'our own or
supermarkets wuh abundant. wellt
main tamed vegetable departme~ts.
All kmds of vegetables are avail-
able. even Chinese pea pads.
Herc's the chance to change your
vegetable style of cooking. For
instance. make an exciting main
meal. Japanese fashion. from veg-
etables alone. or try some spinach-
stuffcd mushrooms as dehghtftll
appetizers. or vegetable fritters as a
great side dish.
VEGETABLE STIR-FRY
1 teaspoon cornstarch
11 cup soy sauce
1 cup cblckea broth
•, cup spicy brown mustard
1'2 teaspoon powdered ginger
3 tablespoons vegetable oil
1 cup or ~ large chopped
Spanish onion
1 tbJnly sliced red bell pepper
..
.
1 thlaly sliced areen bell pepper
6 ounces fresb or frozen Chinese
pea pods
8 ounces fresh bean sprouts
Cooked rice ·
Mix cornstarch with soy sauce.
Mi>. together '°Y sauce mixture.
chicken broth. mustard and ginger.
Heat vegetable oil in a large skillet:
Stir-fry onion and peppers for 3
minutes: stir in pea pods and cook
for an additional 2 minutes.
Sunn soy sauce mixture. Bring to
a boal while stirring constantly.
Gentle stir an bean sprouts. Heat to
ytarm. Makes 4 to 6 servings. Ser~e
<:Jvcr nee.
VEGETABLE FRITTERS
•, cup t;utter or margarine,
melsed, or as needed
3, cup finely chopped zuccblnf
"1 cup fibely chopped mu,b-
rooms .
•, cup shredded carrots
•, cup chopped onion
3_. cup daJry 1our cream
3 tablespoons spicy brown mas-
tard
2 beaten eass
3 tablespoons cornstarch
Combination
hard to beat ..
BEETS AND EGGS
6 lar1e e311
16-ounce can sliced beets
"'-a cup su1ar
~ cup cider vlne1ar
Salt to taste
Lettuce
Storebou1bt herr.lni fillets In
1our cream
Hard-cook eggs. ~hell and cool:
place in a I ..quart jar. Dram liquid
from beets into a I-quart saucepan:
add sugar. \ inegar and salt to taste:
stirring to dissolve sugar. bring to a
boil. Pour over eggs: pile beets on
top: press down beets so liquid
about covers them.
Co ver and chill 24 hours. At
servmg time. remove from j11r and
drain: arrange beets on lettuce:
halve eggs and add. garnish with
hernng. Makes 6 first-course ser-
vings.
' I
rrs UNIQUELY DELICIOUS
And so easy to serve. Because it comes
full-cooked and spiral-sliced. So-party-
timc. dinner-time or anytime that onlt
the best will do. make it HoneyBaked
bran~ ham . And you've aot it made. r ITS ONl Glf.AT HAM
• Smokf:d & Baked for 30 Hours
• Honey & Spice G l11cd
• Spiral· Sliced for Sc"' ana Ea e
•Whole & Half Ham • Nauonwido Sh1ppin1
•Gift Cen1ficate • Pany Tray
AHAHllM • Tiit Vllla11 Cent1t. 1222 S BrOok!wnt (a 1111 M I • ( 714) 63s.2•6 I
, COIOllCA Oll MA&· 3700 C'oe.1 Hwy 17'4167l 9000 ,,
IL 1'0&0· le I f()';rjtt Ptue NM!\. 2'601 RaYmond Way•2h& El Tm>MJ • (71•1137·3 22 HUHT1NeiTo-il NAClt •I 9 ~ IML (at
Oal'f'lcld not io ~lpfti) • ('7") I• U 7S
OIAHCil • I' 19 N Tust!ft ( Kattllt) • • (7141997 9960 •
ONE TASTE IS A l IT TAKESI
Copyr11lu f I Honey 81led Him Inc
'
Saute• vegetables m 1 tablespoon
butte~remove from heat. Mix
together sour cream, mlMtard and
egp. Gradually beat in comsta'rch.
Sur in vegetables. Melt I table-
spoon butter in skillet.
Spoon 2 tablespoons fritter batter
on skillet. Cook until liahtly brown
on one side. Tum and lightl)' brown
other side. Add butter to skillet as
needed. Serve with . breakfast
sausage or bacon. Makes 8 to l 0
fritters .
Note: Any combination of veg-
etables can be substituted in the
recipe.
SPINACH-STUFFED MUSH-
U medlom-slied)
S tablespoons butter, melt~
l cup Ricotta cbeese
l tablespoon plas 1 teaspoon
spicy brown m11t.ard.
Pinch crushed orecano ;
Wastt and clean spinach; place in
covered skillet and s(eam for five
minutes. Remove. thorou1hly
drain and chop. Remove stems
from mushroom caps and finely
chop. Sautc' chopped stems and
spinach in one tablespoon buner.
ROOMS •
1 pound fresh spinach (or 1
package (10 ou.nces) frozen
chopped splnacb, thawed, well-
drained)
In a mixing bowl, combine the
spinach mixture with the remaining
ingredients. Spoon the stuffina into
the caps. (at this point the stuffed
mushroo~s can be refrigerated).
Before baking. place on a cookie
sheet and brush with remaining ••
butter. Bake' in er 350 dev..ee oven
for 15 minutes or unul heated
through. Makes about 16 stu,ffed
mushrooms. 1 pound fresb mu1brom1 (about
CHINESE CUISINE ...
From Cl
THE
ORANGE COAST
DAILY PILOT
council on its contri-
butions to the City of Hope.
Look for lo~al spo·nsors tn·
~ednesdays food section of
The Daily Pilot. '
-•
•
1 .
;
-Shrimp, oc o
Nectarine m .ousse
cool summer idea
Though summer cookcl") does
not neccssaril> mean cold food.
cold dishes arc always aarccable in
most summer meals
This Blue Cheese Nectannc
Mousse features one of everyone's
favon tc summer fruit. fresh Cah-
forma nect.annes. in an unusual
cool and creamy summer salad
As fruit and cheese have tra·
dittonally married well, the blend·
ing of tangy nectanncs and the
"bite" of sharp blue cheese make
this molded salad a pleasing com-
bination offlavors and textures.
But what doesn't ao well with
California nectarines? Whether it's
a chocolate souffie roll with a
nectanne cream fillin' or a nec-
tarine sweetened ",Frs1oh of cold
gazpacho soup. nectarines from
California enhance so many sum-
mer menus.
No"' that the}'re in season. from
mid-May throuah September. you
can create endless nectanne special-
ties from the more than 90'varieties
available all summer long.
BLUE CHEESE NECTARINE
MOUSSE
4 ounces blue cbeeae
2 tablespoons llme or lemon
Juice
1 cup cucumber L 1bredded1 loosely packed
1 cup sour cream
•,.cup green oalon1, sliced
i,,. teaspoon salt
1 envelope uoflavored aelatlo
•, cup cold water
1 pound f resb California nec-
tarinea, diced (1 ~, cups)
Lettuc~
Nectarine and cucumber 1Ucea
In large bowl. beat cheese with
lime juice until thoroughly
blended. Stir in cucumber, sour
cream. onions and salt. ln small
saucepan, soften gelatin m .water.
Warm over medium heat to dis-
solve gelatin. Cool slightly.
Sur into cheese mixture: fold m
nectannes. Pour into 4-<:uP. mold
Chill several h6urs unul fi rm
Arrange lenuec on serving plate
Unmold nectarine mixture onto
lettuce. Garnish >A-1\h nectarine and
cucumber slices. 6 to 8 servings.
Sweet, mild onions· .
sal~d centerpiece
The crackl} goodness and fresh
wholesomeness of a sweet. mild
onion is Just what's needed to make
a perfect occasion out of a barbecue.
Onions are at their best as a raw
vegetable and when served raw.
they also retain more of their
important nutncnts. One medium·
sized onion 1s a good source of 1r-0n.
calcium. potassium, protein. B-
v1tamms. and vitamin C In ad·
d1t1on. tt has onl> 38 calories.
accordm~ to USDA.
In addtt1on to being nutnuous.
an onion 1s a good source offiber, is
good for Jowcnng blood pressure
and blood cholesterol levels accord-
ing to recent research. and it has
man} other healing properties
Because of the unusual charac-
teristrcs of onions. special recipes
have been developed around them.
And salads take top b11lmg on
summer menus as appetizers. main
dishes or accompaniments to the
meal.
If yo u're looking for an eye-
catchmg and un ique salad for }Our
next meal. try the Potato Onion
Salad. or the increasing)} popular
Taco Salad
POTATO ONION SAL-AD
l medium onion, thinly sliced
and separated lnto rln1s
5 medium potat~s ( l '' pounds l
~ cup minced parsley
i, cup wblte wine
Vlneaar
'' cup oUve~n ·• \ teaspoon prepared Dijon mus·
tard
Salt and white pepper to taste
Lettuce
Paprika
Sliced bard cooked tH•
Green pepper rln11
8011 potatoes in their Jackets m
the salted water unul tender: peel
and shce thin. Add onion ond
parsley. Beat toaether the oil. vmepr.
mustard. salt and pepper. and add.
Mix gently but well. Potatoes
should be quite mom. If you hke a
tart flavor. add vinegar.
Serve at room temperature on
lettuce: sprinkle with papnka and
garnish with eggs and green pepper
Sen es 6.
TACO &.\LAD
1 cup chopped onJon1
1 pound ground beef
12 cup taco sauce
1., cup pitted black olives
1 small bead lettuce, chopped
1 green pepper, cut lo strips
% tomatoes t cups shredded cheese
1 package taco flavored tortilla
cbJps, crumbled
l cup Tbouaaod Island dressing
1 can kidney beans
Brown ground beef. dram. Stir in
taco sauce and beans: heat.
Mix together onions. lettuce.
pepper. tomato. ohves. cheese and
chips. Spoon beef and dressing over
lettuce mixture. Serve prompt!).
' 6 medium-sized sweet onions
l ~11 cups prepared .stuff lug mix
1 te11poon poultry ae11ontn1
(optional)
l l'i cups grated sharp cbeHe
:i, cup melted butter or maraar·
lne
l cup bot water
Peet oruons and_~u
crosswise m 3 or 4 thick
Combine stuffing mix a
add melted butter an
along wtth poultl')
desired Blend well.
Spread stuffing mixture th1ckl>
betweeJl onion slH~es: reassemble
each onion. Wrap each onion
securely in heavy aluminum foil or
double thickness of regul91. foil.
Place on grill or direct on coals.
Bake I to.2 hours de ina on size
of onions and heat ire
ShoppiDg tips for be~f
The around beef label of\cn tells
>OU how much fat 1s present in
around beef. This ma) be stated as
"not le than 75 percent L:EA ..
wti1ch muns that 7S percent of the
meat in the p cklae 1s lea" round
bcefand 25 percent IS rat.
Choose the around beef accord·
ina to the beet d1 h )OU are 10101 to
prtP re . The pnce of around beef
tncrca a the percent e or lean
increa . Ground beef 1s o6d for ham· burge~. lopp Jot'~. rh1h nd
pa hcui sauce.
Lean around bcefis recommend-
ed for meat loaf. meat t> Its
Salisbuf) steak, tamale pil' and be.cf
and noddle or rice ca serolc~.
fatfl lean around beef I e\CCI•
lent tor lowo(alone diet : pame
nd combina tton d1 he1
Becau~ there 1s no oonc or wa te
an around beef: one pound (16
OUf\CCS) will make four "1n s
< ontr~n ma u ounct< cooked 1c n
beef). ·
o m ner whl\ the fllt to le n
ratto. one pound ot round be t "11
make four crvm '~
'peared • ta~tlti
~orld f: mou h n c l1fomt rtl u 1>l" ph!J9 phcr, once wrotc. "If you nCC'\ nnc nd plum
nuoknowthe l 'tcof pe r.you · mu t ch n c the pear b) c tin ll
)Ourself." ,
When) ou ta tc a fre h C hforn1
Bartlett pc r )Ou chin c it to
fructo t . B and· C v1tam1ni.. iron.
ma l}C ium and ~a.Jcr to nouri\h
)OUt body. · .
You can also chanJc. a ~ar b)
cooking with it. In Shl'imp. Pear
and Avocado alad; t~o fresh
California Bartlett Pctll'i r~ 'sliced
and erved on lettuce with the
shrimp and D\.CX'ado and dre ed
Y. ith a tan&~ herb m1Aturc.
The Banlett Pear 1s one fruit tbat
mu t be picked green to ripen
comctl~. andjou can pla> a pan in
this metamorpho is b) placing the
unripe pear~ 1n a ripening bowl or
loo I) clo cd paper baa at room
temperature. Within a Jew di)\
almost hke·maa1c the fr~1h Bartlctts
will turn ~unn\ \Cllow. fragrant and
sliihtl) soft. · · .· ,
Howeve r )OU choo~e to chan&c a
pear. )Ou haH• '>everal months of
pear time left and man) Barletts to
taste If this Shrimp. Pear and
~ vocado Salad intriaues ypu. send
SO cent\ (for postaJe) to the C'ali-
forn1a Summer Fruits Recipes.
P.O. Box 2SS627. Sacramento
9S86S to receive a new color
cookbooklet. lt teaturcs scores of
simple yet eleaant recipes for fresh
1 rim" P.OUDd mat
Drt11ln1 .
2 f reala CalUomla Bart t p ar1
tabout l poud)
l avocado
Lemoa Juice •
1 tars• htacl butt r ltttuce
Marinate hr1mp an drc sm 1n
refriaerator for about hour. H \C.
core and hce ~ rs ~to ac& boul 2'h
cupi). Cut a\Ocl do ant(> lenathwasc
slices. Coat both pc r · nd
•~OC'ldo \\:1th lemon Juice l
,prevent brownina.
Shred en per (t'Cnter) le ve o
lettuce and put into center of 4' lad
bowJ hn~d with large outer lcA\es.
pQon marinated hr1mp onto let-
tuce and'arrangc: pear) and avocado
around the shrimp. er-.e remain-
ina Drcssina on the side. Make 4
cn·inas. •
Dre11ln1: Combine .•IJ cup white
vinep r. 114 cup "eaetable oil. 4
teaspoons Worcester~hire auce. l
teaspoon supr. ''> teaspoon salt. '• teaspoon basil. crumbJed, 'h tea-
spoon oregano. crumbled and •/,
teaspoon pepper in a jar: Shake tb
combine. ·
....~ ... .......... ,
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Herrenhauser
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12 Paclc
12 Or. Caru
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Go&dmf.lsk ..... ·.~ ... .,a• ,_..._ °""
._.._ .... ~ 110.. .... 77
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-
STORE HOURS
..
From Germany
~~ =.,,.......,.......,......_ ...,H
6Pack $199
ll ~ NR Bctdes
.... . ........... . ,._,.I
-----------'3" 7toml
• • , , .... . \ ·• t I , ·,
l11 1i.h\\1111 \ .111 1 ..
Ll~um1lch
15(' ml
Estrella
: s.w $1.00
:uquor
'Dam
: Coupon
I
I S.W $1.00
Cabernet Sau~
. 4 C\"'3 >&Jali 1984
~Cooney Fair
., s k
CIStl • ...._ ... ,. .
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1om ....... ~ ..... .,.... ,._. aMta
ta llllltl Dcltll AW. 111>11• • .... •1.W
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Save $1.00 ~~ •
Canadian Club :
-86 Proof· 1.75 Lt I .I'-.... • .... Pay '-'ll&J $16.98UA .... l .. ~•· I
Um. onr 1.1s It bon:1t pa: ~ I
~Unk c-
Mecua 1 llw.~ ... , •• '14"
s.ock 'M .... . . 7W -'6"
Cragmont
2 Lt.. All Fla\
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-.£.. ...
C4 Oran Coast DAIL
Soup's ·
ct,eamy,
poi:tab1€
P kin1 a lunch for 'Aork. or play
n ch l"n e the 1m ·nation "hen
the u u I fare of ndwiches and cold
chicken has lo t its appeal. A novel
and nutritioui sugcstion is in cold
soups, which arc not only colorful and
full or summer flavors, but arc al o
tast) an4 portable. ·
· Fre h Tomato Cttam Soup is •
one-tep preparation of prden-swcet
tomatoes and dairy-fresh mtlk spiced
with onions, garltc and dill. The
ingredients are simply blended
t<>ðcr before sumn.s in the milk.
• and the soup mixture 1s refrigerated
until chilled.
For a picture-perfect lunch. fill
scrving-s1ie Jars with Fresh Tomato .
Cream Soup and top each with lemon
slices and sprays of fresh dill. Aecom·
panied witb. crust> French bread and
hearty cheeses. this lunchboit menu 1s.
guaranteed to wake up a sleepy
appetite.
,
Gool. n c chocolate de serts cma frGlD a ml
arc a ea )' on the cook as they are purt'bt ed)
delicious. Quic hocolate An el ~ eap 111g1r---
Tone tart with a purchased or cap cO<'o
m dc·from-a-mix angel food cake. 1 cup beavx cream
It's plit and layered ~ith chocolate ~ teaSP90D cnt d or n1e P
whipped cream and garnished "ith Fresb or11ge tile 1
a colorful crown of fresh orange Cut cake hori1ontally info thirds
slice . . . 'using p serrated knife~ .~eparnte
kc Cream Sundae Pie 1s a ma.Ice· · pi~c and et aside. Combine sugar
ahead treat that can be kept on hand and cocoo in ~mall mi'u~r bowl. Add
in the freezer for those imprompt" cream: beat unul ttfl. Fold in
gatherings that arc a'wonderful p3rt orange peel.
of summer. From the chocolate-nut Spread chocolate cream between
crust to hot fudge topping, this cake la}ers. on top and sides ofcake.
one's nch with chocolate flavor. Refrigc ; garnish wJth orange
The choices in ice cream filhngs arc slices at serving umc. Cut wnh
limued only by your imagination serrated knife.~ to 8 !>ervings.
-.and remember to pa s the
yummy Ho t Fudge Sauce.
For those hot and lazy days when
only a fruit dessert will refresh. tr)
Chocolate-Fruit Foo.I. an updated
Colqnial Classic. Choose" )OUT
favonte summer fruit, slice and.fo~d
1nto a cool and cream) chocolat~·
marshmallow pudding. Like all
ICE CREAM SUNDAE PIE
Chocolate.Nut Crust:
• 1 cup .cround walnuts
1 cup vanilla wafer cramb1-~ ... cup confectioners' suin
'4 cup cocoa · 'a cup butter or margarine,
. melted
-
dtuin muan boWI; drtzzle in but.
ter. Blend well. Pre mixture onto
t>ouorn and up 1de of inch pie
plate; chill. Fill with ice crtsm
Cover; freeze until flm1. To prepare uce: Combine.-
cocoa ano ugar in ma_ll uc:cpan;
blend in evaporated milk and corn
syrup. Cook ovcl' mC"dium heat
•
limng conMnntl)'. unlit mi~tur~
boils. Boil • and stir I minute
RemO\C frorT) heat: tir in butter
and vanilla.
To save pie: RcmO\'C pie from
freeLer about 5 minutes ·before
cutting. Cut into wedges. Serveeactt·
~lice w1th warm Hot Fudge Sauce. • ~
CHOCOLATE-FRUIT FOOL
\'a cup milk
11,'a cups miniatur e
marabmallow1
'•cup cocoa
I cap beavy_cream
...; cup confectioners' 1ucu n teHpoon vanllJa .
.,_ teHpoon almond extract
FRESH TOMATO CREAM SOUP these chocolate desserts, it's· short
t i,i. pouds ripe tomatoes, peeled, on preparation ttme and long on
t. •
Filling:
1 cup 1Hced fresh frutt-(straw.
berries, rasp~rrtes, oectarints
or peaches) seeded, ud cbopped satisfaction. s grttD ODJ0;1, cbopJHtd Note: To convert any baking.
1 '2 quarts favorite flavor
cream, softened.
fee
1 clove garu~. mlaced chocolate recipe to cocoa use this
14 cup chopped dJJI handy formula: Three.level table-""'1.uot Fudge Sauce:
1"' tu1pooo nit spoons cocoa plus one level table-•-i cup cocoa •
Combine milk, marshmallo"'
and cocoa in small saucepan. Cook
over low heat. stirnna constant!)
unttl marshmallows are melted.
cool to lukewatm. Combine cream
sugar. 'an1tlaandalmondextract in
large mixer bowl; beat until stiff.
'• tea1pooD pepper spoon shonenlng (solid or hqu1d) "•cap sugar
Zcapsmllk equalsaone--0uncesquareofbaking ~cup (5.33 fluid-ounce can)
Blend tomatoes, onions, garhc, chocolate. evaporated milk
dill, and seasonings in a food 1':1 cup Ugbt corn fyrup Gradually fold in chocolate mix-
ture. then fold in sliced fruit-. SPQon
into dessert dishes; refngerate until
ch illed. Garnish. if de ired, with
additional fruit. 6 servings.
processor or btendcr; stir in milk. QUICK CHOCOLATE ANGEL up butter
Serve chilled with lemon slices. if TORTE 1 teaspoon vanilla
:d:cs:ir:_:ed=... :M:ak=c:s :6_g:::rvi..:..:.:· n~gs:·~---~====~~~~~~~~~~~~~~=~~~~~~-_:l~p::r.:e!:'.par:::ecl:__:•:n~gel::_:_fo:od=--==..:. To prcpa1'e crust Combin,.e nuts. crumbs. sugar and cocoa in me-
T·Bo11e or j~ ..
Poa lerhouse
Steak
Safeway Quality Beef Loo
Great '° Barbecue
•[)iir1 '4 ..
:special Low Pnce '309
Less eo• 1 up Coupon Below eo-
Pnce With 7 -Up Coupon '2"
SS 60' Sa1eway Double Coupon 60•
.. ••less a-cl .... __ ..... , o ... ,, , 1" Pivoting Rasor ,s,a;.::.· p: i • 1 ••
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Chuck Steak S.t•w•y Ou•"'~ B•e• • • i •• llOOll rote M t•'lv•C P~g
ei~tt Cuf r " ...,, 1 F "•S"'•ng ll n..e • • '1" Shampoo. •l•"•c-. .. t '1"
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,...., .. "'~I a., cl 1.-::·~ ... sorta ''~'/Pork Chops
Fresh Center 6 End
Cut Loo ChOOS
59
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30-Sllcellread
Mrs Wrlghl s
2• oz Loaf
EVERYDAY
Seoond &ti ....
DO CUI cw,,..~ .. ~... ..,..,, •••
DOYellow ...... E ... lMot • , ••
Dtlxtra Large Nectarlw. a9•
mm>1xtra a.arge To•ato" n·
...... """ ..........
•Bean Sproul s
-..-1 ... ·iit'oa1kon • 69•
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• Asian Pears• 99•
•Vegetables • .~ .. , 79' DO Chma Peas •it•
.• 89• •Tom.Aloes....... '1"
DO Bell Peppers'!":: •• ~'2"
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~ .......... 8read lo' A W•IQ'll l ,~:~: , ••
:::)Oral Hit Cereal ,;:• 1·~ ••·
~•-try M• Pouncl Cake ·~01 •1"
C!Qllkecl Strawlterrln • ':..°,; 59• --... ----·--'1"'.!~iiii:ii::l
Dofro ... •asp .. rra.. ..
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SNACKS TO PACK •••
From Cl
Slice bananas 1n chunks. Add yogurt to blender. Whir, adding a few
banana chunks at a time. Sttr. 1f necessary. M1.xture will thicken into frost).
)Umm) shake. Makes I serving .
•Delicious \.\Ith lemon. bluebe ach or strawbe
,_ OLD-TIME FAVORITE BANANA SHAKE
2 large, extra-ripe bananas, peeled
l pint vanllla ice cream
'1'a cup milk
%cc bananas into blender. Whir with ice cream and milk until th1d.
and \umm). Makes 2 shakes. ·
PEANUT BUTTER SHAKE
4 medium,· extra-ripe bananas, peeled.
1 cup milk
I pint vanilla lee cream
'• cup peanut butter .
Slice bananas into blender \\'hir with milk until smootti. Add ice
cream and peanut buuer. Wq1r unul thick. Makes 2 shakes.
Variation. Whir in blender '.\ medium. extra-ripe bananas. 11/i cup
buttermilk. 3 to 4 tablespoon~ peanut butter a nd 2 table poons hone\
Make 2 hake~.
PEANUT BUTTER BAN AN• POPS·
4 medium, extra-ripe bananas peeled
1 carton Cl oaaces) vaniJla yo urt
'• to t~ cup peanut butter • i ublespoon1 hooey
1 teaspoon vu'ltla extract
lice bananas into blender. Whir with vo3urt. peanut butter, hone)
nnd \an1lla until mooth. Pour into 3-ouncc paocr cul)\. Insert wooden
~lid: or plastic \poon in center. Frcc1c. Make l1.
.
• HONEY POP
t lar&f', ut11-ripe baDanas, peeled
• • cap pea .at butter
t table pooas honey Slk~ banan into btend\;r, \\'.Im Y.hh pc nut butter
mooth. Pour tnlO ·ounce paper cups. In n \\OO<kn
spoon in ccntt•r. 1-r c1 " Make 6,
r
nd hon y until
u~k or pl u~
I
..
pumpkin.
!ft c'' ble nc dr). ~~~ nuherthtmmo1'1 :stora e ptnt"e.
d~~ kte~tt~m tnf}I tH: •
p3pcr or mcsh.b • or unCO\Crcd
bin in dra"e_rurcupbonrdsothe)
quaht) 1ftcr mu 1nck or purcha c are Pr<?tccte~ trom ltght. them. • Pan1all> npe tomatoc should be
Ideally, lhc~ ,hould be catl"n soon stured at room tempcrnturt unul .
a.fter h~r~ estang or bu) mg. But npc .
. since th&s isn't atwn)~ possible. y0u · QUESTIONS WE.ARE ASKED· ma> m-cd to stor'"' fre h' \:Cg{'tables · · for a fo" day~ before using them. -Q. I read a boasekeeplng tip for
Long stornge nt home generally 15 , cleaning alumlnum pa.as tbat 1u1·
not practical, 0 it's nest to bu> in aested bollin& rhubarb l~aves la tbe
quantities )OU can use within 8 pin. Wby wou~d . this clean
wt'ek. Thu . a "large economy" aluminum, and '!Ould It be 11fe to packoffresh\cgetablesma)notbc'r-~~~~~;:,._~~~~~..._..._~~~~--~~~-:.---...--..._~~~~.....:...~..._..._~,.._~~~~~~~~.:..._~..._..._~~....:..::.:.=.:.::.:.:.;;:;.:.:..:.:..=.:.::..:.:;=:::::..::.::...:.:;:..;.~--
goOd cconom> if ~ou c;an·t u~ them
before tht') detcr10ratc.
"Mark do" ns'' in the fre h·
vegetable department ma\ not ~a
good value either if the produce 1s
wilted, O\Crmature, or old i,qttlT
reduced nutritional ·value. When
buying produce. the rule i!>:•ifresh as
best." ·
To maintain q.uaJ>.t) and
·nutritive 'aluc. frc !)"" vcgetablrs
should be. held under the proper
temperature and humidi~·. Wuh a
few exceptions the) keep best in the
refrigerator: and most need
moisture. .
The cold temperature 1s 1mpon-
ant to slow down the aging process
as well as 1nh1bit growth of spoilage
organisms. Thus. a vegetable like
weet corn will age qu1ckl> at room
temperature or above. and Its
flavorful sugar ·chan~es to stnrch.
Chining com immediate!}' after ifs
picked will stop this flavor change.
Moisture is necessar) to keep
vegetables crisp. It's most 1mpon-
ant for those with the highest water
content. such as leaf) greens In
most markets. vegetables are
sprayed wuh water occas1onall). At
home they should be \\.ashed and
stored in the refrigerator 1~ crisper
drawer, covcrecj containers. or
.Plastic bags to keep them as moist as
possible.
•ONIL1ss •
CLOD •OUT
BEEf I 87 CHUCK L& •
A full cnsper drawer will retain
moisture in vegetables better than
one that 1s half full or less. A damp·
paper towel can be placed in a half·
full crisper to add moisture; or Frwshly
vegetables can be stored in plnstic GROUND PROVIMI VEAL .La. 2.89
bags m the crisper.
Some vegetables. such as
cue.umbers and bell peppers. are
waxed when the) are. packed for
shipping. The wax coating. which 1s
edible and not harmful. holds tn
moisture and protects the vegetable
(or fru11)from invasion b) spoilage
organisms. •
Do not m1\ npe frut\S w11h
vegeta6Tes m the crisper. Fruits
produce ethylene gas that causes
ycllowmg of green \'egetables.
russet spotung.on lettuce. toughen-
ing of asparagus. and bitter taste m
carrots.
Vegetables that arc ''fruits." such
as tomatoes. bell peppers. squash.
and cucumbers. also may release
ethylene gas and should not be
stored with other vegetables.
Ca bbagc. broccol 1. and '11111 IOP
APPLI JUICI
~OZ-REG 1 _,_•9 OR NATURAL ....
caultflowcr can give strong odors to
other foods~ ~o lb~ arc besi s1orc.d
~eparately m plastic bags. And be
careful not to keep them too IOfliOC
your refrigerator will de' clop a bad odor Loyer Variety Coke Mix
Most home refrigerators main· PlllSBURY PLUS .............. .. .89
tam a temperature of about 40
degrees in the mam storage space.
with slightly higher temperatures tn
the crisper This temperature 1s
~ood for most vegetables. However.
1t 1s too lo"' for those sens111' e to
chllhn~ mjur) The ideal storage temperature for
green beans. cucumbers. summer
squash. bell peppers. and ch1h
peppers 1s 45 to 55 degrees. Since
most of us don"t have a storage
place of this temperature. these
vegetables should be stored in the
warmest pan of the refrigerator and
used within five days.
Vegetables that need an even
warmer. temperature -SO to 60
degrees -arc better stored at room
temperature than in the refnger· r.nd•r 6
FRESH BROCCOLI ......... .. .. LB .39
SLICID
PllOVIMI VIAL
FOR SCALLOPINI 6 99 OR _WIENERSCHNITZEl UL. •
Point Cut, Br1sk•t
HUGHES 'CORNED BE~F ....... La 1.59
CHUCK
SIEAK
La ... UlllT4
~.LB.
PA••• IOllN
SLICID llACON
REG OR' HOCK I 29 I LS PK~ IA. • •
Shc:ed Sk1nn«I 0...1ned
FRESH BEEF LIVER .................. La .89
~· ·~~~~CHUNK .LIGilT
tl TUNA.
OllSHA 6.5-0Z., IN WATIR
........
•CORN PLAICIS
TB-OZ BOX 1.19
c
2-Llftll
SHASTA
REG.: OR
DIET
ASSORTED .99
ftfAD'I. f
lOW
Hormel Cur• 81 OI
CUREMASTER HAMS ........... \I
7 Oz Elbow ts.Oz Cre<j.my or Crvnchy
SKIPPY PEANUT BUTIER
22 S 01 F~ A:.M)rted
1.59 PILLSBURY JUMBLES l.69i · CREAMETIES MACARONI 3.K>a•I
,..--------------------------------------------------~
large r.nd.r
ROMAINE LETIUCE
IO·LBS.
RUSSETS
U.S. NO. 1-CBLO llAO
c
IA.
Flavor TrM A$M)rt•I
EA .39 FRUIT ROLLS .. 3 f()tt., 2.ff
garlic. potatoes (\\.hlle and sweet).
hard-nnd (winter) squashes. and . ... L ...Jl!l l!l~l!N~l!!•~-~l~DJ~A~&a~_J --( .........
Open sandwlcbes
good weekend fare
Grl'at tasung open ~and..., 1che
for a .... eekend meal.
AVOCADO GRILL
Medium avocado (halved, seed·
ed, peeled and sliced)
Small onion (tblnly sliced and
separated lnto rings) ·
011-vlnegar 11lad dre11ln1
4 tbla slices bread .
Mayonnaise
% medium tomatoea, sliced
1 cup grated (medium-fine)
cheddar cheese
Marinate n' ocado and onion tn
oil-vinegar ~lad dre ing for about
•fl hour: drain. Spread one side of
each slice of bread with mayon-
nai~. pl.lee on a cookie hc:ct, top
with avacado. onion. tomato and
chc:e~ ·
Broil about 5 1nchc\ from high
heat until chee melt and a"ocado
is warm -ll few mmute\. neat
once. 1akc 2 tar c or 4 mall
~rvina .
< ;l'I Ji{oocl dl•.1 ho nn
ust•d1klll!' 1n lhc
cJ,ll\SllH.'cl t>UJ.tl''
!~~l!1~t~g
642·5&78.
... ...
I~ , \,;
-----~ ~ ~-USAMI STllllT •. ·;:;t~ ·DICTIONA•Y
Automohc
QUICKIE ROLLER. MOP
~---COU•ON•"t&IQ!
• • • n ... ~ COU. ... 11\Ai Oii....,,... • I MIAD 200 COUNT I =··~·~"·=
: 11n °•• FREE: • eno• • I WITH '"'' COWON, ltMIT OHi IT1M I I . "9 COWON, OMt tCM#ON "' • I
•UO •JJ ii ............... .
..
f""h
269 . 2..-.... ":, ---......
... PLAllT La .119
6 Ounc:e .,,..
TEN HIGH BOURBON AJINOMOTO M S G 8.99
3.99
P•om lob.I Chobl ""' Re e or Burgundy
8.M
2.39
Koda Moch•lot"> 16 Or lo•
. .
3-LITER WINES
•OMAN MIAL
WAPPLIS
.89 12 oz
PKG I
14 Oz 08rien or 2 Lb l'>o Style Ho\h 8row.i
ORE-IDA POTAT0ES 1.25
60 01 Frted
BANQUET CHICKEN S.79
.. .-.
UllA UI
.-, CAICI
101s '° ,, .soz I 69 ASSOltHD e
\IARl£fttS
... ....
eLASSWAlll .(~~ ....
• t .oa ON nte llOOI • n 01. esv•aoe • H..01. ~ llOOtl • •OZ. GO
ftA • I 01. '°°'9 • t,iooa. eoeln
.99
SWEET RICE FLOUR
1·1CHF1 ..........
PUDDINGS
'OZ ASST'O 89 \61(1UETIES •
8 01 Pkg Th•" Oeh She•~
KRAFT SWISS CHEESE 1.89
., 01 kg l11 h ~ M«lt
WILSON VARIETY PACK .1A9
She ltd C • lltond W1
HUGHES MUt:NSTER ta 2.JS
•Oi ~ ' ......
BUDDIG CHIPPED MEATS .JS
------[\ ~~~~.'ho
<... .,
Talk about )'Our root :in the wine
Jnd\ISU')'. Crawford Cooley, prin&ip I owner f li icnda Wine Cellar1. ts ,.ov-~ oh vane ard .ne~ Clov~rd' c · ~~·cm Sonom1 .County)lhltll __ 11 ______ ;:...
-rrrtrtnmntyttn« t !6<T.Onapes .
from that vineyard ao into Hacienda
wine. •
Another partner i5 Frank
Bartholomew, the fimou-UPl news-
man who restored the histonc Buena ....
... , .-·
. \
1-ROLL
Meat Dept. Savings
Lunchmeats !~~;EPftPC<;
Chuck Steaks &•~:
Sliced Bacon
Tri-Tip Roast ~£: ..
Beef Liver ., • Red Snapfier "
Rainbow rout .1
Braunsweiger
4 VAR NATURAL
Hansens
Soda
SI_.79
Kool-Aid "~=~ ': ~'.
C & C Cola 4
:· ••
Hi-C Drinks
Noodles ,~.;;,·:.r· £
,
Yelveeta SI ices ....
.,.,.de ··1;~0•• 'I :rr•or,·
Comet :-.fHU•
Towels ~==•eo~~~1.?··-r
Garbage Bags ;.;:~
T-rash Bags ~·;f . ..:i,
. , 43c
51.79
51.49
52.89 sec
51.89
51.89
osgc
I STATER BROS ..
Big Thin
·Bread
24-0Z
STATER BROS. UNSWEETENED
PineapPle
~~--...~ Juice
46-0Z
J l
48-0Z
Frozen Food Favorites Garden Fresh Produce
Pie Shel Is •£·,M ·•. . ggc Corn f·lP• ..... l,,..,to~ •• H f' 1gc
Stuffed Peppers 52.17 Avocados ~·:. .!:~ .. r• 25c
Lasaina ·:.: · 51.59 ~33C Pears .......... · ~:,ff' t "
Mac Cheese 49C LIITLE ROcK FANCY POT HOS MARBLE OUH'~
Fried Chicken 4 ...
54.79 Sweet OlE F&'lNBll.Gl'itA OR ASSORTED HRN5
Peaches Tropical Fish Fillets :·~-· ·y 51.99 )tr Foliage Pound Cake ::·~::· .. 51.75 LB SI.09.," \.,, Carrot Cake ... ·" .. 51.89
Bagnies . Maxi Pads ·L :~1
k ..
s1.79 Hamms Beer ! .. r· S2 59 Champagne ,~~.~·
s1:69 C.olony Wine Q Orange Juice ·::~:·~· ..
Miracle Whip Light ..
Candy Bars -~ . · Cake . -~~ £\ 1·~ ·
O~ange Juice
Coca-Cola : · ..
Bath Tissue
· s1 .79 Liqueur , ..... ~.:
s2.19 Bourbon .. ,.,,A~
~89 TequiHa ~~·· -~ I • )('( .... ,, .
51.09
r51.59
95c
Popov
Vodka
"739
1.7$-UTEA
PJUC&S UFECTIV£ 1 nTl.L DA rs
91in ,.,. ... T\I• .w.ca Thur! ht .. t
e..t. 6 1·7 8
9 . 10 11 12. I
WE lll!SERV! '>4E-RIGHT TO l''°" .. OR REFUSE
SAlES ·o co~~ERC AL. DEALERS OR W~LESALEPS -
.;
..
1
. .,.
11 • ......-. .... ~ ......
~ ........ _,_.....,
-·
, .,
Hacienda an•t tbe only winery to do
thi1. This can be very c:onf'u1inJ,
because there arc truly dry Chontn
Bia.net on the market, 1ome of which
don't use the term "dry."
Zlnfaadel ltll ($6:50): Thia wi.ne i1
special because it it the kind of wine
Zinfandcl was meant to make.
There'• beme1 and cherric1' in the
aroma and in the flavor. lt't 1tructure
and feel it that of an el~pnt Cabernet. '
lt is 1tructured to quaff free and c11y,
but it is anythina but a simfle wine.
Cabernet Sauvlpoa ($ I ): A hlnt
of mint, but mostly juat aenerou1
Cabernet fruit. The ihin• that f1l&ke1
this wine special is that u entert the
mouth with Immediate aood flavon
that build throuah the middle tatte
and become even more plea.ant and
intense in the finish. You can time the
aftertaste wtth a stop watch:. That's
the mark of a great claret;
Cbardonnay "Select Re1trve" 1911
($15): Most Hacienda wines arc
subtle. This "Reserve" is ebout 11
subtle as a m1cro-miniskin, which is
not to say it isn't attractive. A
decidedly nch nose with plenty ofoak
statement promises a wine of con·
siderable size. Overtones arc butter
and vanilla; undertones are of citrus.
Cbardouay 1982 ($9): The subtle
side of Chardonnay and ocrt.ainlx
more subtle than the "Reaerve.
Lighter in styk but not liaht, and
more to. the appley side. Oalc is
present but much less evident and
there's .a . lively, unaty acidity that
Ii ah.ts up yo'Ur mouth. At $9 or less it's
a Y:f>est buy."
Gewar1tramlner 1983 ($6. 7 5 ): Ha-
cienda consistently produces one of
the best tasting Gewurztraminers in
America and this vi ntaae is no
exception.The aroma leans toward
the floral side of spicy and the flavor is
floral spice on top of loads of fruit .
The sweetness level is just off-dry.
Because of this touch of sweetness, I'd
be more inclined to use the wine for
aperitif or refreshment than to ac-
company food.
Plnot Nolt 1981 ($12):1 It is a li~t
and elegant Burgundian style, with
very good Pinot Noir varietal cbarac·
ter, soft. round tannins and a pleasant
hngering finish.
One of the best guides to Napa
Valley is available at many shops and
wineries in the area and it's called
This 1s Napa Valley. It is 130 pages of
maps, events, and happenings., and
there are guides to wineries. lodgings.
dining and shopping. Restaurant
listings include menu reproductions
to help you Judge both price and
cuisine.
'rhe book sells for $3.95 at ocws-
stands. or if.y.ou want it to help plan
your visit. send $5.25 (includes tax.
postage and handling) to: Napa
Guide, P.O. Box 7244. San Francisco
94120.
MORE HELP -A guide to all the
wine regions of California is available
free, courtesy ofWine Institute, tn the
form of the booklet titled .. Wine
-Wonderlana:" Names, addresses.
phone numbers and hours of oper·
ation of virtually every winery in
California is included. Send 50 cents
to cover postage and handling to:
Wine Wonderland, 3415 Alemany
Blvd .. San Francisco 94132.
Spreads zesty-
with pimiento
In makmg these spreads, the
method of combmmg ingredients
will vary based on the desired
texture and equipment available to
use.
If a blender or food processor is
used. all ingredients can be com-
. bined at one time and spreads will
be uniformly smooth and creamy.
Otherwise. chop or mash pimien-
to finely; shred or grate cheddar
cheese or buy grated product;
hand; blend cream cheese with fork;
tear dried beef by hand or chop
finel y with sharp knife.
l11mlento Cheese: r;i' pound
~ated cheddar cheese. one 4-ounce
Jar.of pimie~to and en~gb mayon-
naise to moisten.
Blue Cbeeie: 3/4 cup blue cheese, 2
tablespoons sherry. Y4 cup mayon-
naise. one 4-0\Ulcejar pimiento and
J/, cuJ} parsley. ----·
Onion: 8-ounce cream cheese, I
ca n (I 03/• ounced) cream of oion
soup, one 4-ounccJar pimiento and
1h cup ·parsley.
Bacon: One 4-ounce J&r pimien-
to. 1/4 cup cooked and crumbled
bacon, 2 tablespoons minced onion
and 1h cup mayonnaise.
Cream Cbee1e-Oarllc: One 4-
ounce jar p\m1ento, 1/4 cup sour
cream, 8 ounce packaJC cream
cheese. 1 tablespoon prhc powder
and 1h 1caspoon paprika. .
Plmltnto-Cbeddar: 2 cups ched·
dar cheese, one 4-ounce jar pimien·
to, 1 tablespoon prepared mustard,
If• cup sherry, 1/4 cup sour cream. 3
drops hot pepper sauce and 2
da hes garlic powder. Chi)I for a few
hour\ or ovemt&ht.
,.
•
1 ' te 1 n1 c I pow Cler .. •
t .. teaspoon dry m11tard
l' tea1pooD 1r•ted lime rtnd
Rinse· alb core with cold water.
generation of Mexican people pat dry with paper towels. G'ut
brouaht their recipes when 1mmi· albacore into l 'h·inch cubes: set
gratina to the Unued States. They aside. Combine rcmain1n 1n~· --.?taptedtlre~rec:1 stot cmnural dic1tts except hme nnd. Pour ov_e_r -----
in&red1ent of their new homeland. · lbacore and marinate in rcfriaer·
creatina a c-ui inc all iu own. ator a minimum of .. Jo minute .
There ·are many different var· turninJ once to recoat albacore.
ieties ofT ~x,Mcx cookinJ. Most arc Divide albacore into 4 equal
characterized by authentic Mexican scrvinas. reservina marinade.
spices and . an inclusion of sour r.:U.:si:.::n:a.:.m:.::e::t::al~o:r~ba~m;boo::::..,::sk:.:e~"::-c::rs~ . .;i~~:.::~=.::~~~~~~::==::::;:::_===~~=~~~;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~::;:::=~~ cream; cream or queso anejo. a dry,
white cheese much like Greek feta "'
in texture.
Albacore. is a fish tt'iat adapts well
to the 5p1cy Tex-Mex style of
cookina. It hasa firm. meaty texture
and a mild flavor that won't ~om~te with assertive spices. such ·a chili po\lidcr and mustard.
When purchasini albacore. look
for loin cuts that arc moist and soft
in texture. (Albacore becomes firm
when cooked.) There should be no
noticeable brownina around the
. ..
·"111 always.be satlSfled •.
,._.at'~ what a guarantee " . ..· means •.
. edge of the pieces, and no "fishy"
odor. Albacore that has a strona
odor is not of th~ highest quality
The albacore in the following
recipe receives a distinctive Tex-
Mcx flavor from a marinade of
sherry, lime juice. aarlic. chili
powder and mustard. lt also in·
eludes a small amount of oil. which
is necessary in fish marinades to
prevent sticking during cooking.
To funhcr prevent stickina;
brush the &rill with oil or spray with
a non-suck spray before cookinf.
Handle raw albacore with care. It 1s
very soft when raw · and has a
tendency to fall apan. However. as
soorras it is cooked. albacore attains
its characteristic firm texture. ·
When cooking albacore, cs·
pecially small pieces as with kebabs,
remember to watch the cookina
time carefully. Albacore will be·
come dry and flavorless if over-
cooked. Remove it from the heat
when it is still medium-rare, leaving
a pink· center in each piece. The
albacore will continue to cook
sli&htly after being removed from
the heat.
Serve· this Tex-Mex dish with
rice. tonillas, and refried or black
beans topped with queso anejo or
your favorite white cheese.
TEX·MEX ALBACORE
1 ~ poud1 Paclflc albacore, loin
CICI or 1teak1
14 cap dry sherry
1• cup Ume j uice
i cu1poon1 minced 1arllc
1 tablespoon ve1etable oll
DIET.;.
From Cl
arteries coated with plaques.) Ideally.
half of their protein should come
~~. 'N, .. ~FT Tl~UE
Ht< FRCJlT DRINKS .. o. .... c... .. ,
2R~C9Q~I~
HIDDEN VALLEY
/
-°'"'"""" ac-.. • o • ~.on
'.95
.69
169
.69
!1~J~q%,.INST. TEA259 .
§k.Ll~t. ~CE• 10MA10ES .5 9
~~~.!ITTED OLIVES .89
SPAOHE1Tl · 69 _ ...... ,.~,..,.... .
HEINZ tollA.10
KETCHUP 32-0unc.
Botti•
THE DAIRY
~~To,!.0$1~ .53
ORAtf~LJ~~ ... ~.... 149
~rr.Eil~~,_,_c-.-.79
~~~£.. ,._ ,.,.. ,_ °' • 79
from -vqctablcs, such -as dry beans.
pcu, lentils, peanut butter and un· utre.d1nnnnd seeds. ChecSC'8llct·HOrt-t----c--.;;a
arc fine foods but ihould be used 1n
moderation. "'' ... ~llWl'li. It isn't too·early to tram children
(past 2) to drink.skim or tow-fat milk.
Go easy on the butter. maraarine.
maxonnaise and salad dressin1s.
Children from I to 10 need at least 3
cups of mine a day, and from 11 to 19.
a minimum of 4 cups a day. Beware.
thou&}l. of the compulsive milk
dnnker, he may be shonchanaina
himself of nutrients from other
essential foods. Teach your child to drink "plain"
water -plenty of 1t -throuahout
the day. · .. A well-planned baa lunch is usually
superior to most school lunches. as
Ion' as a home cooked dinner will be
available.
Always serve at least two vea·
etables, includfn& yellow and darlc
&reen onet, preferably also a mixed
salad. Get your kids used to whole arain bruds and cerc•ls. Get into the
habit of servina a piece of fresh fruit
Considering the millions of obese Afnericans, nagina about "deanina
one's plate" is out. You'll 1ct better -.&J~u it' you .show tt&l e!Uo)!me.nt
from eatina healthy foods . Let kids &ct involved in plannina.
shoppina. prcparina and servina of
foods. besides cleanina up. Parents arc rcspcnsible for their children's
nutrition education. and what better
way to learn than b a hands-on
approach .
I
If your child is obviously under· or
overweiaht. or has a specific eatina
problem. invest the time and cffon to
consult a rcaistcrcd dietitian. referred
b>' your physician. or call Consulting Nutritionists of Southern California
(213) '453-537S.
Rlce wad enriched
Califomia turkey t>reast and' ham
add rich flavor to Rice Pilaf Silad.
Cook 'h cup wild nee and 'h cup
lonaarain rice accordin& to packqc
directions. Saute 4 slictd arecn
onion , 'h pound heed mu hrooms
and • tcasPQOn salt in 2 table·
spoons oH unul tenl'let.
Prepare dres •na· ot v .. cup red
91ine vinepr, 2 table poons aalad
oil, 2 tea poons prepared mustard, Iv. tea poons upr, 'h ica poon
ttiymc, V. tea poon ~ppcr and I
teaspoon salt. Toss wnh both ncet, VJ po14nd
each QOOked white turkey meat and
turkey him. tom into hrcds, lh
pound halved and seeded ~pcs
and 'h cup livered blanched
alKTiond . rve m1 heel :wuh npc
a Voe.ado lice . "cs 4 to 6 ..
•
THE BAKE SHOPPE
VONS 11/a-tB. BREAD .
(. .._ .................. 11 •
'-~fU2!;....tS-..
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SAVINGS RELATE TO PREVIOUS WEEK'S ALPHA BETA PRICE OR LAST DATE PRIOR ro ll';'ITIAL PRICE REDUCTION EXCLUSIVE. OF ADVER11SED OR PROMOTIONAL PRICES
• ~ \ . I . l _J
l • \ .
. . '
'\
' .
Are-Barons oveFrated? . ..
'Fhat question . . and more . -:-. could be bc~i~d ~~a~~~t~~f ii~~a ~;1t1~rJ:
~n~wered in open ing prep ga mes t his week_ .. ;~f~1~:: ~~J~~~~~d~~ ~~~·~f~: ~:~~~1~;:,!r;,~;t) ofrcturning
Answers to those nddles. and a lot with standout runner Robert talent at the !lk1lled pos111ons -'w11h
but tear\ a slo" !ltan.
By ROGER CARLSON
Of ti.. Delly Plloi lt.tf
Are lbc Baron5 of Fouiaam~
_ lildwcalJy as good as the) 're bein&
b1lfed?
of other· unanswered questions are Tomichek and a host of talent from a Univcrsll> boasting quarterback AUDAY amongrnespoals~thiswttk'sprep su~n~so homoret~m1nlffL3h·~~~un~du~~M~1l~le~r~11g~hw1~e~nwd~Bcrnwd~~nmuo~W~-~~~~L•d~P~~m~t~~~nVa~•~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
loolbali schedule which launches the Huntington Beach is ming 10 fill. and running back fo....alama Gohara. Ocean View YI. Estancia at Npt. Harbor
Cafl a freshman quancrbad.
handle the duties for a major school
like Mater Dc1''
Will Edison really be back? H:rs
Corona del W..ar losJ too much from
the 1984 graduaung class? And trow
about Huntington Beach? Is there hfe
after Dann> Thompson? •
Rams acquire
lineman R ees e
Attempting to bolster a de-
fensive l~ne weakened b> injuries.
the Rams acquired Booker Reese
fro~ Tampa Ba) Tue'ida) for an
undisclosed future draft choice.
To make room for Rec;~. th~
Rarh'i put wide receiver Gordon
Jones. signed as a free agent earl> tn the 1983 season. on ~a1vcrs.
A 6-6. 260-pound defensive
end from Bcthune·Cookman.
eese was nmpa a)' s <;econ -
round draft choice 1n 1982. He
starfcd scv ·n game in 1"981
· Because 'etcran rescne Gal)
Jeter injured his back dunna the
preseasoo. the Ram-. had JUSt
three defensive ends on their
active roster to start the ~ason
Monday night against Oallas.
1984 season. the gaps left by me graduation of tv.o-among man) others. Weeta.ke vs. £en.on at Huntincrton Beach
Herc's a capsule look at each of the tame Sunset League back of the )car In inc. which has moved to the NeWport Hart>Oi' at Santa Ana
0 r Danny Thompson (UCLA). among South Coast League. has JefTBaelman Costa M ... at Botaa Grande games involving range \.. oast area w .......... brfAAA I ...... H".._ &IT.!c.u.:.._ v :ai teams: others. but Coach George Pascoe say!> back at quarterbac~for the third )car UU\ol ""WV YI • .......,una .... at MIAfQfl ... ,o
he bas the talent to keep the [)elawarc as "°ell as rcce1'f'cr Mike Henigan. and La Quinta at WestmJna1er. •
Hnntlllgtoo Bucb vs. CdM
Corona del Mar own~ a 4..1 edge in
this series. which has been the season
opener 1n each case
Win&ed-T flowma.. • fulloock Rem) RahmatuJla lends
Dave Holland. C:orona del Mar's strength as a returnins fullback.
coach, says this )Car's club can In c;rx previous meetings the t"o
contend for the Sea Vie\\ League title. (Pleue eee PREP /DS) -"\
SATURDAY
Marina vs. Esperanza at Valencia
Laguna e.8ch at Buena Park
McNamara move almost backfir ed Connors·
But Angels rally
to beat Indians;
tra il Twi~s by i 112
CLEVELAND (AP) -Angel!>
Manager John McNamara had no
regrets about pulhng starter Mike
Wm from the game. even though the
move nearly ro\.ed d1sastrou
innings.
"Mike had thrown 136 pllche!I and
Pat Tabler had JU t fouled off a lot of
them." McNamara said. explaining
wh> he v.ent to ase following
Tabler's ninth-inning waJk. ··Aase
had pitched efTectiv~I) ou1 of the
bullpen and he hadn't g1,cn up a
home run. so it was time to go to
him."
Bando. ho"ever. slammed hi~
ninth home run of the sea on to 11c ll
against the Cle\.elan Indians leading single . and Tabler.
3-0 with iwO men ommd two out m "H~· 1011oochtuff; .. B:mdo....nd. -r·
the bottom of the ninth annang. ~as JUSt trying to .. eep m) '>trokc
Indians' catcher Chm Bando then hort because he thro\\ the ball
slugged reliever Don Aasc's ~ond hard:'
pitch O\.Crthecentcr field ~all to tic 1t . Aa~. "'ho hadn't &•'"en up a homer
3-3. in 17 apJlCarances this )Car. allowed
Aase. 3-1. :uoned b) shuttina the Indians only one hit the re t of the
"That game \\Ould've been a real
letdown for us to lose." Carew-said.
"We came back into the dugout (after
the ntnth inning) and v.c thought v.e'd
score." '
With one out in the ngels' 12th.
Juan lkniquez sanaJ d ofTCle,eland
relieH~r Jamie Eastetl). 2-1. Carew·~
double then got b) len fielder Joe
Can.er, ollo, .. tng Beniquez to ~of'C'
and Care" to mo'c to third.
"It beat me to the \\all.'' Carter
JUlll decided to go for it. But it got b~
~and h1n~""111.---
Folio" 1ng an intentional "all to
Fred L) nn -"ho had homered
earlkr -Care" '\COrtd an msuranet' ..
run on Rob \\'tlfong'c; licldcr\ choict'
grounder. .
... It \\ould ha't' tx'en deva taung to
lose alter going 8 ~-3 1nn1n s.··
The Wild, Wild W~t
Mi~!·
l(at1M1$ c ,,.
A!llllh
CtllOQO
ALWKI~
W l ~ Ge
70 .. 507-,. .. soo 1
.. .. • •• 1
.. 73 t47 s J
llt~Garnn
ANCaU CZSl -Home OJI Seo! 11 12
13 Ci.vei.f'G 14 IS, 14 Clliea* 17 11 It
20 Katit.I\ c ,,. 2t. n n T••H ....... .,
( 11> ~ S Cle .... l'lt ' I t ClliCHO 1• 121. 1S 1' lt-i C IV, 11 21 1' 'WI Toa.
MINN.SOTA 124>-t11-~D' 7
19, 20 Clllc:HO, 21 , 22. 1J C ...... l\O Awn
1111 ~t_.,.S 11.a!IM\ Ct!Y •• H. Ii. 16 I..uu.. ;~).14 I. CHO, 11. :II ?9 30 C~'fN"CI
ICANSAS CITY (Joi) -Homt 111 1 S """"""°'• 1 • ' s..11 11 n n 09llla!IO 14 (1 I H t• A "9eh A••• I 1l)
Seol 10 II 11 ~la l4 tS, t& *",.
11 ta 1• 20 Anoe~. a 1t JO o. iano
CHICAGO CZSI -HorN 1111 5 • o.111a~' """''· 21. n n \ff11e 24 1S M r~ota. A•n 114) S.DI 10
11, 11 14, IS, 16 Anoe!\ 11 11 tt
won't look ·
past Lloyd . .
NEW YORK <APl -H1\
opponent I' John Lloyd. gain t ,
"hom hC' hac; ne\. er ·10 t so m ueh ls
one set But 1hl're I\ no 'wa' J1mm'
Connor\ '' lookin pa..,t hun toward
John McEnroe
Cleveland out for the next 3 1-3 v.ay. and Rod Carew doubled to bnng •••••••••••FWIJlf!tnas...nt.bc n Ii 'AOO J in 12....._mthe uebreakina run in the 12th .. Mc.~:im aua1------~~ 20"' • 27, 21, 1' ,. S..1119
..
,,
RocE1
CARLSOll
PREP SPORT S
..
, 5, 1984
~ ~
.errag~mo ntay driv
outot first place in 1967. "h1ch ma)
be some consolatioo for 1984.
"!---..-NObo<fv rneu\on th~"® -..,..---+-
balloon from k:uoon and a kl.-<J
• skrd man mterv1cw wuh How-
ard Co ell whether he wall kouc.Jcle
undetto1heowners.mcom1n • · -.
ba eball <:ommissiuncr Pete I' ctx-r-
ro1h answered, hockingly. "no."
...
me, but ••.
• JrRams' Quartc:rbad. Vince Fer·
~~·fi<>H\i~law hot and told. a~ )Ou mi&f\t u ~l from the R m$'
10:.1 )oaxninanil.ht loss to D<\llas, he
wiltdri\eCoachfohn Robinson nuts
1na~much a the coach thought the
ofltnsc wa the last thing that might
dm·ehimnuts.
•Managc,....oftht:)car:Jam frc) of
Chicago an the National teaiue and
park) Anderson of Detroit an the •
.\mcncan. . .• ,. , .
•You knowyouarcgetunaold ar
)OUrkids nevcrht>ard ofBubbaSmith
•Rumbles on the boulc>--ard say
• i\BC as lookina.tn the direction of
mel\tion in the c~lege ratings? CBS to pilfer a reaular for Monday
-Visilol'\tothcAnaheamStadium · Ni&htfootball .. Wcll.itwou1d
press t>Ox Monda) nag.ht were actress rnher ~John Madden or Phylli!
Landa Evans and cas football analyst GCOl'IC. . ..
Phyllis(korg-:· •. OP-tofthem does •Freeaacnt 8111 Walton wantuo
aerobicexercu;es on TV. the other one play fonhc Lake rs but Jert') Bu s has
should. a quirk about only pa)·mgplayers
•T.he Dodgers tin ashed 281h gamcs with two whttls.
' ----..:.._.,_..;.-_..;.._,,;.;....__~~---------_____;,,_ Are L8.ndrea -'s
-Sea~le gets some.
bad news: W anier
sideli.ned tor year
From AP dispatcbes
SEATTLE -Running back Curt
Warner, the heart and soul of the Seattle
SCahawks' offense, wall be lost for the entire m
.·. Toronto wJ.thln 7 1/2 of .Tlge.rs . .
'to make a t:ic1ated run at the Detroit Tigers · The Toronto.Blue Ja}s are stall hoping a
in the American Lc~gue East race. On
Tuesday night at Yankee Stadium. Jim
Clancy and two relievers combined on a !>even-hitter
and Geor_ge Bell's sacrifice fly provided the go-ahead
run in a three-run Toronto eighth mnang as the Blue
JaysdoWned New York, 6-4. to,pull w1thm 711>gamesof
the pace-setting Ti$ers, who lost for the sixth game an
thetr last seven outangs against Baltimore Tuesday . •
1984 National Football League season because of a
severe knee &nJUry, the club reported Tuesday.
Arthroscopic surgery at Seattle's Swedish Hospital
revealed the ligament damage to Warner's right knee
and full surgery was perfonned to repair the damage.·~
Seahawks" spokesman Gary Wright said.
"The doctors expect a good recovery." Wn~t
added. ..However, we are taking a conseJVataye
approach. We expect him to be out· for the season ."
Cal Ritlken and Eddie Murray dr~e m first-innmg-runs and
Mike BodcUcker pitched a sax-
hiner through seven innings a~
the Orioles beat the Tigers, 4-1 ...
In other .i\l action. Mark Gubicia
scattered seven hjts over 8"11
annangsand Frank White drove tn
the go-ahead run as· Kansas City
defeated Minnesota. 4-1 . to climb
within a game of the division-
leading Twms m the West
Warner. who led the Amencan Football Con-
ference in rushing wuh 1.449 yards as a rookie last
·season, suffered the injury in the second quarter of
Monday's 33-0 regular-season opening victory over the
Cleveland Browns.
Warner had to be helped off the Kangdome field
and limped to the dressintroom, where his kne( was X·
rayed.
''I have never felt that kind of pain before." he said
from the hospital. · .
· "It was a costly victory. ~ch Chuck Knox said.
"We paid a price for this one. When you lose an RBI
guy. a home run guy ltke Curt Warner. it really hurts
yo ur football team. But I feel wo~ for Curt Warner: He
ltad a great training ca mp and he was ready to have a
great year."
Warner wasn't even hit when hts knee was injured.
He went down when be planted bis nght foot and
Clancy Division race. The Twins' defeat
aJso helped the Angels climb to WJthtn 1112 games of the
tQP spot. Gubicza, 1()..11, struck out and walked one
and got last-out help from Dan Quisenberry, who
collected his 37th sa.ve ... Boston's Al Napper stopped
Milwaukee on seven hits in leading the Red Sox to a 3-1
vtcto!.J-.. Al Cowens drove io Spike Owen with a one_-
out double in the top oftbe 13th inning to lift Seaule to
a 6-3 victory over Texas ... Greg Walker smashed a pair
of three-run homers and Tom Seaver pitched a fi ve-
hatter as the Chicago White Sox dumped Oakland. J 2-2.
The game was delayed one hour. 23 minutes by rain
Mets continue to fold In East
a sweep around nght end. games in late July. are rapidly dropping
attempted to ma~e a cut at the Cleveland 4-yard line on The New York Mets. leaders by 4112 a
"I saw an opening. and I was getting read)' to ™-.from sight.along wtth Philadelphia in the
back to my left." Warner said. ··Then I planted my leg. 1%ti'onal League Ea.st. George Hendr~ck
. went 4-for-5 and drove in four runs -Nl'lile Tom Nieto
"It JUSt .save out I could feel ~om~thing pop. I belted a two-run homer to highlight a 17-hit attack
thought I might have $Otten caufft up in the turf. I Tuesday night that powered St. Louis past New York.
know I never got to finish the cut. ' 12-2. dropping the second-place Mets seven games
beh ind Chicago in the Nauonal League East .. The
Cubs beat Philadelphia. 7-2. Tuesday. as Scott_. Quote of the day
Kent-Tekul¥e, the Pltteburgh Pirates' relief
ace, asked Jf his 2•0 record meant that he'd been
sneket>tt: "I feel llke t've had a cobra wrapped
around my neck." . •
Boxing title card postponed
RENO _J A boxing champ1onsh1p m 'doubleheader set for this wc-ek was post·
poned indefin1tel) Tuesda) after
promoters failed to come up with a
replacement for light hea~} weight challenger Dwigh t
Muhammad Qaw1.
w was schcduled,10 face_un d1sp111ed champion
Michael Spinks Frida)' an a 15-round rematch of their
brawl last year an Atlantic Ci ty. which Spanks won by a
unanimous dec1s1on . · ·
But Qaw1 left Reno suddenl) last Friday after has
manager said he aggravated a chronic shoulder IOJUry
"Smee Frida) afternoon's pullout. we have been
feaverishly working to set something up." promoter
Butch Lewis said Tuesday.
Sanderson scattered IJ hits and
Ron Cey homered and droYe. tn
three runs in blasting Phillies'
starter Steve Carlton. Sanderson.
74. helped the Cubs to their n1nt.h
victory in I 0 aames as Chicago
swept the two-game series. The
Phillies are now 101/2 games
behind the Cubs ... Elsewhere an
the NL. Jason Thompson stroked
a two-run single in the ninth
inning to rally Pittsbur~h to a 5-3
Hendrick victory over Montreal ... Alex
Trevino led ofl' the eishth inning wnh his third home
ma:i of the season. leading Atlanta Braves over Houston.
8-7. The Braves had tied the score 7-7 an the.seventh on
D~le Murphy's league-leading 30th homer of the
season, a two-run shot ... Erle Qavls' second homer of
the game. a three-run shot dunng a six-run rally an the
eighth inning. sent Cincinnati to an 8-3 triumph over
San Francisco. Marlo Soto, 14-7. who 1cft for a pmch-
hit~er m the eighth. was the ~inning pitcher. Giant
reliever Greg Minton, 3-9, t bsorbcd the Joss. .
PoOr 1983 season
incentive for USC
Tollner claims
Trojans-are ready
to make amends
LOS -\l'!GELE5 1 .\Pl -l'SC
Coach Ted Tollner kno-ws ho\.\ his
TroJans l&n eliminate the !lhado\.\ of
"There'..s OW> one v..a~ to gel back
on a pos1t1ve note.'' Tollner told
reporters Tuesda). ".\nd that 1s to
play. I think w~·rc read~ to pla) and I
think we're read) lo be a quaht'f team
Hut we have to pla) to find out." .
The Tr,oJans' fir')t test of the 1984
season come~ <;aulrda) at the Los
.\ngelet'C'oliscum when the) take <>n
l Jtah State. a team lbat went 5·6 last
}ear
NL su spends
Ozzie S mith
The spring practices for the Trojans
showed that a 4-6-1 record as enough
1ncent1\e to give e'\tra effort.
.. We could not have had things go
hetter at camp " Tollner said. "We
had the focus and intensity of what we
wanted to do The more work we gave
the players. the more the.,. took.
"It was the most enjoyable camp
I've been 1n 1n terms of work ethics
11nd c nth ti ,
their mmm wa~ w do cv~hing
po<;s1ble to pro'e we're go111& to be a
qualtt) team .. . lot
. The players have C\pressed thea'r
desire to "come back with a \.CO·
geance .. This 1s reflected in the
attitudes of the incumbents at quar-
terback and tailback.
A.t tailback. the Southern Cal
1rad1t1on seems to have been inter-
rupted following the Marcu~ >\llen
era However Junior Fred Crutcher.
who has gone through two years of
inJuncs. as back \\Ith a fre!.h outlook.
"Crutcher h<fd an excellent fall,"
Tollner said "Probably the most important thing as an his mind He
belirvcs he's healthy and he as over
whatever ps~cholog1cal hangup he
l>CAA .tabs Wesson. Goodmon . .
SANTA ANA -Fresno State wide . m
receiver Vince Wes.son and San Jo~ State •II•
linebacker Vvn Goodmon have been
selected as the Pacific Coast Athletic
Association foo1ball players of the week. the PC.AA
announced Tuesdlly.
W~ son, a 5-9. 185-ppund sophomore from Clovis.
was honored C\S the offensive player of the week for his
performance in the Bulldogs' 27-22 upset victory .over
Arizona, whale Goodmon, a 6v2. 227~~und senior•
from Bakersfield. wa1selected as thedeferisive player of
the wee~for his effort in Ute-Spartan~t.n-4\'~r
New Mexico State.
Wesson had four receptions for 11 l yards. The big
one was an 80-yard scoring catch from Fresno State
quarterback Kevin Sweeney wilh 35 seconds left In the
game to give the Bulldoas their surpnsing victory.
, Goodmon had three unassisted ~ckles and eight
assists and aJso recovered a fumble to lead a San Jose
State defense that held New Mexico State to four first
downs_!!!d 164 yards in total offense. • ·
Chargers to regain Shields?
SAN DIEGO -Offensive lineman s
Bally Shields. traded from San Diego to •II•
Minncsotala.st month, may be.on his way
back to the Chargers.
The San Diego Tribune reported Tuesday that the
Vikings have returned the rights to Shields to the
Chargers. and in exchange wil:I receive a No. 3 pick in
the 1985 draft.
The draft choice was part of a clause in the Aug. I 0
trade that sent Shields to the Vikings in exchange for
defensive back John Turner. Turner has since joined
the Ch~gers. but Shields never reported to Minnesota.
San Diego initially put Shields up for trade because
he walked out of campoven1 contract dispute. When he
did not report to the Vikin$S after being tradea. 1Minnesota general manager Mike Lynn opted for the
1985 draft pick rather than trying to sign the'lineman:
Hayes named Player of Week
1. NEW YORK -Von Hayes of the a
Philadelphia Phillies. who hat .466 with
two homers. h·as been· named Nauonal
Leasue Player of the Week for the period
ending.Sept. 2. the league said Tuesday: Hayes also had two doubles. six RBI and eight runs
scored dunng the week.
Also nominated for the award Bruce Sutter of St.
Louis. Hubie Brooks of New York. Chili Davi s of San
Francisco. Tony Pena of Pittsburgh and Dale Murphy
of Atlanta. ·
Televtalon,.~~o
TELEVllK>N .
11:30 p.m. -:rlNNtl: U.S. Open tilghllght1,
Channel 2.
. RADIO
• p.m. -8A811Ali.: Moel• at Clevetand,
KMPC(710). ·
7:30 p.m. -BAHIALL: Atlanta at Dodgers,
KA8C (790}.
9ays numbered?
e doesn •t act like they are,
_leading Dodgers to 2-TVtc-to_ry_·_
LOS ANG£LES {AP) -Rumors persist that Ken
Landreaux's days with the Los Angeles Dodgers are
numbered. 1
One ind1cat1on is" that Pedro Guerrero has been
playing a lot more in centerlield. the. position that
Landrcaux hu-beld s~nce commA to the Dod~rs in 1981.
But TueSday nijht. Lanoreaux gave Indications ofllis
own that he's not ready to move along quietly, slammina
his 10th home run in the first innin~. then racing home
• from third on pinch-hitter Sid Bream s sacrifice fly in the
·bottom of the ninth to giYe the Dodgers a 2-1 victory over •
San Diego. The 29-year-old outfielder, who signed a four-year
contract, last year. was ctedited by San Diego Manager
Dick Williams for the Padres· run as well.
In the eighth, Tony Gwynn slapped a single to Id\ that
scored pinch-runner Eddie Miller from ~ond base to tic
the game, 1-1. . . . "Sheer speed got' that run home," Williams said.
.. Their leftfielder (Landreaux) doesn't throw well, and we
knew that. Not many players would have scored on that
play." . ·
Despite the loss. Williams was hardly disheartened.
•twe had hoped to go 7-7 on this trip. but we wound up
6-8," Williams said of the Padres' four-cuy, 14-game swing
through Montreal, Philadelphia. New YorK and Lo~
Anger es. ·
:'When we left we were I <1 aames up, and we're the
same now," Williams ~id. "You have to be happy with
that, plus we killed 14 games off the schedule."
·The Padres, who return home -toni&ht to face
Cincinnati, have only 23 Mmes remaining. iheir magic
number for clinching their first-ever division title as 14.
Ken Howell. 3-4, who relieved $tarter Orel Hershiscr
in the seventh and pitched out of a bases-loaded Jam,
earned the victory. •
Hershiser held San Diego to two htts m six innings.
. Leading l-0 wiJh two out in tbe seventh. Hershiser
walked Kevin McReynolds. gave up a sina.le to Tetry
Kennedy and walked Carmelo Martinez to fifl the bases.
Howell came in to get Garry Templeton to grounq, 9ut A
to end the threat.
In the eighth. Howell hit pinch-hitter Tam Aannery
with a pitch. and pinch-runner Miller went to second on
Alan Wiggins' sacnfice before scoring on Gwyno's single
to left. -
Irv ine foursome in finals
Four Irvine youths recently qualified for the finals of
the "Go With the Dodgers Coca-Cola Baseball-Softball
Skills Contest" to be held at Dodger Stadium on Saturday.
The youngsters competed tn three sk.111 ev~nts among
other boys and girls in their age division. The categories . . . . -cy
plus base running for time.
In the girls division of the Oran3e County Regionals
held recently, Deanna Doolinle finished first with 339
points with Denise Mahoney second with 283. In the boys
division, Irvine's Anthony Ramirez and Jeff Johnson both
qualified for the finaJs. .
All four of the youngsters received a medal and two
complimentary tickets to a Dodaer aamc~ At the finals,
they wall be competing for a large trophy, a complimentary
Dodger uniform and two boll seat season passes.
CONNORS ADVANCES •••
,.,.........,..
FromDl
over No. 13 Tomas Smid ofCzecho-"I've played well aga111~1111m. w.uc;u
slovaJda. ham." Mayer said. "I had a rouah
Also Tuesday nwn. Wilander be«tt match against him the last time we
Tim Mayotte, 6-4, 6-4. 7-6 in a fourth-met in the Open (McEnroe wanrung,
round match begun Monday night. ~6. 7-6. 6·3. 4-6. 6-1 in the 1982
And Hanaka defeated Patra Huber of quarters). Wtn or lose. hopefully this
Austria 6-4. 7-5 to fill out the ofte'll be shorter."
women's quarterfinal fiO.-. McEnroe had no trouble defeating
C Green, who wasn't supposed to get onnorssaad,h~wa~n'tsurpr!sedto anywhere_ near this far in the tour-
find Lloy~ w~1t1ng •Or h•r:n an the nament. ·•tte had notning to lose-and
quarters. • He s been playing good could go out there and hit his shots.
tennis. Hes beaten a lot of good guys which is what he did -except I
-p!ayed better." McEnroe said. '"He
--·-....~me;-rcttting-to the erowd
_.which an turn was reacting to him.
"l was having a good tame out there."
he said. " '
"I sat around all day. Didn't get to
hit any balls because of the rain. I just
wanted to act out there and try to &et
aoing. I was just happy to get out of
the hotel room."
Lloyd ~«i he's "very supcrsutaous
- l think a lot of players arc -and I
think J"vc only lost once in the fir'$t
tound here in the 10 timesJ'\IC played
it. And that was to Jimm) (irl 1·981 ).
The Open was only the second
Grand Prix tournament an which
Green made ll past the first round.
"You Just look for a decent draw and
hope for the best," he said. "I thouaht
if I iot ioo<l draw. one or \wo rounds. The founh round is-more
than l expected."
He said he'd had a lot of interest
shown an him m the 48 hours between
his third-round victory over Austral·
ian John Fitzaerald and the loss to ••
McEnroe.
ST. LOl'IS (AP) -St. Louis
Cardinals shortstop Ozzie Smnh
was suspended for seven da)'s and
fined a reported $5.000 b) the
National League on Tuesda) for
bumping and knocking down
umpire ~tcve Ripple;_ last Satur·
day night
has regarding his knee "Ha~ bcxh balancr is there. he i.
quicker. and he's able to &et into the
'!Cam faster. ff he proves to be
rons1stcnt. he'll can') the bu lk of the
Top IOed John McEnroe eyea return. dwinl •tra!Cht-eeta
.tctory o•er qualifier Robert Green at the ~8. Open.
"But r think rm· a -much. much
better player now than J"veevtr been.
Jimmy's ranked third in the world.
obviously one of the areat players. but
I'm not going to be overawed by
play1n1 him." . :
• Neuner. for that matter 1s Mayer .
"A few agents have been making :·
contact. cxpressinJ an interest m •
geuina toacther," Green said. "Right
now r don't have any contracts -
clothing. shoes. rackets. I do have a
suina contract .. :•
load" Bruins gain ground without even taking field Smtth 1mmed1atch appealed
the penalt> and wall re.main in the
lineup un11I h15 hcanna before
,Jeaaue official'>. St Louts Man-
aaer White) Her10a 1Wl1d. No date
ha' been set for the hearing.
While the IC'ague dad not an·
nounce the amount of the line.
Cardinals spokl.'~man J 1m
Too mey said It wa $5.000. He
Quarterback Sean Salisbury wall.
bamng disaster or 1nJUf)'. become use·, all-t1m¢ pa!o~ma leader this
~casol). It hasrft been an ca.,> road.
howe\cr. Last year. he wascominaofl LOS ANGELfS ( -'P> -UCLA doc "he ~ad fucsd >'·"I think the
knee surJtl) and his confidence too\{ Coach :ref'l')' Donahue couldn't help team's an•iou~ to play ~mcbod>
a beating. but c,m1le when 1t was pointed out to else.
It'' 1 different kind nf opener than
last vcar. when UCL.A chalJcnaed alway~ itrona Georaia. But Donahue
5-ald has ftelinaurc stm1lar to those ha
fclt ·m 1983.
ad &hat Smith. in addition to
appeahna the ~11spens1on. :.al\o
appealed the line.
" fine or a 'uspcns1on "0.Uld
be OK. But to ha~c both is
ab,\urd.'' Smith said pnor to the
,Cardinals game Tue5o<fa)' n1ah1
w11h the !'lew York Mets h ..
. ..
1 hat. Tollner noted. wall th~ ham that his Bruins. ranked fifth tn "l bchc"c the team as comina off a
well · "" ·. __. 1-M AP pre-season football poll. had •\'Cf) good two-a·da>' which w1ll a"·c
"He CSalt.sbuf')) 1s playing b) far the moHd upa notch to fourth this week. it a aood foundation for the ason. I nest ball r, e e"er seen him pla). "Moved up without firina a shot." think the baucstthina no~•~ to lctthc
1nclud1n hiah school.'" Tollner said. heo ~1d ... wuhout tal<ina I snap," team dc~elop a pc:r onaluy. The
"He's morr attun<'d ta focusana to The Bruins v.·ill fitt their lir t )hot pcrsonalit) of all team t different, ::at
detail. and take their first snap thi Saturday least alJ the teams I'' c hnd:'
.. Ht\ mental approach 1\ btttcr. He night. and Donahue can hnrdl> w~1t. "The flruin\ "'II hC mccun San v.ant~ 10 pro'c h11n,elf rapab!e and "I'm reall>. to the poin1 with this 01 o ta.le for the tir t t1f1:1e tn 1hcir
wonh> oi lt"ad1ng us to a w1nn1n1 team where I m anxtous to fl 1t out t1pcncr. K1d:ofT tame 11 n Du~ao
,ca,on .. on tht field and pfa,• nd sec ho" n ..,J01rk tumh> Stadium 11 7 o'clock.
"I can usurc you that the a1uuct)'
lt\'el aflu t the me for me. there 1
nn d1fftrence." he id. "It ha\n't
changed a hck.
"I hone.st!~ <ton·c C~n much of a
difference from I Ht ) c r> n lar as the
openan opponent is tonrcrnCU. The
daon of the pla)crs • m to be
1dcnural.
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MlnnttOll 7, I t SHlllt, 21 22. U
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1111 S 6 Cll•caoo. 1, I , f C11ve•111d, 21, n.
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24, 2S 26 Mln11uota; AWIV ( 14) SIDI 10. 11, 12 01kland, 14, IS, 16 Ano111, 17, 11, It,
20 M•MtlOll, 27, 21, 29, 30 $atlhe
01rro11
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IAST DIVISION
11 SI I»
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ltemalftlne G1mn
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)0 Ntw York
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WEST DIVISION
79 6(). S6I
69 70 496 10
61 70 493 10 ,
9ttmalnlnt G1me1
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FrtnCllCO, 21, 29, 30 All1n11
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ll 12 At11nt1. 14 15.'16 Sin Oi190, 17. II
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23 C1nc1nn11I. Awtv (101 Sept S 6 Sen
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19, 20 C·nc1nna1 , 21. 29 JO St11 01ec10.
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A110 recto t CI', Miiiora Mtrr~.
SIOltl'I Drt1tn1, JOl'IM'I Toliver. '9YCV /11100 .. , JOVflil MooH
T1,.,.,. 2iC2 1/S
U IXACTA lt •2l Pl o alUO
THl•D •ACI. One m t HCI l'atk I.HOii' I v1nontlll'l'I 2 60 UO 2. 10
C1l lornl.1 l11••tt lltOMnl '60 2 10 ""'''Mt NOi (Ltt!llYJ 2.10 A•IO rectd A W•DO Ct tom'• Anot •
'"' 011tc111, llinov• o e11 Titre 1 St
U IXACTA fMI Pl o m 00
• ,OU•TH ltACI, Olli m t Pict,
Timi"' So~ll IP trCtl 7 •O 4 .0 3 JO. F't"flWlll (Va 1114 l'Olltm) _ S IO >IO
JoMnv Otwc.no tKuet>erl l 20 A '° r1cld ~OYa Hunrer. l't•tr ,11111,
hDr• 0111cer, T ooe W1ro Or .,.,
Cout10tout Hun•er
Totnt· 202 > 6.
,.,TH RACI. Ont 1'!'11 t Net
Ne"' Cadet IP11nol 1000 soo 310
ltu,tv Sll'oitrl IH hi JS 00 1100
Cruat On l'f (V1 andlng111ml l 00
Al10 raced Andv1 Urtu •· 1mm1c1.1111t
Wlngout, Mr NM . Marv•• Comnttnd.
Smooth A• "••vii Time 202 11S _
U IXACTA (7•'1 Plid $1 '00
SIXTH •ACI, One m111 01c1 l1ttllng lilly (Petlf'Hn) 2240 I 00 I 00 ~II 01fldy Mtn (Pllf'C.t 310 ) 60
scor1110 o lMltlltlll uo
AllO r1ctd LtlP Ytar •• """ L.O •• Ttll1mon, Ol1bi0 C1nyon, S1.101r Ttd,
C'Mon Hll\b llV
Tlmt I St 2 S U IXACTA 11·21 Ptld '60 00
SIVI NTH RACI ()tit mlit oact
Ortn111r11 lionotn IM1kll > 20 2 60 2 20
AUl\I Gutv lllounl s 20 S.00 Sud<len Move (Ball.tr I 5 20 ¥
AllO raced L.UCll.Y Ltvltv, ""''Y From
Homt. Ottfl'IOl'l•t $111-t, Too S"l>KI, CoYnlrv Comforl, Mra ltob n Bt'I
Time 200 U IXACTA 13·2 N •d 523 40
llOHTH ltACI. °'11 mi• Pace
Minreflllla Ft t ($1"111) 5 20 3 20 Wllln nt ScOll (Wlt',tm') 3 20
SetlClld IMarr.1ml
260
160 4 00
AIM> rectd Ft 1'1 Armt>ro, Know t0eHl>it1 OOn .-"'' Cru1a1ne Time 200
Pt!Cll, Till'lttv
JoMnv ClllflCI
U IXACTA 16·31 Pl d 12210
NINTH ltACI. Ona m 1 trot
NOl>•t Arnetta (AndanO!'I) 10 IO 4 40 3 40 Pro~ .lLIOhllllli) '20 3 00 5'1ar HIM G IC1il1l 600
Al•o raced lltuoe, S~ia 1n11re11, St111
Bowl, Martina Pride
Time 1 Sf )IS
U IXACTA 14·1l 1>11d Ua20
U itlCK SIX 17-7-1-3-6·41 P•ld $2,961 60
wllll four •Inning t1c11111 <five l'IOrtHI
Ctrrvover e>oot. SJO.IOl 00
TINTH •ACI. Otlt mote Peet
01tr1v1 ITrtmbt1vl 33 IO 12 60 6 IO
Trut Tricia C ISlfffhl 3 60 320
11111 Merine (t<otnlO) 320
Al.O r.ctd Ceot1·n Jamil SCotc11
OoUlllt, Froatv SkiDPef, Oma Cllerlu
lt1IPll C AdlOI
Time I St SS
U IXACTA tt•ll e>a·d ,20944
Atttndl"CI 4.265 •
..
NFL NATIONAL CON"RENCI ., Wt1! w L. -T Pct. PF
4111nta I 0 0 1 000 3'
Sin Franclaco I 0 0 I 000 30
"'"'' 0 I 0 000 13
N1..,0r1 .. 111 0 1 0 000 21
Cantril
Cll•caoo I 0 0 I 000 l• Cirffn 8tY I 0 0 I 000 24
O.lroft 0 I 0 000 27
"MlnnttOll 0 I 0 000 ll
Tempe Bev 0 I 0 000 14
lut
NY Cil1n11 I 0 0 , 000 21
Oe"u I 0 0 000 20
Pllnadl•Dlllt 0 I 0 000 27
St L.ou s 0 I 0 000 2l
Wtl'1 nOIO!'I 0 I 0 000 17
' 4MlllllCAN CONP'ERENCE w"' Otn•tr 0 0 000 20
1(1n1u C•tv vO 0 1000 37
lttlOln I 0 0 I 000 ,.
Sin 0·990 1 0 0 1 000 42
S11tt. I 0 0 '000 lJ
Clfltflll
C nc:1n1111 0 I 0 000 17
HOllllon 0 I 0 000 u
PltllDuroll 0 I 0 000 17 c .... ,.no 0 I 0 000 00
EHi
M11m1 I 0 to I 000 lS
New t no•1nd I . 0 0 I 000 21
NV Jt11 I 0 0 1000 23
811lf110 0 I 0 000 17
1na.1n100111 0 1 0 000 " Tlluncllv'• Game
PA
21
27
20
36
I•
23
30
42
34
21
13
21 ,,
3S
17 n
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13
00
20 24
37
l3
17
17
14
21
23
P1thl>11•oll 1t Ntw Yorll Jt11 1cnenne1 7
al 6 oml
al lndl1naoo111 Ractwav Perk Sllndlv'1 Gamei
Top AICollol Oreo11er Brad Anderson, Ctt•tland 11 1t1ma
Cov1111, 6.'37 Hcondi 1t .2n.77 moh, D .. t GrHn 81v al R1kl•n
Kt" Ventv W1d1wortll 0'11o 6 70 ttconc:tt Bufltlo 11 St L.01111
11 21Sl2 mph 011111 11 N•"' York G•en11
Com1>1tllion OollO Klono Gr1tldf0<1<, 01nver 11 ClllCIDO Neb~ 9 24 llCOndl ti 142 40 mpl\, 1>111 lton OtlrOil II At11nt1
IP H lllllt H iO 8.1<1r, North Otm111d. Ol\lo, toul K1n111 Cltv at Cl11Clnn1t1
Sen D1e91 Sue>tr GH 01v•d S1mrT10n1, Norcrou M1nneM>l1 al P1t111<1a<•ll•t --..w ..... n."'t1"'on----..,,~,..,, ,.--.-.. , -..... 1-.. 0-.. 1 --cs-1-. -<t ... 9Cl_.. ... ,_« ... o-o ... as.-.1 .. 1-n""• ... •~o-n•-111 .. 1-1>1--1 .. 1 ___ ...,,....,, ... ~ l!notw•AJ 11 M11n11
-tJff"11 t-3 O t • t • lttf'W¥1¥ C~ ~~ Tfll~ f.93 T~ .. y II New ~lfff>I
LOeLton I I 0 0 0 I HCOndl at } 16 73 m1>ll lnd11naPOlll al Ho..1ton
.._wllln1 L.,7·9 t•l O I I l I Sue>tr Sloc11: Larrv Morotn, Columt>ul Stfl D 1110 II Sltlllt a.. AMllll• Ollio, 11 ll second• 11 117 34 mo11, 1>111 lton ~Y'I Gtme
Htt1111er • 1·l l 0 0 l I Terr th, l'f40ron. Kv , foul Wai'111>9ton et San Frtl'IC•lCO ICll1nre 1
Howl W.l·4 2 1•3 2 I I 2 2 Stock 8 1 Qunn, Wonh11d NJ 1190 1• 6 pm )
""•Ynoldl fllClltd fl.flt on CllCl'ltr l llCOl\Cb II 10. 13 me>!!, DH! Sllvt Bt!lvO lnltr'IWll'ICI P11ta0vre11. P•. I 196 llCO/ldl 11 107 01
HBP-F11-v lDv Ho"'1 I T-2 4' ml>I> A-ll.tll FUMY •• ~.. GtorN •8rvc• Ill ••
Amtt CUI, G• • 7 '1 second• II 111., mPll
1>111 Terry Klier. Ho..1ton, Tuu 1 '3 sec;on<n 1 T71 n-,,.,~ ---·
Too Fuel 8 •11." Sam Willa, Cia1•w1tt·
flit • 111 ttconcll et 1'2 lO mPI> 1>111 I r • .,
Johnson. L.1nc:111er. N Y ., 7 JS ttconcla 11
lt2JO mDll
Nl'L IN1Mr1
NATIONAL CONl'lltENCE 0111,...,.dn
1mm1~ (;.1nll
Otruat1ott. O.t
Lomu, S• L Mont1~1. SF
Dklltv,G B
"""'·"" DICICtnll'I, 1t1m1
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Mii<"-•· St L.
PA PC Yth lO 7) ~
2• 17 171 JS 2S 270
2S 16 IU n 16 lU
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2 I
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21 Ill U 11 1 111 102 s 1 ,, 2
15 ... 5 " 1 • 11220 Jt 0
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Oonlav 01D Q\.11(~.Phll
JOMIOll (;01nt1
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1J7 17 I llS 2
.. 124 71 '
AMlllU(AN COfCl'HINCI I Ova,_..c a
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dtlllaNI•
J1A'1oam1 • "''' I 1011 C: "' •I0>111 va IO""t It,, tit oOClt
1tl'aM Statt Vt ft11lettt llO' oclCle
llArllOl'll ltalt J O'flf Q!lltllOfNI S•tlt
alrlt'lllm Yount 6 O•lf ltviOt
aM cNtt" Ill; VftW Miami, f'1& 11~Jt/IOITll 11 O•t• Sltllforcl
loa•on c: ... ' Cllf •""-mt •WHllll!tton v1 Nonn-.11•1fn, M Oddi
Hl9h td\eol KNclUM
Nlfl·lfl• • THUHDAY Hu~tlf't•on 1 .. en 1r1 Cat0111 ~· •' Ntwoor1 M1'1111t
'9Htl:ll(ll •• S.cie A11• Vt v 11 IEdd t Wttt lilt ld '
•Univ"' l'I' II lrv;rt • ; '9~ OlttO Mo,.t ti Miu~ V'tlo Flol!'tr'O'I va Antllt m at I.a Ill I l'ertt
Rtl!Cllt A am tot 11 T1o1!1" So\.olll H I VI II Doreoe ., Vt tncl1
• 'ltlOAY • Maler Otl n 1'011111•'" V• IV,, Ort"'Ot
Co111Co19• ()(tlll V•I# vi lalt"Clt 11 Nt..,llOrt
Htrt>o' Wlllill\t Vt ld•IO" ,, Huntineton IHCll •
NIWPOl'I H1rbor II Sent• Ana
Coate ,/lltH 11 101" Grano• W004t>rlott v• l.tout11 HIPI al Mlulo11
Vttlo .
&;1 Qlltm• ti w.i1n11n1r.r
C1ny011 II Coron•
LQ,tra II Ill Mocltna
Footnlll 11 C1olttreno V1 ev
Oranea 11 Va encl•
CvPftu II CtfflfOI
l.OI All."'11°' Y• l.OI A,,. oo• ., 01rd1n
Orovt ,
KattU• n Mffnot • II I.I Pttml P1rw.
~Y JI' Wtatern LI MIMI ., Warren
SOnort 11 01"1 H I
G1r"11 Grove '"' Trov 11 Fu iar1011 Arita I 11 BrN·011"4t
kVl l\l'll II Mavft r
ltuOiOOllll II I a~ A()'ll 8 ll'IOCI Moflt~rv er St FtlllC l
Plut X 1 Mvlr
L.ovo a 11 II P1111
SATUttDAY
M1r1111 v1 EiHr1n11 11 Ve enc 1
L1911111 ltt<ll 11 B...e111 Perk
Sen Cttmentt "' S1nt1tto 11 Glfdtt1
Grove
C11t • Perk v1 El Te><o at M u 1on "'''° Ill •
VI 11 Ptrk "' Pacil1C1 11 lolae GrtllOI
t1• t e mt1 et 7 )0 UNHI nolacl)
Vole'Vbel
DOUl l.IS TOUttNAM.INT
Ill Ntw1*1 ... di '°"""" H.UMI
M•WS OPIN
I Stht Ind Dan VrtClltOvoCll CCotrt
Mtael, 1 SCott Fr tar ch11n·ltoD 01¥'
lNewoorf 8a1t11), 3 <iaoret Clrtv·S•evt '
8 ... IL11t11"1 hlclll.
coao OPIN
I ,Wes WllCh·Wendy Potter lL.11111n1
8HClll, ! Scoll 11 lev·Ja.n LOOI CS.n
D eeol. > Tim W1•1ei..Er n ROO.•tlOll
Cot'I MHI)'
..
O...ue fl~
• DAVIY'S L.OCKIR CNlwlMrt .. IClll
-173 1no110. 232 1>0t11to, 1l y1llow1111. 20
rOCJ< fllll, •5 c:ellco Dllu, 13 aend blu, S7S
m9Clllf'tl, 16 1heeoillted 1 tcu!OWt. m outfit tuna, I 1llle>t1cll
NIWPORT I.ANDING (Nt w ... rt
... dll -SI •ne~• 111 DontlO I
ill-1ll4!1d, '1>111. 2 roe!\ losll I vtllowltlf,
12 macklf'~
DANA WHARI' -IU 1"9 tn 177 l>IU
219 DOnHo I YIUOWltli, 3 rock , j/\,
V•HPllllto. 5 KU'P1n, 150 m1c111rt•
• Tu.ldlV'1 tran,..cttona
BASEI A\.l
Amtrtc.ln LMllUI
'
CHICAGO WHITE SOX-ltt<I 10 Sltvt
C11r limit cllcller, trom Denvtr oC 1111
A,.,,.•ICan Auoc1a11on KANSAS Cl TY ROY AL.S-llt1Cll¥1llO On•• ConclPCIOn, 11\ort"OD RtclPIO Jim
ScrtnlO!'I, .)l'tortl!OP 01vt L.11~. oYI· t11k!er, 1n4 Oennv Jack1on, PllCn.f, ffom
Om1ll1 ot ,,,. Arner1C1n AUOCllllOll
NEW YORK YANKEES-SiGMCS Ar!llur
Lff C1IV1f'I outfltldlr. ana IHIQlltd ,,,,.,, 10
Saruora ol 1111 G111t Coaat LNoue
OAKL.ANO A ,-lltc1lltd Mika Wtrren
Ind aavt L.••e>tr 1>Hct1er1, Ind O•nnv
Mever l~r from Tecom1 of th•
P1clf,c Coast LH01.1I
TOllONTO BL.UE JAYS-<:1111<1 UP
Fred Ml"rlo...e, Ind K111V Gr11Dtr, In•
f1tldefl MltCll W1tu11r •!Id Ron Slltllfl«d.
outl t 1d!q, 1n<1 TODY Htr 1ndlt Ct!S...111
f.om SvretuH Of l111Tnrtr111~..:rl11eu1
tQ""'9I L.41q1J9
NL.-SJtC>lflOf<S Ou•• St!\1111 St L.°""
Ctrd n11 illortttoo 1or ~vlfl den, Ml'd•ne
•OOH NEW YOftK MEH-ltt<a Id lo'fU Gt•· oner. e>llc1141~. encl Kt• n Mite , 111 re
1>1uman, lrOtTI T ocs.....11er ol ltw lnlu •
net'Ol'lal t.uotA Purc11a..c rtoe contr1ct of
JOlln C11rlllt!'IMn CK.&lflt 01•, !rom
T C."'lltr ST COUIS CAltOINAL.S-ACl·111ttd loo
Fortell. Oltclltr, lrtl'n lfll to CllY d llf>la<I
lit•
1
.......... ~ ......
Coeta Meu .~ ~t end John Carl90n awalta Friday
nlabt'• opener at Bol .. Orande. . _
PREP FOOTBALL. • • P'romDl
Cit} of Irvine nuJs have splrt wtth
three wins apiece. Irvine is worluns
on a t~o-gamc winnina streak.
Mater Del v1. Foa.ntalD Valley
Mater Dc1 has a nc" coach in
Chuck Gallo. a new offensive
philosoph) (passing) and a freshman
quanerback (Todd Mannov1ch) to
thr~w apmst Fou[ltain Valle)'. the
Daily Pilot's No. I ranked team 1n
Oranae Count).
Coach Mike Milner's Fountain
Valle) Barons rely on ave~ balanced
offense. but one which al'-'l)S shows a
soph1st1catcd passing game.
Quarterbacl Enc Zeno has speed-
ster Carl Harry as his major aenal
tariet. and the Barons boast three·
)Cir starter Da"c Swigart at tailback
Fountain Valle) fiaures to
out"ciah Mater Dc1 b) a consider·
abl) margin. up front and m the
)>ackficld. and 1s cons1de~ deeper
• ·Oceao VlcY. u . Ella.ocaa
The Scaha"-kS of Ocean \'1c" ha'c
a ne" coach (Karl Ga Han> and a nc"
system (a po"cr game rC\Oh ang
around a tnplc·stacked I "llh t"o
ttghf ends) •
Ocean View; JUSt 1-9 a )car ago. 1s
loaded 10 terms of c:xpcncncc and s11c
and Gaytan fceJs the strength that 1s
ncceu&I) to make.. h~ offense ~ "
there. including 6-4. 225-pound ught
end M1kc ~cGhnche\ and ~3. .'.! 15·
polind running back Kell~ \O'all
Estancia Coach Ed Blanton also is
blessed "1th plcnt~ of returning
talent. and Mike R osclhnr and Scan
K.mkadc gi\.e-the Eagles depth at
qwtrtcrback. There 1s. ho"e' er. a
decided lad; of depth 0 ' era I~
Westlake vs. Edison
The Wamors from the ~1annonte
League are the first ofti, e non-lcaauc
encounters for Edison against tcarn
from outside Orange Count~. and
llle) are e'pcctect'f6"1ff'0'1de a 'c~
strong opening test for Coach Ball
\\orkman·s Ed1son·s Chargers
Edison. 4-4-~ overall and 2·~· I an
Sun~t League pla~ a ~car ago ,.,
tr)mg to bounce back after m1s\1ng
the C lF pla~ offs for the first tame 10 I 0
years.
.\mong the Ed1'>on a,.....enal art'
tailbad. Sean Curran, m:c1' e~ Rid
J usucc and Erl\. V. heel" nght and
dcfcns1\C lineman Grant Ice.
"ie9tport Harbor vs, Santa Ana
( oa1:h \111.e (J1dd10gs ha'> a big
1ebuald111g 1ob at ~<ac«pt1n Harbor
"1th thc ~ of two-rear standout
ta1lbacl. teH~ Brazas and the u1.,l 1'
mad!'.' tougher b' the tact t~C' '311 w ..
open \\1th a team '' '3nt .\ ·,
.stature
The '-.lint'> ot \.!nta \na. "hu If.&' c
'c"pon all 1 \\anted aa a .::~.~~
standoff last 'car feature a c,1andout
• ta1lb3cl 1n Ste\c ')hJ\\, "ho probJhh
ha<i the cdgrin s~ nan~ l:kf<'nJC'r
from H.aroor The "31lor .... ho,,c,er. boa<it full·
back Fm7 Ho\\\C'r and t'-'O i1ant
tack.le~ 6-6"'2. 268-pound Mike
Beech and 6-6. 232-pound Tom
Kitchens.
Cotta t u va. Bolta GTl.Dde
Tom Bald"'in takts·over at Costa
Mesa whert' he is tryina lO put
toaethcr a squad with little depth or cxpcnen~. but Bolsa Grande is in~
same boat and this one figures u a
tossup,
Quanerback Mike Shuck and rt--•
cc1yers John Carlson and Sam
Stro1ch, si-.c the Mustangs solid
potenttal tn the aenal pmc.
Woodbrtd1e va. Lapna 11.llls
These t.,..o m als usuall\ colhck in
South Coast Lnaue pla). but nowit•s
1 non-league pmc W1th Woodbri
mo"ml into the Sea View Lcaaue.
The) hue spbt t,_,o previous
pmes. Thas umc Woodbrid# mttn
v.ith a ~tumina st.aner at quar·
tcrback (Matt Com-.'ril) and ~Ct'f
knt team sPtt(J.
uauna Hills counters "ith Hov.·
ard Gasser at quancrback behind an 1nc~pcncnced offensive line· (aside
from 23()..pound Alex Tosheft):
Marlu vs. Etperuu
This Saturd•) N11ht Spcc1aJ pllS
t"o of the bt'st m Oran Countv.
wnh Manna entenna Wl quar-
terback Steve Blokdyk puJhna lllc
1nsaer 1n the Vikina veer offense in
contra.st to Esperanza's bull-like of·
fenSl\.C aamc. Wlth quarterback Greg
Beckman at the controls.
Manna's speed bqins v.1th re-
ceiver Chip Rish (9.~ 100), but
Es~ranz.a 1s quick too. as cndenccd
by 9.b !.pnntcr lo..e1th Ponuflet. •
Espcranz.a"s runninaaamc includes
uulbad: Jim Farrell and fullbad.
Derek Gatchell (6-2. 210). Manna
counters v.:uh ~()().pound .\dam·An-
tO} an and speedster Shawn Masse}
Lapna Beacla v1. Bana Park
Coach Dennis HIJ')llng's .A.nists ·a~ b1& and citpcncnccd. but thin m
the ranks as usual and the) 'Ube trytng
to put 1t together against a band of
C"o\otcs "ho boast sohd citpcnencc Bl
hnebacl.er and in the sccondar).
Buena Park ~cnt 5-5 m I qg3 and
ha' e nine returning staners on of-
ten. e. including . quarterback P-eter
't barra (6-2. 190). tailback Rcgic
Bro"n <5-lS. 1651 and four :?()().plus
offenSt\C linemen.
The 4.nms feature ~1arli. Onpcr at t:ntbac1' wnmn, \ ttr,...,...""'"'n=~~o=pc=r,-· -----':-
atl"d ~ qoamrllart Jrm ffDomtcll
It"\ the fir->t mecung bct"een the
t"o' hool., smcc IQ 59 Laguna Beach
lead' tn thC' bnl"I \t'nl'.'' "h1ch hepn
1n IQ,~. :'·I
'\(,O Ort'n1ng the "1('8<.Cln ~ddk·
t'ia('l'' RoadrunnC'r' tale their spttd)
a t up ag.atn'lt cro .. s·to" n "'a Santa
na YaTie'. and \\ t" tm1n.,1cr pla\S ho~t t o La °'Jtnta for the lifth su:at&ht
\tar sccli.tn~ to up its ad' antaat to
4-1
W-ysocki_i s second
in 800 at Paris meet
P RI ( P)
\
~ .
.. .
.... .. .
..
~ ..
" . ... \\ .· '• . '
\ ''
' .
Auto sales, ·housing.arid
einploy ment-t·he
segments of our economy
on which so much of
classifie d dep ends-7--are
looking better th~n they
have in· a · lon.g time .
We're feeling good about
that and the opportunity
it gi\{es us to .off er you a
~ bigger, bet~-tpan-ey e r
·classified· section. If you
-11r-------~~ . , ---~-'.t ead classified
. •
·.
·.
• • • • .
• • • • .. • • • • • ' • • , .. • •
.) -
. \ lat ly, come ·enJOY 'a _____ ,,,,.,,
>'''·;\. browse thro\].gh our
c9lumns . You'll see why
we're feeling good about
classified.
642-5678
\
-. ' '
· · • 9r11E DAll~Y rn.or
CLA I IED Of.'flCE HO
Telt>phoue Ser\'irt·:
~l onda,·fridin
8:00 .\ .\1.-5::~() p . ~).
ttu .. ane " Counh'r:
\l onda~ -Frida~
8 :00 \.\1.-.>::io P .~I.
UEADLI :\ES
Pl HI .IC \T H>'\ OE \l>l.l'f-
\l11111l<n '111. 11 .. rn u.111.
'1'111• .. d•" \lu11. 1:;~0 J1.;11.
\\ 1·tl1w~tf.1., T111·... Lin J1.111.
Thur .. 11,1\ \\',,,1, & .m p.111:
· Frid.i\ Thur... & rn p.111.
"'·•l11r1l,1' I rid." :\:110 p.111. I ........ c1." f'ti. :\:oo p.111 .
(. \ 'CE IJ.ATIO'\ & .
<:ORHECTIO,S:
( .11wd latio11 .. and l'C1rn·1·ti11 11 .. 111<1\
Ill' 111,1cl1• 011 ,,11111• cl 1•,1dlint•-. a-. aho\ ,:.
Plt•a .. 1· ''"'k for ,, t'cllll"t'll a tion
11umlH'r "111·11 1 .111n·lli11J! 'our ad,.
ERROR ·:
Cht>t'k 'our ad d,uh tt1ul n·port
t'rror-, irn1111'flialt•h. I lrt· I>\ II \
PJI OT a ..... umt'-. lialultt' for tht· nr~t
1111·orrt•r t in ... t•rtio11 ou h .
CLA l f'IED 642-5678
ie .. n fer..1111 -· Hn 1n fir 1.r.--
Traditional
Realty
631-7370
Macnab-Irvine
I I I '
• I
COLDWeu.
BANl(eRO
C.atral 1002 Gtatral 1002 llWPllT lllT UY
UIU m ..... ~lOIUllllfllll 3 Eid 2~ wtth ocean
OlllU 111 IUI 1245,ooo. 20011 eypr... ~-=-~,::0 =
North of tllghwty location s A. H.ighll 5'5-2&47 to tM beech. Ttlll non.-
Corner R-2 lot w/alley It.-condo tlu oommunhy YEARL y 700 m(f
ceu. L11t pnoe lnciu• pool and lennle end a fenced patio gar
approv9d plana 10< two HIT&IT10 Plnl 1 vwy faYOtabl9 pr1oe of CALL et
11t ctUI condoa each eeautllul private aunny only' 1&4,500. That'• not IOU.lllT ........ .
with two car ga~. patio with large awtm-bad tor Newport BMc:h. 5109 Seuhore Dr_ Wt ec-ta tll
Motivated Miier Wiii con-ming pool. Spanllh etyte 751-3191 one. Ownr/egt 5454&47 llll II.Ill :'~~.to~.0"tJi ~~ ~::r~· ::rn~~~ h~ c:: ~~ECT II Ul.11 IUUID HOUM on lot bY ltMI
DRENNER or DON carpe1ed. A terrific value ..... PROPERTIES Looking tor eggt'eltlve In· 1ba frplc. totally r
O.THOMAS at $345,000 dlvldual to run emal1 'NB ~t 1950. 541-
Penn office. Tom LM 2 Bd 2~b• delux GE 1s9-9100 ------~_,t ""' •• ~ ... '" • ••• : .•••
(7 14) 673 4400
SEA. VIEW by owner & epe 1950 &43-22
Hampton model 3 br 2 'A I It 1, tu4 •Mi .~ &42· HI03 Frptc, micro, dbl g
ba + fmly rm, good view ......... sn' "' ..... , ..... ueume k>9n $400,000 --· "~ Ull llU 213-430-3529 •-*-a..ut--.-2-1t-ory--8~
MINT CONDITION! Own-VILLA BALBOA •!YI-· 2br 1V.ba T\ art have totally coordl· XI w/courtyard pvt nated the carpet and wall 1111111.IT nt term1. 2 Bd w/pool, 1 . • blk to .._.. 1••2 lltN\ fmt/bck, gar .. av
Co·-rlnga 1n thla bright Sale 1to"' 4 Bdrm In ""''· '" ,.,vv. • ooo ..,.. ..... 3 ch;rful and appeallnQ -------COM'• H~bor View Hllft: &42·1113 M.Fergueeo •1 mo ... .,,.._
home. Large 4 bedroom large lot hu IPoft court, Me,Ut lean UOO 3BR 1BA etalde d
-+-family room with bar, IPnlTllm covered patio I• near gar .• w/d hookup~
gourmet kltcn. s.479,000 knock• often when you part<. now S379.000 lllULW P&ll yatd Sl25 mo. 1
FLEXIBLE SELLERS UM resutt-oettlng Dally l ~t t •Ml.S Fleetwood: A beautlful $100aec. ~1
Pll Cl Ill .... "d 12x52' mobll home withe ot aH '""" " • to • ~ora, 175-8000 1!' x I ' expanalon on the • P&Ylll ....
"-'Tl HI Hll' 1 rNCh the Orange Cout -------~ dlnl"" .,.., Lerge Don't ......,, Call
HU"'tl ., l•c. mark~---.... 2_,,_,,,,.1 Ill If & llU kttChen • 'sp.aou. bath '" bulterel Pay REAL ESTATE rnunw -._, and King SIUd Bdrm we move youl ta•
•---•83•1···H-00• -~~~~~~~ G0<geou1 Brittany Woode Call A.gt. 540-5937' tatl By CM=alne = Condo located In Eat-tlonalty Advert
aide CM. 3 Bd 2'...tba 1800 te-trdaJ only rental
LllO llLI
101. Vii LI•• St d 0,1 11111 12-1
Marvelous 6 Br bayfront 78' on bay. pool,·
spa. 100' boat space. Xlnt Fin. $4.._850.000.
Channing Spanish 3 Br. 2 Ba on 45' lot,
lrg deck, courtvard, pier & shp
$1.100,000
Sq ft. 3 car gar, wet w , Ptt 1250 wu Invited & p fam • .tm & no common . pated In the M
walla. Only $189,900. x ot. a "· Stadium Rental Eq
Santa Ana Htl. Pou. of· carel 543-2491 ~
Traditiona l flee llte75~~000 fltm. Brand new 2 ' 3
of Realty o.c. AIRPORT ., ... new $925/up &42·9551
631 7370 bldg, fulty IMMd, 2 •ty ·~------< • corner bldg Idell f0< Breathtulng OCMn
prof ow~er/uHr . 3BR 2~ba condo
Wanted to buy In CM. Ree Sl19,000. Quality up-nll, pool, trplc•, 111 Beautiful 3 Br 2 Ba, playroom, fireplace, lot "¥/tear down 1truc-grades. 751 -5919 lrg garege. 130
beam ceilings Xlnt financing $420.000 .• ··t~_ur_e._M,,,,M_5_2_4 _Brtan-.....--.. la p I · Contact Holly 547-" ~ Mmt 11! EASTSIDE 2 Bdrm
IAYSIDE DlllYE llYFHIT COIDO C..ta Mt11 1124 *IUlll lllm* crpt1. drpe, yard, ~ O&LL F• APPT. Tl SU 27 Unlta--all 2 Bdrm 2 ba $725. 536-4837 Jetty & Bay view, newly decorated Mai 4BR 2 1tory w/<Jen, ofc, townhou .... encl gar· Eattalde 281 1ba
Kai. 2 Br, 2 Ba, 40' patio. Now $645,000. llbrary, 3 car gar. agee, pvt patio•. 1.5 acre gar yard Im~'
PHIHUU NOIE OCUIFllOIT s240
'
000 ~ ~~~ ikrx1I0:.1~ cus200pancyd s5c8511' 11s'' 3 BR home, lrHhly anytime. BKR CO-OP. ep. a
Exciting Ocean & Jetty views, 4 Br. 3 Ba,
3700 Sq ft car parking $1,285,000
WEST IAY H f llYFllOIT
At NH Y C Trad1t1onal 5 Br spectacular
bay view Ownt>r hn $1.050,000
U&lllA IU CH MILLSllE
Panoramic ,ocean & city view, 5 Bd, 3 Ba.
spacious for entertammg. Xlnt financing,
now $835,000.,
1. fix car
2.read the iilijPuat
~ 3. water plants
4. read· the Daii·-, P-Hat---l
5. s~oppinc .--_..;;._ ____ ....j
_6. The lallr Pilat -----....J
H£LLAT
I I' I 11 I
TANUO I I I ~ I
painted, new car~. 2 "Mt-upe" malled Gr .. t Catanna/M
car garage $ 125,000. w & lllo.htlh• view 2
ltJ lh0af411 lffr l&LEIPDllU · SffsfmollM &42 ~7121 ~ II lmllllllTI · HOUM w/gtt boldJ
-------Opportunity wtth ettab-decor fncd/pvt Y1 M .. Verde 3 bf 2 ba lllhed eucceeeful lnveet-$575 avail t-10-l
2112 Serang S 165,000 ment office In CM. Exe.I· 53M 190 Belt rtty
879-2&80 ownr egt i.nt commlaalon1. Tom 1------
REPOS 2 on lot S 141 000 LM &42-1803 Rentala nr OC(
S • · Ju1t redone 2 bf
HouM 127.000. Low Lets ftr I 14 home a had. y~ down. egt 54&-n39 enctOMd gttage
au Ptlat 1 ~~'~..,~ ~ Reelly mutt
180 degree valiey vi;; 3 bf 1owe11 Pf1ce $198,000. E *Uer Md 1311
hM· avaJI now $189,000 Own« &4&-ee73 cono ~ deP
neg owner 3e()..9580 VIEW LOT at SILVER ~~:r .. nai. ~
OCEAN VU T\lfMOITle 3Bd LAKES 0< wlll conllder 53M190 Belt Alt
'
/Jn ~ll.fl
llAl1 I 'f I.
A\ilo,lX 1111 f ',
'!
••
I ' I
plut the IRvtNE MIAAOA
andihe HUNTINGTON BEACHCOMBER~
Wedneeday at
,_JIO txtr• ctwaet ~ CALL TODA'i'll
UIF LN
YOUt Ody Pilot •
8trvloe Onc'lory ~Me{llatlve
ta-4121td.I
amw
CALL US REGARDING
IRVINE LEASES
~1:0~ ·Realty
786-1172
I' HOROSCOPE
_'.____ -
...
' J
•••
·.District Managers
If you 9nfOY worklf'V with young boY, & •
Qlfh and dul. job' 0t• not for yov,
con~ a cCJNer in M ~' arculo-
t.on held. Thri '' a ""'~ po'•tton with
daily chollengH & r..-ordi
Ovr open~Q•O~ IMdiate. Apt>konta
mu't ho... o ¥Qn, •totionW090fl or trvck.
We offer on excellent '°lot) wtftl o boftv6
pion ond goa ollowonce. We ho"• on
eACellent beN!it pion tflot inch;d.& hospi·
to 11ation lnwronc•, libetol 'WOCOtion ond
holidays
~ """' ho;,e o dtwe IO M &uec.ufvl ond be w n9 IO work hotd "°" .... )QI .,..,,. quot; icotions.
pl.-. opp~ In ~to
• • •
tM I ily P•lllJ
\
Newspaper
KIDS-EARN GREAT TRIPS AND PRIZES!
AGES 11-14
EARN lJ> TO $75.00 PER WEEK
We 110• nave I~ open111c tor younc u1er
bu>ters to secure ruden lol lne Otanae Coast
lnlly PllOt Our trtWl st1rl 11 3 30 p 111 at'ICI
wor\ 1ot~ 8 30 p m Wttkdays Oil Saturdly, wt
wori a ltw "'°'' !lours 'l'ou urn many lt19S
alld pr11es ~ • I~ wn.ra rour own money
lllere •S no ~~•tlllll 01 collection inwo4w«I
II yOli arr 1111ernltd P'U'if "'' [111
(714) 548-7058
TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ACROSS
1 Create
6 Obscurps
10 Durauon
I<& C11rur.es
150n
16 Cnamp.on
11 Shac111es
18 Beloie g•mm'
19 1nna1><1ar1~
or su11
w "••I'd 22 Redo
24 Eretonq
26 Delam.-d
27 Eye bri.-f\t
31 Compo 1
32 flonerarv
33 Of>f1nea1.-
38 Slul'l\b•es
311 M11estic '° Morse o• l •P
4 I AN1rma1tv,.
11 EVIi 5'J'll'!T
43 G1an1 1.,11er
44 Excavated
45 Lamp l~1
41 Permanent
51 Drink• a b11
5~ Token of
affKl•on
54 Por11ons
~8 Key da1es
59 Frog I Ion
6 1 Piano p1ec"
62 HM!IS
63 01 Pones
64 Sopping lube
65 Tnose 11)1~ s
r',f, Satter) part
67 At>ouna
DOWH
1 ~canry
1 ErigagP
Egyph81" cn•ef
deity ..
4 Eamnq~
S Ri,,at narurP
6 Flalfosn
• Br aon t ilnal
8 Hos1e1r,
10 TrPmblc
11 Alla• SOurct>
,., C•P<;I o• 11
mounla•
,.ll Pr....,
2 I Bue• \ ni111 ..
2;.i f:onal O•O
25 Morr Pt I PPll•
21 Cf L ~ <..;uu
28 My1hotngy
29 Emana11cr1
30 Exoros gr111
f,,(JPIO
~ 3 4 5
14
17
PREVIOUS
PUZZLE SOLVED
34 llemu range
35 Emigrate
36 1 hor s lllt'tef
17 lfli' naffile
QI Old
19 VPryb1g
·10 Af>tordong 1ape
uni!
• 4;.> P11nrc
43 Mosr 1a1uq__us I
44 WAii jjdrbe(t:_j
7 • 9
46 Cleave
47 Opt IOf
48 The Pentateuc11
19 EKl'ieW s0 UnfHlened
53 Towerino
55 Med"a11on
56 Mild yellow
cheese
5 7 Makes ahtrll
60 Ne•t ro Md
11 12 13
. '·
r•taurant
TlllUCI 1111
'ltsfUiftt Ii ltlrl81 w&mwn
..
2011
J
4 AVDf
1160 Matleh tar BlvO
uena Park
121·1010
To ChooM from
Jll ILEIOll
llNRTS
1001 ouairs,, .. ,
Newport BMch
111-1100
TOP SSS PAii
!IHTAlllYU
1144'•
l Tl Cllllll f 111
Targa a Coupe
2NI'• TO CHOO FROM
MIKE McKENNA'S
SOUTH
• COUNn
MOTORS
®
1114 RllllT
COIYERTllLE
Wolfsburg EdttlOl'I
48 mo CE l a
S238 T4 · llll ·per mq
TOP 113.!120 64
@
111• SClllOCCO
11000 OAlll IACll
48 moC Cl "
UJG • taa w mo
• TOP '12 011120
<:.t.P•1uoo
"8rau utae oa
@
111• VllllOR IL
80moC lo
'2"1 GO • 1a1 pet "'o
TOPl14 e2uo
CAP 114 195
'2000 CAP r.O•lll
lldutl Hl40 80
m
1114 IMPULSE
I
NABERS
CADILLAC
LARGEST SELECTION
Of lattl'l\OOef, loW mlteege
Cadlli.c:. In Southern
CaJlfomlal S.. Ut IOdayt
140-1880
2800 Hwt>or BIVd. COSTAM~A
nttllt
1684 Camero 1216/mo
Call Bob for detall1.
714-492·1142
COHHELL
CHEVROLET
.'A.'><lt.1rl••t II .• :
11~1\\H"\
546-1200
''" Hll
'71 Mut1ang 4 cyl, amlfm lt•eo caaa/all MW ti,_
l3000/obo 720-103e
'80 FIESTA OHIA
Good condition, 1 ownat.
11800 ObO 873-1841
Llactla
•i;··· 2 RtliXRf 8E6XJJ Air, crui.. AM/FM
(311741) .....
2• mo/24,000 ml wv •• USED CAR
1'401~ HIJl\tlld\
• 8~'M'70'7
fntlH I
1612 PoNtiXc FIRHIRB
Air C<M'ld • Pow. St.., l
8ru•. AM/FM c...
(310081) S12t5
24 mo124.000 m1 eerv
ontrct, IUb/pttor ....
-· 11o40Jleldl HuntBcil
147-1707
.
114.315.1•••
• Scltt~ .......... "
..... ,.,.. •fl ,. • .,...,
I •
"
,,
·-~....-...... -•
•
'
Forecaet• on A2 .. • 'Coum 1011111
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1984 ORANGE COU N TY CA LIFOR N IA ~~ ('f I< 1 '•
' Berger backers·vow recall
'Retired' Marina principal cheere pos1t1ons. , ,·
The controvcny has simmered
sipce Berger announced" to teachers
on the last day of school that he was
be:ing forced to lea\l't by former
Superintendent Jake Abbott
being forced out. More l'han 6.000
residents have s1ancd petitions and
ru more madt repea1ed appear-
ances be~ trustets urain& Berse'r's
By ROBERT ljARKER
OfltltO..,NM~
With .suPponers s1ill rallying a~ound tum, Dr. ·Pa\,11 Berger called
himself "the luck1es1 man in 1hC.
world" Tuesday night .. moments after .h~ apPartrJtly sawhis hopes to return
as pnncipaloat Marina High School
dashed once and for all.
And many of his 300 supporters..
who pv,c the popular principal a
standing and tearful ovation. im-
-coast"
Airplane landings and
takeoffs ar!! compared to
a game of Russian roulet-
te b~one city official./ A3
California
Los Angeles supervisors
oppose Jarvislnitlative.
/A4
B~r patrol gets b0ost
In manpower.fA4
~;:::::~=~=-;:::;::·::::::::;::::~-'.:::·:·:·:::·:·:·:·:~:·:·:·:·:
Nation
Teachers strike In seven
states affects 128,000
students./ A4
Mondale would ask Sov-·
let leaders to freeze arms
race./ AS
Reagan says the nation is
In the midst of rebirth.
/AS
World
Typhoon Ike heading for
Vietnam./ A4
Three killed In rioting
against military in Chile.
/A4
Home
• •
mediately setJ!P_shgp oucside Hunt-
inJton Beach Union High School
District h~adquarters. collec1ing;sig-
naturcs aimed at t_tle recall of three.
trustees -Steve Smith, Ron Marcu:f
-and Brian Lake ...,... who voted :rues-
day to acccp1 Berger's forced retire-ment. ~
Trus1ecs Sherry Baum and and
Linda Moulton initally agreed with a
decision 10 rctnove Berger in early
January but later. changed their
•
Abbott. who since has become
·superintendent of the Mt. DtabJo.
School .District in Contra· C<>5ta
County .. ·was critical of Berger's
leadership abilities. and pve·the 61-
'year-old Bcrieranoption qfretumina
to the classroom or takina Carly
retirement.
Berger agreed 10 .. retire without
fanfare but announced to tuchcrs on
the last day. of school that he was
•
re11)statemcnt. . 1
The issue came before the board
again Tuesday night wtien tnutfe
Blum asked for recon11dttation.
Bcraer who said after· Tucsda~
niaht's rncetina that "he Wln~t<l to
make a ditfcrencc" at Marina ·and
thoUJht that h~ had in view of the
support of from the community.
"I hope to make a ditferenct" aaa1n
somewhere," he added befo" thank-
ina those who suf>ported him.
-Manv f""'"rlt hrtvt ,,;rl fl ktl of
• • .
....... •
End of a successful mission
The epace ebuttle DUcovery toUchee down
on Roaen Dry Lake today u lta maiden
voyage of ~ 1h million mllee ends. Storlee
and more plcturee on Paee B&.
'-Cat latly' pleads inn.ocent
to endangering her 130 pets
Judge accepts suspect's pea-by-telephone
• By PHIL SNEIDERMAN
OI -~ f'M lfWI
did not reach Bostrom's courtroom,
McDonald said. and the warran w
. sa1 is was not lt'plly
uircd to appear itl coun after !he
··telephone arraignment was set up.
-;;;_~;:;~,:;:::,::;r;:<'---t--:---N'ancy-J-anrettt , r-yCaf.'"ola
U-Indiana woman who traveled to
. Bostrom. The pica was entered
shonly after Bostrom issued a~.QQQ
nch warrant10fE111s' arrest ausc
ncilhcr she nor her anomey appeared
at the morning arraignment.
A&rra1 conference has~ll..K'l t'bt . ' :-ana a jury trial liiSbecn
tentatively scheduled for Oct. 9. A't
the pre-trial conference. Ellis" at-
tomc'y and a rcprcscnt.i.ti-e of the
Orange: County ·District Attorney's
offict will discuss the case and could
reach a tcsolution without going to
10al ..
Food
Delicious lunchbox treats
and afterschool pick-me-
ups help schoolstudents
keep up their energy and
enthuslasm./C1
An Instructor promotes
commuhicatlon and
understanding of the Chi-
nes.icuiture through its
culslne./C1
Orange County ina motorhome filled
with more than I JO pets, entered a
not guilty pica Tuesday to a charge
she improperly cared fo,.her animals.
As the legal matters moved toward
a resolution. lrvint animal services
officials said they have begun looking
for foster fa'tnilies to care for some of
Ellis' ~ts temporarily.
Elhs' attorney, C. Thomas
McDonald, entered the {>lea: by tele-
phone in a Harbor Municipal Coun
arraignment before Judge Russell
Torrid
Lynn Hartley, a cltrk for the judge.
said the arrest warrant was stopped
after the telephone arraignmenl was
completed with attorney McDonald.
In an interview, McDonald said 1hc
warrant resulted from a communica-
tions mixup.
The attorney said tclet>honc ar-
raignments art permitted tn Harbor
Court and that he left wbrd with court
representatives last Friday to afranac
one for Ellis. By mistake. the message
McDonald said Ellis has asked for
her pets back and is now in a position
to care for them. The: woman rc-
ponedly bas found a job and a place to
live in the area.
The: woman's pcu were seized by
(Pl-oee'CATLADY'/ill
'
nice th1np. l apprrciate 11 but I don't
know that I d~rvc i1." he u.1d. . .
Mercer said ht has no plans 10
thallcnae the lcplilly of.h11 removal
and 'hopes to become an cducahonal
consultant. he said. .
His res1gpat1on. which lak.n..effect
SatufJiay . .comn after .J6 years 1n
· cducatJOI). He ~n·h1s educatiortal.
carttr in Stockton and served there
for 17 years as a teachtr. vace
princi~ and pnnc1pal. .
He1oincd the loe1I district 1n 196S
as principal a1 Fountain Valley High
School. He became. principal at
Marina in 1980.
HB .de~ays work
on Ascon dump
A moratorium on the removal of
oil and other waste materials (l"om 1he
Ascon ·t..anfiU site jn Huntington
Beach has been extended for a ydr bY
city officials who voiced fears that
excavation may pose htalth hazards
to neighbors.
Ci1y Council members 1ook the
action Tuesday ni&ht to delay oil
drillincorclcanupworkat the J7-acrc
dump. until they can develop an
ordinance that will allow them 10
share authority over the dump site
with the state Health Dcpanmcnt.
Expected to be inCluded in Jbal
ordinance is tht !_e<IUiremeot thl•
dump owner Phil Spdlc:r determine:
what kind of materials arc: in the
murky porids.thatarcsa1d 1obc about
3S fctt deep in places:
· Refiner')' wastes from Huntin&10n
Beach oil fields WCTC>dumpcd at 1hc
Hamilton 'Avenue and Magnolia
Street 5.ltc for about 30 ~'J bqi~
nine in the' 1940s.
In recent years.. dumping bas been
limited to concmc and other inert
materials: ·
No clues found
i~ ·HB slaying
HomtcKie investigators said today
they still have no clues why a
Hunttngton Beach auto pans worker
was shot in tl)t head late Monday and
left dyin1 on a deserted roadway in
thC city's industrial belt.
Barry Alan Ford. 31 , of Lakewood
diM a short time &ft.er he: was foU,od
. by a polt<"C otrittNiillina a routine
patrol throuah the indus1rial park
near the' intCTSCCtion of Spnnpk
Street and Bolsa Avenue.
' Tbc man's Cll" was parked nearby
with its liahtSI 'On and tnainc still
running, police: stated. No 1un ~·as
found at the scene.
· Sgt. Ron Jenkins said PQlice have
notdc\mnincd why Ford .....ould have:
aonc to the iodusuial aret. wtucb lS
only part.ally developed a.nd typteally
dnrrud at ni:t,hL
Althouah an awopsy was to be
perfonncd. polK:c said a prdi.minary
examinatj.on of t~ man's body
revealed no 1rac:es of pnpiowdtr
which probably rules out the possi.. --'I
bility that the &t1il shot was sclf-
inflictcd.
lnvesuptors. who said FOtd had
no record of criminal activi1y,
planned to interview bis family and
friends 10 try to unravel the .
San_Juan teen killed
in freak truck mishap·
At--killedT.-.,Y Hlglliny'Patrot opolUI-
_, he -eritly tried to IMp St.ft-·
from a Nn8W9Y trudt that Miler w a p1111 nger In IW
skidded out of control on • -truclc -by Erik Jolw-~ 111,
roadway,_. Three Arch Bey, elao ol-'S.. ....., c...:: WJ
authorttlM 1'9P011ed-St_,. Mid . .1o11o...nli111
DMn -· 18, of Son JUan moderate injulree In aw 4 11.1111
Clplolnlno -lcJtled tnotontly ac:cldent. _ -.,hewn run a.-by the The pair _ _,,
truclc, ~Ing to California t'IH•-•1m-..•1-;&;0i
Colleges wonder • • •
Sports re avea
-=~~~~e~s~tud~nts
.,
one
Business
Spending on newcon-
strµctlon In July climbed
slightly, reversing a de-
cline In June./ A7 ·
:·::.::::.::.::~::::::::::::.::::::::::::.::::::::::::::::::.:::·::::::
INDEX
Bridge 1 -·
Bulletin Board
Bualneu
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B• A3
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B• De ea
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05
82
A,7
A• A8
81
A3
Be
01-3
AS
82
• 83 A2 .,..
Beaches Jammed
as.Coast cau ht
in heat wave
By KAREN E. KLEIN
Of ltle D.-y Net St.fl,
S'Ntltcnng temperaturts continued
to bake 1he Oranae CoaSt today and ~·cather: forecasters said thcr-c is little
relief on the horizon for residents who
have abandoned school and work (or
the: shores tryina to cool off.
Themercurysoartdtoa1tt0rd 106
dcgrttS in Anaheim Tuesday. Hips
Thursday are prcd1c1cd to hit 98
inland. a(.'('Ordina to the National
Weather ScMcc. Lows toniaht will
ranac from the low 70s to 78.
The beaches ThuJ'lday wlll be 78 to
SS wi1h h1ah clouds1111mcsand larac
crowds pft'dictcd to take advanLqc of
the 70-dcarec ·w~tcr and aentle surf.
The hca1 wa"e 1 a result of 1 hiih
prcuurc layer over the Southwest
that is pu h1na sea brce:tes back Qver
the ocean. Nauonal Weithtt Service
forecast r Don Lust u.1d
"The only thina 1~1 __k«.ps Lbc
coastal artas ftom Deina hke the
desert 1s lht otfsho1t brtt1e ... Lust
511d. But there 'WI ~IOU httle brttl~ Tuesday. even 1 \he' COi l.
Tuesday. between .2 .000 ind
30.000 pcopk put d<J'A'n 10.,,;-cls on
NcwPon Mathe ICt"Ordina to Lt.
(Pl-oMH /il
I •
•
............. .,,l-. .....
ll'Tine yo111111ten el\IOJ tlM lut eplula• of ........... In
W~qe Lake befo.-lldlool 1tarb nut weell. l'rom left
are Rlcll Burton, Peter Vesl<rlan, 8t.-.e Go.berman and Ryu ~ft.. . '
Administrators at local commun1-
t) colleacs haven't hn the panic
bu non )'Cl. but you can· bet it's no1 far
f'rom theil" fingcn1ps.
Loc:al coll~ alt.-open for fall
claucs. but students ha'-t no1 re·
tumed 1n numbers equal 10 pas1
)Cars.
Some collqc offici.als a~ nervous
bc'Causc undCT prcscpt s:uu~ au1dc-
linn. siuderit attendanct in 1984-SS
wtll be: used as • ) ards11ck for college
fundina in the comina yea.rs. If
attendance as down. the collqc5 arr
. hkcly to feel the pinch 1n their
budg<t .
The specific ~asunna t~ for
(Undlnl IS averaat da1I)' lttenda.ncc. a
fiaurt that is dc:tcrm1ned. by the
number of ~tudcnl •ho t:nroll and
the number of classes~) t1kc
Some or the carty cnroUm~nt
ftgurcs arc a b11 grin1.
A ofTucsday Orange Coast ol-
lqc 1n osta Mc:sa. considcml the
state's la'lt't s1n&le..campus com -
munity (t)lJcte. he3 :U. 760 studcnu
-.dijWn 18 ~nl 1h1sycarfrom the
umc point 1n 1983. The number o
C'laub bc1na taken by 1he
avtraar tudent, ho er. is a btl ·
h11h<'r than la t ran.
. s sister Khoo!. Gotdcn Wn1 olkat lft HURft!'J10t1 Beach. hltd I
fall enrollment Friday of 17.24S -
down 11 pcf't't11t front1hc..1111Kpcnnt
last )W.
l OC'C's otl\cr i!tt':f 5ehoot
Coastline Colkac, .... hKh Mis oo
formal campu~ Du1 otTCn tla at
numerous telhk lotau.,n tht en·
roUrt'\cnt a of Tut1d1' was about
'
•
PKIL
S11EIDEllAI
Focus ON THE NEl\S
14.000 -down 4.. 7 pcrccnt from luf
lilt I
Saddk'blck ~lcat. w1lh camputH
1n tn1nt" and Mission !:f O.P'.Cf'td
1ti fall semester Jut .,.th an
enrollment or 20,001 tudcn ju1t
l S percent below the ft&u~ for the:
st.an. o(the fa.II 1983 SC:MQttt.
CoUqt off"1t.1als ha\'e otTtttd ~v
el'll e1;~anat1ons for tht: decline:
•This is the fint term 1n ,..h1ch
tu1hon has been cbl{JCd at CaU·
fomYi't commun1t rollc:ss. tu-
denti f1lUJI plY $S per unit lot fcwtr
thaft. -~~nits per IC:mctiet or 1 flat S.SO r« for i.-°' mort units. ~U<'l!lon haff mtXtd opinJOn
about the 1mpid of the fee. Wh1$t ll
ma)' ha"c deterred some '°"'·1n®me
or ~ tenou Studc.nts.. MOil f'Co'
turned lh1s fall ready to pey 'the
ch1~ ·
•The tco~ h Im •cd Ind
employment is up. t s that tra.
d1t1ot\1lly '"1"•1adf'OC'1n atttndlnct.
at commun1t)' kal. •hlCh 1r1
Popular M>urtt of 106 ua1nu., •.
1~-cou.-0 Att
'
•
...
By DA\'lD I BOP.
J>MttJ ...... CortM'**"' .
Laaun ~ h "ent "nhout telc·
phone for 1 while 1 uc~) "hen a
new SIS million computenzccl tel •
phone watdung unit went on the
bhnk only "«ks fler bcm m talled.
All General Telephone customer
with a 494 or 497 c:xctuin -ubout 'l3 SOO of lhem -'were unabl to
• make or ri-<-h\e call\ Tuesd \ be·
tween noon and 12:26 p.m. ·
The telephone blackout ftl o cau-.cd
a fi'ustratina half-hour an the lu¥uh:i
Beach Police Ocpllr\mcnt
· "Th~ firs( thing the chief said wu
:call the phone compan) nd find out
what' goan on.' • said S t. Greg
Bartz.
"h was treakv:· 1d airu. the
~ntch comm nder when the phone
blackout OC'turrtd. ••Evel')'lhing I
wanted to do dependw on the
phone.''
· B:iru used pohcc radK>~ to d1 pa ton
e~cr') ·av:ulablc unn to p trol the
~.treet!>, including lire trucks and
muni~1pal service '~hicle . E'en cit~ bu~dnvc!"-\\ere 1nstructcdtostop for
an) one who appeared to be an need of
as .. istancc.
"\\ e-could have had a maJor fire
.ind st "0\Aldn't e\;cn · have been
rt'Portcd" B:irtr. 'ia1d ... It shows how
muth \OU depend on the phone\."
. '\o '>enou'> 1nc1den1s "'ere rcponcd
during the telephone hlackout. Banr
\Bid ,
Oen I Telephone m G be
Robt-r1on id a computer cucun
board malfuncuoned t IO.l4 1.m.
but was back on It 10:32. The 1}'5tem
failed apin dunns testina of the-new board a few minutes befurc noon.
GTE customers could neither make
nor receive calls until the dial tone .
was reJtored at 12:26 p.m .. Robtrson
~ad.
lhe brand new "itate-of-tbe-art,
dianal computer system'' was Pl.It
into operation in Lqu.na Beach A"1&.
17 and handlh an averaae of 272.000
calls per day.
It .WH a sofiware problem.'' said
RoMr~on. who added that tech-
nicians are still fine-tunioa the sy1-
~m. .
"The bad new~ as that. everyone
w1th a Laauna Beach exchange lost
touch wllh the world." said Rob-
e™>n E1ght)·n1nc customers called
to complain about the outtaae after
phone service was restored. he said.
.. ..
11
61 11 u 14 .. 70
71 " i$
, ., •• 2 ,. .,
u u 6t H 7t ... , " .. 76 51
IO 70 .. 6t u 17 u 16
t7 61· ., 11
112 ., .. .,.
kt~ Wtall* ~·NOAA 1J S Otol OI ~Ct
lot u nllr9'ICllCO .. eo
U 0 n J11an,P 9' H 7e
67. 61 11 ltt Man• IO, ...
14 82 ... 111. 10 .. ... 61 lll1tYfOQt't ., IO
11 6t Slo.ia h ta 72 H
71 <19 pOlilM 19 IO IO H lyttcu*9 • 14 IO
71 •1 , Toptt.t 17 60 tt at T~ .17 72
78 10 Tutu M 11
'' 74 w~ 74 II 94 70 Wlerllta ft M
67 13 IM•t It 60 11 n Wl!mlng1o!\Dt 70 62
-
103 Costa Mesans protest
Fairgr9unds rock concert
... ...
63 17 ti
71
-75 75 73 73
17
17 70 ... • IO
THUlllOAV
• 2 20am & STt m
~4pm 751 pm
u 4)
: SuRF REPORT
·----------- -
24 LOCATIOM
Sun Mii 10011 II 7 14 p 11'1 . "-Tllurtll•1 II • 30 I m 11\ll Mii IGl•I\ at t·12p m
& t Hunt•nQlon 8"cll
Alvtt Jetty' HtwpOrl
40111 Slr .. 1. NftPO'I
2211<1 S11 .. 1, N..,pori a11~WldO
UQlill• 8eKll 8tnC*"4111tt.•
Wtt• ltfftP at-71
Moon I-IOCltt II$ OO·P 11'1 , .... II
I 57 am TlluflKl8)' and ,,_ IGI"' 11 s 42p11'1 r::-..
llH 1•2
t
1
I
1
1·2
1·2 s .... owec1oon eoutl'lw9t
COMOITIOH poor
ralt .. ., , •..
flllr
11111
ltlr
By TONY SAAVEDRA
Of "" 01llly ..... •Uin
A packed house at the 18.000-'>Cat
PaCiftc Amphitheatre· cheered thl·
raucous sounds of the Pretenders
)nus1cal aroup Tuesda). Ho""e'er.
Costa Mesa residents within an
estimated 1.5-mile radius of tht'
outdoor arena ""ere not so ap-
prec1ati\le,
SOme I 03 noise complaints kept
the. telephon~ nnging at Cit~ Hall
while C1l)' lawmakers there "'er~ accepting an inv1tauon by a munici-
pal coun Judge to part1c1pa1e in a
sound study with amphnhcater
owner Ned-West. Inc
Two misdemeanor caM"~ againsr
Ned-West. including charges against
compa ny officers. were poMponed I last week by Harbor Municipal C"ourt l Judge Selim S Franklin until 54.-.pt.
28. The company 1s charged with
violating Cll) noise laws during 1"0
summer rock concerts.
Fraol:hn has instead requested that
both parties try one morl' ttme to
avoid a web oflitigauon and reach a
truce out of coun. He ~1d the mutual
sound stud\ would hl'lp set the
ground rule!> for a solutton to 1he
noise dispute
"Ifs hard to do anything "'hen ho1h
sides are lmening to separall' data."
•said Franklin. who added that he
would pamc1pate an the.action a'> a
referee of sorts "suggesting thing,'> tu
do 10 solve the problem.··
Additional!\. a Ja"su11 b\ ;-o.;ed·
West quc~t1on'ing~ lOR\t1tu'11onali=
ty of the cit} 's no1~c ord1name ha<.
1>cen placed on the back burner b) thl'
company P._Cnding 1he outrnml' ol the
!olUd) and further negot1at1ons ·
The Caty Council. though c\pre'>'>·
1ng doubt that an accord could bl·
reached with amphitheater o"nc.rs...
d1reded Cit> Attomc} Tom 'A-ood w
negouatc '-'Ith the compan\ in ~lcct
ing a prt\.ate sound eng.meer.
Council members also "31J thc
11
: CONTI NUED STOR IES '~
the amphitheater into the communa-
l). placed an accent mark on their
comohunts · CON TINUED STORIES
Orange Count} Fair Beard was
rl-qufrcd b) an earlter contract to
share in the cost of measuring the
noa'ie emitted from concerts at the
)Car-old fac1hty on the state-owned
count} fairgrounds.
fhe action \Oak place alter attorney
\\ ooo·conferred· wuh council mem-
bers during a closed-door session that
lasted about an hour
"Tonight's decibel level 1s ungod-
ly." said John Gardner. vice presi-
dent of the Concerned Citizens of
Costa Mesa. a 300-member group
that filed su1·t against the
amphitheater earlier this >ear
COLLEGE ENROLLMENT TU-MBLES ...
Ma\.or Donn Hall stressed the cat)
\.\aS not abandoning t(S demands that
the amphitheater "sohc the noise
problems to the sat1sfact1on of the
com munity."
Hall also f'C'ferred to a ~crct stateg)
that the Cit) 1s taking to force the hand
of Ned-West. Although keeping the
deta1J.s of that strateg) hidden. th e,
• mayor said the mutual sound study
would not alter the o,ccret pmc plan.
"I think we n~d to,nd1ca1e to the
1udge "e·re w1lhng. more than \.\111-
inf.. to pan pate wtth (ham>:· be
~1d. "Scheve me, the strategy that we
a~ pur!>uing '" proceeding ex.acth as planned··
Hov.e\Cr, t\.\O residents at Tucs-
da) 's meeting said the} found 1t hard
to behe\e Hall They ma1ma1ned that
enough sound studies ha"e been
conducted to prove there ts a loud.
bothersome noise problem.
Coinc1dentalh. the llnn) strains of
the Pretenders' mum·. sp1lhng from
-
"I'm a little bit pcss1m1suc about
1ud1c1al relief." Gardner said.
Agreeina was resident Jam A)nes,
"The noise tonight ts louder than r,e
ever heard it. It seems the more time
goes on. the \\.Orst the noise gets ... I
think you should be more in an
adversary pos111on rather than a
negot1allfli pos1t1on:·
City Manager Fred Sorsabal said
this mornm& that Aynes was nJht
about the musk being loud. noting
that I 03 complaints were received
Tuesda)' from as far south as , I st
Street and as far nonh as Paulaffno
.\\enue
··\oormall~ >OU ge1 20 or 30
(complaints).'' said Sorsabal He
added the Cit} ·s accoust1cal engineer-
ing consultant. Gordon Bricken.
monitored the noise Tuesday.
.\Ith h the data was not 10.
~Of'Sa al pr!d1ctcd 1t would be well
over the 5S-dec1bel ltmn set at the
propen) line
From Al
•Local high schools are producing
smaller graduaung classes -and ·
thus fewer potenual college students.
The <?oast D1stnct. which includes
Huntington Beach. Seal Beach, Foun-
tain Valley. Costa Mesa and Newpon
Beach. has had a marked decline 1 n its
}Outh population ln recent )Cars.
many elementary schools have been
closed because of declining enrol-
lment, and a ripple effect is beainnmg
to hn community colleges
One reason Saddleback's enrol·
lment dip has not been so severe 1s
that its campuses draw from south
Orange Count) communiues that are
sull growing.
•The Coast D1stnct colleges.
which have trad1t1onall> begun their
fall l?mls 1n September. this }ear
opened for classes .\ug. 20 The
chan$C 1s to help their calendars hne
up with those of the state's four-year
univers1t1es and make mid-}ear
transfers for students easier. ,
But the early start mav have been
inconvenient for students with sum·
mer JObs las1ina through September
and for those taking late' acations. In Gun01an forces his way
into ho01e, takes jewelry
·• addmon. young parents who must
care for elementary age children ma~
not have been able to enroll before
their youngsters returned 10 classes
this month.
v1s1on m another room at the time of
the incident. were not harmed by the
masked intruder
~n armed robber wearing a blue ska
mask stormed a hou-,c in San Juan
Capistrano Tuesday e\ening and
forred the 39·\ ear-old female resi-
dent lo -take orr her C\peOSl\.e gOld The bandit apparently charged into
J<'"-Cll") and empt} her purse. the house on Branding Iron Road authont1c~ reported. • after the woman opened a rear screen
The ""oman and her l+}ear-old door at about 9·30 pm. to let her
daughter. ""ho ""as ~atch1ng t~le· barking do~ outside.
To accommodate people wtth such
schedule problems. the Coast colle~cs
are offerin~ hundreds of late-starling
classes beginning Monday Students
will 8tten<J.clas1Htbout 30-m1nutcs a
week longer than those who enrolled
last month. but all students will finish
before Christmas. .•
College officials arc hoping hca"}
registration In tflc late clas~s will
pump up the semtster's gloomy
enrollment figures.
The problem 1s not confined to
Orange Coul'\t)'. however.
"It 1s a scnous issue and 11 1s a
statewide one:· said Da"e Bro"'nell.
acting chancellor of the Coast D1s-
tr1c1
Brownell atteoded a meeting last
week with chancellors from other
multi-campus California community
college distncts and said he heard
s1m1lar distressing reports about fall
attendance.
What worries the college officials is
the funding formula approved eartier
this year by state leaislators Because
of the confusion over tuition. the
lawmakers decided not to consider
1983-84 attendance in funding col-
lege$ for the current school year.
Instead. the 1982-83 figures were
used as the auade .
Under the new la"'-. funding for
future )Cars will be re\.1sed according
to attendance dunng the 1984-85
term. If a college has a s1gn1ficant
decline in attendance this )Car. It will
recca"e less monc\ ncu \ear aeeerd-
ing to this formula. ·
But college otficiah contend that
man) costs remain stable or increase
C\ en when attendance drops For
instance. cnerg) costs to hght and
cool campus b~ildings often rise and·
so do the salanes of teachets and
other employees.
-:Ttt<'1'<lst D1stnct's f31ow11ell said
employee salanes and fnnge benefits
account for 80 percent of lhc c-<pen-
d1tures in his budget. lea" ing lmle
room for Oe>.1bil1t> 1f the state cuts
funding. If this year's CoasT District
attendance drops 15 to 20 pcrcen\
below the t 982-83 figures. 1t could
mean the loss of millions from the
district's $90 m1lhon budget.
College officials caution that it's far
too early \O panic. Locall). firm
attendance figure~ won't be known
unul the end of registration for the
late-starting classes. And statewide.
about half of the 106 community
colleges haven't even started their fall
semesters yet.
But because the early trend may
hold true. college officials arc already
talking about prcsSJ'!j l~slators for
changes in the funding formula,
either b) disregarding this year's
enrollment declines or by 1mposin1
funding cuts on a gradual basis.
Fred Klass, director of legJSlation
and communicauons for California
Community Colleges Chancellor
Gerald Hayward, said his office
should have solid attendance fi&ures
in trand.when state legislators return
to Sacramento in December. But
Klass said success in changina the
college funding formula may depend
on Go' George Ocukmej1an's
opinion on rhe matter.
,.Ocukme11an was t~ Otl,e who
waged a long. bitter but ultimately
successful battle to begin charging
tu111on at community colleges. Klass
said the governor has given no
1nd1cat1on how he feels about chang-
ing the fund1og formula.
The C03'Sr0tsmct's BroWlletl ot>:
served. "Our chaJlenge will be" to
demonstrate to the Legislature that
we do have a problem and that fresh
and creative thinking 1s needed at all
IC\'els~·
ORANGE COAST Clrculatlon 714/M2..c333
"
Dally Piiot
Delivery
ClaHlfled 1dverU1lng 714/M2·5178
All othar d•p•rtmenta &42-4321
'CAT LADY' PLEADS INNOCENT ... la GuarantHd
""OM•r r. <Uly I '°" 0
Ot 11""• tOU" Pt!Df'' tr., ~ 30 p "' CA ~· " 7 ~ ,.
Daily Pilat MAIN OFFICE
, • .,, , Pty '1 t •~!Iii CA
•;• •1·• Co!;ra •JM<I CA •161~ From Al
In ine animal '>Cn ace'> l.'.Orkcr' tv.11
"'eek\ ago after a \lrong odur l om1ni
from her motorhome par~cl1 1n a
local lot. \.\as reponed I n'1dl' "crl'
more than I 00 c.:al~. I 7 dog:.. '>l'' en
rabbits and l\\O guinea pig' \1an' ot
the an1mab "'ere 111 lrom lhl d1llil uh
dnvr \.\e!il from Elh~· lnd1<1n.1 larm
r l)Uf lat'> Jt1l.J '"' \JU~ t1J \ l' d 1,·d
but 112 remaining feline<. h.1, l' hcl·n
reP-°.rted 1n 1mprm~d hl·allh .tt lhl·
\\'OOdbndgc Ho,p1lal for \n1111,1I'>
becnhou'>C<.lJtlh<.·c1t\ r, \n1m.1 I< ;ire·
Shelter
( arl PJgano. lht• l 11~ ·, .1n1111al
\l'r\ ICC'I '.IUpt.'f\ ISOr. '>aid f:'lli\0 tlill for
lhl' animal carr e\C'cedr, $6 000 .ind ...
cl1mbin~ dail).
He said the cit) ts lool..:in$ for foster
lamahes who \o\OUld be v.illin!J to care
tor 1,ome of the pets temporanl). thus
helping lo reduce the mounung
expenses. He said anyone interestea
in providing such care can obtain
more 1nformat1on by caJhna the
animal center at 559-PETS.
TEEN-AGER KILLED •••
From Al
traveling downhill OtY Pacific Jumped, but we don't know for~
laland Drive near Crown V~ sure."
HOT WEATHER CONTINUES •..
From Al
Ron John.,on •I lnl' m.irinl' \, tCI\
di\ l\IOn
"h'' a medium-big cro"J. C'>· pe1:1alh "Ith lhl' '~h1x11, h.llk in
SCS\1on and during the m1Jdk uf 1lw
"'e('k," John,on ... 11d
But hc<tlht.·, ,11,,i haH' IX-l'n t•\lt'P·
t1onail> qu1l't hl ,uldl·cl. \IO(l' tht.•
ocean ha~ lx'l'n t.1lrn and 11p11dc<t an·
at a minimum
Early toda~ 1t "'·" ,iln:ath 7
degree" on the be al h lohrt,on \Jlld
There "ere lhrl'C re\ ue' reported
a Iona H untmaton t 11) bl·.ichcs I uc .
da), among thecimHI ot c1hou1 :w 000.
~1d \tC\l' D3\lt.1'0n. a maru1( ~l<.'t )
officer
The rrcord high lt'Olfll'1,1111rcc,. \t'I
Tuc~a\ contnbut~·d lo l'C'ak cit e
trical Jemands and 1nul·,1,i:d fin·
danger throughout tht.• rn11n1'
Electr1 I '.km nd re < llcd .1 ne"
h1&h amon' the 3 3 malhon cultlomC'r\
scr\ed by So\lthcm C ahforn1a Ed1M>n
Just Call
642-6086
'
l o 110111111:.nop111llw1101tn11111\111~·
an the -.outh . acco1d1np. 10 Jim
Kenned~. rdl\un·, ( O\ta 1\.frr,a area
rnanagcr.
l'C',;ik demand k,, \1em-"' 1dt.• htt
1..i 191 m1llmn k1lowam a1 3 p.m.
fuesda'. Kenned> ~aid In Orange
County. peak power was estimated at
~.614 m1lhon k1lo\\8l1'>
rhc pn.•\ iou< high~ for <'kctrical
u<mgc "ere w1 on \ug. :?II, hC' <aid.
De\pttc \OrnC' po".cr outaics in
fullenon and anta na. Kenned\
"a1J, the ut1ht) t'ompany "''able to
keep up wuh the demand. mainl) l'.':tu~d b' h11h uscofa1rcond1t1oners.
\bout 2l tran!.formcrs 1n the central
county had to be replaced Tucsda)
and earl) toda • he 'a•d. and anoth~r
.tO "~ f(~ burned out nd had to be
rrpl::iC'ed
"We hke to a"lk people to set their
n1r r:ond111on1 n no lo"cr than 78
de ··Kenned) , .. 1d .. nd Y..r 'lt1JI
. .
Cll~UUld,l" ~upll' IU ii11rc lhClf "P-
phances the af\emoon off. e~pec1•llY
dunna that hottc\t pan of the day 1n
the late aficmoon."
The hot '-"Cather. beside taxina
power supplle and ma.kjna everyone
uncomfortable. has increased ~re
danaer to a problem suae. accordina
to Pat Antnm. Oranie County Fire
Dcpanment spokesman.
The department i cncoura1in1 the
pubhc to stay out ofarn dosed due
to fire danaer and to be extra camul
in camwound • nmm said.
"The brush is eiurcmcl)' dt) at this
point and with the heat we have a
decrease in cfhciency in our flre.
fiahtcrs 1f the) have to filht 1 ma1or
fire," he u1~
\bout the onl) bnaht 'pot. for
firtfiahtcn, 11 1hat the he11 has not
been accompanied br nta Ana
wind , he aid .. If ""'e had the wmdt
wc·d reall) be 1n hape ... he td
8 "0 '°"' COCr " D" Ile 1• •O
Satutiu, •no s:inc., r
rt:IV 0.0 llO'! !1!C"••• ' COP) b'1 1 a ,.. CA 't>f'' ••
10 1 .., anc 1 otr; •
~Cl"·• fO
ClrculaUon
TelephonH
"'°'' Otanue Cwrtr
A'<'I\ 142""3
H. l . Schwartz Ill
Pub sher
Roaernery Churchman
Cor tr)• er
Stephen F. Carazo
Production
Manager
Donald L: Wllllam1
C1rculat1on
Manager
00-,•'Q't' 1983 Or•'IQe Coe I PuOl<V>ong C:O...pa~, NO .,.,., "°" tt 1·11~ eC:.tor.a "'4'te Cl' •O..•t "'•
..... ,,.,"" only De IQ'~ • ,.._, ~ ~
~<;ICQPY'oghl ,...,..
,_,. 0 •• Coe110a y P'4(..t •Ill w'\oe• "'Cl'Tl~O I~ r·•~ ,,,.,. "tJltOl!Sl>eo ov ,~.Of•~ ca." Publll.rwnu CO"'Pl~r Tt•.e t01toon1 ••t ~D Sl'eJ MO<>illJ 1~•9Ufol
r dlt A 'llQ to •ll)i"..n• •I! tloli .. p.;DiN •a B•'""°"Y'
•'Ill [>vnQJly\ I ~e'fltlllCjPll vu01otNr19 r>lllN I 111 310 ""'" aa, ...... , " B • l!f-0 Co.•• MHI Cl .,.~ lli'l!21
VOL. n , NO. 249
.
"One of Orange County's finest fish houses. Very impressive wine lis~ all
fairly priced."
. Herb Baus, The Rtglsttr
Re1taurilnt Cr11k
"Provides friendly service, excellent food and comfortable atmosphere."
Scott Wtsw, Tht 8.arnstorm~r
Res11ur~nt Cru1~
"Shark and salmon, both generous portions were cooked to that moment of
perfection. ''
Norm St•nley, 011ly Pilot
R~•tilur1n1 Critic.
· "The dinner portion of fresh sea bass was perfectly cooked, ·moist and
succulent."
"Lobster tail was remarkably tender and flavorful.''
..... ~ ... -
Htrb Sau,, Acrou the Tilble
Restaurilnt Critic
•Winner of outhern California Reataurant Writ rt A11ociation1
S er erit Award
180 AIRWAY, CO TA MESA •
ON THE JOHN WAYNE AIRPORT RUNWAY• 546 ... 9880
I
'
. •
W £:0N£:SOAV, SFPTEMBlR r; 1984
e
'
'
.
I
f IRIT 1011111
score-ewe eist
Coaat
Alrpla11e landings and
takeoffs ar~ compared to
a game of Russian CQt:mn
te by one city clal./ A2
Interior S retary William
Clark vows to move
ahead with off shore oll
teases./A3
California
Los Angeles supervisors
oppose Jarvis Initiative.
/A4
Border patrol gets boost
In manpower./ A4
Nation
Teachers strike In seven
states affects 128,000
~tudents./ A4
. .
Mondale would ask Sov-
iet leaders to freeze arms
race.I AS End of a successful misaion
eagan says the natlorlir -e •pace• uttle liC_o._v..;.e...;ry;;..;;..t;;.;;ou.;;..;;;c.,:;;;h~ee~d~o-wn----• ...;oy'""ag-e-o":""f 2 1h million mllee enda. Sttrlee
In the midst of rebirth. on Rogere Dry Lake today u 1te maiden · and more picture. bn Page 85.
lAS
World
Typhoon Ike heading for
Vietnam./ A4 ·
Three killed In rioting
against military In Chile.
/A4 ·
Hom
i"'Takeyourcuefrom the-
wallpaper when you
beautify a room by re-
decorating. /81
South Coast P-laz-a-wlll be
the temporary home for
the Laguna Beach Mu-
seum of Art./81
Food
Delicious lunch box treats
and afterschool pick-me-
ups help school students
keep up their energy and
enthuslasm./C1
An Instructor promotes
communication and
understanding of the Chi-
nese culture through Its
culslne./C1
·:·:.!·~:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·!·!·:·:·:·:.:·:·:·:·
Sports
Area high school foot-
ball teams gearing up for
The Angels recover from
three-runtlomertn the
bottom of the ninth Inning
In Cleveland to pull out
12-lnf'MAg wln./01
Business.
Spendlf)g on new con-
struction In July climbed
slightly, reve,rslng a de-
cline In June.I A7
INDEX
Bridge
Bulletin Board
Business
California News
Clastlfted
Com lea
Crou word
Death Notices
Food
Home
Horo1e'ope
Ann Landers
Mutual Funds
National Newa
Opinion
Paparazzi
PoUce log
Public Notices
Sport•
Stock M rk 1
T elevttlon
Theater w .. ther
Wot1d Ntwa
84
A3
A7
A4
04-6 . 84
06
08
C1·8
B1·2
05
82 A7
A4 AO
81
A3
B6
01*3
A8
82
83
A2
A4
Berger'.s allieS.
Will seek recall
of three trustees
Board aecepts
'resignation · of - -
Marina High chief
trustees -Steve Smtth. Ron Marcus
and Brian Lake -.who voted Tues-
day to accept Berger's forced retire-
ment •
Trustees Shem Baum and and
l:nHla 19f'Oullon mi Ca Uy agree<JWiffia
By ROBERT BARKER dcc1s1on to remove Berger 1n early
0tttteo..,P11otai.11 January but later changed their
With supponers still rallying positions
around him. Dr. Paul Berger called The controversy has simmered
imself ,.the luCkTest man m the-since Berger announced to teache"
world" Tuesday night. moments after on the last day of school that he was.
he apparently saw fus hopes to return bem& forced to~ leave-b> former
as pnnc1pal at Manna H11h School Superintendent Jake Abbott
dashed once and for all. Abbott. who since has become
And many of his 300 supponers. superintendent of the Mt. Diablo
who $2ve Jhe popular pnnc1paJ a School D1stnct m Contra Costa
standmg and tearful ovation, 1m-County, was cnucal of Berger's
mediately set up shop oubide Hunt-leadership abilities. and pve the 61-
inJtOn Beach Union High School year-old8ergeranopt1on ofretummg
D1stnct headqvaners. collccung s1g-to the classroom Cf takma early
natures aimed at the recall of three retirement. -..,.._____
Torrid
weather·
won
Beaches jammed
as Coast caught
in h eatwave
Beraer agreed to retire without
fanfare but announced to teachers on
the last day of school that h~ was
being forttd out. More than 6.000
residents have signed petitions and
scores more made repeated appear-
ances before trustees urging Berger's
reinstatcmcni. •
(Pleue .ee BERG~R/ A2)
\
...., ......... ..,u.
lmne yoaniaten eruoJ t.b lut •plaebee of mmer In
WooclbrtCll La•e before ecbool atana w • hom left
are lClthrton,PeterVeslmn, t Gubenn n 4 ya
Barton. .
\
While couple played bridge at club,
th ieves wer e p icking out the best gems
Aboul S60.000 "onh of JCWtlf)
"as tolen Tucsda}' night. from a
'ewpon Beach home m what pohcc
~1d appeared to bC a profc 1onal
burglary Job.
• The Jewel •-ere &at:en from tM
master bedroom of a home on the
2700 block of Vista Umbro~ m
Eastbluff'TuCsdaycvenm.g. according
to poltcr rcpom.
The m1denu-of the home "ere
pla ing brid at a local club when
their front door knob "~ 1\1.I ted
open with a pair of vise &rip pher'i. the
repo"! said. ·
The b11rglars appeared 110 know
ex ctl]W'hat thC) ~ nted nd wbttt
to find n. pohcc 1d
There was no ransacking of tht
hamc. The jewelry w nelll} ft·
mo\ ed from a JC\lo'Clry box on a
bedroom dre r. The more e•·
pensive items were taken and 1$
e~pens1\c paccc ten ibChind, ~
n:pon said.
The thi ves were are!ul lo .kave
few clues and C\Cn wcnt.10 the trouble of replacing the dru.ers oft~jewelry
box m the ri&ht orckr.
Police said an 1n\'estigation intO
the then is on&01ni.. i
103. complain
of noise from
CM rock COncert
Costa Mesa m1dents Wi thin Jrrdg~suggests---c..-..st1matc l.S-m1le radius of
outdoor arena were not so •Po: talks to s olve prttiatt,e. some 103 noise complainti. kept 'ffieafer problem the telephones nngin& u Cat} Hal1
v.h1le Cll) lawmakcn there v.-ere
By TONY SAAVEDRA
OfllleO..,,... .....
packed house at the 18.~scat
Pacific Amphnhcatrr chttrrd the
raucou sound of The Pretrndcf'5
musical group Tucsda~. How-c\er,
accepuna an 1n\itation b) a munaci-
pa J'()un Judge to paniapatc in a
sound l~) th ampb1thcatcr ~ncr cd-~'csl, Inc.
Two misdemeanor catcS apmst.
Cd-WC$\. 1ndudu" cha.racs. .-na
· {Pleueeee 103IA2J
Colleges WonEler
where have all
' . . •
PHIL
S1E1DEllAI
Focus ON THE NEw s
.
By DA VlD BISHOP
""' CM HUNtm ,
"'h was freaky... 1 n.c, \he
watch commander when the phone
blackout occumd. "Everythina 1
wantt-d 10 do depended on the
General ifclephonc man r Gabe
Roberson id a computer c1rcu1t
board malfunctioned at 10!24 a.m.
but was back on at 10:32. The ")'stem
failed apin durina tcstina of the new
.~rd ~ few minutes btfore noon. OTE customen could neither make
nor ~ce1vc calls until lhe dial tone was rcsto~d at 12:26 p.m .• Roberson
said.
-·
60
•• 1 ., .. 61 ro •2 u 3" u 49
Ill •5 u., 82 .,
... 0
.. 114 .. ,.
... 61 '° 72 11 u ::· r, • UiJuna Beach w nt' wt1hout \~lt'
pliones for a whilt' Tucsda) when a
new $1.S million com pu ttrtted telc·
-phone swuchina unu went on the
blink only v.eck.s after being installed.
All General Telephone customers
With a 494 or 497 exchanae -about·
'3,SOO ot them -were unable to
make or rctelve calls Tue~y be·
tween noon and 12:26 p.rn.'· ·
phone." I ·
Bartz used poli~ radios to dispatch
e\'Cr) available unil to p trot the
strtets. including fire trucks and
municipal service vehicles: Even city
bus dri \ ers were instructed to stop for
anyone who appeared to be in need of
The brand new .. state-of-the-art,·
d•ii~computcr system" was put ·
int ration in Laauna Beach Aua.
11·an hindles an average of272.000
calls per day.
:'Jt was a software problem." said
Roberson. who added that -t~ •
mcllns are still finc-tunina the sys-
t1 .. .. ... u 11
105 t• '° •t 100 82 7• &:I H H 71 ..
88 1t 19 ,, Ne-WM~9! ~· NOllA US Oeol "'' C-"(t
The telephone blackout al$o caused
a frustrating half.hour in the Laguna
· Beach Police Oep~rtment. • · ·
"The first thina the chief '3id v.as
. ·call the phone comp3n) aoo find out
what's going on,' " sauJ gt. Grtai · Baru. ·
as istancc. · ·
•·w.,e could have had a major fire
and 1t wouldn't even have been
reported." Bartl sat'd. ·'"It shows how
much ypu depend on the phones:'' ·
,No ~nou incidents ~ere reponed
dunng the 1clcphone blackout. Bartz
said.
tem. ·
.. The bad n 1s that. everyone
With a Laauna Beach exchange lost
touch with <the world,'' said Ro.b·
ers<>n. F.ghty-nine customers c'alled
to complain about. the ounage after ·
phone !erv1cc was ,restored. he said.
t Cat lady~ pleads .innocent
to·endangeiingher 130 pets
~ .
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN
~ "'-09"' l'tlot .,.,,
Nancy Jane Elh~. a 3 J.year·old
Indiana woman who tra,eled to
Orange County ma motorhome filled
with more than 130 pets. entered a
not guilty plea Tuesda) to a charge
she improperly cared for her animals.
1 As the legal matters moved toward
a resolution, Irvine animal !tervices
Qffic1aJs said they have begun lookmg
for foster farnj}ies to care for some of
.Ellis' ~ts temporanly
Eilts' attorney. C Tht>mas
McDonald. entered the plea by tele-
phone in a Harbor ~funicipal Court
arraignment before Judge' .Russell
Bostrom. The pica was ente~o
shortly after Bostrom issued a S 1.000
bench wa,rrant for Ellis' arrest bec;ause
.neither sne nor her attorney appeared
at the morning arraignment.
Lynn Hartley, a clerk for the Judge.
sa.sd. the1lrresl warrant was stopped
·afterthe Lelephone arraignment was
completed with attorney McDonald.
In an interview. McDonald said1he
warrant resulted from a communica-Irvine animal services workers two
tions mix\Jp. weeks ago after a strong odor coming
The attorney said tel~hone ar· from her motorhome,~parked in a
raignments are permitted an Harbor Joe.al lot. was reported. Inside were
Court and that he left word with court more than 100 cats, 17 dogs. seven
representatives last Friday to arrange rabbits and two guinea pigs. Many of
one for Ellis. B) mistake. the message the animals were ill from the difficult
did not rt!ach Bostrom's courtroom, drive west from Ellis' Indiana farm.
McDonald said. and the warrant was four cats and one d<>i have died
issued. He said Ellis was not legally but I t 2 remammg feli nes have been
required to appear in oourt after the reported 10 improved health at' the
telephone arraignment was set up. Woodbridge Hospital for Animals
·. A pre·tnal conference has been set and Birds in Irvine. Her dogs have
for Oct. I. and a Jury tnal has been been housed at the ctty's Animal Care
tentalively ~heCtulcd for Oct. 9. At Shelter.
the pre-tnal conference. Ellis' at· Carl Pagano .. the city's animal
torney and a representative of lhe ~rvices supervisor. said Ellis' bill for
Orange County District Attorney's the animal care exceeds $6,000 and is
office w1ll·d1scuss the case and could climbinJ daily.
reach a resoluuon without going to He said the city is lookinJ for foster
maJ. families who would be wilhng to care
McDonald r.a1d Elhs has asked for for some of the pets temporanly, thus
her pets back and 1s now in a pos1t1on • helping to reduce the mounting
to care for them. Tb.e woman l e-expenses .. He said ~.QYone interested
ported I) has found a job and a place to in pro•iding· such care ean o6tain
hve in the area. more mfonnation by calling the
The woman's pets were seized by animal center at 559·PETS.
"103 COMPLAIN OF NOISE •••
From Al
ccmpany officers. were postponed
last week by Harbor Mun1c1pal Coort
Judge Sehm S. ft"ankhn until Sept.
28. The company 1s charged wtth
vfolating city noise laws during two
summer rock concens.
Additfonally, a lawsuit by Ned·
West questioning the const1tut1onah·
'ty of the city's noise ordinance has
been placed on the back burner by the
company:-T
The City (ounctl, though express..
Ing doubt that an accord could be
reached with amphitheater owners.
directed City Attorne} Tom Wood to
negotiate with the com pan} in select·
a pnvate sound engmeer.
ouncil members also said the
0 Count) Fair Board was
rcqu1 by an earlier contract to
stiare 1 ~e cost of meusunng the noise cm1 ed from concerts at the
year-old fa ijuy on the state-owned
county fiiir&rounds
The action took place after attorney
Wood conferred with council mem-
bers dunng a closed-door ..ess1on that
lasted about an hour
Ma yor Donn Hall ~tressed the ctt}
was not abandon mg n's demands that
the amphitheater .. solve the noise
problems to the sa11-sfact1on of the
community"
Hall also referred to a secret stateg}
that the city 1s taking to fore~ the hand
of Ned-West. Although keeping the
details of that strategy hidden. the
mayor said the mutual sound study
would not alter the secret game plan.
""rffilnlc we neeo tOindicate to tne
Judge we're willing. more than will·
inJ. to pan1c1pate wuh (him)," he
said "Believe me. the strategy that we
are pursuing is proceeding exactly as
planned."
Howl"'ter. two residents at Tues-
da)·'s meeting said they found it hard
to believe Hall. They main tamed that
enough sound studies have been
conducted to prove there 1s a loud,
bothersome noise problem.
Co1nc1dentall). the unny strains of
the Pretenders' music. spilling from
the amphitheater into the comm uni·
ty. placed an accent mark on their
complarnts.
.. Tonight's decibel level 1s ungod-
ly.'' !.aid John Gardner vice pres1·
dent of the Concerned Citizens of
Costa Mesa. a 300-member group
that filed suit again~t 1he
amphitheater earlier this year.
"I'm. a little bit pessimistic about
judicial relief." Gardner said.
Agreeing was resident Jun .Aynes.
"The noise tonight 1s k>uder than I've
ever heard it. Jt seems the more time
goes oni_ the worse the noise cts ... 1
Th1i\K you should l>e more in an
adversary position rather than a
negotiating position " T
City Manager F-red-5orsat>al said
this morning that Aynes was riJht
about the music beiJ41oud, notmg
that I 03 complamts were received
Tuesday from as far !south as 2Jst
Street and as far north as Paularino
Avenue.
"Normally you get 20 or 30
(complaints),'' said Sorsabal. He
~ddcd the .city's accoustical engineer·
1ng consultant. Gordon Brickcn,
monitored the noise Tuesday.
Although the data was n-0t in.
Sorsabal predicted it would be well
over the SS-decibel limit set at the
property line.
HOT WEATHER CONTINUES ...
tromAl
Ron Johnson ot the m.mne sakt) The record high temperatures set usage were set on Aug. 29. he said.
d1vis1on Tuesda> contnhutcd to peak elec· Dcsptte some power outa&es in
r-~~-tirrt".,--,it'flf1'm1ITi'i'l~P-'M'1'nrrt-~~T'1'tl'~-rlli~rm11t-':ml:t-imrrP:tV'r'l-fm...--1;~i....,..:0n-ant15e"~ AAa, Kea
pec1all} with the schools had.. 1n danger throughout the county. . said. the utthty company was able to ·
session and dunng the middle ol lhc Electnc.al demand reached a ~w keep .up with 1.h.c. .de.marui.. mam1
week · Johnson '>aid high among the 3.3 mil hon customers caused by high use ofaircond1t1oners.
But beachci, also h<1 .. i: hn·n exl cp· '>ervcd by 'ou1hcrn Cahfom1a Edison About 22 tral'l,Sformers 1n the central
11onall~ quiet he added. \lflCl' 1h1· (o from Bishop in 1he north to Irv me county had to be replaced Tuesday
ocean has been calm and np11dl'' .m: in the soulh. according to Jim and early today, he ~id, and another
at a minimum f...cnned) Ed1~on's Co'lta Mesa area 40 were burned out and had to ~
E.arl> toda) 11 ""a' alrcad~ !-. manager replaced. degrce4i on the heal:h , .John,on \;ud Peak demand 4i\Stcm-w1de hit .. We like to ask people to set their
There were thm.· rl·S<Ul''> n:portcd 14.391 m1lhon k1lowam at 3 p.m air condiuonina no lower than 78
alona Huntington city beachc"' Tut.''>-T uc!.day, Kennedy \aid. Jn Oranie degrees," Kennedy said. ''And we still
. day among tht' crowd of about 20.000. < ount~ peak powi:r wa~ estimated at encourage people to "ve their 1p-
.;a1d \teve Da" 1d.,on a marine .. a1c1 , 2 614 million k1lowatt\. , phnnces the anemoon·off. especially
officer r hc pre' wu., highs for clcctncal dunng that hottest part of the day in the late afternoon ...
The hot weather. beside taxina
.BERGER.OUSTER ...
power supplies and makina everyone
uncomfortable. has increased fire
danacr to a problem staae. according to Pat Antnm, Oranae County Fire Prout Al
The 1•m.1e ramt before the board
ap1n Tuesday n1Jht w~·n 1ru~1rc
Baum asktd ror rC'con tdC14lllOn
Beraer who !Hl1d after . 1 ue\C..la'
night's meeting that "h1..· "'<lntc.·d '"
make a difference .. a1 Manna .ind
thought that he had in '1e" 111 the·
\lJppon offrom 1hr commun11\
"l hope to make a d1fTC'renct" agJ1n
w mcwhcre.'' he added before.· •h•rnk· tna those who .supponcd him
"Man~ people h:lH li:l1d a lot of
n1ct. thtnl\, 1 apprrc1atc H hut I 1fon'1
'know that I deserve at:· hr,.~auJ
Just Call
642-60Bt;
•
·4"' Department ~poke man.
ttcricr c..m1 he ha no plans to The department is cncourapnJ the
challrnic 1h1..· legalilty of his removal publtc to stay out of areas clos<'d due
.rnd hope' to become an cducsu1onat to fire danaer and to be extra careful·
lon.,1.1 1tan1. he said. m c.amPaJ'ounds. Antrim said.
I fo, rr.,1gnauon. which takcseffect "The brush iscxtrcmel)' dry at 1h1s
Saturc;lay. ~omc' after 36 ~cars in point and with the heat we have a
C'd\a·.11ion He be~.111 hi educational decrease 1n efficiency in our fire·
lilrt't'r 1n Stod;t(ln and served there • fiahters 1f they have to fiahl 1 major
tor 17 ) e;m a~ a teacher. vice fire." he said.
principal and pnnc1pal About the only briahL pot. for
I k 101ned 1hr ltx:.al d1stnct in 196.S firdi&hter • i that the heat has. not
.1~ pnn' 1pal at founuun Valfe) Hiah been accompanied by Santa na ~ honl I It-Ix" me pr1nc1pal at winds. he said: "If ~e had the winds
\.I mna If\ I <JRO v.c'd ~ally bC 1n bad shapr ..... ht-1d.
Ir
• o clrcul11to" c1lle, 9Jt..a e .
Kl L• 61 ... ., ..
.. .. 76 111
80 70 ee u
12 81
'8 16 n 11
" "
Pf'IOtnta . IOI
Pttlll:l~ll H Porllt .... • 117
PottJlnd Of ...
PrOYtetenU ..
Ae:fll 71
Aeo 011 11
13 Sen FtlnOIOO u IO
d &1" ,11111'.P A 71
61 B18i.Mttl• IO °" 12 SU11>e 70 60 er Shle~rt ., 60
" S.o.n: •!It 71. 31 ... Spoil-.. IO
H u 60 •• n 82 43
73 10 74 5t t 't 112 13 "-no to
llidlmol\CI 14
Syrecu ..
57 Toc>tkl ., , 60 •
.. 6S SKtltT*l10 Dt 1111 Ti)QtO(I .
II LOI/it 11 '° T11tta
•1 P~T111111e , Ill 74 W•tN"l!IOI>
1e11 i..uc11y 11• 10 WICNta
Ian AnlOl>IO 87 83 Wlllt .... a.,,.
• .,, OleOO 87 n Wllmfng1on,Ot
II M ·------_._, __ _
~~ ...... ae Tides •• ts 83 TOOAV ~ 50 ·~IOW IOlpm t4 47 Second tl'O/I 7 .61 o m
83 47 17 &O THUAtOAV
81 .. F"ttll low 2 20 I"! 03
'll
I SURF REPORT
71 !13 '"•I high I 11 Im - ---~ ~
2 4 t.OCATtOM 16 llt 9«;on4 IOw 1 54 P m 76 47 s.cond rugh 7 51 om 6 t H11n1mo1on 8-cll
AIYet Jelly. Ntwp0i1
Sun MU IOOIY at 7 14 p "' ,,_ '°'" SllMI. Nftl)Ott
T1turM11y 11e30 1.m an<t Mt• ao11n at 22nd Sl• .. I. ~
73 .. 73 6~
17 ...
II ..l5 10 60
.. "5 llO t3
7 12p m 811bot W.CSQt
MCMWI rt-lodly 11 5.00 o m., ...;'ii Lagun. 8"Gh •
1 :17 I m Th\nday Ind '1-IQl'n 11 a.it ClllTl«lll & 42 pm Watattamc>: 91-11
-----
tlZI
'2 I
1
I
1
F2 1·1
Swell d1r«t.on eoutn-1
CoNTINUEU S10R1Es
COLLEGE ENROLLMENT TUMBLES .•.
l"romAl
t7 11 15 ea '74 61 .. ... .. 60 10 61
• Loeai..high schools arc producing pump up the semester's gloomy attendance drops 15 to 20 percent
smaller graduatina classes -and enrollment figures. below the 1982-83 fiaures. it could
thus fewe.r potential college students. The problem is not ~onfined to mean the loss of millions from the
The Coast D1stric1, which includes Orange County, however. district's $90 million budget.
Huntington Beach. Seal Beach, Foun-"It is a ~nous issue. and 1t 1s a College officials cauuon that it's far
tain Valley. Costa Mesa and Newport statewide one." said Dave BrQwncll, too early to par,Uc. Locally, firm
Beach, has had a marked decline in its acting chancellor of the Coast Dis-aucndance figures won't be known
youth population. In recent years. tnct until the end of registration for the
many elementary schools have been Brownell attended a meeting last late·start1n_g classes. And statewide,
closed because of declining enrol-we'ek with chancellors from other about half of the 106 community
lment, and a ripple effect is begmning multi-campus California community colleges haven't even started their faJI
to hit community colleges. college districts and said he heard semesters yet.
One reason Saddleback's enrol· similar distressing reports about fall But because the early trend may
lment dip has not been so severe is attendance. hold true. college officials arc already
that its campuses draw .f~om south What womes the college officials is talking about pressing legislators for
Orange County communities that arc the funding formula approved earl' er changes 1n the funding fo-rmula, sllll growtr.l&. . . ta 1 either by d1ueg.ardmg this year•s •The COast District colleges. ch1a y.e.ir b> ~te • to~ .Beca&Ue enronmtnt ctectines or by 1mposiug
w. hich have iradiJ.!i>nall" begun their of the confusi~n over tuioon .. the fu11din.U=uts OJ.l_a.JLradYoal basis. fi 11 · Sco1'c ht h lawmakers decrdcd not to-consider "-'---'--a terms in pt m r. t is year 198).84 attendance m funding col-. Fred Klass. director of le11slauon opened for classes Aug. 20. The " h d · · " Ca1'" chanve is to help their calendars hne leg.es 1or t c current school year. an communications 1ot 110.mia
up with those of the state's four·year Instead, the I 982-83 figures were Community Colleges Chancellor
unaversiues and make mid-year used as the guide. . Gerald Hayward, said his office
lransfcrs for students easier Under the .new ~a"".. funding for should have solid attendance figures
But the early start may have been future years will be ~vised accord mg m hand when state legislators return
inconvenient for ctudcnts with sum· , to a.ltendance dunng 1he. 1984--8.S to Sacramento in December. Bue
mer ·obs l.astina throuiti Septembef'I term. If a college has a s1gni~cant Klas~ said success in -changina the
and lor those takmg late vacations. ln-decl!ne m anendance this year. 1t wall college fundmg fonnula may depend
addition. young parenu who must _receive l~ss money next year accord-on Gov. George Dcukmej1an's
care for elementary age children may . ing to tlus formula. opinion on the matter.
not have been able to enroll before But college officials contend that DcukmCJ1an was the one who
their yo ungsters returned to classes many costs remain stable or increase waged a long. batter but ultimatel)'
·this month. , even when attendance drops. For successful battle to begm charging
To accommodate people with such instance. energy costs to light and tuition at community colleges. KJau
schedule problems. the Coast colle~s ~ool campus buildings often rise and said the governor has given no
arc offerin& hundreds of late-startmg so do the salaries of teachers and mdicauon how he feels about chana·
classes beginnirfg"'Monday. Students other employees. ing the funding formula.
will attend class abou't 30-minutes a The Coast D1str1ct's Brownell said The Coast District's Brownell ob-
wcclrlonger-than those who-em-oiled rniploycHalaries-and frt~-serv-ed, ·~~ wi~ be-t
last month, but all students wall finish account for 80 percent of the eApcn-demonstrate to the Legislature that
~fore Christmas. d1tures in his budget. leaving little we do have a problem and that fresh
College officials are hoping heavy room for flexibility if the state cuts and creative thinking is needed at all
registration m the late classes will funding. If this year's Coast Dislrict levels." •
Dilly Pilot
Delivery
11 Guar1nteed
MO'IOAy F' Illy ' 1'""
'101 "••• '°"'' ""~ ll. ~ 30 I! m Cl lif'I• •e 1 t •
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Sat.J'0At 11"<2 Svf'ld., I vou .,, "01 <tCe ,. • ,
copy o.,. 7. n "' c.,t ,,. io a "' •rio ;"'lv' r. ,,.
~o.-.. rio111
Clrcul1tlon
TelephonH
IA~I
~C•llilr ,.,. eo ... m
IQvna N gue .... -tlOO
Oi:lANGE COAST
Daily Pilat
H. L. Schwartz Ill
Publisher
Rosemary Churchman
Cont rotter
Staph.en. F ~ Carazo
Production
Manager
DonaJd L Wiiliam•
• C1rculatlon
Manager
Clrcu11t1on 714/842-4333
ClaHlfl•d advertising 714/142·5871
All other departmern. 842-4321
MAIN OFFICE
330 IVr 1 Et 1y St C 111 M"M C• .
Ma •' ,., &..• •!18() Co"• M"M CA 11211.?6
r y• II' I •fld3 °'"'Oii l.:<101 PUOIWWng ~")' No
• .,., \t IM 4 l\'tlt.olll •O 10< 1 ,,,_l'l't o< l<fv.,I ... • "'""I• l'I~••" may n. •tpp100ul.O w !!IOI.II l'l'l'Cibl pat· ])Wf 01 COVr''llM·O-"'
6ko• o c nt "°'""" 1111 J •• Co\•• Mew Caotofn..t 1.•Pl) 14' 80CI $.,t>l(Fl'.nK n by {Att ... $4 7~ rT\Qtllhfy
t>r ma ~ !IO "'ll"INr • • •
VOL. 17, NO. 2A9
• • •
"One of Orange County's finest fish houses. Very impressive wine list, all
fai rl t priced." .
Ht.rb Baus, The Register
~estlur•nt Critic
"Provides friendly service, excellent food and comfortable atmosphere."
Scott We~w, The Barnsiormer ftcst•uran1 Critic
"Shark and salmon, both generous portions were cooked to that moment of
perfection.'' .
''The dinner portion of fres h sea bass was
succulent."
Norm St•nley, Dally Pilot
Rest•urant Critic
perfectly cooked, moist and
Herh Bau1, Across the Table
Rut•urant Critic
"Lobster tail was remarkably tender and flavorful."
~-'--Winn 1' of South.,.n California Reataurant Writeu A•tociatlona
" Iver Meri Award
3180 AIRWAY, COSTA MES~
ON THE JOHN WAYNE AIRPORT RUNWAY• 548-9880
-