HomeMy WebLinkAbout1984-09-19 - Orange Coast PilotI
Pedophilia:
U.S. 's dirt)!
little secret
Cbild #~UMI lbu IS um ·n~
cross the country in record
numbers, but autbonues uy of.
licialstatisticsaccount foronly JO
pm:eat of actual cases. 1bis first
of a livo-part 6"ries pro~ an
overview of the problem.
By RICHARDT. PIENCIAlt ......... ,,_.,..,
Pedophilia, the Se.duction and
sexual abuse of children by adults.
is an underground world slowly
seeping into the nation's con·
sciousness and conscience. Jn many ways, though, -it is still
(See PltDOPBILJA/ A7)
'Doonesbury'
adv:en tWies
ln Daily.Pilot
YORK (AP) -How
muy leeth dOcs Jo.me Ctvcm
~ have? Will U.te Dulle
•void the llalnmet .,_ ...
cSnip to rme IDOtlCJ lot •
docwnenwy oa auto ~
John De Lorean? Do w...-•Jte props still Chan.er a Wlaille
Houte Alie let?
Tbele and other ..... cpa..
UODJ wall be :aDJwercd lot Daily
Pilot readcn on Sept. 30 _.die
celebrated comic 1tri9
.. DoooelburY"'.JQlDI .. Pilot.
But euctly wbal Pulitm' Prm-
wi nnin1 canooni1t Gam Trudeau wtU put in mo. finil
r-..DOOBl~/A7)
ClllT 1111111 .
ORANGE COUNTY. CALIFOR NIA 25 CENTS
lide. v ,ictims given $700,000
,.-
Laguna settles with two residents Earlier this year, McAJ1hur was with Mallen for $47,000, and with
. aWardcd $771,000 from a Superior McArthur TOr S6S3,000, City Man-
W hOSe homes were damaged in slide iS>~:iot>..;:~::.:= aaer~j~~dsaiu~betd claims by
wb<>te home .was damaaed in the MaUeg and McArthur that the city
Bj DA VlD BISHOP
09lr"9eC:ao I 0 1111 ti
Two Laguna Beach residents
whose homes were damaged three
yean ,o in the Del Mar land.slide
won a 700,000 settlement Tuesday
The closure of the Joseph
Magnln stores shocked
.employeesand angered
creditors./ A3
Callfomla
Actor Richard Basehart.
succumbs at the age of
70./AS
Americans!. personal In-
come rises at a modest
rate for August./ A4
' ·:~~:!!•:'.·:-:·:~:9".:!!!(•:•:::·:·:·:·:·:-:·:-:·:<.:·:·:·:<·
British find an 'almost
brand new' mine In the
Red Sea./ AS
Five U.S. sailors are ex-
~ted to be freed In
International waters
today./A5
Home
The way a window Is
framed can add beauty to
the Inside of the room and
the view outslde./~1
Food · •
A senalble diet can help
control hlgb blood press-
ure./C1
Sports
The Rams get some qua~
terback help from Minne-
sota In acqufflng Steve-
Diis. /D1
Entertainment
Michael Landon as an
angel and the devlllsh
Morgan Fairchild at!lr In a
pair of watchable new
serles./113
INDEX .
Bridge C8
A3
84
A4
[)4..e
from the.. city of Laguna Beach. landslide. was at fault for the damage to their
Dr. C.L McAitnur sued the city But the awards were held up when homes because a malfunctionina
aft.er be lost bis hillside home in 198 l city attorneys filed an appeal of the storm drain was divert.in& excess
when 30 000 cubic-yardl-of·arth-docisi<>n.~----------Willcr .onto their property.
slipped off the end ofDel Mar A venue City Council mernbers agreed in a The claims 'W'Cl'e not covered by the
following a period of heavy rain. private meetina Tuesday to settle city's insurance, Frank·llid.
Ah, the good life .
Wblle ~·re alaYlni awa1 at S o'clock tn
the afternoon, tblDk of theee more for-
tanate llOllla ~a JelaueJ.7 C'J1dM OD
their Mllboata. Tllla picture wu aoapPed tn the cb&D.Del between Lido la1 and tile
Jlf ewport Beacb malllland.
Frank added that the jwy awards
included l 0 percent in1ere5t &om the
time of the award until it is actually
paid;
The moneµtaS ct aside in the city
bud&et when the city lost in court last
year. Frank said.
.. We thought the Ma.Uea a9Nd
was fair even thouah the jwy ruled
against us." Frank said. .. We didn't think tbe McArthur
award WIS fair," f:nmk aid.
"1ibet'c was a small · dlanoe e
would win an~ then JO l1u'ouch a whole new trial and wm,.. Frank
said, .. but the odds are 10 anaJ1."
Frank said other court ams pend-
ina coUld iDaeae the amount of
interat owed ~ tbe jUIY, award, and
that lep1 costs Of ID appejl niiahtabo i~ tbe cost of tbe .Wt beyond
tbe the pri« of l('Ulement.
JWAexpand
decision given _
delay until '85
Supervisors want ~na~~
additional tlme
to address comments
Hariittt~ICdct ~ tbe
board bad ~ Witbout ~
to put off a sdieduled oaoberbcarina
durina···wbicb supelfisors ~ to
By JEFF ADLER consider c:atifyina tbe project•s en-
vironmental impea ~ Of............. .......:-• _ _......_ __ ......... _Q:wnl)'..0lf1Dyl,Adrian J{u)'pcl'., 0a
The decision on a $191 million a confidential memorandum
project to improve and enJ.arae John circuJaled Monday, recommended
Wayne Airport was delayed until the dClay to allow airport planners
January 1985 by the OranF County adcqoatc time to respond fuDy to
Board of Supervisors today. (Pleue Me .SW A/ A2)
Guru's· .. followers
win court battle
over ~aguna land
Fam staff ... win n..-
Followers of Indian suru Bhapan
Shrce llajneesb have won the riabt-
at least for the time bein&-to remain
OD the six-acre Laguna Beach pro~
erty that bas been the focus of an
intcnSC ~year lep1 battle.
Oran&e County Superior Court Jud&e f udith Ryan supim.arily diSo-
missed the last portion of a lawsuit
filed by the Olurcb of Re~ous Science Monday. The suit c1ainied
that the Oturcb of ~neeshism bad
iUeplly taken over the church pro~
erty at Laguna Canyon and El Toro
roads. --Ryan. who ~ CC)nsidcri~
the case sirK'C a June 19 beanog. ruled
the COW1 could find 04DO triable issues
of maicrial fact." lbis lalelt in a series
of ru1inp clean title to the dwrcl1 •
property for ~neesh fbllowen un-
less the decision is appe1led
Members of the Church of~
liiious Science oonaregation, which
have been meetina nearby since their aUeacd ouster from the property, aliady have vowed \o appeal · the
judgment as they have previous
summary juctaments in the case.
The relillous tempest between the
two churches was sparked by a split i.o
\he conareption after members of the
Rclisious Science COQITePtiOD be-
came disciples of a.,jncesh in 1911. (Pl--..,. CBORCBfA.2)----
NB Chainber hears
plans for FU.Ii Zone
., IAl\EN E. u.EJN
Of ..............
Small shops. clcpnt restaurants
and a puking structure will replace
the tfina Balboa Fun Zone and Art''
Landing on Balboa ~1nsula if
ambitious developers make aood on
their plans. • .Drawi and btuepnnt for the
proposed renovation of tbe two sttcs
..-cl'C prc$C1lted this mornina al a
meeti of the Newport Harbor Area
Chamber of Commerce Marine
OIVl ion.
Dcvdopen foe the two sites laid
thesr J)l'OJ«ts would eliminate the
.. bad element" that bas lf'OWD up in
(PJeue eee ft1" ZORS/ A2)
BuHetln Board
8ul6neu -
Callfomla Nevn
CIUSlfied
Comlea
Cr08IW0fd
Death Notleel
Food
Home Hof oecope
Ann Lendtrt
Mutuel Funda
NatlOnll Newl
Opinion
C8
06 ea
C1·7
81·2
05
82
84
A4
Skip school in Newport and you may go to jail
=~ Pub41c Not
8port1
8toek Marketa TtMMak>n •
Theaters w .. ther
WortdNtwl
A7..e
81
A3
88
01-3
85
82
83
A2
A4
PQilce launch new crackdown on truancy
around city' beaches and video arcad
--·-
-
SmE
ManLE
Fo cus ON THE N£\\S
ptember 19, 1~
Mesa gardener he}d on child molesting rqp
Jose Godinez-I rra, 22, of Co t
Mesa was arrested on uspiclon• of
child molestation after the .boy told
.
his ~ren bout the all
wb1cb occurred aroun noon n r
Harbor Boulevard and Walaon treet.
Oet«'tivc Sam Zuorski ould not
·ret e details of the case.
:Zuorski said, how ver. there is
possib1luy that addition l vactam
may be found a pohce mv uptc
other areas of the county. where the pri~te gardener works.
;z~o ikj reponcd that Godinez. ~m was tal<t'n into custodv around
2:30 p.m. fter voluntarily ubmuUn
to que uonina t the C Me Police Dcpanment. The u s>etl was ull at the work 'ite ~nen police
arrived 1 ucsd y afternoon
Pohoc id OOdinei·lbarra 1 ex·
pected to be arrai&ncd on felon)
chafiCS Thursday or Frida)'&t H rbor
Munaci~l Court m Ncwpon Buch.
He remained at Costa Mc cny ~ail
this mornina tn lieu ofSJ0,000 bail.
FUN ZONE PLANS UNVEILED •••
PromA1
the area and reduce the biah-<:rime. counyard complex with a New Ena·
level around the propenies. which land seacout theme.
have badly deteuoratcd over the Debbie Gray, a spokeswoman for
years. Yavar Industries, told the chamber
"My dau&httr has a ked on week· aroup the project would consist of 13 ~nds if she could go down to the Fun new walk-up and sit11own res·
Zone and I've been hesitant to aUow taurants, •n arcade, a merry-ao-·
her to ao down there," said Ken round, a ferris wheel and specialty
Nelson, a spokesman for Mark How· shops, including some of the te,nants
ard, developer of the Art's Landina that are already operatini on the
property. propcnv.
.. We Want to bring ·about a change The Fun Zone projeci ~ould not
in that area and make it a place where provide on-site parkina. but proposes
!amities will want to ao apin," to pay (in lieu) parking fees to the city
Nelson told the chamber group. for parking in city.awned lots on the
The two properties, which adjoin -penmsula.
each other along the Balboa Bay near The proposed project would add
the Balboa Pavilion, house food · 1,683 square feet to the eXJstina
stands, video pmc arcades and small property, Gray said. The plans how
shops. that food service and retail uses on the
The belequercd J7,077·square. propeny would increase and that
foot Fun Zone, at 600 Edaewater arcade and amusement park uses on
Ave., bas been the site of two previous the propcny would decrease.
development proposals that failed. The new project would also
The property was sold in July to provide public restrooms on the site.
Newport Beach developer Jorae Yavar told the chamber that if the
Yavar and U>s AD&eles attorney project pins the a~proval of the city
Jordan Wank. and the Califoriua Coastal Com·
They describe their project, which mission, it would take between six
is scheduled to be considered by the and nine months to construct.
N~n Beach Plannina Com· The Art's Landin4 property, site of
mission Oct. 4, as a one-story Art Gronsky's ,longnme spon fishing
business, was sold to developer
H0sward early this year.
Nelson id Howard • plans to
develop the propeny in two phases.
with the. first phase. called Newpon
Landing. scheduled for a vote by the
Coastal Commission on Oct. 9. ..
So far, Howard has rebuilt docks tn
front of the property, redeveloped the
Texaco Starport fuel dock and started
forming the Balboa Sailing Oub. He
plans to open a new sport fishing
operat1on
The Ne~rt Landin& develop-
ment would include a fish market and
a seafood house with "mellow enter·
tainment," aocordint to Nelson. He
said the area would incorporate
paved brick walkways, ps lanterns
and flower planters.
Phase II of the development would
include thrce·story structures hout-
ing retail shops, a second restaurant
and some office space. A parkina
structure that would provide 293
J)lrkina spaces is also l?roposed in the
Phase n plans, which are beina
reviewed by Newport city planners,
Nelson said.
The Fun Zone project is scheduled
to be discussed a.pin Tuesday mom·
ing at a meettna of the Balboa
Improvement Association. /
TRUANCY COULD LAND YOU IN JAIL •••
Prom Al
won't be placed with adults or
juvenile criminal offenders." Hen·
1sey noted. ''We'll keep them here
until a parent or auardian picks them
up."
Truant officers. who may or may
not be in uniform, will stop youths
during school hours, ask for identifi·
cation and will attempt to determine
if the student has an excuse for not
beina in school.
Students cauaht ditching school
face... possible suspension or after·
school detention In most cases,
however, school adminstrators say
they will attempt to .. talk out" the
problem, often with the youth's
parents present.
In the first three days· of the
crackdown, Henisey said officers
rounded up 1 7 trµants. He said the
number likely will increase after the
"newness" of the school rear wears
off.
"A lot of them seem surprised when
we pick them up. We hear a lot of
comments hkc "We're going to have
to watch 1t this year,"' said the
detectlve.
Henisey said truancy 4uty will be
rotated throuah the entire patrol
dlv1sion and that the number of
officers assianed to the task will vary
from four to 12. He said weather.
sudden upswina.s in crime or other
factors will determine how many
officers will be out scoutmg truants.
Fred Carter. director of student
services for the Newport Mesa Um·
fied School Distnct, said the d1stnct
"doesn't have a aood handle" on the
number of students who ditch school.
Just Call
642-6086
Dally Piiot
DeUvery
I• Guaranteed
"Sometimes we're deajing with
permissiveness on the part of pa.rents
and in some extreme cases where the
kid is a chronic truant, parents 4et to
the point where they make alibis for
their kids," said Carter.
"There's a wide range of factors and
it's hard to come up with exact
statistics," said Carter. $efiC Bcltrans, the attendance co.
ordinator at Corona del Mar Higl:l
School, estJmatcd that on a 11vcn day
about S percent of the school's 2,200
students skip class.
"It depends on the surf," he
su~ested1 only half joking. "I don•t
think it's as bad here as it 1s in some
schools." .
But residents in Eastbluff, an
upper·m1ddlc-<:lass neiahborhood
adjacent to the tugb school, have
complaJned about students loitenng
durina school hours and have re·
ported an increase in daytime bur-
glaries, Beltrans said.
Last summer. the Oranae County
Grand Jury blasted the education
system and county government for
not comma to gnps with the conse-
quences of truancy and, in<l)articular,
truants who act into trouble.
In a repon on thc~roblem, the1ury
sa1d it was unable to fina accurate, up-
to-date fiaures on truancy and scnool
drop-outs. Jury members also com·
plained that truants arre ted for
crimes would varushed mto the
~ystem with school offiC1als seldom
leamina what had become of them. -
The provam in Newpon Beach, by
its design, 1s an attempt to get school-
ditchina youna.sters back on dmpu1
before thc.Y become snarled in a
serious pohce problem. Henisey wd.
"Our mission is simply to pick
them up and make sure they are put
back in touch with school officials,"
said Hcnisey. "Once we take them
back to school, it's up to th.e adminis-
tration to work out the problem."
Skipping school, though, is not a
crime and school administrators said
there is only so much they can do to
keep students in the classroom.
ususpendina a student for a week
so they can ao back to the beach
doesn't make a lot of sense," said
BeJ.trans.
"The real problem is in the loss of
leaming..the loss of continuity," said
Carter. "A students misses some
classes and pretty soon he's in a rut
and gets so far behind that school
becomes a b1a frustration to him."
Because school districts are paid by
average daily attendance, they lose
moner when students aren't in
schoo . Administrators, however,
said they have no estimate of how
much money is lost because of
truants.
· "We try to look at the positive."
Caner said.
Henisey said police hope that news
of the crackdown will prompt stu·
dents to stay on campus rather than
risk bcina picked up by patrolman.
The program will last the entire
school year, he noted.
"To the kids I'm sure the program
seems like harassment. ofcoune, but
that's too bad." Bcltrans said. "We
want them in school."
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Tell as wbat'a on )Ollt mlDd.
ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilat
Clrculatlon fHIM2..us3 ,
ClaHlfi.d advertlalng 7141142·H7t
All other department• 142-4321
MAIN OFFICE
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cooy tiy r 1 m a.IOI• 10 • m •114 ~ copy ,.-.
H. L. Schwartz Ill
Pubh h r
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Cfrcul•tlon
T.,.phonH
Rotemary Churchm1n
Control! r
ltet>hen F. C1ra10
Producuon
M n .g r
Donald L. wm11m•
C1rcu hon
Man g r VOL. 77, NO. 213
Tldea
TODAY S.OOOd lllgll • 5t p Ill
'"""IOAY 12 41•.tn
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1211 pl'l'I lot pm.
..
1 0
0 2 40 so
II
Temperatures
II IA 73 '1 .....
H 62 63 •• 73 ..
.. 63 " .. " '5 7t 82 to 45
to II '3 ••
e..ilf 10 62 .,,,..,on, VI 70 64 c...,., 16 52
Clletleelon.8 c 11 eo
Oiettnton.W V 11 ~ ~HC .. 48 ~nt ., .. ~ 7• 64
tlllCIONU 78 45 c:i.v.iano 70 " Coklmll••S C 17 49 CoMnllue.Oll '2 •e ~dHH n 30
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0.rtOll 12 .. 9
'*'-17 M 0..MOdln to 54 DelrOll 71 50 °"""" .. 41
EIPNO .. 69 '•l<btnll• 64 40
Extended
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ot'-INlw.COoierd• Hlghellltlle
70. -Ille ~ to uPC* eo. lnl9NI ~ l-1110tll1111 IN eoa.
CoNTINUEO S10R1Es
,.,00
Flegftelf O reno "9l>ld• Of .. ,,
HeOlord •
Htleft• Honolulu
H-ton
lnd•IMPOh•
JIC*IOll.Mt
Jllillktoffl\118 Jwneeu KantNCny
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LOCATION Huntington IQctl "'* .i.tty,Hewpon 40tll llf881, Hewpon
22nd llfWI. Hewpon
e.it>oe weooe L.-llMllll SM c::ii.r-te
Wetw t8"1p 7~71
JW A DECISION DELAYED ••• From Al
more than 400 pages of wnttcn
. comments received concernina the
project.
To fully address the comments, the
environmental report issued in July
will be revised.
BCach, which.. filed 100 pages of
comments on the plan.
Raley also said be bolds ••concerns"
that consideration of the giant project
might even have to be delayed
fun her.
7t IO ~' 'oo n 01 r. :: u u ,. ...
11 ..
72 IM 11 ee ., 61 .. .. .. ,,
111 .. 70 •7 lot u .,, .. .. ..
13 a .. ., .. .. ea 61 .. .. 'n q 101 • .,.
71 " to fa to .. ., .. ., ,.
tO M
.. 74
71 .. n M ... ,,
•1 11 .... 70 11 .,. " . .. .. 11 ..
n '' • 71 ,.64 . 10· 41
10 43
scheduled to be circulated Oct. 26 .
The first hearing on the revised
environmental documents is sched·
uled before the Planni°' Com·
mission Dec. 18 with a decision set
for Jan. 8, 1985.
1 "We felt 1t was in the best interests
' of everybody served if we do have a
document that can meet all its
challenaes." explained Supervisor
Thomas Riley of the board·s ac-
quiescence to the three-month delay.
Riley•s district includes both the
a.irpon Jnd the city of NC'-"-port
The board·s decision meant a
scheduled county Plannina Com·
mission hearing today on the related
airport land-use compatibility plan
also would be delayed.
New copies of the draft en-
vironmental documents incorporat-·
ina the public comments now arc
. The Airpon Commission will con· -
sider the document at hearinas Dec. 19 and Jan. 9 while the Afrport Land
Use Commission will hold a public
hcarina Dec. 20.
Consideration by the Board of
Supervisors 1s set for Jan. 16 under
the revised schedule. •
·CHURCH REBUFFED IN GURU SUIT •••
From Al ·
. Shortly thereafter, Ra1necsh fol·
lowers voted the ReliJious Scientists
out of the church and retained the
church property, valued between $2
and $4 million.
In filing suit Jatcr that year to regain
the property plus about $ l 3S1000 in
other assets, the Religious Scientists
cliimed the international leaders of
the Rajneesh sect masterminded the
chuch takeover.
Currently, about eight Rajneesbccs
live on the property located at
Laguna Canyon and Ei Toro roads,
and about 200 followen reguJary
attend Sunday cclcbrattons. ·
Rajncc$h, who came to the United
States in l 981, lives with about 1,000
red..prbed disciples on a 64,000 acre
ranch near Antelope, Ore., called
Rainccshpuram.
Neither R~nccsh attorney' Swami
Prem Nircn, contacted at tbe Oregon
ranch, nor Villa Park attorney WiJ.
liam Dougherty could be reached for
comment.
Meanwhile, at the town once
known as Antelope, Ore., followers of
Rajnccsh arc celebrating a political
victory and cliangc of the town's
name to 'Rajneesh.' •
The name chanie has completed a
political victory for the followen of
Bhqwan Shree Rajneesh who have
taken over the town.
The vote during Tuesday's elec·
tions to chanae the name was S7-22.
Rajnecshccs now make up most of
Antelope's population.
"The town is enterina a new~"
Mayor Ma Prem Karuna said Tues-
day. She said the name change would
take effect immediately.
The town's 90 fCJistered voters
were forced to cast absentee ballots
after a flap overthe pollina site.
The disciples, complamina they
were harassed when vouna at the post
office, asked Wasco County Oerk Sue
Proffitt to move ballotin1 t~ its old
location at a school in the ~neesbce
part of town. Instead, Proffitt ordered
absentee voting. A cin;utt judae
denied the Rajneesbees• appeal
Antelope's transformation since
the Rajneeshces took it over in 1982
has been df'amatic. Street names have
been changed and nudity now is
allowed tn the city park.
Most of the town·s 40 ori&inal
residents left after tbe sect members
took control of Antelope's covern-
ment and raised taxes:
By the following year,. nine of 10
elected positions ere ncld by Ra·
jneesbces.
Tensions betwe'eo the two factions
have remained hi&h, with non·Ra·
jneeshecs claimina they arc harassed
by Rajnccsbpuram peace officers.
The U.S. Justice Department is
invcstiptins cl&lJDs by one resident
that an officer burst into his hoUJC
without a warrant and arrested him
on a cbarae of thrcatenina a Ra·
jnceshee. The case was dropped by
the district attorney.
Funeral set ln
Washln#on
for Mabel Estes
The Rajneesbces bepn arrivina in
the area in 1981 when they e5tab-Funeral services will be held in
lished a commune 18 miles from Chehalis, Wash., for Mabel .. Pat"
Antelope on a former sheep ranch Estes of Newport Beach, who died
Legal challenges to the tncorpora· Saturday at the age of82.
lion of the commune~il~, Ra· Mrs. Estes, who was born in
jnecshpuram, convinced the disciples . Minnesota, bad lived most of her life
to set up another base of operations in in Chehalis, movina to Newport J 2
Antelope. years !JO.
In April 1982, the City Council set a She 11 survived by her dau&bter,
disincorporation election that failed Peggins Bonner of Corona dcrMar.
SS-42. That July, the city and com·, Alsosurvivinaarcfourarandcbildrcn
mu.ne sianCd a I?ta~ ~ty after a -Alissa, Martha and Trey Bonner of
senes of mcetmp with federal Corona d~l Mar and Brynne Watkins
mcdiaton. of Studio City.
-:PUBLIC NOTICE
, , One of0range£ounty's finest fish houses. Potatoes were exceptional and tartar
sauce a classic. ' •
. , _ Herb S.u.s, The ReilSter
_ . , . ( Restaurant Critic
, • Provides frlen~ly service, excellent food and comfo-rtable atmosphere. Quality
and generous portions makes the food a real worthwhile pleasure. ' '
Scott R Weua, Airport Area Culde
Restaurant Ctltlc
• • Shark and salmon, both generous portions were cooked to that moment of
perf ectlon. ' ' Norm Stanley, Dally Pilot
Restaurant Critic
• • The dinner portion of fresh seabass was ~.rfectly cooked -moist al)d
succulent. ' ' Herb Baus. Acroa the Tabl
Restaurant Critic
• • Lobster tall was remarkably tender and flavorful. ' '
Joel C. Oon, O.Uy Pilot
Re.i.urant Critic
• • Adding to the Intimacy of the moment, Is a background of relaxing piano music,
by Dave Bartly seven nights a week. ' '
P Huffman, Airport 8 In
Journ1I Restaurant Critic
• ' McCormick's Landin& should be on everyone's list of preferred dining locations.
It ts one of those places that should be visited on a regular basis to savor the
variety of food on the menu ..•• my rating-superior. ''
Mkhael Hunt, Wh t'1 Happcntna
Jlesi.urant Critic
..
Win rn C:Oll 01nll R urant Writ rs Association' v r Awa"' of M rlt • 11180 Airway, Cosi. M
ON THE JOHN WAYNE AIRPORT RUNWAY• 546-9880
' •-. ,
0
DAn.:v fl LOT/W~ s.wnw 11 1114
'Victory '84'·
opening today
Lifelike in death a mortician
The .. Victory •M•• Republican Headq'uart.en, 808
· Adtma Ave., Huntinaton Beach will have ··iu ·Officlal oJSeni~~ with •celebration beainnina at .s p.m. and CODCJ It 7:30.
Tbt uantn, dedicated to the re-election of President Reqan, will also ICl'\'e 11 headQuarten for
RObert Baahalft of Newport Beach and 'Du wnaren of
Lona 'Beach. Staie Senator Jo~n Seymour Auemtilymen
NoJan Friuelle and Dennis Brown and AUemblywoman
• Maria~ B,eraeaon will also use the Adams addteu as a bite f ot \heir election eft'oru.
Hon d'oeuvm and rtfreshment1 will be eervtd
compllmenu of Frizelle. For more infonnation call 96()..2404. •
Future embalmers find restonng
feat urea demands precision
BJiM~te4Prn1
The thilll' that death d , and the UUfllS done lO
caute death. are the cballenae that Bob Boeu1er, m 11er of
restorative .n, tetches tofu monic1an.s an h11 Cypress
Communi\Y Coll* class.
"'lhere are people who've been cmbalmins IS yean
Who still can't set •traiaht teaturea," aald student Soou
McCaWly. "Some have :the knack for at and others don't.
Bob's natural ability keq>s us a re that n's not
lmPollible io do well." Wotki~ with a flesh·tone wax called 0 Naturo Plasto (No.2 Soft); Bocttaer shows students in his rntoratave an
clue how iomake cant noses and even whole ht.ad$. and make corpses look lifchke for funerals. .
The touabest jobs are decapitations, Bocttaet said, and be has rebuilt entire heads.
"But a abotaun blast can really do 50me darpqc, toO.
Ronald Oehlin1t allefliat, will discuss .. The Care and Rip off half of your face.''
Treatment of Alleraies" at a ftte mectina of the Better To illu1trate, Bocttaer has h~nJina on the wall of hi1
Brea then•· Oub loday at 4 p.m. at Wertem Medical clasaroom a painted model of just 1uch a catutrophe.
Center, 1001 N. Tustin Ave., Santa Ana. downstain 1n ''Gross. liubT' he asked ... And I've seen worse than
clusrooma 2 and 3. across from lhe afcteriL . that."
.Oironic o~ctive tuna discue ~tienu, their ·pie class is pan of a yearlo~ series of courses
C.mtly and aupporuve friends arc •elcome. For ,nyooc reqwred for YiOUld·be uodenaken.
wbo would like to remain for dinner, a special reduc:led rate The only other West Coast location for the discipline
bu been ~ for more information, call 83S.3SSS, is a private school in San Francisco, and Bocttaer laid
Ext. 3526. · students from as far away u Haw•ii compete three times a
year for one of the 4S o~ninas in his class.
Guardian An1el• to meet "You don't have to be 1 sculptor to do this job, ..
Boeuaer said. "I couldn't draw you a pic1ure if you asked
The Guardian Anaels, a ladies support aroup of me. There are mathematical formulas you can use to put
Anaheim Memorial Hospital will hold their annual fall eve~hina in balance."
luncheon on Thursday at the ~d Hotel in Anaheim •Say you haven't 101 a nose. You measure from a
Susan Oinz will speak on ''Streu: Friend or Foe?"' picture. A face. divides up into thirds. The nose is a third or Coo~nator of the event is Betty Woods. President of the ,..the face. And it's the aame lenath as your can.
Guardian Anaela i1Gioer Kleerup. For more information, "Also: Your face is five eyes wide. And your mouth ia
.. call 999-6064. two eyes wide. And the base of iour nose is one eye wide.
And etcetera. etcetera. etcetera. • ·
Chamber lillzer .cheduled
The Irvine Chamber of Commerce will bold its
Seplember Mixer on Tburiday, from S to 7 p.m., at the
American Asian Bank, 9 Executive Circle. Irvine. There
will bi complimentary hors d'ouevres, and a SO.SO
drawing. Members are free and non-members without
Bocttaer says onlr, about one in 30 cases need serious
restoration, and it isn t easy to make them look peaceful.
.. It can take 10 to 12 houn to restore a body. Aod
v.-hcn wef!t a body, I'm tellina you, it looks an)'thina but
at peace,' aa.id student Karen Barnes of Anaheim.
She said rigor mortis causea the jaw to freeze open, the
eyes to roll back and the legs to go into a crouch. auest pass SS. ..o1 •
Bowl ezcanlon offered
...But when Y.OU start the mctamorphisis, well, there's
really nothing like it. .. said MCCaulay, 20, ·and a fourth
generation undertaker from the MoCaulay and WaUace
Funeral Homes in Fullerton and Yorba Linda. "You close
'the eyes. You close the mouth. Already, it looks less
dnu1ic. The embalmina fluid aoes in, and the knuckles
start to look pink &pin, and then the hands a.nd arms.
Really. lt't almost mqic."
...... 111
Bob BOettaler demoutntee tbe :Ito& polo ta lifelike -to la1e claM of emM'•'•• • t•ta of telt~rall•e art -malrtna CorpM9 look at CJFHI COiiete. .
· The City oflrvine Community Services Department
is otrerina ,n excuraion to the Holljwood Bowl
"Firework.I Pops Finale" on Friday.
Cost for the excursion, which inCJUdes tickets,
motorcoacb transporution and refrabmcnu ia S 1 S for
adults and S 13 for children under 12. Tickets are limited.
Call 66()..3643 or 66()..3928 for reservations and infor-
Barnes and McCaulay both aaid chemotherapy
treatment for cancer victims wMla havoc on apperances
when it mixes with embalmina Ou id. The chemicals offset
the embalming dye, and the akin turns pay.
Nov. 16 court date for Gabri els
mation. ·
TechnoloO worbhop •lated
The Women's oPPortunities Center will present an
inform.al .. Hiah TeclinolOSY Workshop" on Saturday,
Sept. 22, from 9 Lm. to l p.m: at UC Irvine Humanities
Hall, Room 178.
There will be a keynote speaker plus a panel of
industry representatives includina suc::cessful women in hi&b tech careen. A question and answer period will
follow.
The fee of SS includes refreshments. Forinformatioo
and pre-resiatration, call 856-7128.
By beina straightforward and never permittlna
metaphon for death in class, Boettger ho~ to end an
ima&e of morticians as ghoulish and phony.
"He hates it when we avoid the word 'dead.' He hates
words like 'loss' or expire.' Credit cards expire. People
don'L They teach us to say 'die,'" McC.aulay said. .
Trial dates have been set in Ora.nae
County Superior Court for Laguna
Beach civic activist John Gabricls, ~ with 19 felony cou.nu of
provtdina controlled druas to minon
and seven.I misdemeanor counts of
hatborinajuvenileS in bis home.
Gabriels was arrested by Laguna
Magn n Closing angers
creditors, shocks staff
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Employees ty payina off our debu." said Willard C.
were shocked, and crediton anpy, when McNttt, the store's chairman. But. be
they learned 24 Joseph M-anin clothina ~ .. The fUtun ofour employees' jobs
stores bad closed after the owners ftle(I for isn't all that aood"
reorpnjzation under federal bankruptcy The action i1 aMi'cS'ponse to a Iona sales
laws. decline, McNitt said.
"It came as a shock to _people," said He said the compeny is scckina a burer
Walter Johnson, president of Local 1 lOOof for the stores, and will continue operating
the Department Store Employees Union. seven Gucci stol'H ln six states.
"Some of them had ..,orked there for more The 71-year-old company, which bepn
than 20 yean. Then ~ come to work with a s~e s~ality shop for women in
---------Monda)'I -and aet a four-parqraph state-San Francisco, flourished in the 1960s u a
ment that tells them the store was closi~ cha.in of stores emphasizina youthful
and ends:We thank you for your support. fashion$. It was then directed by Cyril Vlechletlday,~t.19
e 9:30 Lm., 0r0p Couty ..... of 8-enUon,
Hall of Admipistration, 10 Civic Center Plaza. Santa Ana.
• 7 p.m. Lapu Bead Panllll, Traffk OrallU.
C.mmlttee, Municipal Services Office, SOS Forest Ave.
• 7 p.m., Oraqe CoatJ Water Dli&rlet 8-1'4 of
Dlrectont.. District Hcadqua.rten, 10500 Ellis Ave., Fountain valley.
• 7:30 p.m., i.a,_. Beac• Seismic SafetJ. ud
Dl1&1ter Prepue8es1 C.mmJttee, Police Dept. Library,
SOS Forest Ave.
It was quite a eendofT." Mqnin son of founder Joseph Mqnin.
Johnson said the union is to meet with 0 My fither would tum over in his arave
store officials Tbui'lday io faaure out how if he knew they had aone into bankruptcy,"
the company will S-Y ~ and benefits Cyril Mignin, now IS, said Monday.
owed employees. The clos1n1 will leave He blamed 0i ust poor manaaement" on
about 800 people without jobs at the 23 . the company's failure.
Maanin stores in Califorrua and one in .. It's a shame, but you could sec it
Reno, Nev. comina a lona time a,o." said Brucie
.. rm just furious about this," said Nordstrom, chairman o Nordstrom's, a
Kitron Rolph. a dress dcsiancr who said J. competina cha.in of stores. "There "ere a
Maanin owes her "many thousands of lot of different ownen and none of them
dolfars." seemed to know what to do with the
Jn all, the stare is estimated to owe some stores.'• ·
Beach police initially on 1'pril 11, ooe
day after be ran unsUCXlCSSfully for a
acat on the Lquna Beach Oty
Council. He bas been arrested twice since April 11.
Ju~ Francitcb Btnaoo on Friday
set pre-trial beariop for Nov. 16 aDCl
• I
the swt of a trial on Dec. s iD Santa
Ana. acc;ordin,g lO the court bailift:
Gabrids was also telt.acd oa hi&
own ttrognizance pend.ins~ re.
ICAJina Sl0,000 in bail set~
in South Oraose County ~ Q9urt: ~
..., ..................... • 7:30 p.m., Coast CommaltJ C.Uec• Dlltitd
Board of Truteet, Costa Mesa City Council Cbamben, 77 Fair Drive.
2,000 creditors nearly '$24 million. The company listed· assets of S3S.46
"We don't expect we'U have any difficul· million and debts of$23.36 million. Sten ireeu· patrou at J°"Pb ~store ID eo.tb Cout P1ua.
PoucE Loe
OC Jail inmate attaCked,
stabbed by other prisone~s
An Oranae County Jail inmate
walkina to funcb :r'ueaday wu coo·
fronted. by several fello• pritoncn
and stabbed in the head and beck witb a homemade knife, authorities re-
ported today.
Tony Delfin, 3S, WU taken to UO
Mcdic:al Center, treated for his
l'f ..,ort lleacla
An open aaraac provided entry'
Tuesday to thieves who siole ciaht
beaCh iowels and a bOotie board from
a home on the 400 block of Colton
U'Ctt. Tbt lou was nlat.ed at S 116. .. ,·----
Auio. butalan broke into a car
puked on \ho 200 block of 30th Sueet sometime Monday niaht and stole
1tetco equipment valued at S270. The
• thievea elto broke the Windabield
wipen on the car,. caulina S50
~ damaet. •••••
-A <V ~ed. on Bi10o and Jam.
borec Roed over the weetend wu ~and S~070wortb of'toob
MR atolcft. Tbttc was no lip •f
fot'CICld entry into the vehidc, PoUco
d. • • Vate atjps were moa la~y u.ed 10 ~k into a home on 1he 5KlO block of
Sandcutle Drive Tuelday •.. police
. llkS. Tbe tb rva twit1ed a~ bob
11 the home and stole t~ writt
watchft. • DOCtet Mtch and usoned COinli The loa Ml ~~SIOO.
(
wounds and later returned to the jaif,
aa.id Oranae County Sberifr1 Lt Dick
Olson.
Olson aaidjail pmonnel recovered
the knife after the attack. He la.id a
motive for tbe attack bu not been
determiotd and no one hU been
eo.tall-
A·wallct was reported stolen Sun·
day from an apartment in the c0m·
plex at 2700 Peterson Place 'khile the
rt1idtnt wu out by the PoOl between
noon and 2:30 · p.m. Entry wu
apparently lhrouah an unlocked
ICrten door. The c Omated toss was
tel at$60. • • • Two aluminum tooliq beets,
wonh SS,000, wen: reported tolen
from Panel Air Corp., 1571
MacArthur Blvd., aomctimc between
Aua. I and last Monday. The sheets were apparently taken from a
southetat comer of the S*klna lot. • • • A l>icYCle and a tool bo1, both
worth J400 were reponcd tOlen
sometime between :10 p.m. Friday niaht and 8 Lm turday momi hfft an unloebd • ..,. in the
block of Ramona PIMle. • • • An in-4elh cutette 1Pllytr. nh SOO. wlllrtP:Of'Cd Olen around 1 1.m. TubdJy from a car petted at 63S
Blker St. The paucnttr doOr ap.
siniJed out for the assault
Delfin, arrested in June by Santa
Ana police, is awaitina transfer to
state prison followina a conviction .on
attempted murder, buralarY and rob-
bery <:hafles. He was on parole at the
time of has arrest, Olson said. •
parcnlly had been pried open, tnaacr·
1na the car alarm.
tmoe
A.n 1 &-foot boat was stolen from the
13000 block of Jeff rev.Road. •• ti
About S400 wonb or Jcwlcry wa ~ported Stolen from an •Ptrtmmt on
Moma Dove. • •• Three juveniles were arrested on
. pioon of pouession or oocaine. ! • • wtllet with i50 was tol n from 1
car parked on the lock of ur
Avcnu • • • • A )'tllow Sch nn ~C) le
200 S tO~n from the 4
of Walnut Avenue.
..
..
Cauca ian, of medium bwld, about
25 years old and dressed in white,
who was seen attemptina_ to break
into a business in the I SOO bb>Ck of
SOuth Coast Hiahway late Monday
nlaht. Tbe 1uspect repcmedly drove a
blue ports car, but police found no
one matchlna the description. · • • • Someone in an orange van was
reportedly seen brandishing a
wta~n out of the window of the
vehicle at Laauna Canyon Road and
Can)'9n Acres Orne ttrl) Tuesda)
momm1. No arrests wert reponed.
' .
,.,
Beach. The lo was csumated at
$400. ••• Someone stole the T·tops from a
buraundy 1981 Corvette patted in a
carpon on the 16900 bloc\:·of Pacific
Coast Hi&hway. The loss was csti·
mated at S 1,000. • • • A resident of the J 6500 bkxt of
Hart Cu-etc rcJ)C?rtcd Tuesday that her
gold 1969 Ford Mustana v.-u stolen
from the parkina lot of tbc Gcmco
store at Golden We t St.rctt and
Ed1nacr TCnuc. The loss wa esti·
mated at $4,000. . . . ,
A woman was arrested Tuesday
afternoon on Ai picioo of hoplif\ina
atthc tJbcruoo'sstore, 7101 Warner
A vc. Rcrovcred were thn:ie cartons of
ciprettC$ worth $27 ..
'Beer-bellied bandit'
robs Huntin-gt_on bank~
Poh~ irt rthU't for I man ho
used a holdup note written on an
envelope to rob a Huntinaton Beach
bank Tuesday. Huntit'I on Beach police u. Jam
Walker said a httle more \han S
wa taken in the I :25 p. m. boldup at
the fl t lotr~tatc BaM:, 7 2 Ed·
i
CokebustatS.CoastPlaza
,
. .
. . .
M Orange
Personal
incomes
showing
tiny gain
COLONY a.-... Am'*-t ~-c...
BERINGER Clllll ..
BWENUN
1.11111 11
1.71 l
AMAAETTODISARONNO lllll
BUDWEISER If ,_,U It.Cm
MICHELOB U,_,IUtll ....
5.99 .
4.48
17.21
11.89
11.54
9.78
9.97
11.48
15.32
14.89
5.49
5.95
4.97
"
GM strikers now
number.92,000
3.89 3.59
4.99 4.79 4.79
4.39 4.39 4'.25 3.99.
9.44 8.99 8.99
5.99
2.49.
4.89 5.99
4.39 4.29
3.79 3.89 3.59 3.98
10.79 10.99
7.19 7.99
17.21 16.25 17.99 .
11.59 10.99 10.89 12.49 11.98
11 .. 54 1 10.59 11.99 11.98
10.49
21.19
8.99
11.19 12-.99 9.88
14.19 14 .• 15.98
13.99 13.89 14.88
5.09 4.99 5.49
5.95 5.89 5.59 5.99 5.89
4.62 4.59 4.55 4.69 ·
RALPH' I OEMCO TOTAL TOTAL
I
----
NA I IO N
Reagan 'a lead 21 !percent
over Mondale, poll shows
BoOtia a•UJ6 compaten liJ NY
NEW YORK-Police say the book.iet are usina computers. and an expen
on illepl aamblina saya it won't be Iona before the bettors are, too. "At last!"
Rand Corp. eoonomist Peter Reuter said Tuesday when inf armed police found
Owe personal co~puters when th!JY raided "wt~ rooms" in New York llld
New Jersey. "It's a fairly obvious thin& to dO if you want to orpnizc mmive
amounts ofinformation." New York police Capt Brian Hillen and Sst. Charles
Salter of the New Jersey State Police said Monday's raid marked the first time
police &Om their agencies had enoounte1':d evidence that computers were
beina used in illepl ~blina. .
CAt If ORNIA
Coon accord ena IHter bOycott
. LOS ANGELFS -The makers of Coors beer have promised to inv~t
millions of dollan in the black community and hire more blacb for manqerial
pot.itions to end a boycott of the Colorado Drew orpniud by the N~CP. repre1Cntatives said The qreement between Coors and the National
Aaociation for the Advancement of Colored People covers the next five yean
andCatlsforthebeeroomp1nytospend up to lOpercentofits budg~9n black-
owned businesses. The Coors settlement ends a NAACP boycott bqun when
Coon cbairmao William Coors said in a Feb. 23 speech in Denver that blacks
.. lack the intellectual capacity to succeed, and it's taking them down the tubes."
Wome.a '• deatlY blamed o.n .IJeat trave
SAN DIEGO-the beat wave that bas sinothered Southern California
the pe.st few weeks is beina blamed for the rueot deaths of two cldetly women.
The women -one 80, the other 89 -died of beat ltl"Oke ~ to Dr. Ronald Ramras of the San Dieao County De~ent of Health ~ces.
Ramrauaid the first woman died Sept 7 and the other on Sept 12. Four deaths
in San Diego have now been blamed on the stifling heat, which has been
exacerbated by unusually high.humidity.
.llcJlartJ.n moJat hearbJI• •taT ope.a
LOS ANGELES -Prelimin.ary Mari.op in the McMartin Pre-School
molestation ca1e, in which seven ddendanta face more than 200 cou.nts of
sexU:.Uy ~busin& children, will remain open with some exceptions under a
juctae's rulina. .. I do not find that the e1clusion of the public ... iJ necessary at
this time," Municipal Judfe A viva K. Bobb said Tuetdaf in rej~na a defense
motion to close the beannp. Tbt seven defendants. mcludina 16-year-old
wbcclchair·bound school founder VirJj.n.ia McMartin, have pJc:aded innocent
to 207 counts of sexual abuse of .<42 children at the school in suburban
Manhattan Beach.. Althouah the ju<f&c ruled the prelimiJ?MY b~np sho~d
remain open, she instructed new~ reponers not to pubh~ ~Y b1oaraphical informabon th.at could reveal the 1denttty of the alleged v1ct1ms.
WoRLD ..
~ojet crull ~J• at Jeut 50
QUITO, Ecuador - A OC.8 !o jet hit a fence on takeoff from Qwto
airport and crashed into a nearby ne · borhood, killina at I.east SO people and
wrecking dozens of homes as it expl ed in flames, ~rts said. Radio reporu
g\_loted firemen as Nyina the death toll from Tuesday s crash could reach 80 or
90, but officials could not confirm that estimate. About SO people were re~ned injured in the crash, which demolished much of a middle-class
neiahborhood that bqins about 200 yards from the airpon. -
AUIDI CIJeme.n.ko a~ o.n TV
MOSCOW:_ Soviet President Konllantin U. Olernenko. the subject ol
penistent speculation about his health, made his eecond public appearance on
Soviet television in two week to prettnt the Order of Lenin to the head of th(
Greek Communist Party. Chernenko, who was absent from public view fo1
nearly two months this ummer, was shown on the main television new1
broadcast Tuesday evenina presentin1_ the Soviet Union's hiah t honor tc
Greek party chief Harilaos Florakis. The Soviet leader, who will be 73 or
Monday, •Pt>Ured to be in &ood health but had difficulty brcathina while
delivenna bis s~h -a problem usually in evidence at his public
appearaoc.es.
Seven s. African mJaen kJJJed
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa -Seven black mincn were killed anc
scores irtjured in clashes with p0lioe durina a wildcat strike at a non-~nion ic>lc
mine, police said today. In addjtion to seven dead, 89 black miners wen
wounded in several hoursoffishtina TueSday at the Western Areas Gold Mine
said Lt. Derick van der Watt at police hcadQuancrs in Pretoria. The Rane
Daily Mail said the iajury toll wu at least 140 after police opened fire on th
illegal strikers durina a si1·hour rampeae.
Bo.DI KolJI tamover plan completed
PEKING -A~er two ycan of barpining. Bntain an~ Chi.DI t~
announced complct1on of a draft aarccmcnt on how Pckina wdl reaa sovcrtl~ty over Hona Kona wbcn the 99-yw British l.case on the colOJ?.
expires 1n 1997. The text was not released, but tho accord •s known to conta1
China•a ura.ncc that Hona Kona will Tetain its capitalist syatem and bUJ
freedoms for SO rears aft.er 1997. Hona Kona Will become a "ipecU
admini uative rqJon" of communist China under: a ••one country, tw
systems" policy.
Plan• for '92 Sammer Olympla •tolea
LQNDON-Planaforstqinatho 1992Summer0l)fllpicain·NewDcll
and three: cameras bcJOQl.ln& to lnd•a's president were ltblen &om a car '
central London, policic ~rted today. 1ih cameras and four fol<lel'I ~
documents re taken l1uesdl) from the trunk ofa car beina ute<l by a mcm
of the Indian Olympics MsOciition t.ll.nd Yard llid. ~1be doeumenu ori11nahnd there arc no c~ ... d a tland Yard IPQkesman. ••TbeY
valuable 10 the lo r, but not to anyone e tie desperately nts 1he
returned, but n n they will dumped... •
r
l
y • c
~
~
Ii
l ~
)'
n
0
I
Oiangt CO..t DA LY PILOT~ .. __. 18 1M Al
RlclJa~d
.Basellart
succumbs
atage70
U .s. sailors to be freed . .
LOS ANGEU:.S (AP) -Richard
Basehart, whose career included an ~ward-winniJ!I Broadway per•
!formance in "The Hufy Hein" and rolei in movies aucb u "La Strada" and "Moby Dick," suffered a teria of
strokes before dYina at qe 70.
Baaelwt. woo also starred as Admiral Ndlon Ul the 1960I ABC lcicnce-fictlon television senei1 "Vo)'lle to the Bottom of the Sea:
died Monda_y at Cedari-Sinai Medi· cat Center, frienda anoounccd Tua.
day.
He was bosoitaliz.ed after 1uft'erlaa
a stroke Aua,.13, the day after he read
. Pindar's ode to OlympU; athletes an
. bis rjch bus voice as the flame atc)p
the Loi Anaelcs Memorial Coliseum flickered and then died during the
Games' closina ceremonies.
W ASHJNGTON (AP)-Tbe Sov· iet U nlon ii e.xpeaed lO ium ova five
Amencao seamen held for more than
I Week lO American offidll1 law
todaYt!he Coat Ouard 11)'1 Lt. rticbola1 Wu.h, a c:out Guard
spokesman in Juneau, Ai.ab, aid an
a tdepbone lnkrv:iew that tbe five
should be handed over betMea l p.m. and 8 p.m., PDT (10 Lm. lO 5
p m. local time) lO officiala onbOard a
cutter in the wa1Cr'S between the
Soviet Union and Alaska'• St. law·
British find ·mtne
in sweep ofRt;d Sea
·Almost brand new' explosive device might
be. traced back to either Iranians or Libyans
rupud ~ ~ tme tUeil alO CU~OD Wednetday. "
to ~~:,."1:; °1:
ttoce biand. wa1tr1 tt tpparen~ Iott at.a way.
The Oout Guard cutter Sherman Huahts 11.Jd t!Ki Amcricao11Ailed m
WU ailJ lleaml:c toward the (be d&realOD Of anot1aef alup to uk nmckzvoua ate 10 D-:-C!-direc&iou but, unbetnowmt IO Ulrin. midday, Ell1tm Wne. ~--~ at (he other IP WM I SoYJa naval
He llid the Amenc:aa Milon and ~ vn1C1 &o Mli(b lhey ailed
'their supply boat, the FRick K. >uld tumcd out '° h. 1 Soviet -.-1 ..... be iabn e.itbei' to Nome or 10 tJu, r " .. .....,
isettlemeatofGambCU on 1JUU•1 ~P. ~ tot
Lawreace Island; Huaba die te Department
Earlier, late Dcpanment spokes-hu IOdled an ofticia1 procaa with
man John H\.llhcs said weather and MOICOW over ha bandli111 of the time of day could affect the timina of inddent.
the traitsfcr. HUlbel Mid that in a telcDbone call A MOSQOw telephone operator told with 0.S. Em~ officlafa iJl Mot-
Tbe Associated Press today that she cow, \be ,~ of the Frieda K.
cOuld not connect a can to Uttlik in Tabb~ Mid the S<mett asked
far ~ortheaat Sib;cria where the the ~1 to sip a 1t1temeet
Amcncans ~ ~Df ~ but that that they entered SovJet waten inttn·
an o~tpr an 1beria tOkl.het 1he ti~n&ll • men wert still in Soviet territOJ). ff di&•t now if tJiey bad
·The Sherman is a 37S.fciot ves1el s or not. B\,lt Malia Jenni._ ao
Basehart underwent surael)' to
clear some antriet, but suffered
several more strokes before dyina. said attorney Bruoe Stialitz.
CAIRO, f.aypt (AP} - A mine
found '!l the British in lhe Gulf of
Suez is almost brand new" and may
have been part of the attempt to
disrupt ahl_ppina in the Red Sea this summer, f.IYpt'a defense minister
11id toda:y.
that wu div~ from ha routine .ai<k to Sen. To.41 tevcm; R.:Aluta.
patrol in the Bcrlna Sea to the · said the 1em10r talked by tdephone
exc&anie afca located bnwcen t. with Thoms in midaftcriloon Tues-1.a~nce Island and the Cbukotsk day and that 'Jboms reponecS the
Peninsula. Soviets continued to uk.'tbCm 'to li&n 1inke4 to the recent series of ex· Huahes said the Americans, all P9PCf1 that slid they Plll'.P91dy
plo ion . residents of Homer, Alaska, mi&ht croacd the Soviet border
.. He wu not conscious for the lut
week," Sti&litz said. '.fhe B~tish t:0ntingcnt of four want to mu me the mi ·on inter-Thoms told SteVem d:iey bad 'not mmc--bunung ships and a support
VCSICI found another mine on Mon· I Dom in ""Zanesville, Ohio, on Aua. 31, 1914, Basehart held jobs as
newpaper reponer for his editor
father, su.rveyina crew radio an-
nouncer and ward politician before
tumina to the atage at the Hedaerow
Theater in Moyla"t Pa.
. He~ actin.t!!l New York after
director Marprc~ '( ebster puted an
audition hC souaht ma Jetter. His bi&
break came in the l 94S production of
"The Hasty Heart," which earned
him a New York Drama Critics best
actor award.
The versatile Baseban accepted
two early film roles portraying
psychopathic kiUen: his movie debut
1n "CrY Wolf" in 19•7 and .. He
Walked by Ni&ht" in 19-i8.
He later II.id those early roles made
it difficult for him to escape castina u
what he called ••a succcsaion of
llobberin& maniacs." But be eventually broke out, with
roles that ~ed from the fool in
Federico FeUmi's 19S4 film ··1..a
Strada" to lahniael in John Huston's
"Moby Dick.. in l 9S6. In 1979 he
~yed· the Russian ambassador in Bein& There.'' which starred the late Peter Sellen. .
The minister, Abdel-HaHm Abu-
Gbazata, said he expected the mine
would be pulled out of the water later
toda:y a?<t ~~n eitarnincd to do-temune 1ta 011110.
Abu-Obazala, speaking to rc-
porten at an air hue northwest of
cairo, said the British and Egyptians
"have an underwater film which
shows it's a modern mine, almost
brand new."
For this reason, be said. "I believe it
may be one of the mines that caused
the explosions (in the Red Sea)."
Underwater explosions in the sea
and its northwestern fork, the Gulf of
Suez, damqed at least 18 ahips
betweenJuly9andAua.1S.£ayptbas said it suspected Libya &nd possibly
Iran of ~sibility. The two coun-
tries denied involvement.
Britain, the United States, Franoe
and Italy tent mioe-buntina uniu to E.aYPt to search Red Sea watm. The
French found and <ktonated a mine
last Friday but said it wu from the
1973 Arab-Israeli •war and wu not
day. .
Abu-Ohazala told Parliament on
Monday the mine was towed to
shallow waters and initial examin-
ation showed markinp on it were
covered over.
He told reporters today that salVlll crews womna to pull the mine out of'
the water had to work eard'uUy
••becaute they don't know if the mine
has a time fuse ...
American and British officen in-
volved in the multinational oper-
ation which ~ on Aua. 17 have
said that even af mines were found
and their type and oriain were
established, there was no ccnaiDty
that this 9t'OUld prove Yt'bo laid tbem.
Abu-Obaia.la reiterated ~
suspicions about Libya tQday 6Ui said
there was still no proof.
In reply to a question. be said it was
premature to say what action Egypt
would take apinat Libya, its westem
neiahbor. if definite proof in-
criminated iL
PfeAdeilt Hoani Mubarak baa said E&YPl would <koy Suez Canal panqe tO-sbip1 frOm any country proven
p&ilty of the mine-.layina.
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... Orange Cout OAJLY PILOT/Wednuday,
Sedelmaier: Master of comic underreaction
' ... for mo t things satd In commercials
there's no need to be that et1ous •
Scdelma er i1 pcrhap: th only
commercial director wlao exercises uch complete control over his )\'Oft. from early casttna to final caiuna lt'a
CHICAOO(AP)-Hc'uheklnaor c in the bi.f·bucks world of a •&yle that cams him 1taunch comedy-the 3(HeQond vancty. television dveniSIPJ. admirers and fierce critics.
. He doesn't tell jokes or appear In .. He'•. the kina of comcd~.'' 1115 But both iroups .agree that what·
r»lbtclubs and most people don't S1cve Pickford, account 1upcrvisor everScdelmalerdOclworkswcU.And even know his name. But every day, for Ketchum Adverti iria In San all he docs is comedy, (requently In
millions o! Americans meet \he Francisco. "He's in hiah demand." 30-second an ppcts.
characters be creates, cat the food he Today, advcrti in.a agencic are Some directors say humor in sells and even mimic the words he poundina at his door. A Wendy's advertisina can act in the way of
uses. . scquelis on the air. Movie dcalnre in scdillina the product, but Scdelmaicr
He is Joe ~lmaier, director of the works. Directors att: imitatina bi sagrees. • television commercials. His cam· style. ..It'• like someone who's uaJy and paians -for Federal Express ·reatur· ~fter t 6 years of headina hie own aay1 beauty isn't ev~hing," )l_e aays,
1n. a motor-mouthed executive and studio, Sedelmaier, 51, haS become .. If~ou ca~'t do it, you say it doesn't ~ wor." 1or Wendy's fcaturina the "Where'• one of the busiest -and more the beet'?" line-have made his name controversial -men in hie business. Sedtlmaier uy1 he uses comedy , --;:=::;::======:::::::;;;;=============-• becau&e "for most oftht thinp said'in ·r commercial?i there's no need to be
~ I B'• d a• that aerious: .. ari ,., .r .nner Scdelmaier dOt"S 60 to 70 com· 'I mercial1 ann~l_ly -each can cost as
. ~ft.Ct.· ra .•• '6,.•fts much IS $80,000 LO $120,000. He's Wlr •••• U 71 already won more than 60 Clios, advert1Sirt1'1 Oscar;, ·
u • P-rime Rib or Fresh Fish His clients have included Mr. Coffee, Jartran \"total trucks, Pentax
C , · cameras, Dunkin Donuts, Aamco ompiete Dln~r With choice Of Auto Transmissions. General Elec-
soup or salad and dessert tric batteries, Alaska Airlines.
'
to. 6 PM Southern Airwar!-the llljno1s State Lottery, Wendy s and Federal Ex-
7 Dip A Wl lkl P~~·OUJh the clients vary, . SOl E. nai·eoA 673_772~ Scdelnwer's comic touch docs not. 01U. In each commercial, there's, a bit of
~-=::ii::::===:::::;===============~ Buster Keaton, Charlie Oiaplin or Harold Lloyd, all Scdelmaier child·
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hood favorites. .
And there is one theme: everyday
people confront -and survive -
everyday life with dread and de·
termination.
"I like people wbo try to make the
best of •·bad situation, t• Scdelmaier
says. ••we all try to do that ... Once
you lose your aense of humor, you
become funny."
In his Mr. Coffee spot, di l\lSted
coffee drinkers toss their coffee pots
out their windows while a bespecta-
cled mailman warily looks toward the
heavens and then calmly lifts his umbrella to ward off the metallic
rainfall.
In an Aamco spot, applianocs blow
up in a poof of smoke ju.st as their
warranties expire.
The world may collapse but Sedelmaicr's people don't. "My
people never overreact," ·says
SCclelmaier, a youthfuJ-lookina man
with a white beard, shock or thick white bait, an even smile and bellow-
ing lau&h ..
Unlike many dircctorl, Sedelmaier
shuns ~our and &litlC'I'. He prefers
the kind of people· seen on the
momina bus, rather than billboards .
They speak. in cliches, have dour
expressions, wear fedoras with ban·
danas and keep pink flaminaos on
their lawns.
Sedelmaier maintains a file of
Polaroid photos that he builds on as a
casting source. Most of bis people are
not trained actors and he doesn't like
•
•i Holiday SP9 Health Club
~ for Men and Women
Features separate gyms for men and women. ovalloble 7 d<;JYS a week. •
' .
~BM ... (71A) 952-3101, 310 So Magnolia. 1 bk>clc SO. of Unooln
aRRnOSllAKEWOOO ••• (213) 924·151A. 11881 Det M'to BM1 at Ploneer. ·3 bfookS East of~ ffAA\'11~
MtSSK>N VIEJO.,. (714) 770-0822. 24401 Allclo Pkwy, a1:6¢n Diego Freeway
WESTMINSTER.'. (71iA) 894-3381, 6757 tm Ave at GOid
COSTA MESA .•• (714) 649'""68. 2300 HorbO( BM:t nd Thtf y Drug)
ORANGE .•. (714J ~2441, 622 East Ko no Ave. WSSt Of Tus11n Ave
to ca 1 m Hollywood.
Sedclmaicr also doesn't work with
celebrities thoqh some have lince
achieved ihit'ltatus, such u Wendy's
Olara Peller, the former manicurist he discovered acvcral years aao. .
..There arc an awful lot or plastic
people," uys Howard Rieau. a friend
and 1en1or vice president crut1ve
group head at the NW Ayer qency in New York. "1 thmk Joe has done
wonders in castina for unusual
people." .
Others arc less d&Wed. "I think he
focutcs on the neptlve side of
people," .. ys Curvin O'RieUy, senior
vice president and eitecutivc creative
director at Qlilvy A Mather 'in Chicaao. "Jt•s not a very flauerina
view of mankind. If a ptychiatritt
vicWed Joe Sedelmaier's wor~ he'd
say here•• someone who docan t like
1>4;ople."
O'Rietly also is critical of
Sedelmaier'1 han<h-on appr°'ch,
which can include rewriting diatoaue
aftercastioa;.changes in the sequence
or the emphasis. Sedtlrnaier was raised f n OrrVille,
Ohio, then came 10 Chicago where be
attended the School of the Art
Institute. He took courses in pain\ina.
and fine art, and worked as an art
director, includinaa stint at J. Walter
Thompson. He then set up hia own studio, which has seven employees . . A! leas~ one ~fScdclmaier clients iSi
StnSJna his J>f'liteS; Wendy's-whose
ad agency 11 Dancer Fi~rald Sam·
pie -crcdiu its .. Where s the beef' campaian as a prime reason for a 32
percent increase in sales during the
first half of the year. .
I Coinlc kbit Joe 8eclelm•ler
'
Nobody knows
how many kids
abused in U.S.
By RICHARDT. PIENClAK
It.a II I , .. ,.._Writer
There is a aood rca on why no one blows for certain how many children
are aexually abused every Yt•r in the
U nltcd States: no one bas ever asked.
But af tb y did .,, researchers say.
many victims miaht not admit n
ID~)'.
'There really has not been a
complete national mple," David
Finkelhor, auociatc director of the
Family_N1olcnce IUscarch Proaram
at the University of New Hamp,llire,
said in an interview ... But 1.it's ap.
Plmlt that it is a ianificant prob-le~:· . •
A study published l?)' the American
Psychiatric Association :;bows that
the better the children know their
abusers the less likely they . are 10
report the crime. Also, the tonier the
abuse aoes on, the less likely 1t is to surface. .
Reported cases have increased at a
shocking rate. In Maine, for examptci
thenumbcrofreportedcasesrose luu
percent in one year alone, from 1982
to 1983, accordina to that state's
Department of Human Services.
Expens like Finkelhor estimate
that only one in 10 incidents of child
sexual abuse is reported. If that is
true, more than S66,000 children are
sexually assaulted each year.
"Even ifno more than 10 percent of
all airls and 2 percent of all boys were
destined to be sexually abused, it
wofild lead to the prediction that
rouahly 210,000 new cases of sexual
abuse were occurrin4 every year,"
Finkelhor writes in his forthcoming
book, "Child Sexual Abuse."
But the few studies that have been
done indicate the rate of incidence is
much biaher.
In the most extensive random
urv~y c er don on lid 1exuaJ
abuse -a aamptina of ~lO adull
women ln San Francisco -re-
searcher Diane E.H. Ruudl found
that 38 ~nt said they had been vi_~ims of phy11cal texual abuse .
before 8't 11. Nearly thrtC-fo11rths of
th VJctims said Ibey were l 3 or
younaer when first attaekcd.
When non-contact experiences
were added. uch as exhibitionism
and unwanted sexual advances, 54
pcr:cent said they were victim1.2.ed
before aae 18. Of the cues in the Russell study,
only 2 percent invo1vin family
members and 6 ~nt where
molestm wero out11dc the fa.mily
were ever reported to police. The,. best data available about male
victims js contained in Finkdhor's
1979 11udy of 796 male and female
colleae students. The etudy indicated 9 percent of the males were child
sexual abuse victims.
Finkelhor belitves sexual abuse of
boys it espccjatly underrePQned be-
. cause the boy-to-tirl ratio of victims
is much lower in general population
surveys than in clinical studies, which
usually are done in prisons. "The
ratio I estimate is one boy victim to
every 3·to-4 Jitl victims.'' said Finkelhor, a SOCtoloajst.
Boys repon the1r sexual abuse less
often for several reasons, Finkelhor
said.
.. Part of being a boy is you're not
supposed to ask for help. You're
supposed to take care of yourself: The
imap is boys are not au~ to be a
victims, and this doesn t happen to
boys. So there's some-of, 'Will they believe me if I tellr ••
Since most molesters arc men,
Finkclllor said. there also is "a real
fear of the stiama of homosexuality
among boys." ·
..
Some symptoms
of child abuse
Noonedangcrsi&n will prove child
sexual abuse, but combinations of
symptoms can sianal that your child
is a victim of molestation, accorc:lina
to experts.
Here are some physicaJ sians that
can mean seJ1tual abuse:
• Tom, stained or blood-spotted
Uftderclothina
• Pam, sweUina or itchina m the
Jenital area
• Bruises on extemaJ genitals
• Vqinal discharge_
• Difficulty in wa~ or sittins
• Sudden increase m bathing.
bcdwettina or masturbation
Herc are behavioral SJJnS that may
indicate a child is beana sexually
abused, especially if these conditions
appear suddenly and without expla·
nation:
• Fear of etttain people or places
• Social withdrawal
• ChQJina to parents
• Poor peer relationships
, • RcfusaJ to leave thliouse or runnina away
• Development of Sch I phobias
and sleep disturbances
• Fear of sleeping
• We1aht loss or gain
• Severe misbehavior
PEDOPHILIA: AMERICAN'S DIRTY LITTLE SECRET •••
Fr9mAl
America's ditty little secret sucll as '"The Cradle Snatcbera,."
Despite stUdies indicating that 0 The Child Seekers" and "Never' Too
before they turn 18 as many as half of Youns." recalled a C3$C in which a 1-
all &iris and l O percent of all boys are week-<>ld irifant was molested.
sexually abused, only one~tenth of There are groups based on the
child sexual abuse incidents are premise that sex with minors ls
reported to authoriucs, aocordina to healthy and should be legalized. ex~ , .. Sex by year 8 or it's too late" is the
"Sdual victimization of 'children slogan of the Los Angcl~abased Rene
is the most underrer:>ned serious Ouyon Society. Tlie group wants
crime in the country.' said Kenneth leplization of child-adult sex at any
V. Lanruna. the FBl's child se"ual age1 includina ir;itercoursc and oral
abuse and f..Omograpby specialist. ano anal copulation.
"People don t want to believe this. The organization claims S,000
There is a tremendous built·m de-members. Thepolicesarthcyhaveno n1 I." way to know the size o the member·
---Cases of child sexual abuse re· ship. Its oilly spokesman, Tim
ported to government · protection O'Hara, does not use bis real name for
qcncics increased 649 percent in six fear of reaction to his unpopular
years-from 1,SS9 in 1976 to S6,607 cause.
to l 982-acoordina to the children's ~ According to O'Hara, children
division of the American Humane "want to have sex ..st4Jtina at two
Association in Denver, a national years, or at l 'h. Childn:a Seek out sex.
child welfare organization involved Sexuality is something that is, that
in training, consultina, advocacy and you're born with. It's normal and
research. natural."
"It could ea5ily be 10 times as Law enforcement authorities con-
l&Jlt,' &aid DaV1d Finlcelbor, as.. tend orpnizations like the Guyon
soetate director of the Family Viol-Societ.Y and the East Coast's North
enQC Research Program at the Uni-Amencan Man-Boy Love Associa-
versity of New H8.Jllpshire. tion are little more than fronts for
Finkelhor said one thin& was pedophiles.
certain about the statistics. "They're "I don't think the common public
not too low," be said. "People don't believes th.at anyone would h.av~. or
pin status by inventina stones about try to bavef sexual intercourse with a sexual abuse." l·month-o d baby. I don't think the
"By even the most conservative public wants to believe that it hap-
estimates, a cbjjd ts sexually abused pens, but it does," said Joy. 'ZJU
some·ptace within the United States wonder: Does the public really know
every two minutes," Sen. Christopher what's aoina on?"
J. Dodd, O.COnn., told a . special Sexual abu:sc of prepubcsce~t chil-
session of the Senate Cbtldren's dren can. lead to venereal disease,
Caucus in April. "One in every five rectal tears, laQCrated vqinas. aonor-
victims is a child under the aae of7." rheal tonsilitis and pregnancy. That
By definition, pedophilia is an the victims also suff~r psycholopcal
addiction in which children are the torment is almost a given.
preferred sexual object. The need for victims to break thelf
The criminal is usually a male silence and come forward for therapy
attracted to boys or girls, rarely both. . is especially important, therapists
Pedophilia ranacs fro~ fascination say, given the f~ct that up to 80
with photoarapbs and videotapes of percent of all chtld molesters were
nude children 10 involvement in sexually abused when they were
child molestation, sometimes with children, evidenQC of a self-per·
filmed recordings of the incidents for petua.tina society of child abusers.
later viewin& or sale to others. Cluldren blame themselves for
"A pedophile is no~ a little old man beina tricked and d~n·1 tell their
in a raincoat hangina around the parents for fear of punishment. Othtr
playground" said Robert 0 . Joy, times, a molester will penuadc a
chief of the U.S. Postal Service victim to keep "our litUe secret."
branch that invest1aatcs child porno-Finkelhor said many parents didn't
~phy mailit\i-'. ''lie -or she -report sexual abuse bcCause they
could be a doctor, a postal wo~ker, a "want t<? handle it on ~heir own. They
priest, a law enforcement official, an make a Judament -If outsiders an:
·engineer a Boy Scout leader, a day-involved, it could be harder on my
care center worker, a teacher -you kid.' They don't want the child to~
name it." • traumatized. They d<?n't want the
Adults have even adopted child~ embam sment of a tryal., And some
"for the purpose of bavins seit with of that is based on rtahty._ •
them" accordin1 to Detective Bill Even doctors and 50C1al workers
Dworln of the Los Angeles PoliQC don't always report such cri mes.
Department's sexually exploited Close to SO percent of child !Cxual
child unit. . . . abuse casea .known to profcs 1on.als
Authorities say the molestma an: not offiaally repartcd, 1ccord1n1
pedophile and the underaround to the NatiC?nal Stuc!y ~fthe Incidence
network of child pomoaraphy arc and Seventy of Child Abuse and
closclf linked. These days, they say, Neal~t. . . . sex with children is not enou&h for While most ~~nts behe~e •.n what
some pedophiles. federal authontJcs calJ stranlCr·
Pohce arc uncovcrina more and da!tJCt"-.thefearofutranaerlunna more cases of what they call perverse children ~i~ lolhpops or ice cream
child porn. . -authonucs say u many ~s 80
"We're tartina to ~ children percei:tt !Jf .se:u1t.lly ·~ ch11dn:n
involved in pain upenenccs. do-are victimized ~)' relatives. family
masochism. We're i~ pictun:s of fri~nd~ o~ authonty fl&~·
kids tied up with ... chains and ropes This is not a v1cti"! hunt. We
around the:r neckl " said Dworin. know th y're then:," s&•d Cordelia
"But that' not the if!tportant ~hina. Ande~n. a Minneapoli therapist
The tmf<>Nnt thing 11 the 1mtl on who directs a theater aroup lhl1
the kid face." Even with pervcno ho~s arade school c~!ldren ho to
porn be uplained the ch1ldn:n are avoid 1e~ual abuse. When I first cond~ti ncd tothinkthcyarehavinaa went lnto the classroom, t wu aood 11mc hocked. I'm not an)•morc. We had
In one • t of photos l"CQCntly tcized on two three. four kids n Cvtt')'
by Lo AnacJet police~ aradc school cla 11y1f\I 'Oh, yeah. That bap-
boys • hown wnh ri> tied. to pen~. tom~.' And lhcre re so many
their nitals, heavy ts danahnJ boyt.
from the end of th ropes. Scrlb"bled Pcdoph1h1 mo no econom •
00 the photos were the mole tcr'a . cial or raphlc boundari
ts of }\o ' he ttad lfl(luaHy c1lher. • ,..,..,~-111.,.d the t "Y~u·u find a ~.O 11t In e~
nd Ow nn wh offi bo1· city an the nat1 n. n iaid.
helves c' d uh pcs kl "Everyone 11 • 'h's happen n.a n
,
LA, but it's not happenin• m my
community.' Unfortunately 1t is. It's happening everywhere."
Experts say the belief that most
exploited children are runaways also
is false. "We are findina that the prep<>nderance of children that arc
sexual!¥ exploited are living at
home: said Assistant FBI ~tor William M. Balcer.
Two hiahl,¥ publicized cases under·
score the point
Last March, pohce in Manhattan
Beach, Calif., arrested the 76-ycar-old
rbunder of the Vifainia McMartin
Pre·School and six teachers, includ·
ina her diuahter, grandson and
iranddaUJhtcr. Their investigation
bepn after doctors discovered that a
2'h-year-old student had been sexUal-
ly abuscd.
The official complaint now lists 42
children and allcaes rape sodomy
and other molestation offenses, of·
ficials say there may have been
several hundred victims over a 1 ().
year period.
A similar day-ca.re scandal erupted
last month in New Y -Ork City when
docfors found that a 4-ycar-<>ld girl
had been sexually abused.
An investipuon by the Bronx
district attorney's office led to the
arrest of four employees at the
toddler's day-<:are center. Officials
now say they are investigating allega·
tionsinvolvtnampre than SO children
at six facilities in the borouah.
Many .. people interviewed, from
psychiatrists to detectives, aar'Ced the
publicity &iven such cases has bad a
snowballing effect. Here is a samplina
of incidents uncovered between the
California and New York day-care
cases:
• The founder of a nation.ally
acclaimed children's theater school in
Minneapolis, John Oark Donahue,
was chaflcd with sexually abusing
three boys at the school, including
one youth he allcgcdly persuaded to
have oral sex because it was "fun to
play.''
•A S4-year--0ld female employee at
a day care center run by a Baptist
Church in Mem{>his, Tenn., was
charaed with kissmg. fondlina and
bavina oral sex with three boys and a
&irl; aaed 3 and 4. An investigation
bcpn after one of the boys contracted
gonorrhea.
• A rug cleaner from Collingdale,
Pa., was char&ed with sexual abuse
after police found more than 200
color snapsboi.s of naked boys enpa-
ing in sex acts in hisaperu;nent. PoliQC
allege he invited hls victims inside to
play video games then offered them
alcohol and up to ~20 in return for the
photo sessions.
• A sheriff's deputy in Jordan,
Minn., his wife and a county govern·
ment employee are among 24 adults
cha,ricd with S)'.stematically abusina
more tbaii twoClozeo children.
•Workers at ttie Childbaven Child
Home in Cullman, Ala., were in-
dicted on sodomy and other abuse
allcgauons involving children as
younaas 6.
•A Leawood, Kan., physician wbo
was co-author of a book on rcliaion and child care was cbaracd with
aggravated sodomy and taking
liberties with a 14-year-<>ld airl
• A 71-year-<>ld retired school
teacher from Fort Ltt, NJ., was
convicted of molesting two neiJ)lbor
girls. Clutcbina dolls while they
testified, the girls, now 4 and 9, told
bow two years aao the man had
exposed himself and forced them to
perform sexual acts on him while they
watched sexually explicit films on a
bedroom television.
The FBI, armed with a new law that
raised penalties tenfold, is tiabtenma
its noose on child pomoaraphers and
training local {>Olice for specialization
in child exploitation cnmes.
Schools and social service agencies
are conducting more seminars for
un~ youngsters and their un·
believ111g parents.
"We're seeing the system shake.
The climate is npe for change -
finally. Instead ofiust problems we're
seeing solutions.• said Jay Howell,
who heads the new National Center
for Missing and Exploited Children, a
private organization 10 Washinaton
financed by a $3.3 million Justice
Department arant.
But, Howell cautioned, all the
problems cannot be solved overnight
Assaults on teens
usuaJly in tb.e"liome
' I
•
KGC-E t-o broadcast
progr m · on b a llot
measure s, race
Freeway interchange
hearing set Thursday
Plans to build ao SSO million
intcrchanic between the Santa Ana
and Costa Mesa freeways will bet
unveiled to the J>Ublic durint a
bearing set th.is Thursday at the
Tustin Unified School DistriCL
The planned interchange would
help relieve the bottleneck where &he
freeways meet, said Heinz Hcckeroth;
a Calt.rans district director.
· As now scheduled construction
would begin in late 1987. The wort
would take about five ycan to
compJete, said Hocterot.b.
The fneway "''Ort uld dCvd<>f. in.~ stageS. The fU'Sl woWd eotaJl t.vldCDJ.n& the Costa CD FRCWay
betweea [)yet Road &Ad tbe San
Dieao freeway, the JeCOod would
include modifications to the Santa
Ana Freeway and \be third would
involve the new suucture itJelf.
The public bearina is tet to beiiD at 4 p.m. and last about four boun. The
school district is· a1 300 S. C St. in
Tustin. for additional i12formatioo.
call llcm Kosinski at (213) 620-37SS.
DOONESBURY •••
Prom Al
panels after his 2().montb sabbatical
u a closely guarded secret at Univer-
sal Press Syndicate in Fairway, Kan.
And Trudeau, who dodges inter·
views like a seasoned matador ide·
steps cbargma b~ isn't talkinc
But in .an.excJUSlve story for Life
mapzioe'1 October issue, Trudeau
lets readers in on what their favonte
characters ba\IC been up to since
graduation day.
Michael J. DooneSbUtyJ, the dither-
ing ~or-domo of the Walden com-
mune,Joined a Manhattan ad agency
and married Joan Caucus Jr. on the
back porch at Walden.
Marvelous Mark Slackme)'er has
bis own radio show and bas become
sometbm& of an irritant at presiden-
tial news conferences. Quarterback
B.O., who had been traded to the Tampa Bay Buccaneers for nr.·o draft
picks and a bus, was lost to the Los
An&elcs Rams in a poker pme. He
distinauisbed himself by_ making the
worst fumble in Rams' history.
As for Zonker, he's still holed up
after graduation, stepping out only to
rent videocassettes.
"Garry works on a l 0-day~e.
and anyone who says anything about
it in house will lose their head." said
Uni versa! spokeswoman Victona
Houston. .
.. The writing will Sl:IY pretty simi-
lar," chimed in editorial director Lee
Salem. "He will weave the lives of his
characters into political headlines.
There will be the same characters and
they'll be a tittle older.
States from Rome. wbcre me·, wort-i.na with the United Nations OD world hunaer.
.. 1 doa 'uhitlk 1.aocy l'ill ever come
tack beca l tbi.ok bc's ~
the poliiicaJ ~ iD Washi.n&ton and
f m DO IODICf ' part of it;., W said.
The 36-year-<>ld Trudeau an..
oounced in September I 2 tba1 be
would take a »month s8bba • from the .. Doonesbury" strip to sive
himself a "breather,•• allow his
cbaraCtc:n to move from attitudel of
the '60s to the ·aos and putS1>C other
creative and person.al projects.
While fus fiddled with otbet
funnies. Trudeau fathered twins with
wife Jane Pauley of the--Yoday" show
and sent Zonker, 8.0 . and sans to
Broadway. The musical, .. DoonesbW')',.. which opened. last
November to lukewarm ~ 1~
served as a brid,e between where tbt
strip left off and •hen: il will pick up.
Salem said. ·
Tnldc:au wrote the bOok and I~
and Ehzabelh Swad°' composed tbC
mw.ic for the show, which took plaQC
in the Walden commune oo arad~
auon day.
The last newspaper strip showed a
Western set and prop& being disman-
tled from .a White House scttina. A voice said; .. Ob,. boy, a vacation. ..
Another voice said; "No, not you,
sir."
And so Trudeau took oft'. leaving a
void on the canooo ~ The 726
newspapers that ran 'Doonesbury"
were forced to use other comics. .. A lot ofit is so much dependent on
the news." Salem continued .. So he's So far, Universal has signed up 730
wa1tin1 until the very last minute. newspapers for "Doonesbury,' and
Who could have ~cted a woman • Salem said the syndicate cxpecUd
as vtce prcsidenttal candidate? ~be even m~re. . .
(Gerald.inc FefT!SO) is cena.inly ''I tht~ ~·s a lot of tnteJUt lll
eliaible for the stnp." what bes goana t~ d?, •hen he comes
In fact.just about all of the powcn back," Salem said. A lot of papen
and pawns of the political world that might not have taken 1t are
Trudeau skewered in the strip's first bccasue of the publicity attached."
12 )ears are candidates for his pen,
ink and parody. But no mancr, mo t
politicos love 1l
.. Life without 'Doonesbury' hM
meant far more than life without a
mominatauah.'' ~dSen. Edward M.
Kennedy. l>-Mass. "His retum
makes our nation.al s.ensc of humor
whole apin."
Fonner President Jimmy CarteT,
interviewed recently wbilt bapp1ly at
work oo a con11Nctioo project in
downtown Manhattan, fla.shCd the
fam ous toothy smile lo 5.ho h1
dcJiaht that Tn.id~u would return.
d.
-•
. '
Convicted cops
violated their
bargain with us
Two police officers (one current, one former) stood before
orange County jud&es for sentencing last week. Each reqived a
sentence that would have been considered fair and reasonable
· for another citizen.
But these were men in whose hands we placed our most
p~ous asset: our security. We have established high standards
for these people and we have made a bargain with them. You
give us your solemn oath that you'll be pure and clean and brave
8.!ld honest, we tell the young1a~ enforcement officer, and we'll
"ve you oµr trust. It may be unrealistic to expect humans to abide indefintely
by such a bargain. Certainly, it's difficult. But if we accept the
t>t"mise that our police officers are subject to the same lapses and
flaws that plague the rest of us, then we must accept the
conclusion that we're not as safe as we'd like to be on our streets
and in our homes.
That won't do. The price of our security is paid by the people
we expect to protect it ·
So when Judge David Carter reduced Newport Beach police
officer Michael Pule's felony drunken driving conviction to a
misdemeanor and placed him on prpbation -paving the way
for Pule to remain on the force -the community winced.
AndwbenJudgeJamesJudgescnt.encedformerCostaMesa
police officer William Lauchlan to 60 days in the county jail for
a sexual battery conviction that was r~uced from a felony to a
misdemeanor, it cringed. ·
We trust our judges treated Pule and Lauchlan fairly; they
parceled out punishment appropriate to the crimes. ·
But Pule and Lauchlan weren't charged with violating their
bargains with us.
It's too appropriate
Newport-Mesa school district administrators have come up
with a novel approach to the problem of truancy. Any pupil
caught skipping school will be forced to stay away from school
for a day. Suspended is the official term.
Following that logic, a student caught smoking in the
lavatofy may soon expect to be given a carton of cigarettes by the
principal and one who cheats on tests may ask a teacher to help
him write the answers on his palm.
·Thafs discipline.
Police copter's presence
'/Jelles City of Arts lDJage
To the Editor.
ConpatulatJons to the Mayor and
City Council of Cost.a Mesa for
proclaiming Cost.a Mesa the .. City of
the Arts.••
I truly hO(>C this reflects a cJlan&e m
philosophy rn the city administration
and is not simply ackowledgement of
the location of the music center.
"City of the Arts," an image
suagesting a climate conducive to
creativity, a tranquil place where one
can eruoy aestheucally pleasing
endeavors.
An objective person would have to
acknowledge tbat this is the antithesis
of the imase currently projected as
evidenced by the siege mentality of
the police department.
I would defy any sensitive person
to enjoy a day or evening of relaxau"on
m the self.proclaimed .. City of the
Arts" while low.flying surveillance
aircraft circle overhead disrupting
whatever activity one is pursuing on
the average of once every I 0 minutes.
Tbe most prominent fixture to be
seen upon enteri~ <Asta Mesa is the
omnipresent police helicopter, an
image not unlike that of an armed
guard tower. No where in the free
world are people subjected to such
continual haJTassment in the name of
law and order.
If Costa Mesa ts such a high crime
area that such extreme measures are
necessary, maybe we could take a tip
from Santa Ana and put foot patrol
officen into the problem areas thus
preserving the rest of the city for the
pursuit of, if not tbe arts, at least
peaceful hvina.
C. RICClARELLl
Cost.a Mesa
ABC's not telling whole story
To the Editor:
ABC television eslablishment is
constantly pushing E.astem establish·
ment polit.tcs. They put on a three·
hour dramatizauon of their feeltng
that we need an unilateral nuclear
freeze. Then they put on a tbree·hour
dramatization of their feeling that we
need more federal involvement in
public education. They received pub-
lic questions and comments from the
Eastern section of the country only.
They are constantly ballyhooing pub-
lic lotteries.
They remind me of an instance,
many years ago, when I was fishing at
the end of Newport Pier. There were
about 50 other fishermen (or persons)
there. Two of them caught a fish.
The~ wu quite a cclebrauon over lhcir~tcbes by the children. My little
&irl ca.me back to where I was and
said, "Daddy, everyone is catching
fish but you." If you listen to ABC
television, you get the idea that
everyone ts winninf public lotteries.
Cahfomia docsn t need any more
profcss1onalgamblers running things,
and we don't need any more federal
government in public education and
we don't need to roll over to the
Russians with a uqilateral nuclear
freeze. We need to realize that ABC
television is pushing Eastern estab-
lishment politics and not be taken in
by their dramatizations.
JIM BOLDING
Costa Mesa
Cold remedy.leads to
drunken driver arrest
A cold sore remedy on the market is
'70 percent alcohol. A Beverly Hills
Why docs it take so Iona to
improve? Golfers played thepme for
more than a century and a half before
George Grant of Bo ton in 1899
1n"entcd that simple littl pei called
the aolf tee.
··stopsaylngyou have plan forreduclngthedeflclt. In. tead.
y you have no plan but that thedeflclt wtJJ somehow feduce
It elf. TheneveryonewlllgtveyoucredltforbeJnganopUml t
andfeelgoodjustby eelngyourface. Soundless, cock ... eyed
o Umlsm Js better than a Ian an da · ·
\..
Dear Fritz: Yo.u 'lldo better
if you don't iriSist on facts
RICHAID
Co1E1
complice. The implication is that she
ouaht to be stuck with the conso-
quenocs of her own behavior-in
effect be punished for it.
WASHINGTON-It's possible that
as George Bush finished explaining
his position on abortion be heard a
noise. If so, at was the sound of his
own argument bcinJ stretched so far
that itsnapped. In his role as the Clara
Peller of the President's ro-election
effort, the out·front Bush said that be
just micht favor abortion in the event
of rape. Where's the l~c. Gcorac?
Forget that you could ape.nd a
lifetime wondcnng whether a sexual·
ly naive 14-year-old is a victim or an
accomplice and whether a woman
••••••••••• -'Whose fetus is deformed is any Jess a victim than one who was raped.
In fact, Bush's positton was about
the same as the one staked out a bit
earlier by Nancy Reapn in a maaa·
zine intertiew. Just about the only
breach she couJd conceive of in her
husband's clarion position against·
abortion, she said, was rape.
their position, it t
tent.
logically conais.. Concentrate instead on somet.hina
But why? Ronald Reagan's pos-
1uon on abortion-indeed that of the
whole adnunistration-is that it
amounts to the murder of the unborn
LDDOOCnt. If the fetus is a life, then it's
a hfe no matter bow it was produced.
The fetal product of a rape is no
different than the fetal product of
consensual sexual intercourse.
What's different is the attitude,
feelings and mental health of the
mother It's understandable that she
might want an abortion. But it'a just
as understandable that a I 4:year..old
may want one, too, and so m~t a
woman who knows she's carryuig a
deformed fetus.
There are plenty of people, of
course, who make no exception when
it comes to abortion-not rape and not
incest. They believe either as a matter
of rcliaious doctrine or intellectual
conviction that a fetus is innocent life
and that abortion as therefore uncons-
cionable murder. The only exception
they will countenance is when the life
of the mother ts at stake-the old
choice between a rock and a hard
place. Whatever you may think of
But the George Bush·Nancy Re-
apn position is another matter. If
they were just like most people,
intellectually and morall,Y lost in the
morass of abonion, their confusion
would be touchina. 11 for one, am all
over the place on the wue, discerninJ
a difference between an abortion in
the first month and one-.t))e~ahth,
between one sought because the l'etus
1s defonned and one souaht because it
is of the wrong sex. For that reason.
we confusenicks prefer that the choice
Slmply be left to those ..,ho have to
make it Lif c, after all, has more
exceptions than an apartment·house
lease.
Bilsb and Mrs. Reagan. tbou&h. are
saying sometbi1'a else. In the first
place, they are willing to swallow their
doubts and confusion and foist on
othen an abortion ban about which.
they have doubts. It's okay for them.
Their chances of havina to violate the
proposed constitutional amendment
outlawing abortion are nil.
But they are also suggesting that the
difference between a ~t rape
victim and a woman who 1 prcanant
out of consent is not the fetus, but the
woman herself. The former ia a
victim and ought to be helped; the
latter is not only not a victim, but
something elte entirely; au ac-
else: The Geo• Bush· Nancy Reapn
doctrine has almost nothil)I to do
with the aacredness of the fetus and
almost evemhin& to do with the se~ual morality of the woman. Con·
acnt-and not the fetus-is what mat-
ten.
That's not a rarified doctrine on the
inviolability of life. That's a simple
~·on of sexual morality. Good
. Id the abortions; bad &iris aet the
by. In this administration, free will
is exalted second only to free
enterprise-sometimes with the same
banana consequences.
At the moment •. Geo~ Bush
would prefer that we all concentrate
on bia opponent, Geraldine Ferraro,
and watch her 59uinn in attemptina
to reconcile reliJious doama with
political reality. Bush, thou4fi, is
doina the same thiq. He's tryUl& to
reconcile the Reapn position on
abortion with his own and not
bothering to think the matter
throuab.
The doctrine he's enunciated is not
pro.life. It's just mindlculy pro-
Reapn. lt'a understandable, then.
that be's takin& no more questions on
the subject of abortion. He has oo
ans wen. 1
RJ~ Cota ll • qrMIJcal~ti
col•m.a.l•I.
Health service firm gul!ty
of unhealthx. overcharges
HHS audit reveals Massachusetts firm
engaged in illegal 'corporate incest•
WASHINGTON -No one needs
to be reminded that the costs of
federa11y · funded health care are
soarina into the stratosphere. Many
companies that provide the equip-
ment and services needed to tttat
Medicare and Medicaid patients
charge top dollar whenever they can
get away with 1t. ·v.-
• To prevent this unconscionable
profiteenng on the misery of the
nation's sick and needy, the Depart·
ment of Health and Human Services
has laid down certain rcaulations
an tended to keep some k:i nd of control
over runaway costs. One of these
prohibits .. sweetheart" deals bet..,een
health providers and subcontractors
that inflate the cost of goods and
services.
This is the story of a major hc:alth
provider's request for an exemption
from the swcethe.art"(fcal rules -and
all ~ion by HHS after an in-
vcstiaation by the &&cncy'a inspector
sencral.
The exemption was sou&}it late wt
year by National Medical Care Inc. of
Waltham. Ma .. the nation's lalJCSl
provider or hfe.sustaining kidney
dia}yS1s treatment HHS auditors
dil()()vetcd that one of the corpor·
charges were ••comparable" to the
going rate, and that a .. substantial'•
part of the company's business iJ with
unrelated firms.
Erika flunked both tests, aocoroina
to the auditors.
Data it submitted on 1981 sales
showed that the company did more
than half iu business outside the
corporate family. The HHS in·
vmiptors concluded that the correct
figure was only 46 percent. •
AS for comparable prices, the
auditors looked at Erika's ch.ar&e to
its parent corporation's J 70 clinics
and to other, unrelated clinics and
concluded: .. Contrary to NMC'a u-
tert.ton.s. sales to related orpoiza·
tions were at aenerally hiaher prices
than sales to unrelated organiza-
tionL"
NMC Vice President Timothy I.
Mcfeeley urp:d HHS ifot to release
the information &atbercd by the
in pcctor acneral. ft'• c.a.sy to uader·
11.and the company's concern. For
cxamole:
JACK
AllEISOI
said, "The Problem is with the
regulations themaeJves. ••
In hia letter to the IG, McFeeley
called the audit ••a colossal waste of
tax money." But if HHS bad allowed
the hiaher prices resultina from
NMC1 sweetheart deal with its
subsidiary, th~ would have affected
the federally established reunbu~
ment rate for kidney dialyaia treat·
menu nationwide.
FERRARO REVlSITED: Her
fin.anclll furor behind bet, OcraJdine
Ferraro ba actually beaun to enjoy
the ncors of the vioe J)ft&idential
cam~. Fnends say the conareuwoman f'rOm Qutiiis, N.Y., ia thrilled by the
size of 'the crowds Jhc is drawiaa acrou the counuy and by the warmtfi
of their rcsponec.
fem.to'• earlier troubJea may have
been larleJy 1elf-iaftidedt .but her friendl put 10me of the oaame on
Walter MondaAe for sivioa hi• run·
nina-maae an inopmenced cam·
pl1jn st.aft".
RJCH>dtl> COBBr, colamnllt
.ANN
WELLS
Books
an avid
reader
won't
Some titles don't
even deserve room
on the coffee table
When friends and relativea ask my
husband what to a;ve me for my
birthday or Christmas, he says.,
.,Boob-11ve ber a book. She reads
evet'ytbina she gets her handa on:•
That's not true. I do read the
classified ads even thou&b I'm not
lookina for a job, and l read the"
laundry instructions on the labels of
drip-dry clothes. I ad the fine print
on the back of airline tickets, but I do
not read everythiJla,
There are books which I do 001
intend to buy and would no1 read if
they were aiven to me. Most of these
titlea come from a book publishen
cataloa which arrives by mail quar·
terly, consistently, and relentlessly.
Bow To Play Th BarmoaJca for
ha Ud Profit: This is a bargain for
only $1.69 (and the 10$$ of a few
friendJ), .but my m~cal . talent is
appreaauon, not parucipation.
Practical BlacbmlWq: At $7.98
thisisa bit more expensive, but if you
have a horse that needs shoeina ·
reaularly, it would probably pay. for
itself. Also, if you are the arts-and·
crafts l)'J?C, you could make some
wrouaht iron doodads for the nci&h·
borhood aaraae sales.
bow Yov Owa LQ.: $2.98:
.. Enables you tnestimateand confirm
your own 1.0!' I wouldn't even raise
the cover and peek inside th.is book. I
don't want to know what my I.Q. is. If
it &1 higher than I tbin1c it is, the
pressure will be on me to 'rodaee. lf it
is lower than "normal, ' I will be
demolished and won't be able lO
function. I'll pass on the l.Q. book.
ne W•J• to Bouedeaa EverJ· fMaa: $2.98: l don't have 420 thinp:
If I did and tried to keep them all
clean, when would I have time to read
the book publishers cataloa? Doina
a~ with every stain. smudae or s of grime woud be like livina 2"4
hours a day in ope of th0te new,
improved, household cleanser com·
mercials.
How to C.t Yov Owa or ADybody
Elte'• Bair: SS.98: I'm sure I could act
the bana of this and save a lot of
money but wouJd deprive my hUJ.-
band of his barbershop privilqes.
And where else could we get the latest
on the economy, politics, and the
neiabborhood gossip?
C.m.P!lca&ed Watclaet uct netr
Repair: S 1. 98: Anyone who has bad a
watch or clock repaired recently,
complicated or not., knows this is a
barpin, but l'm atilt worltina on
masterina the TV remote control. For
those of you more dexterous and who
have complicated watches, the blurb
aays ... "lndispe1111ble ,Wde to repair.
ing stop watchea, calendar watches,
etc., filled with easy·to--follow instruc-
tions and diagrams. . .'' If you believe
that., I'll sell you my stock 1n the bul8)'
whip factory.
Tn1a Wretb: SS.98: ••Hundreds of
excatina photos. ThriUinJ pictorial
history of eccideou on the main line,
wrecks which brou~t on •horror articl~ songs, etc.' Sounds li~~ a '
muat for every coffee table. For·
tunately, we don't have room for it. A
few years q<J we invested in "Mill
PialYs Guide to Life," and that tak
thelast available •Pot.
,,lff Wltectacb, Witty Rellwb
&M Eplarama for all OCculou:
$3.98: "Put zip into your convena-
tiona and apeecbes -you'll have an
an wer for every\hins an4 it wiU be
easy to find in this alphabetized
collection.'' Now thi1 is temptina,. To
have an answer for cverytbina (in can
remember my ABC's) would f.ve me
cnou&h confidence to buy the 'Know
YourOWn l.Q." book. However, my
huaband is the comedian io th11
family, so I won't inveat. " Gray's Aaatom1 c.Jorlq a.M:
oman who used aame ¥tU picked up
tor d.n:lnk drivina. Her attorney had
lab Lesli ruri on the medication. They
lhowtd ii aft'i ted the breathalyztt more than an hour after it was
~· Cuc dism1 d, uid tbe ation'a 1ubs1di.aries, Erika Inc., eold L.M. Boyd /1 • •1•dlc~ dial~sia uppliea to another ~•m•l t. u~diary, the Artificial Kidney
•The comi!o claimed that Erik.I actually ch NMC clinics an ave~ ors l.9l lat for dialysil
machtnc filten 1ban it did' to un-
related dini • The 10 rcvfcwed four
filter model and found &hat Erika
bad in tacit ~ clinics in the corponte f'amily anyWbere from
U8iOI to SU ..,. pet filicr .. for an
cxoess profit ofS t .3 millk>ft.
.. Mondale ~ve htt hia n:.icds, hia
te00nd IU'i111o complained-one Fer·
taro inaider.
S4.9S: Acoordinc to the publiabcr
tbas book ..... awans only the touch of
your crayon or marker to make the
human bodr prea1eJy u you have
always tmaained it to be -1 pafea
complement to your anatomical fan-
wi~:· J pve up colorina boob
when my dauahttt outarnt them. and
I'm not ~a, so diecuu my tantaala.
anatomical or othetwitc. except to
OA~NGE COAST
lailyPilal
Tom T8ft
Clt'/ E IOI
• OI
~ter of Qu " N.Y •• at pric:a
from 22 percent to .S6 pcrc.cnt bove
thC aoing ntc~
a result Ote auduon found, Eriumadc$tk~:1~l iAo profits an 1977 on that I ne. Erika al
netted $4.3 mdhon in profiu
dunna l 9 I from I 10 it corpor·
• • tc iblt accordiq to the LIU·
un JG rcpotL U n<lcr federal · 1rqu uon uch
rorporatc inc~s• is pcrmi ble only •f
the com ny can ptO\C lh4t the
•The comp.ny daimect iu chna
paid only 4 cents more for blood-line
from m •""'ilry, a..
audatora found 1hc nwttup a~
S 46, foranacas profitOfS27il.69l
on that item.
A n told my U10date
Tony O.IJICitjo that the com~ny
could not appeal the ~on or its
emption ~uest. TbOUlh he con-
ed th audu wa done y, c
Fm'lio bmeJf &1 now tettina her own aenda -1ntieed of defcndina '*1elf .... iftt1 •I.be ...._So, you can ex~ more dl.CUllion of the iaue
........ IDOlt.imporianl of all!
war and peace.
Al the mo&het or a draft• ton.
she feds Abe qualifia 11 an Cl~ on
the ubjca, ind She bdievts m llion1
of Amcric:am mare her c:onc:un.
Jld AMnM ,, • •TNkeNtl
~
. .
y they )lave nothinl to do with
Cf'lj'ON. •
Titefe ari'mMe boOks b ed in thi
catalol. bU1 you'll have to rerrtt out
the otlitt titlel fOr ~netr. J'm riaht
in the middle of a book that I can't
waal to ftnilh -.. Dieter"• Guid~ to W~t loll Durina x'' ..... Now flus 1 a berp!n
c.e.eMt .u. 'ft u .. IACIMNlfMI.
'
Window .
dressing
deceives
Drapes frame a view, allow
prlvacy·or control light
BJ BARBARA MA YER
-While the window coverings you select can enhance
the beauty of yoor rooms, the same coverinp have other
functions as well.
They can enhance and frame a1view, screen the
interior to provide privacy, andcol\trol noise and li&bt
entry into the room. The window treatment you select
can also save or squander energy.
Notallfunctionsarcequallyimportantatevcry
window. Bydecidinaon the primary job of a particular
covcrinaat aspecific window you Will in the process more
easily decide where to put the emphasis. .
If you like the view, choose a treatment which clean
the window by drawina back beside it. Draperies and
vertical blinds are especially useful here. Or, select a
treatment that rises above the window glass. Shades or
blinds fill the bill. You may also choose to select a
treatment in a sheer material that lets you see the view
through thecoverins.
Ceilina-to-floor windows call for a ceilina-mounted
treatment. Some large windows arc installed so that you
can place brackets on the wall just above the glass. Still
other large windows may really be several ordinary
windows butted frame to frame. Multiple windows look
their best when treated so they form a single focal point.
Three easy ways to unify several windows arc: a
decorative rod over aJJ the windows; a valance stretched
the length of the windows; or a cornice stretched over the
windows,
Many rooms have several single windows which arc
not the same size. The experts sugest startina your
plannina with the Ja.r&est or the most difficult. Then dress
the rest of the single windows in a scaled-down version of
thcfint. -
A skinny single window need not look like a lonely
. soldieronsentryduty. Tomakeitiecmwiderandmore
important, haoa draperies well out on the wall To make
a squat window seem taller, use a cornice and install it
above the window so that the bottom of the cornice is
level with the topofthe window. You can do the same
trick with a valance. If you want to usecafe curtains,
consider hanaina one set of cafcs from the window sill
do'"'11 to the floor.
Sometimes you want to hide a httle, oddly-shaped or
Jnapproprlately-placed window. You can do so by
matchina the coverina to the color of the wall and
window-frame. Use a simple shade with as close a color
match as possible. It will seem to disappear into the wall
Nowadays it is common te treat windows in several
la yen. A layered look is attractive and promotes energy
conscrva ti on by providing a series ofba.ftlcs against cold
or hot airand wind. If the price of a multiple treatment is
out of reach, plan the treatment ahead but install it one
. step ata time. Curtain for privaicy fmt; then add
decorative la yen later on. ·
lfenergysavinaisaprimarygoal,considerwindow
shades. Oosely-woven, ti&htly-fitted, inside-mounted
ahades can cut winter heat loss throu&h a window by up to
2S pereent If the shade is in a light color, it will reflect as
much as SS pereentofthe hot summersun, accotding to
one manufacturer. For the best energy efficiency, select a
ti&htly woven shade with a white, light-reflectina back.
Shades installed behind another type of window
treatmentaddextrainsulationandprovideprivacyas·
well. You'll find a variety of shade materials on the
market.
Blinds, which off er excellent liaht and privacy
control, come in a variety of sizes (standard, extra-thi.D
mini~blinds.and even thinner micro-blinds) and colors.
. You'll find that curtain and drapery hardware
opuons have been expanded. Extra-wide rods provide a
decorative hcadina when fabric has been placed on the
rod; rods that tum a comer make it possible to treat bay1
windows easily. Decorative rods and wood polcslho
expand choices.
.Spread can
trim figure
Time is of the essence.
For a housewife--------------
who bas to jualle the
demands of work,
children . and hu5>-
band, time ia
precious. Short cuts
in cookina arc price-
PILAR
WAYNE less.
One more hur-•••••••••••
dle that housewives .
have to cope with II Jow<aloric and nutritious food.
Everyone diets nowadays. Everyone it on a health Irick ao
here are some ideas:
•U the richn of real sour acam to enhance the
taste and tc"'ture of foods. No imitation can match iu
con i tent quality.
Try it as a rcpt cement for high~caJorie oils and
ma)onnai inyour ladd · . Tbercare26calories
inuabl poon of urcream, 99 calori in a tablespoon
ofmayonnai and 6S tori in a tablespoon of French
dreSsing.
•For a delicious nd ca y prcad that's arca,t on
whole wh t b d or brown bread and whole araln
muffin tty thi : •
Beat one cup of cot cheese until smooth: blend in
half a cup each of trawbcrry, peach and oranaes. ahced •
. •An cay ftlhn for canodoni is made by ;whippina
...
...., .......... .,, ......
Jan and Blll Land were d~tecl by Bnerly sma• commenta.
W&>NESOAY. SEPTEMBER 19, 1984
Warm.glow
adds comfort
Change of bulb creates
a more tnvttln room,
removes cold shadows
Most people have encountered the
followina sitUation. ·
You have j'1st bOu&ht plush. on.'
fumishinp, carpetina or draperies. Your
choice looked perfect in the store. But
once it was delivered to the home. the
difference caused Shock and dismay.
What you thouaht would be warm and
invitina was cold and uncomfonable.
lnJtead of sending the draperies
throuah a shredder or returning the
furniture, the solution couJd be as imple
u c~ a light bulb.
In fact, Soft-White buJbs offer soft.
warm liaht that can make the difference.
Their white coati.na belpt diffuse the li&ht
produced, reducina glare and harsh
shadows. For this reason, fluOT'ClceDt and
incandescent li&htina products can
en.barice decor and complexions by
empbasizina wanner colon like red,
ora.nae and yellow. • •
.. Of the many people who think the
warm &low is missing in their home, few
realize that difi'erent li&ht sources can
affect mood and color," said Nancy
Ouistensen, residential lighting spcaaJaA
for General Electric Co
She noted a.hat another way to Abtly
add versatility to a room is to install :Soft ..
White l-Way bulbs wherevet possible.
· Their hiJh setting is perfca for rrad•na.
needlecraft or hobbies 8nd desk ork; the
medium settin, is fine for .cntertaimq
andlhelowsettmgiuuitablcforactiv.itia
that don't require much liJht. uch as
watching television.
Research ows that one-fifth of all
t~way sockets hav~ ~ bulbs
instead, Otristensen said. -
When purchasing lighting supPlies re.-
member.
Two-hundred-watt incandescent bulbs
are ideal for prolonged reading and deSk
work; for dinette areas, consider one I~
watt bulb, two 75-wan bulbs or three 6().
watt bulbs; forsrooming. one 75-watt bulb
on either side of the mirror is pradlcal;
above the kitchen sink:, me two I 00-watt
bulbs; and under the ranae hood. ins1a1l
one ID.watt bUlb. 'However, in all cues
don't eMftd the waua&c RCOftUDCD•
dation of the fixture manufacturer.
A circular, Ouoscscect tube is useful for
kitchens., baths, walls and mirways. -
For fUrther information about Soft.
White decorating. call the GE Answer
Cent;er toll-free at 1~2~2000.
Gridiron Club's righten. the beam
First perk for major donors:
Partying with Beverly Sills
BJ VIDA DEAN ...., ............
0 Tbis may be my only time on the stage."
commented Marcie Malvllle,a member of the board of
directors. as she and husband Maaiiee left Sunday's
partyattheOrangcCountyPerfonninaArtsCenter
under construction ... And,~ can say we were on the
staae with BeverlJ Slll1". 1 •
The superstar of opera, now general director of the
New York City Opera was indeed on staae, wearing
black rumed dress with a black and orange scarf.
Standing on a warm evenina underneath the beams
where eventually large opera scenery props will hang,
she said, .. Jsn•t this pectaeular, .. addina with a lauah.
.. All it needS now is air conditioning."
Jnabriefspeechshecommentcd, .. Asm)'
arandiriothcr would have said 'only in America'. I salute
you ... you have I big task ahead ... you can do iL rm
looking forward to coming back." (She was introduced
by WIWam IAIMI, president and CEO. after a Wk by
HemJ se,entrom).
Earlier in theeveninaat the .. ToppingOut" party
ibe had siancd. along with trustees. directors and
director emeritus, the filial steel beam before it was
raitcd(witha U.S. l\aaandsprucetrecforluck)into
place in the framework. At the liaht buffet which
followed for about 60 at the Westin South Coast Plaza
Hotel, Sills complimented the P'OUP on fund-raising
efforts.
And Sunday momina. Sills attended a volunteer
recognition brundl at the hotel
The party in the evenina, the 6.m-cver on the main
stqe, held to commemorate the toppi.DJ out, was a
salute to m01C than 300 majordonors(S50,000and
more) who were welcomed into the .. Gridiron Oub ...
As the donors names were called.~ stepped
forward to sign a stainless steel plaque which will be
mounted in the beet~· TbeY wa.1kcd away with tiny
jewelry bollcscontainin&pinseniraved wltb the
Center's fmaJ loot. (A look at Non and Ola.rlle Bater'1
pins showed a tiny cha.in at the bottom ofhis.}
Othcn seen were Marilyaand Tom Nlellea.Mr.
and Mn. 0.0llplaut(he'sco-cbairman of the special
aift,scommittce), Suu and Victor Boy• (he's chairman
and a bone breeder who likes winners), Patty and Bable aan. Ola.rlotte Rolu and some 100 others. (Before the
plaque is attached 180 Gridiron Oubbcrs will sip.
Their contributions total more than $49 million of the
SS4. 9 million donated to date.)
La W..w took thesuests on a "tour" of the
3,000-seat multipurpose theater via tight beams.
The executive director pointed out the dn:uina
rooms. aridiron control the rehearsals rooms. VIP
room, etc. and there was a lotof~kaboutdreamsand
what is to come.
Among th drcamcn looking forward to 19
when world classenteruinment will be PfCICD~
(ballet. musical theater, &rand opera and symphony)
were Ra~ and Leck G. J)tac. Nlla Gaies, Anette
Huwttz. K.it and Stepltea To~. SaJ DUD. Nora and
VlaJ~(he's VPmembcBh1p), Jue and
Tom ;:Ba.men and In Wieder, Jeu and Tom
..._(be Vii'U tht original director of OCPAC) and
Board Secretary MaJi11a Pa J and husband Dr.
~).
A final bit of excitemcotwasa firev.'Ork:sdisplay
along with the champeane ltnd d rt.
'e<>tta ch and liquored choPPed coconuts. Thi Ilana al m y be prcad on m"clba iout or vanilla ,-... .....
nd .
f
.. • -·
• .
\
82 * Orange COUI DAILY PILOT/Wednesday,
WE DDI NGS
----- ----
CABALLERO-CANCHOLA
• Cynthia Ann Canchola nd Roben
L.awrcnoc llcro. both of ta
chanacd eddin vo on
Au I 10 the 'First Unned Metho(h t
Church of Costa M .
The bnde, daughter of Mrs.
ud1a nchol wore a own ,
cllltom designed b)' Gw ns by
Valdez. A sweetheart n~khne and
lonJ sleeves cccnted the bodice, ·
which wa m de of re-em bro id. ttd
Alcenon lace and trimmed with
cultured pearls and sequins. The satin
k.irt, trimmed with appliQues oflace
and heavily sciutettd pearls, fell into
a draped demi·train of Cathedral
length. ·
Gloria Elmore was maid of honor.
and the six bridesmaids were Patricia
Garcia, Ledia Sanchez, Julie
Canchola. Carla Canchola, Monica
Caballero and Mary Aores. Junior
bridesmaids were Monjc:a Flores and
Denise Onaka. Julia Annette
Canchola was the flower girl and
Jason Michael Canchola was the
ringbc.arer.
The bridearoom is the son of Mr.
and Mrs. Rafael Caballero of Costa
Mtsa. Bill Norton was bis best man.
and Kevin Flores, Mauricio
CanthOla, Mark Canchola. Rene
•
Cynthia Caballero
OOD N-0
n Au 2S ceremony an the
)'lcrttln Churt'h in una
ch united Kathcnne York nd Brent n Jr. The \\edd1ng ntcs were peifonned by the Rev. Jerry
T nkcrslC)'. and the bnde' aunt,
Katie Oran, was soloist. .
The bride is the daughter of Mrs.
Ray Evan of 1 ustm nd Otnc York
of Newport Bench. Given in nt triage
by her father, he wore ll tr1dition11l
own of EnJ11sh netting embroidered with Shiffia lace accented by seed
pearls and sequin . Designed with a
high ned.: and fitted sleeves, the
gown's skirt flowed into a chapel train
from a dropped diagonal waist. Her
h dpeice of Alencon lace held a
cascade of ivory ribbon streamers and
a cathedral length veil scattered with
seed pe.trl clusters. She carried a
bouquet of orchids, stephanotis, gar-
denia and ivy.
C.aballero, David Caballero aruS Gil-The matron of honor was Deborah
bert Flores were u hers. Bagley, and bridesmaids were Liz-
Thrcc hundred ~d twenty aucsls abeth Ogden, Deirdre Qiden, Llz
attended a rccepuon following the Wawrzyniak, Becky Arnold.. Valerie
ceremony at, lhe American ~on . Kohler and Doreen Marowitz.
HalJ in Newport Beach. After a The bridegr-oom is the son of Mr.
weddinatndtoHawaii, thecouplearc and Mn. Brent Ogden Sr. of Corona
rcsuknts o t Costa Mesa where they del Mar. Jerry Kobler was best man
arc both employed by Fedco. and ushers were Dan York. Steve
I l
Mr. and Mri. O,den
Marowiu. Tom Smith, Steve Klein,
Jim Eliades and Merrill Butler.
A rteeption at the Balboa Bay Club
followed the ceremony with muajc
provided by the Onyx Group. The
wedding party wtnt for a harbor
cruise on '"The Conque t," a bOat
owned by Memll Butler. one of lhe
ushers. • ·
After a South Seas honeymoon, the
couple arc residing in Costa Mesa.
Tbcbnde1s graduatcofTu tm HiJh
School nd Cl1 St tc n D o.
whett he ffiliated wtth Gamma
Pht Beta ronty. he i a .l'.Ciional
sale rcspresentauvc for AST Re·
search, computer comp ny in
Jrvrnc. Her husband 11 n Jraduate of
Corona del Mar HiJh School and
redeved his bu inc s degree at an
Dieio tatc where he w s a member
ofStil11a Alpha Epstlon fratemit)'• He
i' a oclated with Hopkins Develop-
ment Co. where he is a limited
partner.
PBTER80N·8UMPHREY8
Annette LouWe Humphrey•.
dau&hter of Robcn and Helen
Humphreys of Costa .Me , ex-
chan~ nuptial vow with Scott
, Peterson of Campbell on Aug. 2S in
Our Late of Mt. C~nnel C.atholic
Church, Newport Beach.
The bride. an ciahth generation
Californian, wore a beaded Alencon
lace over n;ton and ivory 5atin gown,
fashioned with a hiab neckline and
chapel train. She carried a lace fan .
withjappet orchid and stephanotis.
Cynthia H\lmphrcys was her 11s-
ter's maid of honor, and another
sister Denise Humphreys $Ctved es
bridesmaid with Leslie Frates.
The bridegroom is the son of Mr.
Annette Petenon
and Mn. John Peterson of
Sunnyvale. He was attended by his
brother Ken Peterson as best man,
and Steve Vondcrach and Tom Busch~k were ushen. ·
The couple peeted . I 00 auests
d\lring a receptJon a~ the Ncwp0n
Manion Hotel, and then left on a
Hawiian Island cruise. They wdl live
in Campbell. ·
.
Care of research ·animals graded
DEAR READERS: Do yo\l re-
member the abusive letters I received
beca\lse I printed a column in supPQrt
of animal experimentation? I listed
many diseases that never would have
been conquered had medical re-
searchers been denied the right to use
animal models. .
I thought you might be interested in
the foUowing information:
lo 1983, The National Institutes of
Health published notices about their
plan to conduct site visits to institu-
tions receivingaovemment fundi ng.
The purpose was to ensure that the
animals used for research were being
treated humanely.
Between June and September the
following institutions were visited:
Brandeis University, Waltham,
Mass.
NewYorkUnjversity,NewYork
City.
Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh.
Bethune~Cookman College, Day-
tona Beach, fla.
Northwestern University,
Evanston, Ill.
UniversityofTexa.s-Austm, Aus-
lm, Tex.
. A1111
lo DEIS
The results were as follows: No
inc1dentsofanimaJ abuse were ob-
served. At all institutions, a full-or
part-hmc veterinarian had been ap-
pointed. In most cases the appointee
had advanced trainina in laboratory
animal medicine.
The areas where most animals were
kept met the requirements and care
wasf.11ded from "adequate tocitcel-
lent.'
It should hearten my readers to
know that installations where animal
resea~h is being conducted will
receive no aovemment funding un-
less they meet the biJh stand.trd.s set
by thcNationaJ Institutes of Health.
• • •
St. Louis University, St. Loujs, DEAR ANN LANDERS: My ad-
LDS Hospital, Salt lake City. vice to that 28-year-<>ld male in Flooring for little ones Syntex Research Division, Palo Dubuque is: Grow up. His bed
lfow tbere'• a no-wu Ylnyl floor made jut for little onea. Alto. com~ondidn'tsoundtomeas if
lfamed Teeter-Totter, the ....... _.__ .. deal"" lncladea UniversityofWashmgton,SeattJe. shewastryingtotrickrum when she .. -..----. ...... Thes1te-vait teams consisted of a saidshcwasaettingofTthePill. His plctarea of ducb, hobby honee, toy tiaina and boya and veterinarian,ab1ol~calscientist response, "forheaven'ssakc,use t.ta bouncln.& IMllla and n~ kl tea. The Ooortn& la euy to currently working wtth animals and something," suaaests he was unwill-
,-.. .. tall==u=lt=n;;;;eeda==n=o=a=dh=ea=l='t'=e=. ====·=========an=N=IH=sc=ie=n=ti=st::;/a=d=m=i=n=is=tra=t=o=r·=:::;• ing to accept any responsibility what-
Lunch &·Dinner, Sunday-Thursday
rder one of these delicious entrces, and we'll serve it with our
famous traditional flavor margarita . So come, treat yourself to a
Margarita Dinner and enjoy 12 ounces of Mexico's favorite beverage.
A) Chicken Picado . $6. 75
Breast of chicken saut~ed with onions. bell peppers and tomatoes
(well spiced. bur nor hot). Served with tortillas, rice and beans.
B) Beef1bstada Compuesta and Beef Burrito $5.95
A crisp corn tortilla topped with beans. beef. lettuce. tomato
and guacamole. Served with a beef burrito and rtce.
C) Taco and Enchilada Combination $5.25
Our most poputar combination. Your choice of a chicken or beef
taco with a delicious chec~ enchilada. Served with rke and beans.
•
·--
ToNIGHT'S TV
Of
socveTi(she became pregnant.
The Pall is not for everybody.
Women who have had a history of
cancer should never \lse it. It also can
be expensive. I wonder how many
men offer to alleviate the burden of
that expense? Any man who is halfway decent
will discuss with his girlfriend the
various methOd.s ofbirtb control and
settle on something that is mu tally
satisfactory. If she cannot be de-
pended on, or doesn't wish to take
total responsibility, he should use a
con'dom or stay out ofbed. -
RESPONSIBLE IN WIL-
LIAMSBURG
DEAR R.: Yoaradvlce 11 aoud bat
urea Ila tic. Tellln& a man to atay oat
I •
of bed 11 llke tell.lng a cat to atay away
from a bowl of cream. Wklle tbe
condomluot lit percentfall·aafe,
lt'1 more effective tlwa "' rta~ 1y1tem and bu become more widely
a.sed 1lnce gea.ltal berpes reared Its
a••y bead. Pay attendon, oat "ere. .. . ...
Ann Landers' new booklet, "Sex
and the Teenager,•• explains evel)'.
aspect ofsaual behavior-where to
draw the line, how to say no, the
vadous methods of contl'lception,
the dangers ofVD, the symptoms and
where ro get help. Fora copy, send S2
and a /0111. sclf ..addresst:d, stamped
envelope(J7 cents post.age) to Ann
Landers, P.O. Box 11995, Clu'Ctf8o,
Ill. 606JJ.
-11:A5-
Good Landon,
bad Morgan
fin~ viewing
'Tightrope' cl
By FRED ROTHENBERG
~, ........ ....,
NEW YORK (AP) -Jt'1 a to~
orld out there. Every time families
aather ~round the heanh lookina for so~ethina for everybody, a car cotnes
tlytft& by, some amoral hero stabs his brother aa the ba k or a loo lady EVEN IF YOU'RE not e fAn of makes a financial deal in the street prime-time soap operas, }'OU can
Michael Landon'• .. Hiflway 'to watch .. Paper Dolls." h's far from • Heaven, which intelliacnlt but h's the best \Wtten
begins toniaht on and most aubsuntial 1prime--time. NBC. tS the exccp-soap opcr9. Tben apin:-that's really
ti on. The former not :sayina much. ••n...pcr Dolls•• -mi-Su-... -y star of .. Little • r ,a • ...... ";.... INA '"!Pll~I' House on · the night watb ~ tw<>-hour ~1sodc before
t Prairie" plays an movana to 1t1 resular Tuesday nilht
an-I ~·n1 t spot next week. .... 1 o save .. Dallas'' d ••0yn • ,. bo ( people roll} them· . an as.y are a u
OXNWD•UMS (M.1a taH t 1U hlO t 1SO
• IN.IAK AT 1100
Rao DAWN (N-11) l"owrat U 1IO i 100 t 1JO 1 100 6 101JO
Cllftt bUWOf.! .~T.T.~l. S1H 111~ • 10111
8111 Mllrfllf 01n AlflUOJO GMOST8USTS•..., Sllowa at 1lhH lh<M
4 1U 71U t&S0/10 MM
STADIUm a
~ ..
T•WOMM tll-.0 ...... "'"' ••cllelor l'ertr (A)
nva.•o":r .. ...... (IQ''"' '•rtllf'• (A)
selves with dis. the .oil !ndustry and" power and ~ plaTc of kindness ~·~n. Falcon Crest ii about. the N•f'L& u•• ,., 1111DtA1tA,.,.... a n. .... u .. CN) ~ ha · w1ne1ndu1trvandf.!wcrandft9u1on AT 111•1110S T __ _...._ .,.., '"u C•Peafure an c nty .. , _.... I 1121 '7141 Shows., UtOO 1110 Tll• Llat ltlrflfltff(N)
· It'• almost 11 if HollywoOd has and. "Paper Dols" is abOut tbe • to101 1:00 '''° • tt100 altted to one way of lookina at TV fashion-model industry and power tN 70 MM
fife, while Landon, writin1 scripts ft and passion. K'lifituO;l 2] ;~Av:u =•Mlfta• ) :'J~c''!°.·~~"( .. O)) his home in M~ibu, sees thin.as (rom · · · It 1pons a chic aJamor that pu_l$ it ---- - . ..
a completely distinct point of view. somewhere bet.ween. the .. ostentatious UNDU THC 1 ••D1u• -~ el-•n""' of Dynast~ and the ............ -c•> At ..--
11
'
0
Tbat'awhvaroundNBrrt,Landonis' -.-"" .__ 1iio. cono11 "' o~ .,..,.
beine·.....:11cdt.J-usofMali u.''Out of earlhl, er excesses of ••• las." Bu,t. U •H l ••• l iOO D•str•~•r (N) •t ,,,,. C•Hlt COlllll ..... ~ ... 1 •"' p 7itl • tiao t 1ot 111' a. t1H Tiie o .. troyer (flG)
deference to his· JD<:ato"' he aayt un ik~ u1ose two soaps,. •r.r Dolls
they should call him "Moses of oc:c:u.ona:tly looks at 1.uet and ukl t-;..-..:::::11:=11110"1111•"Ea·'•"'•C111Wr••••u.=•='=2 ::'":s:EE=::u;:;111;;;•=:,.._;:mro.;: .. ==:•c:"E:•:";•;:vt::;1~•~·~ttltll;;;;:;":::!!l!!~_J Malibu... quesuo111 about morahty.
Either way. Landon is the Walt Disney or pnme time ..
.. Hiah,,..ay to Heaven" starts with a
twist on the kind of hero only Landon
?takes anymore. Instead. of ridin& off mto the sunaet, Jonathan Smith is ~in from the sunset. He's been
sent bY his friend upswn to teach
some leuons oflove.
"Nothina is free in thia world," a man, dcmandina S 10 for a ride. tells the hitcbhik.ina Smith.
"Kindneu is,0 says Smith, and be
walklon.
A Jot of the show'1 li~tness comes
from Landon'• inside 1okes with the
audience. We know he s an anael; the people be meeu don't.
To wit: Where does he 'et all his
pi:ops? ·:A f~cnd of mine, ' be aays
with a b11 pm. At .uotber point. be
aays with a twinkle; "I don't sleep
ipuch." .
Toniaht'1 tw~hour·pilot -writ·
ten. produced and directed by land·
on -SW1 Helen Hayes as a resident
of a retirement home, which is beina
sold for profit by a bottom·linc bUsinessman. Smith and his cohort. a
convened cynic played by Victor
FteDCh • .scheme to protec:t the rai-
dcnu and 11ve their home.
In some waya, this abow is like a
walk in the park, with the walker
developina a case of beat.stroke.
There's too much heavenly sunshine.
There's cenainty warmth and carina here, but there 1 also ·ample over-
1implification and preachiness.
~ But it counu for sometbina that
0 Hifbway to Heaven" is not of-ferm~ and Landon ii libble in the role. 1 ne hope ii that, in the future,
the series Will offer more subtle
Technical
Emmys
awarded
· LOS ANOELfS ~AP)-"A Street· car Named Desire,' an ABC Theater Presentation, won four Emmy
Awards and ABC topped the neiworb with I l awards Sunday as
the Academy of Television Arts cl
Sciences honored excellence in the
creative arts.
"A Streetcar Named Desire" and ita producen awept 1ward1 in the
catcaories of art direction, mm edit·
ina, lilm sound mWna ano cine mat~
araphy u plaudit• were handed out at
the 36th annual technical Emmy
Awards banquet at the Century Plaza
Hotel.
• 0 A Street.car Named Desi~." tele-
vised March • Mt the only limited
serie. to pin four honors. althoup
four other 1how1 won two tcchniCal
Emmy•, iocludina ABC1 hiahly ~c
clai.med "The Day After," NBC•
.. The Duck Factory," and two Public
BrOadcutina System prcaentation1,
"A Walk Throu&h The 20th Century
With Bill ¥,oycn" and "A-Sona For
Dead Warrion."
Tbat'anottoaaythatitevertttstoo
serious, but, for this acnre, puttina
makeup on a blemish is propas ovCT never ack.nowled&in& that any exist ;,..._.._ __ ,,,.
Laurie Caswell (Terry Farrell),
ostensibly a normal teen·qer with
normal parent" is drawn mto the biah world of fashion, des_pite the
concerns of her mother (Jennifer
Warren), a formCT model.
••1t•1 all the wrona values. You'll
think that looks are the only thinp
that count." Dinah Caswell tells her
dauahter. Laurie becomes a cover &irl. tbreat-
enina her toehold in the real world.
One counterpoint is the spoiled,
tempestuous teen-aae superstar
Tayrn Blake. (Nicollette Sheridan),
who1 underneath it al~ wants to be a
f'CIUllT kid but is corrupted by two
catty cliches: her pushy ataae mother
(Brenda Vaccaro) and the snooty.
modelina aaency head, Racine
(Morpn Fairchild.)
Vaccaro ma~ to flesh out her
characier, but Fairchild tries too bard
to do a Jo.n Collins imitation with
her transparent ··dahlinss" and stud·
ied phonineu. endina up witb a
lauahable caricature. Another counterpoint is Blair
Harper Fenton· (Mimi Roaen),
Racine's top model the past 10 years.
Blair is nea.rinl 30, a never-never land
for some beauty queens. She's also
tom between pride 1n her profeuionaJ
1uccesa and her desire to IWt a family
with hJf dotina husband (Richard
Beymer.)
Every show like th.is needl a
patriarch or matri.arch, and that'• tbe
rote of Uoyd Bridaes. He plar. powerful Grant Harper, the bead o a
cosmetics co~omerate. ln one scen~1he tells an mfluential TV aossip
that me two are much alike:
.. We're both feed.in& the public
tute, .. say• Grant.
RUFFELL' I '
UPHLITllY, 110.
F• Tiii •eat Of T• Lh
1922 HMmt aw .. COSTA IEA -Ml-115.
FREE
Freebie· a got news about our
NEW, LARGER SHRIMP-and a generous offer to go with It!
Juat f()( trying our new 6·P1ece
Shrimp Olnntr, you'll get two
extra pieces of our new, Jatger
ahrlmp-abaolutely FREEi
• COSTA MF SA •
COWARDS "IT•• r f'll .... ' .. Tllwlt• ._ "WfrT_.f'I)
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"ID II. n. I ** .. &II rua "'IUCIUS" Pll
HIWAY39 (:' * "fllft1 .... (I)
Pltl$
"UCIRll PllTT" (R)
ORANGE ~ ll14J .,,. 1•110 ..... .... Ami,.,.""' Cel
* * SUP£A SWAP MEETS E"'l SAT. a 14i-*Y • *
J ••'Irr' .'\~ iPY " '' ,.. '14 1'11.t 4.'' ·•
. fll NIS PU1S .._. Tll Mii .... ...__. tll _..
1. "Tll-----" L"lm__.&11 l"W•--&11
.._.. .. "911.1111-.· 1 '•ITllSTUS" (KJ
~~~~~~====---
J
' Douglas ge~s
order for six M C 11 M D id new jetliners c a ey' ac av
Standinavt nAirlinesSystembas have asso.ciate status
orde~ ix new M0.80 scne JCt· •
linen yalued at bout$ l SO millio~ lo Lortoda MCC.lley of fountain Valley and Daa1el MacDavtd of trv~ne
be dCh~crcd I te next tear. ccordm1 have been named associates of Gilbert ~· Aaodatet, a taauna ~di
to. officials at the Long Be ch Douglas architectural finn. McCalley whOJOilled Gilbert Aja io l 98 l, '· sen1or.Pt0JCC
Aircraft Co. . . • . architect· Mac David, part o/ the fimuince l 982, is senior proJect d 1gner.
DouaJas, a d1vl.61on of St. Louis, ' • • • · · i "'· Id Mo.·bascd McDonnell Ooualas , Stev~ Mar~l1, president of PrHU.e Accommodaltl!>ll• m Irvine. • tn~ go
• Corp .. saidTuc$daythatSASncedsto · rrlCdal wanner an the Biltmore Hocef1 Grr.at Olympic Room Race. !.blrleyf
planes to handle increased traffic. !ffn. director of proaram de~~re~t for the Newpon Beach 0111d1edc:e o
SAS ha$ increted its full·fare traffic C.ldwell ..._.,, is the silver m wmocr. The medals were awtr to
by more than 20 percent m Europe in
the past three years and by 20 percent
on intercontinental rout~ an the past
two years.
DouiJas said that as of Sept. I, it
had received orders for 46S of its
quiet, fuct~fficient MD-80 twin·Jets
and bad delivered 172.
Levi's quarterly
earnings shows
case of the blues
Levi Strauss &. Co., the nation's
largest maker of jeans, Tucsc;Say
reported a 6S percent decrease in
third quaner earninas from the same
period in 1983. attributing part of ttie.
loss to a consumer move away from
denim. The company reported that sales
were down 8 percent for the quarter,
with net income of$22.S million, or
61 oeo1' per share, on sales af$718.8
million.
Thinfquarter sales for Levi Strauss
USA were $S24.1 million, off' 7
percent from 1983, and Levi Strauss
International reported sales of$ J 42.8
million for the third quarter, down 17
percent from the third quarter of 1983. .
MC CA.UEY CASWF.LL C DAVID
individuals who booked the hotel Cora ~nfercocc or meeti.na between AUf. 13
and Dec. 2 l. 1984 For each bookioa of2S rooms or more, partici~nts received
tickets that qualified them for mcdah and prizes.
• • • • • Maueca ca.well has joined Medld Eqaltlea as a project manqer m th•
diversified aut estate development and investment finn. She will be baSed in
the finn's Newport Beach headquarters aQd it5 San Diego office, will!
responsibility for overseeina Ill aspects of a project's develP.pment from
architectural p\A111 to closina of escrow. Cawell was formerly with Biltoll Hoteh
Corp., where she was involved in development of the AuJilelm Rllto• and
Towers. • • • Robb Norrta of Irvine has been promoted to sales ~r for the
Southern California tqion of Noma, Beu• Is SlmplCNI, located 10 Newpon
Beach. Norris, previously_ senior commercial marketing representative for the
firm's Newpon Beach office, is a five-year vetenan of the real estate industry
and recipient of the Pretlcleat'1 Award in the pest two r::,ror oqotiatin1 thl
putcst number of transactions in the reaion. Norris, cl Simpson offen
commercial brokeraie, propeny ma~ment, mottp&e financing and rea.
estate advisory 1CtVices and has offices an eiaht western citiea. • • • • Edwan L MarluiO bas joined Wutera Dlcltal Corp. of lmne u via
president and aenerat manager of Storqe Management Products. In bis ne~ ~~ Marinaro is-responsible for dirution and development of Westen
Diaital'• Storaje Management Products. He comes to Western ~tal frorr
Momeahm COm_P.'~r_ Sy1tema lltera&tl._. where he wu president an(
N r"1 1 t d CEO. Western QiaitaJ designs and 1ups>GW storqe and communication! ew 011.J cers e ec e controllers for office automation and rrucrocomputcr industries. • • • The new officers for the Orange Michel J . VHpu bas been promoted to senior vice J>('CSidcnt an(
Obstetrical and GynccoloaicaJSocie· manager of VaJeacta BuCOrp'1 trust division in Irvine. Vaupan bas beel
ty are Larry Stoneburner, M.D.. manager of the .division since he join~ ~h~ fll'tn abouta y~ ~· .B:efo.re tliat
president, practicing in Westminster; Vau&han h~d ~·sown firm . Va~ghan s c1v1c and commuruty act1viuea include
Tomio .Hirota, M.O., vice*president membersh1ps108oagHospltal 1H!Claband thcNe1rponllarborOlamber
· practicifta in Santa Ana· Richard Commerce. Goldman, M.0 . secretary, 'practicing l ~vld Scluabertla has been appoint~ ,Yioe president of mof'tllle bankinj
in Orange; and Allan David. M.O., for lrvme-bued CiduD_• Groep_. a sut>Sid1ary of we.sen la&en&ate ~
treasurer practicing in Irvine. and the mon~ banking a~lliate of Citheu 11u1.fl Md ~ ;AIMdadoa ~~~------~~~--~-~~~-----~,~be~a~~t~H~~n~~~~~y~M~~~ of MeniU Ftaucial in Santa Ana. His office is located at Citizen• Thrift'•
Anaheim Hills branch.
I . . . .
lmperial's Tomorrow SavingssM
Jolua P. Dye of Job.a Dye Alsodatea, i.e .. of Costa Mesa bas been admit~
to The ReaiJtry of Financial PJ.annina Practitioncn, the swidard·settin,f
• PJ"Olf&m in the financial planning industry. It identifies people who work wit!
clients in the financial planninl field and wbo meet certain requirtmenu fo
educaffon. experience and practice. ~e is one of 294 financial planne
: nationwide who have meet the qualifications, out of more than 4,000 membe
of the ID&erutloul A•soclatloa for Flauclal Plamataa.
• • •• Rlclaard D. Strack of Newport Beach has been appointed director oJ
lea ina for Ceaser Developlileet of Newport Beach; with res~nsibility f~
'overseeing the leasing of the finn's shopping centers. Before Joining Centes
Development, Struck was sates manager with the lrvtae CO.
Rates shown (compounded quanerly for higher yields!) are recent, but subject to change
daily-indicating approximate current earnin~ potential if you deposit as much .or more than
each minimum amount shown. Other rates and terms available-call for detailS.
$500 $10,000 . $20,000 $50,000 $7S,OOO $100,000 +
~ . .
Terms Rate Yield Rate Yield Rate Yield Rat Yield Rate Yield Terms Rate Yield
OvE R THf CouNT£R
Da.ys 10.900 11 .354 t 1.200 11.679 11.350 I l.842 11.500 12.006 r 1.600 12.114 30-59 Days ( 1.800 12.332 .
Days 11 .450 11.951 I 1.750 12.278 I 1.850 12.387 l2.000 12.551 12.100 12 660 Go·89 Days l 1.850 12.383
I 1.800 12.332 12.100 12.660 12.200 12-770 12.350 12.934 12.400 12.989 90·119 12.715
l 2·231 I Mos. 12.050 12.606 12.350 12.934 12.450 13.043 12.550 13.153 12.600 13.208 120-149 Day 12 .715
24-:,5 12.200 12.770 12.500 13.098 12.600 13.208 12.700 13.318 12.750 13.373 1,.098 .
36·47 12.200 12.770 12.500 I 3.098 tl.600 13.208 12.700 13.318 12.750 13.373 365 13.208
For current rat and yJcl and to open )'Our accour11, call
the Tomonow vio mce Cent r nearest you, dlr ct or collect:
(213) 680-9292 in Lo Ang J (714) 858-0825 in Orang
(619) 268-4797in an Diego
0 Jmpg~tion . ... @ ~Tomorrow Begins TQ<Jay.
•
II
On
the
..}
,~
•
.
• \
w HAT Ny s E D :_,
GoLo QuoTlS
---- -
ME T~Ls QuoHs
~-----
. That ·s an apt description of both bu Iness and
bu nes p opl alon th Ora11 e C ast. Tok ep tr k of
wh r compa11te ar gotngand \Vhich p opl ar h lping
th mg th r .ju t ~ at h ~c~ dit Lh1 • -r , da 111 th
Bu In -~t~o~ of yourn w Daily Pilaf
(
•
..
DEATH NOTICES
PIERCE BROTHERS
BELL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
110 Broadway
Cost• Mesa
~2-9 tSO
IAL TZ BERGERON
IMfTH TUTHILL
WEITCUFF CHAPl!L
427 E. 17th St
Costa Mesa
6'46-9371
PACIFIC VIEW
MEMORIAi! PARK
Cemetery • Mortuary
Ch pel • Crematory
3500 Pacific View Orrve
Newport Be.ch
&44-2700
r
' ' '
-.
U s_her in season with a brunch
Menu mixes baking ideas,
fau·s plentiful fruits ·
°Come for brunch.;' It's the ~st way to
entertain friends in a relaxing manner.
With the advent offall's cooler weather, you can
choose a brunch menu to take advantage of delicious
baking ideas plus the season's plentiful fruits.
Guests will delight in classic quiche baked in
crepe-lined muffin cups. They taste as good as they .
look. Simple chicken salad wrapped in biscuit dough
is another .main-d,ish idea. Top· it wth a smooth
cheesy sauce just before serving.
Fres~J>aked fruit and nut crescents add a sweet
touch.)Fqr-' burst of color 'round the buffet table,
enjoy $£rwft salad complemented witb cream cheese
toppinB laeed with lemon.
. Bruneb -you and your guests are roing to love
lt. I . •
'•
· · · RAl8llf-W ALlfUT CRESCENTS
% capt blsca.lt mix
'141 cap cold water
1 tablet~a aranalated sacar
3 tablespoom marpriae, softened
14 cap packed browa 1a1ar
% tabletpooa1 ral1lu
% tablespoou ell~ walData
1 egyolk
1 tablespoon water
Glaze, recipe follows
Heat oven to 42S degrees. Mix baking mix, 'h cup
cold water and the granulated sugar until soft dough
forms; ~at vigorously 30.scconds. Gently smooth
dough mto a ball on surface well-floured with t?akinJ
mix. Knead 10 times. Roll or pat dough into 12-inch
circle; spread with margarine.
Mix brown sugar, raisins and walnuts; sprinkle
over margaririe. Cut into 12 wedges. Roll up, beginning
at rounded edges. ~lace crescents, with points
underneath, on uncreased cookie sheet; curv"e slightly.•
Mix egg yolk and 1 tablespoon water. brush over
crescents. Bake until &olde1.11brown, 10 to 12 minutes:
cool slightly. Prepare Glaze·; drizzle over crescents.
Makes l 2crescents. ·
Glue
1 tablespoon mar1arlne
Yi cap powdered 111ar
14 teaspoon vullla
% to 3 teaspoons water
Heat margarine over medium heat until delicate
brown. Mix margarine and remaining ingredienu until
smooth and Of desired consi tency. .
CREPE CUPS LORRA11'.E
Crepes,reclpefollows
t caps (I oaaces) lbredded Swit1 clteae :
t tabletpoom all-purpose flou
1 cap laall-ud-balf ..
1 teaspoon salt
V. teaspoon pepper
%eggs
. I 1llcet bacon. crisply cooked Ud cnmbled
Prepare Crepes. Heat oven to 350 degrees. Grease·
12 medium mi.tffin cups, 2111. x 11/.i inches. Toss cheese
with flour. Mix half-and-balf, salt. pepper and eggs; stir
into cheese mixture. Stir in bacon, Fit crepes in muffin
cups: filJ each with 2 table$poons cheese mixture. Bake
30 mjnutes. Makes 6 servings. ·
Crepes: Lightly grea~ 6-or 7-inch skillet; heat
until hot. Beat l cup biscuit mix, lf• cup milk and 2eggs
with hJd ~ater until smooth.. · .
For each crepe, paur2 tablespoons1"utr into
skillet; rotate kitlet until batter coven bobom.CoOk
untilgoldenbrown.Gcntlylooscn~withmetal
spatula; tum and cook other side untilaoldcn brown.
Stackae~plaoina waxcd~betMen~.
D.-alMM Tip: Prcpare,Crepcs. Siack6coolcd
crepes between waxed J>4lper. Wrap it aluminum foil
andrefrigerateupto2da~t.
'CBICDK SALAD TWl8T
WITH GOLD&Jlt SAUCE
% nps cet-. ~e41 ~
.Yi Cllp aw.ly sUee4 eelery
Ya cap touted dlvered AllDOIMls
~ cap mayoaaile
t tablespeoa1 lemoa Jake
1 tablespooa tt.ely dtopped oaloll
'4 teaspooa salt
% caps bltnll mb
Yi cap coW water
1 egyolk
1 tablespooa water
Golda Saace, reelpe lollow1
Heat oven to 425 degrees. Mix chicken, eel~,
almonds, mayonnaise, lemon juice. onion and salt;
reserve. Mix b&kin1 mix and l/z cup cO&d wa1er until soft
dough forms; beat vigorously 20 strokes. Gently
smooth dough into a ball on surface floured with bMiJ11
mix. Knead 5 times. Roll dough into rectaniJe, 14 x I l
inches; place on uncreased cooO: sheet.
Spoon chicken mixturclengibwiscdownccnlCrof
rectangle. Make cuts; 21h inches long. at 1-incb in1erVals
CP.leUe ---OWCll~)
I SENSIBLE EATING
Diet eases
htgll blood
pressure
Time-saving dividends: Bonus meals
-By AMY SANDERS, M.A.
" .. 2 ... Dl9Wlll
Hypertension is not the con-
dition of a person who is overly
tense and nervous; it refers to high
blood pressure.
The reason there's so much talk
and concern about hypertension is
that, usually there are no symptoms
involved, yet it's a major risk factor
leading to strokes, heart attacks and
kidney failure. I was horrified
recently, when a physician friend
commented that hypertension is
something we have to expect when
we reach middle aJ,e. Not so!
Altho\iah 60 million or 33 per·
cent of American adults have it,
hyptrtension is rare in parts of the
world that have not yet been
westernized. Contrary to papular
belief, blOOd pressure need not
increase with a person'• 'IC·
Smokina. alcohol. caffeine,
stress, pollution, hidden anger and
frustration all raise l>lood;pressW'C
by causina muscles to contrKt.
which squeeze blood vessels, f orc-
ina the hcan to pump harder.
Blood pressu~ is also affected by
exen:isc, obesity and diet. There is
much we can dO to control, and in
many case , normalize blood prcu·
-urc.
Altho"ib ICICnliitS IUll have not
been able to prove that :r. hiah
(Pl ...... DIST/C2)
While burgers, brats and stealcs are papular
choices when barbecuing for two, larger cuts of
meat provide time-saving dividends for small
families in the form of bonus meals.
A sirloin tip beef roast is perfect for the grill.
Because it contains no bone and little fat, a 3-
pound roast easily provides two beany meals for
two plus plenty of sandwich fixin's.. Beef roasts
also are good buys sancc they frequently are
.supermarket specials. As an added bonus. a roast
can be .. barbecued" indoors if the weather
dictates.
For best results when barbecuing a larse cut
of meat such as a roast. use the indirect method of
cooking. When the coals are ash $f&Y. arrange •
them around a drip pan. Before adding the meat,
qu1clcly judge the temperature by holding your
hand, palm side down, at &rill height. lf you can
keep it there for four1scconds, the temperature is
medium and the coals are ready. Spnnlclc the
roast with salt and pepper.
For a 3-pound roast, grill, covered, l hour
and 15 minutes to I hour and 30 minu~ or to
desired degree of doneness.· (lo roast meat
indoors, place meat on rack of1>roiler pan. ~eat
325 degrees. 2 hours and 15 minutes or to desired
donen .) Indoors or outdoors.. brush frequently
with barbttuc sauce durin& the last 45 minutes.
For ca ier carvins; let the roast stand 15 minute~. Mcanwhik, use the grill to toast thick "li~ofFrcnch or Italian bread. For added fluor.
brush ices encrously with ~f\ened marprinc
ned it pated parmesan chccsc or herbs
rran brtad round cdgts of Jrill. turning
~ octa tonally to toa l evenly. • • .
A m kc-ahead vegetable salad 1s a 1 l.
rcf1 1 ocom niment for· any ~ en· hahan d ina lend in wn zest to
crunchy cucum r and cri ~tender roo ~
uhflov. rand rTOt mblc Vege blcTo
• 1 d rly in the l) or then· ht bcfote so flavors
>tll de clop fully. Ju~t before serving. Wllh
• hreddcd 1 bera lettuce. ( tore mnainina f~h
ies in the rcfri rator en per. Cucumber and •
cau iflo r n be "tortd up to a week. carrots a
long as two weeks.)
VEGETABLE~ SALAD
'4 cap ltallu tlreuba&
~ cep callllflowereti, jjittially c1 tkji,
dra1M4
Pi\ cvp carrot slices, parUally ceoked., dramN
~ cap Ct1C1Ullbu aUca
1 cep Uredded leu.ce
Pour dressing over combined cauliflower,
carTOt and cucumber. Cover. Utarinate in refriger-
ator scvcra.1 hours. Drain. rtscrving marinade.
Combine vegetables and lettuce; toss Ji&btly:-
Serve with reserved mannade. 2 servings.
Refrigerate the remainia, roast as soon as it
has cooled. lf}ou plan to use the meat wilbin a
~y. or two.· wrap it tightly and store in rbe
refrigerat-Or. For longer stOf'alC, wrap sliced meat
in moisture-vaporproof wrap and freeze in meal·
size portions.. The rooked bttf can be frozen up 10
a month.
On a night when you're too tired to coot.
create an impre$$ive wad with the sliced rooked
bttfand &be fresh veietables you have on band.
Slice the cooked bttfinto strips and arran,e tricb
the ~tables on crisp salad ,.,.ccns.. Serve with•
f.o·onre pourable dressing.
-.
llllJPilll WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 19 1-.
TIJ your bfft
PNrreclpee .
with thl1 Y••r'•
bumper crop. C2.
~-
U s _h er in season with a brunch
Menu mixes baking ideas,
falrs plentiful fruits ·
°Come for brunch.;' It's the ~st way to
entertain friends in a relaxing manner.
With the advent of fall's cooler weather. you can
choose a brunch menu to take advantage of deliciou$
baking ideas plus the season's plentiful fruits.
Guests will delight in classic quiche baked in
crepe-lined muffin cups. They taste as good as they .
look. Simple chicken salad wrapped in biscuit dough
is another .main-dish idea. Top'it wth a smooth
cheesy sauce just before serving.
FrestvJ>aked fruit and nut crescents add a sweet
touch.)Fqr-' burst of color •round the buffet table,
enjoy $Cruft salad complemented witb cream cheese
toppinJ lated with lemon.
. Bruneb -you and your guests are ioing to love
lt. I -•
'•
· · · RAJSllf-W ALKUT CRESCENTS
% capt blscalt mix
~ cap cold water
1 cable1~n 1nmalated aa1ar
3 tablespoo111 mar1artae. softened
14 cap packed brown 1a1ar
% tabJetpooDI raltillt
% cablespoou cla~ walDats
1 egyolk
1 tablespoon water
Glaze, recipe follows
Hratoven to425degrees. Mixbak.ingmix1 Ylcup
cold water and the granulated sugar until soft dough
forms; beat vigorously 30 seconds. Gently smooth
dough into a ball on surfaec well-floured with t?ak.ina
mix. Knead 10 limes. Roll or pat dough into 12-inch
circle; spread with margarine.
Mix brown sugar. raisins and walnuts; sprinkle
overmargarirle. Cut into 12 wedges. Roll up. beginning
at rounded edges. Placecresccnts, with points
underneath, on unlJ'eased cookieshect;curvesligbtly. •
Mix egg yolk and I tablespoon water. brush over
crescc~ts. Bake until goldeni6rown, l 0 to 12 minutes;
cool shghtly. Prepare Glaze·; drizzle over crescents.
Makes 12 crescents. ·
Glue
1 cablespoon mar1arlne
~ cap powdered 1ugar
14 teaspoon vanilla
% to 3 teaspoons water
Heat margarine over medium heat until delicate
brown. Mix margarine and remaining ingredients until
smooth and of desired consistency. .
CREPE CUPS LORRAJJlfE
Crepes, recipe f 0Uow1
t cups (I OllDC'el) shredded SWll1 dteete
% cabletpoou all·pa.rpote Ooar
1 cup Mlf ·Ud·balf •
1 teaspooa salt
~ teaspoon pepper
Zeus
. I 1Uces bacon, crisply cooked ud cra.mbled
Prepare Crepes. Heat oven to3S0degrecs. Grease·
12medium muffin cups, 211i x 11/4 inches. Toss cheese
with flour. Mix half-and-i}alf, salt, pepper and eggs; stir
into cheese mixture. Stir in bacon~Fitcrepcs in muffin
cups; fill each with 2 tablespoons cheese mixture. Bake
30 minutes. Makes 6 servings. ·
Crepes: Lightly grease 6-or 7-inch skillet; heat
until hot. Beat l cup biscuit mix, l/•cupmilkand 2eggs
with hTd ~ter until smooth.. .
For each crepe, Pour21ablespoons ~Utt into
killet; rotate skillet until batter coven bottom. Cook
until golden brown. Gently loosen edaewith metal
spatula; tum and cook other side uritil aolden brown.
Staek ere~ placing waxed paper bttwcen each.
O.•lae .. ~ PrcpareCrepes.Siack6coolcd ere~ between waxed~~· Wrap it aluminum foil aodrcfrigerateupto2days. .
'CBICDJlf SALAD TWl9T
WITH OOLDltN SAUCE
% e11p1 cat-ap ~N etaiaea
.~ cap cw.17 tUcM eelery
~ cap touted 1Uvere4 almoa.,
~ cap mayoaeelw
i tablespeea1 lemea jldce
l tablespooa ftaely daoppd --
'141 teupooetalt
t caps bllnlt mis
~ cap cold water
1 egyolk
1 tablespooa water
Golden Saace, recipe lollow1
Heat oven to 42S degrees. Mix chicken, eel~,
aJmonds, mayonnaise, lemon juice, onion and salt;
reserve. Mix bakina mix and Yz cup cold water until soft
dough forms; beat vigorously 20 strokes. Gently
smooth dough into a ball on surface floured with bUiJ11
mix. Knead 5 times. Roll dough into rect.anale. I 4x U
inches; place on ungreased oooJOe sheet
Spoon chicken mixture lengthwise down center of
rcctan&)e. Make cuts; 2'h inches Iona. at I-inch in1Crvals
~ ... BR01'CB/O&J
'SENSIBLE EATING
Diet eases
high blood
pressure
Time-saving dividends: Benus meals
-By AMY SANDERS, M.A.
......... '*'""-'
Hypertension is not the con-
dition of a person who is overly
tense and nervous; it refers to high
blood pressure.
The reason there's so much talk
and concern about hypertension is
that, usually there are no symptoms
involved, yet it's a major risk factor
leading to strokes, heart attacks and
kidney failure. I was horrified
recently, when a physician friend
commented that hypertension is
something we have to expect when
we reach middle a1e. Not so!
Altholi&h 60 mdlion or 33 per-
cent of American adults have it,
hypCrtension is rare in pans of the
world that have not yet been
westernized. Contrary to popular
belief. blOOd pressure need not
increase with a person's qc.
Smokin1. alcohol. caffeine,
stress, pollution, hidden anger and
frustration all rai1el>lood p.ressurc
by caus1na muSclcs to contract.
which tqueeze blood vessels, fore.
ins the hcan to pump harder.
Blood pressure is also affected by
exercise, obesity and diet. There is
much we can dO to control, and jn
many case , nonnalize blood press·
-urc. .• Althouah scientists sull have not
been able to prove that )a h1&h
(Pl ...... DIST/C2)
'
While burgers, brats and steaks are popular
choices when barbecuing for two, larger cuts of
meat provide time-saving dividends for small
families in the form of bonus meals.
A sirloin up beef roast is perfect for the grill.
Bceause it contains no bone and little fat, a 3-
pound roast easily provides two heany meals for
two plus plenty of sandwich fixin's. Beef roasts
also are good buys since they frequently are
.supermarket specials. As an added bonus. a roast
can be .. barbecued" indoors if the weather
dictates.
long as two weeks.)
VEGETABLE~SALAD
•:. cap ltallu dreubt1
~ caallDOwerets, partially ctiik~
~ cap carrot slices, parClally CMked., dra.IDe4
!.\ cap c.cunber llJcet
1 cep Uredde4 lett11ce
Pour dressing over combined cauliflower,
carrot and cucumber. Cover: 01arinate in refriger-
ator several boun. Dram, reserving marinade.
Combine vegetables and lettuce; toss lightly.-
Serve with reserved marinade. 2 servinp. For best results when barbecuing a lar&e cut
of meat such asa roast. use the indirect method of
cooking. When the coals are ash y.lY. arrange
them around a drip pan. Before adding the meat,
quickly judge the temperature by holding your
hand, 1>3lm side down, at &rill height. If you can
keep it there for fouriseconds, the temperature is
medaum and the coals are ready. Sprinkle the
roast with salt and pepper.
· Refrigerate rhe remainiIJi roast as soon as it
has cooled. If you plan to use rbe me.at within a
day or two. · wrap it tightly and store i11 the
refrigerator. For longer storqe. wrap meed meat
in moisrure-vaporproofwrap and freeze i.n meal-
size ponions. Tbe cooked bttf ce be frottn up r.o
a month.
For a 3-pound roast, griU, covered l hour
and l S mmutes to l hour and 30 minutes. or to
desired degree of doneness.· (Jo roast meat
indoors, place meat on rack ofbro1ler pan. Bake at
325 dcgrccs. 2 hours and 1 S minutes or to desired
doncness.) Indoors or outdoors. brush frequently
with bat°bc'cue sauce durina the last 45 minutes.
For easier carvi~ let the roast st.and IS
minute . Meanwhile, use the grill to toast thick li~ofFrcnch or Italian bread. For added fla~or.
brush i encrou$ly with softened margarine
ncd .,;t ;rated pannesan c.hccsc or httbs.
Arran bread round edacs of 'Jrill, tuminl'.
~ ionall> to toast r\enly. -
A m kc-.ahc d ~tablt salad is a light. rcfi ing ccom niment for · any barbecued
n ltahan d I\& lend$ instant 'lest lO
crunch) cu um r and m p-:tcndcr C'OOkcd
uhflowcr and rrots. mblc Vegi table To
• tad early in the l) or then' t before so flavors
'111 de, clop fully. Ju t before serving, t with ~ reddC'd iceberg lettuce. ( tore rcmainin& frc_h
v i an the refri rator en per. Cucumber and •
u iOo r can be torcd up to a week.. carrot a
On a night when you're too tired to ooo.t,
ciatean impl"CS$i~ wad with rbe ~jced c:OotOd
beef and cbe fresh v~etables you have on hand.
Slice the cooked bttfinto stripsed arraqe •itb
the vqietables on cri p salad ~ns. Serve wilb 1
nvonte pourabk dressin&.
Plentiful pears, apples filling produce displays
As the summer fruit season shoppen. With Ott&on, Callfomia and are k'nown as the summer pear. have soared in populamy. fhese Pippins~ n ti rm green apple frc-last of the enson plums, and they
com to a cl nd few pc ch nd Washington producing about They feature and extra·tbin kin pears enjoy a later season and arc qucntly used an baking, are up and re in good supply at this time. ·
plum and nectarine re av Hable. 90 percent of the entire h rvest, \hat turns translucent yellow when more durable because the) have prices re very rea on ble. Pric Avoca(Sos re plentiful and
consumers anr turning to later· they are truly a western specialty. the fruit is ril)C. Fle h is white, thickers1uns. on apples u ually stan out high~ and reasonably_ priced. The creamy,
season fruit, including pears and fh~ current crop is tuminaout to smooth and juicy. They are avail· Apples are makinf their debut taper off as upplies increase. delicious Ha s variety lends to all
apples ofall types. bt one of the best in years with able through November and arc from Washington this week. Red A few late sea on varieties of sorts' of salads and a<id color and
FRUITS delicious eating quality and preferred for canning and desserts. Delicious. Golden Delicious and plums are still available. Red af!d variety to other dishes.
Nicknamed "buner fruit,i" pc rs JO~cous appearance. Rroduction Winter pear vanetics include Granny Smiths arc the major black plums should be very S\\CCt m Tomato quality should be im·
have been around since the Stone is high and pnt"Cs are reasonable. D'Anjou, Bose and Cornice. Re· varieties. flavor and prices are ste dy. Italian proving short!Y· The heat alwaY.s
• Age and are a arcat favorite of Bartletts are the principle variety cently red varieties of these type' Califom1a supplies of Newtown prune plums are traditionally the causes extensive damaae to this
----~---~----....._ _____ _.;,. _ __.....___-----~...;....--"'-:-----------~--:-....:...---------,,...,,.,.-~-__.._, delicate fruit and it takes about a week to return to flormal pro=
duction and quality. Look for
droppina prices this week on all
tomatoes. mcluding large and small
No Games ... No Gimmicks~ .. Everybody Wins With Stater's Low, Low Prices!
3 oz.
Meat Dept. Savings
L Ground Beef ..OTTO EXCEED s1 59 ean /!;,[yA;,,c~ l• •
Top Sirloin Steak :f~:l~~ LB S2~
. Back Ribs am l• 69C
Turkey' n~Jt!ss , . LI s1 .59
Tri-Tip Roast :J~~.ESS .a S2.59
Crab Legs a;;:Tl()N E• 51.49
C tfo h DILTAPAIDE ~ 29 a Is ::.~cl.'i'4ISIEO LB ~ '·
Bay Scallops i~f;,.,. LB S2.79
Compare these Low Prices
SOFT BATCH
8 VARIETIES
Keebler
CookieS
s•.39
S It MOlnON a ,LAIN O!I I001UD Syru~ LOG C:AI N
!l(Oi,11.All
• Ol~ATIN Jell tHAHTH
Dish Liquid oov•
MEADQw LEA ~ne .· . ers ~4tr_
B th T. t1A1111 1"01 a issue r~:l O!!OI004TQJ.r
48 oz.
SUNNY DELIGHT FLORIDA
Citaas
Pull ch
64-0Z.
Frozen Food Favorites
Apple Pie 'D""'TON
Potato Crispers 0A[10A
Hash Browns ~r~l'A .. ,mt
Potatoes O'Brien ORE IO•
Party Pizza ~'~:T'°"
De I lo s PEl'l'flt100( FAllMS
• VA!llt'Till
Orange Juice MINUTEMAIO
Burritos :t:i:,.~mn
IOI-OZ age
1~~z S2.15
~•oz 51.79
5-0Z 2s~
Grocery Specials
Facial 1Tissue H~f!;o' .. 7'
American Singles KAAFT
Box Drinks ~t:,M::u
Cereal ~~L~~! ..
Peanut Butter t!1~~:: ..
Pine Sol ~~fru~r ..... ,
Napkins o.\l~N·
Green Beans 0::~7 ,01~ .. ,
TomatoSauce, r•Nl•o ...
...
1
23
....
24
,.... Wtod nw . ..... 20
2§ 26
...
PEPSI. DIET PEPSI, f>EPSI LIGHT. MTN. DEW,
PEPSI FREE, SUGAR FREE PEPSI FREE
2L1R
Garden Fresh Produce
l.15c
LI age
'" 79'¥
LG. FANCY
RIPE HASS
EXCELLENT QUALITY
Hanging
Pothos Avocactos
·~s~ EA. ~99
Stroh's Beer t;:lARCIA
Wine Coolers c~.-l
Scotch :rm""'<i"l
Amaretto ~·M~l .... 0
Vodka ~~~~lS
E&J Brandy
KESSLER AMERICAN ANCIENT AGE· Bour hon Whiskey
~-99 ~!'9 1 75-UTER
Frt . ""'
2.1 2.2
'I ..___
Al)\'l ·R 11s1m 11 a~M
(;\ AHANll'!t~
'" \Ith t llo 11.o r flft IYlld -ul '""'""\•If ltd•~ •d -"~ II dw "'•liltd W~Olftd wt
1 ;ii "' f1tn 11111 m.• ••ht~d '""141 • ~'" I Ill t .. • Ill tll' k•uN •n•btl~ \rte a1 1>¥• '"" lfrm 41 """..S'l'ftfV'd J>f"f" ._.._'Milin"" H ............ , 4t .. 1.tllt
uf M~Hlft.A\'
WE AEStRVE lHE RIGHT TO llMfl OR RC.l'"USf:
IAl.£9 TO COti!MfffaAL OEAl£RS OR WHOlESt.lE
•:'.-'..·,No Games ... No Gimm icks ... Ev erybody Wins With The Low Pr ice Leader~•::-~'. . ,.
• •
and cherry tomatoes.
Watermelon is plentiful and
reasonable in price. Mixed melons
are available this week. ·The
Crenshaw and pink and oranse
honeydews will begin to dwindle m
supply. Canary melons and Per-
sians should remain plentiful.
Lemons are hi&h in price, and
Quality is only 1acceptable. Limes
are better value. VEGETABLES
Lettuce prices are up, and ex·
pected to become more reasonable
next week. The heat caused over-
production and now there is a gap in
the mature crop. In a week, Arizona
lettuce will besin to come into the
Southern California area and tiaht
supplies will ease even further.
Increased supplies ofleaflettuce
such as romaine and butter lettuce
will be here during the next week1 so
the overall lettuce supply shoulo be
gradually improvina.
Broccoli is a good vegetable
value, with prices reasonable and
quality high. Dry onions are arriv-
ing from Lancaster and Stockton in
quantity. Prices will vary, due to
exporting factors but the quality
remains excellent. Noraold Russet
potatoes are at their peak and
Burbank Russets will soon be
available. ·
DIET ••• ..
Prom Cl
sodium diet leads to hypertension,
experiments with arumals and
many population studies stronJ!y
suggest sodium as -a contributtna
factor. This theory js not new;
ancient Chinese writinas contain
warnings of high salt intakes caus-
ing strokes.
Sodium is an essential nutrient,
but we only need from 1 to 3 arams
a day, not the 4 to 10 grams most of
us are taking in every day. Excess
·sodium in"Creases water retained in
the body, which in tum puts extra
strain on the heart and kidneys.
Sodium must also be held in
balance with potassium. Animal
food products are naturally hi&h in
sodium, with lesser amounts com-
ing from grains and vegetables.
Therefore, there is no need to add
salt or other forms of sodium to
food.
A diet rich in fruits and veg-
etables -watermelon, apricots,
bananas, dried 'fruits, oranges,
papayas, beans, tomatoes and
baked potatoes -is the best
potassium insurance.
limiring excess sodium takes
careful label readina. general
avoidance of highly processed
foods, and, of course, cutting out
salt an<1 salty foods. This includes
reducing intake of sodiwn-contain-
i ng foods such as soft drinks, baking
soda and bakin1 powder, bouillon
cubes, and over-the-rounter drugs
such as antacids and aspirin.
Recently, several researchers
have reported that most people
with hypertension are found to
have fess calcium and potassium in
their diets than those without the
disorder. Most of us don't even
consume the Recommended Daily
Allowance (RDA) for calcium. This
can be corrected by including about
two glasses of non-fat milk or
yogurt and a varietr. of vegetables
and beans to our daily meals.
One of the major factors con-
tributing to hypertension is obesity.
Therefore, if you have hi&h blood
pressure and are obese it is essential
that you embark upon a weight
reduction program. This is most
readily accomplished by a change in
eatin$ habits and an increase in
exercise.
Simply reduce your ca.lone in·
take by cuttin& down food ~rtions,
snacks and alcohol; avoid fbods
high in fats and su_gars, including
those from natural fruits and juices
as well as from refined SOW'OC1,
The usual treatment for hyper•
tension is medication and mild
sodium restriction. If, however,
diet were &iven more serious atten-
tion, many people would be ablC'to
forego medication, or at lcut be
able to reduce their dosaae. This is a
reasonable aoal, as all medications,
taken over a Iona period of'time,
can cause barmf ul side effects as
well as orpn damaac.
If many elders around the world
can have the same low blood
pressure as their youngsters and
live without the threat of vaseulat
disease, it'a worth usina the knowl· , edae we have to try to reverse the
hiah incidence of hyPCrtcnsion and
refatcd health hutfC1S.
OMPl:ETE
SPORTS
DAILY .
In the
DallJPlllt
•
Soup+ sandwich
schooltime treat
--
Eating solo
class topic
Meals are usually shared times in
our society, but because of divorce,
death of a spowe or close friend, or
by personal choice, increasipg
numbei'I of people are eatina ilone.
Frequently, for thete people, the
psycboloaical traumu associated
with mealtimes often lead to eatina
habits that are nutritionally un-.
aound, often durina times of stress
when poor nutritional practices can least be talerated physically. ,
The subject. "Eatina Alone1., will
be the topic of a two-part nealth education seminar at Golden West
Colleae, Huntinaton Beach, on
Fridays, Sept. 21 and 28. Chemistry
instructor Stan Winter, Ph.D., will
conduct the propams in the Health
Science buildinJ. room 131, from 7
to 10 p.m. Partaci_pants can register and pay a $9 fee for each session at
the door. ~
Continuin& education crCdit for
health care professionals is also
offered.
Discussion at the first session will
include sources of neptive feelings
when eatina alone and the resulting
poor eatina habits, methods of
rcsolvinJ psycholotical difficulties,
basic 1u1delines for &ood nutrition, and alternative eatina styles for one
person.
Tiie final tession will aive IUl$C'"
tions for nutritious and economical
aborpina and cooki~ and how to. dca with bun)'·UP eatina. eating
out, the lunch ptpblem and enter·
tainiq solo.
" • • • jlat Oent.ry will conduct an
Italian cookina teminar from 2 to 4
pm. Sunday, Sept. 30\..
0
in the
HoulCW&l'CS Ara of JCrenney•s,
Huntiqton Center Mall •
• • • Great new idt* usinc a variety of
..,.o me guaranteed la
another worcl for truet.
I can believe In something."
BARTLETT PEARS .......... ''°''.00 AVOCADOS . -c...-..... ,.....
FRESH YAMS ........ S.-LA.29
FRESH SPINACH C....,LA 17
BROWN ONION l-~8-e
RIPE HONEYDEW
(C..._.,.. .... ~2 •1
S<JN MAID RAISINS
24-0unat l'lcllaoe
• Ul .39
3~100
L& .39
u.c>i .49
PA .89
LA .25
rA 179
BABY DILL 69 ,.,_.. HA PllQ. 7t LA •
P~!1J!iSSX~~EN PA 199
JERSEYMAID TOPPING 7.'"°"'"°9 Can.. ~
APPLE JUICE 169 YliUme Y91111J 64.c>unot Bott ..
~WLEAMARGARIN~49
-~=GE 149
TtapQnl, 454-0unce CtttOn ... -
IOIW. ""-Fror11 C:O.-•• -
THE CORNER DELI
VONS SUCED J99
COOKED HAM
Sciiart Peet.Ate. 12..()ulQ ~ MYI O TO .. ~~149 •
VONS JACK CHEESE 199 "'°"'""" "-nl7 ,_.,I~~ LA 20tJ Ul
~Bl.~~ DR~IN9 l 49
.BALL PARK FRANKS 169 · I~ hcUft ""-OI '-f
TILLAMOOK CHEDDAR 499 2 ....... l.ol( ~ ~'P 0-
~~~~DDINQS .98
ALPS SWISS CHEESE 109 ~ ~ ~Npii. Sin!
PRECIOOS RICOTTA 119 a-. 16-0uni:e c~.-ii.n SCytt "201 Pl\; 22'1
!-£2!u!L.!£.~R .... !URKEY J 39
B<JDDIO SLICED MEATS 59 •Own<a,.... ,...~ •
'IUIRI a. COIM I Wt
S'IONEWARE Thll ..,.. ... IHllft
SAUCER
'
RED DEUCIOUSJ49 APPLES l ·llOdl'la IAG
!ltt19 MW M Fancy
YUBMt
0
INSTANT COFFEE 3a1 l-0..wa Jel
~~~<L11.~~ .89
SMUCKER$ QRAPE JELLY105 J~.W
JELLO
GEl,A.TIN
6-0unct lie. NlorUid l"-i
.49
179
249
.rg
Mft
JOU.r
399
999
199
ANCl~NT AGE BOURBON 999
SEAGRAM'S 7.cROWN 1099 l»Uu lklll 8ltftd
POLD BRINDISI WINE 179
750 8ault---.....
HEINEKEN BEER 389 ~'9c!!. 120unc. M.a. ~
SSl..1.£~ 912~.2. CHABUS 3a9
MILLER HIQHUFE BEER 429 12 .... 12.0.-c-
QOROON'S QIN 999
I 7!1 9c.; 'l
UKE
COIA
1., -
"9aUltt«&i..,F,.. 6-l'ectl. 12-0lml Cttlll
APPLE SAUCE
Ti9I Top l~ loli.t. ~.
SALAD DRESSING
K191\. a.o.-. lolll1* 1191i.1
.,..
6" . zoo
J39 ........
126
.84
VONS TUNA 130 a..onll ~ IU-Olonca t.I\ Ill ..,._. 01 Oii
~F &""B<.11TER CHIPS 109
\ JO!.~t=~~p .23
HAMBURGER LASAGNA 99 ,~ ....... c.......... .
~~ 139
Skim-<:-. Of '--... lt.ounc.... y • Mn .21
STRIKE FLEA ENDER 299 12-0unat~~
~'e.,~R~~~P . .~.53
JERQENS LIQUID SOAP 139 10-'0--. 9al clC f& ._,_ OI 8M
EQUAL SWEETENER 222
'°Co.. I ........ i..c.~
SARAN WRAP 189 100 ,_ ,_. Nnllo
VONS PAPER 55
TOWELS e
. 90Count Roll
.63
imponed chocolate will be Jpreta
eoted at 6:30 p.m. Thu~y,_ Sept.
27, and Baaic Olinae Cootina at
10 Lm. Saturday~ Sept. 29, at My
Favorite Tl\inp _ COoki~ School,
14370 Culver Drive, Irvine. .
lnatnacton are Tarta Fa1.ncr,
Chocolate. and Vina Lo. Chtnese.
For information lbOut Fees and
1'1i\i'ation. call 5'2.022 I.
You dOM 1M1Y more.
l1bd JUs_t get more ..
<' I
... .. -
AH Vons meat, proc:tua;, dell,
bakery and Vons own brand
products are guaranteed or
double your money back. This
sy.,,bol ls 'Vons guarantee of
quality. Look for It.
SU CED
BACON
~l'lomn t.flourld ~
FRESH RAINBOW TROUT 149 , . ._
p<JUE,&ISH FILLETS Ul 169
potfGENESS CRABS .. 399
~~ SHE~~~ SHRlMP .. 899
-
--------------~-------------------------~:--"'----~-----:------.,.----------~--~--~~~--~-
t OAllY PILOT/Wednesday, eptember 19, 1984 •
True vine-ripened tomatoes coming to market
•1 DOROTHY N an) other ripening ent before or pound more for ,,nc·n~ned you arc tta~ptn~ the fnut'1 ethylene poalin& dunna 1h1pp1~to~ nd County &fO\\Cl'I who market (i h C::.'::'::2~..... ncr harvc t: tomatoes ps and douia t e same thma on a llm& is the reason. hile fruu1 produce. send a stamPCd, If· d· • Be &tided to S percent or bctlcr Consumers have not been aware of 1mall scale. ripened on the vine have upcnor drcs d envelope to F~rin Trails,
Trvc''vine-npcnod''torn toes U. o. l und rU.S.~ ntof the ctifTcrcnoe between v1ne·npcned Whenyoubuy1h1stypeoftomatoll eatu\lquahty,theywillnotwlth iand Cooperative Extension, 1000 S. be appcanng soon t me mu et AJnculture (U DA) an pcctaon. romaton and the "maturc-sreen" gtncrally isn•t npe enouah to eat even the r11ors ormarteun,a. Harbor Blvd 1 ,4nahctm, CA 9280S.
Eich tomato will ha\ ea mall, round "You will ~Y premium prices for tomat 'hat predominate the mar· thou&h the color may be npc-red. The Tbe Jocal aro~r. who lclls dtrcctly • • •
"vine-ripened" ticker. the \1ne-npcocd tomatoes because ket nrsh ls firm-or even bard, the skin to conJUmen or supplies matketa m QUESTION WE ARE ASKED:
A mall 'number oftonuuo ippers 1hey co t more to produce and "Maturc-ll'ctn" tomatoe arc pld:· 1s hard to peel, and the flavor is not the local area is more hkel) to be able Q. rm U.t lo cu iome tomatoes
are particapauna an thi 'Cali· handle. The stictcrsan ;&h~ votun ry ~ wbUe1heyarc dUarcenincolor-that ofa nch, npe frun. to supply \ine.npcncd tomatoes that lrom my prdell. How• I U.w If
fornia Fresh Market Tomato Ad· program will be put on by 1 1ppcn, at althoup supp0$Cdl)' mature -and h may take maturc-arcen tomatoes WlU ~ untal they're putcbased. ::' ~..:.= :cW,, ':.:: :!::. vi~~=~~~fthe 1ckcr, the ~r8K::.oxim tc co t ofaoout lOcents ~~ :h'Ueno~fs~~§. ~~~~m~~ ~~e~~1ib1e~ =~ ~~=~l:f,!~ di~tf:ra~u:~h1 t~~~~ua'ir.~ ~f wW8 I •oa'• ._-;-e?
tomatoes must: However, coMum rs re cxl)Ceted · ri,pcn_i~ to the rcd-cQlor stqc is And even then, the flavor may be ~n-picked tomatoes, be on ~he A. /\ccotd1na to 1evetaJ teau, <X?n·
• Have been grown 10 Cnhfomia to be willing to P6) more fur them spCecJed up with the use of ethylene bland lookout for frCsb tomatoes with the ducted on a IJ'C't number of vaneu
• Be allowed to ripen on the ,foe bccau of their ·~·n " flavor. This •ac:, So wh"'. vou ask, arc tomatoe "Vine Ri-n-" t1cl..-. Or bu our of tomatoes. there' no J)!.'Oblem with r · -i 1 1 _..~ '"'' • Y Y tomatoes bavinJ too bttle acld to be until 9S ~roent o the fruit ha expectation is ba 10 pan, on a Eth~lcne sas 1s naturally produced packed at -this mat~n staae? tomatoes from local arowers who · "'c to can uun• wa••· bath pro-• attained plnk or ml color in the flesh 1983 st""'Y conducted t a m~or by fruit as it ripcns. ao there's nothina Mau production and the need to lhi1p pick them red ripe 1n•tcad of •tt> n " ... _, or on the skin; s1.1pcrma~~ c!iaio that bowed con-harmful in this prooess. In fact, when tomatoes Iona dirtancet to market, -• ""f" .. -• ccs in&-Select tomatoes for canning
•Not bo ripened by ethylene aas or umers would pay up to .0 cents per you ripen fruit an a closed pepcr big. and to be able keep them without fl~· you would like a liSt of Orange that arc not overripe as acidity ~~ ........ ~~ ........ ~~ ........ ~~~·~~....,-~ ................ -:--~~--:-~~----........ ~----.~~~~----~ ........ ~~~-4~---.---~.....-..;_-~--'.-....--.....-~-...:...-dccrcaSes with overmaturit~ Also,
select only tomatoes that arc f rce
from blemishes and spoilage. Do not
can moldy tomatoes. even 1f you C'Jl off the moldy pen.
.........
fAMILY STIAK
C~~K L& 1.89
USM Choic• 8"f Chuck
BONELESS CLOD ROAST ....... La. 1.89
REG. Ott LEMON AUSrlC 1.99
D•.t light, F,... or Su9or frff
2-LITER PEPSI ... . ...................... 1.19
fAmM•STYU .
~ szfl'IR S•Alll ••••
1\0 ,.,.FRESH POAK LOIN IA• 0' RIB ENO L ..
88.Q., lkoite, 8toil Or fry (Cod)
LIL .. ....... .
SHOULDI• aOAST
~J2flillR PICNIC 89 otlH PORTION U. e
.... _..... .................................. :: .................................... la.
12-0Z PKG
24·01. loof, Round Top or Sandwich
......
OIL
NEW 3 29 HALF GAL.
PLASTIC •
OLYMPIC MEAL BREAD ............... 79 Appletim• Originol, Holf Gol.
APPLE JUICE ................................ 1.89
RED
DELICIOUS
NIW CllOP IXTllA fANCY
University ofCalifO!llia food tech·
nologists recommend that lemon
juice or vinepr (2 teaspoons pu
quart} t>C added to tomatoes after they
arc packed in jars. This added acid
will prevent mold from formina on
canned tomatoes. Hot-packed
tomatoes should bo processed in a
boilina water bath for IS minutes per
quart or pint; cold-packed should be
processed 30 minutes per quart or
pint. Add IS minute$ to each pro-cessina time if you don't add vinepr or lemon juice.
lf your canned tomatoes should
develop mold on the surfaee. do not
use them. Mold arowtb uses up tbe
acid in tomatoes that protects them
frotn arowth of bOtulism bacteria. Thus, moldy canned tomatoes could
be a aouroe of botulilm tox.io and
unsafe to eat. • • • Q. 11 It safe &o ase a 1&aillle11 1teeJ
18Dcepu for laeatiD1 toiuton to be
ea.ue41 or to laeat vtaepr ud water
for plCkle brl.De? My aefpbOr waned
mt &Mt tile add la dtele f oodl wo8Jd
react will tile 1&aJDJea1 1teel ud
make tbe foocl auafe?
A. Your D.ei&hbor is misinformed.
There is no safety problem in heatini -f•llH acid foods in stainless steel utebsils. .o.la.I .. CHICK... You can safely use aluminum, swn-._ • less 1teel, enamelware, or &lass for
-CALIFORNIA 99 preparing acid foods for cannina or ·:r ~ pickling.
I& e Avoid usina copper or iron
,___--------------utensils. Copper may tum pickles a
i.tb. Pk;. peculairshadcofareen;iron may tum
WILSON SLICED BACON ..... EA. IA9 the~j>lack. .Al1 ~· nev~c~se aaJth· van1~ utetlSt s ior any 1uuu -e
''\ \ l I I/ DUNCAN ·-· £NIWI ~ COOKIU
1.39 -12-0Z
I '" '""" ASSO«TED
Nabisco Lorge. Trlteults Or Wh90f iThlna
SNACK CRACKERS ..................... 1.19
action of acid or salt on pJvaniud uteDJils may produce a toxic
substance. Perhaps your neighbor
bad 1tainJess steel confused with
plvanized metal.
BRUNCH •••
Prom Cl
on 14-inch sides of rcctanJ}e. Fold
strips over fiUi~ Mix cg yolk and l tablespoon water; tirush over
dough. Bake until ~'!:.n brown, l S
to 20 minutes. re Golden
Sauce; serve with twist. Serves 6.
GoldaSaace
YI poUd puteerlled proca1
~~,nbed
•4 e11p mllk
Combine process cheese spread
and milk in saucepan; stir over low
beat until smooth.
FRUIT SALAD SUPREME
l 1-oance packa1e cream
clleese, softeaed
•/• cap milk
~ tea.,.oa IJ'alecl lemon peel
1 &ablnpooa lemoa jaJce
1 cap wltJpplq cream
YI cap powdered Hpr
f cape apple aUcet
I caps ltoeeyd.ew meloa ~WI
I caps 1eed.Je11 ~ea 1rapn
YI cap~~·
Mix cream cheese, mil~ lemon
peel and lemon juice. Beat whip-
ping cream and powdered supr in
chilled small ~wl until stiff. Fold
cream clicesc mixture into whipped
cream mixture.
~k";A' • .m~•• MUMS .................................................................... La. ;29 ;x_~~M•-.......................... : ............................................. EA •• 79
Mix 'h cup of the chrum cheese
mixture and apple alices. Layer
melon, apple mixture and arapcs in
3-quart bowl. Top with remaining
cream checae mixture; sprinkle
with pecans. Makes 12 servinp.
••• •••• •••·• C:!!iii!!i~~·~~iii::Z)----.
... 4.l·Ot. ~ Of c;.1
~ ~::.Tl .............. 2 29
F:•~fC.:_ll;..., l2-0z. Com. "-9~ 0< Ute
~-'j_'j :=:.-:: .............. 139
-..; .
3().(!ount Regulor or Super,
KOTEX SECURITY TAMPONS .. . .. ..... .. .l.19
80-Proof-look For 2.00 Moll·ln-R.t>ote-ln Store
1.75-LITER POPOV VODKA .................... 6.99
'W>lum• 6 75Gml , Brut 8.5·0unc• Con
SESAME STREET DICTIONARY ....... : .... 2.69 DOMAINE CHANDON CHAMPAGNE ... 8.99 SHIRAKI KU BAMBOO TIPS ....................... .II
. ., STAUIRll'S
---~-mn,
·.J.. ~ . ~"h ... · ..... .. ..•.
~ SALUll CllU• ~. 1~~z 2.99
~, CHllSI MU.S
( 7 =t 1.59--'-'-"' .....
•1C01TA CHIUI ~ -:~ 2.29
..
win ICn~t A 01 P
CHEES SPREAD ·-··-·· ............ .
501 Pkg
ALPS SWISS CHEESE
·1.st ...
8ird~. I Ot WM! e1
COOL WHIP TOPPING ........... ··.91
~ lb 01. A&torted
FARM FRESH VEGETABlES .
12.01 ~ Plo1n £19 Or On on
LENDER'S BAGELS . .
-~ i___ ;.
-~h ~ Oi Wrletlfl
WHITE & PIKE TINS
A-0t l#f Sp(lngt
HORSERADISH
'
BONUS •••
Prom Cl
"cooked" with the milk, bouilJon
and parsley until tender. then
pureed in a blender or food pro-cessor. Cream cheese gives thislisht
delicate soup its rich body and
pleasant n. vor.
CAUUFLOWEI\ BISQUE
1 YI nps -.,ied ca.Unower
lnpmtlk
I &ab...,._• cllop,ed HJoa
l ~eta ....... "" \41 ... .,.. ,.,..., nu
1 l·ouee packa1• cream
cffele,nl»H .
In uucepen, combine all inan>
dients except cream cheese. Cover;
aim mer 1 S minutes. Place
cauliflower mixture and cram
cheac in blender container. Cover;
prpcess on low 1peed until amooth.
Retur,n to saucepan: heat
thorouahly. Two 1-aip 1UVinp.
MIClOWAVE: Microwave •
cauliflower, on ion and l tablespoon
wattt in l Yl-qun covered cutcrole
on Hiah 2~ to 3 mmuta or until veseia'blct are crisp.tender~ Stir in
milk, bouillon cube and parlk:y
flakes.
COver;-inlcro W manu cs, mm~ after 2 minutes. Place
cauliflower mtxt~ and ~m
cheat in blen~ container cover:
proceil on IOw ~ Until smooth.
IRetUm to cueeiole. Cover; micro-
wave I to J '6 m1nu1a or unttl
thorouply heated.
,
..
No~dlc dessert
sauce versatile
The world of sauces is cndl cnabh!l& the cook to add.
Ult finilhioa touches to a wide varic&y of •wee& and •v~ cliahes. Sauoea are peat over tlP.> witb .rOQd. icleal for a meat toppsna and supdb with~
lf yoo'rc 1tart1na your own rq>e0o1re tor aauca lbea you MD want to add th11 most unusual •uce surprite.11•1 a sweet uw;:e made with 1 umque checte &om Norway
caUed Ojetost. Oolden .. bro~11. 1u sweet caramel.;Jib
flavor 11 the perfect enhanCC'r an creatin• th1s incredibly deijdousdelim sauce. · ...
Tiai.a creamy sweet sauce is so venatde that you can ute it u a fondue, or served over fresh f ruat or as 1 laity U>ppi~ tor a cream. Try 1t the next time you have J~
over for cotree and dcsscn, it will be a pleaunt surpnse for everyone.
NORDIC Dl!'.SSERT SAVCE
~ &M111,1• eera1....U
I= •d•ell Gjetelt eMele 11••••• IN'en....,. 1 ....... .,. ......... peel
I .... ,,. •ullla Htract •
Jn saucepan, tombinc cream and cornstarch. Cook
over medium heat, stirring, until mixture is thickened
and smooth. Add remaining iqredients. Heat, stirrina:
until cbeele melts and sauce is imooth. Makes about 2
CUPllA\lee,
SatptUe p.eeta Wida aa-1 na....-of tliU Use as fondue for assoncd fresh fruits and pound !ford.le cbeeee Mace. cake, or .ervc over ice cream.
•Pepsi
•Diet Pepsi
\ .
....
Steak
Safeway Quality Beef .. ~iE•·
t8eef AC> Aollt s-11 EnCI lb. '2"'>
...... •••ketl ······~·~' !b •2•• Clll•• ....... ~~ 1:::•2•
fN ...... lte 1 I Bla<Se Should~ lb • 1 ••
............... _.,.
_ ........ -....... 1 .. _ ..,..,._99"
_...._ ............ ..tt_
, ............... 00' =ft Pllll
.... -------~I'!" l ... w.,lleell••••~~ ~1:•1" •'Cob com.__
................... :!~~~~ ~2"
•Pepsi Free
Thirst CMnct*'o
---------= =-... --... ----· ·--------·--------e:------._._.._. __ ,_ ........ __ _ =.., .... __ --........ -.. ..._
....... c ... •Ill low In CalOfiee 2 :!e ••• .. ••••7tlew ...... ,..,_ a a.., .. ~
.. KIWI ...... "fl-. FllUf Fru ,~ a FOf., ..
••r••• Oaloa10no:='""' 1•
•Ce•ke ....... -.-~.
•hckel ........... --........ ~ ....... " ... ........... _._...._. ..... _
• Fresh Celer)ae ... .._.,39• • Fresh Yams •9'
• Cut Chive~......,..:.-sg• • Candy Apple Kit ~ 69•
iiit Shallots~,. ~ 89• • Peanuts"== • 99t
• Ralslnsw...... ":_.• 99• • Avocados ui.. 3 , •1•
I '
•Bulk Garlic 10 ,~ '1" -• Anlct~e He
•
•'
I
C8 Orange Co.ut DAILY PILOT/Wednud1y, ptemt>W 18. 1 84
..
CAPRI SUN
DRINKS
99
f.A.
CHICKEN OF
THE SEA TUNA '
LB.
. . •NEWCROP .
•EXTRA f ANCY
•WASHINGTON
r--~~~-~.,_......--~
REGULAR
GROUND BEEF
• S·LBS. OR LARGER PACKAGE. UMR 6-LBS.
SKAGGS ALPHA BETA
PAPER TOWELS
GOLDEN DELICIOUS
APPLES
..
.. . . . . ..... ·. ···.·. . . ·. · ..
.-1'
BONELESS BEEF
CHUCK ROAST
..... : .:
•IOU> AS
"°"" ONLY
...
. .. ·: ...
TWELVE PACK
srROH'S BEER
• II-OZ. CANS • RE.GCA.Alt
OR UGHT
CITRUS Hill .
ORANGE JUICE
DENNISO~S
CHILI WITH BEANS
~t)f.,~
~
. LIBRARY
VOWMI 1 ON WI NOWI
ATA&IHAUTA
ALPHA BETA ALPHA BETA ----~ N ___ , ----~ ~---, I Coll~\11~~ \ I ~r1rc:,~0~', \
I nnuau SAVINas cou;;; ..... I I DOUBLE 1AV1Na1 co~;;,;"""' I
I PrtWlt t1i1s coupon 1lono w1ih any one manufacturers I I · sant rnts coupon alongw th '"lone manufattaren I I ·unts ow coupon and get DOUBLE THE SAVINGS when I I •cents 011" COUP9n and ott DOU8L THE SAVINGS wn n I
you pur~nase tht Item ~ I . you purchas~ the Item I om• •or TO 11CLUH •nA1ua 0t FME cou,0111 ~ cou'°"' I OfFU llOT t0 11CL1111 •rA1ua 01 ,.r cou110t11 oa coUP011 I
I ovu 11 • aEFu o MAY •oT utuo YALut O' m• 1utJ1cr ro I I m1111 • •Fu• u• .or txclH VALUE ., m• 1ut11ct to I ITOCl .. UClUOH u TOIACCO a DAIRY NOOUCT& aroca M llHD UCLUOU UQUOI. TOIACCO AIO GAIAY ,..UCTt
I u r =.:m1 Pl•'~r ~~~u I I UMfT ~ ':':='r=n.f,;'toU,. I I u TTWO [ 'lll MTG • I I lJID Ulll TWO LE COUP'Oll PU CUITMA I
cou,. ... "' an. 21 = ... neuu.. •n. • \ n1111•11wo .. llf'T.a 1114 I \ Mwu .. • .a 1-. I ------------~-----------' '
•
SIX WEEKLY FIFTY
CARIBBEAN CRUISES FOR 2 'ii 0,000 BINGO PRIZES .
I DAYS AND 7 NIGHTS ' .. PLUS MANY MOREi
ALPHA BETA
BINGO ··
WINNERS
Copyright 1814 Afl right• ruerved We r8"fVt the right to limit quant!tl .. Mitt
T p, Col1tc1t0 on all T aHblt lten'll 8Mt", Wint & l'IQ\IOf Not Avall.Olt ln All Stom
Prlcel Effective et Ill
8oUthem C8lltornl8 Alphe .... Marte ...
Thursday, .. t. 20 thru wec1n.,.,, ..... 1114
WlfG Ml.All: TO~ wt:fl( ~ .iA """1 Oii L4IT °"Tt TO INfTW f'llJa NDUCTJON EX IJJlfVf. Of AOVl:RT1lfD ()It PllOMOTIONAL Nit
l
* ~
• I t
00 •
·•
>< "<l.)
•
~-• I 4
..
Or.,,ge COu1 OAILV
Paprika makes food party pre
from a spnnkling to a i>90nful
papnka as the sp1oc.1hat makes fOOd
look pretty. Wb n di h tastes great
but looks a bit blah, 11vc n a few
shakes from the paprika conta ner CHICKEN AND VEGETABLE
and it' bathed in a rosy &!ow. PAST A ALAD
Hunganan scasoninp flavor the t,; cup dairy soar crum
Chicken and Vegctablc Pasta Salad, cap :mayonaJ e
a ti f¥i hearty di b. If pos tble, I &abletpooe vege&a I U
make 1t the day before so the I leatpON ult
seasonings in ~he dre sma arc fully l tu JM'M paprika
absorbed by the chicken chunks ~ teaspooa caraway aeedJ
and the rotelle '(a pasta that looks ~ tea.,ooa ODIOD powder
pOtUon ; bout CUJ."
•3 cups uncooked.
PAPRIKA
festive and holds the dee ing l /lt teaspoon 1roaad blad pep-oiocly). per .~ ................. ===---'------------------------=
The starring drcs ina is rich with c cups cooked pasta (sud as
paprika, caraway 1etd, onion pew-rotene, elbow, 1bells)•
der and pound black pepper. Serve i cups flaely dieecl 1weet red or
alona with thick chunks of tomato freea peppers
and cucumber, and French bread caps diced cooked clalckea
with lots of crust. ~ cap diced celery
Paprika Sour Cream Pany Dip ~cap sueclded carrot
!hake~~ fine welcome. The. m1xtu~e In a medium bowl combint sour
ts dehc1ously ~vory, and 1f there s crea~. mayonnaise, oil, salt,
any left (you re lucky) add some papnka, caraway, onion pc>wder
tuna or bard-cooked eggs for a and black ~pper~ Add pasta red
sandwich ftllina. It takes off, from a peppers, ch~ken, celery and carrot. ~ur c~m and m,a>onna1se. ba "Mix well. Cover and ~frigerate at
with a hft from instant mmced least 2 hours or overni 1. Yield: 6
·---------------
GET SJ.OO WORtH
OF FREE CHEESE .
MANUFACTURER COUPON I NO EXP(RATION DATE
"There 's Raisin in
the Middle "
Here's a· comb1nat1on that's sure to please'
Premium Crackers . light and cnsp. with your
favorite cheese We 'II senci..you a
~~~~~:::=:: coupon good for $1 00 worth of free
~ ............... ~ cheese See details m the order form
below And to nelp you get started. just
~~~;i.~use the coupon to save 25C on your
next purchase of Premium,
~~~,,.~~~~~~A;enca 's favorite cracker.
------------
We It s nd )'OU 1 coupon g()()(t tor $1 00 worth of hard dom
this rttf t nd ll'HH Pr rtl um Cr c r brand purch
P.O. BOx NBO n. El Pno. THU mn.
PL!ASE S ND MY COUPON TO:
ODD ll'llal~ ,.
" t
1 DAILY PILOTIWedn
. .
~~ : . . . . .. .. .. . • : 9-19
' .... ··. . • . . . . • . . . . . .
GllRFIELD
Lf1''~ ~60R£
YOOR 1'1.JMMY,
GARFIELP
WHEN YOO TAKE FOOR tNC.H£'b OFS: YOUR WAt61'..:. VOtJ MAY GO OFF YOOK PlE,.
THE
FAMILY
CIRCUS
BIG GEORGE
by Bil Keane 1 ·r
'1 I.
ij h
l
i
by Gus Arrlol
by Jim Davis
by Virgil Partch (VIP)
-
~ 11
"I wasn't the last one in. Barfy wasl" "I've got my expenses to meet."
MARMADUKE
MOON MULLINS
PEANUTS
YES, SI~, ~.PRINCIPAL ..
I lJNPERSTAMD ... MV
TEAC~ER WANTS ME eACK
IM MY OLO CLASS ...
TUMBLEWEED
by Brad Anderson DENNIS THE MENACE
r'M NOT A
FAILURE ANV MORE?
A
Hank Ketcham
"Marmaduke was the bad guy, and when •
our posse caught him, he chased every kid
In It home to his mother!"
I
by Ferd & Tom Johnson
by Charles M. Schulz
I NO, SIR, I PONT KNOW
MOW A DESK CAN
SNORE wrr~ovr ME IN IT
by Tom K. Ryan
I TlNK l"T'S PA ~a\I
P'AN1YHOSE.
TOO A Y HIGH CARU I
North oulh vulner bh" South
deal • mnu
• K lb3
O AUZ
0 AQIOU
+K
WES'I' EAST • g, • 95
<:? H <:? KQIOU o aa OKJ4
• QJ9UZ • 106•
Ollf'H
• AQJ97l
(.1 JI
OU
•AH
The bidding:
outJa Wett
I• Pa11
2 • Pa11 6. , ...
5 + P11t1
Pua Pa"
Eut.
Pa11 , .. ,
Pa11
Pau
Op~ning lead: Seven of <:?.
SHOE
Cua1.1s
Go1E1
Mo t or u grumble chronically
about the bad cards we hold. Wh n
this hand was ov r, Ea1l could com
plain that h hrld too many high
c:a11ds,
North's jump tu four dubs wu a
phntttr bid ahowani the values for
game and a inglelon c:lub, That
'llrred ~OU'Ui t!nough for him lo
make a club cue hid, and lhe spade
~lam wu oon rea~ed.
East might have rnad• lif• f'llY
for his partner by doubhntt tht' five
heart cue bad, but We t found the
lead anyway. Declarer wat Richard
Poppet of Wilmington, Dtl .. and he
would have preferred any other
lead. ·He was reluctant to have to
ttly on the diamond fin s for his
slam, $0 he won the ace or hearts.
cashed the king or club and uos ed
lo hand with the jack of trumps.
Arter ruffing ~is low•cJub. he over
-took the king or padet and proceed·
• "t'd to run trump .
·•''._.";_-·
DRi\BBLE
FOR BE'ITER OR FOB WORSE
FUNKY WINKERBE"N
DR.SMOCK
ROSE IS ROSE
IUDGE P~RKER
lQHY IS II f\LWR'/S UPlb
(J;S lo KEEP 1HlS PL.AeE.
$HCNELED
~
'TEU.. ME I COAc.H ... ,~ fT
L£!:,A l 10 HAVE A GOA1 a.J .~i&w\2F-
GIVES YOU A FOOR eucK
PROF1-r ON ES VS RY eo1"'·n .. e!
I
I
I
I
0
Ou1
S1111F
He reduced dummy lo four
d amondt and l"Ast. who had been
having eomc trouble.• finding
discard • kep\ the king of hfart
and lhrce diamonds. When d cJarT.r
t'Uhed the ace of club • Eaat wa1
forced to discard a diJmond, for he
had to k~p his king or hearta lo
cover declarer"• jack.
Rcidmg the position perfectly,
d c:larer axlted .,1th his heart. Eut
wa Core d to win and lead away
from .his king of diamond Into t hf"
tabl '1 a<" queen tenace.
Just anoth r t>veryday lam l'i
com" home!
Have 1•• ~D r...u., .. .,.. d.u•
ble trffble1 Let CM.rlet c ..... lle}p 1•• filMI r••r way ilare•lt tM aue
ef DOUILF.S for peaaJU.1 aacl
takeoul. For a copy of hl1
·ootJBLES beolde&. Mad 11.85, t.
.. Gorea Doublu," we of tlsl1
Dt••P.per, P.O. Boa 611, P•rr•.
N.J . 080l5. Mako daeck .,.yule t.
New1paperbeokl.
by Jeff MacNelly . .
by Kevin Fagan
by Tom Batluk
by George Lemont
by Pat Brady
(j: COORS£, rot
A fl/Ut.aT. =GOn'AOOt f~(J
CMCKllS!
~ .. ,,
a•• .... •.. ~·,.
by Harold Le ~x
'
·.
f
Joh.ii McNamara
'llaen 01••-·· .tfer Cllnchlng
AmerlcM Eeat
crown.D2.
Kansas City showing no mercy
·Royals pound A.ngels pitching again;
sweep would virtually eliminate Halos
four-run third with a two-run shot.
and before the next innina star1tld,
they"d chased starter Jim Slaton, who
couldn't answer the bell after three
innif\8.' with so many standina eight
senCS: They go at it apio tonifht and ot>unu. 8)' RICHARD DUNN Thursday with a sweep virtually . The Angels must now be concerned
.,.., .... c.mt•18.._ eliminattng the Angel~. with simply geltina back io the race,
The showdown has become a So far in the two pivotal pmes at but they'll have to start immediately. slow~ow~. Kansas City is devouring Anaheim Stadium in this September .. Every ~11 game tets biatr and
the pitching. .Th~ fi~t .two pmes for suspense story, tbe oqly problem more important," said An&d Man·
the An&els Will live in infamy.. Kansas City .bas encountered was ager John McNamara ... This thing
And the .Royals are showmg no . ll~e JacksOn's SOOth homer Mon· isn't over· by any stretch of the me~stepp1ngfurtberaway from the . diy. The Royals won that one, l().;l .. · imaginatiqn, but we have to beat
TwiM (2 P.Jl!CS out) an~ the Anaels The home run, once an Angel these people."
.<21'2.out) m the Amencan Lcaaue trademar1c.,bauotedthcinagainTues--McNamara summed up the eve.
West pennant chase. · day. The Royals supported starter ~i rather well ... It was a Iona, touch The slowdown is. of coune, for the Bret Saberbagen with the only run he · t." -~Ana.ets. i:tiey lost for the. second needed in th~ second inning wpen · ut fo/ Saberhagen, a 2().ycar-old
. straight n!&ht t~ Kan~ C1ty, 10-0 Danc·lorg drilled one over the ri&ht right·mlilder who wasn't even on the
Tuesday in this crucial four-game field wall. Steve Balboni capped a RP'1&is' 40-man spring trainin& roster
Wt Mardh, at WU a night w1•ll 1ast
forever.
"It's real easy to pitch well when the
auys bdlincl ~re makina . .sood plays," Sa . aid. ••After l
Jtiua1ed thro the first two in·
ninp. I found swo or three pitches
that really worked for me and I stayed
with them the rat of the nipit."
Many people iwerc surpnscd when
Kansas City Man.acer Dick HoMCr
nominated three rookie pitcher& to start in the Royals' most imponant
series of the teaSOD (Mark Gubia.a
and Danny Jackson being the Other
two).
Sabcrhagen tossed shutout bell for
seven inninp. allowing just four soft
lin&ics durin& that stinL · Ris biaest ~jam was his own
(PleueeeeROTALS/02)
Tars, Oil~rs Reggie .
spends
-quiet day • renew series
s .ea ~tngs put
unbeaten record
on line.Thursday
By ROGER CARLSON
OfllleO..,lllot ....
One of Orange County's oldest
rivalries renews Friday night when
Newport Harbor and Huntin~on Beach hi.Rh schools clash. It's the 47th
mcetma f>etwcen the two schools. ·
Both were long·time rivals in the
Sunset U:ague until Newport Harbor
pulled out of the Sunset prior to the
1981 season. Harbor enjoys a 27·16-3
edge in the series, which began in
1931.
Another key contest at Newport
Harbor takes place Thursday night
when Capistrano Valley tests Corona
del Mar.
Herc's a look at each of eight non-
league games for Sea View League
teams:
• Banthtctoa Beicll at Newport
Ruhr: -.. It's always a bi&
matcbup, .. says Huntington Beach
Coach George Pascoe. Pasooc's con·
cems arc split between the Tars'
personnel and coachina staff.
.. They're relentless and will punish
you, .. he says. "You have to stop their
rush on traps and ·their ~lacement
(Kevin McOelland) for Fntz Howser
is a very 'ood f ootbe.11 player. "They don't have a lot of people,
but be (Harbor Coach Mike Gid-
dinp) knows everythina and you
have to match wits with him and hope
you come out on top."
Giddings says Howser (hip.point·
er) and Joe Johnson (b~xtended
elbow) arc ,both qucsttonable and
with both fullbacks out, it's goin& to
be a problem fillioa the void. .
.. We've lost the Damien film
(Huntington Beach downed Damien,
l 7-0)," says Giddiop. "but we have
Huntington's P!!!e film against Cor-
ona del Mar. They ·beat Damien
pretty aood and Huntington Beach
will be the tou~cst O~P<>nent we've
played so far this year. ' .
Giddings is still mumbling over his
team's ~ormance in a 2().7 win
over Irvine, one which did not please
him. ··we Jacked continuity and that's
what· you need. We must put it all
together against Huntington Beach or
we'll be in trouble."
Caplatrano Valley (0·!) ••· Coroaa
del Mar (Z.0) at Newport Barbor: -That'• T~der '"ever The records may be reversed, but the -e "1
strenaths of the two teams in no way Detroit f&D.8 whoop it ap oatnde 'flCer
(Pleue eee SEA VIEW /D2) Stadium Tue.day nJcbt after the Ttfen
beat llllwaakee to Win the AmerlcaD
~e East. See story. 1>2.
BJ IUCBABJ> DUNN ..._,...ea, o • s
Reggie Jackson met the press
Tuesday -the Day Aft.er bis bat ...u
beard aiound the world wben be
cl~ homer No. SOO.
Jackson, as you recaU. launched
Kansas City left-bander 'Bud Black's
first pitch 10 the seventh innin& of
Monday's pme into the riaht field
seats for round-tri~ No. SOO.
Not uoc:h.aracterisU of Regie, be
didn•t ·stumble when be took OD
reporters . in post-season n bets
Tuesday. · After all, he's used io this.
And of this Day After, 1'1iat WIS
Regie doing? The obvious would be
annoering many conpatulations
over the phone, and receiving et\Oujb
mailgrams to own stock in: Western
Union. . . • . ·
..... was busy," he said. .. 1 went up to
my car shop all day." '
But w~t about the pbooe call$? .. I never answered my phone, I 1eft
my answering maclline on all day;• be
explained. ... cheCked all M}'
mesAIC' and I bad about 40 or SO. Rcllic. who became lhe 13th
playa to reach the 500 milestone in
homers. saia he was unhappy with
with 'the aowd support. .. , was disappointed that tbcrc were
(Pleue eee llltGGIS/D2)
R•::e~et Sunset faces blO~~~~~ter sc~~d ule
p, Eclison vs. Banning. Marina-Foothill, Cil}' -· IS cooehod by~ This week's schedule
~ .
Dn I t Ferragamo and has a reputat.100 for a 8 Fountain Valley-Mission Viejo tops a e wid~.open option sam' behind a
bnnsmg front wall. (All pmee et 7:30 unlMe noted)
•
By ROGER ~ARLS9N
Of .. Delr .... .,..
For · many high school football
teams this week is the final tuneup
before league play, but in the ~unset
League it's just the middle of the non·
league season.
The slate is filled with major
coillrontatioM -including Los An·
gelcs City power Banning against
Edison, Servite-killcr Marina against
always tough Foothill and OranfC
County's No. 1 team, Fountain
Valley, risking its credentials again
apinst a respected opponent.
Here's a capsule look at games
involvin& Sunset League teams (ex·
cept for Hunti=n Beach), with Mater Dei of the elus League and
Irvine of the South t Lea&ue also
included:
Bau.IDg (M) vs. EcllaoD (i.t) at
Ora.Dee Cout Collese: -He's
already seen his teams smothered by
Banning's Pilots in two previous
encounters (2(). 7 and 33-0). so Edison
Coach Bill Workman's concerns
about the opposition appear valid.
"The Edison children are in deep
trouble.'' says Workman. "We·u;ust
do the best we can. .. Banning has seven auys ';lP front
and they also have th.ru umcs as
many players as Colton and, ccner·
ally, they reall~ have twice the quality
ofplaycn(ofColton), too.
.. We're youna with nobody in the
offensive lioc playina in a varsity
game before this season."
Edison's only valid experience in
the offeMivc hoc, senior center Ty
Thomas, is out for two more wee.ks
because ofinjury.
Martu (1-1) va. FooWll (1-1) at
Tuttn: -It's the sixth meeting
between these two schools and
Marina bas a 3-2 edge, but Coach
Dave Thompson's Vi.kings arc on a
~me losing streak to the Ted
Mullen reign at Foothill.
"We haven't done a good job
runnina against them the last couple
of years," notes Thompson. . ·
.. And there is a problem with the
Foothill quarterback (Jud Dutrisac).
.. He's the most dangerous athlete
on their team. He's quick. throws the
ball well and he's an excctlent runner .
.. Ted Mullen takes advantage of
that. He's had the pleasure the put
few yean of havina the quarterback
that docs it all and they have an
excelelnt offensive line."
The Vikinas will be uying to act
(Pleue eee SUJfS&T /02)
THURSDAY
TIMtpme . capo Valley vs. CdM (at Newport Harbor)
Irvine at Tustin ·
University vs. Laguna Hll1a (at Mission vte)o)
Costa Mesa vs. Loe Alamitos (at Western)
Saddleback at La Habra
FRIDAY __ _
Theodde
EYW'I
Tustin by 1
Unt by7
Loa Al by 10
Saddleback by 3
Fountain Valley at Mission Vle)o Ftn. Valley by 9
Bmtnlng vs. Edl&on (at Orange Coast) Banning by 8
Huntington Beach at·Newport Harbor Even
Marina vs. Foothln (at Tustln) Foothill by 1
Servlte at Westminster Servtte by 7
Estancia at San Clemente Even
Dana HlUs at Laguna Beach Laguna Beach by 2 -. __ _
Woodbridge at San Marcos San Marcos by 3
Santa Ana vs. Mater Del (at Santa Ana Bowt) Mater Del by 7
SATURDAY
Ocean Vlew vs. Cypress (at Western) Oypres9 by 7
Dils entering unenviable.position BARONS
RANKED
NO. l IN CIF. Nobody came in on the ooon
balloon from Saskatoon and asked
me,but ...
•Somebody tell Steve Dils that
playina quarterback for the Rams is
like goal for the Kin~, fint base for
the Yankees or any place for the
Oippcrs. ' etbc Beloved Cubs arc l>Ccomina
America's(new)Team but lhcotd
faithful Wrialcy Field fans arc not
suretheyapprovcofall the new
faithful ..• As columnist Mike Royko asks. .. How can )'ou' appreciate Ryne
Sandbcra if you didn't live through'
Boh.R.amazotti?''
•A auy called to say two ofRegaie Jacklon •a SOO homers actually
boun6cd over the fence. •lfcocai~e isn'taddictivc. how in
·11 Kansas Oity and wa
the world could Chuck Muncie kick
away a career this way?
• JfUCLA plays Nebraska i~ the
manner it s>layed San Diego and Lona
Beach, the Bruins may set a record for
a distance fall in the ratings.
•Howard Cosell said on the radio
the other day that the only l)e9ple who
ever knocked him were sports writers
... he wasn't payinaattcntion. •Dr. Bob says Stu Nahan will lose
his baby fat before he is 60.
• R~eJackson sells his book
while his teammates arc takina bat-
li!ll practice, Ji vcs the kid who got the
500 ball aif\s paid for by his sponsors
and says the A•ls orpni:i.ation has
no clau .•. Reasie has had a storied
career and he has plenty ofcta. -all
ofitthird.
M .
·BuD
Tucm_
----
SPORTS ColUMNIST
'
•
Rogers believes
Trojans will be
ready Saturday.
rom AP dJ pattbet
TEMPE. nz.-AnzonASt ltC.oach Eil
0 n')IR ers idTuesdaythathe'ufraid •II>
Southern al has an old ston: to <settle with
his un Olivil he~ Saturday night.
"USC has been waiting for this football game incc
last year. That's all the talk we've been hearing about -
that they've been waiting all summer for this one,"
Rogers said ... , think our players know why after what
happened." • ·
Arizona State beat the Tro-
jans, 34-14, lan Oct. 15 in Los
Angele -buildmga 27-0 lead by
halftime.
It was their third loss 1n four
m~ungs with the Sun Oevab In
fact, USC has yet to win 1n Sun
Devtl Stadium here -losing
twice to Arizona State (20-7 in
1978 and 17-10 in 1982) and
setting beat 26-lO by Penn State
in the l 982 Fiesta Bo"''· •oeen "It's a tough place to play."
Trojans Coach Ted Tollner said in a telephone
·conference call. "But the better team won those three
games. We're not jinxed. I don't believe inJtn.xes.
"I do know .that it's noisy there. But we-'re looking
forward to having a great game. It's a great opportunity
for us lo _act even." use. 1-0 after an easy 42-7 seasoo-0pening wm
over Utah State at home, was idle last Saturday. Thus,
the Trojans have had two weeks to prepare for the
Pacific-10 Conference opener against the Sun Devils,
who arc l-t after last Saturday's 48-0 pasting of San Jose
State.
Quote of die clay
National Football L~ue CommJislOner Pete
Roa1l1, referring to a poseible merger With the
United States Football League: "t Just can't tee It
h~ing. There'• just no eenttment for It. When
we expand, we'd want to pick oor own Cities and our ownownere ••
Dodgercoachlngataffrehlred
LOS ANGELES -The Los Angeles ii Dodgers. bave rehired their enure coaching
staff for the l 985 season, the National
League team announced Tuesday.
Monty Bas~!. 61. 1s the dean of the Dodger
coach mg staff with 12 years of duty in that role and 25
years of service in the organization in vanous
capacities.
The other coaches rehired are Joe Amalfitano,
Manny Mota, Ron Perranoski and Mark Cresse.
Reinhardt's status unchanged
EUGENE. Ore -Uruversity of s
Colorado footbaJJ .Player Ed Reinhardt •II• remained unconscious in criticaJ condition
Tuesday and a hospital spokesman said his
condition could remain virtually the same for days or
months.
"He is pretty much the same as yesterday," said
Alan Yorty, spokesman for Sacred Heart General
Hospital. .. He 1s still hsted as crillcal, sttll m intens1ve
care and still unconscious.
"We're very much in a wait-and-see mode," Yort>
added. "This could go on for a day or two days. or it
could go on for weeks or months. It's very very hard to
say."
Ali to undergo further tests
NEW YORK-Former world heavy-
weight champion Muhammad Ali checked
into Columbia Presb~rian Medical Center on Tuesday mght to undergo
further neurological tests. ,
A hospital spokeswoman said Ali bad been
admitted.
Ah, who left the hospital last Tuesday after a five-
day stay. had been in West Germany on a business trip.
He flew from London to New York Tuesday and told
well-wishers at Kennedy lnternatioRal Airport: "I'm in
a good shape. I'm a bttle ttred, but rm in $ood shape."
On Monday, a television interviewer 10 Frankfurt,
West Germany. ~uoted Dr. Manm Ecker, who was
traveling with Ah, as saymg the retired fighter has
"minor symptoms" of Parldnson's Disease.
Mancini sued by promoter
NEW ORLEANS-A local promoter m has filed suit for $3 million against former
~iahtweight champion Ray "Bt>om Boom"
Manicini, his staff and manager over the
cancellation of Mancini's Sept. 8 figh1 with Kenny
"Bang Bang" Bogner.
Barry Mendelson Presents, Inc. claims negligent
representation and breach of contract in the cancelled
fight.
Both counts demand SI m1Jhon for loss of past and
future profit, as well as $500,000 for damage to
reputation.
Tig re win flrat title •Ince '72
I tro1t won h fil"$t men n ue a \ ch mpion iJ! moc 1972 Tue y
night s R dy 0 tal, mak1 hi ft t ma.tor le uc: tan. pitched en srorel
mru d lb 1i beat Mil ukce. 3.0 Detroit,
which has been 1n first pt everyday this wn, 1s the
fir t m~or le ue te m to c:hn\:h a division title this
son. Llact Parrl b drove in two run and Tom B~ca1 beh(d a \Olo homC'r for Detroit a O'N land Willie Hera.aadH combin(d on ix-hiller , . , In a
crucial Arnenain league We t
matchupin Minnesota. theT"in
Jost for the second straight time to
Chicaao as homen by Ron Kini•
and Harold Baines ctased a 3..0
deficit and Minne ota catcher
Tim Laudoer'1 seventh-inning
-throwing error allowed JaUo Crui
to ore the tie~breaking run as the
White Sox rallied for a 5-3 victory
. . Elsewhere, Dwlgbt Evaa1
lugged a pair of two-run homers
and Tony Armu and Rlcla Geel·
mu ttil one each. powering Boston lo a 10-3 rout of
Toronto. The Blue Jays were eliminated from the East
race before the conclusion of the game when Detroit
beat Milwaukee to win the division . . . Mike
P1gllanili>'1 ff?nd Jam and Doa Mattl.o1ly'1 two,.run
horn.er highlighted a seven-run New.-York second
inning as the Yankees crushed Balt1more, L0-2 ... Alvlo
Davia ripped a two-run tnple and Pbll Bradley added a
run-scorin1 double to power Seattle past Cleveland, 6-3
... Mickey Tettleton·hit his first maJor league homer
and drove m two runs while Mlke Heatb cracked a solo
shot as Oakland defeated Texas. 5-2.
·Padres take step closer to title
Dave Dravecky fired a three-bitter a
and Terry Kennedy drilled a two-run
homerTuesda,v as San Diego inched closer
to its first National League West Division
pennant with a 2-0 Vlctory over Cincinnati. The Padres'
magic number for clinching the division is four with
Houston and three with Atlanta, each of whom won
Tuesday. Dravecky, 9-8, earned hts first victory since
July 30 by boldio1 the Reds hitless through 51/J mnings
before Ron Oester doubled ... Crai& Reynold•' l Oth-
inning sintle scored Terry PllllJ
from third base to give Houston a
5-4 victory over San Francisco.
Puhl walked with one out in the
I Otb and ·went to third on Mark
Bailey's single. Reynolds then
belted the game-winning sintle
down the right-field line .. In ihe
National League East, Chicago's
drive to the pennant was stalled as
Pittsburgh dropped the Cubs, 6-2,
as Joba.ay Ray homered and
· tripled, driving in four runs ...
Meanwhile, in Philadelphia, Darryl Strawberry'•
three-run, ninth-inning homer carried New York to an
8-5 victory over Philadelphia, keep-ing thc Mets' slim·
hopes of catching Chicago alive in the East. The Cubs'
magic number remained at four ... Bryan U ttle
snapped a tie with a bloop double and Tim Wallacb
added a two-run double later in the seventh inning to
lead Montreal to a 7-4 triumph over St. Louis and
Joaquin ADdajar.
Canada holds on to take Cup
EDMONTON. Alberta -Mark ~ Messier and Waynt! Gretzky of the Stanley '
Cup champion Edmonton Oilers s~kcd a five-goal first period Tuesday night and
Canada withstood a stunnin' comeback by Sweden for
a 6-5 dec1s1on to capture the Canada Cup.
,The v1ctof') gave the Canadians a two-game sweep
of the finals in this s1x-nat1on event, which served as the
World Championships for I 984. After a mediocre 2-2-1
showing and fourth-place finish in the round-robin. the
Canadians came of age, winning their last three games.
To reach the finals. they upset the Olympic
champion Soviet Union in an overtime semifinal
contest.
Teltscher breezes In tourney
SAN FRANCISCO -Third seeded E.3. Eliot Teltscher rolled past John FiugeraJd,
6-2, 6-4, in a first-round match at the
Transamerica Tennis Open Tuesday night.
Thomas Hogsted upset fifth-seeded Scott Davis
and seventh-seeded Paul McNamce beat Leif Shiras
earlier m the day.
Teltscher, ranked 17th · in the world, bad little
trouble against Fitzgerald. After taking the first set
handily. he broke Fitzgerald in the third game of the
·second set, then held his next four service games to close
out the match.
India's Ramesh Kn sh nan scored an exciting come-
from-behind victory over Poland's Wojtek Fibak. 6-7,
7-5. 7-6 in another first-round match.
TeleVlalon, radio
T£LEVl8ION
No ~ents acheduted.
RADIO
5:30 p.m. -IASllAU.~ Dodgers at Houston,
KABC(780). 7:~ p.m. -8A8EIAL.L· Kansas City at
Angela, KMPC (710).
' -
He survived
Detroit Manaier Sparky Andenon amllea deaplte being
nicked by chalnpape bottle during celebration Taeaday.
ROYALS SHOW NO MERCY • • •
PromDl
malung, nerves induced by a home-
town appearance causmg a first
mning loss of control. The Reseda
resident walked three of the first four
men he faced, but escaped when Brian
Downing bounced into a double play,
one offive turned by the Kansas City
infield. . ....
This is only Saberhagen's second
full season m pro baJI -he went 16-7 with a 2. 55 ERA splitting lime m his
1nattal season betwec11 Fort Myers
(Class A) and Jacksonville (Double
A) last year.
.. I'd ~Y lhere were 30 or 40 people
here tonight to see me," he said. "I
wal> nervous the first anrung. then
after the second inning It went away.
After the third inning. I started
throwing the ball where J wanted to."
"Our pitching and defense was
outstandt.ng." Howser said. "In fact,
the infield played the best I've sten all
year."
On the pennant race. "My ex-
periences from 1980 tell me we still
don't have enough breathing room.
This 1s a day-to-day game and we're
lookmJ at their two best pitchers
(Geoff Zahn and Mike Witt) the
rcmaindcroft.hiss.enes.Plus, we have
six games left wtth these guys."
* ANGl!L NOTES -•ret S.'*"'"""' lhr" w•llll lo lhe first lt1nir'll lr'9olftcl •II tlmo$1
IMrful mood from AllOtl mtl\tffl' Jelwl
l
REGGIE •.• l
ftomD
onl> 2 000 people, .. he said. "And
the fact that ~e·rc m pcnnAnl rncc
.. There 1 such thing s a I 0th
pla)-er.. ... •
The ht tone-home run me on th
nnt\CTSnf'Y of R 'e's first bl&
I ue 1our around the On
Sept, 17, 1967, he hn No. l off ArlgCJ
lef\·handcr Jim W ver, also al 'I
Anaheim Stadium. That was only one )'CAt' aflcr he'4 I
finished his collegiate CMCCr 11 Ari··!
zo na Statt-. "I was still had kin head :
then, too," he laid .
Jackson Jdmttt~d that for the fir1f ·
time in quite a while, he ttad l
n~papcrs T uesday.
"It really had a lot ofimpect When J
rtad the paper today,'' he CAl)latned.
"J boUjht three papers; that's when 11
m de me feel bke they thou&ht 1t waf s important as l did. l used to read
the 1)3pers a lot, but not as much ~nymort because I've been struliJ: 10f: . · 500 home runs -it's a penoruil
thing. h'l> kind of a goal, a feat, a
record. I don't feel like 1 have to hit a
home run now. That constant anticl·
pation of'wben, when,' isn't there.
"The pressure came from myself. J
don't think lhe media over covered it:
It's newsworth..y and they did a good
job." .
ReagJe went a month between
bitting No. 497 and No. 498, bui ne
also admitted he didn't want to reach
SOO on the road.
"I hit a ball in Detroit, and it hit the
top of the wall," Reggie said, "and it
went for a triple. And I sure was aJad,
because I wanted to do it at home.
The only problem was that it (not
bittina a homer) stayed with me (or a
month."
The club it If Monday seemed
totally unp~pared for Regaje's shot.
While the entJre.Angel bench emptied
onto the field to greet No. 44, a bat
boy luued a microphone out to the
on-dcclt-circle.
He took it back into the dttgout as
the game went on, then t>rouaht it
back out after the inning had ended.
"Had we been winnine, the game
sbould'vc been stopped rif1t then
and there. But we weren't, • Regie
said.
McN81Nrl. "'HNI ttll YOU sev. he ( .......
o.wnln9l l)lt the blH herd (llllo • OolJble Jiiiy)/'
h4I seld, rtterrlno th41 Motts' baM•·IOeded, ont
out .i1u.rloll. "VOUllO kid p11~no here, from eround titre -vou lust never k110w wtlel you••
get out Of II." ... ~ lrett, whO tied thr ..
lll'lllel T~'I' before rtllrlnO, ~d Mimi dlolc.e
words 10 MIY •bout his bll dUb afler the ..,,.,.,
•lld •boUI his fonner roomtMlt -SebtrhtMI\.
"This c:ould be the fastnt rtbulldltlg transition lo
the hl1lorv Of ~ Ttin Is Probeblv the _.,
25-mtn tMm I've e¥tr l>Mn Oii -I """" tvKYbodY COl'llrlbuta," &ftll Y id. Tllel'I, Oii ntl
formtf' roomni.rt: ''When Ille A""" were In
K•nsa' Cllv Mr11tr '" !tie ..... , • I Wt ' 1 ... lllO to
DtU9 DeCMctt 1n ffotlt of our dUllOU1 Mfor• • oame S.btrl\tOtll w•lktcl UP ro u., alld Yid tO
Doug, 'Hev, rtmtmbef mt? You SllOk• •I ITlf
hl9h schoot blMl>llft bll'ICIUet lwo y .. n HO.' T
11uv's amazlnll. Ht 's lmmelUA for Ills He lhe'I
onlv 20>, but ,,.., merurt for his ave e11 tl'9 flelCI;
He 1l•vtd with mt Ille flrsl COUPie week' a t ,,,.,
houM Wt hed • good llmt Wt get t lontJ graal
11 mekn me IMI youno." lrett Is Jl ... 0.-
Zahn (12-9) f.c.es 0-. JedlMll 09') IOtlkltf,
SUNSET LEAGUE •••
FV'• Tom Boyd I• queatlon-
able for Friday'• game.
FromDl
back on the ground after a big victory
over Servile, while Foothill is picking
itself up from the dirt after a 24-13
loss to Long Beach Poly.
FoutalD Valley (1-0) at MJ11loa
Viejo (t-0): -The Barons' 17-14
victory over El Toro did not come
Wiffiout a price and they'll nslc their
No. 1 label 10 Orange County a11inst
ninth-ranked Mission Viejo with two
key players on the questionable list.
· Nose JUard Tom Boyd suffered an
ankle inJUry and defensive end Don-
nie Lewis sustained a neck injury.
Also, defensive lineman John
Etheridge is questionable with a
possible broken finger. .
"We'll be seeing the same type of
offense for the second straight week,''
says Fountain Valley Coach Mi.kc
Mtlner.
· Servile (1-1) at Weatmln1ter (1·1):
"Basically we're going to shut off their
passinggameand malce them run," is
how Westminster High football
coach Jim O'Hara describes his
team's task this week.
Fenton rushed for 700 yards as •
sophomore. · . j
Both clubs are loaded in terms of
experienced depth.
Mater Del U·l ) vs.Santa Au (0-1)
at Santa Ana Bowl: -Mater Dei's
Monarchs arc obviously fcelioa better
about things after a 3()..() victory over
Santa Ana Yalley; but the irtjury sheet
isn't helping matters in preparation
for Santa Ana.
Comcrback Tim Haider is quea-:
t1onable with a strained le.nee, ~
fens1ve end John Barich missed the
last game and may miss this-one, too,
with a sprained ankle, and fullback
.Charles Anton is out with a fractured
left lhumb.
"We'll continue to do what we've
been doing," says Coach Chuck
Gallo.
Irvine (1-l) at Ta1tin {U): -The
Vaqueros showed they can deal with
size in playing a much Jaraer Newport
Harbor squad no~to-nosc last week
in a 20-7 Joss, now they must contend
with Tustin's new look Tillers, wbO
arc on a two-came winning streak for
the first ti"\e in years.
Sea Kings
triumph
in tennis
SEA VIEW LEAGUE ROUNDUP •••
"l feel we have one of the best
defenses in Orange County, and this
week, we hope to establish our
running pme. '1
The Lions must do It without all-
league defensive end Jeff Lovina. who
broke bis le1 in the 14-11 loss to
Pacifica.
Marijon Ancich bas the Tillen
believing in themselves and lhereia
may he Irvine's big est hurdle in thi
final tuneup before South Coasa
Lcaa11e neAt week. •
The Corona def Mar Ht(,h girls
te'nnl• t .. m made 1 trip to a.Yerty
HUia worthwhll4t Tuesday, beating
the h08t Normans on points, 8&-81,
Wherl the Mt ICOf'e ended In a 9-9
ct.edtock.
The Se& tqnga, Who begin Sea
View League action on Thurtday at
WoOdbtld~, Improved to 2.0.
Ptaytng lo thi No. 1 slot,
fr91hman DanlelteScoU won two of
ttuw fot' the S.. Kings. ·
~•. L.agona 8Mch9dged
Mater o.I, 1().8, and Newport
Hwbof ~ Dana Hiiis on a tJe..
brMICW.
The Artlltl ct1tmed their W:tory
In dOublee, M Mater Del lf1owed
strength tn ~. ~tur1ng llx of a po•ibtt nine point•. '°1l'e ,..,,, Of o.*8 Sugl nd
Noni TMll 1W9Pt In dc>Ut>IM. 8-2,
1-2 Md w . to prcMde VJI! dlf-
w.nce In the l'Mtdl. ~· opena See VJaW L..-pley at
Eltlnde ltK.n(ley .eftetnoOn at 3. ,..,,, ••. Lelle Ayer1 tcd
of ttv• In llngtee Md thi 8eAott
took • ~ YlctOtY " .ovw Dana HUii. NtWpoft ... _.. ,Sedcne-
b6ck tn ,,. kMtgµ Opentf 1ihu,.
day. ,
FromDl ·
reflects winless vs. all-winning.
Capistrano Valley's Cou.ars. under the coaching of Dtck Ennght,
arc big. have a standout quarterback
m Nathan Call and have lost to two of
the best teams 10 Orange County
(Foothill and Esperanza).
Corona del Mar, however. weath-
ered the storm at San Oemcnte and
should be ready for a top performance
with ctuarterbaclc Bobby Hatfield in
I 00 percent thape. Matt Du Bow and
Tod Bcarbower arc also expected to
be ready after injuries.
"I think it'll be a dam Jood football
game." says CdM Coach Dave
Holland. "They're well-coached and
the caliber of learns they play against
arc real good.''
Ualverslt7 (t-l) VJ. Lapna Hiils
(l·l): -It's no secret around the
University aunpu , di 1ppo1ntment
doc n't fully dttcnbe the Trojans'
feelings about their low tart.
Somt: of th~t was the re uh of lhc
absence of linemen Phil Palumbo
(215) and Tim Bates (20S). JO
quarterback Andy Maller hould be
happy' to see his protettion ~tuman
~um-Httts, Hawks arc the ~
pos1t1on thi week, but for the
Trojans, the team they have 10 Yl'h1p i
the on wlticb hasn't put itt cthcras
a team in the past 1 'O wcct5,
"Our ability to play a team 11 the
btJ thing." say Un1ver'l1Y Co h
R1clc Curti . "Jl' 1 di iplinc fact()f
on 1hc field.'. ,.
E11aacla (l-1) at Sao Clemente
(1-1): -The ~es of Coach Ed
Blanton will be trymg to make it two
m a row -but tt comes at a site not
genera!IY conceded as easy territory
for VISllOrs.
Coach Allie Schafrs Tritons have
developed a passin& arsenal behind
Junior quarterback Alex Baker, to
complement an always tough de-
fense. one which-held Corona de! Mar
t a smsJe touchdown.
'They've really changed their of-
fense," notes Blanton. "We'll have to
work on our defense, hopefully put a
little pressure on him and cause some
problem ,"
Woodbrld1e U·O v1. Su Marcos
U·U: -The Warriors travel south
for the 7:4'5 contest and Woodbridfc
Coach Gene Noji says a concern is m
dealina with the optton attack, some-
thing new for hi team.
"They have a iood option quar·
terback (Gr'( Htlm) wbo c.an throw
ofT-balanmi. ' say Noji ... We've &Ol
lO keep bim ID idc 8S l'aJ' I the pa
rush is concerned bccau he docs a
lot of aood trunas nd has some aood
receivers ...
Costa Mesa Cl·!) vs. Lo Alaml
ft .. ): -Co ta Mesa quarter ck
Make huck i1 reportedly que taon·
ble for duty bmlu ora rained ldl
knee. nd th tju11 makes the Griffins'
ch nccs inst Mc evtn better.
"Wc'~e ot our work CUI out for
u " ta M C ch Tom
·'
Baldwm. who 1s still smarting from
his team's duel with Santiago and the
officials a week ago.
"Every time we had a key play in
the ball aame the officials called it
back." says Baldwm "We held them
to no first downs tn the second half
and I don't thank we're as poor a
football team as we showed the other
n~t. 'I feel we can still Wln, and we're
plannina on it:•
Dana 111111 (0·1> 1& Lasua Beacb
(0-1): -Both have been makina their
share of mistakes at the outset, and
thi~ one fi1urc to be as clo as the 12-
year scrie , which find the ho t
Arti ts up on Dana Hill , 7·S. after
secmg a ix-year winnina streak
snapped a year qo.
"We have to top ma.Una so many mistak~" says Luuna Beach Coach
Dcnnt1 Haryuna. ·rwe·ve been doina
a better JOb of bc.ati ounclvcs than
the other team do.
.. Dana Hill" beat u on a broken
play llst :year, and t e:ce,cc1 that same
kind of me th1 year. •
•
........... _._ ___ _
Replacing him will be sophomore
Todd Weaver, who O'Hara dt1Cribes
as "probably the most ouutanding
sophomore we've ever bad."
Oceu View (l-1) v1. Cypres1 (l-l)
at Westent: -The Seahawks of
Octan View fell out of the cloud with
a 28-10 loss to La Quinta la l week.
thus it's a matter of regrouping
apinst the Centurions, who operate
with seven ret\Jming offensive
starters, includina tailb3ck Todd
Fenton.
Artists bold on
for 16-14 win
"It's just another non·league
pme,'' is bow Irvine Coach Tc~
Henipn describes the situation. • . .
Nutrition
talk slated
.•: ..
r • Dr. Be rn ard Landes. one of th
leadina authoriti~ in the field Of
spons nutrition, will be spcakina on
the subject toni.&ht from 7:30 to 9 p.m.
at the Ncwp<>rt ~Utt Academy, 2632
Santa Ana Ave .• Costa Mesa.
.Dr. Landes has worked '-i lh world·
clw athletes in such divcnc field
powcrhf\ina. tnathlon, football, trKk
and field, and ultra-narathon cya,.
His nutnuonal programs have ltd
to the tabli hmtnt of four wo11d"
records in ultra-marathon cyclinaabd
he is a lcad1nc ~uthority on ulua·
endurance nutnuon.
T1 ct may be purthased 11 \hC
door for $3. Procttds from the ticket
lcs Wiil be donated to the Ba1Jet Monrmart~, a non.profit orpnm -
taon
For funhcr informauon, phone 67J.697S.
K
tleflll
ltUI
1·41 •
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TlllPl.ES: Stmuel, ~. II, Sandtlar9, ~. 17; Cn.11, Hou.ton, Ill Donn, Houston, 11; c•~. Houlton, 10; Gwvnn, San Dleto, 10; MtetHtt, SI.
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Sdvnldl, lll'hllad••~.~. Cey, ''*-"1.25; <Kart•, Mor!tAal, U, Straw~, ..._
York, D.
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• S.l'llUtl. ~ ... ; Wletlnt. Saft OleOo, 65; ltadul, ClllcfnNlt, 47; l..eSmlll\, St. L.ult, U; MWVton, New YCIR, '5;
VHaY•, Ptlla._l\la, 45.
PITCHING (14 didaloN): SI.ii~, Cftl·
catO, 15-1. 2.'3; •• ....,, ~. 10-4,
U7; Soto, Clndnneti, 15-7, 14'L ....... •
DM9lr'I. 12-.. 1.AI; Stoddard, U!ICfflO,
10-5, U2.
STllUKEOUTS• Gooden, New Yotk, 267; ¥.........., DMllln. 219; llvan, HCMi•ton,
. IN; Sol•, Clndnnall, , .. : ceruon, Pfll,...·
llt\la, 151.
SAVES:. Suiter, St. l.ovlt, 42f: LASmll'tl,
Chlcato, 321 Or~, New YOl'lt, )0,
Holland, Pl'lllacMlllNe, 2'; Got .... , San Dleoo, 25.
t
CIF football ratings
Southem Conference
'· U*"MIH 2 EIMDdana Ems>lt9 M 7' a.ti~ Valltv, '4•!2
I l.Ynwood C.mJr:Y I 2-0 72 ... , ~' 30-<I
Sen Ga!lrltl Valley 2-0 6l ... , V~ Del, 7$-0
4. Wlbon (HH)
5. FOOllllll lltrra 2-0 u ... , Ganwta, '2-0
6. El Toro 7.~
CefttUrY M Jf 1 to Lot$ IMCn Poly, tl•14
Soufrl COl'I 1•1 17 t to Fountalll ValltY, 17·N
Emoh 2-0 U ... , Wt1trNnsttr, U·11
I Mls.&lon lo
'· Dowftrt•
Soult\ Coest 2-0 2S '"' untvar:anv, 21-0 lal'I G~ Va 1-1 J7 \.oS! to Id O.roana, M lO, Lot Alloa -Slerrt'-.., 1• '-"' to eWioo M'lef. l4-0
Coastal Conference I. Senta Manlca
2 Patacltne , Mlllr
• OlcnatCI 5. Ventura
6 Camarllo
1. Tl'IOuland Oekt
I Wtal Torral!U t. Cllennet 11r.ndl 10 (ti.) Schurr 10.(tle)H~
.. ., 1-0 " Paclllc 1-CI a .
Pacific .. 1·0 ff
Clla!IMI 1· 1 61
CfllnMC 2-0 S6
Marmontt 1·1 52 Ma rfl'IOllf e 2-0 40 Bay H 34 Marmonte 1·0-1 » ftoolbll H 1
Clla/llltl 1·0· 1 7
.... L~Ola. 7·0 llat It. Frencb. 21-7 ... , CentenntaL .._..
lost to w. Baktrtfle!O, 2h 12
.... ~ pn_ 2'•14
.... Rio MaM. ll-7
laattuene. lM
L01t to lnoltwooel. t•O Tied Hvenwne, •o
LOii IOI( ..... , 12·6
TIM Cll•nnel lafaMI, 0-0
Desert-Mountain Conference
1. •Im of WOl'lcl Suntr.111 2·0 116 .... 2' Patmt, iHI 2. Aeour• FrontlW ,.. 110 ... , Oall ,.~ 1-J a. Carotntwi. Tn.V111tY 2·0 " ... , CalaOaaa• • .w-u
4 Mix~ sam. Ft f-0 11 leaf CSOR, ••
5. Santi Cler• Frontier 2-0 71 laal Sf. lonawriturt, I• ..
6. Harvard PloMW H '3 Lott 10 ~ Hiii, •7 7, Mlr ... ta P10Ner 1-1 JI ... , R.oondO, 21-0
I ai.tnlnMa S9IU9 Fe 0-2 21 l.ott .. A1anW1Y, 17-0 ,, St. '°"'"""'" Trl·V...., 1-1 11 &Mt .. Sante Qare, 1H 10 YwcalM Sunk.lit 1-1 11 Loat to La Sierra, 2IH
1, Olltmoflt
2 T..,_ City
i Notco t~--.. ltetnone
7. La CalltA I Saft Marino t EelteWOod 10 Whlttlar
Eastern .COnf erence kMllM 2-0 ,.
llJo ~ 1-0 '° Ivy 2-0 II
tvy 2-0 n
WMmonl 1•1 ..
tvv 1-1 a
Rio Honclo H • Rio Hondo I.. l3
VI Vl•ta • 1-0 12 W111tmo111 2-0 20
Inland Conference 1. W1111t1er CIWlatien Olvmoic 2-0 to a.t $1 ~. tt-1 2. Vellrf CIV'l1t1an OtvmcllC 2-0 61 a.1 Mavfw, w.-t
'· TrOllt Oes«Hnvo (S) 2-0 67 ... , ,.•fir~. Nev., tMf
" San Jacinto O. Ania , 2-0 SS ·"'' Armt·HeYV. 56--1 S. lllhOo Union O.wt-lnvo (LI 2·0 41 het Whit• Pinet, Nev., U.14 t Olwt o...N·lnyo (L) 2-t JI ... , lllv• Vallav, ... 7. T.nactla.I DtterHnvo (l.) t•O 25 .... lt..amond, 2>•1t I. Montdalr Prep AIPM H 2l Lott to St Barnard, 14-0
t. LA Lutllwan Alofll 1-1 11 ... , Oranee Luthlrlft. 14·f 10 Ol!llrlO Chrlateln ()lymplc H 10 ... , HalMrla, 21·7
. Northwe&tern Conference 1 Horlll Torrance Oclart 2·0 f7 ... , Sol.lltl Torrance, ...
2. Canvon CS> Goio.n 2-0 '2 lelt St. ~ ......
,. LomPOC Hontwn 2-t II ' .... w.. •. JM•
4. C~ CllV Oc9111 2-0 60 ... , Lone aaadl JOfiMft. 14·9 5. Sent• Mal1I Nor1tlerft 2-0 5' ... , .... Dil90. ,..,...
6 Atatcaoaro LOI.... H .. lo&I .. Soulll l&Mnflalel. 15-ll
• 7 Ql.lai'IJ.H Goi4an 2-0 U .... len10W, 17·7 I Cwlllo l.ot PW. 2-0 26 leaf Horcltlaff, '1·14 t . Anla!OM Valle't GOiden l-1 22 L.o6t to P'ocM!lll (aak.), l4-t
10 .,,..._ooct Ocaen H 12 ... ~"'' Torranc., H
Southeastern Conference 1. leidw1'1 Parll
1 Dtllmond Bar .l.s.n Olma• 4 AHit VallaY S.K .....
6 Duar1• 7. san larnardtno a. Alrovo
'· Calon 10 Catutc:o
1. •loomlnO~ ""· 2 • .......,.,. OWl&tlan
J. •to Pine 4 Cal L"thlrt11
......... Olftl1*t
MonlVJe# 1-0 f7 .... ~··\.4 ~ 1-0 ,, .... Las.ma.,. ..
Molltvlaw 1-0 74 .... ""'°""*"· Jl-0 San Anctr.1 2·0 61 ... , PWllJndalt. 7•6
Minion Valley 1-0 60 ... , Sctlurr, IN
MIMlon VaWY 2-0 41 ... , MottNI¥ IJ.-J
S.'1 Anclr"' 2-0 :at a.1 tnc11o, J6-2t
MiHlorl Valley 2-0 21 .... ~ .....
S.11 AtldrM• t-1 11 Lott IO 5d Gor~. 2'Ml
Datart·Valltv• 2-0 t '"' llTIMri&I. 15-7
Eiaht-Man (Larae\ · OtlPhlt" 2-0 "'\ea{ Vetey Cl\rl1tlall (SM), 46-0
DalphlC 2-0 ... I Marlcooa, lM
Trl·COuntv 2·0 ... , Rio HOlldO, 3'-15
Trl·Countv 1·0 lye
Pr•P 2·0 ... , LM Fllll Hiiia, '2 ..
THOllOUOHMIDS ,~TH RAC&. t fUt1onta.. Mia's Ffl/tt (P'•Mnda) S.60 3.40 UO StaadY Penny (HanMl'I) UO 3 00
MaW'a Teddi..,._ (0rte9a) 600 AllO raced Qllldl Alt OeedlV, Via Zanta,
Mt irUulout OM. Lodtl.tOYourdllt#ltar, ....,, Aolow.
Tlma 1:l3 211.
"'™ ltACL 6 ~ .w.·rt ~ <Mena> 1.• 3 '° ·uo • Ooldaft 'W•ldl (lladt) 3.00 2.to
Slllln °" Oo (0omln9uet) ... Aaao rlC9CI Wlnnlnl Tri, Out Oii IM c ... 1, HaHv Baltw, Tvrbulanl ltt.tltr, C-try Rldea. •
Time. 1:11 U DAILY OOUILI (1·3) oald UUO.
MXTH uc•. 6 tunonoa. P\lcldlns GOOdUn (HIWth) 25..20 1UO 4.IO
Glol'latla lay (MllCMll) '00 S.•
Prlda O Paul Clurna) "60 AISo rlC9CI: GOlc»n Dul!.•. SPtrlt Foree, La latreea, Flvwood, Sw•t wt.at. Tll'M: 1:11 2/S.
'5 IXACTA (l·S> Hid 1110.00
SaVIMTH UCL 6 turtoneL
Mlrllllt (Hell*') U0 UO 2 20
Stunnlne Scart IMenll UO 2.40 ~· Halo (Orteta) '60 Aaao r.c.CI: Jlffv Lundi. LMKia Lou,
Manem, Charmine Gue$!. :nm.: 1.ll 115
liOHTH RACI. 6 ~
Tiie Sal'M ION I'*"> • 1120 S..20 OQ•MartM IEl&atllttl (Oltver•I ....
Cermtll K.., COWtdllo)
360 uo
320
~·· MUa *' aNt PtecM MCOftd. •
AIM> racet Talfv, TlrN To llU-.. ir '• Vldorv, T~, ~ M.PG
Tlmt 1;12 411
U IXACTA (l•tl Hld Sf7 00.
. t
Delea HVG ,, Louh
PA ,.
12 .,
n
7• .. . "· 62 to ,, '° .. .. ,, .... Ill .. 12 n
'1 1'
er.. ceulllrY ,....,.
IOYS
4• A -1. Foot!lfl; 2. Simi V I 3. El ~; ... aw-... ,,_, s.. MbMln
Vlelll; 6. Mlltw Oell 7. ~' L Toro; t VIII Patao, 10.. (llt l Dana H ,
Sante Ana Vdl\I. ~
1-A -I. Hart, 2 Norco, ) ~: 4 Mouflfeln VJew, S. 8'*" P9tk, 6. T*'*8
City, 7. HawttiorM; I . Arrovo, t ~
(II: ta. Su Melino
t·A -1. l0¥oll, 2. Hordllllft, S. MNnola," L.omMc; J. .,......,, 6 Arrow Grlflda; 1. ve~ t. OWNnd e.r; t
Orllllrio: 10. "*'*"'. l·A-t. Shen'N.i I,..,,. 2 Alatc.acsar..
3, ca~• Morro Ba¥. 5. u ,Jala, 6 9'enhilooct; 7. Marana!N: I: TvwemY/lftle
Palma; 9. 8W. Union; 10 LA leon». . GltU •·A -t 8-; t. Tustin; S. •• ._ • ~ V•dll; t. ......, HafW1 6.
Fooltlll; 7. Hawttlorna, I. ThouMll'CI OU.; t. Simi V....,; lO. MIUiOn Vlelo.
J·A - 1. MMar o.&I 2. Htn, l. I •"-
Amat; 4. E._..l\la; S. A'"1YO Grl/IOll, 6-
Lompoc,; 7. Norco, L Slueul; f El Rencho; ta. Peramount.
1· A -1. MoYftlalll View; 2. OW. 1
L.oulavllla, 4. LA Quinta; S. """'•; 6. ~ PUldana; 7. Indio, I. Yua pa; t 8'•·
Ollncla; 10. Ol&mofld lw,
1·A -l. Morro lev, 2. Calwlllo. 1 AlatadrO; .. Mllrafla.lhe; S. SNrma11 ~ '-.... Jeff, 7, P,.~ I T...,...
h'nlllt PU'N, t. LA R.ina; lt. SI Monica
.... Girts "llntlitl
COLLaGa
UC lrvtllt dlf. Uni~ ol S.n D"90.
lS-12, 16-lt, 1S-ll
s.i"-n Cet c-.. tl9'. It ..... t-IS. 1H, lS-11, l·lS, 15·l2
WlOH SCHOOL
S-VWUttM
Conina Cle! Mar dlf Unlvtnltv, lS-0,
15-2, lH
Woodllt1d9e dlf co~•• ~. 1S·2, 1S·3,
IH.
.. Ctlit ~
ltvtna dlf. Et Toro, 15·5 IS-6 15·1 .......
E dlf LaktWOOd, 15-ti lf-.4
12•15, IS-7
Marlfl& clef Lo. Amlooa 1 .. lS. IS·ll ,
lt--14, IS-l.
------
\' ..
CdM ·
takes
opener
.
C.Orona 4cl Mar Hp·~ \lo&-le>'b!tJJ .-_quad 8wd itl -Ul Ow
Sea Kiaji' Sea View 1:1:.~ Tuetday niabt. qWc:Jdytdtu11
'Untvmlty, l~ IS.:2. IS-0
Abo rwinruaa na :first Sea 'VIC'W
msu:h was w~ a I S-2. I S.3, 15-0 vtctOr over Colta Me& lniae
and E Toro, two bmet S.. Vrt:J1 teams. bepn olay lJl tbe Souda 0..
l.ca&ue :with t&e 'VlqUetOI ~· IS-5, ls-6, IS-8 wumerov.er IEI Tolo.
. In non-kque acuon. f.ditoe soclk a
IS.10, lj.-4, Jl·lS_. IS-7 WU1 over vwuna LakcWood and MariU woa
qi), the road o;,·er Los~ lO.I,,
1 S.13, 16-14~ .tS-3.
ln coUcae act10n, UC lrviAe .oa
for the aecood :time this --.,
IWttPlDI past the Uruvenny .cf Sea Dicao. 1s.12. 16-14, 1s.u; and Southern Cal COllcae's womtn down.
(d Redlands, 9-:IS,Ti:S.:8, H-11, 8-U,
IS-12.
AJ Corona dt1 Mar, tbt Sea Kil9
were hardly tested as seruor UDaa
Burton enjoyed a fine serv:ib.7 ma1dl and 1e01or Cristy Moiso a IOOd
bittin& ni&bt
The sea Kinas uavd 10 meet
Woodbridae 1bunday. W~
made .its .sea View Leaaue dcbUl_bf
blittina Costa Mesa and im~
itsovmll record to 3-0.
Setters Loren Newman, a
IQPhomore, and junior 'f:omoau
Kaneko each JP.11Ye4 well for the
Warriors, u did .enior bitter~ Wilson. .
In the South Goist l.eaaue, Im.e's
c:asy victory over El Toro wusputed
by front-row players )Kari Boothrvyd.
a junior, ancf ·IC1lior Dayna &to. la
the back l'OTi T Olhia Runner alto WU
instrument&i iD the Vaqs' fourth win
ovc:nll without a loa. .
Irvine hOIU San Oemente iD it.a
oat encounter Thursday •
Edison wu J*Cd by senior senc:r
Erin Tomblin ( 17 Ulilu). ICnior
hittet Katby Stewart C 11 kills) and the
fine net play of Kelli Winkler.
UC lrvine, ill wiAniDa its leCODd match qainst five ectbacb, breezed
put Sari Dieao u hinen Lynda
Kelley and Lila Johnson were credi-
ted •ith 10 le.ills apiece. Su Pieeo droDPed to t-3 wilh the toa. Ntit on ti.I) for the Antealerl is
USIU OD Situn!a~, at ua.; Soutbeni Cal ru its record
to 3-2 with the win over Redl•nda
Ch81Dbllss'
-~bit' beats
Dodgers
A TLA~"T A (AP) -.. I thOU&bt it
would be cauibl," s&Jd Ad&Dta•s
Chris Chambliss, who hit the ball
"I thouaht it was out of the~ ..
said Les Aqetes reliever Ken How-
ell&.. who threw it.·
uoth were wrona. The ci&hth. inn.in& drive fell fot a twc>-run doub1e
th•t=e the Brs"esa 6-S victoryow:r the Tuesday niabt.
••Jtloo likc:hewas~tocatcb
it, but be reached beck and n wam't
tbCf'et" Qwnbliss said. .. All I could see were tbc liahts. but
I thouibt it c:arricid well cnouah that it
woWd be out, .. Howell said.
.. I Jost it in the liabts." said Qodeer
outfidder RJ. Reynolds, •ho miucd
the catch.
The double scored Alben Hall with
the tyina run and Oauddl Washlna-
ton with the winnina run. Hall wu oe
third as a Diach-nmner for Randy .
Johnson, •ho bad ain&led with one
out off Dodger reliever lN.rt Hool.OD,
3-S. Washi.Dgton was on first after
drawina a walk.
.. I knew I bit the ball Well. but I
knew it wasn't out." Chambliss said
··1 aot behind two balls and uo
strikes and had l.O ao i.ftcr him, .. saicl
Howell.
Gene Garber, 3-S. was mdit.cd
with the victory. Donnie Moore
pitched the final innina to c:am his
16th S'l\'C.
The Ood.&Crs took a S-4 lead iD the
ttvcnth when Candy Maldonado
tn&}ed in Dave Anderson from
second base.
South Coast
tourI)ey lures
top poloists
AflOllCOIEm = ____ .,, ...
)(Ill -----•11
Traditional
Realty
631-7370
-BAYFRONT
mT•IU
"!!:Macnab -Irv me
642-5678
\ I
j
HEALTH
CLUBS TENNIS
SWIMMING plus
mU<h mort' Sorry
rio Ptll Modtls
open d11ly 9 to 6 ~ Apartments
Newport Bta<.h So.
1700 16th Strut
(at Oovtr)
642-5113
New~rt 8ea<.h No.
880 lrvint Aveniw
(at 16th)
645-1104
$2.17 per day
TMt'• AU.~ .,_ '°' l llr-.80 ·~ In Che DAlY
PlOT
SERVICE
DltECT(MY
plul the IAVIHI MIAAOR
end the HUNTINOTON
MACHOOMHR.wty W~et · no .wa cMroef CALL TOOAVd .,.uea
YOAl/f ~ PIOt ~Dnctofy
~
Ml-4111 nt. •
1 ' ..
r••l•r
I
•
District Managers
It 1<N efttOY worl·~ wl )'°""9 boy\ &
g.rll •tJnd detl tob. or• not fo, you,
c~ o co•eer in the ~r ctrcvlo 'ion f~ Th" i' o un!qve f>O"'"°" wt
d01ly chol\enge• & rtWOrds
Ovr opetllt'IQI ort immedfatt, Appliconh
mVJt h~ a Yan, "ot;onwogon or tt11<lt
Wt offet °" e cellent solory with o bon•ll
pion ond oos ollowonce. We ~ on
excellent brifrt pion that i~ ho&pi·
to tot!On inlwonct, libet~ •OCOhon ond
holldoyi.
330 W~ Bay
Co ta Mesa CA 92626
l
'
•
AGES 11-14
EARN ti> TO $75.00 PER WEE<.
We 110W hawt I~ ~ tor JOV"I tlCf'
buvers to MCUft readers lot 1lie llf•"I' Coast
Dlil1 Pilot Our crews start al 330 p m and
1work unbl t·JO pm weddllys On Saturday, we 'i"°" a tew more hours. YOI wt arn NAY ~ , tfld prucs. llollC 111th arnq roer tw11 money ,
. theft IS llO cle4rterq Of calechOll •vohtd
If )'Oii "' llllttested, plase al ,., [lf1
(714) 548-7058
TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
Aa.GSI
1 Slwpglel1Ce
5~
10 Tooth
14 Otitlquely
15 Feton' I flllld
11 Mountain. ptef.
17 8'oMn¥0W
20 Turf
21 a.. ('of)
22 Goodies
23 8lle*y •tuft
24 -·c.tlo
Menotti
25 Scout group
21-~
32 Another tllM
33 Body OfP'\ 34aag.....,.
35VeNcee
3e Noell -, Jr.
37 WOffY
38 lk•'• command
39 Juicy berry
.0 Hend 00\ler
41 Wltl'ldr_,
43 Sweddled
44 Went
45 Eat flWay
4e Wu c:heelty to
49 Ulyplent
50 Jedlel'11Un
53Wuboeey
51 USSR rl\lef
57 Putorel
51 SP*»
5tCNl!enge
80 LocallUel
81 WOffY -
DOWN
1 Flounders
2 Of IOll: ptef
3 Tlllgr-
4 E\19fgreen plent
5 Educ:atlonel
lnltltutlon
8 Oree1 number
1 FlMwe
8 a.-.. erblter
ltlformal
t Third
10 Incite
11 Div•'• IOlo spot 12 Snug ptece
13 l.M\W
IS Sing .oftly
1t Preying figure
23PllO
24 Fierce look
25St ~bred 280.Uf~ .
27 Pleytng ~d
28 BWd eounds
2t Bar legally
PREVIOUS
PUZZLE SOL. VED
30 Town officer
31 CUI to size
33Leem.d
HSourcee
37 Wooden strip
3t Untrelned
.Os.M.
42 Boot pert
43 T etka lllly
45 Root beer -
I
BRJSTOL AT !DINGER
IRSAHTAAHA
Ml·OllO
Wolfsburg Edition
4'moC E.L a
S23' 74 +tax I* mo
TOP 113,52014
CAP S15,41t
l2500CAP~
Aulduel S5eOO 28
®
111t ICllOCOO
11•1&11uaJ
... moCE.L sm • 1ax per mo
TOP 112,019.20
CAP 112,000
Aelldulf$578e 08
m
11U IWm'ILSE
4'moCEL e
S211 .. tlilt1* "'° T6Pl1t.040te
CAP S1 1,500
$500 CAP reclUctlOn
ReeldUll '5208 76
Alk/Bob In Leu1ng
L74 Pinto. Gd oond. •1000/obo,54f.7Mt , ....... .... &eden IUto A/C ,,..., t>tu.. CtUIM 1mlfm
.-.0 (321UCU) .....
1 THEODORE
ROBINS
FORD
2000 HAll80R Ill VD
CO~IA MESA t>47 0010
., ....
.. DNllAC
~ifA IU
We're NeW'
We'r Dealing
~~:U~l!~. w.a. .........
Pedophilia:
U.S. 's dirty~
little secret --ChjJd sexual abu1e i11urfaci1J1
across the countl)' m record
numbers. but autb0ntit11 uy of.
ficW 1tati1ticuccount for only IO
~rcent of actual caes. ThiUln1
of a live-part aerie. provides an
overview of the problem.
By RICHARDT. Pl.ENClil
A1111'1t1•lllw.,._
Pedophilia, the seduction and
sexual abuse of children by adults,
is an underground world sJowly
seepina into .the nation's c<>n-
tciousness and contcience. In
many ways, thoUah, it is still
(See PSDOi'BILIA/ A7) "'
I'
'Doonesbury'
ad~entures
in Daily Pilot
NEW \'ORK (AP) -Holw
many teeth does JOI.Die Cauall'
bab1 have? aD U,.clc DUe
avoid the dimmer aftt:t' dc!I"• drugs ilO r&llC money for A
doeumcntal)' on auao lJCOGa
John De t.otta1 Do w ....
style props Still dutter a Wlabt
House "laFlet'?
These and other n1111as q..,.
ODS will be answered b' DdJ
Pilot readers on Sept. 30 Wbe8-IM
celebrated com:ac auap
.. Doo~bury"' JOlnl the Pilot.
BUteXactly what PUiitzer P.rbe-
winning cartoonast Oat:ry
..,_..._, Trudeau will put ia thole fttla
DolDIU~UT (See DOOllS88Ua'l'/A'1)
..
. , .
caum IDlTIDN
WI IJNt ',(l/l'J ·.i I'll Miii 11 1•1 1•1111 0 HAN GE C 0 UN l Y CA LI f OH NI A :• 5 CE N TS
. .
Handcuffed man stealscops' car
Limber-limbed drunken driver suspect
captur~d after Santa Ana foot chase
Melvin Kokoruda, 29, of San
Diego was collared about an hour
later when be was spotted running
down a side street in Santa Ana just a
short distance from where the aban-
doned Irvine police car was found.
driving. police ~d.
With assistance from backup of-
ficer Ron Carr, Kokoruda was given a
field sobriety test that he reponedly
flunked. Kokoruda had been driving
with a female passenger who. was not
arrested.
By STEVE MARBLE
OflielWlr .........
A handcuffed drunken drivina
suspect surprised Irvine police early
today when be "slipped the cuffs .. and
roared offin a police squad car, nearly
The closure of the Joseph
Magnln stores shocked
employees anctangered ·
creditors./ A3
CaHforilla
Actor Richard Basehart
succumbs at the age of
70./AS
Natl.on
Americans' personal ln-
c<>me rises at a modest
rate for August./ A4
, .:::!:!:·=~=~=~~!!~*=~!:!:~:!:-:!:-:·:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:!:v:·
World
British find an 'almost
brand new' mine In the
Red Sea./ AS
Five U.S. saJlors are ex-
pected to be freed In
International waters
today./AS
Home
The way a window Is
framed can add beauty to
·the Inside of the room and
the view outslde./81
FOOcl
A sensible diet can help
control high blood pr8SS:s
ure./C1
Sporta
The Rams get some quar--
terback help from Minne-
sota In acquiring Steve
Dlls./D1
Entertainment
Michael Landon as an
angel and the devilish
Morgan Fairchild star In a
l pair of watchable new
serles./83
INDEX--'
Bridge C8
Butletln Board A3
Bulfnela EM
Cellfomla Newa A'4
ClaUffled [).4..6
Comlct ca
running down a patrolman.
The limber-limbed man dod$ed
police bullets as he sped off, leaving
bis bCwildered female companion
and the officers standin& on the
shoutder of the Santa Ana 'freeway.
The unlikely ej>isode started lt
12:30 a.m. on the Santa Ana Freeway
near the Myford Road exit where
Irvine Officer Dave Hustud stopped
K.Okoruda on suspicion of drunken
"He was handcuffed behind his ~ placed in the front seat of the
police car and seat belted in," ex-
plained Lt. Al Muir. ·~Once he was
Ah, tile aooc1 µ.te 0
Wlalle yoa•re alanq a11F&7 at 3 o'clock lD
tile aftenaooa, tlWlk of tlaeee more for-
~te ilOala ~a leiA.relycnlM OD
. tbelr .allbollta. Tlala plctare wu anaPPed··.
lD tbe clui•nel between Lido lale ancl-tbe
Re.port Beach mainland.
t
restrained, the officer turned his
attention back to the woman."
Officer Carr reportedly looked
back at the squad car just 1n time to
see Kokoruda sliding into the driver•s
seat and putting the patrol car in gear.
"Somehow he slipped the cuffs. He
slid them·undcr him so that hii bands
were in front but still cuffed. Then he
unfastened the seat belt," Muir said.
The agile man pWled back onto the
Santa Ana F,rceway. neatly~
over }jUstud iD the procaa, 'potioe
said. Carr, Who ~tly yeDcd a
warning at Hu stud, fared two lbots u
the squad car roared. by him.
.. One of the rounds bit the car
door, .. Muir said.
Less tlWi an hour later, a Santa Ana
police sersr:ant saw a baadCIJffed maa
runniaa in the vicinity of JF'JJ'lt :aDd ......... BAJllDCUn&D/d)
Z 1st suspect
in coke bust
pleads guilty
Huntington man
faces 30 years,
ltf etlme parole
By STEVE MARBLB °' .. .,.., ........
A 29-year-old Huntington Beach
man bas p]Caded auiJty to cocaine
smualinl c~ brinJins to 21 the
number-of people to plead guil!)' in
what bas been described as the Lafacst
West Coast drug case n'er pros,;
ecutod.
Mark Steven Mcfarlane, who
maintained resjdcnca in HWlri naton
Beach aDd San Ocmente pilelMled
suiltY Tuesday to two redcni drua
charges. He faces a maximum of 30
years in prison. and lifetime parole.:
McFarlane has been described u a
.. mi~dle DU1u:ff:ent .. fi.f1ue in~
cocame sm operallon, which
rep6rtedly brought more than a tOll of
(Pleue Me COCAIRS/A2)
Guru's followers
win court battle 1
over Laguna land
From staff a.M wire reports
Followers of Indian JWU Bhagwi.n
Sbree Rajneesh have won the rigbt-
at least for the time being-to remain
on the six-acre Laauna Beach prop-
erty that bas been the focus of an
intense three-year lepl battle. . Ora.nae County Superior Coun
Judge fudith Ryan summarily dis-
nussed the last portion of a lawsuit
filed by the Church of Re~ous
Science Monday. The suit cla.imed
that ~ Olurch of ~necshism bad
illeplly taken over tbe cb:urcil prop-
erty at Laauna Canyon and El Toro
roads.
Ryan, wtto had been considcrina
the case since a June 19 hcarin&. ruled
the court could find .. no triable iauea
of material fact." This latest in a 9Cries
of rulings clears title to the cbun:h
Cropcrty for ~neesb followers un-
eu the decision is appealed.
Members of the Church of Re-
liiious Science congregation, which
have been meetina nearby unce tbcfr
.ilJqed ouster fiUm the property,
already hive vowed to appeal the
jud&ment as they have previous
summary judginents in the cue.
The reliaious tempest between tbi
tw0 churches was sparked b6!s split in
theconarcptionaf\ermem of the
Religious Science oonareptiOQ be-
came disciples Qf a..,jnee5h in i981.
(Pleue eee CBORCB/A.2)
. .
Valley folks .shen out
more for trash pickup.
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN
Of ..........
Fou.ntain Valley homeowners and
businC$SCS am expect to pay more for
uub collection as the result of a fee
lDcrea9C IPefOved Tuesday ni&ht by
the Fountam VaDer O ty Council
The 1ncrcue1 like effect Oct. L
The monthly cbarac for residential
trash pickup will increa f'rom S7.
to $7.31 . Trash pickup fees arc
includcdloa city water bills.1Wbicb are
mailed to rcsidco.u CVr:r:J two
month . Tbe new commerdal rate
incrcasea avcraee 6.64 peroent.
Tbe rate inau9es were ~
by Rainbow Disposal, Whida bat a
(Pleue ... n•..,u1
CrOM*Ord 06
Death NotlcM 88
Food C1-7
Home B1-2
HotQIOOP8 05·
Skip school in Newport and you may go to jail
AMlandet• Mutual Funds
NatlOnal N.-
OplnlOn P:azzl p Log
Publle Notlcel
Sports .
Stoek Marketa
TtfeV\tlon
Thelteta
Weather
W011d Newt
82
M
A4
A7-8
B1
A3
88
01-3
B5 ' 82
83
A2
~4
Police launc new crac1ti:lown on truancy
aroun city's beaches and video arcades
Hilb IChool students ditchins
tehool could find tbemtel¥ spend·
ina an afternoon in J••I as part of a
new U'U&PCY crackdow-n by the New·
Pof1 BeKb Potice D@anmcQt.
Pluolmcn in the beaeh city starttd
opention "Baclc tO School' a wtek aao an4 have vowed'° put a lft&ny u
a dottn officers on the dcWI t~t wall
£.lf1lRCH REBUFFED IN GURU SUIT •••
CUJTtntly, abou1 eiJbt aem1ces
bvc on the propcny, located at
una Canyon nd El Toro road ,
an about 200 fotlowcrs rqulary
ttcnd Sunday celebration
~n h who came to the Un ted
lit in 19 l.liveswithabout 1,000
red':lllrbcd discip s oo 1 ~.ooo acre
nch near Antelope, Ote.. called ~nee1bpuram. •
~~SB RATES UP IN FV .:. .•.-vmAl I
The contract give Rainbow the
• t to request a rnidendal rate
blcrcase oncc each year if tbe com·
ny cu show iu co ts of doina
liness have 111crcucd over the
viou1 year.
The co ts can include labor, fuel,
insurance and ttplaocmcnt of trucks ~ ttutk bodies.
In a repcn to the councd: Steven
Chippa • city comptrollcrt. u1d Rain· However, the comptroller said the
bow's request for a 3.lS percent commercial rate increase will cause
midential rate incrcuc was le than Rainbow to pay hiper hnchise fees
the most. recent annual incre~to c city, providina an extra $2,200
reported an the Lot Anaelcs·Lo or the 1954-85 fiscal year. ·
Bnch Comumcr Price fodcx. 3. The rate increases were approved
percent. in a 4-1 vote by the council.
Cbippas' rcpcn said Rainbow had Councilwoman Barbara Brown
not requested an increase in com· said &be cast the oppbsi~ vote
merdal O'Uh pkkup prices since because 1he objecu to proviJions of
October 1982. the contract with Rainbow that
Heu.id the residential rate increase oblipte the council to approve rate
will not affect the city budaet because increases. She said the contract wa
the increased . revenue would be approved before she was electtd to
passed on to Rainbow. · the council.
COCAINE SUSPECT PLEADS GUILTY •••
the citua into Oranae County.
Accordina to Assistant U.S. At·
tomey John Kuray, Mcfarlane per-
sonally distributed 18 k.il~ms of
cocaine or more lhan S 1 million
worth of the dru& in a one-year
period.
The crumbled druJ em-pire rt:
poriedly was masterminded by Alan
Charles Mobley. a 24-year-old Hunt-
inaton Beach man who pleaded auilty
to three f cderal drug charie1 last
week. Mobley faces 45 years in prison
and lifetime oarole.
HANDCUFFED SUSPECT •••
From Al
Wri&ht 1trceu. FoUowina a brief foot grand theft auto, escape and drunken
cbue, durina which the man re· drivina.
portedly tried to take rcfuae under a "I don•t known if the puy was
parked car, Kokoruda was arrested. doubleo-jointed or what but know I
The bullet-duaed Irvine squad car couldn't have slipped the bandcuffi ,''
was found p&rKed several blocks. Muir said. "And I know it•s tbe tint
away. Muir said. · time we've had a (police) car taken
K.okoruda was booked into Orange from us."
County Jail this momina on suspi· No~ was injured in the inci·
cion of assault with a deadly weapan, dent.
Molbey. Mcfarlane and the others
who have entered 1uilt}'. pleas will be
sentenced Nov.'· The list ofindivid·
uals to be sentenced includes
Mobley'• 1i1terl hi1 wife, his mother·
in-law and bis unancial adviser. Of the 31 people named as defen-
dants in the cocaine case, 21 have
pleaded 1uilty, five are fuptivcs and
five othm have been ordered de--
ponCd or sentenced on lesser cba.raca.
Most of tbe fuJitive1 are related to
Mobley throuJh maniqe and are
believed to be hidina in Colombia.
The United States and Colombia do
not have an extradition q.reement.
McFarlane . remains free on
S2S01000 bail. Mobley, howevcr.i. is
jaileo at Terminal Island in lieu or $4
million bail. Mobley's wife. lister and
~other-in-law are beina held at Sybil
Brand Institute.
TRUANCY COULD LAND YOU IN1JAIL •••
From Al
won't be placed with adults ~r
juvenile criminal offenders:· Hen·
11ey noted. "We'.11 keep them here
until a parent or auardian packs them
up.••
Truant officeti.~ who may or may
not be in uniform, will stop youths
during school hours, ask for identifi-
cation and will attempt to detemune
if the student has an excuse for not
beina in school.
Students cauaht ditching school
face rssiblc suspension or after-
schoo detention Jn most cases,
however{ school admmstrators say
they wit attempt to "talk out" the
problem, often with the youth•s
parents present.
Jn the first three days of the
crackdown, Henasey said officers
rounded up 17 truants. He said the
number likely wtll increase after the
"newness" of the school year wears
off.
"A lot of them seem surpnsed when
we pick them up. We hear a lot of
comments like "We're aoina to have
to watch it this year."' said the
detective.
Henisey said truancy duty wtll be
rotated throuah the entire patrol
division and that the number of
officen assianed to the task will vary
from fo1,1r to 12. He said weather.
sudden upswinas in crime or other
factors will determine how many
officen will be out scouuna truants
Fred Carter, director of student
. ~cet for lhe Newpon Mesa Uni-
fied Scbool District, said the district
"doesn't have a aood handle'' on the
number of students who ditch school.
"Sometimes we're deal1ng with
permissiveness on the part of parents
and m some extreme cases where the
le.id is a chronic truant. parents tct to
the point where they make alibis for
their kids,'' said Carter.
"There's a wide ranae offacton and
it's hard to come up with exact
statistics," said Carter.
Serge Beltrans, the attendance co-
ordinator al Corona del Mar Hi&h
School, estimated that on a Jiven ~y
about S ~nt of the school's 2,200
st1,1dents siip class.
"It depends on the surf," be
supcsted, only half Jok.iq. "I don•t
think it's as bad here as ius in some
schools."
Bul residents in Eastbluff, an
uppcr-middle-<:lass neiabborhood
adJacent to the hi&h sciiool, have
complained about studenu loiterina
durina school hours and have rt·
ported an increase in daytime bur-
&larics, Beltrans said.
Last summer, the Oranae County
Grand Jury blasted the educauon
system and county 1ovemment for
not comina to arips with the conse·
quences of truancy and, in panicular,
truants who ,et mto trouble.
In a report on the problem, the jury
said it was unable to find accurate, up-
to-date fiaures on truancy and school
drop-outs. Jury members also com-
platned that truants arrested for
crimes would vanished into the
S)'stem with school officials seldom
learnina what bad become of them.
The pravam in Newpon Beach, by
its desian. 1s an attempt to act school·
ditching youn15ters back on cam~u·
I
before the)' become snarled in a
serious pohce problem. Henisey said.
"Our mission is simply to pick
them up and make sure they are put
back in touch with school officials,''
said Henisey. "Once we take them
back to school, it's up to the adminis-
tration to work out the problem.",
Sk.ippina school, thouah, is not a
crime and school administtaton said
there is only so much they can do to
keep students in the classroom.
"Suspendina a student for a week so they can ao back io the beach
doesn •t make a lot of sense,'' said
Bel trans.
"Tbe real problem is in the loss of
leamina. the loss of continuity," aid
Carter. "A studenu misses some
classes and pretty soon he's in a rut
and 1et1 so far behind that school
becomes a bi.a frustration to l:aim."
Because school districu are paid by
averaae daily attendance, they Jose
moner. when students aren't in
achoo . Administrators, however,
said they have no estimate or how
much money is lost because of
truants.
"We try to look at the positive,''
Carter said.
Henisey said police hope that ne"s
of the crackdown will prompt stu·
dents to stay OD campus rather than
risk beina picked up by patrolman.
The frosr&m will last the entire
schoo year, be noted.
"To the kids I'm sure the proaram
seems like harassment. of course, but
that's too bad." Beltrans said. "We
want them in school." .
Just Call
642-6086
Wbat do you lib about tbe Dally PUot? Wbat don•t you llkt? Call Ult
a umber at left and yoor mea11ae will be record d, transcribed and dellvered
lo Ule appropriate editor.
Delly Piiot
Oetlvery
leOu entHd
The tame U·boar answerla1 ttrvlce may N Hed to record letters to tbe
editor oa any topic. Contrl otors to our Letters column mast lncludt tbelr
name and telephone number for verlfkatlon. No clrculatJon calla, ple11e.
Tell ut what's on yoar mlnd.
ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilat
H. l . Schwartz Ill
Publish r,.
Ro1emary Churchman
Control! r
tephen F. Carazo
Production
Man r
Donald L. Wt1Uam1
Ctroul hon
Mang r
Coutal
Tl du
TOOAY 4Mp111
TNURIOAY
12 41 &.Ill 741 &.Ill.
1i:1111.111 ·~''"
10
·Temperature•
That•• juat ducky
.'
Joume Leia and 17·month-old Laarea&D of ea.ta lleM Join the du.ca OD. •a.DD)' day ID TeWbllile Park. ,... :M&
Yentare oat to feed tbe dacb two or three tim• a--~
Cooler weather on horizon
• The on1oina spell of ho!_. humid lyblessedsomeotherarcaofthe&lObe
weather in S<>uthem Calirornia is~for the time beina -lcavift&1ocal
more suited to plant life than people residents wipina their ·~ fore.;.
-but don't wilt yet. People can look beach and 111dDA the sky for telicf.
forward to some cooler, drier air. _.:1_ At 96, Tu~y's hiah was well Tb~ hot but dry weather that ba1 below the record 103 rte0rdcd in
convinced people to miarate from 1939 but the humidity ranted from a
less hospitable climates has apparent~ ~ 67 percent to 36 percent.
ff to .. ' 'n IO ,, .,
n D H :: ., fi ,. ,, .. .. .. .. n
111 ..
ro "' lOI • 11 •• .. .. . .. . .. :: n:: 101 ,. ., ... = :I " .. ., ,.
IO 14 • 14 ,, ..
11 .. .. ,, ,, ., .. .. l'O ., :: :: ., ..
11 .,
~ ::· JO 'I
Disneyland
will resume
b~rgatn;ing
BJ "e A.Hoclaied P~ -.
After worken overwhelm.inaly re-
jected a proposed three-year waae
freeze, Di1ncyland said it Will return
to the barpining table Thunday with
five unions representma more than 1,800 employees in the Maaic Kina-
dom. ,
"We know we are loins back with
ID impressive abowina of unity,"
Michael o•Rourke, fpolcelmlll for
the United Food and -Commercial
Workm, said. "We are hopeful that
compromise can be reached... ·
Disneyland and the unions aa;reed
to resume neaotiation1 after the waac-f~ plan wu turned down by a
lopsided 97 percent vote Monday.
The new talks will be held under the
aeaia of a federal mediator.
The unions, which represent
janitors to ticket taken to ride
operators. had threatened to walk out
Tuetday momin.a unlcas the com·
pany offered to neaotiate fUnher.
The unions have indicated they are
seelrina raises of "between 3 percent
and 8 percent a year" in a two-year
pact.
currently, waaes for memben of
the five uruona ranae from $7 to $10
an hour.
OBITUARIE S
Funeral set liJ
WasbbJ~n .
for Mabel E•tn
Funeral services will be held in
Chehalis, Wub., for Mabel 0 Pat"
Eatea of Newpon Beach, who died
Saturday at th~ qe of 82.
Mrs: Estes. who wu born in
Minnesota, had lived moat of her life
in Chehalis, m(}vina to N,wport ll
yeanqo.
Sbe is survived try her dauahter,
Pegin1 Bonner of Corona del Mar.
Also 1urvivina are four arandchildren
-Alissa, Martha and Trey Bonner of
Corona del Mar and Brynne Watkins
of Studio City.
PUBLIC NOTICE
• • One of Orange County's finest fish houses. Potatoes were exceptional and tartar
sauce cyelasslc. ' ' Herb Baus, The Reclaler
•• • RestAur1nt Critic
' ' Provides friendly service, excellent food and comfortable atmosphere. Quality
and generous portions makes the food a real worthwhile pleasure. • '
· Stott R. Weaa, Airport Area Culde
· ReatAur1nt Ct1tJc
' ' Shark and salmon, bOth generous portions were cooked to that moment of
perf ectlon. ' ' Norm Stanley, Dady Piiot
• Restaurant CrltJc
' • The dinner P9rtlon of fresh seabass was perfectly cooked -moist and
succulent. ' r
• • Lobster tall was remarkably tender end flavorful. ' r
Kerb 8au1, Acrou the Table
RettAurant Critic
Joel c. Doti, Dally Pllot Refiaurant Crltk:
• • Adding to the Intimacy of the moment, ls a back&found of relaxing piano music,
by Dave Bartly seven nights a week. • 1 ' • PeMY Huffman, Airport 8utlMu Journal rt.ltturarrt Ctttk
' ' McCormick's Landin& should be on everyone's II t of preferred dlnln& locations.
It ls one of those place that should be visited on a reaular basis to savor the
variety of food on the menu ... my ratln --superior. •'
Mlchffl Hunt. What's Happenlf'll
R•t.aut•nt emit
Wtnner of SOut rn Clllforn R tauru1t W~tif1 A
ON THE JOHN WAYNE AIRPORT
,
Pedophilia:
U.S. 's dirty
little secret
Child 'iUa/ a II I IUtfacJIJ,I
aero the counrry in record
numbeis, but authorities ay of.
ficial statistics account for only JO
pen:%nt ofacrual cases. Tbu fint
ofa five-pa[t series provides an
overview of the problem.
By RICHARDT. PIENCIA& ........... ..._.,..
Pedophilia, the seduction and
sexual abuse of children by adults, ii an underground world sJowty
scepina into the natloo'a con-
aciousncss and conscience. In
many ways, thoU&h, it is still
( ... PS~IA/A7)
'Doonesbury'
adventures
in Daily Pilot
YORK (Al? -How Jouuc Caua11
ve? Wall UDCle o.D
•~ d t mmer afta' ddti 1
ro,p to rauc money for •
docu tary &\1\0 t)"tOOG
John De Lottan1 Do w~
style props still duner • While
House S1a&C Kl?
These and other "•••111 quefo lions will be anlWCf'Cld for Daily
Pilol readCrs on~ 30 whcD Oae
celebrated comu: 1tup
.. Doon~ jow the Pilot.
But cxacify t Puliu.er Prille-
1 n n in g canooai1i Garry _.,.. _ __, T;rucic2u will put m lbole ...._
(See D0011U8Un' /A'1)
f IRST lllTIDI
WI l>NL SDl\'t' ·~t I'll MBI R t'l f'l~l OHANGE COUNTY . CALIFORNIA 25 CENTS
an man ees
~ ..
co
Cout .
The closure of the Joseph
Magnln stores shocked
employees and angered
creditors./ A3 ~
CaHfornla
Actor Richard Basehart
succumbs at the age of
70./AS
Nation
Americana' personal In-
come rises at a modest
rate for August./ M
(•:•:?:·:.:-:-:-:·:-:·::~:·:·:'!·: .... :·:·:-:.:·:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:-
World
British find an 'almost
brand new' mine In the
Red Sett/AS
Ave U.S. sailors are ex-
pected to be freed In
International water•
today./A5
Home
The way a window la
framed can add beauty to
the Inside of the room and
the view outslde./81
Food
A sensible diet can he!p .
control high blood press-
ure./C1
Sports
The Rama get some quar-
terback help from Minne-
sota In acquiring Steve
Ollls./D1
Entertainment
Mlchael Landon as an
angel and the devlllsh
Morgan Falrchlld star In a
pair of watchable new
serfes./83 •
INDEX
Bridge C8
Bulletin Board A3
BuaiMll B4
California News A4
Ctaulfled 04--8
Cornlea C8
Crossword 08
Death NotlceS 88
Food C1-7
Home 81-2
Horoacope 05
Ann Lander• 82
Mutual Fund• EM
National N A4 Optnon A7-8
P1Parazzl 81
Poll<:e Log A3
Public Not 88 ff>ort• 01·3
Stack M11k 85
Tetevl n 82
Theatert B3
WMthet A2
Wend Newt A1
e
S .ID atro car
•
,_
v~ a. -.
. .. ._ -
Ah, the 1QOC1 life
W1alle yoa•re ala.tac away at 3 o'cloclt lil
the afteroooa. tlalDk of tb .. more for-
tmaate aoma ~a lelianly craUe OD
tJaelr •llboata. Tbla plctare wu uapped ·
Ill the cbaanel between Lido Ille and tbe
Newport Beacla sn•lnl•nd.
Limber-limbed drunken driver suspect
captured after Santa Ana foot chase
By STEVE MARBLE °' ............. A handcuffed drunken drivioa
suspect surprised Irvine police early
today-hen be .. lipped t.be cuffs" and
roared oft' in a pc;)tjce !Quad car, nearly
running down a pauolman.
1be limber-limbed man ~
police bullets as be sped off, Yl
officers and his bewildered female
companion sta.Ddina on the shouklcr
of the Santa Ana Freeway.
Melvin Kokoruda. 29, of
Diego was collared about an hour
later when be was spotted rwmiQI
down a side WCC1 in Santa .Ana just a
short distance from where the atJu.
doncd Irvine police CU WU found.
The urilikdy ·CPdode staned at
l 2:30~m..on1he Sau Ana Freeway near \he yford Road exit where
(Plea• w BAJmCUP'nD/A.2)
ardener
seize on child
mOlesting rap
Police are boldina a local prdener
suspected of fondflna a 5-)cat-old Costa Mesa boy ·bo was playing near
the site where the man was wo~
TUesda~, -JOic Godinez-Thai'ii, 21. of Costa
Mesa was &rre5ted on suspicion of
child molestation after the bo~ t01d
bis parent.$ about the al1eaed inodent,
which occurred aroUDcf noon near
Harbor Boulevard and Wilson St.reel
Detective Sam ZuorUi would not
rclcuc details of the c::uc.
Zuorski said; however, lhcrc is a
possibility that additional victims
may be found as police in~cstipte
othet areas of the county wbm: the
private pn1ener' Wotb.
Zuorski rcpor1Cd that God.iDez.
lbuTa was taken mtocust~-= 2:30 p.m. after \'Olmwity.,.,. . .
to questioaina at tbc. Coaa Mesa
Police Departmci\l 1'be mspea was
still at the work · ie when police
arrived Tuesday afternoon.
P01ic:c said Godinez-Ibarra is o-
pectcd to be arrai&:Dcd OD fdoDy ~Thursday or.J:riday atHaibor Murucipal C.ourt ill Newpon Belch.
He remained at Costa Mesa city .P.U
this momioa in~ ofSI0.000 bail.
Guru's followers
win court battle
over Laguna land
Jud e throws out
church's lawsuit;
appeal promised
From atafl ud wire rt-ports
Followers of lnd.ian auna 8hagwan
Shrce Rajneesh have won the ri&ht--
at least for the umc beina-to remain
on the ~i~-acre Lquna Bc8ch proi>-
crty that ho been the f ocu of an
mtcnse t,brcc-ycar legal bettlc.
Orange .County uperior Cowt
Judie Judith Ryan summarily di • missed the la tport.ion of. lawsuit
filed by the Church of Re ·
Scicn~ Monda). The u da1mcd
that the Church of Raj hi had
llleplly Ulkcn O\ er the dlurch ~
eny at Lqu.na Canyon and EJ Toro
roads. R\U. -..ho bad bcco oo~
tbc Case since a J unc 19 bcari.Da.1NJea
the court could find .. no triable ·
of material fact. .. Tl:Us latest in a ICrics
of rulinp dears title to the church
propcrt)' for RajnecSb fOUowcn un-
less the decision i1 appealed.
Membcn of the -CJuatCb of
1 · • us Science oongrqation. iob
ha vc been mectina 'nearby since 'lheir
alleged ou tcr from the propeny,
alrudy have \ o :td to appeal the
jud&lflent as they have ptt'Vious
ummary Juc:t&ments in the cue.
The rch11.ou tcmpcat between the
twochuroh · was~:J•ti.n (Pleue8ee A2)
Skip .school in Newport and you maygo to jail
Police launch new crackdown on truancy
around city' beaches and video arcades
Hilb hoot tudcnt dnch1na
school could find them Ives nd•
ina an afternoon in JIU as pan of a
nc truancy crac down b the Ne • n Beach POhcc Dcpanmcnt.
Patrolmen aa the l>Qch cat1 taned
opcBuon "Back to hooJ' a week
o and have vowed to put ts many 11
I doun offi On \he C!cta1l that will
STEVE
lhe tt naficrmcmbc oflhc
Rchpous nee oo uon
came dt pl of R.Qjn in 19 l.
bonty therc3fter, Rajn h ful·
lo'\\en voted the Reh iou 1cnti t
out of the church nd ~ ined 1hc
church pro{)Cn)', valued between $2
and $4 m1lhon.
In filina uit later that year to regain
the propeny plus about S 135:000 in
other asset . the Reli.Jious Sc1enti ts ct amed the international leaders of
the ~nee h IC'et mastcnnind«i the chucb takeover.
Cumntly. about ciaht Rajnffithees
live on the propcn)'. located at
Luuna Canyon and El Toro road • Ina·' about 200 followers re ulary
. attend unday c:elebrauons.
Rajnecsh who came to the United
5'tates in 19S 1, livcs with about 1,000
rcd-prbed disciples on a 64,000 acre
ranch near Antelope. Ore.. called
R!Vncc hpuram.
Neither Rajnecsh attorney Swami
Prem Nirtn, contacted at the Orqon
ranch, nor Villa Park attorney Wil-
liam Oou&heriy could be reached for
commeot:Meanwhtle. at the town
once known ntclopc, Ore , fol·
lowcn of R l]ncc h re oeleb ta u
pohucal vu:1ory nd ch of t c town· name to ·R11.1n h •
The name cha c h completed a
Pohti I vict.orr or the follO\\er of
Bh n hrc R~n sh "ho ha'e taken O\ er the town.
The vote durin Tue day'5 elec-
tions to change then me wa S1·'2l.'
Rajnec he now m ke up most of
Antelope'' po{>UI tion.
"The town 1s enterina a new era,"
Ma' or Ma Prtm Karuna said Tues·
da) She td the name ch ngc would
take effect immcdiatclf. ·
The town's 90 rCIJslercd voters
were forced to cast absentee ballots
after a flap over the pollinJ site .
The d1sc1plcs, complamina they
were harassed when vot1na at the post
office. asked Wasco County Clerk Sue
Proffitt to move balloting to its old
location at a i.chool in the Rajnecshee
part of town. Instead. Proffitt ordered
absentee votJng. A circuit judge
denied the R1Jneeshec)'·appeal.
Antelope's transformation since
the RaJnceshees took It over in 1982
hu been d m uc. Street names h ve
been ch ngcd and nudity no is
allowed 1n the city • M t of U1 town•s origlnal
~s1dcnt lcf\ ftcr the ect membe
took control of Antelope• govern·
ment nd raised taxes.
The RtJnccshces began amving in
the ~a an 1981 when they estab-
lished commune 18 miles from
ntelope on a former sheep ranch.
Legal ch llengcs to the ancorpora·
tion of the commune-city, Ra·
jnCC5hpuram, convinced the disciple
to set up another base of opcrat1onun
Antelope.
In April 1982, the City Council set a
dt incorporation election that failed
SS-42. That July, the city and com-
mune sianed a peace treaty after a
encs of meetings with federal
mediators. .
By the following year, nine of 10
elected positions were held by Ra·
Jneeshccs. · Ten~oos between the two factions
·have remained hiah, with: non-Ra-
jnecshees claimina they arc harassed
by Rajneeshpuram peace officers.
HANDCUFFED SUSPECT NABBED •••
J'romAl
lmnc Officer Dave Hustud stopped
Kokoruda on suspicion of drunken
dnvina. police said.
With ass1Stancc from backup of-
ficer Ron Carr, Kokoruda was aiven a
field sobncty test that he reportedly
flunked. Kolcoruda bad been driving
with a female passenvr who was not
arrested.
"He was handcuffed behind his
back. placed in the front seat of the
police car aod seat belted in," ex-
plained Lt. Al Muir. "Once .he was
restrained. the officer turned his
attention back to the woman "
Officer Carr reportedly looked
back at the squad car Just in time ro
see Kokoruda slidma into the driver's
seat and putting the patrol car in gear.
"Somehow he slipped the cu ffs. He
shd them under him so that his hands
were m front but still cuffed. Then be
unfastened the scat belt," Muir said.
The qile man pulled back onto tbc
Santa Ana Freeway, nearly bowling
over Hustud in the process, police
said. Carr, who apparently yelled a
warnma at Hu tud. fired two shots as
the squad car roared b) him.
"One of the rounds hn the car
door," Muir said.
Less than an ho1.1rlater, a Santa Ana
police ser&caot saw a handcuffed man
running in the v1c10ity of First and
Wnght streets. Following a brief foot
chase, during wh1ch the man re-
portedly tned to ta.kc refuae under a
parked car, Kokoruda was amsted.
The bullet~inaed Irvine squad car
v.ias found parked several blocks
away, Muir said.
Kokoruda was booked into Oranac
County Jail this momina on suspi-
cion ofassault with a deadly weapon,
arand ihef\ auto, escape and drunken
driv10a.
"I don't known if the fuy was
double-jointed or what but know I
couldn't have slipped the handcuffs,"
Muir said. "And l Jcriow it's the first
time we've had a (police) car taken
from us.··
Nobody was mjured in ihe inet·
dent.
TRUANCY COULD LAND YOU IN JAIL •••
From Al
won't be praced with adults or
juverule cnmmal offenders,'' Hen-
1sey noted. "We'll keep them here
until a parent or guardian picks them
up."
Truant officers, who may or ma}
not be m urufonn, will stop youths
durina school hours. ask for 1dent1fi-
cat1on and will attempt to determine
if the student bas an excuse for not
being m school.
Students caught ditching school
face possible suspension or afier-
school detention. In most cases.
however, school adminstrators say
they will attempt to "talk out" the
problem. often with the youth's
parents present.
lo the first three days of the
crackdown, Hemsey said officers
rounded up 17 truants. He said the
number likely will increase after the
"newness" of the school year wears
off.
"A lot of them seem surprised when
we pick them up. We hear a lot of
comment.5 like "We're gomg to have
to watch it this year,"' said the
detective.
Henisey said truancy duty will be
rotated through the entire patrol
division and that the number of
officers assigned to the task will var;
from 'four to 12. He said weather.
sudden upswmgs m cnme or other
factors wilf determine how many
officers will be out scouting truants
Fred c.arter, director of student
services for the Newport Mesa Uni-
fied School Dtstnct. said the district
"doesn't have a good handle" on the
number ofstudents who ditch school.
"Sometimes we're deahng with
pemuss1veness on the part of parents
and in some extreme cases where the
kid is a chronic truant. parents fCl to
the point where they make alibis for
their lcids," said Carter.
"Therc'sa wide ranae offactorsand
it's hard to come up with exact
statistics," said Carter.
Serge Beltrans, the attendance co-
ordinator at Corona del Mar High
School, estimated that on a given day
about 5 percent of the school's 2,200
students slup class.
"It depends on the !.Urf," he su~ested, only half joking. "I don't
thtnk it's as bad here as n 1s io some
schools."
But residents in EastblufT. an
upper-m1ddle-dass ne1&hborhood
edjacent to the high scnool. have
complained about students loitering
during school hours and have re-
ported an increase in daytime bur-
glanes. Beltrans said
Last summer. the Orange County
Grand Jury blasted the education
system and county aovemment for
not coming to gnps with the conse-
quences of truancy and, in particular,
truants who get into trouble.
In a report on the problem, the jury
said it was unable to find accurate, u~
to-date figures on truancy and school
drop-outs Jury members also com-
plamed that truants arrested for
crimes would va nished into the
system with school officials seldom
learnma what had become of them.
The provam in Newport Beach. by
1t!. dcs1an. 1s an attempt to get school-
d1tchin1 ~?una,sters back on c,ampus
before tbe,Y become snarled in a serious pohce problem. Henisey said.
"Our mission is simply to pick
them up and make s~ they are put
back m touch with school officials,••
said Henasey. "Once we take them
back to school, it's up to the adminis-
tration to ~orlc out the problem."
Skippma school, thouah, is not a
crime and school administrators said
there is only so much they can do to
keep students in the classroom.
"Suspendina a student for a week
so they can go back to the beach
doesn't make a lot of sense," said
Bel trans.
· "The real problem is in the loss of
leamina. the loss of continuity," said
Carter. "A students misses some
classes and pretty soon he's in a rut
and acts so far behind that school
becomes a big frustration to him."
Because school dislricts are paid by
average daily attendance, they lose
money when students aren't m
school. Administrators, however,
said they have no estimate of bow
much money is lost because of
truants.
"We try to look at the positive,"
Carter said.
Heniscy said pohce hope that news
of the C1'tkdown \Vill prompt stu·
dents to stay on-campus rather than
risk being picked up by patrolman.
The froaram wtll last the enti~
schoo year, he noted.
"To the kids I'm sure the proaram
seems like harassment, of course. but
that•s too bad." Beltrans wd. ··we
want them in school."
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t.AAI a(!Orftl eo. t&tiO Cotta MMe CA ' ~6
VOL. 17, NO. 213
I
l
Cooler temperatures on the way
Tides
TODAY Htprn
THUfltOAY 12·•••m , ... Ill. 1a 1' pm tot om
60
Temperatures
That'• jut ducky
Joume Lela ud 17-month-old Lauree.an of Coeta lleA
jolD the dacb OD • 8UDDJ daJ lD TeWl.nkle Park. Tbe pair
•enture oat to feed the ducb two or three tl.m.m a week.
Colee bust at S. Coast Plaza
A Tustin man was arrested Tues.-
day out.5ide South Coast Plaza on
suspicion of sellina SI 2,000 worth of
cocaine to undercover sheriff & depu-
ties authorites said. Fran.le Ventura, 33, reportedly
aarced to meet the undercover officer
in a parlcina lot outside the Costa
Mesa mall at 12:30 p.m., accordina to
Oranac County Sheriffs Lt. Dick
Olson.
Olson said Ventura sold the
narcotics officer six ounces of co-
caine. Ventura, identified as an
unemployed machinist. is beina held
at Oranae County Jail on S 1 S,000
bail.
11 1t .. H '2 " .. ,, .. n .. fl M ., Ot .. ..
.. 71
111 14 JO ,,
10I 12 11 ••
.. •5 NU • '2 . .. .., .. u M
11 " 101 1' ,. ..
IO 7a IO It tl ..
ti 7t IO f4
.. 14 I 71 ..
71 .. ... ,
ti It .. .. 70 It
7t 11 .. ..
It .. 12 11 .,. 14
10 •S
10 "
DisQeylan9.
will resume
bargaining
By lite Alsoclated Press
After workers ovcrwbelrn.in&ly re-
jected a proposed three-year waae
freeze, Disneyland said it Will return
to the barpinina table Thursday with
five unions representina more than
1,800 employees in the Mqjc Kina·
dom.
"We know we arc aoana back with
an impressive showina of unity,"
Michael O'Rourkc, spokesman for
the United food and Commercial
Workers, said. "We are hopeful that
oompromise can be reached."
Disneyland and the unions aareect
to resume neaotiations after the waac~
frcez.c plan was turned down by a
lopsided 97 percent vote Monday.
The new talks will be held under the
acais of a federal mediator.
The unions. which represent
janitors to ticket taken to ride
operators, had threatened to walk out
Tuetday momina unleis the oom-
pany offered to nqotiate further.
The unions have indicated they are
seclcina raises or "between 3 percent
and 8 percent a year" in a two-year
pact.
Currently, waaes for members of
the five unaons range from $7 to $10
an hour.
0BIT UARl£S
Funeral set ln
Washla#oa .
for Mabel'Estes
Funeral services will be held in
Chehalia, Wash., for Mabel "Pat"
Estes of Newport Beach, who died
Saturday at the aie of 82.
Mn. Estes, who wu born in
Minnesota, bad lived most of her life
in Chehalis, movina to Newport 12
ycan&fO.
She ts survived by her daupter,
Pcgins Bonner of Corona del Mar.
Alsosurvivinaarcfourarandchildren
-Alissa Mart.ha and Trey Bonner of
Corona del Mar and Brynne Watkin•
of Studio City.
PUBLIC NOTICE
• • One of Orange County's finest fish houses. Potatoes were exceptional and tartar
.sauce a classic. 1' Herb a.us, The Re&lster
. Restaurant Critic
• • Provides friendly service, excellent food and comfortable atmosphere. OuaJlty
and-generous portions makes the food a real worthwhile pleasure. 1 •
• Scott R Wesu, Airport Area Gulde
Restaurant Critic
• • Shark and salmon, both generous portions were cooked to that moment of
perfection. ' ' • Norsn Stanley, O.lly Pilot
RHtaurant Critic
• t The dinner portion of fresh seabass was perfectly cooked -moist and
succulent. '• '
• ' Lobster tall was remarkably tender and flavorful. ' r
Herb Baus. Acrou tM T•ble
Rest1urant Critic
Joel C Don, Dally Piiot
Restaurant Critic
• • Addln& to the Intimacy of the moment, Is e background of relaxing piano music,
by Dave Bartly seven nights a week. r 1
Pt&IY Huffman Airport Bus ~ Journal Re.taurant Crttlc
• • McCormick's Landini should Qe on everyone's list of preferred dining locations.
It Is one of those places that should be visited on a reaulat basis to savor the
variety of food on the menu ... my ratln -superior. ' '
MlchHI Hunt, What's Happenlnc
Restaurant Critic
ON THE JOHN WAYNE AIRPORT-RUNWAY • 548-9880
'