HomeMy WebLinkAbout1984-09-26 - Orange Coast Pilot•
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WEONE SOA 'f, Sf PTEMBE.R 26. 1984
DruJDmer
Manne
deadat64
LOS AN·
GELES
(AP) -
Jazz drum-
mer Shelly
Manne died.
~rly tpday
a n · a
suburban
hospital
shortly after
col~apsing
at h1shome,
h0$pital of-MANNE
ficials said. He was 64.
There was no immediate in·
di?tion of the cause of dcatl\. said Cathleen Kotarakos, a
spokeswoman for Serna Mem-
orial Health Center in Sun Valley.
Manne was a composer, con-
ductor and drummer who studied
with drummer Billy Gladstone.
He founded Shelly's Manne
Hole. in Hollywood, a popular
jazz club and meetina place for
other entertainers durina the
1970s.
Cout ._
Utlltty poles tn Newport's
China Cove will be com-
ing down./ A3
California
Veteran actor Walter
Pidgeon Is dead at the
age of 87./ Al
Nation
Smlllng Shultz, Gromyl<o
meet for talks In Wash-
lngton./ M
A balloon-flying Czech
defector arrives In Colo-
raCfo./AI
Donald Bren receives
Golden Baton award for
arts patronage./11
Food
If you want to win cheers.
pack a sumptuous
tailgate picnlc./C1
Winning COOklng·con-
. teats ls old hat for an
lrvlnewoman./CL
:·:-:·: .. :-:·:·:.:~.,.,:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:·:·:·!•!•:•:'.·:·:~~·=·
Sports ....
Edison and Fountiln Val-
ley face stiff tests Satur-
day night. /D1
Laguna Beach tops New-
port HarbOr In a battte of
unt>eatens In girls vol-
leyball./D2
Entertainment
That's not the sexy pinup
Farrah Fawcett that you'll
be ... Ing In "The Burning
Bed." /BS .
~w::.~:::::::::::::.-::::~:.~::::~::.-:::.-==:~··
eoncert noise halt nixe .
1tuation hi1 bccx>me incendwy and must be defused. ...
to control din at Pacific Amphitheatre
restraining onkr, d p1te a~menu
by City Attorney Tom W~ that the 18,()()().aeat amphithea tcr was a .. very
furiou • furious nuisance ...
The request was part of a lawtull
filed Tuesday b)' the aty · na OW
the facility ,either close down or abide
by Costa Mesa's noise ordinanoe.
Baucriaid he recosnizedlbat no&e
from Ole arena could be bothenome
10 nwby residents. but· be didn~
believe any harm would be done by BJ TONY S.U VEDRA
.... JEFF ADLER
Of .. .., .......
The city of Costa Mesa lost its bid
Tuesday for an emersency ~ourt
order that would have 1mmcd1ately
pllccd a lid on noiSC"from conoert.1 at
Wieder's
torchruil
prompts
OCprobe
How much value
should be placed
on 'contribution·?
BJ JEFF ADL'ER °' ... ..., ........
Oranae ~county Board of Super·
vil01'1 Chairman Harriett Wieder on
Tuesday turnt'd over to the county. a
lithOfRph lhe received in July after
runnma her tea of the Olympie's torch
relay, but she plans to k~ the torch
she carried. ~estions about Wieder'• .1~nici·
petaoo in the torch run were r&itcd ib
relation to how she should repon the
$3,000 contribution from Pacific Bell
used to pay for her one-kilometer lea
plus a luncheon valued at SI ,200 that
followCa '
Jn tum'in& over the lithOJtlph to
the county, Wieder said the depiction
of an Olympic: torch runner. valued at
$80, was•'a&ift tothecounty,clirectly,
and wu not to me."
She added sbe has consulted with
County Counsel Adrian Kuyper: con·
ccmi ng wbether \he torch, the dotha
she was &iven to run in or the
..
the Pacific Amphitheatre while the
city and theatcrownen continue their
lept battle over the sound level at the
outdoor arena. ·
OrallJC County Superior Court
Corrim1saioncr Ronald Bauer denied
Costa Mcsa'srcqucst for a temporary
"1be problem. as we sec it, is that
the owner of the ampbhheaier ii
unwillina to control conoeru at the amphitheater:• Wood said. ..The
· · for a fwl c:oun hearina on the
JUiL e ICbeduled the bcarin& for a ~lim1nary 1njuct1Qn on~Oct.10.
~ood said the dty would seek a
prchminary and eventually a per·
mancnt tulina that would shut the
Oriofre
plant
gas leak
'minor'
But foes of proposed new routes promise =.t;~~~~co==
to fight construction ·every way we can· :i~.~'t~~0Fv'Ji: w plan=
BJ PHIL SNEIDER.MAN frombomcowneruttendinaTucSdaY. oflbcte hilbways. ·
AM ttAREN-.u.EIN ni&ht's meeting. tbe lmae council At i uc are three propQilCd &e. .... ..,........ expressed support for the freeways Qys mown as the San Ja.quin Hilb.
Citycouncilmembenio Irvine and and thedevelo~rfeeconcept by a 4-Eas1a"D and Foothlll tramportalion
Newport Beach favor the asscument tcrl vote. . -conidorl. Cost of buildiQ&. tbe free.
of developcn to help pay for thrtt Oo Monday. Nn.']>Ort .council Wl)'1hubeencstima1CdatSI billion.
propoeed freeways that wouJd open members. already oo RClOl'd in favor · OfpaleStooncenuohomeownen
South Oran&e County to additional of the frccwa)'I. voted unanimously io Irvine and Newport BeadJ is tbc
development. to support th~ deyelo~ fee CO!lCq)'t. San :Joaquin Hills Tnmsponation
Afterlisteningtostrooaopposjtion In letters ~layi~ tbe:irdcdsioo to (P'leue._ntaW•T/A2J
=~r:e·:r~rouowed constituted a Power cut
Wieder said she was asked by
Pacific Bell to run in her ca~ty •• b~ 54-orm bOi.td chairman_, represeotina the &,~
county.
0 Jt WIS ID honor but an honor On in ••esa the count)"s P._art: not my own; lo .lr.&l
addition, Pacific Bell wu inll,jog a ,
S3.000 sift to charitY, ftOl to me," she sai!f. I BJROBEBTBARIER
-P.af&e1 Bcll paid-$3~ for .eacip -!!. .. .........-. Mone-kilometer relay lea it sponsored. A pectacular thunder and light-
The money was donated to the Boy ning sto~ that Rash~ an~ rumbled
Scouts of America. throua,h Southern C..hfom1a at about
Pacific BeU i1 one of more than 90 sundown Tuesday knocked out thR:e
companies ellpected to bid on a S 12. 7 electrical tran.Sformci:a lD Cosla, Mesa
milhon contract for a new county and left _some ~denu WtthOut
telephone system sometime next power ~unq the ltj&ht. year. The li&llunna nri~cs put the Costa
(Pleue eee TORC8/A2) CPleaM Me 8'l'ORM/A2)
HB's Dennyhasn 't missed 2arrested
in Porsche
tlieftriilg a drop of rain Jn 54 -yeatS
J. Sherman Denny has meaMltt!d
6S2. I I inches of raan in ff '1DlinltOD
Beaeh since he beun tilt ~pie
weatber-kcepina ectavfdes in 1930.
The 87·yea..-old Denny chmbl the
ladder to his rooftop at I a.m. aDd S
p.m. each dal -and much more
frequently duo._na the rainy •ton -
to cheek hit offtcial I I.Inch diameter
copper raht a.ee, · ·
.He"a never mitled 1n unponan m~ haPllCIW'lrOM rainy penOd he f\ad _:1~att1 and
couldtn make it u...-o h11 roor. Byt
-,he 11• had 1n operalinaCIJICt•>· to ~~ raan ror three dlya and that WIS IOfta enoup for him to recover
Ind record the torm' total. •
I .
'
-.
·~
J._ ---,J;.__ • -~--
\
Eld~ 1y Lagunan beaten in bed
Kathy Youngman, th woman•
nei bm, told p<>h~ he belieYes the
L~n-a er w tbe me person he
(Youna,m n) h d kicked out of her
a~nmcnt earlier on the ni~t of lhc
lnc1dent. .
The youth, wh9 lives with his
ilant e~lXS at about l
)·
tn was struck on the ht.ad t I s.t
three tim • Jiminez id. nd e
rccch cd cut on her hand from trying
to fend off blows. Tbe u PQCt then
fled.
Pohcc 1d nothing was mi ing or'
di turbcd in the apanment eJl~Pt the
cutt1n1 bOilrd, which had been re·
moved fro.Di the kitchen.
Sam wa taken to South Coast
Medical Center m South Latun by
her daughter for treatment oT minor
cuts and bruises. She was later
released.
Goaatal
Tides .. ~. ~ "'ONTI ~ ~ Wt1m-COld.,.....
..
M
Nahvt!M HftlO!'!Nnl
New:W'or'li ~VI
Olllahoml Cit>' OaWll. ~ 10
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66 DO
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~lo ... ..
1 11 .. ,
Show~• ,_..,, 'Ut•• Snow Ocelud•d ~ S1ar10N1y ..... SIPel .. T~ .. ..
... ~•City u 40 TODAY 4.U pm 0 I
~'°'* YI.,_ lrt!c• HOM. V 9 o.ot OC ~' SenMtOflO • u
DMgo IO u Hot pm U
STORM CUTS POWER IN MESA •••
From Al
Officials blame the slide on moisture
-but not from the ram. They said a
resident left water running for three
days in a yard in the 34000 block of
Doheny Place.
for Huntington Beach. officials re-ported sporadic heavy showers dur-
ID8 a two-hour period Tuesday eve-
ning.
THlM90A'f
I001un . Oe
It 141111.. 112 564p111 0,1
....... locler .. I .. p ,...
TIV8Ny II I 44 I 111 WICI .... ~ 11 IOp111
Moon Mt• 10daj M I cw pm, ,_.
Tllllt91Nyall401m n_....,..11
ll40p!ll
Temperatures
.. Lo u ,.
11 .. eo 44 61 .. 17 6e ,, 72
88 57 .. 115 a e1
.t2 25 M 3e
e1 117
llut!llD 75 47 e.... II n
Chltteelon.S.C 112 ..
~on.wv .. 6t
Qwwlofte,N C 11 M g:z-•• 31
1• M
Onclfll!etl • • ..
Cll¥lland tO ...
~ble.SC 86 17
Colur!lllUl.Oll '5 ..
Cotloold.H H ta ..
OelM-FI WOt111 " 63
Oeyton ... •• o.r.-611 41
Dee~ 63 IZ
DeltOil 77 42
Oulultl 42 so
EJP-u 54
F'lirbenkll t1 31
Fwgo . .. 2•
EztenCled
Faw QOICll --ly ll'IOf;:, low doo.cle on _,tn -• Wwm 11)'1
Hlghe 75 10 IO It COMt end IOI lo IOlw
90s "1lend. L-IO 10 70
CoNTINU[U S10R1Es
---
FUigitlll
GtWICI "llPldt Gr•' "*110td
Helena
Honolulu
HOvltOll ~ Jlldleon.Mt
~ ~ 1<an ... cn1
LMVegu
Ulllitlloell
LOCATIOM
Hvnttngton e.cfl fllvtt .i.tty. Newport
40tfl 811MC, Nftporl
22nd •• ,... N4lwl>Oi'1
1&1b09Wedgt
lagl.ne hld'I a.n Clemlnll
Wat• ttmP. 70-73
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T~ w
WlCMll
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tlZI 1·1
1·2
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1 1.2
1·2
1·2 S ..... dnCUon~
., IO ., 74 ... 14
M 11
IO ... ... a .. ...
IO IO 17 15 17 .. 71 .. 17 70 a •2 ., ta es •
•
Mesa Police Dc~mcnt's generator
and au conditJoniDJ units out of
commission bnefly. PoWtt trans.
formers were knocked out on
Camelia Lane and on 22nd Street in
the eastern part of the Clty as well as
on CoUeen Place in unincorporated
Orange County territory near the
C.osta Mesa border.
Two northbound lanes of Pacific
Coast Hiahway were closed briefly for
cleanup operations.
Orange County Pubhc Works
Superintendent William Gustafson
said early reports indicated that a
patio slid down from the blufftop on
to the adjacent hiabway but there was
no other apparent property damage.
Weather forecasters in Los Angeles
said the widespread storm was caused ~th:r::;~~~~~~it~ DENNY HASN'T MISSED A DROP •••
and "the trailing edge ' of a cold front From A 1 Power outaaes also were reported
LD Irvine.
About 38,621 customers were left
without elcctncaJ power throughout
Oranac County, but in most cases,
service was restoRd almost immedi-
ately, according to Jim Kennedy, area
manaacr for the Southern California
Edison Co.
In Costa Mesa, the storm brought
plenty of sound and fwy, but only .01
of an mch of rain. In lrvme, it was .07.
of an inch And in l..qUita Beach there
was no rain at all.
cominJ from the north. Remnants of much it is-•ningand ifit isaU n· ... i.t to departing storm Noi'bert also played a .... ,.,.
p.art. send their men home." he said.
Weather forecasters said there is a Denny has other interests -in
lot of moisture in the skies despite a addition to beini a member of the
1ackofcloudsand tht thcreisf chance American Meteorological Society, he
ofa repetition of last njghfs storm. belongs to cactus and succulent
Skies will be clear Thursday as the society and is a coin collector. •
early debut of cool, gray, fall weather . . Jives way to wanner days with highs But more .1mpon.ant to him -A mudslide also ~as reported at
5:45 a.m. today in Capistrano Beach. Although no fiaures were available m the 70s and m.id..SOs. . perh~ps ~s 1mpo~nt . as weather keeping 1t~lf -1s hts lonJ and --------------------~-------------------rt~~witht~~~~oo
PORSCHE THEFT SUSPECTS... ;:::;::s0:~piled a perfect
Prom Al attendance record at weclcly meetings
Mudd owns the Laguna Porsche 40, of Costa Mesa. in July in police believe were assisting the for 54 years. But that mark appears to
dealership and Cano owns Posh conncction with the theft ofJackson's alleged theft ring,. Weigand alleged be in jeopardy because Denny
Porsche. ,a S:mta Ana repair shop, car and four other Ponches. They MQdd bought sheet metal parts from entered Hoag Memorial Hospital in
Weipnd said. said they believed Eberhart was the Eberhart and in tum sold them to Newport Beach this week for explora-
Tbe Newport investigation nngleader of a Porsche theft ring Cano,whoplannedtousethemtodo tory surgery and is scheduled to
stemmed from the June theft of a operating in Newport Beach. body work on a Porsche that was undergo lung surgery Thursday.
$65,000 Porsche belonging to Cah-Eberhart is being held without bait damaged in an a0C1dent. friends said.
fomia Angels slugger Resgie Jackson. in the Orange C-0unty Jail because he Cano was .arrestccLSepL l and "It's really going lo nurtrum to
Jacbon•s car was stolen from the 1s on parole from an 18-montb Mudd was arrested Friday, Weipnd miss a meeting." longtime friend and
front ofa Newport Beach restaurant sentence following his conviction on said. Both men were arrested on former Mayor Ted Bartlett said. .. It
on Pacific Coast Hi&hway after an similar charges stemming from a theft suspicion of receiving stolen prop-(the perfect anendance) is one of the
Anselspme. Partso(thecustomized ring in Anah~im m 1982. He is crty. Cano was released on his own · h. · ~: 1·r-. ••
car were later found in an mdustrial awaiting arraignment Oct. I on three ~ce and Mudd posted m~~·=~~~ !'j~ '8:n.~;·:· few
area of Fountain Valley, in a Foun-felony counts of possession of stolen $2,500 bail. days igo at his Pme Street home
tain Valley storage yard and in a car parts. Neither suspect was charged in which was piled high with news-
Huntinston Beach home. Tb.is month, the mvesupt1on led connection with the thefl of Jack.son's papers and about any other materials
Police arrested John D. Eberhart, to the arrests of Mudd and Cano. who car. you can think of that he saves for the
Girl Scouts and Boy Scouts and other
FREEWAY PLAN GETS BACKING •.•
charitable organizations.
He recalled that he first became
interested in observing the ..-eather
when he bouaht a barometer in 1927
or I 928. "It was nice weathet but the
barometerstarted to fall. I thought the
thing was no damed good. But then it
rained for tbout a week and washed
out roads and other things. It rained
almost a week."
Denny, who first was employed by
the Huntmgton Beach Com.P.any to
measure the amount of oil beini
extra<*d from company wells. be·
came manager of the Jarae company
in 1948 and served in that capacity
until he retired at the age of 65 in
1962. Denny presided over the com-
pany's empire that included such
agricultural pursuits as the raising of
sheep and bogs and the cultiYation of
oats. The company mostly now is
engaged in the land-development bus.mess
Denny was born an Lead (pro-
nounced Leed). S.D.1n 1897. He was
named after his father, John Sherman
Denny, an engineer.
"My dad was called John S. Denny
and I went by the name of J. Sherman
Denny. We didn't want to be known
as Big John and Little John,".fte said. • • • J The wettest. year in the hi«ory of
the city. Denny said, came in I 9"40-41
when 1t rained 28 inches. The driest
year was 1960-61 with only 3.43
inches of measured rainfall. It rained
I0.34 inches last year, not far off the
yearl y average of 12.08.
Denny gives credence to the com-
plaints of others who complained
about the reccQt hot siege in the city.
One day the thermometer bit 93
degrees for one of the hottest days on
record. "We're only a mile from the
beach and. m y lands. that's hoL" •
Denny said the other day he'd like
to continue to keep weather rcoords
two or three more years and then turn
the responsibility over to some one
else who wiU 0 stay with it. There's oo
use doing it unless you do it accurate-
ly," he said. ·
He said he hopes toturn his files
over to the city for refeTCnce when he
retires. .
Denny, who is known to have a
ready sense of !rumor, recalled with a
chuckle an occasion a few years ago
when he was asked to give a talk by
the Rotary Club. -
"l suppose you want me to talk
about the weather," I said.
.. ·No.' they said, ·why don't you
talk about something you know
about.'
He talked about the weather any-
war,.
•My lands, we've had fun:' he said.
Prom Al ORANGE COAST Clrculatlon 714/142-4333
Corridor, which would connect the
Corona del Mar Freeway near John
Wayne Airport with the San Diego
Freeway near San J~n Capistrano,
running along the southern border of
Irvine near Newport Beach
Orange County supervisors neJtt
month will consider a plan to assess
new development served by these
highways to help pay for the freeways.
Supporters say the freeways are
needed to relieve traffic congestion
and to serve residents of growing
South County areas.
Cnllcs say the freeways will actu-
ally promote growth -and ad-
ditional traffic -and will create au
pollution and noise problems along
the route. They also say the developer
fees for new construction wtU simply
council to withdraw support for the
San Joaquin Hills freeway. The
speakers were ap.Plauded by about
150 people attending the meetin1t.
On Monday night. the Newport
Beach City Council also heard some
criticism from homeowners before
giving unanimous support to the
freeway fee plan.
John Kubas, president of the
Village Way Management Co .. said
his group, representing about 4,000
homeowners in Newport Beach and
Irvine, is stron&ly opposed to the San
Joaquin H1Us (reeway.
.. We feel we've aot to speak out
every time this issue comes up,"
Kubas told the counetl. .. We're going
to fight the comdor 100 percent,
every way we can."
Councilman John Cox said the
homeowner group may be taking a
"shortsighted" view.
"This is going in because 1t is
supposed to alleviate a bunch of
traffic getting through our neiah-
borhoods," CoJt said.
Councilman Don Strauss aslted
that the city again remind the county
it ts concerned about a proposed
interchange at Ford Road. While the
city is on rcoord as supportina the
freeway, the city does not want Ford
Road or San Mi~el to be maJor
interchanges, he said.
be passed along to buyers of homes
and commerc1al buildings. O HALT NIV'~D A report prepared by the lrvmecity N ISE ~ • • •
staff said that after unincorporated From Al
Orange County, Irvine would aener-
ate the area test contnbut1on to the fee stricter because it also sets time limits
prolJ"lm, about 25 percent. The on lower noise levels.
proJ>O'C(i fees would be about $1 ,200· Wood said 10 of the 30 concerts at
for a single-family home. $700 per the arena have violated the city's
apartment unit and $3.80 per square '-noise ordinance, but only two were
fool for commerctal development. above the 70 dcci~l level.
A lener ap_proved for transmission Consequently, the restraining
to county officials said the Irvine ·e1ty order would have probably affected
Council .. supPQrts the concept and on!)' the loudest concerts, while
acknowledges the need" for the three showing residents t city govem-
frecways and "recognizes the need" ,ment and the courts are tak.inJ a
for developer fees to be part of the senous look at the problem. he S8Jd.
.. financing miJt" to build the hiah-Ne1l Papiano, attorney and chief
ways. It also said lrvtne wants to executJve officer for Ned-We t,
participate in 'ptepanng the specific counter:e<f that the a.mPhithcater will
desian and ftt P.lan for the freeways. be bosllng the five b1gcst conccra of
The councils letter also said its the season when Julio l&lesias and
members are concerned with several Lionel Ritchie come to town .. in the
• .. technical issues" concerning the next s1Jt days."
.. freeway, including the number of Papiano said the amphJJheater as
lanes to be built. well as local busin~ses would lose
• • The Jrvine Council's vote came "thousands of dollars" if the re-
• after a dozen pea.ken asked the straini~a order were issued.
He also atJUed that the city does
not have Jurisdiction over the
amphitheater, which is o n the state-
owned Orange County Faif&rounds.
That argument has been repeatedly
used by Papiano to defend himself
and the company from cnminal
charges tiled by the city for summer
rock concerts that violatedlocaln01.SC
hmits.
The city's suit Tuesday was in reply
to an earlier suit filed by Ned-West.
which claim's Costa Mesa's ordi-
nance is "v~ue" and unconstitu-
tional becausctt 1s aimed solely at the
amphitheater.
A hearing on t..-o misdemeanor
charges brought by the city apjnst
Ned-West is scheduled for Friday in
Harbor Municipal Court.in Newport
Beach. And seven homeowneTS re-
cently filed a civtl law5uit against the
oompanx.
TORCH RUN RAISES QUESTIONS •••
Prom Al
tate law requirct that supervisors
,., file disclosure tatements rtporting
any 11fts valued at S2SO or more. The ~rt1s\1 dtadlin is Apnl 1985.
.. , a.ntcnd to in tigate this
ahOrl>ut.hl nd have lcill dvice
bdorc ] ,, to vote on 1 matttr
.
clust eall
642-6086
1nvolvin& P C1fic Bell or fill out and
si~ the disclosure form," Wieder
said.
he id the count)' coun I' office sun i tudyina Ythlt valu can be
placed on her paninp:ltion 1n the
relay and the torch
W1edcT also said that as to the value
o( the luncheon Pacific Bell hosted,
he has been ad vi~ the value of thc.
lift he received is limited to the co t
of her own m~I.
"It is non-reportable becau 1t wu
1 than $50." the supervisor 1d.
' -
..
t eir
e .
Dally Pilot
Dell very
la Ou•rantffd Daily Pilat ClaHlfted advert11lng 714/M2·5e11
All other department• 142-4321
MAIN OFFICE
l.'on<lll r F ltCll y K r "' do
not '1!1YI YT» Pl'* .,. !> 30 s!'.m caw l>e!.Jrl 1 pm
330 WOSI 9.ty SI Coat1 ...... CA
l.td• .000-Bo-1560 Co111 M"9 CA 92626
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J!Ollr and sv.a., n 'IOU dO no! ,_. YfNI
cociy b}' 7 • m , .. t>elor•
10 • m "° ~our ecpy Ol~ld
H. L. Schwartz Ill
Publisher
~IQN 19&3 Orange CQaSI ~ ~'1'( H~
-ll«IM ~lrllonJ ldo!Ot q1111 Ot ~·
l!lenlS lleten may OI rlQfadue«I ~ IPICill pet """'°" 01 '°P'l'~I OW<W
Clrculatlon
Telephone•
Rosemary Churchman
Controller
MO$I
OrllflQOI Gour •y "1to tu..am
Stephen F. Carazo
Production
Manager
Gem
Talk-
By J.C. HUMPHRIES
v.mr/Nl wmolo~ist .. ~cs
--------
CHINA DIAMONDS
from • land of mr•terr
We think of mysterious, ln-
acrutable China as a huge land of
a billion peasants, a long history,
and a puzzling future.. If we think
of China In terms of art, beauty
and culture, we are likely to en-
vision beauttfc.tlly-carved Jade or
Ivory. But, modern Chtna Is also a
land of diamonds. There are
known to be diamond deposits In
at least five provinces and.
although the Chinese govern-
ment maintain• a high degree of
secrecy about such weatth, It la
also known that diamonds are
being used to cqulre. f orelgn
currency for trade. Now, we tearn
that the Chinese are also d ....
veloplng a considerable
diamond-cutting Industry. There are said to be about 5,000
diamond cutter• now at work,
with another 300 betng trained
eaeh year. It la estimated that
China now mlnee abOUt 10 mill on
carats of rough diamonds each
year.. and that about 20 to 25
percent of thl1 11 of gem quality.
The rem lnder are used as lndu
trial diamonds.
Donald L. Wllllam•
Circulation
Manager VOL. n , NO. 270 ·-·
From the people making crystal a legend.
SWAROVSKJ ~
The graceful beauty of one of nature· s most
-elegant<:reations, crafted in 32% futl leac--
Austrian crystal. Exclusively yours from the
Swarovski Silver Crystal r .. Collection. •
J.C.
ME M R ~M AN.GEM soctETY
!809 NEWPORT L VO , COST A M SA
-. SINCE 19'6
BankAmeu ard MH!er Ctlarg PHONE 648-3401
f
Elller e mes~sea
ospital topic ---Mesa
A free, P,Ublic health propm on .. Medical Emcrs·
endcs at Sea ' will be presented in the confcn:nc::e room of
Cofro ll7Mesa Medic&J Center Hospital, 301 Victoria t., m to 9 p.m. Thursday.
The f~tu~ speaker will be Or. Matk N. Monroe, 1
former saihna m1tructor at UCLA 11 well as a crew
member and skipper or the UCLA sail team. He wall ~scu s what to include 10 a medical kit on a boat, &he latest
an advances in radio communications for assistamie and
• steps to be taken for a variety of medical complications on a bOat.
. Seatina is limited and mervattons are reqwred bY.
lhna ~2-2734, Ext. 291. between 9 a.m. and ,S p.m.,
Mondays throuah Fridays. •
~alcJde IJotJb:Je cJau .iated
. We t Orange County Hotline will hold an evenina
traanina class in Suicide Preventiob Thursday and a Mo!t~Y evcnina trainina class in Crisis Intervention, ~nn1n1 Oct. l 5. A day clan in Crisis Intervention is
planned at a later date and time to be announced. •
Hotline volunteers receive intensive trainillJ in
creative listeoina. dl'\I& and alcohol abuse, suicide
intel'\lention and referral serviCCJ. Volunteen are needed
who are willina to help othen to help themselves.
For more information on class times and to make merv~tions, contact Maf)'l Blackwell, proparn adminiJ..
trator, 't 761-4S75 between 8 a.m. and 1 p.m.
Sell-IJypnoal• cla .. In Meu
The Costa Me,. Parle and Recreation Department
will spon10r a class in "Self Hypnosis for Self-esteem and
Succesa' be&innina Thursday.
Tauaht by Suzette Aller, certified hypnotherapist, the
four-week class will cost 12.
For more information, call MS.8SSl.
Pareat.9' rf61Jt. to be dJacaaed
Commiuioner Gale Hick.man of the Oranse County
Juvenile Court will be auest speaker at a United Parents meeti~ Tbunday at 7 p.m. He will discuss parents' riabts
in dealina with their teenqers.
United Parents meet at Silverado HiJb School, 25632
Diseno Drive, Mission Viejo. For more information, call
837-9953 or 837-6285 eveninas and weekends.
Drawing coane offered
An ei&ht-week bc&innina and intermediate drawing
course wilf be offered to people 16 yean of age and older at
the Irvine Fine Arts Center, 4601 Walnut Ave., Heritqe Park. bqinnina Thursday. A fee ofS40 is required at the time of rqistration. For
information (X)ncemina times of the classes, call
SS2·1078.
Lapa• chapter plan• meeting
The Lupus Oranae County Chapter of the City of
Hope will have its monthly meetina Thursday at 7:30 p.m.
at the Health Education Center, 1830B W. Romneya
Drive, Anaheim.
The auest speaker will be Terry Grant. pharmacist for
Park Lldo Pharmacy, Newport Beach. He will discuss
medications taken by victims oflupus erythematosus.
. The prqgram is open to the public. For more
inf~rm~jion, call 529·5092. /
Dlnea Hr1et1 to conclude
The final proaram in the series of Community Health
Work.shops, sponsored by St. Joseph Hospital of Orange,
on "Cop1fll With lllness" will be held Thunday from noon to 1 p.m. in:J.bt OB Oas room, first floor of the
Northeast building of the hospital.
"family Panel: The Pain and Possibilities" will bC
presented by Ailene Calhoun. ~ Kamm~rer an~
Don Anderson. Participants are mvlled to brina their
lunch to these free, infonnal prop-ams held on the second
and fourth Thursdays of each month.
CIJlldren '• CPR cla .. •lated
St. Joseph Hospital of Oranae will sponsor an infant
and child CPR Oass Thursday from 6 to 8:30 e.m.
The class is important for parents of infants or
children 01 moniton as well u anyone wbo miaht baby sit
with infants or small children.
be oost is SS per. person and pre-registration is
required by callina 771·8040.' •
DAILY P LOT/W
Sam Willett's 'home fr
8amaelWUlett .
Adopted SJC Liberian
needs only R~an's
signature to tay In U.S.
IJDAYIDB
lrl.. immiaration bill, written cxclu "el)'
to allow Sam Willelt of n Juan
Capistrano to stay wnh h1sadopted parenu
in the United States, was adopted by the
U.S. Senate on Tuesday. -
All that's needed now is President
Ron&ld R•n'1 anature and Wlllett wm
have won h11 10.year battle wuh lhe U .
&0vemment to rcmam m the United States
''We're very thnlled1': Ruth Willett,
Sam'• adopted mother 111d today. ••Sena· ..
Mesa~ with baby captured after chase
81 TONY SAAVEDRA caused by the woman's complaints that
oe .. wr,... _. Huddleston had arrived home late and had
• • been drinking. Holdi~ his mfant dau&hter in front of The woman pve officer\. 1 v ue
his chest. like a shield." a Costa Mesa man description of the car and a broadcast was
surrendered to police early this morning issued, Durham said.
after allegedly breakina into a ps station M h 1 th · Ii · and leadina police on ah~· -speed chase. in canw 1 e, e city po cc heh copter · spotted a-ar 1pct<!in1 west on MacArthur which he reportedly tn to run down an Boulevard. The car ran a red li .... t and officer. .. . David Allen Huddleston, 28, was ar-pulled into a Union Oil ps station at 3S99 _., d 2 ft . f Harbor Blvd. rest~aroun a.m.~ erastra.n&eseneso Durham said the helicopter patrol did
events that started with a family squabble not know that the car was the same 0~ ~t the Sea Lark Motel, 2274 Newport Blvd. .driven away by Huddleston but ciilled for m Costa Mesa. d · ' · Police Lt. Tom Durham said officers a aroun u~i~ to stop the car because tt
call-" th t l ~ H ddl • . looked SUSPICIOUS. were ~ to. e mo e u . eston s Officer Darrell F~man anived at the
,2S·year-old wife, Tracy, "' 0 c!11med. the station just after the man broke into the
man hit her a!ld drov~ away wt th theU' 6-office, takina $200, police said. It was later
month-old ~~d. Da~mL . diicovered that HUddleston had been The family .is stayma at the hotel, said employed at the station for the last few Durb.am, adding that the araument was
Work stoppage
can't halt ma ic.
of Disney sty: e
Amusement park
stays open with no
drop tn attendance
By ~e .UIOdated PreaJ
With replacements for some of its
1,800 striking workers, Disneylarid
remained open with no saan of a drop
in attendance, and visitors said life in
the Magic Kingdom seemed normal
and friendly.
Monday and the walkout of janiton, ·
salespeople, ride operators and others
was called at 6 a.m. Tuesday, said
union spokesman Bob Bleiweiss.
There was no sip of movement by
either side Tuesday.
.. The company has made 1ts final
offer," Disney spokeswoman Debra
Garron said.
"We want to act back to the
negotiatina table. but there does not
at this point seem to be anything to
discuss." Bleiweiss said.
-Federal mediator Bonnie Castrey
said she would continue private talks
with the two sides, but no f omull
negotiations Vwere planned.
das~~m said ~uddl ton allC&ecih
jumpccJ into his car and led Freeman on a
70 mph chase west on MacArthur
Boulevard into Fountam Valley. The
suspect apparently lost control of bis car,
pun out and stopped ju t over ~he nta
Ana River bridle. he said.
While the officer was walk:Jng p to the
car. the suspect allegedly turned the vehicle
around and tried to l'\ln over him. Freeman
fired his service revolver, bittina one of the
front tires and jumped out of the way,
accordina_to repc;>ru.
The officer Jum.PCd back into his car,
which also bad a flat tire. and cb.ucd the
suspect' scar, wbicb was headina back over
the brid&e and into Costa Mesa. Durham
was unsure what caused \he Oat tire oo the
police unit.
With both can disabled, the ctwc
CIOntinucd t a alov.u rate as die .ulOel•
drove baa on MacArthur.
Durham id the chase eftdedJust ...r«
lhegassta\lon When Hudd.laton swr~
aftet another urut. with liabts flMlllill&
beaded lhecaroffon MacAn.bur.
Dw1wn Aid both ofTiocrs were una~
that the u peet was the same man that b1f
taken the baby from the mOtd.
.. No one thought there coukt bea beby ,t.
the car, not the way hewasdrivanai~ "ilfl
DUrbam.
Huddleston came out of the car ~ ..bCJd his 6-mooth-old dauabtet in fron1
him like bield." be said.
Huddleston sarresiedonsuspiac>n
commercial bUJJlaz)', Uh on an offia*
with a deadly capon and fdon) cbild
endanaerment. ·
He in od)' at City jail tbil momina in lieu of SlS,000 mil
China Cove
utility poles .
coming down
Calif. Institute of Technology,
city. 4 7 homeowners to share
$200t000 cost for the project
BJ lill~ E. ll.EIN . ..............
Unsilhtly dcctric:al poles and telephoDC wires m
• ewpon .&eaeh's Otlna Co'"C community will be com•N
down next year, with underground utility lines tom& \D
courtesy of tbe at) of Ncv.-port. the California lnstitu\C of
TechnoJosy and 47 homeowners who will pick up die
$200 000 tab. ' More than 100 union memben
carryini "On Strike" sisns btpn 2~
hour picketing outside the park
Tuesday, a day after five unions
rejected a new contract offer. The
park has S,000 wpr~ers, 3,SOO of
whom belona to 26 uruons.
To visitors, it ippeared to be
business as usual Tue"1ay at ~
neyland, which bills itself as 0 Tbe
Happiest Place on Earth.··
The Newport Ot> CounC'll \'Oted Monday uiabt to
approve the assessmC'Dt distnct over the pro\CSU ol 2&.4
percicnt oft.be area's residents. .. just under 9,ooo;· a Disneyland The council ilso voted to increase its oontnOutton ilO
spokeswoman said. the Wlderp'o\1.Ddi1'1 effon from S 11.00010 aboUt $25.000.
N~otiations broke off at midniPt Attendance was about normal,
Long~time ·reSident
Withee dies at age 80
Funeral services were held this
..As far as I can tell. everythina·s ~About 35 residents of Chi.Ga eo .. e turned out at lht
just fine here," said Hal Snyder, 37. of council mee~ to testify both for and apinst the ·Poway, with 'his son. Alec, 2, in assessmentdistnct-thefi.rslofitskindeverapprovedin
Fanwyland, one of the park's theme the city, accord.in& to the City Man&19" Bob Wypn.
areas. "If anytbins. the operators Most of those protestina the assessment Said they
seem over-friendly, not at all burned thouaht the cost to homeowners was unfairty distributed.
out." Individual assessments ruae from about $2,00010 abOµi
Wendy Reed. 29, of Lona.moot. $9,000 and can be paid immediately' or over a 10.year
Colo., said, .. My only tho\.labt -.-as, period at 9 percent interest.
'How can this be bappenina to Two previous public bearinp wci"C hdd on this
Fantasyland'r.. matter, which was bro~t up last year by raidcnts Who
The strike is the third since the park siped a petition ask1 na the at) 10 establish lhe
opened in 19SS. It is the W&est in asacssment.
Disneyland's history. said Al Ff ores, a Evelyn Frost. who owns a home oo COve Street. sasd
park publicity supervisor., the ~ority of the China Cove residents are in favor of
Wedn~av, Sept. 28 mominaforWilliamWoodWithee,a ~-,, ~ 2S.ycar resident of Costa Mesa, who
died at his home Sunday at the age of
He issurvived by his wife, Dorothy
H. Withee, of Costa Mesa and a
daughter, Sharon Glassman, of
Diamond Bar. Also survivina are
three arandsons, John, Timmy and
Randy Glassman, all of Diamond
Bar.
Disneyland will remain open ~ur-enhanang the quality of life in their ueiahbotbood. "lf .-c
ina its usual hours. cuttin& back as· are ihe first (to have an ass.esamcnt established fbr
planned to a winter schedule of five-underaroundinautili~)lhan bravo. We show that we are
day weeks Oct. 1, said Bob Roth, a people who~ about wbere we live and we're willina to
• 9:30 Lm., On.lap Couty Board of Sa,ervllon, 80.
HallofAdrninistration, lOCivicCenterPlaza.SantaAna. Mr. Withee, a public accountant
• 4 p.m., Couty Su1tatloa Dbtrict No. 11 District who operated an office on Adams
park spokevnan. put our money where our mouths arc." Frost said. ·
Nearly 70 percent of about l ,400 But Dolly Russell. a resident of Ocean Boulcvai\1.
Headquarten, 108~ Ellis Ave., Fountain Valley. .· · Avenue in Costa Mesa for many
• 7. p.m.. Lapa.a Bea~ P•annlq Commlltloa, yean, was a descendant of the Withee
Council Chain be~ ·SOS Forest Ave. family ofWithee, Wis., a town named
• 7:30 p.m., Foutalll Valley Plann1a1 Commbtloo, for his arandfather. He bad practiced
City Council Chambers, 10200 Slater Ave. accounting for 56 years.
Services were held at the Piercic
Brothen Bell Broadway Mortuary
chapel with interment following at
Fairhaven Memorial Park.
union memben who voted Monday protested the assessment. .. lam not in fa,·oroffinancillly
followed the recommendation of supponi~ other people's desires th.at I choose not 10 be
union leadership and re~~ the involved in.'! R';ttsell said. . . • company•s latest offer, wd Michael The council voted . to 1~ its ~ m lbc
O'Rourke, spokesman for United aueumcnt district by includina ~"O city-owned beKb
Food and Commerciil Workers. parcels in the di trict. ,,
Pou cE Loe
--)
UC Irvine employee held
iii $1 OQ_,000 bribe[}!'. case
A UC Irvine maintenance em·
ployee has been arrested on suspicion
of soticitina a S 100,000 bribe from a
com_pany seekina a contract to do
rooflna work on campus.
Elie Lee Grooms Jr .• 59, ofOardcn
Grove. pleaded not Juilty Tuesday in
Harbor Municipal Court in Newport
Beach to felony and mildcmeanor
charses ln connection with the a1lcaed bnbery solicitation scheme. A
preliminary hearina in tho cue was
tcheduled for Oct. 8. · UCI spokeswoman Linda OraneU
Pfewport~b
An open 1u1te in an office builclina
Wednesday proV1dtd entry for
th eves who stole telephone equip-
ment from a rectption1st's desk. The
wnchina equipment wu valued at
S2,08S. • • • Thieves forced open a windo on a
boat docked at 928 V11 Udo Nord cart) this week and stole fishm1 and
electrical equipment. A tclcvmon ttt,
rad o and tishina pol~ valued at
S I, 7l S, were reported m i na. • • • bout$ 1,000 worth Of poQ1 ~UIJ>o
ment was tOlen ft'om the patto ofa
home beiq dcmoh bed at 114 Vaa
Tncstc ulfday n •ht . • 'I"-.
A b<W--dockCd at 2122 N"".P<>n
utcvatd \\'Is buraJanztd la t wtek
l
_,
said Grooms. a senior superintendent
of facilities manqemcnt. allqedly
.. sou,ht financial pin from a pnvate
company in excbaqe for aivtna the
com~yacontract to test roofsat the
univeraity."
She said Grooms alleacdly asked
the company for $50,000 per year for
twoy~.in exchanae for a contract worth S 150,000.
Grancll declined to identify the
compeny involved. bUt said officials
of the firm 10Pt01Ched campus J>Olice
and a Sl.SOO cellular phone was
tolen. Police 'd the antrudtta slid
open an unl«t.ed window, drank
beer and ate fOOd on the bolt alW! ltft amm. • • • An $8,000 mink coat WU Molen
lUetday from the f\ar Won at
Robinson's Fashion bland store. The
coat was found minina and the ha.., and atnsonnatic alarm u was
chalnCd to wtre found in anotMr
depanmenL Emp&o~ told P9li«
&he only wa1 to mnove the coat FtOm tbC b&n,lrf IS tO Ult I key. TIUS ls the
\lurd aucb theft ID four m nth the)
id.
concemin1 the alle&ed bribery
scheme. She said UCI police in4
vestipted the matter and an:ested
Grooms on Tuesday.
She said Grooms. who has been
employed by UCJ for four..and~-b~f
years. had been plannlna to retttt in
Ma_y t98S. .
Grannel said Grooms has been
s>laced leave. Wtiether be will coo·
tinue to receive pey while on )cave
will be determined after a two-Wttk
university inquiry m the matter, she
u~ I 4
home on Spruce Tree Lane. • • • II.. microwave oven -.,s stolen from
a condominium on Sky Park Circle.
The bufl}ar is believed to have
broken into the residence bet >een 11
1.m. and noon Tuesday. • • • A te~ valued at more than $400
WIS reportCd stolen from a car parked
Tuesday at 16 Auto Center Drive. • • • A bicycle was reported toleo
Monday from a home on Dttrfield.
The bicycle bas an estimated value of
SSOtoUOO.
Foutain Valley
A resident of the 17200 block of
Palm Street reported Tuesday that
someone stole a bJuc t S.foot boat
cover from a boat parkC'd an hi
driveway. The l was estimated at
$300.
oo an Idaho marshal's .. -arrant for
distnbuuon of cocaine TuC'Sda) after·
noon. No bail was seL • • • Dennis Couley Galla&her. 28, was
arttSted and ctwJcd whh posxs$ion
of cocaane, desuuction of cvidtntt
and resisuna arrest early Tuesda)
momil\I" A and-South
Coast Hi&hway. He was pl.aced undtr
$$,000 bail and hi! vehicle was
impounded.
Butloiton Beacb
A •orker at the J ErskiM
tltttion office at l b 2 Beach Bh d.
said someone took a '&l1ct from btr
pune contia11n1S 100 caSh and credit
cards •hen ~he walked ou 'de th
premises. (Erskine is a candid.ate for
Hunti"•ton Btarh Oty Council.) ... . ...
A 1969 VolksWq,eri Bua WU slOkn
at the beach by someone ho ap-
parently saw ibc owner hide has keys
under iM blanket. The :su.spea itblc
the keys_ and then lhc ~Chide Vi.lucd
at Sl,..00. . . . ' Burslars tole a arecn ho) Sdlwinn
Vamty 0-~bic} .at
$1 SO from a ruideuce in the 7QOO
block of Toulouse. ••• A ~tereo WIS stole!\ from I 1982
v.h1te Volkswag'n Rabbit parked iD
th' ~~iu Furniture lot on Gotllard
trttl. •••
Vandal poured l1qiud on a
parL:cd io t. GtOrRC 'Lane. . ,, . z
A male adult ,,,.u taken into
custod' and $68 in liquor
re«wcttd at Alpha Beta. t 9640 BcaCh
Boulevard. /
,
t r,
J -·
I t
EVERY
SUNDAYll
e a.m.-3p.m.
ORANG!
COAST
COLL!OE
SPACES $10 • 432·5880
111u .. ,Y 11111141.act 11 t• t 11' 11 111t om
BARGAINS GALORE/I
FREE CUSTOMER ADMISSION
a PAAKINGm -
AT
Non-Alcoholic Sparklers
NartiacUI SparkJiltf Cldu
Mc~r'• SpuldJ~ Cldrr
Paul Masson
Chablts. Rhine Calif. Rose.
Light Chablis or Burgundy
12 Year Old Scotch 86 Proof $12~~ml
7-UP
or Diet 7-UP
'L1~119
~. Scliweppes
Mixers
.----······-------------· sot I uQUOR BARN COUPON 1 so~·
Save 50~
On Your Next Purchase Of
Kaiserdom
Pilsner
6 Pn k • 11 oz. R Bott
Pay Only '249
Regul r Prlc 2 99
.,.... -~----~~~~--~~ --~ ...
Shultz, Gromyko meet
entered the bu1ldi from the
U.N. headqu rters.
Gromyko" nt dttCCtl)' to the 11 lh
noor of the nussion. where he and
hultz met in the office of the lJ m dor to the United N uons.
J ne K1rk~tnclc, nd posed for .
photographer while cxd1an1in
mall talk. They then went mto a
nearb) confeunce room for thei1
official discu ~ions. expected to last at
least through the lunch hour.
It wa) the first h!gh-level me ting
between U.S. and Soviet J~ dcrs incc
Shultz met with Gromyko in Stock·
holm last January.
ln the conference room, Grom)ko
and Shultz sat at opposite l1des of a
lon table.
tn. ad,ance of the seuion, Shultz
said he \\ould discu a wide range of
issues w&lh Gromyko, including Re-
a h's propo Is spelled out m his
speech to the U.N. General Assembly
on Monday, for contaC'ls with Mo •
cow at all levels to rcduoc tensions.
Hong Kong to remain same
PEKJNG (_..P) -Britain and property and to be defended in court.
China initialed a deuuled agreement Existing laws will remain in force,
today tbat will return Hong Kont to the agreement ~ys. to maintain
Chineit rule in 19'7 and promtsn .. freedom of the person, of speech, of
that for so years after that, lift there . the p~s, or assembly, of association,'
will remain much the me -to form and jojn trade unions, of
including the ri&ht to strike, wol'$hip correspondence, of travel. of mov~
and travel. ment, of strike, of demonstration, of
Hong Kong's police and public choice of occupation, of academic
servants may keep their jobs, English research, of belief, inviolability of the
will be acceptable in the courts and home, the freedom to marry and the
government service, and the Hong riJbt to raise a family freely."
Kona dollar will remain freely con-China wilt take an equal share of
vcrtible -althou&h the British profits from some land sales before
monarch's pidurc wi11 go. 1997. People with British dependent
Among privilcaes China promises territories citizens passports will get a
to protect arc the rig)lt to own new form of British passpon after the
Chentn Blanc '12/IS
Chardonnay 'Sl/82
Cabernet Sauvlgnon
Fume Blanc
French Colombard
Gamay Beaujolais
aul anCCOtyW111Mt<"--11J" _ .................................. ..... .................................. _ ..
......... bqll_ ... ....,._ ...... •411 , ......
Ru.tu Rtallng
Trockenbeerenauelne
~ ........ ~ ........... -..... _.._0--...,.11~~-... ......... ., ..................... .,,. ........ u.-.._L.-.. ... _ ..... .._._ '1799 , ......
Morano Vlnta~!ort •so ,,.........,............. ~"·-..................... , .............
1.66
1.04
1.06
1.16
2.58
2.04
RlJM/Tl:.QlJILA
~-=·~:om ......... l 711t. 1991
Boca Chica Rum *898 ~ .. ....., .•• 1.7SlL
~~!!'~~~-~~~ Ru~ ... '7"
~~.J.e~~~.1se..i.'899
~~!!.~~u~.._•59s
Fxplore and Discover
~ell'l·tion and Savings
Robert Stemmler
0.-..C:...,G.w l ... c......a 1093 ........... .__..,., , ........ .
MUano o..,...c.-.111ww
, .... CatMr_ .. ...,..._... • 13s1
... Valh!J. ''°al ........ •••••
takeover, but that will not apply to
later gene"rations.
The a~ment be&ins with a .. joint
declaration" in whicll China states its
intention to resume sovtrcignty over
Hong Kon1 on July l, 1997, and
Britain says it will relinquish control
on that date, ending a century and a
half of colonial rule.
Three annexes and two memoran-
da spell out China's pledge to main·
tain the frccport's Jife style and
capitalist economy for 50 years after
1997. They also examine land and
nationality changes and call for a joint
liaison voup to monitor implemen·
tat ion of the pact.
PLUM BHANDY
White Star French Champagne
75~ml.
$3~?om~ ............ ~--·u.-.--..... ............... _ ............ • , ..... Tlle ............. .,. tee ...... "94 ••
....,_"""-•"'4 tee -.-1w •• w... ...... u.-...................... Lyness Creek
Liquor Barn
trrouwant.
'1811.
' 45 Location~ in Southt.·m (.'alifornia
1721 l•••rtlr AWi.. Celtl ........ •1•
21111 •111111~ .................. 14+1417
10882 W•rbr•,llr~11 kM· ~ UM14a
213 ....... ~ l~Allhlll ........ •1-.n
14t17 Cutvw Drhl. lrvt. • ...._ 151·2717
Cl'bemet Sauv1gnon
N ~ f 10~
By CM AtMda&e4 Preta WA HINOTON -Ne.arty one.third of Amcncan receive bcndits from
one government pr~m or another, a federal re_pon disclosed tod y. And
prOjf&ms that provide istancc based on indivtdual mcome provid
a stslance to nearly one American m five, occordittJ to the report. The Censu
Bureau•• new Survey or Income and P~m Patliopauon counted lht:
number of people rcc:ic1vina dtlTere.nt forms of assistance, altbough at did not
attempt tu se~ a value OJ\ that aid. The urvey found 29.6 per~nt of non-farm
residents receive at least one form of~ovemmcn~ benefit ra~.ns from 1.,1 .
ScCurity to unemployment compensatton to Medicare. In add1tton, it said t S 8
percent are aided by programs based on their need. uch as f~ stamps, pubhc
housins, Medicaid and Aid to Families with Dependent Children. .
S.tllarov ktn denied vl.N•
NEW YORK -Soviet authoritiC$ in W.ashington have don.i~ vj . to
two relativ~ of Soviet dissident 1eader Andrei D. S&kharov, who 11 tn ex1l In
the city of Gorky, aocordi~a to the rela!ives. No reason was ~ven by 5avlet
official! for th denial of visas for Alexei Sernyonov, Sakharov s stepson, and
Tatyana Yanlcelcvich, Scmyonov·s wife, accordin& to their attorney.
AH five au~ con• captured
LANSING Kan. -Two convict d murderei-5 who sawed their way oufof
Kansas State Penitentiary were captured by a deputy sberifkarly today as lhcy
walked along a road just ~iit miles from the prison. Three other C$C'8J>CCS were
apprehended hours earlier. "Well, I'm just glad that they're back •'! the
penitenti.aryand everybody can go to bed at n~t and sleep wtthout w~rryms." said Wyandotte County Sheriff's Department . John Holt a.f\e~ he packed ~P
James Allen Purdy, 33, and Thanh Van Pham, 0, both of.W~ch1ta. caught in
Kansas City on Tuesday were Thaddeus Jones, 28, of Wichita; Lawrence E.
Une, 33, of St. Louis; and Ano Tucker Jr., 28, of Wichita.
Copter cra•IJa during rescue try
KERNERSVILLE, N.C. -The decision to use a helicopter at night to
retrieve the body of a worker who bled to death while pinned atop a water tower
was a last reson. officials said after the chopper bit the tower and crashed, killing two peoele. Three previous attempts to rescue Owies Glenwood
Tompkins Jr. with a 7S-foot aerial ladder, a 9().;foot c1lerrydickcr and with ro~ haridled by rescuers who sea.led the 140.foot tower ha failed. officialS
S&Jd Tuesday night:. Both Tompkins' legs were broken wbeo a Jirder he cut fell
the wrona way, pinnina him to the tower. He bled to death four hours later.
about 10 minutes before WFMY-TV's news helicopter arrived, struck 1
protruding piece of steel and crashed on top of a nearby building.
FouU 'trea.are trove' 1tJ Wyoming
PITTSBURGH -The complete skull of the earliest known horse has
been found in Wyomina's Wind River Basin, part of a tteasurc trove of fossils
which scientists compared to finding an unknown Rembran~t. The .site
includes remains of animals never beft>rc known to science and WJU shed hght
on the dawn of modem-day creatures, the discoverers said. "It's the beat SO
million-year-old gold mine of fossils in the world. Nothina else compares.
Absolutely nothina.0 Leonard Krishtalka of the Camqje Museum of Natural
History said Tuesday.
CAuroRNIA
Afan.an bJ good condlt1on
VACA VILLE -Imprisoned murderer Charles Manson, servina a life
term for the 1969 cuJt alaymaa of nine {>COPle, was in good condition today after
beinJ liadly t>UJ'Jlcd by another conVJctcd kilJer who doused him with paint
thinner and set him ablaze. Authorities said Jan Holmstrom attacked Manson
Tuesday in the bobby 5hop of the California Medical Facility at Vacaville,
about 50 miles northeast of 5an Francisco, where the state keeps psychiatric
prisoners. Corrections Dc~ent spokesman Bob Gore said Holmstrom, "a
(»ycb.iatric case 1n remiwon," told offiCcrs that Manson had threatened him
for bia professed Hare Krishna beliefs. Manson. 48, servin& life for the cuJt slayi~ of actress Sharon Tate and eiabt other people. was listed in iOOd condillon in the prison hosJ)ital with second· and third~ burns over 18
percent of his body, mostly face, Scalp and hahds.
l 00 evacuated from baml.ag IJotel
MERCED -Tenants were leanina out their windows screammg to be
rescued as fire caused $200,000 damage to a six·floor Meroed hotel that had
been converted to apartments. Firefifbters kept residents calm and evacuated
about 100 J>COple at the downtown T1op Hotel Tuesda=niaht without injury,
said Fire Chief Ken Mitten ... The touJbestjob for fire rs was evacuating
the residents of the building," Mitten said ... Several peo e had to be rescued by
ladder crews from their apartnlent windows." . •
State voter ~tratloa ap
SACRAMENTO -With election day only six weeks away, voters in
California have been rqistering in unprecedented numbers. From May 7 to
Sept. 7, the state's total number of rqistered voters soared to an all-time hiah
of 12,143,940, accordina to figures released by the secretary ofstate's office.
.. I've never seen anything like this in a comparable period," pokeswoman
Caren Daniels-Meade wd Tuesday. 0 What we've been hearina about voter
rcsiJtration is true. All those aroups really are out there sianina people up.••
Bfl quke due wltllfn SO yean
PASADENA -There is as much as a 90 percent cbancc that an
earthquake capable of killing up to 30,000 people will strike California within
SO years, a scientist says. And the likelihood of a killer quake in the region l:fy
the end of the century -just 16 years away -is one-in-four, California
Institute of Technology geologist Karry Sieh said. The forecast is consistent
with earlier predictions that a quake measuring 8 or more on the Richter seal
i1 likely on the southern San Andreas FauJt in 30 to 50 years.
F•t toe. rarely: fat kl.I&
LOS ANGELES-Fat infants rarely become fat children, say researchers
who monitored 450 babies throu&h aae 9 a1uf.found that overwciJht babies
slim down through a natural growth process. Studies at the University of
California at Berkeley did not, however, determine why some babies au fat
and whether fat children are destined to be fat adults, the researchers aaid.
Contrary to popular belief and earlier studies, "the obese infant is not
prtdestined to become an obese child, .. the research team of nutritionist Leona Jt~ Sbapiro.,wrote in this month's issue of the American Journal of Public
Health.
•
WoRlD
S. ~rlcan ilot11J6 clalaJ• victim
SOWETO, South Africa -Scattered violence wu rcponed tOday,
rcsul.tift&. in the death ofa black youth, as tens of thousand of black studcnu
resumed a boycott when black schools rropencd after a vacation, officials said.
The vacation beian a week early because of widespread boycotts and riotinJ.
Tbe youth was struck by a buund killed as the driver sped away from 1 crowd
of. youths throwana rocks in Soweto. Lt. Tom Jeffcrson...J&Jd at polict
headquarters in Pretoria. He aaid that when police arrived, about 300 blacks aSkeid them for protection from stone-throwers and were escorted home.
Sorietplane •liot down In Al6hn1-tan
NEW DELHI, India - A SoYiel military plane was ahot down by anti·
communist auerrillas in Af&hanista.n's Lopr Valley last weekend, k1llin& 30 to
SO people, a Wemm diplomatic repon wd today. The report mentioned
scVerat plane shootinp a.nd rocket attacks in tbe.s>11t w.eeJc end ~ulated that
they may have been c.amed out by followers of rebel leader Ahmact ha Masoud. At lea tone mthta.ry plane was lhot down in the lopr Valley, where
heavy fl&htm& has taken Place between Soviet troops and insuracnts, id the
repon from a W tern embassy an Kabul, the Af&haru tan capital. 11he rcpon
wa1 made under condition that the nam~ of the cmbuly not be revealed.
LON(}()tiil-Amnaty International sa)'I Cuna bu executed thou nd
of people dun~ a nation Wide anu-cnmc crackdown and i bold10& thousand
ofpohtical prisonm in Jail and labOr camps. A.nuicszy. which won the 1977
Nobel Ptaoe Pri1e for champ onina human nahts. ori Tuesda) 1 ucd it first
mljor rcpon' on ommunlst Chana incc 1978. The LondQJ\4Jaltd
orpn1:r.ation td that dunni the first three months of the dn\c that tietln in
Auaust 1983 qainst oommon cnm1nals .. ten of thou nds of ancsts and
veral thou nd ex«uuons are belie~cd to hue been canicd ouL" Amnesty,
wtuCh OPPQtCI the death penalty, 11id prisoncn were t1ccutcd for ofTcn
ranalna from murckr c mole 1ma women and cmbcttlcmcn\
I
,
, ,
Mr. and Mrs
boy
pt mbuS
Mr. nd Mrs. P ul John on, Irvine,
boy
Mr. and Mrs John Gardner, Co ta
. Mcsa,girl Mr. nnd Mrs. Curtis Stirzin,ger,
Irvine, girl • ·
Mr.· and Mrs.John McGlinn Jr •••
Costa M ,_Jirl
September 4
Mr. and Mrs. Franklin Q\u, Hunt-
ington Beach, boy
Mr. and Mrs. Robyn Ray, Ncwwrt
ch, gnl
September I
Mr. andMrs.JohnSager,Co5ta Mesa,
boy
. September?
Mr. and Mrs. Fernando Melgar·
Borja, Costa Mesa, &i rt
September a
Mr. and Mrs. Cameron Smith, Irvine,
boy
Septembert
Mr. and Mrs. Joh Ruud, Huntington
Beach, boy · · Mr. and Mrs. John Walovicz, Costa
Mesa. airl ·
September 10
Mr. and Mrs. Bradley Rawlins, New-
port Beach. boy
Mr. and Mrs. William Clark, New-
port Belch, boy
September 11
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Allen, Irvine, . 1 &lf • September ii
Mr. and Mn. Patrick Karr, Costa Me~airl · Mr. and Mrs. George Katzenberger,
COsta Mesa. boy
SePtember U
Mr. and Mn. f effi'ly Brown, Newport
Beach, boy
September U
Mr. and Mrs. lames Carlson, Irvine,
boy
HUMANA HOSPITAL
HUNTINGTON BEACH
September 1
Mr. and Mrs. Eric Lancenbach, Costa
Mesa, boy
September•
Mr. and Mrs. David P. Monyhan,
Huntington Beach, girl
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Tietz, untinaton
Beach, girl
Mr. and Mrs. James W. Spearman,
Huntington Beach, girl
September I
.-1&eailltef .•
Mr. nd Mn. Frank Soott Bauder,
Costa Mesa, airl
Mr. and MrL Lawrence hatz., Huntington Beach, boy
September 11
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Wtlham
Beaudry Huntinaton Beach. gu1 ~r. and Mrs. James Sager, Hun\·
u\gton Beach, boy
SAN CLEMENTE GEN. HOSPITAL
September 7
Guillermina and Theodor Medina,
Laguna Niguel, girl
WESTERN MEDICAL CENTER
ANTAANA
September• Ellen and Ronald Luce, Co ta Mesa,
boy
Linda llnd Chris Kilpatrick, Irvine,
girl
. Septemltf:.r ' Debra and Ricliard Nickenon, Costa
Mesa, boy . •
' September a
Renee and Mad Oark, Irvine, airl
September 11
Susan and Martin Waters, Irvine, prl
FOUNTAIN V AUEY
COMMUNITY HOSPITAL
September 1 .
June and Steve Zitzer, Costa Mesa,
boy
September I
Barbara and WarTen Maxvill, Costa
Mesa. girl
September•
Dora and Roger Hiers, Irvine, boy
Leslie and Christopher Martino,
Fountain Valley, girl
Valorie and Robert Giese, Hunt·
ingtoo Beach, boy
September5
Esther Kramer and Raymond Ortep.
Costa Mesa, boy .
Amalia and Tommy Blahnik, Hunt·
ington Beach, girl
Deborah Cooper, Irvine, boy
Shirley and Jay Wilkerson, Hunt-
inaton Beach, girl
September I
Bicb Ngoc Vu and Thanh Huu
Nsuyen, Costa Mesa, boy
Saundra and Larry Hartman, Hunt-
ington Beach, boy
September I
Patricia and Douglas Copenhaver,
Huntington Beach, boy
Lisa and Lewis Hurwitz, Huntin1ton
Bea.ch, girl
Septembert
Josinta Frye and Fernando Azurin,
Costa Mesa, boy·
Mesa student m .odels
for college Calendar·
Jim Sampson of Costa Mesa is
amona the 10 male University of the
Pacific students featured in a calender
produced by a recent paduate.
Sam~n and the other students are
shown m a variety of campus settinp
in the calender, named the 0 Pacific
Ten." Since the novelty item is geared
to school activities, the months of
July and August were omitted.
choice of 1,000 univenity women,
who were surveyed on which men
they would like to sec modclina the
collegiate fashions and swimwear,
accordioi to Bob Benyrpan, who
produced the calender.
The student models were the
The calender sells for $4.95 from
the campus bookstore and other
locations in Stockton. Berryman said
nearly 400 copies of the 1,000 printed
have already been sold.
. . REWARD
1100111 SOIML SEWIH llOlllES
Necchl'a Education Department placed orders In antJclpatlon of
previous year sales. Due to budget cuts these machines must be
sold! All machines offered are the most modern machines In the
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all fabrics: Levis, canvas, upholstery, nylon, stretcil, vinyl, silk,
EVEN SEW ON LEATHER! These machines are new with a 25
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color~ed dial and see magic happen: straight aewtng, zJQzaa,
buttonholes (any size). lnvlslble blind-hem, monogram, latfn
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topstltch, elastic stitch, professional serging stitch, strillght
atretch stitch . . . all of this and more, without the need of old
fashioned cams or programmers. Your price with this ad 1111.95.
Without this ad, $521. Two locations to serve you.
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Alona for the nap
A puee~er In a car on the Gard.ea Oro•• Freeway enJoJS a ammy -and probably nolay -aftemooD nap.
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Walter Plqeon (~m left) ln 1$SO, 1944. 1962, 1977 •
. WalterPidgeon dead at 87
'Nothing amused him more than to tell me
a funny story just before a serious scene'
Mideast
~
Lofty backdrop .
Cotton-llke cload.8 eene u a backdrop for roller couter
riders at the Loe AJiaelea County Fair In Pomona Tue.day.
Balloon-flying.
Czeeh defector
arrives in U.S.
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probed
EDMONTO • lbrna (AP}
R rCh hope h plei
fr m the body of a BntiiJ\scaman will
bclp explain wh~ he and OC1*
mcdlbcrs o the 1846 Fnnkhn AtaiC
6ped1uon died searohmg for lhc
onhwestPa · ·
•• c didn) expect l re uld
much left of the OIJJ:~" patholqsa• Dr. Rohen Amy d of the 20-p
old petty officer' body that w.t
uncovered b UruvetS1t} of Alberd
researcben 10 Au u t. .. l'be)
shrunken, but quite di preserved
The two iht~ in me J 2 mber
exped111on led b) 1r John Franklin
cartoonl8t Brad Andenon ln h1a atudlo.
.. Next time we fly by. toss me a
slow waltz tape.'·
ere trappoc;l in aa: m i 846 '9Dd
scveralcrcwm mbersd1ed, mdudi
Franklin. The h membeG of the
e1pcd1tion ildoncd the hips llwo
years tcr an4 t out across be
frozen sec to try to reach a Hudson
Bay outpost 600 mile5 away. I died
during the trek.
mples "-ere taken from a11 the
seaman's internal orpns1 and projfl(:t
leader Owen nie said be hopes
anal)sis will help determine why
expedition memben died. No 'dog day afternoons' for this cartoonist
The tests w1U 1akc se .. -e.rat weeks. he
5aid. They could .suggest whether the
seaman died of exposure, malnutn-
tion or other some other cause.
ESCONDIDO (AP) -Car-
toonist Brad Anderson, who has
delighted readers for 30 years with
the comical adventures of the dog
.. Marmaduke," doesn't have to go
very far for inspiration. He just goes
downstairs.
.. When rm down here, I'm back.
at work. again," Anderson says of
his in-home studio, where he draws
the lovable but troublesome Great
Dane that stars in his syndicated
cartoon appcarina daily m more
than 600 American and Canadian
newspapers.
There never has been a "real"
Great Dane in Anderson's life.
Marmaduke's character, Anderson
says, is based on a bulld<>& owned by
his mother and stepfather. Pans of
Marmaduke's personality also
come from dogs Anderson has met
or owned over the year, a sort of
"everydog," the cartoonist says.
When he leaves the studio,
Marmaduke stays behind, says
Anderson, who shares his split-
level home in this northern San
Diego County copimunity with
Barbara Anderson, his wife of 39
ycan. .
0 This is work, and that's home up
there," he said. "I can walk away
frem it every night., turn on the TV,
and it's like coming home."
Anderson, 60, dabbled in grape
fanning and had thoughts of bc-
comina pilot before settling on -a
career as a cartoonist.
.
"Cartooning kept taking over a year, and then itJUStdacs," he said.
more and more, so finally I gave .. A lot of (comic strips) fall by the
into it and went into it fulltime," wayside. Maybe the cartoonist just
says Anderson. loses interest. You really have to
At first, he sold mostly to maga-like the character, and like what . your're doing.'' zincs and was under contract to the Saturday Evening Post for a time. As for Marmaduke's name, it just
He tried out many different charac-sort of popped ~Pone day.
ter ideas for a syndicated cartoon "Marmaduke uiunded like a
before Marmaduke materialized good name. lt'sjustagood name for
one day on his drawing board. a dog," he said.
''I drew up one month of Although Marmaduke -i not
Marmaduke, sent it off to the above antics that exa perate or
syndicate and it was accepted," he enrage his owners. neighbon. the
said. dogcatcher and police, his innate
Beattie said lhc seaman•$ body was
removed from a grave site on 8cechCy
Island. abOut 1,600 miles north of
W1nn1pcJ. that had been known since
the I BSOs. Tv.o other seamen are
t>uried in permafrost at me same
location.
.. We're ~tying to interpret why ttic
whole expedition died." Beattie saud.
..There ba~e been a I.at of cxola-
n.ations IS to Wby It tOOk i)bic%:'W'"e ire -. •
attempting to back up or change lhe
theories ...
President drops in on pen pal It was a feat of some note. lovableness saves the day -and
Anderson ~ys United Features the dog -every time.
receives more than 1,000 cartoon Anderson believes that quality is
ideas each year, "and out of that one reason Marmaduke has been
He said peculation and rcscarch of
historical records have offered .. no
real~ answers" to the failure of
the exs)edition. which was ~ll
equipped and had arctic experience.
WASHINGTON (AP)-Bearing a
gift jar of jelly beans, President
Reagan knocked on the door of a two-
story, red-brick home in the
predominantly black Congress
Heights section of Washington.
ur•m calling on my pen pal, ..
Reagan explained last week in drop-
ping in for dinner at the home of 7-
year-old Rudolph Lee-Hines.
Assislant White House Press Sec-.
retary Marie Weinbera said the sec-
ond-arader at Co0&1'C" Heights
Elementary School had invited Re-aaan to dinner in a letter he wrote the
president in August.
The boy's parents were expecting.
the president and Mrs. Reagan, but
FREE
the visit came as a surpnse to the 37, is a self-employed photographer. they pick. up one or two to try.'' around for sue~ a long time and The researchers.~ plan to open
youngster. continues to do well 30 years after the other two gra"es in a search for Reagan met the boy when he Reporters were not permitted to Keeping readers interested in the h·s creaf on -ff'l&J?Cnts of documents and m<m
visited the school March 12. They enter the two-bedroom home, but character over a ~riod of time is 1 1 · medical clues.
have exchanged about five letters Weinbe!l said the president was one of the most difficult aspcctS of .. My primary goal in cartooning Beattie said hewiUeo10 Eagland in
since. served fned chicken, wild rice, salad. his job, Anderson says. is trying to draw a funny picture the sprina to try to locate descendants
Reagan's motorcade left the White dessert and iced tea. ..You might have a great idea for every day," be savs. oft.be men buried on Bccchey Island.
Houseonoruy arewminutes'notice r;:==============================================================================;;;::;;====================:::::; to the reporters who usually accom-
pany him. They were not told the
~tination or purpose of tbe outing
until the president explained it
himself.
Most of the block of Savannah
Street, where the home is located, was
cordoned offby Secret Service aaents. 11ic boy's mother, Stephanie Lee.
29. is a nurse. His father. Chet Hines.
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'
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Freeway's foes
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'
Stella Chavos says the defeat of Proposition A during the
pril primary election sent a clear message to government and
industry alike: ~he people of Orange County don't want any
more freeways. .
Since interpretation resides in the interpreter. she may be
fight. Bat Chavos seems to be using the failed I percent sales tax
hilcc initiative like the proverbial drunk uses the lamppost -
more for suppon than illumination. .
If Proposition A's resounding rejection sends any message.
at is that the people of Orange County don't want any more taxes.
Stella Chavos is vice president of the Spyglass Hill
Community Association ofNewpon Beach. Her group is one of
13 that have bandea together to oppose development of the San
oaquin Freeway. which would link the wide open spaces of the
southern end of the county to the more densely populated
Newpon Bcach~Costa Mesa area.
• Although it is not strictly an environmental group, the
Coalition's goal is to preserve the character of the land and the
51uality of the air. A new freeway will bring Los Angeles-style
smog to the area and make Newpon Beach about as desirable a
place to live.as Barstow, the coalition claims. _
The coalition is taking a responsible attitude toward the
development of the San Joaquin corridor. It has hired a planning
and environmental expcn and is mapping strategy to minimize
traffic problems around Newport Beach if the freeway is
0approved and constructed.
• This kind of input will be invaluable to the county
supervisors who ultimately must approve the freeway or tum
their backs on growth in Orange County.
People want to hve here and businesses want to locate here.
1hcy will put a strain on the existing land and air transportation
facilities.
In increasing numbers, they will rely on the freeways to get
to and from work, to bring materials in and to ship products out.
Those already here are frustrated by the traffic jams and the ·
costly delays. They fear the futu~; they want more and better
freeways, despite what the oppor.ltnts of the proposed freeway
think.
The current plan for the San Joaquin Freeway takes the
message of Proposition A to heart. It places the local cost burden
on those developers who will profit from the housing tracts they
build along the freeway. It recognizes that the developers wiH try
to pass that cost along to the ~ople who buy their homes, but 1t
also recogn~zcs that that addttionalcostis an additionalrisk for
the developers. After all, the proposed freeway is only 14 miles
long, from the Corona del Mar Freeway to San Juan Capistrano.
New houses built along it will have to compete with those for sale
at its eastern and western ends.
Ultimately, economic forces will determine the cost of
ousins along the San Joaquin corridor, just as they have
<letennmed the need for the highway itself;
.Coyotes deserve be~er
: treatnient than slaughter
To the Editor:
As a dedicated humane volunteer
• for more than 25 years. and rec1p1cnt
of three humane awards,' may I say I
am greatly distressed at the method
used to slaughter the coyotes. Let's
face the simple ·fact that Orange
County is becom1na overpopulated
with more bu1ldm1 planned. People
Invade the hills: the canyons then arc
nccnscd when wildlife a~ars. No
•:-one wants a child or small pct
1ttacked. but when promiscuous
.shooting takn place a female w1th a
Jitter may be killed and her pups left
to starve: the method 1s heanlcss and
useless.
•"" Humane officers have tranquilizer uns and the animal could be moved
to an isolated area. A ktnd temporary
act would be for helicopters to fl)' in
and drop food; 1f thus fed the coyote
would stay in its own area. Some
tranquilized and moved could be
spayed and neutered. Coyotes arc
doinJ what comes naturally. tryini to
survive. They should not suffer thirst
and hunvr and be shot down. Is this
civ1tizatton'> What's happened to
compassion. kindness and pla1h re·
spcct for a hvma creature'> May the
powers that be act their act together
because at present ll leaves much to
be desired.
MYRTLE L. RING
Leisure World
Laguna Hills
.. 'Judge too lenient on ex-cop
To the Ed1~or With men hke e>.-officer Lauchlan. is
it an} wonder women are skeptical of
nd fed up with a d1spropon1onate
,,. number of men in · authontallvt
..posllion.s'.! When J need an officer_
doctor. lawyer or a plumber. I sure
would feel more comfonable w11h a
competent woman.
I know there arc a 101 of good men.
so please. when the bad male people
mess up. please dul) punish them to
mtorc a woman's faith in men as a
aroup and 1n the system. The JUd&C
may "reason" that Lauchlan has been
punished b) the loss of his carttr and
his family by separauon But that 1s
-ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilaf
rcall) not so much compared to 1he
loss others have suffered because of
his actions. Hi s famil> has been
hum1ltated by his actions and lost a
husband and father. His wife has
chlldren to cm.ouonall) and econ·-
om1call) care for while he can more
eas1l) mo"e and start O\er. ""'
The v1ct1m ·s career has bt.-cn ruined
as well due to emotional trauma. We.
the public. h.avc suffered b) losing our
faith in our SttUrlt} Yet who com·
mitted the wrong? Lauchlan did. and
he should be funhcr punished.
E. RICH .\RDS
Costa MeM
H. L. 8chwart1 Ill ~~
Frenk Zlnl
tJ [Ol!Oo
Tom Tait
C Ir E 0t
".-. ,
..__ ______________ ··-'ho wor rldo 'Lra.tb..exsee.Aamn ~beard.tban.alzy~rlcum cal vein um?
!Aplncu hlonflow rthananalropuipure ?''
•
If America's 'standing~tall,'
why are terrorists winning?
Rhetoric ignores --reality of limits
that go with power
WASHINGTON -One of the
first things the Reagan adminis.-
tralion did when it took office was to
"declare war on terrorism." President
Reagan enunciated that policy 1n his
inaugural address and the then SCC·
rctary of state. Alexander Hat&.
repeated it every chance be got. The
tcrronsts. though: either unim·
pressed or 1pdifferent newspaper
readers. have! since struck three
different ttmes at Amencan mstalla·
t1on in Lebanon. Thrswansd1stmc1-
ly one-sided.
l\nd so 1t almost has to be. The
latest bombing of the American
Em bass( in ~1ru1 was apparently the
work o a aroup called the Islamic
Holy War. At least. that's who
claimed respons1bihty. but other than
that little is known. They may or ma)
not exist: they may or may not be
linked to Syna. Iran or both. But they
are too few and too shadowy to
present much of a target for retalia·
tion.
Just about everyone rccoanizes
that American options arc limited
and maybe nothing at all can be done.
Contrast that. though. with the feisty
can--Oo spint which infused the Re·
agan administration in its early.
naive. days when 1t held President
Caner personally responsible for the
hum1hauon that was Iran Amencan
hostages were held for 444 days and
released only on the day that Prest·
dent Reagan took office. It was. as
RICHARD
COHEN
Jerry Ford said in a different context.
a long national ni&htmatt.
. Back then, ncitTtcr Reagan nor his
forc1gn-pohcy advisers had to deal
with rcahty. It was easy for them to
take a cheap shot at Caner and
pretend that they would have handled
the Iranian cns1s differently -
although JU St how they can not say. In
fact . administration spokesmen per·
s1st an summoning up the specter of
Tran as a reminder o th~ days when
Amcnca. instead of standing tall. was
supine.
Now we arc standing tall Since
having improved our Posture an the
saddle. though. the U S Embassy in
Beirut was bombed Apnl 18. 1983,
wtth the loss of 63 lives. 17 of them
American. In October. terrorists
bombed the Manne barracks near the
Beirut 11rpon. k11hng 241 persons
and wounding many more. War was
again declared against terrorism. but
again the terrorists didn't notice.
Now. the Amencan Embassy has been bombed apm with at least 23
dead. There is getting to be not much
of a difference between standing tall
and lying flat on our back.
Caner was exiled from American polttics for his inability to make the
world conform to the rules of a
Hollywood western. It will be
interesting to sec if the same thing
happens to Reagan. The chances arc
that it will not. that the President by
dint of his public-rclat1ons acumen
will be able to ride this one out -
rhetorically tall in the saddle while in
reality sprawled in the dust. Neither
his rhetoric nor his ideology bas been
able to make a dent in the zealousness
of terrorists. If· some nut wants to
drive a bomb-laden car into a build·
ing. some nut is goin& to figure a way
to do it.
Lebanon is sui gcneris -unique.
But 1t is emblematic of a cenain,
awful kind of reality. It sticks its
tonauc out at presidential rhetoric.
shows the lim1tat1ons of power and
mocks a vast U.S. arsc.nat \}lat has
grown incomparably vaster under
Ronald Rcapn. Lebanon 1s no d1f.
ferent. m its own way. than is Central
Amenca or the Soviet Union.
In all three areas. the adminis-
tration's foreian policy is rooted m
forct that either cannot be applied or
dares not be appltcd. Since Carter.
nothing has changed for the better.
other than the mannCf' of dclivcrina
1hc news. In fact. much has chan~
for thffiorsc -especially Soviet· Amcric relations. Thi 1 c way the world is. The
cavalry i aonc, and standinJ tall is a
rhctoncal <te'f1ce at best, a flight from
reahty at worst. The president, like
Gulliver. finds himself fettered by the
world's Lilliputians -be they the
Islamic Holy War in the Middle East
or the Sandinistas in Nicaragua. Even
retaliation, as the Israeli experience
suggests. would not chance maucn.:
Power, as Jimmy Carter knew. has
its hmitations. Reagan ridiculed him
for that, but this debate 1s no different
than all otllcrs. Reality has the last
word.
RJcllard Colla /1 a 1yodJc~ted
col11mliJ11.
Reag an on shakier ground
in 1984 race,-adviser says
GOP had an easier run against Carter,
unpopular president on the defensive JACK
AIDEISOI
WASHINGTON -The press and
the pollsters have all but re..clected
President Reapn. Yet neither pre51.
den1ial candidate has a do-or--Oie
following large enough to win the
election. The outcome will be de·
termin~ by the swing vote -the
i~pcndents whttarek>yal to ~ithcr
Reagan nor Walter Mondale.
This middle vote. now leanin&
heavil> toward Reagan. can be
chanaed overnight b> a sh1f\ m the
pohttcal winds. And a confidential
memo circulating inside the White
House warns: The Repubhcanscould blow tt . • _-;
The memo was written by Ma'
Huacl. a dcpuw director of the 1980
ReaJln campaign. now a senior
adviser.
"This clecuon 1s far from a
pushover:· he warns. "No matter
what the pollu.ay now. as 1tgctscloscr
to Election Day. the electorate will
narrow. 1t is very po s1ble we could
lose:·
Hu cl doesn't trust the polls. "The
upcns tell me that the polls can be
interpreted and analyzed differentl)
depending on how the questions are
asked and rtponed ..... he says.
"Depending on one·s motive. the}
can be reponcd for the purpose of . .
lulhng the Reagan supponers into 4, . In 1980. the forc1gn-pol.1cy
complacency and inac11vit)." SPothaht w~~ focused on the Iranian
Jie.tt..m .lhc conCc.rMm.lsed in the _hostaac cns1s. ~ Caner fiasco. In
memo: f984. t c spot •ant 1s on Central
I. In 1980. Reagan "had President Amenca, Lebanon and the Persian
Caner to run against." Carter was an Gulf, with Reapn on the defensive.
unpopular president on the de· S. In 1980. the con~rvataves were
fensivc Jn 1984. Reagan faceu more wild about Reagan. In 1984. "they
formidable ticket. and the Democrats don:t have. the same intensity for
arc on the attack -"with extreme getting President f\eapn re..clccted,"
tnt(ns1ty ... the memo adds. the memo notes.
2. In 1980. ma'ny key electoral 6. In 1980. Reagan hammered at
states were controlled by Rcpubhcan the Democratic deficit and promised
govmlors, with strong state organ1za· •balanced budact. In 1984. he is held
t1ons. In 1984. some of thcst states accountable for a budget that is more
now have Democratic aovernors. out of balance than ever.
3. In 1980. the Democratic pec1al Add to all th1~. the memo con·
interest blocs -union . teachers. eludes, that the Dcmocrets "arc
minonhes. feminists, etc. -were less financially healrd: they have the fiaht
than enthusiastic about Carter. Some and dnve nece \lry to put on a ~tron1
even ~ve Reagan "pa~s1ve ap-campa1gn: they are btucr orpnited
proval. · Jact Aad~no11 /1 • lyNlc.tH But 1n 1984. the~ groups are fired rolr1maJit.
up a11ln1t ReaJtan .
AKNWSLL8
oolamalat
A11
WEU.S •
Guiding
11ght
S t the
gardens
Bcinaa Garden Guide is one of my
duties as a volunteer at the Sherman
Libra7 & Gardens in Corona del
Mar. shouldn't call it a duty -
leading a lfOUp .o~ intcr~~ed people
throuah that oasis 1s a pnv1lcgc.
A variety of OfP.niz.ations reQUcst
tours -senior ettizens. school chtl·
dren. sorority alumni. wives of men
attending conventions at the
Anaheim Convention Center and
prdcn clubs.
I en JO)" them au and feel perfectly at
ease guiding them around unless I
draw a prden club:· No matter how
nice the ladies arc -and they arc always deli&htful -rm intimidated.
I am convinced that members of
prdcn clubs know everything there is
to know about anything that arows in
the ground. I ao in early on the days I am
booked for a prdcn club tour ind
check to sec what has spruna up
ovemi&Jtt. The Gardens is a constant·
ly chansina panorama of beauty.
Then I review the scientific names of
the plants. These are difficult to
remember and almost impossible for
me to pronounce. J use the common
names as often as possible. They ire
fun and more dC'SCriptive.
Napoleon's Hat. for instance,
sounds more interesting than
kaJanchoe coccinea. and is a perf cct
descnpuon of this velvety tricom.
Old Man of the Mountains is a far
better descnption of the cactus,
ccphaloccreus. He huk.crs down wjth
his Iona. flowing, .,.ay hair. oblivious
to his fellow cacti. Actually, he lo<>ks
like an qjng and abandoned hippie.
Who wouldn't rather sec Aaron's
beard than a hypcricum calycinum?
I\ pincushion flower than an
atropurpurea? Of course. I can act the
instant attention of any group by casually remarkina that. .. Next we
will sec a naked lady and a lady of the
night." !fl told them we were goin1 to
see an amaryllis belladonna and a
brassavala nodo~ they miaht or
might not tag alonit with me.
But members of a prdcn club
know alt the scientific names of the
plants, don't they? And how lo
pronounce them.
I try not to show my insecunty. I
welcome them and aive a history of
the Gardens. .. Feel free to ask any
questions as we go alonJ." I say,
Cr0$$1ng my fincers behind my tMlck
and hopina they will ask only qucs.-.
tions I can answer. Often I learn from them ... What is
the name of this beautiful plant?" one
of the ladies will say. I stare at the
plant, which I swear was not there an
hour qo. Before I can start with, "Oh,
this is uh. in the uh, family of ...... one
of the other members will say,
"Helen, you should know that -
that's a brunfelsia calycina." l smile
and nod and assure her that is correct,
and head into more familiar territory.
A common question is what kind of
fertilizer we use. Fertilizer is some-
thing l know about. J know the
scientific names, the oommcrcial
names and the common -very
common -names. We arc on safe
around here. I give them the name
and where they can 1et 1t. I also tell
them not to expect the same results
with their prdens just by usina the
same fcrtihzer.
We're son of sneaky abOut the way
we use 1t. We buy it m 30().pllon
tanks. and itu connected10 ovrwater --
system. Each momina when the
prdcncn Wiler, the plants &Ct I lipt
feeding. T~ plants are healthy and
happy -same as your hutblnd is
when you live him three meals 1 day
instead of just an 0«a1ional one.
The question aboUt fertilaur 11 not
the only easy one I've been 11ked.
Recently. as we toured one of the
color areas. 1 lady ~ ttmidly, ··1
hive a question." :'.'I
''Yes. what is tt?" I asked, ft1ppin1
throu&h my mental card file to
identify the plant lhc w11 apperently
starina at.
"I'd like to know where you Sot
your shoe.I?" she asked.
cw • pH Am W'.U. Ure. •
~N,,_,.
'Skull session' offers plenty of p ersonality
1>ron<>Unet the find1 s· lov. 1n If· twtcc fc a rtd ii rt trucks Ma)'bt
Estttm. h1 h in n1mal Propcns1t1 n's thec:olor,don't know. Am told the
red uucks on the whole arc a lot older
If that buttctfl) doc n•t \\&rm ts thin the llow trvc:b.
bod~ to11t le \t l d rcts F .. u can't
fl • ...
romputer tabul lton or t'Cld n1
rote no" ho~s )t'llo tirr truck rt
Do •Mt of the Ind an ttMf•
vauons pcrmu B1nao pmes?
A ot mMt but many. bout IO of
the 290 rc!Cl"\'lt1on arc maklna
'!'On_ey wuh Bi ... T'hc Stminoles sn
Florida reponeclb' •' almost S20 Mllhon I )af out Of it,
Some J ..... art bu11q "'"*'· Qn •rm mlftala fbr Nlbi
....... ·~,.. ·~ .... .. , ..
~PAPARAZZI
-~-~---~---------
. •
Golden BSton gala overwhelm
Donald Bren, patron, cited
at Hilton's stunning opener
By VIDA DEAN Dilllr .... ..,.. .... • Ice carvings arc pretty much tandard decorations
at large parties.
But, one the size of a grand piano, complete with a piani~t and a tall candelabra? .
.. Andre (Lansacber, executive chef) wanted me to
find a piano he could coat with chocolate. When I
couldn't, he said 'We'll make one from ice;" said F1011
Sclaamad1er,chairman of the Golden Baton pla at the
new Anaheim Hilton Hotel ad'd TQwers.
' Carve a piano they did, much to the delight of some
900guestsattending the Orange County Philharmonic
Socicty-spc>nsorcd hotel opening honoring DouJd L.
Brea, chairman oft he Irvine Co. (After a planning
session, Bill Orton and David Hurd spent.SO houn
turning 70 blocks ofice into the masterpiece) .
.. Thissurpassesevcrything. I'm overwhelmed,"
said Nora Jorae•sea during the cocktail hour. Loo kin&
about the ballroom she could 5CC 35 other ice carvings,
tall florat amnaements, eight 30.f oot serpentine tables
·loaded with more than 200 varieties ofhorsd'oeuvrcs
(some oold with others being made at 12 cook stations).
On one wall was reflected a large rain bow.
"We were planninaa nice cocktail pany, but Baroa
BUtoa said he wanted to make this very special," said Pew Cotton. committee member ... The raised plat-
form for the musicians in thcccntCTofthe ballrooom,
the ice carvings and this much food were his idea and his sift to the Philharmonic." . .
0 1 thoughtthis was dinner," said Nora Bester as
guests were asked to go to the hotel's second ballroom
for dinner. "What will the other hotels do aftCT thisT'
"This hotel is fantastic. This ballroom is just a small
area ofit lt'senonnous," said Ed Scbamacher shortly
after Hilton bad welcomed the group to the flag.ship of
the "Hilton fleet. .. (He flew in more than 200 ofbis
employees for the gala).
Entering the <fining area for a gdurmet dinner and
program. guests again found an abundance offood-"I
couldn't cat my main course," said Irene Bentley.
After Pate Allearo (served on &low-stick lit crystal).
Symphony of Seafood. sherbet with raspberries and kiwi
fruit then Toumedos Philharmonic came the grand
finale parade. The Uoael Ames Orchestra played
marching music as waiten served flaming ice cream
bombe. In front of the bandstand, steam was shot to the
ceiling as Cafe Diablo was prepared.
.MA.De M1x'1 "Isn't this something, 1'111.over-
wbelmed!" pretty much said it for the mostly seasoned
party-gocn. "One man at my table said he hadn't seen
PERSONAL s TYLE
Robert and Ban~ Barbour Pbllharmonlc ComniltteeCbalrma.n
Sa.Dclra Cloue. left. cbat with Jane Green and Leon Statler.
such a lavish pany since World War 11," said Mura
Eau. .. Everything is so beautiful, I almost bad tears in my
eyes when I stepped into the room," remarked Sasy
Dahaa.
FurthCT .. overwhclm-ment" was voiced by Bren as
he accepted the second Golden Baton (honorary
chairman Beary Segentrom was the first).
.. rm overwhelmed ... touched ... honored to be
introduced by Du Aid.rid (the emcee). I extend my
appreciation to Tom Riley (who had read a supervisorial
proclamation honoring Bren). We've been friends for
many years. I was a young lieutenant in the Marine . <f orps at Camp Pendleton and he was the commanding
•neral. I'll always be the Ii tenant and he the general.
"rm deeply hono pt the Golden Baton
award ... whatever I ha~ aoc:omplished seems small
compared to you people:• Bren coptinued, compliment-
ing members of the 30-ycar-old musical organization on
their advancements in the arts.
.. I'm happy to participate not only on my behalf.
but on yours ... you are the true patrons of the arts,"
concluded Bren, who reportedly owns one of the finest
modCTO art collections in the country.
( .. What kind of music do I like? llove all kinds of
music. I know that sounds like a ~t answer, but I really
do," said Bren duri"cft:;cocktail hour. His guest at the
party was singer Ma Kue.)
Otherauestsat .. thesimplysmashingparty••
promised by Aoss months qo were Co-Chairman
Doroday DoU and Tom, Rose and Norm Sme4epard.
Georgia Spooaer, Rtl~ and Lock Gee Dlac. Jack and
Dorie DeJtnif, Nucy T'Hn..., Joyce Rea11me,
Yvone and George Flessaa, DarleH and WJI&er
Gerke11, Mary and James Roosevelt, Ml.ml and Bal ..
Blrakrut, Carol and Job Mlltaer, Eve Manlaall, Pat
and by Mlluo, Kitty McCey, Vlrdaiaand Paal
Bender, Mary Au and Loa Wells, Gloria OtlN1U. Tem
and Martl19 Nlebea, Gary and Jeaae Butaod James
and Gwea FeltoL
Also Jean Ald.rldl (she's out of the packing boxes
andwaitinaforthedrapericssosbeandDancansettlein
their Laauna Niguel home), the new UCI Chancellor
Jack Peltuoa and wifeSuaue, Marjorie and Paal
mmqalst( chattinsabouta trip to my former hometown
Tyler, Texas to viSJta mutual acquaintaooc Mel'T)' Aaa
Holitlk), SU.Nii and Jlm Ba1'0M udloqtimeOCPS
sapporter Jeu Tandowsky.
If ~oup 'son, satisfaction is assured
PILAR
WAYNE
-
• ' I
There is nothina
more universal than
soups. They are ser-
ved in elegant palaces
and lowly country
cottaces-You can
make a whole,
nutritious, and very
satisfying meal out of ••••••••1!111•• a soup.
Ingredients can be very expensive or cost practically
nothing. .
Bouillon cubes arc a good basis for soups if you don't
want to bother to make your own stock.
The secret is in the simmcri!lf. Vegetable and fish
stock need 30 minutes of cooking. chicken needs two hours
and beef needs four hours. _
Herc are some of my..fayorite soup recipes, starting
with a specialty from the FemtcafCafTe Restaurant. You
witJ sec why, it is absolutely delicious.
ASP ARAGUS BISQUE
4 nps f reall or fro1ea asparagu
i e11p1 dloppe4 celery
'1 capa clllckea broda
t tabln~s batter or margariDe
1 e11p lleayY cream or llalf ud llalf
Salt ud pepper to tute
.. A dull of a1tme1
Place asparaaus and celery in boiling water. Boil for
five minutes. Add sall Dram excess liquid. Place in
blender and add little by little the chicken broth. Blend
until smooth.
Melt butter and add the salt, white pepper and
nutmeg. Mix together with the chicken broth. Sur in
. vegetables, add the cream and serve,
EASY CORN CHOWDER
1 cu potato soap
1 pacb1e frozen con. drabled
1 lfA tea1poom carry pewder
Black pepper
Combine soup and com 1n saucepan. Heat through.
Add spices to taste.
VICHYSSOISE
4 leeks, only wlllte pert, 1Uced
l mecliam onion, lllced
1.4 cap batter
t medlam potatoes, peeled and sUced
1 qaart cblckea broda
Z tablespoou lberry, dry
l tablespoom aalt
lC1Spl mta
l cap table cream
Cltoppe4 clllves
Jn a l~ pot saute leeks and onions in butter. Add
potatoes, chicken broth, sherry and salL Gently boil for 30
minute!. Potatoes should be very tender.
Press throu&h a ftne sieve or puree in an electric
blender. This process will have to be done in portions until
it is completed. Return mixture to pot; add milk and I cup of the table
cream. Bring to a boil and remove from heaL Let cool.
After coolinJ. put through a ftne sieve to remove the
vegetable pulp. ChJll thoroughly.
Serve chilled in siJt portions: garnish with chopped
chives.
FRENCH ONION SOUP
4 lar1e eal , fi.DeJJ dtoppff
• tablespoon bae. fat dripplap
t tdlespoolll floar
Z doves prUe, mubed
Salt ud pepper to taste
1 q9.Ut da.lckea stock
1 C8f dry wlllte wlae
I spriJ of parsley
14 teaspeoa "1ale
1 tablespooa c.pac
~ teupooa .. K.Jtdea 8Hq9et" (bnWlllai a1aO
1 loaf Frucll bread
Partnesu dleese
Jn a deep saucepan heat bacon drippi~ then sautc
the onions and cook over medium beat until onions arc
just soft. Add flour, salt, pepper and prlic; stir and cook
untitmtxture is golden brown, bot not burned. .
Add parsley, thyme, chicken stock and dry white
wme; simmer for 4S minutes. Add cognac. Add 'h teaspoon
Kitchen BouqueL
Serve in six individual ovcnproofbowls with a slice
(half an inch thick) of toasted French bread in each.
Sprinkle with Parmesan cheese and a dot of butter, place
under broiler until cheese melts and forms a brown crusl
(This is the original Soupe a roipon served at ··Les
HaUes" in Paris, France.)
Pilar Wayne is a resJCknt.oJNewpott Beach and the Lee Braadoa, left, atope by ra ..
authorof"Pilar Wayne's Famous and Fabulous Recipa.. Sclnamaclaer•a table at Plal.Ularaolllo .....
Artistcy, magic f oun~
in forms of furniture·
Irvine exhibit shows
home's resPQnse to
supei:-techno society
By CAROL MOORE
Of .. Ollf .......
.. O\.airs ha~e many psychololical
implication1. When you see one ~u
usually imagine younclf11ttinain at."
Slid Dorrit Kitt Fitzacrakt, coordi·
nator of the Irvine Fine Arts Gallery.
Several seating sugestions arc
included in the pllctY'• cunent
ubibit. .. In the Form ofFumiture.•t.
Which she CURtcd.
Japen's premier architect. ~Rta
lsoukl. who ls noted for brellkina
tl'lditlonal canons. pVe bis black IKquer .. Manlyn Monroe .. chair the!
euct curvature of one of her pinupa.
four birch chain were desipcd by
Oary Manln with aubtle chanacs an
their biCks and vina them the human quahucs of 1ild, Ad oon. dult and Eldmy ...
Or mm·s Bill • id k
.. Hocke) r" made entirely of
ttob and pu le • h dt p\a)'Cd
mo t recently 1 .. The Unofficial
I
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday,
I
AIM
i.uDEIS
DEAR SOMEWHERE IN ARK.: My coadol ces -
aloq wl1' my tlaaak1 for tlle beat lauglil of dae day. (Maybe ~week. It'• oalyWHDesny. > TbetoUowtng 1-ettumay ~elpyoa fed better. • • • • £?EAR ANN LANDERS. I am orry the Hooker
fam1hes h8v1n,a omuch trouble bec:lusc of their narne but I deserve little ymp;ithy, too.
M_y name is John Smith. Nobod) will believe it. When
my wife and I ~stenn a ~otel we get lrange glance .
When I present 1denl1ficat1on people look at me funny. I
have been tempted more thanonce!l take my mother'~
maiden name, which is Polish and d1fficl!h to pronounce.
Atlea tit oundskgitimate.-SlGNME-Al.SO
VICTIMIZED IN PHILADELPHIA
A Sept. 8 wedding certmony on
Ba) Island, Newport Beach, united ·
Cynthia Wood Williams of Corona
del Mar and James Peter Aetcher of
Newport Beach. A reception for 200
guests followed the ceremony.
The bride is the daughter of
Thomas Arthur and Gretchen Wood
Williams. Her maid of honor was
Lindsay Corich Kremple of Grus
Valley, and bndesma1ds were Carol
Kredel and Laura Crout of Corona del
Mar, Karin Paglierani of South"
Laguna and Connie Dotteny of Lake
Tahoe.
The bridegroom is the son of
Douglas Baden and Sally Aetcher. ·
His best man was James Mclnery of
Santa Monica, and ushers were his
brothers, Ouistopher Aetcher of
Pasadena. David Aetchcr of Newport
Beach and Jonathan Aetcher of Santa
Barbara, Robert Williams, brother of
the bride from Manhattan Beach, and
Kenneth McMurra)" of San
Oementc.
After a wcddi11a trip to Bermuda
and the Canbbean, tbe couple will
make their home in Laguna Beach in
October. She is a freelance graphic
desiJner and he is the former editor of
Business to Business magazine and is
now a researcher for Newport Part·
ners, a venture capitalist organiza·
tion.
KARAMAN~MONTA.NO
Nancy Jean Montano and Kevin
Joseph Karamonos exchanged wed·
ding vows m St. John the Baptist
Catholic Church 1n Costa Mesa on
Sept. 1. Elmer and Karolyn Montano of
Costa Mesa are the parents of the
bride. She wore a traditional white
-wedding gown of tissue taffeta with a
chapel length train. Beaded Venetian
lace trimmed the bodice and accented
the pnnccss neckline.
Gail Palmer was-maid of honor,
and Ann Shores, Barbara Montano,
Susie lssacson and Lisa Karamonos
DEAR VIC: Stay wltll Sml1', Jo . Simplicity b1 a
charm of U1 owa. • • • OEARANN LANDER : Please uteadisagr~ment
Mr. and Mn. Fletcher
were bridesmaids. Emily and E!Jza.
beth Hunn were the flower girls.
The bridegroom is the son of
C'.arole Karamonos of Costa Mesa
and Tony Karamonos of Las Yeps,
who was aJso best man. Dave Oddo,
Ken Montano, Robert lssacson and
Tom Langer were ushers.
Two hundred guests attended a
reception at the Costa Mesa Country
O ub following the ceremony. After a
honeymoon m Mauu. the couple are
living in Costa Mesa.
The bride is a graduate of Estancia
High School, Costa Mesa, and Cal
State San Diego and is employed by
Nordstrom. Her husband is also a ~uate of Estancia High School and
1s atttnding CaJ State Long Beach. He
1s. employed by the Los Angeles
Times.
RUSH-FENTON
The garden of the Ambassador
Hotel in Los Angeles was the setting
for the Sept: 9 weddmg of former
Costa Mesan Mma Michele Fenton
and Jordan Zev Rush of Beverly
Mr. and Mn. Katamanoe
Hills.
The bride is the daughter of Judith
Fenton of Costa Mesa and Dr. D.
Jason Fenton of Huntington Beach.
She wore a gown of white silk organza
jaccard accented with Venetian laec
and pearls. Her sisters, Tamar and
Suzanne Fenton, Karen Stoddard.
Ester Kneger and Dori Cohen were
her bridal attendants.
The bndcgroom 1s the son of the
late Harry and Shirley Rush. He was
presented by his sister Margo Rush
and bis best man Laune Slavin.
Michael, David and Andy Peilet,
Paul Cohen, Jay Sanderson and Sam
Krieger were ushen .
The couple received 250 guests at a
reception in the Embassy Room of
the Ambassador Hotel following the
ceremony. They departed on a wed-
ding trip to Israel, France, England
and Belgium and plan to reside in
Beverly Hills. She is employed by the
William Morris Agency in motion
picture castmg and he is a
screenwriter.
Lunch & Dinner, Sunday-Thursday
rder one of these delicious en trees, and we·n· serve it, with our
famous traditional flavor margarita . So come, treat yourself to a
Margarita Din ner 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. but nor hot) Served with tortillas. rice and beans.
B) Beef1bstada Compuesta and Beef Burrito $5 .95
A crisp com tortilla topped with beans, beef, lettuce. tomato
and guacamole. Served with a beef burrito and rice.
C) Taco and Enchilada Combination $?.25
Our most p0pular combination. Your choice of a chicken or beef
raco wilh a delicious checst enchilada . Served with rice and beans.
eosu Mesa • 1262 S E BriStol St (1 m1 sourh of South CoaSI Pla1.a) • 754 ·6528
Carden GrO\e • 12101 v.i!Lry View St. (On Valley View south of Charman Avt. • 893·7513
Mexica n Restaurant & cantina •
)
..
oVide a better name
betwccnmy 1 ter ndm h )lparentsha\e n
obligation to d1v1de the r propeny equal!) among their
hil<ll't'n when the wntc a wall-that this would prevrnt
a lot ofl\ rolOC in n jealousy.
cnclosednem ndcommcnt wanure en and heard evcryihi , ~t after read.in,& this an the
Daily Pre s·Newpott News ih Virga ma. I have now iCCn it
all. SnrnH. ndJ. ndP R ofJiamptonannounce the
engagement ofbcr mother, BcuyT., 10 thctrfither, Chn1
R., both of Hampton. Ms. T.1s the daught~ro~Mr. and Mrs.A.T.o™athews.ASeptember~eddmg 1 planned Ho~ do)oucxp1Jtinon1tem like that'' -Jl 'NE IN
As ncx mplcshcpointstotheftghnhaus oin on
amol\fourfouroou ins. They ruquabblln1overthe1r
fathers old house and a m II pt cc ofland. (He isn'tc\en
d d )ct.)l say the f1 theuhould leave hispropcny to
whomeH~r he plctisc -that 1t 1s not wnncn n)'Where th t
h1~children al"C'enutled to it.
WiU you plea pnnt your opinion On thl SUbJOCt?-
ALBUQUERQUE RF.ADER
DEAR AL.: I bave-muy limes-but I would be
bappy to clo 10 a1ata.
PHOEBUS -..111 DEAR JUNE:-lt appe,r1 tbiUbt clalldrea of Ma. T.
aad Clltl1 R. of Hamptoo are pleas~ tlla' tllelr pernu are
1eu1D1 married and deddtd to aaaouce It la &ie pru1.
J1d1eoot ... "
• • • Pareat1 are.uder ao obll1atlo to leave tlaelr clalJdren
uytklq. Tbe coadact of yMr coosln1 l1 predaely wllat
broupt me to tbl1 conclaaioa. Gra1plD1, 1red y clllldtta
d uve to be dl1appolate4. Tiiey bave probably dl1tp·
~lated tllelr para ta maay Ume1. • • • 'OF. RANN 1..ANDF.RS: Will you kindly read the
Do> ou fttl awkward. :Sel f~n c1ous-lonely?
Wt/come to the club. There's help for you in Ann Landers•
booklet, .. The Key to Popularity." &nd 50~nts with your
request and a Jons. stam~. sclf-add~d envelope to ·
AnnLandtrs, P.O. Box I 1995, Chirngo, Ill. 6061 1.
TABLES •.•
FrosnBl ·
'wood and aluminum this year.
The greenish tint of "Wire Glass
Desk" b)" Ron Cooper/Robert Mao· gurian would make 1t a perfect answer
fortuminganatrium into an office or
awritinJ nook without encumberina
the room •s mood with wooden
furniture. Similarly James Ganzer'1 "Ramos" of slate, palm and epoxy
would add style and function to a
desert condo's hall or entry.
And John Pierson has crea\ed
.. Rite of Passage" out of California
pepper, maple and lacquer. Its
Japanesque "roor • lined with stone
fangs would make this possible coffee
table a conve"8tion piece in itself.
Prompting more commentary
among viewers in the aallery are:
•The outline of Ka~n Loye's
"One Family House Chair • fashion·
ed of square steel tubing, electro-
magnetic powder paint and Astroturf.
•B~t colors and movable parts
of toy·like jewelry boxes designed by
RayJaoob.
CW, ............ ~ Tent IC-
Bla alumtnum .. Chle&ao" table and ceramic ••sour Gta.••
'teapot ahow how Peter.Shire at•ea life to concrete fonna.
Two Creal Dinners for the Price of One!
Choice of ten fabulous entrees including
prime rib and fresh fish .. .
Seating on first come, first served basis
on 2 for I nights.
Otter good on Wednesday1, Thundsays and Frfdeys,
5-7 P.M. thru 9·28·84
' 833-0080
2 llecb
SMtll If ... .,..
•
..
•
'
best of the new bunch
By JERRY BUCK ,,., ..... ...., .
LOS ANGELES -Hold on! How cu you do a detective series without a car chase or a shootout? Where're
the 1mashed ears? Where's the htli· ,copter?
How can they do it? CBS' .. Murder
h Wrote" docs it very well. thank
you.
lt'a no mystery that "
Wrote" is the best new show of the
:season. Anacla Lansbury starw as • ... llkl!lllllllii
mystery novelist
Jessica Fletcher,
who uumbles
upon a murder or two every week.
She actually solves
the cases by usina
her brain, a novel-
ty amona today's police shows.
Lansbury plays a very contem-
porary lady despite a few old-fashion·
ed virtues. In fac!1 she's not too far
removed from me "Mame" she
ettatcd on Broadway.
The show is reminiscent ofAaatha
Christie, and l..ansburr, did playMiss
Marple once in 'The Mirror
Crack'd." But Jessica doesn't sit
around knittina orcallinaevcryone io
for the denouement in a stuffy parlor
with antimacassars on every chair.
.. Murder She Wrote .. will make its
debut in 1 special two-hour ~lot
Sunday on CBS. Thereafter, it will be
on the hour followina "60 Minutes."
The show is from Peter S. Fischer,
Richliii Levinson and William Link.
wbo also broupll us another liaht·
hearted detccuve adventure, "Col· umbo."
The plot ls antncate enoUJh to
ptque you' interest. th enouah. red
hcmnp to keep you fUes In the
characten are intraauinJ and
Lansbury is bquilina.in a role She
seems born to play.
Guest stan 1n the fint show art
Ned Beatty 11 the ploddi~ ·local police chief, Arthur HlU u Jes ica's
amoooth-as-ailk publiahcr and Brian
Keith as an oily iycoon everyone
lo\"CS to hate. '
The first deadly deed ls committed
at a coatume party thrown b)' Jessica's
publisher. Keith showt up u Sherlock
Holmes and h's not Ion& before the
Baker Street detective is found float-
ina in the pool. But, wait, it turns out
to be a seedy private eye dressed in the
houndstooth cap and eape. Did the
• killer act the wrona man by mistake?
There is another murder and more
intriaue before Jc sica 11 able to put it
111 toacther and name the killer. It's a
lot of.t\ln.z and more .. tisfyina than a
bushel 01 car chases and shootouts.
Well, maybe a pee*' anyway.
ABC INTRODUCED .. Three's I
Crowd" Tuesday niJ,ht. It's not really
a new show: more like "Thrcc'.s
Company" with a new enaine.
The only careyovcr from the old
series is John Ritter u Jack Tripper.
Curiously enouJ,h, the actor whose
comic inJenuity kept the one-joke
show aoma for ciabt years. His
timina. his pbrasina. nis eitpreasions,
his pratfalls always enchanocd ma-
terial that was less than memorable.
In "Three's Company" Ratter
preten<led to be py so that his
landlord would pemut him to share
an apanment with two beautiful
women. It wu 1 rather chaste show,
although n was filled wnh leers nd lnnucndos.
In .. Three's A Crowd'' Ritter
opened his own restaurant and
moved into the apartment on the
nd floor with b11&irlfriend Viclcr.
played by Mary rctte. The cro d
oomes from her father, played by
Robert M odan, wtio buys the res-
taurant and the buildina and thus
hangs around all the time tryina to
brca1' up the romance.
'1'hrcc'1 Company0 ended last
week with a on~hour special 'that presented what has to be the most
unbelievable chanae of character in
television history. Jack, after yean of
lustina after women, suddenly_ turns
shy and only accepts his airlfriend's
invitation to live t<>ðer when she
twisu• his ann. Perhapt that's to
appease viewen who m1&ht be of-
fended by two unmarried people
livin& t~thcr. You t.now, to show people that Jack's really a man ofh1ah
principles.
In the open ina show Jack hired a
spaced~ut surfer (Alan Campbell) as
a$Sistant chef and tried to keep his
Aunt May from finding out he's bvina
with Vicky. 11 the new runnina aaa
aoina to be Jack tryina to keep his
family from findina out'!
Once apin.t John Ritter squeezes
lauatu out 01 the collesc fraternily
humor. Cadorette, a former under-
study in Broadway's "4'2nd Street,"
and Mandan, late of "Soap," make
the most of their material. Actually,
Mandan, a master of timina, like
Ritter is able to deliver more than is
actually there.
Toicthcr, they make "Three's a
Crowd" the kind of show you hate
yourself the next day for laugbina at
the ni&ht before.
Farrah changes her image
and how in TV drama
DINNER SPECIALS
Teriyaki ._Steak
KRVlD
THUMOAYI no10,M.
Carrie 8nod.CrW and a J'OG.DC nmaway (TODJ' La~one. l.nJ cll11r
her cancer-atrtcken eon (Barret Oll•er) on 111f1CbwaJ' to 11ea..-••
tonlCht at 8 on l'fBC, Cbannd 4.
CHANNEL LISTINGS
9 KNXT CCBS)
8 KN8C IN8Cl
• l(TLA (Ind )
e KABC IABC)
•KF~B ICBS>
0 KHJ·TV Clnd )
e KCST CA8C)
e KTTV (Ind.)
• ICCOP TV (Ind.)
e KCET I PBSI
e KOCE !PBS!
Don a.ry,
On-TV
Z-TV
HBO
I C.lnlnMI!!)
<WORI NY., N.Y.
CWT BS>
fESPNl
' ( Showt ltM)
• Sootllflhl
• IC.• Nr-s N..._lll
-""' 11\ 'u
• SO COAST PLAZA •
-.
. -.
: .. .
1.
l
. . ; .
. ,•
•
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1M Ot'MQe Coul DAILY PILOTIWed04tlda,Y, Septembll 2e, i1914
Here's comedy for 8 goOd Cos
Bllleo. '1
• oomcdy of the flU season by a lo
NEW YORK _ Ju t when some ~ lonnnnnnng 6h0t •• The New
L-.;a_,.:l ttd Yolk Times wdjt WU "by fat the ~pens ..-vc ~ 1 tuauon oom-dassa t Lnd most entcnainiqJ new
> d.Qfl, Bdl Co$by's firat pnmc-situation comedy." The W11h1n•ton
lime lmCS in nearty a dtdlde u off to Po t said it wa the ··best. funniest, a masJuna rtart, wanning 1Jow1ng reviews from criti and attractina most n.~.umanc ~cw show or lhc
nearly SO percent of the viewing .. The Co by bow" could reverse a
audience. tttnd. Only one new comedy Jut faU, According to Niclttn ovcm~s, "AftcrMASH," ~s renewed, and for
Thursday's Pf.Cniog episode of·· c tbc fint time in years. no situation Cosby Show ' was watched by SO percent of the television homea with romed){ cracked the I ill or top 10 · · De · ~a · hows last season. "' their act on m tro•l. ~ petcent 10 The response to .. Co5by" did not
NewYork,4SpcroentinLA>sAngde5 surprise NBC or Madison Avenue.
and Cbi~o. 38 percent in Cosb)"a NBC's new-show testina determined
hometown of Philadelphia and JS that viewers liked both Cosby and the
percent in San Francisco. series' family concept. Several
The average for the eight cities that dvenisina a&encies predicted that
Nielsen measures was a 2S.9 ratina "Co by" would bC one of this year's (percentaae of all TV homes watch-f'ew new hits. m&) and a 43 share (pcroentaae of all homes with their sets on and watch· Cosby, the first black to star in a series when he was cast in NBC's ••1
iOA)u.d1ihn• a,......;_ b~ its debut can be Spy" in the mid-60s, last appeartd Ti _.... .......... J regularly in "Cos." a ProplU!l dc-misleading. For instance, CBS' sisncd for kids that survived two
.. E.R.," the No. l show last week, had months on ABC in 1976. Since then,
a 23 ratio& for its special Sunday night he's bcconte well-known to a new
opening, then fell to 1 I 0.8 rating in its aeneration fOT his work on puddina. rttular Tuesday niaht slot. d h rcial --T.A SUOCC$Sful Kries needs to work an ot er, comme s.
in two stages, .. said Curt Block, an "I'm not here just to make money,"
NBC vice president for public rela-says Cosby of his return to network
lions. .. You want to act sampling in TV. "I could do that in Las Vegas. OT
the first or second episode. But the for JeU-0 or Coca-Cola:."
second half of the equation is that In a recent interview .. Cosby said
people have to come back." the sad state of ~programming
TV critics across the country urged motivated his return. He said he
viewers to watch "Cosby ... The Los balked at seeing "one more car go
Th ow is not bcina done in
Hollywood. where most TV pr:o-
ducuon onginatcs., but in New York.
closer toCosbfs home. "l worked out
in LA l S xean' and the ahows still act·
canoclcd, ' he said. •
In the ~ries, Cosby pla)'S an
ob6tetrician who1 in an oddity for
today's sitcoms. strives for an ordi·
nary family lif'c with his wife and four
kid . Another novelty is that this
comedy about black people doeso•1
opt forblack-jaraon humor. Nor does
it have any tegular white characters.
"Thilll family will work to show
Ameri~ that behavioT is the same all
over,•• Cosby said. He says Nielsen
won't judge the how's quality; he
will. And he says he'll know it's
suoe«Sf ul if viewers lau&h and say to
themselves, '"that's my 1amily."'
So, 20 yean after Cosby broke
around in an all-white medium, he's
.. n broadenina barriers on tele-
vision. And he sees justice doing it for
third-rated NBC.
"NBC ~ve me a shot with 'I Spy, ...
he said.• I'd like to see them on top
and say l helped rescue NBC ...
E urythmics making musical reality 'Your place or mine?'
Lomlne llcWIJHam• mak• an offer to T. Bradabaw Yates
that be bu &rouble refulnal ID tbe myHer'J'-comedy .. A ,
Tomb Wltb a View.•• pl8ylna l'rtdays ancl Satarda:ra at 8 :SO
tlaroaah Oct. 8at tbe We8tmfnaterComma.nltyTbeater. Call
BJ DOLORES BARCLAY
A1111trllf"'-....
NEW YORK -Annie Lennox,
lean and lithe, was in no mood for
chatter u ahe huddled on a worn sofa
in an office at RCA Records. But her
musical partner, Dave Stewan, eyes
hidden behind suQglasses. was a
talkiDJ machine extraordinaire.
Togeeher, as the British musical
marvel, the Eurythmics1 Lennox and
Stewart have been dazzltng American
audiences with their magical mel-
odies and an ensemble of l 0 during a
six-month tour.
They were understandably tired as
they stopped in New York for a recent
ooncert: Lennox, in fact, was hoarse
-partly from singina her soul out on
such sonas as "Sweet Drea1I11 (Are
Made of This)." ••ttcre Comes the
Rain ~in" and "Love 'ls a
Stranser, ' and partly from an inter-
view overdose.
"I don't like doina interviews," she
said with a smile in a husky voice
"When we're asked questions about
what we do, I do a double take. I thinlc
our music speaks for itself. 1 like what
ldo."
Her hair was cl~opped blond
instead of orange spikes. She wore
little makeup, which allowed tier
ccntlc, almost lyrical beauty to show.
But her bere feet shouted neon pink
toes. And instead of sportina the
androlYnous costumes the media
loves lier to wear, she bad clothed
herself in a simple black sleeveless
shift with a rope of pearls.
"whenever fashion becomes po~u
larized. I avoid it," she said, wanrung
to the interview. "All J want to do as
far as clothes are concerned is to wear
somethina I feel comfortable in .... I
really love wcarinf the clothes I wear
for the stage, but I m not an outgoina
person and can't wear them on lhe
street because it would attract atten-
tion."
The 29,year-<>ld artist appeared
.with BoyGcorgcofCulturcClubona
Newsweek magazine cover earher
this year on the androgyny trend. And
during February's Grammy Awards
presentation, .lennox chose to wear a
'SOs ducktail wa.g complete with
sideburns, don a man's swt and wear
a mustache over her lip. It was all in
fun.
But the music is hardly frivolous.
There's a sweetness in life-and also
decay -as their first Eurythmics
record, "In the Garden,'• explores.
"What we tried to do was .make
music about reality," Stewart said. .. A
lot of groups make music about
fabricated reality. A lot of people live
outside reality."
Lennox joined in: "Some 'people
seem to be ve!! comfortable in their
lives, they don t ask many questions
about thelfexistcnce. We were always
interested in observing thinp. That's
what an artist does."
Thouah the Eurythmics·. were
nomioat.cd as best new artists -
losing out to Culture Oub -they
have been around for some time.
Lennox first worked with Stewart in
1977 when they bad the band, the
Tourists. They had met in a res--
taurant where she was a waitress.
A native of Aberdeen, Scotland,
'All of Me' goes all the .way up ~
HOLLYWOOD (AP) -.. A1J of
Me .. and "The Evil that Men Do •• 1
pair of Cldy ~ releasesJ... muscled ibto
the lead 1t tbe box omce over the
weekend as the summer favorite,
"Ghostbustcrs," topped $200 million
ingrones. ·
"AU of Me," a comedy about Steve
Martin and Lily Tomlin tryinJ to get
alonJ in one body, brought m $5.8
milhon to debut at No. I.
"The Evil That Men Do," a IS-
victim Charles Bronson talc dis-
tributed by Tri-Star, opened with a
gross of$4.S million.
Despite finally droppina into third
~lace, the $2.9 million grossed by swinging, picking up $1.9 million for
•Ghostbusten" was enough to boost seventh place.
iu 16-wcek total to $200.9 million. Here are the top seven movies last
Rock star Prince's first film, .. Pur-weekend. with distributor, woekend
fc
le Rain " dropped one notch into sross, . total gross and number of
urth 'th r $2 1 illi' weeks lD release. o .. Y"1 a~ ~ · m 0~· .. All of Me," Universal, SS.8 But Tight.rope, which was ~-million, first wec.k.
ously perched at. No. 1 the previous "The Evil That Meo Do," Tri-Star, ~k., took the biggest tumble, drOJ>:' _M.S million, first wec.k. :ilt all the way to fifth place at S2 "Ghostbusters," Columbia, $2.9
on. million, $200.9 million, 16 weeks.
With5· ust a week left in the month, .. Purple Rain," Warner Bros., $2. l
"Until tember" opeued at No. 6, million, SSS.5 million, nine weeks.
also with 2 million. "Tightrope," Warner Bros., $2
Another summer veteran, .. The million, $43.6 million, six weeks.
Karate Kid," was still out there "Until September," MGMUA, $2
'"ICUIO" (NO GI« Wlll 17
WU IC AIJllfTCD) "5, l20 "M unu." <rel I 00, S45, 1030
million, first wec.k.
"The Karate Kid," Columbia. SI. 9
million. $78.1 million, t •weeks.
l~~1l , .
PTll!!I ... ' ~ ·--. NOVY PlAVING -
li1ill IJAMoYies
89()..4()22
BUENA PARK
UAMINtes
"TIE WOMAll II UJ>''
(N-13)
12JO no • 1s 110. l"Oo tss
....... (PC) 1(11.SlO.t~
"STM TB 11: TME SOICll Fm
IPOCI" (PC) HO 1 4S
'1£0 DAW" <P"·U)
12.30, 3·00, 5·30. 800. 10.30 952-4993
COSTA MESA
£dw9r'cll Town Cents
7'1~164
NEWWWf lfl&
EdMr'dl IJdO
67l-al50 "ID> DA_. (N-13)
• CO.IY STUlO 12.Jt tS&. s&. 1.s.. 1t1~
IYMCOEllr
(11) Giil llCO 11 llll.l ec AIMml>I
1-Gl US 410 l4S l40. tflS
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114\2 HS us us 100
PACIFIC DRIVE-IN THEATRES*
OIUMCll an.tanwl ~
Lennox studied the classical flute at
the Royal Academy of Music. She
dropped out after three yean. Stewart
ran away from home when be was l S
and worked with a band called Am~ Blondel. Together, they
have explored the full range of pop
music, from blues to folk to funk.
"We actually consider ourselves to
be pop writers,'' Lennox said. 0 All
we're really concerned with is making
music -music that's most inspiring
and uplifti!1f-We're not interested in
mediocrity.
The ponderous lyrics, she said
somewhat bemused, come "from my
bead." .
"I would like to explore what
potential I have,'' she said. "At the
end of a tour, rm screaming from
frustration and say I'll never write
apin. But then in the spring. the buds
do come out and things do shoot UJ?.
"J set very annoyed with myseJfifl
can't express my1elf, articulate my
existence."
It wasn't until l981, when they
opened their own eiJbt-track record-
101 studio and made "Sweet
Dreams," that the Eurythmics~
to international stardom.
"We were in our own kitchen
making our own music directly
related to us," Stewart said. "When
you have your own recording studio,
you have all the ingredients to make
your own good thina."
Now they've expanded to 24-track
equipment in a studio built in 1 16th
century stone church.
Lennox married earlier this year·
and plans to spend some time with
her husband, whose identity she
refuses to divulac. Stewart plans ~o
write a movie. Together, they will
continue their special music.
"We've done a lot of work bver'the
years," Lennox said. "Success is
givina us the facility to do what we
want:'°'
RFVIEW
· 995-41 18 fo.r tic ket Information.
'John Wilkes Booth' . .
due at Orange Coast
A one-man play that delves into the
passionate psyche of John Wjlkes
Booth-Abraham Lincoln'tassassin
-will be presented Saturday niaht at
Orange Coast College.
Actor Ointon Que, who will
portray Booth in the 8 p.m. show in
OCC's Fine Arts Hall, Room 119,
also co-authored the work.
"The play is informative without
being preachy,'' be sys. "It is never
pro-Booth, for bis act cannot be
excused, but the play Jets us look
closely at a man who, 10 one moment
of madn went from a well·
respected actor to the most hated man
of his time.
Case, a Houston native who moved
to Los AJigeles in 1977 to pursue an
acting career, says Booth deserves
more than a "footnote in history." In
the two years of the play's gestation,
Case pored over volumes about
Booth and his family, who were all
well-known actors, a 19th century
show business dynasty on a par with
the Barrymores.
During the show Case recreated
many excitina moments of Booth's
life, ancluding the assassination and
his fatal wounding in a flame-
engulfed barn.
Tickets are on sale in the OCC
Ticket Office in the College's Student
Center. For infonnation about the
performance, call 432-5880.
-·-_--..!_.
South Coast Sylilphony debuts
· Soprano soloist for the Berlioz intCTpretative energy to its work.
sonp was MarveUee Cariaga,a Granger obviously has decent talent
Tbe South Coast Symphony Or-nauve of Corona dcl Mar whose to work with, and sometimes used 1t
chest.ta presented the premiere per-appearance Saturday was therefore a to best advantaae: In the "Mother
formance of iu official n-.. -Coun-homecoming. Cariaaa spons a Goose Suite, .. for instance, the Jullina .., ... ...,. mellifluous instrument which she rhythm and endless tepto of the
By SUSAN FINGER
DllJ "9t C.rr Ill I~ •Ht
ty residency Saturday at Orange employs in an accurate delivery. For Pavane, the perky percu5Sion pace in
Coast College. Berlioz' masterful orchestration, her "Petit Pouoct" and the atmospheric
Director John Larry Gran~er unforced blendina easily entered the timbres of "Beauty and the Beast."
divided the proaram by nationality: overall texture. Though the Mozan had its mo-
Freoch -Berlioz' "Les NuitJ d'Ete" But case and tone are not enough to men ts of aracc an~ appr~priate a~yl~
(Summer Nights) and Viennese -carry a piece of music_ especially a -: a . fine conccp~on of cantablle
arcbetypically embodied by Mozan's work with profound dramatic poten-(s1naina manner} tn the sec,ond move-
, _··_Ju....::p;...i_te....::r';....' S_ym;........:...pb_o_n...;.y_. ------. tial And Cariap brought no sense of m~nt, an~ a s~og o~rul'.'a for ~he -· . . . anstocrallc nunuel -this Jupiter the drimattc lo her antcrpretal1on -· was cnvelWf in an aura of &tu· RUFFELL'S
IPllLSTEIY, llC.
f•1'11 bstOfYwlh im .-. aw .. COSTA mA -541-115'
not.even to "Ma bcJJeam1eed monc" di ..--_M · ("My fair friend is dead"), thouib the ousn~. •....-. stnna ~ot.tanct
* CINE·FI SOUNDI At U.. symbols •eat soun• •irect to your AM aK * ra•io. If 110 radio with wy e-tion. tw1ni yo11r own AM port1We.
._ '" .._ 111HI• ... nmue• ... 11n 1• .-ChiWrenUnd.12 ALWAYS FREE •J~Mll4$13I'l~!!~.~ri L.!:'t.-)
low register of this opening phrase that cheated • tol~raot s~le from
lends itself to hcart-rendina pathos. Granger, the oocas1onaJ slte~ b!l-
The encore of the Haoabera, which ance between contrapuntal !met in
was offered aratis _ in repoosc to no the last movement. and espcaally the tiii!~iiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiir---~----------:-~""--'-""-1 particular demand, seemed especially not·f~st-coouah fast mC?vement1 _all pale af\cra too reccntstellar rendition CO!llnbuted lo. the f~lina of being
fountain Volley
* * SUPIR MAP MUTS EMY SAT. l S.1*y• * ;•1•t·t•t110 ,_,,., .. ....,..*
WARNER
tll::11. ,,, ~ ir:1 :-
1 I. a a '
••AU Of ME' 18 A
81.APSTICK. HIP8TEll
llYlllUD OF "Hf.AVEN CAN
WAR' AND TOOTSIE."'
_ .......... PICft.I~
NOWftAYING = ..,.
Jul. M' J h b pnvy to a practice scSSJoo. by . ta ~n~ o DSOn, at t e But given the a.roul''' potential I
Pacific Am~hithoatre. bet thcy"ll do a fine JOb when th~y
The orchestra brought a bit more fi nish studying the piece.
' ,l(Uln' ,,....,,.
DRIVE-INS m:;
STADIUm n
•I ' '
·~--.... awn1 tfo.11) .....
i 0
.,
1
GORDO
6~RFIELD
MON CM
~MACK
I
~
. .
@_
0 :::=-
o -.... ,,,__ .....
t vulnerabl orre . But don t atpotit thetD 1n aa
• K I a lnStituUon that p>uld fold
o A J fl By partn fa hip agre aient, o 8 Nor&.h·1 jump raise wu a Umll •
• tG4 t !otClng to pme. Howev r.
WEST EA T South had a bo.t of prime valu
• 1084 • f 5 and readily aeeepted hla partner's
b J I O l · O 108 o K Q94! invitation . Y m av s 0 g 11073 0 Qr West led the kinr of dubi.1nd It
•
• KQlO • J86Z was obvioua that dedarer would --A----.fiKJUJ'B--...----~._.to-aoan&ff.;tbt...:taaacl C.. e
• A Q 9 z to I 0 t.Hckt. He won the ace of clubt, o e cubed the ace of hearta and ruffed
O A 9854 a heart low. There fOUlowed the ace + A 'I a of diamond• and a d1amood ruff. and
The bidding: another heart wu ruffed with t 8"da Wtilt ...tJa Eatt nine of trumps. Unfortunately.
1 o Pue 1 0 Paa We.sf overrufied with tbe 10 and
l • Pue a • p... . returned a trump, and declarer
4 • Paa Pua PAM could come to no more than in
Opening l d: King of •· trieb -·1: t.nlmps.and three aces.
It is natural to try to uve your
SHOE
Once South had scored a ruff in
each band with a low trump, the
con.tract as unbeatab1e. All
THE
FAMILY
CIRCUS
BIG GEORGE . by Virgil Partch (VIP) ,.
"That was gonna be our dvbhouse, but we I ran out of summer."
MMIMADUK.E by Brad Anderson
"You sure know how to ruin a
good converutlonl"
'
MOON MULLINS
:'T'EL&.ltSJk>W... "~ CRT , H , ""''"";;,Si;; , ... ···t 5 FOUR
B,A'SIC FOOt>
<5ROLJPS:
PEA UTS
I VSED TO WONOEI{
WM'r' 1 MATEO TME
KIQ(OFF •• HOW I KNOW
TUMBLEWEED
,s ....
-6
..
"I lost my whisk broom.''
by Ferd & Tom Johnson
AND VE<j~,ABL.ES.
by Charles M. Schulz
FOR BETTER OB FOB WO~E
. .
FUNKY lt'INK.ERBEAN d
t lUSf <JMT~ 10 60 our -nJat.E . ~ 1HAI eA1'rLE CE
1ME 8AND5 AND HAVE. RlN ! '
~
-
DR.SMOCK -
RO EIS RO "t:
r " J
by Tom.J<. Ryan
•
....
....
•Ht4 •fl
0-OK
<> -0 -
•Q •J .,
~-
<> t ..,J
The I ad is in dumm1. Declarer
aimply leada the last bean and ruffa
lt. lf West does no( over:ruft. .
declarer bu bis IOtb trlct. U West
doea ov rruff. the eifbt of Uiampe ii
promoted to t~e f ulfilliu trick . .
by Jeff MacNelly
·0ftA~rt~·ree
9Ult,T JtJ W( ~TAT£~
by Lynn Johnst~
--.
by George. Lemont
we HAV~ NO 1.c>e.A
WHA1"'S W~ONG Wl1"H voo, M~S. FBRN !
by Pat Brady
COMPLETE NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS,
Gr.eat battle~ fought
.with mythical Issues
J JOHN CUNNIFF ,,, ...... ~·
•NEW YORK -Anyone who
bar\fS around the economic fo~
caltlDJ fM:tories tends to be in·
fluenced by the dire ob5ervations and
Predictions that emanate from them
like can from OM or cookies from
Nabisco.
the day. But not one ot them rem11ns
at the top of any list of cumnt or
future problems for the automobile
indu try.
Few. ifany, of the pundits focused
on what did tum out to be the bi1
developments of the 1970s and
1980$, which were the fundamental
chsnges brouaht about b)! higher oil
prices and the rise of Japan as an
automotive power.
. You will note, pethaJ>$, that the
factories are chumlllJ out recession,
and some are even producini a lot of
products abo~t the com~na.coonomic "h's bard to imajine it today," said
collapse, which they tnstst occurs Caldwell, "but most of the auto
every SO yean or so. -studies of the early 1960s did not
Looking back, however, an odd regard the price and supply of oil as
t.bina occurs: The big bad issues that serious factors in the automotive
are foreseen often do not come about equation."
at all, in spite of millions of hours
s~nt worryina about them and
billions of words written about them.
History can be a great teacher.
Philip Caldwell, chairman and chief
executive officer of Ford Motor Co.,
says, .. It provides the experiences and
perspective so often needed in evalu-
atina today's cnscs and battles.•·
That was Caldwell's preamble to a
revealina story be related at a sym·
posium on the future of the auto.
mobile last week at Massachusetts
Institute of Technology.
About 20 years ago, said Caldwell, a
study of the automobile industry
typically cited the outcome of these
issues as critical to the U.S. industry's
success and perhaps even its surv1 val:
-Would the West German econ-
omic maracle establish cost and value
standards that would make the Ger·
mans dominant in cars throu&)\out
the world?
-Would the rise of state.awned
automobile companies depress the
prospects of private companies which
had to take risks, pay taxes and raise
their own capital in the open market?
He offered insight into the business
oflook:inf. ahead, to wit, that what the
automobtle industry should have
been thinkina about at the time was
then unthinkable, or oot even in the
realm of possibility.
As an example, he offered the
"truly unthinkable" -that the U.S.
government "would one day approve
a OM· Toyota joint venture in Cali·
fomia, to give OM a little help in
buildina up its strength and vitality."
And, be pointed out, nobody really
foresaw that the U.S. government
would mandate that producers selling
in its market improve the fuel
efficiency of their cars and light trucks
on a specific year.aver-year schedule.
The examples arc not meant to
suggest that the great problems fore·
seen for the future simply fade away.
More correctly, the lesson seems to be
that great problems will always be,
but not in the shape in which we
foresee them. ....
Meanwhile, and in at least some
instances, we seem desuned to fight
great battles with mythical issues.
Lldhter moment T~ctan Don Clark teem Scrlpto'• new .. Electra" l~hter
at the company'• Atlanta, Oa •• l'elle&l'Ch center. The lljbter
uaee an electric etart IJ(nltlon eyetem to replace the
conventional eparkwheef and fll.Dt ln other dle~ble
11.ahtera. ScrlJ;,!° le trytna to enwae lta ehare of the $250-
mllllon u .8. poeable UCbter market.
nCed%~~:to~~il~?sit reduce the Seminar, sf OCUS will be cash flow
-CRED IT L1N£
-Ford gets regional vp ·
]ob for Ponderosa Homes
_Newport Beach resident Doa1w M. Ford has been p~omo~cd t<? vice
president of planning and development for the Sputhem Cahfomia region of
lrvine·based Poaderoaa Homes. The promotion recognizes contn~ution
Ford has made to acquisition, planninaanddevelopment of future prO)CCts for
the Southern California reaion, accordina to Jack Bartus, senior Vice
president of the region. Ford has worked for Ponderosa homes since 1981 . Ford
has served as president of the Home Ballden CouacU of Southern Callfornla
al\d as a director of the BalldlD1 lndo1try A11octadoD and the Ora nae County
chapter of the Aa)erlcu Red Cr011. · •
••• Ed Mce.tloap has been named director of sales administration fo.r CIE
Sy1tem1, lnc.'1 distributed systems division. The division suppoftS a hnc of' .
IBM plua-compauble products developed and marketing throu&b Alternate
Cll.amtel MartetlAft lac. of San Jose. Cll~ is a subsidiary of C. ltoli'Eleetroala,
lac. McCullou&h 1s. former vice president and aeneraJ manaaer of Video
Speclall1t1, Inc. oflrvine, distributers of computer peripheral equipment. As
part of CIE, McCullough will oversell daily operations of the distributed
systems division. ••• Ro1emarte Callero1 of Irvine has qualified as a national certified career
counselor-one of only 41 such certified counselors in the state. To secure
national certification from the NaUonal Coancll for CredotlallD1 Career
Coauelon, a counselor must hold a master's dcarec in counselioa or a rela~
field, have completed required coursework and a supervised career counselina
practicum, have three years of experience after attaining the master's deiJ:CC,
and pass a thrce·hour exam. Calleros is a licensed mani&&e and family
therapist in private practice with Employee Couaelba1 Servtcea of Oranie.and
Employee Sapport Sy1tem1 Co., also in Orange.
• • •• Jalla StritslD1er bas joined the Cox Ii BllfCb Advertillal Co. as
administrative .coordinatot of account services with responsibility for
coordinatina internal activities of the department. Stritzinger is a former lepl
secretary for attorney Sidney H. Wyse of Laauna Hills. ••• Richard C. Holmpea, a partner with the Newport Beach office of MaJD
B1rdmu, CertWed hbllc A~antant1, has been elected vice president of ~e
Callfonla Sodety of CertUled PabUc Accoutallta. Holmgren is a former vice ~dent and director ofthe organization's Los An&eles chapter and bas served
-Would disappearance of the ~ the statewide oipnization as a member of the board of directors. Holm~n is · called independent carmakers -Crcdtt Management Workshop, a wholesalers, the seminar bas helped increasing profits. also an advisory board member with Cal State Fallerton'1 school of business
Studebaker, Packard, Nash aJllong one-Oay seminar to help businesses thousands of companies achieve administration and its school of economics, and with USC'• executive briefing
them -lead to antitrust act1bns to improve cash flow and reduce credit substantial savings since it was program. He is also a director and past chairman of the Oru1e C!aafY
break up General Motors and Ford? risks, will be held at the Westin South founded in 1969. The seminar lnqumes should be directed to: Chamber of Commerce.
Coast Plaza Hotel in Costa Mesa, Oct. stresses practical approaches and Credit Management Work.shop, P.O. • • • Those issues, QldweU reminded 8. techniques for cuttmg bad debts, Box 1611, New Britain, CT 06050, PbilUpD.RowehasbeenappointcdtotheboardofdirectorofCPIPenllon
the audience, were the blockbusters of Tailored for manufacturers and improving accounts receivables and (203) 677·2086. Service• oflrvine and its wholly owned trustee bank, tbe IDternat1onaJ Central
-----------------------------------------------------Bank and Tru1L Rowe is president of Attlllated Plan.Den I.De. of Irvine. whj<;_h offers personal and business plannins. He is a member of the lnterutJonal
Imperial's Tomorrow SavingssM
Rates shown (compounded quarterly for higher yields! ) are recent, bu~ subject to change
daily-indicating approximate c urrent earnings potentiaJ if you deposit as much or more than
each minimum amount shown. Other rates and term~ available--call for details.
$SOO $10,000 $20,000 $50,000 $75,000 $100,000 +
Tenns Rate Yield Rate Yield Rate Yield ·' Rate Yield Rate Yield Terms --Rate Yield
32·89 Days 10.8~ " 11.299 11.200-·11.679 1 1 .3~ l l.R-42 11 m 17.000 11.600 12.114 30-59 Days 11.(100 12.W I
90·179 Days 11.300 l 1.78S 11.6~0 12.1~ 11.7)0 12.278 11.900 12.422 12.000 12.~'1 60-89 Days 11.GOO 12.114
180·364 Day 11 6W 12.169 12.000 12.n1 12.100 12.@ 12.2W 12.82'4 12.350 12.93-4 90-119 Days 12.000 12 ,,l
12-23 Mos. 11.800 12.332 12.lW 12.71' 12.2W 12.824 12.350 12.93-4 1.2.400 12.989 120-149 Days 12.000
24·35 Mos. 11 .8~ 12.}87 12.200 12.770 12.300 12.879 12.400 12.98<> 12.'450 13.043 180· 209 Days
36·47 Mos. 11.8~ 12.387 12.200 12.770 1 2.~ 12.879 12.400 12.989 12.450 13.043 365 Days 12.)00 13098
For current rate and yields and to opeti your account, ca1J
the Tomorrow SaVing Service Center nearest you, direct or collect:
(213) <itl0-9292 in Lo Angele (714) 858-0825 in Orange County
(619) 268-4797 in San Di go
H ~ial A:Sociation
Wbere Tomorrow Begins Today.
Alaocladon of Flnanclal Plannen and the Newport Beacb/lrvlJle E1tate
Pl&DD1q CoancU. CPI provides administrative and self-directed trust services
for businesses. • •• Frank A. Capat has JOmed the Newport Beach office of Co1, Ca1tle &
Nlcbolaoa, specialists in construction and real estate law. Caput is a real
property and taxation specialist who docs financial planning and structuring of
transactions involving real estate partnershiP', syndications and closinp.
Costa Mesa optometrist Bel'llard Slmon attended the 11th annual
National Re1earcla Sympo1lam on contact lenses held in San Francisco
recently. The s.ymposium was sponsored by the professional products division
of Baucb and Lomb. • • • • Costa Mesa's Katbleen PaaladlJlo has been awarded the use of a new
Oldsmobile Firenza l7y Mary Kay Co1metic1, 1Dc., as one of the 1,000 charter
members of the company's new VIP Oub. The VIP program, unveiled in
Febraury, recocnizcs leadership and personal achievements, and honors each
VIP busmesswomen with use of a new Firenza. • • • Connie L. Kelly as the new vice president of commercial lendina for
Laguna Hills' MJdweat Financial Senlce1 Mort1a1e Cory. Kelly brinp 12 . yeari of experience to her p_ost. The Huntington Beach resident was formerly
with Coldwell Banker. Midwest, a subsidiary of Midwest FlD.uclal Savina•
Bank of Minot, N.D., specializes in real estate loans secured by income
producina and residential properties. • • • Doelt Networkt, Inc. has ap~inted Jobn R111ell to the post of Midwest
rqional sales manager. Russell will work out of the company's Clicaao office.
Doclz is a prevately held company that dcsilllS, manufactures and markets a
family of ba&h·spccd concentrator switches for data communiations networks. • • • • Cllarlene J. Root has been rromoted to media aroup head for Cocla.rUe
Clla1e, Uv1A11toa Ir Co., Inc. o Newport Beach. She will be responsible for
med/bio science, industrial and high tech accounts. Root bas been with CCL
for two years, and is a member of the Ora.n1e Coanty Advertt11A1 Federation
and the Balboa bland board of dlrectora. • • • Cbarlea (Cbuck) Buttner, chi ef executive officer of Ocean Paclflc
Sanwear, Ltd., of Corona del Mar, has been elected to the board oftrusttcs of
the City of Hope Natloal Medical Cater. The Newpon Beach resident was
honored by the City of Hope Profes1lon1 and Ftauce AnoeJates in 1983 as the
recipient of the Award of Hope. Buttner, a member of the Balboa Bay CJ b,
formed Op an 1972.
·'
AUTOFACT6
C'O Nf f HI NCl ANO I XJIOSlllON
DISNEYLAND HOTEL &
ANAHEIM CONVENTION
CENTER • ANAHEIM. CA
exh1b1tors. Expo houra 11
AM to 8 PM, Oct 2·3 11
AM to 5 PM, Oct. 4. •
Sponsored by Computer &
Automated Systems Asso·
· c1at1on of Society of Manu·
f acturing Engineers
Before Sept 27. call 313 /
271·1600, X621 .. 1fter
Sept 27 call 7141768·
7870
OClOBER 1-4
,J
..
arts could be bi business
t for &kin cstlmated t S80
million; for blood. SSOO r;pilhon, for stom en S l 2S malhon; and or
boo , more lhan;$200 million
The pro pccts for dcvcloprn
natomlcal ubstuutn arc llun
to a tory tn the an but the n k is enormou .
rontcle, the annual mar· Companies mu t m U.S. Food •
Fluor Corp. unit ITlanaglng
contractor for China mine
· A untt of Auor Corp. hu been
appointed manaaina contractor for
the conceptual phase of the Jin&ing
No. 2 coal mining project in the
h.Optc•s Republic of China. ·
Value to Auor was not disclOSed.
The mine. planned to &tart produc-
ing four million tons per year by 1990,
will be loca\CO 200 miles ~uthca t of
QcijiOJ and is being developed as a
joint venture between China Na·
tional Coal Dtvelopment Corp. and
Shell Coal International.
Initial estimates indicate develop-
ment cost of approximately $300
million.
.
ll'Jt 1eu market!JJ6 OK .
NMS Pharmaoeotical of Newport
Beach has announced that it bu
received approval from the Food and
Drug Administration to market it1
Nimbus test kit. Nimbu,-is a
biotcchnol91Y-besed visual test kit
for detecting very_ early ~ncy~ It
is ideal for the clinical lab and office
Pl)ctice, the company said.
The most outstandins feature of
Nimbus is that it detects pregnant)
either in urine or scrum by a _imple
color change reaction that requires no
instrumentation or special trainina.
aM DtU& dmin wauon is firs& to conduct bum n tests nd ta
to scll bod>. parts. But the to 1 ~-k will.be ma finanet 1 su of' the new product
"Doctors re conservat1"c by
nature,·• 1d Jam McCam nt,
analyu with the n Francisco Mcd1·
I Technology Stock Letter.
••A lot of these bright new 1d re
going to be a touJ}! sell," he id.
Among the bri&ht new ideas is the
artificial !henn pump, • .
Novacor, an Oakland·bascd com·
pany. received FDA appro\lal.tt«nl· 'Y. for the firr.t human &cstl of the
•heart a i t" symm. The fist-sized
electronic a I t S) tcm would not
replace the hcan. but augment a weak
heart muscle by pumping blood min
time Wlth the natural heart, ncrordina
to company President Thoma
Laurie.
· Pump implantations in the im·
mediate future will be temporary.
with the company working to develop
a pcnnanent device, Laurie said
About 105,000 people today could
benefit from the device, he said, citinf
a study done for Novacar by SRI. SR
Stock o«ered to public
Western Diaital Corp. , of Irvine,
has announced the public offering of
three million shares of its common·
stock at $10 per share.
~he site of the offering has been
increased from 2.S million to three
million shares.
The test can be completed in a few
minutes with 99.8 percent accuracy
when pcrfOrmcd on specimens 10
days after conoeption NMS said.
Njmbus is the first kit in a series of
nelf NMS biotcchnoloay products
which incorporates polyclonal and
hybridoma monoclonal antibodies in .
a unique way.
NMS manufactures and markets
advanced immunodiaanostic test kits
for laboratories, hospitals and clinics
and also owns and o_pcratcs an
independent clinical reference lab-
oratory.
The best thing about
economists is most of
the time they're wrong Not a video game
~a tobethetatestcompaterpmeiaactaally~
1 of a new tire. The computer-aided deet&ia
syatem own lit aMd by enatneen at 11~ Tire'•
tecbnlcaJ center to belp dmul&te tbe effectll of~
1trw and other road condltlon9 on prototjpe t:tr..
The Fint Boston Corp. and Mont-
gomery Securities arc co-managing
the underwriting syndicate. The
underwriters have also been arantcd
an option to purchase up to an
additJonal 450,000 shares to cover
over-allotments.
Western Digital designs, manufac-
tures, and markets a line of
proprietary semiconductor compo-
nents and digital subsystems for use
in the computer, computer peripheral
and s:ommunications markets.
AST re~eaae. a record
AST Research Inc., of Irvine;. has
announced record revenues for nscal
1984 ended June 30 of$63.8 million,
up 402 percent from$ I 2. 7 million the
previous year.
Revenues for the fourth quarter of
fiscal 1984 reached $23.8 million as
compared to $4. 7 million for the like
period last year.
"Continuing strong demand for
existing ~Tadd-on products for the
IBM PC, in conjunction with a
broadening of our product line to
include offerings in local area
network.. graphics and communica-
tiom areas, has fueled this s~1ficant
revenue expansion," satd Safi
Qu~bey, president of AST Re-
search.
Hu.tar lJe61.n• bumea
Hexstar Inc. has been formed at
Placentia to enact the fletd of ad-
vanced composite structure, design
development and manufacturing.
Two of the companies founders
and officers arc Larry C~persen and
Jerry Howell. Caspersen previously
was president of Sierracin Corp.-
thennaJ systems. Prior to Sierrac1n,
Caspersen held positions with North-
rop, Rohr and McDonnell Douglas.
Howell previously was president of
SierracinSylmar, one of the world•s
leadina .suppliers of aircraft trans-
parencies. Prior to Sierracin, Howell
spent l 0 years with Northrop Aircraft
division responsible for advanced
composites manufacturing.
Caspersen and Howell have com-
bined 30 years of experience in the
aerospace industry. •
JIU1er appronl lrazJted
The meraer of Petrolane Inc., of
Long Beach, into Texas Eastern Corp.
has been approved by Petrolane
shareholders at a special mcetinJ..
The mer&er is expected to become
effective today.
· Texas Eastern has acquired about
98 percent of Petrolane•s common
stock outstandina throu&h open mar-
ket purchases and a subseq_uent 20
dollar per share cash tender offer. As a
result of Monday's stockholder ac-
tion. Texas Eastern will acquire the
remaining publicly held Pctrolane
stock for 20 dollar cash a share.
NEW YORK (AP6 -The f~wlnO Ult 1how1 the ver·lhe-ounler stocks J.nd wwranla that hev• ~ UP mMl•6.~ on ~~l ~~ w lior 1000 :::F:" .,. . t and ~centa~ cna~ "t !"' be een ht or•v s t s tl9 gJd =and uesdn'• last bid price:-
UI'~ Pc .• f ~w,n:, Ur r~ Up
n~I UP . i' II) 1~ Up r: ~ Up
IV~ UP I !if 1 ~ tl: H: l UP l :,
-t UP
-
Ov ER TH E Cou NTE R
--
.. \ •
Baab A.le anaoaaced
Sale of the first mortgage banker-
issued AAA-rated 'multibuilder
bonds collatcraJiicd by non-conform-
jna conventional mortpge loans has
been announced by t&c Hammond
Co. the publicly beld Newport Beach-
bascd mo~ge banking company.
, Announcing the sale, Thomas T.
Hammond. chairman and president,
said that his company sold the
$9.825,000 first increment of a $200
million builder-bond pi:ogram, an-
nounced earlier this year, to two Wall
Street underwriters.
Hammond added that Kidder,
Peabody & Co Inc. and Donaldson,
Lufkin & Jenrette, actina as sole
underwriters, purchased the bonds
form Hammond MOrtsaJC Securities
Corp. (HMSC), a limtted-purpose
finance subsidiary of the Hammond Co. .
The two underwriters simul-
taneously announced a public offer-
ing the-bpndsi which offi · Jy ai:_e
called HanUnond Mortgage Secun-
tics Corp. 12.75 percent mortgaa,e-
collatcralizcd bonds. Series A, due
Oct. I. 2014.
.. This sale is the culinination of a
long. involved process." Hammond
stated. "We began working on thit'"
bond issue last year and ftlcd for SEC
registration last spring. We have put
thousands of hours of work and
hundreds of thousands of dollars of
our Ol\'n money into this effon.
Unlike other builder bond issues, our
builder-customers have not bad to
put one penny of their own money
into up-front costs.
Hammond said that while the bond
program originally had been desianed
to provide lower-interest loans and
tax deferral advanlaJCs to the finn 's
builder customen, 1t now has been
detenmned that the bonds can be
used to fund portions of Hammond's
regular loan production. He added
that the company will do this.
The bonds sold Wednesday arc
collateralized by home loans made to
buyers in housinf developments in
California and Aritooa, according to
Hammond. .. The way it works," Hammond
said. "is that P.rooeeds from the sale of
the bonds will be lent by HMSC to
finance companies that have been
established by the panicipet1ng
builders.
"The finance companies, in tum,
will repay the debt incurred in
funding or acquiring mortgages se-
cured by single-family rcSidenccs and
will pledge the loans to HMSC.,.
By JOHN CUNNIFF u ...... ....,..
NEW YORK -Americans can be
very happy that over the past two
years business people have made
their own assessments oftbe future-
and acted on them -rather than
listenina to their economic advisers.
They can be happy, among other thi~ for jobs, whtcb were created .in
such volume that no econonust
would have been believed had be
projected the actual number -6.8
million since Dtccmber 1982.
Throughout the great recovery and
expansion that began in the final
month of 1982 there bas been in fact a
strong dichotomy between those who
analyze and forecast, and those who
must make the hard money decisions.
Analysu and forecasters viewed
the economy through abstractions,
such as seasonally adjusted annual
rates, and soft estimates, such as what
the Federal R~rve Board was likely
. to do or not do.
The bard money decisions were
very real, bard-nosed actions, the
kind that can earn the chief execuuvc
a bonus or a ftriog. They involvcd"b1g
money for capacity expansion, inven-
tory rebuildina. hiring.
1'homas Love of the U.S. Chamber
of Commerce pthcrcd st.aus'tics on
the extent of hiring over the 20
months since December 1932 and
came up with some · remarkable
observation , to ~1t:
"Mo"' jobs were created in the
United St.ates during this 20.month
period than were created in Japan
durina the last lo years.
"And the 880,000 jobs created in
America during May alone surpassed
the number created in the entire
European Economic Community
durinJ the last decade.
.. After making up for jobs lost
duritlf the t 9"80-1981 recession.
Amencan business continued to ex-
Market-ng
seniinar set
''Precision Mark~tina" 1s the title
of a half-day program to be presented
from 9a.m.·lp.m. on Oct. 17th, at
The Newporter by ~ Niguel-
based Professional Wnting & Mar-
keting Services' (P.W.M.S. Inc.)
president, Lorna M. Galbraith.
Interested business persons who
wish to have the opportunity to lear:n
how to dcsWi their own marketing
communications plan, describe the
ri&bt ~et audience, create effective
advertismg. promotions,, .sat~ ma-
terials. Cut Costs! are 10v1ted to
contact P. W.M.S. Inc. at 493-3282 for
more information.
u
StarSr s u•. 2\i UP lj: • ~. ~ ~serPr 2\• v. Uo ~~-r .,,., UP l I.. ~ l 1 ti: .'4 I~~--
l on 1n ~ Up 1 so I') ~W1 ~ .. UP "1 ~~~: I 1 p ~ \-') Up
dMd un •• UP oro 7~ t~c§f .. I') ~ Up l r,'Vm r UP ~ ,t .. 2 ~= H"~Fun ~ -~ II Vt \.:. Co ..,., ~ Up Wn~r --l"J
i ~, I"· ~. ~= A~ m 1 v, -2~
Au ~ 111 ~ SI WI !~ -..
~~·j L Sv -" DOWNS ~uton I'> -1
Name L.aJ~ _chf. I lln 1 -21"2
j C~tlo alA:ro t -~ f;111 oh ~ -~ j ~~va I -1~.
hOtron -~ ,.,., -~
pand and now there are five million
mo~ Americans at work than evc-r
before.''
If there is an economist who
foresaw this. he hasn't stepped for·
ward to identify himself.
Nor have many of them been
identified with some of the other
numbers that have been produced:
-Gross National Product: Up
more than $500 b11lion. from an
annual rate of$3. I tnlhon in the final
quarter of 1984 to $3.65 trillion in the
second quarter of 1984.
-Personal Consumption Expen-
ditures: Up $28 billion, from an
annual rate of $2.0S trillion in the
final quarter of 1984 to $2.33 trillion
in the second quarter of 1984.
New Tax Act has
many changes for
firms, investors
-Disposable Personal Income: 8 · l d • ll U~ $32 trillion, from an annual rate usincss peop e ao tn\'CStors Wl
$2 24 ·u· · th fi al f need to team about the manl o · tn ton in e 10 quarter 0 provisions in .. The 1984 Tax Act
1984 to $2.56 trillion in the second that will affect them. Hercarc10me of
quarter of 1984. h highl.gb f ... _ The numbers add up to a recovery t e 1 • ts .o un;; act: .
foreseen by nobody-jud&ingat least . •. ~prcaatJon ofb_usmcss vehicles
from the printed record -not even ts limited to $4,000 10 tbe first year
llit White HOU$e economists. and S6.~ a year ~r. ~nvest·
-Housing starts more than . men1 credit OJ' autos is hm1~ t.o
doubled, from an annual rate ofless Sl,000. No n:.1vcstment credit 11
than a mmion during the depths of allowed for vchicl~ used less than 50
the ~ssion to more than 2 million pe~n! for busm~ ~~ _de-
durin& the spring and to levels that prcetatJon _for ~cb vehicles lS limited
remained above 1.75 million into the to the straJ,gbt-bne method over five
summc-r. years.
-Ncw<ar sales, which dipped to • Depreciation on all real estate.
annual rates just over 1 million units except low inrome housing. is ex-
in 1982, rebounded to more than 11 tended from IS to II yea.rs.
million during the rccovel) and ha"e • Corporations have new rules to
remained between JO million and 11 follow in man} aJUS., 1.0duding the
million since then. di\ idends received deduction. dis-
To the list must be added the return · tribution of appreciated property,
of productivity pins, which had all and the calculatJon of earnings and
but disappeared during the previous profits.
decade-and-a-half. and the taming of •The amount of business property
the inflation shrew. that could be expensed rather than
Negatives remain: The big budget depreciated was to b.a:ve in~
deficit, the big minus in net exporu, from SS.~ to $7,SOO in_ 1984. Thts
and by the reckoning of some analysts mettase is postponed until 1988.
-not aU ~ any means -ttie • T~e~ arc new rules for the incredibly bi value of the dollar 10 deducubihty of a~cd expenses.
relation too er currencies. • Tax-free likc-kmd excbanses of
MUTUAL FUNDS l - - - ---------
..
b111sineu or investment propeity will oo• have to be compteud 'Aithin
certain time limits.
• Tax shelter promoters haYe new
reponina requi..rcmmts int.ended 10>
curb abusive tn eltcn..~ ain-
tainina customer lists aDd felJ.Stcnn&
tax JhcllerS art' pan ·of the m ruinacnt rul .
The Ill act has Pf'O' · ·ons thal ~
affect e changes of partncrsti
intaests and oilier panncrs.hip
acllOQ emplO)CC fringe benefit$,
retirement plans. In that lhe .CC
over a thousand ~ invol
hundreds of provisions. it is
5ipificant piocc of ~slation. to-
vestors.. and business people shov d
consult their tall ad,'isors for de
on how the law will aff cct them. •
IUJpb Scott IS a cttfifinj pu
acc:ountant praczicipa ia Ne-.+"Pf!tt
Beach. -: -
J
On
the
. ..
,
WH AT AM EX DID
AMEX LEADE RS
Colo QuorEs
METAL S Quon s
\
; That's an apt description of both business and •
business people along the Orange Coast. Too keep track of
wherec.ompanlesaregotngandwhich~eoplearehelptng
them get there,just watch 'Credit Line· -very day In tlie
Buslnesssection.ofyournew Illy Piii
• . .
--~---..------~~----------------
.Score points with t~il
TOURING CHEF
DISHES OUT
SAGE ADVICE
• By BEA ANDERSON chop the leaves (no stems, please)
.Of .. Dlllr........ extremely fine. Roll in a clean towel
When Chef Sage rolls into town. and bold under runnina water. ''At
be doesn't stop movina. first the water will look like areen
With the help of some workmen, J>aii!t, but it eventually runs clear.
he assembles a portable kitchen, Fluff the parsley every now and
complete with refiiierator, ranae, thenforadayanditisrcadytogoon
sink and convection oven, and then the shelf.••
launches a whirlwind schedule of Instead of spendini hours mak-
cookina demontrations. His four-ina sauces. Saae advises using low·
day presentation includes a new sodium soups. "Justaddsomewine
program every two hours. and herbs for special Oavor."
Focusing on quick-to-prepare Crepes, apparently, arc one of his
dishes, be whips up a meal for two favorite food extenders. He sug-
in less than an hour. Naturally, he cestcdusinathcmforwrappiJlaupa
uses products from the 20 name number ofleftoven, adding a soup.
brand fOOd companies that sponsor based sauce and presto, "instead of
the Food & Beve,.ge Festival, barely enough for two, you can have
staacd in shopping malls in 70 cities four aenerous servings." across the CO\,\ntry, includin& Hunt-Another reason he favon crepes
ington Center. is that ••you can make a dozen at a
And while he touted convenience time and freeze the extras.•• A crepe
and time-saving attributes. econ-pan isn't necessary; •-an &-inch
omy was not mentioned. The sautc pan works just as wen:·
-Chicken Breast-Florentine on a bed For tho.se_on uaar-frec diets_,
of rice with a lemon basket p.mish Sage offered sugestions on how
and Strawberry Crepes looked ap. you can have-your d~rt and cat it ~ina. but the audience was not too.' ixpla.iruna that aspariame
invited to aample, so no taste supr substitute loses its sweet taste
comparison could be made between when heated, ~e told his audience
...,,.._.._,'-,.._ these foods and from-scratch to add the subsutute after puddina
PatMJ Reed wltb awa.td·wt.nnln• C-Hmarl BarprlM. recipe$. has cooled, or sprinkle it on cookies
But the telf-tau&ht chef rattled off after they arc baked. . . .--.
Irvine cook tops
in fair contest
hinu that arc applicable to any To ~· pre9Cotauon_ &S import·
brand or plain·wrap packqe. l!'L ••\1qctabl~ ~1shcs
T·'-· h rbs, ,.. 1 .. 1f simple to carve. be 111.ststs. and of -e c aor examp c. you ,.._.. ... CllSP /C3)
don't know what it tastes likc.0 says..,.
Sgc, .. don:tJust sweat the name
of the betb. • He suaests tunrina
the bottle or can a.round and
reading the label. Then open the
BJ BEA ANDERSON
Of .. ..., .........
Winnina top honors in a Lo
Anacles County Fair cookina con·
test wa a lUI thrill even for a
veteran contest winner.
Patscy Recd admiu he was quite
... aervous, explaining that this was
the first time he been requited to go
up on stage and prepare her recipe.
.. The worst was heari~ that
Jackie Olden would be there. Reed
· ys she an vid fan of the 44Fo0d
and New Hour' ho t on KNX r~lo nnd attho~ he cited
over the po ibility of meeting
Otdco, "the id ofh r being m the
udiencc m de m v n more
nervous.
"But I knew my rcc:ipc, so I was oacka&c and inhale tbc aroma -
OK." 5ou11 swear you can ta te it."
Reed, now owner of a new Then taste it so you know iu
microwave oven thanks to her flavoring.
efforts with Calamari Surpise, is a Sa,ae stressed starting with small
two;time winner at the Wr, having amounts. "It takes about 20
placed third in the 1982 Seafood in minutes of cookina time For the
the Microwave contest. • flavor to penetrate the food, so
heuyuhehaswonanumberof don't hurry it by addina more too
contests-mostly newspaper pon· soon. It wm just tum you oft" from
sored -and now is ready to go for ever usina that panicular herb .
national d>Mpctiton. apin ...
Food has been a Mbby r the He alto .rec::ommendcd bleridin&
Irvine resident incc "J wu a youna t to three ~ .. and add wine.
girl. I just love to cook and collect Don't ~· about the a coho1
cookbo6'k . A day never aoes by content, it coots awa~. These
that I don't read a cookbook or a m inations are ol\derful a salt
food tion in a paper... titut ." fPl~--~•/C3l -=Ti~,,,;,o,_m""'u=-==-......,-~d-ri~ed·--Pl~-------~=-----~-N--
Versatile, sumptuous menu
wins ~beers f~oµ'l home tea~
Fall means football tothcsponscnthu iast,
whether it's hi&b schoOl, colJege or professional.
Nothing beats a trip to the tadium tochccrthcbo
team on, ex~ pcrhapsthc"SUmptuous tan&ate
picnic before thcpmc:
Fora grand pirking lot picnic.a small~
&rill or hibachi, a folding table and delicious, easy lo
terVc food prepared in advance arc all you rcatly '4'
need. 1bcse tempting recipes fill the ~uircmcnts
and illustrate the versatility ofcrisp locberg lettuce,
tender and dClicious frcSh American lamb and sweet
Spanish onions.
Al the stadium, start the oo&Js, allowing about
30 minutes for them to be just right. While you wait,
kick ofTtbe picnic with an attractive and rcfreshin&
appetizer. Tailgate Party Spread is served in its own
special container-the shell ofa frcSh and cri~ bead
ofloebelJ lettuce. Choose a "~ngy-finn" bead tbal si vcs slightly to gentle pressure. The scooped out
lettuce is obopped and steamed, then blended with
sour cream, cream cheese. herbs and soy sauce.
Barbecued Lamb Riblets use an cconomic81 cut
from the lamb breast and make ondcrful finger
food. Braise the ribJets bcf orc leaving for the
ball part. then at the stadium just place them on the
grill and baste often with teriyaki sauce.
As the appetizers disappear, bring out the rest of
the bountiful ~ic. GOiden Potato Salad is served •
in individual, marinated sweet Spanish onion Shdls,
and Lamb Ke bobs arc winners at any ballpark
barbecue.
Round out the menu with Teriyaki Barbecued
Beans and SponiJ:\& Tossed Sala4.
C.aution: This tailpte picnic is so flavorful and
bountiful you may not make it to the game!
TAILGAft PARTY SPREAD
1 larie ..... 1aMr1 leu.ce
1 aiu. (I~) 4a1rJ ,_,.er-.
1 paebp (I ewflll) ereaa c.MeM, ..,..,_.
I tdles,n• ._, .. _. •eptallle flakes
i taNe "·-,.,., .... i ~ .. .,,_ ~ e111.,ei dllns
l&dielfllMMJlllece
,.. ............ ~ppa
Cecktall rJe llrelMI dees • me:a. -.a r••••
Core. rime and thorou&Jily drain lcUuce. Scoop out
center oflettuce bead from core end, leavin&a ~ 5hc!t
Refrigerate ihCUin pwticbq or crisper until tcldyto me.
Cbop=~out letnKletomeeasure3 Place in sieamer colander Of larae strainerthe!l
place over,.. but not touchina. bOilina water. cover iild
sieam 4 m1n1rtcs. Drain and coOl Squeeze out excess
moisturewithi:-per-to...-d.. _ ·
TboroUghly com bi.De Cootcd lettuce with soa::raeam.
(PJeue ... rAJLOATS/C2)
......
Ctief ~ pnpuee bed ol dee for ClalclE• P1oreat1De. aanaJaW Witti & I-OD be•Jset with carrot flowse. below.
I
' j
,
I •
.. c
C2 Orenge Coeit DAILY Pll.OT /Wedheeday. ~emt>er
Meat Dept. Savings
7-Bone Roast tt~-.s1.29 Ch' k B t wH"R•BS 1c en reas ~~~r:eF"· .. c; 18
51.27 Co d B f IHl"SO"~ rne ee ~.~:~i~'°"'° 1"'~~f! e 51.29
Round Bone :i!~.CHUO ,51.39
Back Ribs ;'tt,~:"0 ,age
Pork Chops iw:h • 51.99
Ball Park Franks :i~'0" •51.89
Smoked Sausage :~~~m .. LI
51.99
Compare these Low Prices
TA8~
OA ~l 11'& Oll(T CO<£ OA
Coca·
Cola
•3.49
1:1lt12.-0Z
RC Col O<ITll!l • • a .:t~•llOJ!IUQ1>llt U
Like Cola =~::
Sunlight Dish Liquid
Lasagne •v1~":""
Gapri Sun o:~·IUi
Scottowels ~, •'OI'
Chinese festival mark$ ..
Toa t autumn this ~ r with a ThoUgh,cclcbratcd for thou nds
gala, new celebratio n for fam1l)' nd of~n in Chma, Americans have
friend • just found how much fun a Harveit
What can be so new and exciting Moon pany can be. The festival
it will be t tho po t-summer creates the perfect celebration be·
"blues'!'' Imagine Thanksgiving tween l..8bor Day and the beginning
and a binhday party all rolled into of the busy holiday social season.
one. You've JUSt described the Observe thi! year's Harvest
Chmese Harvost Moon Festival. Maon Festival with a menu fit t'br ,
Honorina the binhday of the the emperor yet convenient enou.J!l
moon with a foe st ofThanksgivi ng for American lifestyles. Start wtth
for a &ountiful harvest 1s one of the steaming bowls of won ton soup,
most important and fcsuve hol-quickly prepared and available
ida in the Chine year ~ frozen at supennarket .
--~------~--~-----~~--......... --~.
9
Move on to a.mam course ofPork
Chop Qnental. In what Is de-
scribed as the .. East Meets West.,
technique, this rcci~ team
classic American bratsina method
of cookins pork chops with a ·
traditional Ohincse vegetable stir-
fry. . Comptete your meal with cnsp
satisfyiQ& fro1en ta rolJs, heated .
according to pacbge directions.
The tttults will be described just
one way.4-1\ So J:?_elicious!
PORlt CHOPS ORIENTAL
I port Iola cMpl, S/C·lDcll &Wck
IA c.p cookl.81 oll
ctaJckn brotll
1 pactaae <• ouce> Clalltete pea
pods, tlaawed
S green oalou, cwt ID ~ ·lllcla
plecn
l can (I once) water cbesmatt,
.tralDed, sliced .
% stalk• celery,, cat d1~1oully
illto ¥.t·lacll plecet .
1 cap sliced fruit ma11lroo1111
1 redbellpepper,catlato ~-lacb
squres, blaa8ed
1 cloves 1arHc, craned
•Ai cup cora1tarcll
1 table1poo11 soy nace
1 treatpooa bro'Wll sravy nace
14 cap dry wbJte whte
In large skillet, brown chops in 2
tablespoons oil; add 2 cups chicken
broth. Simmer. covered, 4S minutes
or until chops are tender. Remove
chops from pan; keep warm. Add
enouih chicken broth to pan drip-
pings to make 2 cups; set aside.
·Heat remaining oil io saucepan;
stir in vegetabl~ and prlic. Heat just until hot. Combine reserved liquid,.
cornstarch, soy sauce and brown
graV)'. sauce. Cok over low beat until
thickened. about S minutes. Add
wine. Stir into vegetable mixture.
Place chops on heated servin& platter.
Spoon on vegetables. Makes 8 ser-
VJDSS. "
TAILGATE •••
From Cl
cream cheese, vegetable flakes,
parsley, chives, soy sauce' and
pepper. Cover and refrigerate 8
hours or overnight for flavors to
blend. To serve, spoon mixture into
lettuce shell. Serve with b~ slices
or toast rounds. Make about 2'12
cups.
LA.MB RIBLET APPETIZERS
3 poaad. Jamb breast riblets, m
lDto 1ervlD1-1lle pieces
'Ji cap teriyaki Utlee
Place riblets in large saucepan.
Add enough water to cover and
bring to boiJ; reduce heat and
simmer. covettd; 20 miouta. Re-
••••••• -move riblets from saucepan; dis-card water. Pat riblets dry with
24-0Z
Frozen Food Favorites Garden Fresh Produce
Tina's Bt:Jrritos JVAR·£••E• •oz 25C c rfl w~ au 1 ower :!o~ ... n . ll 49C
Chicken. Patty ::~~i"'s ti •I s1.99 Potatoes =:°· ll .igc
61'0/ 52.19 Onions :~.u' ll 1gc Oven Fned Fish ::T~~~R~ Cheesecake W(~HT WAfCH(RS .), s1.35 PRAYER Pl.ANTS ANO FLUFFY STl'IAWB(ARY 0" lAAGE ~FANCY CHlRRY Rufne F' Al. '""'' il'UN<'.H •101 ggc Sweet 1ve 1ve ~.,f~~t Peaches Feraas Lemon Juice ... N\l,( .. A•D ·~oz 85C 4tr Le 92.99 Grapefruit Juice .... u,, ... <> b0l 48C
'-'unlight Detergent ~~~c. .. 51.99
Orange Ju ice oo..~o!Mo< MOZ s1 .59
Seagrams Gin ~~
Coors Beer eomn ,, .:o: ~4.19
Chateau La Salle =, .... UUllll sa.99 Margarine :~ '°""(T • ,.oz age
F~lgers Coffee m•~T•U ••OZ '2.76 Yukon Jack ~-~-··
Max . Pa~s •lWAY• ;ia ... L ... o.. ~89 B d · R , H" 1-u 6..~.~~~:~·0 >OCT ~, • acar 1 um f~.[R
Pantiliners ~~!~~0" aoct s1 .29 Heublein ~::,'!fAN
Tea Bags fNtl(l'lll., ·ooc,$2-49 La Cadena
Grape Juice w c"• 2•01 ggc Vodka
Elbo Roni ;;.;'!.;:. ~ .. eac Sft 99
ff ee ~':.t 101 93.69 •
PJUCU DnCnQ 7 ft1U. DA r•
"°~· SS.99
no .. t
94.99
8tatera.._
HapkJ ...
,...S9t'<oct
.............. ,.._. ... ... ADVERTISED ITEM
G ARA1'1"EE
paper towel to remove excess water.
Place ribleu on grill about 4 to S
inches from hot coals. Brush
thorougly with teriyaki sauce. Cook
about 8 minutes, turning over ...
frequently and basting often with
teriyaki sauce. Or, broil riblets
about 4 inches from heat 4 minutes
on each side, brushing frequently
with tenyaki sauce. Makes about 6
to 8 appetizer servings.
GOLDEN POTATO SALAD
IN SPANISH ONION SllELLS
~tb OalOD Slaellt
2 (S-lncll) sweet ~tit Olllou
"4 cap dry wlllte wtae
~sap wlalte YlHpr
1 clove prUc, mlaced
% teatpocm• Hgar
~ teatpooa salt
Peel onions and remove a thin slioe
from stem and root ends. Cut onions
in halves, crosswise. Place in latic".
saucepan or deep skillet with boillna water to cover. Cover and boil 2
minutes. Drain and cool quickly
under cold runnina water.
When cool enouab to handle. drain
well and lift center from onion halvea,
leaving shells 2 layers thick. (Reftiaer-
ate or freeze onion center to use in
soups, stews or casseroles.) Arrange
onion shells in &lass bowl or utility
dish.
Combine wine, vinegar, aarlic,
suaarand salt Pour over onion shells.
Cover with plastic wrap and refriaer-
ate several hours, tu mine onion shells
over one or twioe to mannate evenly.
~ ........ -~Petate-s.&M----~
I medlam ,.ta&oet (l p0ucl1)
t tablapMU flaety ..... sweet 8'ultlt ...._
l11JCet\aCM I" tea1peou corutard cep mariaade frem oat .. sa.eba,
dJvl4led
1 tablet~ IOJ 1811Ce
1 tabl..,... prepaiff mu\ard
'M teatpoM wlai&e pepper
~ cep •lce4l celery
" Clp dlcel Petti pepper .,, cep dke4 ~mlellte
·BOil Potatoes m skins until tender.
When cool enouah to handle, peel
then dice into tarac bowl. Sprinkle
chopped onion over Potatoes. Mean-
while, cook bacon in skillet until
cri,p. Remove bacon, reservina '!•-
cup drippings. Drain bacon on pepcr
towelina, then crumble into bill. Bltnd cornstarch with 2 table-
P9Qns onion marinade. Stir remain·
in& marinade. toy aaucie, mus&ard and
pepper 1oto becon drippinp in akillet.
Heat LO boatina. Stir in cornstarch mi)turc; cook and stir over k>w beat
until sli.&htly thidkcntd.
Pour over potatoes. tosstn1 to coat.
Cool to room tempcraturci then add
celery, ~n ~~t p1m1cnto and
blcoft bit TOii tetmy, Te lent: Drain Spanish Onion
Shelli well and fill with Golden
Potato Salad Makes 6 1en•1nas
----.....•
49 Y~drs . ~c~1ng Yc>tir F~n1ily ~ell' ~~~ UMILUOBS
•. ,.... lflu ... ., ...........
IPl ...... T An.GAT'&/CffJ
L •
CHEF ••• l'romCl
FlWDa leg
I tableapoon1 dry curd eottaae
clleeH
I OUCH low calorie cream cllMlt
' packaatt 11car aabttltata Mix crepe inai:edients until
smooth. It &hou.ld be the consiltancy
that is not quite u thick u sour
• cream. Heat uuie pan until hot.
Remove from beat and spray with coolciril oil.
Pour about 3 tables~ns batter in
pan and tilt pan 11i&Jltly to 1~d batter thinly and evenly. Liptly
brown fint side; ·turn and cook
second aide a few seconds. fill with 2
tablespoons of fillina, roll up c:rtpe
and top with uuce.
For fillina. mix all in&fMienU in a blender or (Ood processor.
for uuce, mix ill inlfCdienu in a
'blender or food orocessor. ..
WINNER •••
1 PromCl
Her bu blnd1.,.JhC said, lovea to
eat her cooJUQJ. "He'• my
auinea pia. He samples everythina
and then has to run abOut 10 mileu
day to keep his weipt down:0
One of his favontes is the arand prize winner.
CALIMARI SURPRISE
' eallmart 1teakt Seuoned talc
Lemon pepper
Floar tea• 1 cea1poo11 water
4 tablttpoou batter
' tta1en Moeterey Jack c~ene
' wllole euaed sreea cbJlln l paebae laoltandaltt aaace
~ ctpbatter
1 cop_qtllk
P1nle1
Paprlb
Spnnkle calimari stean with
• seasoned salt and lemon pepper. pust
with flour. Dip into ea and water
mixture, then dust with more flour.
Melt 1 tablespoon butter in aiass dish
ip microwave OD low. Place calimari
"' steak in dish and microwave on low-
medium 1 minute.
Tum. Microwave I minute more.
Repeat method o4 times. The steak
will probably curl which is perfect to
place the cheese-stuffed areen chili in the center. Place rolled stuffed steak
into &Jass casserole. Set aside.
" Prepare hollandaise sauce. Melt
butter OD low. Add pack.tie mixture
and milk. Stir with wisk about every
30 seconds until thick. About 4 times.
Spoon some hollandaise sauce over
each steak and sprinkle with pa8rik.a.
Microwave on medium for 3 sec-
onds. Garnish with finely chopped __,....-=panley. serves 4.
In tho ume contest Mille Klein of
Founuin Valley placed founh for.
SAVORY SOLE WITH CARROTS
AND CUCUMBERS
I tables,.... IMltter or maraarta•
1 1mall C.C.mber, teed~ ud
1tard4 ..
'4 np ~-carrot • ~ tet•••• snsed lem• peel I poudt Ml• flUeca, rr .. ta or , .....
1 cu (11'4 oaces) er am of
celery IOIP
14 cop wlal" wlae or milk
\t&M•,..."1meluvet ~ .C9f 1sn1H P1.1111 .... cMete
Pll'lb. ~71prtp ... lem•
llleelu~ Place bUttct in 9 x 13-incb bakina
dim; microwave uncovered for 30
secondi on Hilb. Aad cucumber,
carrot and lemon peel stir until well·
coated with butter. If fi1b i1 frozen,
tha• in microwave.
Add filleu to the pan: spoon vcpi.btcs over top, cover Ind micro-
wave on Hiah for 3 minutea. rotatin1 once. Meanwhile, comb nc soup, wine or
milk and thyme. Remove any ex
Jiqold ft-om pan and poon auce over
fish and veeeiabld: sprinkle wuh the ch Microwave an tdditional t
minute, or unUl fi h Oakes ca Uy and 11ucc i1 heated. Let stand, co fed, 5
minut prinklc With pipnka and
pml1h with lhc panley •P nd
ltmbn Uc:i s, rv 6.
•
Belvedere's new release worth t
fAMILY llACK
WHOU .. Y•U•S
rt=I • CAtr:~5:4NIA t.& .89-~-CHICKEN
Zocky Form•. Collf. Fresh
ROASTING CHICKEN ............... ll. .ff
C•IAMllllS •••••••••
•-flock ....... ' Wh1 ..
H I BOX .69
NORTHERN TISSUE ..................... 1.09
Ju1Y
lw
...
I&
(. # ~-;I iiiiSii0LOCAL . . ••• -f ••DflU STIAU .... l•.
U.S.OA. Choke Ifft
BONELESS ROUND STEAK
U.S 0.A. Choice .... bnd. lone'9u
SIRLOIN 'TIP ROAST ............... LI 2.19
·: DIL MOllTI
YIGITABLIS
DIL MOllTI
WTOSAUCI
8-0Z. REG
Olt NO SALT .18
... •••..
CAnUll
1.09
USDA
CHOICE
SKINNED • 89 OEvtNDL& e
•ot.., CltEAM OI CHICKEN 35 . ~ CHKJCEN WITH RlCE ~····;t e
17-0t Cana All Vor•et•" a.tty Crodt•. AatOtted Hughes Plotn t4ot Dog °" Harnbufger ·
t>.PK. COKE. TAB OR SPRITE .... I.ff LAYER CAKE MIXES ........................ 79 8-PK. PtcNIC BUNS ·················-·· A9
c
Frelh Fresh, Crisp
SALADETIE TOMATOES ........... Le. .39 GREEN CABBAGE .................... La .IS
Tender • Inch ftof
FRESH BEAN SPROUTS ............ LI .29 COLORFUL MUMS ................ EA. l.H .-u au1••• r1111•nm1s R
. .• 59
I 5·liter Hime. 10-0i. b
FOLONARI SOAVE................................ ..3A9
}Aon1Kh4'W1t1 2A ·Oi Jor .. -
GELFILTE FISH ........................................... 2.39 GENMAICHA-TEA ... .. .. . . . .. .. .. . .. 1.11
HlfM Su.tiinon 0.7-0t Pkg Beringer 750-MI
CHEN.IN BLANC .......... : .......................... IA9
H01"ow1tz Mofgotet1n II Ot. ·.
UNSALTED MATZOS ................................... ff DRIED SEAWEED... . ............................ 2.19
WIDI IAND
L'leeSK-IMe• .. M 9"CIM ,..... IONUI MCIC
YOU MIY 1-M• I. OIT 18•
-FREEi
,._
MNDWICllllAft
12-0l. SlNGlES 99 CHEESE PltODVCT •
I Ounce Poe.koge •
HUGHES CREAM CHEESE ....... 79
~Jol5·0L
RICOTTA CHEESE .............. 1.39
W11prkte a.oi. Wine. Sh<wp or smok9d
CHEESE SPREAD CUPS ..... 1A9
~ Oovld, i,-oz KnoCkwunt flollth 0t
KOSHER FRANKS... • •• .... ... 1.H
Ml lmATIOllAL
¥11&•••
StOICllYS _1'-02. I 19 COMMWIONS •
)O.()z., Assorted ivdg9t
GOURMET ENTREES .......... IA9
KnUCIMn~, AIAONed ~;es
6-P.ACK YOGURT PUSH·UPS . 1.29 ..........
Wllft ..... .= .. "2A9
j
•
•
ti Orange Coaat DAILY PllOT/Wednetday, September 26, 198"
ON SIX.PACK CANS CW
Like
COLA
-:::LiU
COi.A
.. · ......
• WHrTE • M-Ol.
SKAGGS ALPHA BETA LCW'
GIANT BRFAD
COORS
BEER
EA.
·t~ • 11-01. ll01'11.ES
DANOl.A HAM
TIDE
DETERGENT
NEW CROP
PIPPIN APPLES
WIN UPTO 12!1@90
SIX WEEKLY FIFTY
CARIBBEAN CRUISES FOR 2 1 10,000 BINGO PRIZES
I OA YS AND 7 NIGHTS PLUS MANY MOREi
SKAGGS ALPHA BETA .
10RTD.l.A CHIPS
..
ALPHR BETA ----~ ~---, ----~ ~---, . >I . ~c~ \ I ~~J:r:'~\.1 \ ALPHA BETA
II DOUBLE SAVINGS cou;;· Mwktll I 11 DOUBLE .. UVINIS cou~; "''-"' I
I Present this coupon alono with any one manufaciurer's I PrUtllt this coupon alono with any one manufacturer's I ~cenls off .. coupon and get DOUBLE-fHE SAVINGS when I I "cents otr coupon od get DOUBLE THE SAVINGS when I
you purc~s• the item you pufchase the Item I •rH IOT Tl 11Ct.• 1na1lH oe FE CIOf'OIJ • CIUNQ I . I WFH IOT To 1cu. •Twa •Fill couroa u ceoroa I
I own 11 • WUll l&AY IOT ucua VALUE 1F 1Tt1l 1U1J£CT Tl I I ow1 ••• IEFU. IAY ., uao VALUE If m .. auucr 11 I ITllCI • ... EICUllU UOUOl TIUCCI AIO IWIY NOOUCT& ITCICl GI U.. OCll*I utUll TllACCI All lllll PIGOlJCTI
I .... IHI '1.llCMll •OUlllED I I • -PVICMIE •OtMK I UllT -m• l'U llAlUUCTUIU'I COUNI U.T -m• n• IAIUfACTUllra caN I AID u.T TWO 00Uk£ ceuro91a PU cust•£• I I AID i...r ""111a1 C*'"" 1'111 cuar•• I
\ cou,.. HOD THUU .• llPT. 27 I \ GIU,. .... THUU .• llPT. 27 I TMIOUIH•ED .• OCT. I . 1114 T ..... M Wll .. ICT. I, 1114
~------------.~------------
ALPHA BETA
BINGO
WINNERS
Copyright 19&4 All t1ght1 r Sal• Tax ColJected on all T1x1bte t ma. Beer. Wine & l..lQuor Not Av1ll1ble In All Stor•
Prices Effective at all Southern Callfornla Alpha Beta Markets
Thursday, 8eptember 27 through Wednesday, October 3, 1984
SAVINGS RE.LATE TO PREVIOUS WEEK'S ALPHA BETA PRIC OR LAST DATE PRIOR TO INITIAL PRrC REDUCTION EXCLUSIVE OF ADVERtlSEO OR PROMOTIONAL PRICES
J I I ..
• •
Roll-up~ slmple enough
California
supply of
citrus good
Although the citrus canker prol>-
Jem is affecting Florida shipping.
the amount of citrus fruit available
in Califomta probably won't be
altered noticeably. Florida is no
tonier permitted to ship any citrus
fruit to citrus .P.roducing states so
that the possible spread of the
canker is virtµally eliminated.
California is a major citrus
·producing state, and therefore, our
citrus supply should remain good.
Prior to the embargo, limes were the
main citrus item brou&)lt in from
Florida, so now, limes arown locally
will wear higher price tap.
California valencias have been
scarce this year. Prices have been
high and quality only fair. The
monO. of October should brina
welcome relief from a ti&ht orange
madcet with the year's first navels
becoming available. A good upply
expected, and cxccllent,guality is
predicted.
Washingtorr state apples arc hit-.
tina California markets m full force ,
and an exceptional croe of golden
delicious is m store. Pnccs on the
first.of-the season Washington crop
are hi~ but as production in-creases, they arc expected to drop to
very reasonable levels.
Watermelons and cantaloupes are in particularly good supply.
Persian melons, crenshaws and
honeydews arc fading out as t~ end
of their &eaSOn nears.
A good buy in the produce
department should be tomatoes.
San Diego and Baja are producina
record levels of this favorite salad
, fruit and prices should be dropping
noticeably. Cherry tomatoes should
be at low price levels.
Grape supply is basicillly out of
storaac, and aood quality grapes arc
readily available. Bartlett pean will
be wiodina down from their season
shortly, and D'Anjou and Bose
varicities (winter pears) will domi-
nate thereafter.
Iccbcra lettuce is droppina in
price and improvina in quality.
Supplies irSahnas and vicinity arc
increasinJ' Leaf lettuces, incuding
butter lettuce, red and green leaf
and romaine lettuce arc low in price
and make a pleasant addition to
cool, rcfreshina salads.
Fresh carrots arc very reasonable
fight now, and another good value
vegetable is fresh spin~ch. .
Cabba.Je 1s down an pncc and
quality ts very 1ood. Celery is
another excellent vegetable value
this week.
Sweet com, coming· from Col; ·
o~o. Washington, Orqon and-
C.ahfomia, is still a reasonable
value.
Cooking
with class
A two-day American and inter-
national food and cooking expo-
fition will be presented by radio
food hostess Jackie Olden on Satur-
day ad Sunday in the Anaheim
Convention Center.
Besides an may of food exhibits,
a Gallery of Chefs will be featured. • • • A Thrce-sw French Menu Made
Easy~ wtll be presented by Dolores
Hoffman at 111 a.m. Oct. 4t and a
class on Ba ic Chinese Cook1na will
be tauaht by Yi111 Loat IOa.m. Oct.
6 at ~Y Favorite Thi~ Cookina SChool, 143700\lhcrDrive, Irvine.
Cost for each ion as $20. For
more informauon, call the school at
S.S2-0221 . • • • A Phyllo DoU&h Wor1c hop wall be presented at 6:30 p.m. Oct. 2 at
fauero•1, 2919 E. Coast Highway,
Corona dcl Mar. Fee t $25. For
raervation and lnfonnauon, call
673-23~ .
.,
"A Guarantee, It meena
the food I buy at Vona
will alwayt1 be up to my
9tandarcls."
FABRIC SOFTENER Dow<t .a.-.._ 293
FOUiER'S
COFf'EE 249
MYl..33 ·~c.n.c~ ElKttte ~ A.gular, Auto. Drip
THE DAIRY
MARGARINE ..... l!lamet. I Pound he ...... 4 Stoel.a
ORANGE JUICE ClitUt .. 100°4 ,..,,,. f'IOll> C.0.--. 64-0t (II\,
COTTAGE CHEESE
Wei;.t ~ 16.o..-CMlon
FRUIT PONCH °' l---. "'-~...ow-c-.
.69
179
.89
.85
CONTINENTAL45 YOGURTS e =f:::: ......
THE CORNER DELI
VONS CHEDDAR CHEESE 199 · /OM ,....., Sia LA l.lMI fomlfi '9cll L&
VONS COOKED HAM J49 SllQld Oblone e°""° ~ -'01
TACO SHELLS 69 no~ 1o.c:ount. -t 1-0ura ... (SAVf; ;zr.1 •
OSCAR MAYER SAUSAGE 179 ~ Unb. 12 °"'° ~(SAVE "°'
ARMO<JR HOT DOGS 169 IJMI. 1e..o.-. l'KMge(SNfE ~
RICOTTA CHEESE 119 ~ 1'.o..nc. c...-(S/tV£ 001
LEO'S SLICED MEATS 109 )v.n..-'Owce ~Mgtj$.W[
SHREDDED CHEDDAR 219 .. ~ s.. 12 Ountr ~!SAii •
GALLO SALAME CHUB 319 Ml l)()w>er ,........ .eoi
'IOWl'C & COON I RY
STONEWARE This week's fle~ture
DESSERT DISH
V~u" • 69 ~:;,,um Fo1 Only ., P\ltcha ~
BROWN ONIONS ..., a--c.-1~ ... .,
SALAD LETT<JCE .... lllulW .. c;...., Inf v.rldv
BR<JSSEL SPROUTS IW ~MMD,_..... .l kl UJO
GOLDEN DELICIO<JS ~~1119 ........... ,....c,..
HONEYDEW MELON ....... CM,. L& ..99
KIWI FR<JIT
taotk'T-1-
1.ARQE AVOCADOS ~ s.w,._,_
MARIANI APRICOTS
6o-:. .......
BLOOMING VIOLElS ~ ... ~ ...... !A.UOI
4 :100
, £A .39
LA .59
EA .98
Ul .25
4 ~100
3 ~1 00
r:A 199
u..99
RUSSET
~!OES EA. .87
10.Pound e..
FREEZER PLEASERS
BIRDS EYE COOL WHIP ...., ., c..1 .. c,_,.,, ao.-u
PEPPERJOOE FARM c...,. ..... ~ ..
EQOO WAFFLf.5
~ .. ~11<>--lloo
CELESTE PIZZA ~-s....,.1.0.-llclll
.85
125
.95
2"
WEAVER ROCJNDELE1S '~239 °""·~a-..... a... ..... & s,.ca.."""' ~
OREIDA 169 ~~~ ..
VONS C<JT CORN 39 °'~'Id~ 10°"'1a.. •
~~~~ ~ ... <;~ -209
BIRDS EYE ORANGE PUJS 119
12-0lllQ c.n
VONS . 59 APPLE JOICEe
12-0ura ea.. r..,_~~--~~~~~------~-
THE WHARF ...-
SALMON STEAKS 279 ,.._ llf Ofho*d ta
• DOVER SOLE FlLLElS 299 ffd\ PIK 1e lJl
SNOW CRAB CLAWS 398 ,..,_.or ut
1a9
Bay yom nebb to
The L.A. County Fair
SAVE 1~
Vou P~ Only
Adults 400 Kids 2001~&12:1
OCEAN SPRAY CRANBERRY.199 Co6.:R. 0<>ura llatt~
FR<JIT DRINKS 63 g,_, ~ ~~ »ldi.. A-1d ,.._,. •
HUNGRY JACK 169 ..... ,._ 26.'1-0lsa ~
SPAGHElTI SAOCE 159 ~ '2-0unft ............. ,.... .. Mullw-.
DEL MONTE CATS<JP 99 120..... eau.. •
KRAFT CHEESE LOAF 329 ..,.,_. 32<>-it hc"'9t
SLIM PRICE® 99
APPLE JWCEe 64<NllClt eow. .,,,,,. ...
ORTEGA DICED CHILI .60 ''°""°' c.. BETIY CROCKER 199 ~~ ..
SLIM PRJC~ MIXED N<JTS169 ll~C..
~~VAPORATED MILK .52
CORN BEEF.: HASH
l.l!:ltlp .. '''°""° Q<I MRS. BUTTERWORTH'S $7nip 2A OullC!t ..
FAS DETERGENT~ w fllNtc: s..-~ ..
122
1"
1"
VONS FACIAL TISS<JE 59 ·~c.u..... .
CRISCO 278
SHORTENING ~ . ....-&&& ..... ._ J.~c.11
.59 ......
LIQUOR LOCKER
COORS
BEER 12 Park
120unc. NA&
BLACK VELVET •
c......... '"Uln e.ui.
399 ..... ~
999
CUTIY SARK SCOlCH 1799
~~'S 7 CR9WN 1099 l~Oont.
~,l~LKEN BE!f. . 3a9
~ ... seMKUNGWINE899
~~R WHISKEY 999
POPOV VODKA 699 am...
..,
Pl'>Ot
S.;c Ptl~
Lru I"") ~ ----
~
You"°"' PllY more.
tMfftN*TOtl llACM _...., . .,,.... ....
.OITAllllA •. ,,... ..,... .. or... ...
You Just,,., ......
•
BONE•J?SS J79 10P SIRLODI ~ ~ Kll1CI ·"-' lR CBandnl Tep SUloln Ut. l l li9R .... LL
BEEF CHOCK STEAKS
Q4.. N!!l!Elm
BEEF CHUCK ROASTS Ci&,_ a.I
SHOULDER CLOD
....... ~ lli!lg llod
LB e89 4
129
La 198
FARlllER~OHRJl 9 BACON Ul
SIJmd ··~~
C<JT-<JP CHICKENS 69 CISDA 0-... ~ fiytilg Lil e
FRESH HEN TURKEYS 89 ~··u.~ ~ ta•
WILSON'S SAUSAGE
20'-i.-~-
WESSON
SALAD OIL 2 .. .<>uncr n .-eatti.
,,,,......._~~-$ • -----... --~-~-,..-,..--..,_......,. ________ ,.. .... _____________ _. ________ ~~
Orange Oout DAILV PILOTIWtdnetd~y. 81pttmbet H, 1N4
Coon
Beer
Whole
Top
Slrloln ~Botlet ~ 'Mlh Prttr.'1111 Sltved 'Mth Pln Rocky
Safeway Ouallly Beef Loin
"ln Tht Bag MowltM'I ~ --
89
Boneless
Breasts
~ ..... House Resh
ryWlg Chlci<en
·~-Yltaa ... ""-c 500 mg ....,., PloG °' 1
CIOfarmstyle Rolls ..i::~~;.;,. ~' 59• DOln9llsh ......_,lo(;,,,,
•Good N freah Bagela. :~t a9• cut low flat •-d cCS10..,1io
1 Cl!)Ral1l11 8read ,,.,. w ..... , ·~ ••· •'-Isla Pl-pple ltrlps
.......ult I L.o.tt• ....... 41W111•1• f4 ·"····~-......... ...... ra ft89 r _.,l!OurtO•tmr• '•' __,.r8•C r .. Mrt WrOl'IU .
• hnla Ma Fr.-ray at u Pu, Mlttlon VlejO
t 14417 CUl'ftl' Of. at Weinut. !Mlle
1
tr"' •2 .. /ti
. SI Zto
...... Oftl0ft9 ~llOFlavor ........... P•• ... OntOI Tne s ... ~IUI ,_.., Julc1 .. 1 Peare
DOP,...hCucumltersC:.::
Di>Rulty Grapefruit ,,..,
LOOKING FOR .... THE~'
APARTMENT?
Try tips
for asta .
•When coo n1 pasta, allo\V 4 101 5 quartt o_f water per pound o
p11t1. Bnl\I water to biitk boil. add a pinch 6(Ult, pasta •nd 2 to 4 tableapoons of ofl which prevent• &he pa1ta from atlck.ina toacther.
•Pasta 1hould be cooked al dcnte
(to the tooth), tender yet flrm .
. Remember freah paata takea lett time to cook than commercial
p11ta. . h .t l •Undcrcoolc any paata t at •• 1oin1 to f\arther cook in bakina
(example: la111n1). • •Be 1dventurou1, try combin1na interestina aaucct with any of tho
new flavored p11ta, or explore the
endle11 ahapea and texture• of
avaUablo pasta. •Fresh' herbs aenerally are more
punaent than dried. W~en
1ub1titudna freah herbs for dned.
use about a third of the amount ot . dried herbs called for in the recio.e.
•Two ounces of dried pa1ta it a aenerally accepted main di1h aer·
vina size .(1 cup cooked). When aervina pasta with a rich uuce,
reduce tbit amount by a half ounce
per tervina.
taHONEYBAl<ED
-one aste
is all it takes!
• '
\
•
GOOD OLD FASHIONED
ROMAN MEAI IS NEW
You don't fool around with some-
thing people love, unless there's a
very good reason.
Tasce our new 10096 Whole Grain
bread and you'll know the reason.
We staned with our natural whole
grain OLD STYLE recipe. ljlen we
improved it by giving it an extra-
hearty taste.
It's still all-narural Nothing
artificial.
And the taste as C\'en bener. lfv ic
now and see for yourself ·
WHEN YOU BUY
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I
...., ......... ,...
a..stun• wlna e•rtr ehowdown
In volleyball
from Newport. D2.
........... ? ••
R .. pllHol*
ennounce.1119
...Orement.m.
Saturday night specials!
Edison, Barons
encounter rugged
foes this week
By ROGER CARLSON
Of .............
Sunset League footbalt puts its
credentials on the line this week in
stiff tests in every direction-cappCd
by two big ones on Sarurday night -•
Servite vs. Fountain Valley and St
Jobn Bosco vs. Edison. ~ Here's a look at each non-league
game this week as they continue to
f. rd for their league o~ners Oct.
1-12:
Semte (1-1) vs. Fouta.io Valley
(J-1) at Santa Ana Bowl: -They ~ in 1978 and the eiaht-game
senes has been one of the better ones
in recent OF annals.
Fountain Valley leads, 6.2, includ-
ina a CIF Bia Five Conference
championship decider in 1978, while
Servite•s most recent victory was a
year ago in the semifinals on the way
.to tbe Bif Five crown. 0 They ve changed a Jl'Ul deal,"
says Fountain Valley Coach Mike
Mtlner.
.. Now they're operating out of the
winged-T and their quanerback (Eric
Buechele) throws well. He's a good
athlete and a scrambler. We11just run
our basic defense, plus a couple new
variations.
"Their wide receivers are both
'
Thls w,ee:k,s schedule Fontana." Yi the t. JOhn BolCO
coach.
The Otargerd t hnebadcer Dav.id 1..9pes (bruised lbouJder) and may be
without reoeivcr-tafety Eric Wbcld-
wrigbt (llu&h). wo.
,
CAU pmaat '1:11 le1 aottcl)
THURSDAY
Tltepmt
SaddJCback vs. Costa Mesa at Newport Harbor
Westminster VJ. MatcT Dei at Santa Ana Bowl
Tiie o4dt
Saddlebact by 24
Even
La Qma&a (!-U n. Mulu (l.;t) ea
Wmmbalter: -The v~ d
Marina continue wadtqa OuoUP a ~ non-leaiue ~bedule -ttm
time mecung up ~tli &he~
IO Iler Aztecs.
FRIDAY
Newpon Hai:bor vs. Woodbridge at Irvine Newport by 10
Laguna Beach vs. Corona del Mar at Newport Harbor CdM by 12
Estancia vs. University at Orangic CoaSl University by 4 And Marina Coaeb Dave Thomp-
son, vJho bas seen his team lose IO
Esperanza and Foothill, · knowi
what"1 ahead of bis team. ·
Irvine vs. El Toro at Mission Viejo El Toro by 7
La Quinta vs. Marina at Westminster la Quinta by 3
Long Beach Wilson at Huntington Beach Huntinaton Beach by 1'
Octan View at Gardena (8 p.m.) Gaidena b} 17 · .. They've ;played three in~
tional games Ut a row and rd Classify
them as somew'hat explosive on
offense, .. says Thompson.
SATURDAY
Servite vs. Fountain Valley at Santa Ana Bowl Fountain Valley by 3
St. John &sco vs. Edison at Huntingtot_t Beach faeo 11tey have a quarterback (Ban
Rectenwald) who is unorcdictable
I
There's more to this one -and
Milner explains:
"It's always been a close and hard-
fought game, and it has always been a
class pme."
Fountain Valley is ranked No. I in
Orange County, Servite No. 6 .
"They've played some good teams
and lost a close game, and we've
played some· good teams and won
some close ball games," says Milner .
and they ~n t~ a~ defcns!ve pi8y
quarterback Mike McMastcr (6.l, from ourSJd~ tnto~ bigoft"ensi':~ play I 8S) · ffi · -~d· · for them. Hes a pmc-breater. . in a veer o ense, m .. 1t1on co_ The Aztecs• defense is led by 6-l. tiaht en~ Dan Po!1°van (6-4, I 95), 24S-und tackle Tom Holler. ~ck.le Tun MoroV1ck (~ 250) and ~Y just have a lot of kids Wbo
linebackers Steve Hastert (6. l, 195) run around and cause a lot of havoc," and Gene Lemmen (6-2, 200). · Tho Lemmers bas three field goals and a contmues . mPSQn. • . -The Manna coach rcmams op-44-yard punung average m lhrec timistic about his own dub, tnowina
11!!'.fh,_ run the option well. .. says fullweDtJ!elcvelofcompetitionithas · _, c · 1 bttnplaymgforthepastthreewedcs. ~so~ oach Bil Workman. ""We're just going to try and ~ Tb~y re l~dcd on !'Cf~se. too., And better and more consimnt. we·re a
they re qwc~ I don t ~ ~~ey re u good football team. we just have to fast~ ~og, but who is: . put it together .. says Thompson. fnedrich compares Edison with •
Fontana in physical terms. but be DY!
the Chargers have an edge in several
clepartments. •
Fountain Valley BIO mnnln• back Daye SWlarart wW lead
the Barona into s&farctay'• confrontation .,am.t Semte.
aood athletes and have good speed.
but their fuJJback (Brian Booker,
5-10, 215) is the one we're concerned
with."
St. JobD Bosco (l-1) YI. F.dJsoe
(l-1) at Butiqtoll Beaell: -The
Braves of St. Jofm Bosco Coach Bill
Friedrich invade with · one of the
better reputations in the Southern
Section, based on a strong per-
formance a year ago with 17 returning
starters.
The big auns for the Brav~ include
.. Edison is smoother, bas more
finesse, ~ bencr and the of-
fensive line is ccnainly better than
Loq Bea.ck WU.. (l-1) al Bmt-
tqtea Beadl U·l-1}: -Two po,..cr
football teams are · sCbcduJed 10
collide at Huntington Beach and
{Pleaie .ee SUKSST~)
Ho hum:
Another
-Bue loss~
Orange Coast (0-2)
yet to score a TD:
Rustlers host Taft
By CURT SEEDEN I -
OftMO.., .... ...,, -
Orange Coast College's first-ever
Mission Conference football game
Saturday could be the Pirates'
toughest of the season, and the same
goes for Golden West College in its
PAC-9.Confercnce opener.
OCC, winless in its first two games,
takes on conference favorite Saddle-
back wbile Golden Wcstfacesaneven
greater task earlier in the day in the
form of Taft College, the No. 1-
ranked team in the Sout})land.
Both games are at Orange Coast
with the Golden West-Taft game set
for I: 30 and the OCC-Saddleback
game at 7:30.
)Jere's a look at what to expect:
Saddleback at Oruge Coast
Thing$ have not looked enco~-
ing for OCC Coach Dick Tucker s
Pirates. They have yet to score a
touchdown in two games in losing to
Golden ~est, 21-3 and Fullerton,
33-0. The Pirates have rf6t received the
versatility they expected from
freshman quarterback Ken Laszlo
nor the speed and talented running of
tailback Kevin Bradley who is still on
the mend followinf an ankle injury
which sidelined him for much of
1983.
Complicating matters is the
Pirates' history against the Gauchos.
Saddleback owns a 6-2 edge in the
series. The last time Coast defeated
Saddleback was in 1978 when the
Pirates scored a 24-22 victory.
Since that game, Saddleback bas
won five in a row, fourofwhicb were
shutouts. The Gauchos bavc
out.scored the Pirates 138-14 over
those five years.
Saddlcback brings a l-1 record into
the game after dropping its opener to
(Pleue eee BO BUii/JM)
Twinsdr9p
11/2 ganies
off the pace
CHICAGO (AP) -The Minne-
sota Twins, battlina for first place in
the American Leaauc West, ran into a
man with a mission uesday niaht.
That man was Cbi~o White Sox
pitcher Tom Seaver, who reached
some prcscason Joa ls in Chicago's 8-4
yictory at Comiskey Park and dealt
tbe Twins a setback in their title
chase.
The loss coupled with Kansa.s
City's 6-5 l l-inning Yictoty over the
Angels, dropped the Twins I 1h pmcs
bchmd the Royals. The Angels trail
by4'hpmcs.
"In pnna trainina, I said that if I
win IS pmc Jlnd pitch 23S to 240
innings,_ J would be happy,'' the 39·
)ear-old aver said.
He pitched 8¥> inninas, allowm1 10
hits and four run , to r4ipc his season
tt<'lOrd 10 IS· l 0 and f.J'''I\& him 288 career vie tone •. Hehn pitched 228'h.
innings this year.
Is Reggie worth another year to the Angels?
. .
Slugger says he'll be .pack next season, ~~=~h~~~~~~1acold
but brain trust has to make decision ---~~C::o~~~cl{bi~kh.f~ft;r
news bulletins. Bun
TUCIEI
Nobody came in on the noon
balloon from Saskatoon and asked
me, but ...
•Reggie Jackson says be intends to
play one more year after bis contract
· expiresandathissalary, the Angels'
cerebral trust would very likely nold
one m<>tt meeting.
•Jim Brown persists in cha11en81n&
Franco Harris and Walter Payton to
foot races but does not mention
blocking or pass<atchi'ng contests.
•Honolulu bas offered to give a
permanent home to the World Series
and Super Bowl and will probably get
to keep the Pro Bowl.
•Ye Olde Ram Elroy Hirsch says
the teams he played on could do well
offensively in today's NFL but Crazy
~saysdefenseisanotherstory.
•Tallcon the boulevaidpersists
that the Dodsers will trade Steve
Howe to Boston for third baseman
Wade Boggs.
I) •Former Raider wide receiver Bob
Chandler bas written a book wherein
Halos all but dead
as Quiz closes door
Dramatic duel
with Jackson
ends Angel hopes
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) -
There are two on and two out in the
top of the 12th and an entire season
ma_y be on the line.
The best relief pitcher in the
American l..eagUe checks runners at first and second. Standing tense at the
plate is a sluger whose late-season
heroics arc a part of the lore of
baseball.
I A Royal flaah?
At Wests..,.._
W L 1'<t. Ga
Kansu Cltv 13 1S ..525 -
Ml~• • -" 7' .51' ,.,., ~ 11 7t .497 41h
~v'a sar...
Kensu City 6, M91b S I 12 IMln!ill)
Chieffo I, MIMllOle 4 , Teclev'a GM*
.,..... CRomenk:k 11-12) at Kansu Cltv
181edt 11·11), 5;30 p.m .. KMPC rMllo (710),
Cllannel 5
Minnesota ($chrom) at Chlceoo <Dotsr 13-15), n
Renialinlll9GMMll ANGaU (5) -Away (5): Salt. 2'
Kansas Cltv; 27, 21. 2', 30 Texfa.
KAM~ CITY (4) -Home Ol: S.I. 26 Aneets; Away (3): Sept, 21, 2', 30 0.-i.nd.
MINNSSOTA (5) -Awev (5) S.Ot. 26 Cllialoo; 27, 21,,2', 30 o.v.nd. _ With a deep breath, the pitcher
winds up and delivers. The slugger
leans forward and begins to uncoil his powerful upper torso. Twins and 41/l in advance of the
And for one heart-stopping fraction Angels in the American League West.
of a second, everybody in Royals Baseball's only undecided division
Stadium thought Reggie Jackson had race may yet go to the final game of
tacked a three-run homer off Dan the regular season. But the Royals,
Quisenberry onto his legend. The ball who were 11 pmes under .500 and
jumped off the bat and rocketed into given up for dead at one point in
right field. But it would not rise, and August, are in a commandin& pos-
Oarryl Motley seemed almost to ition to write an astonishing success
lurch backward as he one-handed the story. .
smash near the warnin' track. .. It'~. sa~e to say that was a ~II
A few minutes later 10 the bottom game, wd Royals Manager Dick
of the 12th another heavily mu~lcd ~ Howser, emotionally drained after
young man mashed one of his own, , watching his team score a run in the
but with luckier results. Steve bottom of the ninth to tie it at 5-5.
Balboni's drive sailed over the h~ "Ut's face it -we let one get away
of left fielder Juan Beniquez to score and then we came back."
U.L Washinaton from second and • Jackson and Quisenberry will both
give first-plaoe Kansas City a 6-5 look back at bis I 2th-inning smash as
victory over the all-but-dead Angels. a pivotal Pl.a)'.
With their third straight conquest "I can't hit a ball any better than
of the Anaels and Minnesota's 8-4 that.," said JacksOn. "So I guess it's
loss to the Chicaao White Sox, the just not meant to be for us."
Royals stand l 1h pmes ahead of the (Pleue Me AftGBLS/Dt)
•Thecommissioqer'sofficchas
asked Stu Naban to refrain from
doing playoff and/or World Series
interviews on the base lines ... he tips
the diamond.
•A mismatch is Donald Sterlings
Oipperscompeting with Jerry Buss'
Lalcersinany aspectofthepmeof
basketball.
•A long-time Rams sufferer says
quarterback JefTKemp reminds him
someofBilly Wade . .-. Wbetherhe •
does, a couple of weeks ago. Kemp
wasn't beinacompiu_ed to anybody.
•With theCbicagoCubsin 1><>$1-season play for the first time since
they were born, the children of the
nauon wiJlget their fiiSfastonisbed
AJiiel catcher Bob Boone la poleed to pat
the tai on Jtan ... City b&Mnaaer Wlllle
look at day bascbaJ1 but they will
never believe it used to be played all
the time.
• 1'he~w.h.o does ootoc.llri.thJim
Hill on CBS f<>Qtball might be better
off singing soprano in somebody•s
choir.
•The next time Ron Brown cat&.
es a 52-yard touchdown pass for the
. Rams. he may become identified as a
wide receiver rather than an Olympic
sprinter and gold medal winner.
•~tions pOsed by Pro Foot.ball
Weekly .•• -What Possessed Sao
Dieao Coach Don Coryell to trade
Ouck Muncie?"
•With Monday Nii.ht football
(Pleue.eerocDJlflM)
It's down to.blisiness for Sea View League teams
By ROGER CARLSON
Of .. .,.., ........
With the non-leaaue portion of the
season in the past and all or -the
marbles in the nna. Sea View t..naue
football kicks off this week with the
four contcnden -favorite Saddle-
back and challenacrs Newport
Harbor. Coronadel Mar and Un1vcr-
ity each cntcrina as favont .
Here's a look at each of the four
pm es:
Newport Hamr (!·t·O vs. w..._
brNp (lei} •t lrvta · -There 1s a
biJ dispany in ph 1 I matthups 10
this on
The hu1tc 1lors (led b ~7. 268·
pound Mike Beech and 6-6, 232·
pound Tim Kite.hens up front)att up
apinst a Woodbri48c t('am which 1s
smaller than m0S1.
There was a · m1tar pattern in non-
Jeaaue play, but Harbor's20. 7 victory
over Irvine failed to tmprcss its
ooach. In fact. Sailors' Coach Mike
Giddinas was furious with his t~m·s
cffon.
Ncwpon cnten without fullba k
JoeJohnson(hC'soutfortwowcc at
le.st with a ptained knte) ..
'"\ Woodbridae Coach Gtne Noj 1
rcalius h's an uphill st~c.
•'If we put the ball an the ir
cfl'ccuvcty we'll ha-.c a ma .. he ys. "but we haven't been pa ·na
too ll latclv.
r
"Thcy'.rc tbe bigcst team l think
we'll play all year, and on defense
they're real ~"'C• they'll come
up and hit you, and of roune, the)
have a ~•rona ru.nni.na an ck and arc
wdl-coac:hed. G1dd1ft&S kno rs evcry-
thina there is to know about football."
The ilo ' camp 1 ~ ry_ Of
Woodbrid&c peed 1er Maik Phillipa
and of the fact that the Warriors are rta,>ina their fim~"tr View
,cqucpmc.
• "They do a lot of htfti v.hich
~ncau problems. WcknowWood·
bn <' h s ot to bC firtd up bcoau
they re romt from a tro r I u
and they thank they n __take it."
H rbor sst nt h Bucko Sha"·
' .
j
...
D2
SPO RTS BR EAK
--~-------~""
Einotioiial Houk
decides to retire
as Bosox nianager
From AP di patcbes
BOS1 ON -Declaring .. if time for a
some younger fellow to u1ke ow1," Ralph
Houk, the dean of major league b.1seb.lll
managers, retired Tuesday atler four >ears as field bOss
oftbeAmerican League club.
Houk, who turned 65 in August, broke down and
wept in te1Ung players and coaches in an emotional
clubhouse scene before ancndmg a news conference at
fertw~~ Park.
· rm ready to retir~." Houk
said whiJe in uniform for a night
~me with the Toronto Blue Jays.
'This has been a real tough
dec1sfon to make.
.. I've enJoyed my four years
here. This is a great organization
and a great town to manage in. I
think we have the best ballclub
since I've been here and think it
has a chance to go all the way next
year.
Houk "However, n's getting
tougher every year to travel and pack up and leave. It's
getUng harder on my family. I also think ifs time for
some younger fellow to take over and give the town the
type of club it deserves."
Houk said "there was a big temptation to give it
one more shot" and accept the Red Sox'sofferto return
in l 985. ~
However, he added, it was time "for my wife and I
to enjoy ourselves while we're still able to do it.''
Haywood Sullivan, the Red Sox's C<H>wner and
chief operating officer who hired Houk, said, .. I tried to
talk him out of it. but I respect him too much to put pressure on him."
Sullivan said it will be "very, very difficult to find
a replacement and we'll take our time."
"We'll look for someone who can win and who bas
the qualities Ralph has," Sullivan said.
Quote of the day
") L" Holta, on how thJngs deteriorated for him
at Arkansas before he took the footbaJI coaching
. Job-ct Minnesota;" At Arkansas, they made a stamp
to oom~morate you, then, after fast year, they had
to stop making It because people were spitting on
the wrong sf de.
Warrick dealt to Clippers
LANDOVER. Md. -The Washing-m ton Bullets on Tuesday traded guard Bryan
Warrick to the Los Angeles Clippers in
exchange for a 1985 third-round draft
choice.
Warrick. a second-round pick in 1982, averaged
4.0 points m 43 games during the 1982-83 season and
2.0points per contest this past season. He was waived in
.training camp last October and re-signed by the Bullets
on Nov. 17.
Blazers. Bowle come to terms
....
..
., "1nipbol•
Former football player Bub~ Smith
.eem• to be ento~ hlm.aelf during tap-ing of an uerclae rideo.
Milestone ho in er for Staub
Pinch-hitter Rusty Staub belted a two-a run homer to cap a four-run rally in the
bottom of the ninth inning Tuesday night
that lifted the New York Mets over
Philadelphia, 6-4. Staub's homer, his firs& of the season,
made him just the second player in major league history
to bit home runs as a teen-ager and as a 40-year-old. Ty
Cobb is the other player to accomplish the feat ...
Elsewhere in the NationaJ League Tuesday, Brad
Kommlnsk's eighth-inning line drive skipped past
Cincinnati center fielder Eddie Milner and rolled to the
wall for an inside-the-park home run, sparking Atlanta
past the Reds, 4-2, in a game called in the top of the
ninth inning because of rain ... Pinch-hitter Steve
Braun's two-run triple highlighted a four-run fifth
inning that carried St. Louis to a 6-4 triumph over
Montreal ... Jose DeLeon broke his nine-game losing
streak by pitching a four-hitter against a reserve-filled
Chicago lineup, as Pittsburgh downed the East Division .
champion Cubs, 7-1 ... Fru MallJ.na hit a two-run
homer during a three-run sixth inning that carried San
Francisco to a 4-3 victory over San Diego.
Big night for Indians' Tabler .,
-
II VOLLEYBALL
t -~ -~ . -
Ayearlater,Connernotbitter Artists, CdM
SAN DIECO--Denni Conner ull ~
huhishe d-even1f1bcNewYorkYach1 tl•ed f4Qf; fi·~st Club no longer has the rnen<'l's Cup.
And he ~ys he holds no bitterness a
year after bema the first U.S. skipper to lose iling's
mo~t prized trophy to Australia.
··1 Knew my head wouldn't really replace the
America's Cup trophy in the New York Yacht Club
(contrary to tbe wishei» of some of the members);'
Conner \\rote in the New York Times last Sunday.
''Nonetheless, I felt bad beina a major part oft he demise
of i.uch a great winning tradition which 0 many rcoplc
had worked so hard to maintain over the )'car:
Three share PCA;A honors·
In an esJ)CC'ially productive week for ti]
the Pacific Coast Athletic Association, •II•. three football players have been chosen to
share the PCAA Offensive Player of the
Week award. "
Quarterb,.ck Damon Allen of Cal State Fullerton
threw for a career-high 264 yards in the Titans' 34-22
win at Colorado State to earn a portion of the award.
Fullerton is unbeaten in four ouhngs this year. • 0
•
Also shanng the honor were q_uarterback Bob
Frasco of San Jose State and running back James
Mackey of Pacific..
Frasco had his &ingle-"3me personal bell passing
totals (2'5-of-43, 333 yards) m the Spartans' 28-27 lo s to
· Stanford. Mackey was a key figure in Pacific's come-
f rom-behmd 38-28 victory over Northern Arizona.
running for 161 yards on 28 cames.
Meanwhile, Cal State Fullerton free safety Mark
Pembrook, who had two pass interceptions, three pass
ddlections, forced two fumbles and made nine tackles,
was selected the PCAA Defensive Player of the Week.
Cubs' lawsuit is thrown out
CHICAGO - A circuit judge Tues-ii day threw out a lawsuit challengmg
Baseball Commissioner Bowie Kuhn'6
authority to change the World Series
schedule and steal a potential home date from the
National ~gue East champion Chicago Cubs.
Ruling one day after the city erupted in celebration
of the Cubs' clinching their first postscason trip in 39
years, Cook County Judge Anthony Scotillo said MaJOr
League Baseball's Basic Agreement grants the com-
missioner "unbridled discretion" in altering schedules.
The Basic Agreement, which each club signs.
governs business dealings between the clubs.
In a light-hearted moment before the ruling.
Scotillo questioned auomey Pat Dwyer, who rep..
resented Cub fan and plaintiff Martin Hennigan.
"I assume the World Series will only go four games
(wftb the Cubs sweepin$ all four). Are you sugg.esung
otherwise?" the judge said. .
Imlach, Esposito inducted
Jach who coached the Toronto Maple , TORONTO -George "Punch" Im-Ei.1
Leafs to four Stanley Cup triumphs, and
Laguna wtils &)lowdown
rom Newport Harbor
1 wo te ins in Sea View Le: uc girls ".olleyball.rc.main
t1ed for the top spot following 1 ucsday night s.acU\'lt)'.
In a showdown between two of the leaaue s strange t
teams. Uag\_lna ~a~h won a 15·9, 5-IS, 15·1, lS·U
deci ion over visittn.8 Newport Harbor. handing the ·
Sailors their fint Sea View setback of the season.
Corona del Mar shar the lead with La&t!n.a at 3-0
after the Sea Kings sc-0red a l 5-~. l S: I, I S-0 deciSton over
Costa Me~. . ln the Artists' victory. the fourth and final game was
the tightest as the two teams were even at 13 before Laguna
won the last two points to close out the match.
"Both teams arc real strong,'' n~ted 1-?auna .Beach
Coach 8111 Ashen ... We were ycrt iJ?consistent in the
second game. When Newport as scrv111g wen. they are
tough and they were serving well in that game." .
The Artists recovered from the second.ga!1'c loss to
Ulke control behind the play of setter B!~k. Btnley, who
also served a fine match,. and the hitting of Annette
Juptner. . l .... * "'Annette did a good job of putting the bal away auu
keeping Newport off-balance," said Ashen. . For the Sailors setters Lara Asper and Sarah Alhson
played well as d1d middle blocker Annie McRay.
Corona del Mar, which will m~t Laguna a~d
Newport next-week, bad an easy time with Costa Mesa tn
moving to 4-1 overall. . Sophomore Jill Herring1on had a fine serving and
back-row match, while junior Carolyn Blake also played
, well for the Sea Kings. . f n the South Coast League, Irvine dumped Cap1strano Vall~y. 15-6, 15-7, 15-10, keeping the Vaqueros 1:tnbeate~
at 3-0. Senior bitter Shawn Shafer and freshman hitter Cari
Delson were instrumental in the victory. • Non-league action found Marina sweeping aside
BellfloY<er, t 5-3. I 5-S, 1 S-0, and Edison tumina back La
Quinta, 15-9. 15-4, 15-7. Seniors Kim Rochow, a setter, and Margo Kester. an
outside hitter, keyed the Vikings win. for Edi~n, ju~ior
middle blocker Dionne Powers. senior outside hitter
. Laura Engdall and junior middle blocker Pam Lance were
the standouts. In a community college match. Orange Coast beat
Grossmont, l 5-8, 16-14, I S-l3 for the.Pira~s· second win
without a loss. Suzette Gervais had eight kills and seven
stuffed blocks for OCC.
UC Irvine was bea ten by Pepperdine, 15-13, 13-15,
15-1 15-12 and Southern Cahfomia College lost to Biola,
12-1 S, 15-l, l 5-2, 15-8 in college action.
Astros clobber
Dodgers, 12-6
Phil Esposito, who set numerous scoring LOS ANGELES(AP)-The Houston Astros h.aveo't
Pat Tabler drove in six runs with a a records with the Boston Bruins and New York Rangers, been known for their hitting prowess but Tuesday nijht
grand slam and a double as Cleveland were among five new members inducted Tuesday into they pounded out 15 hits against six Los Angeles pitcheN
snapped a stx-game losing streak, beating the Natiorull Hockey League's Hall of Fame. in a 12-6 rout of the Dodgers.
Seattle, 13-5, Tuesday night. Tabler, who Also honored were Jacques Lemaire, now head Houston's Pb.ti Gamer led the way with four hits and
also singled twi ce. keyed a 17-hit attack to back Neal coach of Montreal and a fonner All-Star center with the Kevin Bass added three doubles. Jose Cruz bit his 11th
Heaton, 11-15. who pitched the first 61/1 innings ... In Canadiens;goaltender Bernie Parent, an integral part of homer in a five-run second inning and Alan Ashby bit his
PORTLAND -The Portland Trail m other American League action Tuesday, Curt Yoaog Philadelphia Flyers' two Stanley Cups in 1974 and second in the fourth.
Blazers have reached a contract agreement held the Rangers to five hits over seven mnmgs, and l 975; and Jake Milford. a former player who has served Even so, the Astros bad to survive a six-run Dodger
with . 7-1 Sam Bowie of Kentucky .. the Oakland backed him with seven runs in the first two a long tenure as an executive with the Vancouver second inning.
NationaJ BasketbaU Association team an-innings as the A's held on to beat Texas, 7-5 ... Howard Canucks. Joe Niek.ro, 16-11, survived the Dodgers' biggest
nounccd Tuesday. Johnson hit a grand slam in the first inning, and right-inning ln two months to pitch into the ninth inning ~fore
"The contract is still to be drafted," Blazer hander Randy O'Neal combined with four relievers on reliever Bill Dawley gotthe finaltwo outs on a double play.
spokesman John White said. "ft should be prep±1red a six-hiner as Detroit dumped Milwaukee, 9-1 ... Dave "l thought the Dodgers would be bard-pressed to
and signed in time for Bowie to be at the first offiCial Winfield scored twice after launching New York rallies, score at all," said Ashby, the catcher. "Joe really pitched
practice Saturday" once on a sacrifice fly by bis adversary for the AL TELEY18tON ·some game."
Terms of the six-year contract weren't revealed. batting title, Don Mattingly, and the Yankees defeated 5:30 p.m. -BAH8ALL: Angets at Kant\U Pat Zachry, S-6, who failed to retire a batter in the
but White released a statement saying it is "the third-Baltimore, 6-S ... Mike Euler drove in five runs, and City, Channel 5. third inning. took the loss. But rookie Orel HeNhiser, the
largest ever agreed to by a rookie 10 the NBA." Jim Rice had four of Boston's I 8 hits as the Red Sox RADtO Dodgers .. starter, was equally as rocky.
Bowie was the second player taken in this year's rode a six-run fifth inning to an 14-6 victory over 6:30 p.m. -8A8UALL: Ang.ft at Kansas -Hershiser, who started the night as tbe National
NBA draft of college players. He was represented by Toronto. The Red Sox spotted the Blue Jays a 3-0 lead, . Qty, KMPC (710), League's leader in earned run average, with a 2.46 mark.
Larry Fleisher m the negotiations with the Blazers' then stormed back to hand l 5-game winner Dave Stieb 7:30 p.m. -8AtEIALL: Houston at Dodgera, was knocked out in the second inning when the Astros
representative, Alan Rothenberg, who also serves as his eighth defeat of the season. KABC (790~ scored five runs. His ERA shot to 2.69, dropping him to ~~g~en~e~raJ~m~a~n~a~ge~r~o~f~th~e~Lo~s~An~~~e~le~s~C~li~p~pe~T$~.~~~~~~~~~~~····~·lli~~~~~~~····•••••••••••••-founh in tqeleague. The new leader is teammate Alejandro !! Pena, at 2.4'8.
11
TENNI S
Vikes still unbeaten after easy victory
Lagun--a--=B_e_a_c...,,h-. """"'C"""o_r_o_n_a_d=-e......,1:.-M=-=-a-r-c~l:.-a-i-=-m---~~kig~n~~t~ru5t'1n~e~~~n~~~
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shortened 10-2 decision at Costa
Mesa to even the Sea Kings' Sea View
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'8 mo cloMd end lease• 10 680417 •Monthly l-pay,_,. $227.24
ll.tvndoble \eC11rify depolll S2SO, EstimoM<I hcente '" S206, TOIOI amowit due ot illupt'°" of leoM,
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triumphs in Sea View League ma c ups In the Sea View League, Laguna
Beach won its second match without
In winning, CdM rebounded from
a 10-8 league opening loss to Wood-
bridge.
The Manna High girls tennis team
kept its record unblemished at. 6-0
Tuesday with a convincing 17-1
victory over Long Beach Wilson on
the Marina courts.
With a lineup dominated by under-
classmen, the Vikings swept through
singles and lost their only point in No.
3 doubles. Only two seniors were in
Area surfers
advance
in tourney
OCEANSIDE -The final Cali-
fornia event of the international
professional surfing tour, the Stub-
bies Pro lntemationaJ tournament,
got under way Tuesday at Oceanside
Harbor Beach's North Jetty with a
number of area surfeN advancing
from the opening round of four-man
heats.,...,.--
Winning in their heats were Bud
Llamas and Brad Gerlach of Hunt-
ington Beach. John Gothard of New-
port Beach and Mike Parson$ of
Laguna Beach. Fini~hmg 5CCond. and also earning
a berth in today's sccond round were
Randy Weeden, SCott Waring and
Dean Quinn (Hunti~aton Beach),
and Jeff Parker and Grq Giddings
(Newport Beach). Giddings, 18, was
one oft he $urpn~ an the first day of
urfing.
The event started with 176 com-
petitors which will be pardi down to
the top 28 for the main event on
Friday.
The format calls for three days of
trials urfing. and the 28 who survive
the tiraJs wHI face 20 seeded urters in
the thtte-day battle 10 determine who
wios the $4,000 top prilc and f ,000
ssoc•ation of uffina Profl ionats
( SP) point
mona the top namC$ who w•ll be com~ung,s \u tralian Tom Carroll,
ahc reigrHn& world chamruon and top..
!>L.'Cded in the 1ubh1 event •
the Marina lineup Tuesday. · a loss, cruisjng past Newport Harbor,
11-7. Freshman Danielle Scott lost one
game in two sets from the No. I
singles slot. Meanwhile, tbe
sophomore teams of Amy Dalton and
Nicole Capretz and Christina Gwin
and Kristen Brownell won two sets
apiece handily in doubles.
In doubles, Carrie Harris and Kelly
Stanfield yielded just one point m
three sets, while Tiffany Fenton and
Eileen Robi:nson won each set at
love.
Kelly Conkey won two games at
Jove as the only Artist to post a sweep.
Keli Willette, in singles, and all three
doubles teams for Laguna won two of
three sets. Singles players Jennifer Liang,
Janet Po and Heather Church also
eased past the Brui~.s· foes as the
Laguna hosts University Thurs-
day.
Corona del Mar captured a rain-
The Sea Kings host Saddlebaek
Thursday in their oext match.
WATER POLO
Rustlers rally t~ nip Santa Ana
Orange Coast also wins
in South Coast opener
It wasaproductivedayforareacommunitycollegesas
the South Coast Conference water polo schedule opened.
Defending conference champ Golden West rallied to
tnm Santa Ana, 6-4; Orange Coast toppled Cenitos. l 2· 7;
and Saddleback knocked off Cypress, 1).9.
In hiah school action, Marina turned aside Scrvite,
14-9; and Mater Dci won a shootout from Savanna, l ~I 2.
accounted for the rest of the OCC scoring.
In goal, Tom Kennedy was credited with 11 saves.
Saddleback's balanced attack was paced by Darrell
Denny's three goals as eight d1ffer~nt Gauchos dented the
scoring column. Goalie Jon Gaspom limited the host
Charaers to just three goals in the first half.
Marina High, ranked ninth in the latest ClF poll,
moved to 10-2 overall with its win over Servitc in the
Friars pool.
The Vikinp maintained a thrce-gool lcad for much of
the second halfbefore finally pullingawar. at the end. Steve
Spanovich netted four aoals, Larry Szpila had th.tee and
Tom Warde scored two, giving Warde S.5 in 12 games.
Mater l)ej outlasted Savanna as the Monarchs poured
in seven goals in the fourth quaner. Brinn Breen had six
&oats and Zoli Berti five Mater Dci, now 3-1 overall.
Golden West, now S-0 overall. overcame a 3-1 deficit
to cam it victory over the visiting Dons. With Jeff Gruber
and Mike Halphide on the sidelines with foul trouble. tbc
RustleNcame back to tie at 3.3 when Marina High prodoct
Jim Zaka$ky threw in a back-hander and Jason Crow -------------------tallied one of his thrtc goals lite in the half.
Santa Ana managed to go back in front with a aoal in
the final two seconds of the first half, but the Rustlef'I
controlled the second hal(, completely shutting down the
Dons offense.
Gruber deadlocked the aame a~n at 4-:4 with a aoal
with 33 ~onds rcmamina in the third quaner. l\nd Crow
scored tw1oe in the final three minutes of the fourth period
to give Golden West the game. Normally not a starter.
Crowcnjoyedhisfin tpmewtththeRu tlersthisscason.
Goaltender Mike Stanbridac ma<.1 some key saves
throughout, stopping ~ven of his 11 stiots in the second
hi.If. At Cemto.,., Orange oast moved to 7-3 overall ~ith
its confettnce-opcnmg win over the Falcon .
After Cetri!O! got within two at 7-5 at th~ !tart of the
fourth quarter. OCC pulled away by notchinathc next four
ao.t.ls.. Rob M1ranut con n ted on 7-of-10 hounempt for
th P1rarcs, including four in the liif'I& half. John
kowroo k1 (lhrcc aoots) and Mar lughcs (two
Ozark doesn't want job
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Interim manqcr Danny
Onrlc told the San Franca~o Giants he isn't inttrtalcd in
dircctina the club next year, and the team announced
Tuesday ho will be hired back as a spctial u ijnmcnts
scout and consultant.
• Battin& instructor Tom McCraw and third base ooach
Jim Davenport have bCCn asked to return for 1985 ~
Gcncnl Manager Tom Haller and owner Bob Lurie.
Bullpen coach John Van Omum has bCtn offered a
out1n1 position With the club and p1tchin1 coach Henn
Starttttc and first base coach OOn Buford have btcn told
the new manager will have the option of whether lo keep
them.
Lurie said the 01ant1 ho~ to name a new man
after the World nc Ozark · took over the dub a er
hank Robinson was fired A\I 4.
"I'd hkc to 5pcnd more ume ith m)' film1ty," ad
Ozark.
•
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STOt.eN 8Ases 1t11Mt, Monlrttl, n,
Satnutt, PtllltdtiPflia, 71; Wl9oltla. Sell
Di.to, 6', VMavoa, PtllltelelOllla, 41; lttdul, ClnclMatl, 47, • •
PITCHING OS dOc:l~I. ~dlftt. Chi· caeo, 16·1, 2.691 SOto, Clncl1111111, ~·7, i 41, ~, ~ 12·•· 2Ae, 1t1w1tv, .-Ma· 41e1Pnt1, lo-S, l.43, Goocltn. Ntw York, 11-t. 2.60.
STltlKEOUTS: o~. Nt'# York. 276. v~, ~ 221. Rnn, Heutlon, 197; Soto, Cincinnati, 170; Carlton, Ptllladll·
"'''· 163. -SAVES: Suller, St. Louis, 44; LtSmlll'I,
Clllcaoo, 33; orosco, Ntw York, 31; HOiiand. PtlntctelOllll, It; Go111oe, s.11 Oleoo, 2S.
Houk'• record
Man•Oilt'i.l record of lt•IPll HOUk, WllO
llVIOUnC9d hi• rttirttnent Tutadlv lrom tllt
Bolton Rad Sox:
W L Now Ven (A), lffl lot !3
Hew Ven (A), 1"2 H 6' N.w York IA), 1"3 llM S1
Now York (A), '"' .. 73 N-Yori! (Al, 1H7 n 90
N-York (A), IHI 13 7' Nw York (A), 1"9 IO ti
New York CAI. 1'70 t3 ff Ntw Yori! (A), 1'71 12 IO
Now vn CAI, 1m n " Nw York (A), 1'7.J IO 12
Ootrolt, 1'7• n to
Ootrolt, 1'75 S1 102
Delfoll, 1'7' 74 f7
0otro11, 1m 74 •
Ootroll, lm N 76
loltOl'I, 1911 Sf .,
8oston, 19'3 " 73 Boston, 1913 71 .. Boston. ,..... a n
Tote! 1'1' 152t
•·11w'OUlll Mmtt of S.01, 24
.-ct. .... .6n 1 m 1
.... 1
.475 IO ..... ' 512 s .,., s
.S74 2 ,.,. 4
.510 4
.'94 4
..... 6
.JSI 6 460 5
457 4 .sn 5 .S46 5
.j.ff 3
... 1 ' .m n .51'
N .. L
NATIONAi. CONf'altlNCK
West
S.11 F rancltco
Atlanta
W I. T ftet. ,., ,.A
4 0 0 100011' 17
2 2 o JOO 122 n ...,,..
Newe>nnrn
2 2 0 .500 71 7S
2 2 0 .5(11 " 103 etnwal
ChlcallO
Mlnllelota
Oolroll
GreonhY T.,.,_ lat
J I 0 750 1' St
2 2 0 SOOM 10t
1 a 1 250 " '°' IJ0.2504480
I 3 0 .250 '2 IS ... ,
Da a 3 I 0 .750 70 .. NY Gltmf l I 0 750 17 7t
SI. Louts 2 2 O JOO 11t fl Waillln9ton 2 2 0 500 10. H
Pl'ln.dlllflla 1 :s o '"° n n
A.MalllCAJt COHl'altaNCI
W"1 • 0 0 1.000 107 71
3 1 0 .750 6S 51
3 1 0 .750 125 u
2 2 0 .soo 120 '1
220 .500'4'2
Pltllburvll
CltW&and
ClllClnnall
Houston
Cantnl 2 2 0
1 3 0
0 ' 0 0 • 0 ••st
.soo " • .250 SI t7
.000 " U4 .000 Sf 132
4 0 0 1.000 121 41
3 1 0 .750 111 " 220.5007'H
1 3 0 .250 " 122 0 4 0 .000 '1 107
S.....Y'• Oat'MI
NV Glanl1 et llarN
....... al Oonvtr (Channel 4 at I 11.m.)
Buffalo at lndllnlW11 Cltwltnd at K1n111 City
Dain 11 ChlcMO
Miami at SI. Lou•a
Htw Elll'llld at NV Jet\
S..lflt at MiMllOll
Atlanta et San Franclaco
Detroit al San Oleoo
Groen lay II Ttrl'IN hY
N-onten1 al ~ton PtllllldtlPllla at WllNneton
MeNaY'I G4Mnt
ClnclMatl at Pitt~ (Channel 1 1t 61
Odds
N'L X•flllN 3 over NV Glanl•
ll•ldtn • over xOonver
xNY Jet\ 1\'J over Ntw Entland
xKtnMI City 5 OYff Clt'l'tland
Otlll1 2\'J ovtr xClllcaOO
Soettlt 2 o"ar xMlnntlot•
Miami 4 OYtr di. Loulf
xlndlanaoolll 2\'J Ovtt luffelo New on.ens 6 over xHoulton
dan Frenclteo 5\.41 ovor Atlanta
xTemoe llY 2 over Groen hY xWaahlneton t~ ovw Ptlll~•
11s.n OlttO S ovtr Ottrolt xPlll~ S\'J O\lef Cincinnati (Mon·
MY) COLLIOI
~ 24 ovw XSYrte\IM
"' • T .. u-!\'a ovtr x~ Stalt
Otllo Stalt 27 Ovtt xMlnntlota
1tW1"""9ton vs. Mleml, Olllo, no odd' ~ 27 ovtr Kl"IMS Slalt
xFtorlclt Sltlt 11 o"" TtmPlt
Olllalloma State 5~ ovtr xTulM
xSMU 1:a ovtr TCU
GoorOll 4\'l o"w xSOU1h CaroMnl
Otmlon 7 OYW JrGoorgla Tedi
Mldlloan 20.,.. ovor •lndll111
LSU 1 ...,... xUSC
xMlaml, Fie 31 -ltlco
UCLA 1l 1'4r xCOlorec»
Notre Damt 3~ over ~ xAuN'n 10 OYW TtnntUN
x-dtllotel llOl'nt IMm.
COLLI GI
l'CAA u..e W LT
UN Lal v ... 1 2 0 0
Frtsno SI 1 0 0
S.11 Jo" St. 1 l 0 cs ,utttrlOl'I 0 0 0
Pacific; 0 0 O
Ulall St. 0 O 0
1.ont lffdl SI. 0 1 0 Ntw ~xlciO SI, 0 2 0
S.Mdl'I'•...,..
Ovtt9I
WLT J 0 0
' 0 0 I J 0
' 0 0 2 1 0 0 2 0 0 , •
0 4 0
•utell SI. el Cal Stato Fullerton
•New Mo!XCIO $1 •• , FtlMIO St, (n) l.MI hKtl St •t Arlrona, <nl
San JoM SI. al Ca tomlt
Ntve4e la• Vtf" at Haw• (n) Padtic 11 Or.on
•-otnofti conltl'tll<t """
llUSH .... Plt,.r Tel YA TO ~•v. P9clflC " 30S :I Ltwft, UHL V 45 2IO i ...,..., UHLV 12 2 .. I
lt*"ton San JOH • "' I ......,. cs FUlllrtOft a m 4
,ASSING
.....
l011 tiJ 11.l
4llJ .,,
... ._. All.•C•I TO fl'cl. Y&
Q;ftl\lntl'llm, UNLV n~ .. r 6lf
A-. a F~ ·JM 6 m SWMMY, Fr9tN H••SN > l60 ltmer. "9Ctnc 6NM i
Gaynor, LI.. t 115•71.. 1 Hf
•1c;atwt0 :n1 .L.aSt Sm! Mft .:IOU
Md>onald, Sin C'l"1 tiftW MUIC.e W11b. Frttno
• 21
IO
16 u
1J
Y&TD
-I ill ' "' ' 174 I l
-
CIF football ratings
Big Fi e Conf rene
..... kMll LMtut ll~ f'tl.. t,,....Yllft luMtt :a-o IU
• LOnl -..ch PvlY Moor• t-(1 I , .... Amal AllHM l-0 " 4. St .1cm IOKO Del R.tY M n ...... ..... M u
6. loNUt AllHM 2•1 II 1. ltlftn!llt Pot\' Cltrut 8"' M 41
L FCN\tane Cltrl)s Id M 45
'· L.ovolt 0-lltY M " ~O. EIMMflwer Citrus 8al1 3-0 II
Central Conferenc
1 La Mlttde ~ ,.. ,. "' 21 J Vlltndt oranoe J-0 n I luMv FrMWtY 4•0 61
.... -•• ell lotV19w , .. ... s. Wntwn or111M H " ................. IOIVln J+I • Ult) La Quinta GarcMnG~v• M 2t I lonor1 Fr!llWWtY '2· l ,,
t U Habra ,. Fr....,..ev 2·1 15 10. ,ulltl1on FrttwlY J-0 lJ
Southern Conference
\ l!I Modtne Ctftfurv , .. " lttl Peclflca, 2M4 2 Lvnwood Sen GaClt._ Val4Y H u leaCR .» ... 1. Wilson (HW) SO..rt, , .. IO ... , Sdu'r, f1·7 4 ,OOltllll C4fttury M '1. a.it Mentta, ""7 'lhP9flfl%1 ' <EIN>lt'e M .. L.nt to La QIAnla, '%•1 6 MQllol\ Vle)O SOultl Coast 2·1 4l LOii 10 Fin Va I 2'• lf 7 Plclf\Q llT'IPf(t 2·1 ... L.os! to El Mocltna, 21•'7 • Downey San Glllt at Va v 2·1 .,. "'' Jor9f!. :n.f f LOI Al!ot Si«rt 2;1 ,,
'"' Dot\ LUQo, '"° 10 Tustin CtnlUtV 3·0 10 ... , lnrlM, ,,.7
Coastal Conf ere nee
1 Senta Mof!ICa 8ay 2-0 " ... , ,. Ydft 21·7
t Paaedlne Pacific 3-t fl 8ttt Damion, 21·0 J Muir Pacific l•O 71 loaJ Motnl""10t, 21•0
4. Vt11tur1 Cheft1\81 2·0 71 ._,Roni, 42-6
5. Cemarlllo Marmonta M 56 IHI Hueneme, 16·7 6. CtllMOI lalanclt MarrrlOfllt 2·0-1 50 ... , Olin.rd, 14·7
7. ThouMnd Oalls Martn0!\11 2·1 21 LOii lo ClllYOll (S), 1,.1, a. Hart Footlllll M 26 8MI Alfmlnv, 21-16 t, Oxnard ChlMtl 1-2 22 L.o•I to Cllannot ISllllCll, 14'7
10. S.1111 lartlara Cl\atlnOI 2·1 u ... , lolltrtv Hlllt, 6•3
Desert-Mountain Conference
I. ltlm of World
2 .. A90IKI
5'Wllst :M 11J lttt Arrovo Grall&I, 14·\J
Frontlw H 111 8ttt Htnttd, 21-0 a CtrPWtria
4 Senta Otra
5 Miraltltt
Trl•VtlleY .,.. M e.t S.n.ta PMlll, 7·l
FrOllltw 3-0 IO ... , ltlo Mete, l7·l4
P1onew 2·1 SJ ... , ~ Torrlf!Ce, 21-15
6 SI. lollavtnturt 1. l#Wf,...,
Trl•VtlleY 2·1 4S a..1 Nordholf,.is-f ,..,,, Fe 2+1 41 Tied St. Mo!llca. U-13
• CNmlnadt t. Harvard
S.1111 Ft 1-2 37 ._, Meonlortl. 14·12
P*-M 21 lcKI IO AJIOUtt, 21-0 10 Pat., NOllW S.llfa Fa J-0 21 ... , OtMrt~ 21·1'
Eastem Conference
1. Claremont
2. T """* City J Ar1INton
4 8ol CO.rdtna s. Norco
.. Sen Marino
7. ltamona I Pomona t LA Canada
10 Glendora
~
Rio Hondo
IYV
wtlt1"lotll
IVY
RJo Hondo
IVY laMllnt
ltlo Hondo
BaMl!nt
H
2-0
3-0
2·1
2-1
2-0
2·1
2·1
2·1
M
" " '° '1
'2 u
42
30
14
'
... , AITl9dot Va , 39-o
lttt Arcadi., 2CH3 ... IE~,42·14 ... , ltC!NmMd, ...
Loat lo EIMnhow«', 10-6
ltttGltNMll..,._7
a..1 Vidot ValleY, 2M•
-loat Slftla Fa, 41·0
L.ofl to SI. F ranc1•, 36-13
... t Gallr, 24-0
Inland Conf ere nee
1. Whittler Chrl•tlan 2 van..,, c11r1111an
J. San Jldnto
Olvmolc 3·0 to I ... , ~clalr Preo. l0-7
S.t Norwtlk, 12·0
... tCSOlt,44-6 ... , Tront, ,._,
Olvmolc w 71
Ot Ana J-0 '1
4, lllhoP u nloll OtMrt-lnyo <LI J·O SI I.ml lo liahoc>, f-6
Lost to Pater Noster, 21·14
L.oft to Waaco, 20-7
8ttl Santa Fa Cllriallan, 61-3
8•1 Paractett. 1'·7 ... , SDvtr Vallev, t0-14
S. Tront Dt11rH11vo ISi 2· 1 4t ,, OoMrt OtstrHnvo tLI 2·1 J3
7. T tlladllOI OtMfHllYO (Ll 2·1 2•
I Vllltllt Chrlllllil
t. loton
AIOlll 3-t 20
o-t·lnvo IS> 2· l 1'
10. WHftfn OYiatlal\ AIOlll 3~ 14
Northwestern Conference
1, canvon (S) Golden 3-0 16 .... Thoullncl 0. •• lt-l•
2. Nor111 Torr111ee > L01'1'¥1DC
Ocoan 3... 7S ... , W•t T«rrt!U, 11-0
HorllWrn 3-0 u lttt Safi Mwcoa. 17·7
oc.t11 J-t ss loat M.lra coara. 4'·11 4 CUIYtr Cltv s. Sent• Mena Norttltrn J-t 49 • • ... , Peso ltoblts. 34-6
6. Atucadlro Lot Pa«aa t·1 36 ... , Ri9Nttl. 2'·lJ
7. Caltrllo LOI Pa«ea 3·0 32 ... , DOI Putllloa, lH
• Quaf11 Hll Golden 2'-1 16 Losl lo Simi Va , 24•20
0'1) AJ\ltlOClt VIV
10 S.119\n
GOldln 2-1 1' Iott a.tatow, *9 GOIOtft 3-0 12 ... , ~ (8). \2·6
Southeastern Conference
I, llldwln Plflt
2. Dlamoncf ht J.k11 Dimas
~ H H ... , SCNlll Hilb, 11·7
Hac:folldt J·O H lttt Olarttr 0. 45-0
Mo!!Mew 2-0 7' ... r lonita, .S-0
4 A#lt Vtlln
S.KIPiltl
San A!ldral 2-t n 8oat S.n ~. 3S·M
Mission Vertev 2-0 56 Iott Aluta. 17•7
6. Ouarlt MIHlon Va..., 3-0 S5 Itel Cr9Mll, 2'3·21
7. Sin ltt'nardlno
I AmtYo
Sell Andrtaf 3-0 3' lttt Yuc:elpa, 22•13
Mission v...., 3-0 31 S.t wtllnttr, 27·22
f CllelClco Dnarl·VtlltYS 3•0 17 8oat Holtvlllt, 10-0
10 ltoyal Oall Montvltw 2·1 ' ... , Nortllvi.w, 17·0
Eight-Man (Large)
1. Ftlltl la11t11t
2. TamoletCN\ l. El PISO cit Rotlltl
4. Rio HONSo Prto
S IUCkltv
Otlllhlc 3·0 Trl•CoulllY 2· I
Trl..Countv H Prto M
Otlolllc M
loll Ttmllltton, 41·3'
L.o.t to Faith 8totl1t, 41·M
1•1 Fllntrldllt Prto, U.14
Itel Coaal Union. 4-0
l.061 to Bio Pint, 37·27
Eight-Man (Small)
1 lloomllleton Chr.
2. •• Pint
Chrtsllan ~ ... , Chr. Sdlool Delon, S2·0
HI-Lo ~-0 ... , luckltv, 37·'11
3 Hftperla CM1ti.n
' cat LUflltrlll
Christian 3-0 Iott lnilJld Cllrlstian, 56-0
ACldtmV 3.. ..., Mt-LU!lleran. '2·1'
S. Llnfltlcl ChrWlan CJwilllatl 2· I ... , Htrllave, U·lO
cemnwnnv c.-...
SOU'TltL.AMD '°°Tl.ALL fl'OLL
..... SCMll .....,., "" I. Tait 2-H 111
2. Fultrtoll 2-H 110 1 Et Camino 2-H fl
4 lalltnllold t+O 74
5. LA Pltrgi 2-0-0 ..
6. Carrttoa 1 ·0-0 .,.
7. SOl.ltllWHltrn 2-0-0 S2 t. Lone loacll City 2-0-0 25 t ltlvtflldt Q.o-t 1'
10: , ••••• di l·t-1 16 .,
otlltf rtcit!Vlno votes: Groumont (2-0-0), 11; Palomar <2·•0>. 7; Mt. San
Antonio (1+0), 6; Wttl LA (1-1-G), S: o..... West (1·1-0), 41 San ltrnarellno
(2-0-0), 3; Otloft 12~). 2; Sent• Monica
(1-1-01. 1
Hitt\ IChMI ttatfltla
UST w••K'S LaAoa.flS
• fluaNnl 1 Mllrll Orac>tr <L.aouna IMdl), 1'·1»;
2. Oavt SwlNrt (Fountain Valltvl. 12· 132;
3. ClllP ltlatl (Marina), 2)-12'. .......
1. S11ant Folrf (Ntwoort Harbor),
21·•M, m varcll. 2 TOa, 2. Todd
MatlnOvlcll (Maltr Doll. lt-2"1. 1CM
Vttdl, t TOa: 3. Tad ~ (W•t·
mlnttw), 12-24-0, 1t7 verdl, I TO; 4. Milt It (Eara!'idl), 12-23..0, 1'2 vara, 3
TOI; 5 Jiit Nt11011 (Hunlk!fton ltectt),
13·2'·2, flt' vardl. 3 TOI; .. JoM Cook CSldclleltedl), 10-14..0, 1n vwa, o TOI, 1. 1o1tbV Hatflold !Corona dtl MM), t•IS-1,
117 nrda, 0 TOI, • Artttv INM!r (Un!wr·
lllY), f· 17· 1, 115 var•. 3 TOI, t Eric ZeN
(F'CMll'llaln Vtllrt), I• 1S-t, 106 Yll'Ch. I TO
lleaMlll 1. Ho TNOllO (~POrl Htr1:10rl, t-121,
1 Mlkt HtnlMn UrvlN>. 6· 72; 3 Milla
McOl!ncNv toe.an view>, •·41: '-Toen
CN (Mllltr Otll. 6·'5; S J«f GatalY (Maltr Otl), 6·"3, 6. Joey J..,_ (New110tt
Har'OO(), .. M; 7. A4tm WaltlufOtt (£at111·
clel. S-'1: I Cari H.rrv tf:Ollntalit ValtV), •·n; t ltoltttt 01w (H'-"tlNton a.di),
4-111 10. lrla11 Devlaon (COtOl\I dtl Marl. 4·61; 11. Ctlrla 0."16 tlecldlll:llO), 4 ... ; 12 ~,_ ftvorllt (UnlvtttllY), 4·$6J 13. Eric
OOtn IEttanclal, 4.,5, 14. Chlo ltl&h
(Marina). 4•41: 15 SOell Turner <Corone dtl
Mat) arid sco11 Elliott IHu!ltlnllton '-<ft), 4 ... 17. 01"'4 Hldl• ( Wet111"1Wftr). 4· 1'.
kolfW 1 Irle Dorf\ (Ea~), II: I Mark
FtWlto (UnlvonflY), Gaann CtmlOll
(...,.I.eel), t4e fruone (.....,I
Haftlorl, TOCN Me~ (Melet OtU, l'2;
'-y ~ (Fount VtlleY), t
Creu C*'""V
COL La Ga
Miit "'Ctlr1tt C ..... 2S, LA lallftst 31
1 Shrh1w (CC), t3 It, 2. Blau ICC),
25.53; 3 Neuman (LA), 2U2. 4. Lofink
ICC), 2U2, 5 McOonalcl IL.A), 26.44; 6.
H-6C1uc1t (LA), 27.251 7. Ral'WI ICC), 27.37, t
Zut (LA), 27.Sf; t larrow IL.Al 2'30; 10.
R lchnor I LAI, 2' 45.
HIGH SCHOOL ...,. ........
4-A -1. Foothll; 2. Slml Val v. 3 El Mootna, .. c.-.. '1Mrl s. ,Y.iulon
VlalO; 6. Matlr 0tU 7. UllllVWlltYI' t El
Toro, t. VIII PIN 10. Ot.,. Hiiia.
J·A - l Hart; 2 N«co. ).. Sauous. '
Moul'lltln Vlow, $. Buena ll'ar1c.: 6. T 0t· ranee; 7. San MarlllO, L T"'10it CftY, f
He•tl'lorne. 10 Arr9YO
2·A -1 LOyOit, 2. fltordholl; 3 ~: 4 lrew!eY; S. Arroo;o Grtnde. 6 L.~ 7. Vale!oda I ~Bar, t . St
JofWI loeico; 10. Ontat1o l·A-1. SMr'rTllll ~ 2 AIUQCWO, l Ct!Ndnll; 4. ,.,_.,. aav; s u s... '-
lnc\twood, 7. "'-~-Iha: " ~rvnlflt hWN f ~ Udtft.: 10. LA a.Pt I. ...............
4·A -1, .,_., 2 faalM vwo.s 3 T\lllln, ._ ._, S. ........, ...,_.., 6
F~ 7. Hawl!WntJ I T'*'Mnd oaks,
f , Simi Va•: 10 Mls&lon Vlale. J•A -\. llMtw 0tU 2. Hart, J. liatloP
Nl'lat, 4. EIPW'tllll: S Arr-o'IO GflMI. 6.
L.on100C; 1. Hora, L s..ttua. t Et ltancno:
10. PartmOl.lnt
2•A -l, Mount11n vtew, t Clllno, l. Nordlloff J 4, Leult , I. La Q\Mta1 6 A""''· 1. Seutll ,._IMIM, I. llldlo, f Yuca'": 10 lrot•OC!Nt 1·A -1. ,.,._,_ h¥: t CalW'lllO; ) All~J t. ~ttna!M. S. stl«me"I lfld 6 .... ,,_.., 1. faafec:lt .. , I T-.n•
tylllnt ... !ms; f . II. ~ 10 AN1>1
,
trot
:uo ' 0 1AO 210 , 10
Of "'°"' AllOVI
~TM uce. Ont
Marat srar (Pm > GamlWtl(~l
Toudla Mlracfe <Marcnalld)
Abo rac9CI kOf1na
l..t'Vll To Mt, 8' WOOC1 .loM
TllTll 2:01 1fS.
uo
2.20 uo
CV, T-.
""" ltACa. OM mfll NU. Kint Como llllktrl •7 920 511
New Cadet I~) 4.2t 3 '° $moOt11 Al Vlf\I .. (L.adley) UO
AIW raceo· 51!.1"tn 5Plrl!, MIN • Man,
Cruu On av. Sl'ledY Del.
Tlme; 2:04 415
U aXACTA (t•S) Deld 12S200.
SUllrH ltACa. OrM mtle D11C.a
Wllloft srraam ICUlf> 1' IO 7.20 UO
Tn.re Tricia C (O'OW'Jtr) •.OO 3..111
ltOMlanCI lrtt <OIMn> IAO AIM>~ Ktn' Hanovw, G4lml ltoD•
Dlt; RMI Surwt, FMr!t Rotltf', Viti TllCIOI',
So...,.eirl Slit'. ·-Tlmt. 21M 215
u anCTA <>·71•Id11n20
saYaNnt UCL Ont tniit ...a..
Timber Crtell (H ~J lUO 1S60 UO
AMY$ May IGftftiwl 11 • IA L.ove c.MwrA CJ. Parurl 1 uo
Also rk.ed· H1.1ric-SINSra, OV1skirtt
Gt GI RocMt, MalrbrJ L.iel'd FantHY, SolcY
Sky
Tirnt. 2;tf 2 / s.
ll UlACTA \1·4) NICI Sl56.70
IEIOH'Tlt llACL One mllo Nee Olamled Quark <Ownr> , .. ).00 :121
LIOY Le\lltv (F. Sfl«rOll) 4 IO 3.11 ~ NdtnDlt (f>trrt) 4.20
Also nKed: o~ Slllpl)tr, Drltllf*k
~ Aw1v From Home, Wlft•tnlOUrM
Star, OUtni.N Sfwa•ar.
T1rN: 2:Gl. SJ CXACTA CS-61 Mid ,34.ao
NINTH •ACE. One milt trot
lltudt (H PefKWI 1020 4 IO
Pr09MCY (LJ9'1tllllt) uo
Pav Caal! (k trl
210
00 uo
Al&o rac.cs. Star HUI G, Kllemout\,
eaMJ. Tlmt: 2:06
Q EXACTA (2·31 Nod WUO
12 PICK WC l3t7·t+S+21 Hid 17•.M
witll 17 wlMine lickei. lft\11 '*'Mii
Clf'rVO¥ef POOi: m . ., n
TUfTH UCL OM milt ~ Hnnllf Eapru (H Mrl 26.00 IUO
~ ...... (VINN'!wn)' ' .. Saw'Plo G tMllUIJ.:.
AIM raced a.tfb e ,
Wl"'IO'\. Peter L.o I ,
N'.aster 0 G.
Time' Hl 4 S,
ll EXACTA <•·21 Mid Sltt20.
Alltndanct 2,,,.
Pomen11
TVESOAY·s •HULTS o tf it•v tw ,,_...., .,,,,Al.OOSAS
l"WtST flACll. 4 \l'J fur1of!ft
Sowltl'I De1Jot11 (W!l/19) U0 • 00 ) .00
Tri Holmo l~tJ 7'0 ).0
L.ooM O\an9e (Scoff) 3 00
Also rK*I· $Nnlllne G "· Aee·s Flv
Hlilll. Timt: 5' 115 .. --· S.S EXACT A (1·3> PloO SIU 00
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•
ANGELS •••
PlomDl
All·Alliedcan tenah tourney
FIM football re(/16_tntlon lbc:i Huntl!ti'°° Bclth Community Sc~KU
Department ti curttntly ttgisknn younptcr1
Sor Oaa fuo\ball
U-Amcncru> ~nl\ls st&r1 Jeff Kl pcirda or
UCU nd Dall Goldie of Suinf~ att mon
ahe .32 top-nantcd collcJlllt lt'nn11 playm who will oom~t~ 1n \he si~1h annwl Volvo All
Amcrtatl\ 'l'cnn" Champ101~h1ps set for Oct.
25-28 •t UCLA.
·•1 don'1 know wh>' tha• ball duSn't
10 out," said Qui nbe~. the former
Oo ta Mesa High and 'OntqJC C.O.st cone;c· tandout. who raised his
record to 6-3 with four innin&1 of
bnlliant relief. ''When he hh it, 1t was
a real loud sound, a plcnd1d crack of the L Whenever I bcarthatsound, J
don't expect anything good to hap-.
pen. And rm usually ri&h1." Tbe S l 5 tta•slt'Gtion fee wall tncludc h11'l,
J.11t!1!_rj.,,t.iQ!' ~tch and troP-ht"' for the ell>:
thamp1onsh1p. Lai~ play for fint throu&h eiahth graders ~ill tqjn Saturday wtth aamcs playcJ at Mur~y
Communi1y Centrr and &Uson Community
Thttoumaanciuison ofti,cru111onalev nll
on the Cl0llcg1atc 1.enni schtdulc drnini tcrtd
by the lntcrcoll<'&iatc Tcnnii Coaches AUQCia·
uon.
Jacaon was equally clisbelievillJ.
.. It w.as one of m~ most frustrating
momen~·· he said. •
• Center .. Tic lets are pnet'd at S2 tbr gcl\L'ral admi ion.
For mott m(onnation, j>honc 960..a89S or
The Royals, who have won thrtC: in
a row from the Angels, meet the t?lem
once more tonight, then take Thurs-
day off before cf9smg out the rcaular
season with three pmcs at Oakland.
960-8870. ~
._ter Seal 6o1f tournameat
The Twins have anothu pme in
Chicaao tonight, then complete their
season with 1'our at Clev~and. The
Angels, who are breathing through a
mathematical life support system,
finish with four at Teds.
latemadonal ..Uboat uo•
The Easter Seal'Soc1ety ofCalifomia wall hold 1
its third annual golfioumament on Frida}', Oct
Sat Mile Square GolfCoul"$e in Fouruail). Valley
beainoing at 8 a.m.
The S4S tax dcd\Jctiblc donat1ota includes JOlf · can and a dinner which will follow at Francois of
"We're not going to die easily,•• aaid
Angels Manager John McNamara,
whose team has dropped five in a row
to drop out of contention. "We still
have more games to go than we're
behind. But it's not the most rosy-
looktna situation you'd want to sec."
The ·16th annual Long ee.ch tnltn\at1onal
Sulboat Show will be held Oct 27-Nov. 4 at the long Beach Convenuon ("enter. More than 400
boats and 360 booth cxh1b1ts will be on display.
For more information, phone (213) 6SS..9326.
Huntington B(ach. · ·
First hole-in-one prize is a S 14,000 Buick
Regal. Prizes will also be awarded for closest to
the pin, longest drive, lowest net and lowest
gros~ soorcs for rucn and women.
For more information, phone 847-6100.
Royals Manager Dick Howser will
exhort his team not to ease up.
''We're planning on having to wm
every game," he said. ''We'd Ji lee to
get some help from somebody. but
you can't count on it. Some funny
things happen in this game."
Pro football tryout.
Nattonwidc Professional Football Search has
announced the time and date for the Football
A&cocy's next free agent tryout camp.
lbe camp will be held al Jackie Robinson
Stadium, Rancho Cieocge Spons Center in Los
Angeles on Saturday, Oct. 20. Reaistration is set at 9"a.m.
Orer·tbe-Une toamameat
Southern Cati{omia Over-the-Line is acctpt·
ing team ap(>lications for the fourth annual las
Vcps Oass1c Grass Tournament, ~t for Oct.
6-7 at Sunset Park in Las Yeps.
Dane lorg doubled off Curt Kauf·
man, 2-3, leading off the 12th· and
George Brett was walked intentional·
ly. 101Je Orta and J?.a.rr¥1 Motley
popped out before Balboru drove in
Washington.
The camp will be run by Mike McCarthy.
former personnel diroctor for George Allen with
the Chicago Bliu and Arizona Wranglers of the
USFL.
Entry fee is $4S per team, and all teams arc
a:uaraotccd to play four games. Men's and
women's divisions arc scheduled. The tour-
nament beains at 9 a.m.
AnJCls owner Gene Autry called
McNamara in the visitors' clubhouse
a few minutes after the pme.
"Thank you, Gene, McNamara
said into tbe phone. "We just couldn't
hit. It was a tough game and we just
aren't bitting. Thank you, Gene." For more information, phone 643-8604. For more information, pbone (213) 630-2298. He bung up and stared into space.
There were two on and two out. An
entire season was probably on the
line. •
Second little consolation for Mets
NEW YORK (AP) -The curtain
officially came down on the New
York Mets' pennant hopes. and there
didn't seem to be much left to cheer
about.
There is nothing particularly satis~ng about finishing second.
''It s a little nauseating when you
know you could have had it," Mets v~eran left fielder George Foster
said.
The Mets had just been eliminated
·rrom pennant contention, despite
beating the Philadelphia Phillies, 7-5.
Monday night. And some of the
veterans on a young team were not yet
ready to put on happy faces about the
future.
"The season's over and done with.
We're out of it,'' Keith Hernandez
said, displayrng httle relish for
clinching second place in the Na-
tional League East while the Chicago
Cubs clinched first :
The Mets' victory Monday night
was their 87th, second only to tbe roo
games they won in 1969 when they
also won the World Series. The Mets,
in fact, had never finished second
before.
"The Cubs have to be con-
gratulated," Mets Manager Dave
Johnson said. "They deserve to win
and, at this point, I'd like to1CC them
go all the way. I said mueb earlier in
the year to Jimmy (Cubs Manager
Jim Frey), 'If we can't win. I guess I
hope you do."'
It was a best-foot-forward type of
thing to say. Magnanimous. It is not,
however, the way competitive people
really feel. The future always is a litrle
too far away on a night like this.
The fact that pitchers like Dwight
Gooden and Rop Darling have many,
perhaps great years ahead of them; the
fact that players like Hubie Brooks
and Darryl Strawberry are still com-rookies. Strawberry, with 92 RBI and
ing into their own. and the fact that 23 homers, and the Mets other
the club had finished sixth onJy one starting pitcher, Walt Terrell. 10-12,
year ago.-those things offered little are in their second seasons.
consolatJon. Broolcs (.284, 73 RBI) is only 28,
"It all depends on what the guys and relief pitcher Jesse Orosco (10-6,
want," Foster said. "When you 31 saves)is27.AndHemandez(.313,
haven't been there, it's tough to see 94 RBI) and Foster (23 homers. 85
sometimes. Like in August. we bad a RBI) should still have productive
little discontinuity on the club. Now teasons ahead of them.
we've regrouped a little bit, but some .. We made a great run at it," said
guys didn't realize how important 40-year-old Rusty Staub, wbo leads
each person was. Io some cases, the the NL with 17 pinch hits and 16
effort was not there. pinch RBI. "We had a great season,
"If you're comptacent to finish and it bodes very well for the future of
second, that's the way ifs going to the organization."
go." Foster admitted also that
There was no denying, however. "tangiblr,. yes" the Mets had a bright
that the Mets had built themselves a future, • but it's the intangibles tliat
fu ture-if. as Foster says, they want 4 make the difference. Howthe-.titude
it. will be later, we don't know. 1t has
Three of the four pitchers in their improved tremendously over a year
rotation -Gooden, 17-9, Darling. ago August, but it still depends on the
12-8, and Sid Fernandez, 5-6 -were attitude, totally."
SUNSET: RUGGED OPPOSITION ••• TUCKER •••
FromDl
Oilers' Coach George Pascoe says his
team has a major defensive problem
in containing Bruins quarterback
Bobby San Jose .
San Jose, a 6-1, 175-pound junior,
is a returning starter and can burn the
opposition out of the Bruins' winged-
T much in the style of Corona del
Mar's scrambling Bobby Hatfield.
The Oilers, who h<tve limited three
opponents to an average of 70 yards
per game on the ground, will be
confronted b)'. running backs William
Aamelong (6--0, 218) and Ralph
Garcia (6-1 , 180).
Wilson has good size (guard-
linebacker Greg Hamilton 1s 6-2. 205
and tight end Todd Taylor 1s 6-3.
205), but overall the Bruins do not
figure to rival the size of the Oilers.
.. I'm beguuung to think that we're
pretty big and pbysicaJ," says Pascoe,
who watched his team bang heads
with equally big and strong Newport
Harbor in a 24-24 tie a week 8'0·
Huntingtoo Beach's defensive in-
terior(Jim Elmore, 235; Scott Mober-
ly, 225; and Robert Flory, 240, call
themselves the "Pep Boys''.
"They're three no-names trying to
do a good job," says Pascoe. "We're
playing real good football and they
deserve a little credit."
We1tmhl1ter {1-t) va. Mater Del
(Z·l) at Saata Ana Bowl: -Both
teams are hurting -Westminster
emotionally and Mater Dei physi-
cally after the past couple of weeks.
The LionsofWestmmster have lost
tw.» straight heart-breakers, the last
on a final play touchdown pass by
Servite, 16-15.
Mater Dei is hobbling from injuries
and Coach Chuck Gallo says cor-
·nerback Tim Haider, fullback Tre
Anton and defensive end John Barich
are out, while John Doan (ankle) and
Jeff Theis (ankle) will play, but
obviously under less than perfect
conditions.
"We're just trying to get everyone
healthy for the Bishop Amat game
(the start of Angelus League play Oct.
12)." says Gallo.
"IL appears Westminster is a very
good, aggressive team, but we're
~ng to use the John Wooden
philosophy and just take care of
ourselves.
"Right now the defense is carrying
us. We've out-conditioned every
team so far." '
Westminster Coach Jim O'Hara
rates the game a physical tossup and
considers it a match up of two passing
teams.
Ocean View 0·2) at Gardena (0-1 ):
-The Mohicans of Gardena await
Ocean 'View for an 8 o'clock kickoff
and if reputations are any indication,
Ocean View may find itselfin another
tough situation.
Members of the Marine League in
Los Angeles, which also includes
Banning and Carson, the Mohicans
boast a team led by linebacker
Mauricio Gutierrez (6-1, 210), quar·
terback Sean Wilson (6-1, 160) and runnio~ backs Steven Hill (6-0, 175)
and Bnan Brown (5-10, 160).
.. We have some fast kids," notes
Gardena Coach Bill Partridge, io his
sixth year at the helm.
The Mohicans lost a 27-13 decision
to heralded Long Beach Poly in their
Qpener (it was Poly's third game) and
amona their mistakes was a lost
fumble on their own 2-yard line
(leading to a Poly TD) and a defensive
lapse on the game's first play (result·
ing in a 75-yard TD play f'or the
Jackrabbits).
"We didn't play very well," says.
Partridge. "In fact1 wc played very
poorly on defense.•
Partridge is aware of Ocean View's
game, bavin1 met Colton a year ago.
"After see 1g the films, I said. 'Hey,
we're playin... the same team!'
"It's the same formations, the same
style, the same uniforms and the same
colors. The only difference is that
they don't have Colton players."
Defensively the Mohicans run a
4-3.
Ocean View Coach Karl Gaytan is
hopeful his Seahawks can find a way
to get off the floor after a disappoint·
i ng 38-0 loss to Cypress.
FromDl
blacked out and the Angels in a
desperate pennant race, could Chan·
nel 5 miss televising at least lhe
second game of the An.gels-Royals
doubleheader from Kansas City?
•Some say with Abdul-Jabbar
getting old, Laker owner Jerry Buss is
shrewd enough to have a clone of
Kareem on ice at the Forum ... If~ •
that would be an iced Kareem clone.
•Add lookalikes: Cubs' pitcher
Rick Sutcliffe and former major
league pitcher Cy Young.
•UCLA wasreaU)'ratedNo. I in
Sports mustrated's pre-seasonooltege
fpotball forecast ... 1ftheguy who put
that together was a coach. be would
have been fired.
•Many ofbis most severe critics
now want Howard Cosell back on
Monday Ni&bt Football ... this one
doesn't.
•You know you are 1ening old if
yourkidsdon'trememberwhen USC
was a national colleae football power-
house.
•Those who say the Raiders
missed a public relations coup by
permittingloal TV of the Charger
game Monday ni~t do not under·
stand that the Raiders do not know-
or care-about public relations.
•Pro scouts may be revising their
reports to read that Boston College
quarterback Doug Flu tie is a very tall
5-9.
Flores raves SEA VIEW: IT'S DOW~ TO BUSINESS ••• about Plunkett Fromoi
EL SEGUNDO -Tom Flores.
coach of lbe Los Angeles Raiders, had
nothing but praise for the per-
formance of quarterback Jim
Plunkett in his team's Monday nJ&ht
win over San Diego.
"I can't remember when I've seen
him better for an entirepmc," Flores
said Tuesday. "He m~y have had
better spurn. but not for an enure
game."
Plunkett bounced back from a four-
inlerctp11Pn effort a week earlier
against l<.ansas Cny to lead the
Raiders to a 33-30 win over San
Diqo. He completed 24 of 33 paS5CS
for 363 yards -sixth ~t on the
Raiders all-time lj t -with one
touchdown and ooe interception.
Plunke1t also cnS)ncercd two fourth~ uaner drives fur (ouch down
to overcome 10-point deficit tn the
final 10 minutes of pla).
.. Th beat pan about the wholt'
thma j that oa the two bia driv
Wf\ch we needed ltluchdowru. our
protection s cx~llent and Juri
spn.:ad it aruund (amona the re~
oc1vcni1:· Flore said.
,,
we've played. They're throwing more and their tailback (CraiJ Coote) is have to ao out and take it away from
flaas than ever before. They're sure tou&b when be acts outs1de. They're them. They're youna and the better
destroyina the game." up and down defensively, but they they feel 1he better tbefll play. We H~ung notes Cd M's early games pla_y ~und defense." . have to ~ntrol the tempo and
hav:en t s'hown exceptional spark Blanton takes a cautious approach execute.: ·
against San Clemente and. Capo ·to the Tr6jan , who are blesstd with "l like their quarterback (Mike
Valley. evenmoreexpericncetbanhisEuJes. Shuck). He throws the tiatl well and
"I'm sure they're disappointtd from a more successful team in 1983. he's one of the be t otT-balanccd
with their stan so far, but I think "We don•t think wc·re going to take quarterbacks I've seen in a while."
they:rc a bet~r team than what the ball. and ram i~. down their · ddleback entct5 as a heavy
they ve shown. throats., says Blanton. We hope that favorite, due taricly to ovenV!fdmioa
ll con:ics.down to a clo game where speed and experience.
OaivertltJ U·l) vs. E1taKla , the k1ckm1 games becomes 1 factor Costa Mesa Coach Tom Baldwin
U·l·U at Ora.age Coast C.JJ 1 . -bccaust ~e have a good k:ic)(er. hile he · · : The Trojans of Universit~ enter a University i definitely the bc$1 team meAnw • ~ t pme JUSt as It 11.
h ~ "tc d f h · ·11 ... I r: n onnonun1ty. t e 1avon an 1 t cy 1vc up to we w1 no~ve p a)'ed ao 1ar. Compared .. lt{iloinatobcafunpmctocoach
their credentials it will be the fint to us ';hey rea big l~m and they have bccautc when you're an undcrdoa
victory in 1e"'en sW'ts against tht few weaknc .. I JU hope we can )'OU can ttnlt oflook in the coold jar Ett~·ncia Coach Ed Blanton hold a .bana tn there. and do things you usually don't do.
S41 edge over University, marred ddltback (1-f) ••· CMta Mesa .. We1J rush I I au>"· We'reaoina to
only by a 10-10 tie in 1983. <•·t·U at Nt"port Harbor: -do thins that are toully ndiculou1
University Coach Rick Curtis is Saddleback Coach JUT')'. Wine is well because· they're faster, b111cr and
aware of the ta k: •• tanc:ia'" passina aware of the pecial problem his team ttonfer
same 1s C1'cctlcnt and thear: junior 1 ta wnh Thunc&ay -t11 Road· "h · hf\d oflikc NCbrasu pUying
quarttrback (Make Ro llin1) is really runners arc fa~red to win th !tque Cal &ate Fullcnon. I'm goin, to have
cool under pressure and a pinpoint tide and the oppasition·, hopes lie in a load ttmc. I can't Wilt
pe r. surpn 1n.g somebOdy down the road. ..h's like two Iona shots in •he Dally
.. 1hcir Ii ht end (Adm "They( otaM ~re oingtobc Double.lflhu1hcm.artat.lrldon'1
Walburgcr) cateliel nd blocb well cmol unlll.' Witte. .. We iu t well, I wasn't uppc»cd loan -a '•"
•
HO HUM: ANOTHER LOSS?
From DI
El Camtno 24-14 before reboundm&
wnh 10-3 VlCtol)' over Mt. n
Antonio lut week. ••wc·~goina to have to improve
drastically over our first two per·
form noes of the year if we want 10
have a chance against Saddleback," Taft vs. Gold We:at 11 OCC
admlls Tucker ... This will nc the third The Ru tiers 1 their first re.al test
very good football team in a ro~ > of the season when the powcrf ul
we•ve me&.'" Couprs ~ome 10 to\\n
OCC has been out-ta.ined 739-298 Golden West defeated OCC :21 ·l in
in its first twogameswitnonly 129net its opener and then edged S nta Ana
yards rush1ns. 17-14 last week.
Saddleback is fourth in Mi~sion Taft comes into the game as the No.
Conference rushinJ ba cd on pre-I ranked team in the Southland with
conference games with an average of I 0 out of a p()ssiblc 12 tir5t·pl cc
94.S yards per game. votes from the spons mfonnadon
But the key to the Gaucho offense is directors. T he Co\,lpn cnhlltlced
qwartcrtiick Mike ~uglass, the No. I their JX>Sition last week with a ~ 13
passer in the conference with 41 victory over We!t Hills.
completions in 63 attempts for 443 · The Rustlers are led by quarteriback
yards and a pair of touchdowns. John Heisitc. who actually bad a poor
"The reason we're throwing more outing against Santa Ana last wed.
is evident," ex.plains Saddle back Heinle manqcd to comQltte just 9 of
Coach Keo Swearingen. "We have a 32 . passe white being intercepted
fine quancrback in Mike OOuglass. twice. However. his 2-yard touch.
We have· a lot of confidence in his down pass to David Applegate with
abilitl·" • 4: 17 remaining in the prne save the ·
"It s always,lough on your defense Rustlers their second win in two
when you face an experienced, games this season.
sophomore-19uarierback," says Perhaps the surprise of the RustJer
Tucker. ..Having a sophomore at season 1s the running game. John
quarterback is a }giant ·plus m JC Lamberton picked up 83 yards on 18
football. That one year of coll~e atrries while Applegate added SI
experience can make a big d1f-yards on just seven carrries.
ference." lt's a difficult opener for the the
• Tucker says he'll stick with Laszlo Rustlers in their debut in the new
at quarterback, but the OCC coach PAC-9 Conference, but then the
alsohasanewquarterbackincampin Rustlers .could open against Just
fonner Costa Mesa High standout about any team in the conference and
Scot H~ey. Hagey played the last race the same uphill climb.
series of downs for OCC when things The eight other teams in the
had already been decided with FuU-. conference had a combined rccoro of
etton last Saturday.' 61-29·2 coming into the season.
Barons 1
still lead
Big Five
After three weetcs of play in
.. P~l> footb~I. Fo untain Vall~y it...wwt
High remains the top team m ~ the Big Five rankings with
Edison dropping from fourth
to fifth.
The Barons, who are 3--0
after beating Mission Viejo,
24-19, have won their games
against stiff competition by a
combined 12 points. Fountain
Valley has another tough foe 1 PICTmOUe.,...U
this WC4k when it 6attlcs 1ri.--..,.;.-----NAm ITAW
Ser\'ite (ranked sixth) Satur-.__ ........ NIJC.....,. ....... 11>........,TICE ...... _ ~ = r:-.,.
daynight at the Santa Ana PICnnout.,... ... AQERICAN INTER· Bowl. NAl9 STAW NATIONAL MOTOACAM.
Edison's I 0-9 loss to Ban-TM folowlno pet90nt .. 1ao21 ~ Clrdt. ~ · dr h Ch but1MM M: E·2, !Nine, CA 92114 ntng opped t e argrrs one A NE HEAL TH CARE Doneld M. £>eoM. "782
notch in the ratings -behind ENTERS & PSORIASIS .... Vie Sln1r9. Mlellon Vllljo, CA
St. John Bosco. Those two CARE UNIT, ,. t2et1 teams bave a date. also Satur-EOICAL GROUP. 111 Tlll• bullnt1t• 11 oon-
day n~i t, at Huntington • 1"' Street. 8u4tll P. ducted by: Art~ M-. ceat. 92e27 Don8ld M. DaYlt Beach igh. F~ Up ProMeloMI 8klrf Thlt atattment Ml fllld
Marina, which was beaten c.mert, Inc. catt-With "1e County CWk of Ot·
by Foothill, 26-7 last week, MIWett 1eth"!!!'J MQe Coun~ on Auguet ao.
f ltedl. c.Hf. 9no;J 1914 dropped out o the rank.in~. 111. bu.,,,... 1a con-,_
The Vi1Qngs were rated 10th ed tlV! • 00f1)0tati0n PvblllNd Oranci-. eo.t last weetc. 8ara FUiton, PNeldtnt Deity Pilot &eptemb« s. t2,
Long Beach Poly and m:..-=-C:ot~ 18'ff. 1* W-244
Bishop Amat remained in County on September ----------second and third place, res pee-ta. 1"4 NI.IC N011C(
tivety, in the Big Five. PublWled 0ninge ": -----=--.-...~--
Saddleback: and Newnnn Plot ---11er t"', PICTmOUI-• ~Y" ......,_.. • NAm ITAW
Harbor moved up in the obel' s, 10, 19M 111e followlnO '*'°"'.,..
Central Conference following w-211 dOll'O ~ •:
the Roadrunners' 42-14 romp DOORS ETC., 421 1ttti
over Rancho Alamitos and the Pleo9. Cott• *" CeUt 12121 Newport's 24-24 deadlock Robert Frank KlnQMrd.
with Huntington Beach. OO'M'A 4221ethPMict,eo.Maaa.
Saddleback climbed from Calif. 82827 . sixth to fourth, while Newport, OSEPH FRANCIS m. buet,,... la oon-
eighth last week, is tied with La COTT A, beloved ducted by.• limited l*t'*"
Quinta for sixth. father of Joeeph of lh:fot.t KlnQMrd Lu Vegas and Linda 1111t 1t.i.m.m ... tied Corona del Mar was ousted Jo of San AnaeJ.o, with the C9UmY ~ of Or·
from the Central after drop-11 ,_,. .... bro -. County on ~
-pin~ a 27-7 verdict to 0;"M'.a;;i .. of = 12, 1984 ,.._
Capistrano Valley. Marcos; John of Gar-Publllhed ~ Cou1
_ The top tbrtt teams in the den Groove and u..... Deity Pilot ••nMI' 1e.
Conference -La Mirada, ,...--'---··--~ n. Oct®-s 10 1914
t . S H. ~· of ~p. ' ' ' w-2•• Va encia and unny ills -n--l .... maintained their spots in the DC\; tatlon of the Central.• Roury will be
Th S lb C r. Wedne.say, 7PM, at _..;..;--.;-..;.;;;;;.;..-..__
e ou em on1erence the Harbor Lawn lllCTmOUI a1••11 underwent a shakeup at the M 1 c um ITATllmfl' top as last week's· No. l squad, emorla hapel. 111e followtnG.,..,.,..,.. Maia of ChrilUan dolna ~-= Esperanza, was stunned by La Burtel. Thursday. s o u T H c o A s 1
Quinta J2.-7. 111.u• c:i. Joechim ACA.M.MY. 111 Kaarnua Dr El jtodena took over the vsw•..., at \!! Sult• J-1, coeta MtM. Cellt' C.tboJJc-tnterment at 92929 No. 1 spot in the Southern Watmintter Mem-AMbW\oe ProdwoUont-
Conference, followed by orial Park. servtces 111 ~ Or. 8ultt J-1
Lynwood, Hacienda Heights ~ the Dlrectlon Cotta MeA. Cellf. t1t2'
Wilson, Foothill and of &rbor Lawn-Mi ~:,:i~oon
Esperanza. Olive Mernorlal Park. vino.nt O~
111 .. "-*'*" ... fllec MILHOUS With"'-County aa.it of Of
HARLES WM. -angeeountyon~
Vaqs onen ~!0~: C'A~ 11~ Oflnge"= J:' Died Sunday Sep-DallY Piiot" ._..., 11 1 eague play tember 23, 19&4 ln 21. ~a. 10. 1-v:-.254 ~ Hilla. CA, at~-----~-
vs. El Toro =~~=
Irvine Higb's Vaqueros will
be trying to pick them$Clvcs
off the turf after two straight
non-league lessons -but 11
gets no easier this week when
South Coast Lcaaue f o<>tball
action begins with El
Toroawaitingat Mission Viejo
Hi&b Friday night (7:30).
£1 Toro is no 1tranger to the
Vaqueros, since it was the
Chargers who were also in the
. Sea View L.eague with Irvine
before the two schools were
switched to the South Coast
Lcaaue recently. ·
"fhey'rt a very aood foot·
b!'ll team and ,rcany physically
bis." says Irvine Coach :ferry
Henipn.
"We'll have co play a mis·
take-free pme."
£1 Toro·s fone is quar·
terbeck Rodne)' Gatlin, a 6·31 l~under who can run ano
SJa$S effectively, wuh ht' most
danatrout amt his ability to
Skirt the end .
uThe physical thing is. our
b1 t concern.'' 51)'1 Hc:n·
agan, whose 1cam i Yer) mall
an companson.
"Tihcir quaner1'ack runs
and thtt>'A'I, an arounct they"rc
. physical ind they'll be difficult
1oblock."
•
1808. He moved to
Whittler ln 1912. Hf.a
father wu an area or-
ange ranch.-.;' Mr.
Milhou.a WM a ,radu·
ate of Wbitder Wah
School and attended
U.$.C. for 2 years
before ~ an or~ rancher lJl EMt Whltuei, when
be WU a lq timt
member of the !'.Mt
Whittler Friend•
Church . He la
IUJ'Vlved by wife.
Louile D. Mllhoul of
Llluna Hilla. Son Wllliam Milbou.a of
La Habra Helahtll
dauabiera, Beul•
Kewt.h of Ne.wport
Beechi ~ :New-man ol ~
t~and2
~
ht.Id today, 8-Mm· her• 19841 UAM at
the Kut WKi ttler
l'rlenda Church.
DOnatlona may be
m.de to a tawn1a
charity or the Amen·
can Helrt ~ilon. Whlw-lmenon Manary.~
PIERCE uon.t'8
BELL IROADWAY
MOftT\IA"Y
110 Broadway
Costa Meta
6'42·9150
8ALnalRQIROM IMITMTUTHLL
WEITCLIFF CHANL
427 e. nth•• Cotta MOM
646-9371
PACIFlC YllW
MIMOflW. PAi'k
Cometary • Mortuary C~ • Cremalory 3500 Pacific View Orl~
Newport BHCl'I
64•·2700
HAMC>ft&.AWN-"
MT.OUYI
MOttuaty • Ceri*11
Crem.&\OfY
162S 01tltr Aw .. Co 11 Mtll
540·6554
GE ;s9-9100
·,.
THE REAL
ESTATERS
'69$~ of m1
rHpon.a r•~
from th Pilot."
I ... .,,.~ la t11e
P1i.t H4 ~ !tepid
,., ., 99d i..-.
I r«•l•e4 to ~an. -
It -tn. tk PU•1 a94 eely ... ,.,._
,,.. IN ftepeta.
I ... •err hapPJ
•• , ...... Pllet
~Macnab -Irvine
Ull llU
·101 Yla Lift ....
• Marvelous 6 Br bayfront 78' on bay, pool,
spa 100' boat space. Xlnt Fin $4,850,000.
Channing Spanish 3 Br. 2 Ba on 45' lot,
deck, courtyard, pier & slip. $1,100,000.
IAYlllE n1v1 UYFlllT Ollll
At N.H.Y.C. Trad1llonal 5 Br 1pectacUlar
bay view. Owner financing\ $1,050,000.
Wll& IUOl llLLSlll
BILL GR UNDY . REALTOR . . ' , ~
'
' ,,
lOt OtdAd
ACTION
A OAIU l'llOT
At.V1'10e
Mi..Nn
642-5678
NOTICE
The Dall, Pilot wW DO ·~er be OpiOD OD lata.rcla7 -~·· Ou open~ laoan will bi lloDdaJ tlLna l'rlcl&J, 8:00 a.m. to
&:30 P·~· Deaclll.D• wUl be u fouo .. :
SDl'nON DBADLINS
lilOllda.J •.••.•••.•.•.•.••.•.••••••••••••.••.•••••.•••••••••••• l'rtda.J • ':30 p .m. ~.J •. t t t. et e •. t I I I I I •• t It It I II I It•• I I. I I I It t I I I I It I I I I Mo.._, t 6:.30 p.lll.
Weclaeilicla.J •.••••••••••.••••••••.••••••.•••.••••.•....•.• h-4a,7, 4180 p..m. ~, •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Wec1Dlilda1. •:so p.m. l'rl~J •.••....•.••.•...•.•...•......•...•.••.•....••••••• Tll.......S.J, 't.30 p.m,
ktardaJ. •• •• •. •. .• •. . .•.. .. .. .. .. . . • . . .• .•••.••• ..... •• •• •. . l'rt«laJ • S:OO p.m.
IG.DdaJ ••• •. .. .. .. .• . .• •• •. •• •. • • •.• •••••••• •• •.•••• •.••• •••• Pdda.1 • S:OO p.a..
,
lailyPilld
642-4321
•
I . -
If
(
$2.17 per day
t'• ALL·)'OU Pet fOI' 1 llnel, ISO df)'9
ft the DAlY
PlOT
SERVICE
DIECT<IY
ptue the IAVINE MIAAOA
end the HUNTINGTON
BEAOHOOMBER "tel'J
• Wednllday at "° extr• c:Mroet CAUTOOAfll
Ul .. Llll
Yow Delly Plot a.w. Dltectory
AlpreeenWM
141-4121111.•
•' .
1H~
I Oxford. e.g.
10 Baby buggy
1' Ftlble m#I
16 Pttc:tt
11Goodr~
17 Fr • ..c.n.cn.n
bMuty
11 Neutr.,tnn
20 "To be" pert
21 Vetlicte
23Comtc-
2• e.llew
21T'*eo8in 21-..... ~
ao Hls)h Jlnka
31 Pa enlrnal
32Tr~
3e NoYeliat -
L.-An
37 Extra compen-
Mtlon
3t Nothing
38 Slend«
QW-.pon
" lnYM6ons 41 Setvlng dllh ... ~
.. Come to a point
508olo
11 C.UMd to go
52 Bk.le moon
55 Carda
51Armbonel eo Terminated
11 Touch upon
12Stonem .....
13 Promontory
64 Smalt
15 Cutout
DOWN
1 Rich cake
2 Sly gtanoe
3 lrllh S.. IMCS
body
4 Oey91flr
5 Not ordlnwy
I AMEXunlt
7 Search for
8 Leftover
9 Mr. Whitney
tOActuat•
1 t 11 worthy of
12 Thwart
13 Teblellnda
19 Loving~
22 0,,. or more
25 Before: pret
28 Mu.ical ltlOw
27 [)eye' end•
28 Ac:etblc
2tProgr9M
30 Lett
7
ay, September 26, 1984 •
PREVIOUS
PUZZLE SOLVED
SAWS I SAVOR SM OG
ALAI AFIRE HO RA
LINOEN i !!~! 0 VAL
EXTEN.Q. ghlmv I LE e P I 0 SE e-
DUPE on N• R 0 S T E-R
UN I T S• S I SA L• I L E
CLE A N A S A !WHISTLE
T IC •ARi.£ .OLEO STE PIT 0 DENY -o Ailmsw T
ABO U GAS •N IPPER
8 R OS ILLITERATE
Al o e SLIOE IONAN T E SS TYPED WELT
32 Freeweye ·
33 Auumptlon
3' Cleo'I rlwr
35 Valley
37~lonof
France
.OPrMMfl
41 Tempeet1•
42 Spllt
43 &.cl humor
45Brownlh~
• •
'80octl'lne
47 Extant
48 JoM Paul or
Bobby-
49 Short-tempered
51 Benumb
53 Acorn IOUICM
5" Aet1e
5a P\auslble
57 A91aneah
59evt'1 ...
12 13
Wllll USE> CARS l TAUCl<8
COM& IN OR CALL; FOR .... llftllUI.
Cormlet.:otUllo •
~
18211 IEACH ILVD. HUNTINGTON aeACH
141 ..... 11141-1111
WIWAITHm
aulllllUll a.. Aoneld Cece
--
THEODORE
ROBINS
FORD
1060 •4AA60R Bl VO
COSTA Ml !>A b42 0010
1114)111-1111 MW. 1tl 8ente AM CLOIED SUNDAYI
--\
THEODORE
ROBINS
FORD
:or.o 14AAl\(Jll IH\IU
CO'>IA Ml \A t.4 l 0010
THEODORE
ROBINS
FORD
lOt10 HAll60A IH'\10
CO\TA Ml ~A 64~ 0010
,,, '. ~. ' "'' t __ , ..... >#Jl ,.t' "
714-833-1300
• r
. THEODORE
ROBINS
FORD
'JOM1 HARl\OA Bl '\I 0
coo;TA Ml~A 64'J 0010
BRIS'roL Kt !DINGER
IN SANTAANA
Hl·OllO
"f'A.MlLY SINCE ·53·
. MIKE lcKEllU'S
, SOUTH co um
MOTORS
fp
1114 UlllT
OODEITIILE
Wolfaburg Edition
.amoC.EL $238 74 +IP pet mo. TOP $13,520.&4
<:,AP 115,499
12500 <:.AP reduetion
-Re91dual aseoo 29
@~
1114 11111001
$1•1&1116'11
48moC.E.L • .a
1238 t tu OM mo
TOP 112,019 20
CAP 112.000
Aeliduel 15781 08
1114 lllPILll
48moCEL
U11• tu per mo :TOPltt.CMOM
<:.A• a1uoo
HOO C~P ritdliatan
JWidluM 151111 71
Alil 8ob 10 ltHlng
18711 Beach Blvd
Huntington Be.ch
(114) 141·1111
ll!LL Id .. ltttnt *''" • Delly Plot 0 mlllld NJ. ....... , .
'Ml'N ., .. down
CIOMd End . Comm'l ...... AU.~VIM LEA81NG
(114)432· 1177
18401~ Hunt~-
147-1707
We're NeW'
We're O..t~ • 71 .. 315-'919 ...................
~IN9-""'"'"
..
c1111111m•
I --
WEDNESDAY. SE .. TEMBER 26, 1984
Dru.m.DJer
Manne
deadat64
LOS AN-
GELES
(AP) -
Jazz drum-
mer Shelly
Manne died
early •today
i n a
suburban
hospital
shonlyafier
collapsing
at his home,
hospital of-MANN£
ficials said. He wu 64.
There was no immediate in-
dication of the cause of death,
said Cathleen Kotarakos, a
spokeswoman for Serra Mcm·
orial Health Center in Sun Valley.
Manne was a composer, con·
ductor and drummer who studied
with drummer Billy Gladstone. Hi founded Stielly's Manne
Hole in Hollywood, a popular
jazz club and meetina place for
other entenaincrs durina the 1970s.
Coa•t
Utlllty poles In Newport's
China Cove will be com-
ing down./ A3
Callfomla
Veteran actor Walter
Pidgeon la dead at the
age of 87./ Al
Na don
Smlllng Shultz, Gromyko
meet for talks In Wash-
lngton./ A4
A balloon-flying Czech
defector arrives In Colo-
rado./ Al
Donald Bren receives
Golden Baton award for
arts patronage./81
Jl'ood"
If you want to win cheers,
pack a sumptuous
tailgate plcnlc.fC1 · l
Winning cooking con-
tests Is old hat for an
lrvlne woman./C1
Sporta
Edison and Fountain Val-
ley face stiff tests Satur-
day night. /D1
Laguna Beach tops New-
port Harbor In a battle of
unbeatens In glrls vol-
leyball./D2
Entertalnme31t
That's not the ~nup
Farrah Fawcett that you'll
be seeing In "The Burning
Bed." /83 •
INDEX
Birth•
Bridge
Bulletin Board
8utk*a
Clllfomla Newa
c1111tfted
Comlel
Crouword
0.th Notices
Food Home Horoecope
Ann LAnderl
Mutu91 Fundt
Natlonet News
E"T:a
Pubac NotlOeS
Sport•
Stock Marketa r....-on T'heM•• WMtMt
World Newt
A5
85
A3
96-7
A4
De-8
85 oe
04
C14
81·2
07
82
87
A4 A8
81
"3
04'"5
01-4
Bl
B2 ~ A2
A4
ORANCifCOUNTY CAllfOnNtA .·i lft4 '·")
FV t~ach~rs back Knapp··
Candidate to face appointee ~instein
for school board seat in November
activities. , petition dnve by Knapp and bil V.aJcatc::d said &he &eaeben' UIOaa·
· Knapp will faoc Rabbi phen supponcrs forced an electton instead. oon finds no fault wilb Elu\en, buc
Einsiem in a Nov. 6 election to fill the Vakartcl said the i\Caehm auocia· 11moly {avon Kupp.
· u~pircd tenn~fJames Wocst. who lionsshappyto1eeKnappananothcr ""f:'ra.Jlkly. I don't Wnk be (Ei,.
By ROBERT HYNDMAN oc .. ..., ........
resigned last spnng to move to Pucno chance a1 tbe ICbool boU'd 1eat. tein) knows u muda ll>out die ICllool
Carol Valcarcel, president of. the Rico. ' .. Jam ti no sttaQlltrto the Fountam diJtnCt," Vakarcd Mid.
Fountain Valley Education Associa· When Wocst l'CJigncd, lhc school • Valley School District," hesaid. "He · Einlkla downplays the unpan.
tion, said the teachers' endorsement boafd decided to •PPoin~ a ~la~ lost by only 79 vo~ 1n lut fear's · ancic of the ladlen" ~'of
couldmcanfinancialcontributionsof ment. By a 3-1 vote, Einncan was (school board) dcction. In the lasl iKnaJ>P,bowever.abdayslkbdieva
up to SSOO to Knapp's campaign as selected oycr Knipp and several two or three ycan, I Clon't think he's • many of the telCben suppori bim
well as support for fund-:raisinj other cand1dalt!S But a ubscquent missedaschoolbomlmectina... rqardlcsspfthca.oc:iatJOA'svote.,
Jhe teachers' association of the
Fountain Valley School District has
endoirscd James Knapp in h1J bid to
fill a vacant seat'On the school board.
Dl•neyland •trike -1
Dl91Jantled worJiere 1t'&J.lrln&plcJr.et lln•~t dJjpate the
UMl'tlon on tbe ... ·at left that Dlan.,.land la the
.. Bapple.t Place on iarth. •• ~lte tbe efforta of eome
Wieder's
torch run
prompts
OCprobe
How much value
shoilld be placed
on 'contribution•?
By JEFF ADLER
Ot .. Dllf ........
Orange· County. Board of Su~r
vison Chairman Harriett Wieder on
Tuesday turned over: to the county a
tith~ph she received in July after runnmgherlcaoftheOlympic's~h
relay, but she plans to keep lhe torch
she carried.
Questions about Wicder's panici· pauon in the torch run were raised in
relation to how she should re~rt lhe
$3,000 contribution from Pacific Bell
used to pay for her one-kilometer lea
plus a luncheon valued at S l ,200 lhat
followed. ·
In turning over the lithOlflph to
the county, Wieder said the depiction
of an Olympic torch runner, valued at
$80, was "aaif\ to the county, directly,
and was. npt to me."
She .. added she has consulted with
County Counsel Adrian Kuyper con-
ctmina whether the torch, the clothes
he was aivcn to run in or the
luncheon that followed constituted a
reportable gift.
1 Wieder said she was asked bY Pacific Bell to run in her capacity as
board chairman, representina lhe
county.
.. It was an honor but an honor on
the county's P._&n. not my own. In
addition, Pacific Bell was makina a
$3,000 gift to charity, no1 to me," 5he
said. Pacific Bell paid $3,000 for each
one-kilometer relay leg ii ponsorcd.
The money was donated to the Boy
Scouts of America.
Pacific Bell is one of more than 90
companies eApccled to bid on a S 12. 7
million contract for a new county
telephone system sometime next
year.
(Pleue ... TORCB/A2)
' t.800 ·~ worken. Junrn-er. Dlaqlalld nmal•ed
open aJid mfton -.14 life at tbe JlaClc ~ wu
normal Uld friendly. 8~ OD Pae AS.
Irvine
backs··
UCI art
theater
BJ PBD.. SNEIDERMAN °' .............
The Irvine Oity O>uncil on Tues-
day appnn'Cd the aeation of a
nonprofit public~tion to over·
see fund raisi~ construction and
operation of a avic pcrformina uu
theater on the UC Irvine came>us. ua officials have also cxpreaed
support for the proposed Iona-:
awaited 750-teat Qvic Theatre of l . which Would be built off Ca~ • • • .,,. m~ Drive near ihe un1versa., s
Admutlltratiou BuildiQJ.
Cost of the project bas beCll
estimated at S9 million. An .-
pointed board of directors will be
cbarpd with findina a 'W&Y lO pay for
the project. City Council memben
said they hope to-see fundins sources
identified and a construcuon
1mpteinenied within~~ The proposed theater IS led IO
1CCOmmodaie a "~ Of eveau indudina voCal an<J msuumental
conc:eru.. dramas and musical Plays.
Under the cumnt proposal, the
lhcater is not ~ to oompdt:
v.ith i.atJe.scalc evenu that miaht be
held at Ole Orance County lfU.
form.ins Arts Center. no uDaer
construction in Costa .Mesa. ua . providina the land in
e chanee for pennittina some un-
&sity use Of the facility •
Irvine, ~ewport cou~cils
ba~k freeway fund pl•ns
But foes of proposed new routes promise
to fight construction ·every way we can·
BJ PHIL SNEIDERMAN
hd UREN llEIN °' .. ~ ........
Ci uncil members in Irvine and
Newport Beach favor lhe assessment
of developers to help pay for three
proposed freeways that would open
South Oranae C.Ounty to additional
developmcnL
After listening to strona opposition
Power cut
b;ystorm
in Mesa
By ROBERT BARUm °' .. ...., ......... A pcctacular thunder and light·
nina storm that flashed and rumbled
throuab Southern California at aboui
sundown Tuesday knocted oul thrtt
electrical transformers in Costa Mesa
and left some n:s1dcnts wit.bout
po~r dunn' the ni&ht.
The li&htruA& strikes put the Costa
(Pleue ... ITOlllll/ A2)
from homcownen attcndina Tucsdar.
ni&ht's meetins. the Irvine council
ex~ support for the fn:cways
and the developer fee oooocpt by a 4-
to-I vole.
On Monday, Newport council
members, already on record in favor
of the freeways.. voted wwtlmoilsly
to suppon tbc devclopcr fee concept.
In letten relayina their decision IO
county official both cou.na how--
ever, voiced several ooaocms,!rqard-
i~ th( heways and fee pro~:and
med to be in~olved in the Plina.ina of these highways.
At issue arc three propC>llCd rn:.
,_'a}'S known as the San Joaquin Hills,
Eastau and Foothill transportation
corridors. Cost of buikli the freo.
ways bas been cstimatCd a'i\ l lbillion.
Of a:rcatcst oonceni to homeownen
in Irvine and Ncv.pon Beach is
San Joaquin Hills Tra.m;ponation
(Pleue .. PllUWAY/U)
HB 's Denny hasn't missed
a drop of rain in 54 ye'ars
2 arrested
in Porsche
theft ring
Ro1E11
Buu1
?
Al Yr °'7' Cout DAILY PILOTIWednNday, S.p1ember ~6. 1984
NRC investigating 'minor'
San Onofre radioactive leak
Fnautaff aad wire ttport• wnich co-own the plan\, td the leak Sordclct wd no 'AOrkm werr 1n
A minor rad1oact1vc ps leak oc-measured 026 millircnu per bou1 ~f ahe compre r room at &he tame of
curttd t 1he n Onof~ nuclear rad1oactivit) 11 thc plant'1 boundary ... the leak
pow acBtJna pl n1 rher th• By com~ a Chest X 'I camcs nca:ssaQ vo ut uthonttc id the leak 20 m1Uircms of radi i~ty per The leak tn a comprcs or of the ~no htalth-ihrc t to the publi~ · hour. rad1oact1vc ga wa te-trutment sys-Th~ Nuclear RCJulatory Com· "SOrdele_t saia tOclay the leak was tem for the Unit 2 and 3 reactors was
mwion u anvcst~tmg the incident dttccted in a waste gas tripper, a dettcted at 4:10 p.m. Monday .. Aid
to determine what cau J the leak, device used to remove p from ucacat Reautatory. Comm1ssioo
the fifth reported at the nuclear plant liquicb. 1 he ~ak was confined to the pokeswoman Sue Gagner.
this year. room where the ps compressor is The plant on the horc of
Becky Sordelct. aspoke:.woman for located and WA$ controlled within 22 northern Sin Diego County near n
the SQuthem C~lifomia Edison Co. minute . Clemente has three reactol"5.
Thi MMltnQ at the hotel WM
Mt up •ft• en MOflymout tJp fed
poffce to the s..pt. 13 lrNlt ot
Rtchard °* .... 55, and
Maureen c~ Moel, 32 .. both
of ScOttideJe. Artz.
Poffce found two ouncee Of oocaln• tn their tuggage u they
were leaYh'\g their -~'!• Beed\ motel room.
Mfkle and Mo11 then~ to
a.Slat pollce In the "•P·
prehenalon of their connection.''
They helped anange tM meeting
with Mcl.qhUn, police aid.
McLaughlin was releaeed on
hit own ~nlZ.anee ·•tt• ~to .-.t ~Ice In
further..,..... But Pollde ._he
hal dluppMre'd. .and onty hi•
·~ knowt hit w_t.Mbouta.
He • due for arr~t on oet. io In South Or~ County Mun~4 Court on a felony
=..or cOntpfrecy to a8lt
Burnalde, out of Jail on $15.ooo
bait, la ICheduled for arraign-
ment on the ume charge Oct.,'23.
Mlkle and Mou are In Arizona,
poHce said. No date for their
arr~nment has b4NMi Mt. .
STORM CUTS POWER IN MESA •••
l'romAl
Mesa Police f?.cparyment's generator
and air conditioning units out of
commission briefly. Power trans-
formers were knocked out a Camelia
Street and at two other locations in
eastern sections of the city.
Power outages also were reported
in Irvine.
About 38,621 customers, were left
without electrical power throughout
Orange County, but 10 most cases,
service was restored almost immedi-
ately, according to Jim Kennedy, area
manager for the Southern California
Edison Co.
A mudslide also was reported at
S:4S Lm. today in Capistrano Beach.
Officials blame the slide on mouturc
-but riot from the rain. They said a
resident left water running for three
days in a yard in the 34000 block of
Doheny Place.
Two .nonhbound lanes of Pacific
Coast Highway were closed briefly for
cleanup operations.
~ County Public Works
Superintendent William Gustafson
said early reports mdicated that a
patio slid down from the bluft\op on
to the adjacent highway but there was
no other apparent property damage.
In Costa Mesa, the stonn brought
plenty of sound and fury, but only .01
of an inch of rain. In Irv me, it was .07.
of an inch And in Laauna Beach there
was no rain at all
Althou,fh no figuf'Cj were available
for HuntJngton Beach, officials re-ported sporadic heavy showers dur-
1ng a tw°'"hour period Tuesday eve-
ning.
Weather forecasters in Los Angeles
said the widest>read storm was caused
by "the coming together of moist
wann air mass flowinf from the south
and ''the trailing edge • of a cold front
cominf from the north. Remnants of
dcpartJngstorm Norbert also played a
pert.
Weather forecasters said there is a
lot of moisture in the skies despite a
lack of clouds and tht there is a chance.
ofa repetition of last night's storm.
Skies wtll be clear Thursday as the
early debut of cool, p'ay, fall weather
Jives way to wanncr·days with highs
tn the 70s and mid-80s, forecasters
said.
Few clouds remained today from
Tuesday's electrical storm. ~c Na-
tional Weather Service said.
PORSCHE THEFT SUSPECTS •••
From Al
Mudd owns the Laguna Porsche
dealcrsJup and Cano owns Posh
Porsche. a Santa Ana repair shop.
Weigand said.
The Newport investigation
stemmed from the June theft of a
$6S,000 Porsche belongina to Cali-
fornia Angels slugger Reaic Jackson.
Jackson's car was stolen from the
front of a Newport Beach restaurant
on Pacific Coast Hi&hway after an
Angels game. Parts of the customized
car were later found in an industrial
area of Fountain Valley, m a Foun-
wn Valley storage yard and 1n a
Hunungton Beach home.
Pohce arrested John 0 . Eberhart,
40. of Costa Mesa, in July in
connection with the theft of Jack.son's
car 1and four other Porsches. They
said they believed Eberhart was the
ringlC1ldcr of a Porsche theft ring
operating in Newport Beach.
Eberhart is being held without bail id the Oraoie County Jail because he
is on parole from an ~ 8-month
sentence following his con~ction on
similar charges stemmina from a theft
ring in Anaheim in 1982. He is
awaiting arraignment Oct. I on th.rec
felony counts of possession of stolen
car parts.
This }llonth, the investigation led
to the arrests of Mudd and Cano, who
police believe were assisting the
alleged theft ring. Weigand alleied
Mudd bought sheet metal parts from
Eberhart and in tum sold them to
Cano, who planned to use them to do
body work on a Porsche that was
damaged 10 an accident.
Cano was arrested Sept. 5 and
Mudd was arrested Friday, Weig.and
said. Both men were arrested on
suspicion of reccivina stolen pro~
eny. Cano was relelsed on his own
rccoanizance and Mudd posted
$2,SOObait
Neither suspect was charged m
connection with the theft of Jackson's
car.
Wcipnd said he is unsure whether
the investigation will tum up more
su5J)C'CtS in the alleied theft ring.
~y, investigators said they
believed the nng was responsible for
the disappearance of six Ponches
from in front of restaurants on Pacific
Coast Hi&)tway:------'---
FREEWAY PLAN GETS BACKJNG •• ~
From Al
Comdor. which would connect the
Corona del Mar Freeway near John
Wayne Airport with the San Diego
Freeway near San Juan Capistrano,
running along the southern border of
Irvine near Newport Beach.
Orange County supervisors next
month will consider a plan to assess
ways. It also said Irvine wants to
participate in prcpanng the specific
design and fee plan for the freeways.
The council's letter also said its
members arc concerned with several
"technical issues.. concerning the
freeway, including the number of
lanes to be butlt.
lfOund" and not have any say in
plannin& the new highways over the
months to come. He said the
proposed San Joaquin Hills freeway
would help divert traffic around the
city.
On Monday night, the Newport
Beach City Council also heard some
criticism from homeowners before
...
Sk ·es will c ear aft~r wet spell
Coutal
Tides
TMU9'IOAY
6001111
11'14am 614pm.
01 u
8u!I -1oci.y at 8 44 p II\. riMI Tilurecla1 al I « -.111 Ind -Igel!'! at IQp.11\,
• Moon ... 1oci.y 11 I CM pm. ,_
Tlluttd'1 It 9 40 I "' and Mtl llllOWI et I 40p.111
Temperatures .....
15 59 n •• '° ..
51 "' 11 ee
11 72
.. 57
.. 16 .. 11
•2 211 lit H ., 17
Extended
CoNTINUEU S roR1Es
--
7t 7 "1111•tafl 51 Orll>d~ 82 II Gf•lflllt
.. ~ Htf110rd 11 flt ........
•• 31 HonollAI •
74 • "-IOI!•
16" ~ IO 49 Jediton,Mt
95 !7 JlllClulon'.111e
85 41 Jul'IMU 82 61 l<anMt Ctly
11 63 L1tV90a1 .. ... UttleAoC* A 41
53 12 n o
•2 '<> .... ~7 31 « 24 llZll
1·2
1·2 • 1·2
1 1-2
1·2 1-2 S ... ctar.clion' IOU!hwwl
.. "' ., 00
.. 64 12 Tl to 17 ~c
16 .. 11 11 81 95
Ill ...
11 ti
71 ..
IO ..
66 ,,
to ..
11 ,.
a ..
IO
13 ., ..
65
90 •& 61
IO 67 17
71 c a
15
DRCTION
l•"PO« ,.. ,.,
""' "°°' po«
PoOf
DENNY HASN'T MISSED A DROP ••• Prom Al •
much it is raining and if it is all ri&ht to
send their men home," he said.
Denny bas other interests -in
addHion to being a member of the
American Meteorological Society, be
belonas to cactus and succulent
society and is a coin collector.
But more imponant to him -
perhaps as imponant as weather eing itself -is · bis lonJ and
cct record with the Hunbngton
ch Rota{)' Oub.
Denny has compiled a perfect
attendance rcc-0rd at weekly meetings
for 54 years. But that mark appears to
be in jeopardy because Denny
entered Hoag Memorial Hospital ·in
Newport Beach this week for explora-
tory surgery and is scheduled to
undergo lung surgery Thursday,
friends said.
"It's really going to hurt him to
mlSS a meeting." lonattme fnend and
former Mayor Ted Bartlett said. "It
(the perfect attendance) is one of the
most important things in his life."
We caught up with Denny a few
days ago at his Pinc Street home
which was piled high with news-
papers and about any other materials
you can think of that he saves for the
Girl Scouts and Boy Scouts and other
charitable organizations.
D•llY Piiot
Deltvery
t--&LJoUiYILf!_•ntffd
He recalled that he first became
intcre ted in observing the weather
when he bought a barometer in 1927
or 1928. \'It was nice weather but the
barometer started to fall. I thought the
thina was no damed good. But then it
rained for about a week and washed
out roads and other things. It rained
almost a week."
Denny, who first was employed by
the HuntingtQn Beach Com.{>&!'Y to
measure the ·amount of oil being
extracted from company wells, be-
came manager of the lar&c company
in 1948 and served in t6at capacity
until he retired at the age of 65 in
1962. Denny presided over the com-
pany's empire that included such
agricultural pursuits as the raisin& of
sheep and h<>15 and the cultivation of
oats. The company mostly now is
engaged in the land-development
busme s.
Denny was bont m Lead (pro-
nounced Leed), S.O. m 1897. He was
named after bis father. John Sherman
Denny, an e!'Jinccr.
"My dad was called John S. Denny
and I went by the name of J. Sherman
Denny. We didn't want to be known
as Bia John and Little John, .. he said • • • The wettest year in the history of
the city, Denny said, came in 19~ I
when at rained 28 inches. The driest
year was 1960-61 with only 3.43
inches of measured rainfall. It rained
10.34 inches last year, not far off the
yearly average of 12.08.
Denny iavcs crcdcnce to the com·
plaints of others who compwned
about the recent hot siege in the city.
One day the thermometer hi1 93
dearecs for one of the hottest days on
record. "We're only a mile from the
beach and. my lands. that's hot."
Denny wd the other day he'd like
to continue to keep weather records
two or three more years and then tqm
the responsibility over to some one
else who wlll "stay with it. There's no
use doing u unless you do it accurate-
ly," be said.
He said he hopes to turn his files
over to the city for reference when be
retires. . . Denny, who 1s known to have a
ready sense of humor, rccalled with a
chuck.le an occasion a few yein aso
when he was asked to pvc a talk by
the Rotary Club.
"I suppose you want me to talk
about the weather," 1 said.
" 'No,' they said, 'why don't you
talk about somcthina you know
about'
He talked about the weather any-
way. •
"My fai\ds, we've bad fun," ~esaid.
ORANGE COAST Clrcul•llon 714/142-4333
Daily Pilat Clualfled adverttelng 714/142·5178
All other department• 142-4321
MAIN OFFICE
330 We;;r ea., ct C 1 Meta CA ~ .a..i·esa BoJ. 1SUQ ~" Maa CA 92621 l.tO<ld.i f Fr dll r 11 1"" 0.
not ha.. yo.Ir paper "' 630pm calti.fore 7pm
lll>O YfNI copy * ~ ea
S.turdl1 •nd Sono.11 It
'f°" do nol I«.... y<IUI
eo0y b~ 1 a m caM before
tO • m 8'>d youo CDPr w<ll
beden811CS
H. L. Schwartz Ill
Pubhsher
Circulation
Telephones
MOM °''"Of Couri1y AteH tu~
l~N'O'* .~
Ro1emary Churchman
Controller
Stephen F. Cerezo
Production
Manager
Donald L. Wllllamt
Circulation
Manager
s.cono eta• J>Olla\11 1>11d a1 Coata .,... Cllt!ornit !UPS 1« 8001 Subectipt.ot> by cetr1et '4 75 mot>1ntf o, ,,.,.. $6 ~ l!l()ntllly
VOL. n, NO. 210
• new development served by these
highways to help pay for the freeways.
Supporters say the freeways arc
needed to relieve traffic congestion
and to serve residents of growing
The Irvine Council's vote came
.after a dozen speakers asked the
council to withdraw support for the
San Joaquin Hills freeway. The
speakers were applauded by about
1 SO people attending the meeting.
givin1 unanimous support to the r.============:::=:;::~::=;=~=====:;:~=====::;:==:===:;;:=:;;::~ freeway fee-plan .
...
/
-South County areas.
Critics say the freeways will actu-
ally promote growth -and ad-
ditional traffic -and will create air
pollution and noise problems alona
the route. They also say the developer
fees for new construction will simply
be passed along to buyers of homes
and commcmal buildings.
A report prepared by the Irvine city
staff said tbat after unincorporated
Oranae County, Irvine would gener-
ate the greatest contribution to the fee
program, about 2S percent. The
proposed fee would be about S 1,200
for a smaJe-family home. $700 per
apartment unit and $3.80 per square
foot for commercial development.
A teller approved for transmission
to county officials said the Irvine City
Council "supports the concept and
aclcnowtedaes the need ~ for the three
freeways and "rccogn1zcs the need"
for developer fees to be part of the
"financing mix" to build the h1&h-
Larry Aaran was the only council
mcmbdr to vote apinst the freeway
plan, saying the San Joaquin Hills
and FoothiJI highways would be the
third and fourth parallel freeways
passing throu&h Irvine, joining. the
cx1sting Santa Ana and San Diego
freeways. If county plans proceed, the
totaJ traffic on these four highways
would be 620,000 cars and trucks per
day, A.gran char&ed.
He claimed the city would derive
no benefits from the hiahways and would face .. environmental degrada-
tion" if they arc built.
"The irony is that we arc being
asked -with a strai~t face-to pay
for our own devastation," Agran said.
"We are t>cina invited to attend our
own environmental lynching; and we
are being told to buy the ro~."
·But Councilman David Baker
oraucd that withdrawina support
would be to .. stick our heads in the
John Kubas, president of the
Village Way Management Co., said
his lfOUp, representing about 4,000
homeowners in Ncwpon Beach and
Irvine, is strongly opposed to the San
Joaquin Hills (recway.
"We feel we've got to speak out
every time this issue comes up."
Kubas told the council. "We're gomg
to fight the comdor 100 percent,
every WI)'. we can."
Councilman John Cox said the
homeowner group may be taking a
"shortsighted" view.
.. Th.is is aoing in because it is
supposed to alleviate a bunch of
traffic getting through our neigh-
borhoods," Cox said.
Councilman Don Strauss Asked
that the city apin remind the county
1t is concerned about a proposed
interchanae al Ford Road. While the
city ss on record as supporting -the
freeway, the city docs not want Ford
Road or San Mi~cl to be major
intercban he u1d.
. T0RCHkUN RAISES QUESTIONS..t1 •.
From Al
• State IAw rcqu1r that supervisors
file d1sclo urc statements rcportina
any aif\s valued at $2SO or more. The
reporting deadline is April 1985. ··r intt'nd to mve!tll&ate thi
thoroll.lhly and have !cpl advice
before l de 1de to \IOte on a matter
Just Call
642-6086
involvina P cific Bell or fill out ahd ~ the d1sdo ure fonn," Wieder
said.
She said the county counsel's office
till is .studyina what valuc.~n be
placed on her participation an., the
relay and the torch.
Wieder also said that as to the value
of the luncheon Pacific Bell ho led.
she has been 1dv11Cd the valut' of the
110 Jhe rec.c1v.c.d is limued to tbe co t
of her own meal.
"It is non·rcr.:?ruble beau it was
lc's than SSO, • the supcrv1$0r said.
hll do yn Uke 1bCM1t at Da.tly PUot? ~'at cl 't yoa Uke? Call t~
Hmbtr at lrft llM yowr mttsa&e wlJI ~rdf'd. Iran rlbH 1Dd It.UV rt4
lo Ui 1pproptlate e41tOI'. •
The Hiiie H·'"r IM•triq 1 rvic atlf be• f'4 to rttord lttltrs to tbt
Uor o• aay loplc. C..trlbl&on to o.r Lellen rol•ma mHt llcl•d •• Jr
1mt 11111 tek'•ll•H H••er for nrlfletitla. 'o drc1lall11 c•tl1, pluae,
TtlJ •I wut .. ea )'Hr mlad.
Gem
Talk
By JC HLMPHRIF.S
urttfied <A!mololi 1. AC~
CHINA DIAMONDS
from a land of myatery
We think of mysterious, In-
scrutable China as a huge land of
a bllllon peasants, a tong history,
and a puzzling future. If we think
of China In terms of art, beauty
and culture, we are likely to en-
vision beautifully-carved jade or
Ivory. But. modern China Is also a
land of diamonds. Ttiere are
known tO be diamond deposits In
at least ftve provtnces and,
although the Chinese govern·
ment maintain• • high degree of
secrecy about auch wealth, It 11
also known that diamonds are
being used to acquire f orelgn
currency for trade. Now, we learn
that the Chin are also de-
v e Io p Ing a • conafderable
dtamond-cuttf~ Industry. There
are said to , be about 5,000
diamond cutters now t work,
With anoth r 300 ·being trained
each · YMf. It 1t •tlmated that
China now mtnes about io million
carat• of rough diamonds each
y r, and that ebOUt 20 to 25
percent of this I of gem qu ntr.
The remaJnder re used tndu •
trial di mond .
From the people making crystal a legend.
SWAROVSKI ~
The graceful beauty of one of nature's most
elegant creations. crafted in 32 % full lead
Austrian crystal. Exclusively yours from the
Swarovski Silver Crystal ,._ Collection.
;
• • ... •
..
Fllll llTI I
--- -
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1984 ORAN(JECOUNTY. CALIFORNIA -l'J CFNI~
Di'u1D1ner
Mane
dead·at64
LOS AN-
GELES
(AP) , -
Jazz drum-
mer Shelly
Manne died
early today
i n a
suburban
h.ospital
shortly after
collapsing
at his home,
hospital of-MANNE
ficials said. He was 64. .
There was no immediate in-
dication of the cause of death,
said Cathleen Kotarakos, a
spokeswoman for Serra Mem-
orial Health Centerin Sun Valley.
Manne was a composer, con-
ductor and drummer who studied
with diummcr Billy Gladstone.
He founded Shelly's Manne
Hole in Hollywood, a popular
jazz club and meeting place for
other enterlainers during thc-
1970s.
Coast
Vtlllty poles In Newport's
China Cove wlll be com-
ing down./ A3
catlfomla
Veteran actor Walter
Pidgeon Is dead at the
age of 87 ./Al
N~tion
Smlllng Shultz, Gromyko
meet for talks In Wash-
lngton./ M
A balloon-flying Czech
defector arrives in Colo-
rado./ Al
Donald Bren retetves
Golden Baton award for
arts patronage./81
Food
If you want to win cheers,
pack a sumptuous
tailgate plcnlc.IC1
Winning cooking con-
tests Is old hat for an
Irvine woman./C1
Sport&
Edison and Fountain Val-
ley face stiff tests Satur-
day ntght.101
Laguna Beach tops New-
port Harbor tn a battle of
unbeatens In girts vot-
leyball./02.
Entertainment .
That's not the sexy pinup
Farrah Fawcett that you'll
be seeing In "The Burning
Bed." /83
INDEX
Blr1h1
Bridge
Bu"8tlnBoard .,._..
c.MfOmla Hewe
a....fllld
COmk:I
Crouword
DMth NotJcel
Food Home
Horoecope
AnnLMdera
Mutu11Ant1
-HattonalNewt
OplnlOn
=T:a PUbtlo Notic.
~ 8todt Marketa T......-.on '"-'•• w .....
WOftdNfNt
A5
85
A3
9&-7
A4
06-8
85 oe
04 c1-•
8 1·2
07
82
87
A4 A8
81
A3
04.5
01~
88
82 83~
A2
A4
- --e · e ·
1oaet1ve·
Dline,land abile
~tied workerawalkloaplcketllneamfChtdlspte the
UeertloD OD the •laia at left that DiaDeyland la th•.·
.. Happleat Place oD Earth." Qeeplte the efforta of eome
at.
'
.,
1,800 atiiklDa worken, bowuer. Dimleyland rem•IDed
open and Ylafton eald life at the Mat1c IDD.&clom ,,...
. DOrm&\ and friendly. 8~ OD .... e AS.
Incident termed
'very·mtnor.· but
~ 0 NRC investigating
Fnm staff_. wire r1,1r11
A minor radioactive pa leak
occurred at the Sin Ono&c nudeai
power aeneratina plant earlier dais
week. But authorities said the leak
posed no health threat to the pubOO ;
The Nuck.ar flcculatory Com·
mission is in vestip&i..n& the inci-
dent to detcmline What caused lbc
leak. the fifth reported at the
nuclear plant this year.
Becky Sordclei. a spokeswoman
for the Southern California Edison
-Go. :which 00-0-.ns the plant, said
the leak measui;pi-.. p26 millimns
per hour of ~~vity at lbc
plant's boundary. By comparison, a
cMst X-ray carries 20 millucms Cst
tadioactivi~ per boar. •
Sordclet said today the leak
detectcO in a waste ps stripper, a
de~ice used to remove pscs from
liquids. The leak was confined io
the room wbcrc the gas compressor
is located and was controlled within
22 minutes.
Sordelet said no workcn were in
the oompressor room at the time of
the leak and oo cvacuatio11 was
ncccssary.
The leak in a compressor of the
radioacti~ ps treatment -_....,.~--s~m for the Unit 2and 3 reactors
was detected at '4:10 p.m. Monday.
said Nuclear Regulatc>r:Y Com-
mission spokeswoman Sue Gainer.
She described the leak as ~
minor.""
The Plant on the sCashott oi
nonhcm San Dicao County near
Sari Oemcntc bas tbn:e ~
but Unit I has been shut do""D for
some time to allow for earthquake
modifotions.
Wieder's
tOrchrun
prompts
·OCprobe
Irvine, Newport councils
back freeway fund plan&
How much value
should be placed -_,,_ __
on ·contribution'?
By JEFF ADI.BR
Ol ... Oelr......... -
Orange County Board of ~upcr
visors Chairman Hamett Wieder on
Tuesday turned over to the cbunty a luncheon that follov.td constituted a
lithavaph she received 1n July after reportable aift.
runnanaherlegoftheOlympic'storch Wieder said she was aSked by
relay. but she plans to keep the torch Pacific Bell to run in her capacity as
ahe carried. board chairman, rcprcsen~ina the
Questions about Wieder's partici-county.
pat1on in the torch nln were raised in "It ~ an honor tsut an honor on
relation to how ahe should rep<>rt the the county'~ P._art. not my own. In
$3,000 contribution from Pacific Bell addition, Pacific Bell was makina a
used to ~Y for her one-kilometer tea $3,-000 sift to charity, not to me, .. she
plus a luncheon valued at S 1,200 that said.
followed. Pacific Bell paid $3,000 for each
In turning over the lithOIJ'lpb to one-kilomettr relay lea it spon50re<l.
the county, Wieder said the dep1rtion The mone)' was donated to the Boy
of an Olympic torch runner, valued at Scouts of America.
$80, was .. aaift to the county, directly, Pacific Bell is one of more than 90
and was not to me." companies expected to bid on a $12. 7
She added \he has consulted with ruilhon contract for a new rounty
Count)' Counsel Adrian Kuyper con--telephone system '°mctime next
cemina whether the torch, the clothes year. •
she was aivcn to run in or the (Pleue llff TOJlCR/A2)
But foes of propoSed new routes promise
to fight construction :every way we can'
By PB.IL SNEIDERMAN
AJMt UREN llElN
Of .... D911J ........
City council members in Irvine and
Newport Beach favor the assessment
of developers to help pay for three
proposed freeways that would open
South Oranae County to additional
development.
After Ustenina to trona opposition
Power cut
b;ystorm
in·Mesa
By ROBERT BAR~ °' ... ~ ....... A spectacular thunder and li&ht-
nina storm that flashed and rumbled
through Southern California at about
sundown Tuesday lcllocked out three
clcctrjcal tran fonnen in Co ta M
and ~ some residents without
power'dlinng the 01~t ..
The lightn1n1 strixes put the Costa
(Pleue ... STORM/ A2)
from homeowners auend.ingTuesdaY.
ni&ht's meetina. the Irvine council
expresacd uppon for the freeways
and the devefopeT fee concept by a 4-
to-1 vote.
On Monday, Ncwpon council
members, already en ~rd in favor
of the freeways. voted unanimously
to suppon the developer fee concept.
In letters relaying their decision to
HB 's Denny hasn. 't missed
a drop of rain ."Jn 54 ·years
J. Sherman Denny has measured
6S2.1 l incha of run an HuntinJton
Be9Ch since he bean his ~pie
wealbCr·kCJCPtnt activfties in 1930.
The 17·)'elr-old Denny chmbs lhc
Wider 10 his rooftop at 8 1.m. and 5 =acll da~ -and mUdl more
ntl dam~ the l'aln 11Cat0n -
k ~is Ollk:lal J I •l~ diameter
~rain.-.
tte•a never mitlecl an 1mpoiunt
rneteorol<Jlkal blppemna, Qne rain)'
penod M bl4 1Ptlend1clti and
couldn•t make h up '° bis roof. But
thellQ&e bad an ~t•na capacity to
meuutt rain fbr thlft da) and that was Iona tnouah ror him to rcco r and record the torm total. Denn Imo t
OOUDty officials; both counci how-
ever. voiced several oonce.t~ :f ~e freeways and fee and to be involved in the planbina
of these b.iibwavs.. .
At issue are three propolCd frco.
ways known as the San Joaquin Hills,
Eastern and Foothill tl'anSport4tion
corridors. Cost of buildin& the
"Nays bas been cstimaicd at l I billion.. or arc.a test concern to bomco .
in Irvine and Newport Bcacb it
· 1oaquin Hill Transpo~tioe CPI---nt&&1'AY/A2)
2arrested
iilPorsche
theft ring
BJ llREN E. nE1N
Of ...........
I
a dia . ond 1nv.estment
' seized by federal court
''W•'ve got nothma to h1cte," he
d. 1'.he SEC ha~ ccu tl lhe ran~n
companies of :,prc)lfli on ~lderly
cu tomcrs look1na for ufe aM~t·
men ts.
ANGEL PITCHER ARRESTED •••
I
TM meetlflQ at tt.. hotel ••. hit own r~nlzance aft..:
set up after an ano~ tlpiled la]greelng to ...iat POtJce 1n
pofiee to the Sept. 13 anett of 'urther arreata. But police NY he
Alchard Dale Mlkle, 55, and has dltaQpeared, and only hla
Maureen Chefyf Mou, 32, bOth att~ knowa hll Whereabouts.
of S<:ottl,!J•le. Ariz.
Police found two ounces of
cocaine In their luggage aa they
were leaving their Lag1.1.na a.ch
motel room.
~ Mlkle and Moss then ~iMd to
ass1at ponce In ttie "ap-
prehension of their connection."
They helped arrange the meeting
with McLaughlin, police said.
Mclaughlin was released on
He la due for arraignment on
Oct. 101n South Orange County
Munk:fpal Court on a felony
~aro-of C<>MPlr~ to sell cocaJne.
Bumtlde. out of JaJI on $1 5 ,000
ball, la acheduled for arraign-
ment on the same charge Oct. 23.
Mlkle and Motl are In Artzona,
police said. No date for their
arraignment haa been eet.
STORM CUTS POWER IN MESA •.•
Jl"ri>mAl
Mesa Pohce Depanment's generator
and air condiuoning units out of
commission briefly. Power trans-
formers were knocked out a Camelia
St.rcct and at two other locations in
eas~rn 5eetions of the city
Power outages also were reported
in Irvine.
About 38,621 customers were left
walhout electrical power throughout
Orange County, but an most cases,
service was restored almost immedi-
ately, according to Jim Kennedy, area
manager for the Southern California
Edison O>.
A mudslide also was reported at
S:•S a.m. today in Capistrano Beach.
Officials blame the sbde on moisture
-but not from the rain. They said a
resident left water running for three
days in a yard id the 34000 block of
Doheny Place.
Two northbound lanes of Pacific
Coast Highway were closed briefly for
cleanup operations.
Orange County Pubhc Works
Superintendent William Gustafson
said early reports indicated that a
patio slid down from the bluffiop on
to the adjacent highway but there was
no other apparent property damage.
In Costa Mesa, the stonn brought
plenty of sound and fury, but only .Ol
of an inch of rain. In Jrvane, it was .07.
of an inch And in Laguna Beach there
~-as no raan at all.
Althoufh no ti~ were available
for Hunttnaton Beach, officials re-ported sporadic heavy showers dur-
111& a two-hour period Tuesday eve-
ning.
Weather forecasters in Los Angeles
said the widespread storm was caused
by "the coming together of moist
warm air mass Oowinf. from the south
and "the trailing edge •of a cold front
comiDJ from the north. Remnants of
departmg storm Norben also played a
part.
Weather forecasters said there is a
lot of moisture in the skies despite a
lack of clouds and tht there is a chance
of a repetition of last niaht's stonn.
Skies will be cJear Thursday as the
early debut of cool, gray, fall weather
Jives way to warmer days with highs
1n the 70s and mid..SOS, forecasters
satd.
Few clouds remained today from
Tuesday's electrical storm, the Na-
tional Weather Service said. ->
Skies will clea r after wet spe I
Coutal
Tides
thin Mtt toel•r et eu p111 . ,_ TIM<tdey Ill I 44 e m end Mta 111g111n Id 143pm ·
~MU today81 ICM pm,'"" Thuncl•r ate~ •111 end Nit egAln et
140pm
Temperatures
.. Le
15 51 77 •• 60 ..
51 48 11 ee
11 72 .. 57
.. 61 .. 11
42 25 st 39
81 17
Extended
7$ 47
61 23 82 .. ae se ., se
411 31
• 74 " 96 ••
IO 41 95 57 es 4t 82 61 11 53 1-4 '4 se •1 53 32 n •2 42 30
.. &A 67 37 .... 24
F ..,..,i --ty ITIOt!!ll'9 1oW c:tOuda on _,.h _, Werm dlye
Hight 7510 IO at oout Ind IOI 10 low
80a lnlMICI Lowa IO to 70
CoNTINUEU SroR1Es
Flagat&ll
Ofl/ld "8ptclt Or .. tf'lllt
HenlotO
Helene
Honolulu H°"910ft
~ JllCk-.t.A•
Jecktonvtlle Juft91U
Kall .. •~tty LuVegu uu .. R<xt.
lfZI
1·2
HI 1.2
1
1·2 1·2 1-2 Sw.ldtf'KtlCWI~
.,, so ... ,..
12 " ro ,,
47 l'll 81 H " ~ 16 71 '~ ~ 51 ~
15 61 70
1-4 " • 17 72 ., It
71 6V .. 63 10 U .. u
66 '° 7' S5
80 ... ...._ ~
II .. e2 .. ., .,
13 .. 15 to ... '23 ,. ...
80 60 57 35
17 '8 71 . 45
17 70 82 41
13 82 15 ..
DENNY HASN'T MISSED A DROP .••
From Al
much it is raining and if it is all rightto He recalled that he first became
send their men home,'' he said. interested in observing the weather
Denny has other interests -tn when he bought a bafometer in J 927
addition to being a member of the or 1928. ult was nice weather but the
American Meteorological Society, he barometer started to fall. J thought the
belongs to cactus and succulent thing was no damed good. But then it
society and is a coin collector. rained for about a week and washed
But more im~rtant to him -out roads and other th.inas. It rained
perhaps as important as weather almost a week."
keeping itself -is bis lonJ and Denny. who first was employed by
perfect record with the Huntington the Huntington Beach Comnany to
Beach Rotary Club. h f r"'l be' Denny has compiled a perfect measure t e amount o 01 ana
anertdance record at weekly meetings e1Ctracted from company wells. be-came manager of the large company for 54 years. But that mark appears to in 1948 and served in that capacity
year was 1960-61 with only 3.•3
inches of measured rainfall. It rained
10.34 inches last year, not far off the
yearly average of 12.08.
Denny rves credence to the com-
plaints o others who complained
about the recent bot siege in the city.
One day the thermometer hit 93
degrees for one of the hottest days on
record. "We're only a mile from the
beach and. mv lands, that's hot."
be in jeqpardy because Denny ·1 h ·red h f 65 · •--------liiiiiii•lm!ll-liiiillliiiiiiilili ______________________ · entereo Hoag Memorial Hospital In untl e reta at t e a.ae ·0 an
1962. Dmny presided dver the com-Newport Beach thi week for explora-pany's empire that included such
tory surgery. Doctors found cancer agricultural pursuits as the ra.isang of
cells in one ofhis lunp during a recent sheep and hogs and the cultivation of
checkup, and he is scheduled to oats. The company mostly now is
ur:idergo _lung surgery Thursday. enga&ed in the land-development
Denny said the other day he'd like
to continue to keep weather records
two or three more years and then tum
the responsibility over to some one
else who will "stay with it. There's no
use doing at unless you do it accurate·
ly," he said. PORSCHE THEFT SUSPECTS ...
From Al
Mudd owns the Laguna Porsche
dealership and Cano owns Posh
Porsche, a Santa ~na repair shop,
Weigand said.
The Newport 10vestigat1on
stemmed from the June theft of a
$65,000 Porsche belonging to Cah-
fomiaAngels slugger Reggie Jackion.
Jackson's car was stolen from the
front of a Newport Beach restaurant
on Pacific Coast Highway after an
Angels game. Parts ofthe customized
car were later found in an industrial
area of Fountain Valley, in a Foun·
taan Valley storage yarct .and an a
Huntington Beach home.
Police arrested John D. Eberhart,
40, of Costa Mesa, in July in
connection with the theft of Jackson's
.
caT and four other Porschcs. They
said they believed Eberhart was the
ringleader of a Porsche theft ring
operattng in Newport Beach.
Eberhart as being held wnbout bal1
an the Orange County Jail because he
as on parole from an 18-month
sentence following his conviction on
samilarcharges stemming from a theft
ring an Anaheim in 1982. Re is
awaiting arraiaoment Oct. I on tbnc
felony counts of possession of stolen
car parts.
This month, the investigation led
to the arrests of Mudd and Cano, who
police· belaeve were assisting the
alleged theft ring. Weigand alleged
Mudd bought sheet metal parts from
Eberhart and in turn sold them to
Cano, who planned to use them to do
body work on a Porsche that was
damaged in an accident.
Cano was arrested Sept. S and
Mud~ was arrested Fnday, Wcipnd
saad. Both men were arrested on
suspicion of receiving stolen pro~
erty. Gaflo was relea5Cd on his own
recognizance and Mudd posted
$2,500 bail.
Neither suspect was charged an
connection with the theft of Jackson's
car. Weigand said he 1s unsure whether
the investigation will turn up more
suspects in the alleged theft ring.
Ori&inally, investigators saad they
believed the nng was responsible for
the disappearance of six Porscbes
from in front of restaurants on Pacific
Coast Highway.
FREEWAY PLAN GETS BACKING ••.
From Al
Corridor, which would conpect tbe
Corona del Mar Freeway near John
Wayne Airport with the San Diego
Freeway near San Juan Capistrano.
running along the southern border of
Irvine near Newport Beach.
ways. It also said Irvine wants to
participate in prcpanng the specific
design and fee plan for the freeways.
The council's letter also said its
members are concerned with several
"technical issues" concerning the
freeway, including the number of
lanes to be built.
ground" and not have any say in
planning the new highways over the
months to come. He said the
proposed San Joaquin Hills freewa y
would help divert traffic around the city.
On Monday night, the Newport
Beach City Council also heard some
cntic1sm from homeowners before
fn~nc;ts saad. . . busine s. h s real~y g~ang t<? bun. h•m to ,. _ Denny was born 10 Lead (pro-
m1 s a meeung, longtime fne~d •.~d nounced Leed), s.o. an l 897. He was
former Mayor Ted Bart!ett said. lt named after his father, John Shcnnan
(the J>:erfcct attendance) ts ~nc: o~.lhe Denny, an engineer.
most important thu~gs tn bis hfe. "My dad was called John S. Denny
We caught up wtth Denny a few and I went by the name of J. Sherman
days ago at has P11:1e Street home Denny. We didn't want to be known
which was paled high with news-as Big John and Little John "be said.
He sa id he hopes to tum his files
over to the city for reference when he
retires. ·
Denny, who is known to have a
ready sense of humor recalled with a
chuckle an occasion a few years ago
when he was asked to give a talk by
the Rotary Club.
''l ~uppose you want me to talk
about the weather," I said.
"'No,' they said, 'why don't you
talk about somethang you know about' r papers and about any other matenals • • • ' you can think of that he saves for the The wettest year in the history of
Girl Scouts and Boy Scouts and other the city, Denny said, came m l 940-41
chantable organizations. when 1t rained 28 inches. The driest
He talked about the weather any-
way.
Dally Piiot
Dell very
la Guaranteed
M .... ..,,, F•.oar II you 00
no• NI.a Y""' ~ l r !. 30 pm., c.• befoto 1 pm
91"<1 V04/I copy .. a llt'
~ad
GerU<Otr llll<I Suno.•r '' ~w c» not re<e-•t yOUt
COPt by 1 I'"' Cll~ be:lo<e
10 a Ill. And '°"' copy will ~ ·..a
Clrculatlon
Telephones
lotml 0.~COU...ly
"''-" M2"3»
lllgul\l f~ .......
ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilat
H. L. Schwartz Ill
Publisher
Roaemary Churchmen
Controller
Stephen F. Carazo
Production
Manager
Donald L. Wllllama
C1rculatron
Manager
"My lands, we've bad fun," he said.
Clrculatlon 714/142...t333
Clnalfled advertlalng 714/142-5171
All other department• 142--4321
MAIN OFFICE
JlO V.n1 ~v •i C ta Mftll CA
M .00•-P,, • 1!>&> CQ611 ~ CA 92621
<:4>•1\jf>t 1983 Orang.i Coast~~ N!J
<-'t 110ton. iluslttl!CM, NlOrlal 1M119f 01 llOY•I ..
me<l1$ ~ t-i IN t l:.e f"1!oduaid * hOul 'Pf'C° !*•
f'lllSSIO< ot copy•igh1 "*~ .
S«O<'<l CllU ~>Otlag<I peod II Cotti l.4e$1 C. '°'°"' !UP& 14~ 800) Sl.ibKt1ploOn by tarrlOI '°' 1!> 111e111thly
by rnil S6 !°)() mor.1tly
VOL. 11, NO. 270 Orange County supervisors next
month will consider a plan to assess
new development served by these
highways to help pa) for the freewa ys.
Supporters say the freeways arc
needed to relieve traffic congesuon
and to serve residents of growing
South County areas.
The Irvine Council's vote came
after a dozen speakers asked the
council to withdraw support for the
San Joaquin Hills freeway. The
speakers were applauded by about
I SO people attending the meeting.
aiving unanimous support to the r.============::::::=:=:;-:==~=========;;;:========:;;:::::;:~ freeway fee plan.
Critics say the freeways will actu·
ally promote growth -and ad·
d1tional traffic -and will create air
pollution and noise problems alona
the route. They also say the developer
fees for new construction will simply
be passed along to buyers of homes
and commercial buildings.
A report prepared by the Irvine city
staff said that after unincorporated
Orange County, Irvine would gener·
ate the greatest contribution to the fee
prosram. about 25 percent. The
proposed fees would be about S 1,200
for a ~ingle-fam1ly home, $700 per
aparto'lent unit and $3.80 per square
foot for commercial development.
A letter approved for transmission
to county officials said the Irvine City
Council "supports the concept and
acknowled s the need" for the thret
freewa ys and "recognizes the need"
for developer fees to be part of the
"financina mix' to build the high-
Larry Aaran was the only council
member to vote against the freeway
plan, sayina the San Joaquin Hills
and Foothill highways wou ld be the
third and fourth parallel freeways
passing through Irvine, joining tbe
existing Santa Ana and San Diego
freeways. If county plans proceed, the
total traffic on these. four hiahways
would be 620,000 cars and trucks per
day, Agran charged.
He cla1med the city would derive
no benefits from the hiahways and
would face "environmental degra~
tion" if they are built.
"The irony is that we are being
asked -with a stra~t fac~ -to pay for our own devastation,·• Agran said.
"We are beina invited to attend our
own environmental lynchina; and we
are beina told to buy the ro~."
But Councilman David Baker
argued that wathdrawina support
would be to "nick our heads in the
John Kubas, president of the
Village Way Management Co .. said
has group, repre~ting about 4,000
homeowners in Newpon Beach and
Irvine, is stronaly opposed to the San Joaquin Hills (rceway.
"We feel we've got to speak out
every time this is.sue comes up,''
Kubas told the counetl "We're going
to fiaht the comdor I 00 percent,
every war. we can."
Councilman John Cox saad the
homeowner group may be taking a
"shortsighted''. vaew.
"This is going in because at 1s
supposed to alleviate a bunch of
traffic getting through our neigh·
borhoods," Cox said. ..
Councilman Don Strau s asked
that the city again remind the county
at is conctr11ed about a pro~
interchange at Ford Road. While the
city is on record as supportina the
freeway, the etty docs not want Ford
Road or San Mi,uel to be major
intcrchana , be said.
TORCH RUN RAISES QUESTIONS •••
From Al
tate law rcqu1re1 that supervisors
file di~lo ure statements reportina
any gins valued at $250 or more. The
rcporuna deadline is Apnl 1985.
"f intend· to investtaate thas
thoroughly and hav(.' lcaat advice
before l de 1de to vote on a matter
Just Call .
642.-60,86
an\'olvina Pacific Bell or fill out and sign the disclo Jte fonn ,·· Wieder
Jd.
She id the county coun~I'• oOkc sun is study1na what value can be
placed on her panic1pation 1n lhc
relay and the torch.
Wieder also said that as lo the value
of the luncheon P c1fic &II ho tcd,
she ha~ bctn 1dvi d the value of the
gift he received i'l limitcd to the co t
of her own meal.
"It as non-rcp<!IUblc bctause 1t wa
le than SSO; the upervisor 1d.
Gem
Talk
B~· J.C. II .\f PHRIE.!>
Ce;t1fiN ~mologist, i\C
CHINA DIAMONDS
from • land of myatery
We think of mysterious, In-
scrutable China as a huge land of
a billion peasants, a long history.
and a puzzling future. If we think
of China In terms of art, beauty
and culture, we are likely to en-
vision beaut If ully-earved Jade or
Ivory. But, modern China Is also a
land of diamonds. There are
known to be diamond d posits in
at least five provinces and,
although the Chine govern·
ment maintains a high degree of
secrecy about such wealth, it Is
also known that diamonds are
being used t~ acquire foreign
currency for tr d • Now, we I arn
th t the Chill are al o de·
v etoplng a considerable
diamond-cutting Industry. There
are d to be about 5,000
di mond cuttera now t work.
with noth • r 300 being tr ned
e ch year. It Is ttmated th4t
China now min 8 about 10 mllllon
rats pf rough diamonds each
y r. and that bout 20 to 25
per nt of thl s of gem qu llty.
the remalnd r used Indus·
trl I diamond :
From the people making crystal a legend.
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