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1984-10-03 - Orange Coast Pilot
~· . ' - WfONESOAY. OC TOBfR 3 . 1qs4 San Joaquin, Foothill and Eastern :· routes would benefit to·tune of $630M " about $630 malhon toward the esu- mated S l billion financins. desian and construction costs of the proposed San Joaquin Hills, foothill By IEFF ADLEl\ Of ... O..,,.... .... In""" an ~unprecedented effort to permit development in touthOraogc Count)' to continue, the Board of Supervisors unaniQ10usly appro'Ved a Huntington's Chamber of Commerce says Prop. 36 •overklll.'/43 . · Orange Count)-super- visors want to lead air travelers to Ontario lnter- natlonalAJrport.LA3 - Bozo the Clown tosses In his wig In mad dash for presidency./ Al Natt on FBI agent arrested as Sovlet spy./ A4 Shuttle-nauts ready for Friday launch./84 World Nuns{n Beirut live In peace-despite strife"' arolffld them./84 Peter Ueberroth gets a . nice little bonus for the Olymplcs.f~ El!9_ant airiness and plenty of pTan"l~·- Arthur Valdes' hote1s and Newport Beach resi- dence nallve.'~181 Attention to maintenance Is the key to landscaping success./82 ~~:~~~~·~=*-~~~):·~*«<~~~~;-;~ . ·- Sports The Chlca90· Cubs and Detroit f tgers post con- vincing victories In the opening day of the baseball playoffs./D1 Sunset League football teams prepare for final tuneups this weel< before the opening of league . pfay./D1 . . . ~ Corona del Mar recove · from bad start to trim Laguna Beach In girls volleyball./D2 . landmark road fee program today that Will make devdopen help pay for tbe construction of three new free- ways, . ·The program. which becomes effec- tive Nov. 1 S, i~ intended to generate ~nd Eastern freeways. Oevelopen huiJdintf.e!! areas ser- ved bi:s!f'°posed ays would bi as varyinJ fees for every houte or commercial building con- structed. depending OR the freeway corridor in which thcy'll'C located. Mr. April and Mr. August . Ne"1kirt Be.ch flreflahten lllke :New~, left. and Paul llathela, rtpt, admire themlle!Tes ln the 1985 Jl'lrd'ozes calendar. f•tarln& Oranae County flr!flPten u photoo papbed by Pear Darnell, center. The calendar., wblch Donovan· won'tvisit Coast GOP By th .Usoclated Prest Secretary of Labor Raymond J . Donovan canceled a scheduled ap. ~ pearance at a Orange County fund- raisina event after being indicted by a New York &rand jury, Rep. Ron Packard said. Donovan, wao WIS chafled Tues- day in connection with past activities as a construction executive, WIS to be the featured aucst at a Sl2S-a-person reception in San, Juan C..pistrano for the Carlsbad Republican OD OcL 11. Packard said he was disappointed (Pleue eee DONOV .IJC/ A2) RaJJDODd DonOTaD Under the p~ogram adoptCd'by the board. dcvcl~ would be Cba.ried S l, n.7 for every new home built near · th. proposed San Joaquin Hills freeway aod Sl,2S6 for every borne along either the Eastern or Foothill freeWay rout.cs. Developers would be ctwsCd Sl 7 S per square foot for commttcial or retail buildinp constnactcd aloo.& the ·San Joaquin ~ls Freeway and U .9S for commercial construcuon ato the two other freeway corridors. However. bowiaa to requests from 50mcoftbe l J citicsalonathefrecway routes and objections &om de- velopers. the ~ qreed to review lbc commeraal fee Jttucturc and other tcchniCaJ issues. r Supcrvison asked that a report concerning commercial rates and t.hc. saze of the asaessment area be sub-. benefit dae UCI .. .di~ Ceritm"Buril u;ut. wU1 be OD .aie ln local boobtoree 1JeClnntn1 tblamonth or can be parcbued for $7.95 each at the Sabta BarbUa •tr-oet flre ajadon open houe Oct. IS. · Mesa/ officials:·· get pay Woman-may 1ille Costa M~s-a. after being struck by golf Qcill~ Huntington vtcttm ponders legal action ~bilcSb~ = ~:r! after city denies SI milliol) damage claim =·:rb!t0S::!°b:r~~1:fP~ 1en ··1 look like a~ter," · By TONY SAAVEDRA 1 A S 1 million claim ftlcd Au.g.. 1 S by Skidmore, in a ne in · otlMDllllr,...... Skidmore and her husband Jm-y The •-st thil Donna Skidmore ~·nst tbcdtyofC.OSta Mesa, owner Tuesday. 14 .. Our social life is zip, .. added expected when s e bent to drink at a o the municipal golf course, was q..year-o&d husband. wbQ. was stand,. waterfountainattheCostaMcsaGolf rejectedMondaybytheCityCouncil i~• next to the tee and wa·-"'cd and Country Oub was to end up with While Skidmore can look hick on ... u..u a mouthful of golf ball and broken the accident with some humor today, .ball .. go right into her face."' ,. teeth. her injuries were anythmg but funny. Skidmore was secpng $600,000 rO. The SS.year-old Huntington Beach She bas undergone plastic surgery to the damqe to her mouth and ja-1! woman was whacked by a golf ball replace almost the entire I~ side of while-her husband asked for S.00:000 July 10 as she stOQd at a drink:ina heruppertip,wtucbwastomawayby for the emotional distress of .. cl~ fountain about 120 feet from the sixth the errant ball. • · lcssly .. watching the accidetit. tee on the facility's Los Lagos course She lost three of her upper front (Pleue eee GOLP / Entertainment "Sugar" at th&S~n Clemente Community Theater compares favorably with the Los Angeles productlon:JU . Supervlsors OK paramedlc tra.izilag con.tract · ... Anancfng, land costs blamed for rise In houstng costs./A10 Birth a Bridge Bulletin Board • BUllneM California NeWi Clalllfled Comlcl Croaaword Death Notloel Food H0tne Horote<>Pe Ann Landerl Mutual Fund• Natk>nal N8t .()pinion Papetazzl POMceLOg PUb19. Notleel =1 M1rht1 Jtilevtllon By JEFF ADLER contract that first surfaced a week OflMDllJ......... • qo. The Ora.nae County Board of · Supervisornnsured Tuesday that the 'Board Chairman Harrien Wieder oounty's paramedic program won't said the revised agreement .. ad. need first aid by approvina a new =·~~he concerns raiJC<l by the contract to provide trainina for new -:--r· · . paramcdic:s. _ . l)apjel Freeman H~pital offiCials Supervisors unanimously en-• "had no U'Ouble at all clcanna up dorscd signina a proposed contract contract tanauaae that was deemed with the Daniel freeman Hospital in vaauc \by the County Counsel's Of- lnalewood ~ ~tamcdic trainin1 fice, added Supervisor.. Bruce after clearina up problems in th Nest.andc. • ' "lt seems as though we have a very Feb. t. 198S. in time to put new fine work.in& relationship now," paramedics on the street before a Nes~ said while lauding efforts ~edic~ -bccomcL.acute by bospttal negattat rs and~ cOUD· ncd summer, accon:lin& to I spoke$- ty' s emergency pi cal servta:s.. of-man for the. .Orange ..County FU'e' ficc in bamme · t an acceptable Chiefs Associauon. · a;recmenl ~use the trainina classes last six Supervisors oversee paramedic . months. fire chiefl wett conccryted trainina for ,Jl city fire departments ~hatdel~yinacontracupprovalmi&h~ as well as the county fire dcpartinent .. J~~ .... ~c.Jire departmenjS ability to tully staff paramedic un.ats ThC new rontnltJ calls for the first next summer. trainina class to bqin no later than But the =associanon·s prcs.idcot. Long-awaited Irvine .theater riioves ever ·closer ~o reaHtf Faclllty for use by local cultural roups · has been In limbo for the past dozen years NEWS P ERSPECTl~E ,. Buena Parle Fire Cbief sa:m W1nner. said last wect that if classes were sa_r:ted near t e beJiunina of~ year, there would be no sbortaee of certified paramcaics in the COUllty. Danid Freeman Hospital 'Will paid some S2l4,400 annually o- tbc 1g...month term of the pact to pro':ide paramedic traiafina. Previously, the= con~ with the UCI M . Center fOr paramedic ~ ICl'V•CCS at .annual cost of$249. 143, Carter Dall • t r-educed to $100,000 , . ... "CGk@ Queerl; g@t . nt U • Attorney M rt n- ncr. use t not cuizen of the UDated tateti Mobley'• .,,,fc: •"I <U'dned d(J>Ontd. man's ti tbcr and l~'O brothers repon~ly have lbttn ltidtnt out in Colombia 1nce narcotic'i. officer m hed the cocaint rina last May. Prosecutors id th woman'' cnutt family wa involved 10 cocaint m~ulina. &flier fftis wetk, Mobley" sister. Cindy Lee Croley of Newpon Beach. wai ntcnted to sill. months in jail for her role in the drua operation. ProSt<::Utondcscnbcdlhc 27-year-old parolee suspected ofFV rapes · .. L By STEVE MARBLE ln both incidents, the assailant said Miller 1s the pnme suspect in the 0tt111eD111r .... •wi reportedly drove arouod residential rape of.:t 32-ycar-<>ld bou~wife who ' stttets near Mile Square Park, some-lives on the west side of Ful1erton1 . ' A convicted kidnapper, paroled times stopping and asking directions Poltoe said the woman, as in the ~,~ss than a year a&o, has been targeted for a particulAr street. The man was Fo1,1ntain Valley attacks, was as-~ a suspect in a sencs of recent rapes, described as short. skinny, blond and saultcd inside her house. tncluding two 1n the same Fountain probably in his mid-30s. · MiUer ali'eady is facing robbery Valley nctghborhood in the past Jn both attacks. detectives said the . c;h.arges in Anaheim. He i.s bcioi held week. knife-wielding man forced his way at ibc UCI Medical Center J&u ward · Ricltard George Miller, 34. was into homes where he raped and where he is being treated for injuries arrested Monday by Los Angeles robbed women, leaving them tied up. sustained during a car accident at the i><>lioe and turned over to authorities He was seen driving a dark colored time of hts amst. in Oran~e County who are invcsugat· mini-pickup truck, police added. According to the California De- tng a residential robbery m Anaheim. Founta.Ln Valley detectives would partment of Corrections in Sacra- Mitler was then linked to a rape not discuss the Possible breakthrough mento,~erwas released from state rep0rted in Fullerton Fnday and two in the rape cases today. They said an prison last Nov. 3 after serving a little rapes rePortcd in Fountain Valley, annoucement was planned later in more than 10 years for kidnappifli. Tides TOOA't .·-Cec:GfldlOw 1' 11pm 30 ~· 66Spm 60 1"""90AY fwlllow 107•m 01 ~"" lligll 7 57 •"' 45 l'lr.i IOw I Ollam 26 9tcOftCI hill" 150pm u lun Mlt IOC\IJ at I 35 p m ,.. ~··"·"' .cleataagalnll l))pm .,._,_•oo-r••343pm ..... , 12 " I.II\. Thut9day Md ,_ 80elf\ .. 411pm Temperatures __, .. Le All>any 49 " Al=~ .. 11 5"' /4rMI 0 " SS MCl\Of.aot .M o . Atentt " 4& AllentlO City 1: 47 Autlln " ::=m 81 40 72 41 8oeton ... 41 8uftll0 61 47 ClllC* n " Cl\arll9ton.S C .. 6'I 0 ~ .. .... ()Nant fl • ..... YOrir ~ .., •• No<IOll,V• a a: NoM .... tt. ft OIJllllOM• ~ c:im.he •, r 71 to OrWlllO n 11 '91111~ ., • Pl\lt~I ., o . = ... . 11 70 61 " .. :::r. .... .. • ~.Or ,. 11 "~ 63 ~ =:::rolY 115 ,. 11 •• IWIO 10 4' IUChtnOM M aao-llO u ., 51 l.ouls 19 .. $1~TMIP8 IO 81 Sll!Llk•Oll) ",n S..M+enle> n .. S.OleoO .,. . ., '*'"~ • .. 71 41 1a11 Ju111.P" ea 1' 62 ,, Stl• ...... .. " to u 8wtlle 11 .. .. 1'S :=;r.: .,. ,., 74 56 .,. 40 t7 45 epogw n ... 75 • ~ 57 40 72 eo 1' .. 62 42 T-.. 11 73 •• n• n .. 73 5t W-'*'t'MI '* .. 12 52 WICM.I u .. 73 12 Wllk-IS«re M 43 65 ~ ~lgtOn.0. a 40 acc:ording to detectives in lhe two the day. A spolce.sw~man said Miller -=~~~~~..uesr ---~---"l~~~~~-f:~...rtnn-......,.nl":lnr.---i~"""n;.t1111"'"mrivrtrl~vit'~~itft.,.,,----- Th e FountaJn Valley rapes -one while, said they will ask th~ d1stnct he was convicted of 'd'napping a reported Thursday and the other anomey's office to file charges against woman and her two small children in Monday -have alarmed residents Mtller today in connect1on with a Fullerton m 1973. Sbe said Miller was -on Morning Glory A venue whe~ rape rePorted last week. serving a life sentence and first came I r both attacks took place. Fullenon Detective Cecil Reece up for pa.role consideration in 1980. CONTINUED STOR IES FREEWAY FEE PLAN OK'D ... From A l Irvine, Newpon Beach, Orange, Anaheim and Tustin have endorsed the program m principle. For the program to succeed, however, all 11 cities must aS'sess the development, accord1n~ to supcrv15ors. "Working together, we can develop a fair and equitable plan for the comdors, .. Irvine Mayor Pro Tem- pore Dave Baker told supervisors. Added Orange 'City Manager 8111 Little, "We feel that tb1s approach is an appropriate one." In recommending approvaJ of the fTccway funding plan, Supervisor Thomas Riley aJso endorsed a poten- tial compromise ajmed ai s00thing Irvine and Laguna Beach councilmen ~ lo 1l •~Jane Saft foaqum ibf reeway shcmg through the environmentally sensll1ve coastal foothills between Corona del Mfr and San Juan Capistrano. The Foothill Corridor generaJly runs parallel and south of the Costa Mesa Freeway while lhe Eastern Comdor runs parallel to Interstate 5 near the eastern border of M1ss1on VieJO. .. The idea of phasing a smaller iottial facility in this ~ntury while reserving adequate nght of way for future ex~s1on as demand requires is of particular interest to me," Raley sald. . Several shopping center and office dev.elopers told supervisors they en- dorsed I.be plan. but felt commercial and retail building were bein& asked nrpay:unmfafr snare oftne freeway constructton costs. Representing Californians for .En- vironment., Employment and Econ- omic Development, Peter Calagna told supervisors his group opposed lhe plan because it will hurt the county's economy. "This was not bow Amenca was built and it will harm Orange Coun- ty," Calagna said. He told the board the fees would be passed on to consumers 1 n the form of hifher housing costs and higher retail pnccs. . - However. Supervisor Bruce Ncstande replied that be felt 1t was "irresponsible" of pro-development sroups t-O -get -up-and urge ''btttld. build, build, density, dens~. density ano roaas, roads, roads, Wiffiout offenngan aJtemative financing plan. GOLF MISHAPMAY LEAD TO SUIT •.. From A l Hunltngton Beach attorney Michael Cully, represcntinj the cou- ple, said a lawsull against the c1ty would probably be filed within the next s1x months Cull) added Skid- more was still undergomg treatment to get her teeth capped and her lip reconstructed. consequently the cou- ple would postpone the suit until aJI the medical costs could be de- tenmned. The Slodmores said the) played at least once a week for the past two or three years at the municipal course at 1701 Golf Course Dnve. They don't golf much anymore "My game has1oneoff," said Jcl'T)'. adding that he still has n~tmares about the acetdent that spculed what was to be a pleasant even mg of golf. Skidmore remembered teeing off on the sixth hole and walk.mg to the fountain that was ahead and to the nght of the tee. As she drank. another golfer from her pany was prepanng to dnve the car to Costa Mesa Medical Center. The Sk1dmores and their attorney are claiming the fountain is in a dangerous area and should have bttn placed near the bench and ball washer 7 5 feet back. ball from the same tee. Assistant City Attorney Eleanor "I just came up (from talung a Weaver cou•red that the course 1s dnnk) and bammo. the ball was not dangerous and the fault lies either there." she said "I remember my wnh the person who hit the ball or the teeth fl)tng and. of course. I saw stars victim. and heard bells " "One side or the other d1dn 't look. Jefl) !>aid he watched the golfer. an didn't shout a warning or didn't get acquaintance of the Slodmores. slam.-out of the way," said Weaver. the ball "way off course " The Skid mores said they were "I stood there helplessly and watch-unsure whether legal action wd'uld be _ ed It go nght into m)' wife's face " taken agamst the golfer who tut the He sa1cf he rushed her m their own errant ball. . CARTER FACES BILKING CHARGES ••• From Al IRVINE THEATER NEARING REALITY •.. I From A l a thca1cr lease and opcra111'\& aaree-· s~ted lO Bumbera tha1 theater Tbe university has agreed ta mcnt With the university and return pTOJCCl appeared lO be dead. provide land for the communit) the document to the council for "My l'eSPonse was, ·Perhaps not theater. In exchange, UCI will have approval, dead, but dying,"' she recalled. the option to use at least one-th.lrd ol •Authorized lhe formauoo of a One of the early problems. lhe ume available in. the theater's non-profit public benefit foundation Sumbera said. was findmg an ap-schedule. t<> o\lerseefvnd Ali ing. construetion propnate tocatton-·~fo~r-t""'h-e-t~h;;..t11_t_e_r.~At~--B-u_m_bera __ sa_id-th_e_cam_ pus already and operation of the proposed one time, the project was to be located has two smaJlcr theaters lhat are theater; in Town Center, an Irvine Co. "booked solid ... •Announced the need to fill six commercial complex immediately positions on the board of directors of across Campus Drive from UCL But Deanna Mann in~. Irvine's director the foundation. UCI will fill the Town Center development was de-of community services, said local aru remaining three scats; layed. and the theater locauon was groups such as the Irvine Commumty •Directed foundation board mem-lost. · Theater, lhe Irvine Symphony Or- bers to recommend funding Another d1scourag1ng moment oc-chestra and the Irvine Children's proposals and a t1mehne within 120 curred tn 1979, when a desJ&n for the Chorus l'\ow must use churches and days of the board's formauon. Coun-community theater was completed, recreation centers for their pcr- c1l members want to have funding and committee members learned the fonnanccs. Tbe · proposed C1v1c sources identified and a secure con-pnce tag had JUmped to $6.5 million. Theater, however, bas been dcs1sned struct1on plan unplemented m one to When the Town Center site was specifically to accommodate such three years; lost, Sumbera recalled. committee events. •Advised the dtrcctol'S that the members looked mto JOtnt arrange- counc1l wants the Civic Theater to be ments with Saddleback College, She said the facility won't compete b Ca · with the 3.000-seat Orange County a self-sustainmgoperation in the long which bas its Nort mpus ID Perfiormt°to Arts ~ntcr, which is lrvrne, and the Irvine Unified School f ru~;Thanked the members of the Distnct. According to Sumbera. targeted or lar&er producuons 0 local Performmg Arts Committee for Saddleback lacked funds and wanted more regional interest. -ihetrcomrmtment°3.nddcd:teat1on l-0 a smaller facility. and the school But tbcie_ is com.pent.ion. she ac-- tht..thca1cL projttlsmcc the commit--.dislntL.fim:d.. J.cpl COJlilaUnlt lhal kThooewOledraerdngc Coforumn~nPetaeuyormdona1n u~~tee's formauon in 1976 .. :" prevented its involvement. v rfo g "'~ The committee members also were · An amphitheater was also con-Center is trying to raise $85 million. to consider their task concluded. sidered at the county's Mason Re-Sttll, Manning supested that In the audtence when the eot1nclf ~1tl Park in Irvine, but potentral Irvine residents are interested in approved the '>teps last Tuesday was noise and parking problems caused expanding the cultural acuvnies in Marlene Sumbera, an original com-that pr~po~l to be rul~ out. their community and will support the mittee appointee who had served During . the early . plannmg, proPosed Civic Theater. throughout its eight-year existence. Sumbera said, UCI officials were not "It isn't going to be easy to nusc the "l was very relieved and very interested in the communaty theater money," she said. "But as we move pleased that our effort was over,·· she proJ~t because th~ e&o:1PUS was forward on this, l't'fl 'becoming mote said later. Referring to the prospec-considered as a possible site for the and more optimistic." uve foundation directors. she added, larger Orange C'ounty Perform mg Bumbcra added, "We have several "Now. it's JUSt beginning for the next Arts Center. That facility 1s now bemg lhings gdlng for us. We hav:: a terrific group." bu1h 1n Costa Mesa site. We have close to $1.S million i.n Bumbcra admitted. however. that Bui about two yea~ ago. the the bank. And there has been a there were a number of low points unavl!rSll)' officials did express heightened awattness of our (per- during her eight-year stirll on the tnlercst in ~he community theater. form1og arts) space deficiencies in committee. times when she feared the Cny Councdmen David Sills and Orange County. There are lot.soflitlle community theater might never be Lal'T)' Agran had m1t1al talks with theaters with 200 to 550 scats. This built UCI officials, then a task force of CJty will be the· ooJy theater that scats an Aboutthreeyearsago,anewspaper and university representatives intermediate-size (7S~seal) 1u- rcporter. reVlewsng several setbacks. worked on a more formal proPosaJ. d1ence." What do you llke about tbe Daily Piiot? Wbat don't you like? CaJl Utt Just Call number at left and your me11age wlll be recorded, transcribed u d dellvere4 to tbe appropriate dltor . The sam·e U-hour answerln& service may be aaect to record letten to tbt editor oo any topl~ Contributors to our Letters colama must ladade tbelr Car.1.er w~ arrested and booked at the county ;atl Monda:y following an 18-month Shcnffs Department 10- vesugation that concluded ( aner was operating a classic pyramid scheme 1n which old investors would be paid off with mone) from new in\.estors. from S500,000 to SI 00,000 fuesday but the busme.,.,man ha\ been unable to come up v.1th bail mone) as oflatc this morning. 642-6086 name and telephone number for verification. No circulation calls, please. Tell us what's oo your mind. rival Disneyland. according to .------------------------------------------fnends and former employees. Sheriffs fraud 1nvcshgators said Carter, 32, bilked investors out of as much as $75 m1lhon Neuly half the money came from Orange County ~s1dents. 1nvest1g.ators noted. Harbor Court Municipal Judge Frances Munoz lowered Carter's bail Caner was ordered to appear at the Newport Beach courthou~ on Oct I 0 for arraignment. He faces 22 counts of grand then and 44 counts of felony secunty v1olat1ons A former Disneyland emQloyee who once played the role of the Disney cartoon character Goofy. Caner had dreams of opening a \lleme amusement park that would i DONOVAN CANCELS T~IP ••• From A l • that Donovan woul~ not attend. "I have every reason to believe that he will ultimately prevail an what appcan to be a pohucally motiv'-ted partisan proceeding.." Packard said. Donovan, nine 01ber people and two companies pleaded 1nnoccot Tuesday to 137 felony charge~. The defendants att accused of innuing the value 9f work on a subway construction Job m 1979 and over- charginJ the"' New York Transit Authonty by $8 mlllton Packard'~ bid for rc--clection i bcina contested by Lois H umphrics. • Democrat from Oceanside. ,. A large group of investors who hope to rescue their money have asked th.at Carter be allowed to pursue his plans for the Las Veps amusement park, Carter's attorney said. Caner did not end up in hot water for his amusement park plans but rather for something called "medical factonng... r Sheriffs investigators said Carter, · as president of frvtnc-bascd Tom c:arter Enterprises, Inc.. solicited investment 1n .. medic.al factonna" 1n which unpaid medical insurance claims would be purchased, at a discount from doctors and hospitals. Carter said a profit of up to 40 percent would be realized when insuruoe companies paid' the full amount. invcstag.ators repomd Hts business was shut down in late 1983 and nearly S 10 million m assets froun. The 1sscts include several homes, a fleet of cars and propcny.on the Las Vegas Strip ORANGE COAST ClrcutatJon 71'1'M2-4a33 t Daily Pilat H. L. Schwart~ Ill P'UhltShcr Rosemary Churchman CorilrO! r Stephen F. Caraio Pro<1ucmon Mona gm 04nafd L. WllUem• Ctrculat1on MAn gr ( Cl••lfted lldv ltfng 114/842·5871 AH other departments 142-4321 MAIN OFFICE . THE TALK AROUND TOWN IS ... • ' One of Orange County's finest fish houses. Potatoes were exceptional and tartar sauce a classic. ' ' Herb Baus, The ReclStcr , Rt:$t1u~t Ctltk • ' Provides friendly ~rvlce, excellent food and comfortable atmosphere, Quality and generous portions makes the food a real worthwhile pleasure. r ' Scott R. WesM, Airport Arc1 Gulde 'Restaurant Crttk •' Shark and salmon. both generous portions were cooked to that moment of perfection. 1 r . · Norm Stanley, Dilly Piiot Rataurant OiUc • • The dinner portion of fresh seabass was perfectly cooked -moist and succulent. 1 r • ' Lobster tall was remarkably tender and flavorful. ' ' Hefb O.u~ l\<tOM the Table \ Resnturant Crtdc Joel C. Don, Diiiy ~lot . Restaurant Critl<: • • Addln& to the Intimacy ~f the moment, Is a background of relaxJfli piano music, by Dave Bartly seven nights a .week. ' r ~ Huffm n, Airport &Us n . Journal R urant QIUc • • McCormick's Landing should be on everyone's llst of preferred dlnln& locations. It ls one of those places that should be vtslted on a regular basis to savor the variety of food on the menu ..• my rating-superior. r r Mkhaef Hunt. Whlt'a Happenlf!C Restau,.nt C1ftiC rIB Art: League to meet tonight • The Hun,tinaton ~ Art ~ut wtll hold au monthly mceta!lS tOday at the Edison Community Ceoter 21377 Magnolia ~·· Huntinaton Beam, it 7;30 p.m. ' I?<>~ Fo~ter y.'111 be the demonstrauna arti t and wlll be pat~tu11 in 011,,. His paintina will be donated :to the league 1 ~holar&tup {und. Colleae.Ntght In Corona ael ibJ. College-bound stniol"I from Corona del Mar and N~wpo~ Rarb<fr Hi&hSchool may want to attend C.011*-~ij,ht thasev~nin1. lrom 7 o 9 p.m., in the Corona dcl Mar ~ aymnasaum . ~ore th~n 90 collects will be represented during the eve~ns. wh1c~ features displays. question and answer ons and dascu ions on ha&her education. Students and parents from both schools are invited. . Better BreatBen to meet F riday The Bett~r Breathers' Club will meet Friday at l:lO p.m. at Hunbngton Terrace, 18800 Aorida St.. Hunt-' inaton Beach. Karen Wilson, R.N., of Pacffica Home Ca.re ·will present .. Eyeryttiina You Wanted to Know About Your • Luna Problem But We.re AfraidtoA.sk." • The free proararn will be held in the Terrace Room and refreshments will be served. For more information ca.11848-881lor83S.LUNG ' . . OCC off ere creative worbhopa •• Or:ange C~t Co11CJe will off er two· worbhops on. ~tive Potentual" dunoa October. The first, a four-i>art drawma lecture "AWaken Your Creative Genius .. will be held o_n Saturdays, Ocl 6, l3, 20 and 27, from 10 a.m. to· noon t.D Room J l S of the Art Center. Resistration fee is S2S and includes materials. . . "loo~'.'& Inward," !,half-day.propm empbasizina JOUmal wntm for persona.I gn;>Wth, will meet Sat~y Science B14 Registration fee is $15. For more imdrmation, call 432-S880. l Rummage sale alated <utctay ,, Tb~ Youna Ladies Institute, Holy Eucharist 220 of Westminster will.h.oJd a rummage sale on Saturday, Oct. 6, from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. in Stater Brothel'$i)&rlcing lot, col]ler of Newland and Westminster Avenues. ft For more information, call 894-1862 or 847-4200. ---""'--· Ans and Crafts Festival set Oracc Lutheran Church, 6931 Edinger Ave., Hunt- inaton Beach, will bold its 10th Annual Aru and Crafts Festival on Saturday, Oct. 6, on the church grounds, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. . , DAILVPLOTIW_....-.., ~at1tf4 --------... . - I L AMPAlf.~ 84 -- Ghambersay Proposition 3 is overKfll .. . • • • A fund-nisei: for Assemblywomu M1Qao ~ candidate for the 37tb District 5tat.e 8enUe iml. II tcbedulcd for Friday at 1be Ritz.Carlton Hotel ial..lpu Ni&uel. · fund-raiser is billed · u a .allllit IO·· GM.la Be:rpoo, Marian's husband. It be&iDs at 6 p.m. :an 1be bote.I ballroom. For infonnatioa, call 540;-4188. • • • • :Two infonnal mttt-the-cand.idate events me Plantwd forBradfonS in u~rnina ~ :rbie fits(. Oct. 9, 1s Khedukd from 1: l~ ~m. to 9:4S p.m. aq I Beactw:omlter Drive in Corona dd Mar. Form~ c.1176().()S 12 by Oct. 7. lbe accond aet-tcw=tber is to be hdd Oct. 14 • from 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. at 2A1S om ~ For iruormatioo. calt 760-l432 b OcC ti.; ·' • • • """ -t: A.mlJOrity of the memberi of the Oranait UOlillt)' Board of Supervison have pledaed their support for Rieo. Featured will be arts and crafts, a green thumb plant booth, kids' craft comer. Scandinavian pastry and home bake shop. There will also be a luncheon menu, entertainment and pllery exhibits. Admission is free. ThlDk •he'• been to the Magic Kingdom? 11oit ft'elJODe lD 8oadiem California bu bionse raldeat of J'ahraaa Park bi LaPDa been to Dlanqlancl at leut once. but lt · Beach to make tbe trip. Th~ atatae bu *D woald take a ••&lct•n'• spell for tlWI emtHna at pueen-lJY for onr 50 years. Robert Badham, R-Newpon Beach, who IS teddns a ,Uh tcnn in tb~ House of Representatives. 8adharn. WIM) as cornpletina his eighth year in tbe Howie. served for 14 • ~ca.rs in the t.ate Awmbly ~fe>rc bis dectioa k> CJontina an 1976. Deinocrat Carol Bradford is ~him Olis.---1 ovember • 'Volunteer Naturallm' to meet .. Volunteer Naturalists .. ofCasoen Wilderness Park will meet SatUrday, OcL 6, from 10 a.m. to noon at the c t · t t • ght • • • · • ~:i:~0~eo!feia~:h~;~es east of the San Diego o .. un y moves 0 · 1 . ·en amo~&=C=~~J~~~y~::.ss: Bill Mautz. assistant professor at UClr will present the Westin S011th Goast Plaza Hotel oa Oct: 1t at 10-.30 the nature prop-am 0 Reptiles and ~Ch1bians of the t h d · ll t 1--m. The ~· which includes brunch, features • Santa Aria Mountains and Southern "fomia." RQ1Cr was e aza:r regu a 1• on·s panel d.iSCUSSlon sponsored by t.bc 0rante County =si~~"M!n~n:t~~r ~~J :'ct ~t!vi~~~o5-at ~~ _ ~-=~e;\f S4~':.inee. For infonnatiou and orientation in the wil~ , •-+·------..,...,..-....-......--......,_.....~ information, call 496-A212 or 83J--.2&...0J7...,.4_~By JEFF ADLER hazardous ~ste ~ulation and en-.. It as clear that 1oca1 enforcement · Gov. G~ ~~n.. ·IJJWl.O!!bc. • - · oe .. ..,........ • forcement: aettvtties need to l>C'Stcp-ped up so B~Sb T914 camp&J&D 10.California..has ~ Bomiet Babv •fttlnd CllniC aat '-•ondav Cc;>nccrned that closure ~fa West Supervisonexpresscdconccmthat that hlla.rdous waste generators will WtntC!of~~tobeadtheS'eniorsfork~ 1 • ~ m 1 Covtna landfill could tn.,-an closure of West Covina's BKK land-not be templed to lake the easy way effort m Cabfomaa.. Fountain ValJey Juni~Women't€tub-wilttponton i.~~ in illcpl dumpina incidents filllfuy_ JO could mean hazardous out and dume_ ~l on vacantx-~bylittina clinic, ccnifvina .. Super Sitters," on Monday, 10volvma hazardous waste in ~e materials miaht be illegally dumped pr~peny_ and in. tlic sewer systems, . Oct. 8. at the Kina o( Glory Lutheran Church, Slater County, the Board of S~pemsors somewhere in-the counrr. according said w~eder . lD letter qrcula\Cd Avenue and Los Alamos. from 6:4S to 9 p.m. took: s&eps Tuesday to ll&hten up to Board Chairman Hamett Wieder. among S\Jpervtsors. Spea)cen will cover home iafety. skurity. emera-· At her suggestion, the boa.rd unani- encies, child development and care, and fire safety. mously agreed that county Health Available to all Sth throuab 8th pade boys and sir~ the Officer Rex EhlinJ should send a clinic will provide a certificate of participation upon ·~U'l'IP .... .,, ~.-a . .-.7:ont tO po·'rlt letter to au hazardous waste ~ner-Coast chiropractor A lvin T erry dies oompletion. a ~i·:-vii1 :A. );I •.r.c;a '1ac.1 •tors in the county advisiQI them of Pre-registrationisrcqu.iredandaS2matetialsfcewill t•.-al)l 1-0 ~"n ·4-,,. . .:.10 's al~J>O.~ the pcndina BK.Kdump closure. be ch.arsed. for details or rqistratioo forms, call JW 'a Ll v..a·• ~ J 1 .l'.i lj 11. Also, supervJSOn asked that the 96).;.3S46. county's Hazardous Materials Task Wednesday, Oct. 3 • 9:30 a.m., Oraqe CoutJ Boml of Sa_pervlaon, Hall of Administration, l 0 Civic Center Plaza. Santa Aila. • 7:30 p.m., Coast Commwtj Colleae Dt1trlct Board of Tn1teet, Garden Grove City Council Chambers, 11300 Stanford Ave. PoucE Loe Cyclist ho~Ritalized af~er collision with limousine ... A motetcyclist was listed m stable condition at Hoag Memorial Hospi- tal in NcWpc)n Beach today after he broadsided a car in Newpon Beaeh late Tuesday niatit and wai catapulted 61 feet. · Michael T. O'OcU. 21. of Costa Mesa' landed under a parket! car after tiehitalimou inedrivenbyTeresaL Brownyatd. 36t.~fNcwpon Beaeb; on Paci1c Coast High"'~ in Ctc>nt of Cano'• restaurant. aocor'dina to traffic invcstiptor Rick Bradley. O'Dell, wbo was ridins a 1981 Yam.aha motorcycie outbound on the hijbway, sufrmd bead. lea and arm injuries after the 11:30 p.m. accident. Brown)'Ud. drivina a 1984 Lincoln limousin9 with four peucn-sen. was not iajur'Cd but Brads.)' 'd il.ll the passeqm complained of pain after the collision. --- T he crash occurred when Brown~ was exitin& the driveway of eano·a restaurant by mak.ina a left tum into the wcstbourid lanes of Pacific Coast Hiabway. BradJcy said O'Dell broadsided Brownyard, but added that be bas not yet determined •hich driver was at faull ,..,.. Neitbei' Brown~ nor-o+DeU tiiel been driiikint. be 1d. O'Dell wearina a fW1 face helmet at the lime of the collision. Force review exist.in& ·cou.n~ ordi-nances governing illegal dumpina and repon in 30 days bow those laws could be strengthened. Alvin Jay ~crry. a resident of ewport Bcac:b (or 23 yea.rs. died Mooday at the IF ol94. r Mr. Terry worUd as a chiropnctor for more than 60 >·can.. retiring when he was 82. A veteran ofWotid Wu I. be was a longtime. member of the Ncwpon Harbor American 1..4ion Pon 29 l and a member of St. Andrcw·s Presbyterian Oiwch of NewPort BeaCb: 1n a.dd.ition. county officials were instructed to bqjn workina with sanitation districts around the count) to dcvdop ways to monitor any dumping of hazardous wastes in SC•'Cf systems. St.ate law requires hazardous waste generators employ registered ha.zatd- ous waste haulers to transpon such materials to st.ate-approved facihues. Mr. Terry is survived by hiswifcof66 )ears.. Ruth; bis son and dauahtcr-in-taw, Raymond and Melba Terry of South Lquna; dau&)lter and son-in-law Audrey and Bin Grundy of Ncwpon Beach: four grandchildren, Lisa tnd Gordy Grundy, M'Lec Terry and Anita Fitt&erald; and th.rec gsut-paodchildren. Serv1ccs were to be private. · A top "'as pried off a Porsche parked on Dupont Dnve It bad a value of more than $<400 Coetalleu Police arc holdina an 18-}car-old Westminster man susl)CCled ofbein& oae oft .. o bur&lars wbo bro~e mto • car parked af a Costa Mesa ~cot complex early Tuesday momi arid stoic SI 00 worth of tereo ~ers. Otau Thanh l) v.1ls booked an1ocity jail on suspicion of \'ehtde bwJlaryf and remained tbnc.today in lieµ 0 $10.000 bail. He was arrested' by Westmiostr-police around an hour after Costa Mesa officers · Ued. ' COUDty bulletin at 3:45 a.m. d b- 1 the SU peel 1.12d the car be WU dnvina. • • • A bq containin $1.654 in caih, ,ch« and credit card wa rcponed stolen over the wcekc'nd from t 8. Dalton bookstore at the uth C t Plaza. The baa ert 1n the · More than S 1.500 ~onh of hand tools were tolen from a bin of a truck in the 17000blockofStilJ Harbor . . , ... Bufllari stole a video c::asiette recorder ~alued •t ~s397 from a com mun.it') senlCU center, l ~744 Golden '!Yest SL • ...... <' ... ~ •• ThitVCs 5lolc -.-el<!ina ~t'ient, scaffciJdioa. a 10..foot l . a ~1m"1t1t' ~ k~el and a .. beclbl..rro from a contstructio:n site iD the $000 block of Engineer A ~·cnue. • • • A male adull -. taken 'nto cu~tody for the aUCllC!d theft f. SSO shoes and S 13 OOfoane from the Broad .. -.> department sto~ 1111 Edi Ave. - Mom who kllled_Jdds 'depr ' / ., :J I ~ ASHINGTON (AP) -The intelligence agents to gather in- 1 today am :\cd one of its OWi\ telligcnoe. ' DtS, Richard W. MiUcr or Los .lnaelcs, on chaIJes of pying for .. This is ' most serio1's matter. · e Soviet Union. • involving a pedal agent alt cd -r:-n to have committed such a cnme He ts the first rol agent. in against \he United States:•_ FBI i tory to be charged with cs-Director Willi H. Webster ion on behalf of a forejgn said ... It is an aberration on the overnmcnt. proud record· of patriotic and Miller, 47, is a 20-year veteran dedicated service of thousands of f the FBI who was a igncd to 1 th ... i. r reign counterintelligence work secc1a agen.ts rou5-110ut ou n the Los Angeles bureau. h1~tory. S~1al. agents conducted Also arrested were Nikolay th~s mvesugauon and brou$llt P.f,orodnilcov, also known as this ·~atter to the_ prosecutJve Jtolay Wolfson, S', and stage. • wctlana Ogorodnikova, 34, of . .Justice Department spokes- s Angeles. The FBI said they_ man John Russell said all three were born in the Soviet Unjon defendants were atTe ted at their and emigrated to the United residences in Los Angeles in the States in 1973'. . . early morning. They were to· be The FBI said its anvesttgauon arraigned laterloday. disclosed "evidence that Miller llad conspired with the ()gorod- 11ikovs t6 pass classified FBI documents, dealing with positive intelligence tasking, to the gov- ~tnmcnt of the Soviet Union." They were arrested on a federal complaint filed in U.S. District Court in Los Angeles charging them with conspiracy to provide national defense information to a foreign government. If convicted, they could receive" top penalty of : Underground mluUe base proposed. . NEW YORK -The Air Force h s proposed constructing a huae nµclear mis ilc ba* 3,000 feet underground which could survive a nucl~r attack and have retaliatory capacity within three days, the New York Times repon.cd today. The Au Force made the proposal to . ~fcnse Secretary Caspar Weinberger in July following a two-year study, cla.tnun& t~e proposal w~s both militarily and technologically feasible. the Times said. l!ltercontmental balli,tic mi iles would be stored ·in the base, the report stid. T~e cost of eonstructina the base, which would be built in the 19~ has bee.n ~st1matc4 at ~P to SSO billion, the Times rep<?rtcd. The Air Force spent S_t 0 mslhon studying the plan in fiscal 1984 and might spend the same amount in the current fiscal ye.er, the report said. 1 • Students panl slJed after bee r party OLIVIA Minn. -More Shan 10 percent of the students at Oh via High School were 'suspended 1from extracurfitular· ac\ivities, includina football, cheerleadins; band-and the drama club, bccausclhel were at a beer party after which a student -Was kiJled in a car cruh. Last week s homccom101 danoe was oanoelcd. And for the first time in the school's history .. coronation of the homecoming king and queen were eliminated. Most of the candidates bad been at the party, School Superindentent Jerry Bass said. Miller was fired by the bureau (>n Tuesdal, the FBI said, for violation o general standards of eondu.ct for ag~nts as well as life in prison. Ktemlm slJakeap coald delay talks · The arrests came one da} after a Tear tracks "' SHJNGTON _ Dcspuc the Soviets' dccmoo to talk with the Unit~ ~~~~uw~o~m~a~a~-~~~~~~-~~c~lh~~~p~1~~~~~e~~=~~~.~c~~~~~n~=e~.~~~-=.~s~ta~-.~~~P~•1nt~~mlin~~~dup~y~~uin was charged with spying for the a dalnty eyelaahand a pronounced tear traek': What la It th.la efforts to reduce nuclear weapons, says the U.S. ambassador to M1 w. After -Positive intelligence tasking re- fers to the assignment of U.S. Soviet Umon. elephant can't forget? . • nearly eight months, President Konstantin U. Chernenko still as un~~e to assert bis authority, partU:ularly on issues involving the Soviet military, Ambassador Arthur A. Hartman told reporters Tuesday. Judge Claiborne gi ventwo-year term RENO, Nev. (AP) -Fed~ral evasio~. which he sajd would be .sorry I can't say I'm remorsetul He ordered Claiborne to serve "All they've agreed to do is to have senous di~uss1ons with us," Hartman said.After those talks arc held on theambassadonal level here and m Moscow. "we'll sec what happens in the new year," he said. . . CALIF ORNIA .. ------. --------'-~ !Judge Harry Claiborne, who served concurrently. He also -fortheseacts.l'mguilty,notofthe -bis sentence at a federal institu- daims the government was out to fined Claiborne S 10,000. charges made in this indictment. tion at MaxwelJ Air Force Base at get him because of his ~ticism of Oaibome, who could have I'm gu ilty of being reckless with Montgomery, Ala. Actor HiimUton dead at 85 federal agents, was sentenced to faced up to six years in prison, my own personal affairs." Defense· attorneys filed. an-im-ESCONDIDO_ Actor Neil Hamilton, a silent screen star better known two years in prison today for addressed the U .$. District In passing sentence, Hoffman mediate notice of appeal. to contemoorary audiences as the barned police commissioner on the popular rncome tax evasion. courtroom before his sentencing, said, "It is a sorry day .for you, Claiborne is the first federal "Batman''" television series, has died. He was 85. Hamilton died at his Presiding Judge Walter E. Hoff-"My life has been virtually Judee Claiborne. but it is even a judge to be ordered to prison for Escondido borne on Sept. 24 of complications from asthma. Print audiences man handed Claiborne a two-year destroyed. not because of ille~J somer day for the federal ju-crimes committed while serving were 'familiar with Hamilton's face everrbefore he appeared in films. He was term on each of two counts of tax and wrongful acts." he said. 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'Vot•d ~"<·• ,, , ••• .:u •• ~ •• ,, .,,.. ... ....,.,, ... u 000 lll(rtJ!lfOll .... ~ dllftnl -··---lo'"' .. l iltl '"~IPll 1"4 llllt•ttt I"" odlfll llM '°""II l"Utl lie • 101((0.0! v•I 1U!olf1lr .. 11114 II S11lef •"' Ml o. •u lltf 111•,m1" ........,.. _,.,"' • 1•~·,l .. '"" -"'ov"'""~"""'""' N 1111:1 11 "'''"', 1100 000 h•nlll,fl 11111 lie e1ll•d'"' ,, .._..._ 0u1 .. 1• •~• •4'•111!•••' 11<•" a1111 111 • v t ••ll••l 11 mlt nl H!161tf llul ltrlrtt"' ti tr1t'llf •~ttmt -• ..,,..11111•• tellott• to ch•" fl '1 • Check the Yellow Pages for the offi e nearest you. Open your account today in person or call the toll-free Financial line 1-800-272-9000. ... ~ Californta FinanCtal Leader • Smee 1885. Great American First avi ngs Bank • A Century of rvice • lft\ured fotv • ' -- workinaas an extra and bit player in films, which then were beina made ID !'few York and New Jersey. His first bl& break came in 1923. when d!rector D.W. Griffith cast him in .. The White Rose." He quickJy appeared m two more Griffith f~tures. "Isn't Life Wonderful" and "Am~nca." Drunken driver-gets 19 years . R JVERSI DE -A man convicted of second-degree murder for the deaths of two people in an auto crash that occurred while he was drunk has been sentenced to 19 years to life m state pnson Charles Francis McCams 111, 33, of _ Gardena, was sentenced Tuesday by Judge W.J. Harpham. a Lake County JUd$e sitting temporarily in Riverside Sup_crior Court. McCarns, a refngeration mechanic, is the first person.in the count) to be conv1c~ -Of second.<fearee murder In a arunken dnving acCJdent case Raid net. 6 murder su•pects LOS ANGELES -Raids by more than I 00 sheriffs deputies resulted ID su arrests, including three for investigation of attempted murder on warrants stemming from a retaliation street shootfog of three men. authoniies said. · Anti-gang specialists from Operatio~ Safe Streets carried out raids early Tuesday on 11 homes ofalleged gang members m th~ Compton-Willowbrook area, 10 miles south of 4owntown, said Deputy Willie Jewel Maller. No one resisted arrest dunng the operation. which was the largest of its kind 10 18 months, Miller said. Border •hootoat ldll• one SAN DIEGO -Police shot and 'oiled one man and captured another durina a ni&httime confrontation near the San Otego-Tijuana border, officers said today. "rhesbootlnaoccurrcd latt Tuesday niahton a mesa about one mile cast of the San Ysidro P9rt of Entry, said Officer David Russcn. Russell said that p0Jioe SJt. Charles W oodrufT and officer Miaucl Rosario, who were hidden behind some bushes at the time, saw four possible suspects and observed that they were armed. "Two of the men walked toward them," Russell said. "When they got about 30 feet away, the officers saw that one of them had a sawed,-0ff shotaun. The officers.identified themselves in·both English and.Spanish and shined a flashliaht on the suspects The subject with th shotaun raised the weapon to fire and both officers shot at him. ' • Domlnelll rushed to IJospltal SAN DIEGO-Bankrupt financier J David Dominelli has been taken to a hospital for "neurological testing" Rfter falling ill at the downtown federal prison, where 'he has been jailed since May l, authorities said early today. Dominelli, 43, "suddenly feU ill" Tuesday niaht and was talc.en by ambulance from the Metropolitan Correctional Center to Sharp Cabnllo Hospital, said Lt. Booker Mason, a supervisor at the pnM>n. Pand• appomtmentlJ a mu•t SAN FRANCISCO-When Yun Yun and Yina Xin arrive here later this month for a four-week visit, the two giant pandas. wm have a full social calendar, followina a dectSion by zoo officials to allow the public to sec the animals by appointment onlr. "We want to avoid the three-hour Jines at the Los Angeles Zoo," said Sau Kltthener, director of the San Francisco Zoo. "People just don't like standing ID line." The pandas, on loan from the People's Republic 9f China, are finishjnJ up a three-month visit in Los Anaetes and arc due in San Franci$CO on OcL 29. They will~ on display startina the first week in November. " ---+ ' WORLD '~--~---------~~------~ S. African r1o~ IJeat. up, --. JOHANNESBURG. South Afnca -Crowds ofblacu beat a suspetted aovemmcnt informer to death in one 11qttgatcd township and stoned a van in anothe~. cau ing it to vttr into the crowd and reportedly ktll five people. In Pretoria, SO~th African Pre ident P.W: Botha ano9unccd today that Moz.ambique agreed to a cease-fire with sucmllas who ha'ic fouaht to topple the Marxist aovemment,for the past c'aht years. South Africa had 1erved a1 an rntermtdiary durina lhrtc months ofnqotiations. ferry ml•IJap'Ieave. 22 mlum1 HAMBURG, West Germany -A fury takina more than 40 pa "&en ona b1rthdaycru1sein rainy Hamburah rborcollided Mtha t~ bOatandsank. One woman k1Ucd, 24 people were hurt and 22 wtre mi ina and fcarcid de.ad, police said tOday. AmonJ th till mis ina late this rnom1~ ere 10 children and 12 adults. includ1n1 the ferry's captain, pohce 111d. T h boats collided at 7:2S p.m. Tuesd.Sy. "We believe that they arc d d, sinceit h 1 bttn o Iona ince tb accident happened.," said police spolr man P tcr ~yn. Authonu said 1t could be the" or t accident tn Ham burs harbor ince World WMlL • ' .. ' \ • • .. ' "' .. THEI BROADWkY'S • F.AtL ·FOCUS .SALE CONTI ·NUES! ' • THE FOCUS IS ·Q·N FASHION· .. :~ . ' . . . . FOR MEN _, WOMEN _, CHILDREN . . • . \ AND · YOUR -HOME . ' SELECTtON MAY VARY BY -STORE. L1MITEO QUANTITIES IN SOME CASES. NO MAIL OR PHONE ORDERS . SPORTSW·EAR 80's 1 /~ off: Classic wool separates from The ~~llager. Sizes 4 to 14. Reg. 59.00 to 126.00......... . . .37.99 to 13.99 1/3 off: Fall separates from a famous woman designer. Sizes-4 to 14. Orig. 42.00 to 57 .00 ....... 27.91 to 37.99 26% off: Shetland wool cardigans, two styles. Grey or r)atural. Orig_ 68.00 48.99 1/3 off: Famous maker coordinates for early fall. Jackets, skirts, pants, blouses, sweaters. 4 to 14. Reg. 54.00 to 100.00 .............. 36.99 to 86.19 Speca.I pwchaae: Anne Klein silky, tone on tone polyester blouses. Seven colors, sizes 4 to 14 ............. 39.99 26% off: Two pleat pant from Counter· parts. Polyester/wool in black, charcoal. cream, driftwood, light blue or lilac. 6 to 16. Orig. 92.00 . . ........ 30,00 1/3 off: Famous maker corduroy t separates. Pants, skirts, vests, sizes a· to 16. Sweaters. S·M·l. Orig. 40.00 t6 44.00 ................ 25.99 to 27.99 DRESSES, MISSES COATS Spedal purchase: Spun polyester career dresses from famous New York maker . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..... 49.99 Special purchase: Petites asymmetrlcal all-weather coat in shiny nylon . . . 89:99 Special purchase: Shirt-style all· ' weather coat in silky polyester for misses . . . . ·. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 89.99 $pedal .,...rchaae: wool jersey dresses from The Kollection in brights .... 89.99 &pedal pul'Chue: Print-georgette polyester dresses for career or special occasion I' .• : . . . . . . . . . . . • 39.99 INTIMATE APPAREL S.ve 20%: All robes and loungewear in our collection, reg. 30.00 to 70.00 . 24.00 to 61.00 S.ve 1/3: Giiiigan & O'Malley soft brushed nightgown, reg . 30.00 ... '. 18.19 3 fOf 2 when you buy an-. 2 Bali "Something Else" briefs. Complete details in Foundations. Save 20% to 26%: Maidenform Wisebuys b1kini, hipster, brief. reg. 3.25 to 3.50 each ......... · .......... 3/7.80 S.ve 20% to 26%: Vassarette lace-trim tncot string bikini, bikini, hipster and brief, ~eg. 3.26 to 3.60 each . . . an.so CASUAL SPORTSWEAR Save 1/3: Selected Gloria Vanderbilt • denims, plus our collection of Sync, 'Sasson, and·Jordache jeans for misses, orig. 19.99 to 42.00 . . • 13.3,1 to 21.00 Save 1/3: Gloria Vanderbilt and John Henry jail shirts, orig .. 38.00 to • 44.00 . " ..... ' ...•...• '" ..... 19 ...... 24.91 Save 113: Fall sportswear from a very famous maker; COl'd&, sweaters and plaid shirts, orig. 34.00 to 4%.00 . : ...................... 11.91to27.11 ~ ~: Over-sized velour warm-up sets ••. : •.•..•..• : ..•.. 31.• • leve 113: Fleece separates iA fall colors. orig. l0.00 to 18.00 •.•... 1.91 to 11.91 PLAZA SPORTSWEAR lave 21%: Russ Togs dusty colored cOfduroy coordinates, orig. 32.00 to ~.00 1'>' ill• ti.•• i. •It• e II• t e .21.9 to: 21.11 .,_,... puroti 111: Lady Manhattan Silkyway blouse in f 111 col6rs ••••• 21.• leve 21%: Entire Cf.)Uection of Plaza Sweaters Ong. 12.00 to 60.00 ' ••• II .................... I • I. to 411.00 •ve ~ Sh p 'n Shore'• S ken Wond r blou • orig. 26.00 ••••••• 17M 1eve ~: Petton I Habeida hiry bi , orig. 84.00 to 72 00 •••• SIO to ... a.Ve~ 1nt·Her bnic.coord1nat• In navy and black, reg. 26.00 to 60.00 •• 1 ..... ,, ... • MORE WOMAN S.ve 25%: More Woman sweaters. large sizes ~ to 44, orig. 39.00 . 28.99 . Save 33%: Gotham cotton knit sweater, for large sizes 38 to 44, orig. 16.00 ............•..... · .. 9.99 JUNIORS 1/3 off: Corduroy pants from Sasson, Jordache and Made in the Shade. Five days only. Sizes 3 to 13. Orig.19.99 to 32.00 . : .. .. . . .. ..... 13.3310 21.33 . 44% off: Acrylic knit dresses, three styles. Burgundy, cream. black or jade. S·M·L Orig. 36.00 ....... ':" ..... 19.99 35% to 46% off: Our exclusive knit tops from Made in the Shade. Crewneck or boatneck cotton. S-M-L. . OriA. 30.00 to 35.00 . . . . . . . . . . . 19.89 25% off: ·Our exclusive vests from· Made in the Shade. Cotton knit solids in black, grey, pink, white·. yellow.· S.M -L. Orig. 25.00 .. _ ·--~-.15.99 · 3~ off: Stonewashed denrm-f~cl<et · from Silver Nickels. Zip off sleeves. S·M -L. Orig. 50.00 ............. 34.99 S.ve 1/3: Our entire collection of junior .denim, Brittania, Sasson, Union Say, Sergio Valente, and Jordache, orig. • 19.99 to 40.00 .......... 13.33 to 21.87. SHOES 20% off: 9 West pump w~st~ked heel. Sand, black, grey or cinnamon leather. Orig. 38.00 . . ... • ..... 29.99 20% off: Red Cross• "Vanity" low pump with lace inset. Orig. 41 .00 29.99 •No connection whatsoever w ith the American Red Cross. Speclat purchaH: Cahco "Adorn" stack h~I pump in black, navy or caravan . • • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29.99 ~ off: Mia textured pleated pump in -mauve, grey or vanilla leather. Orig.-44.00 ...... : ............ 29.19 113 off: Nina "Vienna" high heel pump in black or gabardine leather. Reg. 62.00 ..................... 4J.33 20% off: SRO leather pump in black, taupe, eggshell, virlo or navy leather. Low heel. -Orig. 40.00. . . . . . .•... 29.19 ACCESSORIES · I ' 26'% off: Distinctive crewneck argyle sweaters from Italy and England. Reg. 40.00 .. . ............... 21.19 4 30% off: European and American designer sweaters in fall cofors. Orig. . 42.00 to 115.00 ...••... 21.40 to 80.&0 30% off: Jantzen wee~ndmg . separates: pants, polo knit shirts, woven sportshirts and more. Reg. 29.00 to 38.00 . ·1 ............. 20.30 to 28.IO . MEN 'S FUffe1~'ISHINGS 30% off: Famous maker cotton cor- duroy blazers in tan oc grey. Reg. 95.00 . • . . • . . . ......•. U.50 33% to 40% off: Givenchy gentleman's fit dress shirt in solid or patterned cot· ton/polyester. Orig. 22.50 to 24.0014• SsMdel purchae! Don Loper leather wallet/keycase set. 3 wallet styles in black or brown . . . ...• eed1 13.99 20% off: All Calvin Klein underwear, in Qts 'Of colors. ReQ . 6.00 to 14.75 ..................•.... 4.71to11.71 26%..,off: French desiQner siaiamas...i.n soft polyester/cotton. Reg. 20.00 .14.99 32% off: Famous American make( "Chemise Champagne" fitted dress shin 1n four colors. Reg. 25 00 . . . . . 1&.91 30% off: Van Heusen tone-on-tone solid dress shirt in blue, white or ecru. Orig. 20.00 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13.99 21% off: Van Heusen striped. dress shin in cotton/polyester. Orig. 21.00 .. 14.99 Special purchMe: Pure silk neckwear · in stripes and prints . . . . . . ..... •• YOUNG MEN•s 25% to 33% off: Modz asymmetric flange-shoulder jacket in cot- ton polyester chintz. Six colors. Orig. 40 00 to 45.00 . . . . . . . 29.99 30% off: A collection of nylon parachute pants and slick chintz pants. From Bugle Boy. Orig. 28.00 18.19 25% off: J .J . McWays cotton cord\Jroy blazer. Reg. 70.00 .... . ...... 41 .. 25% off: Famous maker cotton twill beach pants with elastic waist, Reg. ~ . 24.00 . . . . . • . . . . . . . . . . .... 18.91 26% off: Dress shirts in solids and · . plaids. with pared-down collars and a contoured fit. Reg. 20.00 . . 14.n 20% off: Sports·tn·Motion graphic · design sweater. plus many more boldly designed sweaters and vests. Orig. 24.00 to 30.00 . 1Ll&-23.91 2$% off: Levi's' cotton corduroy jeans in terrific colors Reg. 20.00 .... 14 .. 25% off: Steinwurtzel fleece warm-up wear for boys sites 4 to 20: crewneck sweatshirts, sweat~nts and hooded, zip-front jackets in bold colQrs. Rag. 6.99 to 11 .99 .......... : .. 6.25 to,_. ~ off: lzod fall coordinates for girls 7 to 14. Reg. 14.00-27.00 .I.. to 17.19 _ ~ Off: Selected te Roi cUOOJy stretch coveralls for infants in bright colora and pr nts. Reg. 12.00 : ............... 1.40 30% off: All girls' handbag , totes nd backpacks. Autumn bright and muted ·ton . Reg. 4.50 to 11 .00 .• a.1_1to7.10 ~ to~ off: Heahh·T•x kid· p1easlng.jalhiQns for newborns and in, tents 3 months to 24 months~ toddters • 2T to 4T ,and g 4 to 14. T~. · ~nts, Jumpers, dresses and more. Reg. 5.99 to 20.00 ••.•.••••••••.••• a.II to 11.11 ~off: Toddfet gi1 corduroy um . Reg. 14 .. 00 •••.••.••••••• I.II __.. pure'1•11: Velour og ts for Inf n and todd •...• .-••.•.• , ... aM. oft. G 4 o cOtduroy . 16.00 . . • . . . • •..•. 11.11 ·LAMPS 201.00 off: Our exclusive 31 -lnch Stiffet lamp, orig.' 350.00 •.••••• -~ •.•.. 1•.00 1a.oo off: Harvard cut 31-inch crystat lamp, orig. 225.00 ...... . ......... 11.;11 CARPETING 47% to 50% off: WaU-to-wall catpetrng In 6 luxurious styles. Prices include measuring, removal of old carpet and pad, carpet, 60-oun~ rubber pad or . 7/16 rebond pad, orig. 34.00 to 50.00 .Ji 11.99 to 24.19 8q. yd. lnauled 112.00 off: French styte sofa with damask covering, orig. 1600.00 .• 711.00 222.00 off: Dark ranan swivel rocker, orig. 350.00 ................... 121.00 212.00 off: Traditional wing cha11 witn tufted back, orig. 400.00 •••••.•• 1D.OO ELECTRONICS .tcLOQ Off:. 2.eOJth 19' .. a~onai co or portable.. orig. 349.00 •••••..•... 8.00 I0.00 off: RCA 19''' diagonal remote control color portable, orig. 459.00 . . . . . . . ..••...... .m.oo 100.00 off: RCA 25" d~onal remote control console, 011g. .00 .... •..oo I0.00 off: RCA VHS video recordef, orig. 579.00 . . ......... •.oo 100.00 off: RCA VHS Hi-Fi videO recorder, orig. 999.00 .........•. m.oo 200.00 off: Pioneer 40 wan ~1+.· J----- system, if purchased separately 699.00 ..........• • .......•.....••• 130.00 off: Fisher compact stereo· system, orig. 299.00 . ~ ........ ~ .1•.00 • 10.00 off: Panasonic AM/FM ' radio/cassette recorder,. orig. 79.99•• COOKWARE An extra 10% off: Revere 11-piece cookset, 195.00 open stock value. sale price 99.99, through Oct. 8 .• . 71.11 - An extra 10% off: Club CJassic 7 -piece cookset in cast aluminum· with SilverStone interiors, 160.00 open stock value, sale price 79.99, through Oct. 8 . .. .. .. . .............. 59.88 An extra 10% off: Corning 10-piece all- white cOokset for microwave or conven- tional ovens, 100.00 open stock vatue, sale.price 49.99, through Oct. 8 ..... An extra 1ft. off: Cambridge or Pied Piper teakettles from fujiw.re, SJ)eeial purchase price 9.99, thr h Oct. 8 ._. Ari extra 1°'61 off: 5-piece 'stainless steel bowt set from Metro, open stock value 20.00, sale price 9.99, through Oct. 8 ••..••..••.••...•.•••••..• 1 .. STATIONERY __ ... purdtM 1· Photo frame· iec· tion .•••.•.••.•.....•.•.••. 2 for ... ~ ~11· Leather photo a bum assortment .•.............•. ,,. ... t:ll • DOMESTieS .. I dale ready for;debat The prcsid nl nd his c Uc er we re cleanna their camp 1ie n calenders to devote time 10 lnis Sunday's de te Jn U>u1 v1ll K •• the first of two Qlcc-to-faoe ions. Re n w s al try101 to voice uppon for his Labor Secretary, Raymond t>onovant indicted Mon- d y by a New York grand jury. Re n id Dono van was ••innocent unt.iprovcn u Uty" nd th viaim of a "lynch 1tm\JSpti~·· that bas pl ucd his m1ntsttntion. t's no maucr of la • nd M> I n'l oomment further," 'R n id. Vice Prrsidenl Oco1e Bush s prcparina to rclea ong-awauCd detads of his ancome tall returns Coda)', . eberrothgets· 'surprise' Tu y. Mondale· ntl h run i mate bit suoi;til}' ll R n on lhe qu lion of blame for the at t final bombina in Leblnon. "He seems to be yi0$J. tt lake ponsibihty, but no\hana cnt wr ... Mondale id of Reagan. ••1 don't iicvc that wtll h." After nearly two full weeks of demands that wmco"'-tak~ the blame ror the bombina thit killed two • Ametican$ at the. U.S. Embassy annex. Rcaaan raitcd the ubjcct with reporters· after arrivana in Brownsville, Texas. · "I am ponsible, es.I· said that 1 wa on thcpttvlous tni~;· Rcaaan 5aid. . But the president said .. there wu no evidence of any carelessness or anyone not j>erl'ormina their duty" in Qlven to OlymplQ ~. the from their deep cornmmttment to the Sept. 20 truck bombing. the third [AO O C o om pen• a ti on the OtymP.c mow911en1 and the uch attack on a U.S. installation in commMt•announoedlueeday. people of ~ C8Hfomla, thatcountrydurinaRc.apn'stenn. Bo*'Ueel r9nQeCf from t500 to tile 198' ~ mtght hev. had ··rm not goina to deliver some- :~.a $475,000cash bon-us $85,000. theJlatler for group Vice • fat different outcome.'' Mid body's head up on a platter, which ta. 1"h49 average waa Roy L. Alh. chairman of com-seems. to be the request of so many tion ltt when things like this happen," Re~ • P9f:'M comm 88• • • agan said" · 1 Ueberro,tt, who It 'now com-.. Their ~~ hae beet\ In Nasl)ville, Tenn., Ferraro called lnluloner Of major le-oue extraordinary."' aald Card Reagan's rcmar~s a . mcaninal~ baMball, p;eelded over ttid 1984 Walk• 8 me Of the com . gesture and saad n was JUSt as he did Games WlthOut a .etary thla v-ar ._... ... t0., ltt •• 1 • . after the Oct. 23, 1983, bombing in In a 8how of eupport for Otyrylpic ,...... "99' • comm ee. 'con-Beirut that left 24 l Mannes dca"1 An votunteer8. · ~oftheiet.....i ~ ~~~ In April 18, 1983, embassy bombing • He hadt however. recefved '¥'~ '"' retlln•-11..rYWU· there killed J6 other 16 Americans. $1•• 000 In LAOOC ....... , ...... "He accepted responsibility in vv, ,..ary •uv Paul Ztffren, chairman Of the 1983 and it meant nothing." she said. bOnUtee In 1980. $203,000 In · LAOOC board, termed the "We have now waited 13 days and 1981. $243.000 In 1982 and bonUMi given to u.be\rroth and we have the president accepting $265,000 lut year. Ulher' .. reuonable .. and Mid the responsibility and saying no beads "WlthOUt their extraordinary two were paid .. ~modest" will roll . What docs that mean?," she leadership and talent, etemml compenutton i>rlor. to 1983. said. Liquor Barn W.OBEil=SE Bl-ES:=:QES"AVI NG-S!_·~ Frangelko SanGtor9'o "-Tua ca Sambuca ...._ Ga Illa no Italian Beere MoTcttt '249 • • .. l/ll Oa. .......... Peroni• •56l -.6(llOI. ........ Raffo •499 .. ..,aao.r.•...._ Winery of the Month: BERINGER !...=..~~;..-.750..a.'9'9 Vlncelll zw.,.,t •'>69 ~............... 710•6.- Fetzer0wau• · •486 ...... 1-. GeW J 50 _.. . =~~-~.~-·399 VlncelJi,......_ •399 s-1979 ...... '*"' . 750 .... Vlnc.elll~---~v ... 1• 1. 1099 n.w ...__ . 750¥-Q Ke.ndaD Jackson c.. 1799 Olm' • ,.,,,_....... • .. C.K. Mondavl~ 1349 c.m.. N.V ,.,. ,._ • .• U IL Mlra9eoua.-... •469 ............... 750..a. ~~~~u11.'2" • Vlncelll....... •399 ...................... 7M..a. ~ ..... ~ ....... 1.u.'%'7 ~,£~ww...~•t 99 f~ .... ~~ ........ 111. 1395 ~~ .. ~~.. 7IO..t1 1~ Glen&dcllch '1737 ............................ ,.. ... Canadian Mlet '1067 IO....... . l 7Slt. Lord Calvert •7s9 -~ ta. ~.~~.~~~ .... ,.u.'569 The Glenllvet '1798 .......... UV-OW. ... 7IO•L ~~!. .. ,._,... . 11e..a.'l 998 ~~~ ........... ne~'1999 Imported&~ I ?!:.~~ ......... , .... '5'5 t'~~~~ .... 11 ..... ·~ Metua -'1149 . ...... ,.,..., ~ .. , .. ... !t~~ ................ , ... '699 Pu•en New"~ '13" .....v.. ............. 7M.£ ~~-~-'14-" ~~~l'l!ll,...~'!!!11!'1~!!"!!'1!!911~~11 Liquor Barn Get whatever You want. · For less • ._ ~~~ .... ~o.r.c-'4-" . PaNt ........ ~110.c-'3" Lowenbrau . · •569 ...... • • .. 111110.. ........ 45 Locations in Southern l'alifomia t 1128...,.,. ..... c.tl .... ,... .... , ... · 2A11 ......... ••••1111t·,...,...1a1 -10832 W .................... • .... UM141 281 laUtll Id A.-. An11r1• • ...... •1..-2 14417 ~"""' lrvllil. ..... 1·%7111 Lo. AJICeleeClty Ball afforda a backdrop u Boso the clown, aka Larry Harmon, betlna bU cam paten for preaidenCJ, Bozo the clow~n aims . for the Oval Office LOS ANGELES (AP) -"Leaders around the world talk batooey, and they think that's food for thought." the presidential candidate said, his nose ~t-red. his oranJe hair frizzed as if upped by electricity. "I talk human relationships. I talk love," continued thejumpsuit-prbcd politician, addressing a downtown crowd of preschoolers and parents. Despite his funky appearance as be spoke oftm.npna Jove •nd laughter to the world, Larry Harmon is no punk rocker from the Sunset Strip. ffe•s the original Bozo the clown. And he's not happy about the.state of the world and the country. .. We're all in a mental state of Saran wrap: We can see through it but we can t do anythi°' about it." the 59- year-old clown satd in an interview. Tuesday's speech launched Bozo•s three-week cross-oountry campaign tour, in which be 'will travel in his silver Bozo Bus and talk about voter rqistration, ho~fully gcneratina ex- citement about the November elec- tions. - His..platformis to ".brins laughtcr back into America" by putting a clown in the White House. Bozo is-registcred as a write-in candidate for the "Bia Whig Party" in "more than half the states," accordang to a news release. Pointins out that he has met such world leaders as Prance's Gen. Charles DeGaulle, Bozo wd be would brina 3S years of diplomatic experience to bear if voters call upon him to lead the nation "I'm the person who believes he can talk to the Russians one-on-one," be said. "I'm not a politician. I'm a people person." The independent candidate for president, who created the character of Bozo for television in 1949, spoke o( bristling Soviet and American missile silos. •tLook at those children and you kndW we've got a problem," he added, gesturing toward his audience. He was aC90mpanied Tuesday by two men -who said they hld tUc!n vacation time from their police jobs in Oevcland,.Ohio, to act u secUrl&y guards. They dedined to give their names because they said they work undercover. Bozo said his platform 1s peace, understandina. love and laughter - attributes that made the TV .clown a goodwill symbol throughout the world. Harmon has spent much of his campaign speakina to college 1u- d1cnces, includinJ a raJly at Columbia University in May that drew S,000 .stu<knt$, 8oz<t' spokesman ~ Di~ey said. ' It's a travesty agaanst the spirit of o ur..nation when w~-actoutand vote," Bozo said. Harmon is financing his own campaign, with thc.cross--country trjp on his Bozo Bus costing him SS0,000 to $60,000, Digne)' said. Stops are planned in Phoenix, Ariz.; Omaha, Neb.; Atlanta; Columbus, Ohio; Phil•dclp~ Trenton. N.J .; Wash- ington; and New York.. Sales of neW homes slump for August By fte A110ctace4 Pre11 New bome sales slumped by 8. l pe~f!.t in Auaust, the second con- secutive monthly decline after a 2.2 pe~nt drop in July, the government reported. The release of home sales figures Tuesday prececded a decline in the stock mark~t that sent the widely watched DOw Jones average of 30 industrial isJues to a thrce..inonth low. In a joint rei>pn, the Departments of Commerce and Hou ina and l::T rban Development said sales or new sin&le-family homes sunk to a season- ally adjusted 569,000 units an Auaust, down 2S percent from last Deccm- ber•s peak. The government said hou inJ con- struct1on starts dropped 12.8 percent an Au&\ISt to their lowest level &ince December 1982, while saJes of previously owned homes posted their fourth monthly decline. In Washington, FederaJ Reserve Board policyrnakcrs met behind closed doors Tuesday. Analysts uld the regulators would probably main- tain their relaxed hold on the nation's crediL The Federal Open Market Com- mittee docs not release the minutes of its mcetinp until after its next strategy session, tentattvely scbed· uled for Nov. 7, the day aftet Election Day. But analysts said th.:t:oubtcd the policymakers .would any strona steps that would send interest ratea upwa~ with the elections so cl09!C • I - B IRTHS um Valley, aut Mr. d Mrs James Hendriot. Hunt- '-lbltOD b, bQy ~r. and Mrs. Wifitam RobcrU. Krone elected ·mental health board chief ~ Patricia Krone of Newport Beach, er of community relations for ciflc Bell, · bu been re~lectcd ~rc1ident of the Boa.rd of Directors of tho Orange County Mental Health Auociation. Joining Krone on the board for the e<>mina year will be Maclay Bart. vice ~ m, Vlce president; Jo Caines, vice president; Ian Slater, secretary; Lucille Kuehn, tre.Jurer, and Frank Hall and ~~~e_I Lawler Jr., meml>ers-at· ~ew board membcn include Jamq Carlson, Phyllis Dillion,1.inda Johnaon. James Kri~ Gerry Moyer, Shanaon Willia.ms. Vactor Yack and UndaYouna. The Mental Health Association is a private, non-profit orpni.z.ation that promotes the care and treatment of thO mentally disabled through a vatiety of proarams and services. Anthing goes for county's ~ special people The Anything-Goes-Atbon, an an- nual event held to raise funds for Oranae County senior citizens. youth and clisablcd persons, will be held Oct. 20, at Anaheim Stadium. M ski S.,tember 11 Mr. and Mn. leff rcy Pari , Costa Mesa. girl , September It Mr. and Mn. Rickie Lemon, Costa M~Jirl Sette rH . Mr. and .Mrs. Edward Ycgcr, Hunt· i•ton Pc ch, girl Mt. and Mri. DOnatd Carrick, Hunt· ington Beach, boy' Septembu Z1 Mr. and Mn. Larry Mori. Hunt· ington Beach, bOy Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Nelson, Irvine, boy Mr. and Mrs. Robcn Mitchell, Hunt· inaton Beach: boy FOUNTAIN VALLEY COMMoNITY HOSPITAL September 1t Kathy and AntOnio Cruz,-J;ountain Valley, airl Lench and David Cisneros. Hunt· ingtpn Bdch, girl · September 11 Laurie and Michael Haynes, Foun- tain Valley, airl .:Mai Thi and Sau A. Lo Nguyen, Huntington Beach, boy - Deborah •!td Frank· Gilia, Hunt- -. inaton Be h bof Unda and nncth Jenkins, Hunt· ngton Bach, 11rt hannon Elmore and un u Huntington Beach, boy Debra and John Kcl y, Hunungton Beach, boy September 11 Eht.abcth and David Bcnkner, ijunt- iMton Bcaeh, boy Aflison and Clarence Saeli, lrvmc-, girl ·~&emberU Elaine and Phillip Lundy, Irvine, girl t:eAnne and Richard Boucher, Hunt• iqgt<>n Beach, airl ltptember 11 Karen and Steven Strum, Huntinatoo Beach, airl September 11 Lubna and Riaz. Mahmud, Hunt· ington Beach,f"rl SomPom an Bounchaob Orasit. Huntington Beach, airl ·t September 11 Mary and AIClen Norris, Huntington Beach, girl Karen and Mark Alderson, Hunt- ington Beach, boy September It . Carol and Stephen Zobel. Hunt· in'1on Beach, llfl stfetllltbt:r u ~ A nd f'.red GartnC't, Hunu h, &1r1 • ROSiyn and Richard cm, Hut• UlJlOn ee.ch, boy Karen and Kenneth Mett'itt, H t· i0&1on Beach, aitt J SPcaay anand~ Ed~n Edva~~lfj1 M1, &irl usan uw 1MJun;f-1.funt· in ton~&itl Sheri mm , Runtinaton Beach. bOy &eptemwrU .. Mclinda..and Greg Roi.Ch"-H@i.- inaton Beach, boy SOUTH COAST MEDICAL CENTER .&ept&iber l! LY'lln &Qd Perry Stampfcl. 4guna Be ch, &Irl • 1 ncll and Fred MCNeill, una Niguel, boy Luane aod Bob McConnell. Costa M~gir1 p\aaberU Barbara and Orea Wall, Lacuna Beach, boy September ,. KQrcn and 'Daniel Foster, Laguna Beach, boy September l1 Jan and Kelly Lewis, Laguna Beach, boy ,, HUMANA HOSPITAL Erin and Robert Schaf~r. HuntingJOn Beach, airl Michele Ticidtke, Huntington Beach, M bOy -• r. Septembe1 it .. and Mn. Jeffrey J. Barnes. . ) Mr. a.nd Balboa, boy .~ - U.S. Department of Tronspc)rtation ' • FAMOUS L'AST WORDS FROM FRIENDS TO FRIENDS. I'm perfectly fine. I can drive ~th my eyes closed. Theres nothing wrong with ,ne. Are you joking-I feel · great. What am I-a wimp? I'm in great shape to drive. You're not serious are you? -~ts a couple of beers? Nobody drives The event consists of teams corn- petina in three events: a 26-mile skate marathon, a 10-kilometet run and an "Anythina-Goes" 10-kilometer race 1tt-'Whieh . . Ob-may ~ non-moto~rm of transpor- tation. ~=---:-~my car but me. l've never felt better. I can drink With the best of them. But I only h3d a few. So _I had a coupl~_ ~an drive rirlgs aro.und anybody. I can drive my own ca(, Last year's event included more Dian 140 businesses and aJtncies and more than 1,000 participants who railed s2s1ooo, according to event chairman an Kleeman. This year's pl ii s 100,000. lndividual entry fees are $10. For details, call 778-6 I 16. Seniors raising funds for center at Oso Viejo Park Saddleback ValJey senior citizens • bqun a fun~·rais~a drive to a new seiuor wm1 to the community center in Oio Viejo Park. · AccordiqtoJohnConnolly,chair-rnan of the drive and a trustee of · Saddleback Collqe, the Saddlebac~ Senion' P1 is to raise $1801000 to build a 2,000-1quare-foot addition to the community center for senior ci tiz.ena. ,, Architectural drawings for the new yring, prepared by Gilbert ~a, were &>reviewed at the fund-raising drive's opening celebration Sept. 13 at Minion Viejo National Bank. lUja's SI 0,000 fee for the plans had been previously raised by the Saddle- tiack Seniors. Exchange Club wins olympics For the third year in a row. the N~rt-Harbor Excbanae Oub cap-i~f.ed first place in the Service Oub 'Oiympics be1d at the Ora111e Coast ;'{MCA. The Service Oub Olympics are held eacb year as a way to foster kin hiP' amona the service orpniza. tlont of the Oranac Coast. The Newport•Irvine Rotary Oub ~llce<i second in the competition and ltd place w.nt to the COit.a Meaa- wntown Kiwanis Oub. The next event 1ponsorcd by the ~MCI\ i the riice Oub Hill of Fame luncheon, btld Monday at • oon at the NewpOrt Btlch Marriott Hotel. For more infonnatlon, call ~2·999<>. • Huntington writer named to post I .. thank you. I'm not dnink. I drive better ·'1en rm like this. Who says -cant drink . iliive? ·I can· hold my booze. I know T'm doing. I always drive like this. c~ wi 1 1st me. Whats a few '"bing to me. I'm . ·~th my eyes rith me. DRINKING AND . DRIVING CAN KILL A .FRIENDSHIR , .. ~ ... ~---~--... ' j' .. . ' um·ber ofpet burials on rise •LOS ANGELES (AP) -WJlen ·annuaflncrcasc in the numbCt of pet • tht miniature poodle, was bunals. · "and killed by a car, Nancy and. 1About 18,000 anime.Js have been ld Washburn looked at animal buried at Sea Breeze since 1961, ettries an OVeT' SoutheM Cali· includina squirrels, turtle • hamsters, omia to find ju1t the riaht resting hone" a skunk and I chimPJnzee. place for their pet. ' "People are startina to talk freclr, The Washburns, a childless couple about bow they feel about their pets, • who live in Monrovia, ch<»e a said Wen~ell Mo~. execu~ve di~ ct~ue and se~ne Huntinaton tor of the. Profession~ Arumal Dis- h C:emetery to bury Poacn be-posal .A~v1sory Council, ~non-profit c:a the 2-year-old doa .. would have · assoc11uon ofpetcemetenes based in J~ ·this eemctery best:· they ex.-El~~~e ~ckenbush, ~ instructor , ned. .. . at the University of Pennsylvania YJe looked alJ over for a sui~blc Veterinary School, said that student DI olace, Mn. Wasl!bum sa_id. veu are beina tauaht "grief counscl- The Washburns eul011Zed t~cir ~t ina .. in their curriculum. e open-casket fw:ie~ sci:ic.c witit :Y.One of the things we've found in iii& ~wo other mi(u.iure poodles our research is that 80 percent of pct anendina on 'leasbes. owners who live in ao urban sctuna The Was~burns are among ..consider the pet to be a family thOusands of pet owners who ann~-member, and they treat the pet's 11 .chooS:C to bury or ~mate lhm death as they would a ctuld's death," uimals .mst~d ofturn!ng them o".'er Quackenbush said. to· vctmnanans or artimal agencies . fordisposal according to pet industry _Dr. ~~nardJ. Simo~. a New Yo!k •~-~--~c¥PCttS ' City clinicale!ycholoaW.uys that m As the bonds between people and ,...,~~ cases, pcopl~ are placina such petaar<>wcloscr in today's.society, the unportanoe on their pets that they attention PJid to a pet's death is also often harm their own personal de- r Vowina in significance psychologists velopment. ••. . . say. ' The. A!Jlencan Medical Vetennary Dr. Linda Nilson, a sociologist at AssociaUon bas ~sserted that. for UCLA, says in.security in today's many elderly, bandi~p~ and ~1ngle · ic has led man le to treat pe pie, pets unprove their quality of m peta as surrogate c n. "These people have more trust in According to figu~s ~leased by the peU," Nilson said. "They can't sue c.cmctery association, about 200,000 you." pets were buried last year, compared The number of pet cemeteries in to about 70,000 in 1960. the country is estimated to be about Pet burials can range from $25 for a 400, industry officials say. The mass burial to $200 and more for a American Medical Veterinary As-single-plot interment. 90ciation estimates that 180 million But Cal Hvberts, who operates Americans own a pet. ~t is believed to be the countryls 'Ruth Friedman, operator of one of laraest pet cemetery, the Bubblina w oldest pet cemeteries, the Sea Wells Memorial Park in Napa~ saia Breeze Cemetery in Huntington that bis operation grossed SS00,000 Beach, says she has seen a 1 S percent but netted ·.>nly S 125,000 last year. Refreshing paws · Obie. a Doberman .cher. ·drUaka from a fountain at ,Blllcreat Park lo Fullerton Suoda • Old Farmer's Almanac runs.hot, cOld DUBLIN N.H. (AP) -The latest edition of the folk bible of weather, the Old Farmer's Almanac, says most parts of the country_bener bundle up for a col<twinter. The T9-3roCdition also gives three ways to hypnotize a chicken. The almanac, the oldesti continu-for northern New England, the west-secret formula developed by the ously published periodical in ~meri· em Great Plains and the c.cntra1 almanac's founder, Robert Tt)omas. ca, says this winter in most sections Appafacbians. Cold snaps are predic--About tbis time each year, the cast of the Rockies will be "colder and ted for the South in November and pyblisher also goes to great pains to drier than normal, with beTow aver:-February and in FJorida:Th Janua~. -stms that people not to forget the age total snowfall.•• The mountains west of the Rockies .. Old" in the title. The admonition Above-average anowfall is forecast arc promised normal snowfall but comes because a ~lative upstan colder tempe.,.tur~ while the Far published in nei&hboring Maine for West and Southwest~ supposed to only 168 years calls itself thp "Fann- Southland whites may becOme'minority get a mild winter. _ er's Almanac." Abe WcatherwiSC!! the ~llective The publishers point out that the WS ANGELES (AP)-By the year 2000, a potential influx of3.5 million unmigrants and thei! o.tfspring could help make whites 'l),seudonym for editor Jud Hale, Maine publication is sold to busi- fUblisher Rob Trow)>rid&e and the nesscs that distribute it free as an ~lmanac's wca1her consuftant~ says advertising tool, whereas the original The ratio of blacks, Asians and ·report OJl immigration released According to SCAG forecasrs, the rainy Northwest will get oclow-costs SI.7S. · Hispanics to whites will likely be this week by the Sou them Cali-the total population for the1 coun-average precipitation and the nor-In addition to puzzles, planting three to two 1n Orange, Los fornia AssQCiation of Govern-ties will climb to 14.8 million by °'4lly dry Southwest will be above tables, "zodiac ~rets'' and other · a minority in Southern Cali- fornia, regional planners say. Angeles , Riverside, San ments. • the. year 2010. average. amusements, this year'..s almanac Bernardino, Imperial and Ven-I~ 1980, whites made up 6 l H · · ·th · I Weatherwise claims 80 percent Jives a&ii~ on .. Making the Most of · f ispamcs, wt a potentia accuracy in the almanac's forecasts Your Manure Pile," cures for hiccu-tura counues, according to a percent o the rPoion's popu-· c e se to 41 per"•nt of the ,,.. -o-in r a ........ and takes pride iQ pointing out that and three ways to hypnotize a chicken iiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiir.ir:ria=T.r::r.=r;:rr----_;;· _________ 1 lation. ~y thc.Jurn of the century• population in the year 2000, the almanac is recognized by courts in -oscillating finger, sternum stroke RUFFELL'$ they could account for just 42 woqld be close to becoming the most states as an official list of times and cha1k line methods. , .. percent of the population, accord-new majority. for tides and sunrise. It doesn't say why anybody would mg to the repott. . Even if illegal immigration Weatherwisc also notes that from want to bypnotiu a chicken. SCAG examined four potential were halted, Hi!r-nics alread& in 1943 to 1945 all copies of the almanac The almanac also provides a Jist of rates_o(imm!gr~on in mak.ingjts were confiscated b the overnmcnt · ~"- di ~ the -area woul . ncrease 1 eir--aftcr\1Crman spies ca t otJLong -state-mott65, argutDJ-that .. it~~ UPHOLSTERY, llC. F• l1le llnt Of Y• lh lffl KBBOl ICVD .. COSTA IEl-541-lOC pre cuon, ranging uom a con-numbers by more than hfrdbalf and ."8 ..... bet-t.hat.!OQJtAm.cricans don't know ~~~Y~~&====::::.:~=-..::::__ _ __;::=------..:=I ti nuation -" • '--'-te.J.970s boom ~~_.J.Sltarul-\llierc~~Q--{~J&.-IHll.,.q-ttas--'il,th-..---tat t " = --______ cu...w..~ ffiCv woula make up>atllu b t e· weathe· r tables. · Cit own s e mot os. · to the restricted levels permitted / Rhode Island's .. Hope" is the ODYSSEY MOTOR HOMES 14-22 FT under immigration reform bilTs region's population, the report Except for · the date, 1985• the shortest state mono. New Mcxic-0's now under consideration in concludes. yellow-and-black, 8-by-Sl/,..inch per-0 It Grows as it Goes," the almanac W h · D C The white majority has been iodical hasn•t changed in appearance. says, "is a bit mystifying." as is alfs hmg_ton, · · " f stead1·1y dwi'ndli·ng. In 1970, 7.5 And as in past years, the 224-page Washinoton's 0 By and By." t e immigration rates o the paperback has a hole in the upper left e• 1970s continued_. tJle.J)umber of million whites represented 75 comersoitcanbehungfromanaitin Otbertidbits: whites in the six counties would percent of the population, By the pantry or outhouse. •People will cal l'h to two times drop to 41. 9 percent of the 1980, whites were 61 percent of Although the ~manac is full of wit,. the number of potatoes mashed than population. the population. wisdom and wisecracks it is the they would eat baked . .---....;_------------------------. weather-forecast'nearly 1 S months •Invitina more than 25 percent of THE RELAXING SOUNDS OF THE HARBQR \KDCM 10!1.1 FM .,.. STER ED 4 in advance for 16 regions-that is at tht guests for a university dinner thc..co·re of its pop1Jlarity with more PJrtY from the economics depart- than 4 million people expected to buy mcnt ruins the conversation. a.copy this year. · •In half of alt the cases when an The forecasts use "the latest scien-employee caJJs in sick, he's actually tific technology" based on solar flare sick. · cycles, 90sitions of the ~ets and •Tall candidates with short names moon pfiues. The pred1ctions then act elected twic.c as often as short ~ checked apinst a I 9J..year-old candidates with long names. FRESH LOCAL LOBSTER 7 ?Upu (?( ?PeJ a 1595 Whole Lobster ~ .-, a 1 Q 95 Ha lf Lobster ' ~-J Complete dinner including soup or ~ ~ 98.lad and choice of potato or rtce pUaf ~';:/)~ON THE PE~NliULA BALBOA 801 E. BALBOA 873--7728 . . ·CAMEO APP • l ~ a October 4th and 5th at Jewels by Joseph .. -. . 1 2 .DAYSONLY SATURDAY & SUNDAY OCT . 6 & 7 10 A.M.-5 P.M. HANS-ULRICH PAULY of Germany will demonstrate cameo carv- ing this week, from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m., right in our store! Jl:WELS by JOSEPH is pleased to off~r you the cha.rm of hand carved cameos, each sculpted by thi · famous artfs.J;into one.of-a-kind pieces to be treasured for:.yeai:s to come. His.father, Erwin Pauly, a third gener- ation stone carv~r has pieces in the Smith~onian Institution's world famous Hall of Gems. Inspired by his fjlttier's varlety of carving techniques, In his home of ldar-Oberstein, Hans-Ulrich Pauly 1s al o a well known sculptor of life size bronze figure . Th old world charm he brinss to each unique pi ce makes the value of his h~nd carved cameos much high r than those mas~·pro duced. Have Mr. Pauly create your own family heirl~~h a cameq for you and your loved ones ..... perhapS as a ChcJstma•gift. 2156 . . NEWPORT BLVD. COSTA MESA I • 1 ·' .. Drunkeri dri:v_er must b~ Stopp~<J · at point of sale · . Mothers Against Drunk Driving are MADD. The Hunt- mpon. Beach ~olice Department'• new Mobile Alcotiol Dc:tect1on team is M~D. Irvine got angry enougb at drunken dnvers to form a fulltime anti-drunk patrol abOut a year ago and Newport Beach mounts a special drunk squad periodically -espccial~y during the holiday seasons. Society genetallyis fed up with the drunken driver. Once the lovabJe, harmless bumbler of light comedy, the person who thinks the car wilJ TCRtemt>er the way home, even when he's too Clriiok. to rem~mbcr '&is name, is at long last being recognized as danger to his community. ¥ore than any other group, MADD has been responsible . for this consciousness rai~ing. The success of the orgam~on •s effort can be meas.ured by the response it has elicited fro tate 1ovemments across the· nation. Tougher drunien drivi~ laws · ped .through the legislatures like a comet; llte co-swnsors couldn't sign on fast enough. , . Despite stricter penalties, the highway slaughter continues: •In February, 16-year-old "Pinky .. Rieb of Huntington Beach w~ killed in an aut~mC?bile crash. The driver of the .o~er car, .. . ... "In a court proceeding. Jf.J'nu .a.ttl$WDn wJtb UJe CODdenaed verslo oftheBlble,couldyougetby wear1ngt0 tdl~truth .. theconden trirth and nothlM bllt1ruth,?' .. Condensat ion shgtlld ~mak© aible-intO Good ·Boa·k again . . bas ~n c~ed with murder. •In August, 18-year-old Davict Andrew oflrvme was killed in an automobile crash. The driver of the other car, Dorothy Tucker or-Irvine, was charged with vehicular manslaughter and drunken driving. She was arrested minutes after the collision at a grocery store. Police.said she was carrying "recently purchased" alcohol. •Last month, 18-year- old Dawn.Utterl:>ack. 2()..year-oJdl>el;>oJTah Slemmons and 21- year-old Diane Druckrey, all of Mission Viejo, were killed in an automobile crash. The driver of the other·car, Kym Murphy of Oxnard, has been charged with manslaupter an& drunken Perfect solution oJJtbI;:,J;=r:~:,is.:!d! Youoolyba ~to~atthiso tem'blv·im portant i.ocident to 1q:ija that. w~ like the ·c~ i~ is do~ ~ the l98Qi. Here you 'ftave a Justioe of ';'dii Supreme Cout\$pea k•na before a chib whose policy it is not to admit womca -and no one complainS. • r" driving.Accordingtopolice,Murpby'sdrivinglicensthadbeen if 't t going to·turn ou1-be would have suspended as the result of a previous drunken driving incident. you can · ge A added a few more. With the space __ "" .. P:: The list goes on and on, testifying as it grows to the limited throug1-... original NI saved by skipping the beaats. there aoi.ut~flegal penalties to serve·as deterrents. u wowcfbe roomTor them: Thou shalt WELLS-not abuse childmi; Thou shalt· not Had the IOOd jastice JpOUo before an orpnizatiou that bars b1ack,s, llllb roof would ·have-eollapse6 ut ms bead. Someone would bav~ said - · nlcen driving-1>3trols like the one started in Huntington I haven't had a chance to see the commit arson; Thou salt not rape thy Beach this week arc a good supplement to the law and a valuable Readers. DiseM Condensed Bible, ••••••••••• . spouse, they nei:Sbbor's spome ft01 enforcement· tool. They will ~~f ~ to head off the impaired but I've spent a lot of time going . any stnnaer. motorist before he becomes the · er behind the wheel. But even through my old, uncondensed Bible bcpu. Ill chapter one of Ma~lhcw da~:da:ma:tsla~ ~": ~~ that is not enough. . trying to figure out what they ~ne, ~i~ are 45 begats meononcd proceeding. if you arc sworn in with In Tus\in this week, the state Dellortment of Alcoholic eliTmhinatedbabl k be mAnJu'ls~~~~~th-G~ of St the condensed version of the Bible, Be C l · · · · the · · · · '-d ey pro y too out a num r -u.-"" ~,..;..-,,. . ver.age ontro lS JOllllDg city po ce 111 a crac. own on of "thou shalt not" and .. verily Matthew, Matt ew, Mark, ute and could you get by -:.~-:-~.r ..... ""tell the bat$ and liquor stores. The agents.and officers are attacking the verily, I say unto thee." There's ~ John all basically tel~ the same s~ory truth. 1he condensed ttuth and problem at its source -sales to minors, sales to people who are plethora of••behold .. and "saith" and -each one bas hls <>wn. vel'Slon. 00f~o~~tb[ copy of the ~ visibiintoxicated and drinking in public. ..knowest" thaf could be \crubbcd. I ~~ could settle for Just Luke Bible. It's 'oina to solve an embar· -c--pr.ogi:am represents:the-fir:st tim~-thc ABC has.worked -wouldn't ~t them to eliminate.too a They ·roui<t eliminate some of the rassini ~lem for me. ln the past directty with local police in Orange County. It is progress. many; 1 enJO)l..the way th~ P~ proverbs. l counted 797 o(tbem -when any of ~Y frieods mentioned this is indication of pr9udice, -at very )east toleration. of it, and scxne member of Co~ WOUid have c:a.1.1ed for the justice's impeachment. ·It bas bee1l done for leu. JUSlioe:. William 0 . Douglas. fodnstmoe. WIS mabled by then Rep. Jeny Fafa merdy for writing an anidc in u • a~t-prde mapzine. With the full coo~tion of the innkee11ers. and liquor rolloffthetongueofadcdtcate<iman giveortakeafew~andmostpcople they bad read \he Bible all the way -:u th 1;,. ... nA ARl"' ~a.,,.ntc MADD th rt.s-and-the ofGod. . .a _ _ _ _:__wmddo1 mrss_..smauerina out-o!: \hroUah -· -J. felt~m&IU:.lllm! ;~e e_RQ~~,_,C COU -TnUie Ofd Testament mere~ two each chapter. . apologetic about not having made it legislators may succeed m maltj_ng our roads safe. Boob of Samuel, two Books of Kinp The same woilld be true of .the all the way through even once. and two Books of Chronicles. In the psalms. There m -J so. of them. all 'Tve read most of it. .. J mumble, New Testament there ~ two Books beautiful. But when I conducted a .. but I sort of skip around in it.•• each of Corinthians, Tb.essafonians, little poll and mentioned.the psalms If the Reader's Di.acst has.d&Be as Timothy, ~ and John. ·Maybe to a cross section of my friend$-all aood ajobas I think they have, now they could·sJdmp a littJe and make do good, God-fearina people -they I'll be able to say, ever so casually, withoncbookap·iecc. quicklyrecitedthe23rdPsalm. Three "Fascinatina. isn't it? I fe&d-.it ·-last Coiivlcted COp recelved the punish_pient due hllD With so much baod·wringing of them could recite two other night" ·- about the ~pulation growth of the psalms; the other nine drew a blank. c.luull6t Au Wei& Ut"n la world, they \X)uld s~p some of the The 23rd PSalm stays. . Wpa Nlpd. To the Editor: equatina to $3,235.59. Officer Pule•s error. was in judg· \ . . Your editorial, "Convicted Cops Violated Their Bargain With Us," stated tba1 the punishment received by OfficerPule was "fair and reason- able for another citizen ... By that you implied that his punishment should 6e more severe. I agree, and it was. By · a~ptini his badge of office. a police officer accepts a responsibility to live a more exemplary life than other citisens. His failure to do so is censurable beyond the violation. ment. He got into an automobile after • drinkina. He did not perceive the C1 degree of his impairment. He was . •WJr.e1• wr.ons, and what he did was a crime. ~ 1 .& I but not a crime that revealed a · those a_nclent Egyptians :Therefore, with the badae. he basically, irretrievably flawed charav Ancient E&yptians manufactured ter or malignant heart. l ood Tb t -A • aJ td Ju,."o'"'.;.-errelicdonanindeN>n. ~ · a1.ia.nts mostaso as '-'a \.Al ~ --brewing. -But not quit~ Did l tell dently prepared Probation Depart· you it was the Egyptian$ who in- ment report which recommended vented sourdou&b 6.tead? probation. There was no attempt by ··this department to influence that repon. Q. How ~ome my brown size 10.-B shoes fit just fine but my black size I().. B-shoes.don•t'l • A. Built on different lasts, no doubt. Though the sizn be the same. th,.contoun of the lasu from factOry to factory are noL B•Fd J1 • qadlcatff t. pts double jeopardy for bis trans.- &ressioos and he may be punished not only as severely as any.-Cr citizen. but additionally disciplined by his department Contrary to your closing statement -"Officer Pule was charged with and specifically punished for .. . violatina ... (bis bargain) ... with .. . us," through the additional 3Q..da.y 1 have fa-th in Mike Pule and in his ability to continue to serve the people of ttiis community. He bas made no effort to minimize his failure and bas continued in his commitment to meet his obligation to the injured party and the members of th.is community. CHARLES R. GROSS Chief of Police Newport Beach Loophole makes gougi1:1g easy for Navy cop.tractors , ·-suspension from duty without pay IQternal analysis shows 2 shipbu.ilders ·canfusloa reigns .on freeway ma~ng profits of n:iore than 20 percent . W ASHINGTO?i -The public is , To the Editor: · \here wouJd be no trcc.w"ys within • r{gbtfuJly outraged by re\lelations Durina the perioo of the past ~cw .... our city. limits ~unless tlicre was lln thaf (be •·Pe'D'-&<>n ro-utinely-pays w.eeks there has ~n a lot of reportang affi.rmatJvc vote by the acneral P\>PU· exorbitanU>rioes for spare parts hand in the Daily Ptlot concemina t1lt lace. lnppears to me that au levdso tools and coffee-m.aken. • propOse<l San Joaquin Freeway. As 1 our government are •t?<>ut to trample Despite tht sbockina extravapnoe remem~r. our congress1Qnal Rep.. over all of us o~ce apin: . laid bare by such stories, Defcntc reseni;auvc Mr. Bad~am was quo~ed I am not cnttrely pos1.t.1v.c that t.hc Secretary Caspa.r Weinberser and his sayuta he was mak.ifllpr~ s with (rec.way as PfOpo!Cd i$ Within ou~c•tY. subordinate spendlhrifts insist that the ftdetal aovemmept to fund at hmns,~but certainty a part ofi at. !f these horror stories arc the e~ceJ> least a pan of the .proJe<:t and lately ?>nSt..Ncted, would encroach even if lions not the rule The system they • you have ftJ>Orted 1that the county 1f w~uld'.~ fl~· or ~tr·r.ame>s. And -' . · • . ptrvisora have approvtd the pro-ccrta1nly1f1tJoinsexistuiaand under say8, l•~.Sl?cally sound. • • #\and are currently woikint on a consiruction freeways al.lam led to. ut •Sat. . . . means of aettil\i around the defeat of belit'1c i1 propoSed, the Juncture As~ of our conunums sen~ on ProPo ition A to fund a p:lrt. No~. tf would be.within our city lim1 waste an aovcm"cnt, my ~iate l mad correctly, the City Council of Assum1natbatlamcorttet~tothe ~nald Oold~ra has st~ an N~rt Beach has come out in ~vor eJustcncc of a law rcquinna the internal analy~11 o~ cena.a.o Navy of the freeway. affirmation of our vo~ it would cootract.a-by.t 1n~tipton for. ~ 'PJ>Uf. that there is a l9t of wheel House Appropnauons Commiuee. AJJ of the a~vc confuse me sp1nnin1 if not chicanery which The analysi.s wa not in~cnckd to bt areatly. A l recall, several ycan o should bC put to rest on way or made pubhc. but t thank >U wn· Uie $tatcof0.lifomia wanted to drive another before wastina any more du ions d c to be houtcd from 1 fi:etwtY th~u~ here ~ona tht time. ~oncy and tffon on mere the rooftoos. Pac1fic<;oastH~ihwavand1.n.oi'dcrlo spcculauon. ?n a nut hell, the commhiec an· op th1a hom61e propo11hon, the v tipton found that two m~or • cittuns ofNcWl)On Beach voted th.a,~ ~ipbuildcts are maki°' prOfiu Of more th.In 20 pertent-an one QUC, neatly JO pc:rccnt -oo nuclear ®NGF"COAST Baily Pilat u mann s and aircraft carriers or· dtred by t~ Navy. The true ut.ent of their profiu i co~cn:d up by a bookkcepin pn>ctdu Herc' th tory. JICI . AIDEISOI an 1.ime soon. Act•n tcr. tbe Pentaa00 ac:counti hcnhO"Ua · Tbe issue is not whether the Cosmos bas. the riabt to bar women; but'•hether Black.mun bas an obfi.: prion to appear fair and to take a stand apinst discrimination. TliC Cosmos. after•.U. isn'ta c:.tub that= happens to be all~ma.le. Its mem are chosen for accomplishment and IChievement -althouah their moSl sinp1ar aooomplishment is to peri.iSt in thinkiq that no woman cooJd meet thote criteria. -.. . But what exercised the town. at least the members of the C'.osmos. ~ not sexism. but that Blac.km remarks made it into the pepcr. talk. like all those at the club. supposed to be off..~iecord. Ytt three members (or"&uests) calJed tbC W~on Post under the delusion that wliat a Supreme Court j • says about· the state and direction of the oourt is ne11r1. . •I \ c r t .. COMPLEJE NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS, A12- -.h~-real Cu l p tits b ehi:Dd ris e i n ..-ou~Jng c~sts:~La iid, financing ( -. d schools bi factors In price hike$ . $70,000, in 1982. Almost as a reflex. some people put all the blame pn the bwlder, but the facts usually don't support the ac- cusation. The real culprits, the statistics and charts show, have been the sharp rises in the prlte of land and the· co l of feels an: preventing ordinary Amerl· financin the fonncr ocountang for n to own modest ,houses in the 24 pctelent of costs and the latter l S style of the J 9SOs and l 9605, Caner percent. ~ points lo oth r expenses that have Back in 19-49 tho cwo compo-been put between builden and homc- .nc.nt.s wett only a fraction of what building. · • • • they arc now. Land made up. l l Such u : Fees ofS800toS1:000 per ~roent of tbe price of the typical new unit as a reserve for schools; fees of .sin.ale-family house, finanetng just S $800 to S 1,000 per unit to buy space percent. for new parks: fees that pehaps might Overhead and profit, the two come to S 1,000 for future sewer plant components for Which the builder expansion, and similar fees for water alone. is responsible1 varied little over facilities. B . .C..j · , l} JJ the 23-y~ perioo, the ~n~ Some communities. he points out, J.j rm sa vs OJ. we bein.1 IS.in l949, 17in 1969and 1610 require the Jift of land for schools. J _• 1982. park.sand low-income housina. Some 1n i shed and p· rod u Cing CA~~ ::a:~tis:.'t~.~~Z,i:O~~d~ no::r: ~~!:~~~.i;::~od:dicate J • • Carter, ' fof!tler Connecticut ~udder a certain perc:enta,ge of units at les,.. Transierra Exploration Corp. -of 47Scubicfeetperbarreland the depth now retitcd in ~ta Rosa. ~li( bthan-ma1rket. pri~ for blow-income ~rt Beach announced Tuesday is 7100 feet An offset developmental Some~here m those peroeotaaes-uyers, cav1oa wose w o can pay the succcss'Tul completion of 1is well will be drilled in the next 60 days perha~ an th.eland ~teaory -'!.'ere feaulat prices io subsidize the lower- ' CR£D IT LINl l -- Harvey. TaQb Joins CM ~a11k as a vp and investment manager Veteran sales and commodities executive Harvey P .. Tabb h~ join~ Costa Mesa-baled Amencu DlvenUled lavlql BaU as V>ce prestdcnt an investment manqcr and bond and public finance authonty Brac1t. E. Ro&MaM11 ~taken on the P9 t ofvic:t praidcnt ofiax~xempt financang. Tabb, a Newport Beach resident, will manaae the newly creat~ sales f otce, expand the bank's eertificaie;.of-<tepoiit base, and create marketma COf!C;CJ>U. Rothenbcrais respo1Wble forstructurinaand implemnti~'sADSB's oatt~nal prpgram for tax exempt multi-family housina. ADSB is ~rt of Amencan Diversifiec.1, a fin!lncial services/ttal estate development h1Jh-techo ot>' products and scrv10H company. , . I • • • . . •' • Ralplt Foley is the new director. of subsidiary operations for &IUCor IDtenaatlouJ, the Laauna Hills-based an vestment coosultma firm found~ .by former OOdgcr pitcher 0. &auoa and his partner James Rtlbl. Foley JOlnJ ilde No. l exploratorywell located on this 640-acre lease. 1s the mflal!~~ impact of do-income buyers." n Glasscock County, Texas. Tl'Ul!iem's drillina partners arc aood,ers. ·~btic~ns and cntnnchc;d And, he continues, since the TABB FOLEY w ~ one week on production 77 Allstate lnsuranc.e Co., Sun Life public officials. Calter says. . favored buyers may 4CCk to rf'Cll · • e Assurance Co. of Canada Chica o '.•The d<>-J<?Qdc~ enVtronmeo-some da and make a large profit, Suttcorafter 17yeanwithNewportBeacb-basedSbeanoll/~erlcu ress • · hilt Albany_ formallon during a as xc anje oc. an oest-• oesn e c1 y av v a scrow ., w ere e serv . ~4.bour test. The. ~s.-to-oiJ ratio was Alpine Trading USA Corp. ~~~~~ gf-°Ji~ffe.'.0:!0~ fi!'1~~ bureauCO\cy to monitor those sales?:_escrow 4i~sion: F<?!~'a ncw,i:: w!Jl.ln~e~treamliniDI and menthenm& ~Spalding wins patent suit ·~with Japanese over golf balls • Spalding Worldwtd~ announced -tt'Tuesday the favorabfe settlement of ~ ita , patent infrinJement lawsuit J&,airut Kamata-Ri, the Japanese manufacturer of the Kasco golf ball. Under the tenns of this settlement. Kamata-Ri was required to halt the manufacture and sale of the ~tent infringiQ& Jµsco golf ball m the United Stares, United Kingdom, Canada. Australia and New Zea.rand by 5t:Pl 30. -The suit resulted when Kamata-R1 sold the Kasco 1olf ball that in- corporated Spaldioa's unique Suriyrr cover used in their Top Flite, Top Aite XL and Molitor golf balls. Spalding's compellt1ve product tesung proocdurct confirmed there was a patent infringement and legal action was taken earlier this year. ~· builder easy ~e," he says, explain-Once, Caner writes. .. a builder the ~mratton o Suttco • su~~es. ' ing that they 'find popular support of could start a mode~t-sizcd project, Huntinaton Beach resident Suu Aten Gnves has been appointed the idea that 'if the builder wants to ?refully and professionally plaJ\ned. marketin1 manaier for the ln1lle l.Mutrtal. Dnelpmea~ ud ~ C.., build. be has to pay."' an a couple of months. TltelrvtaeCo.'1new1ubsidiary. lnhcroewpost,Graveswdl beresponSJblefor He listS these as some of the "Now, the endless rm tape and marketing effons associated with the lrvlM l.Ddutrla.l Ca1er, the Inlae roadblocks, or fees, 5et up during this numerous commissions and hearinis Teebolop Cater and the lr.tae BlosdeliCI Ceoter, toeethcr known as lrvi8e period that inevitably add to housma can use up two years before a start can Speetnm. She comes to her: new post after serv:i~ 1!5 public relations dinlctor costs: be made, making the bills s~!1nJIY for U.S. health care development fOr the western divu1on of Americu Mdleal Pennits to support 0 burcaucratic" high for interest, enJineering, desian lilterUdoUJ, IAC. building departments; fees to short-changes and more studioc." M riel ZJU dirccto f b GENES• • •1s ,...._ • 1 n..-d T term, mid-term, lono.tenn planning Retired, Carter doesn't have to deal ' ' r o t e '-'uem1ca .._.,...n ency reatment • ·-o proaram at SOatla Coast Medical Cellter in So~th Lquna, has been honored by departments; money to design review directly with such issµes anymore. the Alcofllollsm baformad• Cater for her efforts on behalf of the working 4e~rtrnents; unrealistic inspections; But, be says, he is still involved alcoholic woman. Zink is nationally recoanized for establishing the f'int fun~sforgroupstudiesofcompliaocc emotionallyandmentallybecauseJre alcoholism treatment unit in a community hospital in 1973. In 1982, she with energy regulations; costly and feels the middle and lower -mid~ developed Amethyst, the first women's chemical dependency unit~ Southern time-consuming environmental classes arc getting a bad deal. California. She has taught at UC Irvine and been a fouodina member and/or studies. He says it almost amounts to i.....--d ber"' '--•r. "' r. • 1 · N na ............ __ • Angered by circumstances that "e bribery. , VUCI· mem 1orthreeuauwayuouses1orwomen,anc udina ew...,~~ •• for Womo, IDc. in Costa Mesa. . .. . .. Y dlel'-Gulud 6 AnecJates of Costa Mesa bas designed and furnished 1-49 model homes and vianctted 18 at 3S residential developments throughout California this tear. Pat Yeiser, principal of the firm. says sales revenues were approximately S4 million for the fint three <\uanenoftbe year, "and the fourth arn 3 ii1terest·! quarter projection is even more optimistic. ' · •••• The Orange County chapter of~ Sodetj of Real E11ate Appnben iJ ponsoring a team of bicycle riders from the chapter in the Mel>oUW't t ttb an Now you can earn 123t interest, defer the taxes o n ·earnings, and withdraw any -or all -of your funds whenever you need ... with a new program• at Great American. Just make one single deposit of at least $4,000. Then sit back and watch it grow. Your interest will compound daily at a fixed 12 %, guaranteed for four years (as long as you maintain the minin;ium deposit). There's no charge to open the account. No fees for withdrawals either. However, if you withdraw before age 59Y2, tax law requires a penalty. You ca n wait until you're in a lower tax bracket to pay the ta xes on interest earned. A death benefit payment is guaranteed to the beneficiary you name. GREATER LOS A/'\IGELES Alf.A UNl\i~R'!Al CIT'l 80 \MMorwl C11V PINl . ..oj.K~ 10 .--'\ Un~loll "'ud'°' 818' i'fl0.26l0 • iNGl£WO()()M.vl..f4 & M.lnc._.er 150Soulh M.lrkPI ~ IZ1ll6'1-"94 RANCHO PAI.OS VlR~'SAN P£0RO 28ri0South~tem~. .. ... 121ltl31-06.l1' 8£tMONT SHOil£ 4601 tut 5«ond Scrett • • • 121ll ••'M21 SOUTH PMAOfNA 1000F1trO-~~"". ~MARINO 2)5S Huntmgton OrM' ... 181$ 79'M141 18131 ~\.N2 ltANC.HO CALIFORNIA li"&JO Y!W'z R.oold DlSCRT HOT SPRINGS 11999 hlmOnw J.C ~Bi~ ~SPtt1~5 2fi01 c. lihcptr.MtQJlum ~ .. far'910nw . ""t M f.)[5ERT r Hlgl'!My 111 M S..n P.t>Ao lt.i'nt11• MW ()(5UT TCM'M CENTlR ~ f'MWy 111 •I Monlert"y ""'°°" INOIAN Wfll 'i Ht!'hw'Y 11111 OIA> OriYf' BOltllEC.O ~INC~ 7lO Chn~llN\ Ccclf' Best of all, your principal is guaranteed by Executive life Insurance Company of California, rated A + "Excellent" by A.M. Best.•• Tax-deferred high interest. Total liquidity. •• Protected ~y the best. 1rs a great new plan. Stop by your nearest Great American office and ask a PAMCO representative to get you started! Today. • lhli tu-dlmtrred 1nn.u1ty ts undl'n•.,•llf'n by hecullve lilf' I nwt1nc• Company and ft ..,.11able at Great Amenun F1m S~1ng1 Bi nk through Pa( 1hr Annully MarkellnS Com~ny lnwrance Sf'rw:~ CPAMCOI, an ind~ndi-n1 lkf'nwd life lnwranc• agency •oid. 'l'81Wed brokf't~aler. PAMCO ind tl!KUllW, ,,,. Uf' not 1fhllatf'd comp1nl~ of C«r .. at AIM-roe an and are~ r~pons1blf' lor tN> .tecurll<'y of all brochurl'\, acher11~:.-mf'tlts. docurMn1S and otMf m1t•r11ls and ldvlCf' ~ou ma~ rf("elw. All fun<k .irt' df'PQ\lll'd d irectly 10 E.,-culive llfl' Crt'll Amt'!'oco1n •• no11 rl.'81\l~M br<>M-r.c!H l4!f and dof'\ not ~uaro1n1"' the ~111 you make • • • ··nm r111ng 1nd1ott'1 .i comp1n~·1 rt'111"'" \lrf'n81h 1n 1tw •n•u11n<r •~try •nd '' thf' h·g~t ''""•~fl. . • lt•I• efft'<11Yt' unlll Oc1obt-< t'i, ~ 0'14 67f>. 5601 b 191 Jl}. 11Mb 6 l<ll }41-4111 161'.I\ J6.16lJ 1619!7&7-5.lM l.AO.JNA NIQJl L .->112 Crown Va P1rilw1Y. \OUlh ofNgutl IUd ........ , • (71414'S4210 fOUl'olTAIN Wlf't' 10175 5Ullef,tt,enue .. • ... ..(714)~ HlJNTINGTON 8UC.lt --91l2 Mims NenUl' . . . . . • • . . . • . • , <7141 «Jfal-2446 IA1.80' f'(NtN'llJl.A • (JOO Ent lblboa loulrt-.rd ......... '714t67J.3101 ~!St.ANO ,J01 Manne~"".... 1714167>Jl ll N~BCACH On Paci£il: COllt Highway. Mcwttn ~8"1dand ~ C.nlflf OrMo • !7141644-ltaS lAO.JNA BW'H ORANGE COUNTY • I 260 oa .. 1n MnUl'. .. .. • .. .. .. .. ... 171.f'I 494-~ 1 MONAaCHBAY •ANAHEIM HILLS J Bly~.. .. • .. .. .. • • 17141 '496-1201 SSSO S..n~ Ana c..nyon An"'!I • •.• (714) 9'J&.6251 • ~ IUl'N CAPISTltANO l2U2 Cimino c:..putrano .. .. .. • ... , C1t4l 6U4197 CN'ISTMNO 8VoCH OftANOE./Tuftin at Hf!m 2SlS NMh btin IM!nue • • (114) 9'f6'00 )4lOrl Dotleny ,., .. M at Vk M.. clpp6si eapw1no ~ PWJ ~ C , ••••••• '7'141496-0201 • W(X)09'UOC( 45:IOl&rranra Paltwmv a l;allr, .... (1W)'S 11 fl 10llO • (714) 611~111 ti Torolbd .. ~1"1 1J0.72XI MN Cl.l.MtNTt l.ltClJNA Hit L'> 601 NcinhU C• no al ••• • ... (7144'D-tm r,1.-. 674.2191 lOl1P.ttt.'Odt'Vo11Mcbi .. (714' SAN CUMlNTC/Mndlda Pico MISSIONVlflO 1.Sm Clbot ltd • 11N1 ta Pu • ' - ,---·--1 ~1 1 ~1 \... Great Ameri can First • annual Bike Ride A.pinst Diabetes Sunday. Participants include StuMuoa. 011 Sipos, Rob Adami, Jlm Forbes and Georre Ballla. The money pled&ed to the riders Will be used for diabetes research,-«lucation and summer camp for diabetic children. --... Newport Beach-based FalnnHt lnvuton, I.De. has bouaht three 'San Antoni&J Texas, apartmeni comple~es toulin.g 302 units for S16.S million. Addiiional piii'chases are beinJ arranaed. When complete, they will brio.a the company's total to 4S2 units worth aporo1imately $28 million. ' . ~ . Corl>ln/Yam.ai.Jl 6 Parmen., I.De. of Irvine rcceo.tly ho.Sled rcprescuta- tivcs from the home office of MJtaal Rome Co., Ltd. of Tokyo. Fourteen architects and consultanu from the housing development dcsiln dcpartlncnt gathered at CYP's main office in Irvine to discuas housing in the 1.Jnited States. Mitsui desi&ns and builds 6,000 units ocr ye&rm Japan. ---. . . . --~~-------Deul• s.dJLu has joined Ma1eolm Lewb Aaodates/EwcJues:sr Ille. of Irvine as senior mechancial designer, with responsibility for plumb!D,& and piping desip on JCveral larae projects, includina a $12 million con- dominium/hotel project in Colorado and a SS.2 millioD'm.anufacturiq plant for the U.S. Navy in Lona Beach. Sudjiao bas been a mechanical desisner for more than 17 years. Sten Bnd1e1 is tbc new president and partner of the Miller Co., a Newport Beach-based finn spccializina in industrial and commercial rei1 estate development. The Laauna Beach resident comes to bis post from CommerceBaak of Newport Seach, where be served as senior vice president and man.ager of the real estate construction loan dcpanmenL • • • • • Newport Balboa Savlap bas announced the promotions of Suaa O'NeU io senior vice president and bolfda Bea4.lactoD as vice president in ctwse of , Joan administration. • • • Alu &. Pribble bas been '6.amed senior vice president and senior crcdi officer for Wells Farso But'• commercial bank.ins fTOUP, based in Newpon Beach. Pribble was former~y vice praideot and ~on&J ma~ for Wells • F~o'• Flair laclutiial Put rqion.iJ commcrcail banki.na office in El Monte. He Joined Wells Farao Bank.in 1967. • . •••• Jeff SW.C.cr bas been appinted director of human resources for A1pU Man.t11tem1, manufacturer of multi·utct business microcomputet syatems. Stanger will t>e responsible for all penonnel-relatCd matters, includi_ni employment, compcn•tion, benefit&,~ and cmptoycc waation.s, 1J cornea to Alpha Micro from the Santa Monica-~ P.,-mate diviaioo of the Gillette Ce. · · 1 • $2,500MINtMUM . DEPOSIT • LIMITED TO PERSONAL ACCOUNTS • LIMITED CHECK WRITING PRIVILEGES • DEPOSITS INSURED BY F.OIC NEMIUM IATI PAID ON C.D. 1-$111,0IO I OVH CALL NOW TORY HINSON =(714)m..... PUUJITON HIADQUAITlll ~ ~ . PIONEEQ II~ . BANK '; l515Swltt ~Mwt. ,ula.rton, COl"Of"fllet2632 ........ , .. . .. ' Bank$ OK Varco restructure . Vart0 Int mat on I Inc. an B.U 1 .. fere.t "-nd'bt • ounced ihat at lied • • ~ """'-. ment in principle With its bank& to _Coast v:in-15 &,U>an Auocta on rcstrueture the exi11tn; rcvolvina id Tuesday lh~t at ha P!J-TChascd crqiit ~mb\t uJl(kr which the .SO percent stake 1n Data. Linc ~c COml)ID)' has been fn dcf.tult c:o., a c:omruttr-SCrvJCC fi~ SC{Vlfll · ; more than 00 financ1al tnst&tuuons: Tho prior default has t>«n waived Tcnna of the deal wemi't di5" tbc company id, an<S . the curttnt closed. 1 qreernent has been amended to Coar.t purchased its share in'"Uata suspend (~ntil Nov. 15) the mini· · Line; a priva~ly heJd firm ~secfin mum tanaiblc net wonb covenant. ~uburban C.ovipa. from Pacific S v- eUminatina the condition of default. 1ngs ~nk of Costa' ~esa. Pacific will V._.. .. ;:-d 't , · h 1 continue to own the other halfofthe ... _, -1 t . •".'t•Clpatet t at the finn. n.cw llfCCment ill be drafted and .. This purchlse upJ'Or\J Coast 11~ by. that !iate. J)'le . ba.rUc~· Savings' continuing efforta to de,. m1~1mum commitment dunna th11 vctop other source of fee and com· pc.n~ has been . ~ucod to $22 mi ion income whic ate no.i aulbon .from the onamal $3S million. interest-rate dependent,•• said Ray ~n:owmgs ~ cumntly at $19 Manin.prcsidentandcbicfexccutive malhon. · of Coast, wbich claim' assets of more • The new rcvolvina credit qree-tha!' $5.6 billion and more than 100 Leamhowtoprcparc,develop,and ment is exl)Celed to contam a com-llvtnp branches stateWide. deliver a s~h in a busjncss ~tting mitment level of s2i.s million, . C~tly. ~ta I.sine serves 100 durini a 51x-ttou.r seminar at Oranse stcured ~inventory, propcny. plant ·~s~tutJ'.bns wttJl more than $30 Coa. l College thu fall . and equipment to mat'ute June 30 bllhon m combined assets at~~-uj Titled "How To S~ Up at a 1987. • • 700otli~_inCalifomia, Neva~ Busincu Meeting." the· session is Tho bank aroup consists of Crocker Arizona. . ...: slated for Oct. 13, from 8:30 a.m. to National Bank agent bank· Citibank· Martin and Coast and Pacific wall 2:30 p.m. ·in Room t1'U of OCC s Bank of the So~tbwest; Lloyds Bank; launch ajo~t marketingca!flpaian to ~ounseli~a ,an~ Adm1ss"lons Build- •nd SeCurit)' Pacific National Bank. find new chents f<>r Data tine. in1. Adm1ss1on is SIS. A Amal. ·I. p I Mlcroventure pushing for new dealers . -1., Microventurc, an lrvine·based de· veloper of 'microcomputer software for the real estate trades, has an· nounc:ed that in the initial month of iu drive to sign retail computer dealen to carry M1croventurc•s line of software packages 37 dealers have been contf'ICted. Included among the ~-ho arc located 10 10 stales, . are Computerland. Entrc, and Genra outlets. "We E'C cncouragec1of our initial success 10 signing computer dealers." said Microventure p,-esident Ken· netb J. GreRorY. ''1\s Micro+enturc's reputation ror developing bigh~uali· ty, user·fnendly, and competitively priced vertjcal market software has arown, dealers have been actively solicit1na us for the right to selt our Sold soft.ware line at retail. Our aim is to build a network of high pro-- fessional, strv1ce--0ri ented retailers; consequently, our corporate poh~ is to be selective in our screening process.•• .. Our aoaJ 1s to "Ill up a network of no more than 200 dealers nationally, with 30 of these slots reserved for California outlets, where both the real estate and computer trades arc eiccep- tionally strof'I. By capping our re-1 tailer network at that level, we are confident that M1crovcnturc can continue to deliver a hi&h l~vel of personal support to its dealcn and their customers," added Micro-- venture vice president, marketing, Michael Shenker. UPs ANO DowNs ~ NEW YORK (AP> .._ The tonowlno ll1t 1how1 the Over· the· Counter 1todt1 and warrants that twive oone UP • CM mc>$1 a~ dOWn the = based on · yi:.g,,,,~r no ~w ft or: 1000 es ar4' • ~ ...... t eftCI ween• Chanoes ar ... d encie betl+Mn rhe Pftv!Ou• ~. g prlee end Tuudav's last bfd prlc:e. ' U9'S Crf. Pct if! l.,Ht. ,.. ..., ~ u: '. ~ YJ UP --At Bank of Amcnca you can choose from a wide variety of mvcstments -all backed by the security of California's leading bank. And you can count on the services of a knowl- edgeable banker who will help you choose the one that best suits your 'individual neCds. I §: I' •• 1 UP . " \-'j Hp . I p . SAVINGS PLANS WITH EASY ACCESS. Cash Maximizer account r ~ p • ~ u· = . l: ~= .1 ~ : ... p 14 Up VJ UP t ~= .: UP Pet 1 I If you're looking for an investment that combines instant hquidity and market rates, check out our Cash- Maximizer• account~ Or, if }'.9U1re · interested in building a savings progtam and prefer a more traditional way to vc, our RegulaiSavings* account may he just what you're looking for. , ~ PERSONAL CHOICE TIME DEPO ITS If you'd like to l 9.00% 9.38% Cur~nt Rarct Annu.i.I Yicldtt l\vo Year Personal Choice Time De~it 12.00% ur:rcm Riuc t . t~r 111 w bin:i toeli1t,cha 2 Y{'.U ta ~ nn I lldep~t" ' ttAnnU.11 VtC'ld u l'fU'IC'•!'lll and in ttU 1"1'11Utn tn l\<nl .. , pmr r al a full ~l h1ghc~t mtcr~t rate~, Per~nal Choice Time De~Jts ""give you iu .... t the choices you need. T he rate you earn d~pends on the amount you deposit and the term you sdect -anything from 7 da y'> to 10 yean,. Best of all vou can open an account with ~ little .is $500 With choices hkc these it s ea~} to get a time dc~it that's exactly nght for you. DEPEND ON US At Bank of America, you can count on experienced people to hhlp you m:ike the right in¥ tment choi The choice that rcfl~ > ur individuality. •u )11U cki )'Our accllont pr co che end . • mau mod, interest camrd but not ~ cm11tcd to the nt 11 not bc-p.a id -uhsumtul tmct't':M poult rl 1 tthdHW l ) - Bl Bank of AmeriCa ., .. - I OD the f .. . " , • , . ..._... ..... -• J. : WEllESDAfS CLOSllC PllCES Dow JoN£S Av£RACES WHAT NYSE OIO NYSE LlAOLRS UPS ~No DowN s WH AT AMEX Dio NEW YORK (AP) Oct. 3 T, ·.~1 AMEX LEADERS GoLo Quon s McTALS Quon ) · / That's an apt description ofbqth business and business people along the Orange Coast. To keep track of· where companies are going and which p opl are helping them get there.just watch 'Credit Line' -every day in ttie Busin~ss section of your n e~ llilJ Pillt , ______ .. ' • • • • • ,. • Ftnd eo1ut1on8 · lor thfM meJor t~oubl• apota In ft r a 11 '•~acepfng. 82. AV, OCTil8ER 3, 1 \. Plants keep. home· 'alive' Val~es showplace on house tour for C<JM High School The same e~t a.iriness that Arthur Valdes · into tbr · Hyatt RCICPCY• on ui and the Marriott resort in Palm Sorina pre~s in his hillside Newport lleaCh resiClcnce. .. Jnteriors should be alive and comfortable with open windows and . plenty of ....... f« --Ul sugcst a relaxed atmosplttre." ays v aldei. -A11 the greenery' wicter -funlltun:, hardwood floon and' used brick contti~te lO the indoor-out-door mood. .. His contemporary, Cape Cod abowplace -with four bedrooma, four fi~lacct. five bathrooms and dream kitchen ~ will he open for Corona del Hiab School PTA's t I a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Inside, iour participants will see ovcntutli:d, -"tll silk sofas; hand- made c:atl!<ll from India, Fronc:b antique armoi.rn and dinina room • suite and· a 120-year-old Grand ' Saunerraie pand!atbc:r clock. All that' richness is refreshed by trees-bamboo and Arica polmsand a l~footJ(entiapilm in the entry, for openers ... I have indoorand outdoor . P!dencn." Valdes admill. the accent on livability'COntinue\ oullide will> a handsome pool d<ck; whiie pzebo and arbon. For viewers who wonder how to re. create such •mtricnce, Valdes ad--vises: .• .. Experiment and surpris&y~[ ~t Y.OU have to be innovlliveand up.. tc><lal<. .. Like a football coach.. you should . chanac your pme plan from year to year.Most likely you've oUtarown the liJht gold carp<Ung ancf flocked ._. -"'al I paper you chose IO yeon "I"· .. Today'slookisfreshandairy. The 'same is-true for restaurants that are breaking away from martini-time darknesi," added V al<l<s, whO has The Pouk, RUl\Y . Pelican and El -..-T~orito amQ@I hiS credits. •· 1be smanest ariCf most cconomi- Art &:-sole O.,W and Dftral:afted llDfa from Wicker W'orb ftaAk • handmade Maclllldo •to•• corree tillble In family room when J'nmch doon and ued brick. fireplace offer more of lndoor-ntdoorm-. • PAP ARAZZI ~ RINGOPSOl..8 ::~ . JnTll SPINACH AND SALMON MOUSSE ;<.:! ·s..,;e MHUT-::,,; -J-tiilftf 11 ii IHifter li;a z...u.11,..-~ 5t·•':r: .. n..r a :,; yolb at nom tempentare '1l .,..... , ... Salt .... peppe!' .. tute u Melt the butt.e'[..in sauce'pan. Add sbaUots.. Sause un ~ . golden. brown. Add flour. Remove from heat. Add · Carole Cade, Geoll(e and Sandra Lomblno chat "f'th'Lla Oleen u Robert and Carolyn Pike llreel Doai and Boonie llaraball. and stir.Cook over low heat. stirrinaof\cn until~ Remove from beat. ln another-bowl, beat the qa ~~ Add a little of the saucr 10 lhe cg Yolks. Then add the )'Olki• 10 the rest of the sauce. Mix well. Return to heat for CJilC..~ minlltt. Add the sa1~ pepper and ouunea. Set aside. !~~11 'Stars' ~~eoutfor S~ndpipefgala S,-M-..: . I (lfa...e)~fn1.ama,,e.11p1-m.t1M1 .......... ~·· ·~ • Auction results prompt cry of 'Hooray for Hollywood' By VIDA DEAN ....,,....,.. ... Hoea'• SandpipcN .. went Hollywood" at their recent benefit auction. Kl.la li&hll welco~aues11includinaloolL-alikes_ MaeWcs~Kalbari~lf<pbum,Humphreylloprtaod Tom Selleck to lhearoup's toast to the moviecaf1'tal held at BUnoclt"s, Soutli Coast Pilla. · · · ·Now, ~Sandpipcnaresinaina"l:loorayfor DebbieS...,.udJAHtla..,..._•mOSIC ctu.y looifnC lluldplpen and...-. ....._ . -- ' • • Hollywood,"becausethcproceedsfrom theannual affair have added up to SJS,000-itgoes_}.o the Radiation.'l11e(apyCentcrofHoaa Hosp11al. Some oithe money raised.came from the 300 tickets guests bou&ht, butprimarilylhe moneywaa raised from the auction conducted by Melvta GlUer and his staff -' (who donated time and servica.) A gold necldacewilh rubies donated byGMrse EJkovt and his dauahter: and son~~~~taw Patti and Jeff Ea-brouaht jn$3,400(so1CI tel J.S.Clmpbell~ a Fld rinacovered with diamonds and em en.Ids donated bjiNldllUmmuwenttoMr.andMrs.n..Ow-for SJ,800, and the Otympicteam-eutoaraphed volleyball (donated by VldlJllaba) went toCecUla Berry forSJOO, etc. It all adds up! The Hollywood aounnet f<.ut (and that means food 1tati0ns located allover the Home Fumishiop Department) wu quite a show in ittelf The "Moroccan Movie Era" table ~tu~ tabouli salad • .......,. date and wtinut salad, lamb and anu11m110GMr)e .... ...,...i the dolmalhes"""' sreat;butUid, 0 YoushouldtuteLerral.M'1cabbqe .rolla." ,. O!llandl!!arlhll<lmuand-•and PHI n.vl were tryina theoetruta;acroa from 1¥m sat EiiillyandCUrlel Wl!PI. Thereweretal>b>n the Jewel Court, but moaloflbeguesll round lheirowd dininaroomsand livina room settinp for dinner. Othen were fillina ~teaat statiom labeled "Soulhem-French.Movie Eno" ~mboand chicken ~uettes~ "Roman Movie Eno lr.;'<antipo ti)and lhe MaanificentSevenMovieEta (desserts). Al1c>er:ttinaatte11itionweteti~tauctioni.tcms~-(alllttyOrableloot..Jike""11it..oo....O. hairdo) waaoverlleonl aayina "!"m sipina up forlh11 • dayof'btautvat"-Wanl1'1).a..IJ'S<Uuk I ..... ..._.,... oaloa top&, "'lacft ...... =--Zea tes· PM' ef aeam llf tartar -....... Pt.ell .t Alt ... pepper • 'i Mix totether the dnined 1 . nacli, half of the M °1 Sauoe. onions and nutmcs,. Ct the ea whities u.n Ii foamy, add the salt and cream oftanar. CoahnUf beati ...... un'til $tiff. fold into the spiMOb mixture. 1'dd sah. ' ~ pepper to taste. Set aside. Salm• Moase: i..-.fralliu••-..._.,ft' t ...... ~n.:-:11~,r.:=~ 1..un.11•trm•----'~ ..... . 11111-. 1 tet'JJ 11a lem• J.tee l Pafrtb•oute · Zegftltea · . PbM:* e.dl .. salt ... ~ .. tartar .._ I er I Nie fUlett · 1 , "....,. • Mil totttber the salmon, the remain inc M · Helen Melchior wt th Ray aild Dee 1'1akie. Sauce. din, lemOG juice and paprika. Beat tho• wlli _,_. __..,_,. -until foamy; add'the salt and a.am of .1at1ar. CootiJI (....Onaawn11<Bappenlmsand~-11a1)wu::. boatina until stilf and i>lcl ill1o the sa1moa mixture. cbc:cldnao.nll111andMar11JaSolU...W11conAdcrina asi&. · • a bid on Wat«fonlcrystal. "1 lla..,some p~and I AaaetDlllr. • uked my motherwllo i1 in Europe to try w>d p:t me PleheatoV<11 to JSO-Rinse aole filleu U.,.i m<>1<-" -ter. SlilJitly llatle1l lhe 6lle11 with a rollilll pin Ollot baa . Others on thc&ucst list who seemed tobebavina• been moistened.(A motUtl'ted mallet wtll~-an I good time watcltfnaOTcl mo Vies on TV scu.,....n<I the or 9-<:up rill molcL Set lht fillets in the sldaned or depanmen~ lookinaat Hollywood tlOltumesand 1 dar\enide up.Sliabtl~ovcrlapthem. t,<t endoC-" specia!Laliq~colle<lion~ln1Rlloy(Sandpipcn ~overthec<nteroflhemold. Utwideeoclexteftdover pn:sideftt)and~!~Jadl-thellldlon oullidetdp:, ~ 1'Mll and O'Net~ the a-..._ Spread tho Spinach lo!OUJI< caref\olly , on the tilletL l>Mcand-Ma......,U.thetl-.~tbe TbenspteadtheSalmonMouueoatheSpinachM..._ JMo MeN•oO-Mr. and Mn. P•• wan. the Lora Fold \heedp:s orthe fillets ":"'It ov.,,.. Cover with butt<red H~'Mr.andMrs.J-llN.CkllH--=·the ri .. mol4 ilu.,aflilll JIU lialf.fillod *"ll lla1nd °"Doell'l'*lo,G:-leand -ter and bUe-40 to 4.S minuteo. Remove from oven and R*na.ndcaratp Pile, Mr. and M lloUI tuni out '!!'"' a platter. Blol any ""toll liq•id. and andO>airman Lara!Mand 0.¥14 -e hot in 6 to I portioos. ~.....:..-'-~~~~~~~--~~~~~~ ... ~-l-1 -·-----_ _. ~-----..---- .. s~ alway.sgr~ EJ.er ifl8.ri<fl.sc8ping ~s planned ., in maioLcnanre, aredraina e, wnsandproperplant Nowthatthcseed v&1ie11c1irechosenand the arc an:1t'9undcoversth11t rcquir'Clh~le re. , ma ten Is. An BR.a imprQpcrly rained C'1'n cau~con taot detennin~ the next step i1 to prcl)a.(e the seed bed -When choosing rtnnt ~aten~b. one mv5l~CC'P an croS1on problems. Qr, at ma) ate H area too wet for Prof~ siona\ landscape contractor$ rt~mcnd prcpari mind the kind of ii and chm tc an the ~: It 11 bes~ to use lawns.and plan~ to s.Urvi've. \ th~ td bed with sencrousamounls oftiumusfor • the performers that demand th~ least attention, Cl.CA ,, A ~11 selected andestabli hed lawo will protect a maximum moisture retention. which hclps$timulate says. . ntle · 1ope from cro)•On. A perarade can be protec'led groW1h ofncw lawn as well as to retain the beauty and For easy rnaiot.cn~ncc, homco~en will ~1!1tc~sted Yard care S\ lie notice bly rtduoed with effective tanninaanc:tplant selection. However. maintenance nnot beehminatod. y usinaoth.cr types of ground o~r. such as vines and • thickness that make a mature lawn attractive and et\)Y to . in neatirowth habits: tn planu relaoydy free <?rdisc.tse shrub$. One of the best low maibtenancc covers available, maintain. · and insect attack, and in plants with strona re" stance to Theinitial tci>utooon idernecd ofthcfamaly, rdinJ to the California Landscape Contractors ssociation. a tatewidc orpnuatioo oflatldscapc arul · oklercootractors, and supj>liers. Which lho~ld be.con idercd dun"& plannina Sta& • isa ~s the need toconscrv~ wa'tC'r mounts, it 1s 1mrnant temperature change'. . ll _ . wellesiabh h'dtawn. ~~ , touuh1e~nerythat~u1rc~thclea1umounto "' Treesandshrubscangr~ws1dc~y~uwc u9,so for )'mowing, howcv , limi llhe traU to level watcnngand i rripting. • don't OVt'rJ)l nt forcing lhc~ to grow ID I~ )Jn natural areas an cry gradual slope nder shade trees where New law •hould be planted this month with d~p diroction. And remember, 1t 1s alwaysea!1er to add another ams js difficult t()grow and hatd to reach for mowing.· watcnna every Stven to 1 O days. Ample watcr'at that $t&gC pl.Ant thin to remove an overgrown or m11ptac:od one, dµc .. Foreumple, onemustdetermincif.a picnic are.a is ~ired. A re \here children.; and bow much play area do ey need? h•sWl mJJlina pool a consideration, ora dtiP:\ and swina set? Will a barbecue urea be needed, a however. Cl CA"adviscsusinagroundcovcrs that need will encouraiedecprootgrpwth. lrutddiJi<>n. two · tothe1>9ss1bilityofroot andi>lantdama~. Evergreen • little trimming and grow close to the around. complete feedings a year arc suffic1cnt-onc in mid· pf:tntsare low maintenance types with sJow growth Use a borderstripQfbrick, concrete or tile to contain March and anothcnn early Scpt~mber. · patterns. • . . · . tbegrass within the design. The borders wilt n:duce / Chemicil weed killers should be used to protect the · By plannin~ laod1Capins to sui~ ind1v1dual needs, patio, a vegelabteorflowergarden? · · Once needs ba ve been decided, CLCA urges lbe omcowner to prepare a scale ketch of the site to be trimming. new lawn as well as to eliminate anyfuture problems, and, desiJned toetiminatc trouble spots 10 the future, the ' Once the lawn area i$'determmcd. select ~ss as an aid to rcsolving.Dlaintcnance troubles. homeowner will have more lei Au re time to enjoy the · d~ped. Drawinallcxistinattccsandshrubs. noorporatinggrowing trees and shrub$. That way, plants ndigcnous to the area can be better utilized, and efiecaive . of existing~cry can bel~ prevenl rro ion. varieties accordingto the area available, considering the While in the planning stages, long-range maintenance beau ti fut landscape. · . temin, the soil and demands made UPon it. A hardy should be a consideration. · The a 5'0Ciauon will refer homeowners to qual}fied variety should be selected iOawns will be receiving a lot of The~ are m~ny materials available which, when profcssjoru\l who meet. not only the state( rcquareme.nt.. foottraffic. arranged m pleasing patterns, will reduce lawn areasand butalso its own standa~. . J'htee maJOr trouble spots m landscaping, particularly . Lawns in inla~ ~as with bot surr.imcrs and cold the need for mowing. These include beach pebbles, pit Jnquiries may be made at the association's office, winters sbould be different from lawns an coastal areas. gravel, crushed stone and wood chips. Other subsiututes 2226 KSt., Sacramento 95816, or phone (916) 448.:CLCA, ' ferns and seasonal plants for soffutss.. ''Less worry about matctPnJ colon means yo1> have wider choices for furniture. Remember the light, out- 4oor mood. Consider pine or quality, tecl-lined wicker that wiU last for-- yea.rs." Part of the experimenung he rec- ommends for do-.it-yourselfcrs in- volves improvisation. . .. My master bed is actually twin beds -carved, antique Fi-ench: circa 1905 -that a Dutch craftsman pieced together." be-telates. . A!ld even m.terior designers fall "Once I was in Wilhams-Soooma .for 15 minutes and bought one of eveiything in the storer he says, still amazed at the results. "They thought •l was ordering for a restaurant, but all that copperware hangs in my own kitchen." I • Also featured"on the tour, accord- ing to Pam Howard, chairman, will be the.homes of: • Mr. and Mrs. Howard Siegel; Com- bining spacious sophistication with f.ami:ty living, this house makes note·- ,of the special interests oftbe owners: a •miniature ear collection and photo- graphs of horses. • Mr. and Mn. Tbomu Schriber: An ample country kitchen and an English club room with a hearth set in river rock are highlights in this pnmc --"ample of remodeling expertiiC Salle StiDner:: Light and spacious California contemporal}' rooms, Mexican paver flooring and soft primary colors in Navajo designs personalize this Santa-Fe style adol>Q borne. l ... Mr. and Mrs. John Valentine:· ncreclible art Objects and Chinese collectibles draw your attention from the ocean-view of this Big Corona cliffhanger which features a wonder- fully eclectic adult playroom. Jadge ud Mrs. Henry T. Moore Jr.: An antique mantelpiece, grandma's &rand piano and heirloom quilts add lo the country chann with a sense of family bistol) evident in this land- a.,. ............ LMp.,_ A halo of CGppe;TWare from Wllll•~•-Sonoma lnd.lt:atee Valdee' kitchen la outfitted for a 9erloaa cook. mark that's (been featured in Home includes a bask.ct lunch and tea served magazine. frorti 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. at Sh~rman -Rob Ingold! Also shown an Home Gardens on tour day. magazine was this sturining remodel Proceeds will benefit the PT A's ·· of a 40-year-old beach house that now school support projects which most sports high, arching windows, Dave recently have included a oomputcr ·ChappeU paintings of game birds and printer, stage lights., sound system. an office-loft. '#< • ·financial assitance to student clubs Tickefs WiJT ~ availabfe from Oct. and the stan-up. costs for S.ADD 15-22 in the Associated Student Body (Students Against Drunk Driving). office on the Corona del Mar campus For more details. phone 760-6983 during school hours. The S 12 'price or 644-04 72. • ~Charles' OK, 'Dreams' isn't By FRED ROTHENBERG /o'I' T....,_lon Writer • NEW YORK-Two back-to-back sitcoms with roots mother entertain- ment media debut on CBS tonight. "Charles 10 Charge," created by a playwnght with several off-Broadway credits, has the smart, sassy feel of a Neil Simon JOkeathon. "Dreams," jnspJred by cable's popular MTV. is so-so as music and abysmal as video. For years. CBS has failed in the first prime·Ume hour on Wednesday nights. "Charles 10 Charge." starring Scott Ba10 from "Happ} Days," offers a good start 10 the ume slot. But "Dreams." stamng John Stamos from "General Hospital,'' 1s a weak link to the follow-up "CBS Wednes- da~ Night Movie " Baio plays \harks. a 19-year-old college student who becomes a hve-10 nann) to three children Lila. 14. Douglas. 12. and Jason. IO The parents 10 this suburban family are whtte-collar executive types. Jill (Juhe Cobb) and particularly Stan Pembroke (James Widdoes) come across as buffoons who are too eager to delegate child -rai si ng respons1btlit1es to Charles. For example. Stan 1s concerned about Lila's male fnends, but he's too blustei; to articulate any guidelines. Always speaking 1n generalities. he says, "Do you unders1and what I'm telling you'.)" lnvanably, Charles does. Dcf;p1te th1~ weaJc.ness, clever writ- ing and the e'ubefant Baio elevate "Charles m Charge" above TV's standard family fiction. in which the kids are a cross between Dr. Ben- jamin Spock and Joan Rivers and the adults are about as mtelhgent as .J Donald Duck. In "Charles in Charge," you won't find flesh-and-blood kids, as in NBCs "The Cosby Show," but ptax- wright Michael Jacobs ("Cheaters ') has crafted some riotous one-liners and some quirky caricatures. Jason (Michael Pearlman) is a v1de<>-game nut who wears a monster mask at the dinner table. -Douglas {Jooathan Ward) is a precocious know-it-all wtio is one step from ~xual awareness -as are most video-a~e kids. "The children know everything," says Jill. "We have cable TV." Part adolescent and pan. adult. Charles is faced with a dilemma. While still growing up himself. he's saddled wtth being a surrogate parent. Balancing those two worlds produces much of the show's comedic poss1b1ht1es. ... Like tonight, when Charles has an eagerly awaited stay-at-home date with the sc~ool's beauty Gwel);dolyn P1orce (Jennifer Runyon from "Ghostbusters") andjs tom between making ad vances and acting prot>erly U1 front of the kids. At the same time. he's playing parent ~use Lita is doing homework in her room with a good-looking guy. '. The plot gets a little slapsticky, but 1s .rescued by sophisticated writing and Baio's immense charm and credibility The former Chachi from "Happy Days" can dtfinitely carry his own series. He displays deft comic timing and a sincenty and ~armth that makes him a believable and winning role model. Scholastic magazine and longtime s11com producer AJ Burton are m GRAND OPENING FRIDAY,OCTOBERSTH UP ·TO 60o/o OFF FamoJ,11 maker •~ttawear -10Jfwear -warm- up 1uita -awimwear -activeweu -dreaaea ~-·-. 642-5784 ., 11•-,. . 1610 W. Coaat Hwy, Suite A (Nen to Chart HouM) -. charge of the production. and they seem intent on crcaring comedy that has depth but doesn't descend into anything depressing. "We won't do stories about teen-age suicides and drugs," said Burton. fF BAIO IS the kid next 4oor, the smart alecks in .. Dreams" are night- mares. They're not into drugs, but neither arc they the sort to be wekomed into many living rooms. "Dreams," about tive Philadel- phians who try to succeed as a rock 'n' roll band, is a hi'11-decibel show, not because of the driving soundtrack but because the series' one-jolle joke is a putdown -generally a loud one. The worse practitioner is Ron Karabatsosas Frank Franconi, who is the uncle of the group's lead singer and main macho man (Stamos) Franconi's a boorish Jerk who does a terrible Ralph Kramden imitation. Some may compare "Dreams" to "The Monkces," but that 1960s series had f carefree spirit, while this incarnation is pretentious and nasty. The series' blue-collar a1t is strictly superficial. The hard work behind creating roclLJi' roll is all but i'1tored. Tonight's episode starts promi's· ingly with a wistful music-video sequence about a successful band. The brief segment turns out to have been a dream. The rest of the program is then filled with inane dialogue and a flimsy story. "If you can be any song what would you bcr' asks one band member, pushing himself on a female who isn't a fan. "Beat h ," she says. Need "'"" say more? ,.. _. ---_. _. .-. --..-imm, I SCULPTURfill I I A RYLIC I I · NAii.... ,,.J LYa-~.!_C!_~.£1~!:.UlD Fud • • 1ng on your years ecome a bit Sticky ·-\ C&D' near Ann Land-___ ....,....._...,......, __ iiiiiiiii...,_ ers: I am fo a second marriage abd very happy. My husband does ·not know my true. age and I would prefer that he never find out. A11 l.oo£1s these projects, because it may save my marriqe. Are you shocked? Of q:>urse, Joe always says "sure" when you ask a favor of him. He is a sweet, kind-hearted, generous man. These are the qualities that attracted me to him. I Yes, I know I am lucky to have a man like this instead of a lazy bum. The only problem is, I don't-have him bcca_use friends and relatives like you seem to come first. lhereis~punishment -nar Marleu:-Mea-wllo follow ddt J8tterD IOme- for one who misrepresents his or her age on a driver's tlmet feel mad~.,.ppreclated at t.l>me, ro daey .. an" daetr lic~se. There must be a great deal of interest in this ' aood condact medals ellewltere. Try a little extra T.L.C. question. Many women· falsify their age on legal and yoa JDlpt be smprlaed at the retaltl. documents because they ~n't want it known. Is the Dear Ann Landers: My wife is irritated because my penalty a slap on the wnst or something more serious?-formc;r wife continues to call my parents ''Mom" and No Name For Obvious Reasons · "Dad" Sbe refers, however, to my son as "the boy." Dear Obvtoas: Accordlac to Tbomas C&rlllle. an I have discussed this with my parents and the~uld uslltaal to the secretary of state of Dllnola, people no Ue prefer that my ex call them by their first names use o.n thelrdrlven'UcenaescoaJdbepl)tyofperj•s;y.Jtinp they sense some in\incerity on her part. She never has a to eacla state'• attorney to decide what action will be tflku. thing to do with them except once a year when we all get IDcldentally, Jytns abo•t one'• ace on a marriage together for Christmas. Uceue In Dlillola la a Clan 8 lnltdemeanor, bat Bob When I suggested •that they make their preference Morrow ID the Kane Coanty state's attorney's office aald known, both Mom and Dad said they would rather not get no one can remember tbe lut time a person wa1'1Dd.lcted into it with her. . on thll charge. Should l correct my fonner wife? What is the protocol Dear Ann Landers: This is a letter to everyone who here? -Inbetweensville In Poughkeepsie has a .. good buddy" who won't mind coming over on· pear Between: Tell Iler, bat don't be smprllell 11 1be Saturday to help with some task, project or chore. ignores you wt1laes. fte womu does not 1oaad u U 1lle ii Dear So-called friend: Next tim~ y_ou call Good OJ' ln&e~ted la promotbl1 J06d will or dolq aa)11t.18a tbt Joe at 8 p:m. on Friday to ask him to help you: mJgbt make yoar life p1ore pleasa:nt. a. paint the eaves, · · It's not always easy to recognize Jove, espt;Cially l/Je- b. chop wood, first time around. Acquaint yourselfwitlHbe guidelines. c. rewire the basement, Read Ann Landers' booklet,· UJ..ove or Sex and How to re11 d. work on ~e>ur car; Lbe Difference.•• F~ail 50 cents and a long. $elf- . Please ask to speak to me. rm his wife. I will gladly addressed env-tlope with. h vof,u":m request to Ann Landen. give you the money to hlre a professional to take-c:are_of P.O. Box. l 1995, Chicago. · s 6061 J. · .. -8:00-8 D-HEWS • UCHIPS U HART TO HART m THREE'S COMPANY 0> THE OUKES Of HAZZARD fD BUS8NESS REPORT l'i) IH'TAOOUaNG BIOl.OOY (])C8SNEWS a NBC NEWS l'}DOCVAH~ aD MOVIE * • • "MMll1ures Of Marco Polo" l!_938~ Cooper, Bull Rathbone. Cl) , 8Tll.L8 & NASH IN COfaRT -&30- CDAUCE fJl) MAQB. / LEHRER NEW8HOUA ~ =OORAPHIC VISION a WHEEL Of FORTUNE 6'THATOIAL -7:00-IJ C88 NEWS q. , DNBCNEW8 UUMBOAT ~~ Gt THREE'S COMPANY ., WHm Of FOAT\JNE 8l) MAGIC Of WATERCOlOAS Cl) P.M. MAGAZINE a J'E.MAPtlt (D FACES l PUCES (ff) CAV8T Al GA Yl£ IN CONCERT (%)MOVIE * ** "Crisis" ( 1950) Caty Grant, UNE.WS J/ISfr/ ORIFflH EHnRTAINM£HT TONIGHT €D ALFRED HITCHCOCK PRE8EHT8 (O)MOVIE • •'h "Breethtess" (1983) Richard Gere, Valerie Kaprlnsky [%)MOVIE *** "48 HRS." (1983) Nlcit Nolte, Eddie Murphy. -9:30- D a rrs YOUR MOVE . 9 t100,000 NAME THAT TUNE CID HBO OOMfNO ATTMCT10N8 -9:46.- (f) MOVIE ***''Start" (1968) Julie Andrewl, ~ Richard Crtnna. -10:00- D OJ ST. ELSEWHERE emmNEWS O ISPV GI) MOTORWEEK · @ TAXI !~SUPERSTARS *** "Drtcull" (1979) Frri Lin--. w.nce Olivier. .i ®MOVIE ~ * '!f'rivlt• Sctloof' (1983) Phoebe Cat•. Betsy Auslell. (l)MOVIE t "Aphrodite" (1982) Vllerle Kipri- lky, Hant Bucholz. . -10:30- G) INDEPEHOEHT NEWS m INOAEDIU DREAM «i> MOAE THAN MUSIC _1:30_ 9 THf&'SCOMPANY -11:00- Joee Ferrer IJ 2 ON THE TC>wtf tJ D u Cl) ([D) a m HEWS D a FAMILY FEUD e TAXI CD WKRP IN CINCINNATI O 8CTV m PEOPLE'S OOURT CD THE JEf'FEASOH8 fD WILD, WllO WOAlO Of G) THE AOCKroAD ALES NIMAL8 THE 0000 NEIOHIOA8 l'i)GAEAT~ ' CO)~. FILE Cl) TIC TAC DOUGH (%) ""'u; l°D RACING FROM OAK TI& t•'h ''Heltwa\11'' (1982) Rlcl\ard ct) SCTV: THE SECOND COMING --1:00-Moir, Judy~ 8 (J) CHAALES IN CHARGE -t 1:30- 19!._ttlGHWAYTO HEAVEN i MAOM.M, P.1. ....... "' s~: * * "Portrait Of A Stripper'" ( 1979) 1 O MC N£W8 NIOKT\JNE L.My Ann Wtrren, £dwerd Her-IM.MAND ALL.EN ll\IM, G JOKER'S WILD VEGAS (f)~.~QNCINNAT1 LA191GHT AMERICA ...... ~ . roocwa •MOVE ...... MOW!* .......... "'-"~ i:...t.." (1"7m ** "Gr•teet HerOM Of The Blble" • • """'" uw-• "''' • •1 (Plrt 3 of•) (1979) Ed Amee, Aon ~=Mee~ ~ PEAFOAMANCQ * t~ "Spit lrnlial'' (1982) Mlchael . ~CWCKHtGH O'K~Kef9nAien. *** ''Wutheling Heights'' (tt38) ** "Tt* For Ave" (tl83) Jon LIUfence OliVltt, Mn Oberon. Voight, Alchwd CNnnl. CR> MOVIE -11;55-t "Sptoe Rlidn" f 1083) -"1nct (C) MOVIE Edwar"" David~. _ * * * "My Bocfyvuard" (1878) Ctwit 8"EiENA EASTON IN CONCERT ~~.Adam 8llclwlrt YCME -ttOO-* ''Prllotwl Of The Loll Uni-MJOHT %OHi *"H 11983) ~ 1.w. Alctl«d m ON H&i.Ywc>oo Hatdl . MOYIE -1;.JO-+ * t •Thlrt't A Git In MV Soup" Cl) ~ (1870) Pf!• Sein. Gddle Hawn MOVIE M. TY OR IM>CINT **~ "lol Sllt!On Zebra" (19U) THl~Al.ES Aod! HtJdlOn. Etnelt 8otgnlnt. 00 TAC DOtMlH CUit flW. HIOHLIOHTI OO!RJAMENT TONIGHT HEWS Scott Balo •tan.•• a llYe·Jn helper to three en. ergede chlldren and Jennlfer Runyon ta bi• aream ,Ul OD ucliatlea tn -CbU,e ... P,remierhag tonight at 8 on CBS, CbaaDe 2. -12:A6-- (f) 8fAHUNT -~-eMOYIE tt'.4 "The Biiie Dlhlla" (1"8) A11r1 Lldd, V«Onlea L.eke. I =RSATXEHON *** "Cloee To My Helrt" (11$1) i!ir~~ *** "Oracuta" (1'78) Frn Lan-gella; LN.a O!Mw. • -t:15-' (f)MOvm ***. Ktyt Of The Kingdom"(,,.. :.i~~1M5) Ofegory Pick.~ J -1. FAMll Y f'8I) IOT OP LA. TODAY AOWAH a MNl'Tlft lAOOtMN MOVIE *** "ICIM Mt ICttt" (1953) Kathlyn~ HoYrltd Kiel. -t*- ~ . . -~...&. Ii :a NEWIJIQHTWATCH (O)MOVE ** 'Tlmer1det" (1982) Fl'td Wiid 8ellndl Bur. . -2:30- ' .. 'Sugar• sweet musical · ·' at San. Clemente theater BJ CHRIS CRAWFORD " ....,'.!l'ICMni *"' lnfact.muchofthecastlsyou\hfuJ Michael O'Mera, who serves 1 -bu~ What they may ck in qe or effective foil ror uc·1· domlnecria& Jf you mfQed .. Supt" duri1t1 its ex~ence, they more than make up 11yi. hiJe lloaer OeWan, a three. recent Los An&clca ruo, ao &ceJt in for in talent, enc~ and enthusiasm. Umc MACY wuuxr. detlvm aJUOq n Clem~nic. You won't be somo CaJ?UtO puts, muc!' moR encrsy performance u Sit Ot&Ood Fleldina. that you did. · and vibraooe 41\to hll role JJ:l!n is Vtr1 conncal as die tap-dancu~a The _Sa_n Clcmen1t Community · cou.n~ Joe Nimath, did.in W\ pnpun ~ Steve !CaPUJQ, J'roy • ~~ter ~It of O.Suaar." under the ~ Aqeles production. P&laiii is a Mactdox and Jon c.anu. :rhe ta,P- . lb~ dtrectioQ of Lee Childrcsa, vo~cc student. and hi trainina (,......-clead.f\I ~uenca, wbieh med P~tdcs 1 fi~t·rate evcnina of enter-• evident u he "'acllve.ra one qf the ov.u ltnf fn ille C\ Dfoduetion ldd t11nmcnt wh1c~ster-movina than •~t Ii~ voices in the play, in just the :rt&hl touch olc6medy ~ -re~ LA production, and every bit u addition to bas equally evident talent without dilU'ICUna from the ~ ~Y· , • • • , with toinedic dial()l\le, 11C OD Of the ftory. SU@f is the !flU,~cal ·~ vcr· T~er. Caputo and Pa1ani Withm the intimacy of the small ~~~ .. of h~ movie Some qke It ~~verycompatibtccornedyteam Cabrillo Playhouse (about 60 scats}, Jack ~~c SllJTcdTony~saf!d in then sona. duce and dialotue the .. Supr"castmakescrutivcuseof' .. _... 11)0!1 as two ~us1ct.1ns tn scienes. ~ thclBisleways for sin.,na sequences ~ who JOI~ an all"tlrl ba~d to ~~DI with them· i1 Loretta and chUe leenes., 1nvolvi.Qs the san:tcr. 1 '11Ucr-happy Cbacqo DaVJs 1n lbe ''Marilyn Mon.roe role.. audience in the action. At one point. · p1aym'1 the lead 1 : th ~ • .;. ofS1:1PT Kane, the lead 1inaer in the Spats (Steve C*puto) <:autions his a . ro cs U\ • e ~n &11-tirl band. Perfectly cut u the henchmen to .. watch out for the c:E':fJ~/j110~~Chri1top~cr sexy, delectable blonde,. Davis is the pc~pte in the front row" u they hwit p . oe, 1 oscp uie and Dino runner-up for Mrs. Calbomia of 1984 for I oaephine and Daphne. Ca uto asd ~~illaphnc. Both arid hU been •ianed!or the TV .mes "Supt" continues Thursdays (~ . an m ~CY "Hotel." · tbrouSJl Saturda~ at 8 p.m. until <>Ct; ~ u:Jic) an~ ... ~ ~mme,nd&tton for Debra Bera delivm a fine per· 13 at the Cabrillo Playhouse, 202 OU lw.a11,1 WllUlen and ·have formanceasSwcetSue,tbclcaderand Ave. Cabrillo, San aemente Call etyx~~ns~e b11? sch~~ and cornmuni-tllkmaster of the all"llfl band. In the 492-0465 for information and ·reset· ea r acu.na C1""1ts. role of Bienstock, her manaaer, is . vatioiu. 'Goile With .the Windies' choQ:..choo to "chattan oo By DAN GEORGE .......... ,,...,..., ~~TIANOOGA -If you can recite an your sleep all of Scarlett O'Hara•s lines, if you know that Georae Reeves -TV's ori&inal Superman -bad the minor role of Stuart Tarleton and if Max Steiner's musical score makes you reach for a banky, then you'll probably want to be here over the weekend. That•s when the Frankl~ My Dear, We Do Give a Damn U>mmittee bolds its two-day celebration of "Gone With the Wind," David O. Selznick'• 1939 film classic. .. It'• like a cult. Like the Trekkies. Only this is the Gone-With-the· Windies," said Travis Wolf~J. co- chairman of the committee. "we•ve aot a woman comm,k who's seen it more tban JOO timcs.lt'sjust a cult." It beaan as a 1,037-pqe novel called !'Tomorrow Is Al)otber Day.'' and · ~uoer Selznick oriainally thouJbt it was too Iona to make into a moVIe. Wind" is still one of the most popular films of all time.More than 300 million people have paid to see tile three-hour, 39·minute sap of Rhett Butler and Scarlett O'Hara. Co-chairman Pat McCarver, a col· lcctor-dealer of movie memorabilia, plans to display a I S..foot-lona. four- section scale model of Tara Scarlett's plahtation. It's on sale for~ I S,000. The committee -which takes its name from Clark Gable's famous and thcn-<:antrovenial exit line: "frank- ly, my dear, I don't aive a aamn" - expects participan11 from as far away as California. McCarver, .whose prize possession is the Cutaway coat Gable wore in the film. bel~ orpnize the firu.. n.t.· tionwidc . ·owTW .. convention tour years aao in Memphis; one wu scheduled in 1979 1n Atlanta but fizzled because of the air controllers' strike. Last year, it was held in St Louis. The 1936 novel ·oriainally drew its title from Scarlett's niW line: .. I'll think ofit all iomom>w at Tara. I can stand it then. Tomorrow, I'll think of some way to set him beck. After all, tomorrow is another daY·" But Mitchell's publisher felt there were too many books with .. tomor- row'' in the title. She then turned to Ernest Dowson's poem "Cyanara,. and the line, "I have forJot much, Cy~! Gone with the wind." Selznick became interested in th~ book only after a member of his company offered to buy it himself. When it premiered on Dec. l S, 1939, in .,.t.tlanta • .J 50,000 people turned out. in~lUdinuovemors &Om five Southern states. Any Dixie sk.e~ticism over the selection of British actress Vivien Lei&h u Scarlett disappeared, and "GWTW" claimed 10 Oscars. Only "Ben Hu.r" with 11 bas won more, while "West Side Story" also won 10. . ~. A dlff erence of oplnlon llaf7 Benton ttlee to 8top Roll Daftll from ta1t1nc oat bla wraoa oa an eet u LDon a~e(center)ud Maida BertlaoUc:rtilCe 1n· bom>r bl UW. 8Ce'De from tbe OllTer Universal double bill EVERY SUND~Yll SPACES $10 • 412.... ~ ....,.._,.. ... •&a aa••• • §MR<JAINS <JALOREtl FREI CUIT1071Dt AiD?lll ION &MMW But today, nearly 4S years after it premiered at the old 1..ocw's Grand Theater in Atlanta, "Gone With the The epic story of a.Southern belle's strugle to sUTVJve \he Civil War only to lose the man she loves has always oocupied a special place in film history. The movie has taken in more than $1S million in film Rntals throu4l! periodic Rvivals.. In 1978, CBS ,P.Ud S3S million for 20-ycar teleVJsion ------------- AIWl'M STADUIOR~ 639-1170 90 MNtt8REA S2}S339 ... , .. ... 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(PQ) 1115.Ul ltl5 "M WT STMflllfTOI" (Pt) l ZS.•• . ts. IMA ..-T•au.n _,_, . .......... Piia (-~Wiii £..-m.me 131-1500 c.r.-. --... ., .. UA-~~ 112•1 ..... ,, E!B. CllTAmM u--(_ ... lllO~S ,..... Sit07 ... SZJ.ltll 1'11*1 __ CllTAIKIA .... r--..... ,__,_ /llllt.Crll!lllilll mm! U t*1 IS14MO a TOM -i-S-IM~C.. ,., .. 1)1. 11 l o MIRADA ~ tm )tM Hllila MotMt..,. ''tlM-.OS" (I ) lt90 ?:U. •iS '" , .. 11• , la ............. ... "ID> DAW (N-13) IZ:lG. US. U O '1llUA • TII oc.MlDI" (I) 2 ~UO 1016 "llAllWMOS" (I) u·• z-.auo &auo tt• Lo •"IABRA .. ~"·.,. 'l~'-.••. ---- WARNER IJ!: :11 ''· ~.r.1 . < -..... ._._..., ...... ~ c..e »• ... IJN170 •L&*-i .... MCI_,..... !»~c:ii-•·au .,. . ~ .._a... _"' .. • Cllnt SutweN TMIHTROIW (1'1 l"owa It U 1ll "1111 1:20 7 110. 10111 l teve Mal'tt" --AU;~-.., IHOWS AT U 100 f 1M 4 1011100 1 100 tO:OO Priflff '" , ... ~ ..... T'll9 """'8 IUUW caJ T~-..._ oi-l SHOWS AT ... ,... .... .. at U :OO i:iso 1 100 1 121 7141 tt:OI 1 100 1111 • 11100 \ I N 70MM «iiEID14iJ2J WAi'IHf:.,.. J ••• ,a.c.L.Aa.s I .......... Dl .... MM:al .-> . AT l 1H · IMOWS AT lh4 0 1#8 (PO·tl) 1:41 . 1 100 .... : .. DfllVl Qltnl. U_.11 fftH .. • 1:45 ,_ t :• i. EDWMDS IOCl8DiE • All SOTS 12.00 EDIUIOS RUITAll VAUFf • All SOTS 12.• • H TORO • ,,,,,l l • Two aa.m cat IOf•· while three otllen ~Hect brancbee lD prepuatiOD for ~ter. :Beirut'snuns surviving, -----~deSpite war around them BEJRUT, Lebanon (AP) -They fused to JO and we remained here to hve a peaccfuJ life in their own pray for Lebanon." enclave, almost their own world, in The French nun, hke her Lebanese the m1dstof a war zone. colleague, asked that only the name of But the Sisten of Clarisse have the convent and not her own name be .found that not even their vow of mentioned. "We are all one and '1solatJon, which bas kept them inside evayene is aU, ~ sM-said Their convent wh.lle war rqed outs1de The nuns began lheJr penod of ior the past nine yean, can shield isolation at the convent a decade "them from Lebanon's violencie. before war broke out in 1975. But, _ "We're livina in a military zone. they said, the war years have 1mpo~d Everybody, the Syrians, the Israelis particular hardships. came by here. We watched them from The Lebanese nun recalled a fire 1n the roof dnve by in convoys," one nearby pincwoods that was started by .nun wd at the hilltop convent incoming rockets, endanaerina the overlookina'Bcirut. compound. The nun, a Lebanese woman wear-"Our pleas to the fire department • mga white habit, said that1n the early were unfruitful as the shellina con- days of the war, .. We used to go up lo tinucd. All we could do was to pra) the roof to watch the shooting." that the fire would not spread. It did Qut the ahellina aot closer and not." she said. bca"vier, and she said that when During another battle, she added. fi&htJna breaks out now, .. we gatherin nuns were unable to get their own the'basement and pray at a makeshift food for about a month. .. A · priest alw .. . «ought us the flour, and we survived The convent of the Lady of Unity, by mak.ina our own bread." bome now to nine Lebanese and One French nun was wounded in .. l:reneh nuns, sits amid pines-ln-tbc 1931 .when a rocket bit the com- suburb of Vane. It is just above the pound, she sa1d. h was then that they I cbanrse Dcfeasc M~ ~.the -sa.v~-u1HhcU' trad1t1on..of nngmg.,thc U.S. ambassador's residence and church's bell before the evening wttbm sight of the Presidential Pal-prayers. ace, all frequent targets when shclhng .. We have to keep our cars open for erupts. -mromi~ll&," she satd. One French nun said she and the Radios. television sets and maaa- others bad turned down a number of zincs arc prohibited. News of Leba- pleas by s1st~ convents an Spam and non's war and other world develop- Francc to evacuate to Europe during ments come from visitina relatives. the last round of c1v1l war early this But when heavy fightinJ ra.ies, she year. went on, one neW1papcr 1s bbtained Although several shells have hat the by the mother supenor "so that we convent arounds, she said. "we re-can feel with the suffenna of the people outside. After all, we're pan of this country." The name of the convent rep- resents hope for a unified Olristian church, and was established with pape.l approval. The nuns' order is named Clarisse .. after Saint Oaire. The convent is composed of a three-story residential and work com- pound, a church and a tiny plot for farming. The compound .includes dormitories for the nuns, a kitchen, a dining room and workshops for knitting, sewing and carpentry. Other rooms arc for making craf\$, such as stone pots and icons. The convent'stncome comes from the sale of crafts made by the nuns and from donations by Lebanese and French families. "There arc families in France who contnbute donations to us, some as little as 10 francs (about $1) a year. We really hve 10 poverty," she said. One nun has been chosen to go out for sboppin& and other ch01"CS. The other eight remain 1ns1de the convent compound. Severt otbet' ~sciptes, most of them elderly, are beina treated for nlnesscs abroad. The nuns ·do not talk while they work and, despite the war, they maintain a disciJ>lin_ed routine. The nuns cook. wash dishes, clean. do plumbing and fix all appliances. Three of them were seen one recent day peeling the paint from the wooden door of the round Concrete church and preparing it for painting. Two others were digging in the garden. East German denied bail -' ln alleged Soviet spy case NEW YORK(AP)-Theevidencc -egainst a 67-year-old East German teacher-accusin' of tryanJ to smuagle c lass1fie'U Amencan military data to the SoYlet KGB 11 ''very stron~" a judsc said in denyma bail for the &raying, bclpectacled woman. Allee Michelson was arrested Mon· day 1hil}lt at Jo hn F. Kennedy International Airport as ~he prepared to board a flight to Prague and East Berlin with a cigarette box containing tape-recorded confidential mahtary ' cables, authonttcs said As Michelson appeared before U.S Magistrate John Caden of Brooklyn on espionage char&es carry1na penal- ltes of up to hfe in prison, assistant u S Attomey Carol Amon req\Jested that she not be allowed to post bail. Caden aarced. telhna Michelson thrOu&h a German interpreter, "Jn my opinion, the evidence is very stropa. •• · Also on Monday. authorities ar- rested Samuel Lorina Morison. 40, of Crofton, Md., for allegedly scJhna sateU1le photogapbs to the famed British mjlitary pubhcat1on Jane's Defense Weekly. A federal magistrate in AJexandna, Va., ordered Morison held in heu of $500,000 bail. He was charged wtth part of the Espionage Acl th.at makes at a felony to transmtl ~fense 1nformat1on to an unttUthonzed re· C1p1ent when there IS reason to believe 1t could in1urc the United States Michelson, who had been 1n New York for several weeks on a tourist visa, flew to Baltimore on Saturday to meet with a U .S. Army sergeant she believed was a KGB operative, the FBI said in court ~pcrs. Jn fact. the unidentified sergeant was a doublc- agent secretly workina for Army l nlelliicnce. The scrpnt was first approached by So\'1et intelliicncc qents three years ago while he wu statiorted in dclayina the flight a day or two bcdule of the ~pcrwork backl<>a. But durina a hastily-callM tele- phone confercnte between National AcronautiC6 and SPI« Admi11i~ trauon manascrs here, in Hou ton and in Wa.shinaton 11 'ft'&S de> termined the paper loajam oould be broken in time and directed t.bc c:ountdoYl'n to stan. A Plpet;Work postponement wo Id have been a new first for the American manned pa~ pr m. Liftoffforthe 13th huttte m1 n, t "•th for 11 n , i sett«• 03 a m PDT Friday, a few minu before.dawn an Florida The hip i scheduled to return to Earth Oct. 13, landi Ob I N.llft)' three mU from the hutllc ltunch pad. • The hort turnaround period 1ancc the la l shuttle :night, that of ti trr West Gcnnany, the FBI said. Nothing apparently came of the mc1denl until this past May, when the sergeant went to the Soviet Embassy in Mexico City and said he had been assipied to Army Intelligence at Fon Meade, Md. On Sept. 15 the sergeant returned to the embassy, where he was given $6,500 and a promise of $500 a month as a retainer. The sergeant met Michelson at an a1rpon cocktail lounge and gave her the ogarette boX: in which he had secreted a tape recording of classified mJhtary cables, the FBI said. Michelson aUqedly told the sergeant, in a tape--m:ordcd conversation, that she taught Manism in East Berlin and would take the tape with her when she returned home on Monday. On Tucsda~ federal agents ex- ecuted search warrants at a Queens flat descrfbed by the FBI as a .. safchousc .. fot Soviet a&cnts. hi~ Discovery one month aao. is mainly rt'J)Onsible for the paper beckl<>a. "Everytimc there is 1 requirement to do somethina. there hu to be a procedure and a rep0n Yyina that it was done correctly,.. 1d NASA pokcaman Huih Harris ... All th procedures ancf rcpons tuven't btCn aone over:· Harris said tMrc 1s about tWicc muctl pipcrwork to review now w11 •tthcum timebefortthela t uttl fhaht. The c:n:w members are cotlllMndcr • Bob Crippen; pilot Jon McBride; m1 s1on pcciali 11 SaJly. Rid • Kalhy uthvan nd David t«stma: and pa~load iahsts Marc Garneau and Paul ully-Powcr. Garneau is the first Can d11n named to 1 ce 01-.hl. .: •• ' .. ~ 1 t ,, .... - The Ultimate +-nence Experience the excitement of finding just what you're looking for-in classified. It's the ultimate!· . # phone 64 2-5 678 people read classified , \ . # ' ' ·--' .... ' . "Mrs. Miles' 11fW baby sure has pink t~th." MARllADUKE by Brad Anderson /O·:!>~ --,---- ''An interior decorator ... for a DOGHOUSE?!" GORDO ... GARFIELD MOON MULLINS .. Yeah? How do you know It'• Nally love?' DENNIS THE MENACE by Hank Ketcham 11 . ,~ 'by Jim Davis by Ferd & Tom Johnson by Harold Le Doux SHOE GE£~~A R::f ~ 1J.US ffOOJING .• PEANUTS As she climbtd int-0 the carriage, he waved goodbye . IO·J He also said, "Have a nice day!" . . by Kevin Fagan FOR BETTER OR POR W.ORSE ROSE IS ROSE BRIDGE --- East-West vulnerable. South deals. NORTH + At.C ~AK O KJI +AK 782 WEST \ -EAT +73 ' +5 ~ 1065 ~ 8732 O Q884 0 A1097 5! • QJ093 • J8 SdUTB + JtQJJ 982, ~ Q.J94 ov.w +54 w. orU , ... t• p.,. -4 ¢ Pa 4 ~ P &NT p.., p by Pat Brady DiaD£S MO! r«Jrn1N(f l01 i A.la 'wt>UR ~rLS ASOOr. ------"I'~~ I I tcx I ••·> WHAT' TB~ RIGHT BID? Forquet and Benito Garozio sat North-South !or Italy. the bidding went as ahown. South deetded that his hand was tOO"St offensively for a normal preemptive bid, ao he elected to open one spade. North's jump to four diamond• confirmed I, • and declarer claimed 13 tricks. AL the other table, the American Sout~ chose to open tho band wjth a preemptive bid of, four spadu. lt was an underst.andable action -in· terchange the North nd Wett -hands, and It Is East-Weit who can ... . OMAR SHARIFF CHARLES GOREN • , ' .. • 1 TrrT·eaa d1111rt ...... llft ftmlr:CI et hooked on salmon . or a bil!!beeue entree . t . Grilled to perfection over glow-cook it 10 minutes per inch of ana ~Is, Alaska salnion is a grand thickness measured at the thickest scl~!on for your next outdoor part. . feshvaty. For a larger gJ"oup, grill"*' . For· a hot accompaniment, try whole fiSh or have tt. filleted. For.., ~otatoes Routed in Coals with a 1111111 groups, you might want to zesty salsa toppina. . ,purchase salmon steaks or individ· · A th 'd th · ..... 1 ual fillets. . • n.o er menu a ca at 11 CC}UiU·, ly enJoyable served on the pttt10 or Buttery basting sauce is an ideal indoon throughout the year is ·complement to the moist and Salmon Vegetable Potato Salad. tender flesh. Just remember not to Chunks of rich. moist canned let salmon overcook. It is ready to i&lmon accompany a fresh veg. enjoy when the flesh Oakes When etable·ladoen potato salad tested with a fork~a general rule is to marinated in tanJY caraway ~s- Alabama fa~ors # dOwn-home food Mix three partS pure -country with one part Yankee spirit, add generous amounts of talent and charin, top it off with a pinch of magic -and J.OU have the recipe for Alabama s success in the world of country music. Composed of three cousins from Fort Pa~e, AJa., and a friend from 'up Nonh;' the musical aroup has played to sold· out audiences in all of the biggest concert halls in the United States and has received or been nomi· nated for every major music award. Alabama made history last year by winning the Country Music (). Associati~·~coveted Entertainer of the Y ca~ard.for the second consecutive year. Alabama was the first group to win, and of entettainen m general, only Barbara Mandrell had won con· sccutivc top honors. An un· precedented third win seems a disttnct wssibilit)' this yeaf on the .. i 8th Annual Country Music Association A wards," telecast live from Nashville Monday at 9 pm. on Channel 2. · Despite their superstar status, the membcn of Alabama hold ---- 'SEN SIBLE EATING -~~~ fast to their down-home, tra· ditionaJ values aspiring to the simple pleas in ~ife, like a country picnic. · · The South's mild weather makes outdoor eattna a PQpular choice for the aroup. In fact, a fond childhood memory of vocal- ist-bassist Teddy Gentry is of Sunday afternoon country picnics and sing..aJonp outside church. · If the membcn of Alabama were to oipnize such an event; the menu would include a variety of good, wholesome fOod with Southern cooking ratina high on everyone's list. Teddy Gentry ''cooks chili all the time" and hlccs it hot with a Mexican influence. Lead guitarist and vocaliJt Jeff Cook proudly recalls that bis 0 aranddaddy made the best cornbread (in a skillet) in the world" and it remains a s~ treat for him to this day. Randy Owen and drum· mer Mark Herndon (the North· emcr in the group) love fresh vcaetables and name a uisp prden salad and stir-fry vq- etables as their favorites. Now you can enjoy your own Alabama-style picnic by trying • ing. BARBECUED ALASKA SALMON t WMI• (a ... t ........... eec•> • AJa1b aalmoa fWet1 Salt ud pepper ~ ~ np IMltle!· or marprllie, melted ' 1.4 np lellHlll Jake • lea~ p-ated .... 1 1ea...-.,.. ... )em• peel ~ teaspoon botUei '°' ptpper aaace • OU . out the wholesome selection of recipes offered below: Homestylo Chili, which gets its spunk from barbecue sauce: a criJpy vegetable ulad toppca with cheese. thousand island dre iJia. and shoestrina potatoes for added '!!A ... ~-~;~ Sprinkle each mict wuh It and pepper. Combine rcmaimna np gients except oil; btush fillCts with utter miJttutt. • - Place each fillet ill-side down, on a heet of well-oiled ·heavy-duty aluminum foil; place on anll ov~ hot coals. -COvq barbecue or make a tent offoil tocovereach fillet. Barbecue 10 minutes per inch of thickness measurecf at its thickest pan or until salmon flakcS Wily W CD fBl!l! th fott Ba.s'Ce frequently with butter mixture. Makes about 12 servings. Recipe can be halved. • POTATOES ROASTED IN COAU I (abo.a 11 oac.. eacll) Roat potatoes OU • Saba, fedpe teU.wa 1 Scrub potatoes: rub with oil. pjcrcc several umes with fork. Individually wrap_po!atoes in oiled heavy-duty alum1nu~ foil; iCiJ sccurcJy. · about. l hour or until tender, turning ~ 1S minutes. Remove potatoes from foil. art °' piace tops of potatoes lengthwise; squeeze-, adl and plish toWai'd center to open. Spoon Mout 'h cup Sala into ea<:b potato. Mikes 6 aervinp. Recipe can be doubled. • SaJaa: C.Oa\binc 1 'h cups ctlopPeci tomat~ lf!~cuP e9dt cboPDCd omo~ choPPCct cucumber ai:ad -diCC<S sreeo chilies. I tablespoon eadl chopped areen onion and olive oil, 2 teaspoons lemonjuioe, ¥•teaspoon prlic Ah. 1A teaspoon crushed oregano and dash pepper. Makes 21~ cups. Tip: Top Salsa-filled potatoes with dairy sour .c:ream or plain yoaurt · S~ON VEffZMLE POO'A~ 1 · pead warm, cookM Ruset .... toes green oruoo and~· Salt and ~to taste. Chall if desired. CafaWaJ Drallq I • 1 np as ewt apr ~ pea, Waly lllc:ed yellow -••.. ... v.nat1iee: ()ix I CUp OUncse ,_ aUce4, .-anl'N cacwm1e7 Drain salmon; break into cbunb. • pods. blanched 'peas. ~ ~ •,4 cap di~ celery . Arrange on lettuce-lined platter with sliced .c:arro!S, brocx:oti n~ i tablespoou eadl mlneed crea potato mixture. Driizlc "remairuna cbeny tomatoes. olives. ilicied Vf!ell oDJ• udpantey Caraway Drcssjnaon salmon. Makes bean or~Qrmlpeppcrstripsc:an salt ... ,epper 4 to 5 servinas. ' be' substituuii for supr snap peas, 1 cu (JS~ oatta) Wmoa. yellowsquasb~orcuc:umbtr. =~~~ eMlW C&iiwa1 Dnnlnc: Combine Yi .. _Letnee ......... __.... ______ ___.-.,.oli\'Coilor.oil. '4.cup-v..~--~• a.a Nae111:-Scnab poc11oca Peel potatoes; slice l/c·inch thick: ,.~ Yi t~p<>Qn dry mustard. "4 Add pOutoes to l iDcb bc>iJina, salllld Marinate iii''hCUp Ci:raW.y DresSina; teaspoon eaa-lUPf, Silt iDd tcr. mW'11 u:r1>oit:Simme(._co_:v---. _ _,. cool at room temperature. Add supr chopped or crushed caraway seeds end 20 to 30 minu,t.es or until tender. snaps, squash, cucumber, celery, and dash pepper, mix well Makes Drain thorouabJy . crunch; S)CjJJet Corubread, com· country rcPertoire and they're banina the flavors of colbyb cltecse, \Ure to become all-time family ·corameaJ and buttermil~ and a 'hits.. . · colorful side dish of vqetables my.ET CORNBREAD prepated Oriental-style ·ith 1 c.p ~••aJ herbs. ~ ,... bakJ8a .... Add these favorites tQ }'.Our (Pl ... ALABAllA/C4) . ' .'Culinary passport issued . Need a break from routine? • Simply add a touch of Tokyo ... a dash of Denmark. .. a soupcon of 'France. . .a tcaspoOn of Tahiti. . .Envision Moussab from G~ exotic Bastilla from Morocco, Tu· -doori Oricken . from India and luscious German Black Forest cake. · · Well-known classics and new 1ourmct discoveries can be prepared and enjoyed at home with ··Easy Basics for International Cooking .. (Sunset~ $16. 9S}. ·-· The 375 recipes explore tra- d1hons and techniques of more than 65 countries.. cultures and regions. While cinpb.asizing truly autbcnic flavor, substitutes are li tcd for most ingrcdieats that are too citotic for supermarlcct el Proocdures. streamlined to aa:om· modate the schedules ot today's busy cO<>k, include such items u store-bought filo dough and ea roll skins. · · The cookbook 4')so pro\'ides U · 5tcp-by-step cooking tessons. The illustrated tcchniq cs include ho to prepare an asplc; co0'\ Japl.DCIC shabu bu at the lahle, co pcm an I odian curry, aacm a F cassou.lct. and prni tbc8c ~ caci with the flair of a bautt cui . DC restaurant , Complete with · of cook• T!lill Calories withOut sacrifici~g taste ina terms and i tanatiorial i dicn menu plans and equip Ii t t.he coo book i a J)US,PO(t to culinar)' Id enturc. Tcmj)tl 9C . rs. · u nw oounca. and c rdi ; before scn-1 0 CS. SA\KU. ha cd and rct it kitchens. H '1 a rcci ·m m -----------• 6892CR ·~ -....-----.~ I I I I I Fi hina indu try poke men pre- dict lhat 198'4 111 be a JOOd one for I re. Traditionally most al core i nned, but with only two opcrat· an canneries on th W t Coast. more f1 hand rroztn al ore ill be a~i ble to con t mer1 thi year. AJ core is truly a premium fi ti. The liahtest and mildest of all membcn oftht tuna family, albacore al~ demand the h1Jh t pncc. AlthouJh many of ~ have Cl\,JO)'cd canned albacore for years, the frC h and frozen flsh ls a completely different wtc cx~ricncc. It cooks up firm and very wtiitc. with a flavor much. like chicken. In fact. albacore works wen in many Chicken diShe$. When cooking albacore, ~member these few basic rules: Although it is very firm and meaty when cooked, Foster Farms. Dell Slices and Ready- To-Eat Meats Dellc1ous. Lower in fat* Lower 1n calories• Higher 1n protein~ N\ade from Foster Farms fresh chicken and turkey Bologna and franks for kids' lunches Pastrami and salami for cold cut buffets Full-flavored hams for main meals All with the goodness of Foster Farms Taste what you've been missing You'll ~ miss the-celones J. Al oore that is cooked too long lo its moi turc and flavor. Cook 8 minutes per inch, not Jhc normal 10 minutes recommended for mos ~ foods. When rcmoYcd from heat, aJblcort will still be pink Jn the cciiter. and will finish cookJna by reiaine4 h t. Jf u in&a thermometer, cook albacore to an internal temperature of I.CO d~~~ Albaeott ia nutritious enough to makt' a salad a meal. It provides 25 grams of proteig per 3'h--0uncc ser· ~in4-'givin1 it one of the hijhett •Chicken •Port< - • ComBread • Traditional Herb • Colnpa~ Quality and Price~ ' . Betty Crocker Stuffing MixJs tne ~rfect complement to every .~at-·an everyday . · ~--------------------------------------------------, 0265 I MFR COUPON I NO EXPIRATION DATE I al , Save 18~ :E:. · . ......,,.....,., when yOU--buy any flavor ' c...wner. umrt one coupon'* pUrehase. no other coupon may bl used 111 coniunct10n w.tn ttMs coupon fWaler: 'tbu are autnonztd to act as our agent lllCI r'°"'1l ttns coupon at lece value plus 8• hlndllnQ. in ICC«data With our recllmptlOO PO!tcY. cop.es l'laillble llOOft request. Send cacians lo'. GMI truPON REDEMPTION, PO. Box 900. MPLS-.. MH 55460 °'our IUttlorlled cleJMO houltS(!J 111M • ~. •• "'*' ,.,.Ma~ kwM, ",........., GeM.,,., la U U .. A.PO'a. F.1.0'a. cm n111111• ..e.,.. 11JWtdll llf ~ 5 '* ' . M2M3 G....,... M' 1 L------------------------------~----------------~ 16,000 1100 l,.1•• "" 1kt.111 .. ••"t •1"tlrt: tUo•• .t 1wt1tt 1t>dll•ttfl •t11• rn-.uk• t' 01 •rth tu t.df t~l"tt" liilAwu.1 .. \lt.t"t'-f"'' k•" t tit" tcr.r I It'• lt.n 1il 1 Hf.tit "hfl'L.1 ''"'Ill" ''"!ti ..... ,,.qt.M"'•f J1il'."f fif"M"l.1)1 t ""~" fhtl~ bt 1·~•11..i~nibt fW(t n ~Jlt"1hfwt Jr l~t nrt •• httt.lr\ , .. )• ..... , ...... 1~ ""'~f'\Mt II\ .... lf\1.tt\ .l1' l'l\i; f "Jwu ht ft'~l<k-ttl• ttf tfM" ( .\. \ '-• JJ111Hc fw.11(' ,,, .. •~~tf'V \1 ... f •I~ ft ltt'•lft1lt1l1 ti Ir, l.t• "-"1N.tli.t1' • tllh tf'lff'l.Wr\ IK I•'(', --------·----·------.~PO CP ~I ... ~I ••• .. 1 .. 11 .. 1s•••I .... u '''° ~.~ ... °""' '-" 0111 ~ .. ~1-C _ _, __ C.,,.-1 IOCitllC -~,.,™I . I 31000 31120 . ~---· ... -------------------------·-------__, flA"MUl'Oi ...:>la-..ul .. DArr I 619108 00 :~ I vi ' .. - ''" ; pat core ~rto and ck i 8 d at ookl nter coot am, reen lend Nitb and ' 4 , r • • ·- Or .·It~~· easy to .en rich :J!OHr_dailjr cale1µin ·d·~~ MUk.,cheese, yogurt recommended havetobcaett~re . u tliereare pms oft calcium daaty throuJh to 't bo plenty of .calcium-nett food o~ their ad"lt years wiJI have a. &ood preven Oe·thlnntng dfsea e can work anto l)'OUr diet to keep It . chance of ptc\'CJ1UQ the onset of • 1 lnteresdn¥," says Dr. red inaer. a osteoporosr~ a bonc.;ihinnm,g dis. Women frustrated by trying to membei-of tbt Ameri n Society eue that affects on~fowth of all ~t allthe ~lcium they ccd via a avoid a common bon~na for Bane and Mineral Research .,vomcn past .qe 60 and .results in male calcium-rich ~ can ease disease. by eatin1 a variety orfoods (ASB~k}. • more than ont milhon. brCSken th :Ir _, that contain this vital rilincral. Sinactsay1 women who consume bones annuall e r stru..,e, and at the same time .. Gettina enouah calcium 40C$ll 't between 1.200 and 1,400 milli-Milk and m k-aroup foods arc Yitanlin doesn't 'replilce , .putrition . 9iving a. child ll vitamin. or mmeral 1 supplement when • he • doesn ',teat enough of the right foods may fJVe a mother a false sense of secunty, cautioned a Sacramento r~stered dietitian. 'Children's vitamin an~ mineral . -supptements do· nqt . provide nutrients childten need such as calories, fiber and protein and therefore, ·are inadequate substitutes for food.;' said Nancy <:Jefl?ard-Cunnin&ham, a nutn- llOniSt for thcf Eskalon American River Hospi!a.1 Teen Oinic of Sacramento. psing Jhe four food groups - milk, meat, vegetables and fruits, an~ bread and cereals-as a simp~e children &et ·all the vitamins and minerals they need without supple-ments. Try to include in each meal: -· Meat (for .protein and iron): includes beef, chicken, fish, cags, dried beans and peanut butter. • -:-B~d or cereal (for B;:vit- -• . ..nQQdlct, pasta, tortillas and crackers. - A fruit or vegetable or both (for vitamins A and C). -Milk (for calcium): includes cheese and yogurt. "If your child'SJIPJ>e.tite is.taclang or he refuses to cat certain foods, try to re-examine his diet to determine what can be altered to make it work for him," she §ugestcd. If you can't provide a food from each food group at every meal, try offering them at snack .time, ad- vised Gclbard-Omningham. "Many children who tum their noses up to cooked vegetables often enjoy raw vesetables and yogurt dip as a snack." For toddlers wh.o may have trouble chewing or swallowing- meat, try scr_vin_g_simple casseroles, hearty sou·~ eggs or fuui1 UIJCr patties to fu1fill their daily serv10g from the meat group .. parents have the most influence over their _chilifi eating bcba=-vt=·o"'"""r ~-1.._,; accordiog to Gclbard-Cun- nin&ham. · .. IJut don't cx~t them to cat the same ·portions, • she pointed out. .. A 3-year-old would probably be comfortable consuming one-half cup of milk. one to two ounces of meat. one-third cup of vegetables or one-half piece of fruit and a slice of bread at one meal. "If you are prcparina balanced meals, eating with your children and presenting meals in a plea5ant, non·threatening environment, )'Qut childrenwilinot_need to_ take vitamin or mineraJ supPlements. "Remember that vitamina, par- ticular!)' fat soluble vit'.am.ins A. D, E and~ are druas and, can be toxic if taken m large d9ses,., she warned. \ .,....,.. ·sEE FRIDAYS ........ . .. .WEllEENIJER! . • •CONCERTS · •DI NI NG · • LOCA L EVENTS . . . •MOVIES '(714) 642-432,l • . \ • • •' l j . t f • ' . .J I • · . ' I inn~ovative -wines ·~re all in· the ·cordtz family . . , A ' The label reads "Cotdu B11>tht1'5 by tbe Cordu clan tn 1979. Most hf Cari&nancalso needuomeagini-IS handle 111 the spices and tomato Contu ltH CoMrHI 1111•1 O:itlan," but i1 is sister Oe9Cla who the &l'IPCS arc purche5td from it sm~lls somelhina like an old cipr sauce you can throw at it ($10)~ "-recent aotd mc.~1 ~n . ......I Pounds the pavement scllioa O.e vineyards in the•Uppcr·Alexander butt when it's youna,. With a few 1ninternat1onatcompet111on,1i.1 . . winea. and father William Cordtz. Valier. -JE"llY. ~can of age, the bouquet trans.. Cordtz: ltli Saavtpoo .Blaac rich cuddtr V&µcy Jtyle w1 ovidina inspiration. and direc-A Cord1z philosophy is 10 price forms into ont oft be most pleasant (about $7.SO): The Bordeaux typical round tannins and love tk)n. • ., the wines vcrx reasonably, of\Cn m smells to emanate from aCalifdmia shaped bottle auiis ihis wine per· CabcmeJ Oa ors. . ~c wincm1.ke:r is brother Dave, 1be ·•best buy• ca.oee. MW WJne. ~ Carignanc rCminds me fcctly, as it i.s ucloseu you'reaoii:ia Cordts..Llll C.Hroe• Sa•vt olio of 1 lf'O\lp-of talented-young C.r<lu IHZ "Mam .. T11ea1" of 10 year old clartl . • to OOl!lt 10 a Gnives style tn (S 7 SO)· Even boner and 2S ifornia vintners who prove that Clrlpue ($3.99 Qr less~ Th.is is Califon:ria. It is steely, flinty and lcsS mOncy. Make it another•• and experience ate not every-onetobuybylhecase,bothbecausc _!his one has .a ripe, Jush·fruit crisp of acid without harshnns or buy." 11 is similaf"'in style ,tot t ' when U comes to producing Jt is so good and because it won't When Caripaf;C is a.rowri 1n too arocna ihat is developing nicely. tartness. Four Q1Mths in Limousin 1980 but the flavors arc bn.aht One wines. Dave, nqt yet 30, is not jast Iona. If tbe CariJftane name wum a climaJ,e, &r'over!"]pped, it The wine'Was ag¢ in predominate-oak provided no re.al flavor con· morC inten'sc and the aftertaste • your typical "little old wirten;i.aker." doesn't mean anyth10& to you, can produeft red, wine that is Jy French oak, which wiUcontrib~te trib\&Lion, but may well p_rO.v.ide a much lonaer. C.tse pu.-lloaes The winery is located at don't feel baO. Only a handful of mediocre at Desi. The same grape., to thft boue'.luet in a few yean.. It i,sa bit-of added backbone. The wine dcd · 7 -. Ooverda16 in northern Sonoma wineries use the srape to make • from old vineyards 1hat produce bi&, rich \\tine. without a hint of has only l l pei;cent alco.ho~ but in ommcn · • County. a facility founded in '1905 \l'&ricual wine. Mottl)I it it used for small yields.can provide some very harshness..Enjoy ii with just about no w.ay~nks Ukc a low alcohol Cordh 1tll euntouay ($7): anoibcr family and modemi~ · blending. · special drinkil\i experiences. .anythin& but note that • it will · wine. citrus style in aroma and flav ~~----:_ ________ _:. ________ --::_:.:::.;:::_:.:_~..:::_.:_::.:__.:.:i::.:.:_..:;:::.::::::!'.....::::_::::::_.::::.:.::...,;;;:_..::;=:_--,-,.------., with relatively low alcoho1. It Li&ht (not qui\c thin) in the mout While this is definitely not a •• au'n" Chardonnay, it iS a aaodLfi wine an4 a good vafue . 1n straightforward varielal style. • • • • • • COUNIRY NIDI 1'llO\fi PRYIR UGS GRADE A SOUT HERN CHICKEN ............. ·" .: .7fT "' ~ry Prid.. Grode A So. Chicken f'RVER THIGHS ......................... lB .• 99 • l USDA CHOICE FRESH LEG. 0' 1 •M---...... a=- ' ' l'illSH . ROASTING CHICKEN ZACKY --• ' --CAllf •G~ L& .99 GENUINE AMERICAN I. L& PRISHLAMa SHOULDD ROAST \'U5l1A1• GENUINE ~ .~A9--~ AMERICAN L& aNllR CUT ALASKAN HAUaUT SftAKS ........ IA 2.69 GOLDEN BANANAS U.S.D:A. Choice, Frelh Amefi«m LAMB SHOULDER CHOPS .... La. 1.89 Cordu ltlS "Sprlag Flowen Gewurztraminer l (SS.~0): Pro duction is limited. It 1s for sal, primarily at the winery and a fe1 5tlect retail and restaurant outlcu If you can find it, it is ooe -oft~ qicest winet of its type around. TJii aroma is a delicate, floral spice. Tb1 wine is bone dry without a trace t bitterncss,_and with good, delicati fruit flavors and · a· subtJe .Jpio aftertaste. CULINARY ••• From Cl s tabletpoo•• dry 111terry Dlppblg '*•ce, recipe follow1 Frttzc beef until firm (30 to 4! . minutes). Trim and .discafd exoesi fa~ slice me,at very_thin!Y· Cutcarro\; diagonally 1nto Uun slices. Cut cal) baac into shreds and tofu into smal cu&cs..Discarcltou&h spinach stems rinse leaves well ana pat dr)'. ~ beef CAITOts., cabbaJe, tofu, spi~bi rilUihrooms and ODJj)QSiD individua bowls or O!!.!Platter in separate rows (A t tliis point, you can _!:Over anc refrigerate for up to 6 hours.J Combine broth, soy and sherry in i J..quart pan. Then prepare dippin~ sauce; pour into small individua. bowls. Heat broth mixture unti bubbl,Y;' eo1:1r into ln electric wok., al clectnc hying pan, or a fondue per over an alcohol burner. Cook small quantities of meat aoc vegetables briefly in broth, then lifl out and dip into sauoe. Serve individ· ual bowls of rice; ladle broth intc bowls for sippina after all food i! cooked. Makes 4 servings.· · DIP,PlngSauce: Place VJ oup sesame seeds 1na small, heavy, dry fryinjpan over medium heat. Toast, stinit11 often, until golden brpwn {8bout 2 minutes). Spoon seeds 1nto3 blender; add 6 tablespoons of the cook.in, broth mix.lure, J tablespoons white win"C"Vinepr, I tcaspoon·sugar,and 2 r • "" -I~ rt~=='=f!~~':fri.l:~saucc-.nd-dry itll' erry:Whirtunril~ttbtem:kd.-Pou.1 through a wire strainer, pressing te c'xtract liquid. ~ ~.bty . . S1uffing LB. .39 LARGE BELL PEPPER S (>:Inch ·-·1 ~osc PEARS ....... • I . t .1J.lnch •.PULLMAN ... •O-lnch nse1 Block Gold Designer Bog 16-INCH FLIGHT llAG LUGGAGE • GARMENT BAG .... •• .. -. ,, TAllLI ,, I I / I/ •ao•:r 110. )1C ,,, ..... 7" .18.99 ...... 19.ff ,, -x• w ••-& uOi•• L !!.. -:-~. 1:75-1.ma . 699 8 POPOY VODKA .... l.S-titer ALMADEN GOLD CHABLIS .. ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,2.ff I 7S·l•t9r, Slrolght 86·Proof ANCIENT AGE BOURBON .................... 9o98 .. :EA •• 19 DIEFFENBACHIAS ....................... 2.ff ( Pllll • .... II II )--..., ~ Morvchon. 7.25-0i. Pkg.. .~:-.::~: ......... 3 '°' s1 Miyoko Shiitake. I-Oz. Pkg. DRIED MUSHROOMS ................................. 1~~9 3-0t. Pkg., Chicken 0( Beef YEE FU MEIN RAMEN ........... ., .............. 5 FOR *1 HAU GAL '::.'l:.. fj. '~ AlltPLI CIDIR HALI' GAL . '::. \ ~-·'" I~ CITRUS PUNCH .::: MALP ,,.. SPRINGFIElD ::. NICI .: 16·0Z UMIT 15 /".// ,,,.........._ ONE CASE a NO DEALERS PtEASl •• ., ~ llALI ;::_ SPRINGFtELO -...ca --LIMIT ·.· 94 /// ,,,........_ ONE CASE e ~ llALf ;::_ SPttlNGflflD . • , -.. ICI -l!MlT $~ ///\'"°'' ONECASE • • • NO DEALERS PlEASE -~.98 12-0r. Mozi~llo or Cheddar FRIGO SHREDDED CHEESE 2.29 ~.o Rondom WI - STRING CHEESE ..... .. .•. tt. 'S.29 GAllDllllA MOZZA•I» n A 12..0UNCE I 89 • .., ..... IA. • • .37 ·- ·--~ , .. ,. .. eo_ I • NO DEALERS PLEASE , WIAVD CHICKIN 12-0Z. ASST'D. 2A' 9 \44.RlfTIES lO-Oi. lfl lk.ttfer Souc:e, Creat'l'I ot GltEEl'<GlANT NIBLE~ CORN.ff 8-01 .... friitiif Cot.E'S GARLIC BRV.D .•. '. .. ,. .... .,,...fD'SLA9Ae• q ·~~·2A5 LIAW YOU& 19l'AL P811 ..... .. ........ ,,.,..,_........... .. ...... .-................ ~ .. ~-·---1 <°""*" ,....__ ....... l'I •• , ............... ef in. ,,.,.. -,~_. _,,.... 1 l~c__..~.n.,..... 'c-""""'""°"'°'*""......,.~·...,.... ,...«'"-'" • °""-'...,.....,.""""•~~•••so.,191,,.,. ... ~ I""""''.., 1-ef ,....,, Of' .................. , Cf"""_.... ......... low • Ve! ... ef Jhot ''-"''.... •·-~.,,..,.. .. _.•·-• "''"'"' '"'%':J.~....,.., •• , ........... "_ ...... ..,>(. 1 "----~,.,. ...... _11..,.; --.. --.. --.............. _. ... . .... ,_..,.. -,.\11~/itwt. .... ~tll ................. ~-...cc. . ....... --..... -...... _ ..... , ..,...;..c,. -~ • ~ .......................... ..,. t~ It OH..-..... Ott •~Ott 1' ,_.II ..... .,~0....-~0Nmrl-_.,.... ...... -.. Uim"" ..... ,. ,..., .. ..,, _,..,..csar·v -.... WiiC!iri 7 Nn I A.M. ,.,._,Ott. i """" .... oa. .... • • ' -·· • • !' ALABAMA .•. From Cl ,,.. iea1pooa a.It 1 C1l.P ••tt.ermU.k t eu, bea1a-----.-- '"' cap margarlne~.melted ~ z caps (8 OUCH) thredded eolby clause Proheatgt<aS<d 9 or !().inch heavy ovcnproof skillet in 3S()..degrtt oven. Combine dry ingredie~ts. A4(t com· bined buttermillc, cu and marprine, mix.ing ~st until moistened .. Stir in I'll eups cb<cse.~our iJUo skillet. Bake at 3SO dearce~ 30 to 3l minutes or until wooden pick lo· serted in center comes out i clean. Sprinkle With remaining chCCK; con· tinue bakina until cheese is melted Makes 6 to 8 servinp. Variation: Substitute 9·inch layer pan for skillet. Bake at 3SO degrec&:i 3S to 40 minutes or until wooden pick inserted in center comes out clean. ' HOMBSTYLE CHO.I I poaad iro•ad.bfff . "' c'p cllopped green peppe:r •• \\ cap ebopped oaloa l 1$-ouce cu kidney beu1 1 cap barbecue 1aace I cap wa ter · 1!i. ctlJ (J ounces) 1breddH cW- dar c•ee.e Brown mcai: drain. Add a.reen pcp~r and ~n.ioni cook ,ugtil ten~r . Stir~n remaLD.LDf 1nared1cpts. Cover, aimmcr 4S minutes. sfirrina oc- casionally. Sprinkle with additional chCC!SC. tf desired. Four IV• cup setvings. • 1 . FRONTIER TOSSED SALA.D l qurt ton uaontd sree.a• 1 medtei tomato, cat laio •td&et \lo CQ "'1 Ollloo rlap 1' cap tam.mer 1qaa11l llltt1 '°' ct1p tt.ralp 1ltcn, qu.rtered I\ cup .. _trlq pota- f ·~ Moa&ere1 Jack ~ -. THeaad l1taff'~ii<l~-bi~ .. ~. inss- 1111. • Combine &rcens. tomato, Ol'\ion, 1quash and ~umips; tau li&htlf. Top with shocstnna potatoes and (bcesc. S<m: with dmslna. 4 Krvlnp . HAl\VEST TIME STIJl.FllY . ...,.,_"""". """"'~ II tea-•rl..i bull ....... en.., • '4 1ea1,... tflrled ntarjoram Jeeves, erulled J \\ e1ps Hrnt 1llcea: 1 'h HJ>1 eaalUleweret1 I\ ......... ..-_,""" S11r·fry bcana In c:omb1ned D\al'lllf"''", • ine end ttaton 1n11 for. S minutes. /a:ldo-carTOu and cauhnower. c:on11nue aair· fryi .. 1 m•AUICI. Add ~ ptpptO': tt1r.fry 4 mlnutct OP.until 'vqdabtes are cmp-1cndcr. 4 tctvi np. r ') )' i ; Frosty tr6pical t:art a fine diriner finale -Often -after a heavy dinner the liaht touch of a frosty tropical dessen is just the answer. Certainly plain sherbet might do, but fre- quently the party may call for something a little more elaborate. No need to give up the cool lightness of a frosty dessen. Just build a tan of the sherbet in a crunchy freezer enhanced shell. What's more, it's a dessen that can be made ahead, keepina your last minutes free for other preparations. This no-bake shell of crunchy almoncb, coconut and butter is ~ is euy. Simply lift • the outsiderinaoffand leave the tan on the metal bottom, then slide it onto a plate. There's no chance of it crumbling that ~y. minerals are all there too in this frosty taste of the trop\cs. FROSTY TROPICAL TART t caps flaked coeonat, toasted 1 cup dlced roasted almonda II& cap batter ' ¥. 1allo!I plaeapple. or oranp sherbet . 1 can (I once) j)lneapple ja.ICe• % tableapooes sa1ar 1 tablespoon corutarch ! teupoou ebopped cudled lhaaer ltablespooa Upt cora ayrap I Coinbine coconut; almonds and butter. Press into 9-inch tart pan with removable bottom, buildina up rim .. F~11ntil firm. Scoop Sherbet into coconut shell buildina up center; - I'"":" Of:Mll eo.t DMLV ~OT /Wldrnll dll)' OIM• 1 S. _. Kluskl noodles a MldWestfaVortte· Th Ood of the Mad~est rcfleci rnany food rom middle European coun1ries One is a thid; dumplina· hu Polish noodle called lhe KJuski odd le. ln the Mid'f'st. they can be purc~sed an cellophane J*kgel like cu noodles. Most often, tiiey are~·u a side dish with me.at, ~ltry or fish. When aervtd as an entrec, they"Jma 1tirred nto ~ <:Urd <lOltqC C CCtc! laced with browned onionl! . The recipe for. Klusld Noodles contains ju.st thn:e i~ents; cua, salt and bread nour. If you have inv led ina pasta machine.tit can do the eidina and rollina ror ~u. If not.. th can be done by hand. This recipe makes ix to ei&ht .ervinas. If your family i1 sman .. you can till make the entire recipe. After the noodles arc cµi, simply 'IPtt.ad aome of the noOdles on a cookie sheet, freeze them until solid !¥ then acoop them into a plastic bit for storaae in the freezer. Our recipe calls for a tQl>Pina of onion. butter and poppy seeds, but these noodles can be .erved in many ways. They mile an ideal nest for chicken paprika of sauteed chicken livers ·and mushrooms. llUSIU NOODLES 4 lar1eeu1 l teaa~naaU · • I~ ape brad floar, d.lvlded 1. ~ cap batter ~ cap 9o'"4f oalou i taspoou poppy 1eed.a • •• DeBdew• ~~ CMDMO~ filled with small &coo s of sher- bet and drizzled with an orange ginger glaze, it's one of the easiest frozen desserts to put together. Ye!"-loosely witl\-plastk-wraB.4-llM0'1=~-~~=---..ff~,.. Diced roasted almonds not only add flavor and crunch, they add nutrients as well. So even if it seems like an indulgence, you'll know the Vitamin E, riboflavint niacin, calcium and an abundance of Freeze firm. ' In small saucepan combine pineap- pl'c juice, supr, cornstarch and can- died ginaer. Cook stirrina constantly until thickened. Blend in com syrup; chill Spoon mixture-over sherbet and pinish with orange peel. Cover loosely, freeze furn. Makes l (9-inch) ~ 8servinp. .ONEYBAKED Onetaste·. is all it.takeS !- l • , •Crisp Celery:::. -» •Rt,.,,.. .. =- .. Aid Clbtllgl 0... ~ 49' ~ Fr9lf\ 1.mpe '=." • Do :: ssa =Aid ~.:::.:,. :: 59' :io Cele 9-if ~ .. s:.w .. 'I • I ·~ • • • t -. T l , I .._ ' ' I I I , • • ~ ' • .. • ' ~ j • .. ·' • } i ..,., ~ ® Prices Effective: Thursday, October 4 thru , 1 ednesday, October .. to, 1984 PRICES 6000 ONLY IN SO. CALTF. STORES . . . --~fl ' r -, < • , • ·--- • • • l XN -, I .. .... .... ' ' I .. .. .. ' .. cJ) .. ·~ • 11 OUNCE CAN • WHOLE KEaNn oa CREAM STVU. • &GUI.Alt OR NO SALT /• L I , i , , ... SIX WEEKLY . FIFTY . CARIBBEAN CRUISES FOR ~'10,000 BINGO PRIZES I DAY• AND 1 NIGHTS US MANY MOREJ ALP.HA BETA BINGO WINNERS Prices Effective at •II SoLtthem C•llf oml · Alpha Bet• Mltf'ket1 TfiuraC11y, ctober 4 through Wedne1Clay, 0 tohr. 10, 1984 . .. . • 2 • Ortange Cout DAI Y PILOTlwednteday, October 3, 19 .. NAPLES SANDWICH ~ ........... 1..uu ........ npea.,•••••. 2 nps ._.. &rff1l pepper 1ha.fnmbread cwp melted htter ~HUC~.;;._~-o--~~+1----........_,.... Moiiftlli Ci , tlieed Wa111Ucerd tom.atoet rown aau ; drain and retain; llice ill half le~wite. Saute onion aDd pepper in ~t from uusaaes; drain. Shce brad in thirds. Brush nom and middle slice with meltCd bUner; sprinkle with Parmesan -cbee1C. . ~er bottom &d<I mic!dle layers 'Nitb Mozarella slices; broil for S IJln,utes or until cheese meltl. Ar· ~· one-half of sauteed veaetables UQ tomato slices on cheese bottom ~r. . ~ae uusaae on top' <)f cheese · DUlSdle 1ayer, ct>ver with rtmainioa uteed vqetables. Top 1¥itb last third of bread. Cut into wedses to eerve. Servel 6. Orange Juice Minute M.td •Regular •More Pulp • RaducedAdd Waffles Oowneyftake •Homemade • ButtermUk •Blueberry Beef ·Taq• ,=::-.. 229 27·0Z. . . .. Celeste Pizza • Sauage • Suprema • c.n.dlan 9acon. • Cheete 29 Dinner Classics Armour • Salisbury Steak •Chicken Frtcaa ... • Veal Pamwglane • Lasagna • Stuffed GrMn P9ppera a..en Ollf1C • er.mr 14y1e Com • Nlblett Com • Mbitd v.--1n"'"" a..c. 10-0Z. 49 Chicken ·=-~ 249 MlnlDMN 12-0Z. ' ' " .. .. • Co tline Community Coll c Lind Burum, au\hor of will prcSCAt two ethnic food pro. "Browni .. wdl m ke a auesi ms dun~ October ln NcW"PQrt ppcarance at Willi m,.Sonom aoh nd c;oron dclMar, • 3333 Bristol St .• Costa Me • at 11Ch1ncse Buffet for 1'wcln'," p.m. on Oct. 10. r--.1 demonstration and dininJ ex· The author h 1 taught iuuv, perience. Will begin at 6:30 p.m. nutrition and intcm tionat cookin& Thursday in the Park Ne\\1)0rt in California for 12 n. A • n.rt ts Ncwnnn Be ch -duate of UCLA she h studied "-men • ·~,--. ~kina ex.ten iv. d~ i~cluding re-Connie Shieh a ~stcrcd dieti· tian, will focus on such Chine c nowne 1Choo~ 1r •an&. • techn ques as stir fry, barbecue and The riches of <;alifomia ~uisi~ chopped vegetables. will be featured 10 the Cabfomt .. A Sumptuous Italian Dinner M•Jti· .. , Porclasses at l and .7 p.m. with Homemade .Pasta" will be "' '' ,... .. 1 fi tauabt at 6:30 p.m. Oct. IS in the Oct. lOand 11atLawry'a'-"'1 orrua · ' ,· 1 /N ., -· ,.._ Center. Lot Anaeles. ...,1nco n cWJ)f>n _..mma """'nter Fee for the thrce>hour d~mon- in Corona def Mar. • itration, recipe oooklet and aampl· Instructor Delores Hoffman', for· ing _is $12. mer student at Judith Et·ffokin Some of the recipes to be ex-· .Eaer' Cookia~ Scbool,. io San ~ are~ Ole-W !tolls; Francisco, Will emonstratc Pasta ~ Vegetables Plus g Spices. Ire Colcrc, Zucchini Alle Melanese Cafe Cooler, Chicken Piquant and Biscuit Tortoni with Chocolate Salad Milano Style Fettuccine and Shells. • Crcm~ Chantilly with Cannc} Rt~· stration fee for each chtss is c.o. . ~u~. • S 12. all the Coastline Community for reservations call Lawry s at Services office at 241 -6168. (2 13) 224--6840. . . . . . . . . ' Marion Cunnin&ham, author of "What's for: MunchT' is the titlC the soon-to-be-released "Fannie of a chjldrcn•s art workshop. to be Farmer Baking Book," will share presented by Irvine· Fine Arts her ICCJ'Cts for preparing such ·Center at 10 a.m. Oct. 13. fabulous baked treats as "Pear and Youn&Stcn. aaes 8 to 12, will Polenta Tan" durina ··a demon-learn how to make quickt easy, 1tration at 6:30'p.m. ffhurlday in satisfying and nutritious snacks the housewares department on the from food · every kitchen should third level of The Broadway in have. For information. call Nancy Huntin.gton Center. Holmes Ghiana at SS2-1078. • • • • •• ~.~ Mixed \egetables Eggo Waffles Homemade • • Buttermtlk • Bluebeny ~ ta Creme I.OZ •• 99 Benihana-Dinne Ot1ental • Shtoln P~ Steak • Sl1Qed 8"' W/ Veget.ablel • Oriental Stutmp -Fish Fillits Van de Kamp BonutPKk 4-0Z. ftM I 89 Mud Pies OryeR • T«*lld AknOnd 149 • Aegullr Mint Chip • CoflM 3-PACK Vegetables ~~-=-119 •C>NnW•IJ1p1M1t 1M>Z • " • . , . . . ~y o~Okfng Me_xiea~ fo~d· w1 th a sl1gh t ·Texas Cjlccen t , Gannel cheesecake flan a ~nlque · sou o. t e border specialty ffuit lads. Plan to rvc • mooth d scrU to cool the palate and end the meal. The Tcx·Mex dcSsCtu descnbcd Th\: unique fla~ors and di ti net Hardly a town exi ts in thii country here could t"a ily fit into any character of Mexican fOOd results . that doesn't offer Tex· Mex fOOds in Sotlthwcst menu, or uy ottier from the culinary influences of a Mexican or American restaurant. meal. flan is 'a eta: ic M6ican early Jndl ns such as A2te(S and For those who prefer to re-create de n. however, the C4rame1 Mayans, and from European ex· theflavorsofMexicoathomc, there ~~ kc Flan has an American p1oren like. Spaniards and Portu· are !Ila~>'. recipes to adapt according auese. to wbvidual tastes. One rule of Jn general, most flans are Mexican cuisine took another thumb usually exi ts when serving custards made with sweetened con· tum as the Texans c.rossod the Mexican or Tex-Mex foods, how· dcnscd milk and cgp beaten border and ~rrowcd td~as1 then ever. Be sure to include a variety of t ether and baked in a water bath. conCO(ted their own crcatton .·The foOds -some piey some mild Thi recipe call forcrcam chectcas result ombinatfon of the some crunchy some' smooth and well, which makes the texture O~vors of Mex!co and the in~-creamy. ' slightly more dense and creamy. It d1eots and cook1'!& sty.le of the U.S. It is.easy to plan a Tex-Mex menu is delicious plain or 9CT'Vcd with Southwest . -pnmanly Texas, or that docs just that. Make the fresh fruit . what. we now refer to as Tex-Max appetizers and ma.in dishes • com-Another dassic Tex:Mex dessert· I cooking. bi'nation of both like guacamole · · d Alb N M Naturally, !ex-Mex dishes are with tortilla chiPs, or tacos and ~SJ'.11~te ~~I u~~~~ · · most popblar 10 the .southwest, but refried beans. Serve enchiln~. · .. pafti ~~I 1 •• Y · cccs of fri: the rest of the Urutcd States ha tamale$ or burritos for the mam so P• ows arc.{>' caught enchilada fever quickly. course alon• with v..aetable and b~d clou&h tra~1ttonall~ terved ... ~. wttli honey or spnnk.lcd with suaar Popcon1 and ~innamon. · The secret to sucessful SoPftipillas is ·in the cooking. Fry them in very hot o~just a few at a time. This version ofSopaipillas is accompanied by a ri~ coffee- • flavor Mexican Chocolate Sauce. RA EL CHEi:.o.1:A.AKE FLAN .. ~~ .. .., Z (1-ouce) ~let crum cMetet .. , ___ ( (14...aee) CU 1,.-efl .. COD· dated milk (NOT cvarra&M milk}· J •eu• . I~ te~ vullla extract ~ 1poou wt lnpwatu Preheat oven to• 3SO degrees. In h vy skillet, over mec:hum heat. cook sugar, stirring constanUy unttl melted nd caramel colored.· Pour into u~ 9~h round layer cake pan, lilting to coat bottom completely. Ip large miAU..ibowl, beat cheese until flufTy, Gradually beat in sweet· encd condensed milk until smooth. Add cgs, vanilla and iah; mix ~II. On low peed, gradually beat in tcr uptil smooth. • Pour into ~ramclitt<t pan; set in ta~r ~n (a broiler pan)., Fa.JI pan with l inch bot water. Bake .S.S to 60 minutes or until top spri~ ba~ when li&htly_ t_9uchcd. CooL Chill thorou&hly. LOOsen ide of nan with . knife. fovcn onto terViqs plate with rim. Garnish as desired. Refrigerate leftOvcn. Makes JO to 12 ~ings. 1n hcavySJucepu, combine1wcct- encd condensed milk. cbooola-ie and ma.rpriae. Over low beat. cook and stir until chocolate meltS and mixt!1ft Pancakes ,..-. ____ ....._ __ ---------·....,._------"~ __ _,_....__ ... _ __:_._--........,_.....____.:.....-_, Plfflbury Microwave Regular or Butter 29 ' Pie SlieDs Pet Ritz Deep Dish • Wh* a Dertl •Chk:keft • MexJcan •Tu~ey 09 Fish Sticks . L OOftoftl • :.2~1 _,_ .. ... • 1 Seneca . Ice .cream Bars Kk>ndike •Veit la •Chocolate • Krtspy ... Lee """'"' a.. . 99 Orange Juice CINI.. •· l«.129 Pillsbury Mlcrowaw Original or ButtennUk Mrs. Smith's Pies _99 ·, Egg Rolls ~=-r:t ·129 ~ -7.2S-<>Z. SlrMtwk:hea . 8.8.Q Beef •Hmm•a- •S..mgePlu.a • P9ppet'ol91 Pin.a 99 Cob Corn 'Golden Patties . ~169 ~z. ,.. A ! i • • ., l ~Coast DAILY PILOTIWedf14*1ay, October ~ ' • F~esh i·uits, ·Vegetables, "g,rain key to b•lanced diet (I ~ . • .. new.. 1oOk. AttracU:we angrcdicnts-and attrul presentation fo ter relaxed diniqg. orudal for proper, ~S{>Ort m~atal prepa'ration and di= uon. Aocordin• to th United F~b , • F:ruit and Vegetable Association. \\ hether n . a eorsonaJ exe ISC fresh mushrooms arc an excellent mm fcatun~acrobs or a ~n source of potassium. a mineral 1poru ootball that the focus, ct1vc partiapanu ·need. As 1thl~tc1 per- J P c n~ ~ell·ba!anced mt:!ls pire they lose the ~ssium that d ily to ma1nwn opumum calonc. enables muscle to function nor- Owd abd rbOhydmtc tcvcb. ~,:(' Mushroom~ make I.he salad fruits, whole gra10s and 1 for .•. PQta.SStum boost bcf~rc:. )Cqe1a arc key inSrcdients for _ ~s actlvtty or u a cool, refreshing nventive, energy-packed meal'-PlCk-~ a.fterWards. They are al~ 99 ain Di h Vegetable Salad. whic percent fat free and Jow m calonea. RTV~ 'x, is an example of a quick, Snow ~ and the soft ~nt of nutn11onnlly-sou!ld entroe for energ)' alfa1C. spro.u&s give this tiaht meat 1 • • now peas ad~eolor, crunchy texture and deliciou la tc. . To round out the m l with 1 healthy deslen, Apef D.ue Nut Snack Cake is approprtate. Brcad·like cakes are among the best fOod for: sustained eneray. The cake, which provides 16 servi~ is packed :with the nl'tural goOdness and moistness ofapplcs and dates.. . MAIN DISJI VEGETABJ..E ALAI> 1 ~ plala l~·fat f!Prt I &abletpoor.a1 maycnuaalM APP.LE DATE NUT SNACK CAKE l rap wbole wbeat Oour l Ctp alJ-pupose nour l &eaapooD betlq 1"4a 1 tea1pooa ,.-oud ebmamo ~ ttaspoo& .alf ~ cap "e•etabJe oil I cap flrml1 packed llpt brew• . .,.,. . ... l cup ttrokeo ~· ~ p cbop"" date• lrt a large bowl stir together wh~l wheat tlbur, all-purpo ~ flour. bak•nfl • soda cinnamon and salt. ln a larac • bowl' beat oil and brown sup' t09tther until blended; beat in one at a time until combined. '\ Gradutlly beat in dry inarcdieJ\U. • Shr in at!f1es. pecans . and ditet. (Batter wd be very 1tJfl). Sprtad batter in a greased · 9-f nch sq um l~~eegp · I 1pplea, cored aod tlnely cbo~ · T baking pan .. Bake in a 35~nm: oven 3S to 40 minutes or until a cake tester inserted in center comes ou1 clean. Remove to \\'ire rack to ?><>I· Cut into squaies. Makes 16 aerv1011. KRAFT .Americail Si Mes MendO!- cook' ' ·down . here· Quip Inspires two women to create cookbook JACKSON, Miss. (AP) -State Agriculture C.Ommissioner-Jim t • " cookbook of Mississippt1nasculine cuisine that includes barbecued chick.en, bushpuppies and the per- fect peanut butter and jelly sand· wictr. •·.oown Herc, Men Don't Cook." beinJ put together by two Missis- .sippr w9rnep, takes its title from Ross's "now-famous statement to Geraldine Ferraro during an Aug. 1 campaign stop by the Democratic vice presidential candidate. 1 It began when Ross ask~ Ferraro if she could make a blueberry muff10. The New York City oon- gresswoman countered by asking him the same ~estion. His reptx: Down here, men don't cook.• That was all the inspiration that Carofyn Taff and Linda Ross Aldy neeaed to start coll~ng recipes for tlieir book, which they expect to put out in November. _ "It was a riatun.l. It wu too aood to pass up," said Taff. .. My husband and other people we know cook. Mississippi men, if you check around, almost all of them do." Any manwh~idersllimsdla.. Mississippian and a cook can ~d in a recipe. Aldy and Taff have already received 200 contributions. "Even some men who you wouldn't expect to cook surprised us. They had ~pcs right at their fingertips," Aldy said. "We fou.nd that men were pretty creative cooks." Most of the men will get credit for their culinary creations but some of the Dixie chefs will be an?nymoua. Ross said he was tlattered tbat h.J.s quote inspired the ~ookbook. "It's quite an bonor," be said, after a good chuckle. ----~-===---~==~===~=--~~""~ Despite th& number of recipes ·-= l:obtributed by-Mississippi--men, Meat Dept. Savings Back Rios "" L9 ~ Chuck Ste~ks ~~lESS .. ~· s1.69 op Sirloin Steaks =LESS ll S2.29 p tt • 5TAfER IROS ~OU. S3.9Q a 1es ~~AGtlU20UAllT(RLI LI sa.69 LB s1.39 l8 sa.69 ~'3.89 &ROLL Frozen Food Favorites COOi Whip eNr~~-. as~ II-OZ Mai1<es Burritos H•ll•UIES ~z 3ac Eggo Waft les ~Lf:~o: 11-0Z 7g; Tree TOR Juice ~~t'l'E 12.0Z sgc Ice Cream Bars !:es N t;l'ACK s1.89 ~ ' p· •e>•oaoz 89C • eno s 1zza m•!IETlfl orton Dinners sv ... ;E;•ES t•OZ ~ French Toast tt~~~.: t.OZ ggc Grocery Specials Gold Medal Flour ~~SC Cheerios ~tia~~tAl R ll!AD!Tl()NAI. ()fl ag U "°MUTTLE 5"AC:Hffl'I IMIC( 11'1.AIW ME.A f °" loluetfllC)Otol Garden Fresh Produce Cucumbers ~t4'1lf .. OE1' Bell Peppers r~i! .. ;,, Yams g: .. ~T~ Windsor ~~~.. · De ' wWht . · wars ~~ ~ \Jim Beam Bouroon 'MML SS.39 E t !RISH mme s =~ .. I rH1flll s14.98 Kahlua b~ __ f;:olonari =:vi Ross, speak.in& from personaLex- pcricnce, said he ham~ changed.hi• mind about men and cookin~ • ••t can't boil water:• wd the agriculture commissioner. - . In their.bunt for recipes by men, Taff and Aldy sent letters to elected officials, state agencies, friends and the presidents of univenities and junior-colleges around-the-1tate They even plan to ask coaches at the state's universities. -• From the Department of Agricul· turc and Commerce -which Ross heads -they received recipes for catfish, bushpuppies and barbecued chicken used by ... the agency's four·man cooking t~m. ..r .Men bavc traditionally been known as masters of the backyard &rill, ao the ;itwo authon were expcctin§ a lot ·of outdoor recipes.< But they ve been surprised by the variety of the responses. 0 Wc're talk101 some. real aourmet recipes,'.' Aldy said. · One man sent a recipe for the ~rfect ~nut butter and jelly sandwich, qid Aid¥, Who found that her son liked at better than mom's own. • ~ Tomato Sauce ~u, Cat Chow 7~:~ Tomato Sauce HU'<IS ._ Gatorade = .. l~t Green ·Beans ~~0 • l!>0235c M" t R" age 1nu e IC0 we • .. RED~ Smirnoff VOdka The women a~ still miuina one vital iiwedlent fortbeirp~rojcct-a • recipe for blueberry muffins. "We thought about &cttina "Genildine Ferraro's," Taffi said. •'But she wasn't male and the wasn't a Mississippian so we de- cided he wouldn't do ... Swish ·~~- .. _ i • •• 01 ggc Glass Cleaner :~'" .,~$1.49 Tash Bags =,,.. 1•0l s1.59 ~"'S7.5Q Hlrlft ~1.()9 ·.: .... ,... ,... ~ -.7 .h '""9 ' ·SCJ-49 . ... ...... .... ... .... :..4 1~ s .. 6 !~ - - -I' ' .. • 'iii • . :All Vons meat, produce, dell-, / bakery and Vons own brand products a~ guaranteed or double your money back. This symbol I Vons guarantee of ~l~cy. ~~ for It. · ~MUSHROOMS EA .79 ~!fAN APPLES LA .49 CONCORD QD~ . 49 lMve Pepey.,. EA .99 • '? .-L..u • -~ • f,R!$_,!2.~~~ ~MS L8. .39 SALAD' TOMATOES lA .39 Atd. Ripe And Firm RED DEUCIOUSJ49 APPLES 5 · LB. Ext.rl Fancy, SWttt end Juicy BAG , New Crop. Washington Crown THE CORNER DELI PILLSBURY BISCUITS 17. 8ul ~mtllc ~v-.,,. ~ ~~ • VONS BEEF BOLOGNA 109 Of "'-et Bologne Sliced. 12-0unce PK~ CARL BUDDIQ MEATS ~9 Thin SllO!d. a.v.n.ti... 2.5-0unc:ie Pactc.ge ~Beef~~~~~~TS 199 . CHEDDAR J9. 9 CHEESE L8 \lofw fl\lld Wtla>nlll\ Cheae • F.mlty Pick. .lMge Size (Arg. Size 1.8. 2.04) MYS • T5 .~1':_'S._1~9iu~~,E~~l .69 ~£2<1~9~~~~ 119 CRESCENT ROLLS . 89 PIJltbl#y Dinner Aoll 8 OunC't P«~ (5-wf 18) • PILLSBCJRY PIE CR<JST 139 All~ To l~Ountt Pkg (S-24) '" DANOLA COOKED HAM 169 nd. ,. I.tel\ 1-()utQ Pt!<. 4S-1 00) .,. . • .. . . .. . 114 Cll .. A Guarantee meUl a company . believe In what ey ~U, I can believe In that ~ompany." TOWN & COWITRY STONEWARE • This week's feature · . BREAD & BU ....... '1°1 ...... 'ER Yours 69 ~~.t;,,um For Only e •5 Purchase) THE WHARF - THE D AIRY MILLER UTE BEER .65 12 Pock ti-Ou~ Can~ MYI! 1.IS SMIRNOFF · VODKA 1 7~ Liter Botllt I GORDON'S QIN I 7~ L•ter Botti!> SCORESBY SCOTCH Wh Jo.y I 75 litl'f Bottle CANADIAN MIST I 75 L11~r Boule EARLY TIMES BOURBON I 75-Lnet ~tit> WALKER'S TEN HIGH Bourbon. I 75 Lll •r Bott r RON RICO RUM Sol-or Gold. I 75 l.ltl>r Bottlr 999 999 999 999 999 899 999 CARLO ROSS1399 CHABUS . Rhine. Vln,Aoet °'Burgundy Big 4 Ulef Bottle I .. T HE BAKE SHOPPE . "COUNTRY FREE HEARl'ff ~g:: Muffin Pl1ln or SourdQ\igh 6 Pock ALMOND DANISH ROLLS 1.em.. ......_ o-M-« Apple c1n..-. fW:k GIANT SESAME BUNS Pleln ot Onion. ·~ • I J29 . .85 .45 ~ • • # 298 RASPBERRY PRESERVES 159 Smutken. Red. 18-0unet Jar DUNCAN .tUNES-179 BROWNIE MIX .& 23~ Boie SM<JCKERS PRESERVES St~. la.Ounce J¥ S~NINQ MIX Law1Y s 0.111. 8ufTlllo or Enchllllda. I ~ AJAX DEIERGENT Uquld Olttlw9shlng 32~ Bottlf: SHASTA J19 BEVERAGES - ~"°'·Oiet 6'11ck. 12-0una Cans FREEZER PLEASERS MAC & CHEESE Stouffers 99 Or Spf\9Cf\ So4Jf' 0< Noodles lbmenoff. 9 Oz. Boa • J!l~J1~9l~o0u~&. ·119 ~~~g~'{.KSlj~~tN 2 59 8~~5~C?,A(\~ATTIES · 119 ~~~~Ef ~PB!~~ 16s ~~E1EY~ V~2~T~BLES. 99 JENO'S PIZZA ROLLS ?oa ~s 99 ptp 1r. ~ !.l'I) ~ MM Boa • lli'[ ~KE~.., or J 199 WEIGHT WATCHERS 0 ~ 199 F~ Ch._ Pait) Fil of A.II "-' <.r9tl'\ ~ Fr fly. i • GROCERY ORVILLE REDENbACHER 209 ~JO~.» ~S !fA BAGS J 99 . DETERGENT 129 . ~ Klftf D 4 ~ &. ·SPAGHElll SAUCE Rlal.i. Trld•tioo. Plain ~11 or Mushroom 32 Ounct' Jar Mft.31J • PRK:ES EFFECTI\E THURS. THR<J WED. OCT -4 THRO OCT 10. 1984 CAU (8181579 1400 FOR l..OCATION OF STORE NEAREST YCXJ NOT ALL ITEMS AND PRICES IN THIS AD EFFECTIVE f\T VONS. 1500 W PICO BL\.D.. 6571 V.-80TH ST. LOS ANCEl.ES nus AD :iOT EFFECTIVE IN SA!'IOIEGO. FRESNO LAS VEGAS AND ToJLARE. COOl'fTT SALES IN RETAIL QUNmllfS Ol"t..Y ."\OST STORES OE'i.N 8 AM TO 10 ~ 7 D.4.YS A WEEK WE RESERVE TliE RIGl'IT TO U"'\rT QUANllllES. {HOT BAKERY ITEMS A\AIV.BLE ONLY AT STORES Willi A HOT a,t,KERV). VONS NO ACCEPrS ALL SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA CON.PE'l i IOR'S CURRENT .·DOUBLE COUPONS~ You don't pay,,._. You ju$f ftf_ more. • ,.,..,,... ¥ ' -•• ffWP S •r &T ..... ue.MA-.U M14t .......... , ..... • II ..,....-.=----- '-.. 1 { . . . • I 4 1 c a • .> \• .. .. .. ' ·"";.,I , J! • -· • ~. I ' Overall, no other supe mar~--·· ) prices even come close .i-. . . . . ... Other supermarkets believe in offering games, gimmicks and costly double c·oupons. At Gemco, we believe in offering you the lowest overall prices of any supermarket in Southern California. If you're serious about saving more on your food bills, come in and , compare Gemco's no-nonsense everyday tow prices for yourself. · We thir:ik yo!ill agree, when it comes to greaterfood savings , Gemco is the only place to shop. - \ ~ Twenty Five Y!Qrs of Membership Savings -....... , \ • .. \' ........ . ----·-/-- \ \ . . • • \ I • CdM glrl1 ouUntUGuna lnle•Vlew VOiieybaii! 02 . - • ; ~ea· View: ga_.1y ~rucial . ~ ... * Upstart Estancia challenges Tars for league lead .. BJ ROGER CARLSON °' .. ..,..,... ... _~=- Four sh~ the lead in the Sea View League football race, and that list "dJI be pafed to at least three this week with· Estancia's upstart EaaJes enter- inc as underdoas for tJle second IU'aigbt week to challenge a title cont.enaer. - Here's a look at each of the four · games this week.: E1taaacta (Z-1·1, 1-t) a& Newport Harbor (3-G·l, 1 .. ).: -Estancia's 1 established thcmsdvcsua.contender * * * Tbis week's schedule . :--. / (All pmee •• 7:30) THURSDAY The 98m• . ' The odde Corona, del Mar vs. Woodbr1dge (at Irvine) . CdM b)' 6 University vs. Saddleback (at SA BowJ) Sad~teback by 9 Western vs. Ocean Vlew {il]:Wntlngton~ Westtwn by 12 Long Beafh Wiison at Westminster Westminster by 1 • FRIDAY Estancia at Newport Harbor Costa Mesa at Laguna Beach · -E<llson.:.a~{Sherman Oaka) Marina at Mlffikan San Clemente at Irvine IA'QJRDAY Newport Marbor ~ 7 Laguna Beach by 1 Edisonby6 Marlgaby3 San Clemente by 3 LB Poly vs. Fountain Valley (at Westminster) I ~~·--· with a 23-14 decisioo over University . * * * LongBeach Poly testsBarons · Saturday night ~ W1 Of five rounds of noo.. leasue football IClioD is on cap this week for Sunset Le4Uc tehoOls - and the top..,OC fiiiita IO bC iLOllll Bt.ach Poly Hi&b'i iilvuion of Wes&· mi.mt.er Saturday ftiabt to dud Foun- tain Valley. Also enjo)ioa .. home" tOles are ·O<an View's ,Seahlwb Tit~ Jiiaht and Huatinaloa Badl·s OiJc:ft Saturday .rii&ht, althouab acidler pme is actiialty OD ~IOil. Faced with travel dala are Edison'$ OiarPs and Che Mama v· · while Westmimt.er (Tbgn. last week. • . Hod&e) asa field goal kicker, so if they Easies ·eoach Ed Blant<>n realizes, get cfose, it's a sure three points. however, their work is cut out for .. I look at this Qne as whoever haS were quick and it took our tids l wjlife to get uSed to Chem." IAq ~Pelf (t-1) n." 1'1 •' h University Will be without free Vallef fl-l)at W~ -Blcb safety Mar\ Petrovich (stretched is comin,g off a toa-the JICbabbi11 ligament in the ripat thumb). losing ta Bmnina; •0·2~ tbe 8aroias them ~ the Sailors. r the ball last will win. and wt•s what ·~~Thell' deferuc is always shifting I'm preparing for." •and that'll be difficult for our of-$ · - fenset says Blantdb ... We expect a Uaivenlty (1-3, t-1) ~·-W~ toui)lon• ljustbopewecaoplay\\lell back (f..t, l.t) a& Suta AUBO'*I:..:...: and make it an interestina contest" It's the have nots vs. the haves, but a Newport tailbaclc John Oswald is few weeks ago it was supposed to be out with a thigh contusion and Kevin the haves vs. the haves. Mc0ellan4 the Sailors• standout '1"bey were so highly regarded and 210-pound halfback. remains on the haven't put it together," says Saddle- lnjurcd list according to reports from back Coach Jerry Wine about the the Harbor camp. Trojans of University. "This is the best Esiancia team I've .. Mybigestconoem is the question seen in years," says Newport Harbor of will they play like they're capable? Coach MikeGiddingS. "It'll bca high-~·university has a front group that scoringgame,ifwecanscore. They're goes about 230, maybe even bigier fastertbanus,butrdsayevecybodyis <than Newport.. We've done ptttty faster, for tba..t matter. We don't have well against b~r teams (Santa Ana anybody that can catcti anybody. · and La Habra), but we bad trouble "And they have a weapon (Keith against~ Mesa bccause·their kids Uni Coadl Rick Curtis says the of fountain VaDCy ~a 16-1:5 obvious: "It ~~·t,get any ~· ~on to Scrvite. They'vegiveh'UpJUstsevenpointsmf Fountain Valley, however. m•ta fous games and their defense is 1 the bat of ph~ Jbape wiG obviously exoellenL They•re prob-coroerback Oailid · IWmey (coo- ably the fastest team we'll see." cussion), li.oebeckes-TiJD FlillD (c:oe- Cotta Mesa ( .. S-1, e;.1) at Lapu Buel (1-2, .. 1): -Neither is considered a title contender, but it's one of the better matchups between two very bungry teams.. "It'll get down to who makes the mistakes and who takcs-advantaie," says Costa Mesa Coach Tom Batdwia.. They're bigger, but rm not concerned ·atSout that. Because foot· (Pleue Me SEA ymw /D2l cussion). fullbeCt terry Reicben Coossible shoulder separation). 0.Ctup &lWd Ron Coobl.oo (knee) and nose guard Tom Boyd <1: doUbt.ful. while comert>ld Jun. co is listed as questionable afts missing the. Ser-vice p.me with ae · ankle injury. "They (the JackrabbiU) have tome lifted athletes ofl'eosivdy,.. says fountain Valley. C.oeCh Mike MilAcr, "a quartcrblck (Nick Ricsto) wbOcan · run and throw and probably the best ~ .................... .-il!iiliiliiill ... lliiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiliim ......................................................................................... __ fullback(~pQund-Wilfont~)......---s u. · t cliffe Will holdall the aces in necJOtiations ~~€i~~= ~, "They really haven't fliCICd a team __ !ll!'!!!'!!l'!"'!!"'i...--._...__ ..... .......,-<v ~f -....--t.ca row but !bg' can na.o with After his new contract, Cubs' hurler wt 11 be able to.aff-0r.dto-lose poker ~mes Nobody came in on the noon balloon fromSaskatoofHlfldtiked- me, but ... •Those of us who played cards -Aith Rick Sutcliffe on the Dodger plane remember him as a lousy poker player, but with the contract he 1s going to get fr~m the Chicago Cubs, he canafford 1t. .. •Apparently, they pilfer in Aorida ... Askedifluck playsany part in football, Miami Dolphins Coaeh Don Sbulasays, ••1fyoudon'thaveagood ~uarterback, that'f \>ad luck." ... The line was first uttered 20 years a.go by Tampa Bay Buccaneers Coach John McKay. •AngelsownerGeneAutrygotbis disappointment the old-fashioned way~-i1' •Baseball commissioner Peter Ueberroth band.led his first crisis exactly the.way Bowie Kuhn bandied mostofbis ... be termed the umpires' strike ••a league matter ... •Now that the Los Angeles Clip- pers have signed Bill Walton, it can be assumed the club bas also appointed at least one team doctor. •On the ABC baseball playoff telecast,F.arl Weaver and Regie Jacksqp may drown l,)on Drysdale in a sea of ego. •The population of the state of California will not drown in a sea of depdation even though a lottery is coming and will be followed by off. t.rack~ports wagering. •Vin Scullr.may have used the best ~on! todescnbe the late Walter Alston .... Arncncan-. - -- •Cinch bet ... Chidgo Bears CoaCb Mike Ditka will not leave the NFL to become-a"OOttege professor: •There~ less than 7 S shopping da~ until Santa Anita opens. •The most intri~ possibility of an umpires' strike lS that of a female arbiter behind the plate in the World Series. i .. Add lookalikes: Rainsquar-. terback Steve Dils and actor Kevin Dobson. •The last time the Detroit Tigers were in the World Series, the manager wasMayoSmithwhohadthesame. · beautiful temperamentasSparky Anderson. •Quick now .•. Which is the most overrated-Pon Sh~Oick Wil- liams or frog legs? OCKER SPORTS COLUMNIST •One can't help but notioe bow quiet Lyle Alzado has been sinoe the Raiders returned from Denver last Sunday. •If you really wish to know how many titnesa Los Angeles Kings coach )'las said, "We are going to stress defense and fundamentals," check the number of years the team bas been in existence. • ~ou owyoui.teicttiilaoTclif. P!;O~ aDcS throw wstti ~ .. yourkidsdon't ~li~~daybasebalt ~on t!le Poly anenaJ are re- Cbicago. for 247 yards) and wingback.Michad •IsRaiderownerAJDavis'house Roberts (9 receptions for 101 yvch) allb1ackonrethedoorsaod windows and tailbeckl Ricoo Wilson. a 6-0. trimmed in silver1 t 8~under. •NBAteamsbavegonetocamp Riesto bas completed 35 of81 for. nd cham . . 5 71 yards and 4 TDs. •. a a paonwillbedetemunedin As frw Fountain Valley's -~ less than I{) m<>nths. ,,. __... •Sparky Anderson says Tiger which hasn't really lived u:p to shortstop Alan Trammell is the best preseason publicity, Milner ~ playerinbascballbutvotesareheard "Mistakes li:ave plaped us throaKh-: in behalf ofCbicago second baseman out the prescason and we've tilled Rync Sandberg ... let the post-season ~~ves dcfenSively and offensive- belpdccide. •Atthismoment,thePavlORbsc FAliSG9 (J..l) at NOlft Daine (Z.l): Bowl representative wouJd seem to be _ AJtho"'lb Edison •s Cbai)iers CICICl": the weakest in years, but it will still tinue to impress, ihey also COJltinue at beat the Big Ten. • less than full strc:ngtb. · •llleysayRonCeyoftheCubs r---2.. Bill w tQJls ~apenguin out J don't think ~" Otbnan says tailbM:t' he runs that good. (Pleue eee SO!CUT Jtd) Lancer s Royal& .claim Tigers had all t he luck in 8-1 "in to test GWC? ByCURTSEEDEN Ot•o.IJ ......... r Golden West College, off to one of its best starts in seyeral years, faces a hungry Pasadena City College Satur- day night to highlight this week's community collqe football schedule. · Coach Ray Sbactleford's Rustlers arc comins off one of the bigcst UP!Ct victories m the school's history, a 21·17 decision over the nation's top- rankea team, Taft in the PAC-9 Conference opener. Meanwhile, Saddleback Colleae puts its 39-game home winning streak on the line Saturday night when the Gauchos meet undefeated Riverside CC in Mission Conference action. After three to~ Orancc Coast College takes a week off to liCk its wounds. Herc's a look at this week's aames. both tarting at 7:30: GoldtD Wett at Puadeu The· Lancers own a dcceivins 0.2 record. Coach Lany Reisbia's squad Cfropoed 1 27-19 decision to hiahly· rateicf Sacramento CC in its opener and then lost lo LA Pierce, 3s.;8. Pierce, undefeated, is ranked fourth in tho SOuthllnd. Golden West has rode the pa •ina of John Heil'\J.e and a balanoed runninJ attack to three straiaht vie~ tones 1ncludin last week's hocker over Tan. It was Taft's first reaular .. season defeat in 31 pmes. ··we'll sec a typical Pasadena team," says Shackleford. They're bi& and very fa t. They arc startina a lot or freshmen. thouah." Last year. Golden Westpulltd otra milar upset of a ranked I m when the Ru tiers surpri!ICd Bakersfield. (Pleue ... LAJ'fCSRS/03) , runs., most· of "their hits were just barely out of reach.·· Tiger starter Jack Morris left the game after the seventh inning with a how it bap~ned. The Tigers, the blister on his pitching band. Even Eastern Drv?Sicm· champs who won thou_gh he did n01llavc his best.stu...ft 10.C-pmes in tlfe regillai season, Moms aJJowed only two third-inning jumped on their hosts with a com-sinates and retired l 0 in a row before bination of· pitchinJ. power, and, Jorge Orta tripled. leading off the White: We hit them right right at somebody. and their hits were barely out of reach KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) - Amateur umpires are no problem when the Dctroif T igers matt the Kansas City Royals look likeamaieur players. . "We sure can•t blame the umpires for w~t happened." said Frank Whit~ one of only four Roya.ls to get a base hit Tuesday night in the openina insist the Royals, plain old luck. seventh. e of the best-of-five American ue Championship Series. e fact the T!Jers whipped them 8-1 was not as galhng to the Roya.ls as .. We. knew they were good. We By then, Alan Trammell's sin&)e. wdn't know they were lucky, too," tripleandhomuunhadledtheTigers said White. "That hardly seems f~ir. to a >O Jead .<?..f'f Kansas City's Bud They didn't win I 04 pmes by be1na Black and the issue was all but settled. slouchy. But it did seem like every Larry Herndon and Lan~ Panisb bill we bit hard was hit straiabt at, also hit solo l\ome runs for the Tigen, somebody. And except for the bome wbo have won eight stra.iahJ,.pmcs in I More1an'd 'splay was capper -. Hts diving catch in nght field gave Cubs the mo entum CHICAGO (AP)-Bob.Dernier set the tone and Gary Matthews set the pace in a rec<>ro; hattering di splay of power, but it'WaJ Keith Moreland's defensive aem that put a k>Ct on the outcome. • The Chicaao Cubs smashed five home runs, two by ... at thews who drOve in· four runs. on their way to a I J.-0 romp Tuesday over San Oiqo in the opcnina ~c of their beit-<>f-five National Le.aauC Ctiampionship Scri1 Dcmicr homered on losina pitcher Eric Show's second pitch which Matlhe said 0 set tbt ~nt for our C!Y.b Bobby hit• flstbell1 we're a fUtbtD·hihina dub and Sbow is a fastball pitcher. The quick run tam the pressure ofhQ(l everyone ltnds to relax.•• Matthews didn't rc1u too much. He llao bomettd 1n Royals Stadium datina back to their when LOu Whitaker sinsled and final mcetina in 1983. TrammclJ tripled and both wound \lP "I don't understand why we seem scoring. ~ to always play well here," said I' 1... th ---Parrish. who drove in the Ti•ers' .. vcgot to .. eep OSCJUysOu UQll; o to keep thctr RBI gu_ys fro_.m__W:ivina._ ~nd J:"l-!.n Wl!..~ ..amfice fly 10 the them m, ... he said. "I didn't do tbaL I first mmng. "I don't expect there as a madesomcmistakes. Iaottheballout true reason for it other than we·~ pla · nJ~ood ball •• over the plate and ~ toot advan· llyt · . tqe. I felt fine. I JUSl threw bad Tona t the. Royals go Wlth 20-pitches and they took advantqie.. .. }'Ur-old ngbt-handcr Bret . Slberhagen. He was 3-1 qamS1 the Eveiyone agreed the amateur um· Tigers in the rquJar season and ,,,;.u pifes.rushedintollC'tiontorePUicetbc oppose Dao Petry as the Tigers seek . strikina rcgullrs., did a fine job. to take a commanding two-pme IQCJ St.hind the plate was Bill ~ a back to Detroit. . 10-year ~or leque ~-..-bo Black POinted. to the first innina. reti~ in t 980. · Amateur umps ·~ave it easy in game one - --· ' Cuti-Bu ters: Creator's loyalty lies with Cubs · f'rom AP dl t ~ \ SAN DI GO -·· b-,Buslm" T-a hirts have been all the .... e in San Diego, where Padn; fan:. have napptd up J0,000 of lhe antt·<"ub shirts at$ I 0 a crack. • But it tumi. out that the creator of the shirt'> - C. W. Log.an -i) a die-hard Cubs fan. . Logan, a 2.6-y~r-old accuuntant, moved from Aurora. lll. to San Dic"o an 1981, but the one thing he c.Hdl\'t lca'e behind wa\ hi~ loyally to flis old team. "I'm till a Cub fan," he say~. "Ttiat'~ what make$ ;.~'Cotttl'Owrsiel. f.f th.-€"5 · ,~..,, h.appy, but I'll make money anyway." The Padre~ and Cubs pla)cd the opener of the be t· of-five National u~ue champion hip serie Tuesday. with the Cub demoijshing the Pad~ 13-0. Logan says he'll be cheering for Ch1c~go in the series. "The hean sull hes m Chicago. I'd rather root for them, .. he said • Logan ~Y e ~·ame up "''!h the design forthc shin after hearing the "Ghostbusters" theme song at a Padres-Met!> gaml" in .\ugust. and his mation has helped build thl· burgeonme Padre fever. "Thc\ 're going hke w1ldtire." said lkv Luallen, manager of t~~ Padres gift shop at San Di~go Jack Murph) ")tad1um "We got 3.100 this morning. and they're almo'>t all go ne. We'\c sold a total of about 10.000." Quote o f the day Oeofge MllC:ln1Y1'9, Vanderbilt footbafl coectt, on defenstve end John Windham, ''John la the kind of guy who tmp tM '8uon o. ak)ng. Sor told him tut night that we'Ye ~ MV9l1 games arr .. dy." • 5.\N FRAl'IC IS(O -Edward De-m Banolo Jr who has tasted sports succ:cssas c II• owner o f football ~San f"rancisco 49crs, ~1d Tuesda' that he "'ill m a lot' of questions bcforl' con$1denng the poss1bilt) of buying the baseball Giants .. fhe door 1s not locked. but at the present time it must rematn dowd." he said. i!ing he shouJd not )et be considered a logical jdate to buy t,he Nattonal uague team which 0 anis owner Bob Luhe says he wants.to sell .,. /if . · . ~Banolo has owned the 49Crs since 1977. The) won the National Football uague championship an the 1981 season. came within one game of reaching the Super Bowl last· season. and are off to a 5-0 start this season. "Many anquancs have been made by the media and other concerned orgam7allons as to my interest an purchasing the G1an1s." DeBartolo said from has busancss·office an Ohio. "At the present time. my first love and pnmaf) obJCCtl\C 1s to promote and advance the San Francisco 49ers · Stevens to get another start LOS .\"lGELES -Senior quar-[iJ tcrback te'liC Bono "-111 mass l'CLA's C II• Pac-I 0 opener ..... nh Stan fora at the Rose Bowl on Saturday the third straight game Bono bas missed because of an aok.le IDJUry, head coach Terry Donahue said Tuesday. .. Sophomore Mau Stevens. a produe\ of Founuun \Calley Htgh, will stan tptn-m--pface-of Bono. who 8)ra1ned his nght ankle in the fourth quarter agamst long Beach State and massed the Bruins' 42-3 loss to Nebrasl.a and their 33-1 fl \'ictol') o'er Colorado last wee!... I ··~1eve 1s not 'well . it's bad for cweryone. Has ankle 1s only 75 percent," Donahue said."~·· Also out ofSaturda) 's game for UCLA, 3-1 , will be starting light end Derek TennelL who suffered a shoulder injury against Colorado. and linebacker Tony Philhps and strong safety ~nn1s Pnce. who both suffered ankJe IDJUnes aga.mst Nebraska. 3, 10S.. Goodman·, ez-Red Sox. clles etcru'i~fthc;~~~l1Good~~ ~ CdM outlasts La,·guna ~nt m t of h11 ll "31'ttf with the 11111 ton Red ll, b died t S afier • .. . ~ r-1 battle ~1lh cancer. . ..E b wphomorc Sara Allison and senior Annie McCray Goodmand1CdMonda)1n rasoi.,h1 home fur dison, Martnagtrls egtn . combancdfor37(outofapo tbh:.45)strvin pornti stht the 0 1 34 rs. . !lots domin ted that phase of the me. , oodm~ spent more thain, 10 sons wnh !hC Sunset schedul with wins M nwh1lc. the Sun ·ti l.L"llgue opened lti .rcaul r Red Soit nd an 19.SO led the Ammcan 1.eque 1n h1t11n ron Tuesday with two of the playoff favonlCS -~ith a .3S4 bat\tnJ average. He pl~)cd mostly u an • ·1 he ,.oron del Mar Hap girts volleyball ttam Eduon and Marina-re.cord ins victories. infielder, 1phu1na time at second, thtrd !ind first. cntrttd this week knowina it \\ouJd faCX" the two other The Vikinp rccovcicd from a low t rt for a 1~1 S, In 19~7 ~c was traded. to the B htmorc Onolcs. primary contenders fot the Sea View League cham· lS·IO lS-4 l>IO win over Huntington Beath, whale The follow1na) r he was traded to th~ <;btctlgo White pionsh1p in l..a&una Beach and 'NcwpOrt .H rbor. Edi on swept asJdc host Westminster, I S.10, 1.5•6, I S-U>. ~"·where h~ptayCd f~ursc•son. inclt1d1na fi"c pme-And, the 'Sea J(jng! passed phaw one of the tesl • 1 h Ch 1..1 11 receav.cd saroooefToru from in the 1959 World nc -Tuesday night. dispatehina Laguna, 2·15, 1s~. lS.8, e ariers. v-ovcra • . • · Kath He fini hed hi&ca~·r\Cith theexp n5ion Hou toq 13·1S. lS·1 at Cd¥,. juniormiddfc blocker Pam Lance and out.\1de hllttr ) Coh4S 1n 1962.Goodman hadac.arccrbattmgaveraae .. We were very upti&ht the first game," noted CdM Stew~. cd ti 20 · t ~hale Stewart chipped in of.300., . • Coach Charlie Brande. "lt wat 1-l at one J>Oint, and the with 14n~i~i:C.':d 11°Jia,s. ~'i':;n·~ next tc 1 will be qain 1 Chat er No. l choice to USJl'L next~ime ~l~k~up it was 12•2:" ih~ tC.. 1 vi6itin 'Ocean View Thursday. de h r:qroup an W1n the nellt two p t;Cfott the Artist • Fttpso •. ·mnor .ootS1 1~t'T, AN DlEGO-Mo ?.; Olde, 1he&n m forced a decadina fifth same. CdM lhen wrapped up the fueled the Viking comeback against the Oilers. rccordm Diego Chatgen' unsigned 1r'\t•round drafi •II• two-hour match. thanks in pan to freshman Rhonda 13 k~rso enjoying a fine performance for ' Ma~na 1 r~~k~:Sm~ ~h:!~~ea:~!ra01:::!1 . ~~e~%fa~~o c.arne off the bench and s.crvcd the ftnal senior co-captain Marso Kuester. The'outSJdc h1tttr w s StatCi Football Ltague. The olher top performen for CdM included outside credited with nine kills ''We're ironed"' out the final details. Now all we hitters Christy Moiso and Brooke Henington and blocker Manna is at Fountain Valley Thursday: . . have to do is act the paperwork finalized," said Perry Cammie Lou Doder. In an Academy uague m~t~hup. Newport Chnsuan DccrinJt Cade's aaent. m a telephone 101crview from Laauna Coach Bill Ashen ·credilcd the play of outside beat vi ttina ·letlingwcll Chnst1,n, I S-S. I(}. IS, I S-10, Mem__ph1s. "I don't sec anything stopping it." hitter Annette Juptner and setter Brooke Binley. I S-10. ~ C S It · Deenng said C.ade, a defensive b.ick from Texas, is At Woodbridge High, Newport Harbor breezed pa~t / The Conquerors, ranked l 0th m the latest IF ma to sign the contract today. Both Cade and Deering the host Warriors, I $-10, I 5-5, I S.3 to move into a tic for Schools poll, were paced by setter Lisi Mohler and out ide amved in Memphis Monday night. but C'.adc was not second place in the Sea View at 4-1. hatter KeUy Davidson m winning their league; opener. • available for comment. The Sailors had little trouble in quickly disposing of In college action Southern California College rallied The four-yc.ar pact was estimated to be worth $2.2S the ~arriors. and damagfug Woodbridgc's playoff for a 6-1 S, 8-1 S. l 5.3,' I S-6, I S-8 decision ov~rvl.Sitma CaJ malhon, about $600,000 more than the Charge~ had usp1rauon&.. Bapt1s1 an an NAIA District Ill match Chnst College of been offenng Cade. The Newpart Harbor .ino of JUD1or Lara Asper. Irvine lost to Caf St.ate San Bernardino, I S-9. I 5-4, 15-12. Haas nam~d Brave manager ATLANTA -Coach Eddie Hus. Ill who has been an Atlanta's organization SUNSET I;EAGUE ROUNDUP~ •• ) J'rom Dl smce 1965. was named the Braves' man-· ager Tuesday, replacing Joe Torre wbo was Scan Curran is questionable for have been plar_ing the game for a long fired. Friday's game because of a back time .....! but 1t s the first meeting ever Haas, 49, who has been with the Braves as a minor injury, defensive end Mike Jensen and it figure~ to be a shootout from league manager. instructor and coach, managed the has a bruised shoulder and is the start. . Rdmoodclub~theO~.~-~~l~n~1t;~~~ti;o~~~~~~u~eH~'n~~u~b~tnfu~l~,a~nTdmn~ohse~gn~~r~d~J~im~Cmo~llni~p~s~~T~h~e~M~o~nna~reMh~s~o~f~M~a~~r~1~yoo forne.rty foUT ]'ca~ ~or.... 1ng nam irst se 1s definitely out because ofa sprained the puslnJ or ft'esbman qpmert>Rle coach with Atlanta m July. knee. Todd Mannov1ch, who has recovered Torre, 44, ~ho was dismissed Monday, led the "Someday.we'll be healthy," says from a head injury against Wcst- tcam to the National League West title in 1982 dunng Workman. mins~r and will be starting. accord- his first season with Atlanta and wound up as the most As for deahnJ with the Knights at mg to the Monarchs' staff. . sucoessful manager in Braves' history since the Sherman Oaks 10 a typical Parochial And 1t appears he'll have a new franchise moved from M 1lwau.kce in 1966. atmosphere (a pit). Workman says taraet in 6-5 Mike Mitchell, a basket- During has three seasons in tAtlant.a. he had a "'the surrounding wtll be a hltle ball star who 1s reportedly returning 257-229 record, finish1ogsecond to Los Angeles m 1983 different, but being on the tOad to football this week. • and tied W1th Houston for second behind San Otego this shouldn't make any difference." "They're a l)'P1cal Mater ~1 season with an 80..82 mark. A measuring stick on the Knights tea.m," says Huntington Beach Coach lies in their 7-0 loss at St. Paul. George Pascoe. Lloyd ezt:ended. but advances ~NHATIAN BEACH -Tqp-~ seeded Chns Everi Lloyd had a tough time · Tuesday m disposing of unseeded Andrea Lcand, ofBrook.landviJle. Md., 6-4, ~.in an opening-round match-o( a women's tennis tour- nament here. • Lloyd, who lost an the finals of 1his tournament last ~car to Martina Navratilova, opened the match with a service break and took a 3--0 lead 10 the first set. but Leand rallied to tie 1t at 3-3 when Uoyd double-faulted three straight tames an the sixth game. But the veteran Lloyd held on to sweep the sets, winning the second sci on the strength ofa service break in the ninth game with the score at 4-4. TeleT&lon; radio 1"ILEVt8tOlit 5:25 M~-um.AU: Detroit at Kanw Clty In acond game of AmeriC8n League prayotfs, Ctiannet 1. . RAIMO ,.. "They run the optjon and they have ••Everybody gels excited to play a very good defense." says Workman. them. They're soing to have all their "1 don't know much about their people dressed 10 red, and we hope to speed, but from what wt/'ve seen they get our people dressed in black. have good speed. It's another game "We'd better be emotional. When that we want to win." they're excited they're very, very Notre Dame, under Coach Kevin good." Rooney, operaJes out of a pro set with Pascoe 's m"Jor concern wuh Mater I and split backs. Tom Schaefer (6-0. Dci's game is the passing game. with 170) is at quarterback and.his favorite Masinovich at the controls. receiver is Rocky Palamara. "Every time they snap the ball they Rooney says his team isn't es-have four or five guys going out for a pea.ally large, but it's one which pass," says the HB coach.· includes 6-6, 27(}.pound tackle Karl The Mdi!larchs operate out of a one· Dahlquist. · back set. and have two different styles Marhaa (2-%) at Millikan (Z·l ): _ (strength and speed) to choose from The Vikings of Manna Coach Dave -200-poesnd Tre Anton and 160-pound :roan Cao. Thompson 'returned to their wmnmg Whale this 1s a bag one in terms ot wa)l.U_aftcr a two-game losmg streak and a-re hopeful offinJshmgabove the emotion. each has a problem Hunt- .500.mark an one of the toughest non· ington Beach's Sunset League opener league scllcdules m the Southern 15 1 week from Thursday against Section. Edison Malhkan, under coach Dtck De.-Mater De1's Angelus League open- Haven, awaits with a squad which has cr_l~!l Bishop Ama1. trad1t1onally given the Vikings ~ Western (4·0) v1. Ocea.a Vtew U·S) at Hudngton Beach: -After four wctts new coach Karl Gaytan 4- m its "this 1S a lot tougher than I tbougtit." And, it's'nm going to get any easier ~ Thursday night as his Seahaw_ • trying to snap a three-pme los!QI streak, face a Western outfit wh1cli has averaged 4'2.0 points a pme. "Western doesn't make many mi,.. takes and has a tremendous amount of speed at the skilled positions," says Gaytan. "'But we're beCter prepared now to handle at. We've had to maJce some position changes and I've split 1.he team in half by platoomn& with m)' ' best on defense." Cbris Chase guides the Western attack at quarterback. but there a.re . ·solid players in every direction for Coach Jim Howell's Pioneers. un- doubtedly the best Western tea.m since the 71-72 era (quarterbacked by Bobby Acosta and coached by Jim Everett). · Lone Beacla WU1on (!-1) at Wett- mlnster (t-!): -The Lions have yet to play a game decided by more than three points and this one figures to be JUSt as competitive wnb Wilson coming off a 21-16 decision over Huntington Beach. Bobby San Jose paces the Walson . passing game and 218-pou.nd. Wal. ham Aamelon~ the bt& gun in tht fUfWl.!ng<pme:-- "He-funs li4ce he'~ 2 0 pouqds," says WestrninsterCoach m O'Hara. 5:25 p.m. -BAIDAU..: Detroft at Kansas Ctty, KNX(1070). THUMDAY'8 TELEVlatoN .. trouble. , "People don't seem to be running SEA VIE. w ROUNDUP • on them," says Thompson. "And they seem to be throwing the ball real From DI • • · S:35p:m.-U••ALL:Ch~atSanotego In Natk>nal Leeg~ ptayOffa, Channel 7, THUMDAY'I RADIO 6:35 p.m. -UHaAU.: Chicago at San otego1• KNX (1070}. well this year." ball is a numbers game. we'll have a game, Mand the kicking game has Thompson says the maj9r tasks better chance than say against Saddle-shown some holes. will be trying to shut down Millikan's back." · Both teams enter at relatively full play-action pass. Laguna Beach is the smallest school strength. "We'd like to throw lhe ball. too," in Orange County (950 for four adds Thompson. "but we haven't. classes), but Costa Mesa as No. 2 with Corona def Mar (3·1, 1-0) v1. been doing a good job with thatfi. l I .300. WoocloodbbrfdJe (Hl.Jgh, Oc·l > aht Gelrvbae:N. -:: think we match up pretty good as ar Mark Draper. Laguna's quick half-W ndgc 1 oac ne OJ1 Stanlord•. New.QB as size and speed are concerned. back out of the veer offense, is the as well awareofhis team's wk.-...inst .I~ "Their quarterback is a little guy. pnmary taraet for the M"ustangs, Corooadel Mar-it must contam the STANFORD(AP)-TheSt.an"-ord but he's quack and can throw the according to Baldwm. Sea Kings' slippery quarterback. c.ardmal offense will have a ~cw ball." "We'll have to contain their pass-Bobby Hatfield. ....... __ F M1lhkan'sRamsaregu.idcd by veer ang -'·me,• says Laguna Beach Coach As for has own team's s1tuauon.1t's starting quan1::1umJc, red Buckley a ·ff l h a--back. .... th when it goes against UCLA on quanerback 1 Mosey. w ose Dennis Haryung. at quarter wuerc ere Ll rnove- Sa da d C h k favonte recc1vCTS asre Ed Robinson "And, we'll have to stop bcaung ment -Noj1 1s inserting 160-pound El~y. y. accor mg to oac Jae and Tommy James. ourselves." sophomore John Yurkovich in hopes Buck.ley will be replacing John Mater Dd (%-%) v1. Batbagtoa The Artists have been handicapped of.~e~reng 5080i~.thitnogs !3:~·im a Pa e. .... B•a-'-(1 • 1) at OCC: Tb-· two with multiple penalties in every e .. 1984 TOPAZ • ONLY '162* ,.._...(........,___ ... , 48 mo clowd -1.._. •ID 6'1677S • Momhly t-pay...-$162 00 fhttvndobi. -u•oty depotll SIH ht-.d i.e.... 1 .. Sl66 Total -due•~ of i.e... S!i01 00 T<>1ol -of poy,.,.,,t S777b Totol Mileooe ollowed 60.000 "-olty be per INle ~ 60.000 """" U mo cio..d ...., a.-• 10 6$331$ • ~Ir i.-,.,..... 53'11' 11 .. 1~ S«u•lfy D.po.ll ~ Elt....-d r.c-IM '410, Teotal _..,,Mae a.-"-P'- S 1707 7• Toto! -ol poy,....... S 19, 10.. ~ ~ .0.000 • '""'°"Y 6c I"' inl -60,000 ....... FORD MERCUR Y LINCO LN 1-"'91 ,,... °"'*' to ~~ .,. ,., .. a.-.,... • • ~ nreMlclllMI _.. .,. .., t11 .._ .. .,_ ..__l_._ ............... ~ .. --i... .... '-•'·•· ........ _ ---._~ .. (,_..~,.........,,., ,~~....--1._., i.o.. ,.,_ ..... _ ............... .... • \:IOHlllOll ANDION LlllCOLll • MERCURY HOff'lll ol 1h, Galdi n Tovch 212 HARi R'I LYD -COST& IESA 140-1810 I ~..;;;;.L.;.;_ __ __.:. __________ .. _ic_u .;....·~-·...:.... ___ • _-____ ... _ ..... _______ ....;_ ________ . 'Chance," says Noji. .. rm not 1oing to wait until it's too late. He's made h.is share of mistakes, but he's a sophomore and he's going to get better." ] ·. ' . ·1 .. Delicious Top Sirloin Steak, cooked to your taste, and se rved with homemade IO\Jp, crl1p green aatad, choice of potato, dinner roll and dessert! s ' As for Hatfield, NoJi calls him a "nJht-handed Burt Call," and he voices a concern with the Sea Kinas' running game and si7e. Corona dcl Mar Coach Dave Holland says his concern is in containing the speed ofWoodbnd.&e's Mark Ph1lhps "We don't have anr,body that can match Phillips' speed, ·says Holland, "but we have some &ood backs. Scan Turner ran well last week. but Robert Tomichek might be out because. of a pulled aroin ... Holland notes Woodbr1d1e's reasonable success m roovinJ the be.11 against Newport Harbor last week and says his own team's ofTcnx ;, · workin& lard on protectm& tbe quar· t~rback. • UMPS . • • FromDl . . " \ ' • AM•RK:AN LIAGUR PLA YOPFS Tletn ,, • ..,... 1 . ( Oaf'ne °"") KAMIASCITY DITROtT .. , ..... Wllltakr 2b 5 2 1 o lrokntft o o o o Tramm1 » a 2 ' 3 hk•» 0000 KG~rf 6 0 2 0 LHPwallc c l 1 2 HetnclOn If J l 1 1 .-R.Joneslf 1 0 O t Kwtttlf 1000 GarWtcll 5 1 2 0 Lemond 5 0 0. ..,,,...,. lb 0 1 0 0 MC.attUo 4) 2 1 Wlltond Sllttklrl rl Uonesrf lrtll )ti Ori• clfl Mottevlf hlbofll lb WNte2b S191,19f\t c Cllbcnu ..,,., ... c 0 l 0 2000 1 0 0 0 cooo • 1 l 0 c 0 0 l c 0 0 0 3 0 1 0 . 3 0 2 0 l 0 0 0 T.... ' .. lt4 t T.-12 1 S 1 san.,,...._ Delrtft .. 111 121-• k.Maat Qtv • .. ,.,_ 1 Came Wll'lnine ltll-Tremmel (1). E~n. DP-t<anaes cuv 1. Loa-o.trolt I, K1riaa1 <:uv s.: 2&-0IEYIM 3~Tramm.a. Or'la. Hlt-H«ndon (1), Trammel (H, LNPar-rlsll (1). ~-i.NParrlsh . o.tr.n • " ••••• JO MorrlsW,1·0 . 1 Htrl'llndt 2 KlnM•Clt¥ 5 1 1 1 4 0 0 0 0 2 ~L.t-1 S 1 c c 1 3 HlllMNM 22·3 > 3 2 1 2 MJonH IM 1 1 1 0 0 WP-Hultmenn. T-2;47. A-4Un. . laMblls:Qy9ffl LIAGUI CMAWIONIHIP lllt11$ (Al T1mlt ~" " ........ ,'" TueMllY'a SC... HL.-Clllc8oo lJ, San OllllO o cc111c.100 IMctS .... 1-0) AL-0.troll I, Kansas Cllv I (Detroit IMdt W1tt, 1-0) TIMV-.CkfNI NL-s.ti 01"0 C Thurmond 14"1) et Olleeoo <Trout u.n, 11:25 a.m. AL-Dttrolt (Petry 11 .. l et Kansas Cllv ls.o.rtleNft ••m. 5:2S •.m. • "*MIY Chlceoo !EtMnllv ll·tl 11 S.n Dieeo (Wllilson ,,..,,,us Pm ,,..., KPMS cnv (Ultwe"Ctt 1 Ml II DelrOlt (Wlleo1' 17-t), US P.m Setw9y At.-Kensas City 11 Detroit, 10 a.m., tt '*'"'If\' HL-Clllc•oo et San Dletlo. 5:25 11.1n., If NCftMCV SllnlllY NL.-Clllatoo et S.11 DltoO. 1'05 1>.m .. If necenerv • • AL-Kansas Cllv et Detroit, 5:25 11.m., If • "!C*"8'Y • .... , " I -I\ 71 IOO 120 17 AOO "' 7• MO 94 N ., 10 115 NPL 1tatt1tta • NATIONAL CONIHINCa .. 'OenJetaon, Oil. lertltowaal, All Mol'ltana, S.F. Simms, Gi.tlta Lomax, su •. Pf.7Pf. f7Yr:.oTD, ~ 127 IS 1153 t S 107 .., ... • 1 m f4. lCCD 11 J m 1011m • 4 RIHIW'I PeylOll, Oii Rltft,AtL Wflder, T 1: ,. Ya A'W'e L~ TD 112 '21 SS n 2 m '19 ·s.o 57 s Okil ........ bm. TYltr.S.F. 12' Sll U J1 3 l1S 4".U J2 2 174775.SCO• •K111Mn ~ Y• A'W'e LG TD J.JoMa. 0.1 n tt4 1.0 11 2 Monk, Wull 31 "9 14 S 11 1 c~e. Dal 2S 303 12:1 M 2 l .Jol\MOn, All. 2' Ml 117 '5 J Tl!ltv. $t.L. I 22 303 lU . 26 I AMalllCAM CON,.HNCI Quel'WMcll• Merino, Mia. eaaon, N.E. flerouson. luff. Fouts,S.O. Woodlev, Pitt. PA.i.~ Y• TD INT 1~ 101 1527 15 I ts •1 nc 6 o 1'5 '3 1006 • 2 176 111 105 5 • 127 73 10.1 7 ·' ltulflWI McNtll, Jell ' Winder, Den. Olckev, Ind. Jedi.Ion, $.0. Collna, N.E. TC Y• AY9 LO TD UM 4tO U 13 2 • 41' u 24 1 " Jf4 .. JO ' 7t ,., u 11 4 t2 356 u 21 I ~ -~ Y• A .. LG TD Du:per, Mia. JO &ff 21A 00 6 W!Mlow, SD. 2t m 130 lJ 1 OW1ltltu.., 1ta1c1en it an 12.1 11 2 FreolrJOQ._luff, 2' ~ I U S4 0 Slellworlli, Piii 26 .. IU 51 1 Oddi NflL ldt.-nl l O'Wll' Attente ~so .. ers.1111 aTernN hv lover MitWleaOI• JlC1!JcMo 1 Ovet J!Mw ~ aKanaes City 5 over NY Jtta a0.11811 61h o.,., St. 'Louis lklffalo I ovw aPl'llladelof'lle aDefrolt J OYlf O«IYlf Miami 5 ovtr xPlttatiur1111 - Ntw Enolend 2~ ovlf xClevetend • Waslllnofon 7..-, over alndlanel>Olls 5en Dleto l over xGreen h v aClncl111111ll 7~ over Houston 5en Frenc:lac:o J~ over aNY Gl•ntt (MotldlV) COLLaOI Ttx.1 :zt. over xltlc8 Ohio State l'h ove,...aPurf\11 W•llllh'iOIOll 20 Ovtf' aOreeon Sl•t• Florida Slate 10'11 over lCMtrnPhl1 State IYU vs. ltColoradO Slate, no oddl aNeOr•lll• •~ o.,., Oklel'IOme State •Penn Slelt 7¥\ over MerVland KGeortle Tedi 14~ over Hortlt Caroline State aMldll9e11 l2..,.,. Michigan State Miami, FIL 1 over•~ Dame 11UCLA 9 over Stanford ~ 9¥\ ..,.,. l!MIUIUl#f xVendlrtlllf IS over Tule11e . ~le vs; ~ ..,.,, x-dellol• halne taam. OclOt .,.,.,, Hatfttt't R-Race & s.orta looll.. COLL•Ga .-CAA , LM9Ut WLT Frnl!O St. I 0 0 UN Let V90es 2 0 0 CS Fullerton 1 0 t Sen JOM St. 1 1 0 Pacific 0 0 0 Utah St. 0 1 0 Lone INdl St, 6 I 0 New Mexico St 0 3 o lefuNeV'I Gamea o-.. WLT s 0 0 J 1 0 5 0 • 2 3 0 2 t 0 0 J 0 0 4 0 0 5 0 •c11 Stet• FUlltrfon 11 PKlflc. <n> .,...,,edit Laa Vee•• •t LOf\tl •••di Slate •u1a11 State et S.11 Jost State, (11) Fresno State et Hewell, <n> TlliD· .. l"IM> anlew Mt111Co State, (n), ·~tea cont•enc. Mme .... .,.,. Macke.'. PKJflc LfWll, UNLV Jonft, UNL.V Lodnft, NMSU ltobiMon, SJS RUSttlMO TCI Yft. TO '7 3IO , S4 , " 0 t1 27S 0 .., 161 1 • ,AISING Ayt, '50. na n.J no sn ,_.,., ,A ~ " TD Pct. v-. $1HtM'(, FmM 1,...,_4 11 :.Slt 1.221 GaYllOf, LIS 160-,,·6 J A 19 I, 1:17 Afietl, CS FulltrlOll 12'•.,•1 t ~ tq ,,.sco, SJS 1'9•79-,S • Sl4 tM CUIWlll\ONlm, UNLV 1~".WJ I .5'0 751 ltlClllJINO ,....., ~Ya TO Loctr.ett, LI St :12 415 o 1m11t1, san Joie 21 ..., 4 Wlllll, FSU • 16 '39 4 Wllllatna, F SU 11 '51 3 MCDaoe, UNL v le 1... 0 TtmPlelon. LIS • . IC lS 0 . CIF f ~otball ratings . I. Senta Monica t PnadMll 1 M411r c. Ventur• S. Camerlllo •·Hert 7. OXnerd I Cllelll\ll IJ!ancls 9. Wnt Torrence 10. Hutfllmt . '· o.remon. 2. Temp11 Cttv S. A,.,.,on ..... c .. -. s. Norco . •Sen Merino 7. Ramone .. ~ f. WNtlier 10. UNnd 1. Whittler OW'ltll.n 2. v...., Ctv1ati.tl I. San Jeclnto &. If"-Union s. Trona "19ron . 1. W"tern Cllrl11i.n t . Monldllr Pr• 9. Ooftrlo Cllrlatlen 10 ... umont ~II OrtllOt IM VW Fr_.., Ol'ill§i FrMWeV .,,..... __ _ . . Gwdlft Ot0¥9 .. ~-.. ··~~' fftfWIY • ti fl'WWIY It 8UI South em Conf er.enee Cll\fUt"r ,.. )t Sell Ge&wi.I v 4-0 .. Sterr• 4-0 " Cllll\.W'Y :1-1 4' E...ite J·I 47 ~ Ceul 3·1 ,, E rnPlrt I· I :12 Ceftfurv 4-0 21 Sierra 3· I " "-!Ttl : ,. , 10 ... , C.llYOll (A). 42-0 ..., arltl'llOIMll, •• leetAr ,IMO .... OrMoe.»• ~-... ,Lott ,)7-0 .. a.tDeM , W•J ... ,...,.,.. J.o ... , $tftle Allt v ' ... ...,Dvant,2H ... MW!Ode.•-O Coa1tal Conference lley '3-0 " ~ 4·0 It ~. 4·0 76 °"""'4 4-:0 n Mermonte :1-1 '4 Footllll -3-1 53 Chtnntl 2·2 ,, Mermonte 2+1 2S h'lf 2·2 16 OtenMI 2· lr 1 14 Eastern Confe~nc ...... . .... " RIO Hondo 3-0 '° tvv 4-0 to . WlllltDont M .. lvv . 3·1 '° Rio HonOo 3-0 .st. tvv M . 3' ....... l-1 . Ji Wllllmont ,.., 14 laatllnt rl 11 ... , Soultl Totr nee. lM .... Monr0¥fai, 14-lJ ... , Blelt, 44•7 ... I ltlo Mne, 21·• ... , Cllelll'lll Island$, 27•0 htts..tul, 16-• ..., Dos ""*"°'· ·-· Loll to camerlllo, 27 "° ... t NJra C•te, u-o 8ul Sen Marcos, 21·7 .... Alie Lome, ., ... ... , ltournead, "'"° .. , CorOlle, 37· 14 a.1 '"'8 Fe, s.-t ... , Nonll (lllvenlde), ""'° ..., HMl/er, 17-lO ... ,Hlmlt,,... a..t Chaffey, D-7 .... Moll!•~ 111, 14-J .... Detnltln. 26io. Inland Conferenc~ · Olvmolc OlvmPlc DeAllU Oeatrt·lnvo CLJ 0.1ert-1nvo cs> Det«Mnvo (SJ AIPM AAlhe Olv1N141c De Ana.a I •·O 4-0 4·0 4-0 3-1 3-1 4-t M M 2+1 100 " 70 .. . '° Cl 21 1J 10 • Northwestern Conference 1. Canvon (Sl 2. North Torrance a. Lomooc &. Culver CltY S Ateacadtro 6: Cetlfllo 7. 51111• Marie • SeYIUI (flt) TorrlllQ tO INfewOOCI Golden ..o f7 1 .. 1 Notre Dame csd>. 20-7 Oc:Mn .... '° ... I '""°° Mon!oomery, 20-1• Not1!Wn 4-0 IJ .... St. Joee.n (SM), JC-7 OCMn •-t 6' a.t LIU:l.I,_,., IH l.oa Pldra a.1 St ... t San L. 11 00tuo. lf·U Loi !'Wet 4-0 52 -ee.t s.~, Merle, W.-13 NonNm )·1 41 lqlt to tur11o, 14"U GCltOM 3· 1 16 Loaf to Hin, IH Oc:Mn .... " ... , G*"I, 23 .. OCMn 3·1 u a..i~.22·15 Southeastern Conference 1. a.idWlll tlaB. 2. Diamond let S. San Dll'TllH 4. AlllMt vaaev s; S.11 ltrntrdrno 6. Arrovo •• 7. Duarte lKIOl>el 9. ltovel O.k 10. Coacllella Vellev 1. Feith Baptist 2. TemPle!On ) ltlo HOllOo Prto &. El Paso de lto&lltl 5. ludOtv 1. tit Pine 2. lloomlneton Cllr. J. HllPIM Cltrlttlen "Cal L.u!Nren L.......,awtdM Montv...,,, i. ... 1' ...,cr .......... 11,.. HedenOa C•O n .... Cl!lrlo, ..,.14 Mol\Mtw 3-0 62 ... , All.IN, 1'--0 San Andr•• 4·0 51 .Allil1 H«1a Yllta. .U·L. San~ees H .. • ... , lerslow, 14-0 NJNIOA V.lev 4-0 ,. ... , Hort ""· »"' Mlulon Vdev J-1 ,. Loaf IO Loa AllOI, 2W MIUlonVIJtev 2-1 26 L.oat to S.n Gebrlel, 17·7 MOllMew l-1 14 hat CherlW ()e)i, 13·7 Dtwt VelleVs J·l " ... , Yucel11e, 20-7 Eight-Man ( L,rge) De!Plllc C·O IMI Fllntrld9t Prto. 41-12 Trl<ountv J-I · ' IMt El Peso oe ltOOln, • •• ,.,..., 2·2 • e..1 LM Feb Hllla,..U-0 Trt<ountv M •. L.oat to T~on, 21·14 Delol\lc 2·t LOaf lo ~POl"f'9'rb.tla,. ~H 1 '• Eight-Man (Small) Hl·L.o 4-0 ... I Ow9ns Vally, SC•12 Chrlatlen 4-0 leet Unf'llld Cllrl1t1111, ..... Cllrlatlell 4·0 ... I Central °"'' 52-7 Acedtmv 4-0 ... , lnlMd c~ 57-6 AcMlntY 2·2 a.t ~. JMI .. Coot OAfLY P•LOT/W~ OctOW I 1114 DI. --~ CRoss CouNJRv ,, ~=---------- Orange Coast ar£a a hotbed-·~ for runnerS . . Cotta Mesa The Mustanas fuilshcd fourth io·1 the touah Sea View Leuue lut fall, but second-year coach 'tom Bums feels bis youna corps can overcome the loss of several standouts.. And althouah they beet SMidleblck in their first league meet, " hi&hly· touted Corona del Mar bUricd the Mus~ l $-:44. • · .. It's JUSt a 11tuauon wb.ere I lost three of my run.nm. t o to aradu· &tion and one to footbiall. .. llwns said. .. Now it's just a rcbuild.ina "od for us." . 1 lfurns(iheooacb"s soi{h -Danny ~ Don Mcl.achlan, Joel Bender and Chris J:lobson. Costa Mesa could be. a~ r as Saddleback ii sup o be one of the stronaer schoo s in the leque. Ed Vapor, Hobson, Bender, Mclachlan and Ma arc up from last season's ·freshman team that went undefeated in all its invitationals, and set a Mt. San Antonio Collcae course record. FollDlaiD vane, There's no question who bas the most cross country tropnics it\ its showcue -the Barons -but 1984 • .. ~Bada • Paul W'"ood. in his 21st seuoa at ttit Oilers coecb. bas ~ J Soto and that•s an bC d Deed if individual beau ·..UC oounicd. U fonunaiel)' for Wood. cro11 cou.u results are counted by team ICOftS. Wilh bis l S:48 time last scuo Soto is a sure bet lO at least auidc liuntin&i011 Beach olotC to the rut / tbeptiCk.Hefioished~~~~m~!~-~-111 'Suntet ran.-t teammates ~'Ct'C far behind. Rcturnina lettermen Ste'1C Wa'f: tho'11U, Karl Post. Keil Vcndley _. Randy Wark will uy and bclp. they're still somewhat untested. ·The Oilers won . easi1¥ in their opcnina lcqve ttteet with Oceln View, 19--46, aud toot fourth pbce the p~ous Las Vesu Invita- tional. behind El Modeba (which be the best team in Oranae ~tY Tut. Gty. Ariz. aru1 Mater Pei. they It.ill lack a solid No. 2 man. .. AoCordina to Wood, it may just ti an Mike Acosta. who "runs in the 16:SO"s. .. :bANCERS TEST GWC ••• .. PromDl . The foUowina week. the RUJ\len Anthony Robbins (23 carries, 130 traveled to Pasadena, and as yards) lead the Lanc:::er oftiense. Shackledford puu it. .. We were annihilated. .. • "We're pretty beat up right DOW. A lot of Jprained ankles and sore sbouldcn," Shackleford admits ... But I don't see U'S haviq-a letdown. Jn this lequc. J'ou·ve aot to play awfully hard an awfully aood." Heinle bu com~letcd 43 of 87 ~ssts. .and .been_ ~ed four times wbtle tbrowin& four touchdown passes. His favorite rcc:etver is Mike OiBemardo, who bas c:auaht seven passes for 19 lyards. Pasadena's Rcisbi• isn't quite sure what's wro~ with h.is team -or af there's anyth1na wrona with it. "l don•t think we're down this )"Car. We're just extrcmcl} yoUJll; We • pla)ed real well apins\, Sacramento at a time they ere ranked fint or second (in the tltc);' Reis~ 11)'1. lUvenlde CC at SMGebaek The Gauehol will tr)' to make it two sttaiaht in Missiou Conference play and three out of four on the season. More impon.antly, thcy11 try to stretch their home winning streak to 40pmC$. It won't be easy. RiversJdc enters the with the top nuhina oftCiiie 1n oon creoce. The Tiacrs a"etaae 18 Ll yards OD the p-o~nd. The defense, meanwhil~ bas limited three oppo13e!US to l3 yatds. Sopbomorc nm.n.iQ& back Olen Crawford 'is ~ T~ ma.ia of- fensive threat. A possible All-Amcn- can c:andidatc pnor to ~·season.• - Crawford leads the conference with 2S6 )-ards on 36 Ql'Ties. The Tiaen also ao to C1ark Browo ofle Brown us accounted for 129 )W'ds on l! "And PiCft'e J st hit US tD spots where we were weak. We bad a · S&ddlc k boa$t tbe • ·o. l quar-~'CCk oft' and hopefully that wtU help.-( tcrback in the conference in us," Reisb.iJ added. sophomore Mike OoUaJa.S$.; Do Quarterback Ned James, a hat completed S4 of BO" pasxs f'or .591 .sophomore who was a s-n-time )'a.rd1 a.Del has been in t!d jua starter a )ear aao. and ronnina back twice. · GWC stays. unbeaten, i>!J11nds Coast, 1.7_-6 BILL GRUNDY . REALTOR • • ' • '. Po': , # '> . Daily Pilat -- COLDWeu BANl(eRu ,. • I t ' er ., • 11. ' , IM DI District Managers 11 you ~ ""'°'~~ w•fh ~ bo.,. & girl, ond de ~ job\ 01• not fot Y°" (Otllldef 0 (QI ? Of\~~ (ff( .. I.on held Tt\11 " o uno~ poultOI\ wtffi do.ly ch~ft & A'WOnh - Ovr o~ OH 1mmed1ote Appil.c:Od\ tnu\t ho~ o "GI' ''°''°"""'090" or tNcli W• off•• °" ea,~t olory w11ti o ~' pion ond ocn of\owOMe W• hoot• Oft l!t I benefit plCMO ~ llK~ ho 1olinition mwronc• l1berol ~ oncl ~ · 330 . Bay Co ta • CA 92626 ' , , t Motor routes available in Newport Beach & Corona del Mar. Miist be 18 years old and havedependablecar.Earn 1600-700 per month. Call IO a.m. to 4:00 p.m. -~'(· ....... 642-~33 NewtPllS* . KIDS-EARN GREAT TRIPS AND PRIZES! = (714) 548-7058 TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE 1 &IPPfY food e RefuM 10 0oorpet1 14 Informed 15 Dfffwent 18 Neot9da City • 17 Terror ,. Hobday 90ng 11 F.,,.,,., group '° Org.nlzatlon 22 All#MU9 24 Upfoer 2e w. der191ve 27 Tooti 31 Miid oeth 32Eur~ 33 l»aui end Leo 35 _ _.,,._ 38S..1Wdow 39Te1tament1 40 Bledlblrd 41 Egg produc:« 42Mow~ 43 fillghteoul 44 FMtener 45 8'mbrtty ~ '7 9'alway WOl1I ....,. 5t Tr1dl neou-.s .. .. 54 &Mntlel perta SI 8Nip'1 tout• 50 ''Prince -.. 81 Pink etiede 82 fWfrtgerwit 53 Roofpet1 84 -0.-ley 65 -Tr\llfteert M !Qt coat• 8781~· DOWN 1 Bottletope 2 Not9thome 3 Meb• ll*'9 4 Ethiopian 5 Matti peld 8 Aalan coin 7 Jem 8 Employer• 9 Medley• 10 Obtain 11 - -onoe 12 Rey 13 Madelherp 2 1 P11hy rematk 23 &M-rebbtt1 25 Li*4'W8ffll 27 Hormone medicine 2t c.n.dlen ll'ldien 2tC.. 30 Pieythinge 34 Su9P11Qt .. • 35 Onew1h 3t H1a1one perlod1 2 3 4 5 PA£YIOUS PUZZLE SOLVED 37 Pipe jotnta 39 N-r>e Va119y ~ 40Samen..of -ltyte 42 Surtece 43 TherepeutlC "Aobert• -44t'Early tffh oentuty d.,. 1 • • '1 Cu1 '8S....tty ••v...,. l50 Queenly 53 P9eCe IOY9t 65 "Judith' ~ 510en 57 Loom reed 80 -llgfll • 12 1J Dl·MES -A- LINE WANI ADS IMPORTANT NOTICE TO PRIVATE PAATI S Sell your lt.n. tor $50 or ,-. Jn our famow OIMES.A-UNES pub-'~ Mell Saturday In ,,,. Dally Piiot. · · .. OIMES·A-LINE •di mu1t ,,. pr...pllld .o maJI or bring th«n Into tlHI o.11)' Piiot otnc.. B. ~ to ~your phone numb# or ad- d,... In your ad, ,,..,. • P<lotl on MDI> lt.m & no •bM atlOM. B°")'~ no oommtltOal • ~ ...,. prtJdUoe, p/anU or M>lmala .,..~ DEADLINE: lp.m.Th~ Ca.le MMe Ofllca uo .... Bar ., ..... Coeta ..... ;Ca.•21 ' SOUTHWEST 10 ..... ..,. ...... lHt ODORE ROBINS FORO . I' I . ., r' I., ,, i "r ((J\\AMl\A "··~(,II(' .,. • j .. .. ''" •• 714-833-1300 IYEll 110 ~ ..... --,_ To°"°°" frol'l'I -MJLDIMI,_ llPll11 1001 au.ii 8.,... Nwportawt\ 111-1• BJUSTOL AT,!DING!R I INSANrAARA Ht-0110 "PAM!LYSINCE •53• .111£ lcKEllA'S SOUTI coum IOTOIS tp 1114 llAlllT OIOOTIILE Wolftburg Edition 41moC.l.L ...f.aal.74 +tu per mo. TOP 113,620 .. CAPl15,4M 1aoo CAP redllalOtl ~15e002t I 1111 THEODORE ROBINS FORD lOf>O liAll8011 Ill ;[J CO'>IA Ml\A 1,.1) r1010 THEODORE ROBINS FORD iCr,11 ~•AllH~w fU "I..> ((.'\IA Ml \A '-l: ()010 THEODORE ROBINS FORD JObO HAR80P Ill VO COC:.lA MfC:.A ~47 0010 ..,,....., .. a.Ito, CNlle; pit, olb. 8ln/fm 8-.0, ate, tit (ID2YQ) ' 17111 @ I THEODORE I ROBINS 1114 IOlllOOI 11•m111111 .. moCE.L 1234 + IU I* mo TOP 112.011 20 CAP 112,000 ~157MOI ® FORD ]Ot <• HAll~OA fll "O (O!>TA Ml \A t.~) 0010 ,...,.mn• **· e/c. --= .. ONLY ••• 4000 (lKBP038) .... THEODORE ROBINS FORD 1ot.11 •~A•eo• 111 •o (0\IA Ml \A b.\ I llUIO 1114 YlllAlll IL IOmoCEL 122t M • tu per mo T()f' I 14,821 to CAPl14,8" 12000 CAP ~IOn Ateldu.i "840 eo m 1114 llnW "4~CEL 1211 • tu """'° TOP 111,040 M CAPl1UOO 1500 CAP r9ductlOll ~152tl7t Aalll~ In Lauing 1871 t Beach Blvd Huntington Beacl'I (714) 142·2000 WEOAIE ........ ~ t r ·~ IJ I tJ '\., We're.Hew.· We'r.e DeeNng - .. - ------ WEDNESDAY OCTOBER J. 198.S -- - - ~erchltnts~·check·to ci~~bo*nceS By ROBERT BARKER .... 0.-, ........ La t month'• much ball)'hoocd Main Event street fair in Huntinaton Beach turned out to be a financial flop and a $9,262 check made out to the Huntington's Chamber of . Commerce say Prop. 36 · 'Gverklll.'/ A3 Orange County super· - visors want to lead air travelers to Ontario Inter-: national AlrpQrt./ A3 Bozo the Clown tosses In his wig In mad dash for presidency.( Al NadoQ~ • \!a.· ._ • FBI agent arrested as . Soviet spy./ A4 Shuttle-nauts ready for Friday launch./84 World Nuns In Beirut live In peace -despite strife around them./84 Peter Ueberroth gets a nice little bonus for the · Olympics./ Ae Elegant airiness and plenty of plants keep Arthur Valdes' hotels and Newport Beach resi- dence "alive." /81 Attention to maintenance Is the key to landscaping success./82 Sports The Chicago Cubs and Detroit Tigers post con· vlncfng victories In the o~nlng day of the baseball playoffs./D1 Sunset League football teams prepare for flnal tuneups this week before the opening of league plaY,./D1 . Corona del Mar recovers from bad start to trim Laguna Beach In girls volleyball ./D2 Entertainment .. Sugar" at the San Clemente Community Theater compares ·favorably wl\h the Los Angeles proauctlon./83 Financing, land coats blamed for rise In h·oust11g costs./~10 • A7 88 ;A3 A10.11 A4 04..fJ 88 oe 85 . C1-12 81-2 05 82 A11 A4 A9 81 A3 84-5 01..a A12 82 ~~,~83 A2 ~4 Mr. April and Mr. Auguat 1'ewport Beach ~ten lllke 1'ewbttiia)• left, uad Paul llathela. n,llt. adrD.lie themMlne In the 1985 FlriFosee calendar. fe&tarlnC Onnae County flreftChten u pbota. &npbect by Peco Darnell, center. The cal~clan •. wblcti benefit the UCJ lledlcaJ-Center Barn Unit, WW be OD .&le In IOcal bOObtoJ'e91MCfnnlna tbfa month or can be parcJaued for $7.95 each at tbe Santa 114arbua atreet ftre atatton open . bOaMOet.13. Route .fee plan· ·gets oK· Parolee suspected ": o.u'a~ l charg~ • i 87 STEVE MARBLE ... 1 4 c c ............... . . ~ A convicted kidnapper, paroled tqs than a Y?r agot baS been taraet~ u I SU pect ID I sen.es of i:cceDt ra~ including two in the same Fountaio ValJey ciabborhOod in the ·week. ' · (PJeaee ... PAROLES/ A2 Donovan . ... ... . won't visit Coast GOP ·Hunti.ngto.n pla~ners nix· .massage parlqr irt center ' 1 " • j By tile AllOdated Prest Sccrc1ary of Labor Raymond J. Donovan canceled' a scheduled ap- pearance at a Ora~ County fund· gUsingcventafter be1na indicted by a New York arand jury, Rep. Ron Packard said. Donovan, who was charsc<t Tues- day in connection with past activities as a construction executive, was to be the featured J\lCSt at a $ l 2S-a-person reception in San Juan Capistrano for the Carlsbad Republican on Oct. 11. " . Packard said be was di5'ppointed (Pleue .. DOl'fOV Aft/ A2) lla'.~ond ~DOftll -Complaints from nei l1borin Businesses lead to dental of ·spa of HawaH' permit BJ ROBERT BARI.ER Of ... ....,...... • The relocation of the Spa of tlawaii massaae parlor lo a shoppina center that incl~es an ice cream parlor. an Italian restaurant and other family- . oriented businesses was halted Tues- day oiaht by the Huntington Beach Plannina Commission. Critics warned that the spa would be twmful to children and destruc- tive to businesses in the are.a. "'ffthisklnd of activity ts aJtowed;" said resident Don Datko~ il..willdriv out busineses and brina in adult stores and topless bars.•• And Vicky Cafasso. whose family Vittorio's Restaurant at Warner Av- enue and Sprin&dale Street said: "I'm afraid of what our customers Wlll think is goini on there:· Spa owner Sus1l' Honi is being forcut out of her p~nt location at 1743419 Be.acb Blvd .• by a I 981 cit)' ordina.ncc. That measure prohibits. "ad Wt businesses... from beiaa located! within 200 feet of residences, SOO fee~ of a school or church and I 0,000 feei of another-adult business... i Hone and others~ pvco thrcC years to fiad new 6-dlitics that ~ requirements. c The Ptannina Commission pvc." Ho114 a permit to opeI&tC. at thc::il~ locauon last month but reconsidcre6 the action aft« recci vina pctitio reportedly con= 3, l 00 · turcs of those o to 1 Commissioners also IC,)t a writ (Pleue eee llASSAG&/Aa SiJpeTv,sorfJ OKJiSramedlc t'i;ai.nlnj contrilct . ,.. . - By JEFF ADLER .. contract that first surfaced a wee "lt seem . u tho~ we ~ve av~ Feb. I. 1985. in ·time to put DCW or ... D911J,.....,. ago. fine fr'Oltin& rclauooshlp now. parimodics ·on the urcct bcfi re 1 Th~ Oranae County Board of Ncstande said ~hilc laudina efforts paramedic Shonagc bccOm acute · SU"'"l'VlSOrs eMurcd Tuesday that the Board Chainnan Harriett Wieder by hospital nciotiators and th~ COUD-' ocxl ummcr, accordina to a po ~ -said the revised qr-cement "ad· • __,; I cca f. ,.. ... _ On. c Fi coonty'1 paramedic pro&ram won't dreascs all the concerns ta.isCd by the ty s cmeracncy m!l;"UJca. sem o • man 1or tn.. nae mancy 1rc need first aid by approvina a n board.'' flee in ba.mmcrina out an acceptable Chiefs AssociatJoo contract to...prov1de tra.ininJ for.new • -. -:;;---. -.41ttment. ---· -B«iux ~ninacJ&ssesli t sf~ paramedics. • Daniel Freeman Ho ,pitat o~cial Supervisors overstt paramedic• month !i-~ chie~ ~ con~ Supervisors unanimously en· 0 had no trouble at aU cleanna up tra.inina fbr all city fired putmcnts thatdclay1ngcontrac11pprovat mi&h1 dorscd siptin& a proposed co!'t.ract contract tanauaae th.at was dc,emCd as weU a the county fire <kpartmcnt. jet?~ IOMc fire dtpa.~mcn~· with the Daniel Freeman Ho p1tal in vaaue by the County Counsel • Of· . ability.to ft.llly taff paramedic un1u JnaJewOod for paramedic trmnina face, added Supervisor Bruce ~.e new rontract ?lls for the first ncitt ummer. after ckarina up problems in the • Nestande. 4-tra1n1na d to begin no later !ban But the a ia&ion's president. • Long-awaited Irvine theater moves ever ~loser to reality NEW S PlRSPECTl\E • . . Carter biiil reduced o $100,000 . LB .. -· • o.ke queen gets.5 year$· Ofl! n u minor fi ure an 1h COOlllne 0 tion who anvoh ment ocntertd on doing bodkkttJ!l CrOJcy · vt'n Credit for ltic fhc months c been jailed he 1ll be freed nc t month. Moblt'y, 24. will be S<"ntenC'Cld Nov. 4, He i& btina held at Temunal 1 land on S4 million bail 1nd fitcn 4S y in prison. • "' A Hunt1n11on Beach re idtnt and a Fullerton Riah School graduate ~-Disney union appeals park ouster ; ---· 1 By die Al •dated Ptt•• sprawlina parking lot . ~.· Previously, coun rulings in other Union leaders represtntingstriking cases ha~ permitted picketing on ! .. Disneyland employee~ said they ~11 pnvate propeny such as parking lots 11 ~ • coun ruhng rcstnctm& that are used bt the public to gain • p1ckctingat tbc Anaheim amusement access to struck facilities. 'n.11-'--·"" "Park officials were .. pleased" by the Orange County Superiqr Court ruJin&. ~id spoke~oman Sydne Commissioner Greer Stroud aranted Huwaidi. · a temporary restrawng order Tues-Meanwtiile, a nqotiation session ·<taytorbidding union members from was held Tuesday with no apparent piclccting on private property near proVCss. It was the first barpining • Otsncyland's main ticket booths. session since Sept. 20, and no ad- The ticket booths are about a ditional mec11nas were set. quarter-mile inside the amusement .. Nothing was aocomphshed, other par.k's propeny lmc. beyond its than what was andicated m our " .. . . CoNTIN uro S10R1Es ,. .....__ FREEWAY FEE PLAN OK'D.~ t announcement... said Disneyland spokesman AJ Aores. He said amusement park ne10- tiaton ~ d &i ven lead~rs of the five lrikina unions written assurance that the company's proposed reduction of frin benefits would not affect ut· rent' Disneyland employees. But the com~ny reiterated at the mectina that it& previous. offer. which wu ovcrwhelmingl~ rejected by union mcmberi; was ilS .. final" ~posal. Tbc company's latest offer call for a two-.yearwage freeze11td reductions in fringe benefits for pan-timers and those hired in the future. .· SI billion San Joaquin Hills. Eastern and Foothill corridors. con_dem1ng freeway design and in& shared responsiblity for the de- assessment rates. st~ oonstru~.Jllld.Jinancin&.of three freeways. . ... ·~ But in •adopting the proararn, )araeJy in the undeveloped south • MQrn · n g}9w clou ds. then fair ' , COiiital TOOAY leoolldlow 12 18pm so 8eoon0Ngll 6:11pm 10 TMUMOAY Flrtltow H>7 Lm 0, '1rat Ngtl 717•111 45 ,.,.., '°" , Ol•tn 26 8-ldfllvll l'llO p"' 62 ~ ... lod-r et e SI P-"'• ,..._ Tllundlly at• ct.,,,. n eeitt 18ain., IJ.apm Moofl ,_ '°*Y el I oQ pm~ -al 1t Cl A.II\. TilurNeJ end,_ ~ • C Uptl\ Tempera titres n 31 OtMIFllllt 17 42 Hlll'tlorcl .. 42 ........ II I 1 • konollllu • .., ~'!'!....i.... If 45 ......._ n *' ..-..-.• IJ41 ~ •1 40 ..._ IO .. ~CnJ ... 4t 1Mli419M n 47 UUl9"9dl n ,, toe N!llllD t1 11 ~ • u ---- 73 .. , 12 n 10 .. .. 7a 74 .. ,, '5 ,. . 7t iO la 41 1i • n M 71 N n II .. 44 11 10 .... ,,. 1' 16 ti 31 .. M SuRf REPORT Ml.n---~ .......... ~ _, Hitw OMlill9 NawYOlll NorlOll.V& NOrtll~r OMahl OltlrlGe ~ ,,_.. ~ Me ~111n41.0r ,,.~ AallO AlclllmClnd --~ tl.GIM • 8t,...._T8Jft'ICIA ... ~Qly leftM*onle hn ""°° 8M FrtindlOO hn Jua/\,f'.I\ ltl1e .. ., .. a.tile ~-== ..,._ ·~ r_.. ~, w ~ ....,...,. ·······°' IRVINE THEATER NEARING ~EALITY •.• From Al • · n " .. ti .. ti G .. ti ,. " ., ., .. .... fl :: 10 .. ., JO IO 71 n 11 • ta .. If ,. 11 n 17 71 .. 11 a u 16 a • '° ,, IO at .. at .. " .. M .. IO If to 0 10 .. , .. ., ., • ., --· u .. II .. .. ll .. •1 .. 71 41 49 41 AO .... 40 Cl " .. 4t 14 u 40 $UlfCSt.ed to Bumbcra that theater The university bas aareed to pTOJCCt appeared to be dead. provide land for the community ~county, supervisors ~ 10 fine tune the program before January to t0corporatc concerns ra1sed . by af- fected cities, most l\Otably Irvine. " The county and the oounty Trans-The Pf'OIJ1lm is expected to add at portat1on Comm1ss1on aJ0111 with the least S 1, 109. on ave"' e. to the cost of cities of Irvine. Newport Beach, homes built aJong the freeway cor- Orange. Anaheim and Tustin will ridors. The.feesforeacb~velopmcnt begin meeting together to work out a actually will be =:::.,by the CX>Opcrau~1egat a~ment<1esigm1~ ~h:ost o4'. the . ay~· • -· a theater lease and operatina asree· ment with the university and return · the document to the council for -"My respon was, 'Perhaps ~ ~ter. Jt>-Hthange. UCI will have dead. but dyina."' she recalled. the o~tion to use at least one-third of ... ... , .................. ~ll!!!l!!l!!l!l!!ll!!!!l!l!!ll!!!!l!l!!ll!!!ll!!!l!!l!!!!!l!!!!lll!!lml ............. lml!I ............................ -- ~MASSAGE PARLOR PE.RMIT DENIED ••• .. From Al repart from Police Ch1ef Earle Rob- itaille that cited two alleged viol- , ations of city law. one in 1982 and , again in 1984 and an alleged violation ·of the Caltforma Penal Code in 1984. A i'.iuntangton-Beach policeman 5&.id today the· alleged .riol,ltions mcluded solicitation of an act of prostitut1~n and not covenng the genitals of a patron dunng a massaae. He was unsure of the d1sposition of the charges. Spa owner Hong told com- missioners: .. I don't do anything wrong in m) profession. rm a good Christian." Roland Clark. who tdentlfied himself as the owner ofthc C.alifomia College of Physical Arts in Hunt- inaton Beach, said Hong's operation "1s very, very therapeutic in its approach. She has the highest stanrdards. She does not allow illcpJ activit1cs. She's not uash. She bu a son who 1s an engineer and another who 1s studyina marine biology." Hong declined to sa) if she plans to appeal. PAROLEE SUSPECTED OF RAPE ••• \ From Al Richard George Miller. 34. was arrested Monday by Los Anieles police and turned over to authonties 1n Orange Count} "'ho are invesuaat- . BB CHECK ... From Al U\8 a residential robbery in Anaheim. Miller was then hnkecho a rape reported m Fullenon Friday and two rapes reported m Fountain Valley, according to detectives in the two cities. The Fountain Valle) rapes -one reported Thursday and the other Monday -have alarmed residents taken by a local photpgrapher. on Morning Glory Avenue where Another financiiT possibility, she both attacks took place. said, would .?e to convert thc~~r (••In ~h incidents. the assailant posters into ~1g.saw puzzles and mi!'-reponccl''f) drove around rcs1dcnt1al ket them nat1onally. streets near Mile Square Park, somc- C1ty Adn:un1strator Charles times stoppmg and askmg d1rect1ons Thom~n satd offic.1.als will pursu,c for a parucular street The man was collectJon of the debt .~h1ch we can t described as short. skanny. blond and forgJve and ~v~rJook because tax· probably )n his mid-30s. payer money is anvolvcd. lo both attacks detectives said the He .sa1~ the city "alway.s charges" knife-wielding ma n forced his way orgam~t1ons ~or extraordinary costs into homes where he raped and for J?Ubhc serv1ces. robbed women. leaving them tJed up. City Attorney Ga!I Hutton saad a He was seen dnvmg a dark colored bounced check constitutes a v1olat1on mini-pickup truck. poh~ added. of state codes and the matter could be fountain VaJ Icy dctccuves would turned. over. to the d1st~ct attorney. not discuss the possible breakthrough S~c sa1d. however. that mttJal efforts m the rape cases today. They said an wiU be ma~e to collect the money, annouccment was planned later an , ; perhaps 1J1 installments. the da;, Delect1vcs in Fullerton. me.an· while, said they will ask the district attorney's office to file charaes apinst Miller today in connection with a rape reported last week Fullerton Detective Cecil Rcett ~1d ~1tller as the pnme suspect tn the rape of a 32-year-old housewife who lives· on the west side of Fullerton Police said the woman. as in the Fountain VaJlcy attacks. was as- saulted tnStde her house. Maller already is facing robbery charges m Anaheim. He is being held at the UCJ Medical Center Jail ward where he 1s beang treated for inJunes sustamcd dunng a car accident at the time of his arrest. Accordmg to the California De- partment of Corrections tn Sacra- mento, MaJler was released from state pnson last Nov . .3 after servin& a little more than I 0 years for kidnapping. A spokeswoman said Maller entered state prison May 8, 1974 after he was convicted of kidnapping a woman and her two smalJ children in Fullerton tn 1973. She sajd Miller was serving a life sentence and first came up for parole considcratJon 10 1980. ~ ............................................................................ .. .... CARTER FACES BILKING CHARGES ••• From A l approval •Authorized the formation of a non-profit public benefit foundallon to oversee fund raising. construellon and operation of the proposed theater, •Announced the need to fill six positions on the board of directors of the foundation. UCI will fill the remaining three seats. •Directed foundatJon board mem- bers to recommend Jundin1 proposals and a umchne within 120 days of the board's formation. Coun- etl members want to have funding sources identified and a sec~ con- structjon plan implemented in one to three years: •Advised the directors that the council wants the Civic Theater to be a self-sustaining operation tn the long run; •Thanked the members of the local Performina ArU Committee for .. tbcircomm1tmcnt and dedication to the theater project since the commit- tee's formation 1n 1976 ... ;" The committee members also were to consider their task concluded. In the audience when the counc1i approved the steps last Tuesday was. Marlene Bumbera, an ongrnal com- mittee appaintec who had served throughout its ciJht-year existen«. · .. 1 was very reheved and very pleased that our effort was over." she said later. -Refemn1 to the pro$pcc. t1ve foundation directors, she added. .. Now, at's just bcglnnin& for the next group." Sumbera adm1tted, however, that there were a number of low points during her eiJbt~year stmt on the committee, times when she feared the community theater might never be built. About ttirce years ago. a newspaper reporter. reviewing several setbacks, Just .Call ··642-6086 One of the early problems. the u me available in the theater's Bu,mbera said. was finding an ap-schedule. propriate location for the theater. Al one time, the project was to be located in Town Center, an , Irvine Co. commercial OOm{>lcx immediately across Campus Drive from UCI. But Town Center development was de- layed, and the theater location was lost. Another discouraging moment oc- curred in 1979, when a design for the community theater was completed, and comm1uee members learned the price tag bad jumped to $6.S nullion. When the Town Center site was lost, Bumbera recalled, committee members looked intQ joint arrange- ments with Saddleback Colle&e, which has its North Campus in Irvine, and the lrvine Unified School District. Aocordin& io Sumbera. Saddleback lacked (Wlds and wanted a smaller facility, and the school dtstrict faced legal constraints that prevented ats involvement. An amphitheater was al.so con- sidered at the county's Mason Re- g.ional Park in Irvine. but potential noise and parking problems caused that proposal to be ruled out. During the earl_y planning, Bumbera said, UCI officials WCTC not interested in the community theater project because the campus was constdcred as a possible site for the larger Oran&~ County Perform1n1 Arts Center. That facility is now bemg built an Costa Mesa. But about two year aio. the university officials did express interest m the community theater. City Councilmen David Sills and Larry A&.ran had initial talks with UCI officials, then a wk force of city and un.iversity reprcscnJ,atives work~ on a more format proposal. Bumbera said the campus already bas rwo smaller theaters that are "booked solid.~· -Deanna ManninJ. Irvine's director of community scrv1oesi said local ans sroups such u the Irvine Community Theater, the Jrvine Symphony Or- chestra and the Irvine Childre~s Chorus now must use cfaurc:nes an(f recreation centers for \heir ~ formanccs. The proposed 1 Civic Theater, however, has been dcsipled specifically to accommodate such events. She said the facility won't compete ~with the 3,000-seat Orange County PcrforminJ Ans Cent.et, which .is targeted for la.r&cT productions of more reaionaHntere1t. But there is competition, she ~ knowledp:d, for monetary donations. The Oranae ~unty Pcrf ormina Arts ~enter is trying to raise SSS million. Still, Mannina supested that Irvine residents arc interested in expanding the cultural activities in their community and will suppon the proposed Civic Theater. "It isn't goina to be easy to raise the money," she said. "But as we move forward on this, I'm becom.ina more and more opumistic." Bu mbera added, .. We have 1everal thinas 1oin& for us. We bav~ a terrific site. We have close to S 1.S million in the bank. And there bu been a beiahtcned awareness of our (per- forming arts) space deficiencies in Orange County. There are Iota oflittle theaters wi th 200 to SSO 1eats. This will be·the ont)-theater that leats an intermediate-size (750-scat) au- dience." Wlt11 do you like abo•t Ute Dally P ilot? What don't yoa lite? Call e number at left and yoar mesaaae wlJl be recorded, transcribed aacl cleUvere4 to the a ppropriate editor. · The same U·boar u swertas 1trvlce may ~ used to record lenen to die editor on any toplc. Coatrlbaton to our Letters cohama mHt laclade lllelr n.me and telepbou namber for verlflcatlen. No clrc•latlon c1ll1, please. Tell us what's oa yoar mlnd. Carter was arrested and hool.:t'd at the count;, J&•I Monda) lollowmg an 18-month Sheriffs Department in- vesttgataon that concluded Caner was operating a classic pyramid scheme tn which old investors would be paid o fT W1th money from new investors from S500 000 to SI 00.000 Tuesday but the businessman has been unable to come up with bail money as of late this morning. rival Disneyland, accordtng to fncnds and former employees ,------~-::---------------------------------- A tarae sroup of investors who hope to rescue their money have asked that Carter be allowed to pursue bis plans for the • Las "V cgas amuscm!nt er s attomey Shenffs fraud investigators said Carter. 32. bilked investors out of as ~ much as $75 m1llton. Nearly half the ••"money came from Oranie County· residents. 1nvest1gaton noted Harbor Coun Munic1pal Judge Frances Munoz lowered Carter's bail Caner was ordered to appear at the Newport Beach courthouse on Oct. 10 for arraJanment. He faces 22 counts of arand theft and 44 bounts of felony security v1olations. A former Otsneyland employee who once played the role of the Disney canoon character Goofy. Carter had dreams of openina a theme amusement park that would DONOVAN CANCELS TRIP ••• -rromAl · defenda.n.Ls are a~cused of inflatina the value of work on a subway construction job in 1979 and ovcr- cb.arainJ the New York Transit Au~ority_by $8 malhon. P~'s bid for re-election is brinsoontested by Lois Humphries. a DemOCT'lt from ~an 1dc. wd Caner did not end up m hot water for has amusement park plans but rather for something called "medical factoring." Sheritrs iovestiptors saad Caner, as president of lrv1ne-bastd Tom Caner Enterprian, Inc., soltc1tcd investment in .. medical factoring" m which unpajd medical insurance claims would be purchased at a discount from doctors and hospitals. C•rter said a profit of up to 40 percent wouJd be realized when insurance companies paid the full amount, invesllgaton reporte~. H11 business was shut down m late 1983 and nearly SJO m1llton in a ets frozen The assets include sevcraJ homes, a fleet of car& and proper;y on the Las Vega\ Stnp. ORAN E COAST • Clrcua.Uon 71•/&U-4333 '="°' ... , ttQU9rllfte.d Daily Pilat H. L Schwartz Ill Publisher Roaemary Churchman Control! r t,p n F. Carazo Pr0t1uc11on M nager Donafd L. WUllAIM 1rcutat1on · Maoag r .I' f ' C .... lfled edfff1J .. ng 714/M2·5171 AU othef department. 142~1 MAIN OFFICE J30 Wft4 fl J I C(iilh WN CJ, Mll4 ..,.,._ 00. 4MCI ~It U!'M C'.A THE TALK AROUND TOWN IS ... • • One of Orange County's fi nest fish houses. Potatoes were exceptional and tartar sauce a classic. ' 1 -/ • • • Herb Baus, Thie Rectstel 1 Restaur.,,t Cnttc • • Provides friendly service, excellent food and comfortable atmosphere. Ouallty and generous portions makes the food a real worthwhile pleasure. ' ' . • Scott R. Wene, Airport Aro Guld• Restaurant Critic ' ' Shark and salmon, both generous portions were cooked to that moment of perfection. 1 r Norm Stanley, O.IJy Pilot . ltestaurant CrttlC • • The dinner portfon of _fresh scabass tias perfectly cooked -moist and succulent. ' ' ~ ~ ' • Lobster tall was remarkably tender and flavorful. ' ' Herb Baus, Aaou the Table Rest.aural'lt Crttlc: I i I - - WF I •f'H SOA Y Ot J Oltf ·~ 1 148·1 ear . e . ·r1so or Orange Coun!Y super- visors want to 18ad air travelers to Ontario Inter- national Airport./ A3 ~ Bozo ·the Clown tosses In his wto In mad dash f or presidency./ Al . :;:::~:~·:;:.:;!(•!-!•!·:-:-:<·:-:-~:·:·:":-:•:.!•!'.•:•:, ' Nation c; .... , .... ...,, ,, • 1'0.• .., FBI agent arrested as Soviet spy .IM Shuttle.naut&ready for Friday launch.JIM ·World Nuns In Beirut live In peace -despite strife around them./84 Peter Ueberroth gets a nice little bonus for the Olymplcs./ Al Eligant airiness and plenty of plants keep- Arthur Val.des• hotels and Newport Beach resl- deoce ••a11ve ... /81 . . Attention to maintenance Is the key to landscaping succesa./82 Sport8 The Chicago Cubs and Detrblt Tigers post con~ vlnclng vtctorles In the opening day of the baseball playoffs./D1 SunsetleaguefooM:>aJI teams prepare for final tuneups this week before the opening of league play./D1 Corona del Mar recovers from bad start to trim Laguna Beach In glrls volleybfJll ./D2 Entertainment "Sugar .. at the San Clemente Community Theater compares favorably with the Los Angeles productlon.LB3 Bulneu I Financing,, land costs blatned for rise In housing costs./A1Q A7 ee A3 A10-11 A'4 ().t.6 88 oe -/ · es C1·"12 81·2 05 82 A11 A'4 M 81 . A3 ,M·S ·d1·3 A12 82 83 A2 A4 ' e . ueeil' Mr. April and Mr. /&aau•t Newport Beach flrefl&hten lllke 1'ewbeny. left. and Paul llathet., dlht. admire thauel•ee In the 198& FlreFozee ailendar, featart.nc Oi'aDa(e CoaDtJ flreflCbten u photo- pphed by PeaJ 8arnefi, center. The caleaclan, which benefit the UCI Rect.lcal Center Bai'D Unit. wW be on eale ID localboobto1'e8 ~thlamonth or can be~ for $7.95 each at the Santa Barbara •treet fire station open home Oct. 13. .. -.Street f ait in hock · to· city · HB bustnessmen·s check for ser:vtces bounces second timet BJ ROBOT 8.AllEB ....... ....._ list mo1n1t•1 muds ball'vt.n.,_. .. Main Event stn:et fair in Hn~· • Beach turned oat 10 be a fin1nci1) and a $9.262 cbcck made out 10 city by the doWmowD t.ni~ who s:pnnwjr:d the event hasbou:Dcell twice. it WU learned Tuetdey. The c¥ck from the the Downtowli Machanu ·Guild of Huntinstod ~which wusU~ 10psy (Qi city police lll"Vices and dCaa'up~ for the four-day festival oa · (PleUe .. IDUT/ Donovan won't visit ~oastGOP . l WomanrµaysueCosta Mesa . after being struck by golf b~n: By tile Associated Pre11 Secretary of Labor Raymond J. Donovan canceled a scheduled ... ap- ~nce at a Orange County fund· raising event after being indicted by a New .York grand jury Rep. Ron Packard said. -.. Donovan, who was ch.lrgcd Tue~ day in connectioq with past activities as a construction executive, was to be the featured 1uest at a S 12S.a·pcaon reception in San Juan Lapistrano for the Carlsbad .Republic..n on Ot:t. t 1. Packard said he w.u diS8ppoi.nted l Pleue ece DONOV AK/ A2) . Raymond Dono•an Hunttn on victim ponders le al action BJ TONY SAAVEDRA Ot .. Dllr ........ The last -thing Donna Skidmore expected when she bent to drink at a water fountain at the Costa Mesa Golf and Country OUb was to end up with a mouthful of golf ball and broken teeth. The 58·)car-old Huntinaton Beach woman was whacked by a golf ball July 10 as she stood at a drinking fountain about 120 feet from the ix th ~on the facllaty's Los ~os course. A$1 million claim filed AUS. IS by Skidmore and her busbnd JCJTy against the city of Costa Mesa. owner of the municipal golf coune. was rejected Monday by the City Council While Skidmore can look back on the accident with some humor today, her mjuries WCTC anythina buffunny. She has underaone plastic SWJCf'Y to replace almost the entire left idc of her upper lip, which was tom away by the errant ball. She lost thrtt of her upper front teeth, while her bouom teeth fractured. She expcctS to bave a permanent scar from the bottom ~ side of her nose to her upper lip. ' ..I look like a pri.zcfiabter." lai6 Skidmore, in a teJePbone ill · Tuesday. I ~social life is zip." edded ~ 4S.year~ld hU5bl.nd. who was SWKP. ins next to the tee and-watched , ball .. So riabt into her face." Skidmore was seekins S600.000 ~ the dam.age to her mouth and .i!!J while beT husband asked forS..00 .• ~ foe the emotional distress of .. lcssJy .. watchins t.bc IQCidenL (P1eue .. GOU/ ~ • • I • Su · ~tvisors OKparamedic training·co:a.tract By JEW LE; J contract that fint surfaced a wttk "It sccmfas though we have a veri Feb. 1. l 985. in time to put new ot .. Dellf PUet...., ago. fine working relationship now, paramedics on the street before a The Orang County Board of Board Chairman"' Harriett Wieder Nestande said while lau<iing effort paramedic shorta;c becomes acute · Supervisdrs ensured Tucsdaay th.att~e said the revised ~ment .. ad· by hospital ncaotiators and 'the coun· next um mer, accordina to 1 poke. 'county's paramedic prosram won't dresses all the concerns raised by the ty's emergenq medical rvic:c of-man for tJie Orange County Fu-e need fint aid by approvina a new board." -fi~ in hammerins out an cceptable ~--· _Association. contract to pr.ov1dc t.rainins for new qrecmcnt. &ause the trainina cla last six paramedics.-Daniel Frttman Ho pital officials Supcrvison oversee paramedic month fire chief$ were concerned Supervisors unanimou I)' en· "had no trouble at all' clcarina up training for all city fire dcpattments thatdda)'i contracappro,aJmi&ht dorstd signing a proposed contract contract lanaua c that was dttmt'd as well as the county fire department. jeopardize me fire dcpanment.s• with lhe Daniel Fru man Hospital in vaaue by the County Counsel's Of· ability to fully tafT paramedic uni lnaJcwood for P1t•1mcdic training fice, added Supervisor Bruce The new contract calls for the fint De-'\ ummcr. · after dcanna up problems !n the Ncstande. trainina cla to bc&in no later than But the a iauon's president. a dream that back more thaQ dozen yean for me local residents. It was conceived in I 72 as one of the IJlll'b and rcaution ·pn:u be constn1 cd in the rap1dlv < v I pt en . P11i s,..... •• Buena Part Fire Cluef Sam Wi said last week that if ·c&alsacs staned near the bcainnina of t:&e ~. there would be no .sbortap of c:cnifted paramedics in t.bC cowny. DIWe1 F~ Hoq:iw will. be paid JOme $214,400 anaually over the 11--montb term of the JMCt pro~ide paramedic traia1n1 • PmltO y, 1 the COUDty CODtrac:led with tbe UCl Medical Center far paramedic uainina tcrVic:ia at u annual cost of$249.143. 'PY!ramid' cited in . Carter case - T · Judge-rul'es· 'Elvis coUStn.' -faces.deportation to Africa lmmiFtion Jud Gcorsc In· dclicato rulma at a deportation bearing TuC1day in Los Angel~ was consisleftt. wittt tate Dcp.irt- ., ment•s recommendation that asylum be denied for f.arJ tt:,en on. 25. of Buena Park~ accordmj «> a sPokes· man fo the lmmi&r1t1on nd Nutu· raliut1on Scr\'tet. •' tettm0n, a fi~)'Ctt'Manne vt>t eran, was d1scha d from th~ Corps and arrested last March by INS officials who said an 1nvei.t1s._ataon had ~vealed he was a SQuth Afncan · national who was in the country ' ille6'1 II y. A federal arand jurv u~quc:Otl) indictN him on four rounts of falsely •claiming U.S. c1t1zensh1p and Ii \Utul nUy.obt nm p:issponantl Social Sccunt) C'lrtl. "As thin s lit nd now he \\Ill t deported, but only aJ\cr the coun runs 1t course;· aid Jo'hn BCUuardo of the INS -Wc'•c not aoin, tu deport tum unul a determination i) m de on the (hantes he t~u:c:~ before tl'le gt1lnd JUl)'•l• Steven on w0t" free on S l 0,000 bOnd, ~i'K!lng':ln ON. 91H'flrMfml ht'drinr. on the 111dictment C'h.arge' S1e\'cn on l'Or\tendl·d his South Afman parents told him he wa bom in Memphis. Tenn., when thty were on \OCation. Authorities said he had claimed to be lhc cousin of Presley, who h\cd in Memphis, and u5Cd the aha\ts E.irl Pr.:sk) and Earl Ste-.enson. r~ ...... ml!I ................................................................... .. li ' • "Disney unjon appeals park ouster By tlM A110C?la&ed Pres1 Union Icade~ repre~nuna stnling Dtsnermnd employttS said they will i ppea. a coun ruling rcstncung p1ckeunaat the Anaheim amusement park. Oran.ac County Supenor Coun CONTINUED S TORI ES Commissioner Grt'er troud granted a temporary rcstraming order Tue~ day forbiddin_g union membe~ from picketing on. private property near Disneyland's main ttcket booths. The ticket booths are about a quarter-mile inside thl' amusement park's propeny line, be)ond its sprawling parlung lots Previously. court ruhngs in· other ca~s have pcfrmitted picketing on pnvate property such as parking lots that art used by the publiC' to gain access to struck facilities. ' -· CARTERF ACES BILKING CHARGES ••• Prom.Al · Carter was arrested and booked at Carter was ordered to appear at the for h1~ aniu~mcnt park plans but Newport Beach courthou~ on Oct. rather for something called ··medical Morning low clollds, then fair " Tides TOOAV S.CO.><t IC>-. 12 1• p "' ~Ml NQll 6 Gap "' TMUM0.4)' 30 60 107 • lft 76)Am 1otam I IO p"' 01 enar~.wv 46 ~.NC 25 ~ 6 2 • CllloliOO CitldnMU ~ ~•c ~-.Oh ~.~ o.llM-'1 WOttll O.,.on Sun Ml• tOClar •1 I 36 P-"' ,_ ,...,,..,., .. 1 •••"' llflCI .... ...-.. '' 1.33 p"' ~ r-•ooar •• a 43 p"' ..... •1 12 •• • "' TnuteOar and r-1111'11 •I • 11 p"' '*'-Dee~ Temperatures =1 EPuo HI le F ... btnlle 49 31 F1tQO 1• 5" Aeem1t :: =~ Gr_,~, .. 411 "_.""' ..... l'I~ i;. u at Gt..-' 11 41 HartlOld .. 42 .....,,. .. 61 HonclNlw 16 Q "-'on 11 ., ~ t2 sa '90.IOI\,.- 13 41 '**-..... 41 .a NlMU IO rs K-.()1p .. LMV .... n 47 Ulllt Aacli n 47 t:i=-., 11 .. 43 11 llO 411 84 78 3& " 81 39 ee lit 59 47 ~ :: Eztended 12 41 48 41 67 47 72 41 et 54 , CoN TI NUlO STORIES - - - - "'~· 73 '1 S2 37 70 3{1 .. " 7• 61 117 i11 76 " 72 IO !12 •2 73 49 73 511 72 S2 73 11 16 44 ..... ~ .._.,YO<lo No;lolli V. Nor111 Plelle Oklafto!M C1b ~· Palt!!I~ .. hltaclllll>hl• ~M Piil= P<H • ..-. ~ Pro~ ::rc.ly JMlo A.cfllllOlld a.tramenlo 8tlOU4a St,...T..._ lbll uuClty SM AlltOtllO ht! Diego 8111 ffaftCleOO IS9ft JuM.P Ill , .......... 8elltlfl = ""*-lr•to.aM TQP9kll TUOtOn , .... W~!Ot1 Wiel\ltl W ... a.re W"""1lellon.Oe em 1-3 1-3 1-a 1-3 1-2 1-2 1·2 , .... Cllftlelloon -"-1 ~ - 12 ,, t7 N ,. •1 .. 47 ~ •• 40 41 11 5t .. &4 Q •O • \he county jai1 Monday following an l8-montl'I Shenfrs Department 1n- ', vestigatton that concluded Carter was operating a classic pyramid scheme in which old investors would be paid off with money fro!Jl new investors JO for arraignment. He faces 22 factonng." counts of grand 1hefi and 44 counts of · heriffs 1nvest1gat~rs said Carter, IRVINE THEATER NEARING REALITY -felony secunty violations. as president of lrvane--basro Tom • • • A former· ..Disneyland emplo)ec Carter Enterprises, Inc.. solicited • · who once played the role of· the mv.estment in "medical factonng" in From Al . • • Shentrs fraud investigators said Disney cartoon character Goof)'. wh1C'h unpaid medical insurance a theater lease and opc"latmg agreC"' su~tcd to Sumbera that theater The unl\·ers1ty has agreed to ~).fl~ -~ll4.. ~~..,_of_Pw.ruD& .a, '~~~~~-~o~~d. .Qe, ~"based~ ai.-.a.--.,JJ\Cnl \'jth ttle um\trs.ity and rctutn ,p~o~.4P~ar~ tp be d~d. _ _ P.rovjdc land~ for the. com.munity Carter. 32 .. bilked .io.~~ ~ of,86. much as $75 million Nearly half the money came from Orange County tlleine amu~metlt park that woulo Jl\Count'irom doctors and hospitals the document to" the counctl for ' rtSponsc was. 'hrfiii>~-not theater. rn t!xcl1;tn , UCl will ha•e rival Disneyland. according to Caner said a profit of up to 40 approval dead, ut dyini.'" she recalled. the option to use at ea~t one-third of· "]"C'Sidcnts, investtptors noted. friends and former employees. percent would be realized when • Authon.zed . the formation of a One of . the early . problems the time available in the theater' A large group oLI.nvestor!I who insurance companies paid the full non-profit public benefit foundation Bumbefl sa1d •. was finding an ap-schedule. • Harbor Court Municipal Judge Francn MunoL lowered Carter's bail from $500,000 to $100.000 Tuesday but the businessman has been unable to come up with bail money as oflate thts momrng. hope to rescue their mone) have amount. investigators reported. to oversoc fund raising. construction prop~aJe locat10.n for the theater. At asked that Carter be allo""ed to His business was shut down m late and opcra&.&on of the proposed onetime, the prOJCCt was to be located ha~ut'!~r:~U!rth~b~~~u~~~a~ pursue his pi,ns for the Las Vegas ~ 983 and nearly S 10 million 10 assets theater; in ·Town. Center, an Irvine. Co. "boo~cd solid.'' amusement park, Carter~ attorney lrotcn The assets include several •Announced the need to fill six commercial com{>lcx 1mmed1atcly said homl·~. a fleet of cars and propert) on pos1t1ons on the board of directors of across Campus Dnve from UCI But Deanna Mannms, ltvine's director Carter did not end up 10 hot water the Las Vegas Stnp. the foundauon. UC I will fill the Town Center development walj de· ofcommunity services, said local ans GOLF MISHAP MAY LEAD TO SUIT ... From At Hunungton Beach attorney Michael Cully. representing the cou- ple, said a lawsuit against the cit) would probabl) be filed within the next six months. Cull) added Slud· more was still undergoing treatment to gel her teeth capped and her hp reconstructed, consequently the cou- ple would postpone the sun until att the medical costs could be de· termined The Slc1dmorcs said the)' pla)ed at least once a week for the past t"'-O or three years at the municipal course at 1701 Golf Course Dnve They don't golf much anymore. "My game has gone off." said JelT). adding that he still has nightmares about the accident that spoiled what•. was to be a pleasant e' enmg of golf. Skidmore remembered teeing off on the sixth hole and walkiag to the fountain thal was ahead and to the right of tl'le tee. As she drank, another golfer from her pany was preparing to drive the ball from th" same tee. "l JUSt came up (from taking a dnnk) and bammo. the ball was there." she said "1 remember m)' teeth fl} mg and. of course. f saw stars and heard bells ·· ~' krry-satd ~watc.-~d the golfer an acquaintance of tht ~k1dmon.''>. \lam the ball ··wa} off LUUN~ ... 'I stood there helplessly and watch- ed It go nght into my wife's fan: ·· He said he rushed her in their own car to Costa Mesa MC'd ical C:enter The Skidmorcs and their allorne' arc claiming tlre fountain 1s 1n 3 dangerous area and c;hould ha'e been placed near the bench and ball washer 75 feet back. Assi tant Cl\) Attorney Eleanor W~ cd'\Jntered'that the 0001'5t' 1S not dangerous and the fa uh I ies ci thcr with the person who hn the ball or the 'l.'ICtim. - "One c;1dc or 1he other didn't look. d1dn'1 'ihout a warning or didn't get ou1 of th~wav." ~1d WeaYIT The )k~dmorcs said the' Wl'rl' unsure wh<.'ther kgal at·11on v.ould be taken agamst the golfer who hit the errant ball. STREET FAIR FINANCIAL FLOP ... From Al Street, has been turned over to the city attorney's office for collecuon or possible legal acuon The etty 1nit1aJly est1mated that · 5erv1ccs would come to more than $9,262 But actual costs now ha'e been figured a1 S6,430 66 That"s the amount the merchants sttll owe. Cit) officials said. "Our expenses came to more than we brought in," Merchants uu1ld E"ecut1ve Director Barbara Javorsk) said today. "We have a negauve balance." The Labor Day weekend festival was held in conjunction with the OP surfinJ championships and drew a combmed crowd of ahout 250.000. according to Javorsk} But the merchanl'i. who d1dn "1 charge adm1sc;1on in their h1J ttJ attract attention to their languishing busine~. failed to fare as \.\.Cll a1 expected in sales of product<i and ol ttemc; at booths '"\\ e expect to pa)-off all our debts:· Merchants Guild President Natahe Kotsch said Tuesda}. ··But we're going to need help from lht• commumtv to bail us out." Kotsch 'Said that much financial hopes was pinned on the sales of color posters of the Huntin&ton Beach Cit) Pier and of specialty T-shirts. Bat neither enjoyed much success. Katsch said the 40·mcmbcr· merchants guild. which went about S29 000 ··in the hole" 1s planning to stage fund-raising ncnt'I to co"e' w~tc, Shl· al'>o ind1c.:ated there will ht.' a pu~h.[or the \ale of the p1c:r posters taken b~ a loc41 photographC!r Another financial poss1b1lity, she ~id, would he to convert the pier posters into Jigsav. puzzles and mar- ket them nauonall~. Cit) \dmin1stra1or Charier,' Thomp'>on said officials will pursue collecuon of the debt· which ~e can"t forgl\c and o"erJool.:" because Un· pa\c:r money ts invol\(ed. He said the "'>' "al""ays charge!i"' organtL.allons ior extraordinar) costs for public serv1res C"lt) Attome} Gail Hutton said a bounced check constitutes a v1olauon of \talc codes and the matter could be tumc:d o"cr to the district attornn ~he c.a1d. howe\er. that m1t1al effort' w ii I ~· made to collect the mon<.'\ pcrhap<i in 1nc;tallments · --COKE QUEEN GETS 5-YEARS ... . From Al Assistant l ~ Attornc\ Mar~ Bon· ner. B«au~ she 1s not a: c1t11cn of the United States. Mohle\:'i wife ""~ ordered deported. · The woman·c; lather and two brothers reportedly ha .. e been hiding out in Colomh1a since narcouc's officer s01ashcd the cocaine nna last May. Prosecutors said the v.oman''i cnure famil y wa!I invol\ed in cocaine smuggling. Earlier this week Moble) 0 \ \1stcr. Ctnd~ Lee Crolc) of Ne~port Rcat·h. "a\ scnu:nccd to six months in Jail for her role in the drug operation. Prosecutor\descnbed the 27-ycar-old \\Oman as ~a minor figure m the cocaine operation whose involve. men t centered on doing bookkecp1 ng. Croley was given credit for the five DO NOV AN CANCELS TRIP... ~o~~d ~~~th~o~~ jailed ~he will From Al . Mohley, 24, will he -.cntcnctd Nov. ~ He 1s being held al Terminal Island that Donovan would not attend. defendant~ are accu~d of mOattna on $4 mitlion hail and foC'es 45 years 'l have every reason to behc .. e that the yalue of. work on a ~ubway 1n prison. ht' will ultimately prevail in what construcllon JOb in 1979 and over-A Hunltniton Beuh rc-.1dent and a 1 ·appears to bt' a pohtically motivated "CharginJ the New York t ram.11 Fullerton High School graduate. l>artisan proceeding." Packard \aid. Authonty b)' $8 million. Mobley · wa\ identified as the rina· Donovan, nine other people and Packard'\ hid for re~lcct1on 1' leader of the C'OC4ine businc\ . whil'h wo compamc1 pleaded 1nnoccnl beinacont u-d l>.> l.01 Humphn~ a smuwed more than n ton of the drua Tuesday to 137 felony charges The Democrat from Oceanside into (';range Count) la\t )Car. ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat H. l. Schwartz Ill PubhShPr Roaemary Churchman Control! • ltttphan F. Cerezo Production Mnnngm Donald L. Wlltlam1 C•rcul<1l1on Man nr • Circulation 714/'42-033 CtaHUl9d .ad~"&l9'ng 7141542-5871 'Atf other department• M~-4321 MMN OFFICE remaining three seats. layed. and the theater location was groups such as the Irvine Community •Directed foundation board mem· lost. Theater. the Irvine Symphony Or· bers to recommend funding Another d1scouragina moment OC· chestra and the Irvine Children's proposals and a t1mehne wtthtn 120 curred in 1979, when a des1an for the Chorus now must use churches and ·day of the board's formauon. Coun-communll) theater was completed, recreation center\ for their per· cil members want 10 have funding and committee members learned the fonnances The proposed CIVIC ·sources identified and a secure con-pncc tag had Jumped to S6.5 million. Tfieatcr. however. bas been designed '>lruct1on plan implemented m one to When the Town Center site was spec1fically to accommodate such three )cars; lost. Sumbera recalled, commmee events. • .\d\ 1scd the directors that the members looked into Joint arrange- councal wants the Cl\ 1c Theater to be ments with Saddleback College, a ~If-sustaining operauon 1n the long which has its North Campus in run; Irvine, and the Irvine Unified School •Thank~ the members of the D1s_tnct. Accord~in to Sumbera, local Performing Arts Committee fOr Saddlcback lacke 1 and w.antcd "'the1rcomm11ment and ded1cat1on ro a smaller fac1ht . and the school the theater prOJC<:t since the commit· district faced lepl constraints lh3t tee's formation in 1976 .. , " prevented 1ts involvement. ., The committee members also were An amphitheater was also con- to coruidcr theu task.coqcluded sidcred. .al~ county's Mason Re· In the aud1enn when the council gional ·park in Irvine. but potcnlial appro"ed the steps last Tuesday was noise and parking problems caused Marlene Sumbera, an ong1nal com· that proposal to be ruled out. m11tee appointee who had served During the early planning, throughout its eight-year existence. Sumbera said, UCl officials were not "I was very relieved and very interested tn the cornmu01ty theater pleased that our effort was over," she proJ~ because the campus. was said later. Refemng to tl'le prospcc-considered as a possible site for thd t1H foundation directors. she added. larger Orange County Perforrmng ··r-.:ow it's JUSt beginning for the next Arts Center. That fac1ht) 1s now being group. " built an Costa Mesa. . Sumbera admitted, ho~e"er that But about two year ago, the there were a number of low posnls university officials did express during her eight-year sltnl on the interest in the community theater. commiucc. times when she feared the City Councilmen David Sills and community theater might never be Larry Agran had 1n1t1al talks with built. UCI officials, then a task force of city About three y-ears ago. a newspaper and un1vers1ty representat1 ves reponer, reviewing several sctbacb, worked on a mort formal proposal. d She ~1d the fac1lit) won~t compete with the 3,ClOO-seat Oranic County Performinj Ans Center. which 1s targeted for larger productions of more reJ10nal mtere!ll. But there is competition, he ac· knowledged. for monetarv donations. The Orange ~ounty Performing Arts Center 1s trying to raise $85 m1lhon. Sull Manning suggssted that In inc residents are mtcrestea In expanding the cultural ac\lv1t1cs m their community and will support the proposed Civic Theater. .. It 1sn 't going to be easy to r&Jsc the money," she said. "But as we move forward on this. I'm becomin& morr and more opt1m1stic." Sumbera added. "We have several things going for us. We have a terrific site. We have close to $1.5 million rn the bank. And there has been a heightened awareness of our (per· forming arts) space defic1enc1es in Orange County. T~ arc lots oflittle theaters with 200 to 550 scaa This will be the only th~ater that ~at~ an antermediate·we (750·seat) au· dience." Just Call 642-6086 Wbat do you like about the DaHy Piiot~ What don't you like? Call tbe ., number at lert and your me111ge will be recorded, transcribed and delivered to the appropriate editor. . The same 24-bour answering service may be used to record lettera &o tbe editor OD any topic. Contributors to our Lelters column must lncludf' their name and telepbooe Dumber fer verification No circulation nil,., ple11e. Tell us wbat'1 oo your mind. THE TALK AROUND TOWN IS ... •' One of Orange County's finest fish houses. Potatoes were exceptional and tartar sauce. a classlc:-rr" Herb Baus. The Rettster r Restaurant Critic •' Provides friendly service, excellent food and comfortable atmosphere. Quality · and generous portions makes the food a real worthwhile pleasure. r r • Scott R Wess.. Airport Are Gulde Restaurant Crltk ' • Shark and salmon, both generous portions were cooked to that moment of perfection. r r Norm St•nlcy, Dally Piiot Restaurant Critic •' The dinner portion of fresh seabass was perfectly cooked -moist and succ.ulent. r r • • Lobster tall was remarkably tender and flavorful. r r Herb ~us. Auoss the Table Restaurant Critic Joel c. Don. Dally Piiot ~ Re.i..urllnt Ctlllc • • Adding to the Intimacy of the moment, s a backaround of relaxing piano musk, by Dave Bartly seven nJ.ghts a week. r ' PcUY Hutfm.n, Atrpon Buslnes • Journ.tl Restaur1nt Critic • • McCormick's Landing should be on everyone's llst of preferred dining locations. It Is one of those places that should be visited on a r ular basis to avor the variety of food on the menu ..• my ratln uperlor. ' ' • Mk Wino r ot South tn Callforn a Re:ttaurant Writer II rAHrdOfM l I