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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1984-10-10 - Orange Coast PilotB p~tting brake$ on cruiser Ordinance sought to stop motorists citations to motoristi who repeatedly drive up and down specified streets. idered Nov. 13 after City Attorney Rohen Burnham draf\i lan&u.aae to comply wuh a ltlte law ~ling cruising. 1'.hat law, aJthouab passed, docs not ao anto cff'ca until Jan. l, Burnham said. from coQstant party seeking The proposed ordinance was in- itiated by complaint larraummer by residents livina on SeaSbore Drive who were bothered by motori cruising in theu nci&h~ood look- ing for panies, says councilwoman Ruthclyn Plummer. By ROBERT HYNDMAN CM .. .., ........ A city ordanance that would put the brakes on cnaisi~ on Newpon ~b'1 Seashore Drive and in other Coaat Thia year's lrvlne Harvest Festival was the biggest In the event's ~-year his- tory./ AS Callfomla 'Burning Bed' docu- drama prompts hun- dreds of caJls from bat- terid women./ Nation Obese boy loses 100 p'Ounds after his stomach Is stapled.I Al Studentiit Brown Uni- versity vote today on stocking suicide pills on campus./A4 Archaeologists at the Louvre In Paris are battl- ing over finds./ Al The Spanish ambassador to ebanon Is kldna~ped In Beirut.I 5 ·How can a consumer guard against Inter- ference on JI cordless telephone?/81 Ftnd put where to buy and how to use the latest materials for decorating at the Fabric Fair ./81 John McNamara, who has told the Angels he won't return as manager for the 1985 season, re- portedly tias told friends he'd love to manage the Boston Red Sox./D1 Things aren't expected to get any easier for the win less Orange co·ast College football team Saturday afternoon./D4 Entertainment Ao Americanized British farce la lapping up the laughs at the Harlequin Dinner Playhouse.Jae BuslneU (__/ Stiff competition Is forc- ing layoff a and ah riveted profits ori U.S. firms In the midst of robust economic expanalon./87 . • : .. x-:-.-..:-:·:·:.:·:~:<·:·:««-:-»x-»:-:«-:·:<·) 87 A3 A11·12 A5 05-7 07 88 C1·14 B3 81·2 oe B3 A132 A5 A10 81 ·~ 88,0..& 01-4 A14 84 IM·O • A2 , A5 co~ areas it bein considered by city official The City Council discussed a proposed measure Tuesday that would enable police officers to i ue FluOr · to sell • •• site 1n Irvine En ineertn firm will remain on land. however By PHIL SNEIDERMAN °' .. ...,,... .... Auor Corp. is preparina to sell its Irvine headquarters and SWTOundina undeveloped acreage for · $340 _ alillion, .bu\ co~rate officials aid the siant engineering company wiU - remain in its familiar green &lass complex throuah a leasina arrange· ment with the new propeny owner. Al a result, 3,200 Fluor employees, about IO percent of the company's total work force, will continue to report to Auor'• existioa Irvine facilities off the San Dieao Freeway near Jamboree Boulevard. Auor has tentatively aarecd to sell the property to Trammel Crow Co., a ·major DaJJu.bascd real estate de- veloper. The sale includes the office com- plex, IOS acres of improved land, 32 acres of Partially improved land where emplo)ec recreation facilities are located and 2S acres of unirn- -proved laii<i. all bOunded by the fn:ewa_y, am® Boulevard and Diego Fluor officiab said t}le company will show an after-tax ·profit on the sale of approximately S 180 million, which will be listed on earninp over a I ()..year period. The deal is be com- . pleted in about six months. Fluor purchased the land in 1974, built a two-million-sq~foot Jlau- sheatbed complex to house its anter- (Pleue Me FLUOR/ A2) The ordinance will next be con- Burnham id the ordi nee af approved by the council ould atio police to establish pecific areas Where cruising would be prohibited. .,, .... JIJ One for the Tl.gen . '_ i;>etnlt pitcher Jack llorrla (center) la coqiatnlated by teamm1te. Dan BerlJ"ID (left) and DaDce "Patrlah after iO~ the dlatance for a 3-2 Tfctory Oftl' the San Dl~o Pad!W In the flnt aame of the 1984 World Seda. See Sporta, Pace 01. for Cletana. Deputy tells court he was hired to murde·r ·woman . · Suspect's lawyer claims entrapment by authorlttes BJ JEFF ADLER OfllleCW, ........ An Orange County Sheriffs deputy who posed as an undercover hit rtlan took the witness stand Tuesday to testify how he had been hired to kill the estranged wife of a S7"'Ycar-old Laauna Nisuel contractor. fnvestiptor Roben Giles de- 1eribed for a six-man, si:1-woman Superior Coun JUry how he tape recorded several meet~ and tele- phone calls during which defendant Frederick Penney alle&CdJy arranaed topayS3,000forthe murderofbis )4.. year-old wife, Susan. His testimony came on the o~ina day of Penney's trial, wh1cb is expected to continue for the next two weeks in Judge Jean Rbeinbeimer's counroom in Santa Ana. Penney, who has been held without bail in the Oranae County Jail since his July 1984 arrest, is cbaraed with one felon)' count of solicitation of murder. rr convictcdohe could be sentenced to a maximum six-year prison tenn Penney's lawyer, Olnstian Dillon of Dana Point. claims his client was (Pleue ... llVRDBR/A2) ... Plane Crash halts . consideration of JWA high-ris~ Supervisors· decision on multi-story construction near airport held off a month BJ .JEFJI' ADLER ............... The cruh of a private p).ane into a build.in& near John Wayne Airport OD Sunday has siveo peuse to Or-. County supervisors who were to consider pcrmittina muJti-stoty con- struction near the airport today. Supervison unanimously apeed 10 de.lay a decision t.h&t would ~it construction of hi&b:.rise buddiags near the airport until Nov. l 4,-wben a full repon and recommendation from the county Airport Comnu ion is expected. ln asking the delay, Supervisor Thomas Riley noted that the com- -mission-wants to investigate furtba: "the safety aspec;ts of allowina build- ings to penetrate the air pace." Supervisor Bruce Ncstande. In acn:ei a dclay WIS DCCC ua/)'1 Su~ I Caul crub IDd me :illue of hi&b-nte constnactioD near the air- port obyious)y are dotdy rda1elL 1bc COWlty is comidcriftl ldliD& • the rigbt to build hiaJ:Hite buildi near the airport :in area where Z Federal Aviation Adminisuatio9 deems the build..ini woWd poee hazard. to llr traffiC usina ~­Wa AiipOrt. ~airpon commillioe • IChed· uledtoconsidcrtheissueatitaNov. 7 mceu~rdinato~. The pline cnish. into a bu4)dina at the ioiersc<:Uoo of Dove 8trect &Del CafD1'\,ll Drive, daimed the ifie of Sanu Ana pilot Cloyd HoultoD Klinsensmith, S4. Driver seriouslx hurt~ in Canyon Road crasli ByDAVIDB OP ...., .... c. •• 1 t ASaota Ana man suffered ma ve bead injuries and a broken back early . this momina when his car Yoent out of control on Laauna Canyon Road, crashed into a clitch and caupt fire, police sajd. The car exploded shortly after the motonst was pulled from the wreck- age by off-duty Laauna Beach police 1ClCf Lance Imm.el and tifaed man. Both '#etC drivi111 by and _ the ovcrtw'Ded vehicle 1'ith a · oo fueat l:OS a.m. accident happened OD a straight slretcb of reed. abOut o and-a-half miles inside I •mu1 city limits, police said. Michael EU8CDC Brn.er, 34. who wis alone in the car. is listed in critical fP1eue ... LAQUllfA/ A2) . Anti-Prop. 36 foes -etting organized 1n Orange County By JEFF ADLER ... ...., ....... Call.int the ~bate prov~1odfoftax­ Slashina Proposition 36 a .. bnbe" for propcrty-owruna voters. a coalition of Orange C()unty orpruzations Tuesday announced they bad banded toacther to fiaht the so-called Jarvis rv initiative. .. Proposition 36 1s not Proposition 13 and 1t does anythsna but ·save' I 3. Proposition 13 1s ahvc and well and atl Proposition 36 does is to &i'\'e a tax break to those who already pay the ~west taxes,." said attorney Susan ll'lger. chairman of tbc Oransc C()unty anti-Proposition 36 orpniza- tion, an off. oot of the californiau Apinst Pro~tion 36 campajp. .. The Oranee County efl'oft will be aimed at showing Mr. Jarvis is .,ina loo far this time. He's otrcrina a bribe to voten to approve a rebate for themselves, .. Trqer said. She said the county anti-36 effort is d,.wint support from.many county sroups. includillJ the of Women Voters, SL Joseph's pi. Lil. tbcOtan.ICCouniyd.1v· ·on of the l.equc of Cities, tevcr'al labor un- ions., water districts and parcnt- tcacher associalio r • TM local campaign will focus OD (PleUe ... nOP. 36/ A2) HB writer beats .. the odds against being published ROBERT BAlllEI PEOPLE IN THE NH\S • .. .. • .. • -' ... ~·Orange Ooal1 DAILY P LOT/Wednetday. Oc'tober 10, 1 84 Nurse _admits drugs thefts from hospitals in county 8 RO ERTBAR R CMae ... "9t A 31-year-old nuflC-8n~lheti l ~$ tonrcsSt'd lO Steahn the pain·ktlling d~ morp inc and Drmcrol from boapitab in Founaio Valley, Co ta M nta Ana 11.n.d O~n e. f oun- t.ain Valley ~the Ocnnll Minna id today. 8ri et Lynn T~~'Y of Newpon Beach admitted the ven burglaries· or burilary attempts in the presence of htt attorney al an interview at Fountain Valley Pohcc headquaners Wednesday. Tracy also confessed tu an at- tempted buf'l,lary at.Hoa& Memonal HO$J)ital in Newport Beach but 1aid she f.ailed to get drugs.. Detective Minna said. The aunc allegedlv uSC'd the exact . . ~ method in II h pu I burglnri • rdi toMinn ~he would to tM mechctll noor o the ho pital Where she would find locked mobile medicine cans. When no one was looldn she would roll lhcm l\\'a)' nd pry them open with a screwdriver she cpl in her purse. Minn aU~ed. ''l titheve he oecds medical t~t· ment for a drua problem. She said be had mtttnal prcssu~ and person.al problem5 but \A.Uuldn•t elaborate.'' Minna said. The ~uspect, who alleg~-dly ii\jccu:d herself whh morphine while tilJ ID the Costa Mesa ho pit.al, acoordin& to Minn • was arrested S:tturda)' after ho p1tal officials became 'uspicious when they found bloody towels that the suspect allegedly used after cut- ting her hand. But the woman was ~leased from ~ iJ on her own~ accord· ang to Minn , aod tltcmp\N to 1teal dru an Hoaa Memonal H°'piw in Newpon Beach Sunday and dtd attal narcoti tl the W tern Medical Center in SanUl Ana t~ m day, he id fountain Valley .police were alencd af\e'r a suspect who was wcarina ti&ht blue jcan and a red blouse stole I 2 J narcotic vials at Fountain Valley Community Ho pital StpL 28 and Oct I. The suspect lricd another burglary at the Fount.a.in Valley ho5pital Saturday. honly before her arn.st in Co ta Mesa for allCCCdJy stcalins SI vials of tM me drua. acc:ordina to Minna. .. We believe e drove straight to Costa Meu 11\er the buraJary attempt 1n fountain Valley." Murder suspect to undergo tests · By STEVE MARBLE Of tM IWlr "-' .... An auorney for a college admin1~ "tratorcbarged with the murder of his former wtfe said today his client will undergo a lengthy scrie of lt'b and evalullions lo dctemune his mental competency . Donald Emil Dawson. 45. ap- peared briefly in coun Tuesday and pleaded innocent to first-degree . ,Reagan s1gns Willett bill; Liberian now U.S. citizen President Re~gan signed an 1mm1- grauon bill Tuesda) that ends a 5an JUH-C&pttlrlno-m&n '"S leAg ~t for permanent residency m the U nited States. Sam Willen, who was orphaned in Liberia, wa/aadopted by Amencan Peace Corps workers David and Ruth Willett in 1972. But the WiJJetts, who didn't know Sam's actual age, were told by 1mau.arauon officials that he was too old to rcmam ID ~e United States as an ad~ted afild. The Willetts have fou t to keep Sam, now in tus late 20s, ere ever since He condiuon tn the mtensive care untt at M1ss1on VieJO Community Hospital with a fractured spine and "massive head iJtjuries." a hospital spokesman said He was transported there by an emergency medical helicopter. No one witnessed the accadcnL Sgt Mike DaVls say$ e'\ tdtna at the scene indic.at.cs that the car v.tS tra'\eltng north at about 50 to 60 mph when n swerved onto the nght sbouldn. tbcn turned back onto thr road. v.-ent through the oncoming Lane and slammed into a din embanlmeot on has ~ucccssf ully fought al least I 0 deportation orders and received as- sistance rrom numerous legislators in hlS attempts 10 remain. work and auend school m the United St.ates. Rep Robert Badham, R-Newport Beach. introduced the 1mm1gratton bill for Willett an the U.S. House of Representatives that guaranteed bts legal residency, and It was adopted m late September. The Senate con- firmed tht b1ll a week later and the prci.1dent's signature was the final step needed. • the far side. The car then apparently flipped over the embankment and into the a1r. landing about 30 yards inside Irvine Co. ranch propeny. Davis said the lack of skid marks indicate that Brewer may have fallen asleep al the wheel Results of a blood test ~ere not 3 \ a1lable Davis saut e~er """ unconetous when pulled from the car and has not yet regained conc1ousnt1s. BrN'tt is an architect "with a last known address in Sant.a 4.na," Davis said murder charges. A preliminary hear- ing was set for Nov. 13. The Irvine man was banda&cd on the .neck where he reportedly slashed himself with a razor blade last week at Orange County Jail. A former policeman and an assis.- tant dean at Saddleback College at the time of bis arrest, Dawson is char&Cd wilh fatally shootma Oona May Dawson at her El Toro home on SepL IS. Mrs. Dawson was a lonJtime nursing mstructor at the Mw1on Viejo community college where her ex-husband also was employed. They were d1\lorce(t lJ) 1982 after a separ- ation years earlier. Dawson aUcgcdJy shot bis wife six times,. using two different guns. accord1ng 10 poli~ reports. Offi~ said they found Dawson standmg near his wife's body. Because of an allegation . that Dawson armed liirnsclf a:nd W.tted for tus former wtfe to return home from her t»yfnend's house, the former policeman could face lhe death penalty. The accident 1s the third involving scnous injuries this year on the twisting. rural canyon road. Three deaths occurred in 1983 and a total of six people have died on Laguna Canyon Road since 1983, said Laguna Beach police Lt. J1m Sprcine. Sprcme attributed the decline to a dayume headlight prosram des1aned lo make people more aware of traffic safety, extra 1raffic patrols, and, he said, "maybe people arc bema a little more cautious." FLUOR TO SELL LAND IN IRVINE ... P'romAl national headquarters and domestt<. engJDccnog operation. and moved m three years later In a prepared statement Fluor Chainnao David S. Tappan Jr ~1d. .. Fluor remains committed to Irvine and Orange County The company's world headquarters and the Southern Cahforma enginccnng center will remain m their current locations " Tappan added, ''There were two pnncipal motivatJng factors m dec1- dmg to sell the facthty. It wilt pro" 1dc the basis for further development of the complex. It will also enhance our financial flc,ub1ht) by generating a substanual amount of cash for gen- eral corporate purposes. mcludmg the further reduction of long-term debt." In tts most recent financial report. Fluor's long-term debt was S643 m1lhon . A year ago. its debt was $786 m11l1on. Fluo r has been mvolvcd ma debt reduction program st nee its 1981 acqu1s1uon of St. foe Minerals Corp. raised the corporation's debt to more than SI billion The r ngrneenng firm suffered a 66 7 percent drop an profits dunng the first three quarters of th1i. vear. PROP. 36 FOES ORGANIZED .•. P'romAl she added. But Fluor spokesman Rick Maslin said thc current property sale "was not eammp-driven. It was done to full y realtu the Lremendous ap,precta- tton on the propeny we own. • He added that the anttc1patcd real est.ate development of the unim- proved property around the corpor- ate headquaners is not Auor's area of cxpenise. Masltn said the lease apcement w1tb Trammel Crow wiU give Fluor the option ofrcmammg at the Irvine sue mdefimtely. 1978. Sun to break through after noon Coa•tal •• • ,. Ii II • u 1\ Ali! .. .. NaflVGt 11 II Nw0!1'!W n • Np\'Oftl YO ' NOii ·"· 76 Of OklMOma Clt,y 71 114 om.ha .. Of Ortll!do .. = ~lloftnoa •oo ~ 0 -l't';Oiinl • Pit= .. ~ .... 11 at lll'Ot1lano ·°' 72 64 PrOVICMIU '1 w =::rcn, ,. .. .. ., Tides l!!Jl!!Jn,.. •• ~. f!J!f:... I' "ONT&: ., ~ ~ ~ Wfllm-COid_. Allr;o 71 IC l'lletlmoflll ., ., s.:1-10 11 .. SILOIM 71 a 01 •1 Sho#ttt Atin Fli.lr1 .. 1 Snow OcctudtO Slll'°'*'f a.,.. 81h&a-flf!lc>t UtLM!AIClty u .. f1 17 Tempe "''°'* w .. i:n.. t.Mct HOM u~ °'1il OI CatwNotCI .. :t2 F~lelf 77 83 Oflnd RIOldt n 57 GrwlF ... 1 I ti Hartloro 41 3'......,. t3 'II~ 74 61 HOul1on 10 "· ~eP<*• 14 52 Jec+.IOft ..... 71 52 '*1!IOfllltlit 70 11 .,.,_ IO U ~City 70 ~ LMVag111 U '8 U111a~ 71 51 17 51 51 •• ... 51 37 30 .. 51 70 15 12 73 1' ., 74 71 13 IO •• 71 to 11 hnAnloNO 181\ Dleeo Ian Ftanelteo 34 Sen Juen.P" &1 S181eMMie " leellla 57 a...::1 40 Slou• ... ,. lpok- as~ 15 TOl*I• Ml-llllllN 41W~ lit WloMa a w•-8alre 12 WlirMlglon.0. am 2-3 2·4 2-4 2-3 2 1·2 ,_, SWllll dtrec1loll WWI IO • 1a ?O 70 M ... 76 11 46 .. u 74 • .. 14 .. 47 IO .. .. 6t .. 11 ft .. 75 11 .. eo 71 11 70 12 WRITER BEATS THE ODDS ... Jl'romAl and help him decorate his office. I've watched the fast-track auomeys and -their sflenampns (lrot tn Marvin's office.)" Those shenanigans;.she said. provided lhe inspiration for some of the financial finaglinJ in her book. When she's not wntina. Vida isa tcchn ical notereader for court re- porters. reading and editing expert triaJ testimony. She graduated from Cal State Umvcrsity DomirrguezHLlls in 1978 with a bacbelor•s degree in English. A flairfoTwritingcame to the fore in creativewritinJclasses. Actuallysittmgdown and writtnga novel seemed to be Just Loo mind- bo&Jhng. but Marvt.n persuaded her to give it her best shot. ''I couJdn •t have done it without my husband. You need a tremendous ego. "He's also my front-hneeditor. He was a Journalist during the Korean War and he has a wonderful editorial eye. "We talk plot and characterization. We talk it out chapter by chapter and then I do as [please," she said wilh a laugh. Vida embarked on her m1d-hfe carecrchanges1x years ago. She's written two books that _ havefl't sold. a mvsterv adventure Dally Piiot Dell very le Ouarentffd ~Y r..oa, " ~-ou "11 not ~ '°"' oe~ u., !> 30 p m w oe•or• 7 1 m and yov copy '""' 1:11! ~~.-w .. .cS Satu•Clar artd Sv>dolr It 'fOU do not tee .... /04.JI called "Run Jennte Run" and another adventure novel about a woman auomey. called "Who's Frcdenck Sachs?' A lh1rd novel, "AAi.ght to Barcelona., Bin the hands d~ -. •· lishe~. lt'saboutaJewish woman and a doctor and two smaJI children caught ID Hitler's Germany. I(therl!'sone thinJ she's learned in berwritingcarccr, 1t sdamed hard for" a first-time novelist to be published. She started out With a West Coast agentand whenthatdJdn'tset ~ anywhere, she turned to a New York agent "who would be closer to the sourcc(publishinghouses.)Tbey wineanddtneeachoth.er. They (publishers) don't hke anyone outside New York City." One agent kept one ofher un- published books one year. "And then she told me, 'I don't handle th1s kind ofbook. ·And I had lhrce years rnvested ID tt." Vida said she got another It terary agent who had the book three days. .. Shesa1d she loved it and couldn't putildown and that a publisher would snap it up. She said she was always nght," Vida said. "lt~ot to be time for a decision and I didn t breathe all week. But the answer came back and the answer was no. The phrase that kept coming back over and over again was that l had no track record. "But my husband said, 'you're having fun, you're havinta ball. EnJOY the rollcr-coaSlcr n'1c.'" · Vl'tta got) t>rcaCaf t~nd of I 98: when she submitted her book "Scan to the Harper and Row publishing house. "The pubhshercouldn't use it. it turned out, because the marketing people wouldn't take a chance on a first-time auth9r. But be said he like. 1tandwmtcdtohelpme. h waurea break. Hed1dn'tgctoneceot for it. H wasa real human beipg." In just a matter of days, Macmi1Ja1 called and told her the good news: "Marketi na says we c.an do it.•• With that announcement. she Joi nee a groupof249 firsMime authors to b published this year. That'sa pretty select numberbccausethercarcabot 30.000 books published each year, st said. V 1da said she's sold papcrbook • nghtsof''Scam,. aoo said she has been told the novel should make a good movie. Vida will speak Bl HuntJngtoa Beach Friends of the Library mem- bership luncheon Friday1t the Cen- tral Library, 71 I J Talbert Ave. Rcsc1 vatlons can be ob rained by calling 842-4481. Ext 35. ORANGE COAST Clrculatlon 714/842--4333 Daily Pilat H. L. Schwartz Ill Publisher Cte11lfled edvertlelng 714/142-5871 All other department• 842-4321 MAIN OFFICE 330 w"'' na, s1 Co\•o '~l!M C• MD• a0.1tH6 B.o • l!>t() CO'.ta 'f!!M CA 91616 C 1 y•ljjl I ll)tlJ 0.a~ Co;t~I ~ ~ HQ """'' ~lrJINt\ 11tus11a1ont tdolO!ldl mat1111 111 80..,.hM •flilr•I ""'"'" ITUly Of' r4t0<00U(ed '"lhOul "'9Clal per ·~ o• c:ot v•'Q'1t ~ ... - c:opy Oy 1 a m a ""''°'" 10 • ,,., 8'o0 yOU' COPY ... bOt °'""'"'N Clrculetlon TelephonH Rosemary Churchman Con I roller ~ .. u p()Sla~ e>aod II eo,1a Mt'W C. lo<- IL'PS U• llOOJ S..boe•"1llO'I b\' Clt'lt« ~ l!I "'°"'"'Y t;, mao Sf·~ montl\f./ MOil 0r8""" Count; ,.,.... M2~ l agut1 l N~ 4f6.4IOiO Stephen F. Cerazo Production Manager Don•ld L. Wllllam1 Circulation Manager VOL. n, NO. 2M fund ra1smg. providing speaker\ 10 community organiat1ons and run-"'"$ newspaper advertisements op-posmg the 1mt1at1ve. which Trager called "sinister " Another attorney who at tended the afternoon news conference. Stephen Nill. explained he opposes t ... e measure becau~ It will "make those people who pay the highest uues pay lor a ta\ break for tho~ who alread-. pa} the lowe<;t tau-s." N 111 said. · The state Legislative analyst est1-r;==============;;;;;i;;;:============================ mates passage of Proposition 36 "The fact ,., 1ha1 1n 1978, (the t.axpaye~ were) supporting Prop- os1t1on 13 Today we all are oppo~d to Prop. 36 becau~ 11 1s unfair. takrs $500 to $800 m1llton from our ch1ldrens education and resulto; in a tax tnC~<;C. It doesp't make sense." Propos1t1on 36 was written by tax- opponent Jarvis to clo..e loopholes he claim~ government ha\ used to ·subvert Propu\t11on l,1, his earlier landmark· ta~ m111attvc passed m would mean governments around the state would be forced to repay about ~I 7 b1llton m onr-t1me tax rebates or c rcdtts to propert} o.,,. ncrs The measure also would sc'llhmt· tat1ons on special assessments and fees that orponents claim would hamper loca government'' ability to provide basic services to consti- tuents. MURDER-FOR-HIRE PLOT TOLD.·•' P'romAl entrapped by investigator~ who pushed Pennc:y into the murd<:r·for htrl! schemc. Dillon. in his opening suitcment. compared the actions of au1hont1ec; to 1elevis1on's "A-Team .. Ht> toJd jurors, "but for police contact then.· wouldn't have hcco any cnmc," · ,., Penney, a former Ntw York C it y fireman. was arrc~lrd by Sheriff, dcpu1ies JuJy 2. shortly after he wa\ ahown faked photographc; of hie; wife ppotedly lymg dead on ulab a1 1 he county coroner's offic-t'. DcJ)uty Di tnct Attorney Wallace Wade told jurors Penney wa-. nu1 1n contact with undercover in- vestipton by an informant who had befriended Penney about six month\ , artier. ' • The infonnant. John Rurton. pve !_cnney the telepho ne number of a profi ion.I killer, 1n actuaht~ an Just Call 642-6086 untraceable "tool" lclcphonc al thl' Shcrifrs office used by undcrcoH·r 1nvc .. 11g.ator'\ Wade ~1d . Pf'nncv told the "h11 man." whom he knew only a.. Bobhy that ht· wanted lo arranec a "permanent accident" for ht<; wife btcausc 'lhe wa\ 1al.ins evervth1ng he had and de• stroym4 hmi 1n their prolonged and bitter divorce procerd1ngs. according to 1.evcral of the tape recording~ pla)cd for the JU'). "It ha\ to look likr a total, total accident, I want 1t 10 he permanent. Pcnnr} 1ell\ Bobb~ 1n a lelephone con\<.'1Ut1on rccordl·d June 14 "It mu\t, must look hkr an accident cau~ 1f It doesn't. they'll (the police) be all over me." tic addtd, .. I'm \Cared hccauSt I've ncH~r done anything like 1h1s in my hfe •• · A da) later. Pcnnn met WJth Bobby in the parkina lot of a Laauna N11uel restaurant 10 arrange the killina and told lhe undercover depu- ty he had tried to act back tO&Cther with his wife because he loved her ""·cry much.·• During the convenatlOO. recorded by a srrrall tape 1"tm'dtr~ctcd on mvcstiptor Gile's back. Penney said he believes his wife set hirn up when they were married to &ct the house they owned and all bis money. "I've tried everythinJ I can for a year to plead with the f,lrl and all '1\e wants to do 11 de troy me ... he told Bobby. ·•The only thjng 1 have left isa taric mona.qe on thr houtc. he'• w1~ me out." As the tape rccordinp were played in coun, Penney. wearing a blue sports (Oii ind tic, pre ~ his fingcrs 10 his tcmplC3o. t times, he brushed t~n from h11 ~es. Whal do )OD likt abocal tlle Dally PUot? Wbat doo't nambf'r al left and yoar menaa• wllt k r nltd, tran1tr 10 th approprlalf! r.dltor, Tllesamett·llourauwuln& er~kcmayNo H l9ttnnlk'Uentolh f'dllor oa H) topic. Co 1nb1&6r:t 10 oar lAJtrn tamn mu I lntlN• &ltttr n mt Hd t•I p one am r for \'trlfkatl , · clrulatJoa call1, plcue. Tell 1 -1a11'1 on )oar ml Gem Talk BJ J l Hl MPJ-IRIE. Cut11i~d Cemol<>s"'· ACS WEDDING RINGS ... wao we•f'I diem'! Old you know that more married men todey weer wedding bend• than et any time In hletory? Unllk• many of their fathera, today'• mar- ried men under 30 ar• very likely to be wearing a band. 89Yenl)'-flv• ~cent of ~lean rld• get en- gagement rtng., and Ju1t about all of thMl si-t wedding rlnga. There hu been 1 tr«id In recent years away from the matched qa~ ment·w.ddlng ring Mt. In fact, 7 out of 10 Amerleen women now profer lndMdually-•tyled wedding rings, lnltNd ot a matcMd aet. Grooms hew a llmll• Mtltude. Textured gQtd bands ha.,. gained In popu. lanty tn recent YMtt. but the old· fnhloned, ~ b8nd t. ttlU the o~mlng favorite. Ther• are allO baket...,...,. cNelgna. mate. flnlthea end twtM patt«ne. mnong oth•r•. AlmOll all wedding• nowadaya lnYDMd doublHing cer- emoni., *fttl t7 petetnl Of the -•oeme-W.0111moet~1t ot CM bridel ~ rtnga. Tl\I "rtng tNt lbtnc:M" II a grOwtog trldftlOn that M*...,. to IOIJI ·~· ... ~In lf!Y~MIOn of MW• ~. iM long • "litdel and grooms uy "'I 00''. we cen DJ)tC1 11hll grind Old ttaottJon to continue to grow. • NEWEST c!ZJUJn1&td ~hitu1 DESIGN A WINNING PAIR LIKE THE T'f'/O OF YOU Sh and you are a winning pi'ir:t°htn g1vi at goO(f u you gefw1th this diamond wardrobe ring and ptndant. Both feature rnoctern ct\annet HI dlemondt tplendidlt mounted In precioua lpurtten kerat gold, From our Art Conaempo• Colleelio.n, Try It on today. -·- . i" c II e • Ofenge Co DAILY PILOT IW~ Oclober 10 Chocolate lovers to attend benefit YMCA ind Bets six i nto H al of Fa .... . ' Chocolate lovers from all over Southern C:aliforn1a will pther t the Disneyland Hotel Edi1bidon Hall lhis Saturday and Sunday, from JI a m. tct6 p.m. both daYJ. • More than 1 S.000 are expected to attend to sample chocolate, watch how it is made. discover ill varied uses, leam to use a variety of molds in amd1makin1, and to purchase "Chocolate, cliocolate prooucu aii<I diocoTatre- rclated items at "Chocolate E"travaganu 184." The tWQ..day exhibition will · benefit Onldrens Hospital ofOranse County. :rhe Lamplighters Guild, one ot I 4 support orpniiations, will len(S us t&me and talent to raise. money to help with the many CHOC projects. General admission to the event is $7. For more information, caJI 54146S7. Former CM Mayor Claire Nelson amon Coast club's first honorees ·~~.:.....-..;z;.,..,.----.-----.-~----~~--.;J1-_,......_ BJTONY A>.VEDRA °'""'~........ 0- Fonner osll Mesa Mayor Claire Nelson wa5 amooa • the individuals and orpnizations inducted this week into the Ora~ Coast YMCA'1 new service club Hall of Fame. Payma uibute to aervicie clubs in COJta Mesa, Irvine and Newport Beach, the hall \Vjll bC housed in the ¥MCA'' upended Newport ch facility. YMCA officials said they have raised about S l million of the estimated $3 .S million needed for the expansion project. They said a aroundbreakin& may be announced in four to five months. , During a banquet held at the Ncwpon Mamou Hotel Monday to honor the inauaural inductees. Oranae Coast YMCA president Jim de Boom aaid more than $240.000 was raised by these clubs in 1983--84 to help the young. the elderly, tbe handicapped and the homeless. Run for Hoag Saturday Among those helping the needy was Nelson, a founding member of the C.osta Mesa K..iwams Club 30 The Sixth Annual Run for Ho~ is scheduled for l'ears ago. He was also one of C.Osta Mesa's founding Saturday, beginning at the Auor Recreation Center, fathers and served on the county board of supervisors. ~Ison Avenue between Michelson and Campus. in .. Oaire•s a deliahtful inductee," '4id Costa Me~ City lrvtne. Councilwoman Nonna Hertzog. "He's bctn a valuable Proceedsofthe~Kand 10Kcharityrunsa.rcslatcdfor be f h m ·t fi " 'the purchase of laser equipment for cataract treatment at mem r 0 t e com . um Y or .snaf!.y. many yean. Hoaa Memorial Hospital in Newport Beach. A pancake foining Nelson were James E. Ballinger. Norman breakfast will be served between 9 a.m. and noon and a Von Herzen, Lewis Dinger, George Hammond and Hal health fair wilt be held as well. Entry forms a.re available at Maloney. most area runninJ stores. For more information~JUohn---valunger ha5 been ·ac-mcmber::-Of:1hc-€osta M~- Blair at 966-0556 or 76().5917. • Orange Coast Lions CJub for 30 years. and has served as a Coastline echedalea workshop Coastline C.Ommunity College wiU conduct a work- shop on °loterviewing SktUs for Personal and Career Success" on Saturday, from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m., at Mesa Verde Learning Center, Costa Mesa. The fee is $20. Register early by calling 241-6186. . deputy district governor and a zone chainnan. An enginee{, as well as a licensed contractor and real estate broker, Ba11inaer is founder of the Orange County Engineering Council. Von Herzen has been a member of the Newport Harbor Exchange Club for 23 years, and for the past three years has chaired the group's annual pancake breakfast. Annual book sale echeduled Dinger -is an alumnus of Newport Harbor High School and,has been a member of the C.Osta Mesa Rotary Oub for 20 years. He's also been active for rouahJy 40 years in the Boy Scouts of Amcnca group~ in Costa Mesa · Amo~ tile honoreea lDdactecl lDto the The seventh annuaJ Auxiliary Boole Sale at South and in .the county. . . YllCA •new aenice c lub Ball of Pa.me~ Coast Medical <:eatei.wiUbe bcld ir:a tile hospital's lobby at-Dinger was rdident of the Cos Mesa Rotau_!!.tn'---=--......:..._;_-.-"="' __ _,..._:... __ -'-------...:..---------,,-------------:------;..- 3 J 872 Coast Highway in South Laguna on Oct. 11and12, 19"81and198~. . . They, to me, reDectaltruism.~ 10 a.m. to 6 p.m., and Saturday, Oct. 13. 9 a.m. to noon. . H~mmona bas bee~ mvolved With th~ C~ta Mesa Tophonorsforservioeclubprojectswent toa Spec1il Books for the sale are contributed and proceeds benefit the Kiwanis Oub-Nonh since l 973 and is lieutenant Olympics at Fairview State Hospital in Costa Mesa, hospital governor-elect for 1984-85. Hammond bas also been a spcnsorcd by the Kiwanis OubofCosta Mesa-North. Also · leader in the Boy Scouts of America since 19S6. ' Old-"aahloned hoedown· ••t Malon.cy is founding president of the year-old Sunrise ... &i ~ Exchange Oub of Irvine. The youn~t of the inductees, Coastline Community College will host an old- . fashioned Country Western Hoedown on Saturdaf, from 7:30 to 11:30 p,~~·,th~ Mesa V.erde.Lcamina .Center, 2990 Mesa Verde urive East, Costa Mesa . ~~eln~ai~~~::-v::,;0i!1'ci1~~3!a~~~mA~~~~ Author t o .Iectt;tre o;n South Coa s t history~-. After the luncheon, Maloney said be was proud to be' . , , • Pe': N • in the c.dmt>any of the otlierind\lctees. A hisiory of the South Orange County-€.oast will be The first protram' tS uiled '"Home Pon for "I think you've seen gentlemen up there (on st.age) p\'en in a three.pan series by noted b.istonan and author Romance; .. the second is ··Prehistory to PrOhibiuon." and The evening will featud' the Texas Two-step, Cotton- eycd Joe, Ten-count Polka, Four Comers. Texas Freeze, and the Montana Stomp. who have given their lives fol' the community," be said. Doris Walker. • ending the series will be •·The Roanna '20s lO me Racina .. By comparison, I'm relatively young. but l'm following The program will be offered on consecutive Thursday '80s." There is a $6 registration fee. For additional information, including credit card registration, call 241-6J86. in their footsteps." evenings this Thursday, Oct. 18 and Oct. 25 from 7 to 9 · The history series is sponsored by the Capistrano l}ay De Boom added; "We have recognized six individ-p.m. at the Dana-Niguel Library, -Coast Highway and Park and Recreation District. For rqj~tion call uals. They are six out of 600 that could be recognized. Nigµel Road in Laguna Niguel · 496-4251. Program on stress off erect A three-hour program teaching participants how to melt away stress at work or leisure-will be-presented at Orange Coast College on Friday, Oct. 12, from 7to JOp.m. Chris Schriner, licensed marriage, family and child counselor. will leciure on "Instant Relaxation" in Room 113 of the Counseling and Admissions Building. R~stration fee is S 10 per person. For information and reaistration, call 432-5880. Harvest Festival reaps prof its in I rvine Newport Barbor reunion set Newport Harbor High School Oass of 1934 will hold its SOth anniversary reunion on Friday. Oct. 12, at 6:30 p.m. at the Irvine Marriott Hotel. The Class of 1934 was the first graduatina class to attend the fullfour years at Newport Harbor. For more information and ~rvations, call Wood- row Hadley at 548-S288. Hadley is seek:inJ information about classmates Ozma Baum, Bob Brown, Roy Graves. Erma Gullich and Andrew Skipper. Those attending the reunion dinner at the Marriott a.re also invited to an informal barbecue at the Hadleys, 345 Broadway, Costa Mesa, on Saturday, Oct 13, from J l a.m. to 4 p.m. , \Vedneaday,Oct. 10 • 9:30 a.m., Oraage Couty Board of Supervhon, Hall of Administration. J 0 Civic Center Plaza. Santa Ana. • 7 p.m., Lqua Beacb Plauln&Comm.iulon, City Hall Council Chambers, SOS Forest A venue. • 7:30 p.m., Lacau Beacll RecreatloD and Com- multy Sen1ces Committee, Community Center, 376 Lqion Street. • 7:30 p.m ., Foutala Valley PlaulD& Commi11Jon, Council Chambers, 10200 Slater Ave. . 0.-, ......... ..,t.. ....... By PHIL SNEIDERMAN Of .. 0.-, Nit .. The chief orpni.ur of this year's lrVine Harvest Festival said the turnout lasl weekend wu the ~t ever in the event's nine-year history and that more than 10 school and senioe organization~ rai~ moDt"y throbgh the festivitie\. Sharon Elli~ president of the festival. said Mcuxin that at least 48.000 people attended the thrtc-day even~ bcklat Heritage.Par~ · .... On Saturday. 1t was so crowded l couJdn ·1 even turn around," she said. Ellis said the ohly problem dunna lbe 1984 festival was a sbonage of parking places. She said the !4-member volunteer commJttte a.bat organizes the feSJ1'931 will addttss the parlcin& issue in ptannina nc,.t year's event. The event hasal\\'ays $Cned as a settina in which local serv1ce clubs can raise money. Elhs .said a new program was iniuated this )CV, allowtng local school groups to operate game booths previously run by carnival .-ork~rs. . Under trus program, focal merchants sponsored school groups with S 100 donations. The groups, generally parent-teacher orpniz.ation~ then proviidcd people to run the game booths.. with prizes purchased from the pme profits. , Ellis said nine schools participated in the filJDe booth program this year and that more are likely to sign up next year. Another new addltion was a pancake bra.k&st ~cd at the festival Satllrday and Sunday mominp b) ltViac's Aldcrwood Basics Plus School. Ellis said more than 4,000 of the S2 pancake breakfast tickets were sold before the event. The festival also serves as a showcase for locaJ en tert.ainers. • 7:30 p.m ., Couty Suitattoa Dt1hict1, meeting room, 10844 Ellis Ave., fountain Valley. · Stadenta from Intne Dance Academy perform at the Inine 11.arYeat Jl'eatl•al lut weekend. Ellis said the most rpular performCTS this year included juggler Michae Holly. the Cripple Creek Ooggcrsdanocgroupand CottonwOOd, a country and pop band. PoucE Loe •:1• ~/ • Teen thrown from car rack, seric>usly hurt in Newport An 18-year-old • Nonhem Cali- fornia youth remained in serious condition today.with head injuries he suffered when he was thrown from a car luua&e raclC he was hanJina on to as a friend drove throujh Newport Beach, police taid. Glenn Patet$0n, a resident of Woodside, was knocked unconscious Coetalleu A thief stole a SI 0 parkina sticker from inside a oar parked at Oransc Coast College. The car owner, a 19· year-old student from Fountafo Val- ley, said the sticker was hanaina around the auto'• rear vfew mirror. • • • four wheel covers and two pads from a bumpcrwefc stolen from a car parked in a carpqn at 1762 Kenwood. The los~ was e~tlmatcd at $40 • • • Camera equipment valued at $750 '4&1 Slolcn from a car parked at 2009 Continental. Sunday afternoon when he tumbled to the roadway at the intersection of Balboa Boulevard and Miramar. • Traffic invcstiptor Rick Bradley said Paterson was ri_d~D.J on a tuuage rack which collapsed under hlt welaht. Bradley said as the driver oT the car turned a comer, Paterson was thrown to the sround. - The youth was ru hed to Fountain Valley Community Hospital trauma center where be remained today. The driver of the car, identified as William Wood, 22, of Santa Barbara was arrested on suspicion of felony drunken drivitlf. He was released from the city Jail after postina a $30,000 bond. · nfrom a Mercedes Benz parked at Newport Center. • • • Two bicycles were i>tolen from an unlocked garage on the l l 00 block of East Balboa Boulevard. • • • Bur&lars stole stereo equipment, a video cassette recorder, a television set and a microwave oven from a residence on the 2000 block of Balboa Boulevard. 7501 Slater A .. e. • • • Someone stole'a $3.000 suina pearl necklacie from a residence in the 300()' block of Montz. • • • A $400 dictaphone was stolen from an office in the l6000 block of Beaah Boulevard. • • • Two special hoses valued at S l ,200 were stolen from a construction Stte at Beach Boute .. ard and KnoxviUe. Hu.n~on Beach f'oantaln Valley Officials at Avi$ 1..case. 16401 Someone smashed a window I.ate Beach Bl~d .• repon that • monthly Tuesday to burglarize Adiamo. Inc.. inventor) shows that a silver 1982 l l 520 Warner Ave .. a manufacturina Malibu Classic car is miss1na. business. The intruder fled with a Tb · • h• ~ 1 20s t 1, SSOO calculator after activatina an rec men in l e1r ear y oo.. alarm th~ 1 ~pach of B~d.\\'Clstt bttr ····~··· . • • • ~ . from the Spigot. 16369 Bolsa 1ca A rn1denl of the l 0800 block of E1 St. Paso A venue rcponed Tuesday that . • • • . · someone pn~ open the trunk of ber Thieve stole a microwave ~v~n silver l98• Datsun Sentn. The and other lcitchen uem~ af\er UStfl& a bili.ll ry caused s 100 dam• to 1hc pa5$ key to enter a residence an tl\e vehicle and the propen} lo c"ta- 16000 block of ~o!'~ Cay. mated it $324, included a puf'S( and Bursi took S520 1n)Cwclry and ba ball equipment. $20 tn cash after .entcn~ a house A mi nt of tl,; 9800 bloc of through an open ~ 1ndo~ m the 3000 bloet of l'l th St~t. • • • Oscar Cude reported Tuesday that someone bad stolen a camera. ~m lens and film winder from a shelf in hts bedroom closet. The loss was estimated at StiOO. ... . . "' Someone entered an open. un- locked ~ on the l 6600 block of Mt. Michaelis Circle and stole a blade Schwinn World Spon bicycle orth S250. a rcsidcntttoorted Tuesday. . ~ .-Entering tbrouib an un1ockea win- dov.. someone burglarized a home Monda) on the t8SOO blcld: of Mt Morgan Circle. The loss incl.uded $35 in cash and an engagement nn& worth $500. •••• A resident of the 10400 t;lock of Sla.tcr.AYCDV<.ttP.Qrted that someone stoic his red l 979 Hondi motorc~le from his apartment carpon. The to: was estimated at $3,J Q9. • • • rcs.ideot of the 18900 block of San~ Catherine trtct ttpcned Mon· da} lh11 someone entered his bedroom \\h1le he was away and tole $400 1n cash and a blue hwmo biC')clc worth $200. A resident returned home an the 16000 block ofGreenV'lc\\ toftnd the hoU5e btoke-n 1nre and SIO 1n liqu r tolen. Bus driver gets fine for crash .. • • ' • y. October 10, 1 • ollege students to vot-e today on suicide pills me want alternative to fall out lzm n. a l·}'C r-old junior from Dem•er, id la week th t many students who igned tb.c ~uuon indi ted the)' \\ould oot umncr Hoffman, director of uni· vcrsity health SCTVlCCS. AJtbouJ.h th~ referendum rvc to "ra1 should some nation drop the bomb . ctually vote for the propo l. waren •• about nuclear r. he •PROVIDENCE, R.I. (AP) - wn University tudent are tin today and Thursday on ether to ask the student h hh center to stock cyanide pills so students can commit suicide during a nudear war rather than die from. fallbut. · . . . .. The plan, propostd b)' two _tu- nt • was placed on a student uncil ballot aftCT more than 700 odergraduates of the Ivy Lcaaue school 1gnrd a petition. University officials have id they ha"c no intcnuon of honoring the prope>sal if students pprovc it, although they said they understand the i ue indicates the degree of concern about nuclear war. amona the S,'400 undergraduates. "The feeling of fear is what we arc tryina to get acros .~· Jason Salzman, one of the originato~ of the proposal, ~id as he and five Sophomore Andrew Feron told the panel the referendum hould be more than symbolic. He tood up and challenged Widmer to upport the rcf ercndum publicly. Only then, Feron said, w'ould "adult21 around the country" start to question the arms race after rcaliz- ina that Brown might actually stock cyanide pills. •. "The stocking of suicide ptlls ts simply a non-issue," ~id Dr. ... ~· . , . jd one can a umc "'there will be parts of the world that will survive.'' .. We'll all be dead, .. one "oman houted out in response. Ginna Templeton, a junior. told the pandisas he has nightmares about nucleaT war. Hoff man id she should deal With hCT fea_rs by beini more ''positive" and ''op- timistic." Another panelist, Georae Morgan, a Brown profe sor who teaches courses on the threat of . .. A Robinsons Sae 4 ·BIG DAYS 20,000 GREAT WATCHES 49.99 YOUR CHOICE THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY, SUNDAY ONLY (,,1.11 brn /11•11 \ tlit ~utcl• qft ,.rm":.'-},.,,.,, 7...:.lll1118 /or . ~ha .m 1t11!JC'.u.1blt pt111·1 Sc1k(I. I lx111. (1tl/t11. BenrrH. Gmm. /:i/1' /111 "t:c1N111. Ti."nt. 'T1x:,c .m. 1mt .i fa~ .... n/ the ..._.,;ddj.mwm m .ikt•1) ''{"l. ,uztt1I Pl r/11, 1pca.zrn/.1r ,.z/C'. \clt'Ct l.1dzc, ·.ind mt'115' sport u iatcht•,, I J n/cl.ll1 u.itcl•e(. Br.m ·lct .md }.1>hzm1 lmk i..'.ltcl1"> Every one protc<tcd ~ 11/1 .i 111.muf.ict11rn':s t.:.zrr.mry. Rt."" ... 0.1rd )"'"'·x:I(. or )t,l)h ,omc awa_l for .., 11-. Tht• ,t'fn tum. the >ot: 111J<> .m.· tt•rn/ic right nm .. · ... /mt ple.m: j})f)p et1rl} /m t/.I' /'<'.•/ ,ho1tn. \1 lut11111 I..'.lrlt') /'}·~tore .md u limacd to stock "" J..md fl•t• •.tie md1 fo~d.t)·, Oaol1(:r 14 111 Ro/111Nm ·, F:i$IJUm W.itchc>, 141. ""(, 4 t nucle r r, 1old Hoffm n, ··1 don•t think it is helping her by tcllil18 her that he shouJd look forward to a fine earctr, and just So about htr busine s." Students cheered and applaud d in response. Salzman and Chris Ferguson 21, a s0phomore from New Yor\ City, id they came up with the propo 1 afterwatchins the movie "On The Beach," in which a aroup of people remains in Australia after the rest of the world perishes in a nuclear war. Doctors dispense a poison pill io people don't have to die from the approaching faJlout if they choose. i . . . • . Reagan: Won't reduce benefits President rejects Mondale charge on Social Security WASHINGTON (AP) -Pmi· dent Rcqan said today he eomm1tted himself on Tuesday to never reducing --Social Security-benefits for prncnt or future recipients in order to put an end to anyone's .. frightening 1enior citizens." "I am terribly concemed about this '4emogoguery about Social Security," R~n said in reference to Dcmo-crattc challenaer Walter Mondale's accusations in Sunday night's debate that Reagan was ~n fact planning to curtail future benefits. Reaaan added that "truth W'5 on my side." "'It is friJhtenina senior citizens and there 1s just no fairness and rightness at all 1n leavin• these people uncertain as to what their situation is going to be when they have no ptaoe else to tum than Social Security," Reagan said. The p~sjdent commented mo- ments before be left the White House to begin a campaign trip to Michigan. On another subject, be was asked about bis comments-contained in a -text of a speech prepared for delivery , later today in Warren, Mich. -in which be accused Mondale of having contributed to a weakenina in Ameri-ca•a anned forces. Asked how he justified that state- ment he said that "many of the people who were pan of that same ... Walter Mondale appears confident In Plttabar&Jl ln aftermath of SUDdaJ debate. . Talk about a giantjack this guy won $1.5 nil OD By 1M,A11KJ1 Producer Fredenc.t BrJMOn dead NEW YORK-Fredcriclt Brisson. 71 , produocr forsuae and screen ¥JS buaband of lhc laic Rosalind Rusaell, died Monda)' of a ~.: Briuon's first independent ptOducuon ~-as "Moonliah1 Sonata.•• He ope~ • ti11 own Lllent agency for American and Bntish·pmonalities in Europe &lid Conned lndeoendent Artist Pictures Jnc. He produced 1'he ~jama Game" and .. Damn Yanttes .. for Bro dwa>' and for film. Other Btoad"-ay hits were ..U n4cr the ¥uo·Ywn T rec." .. AlfiC," "CocO'' and .. Jumper$." .. BameJea "1n rlgbf to v ote NEW YORK ....i Rulina it 11 unconstitutional to bar the homeless votint. a federal judge has ordered the Board of EJectioM to allow indj · Is to regJSter to vo1c even if they live on the s~ts. Tbe d · ion, banded~,, Tueiday evening, was bailed a. ... victo~· b)' Rober1 ~ counsel for COalition for the Homeless, a pnvuely supported ad\·ocacy sroup. ~ decision .. demonstrates clearly that home.Jess people are full-Ocdaed a1.iz@s with the same constitutional rights as evn')'OAe ets.c ... said Ha~ . '•tlJer •ae. Denver undertaker DENVER - A man who found his son•s body twisted on its aide ... a arot.CSQue fashion" in a coffin with a btoocktairied pillow is suica undertaker for SU million, sayina the siaht caused the family le\'tft emotional shock. .. One lady screamed and ran out of the church (when me~~ the body)," said James M. DeRose, attorney for Frank J. Amato, who filed suit TueSday 1Jl District Coun. The incident occurred in January 1983 at a CathOlic church on the eve of a funeral for Michael Amato ... ~ mortuary aocused the pallbearcn of dropping the casket on tbe way up to the d}urc.b the fattier bad been followiog them and said that couldn't have ba.~:nc.,,, adm~nistratiQn ... r . n that "when for an.yone currently receiving them. He was also asked if he believed be ~;::;;;;;:~~denl~~m.A~~~caA.~[e-N~~l-tftafl-he~~HMaM--leA-tJl14Hleba~~·~~Bdal&-end e t he should start redressing the to draw a distinction between present whether be appeared so tired that the military imbalance, Mondale advised Social Security recipients and those age issue now becomes a permissible against it." who may be entitled to such benefits element in the campaign. that the fiaurcs and facts I gave were tnJe-and were never rebuttedud that Ile ·kept repeatina llie facts" that I rebutted because they were inac· curate. as a matter of fact they bad no basis in fact at all. .. DeRose said. LJlierace '•tan' I.a court- .. I\ Reagan did not elaborate on that in the future. ..I wasn't tired," Reagan said. accusation. ' "That was just the way the sentence ••And in feP.l'd to the age issue and On Social Security, be seemed came out." he said. everything. 1f I had on as much determined to clear away any im-"I've said over and over again that ma~~up on as be did, J'd look younger prcssion left in his debate with we're not going to back away from too. . . Mondale that be poses a threat to the those people on Social Security now The preside°:! said be bas nev~r future of the program, and in the future, •• Reagan said. wpm m~~eup, even when I was in Durina the debate, he answered , .. ~ ..... -· . ~ p1ctures. • Mondale's allegation ott; planned "We're not going to let them down In further comments on the debate. Social Security cuts by answering that and I've been saying that since before he said, .. I think if someone would go be would not suppon cuts in benefits I was president,•• he said. over the transcript and took at the fact In recent months Reagan has only occasfonally spoken to reporters who wait for him as he leaves the White House and only rarely at length as lie did today. . He was askea i£be i1*JK1s to adopt a more active cameai&n style. The president grinned and replied: "You get what you see -that's me." LAS VEGAS. Nev. -Entertainer Libc:rlce testified Tuesday bt otvcr a man who atlegedl)'. uSed the pianist's name in an effort to obtain money fot a aolf tournament. Liberace answered .. no sit .. several times-when prosecutars asked if he ever made any arrangcmc.nu with Dirt Summers for a toutnament Sumrnen allegedly ~ed was to be sponsored by Liberace. ··1 never aaw.tl1at man in my entire life,·• be said under crou;.eummation. Summen is c~ with forgery and attemptina to obtain money under false prete Prosecutors allege be forie<l Liljtra~'s ipature and tried to · ~~&$ m~ as SIS,000 for the tournament. .~~ ~ . -~~.. ~1J JS Indicted In irlldUle scam · I • DENVER -A federal grand jury bas indkted l S people from nine~ 'Burning Bed' ·sparks .rash of calls ~]?~~~!lit;~§~~ warrants agamst 34 people around the nation for trafficking m c:arcaan pr By tbe A11ocJated Preas Thousands of women and men who watched a television husband relentlessly batter bis wife until she killed him called hotlines and shelters across the country, some finally mustering the courage to seek help, others offering to give it. "It takes a lot of courage to make that call because If be finds out. he'll beat her again," said Judy Wilson, director of the Ocala, Fla., Spouse Abuse Shelter. Counselors said some women who called in said they bad been beaten just .· for watching the movie. Counselors praised NBC-TV's "The B\lming Bed" for highlighting United Stateeandeontalnen~ gtble amount• of THC. At>OUt tWo ,...-, ado, an tnetructor at aoca Raton ~lddte Sehoot hid eome bird Med to ... If one of the counw·• .... drug· anlfftnG.oanlnee could find It. Toaln\Oet~·a~ee. ••the doO did ~ up the 8cent," Mid ~etant ~ttncfpef Randan Yata scnoot offtclal$ then gave the eeeds to a lkeptleel McKei;Zle. Who In turn· uked tM Pal"' Mich County Sn.rttra Office to analyze eome he Md ~ton htaown. ••A k>t or S*>I* were WNZld to learn ft wa Htegel," McKenzie Mid ... You can ~ hemp Med rrom any ~ atore. • '" addttlOn, .. 1d McKWJe. the teed• were aupp<>eed to be eterlle. but 0 1ome of them were begin~~ to germinate.•· ; MoK.,_zJe planned to contact the 1i.te attorney'• office and ask that tM product's l~atlty be studied. ... o.n.u llkra, m~ of the W• Palm Beach pet atore where McKenZle bought hta test Meda, MJd he hU not had anY, requeata from youtha for the Mied Sine. n9WI of their THC content began to Clrcufate. Harrteonl.-.. that tM eeeda areh.,.._ ....... bMn UMd ... bird Med ror many oenturtet. The ~ thing (the btrda) get from tt II fat. ··rhe nm thlna thetJ! ~Ing wiMi9ll1N1~--;o hlVWto outtew-a peopMital{~ ' rope to IOhoot mad9 out of hemp, er purw. tt "1l8t border• on the rtdk:Uld.lt,'' HarrleOn Mid. n11all)1 1n a tate of n. Warren RuJman, ,. the problem of battered women. which affects 2 million wives a year, according to a recent estimate by U.S. Attorney General William French Smith. A few of the calls Monday niSbt and Tuesday were interrupted, and shelter workers speculated abusive husbands kept women from the phone. ·•1 got a call from a woman whose husband had just beaten her because of the movie. He said she wasn•t going to get any ideas from the movie, and be would get her first," said Phoebe Seares, a staff member at Transition House in Cambridge, Mass. After the conversation, the woman said she would call a shelter in her city. A man who watched the movie in Milwaukee set his wife afire Monday night, police said. SM was not expected to live; he was arrested on suspicion of aticmpted murder. A woman called the Essex County, N.J., Family Violence Project, saying her husband was beating her because she.. refused to stop watching the movie. "She was screaming, She had three children and she was trying to get them out of the house, .. said collnsel- or Kathy Moore. 0 He was abusina her riaht then and then be walked right out of the house. So I gave her the loeation (of the shelter), but she never called back." • A man who said h~ bad severely L... skins of animals includ.ina ti~ polar bean a.ad alli.ptors. ~oamJd bcatenhiswifeMondaynightbccausc -Operation Trophy Kill, the mvestiption oeei.:ated out of a Fort~ she hadn•t prepared dinner called ~dermy shop and turned up more than $100,000 worth of · s. Transition House, wanting to "know authorities said. · what be could do," Soares said. She referred him to a men's counseling center. CALIFORNIA -- - -..The Burning Bed" starred Farrah Fawcett in the true story. of a battered .. Betty Ford no Ferraro fan Michigan wife who lcilled her bu~ . . band by setting fire to his bed while he . REDLA~OS -Fonner F~ Lad)' Bett)'. Ford says philOIOPhlC:aJ slept. A jury acquitted her after <l.iffercnccs ~ll p~t her from v~tin,g for ~~e Ferraro~ the fim woman flnding her temporarily insane. to run for VlCC prcs.ide?t on a m&JOr party uCkeL I w~d like to yoic fot a woman ... Mr's. FoJ'd wd Tuesday. "That would really 11ve me a put deal pf During the movie, broadcast at the satisfaction. The first woman running for: (hiall) office is a ~t tcmJ)tltion. start of National Domestic Violence However, we don't ap-ee philOIOphi~.," Ford, 66, the wife o( former Awareness Week, many network President GeraJd Fon:t. genera.Dy avoi politics during a meeting of 900 affiliates flashed telephone numbers people at the University of Redlands Memorial Chapel. but she was eaaer to for shelters and botlines, and workers discuss her strugle to beat alcohol and ~ dependency. reponed a marked increase in calls. An Oklahoma hotline logged almost 200 calls during the movie. Nearly I 00 people calJed the Sis- tercare Center in Columbia, S.€., on Monday and Tuesday. More than 300 people called a Phoenix, Ariz., refer- ral service. _,,,... The shelter in Cambridge, Mass., received at least 100 calls. The Atlanta Council on Battered Women answered 130 calls in three hours. A few shelters reported that women arrived for help; others said their beds were already full. "We are stuffed to overflowing in our shelter and have had to refer women to other locations in the city,•• Nancy Katchel of Domestic Violence Intervention Services in Tulsa, Okla., said Tuesday. Metro RaU gets no support BEYERL Y · HILlS -The federal government is not committed to lhe $3.3 billion Metro Rail subway, U.S. T~rtation Secretary Elizabeth Hanford Dole said during a campaign visit to Southem California. Dole, who arri.ved Tuesday in Los An&elcs as part of an eJ&ht-day campaign swing for \he Republican ticket, bas been the target of Vigorous lobbying on the downiown- to-San Fernando Valley subway project. Metro Rail backers hoped for an announcement that the Reagan Admfoistration would issue a written coIIUltltmeot to the first 4.4 miles of the project. Governor assails Prop. 39 opponent. c FRESNO -Advertisements opJ)<)Sina Proposition 39 -GoY. CieQip Deukmejian's reapportionment ininative -are "ridiculous and shameft.U" and oonfusina to the public, the aovemor said. Proposition 39 calls forthe-uilk of drawing election districts to be taken away from the Legislature and turned over to a panel of retired jud&es. Dcukmejian, s~ to San Joaquin Valley ranchers at a fund-raising luncheon that collected $14().000, acknowled&Cd Tuesday that the .. No OD 39" television commercials that began nmnina tt.ro weeks ago.have been effective. . BlatlJhoaae 01VJ1en vow battle Spain ambassador abducted in Beirut SAN FRANCISCO -Angry owners of py bathhouses, bookstores and sex clubs have plc:dJed to fight a city order to shut their doon because tbey allow sexllal activities that promote the 'Pf'Clld of deadly AIDS ... My clieats will not just close up business and walk away," said Duke Annstrona. attol"IS)' for five of the 14 establishments closed Tuesday by order of Public Health Director Mervyn Silverman. He said he ptmned10 meet with his clients today · to discuss how to fiaht the order ... Make DO mistake about it These J 4 establishments are not fosterina py b1>eration." Silverman said. ··They arc fcnterina disea.sc and death. .. BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) -Two. aunmen kidnapped Spain's am- bassador Pedro Manuel de Aristcguj in mostly Moslem west Beirut today, a Spanish Embassy spokeswoman reported. The assailants • stopped de Aristeaui's car in front of the Sparush mission in west Beirut's Ramlet al- Baida neiJhborhood. forced him at &\lnpoun mto a green Mercedes and sped off, said the spokeswoman. who s ke on condition .that she not be i ntified ... She.said.the &.bdu.clion ~»rred at 3:50 p.m. (S:SO PDT). The~ was no immedtate claim of i-cspons1bility fo 1hc abduction. which came 1f\er the Jihad lslami: or Islamic holy war. extremist group threatened to strike at Spanish in- stitutions if two Shiite Moslem Lebanese were not released from jail in Spa.in. The orpnization, belleved to be loyal to Iran's spiritual and {>olitical leader, Ayatollah RuholJah . Kho- meini, bas clauned rcsponStbiltty for devastatin& bombina attacks on the U.S. Embassy and U.S. nuliW) headquarters an Beirut. Spanis.b authorities arrested the o Shiite Moslem ltban~ on chargesofshootinaa l.ibyan embassy empl~yce in Madrid. Jihad lslami identified the .two as pcm.Ila belonaina to the oraani..t.ation. • Jr-20 pUot dlett In demon•trat1on SEOUL South ~Ore~ -A U.S.-made F-20 fiahter t>~e crash~ .tod!aY durinf a demonstration flight staged for South Korean di&nitanes. kill~u Amencan test pilot, a spokesman for the plane's manufacturer said e spokesman for Northrop Corp .• wh1~ developed th~ Tigersbark plane in .19 2, said the cause of the crash was under in\•csugauon and the name of the pilo a Nonhtop employee, was bcina withheld pend1na nollfication of relatives. e accident oc:curred in mid..aftemoon near Suwon au base, 20 mates so~tb or Stoul. The Yonhap News Aaency, in a dispatch &of!l the crash site, wd lhe pjaM' en bed while 1be i>.tlOt test-1lrit.la 1 ft\aehine aun wtuk tbcnrt 100-· yards above the lf?und durina the final poruon of the demonstration. I Jonlan. EDJJt ie.q tor talk• AM. ifAN, J<>rdao -Ki Hu n and President .Hosni Mubarak of E&YPt hailed their rapprochement a \'lC'tory for Arab urut}', and the two pto- Westem leaden toda}' pttparcd f'bl their first fonnal political talks qce Em>t's 1979 ~treaty with _Israel. Mubarak'told a banquet ·~d!cncelat Jcitdan's royal palact :r y ni&ht that he ca~ toe pre appreaauoo ... or thecouraat0us ttpwbicbJordan took tore tore Arabrclationnnd reunite t Arab ranks.~· Jordan 1 wt<e aao became the first Arab nation to rest d1ptomatic relation "1lh f.a)l)l which b1d been severed after tt\e peace tb 1 racL .. ,. .. I --------- I . $19.99-$25.99 "!\ ·SO 0 COTION EATERS A D T~1JLL PANT BY no FAMOUS AMES . Our purr <'OlJon ramter for wo1 or play, by one of your fawritt names. 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' S~OP WEDNESDAYt-10-9, SHOP EARLY THURSD~~ 9-9 • • . ._. .... ...-Cout DAILY ~LOTIW~. October 10. 984 Rose Redfield painstakingly colors vintage photographs by hand in studio EDITOR'S NOTE -WMn M walked Into Ro• R«Jfleld'• New Era Studio In 1gs1, photographer Eric Kroll thought It might ~ an lnter•tlng plac. to have hi• portrait made. In ti,,,., h• .truck up a relatlon8hlp with the elderly photograpMr and mad• • photo 1tudy of her and her tirork. Thia month, Kroll and R«lfleld have.a joint exhibit In • Manhattan ,, photography gallery. 9J DOLOMI 8AACLA Y NEW YORK (AP) -Roee Redfleld movea through her musty studio Wfth all the speed of mol ..... But for the 90-year-old photographer, speed la not Im- portant. \ She 1topa before an upright New Era Studio. view camera that site 6n a Some of her portraJt work and wooden tripod. Its accordlan-• sittings wlll be on dl1pley at the pleated aides are smooth and "Photographlca gallery In Man- crlap. A black cloth 11 draped hattan untll Oct. 20. nearby. "That's older than I am," ahe aaya with a laugh. - But the ~lent lnetrument ltlll brings her a meager living u a portrait photographer on Man- hattan's Upper West Side. Her, cllente have dwlndled, and Red- fleld rellea on passport plcturea and restoring old photos at her "Doing the work that I'm doing, I really must have had the brains to do It," she aaya, shuffling through picture frames to ahow a visitor some of her work. There la a tattered black-and- whtte photograph of a boy and his grandparents at his bar mttzvah ceremony. The grand- mother wanted a portrait of herself made from the photo- graph. Redfield reahot the orlg- lnal and cut out the grandmother with 1elasor1. But the grandaon'• arm appeared on her sleeve. "So you know what I dJd?" Redfield uked. "I uied the other aide of her dreu to flll lt In." The finished product la a portrait of the grandmother. Becauee 1he can•t afford the -expensive color reproducing productl from the big photogra- phy companies auch u Kodak, Redfield often colors her pictures by hand, aa lhe would a painting using colored markere. · She came to the United States from Ruaala u a teen-ager .anc married In 1910. Her huebanc wu a photographer; she leatnec the craft from him. They had twc chlldren, and Redfleld now hat five grandchildren and.five great grandchlldren. She eafd that In Ruula, •h• always had a leaning toward th4 vlauaf arte. "Instead of collect.Ing dolls, collected colored pictures," lh4 Hid. NOTHING TO DO? ... • SEE FRIBAYS WEEllENIJER! ·•C ONCERTS •DINING • L0CAL EVENTS , •MOVIES (714) 6~Z-t3Z1 • ,, , --_.....___ ---------~~--·-------------------- I • I r Ancient digs at the Louvre steeped in ~con parate explo~attons of old Paris sites prompts controversy for archeol tsts r "We can trace lhe evotuuon of the city and its in biLant -from the 14th to the 19th centun ... id the ~cd Trombetta. ··we. sec how they lived. What they att PARIS (AP) -Nane months 61 the unveilina of a oon- uovmill plan to erect • gla ~ • the entrance to ttic loum, the ptt1tisiou1 museum is "' the lrtP of another bitter conflict. TwO ams of archacol()lisu 4lllinl for vesti~ ofanclent Paris -.l(tiojaina counyards of the ft>nncr royl palaClc have clashed publidy ovtr their ideas on how tel dotbejob. The root of the trouble i idco-l~cal. One of the teams is led by Ptetre-Jean Trombetta, a casually drc sed, bearded. ouupoktn mem- ber of the Frcnth CommuniS\ Party. He presides over the dia at the Cour Napaleon, where SO ·archaeology students and volun-teers from around the world are un,covcring the worldng-cla s nea&hbOrhoods that prung up outside the palAoc wall . nd wh t lhcy did for a livinJ. "This is a rare oPPOrtumt>: for urban archaeolasilti. Usually find- ings of Ibis IOt'l have Iona ht.en buncd under concrete," he added. The olher team, workina in tbe Cour Carre, is headed by •Mic:hd · Acury, a conservative who until last year had been iii overall charge of all archaeological dip under the French Q.J>ital. His second-in-command is • Venccslas Kruta, a Czech-born, l,>oyloses ndsafter ach stapled tauneh anti-communist who over- ltt$ ~ unskilled workert paid minimum wqt$. He took them off the unemployment lines to wotk on the site. They arc unearthina the remains of the medieval dungeon built by Philippe Aupate in 1200. -rbe dunpn symbolizes the state, .. said KNta. dressed in a suit and tie beneath hi5 yellow rain licker ... It's where the king stored his treasures -the crown jewels, · ·and of course, bis most prized .. , ,__ ....... In lll)Wlf prisonerg, Since we ave no over- Md I daft,_ IJtlll .... MJd view of the ancient Louvre, and ~.I hoPe"' a,, dOWll to 190 very few archives, thedi&isofareat powm... historic.al value." • 11He'•~--"-Dr. Govemmen! ~fficials agre~. woe19......_.__.. ... When excavauon lS completed m ..,.. II .,..._ ...... U111o91 January, . the dungeop walJs a~d Cellllr ....,. U. operellon w turrets Wlll 10 on permanent dis. ........ play. The Cour Napoleon, on the --lf--"l1Z::~~ll:l~~-==:::~~~Q:a~D=ea.:•~llllld:.:~tolcl:J~_.~ .. ~·::c1111:a:~~.-other hanct,_lf!ill~~~ .• ~LJJ(l_.J;......4 who ._. 1111_. 111 ..,., bwfd .architect J.M. PC1. s glass Ind hie "'9"8 a.t ~ pyranud. ~ of both dip runs AJ'cbaeolotJ,at. 41' In eoartyanl of Loawae 11 ...... ta Puta. _,.. Of. MOttler *""' ex-about SI 0 million. ~ t.u hie ollllltl'I COUid I~ all seemed acaderruc cnoulft .. There is a good chance they are diggin& was done. by band.. .,., until Trombetta told a report.er not only plowing under valuable 1"hc terrain should determine clMn hll .,. Within M to 10 .. there is an arcbacolOJY of the right objects. but also de1troyin& the the method, and the idea that ~ ~ _ .. ~ ~ and one of the left." He then context in which cvcrythina else everything has to be excavated ao ""'11--· ~·,..., r-...-: proceeded to denounce Kruta's must be studied;' be said:·for an perfection simply leads nowhere, .. hM :r.dl11111•111""""'10id.... froin the day9 "rir.htist" methods as un-archaeolosist, an object - a piece he said. His findinp, be ~ ~. • ""' '· f'.llcNrdlon'• professional. of animal bone for example, is s peak for thcmtelves: as.ooo foo-,ound lHI~ prOfftl?led Besides what he called Aeury's important only if we know whether ceramic and metal frqJ:nents, an cloct0f8 to put• 'PIHH do not longstanding and passionate it comes from the kitchen or the eight-inch · I Stb century bronu teed .. tea around.hie nedc. interest .. only 10 the powerful," garden." Kruta was incensed. He statue, hairpins and a priceless She Mkt '*' JIOn ~to oome Trom~tta disapproved of Aeury's called the charges .. outright lies." silver buckle. . h°"'9 frOm .moot Md go ''r.lght useofbuJJdozcrstoclearthe90-foot and said that in the three-foot area At the Cour Napoleon, unn- to ~:· , • • pit around the dungeon. around the dungeon walls. all pected findings included a col}ee- liou of Louis XV silver coins. UCb coin JS worth around S200, t...-..-.. •""-' vidc iiiilonnation' . ..,...._. ...... ,pro. • on how money circuJa1ed ID 18th century France. Oaly20re....,..aa.e~ boriJll comtvards. yet the 1e&ml bare iDOQ_C of the Cosily ocavalioe and restoration. equipmcnt. -nus u the i'caJ ICU'dll," Trombetta said, .. btit it is DOt Of our doi.Qa. We would like~ beuO' than to Worlc ~... I FRESH LOCAL LOBSTER 1?kpu~ 1'ed *1595 Whole Lobster * 1 Q9& Half Lobster-· Complete dinner Including 90up or salad and choice of potato or n ee pJlaf "I've never seen any- thing like it." "It's the best thing I've ever done to myself." Two Sr11t Dinners for the Price of One! Choice of ten fabulous entrees including prf me rib and fresh fish. . ' SeMtng on tint come, first terved basis on 2 for 1 nlghu. Offrr good on W~cJneS<Jays. Thvr.sdiys and Ftidays 5·7 P.f.4 . thru 10.-31 4 t • • J • • ~as 1n on-.· our onus an! .. Invest now and we'll pay you from $10 to $3,000 in cash! Here's your chance to make some .extra cash on your savings. For every SS,000 you deposit in a 1-to-10 year Great American Investor Series"• account, you'll walk aw~y with a cash bonus. Just pick the term you want and check the chart on the right. For a 1-year account you can cash in on a bonus up to S200. On a 9-10 year account, you can take home up to SJ,000! Or leave your bonus in the account to compound monthly for the entire term. . 1-YEAR ACCOUNT 12.60" Yield with bonus• .. ..... 11.72" Rilte Cast. IHas l1Y1stor Series for each teras U.000 dtposn $10 1,ar $25 2yun $50 3-4 years • $75 5·61U'S $100 7-81U"S $150 9-lOyun .___ M1n1mum deposit S5.000. Ma11mum dtoos1t SIOO 000 Of I tr erpuu 0c lobfr 31 1984 2-YEAR ACCOUNT 12.65" Yiekl with bonus• 11.11% .. Rate - Take advantage of this li mited offer today! 1rs easy to reinvest at Great American! If you have an account that's maturing, noWs the time to reinvest. Transferring your funds 1s quick and easy-1ust come in our office and we'll do the rest' So lock-m today's high yields and cash bonu<\es for a great investment. }> S-YEAR ACCOUNT 12.50%. Yield with bonus• 11.53" ol • R•te .,_. ,., " .. ,_,,,..,.."" 11 Mt.i.,. *°"'tt' 11U.000111t.....n • lllltml .,..., ..,_ iei.. l!lf ll!lc~ !!!t ""'11 • IO lfOll'!l ll'!l Ntwllt fl ..... II tlltM 11111 N ltl 1""'"1 It( ........... -'\!J Ill I H~ 'till\ ~ It I ~I II.If .. ""WllM fl • ., !:Mt ... """* ... II 11'.-C•I -Ii> Nlwrfty ltta!I .. tetli!H!iil illftlf$1 ..... flt ,..., "'ltihtt .. "'"' t '*"'' ti fltt ~ It. .. W1¥ ~ Check the Yellow P es fcir the office nearest you. Qpen your account ~y in person or call the tolJ..free fmancial Line 1-800 ·2n·9000. ; A CBltfomia fm nc1al Lead« ... Sfnce 1885. I Great AmeriCan First Savings Bank . to. • • ' • • • l'I AlO llot endorses state-run lottery to help schooJs Most of the ballot issues we will be asked to decide Nov. 6 . . can be rated pragmatically on their merits or their appeal to an established political philosophy. Not so Propo~tion 37, the ·"nitiative that would establish a state-run lottery in California. :the lottery is strictly a moral issue. Not that there aren't praalJlatic 8.fiUments pro and con. But e anti-lottery arguments simply arc not support~ by the experiences of the 17 states ~d the District of Columt>j,a, where lotteries arc flourishing. / The question each of us must resolve before we vote on this issue is: Do I have a moral or an ethical objection to gambling? If the answer is yes, the appropriate thing to do is vote no on Propcsition 37. If, however, you are not doctrinally opposed to the idea of a lottery game that will ~rve as a voluntary tax and raise as much . $700 million annually for a public education system that desperately needs an expensive infusion of reform, you must vote for Proposition 37. ...___...__WJiilemaintaining its opposi-UOn-;-ro-me atablishment o casinos here, th~tate has no poliC¥ against gambl:ing per se. Parimutuel betting at horse racing tracks is widespread and popular in California. Even churches tum their heads along with their cheeks when it comes to fund-raising games of chance like bingo. So the moral argument seems to be inappropriate. All the other arguments weigh heavily in favor of the lottery. It woy.ld be policed by a commission, it would enhance local control of schools by providing lump sums to the elected bodies with direct authority over the educational institutions, and it eliminates -or at least diminishes -the need for an increase in a mandatory tax. Despite the hysterical objections of some lottery opponents, the record indicates no link between the $'lmes and organized crime. And studies of the impact of lottencs on the poor show that although the money they spend on lottery tickets constitutes a higher percentage of their incomes, the percentage of lottery ticket buyers who can be considered "low-income" is smaller than the peroentage of low-income people in the general population. In other words, lotteries-do not prey on the poor. Even the Mexican-American Political Association, whic)l defends the interests of a poorer-than-average constituency, has endorsed Proposition 37. It recognizes, as we do, that there is a tremendous amount of good that can come from a lottery earmarked to benefit public education. The Daily Pilot endorses Proposition 37. Attorney rebuts editorial on Newport surf injuries To the Editor: Re: Editorial Oct. 1, "Newport Beach Has Moved To Reduce Spmal In Juries in Surf.·· This is a demand for an apology and a correction of the record. Would this paper edttorially sup. port a city that refused to place a warning on a dangerous curve that produced over 30 spinal iajuries per yea(? Would it praise the efforts of the city after four years of ignonna the s.ituallon for goinJ on a belated publicity binge trying to justify its actions? I am absolutely shocked that a reputable newspaper would run such a biased editorial while a jury is in the middle of receiving eVJdence in a case. I have no quarrel with news covera1e that is fair, but an editorial that accuses me of lymg and distort- ing facts without foundation is libel- ous. Let's see who 1s distorting the facts. If you had beard the evidence presented thus far in the John Taylor case you would know that the .flly's chief lifeguard, Kendall Jacobsen, admitted that the 1eneral public is not aw-an that deceptive bottom con- ditions exist which can lull an individual into bellcvmg that water is safe to dive into when in fact it 1s not. He further admitted that the gen- eral public ts not aware that many catastrophic injuries have oocwred in Newport Beach from people doing what is predictable, runnina into waist deep water and di~ Mr. Jacobsen alto admitted that there is no effective way for the tieaehioer lo effectively test the water before divina. thus conccdina that any doina•norm•l dive runs the risk of becom1na a quadriplegic throui}! no fault of their own. Mr. Robert Wynn, Newport's cny manaaer, admitted that the ~phic injuries ~na fr~m divins 10 Newport require a wamina tbt public (Ood forbid a sian). he just docsn•t know how to do it. Mr. Wynn admitted that the city bas • respoosib1hty to warn and in 1983 did warn in 1he Ciuzen's Report -and three years later i1 in fact warned by 1anau in local utility bills. There is no question Mr. Wynn recx>anizct the city's duty to warn - but the city won't post Slgns. Mt. Wynn admiu the city post, signs warning against divmg off piers. and jettys which arc acknowled$C<f obvious hazards, as well as warning against dots on the beach. Howevel, the most dangerous haz- ards are those which are unobvious, as the city acknowledged by its wammp in the 1983 Citizen's Report and i\Sadoption of the Hoag Hospital film .. Wipe Out" wtuch warns against running and divina into the surf because of the likelihood of the existence of sand bars. The failure to post a s1gn m light of Mr. Jacobsen's and Mr. Wynn's admissions is more than arrogl"nce. It's a city turning its back on the beacbgoing public. There's a hell of a lot of evidence for this conclusion in the court record. If you doubt the testimony of Mr. Jacobsen or Mr. Wynn. I suggest you send a reporter by the courthouse to read the actual transcnpt ofthe1r testimony. As to your final pomt about the wonderful work the ctty 1s doing to get the message out. 1t 1scomc1dental that the media blitz started about the first time the John Taylor case was set for trial. Contrary to your statement. New- port Beach did not produce the dramatic film "Wipe OuL ·• It was initiated by concerned phys1c1ans at Hoa1 Hospital because nottung was being done to educate the public on these accidents. The city should get littJe credit for this excellent movie which I am glad lS being shown The bottom line question lS what was the city doina in 1979 when Gary Fakhoury was rendered a quad or m 1980 when John Taylor was rendered a quad. Not now dunn1 tnal. I am wailing to hear! Every juror in this case was honest enoujh to admit that init1a!ly the) bad a bias apinst someone 1u1ng over t.rua t~ of accident. but that the~ were willina to put th<>K biases aside and decide the case on the law and facts u pttten tcd. 1t•1 ed1tonals hke youn that att calculated to tncreasc bias and preju- dice on the part of juron.. I hope you have the guts tq print &his ktter in full in an tqually prominent 1pot as your editorial and I will foratt ~ur libelous 1tatemcot . HERBERT HAAF Mr. H•lif is •a •ttorncy rrp- ~ntin.a John Taylor f ' I .. .. My , my welJ!ht, nd.my telephone credit card number are the thre mo tclo ;eTyguardedsecrets11Jave ... 1 ... c .. • Mondale whomps (. president In war J · of wqrds Sunday u LOffi§ViLLE -Jt•wu the ro- vcnae of the nerd. Walter F. Mondale. the teacher's favome, the kid with lhe boo~ the one wbo studied the issues an believ t ~n Scolding scale gives voice to weighty issues of the day to competency, fi.oaUy aot Ronald Reqan away from the campajan so~ud tage and onto the de~te atap -and ·bomped him. He won one qainst th Gipper. There sweet irony in that For on e roles were revcned.. It wu Mondale who was underestimated, billed u the patsy. the wimp who would be aoina up qainst the Great Scale that talks aims to motivate flagging dieters A new product 1s comllli on the market. I don't know if you are ready for this, but it-'& a scale that taJks to you -nags is probably a better word. The scale, called the the Sunbeam Motivator, has been developed by Fredenc Warren, a real estate accnt from Lauderhill, Fla. I called Frederic and asked for.a brochure and more details. He was delighted to talk about his scale and sent me the infonnation - even after be realized I was not a retail merchant who would handle the product. The scale bas a vocabulary of 235 words and can say J 44 sentences. It also has I SO motivational and m- struct1onal messages designed for weight Joss and encouragement. According to the brochure, and Frederic's effusive description, you step on the scale, enter your ID number, weight. height, size of frame, age, sex. and what your t.araet weight is. This 1s a one-time procedure. From then on, aJI you do is step on the scale, punch in your ID number and wait for the message. You must be sure you use the right ID: it is propammed to handle up to five members of the family, with a different ID number and a different line of patter for each. • The m~s vary every day, dependina on whether you have pined. lost or stagna~. For exam- ple, it will say, .. Con~atulations. I am pleased you are making progress,·· or, ''Beware, it 1s time for you to start waist watching. Today practice taking smaller bites when you eat." The brochure doesn't say if the voice is maJe or female. It probably isn't important1 but the literature on the scale does use the word 'mottvate' frequently and some people are more motivated by women than by men. or vice versa. The scale is eoina to be on the market this month and will retail for $250. It is ,a handsome piece of equipment. wtute with black trim, and the console faoe has 21 tactile buttons in three colors to easily direct the user in all functions. I suppose if you lived alone and had a weight problem, this is something you could use. There is nothing like a friendly voice first thing in the morning. We certainly do not need Communicator. As it was once with -0ne at our house. There ts always Rc.apn. the man bad been tutned someone hanaitlf around to com· into a caricature - a bumper sticker ment on your weight -in less than with a voice like chalk on the 235 words and for free. Sometimes a blackboard. The Great Com- family member merely rolls his eyes ·municator would communicate and and nuses his eyebrows. Thal ao-Mo.ndale would be finished. . complisbes as much as tellina me to ButtheGreatCommunicatorturn· take smaller bites. ed out to bavelinJe to.py an"f what be One thing that bothers me is that said often did not scan. He sai~ for there are no earphones with it, or instance, that devout as be wu be volume adjustment. Anyone can could not ruk attendin& chuteb stand outside the bathroom door and because of the danJer or terrbritt eavesdrop. Weighh~a in every morn-~t~ck. He di.d not say why ~e did oot ing could turn into the most stressful mVlte a nun1stcr to the White Howe ume of day, as well as being a or why be felt secure enC>\llh to violation of privacy. My aae. my campaian. Afterall, any terrorist wfth weight, and my telephone credit card access to a newspaper knew the number are the three most closely presidentwouldbedebatinaMondale &uarded secrets 1 have. here. He excused it all by sayina diat I would have to write down and ' he thought "the LOfd Undernandl.: .. hide my ID number so other .~em-~at may ~r may not be the cue, bUt bers of the family couldn't find 1t. If 1f1t 1s, He 1s the only one who doel. they did, they could use it and Reqan also hit a lopcal low point confirm what they hear every mom· on the issue of abortion. His belief mg when they're listening outside the that it is tantamount to murdei is door to the scale blabbina away. evidently sincerely held. But when he Frederic says there arc 80 million likened lhe "'personal choice" Moo- people Just wai tmg for this to come on · dale demanded to the one .. , the market. . ~urderer i~ insistinc on -bis or her I don't know, Freddie. If you can njht to kill someone becau.te of talk even halfof the 80 million people whatever fault they think jultifiea into paying $2SO for a scoldina scale, tha~" a painful moral dilemma was you're in the nght business, beq a trivialized. How this is like abon.ioo real estatt a1ent. You should be able is anyone's guess. Few killers think to sell every acre of swampla"" in they're morally justified-and if they Florida. do, they're usua111-insane. Subtlety is Columal•t Ami Wdl• Uvn bl not the president s 1trona suit wpz1• Nlp~I. .. Experience in office -and ma}'be also lie -bu taken I toll. The One Declaration's worth $375, 000 president no lonacr bas the comic.- book convictions be onoe had. The mqic prescription• for the economy may have worked. but not in the .,ay he once said. He described the sudden bloomin1 of a massive deficit u a virtual let of God. and not u an economic plan gone awry. He kind or hoped it would ao the way it camo -Nobody knows bow many copies of the Declaration of Independence came off that first speedy printing 1n 1776. One recently discovered, the 22nd known. was verified, then sold for $375.000. Check the attic. The rattlesnake can strike at some- thin& directly over its head, but the cobra can't. Half the Americans over age 55 have no natural teeth left. Deer hate garlic. Q Where'd we get the phrase "to win llands down"? A. From horse racina. When a horse was so far ahead it couldn't possibly be beaten, the jockey of oJd dropped the reins, hands down, to give the horse its head. L.M. Boyd I• • •y11dlc•ted cola mall I. Pro-family conservative paired with unlikely wife however that was. > Al for Rcapn's clOUn& statement, it was • me.aoderina •troll thtouab fraainentcd themes -a bramble of economic statistics, a paean to the military, a reference to thiop not mentioned (SSOO hammen) and an evocation of the spirit of Thomu Paine. Still, debatina is not the country'• national sport -not an OIYl_Dl>ic evenL Mondale's command of the facta, bis unexpect.ed poise, bis l&iHl)' at balancina respect for the prw.. deocy with not a lot for the man, doc. not blunt the effect of the economic recovery or tarnish the cheap iJjtter ot the Grenada invasion. It does not put more people on the unemployment lines or ra1te the rate of inflation. All tbetc are Relpn triumphs, real or pen:eivcd, pla.DDcd or lucky. nie-y fUcl the Republican j~ut &nd a nation addic:ted to buyina on credit likes its politics the way it doea ht ahoppins: Immediate patificatio~1 pleue. Mondale's 1~r of the biu iiiiiiiiiiililiiiiiilliiiil'°11C<19.r a)mina \o ~ the reco~ry ~be pracicat. but it's bardlycom · position to .. abolish parental authority." Wald's views on chlJ· dren's riahts, he ~ucid. would lid to "bi11rrc chanacs in the family true· ture" if 'he were on the bench. WhQO my assoc:iatc John Dillon asked fhe senator ff he could reconcile his conservative social views with his wife·~ a1SOCi1tion with o~nomy, hC id! .. What my wifc•1 views may or may not be are her bu in • 1 don't know anythina about orgonomy. It 00esn•1 mtercst me and I ran't comment on iL" I Th nator 1d bC does not belie~ e in rornotlna emons adol scents. c id be Clktn'1 know thal a central \enct of ott0nomy was std on orga ma. "I've &alkctl to her vm· Jillie about it." tie id ••J don't undmiand ftd . tt d n't mtcrcst me.. • rs Hum pt\~ did not respond'° requcstlor an intcrv:tCW. J•dr AIHltfN8 II a •~M( ctl•ttU/lt. • If Mo01 nteded to land a knockout punch, thia miaht not have been it. He won on poin~ but Reqan c:omittcd no major pff-ulilal ii 1Vl.I to resurrect bis ''Tbete you, ao aaain hne" -sort of like Jud) Garland raonina to .. Over tbe R.airi· bovl' when bet act -as flltaina. Mondale, thouah. proved be aa the smanct man, tbe more competent one, the one Who ht ta t.bC: books,; the one Wbo doeS not have to be tOkL foa instance, that miuiles once launchod cannot bec:aUed blck. • Bu• after lbC dtblte ~ over, she women who wtre ~ food ia 1 kMtllll ne1r &be preu leOlioa lban· cloaed tbdt 11Cam lablla and rao into u.t 1treet to tee the ~t lea~ l batl. It could be that Roaald Retpn loit ~ deblit, but •n the an)'Wly. Orlt ju c:ouliftie the)' •Yfas ~ la lilt. u an the mOVIC:lt the nerd tomedma ICU ~ (. .... ,, • •ralkii,., f'tl II rtftt ' •Yf~a]olns Parker· Hannifin western account specialist Wl:Jllam W. Davies of l~inc bas been named instumentation account spccahst for the western re11<?n o.f Parker ~autfla Co-OJ.'• ~uid connecton group. Jn .his ne,w J)(?St. Davi~ 11 responsible for sale of instrumentation products m Cahfom1a and Anzona. Before joinina Parker. be was with Crawf onl Ftnlaa. , . . . . . . ~ra Gamtir~llt has been promoted from mc<1ia assistant t'o-_..m_~,-'ia coordmator fo.r Marketta& ~lreettoa1, tac .. a· health care advertising agen9. Gu~brccbt ~dl be responslble for media planning. scheduling and media buy1na functions for the firm. She has been with Marketing Directions since t 983. JoininJ the ftrm as receptionist is Debra lUrklwn, who comes to MFk.eting Di~tiona from Ettee Laader, where she was a makeup artist. ~ttae It. Kere.a has been a pointed director of public relations for -Atbfe• fl Atteet.te1 · , · · · · . ijdntiniton Beach resident is a native of Toronto, nada, and has worked in J)Oblic rela1ions inihat country as well as in Los Angeles, most recently with Clari Tenlu A1soclate.s. • • • Roser A. Moore, a ccnified public accountant, is the new controller for the Melser Aatomotlve Gro1p, based in Newpon Beach. As controller, Moore will oversea financial administration of various individual automobile dealerships thAl comprise Meister Automotive Group, which is a part of The Meister COjnpules. Moore was formerly with Chicago-based AIUar'hderaen It Co. ftc! teaches part-time at Cal State Fallertoa and is an active member of the Amertcaa ln1dtate of Certified Public Acc01Ultutl and the Piii Ttaeta Kappa Hoeor Frateralty. I • • • , Soraya Ottowart has been appointed associate desi'11 engineer for the aqni-custom design section of Pletsey Solid State of Irvine, a supelier and •veloper of semi~ustom, integrated and hybrid circuits. Ostawari is a June ~duate ofUC Irvine, with a bachelor's degree in electrical engineering. .Before JQiltlng Plesscy, she was, a teaching assistant, with the UCI math department. • • • • .. Tbomu Mead bas joined Koll Co.atractto.n Co. of Newport Beach as Orang coast DAtLV PIL.OTIW~. ~ 10 , .. ( U ~s. firms cutting ez---- to fight foreign eompe~tlo Trend is marked by layoffs, shriveled profits during robust economic expansion B.1 JOHN CUNNIFF ,,,.,......._.... NEW YORK -Cu nous things arc happening in the midst of hat is often descnbcd as the m0$t robu t economic expan•on in 1hrce dee· ades. Like layoffs and hriveled profits and eittrtrne attempts to cut costs. lesser oodi11es' speckle lbe econ-omy. Consider: the irony ofboomina sales or personal comput.crs accom- panied by low profits for the retailers who sell them; the hil.h ~el of nc1i'o'- bus1ocss .swu simufuncous with a hi~ rate of ~x.Ulina business falJures~ the record-high profits of automobile companies and their tiaht-flStCd at· utude toward wage increases. a ~-andjpetbaptdeadly­ today. Whether the: newworidof compel.I· Ilion eftdura •• anolbu 3 daire for P"*C\MMI from f1 compeution 11 sou pat; those sadustnes where companies arc cndaftlettd and jobs are lost. Protectionism still t.xitts even the more compeutive matke1 1akal ~J>C. and strong ~u ail ~led for C\i en mOl'C. Two Of' Ult. mos& blSic industries, cars and lld;J. till benefit from a de&r'ee of~ tion1sm. Cravens ·tabbed for B/PAA's · lu~ch talk Partly because ofits si1e, American Telephone & Telegraph is producing ' one of the most noticeable of these seeming oddities, hoping to.sav¢ up to $500 million a year by cutting l l ,000 Jobs. Thats not the half of iL The bia company-ju<;t 23 perdnt of its pre- brcakup siu but still a giant -plans to reduce costs by as much as SS What.explains such anomalies? The common theme in many such ex~ples seems t~ be greater oom- pet1t1on -reuslttng &Om imports, der~ulat1on, new ideas, new com- panies. new products. lncreuingty, however. an attituac scans to be devetopjn.s to which l:tS. manufacturers and·1hdr ~ a~ the new world of governmen1- supported foreiin com:J)Ctitioo rather than u.ailin& it at UnetltiCaJ. And the imm~tc result of new ittitude is u attempt by CO..· panics thtouahout the country to COi thrir expenses to the bone and beat the competition out of the foreignetS. Dee Cravens, director of Corporate Commumcations for Priam Corp. in sa.n Jose, is the featured speaker at 24. The subject of Cravcn's talk will focus on the creative opportunities, competitive challenges, and the risks and rewards associated with the "art" of positioning a fast growing com- pany in today's CTowded market· place. The B/PAA luncheon begins at 11 :30 a.m., at the South Coast Plaza Hotel in Costa Mesa. For reser- vations. call Jean Eastin at 85 l-9433. The~colt is $15 fo~B/PAA membeTs and S 18 for non-members, payable at the luncheon. billion in unregulated businesses, such as telephone swhchina systems. AT&T is not alone. Automobile companies have reduced their la~r financial institutions must fllbt for the saver's dollar, and thcylUUst compete also to get bis business at the loan counter. AT & T no Jonaier enjoys the comfort of a regulated monopoly. Airlines must fight for the best routes. Car makers _must compete with equipment manufacturers, airlines, ken no longer can sit behind fixed oil refiners and large brokerage firms. ra.tes but must get out ind compete ln~~ted Networks ~nc.. a Contradictions? In some instances, with each other. . subsidiary of A VX. Corporauon, one and superficially viewed, they would · A new world has been deveJopm;-oftbe ~orld s lead~g manu_<acturers appear to · be so. The automotive ove~. the ~ few years. ~ the ofmultilayerceram.Jc capaot~. ~ companies can't produce enough ~it1cs of at are now..,bcina ex-!eased a 32,~uare-foot build• cars, the stock brokers never were penenced by wodu~ and co~-an the ~t:d Hill Technology Cent~~ more busy the airlines never carried sum~ ~ts most obvtou~ m~-St5-mill.1on. de\elopment neanng more peopie. festat1on 1s a lower level ~f inflation ~mpleti~n JUst north ofJobn Wayne The condition of banks also -and even fears of ddlauon. Airport ~ Costa Mesa. producesacurioussituation: Many of No longer ~n any produ~r be Aocorda~to~GnffithofBPBC. them arc in financial hot water in as.sured t:.hat pnccs can ~~at ~ exclusive 1easmg aaent f9r tJ\e spite ofloan and deposit volumes that wtll to~ them out ~(their mi~. ccnlr!. Integrated ~e~otts will u exceed anything seen on their books lncreasmgly t.t;tc environment u such the smglc-story tiuildmg as a corpor- in years gone bv. that yesterday s s1mple error becomes ate hcadquarteruod for research. . ~structioo project manager,. with responsibility for commercial and iqliustrial projects from pre-construction planning through completion. He is t:!tesently working on a I-million-square-foot office and manufacturing Bomple~ for Parker BamllflD'• 8crtea Control Systems <iivision in Irvine. LOS ANGELES (AP) -Savi,ogs and the three states lost $706 million in the principal subsidiary of the and· quarterly eiminp would be Mead comes to Koll from a position a$ project managCT with C.L. Peck loan associations in California, -Ari-deposits in August. That contrasts to troubled Financial Corporation of released in abou1 two weeks. S&Ls Ios~ $700 millioil -in depoSTts· ' ~tractor in Los Angeles. • • • zona and Nevada lost more than $700 a reported $3.4 billion saviop inflow America. The association bas lost blJlions pf • Artllv Anderson le Co. has appointed four new managers in the million in deposits in August. and last July and a $3.3 billion inflow m "You can bet a lot on that dollars in jumbo certificates of~· .international accounting firm's Orange County office. They include: MltclleU industry observers say that reflects August t 983. · assumption," Leff said Monday. posit-those ofS 100.000 or more- D .. Simoa, who ha.s been with Arthur Anderson since 1979, transferring to the major losses by the nation's largest Ernest Leff, Beverly Hills savings Neither the L6s ~les-baSed m re<:ent months due to a lad lt>f Qrangc County office last March; Den.nJ.s E. ValeatiDe, who joined the firm in association, American Savings & and loan attorney, was one observer FCA nor American SaVln.gs wOuld confidence in the usociation t.)r J 978, lcft to become assistant controller ofSeaborg, Inc. and returned to Arthur Loan. who said the figures indicate the loss comment on the association's toss of institutional depositors. HowcYl!r. Al)derson'saudit division in 1983; Lawrence S. Wuserman, an lrvine resident The Federal Home Loan Bank of ofbiftions of dollars in deposits by the deposits but an American spoltcsman company official\ claim the lflo 'frh<> joimd Arthur Anderson's Seattle office in 1979, and transferred to the San Francisco$3.id the associations in Stockion·based American Savinss, said the company's de~t figures stopped in mid-SCP'tcrobcf. ~~unfy~ccth~~stm~th;and~~&w~~ofHunti~oo-----~~~~~~-~~~-=============~~~~---~------~~=----~~~ Beach. who has been with the Oran2c County office since 1979 . ... . . Jac:k GauaeU has joined Tlaon Eml Comp•ter Software, lac. as vice president of sales for the Costa Mesa-based publisher and distributor of microcomputer software. Gausnell brings more than 1 S years of experience to hi$ new post, most recently as national manager of dealer saJes for CIE S,Stem1, Inc. • • • 1 Norman Wilks, a sales associate at the Laguna office of Coldwell Buker Retlda1ial Real Estate Services, has been elected president of the Lagaa &>ard of Realton. Wilks has been a member of the board sin~ joining the . profession nine years ago, serving as vice president for the past two years. He 1tia director of the California A.110datioa of Realton and a member of its Professional Standards Committee. • • • Jady Lyne.s and Dlua Drowa have joined the staff at Gloria Ziper & Atsoctates, Inc. of Newport Beach as account manager and account ='nator, respectively. Lynes was formerly an account executive with fr A11oclates Public Relatioa1, Inc. Drown, an Irvine resident. was l> us.ly administrative assistant at the Holmes Organludoa. • • • , DooaJd A. Calllows has joined Ame.rlcu Dlnrlllled'• tech di vision as controller of the Costa Mesa-based firm, a family of companies offering .financial services, investments, real'estate development and high technology . prc>ducts and services. Calhoun was formerly vice president-oontroller of Amerteaa Money Market l.Dvestmeats., Inc. of Irvine. He bas written a , textbook and numerous anicles on taxation and accounting and taught 1abeounting and taxation courses for UCLA ExteasJOll and Cal Poly Pomoaa. He is also a member and former director of the Nadonal Alsociation of Atco¥taDll' Los Angeles chapter and a member of the Oraqe Couty ()Umber of Commerce. "' • • • Item Matto of Fountain Valley has been appointed head of Size Wise of hutabl Valley, a weight loss program that offers nutiritional guidance, 1ficrcise, daily monitoring of progress. ma~ge, body ~ps, plus plenty ~f ~pport, guidance and counschn.g. Musto 1s a nurse with a background in ti.utrition and prior experience in the field of weight loss. -(f .•••• Edward Hope has been named vice president of th~ SteiD~Brie~ <!roap, a Laguna NiJuel-based real estatedevelpment firm. Hopes new JOb will involve s:aort and commercial development. He is a former director of hotel development for the Marriott Corp.'1 Northern California and Pacific Northwest regions. • • • • 't;.,. _ Steve Brld&es is the new president and panncr of the Maller Co .• a J¥wport Beach-based firm specializing in industrial and commercial real cpate development. The Laauna Beach resident comes to his post from ~mmerceBuk ofNewpon Beach, where he served as senior vice president ........ mana1tr of the real estate construction loan department. ·~ ... Ne-..rt BalHa Sa.U.11 has announced the p~motion.s of S!llU O'Neil tq senior vice president and Rlloada. Headmpa as vice president 1n charge of t~n administration. • • • Alu It Pribble has been named senior vice president and senior credit officer for Wells Farao Buk't commercial banking srouf, based ii! Newpon Bcacl.\. Pribble was formerly vice prestdent and. rqio~a manaa~r for Well 1 f.~o·s Fla1r laduttrial Park regional commercatl bankina office m El Monte. , He Joined Wells Faraq.Ban~jn .196i .. -.- J• • Newport Beach resident Elltabetll C. Setaau has been promoted to vice president at CaUfonia Federal Savi.Di• ud Loo Au0dattoa•1 commercial· 1.blink.ina division in Ora~gc County, . with responsiblity for ~'!s~ne. dtvelopment, cfcdit analysis and. ponfoho manan1tment of the. d.tv.1s1on s 1 e6mmercial loans. Sbe has been with the bank for two years. Also J01run1 the Oi'an1t County operation as vice president is 'nom BrHdt of Brea, who co~ts to California Federal from tntevaied Muaaemeat Servlcea, a financial · 1~stitutions software company. • I ' • • , vn 1 J.C. MacRae has joined CDB I~., a Ne.wport Beach·bastd a~ve tmen1 , .ttanld~and venture capital fi~, as v1~ president &fl;d chi~ffti.tanc1al officer. "" hi1 new J>9St, MacRae will dutc_t all 1ntcm~ financial act1V1t1cs and play an tivetole'" fund manap:me.nt. w1th.cmphas1s on health care and the bto-tcch 1 mdultry. He wa formerly vice p~s1dcnt and ch1ef financ1al officer f<?r VLt ~'°'-'' dcvdopcr of the contraceptive soon1t. .. ' . '. ... Smn &. Zelttr us been promoted to executtvc vi<"C pre idcnt of1tNG npp Service, wl .. dlrecW ,...,.....w11 for lt brucMt aM u4 ~ .. 11 mpoestlttlltJ for ft.NG .,IDJal1ttadve senleea. IKl .. laa dte 1Ml14et ui bi•ere4 loa• dM1loa1. TM Newport 8eadl tttl ... l b• bet• Wiiia RNO ftr tw• years. ' . . . ; SltlleJ, tac. of Irvine hH sci ted Vltle!r Comm~deu, lac. ~f ~ ll ,Mesa to,prt~re an rduc.ational pr~ra~ -1n Qon1unc1tons >Atth c-a"!1ologi t\ ud cardiovascular urgcons .--for palients ho ha t had pro thcttc: vahe1 tmptanted. • • • 'J1Ck Carder and Doaald M. Barile 111 have be(n appointed lroJcct manaacr for Bretoe Oo• tnetloo, lac. oflr inc. The)' ill be rt ponsi'blc for Sft'(u~t htdulina. bud t and rontta~t adm1n1\ttallon. \ ~ ·• Imperial's Tomorrow SavingssM Rates shown (compounded quarterly for higher yields! ) are recent. but subject to change daily-indicating ap11roximate current earnings potential if you dep6sit as much or more than each minimum amount shown. Other rates and terms available--call for details. $500 $10,000 $20,000 $50,000 . $75,000 $100,000 + Tenn Ra"te Yield Rate Yield Rate Yield Rate Yield Rate Yield Terms 32·89 Days 10.600 11.029 11.050 11.516 11.150 11.625 11.250 11.734 11.250 t t.734 30·59 90-179 Days 11.050 11.516 11.4~0 11.951 11.550 12.060 11.650 12.169 11.650 180-364 Days 11.400 11.879 11.800 12.332 11.900 12.442 12.000 12SH 12.000 12.551 90·119 Mos. lt.600· ~1 2.114 JZ.000 12.551 12:100 T?.660. 12.200 12.770 12.200 1.710 Mos. 11.650 12.169 12.050 12.606 12.lOO 12.660 12.200 12.770 12.200 36·47 Mo 11.650 12.169 12.Q~O 12.606 12.200 l.?.7 0 12.200 For current rate and yi 1~ and to open )'Our account, call our Tomorro Saving Sc~cc Center. dJttct or ~ollect: H • (714) 858-0825 in Orange ounty Association W'bere Tonzatr0u B tns Toda)~ .. Days Ra le Yield 11.3~ 11.8-12 11.350 11.842 11.MO 12 l~ -11.MO L'.l® 12.000 12Y1l 12.200 l2 ... "'Q • • st DAll.Y ~ILOT/Wednesday, Oatobet 10, 19M new 60 Hrlee locomotlYe, feata.ra an ad•anced tarboChaJ'&er and ireater dl ... placement for better fael economy and power rattni•· ) County offic~ space grows' Expa n Ion ren cts Oran e County•s move f 11om bedroom community to business area are now una r con tructaon w1ih twtl'<'e to break ground 10mcwhc between the end of '84 and mid 'SS. 11 JOY DE ANTHONY o.ll1"9tCent1tJl ... ll Between 1979 and 1984, the amount of office spaoe in Orari~e Count)' has nearly doubled, says Kenton Boettcher, Senior Associate of The Newport Economic Group, an economic fotttastina fmn located in Ne~rt &ach. Once an inventory of 16 million square feet citis\Cd. Now there is 30 million square feet. He attributes the arowth o~ the office space market to the surge in employ· ment in the county, lo the 70s Oranae County cotild be considered a "bedroom community." Boettcher said, but since then "we h.ive matured int<5 a busine s com- munity in our own riibt." Speaking at a ·~Forecast l 98S" seminar sponsored by The Newport Economics Group, Boettcher told a · Balboa Bay Oub audience of land developers and real estate executives that quality ~ well as .quantity of space has grown. The design of offices in Orange County has changed from the primarily functional to the "really first class." The amount of office space chani- ing from vacant to occupied 1s expected to increase. Piior to 1983, the hi&hest absorption of office space in the county occurred in 1979, with just under three million square feet absorbed that year. The low point of absorption came in 1982. "We're predicting a total annual absorption of about 3.4 million square feet for 1984," Boettcher said, nsing to about 3.6 million for J 98S. The amount of • immediately adjacent to the atrwrt. Town Center in Costa Mesa, down to Ncwpon Center ao Newport Beach. "The central area has dropped a little bit," he said. But by l990i-BoeUchcr predicts a shift to the ccnttal and wuth regions of the county. Hiah n&e buildings. (those over 10 storiet), are expected to increase in number in the Newport Center, Town Center, John Wayne airport ~ accord1~ to the Newport Economics Gmun fO~ast. ~~vt-n -;nrh "-u;1c1;"r .. Boettcher a lot of potcnti I in !he Anaheim Stadium area, a reg1Qn cncompas in cc1uratOraogcCoun~ and the re surround1na ttie dium. Currently it accounts for Just a little O'<'CI a gunner of all office p;icc built in the c.ounty. There's about 600,000 square feet undU construction with another one million square feet planned. He cal)s the supply and demand balanoc &n that area of the county one oflhe best of a_ny of the t'CjJOns under · s cons1dcrauon. Zalaskus has Gemologist t~tle Eric J. Zalaskus ofJewels by Joseph, 3333 Bri.st~I St., «;osta Mesa, has added ihe advanced title Certified Gemologist to his prevtously bestowed Registered Jeweler award. . · These two professional awards ar~ conferred by the Atner~can Gem Socit'ty. LonJ hours of study in gemology and the successfu~complcuon of very comprehensive ex.ams were required of him before the Certified Gemologist title was awarded. . . .. . . · . The American Gem Society, &fl assoc1a11~n offineJewele~. 1sdcd1cated to consumer protection and gemological ex~rt1se. ~GS awa~s titles to member jewelers only after they have pr.oven the~ sktl~s 1n e".aluahng gemstones and gradin$ diamonds, have extensive expenence m ~e mdustry, ~nd hav~ been recognized as accomplished and ethical profess1onals by thear peers m the Society. Cammlag•e• get Century award Bob and Ann Cummings, owners of the Sir Speedy Printing Center on McFadden Ave., Huntinpon Beach, received a "Cent_ury Oub" award at an awards banquet during Sir Speed)"s Seventh National Convention. Customer support to the businesses and residents of their area for the Sir Speedy has led to a sales volume in 1984 which ranks it among the top 2S percent of the Sir fuu>chisc system ofover 489 cen Two U.S. Air Force contracts totaling more than $9 million have been awarded to the Willard Com- clim1nating the condition can be performed in a few minutes on an outpatient basis. '8S at year end is expected to be around t l percent of the total space, Milly Bonnet, Anaheim Convention Boettcher said. Center. The amount of space under con- Bob and Ann received a plaque-and a gold medal for their sales volume achievement. Don Lowe, President of Sir.Speedy, Inc. gave 1ifiOngratulA· tions. The "Century Oub" winners were recognized at Marriott's Hilton Head Resort on Hilton Head Island in South Carolina. Elected to the executive board struction currently isabout four and a were: Sharon Sola, Newport Beach half million square feet. In 1985, this Marriott; Sadie Gennaro, Grand figure is expected to be somewhere Hotel; Doris Brown, Anaheim ·eon-between four and a half million and Fieldstone Co. relocates ...,pa.ny of Fountain Valley for pro- duction of fiberglasS mobility con- tainers and drop tank containers, according to Jack 8. Hochadel, presi- dent of the company. The contracts, together with an ~additional $7 million in options for Navy and Air Force contracts. will increase Willird's baclclog to $20. 7 million. Approximately 220,000 Americans each year arte treated for secondary cataracts. American estimates the mark.ct potential for Nd:YAG lasers at S 150 million. vention Center. Thom Ward, Photo five mill.ion square feet • and Sound Company; Barry Cole, "Tbe market in generalofook.s fairly The Fieldstone Co, in order to County and San Diego County tam. Sounds of Music Orchestras; and good for the nex.t year, year and a accommodate its growth from 20 to NEC meem e:stmi.tet H. Davi<! Bright, president and chief executive officer of Nai,ional 6ducation Corp., NeWP.O~ Beach, h~s announced that preliminary esti- mates indicate third-quarter results will be in lioe with analyst estimates of ll <ents a share, an· increase of approximately 25 percent over the Peter Gunther, advisor to Executive half," Boettcher concludes. 64 employees in the past three years, Ne• comp1UJ7 formed Board. Five _years ago, around 47 percent has ·relocated its corporate bead-Aspen Pacific Development Co., NACE is made up of people who ofallofficespacewasabsorbcdintbe quarters to 14 Corporate Plaza in founded by William E. Tackabcry work in the hospitality industry -area surrounding the John Wayne Newport Beach, announald Peter and Charles w. Poss, has -beaun The Willard Company, which started business nearly 28 years ago building pleasure boats. is a publicly- held company with sales m 1983 of $7.4 million~ food and beverage di.rectors, catering Airport. The oenttal area, (Sant41 Ana, Ochs, president. operations in Irvine. managers, florists, restaurateurs, mu-Orange, Tustin), took up about 26 The homebuilding firm, which has Aspen Pacific will concentrate on sicians, photographers, bakers, print-percent with the rest of the county divisions in Orange County and San projects throughout Southern Cali- pnor year's results.. . . e£Sy and party planners.. absorbin& filr Jess. "In five years, Diego County, will take 7,000 square fomia which meet special OP: • we've seen a huge amount of that feet of office space for its corporate portunities in specific areas.," said Dl•trlbutor aamed space shifting towards the airport staff and its Orange County home-Tackabery, president of the new firm. IAMr gem mar.ket OK · The Food and Drug Adminis- tration has given· American Medi~I Optics, Irvine, a division of Amen- can Hospital Supply Corp., approval to market its Y AG-I 00 laser for use in posterior capsulotomy. National EducatJon 1s the nation's leading provider of industrial and vocational training. The Distributed Systems Division area," Boettcher said citing a figure building and sales staff. The com- of CI£ Systems, Inc., of Irvine, and of S8 percent. He defines the airport pany'~ 64 employees are spread Office manager for the firm is Alternate Channel Marketing, Inc., of a_rea_a_s_tba_t_w_b_ic_b_in_c_lu_d_cs_th_e _regi-=-· o_n __ ev~e_n....:.ly_be_tw_ee_n_its_co_rpo_ra_t_e._O_ran_g_e __ san_d_ra_D_u_n_ki_· n_. ------:--San Jose, have named Peak Dis-,... The laser is used for up to 40 percent of cataract patients who develop a secondary cataract. This is the clouding of a membrane inside the eye after cataract SU!Jery. Prior to the Nd:YAG laser, patients had to return to the hospital for more surgery. Now the procedure for C.teren elecm ae• board The National Association of Cater- ing Executives, Orange County Chapter, has announced its board of directors for the 1984-t 98S season. The new president is Sunny Saldana of The Westin South Coast Plaza. Other officers arc: vice presi- dent, Bill Gaines. Anaheim Marriott; treasurer, Pam Purvis, The Westin South Coast Plaza; and secretary, tributors, Inc., of Arlington Hejglus, IH., as an exclusive distributor of the C. ltoh Electronics, Inc, line of lBM 3270 plug-compatible replacement products. The initi.al one-_).'car aveemcnt as valued at $3 nullion. Peak Dis- tributors has received initial ship- ments of the CTE-7800 video display terminals for distribution to end- users. WATER ~REATMENT CHANGE ~nntng NOVEMBER I , l 984;· i water treatment change Will affect most tap water supplies ln Southern California. Before we defiver water to you, It Is treated. That treatment currently includes the use of chlorine as a disinfectant. Bectnn1nc NOVEMBER I, 1984, Metropolitan Water District-the chief suppJler of Imported water to Southern CallfomJa-will switch from the use of chlorine to the use of chloramlne to treat water . . Chloramine is a combination of Chlorine and ammonia. Chloramlne, Which has been used for decades, has been proven to be an effective watet treatment process and safe for human consumption. KIDNEY DIALYll8 P.ATIENT8 LIVE FISH OWNERS Special steps must be taken to remove chloramlne from bOth fresh and saJt water aquarh.am and fish pond water. Pet supply stores have Information anCI the necessary P-roducts. . COMMERCIAUINDU8TRIAL WATER USES The addition of ammonia to the watJet= JdfeCt certain commercial or Industrial water uses. All companies are encour to check their water use requirements to determine If this water treatment wUJ have an effect WHY THl~CIEt Federal rule& are P,romptl~ the Chance In dlslnfeCtants. Some water naturally contains orpnic material. By Itself, that is harmless. But the material combines with chlorine, forming tnhalomethaneS fO'IM's) Which ere ~ car~s. Using chloramlne wlU sllf\lflcantly ,educe the amount of THM's lti your water. ""QUllTIONI? . Gill Mesa Consolidated Wa~er District at '714 t 631.: 1205 . ..()R .. .. CalJ Metropplitan Water Dlstr-lct's toll free hotline: I (800) G .. A .. L·L-M-W-D ~ ) -ftfE A. CONSOllDATID WATIR DllTRICT Highest Bank CD Rate Term Yield Rate 2 Years 12.llo/o 11.43% 1 Year · 1 2.05% 11.38% 11 6Months 11.80% 11.16% ' . ' ' Bonus Money Market* 11.25% '-10.66o/o YlElD Ann11.,111~J y1rld b.i•t'd on print1p.,J •nd ff\l,.rtll •<'m•""'"ll In M~ounl •I 0111 rat<' for <'>nt> )'«'If RATE: Ratft ihown "'" b.1•..d on s 10.000 dC'pO•llt s ...... ,.nll•l lnltr .. t pcn•hy f(ll C'•tfy w11hdr.ow•I R•tn "'blM I(> ch.-n1' wllhn\11 "'"'I(' ~~Central Bank would like you to earn tl)e highest bank--saf~ interest on $10,000 deposits.You are insured by the FDIC up to $10~000. \t\k're big enough to offer you a very healthy return on your money and small enough to make it easy for you. Just ask for our ' '· - Custom Investment Account and check these additional benefits: Hig}:\er rates available on other maturities. . Your interest is compounded daily. . . Your investment is backed by our $1 .2 billion in assets and more than 92 years of experience. Member rn1c L ., I SBA approves new SBIC for Southern California A new m 11 Bu in Investment Co. tw ht!tn lioen~ by the U . m&l.1 Bust~ Adm1n1 tration to provide capual for smaU compani in lhe Southern liforni area. The new SBJC 11 First Amencan Ca.,Pital funding. Inc. l he comp ny's cbtef officer and president is Luu Trankiem. The SBIC is located at J 8662 MacArthur Blvd., Suite 400 ,. Irvine. • SBIC's ~re privately owned and o~tcd mvestm.cnl firms which proyidc venture capital to man bus1n for FOwth or expansion. The SBICI are licensed and rqulated by SBA and are ehgible to receive some fundina from the fedCT'll gov- ernment. The initial capital of these investment tompaoies comes from private aourees. In mak.ina the announcement, SBA Los Anae1es. District Director M. Hawley Smith. said, "The SBIC pt'Olfld\ fil~a need for entrepreneurs who have ideas but have difficulty find.ins financina for their ventures. First American C.apital Funding, Inc. UP s AND DowN s Pcllj ~1 nard IPrarv ~is CrnorsL ~--~ • Adtob un S Hurco EVERY SUNDAYll l e.m.-3p.m. ORANGE COAI T COLLE GI! •aw11111er~ .... -···SPACES S 10 • 432·5880 .. ..,. .. , ltllt lfltcll • ..... ti ...... &Mfr:MINS GALORE/I FRO CUSTOMER AOMllllON • ,AMINO. lacct11: It's cla11HlM! .. , .. u ,, . .,... .. ,,.. " 'l>ell1 rilol." I r~••-•r ulh ,.._ fl111 d17 .... eold l IM oMI .. ,., , ... pritl' I •Hl'4 I .............. K tn ht-• ef 111 t• c••• Ctom lhf' Dall P'Utlt 1J 16. l 11:~ 1., 1 .1 lti l~ It Wl~I scncratc growth ~f new an~ ext Ung amall bUsin 1n th metro- politan Lo Aqelcs area, and s a result, w1U create more revenues and JObs." Smith also said, ··cm.tion of the new ~Bl,C ~fleets Pre ident Rcapn' continuing mterest 1n small bu mm and is in, line with the Pmident's overJll economic program of utilita· tion of federal funds and rcsoul\"CS together with toe.a.I and private funds and resources to create Jobs and stimulate local economic : AN SBIC's major function is to malce iJ?VCStments by supplying equi- ty capital and lo -term venture loans to small companies which meet the investment criteria of the SBlCs. SBICs finance small firms in several way.s: by nrai~t Iona-term loans\ by cquny-typc tnvestment&j or by financing with combined 1eatures of both eqpJty investments and loans. T~ of the financing are nea~ tiated between the small firm and the SBIC. An SBIC may obtain partial ownership of a small business throilgh equuy•typc in¥ tment1 but n Is prohibited from iaking contmll- 1ngintcrcst. Many Bf Cs also prO\~dc bu inc maMgemcnt id to the compames they fin n~. :Alph KlcJw;f9tem. win• man~ement qstem · Alpha Microsystems of Irvine, mnnufactuter of multi-user businc CQmputers, has reached an origina1 cqui,pmcnt manufacturer (OEM) agreement with Superior Inter- national to provide information manaaement systems to the funeral industry. • The .one-year agreement calls for Superior -the world's largest dis.- tributor of funeral supplies -to create a separate division, Primary Computer Systems Corp .. to marlcet systems tQ.'\the funeral home and cemetery industries.. Terms of the aarecment were not disclosed. At Bank of America you can choose from a wide variety of investments -all backed by the security of California's leading bank. And you can count on the services of a knowl- edgeable banker wh.o will help you choose the one that best suits your individual needs. SAVINGS PIANS Wffii EASY A<:CES& Cash Maximizerl!llaccount 1 If you're looking for an investment that combines'instant liqufdity1lnd · market rates, check out our .Cash Maximizer111ac.count!" Or, if you're interested in building a savings . program and prefer a more traditional way to save, our Regular Savings* account may be just what you're looking foc. PERSONAL CHOICE TIME·DEPOSfTS. If you'd like to loc:k up • ... -9.00% 9.38%~ Curmlt Ratct Mun.mum Balana: $2, 9-25% AMual Y1cldtt Minimum &l.anc::e $2,SC.ll 9.65% Cumnt Jtatet Annual Y1ddtt Mort Thrul $100 fl 1lwl Sl Two Year Personal Choice Time Deposit 1190% Ra t highest 1n tcrC!-it ratL~. Personal Chotce Time Dcposib ** give }OU just the choices you need. The rate you earn depends on the amount you deposit and the term vou select -anytlung from 7 days to 10 years. Best of all you can open an accou nt with a~ little as -l. With choices Ii.kc these it's easy to get a time deposit that'~ exactly ri~ht for }'OU. ONUS At Bank of Amcn c.i you can count on experienced plc to help you make the right 1nvesunent choice . The choice that reflccL~ your individu lit)·. •If wu d wur acoount p tO the end ol o mcnt , an~ e.amcd but noi ~ crtdhed to the mnunt will nod'.C id _.Su nual m earl Wl~AI BANK ON THE lEAlJER Bl . Bank of Ameriea .. l \ On the ;)I' ,. • WH AT AME X DID NEW YORK CAP) Oct. 10 1 That· san apt desert ption of both business and business people along the Orange Coast. To keep track of where companies are gotng and whlc'h people are helping themgetthefe,justwatch 'Cr ditLine' -everyday in tlie Bustnesss cttooof}'ournew llily Pilat . - ·.___:__;__~• -- I Cordless ~hones extend •ability But how can a consumer guard against tnterf erence? .. Cotdlesa phones are reallychanaJna the way people use the phone. Until now, even if your phone had an ?tremely. Jona cord, it was atiU thou&)U of u a atatioftary indoor object. ays Susan Ames, AT ~Thome consultanL · .. Now the phone can liietally ao anywhere you do within the &i_ven ran" of the be5e unit. The convenience this off en the consumercao be a najor help 1n any number of everyday situations: doina laundry, for instance, or workina in the YI.rd; anythiDJ that nonnauy takes you away from the phone." • · Here are some of the questions Ames is most often uked "9bout cordless phones: Q. Wlat .._..,bow before I bey a cordless pllioeet A. Fint of all, cordless phones are based · ori a completely different tecbnoloSY than standard phones. Takina away the cord gives the fieedom of mobility. a real convenience. With a standard phone the sound of your voice travel throu&h a wire in the cord on electric sign.ab to the phone it.self and from the phone into the vast network of wires that make up the phone system. Obviously. when the cord was removed, so was the means of transmittina your voice to the phone. Cordless oh.ones WMk on radio s111"'' bc:tiwa:n tbc bandvtaod the bue uniJ. which is conne.cted to a modular telephone jade and an electrical outlet. Lite any kind of radio li&naJ, the s.ipal used by a cordless phone can be subject to interference. Q. ftat elf' coN.Jeta llMaet ..... lib! A. Because of the radio siaQaJ format, voices tend to sound differently than when heard on rqu1ar phones. althouah the VOWe quality ii pmCC1ly dear and undentandable. This is normal and has nothiq to do with interference. You're just hearina the difference between • telephone and radio transmisaiona. , Q. ftat tJM of taterteraco co.Id I ,.ublJ Hl.r • mJ~eu,._.t A. Your cordless phone is subject to the same thinp that can cause interference on your home or car radio: chanaina weather, cenain home appliances, electrical ~uipment, or even metal in the walls of your house. Now, it s imponant to remember that just because these things can caOJC interference doesn't mean that they necessarily will. PAPARAZZI -~ - --=--=--~ ------------ .. Alan, llarle, llerdll, W&JD.e and Jay Oemond dellChtecl Linda Valentine, Merlam Bruelle CUe and Saunne Ferrante. Clinic awards sign of appreciation Entertaining family sings at tribute for Olive Osmond 87VIDADEAN Dllr .... ..,.. .... ••nank God for Kids." That simple and tender little song held a deep and emotional sipificance for Marie Otmoad and her brother Vlrl when they sana and .. sianed" for more than 700 at the Anaheim Marriott Hotel. . It must have held special sianificance for the audience as well, for that's what the gatherina was all about -a salute to people who have helped children ov~rcome handicap . This, the ninth annual Providence Speech and Hearin&Oinic dinner, was specifically to honorOUve Otmoacl, the mother of the famous show business family. And Marie was there to accept the beautiful tribute and memento. an engraved Italian plate, from Providence Board member Carl K.arcHr. The honoree was unable to attend. She and her husband G~e arc in Englind on a couple's mission for the Mormon churCh... be 5ends her Jove and wishes she could bC here." said Marie ... For them it's like being onasccondhoneymoon. They also pentoneycarin Hawaii toacthcr on a mission." The tribute to Olive Osmond was in ~tion of her work in establishing._-inic in Orem, Utah for the bearing impaired Children of that state. It also saluted her cfforuon betwf ofbtr fint two sons, Tom and Y1rl; both victims of tcvcre hcarinaimpairmcnt A photopaphic slide ahow told the story of Olive Osmond•• faith and determination to ai ve her aona help .. Dllr .................. ll ... Third ti.Ille'• tbe charmer for Tllomu T•tmaD, belieftt cJumauUl and wife Jackle. and 1uidanoe toward makina suoccs.ses of their lives. She had been warned not tohaveoibdchildlen after her first two had exhibited hearing impairment. But be rejected that advice, and so Marie: one of seven children to follow, was there to sing ··Thank God for Kids." Present also, besides brother Virl were .. The • Osmond Brothers," Alu, Merrill, JaJ and WQU who entcnaincd with their latnt country western tunes. (TI\c nine children have &ivcn Olive 29, almost 30. pandchildrcn.) · If she had heeded the doctor's advice, the .. entertainment committee would have had to look elsewhere for this year's big benefit, rapidly growina into one of the county's major fund-raisers. .. Itjustgrowscach 'JCM," beamed TMmu Testmu (Ernstand Whinney)ofCoronadel Marwbobascb.aired the last three events. 0 1've been on the board for more than three ycan now because I like an orpnization that deals with children." He was accompanied by wife • Jactleataprivatereception fortheOsmondsand corporate sponsors prior to the dinner. Providence Speech and Hearing OinicofOrange was founded by diminutive MuJaret AllD lllmu who as a nun with theOrderoftheSistersofSt Joseph was workina at Childrcns Hospital with children who suffered from speech and hearing problems. She left the C.athohc order to estabbsb Prov1den~ in a sm~l adobe house 18 years ago. Today the cbruc is housed ma six-story build mg. ~mploys a staff of 50 and provides help for more than 5,000cbildren and adults cacbycar. The pixieish Inman, who was helped on and off a box so she could reach the mtcrophone, bandies ribbina about her small stature with &ood humor. Al one point she related a story abouta small boy student at lhc clinic wbo refcned to her as .. that little girl that's an old woman." Numerous prizes were awuded with an extra one -a Roya) Vikiogcruise1oinatothc .. litlle1irl." Among those on the 1ucst hst (dinina on veal with crcpesfordcsscrt) were tbcO. Dau. Beb Prall , Job Prad~ and the ~eatJa-..., Mike and Carleell WWaN. Dr.RMert Meon, Or. and Mn.J S..U1te11Der, the Reau ~au.Kaesand SUl'OD hllb•aB,..U.Graceand RM Wri&'t.Ban,n. Palmer and ~e.&Gralaam. • • DAY. OCTOB Repai.ring can turn despairing ... 1 Fabric Fair to uncover new ideas Nearly SO e~bttors and l 07 workshop :: · on.s will cover .. Fibers. Fabrics. Fashions a.od Fumi.sbi• .. at Oranie Coast CoUqe's 14th annual Fabric Fair. More than 2.000 people are expected to attend the fair from 8:15 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday in the Chemistry and Appbcd Sctence Buildings on the campus at 270 I FauW:w Road, Costa Mesa. .. Our goal this year is to show what's new and different in the world of fabrics • both an products and services." says Bem1oe Hopkins. fair dtrector. "We'll let the public know euctly where these products and services come from, where they c~m be found and at what cost and bow to use them." Admission ts $10 and persons may come and JO throuahout the day Tickets.. on sale now in the OCC Ticket Office in the Student C.cnter from 9 a.m. to 7 p.m Wttkdays and 8 a.m to noon Saturday, also will be sold at the door. Persons may attend a many as six wort.shops. most of which a.re 45 minutes Iona tltbougb there are sevcql ~ minute ~ons. Workshops bqin at 9. lO, 11:30 Lm .. 12 '\O, 2 and 3 p.m. Workshop hcadinas WlU include "Oin unas. .. "C1othing." ··crafts;· "Ocsian:' "Fabrics." .. Home ., Fumi~in :· •• Home Occorattng." .. FaShion " "f1bcn." .. FittJng.'' "Hi~OI)' and Ethics," .. How to m," "Patterns." "Ouiltina. •• "Sewina Machines" and .. ii Techniques." 'there also will be a fashion show prcsc.n by Lois Ericson of Tahoe City. Featured pcakcrs will include Barbara Hall, ooo- sumcr 1nformation director for the Fabric Warcho : Jar1et SU>der, editor ofTtcadle.an map.zinc; Jandl Berte, owner of Janell Btne Fashion Oesizns; {.)nthJ& Ruuel a - color and wardrobt con ultant: Marion Anderson, owner of Marion's Custom Aoorcovcrinp; Eleanor A. Bum author of<"Quilt in a Day," Mary Jane McOelland. owocr of Ftt for You; Barbara D~m<>nd. owner of The Left Fabnc C'o.: Diane Rick fashion dcsianer for RMR Producl.IOD . Loi Boncer, ov.-ner of Aardvark to a and Elaine Brad:ctt. o"'OCf of Elaine's Quit Demonstration ...Ul be given in "Aoorcov n d rca R .. •• haf ·c 1n oti "" · t Up V ur Li~ Wit a Fabric Lam .. '"Ethnic Do .... Pan Fit for Your Fi re... o1or and Waldro :nation. "•·Ho to wW1 EasvPau.cm " .. tbe ofMakina tu Animal :·.,, n lnlroductio 'Eni~lb odd .... Tailori T' .. tive I H G1 Dtcoraf n ' ine bf'OtOClry,." "11 lhng/C~dle"l~iet of r\\1 ···-~" d I ( • trann , re . ... : • .. ' \ Ne~ lywed Person I Style columnist Pilar · ayne and Harbor Mu01ci1>3tCourtJuc1Je tep ea Stewart are on their honeymoon in Europe. • Last turday's wedding of the widow of actor John Wayne and the New~rt Beach jurist was ocleb~tcd by about 200fncnd at an early evening recepuon 11 La Roca. . - The party followed the pr·ivatecercmony, con· ducted by Judge RobertLaw,at which Ai111 Wayne &altle was her mother's matron ofhonor and the bridegroom's brother, Dr. Ian StewartofDavis, wa best man. JftD.lfer ltallle was flower Jirl and Mactbew Stewart was rin1-bearcr. Also anendinJ were the couple's parents, Ca'rmela Pallet.eofL1ma, Peru and Castle and Catherine Stewart of Corona. The estate's entry staircase, draped in cascades of orchids and antherium by Xavier of Newport Beecb, led to a balcony where violinists led by erati GlbsoA of Huntington Beach serenaded the guests. Vocalist Ju Kaowlto sang a few specially requested selections before the bride to sed her bouqueund the couple cut their cake of chocolate and white layers with raspberry filling. Amona those enjoying the outdoor buffet were Judges Calvln SckmJdt and Loll Carcleau and their wives, Judge Bra~ Sanmer and Carol Lind, Orange CountySupervisorTomandEmmaJaneRiley,Ro1er andSa11yLaby, ToaJArml1teadandBeleaCoffey. Kath)' WU80n and Leon Slack came to Pilar WaJDe and8tepben Stewart'• wed~. .. 612,000 tl~d knot in ·June Wedding march reaches highest rate tn years WASHINGTON (AP)_... Americans march~d to the altar in June at the ti1ghest rate in years, new government statistics indicate. Some 306,000 American couples tied the knot in June, acwrding to preliminary fiaures rolltcttd by th Naeionai Center for Health Statistics. That'sa rate of 1$.8 marriages per 1,000 Americans - thc hiaJlcst level for any one month .since June 1978, when the rate was 16.0. But despite the surge in June-traditionally the most popular month for weddings -the national marriage rate remained relatively level on an annual basis. Barbara Wilson of the stati tics ~nter suggested two factors may have resulted in the jump in marriaacs this June. althouah she cautioned aaainst rcadina too much into figures that may bC rcviSed before.becoming final. There were five Saturdays this June, she pointed out, which increases the lilCelihood of weddings in the month because half of all weddings arc held on Silturday. · But, she added, the increase in the June marriage rate, without a corrcspondina hike in the annual rate. may also show that people are being more deliberate in their wedding plans. · Couples who plan to marry may increa&iri&ly be choosing the time when vacations ~ easier to sc6edwe and the weather may be better for outdoor panics, she suggested. June brought the total weddings to 1 160,000 for the first half of the year, l 8,000 fl\Ore than the {trst half of 1983. But because of the larger population this year, the sil- month marriage ra~ was identical at 9.9 per 1,000 in both periods. Marriages arc seasonal and in recent years Im than half of marriages have occurred in the first six months of any year. ___ ORIWHOM THE CHIMES TOLL ••• _ From Bl tdls me I cannot do that, and asks ifJ am trying to install a new phone. "No ma 'am. rve had this phone for more than 2orears. rm)ust trying to get it toworkaftertakingout the bet chimes.' TeclaDlctu: "All yoa .. oald uve to do II pl•I tlae pboae ID tbe jack.'' Sbe didn't anclentud tlle jack wua't coueeted to anytbla1 at tlae otller end. Me: "But that doesn't work. The wires from the jack must connect to these gray and white ones, but I don t know the combination." · TecbnJclan: "Well, I don't bow why yoa were told to connect tbe 1ray1 to tlle black becaaae tbe black 11 a sroud wire ud doesn't cOD.Dect to an~g.'' Me: "What about the yellow?" , Later, I was told by anAT&Temployee lhatall I neededdowascall them and say I didn't want the chimes anymore. They'd stop charging me rent, but leave the ch1mes. Had I known and chosen that option, I would have just postponed this grand experience. CORDLESS ••• From Bl Teclmlclaa: 11Tbat'1 a sroand, too. Bat I can't tell you bow to coDDect tbe otbers.111 bave to bave a service man call yoa, pertaap1 be cu ulp yoa. Be'• tied ap rlgbnow, -----------..---------------------------. batbe1J1etback toyoa.'' feature for convenational privacy, as· well as program· mable security codes. However, if you do expenence any intrusion on )'.01,lr NOMAD cordless phone or have any questions about it, call this toll-free number for assistance: ' 1-800-222·31 ... . . . ' ·~ . Q. Y oa mentioned the dwulel of a cotd.le11 pboae. Cu yoa explaba wllat tllat .. f OCT-.11- GARDEN BBQ lighter Fluid s1.oo Accent Plant Hangers PP24 YOUR PP28 CHOICE PP32 $1.50 ea. PAINT Zynolyte Speed Enamel Spray Redwood Stain Black Amalon 4'' Brush 3/4"X50 yds. Masking Tape 2300 line, white Navajo, antique s1 :00 ea. s2.oo ea. s1.so ea. 21s1.oo SS.00 ea. ( #3210) GoocL Quality 1 V2" & 2" Brush s Your Choice 1. OOea. (#500) 9x12 .8 mil 21s1.so Drop Cloth HARDWARE Pennzoil, 30 wt. s 1. OOea. Sliding Window 41s 1 _00 Lock, #WH00725 Self Adj. Measure 'Stlx, Reg. 4.99 52.00ea. Sierra Symbols Med. Bold, Gothic $ & Tall, SUm Letters 2/ 5.00 Dlsston Hack Saw #328 Stanley Utlllty Knife #99 Drlvlns 100' Chalk Reel #C111001 24" Rafter Sq. XC650 or BX ci°o~~e S4.00 LUMBER Furring Strips 1 "x2"x8' 2/'1 .00 2"x2"x8' '1 .00 1"x12 .. x6 ' '2.50 1 "x12"x8' '3.50 W'x2'x4' Perforated Hardboard $1.00 ea. Concrete Brick S/S 1 _00 (Red or Natural) HOUSEWARE 10 qt. Rect. Wastebasket 1 O qt. Dishpan ~ 6 Compartment Cutlery Tray Ice Cube Tray (Pkg. 2) 1h gal. Pitcher Plastic Sh6e Box 15 qt. Pall YOUR CHOICE $1. 00 ea. PLUMBING PVC Sch 40 V2"x10' '1 .00 ea. Action light Bulb 40, 60, 75 & 100 Watt 4/' 1.00 ea. 4' Fluorescent Tube '1.00 ea. 50' (2618-050) Drop Work light '8.00 ea. Energy Saver (#E5600RC) ·Rotary Dimmer '3.00 ea. Furnace Fiiters (Except 25x25) 2/*1.00 . -------------, SHASTA . I ... 12-oz CANS 6PACK I L With d1i ~oupon • J ------------ 1275 S. Brlltc>f COSTA MESA Open Mon. thru Ftl. • • Ml.M 558-1500 8un . 1..a • • After 1mpat1ently waiting 25 minutes for the call, I decided totryconnectins.thewircsagain. After all, now there were only two possible color combinations. As the red and whites were still together, I connected the grays to thearecn. A . Each cordless phone is tuned to a specific radiOI channel which it tmnsmits and receives on. There presently five FCC·approved channels for cordless phone and I 0 more are expected to be operational later this year. These new channels have become necessary as cordless phones have aotten more popular1 incrcasina the possibility of interference and crosstalk tn areas whert'I there arc many cordless phone owners. Consumers can bo assured they can continue to use their cordless phon whether it operates on one oftbe origin.al five channels o I pick up the phone. Voita! There's a dial tone on the upstairs extension. I dial a friend; her phone rings; she answers. "I think rm onto somethin&. Call me back to see if this phone rings." It does. I run to the downs ta. irs phone. A dial tone. Again I call my friend. She calla back. The phones work. one of the JO newly approved ones. EXCUSES DON'T GIVE YOU AGREATBODY EXERCISE DOES GIANT 2FORI 2 .... 0PLEFOll OR 2 YEARS FOR 1 Right now, you can get 2 years for the price of 1-or 2 people for the prfce of CTne choice Is yours. This tremendous savings Is yours. Don't wait! Now's the time to start to get the body you've always wanted at the best clubs in the nation at the best price. So, call today, or , stop by fQr a free guest tour. .. ~1 Holiday Spa Health Club for Men and Women Features separate gyms la men and womeA, avolkible 7 days o week. ANAH IM •.• (714) 952.3101, 310 So t-Aognolio. 1 btock So. o( L1nootn CERRITOS/LAKEWOOD .•• (213) 924-1514. 11881 Del Arno Bl\<i ot Pioneer. 3 blocks Easl of 605 Ff MISSION ~EJ0 ... (714) no-0822. 24401 Alicia Pkwy a1 Son Diego Freewoy WESTMINSTER •.• (714) 894-3j87, 6757 Westminster Ave at GOiden W t COSTA MESA . • {714) 549-3368. 2300 Horbof BIVd (Behind ThrfMy Drug) ORANGE .•• (714) 639-2M1. 622 EostKOteno Ave. West of Tushn Ave • 2 ~pie tor 1 1s a non renewable m mbefshlp Ava f\ibl • f ! EA J y 0 • Vietnam vets face common-fears --- 1 HELP YouRSELF -= ----~=~~---------- A11 lillDEIS Wlthdrawal ness.--"They Don't discount low blood sugar Many doctors sttlJ doubt that there is such a clinical condition as hypoglycemia. Thoy believe that it has become some sort of fad. I know one colleaauc who<JC mind is so closed lo the possibility that it may exist, that he refuses to order a aJucose tolerance test for any of his patients. Pma STEllCIOHI ~ted the ovemment. \'Cral men had dru& or lcohol probltms. All h d troubled mamqc1 and difficulllea wnh close r'dat1onlhu>1 My bu bind upt countehng only recent!). Had I known the reasons for his withdrawal. I u1d have urged him to seek coun1eltna much earlier, and ou1d have JOO for counseli~ rnytelf'. Please pnnt something 1n your column about ••vie nam vc~ l}'._n(irome/' There musi be hundred of Vietnam veterans and their famil· aes 1oins thro~ the same upM.aval. • If the infonnauon saves othen from DEA.RAN LANJ?ERS. I ork q the heartache we have uffercd, at a cln.n1ng person at 01&)\t an-an office would be wonderful. -M.G. In building. So many ~Pie leave cups, Pennsylvania panly filled with coffee or soda :pop! DEAR M.O.: Yn uvt detctlbH The. trash container doesn't hold die 17mptom weU ud rec.mm•-hqu1d very well and h can make a real ed c01asella1 tllrOI&~ Hpport m~s.!:. • .... , 1 •• _,. .11.· lO .,..,.. u .. ere ft ... la 7..,. ..,..., Ul>l n1... mcn._aon~ MJll • a tw• or Gree co.plet cu set to&edler ~wy~ who"'~' "'2mn1 latt. He said, ... start oee. YM11 aeed ~ pro-~ls r.o~ Job, nd walked a~y. fetaMDal cou.Hlor or ceuM. Good J:le d1dn t pve ~ea Chan~ to say, A tlld ' hnlc con dcrataon woUld help ma · my job easier." Will you saylt, p - 8 To• Jn New Jersey. · DEABl:Jf yow.raaatebealt,,.J atteattoe to wllat ... mu .at•. Re'• rlpt. Pit a J•I • JOV 11fP17 track u4 damp die ~ 7oanetf. l4e die mu ..U, lt'I JOU Job. Although it's pos ible that too much emphasis is occasionally put on this condition called low blood sugar, it has been my experience that many cases are still overlooked. Here is an DEAR ANN LANDERS: Twenty- one years ago my doctor told me we could never have children because of my husband's low · spcrJn count. When I did indeed become prqnant, the doctor, to save face, told my husband, "I don't know whose baby your WJfe is carryins. but it can't be all klacb, lteadacllet, coUtl1, pt0rlul1 you~." . . There is • bil d1ffertn« berMUn cold •nd cool. Ann Landers shows you how to play it cool without frtezin1 people out in bei book.Jet, "Tttn-Aze Se~ -Ten Ways to Cool It." Send $0 ~nu and a 10111. Jelf- addressed, stamped envelope to Ann Landers, P.O. Box 11995, Chica,o. IJ/inois 60611. lt'•f-old .,_ome week intercstin1 letter: . DEAR DR. STEIN~OHN; Per- haps I can add a little more infor- mation to the ongoina problem of hypoaJycemia by citint experiences in my own family. Low lood sugar is very insidious. It does not attack any two-people in the same manner. My husband &uffercd all his life with colitis, headaches, body pain and psonasis. He was always treated by doctors as a .. mental" patient• We happened to come across a doctor who rccoaruzed his ~ymptoms and ordered a glucose tolerance test. He had low blood sugar. At the same time an acorn of otlaer 1ymptom1, I 1t1U M!raclc No. 1 ts i:iow J 9 (a picture tilu lb& maay caaa of low blood of his dad) and Miracle No. 2 will ••pr are overlooked 1lmply becaue • soon be l 4. some d.octon llave clo1ed &laetr mlDda A second doctor ,told ~ .. I do~ 't to &be posslbWty ... (I do aot say ?re ho_w lo~ a. man s s~rm co~nt is. • 11.keJJUod) tbt It may emt. 1f the lime is n&ht. all 1t takes as one • my teen-age· dauahter suffered asthma and allef'&ies all her life. This same doctor tested her for low blood supr. She also bad it. My entire family began eatina hiah protein, low carbohydrates, eliminatins sweets of au kinds and ate many more veg- etables. My husband's•"symptoms miraculously disappeared. He even looks younau and acts younger. My dauahter is free of her health prob- lems and mentally iJ much happier and more at ease, less nervous than she always used to be. No more asthma or allewwes. Oddly. enough, I noticed after 101og on this diet too, I no longer suffer the headaches that I have had for years. My own reason for dieting was to help them by not eatm& any WTOng foods m front of them. So you sec, people can have low blood suaar but have different symptoms. It does not follow a pattern. This is why so many doctors close their minds against this sneaky disease. "Diet" is the key! I know! -Mrs. 8. DEAR MRS. 8 .: Altltoap I do aot beUeve tlaat truttn1 llyposJycemJa 11 a "care-all" for utlama, allersJes of .RU Ff ELL'S UPIOLSTEIY, llC. F• Tiii a.st Of TM lift ltU Hmm RWD .. COSTA IEA -541-1154 . DEAR DR. STEINCROHN: What do you think about the intestinal bypass operafion of overweflfit ~pl&? Why don't mere try it? I hear it's not dangerous. -Mrs. N. DEAR MRS. N.: Tbe flnt lDcetttaaJ bnu• operatioa wu performed aboat H .yean aao. S1Dee tben maay laave aDdersoae ~. HJ'lery. Fer1 eumple, ID Soa&laera CaWontla alODe, almott Z,001 patleDll ave bad ~. operatJoa for obeaJty. I clo DOt recommai4 U u a r"ttae pi'Oeffllre, espelcally for tllose overwetpt i.Ddi- vldaalt wbo cannot seem to 1tick to a diet. It 11· uully resened for &Use very obese padnt1 wltose weJpt problem ls complicated COD&estTn laun fallue, bJp blood pret11re, diabetes and aerloaa ortlloPe41lc p,.._ leim. lt'1 DO& ao almple a procedare u muy tlli.Dk. For example, tie mor- tality rate It approximately f per- ceat. 'l'lllere may be aerlou eompllca- &lou 1acla a1 Uver fallue, ,.imoeary · embolltm, severe lot• oJ mlaeralt and Improper woad beallq. J advlae patients to "tki.Dk before thy leap" Into 11cta 1ar1ery for welp& redac- tion. For Miss E.: Ask your dermatologist about it. There have been some recent rtports from Up- psala University, Sweden, that acne has been helped by taking zinc sulfate tablets daily in effervescent form, dissolved in water. Some patients were sjven a combinatJon of zinc and vitamin A. . ;/' Ronnie Brown And His Trio Enjoy the music of Ronnie Brown and his trio Wednesday through SaturdQY nights at Copa de Oro. Relax, sip on a Copa Margarita, have an appetizer and enjoyl 8:30PM-12:30AM . located neor South Coost Pk>zo 633 Anton• Costo Mesa• 662-COPA Do It the easy 'f'•Y- advertlM In cla11lfled • ..., .... ' Van JobmoD and Jaae AU,.oa (center) ballil tt ap :wltla Aaael.a Lau~ on the eet ot ~·· TV 1111• ••ICvder, Sile Wrote" tiriJa1 a break bl ... _..,. It'• ... flnttlmetbe trio la.an apPeancl totedler la 11 ,_,.. ..._ tlaetr dap at 11011. TREMENDOUS EVERYDAY . VALUES ON BED AND BATH FASHIONS! SAVE 48°/o TO 66°/o . SOLID COLOR PLUSH TOWEL ENSEMBLES . -From top Amerkan mills. Absort>ent. thirsty 100'5. cotton terry In a full range of colors. Oversized bath towels are 46" to 50". Some selected Irregulars in group. C~RABLE PRICE IF PERFECT Bath S9 to t 12 IOSS PltCE 3.99 2.99 1.79 SAVE 450/o TO 650/o OUTSTANDING SELECTION ~ OF BETIE~ COMFORTERS ~ geometJtcs ar ~de.signs ln pol)ester nd cotton qulltled to ~ lllertlL Al are machine Wash/diy. ' COM.PARE AT 18UPllCE Twin •50 960 $70 •too 19.99 F Quee.n Klag SAVE 37°/o TO 50% PURE COTTON FLANNEL SHEETS 24JI 21.11 34.11 Choose flat or fitted st)ies. Solkt blue « beige: dainty florals, smart wtndowpanc plaids. Fl.ATOR WI NICE FTTTED: COMPARE AT 6.99 Twtn t14 hill $18 Queen s21 King •24 Cues 2/$12 . SAVE 50% TO 66% WHITE GOOSEFEATHER PILLOWS ALL SIZES ONE PRICE I.II 12.19 14.19 2/5.11 __ tu.Xurious pD1ows genereu COMPARE ~T ty tlDed with ftne q t20 TO t 0 Imported whole white goose futMrs. F ,.proof STANDARD. cotton tkkh\g :~ g • g g I Di2ESS FOiZ LESS welcOm•• you' Pt'90n91 CMcll, Yiu, M8 fCatd, or Amertcan h1~aa c.nn. ' ...-----"""·-• ' ----·~.....---....... ----"""""': ....... --~ .............. ._._. __ .....,~,... ..... _.. ..... """"'"""" ...................................... --""""" ..... _.. __ .._.""""'!""" ___ ..,_ ____ """"' .... PBS c~arts a fasc~nating.~ · Yoy~ge through the. ~rain HART TO HART THNFtOOMPNrt DllCH <1F HAZZAAO allN88MJIORT ~llOlOGY Cl8NfWI DO< VAN DYKE NEW YORK -Love, charily, ,,hatt. fear. Hamkt ... nws murdt1 lht hula boop1 the Pyramids -"Herc is the mo t rcmarbble of all worlds, po~ by every s1n&lc one of us. :rtlis is the landscape of the brain." So begins a rcmark.able·cight-pan public television series titled ~'The Brain° which, aiven tbe subJcct, must '°down as one of the medium'• most • 'ambitious undertakings ever. The hour-lonJ documentaries. which start toni&ht and run weekly fl t!irouiJj nee. s. deal colorfully with ... this gray matter. The series danles anCl reassures us by showing bow our • lcnowledac of this most mysterious ave ycan in the malun&, the series explores the hoJTon of madnC$S. the miracle of memory the roots of violence, ~ ion and sex, stre s and emotion. We team 'tliat to understand the brain is, an many ~ays~ to understand our very human· lly. ln Pan I. "The Enlightened Ma- chine," host Oeorac Paae reveals the $COpc of the series by showini how the brain is ca(>lble of ha1r·tri r responses behind the wheel of a race car -and how those same miracu- lous cerebral impulses can go wjld and nearly ruin the lilt of a yodng epileptic named Jason. . therapy. ..~LMO Wfl/ Home" l1981) The episode on °Stress and Emo-~ltrJ Hutton. Btendt V1«110. tion" lS also panicutarly arippina. It ~UOVIE openswithadramatkrcenactmcntof ••.,. "Tht Oeld Zone" (1983) one of the stranacst accidents in Olrli1<lf>l*Walktn,Brookt~. medical .histoty. Phjnneas Gage, a · -t:IO- railroad worker in Vermont in J848, IAuce suffered an accident in which a MACNEJt./UHRER railroad tic plunied into his skull, ~TOORAPtlCVISION causing little pain but separating the NEWS parts of his brain that control emo-1MREE'I OQAPNff lion. . THAT GR. Miraculously, he survived, but as MOVE one of his co-workers said, Gage had **'-'''Shi OI Tiit NIOflt" (1"') Roy "an animaJ•s emotions in a man's S<Nidtr, lihrYf Strttp. body." -7:00- The mystenes of learning and I ~':r memory are introduc.ed in another AICNEWSQ episode by actress Kitty Carlisle Hart, o OAUA8 who recalls that her earliest memory (J) NEWS • orpn bas irown more in 20 years ·than in the rest of history. At times it sobers us with how much remains frightening and unknown. We heanhe iodomitable cboreo- a,,raqher Acnes de Mme describe bow the very organ of her genius betrayed her in 1975 when she sutTcred a stroke. And we $ce this master dancer relearning to walk through gruelina is of a gramophone on her parents' •TMAEE'tOOWANY dining room table. Author George mWHEE.<YFFOATUNE Plimpton talks about how everyone GD ·~ OFWAT9'COLORS ~ Lbacla KelMy etar lD was when President John F. Kennedy =~=TOHIGHT seems to remember where he or she· I P.M. MAGAZINE .. Attack on Pear," a new TV movte baeecl on a true .. tory. tool&bt at 9 OD CBS, Ch&DDel 2. was killed. DC -·""'P'"....., A . ,_,_.., """: -8:46-The late Bntish actor Stanley MUSCALCE1..E8AATION (J) LOVUOAT Holloway demonstrates how at age 90 (%)MOYIE • t:OO- Arts Center gains funds Pledges of $225,000 were recently received by the Orange County Performing Arts Center in Costa Mesa. he could rccite a song hc sang 50 years **~"Come Back To Tht 5 And t1 1T\IA<Mi. Susan isa member of Angeles of the earlier -but could not remember Dime, Jimmy Deen, Jimmy Deen" "Att':ic On Fw' (Premln) PMll Ans and 1s a foundillJ member oflhe h' th th d ha ed t h' (1"')Sandy Otnni1, Cher ' "'-~ A $125,000 contribution was made by the Timothy l. and Susan M. Strader family. Strader, chairman of the board of ComtnerceBank and president of the Newport Beach- based Aries Development, was n:am~t'M1lrf'"tcnlUtll'r Jul Performing Ans Juniors, a children's somet mg a a ppen ° im -7:30-IM~OYNAmlhSI KtlMy. theater group. five weeks ago. 8 2 ON THE TOWN ::"" Because the series is both a college 8THATSHOUYWOOO l~GNFRH The accounting firm of Ernst & course and prime-time entertain-1~!,~TI ~WORLD Whinney is contributing S 100,000, ment, the scientific terminology gets a ,..'"""""'" v """"' ......... while managing partner Thomas R. bit thick at times -but never so WLD, WILOWOALDOF **** "Flddllr On Tht Roof" (Pitt Testman has been named regional thick, fortunately, as to lull the =BRAIN 20f2)(1971)Topol. Nonna Crane. chairman of the next phase of the average viewer's excitatory synapses. IDALFREOHn'CHOOCI< fund•raismg carnpaign, which bar-''The Brain" is outstanding educa--~1!:H'mo.~J~~~DOOO~Ni~-~"THA=r=-=TUNE==-=·.-_.r',.MOVE..,.~ --- topped $55 million. tion pl'ogrammin1.jn every way. e RACING FROM OAK TREE--••~ "Beyond The Umlt" (1983) .. NEW YORK GARMENT DESIGNERS' SURPLUS FOR THE MODERN CUSTOMER WITH OLD-FASHJONEO VALUES! Because we care about you- We try never to be undersold-but We try to have everything you need -but We have succeeded to bring you the latest fashionable fabrics for less and we have succeeded 1n having the fnendliest and most helplu~ sales staff In all our stores Come see why everybody 1s talking about- FABRIC WAREHOUSE! * Open to the Public * Patterns & Notions- Always 20 % Off * Nothing Pre-Cut Buy What You Need * New Arrivals Always ~ •Y SPECIAL ARRANGEMENT! ~-SIMPLICITY E.S.P. PATTERNS (PRICE NET TO CUST<>MEI' OOT. 10·1t, 1914) 21~ •Y SPECIAL ARRANOEMENT1 ~" SIMPLICITY BBC ~!~N~~~!f o! 1!~~.~~ fA. • RED WOOt .JERSEY • SPORT FABRICS SPECIAL ~L£CTIONI • FALL JERSEY PRINTS • IA .. & 1" ELASTIC s111 YI. gg~D. •1« YD. 'YDS. FOR $1 • All CRAFT BOOKS AND PATTERNS 30:ff fJ (I) ~-c:-CHAAQE ~· Alchard Gert. - 0 MOVIE * * * "Wuthtring HeiQhta" ( 1939) "A Town like Mee" (Pitt 2 of 2) LIUl'tneeOIMer, MerttObtron. (1MO) Htltrl Mcne. 8ryln Btecon. -t:aO- ~~ Stnlllltl" (1971) Chria GWOOOWNOHrSSHOP -t:4-Sartndon, Ctlstlna Aalnta. (J) MOVIE l =:ro **** "M•A•S•H" (1989) Oon8'd ~.IJCINCINNATI Suther1and, Eliott~. n1 I v-.g -10:00-• MOYIE D DRUNK DAIVN1: AN IC OF *** "Dutl At Oiablo" (1M8) VIOlENCE Jen1tt G1mtr, Sidney Poitier. D G» Cl) NEWS .fB THE BRAIN 8 9 H0m. ·'•NEWS I~ !~ HIOH ***~"The Eleanor RoolMlt Sto-**'A ''Funny Lady'' (1975) Bll'bra r(' (1965) Narrated by An:Nbald S~. Jameac..t. Mldlllh. ®MOVIE G MOTORWEEK ** "Table For Aw" (1883) Jon · AOU!1'8UPEASTAAS Voight, AicNtd CttMa. PAT BENA TAR IN CONCERT ©) ~ BE.NATAR IN CONCERT MOVIE (!) ....,.~ • • "Crosa Country'' ( 1983) Riellard ** * . .,,,_Ma-I From Snowy River" Seymer. Mk:hlel Ironside. (1982)Klrk Douglas, Tom BwlnlOn. -10:30- -t:ao-D NEWS -~~ 1==.NEW8 (J) CU88 ANAi. HIGHUOHTS CC) 801V: THE 8SX>fC) COMtHG I ENT!RTAINMEN'f TONGHT -11:00- 8MfTHSOHIAN WOAU> euumoa mNEWS Cl)MOVIE **~ "ttonkylonk Men" (1982) Clint Eastwood. K)'te Eallwood. _-12$()- 1 TWIUOffT ZOHE EYE ON HQU.YWOOO R~ Night They Rlided Min- llcy'a" ( 1969) JMOn Aobwds, Britt Eklatld. I CM.TY OR NfOCENT LATENIGHT AMENCA ROCKfOAO Fil.ES -12:15-• Cf) IHOEPENOENT NEWS -12:80- 11 8 LATE NIGHT wrTH DAVID lETTBltlAN 9 ALFMD HfT'CHOOa( PfE8ENTS ~MOVE **'A "Spit llN!ge'' (1982) Mlcl'llel O'Keefe. Karen Allin. eMov!E 4:00- * t *'A "The Genni Died At Dawn'.' (193S) Gery Cooper. MadtWnt Carrol. mMOYE . *** "The Humlll Comedy'' (1943) Mlekey Rooney, Jamt1 CrllO. (%)MOVIE **IA "Come Back To Tiit 5 Arid Dlmt. Jlnvny Deln, Jimmy Deen" (1982) Sandy OtMll. Cher. -S:10- CO>MOVIE *'*'A "Tht Deed Zone" (1113) Clwtltophtr Wiiken. Brodie Adame. -4:15- CH>MOVIE ** UTlblt For Ftvt" (1913) Jon Voight. Aidwd Crtnna. -i:ao-(!) FAITH20 CS) O.C. BEACH PNm: A MUSICAL CELEBRATION -4:00- (J) CHICAGO'S AA8T AEPOAT IDGEHE800TT -4:30- (f) MUPPET$ • 60" MENS' SUITINGS .• llAVY DEllM FABRIC "-\\' IEW WOOL I HOLIDAY FABRICS UI ~R1eHOUSE Fashionable ..,. ~ &i Fabrics For Less PRICES GOOD THAU FRIDAY, OCT. 19 (WHILE SUPPLIES LAST) a shimmering hill in Maryland, there's an aviarY for rare birds. Come watch the keepers tend WEDNESDAY IS BARGAIN NIGHT AT EDWARDS W000BU>GE • AU SEATS 12.00 EDWARDS lllVERSITY -AU SEATS $2 00 EDWARDS FOUNTAIN VALLEY -All SEATS $2.00 EDWARDS WESTBROOK • AU SEATS si.oo * NEWPORT BEACH • llCl USM lHCAGlllCNl llMI 6 IRACI\ 00t SI' •UMD£US• (PG) 1 I' I iO I flCJ JOOl'I I •Al > 001' I •I COUllll! ll'Cl Ill Ubll llt 8 r.> l't, ·un SUlflCITU" 6.0 )\re; • SO. COAST PLAZA • '0 ····"~ , ......... 7~1 411' TOWN CCNTHI u r ... •4'" ,, ..... ... 7!1141&.t T~ Cl NlCR )I ••r •-.•• •' ..... ISi 41U SOUTH COAST 11rw,,..t £itr,At,111f111 ··CltlSl II(" (t i 61S I IS JO IS ~II tO> (l'C Ill 110 um suri.a· Ill 00 1010 "°' ., Slllf c A SCl001 SIOIT (N l 111o ,...,,, I I\ ' I\ 11'1.Ur <11 64~ IOlO PllftI JU/f' (l l UC ~"' lfll• PUCUll 111 IOI! Crtil II\ U ..,,.,,....,.,......,,.,,.,~---\-lf-Yl:-MAllll All Ol W" !Kl ~00 100 1000 ~ c..,. 111 All -sua flO r c~ * COSTA MESA * COWARDS Slf\'l ll.UTIN "AU Of II(" tPC1 aa-surs 111oo no,,,, '30· 10 ••·-,_ llCI S1llO usr~=-lO S46 JIOl too T•v••llS ~10 y -HA-R-BO_R_l_W_IN--rVll_TMA_r -... -00-<-tl CA.Wfll II MQ41 ••, ~ ~ A4 I llU YOU 6 lO 10 r.> ,..,.. ""1 S( (I) ::::.a SIA!~ AllOllO COIJIJIY (l'Cl 6Jl j~OI I' 0 i~ 154·Hll SJOO ..... Thull 8 40 .,..H...,AR""BOR~l""w--1N,..----f\-.a-s-.. lllWISITY IWllC WIUS Ill ... Ill If.Mii (PG) f .... br "' \ • 'JlJ'-01 ~,..Jt, I~ ii~ W.. >r•• Ihle fUllllLISf[ll " ' Mlly S100 • "f-1 ~SA ' ~At GICISllUSlllS ~~ liiWfsif mco..:uai 11 ~ rurwu • <"'> e..-Ot .. Off[ICllClS rrc:i b4b ~01~ ~ 4S 1n lO ~ID ... 11 CINCMA ClR L~IOPHIF Pfl!N l5"4·Ull s oo " "" 1 • ;:; • 111 no Ltr rai lllVIJ~TY 919 4141 Ill;!! I....,, I oo 9 00 C.... '-NII , N II aa.. Ail llACIO\ !I ) ClllMA c lR llAll OIUI ,_ tlCI ~ ... 1 • O~ I C l 10 •,o • --~ IH=Hll S}QO ~·;;4141 ~lri~ ~~TYM •11v111mt1 CINlMA.CfR 'llUMAltlO"IPGl Auwt .,,, All Of ... ("'I .... I l'lO '-llCI S100 600l00l000 .,_ ·0taM'(PC) 154.uu 919 •10 , 10 1040 * WESTMINSTER • CKMA'Wnt .,, . ......._,,, ~"''' HI )')~ CIH(MA W(SJ . .. .. m:rm CINlMA Wf ST .. ,,.....,., -·· 8'1 J9JS CINl'MA wr sr '1'MONIA4 •COllCAMlf lllJIUllltn (I) '·~ , 11) lOITl<ln" Ill ~.·) 101'> (ft IHAI 11111100 Ill ~ tO OOtlr SllRlO ltACllH (I) (II. ' ,,,. ~ 00 1000 .. HUNTINGTON BUCH * IUITJIGTON .... -11 ..... , , .. IU OlU IUIT!ftG f ON .. ,....,..,,. " .. l't O.lU ocu' n1110 llJCIOl ~·) rii..111\ • •~ • GAROO~ GROVE • WUTDOOk .. C1'UU CJ R • El TORO * SADOL£8ACK "lll "'TWl. (I'S) \ 0 ••• •' HS 10~ h '•" .... llOKOW Oii Tll IUJSOll. m SllO I I\ (ll ~AOOllBACM ma l1llll • <PG> ... Moo n.,,,, I 40 I ,, LASI SIUlflCHT(l .. (l'Cl ~81 ~HO .... '""'' .. ~ lt.IO SAOOUBAUI ··111 •u·· <PG> ' .. 110 .. ftD OAWIJ !PO.I)) ~•1 \110 • 10 10 IO SAOOHBMK NIPU lAfll' t•l ~00 1000 .wt• (I) \al ~810 *"" SAOOl[BACK lW. ID 00' (l ) I•• •• ••O IUO . ... • nGHTIOPt. (l J ~ll ~HO 1 lO SADOI CBACK £l4tlS !OM.A l'f:HH I t •t •111atlfl"11) ••••• ~I SUO b '""" 7 l~ 'IS • MISSION V1£JO • VU) IMN ·-.ccw.ueu '' ..... . ·~ .. "!!,... •fUECU• (N) 130 090 Miia '""'' 11 \ uo ~~ !'!. ~~~ ?lWS II Tll llMt• (N) ,,~ '"'""'""' uomo Vl(I() MAll \0 '•· '• c. ' .... O S 6110 VIK> MAil in •• , '"' Ci'•• •• ''S 61:0 Yl.IO MAU \D '••Ir I ll!AtA ll()I fl StlMO IOIUH 1tWOS• ~) 110 • 10 uo 140 10 40 their flock. I Filling in the Blanks A loo"-al the triumphs and failures of our high·Oying pasi. A visit lo a Victorian nest fea1hered with Whistler's whimsical decor. An astonishing array of ancient Asian art, and a wlk wi1h a thousand voices that speak as one. All this and a world more await you in "Filling in the Blanks~ a Smithsonian World television special airing October 10th on the Puhlic: Broadcasting Service. The ~riec. host i~ authnr and historian David McCullough. SMl~IAN WORLD A PB.S Tclev~ion Series funded by the James S. McDonnell Foundation. Co-prodtH.'ed by WETA. ~on. 0.C. and the Smithsonian Institution. . / MCDONNELL ~OUOL~ f \ l 1 , I ew • , aw recently: Them around hla neck wu at•en-to him by the American Federadon of Police for wubcla.IDC a mtager In New York 1ut year. - Cardi started· off on the wrong foot LOS ANGELES (AP) -When Carol Burnett came here m 1958 to be a guest on "The Dinah Shore Summer Show" she asked to be introduced to James Stewart, who was filming .. The FBI Story." Burnett, a long·time movie buff who saw eight pictures a week with her 8f3ndmother when she was grow· .~ ina ~p. met Stewart on the set at the stud10. "He was doing a sccneJon a raised platform," she said. "I climbed up and we sa1d hello, and I burbled the usual lhings you say when you meet NOW PlAVING - BiJENAPAM MIS.Sk>N Vl!JC> UAMovles £.dwltds Viejo Mill 852-4993 495.Q.20 •Pn OiWiaE UAMoV!es Padftc·s 990-4022 0nngt Or1Ye In COSTA MESA 834·9361 Edwlrds Cinema OMHGl Center W19 4 t 41 Ontdome COS1'1Mtsl 834·2.553 EOwarcls l!lr1sttJI WESTMINSTER 540-7444 Edv.¥dS HONTINGTOH BEACH Crl'lefNWtst EdWards Huntington 891 3935 848-0388 WESTMtNS'ttR iiMNi P.crftc s Edwards Unl\lef'Slty 8548811 Ht Way 39 Or1Ye·ln 891 3693 IMiUNA HIU.S Edw.irds/Slnbom Laguna H~ts Min 768 661 1 * PMSENTEO IN JllNft 0 .. I HO PASE MXfPTtD '°" THIS OllfACD,tDfT I an idol, and then I stepped off the platform, putting one foot right into a bucket of whitewash that was sitting there. -· "I never looked back. f just kept walking. dragging the bucket along with· me. Ruined my shoe and stocking. Jimmy has no memory ofit. He never looked back." Burnett was due to film "The Late Christopher Bean" with Stewart this month, but she withdrew on doctor's orders because of a virus infection. She also had to bow out a.s hostess of the Emmy A wards telecast. AIWIW •vi. ' STADIUM DR IN EDWARDS UNIV£RSITY 639·8770 854-8811 .. LA HAIU ~BR£A F AS*toH SQUARE 523-5339 (213) 691-0633 11DAran LA llRADA BUE.HA PARA OR·IH SRO GATEWAY 821-4070 523-1611 1UJ1A rm lMilN llACH UA MO't'lS 8 COWARDS SO COASl 952-4393 lAGlN 497-1711 .:DSTA •SA llSSOI VD) COWARDS CHMA EDWARDS YUO CENTER 979"4141 TWW 830-6991 COSTA EA mAlllE COWARDS SO COAST SYIJFY CITY PLAZA 546-2711 CENTER 634-ml IDTl9CSTO •COWARDS CIHCMA WEST 891·3935 CONSIGNMENT MAKES $.ENSE Ftr t•• lls1rt•ilitl11 lli;lr I Wier I UYE •• Tl 11~ .. IEW • IEmY • Oll Flllllll I 100(1111111, IMlltlll ~~:0•0·01F··········--. ON PUACHASESOF OVER $45~ ~1' .. M.'21'&JJ181'.~~CC!:.1.:t".t.9.!4 · SECOND PERFORMAN~ Consignment Boutique. a119 Main St., Unit 7 Huntington Beach Located In Beautltul Sea Cliff VllllQe ShOpplng Center-OQmer of Main & Yorktown 960-4021 -Tuea . ..S•t. 10-e; Sun. 10-3 THE RELAXING ' . .. SOUNDS OF THE HARBOR KDCM :IDB.I FM STE RED -~-·- .. Orange Coat DAILY PILOT/Wed~. October 10 1.... • Rollins revels la 'Story' Succe s · By YARD AARAR . , ........ "-...,.. LOS ANGELES -Howard RoU1n1 Jr. cuts a (igurc that is diSlinctly non-m1htary as he strolls into 1 Hollywood restaurant to talk about his tellar performance s a World War II Army officer in ''A Soldier's Story.•• Gone arc the heavy khakis and the ayiator aun;Jasses that are Capt. "'Rkliai'd Davenport's trademark. Rollins is weatherin.J a stiflins Los Anaclcs heat wave an casual Jeans. thin cotton shirt and a colorful, beaded Indian necklace. His once· cropped h:air has grown. and wisps stick out here and there. The interv1ewisabouthis lOtb that day, and more are scheduled af\cr lunch for Norm n Jewison's falm ~ersion of Charles Fuller's Putiuer Pnz.c-wmmn.g play. For Rolhn1, .. ,._ Soldaefs. tot)'" a particularly imponan1 bcclUte u is hi\ first film mce be packed up an cademy Award nominauon !or his I 981 screen debut tn "Rqtlme" as lhouse w~. a tum-<>f·tht- c:entury piino player who becomes a ;revolutionary when bis car and 5'\ecthean fall victtJn to raci m. In ''A Soldier's Sto~\" ollini ·Pli)'J a black Howard Unaverstty· trained laW}'er, who is sent to a hue m the Deep South to' investigate tht unsolved murder ofa se~na who is also black. &cept for the qfficers, lhc base is entittly &lack. Ironically, Rollins ald be was not bowled over by 1tbe FUiier pla)'. "Fonome reason, I just didn't c.are what ha_ppcned in it;' he said. "Maybe at was an ofT niaht for the torS. Even rlO\\, I ull ct and do the play:• But be d ttmcmbcr bci n- tr:igued by e racter of ~vcn-pon. ··irsa very difficult role. bccau be sks a lot of Questions, and that's bard to do and 10 be antcrmungaud to SlilJ hope that you c.an re~eal a person through that kind of tbiJJ&" Rollin td. Rollins. who nady ttfu to gave bis a,ge but ppears to be in his mid·JOs, ha ktnt bu~ an the lhrcc years between r'Ragl1mc" and i•A SOidier's Story." He appeared on the SOAP open .. Another World," did 10 episodes of a PBS .seliC$ nd co- starred with An Camey in a tele-vision movae, .. A Doctor's Story." But until "A Soldier's Story'' came along; Rollins fays the film om be -------.----------------.. ------------------------:i. FREE HEALTH SEMlllAR ! I • Have tit• same vitality and 1n1r1y t••t y11 felt y11ra agol Or. Ron I Duvendack M.D. 1 PreventiOn Medieal I Group , endorses I Optimum · Health nutritton, exercise, I stress reduction. 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C1'lJ111n \~ Paili.wll\ .,guth UNl\:ERSAl cm • eo lhYerwl C.I) Plu~ .11C:!~enl lo Uwwr~Slud10 .. • ING&.EWOOO .~rt.et & M.lnc he<.lef 150 !>outh M~ ""1 )IJttl . . r .l IJlt>' I ·:':"M RANCHO PALOS VERDCS'SA' PIDRO 24lSOSou1h~trmMnue UlllllJl·tll'lll BELMONT SHORE 4()()1 b\I X.Cond s1~ r!1ll 4~CMl1 SOUTH Ai\SAOENA llDH.t1r~\ ilwnlM'.. . 1111111;"11'}.4141 • .sANMAAINO • • • H55 ~nungton Dnw . . . . • • 18181 7"I> \l'fl RtVERSIOl COUNTY Rl\lR"llDtJ..rhngton & M.ld1'°'1 \41K>t1orl~un 1"nue •..• ltMINill/M.1ln 'iUl~I\'~·· t~ •••••• -. m iom ~--- cxsun HOT "Plll...C' 119'9P.llm0n~~I~~ bl~~ PiAlM <aPRl"IG'> 2ti01 l °Wlqu•u..-.~t.·.nuni ,.,...., " f •rl'\'I °""' ~ 1 \~!Mb PA1"'4()(~Rl ~how~ 111 .11 ~n P~ ~ur . It> 10) ~ l888 MlM Ol'lln T(M'f Cl~nlt tw.~ 1'11\Monl~~itt 1i.W1 W,_..~11 INOIA"' \\Ill' 1-t lw-11) 111.ttO\bOl'M'. !>WI M.>:.H BOltlttQ.) ~INl.S .. l0"1'nrt~IN\ Orc:lf' \A4 .QllANG( COUNT\ f'l .. 1~1 0'14 '2ll) .. 01 ..... ut'I llrlild -1.tl ~ 10 fOl!"lAI'\ llf\ IOl;<i "I.I"°'~ 0 1.t <lb~rJb Hl.:"ll'1(;T(1' Bl AL H '11\.! a.d.tm' 1'~· -14 ~ 2...,, IV.lent."',""" l,o\ tilXI (••I IW!tiol lk>Olt'\ •rd ,-14 h -~ l;'O I (1..\1.~ISl.A""O i()l "-'-'"''"""'""""" -~,tt~Ull 1'£WPORT Bl~ H On P..tt"IC L~I HtglMil\ hrn-<'t'f1 Mai: tvthul 8hod •nc1 ~C"rntt'f0n~ r.1Cl"44-1M> l,40J A Bl loC H lliOOct'.an ""'lll' 171•1 $.7541 \~A,acHM\ } \Ion.Jn h ~ Mu• 171-11 4'i.1l01 • .-.~IUl."f(; Pl'TitA"l"I uw Camino c"""u'"'" ,., ... toll t-Olf'r \ .APlqv."-() 81 Ail •• Mlllll~,.,rl. Rd •I \1Cton1~,~ l~rlU!u INch P!.t• ShorP"(t ( '7141 ~· VINCU .. \f,..,ll {!01~0 .... «911195 Aro ' _,,,.,, I ~ I ~. Great American •II A lifomi41 Finlnci.11 l .oer ... ·nc~ 1885. ' . Brltish farce 'moves over' at Harlequin •Often, when an EnaJi h play is ~ericanizcd for aud·en~s on this side of the Atl ntic, ~methin is to,t in tho transl tion. that indrfinable ylc" so pttuliar -in both senses of th word -to the British way of doina things . . . Toi Tms ,. • It's doubtful, howcvrr, that the dtliaous "farce "Move Over, Mrs. Markham" could have rcceivcd a lhore cff«tive interpretation than it's tomd and temfic tlie Jegy ordic a.ivcn at the Harlequin Dinner Play-maid who rai s the tcmJ)Cl"llturc b) liouse by director R1chud Vath and a several dtlfCCS. p~t well schooled in the intricacies of The second trin& in this bedroom frantic comedy. ball pme is com~ oft.es Recd as • • After a rather mild fir t act, durinJ Lanjford's timid, l&ina Romeo: \'t'bicb we discover who's doina (or Eileen TK.aye as • dowdy old lady lntends to do} what to whom, the whose writinf career has aone to the play's second and third sqments dog.s, lucrat1vely, and Catherine eome at you like an avalanche. Hines in a brief but attention-act ting Ptaywri&hts Ray Cooney and John tum u the switchboard number Chapman have created a sucky dialed by Foster. All realize the most ~: Mcket of a situation in which three from their sparse stage time. different love affairs are earmarked A large measure of credit aoes to ~for the same boudoir on the same director Vath, who keeps the action J:1iaht -and ''lhc consequences arc movm11•t the bnsk pace demanded equally outlandish. by this 19n of comedy, never allowing Cooney and Chapman sta11 out time for the audience to stop and with the same basic protagorusts they think bow silly it aU is. The actina created in their equally htlarious company -particularly Od\, Hen· "Not Now, Darling." except that ryk., Barnes and Kcepn -sustains instead of bcina bachelor fumcrs, the breakneck tempo splendidly. ... r• •• • 4 $ 0 a f PRIM£ TtMI \, 1 A~1\ .. --• their heroes are married publishers of .. Move Over, Mn. Markham" 1 children's books -one a con-continues at the Harlequin, 3S03 S .. 9C:l Uhvechap, theothcra mnger,1SS Harbor Blvd..,-jusl nonh ~Costa. fn "Darhng." This tJ~ around, Mesa. througlt. Nov. 18 with per- however thert's an unusuaJ element. fonnances nightly except Mondays 11 a heterosexual intenor designer (a varyina curtain times and rescr· ~ rarity in comedies of this sort), who vat1ons taken It 979-SS 11. Next up, ·takes a crucial role in the chicanery. potentially, is an even more hilarious y While he dallies with the maid. experience, "A Funny ThinJ H1p- eJtff Barnes.arrest-eel For Bobby'$ shooting lctt1ng his fingers do the walk.Ill& one pened on the Way to the Forum." BY LYNDA HlRSCB of tbc partners is arrangjna a tryst ' th t I ho ,,. t h.l th BACUTAGE Cal State Lo DALLAS: At Bobby's ~unt. Donna • W1 a c cp n .. opera or w I e e -na and Ray discover lhat J.R. IS rc$pons1bk • latter fetlo~ ·s wife sets up her own Beach's alumni a soc11tion is spon-for Bobby's phone bci.na tapped the nisht ~ extramant.al actton. Cau&ht in the soring a series of five Alumni Nights, Bobby was sbot Bobby, dcprctxd by bis middle 1s the stuffier of the partners, bcginnina Oct. 19 with "The blindness, tells Jenna he can't marry. that in whose bedroom the action unfolds. Madwoma:i of Chaillot" .... the other afternoon Pam visits Bobby and says tlm Thi!> role, bnlbantly enacted by special ni&htsare Nov. 16 for"Dames &be didn't write the letter K.athcnne read Ralph M. Clift, is the centerpiece of at Sea." March I for the opera "L to him in which Pam said she wanted a the show and Ch ft conducts his own 'Amico Fritz," March 29 for divorce from him. At EwiJl&Oil.J.R. u~t "how to" seminar on physical com-"Oedipus Rex" and May 10 for tofindDonnainBobby'som~.cspcclally ....1y. Katherine Henryk as ht's wtfle, the "Summer and Smolcc" .... call the col-after she cla.ims Bobby asked her to look ~ after bis busmcss interests.. Cbtrinfu.riatcs Mrs. Mark.ham of the titl~. has some lege'a Alumni Affairs office at (213) J.R. by thanhni rum for financina his beautiful m~ents as well as she 498-S2S2 fof tickct information... success m the Gulf of Mtxico. At home. vengefully sets her cap for the A seminar on ''The Bus1ncs~ of J.R. tells Sue Ellen that he intended to decorator Show Business," giving potential destroy ChfT Barnes but instead OifT has Seth Foster is perfectly cast as the actors a ttalistic look at the inner become one of the most powerful force' in ltb1dmous partner, but Joyce . workinas of the entertainment indus.-Teus The followmJ mornina Cliff ia LanafordBsomewhatlcsseffecttveas try, will be presented Oct. i1 from 8 arrested fortheshooungofBobby Ewing. his would-be wanton wife. Julian a.m. to 3 p.m. at the Atrponer Inn in DYNASTY: Pre-empted for baseball Barnes 1s a howl as the decorator Irvme at a cost of S8S .... those pla)ofTpme. who's sure Clift and Foster are an interested sho~ld call (213) 463-7974 1~. while Barbara Keqan is tall. for reservations.... FALCON CREST: Former Nazi Johann ~;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim;~~~~~~~~jiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiliiiiiiiiliiii;:-1 Richmann plans to search for the tm· 1 lUJUMY THIATltfS mcox treasure bidden by Jacquehot W'ALK INS flrlt Two MltMtt sa."'"'11 * DRIVE-INS ,10tll~ under Fakon Crest. His son GDStav feels "' · * Olll y SUS u.. ...._ .,.. his father is not doing a thoro~ cnouah ~~;.·::,. CIJ~E[)fl()E GAM • .11;1•l11111W6I ,.•u1 ou1 ~ rw r • RCH)M 111 mu"'"' '"" s,.,.,,"' S 113fiU•l•IitTl6)'14 215,9'!~!,) ~~~"u:Sn,._, S -· StrHtt Of f'lre ("Q) How1rd ll Rollins Jr SOU>IUt'S STOttV O"QI AT 12:20 2 :40 4 SO 7 :00 lo t :U Siii)" P'leld Pl.ACUl .. TH• ttEAaT .. ) 12: ti 2 ·30 4 •4S 7 :f0 t :3C Nick Nolt• In TRACH•U Ptl 1 100 3:10 5:20 7.30 lo t 140 Steve Martin AU.0 .. _lNJ SHOWS AT 12:00 f :OO 4.oo 1 100 t :oo 10:00 fl'rlnce In 8111 Murr1_y .UaP\.a aAt .. C•> 8HOSTllUST&RS fN} SHOWS AT 12:4.. SHOWS AT 12:21 2:40 3:00 5 :20 1 45 10101 l ·OO 7 :31 t .10/ 70MM 13' 00'£1\Jj ;I 2) r:A\5:1 ~ =•f!lltu ) JH1lu un~ I •••&COltCIL.AaLR COUW'l'ltV I ot"Pllaaec:.s (1118) SHOWS AT :00 SHOWS AT 7 :15 lot IS .. t :30 ••~•u .. DIP ... Gleaa "G) Swint Slllft I" ) .Sten M1rtln a. Ll!r Te11tl111AU.OP-1'9) '1ue Co-,.11t11re 11.Ceen Candles ('°) HOUsa9YTHR CUllrntav p1u1 C.H .U .O. '"lend Mortv1ry R) KAaATa tUD .. ) ..ius Co·Hlt Oremllns (,.Q) TMCWO~l•aEO (N-1 l"IUI a1cllelor 1rty (R) DRIVE INS 01M11 I 4!i WUrfs/l :JI Wb .. s/Ch&Wr• u.-Z flllEE U11te. • job and decides lo take over the cartel himself. For bia father'• birthday ail\. Ousuv rip a luitunous new car wilh eitpfosivcs and watches hls father die in the blast. Octenmned to obtain propnty in the valJey,'Oustav sends his enforcer Spbceris to offer Richard money m exchanae for his coopcratton. Richard refuses and a rulhless Sphccria shoves Rtchard out of the movma car. With only mmor injuries, Richard now becomes suspicious of Pamela. Despite the recent losa ofbcr beloved husband Michael in the pla~ crash, Terry makes love to Lance. Anae1a hires Reardon u her new attorney. Anaela, determined to d11Credit ChaJc and &ettina his pilot's hcente &u.&pcnded, hes«> the FAA representatives invesliptina lhe plane crash. Althouah inn~nt of any wrollJdo1n, 10 the crash, Chase is so tormenlcd b)' niahtmarcs that he is afraid to Oyap.m. &N01"S LANDING: After undergom&a . leoatby operation. Karen told b> her doctors that a bullet fragment is lod~ near her spine which may cause lingtnna ~)'Ill and eventually death. Karen decides not lo tellbcr fanilly. Cooperating with lbc police. Gary mounts a ~rch for the mi ina Abby and Wolfbrid&c ex-ecutive Mark St Claar. Unbcknowst to the authorities, Abby 11 bcana held by SL Clair on bis yacht. While the gu11l-nddcn ~c tries to understand how Karen JOt shot, Sumner, trying to cover himself. holds a press conference announcing the neJtt cnme comm1ss1on 11 seelcing an md1ct· JIWll.aaainst SL Clatr and the Wolibridgc.. aroup Val and Ben arc drawn closer lotether and decide to renew their rela- uonsh1p . PAPER DOLLS: Pre~mpted bueball playoff same. M -•ID> <P"-ll) 17 JO 1:10 410 'lO • JO 10.lO 111 llllD lH <•> 114\ HS H S U S. t 4S 104S TtAaos (I) II OOllY SflllO ll JO H~ HO I 4S 10 10 l'IMl Ull (I) II DOllT SllllO Shrimp & Fish Special *2.99 ... (I) II'° U O H O MIUI (N) 110 UQ 1010 a SClllOS STOl'f (PS) 12• l n 440 60 I W 10~ 111"1 (I) 12 JO 4 IS too M MllMI •ID> (PS.U) 1 ~ 610 lt"O ... (PS) 1• ~JO, •• ID> ... <P"-tl) llS 10 IUCIOS 00 " DOllY STUl'O 100 Jlt ,.. bl lt2' 1:it JJO u o n o 11• Elll•(N.U) 12:10 us • .... ~ec.ATQl(a) H S 61' ltj\ *PACIFIC DRIVE -IN THEATRES• ... lll Cl) PLm rarr J11J 11 -• ca> loHABRA .. \.,. . 1£.--r'lt . MISSION TWO OF YOUR FAVORITES ••• TOO ETHER. Now. you don I have lo decide betw~ shrimp and rilh. Because our Shrimp (, Fish Special gives you both cl .the testes you love . You get thrtt ol our new. ler~ shnmp. 11 cnapy (lsh fl~ gold n fryes: coleslaw .-Id two crunchy hushpuppies. AD for lhlt tpedel poce. Stop by end tty our Shnmp (, Ash Spedel soon Offer good for a hm1ted t.trne only. .. 3095 Harbor Slvd. In Coata Mua (Ju1t south of San Dle90 Freeway across from Pedco) Drtve-Thru Service Av11l1bt e a a o o a e 'Amadeus' plays to thinking fans Mozart story latest triumph for director of 'Cuckoo's Nesf and 'Ragtime' movies because the U.S. market Is vital to~ film's IUC4.'CSS. BE\' ER LY HILl~---=fo .. u_r_ye~ars__....;..;...,uf is a native cast tnouiJi to carry a,ao, Milos Forman wa cutina his the tony .. Amadeus .. in thlt counuy'a film .. D••time" in London when bis fOuth and action.oriented film mar-·~ ket? agent took him to sec a preview ofa .. ,t is an American film, and my play by another client, ~ter Shaffer. ambition is that at will make it at "I had no idea what I was aolna to home." id foreman ... Sometimes J sec,.. rttallod Forman, 52. ''I was think it wdl. But at oUier mo menu I overw'helmed by the flay, and even 1 • k '-' 1 d fr•'-tm'nft then I was c-er to m• .. at into film." am I nc en '17 ·~ an '..,, i -• " doubts and 1 fear wt nobody wi The play was "Amadeus, .. wb ch come." became a huse dramatic hit in ••Amadeus'' was filmed in ·prquc, LOndon and then in New York. the only capital with palaces ana Shaffer, who also did ··~uu " had theaters untouched by wan. ~Jved into 18th century bi tory to Fom1tn was persona non srata to tnce the relation hip of the boy lbe Czech aovcmment. A leader of genius Wolfpng Amadeu Mozart the Czech film revival, he wasia Paris and Antonio Salieri, .f le r com· durirtl the Soviet invasion of 1968. Poser who soua,ht Mot.art's destrue-He dttlined to return. tion out of maniacal jealousy. But the desire · for hard fottip "I was fa5Cinatcd by the story. currency apparently outweiabcd d1s- fascinated and shocked by what I taste for the country's most famous learned," said Forman. who spent his expatriate. ••Amadeus" was allowtd fint 37 years in Cucho1Jovakia. ''l to film in Cl.«boslovakia. knew Mozart by his music but not asa "I recorded the music in Loridon. man. I didn't know Salien auU." then took the train to ~uc,'' After completin1 "Ragtime," For-Forman said durina an interview m man joined with Saul Zaentz, hi1 his Beverly Wilshire Hotel suite.•• As producer from "One Flew Over the I approached my home country, I had Cuckoo's Nest," for the film version atrona emotions and feelinas. But of'' Amadeus.•• Orion Pictures qrced tbey were immediately dismissed as I to back the S 18 million movie. rushed into find.int locations and And even though this season's bag-actors. My social life was limjtcd to grossin films -such as ··Revenae of mbbamily and a few close friends." tb erd " "Ou.mlio1" _ __..i.ut__ · ll'lqD. 20-...)'ar:.-<>ld..M>n• live in __ "Gbostbusters" -arc not u meaty Prague with theu mother and played as "Amadeus," Mike Mcdavoy, extras in the movie.- Orion production vice president, Government cooperation was predicts the film will eventually complete -opera sequences wett prove to be profitable. even filmed in the theater where When Fonnan bcpn work.ins on M(\zart bad conducted. But Forman the script, the dirttior exprased idmitted: .. The aovemment was not admiration fofShafTcr. "h 's not easy at cue, as evidenced by the fact that to take apart what you've already neither my name nor the picture bas done and what has worked.·· be said. been mentioned in the Czech press." When it came to castina.. Forman And none of his American films chose American actors for the leads: bas been shown in Czechoslovakia, F. Murray Abraham as Salieri, Tom not even "Cuckoo," for wbtcb he won Hulce as Mozart~ Elizabeth Berrid&c anAcademyAwardasbestdircctorof as his wife. He pickod Americans 1976. Secrecy shrouding 'Mild Max Ill' film By BARRY RENFREW Anni•••,._ Wl1W Deliclous Top Sirloin Steak, cooked to your taate, and eerved with homemade 1oup, crisp green aalad, choice of potato, dinner roll and delaertl s ••ALL OF _,£9 18 A 81.AP81'1CK. HIPSTER. HYlllllD OF "HEAVEN CAN WAIT MD 'TOOTSIE."' ............. f'IOft.l llWIDnl STEVE ULY MARTIN TOMUN :AlLOFME ·....--·~ ..... ~ ,..._......,, .. .,....... .......... _ ~ NOWPIAYING \ ' PUNKY WINKERBEAN THE FAMILY CIRCUS "We just figured it out, Mommy. When I'm · 19, all four of us will be teen-agers at the same time!" llAIUIADUKE by Brad Anderson "Now what?" GORDO GARFIELD WAIT'TIL YOO TA~TE. MY CHERRY PIE., ~AF\flf l'7. 11'6 "f ... E WORLP'5 Bf.ST MOON MULLINS by Tom B tluk BIG GEORGE by Vlrgll Partch (VIP) "Wowf He IS • tall one, Isn't he?" DENMS THE MENACE • by Hank Ketcham / --- PEANUTS ~ NEED TO PRACTICE '(OUR TACl(LIH6, MAl<OE DRA~BLE • I().,. ------~ I LL CONC RVNNrN6 8V '(00, AND '100 TRV TO 6AA8 ME BEF~ I 6ET TO TME 60Al LIME ••. " by Kevin Fagan by Lynn Johnston J by Gus Arriola TUMBLEWEEDS by Tom K. RYan by Jim Davis by Harold Le Doux • ANP HOW, Otf HAUGH'TV HA1Wlalf Hlet4~ VO '«JtJ FeEL AllOlJf ~v's INPIAN SMl)A110N? ROSE IS ROSE WEST +Qt61 Q Q4 O ltJ763 •a2 ( \ 'ertli l 0 , a• ~ , .. J , •f ~~E~ ff ~HU '· A r~ ff.II'! I BREAK THE R LES " by Pat Brady ahown a distributional hand . Three queen, b&\ East was forttd to win no trump might not be t~ world's the fourth diamond. Declarer mad~ best contract.. but no ot~r pm. th. r t of lb tric:b as West's fifth wu much better ...,. two rounds of diamond withered on the vine. diamonds would give decluu no At the olhtr table Ea.st dtcidtd chance al four hearts. and rive clubt t.hat it reall7 m.adt vuy little dlf· depends largely on a 3·3 heart ference wbetber We t lhougtlt b b~ak. had thrtt or four diamondt. He OMAR . SHARIFF CHARLES -GOREN 1 f ' . COAST FOOD ........ crouetecle . ...., ,,, ..... •OOll-· ..... ~ . . 1w1e1. ca ~ca Jndi n cuisine -rm, abun- dant and just little mysterious, like the cou'nlfl It 1f. A blend of the tropical f ruatsJ. v tables and an array of 1ragrant pices flourishing there, it is colorful, flavorful and as varied as the aubcontinent'a many reaion . The idea of scrvina a complete Indian dinner at home is intrigu- ing and now fixina it i easy, after a quick trip to the freezer and pantry. Ea!t meets West when timc·honored recipes are re<:· rcatcd with modem prepared food products. IJlf DIAN PASTA CA88EROLlt lnp~a)lfln ltopm~~ '.4 np NU.a er marprlM l (11 Mllff) pecb1 ''" broccoli er i C9f11 fr broc-eou n.reu l te•IPOOll• C91TJ powder ¥. c.pral11at f ( 11 ouee> cau mlal cklctft or bed ra.S.U .. , rM eabMc• la•" • Add mustard.~ and red pepper. curry po der, .,.eenduli ca and wmato quancn. S&ir, ciovcr. mmer for S rniouia. Pl8CllC P1kdCOOODUlplu1'hcupof'wa1a'1D blender. blend for 2 minutes. Add coconut liquid and rcmalnll\I t..,e- dients; sdr, covcr, aimmtrfor I :Sao20 minulel or unul vtac11blet are &ender' but firm. Serve .. m1shed with coconut or coriander. Maka 6 to I ICJ"V np •use mixed frcnen vqetables (defrosted) of )'Our Choice or: I cauhfJower, florets separa1ed; 3 small c:arro ic:cd; I miall CISPlant. Stan with creamy Gm~r · · served warm WJtb cut>ed; *A pound pun bans, lipped; 2 medium zucchilti, lliccd; V. pound Sautecboppedapplesandminccd ~ tiP(JCd;lpeen~ onion in buuer uatiltendef'.Add --..-cea•Mllwil~.-Nldl-eeiMM!~liel!ld----~ assoncd crackers and frcih fruit. Frozen prepared chicken a la king. in a handy cookin' baa, akes it smooth and simple. Eastern refinement and West- ern convenience combine to produce elegant Indian Pasta Casserole, served attractively on red cabbage leaves. . Canned miniature beef or chicken ravioli make it easy -apples, raisins and spices preserve tradition. chopped broccoli and curry powder, covcr;aimmerforSmanutes.Add 1 raisinsandChiclc.eD ravioh;~ver simmer for lS to 20 mioulel. Ananac red cabbqc leaves in KrVLD& dish, Pour ravioli mixture overcabbqc . leaves. Maket~tQ.hervi cmcm KABOBS wire SPICY PEAftUT SAUCE t ··,aebp Ul eate) fnua ,,....., ............ A subtle blend of seasoninp transforms frozen breaded drumstick-bapcd chickcl! patties and peanut butter into Chicken Kabobs with Spicy Peanut Sauce. - Quick to prepare yet spectacular wped c~ea ,.ns. 1 am ,.. or p.a MU pepper, c.t la'° 1-tacll ad»ell oruae. Cllt late ~ "'*' 11.lcee -~ ¥. alp m••' b•tter •4 c.p lem. Jlllce 'I& npeatdp to serve. No Indian meal would ... be complete withQut Puri, the crisp fried bread puffs · now made effonlessly with handy pizza crust mix. Serve your feast wath season- al v~tables simmered in a blend of sp1ces like ginger root, golden tumeric and tangy coriander. lt'a a piquant acconfpanim t to a Bengal~, A favorite de rt in India, Sweet Rice and Cream, is the perfectly cool, creamy ending to this simply exotic meal. Make in advance and serve surrounded with colorful fresh fruits. Enjoy! OINOltR-CIUCKEN DIP ! clevet 1ar1Jc, mlKd . ~ s. 14 &asp•• end ...... pepper fillet 'It n milk · On eiaht metal skewen, altema&c chicken. pep~ and oran . Bake on cookie lheet m 42S-dqtte oven 6 - minutes. Tum kabobs and bake an add.itioiW6mmutesoruntilho In smatl 11uccpen, combine peanut butter • .anon1wcc,, ca1S\lp,prt1cand redpc-ppcr.COo Jllni constanlJ ovn medium heat. until mu1urc is hot and bubbly. Removo from beat. Stir in milk. Makes I cup•ucc:. CURRntD VEGETABLE (AVIYAL) WRIED IPfDIAPf BRSAD -~ 1 pedet (t .-ee) ,ana amt mJs cw,Wkatserm ~ C9p Yer/ WU'm Water OOferiee;~ la medium bowl. combine now mix and wheat pm. Add Mier' and stir wi tb fork until all ftour plJ'tides are moillencd. Stir vipotisly for 30 strokes. C.Over bawl; let stand S minules. Oividedouah into 10 piecea; On well floured board, roll each piece of douah 1ntoaj, \9 f>.inc:h citclc; stack rortedClouaJt bdween~of ~ paper. ~ry d • onecirde at a limei ID Oil heated to 7 S dep'ces UDU) . aokk~a~ut.O~ tW'Dlaa once. urain oa ~towel. Serve warm. Makes IO ICtVinp, one drde each. Borscht only One of many S pacb1n (i oucn eacll) froM ~ c~ a la k1D1 . l packa1u (I 011DCH eacll) cream c\fft.e, aoft ed ud nt hito eabet l onJou, 1Uce4 Waly l prUc cloves, mtac.e 1 l-~ &talt1" ...... peele4 ud 1Uce4 (l ~•IPOOll.,..... Ila er) ~ cwp co,. oil l&eaJpuu1ptcJ rowa tar4 In mcdjum 11uoepan. corabi &datin, uprandciruwnon. titio I cuporuac~=· Stir over mediwn var ieties of R ussian soup B1TOMHOOE _ ...... ,....,.., Soups in most countries run the pmut from aourmet delicacies to robust peasant creations. But no- where hive I seen the variety the Russians offer. soups like sauerkraut broth, spicy . pickle and kidney soup and a lavish mixturoof stUf1COn and white wine that wu really a main course. When I wu in Russia at the end ofWorld War ll, I sampled a couple of unusual soups. One was a chilled combination of tart apple sJices, sour cream and red wine. Another was a blend of beer, sour cream, cu yolks and supr. Both tasted better than they sound. Salts. tu&e Peel and wash vegetables and cut into fine stnps. Chop' persley fine. Add v*tables to stock, t<>sether with peppercorns and bey leaf. Brina to "boil, cover and simmer about I hour until vqetablcs arc cooked. Stir occasionally. Ten .. minutes before servina. add salt. Serve pipina hot. Serves 6 people. ~ cap 1Jltt4 almoadt l cablnpoaa1 1Uc9' area Di D (lachadiDI tome area pt) l ~ tea1peoa1 I m jaice 1 &eupooa poad ppr Du.II ~t pepper aaace Cracken, 1llcecl applet, 11Jced pears, 1mall snpe clHten In medium 11ucepen, combine chicken a la IUna. cream cheese, •!mond.a,a,rtenonion, lemon1u1cc. 111'1 randhotpcppcruuce.Cook l tea•,... bl.ad ,eppel' "' teat,.. re4 pepper 4 teaspoeu CU1'7 pewd r • lreetl ckUJel, l11cM ( ... Uoul) a toet.GUJ1ft'M Y. cwp pa~ cecoa1 l ..,... ....... CU1111&1111• lceupeM ....... C .. el 1 teasp•••.,..... allspice I cwpa mbe4 " etUJet• rra. eorlud (epdeell) In ~uan sauce pot, sauic onio prlic\.nd gjncer root m com oil until beat until d lved. In medium bowl,combincaelatin mixture,~ maini oa YJ cup oranac JU ice and buttmnilk.Stiriosourcrcamud almondeinnct.Chill I bouroruntil mi.xturesliabLlythickeu. Fold iD nee, oraTI&e and raisi In &<up mold,~ rice mixture. Olill 2 boun or until finn. Makes 8 to IO aervinas. •NOTE: Ff'Clh pepeya, like &ab pineapple, bas ID enzyme that~ venu,elatin from tetti~J. Cook papaya in boilin&wate 5 minutes. Rime until cool. Tben drain well to \I.SC in,elatin rmpes. • Borsctit, the most famous soup of that vast land, ranges from a fillin& mixture thick with vcsetables and chunb of beef that is a specialty of the Soviet Ukraine to a clear summer consomme tinted red with beet juice. But there arc many other kinds of soup. Some Russian adUps take a bit of getting used to in the West. Like solianka, made with fish or meat blended with aalted cucumben. Or rassolnik. a mixture of sorrel, cucumben and other vcsetabl pmishcd with chopped ~idney . Of\en the meat intended u the main course of a Russian dinner is cooked in with the soup 10 aivc it added flavor. then removed to a platter and surrounded by veg- etables. Some savory veggie side dishes ... In ummenime, many Soviets make a midday meal of liaht soup soutcd with kvas, a fermented cereal or rye bread liquor. ThO Ru ·ans arc a.arced on one thins. The meal, whctfier it be from the kitchen of a commi r or a tractor dri\ler, leads off with some kind of soup. Peter the Great, accordina to historians had the taste of a aourmet i'or many dashes. but the appctit of a laborer when it came to toUp. An av wppcr for Peter included a soup containina four kinds of cabbqc. But sometimes he varied thi1 first couno with other Since I have done more than one column on borscht over the years, I offer this recipe for hchi, a cabbage soup, by Rus ian-born author Nina Petrova in tier excellent book, ''The Best of Ru ian Cookina" (Crown Publishers, Inc., One Park Avenue, New York. NY 10016,. SHCHI . 11 capt of beef •tock or Miii 1 ~ poud1 •II.he cabbaa l medl.a;1 carrou 1 lart~ potato 1 lwi 1 Olll• • Y. mtdt•m hnlp ~ medl•• panalp l stkk~my--....... -. l 1prt1 ,anl 1 • pt"J>pCrctru l NJ leaf -; The Italians have a word for themi and here are some simple su estfons II contorno. literally tran lated, tion ho~ld lend ttself arnccfully to ''the contour," is the ingenious the counc being served and be an lcalian word for a veactable ide overall complcrne'1 to the entire di h. What a perfect description of meal. the role vractables play in 1 meal. The following coll tion of vca- Bc it a sing) veaetablc, delicately ct.able side di h recipes aid in meal tau teed or a more robu t combina-plannina. Dried p1 and herbs tion of fresh produce, the re po~i-·blended in a paahcm ucc mix bility of the v table is 10 contour provides convenience while the plate with the flavors., colors cnhancina the flavorofc ch Italian and tclturcs of the season. recipe. An f lian meal i . Uy . ·-·· .• ··'TWO BEAN pt . ····• compo doftwomaincouncswnh A ,cl tm bd fllvoml with ,,.. th ngctable ocompanyina t 1hcttr u i tn unu Ull bqinnm• nd cou • rhe vcgct.abl sci • for thi ckliciou molded lad. Cd ·A chocoholic' s delight ' !IOlve aelatin in boihna water. Add 1Pl&hetti sauce and v1nepr toaelatin: chill unuJ panially IC1 (sbould be the con 11tency of unbeaten ca -halel). Fold bean • arcen pepper and celery into sclatin. Tum into I litJ'tl_y oiled 6'h<up rinft mold or into 1nd1'Vidual mold Chi untd finn. Unmold onto rv1na platter. Makes 10 to 12 SttVi PR ENT A TION: Gama h wnh watercre sprias and chury tomatoci. hot. riaht from the oven. STUPPED GREEN PEPP RS tuff«l peppers ~ u u&/Jy a>o· (idcrcd family fare. H~rt's • · ..-.th •n /ulian flavor. ' Meat's reat at Olding the mayo Wbcthtr you hake, dip or dust. ~ther )Ou coat with flour, bre d crumbs au hed corn flakes o dry nion soup mut, the process bea1ns with a moist urface. The meat n be dipped in water, milk, beaten ea. yogurt or buuennilk. Mayonnaise, however, has re- cently come into its own as a favorite coating for meats, poultry and fish. It has the right amount of body, contributes flavor and holds moistness in. Brush the mayonnaise on the surface of the meat or fish, then coat it with a dry mixture. Use a plastic bq. especially for chicken, since the pieoes arc uneven in shape. Add only .one piece of chicken at a time. For Oat surfaces such as fish fillets or pork cutJCts. it's easier to use the dippiftl method. When dippi.na, llerc's a suggestio n. Use two hands. One hand de;ils with the wet foods, the other with the dry. After brusbin& on the mayonnaise, one band places the mayoooa1se- coated food in the crumbs. The other band sprinkles the crumbs over the food, turning until coated. As the t>rocess is repealed oontinue to keep one band for moist handlina, the other for dry. Some of the following recipes call for the plastic bag method. 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Contabu Japanese 'Glucomann1n • Each pilJ al~ contains an amaz- ingly effective amount of "gluco- mannan", the remarkable natural dietary fiber discovery from Japan (used successfully for over I SOO years) that expands in your sto- mach and gives you a full and satis- fied f eetina all day long The super-pill is already sweep- ing the country with glo wing re- pons of easy and fast weight loss from formerly overweight people in all walks o f life who are now slim, trim, and attracuve aaain. Now A~alla_. to Publk Yo u can order your supply of these highly successful "super" srapefruk pills (now available directly from the manufacturer by mail order only) by sending S 12 for a 14-day supply (or S20 for a J) J().day supply. or $35 for a 60-0ay upply) cash, check. o r mon9 f order to: Citrus lndustri~. 9903 Santa Monica Bl., Dept Wl2, Beverly Hills, Calif. 9021 2 (Un· condJtkHwll monty-back 1uorantet IJ not s«ls/kd.J Visa, M~ terCard, and Amer. pr s OK. (Send card number, expiration date, and sig· na&UIC.) or f est ~ice for t c:ttilit card order ONLY II toll fret H800)·862-6262, CAt. WJ 2. c ... ,,,. ....... -... .. Budget watchers can pig out now; Baked H9.9me chicken ueea m.ayonnabe rather thall Ooar to coat poultry. Jn tall1 encrally there's a large supply of pork bccau hogs arc nt to market dunna th11 ason. nd for con um rt, that mean attractive prices as well . All things oonsidettd, pork price are apcctcd to ave~ge around St.60 a pound compared to S l.65 in l 983. Prices thi winter should avera around S l.64 compared lo-SI.~ lait ~Wh~s more, manr rctaile will b(. offenng pecials so for the fall and the winter months at least, pork bas the advan- tage ofbeina comparatively inexpen- sive. Savvy shoppersjudic pork's quali- ty by appearance. The color ranies from grayish pink to delicate rose. Pork should have a fine. firm texture and moderate marblinJ. The fat on the outsi<Sc, sometimes called the "fat cover." should be firm and white. Pork enjoys numerous cooking techniques. Whether b:irbecuina or broi•ina. pan fryina or roasting, there is only• one ruk to heed: Do not overc.ook. The belt prepantiops ain ea$ily be ruined by overcookina. As a ruJe, pork should be cooked to an intcmal temperature no higher than 170d~- The recipes that follow arc a good ~ cap mayoanaiae BAKED FISH FILLETS Makes 4 servings. reminder that pork has the added ! tablespoons prepared maatarcl 14 cap flne ctry bread cnmbt BAKEP, CtJTLETS virtue of being wonderfully versatile. 1 (!~ to S~ pond) broiler-fryer 14 cap grated Parmeta.D clteeae ~cap f1ae ctr; bretd cnmba SPICY PORg CHILI cktckea, nt lD parts Daill of 11oand reel pepper i tabl~ illloa soap mis, l ¥. pouu boael"f po~ cwt Into In large plastic food sto rage bag. '4 cap mayouahe auke pacaae Hfore meu11rta1 l·lncla cabel place crumbs, sesame seed, gmgec. ! tablespooaa fhaely cllopped l pond cMcteta, pork or tarkey l medJ1m oaloa, ceandy dloppecl paprika and salt; shake to blend well. sree oaloa cetlcll (abotd 14-iDcll Well) 1 medJmn en-pepper, coanely ln small bowl, Uir together real 1 pond Dalt fillets, Helt u 14 cap mayoaalae dlopped mayonnaasc and mustard unlit well floander or sole Jn shallow dish, stir together 1 Clove p.rllc, crnllecl blended. Brush chicken on all sides Io shallow dish, stir tofether crumbs and soup mix until well 1 tablespooa eookbls oo with mayonnaise mixture. Add one crumbs, cheese and pepper until well blended. Brush both sides or cutlets l tableapooa •ll:P'lrpoae Ro11r pie« at a time to crumb mixt~~lended. In smalU>owJ._1.lir toa ... eth ..... c ... r_WJ,l:.:.:·...,h n.m:onnaise; coa witb cru~m ..... b.___ .... ! lloQlll!ce c••• •Mle peeled Slille fo coat well. Arrange in sing.ie mayonnaise mixture; coat with nwtturc. Arrange in sin&}e layer on tomatoes, cat ap layer on rack in broiler pan. Bake in crumb mixture. Arrange in single rack in broiler pan. Bake in 425-1 lka:Dce cu reel kldae1 lleam 42S-<legree oven 40 to 46 minutes or layer m shallow bating pan. Bake in d:earceaven tOto tsminutesoruntit t ~ to unul chicken is fork-tender. Makes 4 415-degree oven 10 to IS minutes or gofden and cutlets arc tender. Makes I ta•l~~ll •er servings until golden and fish flakes easily. 4 servlng.s; --· 1 tablespooa ca.min You can spice up a picnic· Tbe aromas of sauteeing o nion and garhc invariably prompt people to call out .. What wonderful things are you coolcing?" The news today is you can keep those compli- ments COrJting without pechng, waste, musk or fuss. What saves the day -and the cook -is onion and garlic in their dehydrated forms, either instant minced, or powdered, or garlic and onion salts. And when you're cooking at the beach, mountains or on a picnic outing, these spices have the added virtue of being compact and light lo carry. In our first recipe (so easy) the catch-0f-the-day is coated with cornmeal mixed with onion and garlic powders and sautecd quickly. For vegetables go-alongs, shake onion and garlic powders over sliced fresh tomatoes, or sprinkle on corn-on-the-cob. ... . An easy fish stew with an Italian accent can be made by heating a can of tomatoes with onion and garlic Powders, oregano and crushed red pepper (tote the spices in tightly twssted plastic ba&s if you Ci.kc.) Simmer until thickened, add fish' chunks and get your plates ready. CAMPFIRE FISH 1 cap conuneal i &ea•~•• oaJoa powder 1 tea1pooa la.It ~ teal~ carUc powder 11' teupooa ooa:ad black pepper i pOudJ ffill fillets (~-lid &Mck) 4 tabletpoODI ve1etable oll Combine cornmeal, onion powder, salt, garlic powder and black pepper. Coat both side&offisb with coquneal mixture, sbakina off excess. In a larse skillet heat 2 tablespoons of the 01} until bot. Add 2 of the fish fLllets. FfY. until browned and fish flakes easily when tested wilh a fork., about 3 minutes on each side. Remove from sk.iUet. Repeat with remaining fish. Yield: 4 portions. CAMPFIRE FISH STEW 1 cu (lt oances) wltole tomatoes, brokea •P l tcupeon onJoa powder ~ teaapooa orecuo leaves, en abed ~ teaspoon ult '.4 teupooa carUc powder 1.4 · teupooa cnalte4 re4 pepper l t~apooa t ~ teaa~n pepper J capt abred eel Cltffdar cMffe (t 01IDCCJ) armed floar tortilla• (.,..._0 In a 4-quart Dutch oven cook Pork. o nion. green pepper and garlic in hot 011 utal pork 1 browned. Stir in:IJour, m~'xin \\ell. Add ilie l'CJll!inina in 1enl$. cxcepJ cbeese tnQ tor- til as. Simmer. uoco.vettd l tiour. :rop eacll serv~ with some of the cheese. Strve with torulW'; if desired. Makes 8 servi~ SWEET AND SOUR POU LOIN J f• to J.~ ........ "ft1kitn roa1t (doable Iola, rolled, and t1ed) 1 cup packed browa 1apr ~ cap ter1yakl 18•ee ~ et1p dry m ne ""HP~__. :..'I:.:_..:'::: ~ &eafP0'9 pMIMI CIVTa ~ te&lpoM ,.,,er teas~ iarUe powder For marinade, combine brown sugar, tcriyak.i sauce. wine, ctnli sauce, cloves. peppet and prti powder. mix well. Place raikt in a plastic 1>a4; set in 1)Wlow baki~dish. Pour mannadc over roast· clote big and lie sccurely!Marinate In rcfrigct- ator 8 hours or ovcrrught urning roast occasionally. Make a foil drip pan abi>ut I v, inches deep and extcndina 1. inches beyond each side of meat. PoSition dnp pan under meat. I Drain the rout, reservina marinade. Place roast on roti$1Crie of arill over low coals. Insert meat thertnometer in thickest part bf roast, not touching fat or rotisserie rod. Oose ttrill hood. Grill 2 to 21/i bours or 1,1ntil meat tbefomomc.er sesj5Wn 16S ~ brushina frequently with mannade durina last 45 minutes of~ Let rwst standlCrto IS-minutes Derore carvin& to allow juices to set and internal temperature to rise to the recommended l 70degrces. Makes 10 to 12 servings. 1 poud flab filleu, cat lato 1-laclt pleees In a large skiUet place tomatoes, onion powder, oregano, salt, garlic powder and crushed red pepper. Brina to a boil. Reduce heat and simmer uncovered until mixture is sli&hlly thickened, about 4 minutes. Add fish. Stuff your turkey with b arley taHONE.YBAKED One taste is all it takes.· It will only take you a few minutes to take that taste. rt takes us a httle longer to perfect rt Each ham 1s covered wrth rare spices and __ smoked over a special blend of hickory and applewood chips for no less than 30 hours. It's then glazed with costly imported spices and golden honey. Spiral sliced for easy sel"Vlng . .... ~,..,, ............ .H ' I Simmer uncovered until fish flakes easily when tested with a fork about 4 minutes. Serve over slices of toasted Italian bread, if desired. Yield: 4 portions (31/4 cups) Like to experiment? Try a barley stuffing with roast turkey. Prepare 1112 cups medium barley according to pactaae directions. Cook turk.CY. giblets and neck in water unttl tender (about 1 hour). In bot oil saute 2 seeded and diced &reen peppers, 2 sliced celery staJks and 1/4 pound chopped fresh mushrooms until tender. Remove from heat and stir in cooked barley, chopped turkey giblets and neck meat, 1 tablespoon salt, I teaspoon ground sage, I/• teaspoon peP.per and about 14 cup reserved giblet broth. Makes enough stuffing for a 12-to 14- pound turkey. t TEM DIFFERENCE-NOW ONLY Colg Mae-Newport and Vlrginia Open 14 Hours $i.56A \Ue Invite you to taste the dellcl.o~us"'_..~.~~-­ ..,... difference of Donut Inn donuts ... the fresh-baked nevor and fragrance of pure Ingredients ... and the generous size and great variety, too! Cl Treat yourself today too dozen of our delicious donuts. Now only S2.56 a dozen. No Coupon Necessary ...... ~~~~~C: 9 ' This sausage has a twist German Croustade baked in frozen dough, with vartety of meat or vegetable filling Groust.adcs traditionally -are shaped, filled and baked all an one made from baked bread hollowed step. The yeasty bread surrounding outand filled with a variety of meat a flavored cabba&e and sausage or v~table fillings. filling is a flavorful and economical Thu easy variation -German entrce. ~usage .Croustadc -bu a convo; _...._,,-=le~nt lWJSL Made wiih frozen brctad .:GERMAN SAUSAGE CROUSTADE douah.. the Croustade can be t (1""9c!e) loaf frozen brad Here's p ea ch y treat -· foF lor;J.g, hot days- Long. hot days are perfect for savorina soft and refreshing summer fruits like peaches .. You can cat a fresh California peach out-of-band or you can slice it into a bowl and pour milk on top. But you can also euree a pound of peaches to blend with cream cheese and whipped cream in Peach Bavarian Tone. The c~y lJCaCh filling is layered over a crust spread witb chocolate and chilled until firm and ·cold. PEACH BAVARIAN TORTE "' cvp batter '4·cap Ooar I tablespoaaa aagar '" Clip M~·Ud·ll•Jf % ounees aemJ-1weet cbocolate, broken 1 euyolk 1 pada1e maflavoied gelattn 1.4 e11p water 1 pond fresl CalJfornia peaclles, scnbbecl (I lar1e or 3 medlam) 1 pacb1e cream claeese, softened (S oueet) 1.4 cap sqar 1 cap w11Jpp1D1 cream, wllJpped Extra pe.acll sllcea Extra Wllippe4 cream (opdoul) Qoeolate carll (opdoul) For crust, cut butter into flour and 2 tablespoons sugar in a small bowl until crumbly. Presson bouomand l- inch up sides of buttered 8-incb springform pan. Bake in 425-dcgrcc oven I Oto 12 minutcsoruntilaolden'. Cool. irl a small saucepan, heat half ..and· half and chocolate over low beat until chocolate bas melted. Quickly whisk in cg yolk and cook for 2 minutes. Pour chocolate mixture oYCr crust and spread evenly. Cool. For fillina. soften gelatin in 1/4 cup water in SJDall saucepan, then dis- solve over low heat. Set aside. Slice pcaChcs to measure 2 cups. Purce in electric blender (they'U measure I 1h cups). Add cream cheese, 'I• cup sugar and dissolved gelatin; blend smooth. ·Pour into bowl and chill until it begins to mound. Fold in whipped cream and pour into crust. Oiill 2 hours or overnight. To serve, garnish with additional peach slices, whipped cream and chocolate curls, if desired. Makes 8 to I 0 servings. West Coast renowned for seafood and citrus The West Coast states, renowned for their farms and orchards, yield a bountiful and diverse range of delicacies, including a wealth of seafood. Washington, Oregon and Cali- fornia have a frontage on the Pacific Ocean of more than 700 miles, and from those states comes such fare as Olympia oysters, dungeness crab, rockfish, shrimp and mussels. Best known, perhaps, is the Pacific salmon, often called the • greatest of sports fish. A prime source of food for hundreds of years, they hatch in fresh ~ater river and streams, spend their adwt years in the salt waters of the Pacific, then retu the rivers to spawn. Seafood is only pan of the story. The lower zone of California is arid land, but irrigation has turned it into an Eden of citrus fruit trees, not to meotio.n aroves·of olives, ates and avocados. The West Coast is famous for its bread. especially the sourdouah loaf _made from grain gr.own in Cali- fornia '"I great Cehtral Valle¥. Northwest farmland 1s cel- ebrated. Sleek herds of cattle roam the pastures and the re&ion has an abundance of vegetables and fruit. Orqoo '• ra p~rrles are noted for their fr1lgrince and great size. Jams and preserves arc shipped to delicacy shops all over the East. The area 11 a hunter's paradise. Deer, black bear, pheasant and other birds ranae throujb the foresu ofOrqon and Washin~on. For those who don•t like to hunt. there arc game farms featurina squab, wild turkey, game hen and auinca fowl. for scafOod lo\ crs, here as a recipe. for curried O)'&tcrs featured at the hi toric hclbumc Inn on the Lona Beach Pcnin ula otTWa hing· ton• coa t, CURRIED OYSTERS ' tableapoo.m clarJfled batter ! teaspoons sballots, flnely m1Dced I teupoon1 minced 1arUc ! teupoo111 1rffD pepper, dJced 1 teaspoon canj spice mJx 1! small oystera ~ cap lleavy cream To clarify butter, melt.slowly over heat so milk solids sink to bottom, leaving a clear liquid. Saute shaUots, aarlic and green pepper lightly in &utter until softened. Add curry spice (sec below) to shallots, garhc and green pepper, and stir. Add oysters and coat well. Add cream, and poach oysters until plump and firm. Remove oysters to heated serving dish on balf sheUs and cover with foil. Reduce sauce until mixture coats a spoon. Remove foil from oysters and spoon sauce over them. Garnish with lemon and chop~ parsley and serve. Serves 2. Good with a chilled C'.alifW'fUa white wine. To make curry spice, blend I tablespoon curry powder, 1 stick cinnamon, crushed, I crushed bay leaf. 1/4 teaspoon around doves. ... ,. ~ ltead ~~. dtfppe4 Ill":_....,. Jy oalOa, C.One4 I tabJetPffli htkr or marPJIM 1 tea911acaraway_.... "' teal'"' prlJc ,...aer ~u..,. .. pqper J seu,.....i, S Poll" Mltalta. dlc.4 1 tMletpooa rell wtu ~r ......... '°"' ........ He l e.p lftted Swl11 ellee9e HU Allow froicn bread dough to &haw until pliable. Saute cabbage and onion in butter or margarine until slightly tender. Add spic.es and sausage and continue to cook for two minutes. Remove from beat and add vin~r and tomato sauce. Divide loaf of bread dou&h in half. Roll and stretch one baJf of dough to I 2·inch circle. Fit into bottom and sides oflightly areaSed quiche dish or pie plate. UsinJ a slotted S{>OOD to drain exCC$s hquid. fill pie with •cabbage-meat mixture. Sprinkle grated cheese over fiiliDj. · Roll remaining piece of dou~ to 9. inch circle. Place on top of pie. Pinch edges of dough togethertightly to seal. Make several I-inch slashes in top crust to allow steam to escape durina cooking. Brush top crust with egg wash (I cg plus 2 tablespoons water). Sprinkle HJbtly with caraway seeds'if desired. . Bake at 350 degrees for 25 to 30 minutes. Let cool on rack to set for 1 O minutes. CUt into wedJCS and serve while bot. Yield: 6 servings. ~ • • - TEQUILA Herradura Repo.ado 92 p,oof S•uu Homlto• AstJ Spumante 750 ml.. ...... ~399 Aatl Spumante 750 ml. ........ ~898 750 ml sn•t 750 ml ss•9 750ml s10 9s _1som1 5698 10,s500 750 ml STORE HOURS: o~~ 10C Appleton .,__.... Wh~· Gold 80 Pt.;,d 7SO..V •s•s Mt. 'Gav ~ £.dtpw Oj() PTool 750ml ss99 Boca Chica s799 Pliwt0 Roco ISi Prool 151) "'' Bacardi 750ml 51()47 511..../ Ambfr. 80 prool OKTOBERFE~T SPECIALS :,:~~c~ .. ~ .. ~·t 750 ml 514 49 Schllchte s991 Stelnhas-r • • . 7s0 ml Schladerer Apncot or Edel Kinch .... 750 ml s1s ss CbevaJler S 7ss Pep~ment Schnapp' I 75 It Boente Apple Schn.e.pps Der Lach• Gold W Bemka•tler • Bad~ubc Spatle Ockfener 8och5te1n QBA.. 750 ml Bombay 81> Ptool 750ml '8" Tanquua11 94 PrOCll Liter •12n Beefeater •1921 94 proof I 7$11. Staaton'• •7ta 90 pool I 7S ~ 1984 Orange County GOLD MEDAL WINNERS 750"" •1195 7'>llml '4" ;<.(Jm 1499 1984 L.A. COUNTY FAIR AWARD WINNERS 1721 S ...... Avt .• Clsta ~·Phone: 45·1601 r 25171 M*llnds.. llsslen Vleto · ,._.: 144· 1A37 -10932 Westminster, liidift Grove· Phlftl: 631~145 263 Seut9' Eudd Avenue, ·Ana m • Pboftl: 991·&191 1;417 Culver Drive. IMM · Phlne: 55f·2757 C>ciober l l , 1 COGNA C c..,,.;..._ ~tOPt...f ~~ Martell v s • 80 f'lool ........, • E • • ... ' : t 1 ~ .. .. = .. ... • .. . . • ALPHA BETA NOW ACCEPTS ALL SOUTHERN CALIFORN·I A . . . . SUPERMARKET'S CUR.RENT Offer applies only to current supermarket coupons in Southern California. Coupon com- bi nations which exceed the value of the item not accepted. Only manufacturer's coupons of $1.00 or less can be doubled. Liquor an d dairy products excluded. Subject to limits imprinted on each coupon. Triple or unlimited coupon ~ffers not accepted. · .• EFFECTIVE OCTOBER 11 THRU OCTOBER 17, 1984 ' I II - • .. TELL~A•FRIEND , .. c -. . ... -., . 4 PAK . . ... LB. •BEEF LOIN NORTHWEST JONATHAN APPLES BONEl .f..SS • BEEF ROUND IJB. ROUND STEAKS TOP SIRLOIN STEAK - LAKE COUNT\' BARll.ETT PEARS OSCAR MAVER BOWGNA RIBEND PORK LOIN RPAST •I GAUDN AJG SKAGGS ALPHA BETA BLEACH BOUNCE FABRIC SOFTENER WE ACCEPT ALL SUPERllARKET'S DOUBLE COUPOllS OffH APPLIU OILY TD CUIHtl•T IUPllMAIKU CtU,..I • -TMl• CAUf-A. CllPll Clll•llATilll WHICH HCHD TME VALUE Of THE ITEM IOT ACClPTlD. Oil Y M&IUF ACTIHl'I CllNll If 11a II LUI CU II DOUIUD. lllUOI AND DAIRY PllODUCTI DCLUDH. IUIJlCT TO UMITl IMPllllTll ltl QCH COUPOI. tllPU . 01 UNLIMITlD COUPON Offlll NOT ACClPTU. • SIX WEEKLY FIFTY CARIBBEAN CRUISES FOR 2 '10,000 BINGO PRIZES I DAYS AND 7 NIGHTS Pl.US MANY MOREi ALPHA BETA BINGO WINNERS .. , .. Taco salad made quick an4 eas){ ~----------,-------,..:-.=----~"'!'"'""------:----....-..:---:---~·· 1ar :Vegetable stew good meatless meal For best results. consumers need to learn · t~chniques for choostn freshest proouce or ycllowi h. And th kernels hould be cool to the touch. M°'t fresh vegetables hould be kept cold and humid and hould be eaten as soon as ~ ible. This preservation can beSt bC ac- complished by storina the vcg- etable5 in a plastic ba& or in the hydrator compartment of your refrigerator. But do not keep the produce so moist that drops of water cling to the surface. JTOMHOO£ As the years pass, my taste for meat has been slowly decreasing. I tlll like a Sunday roast and have yet to tum down a juicy steak.. But meatless days are becoming more common, which I'm told is nat a bad thing after one passes middle age. My favorite foods now include fresh vegetables that I just about JOleratcd in my younger days. I not only find them ta.sty, buta vegetable plate can be a thing of beaut)", covering a wide range of hues. l}link ~f ruby-red tomatoes, when you are hung;ri. Or orange carrots and the wide range of 1tecn , such as beans. peas spinach and bell peppers. This preoccupation with vcg- etable5 bas prompted me to learn something about how to choose them. The produce dcpanment in supermarkets can be baffling to the consumer at fint. For instance, when shoppins for broccoli, look for com~ green bud clusten. Ydlow and wilted leaves arc a ign of aging. Onions should be ftnn and have dry smooth skins. Spongy onions arc probably decaying. When selecting fresh corn, Some vegetables. of coune, like potatoes, should not be refriger- ated, but stored in a cool place. If you arc a vegetable buff, try this meatless stew. ~Fr01~ 12<>z C1n 69.c a.eleu •ouncl St .. ko~:·~;a; •. r, •1" CMMk Steak ~!"""' Cl Mc .... lye ..... ~·-"., .. ....... •ro•cl a. •• Oo.~ot :; _, 11 • , .. Colcl CapMles S••r••• Asplrbl Taltletss.• .... :tfo •1M .......... _.. p tat ... M•eaA~ICIOUt P•g •21• '*"" .,... ~ Po1e10 Ued o• 200 ..,... ...... w ,O< A Cllenge 01 Pee• Ib a•· ,.,49 Nlgltl ... Cold a.a-.~..... t>w ta" ~ ••-w"""''"'...., .... UR • ..._s,,..-Aa _.. .. ,.. a--1-.-0r"-OWHlll ... •!>4' -'19' H P .... 59 T bl ,...,, • ""' '1" ,.,,, •• -rP' ... 81•1• £•1t11.Mee ~ tOIOt;jl!O ero...... ... a &IS .. • • '° < .., _.. ...... 1/11-L.L.-.. '°' A~-lno1a..a.a • , .. 00Sp1ce0co<lorant •1••Prep;ua11on H :i--.. •'4",.,,, .,..__. loilM~ •i.s _ ... ,,~ -·~~,,_. ''t ... ., ' I CrllMlrl CINlltlh At Otll'd W n · • ur., 0o111 ~ r ~ ;;:.: Listerine 't'.,..'I" COlluttert_,. •re•d ... p:~ •1n Ha•IMlr .. r •-•" /' /... •1" DOOra ltelt·DIH •r• ~' ( La~ •••· ~ ~"AA" .... ~\ltl'lelle (ggs i ~~ J" So Wllcofne Al E>My ._. -' f<rom The er.... Ome6eC ... ~,-~---i> The~ Eao S-0. Algt1I II---· ..... , Up fo The £.llglr'lt ~ Omer ~ .... 0...1•1 -~, . , .............. , ••. c I "AA" .... I I I ~ 4 c I l,,,.t ar -.._.~....., 1 ·---·..,-·,..I 1-oai Wllll .;:::-:.,~.:=---' c.10tl Col.c>Orl Olp M1.1c a...:~-;..~ 49' Boac Peara... ... ~~ .. G9' Yellow Onion• 3 •°:t89' Pocket Fruit ' Western growers have abundance. of fruit, v~getables There are many high quality produce items available at reason- able prices this time of year, according to the Fresh Produce Council. Toppin& the list of produce values are dry onions, potatoes and yams. These are beina supplied ··by almost --an wmem growing areas including Idaho, Colorado, Wubington and Cali- fornia. Citrus canker problems in Aonda nurseries have not drastically altered the amount of ettrus items available to Southern California shoppen. Produce de- partments still carry an abundance of excetJent quality oranges, lemons. limes and grapefruit to oft'er: their shoppers. This year has ~eralJy not seen a great amount of ofanges due to several factors. the freeze of citrus treei in both Texas and Florida, the exporting of the fruit to other countries and now the !rida cittus canker problem have abitofappin the.overall tjtrus p .urc.~onunately, ~lifopi~a is a maJor prOduccr of citrus frwt, so our supplies have remained rela· tively constant. You will see higher prices on Valencia oran~s until the new crop of Navels begins rollin& in late in October or early in November. Lemons are short now, so expect high prices there. As far as the fime suppl)', those arc mainly comiq out or California with some sup- plies available from Mexico. Prices on limes arc becoming more reasonable. Grapefruit production is moving from the Hemet and Riverside areas to the-Q>acheUa Valley a~. Very aOOd quality and steady prices arc expected on this year's crop. Prices arc rising on • the larger sizes of tomatoes available at most markets. This year's crop out of central califomia is loo~ft better than it has in years and q ty and flavor are superior. Chcrr) tomatoes should remain low in price and cxcclle.nt in quality. Lots of &ra~ are available out of storage facilities at this time. Red Aame Seedless, Thompsons and seeded varieties are fresh and flavorful. Quality and price flue· tuate vastly so keep your eyes open for good grape bargains. Two ttally delicious winter fruits have appeared on the scene. Both pomqranates and persimmons have staned rolling into local markets. Pomegranates of the Won- derful variety arc a very rcasonablt value and make for some fun eating; Peel off the outer skin and eat the inner kernels only. Per- simmons are off to a slower stan this season and should be getting better as time goes on. They need warmer weather than recently to develop into fuJJ colored fruit. Iceberg lettuce is still expensive. The high prices result from tiaht supply which was brought about by the heat spells of recent weeks. Ounng a hot spell, lettuce matures quickly and field hacvesting IQUSt .be stepped up to Jet usable lettuce to market. This, however, does result in a gap in production during weeks followina until lettuce resumes its natural cycle. Presently, leaf lettuce varieties such u Red and Green leaf and Butter lettuce arc particularly good values. Romaine JS avaHable. but at a slightly higher price. Spinach is nailable in excellent quality, although prices may be a bit steep. The price of cabbage is rising from the low prices of last week. Quality is Jood on both green and purple cabbaie. Due to the past hea~ both broccoh arid Bell peppers have risen in price. All colon of Bell peppers should be available, as well. The next week or so, there should be little realty good quality squash available. ThtS, again, is on aocount of hot weather conditions. · .Grapes g&in ground as popular tal>le fruit , C.lifomia. which produces about 97 percent of America's table grapes, reports they have risen from lOtti to fifth place as our most popular fruit. Per capita grape consumption in the United States acaually Jumped from 1.8· pound in 1972 to nearly ix pounds a decade later. About S• percent of thCJC arapcs were ca\en out of hand, while the remaining 16 percent are used as ~ents in vu:ious reci~s. ac~ cordina to a survey. • Of the 13 major arape varieties vown in C&lifomi&i one or more are available most of the year. One of the most popular is the Tbomp on 1rcen seedless, a durable fruit tbat is on the stands from June throu&h November. The Thompson is relcrrcd to in the trade u I four-way arapc, ince It is Id not only to cat ftclh, but also for mlkJn,arauin producina wine and ft>( cannisw, The "'Jbompson Kcdl i the only arape used an fruit cocktail • • canned uat of Wh ch me I l million cases arc produecd Oil the Wat Coist each ~· In fatl,;Jwoothcr.,ape come on the market. They are lhe lmcria. 1n elonpted peen fruit metam rdrned lO u the "lldy fi~," and u.c Almena, • a.rac liiht-srecn 119,Pe lhlt ha I full, robu1t l\l'or. Both make the r 1~r1ncc in October and re 1~11tabl throu brua .. 1 wo arape vanetit$. which be- come available mid-summer, are the rich, black Ribier with ita full· bodied flavor, lastin& into Febru- ary, and the bri~t red Ruby lecdles , which wlll be on the market through January. • Grapes arc amona the world's oldest fruits. They were grown 11 far back as 4000 B.C., when Swiss lake dwellers kept vineyard accordina to hi torians. The Scriptures indicate that the first vegetation planted by N h after the arcat flOOd was a arape vine. Mo t of the grapes produced in America arc grown on vines imilar to tho pro~t.Cd in A ia Minor near the Cupu1n Sea in ancient times. Here's o des n recipe that fca· lures seedl crape . • ... Melons can e!Jhance weight control progrf!.m They may be full of sugar, but they're ~~.::= =~:::.~;..~Jr, also full of bulk to satiate the dieter !'!\1.t;~;.S:..1a1out1t.~:i°:2 :.:-.:-.=~;.11;,.:~! one a day. But the wu ' the ft&Wnaor. U wu ~ She y Lawraee Power, M.D. cancer vitamin A prectJraor calkd watermelon and when she aave voiCC loottnedller ltirt. feelins rtuft'cd for .Because they're sweet (thanb to beta catOJtM. • weiabt control to the thouaht, I besitaled a moman &.bC nna lime m DM>athl. Next dly lbe thtir supr), many pcopic lldly avoid however: t!ie water .and the fiber but told bet to IO ahead. At the lime rqated d1¢ eipc:rien(le .-itb another melons as fU! of a weiaht control mean that houn can be taken catina their •Ulll content boibered me lOO, aeamait. and 10 on. Over the week strate,y. It 1 a ~or mistake and bite·sized low·calorie SCC1ion1. IO l er~~ clinicaJ f"lQlltn. the ale oeatty 20 pc:M,andt of' water- dtprivatlon.._Melou can play an '"They're albuaat-'~ aay lhcdouh~ A YfCCk ..._bad Iott• fw1ber melon and :IOlt three innunds of' un,POflant pan in ~t control, "and supr ii "bed news diet-wise." thRe pounds. CautioUlly I IOU(bed wdaht. Suaar may be theft-Pt-ind~ whether 11 cantalou~, watermelon For aucb doubten J n:ieount the on btr e•perknce with the melon. She ca10rie tourcc but they .arc bulky and or the imported exottca. exPerience of one of my patients wilh bad eaien one, lhe •id. a whole one, Atisfyina lhub Co 1t"brir water and Melons are mostly water and fiber. watermelon. oyertbc week After lcavioa tht office fiber. Properly cut and cubed any but they also contain ~tuaium She bad been losin1 weight on a Jhe had.picked up the Jarsett melon melonc:anprovideaneveninaof{ood which is &ood for people watb a blood restricted calorie intake and wu ber huiblnd could c:any, 1 2J.. entc.rtainme1u. prctsurc tendency u well as lhc anti-wilhi~ 1 S pounds of ta~:. As pert of pounder that j>f'oducCd momentary We like tweet foods. and an tbclr Coffee, tea.can lead to iron lack natural form they .deltrvc 1 pllCle n everyone"• diet. 1More thin 40 :fCars· q,o, aoenum intrOduocd 1 ony amount of the Heett:na llCdwin into Lbe amniotic ftuid of babies before binh. 1n tbt oewty ... ~ flavor of their bathirta ftuid; d.c blbies WttC fouDd lO CODIUmC ClU. quanutiesof'lhe water they IW'l1D ln. romcthina :they do routindy over lbe bst few~ of llific111 the womb. Sweet Oavon induce feeclina behav- ior in all of UI. The IWO ftavon' ill the tonpe &hat aipaJ cattqa to tqin are sweet and Alty. Fecdins beba~or is tOooc:id When appetite 111isf1Ctioo devefops, partly from dlewina and .,.nJy from dis- I I Study says beverages inhibit absorption of iron in women LONDON BROIL Women who drink coffee and tea with their meaJs to pick them up for the rest oftheday may · stage for iron-poor blood, says the California Dietetic Association (CDA). According to a recent anicle published in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, tea and coffee consumed with meals or up to an hour after meals can dramatically inhibit the body's ability to absorb iron. For active women, this can lead to anemia. •a&•CORNIM ......... ·-~1.29 Former John. Bulk Frwsh, tO-Oz. ~sorted Fillet cl Interestingly, tea or coffee.drunk an hour before a meal had little· effect on the body's iron absorption ability. . : .. Women , ·especially those who still menstruate, need to keep an eye on their iron intake to keep blood healthy and let it transport oxygen efficiently to the body's cells," says Rita Storey, R.D., president of CDA~ PORK SAUSAGE LINKS ......... ll. J.69 Hughes, Hot 0t Miid ITALIAN SAUSAGE ................ LB. I.ff .-ZIPPE BURRITOS ·1~· ............. .-.EA., .la•' FRESH DOVER SOLE ...... _._,, .. t.a. .2.71 To keep iron absorption at its highest, try to keep coffee and tea consumpllon to a minimum and think about eating iron-rich foods u part of a daily diet consisting of foods from the four food groups - milk, meat, vegetabJes and fruits, breads and cereals. "Foods from the meat and veg· etable/fruit groups. are partj.cularly hiah in iron -especially red meats, eus. areen leafy vegetables, dried fruits~ prune juice,•• Storey says. "Including these in your daily diet can belp fulfill your U.S. -R~ ommended Daily Allowance of 18 mi~s for iron for women and 10 milligrams for men. "By eating a variety off oods from the four food groups each day - and limiting intake of foods that don't belong to tho~ groups, such as coffee and tea -you can get all the nutrients necessary to keep a body healthy and enough enersY to make anificial pick-me-ups un- n~,'' she says. "Studies show that drinkina tea with a meal -including iced tea- inhibits iron absorption up to 87 percent. Coffee impairs absorption by 39 percent, .. she says. "For those who suffer from iron deficiencies, a simple change in dietacy habits might help solve the problem.•• Sauces can add flavor to steak Tender, juicy steaks need little fussing to add flavor, but here are a couple of sauces for a flavor accent: For a luxurious toppina on a steak. mix 1A cup crumbled blue cbese, I/• cup chopped walnuts ~d 1/i cup sour cream, or mayonnaise. For extra decadcJice, you can fold in 'll cup whipped cream. Refriger- ate for at least 4 hours for flavor to blend. Malces 4 servinas. For a tiahter toppin&, puree 1 cup fresh spinach or watercress leaves in a blender. Stir in Vi cup sour cream, 2 tablespoons chopped chjves and salt to pepper to taste. Makes •~inp.. HINISllASBOYAN I 1.eefalal 0 • OUCel ,.. y..-n,at l"OOtD tempera Ian , ....,.., tlrin 1artk, ttaW ........... .~ Wa•h ~hini and tnmien41; do not perc; slice V•·inch thi~;ln a la11t ikille1 heat 2 tablclpio0n1 oil: add ~ zuQChini to :·nu lkil~ an a tanak layer. Coot ae_ntty, tunnna u necenary, until lender and blowned. Drain on . . • · paper to~lina. ~pea~ with remain, in& ~hani. lddana oil u necesury. ~ zucchini, ovcrlappina, on a Mrvlna platter. Stir 1*thet )'Ol~n, larlic and ult; poon over zucc.h.ina. lerveet room temperature ordullcd.: Maka 4 to 6 terVinp. C•ll 6"2•1171. Put• I•• word• to work for ._. ra ~ t-N\/V?,~ 12-0z. Cont, 8"r ~·~ 6MCIC '189 £;~ llAIURAL LffHIT .. 1 7S.Li .. r. Conodiol'I Whisky BLACK VELVET ............................... _ ........ 9.98 750•MI. · E & J BRANDY ......... : ...... --.-· ...... _, ..... _ ....... 4.M GOLDEN DELICIOUS WASllllleftNI IX'IWA PAllCY A..._.. c Lit ..... wA111aCK1 ..acaas ...... -......... .-. ........... , .. .,, EAr2.9f "" / -. " ~-Oz. l'tcg. . ..... --~.u. ... 79 • Kroft, l2-0z. Chefte food Nl•••!NllC R Maruchon. 17-0&. ; Ii ::::0 .. 8t. .......... 79. AMERICAN SINGlES ........ _._ ............... :-...... 1.59 Diamond S-Lb. log BROWN RICE. ...... .............. ..... .. ............ l.i9 , ' Kikkomon Mile* 8.S-~. Botti. l·Lb-f>kG-. Meot or 8"f BAU PARK FRANKS._ .. -... ······-··-··---•···· ..... 1.79 SOf SAUCE ............................................... 1.19 ,..a,_...,. cost• =~D 6.99 WESSON OIL 48-0Z. SIZE 29 I/~ .......... J:/t1 CllACIC .. Ji~ ll.S-OZ. I 19 ~~ NA&lSCO • 22-0l. INCWOES 20t OFF Two-8-0l Tubt Regulor CHIFFON MARGARINE .................. .. ~ DktlOIMWy Sate ~ Ot.1. 21, "" ~ OfilE SESAME STRET OtCTIOOARY .................... , •• \ .............................. .69 - LOWID YOUR TOTAL FOOD BIU.! -' --. . . I • ,, Inch " • PULLMAN ..... *>-Inch GARMENT BAG . . ........... 19.M l . . ' ' •• ' ... ca Orangt Coast DAILY PILOT/W9dn }Winery may cha:Dge hands, but quality endures nu nee con1t:ibu1cd bv the Pinot the taste WJthout dommatln to exceptional value. Thct 'Ow:hitc -Noit. ll it a .. Bes18u)it• and bu)' it Much of the frHhncs nd z1,p \\incs ho a com~on thread of b) the sc. come from the Colomb rd. crisp acidit>J..• quahty ~ferrcd by J.W. Moms It a 11Pr:lvate Re-Another ••nest Buy." wmcmaker 1Kick Mafit. Thi en ne Wlltte•• ($3.49 or le s): The J.W. Morrl• UH VlDtaae Port ness not only m kc the '° 'In \tie t r 1u bout J.W. Morris with the ruit for its whltc inc blend ,, at lcasi tSll):Asappcatinau1hisoneisin extremcl)'. refre hin but houtd e''a')'thi about the l.W. Morris t mou Vmi-.c Pons. Toth iulso a intcrestinaas that oftbe red. Try 35 its youth, it &t really a wine to cellar. contnbute to n relatively Iona hfe, Winny has ch ngcd except two former president of onorna percent Chardonn )', SS percent It hould improve dramatically as white wines So· lhinas. The wines are still aood and V1neyttds. French Colombard with the bal· with every passing year, and a J.W. Morrt1 ltll ~rdOD;UJ they still offer exceptional value. Sometime in 1985 you can look ance aoina to Chenin Blanc. This is decade from now it hould be ($8): All the Morris varietal wines Since May ofl 983 the owncnhip for some new release under the form, and the red and white arc a perf~t dry white wine for day to ab olutely irrcsistible. lt'u blend of arc produced exclusively frdm has chanted. the location of the Black Mountain Vineyard label. a~olutely outstandin! values. day drinkin&._ When you don't want Cabernet Sauvignon, Zinfandel Alexander Va~Jey (5_onoma ~~ winecy bas cha:nicd. and even the These will be Toth•s estate wines, J .W. Morrll 1911 'Private Re· or can't alford Chardonnay or and Petite Sirah. The Jlavon are ty) lflpeS. With pnec taken 1 winemakerhaschanJcd, thou.ah the ancj presumably the top of the line. se"• Red" (S3.•9 or less): This fume Blanc every day, this ~inc already devetopinJ complexity and consideration, .~9u'll look Iona and oriainal wincmaker1sstillon board J.W. Morris has estabtiehcd a re Uy drinkable red wine is 50 will serve the purpose quite nicely. there is no sian of the oveni~ness hard to find a Chardonl'!I)' .to beat u a consultant. · superb reputation over the years for pm:cnt Pinot Noir and SO percent There is very crisp acidity (like that plagues so many Cahfornia this one. Barrel feff!1ented . 1~ u~ The new owner is Ken Toth, three wines. a propric~ white, a Zinfandel. The rich body and many European white) and a Ports. . . . barrels, with adikd1tth1onal . •c11~11 1n1 proprietor of the Black Mountain proprietary red and, of course, the appealing berry quality come from pleasant lemony finish. The Three other J.W. Moms wmes new French oa , c win 11 Vineyard that has long supplied Port. All three are in very good die Zinfandel, with complexity and Chardonnay makes itself known in arc varietAl , and each offcn good citrus crispness complemented ~Y. a ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~_,;.....;;...~~~~~~;__~~_;._~.:.....~--.:..:.;,_~~-=-~__;~~~;__~~~~~~~.....:.~~~~-, certain roundness from vanilli_n extracted from the oak. There is ·more complexity than you'd expect from the price ranac. - - . . ,, .... ... .. A Guarantee meana I won't get ripped of fl" .JONATHAN~ LJOO APPLES ..>~ 1'4-Crop. 1.erge ~0..-n GOLDEN BA.NANAS Lunch eo. F..011tt l8.19 VONS SANDWICH ROLLS 7 9 &.Pk\ • ~~~~RX~ .85 OLD FASHION DONUTS 105 6.'9di SLIM PRICE® LARGE GRADE AA EGGS OQ DOUR. 69 UNT a """T•t• llACM _, . ., ........ ... COKE REG. DIET .99 ~,,,..., 2UW BotUe YUBAN COFFEE 289 ~ -~. ~ l).()ura c.r. ~~RJC~TOMAlOES .66 HUNORY JACK POTA10f.S 99 ..-. 16-0ulo ~ • MOTHER'S J49 -cooKw.s eemec1~~ l~Beo CHEE.SE WHIZ PLAIN ~ l60unoo Jet MftM SOLD PLASTIC PLATES 219 .89 ~ ..._ l).(awit Pk10lgll ~~~E. ~ )2-0l.rQ • 159 ~APm:59 II~ •. -Aol DEL MONTE CATSOP J2-0unot Bottle ... .n .99 BROWNBERRY CROO'TONS 59 Onlool OMIC S.-...S. &-0wtcit ~ e VONS APPLE Jl 9 CIDER 6'0ura Botti<! 29}!?~~~~t20DL~77 DOLE PINEAPPLE 81 c,,., .... In Syrup Ot Jutaa. ~ c.n • EL PASO REFRIED BEANS 99 l I -Own<e Con • BEEF RAVIOLIS 79 Cr..1~1110... l~C.. e COLGATE HANOI WIPES 116 a.o..a,....... DAWN LIQUID DETEROE~99 ~ 46.o...-lloltlo ••• I:. ' BEEF RIB ROASTS Lao'ft l'M. '*-~ ..., I.& 198 FARMER JOHN HAM " 198 S... 'lllr ~ Cli-. CIA lA ~~ JOHN SAUSAQ~ 119 SLIM PRICE BACON . 139 ·~~ll!Cd lA OOITl ... A ttl I tJHI lt"9I W Orlfttt Art. ' All Vons meat, produce, dell, bakery and Vons own brand products are guaranteed or double yous: money back. Th symbol is Vons guarantee of qua11ty. Look for it. PILLSB<JRY HOT LDAF WI* Ot wi-. t()()uro ....... b\ND C1 FROST MEATS3b100 'Tlll1I 5' leld. 4 v.. ....... "'°""°9 ,._. " OSCAR MAYER SMOKIES 179 s.... Lria. 12.0-. P9cUto . KRAFT AMERICAN CHEESE229 SlnQle """"'*' 5bl. 16-0r ~ 0-l'ood FARMER .JOHN 99 MEAT WIENERS• 160ura ,.... VONS LONGHORN CHEESE234 F......, ~(.,._..Sue lA 2J91 La VONS BEEF SALA.ME 109 Or Cooloml S.i.mt SllCM 1-0unre ......... ~~l! e,1~0u-"-Ot 5eo PUJM·ROSE COOKErnHAM 299 SllC*S I~~ PRECIOUS RJCOITA CHEESEJ19 16-0unoe c:.w-(l2-0t. c..~ "'! OLYMPIA 349 ~~c-1 ....... POPOV VODKA , --, 699 I Ts.U.. """. I ~7~~ .. WHISKEY 99 ~~ .. GOLD S~!-IS 239 PETER DAWSON SCOTCH 999 l~lloaae £~~ ~~!!.~SCO 179 SON COUNTRY COOLERS 299 ~ 12-0uru rut.a . BLACK VELVET 999 c.n.di.n. I ~ Llttt lottle lltlJUlar 3•• Priu = 2" 'iltMfY 110 ...... TAYLOR CAUF. J49 CHABLIS ~ =~ lthone « llDw. U Iller 8ot11t w~~UmltOrlt THE DAIRY ORANGE .:JUIC~ ~ .. Qinre&;; NOCOA MARGARINE 1.....,.,..... ...... SONNY DELJQHT OUla lo.Mi. M ~ &wt 14-!~ .75 105 .79 DANJllON YES 39 YOCKDml . AIDttd F1-I • • WEIQHT WAlCHERS ~~0.,.160.,, t.Olla c.ttol\ Mil i .. ' lOP SIRLOIN STEAKS 209 ~ --~.., lA BONELESS CUBE STEAKS239 Tlrlle he BM I.& BONELESS RIB STEAKS 219 --...!! .. .., L& PORK LDIN CHOPS C-Oll Loin PORK LDIN CHOPS c.wc.. Rib FREEZER P L EASERS 22~~Lf.5 115 ~~~~£!.~~ .... 99 TREESWEET 145 Or-. ........ 12.0.-c.. SARA LEE DANISH 139 ~,,,.. 0-., ~ 77'-Cl 'Tl!! PILLSBURY POPCORN 139 ~ lUOl. ........ ., $4~.T.il ,,... ORE JOA HASH BROWNS 119 ~M6-... PET RITZ PIE SHELLS 79 , .... ~~ . COLE-S <lAR~IC LOAF ..ow..,.... .79 JIMI~ B<JRRITOS 4 ~100 ..., .... r. ._ .. ""' .. C:'-,.,.,,_. ,... • ,...,,. YA&4a f • . ........... , ..... ~f&LI ... , ............ .. .. J.W. Morrl• ltl3 Saavtpon Blue ($6): It's a good wine an~ a reasonably good vilue. A faarl)' aggressive Sauvignon Blanc grap1· ness is toned down somewhat by the judicious blending of about 6 percent Chardonnay. Another 6 percent would have made it even better and I undentand some Scmiilon has been planted to serve thia purpose in the future. Try it with oyste:s on the half shell. J.W. Morrt1 IHI Cabenet Saavlpon ($7): Like Jordan and 1 Silver Oak. this is Alexander Valley Cabernet, which means soft, ap- pealina and forward fruit and nice, friendly round tannins that allow you to enjoy the wine in its youth. Is at as good as Jordan? You•u have to decide, but it is less than half the price. This one feat~s about 20 · -perant Mertoc, which may oon- tribute to the very Iona and surpris- ingly (in a wine so youna) compl~ finish. J.W. Morris may be a trans- planted winery, but it seems to have taken bold very nicely in Sonoma County soil. FESTIVALS -If you .have never been to a wine-.fcsiival, you really should build a short vacation around one in the comina year Festivals arc events that allow you to taste more wines in a few da)'S than you could in weeks of visiting wine country, and with commen- tary by experts that help you understand what you're tastmg. Many of the famous winemaker names you 'vc read about or seen on wine labels arc usually present, as well as other wine industry celebrities. Monterey -"The California Wine Festival on the Monterey Peninsula" is the granddaddy of the festivals, and it takes place annually at the end of November or first of December. This year's dates arc Nov. 25·28. It has one oftbe most stellar lists of palflicipants and1 something like a liundrCddiffercnt wineries participating. The fact that it all takes place in the beautiful Monterey-Carmel area is only a bonus. For an invitation and com- plete details write to: Wine Festival, P.O. Box WINE, Carmel, CA 93921 . Texas -Even sooner, Oct. 26 & 271 is the "Texas International W inc Classic," a new event that has to set a new record for value. This twe>-<lay event features lots of tastings and seminars plus a gourmet banquet for only SSO. Philip Wente and author Leon Adams are only two of the name speakers, and yes. Texas wines will be represented alongside wines from the rest of the world. For details write to: Wine Classic, P.O. Box 561, Lubbock. TX 79..08. Many other festivals take place durina the year, such as the two events sponsored by Harrah's Ho- tels, one in Reno. the other in Atlantic City. The Eldorado Hotel in Reno sponson another in con- junction with the Western Wine- Competition. There are literally dozens of other one-day events throuahout the west and the nation. To have your name placed on a mailina list to receive notices of most of them, write to: Wme Festivals, P.O. Box 7244, San Francisco, CA 94120. P~T'A, CHICON AND RED PEPPERS ?·once Jar roa1ted 1weet red ~=• t'1D spapetti ! npe ateavy tteam I Clpt diced ( 'lli lDelll) tMked CMckea w'1te naeat Salt ud a pepper mW Drain peppers and cut ln ¥ .. incb squares; reserve. In a tarae aauoepot cook spqhetti accordina to Plcbae directions and drain in a colander. rn the clean dry la.rae aaucepot beat cream with reserved peppers and the chicken until very hot: add a~ti ·· and lOS over low heat until most of cream is absor~ Serve at once on hot plates: pus salt and pepper mill Makes 4 scrvinp. .. ' , <>r.nge Cout DAILY PILOT 9CIMlday, OctOber 10 llM Cl Or,igin ofourlikes,dislikes in foorlbaffle I • experts Parents have le s impact on our food choices Linda Banoshuk of Y le U01ver· he wa urpnsed to find he was h t f ity's School of. Medicine, "Wc'"re wrona. Parenu have no 1J111fican1 I pre nrnc:n.\ Roz.in lie "'are denial. . , ...... _ an mos o us b Ueve, tudles Indicate. oom liking , ... ,.cct tastes and dislik-circa on wfr children's ilikei and in bincr on '' But we l~m other dllhkcs or dcsuu to uy ncv.• food , Gen may hctp damnu'I£ 11!11y cat t :e do It's known there Supermarket uses stor ~pace for cultn ry classroom By BARBARA MA YER ,, .... .....,.,.. Desi&J)ing kitchens for home- makers is complicated enough. But how do you plan a kitchen that will be used to teach cooking when it is located in the middle of a super- market? , The client's specifications were fonner storaie space into a kitchen with at least three complete work ocnters, 6S feet of counter space and room for 24 students. Require- ments also included a window wall 18 feet lon& a powder room and a small office. These were the needs set forth by Joanna Preuss, director of cooking classes at Kings Supermarket'• 'in Short Hills, N.J. Preuss and her designer, Aorencc Perchuck of New York, asreed the school should have residential equipment so students would easily be able to apply at home what they learned in the classes. The school -known as tbe Cookinastudio ;_ opened last fall after a 13-month collaborauon. Its success has encouraged Kings to plan additional schools and work has ~un on a second Cook- in15tud10 in the l S-store chain . .. We chose stoves and utensils that are used in home kitchens so our students could translate im- mediately what they learned here to what they prepare for their families and friends. They're also becomina familiar with new products they may want to incorporate in their own kitchens," according to Preuss. She cites as an example a double oven that combines a microwave and conventional oven an one appliance. The culinary classroom boasts the three work centers, with resi- dential ranges, dishwashers and refrigerators, residential kitchen cabinets. oak parquet and quarry tile floors and a be_ige and rose wallpaper. Long mobile tables with synthetic marble tops are on wheels and seat 24 comfonably. An angled mirror over the work surfaces enables the seated students to v1ew what the instructor is deing in the kitchen. The ~linary classroom is separ- ated from the shopping aisles of the Kings Short Hills market only by its lona window wall. Shoppers can and do peer in to observe the activities. Providing in-store entertainment is nothi~ new to Kiqgs' president Allen Bildner. Bildner, whose father founded the chain 47 years qo, bclievca in the concept of hoppioa as entertaining and has engaged Hawaiian dancers and madri&al singers to perfonn in the aisles. Shoppers who sec the classes in seuion often become students. Accordins to Preuss, a native Californian who settled in Montclair, NJ., after l S years of work with food expens in America and Europe. the school's success is a reflection of a groWth of interest in cookina. So far, the student population has included bachelors, homemakers, career women, couples and chil- dren. Men make up about 40 percent of the evenin& classes. lasscs,costinaS.13 to$95. depend· in& on lenath, arc held up to three t1mcs a day, seven days a week. lnstructon have varied back· grounds. Some arc cookina pr~ fesi ionats; others are accomplished amateun. For example, a pasta course is tau&ht by a moonlighting bioph~ici5t. SO fa~1 fjsh cookery hu been ~mona me most popular clasxs. 'But b&kin .. sessions on what to do 'with oonvcniencc food , and on bow to ute new appliances such as foOd proocsson have aroused lhletCSt Ethnic cookin& cou . ~Uy Tex-Mex and Ch1ne l>Ods -have also been well· attended. While .. nutritional" cooking in 1encraJ is 1 tum.off, accofdina to Prtu~ ccnain 'asp«t of nutrition such as low·sodium food prep. llJ'ltion-have been very p0pular. Rqardl ofwhatcla the~ ign up for, tudcnts benefit throU&h the .oonfldtn that com pl tt a coo • "'1 course can ~v "flhc t i~icnt for ny cook a..confiden~. Once rou hue'" 1t, e en ~our miatak n be dehclou • ' s P u . elcphant1 ) an me in the Ociobcr issue of Science Dige t. We re turned on -or off -by the flavor. melt, texture and appear- ance of food. Cultural biases oome into play. so do our gene3. Accordin to P.1.Y.<:hop,hnkis.t • fondnesses and l\'CmODS. Roun reported. Until recently, psycho~!;!s:;.t ~u...,..~ c now thinks cultural back· Roz.in o#the Umvenit o n· ~uftd is 1he male mOI& powerful syh·ama as umcd that we learned mfluerwc on our LU&a becau t th lhinas from our parents. But teen us to ocnain combinatton of when he conducted the fint surveys foods and flavors. Amcncans arc on food pr,efe.re~ within ramilies, familiar: with salmon poached or BEEF LARGE-END Rib Meat Dept. Savings Frozen Food Favorites Pork Steaks ~~ La 81.29 Waffles a; IZ«~ Lean Ground Beef a~,~~~(e.S1.59 Waffles =i~Kf lfOZ asc Sliced Bacon .IJU( 1.• s1.49 Citrus Punch ~= 12-0l agc Rib Steaks ~:;.IND 1.• s1.89 Hash Browns £00(0 ,.-OZ s1 .19 Top Sirloi n »H~~~~ ll S2.29 Fried Chicken ~~\~~ ~-OZ S2.89 Sliced Bacon f~~.v•AO·'-·• "O sa.49 Taquitos :t-::0 11~S2.59 Knockwurst :~~~, lACH s1.79 Frozen Dessert ~~:c:l .. "'s1.89 Sea Bass Fi I lets , .. u .. ... S3.29 Gold Rush ~ ~ACll s1.69 Compare these Low Prices Grocery Specials as• pe •hat controls our ability io taste ahe baner chemac1l1 Pbtnyltb1ocarbl.m1de (PTQ llld prop) llh1out1Cd ~ROP), which arc man·made but ;imilar ao chemacal prcteflt in green kif\ iabl Garden Fresh Produce Mushrooms ::~OCT &OZtb ~ Potatoes =~ ... 25c Onions :=· LI 1gc SWEET CRISP 81..AO( RI bier Upright · Grape1 Follase 49°u ~99 ~ UOl s1 .89 Burgie Beer CA .. S ll™>Z eac -eeua ~~ FAMILY SCOTT ... ..:.th ~~ ... ~ettlo'a Tissue 43e s;i.25,....- &ROLL Apr1e Cider :~l=:~ Ca FOOd ~~ .. ~~ Rice Granola ::ro~A Shredded Wheat NA Hot COCoa ~1m~[Ofl Free n Soft ~!1 ~ Scotties r:r: Trash Bags ~ •oz ~ Colony Wine IV•-•cs .,oz S2.39 Hiram Wa lker ~:z""' -tCZ 33C Po v VOOka .. Sa~nae Cog nac CANADWil St.ram'8 v.o. ~ .... r--::------ ...ca DnCTl'Q 7 IVU. DAYS , .... .... ,... .._.. ,,_. L ... L ... .... I.I. u u ~ a' S4 11 •• I > - . ' .. .. , . •' I ' ..... -- ,, . . It doesn't tQke games,. gimmicks or ~ouble coupons ·to get a lower food total. - e ower overa SU It doesn't take games, gimmicks or double coupons to get a lower food total. It takes the no-nonsense prices you find at Gemco: the lower overall priced supermarket. If you're ready to stop paying more for expensive "frills" and start taking home a lower food bill, come to Gemco. Overall, no other supermarket's prices even come close. . , Twenty Five Years of Member hip 5avlngs . . , I I ~-----~---------~ ~~~~ . ..................... -·-·· ..... . ' • Welcome to Lucky! All stores now o~n! Thousands of lower prices stOrewide! . Lucky, The Low Price Leader, is now in your neighborhood with thousands Gf new everyday lower prices. Alf Los Angeles and Orange County area Smith's Food King stores have been re-priced to Lucky's lower prices. Now Coa OAfLV -OTIW~ October 0 1914 Cl \ ~--------------yoo-ean~take-advantage of lower food totals-at ff'WIH"'f'~~~11-.'-tn~frii+1nn.----1-------~ .... . · . . to lower food prices, you'll enjoy the same friendly service and same shopping convenience you enjoyed at Smith's. For over SO ·years, Southern California area shoppers have come to count on Lucky for: · . · • Name Brand Selection • Helpful Seryice .... ~, • • Quality Guaranteed Meats-~". . .. ..f.1-iendly ~~Qyees ~ ~ • .. • -l\ll • "' • Fresn Quality Produce • Lower Prices Overall Come shop your new neighborhood Lucky and get-acquainted with true one-stop shopping. ' .. N Now·lhere•a·a new Lucky near you (formerly Smith'• Food King Supermarkets) •Buen• Park Dale St. at La Palma Ave. •Covin• Azusa Ave. at San Bernardino Ad. • Eatt lo• Ang le• ~ Whittier Blvd. at Sadler T • Gr1n1da Hlllt San Fernando Mission Ad. at Woodl y Ave . • UI Puente Amar Ad . at Puente • Loe Feltz HUit HllTtiuranu 'FrankUn • M1nhattan Beach Sepulveda Blvd. at Manne • Newport Beach Balboa Blvd. at 31st St. •Paramount Alond ra Blvd at Downey Ave •Seal Beach Seal Beach Blvd. North of 405 Fwy. Aossmoor Shopping Center • Upl1nd Euclid Ave. at 24th St. •Van Nuy1 Sepulveda Blvd. at Sherman Way •Walnut Hilt. E Amar Ad. at Nogales Ad • •Weit Covina Azusa at Francisqu1to • We1tmln1ter Westminster Ave. • Norw1lk at Golden West Pioneer Blvd. at Rosecrans • Westwood . - --·· -·-We9lWOOd Btvd:-at Santa Monica Blvd . . . . .,. .. ·P' Progresso 69 &Soups -LENTILOR 190Z CAN . MINESTRONE r Hidden Valley 89 -3 }!!r:~lng~ OZ BTL • , f.~?~~~O: PKG .89 , - Whale Body · 56 Chicken FAYING. • LB • SOUTHERN. GAAOE A • £'!?!'~!~H~,~~-~ ....... LI 1.88 ~~~~f~.~.~~~ ..... Ll 2.69 !:!>.~o!~~ ............. La2.59 P'Sunklst cL Fruit Rolls 3 VARIETIES !"Mother's 6 Cookies •VARIETIES !"Summer &Sausage LAOV LEE BEEF 1-Quart Saucep n .. •OZ BOX 180Z BAG 1ooz Pl<G 1 'h Quart Covered Saucepan 8" Open Fry Pan 2 Quart Cover d Saucepan . 10" Os>.en Fry P n 3 Quart Covered Casserole f 59 f79 .. -..._c~~-~-e Quart Cov r d Stew Pot Open Warm r/S rver . ------~----..-------.-:.----~ ll~OIN CUT, ~ot'!1'!.'!!~~~~~ LI 1.89 !'!to~~-~~•~••• .. •• Ll 2. 79 • !~.~~~~.~~~ .. La 1.27 f A~;~~e/ 150Z CAN 1°9 CORNED BEEF P' Weight Watchers89 6 Mayonnaise 4 OR SALAD DRESSING 1& OZ JAR • Smucker's f7i9 Spread I• STRAWBERRY. 15 5 OZ JAR LOWSUGAA !L~r;; Far~s299 RANDOM WEIGHT PKG • ----E Chicken 239 BAN'!u~' S/te~2 OZ BO~ NUGGETS, PATTIES OR STICKS, FROZEN r~.~.~/~ .~~~.~~~l oz CHUI 1.99 !~!·~~"'~. ~~~~ .~~P! 1.49 Julie Tackney •Wld '8.29 , Bone1ess 189 !!?c~~O~~~L~ . . . !!!'!~u~~!'!v~~~'--....... LB 1.49 ~~!~.~~~~~~~ ............. LB 1.49 !!~.~~~P!'!f!/~:~~ ........... 3.49 ) . ... . ·pe Post Toasties 99 6 Cereal 180Z BOX. r9·Llves 93 soP!!. F"°!foz CTN • TUNA, CHICKEN. EGG OR GOURMET GRILL -·-·--... -... ... --.. -···-- "White King 99 &Detergent • ' •2 oz 80)( ~ fi . . ,, 'loll ~,.,. 1 1 • o 1 d I I 11 I ---....l=n Groce,ry ____ , Coupons • t Large End . ·Rib Roast BONDED BEEF LB f 89 rzee Paper 719 · u.•'!~~/n~'° CT PKG • I ~ • -r Kraft . -··--·········- 8 ·-----9---·· WHI~! T~~:~~~ TUB . FROZEN weicorn~ to LLICkY· 17 New Lucky Stores Now Open. Former Smith's Food King shopper will continue to enjQY : friendly service, same quality and selection. and ~ lower prices. ~~!~~ .. ~~~.~~~~~ ..... L.8 2.99 ~:l~!~.~~-~~p~~••• L82.29 E~!~ .. ~~~~~. !~?~~ .... · .... LB 1.,9 pt Vera 64 ~ ... ~aclal ~~! • . !"Cinch Sak A Trash Bags 30 GAL SIZE 10CT BOX 169 Cll !~r-~ ... ·~-........ LJl.39 f !ra~;~:::e 1299 pe Grapefruit 99 cLJulce MINUTE MAIO 32 OZ CTN • CHILLED !~':Food 55-. r ::~;:,::rin's 99 BEEF CHUNKS 23 5 oz CAN • STICK. REGUlA'R HI oz CTN • OR CHICKEN DINNER OR UNSALTED ~------~----~~-------c ._,,..,... , ... "'lt!C\y ...,., ,,. ., """" .......... L.-A•fl'lt ............ c--.-a.i.. • .. - Orange CO t DAIL'.Y PILOT/W • • .. How's this for a good answer: money. Read our newspaper, and cash in on advertised values, discount coupons,·food news and consumer reports that can save you money every single week. 1 • We also save you time. Which is important for busy wo'men managing a home, children and many other responsibilities. In the market f~r tun? We cover weekend enter- tainment and speci.~1 ev0nts aroun'd-t~~---:------ll~~--'- Recreation. sports, hobbies, a whole package of inter esting news and features to give you a lift! Whenever you h@.ve .th~ !\ft1e , So if you've been feeling a little ....--..-...----·-!...a. .... '-..c '"'' shopworn lately: ger so me tietp:"Getr~ne-.paper:-,= ·-·~~ _ What's In It tor you? The answer appe.-rs on every page of ' . .,._ .. Ti to ans:. thanks Roar of crowd tipped Whitaker on pivotal play I . SAN OTEGO (AP) ::-Detroit sccoo~ baxman Lou Whitaker says Sao DiCIO fans deserve an assist for .. the Ti,ten' 3-2 victory over the Padres in Game l of the World Series. Whitaker who bas perhapS the best arm on the Detroit team, took a relay from riaht fielder Kirk Gibson and made a perfect pea to third baseman Many Castillo, nailina Kun Bevacqua who wu trying to stretch a double lead.in.a off the Padres' seventh Tuetday niaht. That play, along with the pitchina of Jack Morris and Lany Herndon's two-run homer, kept the Tiaers unbeaten in J>OSt«ason play. "11le fi.nt thins l thoutht about when I ~ ~i to~ the ~ was told me that it was aoina to be more than a double, so r flllJ~ he was goiq to thitd base. l Capt. Boo holds off, it pays off ·- Anderson sticks wlth ace Morris, despite instincts SAN DIEGO (AP) -The Captain had his hook out. San Dieao had bi ace in the bole. But~ Anderson went apinst his own instincu. left Jack Morris in -and the Detroit Tigiers' rialn·bander dua hlmtelf out and buried the Padres. San Diego Manager Dick William$. who likeWise bu a ~pcnsity to racb for the hook and Yank a body out of hi.s bullpen at the sJWitest provocation, decided Tuesday niabt to give Mark Thurmond a little extra time. And when Thurmond reached met r a 1 ex ou not tJiC -buJJet.J that Morris was firioi but a 'OOmo that blew up in his f.aoe. Pieao Jad: Mialpby Sladjuai, 11 QJ lhe T'wen a 3-l VICIOfY aa tilC na pine of me World Series. h continues tonpt wffll r:>eaoit·1 Du Petry, I 8-8, • die hdrei" Ed WhillOQ, 14.a~Aa& 5:3.S). Mom1 WIS boOPias on ud oft'ue rim of disa5ter alI lame, fi'oa('tbe finl inuina,. wben die Padres ICIORld their two ruD1 on Terry Kconecb".s doUblC. to the ixth, when Graia Nettles and Kennedy sinaled with ~ OUI. By then, Andenoo bad half bis buDpcn warmina up at oee time cw another. ~1 move pretty quick aDd I was tettina reatdyz" Nici C.p1a1n HoOk. whole habit 'Of wav:ias i• relievers at a moment's notice fol- lowed him from bis cbampiOGShip years io Oinc:innati. BObby Browu was tbe Padres• Dell batter. i~ job: slai6ce me runnm waved balf-beartedly at a bu1Jd of a rutt.11. ODeoaL .. Kirt made a clean throw to me after he made a sreat play getting the Detroit'• A1aD Trammell alldee into the ballinthecomer.Ijusttumedandgot waltlna IJoYe of San Dleto abort.top (Pl .... eee TllA.IQ[8f1>2) Garry Templeton ctartni a •teal attempt bl 11.,,, 6° 0 baWbile '1_~s. ~k. thout ~ the flrat lanl~f Taeeday ~t'• World tten + u.ug; 10 ~ su. lnn1ng, Setle9 aame. mmell ... forced at eec-Thurmond ran out ofluct_ an the fifth d .... ~ a ~ ff ... _ .. __.. ..__ as Lury Herndon deposited a hiab • OD --~ a p,acao uu:vw at ..... _ ..,......,. 3-l fastb&U into the right fidd scats at . ..When be stnd out the first CU) • be mned tbrowin& after ~" ADdenon aid. .. Jack normally can come out thnnri• that way. T · t {Pleue tee CAPTADl{M) Last year three wl~s won a trtp to C.IF; Edison vs. Westmmster has top billing BJ ROGER CARLSON °' .. .,.., ........ After five weeks of non-league play the time bas arrived for Sunset Leigue football teams to do their thina -and it begins this week with threep.mesofvinuaJlyequal impon- ance on tap. Every contender is well aware of the 1983 campaian which saw tb1U victories enouab to claim a portion of 1he championship -and two vic- tories providina no more than ticket in the stands to watch the CIF Big Five Conference playoffs. Herc's a look at each opener, with 7:30 kickoffs scheduled: Westmiater (1-%) vs. P.dJtoa (f-1) at Oruce Ceut C.Uqe: A Jood tw~ word description of Edison Hiab's football teams year-in and year-out would be .. physical, defense,•• and that's exactly the comments Edison Coach Bill Wol'kman uses to describe bis 6nt Sunset J..eaauc opponent ... ~ '!.t~ thq' do best," says Workman, .. Westmtnster plays real physical and has a very good defense. Boston expected to get McNam_a'ra Ex-Angels skipper leading candidate to replace Houk Prom AP dkpatdet John McNamara, who told the Anatls he will not return as manaaer next season. is a candidate, perhaps the leadina candidate. to manqe the Boston Red Soit. Ha}"A'.OOd Sullivan, co-owner of the Red Sox. confirmed Tuesday that McNamara, S2, is beina considered to succeed Ralph Houk as manqer of the American Leaaue club, The Boston Herald and T6e Boston Globe reponed today. Both Boston newspapers predicted that banina a lut-mmute surprise or unknown complication, McNamara would become Boston's next man· aaer. . Houk retin,,d from the Red Sox at the end ofthejust~mplcted reaoJ.a.r season. The Herald said McNamara sat with Sullivan durina the San Diego Pldret-Oetroit T~opcnina World EdisonNo. 1 tn Big Five Series pme in San Dieao Tuesday nights "The situation Dow is no different than it wu in 1981 . He was under consideration fOr the .job then. and he's under consideration now. I couldri't sax that before be quit, but I can DOW, The Herald quoted Sullivan as saying. 1"berc'• no pretense here. I think (by today) he and I will both know w~ we su.od I want to talk with Mac and find out a few thinfS," The Globe quotes Sullivan as sayins. He went 011 to say he wanted to discuss it with o)hen in the Red Sox orpnization., .. but I do1;1o't think it will take IOOI once I've made up my mind." Asked if tbe Red Sox would wait until after the Wolrd Series to announce a new manqer, Sullivan reportedly told The Herald, .. No, if you have your man. why wait to announce it." McNamara's contract with the Ansets expired, and he told Mike Pon, aeneral manqer of the team, that he wowd not rtturn, and Pon then told the Red Sox of the decision. .. While r.m fleued the Angels want me ~ feel it's time for a chan,e," McNamara said in a state- ment issued by the AoaelJ. "I know he felt down about what happened durina the last couple of weeks duriOI the season,., said owner Gene Autry, referrina to the Anaels' late-season fall from contention for the Amttican l.ajue's Western Division titJewon by the Kansas City Royals.;•• He toki Mike that maybe be should stay away from bate ball for "They have good speed, not as much as Bannina's. but they have as much as we do and on any t;d° night """inybody can beat any y and there's goina to be some upsets that you don't expect.•• ••They're a very quick football team," says O'Hara. .. We're pretty comparable in size, and defensively they remind me of the old West- minster defense, being small and quick. .. They run well and pass well. We're going to try to sneak in 14 players." Otto Vtfl' (1-4) n. FMDtaD VaUeJ (l-1) at Westml:mttr. 1t•s David vs. Goliath as Coach Karl Gaytan's Seahawlcs go up against the Barons of Fountain Valley Friday. John llc1'amara a year or coach for a year.•• McNamara's dectsion was not good news to at least one of his players. .. I'm dissapointed. I liked him as a manaier and a man," said Angel third baseman Doug DcCinces. .. He was extremely easy to play for. I'll miss him." The Herald reported that McNamara bas told fnend be would love to m~ the Red Sox. Other teams, includina Montreal and San Francisco in the National l.Qgue. reportedly arc interested in McNamara. Sullivan said there are emplo)ees in the Red So~ orpnization, includ- ina scout Joe Moraa,n. who on~ manaacd the Pawtucket Red Sox. who had to be considered, but be also said Boston is the kind of team that netds. a manager wtth bi~or leagut expcnence. and both sides are ·aware it's a mismatch-to a dearee. .. We have to face facts."' says Gaytan, "Fountain Valley is a pat football team and it'll be a major acex>mplishment if we can bold them to two touchdowns instead of SO or 60 points. This week's schedule (Al ..... 817:11) THURSOAY "If we can stay withln 14 points l'd look on it as if we're headed in the riabt direction. They've losa two tougti pmes by a point (each) and I hope they don't take it out on us. I'm not tbrowiOI in the towel, but ..,hen it ~to set cloudy and it's aoing to rain. you have to take the clothes off the line and prepare for it But we know that someday we're &Oing to turn the corner." The game Tbe .. Westminster vs. Edbon (at Orange Coast.~) Edl9on by 3 FRIDAY Ooeen View va. Fountain Va89y (81 WestnWnater) FV by 15 Fountain Valley Coach Mike (Pleue Me 8URSET /02) Marina at Huntington 8eect'I Mama by 3 Costa Mesa vs. Corona del Mar (at OCC) CdM by 8 Estancia w. Woodbridge (at ~J9Wp0rt Hatbot) Even Laguna 8eecf'I VL urnwr.lty (at IMne) . lJnoW alt)' by 6 N9wport twbor w. 8.cfdt9bel:t (81 Samii Ana 8owt) Ewn lMne at Cipl&tranO VfllW/ CipO Vllflter/ by 10 Mater Del et Biahop AtnaS 8""°P Amat by 7 Sea View title showdown Newport-Saddleback winner figures to have inside track Not many would r=the point -the Wlllncr of Friday night's Sea View e showdown at Santa Ana Bowl between Newpon ,ff r Ht&b's defend.in& cham- pions and the swift Roadrunners o(Saddlcbaclc High has the inside track to the leque championship. Even if the winner should eventually suffer a loss-it is still the opinion it would most likely leave the two tied -.......i• for first with Friday's winner boldinJ the upper hand as the llOW9lr Badkld Plaalq , lcaaue"s No. I representative 10 the OF Central Conference playoffs. 1"bey're not tellina you where tbeir split side is. 10 Corona del Mar, Unwersity and Estancia obviously you don't teilly bow where to put your rover, aod 1hey"ll feel they have some legitimate claims to the top, too, but at send Baker or Campbell to the other side. But the key is this pomt, the confrontation between the big and talented Campbell." says Giddings. Sailors (4-0-1 overall) and the Roadrunners (S-0 overall) Newport Harbor has bccD operatina at lesa than full bolds the key to the utle. strenath. eoina with a one-back offense last weclc (Fritz Friday's contest 1s but one of four involvina league Howser rambled for ISS yards), and Giddinas says bc"s gaMes. all startinaat 7:30. Herc's a look at each: really not sure whether 21~pound Kevin McClelland and his backup, John Oswald. will be fully recove~ from Newpel1 Harbor (4..0-1, %-0) n . SaddJebact ($-0, %-0): thigh contusions. .. There arc many things that can happen from here on in," An educated guess says both will be back. says Saddlcback Coach Jerry Witte. "But I think the one "We have to be at full strength to play with them," that wms this game will be in the dnver's scat. says Giddings. "I don't think you'll have to be close to the sidelines to Saddlcback's numbers are impreSSJvc. Cook bas hear all the hitting. It'll be a hard-bitter. completed 34of61 passes for >43 yards and 3 toucbdowns ·•They•re aoina to do what they've done all year. and and no interceptions. C.mpbcU bas averaaicd 6.1 yards per force people on us and lr)· to get us in long-)'ardagt carryandhassoorcd7toucbdowm_Joneshasa5.Savcra&c situations. and '4 TDs.. .. we·ve&ot to maintain 11ood balance oo offense and Saddlcbctck's defense allowed seven points in its tint defense. This is a pme rd rather watch than coach.·· four pmes. including a thftC11llle string of shutout Newpon Harbor Coach Mike Gtddlnp s&)s a major before University pvt the Roadrunners a scare before concern for him is the fact that Saddleback possesses such faJlina. 28-l 7 . overwhclmina speed in the form of Teddy Baker and Earl Howter ru5hed for l 3= oo 26 ca.mes in Jones,. and can still drive it down the oppo 1tion"s throats Newport' o.,rocr: and I SS on 24 carries last~ with the trenath of l 90-pound full k Glenn Campbell, after rctumiaa to Mt power rom an injury in tbe Sailon' aloaa with a passina pmc directed by quart~ John second pme • Cook. bane Foley bas completed S3 of l 12 passes for 780 " ddl ck won the freshman championship with yards and 6 TDs (3 1ntct'ttption ), with Ho Tnaona. Joey this aroup of 1Cniors," ttealls Giddings ... J remember Jam~ and Tod pooner his major WJCts. them. They have some itt and thq can match up wath us ma couple of places... C.reaa delMar (4-l, %-t) n. Costa Meu (1-4-1, t-1) at Another problem with Saddle~ is the Road-o....a.e Oeut c.lJ e: The Sea Ktnp of Corona dcl Mar runnen' tmdeacy to ao withovt a ti&ht end and thrcic ba ks are logial favonio. utCdM Coach Dave Holland· =wuy=-•• in w backfield. (Plea.le ... S&A VISW /DI) For the ftnt time in more than a year, Edison Hiah has found ,jts way beck to the No. 1 spot in the CIF Bia Five footbell rank.inp. Coach Bill Workman's O\a.rJIClli who open unset ~ otay Thunday niaht apuin Westminster, moved ahead of last week's No. l tt.em, Bishop Amat. which WU tied by Wilaon (Hacienda lfeiahts), J7-37 last wtelc. Prep fans being turned offbypoorotnci~ting Edi10n took over the toe spot afttt dNbbina Notre .Dame (Sherman OUI), J.7 Friday. Tbe Owten are '4-1 watb lbe otbtrvictoriescominaovcrWest- Jae (41-6), Colton (1~3) and t. John Bo.oo (~0). The ~· lone def.eat thit ICUOD WU I l().;9 tttblCk 11 the hlndl of oowerf\al Blnn1na of the LotAqelCICity on. fountain Val'!r dipped to tcVCnth in the Bt& Fi\ie after lolina 2(). I 9 tO Lbn& BmchPoly. Somebo it m Hkc an echo - it'• Ckfinitely not the first time the su~ has risen -but hte a poor fbundation, the oft\dattq 11 prep foott.11 pm 11 not aetuna any better. Crowds at hiJh school football pmes, for the most pan, are far than utidpelCd ana 1t doesn't appear like It's toina lO ,et any better wuh the pme 1ttclf coetinu1na o br,iltcn down b too many nap. There attn"t many o•u come to the front of the clan and qak out - and the reuom Int 11mplc -fcv. coecbes can afford any 1n1m l)' from someone who can retAhatc an - - - PREP SP ORTS y, Ootobef 10. 1 M It's no bu1n deal for Earl ·cam.pbell, Brad Van Pelt From AP dispaUllH New Orleans Samh < oach Bum m Phillips has been reunited \l.tth Earl C » Campbell, lhc runnmg back "he unleashed on lhc National Football League an 1978. and linebacker Brad Van Pelt has fulfilled his wish to move to the West Coast. In the most notable tran~cuons on a busy clos1na day in the lcaguc·s trading pcnod Tuesda). the Houston Oilers sent Campbell to the Saints m exchange for a first-round draft cho1c~ m 1985, whale the Minnesota Vildn15, unable to sign Van Pelt after a 12-week impasse, sent him to the Super Bowl champion Los Angeles Raiders The Vikings will get a sixth-round choice 1n 1985 and a second-round selection in 1986. Campbell, who gained 8,296 m his first six years, managed only 278 in six games-all losses-this year. U.S. defeata El Salvador Sal or. • tn the scoond match. Mexico dctl ted Columbt 1.0 on a aoal late in the fint half by Mexican midfielder Tomas Boy. Mexico dominated pla)' throughout the fi"'t half and into the second h.alfbeforc, in an effort to petsen·e the victory, it sent nine playcrJ back to play defense, content to ~i'CI off any Columbian an.ad.. • · Perkin• •tan• with Dalla• DALLAS -Sam Perkins, the last of m the first-round NaJional Ba kctball As- sociation draft picks to hold o\H for a contract has signed a five-year deal wilh the Dallas Mavencks. The announcement came late Tuesday shonly before the Olympic athlete and All-AmeTican from North Carolina was scheduled to take a team physical. Terms of the contract were not revealed, but Perkins reportedl> had asked for $700,000 a year compared With an initial Dallas offer of about $500,000 The 6-foot-91/2 foward arrived here Tuesday, a few hours before the signing. Orlolea' P~ten collapses Jack llonil pitched the Detroit ~en to a 8·2 rictory oYer San Dleco 1"1ad&y ntcht ln the opening aame Of the World 8erlee. Mol'IU alloweCl e ight blta. Under Phillips, Campbell led the NFL an rushing in 1978-80 and topped the .i\FC again m 1981 "Obviously, we are glad to get him," :Waid Phillips. "I've never had too man)!ood players. This trade gives heck of a bactfirlct. wtnctn11citldcs tlftltlces of George Rogers. SAN DIEGO-Hank Peters, General • ManaJer of the Baltimore Orioles, col- lapsed dunng a pe>st-pme reception fol· towing pme one of the World Series and CAPTAIN HOOK was ~e;;;,o ~ h~~ comciousntss and . warf--1...,nw1ttt--• • • THANKS •.. ··1 doubt if he and George would pla) in the same backfield in too many situations but they might." said Phillips reported in stable co JlJOn at Sharp Memorial 1 think he was a tittle nervous in the the I 12th ofThurmond's 11 7 patches. Hospital. A nurs1n1 su~1sor said Peters was being first inning... "He was going to come out at the the ball to third an ttme So. I would have to say'Thank you' to the fans for helping me." examined and 11ven furtHertcsts to determine the cause Now there was one out and sttll two end of that inning. anyway" Wil- of his collapse. on in the fifth Carmelo Marttnez was hams said "He just came out one Whitaker''i needling aside, the Tigers won the game by employina the same methods that helped them crui~ throu&h the Amencan Leaauc East with a f 04-58 r~cord •nd sw«p tlu: KnEsas Caty Royals io three pm cs <luring the~ Amerieln '"W&U~ playoffs . .. It Just so happens that in the sports business, you have to get traded around sometimes "Campbell said "l hope it's good for them (lhe Samts) and I hope its good for me." Peters collapsed dunng a reception at San Diego next _ Morm' next victim Three hitter too late. . Jack Murphy Stadium about an hour after the Detroit stnkes. "He gave in on the 3-1 pitch, aot the beat San Diego. He was taken by ambulance to the Two outs ball up over the plate that Herndon hospital. l 'p came uarf) Templeton. Three went with. Our book on Herndon is As far as Van Pelt was concerned, what was good for him was any team 10 Aorlda or'&aJifomia so that he P _ .. _ -· ~'L:.1 Bab · ,'...__1. ~tnke~ .. ?·\._·.~·. crl-r -~ , that~e'\a ~nbaUbJJt~f\\L\l/Jli.j t.an-. eDgUUt9·l&JDu e Oft JCD "°'"' JnninJOVCr. un(ortunile p1tcn: lf Mar\· &CU i't could pursue business opportumttes · Van Pelt. who played 11 years with the New York Giants and was a five-lime Pro Bowl choice. held ou1 for 12 weeks rather than sign with the Vikings "We wanted to somehow accomodate a guy who wasn•t totally excited about being here." said Minne- sota Coach Les Steckel. 'Tm happ) for Brad Van Pelt Hc's11venalotto lhe NFL. he's played I I )ears and fell they rtally dumped on him •· "That's what I was looking for," said Van Pelt." .. and to go to a team of the Raiders caliber as Just. well , the only thing that could have been better 1s 1f at happened 12 weeks ago .. Quote of the day San Diego pitcher Ed Whlt:aon, taJkJng about the P dr•' chance& In the Worid Series following l"ueectay'• 3-2 lou to Detroit: ''I know we've got our wane cut out for us now, but this team dOMn't give up -u the wortd saw agalntt the CUba."' PCAA honors football •tar• Bo'>' man '1evada-Las V s tailback Kirk • t San Jo~ State wide receiver Kevin [!] Jones and "'ew Mexico criate comerback II Dennis Owens have been 'loelectcd as Pacific ( oast Athletic Assoc1at1on football playen of the week Bowman and Jones were honored as co-offensive playe~ of the week for their performflnces m games last Saturda)' while Owens was tabbed as the defensive player of the week. . Penguins gambled S 12,500 that Wayne , \iONTREAL -The Pmsbu'ib ·~ Babych can repm his sconng touch by making the one-ume 54-goal scorer the first choice in the National Hockey League's waiver draft on Tues<by That was the waiver pncc the Penguins paid for Babych, the St. Louis Blues' first choice and the third overall ~lection in the 1978 entry draft of amateur talent Babych \I.as one of JUSt I 0 players claimed in the waJVer draft, which lasted three rounds Pittsburgh also claimed Bruce Crowder. a nght wmg. from the Boston Bruins. . The Penguins dropped center Tom Roulston to make room on their protected list for Bab)ch and cut Greg Fox to clear a spot for Crowder The 21 NHL teams were permitted to protect 16 skaters and two ,oalies for the draft. Players with less th.an two yeao profe 1o nal expenence and aoaltenders with less than three years professional playina time were exempt from the draft. Tele'rialon, radio TaEVlalOM 5 p.m. -l.AUaAU.: World Serlel pr..-game lhow, Channel 4. 5:25 p.m. -IA-ALL: World Seflee game one. Detroit at ~an ~hlnnef 4. 5:26 p.m. -IAuaALL: Wood Serles: Detrott at San 06ego, t<NX (1070). WATER PoLo Moms had survived. down, 1t probably wouldn't have "lf one more man would've got on happened." that inning," Anderson ~1d, "he ihat still lef\ five innings for the would've been gone -and we Padres to catch up. Even after-Morris' would've lost!" lip, zip, 21p in the-sixth, they still had "He has a lot of confidence in me. their chances. e pcciaJly H1 the so I didn't think he would pull me," seventh, when Kurt Bevacqua, the Moms said "Then apin, he has a lot designated hitter. led off with a dn vc of confidence in the bullpen." that whistled past the Detroit bullpen So does Williams, what with and rattled around in the right field middle relievers like Andy Hawkins comer, an easy double. and Dave Dravecky The Padres ~ot Whitaker. the Tigers' second here on middle relief. no staner going baseman, sprinted into shon right more than fi ve mntnS> in the Na-field to take the throw from Gibson. tional League playoffs against the ··When the fans pve that roar. 1 Chicago Cubs think that kind of allowed me to know Williams had Hawlun\ and what was going on,'' Whitaker ~id. Dravecky up and throwing in the "Usuall y. you'd think the man was fourth inning. when lhe Tigers put a only f.Oing to go to second ba5c. J)a1rofrunnerson base with two away Theresa rule that says, 'Oon'tgo into before Lou Whllaker 01cd out. third base slidina. cspcctally when Williams had them up apin in the you're down.' When the crowd fifth. when K.Jrk Gibson walked with started to roar. I knew he was going one out and wound up as ionh1rd base .. so when I aotthe ball Thurmond's second v1ct1m of a lj usttumcdand threw. And I'd like to pickoff throw. the first one Alan thank the fans for helping." Trammell afier he singled home Bevacqua helped a bu. too As he Detroit's first--tnq1ng run. rounded second base, he glanced<>' er Williams sttll had· them warm mg his left shoulder at Gibson -and he up when Lance Pamsh pulled a tripped He was an easy out ground-rule double down the ten field "I Just ~tumbled," he said. "It's Just hnc on the eighth full count wtuch as easy as that If I didn't stumble, I Thurmond had to deal with. make it easy Why did I stumble1 I Wtlhams had them up-they were 1ust don't know ... Don't forget, you warm, watching the game, their arms have to give Gibson and Whitaker folded -when Herndon homered on plenty of credit." ..This club can do a lot of thinp, •• said shortstop Alan Trammell, play- ing professional baseball for the first time back in his hometown. "We have an outstanding pitching staff. good ~cfense, power and a sttong bench. "This game was a whole lot ltke the fi~t same we played in Kansas City to stan the American Leaaue playoffs Lou and l ,taned that pmc off with hits and we got a run.just hke tonight. Then Jack Morris pitched a great game -JUM like tonight." The streaking Tigers, who won their fi~t nine games en route to a I record 35-5 start during. the regular season, couldn't help dreaming about a swep in this World Series, now that the cruci.al first game was in their pocket "Th 1~ wai. a big psychological boost for us," Darrell Evans said "Now we now we're going home with one win and we could 10 home 2--0 If we win tomorrow, thcf re in big trouble " 'it1ll nobody was taking the Padres for granted -not after watching San D1cio overcoml' a 2--0 deficit in the Nauonal Leaaue C'hamp1onsb1p Scnes to get here. ··Those guys are a httle tougher than a lot of people gave them credit for being." Detroit catcher Lance Parrtsh iaid. Shootout: OCC belts Cypress , 25-15 "8 ""' cloMd ..-<! i.e.... • 10 61().117 • ~ly i-pay-'111 14 tel~ .. cu•"Y d.p<>"' 5150 ft<-tPd .,.._ '" 1206 l<i'ol ....-due o1 tnt..,._. ol leOM S68J 74 fou t ~of poy..-0 110 94.1 T •a4 M·IPQ\IO oflo...., 60 000 P-"Y 6c ~· ,...i. .... , 60000 .... i.. .. ""'tlowd...., ...... 10 617'90. Mol'4hlr ~ ~ $21914 •••..-Nblt s.c ... llV Oepot11 S21$, E....-.d i.-._ '166 r..., _,.,, .,. • ..... __,...., MIO 14 f(lfOI -ol ~ $10.,51 ~ ~ 60,000 ·.P-.d/ty .. ,_"" -.0000 ....... FORD MERC UH Y LINCOLN l•a-"""'f how ._, 10 ,..,o..,.. the CDf ol .._ e<td ol • ptt<• .............. the ..... 81 i.o.. .... ..,._, ....__ a.-..... "° ~ ....... ~ ... °' .._ -" a..-............ 14" ... - --"-i.-..-;.ct lo credit..,.....-i _......,, • ......,.... _..., ..... ~ht _.. ..... ....,-.,.., 11c-, ...... la-.«-'- llUll .OHITY'I II.JUT LllMll ,,., IULD JOHNION AND 1011 LllCOLll • IEllCUllY "HotN of th11 GolMn TOCICh" 2121 111111 ILYI -CUTI IEIA M0-1111 '1 • a r t r 2 2 Orange (oast College notched a wdd 25-15 victory over Cypress while Saddleback College fell to Sant.a Ana 1n South Coast Conference water polo play Tuesday. On the high school level. Mater Dc1 tnmmed Cerritos in a non-tcaaue match. Here's how 11 went Ora.nae CoHt %5, Cypre11 15 The Pirate\, tied with ( yprcs<> after the first period at 2. broke open the conte~t with eight goals an the third pcnod It was an 8-8 tic at the half. but Orange Coast now 3-2 1n conference SUNSET ••. homDl Milner ts aware of Ocean View'!. runnina tendencies with the double tight ends and stacked backfield . 'Tm sure we'll probably be bisier. but lhey·re advqcates of physu:al football. We're go1n1 to try to throw the ball, hke we do every week and be 11 balanced u far u the pass ratio is con«med. 1t•s our fint lcaauc pme aod wc'rt excited about that.·· 2 play, never looked back as 1t scored rune more goals in the final frame. Suta Ana a, Saddltback 7 Fleckenstein e0t1.h adtkd one tor the Gauchos. Leadina the way ·for the Pirates wCTe sophomore Mark Huabes wu six goals, Derck Hob~ (S goals) and Rob M1rande and John l.Oudcrback, both of whom netted four The Gauchos, 4-0 m South Coast play entenn' Tueld4y's match, were swcptoA'thc1rfcct for the fint time by the host Dons. Saddleback will h~t Golden West Friday in a showdown for the top spot Jon Ga,porra hclpetl with 12 goalie aaves for the Gauchos. Tai Schofield staned at aoahe for the winners and recorded three saves. while Tom Kennedy, playing the second half. registered nine Doug Pl1tt. m. ass1m. and Hughes (five) also sparkled for 1hc Pirate!.. Rhett Chee Pina a.ave Saddleback hope when he scored the last of.his three goals with five minutes left on the cl<><:k to tie the game at 7 but Santa Ana won 1l with 2 11 remain· mg. Mater Del lt, Cerrito• U fhc Monarchs u~ 10 first-pcnod goals to put Ccmtos away early 10 a non-league match 1n Ccmtos' pool. Leading the pack was Zoh Bert), who accounted for seven goals. and Brian Breen. who tossed 1n five. Orange Coast, 11 -6 overall. travels to Fullerton Fnda> sn outh Coast play. In a sca-~w battle between two powerhouses, the Gauchos led early sn the first penod, 2-0, but that short· lived. Jack Ryan pushed 1n two goals and Mike McGill and Glenn In an attempt to come back, Cemto\ outscored Mater Dci in the ~cond half, 7-S, but it wasn't cnou&h. SEA VIEW LEAGUE FOOTBALL ROUNDUP •• FromDl of the task, with an expected ·heavy rush from the Mustanas' defense "Everyone iw:cms to be bliuina with safeties itnd outside linebackers," say1 Holland. "Everyone sccm1 to be doma 11. ll ~m like it's drif\ina down from Amona State." Corona del Mar·, offcn~ revolve around quar-terb~ck Bobby Hatfield, ~pcc1ally now with the losa of retumina staner Robert Tomichek in the backfield. An injury'° Tomichek in the spring (tom quadricep) ha never sufficiently healed and he'• out for the tcason. accordin lo Holland. Dave Fi k, a linebacker, is being moved into the backfield to help restore order. Hatfield, however, s.ccms at tits t when undtt heavy pre sur with his scramblin1 ab1litic . Costa Mesa Coach Tom Baldwin has beefed up his ofTen wuh the ddition of Jimmy Bowle.1 ~_!Ophomorc who caught thr c pa a for S6 yards aa,a1nst uiauna Beach. ··we can't let Hatfield be free -but I don't think that' any secret." says Baldwin ... We played well last week {no tumovcn and two pen ltie ) but we JU t sot bta1, I'm not really con«mcd about < oron , we JU t have to do what we have to do." that the to sup. "Both teams arc fOin& to match up pretty well," ~.Y.' Blanton. "Woodbndic runs ll play and blocli.s different way , so that's what we'll be attempting to top- thcir running pme." La1ua Beacb (t-a, 1·1) v1. Uolvtr1lty ( l·•, t-1) a t lrvtn~ It's definitely a prc,surc pme for Universit>"'s 1 rojans, who ...tU be virtually buncd from ClF pli)Off contention with a lens Univcnity Coach Rick Cun1 rm't worniin& liimSitlf about such a po sib1hty, however. "Our kids gave one or the best teams (SaddlcbQck last week) in Oranae Counly a run for t~cir m<?ncy. It was our best pme of the year nd we're aoa to 11ve some ~nlc problems, .. 0 rm lookina for continued improvement " ~ Loauna Beach Coach Dennis Haryun "arld if we do. we II 'aivc them a aood game." .f:.aguna Beach's two-way \lckle Clark Paul y (sprained ankle) 11 quc tionablc. No declalon on umplrea yet I ... " • I '• I I Tars, Laguna bi:eeze; CdM has trouble stancia gives Sea Kings a scar ; E lson. Vikes. Woodbrtqge. Vaqswin New~n H r'bor and Lquna ~ Allison, both of Rea~h h,i.&h 1ehool roll~ to easy wans 11dchned becau of a torn lt&aments an SJr11 volleyball actton Tuesday, an their ankles. but Corona dcl ~ar b d a rua&ed time A1per. -an All.C,IF performer• )'Clf\ bCfo~ overcom1na Estancia. With aao :will be out a 10 di~ while the W1n1 the .th~ tt . ms remained tn · Allfson, an atl·lcaauc seJccuon last a 11e fo~first an Sea View Lcque play. fall, will miss 1wo weeks 10 a month. Here 1 a capsule rundown: Ne•rt Hanor s, Uuvenlty t -The 110,.. showed no ~ witb I I S-0, 1 s.2 and 15·2 decision over the Trojan . In a match dominated at the net by middle blocker. LindSlly Alstrom, Nc_wPQn upped its lcag1.1c to 6-1. The steady play of Kim Gray a junior ouhide hitter, af'so helped the win and ease the l01s of two or the ~ ilors• finer players, Lara Asper and LaP.a.* Bnn I Coste Mesa t The Arlisu alrc; won ca tly 1n tayina at the top whh wins of ts-3. IS.0 and 15-3. Brook Binley and KolJeen McKcown 1PearheadCd the auack with 1 combined JO ~na aces and Annette Juptncr, who bad eiaht kills in the third pme, and Valerie Foley helped o~t the ne1 with 20 kills between them McK.Cown had four 1tra1 t acn in t. .. ~ 1VISOAY'l llllULTt ( ...... 14 .............. INl'flN) 11..-T 9tACI. OW mM NCA1 tobllOI (OtlonW) ,.. 3 40 2.40 Tovc:N Mirada (Mrehftd) '20 UO WORLD SEltl .. n..ra J, ....... 2 OMUI I IMO-. elHlt ... WN111'r 2t> ' 1 1 t Trernml n 5 0 2 1 Mrll W SMctlCIAW O~ IV~l J . ..O • O I O Alto '-* Hltn SMed, Pa!lfltft, • the final pme to fimlh off th Mustan,p, and Foley dped IJCJ It 91th ICVtn kiU1 1n pme IWO, The An1su• next test will be le on -unday. c...... ... Mu I, Erlaacla I The Sta Klnp ~alked a ~trope in °'e fint three pmes, losi1111W0 or them_, but then came on atrona 10 ~1n the IUW IWO matches ily. I S·2. 15-2. Junior .setter JennJfcr Noonan spatted OSM's comet.ck with m fine sets. and lhe out de hnuna of Brooke Hemnaton allO atdec.1 tbcm. Jn the third pme, CdM was up t 3-S, but lost the Jcad and eventually the same. 1>13. Machelle Mc~ver uPl)Oft.ed the final win with iood backcoun. play. • IWlae I, Lapaa HllJJ 1 , The Vaqueros ta)'ed unbeaten in Mattu I, Oceu View t 1n un~t LCaa.uc action, farina rolled to a IS-9. IS-IO, U-0 Sun 1 vacton. raisina 1t1 record '° 2· I Ocean View as '0-3. Out tde hitter M•'IO K er bad eta.hi kdls and frnhman m ddle blocker Jennifer Gratcau recorded five to IO along With her three b oCk&. The V.ikanp won ninth match in 1-' attempts Edi oa '· Haotlnc&oe B cit • The Gharscrs piled up win of I S·6, t S-9 and l S-S to move thtir record to 3-0 in Sun5et teaiue pfay nd ~I overall. CIF football ratings Big Five Conference L.te9lle ...... ~ ..,..... •·1 m A11011ua 4-0• I lot ~ "' n """°'' 3·1 .. Ctfrul 9ett 4 • I n Ott Rav 4•1 51 ...... J·2 S6 Cbrut hit 4•1 JI c:nrus w • • 1 IO Glbloll rf I 0 0 0 ~dl.b c > ' a. 0 Hwndonll J 1 2 2 GM1ley dll • 0 0 0 Wlnint2b G#'t'Mrf GlfW'/19 ........ S.llltrlb KlllNtvc er-nd Martlnr" TmP1tn11 e.vecoctn AftOliul ).2 ,, -------il ':miw..-...-J Conference 2 O I "o HowdY SNrk, LtVll Te Me, Levlttl•, :J~1 •0 _____ s~'"~M~1~°'~·~~-t'~~-:-~~,--------~ 1 O O O IJ IXACT (6·11 peld lf270 .. L.mc>ncf • 0 1 0 '0 7 2 s•CONO ltACI. Ont mllt trot. Evan a lb I O o o · • 0 0 0 Oso $Ptedv ((;runcM UO UO u- 9-grnn lb 0 0 0 0 CtllflllbO 2 0 O 0 GrubbOh .. 0 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 TecK ITremblavl 2.20 2.10 • 0 0 0 Hot (111• (Alldt.l'tOll) 2. 10 3 O 1 O Al$0 rec:td MaoiCll Me.rllenjav. Tl~ 2'05 J/5 BrollM 3b 1 0 O O T.... JJ JI) T.... ft 2 I 2, sate!w ...... ~ ltl nt ...... , s...oteee-• • •-z Oame Wl!PftQ RBI -Herndlofl (1). e-MKl!Mi...J?~roo 1, SM Dieoo 1 L......,_'""' t, -'.SU 0.... -6. 2~1~ , ~Y. Parrlan, 8evacct1a HR-Herndon (1). II-Trammell (1), GWVM (1), I~ H ll&ll aa 10 °""" Mofrls w, 1-0 ' • 2 2 S...0-. 'fhUrmnd L, 0-1 5 1 J , Hawi..lns 22·3 1 0 0 Or1v«*y 113 0 0 0 T-~11 A-~.90t. Wel1d s.1el ICbedU6e • TWMIY'a kMa• J ' J 2 , 0 • 1 . OttrOll 3, San D'"° 2 (Detroit leedt Serlft. 1-0) TllMM'a Game Detroit (Petry 11·11 11 Seft Olt90 CWhJ!M)ft 1•·1), (CNMll 4 II tlS PITI) ''*"''~ San Dieoo IL.ollr 11· Ill 11 0t1roo1 (Wlleoa 17·1), tClllMll ' 11 S 3S Pm l SIM111Y'a Geme • San Dl9oo 11 Ottre111 ICN""'4 4 11 11:30 1 .m.) 54IMIY's G~ San Di.eo et Ottrol~ 2 O 1 m (If _,.,, T.......,,s~ Detroit ., 'San Doeeo. SH D m. (N nec:•MrY) ........... oet. 17 0.troll 11 S.. DieOo, S 15 D IT\ (If nec.ftMtY) Sef1el facts, ""'"" OMUI I A lltndencs: S1, fOI Net recelph I 1.'01.110 Commlw.n.r'• .nt<a; 1240, 1M ~ PlaYtfl' OOOI· 116,5'6.10 Lt80Ut and CIUlt Serita alllrM: '1M.W"-JS Total Piavtn' '*"· 13,ot,71U7 (NOTE: Playen• IOOI lncludet L-.ut <:Nm· llllOllih'-Sttlea 10111 of s2,623, 152.57). Watw"'9 COMMUNITY CO\.l,JIGI s.ita AM I, SIM1hdl 7 ~ 221~7 Santa Ana 2 J 2 ._. ~ scorlnf· ChM Pini J, llv111 2, McGm I, FleCQMtaln 1. Or-.. C4l9d IS, c..,_. IS Cvwm 2 • • >-15 Ora"" Co.st 1 • I ~s °'"'" Coest scor1nt Hutf'lea 6, Ho* 5, Mn• •. ~ 4, Plitt J. P•rlu I, Ow Intl 1, Sl<owrona.kl 1. HIOH tCHOOt. "' • ,... Del If, Ctn1t9a 11 Meter 0.1 10 ' 2 >-lf Cerrllos • 2 3 ._13 Meter Dtl 11eor1ne: e.tv 7, lretfl 5. M4.l•o 3. Aulotl 1, Blanc I, Popp 1, Sell I Cl, ,..,.Intl 4·A -I ......__, ...,._, 1 C... ... Mtl1 3 P:ool .... ; • LI Wlllon; 5 VIRI PIA; 6 Tustin, 7. C.• MIMI I Sunny Hllll, t Fullerton, II. MllW. J·A -1. El Ootaoo: t, El Two, J 1nc11o. • Mla•lofl VlltO; ! ~Ir; 6 ltlverside Poly, 7, W1hon (HK1en41 ~t); I DowMY. f lt0Yat1 10 $14111 MONCI 2·A -1 C.brillo; 2 South PaMdene, 3 Mlralftlt, • Whittler; S. Lot Arnlfft; • Senta N\lfla; 7. s.nra v.-.1: I San Mtrl!!O; t . San Lula ODlaPO; 10 ftlohettl IJ IXACTA (2·•> Hid lffO Tit•D llAC•. OM mlll 11K1 Lrd Aln'lllnt (W!lama) uo 2 40 1lO 114.rn D OI <Siewert> s • 3 • ... Doti R .... IP\orcel ~ uo • ~:·AU roact:~llint FancvH.-.Val · _., at1 s. ~ hlldl1. av~. -~"'· ~ l»rlda 111.---•• T'lmr. tt:J . IJ •XACTA (l••I ...-r S2610 f'OUltTH ltACI. OM mite Net Krtmllll IC>eaomwl 5 20 J.IO UO Otrv•lln (91helulhl 13.AO 4 IO · lumc>Y klPOW (Vllndl\ol\rnl UO AIM) rKld· Kw"' MtrllenlAY. scoot hbl Scoot, KlkMr. Direct Hit Time 2'02. l1'IP'TH •ACI. Ol'9 ma. Nee saiooen Ltttder IKuoor> 1010 uo uo Crute On av (V ... !ldll'lfllm> I 60 6 .o BattllftO l llY <,......._> ).40 AllO rec:N'. Flrt And Rall\, HowOV Mtltl, El TOl"lflfO, Nwh'I ,..,,...,, Haoov Hunlil,., c I Ntofl HilbOIY. • Tlmt. 2:01. IJ •XACTA (Joi) "id l lOtlO SUtTM llAC&. Ont mill NCI D V SlttY (Plano) , 4 00 1 40 2 20 Keti. Bravo IKUIOWl 4 oo 3 00 L A Mlstrau IP111nenl •.OO Tlme: 2:0a 1/ s. IJ •XACTA lt·Sl P••4 '3030 UVINTH llAC•. Ont mtlt NCI Oma Cllarlft CO'Dwvorl UO UO UO ""-'!• J.ck (~) • ., 3..IO JOflMv MltC N IGlonl UO Also rKeO Rt'-" C Adlos, A* Gold. V111 TudDr, True Tricia c. lloux-Oon, Hoftdl Herry • Time-. 2:00 21 s IJ IXACTA 12· ll oaid MHO llOHTN llAC&. One milt NCI TrlU Leal (1(......,.) 600 UO l.20 ~er Tiit Samt (LCHl90l UO UO Reotnl Miii (Oftomlr) 6.20 Abo ractet· Whale Knoctiout, Caramel CendY, Tlleatrlcat, Wvnna Nandlna, •IPI Geztlle, 8elle Jollt Time: 15' J/5 IJ •XACTA (3·,, Mid 159 lO MINTH •ACL One mile trof. Klltluck 8oW IStltrrenl 5.21 3 .o uo Sier H• G ICllff) 6.20 3.00 Siver LMlel IAftdtrtol\) 6.20 Aiao rKld, lollnl, Kaltmoull, LIMOle, PrOOllecY NM. Timi: ?:el US IJ IXACTA (4 II hid U7 20 Sl ~ SIX 16-Jof-2-3-•l oaid SGUO Wtlh "11 WWll'O lldllls Ctlvt llOrsft). Cartvover IOOJ 113',fM.11 TUfTH llACI. Ont Mlle HC9. Lt9P YW t (Ptrlllrl 1 IO 2 .0 UO ... Jay Get lsntrrtfl) UO 3..60 SUP9t" Ted (Tftsll() 10..IO AllO r9*: Klno Como. MITY'I Com· IMnd, Mldnltltll Mina, Toddlltl Dtslon, Away From HOCM. Minuit Min Tlmt: 2.'01 2/S IJ IXACTA (M) Mid lf.30 A~4.Cnl Men'• NCC« COLLIG• UC trv1111 1, 1eut1Mm Ct1M1ar11i1 C..... t UC In.Int tcOrlllO: (;UM I CS Sen hmardlno S, Chrl.i (*99 1 Christ Co191t tc0r"'9 St~ l, Ptleraoc\ I Lai.en lc:NdUle IXHtafTIOM Fri• Oct 12 -Ltt v ... ,. Mon., Oct IS -el Lu VlfH, '" , Oct If -el Wlefllla; Sii ' Oct 20 -a• w ,. ltlOUl.All S.ASON r Fri .. Nov. 2 -et Kant.ts Cllv, Mon., •Nov, 12 -Oalltt, Thu, Nov. IS-Wlctlll,!i Sat., Nov 11-el San Oltto. Wtd. Nov n -Chleaeo: Fri., ~. 30 -at Oe¥tllftlt Sii., Otc. I -at Plll.aNftll: Tl'lu., Dec t -ti NH York, Sal, O.C. I -at .... 1more, Tut,. Dec 11 -L11Veou:1111 .. Otc. H -Ctn~. Sii. Otc. U -at T.coma. w.. I Otc " -St. LOI.Ila; Sit, Dec. 22 -New 'Yon, ~. Dec. D -1tn °'"°· .sun . Dec. • -.. Wlcfllte S.1., Jen. S -TtcorNJ Frt.. '-11. H - SI Louk, Sii, .J4ln. 11 -•t Dtie&; Thu., Jlft. 17 -MlntltMla; ltl, Jan tf -el $1, L.ouls; T1.1e .. Jen. n -at ~'•· Thu. Jan H -La• v ... 1. Mof!, .I•" 2t -C~: Wld., J '° -11 la«lmof1. -"" • ,.. t -et °"'""Ml· let • ~eo 2 -,, °'""°· Motl ' ,.. • -MlnMMI!• . 1. Lt Mlteda 2. VeianN 1 IUMV Hiiia .. sa~ S W•lern ' &.......,Nar1Mr 1, SOtiot'• • 11u!Wt0fl f Trev '°' Lt Quint• 1.EI~ t~·· ) WUeon (HH) ' 11oothlll S. EN*'tnta 6 ~Ion Vleio 1 VIiia Peril I ROWiand f Plldflca lO T"'lln '· kllf• MOnb 2. Pa'60tlla ) Vtnture 'Canwlilo 5.Mlk 6 ~··· 1.Hert I PMol VttOff f O.nard 10 TI!ovuncl 0.k' ~ .s~ n ..,,_.,.. 5-o n Fr•w•v S·O 61 lae Vlew S-t S6 OrlncM S·O (J lie V1eW .... 1 ., FrafWlv 4•1 3' FrMWIY S-0 2• Fr-•v •·I 11 (;11cllfl Grove 2·2 f Southern Conference • ~en!Or'V .-:lfV . S•O 7' a.1 lent• AN V 52·t • ._~., --5-0 71 .... • 54·6 • swirra •·O I • Tlell B '1IOI Amat, 37-17 CentllrY •·1 56 ... , Slfoll Alli, •1 £rnpirt •·l ,. leaf ll'ed!lca .... SOUttl Coe,, :1-1-1 M Tied SJ Jotwl to.co, 14-14 Ct!iturv •·1 54 IMet Tustin. 22-0 Sierra 4•1 21 ... , Soultl HIUs, JS.· 13 EtnP!rt :M 11 LM lo E.-an11. 29 .. Cttiturv .. , • I.Ml 10 VIiie PattL, 22-0 ' Coastal Coof erenee h Y , .. " .... Wltftall.t, 31·7 Padflc 5-0 fO IMel T.,,,... C1tV, 17 .. Chlnnel S-0 .. leaf Doi ~. IS-1J MtffnOnl• • ·1 " e..t SitTV v..,, 21-12 Ptcff"IC •·I " I.Ml 10 SI FrlflCll, 2'·20 "'*'trlllflHI l-1-1 .. IMel llovet. C2·1 FOOlflll 3-1-1 .. Tied Quenr Hm. 14·14 Bay ,., 2S ... , MJra c-r •. 2f-0 Chennel 2·1·1 11 Tied Senta ler'l>era 14·1' Merarnon•o 3·2 II IMI NilwtlurY Peril, 56-0 Desert-Mountain Conference I, A90Url 2. s.nt• O.r• ) Mifalttl• • St eon.11anture S lllm of Wor1d ·~ .. 7Sl~t I o.-. Peril t Peter NoslW 10 8allnint 1 C&tramont 2 ArlinelOll J a.I Ger0tn1 • ' Norco S T.emolt City 6 St11 Marino 1. Ramol'll .. ~ f Don Luoo .. wtlltt•tt FrOftlltr 5·0 \If ... , Mowpen, 21·f4 From•ar S·O 105 ... , c.r.wtrlt. •·• ~ •·1 100 letl Ar!Mlt, ... ,. Trl·Vallty .. , 0 .... ll'lllrnOr•. 30-7 SUl>illll :H 51 .... Tti·V•ltow l ·J ,, L.olt IO s.u.11 0.1 .. 6-0 sent• Fo 1.J l2 .., Hwvttd 21-17 Trl·Vl'lev 3 2 2' ... , Paler Not tor, 17·7 s.nll Fe •·1 27 LOii IO OP "•tll, 17•7 Sut*l,1 3 0 2 ,. 8e11 COOCfleill ValleY, U-t E~stern Conference hMllne So " Ivy 5 0 • Wh11mo111 •·I t2 IYV • 4·1 61 Rio Honoo 3-1 ~7 Rio~ •·O ~ tvv 4·1 44 a.Milne •. , ,. ~ ,., 1t WMmont 3•2 10 Inland Conference e..1Glel>clore,15-0 9111 MOreno Ve-.V, 41-0 .... WNlllW. JN> 9Nt Perrt1, 20·6 Lo" 10 Pe-.dtna, 17 ·0 e..1 s.wi Gwltl. n-n ... ,c.-.11 • ... , All• LOme, 2CH7 ... , Ul*nd, 2'· IJ Loll to ltl Gardens, 17-0 I. Whittler Owtati.n OtYmPk 5·0 ti Belt Orll'OI l.uttw•l\. IS·7 2. V..-.V Ctw"l.i*' OtvrnPk H 71 ... , Merenef!ll 21-7 J ll&NIJ Union DaerHnyo II.) 5·0 6S ... , Mernrnoth. .... .... umtnt Dt Alla l ... I .. .... Yuc:ce Valev, .... 5 Moflldalr Pf.. AIPtla 3'2 44 &eat W••n Chr"'•an. •-o ' omen. Chrlstltn Otvm.lc 3-1 ,, e..1 CNO V•llrl Chr1J111n. 25·6 · 7. 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Debolt'• LancePu1tah reaches 2 to con- ,.._tulate taimm•te Larry Bern on after Bm ndcnrd outed a Ofth·tn:ntnc t unner to •••e Detroit a 3-2 lead . It was one pitch too many -Padres stuck-to Thurmond "You'd look up, and the count wouJd be 3...() or 3-1 I I • 'r • • ~ ~ almost every Wllc;. You can't last lilcc that, .. said Sherry, Herndon stuck it to Padres who had planned to repra~ ~unnood after five innings regardless of his perfor::mance in the fifth. '"That's a tough way for anyone to pitch. SAN DIEGO (AP)-The statisucs showed that San Diego starting pitcher Mark Thurmond should have been tinfl3, but Thurmond, pitching coach Norm Sherry and Manager Dick Wilhams tried to ianore tbe stats "He said he felt all right, but you can't throw that many pitches ... it's just a matter of Lime," said the coach, who nonetheless did not opt to pull his starter in the decisive fifth even though he had right-hander Andy Hawk ms and lefty Dave Dravecky ready in the bullpen. On Tuesday night. the numbers didn't he. and a weary Thurmond served up a two-run fifth-inning homer to Larry Herndon that gave the Detroit Tigers a 3-2 v1ctorv over the Padres 10 Game One of the World Se~es ··1 wasn't too surprised that I didn'tget called sooner," said Hawkins, who combined with Oravecky to check the Ttgers on one hit through the final four in rungs. "Marte was throwing a lot of pitches. but he seemed to be gettmg out of h1sJams OK" The decision to leave Thurmond m was a cunousone, the lefi-hander bad thrown 111 pitches in the 4~• 1nn1ngs tllat preceded Hemdon's blast. which also scored Larry Pamsh. who had doubled. "He was behind m the count all day, but we thought he would last the fifth." said Williams. ''He Just made a bad pitch. and Herndon hit 1t out." That left it to Tigers starter Jack Moms, who was m danger only m the seventh, when Kurt Bevacqua drove a shot into the nght field bullpen. But Bevacqua was thrown out trying for a tnplc, and Morris reurcd the side m the final two mnings to wrap up the victory. "I knew I'd thrown a lot of pitches, but I d1dn 't feel like f'd lost that much velocity on m} fastball." said Thurmond, who was 14-8 with a 2.97 earned run average dunng the season. "I threw him a fastball but it didn't go where I wanted it ro. "I really feel bad. I probably wouldn't have pitched past the fifth inning..anyway. I threw 117 pitches in five innings. normally. l throw maybe 90 or I 00 an an entire game I got behind Larry 3-1 and he was looking away, and that's where I threw it." • "Moms was _Just battling out there;· said Padres outfielder Tony Gwynn, who had a single atl'd walked twice in four tnps to the plate. "He rcally mixed Ills pitches well. I couldn't tell what any of them were going to be, and he seemed to get tougher as he went along." The warning signals seemed clear enough Thurmond, who was touched for seven hits and four runs in 311, playoff 1on10gs a~1nst the Chicago Cubs last week, was 1n trouble in every inning but the second. The loss means that the Padres will travel to Ottro1t later this week with the Tigers owning a possibility of winn1og the series at home. The best San Diego can do 1s leave home with a 1-1 spht, and the Padres must win ton1ght-.in order to do so. He gave up four hits and a run tn the first. and the Tigers stranded two runners in both the third and fourth lnning.s. Thurmond would have been in deeper trouble but for a pair of den pickoff moves that caught Detroit runners breaking for second base, resulting m easy outs. "We lost a very tough first game. I thought it was a good game, though," wd Gwynn. "We didn't get all the breaks we'd hke to have gotten, but maybe we'll go out there 1n Game Two and the breaks will be on our side. You can never tell about this game." Can OCC avoid a mauling? Riverside Tigers hungry for victory after losingopener ByCURTSEEDEN Of IM Dally l'llet at.n Both Orange ( oast College and Saddleback College hit the road for M1ss1on Conference football action 5aturday. the Pirates looking for a detour to the victory column and the Gauchos out for a JO~ nde against a punc.hless opponent OCC travels 10 R1ver\1de t ll> C ollcge for a l :30 p m contest. while Saddleback 1s at San Diego Mesa where the struggling Ol}mp1ans await. Oly1npian O'Sullivan wins debut TORONTO (AP) -Olympic ~ti· ve r me<falhst Shawn O'Sullivan man- handled Vint Hammock throughout the six rounds of their welterweight bout Tuesday ni~t lo wm by a unammous de.ci~1on in bis pro- fessional debut. O'Sullivan, 22, dominated the ~ fi~t. winnina from all thrtt judaes- 3~2 J. l0-23 and 30-19. Golden Wes1 College takes a break from PAC-9 Conference play with a b)C. Here's how the games shape up Orange Cout at Riverside CC: Coach Dick Tucker watched the R1vers1de-Saddleback game last week (won by Saddleback 23-18) but the OCC coach doesn't think the best team won. "f think they're (the Tigers) an excellent football team." he says. .. They certainly have thl' be~t back I've seen tht'I year .. He'\ refemng to sophomore half- hack (ill'n \ra" ford who led the M1rnon Conference in rushing last vcar with 1,005 yards. He's also leading the league this year with 414 yards in four games for the 3-1 Tigers. "I thought their qua~rbad. CN1ck Butera) was very good and their defensive team speed was im- pressive," Tucker says ''There's no' way they should ha"e lo\t to Saddle- back:' Bu1era has completed 24 of 44 pas~s for 550 yards ami five touch- downs g1v1ng the Ttgers a O.lan~ look _ ()( C. meanwhile. has ~en ofT- balancc this season with an 0-3 record and JU St one touchdown. The Pirates' longest offensi ve dnve this scawn went for 45 yards "I don't care what the stats say, Orange Coast ha~ a good football . team," insists Riverside CC Coach Bai:ry Meter. "They may be 0-3 but they ve played three very fine teams (Fullerton, Golden West and Saddle- back). "I hope they don't catch us off auard," Meier continues "They had a week off and that concerns us. Because they haven't won a game they may bave worked on some changes.' Saddleback at Su Diego Mesa: The host Olympians came over to the Mission Conference with Orange Coast and they brought thelf usual pass-oriented offense with them. San Diego Mesa won its first game of the season last week, 36-35 over Santa Ana. The Olymplans lost their conference opener 20-10 to Citrus. Saddleback, meanwhile, 1s coming off what was expected to be its toufhcst pme of the year, a 23-18 dec1s1on over Riverside CC. The Gauchos are 3-1. 2-0 m Mission Conference play. Saddleback Coach Ken Swear- inscn 's bigest con~m 1s Mesa quarterback Tom Pon1ch who as- sumed the starung job midway throuah the second game of the season. San Otego Mesa Coach Len Smonn started the year With Ball Bennett, a transfer from San Dicao CC. but the iwitch to Ponich has given the Olympians some nt"W life. CARLSON'SCOLUMN. • • J'ro mDl Tollner: H e's far from overconfident Trojans face Oregon next; Key starters to return LO ANGELES(AP)-Southcrn Cal is a perfect 2.0 in Pacifk-10 play. the-troJans' tailback is leadina the confcrcnc~ in ru~hin and &e\.C11ll in;utcd pl yers •~ retumma to duty. But Coach Ted Tollner i n't ex etly overconfident about the t of the seawn -or even the Trojans· next pme. ••we better be focusc-d. utgtnt about Oregon or we've got a problem," Tollner said Tu~y. rcfemng to Southern Cal's Pao-10 mccuna with the Ducks Saturday an Euaene (Channel S 11 3:SO p.m.). "Some people might look al the Duck •schedule nd say they're uspcct. but 1 think they're a good footb3tr team," the TroJan coach said. "The last time we played them, two yean ago, the)' had no offense," recalled Tollner,• Southern CaJ as istant coach durina that 38-7 victory. "But now they do, and they're very phy ical up front. 0 Thear quanerback (Chris Miller) can throw the ball. and unfonunately, he also can move around berter than l thought. And Lew Ba.mes (Orcaon flanker) 1s probably the . most explosiv~ guy in the conferepcc. "Barnes makes at least one big play a aame; he's the type of player that scares you." The Trojans, led by tailback Fred Crurcher, lake a J.J record into Eugene ap1nst the Due.ks, who arc 4-1 overall and l ·I in Pac-I 0 play. Sou them C.allostto LSU. a.n.d owns victoriC$ over Utah State, Arizona State and Washinaton State, 29-27 last Saturday. Ore&on beat Long Beach State, Colorado, California and Paciflc, but lost 28-14 at Anzona last week. Iollner said said the "pieces are falling into place" for the f rojans• runnina pmc, but that the offense needs to "get more production 'out of its passioa attack. O'otthcr, 11 JU01or,-pfnedl7ifari'.t~ on""1/car11es1n the victory over Washinatoo Sllte, and now bas picked up 457 yards on 108 carriC$ rbis fall. Reserve tailback Zeph Lee is expected to play this weekend after beioi sidehned with a pinched nerve, and inside linebacker Keith Biggers is probable after sittina out with sprained knee ligaments. The Trojans lost a defensive starter for the season, however, when tack.le Matt Koart tore ligaments in his knee at Washinaton State. Semor Tim Green, who initially was gomg_ to red shirt this.~ s taken •OY~, th~~uaner-baClc spot for Southfm Cal, which IC»'\ staffer Sean Salisbury to a knee injury in the second gam~ oTibe season. Salisbury returned to the 1;>ractice field this week and is expected to be able to play within a few weeks. Green, making his first start, completed I 0 of IS pas~es for 99 yards apinst WSU. "The key thing for us, like it is for everybody else, is to keep unprovina as.the season goes on. .. Tollner said. T ENN IS Edison, Sailors, -Vikes, LBrwin Edison. Newport Harbor, Marina and Laguna Beach roll~ to easy wins ln &iris' hi&h school tennis action Tuesday. Herc's• recap of what took place: EdJson U, Han&lD1ton Beacb t Debbie Goldberser easily won all of her smgles matches (6-1. 6-0, 6-1) to lead the Chargers to their third Sunset League victory and J 3th this season w1thou1 a defeat. Also winning big for Edison was Tanuyna Johnson, who won three straight (6--0, 6-1, 6-0) in the singles, and Julie Slattery (6-1, 6-0, 6-0). In doubles action, Candace Kirk and Chm Shea teammed up to squeeze out a tough first game win, 7-5 then rolled m the other two, 6-1 and 6-0. Pam Smith and Jolie Feingold also swept tn their doubles match and Nicole Simmons and Anja Allison breezed to 6-2. 6...() and 6-3 wins. Corona del Mar 10, Esta.Dela I The double$ teams aided the Sea Kmgs thard Sea View League win1 as Rachel Rosen and Denise Mallo swept through their match with 6-3, 7-6 and 6-2 wins. Gia Barbarino's effort wasn't.enough for the Eagles, as she won all of her singles matches (6-4, 6-1, 6-0) 1n the losina cause. Freshman Denielle Scott also fared well for the winners, tallying two wins in her singles matches. Newport Harbor 14, UDlver1lty 4 Paced by Corey Crook and Donna Newcombe, who won all three of their sin&les matches, the Sailors (I~) won their fourth Sea View l..eaauematch. Vanessa Bunnell and Leslie Ryan also chipped in for the win with a sweeping doubles victory. Marina 18, Ocean View 0 Came Crisell, Janet Po and Eileen Robertson led the Vi lungs lo their I 0th straight win with unblemished singles wins. Lapna Beacb 18, Costa Meta O The Artists remained undefeated in Sea View League play (6-0).Lthanks to singles players Kelly Conkey, ~nisc Sugi and 1 rac1 Tarbell. Led by Noni T.aul and Missy Bream's convincing doubles play, L.aauna Beach also swept through doubles play. Lakers literally get up off floor INGLEWOOD {AP) -Forwards Jame's Worthy scored 16 poir1t11nd Jamaal Wilkes added 14 to lead the Los AnJelea taken Pas1 the Phoenix Suns IOl-93 in a Natioriat Bi k:etball Association exhibition game that was halted ~rly in the fourth quarter. At the n::qu t of uns• coach John Macleod, the pmc was tuminattd with 8:.40 remainina in th~ fourth quaner due to clltoessive conden'8tion on the forum noor after a number of players slipped and fell dunna the contest. O'Sulhvan, of Toronto, had not fouJh1 1inoe Auaust. when he lost a clote dcc11ion to Amencan Frank Tate 10 the hcht middleweight finaJ of the Los A nsctn Olym pies A former world and Nonh Amen· an amateur champion and Com- monwealth Game1 aold mcdalhst. O'Sullivan po led 1 94~ re..'ord pnor 10 bec<>mlna a profe s1on I aod won 68 ofh1 tights by knockout. year ~n1or 1t Stanford and a starter on the Cardinal ~uad that turned UCLA away, 23-21 last Saturday. w1l1 JOurnc)! to V1cnn •. Au tria as pan of his Campus Crusade for Chrm stud· I~ MllJc Johnwn suffered a cut over his let\ e)c when he <..h•Ppl•n Collqe and the Tour-fell ju1110 the lef\ of "1Je butet late in th second quancr. nament of Champions at Cal Poly but returned to nni.sti the pm The uns' Walter Davia Pomona and the Anaheim Convtn-.., forced to l ve Lh pme in tbe third quancr th a t1on Center. knee inJu~ after ll 1lin1 ~l the me pla~ on the floor. Hammock a nauve of Orlando, Aa. ho no•· fightt out of Char1onc. N.C: 1011 for the fiflh time m 10 pro ft ti S r Ray ~M.trd the former undisputed world v.elterwcisht champion and World Bo~in A~ oci11ion champion. helped o· ulhv•n pn:pere for his open1n1 ni t • I prof~ 101'1 I and "" I nnpide. * J* * Mater Dc1 Ht~ ba~kctb311 (rom lcwH Co.) Wiii be on dr pl y in some top •~nu this ~son. The Monarch win be pl4y at Annhrim COO\enllon c~ntcr [)((' 19 (Vcrbum Oc1). at Lona Bcat"h"Arcn• Jan 4 (Lon. BcaC'h roly> and Jan 2S (Sttv1te), at lrv1nt•4 CrawtorJ H. ti Jan 2 (St. Bernard) at UC nta Barbara Ott. I (Dos Pueblos), 1n addnion to the Oran , oum ment and four ~naclus l~a ue mes nt * * * Davi inJ~ wa lattr diagnosed as• 1ble train A. dd Lewis: Gary 1cKni,Jht. h1 of the medial eollaltral IJPm nt of' the lcf\ knee and be"• c ch. ys the 6-1 leWi 1s bcina u~cd to be 01.u of ICtlon for a week~ 10 days swi&chcd 10 a shoottn guard Others Th tcrmm•!aon w11 ,the fint of its und at the Forum b11 in Mooarcb p1a include 6-6 and th NBA ~. PRSJdtrit SOciuy Sttrhn& It rule Mike Mitchell ("Ota County's Wcdne yon hn lhc Jto~thc ~v.111 be recorded No. 2 pl.l..)'CJ," ,sa~ M gJu). ~S 'fhc vrctory the Lakcrs scoond 1n 1 many nilb.U Jim DW)'Cf, ~Mike Ktll), ~: John nd It~ their n mark lO 2:.0. Phocn1~ fi JJ LO 1-1 an Mounce, 6-4 Tom Pnbody 6-'l Mike ub1biuon P Y· O'Connor and 6·2'/J Om Pinon The Lnkcn pulled away from the un 1n the * * * guaner. f'\cr u11hna J9·l3 at the end of the fint pc od1 . • . l.o n I out red Phocmll ·32·17 m tlfc na Minna Hi&h'• V1kin ba'e uled q ner to llk 1 6S·S6 halnimc ad van • on an opponent for their Hn 11 The Laken incrcalCJ ili t margin wuh a ••~run I foot II tnp ncAt fJ 11 -at'll be I. lhc out 1 of the third quancr to open 1 79-60 I ith Louis Hiih from the 1 land of Oahu. 8:1 s I fl In the period. 6 4 2 • 5 6 .. ·7 8 D A -I L y p I L 0 T c L A s s I F I E D 6 4 2 • s· 6 1 8' ...... , _______ _ PublaMcl Orangi1 COMt NI.IC ll)11C( Ody PlloC Oc:tow :s. 10. 11. 1--------u . 11M , ~let U1 Help Y11 ·, Sell Y •• p,.,.,i,l The Olly P10t off en JOU ttis 11act mt lcl on cu "Pktw• Pac•" wttl-* fOf just •zs Plf ctay, • t 1111111r '45. 642-4121 's.imt I plctwt, Of Wt1 photOCflllh lt fOf you at 1 dtinal d\liti. C r.rNlll•TION Ill Al TY NOTICE The Dally PUot wW DO lo~er be opcr:a OD S.bll'daJ GlOJ"DlQca. Oar open ti.DC lloan wm bi llouday thR P'rtday. 8 :00 a.•. to 6:30 p.a. Deadlllaee wU1 be u follows: BDJTION 11.0Dda,J ••...•..••..•••••••..•.••••••.•••••••••••............• P'rtclaJ, 4 :SO p.a. ~ ...................................................... ~.4:30p.:e. Wedna1da7 .............................................. '?11~. 4;3()p.a. 'l"lual9day ............................................ Wect.n~. 4~ p.a . Frldaf. •. . . . . . . .. . .• . . . . . . . . . . . • . •. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . Tia..,.,_,, 4 :SO p.a. Sa~y ..................................................... Frtid&J, S:OO p .. a. cla.J ...........•........... I.............................. Frid,&'. S:OO P·•· 642-4321 I ... t"9 IJM MIRROR Md t"9 HUNTINGTON BEACHCOMBER.,.,., Wednteday It no.xtra~t CALLTOOAYll &llFML.111 Yow Oalty PUot seMce °'1ectofy ~tat Ive ur-w 111t.1 ., I•• llr••l•r For Cl• tied Ad ACTION Call a Dally Piiot AD-VISOR 142-5'78 ,lrutuab, Val. lf11tanlt1 Val. AJ!l!!•b, Vat. Offlct lntall ztH Lett .... lelt Wut.. llM IW1 Wu... llM ltlt WutM 1111 lt1t Waat.. Siii !ut. leiii 2fl0 •mm.... nu l!!p! ..... Ult 2 lerge room•. bath, 1!~ltfre2 Alh!!'r Jr. Lg:,r ~otrtnoo!:' af:va11e~r~~ OUllU&./lnm .. ltl ..... ..:... "''"Hu . • 29r 1ba. dbl gar, pool, YlllllLUl W '300/mo becM!or unit beaUtffut home Sep. en-111~ Biel' 151-1928 8ch ioi8. ~ wit>tu! toi;fhri..t8dat~ 2 yr. pvt ~ Inter-Extrutlon P,....Ott~ front ofc an~uanc• .... _ = to~opalbc tu041 -acr09IJJciMllH• GMd ~~~~k-1U~/mo. itCANNERV IL * stone. Cell "andy at lreflpret.NB78M351 =•~M:th;irr':a~ro P~~tenc..: =:*~c:uetonw $460if .._ MC dep 831--49t0 loeatlOn Fr ... tandlng bulldlng1 581-1514Of155-6748 UIYllTTll to 2 A prof .... onal ap. :i-,t lrtnge,~tl ,,__ _______ _ mo. •9 1078 alt 6 ·LG 28d 30' to tend 1218 Balboe * * • 1250 ~ft & 150 eq n. s 1 LOST: Sc:ottJeh TenW, blk d ~. ~ 55wpm, Non-oontrlbut()fy GrouP flllT .... PRiii luL luMr fl42 w/V... & gar. llOO/mo, Ill ll"'IWIT w~,~~':'!. ~ per eq ~ make "Aobble". Vic. n;,~~h ~~ 1 :W (i~ fl! ng, phonea. Calt0 ~· lnturenoe & Dental Plan. Fun di~~· ~:..= a;;g; atudiO Mi kUd1 frPI ~ l•••.151-20001 Ml· 1111 Hav. refl, IM ok. 50 yr AllNIT AIU DMrfleld. Irv, Reward. Stewardeaa children. Abbott,~ E. · Ubet .. ¥.c&tton blMflta. lkHll( 6•ruJo. ,ront of· mutphybedPoOl)ecuZZJ v~1 eot1n Exec Pentnouee In VIiia old grandpa1ent1150eqftpr0fofe 55t-1057 Wkd•y• only, CdM OIOITAILlllYDI Xlntatar'tlftONl&ry.Con-~ nwati. $$50714-676--8938 2BrNwptechAptfor,. Balboaw/oenw,poot& w /pollte poodl• w/wndwYlew 23e1Cem-OST White long l\tlred 6«-8025~7090 Full/patt time. We train. t'8ct~e::"c:-' well ::::=.·a..tJ L k IHI tired S*90f1 Wiii.iP In-MC. 11400 Agt e.42-3850 751-2378 •ft tlpm P\11Or1211 IMM. Cor-Cit, btue = m•. UIYllT1ll mm S1ud«lt1ok.Chw•A• (21~201 32().()102 Building Contractor I C come. Minor duttee for ldo Ille Weterfrom Pvt Bedroom w/klt prtvtlgee nerearpu1 & Von Kllar-REWARD. I Me-1504 lor 4 yr 'old p.,,ftlme teurent, IPPl'Y et 7891 2315 Domlnauea St T0t-IOcated In ltvlne. Contect ~Ba kitchenette reduc:.drentCMS-10"8 -bW:fl LMgeoustomct.-Nr buslne a allOpplng m11t,"-~ RRet:A9& ~-~Per-·'• eomeUtettaCteaninn my Wam.t, H·.e .-(at 8Ncf\ rance.CA905oe · U..(714)83U512 1275/mo ev11 cell r .m_...__..._ 2~y , _ -t•...,. 5790 ave. vvri• rn """'-· ,...... __._,_ ... .-... ~.u BIYd.)btwf\3-epmM-For 'e.o E. F/M •7s-· 7..... 2Bt, rerrtQ. .,,..,_,., Jux• 381 .... ~ -· • _,. "400 Ph· 762-2414 E™m/llMLI w-, hofne. __._ call 762-6955 · UL 1111111 u ....... stove V'iCJ /mo.··"° 'U25011"no. ~---·--· __ ........ _ ..,., 2.Br2.Ba.W 10----· Cell645-4&55 ........... ,..twofumrmln _....--·-· OUtClllONLYl35-11" '"'"N~I"'"' DOMESTIC· pert-time Penon. ~-Fu ._ .. OQ) ---beck bey home wl'beeu1 SA& .......... a ...... "'~ ... lady, for alert ~ a part time '50-6731 vu, lkytlghta, trptc, w/d & pool to..npl pw90n '375 1 MO FREE RENT WHiTE MALE 8EeKS TELLER Cheers Restaurant, woman. ISi 1 boa . 1 car ger l900, eeo-39<>9 Sp,wouHingle one mo Ind utl. a.M740 Lux ofe-IV 0C A~. All PARTYING FRIEND 15.p/ttr. FuU/par1 time. 67$-25'1 llllUL lfnll Dye, •M-1899 EYel. . .. two bedroom apt~ F ent In exch--for emenltlee, 11.a /IQ tt. 18--30 AJ 142-7168 Apply et 7891 Warner Establl9hed studio In New- .. Cutt Dr bachelor unit 0 ::;'e' llouaeke-~Ping 833-N70JOdy · cetlfomfa Federal hu a AV9.(at8eeohil'ld)HB. trhenllte4t4 POf18tecll.F111ng,«andl lc:rou from bHc:h. IN NEWPORT BEACH ~ 1 . FuNon llland, folly d«i-lulaat OtJ. ftlt fUU..tltne Teller poelllon or call 752-6855 Clw 1 l u:per. r-iulred. (mutt haw valld drtvw'a 1425/mo. 414-7302 A or-1 place to IN9 on the or•ted, 818 eq ft mo/mo. -avallltite 1n our Coste For loCal movtng oo. lie: & own car). Mtall Upper Bay Private FumroomtWSCPt.za.Jec:, Cdfotdet .7804333 IALll& .... llU M..aBraACh. COSIVOt~ At*tanl 7~ WOftl.GoOdphoe'9mM-l,!!J!I! leac• fll clubhOUHI & lle11th pool S275/mo lftd iJtJ!I N B. 1807 WESTC FF OR Dim IP UIBl•T • 107-Maln It Bllboe Penn 0Na Stort o.Rvldlttc PIT n«I lmportent HOUf'I 1§f'ID5 difiWlhf Mg epu I tennll COUf'11. 7 FemaJI only. 55e-1137 · I LI High c. Mt ~ ~a Terllr ~ 875-M 12 M-1= 20-30 hrl Wk 18yl'+ Tueed1y-S1turday. AalC incl Ho pet1 can' btwn pooia, c:toee 10 b441neea, N9wPot1 COndo ~c:,r. suit~~;'°· '64s:2'41 r-iulred'. or I rnonttta t~ COUNTER help, part./full Colt.Ge Phermac;y ~ fOt lMlll 0t G~ ONLY. 'hm-4pm daily 64$-4855 OC Airport, Faahlon room for rent agt, one 1M' 1 cahlering ex time d~/ntght flexlble Fair Or CM 546--3218 &«-8933, Tu.-r1. ruRNISHEO or llland. conventent ahopl call Kim 873--1519 Airport., .. From eso to PLAIT... perlence. ~ ~tti ~ lllWL OftHAI ' IE1fNIT Clm r RN S E on eight. 3000 •f New office bldg I 11111 I._. ' e.' DRYCLEANERS counter, nv L.,~ 3 Bd 2'.iba 2 car UN U I H D Prv bd/11a kite PflV, all f.,_ r .. d for trnmed ~ .. ~ F0t an Interview eppolnt-Orange Jul • 11 ....,.,..t>ty_..pret. aper • .E.1$*i.nc.cs In Acda Rec, end gar. pool,·,.,,,,._, HEALTH Slnglee 1 & 2 Bdrm Apert· cillllee of Perie ~ cup,!ey. 11.25/lf groa. H:!c..~~~:-: =· =· ~~= BalbOa BIYd, BalbOe '42·54ae ~:obit & ~.m:: c:loM to beech. 11200 CLUBS T£NNI'" tMnt• & TownhouMa Incl. e.40-14811882-7 20 B<okw coop loc Soon to .,. Y8Cant (71•) ~ -.1us • l /F Ull lllO IOO eo.ta = ~-Tll IWIAIDlm "' from 1120 (Ask about ltttli)bttlJ zt04 751-5N9 R & H tnveet For inf«matlon call · • MJ-1111 SWIMMING plu" fumilhed apis. c:ompi.t• IRXRMew MOTE( Shara deluJt HB eulte. MEL FUCHS OWFlllll ~'Js. ~~~. P /WI 111 IT TIE IDEUL lfflll NEWPORT PENINSU•.. much more' Sorry with TV, Unena& u1...,., Room ete on sale + .,;. Large ottlce, non-lft'IOl!er PAVILION REALTOR FER••• CALL aso-1111 ASI< FOA IDOi II 1111 .,, tltM. matUte penl()n, .,.,. no pel\ Model~ maybe rented for short r , · ...., $325/mo 145-3700 llM111 _. Sherri°' Kathy teiephoMI, Ill• typing, 2 & 38'. yrty °' winter. open dc11ly q to 0 term or longer). On Jem-off •fed 1-\ d~ rite aYI Dtpt. OP•t<tOCM<G S.U copier euppllee. SAM-Coat• Meta office. Geragu 050-ltOO. d bat• Ad. el San Joaquin 26« Newport Blvd C.M •CdM dlx 1Ulte9. AC. rsf. 2100 Harbof' Blvd OIEllT lllllTllT Noon Trak'lfnO pr~am. 752-9523 N~1c1~06.7e5nd-4!un121t B2kBrr ~W\ H11l1Adl.a.a 1IOO Llll450-0 29181UCll ~:at=.a:~s . =~'i:t= eo.ta~CA92821 lrvlne dtvt910n of a major ~h::nu::m6~o::'a--e-N_E_RA_l:_O_F_Fl_C_E_exper ___ _ """' "'iu VV ••• Npt Sch, San Diego, LA. Equal Oppty Employer e1ec1ronlc component J.,,,.., lndlv needed for 1 girt of. 2ea. den. dbl gar, PQOI, Ap•rtments ..,...II Ill •he. lntala lnformetloncontact ........ ,...., dl1tr1~'°!huaneedf0< 111 .. 112 nc.. V.n.d dutlel, i.gai iaC 1950 (213~-1~5 •• 1 •• LY Piii * MontOI Fw C<lnauttlnt .-."'""' a ftpettlllOld cttdlt r:,-or acct bct(grnd 1 must. •SPACIOUS APT• Newpor1 Bue.ti So. •• Z7 Wkly rentu. S135 & up Sn-av~ &Cfoea 3'475thAvN.YN.Y 10011 nPllT/~ ~1P1oeltont'9qUln ~.}!! EARNtoleOO . ..-lyMa Flex hrl, 145-9351 . t ml,_ from ........ ft 17011 16th c.1 1 • Color TV, fr• ooff•. ...-T•-tv(212)183-nSO Accurate, 50 wpm, c:< ... exper. a,.,.,.., Commerctal Cf'edlt Ao-6..2.23~· ;, ret' 2nr H~BI Condo. Air ' heated PoOI & atepe to from ooean. 63e-8318 ... prepere loen document•, field. atrono eocountlng count ExecutN9. No c:ol· llllUL "'""•m 1c11 Oo11erJ built-Ina $675/mo. ocean Kitch'• avall Aaatuctantl 1a----1 lite bkkpg, filing, genwll kn~~ Off"! 1.ctlona r~ulred No Wallpeper & Fabftc di.-642-Slll 870-7310 985 N Cout Hwy, .,. .. ....,. ofc ctutlee. xlnt .... growt .. pr4WIOUI tJtPet. nee. In-trlbutor Mid• Individual Newport Buch No L.agune e..ctl, 494-5294 SPIRITUAL READINGS °"t.rtultltl J!ll WELLS FARGO BANK r>e>tentlal, Contact ~a. ternatlonel company to WOt1t In eample dept In knock• otten when y<>Y use retYlt-gettlng Delly Pt101 Cta11lfled Ad• to reech the Or1n99 Coast mane et ==~---:~ !t--.ll;;;ll1A;;la;l;-:l;;amt.;;;-Advto. In All Mattera l ~CE elibiirm' Cont.ct ai.t Boerum, Schwet>er Etectronlq.. provfdel complete ..,. watehouae. Cell Country HRll Irvine Avenui' CounMllng. 1~5 ~ EJ Earn taoo to 15,000/mo. 75W758 EOE 863-02N llltence. Cell ACC. (317) Life D11lpn1, btwn 61~~~~;~. .~~e!:':'!,,.r;:;4=~ Cem~·:-t'2-1~ llm. Detllla 083--7428 IUTIWlll 11Tl011Y/OIT 839-1712, ext 814 ~aL~~ ~o{Of •PP': por1 Blvd.C.M. Ma.-7«5 LOIE 11n PMwport .,. .. 875-eOIO ltvlne CPA firm hu optn-Escrow secy exp ntc Roger f!llA ITAL r.. ' ...... Ing for date entry detk. 11lary commen1ura1e lllmlllll SU I Ill LIME • T •I ...... CANADIAN LOTTERIES Bootckeeplng knowledge, w/exp 881-1551 booth tental Flrlt month w.-...... Beectl, c:o60f TV fomwty of Upperouta WIOOW Hls m fOf tb'a pay tax ft .. mllllona to 10 k9Y ' twMno etflcten-rent frM. 8.it>oe Penn. 'ii20wic agl, no Mpoelt now at INNEA VISIONS I 10,000 up. Euy qualify· luc1ty USA Winners F« cy. Salary range from DP'I APrJ ll11UI 875-1457 1 1' HOROSCOPE SYDllEY .. 01a11 -3028 West Coat Hwy SAME PRICES lnO No penatty can frM cMtalla oall lofl fr• I 1250 Im 0 c 0 m. .. nu.mm , _______ _ 141·1111 oenntaonAlloc.613-7811 1400-268-5297 menaurete wlexper. earn top doll1r•,ull time HAIRSTYLIST· nice ·-· .. VMatMa CARPET INSTALLER ' 833-0e51 pey P.,, time wotll. E,. ~pte. gd etrnoephefe, lntab zt07 Lett ~.. tlJ Ht.. 11 Ex'*1enOe onty -. nlnga Start te.oo pr hr+ N.8 Fuh. Ill. 7eo.«>N _....,. .... ..._ _____ F60Nb ib/i aml brown lllllTUY IMM111 f llUYllY ·~ t com can Mike 711..:IOOI "llllllllU I ** LY PUI * * Male dog wt.tit cllelt or auto pert• store. ue 1--------..... ___ _ ~ Avat.lable ectoa paws vie Garfleld IUM/11• • ERAMIC STUDIO-pert llav. vllld Cellf. drlYIB f1lll UUI 191.. ltlMITI ,... . ' "-----c: ...... 6 · .... -5854t NatJoMi firm hM op9f\lnO time help, 2-3 days p/wk. Ao & good dttwn r• LEADS FURNISHED. Wiii ~------··-~ __ 1_ YOttttown .._... • fO< faet peoed aecmartal C.M. 831-3570 cord. Apply 11 Hub Auto Trlln. C. nec.152·90M Ull lnU ~ S$ ....... tt Found: 9117. Fetn Golden poeltlon. 75 WPM. llt• ru:p1y; . 2120 Harbor F••t gro~ (HOUM Thursday, October 11 lkut 2tOI ::;·.~~. ~ :,::;~~;'"~~ .~~/~~•• for c~· Me-2~ 1ll::. '?~... ~~with J:.~ ARIES !March 21-.\pnl 19) This can be a "b1& money" time for BMUt 2 atory 2 bf condo ployement. 752-1787 MATURE drt• f0t New-09ilvery Orlwr Good r• taur•nt, "udenta OK, c.lltnt opponun~ for you' Astrological numencal cycles h1ghli&}\t financn, paym~nts, w/2 car gat, w/d, avail DIMe ~;-:,t;u~. !; cord Bring MVR CO.ta full/p ut time . 7811 ~~t. AE &LE interest rate\ and rewards You·111ct necessary funding. debts will be lmmed. $400 775--Me3 I PlllnmlYIL drWlng • ctlaUffeiJt 'O, M..a Blue Print ' Warner, Ha. ( at a.ct\ * 5r;e't2°l{'*lflf*tl paid and > ou 'II ha' c reason to ~lcbratc 8" Bay hm, matr bdt a btll, fnl U\ ll\S For ~ ..wy wotll. elmllar .,_. Send ,. 1690 Ptacent ' C.M. ~) °' c.a 152-6955 .... TAURUSC\pril20-Ma)20):Cyclchigh.you.makc:ri&htm.ovci.n ~~ia:r:1ti UU11111\11 Wiii train. No ••P9r aumeto:P0.8ox81210, llUYllY ___ _ ~ -right d1rect1on Study Anes message for spcc1al hmt. Project 1s n«u;'l, Call Betty for Loe~· CA I008I Futl tlmt for 1oc:e1 ct. lllTH 111111 ·-·------- ... completed. yo~ rcccl\ e plaudits and cash. Burden is removed, you 'll C:~ ::,~:,,~.~be~ ARE FREE appt. •5844 •II.Niii WHlll llYIMI. Xlnt drMng ,.. have greater freedom and more people will be drawn to you and your n/1mk Pro'f quiet rm, Cal·. aoo11m• OtChrttilanachool18835 Ncore..:~~ATIONERS product 1350 1111 Pit sso .... us1 OUll Brookhum FV H2-33t2 GEMINI I \ia) :! I ·June 20) Get ready for new start, wbat had been IU IH I "3-1200 Ptl$0nnel dept bold mg you ha( k v.111 no longer~ a senous cons1dcrauon Many fean, F~~~o :e ~S.. ~~ -The Delly Piiot II ~l:l • IT PIT M~·,!.~ DentatlOrtho Rece_pt doubt\. '>U'>Plt ion'> •Hc crad1ated. Romance flounshes. you'll get to 1n H B 1225 964-5552 ~B:;,ec, ~t~_,a,~:j c:.re tnt--1 1n c:ootclnQ. ~:S ~-~ EJcp heartofmalll'r'>.ind '12orw1ll ~restored. F -smklh ~2bf 1 full time ciel"tcal po.-KltdlenThlng.a.873-34'4 CANCER <J um· ~ 1-J uh· 22): Wish comet true, sentimental :'a~ 1328 ~ N.B . ttlon tn 1 bulY omo.. 975-0297 Of 831..S771 lmlL Motor routes avalable In lal'N Be ach. Must be 11 years old, have dependable bansportatton. £1. perience ~M but not necessary. member of 11ppo'>1lt' sex ciys. ··vou arc wonderful!" Love plays CM., .. 432-9321 FOUND Fm1 dog blk/Wht Mutt .,. ae:c:u<ate wttll .... 1 DENTAL Aaalatent I be ha d fld t lhr1 hair med al flguru. &>eperlence ....,.. nHded. Exper nee. paramount ro c.-. )OU II 1pp1cr, more secure an con J en F/Prof OWM 25 n~lmlt 2bf 8 con' ~ J u . preflffed, but will train. sxpw. eutomottve m,t• 1 Laguna Hllll 770-4275 C 110 t 4 00 ~ Capricorn. \quanus and anothe~ Cancer play outstandina roles. 2ba. NB •Pt 1350+u111 J~ ...... ~ 97~:°'.. E>c~t benefit _ ~ Apply In person I a.m. O : p.m. ~ Promotion could he part ofscenano. 631-6416/E937-17711D _.... ... vr __ age 8elary open ~· eo.ti MIN MlttubtShl DENTAL RECPT/l&C LEO (July 2.1-Aug. 22): What appears to be an obstacle could Fem. t~ rent Mitr bdrm tn FOUND large Mt of keys, In ~ to t"9 = 2833 Hatbof' BMS. C.M wlln1t.trll'IC9 expwtenc.. 141-4111 •actually be a c;tcpping-ston~ towards ultimate: goal. Good news com" 3bf home nr beacll\ (NB) ~-:; T= ~9Y· PUOt. Mondey thrv f!lday A.lk for Mr. NtllOn. .::::;4 ~da~ya~IMWOOO~~~C~M~U!ll!!!!!!!'!!!!!!!!!~~~~~~~~~~ Crom supcnor, populanty incrca.~" and you 11 be anviled to unusual '300+'.iWtil 650-3253 536-3212 9Y t-11AM °' 2-4PM, 330 -!IOCial affair. C,cm101. Sag1ttanu-; persons figure promme~tlY: . Fmf nlamkr .,,, new apt FOUND M Golden lab ~ .. Bay 81 ·Coat• Mela. r;. VJRGO ( \ug. 23-Scpt. 22), Good lunar aspect comctdc wuh CdM ptt bt ba l500 mo Pup vtc: N9Wtand PCH -communic&\1on, travel. special information and hiaher cduc.ation. Suranne ao-eeea 1015 536-2.2•7 ee2.0397 M•la.lnht. Yoo'll leam how to make necessary revtSions. how to 6est make u~ of 675-5148 -Career oppOttuntty In In- talents. Th1<; can be a mlljor day where production 1s concerned. F/M Prof a+ lhr NB F~ ~:: 1~~~ ~=~ntpl:'n~;'r..J LIBftA (Sept 21-0ct 22): You gain vital information -may Bayfront ~ 1350 + 962-63031751-6411 OuallftoltJona; ward pr~ concern financial resources o( one who claims ~o be "P_OOr." Di~em oep ref• 675-231$ AM'• . k cealnQ, numerical apo motives. do some personal de1ecuve work, realize special member of Flnon amkr 10 lhr 3bf 2ba F:'~ ~ ':;'·~ ptttucJt, lnterfacino opposite sex 1s on your side Jnd will prove it. N,8 ept "' beech 1325 Patt<wey an.'1347 w/~ inoen.. • • . SCORPIO (Oct. 23-~ov. 21 ): potlisbt on family ti.cs, plans for 875~~~~~ U:~!:1ni!::! LOST bl~lwtlite Male ~:,.,. to: The '= hvinj quarte,.,, dccorauni. rem~ehna or makin1 re 1dcnc.t m~re _ ~,11.., .~~·~herd. company. ,uo.o Von pac1ous. A'"nl also on legal affairs contracu. ~ 1bl pannersh1ps IMn. ~50 t 1trT 38r 555 or 202 Karman Ste 490 ..._.. and your marital status. w/Jac.... i '" utlla AVI POrt IMc;n, ea eieeo °' SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22·Dcc 21 )' Define t.trm1. keep resolutions now. Aft Spm 731"8630 L~on ~.=.:~=.,: cell 471-2121 re•"'"" •1n• work. recreation. rest and v1taman<1. Loved one is not Mv:S:ti ~t~ to ahr HB. R WANJ M2·S180 a ..... -..... ........ ... · d0 f · d d t ....... ...., w/fem ........... , ... na11>na. but rem1n 1na yo'! o your own prom1~ rtgar ma t~. Lort, ~a3-2009 · L08T Old" etrleo;er. neec1e telephone op«- Ans"crs that h2d bttn elus1vt will now be forthcom1na and you 11 A.Mwrl to Till aor. on atora -vattout INfb. 2 benefit a re ult. . . Mahr r;:' :;-~':' ,::r bet ltde eao-1111 3rd 11, Leg.. 8c:h -.• CAPRI ORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): F.mphas11 on phy~1cal 1ttract1on, Ao;a now 142.3«2 Diane Loet pup, 8Nft nu We, .. = pleasure. vaticty, chan c and creauv11y. Romance dominates and IPM Monda)'. Picked up ...... linpcould bcde$Cr1bc-das .. spccu1cular'·. Noth1nahappen1halfway. ~~~5~ lh~,~~·1n~~ byledyinMIZonllfct1t Mk':~r' 1mpurse dominates logic. . .,. .. of c M "42 .. 110 Mela, REWARD, 20et 8S0.210Z VIP TOYI AQUARJU (Jan, 20-Feb. 18) You'll learn more about "tern tonal NewpOt1 c t aar 2 _Miiii~8AiiiiiiHgitaili15i7i14~23ii7iila.;;;;;~iiiliiiiiiiiiiliiiiiii •-ri&Jns." Accent on co,ts. b 1 a ues. property value' Take steps to towmhouM ~ ~ 1 rt'mO\e sa ty haurds and t>t c pct1ally careful 1n connection w1lh ,....,,.r, ~. 142~ • ... electncll . fire. Ane , Libra ~nons play key rol~. p ES ( frb. 19-Marc~ 20): Opt1m1sm chase' l)oom! ~en ions P:!,~~rw:. !: are removed. ~ou find you vc been worry1n1 about somcthina that Fal'llon l*ld. 72CM733 C1ually d<K"sn t c·mt Rc:lauve commun1e1te9, tuas alowing report. PJOf M 1 F non .nllr "° hon tnp may he on agenda. you'll have chance to make a ne ta.rt 1n pN, llJO 8Cf1 hm, oO..n a d1ffcn:nt dirttuon Vt9w, 2br 2ba _ s .. lfOca. 11 1s your birthday you are 1ntuit1vc, ~ naturaltcachCr. lo) J 7 22~1r 1110 k> fi mily nd you ha\'e v.ay of pre&enun td as an unonhod ~. san111n manner. YQu arc an1 ti , ctalJ\IC , \C .. ta le .. fi liiiiiiiiiii~..,.~~~~ unnct ooo. Y u art not without di t1ve probtemi, u1 hcse re ohcd lhrou h pt0pcr d1e1, nutnll n nd comm n • ancer, qu11nu pen.on pta7 1mparunt ro 1n ~ r h~ • II PfO\t mem nble. you1 r«cHcr financial I tut you'll nnisticd .. 11h pcnoJ nf bromlin over bro en rclauon hip District Managers -If y~ enioy worlung with young boy• & girls ond dMk job• ore not for you, ,....-: cONtdet o coreer in the MWtpoper tirculo ~ , lion field Th • • o unique po~•hon Wllh ' • dolly thollfngei & r word1. 0wt .pe.nil\Q& 4:1re imft\edJGta. Appl~h mu\t hov. o van, stotaonwogon or truck. We offer on e11c1ll nl tolaty with o bonvt pion ond 00' ollowon<I. Wt hove on e•c•llem benefit plOl'I lhot inclvdes koipi· toll.roticm llmlJfGO(e, l1berol YOCOhon ond holidoy1. Condidot a mu1t ho,,. a "'• to bo svccei1fvl ond W w1llmo to work hord, If you lhfrtk you hove th4 quolif1cohont, pleo1o1 opp"' lf\ perlOt'I to the lillf · Pillt Moft/Joy Htn1 fttdof 9 t I qftl or 24 pit\ • 330 W. Bay Costa Mesa, CA 92626 Newtpapet KIDS-EARN GREAT TRfS AND PRIZESI ACROl9 1 Lela slip by euk .... •M 10 Paris prie.t 14 Scene 15 Banquet te Edgar Allan and family 17 Danton's ally 11 Bare arNI 20 Winning tennis I hot 22 Dispatch 23 Ripa 24 Spl11 25 AgrMment 28 Anl11ant 29 Amph1b11n1 30 tn11p1d 35On1trtk• Jave ..... 37 - -1tandllill 3a P1llager1 41 -lole 43 Ad,ecuve wttilt .... Rely 45 OatM 1111\ 41 Crall1n ... IO White popla1 51 Alrican n111va 55 Large eola (714) 548-7058 57 WllndlaN 5' Cuttard apple 59 Existence CIO Down IOUrce 81 liquefy 82 Equal 83 Athre DOWN 1 look at: llang 2 Spc»ien 3Wl\e)'I 4 Mllde lawt 5 Rich fabrlCI e COior 7 11 1ncllMd 8 Pungency 9 01 the pa1t 10 Clothing I 1 Pull'I up 17 -Mldi. 13 Charlot of old 19 Tint 21 Prtntlng mOld 24 Ouaaiea 25 At the crown 28 Acidic 27 Gratify c:ompi.tely 21 ~lllel ao Norte deity 31~y 320wrtlang ,• PREVIOUS PUZZLE SOL YEO 33 Brllllh gun 34 Gemstone Ja Mr Laural 39 Meet bot1ng 40 Stranger 41 Tootl out 42 Allreec:o 44 Mor .. coda cnarac1er 45 Female htle 46T~ott 4 7 Ha,,. f\.ln 48 fvefgre.n shrub 49 Abaolutt 51 legwear 52 Ttmt tutl S3 S1ngleton1 5' Creggy hells 58 Energy .. SOUTHWEST 1 THEODORE ROBINS FORO .. '•"· ""1&"1 n k '!1 '• (1 ( (J \ ' ..... t .. , ,. •• -: ,.. .... lllE lclOll'S · som COlln IOTOIS ® 11MUlllT llDWDTllU Wolflburg Edition 41inoCE L $2st 7 4 • taa '* rno TOf' I 13 520 114 CAPSIS.4• $1500 CAP "90UCllOn ~l*'°ll ® , ...... _ 11• 1&11 11111 &lmoC£L & u:i. • iu..-- tOP 112 018 :ZO CA .. $T2 000 ~is1•oe .... cu -am•• ea.per"'° if Of' SH.&26.80 • CA,$16 .. S taooo CA, ~'"°" ~""'°'° m 1114 ....... NABERS. CADl.LAC CONNELL CHEV ROLET . .... . ' ~ \' .. S40-I 200 THEODORE ROBINS FORD •l''. HAI&<>• lllV(I (Q~TAl<'l ~A 6 •2 .:>010 ,.,,.m · aut•. ac. Pl>. cruiM. amlttn, ••wee. mags (1~101)' ..... THEODORE ROBINS FORD ~ >(>..) HAlllOI Ill 11() <0,To\ MESA t>•l oo•o .,.,Fiii..., .. H1ehbd, arto. ale., p/a, pfb, tit\. cr\Me, Mllfm MWeo,..,. ....... ~ C1DZYIOI) .. ... TH lOOORE ROBINS FORD ' :C>r. '1All!IOP 111•0 '(,')''" ~t'" i:.•i 0010 l ' 5 0 .... :::> 0 •5495 :i!m':.c -~~:'':. ! ==::~=-= :::> gtr n •oo .... 11gt11-0 mdoor-to-doof ~ ... (200855) :::> 0 (ilfa;frsus1sHJ ~ 0 ,. _ft ___ CH WIEK JO, 1 ·U 1 t PLACE· WINNER ; SCORES FORECASTED BY NA TIONALL V KNOWN JOE HARRIS I I \ '' \ (("""'''· llf.l'I) -0...---Coll ,.,.,._ GM QUALITY SERVICE PARTS II I e e A II ----~ ..... ·"'-- TEAMS PLAYING ,. * OFFICIAL ENT~Y-~JLANK. * - _ .IDE'S PICIS OF THE WEEI"-Pre Tn•a S11U,, ...... , 14, 111• J23 D at lew Orteau - D ! li1aesota , D!c.ica&• DJ Cilcil11ti D · 11diaaapolis D HoastH D ,., Gialts ~ 16 D at Raiders 24 21 · 20 21 g ~-----------==-~ D at St loais 20 D at flew England . 21 ~ 11 1 ~ ·---~-------~ s ~~~~~~~~~2_1 s 16 D it Philadelphia 17 D at Mia•i 20 ~~~~~~~~~~2_1 ~ 0 at ltlalta as,o·oo PIO~LE WILL READ THIS AD ••• IT COULD BE YOURS CALL ~ 642-432-1 ~. AND RESERVE YOUR SPAQ. 2111 Ullll ILD &40-4491 5 0 I 5 o -iy Je~ 21 D 1t Cletela1d 24 s ............ ~,... .... 0 1171 ........ •••1i11 5 MID*'°· ps, pb, pw, pl,~~ I •2111 ~ l!ATtH. myt rool......, ~ I #lllflSS 1171 IM&••• CUr&• •3999 o._5 Alltel, ps, UClUOO SIM. #413Pl'll :::> 1112 Clltly $10,... '4491 o, V-6, ps. CAMPU HU #113118 1171 VI 1 PISMIC• la •5499 g 2 tollt paint, stereo # IERfOSI 5 1113 IM&t CWeqtr 'l 91 o :·::~=. 49 ,· § 111111 V111. Auto, ps, pb, w, bit. stwto 11 9 ... #1GTA759 f :::> ~ ................. ) -0 SOUTll COAST DODC.E llC. 0 I 4-2888 Harbor Blvd. g 1 Costa Mesa 5 &40-0330 0 ·o Sa• Diego D 1 T~pa Bay D IBllffalo []!Dallas 21 16 17 21 20 ------------.. D at Kusas City D at Detroit D at Seattle 26 17 24 0 s I 0 D at Waslringtin D at Sa• FrancisCo •L 24 ~ ----=-----------=--"-~ 21 ~ ------------I PRO TEAMS PLAYING MONDAY NIGHT .. OCT. 15, 1984 § (TIE-BREAKER) o D Creen Bay 20 D_at_D_e_n_er~<•~> _•L---:=-------==---=---2_3· 1 SCORE SCORE § 0 LAST WEEK'S WINNERS ~ $25 RULES OF THE GAME $15 I g ~ Games list will be published each Wednesday. Make your picks on your entry blank, cut out, mail or deliver to The Daily Pilot, 330 West Bay St., Costa Mesa, Ca. 92626. Entries must be postmarked no later than 5 P.M. Friday, preceeding the Sunday game, and Monday game. Late entries, will not be counted. If more than one winner, a tie-breaker will be determined by the score of Monday night's football game. Wanners will be published the following Wednesday. Winners may pick up prizes at The Daily Pilot office by Friday before 5 P.M. following announcement published in the paper. ~. CAR STEREO ··-:s,ooo -YOUR CHANCE TO CUSTOM INSTALLATIONS -NEW & USEC ~ FACTmtY ICSTAWTION IOPLE WIN ~ with pwdwe of ANY · AM/FU Cassette Will READ-THIS AD ... $GO, $26, and IT COULD BE YOURS 2 Spillcers OR lncbtes: KENWOOD • c;LARION •PIONEER • Bl.AllVl(T CALL $10 EACH WEEK. . -FOLLOW ~ ll 642-4321 ll THE WINNERS CIRCLE! STEREO REPAIR HOME & CAR FAST RELIABLE S~VICE TOP NAME BAA OS AND RESERVE YOUR . •• CB EQUIP . SPACE. 2u1 ..... ae-642-3154 COSfAllJA .. ZERO COST LEASING . 1 Now! You can lease the car of · your choice with our unique new concept that can actually cost you NOTHING! Call for Appointment 957-8985/957-8879 2720 "H" So. Harbor Blvd. (Below Wlt'Mr) Santa Ana 92709 IOUl·AD COULD IE · II TBIS SPOT. IT WILL II SEEllYOVD ':400 ' P PLE. CALL FOi IDEIVATIOIS 642-4321 ~ I I '\ . -' r WE0"4E SOA¥ ncTOBC:A 10. 1984 B's voters 'eireumvented' Ex-mayor assalls ballot measure secuti vc terms. Voters approved the chanae in the city charter by nearly a 3'12-to-l margin in 1978. ··1 really resent it," (Ballot Measure 0) Shenkman said today. to repeal two-term council Umit But the measure will be on the Nov. 6 ballot and voten will get a chance to change their minds. .. It's a ~lf-servina attempt to ·perpetuaie one's own dynasty in public office. By ROBERT BARXEI\ OftlleO.., ........ _Unnamed officials with "narrow self interests•• are attempting to circumvent the will of the people by tryina to repeal a ~wo-tenn limit for r Coast This year•s trvJndij,rvest Fes11val was the biggest lntheevent's9-yearhls-- tory./A3 California 'Burning Bed' docu- drama prompts hun- <Jreos of calfs lrom bat: tered women.I AS Nation Obeseboyloses 100 pounds after his stomach Is stapled./ Al Students at Brown Uni- versity vote today on stocking suicide pills on campus./A4 World Archaeologists ai the Louvre In Paris are battl- ing over finds./ A9 The Spanish ambassador to Lebanon Is kidnapped ln Befrut./ AS .Rome . How can a consumer guard against Inter- ference on a cordless telephone? /81 Find out where to buy and how to use the latest materials for decorating at the Fabric Fair ./81 ·X·:-:·:·;.:·:-:·>:.;»;:-;.!•! .. :~~:~:·:-<·!-:·:~!:~:·:·: . Spotts John McNamara, who has told the Angels he won't r-eturn as manager for the 1985season, re~ portedly has told friends he'd love to manage the Boston Red Sox.ID1 Things aren't expected to get any easier for the winless Orange Coast College football team Saturday afternoon./04 Entertainment An Americanized British farce Is lapping up the laughs at the Harlequin Dinner Playhouse./81 Bu•lneu Stiff competition Is fore .. Ing layoffs and shriveled profit• on U.S. firms In the midst of robust economic· expanslon./87 INDEX··------'-1 Br1dge Bulletin Board Business California Newt Clutlfled Cronword C>Nth Notlcet Food Help Yourtelf Home / HOt'OICOpe / Ann Lander• Mutual Fund• NetfOnal News Oplnlpn Paperaz:zl Potle9 Log PubllC Notl 8portt Stock Mark ta Tetevtalon Theaters WMther wortd New• 87 A3 A 11· 12 AS 05-7 07 88 C1·1'4 83 81·2 06 83 A132 A5 A10 81 A3 88. 0-4-6 01 ..... • A14 B• 84 6 A2 A5 Huntington Beach City Council members, former Mayor Ron Shenkman ch•rged today. Shenkman and four other ex· mayors wrote the amendment to limit elected officials to two con· ' But this time, it will be on the general election ballot when votm- not neceasarily well informed on local issues, accord1n1 to Shenkman -are expected to tum out in la11e numbers. Fluor to sell site in Irvine -Engineering flrtn · will remain on land. however _ By PHIL SNEIDERMAN Of .. DlllJ ......... Fluor Corp. is preparing to sell its • Irvine headquarters and surroundina undeveloped acreage for $340 million. but corporate officials said the pant cn&inccrina company will remain in its familiar green glass complex through a leasing anange- mcnt with the new property owner. As a result, 3,200 Fluor employees, about 10 percent of the company's total work fore~. wiJJ continue·to report to Ftuor's existing. Irvine facilities off the San Diego Freeway near Jamboree Boulevard. Fluor has tentatively agreed to sell the property to Trammel Crow Co., a major Dallas-based real estate de- veloper. • . The sale includes the office com- plex, l 05 acres of improved land, 32 acres of partially improved land where employee recreation facilities arc located and 25 acres of unim- prov~ land, all bounded by the ~y, Jamboree Boulevard and San Diego Creek. One for the Tigeta ''And the a~uments in favor of the repeal ate very, very 1baJlow, partku· larly that it's ncciessary to provide COfltinuityt he 1aid. ..Even the president of the United Stites ts• prevented from serving more than Fluor officials said the company will show an after-tax profii on the sal' of approximately S 180 million, whic~ will be listed on earnings over a 10-year period. The deal is be com- pleted in about six months. Fluor purchased the land in 1974, built a two-million-square-foot Jlass- sheatbed complex to house its anter- (Pleue He FLUOR/~) Detroit pitcher Jack llorrta (center) 18 conaiatn••ted by fe.emmatee Daye Be!'IJ"an (left) and Lance "Parrlah after ·~tile dlmnce for a 3-2 Yfetory o.-er the San Dl•o Padree·bi the ftnt •ame of the 1984 World Serlee. See 8porta. Pate Dl, for Cletalla. Deputy tells court he was hired to murder woman Suspect9s lawyer claims entrapm~nt by authorities By JEFF ADLER OfhDlllJ .......... ---- An Orange County Sberiff s deputy wno.wscd as an undercover hit man took the witness stand Tuesday to testify how he had been hired to kill the estranged wife of a 57-ycar-old La&una Niguel contractor. fovcstigator Robert Giles de- scribed for a sjx-man, six-woman Superior Court jury how he tape Win prizes on gridplcks · Daily Pilot readen who think they know a thina · or-iWo about pro- fessional football will be able to use their.wits and.t.bcit picks to JCOre cash prizes in the Pilot's oew Winner•• Circle. ap~arina-todayon 08. The wtt1dy football contest will pay SSO to the person who selects the hi&heat numberofwinnina teamsand $25 and S l S lo the runners-up. Each week throu&h the end of the football season, a lull-page H tin& of the week's pro samu will ap~r in the WtdnC9day edition of the Daily Pilot. For an added Cdat. nationally known forecaster Joe Harris" prcdic· tions will be included. , Participant~ n~ only lcct the winnin1 tram in each pmc and then mad their score cards to the Daily Pilot. Entries must be po$tmarkcd no later than 5 p.m. Friday_. The Monday Night Football pme will ht u d as the tic·bttakcr. Football fin mu t not only pick the winner but must take a hot at the • final ore. The fan· who comes the clo twin . recorded several mcetinp and tele- phone calls during which defendant Frederick Penney allegedly arranged to pay$3,000 fortbe murder of his )4- ycar-old wife, Susan. \ . His testimony came OIKD.C o~ning day of Penney's trial, which is expected to continue for the next two weeks in Judge Jean Rheinhcimer's counroom in Santa Ana. Penney, whQ has been held without bail in the Oranse County Jail since his July 1984 arrest. is charged with one felony count of solicitation of murder. If convicted, he could be sentenced to a max"1\um six-year prison term. Frederick Penney Penney's lawyer. Christian Dillon- of Dana Point. claims his client was (Pl-..e Me 111JllDER/ ~) ....,,... ....... ........,. The name!i of the winners wall be pubh'h d in h wrck' Winner's Cude. C h pntcs wtll be altll\1 u lhc Oi1I Pilot offi 1n ta t ButialtoDBlee' wal• NlDa Vida-tlllatlMlrworil proe11sorwttla a~olMI too....,_ltllMM boH. ••acam. •• • twoconsecuhve terms ·11herc re a lot pf qualified t>CQplc Who deserve an opportunity to scrv~ and I resent the attempt to dcpnve them of it." Shenkman professed to be unaware ofthose seeking to overtum the l'<'O- tmn limit but said one has 10 ·consider the four Cit} Council mem- bers whose terms expire in 1986 - John Thomas, . DOn MacAllisttt. Ruth Bailey and Bob Mandie Thomas, 1Jo lliped the bUlo6 JP.lmcnt favonrta the f'ePC9I ._ with MacAlhstcr,saidbesupponslllt repeal ••jn tht 1ntenm o( .~ government." People have • rPa 11f choose their councal members with~u1 restraints, be u.id. "If they're notdoinaalQOd;ob, m6 voters oould rcnlace ·them." (~eue ... TWOwTSall/~ Nurse admits ... theft of drtigs from hospitals jail on her own recognizance. accord- . 1ng to Minna. and anempted to steal ,____________ drup 10 Koaa Memorial Hosptal in BJ ROBERT BARJtEJ\ Of .. D'11y ........ A 31-yc:a.r-old nurso-ancstbetist has confessed to stealing the pain-killing dnlgs morphinc·and Demerol from hospitals in Fountain Valley, Costa Mesa. Santa Ana and Orange, Foun- tain Valley Detective Dennis Minna said today. Bridget Lynn Tracy of Newport Beach admitted the seven burglaries or bur&larY attempts in the presence of her attorney at an interview at Fountain Valley Police headquarten Wednesday. · · -Tracy also confessed to an at· tempted burglary at H~ Memorial Hospital in Ne_wport Beach but said she failed to get 'cirUp. Octtctivc Minna said. The nurse allegedly used the exact method in all hospital buJJlaries, acc:ordin& to Minna She would go to the medical floor of the .hospital where she wowd find l<ded mobile medicine cans. When no one was Jookiog she would roll them away and pry them open with a screwdriver she kept in her purse, Minoa &IJCFCi ••1 believe she needs medical treat· meot for a drug problem. She said she bad internal pressures and personal problems but wouldn't elaborate," Minna said. . The suspect. who allegedly injected herself with morphine while still an the Costa Mesa hospital. according to Minna. was arrested Saturday after hospital officials became suspicious when they found bloody towels that Ncwpon Beach Sunday and did steal narcotics at the Wcstcm Medical Cenler in Santa Ana lbe same day, be said. Fountain Valley police were aletUd •after a suspect who :was wearin& tigtit . bloc jeans and 1 red blouse st.ole 121 (PliMe Me ln11l8B/ ~ Power cut ·to 3,000 in • rv1ne About 3,000 Southern C~lifomia Edison Co. cuStomen in Irvine's Unhcrsity Par:lc area Jost po~ Tuesday afternoon because of an underaround equipment f.ailu.rc. ao Edison spok~rnan said today. Edis0n Area Manqcr Jim K.ea- .nedl' said che out.ge affected rcsideq.;. ual and business customers in an area bounded by the San Dicao Freeway on the north, Yale Aveaue on the Vt"eSt and winding Universtly Drive on the south and cast. . He said the power· failure was reported at about 4 p.m. By 5: IS p.m., 2. 700 customm bad po er restored. Kennedy said. The remainina JOO customers bad their electricity back by 6;21 p.m .• be said Anti-Prop. 36 foes -etting organized 1n Orange County .. By JEFF ADLER Ot•D-'J ........ Calling the rebate provisions of tax. slashing Proposition 36 a "bribe~ for property-owning voters. a ooalition of Orange County organizations Tuesday announced they had banded together to fight the so-caUtd Jarvts IV initiative. "Proposition }6 i5 not Proposiuon 13 and 1t does anything but •save' 13. Proposition t 3 is alive and well and all Propos1tton 36 does is to 11vc a tax break to those who already pay the lowest taxes,·· said attorney Susan Tiager. chauman of the Orange County anti-Proposition 36 orpniza- tion. an off-shoot of the Cahfonu.ans Against Proposition 36 campaian. "The Orange County effort will be aimed at showing Mt. Jarvis is aoina too far this time. He's offcfina a bribe to voters to appro\le a rebate for themsclvc.s," Trager said. She said the county anti-36 effort is drawing support from many county groups. anclud1na the L.ca&ue of \\omen Voters. St. Joscph·s 1iosp1· tal. the Orange County division of the lequt of Cities. several labor un- ions. water districts and parent- tcacher associations. The Joe.al ~mpaign will focus on (Pleue tee PROP. S8/A2) HB writer beats the od<;ls agalnst being-published- ROBERT Bu KER PEOPLE 1N rHE Nu~~ ----- Saddleback dean to undergo mental tests ill murder case .. ntdeanal <ldlebat Collt'geat the time ofhjs arttst.. Dawson as cltargec;l with ~Utll> shoaling Oona May Dawson at her El Toro home on Stpt. 15. Mrs. Daw\On was a lo~ime nul"$ing inmuctor at the Mt ion Vtejo community coll wher( her • ex-b1aband alw wa5 employ • They were divorced m 1982 :sfler a scp:ir- &1.lon years earlier. Dawson allegedly ~01 his v.ifc six times, using two different iuns, according to police repons. Officen said they found 'Dawson standing n~r his wife's body when they arrived. Accordin,g to court records, Dawson told police where thcv could find the wl'a ~ and later said, "l ~ot hrr. l couldn't help I\," Bttause of un allcption that Dawson armed htmsclf and waited for his former wife to rctu home from her bo) friend's hou . the former pohceman could faC'C' 1he death J'('n~lty . Ron Brower. Dawson's uttorncy, said lhecourt has given perm1ss1on to conduct a battery of te~ts to gauge has client's mental state. He said the tests could take up to three months to complete. "We won't be presenting any e"·id~nct' at the prchminary hcanng stage," said Brower. "The testing won't be completed by that time." Newport seeks to curb cruisers A city ordinance that would put the brakes on cruising on . Newpcm Beach's Seashore Drive and in other congested attas is beina considered by city officials. The City Council discussed a proposed measure Tuesday that would enable police officers to issue U.S. Judge Walter Ely dies Senior Judge Walter R. Ely of the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, who as a lawyer was known for his impassioned speeches to juries, died at his borne Tuesday in Sunset Beach. Cause of death was not immedi- ately known. The 71-year-old Ely, who was appointed by President Lyndon B. Jobnson in 1964, became 'Semi- retired tn 1979. Ely. a Texas native. served for a time as an assistant attorney $eneral in his home state before JOinmg the Marine Corps in World War IL After the war, Ely earned a master's of law degrtt from USC and entered practice in Los An~eles. He is survived by his wife, Evelyn, a medical doctor whom he met only last Christmas on a trip 10 the Philippines; a son, William, by a previous marriage, and a sister, Eloise Sweeney ofBrownsvilJe, Texas. .,. cnauons to motorists who tCPeatedly dnve up and down specified &trtcts. The propo~d ordinance was 1n- 1t1ated by complarnts last summer by residents livmg on Seashore Drive who were bothered by motorists cruising in their neighborhood look- ing for parties, says Councilwoman Ruthclyn Plummer The ordmance will next be con- s1dered Nov. 13 after City Attorney Robert Burnham drafts language to comply with a state law regulltting cruising. That law, although passed. does not go into effect until Jan. I . Burnham said. Burnham said the otd..inan~ if approved by the council, would allow police to establish specific areas where cruising would be prohibited. TWO-TERM COUNCIL LIMIT ... From Al Thomas also said that persons serving their last year might become vulnerable to bureaucrats and "may no.t live up to what they've said they would do," apparently because they would no longer have to answer to voters. 'Thomas said he doubts if he will run again m 1986. Shenkman served on the Hunt- mgton Beach City Council from 1976-78 and resigned for personal reasons in 1978. He as the president of the Westwood Corporation. the parent company of the Westwood Savings & Loan in West Los Angeles. . NURSEADMITSDRUGTHEFTS~ .. From Al narcotic vials at Fountain Valley Community Hospital Sept. 28 and Oct. I. The suspect tned another burglary at the Fountain Valley hospital Saturday, shortJy before her arrest in Costa Mesa for aJlcgedly stealfoJ 51 vials of the same drug. according to Minna. "We believe she drove straight to Costa Mesa after the burglary attempt in Fountain Vallev." Minna said Traq disclosed she threw man~ of the drugs awa)' after the thefts. Tracy formerly worked m the Harbor UCLA Medical Center m Torrance until a year ago. ~•d Mmna. She then went East to tram to become an anesthetist, he said. Minna said be as coordinating the seven burglary counts and that ar- raignment as slated Thursday an Central Municipal Court m Santa Ana. Tracy was identified by witnesses as the suspect in the Fountain Valley burglarly from a photographic hneup, accordmg to Minna .. Tracy aod her attorney are believed to be making arragements for her to attend a drug rehabilitation program in Palm Springs, Minna said. Tracy 1s being held in Orange County Jail in lieu ofSI0,000 bail. FLUOR TO SELL LAND IN IRVINE ... From Al national headquarters and domestic engmeenng operation. and moved in thrc,e years later. In a prepared statement, Fluor Chairman David S. Tappan Jr. said, "Auor remains committed to Irvine and Orange County. The company's world headquarters and the Southern California engineering center wLll remain in their current locations." Tappan added, "There were two principal motivating factors In deci- ding to sell the facility. It will provide the basis for further development of the complex. It will also enhance our financial flex1b1hty by generating a substantial amount of cash for gen- eral corporate purposes, including the further reducuon oflong-term debt." Jo ats most recent financial report, Auor's long-term debt was S643 milhon. A year ago, its debt was $786 million. Fluor has been involved in a debt reduction program since its 1981 acquisioon of St. Joe Minerals Corp. raised the corporation's debt to more than $1 billfon The engineering firm suffered a 66. 7 percent drop in profits during the first three quarters of this year. PROP. 36 FOES ORGANIZED .•. From Al she added. But Fluor spokesman Rack Maslin said the current property sale "was not earnings-driven. It was done to fully realize the tremendous ar.precaa- llon on the property we own. · He added that the anticipated real estate development of the unim- proved property around the corpor- ate headquarters is not Auor's area of expertise. Maslin saad the lease ap-eement with Trammel Crow wall give Fluor the option of remaining at the Irvine site mdefimtely. 1978. f Sun to b eak through after noon Coaatal Tides TODAY 4 ttpm 1024pm 1MUHOAY 403am tO 14a.m 4;50 pm 10 $1 p'" °' 40 i: Caper 0 5 CharleetOl'.5 c 4 2 Ctlw ... 1on,W v CNtlotte,NC 81/0 Mii tod•y 11 6 25 pm. ,,_ ~ lhln<I•~ •16-55 am end..,, *QWI et Clnalftmiu ''2•pm · Moon ·-todey et 7 03 pm • Mii g~ s c Thlff'8iSlt)I at 7;28 am llf>CI ,_ eoe;n e1 Olllmbla. 1 3' pm Colul!lbua.Oll ConeorO.N H Oda-Ft Worth ~~~~~~~~~~oa~or1 Temps °"'"' O.MotnM Oetroll HI Lo Oullilh 88 52 EIPMO 74 51 FaitlMlnka 76 60 Fwgo 43 40 67 eo ~~ .. : Extended 71 57 69 93 07 4a 73 50 61 51 t6 64 Night .,0 morning IOw ciouo. with hay •hemoon -..nlhone through Ille .-.no Hlglw In Ille tow to mlOOle 70. at the ~ and 78 to &5 lnlel\CI ~Lows-tty 55 toa& n ,.. \,ON I INUlO ~T ORIES ... 2-3 2-4 2-4 2-3 2 1·2 24 &W911 dlrectlen .... " ., 7f .. ,, .. 13 ,. c r, fl " . 71 ., :?t .. 18 .. .. Iii ... .. 100 .. 70 -.as .. . It llO " .. ta It ,, ., 7t .. .. 47 7t .. 11 67 u 61 11 12 12 .. f7 t1 IO .. n 10 10 61 ... 11 ,, 45 • 53 74 .. as 54 81 ., IO 4t .. lit ... , 7t ,. 76 01 .. '° 7t If 10 sa WRITER BEATS THE ODDS .•• From Al and help him decorate his office. I've watched the fast-track attorneys and theirshenanigans(not in Marvin's office.)" Those shenanigans, she said, provided the inspiration for some of the financial finaglinJ in her bool. When she's not wnllng, Vida isa techntcal notereader for coun re- poners. reading and ed1tingexpen tnal testimony. She graduated from Cal State University Dominguez Hills m 1978 . with a bachelor's degree in Enghsh. A flairforwritingcameto the fore an creative wt:itinJ classes. Actually simog down and writing a novel seemed to be just too mind- b<>Wing. but Marvtn persuaded her to give it her best shot. "I couldn't have done 1t without my husband. You need a tremendous ego. "He'salso my front-line editor. He was a journalist during the Korean War and he has a wonderful editonal eye. = "We talk plot and characterization. We talk it out chapter by chapter and then r do as I please," she said with a laudl. Vida embarkedon her mid-life career change six years a&O. She's wntten two books that haven't sold. a mvsterv adventur<:.- Dally Piiot Dell very 11 Guaranteed "-40001,. ,,..,.,. It v •' not na"~ tlJu' 1 at.t~ tJ., !J JO fHH !itd t...tvt• 1 t and 10v1 '(jr ~ "' r .. ()(lh•ttte<.l ~1u~doy 3t'l4j Sut .M1 If (OU tj(-tl('.l •lll("P1°"" r' ' copy by 7 t t4 lw.1 "' <'ailed "Run Jennie Run" and another adventure novel about a woman attorney, called "Who's Frederick Sachs?" A third novel, "A A.iibt to Barcelona" is in the hands of put>. lishers. h's about a Jewish woman and a doctor and two small children caught in Hitler's Germany. If there's one thinphe's teamed io herwritingcareer, it sdarned hard for a first-time novelist to be published. <:~"-SheStartedout with a West Coast agent and when that didn't get anywhere. she turned to a New York agent "who would be closer to the source (publishing houses.) They wineanddineeachother. They (publishers) don't like anyone outside New York City." One agent kept one of her un- published books one year." And then she told me, ·1 don't handle this land ofbook.' And I had three years invested in it." Vida said sbe got another literary agent who had the book three days. ..She said she loved it and couldn't put it down and that a publisher would snap it up. She said she was always right," Vida said. "It got to be time for a decision and I didn't breathe all week. But the answer came back and the an'1\'Cr was no. The phrase that kept coming back over and over again was that l had no track record. "But my husband said, 'you're having fun. you'rebavin&aball. Enjoy the roller~ nde. •" Vida got a breax at the end of 1983, when she submitted her book "Scam" to the Harper and Row publishing house. "The publisher couldn't use it. it turned out, because the marketing people wouldn't take a chance on a first-time author. But he said be liked it and wanted to help me. It was a real break. Hedidn'tgetonecent for it. He was a real human being.•• In just a matter of days, Macmillan called and told her the good news: ''Marketing says we can do it.'' With that announoement, she joined a group of249 ftrst-time authors to be published this year. That's a pretty select number because there are about 30}>00 books published each year, she said. Vida said she's sold paperbook rights of ... Sc.am" and said she has been told the novel should make a good movie. ' V1da will speak at Huntington Beach Friends of the Library mem- • bership luncheon Friday at the Cen- tral Library, 7 I J J Talbert AV?"; Rnu- va tions can be obtained bycallins 842-4481, Ext. 35. ORANGE COAST Clrculatlon 714/142--4333 Daily Pilat H. L. Schwartz Ill Publisher Cla11lfled advertlalng 714/142·5871 All other department• 142-4321 MAIN OFFICE 130 We~t S.y St Coo ta M.u CA 11A "011,. Bo• t5b0 <:4611 ~ CA 92626 G<'P>"ll"I t!183 Ot111Q& COUt Publ4hong ~ No •~ s•orlft •"wltoons. t0t1or..i m41i.. or ldventM menl• 'le<tllfl .,,.y be reptoduoed Wtth0o1 ~1111 P9' tT\-• of GOC>y<igl>I OWi* 'O a"' ttn J t Ctrculatfon Telephone• Ro•emary Churchman Controller "~~°''° tl4'3 pe»1age oaid It Cotta ~ c.111om,. cUPS 144 8001 Sut>tc•l()loOn oy ~II ... "' 7!> monll'ify ny m11I S6 !iO 1nonlh4y lo!Oll Ofl"Of' Cr• r.i, A•Nt M:l-4.U3 Stephen F. Carazo Produc tion Manager Donald L. Wiiiiama Circulation Manager VOL. 77, NO. 284 fund raising, providing speaken to community organazataons and run- nm$ newspaper advtrt1~ents op- posing the m1t1at1ve, which Trager called "sinister." Another attorney who attended the afternoon news conference, Stephen Nill, explained he opposes the measure because at will "make those people who pay the highest taxes pa) for a tax break for those who alread) pay the lowest taxes," Ntll said. The state Legislative anal~st csta-rr:==============:::;~==:;;;======================:::;­mates passage of Propos1t1on 36 "The fact 1s that an 1978, (the taxpayers were) supporting Prop- os1t1on 13. Today. we all are opposed to Prop. 36 because it 1s unfair, takes $500 to $800 m1ll1on from our childrens' education and results in a tax increase. It doesn't make sense," Proposition 36 was written by tax- OP{X>nent Jarvis to close loopholes he claims government has used to subvert Proposition 13, hls earlier landmark tax anitiatave passed m would mean gbvemments around the state would be forced to repay about S 1. 7 balhon in one-tame tax rebates or credits to property owners The measure also would set limi- tations on special assessments and fees that ·opponents claim would harbJ.>er local.govem~ent'5 abahty to provide basic servtces to con!lti- tuents. MURDER-FOR-HIRE.PLOT TOLD ... From Al entrapped by in vcstagalors who pushed Penney into the murder-for- h1re scheme. Dillon, in has opening statement, compaTed the actions ofauthorattes to television's "A-Team." He told JUrol'!, "but for poli« oontact there wouldn't have been any crime" Penney, a former New York City fireman. was arrested by Shenff s deputies July 2, shortly after he was shown faked t>hotograph of his wtfc supposedly I yang dead on a stab at the c~unty coroner's office. Deputy 01 tnct Attorney Wallace Wade told jurors Penney was put an contact with undercover 1n- vestiaaton by an mfonnant who had befriended Penney about sax months earlier. The mformant, John Burton, gavt' Penney the telephone numbt-r of a orof6s1onal_ kilkr. in actualtty an Just Call 642-6086 untraceable "cool" telephone at the Sheriff's office used by undercover investigators. Wade said. Penney told the "htt man ... whom he knew only as Bobby. that he wanted to arra~ a "permanent accident·· for h 1s w1 fe because the~ tatcang everything he had and de· stroyf":$ him in their prolonaed and bitter d1vorcct'roceedana.s. according to several o the tape recordings played foT the JUfY. "It ha'i to look like a total. total aa:1dent I want 1t to be permanent." Penney tells Bobby an a telephone conversation recorded June I 4 "It must, must look hke an accident cause if at d0t''1ft. they II (the police) be all over me." He added 'Tm ~ared becau5C l'v~ never done anythm' hkc thi\ io my life." A day later. Pennc--. met v.1th Bobby an the parkmg lot of a Laguna Niguel restaurant to arrange the killing and told the undercover depu- ty he had tned to get back together with his wife because he loved her "very much." Owing the-con"ersation, recoro~ by a small tajX! recorder secreted on invcstig.ator Gilc's back, Penney said he believes Ms wife set him up when they were married to act the house the¥ owned and au tus mone)'. "I've tncd everyth1n,i l can for a year to plead with the a;arl and all she wants to do is destroy me," he told Bobby "The only thina J haveldl isa large mortgage on tht' housr. he's wiped me out." As the tape rttordangs were played in court, Penney, wcanng a blue sport~ coat and t 1c. pressed his fi n&Ct"$ to h" temples At times, he brushed ttal"I from his eye1. What do-you llktt aboul tbto Dall)' Pilot~ Whit don't you like? Call the •m rat Ith and )'OOr me11a1t •Ill~ rece1rd d, ttanU'rlbed aad deJh·ertd to di approprtalt editor. • Tbt ume t•· wutn1 nrvlct ma)· be a d to rttord letter• to lbt cdllor o ID'J topic. Conlribaton 10 our Ltlkra c0Jum1 ma I l lade c cir utn aod t fepbo marnber for v r flt>allon. ~ drC!ul1tlon ullJ, please. Tell 01 •bit's on 'I ur mind. Gem Talk Bv J.C. HtMPHRJF,5 Cer111i~d CemologiJfot, ACS WEDDING RINGS ... wbo wun lbem? . -Old you know that more married men today wear wedding banda than at any time In history? Unllke many of their father&, today'• mar· rled men under 30 are "flrY llkety to be wearing a band. Seventy-five percent-of Amettcm bclderget en- gagement rlnga, and juat about all of them get wedding rlngt. There hat been a trend In recent yeara away from the matched engag• ment-weddlng ring Mt. In fac::t, 7 out of 10 American women now prefer lndlVldually4tytod wedding rlnga. lnttead or a matched Mt. Groome have a afmllar attitude. Textured gold band• have gained In popu- l1rlty In rec«1t yeare, blJt the otd- rasntoned, s»lllhed band 1t atlll tho overwhelming favorite. Thet• art aleo basket-weave dalgn1, matte flnltna and twtst pattern•. among othtfl. Almoat all wedding• nowad1ya Involved doubi. ng e«· emon1-. with 87 S*certt 10f the groom• and almott 100 perC*lt of th• brld Q'etllng wedding rlnge The "ring th1t bind•" a growtrrg tr8d11Jon that MYtJ ... mt to ION ha IPP8al In any oener•tlon of !')IW. l)'Wd M long brldtt and .;r00mt NY ••1 Oo", we can opect 4th gra,,ct Old 1radltlon 10 contln~ to grow. NEWEST &JUuntmd cfTOJhitJN/ DESIGN A WINNING PAIR LIKE THE TWO OF YOU She nd you ate a winning pair. then gave H good n you git ~ttt\ thla diamond wardrobe ring and pendant. 8oth feature mod rn channel .set diamonds splendldly moontect In precloua fourteen karat gold. F!om our Art Con&empo· Collectlon. Try It on today. wrONf SOAV oc TOllHi 10 1'184 e DCOD·SCIOUS e r1 ·o ( e az1n car This year's lrvlne Harvest Festival was the biggest In the event's 9-year his- tory./ AS California 'Burning Bed' docu- drama prompts hun- dreds of calls rom 6a1-- tered women./ A5 Nation Obese boy loses 100 pounds after his stomach Is stapled./ Al Students at Brown Uni- versity vote today on stocking suicide pills on campus./A4 World Archaeologists at the Louvre In Paris are battl- ing over finds.I A9 The Spanish ambassador to Lebanon Is kidnapped l,n Beirut./ A5 Home How can a consumer guard against Inter- ference on a cordless telephone? /81 - . Find out where to buy and how to use the latest ma~erlals for decorating at the Fabric Ftllr ./81 Sports John McNamara, who has told the Angels he won't return as manager forthe 1985season, re- portedly has told friends he'd love to manage the Boston Red Sox./D1 Things aren't expected to get any easier for the winless Orange Coast College football team Saturday afternoon./04 Entertainment An Americanized British farce Is lapping up the laughs at the Harlequin Dinner Playhouse.lie Bualnea Stiff com~tltlon Is forc- ing layoffs and shriveled profits on U.S. ftrmsln the midst of robust economic expanslon./87 lf NDEX Bridge 87 Bulletin Board A3 Business .......,...__._A 11· 12 catlfornla New• • AS c1 ... mees 05-1 CroatWord 07 th Notloea 88 Food C1·1'4 Help YourMlf 83 Home 81·2 HorOICope 06 Ann Lander• 83 Mutual Funds A132 NattonaJ Newa A6 Opfnion A10 Paparazzi 81 Police Log A3 Pubtk: Notic:.a 88, 0+.5 Sport• 01·4 Stoek Marketa A 14 TeleYtek>n 84 ThHttr• 84·8 w .. ther A2 Wortd Newt A5 .· /) Fluor to sell •t • SI e ID· Irvine land. however ByPlllLSNEIDERMAN OftheO.-,PlloC .... Fluor Corp. is preparing to sell its Irvine headquarters and surrounding undeveloped acreaae for $340 million, but corporate officials said the giant engincerin1 company will remain in its familiar green glass complex through a leasing arrange- ment with the new property owner. As a result. 3,200 Fluor employees, about 10 percent of the company's total work force, wiU continue to report to Fluor's existing Irvine facilities off the San Dieao Freeway near Jambonie Boulevard. Fluor has tentatively agreed to sell the property to Trammel Crow Co., a major Oallas.-bascd real estate de- veloper. The sale includes the office com- plex, I 05 acres of improved land. 32 acres of partially improved land where employee recreation facilities are located and 25 acres of unim- proved land, all bounded by the freeway, Jamboree Boulevard and San Diego Creek. Auor officials said tho company will show an after-tax profit on the sale of apprt>ximately S 180 million, which will be listed on earninas over a 10-ycar period. The deal ts be com- pleted in aoout six months. Auor purchased the land in 1974, built a two-million-square-foot pass- sbeathed complex to house its inter- (Pleue eee l'LUOR/A.2) One for the Tigers Detroit pltcber Jack llorrla (center) .. conantalated by teammatea Da•e Berlinan (left) and Lance ltarrlab att.;r 110~ tbe cllmuee fot• 3-2 TJctory o.er tbe San Dleto- Padrea ln tbe ftnt game of the 1984 World Serlm. Bee Sporta. Paae Dl, for det:alla. Deputy tells court he was hired to murder woman -·Suspect's lawyer claims entrapment by authorities By JEFF ADLER °' .. .,..,,...,. ..... An Orange County Sheritf s deputy who posed as an undercover hit man took the witness stand Tuesday to testify how he had been hi~ to kill the estranged wife of a 57-year-old Laguna Niguel contractor. Investigator Robert Giles de- scribed for a six-man, six-woman Superior Court jury how he tape Win prizes _011 grid Jiic1cs Daily Pilot readers who think Shey know a thing or two aboat pro- fessional football will be able to use \heir ~~-~-~!l~.th~ir ~iclcs to score cash · prizes in the Pilot s new Winner's Ci~le. The weekly football contest will pay $SO to the person who selects the bil)lest number ofwinnina teams and $2S and SIS to the runners-up. • Each week through the end ar the football season, a full-page listina ~f the week's pro games will appear in the WcdnC*lay edition of the Daily Pilot. For an ad<k'd edge, nationally known forecaster Joe Harris' .pftdic- tion wiU be included. Participants need onl)' Ject the winn:ff\1 tearn in each pmc and then mall their score cardt to the Daily Pilot. Entries mu t be po tmar cd no later than S p.m. Frida)~. he Monday Night FootbaJI pmc v. ill be used u the tic.bttaker: Football fans must not only p ck the winner t>ut must take a hot at the final ~ore. The £10 who comes the close l wans. The name of the winners will bC publi h(d an each week·~ Winner's Circle. Ca h pmc v.ill bC wa1u al the Dally Pilot offi 1n Costa M recorded severaJ meetinas an<l tele- phone calls during which defendant Frederick Penney allegedly arranged to pay $3,000 for the murder of his 14- year-old wife, Susan. His testimony came on the o~ning day of Penney's trial, wh1cb is expected to continue for the next two weeks in Judge Jean Rheinheimer's courtroom in "Santa Ana Penney, who has been held without bail in the Orange County Jail since his July 1984 arrest. is charged with one felony count of solicitation of murder. If convicted, he could be sentenced to a ma~mum six-year prison term. Frederick Pemaq Penney's lawyer, Christian Dillon of Dana Point. claims his client was (Pleue eee lmm>.SI/ A2) ......................... BantlnltODBeKllwdtmNl.U Vlda ... tedatMt__. prac:e11orwitll&copJ olb.er to-be-ptlbl1a¥4 book.""""""".._ architect in critical condition By DAVID BISHOP ...., .... c:.n J .... A Santa Ana man suffered ••massive .. head injuries and a br6ken back early lliis momioa when.his car went out of control on l.quna Canyon Road, crashed into i · ditch and caught ftre, police said. Tbe vehi~ exploded shortly after the motorist was pulled out of the wrccbge by off-duty Laguna Bea.ch police officer Lance Ishmael, and an unidentified man who~ driving by and saw the overturned vehicle with its engine on fire at 1:08 a.m. The accident happened on a straight stretch of road eboUt oac-- and-a-ha.lf miles inside Laguna city limtts, police said. Michael Eugene Brewer, 34. who was alone in the car, was Hsted in critical condition in the i ntcnsive care unit at Mission Viejo Community Hospital With a fractured spine and "m.anive bead injuries ... a hospital (Pleue 9ee LAGUNA/ A2) Newport putting brakes on beach-• ·road cruisers Ordinance being drafted to stop· motorists from constant party-seeking in their autos ByROBERTBYNDM.AN . °' .. ..., ....... A city ordinance that would put the brakes on cruising on Newport Beach's Seashore Drive and in other congested areas is being considered by city officials. • The City Council discussed a proposed measure Tuesday · that would enable police offioen to issue citations to motorisu who repeatedly drive up and down spegfied streets. The proposed ordinance was in- itiated by complaints last summer by residents living on Sea.shore Drive who were bothered by motorists cruising in their neighborhood look- . ing for parties, says Councilwoman Ruthelyn Plummer. The ordinance will next be con- sidered N-0v. 13 after City Attorney Robert Burnham drafts language to comply with a state law regulating cruisi111-That Jaw. although passed. docs oot go into effect until Jan. l , Burnham said. Burnham said the ordinance, if approved by the council, would allow police to establish specific an:a.s where cruising would be prohibi~ Tbosr streets Y.'OUld be marked with si~s and violators could be char&ed with infractions. .. I see at as a tool that ~ used when oeoessary,·• she said. .._We've heard compbants from the p(opJc on Seashore Ori" but I also kDOw McFadden Square area and the Balboa Pier business area also have problems with cruising." Plummer said the cruising problem as not hmi<ed to the summer months. ''It's no secret that Newport Beach has btoome a poP\Jlar attraction to people year-round, .. she said. •'This ordmancc would ·help with some of the problems that resuh." Anti-Prop. 36 fOes -etting organized in Orange County By JEFF ADLER °' .. ..., ...... Calling the rebate provisions of Wt· slashing Proposition 36 a "bribe" for propcrty~wning voters. a coaliuon of Orange County organiz.ations Tuesday announced they had banded together to fight the so-<:allod Jarvis JV initiative. "Pro~sition 36 is not Proposition 13 and it does anything but 'save' 13. Proposition 13 is alive and well and all Proposition 36 docs is to gsve a tu break to those who already pay the lowest taxes,•• said anome> Susan Trager, ch.airman of the Orange County anti-Proposition 36 orpniza- lion, an off-shoot of the Californians Against Proposiuon 36 campaign. 0 The Orange.County effort will be aimed at showing Mr. Jarvis is eoing too far this time. He's offenng a bribe lo voters to approve a rebate for themselves," Trager said. She said the county anti-36 effort is drawing support from many county groups. including the League of Women Voters, St. Joseph's Hospi- tal. the Orange County di",sion of the League of Cittes. several labor un- ions. water districts and parent- tucherassocia tions. The local campaikn will focus on (Pleueeee-PROP. 36/A.2) "·tts writer beats tlie odds against .being published ROBERT BARKER PlOPlt IN lHl N l ~S togohuclu~h 1thhim (Pl wan1t1tf A2) \ \ ·. urse admi~s drug thefts from hospitals in cqunty y RO T AR Otll!to.llt ....... A 3 l·)'t r--0ld nu~..ancstheti t ha con to tcalina the J)iio-killing dru morptunc and Demerol rrom ho piw · n Fountain Valley, Co ta M~ and • ta Arui., Fount.am Valley Dcu:ctive Dennis Minna said tod•~· Bn~t Lynn Tr11cy of Newpon Be ch admitted the ~ven buralaries or bWJ)ary attempts 1n the prescn~ of her attorney at an interview at Fountain Valley Police hcadquarten Wednctd&y. · Tr1cy also c:onfcssed to an at- tempted bu f) t H Hospt l in ' 1>0n dcd to t drtJ l)c said. 1 he nur..c allegedly uttd th nact method an all. ll~p1tal buraJane accordmi to Minn . She~ould tottu: me 1 atnoorof the ho pita! where he would find locked mobile medicin c rt~. Wh n oo one wu lookina he would roll them away and pry them open wath a screwdriv~ she kept in her purse. Minna alleged. - "I believe she n~s medical treat- ment for a drug problem. he id she had internal pres urcs and ~rsonal p~ltmi . but wouldn't elabor111e-," Mm , The u pc...·t, who aH ly nJected hcrst'lf with morphtne whale lJll in the Costa Mt-hospital. accordjne to Minna, wa~ arr; «td Saturda) after ho~pata1 official$ became u piciou when th y found bloody t~<tl that the-\I J)«l allegedly U d afttl CUl• ung her hand. • But the \I.Oman was released from J ii on hc-r own recoiniuncc, accord- 1na to Minna. and attempted lo steal drugs in Ho Memorial Hospital in Newpon BcJlch unday and dad steal n6rc.ot1~ at the Westtm Medjcal Center 1n Santa Ana the same da). Saddle back dean to undergo mental tests in murder case I By STEVE MARBLE An attorney for a college adminis- trator charJcd wnh the murder of has former wife said today his client will undergo a lenathy series of tests and evaluations to determine hts mental competency Donald Emil Dawson. 45, ap- peared briefly in coun Tuesday and pleaded innocent to first-degree murder charges. A preliminary hear- ing was set for Nov. l 3. The Irvine man was bandaged on the neck where he reponcdly slashed U.S. Judge Walter Ely dies Senior Judge Walter R Ely of the 9tb .U. . <?irctut C'ourt ~ A~. who as a lawyer was known for has . tmpassioned speeches to Junes, died at bis home Tuesday 10 Sunset Beach. C..usc of death was not immed1- ately.,known. Ttic 71-ycar-old Ely, who was appoanted by President Lyndon B. Johnson in 1964, became semi- retired JO 1979. Ely, a Tex.as native, served for a time as an assistant attorney JCneral lD bis home state bef orc JOlntn8 the Marine Corps in World War If. He won a Silver Star in Guadalcanal for rescuing two soldiers buried by shell blasts. After the war, Ely earned a master's • oflaw dC'jll'ee from llS(' and entered praCtJcc in Los Angeles ''-Th~ was no grcatCT JUT) talent He was a wonderful, wonderful lawyer:· recalled Jack Quann, a pas1 president of the Los An~eles Count~ Bar Assoc1at1on and Ely s former ta~ partner. Ely had ~rved as the president of the Los Angeles County Bar Assoc1a- t1on, was active 1n lhe State Bar and the Amencan Bar assoc1at1ons and was chosen a felJow of the Amencan College of Tnal Lawyers. He as su:-vaved by his wife. Evelyn. a medical doctor whom he met onl> last Chnstmas on a tnp to the Philippines; a son. William. by a previous marriage, and a sister. Eloise Sweeney of Brownsville, Te~as himsclfwath a razor blade last week at Orange County Jail. · A former policeman and an assis- t.ant dean at Saddleback College at the time of his arrest, Dawson is charged with fatalJy sbooung Dona May Dawson at her EJ Toro home on Sept. 15. Mrs. Dawson was a lonJtjme nursing instructor at the Mission Viejo community college where her ex-husband also was employed .. They were divorced in 1982 after a separ- ation years earlier. Dawson allegedly shol his wife sax l.lmes. using two dlfTCrenr -,guns, according 10 police reports. Officers said lhey found Dawson standing n~r bis wife's body when the~ arrived According to court records. Dawson told pohce where they could find lhe weapons and later said. "I shot her. I couldn't help It ' .Because of an allegation that Dawson armed h1m~lf and waited for his former wife to return home from her boyfnend's house:. the former policeman could face tht: dealh penalty Ron Brower. Dawson's attorney. said the court has given perm1ss1on to conduct a battery of tests to gauae his cl1tnt's mental state. FLUOR TO SELL LAND IN IRVINE .•. From Al national headquarters and domestic ena.inccnng opera lion. and moved an three years later _, Jn a prepared statement, Fluor Chairman David S. Tappan Jr. said, "Fluor remains computted to Irvine and Orange County 'fhe company's world headquaners and the Southern Cahfom1a en1mce-nna center wall remam in their current locations." Tappan added .. There were two pnncipal mouvaung factors m deci- ding to sell the facility It will provide the basts for further development of the complex. It will also enhance our financtal flexibility by generaung a substannal amount of cash for gen· eral corporate purposes. including the further reduction oflong-term debt." In its most recent financial report, Auor•s long-tenn debt was S643 ma Ilion. A year ago, its debt was $786 million. Fluor has been involved in a debt reduction program smcc its 1981 acquisition of St. Joe Minerals Corp raised the corporation's debt to more than $1 balhon. The eng.incenng firm suffered a 66. 7 percent drop in profits dunng the first three quarters of this year. But Fluor spokesman Rick Maslin said the current property sale "was not eam1ng.s-dnven. It was done lo fully realize lht' tremendous apprecia- tion on the property we own.·· He added that the anticipated real estate development of the unim· proved property around the corpor- ate headquarters 1s not Fluor's area of expertise. Mashn said the lease ap-eemcn1 with Trammel Crow wall give Fluor the option of remaining at the Irvine site indefinitely. LAGUNA CANYON ROAD CRASH ••. From Al spokesman said He was transported there by emergency medical hchcOJ> ter No one witnessed the accuienL But from evidence at the scene, lhe vehicle was traveling northbound about 50 to 60 mph when at swerved onto the nght shoulder, then turned bade onto the road through the oncoming lane. slammma into a dirt embankment on the far side. said Laguna Beach Sgt. Make Davis. The car then apparently flipped over the embankment and into the air, landing aboul 30 yards inside Irvine Co ranch property Sgt. Davis said the lack of skid marks indicate that the victim ma> PROP. 36 FOES ORGANlzED ..• From Al she added. have fallen asleep al the wheel Results of a blood test were not available. DaVls said the victim was unconscious when pulled from the car and never regained conscious- nes Brewer is an architect "with a las1 known address an Santa Ana," Da"1s said. 1978. unto br--eak through afte~ noon Coutal Tides TOO;llY o.cono low • ,, p Ill.. 0 • 8et'Olld 10 t4 p "' 4 • ~-'Y 4·0)a.m 10 Hein 4.&0pm 1051pm .. JFllQlt&ll n ti 0.MCI Aaplde 17 17 0...."• ,. • , HenlOtd 4 1 M "9lene 63 .. ~ 74 M ttoueton 7011~ ... 52 J~.-... 71 52 Jeoll~ 10 61 ~ eo u ~en, 10 61 LMVegu t5 41 Utlle Aocl\ 71 51 " se SI 41 ... $9 37 30 ee se tm 2-l 2-4 2-4 2-3 2 1·2 2-3 ..... ClnG1Mln _. .,. ,. .. '° ti " fl It .... .... 100 10 ., .. . .. '° ., u n " ,, 6J Yt M .. 47 7t M II 17 a .. 1• a u .. 77 11 .. .. 13 10 10 .. .. 10 ., .. .. a 1• • .. .... , 10 41 .. .. .... , " .. 1t II ti IO ft ., 10 " WRITER BEA TS THE ODDS ••• From Al and help him decorate has office I've watche<\.lhc fast-track attorneys and theirshenanipns(not 1n Marvin·s oflice )" Tbosc \henanigans, she said. pro" 1ded the inspiration for some of the financial finaghn~m her book. When she's not wnting. Vida 1s a technical notcrcader for court re- porters. reading and editing expert tnal testimony. She graduated from Cal State University DominJuez Hills in 1978 W'ltha bachelor's degree m English A flair for wnllngcame to the fore IO crcauve wnllnJclasscs. Actuallysitt1nadownand wntinga novel seemed to be just too mind- bo&Jlmg. but Marvin persuaded her to gs ve 1 t her best shot. "I couldn't have done It without my hu band. You need a tremendous ego. "He'slffw>myfront-hnecditor He wasaJournahst during the Korean War and he hu a wonderful editorial eye. "We talk plot and charactcnzation We talk 1t out chapler by chapter and then I do as I please." shesa1d with a laugh. Vida embarked on her m1d-hfe career change six years ago. She's wnnen two books that haven't sold. a mv'iterv adventure Delly Piiot Dell very le Ouarenleed called "Run Jennie Run" and another adventure novtl about a woman attomer. called "Who's Fredenck SachsT A third novel. "A Flight to Barcelona" 1s m the hands of put>- hshers. lt'sabout a Jewish woman and a doctor and two small children caudtt in Hitler's Germany. lftherc'sone th inf she's learned 1n her wntingcarccr. its damed hard for a first-time novelist to be published. She started out with a West Coast agent and when that didn't gel anywhere, she turned to a New York agent "who would be clo~r to the source (pubhshmg houses.) The) waneanddaneeachother.1hey (pubhshers)don't hke anyone outside New York City." One agent kept one of her u n- publtshcd books one year ''And then she told me. 'J don't handle this kind ofbook. ·And I had three years invested in it." Vida said she gotanotber literary agent who had the book three days. "Shesa1d she loved it and couldn't put 11 down and that a publishtr would snap 1t up. She said she was always nght," Vada said. "lt got to bet 1 me for a dec1s1on and I didn't breathe all week But the answer came back and the answer was no. The phrase thal kepl com mg back over and over again was that l had no track record. ''But my husband said, 'you·rc having fun. you'rchavmia ball . Enjoy the roTier«>aster nde. • .. Vida go ta break at the end ofl 983, when she submitted her book "Scam" to the Harper and Row publishina house. "The publisher couldn't use it, 1t turned out, because the marketing people wouldn't take a chance oo a first-time author. But he said be liked it and wanted to help me. It was a real break. Hedidn'tgct one cent for1l. He was a real human being." In Just a matter of days, Macmillan called and told l'.ter the good ocwi: "Marketing says we can do it. .. With that announcement, shejoiried a group of249 first-t1me authors to be pubhsbed this year. That'sa pretty select numberbecausethereareabout 30,000 books published each year, she said. Vida said she's sold pa&Jttbook nghtsof"Scam"andsaidsbebas been told the novel should make a good movie. Vida will speak at Hunlitt1con Beach Fnends of the Library mem- bership luncheon Friday at the Cen- tral Library. 7 I 11 Talbert Ave. Reser-{ vat1onscan bcobtamed by calling 842-4481, Ext. J.S. ORANGE COAST' Cfrcufetlon 714/142-4333 Daily Pilat H. L. Schwartz Ill PJbhsher Cleaalfl~ 8dvertfslng 7141"2·5871 All other departm•nt• 842-4321 MAIN OFFICE IJ() w ' l ' <I Co '• ...... CA "''' .,.,.,., &o • 'J'-0 Colla MMe 1,;A 11262ti IM'r'""' llj33 Oo~ C:O.t ~ ~Y lllO ., ""'°" ~''"'°" '°'°'"" mao., or 80¥tfl_. ""' •~ ""'""' ".-Y be •.,ptocM:ed *"l"OIJ! spetW per "-'O'l "' COC>y<qll °""* Clrculetlon Tel•phonH Rosemary Churchmen Controller ~l)nd CIUS pouy INlod 81 Colla Mela CMlor"" PS 14A ~I Svo5o<J>''°" 1))-ca•r• S4 1~ "10nllllp br ma loll 'lO l'Tl(llllll't MO<.I 0<811\1'" (. x~ Ir "'.... 141....SU I l1><11,.N'lfJr! ......._ Stephen F. Carezo Production Manager Donald L. WUllama Circulal1on Manager VOL n . NO. 284 fund raising. providing speakers 10 1.:ommun1ty organizations and run- nm~ newspaper advertisements op- posing the in1t1at1 ve. which Trager called "'iant'iter " Another attorney who attended the afternoon news conference, Stephen Nill. explained he opposes the measure because 1t will "make tho'K' people who pay the highest taxes pa> for a tax break for those who alrcad)' pay the lowest taxes," Nill said The state Leg.islat1vc analyst cs11-r;::==============:::;--:;:==================:::;:::;:::;:::::::=::-mates passage of Proposition 16 "1 he fact 1!. that in J 978. ( 1he t.axpaycrs were) supporting Pro1> os1t1on 13 Today. we all arc opposed to Prop 36 beausc 1t as unflllr, takes $500 to $800 million from our ch1ldrens' education and results in a tax increase It doesn't make sense." Propos1t1on 36 was written b> tax- opponent Jan as to clo~ loopholes he claims governmenl has used to subvert Proposition 13 his earlier landmark tax initiative paucd 1n would mean sovernments around the state would be forced lo repay about SI 7 billion an one-time tax rebates or credits to property owners The measure also would set hm1 - tat1ons on special assessments and fees that orponents claim would hamper loca government's abahty to provide buac services lo cono;t1· tuenb MURDER-FOR-HIRE PLOT TOLD •.• Prom Al enlrapped by investigators who pushed Penney into the murder-for- h1re scheme. Dillon, an has opening statemenl, compared the actions of authonues to television's "A-Team." He told Jurors. ''but for poli~ ~onmci. lhcre wouldn't have been any cnme " Penney, 1 former New York City fireman. was 'arrested by Shentrs deputies July 2, shortly after he was shown faked phot<>vaphs o( his w1fe ~uppcmdly lyina d don a 9lab at the county coroner·~ office. Deputy Distnct Attorney Wallace Wade told jurors Penney wa\ put in contact with undercover 1n· \'Cltiplo by in informant who had ht(ncndtd Penney about six months ther. The informant, John Burton. pve Penney the tel phone number of a orofi aonal li:iller. 1n actuah~ an Just Call 842.:6086 f untraceable "cool" telephone al lhe Sheriffs office used by undercovt-r investigators. Wade said. Penney told the "hit man ... whom he knew only as Bobby, that he wanted to arnn~ a "permanent accident" for his wife t>Ctautt .l\e was takmJ everything he had and de- stroym4 him in their prolon1ed and batter divorce proceedings. accordina to several of the tape rccordinas played for the JUry. "It has to look hke a total. total accident. I want it to be permanenl," Penne>· tells Bobby 1n a telephone conversation recorded June 14, .. It must, mu t look lake an accidcot caust 1f at doesn't, they'll (the pohcc) bc all over me." He added, "I'm scared bccau~ r ve never done anything hke th1 an m> hfc." da' latt1. Pcnnc) met with Bobby in the parking lot of .-i . ..aauna Niguel rcSLauranl to arnnac the killina and told the undercover depu- ty he had tncd to ict back together with his W1fe because he loved her "very much " Durfng the converution, recorded by 1 small tape recorder sccrctcd on invcstiptor GJlc's back, Penney uid he believes h11 wife set ham up when they were mamed to att the house they owned and aU hts money. "I've toed rverythinJ I can for' 1 )car to plead W1\h ttfc 11rl and au he want to do is destroy me," he told Bobby. "The only thin& I have left is large mortpgc on the houtc. he' wiped me our:· A5 the tape: rttordinp were pla)'ed 1n coun, Penney. •earina a blue potu coa1 and tie. pl'C'S d ht~ fin tJ to has temple r time , he brtis ed t rs from hi\ e) Gem Talk //1 J < Ill ~f PllR/£..f:, <.'t-rttflf"d Crmol~rct. 1(,''> WEDDING RINGS ... •bo we.an tbem'! Did you know that more married men today wear '#9ddlng bands than at any tlm. In hlatory? Unlike many of tholr fathelt, today'• mar· rled mon under 80 are very Uk9fy to be . Wtarlng a . bJ.!'ld. Sev.,,ty-flve pef'C.nt of American brld .. get en- ga~nt rings, and Ju•t •bout all of thorn g t W9ddlng rlngt. There hit been 1 tr.,,d In recent 19ara away from the matcf\ed engage.. ~t-weddlng ring aet. In fac1, 1 OU1 of 10 American women now prefer 1lndlv1du1Uy-1tyted wedding rings, In tead Of I matched Mt. Grooms have a mltar attitude. T extur9d gold band• hive ga nod In popu- larity tn l«*\t )'NII, but the Old· f oneo, polilMd band ta 111 the oYetWheJmlng favorite. There e a1&0 b t· ve d na. matte n and twtlt patterr'8, among oth9't. Almott • 111 w ddlng1 .nowad ya lnvolvectdoub ting C*· emonl • with 87 S*Olf'lt 01 the grooma · d m t 100 percent ol the bf d gett ng wedd r1ng1. The ''rtng that nd " a grow ng tr ditlon th t ntwt eeema to JOH It• eppul In any generat on of new- tywed Al long brldN and groom• aay "I Do". we c expect grand o d u.i lion to contlnu to gr NEWEST rZJ«unNvf cVtiUNb DESIGN A Wl_NNING PAIR LIKE THE TWO OF YOU 401 •