HomeMy WebLinkAbout1984-10-24 - Orange Coast PilotFour sightings
of tot reported
Uule Launi Bradbury, m1 inaAlnd
pre urned kidnapped from a family
campsite Thursday, may have been
seen wuh her 11~ kidnapper tn the
Ontario area, San Bernardino County
Sheriff deputies 111d today.
Four &eparatc witnesses called
deput1e1 to rcpon aceiog the S-year·
old Huntington Beach airl in the
com1'4ny of a balding. aray•batrcd
man in his SO. Who has a stocky build
and a beer belly.
Detective Samuel Pullock said investigators have not positively
confirmed the aiJbunas. .
(PleueMeMl881JfO/A2) Laua~
Foreca1t1 on A2
Searchers quit;
boaters still lost
Ooast Guard finds
no trjice of missing
Newport sailors
Th search for two Ncwpon
Beach men lost in rough seas
turday was called off Tuesday
maht by the Coast Guard after
searchers criss-crossed about
13,500 square miles without suc-
cess.
Two Coast Guard helicopters
and a search plane swept the
'1'hey ve .searched the entire
rca nd mply couldn•1 find the
two med or the boat," Coau
Ouard Po worn n id
Sl~ven Balley, 25. nd Norm
Seton~ 22 both expcnenced
sailors, left Catalina Island Satur· da>: afternoon in a 12-foot motor skiff bound for Newport when
they ran mto rouah seas about 12
males east of Avalon Harbor.
COAST 1111101
-WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 24. 1984 ORANGE COUNTY CALI FORNIA 25 Cf ~TS
NB .restaurateur held in coke bust
By STEVE MARBLE
Of ... Dllf .........
The owner of a well-known New-
PQrt lBeach restaurant and one of his
employees were arrested Tuesday in
what was dcacribcd u a John De
Lorean·style cocaine bust in which
federal agents allegedly supplied the
drug.
Alejandro "Alex" Lovera, the 2S.
year-old owner of Anthony's Pier
Two Restaurant, was arrested in
Santa Ana after reportedly handing over $157,000 for a quantity of
A twin-engine plane
makes an emergency
landing at John Wayne
Airport./ Al ..
«<-~=·~=-:·:·:·:-:-:·:-;.x-:-:-):-:<-:·:-:-~:~:«~:~:
California
A hug and a kiss between
Nancy Reagan and Steve
Garv~ prompts a ques-
tion from a youngster./ M
Soclal Security checks
will be a bit fatter come
January./A4
The top general In the
Phlllpplnes la 'on leave'
after Benito Aquino as-
sassJnatlon report Is
Owner
held in
.arson
Police say landlord
· pqured flammable
1 utd inside home
By NY SAAVEDRA
Of .. ~ ........
Pol:cc arc boldma a SO.ycar-o1d
-laDdlord who they believe poured a
flammable liquid inside a house he
owned in Costa Mesa and set the
sttuctuie ablaze early Tuesday mom·
i~o one was home at the time of the
fife and there were no injuries. Harold Uoyd Schumacher of Costa
Mesa was in custody today at city jail
on suspicion of igmtina the fire that
destroyed a four-bedroom house at
71 S V 1ctoria St.
made public./ AS--=-'--
Schumacher wu booked for in·
vestigation of arson after voluntarily ~ubmitting to questioning TueSdaY.
i.ftemoon at police headquarters. Bail
was set at S2S,000.
Rome
cocaine, officen reported. Also arrested was Jose Luis Victor,
19, who was identified u a cook at the
Bayside Drive restaurHl->in Newport
Beach.
Officers said they confiscated the
cash from Lovera as wcU as a 1984
Mercedes Benz and a l 983 Ford
Bronco. It was not clear whether the vehi~les were ~ of the alleged cocaine transacuon.
The so-called "reverse stin1 opcr-
ation" was carried out by Newport
Beach police. the U.S. Drug Enfo~
ment Admimstration and the FBI.
OfflCCf'I said the operations was
approved by the U.S. Attorney's
office in Los AqcJes.
The amount of cocaine allegedly
offered to the restaurant owner was
not made public. It also was not made
clear bow or when Lovera came to the
attention offederal drug qcnts.
Lovera. who li vcs in the posh
Cameo Shores community· Corona
deJ ar. was being held = ~th~uilt bail at the Nev.port
Ctty JI •
The native of .Vcoc:zucla will be
arraigned this week io U.S. District
Court.on a federal charge ofauempt-
ing to possess cocaine with the intent
to distribute iL
Victor. a Santa Ana re5idcnt. is
bieing :held without bail on an ident-
ical charge.
One seotesman dacribed the ar-
a being similarlO the $24 million
De iLottan coca•ne bust in that
lawmen ~Wlied Oleo ~ and the
suspect lhc money.
De Lorean was found innocent oc
federal dl\11 chaqes A~ 16. Jury
members ind.icated they fdt lhat De
Lorean had been en~ b)' lbe government and were biabJy crnic:al
of tactics used by aaents.
·Badham
shifts
to attack
'You want to add,
you want to cut,'
he tells Bradford
By ROBERT HYNDMAN or .. ..., .......
n &marked ~:sbift.. eoo.
grnsman Robert .Badlwn root lhe
offensive to combat lbc c:ballcnac of Democrat Carol Ann Bradford at a
pu .. Clebaie Tuc:stay ni&ht at UC
Irvine.
Until the debate, Badham bad
generally refrained from attackin& bis
challenaer for the 40tb Co~ooal
District scat while Bradford has
repeatedly questioned the four-term
Co~·s stance on national
dc!cn.e issues, bis absenteeism from
Conpeu and his &cquent trips
abroad.
At Tuesday's debate; however. Badbam aa:med Bradford of .
· to csiabli new social ~
while cuttina the deficit and 'bal~ anci.na tbc budget. ••you want to add and you want to
cut." be told Bradford. .. You can't
have at both ways. .. As their offices become
second homes, Yuppies
want more 'perceived
amenities' Jn decor./ Al
Detective Dari Hore said inter·
views with various informants led
police to Schumacher. Hogue would
not elaborate on the investiption
into the 2;30 Lm. fire, but did say a
motive bad not been established for
. (Pl-..e Me OWIUR/ A2)
__ ............. -...N ......
lnft9tllator TomPlpee of the ea.ta llaa pollcetake. photoe at8Celleof flre.
Badham also said Brldford's pmty
affiliation ties her to presidential
(Pleue-BADBAll/A2)
Jl'ood
Don't be spooked by
preparing treats for
Holloween. They're a
simple trlck./C1,4
Sporta
Front-running Newport
Harbor and Saddleback
are heavily favored In Sea
View League football
games this week./81
Entertainment
Alan Bates la a "double
81Jent" these days, play-
ing a apy on stage and
screen./ A10
INDEX
Br~
Bute.tin Board .,..,,...
CIJHOf'nla Newa
Ctaalfttd
COmk:a
Croeeword
FWtur.
f OOd
Horoecope
Ann l.Mder•
Mutu.1 Fundl
National News rl.Og
PUbllC NotlCM
C'Mnete T..._on
Theelel1
Wlllther Wo;td.._.
06
A3
B-4-5
A4
03·5
06
05
AS-9
C1-10
CM
A9
84
A4 A7
A3
83,02
81--3 ae
Al A1Q
~
CM homeowners
oppose fwy route
Residents accuse business Interests
-~--=---~=--of pushing road east of Newport Boulevard
By TONY SAA VEDIU
Of .. OelJ .......... Residents aod property owners
along the proposed route for the four·
mile Costa Mesa Freeway extension
accused local business grc>ups and
politicians Tuesday of tryipa
to .. railroaa·• die project ihrou&}i the
city.
.. Nobody put into the record what
the residents of Costa Mesa want.
This freeway south of Bay Street is
bcina railroaded past the citizen$,·•
.said Evan Krewson of Costa Mesa.
The accusation was made Tuesday duri~ the final h~ before a
member of the C'alifomia Transoor·
(Pleue eee IBSAJfS/ A2)
Dru'gtheftsleadto
securitx_ revisions
The recent arrest of a Newpon
Beach nune-anesthetist an connec-
tion with the al~ theft of ~werful
n1rCOtiC1 from five area holPftals has
cau.ed admini11taton to ~View their
pol10es for safeauartlin& the distnbu.
tion of dflllt..
While one loeal ho pita) IClmini
lrator •YI security measura have
already been tiahteMd ft>llowina the
amsi of 31·~ 8ridldt ,Lynn
Tracy. others say lhey have re·
examined thtucxmina poliaes 101ee 1fmore can be done. 'rhey till ldmat. however, that
dNp can and do end up misaina
despite the best ofteeunty meuum.
Accordiq to .Pohc;e. ~ alleled·
ly wheeled m&ilt mcd1C1nt carts
· contaanana the palnkiUana druat
mol'phtne ana :oanCrOJ ao lttlided
robm1. whttc ahe pned them open
with a screwdriver .
.. h's amlllna how much of this
JOCSon;'saysTom Richard adman·
11trator of Costa Mesa Medical
Center Hospital, where Tracy was
arrested after alkaedly tr') ina to teal
SI vials of painb1ltrs frOm 1 locked
medacane tra).
"Wr're a smaUcr hospital so n's not
as much ofa problem, but also do
cve,ryth1~we can to ICtep the d
ocked up Richards ad
At COiia Mesa. tht cans ool\tainana
the dn.ws are wheeled from room to
room but are left locked ln the
ballwa just outiidc the doOr while
the dnap are bt1na daspented
RicMrdl said ibt mall of the
hospeJal -99bcds -allows h1 I OQ.
nurv 1t1ft"to keep a dote eye on the can About five) • he wd, a man
Tbom••Rlley
ROBERT
HYNDMAN
Focus ON THE N E~s
mmun1-
aUG/A2)
OC smokin ban
to be consi ei:ed
for workplaces
By JEFF ADLER
Of ..............
Calling cipreue smokiQ& an un-
disputed public health hazard, the
Orange Count)' Board of Supcn Ison
on TUcsday darectrd county officials
to draft an ordinance that would
establish moking uideliDCS 1n both
pu c and private 'A'Or\pl:i~.
Supcn'isors voted unanamousl) to
consider such an action and rec·
ommeodcd county officlab. in con-
junction with the county be.a.Ith
officer. study laws enac1Cd by other
counties and cities around the co\lD-
~ Los~ City Council has
bCcD considcri.!ta W!lilat le.gislatioo
for sevcm weCki aud :is expected
Pleue-8llOJWfO/A2)
Woman pulled
from flaming car
Rush-hour accident f otoed CHP to close
Costa Mesa Freeway lanes for 30-inlnutcs
..
MESANS OPPOSE ROUTE •••
PromAI · Co ta Mc and Newport Beach, the
local chamber of commcroe. the Ora~ Coumr Tran poration Com-mission as wet s the state.
Clear, slightly cooler Thursda
llUOn Comma ton on .. 'h th r lo Newport Boulevard pcnor
route the frecw }' to the ca t of A venue.
ewpon Bo~le .. ·ard instead of lhe The preferred route. reccntl)
west. cho n from eiaht ollcmauvcs re-Roug}\l) i60 people. mostl~ prop. viewed in four•)'Cat environmental
cny owners alo the castcrlr_ route, tudy. would send 'the frteway eaSl of crowded Co ta csa It) Qounctl N 8 I rd 11 o h 8S chamben for n I I th bour plea before ewport ou eva ' 11 ug
•tate Comm1ss1oner \\alter lqalls to horn and 40 businesses.
keci> the rxtcn ion from plowmg Accordi1tgto1he5tudy,thcadopted thrOu&h tht1r homes and bullnesscs. route would displace I, I l 8 residents
Homoo~ners IU'ICd tho com-'\l\hale the route recommended by
ma$$ion not to bc1"ayed bybusine$S stat Department of TransPQnation
.,.oups that they saad were pnmarily would take the homes of 219 people.
made up of people Jivmg outside Both routes would ~join Newport
Costa Mesa. Boulevard nenr Industrial Way, stop.
"1be he nng was called to take ping before tbe border of Newpon
public testimony on propo 1 to Beach. ,, abandon the route adopted IS years After numerou pubhc hearings
ago. That route would plow through and workshops, the easterly route was
607 homesand l S6 businc: scs west of endorsed by the city councils for w •
However, pro~y owners charged
tho endorsements were made
without the support of the Costa
Mesa re idc.nts. who maintained the
f rceway should not branch east or
west ner coming through I.he New-
port Boulevard ditch that endll nea_r
Bay Street. ,
They argued the c:ttension should
cathcr end at Bhy Strctt or sho
travel straight through NeWPQrt
Boulevard, an option that was drop-
ptd by Cal trans because of utensive
detouring that would be needed for
the traffic displaced by the lengthy
freeway constructio'n.
BADHAMATTACKSBRADFORD .•.
Prom Al
• candidate Walter Mondale's policie
"You can't run and hide fr um
Mondate•s tax hike. You can't run
and hide from Mondale•s unilateral
11uclear freeze," Badham said durina
thr 75-minutc debate.
"I'm noi committed to a tax incrca~. I' believe we're stilt in a.
recovery, not a growth l)Ctiod." she
said. "But we can have (pay for) new
pro&raJ11s by gcttini the Wast out of
govemmrnt. espec1ally 1n the Pen-
tagon."
mva!iion of Lebanon and the
massacre of innocent refugees near
Beirut. In a prepared statement distributed
by her campaign aides, Bradford id
her comments had to be taken in the
context of when they were writltn.
Tide.
0.6 u 01 0 I
~em~ratarea
SuRF R£PORT
l -- ---
Weathering jeers while al5o
promptina applause from the largely
student audience, Badham defended
bis active roles on armed forces
lo rcsp<msc 10 a Que~tion on the
U.S. trade deficit, Badham said the
recovery bas produced a strong dollar
that, 1n : thne, will bring a better
balance between imports and exports.
Bradford aocused Badham of beirl§
Pres1dent Reagan's "errand bOy
rather than attending to the local
needs of the 40th district Badham
responded saying, "lfl can bC called
an errand boy for the president of the
United State, though tt be derogatory
. .. so be it."
.. ... GI 41
0 SI M 42
42 2$ 18 611 83 17 10 67 69 54
88 &2
411 40
71 15
48 ~
... 42
67 52
M 61 13 17 18 ,.,
41 28 82 17 $1 &1
Extended 9118 1-I 1-2
1·2
1·1 1·2
i committees and said defense spend-
ina bas indeed increa~. but not as
rapidly as that of social programs.
Bradford. seeking her first public
office, emphasized . her commitment
to nuclear disarmament. education,
the preservation of the environment
and women's issues.
"I say it's time for a bilateral,
mutually verifiable nuclear freeze,"
Bradford said. "It's time for a retum
to the negotiating table."
Bradford also said she does not
necessarily advocate increased feder-
al spcndina.
In the meantime. be said, Ameri-
cans should purchase American-
made products wben possible.
"I drive an American car," he said.
"My,ppponent can't say that."
Bradford's stand on support for
Israel, which was first raised Monday
night at a Fountain Valley candidates
forum, was introduced again Tues-
day.
Badham produced a letter written
two years ago by Bradford that call~
for cutting off military and economic
aid to Israel in the wake of the
OWNER HELD IN ARSON •••
From Al "
Badham said his two priorities if
returned to Congress would be a
continuation oftheeconom1c policies
initiated by the Reagan Adminis-
tration and a preservation of the
current defense programs.
Bradford spoke in favor of in-
creased teacher salaries, pay based on
comparable worth, support of the
Equal Rights Amendment and the
clean-up of toxic waste sites.
Winds down
power lines
in Costa Mesa
From 1&aff aad wlte reportl
Some 2,250 Costa Mesa homes and
businesses were amon' the 13,000
Southern California Ed1son Co. cus-
tomers in Orange County who lost
power Tuesday when strong Santa
Ana winds blew trees into power lines.
The strong winds rushing doWTl the
I l.t 6w.I d!NcllOn. _,,'"'-'
mountains and across Southern Cali-
fomia will calm by Thursday under
mostly clear skies, the National
Weather Servi~ aaid today.
Power outages were also rcpQrted
in Santa Ana. Orange and Fullenon,
uid Edison spokesman Ken Bellis.
Power was restored to all but ~
homes by late Tuesday afternoon.
the suspected arson.
He said informants told pohce
Schumacher had apparently planned
to renovate the house, estimated to be
at least 25 years old.
restaurant on Harbor Boulevard.
He rented bedrooms within the
Victona Street house; however, only
one room was leased at the time of the
fire.
bad been poured.
Administrative Fire Chief Jim
Richey said the house was fully
engulfed when 14 firefighters anivcd
in the early morning darkness. It took
them about 30 minutes to brinJ the
flames under control, Richey said.
DRUG THEFTS PROMPT REVISION •••
Fire officials set the damage from
the blaze at $50,000 for the home and
$30,000 for its contents.
Police reponed that Schumacher
was a longtime property owner in
Costa Mesa and had once operated. a
The sole tenant, identified as
Mildred Place. was away during the
blaze.
Hogue said fire investigators dis-
covered the blaze was set in several
spots . where an unidentified liquid
He said a representative from the
Red Cross office in Santa Ana arrived
a few ~ours later to help Place find temporary housing.
SMOKING ORDINANCE ORDERED •••
From Al
ado~t an ordinance govemme smok-
ing tn private workplaces at its next
weckll:.,.D'lecting.
TH!". Orange County measure. as
did its Los Angeles counterpart. is
likely to stir a storm of protest.
especially from r~presentatives of the
tobacco mdustry.
.. we•re all on the bandwagon on
this one," board Chamnan Super-
visor Harriett Wieder noted after
Supervisor Bruce Ncstande suggested
that guidelines for smolrin& in county
buildings be extended to cover pn-
vate workplaces throughout the unin-corpora~ po.ruons of the county.
The discussion arose as superv1S0rs
decided to touJb.en the county's
smoking ordinance, which requires
county depanrnents and agencies to
develop smoking guidelines aimed at
provtding a .. clean air environment" lar ptherina spots, Nestande said.
for the county's l l,000 employees. Supervisor Roaer Stanton, who
.. Smoking is a public health issue describedhimsclfasaformer1moker,
-not a political one," said Super-said people have ~o respect the rip ts
visor Thomas Riley in recommend-of others to a healthy environment."
ing that tbe county develop more And Supervisor Ralph Clark, indicat-
strinsent smoking guideline~ for cm-ina he would support the motion,
ployces. "This board bas a responsi-characterized himself as a· "born-
bility to see that county employees are again non-smoker." Of the five
free from the harmful effects of supervisprs, only Nestande said he
second-band smoke." never smoked.
Nestande, who called smoking a The boaf\! first enacted an ordi-
"serious health hazard," said the nance governing smokin~ .in county
issue is one that pits a person•s rights buildinp in 1975, but 1t has been
against another person's lifestyle. troubled by defiant emptoyces, the
He said he wants to find out within improper placement of signs desig-
90 da)'s how well such ordinances arc natina smokina and non-smoking
working elsewhere and how they arc areas and county managers who
enforced. The ordinance he en visions failed to understand their respon-
would govern not only the privtte · siblitics in developing smoking poli-
workplace, but restaurants and simi-cics, Riley said.
~ .
MISSING GIRL SPOTTED? ••• From Al ...
From Al
ty Hospital tha~ was allegedly hit
twice brTracy, on Sept. 28 and Oct. 1
A tota of 121 individual doses of
morphine and Demerol were taken.
"We have tightened up on the
security, but l'o rather not go into
detail about it in the newspaper,".
Myer5 said.
Mary Newbold, director of nursing
at Humana Hospital in Huntinaton
Beach, sa~d a disciplined s~tem of distributing drugs keeps a tight con-
trol on painkillers like morphine and
Demerol.
At Humana. the supplies on drug
carts arc checked at the end of each
nursing shift to make sure the amount
dispensed matches the amount m1sg,;.
ing from the cart. Also, narcotics are
kept in a separate locked drawer on
the carts with only one key available
to open it. ·
.. If there's any discrepancy. the
nurse docsn•t go home until it's
cleared up," Newbold said.
Nor arc the carts wheeled from
room to room as they arc at other
hospitals. At Humana, the physical
layout of the hospital allows the cart
to be left at tbe nurses' station. The
nurses cany the drugs to the rooms on
trays, Newbold said:·
"Ours is a very. very tight system,"
she saya. "But anybody who works
with hospitals who is being hOl\C$l
wiU tell you that drugs sometimes
tum up missing. If someone is out to
get the drugs, he can probably be
He said a man was seen watching
children when laura and her parents,
Mike and Patty Bradbury, arrived at
the campsite at the Joshua Tree
National Monument near Twen-
tynine Palms. The man, who re-
ponedly drove a dark blue van, left
the area at exactly the same ume the
tittle girl vanished. Pullock said.
hypnotized and provided "helpful
information.••
The search by an 18-man task force
is conccntratina on the upper and
lower desert areas and in western
parts of the county that include
Ontario, Montclair, Fontana and
Rialto, PuUock said.
in the search for his daughter.
The Hilltop Nursery school, 1259
Victoria St., Costa Mesa, which Laura •
attended. is boldina a paper drive
l'hrusday and Friday.
A truck will be in the parkina lot
both days and school officials arc
aslcing for contributions of news-
papers and magazines.
Just Call
642-6086
Pullock said shenfT deputJes, "who
are responding to every lead and
every call." rece1 ved I 000 telephone
calls Monday about the apparent
abduction. He said Laura's father was
Mcanhwile, friends and associates
of the Bradburys are scheduling fund-
raisingevents. Mike Bradbury, who is
a a self-employed furniture maker,
hasgive~~work to spend time at the
camp h uarters, hopina to assist
And on Saturday, friends and
neighbors will hold a garage ·sale
starting at 8 a.m. at 1646 Samar Place,
Costa Mesa. Proceeds will go to the
Bradburys.
PEPPER IN LEISURE WORLD •••
i: J'romAl
Speaking to a near capacity crowd
al Leisure World's Clubhou~ No. 3.
Pep\>C:r was stumping for Democrauc
prcs1dent1al candidate Walter Mon-
dale and h1s running mate Geraldine
Femlro as well as Carol Ann Brad*
·ford. the Democratic challengei:. of
Rep. Robert Badham , R-Newport
Beach, m the 40th D1stnct.
"If Walter Mondale and Gerald me
Ferraro are president and vice presi-
dent. and you give us a Democratic
Congress. I will 1uarantee you on my
honor that Social Securit)'. benefits
will not be cut. Medicare wdl provide
more care at less cost to the govern-
• ment and the people covered and
' we'll have a more sound and prosoer-
ous economy," Pepper promised in
capping a ramblin• half-bour speech.
Pepper appealed to the fond
memories of the elderly audience,
mentioning former Pfesidcnt F.rank-
hn D. Roosevelt and the New Deal
policies that gave binh to Social
Security benefits and other social
programs.
Roosevelt's name elicited chcc~
from the white and pewttr~haired
crowd. And severil nodded their
vigorous aar«ment when Pepper
assailed Prcsjdent Reapn and the
Republicans, safina their policies arc
out-of-touch with the Amcncan
people. "No longer do lher, feel &he
pull of tbc pcople·s need, • Pepper
said.
The Democratic Party, Pepper
said, doesn't disagree with President
Reagan on the need to contain the
cost of social proarams. 11 is the
methods the president has chosen -
methods that hun the elderly and
others who need help -that Demo--
tcrats cannot condone, be said.
Pepptr urged members of the
audience to vote and to help rally the
suppQn of other1 for Democratic
candidates mcludina Bradford.
Those who arc "walk.in& doWTl the
last p_art of the long Journey of life,''
can 111 atTord Republican p0hcics that
cost them more but give them less.
Pcpper5a1d, .
ORANGE COAST Clrculatlon 71•1M2..u33
Dally Pltot
Oeltvwy
11 OuarantMd
M~ l'tidly " po.I «! llOI ~ IV°"' ~ by 630r>m Call)el1••7P!l'I
Al'!CI your CllflY ... 1:111
fO
Daily Pilat
H. L. Schwartz Ill
PubhSh""f
• RoHmary Churchman
control r
tephen f , Car zo
Prooucton
Mana r
Don1ld L. WUHam1
Olrcut lion
Mang r •
c1 .. 1m.d M¥et119tno 11•1ea-se11
Alt otMr depertmentt M2.a21
MAINOfftCE
330 I y St Gotta ~ CA
MJli! tOdl Oo• lf,&Q Ilml• Mesa CA 92tl 6
YOL'7,NO.-
Gem
Talk
Rl· J.C. l/UMPlfRIF.S
Ce;tifir.d Cemolosist, AC
STAR WARS TECHNOLOGY
mN•ure• the glitter
The taser and ttwt computer. two
areas of technology that we often
ueoclate with the exploration of
outer space, are now befng used to
measure the "Inner space" of
diamonds. A pair of Minnesota
ldentlstt are using laser beams to
grade diamonds. U1lng the aame
technique Which locates defects In
artificial heart valves, they ''ahoot" a luer beam Into a diamond to nnd
tnclu11on1 (tiny defects) In
diamonds. When the laHr llgh1
1tr kes an lnctualon, It tcatters and
1 refracts. "Thia refraction la projected
onto a ecreen, where It can be
anatyitd and "grad9d.'' The
analylla 11 now done vltually, but
the eclentlsts are working on a way
to haw a computer .n8Jyzt the light
pattema. This I• •II atHI In the 8X•
perlmentel ltege, bUt the ICieotlltl
hope to eventually develop a toot·
proof, computerized method of
grading dlamondl ICCOl'dlng to
1tr1ct International 1tanct.d1 The ldtnttet• lllo ptan to UM the tech-
nology to "fl!'gerprlnt" lndMdull
CN.mcindl and ~ gtmetonee
Thl9 WO&M rNllll• " ...-•o Identify lndMdu8181onet IOht ~ OOUkl
not be •wftchld wtth -... ....
Wluabte lt01191 ...
•
clever about it and get them."
Jim Haden, associate adminis-
trator at Hoaa Memorial Hospital in
Newport Beach, agrees. •
.., think it's rare,, and difficult,."
Haden said, "but i1 someone really
wants 10 do it and is brazen enough,
they can get to the dru~."
To make it much more difficult.
however. Hoag Memorial does not
store narcotics on the mobile carts.
''The carts can be a &ood '}'stem
because they're very efficient,"
Haden said ... But on the other band,
you !ive up a little on the secunty
side.•
Instead, Hoag tores its narcotics
supplies in a double-locked cabinet 1n
each of the units. The prescribed
amount, and only that amount, of tbe
necessary drug is then taken from the
cabinet in locked carts to the patients.
The pharmacy at Hoag, like that at
the other hospitals, is well-secured
with locks on the drug supplies as well
as the room itself, Haden sid.
"The idea is to do all you can to
safeguard, just as you would your
home," Haden said.
Despite those. attempts, the threat
of a drug-user stealing the narcotics is
always present
Or. Michael Stone of the Careunit
Hospital in Orange says the people
who attempt to steal narcot.tcs are
those already addicted.
••Addicts becomt desperate and
they steal or do whatever they can to
get the drug." Stone said. "Typic8lly,
they don't do anything violent, they
won't hun anyone but they will be
busy stealing. shoptlfting and so on."
Relatives of Tracy, who pleaded
not guilty to seven counts of burglary
in connection with the hospital thefts,
are reportedly trying to enroll her in a
drug rehabilitauon proaram in I..On
Beach. " Richards, Costa Mesa Medical
Center•s administrator, says that
apJ?foaCh is good.
While he was a hospital adminis.
trator years ago in Teus, Richards
said a young nurse who had been on
the job only a few days had stolen
Demerol from syrin.acs and reptaccd
the drua with water. •
Another nurse spotted the change
and the local police were soon on the
nurse's trail. '
"But everyone I ran into seemed
more concerned about the loss of
money, the dta itM:lf, than the girl
who definitely had a senous prol>
lem," Richards said .... That's not
riaht. ..
In that spirit, the chairman of the
board of the Costa Mesa Medical
CcntcT recently issued a resolution to
the hospital staff that not only
commended them on their alertness
in apprehending the allqed narcotic.s
thief, but thanked them as well for
reacbina a person in desperate need of help.
What do you Hite abo1t tbe Dally Pilot? Wbat doa'l yoaa llke? Call &M
n11mber at left aad your ine11age will be recorded, traatcrlbed and dellvered
to the appropriate l'dltor.
Tbe same %4-laoor un,erln1 service may be aaed to record letters to tbe
dllor oa aay topic. Contributors to our Letter• column mast Include tbelr
name ud tel~Dt number for vertflcaUon. No circulation call1, please.
Tell .. wut'I OD you mtad.
l 9 B 4
Awa.rd of llerft
..
Certified Getnologist 1
Anlerican Gem
Soeiety
Mnnbwsbtp t1 awtnVld onlJ' ro
Hl«INI jfliJ#IWI wbo pouns
J1f'Ol>m ,.,..o191k"I •"owll'dge
tntll llH bllMl •lbkal •tandilt'ds
It Is yo#" ..,.,.,.u o/tb•
mUlblHty '""' a1pabl/lty of Ibis Jlmt.
•
\.
Artist Council
sets fundraiser
!he Artist Council oftaauna Beach Museum or Art IS
hosung fund·ramna pany on Thundly prior to the
"Red :ShOC$" fantasy even1na honorina phoiasrapher Kenn Duncan,
J'he pany ot Ron's in Lasuna Beach will fea\ure a
pThrevtew of Duncan's intcmattonal photo exhibit U\led • e Ballet."' which will be featured at the museum
through .Nov. 11, Duncan ia expected to attend the ':30
p.m. 1~1al which will precede the fund-rai1in1 dinner. ~1ne, hors d'ocuvres and entertainment will be PfOVJdcd, along with a tram acrvice to transpon aucm
from the muStum to lhe restaurant at 8 ~.m.
Cost of \he pany is S2.S per person. For reservations,
call 497-S243 or 494-6531. •
LQwer-back seminar mcheclulecl
A seminar entitled "Lower Back Disc Disease'' is
scheduled from 7-9 p.m. Thursday in Huntinaton Beach.
• Sponsored by Pacifica Community Hospital, the
proaram will take plac;e at the Carmen Y.uppa Conference
Center, across the street from the hospital at 18819
Delaware St. Dr. Richard L. Mulvania, an onhopedic
spccialst, will lecture and lead the discussion to follow.
Scheduled as a .. focus on Community Health"
outreach propam to the community, the aerrunar ia free
and park.ina 1s available at the conference center.
S)'Jllphony concert announced
Center St.aa_e, Friends of Orange County P~rformina
Arts Center and 1ntcrested non-members are invited to the
South. Coast Symphony concen on Saturda}', Nov. ~at 8
p.m. 1n the Robert B. Moore Theater at Oranac Loast
Colleae. ·
Center Stage will hC?St ~ post-<lOnccrt reception to Emeqency landlnl at JW A . m~t Larry Granier, ~us~c ~1~or/con~uctor, and auest A ft.re .. _.._ent craall crew craae Ufta a 418abled a1raaft from tbe arust Kathleen Lenski, VJohmst. complimentary refresh· -..--
ments and hors 'oeuvres will be served. Special tickets at rua911~:!. '1o1m Wape ~ after tbe twtn~e pl&De, piloted
S l Oare available by contactina Susan Stein at 951-3216 or by W Lee TraCJ • 38. Ol atocktma, made an -~WJ' landlnl
Marcy Beck at SS6-3106 by Friday, Oct. 26. at Jobn W&JD~ .AltpOrt. Lee wu en roate to Bennlnl tla pe11en1er
Aquatic clauee to belln
The City of NeWJ>Ort Beach Parka, Beaches and
· R~ation ~rtment, City Hall, 3300 Newpc:>n Blvd •• is
currently takina registrations for its fall aquatic classes
beainnina Saturday, Oct. 27.
SabOt clases will be tauJht at Oranae Coast Colleae
Crew Base, Lido l4's at the Scout Base, Sailboaidina and
Catamaran claucs at 16th Street on the bayside1 and
surfina instruction at Newport Pier. For more 1nfor·
mation, call 644-3151.
T wo Newport men indicted 1 -t 1 · t • • . n er or secre ary
ID Penne kickback scheme Jn oc to endorse . Robert Dornan Seminar on· elderly featured
'G;--:-:-:~d:;--J;---:-----:----:--:f;;:l:---~-~t""'----;f;:I--=~==::.--· CT A, which was awarded me ran ury accuses Ve men, WO rms multi-milliondollarcontnctwithout
of influencing lucrative state contract ~~~:"~~:::,~~~~dcd~ .! A one-day seminar on "lmprovioa Care for the
Elderly" will be held on Saturday1 Oct. 27, from 8:30 a.m.
to 2 p.m., at First Ul\jted Methoaist Church, Costa Mesa.
Three speakers will be featured and the seminar will
offer six Christian Education Units.
would the tchool employees. The 87 tile Altoclatl4 Preti 1tate'1 Department of Labor and 90nuact was canceled before any
Five individuals. mcludina two lndUSl:t'Y, WU to ~ive a $100,000 work WU done.
For more information, call Judith
432-8014 or Bonnie Brunet at 49S·l660.
Ncwpon Beach reaidenu, and two kick~ . . ·. . The Treasury Department BelinAn at corporations were indicted by 1 Jl;ftlc;e Kinwd, a former ~A y1ce awarded the contract after the Lciis-
fcderal arand jury in Harriabura. Pa.. president, made the allepuona m a lature approved a measure &ivina dJat
Tuesday in connection with lllep-~wor.n statement to the . offic;e of agency, rather than the Education
tiona $300,000 in ldckbaeki were paid Auditor General Al Benedict Department, the power to overace the Flnt Aid cl-.checlulecl
The American Red Crou standard first aid multi·
media class is beina offered montJlly at St. Joseph Hospital
in Oranae. The next class ia Saturday,. Oct. 27, from 8:30
a.m. to 4:30f.m. Cost o the program, which consists of film,
workbook exerciaes. discussions, demonstration and
practice, is $20 which includes materials.
The oounc meets the reguirementa for fint aid
tra.inina under the National OcCupational Sifety and
Health Act. Pre·reaistration is required by callina
77 1-8040.
in return for a lucrative state contract Kincaid depicted Jobn Torquato Social Secunty wort.
Named were John Torquato Jr., 1r., the reputed founder ofCTA.11 a Dwyer termed allcptions that his
reputed owner of Computer Tech· man who went to JfC&t lenaths to carnpaip bad been promi~ a
noloSY Associates of Newport Beach; drum ue bulineu1 mcludina hirina kickback a "ludicrous" political
David Herbcn of Shamokin Dam, women who wowd be willina to do smear on the pan of Bcnedici,
Pa., a former employee in the Pen-whatever they had to do." In.yer'1 opponent for re-election. It
nsylvannia Dep1.rtment of Labor and . . . d. ffi . 1 was Benedict who fim ma.de the Industry: William Smith. Dauphin Several oobuesans an ° ~·a 1 alleptions public.
C (Pa) R bli '-a: appe&ttid bd'ore &he lflnd JW')', The srand jury had been mectina ounty · epu can Cauurman; incl~dina Dwyer, Republican State on Tuesdays and Wednctdavtt every
Alan Stoneman of the city of Oranac; Chairman Roben Alber; state sen. other weeks~ mid-summCr. Mon-
Judy Ellis of Newport Beach; XET Euaene Scanlon. l).AJICJheny; S\.!te day~a meetina which ~uCed the
Ltd., a California corporation doin& Sen. John Shumaker, R·Daupbin; 1sealed indictment came after a five-
business as CT A Ltd; and CT A Inc. of and. Dau phi~ C:ounty ~epublican ~ day recess since last Tuesday. •creative Living' seminar topic Pe~:Yf:=ment cbarJes one count chairman W1llwn Smith. Kincaid had told Benedict's in-
The Oranie Counfy Institute for Transactional ofconspiracy,sixcountsofmailfraud The contract called for CTA· to vestiptors th.at the rePUted founder
Analysis. 14742 Newport Ave., Suite 101, Tustin, is and nine counts of intentate trans-recover Social Security tax over-of CTA, John Torquato Jr., enlisted
preaentina a conferenc;e on "The An of Creative Living" ponation in aid of raclceteerina. All payments made by 200,000 Penn· Scanlon and Smith to ensure that
on Saturday, Oct. 27, from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. defendants are char&ed in all 16 sylvania public school employees Dwyer'a oftic;e would have authority
The event is s~fi.cally designed for people who counts, U.S. attorney David Dan from 1979-81. over the tax recovery wort.
wanttoim_provetheirskillsinlivinJlcre&tive,successfuJ, QueenannouncCd. The Treasury D_e_partment She said Smith was to abi.re in
healthy. life with warm relationships and the sparkle of The indictment c~ the def en-awarded the contract to CT A on May CT A's profits and that Scarilon was
personal charisma. danta attempted to irifluence Pen· 10, but the pact was canceled two provided the use of a free Lincoln
The cost of $1S for the day includes a continental . nsylvannia state officials and em· months later after the allegations automobile durina a trip to Cali-
brea.kfast. luncheon and a cocktail ~Y with hors ployecs to aet a no-bid state conuact suraced. fornia. .
U.S. Interior Sccrewy William Out .-opped ia
Santa Ana Tuesday to endone Republican~
candidate !Robert Doman in bis central Or.-Coaaty ~ apinst incumbent Deinoaauc Rep. JenyhuCnoll.
u1 would not be here 10day if ~n DornlD was not a member ohbe R~ fam y," .aid~ a
Californian and R.eapn's f<>f'IDtt Nationll $ecuri1y
Adv'iser. "President Rcqan wanu Bob Doman to returD
to congress."
The R cabinet member~ lbe bitter
race betMCD ear:nenoa and Conan ubei:-,=10 lbe
presidential coniest betMCD Nonda1e and "'The
record i1 clear," Cart uid of the two CUftiduc'a contrasti~ltandlon me itlUel.
Pan.enon, of Garden Grove. it tttlrina te-dec:Doa '°
I lixlb term in the 31th COQll'ellional Diltric1. Daria,
whose district was IOlt in the J 980 reapportioamca~ ooce
represenled the Santa Monica ancJ Torrance &rea in Con,gress. .
Blacks hoaor GOP ca11tUdate9
C.Ounty GOP caJM1idatcs b state and federal officta
were honored recently durina a fund-railer ~ the Blick
Republican Council of<>rinle COunty.
.Doman. candidate for the 38th tinmlellional 1ea1;
Shirley Gisseodanner. candidate for :lbe~9th AllcmblY
District; and Richard Lonashore, candidate for the 12na
Assembly District. pve speeches durina the afternoon
ptheri.na earlier this moatb at the Saddlebact Inn.
d'oeuvre\at6 p.m. A totalof30prizes will beaiven away. In addition, tbesrandj~said, the
For more Information, call 544-8061. defendants anempted to 'corruptly ------------------------------------------. influence" passaae of favorable lea*
CALENDAR
lation to expedite the contract.
Q~ee~ ~d th~ '1'8nd jury in-
vesupuon u conunwna.
The a.rand jury convened in late
July followina alleptions that Com-
puter Technoloay Associates of New-
port Beach, promised a $300,000
kickback to the re-election campaign
of Pennsylvannia state Treasurer R.
Budd I>wyer in rt\um for the con-
Windsurfing curbs considered
\Vedne.day,OCt.24
• 9:30 a.m., Oru1e Cou*J 8oerd of Sape"l10r11 Hall of Administration, 10 Civic Center Plaza. Santa Ana.
• 7:30 e.m., FoaatalD Valley PlamllD& Comml .. loa,
City Council chamber$, 10200 Slater Ave., fountain
Valley.
Too many close misses sparked
Oranae County officiils to consider
restrictina sail board sports in the Dana Point marina. ·
The Harbori, Beaches and Parks
Comrninion said it will bold a public
meetina to investipte the controversy
at 7 p.m. today.
Sailbo&rdinf. also called wind-
surfina. combines surfing and A.ilina.
The spon entails maneuvcrina alona
the ocean with a sin&)e sail atop a wide
surfbOard.
boaters often swerve to avoid uiJ.
boards. Some boats have veered into
narrow.• waten. ICR.Pinl their bulls, be
said.
Most of the problems ooc:ur at the
baibOr's calm west end. where sail·
boats frequently turn from their slips to
the channel.
-
tract.
It was also alleaed that David
Herbert, a former employee in the
Pou cE Lo e
Mother, 3 Children killed
in Fullerton car crash
By ... Al1oclattd Prtu
A woman and tier three children
were killed and three .othen iajured
when two can smashed into each
other, aendina one careeni111 on iu
side into a chain-link fence in Full·
on, authorities laid.
The woman and two children died
•t the accident scene 11aetdly n'i&ht
and the third child died at the UCI
l'fewport Beacb
More than $4,200 worth of sk.in
cliYfna . equipment wu stolen from JU• Wet OOdc, Sil 29th St. The
bufllan, who reportedly cnlei'ed tllrouib. a loclted rear door, took eiaht :air &anb. wciaht bells. dive filla.
~ten and a soear aun. • r.• ,.
A S300 stereo unit wu stolen from
• VW Rabbit perked on the 800 block
of Wea Balboa Boulevard. The lbief
smashed a window to tet into tht car. • • • An outboard motor wonh 1bou1
Sl.500 wu stolen from 1 dinahy'
doeted at the Newport Harbor Yacht
Oub, 120 Wm Bav S&. . ~.
Neady $350 in cub was stolen
J'rom • cuh boll at the lfMI' Worb,
U'I Dove St. • • • A tmathy aaant•s St.'60 "ftltte
Medical Center in Or.nae. 1aid Fire stable condition late Tuesday.
Ban.alion Chief Jack Eooper. Names of the victims were not
Two other children and the driver immmcdiately available. Offic:iala
of the second car were ::t~ in the said the c:hildren ranted in qe from 2
crash. One child wu n to Uct IO J 2.
Medical Center and ~ male driv~r Cooper said the car CUT)'iftl the
wu taken to St. Jude H01phal 1n . children came to 1 atop on ill Side Fullenon. __ , h · 1: .. fi The othtr child w11 Ween by .... nat • c am .... n.. enee.
helicopter to Western Medical Cenier .. We had to cut the top of this car to
in Santa Ant where he wu lilted in Ft the people out," tic said.
talltie WU 1toleD at tM Marriott Hotel
in Newport ca.ter.
lnlae
Police amtted ltVtn motoriltl OD
auipicion of dnanken drivi ... Steven
Gutiena. 23, was armeed at 12:50
Lm. todly on Irvine <Jenw DriYe 11
S&nd Canyon Avenue. 1lidlaftt wu.
liam Robb, 25, was analed at I Lm.
on J11n'*-1 BouleYltd • tbe !Ill Diceo &eeway. Mary l..yna Jthnbrell. 37, Ml UT'llNd al 3:15 Lin. Ga
Jamboree at Mila SU.. Marioe Johlf~~2. wu 111'11"4at 11:25 2;11n. ay oa Mala at SQ Part 1~uleVarcl. Iida Vu Tm, «). WU
aiTelUld at I l .4' p.m. oe MleAnlMlr'
It tbe N= Ptw•J· ....,
Wayne Me ~" 44. Wll M11•• • 10:2S ~.m. on .1•bofee •MMD
'\WS.-. lc• ••'•••· 3', ... lmlted ll 16!«> ~. Oii Jambane.
the San l>ieeo freeway. • • • A TV and a VCR were reported
ltOaeD Tuetday iliaht from a bome oa
Yiento Drive. btry wu made. *ouP a window. • • • Ala baftalalile bolt WU taken ft-om I ~patio OQ Lakeview. • • • A bl\le Mum)' -.Chcruiter "' re~ atolen ftom a home Oil
fllwedere. • • • A VCR was.._ Tundayevenhle r.a .. ~i:f scar. Poliee ha~"'"''?!! eucd)' how t.be ""'..., ..... tbebolnl. . . . -
-...... reported ltolen .. • a.IW ...... Oft Hllttlm ...... . . .
T• -=valued at MqlO ................... .........
'
Sat. Dick Powell of the sheriff:•
Harbor Patrol said no serious Uijuriea
or damage to boats has ~ bvt
Lapn&Beach
Terri Lytan Counts, 22, was ar-
rested for allqedly drivina under the
influence of alcohol early Tuesda)'
momina at Glenneyre and Cress
Streets. Counts was also charaed with
drivin' with a suspended California
drivers license and aivina false
information to a police officer. Bail
wuxtat $2,SOO. • • • A fire was apparently started by a
•uJty ps stove in I residence in the
1100 block ofiK.atellaStreet Tuesday
niahL firefiahtcrs were able to ext·
iftiuish the fire with no if\iuries
reported. The fire cauted an esti-
mated SS,000 in dlmqc to 1be
structure.
eo...11 ..
A ~ of un dcntified robbers
iheld two Costa Mesa aotbifta·:stott ~pk;yees It aunpoint T~. a-
capina Ylitb about Sl,600 in cash, wee ri1,111 and an unddermined unount of clothes. • Police Mid iwo of the uuitanu m.s U) be*"•"" 'Wtu1e oul; rwo "WttC men. apparently in
tblir JOI. ~ina 10 repon.a, lhe foursome
cnieNd die Eupbona Oothana Co .•
1199 Pllt Ave., at ~:40 p.m. il'he men
waited W daedc>Or' .tlDC the iitf stried
oadol*
After the dothilll wn taken tQ the cubler. oee ot me men came 1ft'Om
behind den 1.Md8d• Ela Shotwdl
35. of Coela Mm Ud put llaa arm
ll'DZI ... ~ Wbile PIKilll a 4-1• -z-to Mr blct. ne _...~1.ou1e ca.or.. 25. ol,....,,,_ criaed • •lllllce ... and dothiOI U\10 I
baa. ·f he suspects also took tbrecrinp
from the hands of the victims.
Police repon the usailanu left on
foot around 6 p. m. after orderina the
victims to stay in a baCk cloeet for 10
minutes.
1be robbers were described u a
female Caucasian. 16 to 18 )U!'I Old.
4-foot-10, 110 pounds; a tanUe
Caucasian. 14 )Uf5 old. S-...feel; a male
Hispanic, S·foot.S, 140 poun&r 98 •o 40 years old; and a male Caucestan, S.
foot~. l30pounds.30to3Syearsold. • • A icre<> and a Sony Waltman
cassette player were ~ .-e
Monda..)' from a car parlced at SOutb
Coast Plaza. The car was b\qlarized
sometime bct~n 7:4S a.m. and 6:4S
p.m. The loss was estimated al S690. • • • BuU.,...Beacll
ThievesC\lt dltoup a pie a1 Vens
Labs. ISS71 C.ommmie Lant.. ucl
stoic 49. 5S.Uon steel drums valued
at Sl,325 frOm 1hc.,... yard. • • ! Someone stOlc 1500 ia -.
equipmau from an walocbd mr m
the MaDdlc lot It 1811 l er,.aL ., ..
BW'llan stOle a lapaw pqoda
\'llUei at S200 from the front fl,rd of
a bome ID ltbC 17000 block or
Coronado ••• 11tneva popped out l'bc drivet"1
Window to I t'lfonae ud aopu. 1914
Toyota Cdk:a 1t Gokle.a WCI\ Col-lete and le Sl.200 in ReteO
tqutPmmt. • • • Someone itOle • "'cMck~ir11bQok.-a. 1enp. turesud•pen===-oea~on ••• A .... )' P"i ftbetJ I ... _.
cdlanous PfOPll1Y ......... to.n
....
-
ibc AutoP&i'k. I 5323 Pipeline. • • • Vandals ransacked a home in the
6000 home ofWalton and stole 1 S300
*"ilion 1tt and $20.
Clerk
sapped
by rug
robber
ON JHE PENINSULA
BALBOA
873·tr28
Thanks all these participants In our
first annual chill and bean cookoff on
October 16th. It was a great success;
hope you had as much fun as we did. ·
Whiskey Bllls Tomfoolery
Bear's Lair Flamson .. Peeny Azuls
Mutt Lunches Charlie's Chill
Woody's Warf Crash Inn-Crestline
Class of '47 Little Knight
Cesa Balboa El Ranchlto
Balboa Pavilion BJ Chicago Pizzeria
Boat House--Catallna Tale of the Whale
Balboa Saloon Montana's Grub & Grog
Gary's Bayview Cafe The Fling
PavUion Queen Alisia's South
Ruby's ·Hazel's Place
Congratulations to the Winners:
1at Place-Baer'• Lair
· 2nd Place-Tomfoolery
3rd Place-Flamaon-Peeny Azula
1831 Fullerton Ave.
1at Broadway)
Costa Mesa -646 .. 963~
MS-1476
"I've never seen any·
thing like it."
"It's. the best thing I've
ever done to myself."
ELIMINATE NAGGING
BACK PAIN
TONE A FIRM
LOOSE, SAGGY
MUSCLES
We've
Moved
-
N .111,,~
- - -
Social Security checks
10 up 3.6% in January
Bad driver tbJed $55,000
MIAMI-A motorist deemed a habitual offender has been fined SSS,000
for traffic violations and threatened with a l 2·ycar prison sentence if he drives
dunna the next four years. Nearly half the fine money will be donated to a
children's hos~tal and a YMCA. Nathaniel James, 27, has been arre ted at
least 70 times since 1973 and had his drivcr'a licensc revoked twice. He will be
on probationforfourycarsundera plea bargain in which he agreed nottodrive.
Couamer pric• ap .4~
WASHINGTON -Consumer pnocs rose a moderate 0.4 pen.ient in ~bet u aa.oline prices rose at their steepest c!!P in 16 months but food
pnces dipped sli&htly, the government said today. ·1 tte new report showed a
stark reversal in the summer·lonJ trend of cheaper gasoline but risina food
prices. With only three months left in the year, consumer prices were rising at
an annual rate of just 4.2 percent, dose to the 3.8 percent PoSlcd for all of last
year.
Sade cfJdlJ 't JJave • •tllmP
MASSAPEQUA, N.Y. -It wasn't rain, nor snow, nor dark of night that
caused the pause 1n mail delivery here. It was, authorities report! a five-foot boa
constrictor. The snake was discovered Tuesday inside a ~ai box durinft an afternoon mail pickup, Nassau County police spokesman Officer Wil am
Bums said. The unidentified mailman was shaken but uninjured. Authorities
bad no idea where the snake came from or how it wound up inside the mailbo~ ~~-.--=-~~-..:.~~__:_~_.:_~~~~-.--:-_,..,,,,.._~,...-,...-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Burnssaid.
·Lite Beer
12 Pack, 12 oz. Cans
·Popov
Vodka
80 Proof
Colony
Zinfandel
(1984 Orange Counly Falr
Gold Medal Winner)
Cabernet Sauvlgnon,
French ColOmbAtd or
Chenln Blanc
.
-~:
AT zzs:x:sar:-~.
. Get w atever you want. J.;
Winery of the Month: BERINGER
CANADIANS
....,_·,vo
llO ,,_,
~c""' 86 ,,_,
C-...HIU
90PTool
Gor4e.'•
80 Proo/
GtfMJ'•
llO "'""' s-·· Cl()~
7!'>0 .... '695
~·to" '9" I 7Sh
750MI '4"
i.-'6"
'7" 1'S'
HllUIY. LAST WEDC AT THESE
LOW, LOW PRIC£g
Chenla Blanc (1982· 13) 760 •I.
~· Cbudonnay (1981_.S2) 750al.
Cabanft Sampoa 750•'·
Fume Blanc 750•1.
French Colombard 750 ml.
Gama9 BaujoW. 750 ml.
1984 l A COUNTY FAIR
AWARD WINNING WINl:S
7!>0 .... s595
mm1 '416
•395 H
I!>' •211
Uquot 25._, OFF Su~kt
8-n Pnce Pnce e ~r.
3.99 2.99 4.65 1.66
7 ~75 5.82 8.79 2.97
6.89 5.17 7.95 2.78
5.49 4.12 6.65 2.53
3.99 2.99 5.49 2.50
4.95 3.71 5.75 2.04
VIN CELLI CELLARS
HALLOWEEN TREATS
Lau.t'• '6" Apploiocll 750• C.K.......... 1349 ~ IC.W hV I Fnpi.:, lbl .. ....... ...,, '9" '4" 750 ml
c ...... 750 '"'
O.Kv,.r •511 ~~ 7!111 Ml .._c.... '1" W.-~ INV I Thwdl'letw 7!.U..i -~-1som1
119° ~& ......
'2" IS~ ...........
~ 7!i0 ml .......
AlfllloS.'-
Farley's
Hard Apple Cider
Martinelli
Sparkling
Apple Cider
Liquor Barn
s· 37 1 25.402.
Get whatever you want.
· For tess.
1.,, r~JP'tf Selection In California
1721..,.,. Ave., Cost1 MIU· Phlne: &4&-1608
21171 lllllllnds, Mission ViljO • Pblne: 844· 1437
1H32 W11a.l1sttr, B1rdlft &rove· "'9ne: 138·4145
211.llutll EuclM Avenue, Anahllm • "'8nt: 991-6192
14417 Ctlnr Drive, lrvlnl • Plllnl: 551-2757
STORE HOURS:
Mo• ·f'rl. IMM...,. ..... .., 9AJll.,.,.
i•-4a; 18.UMPM
•9st
For less.
Seagram's
7 Crown Blend
80 Proof
s10?.,?k.
!;ogram1 S.lt.z«r
Wattr, Club Sod..
Tonic°' Ginger Alt
KEG BLER
.........
i..--.n.
I ow•.._.._
Kae '36'5
~Kae'2349
l<4 '4195
~s2495
TF Qllfl A
7!!0 ... •n••
750"" •121t
750 ml '12"
Mario's
Box Wine
...... -Chablis. Row • • Bw9undy, Rtiin.
~ ' ' s2~! 4 "'.: 1111~
Old Smuggler
Scotch
86 Proof
$9?.7!.
More than 1,000 angry people complained to
television stationt nationwide about a half.Jlour political
advertitcment in which riaht-wina inde~ndent presi-
dential candidate Lyndon H. LaRouche Jr. claimed Walter Mondale "is an agent of influence" of Soviet
intelli&ence services. "A lot of them were ex~ssin1
anger at us why we didn't just pull the plug on 1t," said
Dave Busiek1 a reporter for KCCI· TV in Des Moines,
Iowa, who wd the station got I 00 calls. '!Our hands were
tied. People were blaming us and we didn't have anything
to say about it" The paid advertisement was aired
nationally_ by CBS Tuelday niaht. By early today, more
than 1,000 calls were loUcd at network affiliates and LAllOUCBE
ncwspapen across the country. Mondale did not comment on the
advertisement, but a spokesman travelina with the Democratic presidential
candidate in Illinois issued a brief statement ... 1 don't think anyone 14kcs
Lyndon La.Rouche's opinion vccy seriously and for good reason," said Dayton
Duncan. A person who called the Sacramento Bee said she was convinocd the
advertisement was satire "and waited all through it for the punchline before h
occurred to ber that this was tomcbody's vision of reality,'' said reporter Tom
Akeman.
CALIFORNIA
----- ----
Navy ammo termed melfectfve
LONG BEACH -Navy officials denied a commander's reported
statemenu wt the USS New Jersey"s 16-inch guns fired inaccurately at tar&cts
in Lebanon last winter because of old ammunition. "Our position is we hit
what we aimed at," Capt Richard Genet, executive officer of the USS New
Jersey, said Tuesday. In Tuesday's editions of The New York Times, Cmdt.
Richard Gano said the powder used in the New Jersey's ammunition varied u
much as t 20 feet_ per second in exit velocity from expected standards. Gano is
chief weapons officer of the New Jersey's sister ship, the USS Iowa.
KHl-lor-ldre •a•pect fJred
SACRAMENTO -A Sacramento woman charged with tryin1 to hire a
hit man to kill her husband has been fired by tlic state Department of Motor
Vehicles for "soliciting a homicide." OMV officials added Tuesday that
new5paper stories about the case embarrassed the department The
department's chief counsc~ Alan Mateer, said that if the woman, Frances N.
Rociiers, appeals her dismissa.11 the department is pre pated to argue that she is
guilty -even before her triat. Rodgers was arrested Sept. 28. Sacramento
Police Sst. Bob Bums said she unknowili&ly tried to hire an undercover officer
to kill her husband, Carl, and 18-year~ld son, Nathan. Bums said Rodgers
admitted to J)Olice that she tried to have them killed, Bums said.
Pint Lady avolda 8C'fadal
SAN DIEGO-First Lady Nancy Reagan and San Diego Padres baseball . sw Steve Garvey may have created a scandal fit for the national tabloids. Near
the end of her visit to Children•s Hospital.here Tuesday, Mrs. Reapn hui&cd
and kissed Gaivey, who had escorted her and was preparing to leave ... Mri.
Reapn. Mrs. Reagan," said Stephanie Hicks, a S-ycar-old San Diego Jill who
is beinJ. treated for physical impainnenu at the hospital. "Do you hve with
him?'' 'No, dear," the First Lady replied. "That'• how rumon set started."
VJt.mln C YnUDlng l•aed
BERKELEY -Vitamin C enthusiasts, beware: massive doses or the
substance miabt be hazardous to small children and the unborn accordiOJ. to a University of California study. Nutrition researcher Diane Bray said 1t is
widely assumed that "mepdoscs" of vitamin C can do humans no harm
because it is water-soluble and theoretically easy to eliminate from the body .
But experiments show that massive doses of v1tamin C decreased the bone
density of lab animal1t Bray said.
• Pape .ea pi'l•t•• ieleue
VATICAN CITY-Pope John Paul II appealed today for tbe release of a
Polish priest who supports the outlawed SOiidarity uiuon and called his
abduction five days aao a ••a shameful act." The Rev. Jerzy Popieluszko, who
bu hekl weekly nationalist Maucs at the St. Stanislaw Kostka Church :in
Warsaw, was abducted on a hlahway Oct. 19, accordin1 to bis driver, who said
he escaped from the kidnappers and called p<;>lice. The Polish-born pope said
he wu "~y stiaken ••by the disappearance of Popielusz.ko, and he expressed
bis .. solidanty with the C:lerlY and people'' of Poland.
Patt J•n IV. GenDaa emba•r
BONN1 West Germany-A preanant woman and her boyf'riend have let\
their i'efUle an Wat Germany's em busy in Czechoslovakia and n:tumed home
to Eul Germanl, a Bonn aovcmment ~eswoman said todty. The •wo hid
holed up in the ~ue embassy alo111 with some 1 SO other East Germans to
paeure their aovernment into arantina them permission to emigrate to West
Germany. The woman is in her eiahth month of preanancy.
• .... OltOinWJJJM -·
OHANNESBURG1Sou\h ·c.a-Police and soldienflMlede musive aou .. no. ~ &hroup rour blKk townships near Johannesbura. and police
Mid the townships were quiet \Oda}' after security forces withdrew Police
spokaman Lt. Henry Beck wd in. Pretoria, the capital, that a totai of 358
~ were atteited Tuetday 1n Sebokeng, Evaton,• Sharpeville and llCJiPI~ most all on ~lativ~ly_ minor chatlCs. They ibepn a~nna In
coarts Tieiday. Beck aid 7,000 polsoc ancf sold1en bejan w.thdrlwana
'heldi1-1'1iabt afttr one of the laracst domcsuc secunty operations In South Aftiaia lalttory.
Wo_plan famine wontenr
Al.AMAT A. EthioPt• -Dr. Georae-Nptiri and seven other medical
'-WU1""'""•un-fllht a daily battle to keep 100,000 people ahve at thia famine relief
CIDler 1n northern Ethiopia. Every day 90 lO I 00 die, most of them chlldrtn
Tiie piople wbc>come to Alamttt are Victimt of perblpt the aratett b1ne ia
aWs Easi Aftiean nation's modn biMr'Y. caueed ~ 1 ~di= ud 111 mderiel ..,.vued by·leCJdlionltt fipun, an the: )\onh. £tbi 'I
Mnitt ecmnmen&.umateu.he ~·bu afl'ecied the hvcs of 1. 7 m on
ia dmCOUDn' of'33 millioe people, bant 2 2 million from thear homeland
dlreltnint S S naWioa W1tla IWYIUGa At the Alamata camp, 85 nula laf'tb
of'lhe captlal of Adda Ababa. Npdflt one othtr doctor. three nunn and U.ne nutntioftitltwortc wwth 100,000 ...mna ~
r
I
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednaday, October 24, 1914 M
Top Philippine general
put on leave after report
President Marcos reportedly ·saddened'
by results of Aquino assassination probe
Ohvas, &he Manila police com-
mander who alto 1iepped down
today, two colonels, tlvee captaau,
11 olhenold1en,andaclvihan hnked MANILA, Phahppines (AP) -Oen. Fabian C. Ver, chief of' the
Philippines• armed forces and a close
ftiend of President Ferdinand E.
Marcos, went on .. temporary leave·•
todiy after a fact·fltldina board
accused him of complicity in the
usasalnation of BeniJllo Aquino.
Neither the majonty nor minority repons of the Marcos-appointed
board implicated the president in the killll)I. and this led to charges by
Aquino's famdy and opposition fig-
ures of a cover.up.
The government news agency
quoted a "saddened.. Marcos as
nnouncins Vefs'departure shonly after the majority repon by four of the ~ve board membcfl named • Ver amona 2S military men and one
civilian who allcgedl) plotted the
murder of Aquino.
The 0111><>s1tion leader was shot in
the bead while under military escort
at Manila's main airport as he
turned home on Aug. 21 , 1983,
(rom voluntary exile in the United States.
The four board mcmben said they
ere ''satisfied that the evidence
pro If CS the complicity" of Ver in what
ey called the "premeditated
urdcr" of Aquino.
The board said it had received
"ovcrwhelmina" evidence showing
that the military's "elaborate plans
ostensibly &eai'ed toward protectini tlle life of Sen. Aquino were in reality
desl&ned to camouflaae the talcina of
thailife."
hJarcos said iri_a statement that he tent the majority rep0rt to judicial
authorities for prosecution -:-in the
same way he had handled the disscnt-ina report of board chairwoman
Coraton Aarava on Tuesday.
Aarava's report concluded Ver was
not involved and ac6Jsed air force
Gen: Luther Cqstodio and six soldiers of plotting the murder.
The government said Ver, m a tothedasappearan~ofthcwifcofme lette~ to Marco , proclaimcCl his man the &Qvemment MY• killed innocence and asked to be rehcved' Aquino.
until the .. ,nal at the Sandipnblyan In a letter aceept1~ Vet's reteue
(a special civilian coun) 1s finished." from duty, M!fCOt '1&1d the board'•
"I ,never imagined an m,)'. waldest finding were ••fr_aUl)lt wltb dOubt and·
dreams that J would be 1mJ)licatcd in area• contradadons or opan1ons and
the Aquino cases/' saad Ver, also tesumony."
r_equestins an 'mmechate separate Ver has beeq the military officer
tnal. dosest to Marcos t&nce tbe presi-
Justice Minister Estolito Mendoza dcnfsdc!cuorfin 1965, when Ver was
said at a news conference that he a captain 1n charae of tail teeunty.
expected those named an the m~onty They were born in the ame town.
report would be restricted to quaners. Both reports rcjtcted the onainal
Shonly after the mljorjty report's claim of Marcos and lbe military that
release, a secretary for board member Aquino was killed by alleged com-
Luciano Salazar said Salazar and mumst agent Rolando Galman, who
board member Dante . Santos had was himself gunned down by police
been barred from leaving the country shonly after the dramatic slaying at
on a flight to Hong Kon& having been Manila 11rport.
told they needed clearance from the "Jf it was not Galman, then
presidential palace. Galman was used as a ·decoy or a
Marcos later reversed the order scapegoat to hide the identity of the
preventing them from lcavin&. saying real .assassin," the majority repon
it was due to· an "apparent mix-up." says. Like Mrs. A&rava's report, it
However1 Salazar said he did not sar.~ Aquino was killed by one of his
believe has detention along with that m1htary escorts but does not say
of Santos and his family was an which one.
innocent mistake. Aquino family member$ have in-
The majority rc~rt accused Ver sistcd the president mastenninded
and Custodio. MaJ. Gen. Prospero the death of his moat popular rival.
Eaely Bird Dinner
Specials 16.9S
Prime Rib or Fresh Fish
Complete Din~r with choice of
soup or salad and tJessert
.4 to 6 PM
OltlTHE PENINSULA 1 •• ,. • W11kl
• BALBOA • 801 E. BALBOA 673-7726
DIRECTORY OF MERCHANTS
Trak Auto ................................... 241-0618
Jolly Roger................................. 540-8535
Winter Beauty Supply ................ 545-5180
Stereo House............................. 546-3544
The Queen's Cuisine.................. 549-0904
Harbor Stylist............................. 545-8500
Harbor Cleaners ......................... 751-4357
The Register ............................... 754-6272
Thrifty Drug................................ 540-4870
Can'da Fashions ......................... 432-9156
The Shoe Hut............................. 546-6775
Souvenir 1-Hr-Photo .................. 432-1757
Large Size Mart .......................... 662-7493
Crown Books .............................. 979-0123
KC's Hallmark ............................ 979-1882
Talbert Jewelers ......................... 241-0204
Kirk Jewelers.............................. 545-9485
Winston Shops, Inc .................... 546-2622
B. H. Kletne, Optometrist. ......... ~5-9162
The New Male Man.................... 540·8818
Wallpapers To Go ...................... 646-5058
Columbia Savings ...................... 646-7141
It's A Diiiy ................................... 631-9618
Kid's Mart ................................... 642-4626-·
Dimensions In Fashion ............... 64~885~
J.C. Penny .................................. 646-5021
Holiday Spa .......................... : ..... 549-3368
Richard's Beauty College ........... 641-0359
BTE Sandwich Dell ..................... 850-1404
ChuCk & Cheese ......................... 966-0813
Vinci Vito Tailoring ..... ~ ............... 545-4544
Harbor Ctr Managers Office ..... : 540-7921
Merchants Assoc ....................... 540-7921
Mon Ami Bridals & Formals ....... 546-1821
Nicks Plzzt-... .... ... .. .. . ......... ... . .... 549-1511
Cobbler's Benett. ....................... 549-0414
Enterprise Rent-A-Car ............... 540-0098"'
Edward's Hrbr Twin Cinemas .... 631-9499
The Hot Dog Place ..................... 646-4855
Harbor Center Lock & Key ........ 549-3601
Glendale Federal S&L ............... 642-4711
Security Bank ............................. 759-4146
Marshalls .................................... 540-0823
-25th Anniversary
..
•
Sell-A-Bration
Oct. 19
Oct. 20
Oct. 20
Oct. 21
Oct. 21
Oct. 26
Oct. 27
Oct. 27
Oct. 27
Oct. 27
SCHEDULE OF EVENTS
OCT. 18-21 .
Ghost-Goblin Contest
Clogger Dance Demo
Super Leg Contest
Baby Contest
Karate Kids -Bob White
OCT. 26-27
Magician-Adrian Sundeen
Used Book Sale
Puttln' On The Dog Show
Pk:kln Over Fifty
Grand Prize Drawing
4:30 P.M .
2-5 P.M.
3 P.M:
2 P.M.
3·5 P.M .
9·3 P.M .
2 & 4 P.M.
3-5 P.M.
5 P.M.~----
SIDEWALK SALE OCT. 26, 26, 27
.--------------PAID lll•TMTION -------------, I MANY A TTENOANCE PRIZES-DRAWINBS AT 2 Hfl INT,9WAl.S EACH WeBCEND.j
I WINNERS NAMES TO BE POSTID ON 1121 MtlDOW I
(Acr<* Mii flOm ,,_..,,
~ NAME '
L STREET ZIP
Pleol~lelldtormkt•U11Ll&"QefOllTIPX"~ ttta•.-=
~~---~---~------~-~--~~-~~~~~~-----~
,.,
OrW\99 Ooltt OAIL v PILOT /Wednelday Oc1ober 24 19M
,
RELIVING THE PLEASURE OF FASHION ISLAND:
..
11
/ had to write
an essay about my
favorite iSland ~bet _ you
never thought I'd · · ·
,
SOME KIDS WROTE ABOUT
CATALINA OR HAWAlt.
THEY'RE OK, BUT FASt-:llON
ISLAND'S BETIER FOR KIDS .
pick" FishiOr:i · Island!"
When I was a kid, Mom used to take my , .
sist~r and me there all the time. That
was a couple. of years ago, when I was
eight Then, she started going to some
mall somewher~, and my sister'd
get lost all the time. When the teacher
gave us the essay to write, I asked
Mom to take me to Fashion Island so
I could do some research. When we got
there, Mom said she remembered how
nice Fashion Island has always been.
My sister never got lost once ·and
I got to see some really neat stuff.
Ftrst, I got to look through a peephole
at a ne\.v but/ding going on there.
It's called Atrium something-
Atrtum Court., that's iL Mom says it'll
be great because they're going
to have shops and restaurants
all over the place. It's supposed
to have some kind of fancy
French store. Wait. I've got a
piece of paper they gave me at
Fashion Island with all the
names written down. Oh yeah, (
it's Pierre Deux. That's French
alright. And the Irvine Ranch
Farmers Market is going to be
there, too, with a cooking
school, bakery_ and grocenes
on one whole f Joor. Mom says
it's going to be like shopping --~::::J
in Iurope and it'll be ready
next Spring. I wonder if I can
get a ncfe on a-\bulldozer
before tft'en?
THE. FIRST PART OF MY
ESSAY WAS ABOUT THE
NEW STORES AT
FASHION ISL.AND
Since there are.fourteen new stores,
I. could have written a wbole es'say on
any of them. But I didn't. Instead, I put
them down alphabetically. It's all here
on this piece of paper. Amen Wardy,
Bambino, Benetton, Classic Tailoring,
The Corn POpper, Great American
Short Story, Lme Adzer, The Limited,
The Linen .Store, The Look by
Arlan Flaum, Mirna's, Nelly's, Oplical
Shop of Aspen and Video Concepts.
· In my essay, I told about how .
Amen Wardy ts already expanding its
store And you know what? The guys
· doing the building all get to wear
hard fiats !
THE SECOND PART WAS
HOW FASHION ISLAND
WAS GREAT FOR US KIDS
On Catalina or Hawaii, there's nothing
much for kids-just a bunch of sand-
and water. At Fash10n Island, there's
lots of neat things. When we got ready
for school last y_ear, Mom took Robin
to Hemphill s for shoes and Dad
took me to Wetherby Kayser for mine.
Robin got her clothes at The Red
Balloon, Ltd. and I got mine at
Robinsons. Last time we went, Mom
stopped to see what the
Motherhood Maternity shop had.
She's been promising us a
baby brother for months.
When he gets here; we're
going to tal<e him to Fashion
ls/and. We'll get him clothes
at Bambino and shoes at
Newport Children's
Bootery. I wonder how
· old he has to be before
he gets to have a milk
shake at Coco's or go to
the movies at Edward's
Newport Cinema? When
I grow up, I'm gomg to
take him 1or a riae on my
bulldozer and let him
wear my hard hat
mNEWPORT CENTER W FASHION ISLAND
' I '
MY TEACHER WAS
SURPRISED WITH MY ESSAY-
SHE DIDN'T KNOW ABOUT
ALL THE CHANGES AT
FASHION ISLAND
She thought the part where I told
about watchin8 my sister at the
Fashion Island klC:J's play area while
my folks did their speoal shopping
was nice. I didn't tell her that their ·
special sho~ping means they're
gettin~ us something from Karl's Toys
or Sees. My teacher's' going to Cata/ma
Island next weekend, but she said
she's going to Fashion Island first
to do some shopping because of
my essay. She was happy to hear about
all the building ~oing on there, and like
my Mom, hadn t been there for awhile.
Oh She gave me an A-on my essay.
The A was for what I wrote.
· The minus
was for penmanship.
rt
REDISCOVER .
THE PLEASURE OF
FASHION ISLAND
D<•partmc>nt & Secc 1.il1y Slot<')
Thv 8road~ur
Bullums
Bufloc h W1M111<•
'c1man ·Mat< U)
Robinson\
WomC'tf§ AppaTC/
Am<•n W.trd.>
Apropos
Ar £.Jn• l
Brooks Brothc~
Char/I(•\ -
Lmc AcJz<.•r
lc!M oi C.1f1fomiJ
Thi· l1m1tt'CJ, Inc
1 tll' look, Inc
MJ11h1·w'
.-.:c ·If~'\
The· Rf'CJ BJlloon, Ltd
/!'in Ry.Jn ft1,hmm
S1/\l('f\HJOd\
Swl(nt'<'
\ Yl'nnt'fl \ Spt!c i.illy
fort}' LCM'
Grc•al Am~m an
!lhort Stew
M lac qut·~ furn<•r
Motht•rh<1<)() M.Jtc•rnllr
Mima\
Wumc;n \ hor'
AnJ('n Wt1rd\
Apropm
,.., fJ\('
C<ithy Jc•.tn
llllgRtn\
l.m1 of ( .tf1torn1J
M.t1th1•1\,
full' fl'\\ !'fry
IJonJVJ/l ,\ .'IC'.1111J11'
1<.1fi /<•11 c•lry
WypclhJm Lc·1~h
I )1Jmund,
Mr11 \ Appdrc•f ,\ 5hoc•,
Al\ C:JrJg1•
At fJ\(1
Brooh Bmlhc•r\
c;Jry' ,1,;. Co
Ttw loul... ln1
l'hcolf"
11.0 JI
.\1/Vf'I\\ ood> r Jilli/\' & ( h1ldrt•11 \ \hoc•\
I lc•mph11f\ 'ihC)(''
I luAAln'' ~h"''' ·" ('\ \ """ Ch1/drc•n\ Hoot<'I\ W1•th1·r~ KJ~wr .
F.11111fr 1.'I. Ch1fclfC'11 \ AppJr<'I
At fJ,<'
IJ.1111hmo
Hc•1wllun
/Jrook' 1Jroth1·r'
Forti LoH•
fh1• Rc•cl 8.1//urnl, LtcJ.
Houk'
~~~~~~~~
IJ /)J/fon Uuok,c•l/1.,..·
IJoul>/c'C/Jy Book \hop
Rc•,l.J111J11l~
Ho~11•, Pf,u c•
Ho/> Hum'
( oc u\
El Rohf.•rtu
f r.1111 ''' Jll J<ow11
I Hull lltll\ I
Vdu Hultc•I 1Ruhi1M111\1
'C'\\J)Ort '1111111/ Rolf
'<·111mrt Turtle•
/.oc/iJc Rourn
I \;c•lf14lll•\f,m (I\/
foml ,,,,., 1,1ftr
I hi' C h11» :.>rel.
1 Rol)l11,011 , 1 '
E pie we•• 'l,c•11n.111· \IJrc 11,'
1111 ko') fJm"
,,.,., C .111c/ic•,
I h1• C wn Poppc•r
Tlw ,\1\ 1•1•1 I if11 8.1k"''
1rc1l1 ~.11c1r.-//1
I ic',1(1h Foocf, c;,,,, Cm/, ( .mc/11·~
,\ \t,11111111•1\
I ),111' Un J.trc/111
L,11111,.. ~ h 1
~.ir/, 711\ '· 'l.lt1Cm''''
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'~1t1W1 ~ 1 Lll/HLJrl>.
f lnm1• ftttm•hm~·
Th1• lm1•11 'tori•
~c·lllt• Crt'l•k \hop
\ 1cl1 •u { On< <'f>I'
Art C,1lf<•1111' •
\ l.111wncl' Ro" c;Jth•m••
lip11rt111~ < ;1111ck 1111' lluhl>tl'•
11106,,~,. ·" ,.,.,,
Ht•itt h/111 lUAAJ>(<', Uc/
K,11/\ :Tu ~. !ll~tmm!J"J>
l' 1 lohbi• .,
~m•<> • \\1md1•rt11l \\otl<I
UI l\•b
'.\k1 °"" ~pon~. Inc
St>MCt'S
Anthon> Shoc SeMCe
Classic T11lorlng
Clown Cleaners
Ccrard Austen
Gold n BlaCJ Bar rs
Coins Places Tt~vel
Opu al Shop bf Aspen
T~l'f om Body
1fcke<ron
mt Olf1
C1984 Tht· Irvine CnmfMn
•
Reagan's· earned
the right to have
another 4 years
. Adyising Orange County to vote for Ronald Reagan may be ~ little bke asking Henry Kissin$er to speak with an accent but
Just for the record, The Daily Pilot endorses the pre ideni•s re: election bid. ·
I:F'ONt.VItJ~~V~
I~ OtJL.Y I. Nt\M. (:Dr IM~eo
J.f~ t<":ol•O AF"Fblll).
YOUR LJ\U.l'/Efl ...
Reagan
policies
doa'tflt
in 1984
KA SAS CITY -In the old
cartoons -in fact in 1hc cartoons chat
In the four years since President Reagan's election1 the ~conomy h~s improved o greatly that inflation -the key issue
m 1980 -is a forgotten word this time around. Forget interest
rates, t~. 1:hey've dropped ~ight points under this Republican
adman1stration, more Arnencans are working now than at any
time in history and income taxes have been reduced.
President Reagan's commitment to rebuild our national
defense has proved inconsistent with his commitment to
balance the federal budget and has contributed to the largest
deficit ever compiled. The deficit is a source of concern, but no
more so than the remedy for it offered by Democratic challenger
._. ..... uted to pretlCdc Ronald Reape
mo~ics -one character alwa~
thouaht he had won a fipt when 1n
fact his e>ppc>ncnt had lit a slow·
burruog fuse under him Sometba•
Hice lbat ha~ 1t tbci Pf'C$idential
4kha1CS here. 'The reaJ aplosion ma)
be)"Ct 10 come. Walter Mondale: Raise taxes. .
There of a>une. no iJ'lunedjate Mr. Reagan's lopsided victory over Jimmy Carter four
years ago left him with two mandates: Provide the leadership
that the Carter-Mondale administration could not muster and
right a badly listing economy. He has done both.
knockout Ronald Reagan proved .._ ___ .. _ that 73 i jUSt a oumbei'-not a.a 11t
~!1!1111 .... llliliiijillii~--.............. mll! ......... ~ .... ~ .............................. c:cili~f~tbeprcsidenc:y.AndW~itt
No recent president, with the possible exception of John
Kennc:dy, has atta~~ed the sym.bolic stature of Ronald Reagan.
He articulates traditional Amencan values that cross party lines.
So many people believe in Ronald Reagan's vision of America
that la~r unions -~he sta~nchest of the Mondale supporters -
are afraid that gettmg the1t members to the polls will mean
,:bne size fits all' doesn't --ie~5?::::L~~
and other words of wisdom ~.£~~~~
getting more votes for Reagan. ·
It is his-leadership, more than any other attribute, that earns
Reagan the right to four more years in the White House.
.
40th District
needs to send GOP
back.to Capitol
Painless sharing
imparts wisdom
learned over years
. W?en I was a chil~ and things
d1dn t tum out as J anucipated they
would, my grandmother used to say
to me, .. Well, live and learn:• member that ··one size fits au··
And l have. When you have lived doesn't.
as much (as long1) as I have, you Your bathroom scales, alas. are
acquire, ~ometimes painfully. a lot of correct most of the time.
learning. I'm willing to share this •. New Year's resolutions are fun to
knowledge to save some of you from make, give you a feeling of ac-
leaming the hard way. complishment. and arc rarely kepL
If Ronald Reagan has a Teflon coating, then Robert · 'for instance: Never let an) mech-Husbands are not wired up right to
Badham was invented by DuPont. Dirt that would stick to most anic touCh a Volkswagen. Mercede5 fold laundry; wives are not wired up o P h les h h G right to clean out~ other politicians has been sliding off Bad.ham for years. a~cc~~ c un 5 e · as 1 errr.an Cameras can and of\cn do lie. Bad~ (R.-N ~W1>9rt Beach) ~as rep!esented. the 40th Don't miss a single meeting ofany Mamage is like a little black dress; Congressional Distnct smce 1976. Hts coJJ.Stltuents seem not to orpnization )OU belOna to unless )·ou ~~~7 woll!a~ ~hould have at least
mind that Badham's most.significant achievement in eight years want to be elected president. Jogers are bOrdcr line masochists. in office is to become Congress• leading junketeer, to compile When you have guc_,ts for dinner. You can believe:
one of the highest absentee records in the House of ~o not. i:!repa~ a ~pc that ends, -The .doctor when he tells you.
Representatives and fo operate a low-cost and generally ~f c immediately. . . "This will hun a little." unresnnnsive office he: has to tell you he 1S sentunen--The buildjngcontractorwhen he ~ • . . taJ, be isn't. ' says ... It won•t be cheap." . Perhaps the best thmg you can say about Bob Badham 1s When shopping for clothes re---: The waiter wh"en he whispers.. that he's a reliable rubber stamp for th~ro~ms of the Reagan
"The catch of the day should have
been thrown back. ..
You cannot belieye:
-The ads that offer a gadget, a pill
or a CJUm that will enable you so
increase your bust, decrease your
weight, or zap your wrinkles .
-You cannot believe: The hostess
in the restaurant when she tells you.
.. Your table will be ready in just a few
minutes.•• .
-The plumber 1Vbo says; "Lady.
I'll be there first thing Tuesday morning.'' .
-The gardner who say .. This
plant thrives on neglecL ••
There are people who have never
been on time. and never will be on
time. There is nothina you can do
about it. Ea'cb y,•as dehvetcd after a
10-month pregnancy. When Gabriel
blows his horn \bey Will be the last to
straaJe into ~p.
There are a fc 010~ n~ of
wisdom 1 could pass on, but someone
is at the Cloor. It's probably the
plumber. be said he would be bett
early yesterday morning.
Col1U11.1111t A.a ffelb u... ,.
LagwitaNJPd.
administration. ' .-
Badbam 's Democratic challenger is Carol Ann Bradford, a
bright, articulate businesswoman who has demonstrated
remarkable success~ raising money to fund her campaign.
Bradford describes herself as a moderate and has gained a
measure of acceptance among Republicans.
Her economic philosophy however, is badly flawed. She
identifies the federal budget deficit as a major problem and, as a
partial remedy, advocates an immediate freeze on all new
spending programs. However, she says she favors the restoration
of funds to the Aid to Families with Dependent Children
prOJ13m and funds for the Huntington Beach flood control
CIA doing its best to hide
links to investment firm
Sealed testimony says effort it) eludes
hiding people, changing identities JACK
Allus11 project, for exa~ple. . . .. WASHINGTON -The CIA is
On the positive side, Bradford bas taken a strong pos1uon engaged in a d~pcrate effon to cover
on John Wa~e Airport expansion -she opposes It -and the tracks ttiat lead from the sp) agency directly to a Honolulu-based Proposition -. she opposed that too. Bradford also has strong investment company now under fed-
pro-en vironmentaJ and anti-nuclear weapons opinions. eral and state investigation.
As a candidate, she is extremely attractive. · The company has been accused of
The unfortunate reality of the matter is that, if elected, bilking investors of$22 million since
Bradford would find herself in the position most freshmen 1979. :
occupy -dependent unnn the leadership of her partdc for My associates. Indy Ba~hwar .and · d I r-1· 1 th h d · Dale Van Atta have been invcsttgat· g~tdance an support. t IS not ilc:e y . ~ts e,woul provt e t~e ·ina the scandal. Scaled testimony
kind of-l5ac1cing the _Reagan ad~m1s~tton · needs for ~ts charies that the CIA ..:.... with the
economic package. so 1t would t>e mcons1stent for The Daily knowledgcoftheJusticeDeoartment.
Pilot to endorse the president, as we have done above. and whjch is now prosecuting the inYest-
endorsc the candidacy of someone who might block his · mcnt co~pany•s executives ~ "has · C !Jii!'en h1dmg persons and changina the programs in ongress. . . identtty ofother persons'' wbo could Although we can't bnng ourselves to endorse the candidate give embalTlssing testimony in the
by name, we think it is important that the voters of the 40th upcoming tnal. _
District send the Republican candidate back to Con~s. . The dam~ntrol opei:at·~~. is
CM citizens must unite
to·p:reserVie way of llle
To the Ednor: , become a 1><>lit1cal force taty-county-
Statewide. Find out wt\o our elected
friends are in public omoc and who
arc not. Election 1ime ·n Cotta Mesa
Costa Mesa, wake uc· Arropnl lndividua s and corpor·
a1ions kina the almaah&y doUararc
destroying our communlg and quiot
peaceful way or life. The Pacific
Amphitheatre, moto~le races. pn·
vatc hc~190pte~ O.C. Airport, the
Amel 1hllb·nsc deVOf!lJ>mcnt -e.yc pollution, noise. traffte and public
relations speeches arc all we act from these firms
Unne, all homeownen a soda·
•ions, join wuh one another and
1s here.
Regain conuol ovcrourcommuna·
ly and peaceful way of life. Don't let
the biacampeaan pendcrs suttponed
by specill interest &n?UP5 and d
vclopcrs from ouu1de 'the cit~. buy
the elections based on the &12c and
number of SIJIJS they put u_p..__
RALPH L lEGFREID
Costa
aimed at limiting the CIA s hab1htics
-financial and poliucal -that
could come from its clandestine
Involvement With ltiC mvcstmcnt
firm of Bi hop. Baldwin, Rewald,
Dillingham & Wong. The company's
assc1s were frozen last year, and 1t ha
been placed under trusteeship in
iresponse to a bankruptcy petition and
investor complaints.
The firm's chief executive. Ro~ld
Ray Rewald. was jailed on charges of
fraud; he was unable to raise the S 10
million bail -the highest e''Cf set in
Hawaii. Rewald c.laimed he was
runn "I BBRD&W for the IA. The
qcncy denied it. So RcwaJd ~
spondcd with 54-~ affidavtt end 95 upp0n1ng nhibits howmg that
the n' tmcnl firm was a CIA front.
Rcwald la)'.S the biamc for the
compeny"s dafTtc:ulues sold on the
OA, which has now admitted to a
.. low-level,. involvement with
BBRD&W.
But confidential documents and
ioten·iews with sources make it clear
that the CIA's involvement goes
much· deeper. Herc is what l've
learned so far: ·
• fter I first broke the scandal last
week. CIA offici1lls wer~ forced to
confirm that the agency ran a covert
surveillance operation aimed at
f orcisn students at the Hawaiian
branch of Brigham Young Univer-
sity. A CIA agent recruited Rewald's
son. Jimmy. to become a st~nt at
the univer5ity. to tail Chinese stu-
dents on campus and to pilfer thetr
records. A subsidiary of BBRD&.W
paid for and ran young Rewald's
operation.
•Intelligence souroe.s have con-
firmed that at least six CA agents
wortCd for BBRD&W an some c:a-
~1ty. Several in estcd money 1n the
firm. After n collapsed, the CIA tal'I
an internal In\ cstiplion that ttSUlttd an the disml sal of one agent and
disciplinary action agiinst others.
•Fonner CIA dirtttor Stansfield
Turner knew about BBRD.tW. and used the comparw's cbauffcurCd
limouSlnc on at l t one vmt to
Honolulu.
•The CIA dm1ned toa:grandjury
that 11 paid $3.000 for BBRD&iW's; telephone, tele~ and pnntina ball h
hid to. The FBI has obalntd pn
of checks made out to Rewald by the
OA 1s one11mc Honolulu tatton
duct Jade Kind h1, Who became a BBRD4W director when be retired
from thcqency.
•A souroc clo to LI Col J mes
.. Bo .. Gritt n:vealed that funds for his
ill-starred coven operation to locate
American prisoncrs.-of-war in Laos
were paid through BBRD&.W. The
firm's files alsO contain a Jetter from a
formcrdeputydirectorofthc Defense
Intelligence Aaency that indicated
Pentqon suppon for the Gritz
mission: •
•Jade Rardin, the GI ~tion
chief who succeeded Kindsclli. sent
~Ulac rq>OrU of hi meetings with
llCwa1d \0 hcadquanm in l.abgley.
Va. ReWald scettll)' tape.recorded
several of thie meeti•
•According to tcstJmon) aiven to
the FBI, a Justice Dcp8rtmcnt f.COS-
ecutor ·gned to Utt case said 'that
the gcnq (CIA) '11\'0uld l.lkc what·
ever a.ffitmalivc .stepS (necessary> to
protcc1 the identJt) of ClCn&in qents
... that tht" agenc)' would till to protect o~ particular agent ..
•Acoorihng to Rewald's coun·
seiled affida\'11. BBRD&W w a
crucial pan of lbc Cl A's Pacific and
Far East operations. The investment
company wn used as a conduit for
funds that went into covert action and
arms transaction and a a way-
stauon for ca h tha1 foreigl) VIPs •-.meet o hiJHo 'th~ Un ted Stat .
FOotnotc: ktwald, ho is und
court orders not to italic about the ca
coUkl not comrncnL Thro our
own so hOWC\'Cf. I
obcailled m l n l 00 of his
with hi It
M.Leoltw.-U•
~ ,,..ZIN Thathardhathasroyalprecu~sor
.... ~ , .. , ...
(Cllklt
Cf811ahelt aporta[dil
tr do >1 u C\'Cf wtar an aluminum
rd hel'l Kint Frtdttid: II of
Dtnmark • c.ntur) 1JO wore one
ttUlll), 11 wa h ro I htlmct, and
he had at craned of alu{lunum
bec:'au aluminum "1' so rare then In bri r. Fttdm 111 th en" ofthr
rorld' fO} h) f'or a 1lc thm Amona men
becau he v.~ an alumu1um hard four out of 10 arc ""'in"~
h1\ mm an \hat• arouP.
IOa a ~ hat lhc best ) to
When i1 comes to presidential dcbatc:s
-is :not necrssarily •hat mattcn. ~Bush pro\'CCI lhat when. m 1he o_pi~on of most Obsen'Crs, he belled
Geraldine Ferraro in their debaie and
then went on to lose it in the followi•
week.
Mondale may have pulled off the
same feat. He ,na.nsformed hi.mtelf
into a penonification of what the
polls say :tM voters !hint when 11
comes to nudear arms and US·
Soviet Tdations. In fact. the sen~ what be said in the debate
follows an artide in ~ A&in
mapzinc. In ti. the poUsicr DmUd
Y a.nJcclov1clt and 1lll associaie wrote
that time bas passed Ronald Reapn
by. The militant mood of 1980 bas
become lhe anxiety of 1984.
Tbe '\:Otel'$, Yankclovidl ~
both distnJst the Soviets and Ice PO
choice but to deal with them. T'bcyan:
limwiancoully in :favor of streallb
ud negotiau Tbey mt dial
neither "de could win a nw::lear •-ar
or. for that matter, achieve nuclear
supcrionty. ,. • ..AJ:ncriam have c1-
pcrieoocd a serious cbaDae of bcart
about the impact of nuclear weapon1
and national security," Yantelovicb
wrote.
The pOll data y welovicb cited
arc unambiguous and the J:WUoritic5
enormous. ,Interestingly, these .find-
ings arc relatively new and they
represent a massive ~ in public
opinion from 1980 wbeD Americans
were more lbarihly anti--commun.ist
and more willina to bdicve lhat
nuclear superiority was pos.siblc.
Of co the poll data is no secret
to cil.btt1he Reapn or tbe ODdaJc
camp and bOth candidates a~
to PiQcb the new iospcl. Reapn.
thouab. is~ by bis rUord.
He 6a5 Presideci over • maam: mill~ buildiq> and bas been dowD-~t lacbd1mcll in his pursuit of
umH"eduaion ialks with the Soviets
-aspects of the Reapn record t
Mondale :repeated over and over apin.
Indeed. if lbcre was a Mondale
tbcmc to the debate, it was that be,
Mondale. was the president the
American people seemed to be tellina
the polls1Cl"S they wanied. l'nstated.
bUt a part of this theme &nyy.'&y. was
the sugacsuon that Reapn had done bis job ·.and ou&ht to be rc1:iRd..
Rcqan had built up du: miliiary.
qaitcd the harsh anti-communist
moo<I of four ycan qo. and no
ol.iibt to pass frOm the stage,
'To emPhasitt that.. Mondale pn;ss-
cd another button Of national anxiety
-the fear of weapons in space.
Yankelovich makes no mention of
thi But ondalc"s own {M>lhna idls
him there is IOmdhina •
weapons in spec:c-""the tavcns .. -
that ICU people's ttCth ~ ~)C,iitrists ma) ponacf.thiS, 'bul
faCt rcma.ira that voters are far mort
a:fraid of what Mondale fabel) -
t would be nUdear weapons an
'SJ>8CC I.ban the) arc •bout lhc me ~P91l bUricd in silos iulbc aroond.
d 1it ttrtainly did Reagan no ·aood.
iben it came to bis own r Wars
propo l. He mect unsure of
9ihet.her he in fact talki!if about
outer ~ or ma somclhana ebc
entirely.
9().minut 1e 1 neYet hm-
hed to just one or t'fo'O thtrltCS. Both
Monda! and Reapn tried 1t0 •Y tar
m re -tondale ihat lkaiean -a
10 Pohttcal com~~
Rcapn that Mondale wu •Poll a1
the Caner adm1nlSU"lt10n pu&. -.a
1ond* ucr man Rel!IUi. -.
foundauon for Ute debl1e dmt will
follow the debeie -be OM dMn wil
oond from now until Electioe DI~. """ Thts :t CSebuc ltcr Moadalt
led 11-io. -lht one--..
D01 RtMaa. besl~ .... u ent.ltccou1dha~-..._..
er n he Iced the pt Csident llcft.
Ind God tnows l be od eot
R~ whO ed tired.. ... ~
he td t be t OUtlO do Jtel t Ille
fi hopa~h ~tftdlwttlla na anct "°' • n Ptf'. ltkMnl CMlil .. • Q•• ,..,
~ ..
•
, ..
..
ANN LANDIRI Al
TVUlnNGIAI
INTlllTAINMINT A.10
Li ~ -Penlnaala table, complemented by the warmth of •eneer 'l dlee. pro'ridea an elecant •arface for deek work J ••
A41u•tablllty and acceulblllty are key• to a funottonal accommodate mlnl-abel••· "~' tray and tackboard.
office. Ttie two Etboe"ce llafl Tlln abovo work •mace Telephone tray. mouted on an armature, la acUutable. , .
.. WheQ your office is a sec~nd home •..
. -
The more time youna. upwardly mobile prof~ssionals spend at -the
office, the more these Yuppies want
that en.vironment to be as satisfying
u the work they do there.
''The drive to leave a personal
mark on one's works~ce bat always been important;" said Bill Stumpf,
who recently designed Ethospace, a
new concept in interior architecture for the office, manufactured by
Herman Miller.
"This desire for personal comfort
will only gain in importance. That's
why our designs are based on the principle that people cherish chosens,
not givens.
"They take pride in 'perceive<i
amenities' -access to a view or
daylight, choice of colors or chairs.
The personality in an office can
change ver;t quickly when you create
a window.'
A main component of Ethospace is the structural frame. lt supports
rectangular panels, called tiles, which
can be easily interchanged on both the
exterior and the interior of the infrastructure so workers can desig-
nate where to place the tiles that hold
mini-shelves, paper trays and other
accessories.
Stumpf explained that the tiles -
16-inches high b_y 24-to 48 idches wide
-are made of flannel, vinyl, plex-
1glass or wood. Their wide palette and
varied textures enhance a designer''
creativity and •bility to invent,
improvise and compc:>se. The result·
ina mosaics provide an interchange of
color, opacity, transparency and open
spaces for easy access and com-
munication.
"The tiles are 4 inches thick and the
scale of Ethospace eliminates the
( ................................. iiil ................................................................................ __
. New chair does its job
-so yours can be easi.er
Equa seating brings equityt
ctvtlltyt comfort to workplace
Io computerized offices where most people "sit for a
livillJ." it's. important for health and comfort that chairs
are 11tter-fnendly.
Some adjustable seats come with an usortment of
levers. knobs and bunons for cbangina positions.
But desi111cn Bill Stumpf and Don Chadwick
. wondered why people should have to spend the mental and physical energy to consciously, constantly make such
• adJ uttmeots. 1 "We observed that office chairs were becomina more specialized by the t~ of job the user performed,.,
explained Chadwick. • We wanted the opposite: a chair
I PAPARAZ ZI '-=-----·----~ .="-.._rT'llO"r ~~-=--
that lets people move around, peifonnina a variety oftisks and sittini in a variety of positions from work•intensive to
conversational to relaxation."
Both designers believe that everyone -regardless of
physical build, work habiu or status an an orpniz&tioo -
deserves and eraonomically supportive chair. They call
this principle "seatina equi!}' "and the result of their three
years of research it the .Equa chair manufactured by
Herman Miller.
"It's taiJorcd to small-fiaurcd people," Stumpf added.
"Frequently office personnel who sit the least; such as managers or executives, have the more supportive,
comfortable and attractive chairs. But 57 percent of the
average office workforce is female and the women havt
been stigmatized for years by the inferior chairs they arc
issued." ·
(Pleue Me EQUA/82)
Whether upbolatered or not, Equa chair dee~• are
contoured to reapond to office workers' body mo•ementa.
.flimsiness, nervousness and closely
packed feclina of ·other modular
systems." he added. "But it is not the
answer to full privacy."
"You can differeniiate status levels
with fine wood finishes and the color
of appointments." explained Jack Kelley, a collaborator with Stumpf.-
. ·•Tho fundamental elepnce, how-
ever, is inherent in its desian and
function at every level. It hu the
solidity of a fine system of cabinetry,"
Nancye Green, partner of DOnovan and Green of New YorlC
aarces:
••Ethospace it architecture, creating
space that is esthetically pleasina. It
takes acoustic walls, clear panels, pin-
up apace, work tools, storaae -all the
requirements of the office -cleans them up and buries them in a
beautifully dm~. well:.articulatcd
wall. A wall with the thicucss and
heft associated with architecture."
Five years aao there were 2.5
million terminals in office in thit
country; five . years from now there
will be 1 S million terminals in use by
business.
· · ··aearly we have to re-think the
amenities of the office;" Stumpf said. "In the same way that we've moved
from mum& work easier to makina
work better, we must move beyond
ergonomics to subjective human
values as well."
, Gerald and Sandra Brodie bear about opportunldee from Marty Lockney u Mary and Jerry Kroamann and Pat Peanont Tim and Jan 8alllftll watcla fubloU.
Men of Goodwill turil fashionable
81 EVE C. LASH waving by,·· Pid MlmJ Roser in awe oflhe fashions. Her that's not saleable from K.nott's Berry Farm off to °"',... c.n • .,. *''' husband Michael retorted, "You better give me your Goodwill, .. said Vlr11D1a hon Buder. She and Paal Step aside Tom Selleck, because Goodwill Presi· Bullock's charae. •• were also talking about their new 'baby• race horse
dent GeorJe lte11ln1er and four associates have entered The event was planned bylheHelmsmensUJlP'Ort ~ccllus enteredln the m@iden ACC at Santa Aniia.
the modehna arena: _ ___,..ar .... oup to Goodwill of Ora nae County to "benefit the Dr. Jerry BrOdle and wife Sandra were chatt1na
They and IOprofessional mooelt from Bullock's, vocational traininaproarams for disabled adultsat with MartyLocqey about thcirimmincntcrulsetothc
Santa Ana took part in Goodwill Industries' fourth ' Goodwill," stated Amelia Locuey.co..chairman ofthc Iron Curtain countrie and visit with theAmbessadorof
annual Fashion Fantasy Cruise at the Newport ~ach SSO.pcr·person event along with Annemarta BalllD of Italy.
Marriott Hotel. Corona del Mar. Al o on the scene were Fred and MaxlHeutrell.
The fashionable foursome modeling with Kc s-Standing under a large tree to avoid a mild rain Fred X:octa,Jacl& and Ulrley Ca1perMD. Nat andUt
inaer were Gene Hartlliie. Helm1mcn president; Marty shower during the cod:tad rCQCption in the hotcr Limm, Ptrrf andlUU BHttllot, Jim and Floraet
Locbey, foundina Helmsmen president; Glen WoodJ, atrium were Bert and Pallla R11li, Jim and lu •lllvaa, La'••· Pellda Baul)', Pat and PHii Ml9Mll and
chairman of the GoOdwill bOatd and Leonel Barrt1aa, a RObertand Patay Peanoa and Ku and Debble 8Wpley ltn and DlutBNWll.
1 '·ye.irGoodwill employee. who all practice law toacthcr ... We arc oll trying to Dr. Je'tf'f Rieu rd• ofNcwpon Beach said, "Go na
About 2SO Goodwill supponcrs and committee resolve the me Law uit." said Rush. from an afternoon afTairto the even Ina ia aoina to 11\ake
members were dazzled by the show ... lots of ooh 'sand Dr. Riy Os brink and has w:i f c Gloria of11'\1nc along this one of &he biaacst C\ en ts in Ora nae County."
aah's were heard as fabulou fa hionsaod furs were with Lon and Mar7 Ann Well• proceeded tot he Orand ddecl'hi&hfflhts wcreopponun1typriicuw1rded
paraded. • Ballroom where the en tree were tenderloin of'btcfand anclud1na vaeitions,jewelry and ashoppirlJ pree ... a
Irvine re ident Patrtcta D lion of mi th Inter· chicken brc ts. home safe filled wsthjewelry, ostnch ~and s1tver
"" national said\\ hilc dmirin theprb:•This i notj u ta tthe Walt D1 neyMa&ic Kingdom Club ta bl~ co ans won by Rell MaeGrepr; a Hawauan holiday won
fa hion show, it'san event.• DisneyNauonal Director Robert Baldwin and his wife by R1 .. a.. ... and a wicker trunk filled with 111\1 npw
A 12-piccc orchestra played ho tunes as mOdels aady called the cherry flam be dcsscn the dinners belonas toGeori• Upton.
prancedanddanctddow:nthcrunwAydi pl ym hiahliJht. ~sochattmgwlth them wercUsaHlatt,Dave
sophi ticatc~us 'I ndscxytrnppuw. 111 r.Mtnctyl U1onandGer:?.'andAaltaVu1mu. Paparauused1redb> Daf/yPl/01 t)1cEdttorViiU
"This is hkcbein a diabeticandbavmgchocol tcs ··1 rcallybclic\emGoodw1ll. I ndevcry1h1ng Dean , ,
In· the r~d? Seek financial cou.-..-. ...
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Th111 for"llhnoas Readers, 'who \\CfC
haYJn&atcmbleumepa)1ngthe1r
balls. Wewerem tbcsamcspo1 nd
found the perfect soluuon.
Wnuna letters to our crednors nnc\f
offennatopaysomcthingeach moofh d1dn"1 ~ort. Noonr\\DS\\1lhn 10
eooperatc. Ourcrtd1t was cancelled andablotwa putonourreeord.
•• lMDEIS
ourm n Ourcred1ton rtbe1og
pa1doff. Jlowlybuuurely. tam
grotefuhhat we~reable to&alvcour
linanc11l problems m auch pos1tave
way.
Please Ann, tell people It 1s fu talc 10
lry to ncgotuuc w 1 lh their creditors. If
they oik wuh a tegmmatecoun1el·
or. 't~t•ll rtQCa vc total coopcrauon -S PINGATNlGHTJN
SJOU 'FAU..S.S O. A fnend told us about the Lutheran
Social Services Although we are not Lµtheran they couldn't have been
more helpful. Ther,set upa bW4et for
us, took over the bills and ncaottated
mallerpayments to our creditors
We pay them a pcc1fied amount
every month and lhCf take S percent
of that amount s thcarfee. The
crcdjtors pay them IS percent for the.
payments.
DEAR S.D.: ftaak1 for dolq a
better job fer .. lllU.011 Readtnn tbu
I did. I al.lo llartl from Cbe UliUed
Cbarlties of Greater C1Uca10. Tlaey
offer flauclal eouseUq oa 11Ud·
lD1·scale fee lle1ll.1'Htr 1amber la Where'• Pilar?
(S IZ) Ht· UH (betwee118:M a.m. ucl
6 p.m.t MHday W...p Friday. !Pilar Wayne I• honey-
moon•n1 In Europe. When
ahe retarne, her Penonal
Style column will resume ln
dae Dally Pilot. The load has been lifted frqm our
backs. Wearcleamingtolivewithm
Alo&Mr nuestJoa: Coatact tile
niatSoaaJ orpallatioe ef DOt•fOr•
profi&Co111mer Credit Cou1elln1
Senlces. JI b1 more thaa 200
~
IU,.ONM
tWITTOHART 111&'8 OIN/PAlf'(
ITMTMIC
I WBIAIPORT ~llOLOOY Cl8NEW8
QJNICNEWI • CD VAN DYKE
CC)~ . • * * "Wllh A ~ In My 1Helrt"
• ( 1952) S11u11 Haywerd, David
WayN cmuow ** •·uuccwrwnoo Valor" ( 1983) Gene
H1Ckn11n. Robert Sllcll, (l)MOW
•••..; "Thi Goldetl Sell" (1983)
Sieve Rallablck, Penelope Miiford.
-~ e STRAWIEMY 8HORTCAKE: PETS ON PMWIE •AUCE e IMCNEL/ LBIEl · NEWIHOUA
G PHO'TOGAAPHIC VISaON
(()NEWS
Onl&'tCOWAKt 8 WHEEL OF FORTUNE '9 IN OUR DERN8E
CID vuo JUKEIOX
-7:00-
8Cl8NEWS
DtllCNEWS
•LCMDT 8A.::NEWIQ Glw.1M (f)NEWS
I ntREE'8 C<NIPAKt
Wt&L OF FOATUNr
• MAGIC°' WATERCOt.OR8 (I) , ..... MMMZINE
0 BfTERTAllBT TONIOHT a IB»Nflt r • e cemw.AMENCA: BEFORE~ IT'8 TOO I.AT! ·
~~IENATARINOOHCEA,.,....._T
** *~ ''Oodftotth" (1938) Walt«
Huston. Ruth Cllattwton.
-7:30-• 2 ON THE TOWN
I QIFNAYFBJD
EYE ON LA. .,., .. CINClltAll
I NDPlE'8 couirr WILD, Wl.D WORLO OF ANIW.8
GTHEllWN
(() TIC T~ DOUGH
9 S100,000 NAME ntATT\ME m MCINO FROM CW< TI&
-l:00-1 (I) QWU8 ltawl3E 8 HIGHWAY TO HEAVEN
eMOYE **'h "Thia Timi For KllPI" (1947)
Either Wiiiiams, Johnny Johnaton. 8 Ol FAU. 0AJY • .o<ER'8 Wl.D
Cf) WKN' It CINCNCA1l
• flTUAl.I
f.~ &gll H• ~
(1977) Michael Caine, Donald
Sutherlend.
•THEIRAIN ID 12 O'Cl.oa< HIGH
CCllltOW **. ''ClllP'how'' (1982) Hll Hol-
brook. Adrilnnt Blri..t. ~TOLOOICJNQ
(D)MOYIE **'h "Thi Siii' Chlmblr" (1983)
Micfllll Ool.lgla. Hal Holb<OOI! 00 WASHMTOON
-a:ao-11 (J) DAEAM8 G TIC TAC DOUGH
(!) LOVHOAT
• ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT e MAAK AU88EJ.
(I) A CASE Of l8EI.
8MOVIE -t.00-
"With Intent To Km" (Pnlm'lrt) Kati
Miiden, Alt11 McAr1hUr. DOIF~OILFE
GODYNAm DN!WS
• MERV QfllFM
• MARK RUSSELL ID ENTEAPAISE
(() Tn.EVl8ION ANO THE Pl&llENCY ~ CD ALFRED Hf1'CHOOa< PIEB8tT8 (%)MOVIE
• u "1900" tPart 1 o1 2x1em Robert OeNlro. Bult LlnCalter.
-t::aO-Q a rre YOUR MOVE (!)MOYE •
**•~ ''Klllidoecope" (1988) W1t·
l'lfl Bellty, Sulannlil York. ·
9BfTBMSE -ID WOODWfDfT'8 8HOf>
Of) THEIMSTIGATOAS:
CllJSADllO AEPORTEJllS Of THE AIR
-10.:00-.. IT. B.8EWHEAE
GQ)tl)NEWI
I Ill HOTEL 18PY
A AEPORIEA IN GAENADA Cit MOTORWES<
CD AOU.EA IUPERSTARS CC) MOVIE
**'~ '0A Star ls Som" (1978) Bltbfl Str-.nd, ktll Kriltofftrlon. ®MOYIE ** t'A "OkilhOmll" (1955) G0tdOl'I
MacRll, Shirley Jones. C.D>MOVIE * 0 "An Otftcer And A a.rtt. man" (1992) Richard G«e. Debra ~-•• "AM!nge ol lht Nin)a" (1983)
ShO KOIUQI, Mhur ~
-10-;30-., INDEPENDENT HEWS
Gi) A REPORTER It GRENADA
-11•-
8D8Cl>3'11CDNEW8 8~ •.&FERSONS .., ROCl<fOfl) FU8
fa ONLY WHE.N I LAUQH
-11:30-
• (() MAGNUM, Pl
DCfJTONIGHT 8 ODO CCM'l.E
8 111 AIC NEWS NIOHT1.tE Cl UllSANOAU.EN •VEGAS • lAltMQHT AM£AICA m100cue
())MOYE *** "Creepshow" (1982) Hal Hol-
brOOk, Adnlnne Blrbeeu.
-1~
8 TWIJGHT ZONE i=HOUYWOOO * ·~ ''Whart lt'1 At" (1989) Dlvld ~Forsyth. Cf) HEWS
Irish strife
fillD. hailed
at Cannes
Karl Malden •tan u an eDJ'aled er
cruadlnf agalnat a boy con'ricted of his
daughter • murder In the new TV mo'rie
"'With Intent to Kill" tonlaht at 9 on CBS,
Channel 2. ·
• 8Tl&T8 Of IAN FIWQICO 9 aoacFCR> FUS
@S'T'Yl£'M
(%)MOYE * •~ "f>tnlmltt Chicken" (19e8)
-1.2:80-'
D QI LATE NIGHT WITH DAW>
LETTBllAH • AlRED tlTatCOCK
PRESen1 8 THREE THREE 0
(!) SEA HUNT • •MOVE **** "A Night At Thi Opn" (1935) Man 8'othlr1, Allin Jona. e GROWING YEARS
(t)MOVIE *. "Bolrdlng Sdlool" ( 1983) Nat-
llllil l<Nli.
®MOYE
•• "RMngl Of ltll NilJa" (1983}
·~·Arthur Aoberta
-12:«>-
f)(l) MOVIE ** "Goldie And The Bour" (19791
0.J. Simpton. Melisa MiclllllMn.
-1;00.;-
0 MOVIE *** "Thi Acc:wld" (1948) Loretta
Young, Robert~. GUPSTAIRSAT~
Cf) MOVIE **. ''Thi Proud Onie" (1956) Robert Ryan, V1tglnta Mayo.
eMOYE **\i ''Thi .......... (197•) John
~Pa=onJr. 9 EHTERT TONOHT CD> U1f GAIUN> WITH MICKEY
flOOHEY
-1:30-
• TO IE ANNOUNCED G llE8T Of L.A. TODAY $:"' lWITlfS LAUGH-IN * * "Humlnolda From Thi Delp" (1980) Doug Mc:CIUf1, AM Turkll.
(%)MOVIE **** "Smllll Of A Summer N"ighl" (1955) lMa Jacct>uon, Eva
Dehlbeck.
.._
We Will
MANAGI
your Property
Prol>'rly
842·5827
LONDON (AP) -"Oll," a
somber mo\ ie about the agony of
Ulster, 1s brinJing home to mainland
Britons what 1t'sJike to be caught in
the crossfire of Northern lrefand's
turmoil.
NOTRE PLACE
Better Women's Clothing
at Better Prices
The $2.6 million film, produced by
an Englishman and directed by an
Irishman, was well received at the
Cannes Film FcstivaJ1 where its only
name star, Sliakcspcarcan actress
Helen Mirren. won the best actress
award.
"Cal" is tht latest in a strina of
feature films abOut Ulster. Most won
cntical praise but were financial flops
because Briush di11nbuton shunned
ahem as too POhtica11y sensu1ve.
A few years aao. London's National
Film Theater canceled showing "The Dawn;• a 1936 movie about the 1920
Black .and Tan War. because at was
coasiclered lOQ provocative for Ena·
lilb audtences. Wben the movie finally aot a
pnvatc ahowtna,. pohce Spcc1al
Branch aacnts hovered ouwdc the
theater nouna who went in to sec h
"'Cal;' produced by David Pul·
1nam who made the Acadcmr. AWiril-winnlna "'Chanou of Fire,'
breUI new "1?Und bticause h ii
p1af1n& to a wider audaence on a
tnaJOr cucun after a London
premiere.
It's also do&na 1ood business an
Dublin and was rclcated 1n the
United Si.ta last month. ~ .. will prcmaett 1n Nonhcm
Ireland Nov 12 at the Queen's
Unlvtntly film festival an ·~lfut1 ~ f'tsttval adminaltfltOr MICNICt !>Den said o 11 1he moo 1mponan1 ftfm we· e ever~.-
170 E. lnH ST., SUITE 211
COSTA MESA (UPSTAlftS)
10:0CM:OO MONDAY THRU PllOAY
Sotwdoy hy 'Appolntment , 541-3035
-SIZES~12-
• •
Consultation ..
Cutting & Style
S25
1ss otr
tor new dlents)
PerrNng
S45
2111 •· CCNlll HWJ 171·0'21
SUit• A 181 a..tteo•1t Open 'Juea. ...,.. lat.
Coron. d•I Mar t .. •
memkrqellda=11•1M Ual~Stalct... • ...
drHtltHllA•r .....
IA•llam,M41 tt'1 Plwe=a self • ......._,...,_.
•1141 lilt)' will telly .. WIMt le la
you area
J'mc=-villeddllla =-' decat~Jenean 111'8
lebtOli'twlala•IMtn*Hll ftey
wu& .. ,.y IMir ......... ,....,..
tllelrtocMIMmet.F• ..... ....
lllfoniaaU• cubea 1.._.. Tlluk1
for"rlt1a1. • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS· Please clanl'y the rumors that are running
rampantconccrrunaa recent rep-
rcscntau ve ofJ>roc1Cr It Gamble who
was supposedly on the Plul Donahue
s~ow discussma P&G's relauonsh1p
with a &atamcchurch.
Since I am not a TW..icwcrdunng
thedaytimebutamabiguserofP&G
pnxiucts, I would like to get to the
bottom of this.
The P&G represcntata ve was id •
to have made some comments about
there not bcingenoujh Christians left
• • • E vnt ifdt'ink1D111 rite .. ,,, "rh11111n
youraowd. 11fltledn'rcrowdyou our. Lam rk &di 6om Ann Landers'
bookkr. "Booze and You-For T«n-~s~· "Send 50~n1und a ~lf..addre. en"Vel~~ to Ann
Landers. P. 0 Box J 1995. OJ~.
1ll. 60611. •
CHAIR SPECIALIZED •••
F.romAS
av INCW. AMMn22•1n
s.cau .... c.e about )'OIJ-
W• tty never to be undertold-bUt
We try to haYe ~hlng you need-but
We have ~ to bring you the
lat•t fUhlOnat>te tabrlca '°' teu
and we have ~ In having the
trlendllelt 11'4:1 most helpf'ul ..... atatf
In WI our stor•.
Come .. Why wtrfbOdy talk"1! •bOut-
,AMC WAMMOUem "'-........
* Open to the Publlc * PatWna & NotlOna· Alwa~% Off * Not Pre·CUt Buy t You NMd * New ArrNal• A'-Y* .
~\. MCCALLS 1e PATTERNS
f~NITTO~OCT D.:lt, *I
SNOW.~ ...... ntl'Y l.AS1'I . ... ...,.. *NEW* HM.LOW
•11.• l'QJDAY WTAWCI ....... '-\L.L~
"' • "8.WT&Wl~ l'AU. IOirTS
~-( '4LLCMJC0e ._,....,.,...
E.IC1WD m•nDWt __ ._
FAmlCI MOON
50~ .,,. lff
ow.._.i.,... ........ ,,...
DOmlTIC a •oa1m ---r ... •1:; .... --;-,n ...
'II" 'a .... .• , • ••
'••ttron•lil•
f •IHICS f0t l•n
,.._111111111111
119 .. , .... 4
(WHILE SUPPLIES LAST~
,
t I
J
Qqnge Cout DAILY PtLOT /W9dnelday. October 24 1984
tes a true 'double agent'·
'' JACIDS HYMAN Mc,01 at the Ahmanson Thea1cr ofihc n .. ,, , __
.__ Los Anaclcs Music Center, he
UJS ANOELES -11•1 u'OQac that ponrays AJfrtd Redl a homo xual
ectGI' Alan Ba.a Is m '°wn dunn& a Austnan soldier who wa black·
E ll'Y andal. the anaa of an mailed into becomulJ a double cnt
-1 aa-.. f d . for the Rus51ans. ..,-:uo~t~ it:~:e~lt!fo"~. inJ And in .. An Ell81i hman Abroad"
-. whose movie rolet have for PBS. he plar.s 1hc notorious from lhe 1y.mpathehc En,11 h PY Gu) BuraeiS. who de-
nid mn .. An Unmarried fected to Russia.
•• 10 the man~tative man· ~"One (Burges ~ 1s a Vt!) extrovrr·
"Tlic ROK, is cumntly too son of man
two ttt.1-hfe spies, one on who wenl to ..._ ud one in a film for television. Russia for ideal-~ II Jobn Osbome"t .. A Patriol for is tic reason , and
#
... ....... l'li:I
12fW!I ... ,.
IM...._
~--1
cmT•Mlll
(-MllllllD'l1"1
13 *' ...... , __ ~C'.unl
._,. W 1 11
'
=====-. the other is a Vet)' suppreascd man
who is blackmailed
into beioa a py ...
--..:.."'!.o::..-!t
...,.... llAOI LA ......
to.J!OS~ 5111~ ~ C-...MCllA m1•11
Imm( _.,..V!lJO
( ~ f-V#!IMI (Aim~· IJO
LAIUM IMACll llMlllll
l"'*lflD 5CIMI Con! Gnooorrc ... ,,, UI~
LAl!Aat ~
MC Sc.w ~IU
(81 ll ..,~
said Bates.
The choice o
role5 was coin·
·i.f t l ~
~ J,
cidcntal, and Bates aces prepared for each part separately.
"'You can't compare them. They're
Just great roles."
Throughout his career. the actor
has preferred to tackle cha11cnging
characters .
.. , suppose I hav~ turned down a lot
of part , mostly because I couldn't
connect in any way,'' he said. ''I look
for some kind of genuine response in
myself .
''I think if you go blind into
something you're much more likely
to get lost. There must be one strand
that you can catch."
Bates has purposely avoided
stereotyping in making such films as
··women in Love." .. The Go-Be-
tween," "Zorba The Greek" and
··Georgy Girl."
''I've lway tned lo m kc every-
thing different,•• he c~phuned. "I've
alwa) tned to stnkc a new note. so
I've alWll)'S looked for mcthillg
different from any image I've bad "
Bat has worted in televi ton
several times, primanly an adapta·
lions. "The Mayor ofCtmetbridge," a
rninisenes based on the Thomas
HarCI)' novel, was shown on PBS.
What pans would he hkc to play
that he already hasn't done?
.. I've alwa~ ·wanted to do a
mu ical," Bates admitted. •·1 take
singing lessons becau$C I find it gives
you a real sense of your voice. l"d love
to have a go."
He's also intrigued by the idea of
directing, .. but I love to act and I've
never really wanted to slop. I'll do it
~meday,"
A retrospective of Bate • films is
ttenma rn nearby nta ~onica
during October and November.
"h's a compliment, I gues • ' said
Bates, who confinned that he' been
ctmg for 30 ye rs but dded with a
mde, "beg.innlna very youna. of
course."
"I can't a scss my work at all " he
said. He docs &omctimes watch h 11
films on television. "I'm inlJi&ucd
objccuvely, whether what you
thought you were aoing has me
across."
The difficulty for an actor. ~tcs
td, is to keep one' balance while
collaborating wnh the other actOl'I
and the director.
.. Acting i a very private personal
th ing." he said.
"Therefore it has to do with who
you are and you have to hang on to a
sense of who you are and not allow
people to exploit it and manipulate it
too much."
·ca11· him the Rev.
Anthony Perkins .
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Anthony
Perkins may be the only Hollywood
·star who can officiate at your wedding
ceremony.
He recentl y performed the weddina
for director Ken Russell and writer Vivian Jolly on board the Queen
Mary at Long Beach.
Russell's suggestion, sent $25 to
become a licensed minister of the
Universal Light Church.
The wrong pew
)
fn Gitt l to 111. S40. IO..OS f11 ..,,._ ••
Ito llS SJI 7tt 11• MMODIS (PS)
•ICU'fS1DIO
Perkins starred as a street come~
P.reacher in Russell's nc" movie,
'Crimes of Passion. He said. .. I'm
glad ifs turned out to be so con-
trovcrsiat: P@J)lc will either love it or
hate it.''
He formed a close associatiot\ with
Russell while makina the film and. at
"Well. 1 really enJoyed marrying
Ken to Vivian." Perkins said. "When
he first proposed it1 I thought he was
kiddjng. But then ll turned out he'd
done some research and discovered
ttlat if we paid S2S I coula become a
member of the Universal Life Church
and would be eligible to marry them.
"Now, as long ad pay $25 a year, I
can keep on performing weddings.
And I want to. I had ucb a good time
with the last"
·Lenore Stjeme belle.ea 8he'• ID the preMDce of tbe
Almt&hty, bat John Greeulade dl8patee thla Idea lD tile
lntae Commanlty Theater comedy .. For t1ii UM of dli
Bal. I," cloelnai a foar-weekend nua with flna1 performancm
Friday and Saturday at 8 p.m. In lnlne'a Turtle Rock
Commanlty Park. call 85~-5496 for ticket Information.
TIE UZOl'S (K-13)
flDIUYSTtKO 12.Jt J ll 5~ •• ... 1_1 _ .. _____ .,.
P'IWl#(PC) tno uo.110
M WT Sla.wntl <")
Zl!>. I U. ICISO
A SCll81 STOIY (l'G) rn Ollr 110 uo. 5 4 1010 rft °"' rr-ue l?'JO. ?JS U O ' .. so 10~5
TillF Ol IOm (I)
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C1141tM 1411'1.• ..... 111111
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ruaos <I> .
llO l11S. Sn 14S 11.15
CIM:S Clf PWD (I)
1• llS Sll 70 IUI
I 00 4 ~ ) I~ IOl~
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IN 00l8'( $111110
IZO 24~ H S &O an ltU
M UT1D OlllllD -Cll 12 lO lOS. HO, I IS 100 ,
EXTED9UTOl 2 (I)
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Z10,61S 1015
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mwa_WEDNEA04sY12 1A BARGAIN NIGHT AT
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Put a Jew words to work for you m the.
Acting's easy.
but not speaking
NEW YORK (AP) -Academy
Award-winning actress Joanne
Woodward has no trouble getting in
front of a camera or on a 1tage. But
just tell her to give a speech and she
heads to the shower,
"S~lcing is not something 1 do
well, ' she said in an interview.
So when she has to give a speech,
she practices in the shower. •·Because
I JWCat so. It's terrifying,·• the actress
said.
NOW PLAYING .... _ .... ,,.,.
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-Sailo~s, RoadrunneI-sjockey fort ·tie shot
Jockeying for the shot t the title
and CIF'OCntral Conference pl~yoffs
continues this week in the fifth of
seven rounds of Sea View League
acuon-with front-runners NC\VPOrt
Harbor and Saddleback heavily
favored.
Herc's a look at eacb of Fnday"s
con1C$1S:
Etcaacla (Z-4·1, l·I) vs. Corna •eJ
Mar ,,.z, 1-1) at Orange Coast
College: The pme figures to be a
blueprint of Corona deJ Mar gamcs-
a defensive struggle with 14 points
more than enough to win.
Corona det Mar quarterback
Bobby Hatfield suffered a mild con-
cussion last week against University.
"He'llbc back," 111oout all Corona
del Mar Coach Dave Holland will say
· i,omb8away
about the Hatfield tuauon Just
when he'll be back isn't entirely clear.
''h's a perfect matchup, size.wise
wc•re the same and we're' Cf)' similar o~n~ivcly and defensively,
I 1ust hope we can fVC people
run for their money.' "Thcfre a
different football t m with him (Hatfield) in there," says Estancia
Coach Ed Blanton ... But we feel his
replacement (Tod Beamowcr) as
very capable athlete. They're for-
tunate 10 have that kind of quar-
terback backup."
Both team arc in similarahuat1ons
and Blanton puts it simply: "We have
to win."
Laguna Beacll (3·'· l·!) at New·
port Harbor C5-0·!, 3·0·0: Newpon
Harbor figures to be in its t>t;st shar)e
Tb.ls week's schedule
nepble
TIWRSDAY
Edison v . Huntinglon Beach (at Orange Coast Coll ) Edison by 7
Gahr at Irvine . lrvme by 3 DAV .
Westminster vs Fountain Valley (at HD High) Ftn. V"1ley by 1
Ocean Vaew vs. Marina (at Westminster) Marina by 13
Costa Mesa vs. Univcrsity(at Irvine) Uruversity 'by 14
Estancia :vs. Corona dd Mar (at Orange Coast) CdM by I
Laguna BcachatNelVJ)On Harbor Newport Harbor°by 13
Woodbridge vs. ddleback (at Santa Arna Bowl) Saddlcback ~ :11
Mater Dci at Pius X tcr Dci b)' 3
of the season and Coach Mike
Giddings has to feel good about th t.
''They (the Artists) can match up
with us and they have some speed in
the backfield," says Giddings. ''They
really play tough up front, and very
few people have moved the ball on
them.••
The Artists wdl be without 6-4
a.acldc Oreg Heneghin, aoootdana to
Laguna Beach Coach -·pain is
Haryung, bccauscofaspraincfi_anklc.
leavJna 16-4, 220..pound Oark Pauley
as the only legitimate answer to
Harbor's overwhelming advantage.
.. No on can deny that we're
Golden West Coll~e'• Tom Bermatad, 80D of the coach. SOUtla Cout Conference water polo match lD tile c~·
fl.ree lhot a&UU.t Cjpreu defender Brent Parenteau darl,lii pool. Raatlet9 stayed unbeaten wttla romp. Detall8 on 82.
ovcnnatchtd AYJ Hat)'UJJI. .. But
ID)'lhin& can happcn.J.. ~y ID a hljb school pmc un pa~r they
ould wm. Their nmmna t.ck. (.Fnu) HoMCT, 11 biatr than an}
body we've aot.. We need a btde uke
like we did Friday ni&bt (in a 14-0 Wtn O't~ Woodbridge) f ibo~ we didn't
usenall up."
Cfi1A Mna (l..a.I, M) Y•. U. V.•
llb' '?i:id"!-%) at Im.: Mesa Coach Tom win u bopir_w bis &earn can
repeat its u ual stron1 f mt..JWf ow·
ing -and get some m~ 1n thC
second half in order to pnna an
"J>.!C~e·re ghing some of our kids
rest. havinJ them go JUst one way;·
AY$ BaldW1'1. ··so I think 'WC re png
tobe stron&er in the scoond half."
Mark Favorite, University' best
rcoeivcr, remains questionable after
missing the Trojans• lo-6 win over
Corona dcJ Mar because of an ankle
injury.
Rustlers,, Bucs,
Gauchos faclng~
big road tests ·
Long Beach hosts
Golden West; OCC
meets Apaches
ByCURTSEEDEN or .. .._,... ....
All three area community collcac
football teams hit the road SatUrday,
with Golden West traveliitg to Long
Beach City CoUcac M> take on the
Vikings iD J>ao..9 IClion. while Oranae
Coast visiu SouthweslCm in Oiula
Vista and Saddlebact ventures to San
Diego City College.
A 7:30 p.m. start is scheduled for
the OCCSoutbwestem and Golden West-Long 8eac.b pmcs. Sadd
will play its lone day pme of tbc
seatOD at 1:30 apinst the Knigbts.
Herc's bow tbc pmes ibapc up:
GeNtia. Wat al Leu Bead9 CC: ne Rustlers bri ·a 2-1 am~oe
mark and 4-1 overall record to
Veterans Stadium 1n Long 8eacb
against the 3-3 Vikinp.
Long Beach woo its first three
games of the IC&SOD, including the
coruercnoe opener with El Camino.
But the Vikings ·have lost their last tbree~o werfuJ Taft. Bakersfield
and oa. •• CD I look al them, they look
htc any of the other team in the
conference. They're "'UY aood." ays
Goldcri West Coach Ra) Sbactlcbd of the oPPQSJtion. Long· Beach 1s ex~ to have •
staning quancrbaCk AJ WUhi.oaloD ;
in the lineup~ the Ruatlcn. w~ misli:d the last two games wnb an ankle iajury, -wbic:b is
one of the rasons they lost two of those pmes;• accordina to "
Shad:Jeford.
Golden Wesi v.ill be missin& No. I
runajng back John Lamberton for the
second wect in a row. Last~ Todd Parter took over Lambaton"s
JOb and promptly ran for more than •
I 00 yards ID a 3():.24 ctory over ML
San Antonio. • ·
Oru&e Coast ., S....waitn: •
Buoyed b} their first victor)• of the
season, Coach Didc Tuc't~s Pirates •
will try 10 make 1t 1•'0 smigh t qainst
the A mes m Cbula Vdta.
beat San Diqo M l7-J4,
to~arour~~ streak. Southwestern, meanwhile,
will be out \0 end a two-same '.'!
streak. • "'Based upon our last two pet. •
fonnances (including a l9-17 IOss to
host Rivenide two WttlcS ago), we "
hould be very competitive tho rest of
the way." says Tucker. •
TrenC.hes are being dug in horse-racing circles
OCCs defense had a Jot lO say
about last SatUf'd:af's victory. The ~rates rcc:orded ~t sacks of quar-,.
terback Tom Ponidl. even th~
five OCC starters were out with
injuries.
more linebackcl' Joe Piccola. ..
Charlie Whittingham, the cel-
ebrated conditioner ofhorscflcsh,
tcllsthisstory.
A young lady approached Owlie
atSantaAnita. thrustfonh her
proJ1'8m and asked him for assistance an iheupcomina race. Whittinaham
obliain&ly pointed to a name and
number on theproaram.
"But that horse is even money;•
she exclaimed ... l c.a n 't make any
money betting on him."
"OK." Charlie said, pointing_ to
another horse, ... Here's one at 60 to
one. You c.an 't make any money
bettina on him either."
Charlie Whittingham no longer
counsels beginning horse players. He
is now president of the California
division of the Horsemen's
Jabbarsays
he'll stick
to decision
Benevolent and Notcctive Associa-
tion and deals in larger affairs. The
pressing issue at the moment is the
matter of the state lottery initiative
which willappearon the November
ballot in.C.ahfomia.
The advcrtisinacampajgn against
the lottery is implU~ive and its theme
suggests that the lottery is a vehicle of
Eastern money barons with past
and/or present o'P.Dized cnme con·
nections. The anu-lottery f orccs
would protect us from these rascals,
not to mention the ravaaes of p.m-
bling.
Charlie Whittingham lays none of
this on us. He urges HBPA members
to deliver a ti thins offive percent of
their earned purses to belpfi&ht the
lottery initiative. Charlie malces no
pretext of savin&souls. He is
mterested in the horse racina mdustry
and the HBPA.
Whether a state-operated lottery in
California would destroy California
hone racina is open to question.
Lotteries and horse racincco-exist
in several states and many surveys
have been conuueled to determine
the effect lotteries have on racing. As
in thecaseofmostsuch studies, the
results depend l81Jely on who pays for
the survey in the first place. Gener-
ally, though, race track people and
horsemen lament a negative effect of
lotteries on theirindustry.
The horse racina people in Cali-
fornia, includinathe HBPA, are also
concerned aboutadodae that, like the
lottery. is still in the formative stages.
Board meettna
lllnaeeota '• 8tne Payn dell•et'9 a bard eek Into
boud9 oa P.lallalil '• Daft Nilllii 111 10IL coatelt.
Buo
Tucm
That would be off-track wa1enn1
which at one time was causing the
racina fraternity to muster its
financial forces in even peater
strength than is bci na put fonh in the
battle against the lottery.
This changed when the racin&
VOLLEYBALL
------ ----
industry moved to take over the ·
operation ofoff-ti"adt bcttin,s. As the
structure of off-tniCk wagcriJlB ·no~
stimds, the raoe Will c5UbliSb ·bcttina
partori with somcthin& of a cafe
society atmosphere and v.11J tbcrefore
control the distribution of all pari-
mutuel tickets in the sta&e.
This action by the tracks is in
compliance with an old saying io
horse racing: .. If you can 'tbeat ·em.
join·em."
Probably. the anti-lottery fon:es
will be best equip~ for bat\le
inasmucbutheotbcrsidedoesnot ·
have any visible source ofincome.
StilL the lottery at the moment is the
favorite because the polls say the
voters will approve. ·
I 6-4, 22().poundet, •'U rcsponsibJe •
for IS ~and lhrtt $acts.
~at Sa~ The Gauchos. tied 1itb Citrus for
M' ·on c.on.r~ lead. can have
the toP spot 811 to themselves -1th a
win in San Dieao. Otrus bas a bye this
~-Saddlcbact ·quanerback Mike
Do ill lead \be Gauchos
qainst a San t>iceo team whicb lw
not won a pmc th11 season and is
yickh.ng 318 yards to oppogaa of-
fenses.
San Diego Coach Joe DUkc lltcr-
nates his quartcrbac.kS. usina option-
onentcd Bruce AndCt"SOn and suona-
armed Eric Vradcnburif\ depeDding
on the ituation.
CdM primed for showdown
Relief ace Sutter
joins growing list
in free agency
Fnm AP a1.-aeu. 111 Bruce Suncr, who tied lhc major
leaaue record with 4S 1aves laJt season,
filed for free agency Tuesday from the St.
DALY TV -Long-time major • lcaaue umpire &be Pinelli, who worked
home plate dunng.Don l.arsCn's pcrfttt
'pme in the I 9.s6 World ScriC$, has died at ~uts Card nals, lhc Major LC"Que P1iyer$ Assoc1alion a oonvilesctnl home.
'1ald. .
Sutter, 3l, joined pitcht>r Jtick Sutdiffc of the
Chicaao CUbs and designated hitter Andre Thornton of
the Oevcland Indians as the top names to file for thu
· year•s f~nt rc~ntry draft Nov. 8 m New York.
Pinelli, 89, b best remembered forthetut1ime he
ever offic1atcd. umpirin' Larsen's perfect game
between the New York \ ankeet and the Brooklyn Dodaers.
Born in 1895, Pinelli played eight years in the big
lea,aues -Chicago White Sox, Detroit Ti&ers and
Cincinnati Reds -before retiring as a pla)'er in t 927.
He started umpirinJ in 1935 and, at one pomt, went 20
)'cars without missing a game.
Also fihng Tuesday wtre infielder Jim Gantner of
Milwaukee and pitcht>r Dave Rozema of Detroit, brin&ing to 40 the number of players who have filed for
the draft. Players have until nC).t Monday to apply for
free aaency, and clubs may continue to negotiate with
their own frec-aaent players until Nov. s. The Cardin.I
also have the option of retainina negotiatina rights to
IA.ken put Jone. on Injured llat
Suuer at the draft. · •
Sutler's move was anticipated by the Cardinals,
who currently are looking at a counter.()ffer made by
the pitcher·~ agent~ Robcn Gilhooly and Jim Bronner
INGLEWOOD -Rookie Earl Jones m of the Los Angeles Laker.. has been placed
on the National Basketball Association
team's injured restn'C list due to
scsamoidius in his right foot, it was announced of Northbrook, Ill. •
Bronner. reached at bis office by telephone, said it
was "certainly possible" that Sutte,. would re~sign with
the Cardinals before the draft. .. but it's cenainly abo
possible th~t he will go through the draft."
Tuesday. · . The move left the Lakers with 12 players on their
active roster, the NBA limit. heading into Saturday
niahfs 1984-85 season opener at San Antonio.
Another easy win
~lo:r Golden West
Orange Coast
also victorious
in conference play
Golden West College continued its
winning ways an South Coast Con·
ferencc water polo action Tuesday by
outscorinJ Cypress, while Orange
Coast enjoyed suc.cess against Mt.
San Antonio.
In a high school match, Corona del
Mar broke open a ,close pine in the
early stages to upend Downey.
Here's how it happened:
Golden West 11, CypreH 10: The
Rustlers received scoring from JO
different players and used three
goalies in overwhelmrng the Chargers
at Cypress. T&c victory ran Golden West's
record to J 5-0 overall and 9..() in
conference play.
The Rustlers raced to a 6-l lead
• after one quarter with Tom Hermstad
scoring both of his aoats in the period,
extended it to I 0-4 at halftime, then
made it a romp with six more goals in
tbe third quarter. Jn the third quarter,
Dave Cook had three of his five soats.
Jim Zakasky, a product of Marina
High, tallied four goals overall, while
Jason Crow had two. Mike Stan-
bridgc opened in goal for the Rustlers
before being relieved by Jorge Garcia
and Jay Winterhalter.
After a date agains\ the USC
freshman at home today, Golden
West's next action is Friday at Orange
Coast.
Orance Coast U, Mt. SU Aato.Dlo 8:
Pirate goalie Tom Kennedy blanked
the host Mounties in the first half as
OCC built iu eventual winning
margin by taking a 5-0 lead at
~me.
Now 14-7 overall and 6-3 m
conference play, the Pirates did yield
Jive goals in the third quarter, but Mt.
SAC could pull no closer than three.
lo the final period, Doug Plin had
three of bis four goals while Todd
FUilerton added a pair.
Rob Mirande had two of bis three
tallies in the first half and· was •
credited w;th five steals overall, as the
Bucs await Friday's confrontation
with Golden West.
ln high school action:
Corona del Mar 15, Downey 7: After
the teams traded goals in the first
quarter to end in a 4-4 tie, the Sea
Kings' defense came alive, complete-
ly shutting down lhe Vikings while
the offense poured in five straight
goals. CdM was sparked in the quaner by
Jason Likins' three steals, which the
Sea Kings convened into scores.
Gary Tichy and Ty Tripoli accounted
for two goals each in the second·
period uprisinJ: Downey, which entered the pme
ranked ninth in CIF. 3-A, could
manage only three goals in the final
three quarters against the Sea King
defense.
Marlu 11, Su Clemeate lt: After
tradin1 single goals in the first period.
the Vikings broke the game open in
the second scorina six times with
Tom Warde and Steve Spanovich
notching a pair apiece.
For Warde, Marina's leading
score.r, it marked his 99th goal of the
season and moved him nearer to the
school record of l 00.
The Vikings, ranked eighth in Clf,
play Buena Park fn a non-league
matchup at 6:30 tonight at Golden
West College.
Tollner warns team
to stick to football
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Thete la
one ~ ttMlt USC Coach Ted
Toltner hopee the TroJana won't
ptay Saturday when they face
Caftfomta In a Padftc-10 football
cont .. t.
Some Cal playere this teaaon
have ahown a tend~y to taunt
r oppoeing p'ayera, but Totfner ta.Id
Tuelday that he'• warned hla team
not to get caught up In It.
"That'• aomethlng we don't do,
but we have guys who are~
Uble to getting caught up ln It and
retattatlng," the TroJane' COech
Mid. "And they'd be the ones to
get caught.
"We've been showing them
game fltma and telllng them that
thfa (taunting and finger-pointing)
lt going to happen to you. If you
ret.,late, you'lf get caught and
thrown out of the game and tMy
other guy wffJ be atancsfng there
laughing at you.
"I know tt•a h8rd to do, hard to
keep from tetaltatJr\g tf you catCh
an .. bOw or eomet~. but It's
~ we have to gu1rd
agatnst.''
T ortner, whoM 20th·ranked Tro-
jans tak• a 4-0 Pec--10 mark and
5-1 overall record Into the 11:50
a.m. game a1 the CoUMOm, said he
plan• before the kiCkoff to .. ask the.
off~ top-.. be_,,. and ...
t~ wtK>le phay." ea.·· a... .... comtno off •
17-14 ·toil to UCLA, white the
TrOJMe ripped Arizona by an
lndMtlolil 8COre l8ilt weekend. ··cm ta 2-a (overall) ind 1-t (In
the Pac-10), but rM1tv better thar'I
thet," Mid Tollner. "ft'1 the Mme
Old thing," we're not rMdrtoplliy,
we're ~ to be tn ~ ---~-~
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NFL
NATIONAl; CONl"PENC•
San Francisco
llM\t Atlanta
N-C>r!Mns
Chl<:allO
Detroit
Tamoe Bay
MlnllttOla
Green a.v
Wftt
W L: T
7 l 0 5 3 0
3 5 0
3 5 0
~ s 3 0
3 5 0
3 5 0
2 6 0
I 1 0
EHt
ll'ct. P'fl ~A
.17S 21' 1'3
625 18' 137
.37S m m
375 170 191
62S"l71 136
.37S 159 llO
.37S 143 200
.2SO 163 203
.125 137 1'1
SI. Louis S 3 0 .425 20 19'
Wa$hlt10fot1 S 3 0 625 217 143
Dallu S 3 0 ,625 1S7 170
NY Glanll • 4 O .SOO 131 173
Ptilladell>hla • ' o .SOO 139 143
AM&JUCAN CON .. ERIENCE
Plttsouron
Clocinnell Cleveland
Houston
West
7 l 0
1 1 0 6 2 0 • 4 0
' • 0 c:.ntrM
' • 0 2 6 o .
~ ' 1 0 0 • 0
East
.175 163 " .175 215 151
.750 220 156 .soo 1'8 156 JOO 221 211
.500 165 170
.250 132 1M
.125 102 150
.000 103 "'
~ml I 0 0 1000 267 117
NY Jets , 6 2 0 .7SO 201 157
New Enoland 5 3 o 625 165 lff lndi&NPOlll 3 S 0 .375 151 206
Buffalo 0 I 0 000 136 233
SundaY"I Gllrnn SM Francisco at Rams
Oenvera1 R~
CindMati at Holnton lndlanaPOlia at Dallas
Delroil al Green a..-
MlnoftOla al Ctilca9o
New Orteans at Cleveland
NY Jets at N-Enelan4 Atlanta at Plltsbul'Oll
St t,;.oul1 at Ptilladelphia • Tampa Bay at KallSH OIV
BuffalO at Miami , WuhlnotOll al HY Gia11t• ,.....,., Gama
Se.Ille at Sin Oieoo {Chaimel 7 at 6)
NHL
CAMPIELL C:ON,.lllt8NCI
EdlTIOnton CalQarv
WIMloeG
Va.ncouvtr
Kill9I
Sm~ OIVbMft
W L T l'tl GP: GA
6 0 1 13 •2 20 s 2 0 10 .. 25
2 20 '"" l 6 0 2 25 '3
052 220 34
Nerm DMWn St,LOYb 3 2 0 6 21 16
ChlcaOO 3 3 0 6 29 27
Delroll 2 ' 0 ' 25 31 Toron10 2 • o • 1' 29 Minnesota 2 5 O • 21 21
WALES CONF•RENCE
Patrtd! DMs6eft
NY Islanders S 2 0 10 .0 3S
Ptllladtlollla • 2 1 ' 33 11
NY Ranlltn 2 2 l S 11 20
Walhlnoton 2 2 1 s 19 11
N-Jerwv 2 3 0 • 19 21 Plllsburgh 2 3 O • IS 16
Monlr&al
HarlfOfd
BuffalO
Quebe<: Bos Ion
Adams DMlten
• l 1 9 22 IS
•21 926 27 • 2 ~ • 27 25
340 63030 2 • 0 • 16 26
TuetdeY'• SceNS Montreat 3, QueMc: 1
NY lalander1 6, Vancouver S
PhllldelOhlli 7, Minnesota 2
C.te>arv 9, liarlford 4 Teniltlt"l~I
Haw Jersev at Plttlbur1111
Detroll at TOfonto
19o$1on at St Loul'
H•rllord at WIMli>eQ
Venc:ou"ar al ChlcallO
Washington at EdrnofJIOft
-,
'
Quebec trimmed bJ Montreal Florida to UDd_,oprobatlon'l
Rookie dcfcnscman To• Iuvm ~
bro c n M."Cond~od I e w.ilh b1 :tint '
cnreer aoal to 1 .d the Montreal CBnad1cns
OAlNfSVILLE. F1a -The NatJonal 0 Colkciate ihleuc Aaoaauon noufied die
Unh en1ty of AondA on Tuesday U..1 u ll
recommcndin& lhe Gaton' embattled foot· 10 n 3·1 National H~ey ~ VJctory
over the Quebec NOtdiques l uesday n t G1y C.rbonncH ddcd an imunmce &Qa1 for Mootttal at
9: l 8 oflhe third period. Carbonneau 5000ped upa loo
p:,ass and got an unassisted goal with a slap shot from the
n&ht faceoff circle ••• In other NHlaames Tuesday.Pat
LaFN"1De lipped hom the wisrn1ng goat with l :07
remaining nnd Br at S1tte.r 5Corcd three goals to give
the New 'York Islanders 16-S victory over Vanoouvcr .
. . ~\'• hmMlU.1 notched .ihree.goal5, two an an earl)'
th1rd-pc;riod eruption. to lead calg.ary 1-lanies to a 9.4
victory over Hartfold. An Olympk Saddlcdomc cro" d
of J~,683 saw the Anme:. break open the game by
soonn~ five straia,ht goals in the first 10 minute$ of the
third period .•. Mark Howe ignited a three.goal $COrini
burst 66 seconds into the secpnd period to spal'k
Ph1ladclph1a to a 7-2 victory over Minnesota.
ball pf'Oll'811'.' tic plaCCd on thm" years• probation for
'lolattna NCAA rula. The proposed Anct1ons, detailed in a confidtnual
repon received b>: university President Mailball
Crlser. would proh1bu the Southeastern CoafeRoce
school from ap~riqg 1n posi.season .-mes and on li vc
tclev1 ion for three ~ears as well as Stnp the 1n1t1tuaioa
of IO scllolarshlp in each of the next two acadtau.
)eatSThe NCAA'_s Lewn. mlormCd university Offtdall
that the Kh<><>l has l S days to appeal the findina.t ofih
Committee on lnfra_ctions and noted that by doina IO,
any sanctions wouldn't take effect until at least January.
1985. . ... :..a. That would mean the Gators, who are in the ~
DeBartolo set to buy Glanta?
of the nscc for their first SEC title ever, could •00f.P1 a
bOwl in Yitauon this season if Criscr clectsto appcAJ the
results of a 22-month probe initiated in December,
1982.
SAN FRANCISCO -Edward De-• Banolo Jr., owner of football's San Fran·
cisco 49ers, says that he is now •·so to 70
There was no immediate word on whether Crilet,
who ten town for a meeting in Binningham, Ala., Wher
in the at:temoon would appeal.
percent interested" in buying baseball's --
San Francisco Giants.
Oe8artolo1 in New Orleans for an National
Football League mecting1 talked of his intel'C$t in the
Giants in intervie~s wath reporters from the San
Francisco E;<~miner and San Jo?C Mercury News. •
Teleililon, radio
1&IVlllOll
No event• echeduled.
Bob Lune, owner of the Gaants, put the National
League club up for sale recently,
MDIO
No eYerltl ICheduled.
LOI Alamftol
TUHOAY'S llltlSULTS (~ tf ,, ............ "'"""9)
Afl'flALOOSAS
l"IRST llllACI. 4YJ tunonvt. Watt"ll 'Thi• 8ov (MIJnoa) HO 2A 2 40 Lady In The Nlotlt (~) 2.40 2 IO
Prlnc:ns Mldllllo (HanMft) 3.20
Also racea: Ace'• Fty High, LOOM
Chaltte, PIMM N Time, Atnv Do Riehl,
Ne"er Worrv, Arrlv•. q,.rpw PoWer. Time· .52.
52 •XACTA (3·21 11111d 17,-40
QUARTERHOASES
SIECOHD llltACI. 350 Vlfdt, Buds Brother (Ward) ll.40 UO S.40 a. Sure Tonv (C.mpbel) • S.60 uo
Mo«I Lark Jet (FrvcSev> 1.20 Also raced. C1!41rm e:uv. EIUilvetv. l',\fu . Ta Rac:iuetl, JOhn C•Mn, Gofor
IM4uesf. Vetue Out, JOllny SllYl Run.
Time: 11.22.
TICIRO RAC•. 3SO yerds, OH·S9Md Galore (H Gro) 2.20 UO 2.20
DH•Mla Amor (E.Grc) 3.00 J.40 3,00 Game lnue (Cardoza) 10.00
DH-Otadtital for first
'*'I'° raced: Llsa1 Clllldv. 5mokam T111v.
DlcUYI Blue Delllm, Jell 8adu1ll0. Droe> OI
Moon ..
'Time: 17,17.
U IXACTA (7·1) oald S13.00; U EXAC: TA (1•7) paid Sl7.SO.
THOROUGHBREDS
fOUllTIC RACE. 6 fUflollot
Rlbortllt (DomlnilUeZ) 18'.60 6160 20.20
Stir' Reoal <Eslr.O.) uo •.oo Naomi'• Mv JtW94 CPtdroia) S.00 Abo reced: l.adY Fr•n Fran, Avater Lady, Whal In The Wor1d, Queeft'I Rullno,
Awnome Twosome. Via Zatlte, Rlctr.v Power.
Time: 1.13 llS.
"l"TH RACL 6 furlO/los,
Golden Wetdl tSlblltal 4 IO 2.IO 2 60 Cosmic L\ont !Stevens) 3.20 J.oo One Master (Ori ... ) • 3.10
Also raced 54.lrrtolillouslv, Pnlf'1 Prince, Admlral 0 .C., &alhYmtlrv. Turbu·
lant Ruter, We're lmor•Md, Barstow
Time: 1:12 2/S.
SS •XACTA <•-7) oald U..00.
SIXTH RACE. 6 furlOngs.
Broad StrHt, (0Uvaresl 9.60 5.00 U O
Blame It On Mt (Domfnguet) 1'.20 s.oo
Bvl\Oladv (HanMn) 2.IO
Alic> racec:I: FIVlng Catch, Loc:k·
uovourdaughler, By Monday, Formage,
lnnoctf11 One, Prlnctn Btvertv.
Time: 1:12 2/S.
SEVINTH llltACI. 6 furlollo• Rtslt'lll Yukon (Ollvarn) 7.40 4,00 3.JO
Axe The Odds (Slbllltl 3.10 3.60
PlQuantlY Uwal) 12.40
AllO raced: FOllOw Ma ArOUllCI, All Arie,
Rule The 54.ln, StcUtar Side, Purlllel Fl·
lltlM, Oollols, Sltant• Gaal.
Tlmt. 1;11 415.
SS IXACTA (5-6~ oald US.00.
llGHTIC •Ac•. 6"2 furl0rt01
Slunnlnt Scarf (MMIA) 12.10 UO 3.40 Melfua'a River (Gard e) 3.20 2.60
SlnoinO Snow ISlblllt) 2.60
Also raced Hold The Queell, Act's
APPMI, Silver 8tushtr, Klltv Dancer. Star
Isle, FrOlll RU1111er.
Tlmt. UI 415.
NINTH RACE. I 1116 mllel.
Glance AOGUI IFmclt) 14.20 S.60 540
Skv Yardar (SlbUle) UO 3.00 Soectecular a .. u (0Uvar .. ) 3 . .0
Also raced our Man Bob, GabtlV Chief,
LlmfftOM 1..oult, Conllnual Orans1t.
Time: us.
U IXACTA (7•2) H id S131.SO.
S2 PICK SIX (9·•-1-5-4-7) 1>ald Sl,4'6 . .0
with 15 wlrmlno lfckats (five hors.Ml.
Carrvover POOi· 521.697.51.
T•NTH RAC•, 7 furl0n0$.
Natural Summit (Slbllltl 560 3.40 2.10 Lady TrllbV CL.loham) 3.20 2 10
Gent's Ladv (Han54111) · 2, 10 AIJo raced; Mias Ebonv, Nlbelune>a
Time: 1:23.
SS •XACTA <•-n oald W .00.
•LIVINTH RACI. 1 1116 miles.
JoM Thi Touoh IOtvsl uo <1.00 2.60
PrOOtf Otllverv (Hansen> HO UO Our Gian (Meza) UO
Also raced: Just .For Cflartlt, Afld •nado, Wast• Bastctt, Troian Houw.
Time US 215
U IXACTA 11'2> P411d SS6..50
~l'ALOOSAS
TWILl'TH RACI. 4Yl fUflolloJ. Roval v1111nowin <Fr..,) 13..tO uo 3 '°
Homer Madlavtork IHanMnl 360 HO
lk'atet1 Lad (Bum') S 40 AIM rKtCI: SNl'llllno Gin, ._. So,
Jeq\llla Wllllt, South'.) Dtlltflt, Kodr.k Kkl.
Cal\edlan e.!ls, Mr. ~ !Jmt.
Time. :51 41S. 12 IXACTA 17•61 1>111d Ml.20
Allandance: 5,911.
G~ tlMI' HIGH SC..OOL
.. Marina 11, l'euMlln Vlltfrt 0
Slllllel Cmtl (M) dtt, WMYer, 6•2. daf Knoy,
6-0, ~f SMllOll, 6'0; Po IM) won. 6-J. t•J.
6-0, E. Robertson (M) won, 6·3, 6·4, 6·1,
Deutl6el
Llano·Hatrll IM) def. Dardl·Ll9tlt, 6· I.
def. Prlce·O..oot. 6· I. def. Cutltr·C.dllll, 6·0; Stamitlc:Ht. Robertson IM) won, 6·•,
6· I, 6·2J Fenton·ChurctJ (Ml WOil. 7·6. 6· 1. 6-3
«llwn 14, OC-View 4
SIMlet JoMson IE> def. Tre119, 6·1, Off. tnurld,
6·0, ci.t. Matlaon, 6·2, Slellerv <E l won,
6·1, 6·0, 6·0; Cri5109010us (El IOsl, 1·6.
~n. 6'1. 6·2.
0.-... Smllh·FtlnGold (E) lost to Hurzllllet·
Durr. 3·6, dtf. Kerc:e•Go!'dOn, 6·2. def. Rellev·DaVera, 6·0, ShM·Slmmons CE>
I01I, 6·7, won, 6·1, 6·1! Nosar·Luttrett IE)
IOst, 0·6. won, 6·2. 6•4.
W•tmlril1w ts, H~ ... di l . Slntlff
Beff(ln <WI dtf, S Sut>erwanl. 6·1, def, • Nlc:ol, 6·0, def. C. Subtc:wal'tl, 6·1; IHrl <Wl
WOii, 6-1. 6-1. 6·0, Felendo CW) won. 6-4, 6·1, 6-2.
~ Al11·Mart1MI (W) dtl. Allurl·MIDI, 6·3,
dtf. Masal'IOkav·Nokemura.4 6-l. ci.t.
Cartv·Schuttan, 6·3: lwallltc-1.aaa (Wl IOll, 1·6, won, 6·3, 6-2; Andraw$.·UUlt IWl
lost, 1·6, won, 6· I, Iott, •-6.
Nnrlleft HattMlr 12. C:..q MtoM 6
SIMIH Tuoer <CM> kHt to CrOOk, 0-6. def.
Newcombe, 6-•. def. Slbasllan, 6•1; Ct1a111 CCMl lost, 0-6, won, 6•2, loll, 3·6; Wlilf (CM) lost, 0-6, 2-6, 3·6
0..-S
Larson-Va" SCovoc: ICMI lo11 to Evan•·
Howard, 3•6, IOlt to MCCieiian-Woodruff.
3·6. IOsl to Watsne-S11vdar. •-6; Sotln· KOM
(CM) ""°"· 7-6. .... 6·•. Paimer•!N•H•e
<CM)' IOSI, 1·6, 1•6, •·6.
Utl!IM a.di 1S, UnlWnltY ' Slnlltt
Conkay (LB) def Corlmln, 7-6. def.
Carlaon, 6·3, def Gr"'· 6·1; Lead\ <LIU
won, 6-1, 6·0. def•ulttd; Tartlel (LB> won
bV detaull, 6·2, IOst, •·6
Doullttl
0 . Swl·Taul <LB) def. Branda·MRltr,
6·0, dtl. Abe-Hoek, 6·2, def. Leppl11·
Robtuon, 6·1; Wlllallt ·Navlor (LB) won,
7-6. 6·2. 6-•; W. Suol·Goldlttln (LB) won,
6-1. 6-3, loll, 2·6.
Women's IOCC»f'
COMMUNfT:Y COlllGI °"'* eeest a, Lene IMdl cc o Oranoe Coast ICOflno: WhlleclOll 2, Bran
Boxlnt
(at A"8ntk CltVI
MeavvwtlGht1 -Marvl• Frazier <Pnlla·
dttol'llal won 1111anlmouJ 10-round dtc.lalon
over Bernard 8eriton (Toledo).
TuNdlrs transedleM
8Ala8ALL
Al'Nf'lcafl Leatue
CLEVELAND INDIANS--AdOtd .Jlm
WllMln. flot ba~n. Lula Quil'IOllH, In·
fltlder, Jim Slwy, ~tctlef', aftd 8ar111rCIO
Brito and Ml11utf Roman, outfieldtf'a, to
lllair roster. ~t Oon Carter, outtlelcltr, to
MalN of 1fla Arntrlcen Auoc:latlOll ...... LMwe
NEW YORK METS-Narntd Jonn larr
..arn1n.111tallv1 anb!1!ll tor lerm turns.and
KO\/lino '
8AM<•TIALL N•"9NI ....... A ......
LOS ANGELES l.AKERS-fllacld Ewl Jones. lotward, Oii fhe lnlured rftttff llil Cl.:EVELANO CAVAWIEltS-W•lv•d
G4ff Cromoto,,, ctlltar. DAU.AS MAVERICKS-Rtltued Mark
Wtat, center.
DENVER NUGGen-walvtd Rott Wll•
llams, euard GOLDEN STATE WARltlORS-Welved
Chrla E 1111i.r. cet11ar.
KANSAS CITY KINGS-Announced the
• tatlrtmenl of Da¥t Robltcll, center,
MILWAUKEE IUCKS-Cut lutc:n
Graves, guard, and Md(fnlty .S•no1tto11,
Cll.llfd•torwlfd
NEW JERSEY NET..,__ltlHtd Sttve
HavM, tenftr, anG Hank CorlHv, forward
C9d Foots Wall<« l 1uard, on Int lnlufed 1' fOOTtALL .............. Lfft!IN
GRE.£1't IAY PAC.KEIU-Waivld Svd Kit.on, ~ guatd C .. lmtd Ka Ill"
U.Otf, offlrltlvt """'*" oft w1lvfof1 from ttlt Denver eroncos SAN DIEGO CHAROElts-PlaCKI
Kt!lfn WlMIOw, lltfll llld, on tr... Jlniured
rtlafW st SloMCI R Ofl E lleft, 11tnt tnG.
SAN FRANCr5CO ~Rl-f'!Kecl llus'
Fre11e11 119'\t tllCI. on '"' ININed rewv. ll•t $19nH Al Dh1on llttlt encl WASt41~TONJlamK~c.d Jefl
aoltlc, C9ftt« • 9lld Cl'«llt 9rown. w10t r.c.rv.r, 0!1 tfl9 lfllutlod ~ I Ill ilfMd
J T Turntf ano lruc. KlmOan, ott.nlv1
~
Edison,
Marina
net wins.
The top two teams in the Sunset
League girls' tennis standiil&S -
Edison and Marina -crushed 'their
foes. while Westminster took the
measure of Huntington Beach Tues-
day afternoon.
Meanwhile. La~una Btach held its
share oftbe Sea View Leauge lead and
Newpon Harbor stayed in the thick of
the playoff race with victories.
The details:
Edison U, Ocean View C: With a
number of junior varsity players
inserted in the lineup, the Chargers
still bad more than enough for Ocean
View in staying unbeaten (17-0) this
season.
The trio of Taunya Johnson, Julie
Slattery and Lisa Cristopolous (\IP
from the JV team) combined to win
eight of nine Points in singles to pace
the Chargers.
Edison plays at Huntington Beach
Thursday, then meets La Quinta in a non-lcque encounter Friday.
MariJla 18, Fo11D&a1Jl Valley 0: The
Vikings won their 13th match against
one setback this season, breezJng ~st
Fountain Valley for a second stra1aht
shutout win.
In singles, Carrie CriscU, Janet Po
and Eileen Robenson each swept, as
did the three Marina doubles teams,
whose closest call came when Tiffany
Fenton and Heather Church were
extended to a tiebreaker against the
Barons• No. I team. .
Westmla1ter 15, Hantlagton Beacla
3: The Lions swept in singles behind
junior Stacey Belkin, freshman
Naomi Iseri and sophomore Julie
Felando to improve their Sunset
mark to 3-4 entering Thursday's
match at Fountain Valley.
For Huntington Beach, panners Jy~thi Atluri and . Cindy Mills
cl11mcd two of the Oilers' Pomls in doubles.
Lagua Beacla 1$, UDivenlty S: The ~sts improvt;<t t~ 8-l 1r_l lcaguc play
with the conVJnetng win over the
Tr<?jans as Kelly Conkey swept in No.
1 smgles and Denise Sugj and Noni
Taul did the same in doubles.
Laguna hosts Corona del Mar
Thursday.
Newport Harbor J %, Costa Mesa I·
The Sailors rebounded from Thurs.:
day's loss to Laguna Beach to stay in
the bunt for the CJF playoffs in the
Sea View with a 6-4 mark.
Corey Crook won each of her
matcbups at love from No. 1 sin&lcs
for Newpon, while Mesa's dou6tes
team of Carrie Sohrt and Denise K<>p
posted a 7-6, 6-4, 6-4 sweep to hi~hght the Mustangs' efforts.
Charlie Simmer
traded -by Kings
From AP dl1patclaes
INOLEWOOD -The L:os An·
&,elcs Kin~ Of'! Tuesday traded dis-
gruntled ten wins Charhe Simmer io
the Boston ~ruins for a J 985 ftrat round draft p1clc.
. The depanure of the »year-old
Simmer mtans the end of the oncc-
fe.ared Triple Crown line which
included Marcel Dionne and Dave Taylor.
• Simmer, who earlier said he was
tired o~ playiq for a losioa team, bad
scored Just one goal fonhc Kinas who •tt off t~ an O..S-2 •tart. worat in the NHL th11 season.
Basketball coach
needed at Newport
. If you·vc c~er wanted to rotdt a
high school basketball team Coach
Jcny OeBusk bas a deal fen you et
-Ncwpon Harbor Hi&h.
~Busk is m need of 1 Wilk-on
c.'OICh to 'Jke over hts sophomore team, 11\d he nttds someone immedj.
1tdy. The meuon 11 just a couple 0 weeuaway.
De Busk Po•?1!' out 1h11 lbe opc.U
tS 1 paid po11t1on For more infor-
mation. phone 760-3327,
COMPliTE NYll C
Taz Reform Act ..... ~
minuses for real
The TJX Reform ACI of 1984
contains plutet and minuses for the
real c111ie investor.
Real esiaie "M:Quired" after June
22, 1984 and bef~Jan. I. 19&8, will
be entitled 10 loat·term capatal lltn
treatment 1f 1t is 'held for more than
111 months Rell ~Cite Which ~
owned pnortoJune 2.2, is~ subject
to U\e "'more than one year .. rule to set
the preferred lona.ierm capnat ptn
treatment
The recovery pcnod is extended
frOm I :S yean to 18 years for all
bu11d1np except low income housmg..
You•u mU be able to choose between
aa::clerated rates and stta1&ht line
dq>reciation. nus affects au property
otaocd in service after March IS,
1984. There will bC transitional rules
Newport firm
starts project
for country club
for propcn)I ubJta 10 bindana con·
U3ctS or under con~on u:Of tbat
date.
Tax free e.xcbanlO of real estate
wJll have to be completed on a sborler
·time schedule. The pnorlawlllowed
the tranff eror to J)e,nd an llmOI\
unhm1ted amount of tJme findina
qualified proptn) to take 1n ocbaw
for the property transferred. Tbe new
act requires that lhc ~ent
property be identified wnhan 4S days
"~ ~~ = c::;._Evel~o DaaleJ~fC~=ted struction on lhe Bermuda Dun~
Counqy Oub .~lubbousc, a ~.000 to state researi square footiilcdny situated adjacent
to the club·s 27·~ole 1olf cowx. The • Evef' Daiei Cbairman of'IMla u. c a 1 'I ..a-lrt•= countryclub1~cbhas4S0mcmben t Ja ' n.---.-.,• ........... e.-. ! worldwide nas been the site of the has been apoan~ to the state~'---. ~II· I 1 wr._ Bob H 1"--~ Oa · G If~ Research Advuory Committee. Duiel 11 11 .. II • Ill E:'wlhwi• namcn~'fur~~st 2f1c ~ ., our: Educatio!l Subcommittee, which will ~ aew HI ·~ • p'rm r lilli
LocklHll deYelelfed for ffAllA. •Oald The tWO•ltOry, rt" mtllion Scnate..B1ll lOl8. Tbebillex~C'ODUDUUll~'!Ml-I I .....
pro.Ide ••eelYe amoaata of JllOWW for lubbousc in Bermuda Dunes will cstate~~andunpoea1e1ttna~Dnieh1a..a-lln*lr
.,_. atadoa operad-.. A LUI• bcm· replace the country club's os;tP.nal and pracuana attorney. • • •
lbaped ban..... plctued betweeen tbe clubhouse, which was demolished Pamala R ...... bu been appointed ales -.m far 11.D. ~Ca. 'I
liolU' &rraJW, woGld be a.Md to MrriCe prior to beainnina the new facility, PentridleCovecondominiumcommuahyiDO...MeallliimWMf.ID
Oltaltal tramif• .utel•. Not 9laow are acco~1na t<? Al S~bic. Torre Con· theJanescompanyaftcranwo-~··reanmaat"frmD.*1911-...._.
ueoolated elemena n.cll u the co-orbital strucuon vice prcstdcnL The new previouslyhandleds&lesforPal~Covclllhe«ial"'~•eat,..._ anmanned platform for 8Cleatlftc apert-dubbouse will feature a combined at the project. She has been 1D tbc real estate'bulineli i:lr mae,.... ta tJa bltal _._., ela1 I dtnina/banquetarca to accommodate . • • • .. men • e or maaea•w:--. • c •· 600 pcop!e; OOcktall and reception lM Au B~··· ~Joined A lwla/llt 1111 N ·NeNi.11wMpa1..w.11-..~
faollld• for eemctnc and NDeJitDa otlaer lounJct, each with a fireplaoc: a viii as~officeleas1na1~Sheco'!!"tD.ilernew.P011e,...ai.•:-•••ve ...-oeoraft land utroaaatli PutlCfpatln.C and snack. bar; pro shop, and locker ass!stant to Gove. Deubn!*" • ii a UC Imme""* • ... • tieuattanlalClaar acldrity. and card rooms for men and women, active member of the 'OniR nelal Net"" IDd die A• Ph ..:;:::::::::;::::;:::;:;::====::;:====::::=::::::==:::::::=:::::::::::::::::=:=:=:=========::::;::::::::;::===========================::::::::lA.uoclatloa•IU~Y&dtJWI•• I"' • • •
CoWw.U BaMer Retlh1dll a.a...._ ....... U. cMlm • toP
salespeople for the month at tlltee ara. Co.a ofllmi. Mtal Ir toaklDP
The only way to tax defer
hi income fmm ·
honors at the Costa Mesa office, 8elte .,_ _..... ber __. • 1111 West
Hunt.inaton Beaeh office, andlua ...,...,_WQPMP•-aflM__. in
Auaust and SeOtembcr in cwpon 8eJdl. s.maa.. a ca aw nlomnoa
spccialis"t, has 6cen 1 QOnlistant iop Dl'Oduccr ad tillOr m 1lae C.. Mela
office. She bas been 1ith Coldwell :fOr :four ycan and is ...a.. .......S a
broker's license. She is a member of the " ,, .. ,.. ... O J IPL which
supports :the new music cenla'; lbas ICrVed u liseaboocl ~a:niideet II '11 ti•
Bae l'UID, arid IS actively involved in tbe Women's GoJf'Club al die Cella
Mesa Cloatl'J' Cl9ll and the Tennis Oub at.._ V_. ~ ""-8rOct.
who bas been WJth COidwell for lhtee ~ S&Wi•ljtte bl laillm pricl4
propenies in I.be uu. Marv:&n ba been !Wida OOkfweD for l ~ ,_,., RiCaiOJ~fi Pld.orunahli~ riammr:!.tTn£..-~~·. ~-= at 1e a communal)' o ll vaew Ul
·securities . aranteed by
the U.S. overnrnent
No other investment offers you all these
advantage~. Total tax deferral, high yield and
payments of principal and interest guaranteed
against default by the U.S. Government make the
Com~ss-11 Government Guaranteed Variable
Account• {GGVA) an attractive new opportunity:
• professionally·managed portfolio of1>0% U.S.
Government-guaranteed securities, including up
to 90% invested in mortgage-backed (Ginnie Mae)
certificates
• P-Ortfolio rated AAA by Standard & Poor's
• total tax oeferral of dividends, interest and capital
gains
• no sales charge deducted from investments
• $25 minimum investment ..
• dividends, capital gains and distributions of
GaEATEI LOS ANCUES AIEA
U IVERSAL CITV m ~ OtV f'l&z&. ldJl(ent IO
lk\iYef'IM Studiol • • • . • • • • • • • .. • • • • i'fl0.2620
• INCUWOOOI~'~
150 South Marllrt Stl'Mt .. .. • ...... (21))611.;?94
RANCHO PALOS vtlDlS&lS P.lDttO
211190 South~,.,.,.,.
ltLMONT :SHOlt£
.., (ate Second S4rMI
SOlJTH~~ 1000 fli! °"'' MnUe .. • .... (111.t '91M"4)
SAN MARINO
2JSS ti.int~ Drive
principal reinvested automatically
• withdrawals can be made at any time0 "
• free, non-taxable transfers with the four other
Compass-II investment options
• guaranteed death benefit payment
• monthly income guaranteed payable for life
Stop by your nearest Great American office and
ask a PAMCO Representative about this new
investment opportunity!
• fhis \Jn '<telflred .annutty K undet,.,1111Pn t>y S...n lo~ Anur1m1t ComJN!l) of C•Ndl ~US:l •nd Is 111\'~i.ble at Cre.i• Amenc.in f '"t ~·ng' S.nk through P.iic:1 IC Al'Vlult)
M11kt11ng ComJNny lnwrMICt' Mr"o<ltt tPAMCOI •n 1ndfpfndc-nt he mMd hie 1nwr1nc:1t
.agi-ncy .1nd • rts••l1tritd b~-dHlitt PAMCO ;,and Sun l1l1t ••1t not 1tfi11i11ed <Of'llP'nllt> OI Gtfft A""1'1can "1d .lr1t wl'l.'fy respon<ibl1tfM thto •curl<~ al &rt brochurr ...
1d..e11twmrots documen11 alld other m.at1trio1I\ •nd 1n~,t~Kf' "°" m.av r«1t•'"'
All funds 1n•esrf!d Ut' dt'pOS•tt'd d1r1t< tty to c;un Liff' Grt'.lt .Jn. 'fl< 1n" no1 •'"I'''~
brol.er-dNlt'r ind doltS not gu.ir.inttt thlt 1n~tme-nt you n1kt'
"tnvestcnentJIT'U\I IOt.il 11 ~a.i ~in fir~t con1t«t ~u
• • 'Withdr-1 of~ "'hith hi~ bttn 111 thlt contrlKI '"'thin S ~·n ~ bt' tubj«t
to• S" clwrge A Pfthpfl tuHont11nlng complf't1t 1nfofrmti0n on rhe COMPA ~I
Amu t~ 1n<fud1ng 1n ctwgn imd 1t>..pen\t'\ diould be rt'4d caretUlly bfoforf' lnw!\11111
L4CU: .\ Sta.J(l
30112~1\~JWh\~ wiuth
of ROid .. • t7141
FOU~1AI WLEV
10175 ~. • • • • ('11"4 i7l6
RIVHSIDI COUNTY ORANCI COUNTY
• ANAHEIM HILLS
•MltSIOVAttlnplr'I I M«tllOn
!OJI) Arll"lltln AWIM I • • '
ltMUIOfJt-Wft "'5 LWwflltY /MftUI' M
Chritnul ,
CLENNON
I01I Mittilan~
LN(lKSiioOl •w.c OllNllt IMnUe
MUIM1A ~ w.tlt•ip11'1"nW
5905.nu Nw ~~lid ••
OIANCf/Mtln M ~m
UNorm.._. n ~
• WOOD•UOCf
-~ P'lrkway &I Lau
ll TOIO
U.111'olold
~ttlll -..lillllc>ct.~
t.aoi\'IQO mllC.-M ,_ u Pu
C1M 99M251
American
Arst~Bank
' •
Porocl basspcntciabtyeanin awe ancl1*worbd PN1 ••
Homes and MacNa& lmne, the reale c.tivision of l'be Irvine Co., • well u
Warminaton. Warminaton Homes 1$ ,pretCD\ly ~ 12 DeW' home
developments thro\Jlhout the itate.
Su4n Dadra, marketina manqer for Linao/Grubb A Ellis Residential
Brokerage Group in La&uoa Beadi, bas been ldec1ed to marlc.et ftn&I ~
sales for the Rancho S-.U Juan coildos in Tustin. K:badra bu been with
Lingo/Grubb&. Elli1 for seven years arid bu wOrbd OD DWDCl'OUl:prqiec:u in
the area. includina Palacio del Mar, Sea ~ 1.,.ma Lido, Suclc:utle,
RrMrlmoor Homes. and Ridltview t AllUDI . ' . Vietor Lewta and Rolud Mar1ba TIMma have joined the Ne..-pon Btaeb
office of Alllwelll.Scbelder. Lev.is. of ~na Hills, brinp mott thD l 8 years
of ad"\ cni ina and mark.eti;ig e1pcncnce to i4.Sh~neider &om bis :post u
president and chief CXealU\iC office of oplYy .. Madler Ltwllu•t
Adnrtlaaa. ilboma has joined Ash'Wdl/Schricidcr a an 1aw:111DCDt
coosultant from the Portland. Ore .. area. here he sold residcntiaJ propcrt). He
now lives in Aaahcim Hills. • • • Stena C. M.11.lkra and GaUI D. Peyi. have been awarded :the lmior
residential a~scr dcsianation b) the laaaaa"-1 SedelJ el Real Estate
Apprallen. Boih men are ill PrtfertJ A.-IJdl ~· n O,U,C. and membersofthtSociety's OranicCount Cha)XCJ'l32. The • uonmustbc
renewed even fi\ie years. To obtain a tccert.ification. mem must meet
extcnsl\c conunuing education requirements. • •• Jrvine·bascd McCar&er·Bant commercial real estate borkerqe ftrm
added th.rte ks prof esstonal to its lnine office. The tno indudes: lllaft
Badraa, Du Splener and Riben IDI ... Badraun, of Laguna H~ was a
professional golfer before joinmg AIU as a sales representative. SPleuer. of
Corona del Mar. "'3 formerlv a business broker with VR Betheft Br-Men.
Smith has a bacltelor' dearcc in bUS1nC$.s andJinance and formerly WOJ\.cd in sat~ and finance capacaucs.
Eam more from your
depos with tnatant
Interest Five percent
bf the ln r.-t to be
ea.med during the
account term II com·
puted from \he day of
depOslt. ~nc:t.a
quart rty.
accounttransfers:Thepau
money spinn1na into the dulChes of the IRS.
There are two wa)'J to move an
IRA. The moat common is the direct
transfer. in wh1cttJhc current spont0r (ouatodian or trustee) of your ICCOUDI
Shifts it diffi:tl~ to the ntw one.
The ahematave is the rollover. in
which you close one IRA and per-
aonally shepherd tbe funda &o &be new
1CCOunt. Althou&h 1here d no limit on the fttqucncy of direct transfer, you
aan taJtc the rollover rouac lust once
,
every 12 months. The worst delays ·pique dn"ttt
transfers of se1f .dirccted IRAs offered
by brokcrqe firms. Cdunt on wa1una
at least a month and perhaps several.
Wall Street IS womna to 1oeed up
the proccSI, but thiDP. are so lied that
an official wstb Memll Lynch, which
has the matt self-directed IRAs &Del
.the mOll hneerina tranafen. IOld Chanaift4 Tames ~ne ht thinu
the saluuon may be aovcmmcni.sct
time limits with ~tues for spon·
aors wbo m1.a the deldliM Swhchina your IRA miaht not So
smoothly 'for a number of reaaons
Your broker may not know tbe
prooedures. The paperwork ba& lO to
throu&h many hands, incrca11na the chances for n to be mild.irected, lost
ora~. RCptdJca of the type of IRA you
'W&ftt 10 move, you can avoid maay of
thole .bafta-ups 1( you do your
bomewort and ride herd qn the ~tch-ovtr.
. ~~
lfyou'tt anan11na a direct tran1fer, tqin by .-1Ula instructions -
preferably hi writfna -from both \he
restpin& and 1eeeptina IRA.,IJ>OnlOr
Yo.i'lf need to au1honze the new spont0r to Rquest the transfer and
au1horitc \ht pretcnt holder to re·
Jette at. find out ftom the resian~na
spolllOr eUaly whom \he new IRA
spon10r should c:oa\ICt.
AAk ~you must pay any fen -corruaa ot aoina -before the UliUftt can io throu&h. You 11\IY
need 10 have 10mc or the required Pl~l'I notarUed. If you're tran•· femoa a . stlf-d1rt(:\ed account,
provide: the new custodian with •
complete lnventory. Oe1 an m1mate of how lont the
1ran1fer should take. Transfemna obeut of a tt.nk or mutual fUnd m1sht
aecompbshed in a few dlys. Stay onf
top of tbanp, keep 1ood records o
yOu.r follow-ups and equawk if you
conclude an unrcasCJnable amount of
lime his passed •
--~urrent Saving~ Ratesllliiillllmm-
~i.xedRat~
FiXed·Term
Certificate&:•
32:..89 · Days
I •
90-179 Days
180-364 DC:l)'S
!
12-23 · Months __ ___,__...
24-35 Months
-
---
.
---------
Current
Rate
10 .7000/o
I0.950o/o .
11.150%
I
11.350%
11.400%
•substantial penalty for early withdrawal.
0Imt>p'~!t~
-
.
.,,
--
•·
Annual Yi eta
. 1 l.137o/o
I
. l l.408'Yo·
l l.625'Yo . .,
11.842%
11.891%
Wix~ Tomorrnu1 Begins Today"'
All ratea subject to
change without notice.
·.
Above ntes and temu are for $20,000 minimum dtp01lta. Other ntes and tmns are available with mlnlmum deposits u
low u $500. For more lnfonnation or the nearc1t location of one of Imperial Savin&•' stateWide branch~•. Just catJ our
flnandal hotline:
1-800-CHEK-NOW -
(l ·800-243-5669)
one
Open y~ur account today. Call the toll-free Financial Line now: 1-IJ()()o;272-9000.
6 MONTH TERM 1 YEAR TERM
IZ.DD"
CIWrMI•
I
On
the
•
,~
•
' '
\v _ ~i'\_1: I (,
..-4 I t • l' ' .... f L.J
NYSE L: , · ~
•
NEW Y()lt1( lAPJ Oct. 24 ~ ·1 ,
NASDAQ s u~M~Rl
GoLo QuoTES
1 That's an apt description of both business and
business people along the Orange Coast. To keep rack of
wherecompanl sar gotngandwhichpeoplear h-elptng
"them get there.just watch 'Credit Line' -v~ry d~y in the
Business section of your new
QNnoe Coelt DAll.Y PtLOTIWedneeday, October 24, 1884 • ..
"
J
l7 M ''11r:' 11111 ....... I* aprllll.~C RtPlf1 Mer14
I
W.ming: Jha Surgeon G1ner1I Hes Determined
1hll Cigntte Smolling la 0111g1n1us~o Your lleehh.
Almonde8dcl•
crunchJ delight
tohotveget9bl1
aoup.P-C2.
imple trick tabake treats
G t kt kt Butterscotch flavored morsels, sprinkled over the rea pump n coo e capers brownicswhilethey'restillwarm,melttospreadable
fun for the youngster too ~nsistc~cyforaquiclcandcasyfrosting.dccorated --.--.--.----.-----...._;;;;;..........,...~'-;;..,;,-.....,.,__~ wnh a spidery web of chocolate.
Giant pumpkins, hootowls and funny-face
goblins-they're all cookies, all wholesome-all
part of a safe and happy Halloween. The enticing
cookie recipes that follow make bewitching party
fare for Halloween celebrations at home or at school
- a popular s.af e alternative to "trick or treats" on
the.&trect.
The Great Pumpkin Pan Cookie, freckled with
real chocolate morsels, is a delectable 14-incb
specialty designed to treat a whole gathering of pals.
The cookie dough (or the baked, cooled cookie) can
be frozen ahead, a time.saver for busy party-
planncrs. Let the youngsters frost the pumpkin in a
jack-o'-Jantern motif.
Pumpkin Cookie Monsters, cut from a roll-out
dough arc easily transfonned into owls, ghosts,
aoblins and funny faces with cookie cutters or
cardboard patterns. With a few pokes and pinches to
thcbuiccut-out hapc thechildrcn'sown
imaginative creations can emerge.
For a bite of pleasure and loo le of adventure,
bake a batch ofScrumptious Pum~kin Brownies.
THE GREAT PUllPIU1' PAN COOKIE
! caps no.r
1 np q1dck or o .. faUloaed oats, acooked
l &uapooa bat1q soda
l leaqNMNa iroud duamoa
~ ceas,...aalt
1 c•p IMltter or mar1artne, 1oftaecl
1 c.p firmly packed brown Hpr
1 cap crualated sa1ar ieu 1 teaspoon vanllla extract ·
1 cap solid pact pamptln
1 cap stmt-sweet real cbocolate monels
Assorted klq or pcu•t batter
AsHrtff cudles, ralllu or aab
Preheat oven to 3SOdcarecs. Combine flour, oats.
bakingSOda,cinnamonandsalt. Crtam butter.gradually
addsuprs. beatinauntil liaht and fluffy. Add egg and
vanilla: mix well . Alternate additions of di) ingredienu
and pumpkin, mixing well after each addition. Stir in
moncls.
Spreaddou&h intoarcasedand floured 14-inchdeep
dish pizza pan. Bake JS to 40 minutes, until woodco pick
insutcdnearccntercomcsoutclcan. Cool on rack l S
minutes. Rcmo\Ccookac from pan. Coolcompleicl).
Decorate using icina or peanut butter to affiussortcd
candies, nlisins or nuts. Cut intosquan:sorwcdaes to
ser.-e. Yields about 24 servings.
SCRUllPTIOUS PUllPKIK BROWNIES
~ C9P Htter w marpriae, softelled
l C11P1 flriDIJ ,.ded bro,.. npr
1 C9p ..U• pad P'mpklw
l egp. auptly lteatea
t &eaJpooa •ullla extract
1 ~ C9PI floer
1 ~ caps qalck or oW ful.loaed oats, acooted
l teaspoon pamptlD pie apfce
1 tea•poo11 bUhl& pow r
~ teaspoom bak.lJlc soda
~ teupoMaalt
~ cap clloppc4 wal .. b (optloul)
l capt battencota flnor'H monds
~ c., aeml-sweet real cltoeoJa .. morsels
Preheat oven to 350cSearccS. In large bowl, cream
buttcrand r;addpumplin,qasandvanilla. tir1n
flour, oats, ~pice.. bakina Powder, bakinasoda. salt and
walnuts.Spreadbancranto~andftoured ISYn. IOVJ..
inchjcllyrollpan(ortwo8-mch&quart ·1ngpans). Bake
25 to 30 minutes: (30to 35 minutes for 8-inch pans).
Immediately ipnnklebutterscotch morsels and
brownies: let stand S minutes. To frost. acntl) sp d
butterscotch morsclstOCO\'erbro nifi. In small
saucepan. mclfchocolalc morschovcr lo~ heal. Drizzle:
'ChoCophiles' have their day
By SUZANNE FREY °""' ,_. CelHI I 0 l
The 10,000 chocolate loven,
aucndin1 a lwRI extravqanza, no doubt, qree that the most
valuable find of exPtorer Heman
Cortez WU the cacao bean. Leaend has it that he was 1n-
trodUced"10QQO, ''the food otthe aods" by the l 6tb century Attoc
ruler Montezuma II, who, probably
bt1na one of the first chocoholics:. reputedly drank SO pitchcn 01
hocolatc a day.
Thanks to Concz. who sptcad the
O\ er frosted brown1e an a piral ~ While still warm,
lightlydragcthc of tmfcorlhmmdalspatulafrom
the c:;cntcr of the ~f'!ll lO the edge of the ~n.1Repea1
motion at .paced mtcrval to make a spider ~b pattern.
Cool comp!ctcly bcforcslici Yields about 3 dozen
Pl1llPKllf COOKU 1101'f8TEJl8
C9p lltertnJq
c., ftnll>' ..-. WiWa ...... ~ c., .... f1ld ,..,..
c., .... , ........
a CllPll a11te11 n..r
l&alf•• .......... ~ &elllfH•aalt
~ lealf•• ~ sbacer ~ ..... ~ c:m:lallllem ~ &ea ..... P"JMI ..
~ teupoom sread alll'pke
lctq. rabtu, pm.,..,. ... ·~ ........
Cream shonenioa and supr. surin pumpkin and
mola • 'ft together flour, balcinasoda. saltand ·
Add to pumpkin mixtutt. one-third at a rime, mixina
thoroughly aftcrca& addition. Cover: chill 2 to 3
Prehcato'en to 37S ~On a 'WCU-flourcd SWil ~ ro I out dough to ~nm thictncSs. Cut wi
ncd floured cookie cutters ( otcut around noums
cardboard pattern ). Gently place on &rCascd t.kina
sheet Bake 8 to I 0 mi nu or untilffrano tbc touch.
Remove from bakina Shcc: cool on Wlrt radcs. Decorate
1th1et ratSJnsandcand· Yiclds2dolcn(3-inch)
coo
'
C2 Orange Coast DAILY PlLOTIWec:tnesday, Oatober 24', 11984
crcamand)o un.chocolatc-c 1«1
~ , nd chocolntc ... fla, ored
dae1sod .
There even re "1ounnet ch~
olatc noodles.. nd ••tofutll... a
chocolatt·flavorcd non-datf') ••ace
cream .. made of .SO)be n b sed
tofu, sovmil fruits and honey.
Scriou chocolate lo\ rs could
also sign up for two--week. $3 300
tourofEuropepe:in summ r. which
will feature VJsilS to s:ix major
ohocolate manufaeturers and da1ly
spec1at chocolat de ns at each
bOtel.
A boy walking by oomplaim.ng to
. his mother lha1 ht" was "ge11ng a
little ~ick0 clear J1d not express a
ty op1 on Rather. two
teen Goorgi Tif!gindes ot Full·
enon nd LOme Corrin of lr'\'tne
were more rep ntallve of the
many lf-procl 1med chocophal
in the CfO\\ d.
"I'm imJ?l~· 11 glutton,•· 1d
Tal)81ndes. sligl)tly cmbarra sed. ··1
never get enough of chocolate; I
h ve to have ll fint lhing in the
mommg." Her friend agreed. nd
ddcd he lso nted chooolate
t>efQtc J<>tng to bed at nagh
Having tasted about half of their
allotted l:S sample , the) said ther,
had barely gotten "wanned Up•
nd headed toward the chocolate
f udgc ice crean1 booth.
A 1de from samples, the extrava-
ganza featured demonstrations of
chocol. tr. cooking nd molding,
draw1n and chocolntccon ump.
uon contc t. The ,pnze for 1h
wmner? A l().poundGunUlrdchoo-
olnte r,
But theshowwnsmorethftnjust
ga tronom1c experience. It was a
charity fund-raiser, with SS,000 in
ticket Ales being donated to the
outpatient clime of the Children·
H pit I of Orange County.
Exh1blt6rs also bencfi ted from
the \'lekend convention.
.. rve sold a lot of candy and
opened man)' whole le accounts,"
said a satisfied Mary Co tello.
owner of the Island Sweet Shoppe
in Costa Mesa.
Although it takes a lot of work to
get rcndy for the how ("like
preparin forthc Chri tmasrush")
1t' \\Orth it, id Costello, 62 "1 he
howbenefit meine\'CJ')i "ay."she
1d, adding that man)' who attend·
cd last )Car's show have frequently
topped b} her store dunng the
year.
Like mo t of th other
chocolntic~. CoStello's products
contain no preservative and has
top.of·the-Jme fre h ingredients.
Most of it is handmade. Prices are
therefore higher than assembl} -hne
version , but that ·doe n't <deter
customers. Costello said ... Ealing
good chocolate is a fad now. People
are quality oonscious and don't
mind paying a little extra."
Cut' VALDABLE COUPON
•
-ro me Gwmmteed .. another
wont for tn..t. I can believe In
90mefhlng."
CHOCOLATE MILK -.......Ya. l2~ c.tDrt
~l!S~~~~
YAKIMA APPLE JUICE Mo-....
GOLD 'N SOFT ~Wbur .. U
.79
.95
J79
.79
KNUDSEN J69 ORANGEdWCE IOO'JI. ~ Ft0m Conc:a-,. __
64.()unca 9oaJe -· •••
~~~~~198
~H.1)2.TTER ASH Ul f 98
IA 3 98
~~~,£RAB MEAT Ul 349
RED DEUC1oas29 APPIJ!S Ul e
~~Clop
CANDY APPLES twor~
SUNMAID RAISINS
Ten I 0..-Iba "' ...
FRESH CABBA<lE O....bC'dtSlao
HAWAIIAN PAPAYAS ,,..,. ..... .,..,
SALAD LE1TOCE I ' RIM .__or~ i..I ...--
BROWN ONIONS ....... '°"''**
RED BELL PEPPERS U. Pb: ... -3 FOR IDO
2 ~.89
&tiJ .99
.Ul .19
a .69
EA .39
4 i100
Ul .59
GRANNY SMITH APPLES 79 Sui "4IC o-~ IMP LA •
6" BOS10N FERNS 299 l4Qail Fblll<I Oat IWlr'8 Soll :11111 l1A
:O~m La J29
~,_....~
FARMER JOHN HAM SLICFJM 98
fully Qiolred, c..r c.a .:::a;-~
HOFFY SLICED BACON J39 Hldtaoy~ Ul
LD<JIS RICH TURKEY 198 .,,__ FIW\ ........ tw Ul
I.DUIS RICH TURKEY 59
....... Of 0..-!Cb. '-" Ul •
TREE'IOP
APPLE cmER
64-0unoe llottJe
J39
D<JNCAN HINf.S COOKlf.S ·J49
OIOCdlla °" .. ~ ~ °"" 120.. ......
CORNQUISTO SNACKS 119 r-or "9cllo 0-. a.Outa Bee
HUNGRY JACK POTA10f.S 99 lnlllari&. t 6-0llllGI PKMtt •
NERI 2 UTER 79 BEVERAGF.8 e ~,.,.ii~:=. 8cittl•
DEL MONTE CATSOP )2.()unca Baille .99
L& 239
lOP SIRLOIN STEAKS 209 ~ r... Klf19 ll.i &.&
BONELE.85 CUBE 81EAKS 239 T<llllt~e..t LA
BONELESS RUMP ROAST 189 0. "'"°"1 Round \.at e ... ~ Kint a..t La
MILK FED VEAL CUTLETS 598 EMlet!t lloMl a.,.. La 6»I La
PAPA cANl'ELl..AS 198 ~~l"llldc.-:Hat UL
I
THE CORNER DELI
WISHBONE DRESSINO
1000 ..,.... '"°"'* llolti.
143 --A-__.....-
MACARONI & CHEESE
..,,,,..,S<lunct ..
DOLE FRUIT BARS o..ng.. ,.,_...or 51-rv ~ea.
CELESTE PIZZA
o.twot ~ ~"' 0-67~ ec..
C & W PETITE PEAS
16-0unar leg
.45
139
129
129
~~l;!ICKEN PIES .39
~L~c.~<?61~ 169
PEPPERIOOE FARM 1-0L... 139 DIM!\ ~ l\CIPlt a-. 8ludoo<!J ~ I*!
ROMAN MEAL WAFFLES 89 12~8ot •
~~~f5AMP ALLETS 209
CITRUS HILL Jl 9 ORANGE JWCE ~ Of fl\Qfe Pulp i2:ourtc» <All
HALLOWEEN FREE PUMPKINS
~ su. WIT8 COCll'OR
LIQUOR LOCKER
COORS ~
BEER IZ·PACK .. 7'" -
'=."i2~ CW .... lA•
~~M!..~t.St!~BLJS 399
~~~ISKEY 999
~~LC}P~ ,~~IS 239 _
~~!-:SltN1f~~~ 199
CELLA LAMBROSCO .... ~ 7~11111< ..._ ____ ,, 179
canv SARK SCOTCH
L1).Uft 8tillle
BLACK VELVET ONdillll W...W.y I UI ttff Ootlla
WHITE ZINFANDEL 7~
POPCN VODKA lf~llOllll
+
1799
9"
2'9
6"
SUE BEE HONEY c ..... Of Orange. 12.0-:. Jer
VONS
COFFEE
Oround. All Gnndl l~Cw!
109
219
MftU
QOLDEN GRAIN DINNER 39 "'-oft c. 0-... 7.25-0unct ~ •
SUM PRIC~ SALTINES 60 16.c>unca l'ldaoe •
LA PINA FLOOR 199 l~Bee
TIDE
DETERGENT 299
SclltUd Of Unec<ented
72-0unce ac.
NESTLE CHOCOLATE
0.... »-Ounce c.w-
COME 'tf GET IT Dog Fwd, O!y. ~Pound a.o
SUM PRJCee B.\08 u.dl Ila 100.C.-. .......
ZE.Sf. BATH BAR SOAP ~,~ ..
......
269
-7•9
111
.41
BIZ ALL FABRIC BLEACH 317 ""°""°" .. HEFTY TRASH BAOS 179 Ond1 .... ~ KM:lourl ~
""6 don't IJ'i' BIOi'&
~--· ....
.39
.,....,... ..... .., ..............
Lonie C&nin of lrTine (left
and Geor•l• ~lrdee o ,.ullerton are eelf-
proclaimed chocolate ad-
dict..
HowtobuJ!!
the· best
chocolate
When it comes to bo~ed confec-
tions. chocolate aficionad&s ~re
faced with an endless and confusing
assortment of candy. Some choc·
olates come in flashy packages,
others are plain janes. Some will
cost 30 a pound, others a mere
$5.2S. How can you tell a really good
chocolate from a borderline bon-
bon? Herc are some guidelines:
• The chocolate should Jook
&lossy. Chocolates with ~shine and a grayish hue ha been
through a number of tern rature
changes, indicating eith r bad
hanating or poor storage some-
where along the line.
• When you open a box of
chocolates, you should be hit with a
fttsh, chocolaty aroma. The aroma
of fruit, nuts and . other fillings
should be distinct, too. It it is musty
or .. off" in some way, the chocolates
are no good.
• Good chocolates will ha vc a
snap when broken open. If they
splinter, they are too dry; if they
ttsist breaking, they are too waxy.
•To keep your chocolates tasting
their best, store them in a cool. dry cabinc~. away from direct light. F~r
long term storage, wrap tbem in
plastic and put them in the freezer.
•Taste in a chocolate is a matter
of personal opinion. Check for
qualities like sweetness. choc-
olatcyness and bouquet.
Allllonds
add crunch
to soups
Soup ... hot and steaming, thick.
rich. wonderful soup! On a cold
night. -1here's nothin1 more
satisfyingorcomfoning than a bowl
full of delicious homemade broth to
chase the chill away.
When the soup i~ade with lots
of vegetables, pureed and creamy,
with the nutty flavor of chopped
almonds for a bu of crunch, the
meal becomes very special, indeed.
Serve Almond Sunshine Veg-
etable Soup with a crisp green salad
and hot garlic bread for a delicious
lunch or supper treat. Or pack the
soup in a thermos for the hrown bag
lunch. Add a sandwich and a bag of
whole almonds for munching.
ALMOND StJNSHINE VEG· ETABLESOUP
1 mecUum onion cbopped
l cloves sarllc, cndaect
l ublespooi11 batter or mar1art.ne ·
1 can (13t,t• 01111cea) cblcken broth
1 pound carrot1, peeled and quar·
tered
\.i pound tarnlp1, peeled and
qaartered
1 celery beart, c11t ap (or about 1
cup sliced celery)
1 te11poon ~araway 1ffd1
Salt and pepper, to ta1te
1 quart tlaredde4 1reen c1bba1e i cupa milk
~ c•p cbopped natural almoadt toa1tec1•, •
Sliced n.ataral almoad1, toa1tecl•,
for1aral1b
In 3 quan kettle sautc onion and
prlic in butter until tender. Add
broth, . carrots1 turnip., celery and
scason!nas. Bnng to botl; reduce heat
and simmer •. covered. until ve&.· et~blcs are almost tender. about 20 minutes.
Add cabbag : immer until tender
I 0 to IS minutes longer. Purce 1n food
processor or blender, in 2 batches.
Retum to kettle; stir in milk and almonds; heat to warm throuah
Serve garnished wl\h sliced almonds: Makes about I "2 quan1
No1e: Leftover cooked vqetabJ
can be used 1n place of frt h. Reduce
cokin& time as needed for tender veaetablc~. •ro TOAST ALMONDS :
Spread 1n an unarcaK<S bakina pan
or slullct. Place In a 350-d~
oven or ovet m~ um-1ow hQt on
the stove top for S to 10 minutes
{depcnqlna c;m the form of almonds
that you are utina) or untll almonds
area hah11oldcnbrown,1uron~or
tWIC:C to 1 tutt even bi'owruna.
Note that almond wt1l oonunue 10
bro\\n slightly after btma rcmovca from the heat.
•
Fettucine with gorgonzola
a delightful menu surprise
If p sui 1s one of the taples on ualnd panley
your famtly"s menu. then try th11 t &a~ ........ c~ ,.nley l medl•m clove ptlk, mliieell
Cich&htful urpnse, Fettucmc wuh lnuuctpan cookifialJotunbuttcr ~ HP :c:::•ble lltallaa aoraonzola. It a n aulhenuc until tender Add cheese tomatoes, 1•ra••le
cla1 1c, a delectable dish that offers proscu1uo sail and pepper To to 1 loaf ltallu INeM
all the intnguc of hahan cookery. blend. Add cram. In small bowl, blend butter panlcx
Nonhem nd outhcm Italian In hot .ervmg dish combine and prtk. Blend 1n chttte unul cooking is very different. Jn the fcuucine end cheese mixture TolS to smooth. ~
nonhem regions of Lombardy and blend Serve 1mmed1atel)', prm1hcd Cut bread tn half horizontally
Piedmont, mild subtle flavors with parsley. Makes 610 8 servings. cuu1naalmost through to otheredae. d~minate many .of haly's favonte GORGONZOLA GARLIC SPREAD ~f::~n f~~r or~~~~~i':.tmunurc.
dt&he! · And this is the dairy ttjlon ~ e11p 101Uned butter or ma-•r· Bake at 37S d--l'.or I• m1'nut•s that prOduccs ome of the finest •--··-~-..... '~ J ~ -'-· h Id IMC or until bread ss cnsp and hot. Makes
-
wiecses an t c wor thus cream and i tablt1poon1 chopped ltallu 6 to 8 serv1nas.
cheese arc used abundantly. One,---------------..;._--------------------------------------..;....--cheese that comes from this area is
soraonzola, a creamy, bluish-green
vein looking chec with a piquant n vor that is perfect for cooking.
For. )·our next meal, try this
Italian classic -Feuucme
Gorgonzola. It js a delicious max·
ture of egg noodles. tossed buttert cream and gorgonzola. Serve with
an ltahan bread filled with
gorgonzola prlic spread and )'OU
will have served an Italian master-
picc~.
FE'M'UCJNE GORGONZOLA
4 lar1e 1ballot1, cboppecl
•4 cup butter or mar11rJne
84 cup crumbled Italian
for1onzol1 cbeeae
"' cap cbeny tomato wedgea ~ cup proscaltto 1trtp1
14 t;spoon aalt Pi\ poon pepper t ta le11>00n1 Upt cream 1 pack·
a1e (l ounce1) fettactne or me-
dfam en noodles, cooked and
Curried
chicken
ZJpdated
By CECILY BROWNSTONE u ........
A recipe for Country Captain -a
li&htly curried chicken dish -
appeared in a cookbook published
early in this country. Ever since,
numerous versions of that recipe
have cropped up.
Here is the latest variation I have
come upon, created at Hubert's, a
delightful New York restaurant.
COUNTRY CAPTAIN
A LA HUBERT'S
I tablespoons vegecable oil a pouds cblcken prts
114. tea1poon1 curry powder
Z caps diced tomalOel
~cup water
1 teupoOD salt
Black pepper to taste
I &able1poon1 finely
drained ch1htey
I caps slivered (matchstJck tile)
sweet red pepper ·
I cvp1 slivered (matcb1tJck 'altt) reenpepper
tablt1poon1 floar blended with
Y. cap dor wblte wine f tableapoont carrants
Y. cap 1Uvered almo11d1, toa1Cecl
(see Note)
1 or z tbtaly 1Uced small 1ca1Uou
In a larac skillet. over moderate
heat. heat oil; add chicken and brown
on all sides. Push chicken to side of
kiltet.
EEF CHUCK
·Bone
WELCH'S
'l==
Add curry powder to oil in skillet;
stir until 1t darkens -about 10
acconds. Add tomatoes. water, salt,
black pepper and chutney; brins to a
boil. Simmcr1 covered, until chicken
is almost tenaer -about 4S minutes.
Add red and arcen pepper; sjmmer,
covered, until peppers arc almost
Meat Dept. Savings Frozen Food Favorites Garden Fresh Produce
tender -about 3 minutes. Remove R1'b Roast ~~I s1 .89 Pepperoni· P1'zza ~59 chicken to a servina platter and keep tHO ... I · ~.,-..AC« 9ot ~ ~
ho+~nt~~.~~enour-wine mixture Chuck Roast s:~ uS&. Orange Juice c:r•. .1tol sgo
r~d~~tiTnt:~~~~~~ti~·~:~nt3 Shoulder Roast ~=.... . ... s1.89 Plain Bagels W.DIM .I.ct nc ~~~ru~~~-~%i~h~it1h!~~gnd~:;~ Round Bone Roast &:~ .... L• s1.27 Apple Juice tl!!ICA .. ... .. • ........ ,.oz 69C
scallions. . R'b St k ... , e1 99 Ench 'lad VANOllWlll"t ... MDOtDIHl'"' s1 95 Note: To toast the almonds, spread I ea s LAl!OI ~ I a CHIHI MlfCMlllA 011 CHtClll over bottom ofan 111/• by 71/1 by 1111· 1"0 • • • .. • • .. La • 011~1tll'Vl'11tto1UM1To • .. :. • lMtoZ • ~n5c~.::~~: pa~~:~~e i~i~r.~:e·~~ Back Ribs "" .. . .. .~ 630 Burrito Grande ~-. 11« s1.9S
~r~~~:!~y, until toasted -5 to 7 Smoked Sausage :£ LI 82.19 Tostada Supreme :;:~" uoz 51.89 ..... .-.....-lllllimilll--Rainbow Trout ""'" . ~ •1 .39 Cranber Juice :~. 114' s1 .37
Cooking
with class
Gloria Levine, co-owner of
Aphrodite Confections. and
Dolores Kins. general manager of
Allen Wenz Chocolates. will teach
May Co. customers how to make
mouth-waterina desserts that will
be the crownina touch of any meal.
Wertz will be at 1he Costa Mesa
store Saturday from I l a.m. to
12· 30 p. m .. and Levine's program is
scheduled at 6:30 p.m. TucSday at'
the Westminster store. ----.-~----~ Makin& Croissants" ill be taught
at Fassero's International, 2919 E.
Coa t Hi~way. Corona dcl M•IJ. at 6:30 tonight. Co t is $25. tor
inform tion, call 673·2343. • • • • Holaday rccapes including gifts
from the kitchen and f reezablcs will
Compare these Low Prices
WHITE PIOUNO Teft, WHIAT
,... Oft WHlTl SANDWICH
Stater....._ .......
'Po ...
be tau~t at the Ta ung poon.
Huntington Be ch, t IOa m.and 7
p.m. Thursday. Fee 1 $2S. For
mformation call (213) 250.3919.
l'lllCSI .. a:nn 'n7l.L DAn -w
• • • Three clcpnt main course egg
dlshc fc tum'l on the menu ofNe
Odean'a famou Brennan's re
taurant will be demon trated at Mr.
Favonte Thtn CookinJ hoo .
14370 CUiver nvc, Irvine. Cll
•Ill bt'a' n at 6: 0 p.m. Nov. l. Co t
i $20. ~ r rcscr\'at1on call
SSl-0221 .
I ...
•
•
... ~
n 30
... ...... : ... -.... u • 27
:al ~ ,,
Pleasure doubled
with 2-f aced cake
Why not throw a pany for your trick or treaters? A Two-Face Jack-0-
Lantcm Cake makes a put centerpiece for a Halloween party. Easy to
make and fun to decorate, there's no trick to treating your fabulous bunch.
TWO-FACE JAC&-O'·LANTERN C.UE •
1 peeb,e devils foed cake mix ,,,
i aaMespoo111 sra&M ... ~~ pttl
! tm vullla ready·to-1pread frostia1
1 cablap1• crated oruge pttl
• to I drops m food color
I to I drops yellow food color
! larse manblallow1
Grem foM color
IUack IMes&rtq lleortce · smau colored cudles
C...y COl'll
~rmlat leaf·slaaped pmdrops ~
Heat oven to 325 degrees. Grease and flour two l 1h-quart round &lass
casseroles with rounded bottoms. Prepare cake mix as directed on pacbge
except -add 2 tablespoons oranae peel with the water. Pour batter into
casseroles. •
Bake until cake springs back when touched lightly in center or when
wooden pick inserted in center comes out clean, 42 to 47 minutes. Cool 10
minutes; remove from casseroles and cool completely.
Reserve 1/2 cup fro ting. Stir I tablespoon orange peel, the red food color
~nd yellow food color into remaining frosting. Trim tops of cakes, if necessary.
Place I cake, rounded side down, on plate; spread with 1'2 cup of the orange
frosting. Place remaining cake, rounded side up, on top; frost cake. Make
vertical pumpklnlike lines over cake with knife.
Secure marshmallows toaether with wooden picks for stem: place on
center of cake and StCUre with wooden pick. Stir ~n food color into reserved
frosting. Place in decorating bag; pipe fro~tina in verticaJ lines to cover
marshmallows and in CUTI to make vines at base of stem. Pipe frosting around
baSe of cake to resemble aras~
Make a face on each side of, cake. using licorice for eyes and mouth,
colored candies for eyes and candy com for nose and teeth. Place spearmint
leaves next to stem. U5e round cookie halves for cars if desired.
Flavor's
savory
in breaa
Herb Batter Bread is quick, easy
to prepare, and has abundant flavor
possibilities. Whole wheat and
white flours arc mixed togtther in
one bowl with chives, savory, and
sage. With the addition of dairy-
frcsh milk, the batter bakes up firm
and chewy in less than one hour.
Other herb mixtures can be '
substituted for taste combinations
suited to your own preference -
and the baking dish itself can be
changed to produce loaves m a
variety of shapes and heights.
Serve Herb Batter Bread warm or
cold, spread with Cheddar or cream
cheese to highlight the herb flavor.
as a toasted accompanime nt to a
favonte so up or stew. or use your
ima1mation to plan )'Our own
favorite ways to best present this
flavorful, versatile treat.
HERB BATTER BREAD
I~ caps milk
1 tablespoon wlaJte vlDc&ar
~ np melted batter
1 ~ caps wklte noar
11 caps wllole wbea& fioar
1 teaspooa EACH bak.lq pewdcr.
baklD1soda,1111
I tablespoou eltoppecl cbJve1
i tablesp.ou cltopped savory
! tablespont cboppecl aa1e
Combine milk, vinegar, and butter:
let stand 5 minutes. Mix flours,
baking pawder. bakina soda. and It
in larse bowl. Stir in milk mixture
until well blended: mix in herbs.
Spoon into arcaxd round 1-quan
casserole or loaf pan. Bake about SO
minutes at 375 drgrecs. Remove from
pan: cool on rack. Makes I loaf.
NOTE: Dried herbs may be used;
substitute teaq>oons for tablespoons
Other combanations of hcrbS may be
used; chervil, dill, nd tarragon arc
nice addition •
Make holiday af e, on al
Don't be pookcd mto kecpang
your kid home tha Hallow~n.
~he holiday can be.safe and fun. if
you follow these suggcstaon :
-If your children arc roung,
c~ompany them on -their tock-or·
treat rounds.
-If your children arc 1rick-or·
treaung in a group, attach a label to
their co tumes with their name,
ddress and telephone number.
-Give your children snacks
from home to eat en route so they
"on't be tempted to sample Jreats
)OU ha~en•:t examined.
-When examining treats for
tampenng, check for tom pack-
in& pin hol~ strange Odors or
questionable appearance. Regard-
ing fruits. scnab carefully. then cut
mto mall picttS,. looking for
foreign objects.
-Give your children mall
trick-or-treat b~ that will fill up
quickly and bring the kids home
ooner ..
-Make a trick-or-treat map for
your children, outlining exactly
where they may go.
-Trim costumes and trick-or-
treat bags with reflective ta{>C. to
enhance your child's visibility at
night.
-Buy only costumes, masks,
beards and wigs. labeled .. flame
resistant" or .. flameproof."
-Make easy to remove make-up
by mixing cold cream with red,
vellow, blue and green food color-• . mg..
- Create a fabulous jaclc-o'-
lantem by dcSigning the face on
paper first. Tilcn outline it in
cra)on on the pumpkin and cut
with a sharp paring knife.
-Enjoy the leftover pumpkin
seeds from your jack-o'-lantem.
Dry in a wann spot for three days,
then roast in a 250-0~ oven on a
greased, shallow pan for about 20
minutes.
-Have a Halloween party for
your little trick-or-treaters and their
friends. Spooky party favors and
decorations can make any house seem haunted.
-last but not least, serve the
delightful Halloween Cat Cake
featured here. The Cat is delicious
and surprisin&ly simple to prepare,
thanks. to cake mix. After a long
night of trick-or-treating. this cat is
a terrific treat to come home to.
HALLOWEEN CAT
% ( l t outt > pacta,es poGDd cake mix ·
l~ et1ps milk
4ew % (It ouce) cu1 vaiallJa rudy·to-
1pread frostbas
1 cup cboc.-olate syrap
:rhl8 cat will make more tban Dlne ll•• bappy.
~ cwp dark cltecOlate ree.ly-to-Angle I-inch piece off bottom right Jn medium bowl, with clectnc
spread frosthl1. side of body for tail. mixer, beat 2 cans vanilla ready·t<>-
Jn larac bowl, combine both pack· Split I custard cup cake in half and spread frosting and chocolate syrup
ages pound c•ke mix; prepare accord· place, cut side down, below body for until smooth and fluffy. Fro t cake.
in& to package directions usina milk feet. Cut remaining custard cup cake Spoon dark chocolate frosting into
and eggs. Spoon about 'h cupi>attcr in half; place cut side down and cut decorator bag fitted with writing tip.
into each of 2 (6-ounce) greased into triangular pieces (scraps can be Use to draw face and outline body of
custard cup~. 3 cups batter into r.::ca;:•::en;:>::· A=rra=n::g::e::•:::tt::o::p::o::f::hea=:d:::fo::r::::e::a:::rs::. =ca=t.=M=a=k=cs=24=se=rv=i=n=gs=. ===:::; greased I ~uan oven·proof mixing
bowl and remaining batter into
sreascd 9 x 9 x 2-inch baking pan.
Bake at 325 degrees. Remove
custard cups after JO minutes and
oowl and bakins pan after l hour.
Cool cakes in pans on wire racks l :S
minutes. Remove from pans: cool '
completcl)'·
Cut a I-inch wide <>lice and a 2-inch
wide lice from one ide of ~nch
square. On serving board, aihnJC
remaining 9 x 6-inch piece of cake for
bojy and iiavertcd to.quart boWI ca¥
forllead. Split 2·inch wide piece of
cake horizontally and lay 5ide-by-side
on top of9 x 6-inch piece foT stomach.
!
(IHONEY6AKED
One taste
is illl it takes I
It will only take you a few minutes to take that taste, tt takes us a
little longer to perfect rt.: Each ham 1s covered with 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. Sptral sliced for easy servtng.
•M!41 ... ~ 14.o ...
HONEYBAKED GIFT CERTIFICATES
ARE GIFTS IN GOOD TASTE
~ rn grNC to l'ISl wy thaM )'OU foryour~ or any other reason you need t
say think~ TheY ako rNke ei dent gifu for that hard to t>lc•se ~ bwnfs
<Ksoo.ttt. or~ but~ the wtu.ltlOn the gift of H~ ure to
WI'!~ PAATY TAAYS NATIONWIDE SHIPPING WHOLE OR HALF HN1
2221 Newport llvd, Cost• Meta
~nl4Hou11 •
..
t
~~~---------~._... ____________________________ _... ..................................... .
Dips of all kinds arc pcJJJetual cut-raw vegetables. Yield: About 2
petty pleasers. They're easy to cups.
~ and serve. can often be GOLDEN CREESE CRISPS
tnamj. in advance and the most leu(twllewes)Q1•m ...
pPpt.alar ones are aaemblcd from llen Oaver elleele..,
.. on-hand" ingredients -sour 1 C9P ma1-z1p ~or mayonnaise, cheese, mus-i ._.,,_ ....... ..._ ·
Wd, hc;>neradilh, catsup. ~=t!:;.~:!= llke4 nl&e ~Item that ·~~uld be~. ~o Jn medium bowl combine cheete your list of pantry party staples 1•, dip, mayonnaise and onion; mix well.
a line of Cheddar flavored cheese Arranae bread in a ainale layer on a ~. Un!>pened, ~ey don't need cookie sheet. Toast unaet-broiler on
uon and will keep fresh up one side only about 3 inches 'from six months. Delicio~s right fr<?m source of heat:
tbecan,theyalsocombinewellwtth Spread untoasted side of each
a wide variety of .inlfCdients to bread slice with eenerous amount of
IM.'Ovidc a sumptuous array of party cheeSc mixture~cut in balfctiqonally.
ilipa. Ananat trian&les on cookie sheet;
return to broifcr until mixture bUb-
aiulJNG CON QUESO DIP blcs and is lightly btowned. about 2
le1a(terll-.)Q..t•ar... minutes. Serve hot. Yield: About 4 rh••· Oaver .... dip dozen hors d·ocuvres.
eM (H~ taee1) 1&eweit , LONE STAR TACO DIP
............ ~ 1 cu (t ., 11 eacet) ..... •If•• Werea sa.ee Qddtr flavor dlMlie .. In a small·~ or fondue pot ~ n, NV enam
combine cheese dip, aoma&oes and l tdlel••• ,.Cbae4 aace
Worctstenhire: mi1 well. Cook over sea..aq ••x
low heat unlil mi•Uft is bot ud In small bowl combine all •-are-bubbly. Keep warm on a laot plate or dients: mix well. Srivcwith &onilla or
in II fondue pot over canned beat. corn chips or cut-up raw veaieiables.
set¥e with corn or tortilla chi or Yield: About I 'h cups.
MEAT
Marinated BEEF RIBS,............................................ 99( LB
Stuffed
PORK CHOPS........................................ 2.29 LB
Beef Rib -SPENCER STEAKS................................... 4. 98 LB
SEAFOOD
Delaney's
CLAM CHOWDER ................................... .
Jumbo
SCALLOPS........................................... 7. 98 LB.
lumbo
SHRIMP ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 9.98 LB.
GROCERY
Dltlaney's
SALAD DRESSINGS ........................ :,....... 1.19 PT.
Ott & Vlnepr • I 000 ISiand • Blue Cheese
l>Nner'• CIEAMm SPINACH •• ;-;............................. 99(: PT,
• •Select COftee of the Week• •
DUrCH CHOCOLATE ................................ 5.49 LB.
COIM In & lfY a ~ry Cup
LETAKEotrr
Pelhnd Quiche of the Week MCXICAN OlJICHE.................................. 7. 99 EA
uMcMme DEEP DISH APPLE TOITE ....................... l.59 SLICE c;tandma never made It to ~I
~ Dte'HILADAS.t ........................................ .5 .. 99
MARINATED MUIHIOOMS....... •• ......... ...... 3.•9 UL
PRODUCE
l I
•
,
')
..
Ce Orange Cout DAfLV PlLOTIWednnday, October 2•. 1984
Goodgravytlt's sauce
Frutt--based dish
served und r
1p claopped carrot IQ CUJ' vlnepr i It poon II cap I moa Juice
l I m D I l llpoOD uft
1 oru1e l tabletpooD wbOle bl ck
1 cup currant jelly pe~rn 4 ~ cup port w1D l~ tea•poon 1roand nutmeg
~ &easpoon ground 1 n-1 r 1 t upooa 1ro111d cloves
~ • r; I cup fresll or frotta era nits 1 1 aapooa aroand 1Laaer "'ravy, once Amenc.a ,a,onte ~ t ipooa wt l 'i; te11pooas crusbeCI mustard
accompaniment to m t nd In large kill~t ute onion celery seeds
mashed Po\atoes ha ll but da Po ana carrot in oil. Remo\e nnd of I lhallot1 crushed
pea red. The -gn.vy boat ts ltmon and orange ana ~ut into thin 1 tiay leaves •
lanauishing in the china closet julienne-pieces. Add to skillet along ~ u11pooa marjoram
because most meat come to the \\ith lemon 'ukc and orange Juice. 2 teaspoon tlayme
table unadorned. Add jelly, inc, ground gmger nd Small cluasnoa 1t1ck
There's a trend, however. both cranbemes. Cook over medium he t l c11p ftttll or frozen cranberries
h d E t fi ·1 st1mng frcquentlLuntil J'clly melts 1 cap dried figs, coaraely cboppri ere an m uropc, o serve ru1 d be . h d 'n laro~ sauc'"pan, combine all based sauces instead of grnvy. The an me:. pop. rvc wn roastc · "" d .... C k.. '""'' h
sau,..es are served nouvelle cui'sane Comish hen . Makes nbout I 1h cups. ingre 1ents. oo over m~1um cat .. until t>errics pop and figs become
tyle underneath the meat or, if you CRANBERRY FIG BURGUNDY plump. Serve with beef. Makes about
prefer, as a tasty ide dish. _ _:_1.!qaa=r&~B~urg~un~d~y~w:!i:=:ne~---.......:'..::'h:..:q~u::an:;:.:s._ ....... _~ ---=-....,---!======~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! With your Sunday roast lom of ..
pork, consider a Cranberry Rai in
Madeira Sauce that•s made wnh a
generous amount of garlic end
tomato puree. and just a hint of
mint and mustard for punCh. Ores
• UJ? individual roast Comish hens
with a sauce that's a blend ot
vegetables. fruits. currant jell). port
wine and cranberries flavored >Aith
ginger.
Cranberry Fig Burgundy Sauce
adds a melange of herbs and spices
to Bu~und9 wine, fresh cranberriei.;
and dned figs. -i .
CRANBERRY RAISIN MADEIRA
SAUCE 1 olllon, 1llced
4 clOVH prlJc, Cnll eel
~ capoU
0 U!!f~~~-~-l--!-_JMfOjl.l:;~[)L1-._-.--4
1 cap oraqe jaJce
1 cap frHJa or froten cranbenie1
Z tabletpoons cltopped panley z tabletpoons chopped fresh mlat
~ cap Madelra
~cup rabln1
1 teaspoon dry mutarcl
In large skillet sautc onion and
garlic in oil, until tender. Add tomato
puree, orange jwce, cranberries,
parsley, mint, wine, raisins and mustard. Cook over medium heat
until berries pop and raisins plump.
Serve with roast loan of pork. Makes
about 3 cups.
CRANBERRY PORT WINE SAUCE
14 cap chopped onJoa
•.4 cup chopped celery
Raisin
harvest
bountiful
FaJI means harvest time and.
traditionally, there's a feeling of
abundance as food is gathered and
prctCrVed to savor all winter loni.
ln California, where lush, ripe
gra~s have been sun-dried into
moist, chewy raisins, the word is
out that the crop is large, supplies
arc plentiful, and lower prices will
prevail.
It's time to bake Harvest Raisin
Apple Cakes, tiny fruit and spice
cakes with the dense richness of a
fruitcake. It's also time to plan for
. all the holiday baking and gift.
_...__.+ ----givtng soon to come.
SCOlT . UMJT I
TOWELS
Harvest Raisin Apple Cakes em-
brace traditional values, the time-
bonored flavor favorites of fresh
apples, raisins and spicy cinnamon.
Baked in custard cups, then
drizzled with cinnamon glaze and
topped with a sprinkling of ad·
ditional raisins. each little cake
makes its own convenient single
serving.
LR
BIADE CUT
Bake these cakes on one day and
frost the next. Or you can dust each
ca.lee with powdered sugar and omit
the &laze. These hardy cakes are
good keepers, thanks to the moist-
ness of the raisins and apples, but
for longer storage, you can f rceze
any extras, to serve another day.
BEEF CHUCK ROAST
HARVEST RAISIN APPLE CAKES
•;, cap batter or mar1anne,
softened a;. cap sugar
1 teaspoon cinnamon
1 teaspoon vanilla
1 cap flour 1 te11poon baklnl soda
1-MI C11pt ral1lns
1 ~ cap• grated applet
Cbuaamon Glaze (recipe follows)
In tarae bowl combine butter,
suaar. cinnamon and vanilla. Beat to
blend thorouahly. Add flour and
soda; mix to blend. Mix in raisins and
apples. (Mixture will be dry.) Spoon,
equally divided. into 8 areased 6-
ounce custard cups. Place on bakina
sheet. Bake in 3SO dcaree oven 40 to
4S minute\ until springy to the touch.
Cool. Loosen with knife and invert to
remove from cups. Ice with Cin·
namon Glaze and prnish with ad·
ditionaJ raisins, or omit Cinnamon
Glaze, if you wish, and dus.t with
powderechupr. Maku 8 servings.
CINNAMON GLAZE; In bowl com-
bine t l/4cups powdered suprwith 11/J
teaspoons lemon juice. Stir in enouah
water to make a thin icing. Stir in a
dash of cinnamon.
Pinn Colltp
Nowtllbn .... ltll • l:lO ..... "'oad' wd ffil • C•lifomi.I
~~~LI\,-. "4<'\• '""''" """"'"'\"~'
• NOTE; Cakes may be baked in 12.
2.V.-ineh muffin tin cups. Bake aoout 35 minutct until springy to the touch. ~A\l.'-<~ RU.Arc ru PRL\10US \\f.f..,; s
Al..Pti.r\ TM'RIC.:EORLASl O.\TEPRk>K
TO 1'1TlAL PtOCt: RCOO ·nos lJ(ClUS$\ 1'
Of AO\"E.RTISlOORPKOMOHOSAI lnM
GEORGIA TOMATOES
Remove kins (rom 4 medium-size
ripe but firm tomatoct; quancr nd
tum into a skillet with a mall onion
<finely chopped). a &able poon or "
butter, a bay leaf. salt, pepper and uaar to taste, immcr. tum ng
tomatoes over s n ry undl they
arc cooked but ull hold their hapc.
Rcmo'e y teat: Scnc hot. Mak 4
scrvin
WE ACCEPT ALL
SUPERMARKETS'
DOUBLE COUPONS
f
FOi.GERS .
FLAKED
COFFEE ·gg
,
I ,
\
EA.
STAR-KIST .
SOLID WHITE TUNA
• IM>UNCE
• BEAN/CHEESE
•SPICY •BEEF/BEAN
•GREEN
TREE
'IOP
,PLE JUICE
29
EA.
• 64..oz. 801Tl£
• ltEGUlAR. UNAUERED OR CIDEI
GARDEN FRESH
BROCCOLI
FROZEN
SWANSON DINNERS
. ..
Crunc yto
judged a winner
SALAD SIZE
"FOMATOES
BAM por ., .... :' :-=:-:·:=-' .... : .....
*' ..................
l ..., 41 ..... • ... rtmW ........
~lllllutl,.,....(1111r~ ..... ,
l ..... ,, .. eeler7
~NJ ......... ..
af..,....'fl11pr ..............
I Jar (I wn) ._. JI h1111,
~
lftlll aHf fillly CMllM AIMM ...
I Ctlfl e..rRJ1 anHlll le$etl
let&Ke
% Clll' ....._. J~ or
wit1dleete
Heat lbUttct in I o.tncb skillet over
medium-low beat until melted ur an
potatoes and oruon ult. CoOk. Jt.ir-
ring constantly. until potatoes arc
dark brOWfl: S to 8 minutes; :ruervc.
Chop anicboke hearts; place an 2·
quan saucepan. 'Sur m ~
artichoke heart ~uid. iM cday, oil,
vinegar, salt and punimtos; bei1 until
hot. MJ_X ham, lertuoe and anaokc
bean mixture in W:ac bowl ~
with browned Potatoes and checte. Serve immediate!). 6 semnp.
CRUNCHY CHICKEN AND
POTATO SOUPnE l~iallat ............. (*7j • e.,. e.l ... eMiell 1caM~· r---~
I eu (t ,eeea) deei ..... .,.....,.,.....
I ea (I -.es) ~ wattt et.es ... .., .....
l jar (l wet) 6:e4 .......... .......
t UI'' .... dalfpeic;reea .....
·~.--te.,s.at
'M c.,....,..._or AW men-· .. ~lellJlllAll
~IHIJUl,.,er" 1 cu (It~ .-US) c1a1 .. e11 aeam9'....,11m...,
I llleel ,new ••erleM dlee9t I a, 181*-1 •1¢11 ,_ ...
(*J)
IA ap .. au • ...-prt.e,
lleltei
Layer 2 cups potatoes, the chi~.
mushrooms, water dlcstnuts. pi-
mientos and onion m DgJuscd
~bakingdiSh, II x 71 IYJ inches; Mix ~ ma)'O • ,
salt; pepper and soup: pour over
chieken mixture. Place cheese ·
Oft lop.
CO\"CT and 'R'friiicratc at kast 4
hours. Heat oven to 300 ~Mix
J cup potatoes and the butter,
sprinkle over Chec:sc. BHc atil
potatoes arc brown and chicken
mixturcisbUbbly.about I bour.6108
servings.
Teen cooks
can compete
Attention. all creative leen.
oooks! Here's your chance to wto some cash prizes.
Entries for a tec~nJy con-
test opens No''· I .. and runs until
Jan. 31. t98S. OriJinaJ recipe
cotncs using at least I cup (un-
coOkcd) of Uncle Ben's Converted
brand rice COUid wiJJ the St.000
arand price, one of three S2SO first pr!.z.es or one of 100 runners-up
pnzcs.
Recipes may be entered in any of
thrtt catqorics: I) Main diShes (for
d r lu.ocb or breakfast), 2) Side
Soups. Appetizers aod DeS-
, r 3)Sidct>iShes(accompani-
mcnts to complement the main
meal). As in any recipe contest. it's
always the recipes with '"that some-
thing pecial'' that catch the judges'
eye.
To win, it's imponant to play by
the r'u.lcs. That means following
them cue~~ after rcadi them
"Cf)' carefully. Don't the
cbanec that a potential prize-win-
ncr may be di ualificd because of a
technicality.
Recipe entries Will be judgCd on
the basis of sQOd taste, appetizing
ppearance, oriainality, case and
convcnicn~ of preparation and the ~ropriatc use of Uncle Ben's
Convened Brand Rite.
For coml:>lcte con t rules. wn\C
•o: RULES, Uncle Ben's Young
Cooks Recipe Coo&esi, ·P.O. Box
J 1877. Chicago, Ill. 606U.
AND
DAILY PILOT1WtdnMd1y, OCtober 24 1984
l MJB
Ground
COlllJ•
rHelnz
Ketchup
44 OZ. BTL.
. f!' Orville Reden~cher 1· 99 &Popcorn ·
300Z JAR
pt Kraft .
c\ !tfayonna/se f75
320Z.JAR
-------~--..;;.------..._;,-------
,
!!!!!~£!~~ .':!~~-~~~x 1.69
r~~T~!!.~~~~.UOZ ,KG 1.59
Barbara Fullerton
saved
$12.87
Whole BOdy 49 Chicken
FRYING, LB .•
SOUTHERN, GRAOE A
!!!~~EF~~~ .~~.'!.~~ -~~~!., ll .95
~~'?o'!!~~!!o!!~~-... ,. LI 2.19
~~f4~!!:~~~~~~~~: ...... LS 1.19
I Coors
Beer
pt,,,,,,.,,.,
,, Ma911n8
STtCK. 11 OZ. CTH
.59
'.IMPoPOV
&Vodka
80 PAOOF. 1 75 L TA 8TL.. 699
r=r
FRENCH OOLOMIMO.
GAMAV llAUJOLMI
OA Cf4H.tN 11.ANC. 710MLITL
299
12PACI(. 449
REGULAR OR LIGHT 12 OZ CANS
.,_Seagram's 4599 c\ v.o. ,,
80 PROOF 1 75 ~TR. BTL
•
Thomas Spansw ck, Jr.
•*' SB.28
Boneless
Round Steak
fULI. CUT, BONOEO BEEF LB •
1s1
~~!l:!~~~-~!.~.,,,.,.,.,.:,,,,LI • 79
~?~?a!'~.~~ ......... l8 .99
~~~'!!!~o~'!!!!!'!!!!~~ 3 ~a 3. 19
e.az.en
159
rHershey or ~1)29 SNA~~ses ~~.c; •
(WHILE SUPPl Y LASTS)
4,I" Baby Ruth or
6 Bµttedlnger
Ft.:IN151Z! CANOY 1802. PKG
rr~~~!M~!!~!"' IOZ 0 1.79
i!~r~~~ ~O/~~. 11oi PKO 1.09
(
The Lucky tot11 S77 21
Tne lot.al 11 tl'I• ether
1uperm1rktt on tnt ume or
comp1r1bl• lttm1 $83 86
•ft llUtt1'8tpl RI ~OM ..
Sirloin
Tip Roast
BONELESS.
BONOED BEEF ROUNO
Fresh Beef Liver · 79
6L1CED • • • • • • • • • I • I ..... t " , •••••••••••••• I LB •
Quarter Poik Loin 169 ClUOES 1118 LOIN BLAQE ANO SIRLOIN CHOH ...... , ••••••••• LS 8
e!?!~c!~!~~~~. ~~~~., 'J ., LI .89
rLa Tortilla 55 .. FL0~~~,-·12 Ct. PKG •
~P' Sunklst
6 Orange Juice
CHILLED M OZ•CTN.
f-79
..
Large End
Rib Roast
BONDED BEEF LB 1~~
~~ut~~v~~~~ ........... LB 1.49
E~!..~~.~~~~.~'!~~~1~:a1.19 .
!!!!"!~.~.~~~.~~~! ... L8 2.19
·P' Cinch-Sak
i Kitchen Bags
TALL, 13 OAtlON CT. BOX
199
Fresh
Cauliflower
LOW IN CALORIES ~-49
!~~!!e~!'M~~!tGRAVY t 89 OR WITH 8TUHIMO !ALL WHITE WITH OAAVY,
l lh LB PKO 118) ................ ., n LB PKG 8
ro~~!!. ,~l~!Ke!~~t " 99
DRUMSTICKS°"' WINOS, LB 58) ••••• ' •• ' ' ' • LB I.
. . I ... :... .
!G;~ Tta:~ BOX 359
!G;'Tsker18 0~CTN .91
OR QUICK
-~Jlt Peanut 249 &Butter ·
CREAMY OR CAUNCt1Y-:aOZ. JAR
Fine I
Weeks I
Solid
Cucumbers
LONG, GREEN EA .29
~o~!!~~ ... u .. 1~L 1.49
~~~L~~~ ......... ,.Le a87
!!!!E~nschwelger 8B
(LADY LEE CHICICl'M 90LOOMA LB Ml •••••••••• Lit a
!~=elOZ.CAN .97
!o;':of ~~':219
¥~;.;CAN.89
OR LAREDO
I-La Plate
A Foam Plates
I INCH .. 40 CT PKG
•
• •
Clo Or-Cout DAILY PILOT/Wod-y, October24. 19114
Sonoma Cabernets not gold medal quality
Th TC ultsarc in from the laraest
Old~t of the rq.lonal compet1-U... and it is a year of some
cont.rovers~ Judges could not aarce
a sin c •old medal in the c:.bemct U\'1gnon category with
&Sentncs.
They must have-tasted Cabernet la thC" afiemoon after eating
Jllueno peppers for lunch 1r they
Claaldo•t find any &Old modal quail·
ty Cabcmets from Sonoma's many
~flight otrerinp. At least eiaht
~rent Sonom1 Cabcmet.s won Pl medals at various statewide
Ud national -competitions (two
even won double gold at San
.,. ' .
.
they've gone too far. C'hatteu S1. Jean produce more Sonom1 Winearowcrs h1tve 1 lot to fair have provided me with 1 good
On balance, Jet me say that than two Chacdonnay11 so even the say about th1 C\·ent, and 1t apptars ~~~P~y cr:e~'di~~~~'n~~~o~~~
judgtng cha1nnan Rich Th01111S improved pohcy i restrictina. t~ btan attempt 10 restrict compe~J· postaae and handhng. Wnttr to:
runsagood,clcancompc1i1ion,and Another bad rule allows out-of-uon. t Sonoma Winners.. P.O. Box 7244,
that the wines that do win are county wineries to enter only Wlnes One Other minor flaw. as I see 't. San Ftancisco, Calif. 94120.
almost always worthy of consumer produced from Sonoma grapes, is that while most white wine h So Jmy
Mw consideration. which is fine, except wtnerics catefoncs are divided by sweetness The bipcsl story at 1 e noma
Like most competitions. it does within Sonom1 County m~y enter Jevc , White Zinfandels are · 111 fair each year is 1he _sweepstakes
have some Oaws. Paramount wines from grapes grown anywhere. bunched toge1her, sweet and dry, in winner. This year 11 went to
among Sonoma'! isa Policy rcstric~ The "'orst rule of all was in-a single class. Tough work for the Baciplup1 (pronounced Bawtcha-
Franctsco), so it doc n't make sense tin& the number of entries in a ~ivcn 1roduced this year. It states that judges. galoopi). Chardonnay 1982 from
the\ not a sin&)e wine wu wonby of cateaory. If all wines aren't eh&ible onlytbe bonling winery maycn1cr1 Getting back tosayini nice things Belvedere Winery. What mikes
1 top medal at the region's own tobCjudged, how will thecomumer wine. Which effectively bars all about the Sonomajudg.ing, it is the this a really great story is that
competition. ever know which wines are truly "negociant" wines from competi-on.ly major event thal docs not Belvedere also won a sweepstakes
The SonoR\a'judging has always best? Begi1!nin& last year, win~ries tion. Negociants arc entttprcneurs charge for its awards book.Jet. Since for its Winery Lake Pinot Noir at
prided itself on bcingcollseralive 1n were pennltted to enter two wines who select and blend wines and hire I can't list all the winners in this the San Francisco Fair.
the issqancc of medals. This ume per category, but wineries such as wineries co bottle them. The column, and since the folks at Lhe The other two gold medal win--~----------~-----~~~--------'---'--'---'--'--,,,,=,-, ning Chardonnays were also from
i fRISllPOllK
SPA .. laS
I& IA9
-
GROU~D
BEEF
(ii) •
La.
PORK
UNK SAUSAGI
B-OZ. 59 PKG. IA.. • .
llUCHllS
ITALIAJI MUSAGI
~l~ LIL 1.99'
Fonnw John Picnic fbtOon
1982. Lambert Bridge and Sellards.
Three Sauvignon (Fume) Blancs
shared the gold honors in the dry
class. and all were from the. 19~3
vintage. Chateau St. Jean "L,a Petite
Etoile" was one; the others were
Deloach and J. Pedroncelli, the
latter being a real bargain.
The only Chenin Blanc to w!-n .a
gold was in the dry class, 11\d 11 1s
truly one of the best of its typt\ that
being the 1983 Simi "Mendocino."
In the off-dry Riesling class the
gold medal went to a winery that is
no st·rangcr to top awards in the
category at this and other fairs. I
haven't tasted the 1983 Haywood
"Sonoma Valley" White Riesling,
but you can bet it's a dazzler.
The gold medal for very sweet
Riesling went to 1983 Kenwood
.. Late Harvest," al)d the top award
for super sweet Riesling went to
· •• ancest."
There were only two aold medals
for • Gewurztraminer, with Hop
Kiln 1983 winning in the dry
category, and Mark West 1983 for
its very drinkable off-dry style.
farmet John, Rib End ,..,.._ ~n
FARMER STYLE SPARERIBS .... 1.11. IA9 PORK SHOULDER ROAST.. ..... to. .89 ·
Zinfandel fared better than
Cabernet, with the judges being able
to agree on three gold medal quality
wines. Ravenswood, a winery
noted for its Zins won for a 1982
''Napa," with another gold aoina to
River Oaks 1980 "Private Re-
serve." The gold medalist that
should send consumers running to
the store, thouJh, is the Rivenidc
Farm 1982. "Sonoma." It sells for
about SJ.
This seems to be the year for
Pinot Noirs to shine, with the
sometimes overlooked variety
doing well at judgings throughout
1984. Gold medalists of Sonoma
were Sea Ridge 1981 "Bohan
Vineyards,•· David Bynum 1982
"Westside Road.·· and La Creme
Vinera 1981 "Porter Creek
Vineyard."
•
TOPLAIT
TOOUlll'
6-0Z. ORIGINAi. A9 Ott CUSTARD
.l.1S·Oi., Incl. 4C. Off
DOVE BAR SOAP ............................ 65
' •
.. ..
' ~ Fl••. 15·01.
l·LB. PKG.
WTID Ott
UNSALTED
&·PACK ~~ PICNIC BUNS
PLAIN llAMllUllOIR M llOI' DOO
HUG HIS
SOUR CRIAM
J
· 16-0Z.
CARTON .89
P9t...-Pon, IB·Ox. Cntamy or Crunchy 24·0r., bind Top Of SandwKh
PEANUT BUTIER ......................... 1.65 ROMAN MEAL BREAD ............... 1.29
A ...... .
GRAPH
S:e~T LIL .59 ,_ '
HAWAIIAN PINEAPPLE.. ..... to. ,39 ......
RED YAMS ............................. 10. .a9 ........
llUSATS
U.S. NO. I
POTl\JOES .29
WILCll'S .
ffA" .IUICI
l2-0IJNCE 79 CANS . • Stouffw's, 10.lS-Oz.. Cheese
FRENCH BREAD PIZZA ......... I.ft
Swiss Miu (Coated ...... 1.99)
10.PK. PUDDING-&ARS ......... 1.79
,r.,~ MIWlnl'Ul,llll ,<:jr fl: .. ..=--9 ~ • sumRM1uc I •
...,....,..,. c --· ...... --~-. _ .... ,.
SllWOO& I .. CONDmOlllR ............ .
FREI ''COLOR Ml''
HA• I OVJllll MAIK
MllllUTll MAID
ORAllOI 'UICI
M ·OZ.
CHH..LEO 1.89
9-f'k., Cakll Plojn, Sugar or Combo
VAN DE KAMP DONUTS ........... 1.25
Sebastiani was back in the gold
medal circle with the only red
generic so honored, 1980 Burgun-
dy. August Scbastiani ··country"
Cabernet Sauvi&non was the winc-
ry'sothcrgold medal winner, a wine
I picked as a "Best Buy" well over a
year ago. Nothing has changed, it
seems. ·
The only gold for spark,li)TI wine
went toChateau St. Jean 1980 Brut,
a wine that won the top award at
another judging recently. Make
sure you buy the 1980, as J 981 is
already released and is not as
developed.
Shrimp salad
dressed up
wi th grapes
ByCECILYBROWNSTONE •
,,,,.Mdl911er
Since the 1950s, recipes for
chicken salad to which grapes are
added have abounded. Much less
known is shrimp salad made with
grapes .
( had never tasted the combina-
tion until recently, wben I came on
a recipe in which the shrimp and
grapes arc marinated, then served
with lettuce, ivocado and mayon-
naise. Finely chopped scallion or
fresh chives make a flavorful gar-
nish. lf's a recipe for two oi-three,
but it can easily be doubled. My
tasters liked it and so did I. ·
Two varietie.s of seedless grapes
: ~i ~ ~~, ...co.m
are excellent to use in this l'CCI~:
MaNluri Su, 25.•-0z. Botti• Thompson Seedless, which vanes
EFFERDENT TABLETS .................................. 3.29
..... OC:I09m I.ICM HUDHd WlllNO MO IS'
&UO a .-.nftA H•"'1D¥ ... MAii(, ClOU..IC1 4
D#P-n MAtaS AND 4 0#1-n MliOtC ftllQQ ........ , ...... RICE VINEGAR ............................................. 1.09 from light green to golden, is
w.l·Nc Saba T.nydll, 3.S-Oi.. eon available through November. Ruby 32.0z. loitl•
LISTERMINT MOUTHWASH .. . .............. a.69
JS)..MI., ~ Of' bWo Dry
JACQUE BONET CHAMPAGNE I.ft
-a.o..-.a--AMElllCAN SINGLES .............. .,.a9 -..0.. LEAN SUPREM E llOIOONA .. l.M
•
12·PACK
COORS
1110aA11 M UeHT
97
12.0Z. CANI
Plain I...~. Choilts llhlne « Vin .,.. ~·LITER WINE·IN-A·BOX ............ I.ft
.39 = C~SE DRESSING ...... 1.29 --.-....... JACK OR COLBY CHEESE.II. I.II
•
BROILED MACKERAL.. .................................... 65 Scedless,1 brilliantly red an.d CO'!'-L--------------------JI parat1ve y new 1n markets, 1s avail-
--·-•--n..••••• ... au. -•--••era•
,._,SOllCIWI T ... IAA .... 00.lt ....... oa. ... ....
'
• •
.. "'
able through January.
SHRIMP AND
GRAPE SALAD
t table1pooa1 ellve oil ·
3 table1poo11 wlllte wlae vlaeg•r
t 1e11poon1 Dljoa m••tard
S.11 ud pepper to taste
~ po•nd mtdl1m Jkrlmp (eooli:ett,
1llelled ud develaed)
I cep llalved 1ttdles11reea or red
cr•pe•
Lethlce
Avocado 1llet1
Sc:allloa or tre•b eblvet, flllely
dlopp•• -----
Mayoual1e, prefer1bly ltome.
mad•
In a 3-to 4-<:up shallow bowl, whisk
totcthcr oil, vinqar. mustard. Slit and pepper.
Cut each 1hnmp in half lenathwisc:
fold into oil-vinq,ar miKturc with
lfl.pcs. Cover ti&htly and rcfrilCfl\C
for tbout an hour.
At scrvlna 1ime. arranac lettuce on
ind,ividual scr,vina pl11cs: add
s.hnmp-ar1pe m11tturt. 01m1sh wnh
1vQt1do and SC1lho11. Pass 11\1.)'0n-
ntite. Mair.et 2 to 3 terVanp.
Nott: If you buy cooked &hnmp,
you Wlll need 8 ounces.
C•ll &42 ... 1171.
· '"' • l tw words IOWfk for u .
•
'II llllITT 10
.499 1
112 0 ffllf engine W/ntr#
8Utomatlc vatv. ed-lulter.-oou~ wau c:... bo•8dlal tlf~ted go
~ ;argo.,.. light -to-door carpeting. 4201017)
Previously Owned Cars
$ 5 0 E CH EEK TO ··
· . 1 .t PLACE IN ER
FORECASTED BY NATIONAL~'\( KNOWN JOE .HARRIS
D Kansas City v
....
5 · D Los Allgeles Raiders v s I D Mil•i v
§ D Minnesota ....
;:)
·..,._-D at Houston v
· D at New Orteans
D at Indianapolis
D at Green Bay v
D at r a•pa Bay
D at Chicago v
112311~+ .. ,,. ... -... -...--1.--~ _._ _____ ..,.... ·----Clll'-ll114r---IJ:!171n_,,,_ 0-01~
Al ........ -
1910 VOLVO 245 Station Wa&on
Atltotutic, '°"" Slctnl'C. Powtf ll'llas. M (#18620G)
1971 VW BUG 7 Passeni•
2 Toat, runt (#llRr~I)
f
I D New England v
'6499 g D St. Louis
D at New York Jets
D at Philadelphia v .
1976 DATU Piela.., "TRUCK"
(,1012$34) ..
s5499
.... 8 [] San Francisco D at Los Angeles RUIS v
I § Q Wasllington Qat New Yo_rk .Giants v
~ Pro Teams Playing Monday Night· Oct. 29, 1984 g '13 DOOGE ARES Econam1 4
..... Billn. l'ow. ~ ~
1111. St!teo T wt II tlloose lrOlll
#lllill5U w M)
I (TIE-lHlEAKER) ~
s5999 ~ D San Diego ~ D at Seattle S o I
~ EAR STEREO
FACTOIY mTAWTDI ......
..-ANY
AM/Fii Custttt
and
2 Speilltn
STEREO AEPAIR HOME 'I CAR
FAST RELIABLE SERVICE
TOP NAME &BANOS
CB EQUIP
llJ7MMa••· CGITAIEA
a Put Your Score For Mo day Night Tiebreaker s
I r-~L _A:s:r=w=::EE=K='s::w:1N:_N~ _~ER=S=========== .... N-A-. M_E ___ __;.__,.;-_____ __..:;..;. ____ ~ s
_mn_T ~ __ u_ ... _> +---C.-l1_11na_--.-+--____ .....,,5 ___ 0_.oo __ , ADDRESS I
_TillfY_SflJl __ a ______ _.,_ ___ ... __;.._. _ _..,.1-----~2~5~.oo~,PHONE 0
•LOY/• ta.LS (tie) "C.ta lilnl 15. ATIENTION: WINNER'S ORQE (On Your Envelo.,.) ~
. RULES OF GA .
Games list wtll be published each Wednesday. Make your picks on your entry blank, cut out, mall or _
deliver to The Dally Piiot, ATTENTION: WINNER'S CIRCLE, 330 West Bay St., Costa Mesa, CA
92626. Entries must b9 postmarked no later than 5 P.M. Friday, preceedlng the Sunday game and
Monday game. Late entries will not be counted. If more than one wtnner, a tie-breaker wtll be
determined by the score of Monday nlghf s football game. Winners wtll be publlshed the following
Wednesday. Winners may pick up prlZ&S at The Daily Pilot office on Friday before 5 P .M. folloWlng
announcement published In the paper. In the case of more than one winner, prizes will be divideCI.
tNo employee of the Orange Coast Daily Pilot or ihei~ families are eligible to""eriter.) .
.
HARBOl\AREA
APPLIANCE SERVICES
ova. YaAU LOCAL IXNMINCI
•Refrigerators• Rangel • Dllhwuherl • Diapt>Ult
• I04tln9k .. • Wuherl • Oryetl • Tmlh Com~or1
1-L---An
COiia..._ 541-IDll
......
,.,..
@ IS's 9
ARE HERE!
84
CLEARANCE
ZERO
COST
LEASING
Before You Even
THINK
of leasing anything .
from anyone. . .
CALL US f(lt APPOlmDT ·
957-8985/957-8879
2720 11H" So. Harbor BIVd.
(Bek>w Warner)
Santa An.a 92709
• • ' •
lllUC llJTlC(
•
\ ~--
\
( ( I
• ••
•
PW.IC llJTlC( Ml.IC lllllCl
Drn1H Nor1u1
IALTZNRGallOll . -™ & TllTllU.
WHTCUoP C...,.L
427 E. 171h'St.
Cotti MeN
M&-1371
---llU--•Y -.v.urt ll09'~ ---'42~t&O •
• I
..
\
Jetty & Ba:y view, newly decorated Mai
Kai, 2 &. 2 ~ 40' patio. Now $575,000.
PENINSULA HOME OCEANFRONT
Exciting Ocean & Jetty views, 4 Br, 3 Ba.
3700 sq. ft. car parking. $1,285,000.
WEIT BAY AVE IAYfRONT
At N.H.Y.C. Traditional 5 'Br 1pi.'claCular
bay view. Owner financlnl. $1 ,050,000.
LAGUNA HACH Hl~LllDE
BILL GRUNDY . REALTOR
. : ' ( . ., ( ! • I, • • ... ,, ,' ) I) I I.)
•
•
Traditional
Realty
631-7370
COLOWeLl BAN~<?Rll
s.11 your ltema fOI' $50 or ,... In
our famous DIMES-A-LINES pub-
1'-'*I eeclJ Saturday In ,,,. Dally_
P#ot.
DIMES·A·LINE •d• mutt be
Pf""P•ld M> mall or bring them Into
,,,. Dally Pilot offlctl. &t ture to
Include yocir f>hoM numw or IKJ.
drea In your ad, hav. a prlcfl on
each Item a no •bbrevfatlon&
DEADLINE:
• = • •11-•I
l ••
HOROSCOPE
1 I
• ,
HEALTH
CLUBS. TENNIS.
SWIMMING. plus
much more' Sorry.
no pets Models
open daily 9 to 6
~
• l•r
•
,
..
To peeooyour m..-.
befor. the
rtedl!'Q publlo.
pllono
Dally Piiot
Cfustfled. 942-5811
District Managers
If you 9'ljoy worl11ng with yov09 boys &
girl$ ond d k jobt are not for )'Oii,
consider o cor"' in the newip•r dr<ulo•
_._,,,. , tion field, This it o umcrv-pol_ition w1tft
.• daily cholJ-oes & ,.....,ordt..
Out 0~1 ore immediate. Applkonti
mu1t ho.e o von, ttotionwogon or true.It,
We offer on txcelltnt t.olory with a bonut
pion ond 9cn ollowonce. We ho¥9 on
txctlltnt benefit pion thot indvde' hotpl·
tof11atlon insurance, liberal vocation ona
holldo~
Cond1dotts must ho~ a att1r to b4J
W<ctssful arid b. wi111n; to WOtl hord If
you ihlftk you how tht quohficot on ,
pMoti opp!r person to
an tqVO! OpportufUty em
~
KIDS-EARN GREAT TRIPS AND PRIZESI
ACtlOU
1 FRp
ITonedOwn
10 Flth
14 WI vo6cano
11 c.tte decoratOf
118Cheme
17 6trOll
11~11
20"--&)'latk"
21 Stag
UVeetlQe
14 Interlace
llt>y9uMr
21 Aun agr°"nd
80 -ltory
11 Antler pa11 aa Nlmtod, • o.
h AonWI brOfl•
• , Aldial'IOe
MM«ncunlt
HHOldabeck
42Toeeed
440og
41 Playl
4t 0ener911y
•• AellgloUI
pelntJnQ
&O&wegoer
UTopt
II Klncled
ll&mfty
1
SI Potie fUn at eo .. s,.., -_, ..
11 Ot>Uquely
12Do--
l38et1Y-
... Urge on
85Amedlum
DOWN
1 Famlly row
2 Short note
3 Petrara kin
4 Current unit
&Abounding
• tplthet
7 Land meuure
I -culpa
t Ending for cttt
0( dlte
10 Hatd liquor
11 HYI ~ty
12W~
13Pterce
1t Set Into motion
22 ... ONOvet
21~typele
21 FOOtWNt
27 Lac1tal9d
a Ol9pufe n 8rlngto
bty aou.up
32 o en
PREYtOU8
PUm.E SOLVED
33 Cttrtc )am
34 -COCle 35 1nfonnatl0n
37 King Of..,...
40 P""'9I
41 eour..
42 Uppermc»l
bfancl*
43~
'5C&amot
48 John Jecob -
47 Tysi4~ pool
member
48 Molding edge
49 8atfled
5, On the bMy
'3 Fertllltp
goOdele
~ ... ,,.
51 Rnd teult
57Self.-.ern
It a. tnlltakan
THEODORE
ROBINS
FORD
2060 HAllOI ll\ID
COSTA tllf\A 0 .. 2 ·0010
FllDIARU * 0111* HAS
HONDn
CARS
-
THEODORE
ROBINS
FORD
.:_ ,_, •tA•!l)e 6l...-~
( 0\ 1 A "'I~ A '4. :>•:" '.:·
THEODORE
ROBINS
FORD
20t.ll ~AR8011 t<WO
CO!>TA ,.,_hA 6': 0010
'71 VW siaUon WIQOft
>Ont conct! $2150 obo 1
°'"*~12'4
@
Hl41Am114•.
HHODOIH
ROBlNS
, FORD
~ '... {. -MAR~ >l r-, ' •
CO~TA .,.! ~A :i.<< 0•)10
THEODORE
ROBINS
FORD
r ..,_.A 5 P. ~'Q ~ , •
tri. .. "l A 1rt11 t ~A -, 1' •
'IZU..T ....
F"'1 ~. Wlku' lnl. n. Aide Md ~ of •
Tru• Luxury Carl ~K259) Pttc9d ••
111
c-...·-... ._ ..... _ ...._ ..
by Bil Keane
• h f II "Mommy, my voice ur s.
by Brad Anderson
-~
by ;r om Batluk D001'Sl8UllY
BIG GEORGE by Vlrgll Partch (VIP)
I~
--......
"Would you care to take advantage of my
close-out sale?"
DEKNIS THE MENACE
~~lfff+· tttti'' /Ill''"' by Hank Ketcham
1d
DRABBLE . ...,
W%feETH, GO J flHD~ ~owt)1' f\GE.
I
by Gan:y Trudeau
by Jeff MacNally
by Charles M. Schulz •
I HAO TME ANSWER
Rl6HTON TME
TIP OF M'Y MEAD
by Kevin Fag~
"Who left this front door open?" •J'M GlAU YAUIDNT Ml«E ME PERFECT, 1CAlJSE IF YA
VIV, 1 ~LUN'r 8E HAVIN'#ALF AS MUCH FUN AS
I'M AAVJ N' ~ •
GAltPJEJ;l1
AAE.N'T YOO A!>MAMEP OF
'TMA'f !>PACE eETWffN 't'OOR TEETM?
llOOl'f MULLINS
l t>o WISH
lCOUU>
SAY THAT···
' by Gus Arriola TUMBLEWEEDS
by Jim Davis
POC1 Ml:e'f~6U!N! He Hll(l:V Ol11 H~ Ffl1M 1HI! rAS'1f:~ ~L.ANPS! v
R08EISR08B
North·South vulnerable. South
deals.
NORTH
• QJ 109
~KQJt
O AK5S
·~ WEST EAST
+864S •5
"'84 <:)10985
¢ 106 ¢ Q9842
+Kt0853 +Q96
SOUTH
•AK'12
~A73
bid optimistically to get there in
quick time. He used Stayman to
locate a 4-4 spade fit, then leaped to-
BlackwOOd. Arter all the aces were
located. his six clubs was the Grand
Slam Force, and South duly bid the
grand slam since he had two of the
top three trump honor1.
___ __,,,, ;i 7
+Al72
The biddln1:
S..tli WM& N...U. Eut
I NT PAM I+ Pa11
2 • )U. 4 NT P ... 5• , ........
7 + P... PU1 Pa.
Optonln1 lead: Thl'ff or •.
A dumm1 reversal 11 a simpltt but
elegant way or atorlng extra tricks.
But you have to ht careful about
· how you u e your entries, or you
mi1ht allow the opponents to KOre
a rurl lO def eat you.
Seven apades f 1 an excttllent con
tratt, but not cu y to reach. fl!otth
Wett ltd a frump. and dffErer I could count l1 ~ Tiit obvloua
way to develop the two triek1 need
~ to fulfill the mntract waa by ruff·
ins and, became of the entry 1ltua·
tfon, 11 dumm1 nTel'lal -wu the
recon1mended way to achieve hla
goat
DedaNr won the openiDf lead In
dummy. ~ .. w ,... fft~lng or
diamond1111d ruffed a dlamODd hip
aa Wett llutred 1 ht1rt. He return
ed to tt.. &able With a trump aad ruf
rtd another diamond hf1h. Unfor
tun~l.1. on t•l• trick Wnl-.llMffed
hi1 rem1inin1 heart, 1nill now
dtd11'9r had no way to R"!t to the
by Tom K.'Ryan
OF COll"SE.1')4~
tt?W l'Oaf{fes ""'* A UVltJe.
board to draw West's .trumps.
When he tried to cross with a heart,
West ruffed for down one,
West's discard or a heart on the
third diamond should have alerted
declarer Lo the danger. Instead of
using a trump to return to dummy.
he should have crossed with a heart
while Wm still had one. Then he
could ruff a diamond high as West
dilCIJ'ded and atill get back to the
table wlth a trump lO dr.aw the re
malnlng trumps and claim hla •lam.
HaveJ"IMe•na ... -.. ....
Wt UWW.T t..t CWrle1 G.,.• Wp ,.. .. ,_ ••1 u.r..t. .........
el DOUILES ler ,. .. 1u.. ...
takH•I. Fer a copy el ••• DOlJaLEI ....._,, telld Sl;s& te
••G .... •·DwWe•," ure ef 1•11
......,. ••• o.a.a111,P•1n.
.J. llOl6 ..... tMck payable :&1
New.,.,......a.
' .
NB restaurateur
' held in coke bust
By STEVE MARBLE
Of .. a..,""'.... .
The owner or a well-known NC"W· pon Beach restaurant and one ofblJ
employees were arrested Tuesday in
Whit 'WllS described U ll John De
Lorean-style oocamc bust in which
federal agents allegedly supplied the d~ejandro "Alex" Lovera, the 25.
y~r-old owner ·or Anthony's Pier
Two Restaurant, was arrcSled in
Santa Ana after rtPortedly hand1na.
over. S 15?.,_000 for 11 quantity of coeame, omocrs reponed.
Alsoarreste'd was Jose Luis Victor,
(Pleue Me K&WPORT/A2)
Foreceata on A2
rchers quit;
boaters still lost
Coast Guard finds
no trace of mtsatng
Newport sailors
The IC8td1 for two Ne~
Beach men lost in rOUlb ~
Saturday was called off f .uetday
niaht by lhe Coa11 Ouard after
searchers crin-croMed about
13,SOO square males without suc-
cess.
:Two Coast Guard helicopters
and a search plane swept the
caesthne from Pomt Femur\
nonh or Sota Barbara, IOU1ti iO
Ocan@dr u 1W'Cll u arotmd the
Chand lslaack.
.. They've 1earcbed the: entire
area and 11molY couldn 1t find the two men or-die boet .. a Coast
Guard 1po'kawoman wd.
Steven Batley. 25. and Nonn Seaona, 22 lioth tllpcrienced '
sailors. left Catalina l~nd Satur· di>: afternoon an a 12-root motor
skiff bound (or Newport when
lhey ran into rou&h ICU abOut 12 nula eat of Avalon Harbor.
Claude
600atLe
c11m 1111111
•
WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 24. 1984 ORANGE COUNTY CALIFORNIA 25 CE Ni·..,,
---
Missing Huntington tot spotted?
I
Four separate sightings of little girl Detective Samuel PulloCk said
;pvestipto3 have not positively
confirmed the sial!tinas.
little airl vanish~ Pullock said.
·Pullock said sheriff deputies, ··who
are responding to every lead and
every call," received 1,000 telephone
calls Monday about the apparcot
abduction. He said Laura ·s father was
hypnotized and provided "helpful
information ...
pans of the county lhat indude
Ontario, Montclair, Fontana and
Rialto, Pulloclc: said.
Vactoria SL, Cos1a Mesa, .micbl.awa
attended, is hoklig a ~ drive
Thrusday and Friday. and abtiuctor reported in Ontario area He said a man was seen watchina
children when Laura and her parents,
Mike and Pany Bradbury, arrived at
the campsite at the Joshua Tree
National Monument near Twen·
tynine Palms. The man, who re-
portedly drove a dark: blue van, left
the area at cxactly the same time the
Mcanhwile, friends and associates
of the Bradburys ~re scheduling fuod-
raising cvents. Mike Bradbury, who is
a a sclf-employe4 furniture mater,
has aivcn up work to spend time at the
camp beadquarten, hoping to assist
io the search for his daughter.
A truck will be in die pmtiea toe
bot1r days ind XbOol Ofticials are
asking ·(or contributions of ne...
papers and m.Una Little Laura Bradbur)', missing and
presumed kidnapped from a family
campsite Thursday, may have been
seen with her atlcgcd kidnapper in the
Ontario area, San Bernardino County
sheriff deputies said today.
Coast
A twin-engine plane
makes an emergency
landing at John Wayne
Airport./ A3 ·
Callf oml&
A hug and a kiss between
Nancy Reagan and Steve
Garvey prompts a ques-
tion from a youngster./ M
Soc I al Securlt)' ~hecks
will be a bit fatter come
January./M
World
The top generilJ In the
Phlllpplnes Is 'on leave'
after Benito Aquino as-
sassination report f s
made public.I AS
Home
As their offices beCome
second homes, :Yuppies
want more •perceived
amenities' In decor./ Al .
Don't be spooked by
preparing treats for
Holloween. They're a
simple trlck./C1,4
Front-running Newport
Harbor and Saddleback
are heavily favored In Sea
View League football
games this week./81
Entertainment
Alan Bates Is a "double
agent" these days, play-
ing a spy on stage and
screen./A10
INDEX
Bridge
But1etln Board
Bullneea
Caltfomla NeWI
Clu8ifktd eoma croeewont
Features
Food
Horoecope
Ann Landert
Mutual Fund1
National Newt
Opinion
Pola t.og
Publlc NOUCM
Sport•
StOCk Mlfttet1
T_.elon
Tihelt.rl
W•ther
WotklNewl
oe
A3
S.·5'
A4
03-5
08
05
AS-9
C1·10
04
"' 84
A4 A7
A3
83,02
81-3
88 At
A10
A2
A4
Four separate witncises called
deputies to report seeing the 3-ycar-
old Huntinston Beach girl in the
company of a b8lding, gray-haired
man in his SOs who has a stocky build
and a beer belly.
2 held
inlrv·ine
kidnap
BJ ROBERT HYNDMAN °' .. .,.., ........ A Santa Ana woman was allcacdly
• kidnapped from her Irvine workplace
Tuesday niaht by two people -one
reportedly an ex-boyfriend. She was
driven to another area where she was
beaten. aiven a C:nade haircut with
knife and threatened with a aun,
Irvine police reported today.
Arrested on suspicion of kidnap-
ping and anemptcd mutdcr were
Frederick Jones, 30, and Judy Carole
Hall, 40, both of Santa Ana.
According to police, the two
suspects allegedly kidnapped the 28-
ycar-old victim, whose name was
withheld, drove her to an area in
south OranlC County .. There they beat her and cut her hair off with a
knife.
She was also allegedly threatened
with a small band.gun and told she
was goina to be killed, LL Al Muir
said.
Fire'• aftermath
The search by an l S.man task force
is concentrating on the upper and
lower desert areas and in western The Hilltop Nunery school, l 2S9
And on Sat=, friends ud
neighbors will .... Ille
startiD,gat am.at l646SUWPlace,
Co5ta Mcsa.r
·.Badham
shifts
to attack
'You want to add.
you want to cut,'
he tells Bradford
iBJ 1'0BDT llYNDlllAN ...............
ln a marted campaip shift, COO.
~ Robert ftadham took lbe
o&nsi~ to combat ltic cbaJie.e of
ocrat Cvol Ann Bradford at a r: debate TUClday ni&ht at UC
UntD the debite, Ba(lbam had
IC1)Crally rdi'aincd from auacldna his
challenger for the 40th CoQll'eSSiooal
District seat while BraGford · ·lbU
repcaledly questioned the four-term
Co~'s stance OD national
dcfcme iuucs, bis absenteeism from
Concress and his fnqucnt bipl
abroad.
At Tuesday's debate. however.
Badbam accused Bradford of'waobQI
to establish new social prosrams
·while cuttini the deficit and ~bal
ancing the budgcL
PofiCC said Jones and Hall then
drove the victim to Joncs's Santa Ana
apartment and later took her to SL
Joseph Hospital in Orange. She was
treated and released but not before
hospital officials called polioc.
Irvine police arrested the pair at
Jones' apartment without incident.
ID~tor Tom Plpee of the COllta lleea
pollce tilkm pbot09 at mcene of fire beUeftcl
Mt by 1aDdlOrd ~d LlOJd Scbamacber. 50. of eo.ta llna. Police belle•e
Scba••cller poared a flammable ~d
lmlde the 4-bedroom houeat 715 VlctDrla
St. Ko one wu bolDe at tbe time of tbe ft.re
&Dd there were DO IQlarlea. Sclaa•acber la
hi cutody with bat.I at $25,000. n.m.,e
wu e9tlmated at a total of $80,000.
.. You want to add ind you Vt'U1 to au ... be told Bradford.. .. Yoo can't
have it both ways. ..
Badb•m also said Bndford's patty
affiliation tics her to presidential
(Pleue Me BADBAll/A2)
Billy Martin
found innocent
in CdM ruckus
(J
By stEVE MARBLE Martin said he'd rather talk baseball
Of .. Mir.,......, than courtroom stratqy following his
Billy Martin, the fiery ex·man~ victory in Harbor Municipal Court.
and player known for his run-ins with .. I'll answer a baseball question if
umpires, finally got an arbiter to rule you have one, .. Martin said before
in his favor when a Newport Bt.acb ~ducking out of the courtroom with his
judge TuCsday found him not auilty attorney is tow. '
ofbeingdrunk in public. . The former New York Yankees'
Wearin& a &raY suit, blaCk cowooy manaaer was arrested Apnl 13 after
' boots.. a red tie and a somber stare, (Pl .... Me BILLY/ A2}
Drug thefts lead to
security revisions
The recent arTCSt of a Newport Beach nune-.ancsthet11t in connec~
tion with the all~ theft of pc>Werful
narcotics from five area b ..... hat
caUKd adminimaton to review their
policies for 11feauardina the distnbu·
tion or drup.
While oaeJocal holpi\11 admini1-
tra1or says tecUnty meuura have
already been tijhtened folloWins lhe
arrea& of 31 •year-o&d Mdlet Lynn
Tracy. othcn say they ihave re-
examined theire:uaunapobaa to1ee
1f more can be done.
They mll ldmn. h<>ftver, that
d"-P can Ind do end up mllllQI
de11>1te the best of .ecunty mtllWCt..
Accordina to pohc:e. T~ iallefed-
ly wheeled mobile medaant 1:1ns
conta1n1na the pa nkllhna dnap
morplune and Dt'merol U> llCIUded
rooms, whttc lbt pned them open
with a iSCl'CWdnver.
.. rt•s amazu'I how much of this Joel on,,. says Tom RJchards. admin·
11trator of COiia Mesa Medical
Center Ho1pnal, Where Tracy wu
anated after al'-d!Y ~re to steal ~I vials of paantllleri ftOm I locked
mediclae ttay. ··we·Ra smaller boloiw 101t'1 not
u mudl of a~ but we alto do ~verydu~ we can IO beo the drvta
loCked UJ>. llidw& llicf.
At Calta M• tk cans conwn•na lhe dnm 1rt Wboded &om room to room tiut 1re left locbd ut lbe
hallway ,-OU1lidt lbc door Whale the dnali are bei111dilpen.S JUcbirds liicl * ....... of the ~ -99beds-ano.tih100. nurtt 1taff'to keep a dole~ on the
aarti.
bout fi~ n llO. be sa d, a man
Bllly llal'tln
Focus t1N THf NEWS
Widdinaa crowbar broke two toe.ls t0 met to some ortbe bolpiaal~s.dNp. In
'ibe wake or that burllar'Y, new
.ecunty meawres 'Wtf'C am~nted
and the lime m&ft WU arftAed wb D
ht tried '° raid tbe dtua suppl.a • leCODcl tune.
Tht abihty to alter the hospta1
leCUllty DOlicies is ertdalt:d for catch· ... u.c tlUef. Richarda .. and he'
not about to ~ tbe speafics of tbechus. ~ Mycn. the admtn1strator of
Foutam Valley Commumt HOlp'-
'81. 11 •nwtlhQI ao eta ltCUttt meawmatall
h wa Fouwa altq COmmuni·
(PleUe-DllUO/AI)
CM homeowners
oppose fwy route
Residents accuse business interests
of pushing road east of Newport Boulevard
BJ TONY SAAVEDRA
Ol .. Dllt ........
Residents and property owners
along the proposed route for the four·
mile Costa Mesa Frcewa) e tension
accUSed local business pups and
politicians Tucftday of trying
to"railroad" the project through the
ctt .
.. 'obody put anto the record what
the residents of Costa Mesa wanL
This freeway south of Bay Street i bciq railroaded past the citizenr., ..
said Evan Krewson of Coria Mesa.
The accusation was made Tuesday
during the final hearina beKft a
member of the Cali.fOrnia TransPOr·
(PleUe .. taaA1'8/A2)
OCsmokin
to e consi
ban
ered
Su rvtsors order stat:f to draft ordinance ·
extending to pu lie, private workplaces
llBSANS OPPOSE ROUTE ••• Pn.Al
tauoa Comma on oo whether lO ch n from t altmtauvcs rc-rou~ 1be freeway 'o the ca t of vi 'ed in four·ycar cnvuo mental
Ntwpon Boule rd instead of the: tudy. ould nd the fi y t of
'#Mt. ~'.POR Boulevard, through S
Rouply 160 PtOnlt.. mooly prop-homes nd 40 bu me
CftY ownen aJoQa the ~rt)' route -ACQOrdinatothe tudy,lheadopted
aowded Coata Mesa c.uy Counctl route ould disp 1,118 residenu
cbmDberl for an 11th hour plea before while the route recommended t>)'
aMe Commin QOtr WallCr .lnaalls to Ulte Dep:u1ment of T n Pon tton ~ the e11enuon from .plow.in& would t .kc the h9me of2J9 ~plc thrc>up their homes and businesses. Both routes would rejoin Newpqn
Homeowners wpd the c:om-Boulevard near lndustnal ~(ay, atop.
m&lllOll noc IO be swayed by business ping before the border of Ne\\'.POR
&rOUPI l.Mt tbcy iakl we.re pnmanly Beach. ·
INde up of people hvll1& outside After numerous public h rin,gs
ColU Mesa. , and workshops, the easterly route was
""The bcanna called to take endorsed by the city councils for
public llCStimony on a proposal to Costa Mesa and Newport Beach, the
abandon the rou\C adoplcd I :S years local chamber of commerce~ the
ago. That route would low throuah Orange County Transporation Com-
607 bomesand 1:56 businesses west of mission as well as the tatc.
Newport Boulevard and Superior However, propcny owners chargt-d
Avenue. those endor5tmcnts W'UC m de
The preferred rbutc. recently without the support of the Costa
M ru1dent lho m intaaned the freeway s ould not branch t or
l ftcr coming through the C\\
pon Boul v rd ditch lhlt end n r
BayStrttt.
They rgued the extension should
either end at Bay Street or hould
tfavel struight through Newport
Boulevard, 11n option that was drop-
ped by ltrans because of extensive
detourinJ that would be needed for
the rraflk displaced by the len&thy
freeway construction.
Moreover. the route would vir•
tually choke off business for down·
town merchants · along Newpon
Boulevard.
After the meeting, Commi ioner
Ingalls id the oommiss10MW0uld
only consider the tw. o routes aalcing
the fn-cway to the cast or the west of
the boulevard.
BADHAMATTACKS BRADFORD •••
,Prom.Al
candidate Walter Mondale·s policies,
••You can't run and hide from
Mondale's tax hike. You can't run
and hide from Mondale'1 unilateral
nuclear tfeeze," Badham tiaid durina
the 75-minute debate.
Weathering jeen. while also
promptina applause from the largely
atudent audience, Badham defended
hit active roles on armed forces
committees and said defense spend-
ina bas indeed increased, but not as
rapidly u that of social proarams.
Bradford, seekina her first public
office, emphasized her commitment
to nuclear disarmamen~ education,
the preservation of the environment
and women·s issues.
.. J say it's time for a bilateral.
mutually verifiable nuclear freeze:•
Bradford said ... It's time for a return
to the negotiating table." .
Bradford ·a1$o aaid she does not n~sanly advocate increaxd feder-
al spending. .
"I'm not committed to a tax
increase. I believe we're still in a
recovery, not a arowlh period." ~be
said. "But we can have (pay for) new
prOlfl.rDS by iettin' the waste out of
aovemment. especially in the Pen-
tagon."
ln response to a question on the
U.S. trade deficit, Badham said the
recovery has produced a strong dollar
that, in time. will bring a better
balance between imports and exports.
In the meantime, he said. Ameri-
cans should purchase American-
.
made products When possible. .
"I drive an American car," he said.
"My opponent can't say that."
Bradford's stand on suppon for
Israel, which was first raised Monday
night at a Fountain V aJJey candidates
forum, was introduced again Tues-
day.
Badham produced a letter writ\Cn
two years ago by Bradford that called
for cuttina off military and economic
aid to Israel in the wake of the
invasion of Lebanon and the
massacre of innocent refugees near
Beirut.
In a prepared statement distributed
by her campaiin aides1 Bradford said
her comments had to oe taken in the
context of when they were written.
NEWPORT RESTAURATEUR HELD •••
Jl'JomAl
19, who was identified as a cook at the
Bayside Drive restaurant in Newpon
Beach.
Oftic:cn aaid they confiscated the
cash from Lovera as wcfl as a 1984
Mercedes Benz and a 1983 Ford
Bronco. It was not clear whether the
vchi~les were part of tbe alleged
cocaine transaction.
The so-called .. revCl"IC ·sting oper-
ation .. was carried out by Newpon
Beach police, the U.S. ~Enforce
ment Administration and the FBI.
Officers said the operations was
approved by the U.S. Anomey's
office in Los Anaeles.
The amount of cocaine allegedly
offered to the restaurant owner was
not made s:;ublic. It also was not made
clear how or when Lovera came to the
attention offederal drua agents.
Lovera, who lives 10 the posh
Cameo Shores community in Corona
del Mar, was beina held· today
without bail at the Newpon Beach
city jail. .
The native of Venezuela wilJ be
arraigned this week in U.S. District
Court on a federal charge of attempt-
ing to possess cocaine with the intent
to distribute it.
Victor. a Santa Ana resident.. is
being held without bail on an ident-
ical charge.
One spokesman described the ar-
rest as being simHar to the $24 million
De Lorean cocaine bust in that
lawmen supplied the drug and the
suspect the money.
De Lorean was found innocent on
federal drug charges Aug. 16. Jury
members indicated they felt that De
Lorean had been entrapped by the
government and were highly criticaJ
of tactics used by qents.
The U.S. Attorney's office, which
prosecuted the De Lo~n case,
vowed the jury's ruling would not
affect future sting operations.
PEPPER IN LEISURE WORLD .••
l'romAl
Speaking to a near capacity crowd
at Leisure World's Oubhousc No. 3,
Pepper was stumpina for Democratic
presidential candidate Walter Mon·
dale and has running mate Geraldine
Ferraro as well as Carol Ann Brad-
ford, the Democratic challenger of
Rep. Robert Badham, R-Newpon
Beach, in the 40th Distnct.
"If Walter Mondale and Geraldine
Femro are president and Vlce presi-
dent, and rou give us a Democratic
Conaress, will 1uarantee you on my
honor that Social SccuritY. benefits
will not be cut, Medicare wtll provide
more care at less cost to the govern-
ment and the people covered and
"'e'U have a more sound and prosper-
ous ec~nomy ... Pepper promise<1 in
capping a ramb1inc half-hour 5pe«h.
Pepper afpcaled to the fond
memories o the elderly audience,
mentionina former President Frank-
lin 0 . Roosevelt and the New Deal
policies that gave binh to Social
Security benefits and other social
programs.
. Roosevelt's name elicited cheers
from the white and pewter-haired
crowd. And several nodded their
viaorous acrecment when Pepper
assailed President Reapn and the
Republicans, saying thetr policies arc
out-of-touch with the American
people. "No lonaer do ther, feel the
pull of the people's need, ' Pepper
BILLY MARTIN INNOCENT •..
ll'romAl
Newport Beach police found him on
the front lawn ofa girlfriend's house
m Corona del Mar. Pohce said
nei&hbors had complained that
Martin was outisde ~mJ.
Police said they took Martin to jail
because he was unable to care for
himself. The ex-manager was bailed
out after four hours by his girlfriend.
Judge Russel Bostrom ruled in
Martin'• favor today after looking at a
series of photographs and determin-
ing the woman's front lawn could not
be interpreted to be a pubhc place
The question of whether Manin
was 1ntox1cated did not come up.
Martin, color and controversial as
a ball player and manager. has had
alcohol-related run-ins with the law
before and once got in trouble for
allegedly punchina a marshmallow
salesman in the face during a barroom
incident.
In the Corona dcl Mar mc1dent,
police cla1med Manin and has g1rl-
fnend got mto a spat over travel
arrangements for a horse he had
purchased for her.
Martm's girlfriend reportedly was
set to testify in his behalf today but
said.
The Democratic Party, Pepper sai~ docsn•t disagree with President
Reaaan on the need to contain the
cost of social programs. It is the
methods the president has chosen -
methods that hurt the elderly and
others who need help ..:-that Demo-
crats cannot condone, he said.
Pepper urged members of the
audience to vote and to help rally the
support of others for Democratic
candidates includina Bradford.
Those who are .. walkina down the
Jast ~ of the long journey of life,"
can iU afford Republican policies that
cost them more but give them less,
Pepper said.
was not called because of the Judge's
ruling. Both sides agreed to waive a
trial and let Bostrom make the
decision.
Manin declined to comment on the
case as he entered the counroom and
again as he left a few minutes later.
A former manaecr with the Yan-
kees. Detroit Tigers, Minnesota
Twins. Texas RanJers and Oakland
A's, Martin now 1s a scout for the
Yankees.
The ex-manager. however, 1s per-
haps better known now for his role in
a television beer commemal.
SMOKING ORDINANCE ORDERED •••
Prom Al
vate workplaces throu&hout the unin-
corporated ponions or the county.
The diacuS&ioo arose as supervisors
decided to toughen the county's
anokina ordinance, which requires
county departments and agencies to
develop 1mokin11uidelino aimed at
providing a •·clean air environment"
for the county's 11.000 employees.
.. Smokma 11 a public health issue
-not a pohtical one," 1d uper·
visor Thomas Riley in ~ommend
'~ thlt the county CSc clop more
stnnacnt mokina auidcline for efY!·
Dtoyees. "Th s bOald has a rcapons1-
bility to sec that county employees are
frtt trom the harmful effects of
second-hand smoke."
Ne5tande. who calfed smok.ina a
··senous health hazard," said the
issue 1s one that pits a person's rights
.,ainst another person's life tyle.
He said he wants to find out within
90 days how well such ordinances re
worlnng elsewhere and how they are
enforced. The ordinance he envisions
would govern not only the private
workplace, but restaurants and simi-
lar pthenng ,pots, Ncstande said.
Supervbor Roger Stanton, who
described himself as a fonner smoker,
said people have "to re pcct the riahu
of others to a healthy environment." ~nd Supervisor Ralph Qark, indicat·
ing he would support the motion,
chatacterize4 himself as a "bom-
apin non-smoker." Of the five
supervisors, ooJy Nestande said he
never smoked.
The board first enacted an ordi-
nance governing smokinJ in county
buildinga in 1975, but 1t has been
troubled by defiant employees. the
improper plJcement of signs desig-
natina smok.ina and non-smokina
·areas and county manaacrs who
failed to understand their rc_pan-
siblities in dcvelopiai mokina poJi.
cics, Riley id.
ORANGE COASl Cltcutatk>n 114/Ma-4333
'
Daily Pilat
H. L Schw•rtz Ill
Pubh h r
ROHm1ry Churchm.n
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lttphen F. C•r•zo
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..
Don•ld L. Wllll1m1
Ciro\Jtatlon
Man g r
Clnttfled eclv~ 114/142•5'71
AU othef depertmenl• e.2-4121
MAJN C>r:FICE
Wal 1 SI Costl Meou CA
I I ~CA.
\
Clear, slightly cooler Thursday 1
t
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Tem~ratura
... ~. ~.~. F9'0NTI • °'9\iiif ~'* Wt1m-Coto...,.
Sll0••1• Ran fUtt•• Snow Occiuo.o..,. St1tiOl\ll'v.-..
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u eo
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SURF R£PORT
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a:i ~ Mi.mi-..cb .. ~ .. ... ......... ,, IO ......,.,p., 0 :u NWrvlll 65 63
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6111 Ub Clt1 $0 13
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Extended llD
1-2
1·2 1·2 ,.,,
Sheriff's shooting
range ls closed
over safety issue
The Oran~ County Sheriffs De·
panmcnt shooting range in the city of
Orange was closed indefinitely by the
Board of Supervisors Tuesday after
repeated instances in which slugs
fired by police strayed into the
surrounding nei&hborhood.
"While I believe every reasonable
precaution has been taken by this
'"' I 1-:r Sw.I dhalon: IOWMlll
board as well as the Sheriff to ensure
public safety in the area, a single
projectile splJteri~ about thr area is
simply one too many," said Super-
visor Ralph Clark. in proposina the
shutdown.
The shooting ranee is at the
dcpanment's trainina academy on
K.atella Avenue.
DRUG THEFTS PROMPT REVISION •••
From Al
ty Hospital that was allegedly hit
twice by Tracy, on Sept. 28 and Oct. 1.
A total of 121 individual doses of
morphine and Demerol were taken.
"We have tightened up on the
sccunty, but l'cf 1rather not go into
detail about it m the newspaper, ..
Myensaid.
Mary Newbold. director of nursing
at Humana Hospital in Huntington
Beach, uid a disciplined system of
distributing ctruas tccps a tight con-
trol on painkillers like mol]>hine and
Demerol.
At Humana, the supplies on drua
carts are Checked at the end of deb
nursing shaft to make sure the amount
dispensed matches the amount miss-
ing from the can. Also, narcotics are
kept in a separate locked dra\\er on
the caru with only one key available
to open it.
"If ·there's any discrepancy, the
nur-.c dOC5n't go home until it's
cleared up." Newbold said.
Nor are the carts wheeled from
room to room as they are at other
ho pitals. At Humana, the physical
la~out of the hospital allows the cart
to be left at the nurses' station. The
nurses carry the dru,s to the rooms on
trays. Newbold said.
"'OuN is a very, very tight system,"
she says. "But anybody who works
with hospitals who is being honest
will tell you that dfU8.' sometime
turn up missing. If someone is out to
act the drugs, he can probably be
Just .Call
642-6086•
Gem
Talk
B • J ••. lll/MPHRIES
Qrtlfied CemoJotist •• 4CS
STAR WAAS TECHNOLOGY
mN•ur•• th• glm•r
The Iner and the computer, two
areu of technology that we often
ate0elate With the e>tpl0tatlon of
outer apace. are now being uted to
measure the "Inner tP•ce" of
diamond•. A pair of Minnesota
tei.ritl1t1 are ulfng laser beams to
grade diamonds. Utfng the same
technique which locat" defect• In
artlflctal heart valvM. they "lhoot"
a laeer beam Into• diamond to find
tnctu11on1 (tiny Cfefect1) In
diamond•. When the luer tight
ttrlk" an lncfutlon, It scattert and
• refract1. Thi• refraction la projeeted
onto 1 ac.-..n. whet• It can be
analyzed and "graded," The
anatytlt It now done vllualty. bUt
the 1Clentllt1 are working on a way
fo haw a computer an81yaa the light
patterns. Thia la en etlll In the ex-
~tal 1tege, but the ldent11t1
hope to eventullty devek>p a fC)()I..
proof, computerized method of
gradlnQ <Hamonda eccordlng to
atrtct lnt«n1t1onat etalldwd1. The
telentlltl alto ptan 10 UM the Md'I·
~Y to "fingerprint'' lndMdUal
diamond• and Cotored gemeton.e.
Thll woutd matct It ..-lo ldlntffy
lndtvldu., ltonea 80 tMI ~ coUkl
not be rtwttchtd with other, ,...
valuable 1tonn .
t
clever about it and ~t them."
Jim Haden, assbciate i.dminis.-
trator at Hoag Memorial Hospital in
Newpon Beach, aarces.
"I think it's rare1 and difficult,"
Haden said, .. but ir Someone really
wants to-* it and is brazen enough,
they can get to the drugs."
To make it much more difficult.
however, Hoaa Memorial docs· not
store narcotics on the mobile cans.
••The carts can be a good system
because ther,"re very effietcnt,"
Haden said. • But on the other hand,
you give up a little on the security
side."
Instead, Hoag stores its narcotics
supplies in a double-locked cabinet in
each of the units. The prescribed
amount, and only that amount. of the
necessary drug is then taken from the
dabinet in locked carts to the patients.
The pharmacy at Hoag, like that at
the other hospitals, is well-secured
with locks on the drua supplies as well
as the room itself, Haden sid.
"The idea is to do all you can to
safeguaro, just as you would your
home," Haden said.
Despite those anempts, the threat
of a drug-user stealina the narcotics is
always present.
Or. Michael Stone of the Carcunit
Hospital in Ora~e aays the_J>COple
who attempt to 'tal narcotics are
those already addicted.
.. Addicts become desperate and
they steal or do whatever they can to
get the drug.·· Stone said. "Typically,
they don't do anythina violent, the~
won't bun apyone, but they will t,,.,
busy stealing, sbopliftina and so on."
Relatives of Tracy. who plead
not auilty to seven counts ofburslary
in connection with the hospital thefts, are reponedly ~ins to enroll ber in a
drug rehabilitaUOD prosram in Lona
Beach.
Richards. Costa Mesa Medical
Center's administrator, AYI that
approach is good.
While he was a hospital adminis-
trator years qo in Tc~ RicbarcU
said a young nurse who had been on
the job only a few days had stolen
Demerol from syringes and replaocd
the drug wilh water.
Another nurse spotted the chanat
and the local police were soon on the
nurse's trail.
"But everyone I ran into seemed
more concerned about the loss of
money, the drug itself, than the girl
who definitely had a serious prob-
lem," Richards said. "That's not
right."
In that spirit. the chainnan of the
board of the Cossa Mesa Medical
Cent~r f'C<lCntly, issued a resolution to
the hospital staff that. not only
commended them on their alertness
in apprehendin1 the allcacd narcotics
thief, but thanked them as well for
reaching a person in desperate need of
help.
What do you lib aboat tl11e Dally Pllot? Wllat don•t yoa like? C;a1J tlle
aumber at left aad yo.r met1ace will be recorded, transcribed aad dellvettd
to IJae appropriate editor.
Tiiie same U·ltotlr u1weriq urvlce may be uecl to record letten to tl11e
editor on aay tople. C.trth&on to our Leuen columa mast laclllde tllleJr
• aame aad telePtaoae a.miter for vertflcatloa. No circ•latloa call1, please.
tell a1 •'•t'1 on yo1r mind.
1 9 8 ' Aaoatd of Jlerl.t
•
certified Ge.Uologi8t I
American GeJD
Society
Nme~lp /1 a&i.tardH only to
#l«IH}ftt¥Wrl ~ pouas
JW'Oflftf ..,,.o1ogtc1fl ltnou1/Ng,
""" llH blllHll #tbkal '""""""'' It 11 )'Oflr a#ruwnc' o/ tb•
nl"'blllty """ capabllll)•
of Ibis Jlmt
MEMBER "M[RICAN GEM SOCIETY
1809 NEWPC>f'T It.VO COSTA MESA
StNOE tO•e
,
NB restaurateur
held in coke bust
BJ STEVE MARBLE °' .. ..., .......
The owner of I well·known New·
PQn Beach restaurant and one of his
employees wtre anetled Tuaday in '
what wu ciembed u a John De
Lorean..ayle cocaine bust in which
f<derll aaent1 alleatdly 1upplied the
d1tcjandro .. Alex" Lovera, the lS..
yeat-;<>ld owner of Anthony's Pier
Two Restaurant, was arTeSted in
Santa Ana after reponcdly handina
over. SIS1,000 for a quantity of c.oca1ne, onK:en reported.
Also arrested was Jose Luis Victor,
(Pl-oeelfSWPORT/A2)
Foreca1t1 on A2
-
Searchers quit;
boaters still lost
Coast Guard finds
no trace of miss!
Newport sailors
The search for two New_.
Beach men Josi in rou&h ICM
Satu<dly wu called off Tunday
oipt by the C-1 OUOJd after
tean:ben cri~ about
I J,500 square miles wit.bout suc-
CN.
Two Coa1t Guard hellcopten
and a aearch plane swept the
.,._hoe fnlm Point Femua,
north of Sania 8etbeta. IOUth &0
Qcaplidt u 'well as around &he
Channelblancb.
-r'hey•vt M&R"bod \be NbR
aruaad 11mplycouldD't find w
two men or I.he bot!;· t Coul
OUOJd spokeswoman said.
St.even Bailey, 25. and Norm
Seaooa, 22 both ••prrienced
1111on, left Cai.Jina.1t•nc1 Sotur·
da)'. al\emoon in a 12-fool motor
U1ff' bound for Newport when
they ran intO rouah teas about 12
mik:s cast of Avalon Harbor.
f 1111 EllTlll
WEDNE SDAY. OCTOBER 24 1984 ORANGE COUNTY I ALIFORNIA 2; CENTS
• • • ID rv1ne I • 1n na
Cout
A twin-engine plane
makes an emergency
landing at John Wayne
Airport./ A3
-.-:.::-:-:-: .. n:·:-:"»:-:o:-x®:..-:::*:-~
California
A hug and a kiss !$tween
Nancy Reagan and Steve
Garvey prompts a ques-
tion from a youngster .IM
a~~"::~:::!"-.9.::~m~
Nation
Social Security checks
will be a bit fatter coma
January.IM
~:X$:;W..¥~®S.~«
World
The top general In the
Phlllpplnes Is 'on leave' .
alter Benito Aquino as-
sassination report Is
made public./ AS ----~9~ .. h~..W~:~:m~.<:!».:
Home
As their offices become
second homes, Yuppies
want mora.'percelved
amenities' In decor .I Al
Food
Don'tbespookedby
preparing treats for •
Holloween. They're a
slmpletrlck.IC1,4
Sports '
Front-running Newport
Harbor and S•ddlebeck
are heavily favored In Sea
View League football
games this week.181
s..o;:;:~~~!O!o~~~"-=:;:;s:;s:;:::~
Entertainment
Alan Bates Is a "double
agent" these days, play-
ing a spy on stage and
screen.I A 10
JNDEX
lll1dgo
lulefln 801.t'd --Clllfo<nlaNewa
~flld
Comlca c,_d
~tUrel
Food
Hor-
Ann l,.end<l<I
Mutu8'Fund1 --Opinion
-Log
Pullllc N01-
flpot1a
Slook M1111<eta
TelNllO'! nw•• W•ther
World-
'
D6
A3
84-5
A4
03-5
D6
D5
AS-9
C1·10
D4
A9
84
A4
A7
A3
83, DI!
814 ee
A9
A10
A2
M
Landlord
held in
CM arson
' Police say owner
poured flammable
. liquid Inside home
· BJ TONY SAAVEDRA °' .. ~""4 ....
Police are boldin& a SO-year-okl
landlord who they believe poured a
flammable liquid in'side a house he
owned in Costa Mesa and set the
structure ablaze early Tuesday morn-ing.
No one was home at the time of the
fire and there were no iJ\iuria.
HarOld Uo~SchumacherofCosta
Mesa wu in custody todat at city jail
on suspicion of iafutioa the fire that
destroyed a four-bedroom house at
71 S V 1ctoria St
Schumacher was booked for in-
vestigation of arson after voluntarily
, submitting to qucstionina Tuesdar.
1 afternoon 1t police headquarten. Bad
was set at $25,000.
Detective Dan -HoJU:e· said"in1tr-
view1 with various 1nfonnants led
police to Schumacher. Hot:ue would nol elabon1te on-the investigation
into the 2:30 a.m. fire. but did say a
motive bad not been established for
the suspected anon.
Victim beaten,
'. taken to hospital
by two suspects
BJ -DT llYNDIUN
OI .............
A Santa Ana woman wu 1llqodly
kidnopped from ber lrviJJe _.,._
Tunda1 nisht by"'° people -ooe
reportedly an a-boyfriend -and
wu driven to another area where lbe
'WIS beaten. her hair shorn with •
knite and tbn:a&encd with • sun.
Irvine P,>li<e -t<lday.
• ArrcAcd oa suspicion of kidup-..eina and attemp&cd murder Mn
f'lederic:t Jones, JO, and Judy Carnie
HoJL 40. both of Santa Ano.
Aa:ordins to police, di< .....
-olleFllJ bdmpped the :zg.
)'Cir-Old victim. whose name was
withbctd, drove her lO an area in
south Onns County. Tbere they
bat her and cw bc:r hair off with a kni!O:
She was also aJJerUy thratened
with • smoll hlndaun ..... told ....
was aoU. 1.0 be kil1cd. Lt. AI Muir
said. .
Police said. Jones-and Hall then
drove the victim tQ.Joncs'sSanta Ana
.-&parime:Dt and later took her IO St
Joteph Hospital in-Oranee. She •IS
treated and re" •tod but not ~
bolpiw officiols Clllod police.
Police said the iJM::idm.t may have
developed out of an on-coin& conflict
between the victim and her a.-
hoymend, Jones.
He said informanu told police
. (PlaN-OWl'IER/il)
............... ........... Irvine police arrested the pair at
h!...-tlp-T-Pl-of tbe C'!l'la II-'police takee ~ ateeae of ftre. Jones' aportmeot without incidenl
Billy Martin
found innocent
in CdM ruckus
By STEVE MARBLE
Of .. .,..,, ........
Billy Martin, the fiery ell-manater
and player known for his run-ins with
umpires. finally 101 an arbiter to rule
in his favor when a Newp0n Beach
judge today found him not suilty of
beina drunk in public. Wearing a gray suit, black cowboy
boots. a red tie and a somber stare,
Martin said he'd n.ther talk baseball
than courtroom strategy following his
victory in Harbor Municipal Coun.
"I'll answer a baseball question if
you have one," Martin said before
duck:ina out ofthecounroom with his
attorne)'. is tow.
The former New York Yankees'
manaaer was arrested April 13 after
(Pl--BD.LY/ill
Drug thefts lead to
security revisions
The recent arreat of a Newport
Beach nuno-anathetist in connec· tion with wallepd theft.of,,......rul JW'C'l1lCI lnlm ftvt .... holpillk hu
cauted administrators to review tbci.r
policia for illf'luanlifta the diotribu·
tioa of drup.
While one local hQIPi-1 Mmiait-
trator uys .ecurity meaura hive
already been tilhtet!ed followi111 the
umt of )J.,_...,id ar-. L1nn
Tracy, othen 11y U.O, Tiavt re-
CMIDiood theirOltillil!I polic:Mo 11>-
if more can be done.
They lliU lldmit, --· tllal ~ "'" and do end ........... dctpite the-belt of lmlrity meuura.
Acconli"I to polit<, T"!CT lllclled· ly wheeled mobde . mediant cana
conwnana w pou!lullina dnip
tl!Ollllilne and DelMl'Ol 11> IOCl!!dld roomo. where tllc pried wm 01JC11
l
Bllly llaltin
ROBERT
HvraW!
'
J
Missing Huntington tot
may have been spotted
with .her kidnapper
~ittlc Lau .. Brodbury, missinaand
pre\umed kidnapped from J; family
campsite Thursday. may have been
seen with ber altqed kidnapper in the
Ontario area., San Bernardino County
sheriff depuUCS Slid t<lday.
Four separate wilDCSSeS called
deputies to repor't Sceina tbc 3-ycar-
old Huntinaton Beach airl in the
cootl!"ny of a boldina. l"y.hoiftd
man 1n his SOs who has a stocky build
and I beer belly.
Oe1ccti"" Samuel Pulloct said investiptors have not positively
confirmed the si&IJO-He said a man was seen watching
children when Laura and bC:r parents,
Mike and Patty ar.dbury, arrived at
the campsite at the Joshua Tree
National Monument near Twen-
tynine Palms. 1lte man. who rc-
poned!J dim,, I doJ1t blue ..... left
the area at cuctly the same time the
~--/A.al
OCsmokin
-to be cons
__) ban
red
Su rvtsors order staff to draft oldinance
extend! to public, rtvate workplaces
BJ .IU'F .ttll,Ell ............ _ I
Callifta cipreltc: smotina an un-
di11P11tod Jlllbhc h<olth lwotd, the Oro• County Boord ofSupemton
on Tueodoy dilOl:tod oounty ofticials
.. -.. -tlllt would -blOJlJ smola111 av•dd!-on both public and private_,._.,
Supavt!IOn voted W!IJ!Jmo<llly to
co.skkl' such an klJOll and reo-
ommet!de\f county officlah, in con· 11J1!CUOO With the tlOOOty health
Ollk:<r, ttl!dy --by othe< counbel and cibel around lht coun-
'ri;,,. Los Anl<lcs City Council hu
u ar-. COMt DAILY PILOT /Wedne.day, October 24. 19JM
Woman pulled from auto
in flaming freeway crash
A COm Maa woman wu pulled
from bet &a._miat stauon ~n after h WM bit tom behind an a messy
threHar 1ICCicleat Tuetday dwina n8 bow'oa the Cole.a Meu Freeway an Sulla Ana. •
Jcu A.Da Gilbub, 43, suffered
cbaa .uvwi. Md .-oke inhalation
inlbe S:2~p,.m. mitblp. wbach forooi
tbe Califomia Hilbway Patrol to
close all southbound lanes of lhc " s10DPCd in bumper.to-bumper
freeway at Founh Street for nearly 30 traffic when Quant, drivlna 1 red minutes. Thunderbird, hit her car from behind ..
A second driver, identified as Carl The impact caused GilbankS' car to
Quant, 79, of San Jacinto, 5utfered burst into flames and also forced at
head and back injuries. aooording to into a . third vehicle, driven by
CHP spokesman Rick Stcvcn1. Both-Matthew Heath, :281 of Costa Mesa.
<lrivers wel'C' treattd -at Wettcm Heath wa not iruured.
·Medical Center in Santa Ana. tevens said an unidentified ocr-
Stevens said Gilbanks ttp<>rtedly son pulled Oilb.tnk.s from her car.
NEWPORT RESTAURATEUR HELD ••• From Al
19. who was identified as a cook at the
Bayaide Drive restaurant in Newport
Beach.
Officen said they confiscated the
cash from Lovera as well as a 1984
Mercedes Benz and a 1983 Ford
Bronco. It was not clear whether the
vchi?es were. part of the allCSC'(I
~me transaction.
The so-called "reverse stina oper-
ation" was carried out by Newport
BeaCh police, the U.S. Drug Enforce-
ment Administration and the FBI.
Officers said the o~rations was
approved by the U.S. Attorney's
office in Los Angeles.
The amount of cocaine allegedly
offered to the restaurant owner was
not made public. It also was not made
clear bow or when Lovera came to the
attention offederal drug agents.
Lovera, who lives in the pOSh
Cameo Shores community in Corona
del Mar, was being held today
without bail at the Newport Beach
city jail.
The native of Venezuela will be
arraigned this week in U.S. District
Court on a federal charge of attempt-
ing to possess cocaine with the intent
to distribute it.
Victor, a Santa Ana resident. is
being held without bail on an idcnt·
ical charge. •
One spokesman de~ribed the ar-
rest as bcinuimilar to the $24 million
De Lorean cocaine bust in that
lawmen supplied the dru.g and the
suspccl the money.
De Lorean was found innocent on·
federal dnJ& dwgcs Au;. 16: Jury
members indicated they felt that De
Lorean had been entrapped by the
government and were highly critical
of tactics used by agents.
The U.S. Attorney's office, which
prosecuted the De Lorean case,
vowed lhe jury's ruU~ would not
affect future sting operauons.
PEPP-ER IN LEISURE WORLD •••
Jl'romAl
'ng-m-lnll!U' ca]Slctly-ero
at Leisure World's Oubhouse No. 3.
Pep~ was stumping for Democratic
presidential candidate Walter Mon-
dale and his running mate Geraldine
Ferraro as well as Carol Ann Brad-
ford, the Democratic challenger of
Rep. Robert Badham. R-Newport
Beach, in the 40tb District.
.. If Walter Mondale and Geraldine
Ferraro are president and vice presi-
dent, and lo~ give us a Democratic
Congress, will ~tee you on my
honor that Social Sccurit)'. benefits
will not be cut, Medicare will provide
more care at less cost to the govern-
ment and the people covered and
we'll have a more sound and prosoer-
ous economy,-Pepper-proriiiSe<i m
capping a rambling half-hour speech.
Pepper appealed to the fond
memories of the elderly audience,
mentioning fonner President Frank-
lin D. Roosevelt and the New Deal
policies that pve birth to Social
Security benefits and other social
programs.
Roosevelt's name elicited cheers
from the white and pewter-haired
crowd. And several nodded their
vigorous agreement when Pepper
assailed President Reapn and the
Republicans, saying thcu policies are
out-of-touch wit.b the American
~people.;. ••No longer-do t.bey feel the
pull of the people's need," Pepper
~
• >
w-a.-
• The Democratic Party, Pepper
said, doesn't disagree with President
Reagan on the need to contain the
cost of social procrams. It is the
methods the president has chosen -
methods that hurt lhe eldcr!y and
others who need help -that Demo-
crats cannot condone, he said.
Pepper urced members of the
audience to vote and to help rally the
support of others for Democratic
candidates including Bradford.
Those who are "Walking down the
last ~ of the loll& journey of life," can ill afford Republican policies that
cost them more but gjve them less,
Pepper said.
MISSING GIRL SPOTTED? •••
Prom Al
Clear, slightly cooler Thursday
.Tld~•
TOOAY
• 14~"' t:Ha.11'1
4 01 PJI\.
10'.IOP"'
°' 19 01 61
THUMOAT 147Lm. 10
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8un .... tod., ., l.ot p.111. ,..
TllUtlda~ 1117.ot•.m.llld llMlllQlllt'l 11 t·07pm _._ ..... UpJ!L,tllllll Tl\uftdtiy • 127a.m.end ll9IJI _.,_,_. 7. 10 pm.
TemP,eratures
.. t.. :I ::
.
., $4
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t7 7a SI ..
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17 II .. IO ... 42
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Su Rf Rr PORT
Extended
Sheriffls shootlng
range ls closed
over safety issue
The Oranae County Sheriff's ()e...
partment shooting ranie in the city of
Oranae was closed indefinitely by the
Board of Supervisors Tuesday after
repeated instances in which slugs
fired by police strayed into the
surrounding neighborhood.
•'While I believe every reasonable
precaution has been taken by this
board as well aa the Sheriff to ensure
public safely in the area, a sinaJe
projectile splatetina about the area is
simpl)' one too many,•• said Super-
visor Ralph Oark, in proposing the
shutdown.
The shooting ranae is at 1he
department's tralltlng academy on
Katella A venue.
F U.Jliiijj_i-________ ... _ .... ______ _
DRUG THEFTS PROMPT REVISION ••• -
Prom Al
ty Hospital that was alleaedJ_y ~it clever about it a~d get them." get the drug," Stone said. "Typically,
twicebyTracy,onSept.28andOCt. l. Jim Haden, associate adniinis-they don't do anythina violent, they
A total of 121 individual doses of trator at Hoag Memorial Hospital in won't bu.rt anyone, but they will be
morphine and Demerol were taken. Newport Beach,~ busy stealina; shopliftinaand so on." .. We have fi&htened up on tile .. I think it's rare.z and difficult."
little girl vanished, Pullock said.
Pullock said stienff deputies, .. wbo
are responding to every lead and
every call," received 1,000 telephone
calls Monday about the apparent
abduction. He said laura's fa th er was
hypnotized and provided "helpful
information."
pans of the county that include
Ornario, Montclair, Fontana and
Rialto, Pullock said.
security, but rd rather not go into Haden said, 0 but it someone really Relatives of Tracy, who pleaded
Victoria St., Costa Mesa, which Laura detail about it in the newspaper,., wants to do itand is brazen enough, not guilty to seven counts of bural~
attended, is holding a paper drive Myers said. . they can get to the drugs." in connection with the hospital thefts,
Thrusday and Friday. MIU)' Newbold, dittetor of ouning To make it much more difficult. are reportedly trying to enroll her in a
A truck will be in the par~g lot at Humana Hospital in Huntinaton however, Hoaa Memorial does not drug rehlbilitatlon program in l.Ona
The search by an 18-man &ask force
is concentrating on the upper and
lower desert areas and in western
Meanhwile. friends and associates
of the Bradburys arc scheduling fund-
raisingevents. Mike Bradbury, who is
a a self-employed furniture maker,
bas given up work to spend time at lhe
camp headquarters. hoping to as1ist
in the search for his daughter.
~e HHJtop Nunery school. 1259
OWNER HELD IN ARSON •••
Prom Al
Schumacher haq apparently planned
to renovate the house, estimated to be
at least 25 years old.
He rented bedrooms within the
Victoria Street house; however, only
one room was leased at the time of the
fire. Fire officials set the damage from
the bl.az.e at SS0,000 for the home and The sole tenant. identified as
$30,000 for its contents. Mildred Place, was away during lhe
bl.az.e. Police reported that Schumacher
was a longtime property owner in Hogue said fire investiptors dis-
Costa Mesa and had once operated a covered the blaze was set in several
restaurant on Harbor Boulevard. spots where an unidentified liquid
BILLY MARTIN INNOCENT •••
Jl'romAl
Newp0rt Beach police found him on
the front lawn of a girlfriend's house
in Corona del Mar. Police said
neighbors had complai~d that
Martin was outisde screamin_a.
Police said they took Mart10 to jail
because he was unable to care for
himself. The ex-manager was bailed
out after tOur hours by his girlfriend.
Judge Russel Bostrom ruled in
Martin's favor today after looking at a
series of photographs and determin-
ing the woman's front lawn could not
be interpreted to be a pubhc place.
The question of whether Martin
was intoXJcated did not come up.
Marttn, color and controversial as
a ball player and manager, bas bad
alcohol-related run-ins with the law
before and once got in trouble for
allegedly punching a marshmallow
salesman in the face during a barroom
incident.
In the Corona del Mar incident,
pol ice claimed Martm and bis girl-
friend got into a spat over travel
arrangements fo r a horse he had
purchased for her.
Martin's girlfriend reportedly was
set lo testify in his behalf today but
bot~ days and ~h<>C?I officials are Beach, ~id a disciplined system of store narcotics on the mobile cans. Beach.
asking for co~butaoos of news-distributina drugs keeps a ttaflt con--••The caris can be a good systtm Richards, Costa Mesa Medical pa~rs and magazmes, trol on painkillcn like morphine and because they're very efficient." Center's administrator, says that ~d on ~turday, · friends and Demerol. Haden said. "But on the other hand, approach is good.
neiahbors wtll hold a aara&c sale At Humana the supplies on dnag you Rive up a little on the 1CCurity While he was a bospa'tal admini•
startingat8a.m.at 1646~marPlace, · cans are checked at the end of~ side.rr · trator yean llO in Tea~ Ricbuds
Costa Mesa. Proceeds wdl go to the nursin1sbiftiorilake1uretheamount Instead, Hoaa stores its narcotics said a young nurse who had been on
Bradburys. dispensed matches the amount mi~ supplies in a cfouble-locked cabinet in the job only a few days had stolen
ina from the ca.rt. Also, narcoti~ are each of the units. The prescribed Demerol from sypn.ges and replaced
kept in a separate locked drawer on amount, and only that amount; of the the drug with wattr.
bad been poured.
Administrative FU'C Chief Jim
Richey said the house waa fully
enaulfed when 14 firefigbttrs arrived
in the early momini darkness. It took
them about 30 minutes to brinJ the
flames under control, Richey said.
He said a representative from the
Red Crosa office in Santa Ana arrived
a few boun later to help Place find
temporary housing.
the carts with only one key available necessary dru' is then taken from the Another nurse spotied the chanac
to open it. cabinet in locked carts to the patients. and the local police were soon on tbe
.. If there's any discrepancy, the The phanna.cy at Hoag, like that at nurse's trail.
nurse doesn't go home until it's the other h.osp1tals, is well-secured "But everyone I ran into seemed
cleared up," Newbold said. with locks on the drug supplies as well more concerned about the loss of
Nor are the carts wheeled from as the room itself, Haden sid. money, the drug itaelf. than the gjrl
room to room u they a.re at other ••:rhe idea is to do all you can to who definitely bad a serious pro~
hospitals. At Humana, the physical safeguard, just as you would your lem," Richards said. "That's not
layout of the hospital allows lhe cart home, .. Haden said. riaht."
to be left at the nunes' station. The Despite th0te attem~ the threat In that spirit. the chairman of the
nurses carry the drup to the rooms on of a drug-user stealing the narcotics is board of the Costa Mesa Medical tra~, Newbold said. always present. ' Center recently issued a resolution to
• Ours is a very, very tight system," Dr. Michael Stone of the Ca.rcunit the hospital staff that not onJy
she says.-~But anybody who works-"Hospital in orange says the people . commended them on their alertness .
with hospitals who is being honest who attempt to steal narcoucs arc in apprehending. the alleged narcotics
will tell you that drugs sometimes those already addicted. -thief, but-thanked them as well for
turn up missing. If someone is out to "Addicts become desperate and reachin1a person in desperate need of
get the dnip, he can probably be they steal or do whatever they can to help.
•
was not called-because of the Judge's Wllat do yo. like aboat tile Daily PUot? Wbat don't yoa Uke? Call die
ruling. Both sides agreed to waive a number at left ud yoar me11aae wUI be recorded, transcribed I.Id delivered ~si~~~ Jct Bostrom make the Just . Call to die appropriate editor. :i
Manin declined to comment on the The same U-laoar u1werlD1 service may be 11ecl to record letters to die
case as he entered the courtroom and 642 6086 tditor OD ••Ltoplc. Colltrlhton to oar Lenera colama mHt laclMe tHlr
aamin as he left a few minutes later. -ume aid &e plilo• .. mber for veriflcatJoa. No clrcalatloa calls, pteaM. _. Tell 11 wllat's OD yoar mllld.
A former man~r with the Yan-11=::.:::============::::;;-::=:;:=====:;:::======::::::::::=:=======: kees, Detroit Tigers, Minnesota
Twins, Texas RanJers and Oakland
A's, Martin now 1s a scout for the
Yankees.
The ex-manager, however, 11 per-
haps better known now for bis role in
a television beer commercial.
Ge01
Talk J 9 8 '
Jl&OGrd of •erl.t
SMOKING ORDINANCE ORDERED ••• By J.C. HUMPHRIES
Certified Cemolo!ist, ACS Jl'romAl
-
vate workplaces throu&hout the unin-
corporated portions of the county.
Thediscussionaroscassupcrvisors
decided to toughen the county's
smoking ordinance, which requires
county departments and a1enc1es to
develop smoking guidelines aimed al
providtng a "clean au environment"
for the county'& 11,000 employees,
"Smoking as a pubhc health issue
-not a political one," said Super·
visor Thomas Riley in recommend-
i~ that the county ~velop more
stnngent smoking auiddincs for cm·
pl~ . ":f~ has • respona;..
bility to sec that county employees •re
free from the harmful effects of
second·hand smoke."
Nestande, who called smoking a
••serious health hazard," said the
issue is one that pits a person's ri&hts
againsl another l)Crson's lifestyle.
He said he wants to find out within
90 days how well such ordinances are
work1na elsewhere and bow they are
enforced. The ordinance be envisions
would govern not only the private
workplace, but restaurants and simi·
far gathering spots. Nestande said.
Supervisor Roaer Stanton, who
dncribed himself ua fomMrtmoker,
said people have .. to respect the riahts
of others to a healthy environment."
And Supervisor Ralph OarJc, indicat-
ina he would support the motion,
characterized himself as a "bom-
again non-smoker." Of the five
supervisors, only Nestande said he
never smoked.
The board (mt enacted an ordi·
nance governing smolcinJ in county
buildinp in 1975, but at has been
troubled by defiant employees, the
improper placement of sian• dcsia-
natina tmokina an.d non-smokin1
areat and county mane.sen Who
failed to understand thear respon·
siblitia in dovdOPina smokina poli· des. Riley Aid.
• STAR WARI TICHNOLOQY
m•a.ur•• tlJe glitt•r
The tuer and the computer, two
area of technotogy that we often
u90dat• with the exptoratton of outer space, .,. now being UMd to
meuure the "Inner IP809" of
dlemonc.ta. A pair or MlnnN<>1a
ad9ntl•t• •• ulfng ,..., ~ to
grade dlamondt. Ullng the tame
technlqUe which locat• defect• In
attlftdat hUi't vlltvel, th9y "ahoot"
a, ... ~ Into a dlamondJ9 flnd
Jncfuirone (tiny defect•) In
dl.monda. When the laaer light
1trtk• en lndullon, It ecattera and
Certified Gemololist'
American Ge01
. Society-
ORANGE COAST ClroUletlon 7141M2-4m • retract•. Thia retractk>n 11 protected
onto a 1Ct98n, where It CM be
en1lyzed •nd "gr1ded." Th•
~ ll now done vteullty, but
the IOlentleta .. working on a way
to have a computer lnllYZI the light
pattem1, Thlt It atl 1tlll In the ex-
pirtmental it-... but the eolentl1t1
~ to ~tullly deWfop I foe)f.
proof. oomputtr&.d method of
grading dlimond8 according to
ltrlct lntematlonll ltandtlrdt. TM
ldlntlltt allO ptin to UM the t.ch-
nok>gy to "flng9rp(.m" lndMdUll
D=t
•• Guerenteed
MQ,ld.fy ,,idt't • "°" llO not ..... yWI ~by 6 pm !Jt10f9 Tpm
-,..,.. UJ(lY lit ~'°
turlJaf •Nl &undAJ II
)'Oil 00 !IOI -~ CClC!Y CJ :r • m m OftfOJ•
10 • "' ""' """ C«>; wil Df
ClrcUIMlon
T111ptHMtM
MOii 0rlll'OI cw;i, ,.,, .......
\.~l"CJ4! ~
J
Daily Plat
H. L. Schw•rtz 111
Publisher
ROMmMJ Churchman
• Contron r
... _.., F. C-.zo
Production
Manager
DOnakl L. WHtleme
Circulation
Manag r
•
CIHltfled ~ 7WM2-M71
AM OIW .._.mente M2-a21
MA .. OPFICI
:330 Wttl e., ~ C.0.11 W-. CA
t,W .cror ... nc. IMO Coll• ~ CA 9M2&
iQlll J913 '>lllil" co.tt f'ullWlinG Cotlwl'>' No ,,.... "°""' 1u11r11-ldltOflll man., CJr ~,,... "*"' NtfW\ may Cot '~ ~ ~ Plf Of~oi.!W
YOL.n,NO.•
da.monda Md OOIOred ~-· Thia~"*'• tt....., to--lndMdull ltOMI IO 1Mt thjfOMi
not be IMttehed wttti °"*· .... 'il!UI~ MO,_
• , •
MtM8EA A.Ml'AICAN GEM SOCIETY
•IOI N!WPOAl ILYD . CotT A MrSA
IWCE 114e •-Matt• .Cfttlr•