HomeMy WebLinkAbout1984-10-31 - Orange Coast Pilot..
For~t• on A2 "" ..
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·~..r D N f SD A V 0 . T OB Er~ s 1 1 • l fl 4
Witness details 2 murders
0 .
Former Mesa man allegedly kl l~d girls
in desert as f rlend drank beer. watched
f rof!J prosccuuon an exchange tor bas
testunony against Do~s. who faa:s
a death penally sentence if convicted
of the ftnt..dqrtt murders of I 6-year-
old Margaret Krueger and 19-ycar·
an the Am.a Bo~ wte Park on A~g. 13, 1982 bchevtn lake the two
11rts, that they were goan U> pose for
nude _ptcturn.
BJ JEFF ADLER
Of .. .,.., ........
. An eyewitness 10 the dcscn Stll-
slayinp of two Anaheim teen-agers
recounted in pisly detail Tuesday
how he drank beer and watched as the
NEW
DELHI.
I n d i a
(AP) -
Prime
Miniuer
lndira
Gandhi
was as-
sassinated
to d a y
outside her home,
mortally GANDBI
wounded in a barrage of bullets
reportedly fired by her own Sikh
bodyguarsiJ. Related 1iortes A4,
Bl. ) ·
The slaying of the woman
who dominated Indian Political
life for two decades threatened
to plunge this troubled nation
into new turmoil. Her son,
Rajiv, was quickly sworn in to
succeed her.
One or two of the gunmen
were rcpe>rted killed at the scene
of the shootinJi for which Sikh
extremists claimed responsi-
bility.
California
A huge tan I< er vessel Is on
fire near San Francisco
Bay with one crew mem-
ber still missing./ M
Fiim on teen-age suicides
prompts thousands of
calls to crisis centers./ A8
World
Poland mourns death of
pro-Solidarity priest./ A7
Home
More Americans are tak-
ing a personal Interest In
history -theirs or some-
one else's-and
preserving furnlture./01
Food
Student and professional
chefs show off their artis-
tic talents at the cull nary
arts competltlon./C1
Sporta
The Southern California
College basketball team
la prevlewed./91
~::::::::::::::;:::::::;:;::::::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::!~ ,
Entertihiment
A rape victim takes re-
venge on her attacker In
the tense drama •!ex-
tremities" In Laguna
Beach./114
INDEX
Erma Bombeek 02
Bridge C12
Bulletin Boatd A3
Bu1lneea A9
Callfornla ~ A4
Clualfled 03·5
Comlea C12
Ctot1word 05
Death Notlcn 85
Home 01·2
Horoecope 04
Ann Landtra 02
Mutual Funds A9
Netlonal News A4
Oplnton AH
Pepwanl 01
Pattee Log A3
Pubfie Notlcn 85-6
Sport• 81·3
Stock Market• A 10
T.-vtlfon 02
'TM1ter1 • EM
WNther ~ ..
Wbt1d Newt "'
two airJs were killed by his friend,
former Costa Mesa resident Fred
·Bette Douglas1n Augu~t 1982.
Richard Hernandez. 39, an ac-
lcnowledgid heroin addict and con·
vlcted burglar, was granted immunity
Co.tamed paraden
old Beth Jones. JO
Hernandez told an Orange Count~
"uperiorCourtjury in Santa Ana that
he accompanied the SS-year-old
Douglas, a f umiturc rcfmisher, and
the two gjrls to a remote desert wash
But instead of camera cquap,nent,
Dougla puUed a nfle and a bo,-cl
from the trunk of his car nd ordered
the gifts to pctf orm A acu on him,
Hcman.dci and on h other before
he killed them, Hemande7. testified.
Speaking an a low monotone,
Xlndeqartner Cbtla Eaplsdo, dre 11ed u a
Care Bear for Barbor View Jtlementary
School'• Balloweeii parade lD Corona del
llar, wreetl• Wida die lloOd al 11.bt:cMlt•me
(left) at puade'• end. Be loob a lot more
comfortable lD tbe photo at rtaht.
Widow suspected
of paying $3,000
for mate's death
By STEVE MARBLE used to obtain a warrant for Mrs.
or .. .,..,,.. tt.1t Ford'sarrest last week, police suspect
A 2S-year--0ld woman, who com-the Lakewood woman plotted her
plained that her husband mistreat~ husband's late-night death and then
her and refused to Jive her a divorce. attempted to collect insurance
may have paid $3,000 to have her money.
husband gunned down on a dark The woman reportedly confided to
Huntington Beach street in Scptem-a police informant that she was to pay
ber, coun documents show. $1,SOO befoTC her husband's death
Anita Lynn Ford is facing murder and another S l .500 when the job was
and conspiracy charges in the murder done, records indicate. ·
of her husband, Barry Alan Ford, 30 Coun documents also reveal th.at
whose body was found lying in a poof Huntington Beach police attempted
of blood near his white sedan on Sept. to unravel the mysterious crime by
3. A crushed ciprctte butt and a . having one of Mrs. Ford's acquaint-
flashlight were found at his feet. ances pretend that he too wanted to
Mrs. Ford's brother and two other have someone killed.
men, described by authorities as . The man, who worked with Police
family friends, also were arrested in for nearly a month in an effort to learn
the apparent murder plot, police said. the identity of the apparent killer,
All arc bcina held without bail and allowed police to tape record a series
were-to be arraigned today. of telephone calls he had with Mrs.
Despite the arrests, police have not Ford.
said whether they know who pulled Duribg several telephone-calls.,
the tnger. Mrs. Ford is quoted as saying her
The auto parusalesman reportedly brother ltnew a person willing to do
was lured from his Lakewood home lhe job butthat the man could onlf be
to an industrial area of Huntington contacted 1hrough a .. biker bar' in
Beach by someone frisnina cat Los AnJtlcs. .
tt'Oublc. loots we~ found 10 the front The informant reportedly '5aid he
scat of Ford's car, which was itill discontented wife had complained
runnmJ with tll lights on when a for weeks prior to thl': murder about
patrolhng pohce officer happened by. being rouihed up and mistreated by
Acoording to court documents her husband. The wife said her
Joel's mistake
will haunt man
Famll rt eves for boy. 9, killed by car
as parents protest lack of crossing ~ard
Most ~ bve to rqrct thctr
childhood mistakes.
Nlne--year-old Joel n~dtdn't.
The fourth~ f'tOm Whamcr
Elementary School was kalltd in
Costa Mesa Monday. He wu hn by 1 ear Mitle tfyin& to mm Plaoentta
Avenue 1111nst the ttd traffic liaht.
H11 I l ·)Ur-old brOthCr, Donatd...t
med him not to challeswe the l:JU
p, m traffic on the four-lane blaftway.
But Joel duhed into the inteneetmn
of Placent11 venue and I Ith 1reei
anyway
He nev~r m.dc it to the oppo11tc
curb
An autops Tucsd11~ mom1oa
\
Barry Alan Ford
husband came and went as he pleased
while fomng her to remain at home
with thetr two young children.
Apparently, police 'suspected the
woman from the start. A Police officer
who traveled to Lakewood to inform
the woman thal he\-husband had
been killed, noted that she showed no
surpnsc or emotion and said "l
thought so" when he broke the news.
The officer said Mn. Ford then
called her 'mother and said, .. Barry's
been shot."
The Policeman said he told the
woman her husband had been lilied
but never mentioned he was shot to
death. The informant, who cat\le to police
eight da)s after the hooting. said
Mrs. Ford had talked fos: "'~ks about
having her husband "wuted" but ·
(PleueeeieWOllAN/A2)
TONY
SAAVEDRA
--~-----
Fo cus ON THf Nu-.s
Hern ndez told juron he. Douata1
nd the lWO 11rh drank Nm and role
and smoked man.Juana for about an
hour after &mVlng at the deic'n &ate
the two men bad sCkded sevenJ
weeks earuer.
ApP3ttDtl> belicvi~ lhc photo SCSSJon was about to btji~ Jones and
Krueger ttmoved their dothcs and
agreed to have their ankles and wnsts
(Plcue Me wrnnt88/ A2)
Stabbing deaths
in Sunset Beach'
shock neighbor
Young victims termed 'a perfect coypte•;
Sheriffs deputies hard pressed for clues
By ROBEaT BARKER
Of .. D.11)' ........
Residents in the e seaside community of Sunset b across
Pacific Coast Highway from Hunt-
ington Harbour expressed bock and
horror tOday over the brutal stabbing
slayings of .. a l'Cffcct beach couple ...
Darrell Jo&n Attardo, 26, and S-teplianie Michelle ·Andersen, 20,
were found Tuesday lyi~ on the
livi!lJ room floor of their bome with
mult.aple stab wounds in lhcir upper
bodies. .
The bodies were found by a
roommate of the slain couple who
rctumedtothe(eSidenccat J69559th
St. at about 12:4S p.m. The room-
mate, described as a native of Brazil
who spoke only the Ponugucse, ran
ou1 lhc door scream!DJ for pOtice
•'hen he madr the pisly dilcovay,
authorities said.
Orange County Sheriffs Dqmt..-
ment in' cstigators said lbiey u.e DO
suspects OT mouves. Area raidellts
failed to report bearing any u,,....a
noises. .. we·rc sbockcc4_.. said Luaa
Jester, the manager of the ~
Woody's Market wbcte the )'CURI
cnu£!e did their~ sbooPi111-
.. l1ley were real nice ancffiieDdly.
They we.re a perfect beach couple -
both were blood and bl~ and
they li~cd the ocean ...
Jester said Skpban.e Andeneo bad
visited the market about 9 a.m. on tbe
momiog of the slaying and bad Wked
(Pleue w ST AllBIJIG/A2)
Irvine schools plan
classe~ during strike
By TONY .SAAVEDRA
Of_..._ .......
Under the threat of a •'a.lkout by
lf';ne t~hers. trustees for the Irvine
Unified School District adopted
emergency measures this momioa to
keep district schools open should
facuJty negotiators caU a strike.
Three trustees at the specia) board
meeting today empowered Super-
intendent A. Stanley Corey to hire
substitute teachers and take other
actions if the disaruntled teachers
leave the classroom. The two other
board membcn ~re absent.
The action came in the wake of a
strike authorization vote Monday by
members of the Irvine Teachers
Association. Teachers casting secret
ballots were asked to g; ve faculty
negotiators the permission to call a
walkout if a state medtator fails to
break the deadlock over pa) raises.
An impasse was called Oct. 4 after
teachers held fast to their dcma.nd for
a 1.5 ~· COll".Of-livi111 pay--. while the district offemt a OM-Ume
bonus at the cod offlSCal 1984--85.
Teacher repm.eotatives said the
results of the strike vote would oot be
released to the public, but would be
used as a -UUmp card"' to bolster the
teach&s' bargaining power with the
district.
District board members countered
today by adoptinJ the emergency
measures to bring 10 substitutes and
oon-crcdeoti.aJed lecturers if necess-
ary, Corey said
Also, the superintendent's office
was empo~ to gjve additional
pay to employees th.at have taketron
extra duues. And as a last rcson,
Corcywasgj\'cnauthoritytodoscthe
schools if students' welfare is threat-
ened. -Core~ said the emergency resol-
uuon is rouunely adopted by school
districts threatened m· a strike.
(Pleue w sCBOOL8/A2)
School, business
leaders convene
Second Academic Excellence Conference
promotes 'partners fnectucation· goal -,------=-------------
By LISA MAHONEY for workshops, lectures and stratesy
"'._ ~,......,, · ons on how to brina business
· Orange County busmess people people into the schools and 1Ct
and educators met m a day-long Sludcnts more involved in the WOrt ...
session Tuesday to e'.tplore way to ina "'-orld they will enter ~
become partners in education. graduation.
The second annual cadcmic fa-tate schools u~nicndent BiU
ccllence Conference. held at the Honig and Ills wife. a.acy, U.O
Hiko,J\ at the Park in Anaheim. appeared before the more than SOO
brought representati\CS ofarea busi• participants to ans"''Ct' questions
nesses toacthff with educators from about promotmg panncnbrps.
e\ery Orange County school d1~ (PleueeeeEDUCATIOR/d_.:) _ _.._.._
Sen~ Wilson in county,
lauds GOP candidates
_,_~--""-~f ~-----~~-~ells Newport f!llly
'There are no safe
Republican districts·
OC-bound copter crash kills two
beside Interstate IO r nn1ns.
benfrs spg oman 1d.
The '"o men ~illcd la&e Tuesday
\\'ttt identified thb moml s
Fair sky after morning clouds
•
SCHOOLS MAP STRIKE ACTION •••
Prom Al
"Al the bottom ltne. th1 as JUSl an
cl(pres ion of the district's re pensi·
bihty to keep the schools open," he
id.
'The di tnct ha ~!ready had to
replace trache1s 11\at are refu in to
chaperone dance , advise hoot
dubs or participate in any other afttr-
~bool activities Pnvate sccunty
u rd~ dmani trato · nd othtr
emplo)ttS have Uken over those
duties,
Corey id the state PUblic Employ·
ment Relations Board recently up-
held 1he district•s charge that teachers were viobtin~ fair labor prncuc:cs by
not providina the after. boot r·
vices.
HowcYer, PERB officials denied
the dastricfs requ l for n inJunct1on
orderirt t chcrs to immediate!)
resume ~hose extra-curricular duties.
E'orcy said the complaint was
denied bcC'ausc the distnct had noa
officially ordered the teachers lO
pruiicip:lte in djunct scNaocs.
The di trict h .s not yet decided
whether 10 issue a formal order.
Core) id.
WILSON BOOSTS GOP CANDIDATES •.•
From Al
can," W1l!l<>n said. "1 hev ~Y this 111
the strongest Assembly dis1nc1 in the
\tatc. but I can tell )OU, there are no
~re d1stncts."
Ferguson, who will face Democrat
StcYcn Feldman. said, ·-rm no more a
poltt1c1an than you are. But I'm gomg
10 go up there (Sacramenlo) and give
11 my ~1 shot. •
The reccpuon was atteadcd by
<;everal Republican lcgi!.lators and
ca ndidate& includ ing As-
~mblywoman Marian Bergeson, As-
semblyman Nolan FrizzeUe, Reps.
Robert Badham and Ron Packard
and Count) Supen isors Harriett
Wieder and Thomas Rtlc,.
Moi.t of lhe 400 guests 1n attend-
ince donated S 125 each to attend the
reception. which raised more than
$40,000 for Ferguson. But. a! his aide
Gres Haskin pointed out today, not
all that money will be U$Cd b)' the
~sembly candidate.
"A lot of the o ther Republican
senators and &S$Cmblymcn 9-'ho at-
1endcd bad lent Gil some camp:ugn
money during the primary. A lot of
the proceeds from last night wdl be
used to pay them back." tfa~kin said.
"In turn, they will lend the money
to other candidates who may need it.
like Bob Doman," he said. "It's kind
of ~cled Republican money."
Earlier in the day, Wilson visited
recently opened Republican Panx
headquarters in the "Little Sa11.on '
area of Westminster, where Wilson
endorsed the candidacy of Robert
Doman. Dornan will face Jerry
Patterson in a hotl)' contested race for
the 38th Congrcss1onal seat.
Wilson told 1he V 1etnamesc-bom
residents that President Reagan and
others arc working 10 ~cu~ 1he
release of political prisoners held in
Vietnam. many of whom are relatives
of Orange County's ~sian comm uni-
t).
The pan) headquarters on Bolsa
Avenue is in a commercial center
almost exclusively leased by Viet·
namcsc businc~scs. ...
Chris Vu Dinh, who manages the headquarter~. said the Republican
Party has had remarkable success
registering the Vietnamese immi-
grants.
.. You might expect the Democrat!>
to have better luck Wlth the min-
ontaes, but 1ha1 hasn't been true
here," Vu Dinh said.
Wilson later made an appearance
at county GOP headquarters in
Oran&e.
Tides
TOOAY 2*0tlCI !'I '"Piii 4,6
Seconotow 102tp"' 03
THUlllOAY ,.QthiQPI 5 ao "" .C4 ,.., .. ,_ !102tm u
hCQnd "'Oii 4 1tpm 44 kONJIOw "ltp111 04
8"" ...._ tony •I 6 0 I p m. tlMa
T hUrlclar at 6 12 • .111 ond Nit t1Qa1r1 111 600pm
Moonfbfta'l 121plft.,utaal1131
Pf" .nelriMil T....,.,,.y M 1 ~ti~
Temperatures
Eztended
CONTINUED STORIES
' --
"' 24 63 « 6S 44 157 SI
" 70 71 H
7!1 12 31 21
64 ~ .. 65 ,, 48 .. .. GO 51
It M 12 66
16 61 41 25 6l 3S
12 37 N 1t
" llO' 13 .()0
., .. ..,
NM
1M CO ,, 71
61 ... .. 12 .. :rt ,. ...
" ,,
70 .. ca o
Jl3 S3 60 .co
tl '° &a 63
4) )
01 '° Ot
"'
Ill ..,
It :ro ,, 63
157 &O
16 12 .. ,,
61 u .. .. 60 ,.
.... 17 .. 61 ....
13 62
12 IO .. " 12 .. ea 63 70 157
WITNESS, 'DRANK, WATCHED SLA YINGS'.. ~!!~D'S MIST ~KE HAUNTING MANY ••.
From A l pedestrians showed that the chances requests brought by the schools 1n
bound with nylon cord, Hernandez bccr,"HernandC'lsa1d. lcgcsDouglasfollowedthroughoohis of a child being hit at Placentia hopcsofreceivingth~guardsintime
\aid. Douglas told him the two g.arls gnJC$0me murder plan several years Avenue and 18th St~et were very for this school year. Seven crossing
h was then that he and Douglas ~uld not .. go back anymore .. and. later w.h.ep he promi.sed..to pay Jones low. . • --~acds...wcrc .approved in May.,_whilc
walked 10 the car and returned not lttemandtz said he protested. and Krueger for nude photOJ1"3phs. With Joel's death, angertd parents the commission a ked for mo~
w1th camera equipment, bul with the "l seen he was choking the one with The girb' skeletal remams were didn't· care about suidelin~ or information on the numbers of stu-
nfle and shovel. lie Mid. dark hair(Jones). The other was lyi ng djsco\lered by a phot~pher on statis1i~. It didn't matter that the dents and cars at the other locations.
"We got back there and one of the there with blood com int out of her March 28, 1983. ASan Diego County childcrosscdagainita red light or that Traffic engineen were asked to
girls said, ·where's lhe camera?' He mouth. I tned to knock im off, but Coroner's Office patholoCJSt already he was outside the crosswalk. monitor at least 20 streets and
(Douglas) picked up the rifle and put a I'd been dnnk1ng a lot and he pushed has testified that because of the "I don't care whether or not a intersections where suards were re·
chp in ii and said, 'Herc it as.'" me away ... Then, I went and got cond1t1on of the remains the cause of crossing$uard is 'warranted.' If some quested.
Hernandez testified. another beer. He stood up and picked death cannot be determined. child is ktllcd, then the 5tatc'.s criteria Burnham said such information
Whtie the sex acts were being up the rifle anc1 bulled her w11h it. When the tnal resumes Thursday, is wrong." said-Connie Margi tan, a could only be garnered while school
performed, Douglas .. paced" back Annothcr witness. former Hunt-Hernandez wall agairt be on the Whittler PT A member who has long was in session. Classeuoon ended for
and forth, the gun in one hand. a can angton Beach resident Kathy Phillips, witness stand and Douglas' defense championed the crossinJ guard i uc. the summer and dad not start again
of beer in the other. Hernande1 said. testified last week that Douglas had attorney. George Peters, is expected Herb Burnham. assistant traffic until mid-September.
Then, Douglas pulled out a ra1or disclosed a plan for lunng two 10 cr~s~xamine him. engineer, sat in a ml!'k:ed cit)' car at The monitoring began in early
blade and shced one of 1he girl's httchakers to the desert and kilhng Peters, in his opening statement, the mtcf'ICC'tion Tuesday, counting October, afier giving the students
throats sucking on the wound. them during lhe filmmg of a .. snuff characterized Hernandez as an un-the children crossing the slrect be-roughly two weeks to establish their
"II looked to me lake she was an a movie.'" The disclosure was made in reliable witnt1s, who besides being a tween 2 p.m. and 3:30 p.m., when routine paths to and from school,
state of shock. The other girl just October 1979, she said. heroin addicl and an alcoholic is a students arc released from school. He Burnham said. Since the commission
stared. l was lookmg at 'em. dnnling Prosecutor Tony Rackauckas al. "brutalizer of women." also kept track of lhe cars ma~ng meets the first Wednesday of every
WOMAN PAID HUSBAND'S KILLER? •••
From A l
1hat.. he had nol taken the threats
\CnOuSI).
The man told police he phon~d thl'
woman the da\' after her husband's
dca1h and had· a short con\l·rsat1on
with her.
"How's business?" M~ Ford
asked the man. according to court
documents
"Pretty dead.'' he reportedly re-
plied.
month. court records sbo"'.
Despite: weeks of telephone cails.
the man apparent!) was unsuccessful
an arranging a meetrng \\Ith the "hn
man." .\t one pornt. Mrs Ford as
quoted as saying thl' man "who 1s
going to do at" was rn Jail and rnuldn't
make bail.
Dunng another call, the tnes to
learn the ident1tv or the h11 man and
Mrs. Ford responds, "I have three big,
ugly brothers."
The tnformant also said Mrs. Ford
dcscnbed to him ho"' she had .. put on
a show" at her husband's funeral for
police dele(·t1 \cs in attendance.
A baby s1ltcrwho said she frequenl-
1) took care of the Ford's children,
told police that just days before the
murder, 1he woman confided, 'Tm
about to do something illegal and 1s
has to do with a gun."
turns through the crosswalks. month, there wasn't enough time to
Ironically, lhc monitonng had compile the information by the
been scheduled for days and came the October meeting. he said.
day after Joel'i. death, Burnham said. Y ct. the parcnl!I who had fought for
Bumtiam' findings, to be pres-roughly 30 year) for crossing guards
coted to the traffic commi ion Nov. felt they had waited long c.nough.
7, showed 97 students cros~ the "I rcpcaredly id, let's not wait
intersection, well past 1he state &fan-until someone ccr... killed," Margitan
dard of 50. But only 7S car) turned said.
into the crosswalks every hour, well When Joel was hi1. traffic com·
under the state danger limn of 300 missione~ found themselves Tue~
cars. day defendina their questions last
The City Council adopted the state spring on whether a suard was needed
guidelines last sprina to help ensyre at Placentia Avenue and 18th Street.
that limited funding and staffing "We weren't trying to stall. We
would be used only where the guards were trying to see what some of the
were warranted. peculiarities of th.at intersection
who arc only two year:. older than
they are. But with an adult there.-, "
wd Don Snyder. who d~n't dis-
...rount his .son· s fault. hut said the
penalty for his mistake was far too
high. .
He qid Joel's mother was takina
her son's death hard, as was the
brother who helpleuly watched the
a~ident from the curb.
Snyder said hi<i son, Donald, asked
to be transferred from Whittier
Elementary and into another nearby
school because he was fearful of
relivin& the painful memory of his
brother's death every time he crossed
the intersection.
"It's gonna be tQO much (or him to '
walk home from that school and cross
that street.·· Snyder said.
Father and son coped with their
grief Tuesday by haring in the
preparation of Joel's fundcral.
Together, lhey picked a headstone,
reserved a plot -alongside the boy's
great grandfather -at Fairhaven
Memorial Park in Sartt.a Ana and
made arrangements for services there
Friday at 11 a.m.
The Whimer Ekmentary PTA
plans to send letters home with the
students asking parents 10 help offset
the funeral costs y making contribu-
tion!., Margitan said.
Sunsh ine will
r eplace clouds "Yeah. so 1s Barry," she allcgedl>
~•d laughmg.
A week later. the man agreed to
pretend he wanted his ex-wife killed
and to seek out Mrs. Ford's as-
sistance Police recorded telephone
calls between the two for nearly a
Prior to her arrest. Mr'> Ford's da~!>
were spent attemptlnJ to cash an
insurance policies. taking drugs and
attempting to eel police to return
S500 that was rn Ford's wallet the
night he was killed, records state.
Mrs. Ford was arrested Oct. 24
after agreeing 10 come to the Hunt-
ington Beach police station to p ick up
some of her husband's belonginp.
The woman brother, George Harvey ~nght, 30, wa_sarrcsted the following
days as wc;re fnends John B. Aldridge.
31, and Lionel J. Cashman, 20.
Margitan said PT A leaden from were," said Commissioner Wayne
Whittier Elementary WJll be meeting K.raiss. "Unfortunately, these acci· By Ule AHoclated Press
with city traffic engineers today to dents arc not prcdictabl~. God knows
demand that a cros ing auard be that if we knew there was ioing to be
placed at the mterscctfon. an accident, we would have tried
EDUCATION, BUSINESS LEADERS MEET •••
From Al
In the past five years, hundred!> of
large and small OranJe County bust·
nesses have jorned wuh area schools.
according to Lorraine Dagcfordc.
business and industry spcc1ahst for
the Orange County Departmenl of
Education.
ness and offer mtcrnships to promis-
ing students.
About two-thirds of Orange Coun-
really need to learn (from business) ...
Honig said.
She said pa~nts also would insist anything. even ptcs."
that 1uards be assigned to the other Kraiss added he was unsure that a
schools placed on a waiting list while crossing guard could l'lave stopped
traffic engineers review merits of JocH'rom running into the street.
their requests. The child's father thought otber-
MargJtan accused ci1y officials o( wise.
beinit slow-footed in processing those "Little boys don't listen to brothers
Clouds will gather like HaJlo~een
ghouls along the coast tonight but the
momin4 sun will scare them off as
blue ski~ and mild temperatures
prevail around Southern California
on Thursday.
Skies wilt be clear with tughs in the
mid· to upper-70s, the Nattooal
Weather Scrvtce said. ·
Just Call
642-6086
Wbat do )OU llke aboat tile Daily Piiot? Wbat don't yoa llke! Call t e
namber at ldt and your meaaa1e wlll be recorded, transcribed and deU\lert'CI
to the appropriate editor.
Tbe same U ·boar a1mnrlng service may be a ed to record teuera to the
editor OD 'ID)' topic. Contributors to our Letters column must lnclade tbelr
name and tele pbooe number for verificat ion. No circulation calls, please.
Tell 01 what's oa your mind.
The department's goal this year 1'1
to coordinate ex1strn~ programc, and
bnng non-part1c1pat1ng school dis·
tncts into the fold. she ~1d
Partner~h1ps do not net ~hool'
monetary or matenal donations
Dageforde said. They pro' 1de human
resources. people to gjve classroom
presentations, participate an JOb fairs,
conduct s1udent tours of their bus1-
t) school districts have some form of
partnership program, Dageforde said.
For them. conference organizers
prepared lectures on topics such as
how educators can meet the needs of
business Potential converts attended
basJC talks on how to get <>tarted m a
partnership
In their appearance, Honig and has
wife appealed 10 business people to
make a long-term commitment to
education.
Quoling Federal Department of
Labor projections. Honig said that
children born today will need to be
educated to cope wtth ever-changing
technology. Thirty-three percent of
lhem will work in technical. scientific
and managenal occupations while
another I 5 to 20 percent of jobs
available wall require college level 1 -----------------------------------------educational '>kills
"We ha\e a huge trarnrng m1ss1on
in this state. There arc techniques v.e
Open commun1cauon and help
from the business community will be
needed to educate students to meet
the demands of the future workmJ
world, he said.
STABBING DEATHS SHOCKING .••
From A l
about plans for a Halloween ccl-
ebralron.
Andencn was gomg to be one of the
Judges for a HaJJoween costumr
tontest at the fire station, according
to Jester.
"She also said she was going' to get a
couple of friends l.P help out with the
Halloween party. She was aoing to act
back to me but that was the last I have
ever teen her.
"It's really 5pooky knowmg that
tier killer might have been waauna at
the house whale \he was talktng to
me."
Anderson worked at a doctor's
office. accordin& to Jester.
Orange County · Sherill Dcpan.
menl's Capt. Jack Deve~ux said
today a small safe was found rn the
two-bedroom residence but declined
to reveal its contents Witnesses have
been quoted in published reports as
saying that Attardo, lhe male victim,
installed a safe at the house several
years ago bccau~ he kept large
a_moun1s of ca h. Attardo's occupa-
tJon wu not known.
Devereaux said invistiptors arc
cxplonng "aJI pc>n1ble a\lenues" in·
eluding the pos1bility that the tayinp
may be drug·related. He d«lined to
list other pouibili\ics.
Devereaux said the roomma~ who
discovered the bodic is not reprded as11u1~t ·•at thistime." Devereaux
declined to reveal the man·s identity.
The houM: remained ~a1ed today
while investiptorsscarched for clues.
Autopsy r ults arc pcndina.
Dally Pilot
Oetlvery
ORANGE COAST Clrc uletlon 114/M2-UU
It Ouera ntMd
uono.1 r II ';OU o
-hattl ~ ~ :JO p "' llflor• 1 "
llnd YINI CCCI •• °" ,,.,.,.,.....,
""'"°"r aM ~. 11
fW OU f>O! •K"""' Y°"' ~ ITf 7 am Nlo<t'
10 • "' 9'lO '°"' ~ ...
l)f) ..:
Clrcue. Ion
T pttonn
Daily Pilat
H. L. Schwertz fll
Pubh'itler
RoMm•ry Churchman
Control! r
Steph•n F. Cerezo
Production
Manag r
Donatd L. Wllllam1
Ctrcut tion
Mana r
.. •
ca. .. ttled edw.t111no 714/M2·M7t
AU oth« dt.,.rtment1 142-4321
MAIN OFFICE
330 Wl'll ~, 51 """" • M I
I
• • .. '
'Farmer Fred'
plans surp;rises
d4leback offers seminar
ddleback Coll Nonh is offenng seminar OD
" t te Planning .. on turday, from 10 .m. to noon, le(t
by David Allen Brown, estate planning nomcy.
Fee for the course 1s $ l S. For more information or to
1register, call 5S9-l 3 I 3.
Career opportunities topic
''Carttr Opponunitics in Mouon Picture ana
Television Industry.. seminar is being offered by
S8ddleback College North Community Services on
Saturday, from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., in Room A302.
Desig.qed for anyone intcrestd in the variety of skill
and professional knowledge that goes mto makinJ a film,
the seminar-is led by Irvine Coopper .. literary editor and
ftlm writer. SFte is $50. For more inforntaJi,9n or 10
register, call 559-1313. 't
'
Or
Track cwerturn•
Vans reorganizing
under Chapter 11,
cites conipetition
AnlmaJ ... tralnlng lecture set
Dwayne Allen, 19, of Santa Ana. belU
treated bJ ~med.ICa. photo at tbe rlilht. .ana Charles~. 30. of Stanton, u~ lD tbe
back eeat of the pollce car ln the photo on the
~t. were treated for lnJariea auatatned
Tuead.aJ when • Great Weetem Reclamation
truck nerturned OD UnlTenlty Drl•e be-tween Jamboree Road uad llaeArtlau ,._,,_"~--'""'
A Committee of Fncnds of the Irvine Animal G.'a~
Centcr1 Inc., Will present S\Je Myles, behaviorist, of Costa
Mesa m a fund-raisins lecture and demonstration on
MQnday, Nov. 5, at 7:30 p.m. at the University
Community Center, I Beach Tree Lane, Irvine.
Myles has been profe5sionally involved with dog
trail\ing sjnce l 972, and has presented numerous seminars
to the veterinary community as well u appearing on many
television and radio shows.
Tickets, available at the door, are SS for adultS, $3 for
students with JO, and S l for children under 12. The public is invited and refreshments will be served. For moe
information, call 833-9649 or SS2· 7044.
Toaatmletreu Club to meet
•The Newpon Harbor Toastmistress Oub wJ1i meet
on Monday, Nov. S, at 11 :30 a.m. for lunch at the Reuben
E. Lee Restaurant, Ncwpon Beach.
Theme of the meeting Will be "Poetry in Motion)'
Call Diana Morrison at 851-3948 for reservations.
Prenatal program acheclu.lecl
St. Joseph Hospital pf Orange is oflfering a prenatal
fitness program .. Graceful Expectations" beginning
Monday, Nov. 5. The class will meet from 5:30 to 6:30
p.m. on Mondays and Wednesdays during the four.week
session.
Cost is $34 and a physician's ~lease is required.
The class.consists of exercise designed to stretch and
strengthen muscl~ and to encourage cardiovascular
fitness.. For more information, call 771-8040.
Family: planning offered
Natural Family Planning classes will be otTercid
monthly at St. Joseph Hospital in Orange. The Sympto-
Tbem1al Method will ~n Monday. Nov. S, and the
Boaleft1'4 ln l'tewport Beach. Allen, the
d.rlnr of the track, wu taken to B~
llemortal Bmpttal and~ wu taken to
ea.ta Meaa Boepltal eb.ortly after the 10:15 a.m. accident. Both men were reported lD
etable condition.
Multi~e niurder
charge filed in
auto crash deaths
By Tlte Assoclated Pren
A Fullenon man involved in a traffic accident that
killed a mother and her three children was rc-atrested in
Nonhem Cilifomia on a warrant charging him with
multiple murder, manslaughter and felony drunken ·
driving, police said Tuesday.
Michael Wesley Reding. 26, was arrested late
Monday at b~ parents home in Milpitas and held for
transfer back to Orange County, Fullenon police Lt. Ron
Kaczor said. .
Reding. a Northrop Corp. engineer, was arrested on a
$250,000 ben~ wamnt i~ed Monday by Municipal
Coun Judge !ohn Mc:Owen. Kaczor said. The warrant
charged four counts of second-degree murder, four counts
of manslaughter and felony drunken driving. Kaczor said.
The officer did not know why Reding was charged
with bcith second-degree murdet and manslaughter. Orange County Deputy District Attorney Michael
Jacobs said Reding was charged because an investigation
into the Oct. 23 accident in Fullenon a.Jlegcdly revealed
his vehicJe made an unsafe lane change and ended up on
the wrong side of the road before collidina with a car
driven by Pamela TruebloOd. "'
Ovulation Method will begin on Monday, Nov. 12. Both ------------------• classes are held at 6:45 p.m. and the cost is $65 by
appointment only. The methods can be used to either plan
or delay pregnancy. For more information, call 771·8040.
Sbopplng spree announced .
The Junior uague of Ncwpon Harbor wiU present
•"The Christmas Company," a three-day shopping spree
on Nov. 6, 1, and 8, at 1he Oran&e County faUJJoundS,
Costa MtJ8. • Entry to the event, a charity to benefit the Junion
League's community projects, costs $3. For more-r
anfonnatlon, call Dianne Bonugli Jones at 838-4155. "
'Coplilg With Stroke' topic
A five-week class on .. Coping With Stroke" will be
offered at SL Joseph Hospital of Orange, beginning
Tuesday, Nov. 6, from 7 to 8:30 p.m., in aassroom II of
the Nonheast Building.
Professionals will discuss wby stroke victims behave
the way they do and ways in wruch a family can lessen the
destructive and disabling impact of stroke. Registration is
S20 per family with a limited number of scholarships availa~le. Pre-registration is required bycallina 771-8040.
Dtllr ........... .., ..... I(....,
Burnecl ... out trailer
\Vednesday.Oct.31 ea.ta Ilea& OremaD Dick O'Connor 91»ra19
down the ahell of a traller which barned at the
RV ·Ti'aller Repair facillty OD Ford Road
llonday nS,bt. • 9:30 a.m .. Oru1e Couty Boatd of SG_penilori, Hall of Administration, 10 Civic Center Plaza, Santa Ana.
Pou c£ Loe
----. ,,,_
Ex-Laguna hotel clerk
·surrenders on theft rap
'A f ormcr Laauna Beach bot el desk
clerk suspected pf atealins money
from the cash register tumed himself
in to Laguna Beach p()hce TucSday
a~r-fttumina from a tnp to New
York alleiedlY paid for with the
tolcn money. Laurence William Poole,. 22. 1
former Lagun ttS1dcnt behcved lo
now reside in S.nta Ana. is su pencd
of tealina S 1.800 from the Hotel San
Maanen at 696 . Coast Highway on
Sept 1.5. 1ccordi111 to Laguna Beach
lnvestlaator Unda Parker.
The money sd1scovcrcd mi ing
soon afterward. Parker said, but
Poole bad dePaftcd early the neat day
on a plane bound for New York.
Police sus~ the tolen mone)'.
was used to pay for the trip.
Poole turned himself in to Laauna
polict and was later rctcased on his
own recogn1zanoc. He faC"CScl\arses of
embeuJemcnt and arand theft.
Parker said.
Slides blamed
on bad permits
BJ tbe Asioclated Preas
Faulty buildi!ll permits issued nearly 20 years ago
were responsible for the landslides in San Oement.e last
Dccembei' that destroyed three homes and-caused the
evacuations of eiaht othef$, three insurances companies
say in a lawsuit against the city.
The insura~ companies cwm the city breached its
duty in 1964 by not requiring that lopes along Verde
Canyon be properly graded and filled before buildina
penmts were issued.
The 1uit, filed Monday in OranJC County Superior
Coun. also charged 12 homeowners wath property damage
and negligence that resulted in the Dec. 30 slides.
The landslides cost bomeownef'$ an estimated Sl.7
million in losses. The insurers claim the city knewofleaking'4'1terliJ\C5
under Via La Mesa. Via Catalina and.Via La Jolla trecl .
Students invited
to discuss issues
Irvine high 6cllool students have been invned lo
discuss Pruposillon 3'1-""i:hrrm>1>0sod state!otter)'·--m(J
the differences between the 'Oeriloaatic and RqN:blican
parties at an event sponsored by the 1n,nc Ownbcr of:
Commerce.
The event,. ponsored each )'Cal' lhe chanlbc(s
Student Community Issues ~)'..r will be bdd at :4S a.m.
Tbunda)' at the Irvine Co. 's comcrence center in Ncwpon
Beach's Fashion Island.
Eighty five students have been invited 10 attt:nd.
Kent Hann or: Republicans of California for Bcttcri Education v.iU discuss the arguments for Prop. 3 7. Nancy
Jenlcins, ao ~vocatc for the state PTA. will discuss lb.e,
arguments against the lotter)'.
A straw vote will be wen among studcnu Who will
have the opponunaty to di1CUSS their vole$.
Addressing the ef.inciP'1cs of the RepUblican and Democratic parties will be by Wolfcn, parliamentarian
of the Orange C.Ounty Rcpubhcan Comnuuee, and Bruce
Sumner, chairman of the Oran&e Coumy Dcmocntic
Committee.
Welcoming remarks will be made by Irvine Co.
President Tom Nidsc'n.
Saga of love in uniform
continues at El Toro base
By tM Aslodatecl Prat ,
Despite Capt John Moultak being court martialed at
llic El Toro Manne Corps Afr Station for fratcrnizins with
an enlisted woman. CapL Daniel Mari&liano says he's
aoing ahead wi01 plans lo many a sergeanL
The announcement came about a week after
Marigliano, a lawyer who met his intended bride, Sgt.
Alison J. Brown Riley, while crusading to reform the
military justice system, was ordered to stop fraternizing
with the enlisted woman or to marry her.
The case differs ~ly from the Moultak. incident.
This time the base commander, Bria. Gen. William
Bloomer, bas &iven his blessin& to Marigliano and Raley.
"He wished us luck aDd basically oonaratulated us.."
Mariiliano said Monday.
Another difference was that Moultak., coun-
martialCcl July 13, denied he wanted to marry lanoe Cpl.
Kandi K. Oark but <:<>ntinued to sec her anyway.
Marigliano, a military lawyer whose letters to
congressmen led to changes in the Marines' legal defense
system, said be met Riley during a probe oflaw office
irresuJarities at El Toro.
Mari&liano had complained to Congress about the
Marine Cotps lepl structure, which puts military defcnx
attorneys and prosecutors under the same command. As 1
result, -Manne defense lawyers worldwide sooo Will be,
under SC1J813te commands. ·
He said be told tht hi&h command Thursday he was in
love with the sc~nt, and they planned to marry May S.
CoJ. Jon R. Robson, base chief of staff, said lhal.
unlike Moultak. Marigh.ano admitted .. up front" that be
was in love and had set a weddina date. And. he added.:
while Moultak and Clark were in the same commahd and
in a position to undermine "morale, good order and
discipline" Mangliano and~· a.re noL s
Riley was a dcrk at the Tusun law center until she was
tranSferrcd in April to T weotynine Palms. where she no
is in communications electronics school She will hkely
leave the Marine Co~ in October 1986. when her tour ol
duty ends. Marigliano said. • .
Mari&liano remains at the EJ Toro law center as a
prosecutor.
Both have filed for divorces from their spouses
Mari&lia.oo, wbo has a 7·year-old son, said he ex~
a finaJ decree Nov. 18. and Riley. who bti no children
expect.Sher final decree in Apnl.
One said he was hit at l2:SO a.m.
today on Wyngate Circle~ the other
said his car was sideswiped Monday
in a parking lot.
from a boat docked at the Newpon the Creative Nursery Center on Heil
Harbor Yacht Oub. • A venue said 50m~oe '1>tok her purse,
A va~ ~.:i,~ out the head· $200 cuh. Credit cards and chctk·
li&hts of a BMW parked at Newport book.from her c:r • •
La,.Da BeaCh
Police arrested James JO$Cph
Nugent, 22. on suspicion of drivina
under the innuencc of alcohol.
Nuscnt was topped by pohce 11
I 0:30 p.m. Tu~) at Oak and
Glcrrneyrc. • • • Reports of a pas.sable house fi1"
turned out to be onl) cnnbcrrics
tfumin1 on 1 ~tovc. ad police who
"' ponded to ihe call at a Oiff Drive
home Tuesday evening. • • • A pQliC and its contc;zlts ther
wonh $265 re reported stc>kn from
1 home on Nonh Coast Hiahwa>
Tuesday.
Centerand benttheauto's wind~jcld ·A S2SO stereo wu stolen from a
wipers. 1968 Mustana in tbe 18000 block of
Baatmcton Beach
Someone threw a chunk of cement
through a sliding &lass door and 5to1e
$5.000 in a.ntiquc:bicyclC$. ••• A sUSpcct discovered an occupant's
hide-a~key and tole jewelry, cloth1ng
and eash from a residence in the 2000
block of1th trcc1 • • • Thieves u~ bolt cuucn to cut
tock to a ga an the 2000 bloc of
Frank.fort end tole S 1,000 in fa bing
Racquet while ats owner ~.-as away o
v'cation. • f; • •
Tb&CVQpried pcnadoortoa I
black Toyota Ce ica in the 6200 bl
of Edwardnnd st.Ole a S 1,200 '
~l.
;
A4
NEW DEl.Hl, lndaa (AP)-'Prime Nauon l lcgislatoBoflbcCongrcss
Minister lndi.m Gnndhi wa as· Party unanamou ty chose RaJh··
inatcd today outsid her home, Gandhi, 40. as the new pnme m1n1s-
morully wounded 1n a b:imgc of tcr, gQvcmment sppkcsman rc-
bullcu reJ>QrtCdJ) fired by her own poned. The former 111rtinc pilot, a
Lldt bodyguards. memoo of Parliament. was then The slaying of the woman who sworn in by President Za1I inah. The
dominated Indian political life for old Cabinet was dissolved nd a new
two decades threatened to plunge 1h11 one was being conatatuted
troubJod nation into nC\\' turmoil. Her son. RaJiv, was quickly sworn in Unlike her pre<lec sors. Gandhi.
to succeed her. prime mini ter for 15 of the paSl 18
One or two of the gunmen were years, had not designated a deputy
reported kalled'at the scene of the prime minister or a Cabinet minister
shooting, for which Sikh extremists to succeed her.
claimed responsibility. ··we have It had been expected that her son
taken our revenge!" one militant might be sworn in as her temporary
proclaimed. ,_ successor because be is effectively
Gandhi, 66, had bttn under .heavy India's No. 2 lcader as the tint among
auard for months because of as· five general secretaries of the Con·
5aS ination threats from Sikh~ gress Party. National cl~tions had
angered by her crackdown on militant been scheduled to be held late this •
members of the sect in Punjab state, year or early next year. including an anny assault on the
Sikhs' holi~t site, the Golden Tern-Rajiv rushed to New Delht from
pie. the eastern state of West Bengal,
he was shot after she emerged where he was addressing a public
from her house at 9:20a.m. (7:SO p.m. mecung, after hearing his mother had
PST) to take part in a recorded been shot. He entered the .hospital to
intcn·ie\\ with British entertainer vtew herbody.~fyguards said.
Peter Ustinov . .._.._ In Washington, President Reagan
"Suddenly, out of the blue, two expressed bis "shock. revulsion and
persons carrying Sten guns -one gnef over the brutal assassination"
uniformed and one in civilian clothe and said it was "a vivid reminder of
-shot at Mrs. Gandhi," the United the terrorist threat we all confront."
News oflndia reported. "Eight to 10 A former Indian foreign minister,
bullets ... hit her." Informed sources Atal 8. Vajpayee, bead of the right-
said he was shot from just seven fccJ wing Indian Peopre·s Party, said
away, UNI reported. government officials told him three of
Gandhi, clad in an orange cotton Gandhi's security guards fired on her.
sari, was rushed to the AU-India He said all three were Sikhs and that
Institute of Medical Sciences. Doc-two were shot dead by other security
tors said she died five hours later. guards while the thard was wounded
"She is no more," a member of her and hospitalized.
govemingC011gcss Party announced United News of India reported
to more than 100,000 people sur-three security guards were involved
rounding the hospital. Cnes and sobs in the attack but only two opened fire.
rose from the throng. Many prayed or The news agency said one, ident-
beat their breasts. ified as police sub-inspector Beant
• UWh(llMCo
RajlY Gandhi • .on or uawlnated Prime Mlnlater Indira
Gandhi, wu aworn bl today u new leader.
By IM AIHda&M Preti
W~SHINGTON °Thc aovcmment said today mts main economic
fon:cas11n,puac rose a-;odcst 0.4 percent in September. llut o revi ion m th~
AU&U$t data showed the cconomf was headed down for a th a rd stnught mont
-a trend that has siinalcd previous f'C(lcssaons. The .Commerce Depa~mcnt
reported that the Sept~mbcra,ain in the Index of Leading Economic lndacat~~
followed a sli&ht dip of O. I percent in August and s.tctp ~rop of 1. 1 perce,nt
July and 0.9 pcroent 1n June. The Rca~o adman1sttat1~n and many pnvatc
cconomasta ha\e said the index is not infallible and has 1'? the ~st signalledt!
rcce5Sion when none came. Optimists argue now tha! whale the index may
1gnallina lower growth, no l't()CS Ion is on the h9nzon. Other eco~.om1st
however, contend that at the very least the countr)' as on the verge.of a lf'OW1h
recession" -a prnod when the economy grows at such a sluggish pate that
unemployment nscs.
Dl.covery readylor,Nov. 7 trip
CAPE CANAVERAL. Aa.-S~ceshuttle 01.scoveryis in goOd shape for
iu second trip mto orbit next week:, but a thermal l!li:..-problem could delay the
December flight of's1.ster ship Challenger, launc~ directors report. Followt~8 a
launch readiness review on Tuesday NASA said that eJt~CP.t fo~ a fe~ manor
problems. Discovery is ready for hftoff Nov. 7 on a m1ss1on m. which two
comrnunacations satellites will be released and two others rctncvcd from
useless orbits and re\urned to Earth for renovation.
Tome led dispute rages In_ NY
TONAWANDA, N.Y. -An Environmental Pro.tcction Agency teP<>!"'
that toxic wastes may be leaking from one of the nauon's largest dumps is
··unfounded" and disputed within the. federal agency, a ,apC)kcsman for the
operator said. But residents of a Niaga1a falls neighborhood near the 360-acrc
CI;COS International landfill are wondering if they'll see a reJ?tal of Love
Canal, which forced the abandonment of another neighborhood an ,1978~ 1lhe
EPA report conflicts with a rcp0rt from the same data by the a.gency s rcaionaJ
staff, suggests there is "circumstantial evidence" that buned wa~tes . "~re
mignuina offsite and could endanger the health of the publtc hvrng
downstream." ,.
Court lJold• fate of Velma Barfield
RALEIGH. N.C. -The latest in a string of appeals by la~ers for
condemned murderer Velma Barfield to p~vent her execution Fl"!daY for poisonins her boyfriend now rests with a federal coun. On Tuesday..gaght, her
lawyers filed an appeal in U.S. Dist net Court, less than an hour after t~e North
Carolina Supreme Conn refused to review a lower court's order denying her a:
new hearing on an appeal or to stay her execution. Mrs. Barlie~d's attorneys
have appealed unsuc~sfully to the U.S. Supreme Court three umes.
Oldeat veteran dead at J 10--Furious Hindus wielding sticks and Singh, aged above 40. was killed by
chains and chanting .. Kilt the Sikh~! other guards. Another, 26-ycar-old
They have kjllcd our mother." at-police constable Satwant Singh, was
tacked turban-weanng Sikhs in the wounded. Singh. which means lion, is yi~inity. At least 15 were reported a name given to virtually all Sikhs.
uljurcd. The report ~id the wounded guard
e ST. PETERSBURG. Fla. -America's oldest veteran, .wh~ fou&ht under Actor Ustinov Dea• Teddy Roosevelt in Cuba but ~srejected by the U.S. Army dun~ World War. &-0 I because he was too old, has cited at age l 10. Doctol'i at Bay. Pmes Veteran
· · "' Administration Medical Center said Harry J. Chaloner died Tuesday ot
The funeral and cremation was set was "out of danger" and would be
for Saturday. The government de-interropted.
clared a 12-0ay mourning period. In a later report, UNI quoted G dhi d th respiratory and cardiac arrest stemming from infection, according to hospital
spokesman W.B. Mackall. His death made Walter Pleate, 108, anot.her an ea seen e Spanish·American War veteran and a Iona-term patient at the VA Medical
Doctors said she was shot in the informed sources as saying Satwant
heart., ·abdomen and thigh. There Singh returned to Gandhi's sccunty DUBLIN, Ireland (AP) -Actor
WCf'C reports she had been shot detail three days ago after a leave of Peter Ustinov was about to
possibly as many as 16 times. two months in Punjab. lntervlew lndlra Gandhi and was .. Despite the best efforts by a team Sevei'aJ hours after the shooting. an 1 ...... h
of doctors ... she c;ould not be saved," unidentified caller told The As-waiting n the gar""'n Of her ome
said Dr. A.N. Safaya, the hospital's sociated Press office in New Delhi: when the lndlan prime minister
medical superintendent. He said she "We have taken our revenge~ Long was mortally wounded, hla cam·
died at 2:30 p.m., correcting an earlier live the Sikh religion!" eraman aald today.
report putting the time of death at Asked who he was, the man said: The cameraman, Rory about 1 1 30 am "This is the action of the entire Sikh The United News of India and a sect." Then he bung up. O'Farrell~sald In a telephone call
former foreign minister both said Gandhi has been bitterly con-to Dublin that Gandhi was 10
thau security guards were involved demn~ by Sikh leaders for her minutes late for the lntervlew
in the attack, but UNI said only two governm.mt'.shandlingofrecen~ when·he,-UeUnov and producer
fired on Gandhi. There were conflict· cncc in the northern state of Punjab. Seamus Smith heard gunflre.
inarepon.sastowhct.heroneortwoof In June, Indian army troops besieged W 00 d
the cunmen had, been kllled by other ·and then assaulted the Golden Tern-" • were about 1 yar s
security guards. pie, the Sikhs' holiest place of away when She was ahot,"
The million·strona armed forces worship, in Amritsar O'FarreJI said. "We didn't see It.
was placed on alert, and pohcc sealed Gandhi said the action was neccss-Our view was blocked by a house.
off New Delhi and surrounded ary to root out Sikh terrorists who "We heard three alngte shots
Gandhi's residence and the hospital. were waiting a campaign for indepen-followed by machfne..gun fire. We =thrcc=;.;m:.::.::1l=es::..:a:..;w~a::.i...:... _______ ...;.d_e_nc...;.e_. -------------. were told It was normal fire
crackers. Then 20 second• later
there wu another burst of ma~
chin.gun fire. A minute later we
were told &he waa lhot.
.. There was great confusion.
Soldlera were running
backward• and forward. Peter
lJstfnov, Seamus Smith and my-
aeff were detained. We were
questioned at length and re-
leased afterflvehoura,'' O'FarreU
Bald..-'
• The Interview was to have been
the first In a aeries by an lrfah·
b89ed tetevtaton company on
preeent and put wortd leadere,
with Uetlnov conducting the ln-
tervfews.
Gandhi died at a h<>epltat
Hveral houre after being
wounded. ~
Let's
discuss cost
without
·embarrassment.
Local Sikhs hail
death of Gandhi
At time of loas family feelings are dif-
ficult enough for you to cope with. There
is no need to increase your discomfort
by reluctance to fully discuss funeral
costs. There is often the practical
necessity to do so.
At Harbor Lawn the family's choice of a
casket is the factor which most often
determines funeral cost. For this
reason, we have caskets available in all
price ranges.
Pre-need funeral arrangement• are en-
couraged by Harbor Lawn, because
when there is no emotional •tress costs
are d.iscussed in a more businesslike . .
manner. But, prior to need or at time of
.los1, our understanding counselors will
ofter xoU.every. oppo~tunity to know
and controlluneral 005'1, W & care.,---..-
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Coata Meaa '•Only Comp/et• Fun•ral Facl//tlu
LOS ANGELES CAP) -The
assassination of India Prime Minister
Indira Gandhi, reportedly carried out
by three Sikh guards, was hailed as
"Justice" by one prominent local
Sikh, but characterized as a shock by
another.
Gandhi, 66. who was prime minis-
ter for a total of l S years, was gunned
down Wednesday morning at her
home in New Delhi, reportedly by
Sikhs on her security staff. Sikh
• extremists in India also claimed
respons1b11ity.
"We are very grateful to God that
this thing happened and justice has
been carried out. We arc so proud of
the people who have done it and we
arc ready to help them with our life
and blood," said Dr. Amrit Sina.It, a
spokesman for a group called World
Sikh Organization of Southern Cali-
fornia.
The assassinatiGn follows violence
between the Indian 4'tmy and Sikhs.
In June the army oven.-n the Golden
temple, the Sikhs' hoht.~t place of
worship, which the ao,•mment
claimed was the base for a 'error
campaign aimed at forming a sea:l\r-
ate state. Some reports put th~
number Sikhs killed at 1 .000.
Ship in flames
outside SF bay
Blast tosses 2 -------crew members over,
one still missing
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - A 630-
foot merchant ship was ainkjn& today
off the northern California coast after
three fiery c:xptosioos aboard the
ve.,,sel hurled two men into the icy sea
and sent flam~!iltootina JOO feet in
the air, the Coast Guard said. One
crewman ~reported miss1na.
A sear~h was under w~y_for the
miuinJ man, said Pcuy Offi~r John
Hollis, ~dcJing that the hip's other 28
crew members were evacuated to
Coast Guard rescue vessels.
The shi~. called the Pucno Rican,
was carrying a 20 percent load of
petroleum products, the Coast Guard
id.
The explosions t 3:2S a.m. aboard
the Pueno R can threw c leatt two
crewmen into 'he water about 10 A tu~t was attemptin& «> low
miles ou1S1dc Sall fmiruco Bay. The •he 1tup lu..U. O\tl 10 tet and out of
bla t came 1 1 Pilot boat which had 1h1ppin1 lanes, be uid.
led the hap OU\ of' the bay was being Homa Mid the 20.29~10n llup wa1
dcta(hcd, aman PaulGafdnn1a1d. carryana babe oUa, fUcl lldd1Liva, The cause of the cxplos ons was not butane and ocher ~icala.
immediately. known. Coast Guard ··nere'Hft~tromt.Gwaobridee,"
spokesman Ken freeze 11id an 1nu11l Olrdntt laid
blast ·as follov.td by 1wo othe11 One 1nJured Cft'Wmaft Mlflllred
Hoths 1d the ship was nkina verebumsintheblaA,wh1etua.tt
f0\\1 1 add1n_J. "It's buc:khn~ at bolh him and another man into the m d 1p :· • icy sea
Center in Lebanon , Pa .• the oldest livina veteran in the country, the Vetemns
Adminjstration said.
' CALIFORN IA
.... -------- -- --
Tblrd South Bay pracllool cla.ed
HERMOSA BEACH -A third preschool in the South Bay was closed as
authorities investigated allegations of child molestation but made no arrests.
local pohcc and Los Angeles County sheriff's invcstiptors asked director JilJ
Schwartz to close The Children's Path preschool orrPier Avenue until the
investigation is completed, authorities said. ''The dirictor of the school q
been cooperative with police efforts and m<hcated that she would comply ana
close th.e S<.·hool," Hermosa Beac~ police said in a statemen,t Tuesday.
LA rldlng on Olymplc laurel•
LOS ANGELES-The city must capitalize on its newly-gilded ima.se, still
sparklina after t11c Summer Olympics, to attract tourists and conventJOncel'I
away from other cities, an official says. "We now have ao unparalleled
opportunity to butld on the positive imasc Los Angeles left in the minds of
millions of viewers throughout the world," Harry V. Cheshire Jr., outgoin1
president of the Greater Los Angeles Visitors&. Convention Bureau, said at 1
luncheon Tuesday. •
KOGO a go-go •r• aew• •tall
SAN DIEGO-Plans are in the works to discontinue KOGO·AM radio'
all-news format, a move that could lead to the disml.ssal of most of the station 't
26-member editorial staff, employees say. Repofters at the station were told by
management officials Tuesday that KOGO planned to drop the news format in
favor simulcasting soft rock music from its FM sister station, KLZZ. Tho
reporters were not told specifically that they would be fired, but .. th
handwriting is on the wall,"' said one radio journalist at the station who
declined to be identified.
Jail rapes clted bJ court
INDIO -Twelve men reponed bcillf raped an Riverside County jail \
Indio in 1976, and dozen more reP.Oned similar assaults two years later. the
jail's commander testified. Lt. Mike Uwis was called as a witness apinst
Riverside County in a case brough by a 1979 jailhouse sexual assault v1ctim1 Robert Jeffery Lickliter. In addition to rapes, Lewis testified Monday thatthcre
were 41 non-sexual attacks made by groupf of inmates and 58 one~n-one
assaults at the jail in 1978.
W. Holly,,ood rent control extended
LOS ANGELES -The county Board of Supervisors on Tucsd~y
indefinitely extended rent control in West Hollywood in a move officials
conceded was an attempt to derail efforts to incorporate the l'qJOn into a city.
The rent-rontrol exten&ion for ~he area, which has a larac py po~ulation, waa
approved on a 3·2 vote after Supervisor Pete Schabarum broke with hi
conservative colleagues to back the measure. Conservatives hold a thrcc-to-
two majority on tht-board.
Jack.an'• Ja•t concert In LA
LOS ANGELF:S -The 56,()()().seat Dodaer stadium tras been cboten for
the final thr concerts by MichaelJackson and his four rock 'n' roU brothers in
the Jackwn120-ci&y U.S. "Victory Tour," officials said. Represcntativetofthe
Jacksons sil(led ¥, aarcement T~y.for three conceru at the stadium on
Nov. 30, Dec. I and 2, aocordina 10 IJOd,&Cr publicist Steve Brener. Btctltr saiCJ
ucken for the shows will be distnbuted by mail. •1The1e arc the last dittt on the
tour," said Parvenc Michaels of Norman Winter le Associates Michael
Jackson'• publicim. '
I WORLD
Romaatl<: adYeli.t dead at 9J
LONQON -Unula Bloom, Britain's most prolific romanuc novelist
died Monday at the ~ of 91. MiM Bloom, hsted in the Guannas Book pt
Wortd:Req>.cdLllJbe Bnt11h autbor..wish lhe &realest number-of fuU .. enath 1iUe1 pubhlhed, authored 560 tic>oks.Hcr bcst-1ellin1 workl were "Secret
Lover,"'' ••The Ri>se orNorfolk.," .. Huntcr'1 Moon "0'Hitlcr"1 Eva "''Ttie Dut'e
ofWindtor," and .. Juda l1CBriot, Tn1tor?.. ' •
••t "Loar• d.tammer nceamm
toNDON -Wells Kelly: ibe 3S-~r..old Atntrican drummer sn ihe
blckup bind for rock star Meat Loaf. died Tuesday. From 1973 unul 1910.
Ktllywua mcmberofthe rocksroup0rlean1.Healtotour"'1 wi1hsa1ophoniss
Clart'nce Oltmcns, &he Mamu and the Papas, and Meat Loaf
llonea to aJd •w.,.
ADDIS BAB • Etluopia -:The Soviet Union Widtl)' cntkired fl
provid1111 e•1entivt m1fttary Ud but hnle food to f1Jtlipe-1uidsen EmioPiaf
11)'1 h wiD supply huftdreda of transpon vehicles and airaift •o diattibUte ~
Soviet teedef' Konacanun Chernenko, in a mrsrsee reed Tueldly on th aowenameat radk> an Elh~ Mid his nauon was ltftCU~ JOO llUCb. 12
.___.plannand 24 helkop lell. Tht Untied lata. wtuch bu ~Vktea
I0,000 &oftl olpn lhtt ~rand promitcd mort next )'tar, ha• been lharpl1
crtticaJ of lhe Jc)Vkt Union beclu1e II provided S3 billion '" ~pons \0 Eth1opa1' M1n11t IO'~rnmcnt but onl) 10,000 ton · of net
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LA coa.ncllman Art8nyderreacta to new non..mokinl law.
Suicide movie
sparks crisis
phone respOnse
By 'l'IM .At.NellW Pntl are relatina atronaly to the movae. 110
CriSll botlines in ataa across lhe the feehnp ol' isolation and
country were Jammed by hundreds of withdrawal, Jhe fcd1na that they
tecn.qera and aduJts 'wbo wanted Ito don•t know how to set out or that
praise or JUlt to talk about "Silence of situatiQn.
the Hean," a CBS moY1c about .. We're also acttfoa calls from
adolescent auacidc. people who are eonccmed about their
.. Ttun'1 are really buu.in& around own children worried about what
here," said Annette Mabiaa. a c:ounp · they can do. In those cases we refer
sclor at Suicide Prevention Center in llhcm to the professionals in the
Detroit. ''Everytime tbeJ flash our community for advice:•. .
number. thinp ao ~· The phones at an mu:rvenuon
''h's been fut and funous," Ma bias service called Switchboard. of Miami
said Tuesday nijht. ,-rans nonstop for hour& after the
••wt ni,lht. I received 2$ calls in a mov:ic. said volunteer Jim Black.
:2'h-houupan," be said ... In the same
period tonight, 1 received 4S calls.
With aix counselors here. multiply OPEC cuts lhat by about 10.11'1 bas been a busy
ni&ht. It was intense, very fast· •
~c -:novie about a 17-ycar-old boy production from an upper middle class home
who csca~ his problems by drivi~a I 9 %
over a chfT, was followed by pubhc • near y service broadcasts of local crisis ., ......... LA council OKs
:no-smoking law
center telephone n\lmbers. Calls to Crisis Queen City in GENEVA, 8wttzer18nd (AP)-
Cincinnati skffOCketcd from the nor-The OPEC Clirt9t today formally
mat five to ei&ht an hour to •n averaie ~Md a peen to out produotlon
30 an hour, said Barbara, a volunteer fJY. Mlfjy l:percent to prop up ol
who spoke only on the condition that prto19. 8eudt Anlble .. lhouldeit'
her last name not be used. · ........, half the .,.,_.'I f'9duo..
Baby Pae ebown reeUni ID a photo taken Monday.
The center heard from ·ca.Um ~ -'"' ._...
"contemplating suicide and people ~·communique 1.-at the
LOS ANGELES (AP)-The City tomake"rcasonable'·etrortstocrcate with friends they think are suicidal CloeeOfhttvM • ....,.._
' Council bas passed an ordinance a non-smokina area at the ,,..orkplace. and want help in ~ina them to me'*'5 .8ekl the outl _,. ct.
' which encouraaes creation of DOD-and also limits smoking in emplo)ce help," Barbara said. .. We are also -..
Baby Fae eating,
sleeping, smiling
smoking areas in workplaces, but restrooms, elevators, company medi-gettin& a lot of volunteers." "°'*to pr111rve U. Orgelm-LOMA LINDA (AP) -As ethical
exempts from enforcement the public cal facilities, and in twe>thirds . of About 12S calls poured into nine tJon of Petroleum ~ ~questions accumulate about the case
areas of hotels. mtaural)ts or bars. employee lunchrooms, lounacs and telephone lines installed at KWTV, r~un.,... .. • bMe prloe ol S2t • 'or Baby Fae, the lonaest-lived recipi-
The vote was 12·3. cafeterias. the CBS affiliate in Oklahoma City, ent of an animal~te>human bean
The provisions of the ordinance The matter was briefly at today's said Sheny Rice, director of Contact, transplant. the doctor who pve her a
were changed several times over the asion before the vote was taken. a volunteer crisis intervention qen-the wor1d'I ltflllll oll baboon's heart is avoidina the "r past month by members of the The measure now must go to cy. ~ end the moll PG•erful !imeliJ}lt. :•to!A11Y absorbed in nun-J c:ouncil, who faced fierce ~re Mayor Tom Bradley for bis sianaturc. ''We had some people tellina us In OPEC would reduce Its mg this chtld.
" from lobbyi1ts on both sides of the Bradley bas said be will make a that they bad at their means the ' t..u .... 7 000 The 21/2 week-old infant. whose
issue. -. . decision on the law .. when it reaches ability to kiU themselves," Rice said. =.Jetton quota vz .,... • 1r. name and exact IF are beina
I • '4 I
I I I
I
4
I
The law passe.d Monday reqwres bis desk." spokeswoman 'Vicki .. We're p=ttin& a la.r&e variety of calls, j • day from tbe curr.m " withheld, completed ber fourth full
cmploycrS with five ormore workers Pitilin said today. both from teen-aaers and adults who ~· day '9vll. day with the baboon's bean at 11:35 --..;,_--------------------~-----~,..--------, 1'M Ndudtlon from the 17.S · a.m. Tuesday, surpassina the record mmon ~ • day OPEC set in I 979 by I South African NEW YORK STYLE PIZZA THICK OR THIN Oroductlon C11Mng ~ In accountant who lived 31/i days with a
M-.ch .1983 • ao ... en.ct chimpanzee heart.
MEATBALL SANDWICHES ~.the com~ Mid. Baby Fae, .wei&h!ng i~ at S.1
L,;;.;..;.:.....:....:;.=:;;..;.;....;.;;;..;;;.;.;;.;..;....;.;.;..; ____ __, pOunds, remained m scnou1 but
s1°0 OFF
Large or Medium
-~ ... , ..... wt:O.nf .... .... -...... ""' '"'" , ....... ,.. ........
RUFFELL'$ stable COJ!dition at~ LfI!. today, t:tid
Loma Linda . UnavCl'Slty Medical
U •• OUTEIY llC Center spokeswoman Patti Gentry.
' • "Shnlept weU lait ni&ht. There arc
f• n. •at Of Y• Lil• no sips of rejection and Jhe's just
ltZZ ...a aw .. COSTA lllSA -S41·115& aulping down her formula, .. ibe said.
The baby was smilins occasionally,
drinking from a bottle everr three
hours and sleepina intcrm1ttcntly
under an oxyacn tent.
Officials on Tuesday released the
firit videotape and color photoaraphs
of ~he infanL They also said 1their
initial report that the baby was breast
Dr. uonard L Bailey, 41, Who
perfonncd the transplant Friday,
didn't atterid a Tuesdal news con-
fereace to hail Baby Fae s milestone.
Instead, other doctors responded to
key. ethical issues raised by critics: Whether a human heart transplant or
experimental corrective suraery
would have provided'' a less risky
means to deal with Baby Fae's fatally
underdeveJOped heart and proli>n&
her survival, and whether her pareGU
were fully informed. .
But Baby Fae's mother didn't think
much of the critie&.
"I wu riding in an elevator with
(Baby Fae'1) mama, and somebody
asked her about all this," said Dr.
John Maoe, pediatrics debartmeDt
chairman ... l{cr answer was: 'Billi.
They don't know what they're talkinJ
about."'
Bailey hasn't appeared at 1 news briefina since Su.pday because .. be is'
totally absorbed in nursina . this
child," said Dr. David Hin1h&w1 a
SUJICOD ... He is not a publicity seeur
aDd he is very sensitive about this."
... fcedma was incorrect.
Dr. Ted Mackett. the university's
tranaplant scrvices chief, added.
"He's been camped out on the ftoor taki~ care or this patient hour by
hour.'
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ANAHEIM 3iO So Mognoflo 1 block So of Unco n, (714) 952-3101
CERROOSILAKEWOOO 11881 Del AmO B1vO 01 Pioneer, 3 b1ockS EOst b1 605 Ff
MISSION VIEJO 24401 AhclO Pkwy ot Son Freeway. (7~} 770-0822
WESTMINSTER 6757 Westm1nst r A: at Golden W l (714) 89d 3387
COSTA MESA 2300 HorbOt Blvd. ( nd Thfifty Drug) (714) 549'3368
ORANGE 62~Eo tl<of IOAYe. we IOITustlnA (714)63Q2441
•
v. (213 J 924.1514
THE MEN AND WOMEN OF THE EXECUTIVE COUNCIL
HAVE TAKEN A THOUGHTFUL LOOK AT THE CITY
OF COSTA MESA AND ITS
FUTURE ... AND
Costa Mesa is a dynamic city with tim1tleu
Potential. Results oriented leadel9hip la nec:ee-
sary to insure that the quality of life contlnun
to improve as the city grows over the next five
to ten years. Look .. the,..... Coltll Mw .. .,,. ..
under the L.eederahlp of Meyor Donn Hell,
Councilman Ertc JoMlon Md Pl8nnlng Com-
rnlaloMr a... .......
•Became· The City of the Arts" with a soon to
be completed Performing Arta Center-the
finest acoustical multipurPoM theatrical facil-
ity In the world.
•Cr11te'd tte~I f .. Enrtrl} ncrtnatan ..
Response" ayatem in the nation, Which dr1·
matically f9ducel the time it.._ Pofa. flre
or emergency MrVicel to arrive et ~r doOr.
• Initiated ~r1me Which reduced crime by "~ OY9I the .... foarY..,.t
• Eltlbllahed strong regulations which reQuire -.,.1opersto ,pmy tor r09dt and other Im~
ment9 which benefit the entire city,
• SIWd ~ S70 mfltion by finding a Coata Mesa Freeway 1olution that will not require
the IOA or rek>cation of 821 homes and 90
bualneaea. ·
• Initiated plans to pUrchate Fairview· Regional
Park from the County to ineure that thla park
land remains open for our children.
• Provided IOUnd filcal ~of the~ ,...nun ... no; XpenteS rnultino n a ifiOng
flnMoial reeerve Polttion. white lmPtOVlng city
aervicet •nd never llking for a general tax
lncreue. .
,
I H• •X•CUllVll COUNCIL ..
The Executtw Counoil II 1 grouo Of concerMd cltt. .. worklftl IO..,,. the bett poeeibttt IOOll OGY9fn-
fMftt In COltl M ... Irvine and N~ 1Mctt
..
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT /Wed---OclOW 31. ltM AT
Pola~d inourns assassination of priest
Three secret poltce
members expelled
from Red Party
Dorothy Emerson Er Don Nolan present
ITIQUIS llPO & SALB
IN THE COMMERCE IUILDING "
ORANGE COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS
N FAIR DRIVE• COSTA MESA, CA
NOVEMBER 1, 2, 3: & 4, 1984
TillJltSDAY ntall "A.TUaDAY, l • 10 P.M. • SlJNDAY, NOON • 6 P.M.
Oranae County'a larpat and most dfwnified •bowtns of antique1
Aftemooa and eveai .. doer prian -•25"' to,_. IUld
1SOO-GRAND PRIZE tor tboM 1n 11.....sa.c.1..., be ,..._11o w111t'.·
Allo dailJ d9or pri-. --.I llllC be ,._L.
•Al .... ilw ....--~ cstlfocat• fer snr..-.1 t-·
C1mno/ Aclmlss111n S:J (HJ. With this lic:~r.I ony numbc:r -$2.75 1l0 •
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Speclals .. 16.9S
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CITIZENS OF RIGHTFUL
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· CITY ADMINISTRATOR EXCEEDS CHARTER AUTHORITY IN
DENYING WAGE INCREASE TO WORKERS. USES ·MONEY
FOR OWN FAT INCREASE AND ANOTHER ASSISTANT
BUREAUCRAT
The 500 clerical, maintenance and professional employees represented by the
Huntington Beach Municipal Employees Association (MEA) are taking their dispute
with the City Administrator directly to you the CITIZENS OF HUNTINGTON BEACH.
THE BUREAUCRATS HAVE DONE IT AGAINI
The City Administrator has acted illegally and excess of his. charter powers in
attempting to cheat the citizens of their rightful input to ·city Government. A panel of
7 of your fellow citizens -the Personnel Commission -recently resolved a wage.
impasse between the MEA and the City Administrator by recommending a 51/2% ·
total wage increase: Citizen input is an important and vital ingredient for a fair and
honest government in Hvnti".lQt.on .Beach. Fqr t~is reason, city law gives this citizen
panel the Exclusive Authority to resolve Impasses and recommend new employee
contracts to . the City Council. The City Charter specifically prohibits the City
Adminstrator's interference with such input. In a blatant grab for power, the City
Administrator violated this law and acted illegally to thwart this citizen input. . .
THE CJTY ADMINSTRATOR ~ON'T TELL YOU THAT:
• The additional 1/2% recommended by the Personnel Commission for all MEA
members remedied and inequity from last year and ws not a windfall this year.
• HE received a 15.4°/o salary raise this year -OVER 3 TIMES THE INCREASE HE
RECOMMENDED FOR THE WORKERS. ~ . r
• HE now makes in excess of $93,000 per year and he won't even .act within
constraints pf the City Charter.
• HE just hired ANOTHER ASSISTANT BUREAUCRAT! The unbudgetec;i cost of this
one bureaucrat is MORE MONEY THAN THE AMOUNT IN CONTROVERSY
BETWEEN M EA and the City Administrator .
. Don't you agree with ypur fellow MEA citizens that:
• Tax dollars would be better spent on 500 employees who do the work In YOUR
streets, YOUR parks, YOUR library, YOUR police and fire departments, and YOUR
beaches.
• YOUR TAX DOLLARS are being wasted on BUREAUCRATIC SPENDING."
_ • Eor '93.000 s__houra AT LEASY ave a CJty_AdmifiiStrator who respects the
authority of a Un.nlmoua Declalon by 7 of your fellow citizens who vOluntMr their
,
time. a
WE NEED YOUR SUPPORT. Pl1•11 all rour City Councll M•mbera •nd tell them JOU bellev•:.
1¥1"-18 FMRn
ATTEND THI CITY COUNCIL MEETING ON MONDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1884
at 7:00 P.M.
Voice your su~port for the recommendations of your fellow citizens.
fEEP CITY GOVEllNMENT ff' lHE HANDS OF tHE CITIZENS II
.,.....,., ., 1Jie ........... 811111 ..........• ,.,., 111 A111alll111
•
• \
I
\
FOR HER
PLAZA SPORTSWEAR
Save 33% Pant-Her classic fall wool coordinates,
orig. 38.00 to 92.00 .....•...•.... , .. 24.91 to 69.91
30% oH Our own boucltJ knit cardigan jacket for
misses and large sizes. orig. 38.00 and 39.00
................................................................. .24.19 and 26.99
30% oH Personal rich haberdashery wool coor-
dinates, ong 38.00 to 72.00 ......... 24.11 to 49.•
26% off Our collection of novelty sweaters, orig.
40.00 . . . . . . . • . • . . . 21.111
30% off Nubby linen-like blazer by Sag Harbor In
rayon/cotton/flax, orig. 40.00 .......... , .... 27.119
33% off Teddi shin-style georgette polyester print
blouse, orig. 30.00 . . . . . . . ............. 11.11
JUNIORS
S,,.cla.I purclutu Acrylic knit dresses in four styles.
Black, fuchsia or 1ade. S-M ·L. ................ 11.11
Value Item Brittania denims in several styles. ·
Sizes 3 to 13 ............................... 11.11
33% off Henley cotton tops from Troustffs Up.
White, gold. fuchsia, light pmk, light blue, yellow,
lavender. S-M-L Orig. 18.00 . . 11M
33% off Novelty sweatshirts. Fleece with cotton tnm.
Rtld, grey or black. S·M -L. Orig. 32 00 ... 19.119
· 34% off Dress pants from Sman Pans.
Polyester/nylon in black, blue, brown or charcoal.
Sizes 3 to 13. Reg. 38 00 . . 24.19
S,,.clal purchoe Sweater 1ackets from Outerbound.
Solids, prints, stnpes. Acrylic/polyester. S-M -L 31.11
INTIMATE APPAREL
20% to 40% off Olga and Warner's bras with mat-
ching bikm1s and bnefs, Oflg 7 00 to 16 50
. ............ . .... 4.19 to 11.99
33% oH Soft brushed nightgowns in two styles, Oflg.
27 00 . .. ..... 17.•
40% oH Olga's stretch bodice nightgown,
Ortg. 40.00 . . ..... 23.19
«J% oH Crewneck velour jog sets in brights, orig.
50. 00 . . . . . . . . .......... 21.19
26% off Selected styles of St. Eve panties, reg. 2. 75
each . . . . . . . . . ............ 316.00
ACCESSORIES
Save 26% All Stone Mountam ·leather handbags m
eluding small shoulders to large hobos Reg. 76.00 to
96 00 . . U.11 to 71.11
Save 40% On Broadway's own private label earnng
c ollect1on Dau/mg drops and buttons; clips and
pierced. Reg. 7 50 to 15.00 ........... 4.# to 1.19
Save 30% Selected ladies· belts m soft leather or
snakeskin Ong ·10.00 to 18.00 . . 7.11and1.19
Specllll purchau Leather checkbook clutches from
A & L Seamon Fabulous textures and colors to
choose from . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16.n
Save 33% Rich leather handbags by B.H. Smith Our
verss ttle hobo style in black, brown, burgundy, tan,
taupe and navy Orig 24 00 . . ........... 16.19
Save 25% On a brilltant selection of semi·precious
stone 1ewelry Onyx, sodalite, t19er eye, amothY$t
and rose quartz in necklaces and earrings. Reg. 12.50
• to 62 50 . . . ........ , •............. l.19 to 41.11
Save 26% on sll textured hosiery. Fall colors and
textures. Reg. 3.00 to 18.00 . . . . . 2.26 to 14.40
Save 16% to 17% on all Round the Clock hosiery.
Reg 2.50 to 6.96 . . . . . . . ... 2.10 to 1.71
Save 36% to 4196 on Hanes Oleg Cassmi 1ty/ea.
Reg. 1.95 to 4 25 .................. .#to 2.11
3fJ% oH 9 West "Roxy." Leather flat with bow. Pale
grey, black. taupe or navy. Orig. 40.00-. .•..••. 21.11
Sji«;ljl pufclMu Glona 'l/an'ilor'D1lt .. Forrune. •• Open
leather fin in black. rtldA ltght taupe or blue ...• #M
S,,.clal purchfte Nina "Yvette." Open toe pump
with pleated detailing 81,,c~. grey or winter white
leather . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ~ ..•.•••••. #M
2"" off Caltco "Lucky." Low heell'td pump in black,
moles, garnet, prt1$SO, navy or caravan t ther.
~~· ~%~r 'sir~~; ·,:Ma~~;,;~.~.-cdm(~;,~~i. ·;ya::
shae in charcoal, black, navy or taupe. Through
Nov. 12. Reg. 33.00 ... . • • . . . • . • . . • .•.••. 24.7'
Bp«:llll purchaH Nik• ''Pul r. '' Jogg r In white
with light blu swoo h. Nvton with sued1 •.• flM
FOR HIM
,. MEN'S SPORTSWEAR
30% oH Haggar• Expandomatic slacks. Four
unbeatable colors. Sale ends November 5. Rt1g.
29. 00 ..............•......•..•..•....• I .... 2(1.30
28% oH Robert Bruce's short·sleeve nubby knit
sportshins. Reg. 28.00 ....•....•............. 19.19
33% oH Coosa belted casual slacks in four terrific
solid tones. Washabls polyester/wool.
Reg. 30.00 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1tl.llf
26% oH Arnold Palme,..· golf cardigans from Robert
Bruce. In ten tempting colors. Reg 35.00 , ..... 25.11
24% to Z7% oH Pullover or button-front sweater
vests in wool, acrylic and blends. Reg. 26.00 to
33.00 .......... . .............. 11.11to24.99
33% oH Selected polyester/wool slacks. Reg. 28.00
to 32.00........ . .............. 11.19 to 21.19
31% off Catalina Varsity jackets in five colors. Reg.
65.00 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .........••... 311.19
26% oH Members Only·\i 1ackets with zip-out pile lin-
ings. Five colors. Reg. 80.00 . . . . . . . . . . . . 69.99
22% off Italian lambswool v-neck sweaters in nine
colors. Rttg. 32.00 ..................•.. , . • 24.19
MEN'S lURNISHINGS
27% oH Our exclusive A llyn St. George full cut tone·
on-tone dress shirrs m blue, white or ecru Reg.
22.00 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 16.19
211% to 34% oH Our exclusive Allyn St. George.lu/1-
cut patterned and strtped dress shirts. Orig. 21.00 to
23. 00 .•.•............•...........•.••.•..•• 14.19 •
3396 off Allyn St. George striped polyester neckwear.
Reg 13.50 ........................ 1.99
26% off All our Gold Toe! socks in dress, casual;
argyle and athletic styles. Reg. 3.00
to 7 00 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... 2.26 to 6.26
26% oH Neil Martin pure wool and
wool blend sportcoats. Reg. 135.00 ........... 19.19
21% off Tailor's Bench wool flannel slacks in five
classic colors. Reg. 55.00 . . ................. 311.19
26% to 31% oH All Centura leather belts. Reg. 12.00
to 16.50 ................................ I.ft
21% to 31% oH Designer and famous maker silk
ties. Reg 13.50 and 16.50 . . . . . . . . . . . . I.II
33% off Famous French designer fitted tone on tone
dress shirts. Reg. 30.00 . . • • . • . . . . . 19.11
26% oH Freeman's leather "Jazz" oxford shoe in
black, taupe or grey. Reg. 52.00 .......•...... 31.n
YOUNG MEN'S
Sp«;IM purchllu Smooth-as-silk nylon crinkle jacket
by Visage in black, grey, royal or khaki . . • .... 41.19
26% off Striped oxford shirt from Berkley in cot·
ton/polyester. Orig. 16.00 ."'., •• , •••.•.••.• ,. 11M
2596 off Wide walo plush cord dress slacks from J.J .
McWays in ssvtHa/ solid colors. Orig. 26.00 .... 11.11
33% off Modz fleece top with triple colors and tex-
ture. Orig. 24.00 .........................•.• 16.11
21% off Michael Gerald's dramatic color block
sweater in acrylicl wool/ny_lon. Orfg. 30,()() . , •• 21.119
SPiHillll purchiuMZeppelm cotton corduroy
jeans ...............•......•......••....... 11.n
BOYS'
30% oH Boys 4 to 7 Van Heusen solid oxford shirt6.
Orig. 10.00 ......•.......•.. , •••.••••.••.• I.II
off Boys 'JJ ro "JfJnsthsn Sttong cord Jacks.
-Orig. 77.00 •• , ............................... U.•
'SpeclM pcll'ChU• Boys 4 to "I Jonathan Strong cord
blazer• .... , L.AJ • • • • • • • • !II • • • • • • • .. • ............, • • • • • •• ZIM
21% to 33% off Boys 8 to 20 iiress·up epsrates:
Don Juan dress hlrts. Reg. 12.00 to 16.._00 .•. IM ro
10.# -
Farah lacks. Reg. 21.00 to 23.00 ..... J2M to '4M
French de igner knit rles. Reg. 9 00 .••..•.•..•• 1.•
33% oH Boys 4 to 7 plush ~ lour robes in thre col·
or1. Orig. 16.00 • • . • . . . . . • • . . • . • • . . ••• IM
219' off All boys 8 ro .20 rObes nd PBJllmB • 'Reg.
15.00 to 20.00 .. .. . . .. . .. • . • . .. •. f OM to HM
-
...
FOR KIDS
WEST COAST KIDS
25% off Girls 4 to 6X textured-knit pa.rel tops. Orig.
~i:'oH.Giri; 4· i~ '6x fre;hiy-d~t~ii~d ·P~~t~i pi~~~d11
pants. Orig. 18.00 ................ 1 ....... 12.11
25% oH Girls 4 to 6X yoke·detsiled pastel pincord , ·
skirt. Orig. 12 00 .....•.•.......•.•......... I.ft
25% off Girls 7 to 14 tesr·drop pnnt shirt, pastel cor-
duroy b/ouson vest and matching pants. Orig. 20.00
each . • . • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . : .•.. 14.11 Melt
-40% oH Girls umbrellas in cheerful designs; some
with wooden animal-head handles.
Reg. 6 00 to 9 .00 ..................... 3.• ro 4M
26% to 30% off Toddler girl's festive separates:
turtleneck solid knit tops. Reg. 6.00 .•••....•..• 4.60
Plaid pleattld skirts. Reg. 12.00 •...........•..• 1.40
25% to 30% oH Girls 4 to 6X holiday separates:
Ruffle-co/la; blouse. Orig. 12.00 .......•........ I.II
Plaid plesttld skirts. Orig. 13.00 •..•.•.......... 1.10
30% oH All girls handbags, totes and bs~kpacks.
Reg. 3.00 to 11.00 ...................• 2.10 to 7.70
26% to 30'6 Off Girls 7 to 14 holiday separates:
Ruffle-collar blouse. Orig. 16.00 .....•... ~ ••..• 11.n
Plaid pleated skirt. Orig. 14.00 ..•...•.•........ I.ID
FOR THE HOME
FURNITURE
Save 461.00 Queen convenible sofa in Aberdeen
blue or rust velvet or Imperial cocoa or blue 10096
Herculon. Orig. 950.00 . . . . . ........•.. lfSl.00
Save 161.00 Wing chair and ottoman in rich leather-
look vinyl. Ong. 450.00 .................... 2111.00
Save 301.00 Contemporary leather chair and match·
ing ottoman Orig. 600.00 •...•.............. 211.JJO
Save 601.00 Transitions/ 2 ·piece sections/, Orig. 1400.oo . . . . . .......................... m .oo
Save 401.00 Matching 2-piece sleeper. Special order.
Orig. 1500.00 ............•.•••..•.•....•. 10llfl.OO
TOWELS AND SHEETS
Save 23% to 33% Exclusive European·importtld
100% cotton flannel sheets. Reg. 9.00 to 24.00
..................... 1 ...................................... 6.H to 16.n
S.v• 26% to 60% Your choice of towels in
J8Cquards"tlnd prints. Will be 4.00 to 17.00
..............................•...•.. 2.19 to 6.11
Regular prices effective November 13.
HOME ENTERTAINING
S.ve 33% Black lacquered 3-piece tray set in 4
designs. Reg. 15.00 •.•....•....•• , •.•.•..•... IM
Sp#H;llll pure,,_• Romantic Rose ssrvice for 12 in
silverplate or gold electroplate; includes storage
chest ...................................... 711.00
S.v• 40% Royal Albert "Poinsettia'' dinnerware by
Royal Dou/ton. Reg. 13.50 to 280.00 •. 1M ro 111.11
Plus bonus savings with purchase of 150.00 or more.
S.11• 26% Full lead crystal from France. Reg. 3.99
each or 6 for. 23.94 .............. 3.00 « I fol 11.00
TELEYISIONS
Save 60.00 Magnavox 19" diagonal color portable.
Orig. '319.00 . • . • • . . . . . . . • . . . . • . . . • ........ M.00
S.v• 70.00 Zenith 19" diagonal remote color por-
table. Origli.~469.00 •..• • ..•.•....••.....•.... Jll.00
S.11• 100.w Magnavox ·19" diagonal color monitor.
Orig. 599.00 .................•....••....... lfll.00
YJDED_ll&DIDERS
S.v• 300.0I RCA VHS convsrtible portable video
recorder. Orig. 1299.00 ........ 4 ........... m.oo
S.v• 100.00 Panasonic VHS video recorder. Orig.
5!19.00 1 I I f I 1 I I I I I I I I• f 1 f ••• ,,,
• TOYS
~ • THE BROADWAY
I\ SOUTHlllN CA.L 11011NIA
• COM~ NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONI, A10.
---------
Predicting the unpredictable
Sometimes the best investment advlc
gets very little attention from the news
By JOHN CUNNIFF
,.,......,.~
NEW YORK-Three decades ago
David L BabSon. an investment
counselor, drew up a Ii t of economic
and derrlopaphic predictablcs Viat
still holds tn,c today. 4 The population wiJl rontinuC: to
grow, he said, and more people will
need more goods and services. Re->
search, he added, will develop tech-
niques and products that will create hi~er demand, more jobs and added
OVER THE COUNTER
productivity.
The dollar, Babson 'd, will keep
on shrinking in (domestic) buying
power, but well-managed companic
with favorable long-term an vestment
charactcrilli will, a group,
provide above-average pro;rcss :an earnings and dividends.
.. These predtctablcs seldom re-
ceive any Bttention in the financial
~ ... comments Dav:id Wendell.
another investment adviser Who calls
attention to them in an article for .. Better Investing,•• an investment
club pubhcauon
Neverthel , he mamtain1 that
··over a r~sonable pcribd or llme
they have a far greater impact on
investment ult than thcpcreoialfy
limelighted unpred1catablcs."
The latter arc well-known to most
people. even ttlosc who haven't a
nickel invested in stocks or bonds.
because they arc repeated every day
in a dozen y by ••expens"' Whose
vieW$ hift walh the seasons if not
with the tide •
The list begins with s~lation
about what securities pnces or
interest rates ere likely to do next
week, month or year, and includes
which way the political winds wiU
NOTHING T.O DO?
blow; how swaruy or owly he gross
nattonal produet will n orf.all; and
when·whcrc-how the next mtcr-nat1onal cns11 Will occur
Nobody knows. of coune, but 1h1
ven I clc of knowlcd ll as often
aid, is what makes speculation on the
future ch a wonderful game, a game
wuhout co~uences except for
lbose who n;ti&ht follow lhc ct5aU
advice. •
In contrast, the BabSon lis\ of
predictables can bC eipandoo greatly.
Perhaps the urest thing in the
finnnaal world. for instanStC, is that
economics nse and fall or expand nd contract, and that nobody n predict
more than a year in advance whtn a
cychcal change i1 likely to ~n.
This docs not prevent individuals
nd in$litutions from attcmptina to
do so, because it is e:qualJy certain
they will forever believe !hey can
devise a system for outw1nmg fine.
Bes des, the world pays well for such
ttempts.
It is predictable also that the
ordinary small investor cannot poss-
ibly ouiguess the market on a Weeki)'
basis over a.n extended time penod,
although from tame to time he or she
misht indeed find undervalued
stocks, .
Earn more from your
depostts with tnstant
tntere Ave percent
of the interest o be
earned dlUing the
account term s com·
puted from the day of
deposit, compqunded
quarterly
$1~ mln1mum deposit • 12" annual rate
WEST
SAVINGS BANK
One Corp()rate l>laza. ewport Center (714) 720-1082
e PMwa< company (NYSE·PMKl
The investment world is tilled with
the mental and emotional carcasses
of those who \bought they could play
me in-out investment pme, but the 1 ~'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!=!!!!!~•f only ones who manage to play it r
successfully arc the brokers who take
commissions in both direciions.
You may be certain, on the other
hand, that the investor who focuses
on the long term, who avoids frantic
in-out trading and who buys small
amounts at rqulat intervals might
starve his broktr but be.at the short-tef1!1 guesser.
Tax consultants
plan work s h op
The monthly dinner meeting of the
Orange C.Ounty Chapter of the Inland
Society of Tax C.Onsultants, Inc., wiU
be held at the Revere House in
Tustin, Nov. 12.
Written reservations should be sent
to Millie O'Conner by Nov. 2, 1984.
Telephone 956-8280 for complete information.
The November meeting's theme is
tarac\Cd to the coming Income Tal season. The mini-workshop wiU
covet an update of Federal Tax~
presented by Joe Hammer. The after-
dinner speaker will be Bob Spidell
who will · cover the California tax
chanw..
AT
Center Cut
PORK CHOPS .. -·---·-· -·---· .. ··-·
Fresh American Sprinc
LEG Of LAMP .. -·····-· . -·---·---"' ..... _ ....... --
SEAFOOD
COCKTAJL SHRIMP_ .,._. -·--···· .......... 3.98 LS
~t~m OF SOL.£......... . • ... _ .............. -. .••. . .. 2. 4 9 EA
~onterey or Florentine
HALIBtlT STEAKS ..... -·-.. -·-·--·--·-..•. 3. 98 L6
Iranian
GIANT BELUGA CA VIAR
G OCEB't'
I.Kit or Cheddar
CHEESE. .. -·-··-··----·-.. ···--·-·
~.~.~ ....... _ .. --··· .... ·--·-···-·· .. ·-·
Leyon Btut Extra Dry •
I 981.8,
~¢DOZ.
CHAMPAGNE. ....... _ .. _ .. ·--·-·--·-·.. .. --· 7';0 m~
• •Select Cofftt ol the Wttk • • 9 KENYA ARABICA ... -... -.. -....... -·--·---.. --5.4 LB Come In & Try a Compllmentay CUp
P ODtJCE
Extra Fancy Laree 49 OELIOOUS APPLES--.:...----· --.. ·--· -.. C LB
=C~ROTS ................................ _,, .............. 19¢ L8
Extra Fancy Laree
CUCUMBERS • ........ • --·· .. - -,_ ......
Dela~ Frfth SqUttZed Sweet
ORANGE IUICE. .................................... -·-· . ..,{" ...
lAMC>UsSe ' PUMPICIN MOUSSE PIE. ---..... _ ••• 1.99 51.lCE
A Great Way to Eat Your V eu1blesl
HAM & BROCCOLI OUICH ··--.. ·-·--... •·
SEE FRIDAYS
WEEKENDER!
•CONCERTS
~'-•DINING
'\
• LOCAL EVENTS
•MOVIES
(714) 642-4321
..
••
On
the
, •
WEDNESDAY'S CLOSHtC PllCES Dor\ JoN£S Av£~AGlS
---
11 NYS E L£AD£RS ---------
UP s AND OowNs
---
: WHAT AMEX Om
- -----===--=~~
NEW YORK CA~) Oct. 31 ,
I NASDAQ SUMM ARY
~be -----~ -------~
1 Go1 o Quo as
---------·-
----
That's an· a Qt description of bd h business and
business p ople along the Orange Coast. To keep track of
where companies are goln~ and which people are helping
themgetthere.justwatch CredltLlne' -everydayl~the
Business section of your new
· 'Evel)' gun that J made. every warship launcl1ed, every rocket fired.
1gn1n~ .lnlh finalsen • .athdlfronJtho whohungerandarenot_
J; d, tho who re cold and not Clothed ...
· Council election
iil NB unusually
low key this year Ike
fought
arms
race
'
~Y Ncwpo.rt Beach standards, this year's City Council
election campaign has been dull -and cheap. In a city that's
grown accustomed to Neiman-Marcus, this race has been strictly
K-Mart. The extravagant fund-raisers. eye-catching signs and
glittering insults are absent and only one of the five candidate
on the Nov. 6 ballot will spend more than $SOO to get elected
according to statements filed early this month.
There are places in Newport Beach where you can spend
that much for dinner ..
Of course, two of the five candidates -incumbents Phil
Maurer and John Cox Jr. -are unopposed, subtracting from the
dra!Jla. Maurer and Cox spent $30,000 each four years ago to win
their scats.
And of course, the environmental group Stop Polluting Our
Newport (SPOl'f) doesn't have a candidate m th is contest. so th
tone 9f debate 1s a bit less shrill. ·
WASHI 'GTON -Wrth the Re.
pubhcans rrtaking off wuh the Dem~
cratic Hall of .Fame. v.ith R d
. Reagan quoung John Kennedy.
Frankhn Roose" clt, Henry J n
and even takingHarryTruman' old
train &cr05$ Ohiot maybe It's umc
Walter Mondale :tned the me trick.
There 1s muCh v.isdom in lht.
speeches ofl)v.ight 0 . EiscnboYt-er. However, over on the city's west side, incumbent Ruthelyn
Plummer and Planning Commissioner Dave Goff are politely
casting aspersions on each other's leadership. Newcomer Vivian
Roum is the third candidate in this contest, but her political
profile has dropped so low a consultation with a plastic surgeon
might be in order for a face Ii~.
Both Plummer and Goff say they believe in finding private
sector solutions to public problems when feasible. They agree on
· tbeth'reat the expansion of John Wayne Airport poses to the city,
they agree steps must be taken.to stem the pollution of Newport
Bay and they agree an effective pro~rrilo deal with congested
parking on the west side is'imperat1ve.
Of course. lte is not the pcct
ioon. E .. ·en hist0nans who PtJI his
praisn oonsider his position on both
school integration and cCartb)ism
Lost yollr traveler's c hecks? ~~;i~7~~7~~~~:i
. latter -Sen. J~ McCan.by and
Good luck in getting a ref und-~lfr.::~:::§;::71--. ---.---.....~
wron on two great issues of bis time. .... The difference between the two is that doff points to
problems and suggests what might be done; Plummer points to
the same problems and explains what is being done.
Ruthelyn Plummer has carved out an important niche as a
compromise-maker on what has proved to be a successful City
Council. She claims credit for opening a spot at the beginning of
the council's agenda for public comments and she won a victory
for homeowners when she spearheaded a successful drive to
overturn a 75-year-old ordinance that granted the city a two-foot
easement onto private property.
Plummer secs herself as a team player. The Daily Pilot sees
her as one reason this City Council bas met with broad
acceptance. We endorse the re-election ofRuthelyn Plummer.
Consolidation ·
·will bring voters
to the pOlls in LB
The question, difficult as it may be to discover on the
Laguna Beach ballot for the Nov. 6 general election, is: Will
Measures J and K focus more voter attention on local issues, or
less?
Measure J .offers voters the opportunity to consolidate the
traditional April city election with some other election. Measure
K, which is meaningless if voters reject consolidation,
determines if the local efections will 0e held in conjunction with
the June primary election or the November general election.
While it is true that city issues don't have to compete'witb
state and national issues in April, it is also true that voter turnout
at the polls has been substantially lower for the city elections
than for the P.rimary and general elections.
lfthc will of the people is to be expressed, the people must
come out to express 1t. Consolidation would seem to facilitate
more voting-and it is cheaper than running separate elections.
It's not as easy --as Karl Malden
seems to think
I ha\'e never lost a traveler's check
-Amencan or otherwise. I know
only one couple who has.
.I'm sure it happens frequently.
Several times a week. while watching
TV. I 5CC panicky couples running
around the streets in foreign lands.
They have Jost their traveler's checks
and are looking for a rab driver or a
policeman -someone who can tell
them where to go for a refund.
It's been a few years since I was
abroad, but I'm amazed at how much
information these couples get from
the people on the street. In Paris l was
'ucky to run across a policeman who
could tell me bow to get to the Eiffel
Tower. In Rome the onl> Enghsh I got
out ofa J><>liceman-no matter what
I asked -was, .. Two blocks ... The
cab drivers in both c1t1es, with very
few exceptions, could speak English
only when dealing wtth figures -
convenin&,. lira and francs into
dollars, lou ofdollars.
The people thete couples stop even
know that there arc different kinds of
traveler•s checks. and if you have the
riaht kind, they telJ you where to go .
ANN
WEUS
for)ourrefund. lfyou have the wron&
kind, they offer you sympath).'.
Since I've been there, Kart Malden
has been there and spread the word.
I've probably never lost any
traveler'~ checks because I ~ and
follow the directions in the folder
enclosing the checks. I write down all
the numbers and keep that record in a
different location from the d\ccb. l
carefully note every check cashed,
~hen, where, what was bou&bt. and
.what kind of weather ~e were havinJ.
This record is kept long after the
.checks are gone and the trip is over.
You can't be too careful. and it is a
complete journal of my vacation.
I handle my tnveler's checks, even
for domestic tr.avel. in this manner
because Karl MaJden has impressed
upon me what a catastrophe it is to
lose them. As a result. I aJ~'ll)S tak:e
plenty of cash. too. Sometimes I come
home with my traveler's checks
intact. I know they arc safe in the desk
dra~er. Unfortunately, when that
happen), I have no day-to-day record
~ L.M. Bovo
"'-"'="-------------•
of my trip.
The one couple I know, Nate and
Gladys, who did lost their checks
were in Hong Kong at the time. They
9Jerc ready for bed when Nate
discovered the checks were mi.ssina.
He set a speed rcoord for dressing and
rushed down to the lobby to talk to
the night manaJtr.
Nate was given the name and
location of the bank where he could
go the next momin& to att his instant
refund. They WC1"C there before the
bank opened and waited patiently
untH it did. Fortunately, the manager
of the bank spoke En&lisb. Un-
f onunatcly, be did not seem to be
aware of any procedure bis bank
could take to refund traveler's checks
-he didn't even offer sympathy.
Nate and Glady were on the last
leg of their trip home. bad their tickets
ll'ld some ca~h. so it V.'U not a
complete disaster. We talked about it
later and decided that it was the fault
of the hotel manager. He should have
directed them to the nearest cab
driver or policeman: thc>'re more
tuned into these matters than bank
rnanaacn. Nate •-ants to go to Australia next.
Glad~s is aoioa to check with the
travel qent before they make rescr-
vauons. She wants to make sure that
Karl Malden bas already been there.
Colamalst A.a W~lls Uns la
upuN~J.
11 • syadlc•tH Since the peak of voter inter~st in many election years is
reached during the June primaries, when voters of both major
parties are climaxing strenuous campaigns, The Daily Pilot
endorses the consolidation of the city elections .with the June
primary elections. S . Africa helped finance
Objects to pafing the blll Sen. Clark's 1978 defeat
to dive loser 2nd chance Senator was targeted by that country
a· due to his anti-South African stance
To the Editor. FVSB mcrnbcr-5 to do their job. which
Talk about ..,aste in our fcdcraJ they did, and no" Jim Knapp wants
budget, we have the same problem, u~ to pay again. I "'ork hard form)
on a smaller scale, right hcrt in money and lohject to payina for sore
Fountain Valley. We have political losers having a ~cond chance. If the
sottlostrswhoarewutingtaxpa)'tfS' FVSB didn't think Jim Knapp wa
money b)' forcing aspcc4aJ cl tion of the be t quahfit'd candidate tn the
the Fountain Valley School Soard. fim plare. why should he have
The FVSB this year appointed Steve another chance anyway, and why
Einstein to replace a member who must Jim Knapp force all the tax-
oved away. It interviewed five c;~rs of Founuun \'alley to pay JU St
people for the job and selected teve use he can't ac:ccpt dctcat like a
Einstein the bcSt qualified pcm>n gentleman?
based on his credential$ and e~· l have been told thattheothcrthrct
pcricncc as cducauonal director of a -. candidate who were al o not
fairly large private school localed in selected, some of whom have been on
Fountain Valley. Jim Knap_p wa hot the FVSB in_J)3st )t' 11,. ha"e all
lcctcd, and dccidrd that with 4S~ dctlded to upport Ste\'C Emstcin and
signatures he could fortt a si>«1al not Jim Knapp. Knowing that make
election that mi&ht put him on the me fc: I more comfonablc that the
very me school bOard that con· FVSB did their JOb properly 1n the
idcrcd tcvc Ein e1n the better first place. llnd rm reall) funou
candidate. about wasting m) monc) 'On sore
Jim Knapp doc n't ClJ'C th t the Jo r . If I ha\C to pay on)'WI~. I'd
taxpayers of Fountain Valley will rath r cc H go for ~ucr education.
ha e to toot the bill for h1 bruised LA KE L:ER.
o: we arc alf"C'ady s>aY:•rti the ~nt Fount 1n V lie
ORANGE COAST• chwartz Ill
Daily Pilat
......
Mr. Vol"\ter ... that if Clark ~as not
defeated the go,emment could
cancel his contract."
Jac1
AIDEISOI
Butnoo~.ulheysay,isPCri'cct
and that includes Truman. ftoose dt and even .. Scoop .. Jacbon. So bear-
ing that in mind. let us now ~se
Eseobo er for what be said 111 the
lml in which be ~U,_ U!19UCS--
tiooably wise and knowledgabk -
the arms race and i&J CCKl.
Eisenhower, of cour9t, is best
known for bis Wnous ~about
the .. miliW)-iodustri.al-complo .. -
a phra~ wntten for him by another.
but nevertheless employee} by him.
Wa)' before that add~. tbouah, lite
had marched over to Wuhiqgton':s
Statler Hotcno mate an cvm more
eloqueiit speech for vm' rcductlon.
Tbe date was;Apri1 16, 19S3, and the
audience v.-as the.American Society of Newspaper Ednors. It wu then that
lk.c delivered •hat his biographer.
Stephen Ambrose. calls "the fmest
speech of his pttStdenC).··
I J
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12 Orange Coa81 DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, October 31, 1984
( ,,
..
The -sP.irit of Marlboro in · a low tar cigarette.
la()WEAEOTAA r, NICOTINE
Also avallable In Fllp.!foliboX.
\'
Warning : The Surgeon General Has Determined
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.
' '
I kings & 100'1 11 mg ''lar:' O 7 mg mcotme-Kmgs Box rn mg "lar:·.o 7 mo mcot1ne av per cigar lie,
FTC Report Mar.'84-IOO's Bor 11 mg ''tar;' 0 7 mg nicotine av par c1garet1 by FTC method >
•
..
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v
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•
WEDNESDAY OCTOBER31.19M
Hernandez wine
Cy You:z Awsd;
CM'1 Q~1nb1rry
ii ••coad.112.
No. I MIL n t I rr
sec will h&ve new loo)[
ardshaverem f.-their 198J.14 club, forward>
Larry Hint and Dive Corti and
sh.atpthootin1 suard Andre Smi\b.
Two 1tartcr1 returTI, play~ln.na
pard Shetwin Durham out of Gnld-
el'\ West CoUeae. and •~Y forward
NeU Andeno~ out of Cerri&OI Cai. Iete. Each averap:d iJt double fi&weo
last year, and Durham was tbt No. I
usist man in the NAIA District III a
year 110 with 7.S per pme.
<>rant< C...t Collep:) to We the
place of Sm.th IS the V......,.S.'
Lake rs
workout
kinks •
The magic returns
in home opener
blitz of Warriors
JNGLEWOOD (AP) -AIU:r
opening the 1984-SS season with two
loues 10 Texas, the LOs An&eles
La.ken returned home to work tome
kinks out
It didn't take them Iona to return to
the form that carried them to the
National Basketball Association
finals last season, u the Lakers
crushed winless Golden State,
144-110, Tuesday ni,hL
Milcc Mc:G<e and Byron Scott led
the parade with 26 poinu each u the
l...aken rtdiscovcrcd their running
pmc and placed seven playen in
double fiaures.
The Laken shot 67.8 percent in
climbinJ out of the Pacific Division
cellar With a veqcance.
o.yoniaht we went out and played
ball1 instead of think.ins too much,"
l&ia Earvin .. Maf;ic'_' Johnson, who
rqistcttd a triple-double with 16
points. 12 rcbopnds and 10 wistl.
.. I thou&ht our tcatn played real
well, and we needed to UJC our other
options. which Is passina the hi.JI
using all five auys, .. Johnson said.
"We've gotten off to bad starU
before, it's nothing new to this team ...
be added.
Kareem AbduJ.Jabbar scored 17
points, Larry ~Sprigs 13 and Jamaal
Wilkes and Mitch Kupchak: IO apiece
as the l..aken broke open the game in
the third quaner after lcadin& at
balflime, 62-S3.
By CURT SEEDEN
Of .. .., ......
They're CXf)!lndin1 "The Pit'' at
Snuthem c.alifomia Collea< oo that
the little Cb.riJtian achool in Costa
M can teat up to 1,300 fans for
etb&ll sames.
not sure where the fans will
come from, however. sec hat an
enrollment of 95-0. And you have to
subtract i 2 from that because <:oach
Bill Reynolds hu a dozen players
who ~14Ure to have some fun in .. The Pit .. ·this season.
\>:Because of the remodel in&. we've
bctn practicins without baskets._ .. uya Reynolds. who is startina his
fourth camp1isn u lbe v~·
he.ad COKb and who owns a 62-30
record sinoe tak.in1 over the proeram.
.. We've been practicin& wherever we
can -boys clubs, UC Irvine, any
place.
"The mechanized baskets haven't
been initallcd at our place yet, so half
the time we lllve to work ~i11&1
like the basics. Because of that I reani
can't teU if we're aoing to mtsb yet,
Reynoldt adds.
The Vanauards lost three starters
Reynolds' tu1t has been to find
thcee newcomen w the startina
lineup and sec how they mesh -
without the UK of baskets. Nobody
said it was aoing to be easy in the
N/.IA. _.,
lhoou,,. pwd.
The-ofthesuru,.five lfutd
Mike Bnioe, a 6-1 u.mfer from the
Univenity of A1asb _(he cbd.n•t hke
the weallter~ ud M 0,.. Ward who
wu a reserve forward a year qo.
RcynoldJ thtnb his &earn bu put
depth with players tike S-11 JUnior
pwd Roben Aviles ud 6-2
sophomore forward A.Lan Renshaw
retum1ns from last year's inm. ln
addition. Rcynokb bu Tyrone
My&cs, a 6-2 juniof who ...... a
beckcourt male with Dwtwn two
ycvs .,at Golden Wesi. and Randy McAlhstt:r. a 6.-2 junior from Hunt-
inaton 8cacb who played last 1C:alOn
At any rate, look for the mucb-
travdcd Ken Ba~ (ex.Costa
Meu Hieb, ex-UC Irvine and ex-(Pl--llCC/1112). lien
Raider fans get in the act
Who says the orily
Coliseum action
is on the field?
Nobodycamoinon tbenoon
ballooofromSaskatoonandukcd
me.but ...
•TheRaide~pmesat the Col-
iseum rcaturc60minulc:S ofbonc--
crushinaaction,chop blocks, un-
occ:euary rouahness. pilina on and
unsporumanfikeconductand it is
pretty rough on the field, too.
• tfthcclaimofEd DcBartoloJr.
that he lost nearly $20 million since
he bought the San Francisco 49eBin
1977 is true, you wonder what anyone
in his right mind would want with a
USFLt.eam.
•A post«asonpme between
Houston and Buft&lo to determine
· the worst team in the NA. would be
more inlerelting than the Pro Bowl.
•Somuch for the .. new look" Los
Anaeles Kinp. •They don't baveGeny Faust to
kick around this week but ifNotre
DamelOICSto Navy, they will
BuD
Tucm
SPORTS COLUMNIST
torpedo him wane thaa ever.
•RamsC.oachJohn Robinson was
afraid the San Francisco 49ers were
a<ttiJtarady to playa oerfe<tpme
•nd"theysureaabelldid."
•Will Douc Au tie be the shortest
pla)'crevertowin the Heisman
Troolty?
•European fOCXUh.al tbe .. Goldcn
Boot .. a ward and so does American
football ... Sam Rutislianop it in
Cleveland and Ron Meyer in New
En&Jand.
•A goodjockeydoesn'tneed
instructions from the trainer and a
t.djockeywon'tfollowtbcmany-
woy.
•The l.osAn&eles Oippen
advenised for .. foyal" fans and witb
Edison still lead~ Big Five
With just two weeks remainina in the 1984 OF rqular football
scuon, thctt were no chanp &mOftl tbe top-ranked u:ams in any of
1he LI conference A)lls of area spon.a wri\Cn.
Edison Hi&b (7-1) retained its top billiDf in the Bis Five
Confttence for the founh 11rJ.iJbt weet after rom1?._1ng put Huntinston
lleacb Thunday, 27-7. Servne {7-1), meanwhile, .moved iJtto 'the
second lrK>l with a win over prcvK>us runner-up Bishop Amat. 14-7,
while Looa Beach Poly (6-1). Riverside Poly (7-1) and Bishop Amat
(6--1-J) round out the top five.
Fountain Valley moved from seventh 10 sixth after beating
Westminster last week.
oilhtpmesatlheSpons~tbey
..aJabobo--•Youbowyou areFttinaold
when yourbdanevubeard.Of
DeaconJnnes.
• Les SC<dd. the lolar1DO 9>rl'a""' wbocoadv:ltbe Mi""""* Vitiftp,
aid theollterday, •1 will-tolente dnJ& use." ••. What NFLCDKll wil11
•llesidesblowins .., ....... -does an assist.ant tmketball coecb do?
. •Tbepywboaid the hc; 10
Confermoewill-.................
iJt the Rote Bnwl aid theaamc OU,.a
~~milliontofdollartioponc1
for-the BrudenCupit vay im-
pftlS.ivebut yourbuic:Sl beUar
couldo 't care kM..
•TbeNBAsala')'cop-
isn'tall thatcomplic:atcd .•. Ina poU ofleaaue....,.imao~ balf oJ'tbemaid they UDdenl L
•Irtheratiop WI: M...say N'.pt
Foott.11 are really down teriously,
:=::r.someof!Kblameabouldbo
OD tbe attraction Oil the fidd
1ns1ead of in the booth.
• lf they put a video CUICttC o(.
(Pleuo-TtJCmfD)
You can't
count out
Vikings
BJ ROGER CARLSON °' ............. The Sea View League ~leaden Saddleback and Newpon Harbor f · · Su
each moved up twotfi''" with the Roadrunners (7-0-l)Jtunmin& third A lfC*t deal o mierell m nsct .., l...equc football will be focusccl on and the Sailon (6-0-) • S1q> behind. Comna dd Mar (6-2) eamed siI AnAbeim Stadium Friday ttiabt
rK>ints from the voten to place 10th in this week's poll wbc:re Ed.iJon and. Fountain y .. n-.. In the Southern Conference, the South Coast Lcque has throe _,
entries this week: Mission Viejo (S.2-1) in seventh after a 2&-21 wi.n hiah schooh WCR for the Su.met
"Tonia.ht was our home opener and
we had to work out the bup," Wilkes
II.id ... We also needed a bi& win. In Tex.as. we were physically domi~
nated.. Toni&ht. we were hal?l?,Y with a
win, but it wasn't a true test.
.. _
lllaCic Jobmon 4rlYea for two poln18 u GoldeD Slate'e lllke
Brats (23) and Othell Wlleon defend Ta-J' nlCht.
overEIToro(S.3).whichisnintb,andC.apisuanoValScy(S..3)in IOtb ~~re, ho~vcr. two other . •alflellrtloippi11."'i1LaalilulnallHlilll~ .. 218-171.llllllllllllllllllllllr-~ pmcsofsigni6caoce. -Coach O.vc Thom 's Marina
Hich Viltinp still C! dlaJI>.
pionship thoughts. For instanc:e, a G1RL~ VOLLEYBAL L,
•
Newport has Corona del Mar's number •
Sailors complete series sweep of CdM,
drop Sea Kings into tie for league lead
By JOSEPH DUDEVOIR Sailors tu.med back Corona dcl Mar
in a five-pme thriller. And Tuesday
niaht was more of the same kind of
When Newport Harbor and Cor-action u Newport swept the season
onadel Marhiah schools square off in series with a 1 S.!li, 11-1 !Ii, 4-l!li, IS.9,
airls volleyball, lhe best of friends l!li-6 win in another fivc-pme fray
tum-into-the-ficrcett-of-competiton;---before-80C).1ercaming-fans. --
And Tuesday ni&ht's Sea View After the victory, Sailor Coach
Leque match at Newpon Harbor Mike Nccoc said, .. [ thouaht that the wu no exception. more agressivc team would win
Jn the first mcetina this year to11~t. We kept the pressure on and
bet•n the two arch-rivals. the it pud off ...
By CURT SEEDEN °' .. ...,,... ....
Golden West Collep will try 10 stay
atop. the 1,1pper half or the Pac-9
Conference football race, Oranae
Coast Colle&e will shoot for win No. 2
of the seuon and SaddJebect Collcae b'O~ to mafntain the 1op-rpot1n tfie
Mission Conference Saturday in
community collqc football action.
Oolden West playa hott to Cmitos
at Orlnce Coast at 7:30 p.m., while
OC'Centertains winless San Dieao •t
1:30 nn the same field. Sadtlleboclt 1i
home qainst Pllomar for a 7:30
pme. Here's how the 11me1 shape up;
Cemlol ... Ge!Mo .... Both lhe
ftJcom Jtnd RusUen hid a chance 10
win their ~ lut week. but
Cerritos' two.point convenion try
fell 1hon In a 29-28 lou to conftrtnco-leadina Puadtna. Oolden Wm
....... bile, benled bo<k from • 29-7
deflcit but loaU 3S-JOoonlelt to Loni
-hCllyCol'*· The Rustlm Ori"' a 2-2 hc;9
(--COMMUIITTT/1112)
It won't be loni;w bef()re lheCIF
football playoffs ·n-with Or-
anae Colstarca teams involved in the
Jlij Five, Central and poaibly
Soulhem conferences. . •
lt u.Kd 10 be the whole lhina wal claNilied in4-A, J.A,2-Aand 1-A
aroupinp, but when theCIF
Southern Section ded<kd that not
eno\llh 1ehool1 were eettina into lhe
playol&and •rUo)'l"' the rewards of sucx:aa (whetbc{tt be a cbam-
pionihip or nc:ar-championshlp), the
playol& ...... expanded to 32-team
eliminations.
. Well,thatworkedoutfl.irlywell,
but i£ meant the eventual fin.ilitll
...,.p1ayinafiveplayolf&1"?ea,•nd
that WllCOtwdered 100 much llnc:e
the 1CUOnt of sporu overlapped too
much .
So, they split tholed1vasionsand
for every 32-team divis1on1 two t 6-
te1m ''confCrmces .. wertae~le)9td.
The Bit Fivt isjuat 9ilbat 1tt0und
hke-five lea&ues wl\Jch AR con-
CdM Coach Charlie Brande fashioned a flfSt-pbce record of 11-1 ,
aareed: '"They've sot a lot of heart. with the Sailors in third with a 9--3
They're a real scrappy bunch of mark. With one match to go, Cd.M
competitors and they never let up." and Uguna Beach now share the Sea
Harbor was led by Lara Asper, a View Lcaaue lead.
two-time All..CIF selection. Asper, a In the tlnt game Tuesday, Newpon ~unior, missed four games with a leg broke o:n top 8--0 befo:re coastina to
injury but is back now leading the I S..S win. A!'d then _ 10 the second
team "\game the Sailors again took charar.
"She's the best around one of the leadin& 8-2.
best in the county," said Neece in llien Brande made a move, be said
rqard to Asper. ''I don't think there's after the match, "toinspircthcteam."
anyone who can tie her shoes. If she He inserted Brooke Herrigatoo to
doesn't make All-CIF apin this tur serve. Herrinaton, the Sea KiRfS'bcst
there's somethina wrona... pla)'tt, who has been out wttb an
Comina into the contest. q_s.M bad ap.kle iajury. ignited a 9-0 spurt to
siderod the cream of the crop, and it
includetthc: Sun.tet Leque.
It could be construed •s• S..A
di vision, but officially it's simply the Bia Five Conference.
The Southern ii riaht behind It (El
Modena A Co.) 1tnd the Central is
bulcally • aroupi "'of 2-A ochools (in
tamsoftnrollment).
The ol!kpnna of all Ibis. of ooune,
is more money forthCOFSouthenl
Section(itpeclaotfSO...,..ntofall playotftal<a~ .,luch meons boa
prnea 10 leque play producea~I
clW ..,,. money fo< the panlcipatt"'
1Chools than the playoff .. ,,,...
Buti lt's• syslem,andahhouaba
puriat will tell )'OU 1t't1 bunch ol
bllOM'f that anyone othtt lhan a
cham1>1on be Mlm1ttcd to the play.
• om.11·sbctterthan1tVJtd1o&t.
' '
help CdM win the second p.me,
IS.I I.
The momentum continued for
CdM tbrouah the third pme. as the
Sea Kfogs dropped the Sailon, I s-4,
to assume a 2-1 lead in the matclt.
Newpon. with its beck Jt&linst 1hc
waU, scrambled from a S-7 deficit to
even the match at 2-2 with a 1 S-9 win
to send the match into a wioner-take-
all, one-same affair.
The fifth and dccidi"' pme .....
really no contest. Newport Jumped to
an 8..Q lead and never looked bt.ct.
winninc \he.pmeand 1hc maich with
a I s.6 decision.
BD.LBOARD
TONIGHT =..-..-.. -. ...._ .......
THURSDAY
,_.., .. ._
..':'.!JC •, , ' . Si=-:.---.. -,., -·"-... ::" .... --.. ............. _. ......... ._ .. _
win Friday and a victory over E.ddon
next 'N'CCk, combined with a Edison
victory over Fountain Valley would
leave all m,.. with 4-1 """'1ls. Ot,
two. Marina victories and a Hwat-iJlllOD Bach victory over Fo.lntain
Valley nut -1< would oend the
Vilrinp iJtto the OF Bi& Five Coa-
fermoe playoffs a the No. I .....,
&om the leque.
· Ncedlesu to say, thOIC fi&ures •
depend tint oo Marina bandli"'
Westminster Friday ni&bt.
Here's a look at 1his week's pmes:
-(W, 1-11 at W-(1-5, H)' The Viltinp of•Marina will
be look.ina for their stJ.tb strai&ht over
the Lions,• 180-dqree tum fiom the
pre--0.ve Thompson en Ill MJtJiAa.
... Westminster's stttaath, comes in
its defense." uys Thomp$00.
.. They've been in every pme because
of their defCTlJC and offensively wr
can' let them throw the ball. It'•• bi& rivalry and they're really hunpy ...
Westminster eo.cb Jim O'Han
says his primary coooern is Marina
receiver Chip Rish, alt.bousb the
VilliDa ....ior bu """lilt jlllt 11
-for 273 yonls this yoar. -He 10CS IO dccllt )'OU can'tJ\all be
·ready for the run. .. uya O'Hara. .. It
bastoboa~-lbr111to come out on top. t think ft'rc aoiftl
to have to throw 10 beat lheni,
bot:auae we haven' ""'"Y .....,.tod • wbole lo< o( o1lmlc." .
0.-View U·l, H) at ....
1"Ceao -(1-5-1, 1-1): Neither
team " at the top or ita ~ ~lly, with fluntinatoo --
Wilbout swtina lfneb.mcr ~J Hatdl (hyperulended knee) Ocun Vre.w still nuniaa a tot of
misha,pa.
"Ooeon v.... ...,, -" •YI' Huntmston Beodl C4*1> ~
Puooe. "But ~ bta ud pllysocal
and ,,;n run nabl at you, and .,...,..
boat up.
-rbe th1aa is. we·re not ou.t of U.
We have to beat QQu Vw:w and
Fou•tai• Valley and we'~nfl)t mthe
tbldt of thlnp. ObvlOU1ly tt'• a bta
........... --looiftl to &!don, which bosic:ally lacbd our
........ bul ......... to "" ""' 1dda llndt11>." o..n v..., C-1> Karl 0.)'U
...... , ..... updeopt ....... ..,..,.t
-•we -. floh Marille
-other --ia' .. potdlod the IOW<I." •YI Gaytan.
•
I
Edison puts a lock on Slinset League crown
Edi OD s. Fou&al.o Valley Z: The
Char£ers survi"((f their biggest scare
f:Jlernandez ·wins:
~AL Cy Young;
;Quisenberry 2nd .
From AP dispa&.cltes , J,. NEW YORK -Wilhe Hernandez.
• \\hose relief pitchtnJ played a major role in
·.the Detroit Tigers dnve to the World
Senes champ1onsh1p, wu·named Tu~sday the winner
of the Amencan League C> Young Award as the
league's best pitcher
Former C'osta Me~ High and Orange Coast
College star Dan Quisenberry, the standout reliefer for
the Kansas City Royals. was second m the balloting.
I Tripucka ignites Piston win
Kelly Tripaclla scored 31 points, m
includin four dunng a 12-0 Detroit s~ak
to s_tan ~e pme. as the Pistons coaste~ to
their first National Basketball Assoc1alton -
victory of the sea~nl a 124-107 tnumph over winless
Cleveland Tue'>day night. Tripucu reached a ~rsonal
mibtonc by sconng his 5,000th career point •.• In
other N BA games Tuesday, Gas Williams scored 23
points and set a team-record with nine steals as the
Washington Bullets recorded' an easy 119-104 victory
over Atlanta. Jf!ff Ralud added
21 points and Gres Ballard
tallied 20 a~ the Bullets "on their
home opener ... Andrew To ey
scored I 0 of his 19 points in the
final 6·49 of the third quarter to
help unbeaten Philadelphia de-
feat New Jersey. 118-96. The Nets
had center Darryl Dawldu and
forward Albert KlDg both side-
lined with back spasms ... Lewis
Lloyd scored 11 of his team·
Marina was down 13-9 in the final ~me, but Ohcryl Farole'i sill S.Cf\ ice
points helped the Vikinp escape with
the tnumph.
Nog-are
in front
ofSUns
Johnson stars
for Clippers
in 99-96 -se_.,t-=-b_._a .......,ck,,__
PHOENIX (AP) -The Phoenix
Suns. now 3..0 on the NationaJ
Basketball Association season
although without forward Maurice
Lucas and guards Walter Oaf is and
Kyle Macy. attn't doing It with
mirrors. says Coach John M 61.%od.
Et&anda 3, University 0: The
Eagles (8·S in lea;uc) arc clinging to ho~s (or 1 possible "lld-C"ard berth
fter beating University. 15-7, I 5·),
KenLuzlo
I S-S. Ann Larlmcfs J4 kills nd
senior Cin<l) 1bo • sax stntight scrv1 tn lhe nd 1me•fcd
the \o\O)'.
Estnncia will lJ')' 10 play spoiler
when 1t hosts Sea Vie\\ ooolea r
Corona dcl 1'bursday.
ln'l 3, lssloo Vle.f 0: The
\'aqueros made ll 11 stnu,gh1 SOuth
Coa 1 Lt uc V1Ctone5 after an cu
I ~7. I 5-6, I 5T9 ''crdic:t over Mi ion
Viejo.
Senior out 1de h1uen D1na
Graham and 03yn f.sko provided
the needed $park for Irvine, wbacb
ends league pla)' Thursday at Lquna
Hills.
John Heinle
Hernandez. the Puerto Rican
left-hander who joined the Tigers
in a trade wuh the Philadelphia
Phillies just before the I 984
season. had 32 saves in 33 save
opportunitie<;, five more saves
than he had an a mediocore ~ven
year career to the National
• League.
Trlpa.cb leading 23 J>O'IOlS in the third
period to ignite Houston to a I 06-84 romp of Dallas m
the Rockets' home o~ner . Rookie Michael Jordu
scored 25 points to lead Clucago to a 109-104 victory
over Kansas City. EDD.ii Whatley secured the victory
for the Bulls when he stole the ball from the Kmgs'
Eddie Jolloson whh 46 seconds remaimng and Kansas
City trailing by three points . . Jobo Paxson came off
the bench and scored 13 of his I 5 points in the second
half as San Antonio Spurs defeated Denver. 126-118 ..
. Darrell Griffitt. scored 30 points and Mark Eaton
hauled down a career-high l 9 reboun<ts to spark Utah to
a 117-111 victory over New York ... KtkJ Vaodewegbe
scored 22 points whale playing less than three quarters
of the game as Po nland rolled to a 115-83 victory over
Seattle.
.. What we're doin~g is hustlinf a nd
working our bulls off out there,' said
Macleod after his club's 99-96 win
here Tuesday night over the Los
Angeles Oip~rs. "l think the fact
that we have three key players o ufof
the lineup -two of them with
injuries -as a testimony to this
team's honesty in living a full effort
every night."
COMMUNITY COLLEGES •••
He com baned that Wlth a 9-3
won-lost record and a I. 92 earned
run average as the Tigers coasted
Bemandea to the AL East crown, thrn went
. on to win the playoffs over Kansas Cat) and \\orld ~nes over San Diego. Hernandez saved the third and
deciding game of the playoffs. then added two more
'saves an the World ~nes, an whach he had a 1.69 ERA.
"It's ancrcd1ble," said Hernandez when he heard
the news tn Pueno Rico. where he laves in the off season.
"(was one of the ke)s to Detroit wanning the world
champ1onsh1p and that's the reason." he added. "I feel
like a won the award for the people of Pueno Rico "
' The voting was based on regular-season per-
formances.
Hernandez. who will tum JO on Nov. 14. had 12 of
the 28 possible firs&·place \Otes and 88 total points to
edee Quasenbcny 1n the ballotme b) two baseball
wnters from each of the 14 Amencan U!ague c111e!>.
QuasenbcCT}. who had a 6-3 record. a 2.64 ERA and 44
sa'es as the Royals won the AL West. had nine first·
place votes and 71 total point<;
.Quote of the day
, .llmmJ Connon, tennis player, dlamlssing
suggestions that his behavior has Improved with
age: "t don't know that I changed all that much.
They just found somebody worse."
Biltz move to Dallas canceled
-
United States Football Leasuc will not be c • t
Minnesota escapes with tie
goals and assisted on the other three, but • ,
Denis Savard scored two of Chicago's m
Dino Clccarelli'1 goal with less than five
minutes to go gave Minnesota a 5-5
Davis. a five-llme NBA all-star. is
recovering from tom lipments in his
left knee and is out until at least mid-
December. Macy has sprained liga-
ments in the big toeofhis left foot and
wtll probably miss at least the next
two games.
Lucas. a free-agent seeking a new
four·yearcontract. has been offered a
two-year pact by Suns General Man-
ager Jerry Colangelo who said "if we
don't hear from him or his agent by
noon today, we will tender a one-)ear
offer to retain his rights'' for the rest of
the season.
In the meantime. Phoenix has been
~tting strong play from rookie
auards Michael Holton and Jay
Humphries.
Holton had I 5 pomtsand s1x assists
against the Clippers wh.Ue Humphnes
came off the bench to score seven of
his 11 points at crucial stages of the
founh quarter.
;_~IR_L S _ T_ENNJ_S_ _ _
Prom Bl
rteord into tbe game, the Falcons arc
2-3 but have played the hardest part
of their season already -including
W'IM over El Camino and Bakersfield
and losses to Taft. Pasadena and
Fullerton. Taft belted the Falcons,
but Cemtos' losses to Pasadena and
Fullerton were by a combined three
Points.
Quarterback Andy Moves1an, who
has passed for 766 yards and 10
touchdowns. guides Cemtos. The
Falcon running game 1s led by Ke1th
McCoy, who has picked up 356 yard.s
on 85 cames.
Golden West quarterback John
Heinle has now pa sed for 1.357
yards. completing JOI of 188. But he
has been intercepted JO times.
Coach Ray Shackleford has gone
with a quartet of running backs this
season, led by John Lamberton (60
carries, 216 yards) and Todd Parli.;er
(63. 214). .
San Diego at Orao1e Coast: C. oach
Dick Tucker's Pirates can wm their
second game of the season against the
lowly Knights San D1ego 1s 0-6 and
D.\LLAS -The Ch1ca&o Rlatl of the CE
moving to Dallas because a "negat" e •
anicle" 1n a local newspaper SC3red off a •
major tn\'estor. a Dallas businessman saad Tuesday.
All the details had been worked out down to having
a complete letter of an tent in hand, said Jody Tallal. a
wealth> investments broker.
But a Dallas Tames Herald reponer then heard
Dallas was a strong prospect for a move b) the debt-
plagued Blitz. Tallal saad.
oven1me tac Tuesday night in the National Hockey
League. Neither team scored m the last 4:50 of
regulation or the five-minute overtime. so Chi~o
increased its Noms Division lead to four potolS, while
Minnesota ended a six·game losing streak ... Wayne
Babycb scored two goals to !rad Pittsburgh to a 4-3
"r~tory over Detro11 The win marked the first lime the
Penguins have won four of their first five home games
an the team's 18-year history, while the Red Wings fell
to 0-5 o~ the road this year ... Mike Bossy scored a goal
forthe ninth consecutive game and added four assastsas
the "lcw York Islanders belted the New York Rangers.
7-l Bossy. off to the fastest stan ofh1s career, collected
his league-leading 13th goal of the season 63 seconds·
mto the finaJ penod ... Jarl Kurri had four potnts,
including the 400th of his NHL career, and linemate
Wayne Grettky added three lo pace Edmonton to a 7-0
victory over IOJury-riddled Vancouver. The victory
kept Edmonton as the league's only unbeaten after 10
games. while Vancouver's losing streak was extended to
eight games.
USC's Salisbury to red-shirt
Warriors pull upset
over Laguna Beach
'"We had alwa\S thorough!) intended to keep this
whole affair coniidenual .. Tallal said "He (the
reponer) then check<.'d the Cotton Bowl and found that
I was pan:r to an t'itclusave option to lease the Cotton
Bowl for l SFL football gam~."
That first anaclc ~as followed b~ a .. negau \.C article
in a local ne~spaper" that Tallal ..aid caused a local
in.,estment firm consaderinga 60 percent inH~Stment in
the ll•am to back out.
pailey fined for missing game
< HIC.\C10 -Quantan Daile:\. the m
talenll'd but trouhkd ( h1cago Bulls guard.
lk"' t11 Kan\.ac; < It) on fu~a} afternoon
lo Jnln hie; tt·amrnall.~\ after m1~\ang the
ll',1111\ morning f11gh1 and a Monda~ night µme ''due
to :i pc~onal prohlcm ... the duh \aH.I
Daile\ "'3'-\\1th &he team for r uc'>da\ night's
"at111nal Ba\ketball \<,s0<:1at1on game against the
K1np' hut had no comment. "He has been fined
'uh'itant1all~;· \aad Bulls Coach h.n an Loughery. "He
had pc:r\Onal prohkmc; not related to drugs or alcohol "
Ha\ ab<,enu:· from C hacagu Stadium for Monday
night'<. conte\t against the Milwaukee Buckc; marked
thl· \t'lond 11nw an three sca<tOn\ Daile) had fa1kd to
appc:.tr lor a game
LOS ANGELES -Sean Sahsbul)'. a Ell
USC seni.or quarterback who suffered a c II•
knee injury in the second game of this
season, will not return to act1on this season
in order to preserve his final year of ehgib1hty
Salisbury. who was in bis third year as the Trojan
starter and was nearing the school's alJ-ume passing
records suffered tom knee cartilage against Arizona
State on Sept 22.
Southern Cal Coach Ted Tollner sajd the decision
whether to sit out the remainder of this season was left
completely up to Salisbury. The coach added that he
thought the quarterback had made a wise choice.
Despite losing Salisbury, the I 8th-ranked TroJans
are 6-1 overall and 5-0 in the Pac1fic-IO. Senior Tim
(,recn has become the quarterback and 1s 4-0 1n his
stans.
Televlalon, radio
TELEVl .. ON
,7:20 p.m. -PRO HOCKEY: Kings at Van·
couver, Channel 9.
RADIO -7:20 p.m. -PRO HOCKEY: Kinga at Van-couver, KWVE! (108 FM).
The Woodbndge High girls tennis
team moved mto a tie for first place
with Laguna Beach in the Sea View
League standings at 10-2 following a
l 0-8 victory over the ArtlSls Tue~ay
afternoon.
Elsewhere 1n the Sea View. Estan-
cia secured its grip on the final playoff
spot with a win over University;
Cpro.na del Mar topped Newport
Harbor; and Costa Mesa won its
second league match, beating Saddle-
back.
In the Sunset League. Edison
continued tts unbeaten ways, Manna
tuned up for a date with the Chargers
on Thursday by beating Westminster,
and Ocean Vaew turned back Hunt-
ington Beach.
The details:
Wooclbrid1e 10, La1ana Beacb I:
The Warriors' singles pair of Kristin
Fiegmund and Julie Willett Posted
impressive sweeps as Woodbndie
claimed eight ofits 10 total poin&s in
that department.
The chnchmg point came from the Warrio~· team of Tiena Pham and
Lisa Wang. who ralhcd for a 7-6 win John Henry
entered in race ' WATER POLO
NEW YORK (API-John tknl).
thr Q.)C:Jr·old gelding who l'i h1\IOr) '<;
top monc) ·\.\inning race hor\C, \\Ill
tle \uppkmented at a lee ofS400,000
to run an the Brec.·dcr\ < up No\', I 0 at
ReOywood Park. owner Sdm Rubin
"<tad Tuc~a>
John Henl). who ha'i came<! more
than St, S million in h1\ career, "'all
run in the I '!:·mile. S2 million race on
thcJrau
Rubin .,aid lhat tra1nc1 Ron
McAnally was to turn over a check of
$13.3,000 to Turf Cup offica Is Tue.._
day at Hollywood Park. Another
check. for $267,000. "•II be &urned
oyer next ruesdiy.
' The \upplemenuary foe doe not ti~urc into the purse and Rubin
stand to make only $2.S0,000 from a
w1nntfs purse or SI million 'hould
John Henry win rm no1 that kind of gambler," Ru~1n had sn1d cnrh r an tatin that
Jdhn Henry would n9l be up
plcmcntcd,to the Breed r's Cup A
upt>l men UU') ftt of20 pe.rttnt of th
101al purse ~ needed 1ncc 1he
eld1n ' sar • Ole Bob Bo"crs.
not nominated.
J
---=----..,,.___=c-=----=-~----~
OCC nipped in sudden-death
Rustlers re ~in unbeaten
with easy win over Cerritos
Peter Kasparon scortd, but Saddlcback's Jack Ryan
notched two goals to put Saddlcback ahead, 13-12. Rob
Mirande' four-meter shot sent the match into sudden-
dc.ath. .
M1rande nnd Dcrtk: Hobb led the Pirates w1tb four
~oals ch. Ryan had five for Saddlcback, while
t-1cckenstcin added four. In 1oat, OCC's Tom K-mncdy
wa crcd1tcdwnh 13 \ICS&nd ddleb ck•sJonGa J'Ol'Ta
had five,
emoon
,
over Denise Su&J and Noni Taul m a
battle of No. 2 doubles teams.
Kelh Willette and Kelly Conkey
h1ghhghted the An1sts' efforts with a
sweep in No. 3 doubles.
Estancia 11, UaJvenlty 7: The
Ea&Jes (9-3 in league) rested No I
player Cathenne O'Mcara but still
had eno ugh guns to outscore the
TrQJans
Gia Barbarinos~ept in singles, 6-0.
6-1, and 6-2, but the Eagles showed
their strength in doubles. winning
seven of nme possible points in that
department. Partners Joey Ferda and
Kalle Brown and Natalie Hastings
and Enn Hendricks each went 3-for-3
to spark Estancia.
Corona del Mar It, Newport
Harbor I: The Sea Kinpmoved to 7-5
in Sea View play, as the double team
of Rachel Rosen and Denise Mallos
captured three sets.
Uslie Ryan and Vanessa Bunnell
were 2-1 m doubles to pace Newport.
6·6 tn league play.
Costa Meu lZ, Saddietiack t : The
MUstan~ won their ~ond league
match· against ddleback this
season, as Mana Tucker and me
Sohrt each were impre ivc winners
in singles.
Edi on 14, Foucala Valley •: 1 he
Chaf¥ers, wh<>5e onl)' obstacle re'°
ma101n1 for an unbeaten ltaguc
season 1s Marina on Thursday, made
it 19 straight overall tb1 .season by
putting away the Baron•.
Julie Slatter} earned three point in
singJ , while C nda K:ir nd Kris
hes did the in doubles. For
Founuun Valley, Jenny Weaver had
fine day, ~•nnang 1wo of three,
including a aic-brcakcr dcc1 ion over
Debbie Goldbe r in No. I 1ngl •
coming off a 36-0 setback to Saddle-
back.
"San Diego has been very, very
erratic this yeM." 5a)S Tucker.
"They've played some teams very
well and been blown out in other
games.''
OC'C'. I ·3 in Mission Conference
play. drop~d a 17-10 decision to
Southwestern last week, mainly be-
cause the Pirates dropped the ball too
much.
"We turned the ball over 13 times
in our first three games. then limited
ourselves to just two turnovers in our
next two contests," Tucker said. "The
four turnovers against Southwestern
relllly killed us.''
The o ne bright spot last week. was
the runningofOCC quarterback Ken
Laszlo. who picked up I 03 yards on
the ground on 18 camei..
Palomar at Saddlebaek: The Com-
ets come anto the game with a 1-3
conference mark (3-J overall). but
they'\c been without the No. I
receiver in the state from a year llJO.
Lafo Malauulu. and their top runrung
back. Leroy Lcfiti.
"Both of them are expected to play
against us this week." says Saddle-
back Coach Ken Swearingen. "We
know they'll ~s a lot and our
defensive backs should have a busy da ..
the hos& Gauchos stand atop the
Mission Conference standinas with a
4-1 record Both Citrus and Riverside
are 3-1.
Quanerback Mike Douglass has
now passed for 1,261 yards and eight
touchdowns, and the Gauchos
amassed 468 rards an offense against
the Kn1&hts. but Sweanngen con·
tinues to be unhappy wath his offense.
"Jn terms of end result~ 1 was
happy with our play. I wa n't happy
with the numerous offensive break-
downs that have plagued us for much
of the season," Swearingen said.
sec ...
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Ventwa l•·J-Ol, 2; SoutllWtstern IS-2-el. I,
Cltnn IM·ll, t, w.tt Lot Anttftt (S-2-0), 1; AntetOM V111eV (J•J•ll, t
"-....... TUUDAY'l Htu\TI , ........... ...,..,..,..,
A#IPM:OOtAI
fllAIT llACa. • furlo!IM On TN ~ (Noeull) JIAO HO JOO s.1111 OoUlllt (019Mft) uo uo
AnotNr DOUDlt (Wlllte) UO
Atto rtc»CI JUdY'• lor MllO AliUt'M to
Win, C"·Co, Meet! avllllM. lt1JOI' Timi Timi :U II I. d llXACTA (2 .. 1 Nici Mt ..0. OUAA'f91tHOlllll 18COfeO IAU. 390 ¥WA
Gleolo Doo (.. Olt'Cle) UO •JO a'° Sey IY• lw IC:lrdOu) uo •.IO Act Of Tiii llM (Frey) UO
Also raced ,,.,, Netural, PwMCt Tr•
dllton. Fii"' Oanc41'4 Cuti l•r • .., ... etartn SMll, HOIY Man, t>loetW Cat
Time H.20
T'HIAD aAC•. 170 Vatch
Arni. hltv (~I) 2040 "'° 3.20 Ml Colfu Lark (Paullnt) UO 2.10
L°'t Indian (Hlrl'TIOOI) :uo
AJso racocl Hobrs Affllr Mact'lO MJto,
Doctor Smlrt, Hold A KidW, fmotle Of
Llmll• Tttni. ......
lS aXACTA CMJ oald 1276.00
THOllOUGHMaDS
POUllTH ltACL 6 f\lflonol
Luck¥ All <Orteoa) •40 220 220
Gotabl!erUltr UwaD UO UO
Dublin UC. (Hal!Mft) '""' All.Cl taCOd Look'" Eosv. Wa!Ut'• lttcl.
E luiln UlllCOfn. .\
Time· 1 12 3/S
l'lflTM llACI. 6 turlonOs
MJ111trel Prlncon (SIDlile) '00 JIO 2 20
F1t11 Uk• l..ovo <FomandH) 7.20 UO
lltumous ~ho•d (HaMltl) :t 20
AIM roctcl. G1t1 the W«m, Your leftlt, Ct11nglng l.Uct..
lime: I: ll 115.
U IXACTA (3·0 paid S'TJ.50
SIXTH llAC:llE. 6 furtonft. 11toeue Prlnu <Proctor} 21.60 uo uo ,..mM Grau <C>omttwuez> 7.:tO 441 01ndY Power (C.stalllda) 3.00
AIM raeact· Lui Courier, Tre , Idle
Holme, 11111 Jllc:llce, RllolO, Dfilol lay, SMlvs Car9ff. Time: 1:11 415.
S8WNTH UC:a. 1 fl.lrlllnlP
Folk's Victory ILOIOVI) 3UO t.10 6.40 Timi to Ile.Ila ~) Ut IJO
Lon V11 tS!9'1tnsl f.20 AIM> raceo 1r1 LOvatlle, QIMn et OVitneu, SlllOurnl, Reotna Cenvon. Arlba
Grlba. Colotooo ROM, TM Onlv Way Out.
Time 1:2• 215
U •XACTA (l-51 Plld 126400
IJGHTM "ACa. 1 111' '·
The hbe tttain.nl 6.IO Ut UO
IY Sodolr (Lerneneo) uo 7.00
F llflllV T umDltr (Pecfrou) 320
Alto recff; AH l1lt Oddi. No FNr Of Flylne, OrtHOCf 1n llut, Lome'& KnockM.
Timi. 1:'4
NINTH llAC•L 1 furtofWt
Rffltee (Dom!Nutl) 6 60 J IO UO Pape TOO (Hol\Mfl) S.00 • 00
MY&llc:al Sllhu ~Culaneda) 7.GO
Abo rtc9CI. Crvtlal Siar. IY ,,... '"'"'. Frend! Malelly, Ovnathield, O..nemo Doc. Timi· 1:22.
U IXACTA (2•3) POld 112.00
U ~ StX (7-3-5-1-2•2) oald U:U.20
wllh U •llW\lnv tlctlata (five llCll'MI),
Carryovor DOOi: Slt,30U7.
T•NTH ltAC:8. 1111 min
A(nlt1can s11nctord VAt11) l.20 UO J 60
llt\leful's Nllt\t Out (Stevena> 5.20 2 IO Summer Creet. COClv11es> 2 IO
AIM> ractCt FabulOul Olld, lltOYll Clo-
'"''· Time. 1:• 315 u IXACTA (4-6) Hid moo
8L•VaNTM aACI. I 1/16 rnllft
Jt'tN'#tl Gllloulte C SlOlllo I 1 40 3 IO 3 .0
ScMI -Clllaf IH1nMnl UCI 2 60 PrOPtr L.IN < llll'M) 6 IO Alto raced. Ofl',.1no Fast, Roni O!Or\d, lold n' a.tter. Allaroe, Sinisi• $milt. Time: 1 •S J IS
U IXAC:TA (4-1) oald 161.00
A .. ALOOSAS
TWILl'TH aACL • furlonO\ RI.Ill Ot\ Gill (Wllllt ) J 00 •2.40 UCI
Win'• Jev .. , (l..llf'Nllctl s • • 20 Ml»llvor C11e1 <S.vlllt) 3.10 Abo raclcl. AD-Tac. .J&O'& Sierra Gold,
Sent From Tiit $un, Time: ...
$2 IXACTA <6-•) Hid SllOO
All111C1o11ee: 4,t52 ,..
NHL:
CAMPHLL CON,•HNC8
SmYIM OMll9ll
W L T .... 01' OA
EilrnOfttOft I 0 2 II '° 25
C.•rv 7 ' 0 " .56 ,,
W1Ml"9 ) J ' 7 lt 2'
ICM9I 1 • J 5 2' u venc:ouwr 1 ' 0 2 JO ..
Nentt~
C'tllce9o • • • 1t ., .u
Toronto 3 s I 7 25 11
$1 Louil ) s 0 ' 21 32
Oetroll 3 • 0 ' u ..
Mlnnesot1 2 7 0 • 2' • WALIS CONl'DINCI '"1a Dt¥llllll
PNla llllP'llo • 2 I u .. n
NYlllHdtrl ' ,.J 0 u 50 ..
NYll.,....1 • • I ' ., 37
PllllM9h • • 0 • 17 " W111\in1I011 3 J 2 I ,. n
~_,.,..., 5 0 • 21 JI
Adllm1Dt¥Waa
Montr111 • 2 I I> " 25
Heriford • J I 1) •• ,,
llolton 5 • 0 10 lM lM
luffllo s • 0 10 31 37
QueblC 3 ' I
TliftdaY'• SCtret
7 u •I
Pll1$burOll ,,,Detroit J
NY lllandwt 7, NY Rllleen 3
Ollcego 5, Mlnntaola 5
EdmonlOll 7, Vanc«i-0 T ......... ,.__
e<-. at Vancouver
Quetlec 11 Hertford
Ptllledelorll• II lldfalO Pntlburltl It Htw .... C11NN of Wallllntlon
T«OlltO 01 St. Loula ,,.., .... ¥' • ..,,..
Ql.o.c at llollon
NY ,...,,,.,... et Mofttr'ell
WIMiMI al PnlledaiDnla
C1llorv al OetroU
CIF football ratings
'L1Mlr1411 2 Valencle
J.lltzlC* .. NtwMfT HetW S.. F'*'lon .. La Qulm1
(tit) Sunny ti1llJ
I. La Hlllrl
• Wfttwn tt.CW... .. Mlf
I Lvnwood 2. EIPlran:O ,, FOOlt\lll
4. El Modine
5 RO'MIM
.. Padllce
7. Minion vi.io
I VIiia Plrk
P. Et Toro
10. CIJlbtrono Valle\I
1. Pas1deno
2 C.marlllo :a. Vantura
• Nwlr 5. Sama Montai
6 CPllMll lilendl 7. jqrt
I Oxnard
t W•t Torrtnce IV-Pllol Veto..
Big Five Conference
~ ~ ..... ..... ,.. ..
~ 71 I ,,,,,_. ,. t " ClttlA lell M IJ
A"fllUI ' ... 12
Del ltl'Y J•I " ...... •·J •• Cltr111 1111 6· J IS o.t lt11' S·J 1 ~
All9lllUI s a 1 J
Central Conferen
~ 1-0 1' ... Mllflowtr -0 °'"* 1-0 70 lu1~ ••• S.Vllw 1·0·1 '4 IJNI Wu.,,_, 2Mt ... """ 6·f·:I s ... , Le.-. a.adt, IS4
Freewey M "' ... , Sunny Hill. 21-CI OerOl!!Gfove '"' ,. e.at "'°' AmlOOI 30-1• Fr ... n M ,. LOii 10 Fuoenon, f1 •O ,,......., 6-2 u teat Troy 2114 or.,,.. Joi 23 Lo$1 to Mahe lt•U ... """ •·2 • ............ ,. ..
Southern Confer nee
Son 0.Drlel VallY H 16 t Oowntv, llS·O Emolre M 10 leat KtMtdY I '3-0 c.anturY M .. IMI iema Ano Vilify, ltooO Cenfury M S6 ... , °'*'"· :rt·7 1$1erra 7·1 " e..1 West~ n·ll Emolrt 6-2 AO Bal Et DoflOO, IMJ SoulllCOHI S-2-1 17 1111 El Toro, %1~1 Centiirv H JI ... , CallYOl'.I. 2H SOUlh Coast S-3 .. L.ost to Mlulon Vlelo. 21·21 Soulll Coast S-J 10 81a1La H .n-1
Coastal Conference
l'ecfflc: 1-0 " Mermotltt 7 •I ti
C1lannal 7·0-1 1S
Paclflc 7•t 1•
ll•Y 6•1 61
Mlrmoc110 •·1·1 •
Footlllll 6·1-1 •2
Cllel\MI • • 2 •2 '25 Bev 5--J 1t
Bly 6-2 IS
Desert-Mountain Conference
I Al*!ra 2. Slnta Clare
3Sl.~e
4.Mow111rk
5. Mlraltste
6 SI. lonovenfUft
7, C.rMWrla I..,.,..
(tit) y llCllN
10. El&lftort
I.~ 2. Arllnlton ~lllGardtm • Sell Morine
6. Norco 6. llllr
7, T.,,. Cflv I. ltornofte
'· PolTIOlll 10 W?llHler
1 Wlllttlof Chrlstlen
2. Vallt't' Chrlstla11
J. $111 Jectnto
•· Montdllr Prto 5 IMumont
6 LA L.ulhera11 7, OeMrl
I TrOlll t. ,,.,..
10...,,
F~ 1-0 120 Beel Sante Cllrl, SM Frotlf lat 7-1 • f7 LOst ,. Agoura, lot• 3
Slftta Fe 5·3 ts ... , Munll!V, 21-7
Tri-Valley 5-2-1 7f, 1a1 llsllc» Olooo • .22·6
Pioneer .. 2 71 Lost to Otntenn114. 30-20
Trl-VllltY .-2 U loll 10 Y1111, 21-21
Trt-V.O... s-3 S> ... , Oak ~ 19-IJ
Sullalst j -M 25 IMt I 22 ...
SUnlllst S-3 is Ital Rim of lhl WOr1d, 2H ~lat •·>-1 10 Int rt Dame, 21 ... •
Eastern Conference
.. Milne t-0 " IHI Pomone, •U tvy H fl IMI Ral'T)Ol1a, ~ WMITIOflt 7-1 t2 ... , El Randlo, 2A-O R.lo Hondo 7-f ., I LI C.llldl, IH Ivy 6-2 ., 1111 C«Ona, IH Rlo'Hol!Oo S-2-1 " .... TlmlMI Cltv, 17•14 Rio Hondo S-2 3' Loll to llalr, t7•1' Ivy S·J 21 Lost ro ArllfltfOll. a-n .. Mllftt s-J II Lost to Clefemont, Jl·U Wllllmont S-J I ... ,c.111orn1a.20-t
Inland Conf ere nee
Otvmolc 1-0 • ... , ValltY Chl'MI~, 17-0
Olvmolc 7-1 • u LOii lo Wlllltlor CllrlitJon. 17-0 De Anze. 7-1 '3 ... , ... umont.12·7
Alolll •·2 62 leet Morllllll Fund~ 2S-13 De An,1 ' H·l " \Mt to SM Joclnto, 12-7 Aiona .. ,., 17 l•I Waltm ChrlS!lel\. :12· 1' DaserM!IYO (L.) •-2 u ... llshoo. 15-1• 01wt-1nvo ($) 5-2 11 ... ,~ .... 7 Dlolrt-llr;o ( l) .. 2 15 UKI 10 0eMrt. U · 1' Dlolrt·tmo (S) 6-2 13 IMt 5a'tlt VOiiey, 2•-6
Northwestern Conference
I. Ce~ CCC) • GOlderl H 7t .... l11tl'ouotll, 21-t
2 CIOrtDD Loi Podr• 1-0 71 ....... IO lotllH, 71·6 '-L#noOC Northam M A ... , Sift LUii Olllwo, .,_.
• Rlttlttlt Not1Mm 7· I 4' IN! Arrovo Gf'lllldl, 27· 1'
Ute) Torrence ~ 7·1 " .... Nortll,lorrance, 17•1'
6 Norltl Torrance °'*" 7·1 4' LOlf to fOtTlftC:I. 17-14 7. AtllQdoro L.oa PW11 S-3 U 1111 MtJrre ...... 2'-t
I Sanft Me0o Not1Nrn 6·2 21 Lal t0 SI, Jo1.tot1. .,
t, AnteloM ValltY Goiden S-J lO ... , Oulwta IHO
\0, I~ ~ 5-2·1 l2 Tied le¥tffl H , 7·7
Southeastern Conference
l.Dlo~lor 2.~1t1PIB
3 11tov11 o.i • K--5 Celon
6. Son 11r111rdill0 .
7. ~Valle¥
I Dt.llrlt t. Arrtrto
10. San Dimas
~
I. Falll't 111,1111
2. T..noll-. J, lltlo Hondo Prto
• llldtlty
S. Plaadan\ Poly
1. 119 PIN
2. HelMrla Chrl&liln
J. llOOmlnl10il CIY.
4.~a..tlen
s. C.l Lult!lf '" (Ila) C01t¥111e
HKltncSa 1-f 97 ~ 1~ n
Monfvlew 7· I " Minion Volley .. 1 63
Son AndrNI 6·2 5'
Sen Andt'eu 7·1 SI
Son Andreas 1:1 " Ml1llon Volley S-2 21
Mluloll V111tV 7· I 20
MonMlw S-2 '
Eight-Mao (Small)
HI-LO H
Chrlsl .. 11 6-1
Ctv'lslfan 7-1
Am9m~ f.J
AeodemY 7•1
Hl·Lo 7·1
,,. -' m IV. »l IV. 000 I~ 000 2~
... , Sllondon. SO-•
lye
... , Victor V CIY,. 51·12 ...,........,., ..
L.°" to L.OI Flllt , .. ...
.... Lo. Pint ..... I.
Alllal&~ St•I• 22 (lr11t "· Lot AllftiM '1 IE. JoMlM 10). Total lolb-GOIOlll Stall ZC, Los An9e1n JO.
Attelldlnce -11~
Jn "· Cllppen " LA c ....... altl IHI-~ 12·2> M
2S Wiiton .-1 l-l 13, OoNldlon S-1 M 11,
Nixon MS M 17, $mlltl f•IJ .. 7 11, Whitt
J-2 0-0 •. ~ ~· M I, Ca!Ollntn 0-10-0 0, Oot'dOft l·6 M 7, Warrldl 0-0 H
O Totali G·l2 11-21 M.
~HOINIX(tt) -Adams t ·14 O·O it,
NlllCe 1-13 l·I 17, E'dwards •1' 4'6 20, HollOll 6• 10 3·3 IS, Scott 1-6 0-0 2, Slndart
1-5H1, Foster 5-11 1-2 12. ttooev 0-1 o-o 0, HumoM• ,., 1·2 II, Plllman 0•) 2•2
1 Tolllt G ·tl 1'·23 tt.
Sar. bV Querton L.AC!ftlHn 25 25 27 ~
"'°'"ill J2 12 32 D-ft
Tine-POlnl toa 1-ftOl•tr. FoulM CKit-NlllOfl lteOoUndl-t.ot A'*'" U (w.lfol'
IOI, Pflotnl11 52 !Edwordl t) Autsb-1..ot
A.,..._ 23 (NIQll •>. flftoeftl11 25 (EclW rctt 11. Tota1 toult-4..os ~ 25, PflOenlI It T~. 2 I dlf9nM,
ltotln, LOI A""'" COllCtl LYNm. Attt1!CSlnee -ll,46l
-
~ li!!J
~
Seattle
release
Harri
CIF •••
From Bl • And,altbou&hlhtcbampionecisa ..
home pme int.be first rou.ad, the
champion shoWdccmtinue with tbat
ach"&.D• u toaaa it is Dla)'!na • another m the De%tround with a~ RCOrd or finish. •
How manysreattcams have~
seen strugle to win the~
champioOsh.ip, ooJy to tee Ll kDodtcd off in the fi.tst round?
There arc a loc of facton involvC!O,
but an th considered, dwnDions
deserve better than they atl in t6e < playoffs.
Tbe same thina holds true iD the
basketball and baseball playofti.
Champio111don't deserve to play
xcond roUnd pmes iD 10me pit or.
~~·unless all thinpue
Riaht DO'A'tbe form Ula is~y this: ·E.cb Je1auc bas three rcpracMaJt-;
tives with the lcaauadcsip~
wboisNo. l ,No.2aodNo.l.lf~
lcque has a co or tri-clwnpion. u·a
up to the leaaue to determine whidt 1
No. l. 'lbettaretive o. tsandtbeyn
boin and there ue five . Jt. ail they're on the road. I\ wild<:ard ta'=m~·~,.-+!
is al~ on tberoed. hilecoin Dipa
determine •'h'ich o. 2 teams are on
lhc road in the fU'Sl toUnd.
When the smoke has cleared from •
first rounc!:~y, lhOle that weft bOme
mu ttavcfifthc opponent WU OD.
the road in the firs~.h! But champaons morelban
that A better fonnula 11 requlnd.
TUCKER ...
hallaBl
-
INTfRMISSIO~
-----~~ -----=
ape victim's vengeance
gripping in 'Extremities'
h of u h personnl boiling
poin\. level beyond wtuch we
nnot be puShcd nd continue to be ~Jtlblc of rational lhou t and
·on. When that invi 1blc line is crou.ed, the potential can be fright·
foi~~· In 'Extttmities." a compcllina nd
powerful pla)' bout a wom n who
overpowers nd subdues a rapist, it i
this frightening potenttal that
provides the spine of William
Mastrosimone's tension-filled
drama. It is bein1 presented in a
highly effective production by ditte·
tor Don Laffoon for the Sto~ap
Theater Company in the F'orum
Theater on Lquna &ach's Festival
of Arts grQunds through Saturday.
" Stop-Oap is a drama therapy troupe wh1c:h presents social pro~
lcms in theatrical terms and Laffoon,
its artistic: director, has recruited two
of Orange County's finest communi-
ty theater performers to illustrate the
l>rutality of a fomble sexual attack-
11nd the thirst for revenat which
follows. It is an exhausting project. both for the actors physically and the
wdiencc, mentally.
Toi
TITUS
mundane concerns and lrlagenng
tension-punctunnglaughtcr. Yet they
are needed for prcci~f).· that ruson;
the inten iiy of the plafs fim few
minutes could not Po Slbly be us·
taincd until the final cunain.
Zuver comes ac:t'OIS far too flat and
conversational for the circumstances,
while Cr06 n is more natural but must grapple with Mastrosimone's
aggravatins psychological putdowns.
Neither seems appropriately hor-
rified by the circumstances.
The hving room setting, splendidly
designed by Victoria Bryan, conveys
naturalism and authenticity. The
contributions of Brad Zerbst, in his
assignment as combat choreo·
p-apber, also are well in evidence in
the attack scene with Sidoti and
Barklie early in the play.
Blake darccts lht dnmauc: eomcdy
about the di&intcgralion ofa modem
fanuly.
Jan Angelino, Wil Thompson. Lou
Brookst..:Unnse Tonti, Jane Young
Nunn. ~om Ha~>:t, Bertha Cha\'Oya and Aida Porras-urigsby compose
the cast. Performances will be given
Friday, and Saturdays at 8:30
through Dtc. 1 at the theater, 7272
Maple t., Westminster, with tcscr·
va11onsavadablebycalhn199S-4113.
Jn a lighter vein is John Patrick•11
comedy .. The Curious savage, ..
OP¢ninga four-weekend run Friday at
the Garden Grove . Community
Theater, in Eastgate Park at Chap.
man Avenue and St. Mark's Street in
Garden Grove. Curtain time is 8:30
with perfonnances aiven Fridays and
Saturdays throulh Nov. 2~. Reser·
vation1897-5121.
Drawin1 their final curtains with
closins performances this weekend
wtll be ••Kisme\" at Sebastian's West
Dinner Playhouse in San Clemente
(492-9950). "DracWa" at Golden
West College in Huntirt.aton Beach
(895..8378), .. The King and I" by the
Fullerton Civic l:ight Opera
(879-1732), .. Nude With Violin" at
the (),Press Civic Theater(527-l 949)
and • Stop the World. I Want to Get
Off' by the Brea Theater Leaiue
(996-6283. Joa 8ldoll nbdaea Corbett Barklle lD tbe Stop-Gap drama
0 Eabemid.es0 lD i.,11Da Bea:ch'a l"onun Theater.
N ew film
arr iva ls
lead field
HO~ YWOOD (AP) -Three
new films took lhc tOQ three spots an
the weekend box office race, 1t
:::The Terminator" edJtna out "Ter·
ror m the Aisles" ror the No. l
position.
0 The Terminator .. di tntiuted by
0rio!1.t&ro sed S4 mlllion inns debut
at l,w.S ;theaters. Univenal J>icturn'
"'terror in the Aislcs0 broU,Jbt in 14
million t l,127 sc:recns.
Bnan De Palma·, "Bod>' Double''
opened an third place with $2.8
million.
Another newcomer. Pammounl'&
.. Firstbom,0 opened in seventh place
on a gro ofS 1.6 million.
The previous week' leader, I
MGMUA' .. Teach~" fell to sitth. '
Herc are the weekend's top cros 1111
films, with distributor. weekend .
gro$ , total grou and number o
weeks in release.
··The Terminator," Onon, $4
million, first week.
.. Terror in the Aisles," Universal, s• m1lhon first week.
"Body DOuble;" Columbia, S2.8
million, first week.
.,Places in the Hean," Tri·SW
$2.8million,s16.8 million, six wcckJ.
"Thief of Hearts," Paramount, $
million, $6.1 million, two weeks.
"Teachers," MGMUA, SI.
million, S20 million. four weeks.
"Firstborn," ··Paramount, $1.
million. fiat reek.
Mastrosimone has constructed his
play with little heed to traditional
theatrical blueprints. The violence
occurs in the firs't IS minutes, while
the balance of the stage time is
concerned with resolution -dlould
the victim kill the rapist or release
him to the palice, passibly to invite
murderous retaliation?
"Extremities" seems to be two
plays in one, the first packed wtth
,heart-stoppina action and suspense,
the second a more analytical ap-
proach whic:h.1urprisin&ly, includes a
good deal of humor. &ut with the
lessening of tensions, there is an
accompanyina loss of believability as
the victim's two roommates arrive
and debate the captive's fate.
"Extremities" is a strong, thought-
provoking but also entertainins play
and it bas received some dedicated
attention from the Stop-Gap com-
pany. It continues nightly through
Friday at 8 p.m. and Saturday at 8:30
at the Forum C'.all 838-5344 for ticket
information.
FOUR MORE productions arc
opening on Oranie Coun~y stages this
week -a comedy, a pair of dramas
and a musical.
Katy Jurado-a career on her terms .
Yet at its core -the performances
of Corbett Barklie as the victim and
Jon Sidoli as the rapi$l -the Stop-
Gap production is superb. Barklie
gives usa multi-layered personality, a
Yt'oman with normal reactions. fears
and desires who· makes us fully
believe she is capable of the ultimate
VeDJ?Dce.
S1doli takes a role that, in other
bands. could be a cliched villain and
makes it realistic, vital and terrifyi~
When in command he is savage in his
brutality; then, bound and blinded,
he becomes only another flawed
human being, desperately seeking a
way out of an impassible situation.
The roommates, played by Debbie
Zuver and Mamie Crossen, tend to
dilute the drama by introducina
The musical, which bowed in
Tuesday night at the Grand Dinner
Theater, is "Cao Can," the stage
version of the popular movie musi-
cal. The show will be presented in the
theater of the Grand Hotel in
Anaheim (off Harbor Boulevard across from Disneyland) nightly ex-
cept Mor.l at VIJ)'iJll curtain times throu Jan. 6. Call 772-7710
for ticket i onnation.
"Old Times," a drama by Harold
Pinter, opens Thursday in the Little
Theater at UC Irvine, presented by
the UCI Drama Work.shop. Graduate
student Jim Lykins directs a cast
comoosed of Randi Easton, Paul J.
Read and Kelly E.aston. The show
plays throush Saturday only at 8 p.m.
and reservat1ons are taken at
856-661 7. Also on the serious side is the new
play ~·To Grandmother's House We
Go," openins Friday at the Wcst-
manster Community Theater. Larry
By SOLL SUSSMAN
•111 at1t1•,._.,,..,
CUERNAVACA, Mexico-Katy
Jurado, whose eyes flashed fire in
"High Noon" tqd other movie epics,
says she somettrhes sees her youthful
image now on television and won·
ders: "Who is that girl -,o shy, so
cute?"'
Now, thoush she bas the same
presence and charm as ever, she.
laughs that she is "old, fat and uaJy-
whatever you want to caJJ it." That
comes after• 1 years as an actress and
125 movies, by her count
Jurado remains active pro-
.fessionally, though hampered by a
brok.en leg that bas kept her in a
wheelchair for nearly four months.
She appeared as the mother last
spnng in the short-Jived Norman
Lear TV series .. a.k.a. Pablo" about a
Mexican-American family. To her
amusement. it ltd many in ~e United
States to believe she it· Mexican-
Amcrican and not. as she is proud to
~;iiiiilliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~::~~~1E~~[:~iiiiiiiiii•iiiiiiiiiii.:l paint out. a Mexican who has ·, lUJICURY THIATitfS maintained a homein this resort city ·
W'ALK-INS * fm Twe Mlt1Mt Atwit111 * DRIVE -INS 1'01lu0f:! for many years. · "' Olll Y SUI U11t11 "'"'° .. ..I never became an American
citizen," 1he SI.id, switchina often
from Spanish to English in a poolside
Interview in Cuernavaca, 4S miles
southwest of Mexico City.
~as\".,, .. (fC·lllJ
SHOWS.A 11113:1$ S:ll 7:15 & t ·1S
/">.._
Dl•n• KHton TtCUTTU OAUlllllUl e UIL (IQ
12:00 2:30 1100 7:30 .. 10:00
THIP' o r HliAlllTS (II)
SHOWS AT 12:00 1 :Sf 3 :1 ·4S 7·40 lo t :l5.
Silly f'lald
Pl.ACES HI THE ~.,. (N) 12:41
2 :1111017:15 .. t :21
STADIUm [;)
Ill lllR •11rl!f .... 5,,,,..
TH11P' 0 1" ~_,.S (a) s ~lu1 Co-Hit
Tltfltrope '"'
AMU ICAl!t DtleAMaA
(N) l'tua C•f'11ture 0 rendvlew USA (A)
Jurado also bas a small but visible
part in John Huston's recently re-
leased film, .. Under the Volcano,"
which is set in the Cuemavaca of the
1930s.
"I want to do still even the smallest
642-5678
,..,...~-...-:-"!'-.,~"'!"-P""'----n made her first Amencan movie here her second -"and the last." sh
in -t 9SO, a Western catJcd' "The added emphatically -marriage
Katydarado
part-as long as it has character." she
said. Her: top choice, the actress said.
would be to play the lead in a movie
ve~1on of Gabriel Garcia Marquez's .. Bia Mama's Funeral."
It will be hard to match her
spectacular start in Hollywood.
Already a star in Mexican movies, she
Bullfighter and the Lady." actor Ernest Borgn1ne.
Then she was called to Hollywood "My life has not been a success,'
for "High Noon," the classic that won she said. ..It bas been continuo
Ga.ryCooperanAcademyAwardasa pain .... You waste so much time i
shenff abandoned by his town to life." Her son by her fint m ·
alone face a band of sunfi&hte!S· was killed in a highway accident t
Jurado played Mn.. llam1rez, a years II<>·
woman of the world who has a Jurado said she made her firs
memorable confrontation scene with movie in 1943at a.ae 16 as a joke. He
Grace Kelly as Cooper's Quaker father threatened to put her in
bride. She recalls waitina endlessly to convent school but three months late
film her scenes as Kelly, making only she~ married, and thc~es kcp her second movte, pretty much had comang.
thinis her way. Asked if die ever mi:.scs Hotly
'"She was born to be a princess," woocfJ u.radQ.rtplied: ··yes, I do-fo
Jurado said or the actriss who later the work.. When I'm not working.
became Princess Grace of Monaco. feel very alone."
"She was that kind of a cold girl ....
She knew how to move all the pieces
on the chessboard."
She said the part of Mrs. Ramirez
wasn't difficult for her at all, although
she spake almost no English then and
phonetically learned the lines.
''I am a httle fire person ... JurJdo.
who wears colorful makeup but
makes few attempts to bide her
wrinkles, ~.id with a robu!lt laugh. "I
always do what I feel and say what I
th.Jnk. I stilt have my temper."
In l 9S4, Jurado was nominated for
an Osca.ras best supportinaactress for
"Brok.en Lance."
She doesn't feel that she ever was
typecast abroad as a MeJ1.ican woman,
P.layina amonJ others a Jew in
'Barabbas" Wlth Anthony Quinn.
But she said 1he often was offered
roles that were mere stereotypes or
what Mexicansare believed to be like.
"I didn't take all the films that were
More movles :
for Doml:a.go
NEW YORK (AP)-After rccefv·
ma cntical praise for his film per-
formance in Franco Zeffirelli's recent
"La Traviata." and appearinJ in the
just-released ftlm ven1on of BtZCt's ·
.. Carmen,'' opera star Placido Domi-
ngo plans to broaden bis movie
career.
"I'm gomg to do 'La Boheme' with
W oOdy Allen directina and a 'Tales ofi
Hoffmann,' by Inamar Beraman." Domin~o said in an interview. "There a also a life of Puccini, in
which I will play the composer and
sing his musi~ too.".
Nick Nolte Steve Martin TEAeteas (IQ' A LL 0 11' 11E (Nl)
SHOWS AT 12:30 2 :40 SHOWS AT 12:t0 2 :00
A LL 011' .. (Nl)
ll'hlt Co-trHture I rreconcll•lll• Differ·
enc•• (PG)
Put a Jew words to wor k for you
offered -just those with disnity,"
Jurado said. She also believes that her
career would have been more success-
ful if she had spent more time in Los
Anaeles. rather than returning to
Mexico after a film was completed.
The superstar tenor opened tbe
Metropalitan Opera's IOlst season
srn,ina the title role of Wagner's
"LobeDJrin." 4 :50 7:00 .. t :10 3 110 1 :40 1130 t :20
c;1mi.1o;w 21 ~Av~:~:= ........ ) T~~~"U::",~ ~rple f!1ln (A)
•111 Murray I Sim Sllepar'd T .. llAZOa 'S llDGE COUllT .. Y (fll&) (JIG.Ut Sllows at SHOWS AT •MDST•~ .. s , .. , 7 00 a. t ,:JO 7:00 a. t :15 ~ua CQ-f't•ture G remlln1 (.-0)
ORIVE INS o,_n 1:45 WU1y1/l:JO Wh~1/Chtl4llre11 Un*r 12 FREE Unlta Nit~
BARGAIN MATINEES I FIRST 2 Pwfonnancea Monday * Thru S.tur•v (Except Holidl ys & Spte. EftllllmtnU)
LAKEWOOD Cil
Cenler Sou1h ~ 1m1n.t am w. ... *" at.!'1~~'lf•I•J•I4) OH AMO AT OU ~P!I ~ ~
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&'OI •• l'I. .. u ue,. -st•ll 1• N C~ildren~ 12 ALWAYS FREE
IJ:M:I4't•31'::~~·.~r. l.!..-r Jf:1Vi:t4M413>
• • SU,ER SWA, MEETS h•v SAT. l Sundly • • m•1T11 .. 11 . ht•,. itir1111113rrlllllimEllllllllllmmmon1Il~~I~· L•Mtl• *"' 0' 1111•" *
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in the Daily Pilat
Jurado did Jive in CaJjforruadurina
BARGAIN NIGHT AT
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• MISSION Vff IO •
He'll have 33 performances at the
Met this season, more than anyone
else in Met history since the legendary
Enrico Caruso.
Jal9 dtdn'l W..
NI molhen new tx:Jvtrtend,
He-. the Int to worn her.
Noll( hM l"8 oriY one
Who con KMt her.
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DIVIL.OflmNT MVINUI
IOND '1NAMCIMG '°" CAUONIC, IMC.
NOTICI! 18 HEREBY GIVEN tl'lat tM City Councl
of tti. City of ltvlne wlll con-
duct a pubic '*'ing on
Tueeday. Nov.m~ 1S.
1914, 9:30 p.m u ~.,_,
by s.ctlon 103 (k) (2) (If the
Internal AeYenue eoo., wtttl ~ to the propoeed ... wanoe by the City Of fNIN
of lndustriel o. .. lgpment
Rav•nue Bonde In an
amount not to uc.ad
Sl,500,000 for the ~
of atll9tlng In the nn.nano ofand~to~u a~#ldu
.-nbly pant by Ceil9onlc,
Inc. 8AJD HEARJNO wll be
conduc*I In the Ctlemblrs
of the Olty Council, 17200 ~ Road, ltvlne, CA
92714, wt.a .. lnt«•ted
l)er90nl wtthlng to ·~their vt9w9 on the llMlance
of IUCh bond9 or on the nature end loc:etlon of the
proi.ct prol)OM(I to be
ftnenoed Will be given an op-
portunity to do eo at the pul>-
llc '*1tng. °' mey eubmlt comment• In writing priOr to
the hMting, to the Office of
the City Cfertc of the City of
11'\'fne.
Date; October 30, 1N4
CITY OF IRVINE
NANCY C. LACEY
CITY CLERK
Publlttled by Che Orenve
Coatt Ody Piiot October
31, 1114 W471
EATH NOTI CES
TAI.LA
FLORENCE Tl'LL.lJUl'L..I
puaed away on
Thunday OciOber 25
1984. SUl'Vlved by 10n
Carl Talia, Ne
Beach, dauahter,
Sally Talla, Newport
Beach, Mra. C.V.
Romano, Orlando,
na.; three grand-
children, Cathy. Carl,
& Chris Romano, Or-
lando, Fla. Arrana·
menta handled thru
the Neptune Society.
1ri lieu of flowen,
contributions may be
made to tM American
Hee.rt A.saodation.
ftACtflC YfEW
. •110ft1AL ftA9'K c.metery • Mortuary
Chapel • Crematory
500 Pacific v,.,. Orrvt
Newport 8"etl
644·2700
llcCORMtC«
MORTUARY
1795 Laguna Canyon
Aoed
Laguna Beach, C
92851
494.94 15
HARIOftLAWM·
MT. OLIYI
Mortuary • cemetwy
Crematory
1&25 Gbler Ave
Cote a
640.:5554
· RESIDENTIAL SERVICE
• Aat Rate
• Meesured Rate
• Ufehne
• Foreign Exchange
(Individual Une-Flat)
Current
Charge
$ 8.25 s 4.45 s 1.48
$15.00
With
\ Surcharge•
s 9.39 s 5.06
$ 168
$17.07
• For~n Exchange
(lndMduat Ll,.Meuured) S 8 50
• Reflects revision of eidsttng negative aurcharge (credit).
BUSINESS
•Flat Rate
• Meuured Rate
•Flat Busineaa Trunk
• Measured eu.m.a Trunk
• Foreign Exchange Lines
and Trunk•
SEMI-PUBLIC COIN
Current
Chatge
$17.15 s 8.25
$25.85
$ 8.25
$19.60
$20.00
With
Surcharge•
$19.51
I 9.S9
$29.18 -$ t.39
$22.19 I
$22.75
Private Une rats and rates for certain other eervlcea will also be
affected.
• Reflect• revision of existing negative surcharge (credit).
The estimated revenue Impact of specific rate changes (In dollar and
percentage terms) are fisted below:
INTRASTATE ACCESS
SERVICES (Paid by
lnterexchano-Carriers)
Estimated Estimated Average
Amount of Change Percen4 Change
(Mllllons) Ill. Rfvenu.
($232.0)" ( 18.1 %)'
BASIC EXCHANGE SERVICES
Reeldence Unes s 82.4
) : • 32.3
,......__$ 2.2
13,77%
13.77%
.J 13.77•A
BuslMta Unes
Seml-Pubhc Cotn
PRIVATE LINE s 22.4 13.77%
FOREIGN
EXCHANGE SERVICE $ 4.1 13.77%
CENTREX••
ANO OTHER APPLICABLE
RECURRING CHARGES
$ 88.8 13.7J9A
"( ) lndic:.t• reduced revenues. -
• • Surcharge applied conalstent with Oecialon No. .• 44-04.018 and
84-06-111. •
All of the amount• shown above are esumatee. All ftnal rate determtna-
tlOM appllcable to Intrastate accesa charges will be made by the
Commission after hearings are held. The Commlulon may grant rates
different from those requested, and the rate change9 authan.d may be
In different classes of eervlQe and/or higher for thOM ct ..... of aervJce
fisted.
OATES ANO LOCATIONS OF PUBLIC WITNESS HEARINGS
The hearing dates Hated below gtve you an ()ppOrtunfty to expreaa y<>ur
views to the Commission. You may aubmlt written comments 9f make a
brief oral statement at the hearings. ••
Los Angel• Monday, Novernbw 19, 1984. at 1G> p.m. and
7:00 p.m.. In the CommlMlon Courtroom. State
Bulldlng, 107 South Broadway. LOI Angeles.
San Frarle*O
Caltforn•a. •
Tu.day. November 20, 1~. at 1.00 p m. and
1.00 p.m .. In the CommiNk>n eourtroom, State
Bulldtng, 350 McAIUat« Street, San Franc:f9Co.
California .
The Comm1Ulof'I we&comea your eommenta If you cermot attend theM
hMtlnga. you in•y tubmll wnUen eom"*'t• to ttii COffiffillilol'i at one
of the addr..,. lilted below. Simply atate that your are wrttJng about
Amended Application No. 83-00-85 01 Pacifle a.a.
PIMM note. hOwwer. that theM pubttc: wltMM hearing• afe being held
only to take comment• on Pacttlc'• Intrastate acoeM charge propc)uJJ .
and billing autctwge recommendatlO~ they ate not for the purpoee of
taktng public comment• on other rate applteatlona of PllClfk:. ~te
public wttnM& ~ng days wilt be ~led to conalcMt put>tlc
comrMnt• on Pacific'• other rate lncreeM applloltlona.
In addtt10n to the publtc wttneM heeriflOt, tddHlonal hNrlng dtyt have ~ tcheduted for anetyrlng the need for the requeeted rar.,change
ind ways of allocattng any appre>Wd ct\ange among Padfle'a cu•
lom«S. At theM harlngl. the.C~.wlll.rtelt._.. the telUn\ony o
Ptdflc Bta, and the testimony Of other fnteretted pw\IM IM'ld the
Commlttion 11an. The CornmlMIOn staff conelttt of englnMrt, 9CICOUn-
tanta, economJ•b .nd attomep Who tndepeodentty eYllfUMe the
proPONlt of uUHtlte tor rate lncr.aM9 and Pf9lllM tNlr aMlyMe end
recommtndatlona to the Commlelion.
11 you WOUid Ike to partldpate In an ~ng WIY "'° need .ovtce on
hOW to do IQ, write to the PUblC ACMeOr. Catltom'9 P\lble Utllftlte
CommtNIOn. 350 WWWer ~· San Fr11oci9Co, CA M 102
... ....
, '
"
..
31 1984 -
...
.-
Q '
\
Uftqlllt
JridlaD Prime llinlater ID4J~a 1982ap~ceduringa loCal
OUdlal Is rtnced b7 a eecarltJ sone electioo.
Global leaders mourn ·-Mrs. Gandhi in Wake
of her assassination
World leaders joined in condemnina the
assassination of Prime Minister Indira
Gandhi today and mourned her as a
courageous leader of India and the non-
aligned movemenL
~Indian communities around the world also
moui'ned, but an exiled leader of India's Sikh
minority, whose adherents have been blamed
for the killing, said Mrs. Gandhi got what she
deserved.
In Washington, President Reapn "ex-
pressed deep personal sorrow" when told of
the death of Mrs. Gandhi, 66, said White
House spokesman Anson FranJcJin.
Secretary of State George P. Shultz, in a
statement for the U.S. government. said
Americans "arc shocked and outraged" by the
assassination. He called Mrs. Gandhi "the
leader of a put democracy."
"The United States denounces this des-
picable act which has taken the life of the
prime minister and elpresses its profound
sympathy.to the people of India and Mrs.
Gandhi's family for their uqic loss." Shultz
said in a statement.
In a report from the Indian capital, the
Soviet news agency Tass call~ the shooting
.. villainous." China's communist govem-
mcnuaid it was ''shocked."
Pope John Paul II, survivor of two
assassinatton attempt.a. deplored the slaying
of Mrs. Gandhi as the latest in a '"chain of
atrocities" in the world.
In London, British Sikh leader Harcharan
Singh said the shooting was a cowardly act but
the Indian leader bad been .. more or less askina for it."
Sin&h, general secretary of the Supreme
C.Ouncil of Sikhs of the United Kin&dom,
reicalled the Indian army's stonnina in June of
the Sikh Golden Temple in Amritsar and said,
• "It's not very surprisina somebody bas tried to
kill her." ,
In London•s Southall district. which has a
large Indian population, Sikhs were seen
distributing candies, a sign of celebration, the
British news agency Press Association re-ported.
.. The boys who killed her will go to heaven
din:ct," said Sandhu Ms, 76, a Sikh resident of
Southall. "Every Sikh is happy. It wauureand
ocrtain she would face this thing once she sent
her trOOPJ into the temple ...
Non-Sikhs amona Britain's l.S-million-
strona Indian community expressed shock
and OUtraJe. .. Remam peaceful," Sinna Mani, president
of the Overseas Indian Association, urged bis .
countrymen. "'Please don't take it out on your
neighbor because some demented member of
the Indian community took Mn. Gandhi's
life." ·
He added:" All Indian people deeply mourn
her death. It is impossible -to rule a nation of
700 million people without mak.ina some-
mlstakcs. But nothillJ she did d~rves this."
British Prime Mimster Margaret Thatcher,
who survived an attempt on her life two weeks
ago1 sen la telqram to New Delhi condemning
"this barbaric and treacherous deed.''
Queen Elizabeth II, head of the 48-nation
Commonwealth of Britain and its former
colonies, sent Indian President Zail Singh a
message saying she was .. profoundly shocked
... Tbe world and the C.Ommonwcalth have
lost one of their most distin&uished leaders."
Mrs. Thatcher, Britain's fant woman prime
minister, said in a television interview that
she and Mrs. Gandhi often discussed the
problems of rulina in a pluralistic society. "I
looked forward to our talks together. They had
aome special quality," Mri. Thatcher ~id.
.. For my part, I shall feel greatly the loss of a
wise colleague aod personal friend."
Relations bcil?a:en India and nei&hboring
Pakistan have been tense in recent months,
with Indian leaders aocusing Pakistan of
helping train and arm Sikh militants.
But Pa.kis1ani President Zia Ul-Haq sent a
letter to the Indian government expressina
'"deep_ shock and horror·• at the shooting on
behalf of the government and people of
Pakistan, which has fought several wan with
India.
In Cairo, Butros Ghali, faypt'a state
minister for foreiJ:n affain. said in a statement
that Mrs. Gandhi's death was .. a great loss to
the international community and all the noble
princiP.le$ underlyina the non-ali&ncd move-ment •
Mrs. Gandhi had been chairman of the oon-
ali&ned bloc since March 1983.
Soviet Foreisn Ministry spokesman
Vladimir Lomeiko said: .. The Soviet people
denounce the criminals and their inspiren,
who bad n.iscd their hand against this
outstanding political figure and the leader of
the non..ali&ncd movement."
Leader Indira Gandhi
born to politics, power
By Tiie A1soclate4 Prat
NEW DELHI, India -In the way that
~me pcor.le arc born to weaJtb and others to
position, ndira Priyadarshini Nehru Gandhi
was born to politica and power.
Her &randfather Motilal Nehru, was an •e.Arty leader of the Indian independence
movement. Her father, Jawahattal Nehru, led
the infant nation as prime minister throuah its
first 17 yean followins independence from
Britain in 1947.
Mrs. Gandhi won the country'• top clcaed
post four times, and as those before her, she
aroomed her children to follow in her path,
sparkina protests of .. dyna~·
Het ycan as leader of I 's masses were
turbulent, culminatina in a showdown with
the minority Sikhs in June. when abe ordered
Indian •nn)' troopt to assault the Oolden
Temple, the Sikh•• hotieat place ofwonhip, in
Amntaar.
Several hours af\e:r the 661-ycar-old Mrs~
Gandhi was auusiuu:d today1 an ainiden·
.u .. -.. lcr told The Auocia1e0 ~"We hive tilftn our reveqr. Lona live lbe Sikh
rth&ion."
Durinf her rule, Mrs. G1ndh1'1 supporters aPote o her "politbl 11Cniu1.. and ·· o( 'the ··owbi ~ .. Her ddratlOn called her a
dial tor and uicl she knew tattle about pOlitiQ,,
only about powet, and cued little about India,
only.about mnainlna an power.
.. She haa always been a ~L parlia· mcntarian, .. journalist S. Nibal Si~ wrote.
"Her font is the manipulation of men hkt
pieces CJ& I Ckla board and ~DI
speec:bel rectudna the probkms to im~
c.ldl phrues, often ~vina .fid1on with
fact ."
A1 pnmc minister, Mrs. Gandha led lndaa
mto the nudrar • (I 97 ... When 1t exploded
u uDdetpound nueka.P device) and 1n10 the
ll*lC • ( 1980, When h lauDCMd hi OWft
•tdhie QI) Its own rocket. ud tarlier thil ·ear, when an Indian uttonaut Rew in a
, • Russ1an spacecraft). Yet she couldn't lead it
out of the bullock can age. ·
Her aovernments made limited headway
aaainst thca.ge-old Indian problcmsofbunaer.
poverty, caste, basic .sanitation, soarina popu·
lation and chronic rcli&ious strife between the
m~ority Hindus, Moslcms and other sects.
There were bitter, often violent con·
trovcrsies over \)iralin1 prices and chalJCS of widcsPread offioal corruption. imposiuon of
a ••national emcrsency .. and the Jikeovtr of
several state aovemmenu that were con·
trolled by opposition parties.
Mrs. Gandhi, 1 slender woman, usually
wore tasteful, nmptc saris and little jewelry
except for a laflCt man's wriatwatch. "' larac
shoclc of pay in her wavy, dark hair added
sbarpncu to her features. She could be warm
and charmina ot frotty and sharp depcndina
on her mood.
The high poant in het: 1>9pulanty came an
late 197 I When the Indian army moved
qainst Pakistani troops tr)'ina to qudl the 1ndcoen<ienoe movement in what was then
Eiit 'hkilW\---:Tf1t VIC10r)' cteated Banalldffli
and earned Mn. Gahdhi the adoration of the
Indian nwa. But the war, with h.s milbons of rcfuaiea. da~ the Indian economy. Dro\iabt--:and
l'am1ne foUowed, the alla.dy low Indian
ttandard of hvin~ woncntd and Mn.
Gandhi's populanty tided. FNstration coa~ into a popular movcmeat in 19:7 ..
led by Jayaprakalh Narayan, an cldetly
iniellectual and one-time Oommunisl who
became the nauon's con1acnoe.
On June 1'2. l 97S. the Hiah C.oun in Mn.
Oandhi's Home dty of AllalAblid Nied that
&ht had illcplly u.ect aovmunmt ofl\cial1 in
hu 1971 cl«llon c:ampilp. The vmt1e1
carried 1 sax·year ban on bokhna elective
Office.
Two weckt later, reacuna to demands lhat
she mian. Mn. Oandh dedattd 1 nat onal erncraency.
I
COAST
Bea la111b,
change pace
for barbecue
Food eaten in the open air seems to tastebetter. And whether
your outdoor setting is a smal I terrace or a spacious patio, an evening 1
barbecue is the perfect way to do some relaxed entertaining.
Treat yourse1fand your guests to a pretty tablesettingand some
terrific tasting barbecued food and delicious chocolate desserts.
For a change-of-pace meal, the American Lamb Council SUJ!&CSts
barbecuing a marinated butterflied leg oflamb to a perfect; mcdium-
rare ( 145 degrees) or to desired donencss.
Try skewering succulent Jamb cubes with seasonal vegetables
and brushing with a tangy tomato barbeclle sauce. Tasty and lean,
American Jamb is a nutritional bargain -a 3-ounce cooked portion
is just 163 calories, about the same as chicken.
Guests will clamor for delicious chocolate desserts. Rich
Chcolate Ice Cream is a chocolatey good plain, as it is with toasted
almonds folded in. And by all means, gild the lily with a topping of
thick Chocolate Fudge Sauce. ~
Chocolate-Strawberry Tart will please the eye as well as the
taste buds. The crown offresb strawberries and Strawberry Glace adds
a final; colorful touch. ..
. GRILLED LAMB KABOBS
l can (15 oances) tomato uace
~ c11p llpt or dark cora syrap.
~ cup finely chopped onion
~ cup dry. red fiiM'
l tables,....choppeci parsley
t dlri'et garlic, milleed or pressed
... tM1pelli 4ded rOM'IDal')' leaves
~ teaspoon salt
'iii teupoon bot pepper saace
114 poa.ads (aboat) boneless lamb, cat ha U 1-bach cabes
11 small maalarooms
H small w~te oDlons
1 small iacctiiU, cat ID I sUcu . a cherry tomatoes
In 2...quart saucepan stir together tomato sauce, com syrup, onion. wine,
pai:sley. garlic, rosemary, salt and hot s)cpper sauce. Stirring occasionally,
brini to boil~reduce heatafld simmer20 to 25 minutes.
· On each of8 skewers, alternately thread lamb, mushrooms, onions and
zucchini. Brush with sauce. Grill 6 inches from source ofheat, turning and
brushing with sauce frequently, I 5 minutes or until of desircddonencss.
During last 2 minutes of griUingadd l cherry tomato to each s~ewer.
Heatand scrvercmaininguuce Withkabo
MARINATED BUTTERFLIED
LEG OF LAMB
1 (I poaad) leg of lamb, boned, butterflied
~ cup Jlglat or dark corn 1yrap
~ cup lemon Julee
·~ C11p cora oil a doves garllc, mJnee4 or pmted
1 tea1pooa dried orep.DO leaves
1 tea1pooa salt
14 teu~n pepper
Trim excess fat from lamb. Placem large shallow dish. In small bowl stir
together com syrup, lemon juice, com 01 I, garlic, oregano, salt and pepper .
C HEFS SHOW OFF ARTISTR ------· ---. -
By SUZANNE FREY
Oelfr Nol Corr111111ndMI
· While most food com~titions
arej.udged on flavor and onginality,
the gourmet entrfes in the Culinary
Arts Salon were evaluated solely on
appearance.
About 3,000 people paid $6 to
just look -no touching, pf ease -
at the extravagant food displays in
the 19th .. nnu.al competition at the
Anaheim Hilton and Towers Hotel.
. The show, the targest of its kind in
wes:=:m United States, was spon-
sored by the Orange Empire Chefs
and Professional Cooks Associa-
tion, a chapter of the American
Culinary Federation Inc.
Winning an award in any of the
eight categories is "quite a pres-
tigious accomplishment," acc-0rd-
ing to Bob Schaefer, OECA public
relations director. "An imponant
way of earning a good reP.utation as
a chefis to enter shows hke this one
and win awards."
The purpose of culinary art
shows. he said, is to .. expose the
public to classic buffet w~ and
pr:omote the image of the chef," he
said, adding, "a chef is not just a
cook. Besides being a manager and
an administrator, be must also be
an artist." .
About t 75 students and pro-
fessionals competed, many in sev-
eral categories. Each entry. whether
it was a seafood or meat platter, a
tray of breads, pa~tries, appetizers. ...
complete bullet tables or
centerpieces, had. Jo be edible. Each
was evaluated on overaJI compo-
sition, originality, craftsmanship
and presentation.
Originality and creativity cer-
tainly h'd free rei~. Bruce Riddell,
organizdoftheevent, said culinary
art shows offer chefs the opportuni-
ty to sho" off their talents since
"the artistic factor of foods is
something you don't normally see
in restaurants."
The show featured about 30
tables, beautifully decorated with
. ice and chocolate carvings, bread
sculptures, marsipan flowers.
classic buffet platteTS and deliciollS-·
looking pastries and hors
d'ocuvres. AJthou~ entries were made of
the finest mgredients and valued at
several thousand dollars, they were
not meant to be eaten, according to
Schaefer, who estimated each con-
testant spent about two weeks
preparing an entry.
Jeff Mora, 22, a first-place winner
in the student category, had only
five months of training at the
Culinary Arts Center m Cerritos.
His contribution was a saddle of
lamb, stuffed with ground meat m
cream and wine, chicken pate and
mushroom truffle. It was covered
with an aspic glacc. garnished with
poached pears and asparaaus with
hollandaise, and presented • on a
mirrored servomg tray.
Mora said he spent three and one-
alf days preparing his entry, and • .,_,....,.......,.,,_.~ as up all night. the night before the
Wu: and tallow ectllpture entered by Ot&Jlle Coast College f604 kfficea etuden show finishing it.
,-
: SEN SIBLE E~ TING
L - --
S•tl1ty he•rtr
,•utumn •ppetHn
wlth ... rvMt
Pork. Piage C3.
'Encorer 9POft0'9
celebr81• ,.,. ..
perform.nee of
the cookbook. C7.
until well blended. Pour over lamb. Cover; rctrigeratc o" emight, turnina
occasionall).
Remove lamb from marinade;~rvemarinade. Grill 6inc:besfrom
source ofhcat. at lov..\o medium setting on a ps grill, tumina and brushina
with marinade frcqu~tly, 45 to 60 minutes or until of desired doncness. 12
scrving.i. ·
(Pleue eee LAllB/C6)
Chef Gary Allen teti. onlookers b ow macb effort went lllto
entrle. of hon d 'oeunes and brea!f dJaplay.
Viewers, whose appetites were
whetted by admirina and smelhng
the culinary di plays. were not
allowed to sample. However, they
could taste foods from local res-
taurant distnbutors or buy $30
tickets for the seven-course
Gourmet A~ards Dinner. prepart'd
b> hotel taff..,...
The show rai~ about $4.000,
\\ hich will be awarded to tudent
cooks in Orange County.
Balanced dJet critical with advancing age
By AMY SANDERS, M.A. hy lhc Clion ofdrup. lt i , therefore. no .surl:>risc that
..._.. ..... D1.tt11M • people over 6S, as a group" are more poor1y nouri hcd Should the diet o~ older ix:rsons be the same as for than younger people. ·
the rest of tlie population? Basically ye · A WJSC diet for the tldcrly leaves little room for
·A balanced diet rich in nutrients is essential empty calonc foods h~ in sugar fat and alcohol,
throughout life, but the amounts and emphasis may be which upply no essential nutncnts and even rob the
different. There are several reasons why adhenng to a body of stored nutricnu. Each caloric taken in mu t
, aOod diet becomes more cntical with advancing age. count and serve a useful purpose
First bodily functions low down and become less A breakfast ofan oranac. oatmeal with raisins and
efficient. This may result in nutrients being lost throuah a glass of milk has a high .. nutrient density," meaning
poor digestidn and absorption of food · the calorics In these foods supply ample nutrient , such Scllond, caloric rcqu1rc01cnts may be decreased as as vttamm A. 0, C, the lkomplCA vatamms. iron,
older people become-lcs active. On the other hand, calcium. potas ium end fiber. A douahnut and coffee.
many arc undernourished as a re ult of r appetite on the other hand..supply almost noM"'Of thtJC.
caused by ph~ 1cal and mental d1sabiht1es. Cfc,prc 10n. ~ocpt forgrowingdularcn and ~nt omen,
poveny etc. Although le food 1 taken in, nutntion I P..f'OlCm rcqu1rcmcn1s remain •he same \hroUJhout
requirements stHI remain tl\c same. · dull hfc. But as mo t Amc:ncan consume two or three
Third, all nutrient' must be well upplied bccau umcs the recommended amount • 1t 1 smponant for
the elderl)' arc among the lalJC t consumers of drug older people to avo1d cxoc of mr.at, cgs, cheese and
and nloohol. and many vn min and minerals a:rc lo t other high protein food . • •
, J l ..
)
IT IS THE TIME . OF
THE WITCHES!
Every Halloween
season the Witches
get into the '
classifieds. They
brew items to be
sold, items to
be bought and the
results are fabulous.
You'll enjoy the
flavor its all in
savings and money
to you.
Daily Pilat
CALL CLASSIFIED 642-5678. ·
Foster
Farms. Deli
Slices and Ready-
To-Eat Meats. Delicious.
Lower in far· Lower in
calories~ Higher in protein~
Made from Foster Farms fresh
chicken and turkey ·
Bologna and franks for kids'
lunches. Pastrami and salami for
cold cut buffets. Full-flavored
hams for main meals.All with the
goodness of Foster Farms. Taste
what you've been missing.
You 'll never miss the calories.
L ~=----------JL ____________ J
SWEERST~KES
M -; SJ00,000 IN FREE GROCERIES:
HERE'S WHAT YOU COULD WIN:
GRAND PRIZE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $30,000
(About rive years of free groceries)
3 FIRST PRIZES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16,000
(About one yt·ar of free groct'ries)
10 SECOND PRIZES ................. SSOO
(About orn• month off ree groceries)
500 THIRD PRIZES ................ .
(About 1>11e w<·t'k of frN· ~ro< nit's l
Wi1111t•r-. \\ill rt'<. 1:rvt· check..,
ARTIFICIALLY FLAVORED
I ' • • • • ,
when you buy one eny flevor
l)&M\C.Q.f\ tf LM.s Muffin Mix .
---------• I
I
I
~· ~ .
IJJJlllll
I
I
I
I
I .
I ---------• C!
i ' I
""Slf3 I
lllll,ll I !
witn the purcnase of a 4-piece
Anchor Hocking~ ovenware see
For details, see the Butter Flavor
Crisco/ Anchor Hocking Displ~y /
at participating Supermarkets.
• • I ,
-.
Orange Coatt OAILV PILOT Wednndty October Cl
Satisfy hearty appetites with Harvest Pork
Reap lhe benefits of fall' boun-
tiful ~arve t wnh a hcany upper
featunna seasonal squa h and
crunchy Cahforma walnut .
Harvest Bork and Walnuts 1s an
unusual and dramau lookana ba te ot sherry, soy Auce. minced
mamd1 h that'SsurpnstaaJytuylO &i,,.er honey and prlic ChoPPed
prepare. OUbes of port and small walnuts add a cnsp coeung While. ;;;;;;;:.;;...;;-.;.;....;.;:.;;;;~~.;...;;.;;...;.;;;.:E;,;..-,;,,.;..;.~;;.;;;;;,;;;;;.;;..;;;.;;..oo~.;.;...;-~__.._ __________ _ onions are •hreaded onto bemboo colorful nnp ofbeked squash make ,,.
skewers and baked an an aromattc anattnacuveandtasty .. bcd .. forthe
·Old Indian favorite
gi~en m~aern twfst
The early American Indians were bines nutritious almonds, lentils
an innovative people. They found and pumpkin in a rich chicken
ways to hunt, fish and gather food stock base. Originally c.ooked over
without sophisticated equipment an open fire, it•s much easier to
To supplement the various prepare now with modem kitchen
meats, or when meat was scarce, a • appliances. "
wide variety of native seeds, ber-
ries, nuts, fruits, roots, bulbs, stalks,
and leaves were consumed.
Although there was often a lim-
ited variety of food, the Indians
found many unusual uses for com-
mon items. By combining their
fixed staples with other edibles,
they had healthful, balanced and r
diverse diets.
After the white man came to
America, the Indians taught them
bow to cultivate many of the native
foOds and in return, the white man
introouce<i many new foods to the
In<iians. l\lmonds, olives and nu-
merous fruit tree cuttings were
introduced and flourished. The
Indians learned to eat and combine
these new foods with their regular
diets.
Many of these dishes have grad-
ually slipped into· our c.oolcing
heritage and can be enjoyed today.
One updated version is Indian
Pumpkin SOup Alniondine. It com-
IJlfDIAN PUMPKIN SOUP ALMON-
DINE
114 cap batter Ol' margarille
i large onlom, chopped
~ cap leatlla
5 caps clalcken stock
1 % caps CuDed pemptia
· ~ teaspoon marj~ram
~ teupoo&\ tllyme
V. ~a coanely groand pep-
f:u TabucO
1 cap ILalf-aJtd·llalf
Salt te taste
~ cap toasted sliced almonds
Melt butter in large kettlei add
onioM and cook until lightly
browned. Stir in lentils and chicken
stock.. Add pu.nilio. Cru$h herbs and
add to soup along with pepper and
Tabasco.
Simmer about 11/2 hours or until
lentils arc done. Let cool, then puree
in blender. At $Crving tim~ heat to
simmering; add haJf and hair and salt.
Serve in soup bowls or cups and top
with almonds. Makes 6 to 8 servings.
~H0NEY6AKED
One taste
is all it tales I
At will only take you a few minutes to take that taste. 1t takes us :a
little longer to perfect 1t Each ham 1s covered with rare spices and
smoked ~ver a special blend of hickory and app,lewood chips for
no less than 30 hours. It's then glazed with costiy imported spices
and golden· honey. Spiral shce<f for easy serving.
Potk-omon skewers
'HABVEST PORIAND'W~
I 'Ai lO t ,.... trtm..e.a --'
1U.Mler, c.t .... n .... ~
ltboUlqoal .. ,,...
Salt ... peppet', .......
• ....... ,... llterry
'A C9p M)' Ullff
11otaable.,11uaa-..~
i .mau ca.Yes prue, ,,_ ...
!ta1po1uaiw,
lnp~··•&I l~ t.Ulespuu _. c.rutan*
ud water
Acorn Squala RIDp (recipe fol· Iowa)
Lightly oil 9 x I J.inch baking pan.
Thread pork cubes and onions onto 6
(10-inch) bamboo skewers. dividina
equally. Season with salt and pepper.
Place in pan; cover with foil. Bake in
32S degree oven I hour. Drain juices
from pork into saucepan; reserve.
Meanwhile, combine sherry, aoy
sauce. ginger, garlic and honey. Pour
over Pork. Bake uncovered 4S
minutes lon,er, basting twice. Again
· drain juices into saucepan; skim and
discard fat. Sprinkle walnuts over:
pork and return to oven.
Meanwhile, to make sauce, bring
juices to boil. Coiiibine c.Omstarch
and water; add to juices. Cook.and stir
until thickened. Spoon some of the
s.uce over walnuts and pork. Con·
tinue to bake l S minutes, basting 2 or 3 times with remaining sauce.
To serve, anange skewers on
squash rings. Spoon over sauce and
walnuts front baking pan. Makes 6
Seml·Boneleu, Fresh USDA Inspected "In The e.g·•
99
, ~ :-( Fre1ll
""' Gracie A Fryers
Whole Fryllg. Chiclra'I
(Cut U~.h 79•)
c
HONEYBAKED GIFT CERTllFICATES $
ARE GIFTS IN GOOD TASTE
•a• •••• • •••..,. W!iO'I\ • ..... , ............. .
"' "'°"' 35lnm g9l • ...... "..,.,_ ~ • e prlnll • ...,. '°"" ~·
!WI•• f\llRTO*' l()llo pqcc$ .. .....,.Po-.. .. ..... . . .
COigate
Triple Padl Toottloutt.7-oz
Tut>eBUY2GET t FREE s2••
--c !
~. 1,
I
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I
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~FqOffer ...........
. t ••lc .Zlrc• .. •
• llt ~ Se!lllga ..........
... Clft ... ~ ....
-'be -.. • ---_.,._..., ....
.., .. Or.-a.:.o.
Ill*
~1 '._.. •... $.~
in:ws. ..ct! """1 $50 1111 ~ .....
Ffelh c.10ts 0. . 2 :,.Sgc Fnlstl Shalots.:::
Fresh Spinech 2--79'
PN1 Onion& -::;. 99< Ft'\it A:Jls -°'"" Onions .. -11• Red A3ci$hes
Turkeysaucedpungendy
"Nouvelle cu1 me.. mtroduoed
n peppercorns to the Ameri n
cook. Th youn bcrrac of the
pepper '\"tnC cxud umqu fl ~or
that enhances many fine d1 h .
While food pens conunue to
dcbe1ctbclasnngpowero_{nau.~~~........t.• ... ·
CUISIDC, one thing IS certain: tho
characteri tic ~en pep~rcoms
are here to stay.
BeCJluse of their assenive navor.
~ peppercorn> are espctially
exc1tmg when teamed with more
delicate meat uch a turkey.
Turkey Slioes with Green Pep-
percorn Sauoe 1 a ~ood example. When turkey hces are utetd
TURKEY '' .. WITH GREEN
PEPPl-. RN SAUCE
I' po.ndsdllasUcesofC.Ufomla
turkey brea t
Salt aDd pepper
! tablespoo ucb oU d bah r
I cup dry tt1llte ~l e
3 creea olli o , m ee4
White wine Auce with
pungent green peppercorn• pub Up AU teed. turkey
allcem.
CALIFORNIA
FRESH FRYERS
FO STER FARMS • Z ACKY FARMS
WHOLE BODY
CHICKEN
LIMIT 4
Sl•LO• nP •oan WILSON c••• ••• ••••n
STIAlt •. .U. 2.tt
R~~E~D L& 2.19
f".ormer John Hot links CH ftolid\
SMOKED SAUSAGE.... . LB 1.69
L SI.IC• ll&COll
-~~G-8 1a._l_A_9 ___ HUGHES I 59 POINT CUT L& •
AiAiiiaN HALIBUT STEAKS ..... LB 2.69
GllSHA 7-0Z. Ill WAl'lll
CL080X
BLIACH
HALF
GALLON .59
28 01 ~ °' Chunky 12.01 Package
09
LIMIT 4
SKIPPY PEANUT BUTIER ........... 2.39 DUNCAN HINES COOKIES ...... 1.39
LB.
Snow White FrMh Bunch
CAULIFLOWER .. .". . ..... LB .69 GREEN ONIONS
•IHNl•ena.aw
~~ L& 1.89
LoUrs Rich <>-l Roosted Smoked ot
BBQ BREAST OF TURKEY ..... Le 3A9
C81SCO
OIL
~~ 1.89
12 01 Con1 Assorted, Mount01n Dew ~PACK PEPSI COLA . . . ....... I.ff
~ SO Ct Cop1 or 60·Ct Tobs
·~ ~=o~~~ 3 2!. ~·~L SAPP080 i ~ .3.S 01 l'tlg SAVI Stt01ght Bourbon
.__£HICKIN ICHlllAll llA.MIN ..• 26
901 H.01 & Eot 6 Oi
:; •• I " 1.7Stil.1Ta
:,:,:;-.:--_ JIM 81AM ...
JOHNSON'S BABY POWDER 1.59 ASSORTED TEMPURA ............... .... . . . ..• 99 1.75·l1ter
CLUNY SCOTCH .. . .................. . • Ot Assorted Sturoluku II Oz
CUTEX POLISH REMOVER . . .79 MANDARIN ORANGES ....
Hormel I ' • lb t> lhop9d
CANNED HAM a.ff
FOUR DOUBLE
MANUFACTUBWS cou
NO OfMlll IWHMA•IT OOUIU COUPON llOUlmO
WI DOUal ntl YAWi Of POUi MANUMCNllll"I COUflONI
........ .......
.. COMP.ARTMENT I 19 II OZ PKG •
60z.1Spf1ne Roil 5homoi Of~---
ROYAL DRAGON WONTON 1.69
Triflwoet ~'
GRAPEFRUIT JUICE .-19
.... ':IW'AmA•
• RKHS caAM ••ti
,.,,. • OR ~HOC ECLAlRS I 29
I.Or PKGS e
•
, .
Build calcium
stores while ··
there 's tim e
The amount of bone ma s a
woman accumulates by age 35 is a
key factor in predicting o
teoporosis later in life says Charle
Sharp. M.D., director of the Center
for Metabolic Bone Disease and
Endocrinology in Los Anacles.
Since most women obtain their
peak bone mass around the age of
35, it is critically imPQnant that
their calcium stores bt as high as
possible.
It appears that the 1fC8ter the
bone mass. the les5er the chance of
osteoporosis, a progre ive lhin-
nin$ of the bones that takes place
dunng the aging proces . o~teoporosis is a painful and
ometimes disabling disease that
results in more than one million
broken bones annually. at a medical
cost of SJ.8 billion. One in four
white women over ~he age of 60
sufTen from osteoporosis.
Sharp, who attended a con-
ference on osteoporosis at the
National Institute of Health, said
the conference panel agreed that a
diet rich in calcium and moderate
exercise are key factors in the
prevention of osteoporosis.
The panel recommended that
premenopausal women consume
1,000 milligrams of calcium a day.
says Sharp. .
Since milk itnd dairy products
supply nearly three-founhs of the
calcium available in the American
diet,· these foods should not be
overlooked, he cautioned. They
also contain vitamin 0, which
helps transport calcium throu~out
the body.
A glass of whole milk provides
nearly 300 milligrams of calcium,
while lowfat and skim milk provide
~lightly more. due to the higher
concentration of milk solids. Most
yoguns average abount 300 milli-
grams of calcium per cup.
Women concerned about their
weight can choose skim or lov.fat
milk products, including yogurt.
.. cottage cheese and some chccscs. ·
"The body uses calcium through-
out life, not only to grow strong
bones and teeth, but to assist in
nerve transmission and blood clot·
ting. and in maintaining muscle
tone and a steady heanbeat," Shal'J)
explains.
"Obviously, the ~akium the
body uses every diy' must be
replace<!. Thaf s why I encourage
adolescents and young adults to
start building their calcium stores
early in life," says Sharp. "Once
osteoporosis has started, it can only
be slowed. The damage done can·
not be reversed."
Holiday ideas
demonstrated
Diana and Paul von Welanetz,
authors of several cookbooks and
run a cooking workshop in Los
Angeles, will share their expertise at
a demonstration Nov. 8 in Rob-
inson's, Newport Beach.
The holiday cooking demon-
stration, by reservations only. will
be presented at 9 a.m. Fee 1s $1 S.
and reservations are to be made b)'
callin& the executive secretary at the
store . • • • Dolores Hoffman will present
holiday hors d'ocuvres at 11 a.m.
Tuesday at My Favorite Things
Cooking School. 14370 Culver
Drive, Irvine.
h1cludcd in the proaram will be
Stuffed Potatoes. Teriyaki Chicken
Brocheues. Pate en Croute and
Herbcd Cheese PufTs .• fce as $20.
For re5ervations call SS2-0221. • • • A systematic: companson of
wines, a Coastline Community
College clHs. will bC presented by
wine connoisseur Alexander
McGeary at 7 p.rn. Nov. i at the
Park Newport Apanments, New· pon Beach.
The workshoe wall anclude a
historical overview of the Oah·
fomaa wine induS\ry, how and whercarapcs~regrown and st)lesof
wane J>roduct1on.
For information, call S46·7600. • • • European Holiday Pastncs will
bC demonstrated at 6:30 p.m. Nov.
Bat Fasscro's lntcmataonal 2919 E.
Coast H1ahway, Corono del Mar.
Cost is $23, and reservations can be
made by calling 673·2343
Cl
Winery's second brand no lo er
Once upon o ume, ll s very re d Jextbook dctllllUons 01 Cali-Harvest Scmillo,, a ma or crape This new rclealc 11 lbe BateS
10 tell ii hy wmery crcatoo n fom1nGewurztrammcrandwan1 10 vanety in the ma'keup of famous Ranch' ma n from chc Santa second label. It w a w Y to II pu11 a cork \hat will provide lhe French Sauternes like Chatcau Cruz area :fl r whi h the winery
thcr surplus wmc or sttond rate petfcct example .. thi• 11 at. The d'Yquem become usuraa~ reaowned For
wine The econd brand wn th one aroma 111~t ex.ample ofGewurz The Wine as produc:td very much ~ttinJ the l 9IO YID• and au te eral other w a Y"'DtW
th lhecheaplookinglabel ndthe ••spice "T ebalanceisJustria,btfor in the Sauternes style, wnh 12 ovem~durioanestremebeat Bordeaux 11llIM>l11 •mmr1in..,,
beappncc accompan 'na heany and spicy pcrcentalcohol, 14pen:entrcsidual spdJ riJbt at barvesc wne every ICCelllblc a earlier v......, .a
While 1h1ssituation still cxi t U fOods,just 1ke.all thole-Wine books <1YPJ, anchufficient acidity IO tee ll other Yt11t1eeof'thi1 wtoe Mlbeefta lbould • mauetoast,:-It--is-
me wineries, it by no means tell you Oewun should. That s ice a for decades. There n also lbc clause The 1971 and 1979 ~n~~)' lho!t'in& hilus of dial ._
ys.holdstrue.. comes'lhrougtl m tllellavor very Strona influence or die rare ancr werethe'wmerr1 finrUbttnet-~{iifCalnorn~aiiiliiqUi&ty CW
A classic example is Fetzer and in the termentauonJ I am no1 a fan strongly, combining with intense noble mold Botryus, 11v1na the eft'oru. and both won aold medals tills one and cxpea n '° appeeaate
Bel Arbrcs. Both brands are owned of stems. The wine has also done ns fruit to make the wine a real wine that very s~al ahd un-at tht presu1aou1 Oranac Countf an value.
by the Fetzer family. Initially, Bell time in oak. Buy a bO le, and if it's mouthful. There is just a touch of mistakeable honeyed quahty. De.. Fau. If you have troGble fiadiJll die l Arbres was a way to dis po of your cup of Pi not, get 6ack for a case residual sweetness, but you'll hard-lic1ous now. and better every year It is easy to ptOJect that this 1981 wine, wnte for rctatl informauon
fetter's surpluses and rejects. No while it lasts. lynoticeitfortheverycrispacid.ity. /ordecadcs. ver1ion will win its mQdal too in to SantaCruzMountaanVaneyud.
more. Now Bel Artrcs is a totally D o a a a M a r l a 1 9 I ! Soon to be released under the SUta Cn11 MHatala Vme7ard next year's JUdaillPt and in some 2300 Jarvis Rd , Santi OUz. CA separate wincmnkina facility, with GewantramlDer ($6): If you have Chalk Hill label is a 1982 .. Late. IHI Cabene~ S.1vl,POD ($12.SO): ways at may bctbe bcs1 vanll&C )'ct, 9S06S.
a different winemaker, and some ,..--------"'-------------.....,.-~----.----------....,,.--....;...--...,...--------------~--------Bel Arbres wines arc actually more
expensive than some under the Feuer label.
In Sonoma County, there is
another example with )Ct another
explanation for two different labels.
Wines labeled DOnna Maria and
Chalk Hill come from the same
Healdsbu11 area winemaking fa-cility. Deciding which is the first
and which is the second label
ccnainly cannot be made on the
basis of appearance. The Chalk Hill
label has one of the classiest looks in
the industry, and the new 8Qld·
embossed Donna Maria label also
looks rich and impressive.
Price isn't a giveaway, either,
because both labels offer fair and
moderate pricing. Wine quality?
Once again, quality is present under
both labels, though style is some-
what different.
In this case there really isn't a
.. second" label. The factor that
decides whether the wines will be
labeled Chai}( Hill or Donna Maria
is strictly source of grapes.
If the wines arc made from arapcs
gown by the winery, they go under
the Donna Maria brand. If the
gra~ are purchased from nei~
bohng groy, ers, the wines appear
under the Chalk Hill label. In some
instances the same variefy appears
under both labels, but because of
the differing grape sources, as well
as different cellar practices, the
wines taste quite different.
Cbalk HUI UIS Cbardjumay ($7
or less): A real "best buy,•• and the
kind of Chardonnay that should
appear on every restaurant wine
list. Not only would it still 1>e
reasonably pnced after being sub-
jected to high restaurant markups,
but it is immediately drinkable.
There is a totally charming light
vanilla and varietal bouquet, and a
light, bright mouthfcel that makes this Chardonnay a real pleasure to
drink. It is the kind of white wine to
inspire a party of two to order the
second bottle. .
Donna Marla 118! Chardonnay
($10): Rieber than the Chalk Hill in
every way, with more extraction, a
Jonaer finish and certainly more
oak influence both in bouquet and
flavor.· It is more likely to receive
connoisseur praise and win awards,
but I could sure drink more of the
Chalk Hill version.
Cbalk Hlll 1183 SauvilJIOD Blanc
($6): Another winner: There's a
soft, lush ripeness that is a first
impression when this wine enters
the mouth, but it finishes lively,
crisp and refreshing. It also avoids
the ovenly .. grassy0 9uality of so
many wines oflhis vanety. I like it a
lot. Donna Maria IHI Pillot Nolr
($6): Never mind that this isn't my
personal favorite style of Pinot
Noir. I love it as a red wine, and it is
a style of Pinot Noir fancied by
many. It is a multiple medal
winner, including a gold at Orange
County, and you don't find many
wines with such lofty credentials
selling in this modest price ranse.
There's a bit of spice, a touch of
pepper and loads of fruit, some
berry quality and a tiint of
herbaceousness probably from the
popular practice of including stems
Flavorful spices
suited to diets
In today's climate of concern
about reducing sodium, calorics.
fats and cholesterol, spices and
herbs could be called "\he good
guys.'' People on all kinds of diets
arc finding spices perfectly suited to
their needs; they're low injodiumt
low in calories. low in fat ana Cholesterol, yet so rich in flavor.
A good su~suon is to keep a
shaker of mixed spices at the table,
and carry it with you when eating
out. Herc is a blend .suuested by the
American Spice Trade Association:
2'h teaspoon' each of paprika, prlic
powder and powdered mustard, S
teaspoons of onion pawder, Va
tcaspaon around white pepper and v. teaspoon celery seed.
If you would like a collection of
recipes suited td""'your needs -
whether low in sodium, calorics or
cholcsterol-send'Sl forTheSJ>lcc
& Diet Cookboolclet 10 the Ameri-
can Spice Trade Association. P.O.
Box 2961, Hillside. NJ •• 0720S.·
"' The booklet also contains 1
dieter" spice chan as well as the
nutntional compo11uon of pices.
TOPPING
Jn a t.quan bowl with an clectnc
bfatcr. beat 3 OVACtt cream cheese
until fluffy -about 30 seconds Add
VJ cup heavy cram and ~ cup l\lllr.
beat unul blended IC:fllpin1 bowl ,as
ncctSllr}' Beat 1n I &abl 1poon eqsna~~ake about I cup serve
with Arie Belt)' ors mllar pudcltnp
• • t
FREEZER PLEASERS
WAFFLES e
Or Apple Onn.1mon. Alatt .i.n1ma la-Ounce Ball
~2P,.~~IC LITES 299
WEIGHT WATCHERS 179 ...... Pwmlgllna. e.o.-ac.
GREEN OIANT BROC. =" 99 Caulllloow WO... llliDc, fi Ca& WO-10.0. ...
SCJNKIST ORANGE JOICE 109
12.o..n.. °"'
.~LA CREME 109
OH BOY DEWXE PIZZA ~ 1w.n '9dl. 32.0-. ..
PEPPERIDGE FARM ,..I)' ~~Sc..~l>Cjoft.7a-Oilka
ORE-IDA THINS °' ---~ 24-0i.nca Bet
OREGON FARM CAKE C....f7~1b
COTTY SARK SCOTt:H
17'-Uter &tile
279
135
125
209
699
BLACK VELVET WHISKY
1799
999
299
Cenedllr!. 17,.Ut., Boctle
TAYLOR CALIF. CHABLIS II'-lloM. 0-111 ll1anc Fr Colom. 1 ""1..tr 81
KESSLER WHISKEY.
Blended. ~ 7~Utet "'*'•
JIM BEAM BOURBON 7'CJ.Jl\l11Uiter Botti.
E & J BRANDY ?~Bottle
999
499
499
CHANDOHSPARKLING W1NFag9
,. Valle)-&'lot. ~ill ., .... •• --u-
CARLO ROSSI CHABLIS 299 ~ 111ii ... °' --~ llott~
MOTIS APPLESAUCE 2~hr
DEL MONTE BEANS
CiMI\. C:UI. 16~ Can
NIBLETS KERNEL CORN
WltOW 12~ Cati
I
VONS 1/2 PRICE
MANAGERS' SJU.E
CRESCENT
ROLLS "'°"' 8-0urQ~
VONS JACK CHEESE
flft!lly ~ La•oe Sia "'"°"* si .. LB. 2.341
VONS COOKED HAM Oblont $lie, a.ounce l'8cUOI
PILLSBURY QCJICK ROLLS 139 C-Of Appl<t l>Mltill ,.,,, ... 16-0L P1ig,
CARL BCJDDIG MEATS 59 Thin Slle9d ~-40una PK... e
OSCAR MAYER FRANKS 169 ii.et 0< Ill.-I 5-0un<e PKl<IQt
GALLO SALAME CHUBS 199 .... ..., MMlot ,...(I~~ ).()9)
DAKOTA FARMS CHEESE 159 coe, ~ °' ~ Oleddlt t-Ot. ~
FRIGO RICOITA CHEESE 189 J2~ °"""' ~ ec;
ECKRICH SOPREME HAM 159 ~ ~. 5'!!0illd "'Hone) 6-0a. ....
DEUCIOOS 89 APPi.ES m-e
"-cl Of Cio'del'I ~ 0'°"1\, 5wMt end Juicy
4'?81..00MING VIOLETS•74 ~ 'lltllllM(•';f,& T~ Pllnc.t EA 'l'9l£A e
FRESH CARROTS -2 i 29 .._ ,._ Off. 8Mlli ..,.. s •
~,..2ll~ .,.L&.99
READY PAC CHOP SUEYB34 Or St!: f'!)' ~ 140unct,... EA e
ROMAINE LETI'CJCE 49 .... Spew Ul. ,JIJ [A •
JUMBO WALNUTS 79 l!l.itM. IW\~ v.n.ty La •
FRESH SPINACH 39 .... Sci-" La 15 ICJlt •
RUSSET POTAlOES 3 k100 !Mira~ l"NMa. 12-0wd Ptct.ge .99 s
FRESH LEMONS 19 ...,..,,,,,,.,.,.,'°" 1.00 tA •
EXIRA LARGE 39 a U\ •
CORNISH GAME HENS 129 fmll.,.... ,__ LB.
~~~u?!,...., u.. 79
CORN BEEF BRISKElS 149 Mil TMM 1111911 (Fi. Oil L& l.., La
SLIM PRICEeMCON 129 1-faund~ L&
PORK LOIN RQ\STS 11ane1m 298 Wl'-t "9clpt ...... tc:.-a. Otopo La J Oii! La
RC COIA
DIET RITE
Or &io-r FrM RC 100 G? ..6-0llia. '2.uter 8oU --·--OCEAN SPRAY 159 · c~ Jua ~ ~ 8aale
HONlS 10MA10 SACJM:-'l:!.~f 00 ~c.. --u.
•AMERICAN BEAUTY 39 ~tL 12~ "9c'-tt •
==.Es:•.97 ~Dall ~·
46-0uncll JM -. ....
.49
119
139 RAISIN BRAN Slim~ ~lb
PAPER 94 PIATES e °"'* WIWW. Dinner Of~ I~ P9cQoe ... IM
MARINA lOILET TISSUE 89 4-.rl...... •
ZEE PAPER lOWELS 59 99-o-i~ •
~~-52Ff TISS<JE .65 ~~1;!49
Pniutla, 4~0&. 0.-ilen. 9:01:.. Stid<. Of lWllt.
l'\inl Twllt CM 8-01 (Jnalted a...11en .... ••
FRCJIT DRINKS ~ 111a 89
fNtt SWiil !'NII "'""' °'"'191 0,. .. °""' ....,. •
APPLE JCJICE . 59
Slltft ~ 'UMf!. ~ ~ •
PEPSI BEVERAGES 12~c-179 ... Diec. UglW. ....., f-. -. OI oi.t,; Ml. 0...
...... ,,.... ._., i .. I ,,_ ..... _...,. • _,.. ....... -~-
. " .. den't p.,. ,,...,.. ... ,., .. ~ &I I L
•
t.a
I THE WHARF
FRESH BAY SCALlDPS 199 ''°"",,,.,..-LA
RED SNAPPER FJU FTS 249 ,,.,_ F..,. n. l'klll< z:.,.-• -LI.
FRESH SEA BASS 369
flam '-:!lie lA •
RAW SHELL ON SHRIMP 899 1--CM 2~ -...&
THE DAIRY
ORANGE JOICE IOO p..,. ~ c-:--~ CU\
CANNON YOOORTS ~Mlunct~
SHEDDS SPREAD 14'bulld Cl'QCt.
JERSEYMAID EGG N0G OM~.~ Q!\Ofl
1'9
.49
.69
.99
..
-
'.
Old World soups now ptodate
~
America's ciuiSin~ like 'he coun-for the tabl to become tender. adnilletl cap ired wlH YIMpt
U)' itself, has been influenced Gazpacho is a vcactable-based I CH (II oaces) •ae1 beans, ~ 1eu,... ult ~ immensely by the immigrant who soup brought to American by uadralaed IJe &ea~ ,.,,...
came here from 1830 to l 920. Spanish immigrantS. Tod Y there i IH1peH1 h1&u1 c'1cllea '.!;:"::~'~•~=: u1ee
It .is estimal.Cd that over l 2 , arc as many version of th1uoup as ':::,.. tll)'IDe 1 cu U! eacaj vqetable
million German • Pol ' Cz.echs, there arc cooks. This recipe com-ae .. -,•fOD41 bllck = ~tall J•lce
I .,,.. C' h d :r r · · bincs cucumber, green pepper, ~ • . h ..-11..J.~-n~!J rrenc an 1ta tans mm1--onion anc:l tornatoc.5 in a viooetab e -Cut usqe·ihnkun VJ.inc ; --_... paled du~ this 90-year period. . •0 place in Dutch oven wnh remaining Ohop 1h cup each of cucum~r.
Man)' fint gbmpstd America in the cocktail Juice base. Bacon bits tnarcdient . Brina to boil; reduce SJ"CC1) pepper and 0~1~n: set aside for
form of the Statue of Liberty. which sprinklc:d on top of ~ch serving heat. Simmer 20 minutes until ves· pm1sh. Cut rema1n111g cucum~r,
is situated on Bcdloc Island in the give this soup mtcresun1 texture etables arc tender. Makes 6 servinp. green pepper and onion into large
New York Harbor. and a delicious smolcy taste. l chunks and place in blender. Add
Tod ·t· t t' f ' GAZPACHO tomato pulp. vinegar and next 4 ay, an CXCJ mg res ora ion 0 0' 'D WORLD SAU AGE SOUP ~ ... "'-tat • d It ·11 be ... 1 med.11m C9nmber, ,eel~ scuonmgs. tu~ s UC as un er way. wt l pectue ui uace1) smoked lff41 removed Cover; blend at high speed 30
100 ycan old Oct. 28, l 986, and the A1111e Dab ! medl•m 1tet• ~ppe.n. eored seconds lO puree vqctables. Stir in ________ _:_.,..__...,..... ____ ~-------.-.~· official celebration is planned for ! carro&I, peeled ud lMB1J 1Uced ud seeded • vegetable cocktail juice. Chill
Independence Day of that year. 1 small laead cabN1e. cored Hcl 1 1ar1e oalo• (aboat H olllfft), thoroughly. Serve cold in chilled
Though· these immiarants . 1Uedded (aboa& 1~ po111td1) peeled bowls. Paureservcdcucumber,grecn
J brought few . material belongings 1 qurt water _ 1 ~ C'lpt aemaco ptalp (cortt, 1ffcl1 pepper, onion and bacon bits as
with tqem, they contributed the 1 cu (11 ouces) wbite beaa,, aad peeb remove4) prnish. Makes 6 5trvings. richness of their native culture to _..:__:::._:::_==:..::=~=:r..-~~~~~::,:::, ____ ~~=::..:::.::::.::..::,:.:.::;!::., __ ...:__L--:__. _ __;:..._ ____________ ==:-=t---:::::::::--:;-
cvery fabric of American livina.
Jack Anderson reveals in the lailJ Plllt
" Food was no exception.
Soup, probably more than any
other food. is basic to every na-
tionality. Usually it is considered
p; simple fare and every ethnic group
has one or more soups that are
uniquely its own.
Old World Sausage Soup is
typical of the mid.die European
countries. Sausage varied from
country to country in Europe, even
from village to village within a
country, so each soup recipe was ~ 4-i'1e. . to;;?; -Sa~~~~bin~~dn:~~~ : .-~-.;;;~u:1¥tfo~:;;~;· ~'llllL:
white beans with carrots and cab--1 ••111111 ••• ir-........... ,.. ....... ". I
bage in a chicken broth base that : I WITH nus COUPON I ::_:::_==_;::.==1
becomes hearty fare with the ad-I $ I FF dition of smoked sausage links. 1 00 I -~ No doubt the sausage soup :·; • :.~?i o• I ~
T ... BONE
STEAKS
~ recipes brought to America by ~I ON ANY BONEL ESS •UNIT 1 I ' ~ : ·
, immigrants were the kinds that EF ROAST simmered on the stove for houn. · 1 BE I .
Our modem-day version is suited -, . ~c="~~=~:e'°"u I to today's lif~les. It can be -• COUPOH 0000 HOY 1 ntllU NOY. 7, 1114 ...... -..... ;/ ·----------------.... assembled in less than 10 minutes -~ -~
andmustsimmcrontylonaenough ------•1 -----· ... ----29
t
,.
LAMB •••
From Cl
CHOCOLATE ICE CREAM
~ cap Hpr ~ cap unree&nel
COCM
! tabletpoofal CO?'D IWCla •
14 teupooa aall
!C9pt milk
Y, ewp Upt cen IJl'.lll--
t eu yotb, 1Upt]y beaten
% e9p1 lteavy cream
1 ~ teaspoou vaallla
~ n p 1Uvered almood1, toasted
(optloJla)) .
in )..quart saucepan sttr together
sugar, cocoa. com starch and salt
Graduaily·stir in milk until smooth.
Stir in com syrup and egg yolks.
Stirrins constantly, bring to boil over
medium heat and boil 1 minute. Pour
into laIJC bowl. Cover surface with
plastic wrap.
Refri1eratc at least 2 houra or until chilled. Stir in cream and vanilla.
Freeze in 2-quart electric or hand
~ crank freezer following manufac-
turer's directions. If desired, stir io
, almonds. Cover. freeze several hours
or until finn. 2 quarts.
For leH rldl clocolaie Ice cream:
follow recipe for Chocolate Ice
Cream. Increase milk to 3 cups.
Reduce heavy cream to l cup.
r CHOCOLATE FUDGE SAUCE
lnpnpr
-"' cap auweetnecl cocoa
'4 tealpooa salt
r r.
"' np Upt or dark cona syrup
~ cap heavy eream ·
S table1poou mupr'llle
1 ~ tea1,.oa vuDla
; Jn 3-quart saucepan stir tosether
supt, cocoa and Salt. Stir in corn
syrup and heavy cream until well
blended. Stirring constantly, cook
over medium-low heat until mixture
comes to a full rollinJ boil. Stirring
occasionally, boil 3 minutes.
Remove from heat. Stir in marpr-
ine and vanjlla until marprine is
melted and sauce is well blended.
Serve warm over ice cream. Store in
tightly covcre4 container in rcf riger-
ator.
To reheat: stirring frequently, cook
over low heat 3 or 4 minutes or until
pourable. About 2 cups.
CROOOLATE-STllA WBERRY
TA.RT
~ C9f uslfted au perpose f1ou
~ Ctlf DIWHce.ecl eec08 ~ teaipOOG bakla& p_owder "' a..11'>°°9 lf"ll4I cl.IUmoa (Opdou )
&;.~salt
% C1lp marprtae
1 A P ••car ,..,.
1 tealOOD vulU.
l pl8t1 (aboat)
wllllele ud1llced Strawberry Olaie (recipe foll•••)
• Liahtly arease 9-inch removable
' bottom tart pan. In smaJI bowl ttir
~ together flour. cocoa. bakin& powder.
cinnamon and salt. if desired.
Jn large bowl with miur at me. dium speed beat marprino to soften.
GtadualJy beat in aupr until well
blended. Beat in CUS. one It a time,
bcatinf. well after each addition. Beat in vanilla. Reduce speed to low; beat
in flour mixture just until blended.
Spread evenly in prc~red pg.
-Bake in 3S()...depee oven JO,
minu1e1 or until cake teater intcrted
in center comes out clean. Coolin pan
• on wi~ rack. Arranac whole and 1liccd 1traw-
betties on W1. Spoon Straw'brir'Y
Glau over 1traWberrics. Refriaeratc
at least 2 hours. Remove from 1J>an.
Gamilh with whipped cream. 10
. -
rvinp.
STJUWBURY GLAZE: Ma1h I
cup tliced •trawbenies. Measure ~J
cup. In l quan 11u~n 1tir lOfthcr
l teaspoons corn starch and v, cup
li&bt corn 1yrup un.ul m~tp. tir in
muhtd auawbtmes. Stamna con-
mntly, Mina to boll over m d1um
heat and boil I minute. Remove from
heat. train. Cover url1 cc with
waxed i>apcr; cool to lukewarm.
AbOut 1/J cup
~ SAVE c.OllO'()N 0()00 •' • ' • ----1 IOJ'IHf.lll'IC.6'.lfOt"· • 1 ~ ZS~ ... -.,.,. ..... (i,. ~ ~I ~:~~~~:04uPON I c i---
-• CHUNK LIGHT ..... ""' I ~ -. EA.1--•UNrT2 .
I OH! C~N "" CUITOMll'I • AOUl.Tt OHU I :::::>-
WITH lllHUMUM Ste.ot PUlllCHAM -
-. C~ GOOO NOY. 1 THllU NOY. 1.1114 ...._• ::::-
..,. ----------------~ .... .---=o ~~ -------------...-----. ..-______ , ~-----·. -
-· COUo'C)OI 0Q00 A f oOl l --· SAVE ~n .... ...,CJ.4llOl!NA·1-
:1 I~ WITH THIS CO UPON •ll(u .. •""f'' ··-:! KRAFTX•UMJTJ 25C I-PKG.
=1 MACARONI 1-..:::--
_ 11 &o~~!,.~~usTo..cl'I• AOuuao•cu EA. 11 ~
wtTH llllNUMUM 11e.• PU91CHA.Sf __...--_-COUP<* 0000 NOY 1 T..,.U NOV. 7. ,.... ,,.... ~ -. -----------------....
•LIMIT
2
EA.
.BEEF
RIB E\'E
STEAKS
99
..
, MARINA
BATHROOM TISSUE
•I.JS OZ. DfLU"[
. \ 1 S OZ. AUl.\GE
.• 6 71-0Z PU'ft.IOM
• 6.1 Ol. CHCEIC
• f OZ. UPtlCNA
WllH M AT
CELESTE PIZZAS
AVINO RELATE TO PRl!VIOU WEEK'S
ALPHA :TA P.RlCE OR LAST DATf PRIOR ro INfTIAL PRICE ~DUCTION EXCL
Of! AOVEKTlSEO 0R$>kOMOTIONAU
W• ACC•PT ALL
SUP•R,ARKETS'
DOUBL• COUPONS J Oller •PPlfa only lo cut1tnt '"'~rmafllet
coupcna n SoutMm Callfoml1 Coupon
comblnauons wh cfl HCMd lhe value ot thf
(I "" not IC~tO 0nt, lfNf'l&dielaftt".I
coupon1 of 11 00 01 !Ml can bt dOU'bt.o
Liquor and d11ry ~ ~i,/dtd bite• to limllt lmptfnt9f on Nch eoupon
Trlpl or un1imJ1td Coupon oflera i'Ot 1ce1pttd
Tnl1 ofl11 effective Novembtr 1 tl'ttougn 't, 10M
LB.
It
BONELESS
CHUCK
STEAKS
69
LB.
EA.
•l.IOZ.
•IUF
•NAM J.I." • COllNID Kif , •INOKID ·. nmcn
•IMOICID
PMTMMI
EA •INOl&ID • C"9CUN
SKAGGS AIJtHA BETA
SUCED LUNCH MEATS
•
. I
,_. Or:8"Qe Coal DAILY P LOT /W41dneeday Oct()ber 114 C7
'Encore!' cookbook in repeat performance
OWnPIJD t ts 111 be tscd urtday m honor of the repeat
benormancc of .. Enoore! 1?3n1es knd recipes wonh re~tmg. • The cookbook, wnttcn and pub-liJ&ed by the Chopan Chapter of
l;.Muna Beach as a fund-raising
eftOn lor the Oranae County Per-formln& Aru Center, was fim
published in September 1983. Jt
&old almOlt entirely by word of
mouth, and as its reputation grew
ponion decided to print more coP1es. •
So. the second edition will be
unveiled during the celebration in ~~ ~mcrald Bay home of John and
ur. ~ar'kcr, Toasts will be raised
•anaels" such as Donalda Ptlleilei who heJDCd underwrite the Wit edition, and committee mem-
ben hod voted three n. to llie liersclf m m ~ puns for many 4 l :i..,una cataf. 926S2 he& aho froll lidel. ""' I~ -...-pro1~L recipe uUcs lO the extent that c en Here Ha rtJ)nnt of repe Oaacau aoc nectrry Ranai ol ..a -' ••I ..._ n NJ1!1 • ••Encore!" con tam more than non-coo will find the book enter· Gu1liru, a elepnt 1p1cce de re-will be later di1nntid Uld 11 t' I
22S recipes in two m in aect1on 1mng. The ~k was recognized sasuncc made ~ith 10 crepe la)'Ctl Ade bUed pau II .. ..i~ '**'
The first, "Benefit Performances las1 spnng m the 19th annual with• 1Ubtle mo of filhnas pl(SU 1be Dilbt befoN. well. Jtdriipa • '-
111 fund-ra111ng part1 and how to Author• Rccogruuon Celebrataon, •m1Fate. cweraiek CootCNllll
produce them -for love or ~nsottd b~UCI Fncnd of the caEPE GATEAU GUIULINI Bike uacovered 1n ..._led JO. bldl .oMlict *illl a
mone ~con JQ fCCipcs de l c uorary. 111~ '""9 ~ 6Wlil "'tor lbout 30 .ita•!J. 'ti dMW ~
pany plans and an unusual chock-Party guests. of cou~ will a:.:::.:•:w.. loneer if ~ was rdl .. 1fled. pour at .._. '4 cap
list for each event. sample .. Enoore! .. spcctalU~ -such aseete oa &op will liah~ ~ JIU IO llXad ....,
The second half, .. Pravate s Crepe Gateau Guihn1. Pate ~IUUal Meanwhilc,overlow ~' ovcrhonom
Lessons: an arbnra"' selection of Verde, Chce.sc Toasts Czerny and a...eueee-red"'folletJ checteauce.dtinwilhmilk:.;-mf ......._...__._.._ fj • , D..-... and fill CorTea IC'alOnlJ11. Add o ,._, avorite reapcs," ranaes from Leontyne R1oc Pdaf. ch .... .-re c:repcs, uuc.c 1 tnp ubueo and'" ceaspooa dry mUllard. 4 ...,,,.,,_ ...... -..
"Sugar Plum Fancies," a chapter The cookbook is available m ooee an ovm~f platter larjer Oamalh picau ""'~'/ and ..... ,., ......... .._ that may be a downfall for dcsse.n local cookware stores, the • ..... na than the crepes. ter one~ on .--nt on bu .. _ Sl·-in !'di _ _.. b" id,.., l • I d J ,....u it. SP'Qd 'Nllh 'h of the ch1Cken r•-· ""·• ---..-overs, io • mpromptus an m-Beach Museum of An tores, the filh~ Alternate crepes and fiUanp wedgcs.OfJersauec. Saves 12. •~ Cllf9 .......... .._.
provisations," a ries of quick Ruz Canion Hotel gift hop in bqinnina 'Mth chicken. then pjmch. II••••• I
recipes described as "good acts to ~una Niguel, and by mail For then mushroom until you have UK,d er. Batt« Pew*"' tl'l 11
havcreadyinthewings." mad orders, enclose a check for eaohfilhng3llmcs.Placclastcrepcon 2~.-lnbk:ndernuxlbemchedbuuer CookboOk editor•uthor Vir-$15.90 plus S2 handling, and send 4 'IP 6ourand l eupofmilt. Brias&O boil
ginia Mackey Snyder indulged to The Chopin Chapter, P. 0. Box '°~rost wath cheese uce. Some 4 ~ bmtter. mellff over low be.at, *"ma& coutandy i"""'_... __________________ __, ______ ~..:........:__.;:...._ ____ ......:. ________ --:..:__;__:.__..: ______ ..:___:~:.:._:.:.:.:;.....:.:.:.::;:::.....=.:::::.....:.:::::: __ __::....:.;__:_~_;,_-------------,M1nu~willbeverythic:k.Gradually
add I !h cups more milk and seuon-
mp. Coot and ltif" 3 10 s .... k>nF.; add ebceK· eoaunuc sumac
untll it I melted. Set uide oft'beaL
gg
LB.
• llC(f L()tN
LB.
PREMIUM
RUSSET POTATOES
MIXED
PORK LOIN
CHOPS
29
LB.
LB.
RED EMPEROR
GRAPES
--
--
LARGE • GOLDEN
DELICIOUS APPLES
MIGHT\' DOG
DOG FOOD
•
a.. .....
~--...... ~
~ C9I ilJ'8tM Swltl mee.e lc.pdleele ....
Mix all iiJgredimts lotetber.
S,••dlf'WN t ,.~.. rnaea m-nM .,.... ...........
!illao.ta,d1 ....
%IMl1t••-lliilael'
*.4 IH:lfH•••tl Pe,,erle._..
~ Clf sntei s.... dleese
~ Clf c:Me9t.... -
Sql.ICC'ZE acas liquid from drained
spinach. Melt butler m stllel. Coak
aiKi sUr SplDadt sbdots and taa0n-inp over medium beat b l 10 :S
minutes. Remove from fire.. ll1J' in
pted ~and for asic:r ~
lfll. v, ~~sauce.
J' a ... ...... 1..-.... t c va,tlkel ...... ~ .... -.
tt1Dl1 .. ;1 ......
..... a.. ...
""an.,uawMle...,.
1 .................
In stillet, cook and stir millhrooms
and Shallots in butter. Do DOI brown. C.onintue until musbrooms are em ..
der and some or the liqmd cooks
away. Break aam cbeell: ill ~
and otr the fire. star inlO bot mush-
rooms. Add pepper, retum 10 low
beat for 3 to S minutes. Excess liquid
should be ablorbed. If not. beat egg
into mixture. COot a minute or so
lontcr.
NOTE: C.Old. baked gateau
(without sa&a&::e) c:arric:s ~ ro Holly-
wood BoWt Of' special PJCllic. Can also be Sliced thin and used IS a cb.ilJed
hors d'ocuvrcs for up to 2010 24.
Clderhant
flavor ~ beat
Hard cider is a traditional
favorite bevera,c of the harvest
sea.son. Featurina the sweet taste of
frCsb apples, hard cider may be
enjoyed m a variety of ways.
Historically. bard cider has been
used sinoc coloriial times when it
replaced impure drinking water at
meals.. Became ap~es ~ plen-
tiful and incxperwve, hard cider
became popUlar for conking as well
Long a favorite riabt throu&h the
fall holiday seasons, people arc
cnjof'3 bard cider more became of its · t taste and low alcohol
content (9.5 percent~ Hard cider is
~freS!tlng served hot or cold.
FOUowin,g are recipes featuring
the unique llavor of lmd cidci. •
JACK FROST Cil.E
1 bex r_epar Sllke cne am
1 box tapioca t*•htc (YaiDa flavor»
legs
1 ¥a c.,. ~ewer
Combine cake and pudding m1x
and set aside. Beat ep.s and cider
together. Add liquid ingredients to dry and beat at medium speed for two
minutes or by band for loo strokes
Pour into a bunclt pan (10..l2 cup
siu). Bake at 350 degrees for 45-55
minutes. until cake springs •o the
.touCh.
Make )our favorite white fro ting
nd ~ur o"er cake \While warm. Oam1 h with chopped nuu.
1~;~~~~~~~~ .. ~~~ 1.29
I~~.~!~T~U ~~~ .... tOZ I01 1.49
t~~~~~~~~~. !~~~ ........ 1' OZ GAN .89
£Planter De _ 1)29 OAY~J!~erP~~~~~ '
OA UNSALTED
l~~~~y~ p~~~~!~.~1~oz CAN .89
£!!!~~~~~~~~~~.~~~~~OZ JA~ .69
l2~v1!!~~.~!.~ ...... t40Z aox 1.69
.~Sunshine 1~,,g P' Macaroni i ·c k -~ · &-& Cheese rac er. KAMT DINN 7 25 oz
1 OZ BOX
.. 39
''tLT L 9.99
''°"' '"· 7.99
VernelJ Edmond
18Ved
$13.67
!t'~~"!.F~!f~(Br•~! ~o·' .89
r~~f.~~t Dey Don~ t •9• 1.19
•
Paullet Boulton ...
'10.50
I
!'!~·!!!'o 't~~~.~~~~l.1.91
~!!~c~~~~'!!!T !~~FAT . , , l8 .99
!:!'o01!!LO!~~ .............. ~' 2.59
P'Clorox2 333
i Dry Blea~~oz P•o
.'P' Clorox .,,-
& Liquid B!~~h• _
ik~ r~[!!Y•. Tori/II•• 1' Cf K .39
roowny Fabric SofleMr 159
' '401 ' •
Daisy Ansari
18Wld
$8.43
Tht Lueky tot MO
Tnt total •• crie 01ritr
IUP9tm1rktt on tne tmt or
comparabt• 1 1 •aa " 'Tt I ta .,, Ocr , I
ear docum nr d
Blade Cut Chuck Roast 97
ION Oil' .,.,. •••••• , •• ,,~··•· .• , •• ,.L:B •
!.~~'J'!'o! ~'!.~~.~~~~~oz ~o .57
~ ~~!~ ~~1!! !~'!~~ .... ,LI 1.49
..
£Gorton~ 139 POT'!~~~~~~I oi PKO
P' Belly Crocker 99 & Potato Buds
13 76 OZ BOX •
Watdl:Jor
""' ~ mtllle'..
ArrMno 1n YO\H mer , nutw..
,
teA11 LlquJd 281 ,, Detergent
84 OZ BTL ··
•
pt Harvat Day ~9
i Dell Rolls -, ;•
ecr PKO •
OZ ,AA 1.99
t~~?o!1!~~~~-" • IOl '«0 .99
f Z•cky Chle~•n ~re'!k' ffl(Q .99
't'K,.n Hendl-Snec1c1 "' 09
' f111tl ~ M IUlftl I CT '110 le
l~i~-,!nfl,.I !IOl 1.29
'
Gold8n _,..
TO EAT l.23
E~~ .. ~~.~~~~ ........ L8'2.59 !~~A~'/!~ ................ ·..... .49
rFllMI
Touch
t Family Scott 0~
BAT~!:ue 220SF PKG .ag
•PACK
1IOZ N .56
T IOI 1.99
l I2.19
g{!~~~~... ......... ... .29
~~~'!!.~~~~~~~ ........... ,, ... LS .12
.P'Llfebuoy 37 A Bath Soap
4750Z BAR .
rearess 51
Bath s~e ... • .
!"Spaghetti 9;7
&·Sauce ------_....-1~
1ssoz JAA •
I r.
Ll .29
.. ~
~au~:!~/ noz .&TL 2 11
1-C&H
& ugar
GRANULATED Sl BAO 169
ClO Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesd y, Octob8f' 31, 1984
ft2
Hills Bros. COffee
All PofQ8f Ortndl
Ivory Shampoo
a Condttlonet
Dry•Olty 178
1S~Z. "
Date Allow lour w a fOf Ot! veiy
..... , ..... Ouar11ntM •
11 not Hlltfi.d with your orp. -retum It '°' 1 full rllfund
()fltf •wt "ClllfomJt ...... ...-°"" eou.ont .... JU\< 31 ., .. .... . ................. "'
•
Spicy salsa turns ordinary
dish into taste sensation .
Men of all ~ have become OVERNIGHT ANTIPASTO RICt: ~ c:tqt .usall red .... n.a.
more involved m food pl nnm~ SALAD • "I' ,.tted sliced ripe ellva purc~asina and preparation. Ac-z~ caps wattr Pepperoctal coptioul>
cordll)J to recent marketing re-l cap coaverted nee Bnng "-'liter to a boil m medtum
search, men now assume ole or 1 tea1poo11 sail (o~!aal) saucepan. Stir in nc.c and Jt. Co-.•
joint rcsporwbility for at least 40 ~ '*' MIUM l&a ulaf tlrn•· ti&htly and immer 20 -minutes;
percent of lhc upermark.ct shop. 1.Dg Remove from hat ... Lct 5tand covered
ping tril)$. In two-income house-n pouad pronlOH cllene, e•t until all water is absorbed. about
holds. thi figure jumps to 50 1.Dto ~-1.Dcll e.bH minulCS. Transfer to large bowl. Add
percent. V. poand Guoa ,salami, etil lato dmsmg to hot nee. Cool to room
Wh h h k '---tbla itrlP.1 • 1cmpcra1urc. ct er t ey coo ~use they t once gorgo11ola or blH clleeae, Stir in remainina inonad1ents cx-enjoy it or out ofnccc sity, statistics c1'11mblecl ccpt pep~roani~·~ix '°"~11. Cover
show that men do not want to spend t medlam creea pepper, c.t mto and rcfngeratc several hours or
too much time preparing meals, WD •trips ovc:migh1. Garnish with pepperoom.
Ofange COas1 DAfLY PtLOT/Wedneeday Oc10b« 31 ... Cll
especially during the week. Instead, ~. cap cllerry tomato balves Makes 6 5en.'1ngs. they want ~tbfying meals that r-~......;..;:~-=---_:_....:..:.....:..:.__, _ __;,;.:.::.;,:~:..::.~:.:!::.::__ _____ ~~====~~=~~===
require minimal preparation, or
can be prepared in advance, yet arc
different enough to make a state-
ment when served to gue:ats.
few main dishes meet these
criteria as well as skillet dishes.
Contemporary one-dish meals rely
on meat or poultry and fresh
vegetables with cooking times that
are compatible with the rice. These
ingredients can be picked up at the
supermarket on the way borne if
need be.
Thirty minutes before guests
arrive, the cook combines the meat
and vegetables with rice, seasonings
and other kitchen staples such as
chicken broth, canned tomatoes,
ripe olives, cheese, bottled salad
dressings and wine. Chopping and
slicing are kept to a minimum, and
all of the ingredients are added
t.ogether to the skillet where they
simmer unwatched.
In Picante Ch~ken 'n Rice, red
salsa or picante sauce imparts its
bright color and spicy flavor to the
simple combinauon of boneless
chicken breasts and rice. Buttery
avocado slices, chopped tomato
and shredded Cheddar or Jack
cheese, traditional Tex-Mex ac-
companiments, dress up this south-
of-the-border supper. For added
drama and easr cleanup, serve
Picante Chicken n Rice right from
the skillet with warm flour tortillas
and cooling sangria or Mexican.
beer.
Main dish salads also provide a
dramatic presentation with mini-
mal preparation. Overnight Anti-
pasto Rice Salad takes its cue from
the classic Italian appetizer, requir-
ing one-stop shopping at the super-
market deh and produce sections.
The brilliant colors and varied
textures of the vegetables. Italian ·
cheeses and salami accent the
separate..grained rice.
PJCANTE cmCKEN 'N RICE
I boneless cbiclteD breast balves.
lk:lD removed
Salt, to taste (optJonal)
. 14 cap coartelJ chopped onlon
3 large garUe cloves, mi.Deed
1 tablespooa vegetable oU
REGULAR OR HOT, WITH BEANS
linison's
Cblll
l 1-' e11ps chicken brotb
I cup mtd11m red salsa or plea.ate
Pills
Flour
r--=..;;o.r::;:---NICE N SOFT COLORS OR ACCENT
I Bath saace
1 e11p converted rice
l ripe avocado, peeled and 11Jced
1 medlam tomato, coanely
chopped
in cap (%ounces) 1bredded Ched-
dar or Monterey Jack cbeese
SprinJcle chicken breasts with salt;
set aside. Cook onion and garlic in oil
in 10-inch skillet 2 minutes. Add
chicken broth and salsa. Bring to a
boil. Stir in rice. Arrange chicken
breasts over rice. Cover tiahlly and
simmer 20 minutes. Remove from
heat. Let stand covered unul all liquid
lS absorbed, about 5 minutes. Gar-nish with avocado. tomato and ..__ __
cheese. Makes 6 servings. Meat Dept. Savings
Meatless lasagna
high ln nutrients
This meatless lasagna recipe rates
high in both flavor and nutritional
value.
STATtll IAOI l'!AlllllJllG(lt p tr 1~ PUflUW a 1es UOUAltTl"P'OUf<ID~ATT u
Rum~ Roast t=:=
Red napper := .
JUl'!(OIA S3.79
UI s1.89
L8 s1.89
LI s1.99
BROCCOLI LASAGNA
1 buncla broccoli
Pork Cho~s ..... ,
Chicken reasts :W~itt\ LI s1:0
1 medJam onion, chopped
tiblnpooa• water
% caps cetta1e ~eeae
t egl, 1updy beateD
1 Jar (U oaace) spagbettl uace
I coollecl luapa noodles
Lamb Chops ~arc ll s1.79
Lamb Chops ~TiSflC LI s1.89
Lunch Meats =UJ) ~45C
S caps (U ouces) sllreddtd
Mo1urella clteesc
Trim and cut broccoli into bite-size
pieces to make 4 cups. Combine
broccoli, onion and water in 2-<tu?n
glass mix 'n pour bowl. Cover with
plastic wrap. Microwavt (high) 10 to
l2 minutes or until tendcr-<risp.
Drain. Mix in cottage cheese and egs.
Compare these Low Prices
#
REGUL.AAOA
SUGAR FREE Llt\E OR REGULAR OR DIET
Seven-Up
•1..79
._8112·0Z '
Spoon I cup (about 't.) spaghetti
sauce into 12 x 8-inch microwave-safe bakina dish. Layer 3 lasagna
noodles on '8UCC. Spoon all of cottage
cheese miitture onto noodles, spread-
ina evenly. Sprinkle with 2 cups
sPaahctti sauce evenly over cheese.
Layer rcmain!nJ noodles ovc! sauce. Apple JU ice g~~ Spoon remainma spaghem sa~ce ~C:J ~;;~. noodles. Cover with Hunt's Ketchup
Microwave(hial))J4to 16miautc Q • Q"I
or until heated throuah < 140 dcgrccs>. flSCO I
rotatina di•h once Of twice. Spnnkle Clorox Bleach .-. .... ~ with remainina Monarella ,._. ...
cihenc. Microwave (hi&h), un· 01·11 P1·ckles ~Oii covered, 2 to .3 m1nutcs or until PtA-LVU
<lhtttC 1s melted. Ltt siand .S 10 10
minutes before cumna into squares Bread f.fll~:: tor serving. About 8 scrvinp, 360
caJoriescach. lortillas ~UIOS TIP: Two pee~ 00 ounce)
&oien chopped brooco11 can be Peanut Butter =~ti.. blt1tu1cd for fresh. ·~--_..;_-------1 Green Beans ::::::, l*.NT ln••x•ptn•alv• • •pr, lk ..,., • ...,, not ..
tn prlu: reuoneble,
01111Wld ........ ...........
°'~2=1etng
Taaue
5-LB.
Frozen Food Favorites
Green Giant =~~". IDCZ ggc Cabbage SI~
Patties 5 22 s<lZ s1 .59 Potatoes ~Jt0• p• ro~·s 1zza ~Anoo. M<>Z sa.39 Onions ~~ ..
Taquitos ~Al!llfllm "~zs1.17 EXfFiA FANC;y FRE8H _. ..aa-.-----
Fried Chicken 11• .. 0W 12-01 S2.98 ----...,...·-~ Amorted M Tender
Pizza ~~0 1201 S4.39 ............. TNplcal Follap ---~-w ff I 00-Y'lAKf •.OZ s1.09 93-99 a es :~~ ~PKG
Grapefrt:-1it Juice JR(~U, •IOl ggc EAat MllPOT
Grocery Specials
Potatoes ~~~.o
Cake Mixes .~~"'
Frosting Fe5sPllV0.
C&HSugar ~
Facial Tissues a¥~~ .. n
T• 11Ul1'EX 1ssue ~~:gf
-~99C Canadian Mist 11SUTPI ~
~8& Southam Comfort ~,UTU
~~ s1 .34 Richelieu :.-:o~A ..
~sac Christian Bros. ~~.,.
•!»CT 75c M ido( M(LON
,_
1'GCT s1.08 Burgie Beer
Paper:Iowels=r ,llOU.sgc GU...,'s
Napk,ins =:D ~-,gr. ""'6 -
Laundry Detergent ,,_ -~09 Sft ~
SQa hetti AM~ uei 45c : ~-·~ ~NllEiiei r ,~
"-= ·~ PUCU u1a11n: 7 niu. DAR ---------------------~~ .... ..._63~ ... .... .... ...
;' ....
4 I I. 7
. ~
..
........ ...
I 2
. --
...
.I
-
-=·_... .................... . .-. .. -.... ....,_. ... .. 3 ..... ~=-ams ............. ,. ....... ............ _ .. ..._ ....... .,.._ . ..,..
,
'
t DA LV PtLOTIWednMday, Octo
THE
FAMILY
CIRCUS
by Bii Keane
'"Daddy guessed me!"
by Brad Anderson
by Tom Batluk DOONESBURY
1Q'.MY I AM lalM4U.Y IUCJYG
HI >WHJaJN A l/.HJ,TltJJ5T
SO THllTI C4N <lNTlNiJli 10 j .iiM lfM.PWMAN -~ • /l1'fSa,F-. ...-..-'
BIG GEORGE by Vlrgll Partch (VIP)8 .. a_o_E ______ ...
"You'd better snap up a few while you can.
I'm being tom down next WHk."
DENNIS THE MENACE
PEANUTS
MOW WOULD 'IOU LIKE
TO BE A HERO ?
DRABBLE
IF '(OU Mr:LP ME
WITH MV ..iOMEWORK,
VOO'LL eE A M~O ..
11 Mu!>T t£
by Garry Trudeau
by Jeff MacNally
by Charles M. Schulz
TMAfS TME TROUBLE
THESE DAYS .• we DON'T
HAVE A~ HEROES ...
by Kevin Fagan
by Hank Ketcham 1UI!> Ul<>N 6~\
"He's the reason nobody in this
neighborhood ever dresses up as a cat."
GORDO
~
MOON MULLINS
ONWARD ANC> LOUDER ... --
.. \l.ORLD'S How C,AN you $,AY
GolNG To iKAT, WILLI~? PR~ESS
lt4~ CATS 15 ~RESStNG
.J> ALLIHE
TIME.'
JUDGE PARKER
I'VE OO'T 'TO GET OVER TO THE
HOSPITAL ANO see IF AUNT
BETH'S AL.L Rl(;;HT, DAVEY'
•
I'VE ONLY GOT TWO DOLLARS,
NOT ENO\.JGH TO CALLA CA01
MAYBE I CAN CA\..LOA~A AT SPENCER FARMS• I HA.Ve
HI$ PHONE NUMBER HERE
by Jim Davis
by Ferd & Tom Johnson
by Harold Le Doux
. I '
I BRIDGE
Eut·Wen vulnerable. South dealt.
• NORTH
WEST
+72
<¥' 85
0 J43
• AICQ842
EAST
• J 108f4
c;> A 103 ·-•cua
«;? J7t
0 I( t2
•J3
0 10915
• 1087 SOUTH
•AK5
0 ltQt4t
O AQf
•t6
Th• biddinr:
8"tl9 WMt N~ Eut
IO P.. J • PU1
INT P.. P.-r ...
Openln1 lead: Jack of +.
Som playera are '° intriaued b7
a bit of larcen1 that they falteard
al 1ver7 opportunit7. rhty rarel7
lool aa7one-ucept perhapt part·
ntr. The autce11ful lalaeeatder b
the honest dtiaen who maku the
pla7 onl1 when netell&f1.
South felt tut Illa Wei • ., &.oo
~ 1tron1 for one "° Uvsap becauM of
hi1 titH&rd major 1&all, '° he ope•
d one heart. He bowed hit :good
A BLUFF IN TIME
balanced hand by jumping in no
trump over bis partner'• two club
response, and that ended the auc· •
lion.
West. led the jack of apadu. Eut
1ignaled with the nine and declarer
0111
SHAii FF
held up for one rouad. West eon·
tinu~ with a low 1pade, declarer
won and led a low dub. Althou1h he
was an uprisht clti11n In Hlf'1
reaped and not known aa a
falsecarder, Wut oa UaJ1 0«&1io11
elected to contribute the jack.
If that w1rt1 an honett card, and
there wu "° reatoa to 1uppoee it
Wal not. Eaat had • •topper In chabt
aad lh 1ult-could qot be ru1. After
considerable tho111lat.. idttlanr
dedct.d to dude the dub. Tlaal
utUNd lillsa ot II•• dub V'kb. aed
he could pt h11 alntlil UiCll tit.Mr
b7 pla,ylnJ EH& for the aee of htartt
•
or by taking the diamond finesae.
W ut now cleared the 1pade1.
Declarer continued dubt, and
wben West turned up with a MCOnd
club declarer had a premonition of ,
what WU aoinr U> happen. Oo th•
CHARLES
Go1E1
run of the dube W•t blanbd hll
kins of dlamond1 early. then
dllC&J'ded two heart.I. It wa1 oa11
fitlin1 lhat declarer 11loul4 t.r'7 Ute
cHamond One and end up ott two
uiclte. e ... ,...-..ns I ........
... lrwliMl IMC.....a...~ ,... .. .,.. .. , ........... ....
el OOUILES ._ , .. ...._ ... '-
tahHl. Fer a te•J el •11
DOU.US '-Wtt. .... ti.II te
·~ .... a.O..W..," care el t•l• JM•.,.... P.o. a.. en ..... ,..., ·
N.J ....... Mll&t dMcli ,_ .W. te
New.,.,.,.....
Help
young
shape,
tastes
Appreciation
of heirlooms
takes training
Many of us grew up scorning our
parents' antique treasures. Family
heirlooms were either too fragile or
too sentimental to be a part of
children's lives and were placed out
of reach of grasping, inquisitive
hands.
But, according to the November
issue of House Beautiful magazine,
"It makes sense to encourage chil-
:n to take an.interest in enjoyment
living among beautiful things that
not only beautiful but also
i .............. in value over the years."
. tor SylviJ Sunderlin says that \c n raised with negative rein-
torcement "are likely to give away
their toys when lightly worn and in
later years may reject family gifts of
antiques or heirlooms. They may
eventually prefer stainless steel to
Grandma's sterling silver flatware
because it's too fussy to bother with.
Fortunately, many come to regret
such a choice!'
To help children understand why
certain antiques are interesting and
worth cherishing, House Beautiful
makes the following suggestions:
•Give children antiques· of their
own, such as child-size furniture still
plentiful from the 19th c.entury.
•Antique dolls and miniature doll
houses and furnishings will pique the
inteest of most childre~
•Victorian mechanical tos are
AccordiDC to Boue Beaatlfal, chlld~lae antique. nch u
thla pre11ecl cane Mttee, circa 1880, make &rat .rifts for
children and help them learn to appreciate collectible..
charming. practical and amusina
gifts for pre-teens.
•Child-size antiques, such as the
child's chair, are versatile and mix
well with any family decor and can
teach pride in ownership to young-
sters.
•Gifts of antique craft items such
as small chests of drawers and guilts,
are sturdy, durable and often unique
in character.
These items are good starting
pieces for teaching children to ap-
preciate antiques. But the items you
select with your child should always
be bought with safety in mind. Avoid
sharp edges, small loose parts that
might be swallowed or anything ihat
.
is too fragile foryouryoungcollector.
According to House Beautiful,
children are never too young to begin
enjoying antiques. Youngsters can
rapidly learn to appreciate fine
collectibles -from the simplest old
wooden cradle to handcrafted toys.
And, museums displaying antique
mechanical toys are ideal places for
children to team about these won-
derful toys of yesteryear, the editors
say.
Sunderlin adds, ·•When children
arc shown how to care for and enjoy
their own antique treasures, family
heirlooms also will become a pan of
tbeirdaily lives and shape the taste of
these future collecto.rs."
WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 31, 1984
ANN LANDEll8 ~
TV LISTINGS D2
WEDDING8D2
More honJe owners
are.saving history
By BARBARA MA YER publications and otl=s on related 1op1cs conwn I#•= , r • anformauon ofinterest to consumers with a special
You've ~1vrd a set of vaJuable wine goblets as part oollecuon.
of an inheritance and you're wondering bow to \akecare of In "Care and Displa) of Gia COiiect.ions" !by
them. Barbara RottenberJ, there isa variety of=ions for
Or, pcihaps, il'ucollectionofbook.sin fine leather disp;ngandcanr11forglassinabome. notes that
bindings,ahand-lctteredfamilyuuonparchment,ora lho glasstSchcm1caIJyruistantto1Woingand
family Bible. Maybe you Ii vein an old home with the dura e, provided it isn't dropped or chipped. it iuubjccl
originalwindowsandwoodworkwhicharebegjnningto tosuddcnshattcnng.espcciallyifnhas~
look the worse for wear. Possible causes of dcteriorauon mcludc excess beat, lilb1
ThequestionsareofmanydifTercnttypes. What they orrnoisture,ore.1posurctorcpeatcdsuddenCb.aqesUl
have in common is a need for disinterested advice on a tempcroture and humidity.
subjectinvolvinahistoric prcscrvation. Youcan'tafTord Sh adviseskeepinaglassawayfromradiators.
tomakeamistakebecauscdoingsowouldgrcatlyreduce beatingoutletsandairconditiontr$,andoutofthewayof
the value of the objects in question. sharp changes in temperature and$U'Ong.sunli&bi.(Sto~
More American~ arc taking a personal interest in glass in a closed ~srfronted cabinet whieb adiniuasrqt
someaspectofhistory-theirown or someone else's-deatof sunlight, for ex.ample, can raise the interior I
than ever before. As a result. more people are seeking temperature to a surprising extent, 1be:said.)
authoritativeanswerstoquestionsonce-aslcedonlyby . Atipforimprovingthesparldeof~ast0adda
individualssuch as museum conservat<1rs. small amount of2-to-S percent ammonia roa final rl
One possible source of guidance is the American However, don't use ammonia if alasshassWface
Association for State and Local History. The nonprofit, deterioration or any metallicdccoralion. she adds.
Nashville, Tenn.-based aS50Ciation has been providing To minimizcchancesofbreakage,kcep&lassdbjects
assistance to museums and local historic restorations since well apart from one another. Make sure the melf on wllicb
1940. According to Betty Elder, director of publications. a they rest is truly horiz.onw. lfoff only~ few dqrecs. lhc
growina number of ¢rsons among the general public have 1 shelfis~ous because the pass Object will slide wilb
been ordering lhe technical l.eafleu offered on a Driety of -.-any vibration, eventually end.in& up against the front of a
subjects. closed case or~~ on the floor.
Amongthepublicationsisoneonthecareand<lisplay Onewaycoavo1dsuchadan,ac:tistoplaoeamWldab
ofold glass. while others cover topics such :ts rejuvenating ofbot •U at the front cdae of the Object oo the sbdt: Asit
and carina for old leather objects, caring for old textiles, hardens, it will keep the piece in place and safqnan:l it
how to anest wood deterioration in old houses, and even from minor jars.
how to organize a large slide collection. no matter what the "'Conservation ofMetals, ·•by HaroldL Peterson
subject, so you can retrieve the slide you want quickly and offers advice on caring foro&d silverandothc:rtypesof
efficiently. . metals. Don't, f orexamplc, use soap or pbnsphalf.-bacd"r
Though written for museum personnel, most of these (Pleue eee PRJl'BSPYS ) •
SAMPLE MOBILE HOME
The West's largest consumer show in size and
attendance-the 32nd annual Manufactured Housing
and RV Show-will feature a $)(}.million-display of new
model homes and vacation vehicles Thursday through
Nov.12atDodgerSt.adium. .
More than 112,000visitoisattcndcd last year'sevent.
With lower fuel prices. signs of a healthy economy during
1,985 and the possibility oflowcr interest rates, show
officiaJsexpecta record turnout, especially amongfitst-
time buyers ofbOth homes and RVs.
OfficialsofWestem Manufactured Housing Institute
and RecreationaJ Vehicle lndust.ry Association,~
sponsors of the show. said the big mcreasc in attendance
--t lastyearamongpeople2S:.32wastbefirstsigntbatyounC
fam1liesand sinpe peopleweretakinJa bard look at I
affordable housing and vacation vehicles as pan of their
future plans.
The community of two-and three-.bcdroom bomeScSi
displayavcragcinpriceundcr$3l,000andrangeinsize
from 840 to l,000 59,U&R feet. Information boothiwill
assist the interested m finding locations for homes ei~
manufactured housinadevelopmenu or in mobile homo;
parts. t
The multipurpote van conversion allows for daily
family or business use aJona with vacation options. f1oo<
plansareavailabletoaDowbolh uses. Pa.rkmodelsare t
popular among retired couples wbo can move from snovJ
to desert RV park locations to better enjoy the seasons.
Prices of these homes--on-wbecls range from $26,000 io
$35,000fuUyfurnishedwdbappliancrsandair-coaditiop-
ing; accommodating up to a family of.six.
The show will be open from I 0 un. to 7 p.m. daily. •
Admjssion is S4 fondults orS2 for aaes 6to12. Dodger
Stadium is located off the Stadium Way exit ofbolh the ~
Golden State freeway and Harbor Freeway North. :
Goodness
lies under
th_eir skins
A nutritio us-------------
source that is high in
fiber, low in f.at. free
of cholesterol, and PILAR needs little or no
preparation sounds W
too good to be true. AYNE
Well,itisnot.asl•••••••••••
Belen Brta•. Roaer ED.lie and Jana Reichle cilat u Arthur Coon• and ffellOD Chaflbl admire Julie Flem•n•'• pink hair.
I have just described ,
a banana. About its l
only fauh is that it is very perishable, and can only:be
What's wh.ite. black and bid all over?r.~~E~t~~~j~~~~~:im""~
_,...... Of aJI the fruit family pacQaes. this is the one tb4J is
Masks given an early tryout
at Newport museum benefit
By EVE C. LASH
o.IJ,... Ceo 'r ...,,
Where could you .find Prince Charles, Princess Di,
four punk rockers. several ge1sbas, a Renaissance man, a
Mafia representative and 450 auests dressed in white
and black "creative attire" all in one place?
At the Newpon Harbor Art Museum .. Night of the
Masque" Halloween benefit at Bullocu Wilshire in
Fashion Island -fcaturi ng live and silent auctions of96
fantasy masques created by anists.
The Sales and Rental Council and Contemporary
Oub of the museum orpnized the SI 2S-per-couple
auction and dinner party. And lively it was. as friends,
n~bors and committee people battled for an.an. piece.
One lucky bidder was Sales and Rental Council
member JalJe Flemlq (clad in puJl)t.attire and a pink
coiffiare) who purchased the Jaraest masque dcsiancd by
artist Neda AlllllaU for S 1,200. ·
The Vakrle BecllC.1 masque went for $1,300. "We
didn•t think we'd get it. We're thrill~" said hilh
bidders Felicia MIMR. committee member and her
husband .Beb (aka .. Commodore" of the Yacht Cub).
.. We were bidding qainst a lot of our friends. We'll
probably never peak to each other apin. :1•1 (event
thair) and Joel S11tU; wanted it too," said Felicia.
Before the biddina aucsts dined on Rococo's
Spedalt1cs uch u leg oflamb. salmon unar, Coquille
t. Jacques and curry rhickcn at the plaza level of the
store.
"I haven't had aood New Yort chcescake since I
came to C..lifom11 until toni&ht:' said a.a.t.ue
Ookl1teia ofl rvi nc. Aarceina whh her were other I rvme
rcsJdents Dr. RlebH &Mb (dressed as a French arutt)
~ .. '
Party pla:nnen: Ja4y Slutsky. Eaaene Wlllte and Carol Cam min ...
and his wife BarWra (with blaCk and white painted cracker table. "And he's the Jack Nichol n ofGorona
finger na11s) who said. "It's really a lovely affair and dC1 Mart" said MeUllU B!JW.
we're mcctina very intcresuna people ••. and adnurina Others bidding. m111ghng and dancing io the music
the beautiful art and the beautifuUy dres9cd people." of An Deoo were l'eal Ayres, AM an=J BbMp.
Princess Di look.;alike &a.. CIUUI (with Prince Vlcti and Pa.a hwt.ftl, Mar)' and Curlqion.
Ra' CruUJ of I nine) said, "h's atways sp&end1d bcina E.G. and Wart QuaMrlla, IUu II MM and flanoc
royalty. It's aoina to be hard to qwt when the costume SUI Ma-., Vldl GerSac ahd ~ ~ UlaU and
goes beck tomorrow:· a., J1 ... 1a. DeMrU and 8turt Kati (produ of
Evcrythina and anythina was outfitted n black and Jane Fonda W6rlc-out), iPat and CUI elaer, Jt and
white indud1na the mannequin &shion modtls a.a Pick, Gleria Ga ScMck, LWa and JQ Y .... and
weanna Rina d1 Montella creauons. I.be Dowen committee chairman Carel Cammlq nd aae
(provided by Aliaa·s of Ncwpon Beaeh and the table W •
and chairs.
"I love the ~rls here toniJht -thcfrc lhe best pan • PlpataDi i edirtd b •
of the pany," saui Mel Ctdl mm&11ns at lhc cheese and Dean.
I
..
easiest to opeu; no washina either before or after. ,.
It also provides certain medicinal benefits, but~
will leave this to your doctor. ,
-Bananas can be coOkcd along with some other f<>Ods
that are bcalthy but imipid and enhance their flavor.
Here are some recipes I am sure you will enjoy.
BANANA BOATS
l ...... llalvea ,
1 tablelfl•• melte4 •Hu
,,.. C9P••ter
'tabJapu• ileHJ
1 tablap•• ... Her
Stabletf1.,raklas
1 tablapeea coru~. 10fie.ed ta wacer s&U-..w~J
Paint banana halves with melted butter, p~ oo
bak.ina pen. Combine remaining in&redients; cook for I 0
minute$. Pour rcsulti uce over.bananas and bakt 30
minutes in '1'6dcratc oven.
, _ Bil.EDBANANAS
P'rcMatO\'c:DlO lS . Bakcbana.Qasin ·n for
30 minu Ped and ~nJtle witb lemon JUicc and
powdered , or artificial cner.
--
' WEDDINGS
~----_. ___ ---~~ = -
.
THOMPSON-SMITH
The Irvine Coast Country < lub Sandra Hitzel
I ENGAGEMENTS ' .. __ --=------'--~--..... -~---~--""-_ -----
.... Al'fDERSON-HOLM
'Dt. nd Mrs. 'Gary AnderM>n ol
Hui'lting1on Beach have announced
tht cnaagernent of their daufihter Lon
Lynne Anderson to Mark Eugene
tfb1m of Barstow.
The bride-elect is a araduate of
Oran wood Academy and will
~uate in June from Loma Linda
U8ivers1ty's La Sierra campus in
Riverside.
The future bridegroom 1s the son of Dr: and Mrs. Gene Holm of Barstow.
He 1s a p-aduate of San Pasqual
-Ao.ckmy and if attendjng Loma
L:inda Umvcnity's La Sierra campus.
~ ~ June I 6 wcddin& in the'Scvcnth-
. diy Advrntist Church in Garden
~-"
Gro' e 1s planned.
ROTHWELL-BARTZ
The engagement of C~thia Cory
Rothwell to R~ll David Baru was
announced at an Oct. 21 party at the
home of her parents, Mr. and Mr~.
William Rothwell o( Newport Beach.
The bnde-clcct is a graduate of
Corona del Mar High School, San
Diego State and Palomar School of
Nursing. She is a re&1stcred nu~.
Her future bndeiroom 1s from
Eureka and 1s a marketing director for
National Pen Corp.
A March wedd1na in La Jolla is
planned .
Costa Me"8n Tom S Scholl and
Minda M. Versara of Carson ~ere
joined m matnmony on Oct. 20 in the
Filipino Southern Baptist Church in
Carson.
The bnde 1s the daughter of Mr.
and Mr). Alfredo Vergara ofBacolod
Cit) in the Philippines, She wore a
Pet owner's seDfence makes
animal lover doggone happy
l,~
'OEAR ANN LANDERS: I read
.amething an the Cmcinnati Post that
did my hean good. I hope you will
print it even thouJh the hot weather 1s
no longer with us in many pam of the
No,ui American c-0ntinent. The
mgpJ of the story isaaood one.
People "'ho treat their pets in an
1nbumane manner should be punish-
ed by law. Herc'sa shghtlyed1ted
\lm1on. I am deleuna the woman's
nitne. She's had enouJ!l unfa-,:orabk
~1oty to last her a hfet1me.
An Anderson Township resident
WlUspend the weekend in Jail after
belh,convicted on a charae of cruelty
to •ntmals. The 37:year-old woman WJj found auilty oncavin& her doa
a.ad cat in a locked. unventilated car
at the Becchmont Mall. Passersbv
thetwoanimalsin the car and ~d the Hamilton County shenff s
cfepenment and the Society for the
Prevention of Cruelty to Animals.
SPCA d<>a warden Bernard T 1aac:s
told Hamilton Muniopal Coun
Judge Sandra Beckwith that when he
ariived. the dog. a standard poodle
named Hannibal, was barely breath-
iifa. Police broke into the car w1th coat
Kaftgers and put the animals on the
pavement. The Siamese cat, Merlyn.
socmcd all riJllt. the warden said, but.
"We had to hftthedogout. We
thought he was aone ... The owner of
tflcanimals was fined S2SOand coun
coSts and sentenced to 30 days in the
workhouse. The JUd&C" suspended all
A11
luDEIS
but thrccdaysoflhesentence.
Are )OU as happy about this as 1
am?-CLD IN OHIO
DEAR CLD: I'd be a lot bappler 11
more Judges were toaeber on con-
victed rapi1t1 and cblld abasers. • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: To the
man who complained about the high
pncc ofha1rcuts-especially for guys
whoha,evcryhttle hair-here'sa
r,olution· I go to the barber once every
\IX weeks In between I tnm with
\hears I bought 1 n a drugstore. l t
~orkHwell. -CALL ME HAIR-
LESS BLT NOT BRAINLESS
Dear H. BUT NOT 8 .: As long as
yoa do a fairly profe11iCJDaJ job -
fine. Bat self-Inflicted soapbowl cats
are an abomination. Please check out
yoar home barberln1 wl tit a tra1ted
frtend • • • DEAR A.NN I. \:--iDERS· Myhus.-
b.ind and I are planning to start a
fam1l~. T~el\c )ears ago when I was
17, I hadanat>on1on I keptitadccp,
dark secret No one knew but the
doctor ~ho performed it 10 his office.
Is 1t nece'>sary to &ive my
gynecologjst this information? I
worry about the Rh factor or some
other medical reason that mijht make
1t 1mperative. This informauon must
not be on my record because I don't
want my husband to find ouL My
ultimate concern, however, is for my
baby Plcaseadvise -SWEATING
IN NASHVILLE
DEAR SWEA TING: By all mu.u
te ll yoar doctor. He thoald bow. U
yoa ask tbat tbe hafonnaCIO'D not be
recorded, be almost certablly will
res~ct your wtsbes. Ullfortautely,
office penonnel sometimes &&lie. • • • DEAR ANN: Since you spend so
much t1mcwith a typcwntcr, you
may find the followmg fact of interest:
The longest word in the English
language that can be written on one
row of keys contains I 0 letters. It is
the word TYPEWRITER. -MD.
FRIEND
. DEARMD.:Notsarprtsl.Dg. Tbat
row bas JI letters, tbe out row laa1
only t ud tbe last row lla1 7.
• • • Are your parents too strict? Hard to
~ch? Ann Lande()· booklet,
"Bugged By Parents? How to Get
More Freedom," could belp you
bridge thegcneratJonpp. Send 50
cents with }CW!. request and a Joni.
stamped, ~Jf-addrcued envelope to
Ann Lanilers, P.O. Bo" 11995, Chi-
cago. Ill. 6061 I.
Insecurities unsettling
An)onc can 1n11m1date me velcro, or a ra1or blade. shc)ust sa1d,
I'm ea\y "I want to try on boots." I ,Ult cannot
You show me an opponent who show my calves to anyone to whom I
meet\ me on the tennis court wearing E am not currently mamed.
a swcathand on his wnst and 1t'\ all RMA But the penon who really makes
over for me I'll Ile down on the coun. me feel inadequate is the man or
roll o'er and throw in a can of nev. 80M8£Cll woman who can introduce eiaht
hall\ !CJ hoot. people to onl· another without grab-
Somt't1 mec, the people don't c\cn binJthem b) thechestandrcadmgoff
mt'an to unst·ttk my insecunt1c\ It\ the1rname1ag'>. I wouldgiveanythan
JU\t thc v.a\ I am. hut 111 puhhc'! Ne..,er! I 1hink people to be able to retain names like that.
For \cars. I have considered people ~h11 l'at artichokes 1n public arc the For years I whined around that 1t
who write ~try "deep." The more ot \ame ones who park in tront of a was sororit) training and I was too
1t I don't understand, the deeper I conccn hall and ka\C their keys in poor to fratemi1e, but it isn't true. It's
think they arc. For all I know the) their car. and send wine back after JU.St a superior human being who can
rnuld be people who arc candidates they've sampkd 1t. They defy tra-say, "Armit TraJiano, I want you to
forpapcrbedroomslippers.butlw1ll d1t1ons and thumb their noses a1 meet Murcantile Zolhcize,
go tom) grave saying. "She wac, Just rules. Myoteanot Armaicddon. Bonsai
too lerehral for us." Probabl) the bravest woman I ever Schlorofite, Dick [)yjust and Carlyle
I'm al'io in awe of people who order met was a fnend of mine who walked Mohad. But we're all friends, so let's
an1chokc'i in pubhc. Oh sure. I cook into a shoe store one day right off the just make it Smitty, Bud, Myo,
them at home and 10 throu&)l the \trret. '3t down and ~1d , "I want to Brui~r. Dickie and Tom."
whole ntual of pulling off the petals try on boot\" J went blank last week while
and drauina them through sauce and Now that takes c.ouraac. She dldn't introducing my mother.
then 11ulhng 1hem throogh m) lttth. ask if they had 11epcrs, auucts, Someone once ked me if you __ .:.___=-___ ...,;;._...;.. ______ _.... ___ ~-"--"=---..:.., could die from intimidation.
1831 Fullerton Ave.
(at Broadway)
Costa Mesa -646-9634
..,Jl(e've
Moved
Hav1n1ju~t returned, the tn•wer is
yes
I PRESERVE •••
rro Dl ..
Barbara Tbompeon • aown of white silk tnmmed with I cc
and seed pearl
Jemima v. Pura was maid or
honor, and bridesmaid were Mary
Ann Jamadre and M r1Jyn Ga~. Melissa Scholl w s the
flower airl and Gil Dia was ring
bearer.
. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Scholl of
Costa Mesa arc the parents of \he
bridegroom. Rick Scholl was best
man, and ushers were Vince
Anderson and HilJ Castillo.
The couple creeled 150 auc ts at
rcuption following the ceremony in
Carson.
After a wcddina trip 10 San Fran-
ci~o and the Na~ Valley, they re
now ~ident.s of Canon. The new
Mrs. Scholl is employed by Broadway
Send us your
wedding news
The Daily Pilot wants your wed-
ding and enpgemenr news.
To belp you submit rhe requimJ
informal.Ion, forms are 1v1il1blc at
the Daily Pilot ofli~. 330 W. Bay St.,
Cos t.a Mesa.
For wpJdings, quality photos of the
bridal c-0uple or bride only are
acceptable. The photo must be sub-
mitted no later than three wct"b aft.er
the weddini. "t>lherwi~ it will not be
published.
En8Jt8emcnt information is to be
submitted at least ~ven wct"b before
the wedding. ·
Forms and J>hotos can be dropped
off at rhe office or ma1/ed to rhc
Wedding Department, DaJ/y Pilot, P.
0. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, c.Jjf.
92626. Mr. and Mn. SlaUCht
·. \ MIT -BUDE
n Oct. 6 ocrcmony at the fint
Unttcd Methodi t Church an Cos
Me united 1g C. mith of
Pa dcna nd Rosemary Hudc of
Allentown, Pa.
The bride is the daughter of frnnk
d Rose A mi h of Allentown. She
wore u \\11 of ussue &attn wnh a
~rled yoke nd ~tted t cc bodice
with draped baroque sleeves. The
cathedral train was appliqu.ed with
lace and pearls. Her maid of honor
was Suzanne Orady, and her daugh·
ter, KatnnaHudc.andhcr tstcr,J ne
Fl mash, were brid maids. ..
The bndegroom 1s the son of M.
Cunis nd Ellen mitb of Ncwpon
Beach. He wa 11tendod by Bruce
Brown, best man,and his brother Ken
Smith and Gcorte Hershey a u hen.
One hundred fony_gue u attended
a reception at the Newport H rbor
Yacht Club. After a wcddin tnp to ·1 ahiu. the couple are residing on Bay
I land in Newpon Beach.
Mr. and Mn. &mltb
The Carr&cllnes -f1'om left. Keith, Jobll,
Daftd and Robert-are featured lD a •peclal
Halloween eplaode of .. The Pall Guy'• tontcbt
at 8 on ABC, Channel 7.
•• '"Alctllrd Pryor • Hirt Md
Now" '1M3) Fl::hard Pryor.
-t20-
I
THE DAILY PILOT
CLA SIFIED OFFICE HO R
Telephone Service:
Monday.Friday
8:00 A.M.-5:30 P.M.
Qu ine Counter:
Monday-Friday
8:00 A.M.·5:00 P.M.
DEADLI E
TIO~ DEA OJ.I~•: Pl HI.IC
Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
Saturday
Sunday
Fri. 4:30 p.m.
Mon. 4:30 p.m.
Tues. 4:30 p.m. •
Wed. 4:30 p.m.
Thurs. 4:30 p.m.
Fri. 3:00 p.m.
Fri. 3:00 p.m.
CANCELLATION &
CORRECTIONS:
Marvelous 6 Br bayfront 78' on bay, poolt
lpa. 100' boat space. Xlnt Fin. $4,850,000.
Exdtina Ocean & Jetty viewa, 4 Br, 3 Ba.
3700 aq. ft. car parking. $1,28~.ooo.
WEIT IAY AVE BAYFRONT
Panoramic ocean & dty view, apadoua 6
Br, 3 Ba. Xlnt fin&riCini, now $750,000 . .
COTTON POINT !&TATEi
Custom ooean view Iota next to Caa
Pacifica, San Clemente from $550,000.
WESTWOOD VILLAGE
Prime Engliah traditional 3 Bd. 3 Ba. 3
Frplc'a, hrdwd flra, nr UCLA. $695,000 ,,_.._ . .. __ ......,. ___ _
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
I I I II" y. " I• I I I •• ' • J II f, ' ') f, I (> I
let U1 Ilea, t ..
Sell Y ,., Preptttrl
The Daly Hot offtts JOU tm t11ct lilt Id
111 u "Picture Pait" weekends for J-t
US "' day, or 2 days for S45
Wiii a ,CMt, or wtl pflotOlfaph it ftr
,. .......... dw ••.
e..ca.w
642-5678
I
642·56n
Put o /N WMd• to work /or woe.
ifttlaf ........
NOTICE
n. Didlf PitotWW DO I~ be opa Ola 8atardu':•~ Ou~ IMMln will bi llOllday tllft PrtdaJ. L-00 a.•. to l:SO p.-. Dei111e• wUl Mu foUowa:
·somoN. DSADUKS
-...., •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• P:rltla.,J, •iao , ... ~, .................................................. 1111mla__J, tiaca ,... • ....... ,, ..........•..........................•••...... ~. tiao~-· ~ ............................................ •e1&•• -· •iao ,~. ~ ••• -................................................ ~,. •iao , .... ~ ••••••••••••••••.••••.•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• rr141a_,., a:oo ~· --.,···············:.·······················1••••M•••••••• lhlt..J. S:CJC).p.a.. -
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CALllOOAYll
lllFRLllS
Your Ody Plot a.a onctory
~
NZ...a21al.IOI
., I•• 11r
II Vat. .......... , Val. .._, Ml ... Wa... II• lelr Wu... II lllr_W..... II r WuW_ IHI
t. lw~ 2741 17H Ht PCH. ~ twM, kit c.I BANKING Ol£RICAL PIT. Front of• DJl1IW •lmD'll
•••.. 18r 1525 dllf'IMht. f110 ~·~.~~Lao etvwlFembWlttwn2bt Ownr..a.tty 6'5-9111 or fnfM\ IM JE•:LEIS lice pw90n needed f« Ae91deutMl.831·2345 ._.-.wltftf trw~c:t.lllehn ~ Ind. No peU.. c.11 btwn ._, -v... ·-ZZM 2be twnhouM. Poot. ten-844-2270 uunu Nl-1 19 medic.I offtce 14e-1824 .,,.. ...,.. _.......,, °' ,._ .. . YULl'I ~d#ly64Ml65 Room. lhr bdl . ...,,... n11te60mo.7I0-1578 ... .._.... ™....... ~:..!;..~·~
1 & 2 Bdrm kDwfy , 11r peniJno ~ 27..,., N.B. 1225 ..,. E11tr&>r'nr .-. 19me· ~ _. .. , --ARE FREE 0,:12 ='*8eYI~ Subft!Me ~ ,__, ~f~ ~ 0: ;;;;,j. end .om. ·dllfd
.liP1'1n14ptw 18drm, ST~O BEACH 1oemJattr 7pm6'5-25'0 emkr2Bd.2beCdM.W81k !=!1:.~1 c.r... Cal•, lngtforT ... •toWOttt20 byHuntqtonlMchClty Auoc. 1n ltYIM Min. a c:.,e, Mutt be no1t
8drm end To.Mome9 $560/mo 175-3211 Room w I k It c tt en to ~. '450/ltlf + dep ,,._ 0r n11 1r.1ne. C«· ~ per week In our SdlOOt or... te.82 pnw ,,_ •ltPt'· .. .-c. eiecty emoker *'Ct haw own
• poollt, ..,,,_, ..._.. 1 br ,_., Dowr/W~ prtvtedgee, rv M h & 155-0NO m.. '*.Campus a Von KMr· Co.ta ~ bfMCh. We talary. Apply 20-451 wtth ttrong lhof1Nnd & tr~. 20-40 Ht
pondll 0.. '*"· poof PltiO ~ pref no thop ewer. M2·5780 E..,_ CM 2 bt "'-S300 + man, Ind Recept, Ant IU ... 11 offer '°'7tC*IM ....,_ ct a Im• r L n. H. a. tt•t typing. Cell C..Olyn "· _..,, neootlable. From SM ~nwy pet.a. MOO/mo 94~ Shr 3BR SC Pia.a Condo. utle 1100 dee> Sandy ewe. COnf Arn & Coff•. and exceffent ~ t64 Hie o..dline for for appt. tam·5pm, ...;;aSM>t..;;..o...;;..;;..;;.54 __ _._ __ ·~=~Welt C: 28', retrta. ~. Mature lldUtt 30+. poof, 850-2858 Lv munge l400. ~ 752·2Ae4 condltlOna. · tpptytng. 11/5184. eec>-1111 m.mtelln
fkfedden to a..tnd ttcwe Ind '825/mo. No i.r. 1375+ &e1..a1eo Ellee. t>eyfront "°'* NB iiiiilm lll1D FOUND Fem blk/wttt Apply1n per.on to: ..OAl. lllYlll FACTORY WAREHOUSE for~ dodor. vm.oe. (714)893--5198 ~ c.a ~5 !l!ttl••tl• F pf1v be xtra t400 Ind 1 MO FREE RENT = m~·F.:,..:c,= ••••. Tn..w•• Mutt be 21. Appfy In per· s ~A~ '"' Newporte31-4~ec:tlce. · Ull IOI utlla. Proft 85CM011 L.uxu;y offtce nr OC Air· Alutrellan Sl'lllperd ml.x; u ••5'1 ton. Don JON Aett.. aw \'P o on /••..., l:iiDU .._. 2141 8ac'*<>t YHrlY nl°"' Fmt to r.,,1matt«bt.3 bt port. All ameniu.. 11.35 Fem Brindle .,,. Box.r. UV.I 15101 Goldenwt. H.B. =~ ~'i·~ all1llllL -" m=----($;; Penthou. In Vertalllet. lml Ill hM nr beedt '300+ ~OU P« tq n. 833--tt7o Jody Numerout Olttlklttena ' ' Conttructlon eo.c. Meea 112-2112
.-~ ·~ Brotl• l1MI08 Wkly rentalt. S1S5 & up. l!Yall lmmed. &50-3U3 Altpott.,.., From 700 to Terrfer Mix pupplH. IHI ....... Ir. lllllTllT :t ;1 3. 1oain.epn UTlllll. ...
i peu. &.i 417.311e • Pvt. Gated-The Cowe.. nr Color TV. tree eon ... La furr Condo Bc:h 3300 ti. New office t>&dg, Newport Beech AnllNI .......... U IWW iWWWf 97t-4M7 Plll1 time • ....,clayt, ....
Balboa let. Pool/tpa. hMted pool l ttept to ~ toe Ai amen-: reedy for lmmed oo-Shelter. 125 ..._ Of, No ctllt. Mu.t be ,...Jn., ~ Ult hr. &45-f27t eYoM +twt ltilCll Hit 11350/mo 1st/Wt, Aval oc.en. Kttdl'• eYtlll. H4-e02t 0, 6',4.2583 oupency. 11.251., OfO.. CM. 6'4-315e phorle ptew. up a Ot'adln9· o....i llTllll llll&TAIT UllL llllftill
Nov 15, 142·2008 N5 H Coat Hwy. Br'*-rooop Found: Fem puppy Biie Equt!OppottUMy ttructiOn b-* ound PE. Degr9e. look Ptrl ... 1~8&. Upper Unit. VERSAILLES 2 Br 1 ~be Laguna Beectt. 4M-S2'4 H.B. Exec hotne AIWnel 751-5tlt R & H ~ w/t>m __ ._ 00.. Emptoy«M/FIH con .....: ..... eaper.Commlallon'. Newpott Cent•. W/P a !'1a5o mo 842_... • • • Brookh pvt ba.t• 1'9Q..it mix?.....:.;.--.,,.. mand.tOfY. call Long e.1c;t1 toe. (71-4) eMI lh. _,,.pref, but . • comer unit w/oc.t .... PIUU mm Inc S400 aft 3. H24328 oc Alrpott .,... 3 room ,.__, c:olW Vic E. CM ~ 831-7811 281·2839 cootlder therp b•caln11•. 8ec, no Pttt, 11,025 per IUltt. Al utile Incl. Lots of 84M7M •••UD llll NofMmoller. 720-0a51
mo. Avl~Nov 10 11281~ ~.=~ M=~t».Jr:-1~ grtno '48S.'8:2= FOUND Scotty female w1th::.dlef!W. to Futl~ect dttk F•AftWH'DI Ul''"'ftl
pert 81\fd C.M 848-7445 2~~ for 8'9¥9 OVER 1000 t/f on Wlleon. ~;y e:.1~ Hgl*. ::~~..:.ayfront ttlop. up. Pf•· Apply"',,.: 7•m· 1 :30pm, M·F NEWPORT BEACH"'* VIII Balboe 2eo eagney
LMl9 8pec:iOue 2 bt k .
bldg. IM or IM opt. low
dn. 11000/mo 875-3007
••• t 111 LINE MaJe of 21-38 non«nkr ~ Meu. $850+ ut• . eon.Mk for Mr. Neleoft, 1$.5etM tO ht. 8nadl Ub. hat °'*' poeltJOM ~ thr f;. Npt Hott home Moe.tdt9..Bnr ~n29· Lott c.t v~ tt tor-e.rty 2833 Har1>0t' INd. co.ta t>ar o.c.c Exp. req. ror
Newpott Beech, COior TV A.,. now 842.-3442 Dien& ' t'*9, Jutt tpeyed, fem. IUITf UlllT&ITI Me.a C0Mt Communtty eo.-8U88TITVTE
1125MfS11,nodepoett. ...... Col. Prtl CM ... 2"0 TRAINIHO PROGRAM _ lllftl, teoae.137oAcSamt,C M.. . UBAARWCS. WlTW'I Lii ll1 3028 W• COMt Hwy Mature tecty to lhr w/MtM a.tall 2111 Lott· Dog Purebred._ Ncttard OIMll9le aa.on· . .....,H• "32-6007 Otedllne 1119. Mutl haw on-al ftillllblJI..
.. liilliii .. MM ... lllilll2Br+ den Mod k1tc:t1en Vaui'9 ~~aio.~1~soua1 x;;p;i 118 8q It on Npt =t_tRt"-P~~; 200 ~CtrDt.NB' P=~·=-= MLtrmPAY a'.t'° :1ou~·a-i!:
fURNISHf O or
UNfURNISHlO.
~~~~-1~0 Y.t$ ]tO'l Msture pro,..,.,., to "'1 :/,'!· ~~1":·s~~i~ 6'2-4281 an 5 pm. F·.., 1,117109DI Demonetratort PAl'l/W NI ~~~s· 1~~ :t 'r' •~-----~~LAROE Big Beer cabin 2Br 2ba Npt VersalU. · "" P time P<*tfont, Opportun1u .. avallabt. -1 an • P-IU Ciftifttt 2771 Pool tbl, cir TV, 2 frplc:t condo. 1325/mo+ 12 utll. omc. & garage $315/mo. LOST M wttt c.t It tan tall Architectural firm located Fii 101 wtttt tM L08 ANGELES pftcetloot may be ob-
HEALTH
CLUBS TENNIS
SWIMMING. plu~
mU<h more' Sorry
no pets Models
OPfn daily 9 to 6
81ps 1-4 Call 645-1918 Gall 6'8--0830 Neer M#lnert Square ..,. 10/27 Vic 08'Mt 8.1 neat"°"" w~ Aftpor1 " TIMES Cltc:ul&non De-tai.nect at llnd returned to SUNNY 28r fBa w/rflfrlg. · · & Coast Hwy &48-76'1 name 'Simon' 873-5287 hU 2 lmmed openltlQ9 In dOCt t Newpof1 Center Branch
lndty.gar'4751tt, lut& SUNNY 38r w/frplc. Hr M/F-CM/NB ..... Fpl, . REWARD FOR AHY INFO Exper. ~-Arr: Ar• you adWntutout and ~ OUt' ....: Library. 158 San
eac:ur1ty 493-2710 .... 8 mo tae. Pd utlt• 38d. 3b• 12eo +um. ctallnclal lost em blk t _. AIR, pqron, bank reca, Med money? Ate you ::=;,.r:.---O:ant"d o.m.nte Or. N.B 12eeo ..... BIO lmmed occpy. 873-0584 1tt/lasVdep &48-9148 lat&b 2111 CM. 842·M82 O"I ---· ql.ltl'teriy WC rewr,ne thru =· ,:-" ..tn~~ ~;jy waoe '*" ~ ""PllMI
17N + 1'81h um. to ....... It M/F WI• 2 .bd 2 be CM 8089 NPT Bl CM tfMUJ1 ::!, =·~ c:: Weetem Stst• and .... mlaelon. Hour9: 9atn to 2 ctNrl up ' diellVtry for
~ood
quiet tHmkr. Ute Indy a. lure ltOI apt 1326/mo 557·2"45"4 ,_.., retml/offtce ale counting ma)Orfor p/Ume t0rt.,.... wttti our "'99'· pm°' "Pm to tpm. Train-busy bOcty ttlop.Mutt
cooking OM &4M15e 2 Br hM 111( Ga ;o;\(1ng hm 557-918hwt< Jim 780 tf/$515 mo 6'5-H28 potltlon. Call (71") 'tftof9d mnettng team. Ing It ptOY!cMd. PotenUal havegooddrlvlnor~d.
CM home Room for tingle melt 9275. mo. + * utlf. M/F to thr 2bd In N.B. 2 CANNERY VILLAGE 6' 1·2828 ;.:; ~= = Z..~or~ ::.:. a PP I y t n P • r' 0 n ·
empt'd M/F IHe kit prlYt 543311 (7-iPM Ol'lfy) =· com~n.i'.iti°:*" S.V.al oftl~ ' retail anted female compa.-BRICK LAYEAI Helper. for thOet 11 and Owl."'• c:an: ~~i.c:;::~IYwr;.:. Ap~rtmtnts Quiet/private. 1275+ •NPT BACK BAY• Daya ~13) 5'91.1/'ti ~· •7a..3m nlon for all~ paid Be dependab&e l haW offer mator medle*. Im-157·2M1•t.120-4 648-6513 ' • '
l100dep54&-4047 ~ 3 Bd t. w/yard, 2 Dave. EvH (714) IQlllMllJW weeklnVegu.CellBob goodtr&Np.e7W176 medlatelncomewhlleon ........ LOT PERSON PIT fOf' ~pof't Bu<t So.
l700 16th Strttt
Cat Oo-.er)
642·511)
~':8 PC:t M~ r::. ~~-.v~.;•'aJ:;e •850-ac>7"4ore50-3775 AllPllTAIU I IWl-1944 Cetetortod<IWln= ~~~':~c::i~ Perm.1PT1·30,.12,8d1Yt NNportVeepa.AM*Jln
w•.'to beldi. 875-1024 120-1450 ~ma-76" Mid •prof woman hU 43-47 tq ft. F,.. etandlng ulanMI ~· ~~F!'....!· eem111gt. tr#lfPC)ttatton P'"· typtno.dlc:taphoN. per.on 1llOHpt IMf
• N~port Budt No.
81t(J ll'Vlnt Avtnu ..
(.ti 16thl
645-1104
furn rm for ..,,,. In IQ btdg, 90c: ft. N..N.N. f• lalt ~ ff12 .._. .. -,.., ..... Olllm fl.lrnllhed. 8tar1 lmmed. tmall M. IS Int Ofc. ..._.,, Ind lndry fee, utJla, poof, Avalt now. Lagune p.,,. Condo nr SC Ptza. Fui (7'14)144-4910 tr&MP. t176Wk. Reta For •PPt. call June H1-4t711 _.,... •
kltdl ""1¥. Hletu, M/F, ttouMforllberalmale.-0+. hM l>(lvtledgae, poof & • .., .. ,.,..,... Smd~-del.tor 241.f7879'18pm Pridgen, 148·33'7 7Men&womanMededto 1280. &42·2978 .rt 7pm '450+ dee> 497-31N JK. 1250 me:>. &es-3110 Info 131-3158 2.30-4pm Ill Wiil I llT... (12noon-4pm Tbur8 & Frt gift wrap . take ordtrt In marketing
Large bedl'oom 1n Coe1• M• to * CM •Br poof NEWPORT BEACH thr lfg Wuilili . only NO tH1tre pNiuet WpMlme eeo-1010 (eel onfY) ... Fiia ~-~ .. ~
..... $300 mo. +'hutll. llM, spa. 50" TV '376 BAYFRONT Home '450 latlb 2120 lnntant 9&m..ap_m) D•ntal/Ortho Rec:ept. '=-~ coordin;: xin1 lncOme and r...S
callafter4.543137 lnciutlla.15()..9311Watt paututlltlel.&48-2108 .... /W&IDlllE Ju!rtultia tlll ._. ~· 4* ~exp p.:U~hra~aln. acMncame11tlfquallfted. ------------tPtof fem to n epedold 1ooo.f CM 21M35-1371 ~ Car WMh F&lllJ*t Unie. req d. NB 6'2· W•tctm Plaza 6'2..ot72. Mr Bennett, MZ·6'43
ocnfrnt 28r dupln yr ttfllt UIUITD 844 4480 DENTAL R£CPT/8EC .... ....__/iM.--.t..... llMILAllllTllT
~ HoRoscoPE
' -' SYDNEY
0MARR
round In NB, fully ftltn, _ Nowe>rll r:-; art no.... w/lnturance ~a. _, _...._. a:-/fr ~ l ~Incl l500 831-664-4 1580 tq ft N9WPOf1 BJYd S7 on p '_,.,, 4 ,,._ 6'8-3000 CM ~ "°'1WI delwwy . ..._. w ont .,.c ltan-• .ooo to • pnce. Ex· mt. -... -1• Own car '425 mo ~ tet1bln0 tkllt. XJnt ....,_,
Prot'I reap N/atMr M/F ltlr 8:'!-TM~50/mo, cfulNe 2 yr program. Re-pat t t Im• 1 ·3: pm. .. ll.IU bonua. Houn 2am:s.m. l beniiltte. Mf.3242
Lg NB tune pool/ten wtk ,,... turntl7200mln•)'rpd 3·'1:30pm, 11·7am. exp rMture delk e*1c c., 2-4 htt. 7N-0830 ... I.LL ....
to bc:h '450+ 839-8722 25' JI 30', outtlcM, feno.cf, monF thfy. Neef O.C. fair"°"*· Sttn lmmed 64&-171; 6'2-t015 11 - -, ...
R .. _, p a..,. MC:Ur• .,. .. for boat °' tnanctno now even. Ute pauent loed. GOOd .___ • 'fOUr .,. lnt...e.d In
mmt Fml::, ~~= RV. Call Randy Ctoea. Only 1~ ln1ereet woritlng cones. call btwm anyt,.,... ......... Hrntng 135,000. to =771•3965 i7!-2e2S 850-0181 TIRE WIZAFW-IOS..1307 t-5 Mon-Fri. 64t-30f1 Mlftl/...... Needtd. Full a. part-time, •&o,OOG. or more In •••••••••lllll••J I W 9 M at know L A .,.. m• l f.male Fle1111>1f rmMIOrlt and art .tlling Rntt• wanted. i330 ptut STORAGE CENTEAS OF • I Ht aa11& A 1 at Karl · Home h<Kn. Start '6iHr. Mutt to WOf'k hard fat It,
dee>-Laguna Beacl'I. No AMEAIC~o~ag~ llTlll WllTll Major Newport Beach ve::J. 873 W. 18th at.. be bondablt. Car II'* thlt: Mttttll L~
nunday, November I
ARIES (March 21-April 19): What had been a wish become!>
~ahty. You recei\le import.ant assignment, respons1bihties increase
and so do opponunities for financial reward. What had been a pleasant
flirtation could be transformed mto a serious relat1onsh1p.
TAURUS (April 2()..May 20): You imprint style, you gain wider
audience, you make solid 1mprc:_ssion on one you love. Focus also on
production, promotwn. added prcstiae. What seem~d a .. lost cause" is
revived to your advantage. · GEMINI (May 21 ~June 20): Accent on independence, romance,
creativity. display of pioneerin. spirit. Member of opposite sex helps
you get to hcan of maucn. You II make new start which could involve
JOumey. Lco plays 'ia,nificant role
• CANCER (J unc 21-July 22); Follow throuatJ on hunch -you learn
about hidCSCn resource1 and secret romantic mectin.1 place. Former
teacher ii on scene and wants to &et .. in touch ... Family member does
care, will prove it and you'll be happier as retult.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Permit others to take initiative. Be a keen
observer. P~ivc picture in its entirety. Leave fine point!& details for
another time. You'll act invitation to prestiaious $0Cial anair. Accent
,on special relationship. ~ ---,
' VIRGO (Aug. 23-Scpt. 22): Ch«k details, h1&hh&Jlt per·
ceptivcne , show t~at you tusve acccH to modem source material.
Someone who js envious may be sniping. hop1n1 you'll err. Romance i1
part of 1CCnario, lend spice to life. LIBRA (Sept. lJ;()ct. 22): Read, write, communicate and do t0me
penonal investlptina. Fotus on chari•ma, romance, rclation1hip that
&rowt stronacr. You'll fl'" through unique way of nprcasina ideas.
Gemini, Virso. 1ittanu1 persons play key role•.
ICORPIO {Oct. 23-Nov.-21): AC«'fll on lifcsiylc. domestic
adjustment, conudcntion cncompe inJ PoS iblc chanse of residence. ~bran n:vcal1 secrct, could present unique sift. Tauru1 native helps
, ou t rid of red tape. Y ou'rc ina 10 WIO!
Gm ARIUS (Nov. '22-21 ): Define tcrm1, su others in
reali !ic Ht.ht.Be opcn·m]ndcd, not suillible. Avoi~ sclf-dectJ?lion.
• uve 1¢qu1e lo umque request. You could cluJCh prorn1 of
~ to0pet1tion and fUndtn CAPBJOORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Aoetnt rcspons1b1hty, Pf urc
nd 1 .. tron ff relation ip. Thia n be a power-play day! You'll
kc money ind Jove, )Ou"ll receive dcd recosniuon anc.f 1
urges ~~rd. Another Capricorn plays ramount role.
AQUAIU ~(Jan 20.fcb. l8): You now.fulflllpotcnt11J-youan I ythtq.; chicve aim • anr. L Cycle hrah. 1ud&mcn1 and
ntu111on m on l41'JCI. Love plays )nJmlc role and you•n Ii CJ Vilil,
aldt and .llad to be alive. P~ (Feb. l 94March 20): Those o th0\1&111 you atfeJltcd ire due for rude awaken na. You'll be revivtd, ready for
fl h an nd )'Ou wall 1mpnnt JOUt own 1yte. nano hiahhahu
cm1t1vily, ¥1 r, confiddlce nd 1ntcn fled romanlic n:tallon•h p.
pet1. c.r1 "497·1380 =:. 'v. ml tr<Hn H,.. e.m -11500. PLUS per FJn1noe/IM\lr1nce Co. Nwpt 8cl'I n«nnry. Ideal fOf ""'" AM!ty la the mott pr
spaclOu. Utntty apt MJy Hoepttai 1800 aw:: week. Company wtll train. ti•......,., fl.Ill Ume entry dent•. Ctll 4f.4.:'322 any. tlglout. mo•t gro.t
furn Quiet 11eo1mo + fA Ave CM 831•3930 Atk 88* exper. ttetpfut CalJ levtlcltricel potltlOM. lllYDI WUTll time. oriented name In real
utl CM 850-7739 Iv for 8111 oi a.tty 751·2382 Some typing, 10-ktY2 18 yr•+. provide. own• .......... '*"·.!~..!...Y~HI ~....;;;.;;,~~;...:.;....;..;.z;"tt,,-· JOCOuntlng .-per. pt.,., hlcle. ~of OC l --_ _... now '"' .,,. ·-· r-lntab aat nta 3 An'1Wlrtno Swte. a-11 tNtt. but not nee. Xlnt ~ LA ., ... • muetl Top mutt .,.... Engllth, hew tat• boom. cer .. cerdtr in .;ca;ang; JOr Exp a mu1t. U .25 up/Hr. cond l beneftta. PINN 11S, Call Pat 711-9022 own tranap. 15.50 to portunlU•• avallable
apt 38 Old bach fWa SPIRITUAi. READINGS 3'2 3rd St .. Lag 8c:fl contec:t. Lynn l\ar'lefttld, . ttart. 64&-8071 llcanelng ttalftlnQ
511-'3 . Advtce Jn All Matter• ' e" ". 6. 0 0 Av c 0 Ill M HEI llLP ~. To lntervi.w 8 33 3 Atlc fOf Ttrry COuft9'11ng. 11115 So. El ll•ITllf "NANC&AL; SERVICE.8. want.O """"· I -,.. •lmlDll Watt Maclbortkl or Vlkk Fem Exec to lhr, ,..,. or CamlnO Aeal, San Ctem. Ar•)'O'llookingfootrtety, 820 Newport c.nt. Dr, Af'f*l In per90n 2134 E. te//tti, N.8 . home, rllfl. at Mttnll Lynd! AMlfty
,, .. 11t n, ocean xtt rflf. Uc'd. 412·72" PrObttm totvtng, profec:' Newport IMda. ea. EOE eoett Hwy, CdM t hrs p/v$, f40..f1 tt 548 83'8 or 847.:e5of1 ~~.6'4-ro7~&tl •·st .... M~~~~ Ifft~.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ..,. poaltlon, CaM Ut btwn
Minon"'*' want9 condo i280 WWW #or loet 9am-11am tor lntttV19W.
1·2bf'. gar 1500-teoo. ma6e c:.t 10/27, nutty 157·8191 H.8ch.C.M, Orange .,_ _.. .. _ wllt ...,..._ .... ~ -----------Call 213-92HS11 ew ...,,.,. .,..,..,., .,.... AITI ., ... .,_. AM to M11ton. Vic. S , DetallnQ ,.. ... 14 l!Mtbfutf .... 780-"'8 =~le; hatcf--= I
•CANNERY VICUdi* Found: cat. ISlklwht pews reep. lndlv. to join OUI
Fr ... ttndlng bulldlnl' · & fee.. Unda ltle & teem & ·~ ~ the 1250 ~ft& 750 eq ft. 1 ~ Or. ~. oompeny, Cell for Inter·
Ptr tqft. 87Mtoe frlendlyt75-7180 .., now 831""°3
Newlpapet
KIDS-EARN GREAT TRIPS AND PRIZES!
District Mana_gers
If you~ workift9 wtfh young boys &
9'rla Ond dnk job' ot• not for yov.
coml•r o cor...-in Ifie n9WtpClp9f cltculo
tion f,.ld. Thi• K o u~ potlfion "'""
doity chol~ & rew0tek.
Our open•no• ore lm!Mdlde A~
mutt hove o "°"· statlonWolOft °' lftuck. w. offer on ••c.tlent ~ With a '""""
plan ond '°' ollowonc.. W• how on
•l.Cltlleftf benefit pion ttlat Jncludn h0tpi• *'tdl°" IMuronce, &iberol ¥GCation and
holldoyi
Condtdatft fftVti hD¥1 o ·dnlr• 10 be
wcc"•ful and be wlllin9 to ~ hOtd. 41
you tt'IW. you hcM ffl• quOlifico&ont.
pJtoM oppt, In penot'I to1
thelllJPllt
~ "'"' P:,ldoy 9-1, ... °' 2 ... ,..
330 w. a.,
ta Miii, CA 12121
Oft ..,,,,. ... 111 ..... .,.,.,.,
l
AC"Oaa
t ''lnl•oo·· mat1
t Fwi.1
10 Oleo poec.e
14 On frllfl
1e In tn. c:tkection
of
11 Allequwe
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paymen1
18 lntecl
ltlbNn~n
20 V1bfation
22 1nve.g11no
24 MannertSm
21 Oeterm1ne1
27ConfUM
3t Unit of
reluctance
32 Heating
Ch1mber1
a3 LftMfttO
H !'*gy
3tV1m
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43 Jittery
44 AtcOfd ng 10
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51 VIC'Ctn1
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ONUFE.
JOE'S PICIS OF THE WEEI Pro Teams Sunday, Nov. 4, 1984 D at St. Louis ·
D Raiders
5 D Clewelaad
0
I
5
0
~ 0
I
~
D Cree• Bay
D Hoston
D la1su City
D at Chicago
D at Buffalo
D at New Orleans
D atlittsburgb
e D ... Yon Clots
Oat Seattle
EJ at Dallas
::> 0
I
5 0
5 0
I
D Pklladelpbla D at Detroit _______ _
D at lndlaaapolls
D at Deaver 1111 YW Ill
#781CH •2111 ~ 0
D Saa Diego
D lew E1gllad
D lla•I
~--11110 ..... o D Cl1cl111ti
I
D at New York Jets
D at San Francisco
(
5 D Tampa Bay
0
#1AB219
11U MME llPLOUT
D at Minnesota
.___
•a211 a
I
Pro Teams Playing Monday Night Nov. 5, 1984
(TIE-ISREAKER)
11U IEIAILT FIEIO
Air, tilt, turbo,
#2ABR454
5 OAtlaatl
'7411 ° § Put Your Score for Monday Night Tiebreaker·
D at Washington
--------------.. I~
CAR STEREO I
CUSTOM INSTALLATIONS NEW & USEOI
f ACTORY TALLATeONI
with pwchase of I ANY I
AM/FM Cassette I
and . I
2 Speakers 1
lnclud s: KENWOOD • I
CLARION• PIONEER • BlAIJ>UNKT I
TC.A 0 A PAIR HOM & CAA
FA T RElfA LE RV•C
TOP NAME BRANDS ca EOUIP
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! l_A_S_T_W_E_E_K_'S.--W ___ IN_N_E_R_S--T-____ NAME __________ _ 5 rt ECOVl_o_ ... _-._> _tutieton __ e._a_ch ____ .__5_0_;0_0 ADDRESS ___________ _
5 ID.IDGAft CostaMeu 25.00 PHONE ___________ _
o ROlt WtlTE (tit) Balboa 15. ATTENTION: WINNER'S CIRa.E (On Your Envelope)
I
RULES OFT GA
Games list will be published each Wednesday. Make your picks on your entry blank, cut out, mall or
~ deliver to The Dally Piiot, ATTENTION: WINNER'S CIRCL:.E, 330 West Bay St., Costa Mesa, CA
92626. Entries must be postmarked no latfr than 5 P.M. Friday, preceedlng the Sunday game and • Monday game. Late entries will not be counted. If more than one winner, a tie-breaker will be
determined by the score of Monday night's football game. Winners wlll be p~bllshed the following
Wednesday. Winners may pick up prizes at The Dally Piiot office on Friday before 5 P.M. following
announcement published In the paper. In the case of more than one winner, prize• will be divided.
(No employee of the Orange Coast Doily Pilot or their families are eligible to enter.)
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957 -8985 /957-8879
2720 "H" So. Harbor Blvd.
~ (Below Warner)
Santa Ana 92709
IUE lllE
LDll 11 TllC' m GILLS
81111f?r..
•
I
~
a111111m
Nf(Jta•,()AY u1.r1>Bf~i !I 1'Hi·1
Widow suspect i~. k•tl-for_;ca
Court records reveal alleged murder
plot in HB after husband nixes divorce
who body was found Jyingin a poof
ofblood near hi white aedan on sept. J. A cru hcd cigarette butt and a
Oashhght were found at hi1 feel.
satd whether they know who pulled
the triger.
The auto pans lesman reportedly
was lured from his Lakewood home
to an industrial area of Huntin&10n
Beach by tomeone fe111una car
trouble. Tool were found an the front sea~ of Ford' ,. car. wluch was Jtill
runninJ with its lli&hts on when a
patrolhng police oni'""cer happened by.
By STEVE MARBLE
Oftheo.ltr .......
A 2S.year-0l'1 woman, who com-
plained that her husband mistreated
her and refused to g1ve her a divorce.
may have paid $3,000 t~ have her
Indira Gandhi
assassinated
'N .E W
DELljl. I n d 1 a
(AP).' -
Pr 1 me
Mini1ter
Indira
Gandhi
wn at~
sauinatcd
today
ouuide
. her home,
mortally GANDm
wounded in a bamat of bullets
reportedly fired by her own Sikh
bodyprds. Related stories A4,
Bt.
The slaying or the woman
who dominated Indian political
life for two decades threatened
to plunae this troubled nation
ioto new turmoil. Her son,
Rajiv, was quickly sworn in to
suce«d her.
One or two of the gunmen
were reported killed at the scene
of the shootina. for which Sikh
extremistl claimed responsi-
bility.
California
A huge tanker vessel Is on
fire near San Francisco
Bay with one crew mem-
ber atlll missing./ A4
Nation
Film on teen-age suicides
prompts thousands of
calls to crisis centers.I A8
World
Poland mourns death of
pro-Solidarity priest.I A7
Home
More Americans are tak-
ing a personal Interest In
history-theirs or some-
one else's -and
preserving furnlture./0 1
Food
Student and professional
chefs show off their artis-
tic talents at the culinary
arts competltlon./C1
Sporte
The Southern Callfornla
College basketball team
18 prevlewed./81
Entertainment
A rape victim takes re-
venge on her attacker In
thetenaedrama "Ex-
tremities': In Laguna
Beach./IM
INDEX
02
C12
A3
A9
A4
03·5
C12
05
85
01-2
0..
02
A9
A~
A11
01
A3
BM
81·3
A10
02 84
A2
A4
husbanl gunned down on a dark
HuntingtOn Beach treet in ptent·
bcr, coun documents show.
Anita Lynn Ford is facing murder
and con piracy charges in the murder
of her husband, Barry Alan Ford, 30.
Costumed ~dera
Mrs Ford's brother and two other
men, descnbed by auth0nties a
family friends, also were arrntcd in
the apparent murder plot, police said.
All are bcma held without bail and
were to be arraigned today.
Despite the arrests, police have not According 10 coun documcnu
Klndergartner Cluts Eeptzdo, clreMed u a
Care Bear for Harbor View ltlement.uy
School'• Halloween parade tbla momtPI,
wreetla wltb the bood of Ida coetume ~)
at parade'• end. Be loob a lot ~re
comtortable la the photo at rlaJat.
Witness 'drank ·
beer, watched'
two girls slain
By JEFF ADLER peaking in a low monotone, OftMo.,,......., Hernandez told jurors he, Dou&las
An eyewitness to the desert sex-and the two girls drank rum and coke
slayinp of two Anaheim teen-agers and smoked marijuana for about an
recounted in erisly detajl Monday hour after arriving at the desert site
how he drank beer and watched as the the two men had selected several
two girls were killed by his f ricnd, • weeks earlier.
former Costa Mesa re ident Fred Apparently believin1 the photo
Berrc Douglas in Au1ust 1982. session was about to begin, Jones and
Richard Hernandez, 39, an ac-Krueser removed their clothes atid
knowledgcd heroin addict and con-aareed to have their ankles aod wrists
victed burglar, wasarantcd immunity bound with nylon cord, Hernandez
from prosecution in exchange for his said.
testimony against Douglas, who faces It was then that he and Douglu
a death penalty sentence if convicted walked to the car and returned not
of the first-dcarec murders or l 6-year· with camera equipment, but with the
old Margaret Krueger and J 9-year-rifle and shovel, he said.
old Beth Jones. ..We .aot back there and one of the
Hernandez told an Oranae County J.!rls said, 'Where's the camerar He
Superior Court)ury in Santa Ana that (DouJlas}picked up the rifle and put a
he accompanied the SS-year-old clip in it and said, 'Here it 1s,' ••
DouaJas. a furniture rcfinisher, and Hernandez testified.
the two girls to a remote deten wash While the sex acts were bcina
in the Anza B9n:tl'? State Park on performed, Douglas ··pa~d" back ~ug. 13, 1982 bchevinJ. hke the two and fo~h. the gun tn one hancJ, a can
airls, that they were going \0 po5e for of beer 1n the other. Hernandez said.
nude pictures. Then, Douglas pulled out o razor
But instead of camera equipment, blade and sliced one of the air1'1
Douglas pulled a rifle and a hovel throats, sucking on the wound.
from the trunk of his car and qrdcred 0 1l lookc<l to me like she was in a
the girll to perform sex acts on him, t te of hock. The other airl ju t
Hcmandez and on cadl other before Uli'td. l was 1001' na"ar·cm. dnnkul&
be killed them, Hemandet. testified. beer," Hernandez said.
Joel's mistaJie
wlllhaunt many
as pa~ents protest lac k of crossing guard
Mo t pcoelc hve to ttaret their
childhood m11takes
Nine-year-old Joel n)'dcr d1dn"1
The fourth-trader frOm Whmacr
Elementary sehool wa ktlled an
Costa Mesa Monday. He was hat by 1
car while U')'tftl to '~ PJacen11a
Avcnueap1n t lhc red traffic hlht.
H11 I l·ycar-old brotHCt, Donald,
llWAmcd ham not 10 chal&ttl&c the 3. 0
p.m. uaffi on the four-lane hiahway.
But ;Joel dashed into the 1ntcrxction of MIC.'ent a venue iJnd 18th trttt anyway
He neva made u l the opposltc
curb
An autoi>1 Tucsd.a mo
... •
Pred Berre Doqlu
Douglas told him the two airls
could not "go back anymore;' and
Hernandez said said he protested.
"I seen he wu choking the one with
dark hair(Jones). The other was lyin1
there with blood comina out of her
mouth. I tried to knock him oft". but
I'd been drinkin1 a lot and he pushed
me away ... Theo, I went an~ got
another beer. He stood up and packed
up the nfle and butted her with it. ..
Hernandez said.
Annothcr witne • former Hunt-
inaton Beach resident Kathy PhaJhps,
testified last week that OouaJas had di~closed a plan for lunn1 t\\O
hitchiltcn to the dcscn and killing
thtm during the filmin1rof a "snuff
(Plcue Me WITN&88/ A2)
TONY
SAAVEDRA
Focus ON JH~ NH'"
used lO obtaJn a wamn1 for MrJ.
Ford's arrest wt week. pc>lace suspect
lhc Lakewood womaa plotled ha
hU5band'1 laio-nltht death and then ancmptcd to col)«I 1nJuranoc
mOOC).
The woman rclM)l'ledly COdfaded U>
a police infonnan1 that the wa1 to pay
S 1.soo before her hutband'1 death
and another SI .SOO when the JOb was
done, records 1od1catt
Court dOC'Aments also reveal dw
HunlUJlton Beach PQlace auaDpled
to uruavd the m)'Aa10U1 cnnac: by
havina one of Mrs. Ford·s acquamt-
anca pmend that be IOO wanted IO
have someone killed.·
The man, wbo ~ with poliCle for narly a month 1n an dfon to Iara
lhe Mknt1ty or the appernlt kiUer
lowed police to 'tape tt.COrd I lft1ft
(PJeue w WOllA•/Alt/
Stabbing deaths
in Sunset Beach
shoCk neighbor
Sheriffs deputies hard p~essed for clues
By ROBERT BAR~
Of ... o.IJ ........
Residents in the ~h ide community of Sunset across
Pacific Coast Hipway from ]Hunt·
ington Harbour expresxd shock and
horror tOday over the brutaJ stabbi1'
slayinp of "a oenect beach couple.
Darrell Jolin Auardo, 26, and
Stephanie Michelle Andersen. 20,
were found Tuesday lyina on the
Jivine room floor of their home with
multtple 1tab wounds in their upper
bodies.
The bodies were found by a
roommate of the slain couple who
retumcdtothercsidenceat 169SS9th
St. at about 12:4.S p.m. The room-
mate, described u a native of Braul
who spoke only the Portuaue5e, ran
out the door ~ for pOlace
when he made die ,pitly ditcovery.
authorities said. 0ranac County Sbcriff't Depen.
mcnt 1nvC$Upton Aid llley I.ave ao
suspcct.S or mouves. Ara raidcftts
failed to ~ hcariJlll any ui:wsaat ooises.
"'We"re Sbocbd,.. said lAaaaa
Jester. the ma.,..-of itbe atarby
Woody's Market ~ tbc )'OGQI
couple did their pocay lboooi&
.. lbc, were reaJ nice U.cf &iaidl>.
They were: a perfect beadl eouple -
both were bJond and blue-eyed and
they liked the ocean."
lester said Sltpbaaie Andaxn bad
vilittd the market aboUt 9 a.m. on the
momina of the slayins and bad talked
(Pleue ... 9T.~/A2)
Irvine schools plan
classes during strike
BJ TONY SAAVEDRA oc ...............
Undtr the thrc.at of a walkout by
Jrvineteacben, tru~tcesforthe Irvine
Unified School Diitrict adopted
cmeraency measures this momina to
keep district schools open should
faculty negotiators call a stnk.e.
Three trustees at the special board
meetina today empowered Super·
intendent A. Stanley Corey to hire
subStitute teachers and take other
actions if the disgruntled tcachen
leave the classroom. The two other board members were absent.
The action came in the wake of a
strike authorization vote Monday by
members of the Irvine Teacbni
Association. Tcachcn ca.sting secret
ballots were asked to a,ive faculty
'negotiators the permi ion to c.all a
walkout ii' a state mediator fails to
break the deadlock over pay rai •
An impasse was called Oct. 4 after
teachers held fast to their demand for
~
a 7.S pcn:nt eost-<>f-livina pay raise;
k-1h&"'1itu1Cl offcrr.d a one-:
bOnusat the end Of fiscal 198-4-85.
Teacher rqm::sentaUvcs said ~
rcsul ts of the stnk.e vote would oot be:
released to the publi~ bat would be
used as a .. trump c:atd" \0 bolster the',
teachers' barpinina power witb the
<list net.
Distiict board memben countered
today by adOtJ'inJ lbe ~·
measures to bring an substitutts and
non<redentialed lccturen if' QCICelS.!•
ary, Corey said.
Also, the supcrin\eodent's officie
was cmpowm:d lo sive additional pay to employees that have taken on
extra duucs. And as 1 last resort.·
Corey was given authority lo d0te the.
achools if students• wdfare is threat
coed.
Corey said the emergency IUO~
ution is routinely adop&ed by tc:boo
distric:u thmatened by a trike.
(Pl9&M eee ICBOOL8/ A2J
School, business
leaders convene
Second Academic Excellence Conference
promotes 'partn ers In education' oal
By LISA MAHONEY °' ... .., ........
Orange Count)' business people
and educators met in a day-Iona ~sion Tuesday to e~plorc ways to
become partners an education.
The ~nd annual Academic fa.
cellcnce Con(ermcc, held 11 the
Hilton at th Park 10 Anaheim,
brouaht representatives of area bu i·
ncssn tose=ther with educators from
every Orana,c County hool dt tnq,
for workshops, lectures and ~
1C1Sions on how to brina businat
people into the schools and 11!1
tudents more involved in the work-:,
ina wo_rld they will enter upon
gra4iiallon.
St.ate school Su~ntendcnt Bil(
Hon' and bu wife, aney, allo
appeared before the more than 500
participants to an ICf quesuoes
aoout promoting pannctlh1pa.
(Pleue eee E DUCA'nON/A.2)
Sell, Wilson in county,
lauds GOP candidates
Te s"-Newport rally
·There are no safe
RepubUcan districts·
I '
•
•
two
ky after morn ·ng clouds
ton and other the d tncr1 request for n anJunctlon
vc ken over th ord n 1 chert to itnmcdunely
rcaume lhmc eura-curricul r duue .
Corey d the complaint wn denied because the d1stnct had not
officially ordered the 1 chen tO
rh 1 tc in dJunct &ervfoes. Th d1Jlnct h s not )'Cl idcd
whether to I uc a formal order, Corey 1d,
WIL'SON BOOSTS GOP CANDIDATES .•. Al
n, .. Wdson 1d ''1 h~ y this 1s
he stro 1 A scmbly d1stnct in the
tate, but I n tell you, there arc no
fe d1 mets:•
Fcrauson. who will fl cc Democrat
~teven Feldman, id, "I'm no more a
poht1c1an than you arc. Bul I'm aoina to'° up there (Sacramento) nd IJVC'
1t my best hot"
lh rrcept1on wu attended by
several Republican le1JJlator1 and
eandadates 1ncludin A1·
semblywoman Manan Bet&cJon, As.-
aemblyman Nolan Friuclle, Reps.
Jt.oben Badham and Ron Packard
and County upervisors Harriett
Wieder ind Thomu Riley.
Most of the 400 auem 1n attend· Mee don1lt'd SI 2S eacb to attend the
reception. which raised more than
$40,000 for Ferauson. Bue, as his aide GTtJ Haikjn Pointed out today, not
all that money II be u d by the
A mbly ndidatc.
"A lot of the other Republican
scnaton and a $C1T1blymcn ho t·
tended h lent Oil .some mpar n
money dunna the p-nm ry. A lot of
the prooeecb from lut nil.ht will be u~ tO pay them back." Jfask1n said.
"In tum, they w11l lcnd the money
to other candidates who may need 11,
hke Bob Dornan." he 11id. "lf1 kind
of recycled Republican money.''
·Earlier in the day, Wilson v11itcd
recently opened Republican Pa.nr,
head(iuancrs in the "Lmle Sais.on '
area of Wntmintter, where Wilson
endorsed the candidacy of Roben
Dornan. Doman will face Jm-y
Patterson in a hotly contested race for
the 3Sth Conarcs 1onal .cat.
Walson told the Vietnamete-born
rnidents that President Reapn nd
others are ortm to secure the:
rele se of Pohtlcal pnsoncrs held an
Vietnam, many'lf whom arc relatives
of Oran Counay•s A51an comm uni·
ty.
The pany he dquarttri on Bolsa
Avenue is rn commercial center
almo t exclu 1vely lea~d by Viet·
nam bu Inc .
Chn Vu Dinh, who manages the
hcadquancrs. 1d the Rcpubli n
Party ha had remark.able success
reg11tcrmg the Vietnamese 1mmi·
arants.
"You nug.ht expect the Democrats
to have better luck with the min·
ont cs, but th t hasn't been true here," Vu Dinh 1d.
W1lsun later made an appearance
at county GOP headquarters in
Oran .
Coaatal
f00.4¥ tUpm 10:2tpm
flftM AY
&60em UI011m
4 II pm
H 1 fUfl
Tem~rature .....
6' to • 42
10 •2 21 n ., ... u eo •• 72 .. 61 ., ..
h 2f;
; CoN TINUllJ STORIE S
"--------·~ ~ -' -- --
. .
... t• ...
C$ •• 67 ., 'O ra " 711 12 • n IO 04 M .. llt IS , ., .. u 04 ti .. 61 12 .. , . 64 ., II 04 ., .,
" 21
62 JI 82 37
11 ., 00
13 .oci
WOMAN PAID HUSBAND'S KILLER? •••
mm.A'
CHILD'S MIST AKE HAUNTING MANY .••
pf telephone calls he had with Mrs. death.
Ford. The informant. who camt to p<>hoc
Dunn,g eevend telephone callt, ei&ht days after the 1hoo11na. said Mrs. Ford is quoted as sayin1 her Mrs. Ford had talked for weeks about
brother knew 1 person wrlhn1 lo do hav1n1 ht'r husband "wa tcd" but
the JOb butthatthe man could onlr be that he had not taken the threats
contacted through a "baker bar' in scriou ly.
Lot Anacles. The man told police he phoned the
The informant reportedly said he woman the day after her husband's
ditc:Ontcntcd wife had complained death and had a &hon convcnat1on
for weeks pnor to the murder about with her.. •
beina roughed up and mistrcalt'd by "How'" busmen?" Mn Ford Mt hu1band. The wife said her asked the man , according to court husband came and went as he pleased document\.
while fomna her tO remain at home "Pretty dead, .. he reportedly rc-
with their two youn• duJdren. plied.
App:arenl.Jy ~Ji"C suspected the ''Yeah. '° is Barry," she alleacdly woman from tM \Llt1. A police officer ~id, Jauahins.
who traveled to La · wood to inform A wcclc later, the min IJICCd to
the woman that her hu~band had pretend he wanted h11 e•·wifc killed
been killed, noted that she showed no and to t«k out Mrs. ford's a ..
rpnsc or tmotion and id "l srstancc. Pohce recorded telephone
thouaht ao" when he broke the news calls bet~c:cn the two for nearly a
The offiur ad Mrs. Ford then month, coun record show.
fled her .~oth rand 1d. "Barry's. Despite weeks of telephone t'llllJ,
been ihor the man apparently was unsuccasf uJ
The pe>human u1d he told the 1n arranging a QJcetin with the "hit
woman her hu\hand had hecn lulled man:· At one point, Mrs Ford Iii
but never mcnuonrd he: wa' ihot to quoted as sayma the man•"who 11
___ .,_ .. _..:
going to do if' wa~ in 1a1I and couldn't
nu~.e bail.
l>unna another all. the tnes to
learn the identity "Of the hit man and
Mrs. ford respondt, "I have three baa.
uaJy brothers ...
Prtorto her arrest, Mrs Ford's days
were spent a1tempt1nJ to cash in
1nsurince policies, takinc drup and
auemptinc to act police to return
SSOO tha1 wu.in ford's wallet the
ni&ht he was kJlkd, records state.
lhc informant also said Mrs. ford
de.cr1bcd to him how ~he had ''put on
a show .. 11 her husb nd's funeral for
police detCC11vn 1n attendance.
A baby 1t1erwh0Yid he fl'C(luent·
ly took care of the ford'~ children,
told poltce that JUSt days before the
murder, the woman C<>nfidcd. "'I'm
about to do somethina 1llepl and 1s
ha\ to do with a aun."
Mrs Ford was arrested Oct. 24
aflcr agrccan to come to the Hunt·
1n con De ch pol ace uu1on to pkk up
some o( her hu band's bclongan;a.
The woman brother, Gcorac Harvey
WriJht, 30, wasarrc:sted the follo-mg
day1 as were friends John 8 . Aldridge,
33, and Lionel J Cashman, 20
romAl
pede tnans howcd that the chances
of a child beina hh at Placentu1
Avenue and ISth Street ·we~ very
low.
Wnh Joel's d ah, nccred parent•
didn't care bout 1uidelines or
1tati1t1e&. ft didn't matter th t the
child crossed apm't a red ltght or that
he was outside the cros wafli:.
"I don't care whether or not a
crossina fUlrd js •warranted • I home
child i1 killed. then the 1tate'J criteria
is wrong,'' 1d Connie Maf)it.an, a
Whittier JYrA member who has lone
championed the <:ro 'inJauard iuue.
Herb Bun1ham, Hststant traffic
engjnctr, t 1n a marked city car at
the 1nter.ect1on Tue&day. counttna
the children cro~~mg the trcct be·
tween 2 p m. and 3:30 pm., when
students are released from school. He
also kept track of the cars makinc
turns through the cross" lks. Ironically, the mon1tonna had
been scheduled for da)a and came the
day after Joers death, Burnham 1d.
WITNESS, 'ORANK, WATCHED SLAYINGS' .. • •
Uurnham's finoinp, to be pres-
ented to the traffic comm1s ion Nov.
7, howed 97 tudenls crossed the
intcn;cctton, well past t~ 1tate stan·
dard of SO. But onl) 7S cart tumed
mto the cro~•wall\ every hour. well
µndtr the state d•nacr limit of 300 cari
The C.:11> < ounc1l adopted the state
1u1dehne~ la.t 5pr1na to help cn•ure
that limited funding and staffina
would be used only where the auards
were warranted.
f"romAl
movie.'' 1 he d1tcl<nure was made in
October 1979, she uid.
Prosecutor Tony Rackauck11 al·
teies DoucJa1 followed throuJh on his
sruesome murder plan several years
fater when he promi~d to pay Jones
~r for nudt phot<>Jraph,.
The gu1s' tkeletal remain' were
d11e.·-0vered by a phot~apher on
March 28, 1983 A san D1eJ0 County
Coroner•s Office patholOIJst already
has testified that bccau~ of the
condition of 1he rem ins th,. c;JUte of
death cannot be dctennin• d
~l resumes Thursday,
Htmandez ¥><ill aaa•n be on the
w1tnes' 1tand and Dou&Jas' defense attorney, Gcorie Peters, 1s expected
to cro wumine him.
Peters, in his opcn1n1 statement,
character11.td ff cmande1 as an un·
reliable wllnen, who bei1des beina a
heroin addict and an alcoholic 11 a
"brutahrer of women."
Maraitan said P1 A leadcra from
Whnucr Elementary will be mcctina
with city tramc cnginccn today to
demand that a crossin1 1uard be
placed at the interscct1on.
·ED.UCATION, BUSINESS LEADERS MEET •••
She said parents alMJ would 1n1111
that auards be as ianrd lo the other
schools pl•ced on a waitina lt11 while
traffic en11necr1 review ments of
their requei.ts.
Ma...,tan accused city oflic1als of
bcinulow-footcd 1n proocsun~ thote From Al
In the past live )ears, hundred1 of
larse and small Oran County bu 1·
11eues have Joined wuh area tchoola, ~cordina to (..<Jrr11ne Cor ,
buune s and industry .1pe<:ialtS1 for
the Orange County De nment of
Education
neu nd offer 1ntern~h1P' to prom1~
ma 1tudent1:
really need to learn Cfrom husines J,"
Hon11sa1d.
Quoting federal Department of
Labor pro1ec1tons, Honig \81d that
children born today will need to be J: t C 11 educated to COJ)C With evtr-<:hanJ.lnl us a
technoloay. Thirty-three percent of
them will work 1n technical, ~1ent1fic
and manaacnal occupation• whrlr 642-601il6
requests brouJht by the schools in who arc only two ycan older than
hopes of recciv1na the iuards in time they are. But with an adult there _,, "
for this school year, Seven er sinJ id Don • nyder who doesn't di1-
1uards were approved 1n May, whire count his son·s fault. but 111d the
the commission a1kcd for more pen lty for has mistake wu far too
inform tion on the numbers of stu· hi&h
dents and cars at the other location lie 1d Joel's mother was tak na
Traffic engjneen were a ked to her aon's death hard, as was the
monitor al least 20 trccts and brother who hclpleuly watched the
inteNCCtions where auards were re-accident from the curb.
quested. Snyder aaid h11 son. Donald, asked
Burnham said such information to be transferrtd from Whittier
could only be pmcred while .chool Elementary and into another nearby
~as in session. Claucuooncndcd for school because M was fearful of
the summer and did not start again relivina the painful memory of his
uruil mid-September. . brother's death every time he crossed
The mon1tori~1. bcpn in early' lJlc intersection. _
October, after 1Jv1n1 the tudents . "It'• aonna be too much for him to
rouJhly two wee kt to cstabli h their walk home from thauchool and cross
routine paths to and from schoul. that stteet," Snyder Yid.
Burnham said. Since the comm1s ion .Fat~er and JOn coped; wit~ their
meets the first WcdncsdA)' of every &ncf fucsda)' by shanng.. 1n th
month, there wa n't ~noua.h time to • 1JfCparat1on of Joel's funderaJ.
compile t~ 1nformat1on by the T0atther, they picked a hcads&one,
October moct1n he 1d. reserved a plot -lonpide the bof s
Yet. the:1>3rcnt1 who had fouJht for srcat arandfather ._ at Fairhaven
roughly O yean for cro in au rds Memonal Park in Santa Ana and
felt they h d waited Iona enouJh. . made arrangements for1iervicca there •·1 repeatedly id, lea's not wait Friday at 1 J a.m.
uf!til someone ccu k1llrd," Maranan The Whittier Elemen~ry PT A •~ud. • · plans to nd letters home W1th the .w~cn Joel• wu hit, traffic com· studen1' askina parents to help offset
mis 1oncrs found themselves Tues.-the funeral costs bf makinJ contnbu·
day dcfcnd1n1 their question~ last t1on\, Mar11u.n ~1d.
•pnna oo whether a auard wus needed
at Placentia Avenue and I Sth Street.
Sunshine will ·~
replace clouds
''We weren't tryina to sall. We
were trying to see what some of the
peculiarities of that intcrr.ection
were." said Commislioncr Wayne
Kraiu. "Unfortunately. the&e cci-By tltt Anoctated Press dents arc not predictabl~. God know1
that if we knew there was aoinc to'bc
an accident, we would have tried
anything. even pte1."
Kraiu added he was unsure that a
cro ina auard could have 1topped
Joel from runnina into the &trcct.
The child's father thouaht otha-
w1se. -
"Little boys don't listen to brothef'I
Clouds will gather like Halloween •
ghouls alona the co st ton1a,ht but the
momin• un wall 1e1re them off a
blue kies and mild· temperaturC$
prevail around Southern C•lifomia
on Thursday.
Skies will be clear with hi'ahs in the
mid· to upper-70t. the Nation 1
Weather Service 111d.
Wltat do )'Oa llke aboat tbe Dilly Piiot? Wbat doa't yoa flke? C11l tbe
aamber at ldt and yoar mn _ a, will bt rtcordtd, traaacrlbecl and dtUt r d
to tlat appropriate editor.
Tht tame %4• oar IDIWtrlDJ IC!n'lct may bo Ultd to record ltUtfl &o tit
editor oa 1ny topic. Coatrlbuton to ear LetkrJ column mD1t locludt tb Ir
name aad ttlepboH aamber for vtrlflc1tloa. No clrcatalfoa c1ll1, pleaH.
Tell at what'• on yoar mind.
-fhe department'• aoal th11 year it
t<> coordiniitc ex11tmJ proarams and
tmna non-part1c1p.at1na 1Chool di~
1r1ct\ into the fold, •he 1a1d.
Partnerships do not net 1ehool1
monetary or material donattont,
Daacforde 11id. fhey provide hum n
rcaourus: people to aive cl sroom
prescntat1on1, pan1c1pate in job faifa,
ponduct student tours of th~r buSI·
About two-thirds of Ora nee Coun·
ty school dmncts have aome form of
pannersh1p proV1m. Daccfordt' .aid.
For them, conference orpn11er1
prepared lecture• on topics such as
how edue1tor~ can meet the n«d1 of
busineu. Potential <:onvcrt1 illlcndcd
batic talk• on how IO get •tarttd m a
partnership
Jn their appuran<:e, ffon11 and hit
wife appealed to bu1ine~i1 people to
make a lona·term commitment w
education.
another IS to 20 percent of JOM P
available will rC'quarc collcac level 1 ------------'----------------------------cducawmal 11k1ll<a
"We have ll huJC tram1n1 mission
1n lh!J su.te. There arc technique• "'e
Open commun1catton and help
from the bu11ncu community will be
needed to educate 11udent1 to meet
the demands of the future work1na world he said.
STABBING DEATHS SHOCKING •••
'Prom.Al
about pl ns for a If Ito n eel·
tbrat1on
Andcr1enw •JO•n tobeoneofthc JOd for a H1Uowccn cmtumc
ontett it the fire tton. ord1na o I tu. "'
the hou~ while she wH tallona to me.''
AnderM>n worked t a doctor'1
offict. according to J •ter.
Orancc County Shenll Otpart·
mcnt'4 Capt Jack Devere u• 11id
today a small safe was found 1n the
two-bedroom re•1dence but declined
tor veal 1t1 conten1s. Witnc1 1 ha-ve hee~ quoted in published r pons at
say1na that Atllrdo, the mate victim,
1n•tallcd a safe It the hou sc~cral
year ts<> be u he kepi lar
ORANG COAST
Daily Pilat
H. L. chwarti Ill
Pubr
mary Churchmen
COntro t
I
VO
' ' ' •
I
·~•
'
o '
-
•
/,I I I. j I I /. I ' • I ' , , : I I. I I • l
e ID· eat
eac ront resi .ent
Incllra Gandhi
•••aulnated
NEW DELHI, India (AP) -
Prime Minister Indira Gandhi
was assa11inated today outside her home, monally wounded in
1 barrqe of bullets reportedly'
fired bY her own Sikh body-
auard1. Rela.-1&orlH A4, B•.
The 1layin1 of the woman who dominated Indian political
life for two decades threatened
to plun&e this troubled nation
into new turmoil. Her son,
Rajiv, was quickJy 1wom in to
auccecd her.
One or two o( the gunmen
were re~rted killed at the scene
of the sttootina. for which Sikh
Qtremi u claimed responsi-
bility.
Coaat
Another chapter In the
saga of love In uniform
hu unfolded at the
Marine atatton at El Toro. /A3
V/./.'-".(Q.:X:"Q'/.~~Z.(.:::;~.a:;~-!.
Callfomla
A huge tanker vessel Is on
fire near San Francisco
Bay with one crew mem-
ber atlll mlsaf ng./ A4
1'atlon
Fiim on teen-age suicides
prompts thousands of
calla to.crisis centers./ Al
~q;~~:~Y,:~~:;>-//..-!' .. ~~/.~~%·:::·
World . ·
Poland mourns death of
pr0:-Solldarlty priest./ A7
· ~:..:-:~~xx-:~~~n.;:;~~:r.a-7a:.
Home
More Americana are tak-
ing a personal Interest In ·
history -their• or some·
oneelae'•-and
. preserving furnlture./~1
Pood
Student and professional
chef• show off their artis-
tic talent a at the culf narY
arts compe1ttlon./C1
Sporta
The Southern CaltfornJa
College baaketball team
11 prevlewed./11
'@°$//AJW/Al»;?"Qh(.~91(.!$~
Entertainment
A rape victim tak• r9-!
venge on her attacker In
tht tenM drmna "Ex-
tremtt ... " In Laguna
Be1ch./M
INDIX
02
c12
A3
A9 A• Ol-5
c12
05
85
01·2
D4
D2 At
A.C
A11
01
AS ....
114
A10 DI ...
Al M
~uhlon trick or treat?
llodet. poee bl fublon deataner Willi
Smith'• .. Loe An&elep collectloa" In New
York City. Tbe domblattal[ COION are lime,
red, atrlpect print wttb l»lack dots and
da:.bea. Tb.e collectloa JJOD•t do a whole lot
to help Callfomlam deny tlaetr reputation u bet.Dai a bit kooky. Bat It came out jut In time for Halloween. _ .
Witness 'drank
beer, watched'
two girls slain
81 JEFF ADLER
OflNW, .......
An eyewitness to the deacrt 1ex-
1layin15 of two Anaheim tccn·aaers
rccounttd in ari•ly detail Monday how he drank t>cer and watched as the
two airll were killed by his fncnd,
former Costa Mesa resident Fred
Serre Douglas in Au1u1t 1982.
Richard Hernandez, 39, an ac-
knowlcd&ed heroin addict and con-
. vic:tcd buralar, w11aranted immunity
from prosecution 1n exchanse for his
ttltimony aaainst Douala•.t who faces
a death penalty sentence it convicted
of the first-degree murders of 16-year-
old Marpret Kruqer and 19-year·
old Beth Jones.
Hcrnande1 told an Oranac County
Superior CounJury in Santa Ana that
he accompanied the SS-year-old
DouaJ11, a furniture rcfinisher, and
the tw1> airll to a remote desert wash
in the Anza Borrego State Par:k on
Aua. 13. 1982 bchevinJ. hlcc the two
alrts, that they were aoma to pose for
nude pictures.
But an1tcad of camera cqu1pmcntl
Douala• pulled a nflc and a hove
from the ll'Unk ofh11 car and ordered
the airl1 to perform sex acu on him,
Hernandez and on each other before
he killed them, Hernandez testified .
Speakina in a low monotone,
Hemanda. told jurors he, Douglas
and the two &iris drank rum and coke
and smoked marijuana for about an
hour af\er'arrivina at the descn sue
the two men had selected several
weeks earlier. .
Apparently bclicvina the photo
se Ion was about to begin, Jones and
Kru r removed their clothes and
aarecd to have their ankles and wrists
bound with nylon cord, Hernandez
said.
lt was then that he and Douglas
walked to the car anli returned not
wath camera equipment, but with the
nOc and 1hovel, he said.
"We 101 back there an<:I one of the
&irl1 1~ud, •where's the c.amct1?' He (Doualas) picked up the rincand put a
clip fo it and ad, •Herc h is; "
Hernandez testified.
Whtie 1he .sc~ acts were bcma performed, Douglas .. pacccl" baok
and fonh. the gun an one hand. a ~n
of bcfr in the other. Hemandcz.wd.
f hen Douglas pulled out a razor
Joel's mistake
will haunt many
Moll people I ve to rqret 1hc1r
ch ldhood m11takcs Ntne-~r..old Jotl nydtt didn't.
1ihe founh~ from Whittier
fJementary hoot 'WI lulled in
CO.ta Meu Monday. He was hu h> •
Qr whale tmn• to CT'Olt Plac::en111 Avmue ••ntt the red traffic li&ht
H11 I l·yar.old brothtr, Dona~.:
warned him not to cballenae the 3· JU
p, m uamc on the four4ane hi&hway. lut Jori a&shed into the inttrKCtaon
of'Placentl• Avenue and I th trecr
ln)'WI)'
He never mldt t to the oppo t nutt
n 1u1ops T
blade and shced one of the girl's
throats. suckina on the wound . "lt looked to me like she was iii a
state of hock. The other girl just
stared. I was looking at 'cm, drinkana
beer," Hernandez said.
Douglas told him ttlc two 11rl
could not "10 back anymore" and
Hernandez said id he prote ted ..
•• 1 n he was chokmg the one w uh
dark h ar (Jones). The other w !yin
there w11h blood coming out ot her
mouth. I tned to knock him off. but
J"d been dnnking a lot and he pu hcd
me away ... Then. I went and l
(Pl ....... wtTIUSS/ A2)
TONY
SAAVEDRA
·Perfect couple' brutally murdere<!; ---lawmen seeking suspects or motives
By ROBERT BARKEI\
Of lJM 091J NM IUll
Re 1dcnu. In the quaet sea 1de
communn) of unset 'Bcacb across Pac1fi C 51 Hagbwa) from Hum.
1n ton Harbour ex~ hock and
horror today over the brutal 1abb1~ slayin~ or··a perfect beach couple.
Darrell 'ohn Atiardo. 2S, and
Stephanie 1chcllc ndcrsm. 20,
ere found Tu y l)m on lhc
· hvme room floor of lhc1r home with
nuluplc b wound 1n the upper
body.
Oran County hmfrs Depart·
ment inv 1gator1 said lhey have no
suspects or motives Area re idenu
failed to rcpon htann any unu uat n01ses.
Tht b001es were found by a roomma1e of d1e slain c:ou8'c Wflo
tttumedtothernldenceat 16tj59111
1 tabout 12.CSpm.
"We're hocked" laid i.-
Jc:MCJ, the mana,er of dae ....-,
Woody" Martct wtleR die,....
co!!~~~·~~
'They were a pcrW.ct badl c.,ee -both were blond and bl~ ..S
they liked he ocean."
Jester aid chat Stcplaaaie
Andersen had vt1ited die ...u&
about 9 a rn. on the monilll ,o(dle
ay1ngand had WUd....,..,._..
a Halloween cclebratioll.
Andersen WllSJOtJW IO beo.e oflhe
(Pleue ... 8LATm09/A2J.
Wife suspected
of paying $3,000
for mate's murder
By TEVE MARBLE
OfO.Ol!llr,....
A 25-ycar~1d ~oman. ~ho com-
pla1 ned that her husband mistreated
herand refused to f.JVC her a d1vot'(c.
may ha'e p~ud S3~000 to have her
husband unncd down on a dart
Huntington Beach street m ptem·
her, court documents how ..
Anita Lynn Ford as f1 mg murder
and {'on~p1racycharges in the murder
of her bu b:md. Bal'l) Alan Ford. 30.
whose bod) was found lym m a pool
ofblood n r h1 white sedan on Sept
3. A au hcd c1 tttt butt and
flashlight were found at his feet.
Mrs. Ford's brother and two other
men. described b) autho.nt1e s
family fnends. also wett uresled ill
the pparmt murder plot. polace aid.
All are being held wnhout mil and
were to be arrat ncd lOda)'.
Despite lhc arrests, polace have not
1d whether they know who pUJlcd
the: tn r.
The auto pan salesman rcponedly
s lured from ha Lakewood home
to an industrial area of HuntaJ!llOll Reach :bY someone feiplina car
&rouble.Tools were found an the front
t of Ford's car. wbicb ,.. sW1
nmnt~ vruh au 'li&bts OD 'whtD a
patroth police ofllccr ha~ by. to court doc'vmmu
~ d to obtam .a warrant for Mri.
(Plea• eee WOMAlf / A2)
Irvine schools Plan
classe~ during strike
By TONY AA VEORA
OI .. Deify HIM auft
Under the lhr<~al of a lkoot by
trvmeteachers, 1rus1 for the ln:1nc
Unafied hool 01 tnct adoptt.d
emergency measures this momma to
keep dastncl hools open hould
faculty ncgotiator:t call a strike.
Three ln.istccs at the spcc1 I bo rd
mcetin l~y emPowcrcd upcr·
intcndcnt Stank) orey lo hire
uhsti1u1c t chcrs nd take other
action 1f the d1 gruntlcd 1e chers
leave the clasuoom, The two other
board members were bscnt.
The action me m the v.-akc of a
stnk.e authon1Jtt1on vote onda" by
membcr5 of the INmc Tcachc
Assoc1auon. TC3cbers cutina SCCRt
b !lots were a Iced to gi~ faculty
n uatoffi the penniuion 10 call • kout 1f a state mediator fails :tc>
break the d lock over ,~y raises.
An 1m wns called Oct 4 aft.er
teachers ld fast to their demand for
a 7.S pcrccnl c:ost-of·living pay raise.
while the dt tnct offered a one-time
bonu at the end off 15C81 I 84-SS.
chcr rcprcscntauvcs id the
l'C5Ult oflh tnkc VOte WOWd DO\ be released to th pubhc, but would be
used as a .. trump card" to bolsier the
tc chm' rp1ning power wnh the
d15tnct D1stnct board membcn countered
(Pleue _. ICBOOL8/A21
County .. bo11nd copter
crashes; two perish
Sen. Wilson in county,
lauds GOP candidates
Or~ COMt DAILY PILOTIWednMd.y, OCtober 31. 19S.
Theft suspect caught napping
Ndcly m loyee lou nd ulcd dow for
after he a naJ) on lbc couch.
COPTER CRASH •••
h'.-Al
echcal Center fo.r ~tmcnt of
unspetifttd injuries. ·d criffs
Ide Barbara Buckner. \ Tbecrash of the four· at Bell 206b
~rted at 11:4' p.m. and
fCSP(>ndin,g deputies found it lying in
a plowed field .. near the Brookside
Avenue fiuway overpass. she said. ll
did not bum. The two pa ngcrs died
at thc~ne.
The cran was registered to Air
logii;t1cs of Long Beach a.nd was on a
flight from the bingo parlor at the
Morongo Indian Reservation to the
Orange County area when it went
down. Buckner.said. 11 was oot clear
where m Orange County the htlicop-
ter was headed.
Wito h d observed it flyin
westbound at low altitude with the
hmdin.1 lisht on just before it crashed
into die high voltiagc cables struna
aero the freeway, &he said.
Banni~ is BS mile1 u t of Los
An~les, 1ust west of the Indian
reservation.
SCHOOLS MAP STRIKE ACTION ..•
Jl'romAl ·
today by ado"tinJ the emergency
measures to bnng m substitutes and
non-credentialed lccturen. if necess-ary, Corey said.
lso, the superintcndenL:s office
was empowered to give add1t1onal
pay to employees that have taken on
extra duties. And as a last resort,
Corey .-as given authority to close the
scbOols if students' welfare is threat-
ened.
Corey said tbe emergency resol-
ution is routinely adopted by school
distncts threatened by a strike.
"At the bottom hne, this is just an
expre'ision of the district's responsi-
bility to keep the schools open," he
said. ..
Tbe distnct has already had to
replace teache~ that are refusing to
chaperone dances, advise school
clubs or part1c1pate in any other after-
school act1V1t1cs. Private security
guards, administrators and other
emtJloyees have ta.ken over those
dutles.
Corey said the state Public Employ-
ment Relations Board recently up-
held the district's charge that teachers
were violatina fair labor practices by
not providing the after-school scr·
vices. -Ho~ever, PERB officials denied
the djstricfs rc<1uest for an injunction
ordcnng teachers to immediately
resume those cxtra-cumcular duties.
Corey said the complaint was
denied bc<:au the distnct had not
officially ordered the teachers to
participate in adjunct 1.erviccs.
The district has not yet decided
whether to issue a formal order,
Corey said.
WOMAN PAID HUSBAND'S KILLER? •••
'From Al
Ford's arrest last week., police suspect
the Lakewood woman plotted her
husband's late-night death and then
attempted to collect insurance
money.
The woman reportedly confided to
a police informant that ahe was to pay
$1,SOO before her husband's death
and another$ J ,500 when the job was
done, records mdicate.
Court documents also reveal that
Huntington Beach police attempted
to unravel the mysterious crime by
having one of Mrs. Ford's ac.quaint-
ances pretend that he too wanted to
have someone lcil.led.
The man, who work.ed with police
for nc.arly a month in an effort to learn
the identity of the apparent killer,
allowed police to tape record a series
of telephone calls be had wtth Mrs.
Ford.
Durin& several telephone calls,
Mrs. Ford is quoted as saying ber
brother knew a person willing to do
the job but that the man could only be
contacted through a "biker bar" m
Los Angeles.
The informant reportedly said the
discontented wife had complained
for weeks prior to the murder about
being roughed up and mistreated by
her husband. The wife said her
husband came and went as he pleased
wttile forcina her to remain at home
with their two young children.
Apparently, police suspected the
woman from the start. A police officer
wbo traveled to Lakewood to inform
the woman that her husband had
been killed, noted that she showed no
surprise or emotion and said "I
thought so" when be broke the news.
The officer said Mrs. Ford then
called her mother and said, "Barry's
been shot."
The policeman said he told the
woman her husband had been killed
but never mentioned he was shot to
death.
The informant., who came to police
eiaht days after the shootina. said
Mrs. Ford had talked for weeks about
having her husband "wasted" but
that he had not taken the threats
seriously.
The man told police he phoned the
woman the day after her husband's
death and bad a short but stunning
conversation with her.
"How's business?" Mrs. Ford
asked the man, according to court
documents.
"Pretty dead." he reponedly re-
plied.
"Yeah. so 1s Barry," she allegedly
said, laughmg.
A weelc later, the man agreed to
pretend be wanted bis ex-wife killed
and to seek out Mrs. Ford's as--
sistancc. Police recorded telephone
calls between the two. for nearly a
month, coun records show.
Despite weeks of telephone calls,
the man apparently was unsuccessful
in arranging a meetina with the ''hit
man." At one point, Mrs. Ford is
quoted as saying the man "who is
..&Oi!ll to do it" was in jail and couldn't
lna1.e bail.
During another call, the tries to
learn the identity of the hit man and
Mrs. Ford responds, "I have three bi.a, 0
ugly brothers."
Prior to her an:est, Mrs. Ford's days
were spent attcmptinJ to cash in
insurance policies, ta.king drugs and
attempting to 'et pohce to return
$500 that was in Ford's wallet the
m&ht he was killed, records state.
The informant aJso said Mrs. Ford
described to him bow she had "put on
a show" at her husband's funeral for
police detectives in attendance.
A baby sitter who said she frequent·
ly took care of the Ford's children,
told pohce that just days before the
murder, the woman confided, "I'm
about to do something 1llcgal and is
has to do wt th a gun."
Mrs. Ford was arrested Oct 24
after agreeing to come to the Hunt-
inatol\ Beach police station to pick up
some of her husband's belongings.
The woman brother, George Harvey
Wnght, 30, was arrested the followioa
days u were friends John B. Aldridge,
33, anl1 Lionel J. Cashman. 20.
SLA YINGS SHOCK BEACH RESIDENTS ••.
From Al
judges for a Halloween costume
contest at the fire station, according
to Jester.
.. Sbc also said she was going to get a
couple of frineds to help out with the
Halloween party. She was going to get
back to me but that was the last I have
ever seen her.
.. It's rcaJJy spooky knowing that
her killer might have been waiting at
the house while she was taJICJng to
me."
Jester said Anderson worked at a
doctor's office.
Published reports today quoted
witnesses as saying that Attardo, the
male v1cttm, reportedly kept large
sums of cash and had installed a safe
at th~ house. Attardo's occupation
was not disclosed.
Sheriff's investigators were not
available for comment.
The coroner's office reported that
autopsy results are pending.
WILSON BOOSTS GOP CANDIDATES •••
From Al
can," Wilson said. "They say this is
"the strongest Assembly district in the
state, but I can tell you, there arc no
safe districts."
Feriuson, who wilJ face Democrat
Steven Feldman, said, ··rm no more a
politician than you arc. But I'm going
to go up there (Sacramento) and give
1t my best shot."
all that money will be used by the
Assembly candidate.
.. A lot of the other Repubhcan
senators and assemblymen who at-
tended had lent Gil some campa.ip
money dunng the primary. A Jot of·
the proceeds from last niahl will be
used to pay them back," lfaskin said.
others are working to secure the
release of political prisoners held in
Vietnam, many of whom are relatives
of Orange County's Astan communi·
ty.
The party headquarters on Bolsa
A venue is in a commercial center
almost exclusively leased by Viet~
namesc businesses. ·
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, CoNTIN UEu SroR1Es
CHILD'S MISTAKE HAUNTING MANY ••.
From Al
pedestnans showed that the chances
of a child' being hit at Placentia
A venue and 18th Street were very
low.
With Joel's death, an&ered parents
didn't care about auidelincs or
statistics. It didn't matter that the
child crossed against a red light or that
he was outside the crosswalk. "I don't care whether or not a
crossingfuard is 'warranted.' If some
chdd 1s killed, then the state's criteria
is wrong." said Connie Margitan, a
Whittier PT A member who bas lona
championed the crossinJ auard issue.
Herb Burnham, assistant traffic
engineer, sat in a marked city car at
the intersection Tuesday, countma
the children crossing the street be-
tween 2 p.m. and 3:30 p,m., when
students are released from school. He
also kept track of the cars making
turns through the crosswalks.
Ironically, the monitoring had
been scheduled for days and came the
day after Joel's death, Burnham said.
Bumham's findings, to be pres-
ented to the traffic-commission Nov.
7, showed 97 students crossed the
1ntersecuon. well past the state stan-
dard of 50. But onJy 75 cars turned
into the crosswalks every hour, well
under the state daneer limit of 300
cars.
The City Council adopted the state
guidelines last spring to help ensure
that limited funding and staffing
would be used only where the guards
were warranted.
MaI)itan 5aid PT A leaders from
Wluttirr Elementary will be meetina
with city traffic enainccrs today to
demand that a crossing guard be
placed at the intersection.
She said parents also would insist
that guards be assigned to the other
schools placed on a w . .iting list while
traffic enaincers review merits of
their requests.
Margttan accused city officials of
being slow-footed in processing those
Just Call
642-6086
rc<1uestS brought by the schools in who are only two years older than
hopes of receiving the &uards in time they are. But with an adult there ... t ,.
for this school year. Seven cr<ming said Don Snyder who doesn't d1s.-
au.ards were at>proved in May, while count his son's. fault, but said the
the commis ion asked for more penalty for his mistake was far too
information on the numbers of stu· high -
dents and cars at the other locations. lf~ said Joel's mother was takjna
Traffic . engineers were asked to her son's death hard, as was the
monitor at least 20 streets and brother who helplessly watched the
intersections where guards were re-accident from the curb.
quested. Snyder said his son, Donald, asked
Burnham said such information to be transferred from Whittler
could only be garnered while school Elementary and into another nearby •
was in session. Classes soon ended for school because be was fearful of
the summer and did not Jtart again reliving the painful memory of hiS
until mid-September. brother's death every time he crOSICd
The monitoring began in early the intersection.
October, after giving the students 0 It's gonna be too much for him to
roughly two weeks to establish their walk home from that school and crosa
routine paths to and from school, that street,'' Snyder said.
Burnham said. Smee the commission Fat.her and son coped with their
meets the first Wednesday of every aricf Tuesday by sharing in the
month. there wasn't enough time to preparation of Joel's funderaL
compile the information by the Together, they piclccd a headstone,
October meetina. be said. ~rvcd a plot -alongside the boy's
Yeti the parents who bad fought for arcat grandfather -at Fairhaven
rou&h y 30 years for crossin,c guards Memorial Parlt.: in Santa Ana and
felt they had waited Ion& enough. made arrangements for services there
··1 repeatedly said, let's not wait Friday at I J a.m.
until someone gets killed," Margi tan The Whittier Elementary PT A
said. plans to <Send lctten home with the
When Joel was hit, traffic com-. students aslc.ing parents to help offset
missionen found themselves Tues-the funeral costs by making contribu-
day defending their questions last tions, Margitan said.
spring on whether a guard was needed
at Placentia A venue and 18th Street.
"We weren't trying to stall. We
were tryina to see what some of the
peculiarities of that intersection
were," said Commissioner Wayne
Kraiss. "Unfortunately, these acci-
dents arc not predictable. God knoW"S
that if we knew there was goina to be
an accident, we would have tried
anythin& even gates." Kraiss added he was unsure that a
crossing guard could have stopped
Joel from running into l.be street
The child's father thought other-
wise.
"Little boys don't listen to brothers
Sunshine will
replace clouds
By the Assoclaied Press
Clouds will pther like Halloween
ghouls alona the cout tonight but the
momi~ sun will scare them off as
blue skies and mild temperatures
prevail a.round Southern California
on Thursday.
Skies will be clear with highs in the
mid-to upper-70s, the National
Weather Service said.
What do yoa like about tbe DaHy Pilot? What don't you Uke? Call the
number at left ud your meaea1e wlll be rttorded. transcribed and deUverccl
to tbe appropriate editor.
Tbe same %4-boar usweria1 service may be u e4 to record lettera to the
editor on any topic. Contributors to our Letters column mast laclade tbelr
ume and telephone namber for verificaUo.a. N"o clrcal•tloa calls, please.
Tell us wbat't on yoar mlDd.
The recepllon was attended by
several Republican lcgJslaton and
candidates 1nclud1ng As-
semblywoman Marian BergC50n, As~
semblyman Nolan Frizze11c, Reps.
Robert Badham and Ron Packard
and Countr . Supervisors Harriett
Wieder and Thomas Riley.
"In tum. they will lend the money
to other candidates who may need it,
hkc Bob Doman," he said. "It's kind
of recycled Republican money "
Earlier in the day, Wilson visited
reccntl} opened Republican PartX
headquarters in the "Little SatJon '
area of Westminster, where 'Wilson
endorsed the candidacy of Robert
Doman. Doman will face Jerry
Patterson in a hotly contested race for
the 38th Congressional scat.
Chris Vu Dinh, who manages the
headquarters, said the Republican
Party has had remarkable success
registering the Vietnamese immi· .-------------------------.....,,.------------------: grants.
, Most of the ,400 guesu in attend-
ance donated $ l 25 each to attend the
reception, which raised more than
$40,000 for Ferguson. But. as his aide
Greg Haskin pointed out today, not
Wilson told the Vietnamese-born
residents that President Reagan and
.
"You might expect the Democrats
to have better luck With the min-
onlles, but that hasn't been true
here," Vu Dinh said.
Wilson later made an appearance
at county GOP headquarters in
Orange.
WITNESS.-''DRANK, WATCHED SLA YINGS' ••
From Al
another beer. He stood up and pie~·
up the rifl~ and butted her with it."
Hernandez said.
· Annothcr witness. former Hunt-
inpon Beach re ident Kathy PhilHps,
testified wt week that DouJlas had
ditcloscd a plan for Jurina . two
hitchJkcrs to the desert and killing
them dunna the filmin~ ot'a "snuff
movie." The disclo ure was made in
OC'tobcr 1979. she said.
• OallJ PUot
Deltvery
.. OQfanfeed
Prosecutor Tony Raclcauckas aJ-death cannot be determined.
leges Douglas followed through on his When the trial resumes Thursday,
gru(isome murder plan several years Hernandez will again be on the
lattt" when be promised to pay Jones witnes stand and Douglas' defense
and Krueger for nude photavaphs. attorney, Georae Peters. is expected
The gtrls' skeletal rcmams were to crou-examine him.
discovered by a phot~pbcr on. Peters. in his openina statement,
March 28, t 983 A San DiCJO County characterized Hernandez as an un-
Coroncr's Office pathologist already reliable witne s, who besides being a
has testified that because of the " heroin addict and an alcoholic is a
condition oftbe remains the cause of "brutalizcr of women."
ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilat
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Roeemery Churchman
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Stephen F. Carazo
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